The Weather II.S. WMlhn- CiirMW Forau: Warmer, Flurries (MWit on. Paso u j,Kn THE PONTIAC ^4-|. • ,* ;‘f.{ i. i ‘ )■ I- ^tr- ‘■*1^.'* ** ~ POStlAC, MtXClA[i&j^,WtinNESDAY. FEBRUARY 8, 1967-86 PAGES iiiin.;Vy,aRa;a««». ,' . W- Cold Follows Snow in East NEW YORK (#»—Bitter cold hampered the massive snow-removal job as the East struggled today to return to normalcy after a paralyzing blizzard. The cold spread into, the East from the Midwest and plunged overnight temperatures to below zero on the heels of the worst Eastern snowstorm in two years. and others whose apartments and homes had no heat. Hotels did a booming business last night. MANY SCHOOLS CLOSED At least 39 deaths were attributed to the blizzard. In New York City, where the mercury dropped to 11 degrees at 2:30 a.m., more than 100 persons took refuge in state armories opened by Gov,. Nelson A. Rockefeller to house the snowbound Most schools were closed again today all along the coast, including those in New York, the nation’s largest city. In New Jersiey, Gov. Richard J. Hughes declared today a banking holiday. < Major airports in the East remained closed overnight as crews worked to clear runways to allow at least a limited resumption of operations. These included Kennedy and LaGuardia airports in New York, Newark Airport and Philadelphia International Airport. In Philadelphia, where 14 , inches of snow fell, the city pressed a snow-melting machine into duty on an experimental-basis but freezing temperatures proved it ineffective. The machine sucks up snow, melts it and pumps the water onto die street to run.into sewers. But the water froze before, it could run off. The city planned to &e salt to combat this. The blizzard dumped 13 inches of snow in New York City, 10 in Washington, D.C., and 9 in Boston. The snowfall in New York was the heaviest in six years. Ex-Con Found Slain in Local Church Lot Panel in Favor of Lottery Draft A 24-year-old Pontiac man was shot to death in a broad-daylight, underworld-style killing yesterday in a church parking lot at Saginaw and Judson. ville C. Johnston said witnesses reported hearing one shot, then seeing the car and huearing three more shots. The shooting occurr^ about 11 a.m. Dead is Ralph Alfred Grace of 257 W. Wilson, an ex-convict free pending a new trial on charges brought by-Detroit police. Local investigators said they had not yet determined what the charges Witnesses said they thought the car, -described as late-model and bronze hi color, was a police vehicle. They said the car fled north on Saginaw, flien turned east on Auburn at a high rate of speed. WASHINGTON (AP) - The National Commission on Selective Service will recommend to President Johnson next week a lottery draft'and the induction of younger men first, sources indicated today. Informants said the commission has decided the draft must be continued, but needs a major revan^ing to eliminate inequities and uncertainties. Vidims Include Indided Former Official and Wife ' MONTGOMERY, Ala. I^A fire which began, as tiny flickers, in 'a cloakroom raced through a fashionable ^ftop dining room in downtown Montgomery last night, leaving at least 26 pers(»is dead, including a former state official who was indicted yesterday. Identification was difficult because of the condition of the bodies, which were taken to four funeral homes. A police identification team assisted by FBI experts was set up to help establish the identification. Water pouring from the blackened ruins of Dale’s Penthouse restaurant atop the' 11-story Walter Bragg Smith apartment hotel froze on the sidewalks and streets in the wintry 28-degree night, making it treacherous for firemen and police to move about. A City maintenance truck spread sand over the icy coating. PontUc Prth^liifto ASH WEDNESDAY—Ann Dunn of 48 SparrowA kneels at the altar rail of St, Joseph Catholic Church, 396 W. South Blvd„ this morning as the Rev. Francis Okonowski marks her forehead with blessed ashes. The same ceremony took place in all Pontiac area Catholic churches and some Episcopal churches. Father Okonowski is pastor of the St. Joseph Church. \ tt^mkesman at one funeral home said positive*idAtBiitiM bad been, made of the. bodies of loraMr Public Service Commissioner Ed Pepper and Ms -Wife, Ann. The Peppers were dining with friends at the plu^ cafe when the fire started about 11 p.m. Police said Grace was appareatiy gunned down from a car which pttrined him as he ran north from Jackson. He • was' shot twice in the back and oaca. through the head, investigators said. A church caretaker saw the body and called police. To do this, sources said, the panel will recommend that youths 18‘A and 19 be eligible for the draft first, instead ^ men 24, 25 and 26 as now provided by the system. A fiilly-loaded 38-caliber revolver found chltched in the victim’s hand was confiscated by police. Det. Sgt. J(^ A. DePauw said bullet fragments found at the scene were being sent to Lansing for ballistics analysis. All three of the slugs that hit Grace passed through his body, according to DePauw, After registration and examination, the eli^ble youths would be included in a lA pool and chosen for the draft by a lottery. Sporadic Shots, Plane Lost as Viet Lunar Truce Starts Pepper wa$ indicted, pn two counts of extortion yesterday by -a federal grand jury at Birmingham. T5\e indictments charged he “obstructed, and delayed the transportation of goods and commodities in interstate commerce’- while a PSC member. A third indictihent was brought against Pepper last November by the grand jury. d police No arrests have been made i ai« conttaiuing investigation. SHOTS HEARD Detectives Robert A. Emery and Or- NEEDLE FOUND Johnston estimated the shots had been fired from 40-to 50 feet. Informants said the commission plans to call for continuing student and other deferments, stipulating that after graduation a student again be included in .Jbe lottery pool and thus face the same exposure to the draft as younger men without deferments. SAIGON, South Vietnam (AP) A U.S. photo reconnaissance plane was downed off North Vietnam and more than a score of shooting incidents were reported in South Vietnam following the start of the lunar new year truce today. The pilot bailed out and a U.S. destroyer rescued him from the Gulf ot Tonkin, 15 miles north of Dong Hoi. A hypodermic needle and an eye dropper were reportedly found in the victim’s jacket. Police refused to speculate whether these were in any way coiinected with narcotics. ‘GREAT UNCERTAINTY’ “The great problem with the present system is the great uncertainty that 18-and 19-year-old youths face,’’ one informant said. Most of the incidents were small, and both sides appeared disposed to hold their fire. • U.S,. and Vietnamese officials in Saigon announced they plan an intensive psychological warfare campaign during the truce. \ • Robert J. McCloskey, State D^art-fnent press officer, decUned to speculate yesterday on whether the truce might be extended. He said “we will see what haKiens’’ if the Communist guns remain silent at the end of the four-day period. AMONG MISSING Missing was Mrs. Jade Doane, wife of the sports editor of the Montgomery Advertiser. She was a hostess at the diningroom. w Accompanied by kdber Advertiser reporters, Doane^ ckokb^e J^k the tears, watched horrified as the flanties leaped high into the sky above the bniiding. '66 Birmingham Crime Report Shows 12 Pet. Drop From '65 There were these other developments yesterday; • Backing for the administration position on peace talks came from Michigan Rep. William S. Broomfield, R-18th District, who said Johnson is pursuing “the right course.’’ Broomfield, a member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, was among congressmen invited last night to the White House for dinner and a briefing. Powell Will Testify to Probers Today Gov. Lurleen Wallaro expressed sympathy for the families of thp victims “of this terrible tragedy.” She and her husband, former Gov. George C. Wallace, stayed up past midnight at the executive mansion half a dozen blocks away, getting telephoned reports from an aide., Birmingham went in reverse of a national trend and found itself with a 12 per cent decrease in crime last year. “All in all. I’m pleased with the total picture,” Police Chief Ralph W. Moxley said today after compilation of his annual report. Crime readied a peak in 1965 with 15,691 incidents in Birmingham, but it dipped to 13,808 last year. Moxley ^id the figure is still above die previous three-year average, but is pleased by tfae trend. home burglaries. However, Moxley said that, late in thq year, new procedures were instituted that cut incidences con-'kiderably and that this reduction has carried into 1967. Patrol methods have been changed to provide more coverage in residential areas and procedures on .covering the business districts have been revised, Moxley reported. He said, “Citizens can help further reduce these types of crime by keeping • (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 1) • U.N. Ambassaaor Arthur J. Goldberg announced he’ll undertake a globe-circling “fact-finding” mission for President Johnson, including a visit to South Vietnam. Goldberg said he is not going as a peace emissary. • Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey said toe lunar neAf year truce “offers opportunity fw rethinkifig by all combatants in Vietnam.” He warned that the cause of peace would not be served by speculation as to any conditions involved in possible negotiations. WASHINGTON W - Adam Cidyton Powell, toppled as a power in Congress and brought to toe brink of expulsion, gets his “day in court” today. \ The flamboyant Harlem Demoerk, who has refused to go before othk forums, appears before nine HousA members chosen to recommend whethei^^ Powell should be seated or barred from\ House membership. He already has been deposed as a committee chairman. John English, assistant manager of the restaurant and one of its owners, said toe fire began in a cloakrobm off the cocktail lounge adjoining toe main dining room. FLAMES SPREAD He said it started as a “very sj fire” but the flames spread rapidly. Many of the 75 or more diners trapped by the flames made their way to safety by breaking out windows and crawling onto the roof surrounding the penthouse. Their choice largely may be deter-miped by Powell’s performance today. Rep. Emanuel Celler, ,D-N. Y., chairman of toe select committee considering Powell’s case, said yesterday no other witnesses have been called and no other plans made for the inquiry. One of them was Bill White of Dothan, Ala., a truckllne president who was with and Mrs. Pepper. One of White’s hands was bleeding after he had smashed a window and led others to safety. / Increases were noted in car thefts a Pontiac Prtu Photo SAFETY CHECK — Service station attendant Michael Lewis of 5897 Wilfiams Lake, Waterford TCwnahlp, checks the antifreeze in still another car. The check, requested by many motorists, has proved necessary with the area’s severe cold weather. In Today's Press Curtain Up on OU Dramatic Art Plans Art V Aufos Cranbrook presents a way-out look at the car world — PAGE B-7. A Warm(?) Trend I City Affairs Housing study committee gets I official status — PAGE A-8. TODAY’S TEMPERATURES Mdnt. ... -4 8 a.m— -4 .... -S 10 a.m.:... 1 —5 7 8 a.m -6 1 p.m ... 12 Hall of Fame Former Lkm Bobby Layne -PAGED-1. The wrotoerman is likely to give temperatures a boost tomorrow with the high beading for 24. The low will be a warmer 8 to 14 tonight. '' Thmt’s a chance of snow flurries tonight and tomorrow. Friday’s forecast is partly sunny ^ warmer. Southwest to westerly winds at 10 to 17 miles par hour will become southwest at 7 to 12 niil^ tonight. Plans to launch the Academy Dramatic Art at Oakland University has been unveiled, along with the announcement that a nationwide hunt for the first students will begin in May. A class (tf 15 talented stage aiqiirants will begin studies this fall under director John Femald, whoi is initiating in this country a plan evolved during his 10 years as head of the Rqyal Academy (rf Eh-amatic Art in London. Fernald’s second enterprise at OU will foUow toe premiere seasM of the John Fernuhl Company of Meadow Brook Theatre, whieh opened Hie academy will be the teaching arm of toe resident professkmal theater am-pany and wifi be ciosdy linked to it. * * Many members of the company are Americans who trailed under Fmisld in I/indon, and most of his staff M assistants, technicians and faculty ark former RADA associates. CHOREOGRAPHER PROPOSED OU AlHHTTWf — A sketdi superimposed on an aerial view of Oakland University shows the location (A) of the proposed |4-2-nuUion school of performing arts. Tte building, scheduled for completkii in summer of 1968 east tire Kresge Library, initially would house the Academy of Dramatic Art, to accept its first students next fall; Meadow Brook Theatre (B) is in toe foreground. John Qrooroe, choreegrapher for the Meadow Brook Theatre, will be in (toarge of courses in movement and dance. The Academy of Dramtic Art wHl (Continued on Page A-2, C -Forty persons were known dead today and 10 were missing after a caging holocaust of bush fires devastated the southern tier of Fanned by 70-mile winds, the worst fiiei in the history ofitbe AustraUan island state roared' across raral areas Tuesday and virtually wiped out 12 towns, A total of 612 houses and 50 other buildings were burned out at an estimated cost of more than f 11 million. * * ★ Rural areas w«'e a blackened expanse littered with dead sheep and cattle. Three of the state’s biggest industries were blackened ruins — a brewery, a carbide company and a big flsb cannery. Their employes stood stunned in the stieets. Many had lost their homes also and some had lost relatives. The fire began as several in* significant, seasonal summer blazes in the foothills of Mt-Wellington. A, ★ They Joined and then came the awful moment when the 106,-000 regents of Hobart, the capital, realized they had an advancing fire in front'and only water behind them. “R was our Black Tuesday,” said the deputy mayw, Dame Mabel Miller. “The sky became black as midnight at 2 o’clock in the afternoon. There were no lights, no power — no nothing. We groped -- and hoped.” NEW FIRES As the temperature topped 102 degrees, spailcs ignited new fires in houses ahead of those being tackled with a steadily decreasing water pressure. Housewives ran screaming into the streets, begging motorists to stop and help them fight the fires. Bt................. hurrying to' Steadily the fire grew, engulfing houses on one side and apple ' • - pride of “The Apple Isle” — on the other. Intense heat shriveled the trees heavily laden with fruit them to ashes. Children wandered aimlessly through smoke-blackened ruins, their eyes streaming with tears. Schools were turned into makeshift hospitals and relief centers, and the army opened its Brighton camp for those Who Anti-Soviet Protests, Intensified in China TOKYO (AP) - Mao Tse-tung’s forces intensified their anti-Soviet campaign today with hostile demonstrations in a dozen Chinese cities and new or- ranks with; ders for fighting the Kremlin’s I faithful brand of communism. The official New China News Agwncy said demonstrations were neld throughout mainland China to emphasize “CSiina’s mounting protest against the Soviet revisionists’ outrages.” The Peking ccare^ndent of the Japanese newspaper Yomi-uri said Mao had Issued instructions for setting up in the Red caidtal a “liaison station for struggling against revisionism’' — China’s label for Uie Soviet brand of communism. - The Maoists ajso gave new evidence of trouble Jn their own _ to the on tiie alert Crime Down (Continued From Page One) cars locked and by taking a critical look at their homes and apartments with regard to bur-glar^zroofing.” Traffic accidents showed a t per cent rise over the pre-idaiis yaa r, tat the chief pitated ont this also is a re-vavsed trend because usage of femlntfiam roads ia the year against a “palace coup” ■'armed coup.” REGAINING POWER The “Red Ouard’s Forum” of the Kwangihing Daily said Mao’s followers have “been retaking one after another of the isitions of power hield by a mdful of party people taking the capitalist road” but cautioned that the victories would stir attempts at a “counterseizure of power.” criticism of the Chinese army was reported mounting also, with Peking wall posters accusing soldiers of suppressing Mao’s followers as well as his opponents. Posters said army units had caused “great confusion” by turning against 'truly revolutionary elements” in at least seven provinces. percentafe-about 19 per cent The repdrt on juvenile activities noted a slight increase in arrests, up from 286 to 299, and stated juvenile traffic violations “We are fortunate with our young petafo" Moxley said. “These figures represent leSs than one-half of 1 per cent involved with the law.” Hlis report pays tribute to the auxiliary pdicewho served 3,600 volunteer hours during tile year. Some posters indicated, the incidents stenuned from inability of the troops to distinguish the good elements from the bad. Other reports from Peking sug- gted deliberate opposition to 0 in ti^ anpy ranks. Caught by the backlash from tiie anti-Soviet rioting in Peking, tile Polish and Hungarian embassies decided to follow the Soviet Union’s example and evacuate the wives and children of their staffs, Yoniiuri’s coire-spondent said. He said other East Europemi governments, except for Albania and Romania, would probably evacugte tteir dependents. The New China News Agency reported anti-Soviet demcxistra-tions in Peking, l^nghai, Tsingtao, Nanking, Kunming, Sining, Nahchang, Chungking, Tsinan, Yinchuan, Hofei and Lanchow. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTUC AND VICINITY-Variable chtudiaess and a little warmer today witii a chance of occasiooal brief snow flurries. High 18 to 24. Variable cloudiness and not so cold^ tonight with possible snow flurries. Low 8 to 14. Thursday: Parfly cloudy and a little warmer with a chance oi snow flurries. Southwest to westerly winds 10 to 17 miles today and sontiiwest 7 to 12 miles tmlfdit. Outlook for Friday: Partly sunny and a little warmer. c I * TutMliv In^eontlic ^ . HiBhtrt Itmptrtiurc . Police rushed to West Hobart where a dazed old woman sat in the gutter and said that while 16 homes, were' buraiim, iootoni stole c]othhm,v.funiih^, elecit trteal goods and television setk a ★ ★ “They took everything t had in my little house,” she said, “even my bed.” Nurses wept as they tended burned persons of all ages. SAGINAW (AP)-1 Authorities said today “we have Ae best Near Margate saw 150 children sheltering from flames after being hurriedly let out of school. Ordering them to lie in a gutter, the policeman turned a hose on Aem and kept the flames away until school buses arrived to evacuate thenu lead we’ve had so far” in Ae methodical slayings of two elderly couples in the last eight days. But Police Chief Joseph Bu-genske and State Police Sgt. Derwood L. Finkbeiner refused to say anything more or con-iy®**’®®?®-/ firm rumo's one suspect had H a r b r 0 e-been Jailed. Iger has" taken Harbmeger • it ispecial police training at Mlchi-Bugen^e lea^ the mves^a-|gan state University and has at-toi the raur^ t< ^1 Mid- numerous seminars on deldorf^ 'oS, a schoolwaOTer, problems in preparation his wife, Gertrude, W, i^se jqj. assignment. AP WlNffhat* HOME IN PATH - A couple watch as Aeir home is swept by fire in &rell, Tasmania, Australia, yesterday. Bush fires raged acn»s souAem Tasmania, killing at least 40 persons. Twelve towns were virtually wiped out. Senate Approval Chances ImproveforConsularPact WASHINGTON (AP) - Prospects for Senate ratification of Ae U.S.-Soviet consular treaty edged upward today when Sen. Bourke B, Hickenlooper indicated he might support it. Hickenlooper, who heads the Senate Republican Policy Com- School Bond Sale OK'd for Site Purchase r Application by Ae Pontiac School District to sell $620,000 in bonds for possible purchase of a new school site was approved late yesterday by Ae Municipal Finance Commission in Lansing. Schools Supt. Dr. Dana P. Whitmer said the bonds were sought in the event Ae board of education decides to buy a ^ acre site at Featherstone and Opdyke. PrtoKMed for construction on Ae site is a new Junior-senimr high school, which Whitmer saidfwonld fill an “immediate need” for i mittee, voted against Ae treaty when it first was approved by Ae Senate Foreign Relations Committee m Ae 89A Congress. The Iowan said in an mter-view he took that action as protest against what he called the ^ “unseemly pressure” he said Ae Johnson administration was exerting at Ae time to get Ae treaty before the Senate. The Smate did not act then. The committee now is restudying Ae treaty. NO COMMITMENT ‘I have not made miy firm commitment one way or Ae oAer on this treaty,” he said. “It has some good things in ' that could be advantageous to us and some Aat are not. It has some pluses and some touchy mmuses.” . Hickenloopm' had been counted among Ae Republican conservatives likely to qipose Ae document on grounds it would pave Ae way for openmg additional Soviet consulates A the United States, possibly increasing opportunities for espionage. wisn 1 INIS* inwriMiy •! r»oe AtaMi 4tls WMntutay at 5:03 p.m. Moon ritoa Thursday at 4:11 a.m. Tuaaday'a Tamptrahiro Chirt 'Alpena 15-14 Fort vyorth ! EKonaba 30 3 Jackaonvllle 1 Downtown Tompafitom 4 ojn. -4 11 7 i).m 12 m.,....... 'Gr. RapMa 30 1 Konias City 1 14 7 Lot AiWOltt I 11 '-t Mlotltt Sooch 1 If 7 Mllwoukoo 1 30 5 Now Orloont 4 14 -4 Now York 1 t •.!*» -4 1 p.tn ♦ tarn -1 10 •om. .... V ;Muikt0on Ptilston ITrtvffi* C. _____t'tSmpJriturt .................*4 laiimirck MtM lamptrtlvr* ......... ..........4IU e»tton HIghitt t*mptratur« ...............37 » n Pittsburgh It U St. L.«ult 34 t Tampi II n Salt LaM C. 43 ) 31 3 t. S. Marta V ■- M 11 s; Pranclaco M 44 14 -4 Saa— “ 11 -I • ■ •7 -* I 14 18 The board, which three months ago purchased an ^tion ’to bqy Ae site, is expected to make a final decision at its » meeting Feb. 22. » -k * * g The parcel Is located jus I across railroad tracks from the 4 proposed Consumers Itowier Co. service cmiter. County Man Saved From Alabama Fire MONTGOMERY, Ala. (UPl) - A Michigan man smashed a window and leaped to Ae safety of a six-foot ledge as a raging Are killed 26 perscms last night A a poA restaurant atta a hl^^ spartmeiit bidldiiw. W * k ■ Warren Garrison^ a salesman foom Southfield, was phidrod (rom the ledge by firemen vdto crawled up an extension laddw flames quickly through Dale’s Penthouse res- %p Wlnphtw NATIONAL WEATHER -> Snow is expected tonight in weatem New York State and the Northern Rodties.- RaA is pccdtcted for Ae coitral Gulf r^A>n wlA some snow flmries m Hw northern periphery. Temperatures vdO be colder A flames wbirii blocked the restaii-“ • rant’s elevator entrance. About 40 persons, including two fd Garrison’s friends, were Aai^ by the Atrose heat and Slayings Lead Said Best Yet Rumor Soys Suspect , Is Jailed in Saginaw Birminghom Area News Detective Heads Youth Bureau BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP-Detective Fred Harbmeger has been placed in charge of the . ymeA bureau, b^an his at 3234 Miirwell,' Keego Harbor, WlA their four cAidren. apd said Ae hear poeitttm fulfills an ambi-tirni he had when he joined Ae fnree as a patrolman five I Birmingham « Jong-aoo (]hri, Korean educator, is a visitor to Birminidtein public schools Ais week, talking vriA teachers, administrators cAsses. Choi Is visiting the U.S, Ua «hiM«%iAAa A# TfifAraofmvia] .. . * bodies were found in tbeA hmne Sunday. Finkbeiner heads the search for toe killers of Dr. Archer A. Claytor, 73, and hte wife, Marie, 58, who were found shot to deato Feb. 2 A their $50,000 home about a mile and a half from the Mlddeldorf home. buried YESTERDAY The MWdeldwfs were burled Tuesday after funeral services attended by about 850, including Mayor James W. Stenglein. Robbery motives, at first advanced in boA cases, had bees abandoned by Tuesday. Police said they had no idea thmi of Ae motive. k Shocked by Ae, murders, Saginaw resWents were retorted grimly buying guns and locks-to prertect Aemselves. Brandt in D.C. to Tell Block to N-Treaty WASHINGTON (AP) - Foreign Minister Willy Brandt A expected to tell President Johnson today it will be difficult for West Germany to sign a nudcM nonprolifieraUon treaty unless nonnuclear nations are allowed to use atomic energy for peace- Brandt’s warning, Aplomatic sources advised, rejM’esents Ae growing uneasAess of a number at industrialized, nonnuclear countries. The list, it fa suggested, Acludes Sweden, Switzerland, Italy, Adia, Japan, Israel and perhaps one or two Latm-American nations. * * ★ Brandt, 53, who airived Tuesday, planned to call on Johnsta late this afternoon after talks wlA Secretary of State Dean Rusk, Undersecretary of State Nicholas Kateenbach and presidential adviser Walt W. Rostow. He also is scheduled to meet with Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey. SOaAUST HEAD This A Ae first Washington visit of Ae Socialist leader since he became foreign minister and vice chancellor in West Germany’s new coalitliH) government. He was a frequent visitw here during his nine years as mayor of West Berlin. . k k West Germany’s reservations about the treaty have been spelled out by Brandt and^ oth-ws A public speeches,' and Brandt put Aem j dum to Rusk last week. He and his wife, Betty, live Services are currently being held in UnitaiAn tamreh, 651 Woodward. A welMaMWB joaraalist, she will dbenss la dii^e wiA Rabbi Erast J. Coorad, “Hie ■SeverdI Wortds of American Jewry.” RaUri (tonrad is spiritual lead- Ae auspices of Ae International Teacher Develt^ment PTOgram. He is observing techniques which may be hel^ul to him in teachtog EngliA at his sriiool in West Dae^hin Dong, Korea. Mrs. Sanders, a graduate of Wellesley College, is jx-esently serving as an adjunct assistant professor of writing at New York University. > BLOOMFIELD HlLLS-Mar-ion K. Sanders, senior editor of Harper’s Magazine, will speak at Ae New Temple service at 8 p.m. Friday. Commission Appves Pontiac’s'Deficit'Budget Pmtiac’s twice-proposed, so-called deficit budget of 1967 is official today, following city »i enactment last night of a $9.7-million appropriation ordinance. A quick, unanimous vote on Ae ordinance followed an eight-second “public hearing” on Ae budget. Ncxie of Ae It persons present in commission chambers offered comment on Ae budget. ) Pending Ae fate of efforts to increase the city’s Anlted millage rate, tax rates in Pontiac will likely mnainceastant at $17.78 per $1,991 assessed valnation, based on Ae budget. Qty Manager Joseph A. Warren, A a cover letter to the posal, once again affirmed his position that use of surplus fpnds to meet 0ty employe pay hikes is a “otm-year, one-time acAm.” Unisllocated surplus funds exceeding $538,000 are expected to meet the up to 10-po* coit raises given p^ce, fire, public works and clerical personnel. CITY INCOME TAX Warren also said recommen-datiims of Ae Pmtiac FAance Study Committee — which has advocated a city income tax — will be the subject of “spedfic recommendations to the City Commission A Ae very near future.” He gave no clues as to what Ae recommendations mi^t he. A anoAer fiscal matter, com- missioners received a report on Ae opening yesterday afternoon of bids on temporary urban renewal notes in Ae amount of $2,558,000. The low bidders on Ae notes, aimed at financing of project R20; were Morgan Guaranty Rotated Stories, Page A-8 Trust Co. d New York, and Soloman BroAers and Hutzler.! Aterest rate offered was 2.68 per cent, wiA a prmnium df 10. k k k Also A connection wiA Ae R20 project, commissioitero agreed to meet federal nondiscrimination requfrements for a neighborhood park at Wall mid Paddock. Baffle Creek Accepfs Tax BATTLE CREEK (UPI)-Bat-tie Creek Joined Ae raidcs of Michigan cities wiA an income tax yesterday as voters narrowly aiqiroved a 1 per cent tax for residents. The vote, hdd down by heavy snow still on the groi^ and near - z«o temperatures, was 3,754 for Ae tax and 3Ji85 against Ae income tax. Th« figures were unofficial and subject to change, The tax, sAlch will be one- half per cent woikbig la the city, was passed first by flm City Oom-iniisten last 8^ t, tat a pe-titlM drive by two groqM forced it to a vote ly Ae publle. One of Ae groiqM, tiw dtt-sera’ Cnmnlttee for TruA in Tax Facts, has A'tonised a boycott of all business (qxswtod 1^ persons who openly favored the ECORSE (UPD-thls suburban Detroit coaummlty, deeply in debt during Ae past few years, may join Ae ranks of Michigan cities wiA Incione ' ixes. The C% Council voted 5 • 1 lari night to adopt a one per cent tax for residents and onq-half per cent for nomresWentt who work in Ecorse. The ordiaaace, however^ ^vos residents the right to pe^' titlM for a November vote oa warMri Aere would be Aasttc cutbadcs ia services if tite tax were not p4«sed. If citizens fail to petition, tiw tax will go into effect automatically Jan. 1,1968. ,★ k k The city has beeU aUe to pay employes recently only because Its laigeri taxpaytf, Great Lakes Steel Coip-. P r 0 V1 d e d funds Iqr paying future taxes A advance. ALTERNATIVE Tiie council decided to Agtooe the new tax, wiAA goes Ato Ae tax ritsr rejecting a proeffect July I, is expected to ■ ‘ bring A ibout $1 million A new revtnue annually. City Manager Anaa DaMoose had to cut expenses by _____ig more city anAfoyas- TsseAy-three were Aid off lari fall. . Votwa recently rejected • 1 to Acr^ the d^’s tax. Court-Martial for Objector Descendant of Wilson Secretary of Navy | FT. BENNING, Ga. (AP)-A' court^nartial has been ordered tor a 21-year-old Ft. BenAng conscientious objectew vdw Is al grandnephew of President Woodrow Wilson’s secretary of Ae Navy. No date Ma been set for tiie proceeding. Spec. 4 Btarry Muir A charged vrith refusihg to wear his imi-form while on duty, vAich carries a maximum ptaalty of five years imixisonmait pwi dishoniH'abte discharge. Muir also u charged wlA vio-Ating post restrictions given him as punishment. This carries a maximum sentence of A years inq>risonment and disAmorabte discharge. ‘PAID TO MURDER’ Muir has steadfastly refused to wear hA uniform, claiming he A being prid for murder. The soWier’s Awy«, M. UugMin McDonald of Ae American CSvU Liberties Union, (Aarged Tuesday A Atlanta that btoir has been denied access to newsmen since being placed A a stockade Jan. 4. An Arny spokesman retried that the sol-dW did not want to see tiie press. He said MuA’s fiancee has visitod him. ★ ★ ★ “The Army has d«ie every-thAg posrible to avrid publid-ty,” McDonald said. “HieyM Ifi» to salt hAi away as qtdetly IS Aey can.” McDonald atoo diarged .that< Midr was fo>^ several weeks A a cell four feri hi#i which he said to • MMsore nontMHy reserved tor Court Mulling Hoffa Appeal CmaNNATI, Ohio *(AP) -The 6A U.S. Circuit (tourt of AppeaA A considering for a second time an appeal for a new trial for Teamster? Union Presl: dent James R. Hoffa, who is carrying on an extensive legal battle to stay nut of prison. Judges Paul C. Weick, Clifford O’SuJUvan and Lester L. Cecil htard arguments Tuesday on two motions asking for a retrial of Hoffa’s 1964 conviction in Chattanooga, Tenn., on Jury-tampering chuges. ' k k k The head of Ae 1.7-mlAon member Abor union was sentenced to eight years A prA<® and fAed 810,000. BoA Ae Appeals Cou(t and Ae U.S. Supreme Court have upheld Ae conviction. Hoffa has until Saturday to petition for a rehearing beforo the Supreme Court. Curtain Up on Dramatic Art Academy (Continued From Page One) be Ae first segment of Ae School of PerformAg Arte, which nltimately will Aclnde coaservatorles A music and dance. Architects have designed a |42 • million classroom-office building to house the fchool, and 8750,000 to begm coni^ction is included in Ae university’s current capital outlay budget. k' k k To be completed by Ae sum-mv of 1968, Ae' buildti^i Ater would be joined by a 1,200-seat Aeater which wouM be Ae permanent home of Ae John Fer-naU Company. CULTURAL EVENTS Projected along wiA Ae Aeater is a large auditorium to serve southeastern Michigtn as a center for oiltural events and laige gatheri^. No spedfie pfoos have been made for tUs bidldiiig which will be a future protoct Its fundAg is not Aclnded A Ae five-year OU cNiltal ontiay |daa developed last year. Steps to establish QU as a major center for Ae perftnming arts began four years ago wiA Ae launching of the Meadow Brook Music Festival. ★ ★ ★ The next step was the oreation of Ae summer Meadow Brook School of ktosic. Stuitente A the Academy of Dramatic Art wfil frilow a flexible 2-year course of study. They nuy bO hl^ly talented stndoite ririit ont of high school, althbugb FernaU expects those selected WUl be A Aeir 20s or 80s. ‘“I am looking for genuine acting taAnt ^ I cannot stress this too much,” Fernald said. “A good education A desirable, smne acting experience may be vaAable, but the real criterion A talent.” ★ ★ ★ The May auditions will be held in Detroit, Chicago and New York, and possibly at oAer centers, If necessary. Similar auditions will be held later to additional classes of 15 eadb to begin in January and April of 1968. INK AAA Tips on Avoiding fbe Balky-Mofor Blues CAr won’t start? CSiances are you n9ed a tune-up, a battery charge or even a new batteiy. WlAout these, coW weaAer blues may continue to haunt your automobile. Robert M. SmiA, manager of emergency read service for AAA, died Aese nreas-riugs and pdnA aiid battery—as the lAely tronble spots. Noting Ae hOavy car-startAg business being done by service statipns, SmiA^saA It wouA be difficult to get a car A for a tun^. ★ ★ ★ However, he saA Ae battery should at least be checked, making sure it is fully chained and full df water. CWJE) EFFECT The oont Aued cold weather has caused auto batteries to “just wear doten” from grinding. SAiiA did offer Aese borne remedto to baifcy ears: • A 75 or 100 watt li^t bulb can be hung on Ae engine new Ae distributor. The heat from Ae light will aid early morning car starting. ■k ir ir • After turning Ae engine off to Ae last time at night, pump the accelerator three or four times. ThA puts gas A Ae carburrior for easier starting A Ae morning. ALTERNATTVE • Sometimes a Uarirot can be wrw*d round Ae «i-gine insteed of using the U^t bulb. SmUh did not rate the two methods. The Auto dub officAl emphasized Aat a full taiA of gas should be maAtained to avoM gis lAe freeze. . k it k ' When Bttempting to start a eoU.automobile, all power acceesorto should be turned off. This wouM Acliide radio, heater, windshieM wipers and oAer powerdralning equip- n wvj BAfl iwim THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 8, 1967 Housing Study Unit Gets Official Status PonUae Housing Studygenerallyexpecte^ltobees-Conunlttee (PCHC) i; jin official tablished” for p 1 a n n I n g the city committee today following workable program, action on a revised motion last I d^eion* CORUlUSSiOnCrS 8pprOV6d a lVo«Mn tailmml tionsbemadetothe cdmmissionl > within 60 days son, Mrs. Clayton Role of 33 N. Anderson, and H. Vere Hodges of 224 Ottawa were named to the Board of Review. Appidnted to fill a vacancy on ■ ~ " Trial Board was Jaji Approval of the new un|ts was Wompanled by allocati^ of a At the same time, the com-preliminary planning loan in the mission reaffirmed the independence of the minority housing subcommRtee of the Civic Improvement Advisinry Commit-tec. ★ w. w A move to place the subcommittee under the aegis of the OHSC resulted last week in withdrawal of recognition of the larger committee pending a look at federal urban development requirements. A bulletin of the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) states that a minority housing subcommittee “is. J. DAVID VANDERVEEN Resources Center Exec Appointed Unanimous approval was given by the City Commission last night to appointment of J. David VanderVeen as'city project representative for the proposed Human Resources Center. VanderVeen, presently acting manager of Pontiac ,Kllnicipal Airport, joins B. C. VanKough-nett, ciunmunity action director for the Pontiac schoojs, for planning work on the project. f Manager Joseph A. VanderVeen’s appointment, said he was “hopeful” VanderVeen’s duties at the airport “can be reduced starting in the very near future.” Full transfer of VanderVeen’s airport responsibilities designation of a new manager by the county, which acquired the facility in a land swap with thecity. ★ ★ ★ The project under consideration is proposed for an area bound by new M59, East Boulevard, South Boulevard and Saginaw. A $10,000 planning grant to carry out an initial study was obtabied by the board of education last September from the Mott Foundation. In a cover letter accompanying his recommendation, Warren described the resource center as a “pioneering effort” because of joint city-schod efforts on the project. Previous proposals in other cities, he said, have been limited to school district participa- Rutbenberg of 71 Dwight. ★ ★ ★ Commissioners also suppcffted the City Planning Conunission recommendation of denial of a request to rezone to C-1 a residential lot at Joslyn and Brooks. Age Restriction Atfirmed on Bar, Restaurant Help Despite a warning that the presoit city ordinance “might be illegal,” city commin^oners last night refused by a 4-3 vote to allow persons 18-20 years to in liquor-by-glhss tablishments. ★ ★ The question was brought before the c(»nmt8siuld be permitted to wmic in bars and restaurants, said he objected to the proposed A change in the statute had been backed by a number of Pontiac restaurateurs and tavern owners. Death Takes Sukarno Aide in His Jail Cell JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) -Chaerul Saleh, mice one of President Sukarno’s Closest advisers, died early today in his jail cell, military sources reported. The sources said they believed Saleh had a heart attack. His body was taken to his home, where a large cwwd gathered' ★ ★ ★ Saleh, a third deputy premier until the army took over Indone-sia’|*"|^miment last year, had been in jail more than 10 months awaiting trial charges of corruption and involvement in the attempted (Communist coup in October 1965. He was 50. ‘It’s too bad he died in prison,” said one military source. "Now everyone will think interrogators had something to do with it.” ARRESTED LAST MARCH Saleh was arrested wita 15 other Cabinet ministers March. Two of them, former Foreign Minister Subandrio and former Central Bank Minister Muda Dalam, have been sentenced to death, No date had been set fc^ Saleh’s trial. Government sources said Saleh was believed to have de-pwited $100,000 of state funds iii his own bank accounts abroad. it it it Some persons who knew Saleh said he was a man bf co: erable ability with a talent for organization. They said he was not a Communist but leaned to tim left since the political wind was blowing that way. Don't Ntqloef Slipping FALSETEETH Du tklM tMtu drop, tup w wobbi* when you MUt. tot, hugb or inee»r Don't bo annoyod ond omboiroiMd by ouch bwdloopo. FABTKETH. an •nniUno (non-oold) powder to iprln-kle on your ploteo, keep* falae troth Boi«annlyeet01yeeconll4ent fool-o( OMUitty end added eomfort. Mo lummy, lopey mate or (oelinc. Denturee that at ere otMntUl to health. Bee your dentiet regularly. Oet ntBTKBTH at all drug oounteri. Spring is just around the cor< ner! And things are brighter, sprightlier, peppier! Colors, patterns, styles — you’ll like ’em. New Shipments Arriving Daily M&tmaah Clotkiers-Uniforms "After-Six" Tuxedo Rentals 908 W. Huron at Telegraph ^ I. Pontiac m a3A0 im THE PONTIAC PRESS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1067 til aud-vintei foisituie STOREWIDE REDUCTIONS! Magnificeiit Maple at Savings! Exclutiv* at StEWART'GLENN COMPANY in the Pontioe en iU at his home. He was pastor of St. Nicbolas Ukrainian Cathofic Church of Muskegon Heights, Mich., before coming to Woonsocket. TUB WltLETS dind so around to forcing lump raises , and the use of a new suit bid to rtww the strong nonforcing raise.” Princess Irene, 24, an accomplished idanist, attended a closed rehearsal of the Detroit Synmhony Orchestra Tuesday and visited the University of Mich^an’s school of Music Monday. The princess’trip to Michigan li part 0? a five-week visit to the UJS. to learn about music here. Chairman Picked for GOP Confab LANSING (AP) - Weldon 0. Yeager of Detroit will serve as temporary chairman of the Republican State Convention Feb. 25 in Detroit’s Cobo Hall, the GOP State Central Committee announced Tuesday. •if A ★ Yeager, named by Gov. George Romney to direct the State Workmen’s Ckmopmisation Dqmrtment in 1963, is chairman of the party’s 17lh (fongressimial District Committee. It has been found that ooi^-sions are needed for successful prosecution of Mony cases la fewer Uua 10 psr cent of ttie tHE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1967 Ttie following are top prices covering sales ol locaUy grown produce by ipowen and sold by tfc^ in wholesale package lots stock Market Mixed, Active Quotaf tns are furnished by the ------- - . .,„j Detroit Bureau of Markets F^ay. Produce NB.W York (APJ-Ihe stock I market was mixed in active Itradii^ at the opening today. I (^ing blocks included Jer* _ vaoiTS .Jsey Standarti, unchanged at MktaSt Md, ta.";;;;;:;" 4jo634 on 5,200 shares; American iSSSt off % at 56% on Appgj. ........jjiiiSOO shares; General Motors, ntiiiti ......eJunchanged at 74% on 3,400 cabbao^?'^!l^, i» shar^^ and RCA, up % at 49% on 2,400 shares. shares, Ford Motor dipped V« to<57% on 1,300 shares. Opening on blocks of 2,000 46% and Westinghouse gained % at 53%. ■ ★ ^thlehem eased V4 to 34V4 0h 1 block of 1,700 shares. Consolidated Edison advance % tw 34% on a block of 1,300 shares. Douglas Aircraft slipped Vt to General Electric advanced to 89% on a Mock of 1,500 shares. Tuesday the Associated Press 60-$tock Average declined 1.7 to 315.9. AMERICAN EXCHANGE Prices were mixed on the American Stock Exchange. The New York Stock Bcchange Free U.S. Shot a Hit in Ghana 30^000 Given Dose of Smallpox Vaccine ACCRA, Ghana (AP) - The most popular free sample at Ghana’s first international trade fair is a jet-injected dose of smallpox vaccine from the United States. By the end of the fair’s first ■ Tuesday,. 30,000 persons NEW YORK (AV) :*?.Bx£hgnoe laloctad n Poultry and Eggs DETRO.?*,TOr'S!f'it?R.rp,«,4 for NO. 1 llvt poultry: hMvv tvM hwio ' OETROIT laes DETROIT IAP)-E« price* doieft by first receiver* (Includ.... -- Whites Grebe A (umbo 34.39; extre lerge 33W^Vb; Isrob 32W.34W; medium 34.37; (mS!) Hilii Lbw MSI Cba.| i 33H 330b 330b + '/blscMniey 1.40 41 479b 43 + Ob Schtring 1 34'A 3AVb 34SCM Cp .40b 4404 440b 440b + 4 44Vb 4404 .......Sear* Roe la' 1l'/4 11’A 1l/b 23 29'A had filed into the American exhibit’s geodesic dome, bated their right arms and taken a relatively ptonless jab from a portable hydraulic-powered hy-fxidermic. Chddren under 4 also Net get measles inoculations — but (hbt.) High lew u»t ehg.|gyith jess good nature and more' 10 a% »ob 5^ - obitears. Dangerous Speculotor Amateur in Mart Odd Most tots ride into the dome on their mothers’ backs. “Some persons stand in line without even being sure why they are standing there,” said Dr. Bernard C9iallenor of Brooklyn, N.Y., and the U.S. PubUc Health Service. SECOND DOSE « “I/o one has chickened out 4b when reaching the jet hvpoder-lAjmic. The Ghanaian tecmcians giving the shots have caught some customers coming back for a second does, the theory being if one dose is good a second one is better.” In popularity, the vaccination booth runs far ahead Of a counter where Ghanaians can buy soft chocolate ice cream for 10 pennies. w ★ ★ Elsewhere at the fair, in{ which 31 countries are participating, the giveaways tend run to pamphlets. One illustrates the merits of Czechoslovak tractors. ★ ★ ★ The Ghanaians begin lining up for vaccination when the fair opens to the public at 4 p.m. Ctoe technician jabs. A second wipes off any excess vaccine. A thkd sticks a protective cotton wad on the puncture. A fourth hands out a big sheet of paper explaining that the patjent should not scratch the wound. ★ f^.-,. Vaccindtionsr started on Hie fair’s first day with members of Ghana’s ruling National Liberation Council rolling up their sleeves. Among them were Lt. Gen. J. A. Ankrah, the council chairman, and Maj. Gen. fl. K. Kotoka, (^mmander of the Both veteran soldiers look^ away when jabbed. Business Notes BY JOHN CUNNIFF (Af) BuineH News Analyst NEW YORK « The amateur stock market speculabw is one of the naost curious psychological packi^es produced by the human race. He soihetinies forgets so as to hide from painii He convinces! liimseif that has learned lesson, but i ten just so can go back more of th same trouble. In the mari to make a killing — to double CUNNIFF his money overnight or make a 50 per cent profit in a week or for some such foolish reason — he also desperately holds to a stock that is going the opposite way. Said one of them: “It prising how one can come to live comfortably with imminrat financial ruin, or, at the least, a devastating loss. You get used to living in what is really % rotting structure.” *11118 is the statement of a young man who set out to double his money and, instead, lost an inheritance, his insurance money,'his wife’s savings and the cadi he had set aside fw a rainy day. He listened to hot tips, bought impulsively, fired brokers and jjlilted others whose ethics could be questioned, confused his purposes, adjusted to losses but became even greedier with gains. Plane Hijack by Egyptian 'Was Smooth' A West Bloomneld Towiuhip man, ^fiomar Spencer, witt recently counted As the lOO^XWth member of the National Association of Ufe Underwriters. Spencer of 2239 Grindley is an agent for the American National Insurance Co. Ihe Pontiac Association of Ufe Underwriters has 140 members. Hie president is John H. Salow of Massachusetts Mutual Ufe Insurance Co. Edwin M. Ver Lee Jhas been appointed to the newly created post of regional director of sales for Vlasic Food Products Co., Lathrup Village. Ver Lee of 9145 Bandy Ridge, White Lake Township, will be responsible for continuing marketing VER i-W-w emphasis in Michigan and Northwest (Riio. M. Eugene Davis has been appointed general office manager of roughs Corp.’s world headquarters in Detroit. Davis of 6845 Alderiey Way, West Bloom-I Reid Township, served as man-of distribution smvices for the firm’s business machines group prior to his recent promotion. Tom Bateman of Bateman Realty Co. recently received the Traders Qub award for a display materiai used in trade i^wratlons. He wm cited by the International Waders Club-Exchange Division of the Nationalllnstitute of ReM Es-ta^ Bniers during a meeting in Mlaans^cb. Jos^ H.\Bamier, maiager of the main ofRoe of Birmingham Bloomfield Bank, was re-cmtly elected an assistant cashier. Bamier of 161 Edgelake, Waterford TowmB^, afta fermerly manager of the bank’s Wood-ward-Bennaville office. He Joined thia bank in March 1966. AMMAN, Jordan (AP) - The hijacking of an Egyptian airliner over the Red Sea went so smoothly that most of the pas-smigers aboard did not realize what had happened, s(»ne of the passengo's tidd nevrsmen today. There was no panic — or even excitement — in the passengers’ cabin. “Most of us didn’t know what was happening,’’' said Norah MacKendrick, 60, a (Canadian tourist. “Everything w% carried off very coolly and without any fuss at all.” The plane was fwced to divert to the Jordanian Red Sea port of Aqaba by an Egyptian, Riyad Kamal Hajjaj, who ddected to Jordan. BROUGHT TO AMMAM ’Ibe 41 persons aboard, including Miss k^Kendrick and three Germans, were brout^t to Ammam. Ail but Hajjaj are scheduled to return to Cairo aboard the same plane. The Russian-built Antonov was on a flight from Cairo to the Egyptian Red Sea resort of Hurghada, 350 vmi|es south of Suez. It had been scheduled to go on to Lux(ff before making the return trip. ★ * * ‘f didn’t feel there was anything wrong about the flight. You see, I have not done much flying,” said Miss MacKen-drick^ who is from Galt, Ont. She is an extended Middle DAVIS Carrier Officers Query Lensman Some will recognize bis words as those of the anonymous investor who wrote, fhe book “Wiped out.”' The'anoQymoiM Investor says he lost 160,000, ^en though the msrket was rising. Ibe story reads Iflce fiction. Ibe author says it is fact. ,, ' it h ■: ‘ One big mutual fund distribute has offered the book to its salesmen in bulk lots for possible distribution to potential customers, for in its own way it is an advertisement for s o u n d JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) — An amateur photographer in a din^y snapping close-ups of the U.S. carrie Franklin D. Roosevelt was hauleif Bboard the ship fe questioning, -the Rand Daily Mail said today.' The paper said intelligence officers qjioard the carriers apparently suspected Peter Mel-liar of Cape Town of being a Communist agent. * * ★ Meiliar told the paper a massive steel platform was suddenly lowered and scooped him out of the harbor Monday like an egg spooned frc«n a f^ing pan. He said that after close questioning, he produced his South African identity card «nd that aniarently satisfied theirfficers. returned his camera, gave him coffee and let him go. The Roosevelt left Cape Town .Jonday 24 hours Miead M schedule after wmtroversy because shM'e leave for her crew im canceled chie to South Africa’s racial segregation policies. CREWME34 MISSING Cape Town poUce picked up three white crewmen of the Roosevelt who were missing aftar the ship sailed. The men, all under 21, were found at a white family’s home in downtown Cape Town. ’Ihey told tile poUce they wanted to see the city. ♦ A After a night at a police ste-U(Hi, they were to be hand^ over to the U.S. Embassy for return' to the United States. GOOD LESSON This amateur speculator, who didn’t have rugs on his Maidiat-tan apartment floor because he neeeded the money for stocks, lost his money between 1957 and 1964, then wrote a book in which he convinced himself that a les- Boost Sought for Head start Other .passengers repwted they saw a man enter the cockpit after the plane had passed Suez and then heard him dimip luggage behind the door. FLOWN LONGER ‘We didn’t feel there was anything wrong at all,” said Henry Kattewi, a retired Egyptian government official. “But some of us realized that we had flown longer than we would have to reach Hurghada. “Just before we landed at Aqaba, the pilot came into the passenger compartmoit and told us we would be making an emergency landing at Aqaba and to stay in our seats.” . News in Brief Some I246 in change was re-pwted stolen yesterday from the Tiroberlane Bar, 18 N. Perry, police said the burglar apparently hid until the bar was closed, then forced open h juke box, cigiffette madrine and cash WASHINGTON (AP) - President Johnson asks Congress to^ day to strengthen the Head Start program and ixovide legislation designed to reduce juvenile delinquency. Johnson is expected to recommend in a special message tiiat the Head Start program, now for preschool childroi, start earlier and last longer. * ★ ★ Other recommendations are expected to include new todi-niques for child development, a series of health ixoposals, state welfare program and increasing Social Security benefits for fatherless children. He is back in the maiket. “Not heavily,” he said in an interview. “I got an advance and I got hold of some other dough.” Hbjrould, perimpslwve returned long before but “It emic. I had no dough.” He is behind'again. The advance referred to was cash payment for his book in advance of publication, Authorship, he feels has permitted him to talk out his problem, h i s heartache, his loss. ’It’s history. I’ve learned to live with tt.” MORE MONEY This man soon win get some more money, the income from sales of his book, which now exceeds 20,009 copies. What will be do with this money? Tm going to spend It ace capsde Jm. 27 at Cape Kennedy, Fla., kUling the three qmcemen, Anderson aid. A briefcase containfeg oan-eras and photographic accessories, total value $uo By ROGER E. SPEAR (Q) “I would appreciate aay informatioa on BrazOIan Light ft Power, which ykdcUi 10 per cent. Is the growfe poteatial geod? Shomd we buy this for a young boy’s future? Onrln-vestment elub b • u g h t 110 Rank Organization. Should we hold for recovwy?” T. R. (A) As a general polii^, I advise you to steer clear of fore^ stodts undo* present world conditions. Relatively few investors can keep abreast of changing government piilicies and the variations in toeign markets. Brazalian Ught ft Power Is a utiBty supplying electricity and gas in majw areas of BrazU. Polttical uncertainties to tills country and wide fluctuations in the curroMy makes the shares qitUe spea^tive and entirely unsuitable as a growth vdihUa. ★ ★ * Futtiemnire, any stock whose yield is. substantially higher than the going rate is registering doctot as to the safety of the dtvhteod. For tbe bity ja tpies-Oaoaoiidatod Rank Xerox-owned Jointiy with Xerox Corp. ★ ★ ★ (0) “Onr tnist fond b in-American Tetepheae, Connecticut Nntional Bank, General Foods, General Motors, Inland Steel, New Kigtend Gas ft Electric, Norfolk ft Western Md J«rs^ Standvd. ’Htese stocks were bought when the maitet was Ugh aid we have losses in some. Onr objective b iaoome, which is dbided anung the befrs. Fbase ^e pe year •tlaian an these steeks.” (A) You h a v e an unusually good list, weB suited to ^our objective. I have no changes to suggest. You might inwove your yield by switdiing Goieral Foods, but I would not give up tfab high-grade growtii s^ for a rdativ^ increase in income. Please don’t wmry about the timing of your pur- would buy Feoib where continiiBd growtii appears weU assured. Rankba aottee *froat British oiterpriae which liaa been hurt by tiie govarii-!l .. . - , stock but I noovery because York, I$- Y. own ive likely in roeoyec foOy over a period of time. To erder year cepy eUtei^ Spear’s IS-pnge GUde to Bug-eaaUil Investiaf,»dty thin ‘ send $1.11 wUh year name aid addnaa b» Ragir E. Bpear, cars If Hm ' Patitlac Pn«, Box 1«8, (Capyright, 1U7) sMilflMI THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 196T ■loin the Ski-Dop famUies (tm/re having fun all winteri com6 see, come drive' the sensational new ski-daa WORLD'S URGEST SELLING SNOWMOBILE xiaeBROs. PONTIAC RO. at OPOYKE PONTIAC, MICH. TELEPHONE FE 4;16I2 and FE 44134 1 ms BkOS.iNC. pepfnrc/hi- (n NEW YORK (AP) Has Adolidi Ruppv veteran basket' ball coach at the University of Kentucky, won 757 or 762 games in his 37-year career/? ‘With the nation's winningest active coach closing in on Phpg Allen’s all-time record of 77Lat Kansas this has become a key question in the collegiate hoop CHILDREN OUTGROWN SKIS, SLEDS, TOBOGGANS? SELL THEM WITH A LOW COST PONTUC PRESS aASSIFIED AD. TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 332-8181. Rupp Neors Mark Kentucky, NCAA Diff^on Record jlump, now have won four in a row W a 10-8 record on which the NCAA hnd the university agfee. ' The five games Kentucky played last August in Israel in the Initemational University Tournament at Tel Aviv is the cause of the discrepancy between the NCAA and the UK records. According to the official basketball guide published by the National CoUegiate Athletic Association the 66-year-old Rupp started the current season with 747 victories against 152 defeats. This was after Kentucky’s 27-2 record last season which carried the Wildcats to the final of the NCAA championship tourney in which they were upset by Texas Western for the national collegiate title. However, the UK basketball brochure lists Kentucky’s record last season as 32-2 instead of 27-2. Thus, according to the university, Rupp started this season with 752 victories. EARLY SLUMP The Wildcats, after an early The Wildcats beat the University‘of Warsaw 67-58, University of Cambridge 104-45, the University of Salonika 91-60, the University of Istanbul 82-37 and Warsaw again, this time for the toumev title, 87-57. Top ‘S' Falls MUSKEGON (AP) - UslKP aided Muskegon knocked off previously unbeaten Muskegon Heights, No. 1 ranked team in the Associated Press high school basketball poll, 68-59 Tuesday night. The loss was the Heights’ first in 13 games. * The NCAA regards these five gaques as exhibitions, the ^UK doM not. * * w Walter Byers, executive director of the NCAA in Kansas City, referred all queries to Larry Klein, director of the National Collegiate' Athletic Bureau which handles the organization’s records and statistics. Kldki could not be reached for New York. If the five Tel Aviv games are counted Rupp has won games. He would be No. 2 the all-time list with two more than Ed Diddle of Western Kentucky, who retired after the 1964 season with 759 victories. However, whether the five , games in Israel count or not, Allen’s 771 record is safe for at least another year. Kentucky has elgkt games left and Rupp still would be one short of Allen assuming Kai-tucky won all eight. If the Israel games don't count and Ken- tucky wins its last eight, Rupp would ‘ i have 765. nCK YOUR PRICE ON GOODYEAR RRES 3-TN^n Cord All-H^tbo' Tiie NO MONEY DOWN ON OUR EASY PAY PLAN- GOODYEAR for Pick-Ups and Panels GOODYEAR RANCH AND I • Tufsyn robber and 3-T nylon cord! • Get truck-tire ttrength at passenger car tire prices! Mms «bit at anhr 13 e.00lie laba-tjrpt blackwill, alua rad. Ea.TaatL4l and ncag^a eatlni. CItack our allMr low-prictd dm tadayl GET A ^IDEAL FROM THE 1TIRE COMPANY BUY NOW AT EVERYDAY LOW PRICES! Goodyear Traction All-Weather ^J\ AS )|4» S1.SS Fed. Ex. Tax a Extra-mileage Tufsyn rubber and 3-T Nylon Cord • Track tested for loO miles at TOO M.P.H. The North Hill Classic League bowlers last Wednesday turned on the power and generated 22 series in the 600 class plus one 700 total and a new team high series. Four-O-Six Bar posted a whopping 3373 pins led by Jerry Hoffman’s 255-255-225-735, Le^ and 19 be eligible for the draft first, instead of men 24, 25 and 26 as now provided by the system. After registration and examination, the eligible youths would be included in a lA pool and chosen for the draft by a lottery. One of White’s hands was bleeding after he had smashed a window and led others to safety. Flash A U. S. Army truck and a Grand Trunk Western Railroad freight train collided at a city crossing just before 1:10 p.m. today. Pontiac police said they had no immediate reports of injuries in the collision, which took place on Jackson just west of West Wide Track. Cold Follows Snow in East NEW YORK (IPi-Bitter cold hampered the massive snow-removal job as the East struggled today to return to normalcy after a paralyzing blizzard. The cold spread into the East from the Midwest and plunged overnight temperatures to below zero on the heels of the worst Eastern snowstorm in two years. and others whose apartments and homes had no heat. Hotels did a booming business last night. MANY SCHOOLS CLOSED Most schools were closed again today all along the coast, including those in New York, the nation’s largest city. At least 39 deaths were attributed to the blizzard. ADAM C. POWELL In New York City, where the mercury dropped to 11 degrees at 2:30 a.m., more than 100 persons took refuge in state armories opened by Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller to house the snowbound In New Jersey, Gov. Richard J. Hughes declared today a banking holiday. Major airports in the East remained closed overnight as crews worked to clear runways to allow at least a limited resumption of operations. These included Kennedy and LaGuardia airports in New York, Newark Airport and Philadelphia International Airport. In Philadelphia, where 14 inches of snow fell, the city pressed a snow-melting machine into duty on an experimental basis but freezing temperatures proved it ineffective. The machine sucks up snow, melts it and pumps the water onto the street to run into sewers. But the water froze before it could run off. The city planned to use salt to combat this. The blizzard dumped 13 inches of snow in New York City, 10 in Washington, D.C., and 9 in Boston. The snowfall in New York was the heaviest in six years. SAFETY CHECK — Service station attendant Michad Lewis of 5897 Wiiliams Lake, Waterford Township, checks the ‘antifreeze in still another car. The check, requested by many motorists, has proved necessary witlr the area’s severe eold weather. Warm(?) Trend TODAY’S TEMPERATURES Mdnt. ... -4 8 a.m -4 2 a.m -5 16a.m 1 4 a.m -5 Noon...... ... . 14 6 a.m -6 . 2 p.m..... 18 'The weatherman is likely to give temperatures a boost tomorrow with the high heading for 28 to 35. The low will be a warmer 15 to 20 tonight. FLAMES SPREAD He said it started as a “very small fire” but the flames spread rapidly, There’s a chance of snow flurries tonight and tomorrow. Friday’s fore(»st is partly sunny and warmer. . Southwest to westerly winds at IjS to 17 miles per hour will become southwest at 7 to 12 miles tonight. Many of the 75 or more diners trapped by the flames made their way to safety by breaking out windows and crawling onto the roof surrounding the penthouse. One of them was Bill White of Dothan, Ala., a truckline president who was with Mr; and Mrs. Pepper. '66 Crime Down in Birmingham Birmingham went in reverse of a national trend and found itself with a 12 per cent decrease in crime last year. “All in all, I’m pleased with the total picture,” Police Chief Ralph W. Moxley said today after compilation of his annual report. Crime reached a peak in 1965 with 15,691 investigated incidents in Birmingham, but it dipped to 13,808 last year. Moxley said the figure is still above tile previous three-year average, but is pleased by the trend. Increases were noted in car thefts and home burglaries. However, Moxley said that, late in the year, new procedures were instituted that cut incidences considerably and that this reductim has carried into 1967. Patrol methods have been changed to provide more coverage in residential areas and procedures on covering the business districts have been revised, Moxley reported. He said, “Citizens can help furtiier reduce these types of crime by keeping (Continued on Page A-2, Gol. 1) r" —^“1 In Today's * Press Powell Refuses to Answer House Panel's Questions Curtain Up on OU Dramatic Art Plans Art 'n' Cranbrook presentH^ay-oiU look at the car world — PAGE B-7. WASHINGTON (AP) - Adam Clayton Powell, acting on his lawyers’ advice, today refused to answer questions from a House committee examining«his qualifications to be seated in Congress. City Affairs ' Housing study committee gets official statiis — PAGE A-8, hall of Fame Former Lion Bobby Layne honored — PAGE D-1. Area News ............A-4, A-S Astrology . . . . B-8 Bridge ................... B-8 Crossword Puzzle D-11 Comics .. B-8 Editorials A-6 Food Section C-2 Markets ................. .0< Obituaries A-ll Sp(Hts ..............D-1—D-$ Theaters C-l TV-Radlo Programs D-11 Wibon, Earl D-« Women’s Pages B-l-B-8 As the questioning proceeded, Powell, a New York Democrat, said he would have to withdraw from the hearing. -Rep. Emanuel Celler, D-N.Y., efaair-man of the committee considering the case, asked for a brief recess and clea^ the packed, hearing room to discuss the move. Powell was flanked by seven lawyers as he sat before the nine-member panel, and, bn their advice, refused to be sworn in or answer any questions other than those dealing with his age, citizenship and residency. Those are the only quaUfications for House membertiiip mentioned in the Constitution, and Powell’s attorneys said the committee had no authority to inquire beyond them. Plans to launch the Academy of Dramatic Art at Oakland University have been unveiled, along with the announcement that a nationwide hunt for the first students will begin in May, A class of 15 talented stage aspirants will begin studies this fall under director John Femald, who is initiating in this country a plan evolved during his 10 years as head of the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in London. Femald’s second enterprise at OU will follow the premiere season of the John Fernald Company of Meadow Brook Theatre, which opened Jan. 3. The academy will be the teaching arm qLjhe resident professional theater emn-pany and will be closely United to it. Many members of the company arc Americans who trained under Fernald in London, and most of his staff of assistants, technicians and faculty are former RADA associates. CHOREOGRAPHER PROPOSED OU AimmON.— A sketch superimposed on the Kresge Library, initially would house the Academy of an amial view of Oakland University shoWs the location (A) Dramatic Art. The Academy will accept its first students next of the proposed $4.2-miilion schlool of performing arts. The fall. Meadow Brook Theatre (B) is in the foregrouiMi. building, scheduled for completion in summer of 1968 east of ' ’ v John Broome, choreographer for the Meadow BrOok Theatre, will be in charge of coursies in movement and dance. The Mademy of Dramatic (Continued oh Page ^-3|, Ool. 8) I A—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 12(g 40 Die in Tasmania Holocaust HOBART, Tasimania (AP) Forty persons were known dead today and 10 were missing after a raging holocaust of bush fires devastated the southern tier of Tasmana. ' Fanned by TOrmile winds, the worst fire inwthe history ^ tlJe Australian island state roared across rural areas Tuesday and virtually wiped out 12 towns. A total of 012 houses and 50 other buiWngs were burned out at an estimated cost of more than $11-million. * ★ Rural areas were a blackened expanse littered with dead in the streets. Many had lost i degrees, sparks ignited new their homes also and some had fires in houses ahead of those lost relatives. ^ being tackled with a steadily its Brighton camp for those who were homeless. The Are began as several in-signiAcant, seasonal summer blazes in the foothills of Mt. Wellington. , , A ' 1 it t\ * They joined and then came the a^ul moment when the 106,-000 residents of Hobart, the capital, realized they had an advancing fire in front and only water behind them. "It was our Black Tuesday,” said the deputy niayor, Dame Mabel Miller. “The sky became black as midnight at 2 o’clock in the afternoon. There were no decreasing water pressure. Housewives ran screaming the streets, begging motor- ists to stop and help them fight { homes were burning, looters the fires. But the motorists wer^j stole, clothings furniture, elec-hurrying to their own homes, tltricali goods and I television setsi Ihad*: sheep and cattle. Three of the state’s biggMt|jj_jjjj power — no nothing, industries were blackmed ruinsi^* ^ ^ hoped.” - a brewery, a carbide compa- « ny and a big fish cannery. Their employes stood stunned! As the temperature topped 102 Police rushed to West Hobart where a dazed old woman sat in the gutter and said that while 16 Steadily the fire grew, engulfing houses on one side and apple orchards — pride of “The Apple Isle” — on the other. Intense heat shriveled ttie trees heavily laden with fruit and turned them to ashes. ★ Children wandered aimlessly through smoke-blackened ruins, their eyes streaming with tears. Schools were turned into Slayings lead Said Best Yet Birmingham Area News Defective Heads Youth Bureau Rumor Says Suspect I. ®«*«0Mve Fred Harbruegw has Is Jailed in Saginaw.j^n p^ferge of the .Jtps^nshlpyOu'lb bureau. Y SAGINAW (AP)- Authorities' He began his said today “we have the best duties'this w^k g , , tu- t I, jleeO we’ve had so far”! in the ®eid the ‘They took every tong I had^^t^^^g, ^ two el-^fw posiUon in my littie house,” she said.ljg^j ,gg fulfills an ambi- “evenmybed.” ^y“ tion he bad But Police Chief Joseph Bu-| when he joined genske and State Police Sgt. *i>e toce as a Derwood L. Finkbeiner refused'Patrolman «Ve to say anything more or am-i year* ago. firm rumws one suspect hadj Harbrue- ger has taken Harbmeger [special police training at Michi- BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP- at 3234 Millwell, Keego Harbor, with their four children. Services are currently being held in Unitarian Church, 651^ Nurses wept as they tended burned persons of all ages. Near Margate a policeman saw ISO children sheltering^from nes after being hurriedly let ™ of school. Ordering them to out tfc- onwi tion of the murder of Carl Mid-numerous seminars on A well-known journalist, she will iHicnss in dialogue with Rabbi Ernst J. Conrad, “The Several Worlds of. American BIRMINGHAM - Jong-soo Choi, Korean educatot', is^a ris-itor to Birmingham public schools this week, talking with teachers, administrators Rabbi Conrad is spiritual lead-Choi is visiting the U.S. under of The New Temple, the auspices of the International i Sanders, a graduate of Teacher Development Program. |vygHesiey College, is presently He is observing techniques j ggpyjjjg gg gn adjunct assistant which may be helpful to him in professor of writing at New York teaching English at his school in West Dae-shin Dong, Korea. University. makeshift hospitals and relief 'the flames away until school ™ numerous senunars on ion K. Sanders, seraor centers, and the army opened buses arrived to evacuate them.Juvenile proble^ will spei* Russians Face Doom in China HONG KONG ™^*n ^ re y abandoned by Tuesday. Police night of a 89.7-mimon appro-82,^,000. , 1" said they had no idea then of priation ordinance. The low bidders on the notes, comoleted bv the sum- the motive. | A quick, unanimous vote on aimed at financing of J ^ '.............................RM, were Morgan Guaranty™**^ ” me. the ordinance followed an eight-Shocked by the murders. Sag-second “public hearing” on the inaw residents were reported budget. None of the 11 persons present in commission chambers offered comment on the budget. Pending the fate of efforts to increase the city’s limited millage rate, tax rates to Pontiac will likely remain constant at $17.78 per $1,060 assessed valuation, based on the budget. City Manager Joseph A. War- grimly buying guns and locks to protect themselves. Brand! in D.C. to Tell Block to N-Treafy Hare: Drivers Seldorr) Win License Appeals LANSING (AP) - The odds are against the motorist who appeals his driver license suspension, reports Secretary of State James Hare. ★ ★ * Hare said only one driver in eiflht who appeals actions taken against him by driver improvement officials, 12.5 per cent of the total, is completely ful. k t * Only 3,041 of tiie 24,161 drivers who appealed last year had ttieir licenses completely restored. Of these, 8M satisfied requirements that they had recovered from physical disabilities or passed written or driving tests they previously failed. Senate Approval Chances ImproveforConsular Pact WASHINGTON (AP) — Pros-'mittee, voted against the treaty pects for Senate ratification of when it first was approved by the U.S.-Soviet consular treaty edged upward today when Sen. Bourke B. Hickenlooper indicated he might support it. Hickeniooper, who heads the the Senate Foreign Relations Committee to the 89th The Iowan said in an interview he took that action as a The Weather Senate Republican Policy Com- protest against what he called " the “unseemly said the Johnson administration was exerting at the time to get the treaty before the Senate. The Senate did not act then. The committee now is restudy-tog the treaty. NO COMMITMENT “I have not made any firm commitment one way or the . u T, oiber on this treaty,” he said. ^hTOl District to sell $620,000 m j^at could be advantageous to bonds for ^ssible purchase of a^g ^nd some that are^t. It has Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY-Variable cloudiness and a littie warm^ today with a chance of occasional brief snow flurries. High 18 to 24. Variable cloudiness and not so cold tonight with possible snow flurries. Low 8 to 14. Thursday: Partly cloudy and a little warmer with a chance of snow flurries. Southwest to westerly winds 16 to 17 miles today and southwest 7 to 12 miles tonight. Outlook for Friday: Partly sunny and a little warmer. Lowut temp«ra1vrt pr«e«db)g I (li racardM Mwnitwn) .7 iHighait temperatur* ............. Wind VtiKity 10 m.pJi. Lewait lamparatura ................. IMaan lamparatvira- ..... —....... School Bond SaleOK'dfor Site Purchase ________________IV it 5:57 p.m. Sun rlias Thuriday at 7:38 a.m. Moon sats Wadnaaday at 3:02 p.m. Moon risat Thursday at 8:11 a.m. new school site was approved late yesterday by the Municipal Ftoance Commission in Lansing. Schools Supt. Dr. Dana P. Whitmer said the bonds were the event the board of education decides.JtoJbuy-a 20-acre site at Featherstorie and Opdyke. Proposed for construction on the site is a new junior-senior high school, which Whitmer said would fill an “immediate need” for more classrooms. The board, vriiich three months ago purchased an option , to buy the site, is expected ' some pluses and some touchy minuses." Hickenlooper had been counted among the Republican conservatives likely to oppose the document on grounds it would pave the way for opening additional Soviet consulates in tiie United States, possibly increasing opportunities for espionage. Commission Approves Pontiac's 'Deficit' Budget Curtain Up on Dramatic Art Academy (Continued Prom Page One) be the first segment of the School of Performing Arts,o lybich ultimately will include cmiservatories In music and WASHINGTON (AP) - Foreign Minister Willy Brandt is expected to tell President Johnson today it will be difficult for West Germany to sign a nuclear noni«t)liferation treaty unless nonnuclear no^ons are allowed to use atomic energy for peaceful purposes. Brandt’s warning, diplomatic sources advised, represents the growing uneasiness of a number of industrialized, nonnuclear countries. The list, it is suggested, includes Sweden, Switzerland, Italy, India, Japan, Israel and perhaps one or two Latto-American nations. * ★ ■ ★ Brandt, 53, who arrived Tuesday, planned to call on Johnson late this afternoon after talks with Secretary of State Dean Rusk, Undersecretary of State Nicholas Katzenbach and presidential adviser Walt W. Rostow. He also is scheduled to meet with Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey. SOCIAUST HEAD This is the first Washington visit of the Socialist leader since he became foreign minister and vice chancellor in West Germany’s new coalition government. He was a frequent visitw here during his nine years as mayor of West Berlin. Trust Co. of New York, and Soloman Brothers and Hutzler. Interest rate offered was 2.68 per cent, with a premium of $80. ★ ★ ★ Also in cimnection with the ren, in a cov’er letter to the piTo-'R^W project, commissioners posal, once again affirmed his federal nondis- .......... - crimination requirements for a neighborhood park at Wall and Paddock. West Germany’s reservations about the treaty have been spelled out by Brandt and others to public Speeches, and Brandt put them to a memorandum to Rusk last week. would be joined by a 1,20 .............would be the per- Relafed Stories, Page A-8 position that use of surplus funds to meet city employe pay hikes is a “one-year, one-time action.” Unallocated surplus funds exceeding $538,000 are expected to meet the up to 10-per cent raises given police, fire, public works and clerical personnel. CITY INCOME TAX Warren also said recommen- Appeal is considering for a sec-Study Committee which haS|jjjjjj appeal for a new advocat^ a city income tax - ^ j Teamstere Union Presi-wUl be the subject of ‘^peci 1C r Hoffa, who is recommendations to the Cityj j „„ extensive legal Pnynmiccmn in iramr . ..j .. ... Court Milling Hoffa Appeal aNCINNATT, Ohio (AP) The 6th U.S. Circuit Court , of Commission to the very near future.” He gave no clues as to what the recommendations might be. In, another fiscal matter, com- Battle Creek Accepts Taxi Court-Martial for Objector Descendant of Wilson Secretary of Navy | FT. BENNING, Ga. (AP) - a[ court-martial has been ordered] for a 21-year-old Ft. Benning conscientious objector who is a grandnephew bf President [Woodrow Wilson’s secretary of tiie Navy. No date has been set for the I ^proceeding. Spec. 4 Harry Muir is charged l with refusing to wear his uni-1 battle to stay out of prison. Judges Paul C. Weick, Clifford O’Sullivan and Lester L. Cecil heard arguments Tuesday on two motions asking for a retrial of Hoffa’s 1964 conviction in Chattanooga, Tenn., on jurytampering charges. k * * The head of the 1.7-million member labor union was sentenced to eight years in prison and fined $10,000. Both the A^ peals (kmrt and the U.S. Sa-preme (3ourt have upheld Jne bbnviction. Hoffa has until Mt-urday to petition for a rehearing before the Supreme Court. / 1 ' ■ I manent home of the John Fer-nald Company. CULTURAL EVENTS Projected along with the theater is a large auditorium to serve southeast^ Michigan as center for cultilbl events and large gatherings. No specific plans have been made for this building iriiich will be a future project. Its funding is not Included in the five-year OU capital Mtlay plan developed last year. / Steps to estabUsb OU as a ma/ jor center for the performing arts began four years ago mth the launching of the Meadow Brorit Music Festival. / ★ ★ * / ' ’The next step was the erection of the sununer Meadw Brook School of Music. / Students in the Academy of Dramatic Art willibllow a flexible 2-year course/of study. They may b^hlghly talented students right out of high school, although Fernald ex? pects those selected will be in their 20s or 36s. ‘“I am looking for genuine acting talent — I cannot stress this too much,” Fernald said. “A education is desirable, some acting experience may be itoable, but the real criterion is talent.” • ★ ★ ★ The May auditions will be held In Detroit, Chicago and New Ydrk, and possibly at other centers, if necessary. Similar auditions will be held later for additional classes of 15 each to begin in January and April of 1968. AAA Tips on Avoiding the Balky-Motor Blues Car won’t start? Chances are you need a tune-up, a battery charge or i form while on duty, which car- I even a new battery. Without jthe^, cold weather blues may i 11 «.m. 12 m. 1 p.m... . _ . _______ - . - , BATTLE CREEK (UPI)-Bat- make a final decision at its tie Creek joined the ranks of Michigan cities with an income tax yesterday as voters narrow- Om Ytpr Ago In Pgnttac HIghMt ItmptrAluro .............. I.OWMI Minporaluro .............. M«tn l*mp(r*lure ................ HiglMM. AMI Lowtll TOMptralurM Thh Oalt in fl Ynir* <2 In 1«M -I Timdny'i Tnmpnrtlurt Clurt .. „ . „ 'Alpena 15-18 Foci worih SI 32 meetmg Feb. 22. l|?'T.Sr-s g f S ill * * * ; n -i jisim'j'gssi 8^ SI Th* WMarquatta 1* 7 Milwaukae 28 • acToss railroad teacks from tile u J nI: ?S?r M ” proposed Consumers Power Co. TTavarta C. 13 -1 Omaha p 18 Albugutrqua 42 13 Phoanl* “ “ 37 Atlanta 34 33 Pit*-*—- 24 'Bismarck 18 10 St. 5 2 service center. I Chicago 8 Tampa 48 84 la to Salt Lak* C. 43 34 21 3 S. S. Marla II -3 34 IS S. Francisco 58 " ■ - - g y ■ BP Wlropmii NATIONAL WEATHEk — Snow is expected tonight in westerti New Ybric State and the NcnUiero Rockies. Rain is predhrted for the central Gulf region with some snow flurries on the norttern perigtiiery.. Tempo'atures will be colder in the soutiiern Hatos. > County Man Saved From Alabama Fire MONTGOMERY, Ala. (UPI) — A Michigan man smashed a window and leaped to tiie safety of a Six-foot ledge as a raging fire killed 26 persons last night in a posh restaurant atop a hi^-riap apartment building. * ★ ★ Warren Garrison, a salesman from Southfield, was pludced fixUn the ledge by firemen whojpersctos who openly favored the owwled up an extension ladder:tax. flames quickly swead ly approved a 1 per cent tax for residents. Hie vote, held down by heavy snow still on tiie ground and near - zero temperatures, was 3J54 for the tax and 3,285 against the income tax. The figures were unofficial and sub-j^ to change. The tax, which wUl be one-half per cent on nonreiideBts working in tiie city, was passed first by tiie City Cmn-misskm last Sept. I, bat a petition drive by two gronps forced it te a vote 1^ the public. , One of the groups, the Citizens’ Committee for Trutii in Tax Facts, has promised a boy-, cott of all buriness operated by through Dale's Penthouse restaurant. About 40 persons, including two of Garik’s friends, were by tiie intajise heat and flaiQes Miteb blocdied tiie rostau-rant's rievator entrance. . If Hie new tax, which goes into effect July 1, is expected to bring in about $1 million in new revenue annually. City Manager Anaa DaMoose h * d warned there would be drastic cutiwdcs in sendees if the tax were not passed. \ * ECORSE (UPI)“This suburban Detroit community, deeply to debt during the past few years, may jrin the ranks of Michigan cities with income taxes. The City Council voted 5-1 last night to adopt a one per cent tax for residents arid one-half per cent for non-residents who work to Ecoree. The Mdinance, howeva*, gives residents the right to petition for a November vote on the income tax. If citizens fail to petition, the tax vrill go into effect automatic^ Jan. 1,1968. a a a Hie city has been able to pay mnployes recmitly only because its largest taxpayer. Great Lakes Steel Coip., provided fiinla by paying future taxes in advance. ALTERNAHVC The eoundl decided to impose tiie tax after rejecting a proposal to cut expense by dismissing snore city employes. Twenty-three were laid edf last fall. Voters rocentiy rejected proposM to increase tiie dty’s millage tax. ries a maximum penalty of five | years imprisonment and a i dishonorable discharge. |i Muir also is charged with vio-|i latlng post restrictions given i I him as punishment. This carries I a maximum sentence of three! years imprisonment and a' dishonorable discharge. I ‘PAID TO MURDER’ Mtdr has steadfastly refused to wear his uniform, claiming he is being paid for murder. Hie soldier’s lawyer, M. LaughUn McDonald of the American Civil Liberties Union, charged Tuesday in Atlanta that Muir has been denied access to newsmen since being placed to a stodiade Jan. 4. An Arnfy spokesman replied that the soldier did not want to see the press. He said Muir’s fiai has virited him. * * w “The Army has done evssy-thing possible to avidil publicity,” McDonald said. “They’d' Ifte to salt him away as quietly ! as they can,” | McDonald alro charged that' Muir Was placed fw several weeks in a cell four feet hifdi vriiich he said is | punitive e normally reserved for bomlddals or homosexuals. continue to haunt your automobile. Robert M. Smith, manager of emergency road , service for AAA, cited these areas-plugs and points and battery—as the likely tronble spots. p Noting the heavy car-starting business being done by d service stations. Smith said it would be difficult to get a car in for a tune-up. if ★ ★ ★ li However, he said the battery should at least be checked, making sure it is fully charged and full of water. . ( COLD EFFECT II Hie continued cold weather has caused auto batteries to “just wear down” from grinding. • Smifli did offer these home remedies for balky i - I • A 75 or 100 watt light bulb can be hung on the engine near the distritoitor. Hie heat from the light will aid early minming car starting. ,★ ★ ★ . • After turning the engine off for the last time at ni^t, pump the accelerator three or four times. This puts gas in the carburetor for easier starting in the morhit^. ALTERNATIVE • Sometimes a blanket can be wrapped round tiie engine instead of using the light bulb. Smith did not rate the two methods.' The Auto Club official emphasized that a hill tank of gas should be maintained to avoid gas line freeae. When attmnpttog to start a cold automobile, all power accessaries should be turned off. This would bichide radio, heatw, windshield wipers and other power-dfaining equ^ THg AC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1967 LANSING (AP) - Findings in I probe of the State Highway Department will be kept under wraps until the investigation is completed, Deputy A to. Gen. Leon Cohan reported Tuesday. “We don’t Want to \ reveal piecemeal) w^at is indicated, Cohan told the State Highway Commission. “When the investigation is completed, we will make a full report to the governor, the Highway Commission and the public.’’ ★ ★ Cohan said die investigatim Is in full swing “with several investigators and attorneys following up every lead we have.’’ ’The probe first was directed toward allegations of Overpayments to some contractors, te-| eluding Holloway Construction Co. of Wixom. SUING STA’TE Holloway, however, is suing the state for $1.25 million it claims is still owed for 7.8 miles of construction on 1-94 in Berrien County. The probe was enlarge when Gov. George Romney he heard “allegations’’ some Highway “ Cials might hafe Sonally from Fred Tripp, deputy/director for administration, jmen called a news conferenc^and denied any personal' bepefit from his Highway Deparbaent commp-tion. He detailed his holdings in Lansing and East Lansing, which include land being used for a supermarket complex and two hamburger rdstaurants. Trjpp told the commissiiHi and Cohean' he had been subjected to ‘humiliation, " , mental anguish”' ^cause of “unfounded allegations, rumors and innuendos. * PROVE INNOCEN^ . “I have had to prove my/ffl-nocence and have not been afforded the opportunity to face my accuser, whomever/lt plight be,” Tripp said. The three bers present lArdale " bor in an dence Tripp ask^ Cohan if he would follow up anonymous accusations ysuch as an anonymous le call. can’t ignore those things, -e to follow them up,” Coreplied. “Sometimes they lead us to very valuable information.” TO CLEAR NAME Cohan said the probe also vidll seek to clear the name of anyone unjustly accused. ’Ihe Highway Conunission, meanwhile, said it has rescinded an order that anyone contact- ed by probers from thejA general’s office notto ■ ★ Cohaii made tlp^ request but emphasized thpt it was done only so his investigators might have a freq/^and -r iiot because Tripp way mentioned to connection wijh the inrobe. Hie 4,800 Highway Departr iod workers were instructed to raperate with the attorney general’s department. QUIZ SHEET Also diesussed by the commission was a proposal for quiz sheet on outside interests and holdings of every highway MANHATTAN WONDERLAND — The fastest thing moving was not on wheels at the interseetton of Third Avenue (upper right to lower left) and 42nd Stoet to Manhattan yesterday. It was the pedestrians. Hiis View from the Chrysler Building Annex shows the hikers picking their way through crossroads crowded with slow-mqving cars and buses in the wake of yesterday’s blizzard, which left more than a foot of snow in the city. / Reuther Blocked Plan d^rtment employe. The tentative idea was to include business interests and land holdings. CMian said this might involve invasion of privacy. He suggested that it be checkied out yWith his office and the State Civil Service Commission. BRONCHITIS or gSTHMJtCOUeHS It recarrine attaeln of Bronchial Asthma or Broi^Ua make you sutler coughing and dUB^t breathing that ruins sleep, give qniek acting MKNDACO a trM^Bee lunr tast you curb CDughln^and breathe eaaler thus sleep and teel better. To h No AFL-CIO Break Now WASHINGTON (AP) - United Auto Workers President Walter Reuther, in quitting the ruling couhcil (rf the AFlrCIO, squeldled rebellious aides who want a total break vriUi the big labor federatiMi now, it was learned today. Reuther’s cold war with AFL-CIO President George Meany yet may lead the UAW chief to yank his union out of the federation, but he used the UAW’s own < constitution to block such move for the present. , The UAW is one of only a handful of the 129 affiliated unions whose constitution calls fw membership In the 13.5 million member AFL-CIO. Reuther, who joined Meany in founding the modern “House of Labor” 11 years ago, generally Is regarded as the No. 2 man in the federation. Sources in his Detroit headquarters say Reuther wants to avoid a complete break if. possible. DISENCHANTMENT Reuther and ofter UAW officials profess disenchantment with what they call complacency, lack of vision in' social, civil rights and trade union affairs, ami a too rigid foreign policy under Meany’s leaderstop. r It’s New-lf s at SIMMS Domino Mentiiol Cigarettes 0^:5- of 50 New Baiker’s Choice nut FREE S-Paek Peifecto Cigars Mild Banket Cholci clgoit m MiA Plui FREE S $> SIMMS.'* AnoUier buy-only at SIM^S . . . 'Casemate' by'Kent' furniture from Mmous Grand Raplds,/Michigan moderri/^-tone scretch4mjsh pumice furtiiture fuli size headboard 34»5 55x9x36-fnch «lz« • 1)Obkcata shelf wfth sliding door w ready to as-without 0 screwdriver • packed to lake home with you. chest of drawers 3-drawers O A 03 Y to numblt withsut a iciw • poclml to tolw hem* youratif ISWxSOliKhH. 5-drawers theini • pn-Rnlilwd chtrt of ditnnn In 30xl5«x44%-inch ii» • takn H hniM - randy - 59»® deiuxe room divider 59»* V bi shown • 36 x 14% x 46’A-Inchet • corapartmeirti with sliding doori p comporlmenti drawers • oisamble without a tcrewdrivtr. bookcase • open style • 2 ihelf model • 30 X\J5% X 304nch size • take Rhomtior___________ Charge It! Major Credit Cards Honored E Instant credit on any purchase of ^30 to ^150 ' Use any major erbdit card such ast oil company. Sears, I Hutbons, Words, Waite's, Kmart, Osmun's, etc. Come I I In ond let us exploln the Instant cteto plon. Simms ann«x Store hours: thuri. Q a.m. to 9 p.m. — tH. 9 a.m. to 9:30 | (».m. and Saturday 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. SIMMS DISCOUNT ANNEX 144 N. Saginaw St. Simms Bros.~-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac All 0^ Thursday eniy At SIMMS 9 a.ib in the Homing til 9 pjn. at Rife Be here when^ the doera open for these tremendoui bargains which you'll find only at Simms —the 'Excitement* store / Please pay attention to the followings I/yOU know YOUfLL SAVE ON ADVERTISED SPECIALS but to save even more you should take a counter by counter trip and look over the thousands of unadveitieed money-(overt too. All specials for Thursday only and we must reserve the right to limit quantifies. MiARDAY Ladies’ 1st Quality Texture Nylons lO-'I®® Lovely textured nylon hose In pecan or off block in sizes 816 to U. —Main Floor Ladles’ Canvas Top Go-Go Boots Simms Price IVV First quality canvas lop, white go-go beats wHh bcM% zipper. Misses' sizes 1216 to 4, ladies' 5 to 10. —Bosemont KntSinAtaddin Vacuum Bottio Simmi Price ■ ^ Pint size vocuum bottle kdeps liquids hot or cold. With unbnsakable Lex-On Stopper cup cop. —2nd Floor Fibrai^as Single Laundiy Tub *p^"r|2®® Approximotely 20-gollon capacity, fibreglass laundry tub complete with metal stand. Hardworo-2nd Floor Clearance Special Group Ladies’Dresses oZ 1®® 'Good selection of I- and 2-pc ist^ Broken sizes 10 to 2416 but mot In oil styles. —Main Floor American Made Basketball Shoes Simms Price iVV Hi cut white or block convos uppers with sturdy non-skid suction soles. Slight Irrs. Sizes 81^12. -Basement 5-Pc. Wooden Rack Spice Set Smms Wooden rack holds 4 Individual spice jars. Hongs on wall, or for shelf. —2nd Floor IZCtoWONARCir Ihy Gas 611®® Prevents gas Dne fiweze-ups, odd* mlloage to your gas.. Limit 12. Hoidwaro—2nd Fleer Wash and Wear Yard Goods 5.1®® Fine quality yord goods In colorful prints and solid colors. Washable. ' Start tewing now. -.-Main Floor Special Group Men’s Winter Coats ctt.9®® Choice of nylon ski jackets, wool hooded benchwormers ond Dacron insuloled toggle coots. Broken sizes to 44. —Bofomont r 13" Early American Dii Lamp 213®® Early American gloss ell lamp complete with scented oil. For decoration or emergency use. Umit 2. Ganaral Eiectrle Radio-Phono *;;r23®® Meden 771, S4roMMor AM radio with dHRMod record player. Free record Wand. UmU I. -2nd floor ^ -f hi: ■ \ Ladies’ Insulated Ski Jackets aoo $14.88 V Ladies' ski jackets with DuPont Dacron insulation) Some salesman's samples. Sizes S-M.—Main Floor Continental Styled Men’s Pants 2®® First quollly polished cotton pants In olive or block, waist sizes 28, 80 - 34 - 36, broken lengths. —Basement Tubular Chroma Shoe Tree-Caddy f^fc"?3®® Shapes, stores and freshens 8 poir of ladies' shoes. Complete with freshener pellets. —2nd Floor Famolit ShoceuR .Electric Sander 11®® Model 9151 Secirle orblhii Bonder with 2-omp motor dtMlep* 4000 rpm's. Limit 1. ' Hardwciro-2iid Floor Speciaf Group of Boys’Shirts : Choice ofS |UII Styles J|[_ Choice of turtle neck acrilon sweatshirt, zip front sweatshirt or hooded pullover sweatshirt. First quality, Americem. -Baiemont Non-Skid Backed Throw Rugs 311®® Assorted small size throw rugs in a variety of colors, washable with non-skid backing. -Basement Earthenware or China Coffee Mugs 411®® No need to run out of cups, buy for home or cottage. Choice of colors. -2nd Floor General Eleelrie Clock Radio ®p%"?l2®® Model 403, table model cle«k radio wakes you up to music 4 tubes, 4-inch dynamic speaker. Urn# 1. -2nd Floor 3N Sheets - SSola Notebook Pajier 211*0 Reg. $1.38 yolue, 300 sheets of 5-hole filler pidppr. Fits 2- or 3-ring binder. Limit 4. Sundriet-Moin Floor All Regular IDe Size Candy Bars Mil®® $1.40 value. Your choice of 20 different kinds including Milky Way, Snickers, etc. Candy—Main Floor Schicic Hot Lather Shave Cream 2 i 1*0 $1.00 value, 6Vk-oz. size especlol-ly made for stainless steel razor blades. Drags-Moin Floor Tooth Paste 2-I*® 89c value, 6%-oz. tube. Cue tooth paste has the Fluorection .formula to prevent covitiei Dnigo-Moln Fleer 5-Pack - Famous R.G. Dunn Cigars 3 il®® $1.50 volue, 3 regulor 50c pocks, choice of Dunn Admirals, Regal Blunt or Youngfeliow. Limit 6. Cigors-Moin Fioos* Famous BABY BEN Alarm Clocks 5®® Choice of Ivory or block case, plain ■ dial. $8.98 luminous dbl Baby Ben alarm clock... 6.00 Sundries-Main Floor Bottle Of 1000’s Aspirin Tablets $1-90 100 Value J| Bottle of 1000 USP strength, 5-groin aspirin tablets for headache relief. Drug*—Main Floor Choice of Braniis Tampax - Pursettes 1®® Box of 40's. Yourcholoeof Tompox or Pursettes in super or regular slso. Drug*—Main Floor Man’s Ronson 400 Eiectric Razor. ’it?® 12®® Ronson 400 eleciric shaver with thinnest shendng screen, and side-bum trimmer. Sundrios-Moin Floor New! Rechargeable Eveready Lantom ”ii?®22®® 13,000 candle power, recharges In AC outlet or 12-volt cor. With carry cose. . Sundriot-Mqin Floor Your Choie* of Brando Men’s Hair Tonic ' 1®® Professional size of Vitalis, Score* Vaseline or Eoo-d»qulnln# men's hair tonic Drugo-AAolM F^ Shultpn’s Cld Spico After Shave Lotion 3®® IBtoz. sizo Fragrant, spicy end Dnigt-Nlabi Floor QE Raehargaabla Clothes Brush ’it?®|l®® Vacuums out dirt, cleons ^ff lint and hair from dothes. Rcmwobl* washable brash. ^ SwidriOi^-Main Floor | Qanarai Electric ’Daeor* ■EloGtric Clock 3®® Dependable Generol Electric olom clock with white or beige decorator cose. Foctory guarantee. Sui^rios—Main Floor JaiftRS Extra Diy Skin Lotion $1.09 100 Value I2I6-0Z. size Jergens extra dry sidn fermulo, with dispenser included. CoMiMHco-AAalii Floor 9fMdM Magic’ HairSpr^ $1.99 100 Value J|[ 13-ez, .sixt, legulw or extra Geo-Iroi formula tn oeretel spray oon. Drug*—Moio floor Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 8> 1867 Novi Unhappy With Wording of Sewer Pact NOVI — The Village Oouncil wants a few things straightened out before it signs a joint sewer project contract with the city of Walled Lake. » ISie council is unhappy with some of the wording of the contract and has uistructed its attorney Howard Bond to discuss proposed changes with a repre-smitative of the Oakland County Department of Public Works. Objections center mainly around the section of the contact which reads that b^inning in 1968 the community “shall” spread an ad valorem (at large) tax to cover the cost of the proj-ect. Village Manager Harold N. Addey wants it t» read “may" spread an ad valorem tax. “The wwd ‘shall’ makes it mandatory,” he said. “If it reid ‘may,’ then we could spread ttie tax if we found it necessary." He said that if enou^ funds were c-atofoua to the tosmsUp. THE PONTJAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8. 19g7 ..Ag-ajj,.' OARKSTON EAGLE SCOUTS - Holding a hard-won Eagle Badge is Larry Nicol of 6249 Maybee (left) and Gary King of 5651 Chickadee, both of Clarkston Troop 126. They were nmde Eagle Scouts last night along with Robert Chapman of 6201 Maybee. NOVI - A survey will be tak-of street lighting in village subdivisions to determine where the lights are most needed. Prompted by a i;^equest for lighting from the Willowbrook Subdivision Association, the village council instructed manager Harold N. Ackley to contact Detroit Edison Co. and come up with a pian for the whole area. “We at least want to get (lie most dangerous intersections lighted,” said Ackley. Library Bonds Added foBallof TROY — An additional proposal was added by the City .Commission to M ballot for the April 3 election — a $500,000 bond issue for library construc- The commission has set the order tiie three issues will appear: • One-half mill additional levy for library purposes. • Bond issue of $500,000 for libra^ construction. • Pay raise for city commis-aioners. The pay raise, if approved, would give the officials $20 per meeting with a maximum (rf $1,200 as iqiposed to $10 and $m at present. Also on the ballot will be contestants for two commission seats. The choice will be narrowed to four men after eight candidates vie in the Feb. 20 primary. ★ ★ ' ★ Hie commission also heard.a report on special assessments. COMPARED ADVANTAGES Paul A. York, city manager, said the report compared the advantages of 10- and ^year bond issues. The report states; “The extension of current water and Concept OK'd for Junior High Utica School Board Hears Radical Format UTICA — Plans for a radically different concept in junior high schools has been apptovedjJ by the board of education. ★ * Approved in the recent bond issue, the school will be built in Sterling Township, according to board spokesmen. It will feature a research center core capped by administrative (rffices and extend into four hexagonal pods housing the different curriculum departments, Supt. Philip Runkel reported. The board voted to heat its three new elementary schools, due under the recently approved bond issue, with gas rather than electridty as has been the practice with the last 10 schools built in Uie district. w ★ ★ Board membei^ said- they’d like to make a comparison of the two heating systems. NEW COURSES Three new courses were approved for the school curriculum next fall. One is a historical study of western civilization, another is a musical appreciation course entitled “Elements of Music” and the third is a broadened home economics course featuring such items as child development, advanced clothing, home nursing and advanced foods. The board approved creation of two new positions — director of secondary education and director of elementary education —but reported it is still taking applications for the openings. Street Light Survey Set In other reoent action, , the council agreed to -a payback agreement witii Charles Lap- ham who is constructing a i er from the NcHihviUe boundary line up Novi Road. Hear Salesman WALLED lixE - Richard Kroninger, sales representative for the IBM Corp. wiil speak at a meeting tonight of the Walied Lake Educational Secretaries Association. The meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m. at the high school. All educational secretaries in the area are invited to attend. Ackley explained that if i one conhects to the sewer, the viilage will collect the chaiges and pay Lapham. Lapham owns property on Novi Road on which he plans ito build a series of stores, according to Ackley. A subdivision will also be developed across the street, Ackley said. Plat Approval Hinges on OK of Health Dept HOLLY TOWNSHIP -The Township Board has ruled that any new subdivision plats must be {approved by f the C o u n t y Board of Health. Supervisor Seeley Tins-man said yesterday the move was taken to be sure any future developments are on suitable land. Hie board named John Albright to the park board in other action. In Clarkston Junior High Plans Approved CLARKSTON — Final approval of plans fw a $2.5-million junior high school haye been approved by the school board. The building wiil handle 1,000 students and will be located at Maybee and Pine Knob roads. The board also approved sale of $1.5 million in lumds to the lowest bidder, Drenl, Hanlman and Ripley at an average interest rate of 3.86K per cent. The board heard a report oo antivandalism devices requested to counter a surge of damage done to schools. They will study various methods of burglarproofing and warning devices that could be installed at the district’s seven buildings. ' ' W,' w Intent to hook up the pn^wsed new junior high school with water was also agreed upon. beyond ten years could very well discourage property owners from favoring additional special assessment projects until the water and sewer assessments were paid. “I would hope that we could initiate many paving improvement projects after most of the watfr and sewer laterals have been installed ... If utility assessments could be paid df within 10 years after installation, it would seem that the owners mi^t then be more willing to support sj^ial assessment paving projjscts th^ if they still owed fiye or'10 more years of payments on the utilities ...” ★ ★ w The report was tabled for study by the commission. ORDINANCE PASSED An ordinance governing renting of motorcycles and motorbikes was passed. It provides for each vehicle to have a $10 cTty license; each Business to have a $100 license; crash helmets provided renters; and limits location of rental busi- Troy Candidates for Commission Seats to Appear TROY — Two incumbent com-lissioners and six men who would like to depose them will meet face-to-face tomorrow evening. Voters who will decide the issue in the Feb. 20 {vimary will get a chance to size up the hopefuls at the program — Meet the Candidates Night — sponsored by the Glen-Moor Civic Association. „ Hie event will be held at 7:30 p.m. at Niles Elementary School, Square Lake Road west of Uvemois. Thie two incumbents in the nonpartisan race are Clancy Fonseth, 38, of 314 Lyons and David E. Gratopp, 54, of 272 Fabius. ★ ★ ★ The six challengers are: Al-plmnse Bajgier, 47, of 110 Paragon; Hilbert HirscMield, 60, of 268l0 Bretby; John M. Huter^ 41, of 3551 Newgate; Gerald R. Hershberger, 49, of 285 E. Long Lake; Andrew R. Horvath, 41, of 229 Wilton; and John Kokalis, 31, ofJ4SColebroke. Oakland Twp.Yguth Arraigned )AKLAND TOWNSHIP-Jack Bsley, 18, of 603 Romeo de-in^ examination when ar-gned yesterday oh a fehniy rrant for malicious destruc-n of property before Justice rry Huber erf Avwl Township. 4e is accused of drivii^ four and 16-year-old boys through Jdand and Avon townsh^ turday n^t cm a glass break-( s[M«e amounting to an esti-ited $4,000 damage. Hie juveniles are being turned over to Oakland County Juvenile Conit Romeo State poUce said. Officers claim a BB pistol was used to break windows in Wri^y’s and the S.S. Kresge Co. stores in North Hill Pian, Avon Towndiip, and-at a small grocery store to Oakland Township. * ' ★, w Damage to the Kresge windows alme was estimated at $1,500 police said. enneuf ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY * FEBRUARY dress event Here's your chance to gather a whole wardrobe of new and bright, Spring-minded dresses at one unbelievable low price. You'll find tweedy look two-porters, crisp poplin skimmers, quick-core knits, sleek jerseys and many more! We've chic prints, stripes, polka dots and solids. There are lots of styles and we've just your size whether you're a junior, miss or half-size! What a Buy! Misses' stretch denims Comrgaf a wardrobe of colorful, wonderfully easy-care slacks at this low price! Penney tailored in crisp cotton-stretch nylon denim with set-on waistband, side zipper. Dark and light shades. »3 Girls' slacks 'n shirts at Bargain Days Savings! Tapered ankle pants to 100% cotton stretch denim. Asserted jcoiors. Machine washable. trim fitting $0 pants, t to 14. ^ Elastic-back pants. 3 to.6x. Fine cotton knits in stripes and solids, % length and ehort sleeves, crew neck, v-neck and cardigan styles. Light and bright colors. Handsome polyester-cotton knit shirts with fashioii collar and embroidery trim! Sizes 6 to 18 in assorted light colors. Fineline cotton twill dress-up jeans are trim fitting. Sand, loden, antelope. Sizes 6 to 16. Sturdy doubleknee jeans are never iron durable Prest Real western styling in rugged cotton-nylon with doubleknee Construction for longer wear. Denim blue. Sizes 4 to 12. |50 Sizes T to 14 n 2 tor ^ at PENNEY'S MIRACLE MILE STORE HOURS 9:30 A.M. to 9 P.M. CHARGE IT! THE PONTIAC PRESS M VMBunnSIntt MIm, Hldiliail «N WEimSIMY, FEBftUABY >, U67 ss^'sn&x fssjf-jpsssss ' SiMSTi.,. EdwardkP. Barrett Edwab]} P. Bahbktt, a »tiac attorney for 20 years who < Monday, was a successful man In all the ways one can think of. Up until a few months ago he living a zestfu^e, going at a hireak- V neck pac^ which ;' wal his n^mal custom. BR/mA a well- id business H his coun- BARRETT sought after. He never allowed a personal i^ terest to interfere with his work. Ed, as his friends called him, coidd best be termed a lawyer’s lawyer. Jiust recently a well-known Pontiac attorney, in re- marking about Ed’s plight, said, "Pontiac is losing a real great trial lawyer.” We are sure this is true. ■ , ★ ★ ★ ■ __________________ Unlike most of his contemporaries, Ed did not take much time to relax. His work and his family were his life. He loved them both dearly. Yet, in this relatively short span of time, Mr. Barrett contributed greatly to a vsride variety Of civic roles and he has left behind an outstanding record Of achievement. Not many men have come to Pontiac and left so many friends and such a definite mark as Ed Barrett. A grand guy has taken the final count. We’ll all miss him. Heavy, Heavy Hangs Over Their Heads! WiU Vietnam New Year Usher^^^^m Peace? David Lawrence Says: New Year’s Day is, the world over, a most moveable feast day. In the Far East, it occurs anywhere between Jan. 10 and Feb. 19, and is c^idered the most important holiday of the year. The Vietnamese New Year festival, called Tet, begins today. The 1967 Tet festival Could have more than usual significance. Both sides in the Vietnam war have agreed to a four-day cease-fire, which might .1 be extended to seven days. • Pope Paul VI asked Soviet President Nikolai Podgomy to help sed( extension of the ceasefire into a truce for peace talks. And Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin has arrived in London for talks with British Prime Minister Harold Wilson during the cease-fire. Mikhail Sirnovsky, the l^viet Ambassador to Great Britain, said on Feb. 2 that his country would work “to secure a peace settlement” in Vietnam provided the United States refrained from further escalation of the war. "k ir ir It remains to be seen whether Mos- . cpw’s conditions are acceptable to Washington and Hanoi. But if the cease-fire now in effect should prove a prelude to peace talks, Tet 1967 would be a holiday that the whole . world could celebrate. Voice of the People: *My SteelStudded Tires Help Prevent AaAdents* Many times this winter I have been able to stop my car on icy roads and avoid an accident. 1 place the ability to stop in time on my steel-studded snow tires. , X > ' ' ★ m-:' . • I am disgusted with our Michigan lawmakers that these steel-studded tires are illegal on State roads because they may damage the road surface. It seems that tire chains should also be illegal, if they want to go to these extremes. ★ ★ ★ These tires have been proven to be safer on slippery roads and are used in other states to save lives on the highway. Why not in Michigan, especially when Legislature is trying to pass auto safety laws to make the highways safer and to save lives? FRED H. HERMAN UNION LAKE Reader Has Ideas for Solving Problems This would be e great world If we all had as much patience wiOi folks as we have while waiting for fish to bite. If we taught our children to love and pray, we wouldn’t have the problems we have. NELLIE FRANCIS 379 BRANCH ‘Teen-Age Friend Deserves Some Praise’ I was happy to see the letter stating how good three teenagers were \i^o stopped to help a woman who had been in an accident. One of these teen-agers Is my best friend add for all the good she has done she deserves some praise. You rarely hear about leeH'agera In the news and wben you do it is usually iMcause they have done something bad. A FRIEND Russia Is Real Enemy in Viet Relates Observations on Drivers on Saginaw Nicaraguan Election Ran True to Form Nicaragua, ostensibly a republic, has all the earmarks of a monarchy. For 35 years, the Central American country has been ruled exclusively by the SOMOZA family. So the recent presidential election in which Gen. Awastasio Somoza overwhelmingly defeated Dr. Fernando Aguero was little more than a formality. ★ ★ ★ The Somoza family owes its eminence in part to the long United States occupation of -Nicaragua. American marines occupied the country for 21 years (1912-33, with a brief break in 1925), and attempted without muki success to impose po-Utical stability. The marines departed shortly after the election in 1932 of Juan B. Sacasa as Nicaraguan president; Saeasa’s nephew, Gmi. An-astasio Somoza (father of the curreidt.. presidential candidate) wjss left in charge of the national guard. Like Rafakl Thujuxo, his counter- pfirt in the Dominican Republic, Somoza soon developed political ambitions. He deposed his uncle a few weeks before the latter’s teim expired in 1936. After setting up and pulling down two puppet presidents, Somoza was himselfedeetedchiefexeeutive. His career as dictator closely paralleled TRUJif,Lois: the Nicaraguan held the reins of power for 20 years, amassed a personal fortime, and died at the hands of an assassin. ★ ★ ★ There the resemblance between the two countries ends. The Trujillo dictatorship was unable to outlive its founder, while the Somozas appear to have an endless supply of future presidents. The Somoza family, in addition, has never beeli quite so greedy or repressive as was Trujillo. Even Aguero admits that Nicaragua has a free pre^t But the election 1,, machinery is firmly in the family’s grasp, and that is' what continues to pay off. GOP Hits LBJ’s War on Crime W JAMES MARLOW AtMclated Pren News Analyst WASHINGTON - President Jc^nson’s program for a nationwide war on crime, with the federal g 0 V e mment footing a good bit of the bill, had hardly reached C on-|gress before I Rep u blican I leaders at-I tadced it. John son’s MAnii>w "proposal would not make the federal government boss of criihe control but would give die govemmoit a major role In it by being a big help and a guid^ force. Bat the Repnbiican Hone leader, Gerald R. Ford of Mkh(^, said the best way o Is flaaace a nadoawide attack w crime sranld be through federal tax-sharing. Ta-sharing has been a nach talked ef way to iMll . ant states. As uiualfy discussed, tu-‘ tawliL ltave dta M- eral government turn over to the states — without strings and therefore without control — billions of dollars from federal revenue. Under such an arrt^ement the states could suit themselves on how they used the money; With thta latitude Somes states, perhaps most, couid decide none of the federal money would be used for crime prevention; SPEmL MESSAGE Anticipating die usual complaint of federal interference bi local affairs if his new anticrime program became law, Johnson, in a special message to Cmgress Miaalay explained why he was su^est-Ing it. He said M this way: Crime coatrol is mainly a local problem, bat so are health and edncathm. Yet the federal government has had to help local governmrato aa healili and edncation and lAonld do the same abent crime since malataining pabUe ordo* is the “first bustaets of gsmrune^” He is asking Congress for $350 million over two years to help the states and cities with planning, research and pitot IM-ojects, with the federal government paying about 90 per cent of the cost in this phase of the program. A * ★ Iben the government would . contribute 60 po- cent of the cost of local programs the government approved for putting crime prevention into action. The states and cities, of course, would have to pay some of the frei^t, too. PROGRAM APPROVAL Since the state and city ipiv-erninents woi^ have to gi^ their latigranis approved by the federal government before they could g^ federal money, this would give the federAl government some say over die programs. .•e Johnson sent Ms message to Congress two <^reeks after receiving the rei^ of the National Crinie Commission, which he created In July Itas. ^cials said bis reoommend- WASHNIGTWr - Peace could come overnight in the Vietnam war if die Soviet Union — which is spend i n g billions of dollars to supqily warplanes and other weapcHis, and is providing military tedinicians toj the North Viet-nimese — LAWRENCE were to decide to withhold its aid unless hostilities are ended. For the Moscow govmiiment is at present die real adverse of the United States in Vietnam and has b^n indirectly responsible for the killing of thousands of American soldiers. Yet, instead demanding an end to such acts of war, the President and his administration are actnaUy asking Congress to ratify a new c(wi-sular treaty which could mean assistance to die Soviet system of infiltration. The figures derived from (dficial sources show that in the last two years more than $2 billion worth of supplies— oil, field artillery pieces, heavy infantry weapons and modern jets, incinding light bombers — have been furnished by the Soviet Union to the North Vietnamese nfU-itary forces. In addidMi, hundreds of pitots have been sent by the Hanoi government to Russia to be trained. More than 2,000 Soviet technicians are in North Vietnam training missile crews and operating military supply statirais. The tendency heretofore has been to portray Red Ctoina as Uw principal factor in the bolstering of the North Vietnam government. But the evidence is poming out now that Russia has become in the last two years the mainstay of the North Vietnamese. DESPITE TROUBLES The Red Chinese, despite their internal troubles, are continuing to supply light weapons, ammunition and rice, all of which is a big help to the guoTilla forces. The Russians, however, are providing the real sinews of die war which is causing ^nerica and its al-Bes to incur thousands of casualties. The Moscow government in 19S3 iqieidy botuted that it had been tonishing arms and snp^ies to Red China, though that country had been denounced in 1951 by a formal resolution of the United Nations as an ag-gressw in Sonth Korea. Today the Russians are again giving military aid to an aggressor, and the subject isn’( even being discussed in the United Nations. Nor is it being menticmed by administration spokesmen in Congress or elsewhere. ★ * ★ Instead, the pressure for peace moves is centered on the North Vietnamese without regard to the fact that the Soviet government is encourag-ing the Hanoi regime to keep (HI fighting and is supplying die necessary military aid fose. ★ -k ★ The question is why the President and the Congress remain silent though they have indubitable proof that the Soviet Union is North Vietnam’s principal ally. Bob Considine Says: U£. Government Treats Public as if Ifs Stupid draseof dw oonuoissioo. Verbal OrcJiids Mr. and Mri^ Mnuto* E. FitageraM of 10 Liberty: S6tii wedding anniversary. Mrs. Walter Gingell of Lake Orion; 83rd birtiiday. Mr. and IMrs. T. W. Byrne of 170 S. Shirley; wedding miniversary. Mrsj AgBM Stamman of Rfi Viiiinia; Cod birthday. NEW YORK—You’re stupid. What’s more, you can’t take it. That’s the only conclusion one can reach concerning you (and me) when the government tells you something that just isn’t true and you dumbly accept it — at least you accept it until later word, unearthed usually by good reporting on the part of the free press, gives you the truer picture. News - steering didn’t start with President Kennedy and it won’t end with____ President CONSIDINB Johnson. In recent times, however, dio-e have been many distressing examines of lack of faith in the pe(g>le on the part of the p e 0 p 1 e the people themselves had faith enough to put in power. When U2 pilot Francis Gary Powers was shot down Over Svercltovsk in 1960 lincoto White of the State Department s(demnly announced that Powers had been blown off course ' accidentally on a weather mission for the good of all mankind. The Russians tabbed him correctiy. Powers was a ,spy in the employ (rf our CIA. When the Bay of Pigs in-varton exploded in our faces, (he first word o»t of Washington was that it had nothing to de with the debacle. The truth, subsequently revealed, was that President Eisenhowor had been all fw it, the U.S. had paid fcR nawdi of the training, and President Kena^ had preferred not to go the distance at the critical -hour. It borders on giving cran-fort to tiie enemy in Vietnam, but I’d like to see tis list our actual casialties each day. Ibe same is true witii machinery in this wto. As Newsweek p^ts out this week, we’ve lost more than twice as many aircraft as the 864 we’ve announced as kaput. We wen led to heUeva that astauaapta Gus Gito- mercifiiUy, if that’s the word — when tile flames engulfed their spacecraft. Then we were told, via a telling leak to the N Y. Times, that it wasn’t that way at .all. The men lived for 10 or 15 seconds in that inferno and had broadcast the most heart- ^ rending appeals for help. Horrifying. Sure. But why not give the people the facta at once? We’re a society open enough to permit astronaut launc^s to be televised. Why draw a line at any arbitrary point beyond that, for fear tiiat you can’t face truth? ’There’s only one answer. You’re considered stupid. Or incapable of facing truth. ‘ Are you? For the past few montils Saginaw Street has had a center lane for left turns. However, drivers who use South Saginaw have been slow to learn how to use the center lane. I have noted cars stepped to make a left turn in one of the through lanes, or angled so as to bbstruct the through lane. Proper use of the left turn lane is to stop your car when fully in the lane, with the car and front wheels piiinted straight ahead. One should not obstruct the other lanes in either direction. ★ ★ ★ More “center lane for left turn only” signs might be In order. HWG ‘Old Copy of Press Was Interesting to Read’ My husband found a Pontiac Press dated October 25, 1924. Headl^ rad foont-page stories were interesting and the ads unh«llevable. Imagine renting a 5-room hinne for $40 or buying a new mattress for $7.95, MRS. RATTKE CLARKSTON Disagrees With Letter on Need for Light In answer to “Just Curious,” the extra' light just past Telegraph is necessary. In the morning and afternoon it is almost impossible to get off Pontiac Drive. MRS. FREEMAN 2095 GARLAND Question and Answer Why does Chaunel SO call itself Channel One? CURIOUS REPLY It’s a promotion campaign to get viewers inte^'^ ested in and talking mout that UHF channel. Channel One was picked because there is no number one on TV selector dials, and the UHF position is between 2 and 13. Channel 50 Promotion Manager George Sperry tells us 52 per cent of all TV sets in Wayne, Oakland and Macomb counties have UHF. This new promotion hopes.to educate those viewers to preset their UHF selector to 50, so anytime tney turn their all-channel selector to UHF, they wm be tuned to Channel 50. Mr. Sperry saps the campaign seems to be going over, because the mcfil is addressed about even for Channel 50 and Channel One. Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Alarming Rules Winter Haven Doily News-Chief It is Absolutely unbelievable tiiat the Stqireme Ctourt of the United States can rule as it does. Becentiy It hand^ down a judgment that a pr^ fessed CiHnnnmist cannot be fired from his teaching job and, if qualified, cannot be refused employment. However, if any teacher tells about God through the reading of the Bible in class, he can be fired. ' ■ ★ k k This court has put its rulings above the Constitution; in fact, we are beginning to believe tiiat we would be better off if we didn’t have a Constitution and do as the British — let Congress set the laws aa needed. Beck in 1M2, the Supreme Ceurt ruled that tt is perfectly legal tof > state to enact a taw denying die right of anyeae to teach sedition or having anything to do wita it. * ♦ ★ Now, things are different; with the bieraing of the Supreme Court our ddUren in our own schools at ail levels can be taughi by knowpiCkHii-munista bod indoctrinated with Communist idiiloeigilqr. Someone said some time ago that the (tommunista wouldn’t have to ffre a round to ciHiquer our country—we’d turn it over to them without any fuss. It looks as though Aufomatk Journeyman Barber The little boy ran to his father and exclaimed: “Wow! You should see the great new lawnmower the people next door got — it doesn’t need gas or anything! AU you have to do is push U!’’ Safety in Space Buffalo-Evening News The death of two airmen in a space cabin* atmosphere Similar to that of the Apollo capsule in which tiiree astronauts perished Irads credrace to iniications that a .pure-oxygen environment may pose unacceptable safety hazards for America’s ^ce moi. lUs is a disturbing question, though not the only one, that should have the fullest and frankest scrutiny by a Special board of inquiry. Whuk^sh \ttadytag all dM cto ta dm i^(dlo flashflRf,fettthyani reeemmendxwr tural corrections are necessary to prevent a recurrence of these awfni moments when the trapped astronauts Clawed helplessly at a sealed hatch. That lives eventually might be lost has been implicit from the beginning of the space epoch, and it is to the credit (rf America’^s steady progress that it has been made up until now without sacrifice Of safety considerations. But with the evidence now unfolding of un^eseen hazards — learned, alas, through tragic losses — there should be no question about closing any safety loi^holes evra if this means deferring an arbitrary moon-flight deadline. If priAoBged delays are necessary hi applying dm iessou derived frm a rima-latod s|»ce flight, tiien M be it Reasonable safety precautions must come fer^ •xchnhWr^'tM'wriiir npuMk tU Ponttoc Prm U Wlvarad by tarriw tor 50 canto a awaki atoara mailed In Oakland, OanaMO, Lto-Ingtton, Macomb. Upaar and WasManaw ConnHae ItU tiOJI a *u anar piaoae In WiiUniMd Jaiw^»el|5 ’ tea pqmtiaC frbss. wjednespay, February », iwt A—7 iJ.S. Civilian Setup in Viet Reorganized SAIGON, .Soutfa Vietnam (AP) — Apparent flaws in the pacification program in South Vietnam brought about a reorganisation of U.S. civilian operations two months ago, and officials of the program say they feel “a great deal of progress” is being made. Ibe OfQce (rf Civil Operations ym formed Dec. 1 to coordinate m propam after some experts complained the effort to wfai the minds and hearts ol the Vietnamese peasantry had not kept pace with the improving military situation. ★ ★ ★ Analysts here believe military efforts alone can never overcome the long-term Vietcong strategy of subversion and guer-' rilla warfare so long as the loyalties of the peasants rennain in quostiod. Prior to the reorganization, the pacification program worked largely through the U.S. Agency for International Devel-cq>ment, the U.S, Public Affairs Office and other civilian bodies which operated independently. CONFUSION “Sometimes the left hand didn’t know what the right was doing,” said one American. “We were speaking with a multiplicity of voices without there necessarily being any coordination between them.” Deputy Ambassador William J. Prarter was picked to head OCO. He put the various U.S. civilian operations under an integrated command. ★ ★ ★ Officials said it is too early to evaluate OCO’s success, but they are pleased with the speed with which the new structure was organized. Porter, 52, is regarded as counterinsurgency expert. The British-born dipl(Hnat. observed revolutionary development in Algeria, Palestine, Iraq and Lebanon. He came here in 1965 after a tour as U.S. ambassador in Alters. About 930 American civilians come under OCO and another 100 to ISO are expected in Vietnam soon. About 200 are based in Saigon and the rest are in the field. Quakers Attempt N. Viet Aid Mission PHILADELPHIA (AP) - The American Friends Service Committee disclosed 'Tuesday that within the past two weeks it had an agent in Hanoi attempting to arrange for a medical aid mission in North Vietnam. Margaret Bacon, a spokesman for the (Juaker organization, identified him as Russell Johnson dt Cambridge, ’ Mass. She said Johnson has returned to the United States, but she did not say if he was successful in setting up the mission. He will discuss, his trip at news conference Thursday, she said. Blaze Hits Firm DETROIT (AP)-^^ire of un determined prigin caused $lh, 000 damage at Magnus Products Corp. in Northeast Detroit Tuesday night. No one was injured but firemen moved in special equipment as a precautionary measure because the firm man-unfactures flammable materials •uch as ruW)er cement and adhesives. "nie blaze was brought under control within 20 minutes. KRIL40Nf UTEX WAU. PAINT • IXClUiMT HIMMa ANB CAVIKAfil • MIU IN M MINUm • ur TO 4w io. rii or COVtIACi nl «AUON INlLltaMll,fflt4iai WHOLESALER DISCONTINUED MAJOR CARPET LINE AND WE DOUCHT IT ALL! YOU SAVE WAYS! "Carpets International," a famous midwest wholesaler, discontinued a major broadloom line to devote their entire warehouse space to other merchandise. Our alert buyers took advantage of their need to clear the warehouse, and made o cash offer for the entire line. The result? Tremendous savings for us that we are passing on to you. Their loss is your gain! This buy was so fabulous that we have repriced our own inventory to conform. You save both ways! Save on this special broadloom purchase! Save on our regu!ar in-stock carpeting! Here is a once-in-a-!ifetime opportunity to purchase nationaiiy famous carpeting at unbeiievably low prices. The famous brands are here: Bigelow, Aldon, Coronet, World, Barwick and many more. Hurry in and see the vast selection. "501” nylon tweed Nore’i a decorator’s dream, comoO In 6 festive colors Here's a lush, luxurious carpet that will complement any home's decor. It resists crushing and repels dirt. Heavy enough to last for years. Sale pricel Colossal wl “501” Rough ’n ready ‘SOI’ nylon, exciting solids or tweeds Fashionable enough to grace any home • . - rugged enough for heavy-traffic areas. 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FREE HOME SERVICE Our carpeting consultant will your 100% soft wool tip sheared thick pile 7.99"” The most luxurious, proven fiber of them all. 8 brilliant thick pile colors. vomniwrwei wei^ssi rugged nylon-tweed 4.99"” Space dyed: 3 colors In evOry strand of yarn. For busy home, office. Fiber content oi ebown lelotet to pile . . . "501" it DuPont's eertificotion mork for oil nylon meeting #a^w- • NO MONEY DOWN •MONTHS TO PAY *FREE HOME SERVICE OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9:30 Dray^ Op«ii Sundayi Noon to 6 downtown and DRAYTON PU1NS A—8 THE BONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1967 Housing Study Unit Gets Official Status The Pontiac Housing Study generally e x p e c t e d' to be Committee (PHSC) is an official tablished” for p 1 a n n i n g the city committee today following workable program. ' action on a revised motion last In a related HUD develop- night by the City Commission. - ^ity Manager Joseph Commissoners aPP/oyed unanimously a proposal that the PHSC be officially recognized, with a stipulation that suggestions be made to the commission within 60 days on Pontiac’s housing needs. Chairman of the 2S-member committee is Howard H. Fitzgerald n, pubUsher of The Pontiac Press. approval of 175 units of I6w-rent housing designed for the elderly. The new units bring to 425 the number given clearance by HUD to the Pontiac Housing Conunission. Approval of the new units was accompanied by allocation of At the same time, the com- preliminary planning loan in the mission reaffirmed the Inde- amount of $26,250. ' pendence of the minority housing subcommittee of fte Civic Improvement Advisory Commit- ? tee. A move to place the subcommittee under the aegis of the PHSC resulted last week in withdrawal of recognition of the larger committee pending a look at federal urban development requirements. A bulletin of the Department of Housing and Urban Develop ment (HUD) states that a minority housing subcommittee “is other business, commissioners gave unanimous approval to four proposed appointments to city boards. Gordon W. Rice of 235 Nelson, Mrs. Clayton Rule of 33 N. A n d e r s 0 n, and H. Vere Hodges of 224 Ottawa were named to the Board of Review. Appointed to fill a vacancy on the Police Triai Board was Jay Ruthenberg of 71 Dwight. ★ * ★ Commissioners also suppwted the City Planning Commission recommendation of denial of request to rezone to C-1 a resl-' lot at Joslyn and Brooks. J. DAVID VANDERVEEN Resourqes Center Exec Appointed Unanimous approval was given by the City Commission last to appointment of 3. David VanderVera as city project representative for the proposed Human Resources Center. VanderVeen, presently acting manager of Pontiac Municipal Airport, joins B. C. VanKough-nett, community action (Sector for the Pontiac schools, for planning work on the project. City Manager Joseph A. ' Warren, who recommended VanderVeen’s appointment, said he was “hcqiefur VanderVeen’s duties at the airport “can be reduced starting in the very near future.” Full transfer of VanderVeen' airport responsibilities awaits designation ol a new manager by the county, which acquired the facility in a land swap with the city. ★ ★ ★ The project under consideration is proposed for an area bound by new M59, East Boulevard, South Boulevard and Saginaw. A $10,000 planning grant to carry out an initial study was obtained by the board of education last September from the Mott Foundation. In a cover letter accompanying his recommendation, Warren described the resource center as a “piopeering effort” because of joint city-school efforts on the project. Previous proposals in 'other cities, he said, have been limited to school disti'ict participation. City Affairs Age Restriction Attirmed on Bar, Restaurant Help Despite a warning that the present qjty ordinance “might be illegal,” city comm' last night refused by a 4-3 vote to allow persons 18-20 years to in liquor-by-glass establishments. ★ ★ ★ The question was Imought fore the commission in the form of a proposed amendment to Ordinance 927, which sets 21 as the minimum age for busboys and waitresses in taverns and restaurants serving liquor. Favoring the proposed amendment were Commissioners John A. Dugan, Leslie H. Hudson and Robert C. Irwin. Opposing the change were Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. and Commissioners T, Warren Fowler, James H. Marshall and Wesley J. Wood. • ★ ★ * State law govetjning most areas outside of Pontiac permits the employment of persons under 21 in liquor establishments. ACTIVE DEBATE Voting (HI the issue was preceded by nearly 30 minutes of active , debate and a suggestion from Taylor that formal action be delayed for a legal opinion from City Attorney Philip A. id Rowstom ....... Rowston, who drafted the proposed amendment to the ordinance, said he “seriously doubted” the legality of the present statute. ^ Taylor maintained, however, that the commission should accept “all the (committee’s) rec-ommendaticxis ot none of them.” ★ ★ ★ Fowler, noting that waitresses under 21 would be permitted to work in bars and restaurants, said he objected to the proposed amendment. * ★ * A change in the statute had been backed by a number of Pontiac restaurateurs and tavern owners. Death Takes Sukarno Aide in His Jail Cell JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) Chaerul Saleh, once one of President Sukarno’s closest advisers, died early today in his jail cell, military sources reported. The sources said they believed Saleh had a heart attack. His body was taken to his home, where a large crowd gathered. ★ ★ * 1, a third deputy premier until the army todk over Indone- In addition, he said, objecting commissioners were overlooking the fact that 18-year-olds can dispense alcoholic beverages in Pontiac groceries. ★ ★ ★ Hudson and Irwin both cited recommendations from a city-appointed liquor study committee, which one year ago advised the city to> conform with the state law. Treasury Aide Joins Space Firm By the Associated Press David ,C. Acheson, son of former Secretary of State Dean Acheson, has resigned as special assistant to the secretary of the Treasury to become vice president and general counsel of the Communications Satellite Corp. ★ ' * Dr. Leland J. Hayworth, director of the National Science Foundation, has told a Senate subcommittee on government research he has “grave reservations” about the proposed establishment of a social science foundation' separate from his foundation. been in jail more than months awaiting trial charges of corruption and volvement in the attempted Communist coup in October 1965. He was 50. “It’s too bad he died in prison,” said one military source. “Now everyone will think interrogators had something to do with it.” , ARRESIED LAST MARCH Saleh was arrested with 15 other Cabinet ministers March. Two of them, forr Foreign Minister Subandrio former Central Bank Minister if MiiHa Dalam, have been sentenced to death. No date had been set for Saleh’s trial. Government sources said Saleh was believed to have deposited $100,000 of state funds in his own bank accounts abroad. ★ ★ ★ Some persons who knew Saleh said he was a man considerable ability wit)i a talent for organization. They said he was not a Communist but leaned to the left since the political wind was blowing ^at way. Don't No9locf Slippino FALSE TEETH ikalln»(nun-______ kle on your plataa,___,____________ mor* flrmly Mt. OIvm coufldant teol-IQS of feeitrlty and added eomfort. No gumaiy. gooey tasM or feeling. Denturee that at are eawntlal to health. Bee your denttet regularly. Oet FASTKBTH at aU drug oountetg. THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8. 1967 UAW RETIREE - UAW Vice President l,eonard Woodcock (left) presents a plaque to CSiarles Yaegv of 20 Berry, Bloomfield Hills, honoring Yaeger for his 22 yean of ' •ervke to the UAW before his re^t retire- ment as assistant directin' Of the accounting department. Yaeger was among 42 retired dr present UAW oMcers honored recently in cer^nonies at Detroit’s Sheraton-Cadillac Hotel.. Film Career Ahead for Griffith French Diplomat Runs for Deputy Seat PARIS (AP) - He’s one of fte world’s leading diplomats, but Maurice Couve de Murville is finding his neighbors aren’t mudi interested in his job. Pot the first time in his 36 years in government, Couve de Murville, €0, is trying to be elected a deputy in Parliament He’s running from the Left Bank district where he has had an apartmoit for 34 years. The Foreign Ministry, which he heads, is located there, too. ★ ★ ★ ^ The campaign doesn’t offidal-lyppen until Monday, Imt Couve de Murville has alieady set up two electiwieering offices in the district and has been holding private meetings. After one session where the voters were invited to ask ques- tions, a reporter asked him if there bad been any questions about foreign policy. Couve do Mtirville laugh^ and said, ”No. Nothing They asked about almost everything rise, including what the stock market was going to do.’V KDN’T KNOl^ HIM A photographer following Couve de Murville on a walking, handshaking tour asked a woman with a small dog to pose ^ "" the candidate. She did but she asked the idiotographer aftd (Touve de Murville strolled on “Why did you want that man in the pictim?’’ She had no idea who he was. ★ '★ ★ Couve de Murville is running for an (dfice that he doesn’t want and a seat he will never oc(nq>y. If he were elected aqd woa asked to continue as for-eigi minister, as Werycme would expect, he would r«dgn from die National Assembly a leave the seat to his replace-ilpit, elected on tee same tick-ett ■ ^ ★ ★ w Under tee Fifth Republic, an alternate for each deimty is elected at the same time as the deputy. The alternate takes the seat if tee de{Hity leaves the assembly for any reason. The (xmstitution also says a person cannot be a minister and a deputy at tee same time. Hence, a deputy must resign from the assembly to trice a Cabinet post and his alternate becomes tee tern is to keep assemblymen from jockeying for Cabinet portfolios. It also avoids special The main purpose of this sys- “The contrary would not have been conceivable.’’ STEPPED ASIDE Couve de Murville’s replacement is Jacques Mer, tee outgoing deputy who was elected in 1962 as Gaullists swept all tee assembly seats from Paris. When Couve de Murville decided to run, Mer stewed aside and took second place (Mi the ticket, obviously expecting to get tee seat anyway, w ★ ★ Couve de Murville hesitated a long time before he entered the electcwal arena. But he insists there was no pressure from President Charles de Gaulle. “I can tell you teat I took this decision in full freedom,” he said. LIFE INSURANCE ISSUED BY UHL ENTERIITAGE2tT08P KEEP IT FOR UFE MAILTHISAD NO OBLIGATION APPLIUTIOH HAILEO TO YOU NAME................ ADDRESS.......... STATE..„..........ZIP.. YEAROPSIRTH....... OREAT lAKIS INSUMNCI COMPANY ■LOIN, ILL. Mill, DIPT. MBD VWI Nexf TV Season Andy's last By BOB THOMAS AP M^o-Trieviskn Writer HOLLYWOOD - Andy Griffith has found a produce idio wnts him to .make family pnovies. For that reason win quit wericly televteion after his eighth on he vericly after I sea- c^^^^^H I film^^HlB ItDis-^^^^l Jh rec years the industry lowed Walt i: ney to maihtainl a virtual mono- TOmwai* poly ih the pro- ™OMAS duction of movies for tim entire family. Now it that the Disney Studio aill be friAng competition. Between rriiearsals for his CBS speari for Feb. 21, Griffith discloeed that next season will be the last for “The Andy Griffith l^w,” de^ite the series’ continued high ratings. '‘I’ll continue to do specials — fluee in three years,” he said. ‘But I won’t be doin’ the series because I gotta make pictures for Universal, and 1 can’t do both. * ★ ★ “The reason I’m doin’ pictures is because Lew Wasser-man asked me. He said he wanted to make family movies, and he wanted me to be in ’em. “Now, nobody ever aslted me to make a bun^ of pictures be-tore. It was rianys me askin’ if I could jmake a picture for MOVIES NEXT — Andy Griffith (left), shown wite actress Maggie Peterson and actor Don Knotts during a break in rehearsals for his upcoming CBS special, says next season will be the last for his television series, “The Andy Griffith Show.’’ After tiiat,he plans to concentrate on making family movies for Universal. No mwe TV sales, he insists. them. It’s much better the other way.” K Waisserman, head man (^ tee MCA parent of Universal^ apparently figures Griffith is a natural^ to capture the vast, largely’ ovprlooked family audience. 'The studio has made a mint wite films starring Andy’s long-time sidekick, Don Knotts — who appears on the special, along with Tennessee Ernie Ford. * * it “I figure for the first film I’ll play a similar kind of man to what I play on televisicm,” Grif-fite remarkol. “He wouldn’t be a sheriff, but the same kind of fellow, basically. “I’d do one by myself, then one with Don. If they’re smart, they’ll put us together all the time, because we do well as a team. I’d like to do ail kinds of roles, even a heavy. ! think I’d be a pretty good heavy and Don could do one, too. ’That boy’s right good actor. | “The contract with Universal is a long one — 10 years. Of course if the first couple of pictures don’t make it, they’ll throw me outa the studio. But I’m willin’ to take my chances.” ★ ★ ★ Griffith .seems -as—little changed by his success as any show-business millionaire can be. He lives quietly in a Toluca Lake home with his wife and two children and returns to'his Norte Carolina beginnings whenever he gets a work break. He appears at Hollywood social gatherings only under duress. Performing before audiences stiU holds terror for him. “I guess that goes back to my start in the business. There was some nightclubs where I could do my act for 45 minutes and not get a single lau^. That’s the worst thing can happen ' performer.” Viet War Kills 10 Americans WASHINGTON (AP) - The Defense Department has announced six Army men and four .^Marines killed in action in Viet-nam. Six other fatalities in other categories also were listed. Killed in action: PIc. MiClWRl T. SOUTH CAROLINA -Worttiy, Moon. TlXAS - Wc. Nleh p«e. 4 iirry 0. I E. Tmtama, ''’"'"■"'marine corps . ^ . VLORIOA - Stiff Sgl. PlUl D- Ho lo-Orlando; CpI. Charlaa Eitlra Jr« *mI5saCHU$BTTS - Ind Lf. Brian R. OXonnor, Andovar. . . . TEXAS — Lanea CpI. JamM L, Wat- Missing to dead, hostile: •ARMY NEW JERSEY - Pte. John J. ShiW, ^*Missi!% as a resrit of hostile iKthm: ARMY &4 H*n>M My Mw> • — not as a result of hostile action: ARMY CALIFORNIA — F»t. Glonn V. Card-, nar-Coltan. ARKANSAS — eanw Cwlhelmaii 1.C noriwstile: NORTH CAROUNA^-Mala tC naNUki H. O f THURSDAY - FRIDAY Special Famous DEENA TABLE LAMPS Brilliant styling ot sale pricesl Trodi-tionol white, contemporary ceramics in colors. Provincials in woods, etc. Coordinated shades. 40' K ^ Open , 1 Thur«., ^ 9:3DA.M. J to S:3« P.M. M S:3«lo« HONqOP FINECT SRA 108 N. SAOINAW • FE 3-1114 Sandy Hundley had a ball today. Fun! On the job. Mostly because she gets along with people and enjoys doing something extra for them. It might be a Saudi Arabian sheik, a business tycoon, a lawyer, a mother, a matinee idol or a multi-millionaire Australian pr<»pector. Stretching it a bit? Maybe. Some days are more exciting than others but no matter... people will always be the most interesting part of her job. She liken them- So she’s quick, alert, pleasant and helpful. And that’s why people like hCT. Sandy learned a long time ago that all peddle like to be liked. We saw that the day she came to us. That’s why she’s an Operator for Michigan Bell in Saginaw. Michigan Beil Part of tiiB Notionwidi BoH Syiton A—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WgDNESDAY> FUBEUARY 8, 1967 Draft Forum atCranbrook The controversy on selective service will be in the spotlight at Cranbrook School tomorrow night. A Student group, The Forum, has invited a panel to represent the legal and moral ’aspects of the problem. ' Teen groups from the area have been invited to attend the event at 7:30 in the Cran-:/ brook Auditorium on iMt Pine, east of Lahser.y/ Among the speakers will be Father David Grade from St. Joseph’s Episoo^ Church in Detroit He spoored a recent p4n conscientious ob-0 gained national at- A, Holmes, director of tbe Michigan Selective Service, or one of his officers, iS also expected. HAWK AND DOVE David Klein, a lawyer who has defended draft objectors, is on the panel as well as others representing “hawk” and “dove” attitudes about the Vietnam war. Deaths in Poijfjac/ Nearby Areas Urn Ralph Road Official New Head of Credit Union Service for of 24 Allison Friday neral Home with burial Methodist was taken'there by Donelson-Johns ^Hiheral Home. Guy, a retired employe Pf tbd^Fisher Body Pland, died yesterday. Surviving are a brother, E. L. Guy of Pontiac, and a sister. Ralph J. Thorp Service for Ralph J. Thorp, 72, of 205 W. Booklyn will be 1:30 p.m. Friday at Donelson-Johns Funeral Home with burial White Chapel Memwial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Thorp, a retired employe of Food Town Super Markets, died yesterday. He was a meijn-ber of Emmanuel Baptist Church. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Edson F. Halt of Pontiac and Mrs. William Lanway of Lake Orion; a son, Jdhn C. of San Diego, CaUf.; 14 grandchil-d r e n; 20 great-grandchildren; and a sister. Mrs. Ernest L. Wells Joseph Davis, supervisor of safety, jHiblic relations and personnel for the Oakland County Road Commission, last night was elected president of 'the County Employes Credit Union. Davis succeeds Herbert Ra-dunz who served six one-year terms as president. Elected vice president of the credit union was Leo M. Half-’ penny, budget director for the County Board of Auditors. The other newly elected officers are Shakey Giodoshian, deputy probate register for the County Provate Court, secretary; and William J. Jon«»,'engineering department em4>loye of the road commission, treas^ urer-manager. All officers were elected to one-year terms. They also are ex officio members of the credit union’s board of directors. Service for Mrs. Ernest L. (Lydia M.) Wells, 80, of 3599 Frankman, Waterford Township, will be 2 p.m. Saturday in Price Funeral Homd, Lewisberg, Ky., with burial tiiere in the Lewisberg Cemetery, Logan County. Arrangments were by die Pursley Funeral Home. Mrs. Wells died this morning. Surviving are two sons, Mel-in of Waterfwd Township and 0. of Sturgean, Mo.; three j r V, ......... Two Waterford Township res-|. T*" Fraolt.Wint.rholter ^ , near Forest Drive in the towl^ Archie A. Amos iship- Listed in satisfactory condi- Benfley Good After Surgery ANN ARBOR (AP)-Former Republican Congressman Alvin Bentley was reported in good condition Tuesday foUowing surgery at the University of ^chi-gan Hospital. Doctors said they expect Bentley, a member of the university’s Board of Regents, will remain in the hospital about two weeks and then convalesce at home in Owosso, Micl>. His ailment was not disclosed. . Main will be 2 p,m. Friday at First Church of the Naza-rene. Burial will be in Mount Avon Cemetery by Pixley Memorial Chapel. Mr. Evens died yesterday.^e was a retired supervisor with the Ford Motor Co. Surviving arg his wife, Ellen S.; two sons, Samuel G. of Auburn Heights and Harry F. S, Jr. of Pontiac; two daughters, Mrs. Ljllian Johnson (d Rochester and. Mrs. Dorothy Cameron of Alma; 12 grandchildren; and 15 great-grandchildren. Jacob E. Foess WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN-SHIP — Service for Jacob E. Foess, 72, of 3916 Detroit will be 1 p.m. Friday at St. Matthew’s Lutheran Church,.... Lake. Burial will be in Glen Eden Cfemetery, Livonia. A Lutho'an prayer service will be conducted at 8 p.m. Ihursday at Richardson - Bird ^eral Home, Walled Lake. hfr; Foess, a retired dvU engineer for the city of Detroit, died Monday. A brother survives. Robert C. Hicks METAMORA TOWNSHIP -Service for Robert C. Hicks, 60, of 3785 Hough will be 1:30 p. m. Friday at Muir Brothers Funerai; BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — John R. Wiiliams, 97, d 1697 Home, Lapeer. Burial will be in Metamora Cemetery. Mr. Hicks, a horseman, died yesterday. He was a member of the Professlqitaal Horsemen’s,Association. / Surviving are Ins wife. Mar-velle; five d a u^h t e r s, Mrs. IsabeUe Bow of Wilmington, Del., Mrs. Margaret McNett of Spring Valley, Calif., Mrs. Sarah Davies of Clawson, I^yonne at home and Mary of Detroit; two I, Willis of Wilmington, Del. and Robert E. of Tacoma Wash.; six brodiers and sisters; and 16 grandchildren. Ernest, Kelly AVON TOWNSHIP - Service for Ernest xlSv/MrAl BIRDUGE.,.. Like It? Charge Iti 3.99 3 Days Only—Our Reg, 3.77 24''TOTEM POLE PLANTS grown in 6"pots 3 Days Only-^Our Reg. 994 2 99 9%x9"PUSTIC • FLOOR PLANTER .. Like It? Charge It! hAen's S-SA‘l [Reg. 2.87 1.57 1.97 No more shirt irtwiing! A pressing problem solved fo^ ever in a great blend of 50% Blue "C”* polyester, 50% combed cotton. One full year’s worth of normal wear guaranteed! Plaids, prints and maize. Men, denim red, brown or ^enim blue. Regular and button-down collars. •CAemstrandTM 50% Fortrel*Polyester - 50% Cotton NO-IRON SLACKS Reg. 3.99 Reg. 4.99 Reg. 4.99 Boys’S-U |8I-, Cdloi^o Moturo Slin, Husky Mtu’s 2S-36 Mon’s 29-42 2.97 3.97 3.97 Fortrel* IPERMAIIEIITl PRESS ^Fiher Industries trademark DOWNTOWN PONTJAC I TEL-HURON CENTER DRAYTON PUINS ROCHESTER PLAZA BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE PONTIAC MALL SHOP WITHOUT CASH - "CHARC5 !T" AT KRESGE’S - PAY ONLY ONCE A MONTJj .13: A—18 ' A THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8. 1907 JilliELmOI& THE PONTIAG PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, im B-1 Coffee Precedes Talk of Opera Overture By SIGNE KARL8TROM On Tuesday, Mrs. Henry Whiting Jr. and Mcs. Kenneth Cun-ninghaiJ^^ Jr. entertained for morninsr ^ffee at the Village Woman's Olub members of the Detroit Grand Opera Association Birmingham \|31oomfield opera committee It wtis a get together to discuss the Opera Overture which is produced by Dr. David DiChiera. Performances will take place in Pontiac Northern High School on March 2 and 3. Mrs. Paul Shine is chairman for contacts w i t h the schools and Mrs. J(h seph C. Quay is chairman for the Overture. Cochairmen for entertaining the cast of the Metropolitan performances when they come here in May are Mrs. Edward N. Cole and Mrs. William Mitchell. Mrs. William M. Walker (left) came Road, who are cochairmen of the Birming-from Grosse Pointe Tuesday morning to ham-Bloomfield opera committee. Mrs. a coffee at the Village Woman’s Club. Walker is general chairman of the Detroit Hostesses were Mrs. Henry Whiting Jr., Grand Opera Association. The get-Bloomfield Hills (center) and Mrs. Ken- together was to discuss the upcoming pro-neth W. Cunningham Jr., Waddington ductions of Overture to Opera. Mother Criticizes Housekeeping His Values Are Not Yours By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: My married daughter lives 30 miief i|,om me. She has a wonderful hup-|band and a ' ’year-old child. ’ I ^e has a nice, anew apartment I and everything ^to do with, but I whenever I visit I her, the place is I a mess and she ■ is usually in her ABBY robe. There is never a place to put anything or to sit down. How my son-in-law can stand it is beyond me. I know his mother, and she is an immaculate housekeeper. How can I make my daughter see the shame of it? When I walk in and see the mess, she doesn’t even act embarrassed. She and her husband get along like two lovebirds now, but I’m afraid if she doesn’t start keeping house properly it won’t last. HER MOTHER DEAR MOTHER: F;ortunately for your daughter, her husband values are not the same as yours. If they were, he surely would have insisted that she im-pro’^ her housekeeping. Don’t try to ^ame” your daughter. Pretend don’t notice the mess. She may have qualities that affe more important to her husband than the ability to keep house. For her sake, 1 hope so. * ★ ★ DEAR ABBY; This is the second marriage for both my husband and me. It is a happy marriage, and we get along beautifully. We’ve been married nearly five years. Our problem is that\we would like to have a baby. % husband is 38 and I am 41. (i lqok 35.) We want a baby Very much, but the thing that has me worried is .my age. Am I too old to have a baby? Would people stare? What about complications? If my doctor says to go ahead, should we venture into parenthood at our ages? “AGE CONSCIOUS” DEAR AGE CONSCIOUS: Why not? When the good Lord decrees that a woman is “too oid” to have a child. Mother Nature endwses the decree by revoking the privilege. WWW DEAR ABBY: I’ve been mar-^ried for 25 years and my pet ve is my husband’s constant iplaining about the sandwich-it in Ms lunch pail, ays he loves tuna fish, but ' I his hands smell. He t like pork products and 1 {leanut butter gfves him a paunil>etweeB- his shoulder blades. Im also says he is sick of eggs wpd cold cuts. And chickai uAtuAey «re too dry. Yesteruyl^ came hoiiie ami said a I bacon sandwich and it looked real good, so this morning I put in tijs luqch. pail. Well, he . e hopie toM^t ^dfsaid he found out Canaditm baibon was ham and he hates ham! Do yotthave ariy ideas, Abby? My man is driving me nuts. OUT OF IDEAS DEAR OUT: Keep giving him tuna and pack rubber gloves! CONFIDENTIAL TO H. H. G.: Relax and be yourself. “The most exhausting thing in life is being insuictte.” (Anne Llodt".' bei#i). .. w w Troubl^? Write to Abby, in’ care of The Pontiac FTess. For a personal reply enclqie a stamped, - self-addressed «f»ve-lope. I Calendar I I ^ THURSDAY ; X Fashion Your Figure r k Club, 7:30 p.m., Adah | I Shelly Library. Valentine * party. FRIDAY Detroit Handweav- » ers and Spinners, 11 a.m.. International Institute, De- -troit. Show and Tell program follows at 1 p.m. ; SATURDAY I American Legion Cook- ^ Nelson Post No. 20 a n d Auxiliary, 6:30 p^m. ' Legion hall. Cooperative dinner with joint initia fion. Pontiac VASA lodgle No. II 510, 9 p.m. Pythian Hall I on Voorheis Road, Annual ; Valentine dance. AT SIBLEY’S MIRACLE MILE FINAL REDUCTIONS! LAST 4 DAYS SEMI-ANNUAL SHOE SALE FOR MEN FLORSHEIM Selected Styles and REGULAR-119.95 to .'% 4- > WINTHROP- SIBLIY Selected Styles ^6” and VALUES TO $17.95 FOR WOMEN RED CROSS and YITALin Selected Styles *7.90 REGULAR $12.00 to $19.00 SANDLER, MISS WONDERFUL, WINTER BOOTS DUnmlinueti Style, *3.90 «o *7.90 REGULAR $8 to $20 FLORSHEIM *11.00 Selecled Styles Reg. $1S to $20 Sibley's semi-annual sale is famous all over the Pontiac area because of the wonderful values in famous brand shoes. Bring the entire family and save many dollars in this great event. FOR CHILOREN . . SPECIAL GROUP YANI(£m°AND NOW ’3.90 and ’4.90 REDfiOOSE ,, , Values to $8,95 "MICHIGAN’S LARGEST FLORSHEIM DEALER” m USE YOUR SECURITY CHARGE OR MICHIGAN BANKARD LL ^ MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER SIl wCS OPEN EVENINGS 'TIL 9 South Telegraph at Square Lake Road Mrs. John Dorsey has charge of the adult education lectures which will begin at Cranbropk in April. Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Wilson Jr. and Henry P. Wenger will make a wericend flight to Fort Lauderdale, Fla. to attend the Valentine dinner dance Mrs. Wilson’s and Mr. Wenger’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry E. Wenger, are giving at the Lauderdale Yacht Club on Saturday.* There will be many friend coming for this special occasion, some who are already in Florida and others who will make a weekend trip. Among those are: Mr. and \Mrs. Kingsley Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Mort Shugg and Mr. and Everett Wel^^. ’The L. A. Weyands of San Francisco, formerly of Detroit, will be among the guests as well as the Philip C. Bakers of Grosse Pointe. For many years the Bakers, Wengers and Weyands were neighbors in Detroit, became close friends and took a very active part in the opera and symphony work. Mr. Wenger sHll serves as vice chairman of the board of the Detroit Grand Opera Association. Two Techniques A demonstration of oil and acrylic techniques will be given by Mrs. Robert Poi;ter at Friday’s meeting .of the ’ Pontiac Society of Artists. ’The meeting .. is scheduled fw 8 p.m. in the Community Services Building. Members of the Society will exhibit works at the Sunday performance of the Pontiac S^phony Orchestra in P o n-tiac Northern High School. JANICE LOUISE GOINES Complete Open Stock Bedroom Groupings B—2 J'M l*QN;riAC PRESS WEljNKSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1967 th mid-winter fanutuie □ill STOREWIDE REDUCTIONS! Magnificent Maple at Savings! Exclusiv* at STEWART-GLENN COMPANY in the Pontioc-Birminoham-Bloomfield area, KLING COLONIAL Early American Furniture ... noted for its authentic ctyling, warmth, charm and superb craftsmanship. Select Solid Maple Bedroom and Dining Room group at savings now, during our 50th Mid-Winter Sale! SO” Double Dresser, Framed Mirror, SALE orFuUSieeBed / ^ S-DrawerChes^eg. S139.50, SALE S119.S0 KLING COLONIAL MASTER BEDROOM Elegantly styled open-stock solid Maple bedroom includes 50" double dresser with seven drawers, six-drawer chest, handsome spindle bed. You'll love its Buckwheat Brown, worm-toned finish. 56”x88” Spoonfoot Table (extends to 86”—2 leaves) 4 Duxbury Side Chairs. Reg. 8278.50 ,LE »239*» 54” Buffet and China Top Reg. •359“-SALE •299“ I'lVE-PlECE COEONIAL DINING ROOM Kling Colonial adds the beauty which makes dining an occasion. Extension Table 56"x38" extends to 86" with two TS" leaves. Top is wood-grained Formica. The hutch cabinet offers plenty of storage space. An exceptional value! V D«corating Coniultotion Special Orders at Sale Prices Opon Thou., Fri.j-Mon.,'fil 9 1680 S. Tojpgraph Rd., Noor Orchprd Lak« Rd, Fpm Parking Front of Stpro, FE 2-8348 Convoniont Budgot Tprms Preshrink Cloth PTA Council Hears Educator Before Using If Always preshrink any washable raaterial when using it as an interfacing to stiffen collars an interfacing to stiffen collars, cuffs, lapels, and other Haircloth w tailor’s canvas, used with heavier suit or coat materials, does not require preshrinking. We Sell and Service WGS ires by dc Coiffures by donnell Past Successes Recorded O^mmode CAREER GIRL Lovely, long-weoringw walking sheers with NO-BIND TOPS. •'itay a htUtr «o/*« mti tee « differtnet it mates. ” 82 N. Saginaw St. Looking back at the accom-pUslunents of past years was part \ of the program for the PohtiacJ PTA Council’s Foun*. ders Day banquet ’Tuesday ( evening. The theme at Kennedy Junior High School was “Keys to PTA.” Dr. Dana P. Whltmer spoke on behalf of the school administration, discussing the cooperation needed between the two groups. ■ * ★ * Rev. Russell Hoover of the Michigan Congress of Parents and Teachers, spoke on “Why PTA?” PTA is a form of leadership in the state to help further the education here and in the country as a whole, he said. FOCAL POINT PTA helps to bring out problems, crystalize and confirm views of our city as well as those of other places. As a group, some action can then be taken. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Fred Goines, president of the Council, spoke of the founding of PTA in Washington D. C. 70 years ago as a national congress. The Pontiac PTA Council has been operating since 1923. ACCOMPUSHMENTS Mrs. Goines named some of the major acconqiUshments of the past — dMital and medical checkups in the 30’s; fluoridation; polio clinics; the start of the scholarsbip fund; the blood bank; TB tests. 4r ★ ★ Past presidents attending were Mrs. Lee Hill, Mrs. ...indthKyMiOoyoumjoytInttniqui CLINiC-qul% eombinatiOA «(fMhion, fit and comfort? Ym’II km Itl $11 to PAULI’S S 35 N. Saginaw St., Pontiac Frank Schmidt, Mrs. Gordon i, Mrs. Paul (jorman, Mrs. Grey, Mrs. Thomas and Mrs. Robert That- chet. Othqr guests were the William Lacys, the Vernon Schillers, the Monroe Osmuns, the Russell Browns, Lewis Crew andMrs.WiUiamMarshaU. Concluding the list were Mr. and Mi’s. Daniel Hutchins, Mrs. Russell Hoover, Mrs. Dana P- ^tmer and Fred Goint(s. f , " ♦ ■'■■V ^ Mrs. Tratchet was general chairman for the evening. She was assisted by Mrs. Benjamin Shelton, Mrs. Willis Schn^-enburger, Mrs. Marvin McVic-ar and Mrs. Bruce Graham. THE FINEST QUALITY ... Dependable Elegance! O OMEGA The •lin-ttihoaetio Soimaeler DeVille wind* itself as yon weir h; and is peifset for sports or evening wear. Hie ladies' watch features g facet.ed|ied jewehcrysuL I8K gold dial-markers, fully jeweled movements. Other Omege watches from $65 to over SIOOO. REDMOMD’S k Jewelry . SAGINAW, PONTIAC? Frempoking in Rear of Ston ' MRS. PETER HOWARD Double-Ring Ceremony Unites Peter Howards A recent double-ring ceremony in St. Patrick’s Catholic Church and reception in Airway Lounge marked the vows of Jean Sanderson and Peter Howard. The Ralph E. Sandersons of Elkin Drive, Commerce Township, and the John Howards of Dorr, are parents of the couple. ★ ' * ' * Alencon lace and pearl applique highlighted the bride’s gown and chapel train of white peau de sole worn with butter^ fly veil of silk illusion. She held cascading white carnations. With Mrs. W. R. Bigler, her sister’s matron of honor, were bridesmaids Veronica Howard, Grand Rapids; Mrs. Ronald Fisher, Mrs. Thomas Mucha, Kalamazoo, and Mrs. Benson Weedon of Paw Paw. Attending their aunt as flower girl and ring-bearer were Dawn and Glynn Bigler. itter^- —^ She TO Speed Shining for Busy Days Here’s a novel way to give table silver a quick shine; Fill a coffee pot with water, add two tablespoons of cream of tartar, and stand the silverware on end .in this solution overnight. Then wash as usual in plenty of hot soap or detergent suds, rinse with hot water, and wipe dry to shining brightness. Ivan Weber of Dorr was best man. Skating guests were Eugene and John Lenhart, also of Dorr, Rmiald Fisher and Benson Weedon. ★ ★ '★ After a honeymoon, the couple will reside in Wayland. Mrs. Howard is a seni^ at Western Michigan University where her husband was a former student. 'Bake-off Feat or Beta Chis at Meeting A “bake-off” contest with each member contributing her favorite dish was included in the Monday night meeting of the Beta Chi Chapter of Epsilon Sigma Alpha Sorority. Mrs. John Orosey conducted the contest. Hostess was Mrs. Jere Strang of School House Drive. Mrs. Edgar Plympton was auctioneer for a white elephant sale at the meeting. * ★ ♦ Final plans were made for the forthcoming bridge party to be held at the First F^eral. Saving of Oakland BuMng on. Feb. 20. ♦ * ★ Mrs. Carl Rose is chairman of this event. Proceeds will benefit various philanthropic projects. Guests were Mrs? Reuben Sandy, Mrs. Thomas Clifton, Mrs. Bruce Martyn and Mrs. VemLovse. When Good Grooming Counts. Now's the time to look your best... hearts all flutter when you're well dressed. But don't look good (ust on occasion.. . Well groomed persons need no persuasion. And, no matter what the cleaning problem, Gresham takes the lead ... The finest Professional Drycleaning has olwoys been oor cried... So; settle not for second best,, ^ when all year round you'll be 'best dressed'. COMPLETE SMIRTIEIIVIOE f (’I the UttU Thinga That Cosmt At Crethami 8M l^akland Avtnut FE4-28T9 ¥¥¥¥¥( ^HE PONTIAC PKESS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1967 Johnson Girls ' Back in News With Activities WASHIPJGTON W - While Lynda Johnson makes plans! for a White House party spiced with royaity, % President’s' other daughter, Luci, is back home in Ausljin, Tex. ★ * ★ Luci and her husband, Pa* trick J. Nugent, returned to AusUn lliesday after visiting Ws parents in Waukegan, 111., iorttweek. * ★ ★ Nugent has enrolled in two University of Texas courses toward his master’s degree in business administraticm. ★ ★ ■ ★ liAici has no courses sched-tfled for the spring term, although friends said she may take a typing course. ★ ★ ★ The White House announced ’Tuesday that Lynda will give ^ dinner dance foTW guests Feb. 17 in hohor of Princess Irene of Greece. * ★ * The princess, 24, has been visiting in the United States for several weeks. She and Lynda have met several times. “The secret is all in the wrist/* or at least that is what Richard Younce of Florawood Drive (left) and William Grantz of Highgate Street, would have us believe..Both (men will he on duty Thursday from 5 to 7 p. m. when Della Lutes PTA fathers sponsor a pancake supper in the school. MRS. P. M. RONQUtLLO Sprinkle Lightly Bubble bath should be sprinkled on the water while you are running the water in tub. Don’t waste sweet-smelling crystals. A small amount will provide all the froth you need. Custom PICTURE FRAMING See The MALL ART SHOW NOW THRU FEB.J, FINGER’S/ of THE MALL \ . 682-0411 PTA in Pontiac ’THURSDAY LeBaron, 7 p.m. men’s night and panel discussion; service provided. Longfellow, 2 p.m. in auditorium; librarians to present ffogram. McConnell, 7 p.m., guest speaker, John Purdue on “Every Parents’ Role in Human Relations,” nursery room available. McCarroll, 7:30 p.m., Founder’s Day Program. Bell Ringers will entertain; sitter service provided. Wilson, 7:30 p.m. will honor past presidait. Rev. William Offutt is guest. White Mink Trims Gown for Vows White mink trinuned gown of wdiite peau de sde and circled a headpiece for Faye Ann Reynolds at her recent mar-niage to Peter Macario Ron-.quillo of West Longfellow Avenue, in Our Lady of the Lakes Church. Clipped to her ensemble for the wedding-trip to Niagara Falls, N.Y. were pink Sweetheart roses from the bridal bouquet. Receiving with the couple in Amvets Hall, Oakland Avenue,, were their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul L. Reynolds, Addie Street, and the Macario 0. Ronquillos of West Tennyson Avenue. With Mrs. ’Thomas Hampton of West Lafayette, Ind. her sister’s honor matron were bridesmaids Mrs. Vernon Verch and Mrs. Michael Clever with Pamela Verch, junior maid. I^rgaret Thornberry was flower girl and Michael Tanner, ring-bearer. Paul Ronquillo of Mount Pleasant was Ws brother’s best man, with Donald Sutkus of Toledo, Leslie Smith and Edward Reynolds as ushers. "LIVING SOUND* "HiSARINO AIDS B-4 , THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1967 A BLUE RIBBON MBOULdR OR DRIP COFFEE Hillf Brotherf A KITCBEN MUST Hamn-Wrap STAR-KIST FAMOUS Tuna Pius FOR coonm excellence Moxola Oil UqjBT CBUNK STYLE DEL MONTB^R Nothing says lovin’ like something from the oven Bake him sometMng **rtgJa from the hearf* with Ais beautiful, unusual heart-shaped cake pan, FREE from Wrigley the perfect way to say Happy Valentines Day! CAKIPAN With'Gouport ^ If} WORTH 40e I YOUR CHOICE II ' S, * Imriil* Mb 4 C«iTy\PM / * fawm B«b q«Ty P«il i ^ I • OUonaBiA«‘NCirryPm ff I • Bn«41 Mm» Uf Mt 'HCirryPM I / . , DELiaOVSFULLY^OOKED SMOKED 06.38^ Select Shank Portion V/ TUNA 27* Wt. pkg. SEUrO DEUaoVS Chuusu Cake Mix COVHTRrmCBEN ^ Honosanind Milk 2 89c FORAWmSWASH Roman Bloach FRANCO-AMERICAN SpaghaHi ... Fine Boneless Meats are Best! Leg-O-Pork For tender rotting, langy barbecuing or delicious braising, Leg-O-Porkisamealfitforakingl ' Round RoasfZ 99^ Truly an adventure in fine eating, Wiigleys Boneless Round Roast makes d meal the whole fondly loves. .SAVE 6c • Apple • Orange • Pink-Pineapple- Grapefruit ^ Leg-O-VeaV^"^ ^99^ From young, tender, milk-fed calves, Wrlglejft LespOVedl will enhance any dinner party Del-Monfe Drinks I pt. 14 Oi. Can Chuck Roast B ^ 79^ America’s favorite roast.. .and because Us boneless its easy to carve right at the table. J COUPON U q»l. iJeitip 49c r Blue Ribbon UUlGE 28* ''“.SSI I. MM fiUM9 USJDU. CBOICB BOHBIESS iMf Shw ALL SOLID MEAT-BONELESS Pork Butt Roast V.SJ>A. CHOICE BONELESS Rib Stooks U.SJ>A. CHOICE BONELESS Top Raiifid Stoak RATH’S BLACK HAWK OR NEW •WRACURE’ Armour Slleod Bacon |,ic!|VB9* FANCY GRADE-A- Hen Turkeys TOP FROST BONELESS Turk#yRoa$t BONELESS STRIP OR 4ta 10 ^ lb. avg. n>. Creamy Sno-White CaHffomia HEAD Large Jumbo CaMflower hedd 35* j vrilh mr California Execution to Be First Since '63 SAN QUENTIN, Callfj (AP) -California’s first execution in four years—after a moratorium on,death extend^ by 48 coiirt reversals and nine govemlor’s commutations—is set for Marc^i 1. ^ Lean, pale Dorman F. Talbot Jr. 26, son of an Oxnard, Calif., Jeweler, seems likely to be the first of the 62 men crowding San Quentin PHson’s death row to die in the two^eat, green-Walled octagonal gas chamber since Jan. 23, 1963. ★ Using a wrench, Talbot beat to death an sdready unconscious sailor to get money to finance a marriage that never came off. Barring success of (»ie impending legai maneuver,, Taibot, strai^ied to a straight-backed chair, will breathe the lethal fumes h^rocyanic acid snortlly after 10 a.m7 ‘BANKERS HOURS’ “As ymi know, die California executiona* keep s banker’ hours,” wrote Caryl Chessman in a farewell note. “He never kills before 10 o’clock in the morning, never after 4 in the afternoon." Chessman was probably the most widely known of the 193 persons who have died in the chamber thus far. move could cause a postpme-ment. Wirin argued that the death penalty does not deter murder. Opponents of the death penalty point dut that in 1963, when-James Abner Bentley was executed for killing a Fresno Li-store owner, there were 3.7 killings for every 100,000 people. In 1966, after California had become the nation’s most populous state, the rate dropped to 3.2. * ★ ★ There has been no execution since Bentley died Jan. 23,1963. Death sentence reversals in the courts, based primarily on whethw the condemned men SCHEDULED TO DIE-If Dorman F. Talbot Jr. enters were told of tiieir rights to coun- the gas chamber at California’s San Quentin prison March l' sel and silence, helped prolong he will 6e the first condemned man executed in the state in more than four years. A series court decisions and executive commutations have resuited in 62 men waiting to be executed. Talbot was conviQted of a robbery-killing. WASHINGTON (APf- Within week6 the U.S. Constitution is expected to get its 3Sth jSmend-ment. It would provide transfer of power if the president became t^isabled. i. And it would provide for fill* ing a vacancy h the office of the vice president. To date, 36 state legislatures have ratified the presidential disability and succession amendment. Tvro more must do so. The Constitution requires the moratorium. None of these points figures in Talbot’s case. Aside from Wirin’s threat, his only hope would be a commutation by California’s new Gov. Ronald Reagan. COMMUTED SENTENCES Reagan, who supports capital punishment, decisively defeated two-term Gov. Edmund G. Brown last November. Brown, firmly opposed to capital punishment, commuted 22 death sentences but 35 were excuted during yeare. He was executed May 2, 1960, after masterminding a 12-year legal fight from his cell to avoid dying for terrorism in Los Angeles lovera’ lanes. Last Jan. 18, when Talbot’s execution date was set, A.L. Wirin of Los Ancles, chief counsel for the American Civil Liberties Unbn, served notice he would seek to stop it He contended it was “cruel and unusual punishment” in violation of the U.S. CkHistitution. Superior Court Judge C. Douglas Smith refused Wirin’s petition, saying Talbot’s “lega process ' has been exhausted’ with a rejection (tf his appeal by the U,S. l^preme Court DELAY POSSIBLE Wirin then said he would seek | a writ of habeas corpus in the California State Supreme Court. Dist Atty. Woodrto J. Deem conceded that Wirin’s legal Area Highway Men Honored Two area men were among 19 llBchlgto—State-JB^way De- ;^ a^4(dense €lai!»^ pub- partment employes honored at a lunchemi-in Lansing today for their long years of service. Receiving service awards for 25 yea-rs on the job were ’Theophilu Northcross of 168 As-torwood and Edward F. Kozlow-ski, 1^ Gettysburg, Avon Township. *■ * ★ Three others also received 25-year awards. Awards for 30 years service went to five employes, while nine received awards for 20 years swvice. State Highway Commissioner Wallace D. Nunn made the presentations, saying “Dedicated employes, such as yourselves, are the foundaticm ot the highway department and have contributed ^ much to its mic-cess and leadership in highways over the years.” 'Shipments of soft drink cans the first eight months this year rose 48.6 per cent over corresponding period for 1965. Hypersonic Plane Design Set By Science Service WASHINGTON - Recently a variable-sweep aircraft design coSs'*®‘‘®” configuration as the lis eieht ^ country’s first ® supersonic transport plane. Now ing” for the 4000-m.p.h. hypersonic transport that vrill follow the SST. In a study for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, four designs were considered, including double delta. Just before he left office,^ , - ... Brown granted four commuta^ jfighter, has selected the double- Taibot killed Midihel D. Bar-**®**^ as “most promis-tholomew March 12, 1965, in the Port Hueneme home of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Randall. it * Bartholomew had left his Navy discharge money, $283, with the Randalls While he went out f(H‘ a night on the town. While he was gone, a plot was contrived to kill him and use the money for Talbot to marry a 16-year-old girl. When Bartholomew returned, he was put to bed on the kitchen floor and the gas stove was turned on. It didn’t kill BEATEN BRUTALLY “I will take care of this,” Talbot was quoted by his prosecutor as telling|the Randalls, who then left the ^m. Bartholomew was beaten brutally with a wrench and also stabbed, then his body was thrown over a cliff onto an ocean beach. ★ The projected Talbot marriage never took place. Randall got a life sentence. His wife, Barbara, received a jail term for accepting stolen property—jewelry owned by Bartholomew. 'General Dynamics Corp., which variable-sweep, single delta with not try. But he urged an all horizontal tail, and a scram-jet configuration similar to the double delta. 25th Amendment Law Soon| aiqiroval by three-fourths — of the legislatures. The amendment has mot been rejected so far by any legislature that has considered it The author of the proposal in the Seobte, Birch Bayh, D-Ind., predicts the amendment Will gain the votes it lacks by the end of March. It goes into effect automatically with the 38th ratification. A spokesman fw the American Bar Association, which recommended the amendment and has been watching its progress, ix^cted its quick a|)praval, too. Congress gave its final approval in July 1965. it * Bayh said in an interview the ameidment “doesn’t fill aU the gaps” in the Constitution on disability and succession “but it fills the two most inqxirtant and glaring ones.” The first is the lack of a procedure by vdilch the vice president can take over the duties of the presidency if the president becomes so disabled he cannot handle them. FOXING OFFICE .The second is a means for filling immediately the office of vice" president when the office becomes vacant for any reason. Strong public concern about vicepresidential vacancies de- out effort to help undf oped countries supply food. OfficialWarns of Food Crisis EAST LANSING (AP)-A federal foreign aid administrator warned Tuesday that starvation the world is outracing progress. William S. Gaud, administrator for the Agency for International Development, told an audience at Michigan State University the world can’t expect to have more productivity, education, wealth, equality and opportunity when more men die OT are debilitated by hunger daily. Gaud said the United States _____ . . ________ . can’i feed the world and shouldivelqpieri after JEtesideaiiJohn JL pawer by sending Congress a until after the 1964 elections, when Hubert H. Humphrey won theoftice. * ★ * ■ ^ Next in Une.for the prroidency before then were Speaker of the House John W. McCormack, then 72, and the president pro tempore of the Senate, Sen. Carl Hayden of Arizona, then 86. ’The question of presidential disaMlity came up most recently vdien President J(dmson underwent gallbladder and throat surgery last Novmber. ACTING PREfflDENT At that time, Johnson and Humphrey used a procedure under which Humphrey became acting president while Johnson was under anesthesia. 'The ar-rangem^t was identical to that used by President Dwight D. Eisenhower and Vic6 President Rk±ard M. Nixon during Eisenhower’s illnesses. ’ITie amendmait inovldes that the vice president would take over as acting president if the Iffesident stated in writing he was unable to carry out tiie dur ties of the office. The vice president also could take over if a majOTity of the heads of executive departments sent Congress a declaration of presidential inability. The president would resume 1963 and Vice President Jdinson became president. Tbe nation was without a vice president heads told Congress within two days the president was unable, and if Congress concurred by a two-thirds vote. , Vacancies in the. Vice presidency would be filled on nomination by the president, subjject to conflrmation by Congress. VET TO RATIFY States which have yet to ratify the amendment are Alabama; Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Minnesota, Montana, Nevada, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, South Carolina, South Dakota, and Texas. declaration tha^he Was again able to serve. This could be overridden if the vice president and a majority of the executive ARTHRITIS M SpMTW *• MTHJITie world'* lorgoil Chlraprodlo Ho»-pital. RoMarch K ' hM opoood Km door M hooHh « SPURS CHIROPRACTIC HOSPITAL foil lOth a jorioy Sti, 333-1M1 Dwivor, Colo* I02» Dopl. STOCK REDUCTION SALE I licity precluded a fair trial in the county where the murder occurred, Talbot’s trial was moved to Santa Barbara. He was convicted by a jury which decided July 15, 1965, that he should die in the gas chamber. If Talbot is executed, bot Warden Lawrence E. Wilso and Associate Warden Janies W.L. Park wiU be wit their first executiem in tiie old prison which sits besido4he bay just across the _G<^en Gate from ■ “ years have/found a way . relief from itching end smarting of piles. They use a delightful cooling soothing astringent formula—flTIRSON'S OINTMINT. No wonder one sufferer "The itching and smarting were relieved, and I slept all night. PETfRWN'S OINTMENT is 85c, all druggists. Be delighted money back. DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Offers FREE PARKING COURTHOUSI LOT (Comer Saeinaw and Nuren) Fumithed by tiu FoUotciitf Downtoun MerchdnU: ARTNUR’S 41M. Saginaw St. SI N. Saginaw St. BORETTESHOP IS N. Saginaw St. 0900 NOUSEKEEPINQ SHOP 61 W. Huron St. Easy Load! Just Aim and Shoot! See It in Seconds! POUROID 104 COLOR CAMERA • Color prints in 60 seconds, black and white prints in only 10 seconds • Transistorizeit electronic shutter automatically sets exposure Snap a picture .. . admire it in seconds. You get big 3y«x4V4-inch prints in either color or black and white with a fully automatic Color Pack Camera. Exposure set automatically indoors and out. Easy focusing with rangefinder. Camera is light and easy to carry. Buy now and save! Our Reg. 49.88 Charge It 4 Days Only! While Quantities Last SPECIAL! OUR REG. 6.47 POLAROID FLASH GUN (with camera purchase) ... 5.97 GLENWOOD PLAZA-NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY I B-T 'Around the Automobile' Art at Cranbrook: a Moving Experience ' Pop, op, surreilist, \mp^ sionist, or what have you. All schools or forms of art seem to have taken a crack at the «uto-iqobile. And why shouldn’t art woric about automobiles be powered by a motor and have moving parts? It’s perfectly logical. Such a creation is displayed at the Cranbrook Academy of Art Galleries’ current showing of “Around the Automobtie.” Student Jerry Krause Inspects A 'Furry' The violently colored work is part pf the New York Museum of Modern Art collection making its first tour appearance at Cranbrook through Feb. 26. * ★ ★ “Car Touch’’ by James Rosen-quist is a motbrized construction in which two cars bump together and are dented. FUR-COVERED CAR Another “logical” entry Is a fur-covere fishbijary %, tm Over Half-Million Revelers „ ^!b’ f pfas; Real Cool, Man NEW ORLEANS, i>a. (AP) Sihi,' kihg ' of the all-Negro This %as the Mardi Gras In'KreWe, shotved up fot Mardl some wore long underwear and ice cream vendors curs^ tjie north wilds, Itjwas real coW, man! R Fasii\ the coldest Mardl Gras in the history of the city -Just the third coldest. The temperature stood at freezing most of the morning, Inching to a day’s hl^ of 43. Street cleaners worked a long hard night carting away tons (rf beer cans, vdiisky bottles and other trash left behind T\iesday by over half a million revelers. It was. the traditional fiial fling befwe the 40 days of Lent in this predominant]^ Roman Catholic City. Gras with Dixieland ja«, witch doctors, six floats loaded with “big sIhAs” and a large cigar clenched between his teeth; It was Zulu’s most ambiUous attempt in years. The Zulu parade used to be a major Mardi-Gras attraction bef«*e civil rights groups attacked it as degrading. “I think we contributed something to our wonderful free show,;’ said Zulu — Sheriff Milton Bienamee -- after a procession in which souvenir hunters pinched away chunks of his float. The crowd was smaller than the last Mardi Gras’ monumental crush but it was as mny as ever, ’ turning the downtown area into a costume ball GRAND SPECTACUr Hie parade of Rex, premier Krewe of Mardi Gras, was a grand spectacle. So was Comus, the final procession. About the wily sad faces were worn by the ice cream vendfflrs, who had enjoyed Uttie trade. ★ ★ ★ Police reported about 200 arrests and spoke approvingly of ral bdiavior. were, perhaps, a 1 more sane than in years past,’’ said a police spokesman.' Or maybe they were just too cold. , Peace ReporbLies-Hanoi TOKYO flIPD-Heports of secret peace talks between the United States and North Vietnam are lies, Hanoi Radio said today. “This is a sheer fabrication by Oie United States,’’ the north Vietnamese broadcast said. It said the object was to mount favorable “public opinion addle continuing to bomb Nwtii Vietnam.’’ The Broadcast said r^orts that secret peace negotiation were aow under way were a “she^ fabrication . . . aimed |rie believe ... that Ae U.S. agressors, too, UNDERSTATEMENT—In Sonora, Calif., a community in-the foothills of the Sierra Madras, Aere is no doubt Aat If you take Jacksdn Street to Ae end' of Ae line you have reached a “dead end.’’ That street ends at Ae local cemetery and the. street marker tells the story. “By such an Intrigue Aey (Ae United Kates) b(q;ie to c. Arne accusing Ae Denoocratic Republic of North Vietnam of lack of go^ will A Ae secret talks wiA the U.8.,’* Ad broadcast si^. * ★ ★ i It said this would “give Ae U.S. grounds for continuing “*■'-----^ —’Tting Aeir war of destruction against NorA Vietnam. 1*MCE TO PAY* The Hanoi Radio broadcast said Ae conAtims for peace outlined by President Johnson A his news conference last week required a “price to pay” by NorA Vietnam. YOU’RE INVITED TO Join In The Winningest Game Ever! '•1000 Win, Her fllli'roflllUUH i filler. THOUSANDS OF PRIZES! THE EXCITING NEW GAME THAT'S FULL OF SURPRIZES! We’re having a party and everybody’s invited] Just pick up your free A&P’s AWARDS & SURPRIZE PARTY game book and start winning today! It’s as simple as Bingo.-..the roles on the back of your game book show you how easily. you can win... so many different ways! l^ch time you visit your A&P Super Market you receive a free gome slip. Moisten the wosh-off patch to reveal the picture of an A&P brand product. 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FEBRUARY 8, 1907 GOP Ties String to Debt-Ceiling Hike WASHINGTON (AP) -> House Republicans are threatening solid opposition to the administration’s me^ure to hike the national debt ceiling unless the bill is amended to increase the debt itself. Ibe periodic rinial of raising the borrovnng ceiling because of continuing budget detidts apparently is facing suffer oi^i. tim as well as more complicating OPDsscurrents than in any recent year. Treasury authority to borrow billion more between now and June 30, raising the limit to 1336 billion from the $330 billion ceiling against which fiscal authorities have been scraping. Unpredicted expenses -> most of th^ connected with the Viet-war — outdated the present ceiling before its time had half run. The Treasury now says it will have to hold up government payments next month unl&is it gets relief. Tbe measure would give the |6 price fm- their wpport, want the procieeds of pa:^cipation coHiti-cate sales included in the na- Republican leaders, settii^ These are sales of interests in pools of government-held loans. They are not now counted in the debt and they figure in the administrative -budget in such a way as to reduce the spending side. The GOP also proposes to make a special exception to the law setUiw a 414 per cent limit on interest that may be paid on long-term federal bonds. The combined effect of the amendments would be to discourage the sale of participation certificates and encourage the use d bonds instead. House Republican leader Gerald R. Ford said “we want the debt ceiling to represent the obligations of the federal government.’’ Republicans also contend less use of participation certificates would saye money in interest. NOT OBUGATIONS Democrats arpe the certifi- cates are not government obli-gntions, since they are secured by ioans and the government has an obligation to make them good only in the event the security goes bad. Dies on Lk S, 23 HARRISVILLE (AP)-Joseph Eidward Petz, 49, of Grand Rapids was killed Tuesday when the car he was driving Jum|)ed the median and hit a car going in the opposite direction on U.S. 23. LaWifiakersLaud Founding of LANSING I-' Super-Right" Quality Meats! KING OF ROASTS! "Super-Right'^ Mature, Corn-Fed Beef Standing Rib Roast First 3RHm 7W9 4th & 5th Ribs ALLGOOO BRAND SLICED ■■ BACON - 5y 141. PKG. V* "suviR-aMHT- m •'Suna-RiaHT- country mri.a m«n Fancy Sliced Bacon. ^^5 69V Thick-Sliced Boeen. 1” Fresh Fruits & Vegetables! MARSH SEEDLESS Orapefruit 6-39* 40 SIZE CALIFORNIA NAVEL-4S SIZI Oranges . . .... boz^59* FLORIDA New Cabbage .... “10* MICHIGAN U.S. NO. I A A Potatoes ... .20 79* VlNt^lPI —LK TOMRATeES 24-SIZE HEAD LETTUCE 2-LB. 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W Laundry Detergent/ Sta-FbSpniySf«^%59* THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1967 B—11 mm 'if Coasf-fo-Coasf Power Grid Is Successfully Tested WATERTOWN, S.D. (AP) -A test of the largest power grid ever devised is humming along today, showing that the electrical power systems of the United States can be linked together coast to coast. East and West were joined Tuesday at points in Montana and Nebraska under the direction of the Bureau (rf Reclamation’s power substation at Watertown. Included in the eiq)erimental interconnection are systems in southeast and southwest Canada. Officials said there was no reason to beliOve any noajw problems would result after the first day’s successful testing. Experiments in exchanging power and isoiating sections of the nation from the grid were to end today. The likelihood is that the ties will not be reopened, thereby permanently linking 94 per cent of the generating capacity of the United States and 40 per cent ened in minutes if major troubles developed. Southwestern states were successfully isolated from the national grid Tuesday as part of tiie test. Northwestern States are to be separated today to operate ind^ndently. Official 'testing is scheduled to end at 6 p.m. (EST) today, although there is a chance that exp«’imenting might be extended untilThursdSy. Frank LaChicotte, the Water-town substation’s manager and chaiiman of the task force directing the operation, is ctonfi-dent the intertie can continue permanently. But he and other officials are cautious in sp^u-lating^ on the next big question; How effective will the power grid be in prevaiting, Relieving or correcting blackouts? LaChicotte said the 1965 East Coast blackout could not have been stopped by the new interconnection. The East Coast power failure was caused by internal breakdowns in titat region’s systems, he said BALTIMORE. Md. (AP) Robert B. Watts told police that a television set and a radio were stolen Tuesday from his home. State Delegate WASHINGTON (AP) -- R^. James Harvey, R-Mich., will be anwng tiie 25-member congres-sitmal delegation to attend the Mexican-United States Interparliamentary Conference in Oaxaca, Mexico. The seventh annual meeting begins Thursday. in Special Case Judge Watts said the noon-■ his21t time robbery occurredyas hi^ __ year-old son slept in a sec(ind-floor bedroom aqd a Gmnan Shei^erd watchdog MtroUed outside the house. If a suspect is apprehended in the next few days he will be brought before the {H-esiding judge of Northwestern Municipal Court — Robert B. Watts. Viet Vet Benefits OK'd WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate has voted without (^po-sition to give veterans of the Vietiiam war period the same benetits a&s*79* .M^arpier:7.5"E'89* M«aroni&Chea..4~^^^^ f, TT ' 'I'™ •' ^ , ■ ■___________: ■ ' • "- ■'. iflE t -15 ------...' ^ ^., ,,,7^.-,,,,;,^,: „-Tr7.Bw;=BT-..----------................................ "V-------7—w—r v.a; y, %r 4!i§T‘i , ’ • VJ|- i|W .-L., ,,-v #i^rf ri'i^ '*1 "■ ‘- II II ■''"Mi IN SLATESTONE, EAGLE'S NEWLY-MINTED, SPARKLiNG ADDITION TO THE LIGHT LOOK. Urbane and uninhibited, slatestone grey gives a gentle glow to elegant silk-and-wool sharkskin: a clear^ crisp, medium grey that shows the Light Look at its bestlooking. The theme continues in the lightness of the fabric itself: a smooth,, luxuriou# blend you'll wear as comfortably in June as now. Eagle treats it with customary skill, in a slimly defined two-button model with plain-front trousers, at $110. This is the year to see the light in men's| fashion, and you'll see it at Its'best a.rHHS. i ' ■' vS) ■'*'r?! v>- i (hr Pwrtidle MaH Sitn Evening to 9 309 N. Tob^ ^ MnU Onr linniii|ii«in Ston m» Th«ik/ M. to 9; M. to S:30 300 Pioico StrNjf THE POXTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY^ 8, 1967 iBSi 'BmI !ffl i^j ft’s a Phamre to Shop and Save at li msLmm c—i FOOD TOWN SUPER MARKETS PEOPLE'S FOOD MARKETS ITlNHWiliiidRMi 12N laMwIn Ava.. UTfOoelayLakiM. M»ti.hrtt«aN< 1 I 2f3 AUlffM |4fSLfiKCSr. -------- oroiswwn ' amuMDMt onHiuNOKn J J aotio Sundays f ofENSUNPAY ounsunpay | 2f3 AUlffM I 4iS L f»C ST. I TNMINRNST. I IN MCNAIIP LAKE All. Opm6Do|flQpMtAilL'M*rjlkl •■uum.u I 0|mf AAL'MtrjI. I aOvyiaWHk I I aW,Y*A\WBC OffiNfUNMY KOPIK :‘J4lBYi^yi|A^ COUPON > r Gold Bell ISIFT S|AAWS Coupon Expires Sunday, FePniaiy 12,1967 With This Coupon and $|5.00 Purch (Excapt 6*«r, Win* or OgaraHat) limit 1 Coupon Per Customer SMOKED PICNICS Hygrade’s USOA CHOICE ^ e-. . RIB AQP STEAK JS'^ USDACHCICE AAA T.BONN nnp STEAK '^Oil USDACHCICE Rplled Rump A A 6 ROAST .99^ USDA CHOICE AAA Sirlein OnP STEAK J9V USDACHCICE. ABMA Porlarhouse C|||Q STEAK ..1"® USDACHCICE AJUA Heel of Round QQQ ROAST J9* Peschke POLISH /CQ( SAUSAGE »Dw Eckrich 3*oz. Pkg. / Slender Sliced Chipped Meats til ffl ‘W jOj THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1967 Plan on Variety of Lenten Fish Dishes By JANET ODELL Although hiles for Lenten foods «re less stringent than in the put, there are still many familieii that cling to Friday fi^. Throughout the country, Osh dealem have been pleased that fish sales have not de^ GOU)EN FILLETS creased as much as they feared. When you have a family to feed, a package of frosen fish fillets is both convenient and economical. Prepared in the following manner, they are attractive and tasty. i 0(BiDEN FILLETS 2 pounds Spanish mackerel fillets or other fish fillets, fresh or frozen Vi cup melted fat or oil 1 teaspoon salt Dash pepper 1 cup grated process Cheddar cheese 2 tablespoons chopfied parsley Thaw frosen fillets. Skin ^ lets and cut into swlng-aLiEe portions. Combine.fat, salt, and p^per; ilx thoroughly. Chop mushrooms. Combine mushrooms, Mandarin Oranges Garnish Relish Mold This creamy mold — which does double duty as a relish and as a salad — is made of lemcm gelatin and mayonnaise, flavored with onion and the tangy sweet taste of canned Mandarin orange segments. These little seedless, rindless sections are aU uniform in size so you can garnish the n" ‘ mold prettily with them too. Another excellent feature of the “Japanese Mandarin Relish Mold” is that it is quite simple to prepare since your refrigerator doM most of the work. ChOdieB not noted as salad lovers la general ^ will CARE Knows How io Buy NEW YORK (DPD-WouM that the Yankee Doodle homemaker could stretch a dollar the way the CARE folks dot ' The OTganization, helping to feed 40 million hungry persons in 36 countries, buys school lunches for a diild for a year with — would you believe — $10. Out of a century note the or(^ ization gets a ton of food fdr shiinnent overseas. adore diis one. It’s fun to eat and pretty to look at. Watch out though that the little fingers dra’t strip the mold of its Mandarin orange garnish the table. before it gets to the It enhances turkey, chicken, ham or roast beef. And it will enhance your reputatim as a 'fine cook as well! Mandarin Orange Relish Mold 2 11 - ounce cans Japanese Mandarin oranges. 1 package (3-oz.) lemon flavor gelatin 1 cup boiling water Vi cup small onion rings or sliced green onion cup diced celery Vi cup mayonnaise Chicory Dissolve gelatin in boiling water. Drain Mandarin oranges, adding water to syrup to make one cup. Add syrup to gelatin. Chill until slightly thickened. Fold in half the Mandarin segments with onion, celery and mayonnaise. Place some Mandarins in botUnn of decorative mold, then pour in gelatin nodx-ture. Chill until firm. Unmold onto salad platter, garnish top with Mandarin oranges and place chicory and remaining oranges around platter. Serve? 6. MANDARIN ORANGE MOLD - Toss out the usual ideas you have for salad and substitute this one made with Japanese Mandarin oranges, green wiion and celery. It’s attractive and good tasting too. Bocon Garnish Next time you serve creamed green peas, top them with a lavish amount of crumbled crisply cooked bacon. Small fry usually love this combinati(»-^ so do older folk! One of the most important-kitchen tools is a set of sharp knives. i Toast Cutouts of Raisin Bread Raisin bnead coutouts are fun to frost. Using cooky cutters, cut stars, rounds and other shapes out of raisin bread slices. After toasting in the oven, let the youngsters frost them with 2 cans (4 ounces each) mushroom stems and pieces. Race fish oa a welHfrawMl Imiler pan and bnuA with fat. Brofi about 2 inches from source M heat fnr S to 4 minutes. Turn carefully and brush with remaining fat. Broil 3 to Chicken Livers Are Superb Hot fiakos easfiy sAen tested with Spread mushroom mixture on fish and broil 2 to 3 minutes longer or until lightly brown. "spvei'6. Don’t scorh the lowly sardine or coneider it just food for snack time.',-'. ’ \ \ Msine sardines are now being psckfd in new easy-open cans. Try some of them in a salad you can serve hot or cold. DOWN EAST SALAD 3 cans <4 oz. ea.) Maine sardines, drained IH cups diced celery 1 onion,'chopped 3 canned pkoiento, diced 1 cup cooked peas Ml cup salted peanuts % cup mayonnaise V« cup commercial sour cream 1 teaspoon prepmed mustard 1 table^xwn leihon juice Salt potatoes. Combine ehoppedishallow fat (1% inches deep) foods with eggs, V« cup flour heated to 375 degrees, about 2 and pepper; mix well. minutes;, turn to-brown other Shape mixture into small cro-|side. ^ quettes; combine reroainingi Drain on absorbrat paper, flour and commeal; dtud cro- Serve with tartar saiice. Makes quettes with this mixture: fry in 6 servings. If you can’t get to New Orleans this year for Mardi Gras, do a little celebrating of your own. Party Chicken Livers, spicily seasoned with Tabasco and lightly touched with sherry, make a superb hot appetizer. Guests will lick ttieir lips qyoisj Proceed as above and pjace in To Serve Cold: Combine first six ingredients. Mix mayonnaise, sour cream, mustard and lemon juice. Toss li^Uy with sardine mixture and serve on crisp greens if desired. Yield: 6 servings, ito Serve Hot: CRUSTY SCALLOPS Cranberry Juice Base Colors Fruit Soup it, and you’ll end up preparing^ the recipe for many other fes-' five occasions during the year. Party Chicken Livers 2 pounds chicken livers ¥4 cup butter ot margarine 1)4 teaspoons salt, divided V4 cup finely chopped oidon V4 cup sherry )4 teaspoon Tabasco Cut chicken livers in half. Heat butter in large skillet. Add half of the chicken livers and sprinkle with ¥4 teaspoon salt. Brown quickly on both sides. Place in chafing dish. Add remaining chicken livers and sprinkle with remain-faig % teaspoon salt BTown and place in chafing dish. Add (Miion to skillet; cook until tendo’ but not brown, sherry and Tabasco; heat, stirring occasionally, until all drippings are loosened from the pan. Pour into chafing dish. Cook, , stirring frequently, about 10 minutes or until livers | greased casserole. Sprinkle top with cup grated sharp The name of the game is serv-Cheddar' cheese and bake in a ing something different and it’s hot (425 degree) oven for 15-20 fun to play when.you entertain, minutes untU tarown and sizzling. you’re looking fw somjsthing Garnish with potato chips, unusual for your not company Yield: 6 servings. Scallops usually appear on the dinner table deep fat fried or iMiiiled. Now a new recipe comet ahmg for scallop croquettes. Made with cooked potatoes, these are dusted with commeal,befwe frying. CRUSTY SCALLOPS 2 pounds sea scallops, fiesh or frozen 1 medium onion, quartered . 10 sailed crackers 2 medium potatoes, cooked $eggs Ml cup flour, divided H teaspoon pepper ¥4 cup cornimal ; Defrost scallops, if f r 0 z e n. Cover scallops with cold, salted water; bring to boil; simmer 3 minutes; drain. Put scallops through food dinner, you can’t miss with Swedish fruit soup. Served chilled for dessert, it’s an old Swedish custom that’s dell^t-fully new to most Americans. Making the fruit soup is simplicity itself, for you start with bottled apple juice or cranberry juice co^tail and use canned nd frozen fruits. Serve it topped with sour or whipped cream and accompanied with tiny cookies. Or you can pour it over cake slices or ice cream. It can also Im used as an appetizer. However you serve it, you’ll find it’s an interesting conversation piece. And best of aO, it’s as delicious as it is different Swedish Style Fmit Soup 1 quart bottled apple juice or cranberry juice cocktail 8 whole cloves V4 teaspoon nutmeg 1 can (11 ounce) nundarin orange sections, drained 1 can (15)4 ounce) pineapple chunks, drained 1 package (10 ounce) frozen strawberries with sugar, defrosted )4 cup grenadine syrop )4 teaspoon salt ' CoAibini apple juice, or cranberry juice cocktail, tapioca, lemon, cloves, and nutmeg in sauccqmn. Bring to boil; simmer gently about 10 minutes. Add remaining ingredients. ChiU. Serve plain or topped with sour cream or whij^ cream. Yield: 7)4 cups. Note: Wonderful as a f 1 r s t course or dessert frqiped with sour or whipped crram. Excellent, toO, poured over cake slices or ice cream. are done. Serve with cocktail chopper, using coarse knife and )4 cup minute tapioca tinted powdered sugar icing.Ipicks. Yield: About .4 dozen, lalternating onion, crackers and 1 lemon, thinly sliced Ever add pineaiqila tidbits to Harvard bwts? Interesting com- Fancy Baby (PICNIC) ROAST ™ THIHPME OF NATURALLY TENDER MEATS Hoffman Does It Again-Carload Prices STIAK SUE • Round •Sirtoin • Rib • CMit or Bntehor Boy NONEHIOHER Cottage Style PORK STEAK 3lbt. for $|00 NONE HIGHER NONE HIGHER T-Bones and Porterhouse OOC While they lost M the finest in Pontiac** SAY OUR CUSTOMERS Amounts In 5 Lb. Lots 49^ ib. or More PONTIAC PRIDE our own ipioy pink baby link SAUSAOS NONE HIGHER m FARM FRESH FRYING CHICKEN Our Own Pontiac Pride SMOKEHOUSE SPECIALS BREAST or LEG A TRIORS m WINGS '10 S. Si. BOLOGNA.... .All Meat Chuck 39* Ih* HOT DOGS .... a Skinless All Meati ■ a ■ 39* lb. RING bologna KIELBASSA... FAR PORK SAUSAGE. Cunhy style. 39*lb. FORK ROCKS.. Home Freezer Specials cut, mappad and ddivorad froo FRONirS SIDES HINDS 0 0 BEEF 0 BEEF BEEF 45i 49i 59f, 10 FORK LOIR CUT INTO CHOPS iqc wHh freezer order 1... *. . 4 ... FARM FRESH U.S. Govt Grade “A” Laige ' Give Your Biggie A Treat TASTY-MEATY MM A Pog Fopd ilnltlZMnt A CAN U.S.#1 POTATOES mtSGl, PARK FREE IN REAR HOFFMAN S PONTIAC FNEEZER FOODS, Inc. RETilL DIVISION of OAKLAND PACKING in 3 doz. pkgs. quality meats and produce at wholesale prices OPEN 9 to 6 DAILY 1 to 9 FRIDAY 10 Nn. 526 N. PERRY ST. WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES FE 2-1100 m : i"' ■ ’ -;V h , * .... '' •” , .a.T.R f'rvfT'B'T?. *.»* r.a . r the PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1987 ONE COLOR C-« I MliiM!im-?fiBBEfli ! I ANY 2 PK0S. I ■ fioziN nES-ilioRi! SEAFOODS I VALID THRU SUN., FEB, 12, 1967 AT I LhhhT**^*’^’ ® FRE5-SH0RE FROZEN BREADED SHRIMP 2.^.^’I** FRES-SHORE FROZEN FISH STICKS.......1'>^p';?a89< FRES-SHORE FROZEN FILLETS OCEAH PERCH...2’A.‘k°c*r* FRES-SHORE frozen COD FIIIETS...........'«I5»« FRES-SHORE FROZEN HADDOCK FILlETS....!r^* MRS. PAULS FROZEN I8 FISH STICKS ........ MRS. PAWS FROZEN FRIED FISH fillets: 69* SEA-PAK FROZEN PERCH FILLETS...........’fkS59* SEA PAK FROZEN COOKED FISH STICKS......... SEA PAK FRbZEN BREADED S4^ 2A% *2** SINGLETON FROZEN DEVEINED AND . . PEELED SHRIMPiy2PK‘o*2«* SINGLETON FROZEN PEELED AND DEYEINED SHRIMP’pkI*5** KR06ER BRAND FROZEN VEGETABLES CORN, PEAS And carrots, LEAF SPINACH OR CUT BROCCOLI MIXED VEGETABLES, FRENCH OR CUl GREEN beans, BABY OR FORDHOOK LIMA ffEANS OR CAULIFLOWER FKGS H pkgs H* COUNTRY CLUB FROZEN POT PIES 12-OZ ,Wr. PKG v9w 8-OZ. WT. PK0. 6-OZ. WT. PK0. AVAILABLE AT MOST KROGER STORES! SANDERS BAKBIY SPECIALS VED. i THURS. rmvn CINNAMON t BANANA ICED BANANA | ALMONp TWIRL I ROLLS LOAF CAKE COFFEE CAKE I REG. I 1-LB, T-OZ REC-1 13-OZ^ RCC. I JfX m 39%,79* ‘ tasty ■ KROGER FROZEN 1«AFFLES.^:”.I<10* BETTER FLAVOR AND CONSISTENCY HEINZ STRAINED BABY FOOD S44-0Z Ji*R* WT.JARS BEEF, PORK SAUSAGI..2/.;l79« FOR YOUR DISHES JOYilQUID l-P7> RTU KBQW.AR9KBUTTERIMLK ^ ^ ^ ^ . AUNT JEMIM A'^Sfr* A - 99 DELHOHICOTHIN _ ^ SPAGHETTI MAMRONt...^ 39^ HUSHROOH, BEEF OR CHICKEN CHUN KING __________________________________b79 BORDFH^S ELSIE _ ICE CREAM BARS 12-49 DELICIOUS ELSIE PURE GRANULATED KROGER CARNiED BORDiN'S PIONEER EVAPORATED ICE CRBAM SUGAR IMI.K yt-otzm old CTH FASHIONED 79* 5»4G 74 OFF LABEL-REGULAR SIZE _ ^ DIAL BAR SOAR. ... 3 » 40' FOR WHITER CLOTHES ROMAN BLEACH..................»49 FOR YOUR FLOORS AEROWAX FLOORWAX ..<^99 REGULAR QUILTED ALUMINUM ^ KAISER FOIL___________________^19 SALTINE CRACKERS. »i29' WITH THIS COUPON ON Z ' WITH THIS COUPON ON ANY 4 LOAVES Z 2 FKGS CUT-UP FRYERS, MEL-O-SOFT BREAD ■ 2 FKGS FRYER PARTS OR OR KROGER BUNS ■ 2 ROASTING CHICKENS ■o WAGNER BREAKFAST ORANGE DRINK m TASTES BETTER-HEINZ WHITE VINEGAR HEINZ BRAND CIDER VINEGAR REGULAR AND DRIP GRIND . . YUBAN COFFEE................'cifBS* i nBsamm>-swisu.TEB IROZEN MARGARINE..........W vmrjmsm SNOWY KKAPTSUCeO SWISS CHEESE............ ••••••picc 9P KRAFT SUCED MOZZAREUA CHEESEi......^iFK« W KRAFT SLICED \ MUENSTIR CHEESE......1...A:%c49« JOO SIZE WASHINOrON STATE RED OR GOLDEN DEUCIOUS APPLES OR PEARS.....12»^^ 79< FRESH RRD RIPE CALIFORNIA SWEET STRAWBERRIES.....r 69« RED GRAPES....3 79« If n Tnl5 QpUrQN ON nO-CT BOTTLE 1-A-OAY VITAMINS WITH THIS COHfOH ON 1-PKGOF10 FROZEN FAMILY STEAKS ■ VM Tlif* F.k. iz 1H7 VM Tfc« A«., F.L. li IK7 KRAFT SALAD DRESSINGit^tSi^ 6 SIZE ROYAL 'HAWAIIAN PINEAPPLE.*i^.w*».«EAcw mt PURE FRESH FLORIDA ORANGE JUICE B-GAL mmB •'••juo Nnr ZIPPER SfC/N 59* TANGEIOS.... USSIZESUNKIST LEMONS.......IO 1.5.% 59* 79* THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY », 1967 -£=i- COUPON AT RIGHT ... S TOP VALUE STAMM a ■ excePT SECR wine on acAnerTis. covpm VALia AT KPOCER IN DETHOIT AMO SASTEEM MCN amount.. U.S. CHOICE -NB CHUCK ROAST HAMBUROER 4 ALL BEEF IN 3-LB TUBE , BLADE : CENTER CUT COUNTRY CLUB U S. CHOICE" TENDERAY LB. U.S. CHOICE TENDERAY ARM OR ENGLISH ROAST mPOiNTM 1 CUT ^ I flat! ^EJH 3-LBS AND UP GLENDALE JUNBO ROASTING CHICKEN ..39* POLISH SAUSAGE ..59* \ WITH TOMATO SAUCE fAJi'^aaU’S |.0«K * BEAKS al* SNIDER’S CATSUP i IS KRAFT TASTY MAYONNAISE r.59 mmlmLrm ^ mm m m COUNTRY CLUB SALTED EATMORE ROLL PEAR HAiVES.................«2» ROLL BUTTER MARGARIHI ___ __ LB. U.S. CHOICE TENDERAY BEEF RIB STEAK ^ROAST 69 CHOICE TEND RlSr T9 4TH AND 5TH RIBS 7-IN CUT COUNTRY CLUB SALTED KROGER ALL WHITE MEDIUM SIZE GRADE *A’ FRESH EGGS $^ KRAFT PLAIN VELVEETA CHEESE SPAGHETTI WITH TOMATO SAUCE CHICKEN ^n'sSEAI CHUNK TUNA 3^89 9% bZ. WT. CAN 45* FRANCO-AMERICAN ... 19 GREEN GIANT PEAS 2s39 SUN GOLD BRAND WHITE BREAD....2"r4r;....5 *1 MULTIPLE 1-A-DAY VITAMINS.......... 7. *1” SUPER STAINLESS RAZOR SCHICK BLADES ^.^69 U.S. N0.1 MICHIGAN POTATOES 20.79 GOLDEN RIPE BANANAS 2^29* i ITALIAN OR SALAD SECRET KRAFT SALAD DRESSING... ohTi 37* NEEDS NO REFRIGERATION COFFEE-MATE..................»‘A%49* SUNSHINE DELICIOUS HYDROX COOKIES..................>« WHITE OR ASSORTED COLORS WHITE CLOUD.............. WITH 2 FR^E NOD-ROD ROLLERS ATTACHED DIPPITY-DO................... EFFECTIVE-FOR COLDS DRISTAN TABLETS.................”.rr »1»* 2;;^Ie25* FORFRYmCOKBAIHNe CRISCO SHORTENING.........3 c':i!^85* WITH FREE DISPENSER DERRA-FRESH................ ,’IK. »1»* STANDARD REYNOLDS WRAP..........29* KLEENEX STRONG DINNER NAPKINS.............25* FRESH TENDER POLE BEANS.........;.19* FRESH CRISP CARR0TS.........2.'if.29* ROME BEAUTY BAKING APPLES8^»69* FRESH CRISP GREEN PEPPERS.....C.10* FRESH NEW GREEN CABBAGE............ t.10* U.S. EXTRA FANCY COUNTRY GENTLEMEN SWEET CORN....5 »«39* FRESH CRISP BIBB LETTUCE.........49* FRESHCRISP RED RADISHES.... .... 10* HELPS KEEP YOU FRESH AND FRAGRANT ARRID SPRAY DEODORANT 7-FL. OZ CAN |09 tOHBANH'S HAIVAM) lEEIS 19 J-L8 JAR WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. PRICES AND ITEMS EFFECTIVE AT KROGER IN DETROIT AND EASTERN MICHIGAN THRU SUNDAY, FEB. 72, mr. NONE SOLD TO DEALERS. COPYRIGHT 7967. THE KROGER CO. C-6 THE PONTIAC PKESS^j^VI A SURE WAY TO A MAN'S HEAR SATISFYING FOOOS . . . SENSIBLY PRICED FROM NAMADYvBI^. OLD PASHIONBD-^#.____________________ Selected ^TopGrade^^ Beauties Tender and A TOUCH OF SPRING IN NATURALLY-TENDER LAMB liSaiAMB m Shoulder Roasts ib.58* Shoulder Steaks ib.68° Breast for Stew ib.33‘ Ibi ....."I ^,^-^^m^smm^ssm^^^ssmsmssasssasssssaBms^sassssssssa^ Skiiless Froikfwtars 47« DEL MONTE ENRICHED Orii|B SrlHk 2 39^ GLENIMLE MICHIGAN GRADE ONE lEO UVER OSDA CHOICE f^RYBEST |UinbChopt| en FRESH, SUCED RICH IN IRON 4/ Y Miller Road Dairy CNOeOUTEMILK Cbtf’s Delitbt CHEESE SPREAD 1 VkOallen Carton “W 2 ui‘ 49V Blue Bonnet Regular Blue Bonnet Soft MARGARINE Fleischman’s Unealted MARGARINE Pound Carton 26‘ Carton 43‘ AMMMMMiiiMMMMTIiit Adv. Good Thin Tdts^ Feb. 14» 186T|i Hamtown FRESN PIZZAS 1-lb. 700 1-lb. OQc z-oi. 19 2-OI. 09 ASHER'S Quality Ready to Eat Baked Pastries FRUIT BREAD rl;. 73 19 THirsr BREAD 4*ok. notwt. SOUTHERN STYLE 39< 4^01. not wt.pkg. Strudel Dougbp'i^M^^ EGG BREAD ^73” jJWEDNESPAY, FEBRtrARY 8, 1967 C—T 5^49^ MOTTS PURE NEW YORK STATE Applesauce 2V 1-Lb. 9-Oz. Jar HARVEST SVGARED OR PLAIN DONUTS 29« DOZEN . IN PACKAGE Freshllke FROZEN GRADE *A* 10-oz.wt. GARDEN SWEET PEAS . 10-oz.wt. GOLDEN CUT CORN 10-oz. wt?MIXED VEGETABLES 10-oz. w». PEAS AND CARROTS 10-oz.wt. SUCCOTASH 10-oz.wt. BABY LIMA BEANS 9-OZ.Wt. CUT GREEN BEANS 4>kgs.CQ( H v Mrs. Owen’s Pure STRAWBERRY PRESERYES Frem Her Yalentmer Greenhouse Fresh and Sensibly Priced from Hamady Bros. Fresh Daily Deliveries Beginning Tomorrow in Variety and Beautifully Foil Wrapi HYACINTHS, TULIPS ASSORTED COLORS YOUR CHOICE ONE PRICE GOLD MEUAL KITCHEN TESTED OPEN WEEKDAYS 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M. OPEN SUNDAY 19 A.M. to 9 P.M. 2375 ORCHARD LAKE RD., SYLVAN LAKE 3415 ELIZABETH UKE RD., WATERFORD 8014 COOLEY LAKE RD., UNION LAKE 685 EAST BOULEVARD, PONTIAC 1249 BALDWIN ROAD, PONTIAC 48075 VAN DYKE ROAD, UTICA Enjoy Florida Sunshine in Michigan with Sun-Drenched Doliverios, Loving Care and Carioad Bnying Guarantees It! IN GREATEST ^ VARIETY PURE, FRESH DONALD DUCK JUICE Vi Gallon Jar 2-35W; medium 27-&; Browns Grade A lar^- ” meil^ms 26W27; small 20-21. i"n§ prices: I (hds.) High Lew Last Chg.| Lew List Hhe! PotdAMt 2.40 79 47W Wl* 47Vi -h 4S Phil! El 1.41 42% PhilMorr ).40 29'/^ + 'A PhillPet 2.20k .jPItneyB Dangerous Speculator Amateur in Mart Odd I U'h — Vt FruehCp 1.70 I 32H 32'/k 33 51<4i 50 4 364k 43 544h 34% Address 1.40 Admiral .50 Air RedUC 3 AlcaitAlum 1 Alleg Cp .20e AllegLu 2.40b Atleg Pv ’ ; fs'"* 25S rt^i0.mSI»,.3. ' "”T 57W MvS +1%;gJ!1*CIb LM PitPlate 2.50 Allied C 1.90b 77} AllledStr i.32 45} 27 * ProcterG 2.20 -39W 39% - -f-l I Gen Fds 2.20 + lAIGenMIlls 1.50 ' % Gen Mot .tig " GenPrec i,.» GPubSvc AmAIrlln 1.50 Bosch .50 35 CHICAGO BUTTER, EGOS CHICAGO (AP) - Chicago Mercantile Exchange—Butter, steady; wholesale buying prices unchanged; 93 score AA 65; 92 A 55; 90 B 53%; 39 C 51%; " 90 8 54; 39 C 52%. Eggs steady; wholesale buying unchanged; 70 per cent or better............ A Whites 32%; mixed 32%;-mediums 29; a Enka ________ standards 28; checks 24. AmFPw 1.14 ^CHICAGO POULTRY Am Home 2 CHICAtJO (AP) — (USDA) — Live .................... —.........-^-‘--ile buying prices un-l s 23 - 25; SI 3 24% 24% 24% 22% “% M% - -45 58% 57% 57% 110 90% 39% 89% . .. 54 75% 74% 75% + % 8 50% 59% 50% -1-1% I 285 75% 74% 75% -1-1% 35 68% " ......... Last chg!! Most tots ride into toe dome 32% -f. % on their mothers’ backs. I 35%+'%i “Some persons stand in line' 54%-F % I without even being sure why W;^ % they are standing there,’’ said ibJ” +1 |Dr. Bernard Challenor of Brook-1% lyn, N.Y., and toe U.S. Public 51%-% Health Service. BY JOHN CUNNIFF (AP) BiitiiiesB News Analyst NEW YORK - ’The amateur stock nuurket speculatOT is one of the most curious psychological packages produi*^ by the! human race. / i He sometimes forgets so as to hide from pain.j He convinces himself that he] has learned but often just so he! can go back fori more of t4i e| same trouble. In the market to make a killr ing — to double his money overnight or make a 90 per cent profit in a week or for some such foolish reason he also desperately holds to a stock that is going the opposite way. Said (me of them: “It is prising how one can come to live comfortably with imminent financial ruin, or, at the least, a devastating loss. You get used to living in what is reaUy a rotting structure.” This is the statement d a young man who set out to double his money and, instead, lost an inheritance, his insurance money, his wife’s savings and Bie cash he had set aside to a riuny day. / He listened to hot tips, bought impulsively, fired brokers and hired others whose ethics could be questioned, confused his purposes', adjusteid to losses but became even greedier with gains. Some wiU recognise Us words as those of the anonymous investor who wrote the book “Wiped out.” The anonymous investor says he lost |80,()0(), even th^ the market was rising. The story reads like fietton. The author says it is fact. One big mutual fiind distributor has offered the book to its salesmen in bulk lots to possible distribution to potential customers, for in its own way it is CUNNIFF JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) - An amateur pl»-tographer in a dinghy snapping close-ups of toe U.S. carrier Franklin D. Roosevelt was hauled aboard toe ship for questioning, the Rand Daily 29 5% 28 33% 33% 33% -H Gen Tire .80 xllt 4 -jrber Pd Getty Oil .1 Gillette Ui AmCrySug I , ,..„s AmCyen 1.25 r Gre^ AmElP 1 '" lumi 29;' i - • - i.lAtnMFdy .90 i AMet Cl 1.90 27% ,28 + % «% «%+’% A 7?% 18% 19%-F'%j Goodrich iiM 111 31% 31% 31% - %lGoodyr 1.35 19 41 40% 41 -t- 'AjGraceCo 1.30 5 32% 32% 32% -I- %|GranitCS 1.40 JA tpu i<% 19% ... GrantWT 1.10 90% + %'GtABP 1.30a 50% 21 27% 27% 2 38 55% 55% i 38 44% 44% 4 23 55% 54% 54% 22 43% 43% ^ f 50% 49% S 95 17%, 15% 17% I Am Motors 501 9% AmNGas 1.80 iGt West I - % GtwSuo 1 -F % GreenGnt 8 24 23% 23% 4 %Vi 25% U'/i ___ 50 34% 34% 34% Nor Ry 3 1 57% 57% 57% Raytheon .80 Reich Ch .40b RepubStI 2.50 331 50 49% 50 -F x4 27% 27% 27% .: 21 33%-32% 33 -F SECOND DOSE l“No (me, has chickened out Reyn Tab 2 110 40% 2 S ISS US 31 55% 54% 55% ■ Rohr Cp .80 RoyCCola .72 RoyDut 1.79e RyderSys .50 127 9% 9%' 9%- .. 41 27 26% 27 + % 12 28 27% 27%-% 45 37% 37% 37% ■ ■■ West FInl 221 14% 13% 14% 28 45% 45 45% — %,Safeway l.lO + %:StJosLd 2.80 .10 101 25% 25% 25% + % 32% - %,SLSanFran 2 5 41% 41% 41% + 1 sn 4. I/.' ctouD < ink ia mu mu Mik — a % — % GrumAlrc 1b Livestock % — % GulfSiaUt :l /a'stRegP, % Sanders F % Schenley Schick when reaching the jet hypodermic. The Ghanaian tectmicians giving the shots have caught some customers coming back for a second does, the theory being if one dose is good a second' ie is better.” In popularity,'toe vaccination booth runs far ahead of a counter where Ghanaians can buy soft chocolate ice cream to 10 pennies. Romney Lauds Midland Editor Carrier Officers Query Lensman an advertisement to a o u n (} said today. The paper said intelligence officers aboard the carrier ap- parently suspected Peter Mel-liar of Cape Town of being a Conununist agent. DETROIT LIVESTOCK ? DETROIT (AP)-(USOA)- C8tlle 300; I AmZlnc 1.4ba couple loads high choice and prime 1.000- amP Inc 1,200 lb. steers 25.25; several loads and'AmMx Corp lots cholct 950-1JOO lb. 25.50.25.25. lAmohml .70 VaalVl“iO;™c»uple*’''hetld *of '’ehoS !*!!?“" Chem “iSrir«.ra«.,« prime 90-110 lb. wootad lambs 23.00-24.00; i’K, iS.'Vr?:’liMifh* tis! r'.'SSiiSi-gji awes 5.50-10.50. AtlCLIne 3a CHICAGO LIVESTOCK I 23% 23% 237% ,, 277 30% 29% 30'/4 -F1%| 50 24% 24 24»%f + %l_________ 15 90% 89% +’5* Herlii —-H---- I SCm"'cp .40b 343 72% 59% 72% -F2%1 —, . . , , , , 24 42% 42 42'%+ %. Scott Paper 1 138 28% 28% 2>% + % Elscwherc at the falf, in 12 3^“ 35% sT' + % Immgd ijo 21 43% 42% 42% ^ %iwhich 31 countries are partici- ■ if'''? t '§8 “ “% + %pating, the giveaways tend to 43lS 4JS ift + %™n. to pamphlets. One iUus- 31 57% 57 MIDLAND (AP) - Managing Editor Norman C. Runq>le of the Midland Daily News, and the newspaper profession in general won high praise from Gov. George Romney Tuesday! night. The governor was among nine speakers at a dinner honoring Rumple, a 30-year veteran of toe Daily News. Melliar told the paper a massive steel platform was sud(ien-ly lower^ and scooped him out of toe harbor Monday like an egg spooned from a frying pan. He said that after close questioning, he produced his South African identity card and that apparently satisfied the officers. Tli^y returned his camera, gave him coffee and let him go. A Seeburg .50 5 34% 337% 34% +1%l HollySug 1. Homestk .8 CHICAGO (AP)-(USD I 1-2 H 190-230 It ); I Atlas Corp ,JSDA)-Hogi 5,000; Atlas Corp 51 J% J ^ 9. 21.00-21,25; mixed '-3 Avco Cp 1.20 31% m 30% - —. k.lk.4 lUkXAA Avnel .50b 45 34% 23% «ys _____.J, 20.25-21.001 mixed 1-3 350-400 Avne! .50b sows 16.50-17.00. lAvon Pd 1.40 Cattle 9.000; celves none; prime 1,150-1 1,350 lb. 25.00.25.50; high choice and ....... prime 24.50-25.00; choice 24.00-24.75; hlghlBabcokW 1.35 choice end prime 850-1,100 lb. slaughter Ball GE 1.52 ,halters 24.00.24.50; chohte 800-1,100 lb$.'Beaunlt .75 23.35-24.00. I Beckman .50 Sheep 1,000; near 950 head choice andlBeechAr .80b e 97-107 lb. wooled slaughter lambs i Bell How .50 - - . .HewPeck .20 38 57 55 55 —%1 Sharon StI 1 55%-%1 Hoff Electron 20 13% 12% 13% . j Shell Oil 1.90 ,.ik _ 1,j5 44% 45914 45% -Fl% ShellTra .87e 10 23% 22% 23% + % SherwnWih 2 - - 8 39% 39% 39% Sinclair 2.40 29 701 55 73% 73% 73%-F %ISm^o 2.20 22 2 43 43% 43 -F %|SmT«lK 1.80a 29 18 50% 49% SO - % SoPRSug .15g 193 5 53% 52% S2%— % SouCetE 1,25 28 X33 24% 23Vi 24% -F % South Co .1.02 3) k, . ,1k • souHGas i.30 18 SouthPac \ao 20 South Ry 3.00 10 > 20'% - I 15 52 51% 52 trates the merits of Czechoslovak tractors. ^'HowmetCp 1 ^•HuntFds .SOb W Hupp. Cp .17f 35 37% 37 5 33J/9 33% 8 14% 14% f %|lmp Cp Am % IngerRand 2 .... Inland StI 2 ^34% 34% 34% .... JiMiian’Ihd' 59 a" 21% 31% .'. 18% 18% 18% -F % liilnd j» S% »% X% + **'/• t y? SquaraD .80a 9 21% 21% 21%-F AI/. tiu O'* J- 7* Staley 1.35 2 37% 37% 37% + « 121 M: ‘Ut/a 9.^^ 3AI4 4> !4 InsNoAm 2>40 I M'A — Vii American Stock Exch. .Bendix 1.40 Benguet BethSti 1.50a Bigelows .10 Boeing 1.20 jBoiseCesc .25 195 347% 34% 34% 35% 25% 25% - lange selectrt noon pricos; „ . BorgWar"Z20 Selee Hat, BrloosS 2.40e (hde.) HMi Law Lest Chg.!gLmswIck 8 34% 347% 347,4 iBucylr 1.60a 2 22% 22% 22% + %lBSdd Co M 45 13% 11% 12% + %'gSuard 1 11 397% 39^ 39% . Bu ma U)b 24 3<% 3 31-14+1-14 l“lnnd 120 ArkLGas 1.50 BrazilLIPw 1 Brit Pet .S5e Campbl Chib Cal FInanI Cdn Javelin 134 9% Flying Tiger Gen Plywd It Giant Yel .50 Goldfield . % mi Harv 1.00 % Ini Miner 1 . %llnt Nick 2.80 . % I Inti Packers if ^ + %ilm 25 437% 43 43% + J%IITE Ckt lb i H k ’? ^3^ T 23% T %| jSS!^" fs ?§% 03 91% -90% 91% -1-5 «^4r. 32% 33% + % „ „ 35% 37% + . , if}? S’'* X S’ Packaging HK" !?,k +i2lSfan Warn 2 1.90 41 53% 1 103 54 53% 53% + % 37 11% 11% ll%--’%;st;SffCh "60 109 277% 27% 27% + %lsterlDru8 .90 M 84% M% 84 - %||tevw>JP®2.25 35 48% 44% 48% +1% Studebak .25e 29 42% 42% 42% + % The Ghanaians begin lining up for vaccination when the fair opens to the public at 4 p.m. One technician jabs. A second wipes off any excess vaccine. A third sticks a protective cotton wad on the puncture. A fourth hands out a big sheet of paper explaining that the patient should not scratch toe wound. newspapers and as long as public officials recognize the iitoer-ent strength of a free press and an informed people, the Midlands and Michigans of our nation have little to fear,” said the governor. Romney lauded the Midland community for “bringing to full public knowledge the fact that Norm Rumple has been a first citizQi of his community and his state. Vaccinations started on the jfair’s-first day with members of 2 X% 38 30% 28 517% 51 51% + I 45% 45% 45% .. Tajwa El ^.50 Tcnneco 1.20 Texaco 2.50a TaxETrn 1.05 TexG'Sul .40 TaxasliKt .50 TaxP Ld .3Se —K— ' 5 47%” 47'5 47% . M 29% 29% 29% ~ % • CalumH 1.20 CampRL .45a i Camp Soup 1 * ... Can Dry V U ' iu CdnPac 1.50a A T % g3t%JS"’iT ’‘iiuCaroRt 1.34 +lik|CarrlerCp 2 ™ r«rf.rW .401 ’1 19% 19% 19% ■ “ IT* r 2T = %iK"f.40 3 577% 577% 577% + %iKresge .10 31 89% 88% 88% + < 28 58% 58’% 58% + ’ 10 29% 29% 29% + 1 29 43 42 42% +1' CartarW .40a Case Jl iCaterTr 1.20 CelaneseCp^ Cent"SW l'.40 Carro 1.50b cart-lead .80 Scurry Rain Signal OIIA 1 |{a«Iam**ln5» Syntax Cp .4 Technicol .4 153 tS% I 14 12% 1 12 43% 43'% 4 CIT Fin 1.40 ________%1U 2 41% 41'% 41% + %| 9 M% 50% 60% + % 12 44« 45% 45% + % 16 34% 34% 34% + %i 8 30% 30% 30% - %i 235 34'% 34 .» m ' I 47% 447%. 47% +■%! 5151% 19 25% 26% im + -35% .Col Gas V Col Plot ComICra i-w Comsolv l.» Comw Ed 2 Comsat MacyRH 1.50 4 29% 29 Stocks of Local Interest Figures alter decimal poinfs are •'B'?*'“iS2JlFiod"? OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Quotations from the NASO are repra- 95 53% CW Idls 1.00 38,^ 34% If 34% 34% + mately 11 a.m. Inter^laalar marked CiliFiSl 1.40 124 M% 4 ConNGas lAO 30% 3 cSnf'HSr’r.M 32 00% 0 »a;’lfo 578 29% 28% 29% +1' 24 12% 12 12% + 47 10'% 9'% 10% + 15 33'% 33% ,33% 20 47% 47% 47% + ongIsLt 1 orlllard 2. 32'% 32% 32'% 18'% 17'% 18 . 10 30'% » 30% + 32 51'% 50'/« 50% ^ 53 97% 94'% 97% +3 10 IS 17% 18 + % 12 35% 34'A 35% +1% 97 75'% - 74 76%-+-% n 1.21 25 57% 57 57% 121 19% 19'% 19% 13 75 74% 75 32 81% 80% 01% 50 34 33% 34 Ghana’s ruling National Liberation Council rolling up their sleeves. Among them were Lt. Gen. J. A. Ankrah, the council chairman, and Maj. .Gen.. E. K. Kotoka, commander of toe army. Both veteran soldiers looked away when jabbed. Tri Conf.92e 22 24% 24% 2 TwnCen 1.20b 39 39 38'% 3 Un Elec 1.20 Unocal 1.20a Un Pac 1.00a UnTank 2.30 UnilAIrLIn 1 UnilCorp .40e UGasCp 1.7(r Unit MM 1.20 US Borax la {{|®rr:7o“ us Lines 2b USPlywd 1.40 '% USPIyChp wl ’% US Rub 1.20 % US Smelt 1b _ 24% 24% 24'% 8 27% 27 27 ■ s isa mi 5.45'% 45'% 45'%+ '% UnWheIn ........ ..........- + '% 31 15% 14% 15'/4 + % w “S S'* 1, i UnIvOPd 1.40 28 38% 37 ’7 27% 27% 214 ' 37% v37% inadCp 1.50 irlan Asso . jndo Co .50 VaEIPw 1.20 39% T- % MerckC 1.40e 145 75% 74% M% - -MGM 1b 17 35% 3^ H?* + MidSoUtn MlnerCh ' 1.00 133 104 «% 44% .« S 32'% 32’% 32'% + ' 8'% 0% . . 83 83 - % 45% 47 18'% - 152 4 50 54% 54 541 —V— 28 37% 35% M 53 35<% 34% 35 14 3t'% 30% 31'% + % 15 44% 44% 45V ' —w— 27 19 11% 10? 33 43% 42% 43 WarnPIc .30a WarnLamb 1 WashWal 1.15 WestnAirl 1 WnBanc 1.10 WnUnTal.1.40 n «'/a «',i w.vj WeslgEM.60 243 53% 53’% 53'% ••/eyerhr 1.40 ;J13 37'% 34'% 34'% - fhlrlCp 1.40 42 38'% 38 38'% + %: ” .. VP ... 43 45,4 43?y 4jvi + % 30% 30% . The testimonial, h e i d at N(«-thwood Institute, also served ^hite Rumple as new president of toe Michigan Press Association. Business Notes Edwin M. Ver Lee has been a|H>ointed to the newly created po^ of regional director of sales for Vlasic Food Products Co., Latbrup Village. Ver Lee of 9145 Sandy Ridge, White Lake Towiship, will be responsible for continuing marketing 'pER LEE emphasis in Michigan and Northwest Ohio. WllsonCo 1.70 42 M 29'A 30 + %i ---X—Y—Z— 100 123'/, 119'% 123 +3% xerox Corp 1 100 245% 239% 2458. 18 23'A 22% 2284 — % YngstShI 1.80 51 31'% 31'% 31'% i Zenith R 1.20 209 50% ..... ?S 5?'* S% .. ^ I. IL....... "othMWlTe' noted, r'ates foregoing *- ------- I Zenith r, i.,u MV-., Copyrighted by The Aisocleted Press 1947 Sales figures are unofHeial. „ _ 29% 29% + . 23 11% 11% 11% + % 11 37% 37% 37% -F 13 457% 45% 4H* ‘ '50 44% 44% 44% 5 14% 14% 14% + V 5 41% 41 41% + V ......... 27 - . SO 74% 72% 73% +1'i 34 22% 22% »% '9- IS 105% 105 185% 19 47% 47% 47% 13,159,415,302.20 13,734,277,075.59 (X) - IncludH 8255,190,5)5.70 dtbl Ml F subloct It ftaliilorv limll. jF 13 25% 27% 27% + % 115 70% 58% 70% +1% 5I ^ 20% 20% + % 4 45% 45% 45% - ‘ 101 24 23% 23% -^'Vi QUID «%r .au 14 0% 0% 8% .. Owtnslll 1.35 19 38% 37% 38'A + %!0xfrdPap .80 145 30% 29% 29'A + %! , % 22% 22 22% + % ^^^^, , 3, <55^5 +5% Foe Pelrol” 19% + OOW-JONEi STOCKS: Industrials iFeddsrs .50 iFedOStr 1.70 859.91+7,«| Fed Mog IJO 288.18+OBOl Ferro Cp 1.20 , l39:09+0.5l|Flllrol 2.80 ------------ . 307.45+1.tZ|Fireslne 1.40 45 47% 47 8 38 37% 37% + %l Pan A Sul AO x5 15% 15% 15% + %IPan Am .50 I 53% 53% 53% — % PanhEP 1.50 4 33% 33% 33% “ ------- - 5 29% 29'A 29'A 23 52% ■■■ 4F% + 10 Highar grade rail W tndwslrltla ........ ....... .iFla Pow 1.35 84.21+0.07; Fla PLI 1A4 . 15.35+0.04. FMC Cp .75 89.27.. ...PooGfith’ .90 5 73% 73% 73% + 38 35 35% 35% .. 14 15% It 15 . ParkeDav paid In ..... . jld last . stock during 1957. .« cash value on ex-dIvIdend or ; _____dividend or spilt up. k-Decarod or ptM this yeor,........—- ----------- with dividends In ^ - ■ a S(d,% Act. or securities assumed by su... .. panics. tn-Forelgi» Issue sAlect to 1 terest equaltutlonv lex. STOCK AVERAGES sfflpllsd by The Atsociatsd Press 50 IS IS 51 iiid. Rans UHL stot.- :hin8e ....+3.2 +.9 +.4 +1A _____ Wed. ..... 451.6 177.4 15SA 3W.7 Prev. Day ........ 448A 174.S 155A 315.9 445.5 176.9 155.4 /315.0 433.1 146i 154.1/-* ■-m.2 2Mi 1M 537.9 2)3.9 171.5 »8;o 143.9 150.2 ir Ago .. F47 High “As long as there are Nor- G(XH>LESSON This amateur speculator, who didn’t have rugs on his Manhattan apartment flooi' because he neeeded the money to stocks, lost his money between 1957 and 1964, then wrote a book in which he convinced himself that a lesson was learned. He is back in toe market. “Not heavily,” he Said in an interview. “I- got an advance and I got hold of some other dough.” He would, perhaps have returned long before but “It was academic. I had no dough.” He is behind again. The advance referred to was cash paymoit for his book in advance of publication. Authorship, he feels has permitted him to talk out his problem, his heartache, his loss. It’s history. I’ve learned to live wito'it.” TTie Roosevelt left Cape Town Monday 24 hours ahead of schedule after controversy because shore leave for her crew was canceled due to Souto Africa’s racial sepegation policies, man Rumples running d a i 1 y 3 CREWMEN MISSING MORE MONEY This man soon will get some more money, the income from sales of his book, which , now exceeds 20,(X» copies. What will be do with this money? I’m going to spend it on the apartroeiU,” be said, “and thra what’s left I’ll probably go back into the markd with caufion, care and patience. I will invest conservatively.” Cape Town police picked up three white crewmen of toe Roosevelt who were missing after the ship sailed. The men, all under 21, were found at a white family’s home in downtown Cape Town. They told the police they wanted to see toe city. After , .ight at . pote .te- ^ ^7 tion, toey were to be handed ________ over to toe U.S. Embassy for return to the United States. News in Brief )240 in change was reported stolen yesterday from the Timberlane Bar, 18 N. Perry. Police said the burglar apparently hid until the bar was closed, toen forced open a juke box, cigarette machine and cash register. A Inriefcase containing cameras and photographic 'iaccesso-ries, total value of more than 11,400, was stolen late yesterday from the home of Dr. M(toam-med Safavian, 97 Churchill, Pontiac Township, Oakland County sheriff’s deputies were told. Investigators said entry was apparently liiade by forcing a rear door, < Why go back at all? “I’m not antimarket. I’m antispccula-tion,” he said. “I’m going to invest in companies that pay dividends and I might buy growth situation stocks or put it ail into a mutual fund. If toe stocks fall in price, rn just wait until they come back. Til invest seriously and if VAW Plans Renewal Bid' Apollo Probers Still in Dark-Senator DETROIT (AP)- The United Auto Workers union today is reportedly planning to call on the nation’s four auto makers to share the costs of a |5.5-million urban renewal program in Detroit. The UAW reportedly will offer $100,000 in “seed money” to help plan the rebuilding eff(Hl, if the money is matched by each of toe four major auto producers. Labor Writer Patrick Gwens reported in today’s Detroit Free It the UAW plans would be announced this week. WASHINGTON (AP) - Investigators seeking the cause of the spacecraft fire that took the lives of three astronauts haven’t found anything at all’* so far, according to the chairi; man of the Senate Space Committee. Sen. Clinton P. Anderson, D-i.M., gave that report to newsmen ’Tuesday after his committee met privately with officials of toe National Aeronputics and Space Administration. The investigators are “not even close” to pinning down the capse of the fire that suddenly filled toe space capsule Jan. 27 , at (Ope Kennedy, Fla., killing toe three spacemen, AMerson I aid. M. Eugene Davis has been appointed general office manager of Bur roughs Corp.’! world headquarters in De-tooit. Davis of 6845 Alderley Way, ! West- Bloom-I field Township, DAVIS served as manager of distributi(Hi services tor toe firm’s business mactones group prior to his recent promotion. Agent From Area ^ lOOfiOOth in Unit man, Homer Spencer, was recently counted as the 100,000th member of the National Association of Life Underwriters. Spencer of 3239 (Bindley is an agent for the American National Insurance Co. of Life Underwriters has 140iSt“*^s und» present worldjon-members. 'Ilie presidents John Relatively few investors H. Salow of Massachusetts Mu^ tual Life Insurance Uo. Tom Bateman of Realty Co. recently received toe Traders Club award for a display of material used in his trade operations. Hte was cited by toe International TYaders Club-Exchange Division of the National Institute of Real Estate Brokers during a meeting in Miami Beacji. N«t Presto ind ... .25 Screen Gems .......15 Sid on Ohio .......50 Joseph H. Bamler, manager of toe main office of Birmingham Bloomfield Bank, was recently elected an assistant Bamier of 161 Edgelake, Waterford Township, was formerly manager of the bank’s Wood-ward-Bennaville o f f i c e. He joined this bank in March 1966. By ROGER E. SPEAR (Q) “I would apixeciate any A A X., m l; J information on Brazilian Ught A West Bloomfield Township * yieWg u per Rank Xerox-owned jointly with Xerox Corp. cent. Is tojs grdtvto potential good? Should we buy Uiis tor a young bOy’s future? Our ip:^ vestment dub bought 166 Rank Organization. Should we hold for recovery?” T. R. (A) As a general policy, 1 ad-The Pontiac Association vise .you to steer clear ofjore^^^^ REGULAR .....ring .05 0 Pub Sv .33 Q •SSiSiJX Q 3-15 3-31 Q 2-17 3-10 Prw. Day 72.'i is.i Hr 90ii *“ 72.1 95.S 84.3 90.8 ..................... 82.8 90A can keep abreast of changing government policies and toe variations in foreign markets. BrSzalian Light & Power is a utility supplying electricity and gas in major arAas of Brazil. Political uncertainfies in this country and wide fluctuations toe currency makes the shares quite speculative and entirely unsuitable as a groMh vehicle. k Ago ) lb Ago 7 Futhermore, any stock whose 'yield is substantially higher S;9,toan the going rate is register-J^;*|ing doubt as to the safety of the i«547 Lo'w TOT 88.9 79:2 9o;4 i3.7 tion, I would buy (]onsolidated 1945 Ciw "'.s ’99.9 S:’ 9i:S wii Foods where continued growth appears well assured. Raik is a ■nie term “Boxers” was applied to the Chinese revolutionists who occupied Peking in 1900 and later wm driven from foreign legations there by an interoationid military force. great British enterprise which has been hurt by the government’s deflationary polides. I would not buy this stock but I would hold for recovery because of toe company’s interest in (Q) “Our trust fund it in-American Telephone, Connec-tient National Bank, General Foods, General Motevs, Inland Steel, New Enghmd Gat & Electric, Norfolk & Western and Jersey Standard. These stocks were, bought when toe mariiet .was high and we have losses in some. Onr objective is income, which is divided among the heirs. Please give me your opinion on these Btocks.” G.L. (A) You have an unusually good list, well suited to your objective. I have no (toanges to suggest. You m i g h t improve your yield by sVdtdiing General Foods, but I would not up this high-grade powto stoede for a datively small increase in income. Please don’t worry about toe timing of your purchases, since stocks such as you own are likely to recover fully over a period of time. To order yonr copy of Reger Spear’s 46-page Guide ta Successful Investing, clip this notice and send |1.M with your name and address te Regw E. Spear, care ef Hie Pentinc Press, Bex U18, Grand Central Statioa, New York, N. Y. 19917. (Copyright, 1W7) THE POyTIAC pjESS, WEPyESDAY> FEBRUARY 8, 1967 CHILDREN OUTGROWN SKIS, SLEDS, TOBOGGANS? SELL •niEM WITH A LOW CQI^ PONTIAC'PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 33M181. lunsiirt senice GeDler • LISTED SECURITIES • UNLISTED SECURITIES • MUTUAL FUNDI • TAX EXEMPT BONOS • CORPORATE BONDS • SYSTEMATIC INVESTMENT PLANS • PORTFOLIO REVIEW AND ANALYSIS Cam ifi today orphan* Wailing, Lercfaen & Co. MmbmNtw York Stock Exekangi t NORTH SAGINAW ST. PONTIAC, MICHIGAN PhonK334>2411 Whaf's in a Name? Ask President BHIson ByDlCHWESrr WASHINGTON - President Johnson’s hews conference last wwk produced a brazen case of 'news manage*! ment” 1^ the{ White 'House. Or anyway by] somebody. At one p