, The Weather THE PONTIAC PRESS Horn* (dmiui w Paaa i> —, ~ ; " ■ inr J V0L\J22 NO. 281 ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 81, 1 1964 24 PAGES UNITED SPRESST|NTeRNArOMAU I®* [ Announced by Fomum New Guard Probe Charges COLOMBIAN COFFEE - Herbert N. Stoutenburg, dean of student affairs at Oakland University, sniffs the rich aroma of coffee brought back from Colombia by exchange Says Exchange Student PPPl student, Majorie Hannah. Home on a Christmas holiday, Miss Hannah of 414 W. 13 Mile, Royal Oak, will return to the University erf Valle in Cali, Colombia, in January. Cali Stay 'Enriching' By JODY HEADLEE Home Editor, Pontiac Press Making new friends and adjusting to the culture of a foreign nation is no easy task but Marjorie Hannah, 21, of Royal Oak, is finding it a gratifying and enriching experience. Miss Hannah, an April 1964 graduate of Oakland University, is spending the year as an exchange student at the University of Valle in Cali, Colombia. The South American university and OU are partners in the Alliance for Progress program following an exchange of delegations between Oakland County and the Cauca Valley in 1963. Hearing Set in Machine at Junk Yard A show, cause hearing on a temporaryX injunction against Sam Aden A Son, Inc., 22 Congress, has btai set for 9 a.m. Jan. 11. \ Pontiac City Attorney William A. Ewart and lsVesidents filed , suit yesterday in Oakland County Circuit Court against the scrap yard. \ The suit seeks to curtail operation of a metal crashing machine at the junk yanhand cites it as a public nuisance, disturbing the surrounding neighborhood. \ Acting in behalf of the residents ami the city, Ewart claims the machine is an enlargement of the nonconforming use restrictions on a portion of the, scrap yard. . * * 4r The suit also objects to (h e smoke, offensive odors and vibrations from the machine. HEARING ORDERED Circuit Court Judge Frederick C. Zeim today ordered the show cause hearing for JanTltr^j ■ *7 . dr ' The compaction resulted from a lengthy dispute between t h e scrap yard and its neighbors over the machine’s operations. The City Commission attempted to mediate the dispute, b u t finally ordered legal action. Numerous Gifts for 1st 65 Baby Prizes Are Offered for Parents, Infant An imposing list of gifts for the winner of the “First Baby of 1965 Contest’’ includes items for both baby and parents. The three local hospitals, Pontiac general, Pontiac Osteopathic and St. Joseph Mercy, have agreed to waive delivery room charges for the winner. * Baby is assured a warm and . comfortable welcome home with 299 gallons of New Mobil-heat furnace oil from Gee \Coal ft Oil Co. Flowers for mother are offered by Jacob- * sen’s Flowers and Pearce Flowers. There’s dinner for dad and mother at the Green Parrot Restaurant, 10 gallons of gas from Leeds' Land ft Garden Sales ft Service, and a now tread tire from Motor Mgrt. Other gifts include / ham for the family from Bazley Markets; 95 dry cleaning certificates from Fox Dry Cleaners and Gresham Cleaners; and a car wash and polish from the Pontiac Retail Store. ?(other gets a pair of D* rtiel een slippers from Todd’s Shoes. The first baby of 1995 will receive a Casco high chair from Giant Discount Furni-mmumaimNNiiiiiuuiMMtapNiMm tare, a Casco stivller from I Family Home Furnishings, ■ T -J J and a collapsable swing and In IOQQV S | car seat combination from ' I K-Mart. Press 1 Baby gets a first pair of shoes I from Stapp’s Juvenile Bootery, i i three dozen Curity diapers from Local Economy I Discount Center,-and Banner year seen | a $25 savings bond from the Pontjac — PAGE II. | press. in j 7earn ~ 1 T*ien there’s a baby’s* room . t,__, ... . . I vaporizer from Fitzpatrick I Pharmacy, an Electro Presto Justice Goldberg—PAGE I warmer ^ WKC ^ and . “• I Baby Serv-n-ette bottle and food Senate S diamond ring for bhby- from Liberals appear split on I Shaw Jewelers. Pontiac Enggass filibuster controversy— 1 Jewelej^iU give a-sterUng sil-PAGE 3 I ver charm and diamond locket. Area News ....... 4 ■' -— -----— Astrology .......... 10 *» }J I Press Will Publish ®***rW» .......j| J Single Early Edition Markets ........... , Hi . 1 Obituaries ......... 18 1 In order that Pontiae Press f>v>rts ............ 1M5 I employed may spend the holi- Tbeaters 2! 1 day with .their families, The TV ft Radio Programs 23 | Press will publish a single Wilson, Earl ........ 23 | early edition tomorrow. Women’s Pages 8-9 | Normal edition times will be resumed Satarday. ' : It i tlI ' '1 , John E. Madole, Oakland County's representative to Cali, is working closely with the exchange program. A Hr * “I admire the Colombians’ approach to life,” said Miss Hannah. ’’They are so gay and filled with the joy of living. And the pace they travel is much more leisurely than ours here in the United States. NOT ALARMING - “For instance, if you have an appointment and you happen to arrive late, no one gets alarmed or upset. They are just glad you got there at all.” "Colombian girls are chaperoned when they date,” she continued, “but, because 1 am an American, no one frowns when I go out with an escort unchaperoned. “Though I will admit,” she Chuckled, “the taxi drivers usually call me signora because they can’t get used to an unmarried woman and a man being together without a chaperone.” * * * In, addition to her studies, shp is working with the Peace Corps teaching literacy to prisoners of the loeal jail in their own language, Spanish. COMPLETELY ILLITERATE “The man I am teiching now,” she said, “is completely illiterate though he is 27 years old. He comes from a family of 12 children and has never had the. opportunity to learn to read or write. ' “Each teacher, assigned to one student, begins the literacy course by teaching the basic language sounds and how to print. We spend one hour a day, three or four days a week with our pupil. “By the end of three months or a little sooner depending, on the ability of the student, he can read bis own language and write in manuscript. ' ★ * it ‘Tjhey are so eager, to .learn,” she added. “And in teaching them, we instigate a chain reaction. The method is simple (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) Viet Marine Patrol Ambdshed by Cong SAIGON, South Viet Nam The Viet Cong ambushed 100 Vietnamese Marines today as they were opening graves believed to contain the bodies of four U.S/servicemen shot down as fighting continued around Binh Ghia. A JJ.S. Marine captain ---- Congo. Murder Is Described White Hostages Tell of Rebel Savagery was wounded in the ambush. The Marines fought their way into a jungle area where a U.S. Army helicopter was shot down last night as it was covering Marines collecting the bodies of government troops. The helicopter burst intoJlames and exploded when it hit the treetops. A Marine search company reached the crash site this afternoon and found four fresh graves next to the wreckage, presumably containing the . bodies of the helicopter’s four American crewmen. The Marines reportedly were digging up the graves when a powerful Viet Cong unit ambushed them'. * * Vietnamese losses w e r e believed to be extremely heavy. MARINES WITHDRAW The Marine uitit withdrew, taking their wounded with them, and' late in the afternoon were preparing to attack the area again with the whole Marine battalion. Government troops regained Binh Nghia, a town of 1,199 Roman Catholic refugees 49 miles east of Saigon yesterday, but fighting continued around it today for the fourth day. It was one of the longest actions of the war against the Communist Viet Cong. The Defense Department in Washington listed the helicopter crewmen as missing, but it, seemed almost certain that their bodies were in the graves by, the wreckage. “The Viet Cong have done this before — used graves of Americans as bait,” one U.S. adviser said. “They know we have to go in to get them.” • If the four were killed, their deaths would raise to 245 the number of Americans killed in combat in Viet Nam since December 1961. Military sources estimated government casualties at nearly 300 dead, wounded and missing. A partial count showed at least 32 Viet Cong dead. LEOPOLDVILLE, the Congo (A—Rebel warriors performed a savage war dance of death on the stomach of American missionary William McChesney until he died, refugees said today. McChesney, the sixth American missionary to be killed by Communists - backed rebels in the northeastern Congo in the past two months, was trampled to death at Wamba during almost a week of bloodletting last November. After McChesney had died of internal bleeding, the rebels continued to vent their fury on his corpse, the refqgees said and then flung his mutilated body into the Wamba River. This tale of horror was pieced together from white hostages of the rebels rescued at Wamba two days ago. They told how the rebels butchered 28 of their prisoners between Nov. 24 and 28. * ★ * The toll of white hostages massacred by the rebels rose to nearly 200 with the latest refugee reports. The survivors told how McChesney, who served at a Protestant Mission near Wamba, was killed together With an unidentified British missionary aged about 50. * ★ * Ten other Britons are reported to be among 86 missionaries and other hostages kidnaped last weekend by rebels and taken from Wamba. AIR COVER — An-armed U.S. Army helicopter flies over Vietnamese Marines yesterday advancing into the village of Binh Nghia. One helicopter was shot down in the battle area, 40 miles east of Saigon, and four American crewmen were feared dead. Fighting between government troops and the Viet Cong continued today for the fourth day. Area Churches to Hold Watch-Night Services By MARY ANGLEMIER Church Editor, The Pontiac Press Congregations of city and county churches of the Pontiac area will ring out the old and ring in the New Year with religious rites tonight. Plays, pictures and speakers will be featured with refreshments. The midnight hour will find men and women in services of Holy Communion and prayer, year’s Eve with a service of Several churches have sched- Holy Communion. The service uled services for New Year’s will begin at 7:30. D*y- ' . ' „ SILVERCREST Three area churches — New- man AME, Messiah Baptist and John Methodist “ The film, “In His Steps” based on the book of the same name, will Mr. ™ WJ-M will be shown at 8:30 tonight in Silvercrest Baptist Church, 2562 Dixie. A time of fellowship with refreshments will follow. Slides of various events of the past church year- will be reviewed in the lower audito-' Ham during the 19 p.m. hour. Testimonies and prayer will be given as She new year ar- Slipper Drinking Is Loaded Problem 1965 Will Debut in Near-Freezing Temperatures Old Father Time wilL welcome the Now Year at midnight with skies partly overcast and tempera turesnear freezing. . > ★ ★ ii : The forecast f p r tomorrow is increasing cloudiness and warmer With rain1 possibly mixed with snow, the high 37 to '44. Snow flurries and colder is the outlook for Saturday. Today’s variable winds at 8 to 15 will shift to south to southeasterly tonight. Twenty-seven was file low temperature in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. They mercury had climbed to 36 by 2 p.m. BOSTON (AP) — No more on New Year’s Eve do gentlemen drink from ladies’ slippers — for one big reason. A more enthusiastic acceptance of public health standards has nothing to do with it, notes an article in the current issue of the Harvard Medical Alumni Bulletin. .-*. The basic problem, it says, is that these days “ladies' slippers and shoes are just too big to drink from. “Once scarcely large enough to contain an aperitif, the shoe of the female has become a veritable .tankard, holding .14 ounces-or more. * *■ ' ★ ' . “The ability of the male to cope with libations has not kept pace with the explosion in the size of women’s shoes.”, DECLINE and fall In an article titled “Decline and Fall of the Female Arch,” Dr.'Paul J. Davis lists several factors “which have contributed to the blossoming of the lady’s * foot from the fragile and finely drawn bud of the 1930s. “The average-female today is about 14 pounds heavier than her counterpart of 39 years ago. No matter how this (Continued oh Page 2, Col. 4) .7 7 &; tidpate in a joint Watch Night Service, tonight. Hie Service beginning at 19 p.m. will be held in the St. John Church, 4l3Mi|hland. Rev. A’ N. Reid of Newman AME will bring the message. Choirs of the sponsoring churches will sing. GRACE LUTHERAN ______ ____________H The congregation of brace Lu- rives. The public is invited theran Church will observe New gj mmivi. . Parishioners of St Michael Catholic Church may offer confessions from 7:30 to 9 tonight. Masses on New Year’s Day will be the same as on Sundays, 5:55, 1:30, 8:45, 10, and 11:30 a.m., and, 12:30 p.m. MARIMONT The annual Watch Night service will be held at 9 tonight at Marimont Baptist Church, West Walton at Hollywood. The Gin-gellville Baptist Church will join In the service and fellowship hours. '% The evening will begin with the showing of the “Martin Luther” film, and close with the observance of Holy Communion at midnight. , BEAUTIFUL SAVIOR New Year’s Eve will be marked with a- celebration of Holy Communion at Beautiful Savior Lutheran Church, ,5821 N. Adams, Bloomfield Township. The service will begin at.7:45. BLOOMFIELD HILLS The traditional Watch Night service will be held from. 9 until midnight in Bloomfield Hills Baptist Church, 3000 Telegraph, Bloomfield Township. There will be a service of song, testimonies of God’s leading in the year just past, and the Moody science film, “Time and Eternity.” Refreshments will follow in Fellowship Hall. The closing moments of the old year will be spent in pray-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Tax, Rebate Discrepancies Cited in Report New Evidence Won't Affect Hearings on Officers' Suspensions LANSING 1*1 — New charges in the Michigan National Guard land., money and liquor scandal —1• including a possible $7$,-000 tax violation andean $18,000 rebate discrepancy in the post exchange operation were announced today by Aud. Gen. Billie.Famum. Farnum issued his final ref port in the case which broke Oct. 8 and which so far-has resulted in the firing or suspension of three top Guard officers. When the first 11 charges were unveiled, Gov. Romney fired State Adjutant General Maj. Gen. Ronald McDonald, Quartermaster General Brig. Gen. Carson Neifert and his executive officer, Lt. Col. Verse! Case. . McDonald and Neifert were reinstated, then immediately suspended by their commanding general, C. L. Simmons. They are waiting a hearing In front of Romney. * it * Case has appealed his firing to the State Supreme Court. COULD BE BASIS The new charges will not affect the upcoming hearing but . could be a basis 4for further .hearings. Farnum’s report dealt with 29 categories of alleged irregularities. Those previously covered included alleged illegal sale of state property at Camp Grayling, construction program irregularities and liquor, pay and travel voucher violations. 1 e *• * • .The final report charged Lt. Col* Joemax Smith, operator of the Camp Grayling past Exchange, with witholding $18,-(Continued on Page 2, Col. I) MARTINI NOT TEENY - Not convjnced by the Harvard Medical Alumni Bulletin, Daniel White of Boston, Mass., decides. to try out the old custom of drinking from a lady’s slimier. He uses showgirl Julie Daire in the experiment. The Harvard publication said nowadays ladies’ shoes are just too big for anyone to be expected to drink from them. ' ‘ ' ■ ' '. b.' ' >, State Leaders to Take Oath at Ceremony LANSING (AP)-Gov. George Romney begins his second term at noon tomorrow in inaugural festivities where he’ll be surrounded by Democrats. v The hour-long swearing-ta^eik e monies for Romney and 24«th- V. er top state officials are only part of a day whose activlttea begin in the morning and should continue past midnight. * # * The weatherman is mildly pessimistic, predicting cloudy skies with possible afternoon riin and a mid-day temperature of about 40 degrees. Though officially outnumbered by Democrats, Republican Romney is the star of the inaugural show. „ He’ll deliver the only major speech of the day at the swearing-in ceremonies. It’s expected to be short, with an-emphasis on bipartisan cooperation in meeting state. needs and keeping Michigan’s economy moving. Romney’s running mate, William Milllken, will take his oath as lieutenant governor. But 12 Democrats are scheduled to take oaths for eight • Board of Education and four uni-' versity board seats, and two Democratic incumbents, Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley- and Secretary of State James Hare, will renew their oaths. $v ~fWO v . . ' - . r1 ■ ipi THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 31, 196A -Nasser Feeling the Pinch? Report Russia Getting Stingy With Aid CAIRO (AP.) — President i The sources gave this sum; I afford to throw our money Gamal Abdel Nasser can expect j mary of Shelepin’s conversa- around,” one Soviet source said, little If any food from the Soviet tions with Nasser: , ‘‘We must be sure we are get- IJnjon if the United States cuts The Soviet leader came to ting full value for everything we iff its' niultimitlioo-dollar food Cairo tq assure Nasser that | give. ]rid prbgram to the United Arab former, Premier Khrushchev’s ^qpUblic, sources close to the I pro-Egyptian policies are not being abandoned, and that the Egyptian can expect continued ' fruitful relations with the Soviet I’ Union —but only on a realistic ‘ Russians said today . - ‘Soviet Deputy Premier Alexander Shelepin, one of the, gremlin’s new leaders, toM Nasser in effect that the Soviet tyrion is no Santa Claus, these Sources said. ; - Shelepin returned to Moscow earlier this week after a 10-day yisit to Egypt. He apparently .took a hard look at the way Soviet military and economic aid 4$ being spent here. PROBLEMS AT HOME But Shelepin emphasised that the Soviet Union has problems at home, especially in agriculture,' and vast commitments abroad. ‘‘We are not a rich uncle like the United States and we cannot Carillon Dedicated at Pontiac Hospital ■ A $3,000 electronically-operat-ed carillon was dedicated at Pontiac State Hospital yesterday in memory of the late Dr. -Walter H. Obenauf, medical superintendent of. the hospital, .who died last July. ; Special guests at the brief Ceremony, conducted in the] chapel by Rev. Joseph Brady, .chaplain of the hospital, were •Mrs. Obenauf and her daughter, •Rebecca, of 11200 Clark, Spring-field Township. ■ FT. Brady asked a blessing on the carillon, followed by a : tribute to Dr. Obenauf by Dr. . Donald W. Martin, present superintendent of the hospital. County Solons to Head Units Named as Interim Medical Director Two new state senators from -Oakland County were among 20 .‘named today to head Senate committees. , Assigned as chairmen were Sander M. Levin, labor commit- See Related Story, Page 5 tee, and Carl W. O’Brien, conservation committee. Both were Yectedib the Senate Nov. 3. ' ’ Levin, S3, formerly chairman of the Oakland County Democratic Party, represents the 15th district in South Oakland County. He lives at 1022 Edge wood, of PonUac & ffi0 Berkley. A • than two decades. He was chief * . A Pontiac resident, O’Brien, of staff in 1041, °? Mowe, is the 17th-. • Dr. Ekelund replaces Dr.’ Mar- District, senator. The district includes Pontiac, seven Oakland ^County townships and -Lapeer County. . Other special guests included conductors of the carillon hind drive Mrs. John Whiting of Franklin and Mrs. R. E. Crabb and Mrs. Glea James, both of Bloomfield Township. Several /hospital staff members also attended the ceremony. During his four-year tenure as superintendent of the mental hospital, Dr. Obenauf often talked of the need for a carillon and the tranquil effect jit might have on patients. A memorial fund was established soon after Us death, and the goal of $3,0M was reached in recent weeks through the efforts of volunteers, staff and patients. Operated by magnetic tape and a time clock, the carillon can be set to play sacred or Hght classical music at designated times, as well as toll the hour and the call to worship.., It is also equipped to broadcast a siren-type disaster alarm by remote control and can be used as a public address system. “Our relations will be on a more realistic footing in the future.” After .a lukewarm start, Shelepin’s travels and speeches around ’the country were given splash treatment in Egypt's government - controlled press The Egyptians broke precedent by inviting Shelepin to share the podium with Nasser during “Victory,, Day" celebrations at Port Said last week. ‘GO TO HELL’ It was on this occasion that ftasser, probably with one eye on Shelepin, told the United States in effect that it could take its food aid program and “go to hell” if it did not like his of the Congolese rebels. The United States has been providing $140 million Worth of flour and other food items annually to Egypt. Nasser’s attack has raised demands in the United States to end further food shipments. Watch-Night Services Set (Continued From Page One) er. The community is invited to this service held annually, Pastor Harold W. Gieseke said. MACEDONIA Men, women and children will gather in Macedonia Baptist Church at 9 p.m. for the annual Watch Night service. CHRISTCHURCH CRANBROOK Rev. Gerald B. O’Grady Jr. announces Christ Church Cran-brook will be open tonight for those who might wish to have an opportunity for quiet meditation and prayer. The closing hour will be after midnight. AUBURN- HEIGHTS U.P. Members and friefeds of thd United Presbyterian Church in Auburn Heights will hold a New Year’s Eve^party in the church baseihent -tonight. The evening A 71-year-old physician haajjjj' ***» at 8:30 and close been named Interim medical. 12j” ,m‘ director of Pontiac General Hos- The Moody film, "The Stones pita!, succeeding Dr. John j. Cry Out” Wfll be shown. Marra, who resigned. : Sam Sheehy will lead group Dr. Clifford T. Ekelund, 35 j singing, and a talent show under W. Huron, has been on the staff the supervision of Mrs. Leonard ra, who resigned Dec. 16 because the medical directorship required more time than he was able to give. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partly cloudy and a little colder today and tonight, highs today 32 to 39. Lows tonight tS to 32. Increasing cloudiness and warmer with rain possibly mixed with mow on Friday, highs 37 to $4. Light variable „ |______________| 1M — winds this morning becoming south to southeasterly S to 15 * will be celebrated at 10 a.i miles this afternoon and tonight. Outlook for Saturday mow ! on New Year’s Day in All Saints flnrries and colder. - • - ■ — ■ - Hebei will be presented. Mrs. Harold Burmeister will be In charge of group games, and the Women’s Association will provide refreshments with Mrs. Robert Sipperley, chairman. A brief devotional led by Pastor F. William Palmer will con-clude the evening. OAKLAND AVE. U.P. Ronald Huth, missionary intern, will bring the message at the annual Watch Night seryice from 11:15 to midnltfit at Oak-I land ' Avenue United Presbyterian Church. This will be a I candlelight service of Holy Communion. ALL SAINTS EPISCOPAL A service of Holy Communion Episcopal Church. 1 HRH Birmingham Area News 'Critic's Choice' in Art on Display in January ap raom HAPPY HARMONY - All was smiles between Nikolai T. Federenko (left), Russia’s ambassador to the United Nations, and U.S. Ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson as the Security' Council voted unanimously yesterday afternoon for a cease-fire In the Congo. The council asked the Organization of African Unity (OAU) to push its efforts to restore harmony between the warring political factions.' 'You'll Rue Drinking„ From Shoe' (Continued From Page One) new weight Is distributed in our corset-based society, it is still supported in the same old way: by feet which respond to increased stress in pounds per square inch by spreading out. “Shoe manufacturers and itylists-have added to the apparent size of the foot, altering its natural and rather functional contours into something resembling an arrowhead. w * + “Today there is only casual relationship between the length and shape of the shoe and the length and configuration of the foot it encumbers; who can tell if the dhoe fits?”' THE OLD VIEW .“The average female has grown callous to the centuries-old reverence for modest and unpretentious proportions of the foot. “Grandmother’s feet, in her wedding pictures, discreetly were concealed beneath her wedding gown; today’s bride hasn’t a prayer of hiding her feet as she teeters down the aisle. “Several aspects of our lives have been changed by the foot-shoe crisis: ★ it it 'The dance has degenerated from a team effort into a stage of violent individual performance in which the male is all too happy to stand aside and qway from flashing spikes and rapierlike toes. RUGGED FLOORS 'Marble floors are, ‘in’ again since wood and synthetic-floor coverings are hopelessly inadequate to cope with today’s heels. 'Worst of all, the wa]k of the female is now a threnody of slouching, mincing, slinking, 1 flopping, teetering, limping and / crutch-walking.” . Davis, a 1963 Harvard Medical School* graduate, says tits own foot-size 9C — "is perhaps what stimulated, me to-watch closely from the sidelines of life the inexorable expansion of women’s feet, into gunboats.” Tatar In PonlUc Judge Enters GOP Race in 14th District taft TMMrUim________I f 31 27 Fort Worth. 02 50 ■ 20 Jacksonville 74 47 I 10 Kansas City 4a 35 I 31 ffiimlTfll R 7). ' wjwwffae_. jj 30 AlbwiuirqJ. S 30 nL , ...—— u-fo SlSlita 54 Hi Farmington Township Justice ! Chicago 44 jo frwSsc* 54 « of the Peace Allen C. Ingle has fiivrc ' » ,S ka««fc**r' r 791 announced that he will oppose iK'wK’ jI n waThinqton 57 “Farrell E. Roberts for the Re- ! publican- nomination for the 14th | District State Senate seat. 1 Roberts has already filed for ' j the.' post left vacant by the recent death of Sen.*elect Paul | Chandler. Ingle' and Roberts, whose Senate term expires next j week, were both dnsuccessful I in the Nov. 3 election" In bids for Judicial posts. Ingle sought ! an Oakland Canity Circuit j Court Judgeship and Roberts run for the new Court of Ap- * " NATIONAL WEATHER—Showers are due tonight in norths f era California and from southern Plains .through lower Mis-I aissiippi Valley Into Tennessee Valley. Show or flurries will fell from Rockies eastward through northern Plkteau and ^ Plains. It will be bolder in southern Plateau and Atlantic Z coastal area and milder, in Mississippi Valley. . t Three Democata from Livonia also have announced their candidacy for the Senate post. i*; pUl A special primary election has been scheduled for Feb. 15 with thq'general election set for April 5 Area Man Dies in Trailer Fire Soviet-U. S. Showdown Delayed by U.N. Recess UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. UR—I for a cease-fire in the Congo, -The U.N. General Assembly | withdrawal of Premier Moise started an 18-day New Year re-! Tshombe’s white mercenaries cess today after closing out 19641 and further efforts by the Orga-without a Soviet-U.S. showdown nization of African Unity to over the Russians’ assembly | bring peace between Tshombe’s vpte. - .■■■.*■'.. j government and the rebel*. The Security Council ended its BIRMINGHAM - Work rep-resentative of regional art, selected by the University of Mich-igan's Michael P. Church, will be exhibited at the Birmingham Art Center in January. * ★ * The exhibit win open Sunday with a 2-5 p.m. reception for the public at the center, 1516 S. Cranbrook. He “Critic’s Choice” display can then be viewed from 8 te I p.m. daUy except Mondays through Jan. SI. Presented by the Bloomfield Art Association, the show will be installed by Jean Brown of Royal Oqk. * * ’* Church serves as U. of M.'s assistant director of cultural activities for the extension service. ON ARTS COUNCIL ! He is 'a member of the De-I troit Arts Council and the Ann Arbor Civic Arts Commission. For the last 16 years, he has served as state secretary of the cultural activities board for Michigan Week. | Church was appointed by I Gov. Romney to tbe Graphic year with a resolution calling Ford Vehicle Sales in 1964 to Set Record DEARBORN (AP) — Ford Motor Co. announced today its 1964 car and truck sales will set a new record for the 61-yearold auto maker. And Chairman Henry Ford II said ‘the company is planning to build more cars and trucks in plants in the first quarter of the new year than in any quarter in history. * * * Ford said U.S. Ford and Lin- coln-Mercury dealers will have sold more than 2.1 million new cars during 1964, topping the old calendar year record of 2.040.000 set in 1955. The sales would top 1963’s 1.928.000 by nine per cent. Ford predicted its* truck sales in the U.S. will exceed 410,000, exceeding by five per cent last year’s record of 390,000. This Would give Ford a combined car and truck sales volume of more than 2.5 million units, compared with- the 1955 record of 2,353,000.. * * * Sr Ford said its fourth - quarter sales are expected to set a new quarterly record, with October-December deliveries exceeding 570,000/ compared with the, old record of 564,000 in, the second quarter of this year. The resolution was adopted 114—with France abstaining — after Its African sponsors omitted condemnation of the Belgian-U.S. para troop operation in November to rescue white hostages held by the rebels. Instead, the resolution “deplored the recent events” in the Congo. ★- * 1 * ... Assembly President Alex Quaiaon-Sackey of Ghana recessed the 115-nation General Assembly yesterday night until Jan. 18 after persuading Jordan and Mali to split a two-year term on the Security Council This broke a deadlock that threatened to necessitate a formal vote, which would have brought a Soviet-U.S. showdown. The split-term agreement enabled the assembly to finish all the necessary business of its first 30 days by general consent, without any voting on the floor. Quaison-Sackey announced that Jordan would serve on the council during 1965 and Mali during 1966. If the council is enlarged from 11 to 15 members next fall farac-cordance with proposed amendments to the U.N. charter, each will get a full two-year term. Man Killed in Crash LXNSING (AP) - James Shinaberry, 25, of St. Johns was killed Wednesday when, state police said, his car struck the rear of a truck 10 miles north of Lansing on U.S. Ex-OU Student Finds Her Stay in Cali Enriching (Continued From Page One) enough that they can turn I around and teach fellow inmates j or the other members of their [family when released from prison. SHEER DESPERATION “In the main, these prisoners face sentences that run from five to seven years. And I feel it was sheer desperation at not being able to earn a living that turned them to crime in the first place.” Miss Hannah alio pointed out that the Jail is operated along modern methods with the inmates learning skills In one of the institution’s three factories. She feels that coupling the new skill with literacy should help the prisoner adjqst to a law-abiding society when he is released. During her stay in Colombia, she is making her home with Mr. and Mrs. Mirco Fuchs, the parents of Renato Fuchs who as a part of the exchange program is studying at Gift ‘EXCELLENT IDEA’ '“I think tne exchange program is an excellent idea,” she said, “and I hope it will continue”’ Another April graduate of OU, Dennis Parle, 21, of 244 S. Til- j den, is also studying at the Columbian University under the exchange plan. Arts Committee of the State Council for the Arts. He studied at the Wicker Art School, Cranbrook Academy of Art, Wayne State University and the University of Michigan, as well as in New York. With his extension post, Church also is alecturer in art in the U. of M.’s college of architecture and design, e, ★ */■ He has organized the Upper Peninsula Aria and Crafts Council and the University of Michigan Annual Regional Exhibition. BLOOMFIELD HILLS - He Bloomfield Nursery School, a cooperative school for three- and four-year-old children, will accept applications for 196546 Saturday. The school occupies rooms at Christ Church Cranbrook but is nondenominattonal. Applications can be made with Mrs. Hugh Mack, 671 Pilgrim, Birmingham, after 9:30 am. Saturday. Add New Charges in Guard Scandal j (Continued From Page One) 1818.75 from, the quartermaster general. REBATE I The report said the operator was supposed to rebate 10 per cent of the exchange’s gross sales but that from 1960 through 1963, more than $150,000 in sales had been excluded from the rebate. It said that $3,466.46 was deducted directly from the rebate with State Military Board authorizattos. An additional $19,765.49 repre! senting the 1963 rebate is being held by Smith pending audit and is due the quartermaster general, said the Farnum re-Possible viilac- Possible violations, of tax {statutes applying to cigarette sales, use and business activities taxes are in excess of $75,-000 and have been referred to the State Revenue Department, said the report. Farnum said it was not up to him to determine if criminal liability is involved. Atyy. Gen. Frank Kelley’s office laid it would have to study tbe report and statutes before determining if such liability ex- . lets. It has been repeatedly stressed / by Romney, Farnum and Kelley that no criminal liability existed on the basis of the 11 charges made Oct. 8. Injuries Fatal to Man DETROIT (AP) - Leo Marshall, 70 of Detroit, died Wednesday of injuries suffered Dec. 24 when he was struck by an auto while crossing a Detroit street. Plane Lands in 43 Safe A 68-year-old man who apparently’had been smoking ip bed was burned to death yesterday in his Farmington Township house trailer. The bddy of Richard D. Hune-feld was pulled from the smoke-fijled mobile home in the Le-Blanc Trailer Park, 21331 Hamilton. ; § Farmington Township police were" called to the scene shortly after, 10 e.m. Patrolman Richard Krueger Wat crawling through the 28-foot aluminum trailer on his stomach when firemen arrived. They broke into the trailer and found the body far bed. - \ h1 *. # ; An employe of Star Cutter Co. fat the township, Hunefeid lived alone. , “ ' Canada Hotel Offers 'White January Sale' VANCOUVER, B,C. (AP) -The Georgia Hotel here is advertising what it calls a “White January Sale.” NEWHALL, Calif. UR — The I Cause of the double engine sputtering of the twin engines I failure is being investigated, was the first warning 4j passen-1 The odds are one in thousands gers had that their Conviir Air- that such a coincidence should liner was in trouble. occufTeviation experts said. Over the loudspeaker came pa*seagers attributed their 4he words of Capt. W. M. Wade:1 ...... “Prepare for an emergency landing.” | or uoui. On flashed the light; “Fasten I "I ttlust c o m p 11 m e n t the safety belts. No smoking." escape to divine intervention, Capt. Wade’s skillful flying — pilot," said Rudolf Miller, 68, of El Centro, Calif., “and the good Lord was with us.” “The pilot did a pretty terrific job,” said Gayland Smith, 22, of Fresno. “But there might have been someone else up there with tha pilot...” Wade said he was at 10,000 feet 15 minutes out of Los An- geles when “a power loss occurred in both engines.” “Under the circumstances,”, said Wade, a pilot 20 years, “it was no harder than a rofagh landing with wheels." Two passengers were hospitalized for observation. The others proceeded to Los Angeles by bus. A stewardess took the cabin microphone and said:' “Grab your pillows. Put your heads between your knees.” PERFECT LANDING The plane dropped through ragged clouds steeply, leveled out oyer farmland below, clipped a power line and then was sliding along in a muddy beet field in a perfect wheels-up landing. Passengers harried out and saw where they were: in a flat valley, a tew miles wide and long, sarrouaded by the 58 miles ef craggy hills that separate southern California and the Saa Joaquin Valley. -The paaaengers of a (United Air Lines milk-run flight from Fresno to Los Angeles yesterday became the victim* of one incredible coincidence and the . beneficiaries of a second: ■ ♦ ★ - w Both engines of their plane failed simultaneously over ihe only flat territory withinlniles- Airliner Sits After .Emergency Landing ISa THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 81, 1964 THREE Will Senate Liberals Push Filibuster Change? WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate liberals appeared divided today over whether to push qt the opening of the new Congress for a change in the rules to make it easier to halt filibusters. Although Sen. Clinton P. Anderson, D-N.M., has reported the matter under discussion, Sen. Abraham A. Ribicoff, D-Conn., said he doubts that any all-out effort will be made. He said passage of the civil rights bill in the. 87th Congress had cooled the controversy. "Of course, I would vote for a: change in the rules to make it easier to get legislation passed,” RiBicoff said, “but I think most of the steam has gone out of the movement.” ' v Americans for Democratic Action has written Sen. Mike Mansfield of Montana, the Democratic leader, urging him to support a proposal which would permit a majority of senators to limit debate, after 15 days of discussion of any measure. Mansfield has indicated he Gallaghers PRE-INVENTORY on SALE] Pianos—Organs Save On ^ • Trade-In* • Clone-Out**Itcnial Return* NEW SPINET PIANO from *39900 Buy Now... No Payments ’til March ’65 NO MONEY DOWN In Our 32nd Yr DOWNTOWN PONTIAC In E. Huron Si. „ FE 4-0566 Oprn Mon. A Fit, ’ll! 9 P.M. r ROYAL OAK 1224 hi. Woodward al l.1 Mile B.I. Plumr 519-3H55 0|rn Kx-nina- Nil 9 P.M. expects aome move to be made at Monday's opening day session. Sen. Russell B. Long, IMe* * candidate for election aa assistant leader, said in a separate interview hb probably would Vote to oppose any change inthe present rule. It requires approval of two-thirds of those voting in order to limit debate.. • Or" * * “But the Situation is entirely different now that the chru rights bill has been passed," be said. “This proposed - rule change would no longer be aimed exclusively at the South.” its, ftti.Y., a strong advocate of making it easier to end filibusters, is delaying any decision on possible action until his return from a Mexican vacation. LIBERALS CAUTIONED Sen. Paul Douglas D-fll, was reported to have cautioned fellow liberals against raising an issue that might open old wounds and'cost them support in opposing any fresh move to block court orders for the reapportionment of both houses of state legislatures on a population basis. Aides said Sen. Jacob K. Jav- Sen. Richard B. Russell, D- Ga., an opponent of fule changes, said he hopes there can be “an era of good feeling” in the Senate. He said a fight over the filibuster rule would start the session on a sour note. * * # • Previously the liberals have tried to get a change in the rules by a majority vote at the opening of a new Congress. But they have failed to get a favorable ruling from the presiding officer that this was possible. Subsequently the Senate has voted down such proposals. Once the Senate readopts its old rules, a two-thirds vote is required to change them. Hubert H. Humphrey, who has voted for. rules change proposals in'the past, will not take office as vice president until Jan. 20. Until that time, Sen. Carl Hayden, D-Aris., who supports the present rule, will remain as the presiding officer. JOHNSON Even advocates of the rules change do not eXpept President Johnon to lend, them any assistance at this point. Under these circumstances, the liberals appear likely to generate only minority support if they decide in the end to make a I of the matter. One hundred pounds of fluid | average of 8.5 pounds of nonfat skim n«ik is needed to yield an | dry milk. , , ' i- Hope Tour Was Under Tight Guard Crash Caused by Pilot Error? DETROIT (UPI) — Officials at Metropolitan Airport today theorized the pilot of a cargo plane which crashed killing four persons may have misjudged altitude while trying to land in heavy fog. HOLLYWOOD (AP) — • “I think we had the most security of all time,” said comedian'Bob Hope, just returned from a Christmas tour of U S. military bases in the Far East. ‘Tve| _ , , . ,____ never had my back scrubbed by . J8 .iJZiiS , ■ terday killed the pilot, Alfred a bayonet before. Fallon, 48, of CoUsloga. Calif., Hope and his troupe flew into I ^ Hugo L. Bair, 30, Los Angeles International Air- Elmhurst N Y, and two crew-| port Wednesday to end a 15-day men, j. Ronald Reed, 21, of tour that included Guam, Ko-1 Mantario, Sask., and Dale S. rea, Okinawa, Thailand and Grisham, 32, San Antonio, Tex-1 South Viet Nam. Japan to Back During 1965 All 3 Stapp's Stores WILL BE CLOSED SATURDAY, JAN. 2 STAPP'S JUNIOR SHOES 418 N. Main St. ROCHESTER lOpen Fri. to 9:00) JUVENILE BOOTERIE 28 E. Lawrence St., Downtown Open Mon. to 8:30 and JUNIOR SHOES 928 W. Huron at Telegraph Hope's lips were chapped from the countless outdoor shows he performed. Actress Jill St. John was «ursing a limp: someone dropped a native crossbow on her ankle. No one suffered any serious mishaps. Military authorities weren’t taking any 'chance the Hope troupe might be the target of Red; terrorists. DESTINATION SECRET Hope said Their two-engine CM cargo plane crashed into a clump of trees on the farm of Anthony Jaskolski in Huron Township about four miles short of the The plane was on a routine flight from Cleveland to Detroit. It was owned by Zantop Air Transport, Inc., a cargo-only airline. „«hc *uu ‘Qur destination U was only the second fatal | was^uchl secret we really I ^cnlent in the 12-year history1 TOKYO UR — Japan will stand I closely beside the United States during 1965, no matter what threats to peace the Chinese Communists or any other Asian people try to provoke. . This assertion waf made by Prime Minister Eisaku Sato in an exclusive interview with the Associated Press. ■ “Japanese reacted calmly to the explosion of u nuclear device by Communist China,” the political leader of Japan’s 105 million people declared, “because of the guarantees provided Japan under the security treaty with the United States.” Under the pact signed at the end of the World War II occu- Registration Set for Winter Term of Adult Classes didn’t know where selves. Really!” were our-1of J The plane did not catch, fire, I . , „ ■ but the wreckage. was strewn In Korea a helicopter carry- Qygg- g wide area, ing comic Jerry Colonna and • • . ~ 3 ^bST.’SI Will Attend Granddaughter's Party j ’ “But the highlight was Viet PALM DESERT, Calif. (UPI) Nam,” said Hope. “We found | —Former President add Mrs. | out a lot of things. I never Dwight D. Eisenhower plan to j dreamed the Viet Cong was {help .their granddaughter, Susan, I peppered all over the place. We celebrate her 14th birthday to-saw a lot of destruction from night. i the Viet Cong.” —The celebration for Susan, eld- | He praised the*lI.S. fighting est 0f the four children of John men there. Eisenhower, was scheduled for the dining room of the Eldorado Country Club. Legion Conference Set DETROIT (AP) — The Midwestern Child Welfare Conference of the American Legion will be held here Jan* 7-9. Registration for the winter I term of adult education classes being offered by the Pontiac School System will begin Jan. 4. The program has been greatly expanded, according to Roy M. Gallipo, supervisor of adult education for the school, i High school credit counsel-| ing and courses will be avail-I able at the Adult Education office at 250 W. Huron. All classes will be conducted | with a minimum of 12 persons per class. A group of at least 112 may ask that a course not I presently scheduled be organized. ,v . I Classes will begin Jah. 11. Registration for the winter term will end Jan. 7. INFORMATION I Information concerning any phase of the program can be | obtained by visiting or calling the;Adult Education Office. {vovvw ... wpr- Red, white, & blue chip in vestment / You won’t get rich overnight buying U. S. Savings Bonds.- But for the long run, they make an excellent investment. You get a guaranteed rate,, of interest—8 8/4% when held to maturity — io there’s ho ups and downs to worry about. You also get certain tax advantages since Savings Bonds aren’t subject to state or local income taxes and ths federal tax can be deferred until the Bohds are cashed. Rut probably moat important is that Bonds pay off in more than dollars. When you get your .Bond investment back you know it has helped Ifnele Sam strengthen the cause of freedom (your cause) all around this troubled world of ours. Buy U. S. Savings Bonds and own a share of Aihorica. It’s a good outfit to do business with. Quick fads about Series C Savings Bonds V Toe got back $4 for every $S at maturity V Tee can get year wpecy Vhea you seed R ( V Tout Benda are replaced free If loot, destroyed or etolen V Tee can bay Beads where yea bank, or ea the Payroll Barings Plan where yea work ley f lends for growth— . Buy U.S. Savings Bands STAR-SPANGLED SAVINGS PLAN , ' FOR ALL AMERICANS . tvtnminl doot not poy lor Ihu •*t*rtUomoni. It Uj^otontfitt • ooporotion with UU Trnunrt Dtpnrlmont otid TkrlittrMmf Cl YOU WIlL LIKK OUR BUSINISS M8THOM IMPERIAL--CHRYSLER—PLYMOUTH—VALIANT salis BIRMINGHAM 1 ««v,c« • CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH • 912 S. Woodw.-d Phene Ml 7-8211 JBarnett^ll 150 N. Saginaw St. Next to Sears YEAR-END SALE THURSDAY-SATURDAY-MONDAY | pation, America is pledged to j j defend Japan until 1971. ★ , At * “As to whether, that treaty 1 ] I should be extended or strength- j ened,” Sato said, “I do not see 11 any need to consider any other | alternatives for the time being.” ;3 CONFERENCES Sato, who will visit Washington j I Jan. 10 and hold three separate I conferences with President John-11 | son& had just, completed a two-; I hour session with U.S. Ambassa-, dor Reischauer when he met I with Associated Press represen- | atives. *** * * * Asked what he planned to dis- I cuss with fresident-Johnspn, the I I prime minister said he expected I the.talks to include Red China, the general Asian situation and problems involving the United 11 States and Japan. , - * * * j Commenting on his plan to I have Japan play a more posi-I tive role in Asian affairs, Sato said he hoped through economic and cultural aid to build up longterm stability in the Far East. STOREWIDE REDUCTIONS -to'IP/O to 50% OFF Men’s Choice Quality SUITS, TOPCOATS and OVERCOATS Now is your opportunity to experience wonderful, extra clothing satisfaction at truly important savings. OPEN SATURDAY NIGHT TIL 5.30 OPEN MONDAY NIGHT TIL 9 P.M. Remember — You Don't Need the Cash! just say CHARGE IT! i KOUli THE PONTl/O PRESS. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1664* Big Drive Starts in February Teacher Recruiter Warming Up •OFFICIAL AT WORK - Rolland J. Langer-man is one of the area’s school administrators now getting ready to hire the new teachers who will be needed next fall. Here the assistant superintendent in the- Walled Lake district shows a folder describing the area to a candidate. Most of Langerman’s interviews are conducted on college campuses — some 10 in Michigan and 25 in other Midwestern states. Legal Ruling Favors Novf as 3-Year Land Case Ends NDVI — A three-year court fight over the disconnection of a large tract of undeveloped property ended yesterday with Circuit Judge William J. Beer ruling in favor of the village. Beer denied the petition of the Hickory Lane Land & Development Go., Detroit, to disconnect some 400 acres from the village and become part of Novi Township. The .ruling was basically the same as Judge Beer made when the petition for disconnection was originally submitted la July 1M1. , The ruling was appealed, how- ever, and the Michigan Supreme Court in January reversed the decision and remanded the case back to Circuit Court, saying that an error had been made by the court in dismissing the petition without hearing all the testimony. . The property in question is generally bounded by Napier, 12 Mile, Beck and il Mile. FIRST FILED When the petition was first filed it contained approximately 700 acres, according to Village Manager Harold Ackley, but Troy Agrees to Pay Part of Road-Widening Cost TROY—The city has backed down Just a bit from its original stand on who should pay for widening 14 Mile Road from two to four lanes between Rochester and John R Roads. The City Commission agreed with Sears, Roebuck Co. developer Jay M. Kogan that the city does benefit as a whole from the improvements to the road, and therefore should pay part of the cost. Originally, Trey planned to raise almost all ■ Its $31,M0 share of the cost by means Dismisses Charges on Utica Man MOUNT CLEMENS (AP) Bribery charges against Robert G. Dunn, fired last June as a State Highway Department weigunaster, were dismissed Wednesday. Justice Edmund H. Schmidt threw out the charges in holding the prosecution had failed to show cause to believe contractors’ gifts to Dunn were meant to influence his judgment on truck weight regulations. * * Or' Dunn, 33, of Utica, a Highway Department employe for' six years, was fired after admitting he had accepted gifts. At the same time, Dunn said contractors gave gifts and parties and supplied ’call girls for * Highway Department and Macomb County Road Department employes. REJECTS REQUEST Macomb County. Circuit Court rejected a request by Proeecu-. tar George'N. Parris for a grand Jury investigation. Dunn, of 431371 Fortner, the only person to be prosecuted as the result of his allegations, admitted he showed “poor judgment” in accepting the gifts but said they had no effect on the performance of his duties as weighmaster. A weighmaster checks truck weights to determine if they meet road restrictions. He also issues violation tickets. of special assessments against the commercial properties adjacent to the Improved road. This would have meant $6-38 per front foot after a minor technical error in bouhdary descriptions was ironed out. * * m The commission has decided to lower the cost to the commercial properties to $5 per front foot and pay the remaining $1.38 per fruit foot with city funds. LAST BIG MOVE The decision was the last major move in a long series of sessions with Kogan, who had objected to the whole idea of being assessed.; Kogan had made arrangements to pay the county directly for the paving involved In the improvements. The entire cost of the project was split, with the county paying 75 per cost and splitting the remainder up with cities benefiting from the work. Under the new arrangement, Troy will have to dig up nearly $11,000 to make up the difference between the $20,385 £2-0022 In Downtown Pontiae ___of Colored People and the Detroit Urban League warned Wednesday-.of potential racial strife in Detroit. In separate statements, leaders of the two groups made suggestions for improving what they suggested are deteriorating relations between the police department and the Negro community. Frartcs Komegay, director of the league, said there is a “growing and seething rise in tension, conflict and bitterness ... over brutality, unequal treatment, and the killing of persons without sufficient cause by policemen.’’ „ The Rev. James Wadsworth. Jr., local president of the NAACP, was asked if Negro un- J rest over alleged police brutility [ could provoke a race riot. He i replied: “If we keep on like this we’re | going to have one.’’ The two groups have joined ! with 10 other organizations jn urging that a civilian review board be set up to review charges of police brutality. But Mayor Jerome-Cavanagh , said be saw no necessity for a review board if the mayor and j State Income, Outgo ! LANISING (API-State treasury income during the past | week was $48 million and outgo i was $17.4 million. The treasury balance at the end of the week I I was $172.5 million. Wadsworth also requested that the Michigan Civil Rights Commission hold a public hearing on police brutality charges, while* the Urban League asked Cavanagh to name two civil deputy police commissioners — .one of them a Negro—to ease the friction. complete the job. Beryl Kenyon, who was first appointed by the Republicans, will remain in his position as Senate secretary. Dzendzel said the Democrats, hoping for a harmonious ses-ion, decided to retain the ratty of four majority members and two minority members on each committee which went into effect during the 1963-641 session under the GOP. Makeup of the appropriations zyckl, Detroit. Insurance — Sen. Bernard O’Brien, Detroit. ,,. Judiciary — Sen. Basil Brown, Detroit. Gassy? Largest selling Ckarcu! C»MI. tablet Stags Choking Hfart las la 3 Minutes Of youi 43C tack tt drugfltt. Chow Soll-OM tablets ttftntltoft ot distress. Mop In bof or oockot ter rood* roliof. So test ond suro you cost behove it 3o*d poitdt to aoll-oot. * Tb AiiL, A JOYOUS GREETING M AY’S “oS™ 1TXXXA hJ SAGINAW draft \ beer ira bottles starting this fridag every savings dollar earns 4% at the '(Commonwealth9... compounded and / paid every 90 dags ...these five reasons teU you why our 4% is better Pfeiffer and only Pfeiffer offers you the exact same beer on tap and under the cap." If you prefer the taste of draft beer insist on Pfeiffer draft beer in bottles -its extra smooth, more flavorful. the full'laste.beer. We pay interest on deposits starting at $I.Oth (Soma bank* require a balance of $500.00 to earn their top interest rate,) fit only 90 dags your savings have earned 4%. (Some banks penalize you by paying only 1% to 3% if withdrawn before one year;) 3 Interest At compounded and paid every 90 dags. (Some banks compound interest only once or twice a year.) 1 This is assured bank Interest with big bank safety. (Not a dividend as offered by other types of thrift institution*.) The Commonwealth is the largest hank iuMetroit to man 4% on book savings accounts. LOOK FOR MORE NEW IDEAS FROM BANK OF THE COMMONWEALTH H THE PONTIAC PRESS II West Huron Street THURSDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1964 HAROLD A. 7ITZOERALD President and Publlaher Pontiac, Michigan Jokk A. Mur Secretary and Advertising Director O. MHICHAM. Jordan Local Advertising California’s Regents Show Proper Spirit As an aftermath to the recent disgraceful riot and sit-in perpetrated by a faction of the student body of the University of California, we are relieved to learn that the school’s governing body of regents has denied student-faculty demands that it abdicate its sta;tutory authority to determine the university policy. Such action was, of course, logical and predictable on the part of the regents and in line with traditional university administration in this country. ★ Tk ★ The board of regents of a state’s university is either elected or appointed »by the governs., which in turn appoints a president answerable to it. Faculty-governed universities are a European phenomena, while the student-dominated school is a medieval concept and not contemporary (unless in Latin America and other seething social climates wfiere students are synonymous with disturbance and subversion). Whatever is wrong at Berkley cannot be set right by attempts (to overthrow or hamstring legal authority vested in regents and university president. Such attempts are both futile and wrong; the more quickly and thoroughly they are abandoned the better. Only when the university is no longer disrupted by malcontents can constructive proposals for change, if change be needed, be rationally considered. ★ ★ ★ The alarming situation at the University of California but re- . fleets, in greater degree, the atmosphere that increasingly per-, vades.the generality of our large universities, where con- -tact between the administration, faculty and student body is necessarily impersonal and rapport not easily maintained. But if the management of our schools of higher learning is to surrender its proper authority on demand of a disaffected element of students or faculty, the academic 'outlook for the youth of America is indeed a dismal one. Another Hidden Cost: Shoplifting Ups Prices A statistic much at variance- with the spirit of the season conies to light. As 1064 GHfistmas shopping broke all records, so did shoplifting.. That Undercover form of thievery, the FBI reports, is among the fastest-rising of all crimes — up 81 per cent in Just the last six years. ★ ★ ★ Retailers* losses will range between $2-83 billion for the year. . Discount house saw an alarming 3.5 per'cent of all sales go out the door unaccompanied . by sales slips, while the. “take out” department of department stores accounts for nearly 1.5 per cdnt of total sales volume. Supermarkets and grocery > stores will “ring up” s $600 million loss from those who don’t pay as they go. ■ , Why the upsurge? Experts attribute it mainly to the dramatic growth of self-service merchandise. Large expanses of open shelves and display counters Jnvite not only the professional thief but alsd tempt thd not-too-scrupulous amateur to* help himself to a vast array of unguarded merchandise. ★ . ★ ★ Retailers are fighting back with weapons ranging from “see-all” reflector mirrors which peer around corners and keep an eyeun a store’s “plind spots” to closed-circuit TV cameras which are installed at strategic locations and monitored by detectives. And many states are tightening anti-shoplifting laws to make prosecution of offenders easier. There is a significant fact related to shoplifting, however, not generally realized-. Since losses from theft have to be figured in the selling price of merchandise; shoplifters not only take money out of the pockets • /of merchants but out of the pockets of the preponderantly honest body of the citizenry. ★ ★ Just to save money for himself, aside from the moral aspect, every- * ‘ one should join the Nation’s retailers in a war on pilferage. Russia has also launched a satellite with destination Mars. Some fear it will reach Mars, with perhaps a passenger or two, before tpe U.S. satellite Mariner 4 does, and that pictures taken by the latter may show signs reading, “Kilroyski Was Here.’1 When you have a cold, “blot, don’t blow,” advises' a physician. O.K., we’ll try it, but we don’t believe a cold can be blotted out either. MARLOW Voice pf the People: David Lawrence Asks: Medicare ‘Cure’ Worse Than Ills? U,fl. Is Working by Pantomime [ By JAMES MARLOW Associated Press News Analyst . WASHINGTON - The 115-member United Nations has been doing business by Pantomime. It’s snarled in back due^, voting rights and face-saving. The basic question: Does the Soviet Union have a right to vote in the General Assembly until it pays its share of the (J.N. peace-keeping costs? The roots of the trouble go back 14 years to 1950 when the North Korean Communists invaded South Korea. .* The U-member Security Council wen) into session.-Five of these members are permanent: the United States, the Soviet Union, Britain, France, Nationalist China. ★ it it Anyone of the five has the veto power to kill any severe action by the council. But -just then, by a freak, the Soviet Union was boycotting the group. VOTED TO FIGHT The council promptly voted to fight the invasion with U.N. forces. The Soviet Union returned, too late to undo this, and tried to be a bottleneck. Then the United States thought it time to shift some of this absolute power away from the council. It proposed that the General Assembly, ’ made up of all the U,N. members and with no one holding a veto, should be able to take action against an aggressor. . The vote was 52 to 5. ' it ■ it it In 1956 the General Assembly voted to send a U.N. peace-keeping force info the Middle East to prevent trouble between Arabs and Israelis. In 1960 ft sent a peacekeeping force into the Congo. OPPOSED MOVES The Soviet Union opposed both moves,. France opposed the Congo action. But sustaining a U.N. armed force costs millions. The Soviet Union and France fell behind in their share. Hut’s a rough sketch of the background. By the time the General Assembly began its winter session this year on Dec. 1, the Soviet Union was behind 952 million. The United States insisted, with approval by' Congress, that the Soviet Union should be made to pay its dues, or be prevented from voting. ’♦ ★ ' The Soviet Union argued the U.N. operations in the Middle East and the Congo were both illegal. It says only the Security Council, where it has a veto, and not the assembly has authority to vote funds for’, peacekeeping COULD WRECK Too much of a showdown between, the United States and the Soviet Union could wreck the work! organization. ★ • ★ *★ So, when the United Nations opened. Dec. T, there was a kind of general tippy-toeing in a search for a solution and this was the embarrassing part of if. WASHINGTON - The biggest of all human problems that will come before Congress for action in the new year 'is usually referred to as “Medicare.” Many aspects of the problem have not yet penetrated the minds of the voters. - Indeed,! some of the so-l lutions being! proposed may* turn out some MWRENCE ’ day to bring a “cure” 'which is worse than the disease. The Senate passed a “Medicare” bill this year which failed of passage in the House. It called for hospital care starting at the age of 65 to be financed by an addition to the Social Security taxes of all Verbal Orchids to - Mr. and Mrs. Rayipead E. Parlette of Berkley; 52nd wedding anniversary. Tt» Pontiac: Pron It Mlvorttf by earner tor SI CMM • week; where mailed . In OekWhd, Genejee, Livingston, Macomb. Lapeer and Washtenaw Counties H it Slt-tt a at aw a , Mfchifll Member at ABC. today for government subsidy of individual medical bills are related to older people, experience in other countries shows that, once the government steps in to aid one section of the population, there is a demand that it be extended all along the line. Unquestionably there is a role for the government to play in helping to coordinate the differ-, ent types of programs. But the' principle should be that the needy be given help by the government, and that those who are wel} able to provide for themselves should not be subsidized at the general expense of ail taxpayers. ★ ★ ★ These issues have been debated for several years now, but in the coming session of Con--gress they will doubtless get a much more thorough exposition than ever before.- ‘LeFs Declare War flow on Careless Motorists!’ Eleven persons were killed in automobile accidents in the area over theChristmas weekend. The time has come to declare war on the idiotic driver in Michigan. Write your state representative and demand that something be done aborn the situation. You could be the next victim of oiir careless drivers. A ^ ★ ★ ★ A group of professional truck drivers suggests . we have: • Mandatory and rigid vehicle inspection. • Unmarked patrol cars and radar equipment. • Higher fines on all traffic violations. • Jail sentences for major violations. • Available funds for manpower and equipment to enforce traffic laws. • Air patrols on “high accident” highways. • More thorough investigations of ail accidents. . They also encourage insurance companies to lower rates for drivers with no points or Chargeable accidents. RICHARD W. MONTGOMERY, PRESIDENT HIGHWAY AID BY RADIO TRUCK 2058 WINDY HILL ‘A Man’s Handy When Shopping for Car* If you are a female, and in the market for a good used car, take a man along when you shop. Many a man has been taken, but at least they' are aware of some of the things to be checked or looked into. JUST A DUMB FEMALE ^ ’Can One Compare Mississippi, Congo?’ How can the press compare the killings of the three in Mississippi and the slaughter and cannibalism in the Congo? The murders in Mississippi were bad. In the Congo hundreds of White missionaries gave up home and family to teach the natives about God. They were raped, murdered, maimed and eaten. That waa terrible. x / ;. A _ ■ ★ y If we Ye going to compare the Congo with, some place, let’s' compare it with what happened right here at home. We Americans may be guilty of apathy, but not ignorance. \PUZZLED Foreign News Commentary Italian President’s Role Headingjar a Change? ' The bill passed by the Senate would cover everybody aged 65 or older,1 irrespective of income or whether they pre retired from their jobs. Eligible persons who require hospital care would have a choice of three plans. They could apply for payment of all costs for 45 days in the hospital. If they stayed up to 90 days, they would pay $10 a day for the first nine days, with a minimum of $20. As a third alternative, they would be able to stay 180 days in the hospital, paying the first two and one-half days pf average costs. SERVICES INCLUDED The hospital benefits would include services such as nursing, drugs and sqpplies, fees for X-rays and anesthetics, but bills for a private doctor or the cost of a private nurse would not be covered. For those not sick enough to Tgo' to a hospital or a -nursing home, payment would be made for the cost of visiting nurses, up to 240 home visits a year, and for certain medical supplies. Specifically. excluded are physicians’ and dentists’ bills, medicines and drugs, and supplies and appliances used outside a hospital. 'it is estimated that the outlay for the program of health care as ’provided in the Senate bill would amount to about $1.7 billion a year at the start. " 1 - * * ' * This cost, of course, is over and- above the existing Social Security payments of around $16 billion a year for old-age and disability benefits. SEEMS LIKELY All sorts of compromises are being offered in the event that .the House does-not approve a plan of this type, but it seems likely that a government-financed program of some kind will be adopted. Although most of the plans Tlw Associated Press Is ontttM ---«» ««» tor republl- al Men printed In By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News Analyst The traditionally ceremonial role of Italian presidents may undergo a change under Italy’s new President Giuseppe Saragat. . Indeed it would seem it must i if any sort of Skastri Shows Iron Fist and an incredible display of a lack of responsibility among Italian politicians. The contest which ran through 21 ballots of the National Assembly found. Italy’s largest party, the Christian Democrats, in total disarray and, in the end, the key ballots resting with the Fascists on the right and the Communists on the left. It was with Communist help- ^ that Saragat finally won. ■w ★ • The ' exhibition put on by Italy’s senators and deputies led the influential Milan newspaper, Corriere Della Sera, to compare the situation with the closing years of the French Fourth Republic. DEMOCRATIC PROCESS The newspaper said it was the failure of t politicians who disbelieved in* democratic proc-, esses, but still could rtot form an effective coalition, that led Italy to fall under the fascism of Benito Mussolini in 1922. “T h u s,” the newspaper said, “the-Italian Republic is consuming itself in factional struggle; thus the French Fourth Republic consigned itself to Gen. de Gaulle. “And it was lucky because it, could have done worse...." , , Italy actually has known no political stability since 'the eight-year rule.-ofPremier Alcide de Gasperi ended in 1953. IMPORTANT ROLE And it- is the disarray presented by the fall, of 25 or so governments since then that has led to the belief that the Italian president, elected for seven years, must take on a more im- ' port ant foie. It was largely the influence of such men as Saragat pad Premier Aldn More, a Christian Democrat, that brought old-line Socialist Pietro Nenni into the government after nearly 29 years of opposition. Nenni, allied with the Communists from the end of the war until 1957, broke with them over the repression of the Hungarian revolt. Last year Nenni fame back into the government on a program which included continued close alignment with the West, NATO and the Common Market. Saragat, a firm friend of the West, may be expected to continue to press these* policies, along with others to which the , government is pledged. It. is likely in the days ahead, Saragat will need all his persuasiveness. His old job of for-, eign minister new must be filled and once more the fate of an Italian government will hang in the balance. By CONRAD FINK NEW DELHI, India —Striking with unprecedented speed, Prime Minister Lai Bahadur Shastri has decimated India’s pro-Chinese Communist party with mass arrests. More than 500 Reds were jailed in nationwide raids yesterday that the government said headed off nationwide sabotage and a violent revolution by men whose loyalty is to neighboring Communist China. The Communists charge Shastri with a Fascist-like attempt to destroy his strongest political opposition at a time when his stock as India’s leader is dropping and his economic programs are going awry. ( There seems little doubt Shastri wanted to hit the Reds before they could hit him — and they had been planning an all-out campaign against him in the elections in Kerala State Feb. 15. Also, it is known, Shastri had been looking for a way to demonstrate forceful leadership. * * ★ Whatever the reason for the arrests, Shastri and his trip aides clearly made an important — perhaps momentous — decision. Never before in independent India had a government cracked down so hard on a political party, left or light. WIELD IRON FIST Never before had Shastri, who traded on his shy, unassuming nature, wielded an iron fist so forcefully. * Shastri’i predecessor, the late Jawaharlal Nehru, never jailed (his opponents wholesale, e v e a in the most turbulent days following independence in .1947, when ft seemed India sms about to come apart at the seams. Shastri, an indifferent speaker with none of the political mystique of India's first prime minister, has been hard-pressed’ to maintain national momentum. His own Cabinet has poorly disguised its dissatisfaction with the way . the- government has been drifting. Newspapers, worshipful of Nehru, have been demanding “purposeful leadership.” Despite their ideological quarrels, India’s pro-Peking and pro-Moscow Reds were planning a “united front” attack oil Shas-tri’s Congress party In the elections in Kerala, a southwest coastal state that has been a Communist stronghold for1 years. In Washington: World Situation to Get Worse ByKAYCROMLEY WASHINGTON (NEA) - It’s a paradox. But the Red China-Soviet/ split, the restlessness of t)4 East European • satellites, the weak-1 ening of NATO and the rapid-1 growth of U.S. and Russian nuclear power! may'result in al rash of wildcat! brush-fire revo-| lutions, guerril- ~ CROMLEY la wars and riots around the world in the years ahead. With Russia, Red China and the United States inevitably coming' in with military help on .opposing sides? there will be. more points at which the United States will be “fighting” Moscow or Peking. The chances for larger wars will therefore escalate. , These are the conclusions of an analysis on trends in the world situation circulated among policy makers la the Pentagon, the State Department and other national se-. curity ‘'agencies. Iii the paper's words: “The structure of world power * .,. (is) undergoing major modifications. The fact that the ftra great powers have found it difficult' to' bring their very substantial military power to bear ’ in Order to achieve,their objectives, or to project this power into parts of the world where they have an interest, has had important consequences. “It has deterred the major powers from undertakings which might call their military capabilities into action. (In part, this deterrence has been from fear that , the use of nuclear weapons might escalate into an ail-out nuclear war. In part it has been because the United States does not have the proper weapons or the necessary forces trained in modern guerrilla warfare.) “As a consequence of . . . the progressive disintegration of the two (U.S. and Soviet) power blocs, a pluralistic world order io rapidly coming into being. World power is proliferating-. . j “The (resulting) situation in most of the ^underdeveloped world is so disorderly that many situations are likely to develop from which the great powers will have difficulty controlling if they do get involved. * . *. ★ “Onee outside powers do become involved, whether by accident oc by design, crises can devriop which will engage prestige to a degree incom surate with the intrinsic or tegic value of the area itself Under these conditions ' en an event occurring thro accident or irrational ac will trigger political devc meats throughout an ei area and provide opportuni for political adventnrers or olntionaries who other would have remained obst or ineffectual.” . : * w * * \ Some of these adventurer: be owned by Peiping or Mot In addition, this study by a high in the government i “Individuals and groups ci themselves Castroitei or < muitists might stage revolt ary attempts or initiate guei movements, not on the oi of Moscow, Peiping or Htr but in the hope of gaining support. Similarly, indivii and groups may orgaraz execute plots simply to g U.S. support.” The reader should bea mind that the foregoing r sents only an analysis pref for,/the private reading of p mqkere. However, it should be realized' that it is ag the background of positkM persC such as this that poll made. r THJ5 PON XIAC yKKSS».>TH'UllSl)AY, DECEMBER 81, 1964 SEVEN LongrLasfing Effect in New Tranquilizer By FRANK CAREY Associated Frets Science Writer MONTREAL—Development of a long-lasting tranquilizer drug . that helps mental patients for up to tiro weeks on a single injec-tion—compared with one or two days for older drugs — was reported Wednesday. T)*d researchers of the Squibb Is tbs Tine to Use Your CHRISTMAS CASH 1964 Close-Outs Special Savings •■All STEREOS RANGES TVs DISH WASHERS REFRIGERATORS & ' i HAMPTON ELECTRIC 825 W. Huron St. Open Evas, til 9 FE 4-2525 Institute for Medical Research at Brunswick, NJ., told about the drug in a report to the American Association for the Advancement of gdence. The association’s 131st meeting ends today. , A \ Researchers J.C. Burke and A. G. Ebert said the drug, which is not yet available to doctors generally, had yielded “most gratifying results in most cases in a number of clinical trials in humans. The drug is a new multiple^ dose form of an older tranquilizer called fluphenazine to which scientists added a chemical designed to cause the drug to .be released slowly but steadily in the body. DRUGS ARE BOON Burke and Ebert said older tranquilizers for the mentally ill have proved a tremendous boon but are of value only if taken regularly. Some patients have to talfe them several times a day. . ”• * * * . “In some cases,’’ they said, “patients have become very skillful, at secreting the tablets or capsules while others forget or neglect to take their prescribed medication after leaving the hospital.’’ I They said the new preparation j also appears to offer po$sibili-i ties of reducing demands on i hospital nursing staffs and of | eliminating risks of accidental i overdosage or suicide from drugs self-administered by emotionally unstable people. ★ ★ * I Undesirable side effects of the drug are either negligible controllable, they said. | OTHER REPORTS Decision to Quit Is Final—Miller Flood Victim Digs Out In Willow Crook, Calif. 4 States Soaked PtIMTE DETECTIVES Offices M PONTIAC—FLINT—SAGINAW HAROLD L. SMITH INVESTI6AT0RS \ 1302 Pontiac Stott Bonk Bldg. 24-HOUR PHONE NUMBERS PdNTIAC FLINT SAGINAW ; FE 5-4222 CE 3-4561 PL 4-8434 Rain, Snow, Hail Add to Flood Misery ] SAN FRANCISCO (^P\ —, miles through the forest to the rary bridge over the Salmon Thousands of victims of the W1-] mountain community of Happy River. Residents of the Klamath lion-dollar flood that struck five | r;nmp said, but it is accessi-i River Valley have been isolated! Western states had little to cele-. 5ie only by four-wheel drive ve-. since last week. / brate this New Year’s Eve, ex- jjjgjgj . + + ^Adding toethSrm£lr’ snow, TAKE IN SUPPLIES Another Ft. Ufa unit was rauvand hail pummeled’Wash- Food, gasoline and repair ordered to j ington, Oregon, Northern Cali- equipment were taken in. De-j ferry raft qt Klamath, Q|lif., fornia and Idaho and the Weath- spite lack of power and drinking where the /f er Bureau predicted the storm water, the situation was termed bridge was dui The raft wrtl would go on through Friday. “very good”, by Sowle. u£ it * “Indications are now we will coastal route that links Califor-j A steady downpour hampered come out of this without loss of J "ia and Oregon. __________ rescue and reconstruction ef-1 life,” Sowle. said. . * * * J Amone other reoorts to the forts of 125,000 Workers .in the * * * On the Califomia-Oregqn line; meffil? four states. Many families trapped in the|u.S. 99 was closed by .heavy] Women are literallv “catty” The most critical spot was in [Vast forest’s innumerable val-isnow and several truck-trailer! ! airtit has notWng to do vrtth Northern California’s Klamath leys* have*asked to be evacu- rigs that jackknifed near the] I gossiping,about ^ig^bors.ac- National Forest where 500 per- ated, he said, but others are | summit of the Siskiyou Moup-: mrrfina to a research study sens were cut off from the out- choosing to stick it out. tarns. Jwl)e than 1,000 vehicles female Sners in ti* side by washed-out roads and The coastal city of Eureka 1 were Halted in freezing temper- iSXtory for four days of snow that has left with its 30,000 Inhabitants re- atures for six hours before the] Women three to four feet Qf pack on the' mained cut off except by air, highway was cleared. ' ground. ' and that was sporadic because i damage SURVEY MORE SNOW j of bad weather. An incomplete damage survey: | Snow continued to fall in Yre-jRAIN, HAIL [ by the Red Cross revealed that ka where helicopter rescue op- Rain and hail pelted the city 11,000 families in eight Oregon erations have been halted since! Wednesday. It canceled helicop- counties have lost their homes | Wednesday by the storm. Iter operations along the Eel I to the flood. Four thousand of ' * * ★ ■ j River to the south. these will receive nearly $2 mil- “If the weather keeps'up we’ll j * *■ * , i lion in federal aid. I have a serious problem,” said t .Two Army Engineer compa- ( ~1 j Civil Defense chief Bill Sowle. ] nies fh>m Ft. L«wis, Wash.,! jgl “The people in there have an-j were bogged down in snow at] fi WASHINGTON (AP) - Rep. William E. Miller, R-N.Y., said today his decision not to seek elective office again is final. The defeated GOP* vice presidential candidate, who wUl return to his upstate New York law practice after his congressional term expires Jan. 3, cited his age — }0 — and his family , he and his wife have four children — as his reasons for r retiring from public life, w *, w- Miller, interviewed, by tele-; : phone at his Washington hoiqe, I said he is too old to move in and; lout of politics but still young] j enough to develop a thriving law practice. “The choice was between re- j entering public life and trying to get a holding operation until an I opportunity developed or to cqt ‘ the ties completely and return! to my law practice,” he said. CITES FAMILY Miller cited his family and a desire to return to his law practice in announcing last Jan. 9 a decision to bow out of public life both as a congressman and as Republican national chairman, a post he held from June 2,1961,. until last July’s Republican National Convention. / ^ ★ # , j Sen. Barry Goldwater of Arizona, the defeated GOP presidential candidate; tagged him at that time as his running mate. .. ★ * * Miller accepted the vice presidential nomination despite his earlier.’'announcement to retire but indicated today his decision won’t change this time. * * * “We’ve made a down payment on a home in Lockport, and I intend to stay there and practice / law and not move again.” Miller said. “I’m sure of It.” ★ * - # | Most of his children will be at ia crossroads in life during the coming year and Miller said'he is anxious to .settle dbwn for their sake. His oldest daughter, Elizabeth I Ann, 21, will be graduated in June from Newton College el the Sacred Heart in Boston;. His second oldest, Mary Kara), 17, will be graduated in June from ‘ high school in Washington and plans to enter Newton College in September. - . STORAGE SHEDS AS LOW AS $49.95 ALL OUTDOOt SAMPLES MUST GO! SAVE 19% STOR-ALL PRODUCTS UK. JM4 DUX Hwy. OMni You Art Invited To Xttond • Watch Bight Service White Shepherd Chucn S555 Aubum Rd.” 9:00 P.M., Refreshments Served at Midnight HAPPY NEW YEAR Let the good time* roll in *65/ Thank* to every one of our friend* and host withes from u* to you! ' TOWN 8 COUNTRY GARDEN CENTER 1812 HIGHLAND RD. A Pair of t Comfy Slippers TO THE MOTHER of the First Baby of 1965 “Shoes for the Entire Family9 SHOE STORE other week's supplies. It’s still Medford, Ore. The convoy of 250 i ^ | an emerge)**^ situation.” j men and 75 construction vehi- a * * *. cles hoped to go on today to Ce-1 1 I A one-lane road waj opened 70 j cilville, Calif., to erect a tempo-; g MMMWMMMAMMMWNManMMMntl 5* OTTyrnrriTiTrrrmTTTrTrrmY open Tonight NEW YEARS EVE ” til 5:30 p.m. tIac IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC 4 Complete Floors OJ Home Furnishings Elevolor Service Jo'All Floors >1 • Colonial e Troditional • Modern — All by America's leading Manufacturers!- ® S; SAGINAW ST. Take this opportunity to stove on Quality Home Furnishings ' 8 BUY NOW ^¥£1 AND SAVE DURING THIS ONCE-A-YEAR SALE Final Days of JTarrf’s Store-Wide End-Of-Year Clearance! •Save ' up to ancT more NO MONEY DOWN-MONTHS TO PAY OPENMon.-Tfiurs.-Fri. ;tlf 9.P.M.; Sdt/ti) 5:30 P.M. CUJUUUL »»«»> >1 intmumtiinn HE tut it I i,i 11 lJUiAimii 9 fcg * Gut's fl..t ef new, modem SMC truck., meter • equipped for occurecy and radio di.pafcned for quicker, lenrice, deliver better quality fuel oil -in PenHec, Drayton Plain., Weterferd, CTarliten,. Orion, Auburn Neiaht., Bleemfield "Wills, K.eflo Harbor, Welled Lake, White Lake, Milford and the surrounding araa. 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' Regardless of the weather you will enjoy extra warmth 1 and comfort ,as well as extra cleanliness with New I Mobilheat Fuel Oil from Gee as this better quality fuel I oil burns cleanly, giving an abundance of warmthS when needed and reacts readily to -furnace controls | holding little flame when the weather is warm. Pontiac’s oldest and largest locally owned and opf rated New Mobilheat Distributor! \ MM: EIGHT T&E PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 81, 1064 .Fritz Crisler, director/of athletics, University of 1mchigan (standing left) and Mr/ Crisler (seated) were among auests 11 the pre-Rose Pageant reception in bos Angeles On Tuesday. With them are Mr. and Mrs. Virgil E. Boyd , of Forbes Drive. Boyd is a vice mes-ident of Chrysler Corporation which hosted the party. Delivery Men Her Game akes Gossip Her Fame DEAR ABBY: There is a rather honttly, middle - aged woman by our neighborhood who like/ delivery men—anyone who idrives a 'truck, that . In me sum- .' ■ mer She offers then c o Id ditfks, the winter /ways has Some have told me that they have accepted her in-vitations for a chance to sit ' down and have some refreshments, but when she starts giving them that song and dance about how “lonely’’ she Planning a March wedding are Nancy Carolyn Boomer, daughter of the Harold R. Boomers of V o or he is Road, arid William 0. Pitcock, son of the Lester E. Pitcocks Southfield Road. Jana A daughter, Jana Marie, was born December 241 to Mr. and Mrs. Robert Laity., Sylvan'. Lake. Maternal grandparents are Mr..and Mrs. Paul Webster, Summit Avenue. Paternal grandparents are the Leonard Laitys 'of Pingree Avenue. •'. w * *\ Mr. and Mrs. Warren P. Cosgrove of Old Orchard Drive, announced the adoption of Patrick Christopher. Grandparents of the infant are Mr: and Mrs. Paul Shingles, Oliver Avenue and Mrs. Lawrence Cosgrove of Colrain Drive. is and all that jazz, they decide it’s not worth it. Is there some subtle way to let her know that the neighbors are on-to her and we want her to cut. it out because she’s giving the neighborhood a bad name? ON TO HER DEAR ON: One swallow doesn’t make a spring. And" one cuckoo won’t fowl up a neighborhood. Don’t censure • her. Pity her: . * * *■ / DEAR ABBY: Darrell and -I married young. He/was 19 and I was 18, and ywe have been married for six years now. We have three adorable children whom Darrell adores. My problem: I know I was wrong, but when Darrell was in the shower I looked through his wallet and I saw a note which read, “My name is —..... My phone number is ------. Call me if you get a chance.” I asked him about it and he said it was from some little 15-year-old kid he met at the bowling alley. (He bowls for our church league.) I asked him why he kept the note and fie said he didn’t know. But 1 noticed he didn’t throw it away., Three weeks later I looked in' his wallet again and the note Was still there. I asked him later if pe still had the note and he lied to me. I am heartbroken, Abby. I love him so much, and we used to be so close. Do you think he has been seeing her? What should I do? SO HURT DEAR HURT: No, I think , he has NOT been seeing her! If he had, he* wouldn’t need , to keep her phone number. He’d know it. I suspect that you two are Families (Jet Together Over* the Holidays j Mrs. James ti. Jensen, wife of the president of Oregon State University (left),, stands with Mrs. Harlan L. Hatcher, wife of the University of Michigan'president, and Mrs. Lynn A. Townsend, wife of Chrysler Corp. president. Scene is the pre-Rose Pageant reception Tuesday at Los Angeles Biltmore Hotel. ■ i v*,v' •' By SIGNE KARLSTROM Home for a visit with Mr. and Mrs. Ogden Vogt are the Harrison C. Dunnings, Mrs. Vogt’s daughter and son-in-law. After New Year’s, they return to Paris where Mr. Dunning is studying FrAich property law and Mrs. Dunning is studying the Anharc and the Galla language at the Haile y Selassie University. •/ In June they will move' to Addis Ababa, Ethiopia where Mr. Dunning will teach at the University. Mrs. Vogt’s son and daugh-ter-in-law, Mr. and Mrss Charles R. Frederickson III and their children Ann and , Tommy from Denver, are also at the Vogts for the holidays. BACK FROM EAST Mrs. Raymond Peck returned home in time for Christmas after a visit with ' her son and daughter-in-law, the Charles Crandells and their children Charles III and Marjorie in Connecticut. in a Name? Our Nomenclature not communicating very well. Don’t accuse Brin or cause a scene. * Tty to reestablish that “closeness” by being understanding, sweet, fun, interesting, quiet,, and .very, very wise. (P. S. As for the latter —sta^t by keeping out of your husband’s wallet.) *. ★ * Hate to write letters? Send one dollar to Abby, in care of The Pontiac Press, for Abby’s booklet, “How to Write Let-ters for all Occasions.’’ Bride-Elect Is Honored at Showers A trio of showers this week honored Saturday bride-elect Barbara Ann Shadley, daughter of pr. and Mrs. Maxwell L. Shadley of Ottawa Drive. Gifts of plastic kitchenware were opened at a bridal tea Sunday in the home of Susan Smith at Sylvan, Lake. Cohostess Has Sue Koprince. ' Mrs.; Lester Richey entertained at a luncheon and shower in her Detroit home on Tuesday. . Afternoon tea followed Wednesday’s shower in the home of Mrs. B. B. Roush on -West Iroquois Road. The Robert Grauls of Alton, HI. will host the rehearsal dinner, Friday, at Fox* and Hounds Inn, for their son Timothy and his fiancee. Rev. C. George Widdifield will perform the three o’clock ceremony in All Saints Episcopal Church. By MADELEINE DOEREN The computers undoubtedly ‘have our number’ but we still have ournames! Thousands of names have appeared on the women’s pages of The Pontiac Press since we flipped our calendar last New Year’s Day. Always with us are the An-dersons, the McDonalds, the O’Briens, the Smiths, the Johnsons but we are intrigued by names that have a special significance. Take occupations, for example! There’s Eden Diver, Diane .Grader, Betty Weaver, Johna Mason, Virginia Carpenter, Mrs. R. C. Banker, Julie Candler, Mrs. Steve Butcher, Mrs. Katharine Baker, Mrs. George Shearer, Mrs. Oliver Filer and Pierre Shaver. * * * Besides, there’*' Mrs. Josephine Lawyer, Doris Bender, Mrs. Charles Barker, Mrs. ■ Dan Roper, Jessie Brewer, Margaret Steward, Edna „ Cook, Charles Porter, Mrs. George Cutter, Mrs. Moss Farmer, Mrs. Robert Plater. BACK TO NATURE Found in nature are names like Doris Rock, Mrs. Dorothy-Brook s, Gary Falls, Joyce Marsh, Madge Lane, Mrs. Ben Stoqe, Mrs. Arthur Land, Mrs. James Isles, Jean Forest, Shawn Fields, Chip Iceberg, .Dianne Rilly- C. E. Ice, Mrs. Hugh Grove and Horace Silver. Suggesting building are Linda Board, Mrs.> Ossie Gates, Mrs. David Walls, Mary House, Mrs. Russell Beam, Mrs. William Brace, Mrs. E. W. Tower, Mrs. Ivan Post, Mrs. ' Duarife Block, Rankin Hall, Judith Marble, John Cork, Mrs. Andrew Court and ,Mrs. Robert Bolt. WEATHER REPORT •?' Names associated with the elements and weather are Elisabeth Showers, Mrs. Robert) Snow, Mary Ann Winter, Mrs. Charles Gale, Mrs. Jack Frost, Mrs. Raymond Storm arid Linda Spririg. The animal kingdom has inspired names likp Susan Fox, Mrs. Bruce Sable, Mrs. Ernest Lamb, Mrs.. Whitney Buck, Mrs. Norman Fitch, Vera Bassett and Dorcas Wolf. Dr. Rose Pink has color in her name. So do Laura Green, Mrs. Gerald White, Mrs. Nor-bert Rust and the many, many Browns. FOR THE BIRDS Mrs. Carl Bird heads her own grouping along with Mrs. The Walter F. Powells of Bloomfield Hills announce the engagement Of their daughter, Donna Jean to Jerry M. Roe her of Bloomfield Hills, son of Mr. arid Mrs. Robert Roeher of Logan, W. Va. She attends the Shapero School of Practical Nursing, Detroit. March vows are planned. ; Jewelry Can Create Mood in Fashions Today’s woman can be as ' attractively jeweled as befits her personality. Careful selection of costume jewelry and the accompanying outfit is all-important to the finished look. Selection should be baspd on time of day and occasion involved. A simple string of pearls is correct any time and anyplace. ... Glittering pieces should be George Finch, Mrs. Erwin Raven, Willena Drake, LaVina Robins, Mrs. George Hawks, Mrs. Charles L. Crane, Mrs. Ronald Nightingale and Mrs. Mary Teal. Fond of the water are: Constance Bass, Mrs. Matthew Gill, Mrs. W. p. Pike, Mrs. R. Marlin, Mrs. Lloyd Sturgeon and Mrs. Lee Pike. In the culinary field are Wills Lamb, Mrs. Frank Rice, Mrs. Leslie Shanks, Mrs. Richard Berry, Mrs. Henry Sage, JoAnn Quince, Mrs. Frarik Soda, Don Cherry and Mrs. Clayton Lemon. Biblical and religious names include Winifred Miracle, The-' lonius Monk* Arthur -Solomon, Mrs. Boyd Zacharius, Charles Christian, Mrs. Conrad Church, Mrs. Joseph Churches, Mrs. Robert Laity, Dorothy Virtues, Paula Pope, T. C. SCrmpn, and Mrs. Fred Pew. FASHION WISE Concerned with apparel are Mre. Prank Cuff, Mrs. E. K. Hood, Mrs. A. G. Purse, Linda Marine, John Ruff, peorge Mantila, Mrs. Robert Slack, Mrs. Frank Brim, Wright Cotton and lama C. Hook. Among the do-ers whose names spell verbs are Ger- -trade Burns, Rev. S. T. Dunk, Mre. Fletcher Spears, • Gertrude Bills, Barbara Grooms, Judith Bellows, Theresa Shovels, Shanna Staples and Brenda Stoops. Other active names are Janet Fries, Mrs. Arthur Held, Mrs. Robert Felt, Mrs. Harvie Going, Ethlynn slaughter, Ben Drag, Larry Holler, Mrs. William Wink, Mrs. Lloyd Sprinkle, Mrs. Edward Dart-, Arthur Tickle, Earl Peck, Mrs. Richard Coil. . Competing this list are Mrs. Theodore Bloom, Dorothy Reason, John Croych, Edith Wedge, ‘ Roy Rumble, Mrs. Charles Telling. Descriptive names include Mrs. A. J. Still, Mrs.' Glenn Jolly, Carol Quick; Mrs. U. C. Meeker, Mrs. Glen Grim, Mrs. Edwin Wise, Judith Moody, Mrs. Leslie Cross, Mrs. ■ Charles Blunt, Mrs. Andy Broad and Mary Small. Other adjectives used as names are Maple Double, Daniel Bright, Nancy Bigger, Mrs. Don Stackable, Mrs. F r Loose, Virginia Sharp, reserved for evenihg exclusive- feBeane of Rochester and •y- For the third consecutive year, Francis Hoopingarner, Seward Street (left) has received the Pontiac. City* Panhellenic scholarship. Shown here with her is Mrs. Stuart Jeske of Golf Lane, Commerce Toionship, president of t/w local For informal daytime wear, bead necklaces are attActive when combined in the same '«r in contrasting colors of milady’s outfit. ONE BOLD PIN A simple dress may call for .ropes of bepds, or try-enhancing it with a striking bold pin. One trick to emphasize a tiny waist is to attach a pin Recipe Correction chapter. Frances, a senior at Eastern Michigan University, will start teaching after graduation. Panhel- ■ lenic is composed of area ufomen „ who are' members of college sororities affiliated with the Panhellenic Council. . * ; yS % gloves, hats, shoes, and cuffs. The manner In which jew-. elry is worn aad Jits selection can mean the difference between a careless appearance and the smooth flawless lobk of fashion. Charles Stark, Mrs. Edgar Learned, Mrs. Harvey Swift, Alice Clear, Beyerly Dull, Mrs. Milton Strong, John Handy, Kai Winding, Mary.' Upward, Mrs. Charles Low. ALL KINDS Then there’s Mrs. Marie Frank, May Dewey, Oliver Loud, Mrs. Harry Haider and Sharon Proper. . ■ * */ * . Let’s hope that by 1990, the computers will have had their day and we will still retain our identity and not be known as Mr. or Mrs. Asdfg; hjkl, or Miss 490281. Wedding Plans The engagement is announced ' of Joan DeBaene, daughter of Mrs. Walter ,T. the late Mr., DeBaene, -to Robert Leon Warrington, son wedding. During the Christmas holidays Mre. Peck’s son and daughter-in-law, the Edwin Crandells came from Grand Blanc where he is now deputy superintendent of schools. This weekend Mr. Peck's daughter and son-in-law, the Derek Boltons and daughters Jill arid Gail, will come from prknd Rapids to be with their grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. Gustav von Reis, their daughter Mrs. Karen Newlander and her children Gregg and Leslie, are back home after spending' Christmas in New York: with their daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Altschul. HAPPY ANNIVERSARY Honoring several couples; celebrating wedding amrivqrtk aries, the Hans Fredricksons entertained at dinner in their home Tuesday evening. Guests were the Otto Soeh* ners of Port Huron, Dr. and Mrs. Harald Stubbs, Mrs.' Carl Moe, the John Engels, the Carl Oxfords and the Ralph Crooks, Mrs. Moe will spend the New Year with friends at (he Greenbrier, White Sulphur Springs. - ' , Mrs. M. S. Rosenbergfr was feted with a surprise dinner: party by her son and daughter-in-law, the Garry Rosen-bergers in Ann Arbor. Mr. Rosenberger Sr. kept the secret well and daughter Carol who had been in New York stopped here to join the family cm her way home to Mali-, bu, Calif. Area Alumni Attend Game The Arthur B. McWoods of Birmingham, recently of Bloomfield Hills, with the junior McWoods of Detroit, have been in San Francisco since Tuesday before going on to Pasadena for the Rose. Bowl game. Mr. and Mrs. George Lyddy (Jean Allen) of Brentwood, •Qalif. will entertain the foursome at a dinner-dhnee this evening' in the Los Angeles Country Chib. The senior McWoods, their son, and Mrs. Lyddy are University of Michigan alumni. The Lawrence G. Boughners of Wedge-wood Drive announce the engagement of their daughter, Janice Lynn to David Michael Sanborn, sow of,Mr. and Mrs. James R. Sanborn Jr. of Kenmoor Drive. Both are currently attending the. University* of Michigan. About those Raisin Squares at the midriff. 'Pins can also .........there seems to have be used as . eye catchers fqr been an error, lire. Robert- son did not give any water for the filling. But calls from readers have suggested that tt cup is.necessary and that the flour could be omittqd. , We’re sorry if you had trouble and appreciate yo^r calls. Sheer glamour for tffe all-important New Year’s Eve celebration is typified by Miss America 1965, Vonda Kay Van Dyke. Shown here at the left is a richly embellished, white double knituBan-Lon” gown boasting silver Schiffli embroidery. Gracefully f eminine and with that ever-becoming^ fluid look is the Grecian styled gown at the right, also in white and so sophisti- \ cated for that specieif holiday evening. , «#7S Til K 10 Vi i>U I iklRrOAV,-DECEMBER 31, 1964 NINE New Shade \£ol lapses If you need a new lamp ‘ , but don’t want to carry ky package, choose a new-type shade with a spring steel name which collapses from as high as II inches down to juht two inches. * Vt * These bell W drum shape fabric shades—in white, eggshell, and beige-can b e swished through soap or detergent suds when-soiled. Apples and pears make great combination for a winter deep-dish fruit pie. Serve with plain thick mam! \ I NEW 1-R. VACUUM CLEANER HOSE All Cloth, Ne Plastic Re-usable Hose Ends FACTORY TRAINED MECHANICS ALL WORK ji GUARANTEED DOMELCO SEWING CENTER BtoomfitM Miracle MHo Shopping Gintor Among the Ten Best Coiffured Women of 1964 are Mme. Hetve Alphand, wife of the French dm-passador to the United States, and [atbafa Hale, TV actress. Others imed in the yearly poll were Mrs. Leonard Bernstein, opera etar^j. Roberta Peters, Queen Farah of Iran, Eileen Ford, fashion designer Anne Klein, Bethel Leslie, Debbie Reynolds and Catherine Scott. New Life Ahe&d Oldster Should Marry \ By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE U-453: Jim j., aged 74, has been a widower for three years. \ CHILDREN’S SHOT MIRACLE MILE \ SHOPPING CENTER \ for I our wcuuinp » i QUALITY j I US • I .1 riaee i: • A Large “Ju»t M llgB • A Miniature Marriage Ceftiflcate Budget Tdrmt- ...—...... ... —. r... Available _ Mrs. Richard Vallard . ■ « C R. HASKILL STUDIO J . 1 Ml. Clement SI. " ' FE 4*0553 • “Dr. Crane,” he asked, “am I too old to consider remarriage? “For I have met a very gracious widow, aged 68, and we enjoy each other’s company very much. “She belongs to the same church and is active therein. And it is/very lonely for anybody who has been happily married for many years, to be suddenly left without a helpmate. ,“My children veto any idea of remarriage, maybe because I am fairly ’wealthy and they think they’ll lose some inheritance. . ‘\But I shall remember them liberally in my will.' So what do you advise?” MARRIAGE FACTS . A married man lives several years longer than a bachelor. Why? Well, he gets better meals and maintains more regular eating schedules. Besides, he can relax by vtalking to his wife and even letting off verbal “steam” from irritations at the store, factory or office. if ill, he has a devoted nurse who hovers around and coddles him. \ If he should fall to tlfe floor in a sudden heart attack, his wife will instantly call a physician. Even the physical side of marriage may be productive of longer life, too, so when two are congenial, marriage is in order. WHAT ABOUT MOM? “Yes, Dr. Cran*e,’' some sentimental children protest, “but isn’t it ^ desecration to Mother's memory for Dad to consider remarriage?” No, indeed! On the contrary, it is rcompliment to the memory of the departed mate when the survivor wishes to try marriage COLONIAL LANTERN BE YOUR GUIDE TO GOOD FOOD AT REASONABLE PRICES • DINING ROOM • COFFEE SHOP • CAR SERVICE • CARRY OUT START.THI NIW YEAR OUT RIGHT!. v.. treat' MOM TO A NEW YEAR'S^ DINNER 5896 DIXIE HWY. sESe ■ ■■■■■■■a aaaaaaaRllimiNNHNNNNINNNNININMM \ Wi A:';,:. COLONIAL-HOUSE WATERFORD For that proves his earlier marriage was so happy that he wishes a repetition of such congenial life. ■ ,'v* .* * So the opposition of the grown children to remarriage of their elderly parents Is often uriwise. Sometimes, too* their argument about being untrue Uy the memory of the fornser mate, Is really a smoke screen. / . * * ■ It serves as a. “red haring” to divert attention from the selfish fears of the grown children that'they may not inherit as big a portion of. their remaining parent’s wealth. r Actually, children seldom have contributed anything at all to their parents’ wealth! ExpertView on Current Fashions NEW YORK (NEA) - In her showroom at Pattulo-Jo Copeland on New.York’s Seventh Avenue, designer Jo Copeland talked about current fashion trends. Surrounded by her own beautlf'ii spring collection. Miss Copeland gave her views on such topics as pants above-the-knee skirts and the current trend toward nudity. She is an articulate woman and her comments were sharp and to the point. * + * Re pants: “I don’t understand all this hysteria about pants. They’ve been around for a long time. There’s nothing wrong with a woman wearing them if she knows when, where and how. “But they don’t belong in the city or in a chic restaurant anywhere. And for formal wear, they are out of order entirely.” HIDE KNEES On short skirts: “They’re awfol. Knees are ugly. Instead of exposing them, we should thank our stars It’s possible to hide them with skirts.” Re cut-to-the-navel and little topless numbers: "I don’t like vulgarity eiren when it’s done expensively. In fact, I find it more offensive then. “Anyme with a lot of money W spend on clothes should kirow better. / . e ■ e g “But” said Jo Copeland; “a designer can’t ignore foe kooky style that make shock news in foe collections.. “These shockers either find their correct niche eventually at the hands of designers or they die because they were no good to begin with. “Take the sack. It’s still | with us — but all the bugs are out. The current relaxed silhouette is the result of th^> 1 sack in its original form. gif IBifAWT^NIIIMBTUN ITilNNSBaSSNNaai llPff The Elmer Coles of Maple Hill Road, Avon Township, announce the engagement of their daughter, Sandra Ann to Airman 1. C. William E. Coleman, son of the Edward C. Colemans of Highland. Her fiance u . stationed' in the Philippines, September vows are planned by Yvonne Lydia Lang and John James Joseph, son ofJ the Edgar B. Josephs West Otarkston Road Orion Township. She is the daughter of the Roy W. Langs of Like Orion. ■ One out/of every four cups of Be Aware i coffee is/made from Instant. of Others Waiting Have You Tried This? Rice-Ham Cass* role By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Food Edtior No more rich food for a while—after tonight and tomorrow, that is! So here’s a good casserole recipe that will use up any leftover ham you may have. Our cook today is Mrs. Leland H. Martin and this is one of the recipes sul ' mitted for the cookl given to United Fund Volunteers in the recent/Campaign. HAM AND By The Emily Post Q: My husband and.I/Oine out quite frequently, are only, two really a ing {daces in town And they are always croi We almost alwfcys have to wait for a table: I don’t mind this too mum as the food and xvorth waiting fors But I do get very annoyed when people who have finished eating just sit at the talking and smoking in-of leaving'promptly to ce room for others who are Waiting to be seated. Don’t you agree that such behavior is most inconsiderate? A: Agreeable as it is to sR leisurely over coffee, cigarettes and perhaps a liqueur-, diners in a crowded resfou-rant should be considerate of others who are waiting for tables and not linger unnecessarily after they have finished eating. From Sylvan Lake tp Inauguration Sylvan Lake Mayor and Mrs. E. V. Geizer, Councilman and Mrs. Thomas J. McHugh and Mr. hnd Mrs. John D. McKiniay will attend Gov. Romney’s inauguration on New Year’s day. . Preceding the ball, the trio will be present at a cocktail party honoring the governor and his wife. HAPPY NEW >T YEAR As foil New Year hopefully rings out its merry ^sunds* all of us hero would like to chimo in with best of good wishes for the new Reason. AUSTIN NORVELL Agency 70 W. Lawrence St. Enjoy New Year’s Eve OPEN TO in Bloomfield Hills WOODWARD AT SQUARE LAKE RD. - FE 4*6630 CLOSED NEW YEAR’S DAY i y ! p. • Wl • p? TEN t^g’PONTIAC P&ESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 81, 1964 Today in Washington Obey Law or Lose ,Schools Told jved jut month by rales q President Johnson for administration of Hhe Civil Rights Act. The new rules take effect Sunday,. year with British, French and before a closed session of West German leaders to review Western policies with regard to German peace settlement. This new discussion, U.S. official? reported Wednesday night, WASHINGTON CAP) -School systems across the nation that foil to comply with the Civil Rights Act will have federal aid shut off. This notice is being sent to - - -i school officials by the Welfare The; Civil Rights Act directs will be a preliminary to making Department along with com-! that no federal funds can “be new proposals to the Soviet Un-pliance forms which must be! used in any program where ion for an agreement. 1 out by the heads of all I. there is discrimination on the * ' * * t “« basis of race, color or national Included in the discussions r origin. , will be the problem of the Ger« ------- j man boundaries and a possible > WASHINGTON (AP) - U.S. j reunification of the divided na: The forms are one step in new j officials will meet early next tion. . ' • • 1 j U.S. officials said the Soviet government has ihown no recent interest in-a German settlement, but the United States believes such an agreement would contribute so much toward world peace that it is desirable to try once more to negotiate one, state school systems and officials of institutions of higher learning which receive federal aid. *4 • ¥KJ98 4 AK9862 + AK WIST BAST ATS AQJ108 W1064 3 ¥75 ♦ J5 ♦ Q1073 A 10 9 S 3 3 AJ86 SOUTH (D) A AK9 653 ¥ AQS T ♦ 4 AQT4 Both vulnerable Snrth West North Bad 1,4 Put 14 Pin 8¥ Pan 4N.T. Pan »¥ Pan 8N.T. Pan Bass Pan Fan 7¥ Pan Sy OSWALD JACOBY All bad bids don’t lead to disaster. Sometimes you come out like the man who falls in the river and crawls out with h fish in egch hand. One of dummy’s two remaining diamonds was ruffed with the queen of trumps, another spade was ruffed with the nine, and the last diamond With the ace of trumps. Dummy’s king and jack of tnipips accounted for the last two tricks. There had been many ways 1 for South to go wrong in the ! play, but he had avoided all the pitfalls. The result is really fantastic when you note! that there is no defense against the heart grand j slam, no play at all for the spade or diamond small slam and, ho play for the no-tnin)p small slam if a defender opens >ade or if he shifts to a e, if given the leading during the course of play. V*CRRD Sense** Q—The bidding has boon: JACORY suit after his partner’s jump response to Ids sound spade opening, whereupon the partner took him up to' seven hearts in three bids. South decided to fight it out hearts and the correct line of play produced all 13 tricks for Sey 1 m. He started out by cashing dummy’s top clubs and diamonds. Then he came to his .-/hand with the ace of spades and discarded two of dummy’s four little diamonds on the king of spades and queen Of dabs. ^ m Then he led a low' spade and ruffed with dummy’s eight of trumps after West showed out, Astrological ^ Forecast 1 by SYDNEY OMARR Mr FrMay "Dm WIM man contrail Mi ***H*y . . Altriluv points tho way." ARIES (Mar. » to Apr. 1*1: You wll M bottor it do** to Mm* and tovd anoi. Key roquiroment it peace, resifl You had a (way ovonlngl Plan ahead . , . dltcut* (whir*. So trank—highlight SINCERITY. TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20): Chock Mdait, Mwwmont pottibflltl**. Seek greater herraggMtol^dMl^^Nal^elk ibrs&iM tor euoe***.] gemini MBPWPBPHBPWIPWp our* ot directions, promt***, initructlom. Tendency I* tor frtonds to to canto***. Don't become Involvod In polntleti argument. Key It TACT and PATIBNCr CANCER (JlMOW to July, 22): Po-tantlal lab Imgrovamant lootUghted.—M a good liitener. Show you can M roepanolbillty. Make not* of roapivfl Bo eelective. Jot down only thM*l inton* to k**p. LEO (JWyjfr.to Aug. »): PavorMI*] laat night may prove letting. VIRGO (Awg. & to Sopt. H): Accept delay it mature manner. One unhand great premie** now oopaanl StyileoSc. Don't taka nil* nl affront. MOraly ottrlbJlo It (Sopt- Sto Oct. to: tmahwhl oxlaf^Thtm y! Ok. Kay la towing cam- ________tao OPOA. Write, telephone — bo yworo and avallablo. Mental T£5wu£(Oct. Site Nom SI): Retui *- E --------- 'VnmM attain »i jtowrt w :IUS (Nay. lear. Yowr totem* tor leoderthip ■____* to torefront! TimeSo SBr core Crete tuggaeflan*. Be Independent, OSMICORN (Dec. A to Jdtk W)l Aapnctoto beowtv which awrrownd* you. i Tlim to wwp>B< to ttw air! UoeomnN *aSUS[us (J*n. » to Mb. IS): sa^ X^EAklsTtcl^^lm madT to aawtojMn er^wmjwmty. Don *^ IP FRIDAY IS YOU* BIRTHDAY... year bring* canon. r- eggertuntty tor ' marriage,Jf «Ingle (CwyrtgM ItM, Ogaeral Mature* Cerp.) WASHINGTON (API - Two Washington women and a New York man have been indicted on charges of contempt of Congress for their refusal to testify KERRY’S WORLD House subcommittee on American activities. They are Dagmar Wilson and Donna Allen, both Washington leaders of Women Strike for Peace, and Russell Nixoft of New York, general manager of the National Guardian, which] describes itself as a “progressive’ weekly.’’ The tiio was called by, the House subcommittee Dec. 7 in an investigation of a possible breach in enforcement of U.S. immigration jaws. They said they would testify in open sions but not behind closed doors. ’ ■ ’Die subcommittee was-trying to question them about their part in trying to help obtain a visa for a Japanese professor, Dr. Kaouri Yasui, who was coming to the United/States on a lecture tour last year. The professor is a director of the Japan Council against A-and H-Bombs aqd was Awarded the Lenin Peace Prize in 1958. West North Bant Sooth 14 Dbla. Pan 14 24 Pass Pan 84 Pan 2 ¥ Pan Pan 84 Pan Pan » You, South, hold: 47548 ¥A54 4Q J19S 488 What do you do now? A—Pus. Ten are likely to find Bast with TODAY'S QUESTION Instead of pasting over Wesfa two dubs, your partner bids two spades. East paaaas. What do you do? THE PONTI AC PRESS Thursday, December si, im PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, Landslide Voted Year's Top Story ipture'64 Events | Romney’s Win [ ■ 1 1 Nikitas Ouster No-1 in ^tate 4 Is Ranked 2nd Reapportionmnnt and Auto Talks Follow By The Associated Press Editors of AP member news* papers and radio and TV stations voted the campaign and landslide election of Lyndon B. Johnson as president the ’ top news story of 1964. ment of South Viet Nam, MaJ. Gen. Nguyen Khanh came to power in a bloodless coup Jan. 30, was the targetof a shortlived coup himself ih ^September and in October a civilian government took over withTran Var Huong, mayor of Saigon, appointed premier. 6. Red China on Oct; II ploded its first ntom bomb, and immediately called for a world conference to discuss banning atomic weapons. 7. The ' commission under Chief Justice Warren that investigated the assassination of President- John F. Kennedy made public its report in September. By A. F. MAHAN Associated Press Writer Republican Gov. George Romney's winning reelection against a Democratic tide has been voted Ng. 1 among Michigan’s 10 top news stories of 1964. It was the third straight year Romney has-figured in the No. 1 story. In 1963 adoption of a new S t a t e Constitution, which Romney helped write and for which he campaigned, was ranked No. 1, and Romney’s defeat on tax and fiscal reform ranked No. 2. In 1962 his breaking of a 14-year Democratic hold on the governor’s office was chosen No. 1. , * RIDING HIGH — President Lyndon Johnson whoops it UP on his Texas ranch after he won a landslide victory in the national election. Johnson was chosen top newsmaker of the year. It found that Lee Harvey Oswald, acting alone, killed President Kennedy. It found no evidence that either Oswald or Jack Ruby, who shoUhim to death’ acted as part of any conspiracy. CONGO UPRISING 8. In the Congo, Communist-supported rebels overran the northeast part of the country and placed some 60 Americans and 800 Belgians under house | arrest "until U.S. and Belgium {halt military aid” to Leopoldville. Then on Nov. 24, 250 white hostages were lined up in Lumumba Square, Stanleyville, to be shot, Just as Belgian paratroopers arrived. By the end of the day, 700 terrified hostages were saved by the paratroopers and flown to Leopoldville. Cheers Despite Tears From Scrantons As Dad Loses Review of Year Not a single Republican, other t h a n the independent - running Romney, won a statewide office in the November general election. REAPPORTIONMENT And it was the cause of this switch that ranked No. 2 among 1964’s big Michigan stories. In a word, it was: reapportionment. Here are the “Top Ten” chosen by editors and newscasters of Associated Press from a Moscow building and Tass announced he was being replaced by two of his lieutenants, Leonid Brexhnev as By The Associated Press' I The 36th president of the United States, Lyndon B. Johnson, has been chosen newsmaker of the year .for 1964. LBJ, who became President! at the assassination of John F. j Kennedy in 1963 and this year won the presidential election, i was selected by editors of AP member newspapers and TV stations. ' Johnson settled the railroad strike in April and sent planes to bomb PT boat bases in North Viet Nam after the Points L Romney’s reelection 413 2. Reapportionment - 333 3. New auto labor - contracts 271 4. Macomb County tornado 228 5. Detroit newspaper strike 223 6. Booming- Michigan economy 186 7. National Guard scandals 160 8. Essex Wire Carp, strike 159 9. Low levels of Great * Lakes 140 10. Rose Bowl culminates University.-of Michigan’s banner sports year 82 . After five days of U.S. and Belgian rescue operations in the area, more than 2,000 white persons had been evacuated. Ninety-seven were known dead and MO. or more were missing. 2.BILLS SIGNED 9. President Johnson promised, less than a week after the assassination of his predecessor, that the tax cut and Civil Rights mfis be enacted as memorials to ^President Kennedy. They were' s*Gn Feb. 26 LBJ signed into lavHha biggest single tax reduction in American history, a $11.5 billion cut in individual and corporate levies. And on July 2 he signed, after a bitter fight in Congress, the country’s most sweeping Ciyil Rights bill. Rebel Leader Gets Rough Handling From Congo Troops A No. 1 vote was worth 10 points; No. 2, nine points; No. 3, eight, etc. 24 STORIES At least 24 stories received votes, but none came dose to the 23 first-place ballots received for Romney’s reelection. Reapportionment was second in the No. 1 voting with Ford, who supported Eisenhower and Nixon, was one of the j first from big business to endorse Lyndon Johnson for the I presidency. Ford wasdivorced Feb. ,13,1964, and is rumored to ; be engaged to Italian-born Mrs. Christiana Austin, 35. TEAMSTER BOSS ' James Hoffa, president of the j 1 1.5-million member Teamsters Union, received his first conviction in five federal trials in ’ seven years on March 4 in Chat-i tanooga. i He was declared guilty of try-i ing to rig a federal court Jury . in 1962, sentenced to eight years' and fined $10,000. He appealed. , Pope Paul VI in January boats had twice attacked American destroyers in Tonkin Gulf. He got his two major items of legislation, the tax cut and civil rights bills, through Congress. The raid against the Maddox, ment is what they called it when joined , in the bay by the U.S. on Feb. 17 the Supreme Court | destroyer Turner Joy,, was re- ruled, 6 - 3, that congressional 'newedAug.4. • districts within each state *' * * I should be substantially equal in At the order of President [ population, to end voting inequi-. Johnson, U.S. carrier planes I ties. ! then bombed the torpedo boat’s ! * * * bases and a petroleum depot. I _____ , n j ysLij* as___i.-_—j I,, ——a—i What would it mean. Whole* BLOODLESS COUP j tion and shaking up the struc- two for top story. A story which broke after some ballots were in — the alleged masquerade of Rep. Daniel W. West, Ddfctroit—undoubt-I edly would have finished higher than its 14th place had it broken before voting began. Johnson entertained and campaigned for election Texas style, dancing with lady guests at the White House 'and throwing campaign barbecues. He pulled the ears of Iris beagles, announced such economies as closing certain military bases and turning off the lights in the White House. TWO SCANDALS His administration was touched by two scandals, involving Bobby Baker and Walter Jenkigs. When Americans went to the po|ls Nov. 3, they elected Johnson by a larger plurality than they had given Roosevelt and Eisenhower, in fact the largest in U.S. history. Nikita Khrushchev, who was ousted as Soviet premier and Cormnunist first secretary, was selected by the editors as newsmaker of the year in foreign affairs. . Finishing’ in.order after the “Top Ten” and ahead of the alleged West masquerade were: auto plant expansions; proposed railroad abandonment in Northern Michigan, and marketing headache created by bumper chenfy qrop. BOOMING'ECONOMY The booming Michigan'economy, supported by smashing automobile sales, was a repeater from 1962 and 1963. Missing this time* without a single vote was' 1963’s Nf>. 7 story: racial demonstrations. There was only one .sports i story among the “Top Ten” this time, compared with two a year earlier: Detroit’s Olympic bid and suspension of Detroit Lion Alex Karras. ' The University of Michigan’s ■phenomenal sports rise* was rated 10th among the top stories of 1964. While Romney's victory Was scored No. 1, it was, in effect, a defeat for him which ranked No. 2—reapportionment. Romney insisted upon reap-portionirient as provided in the state’s new constitution, but courts ordered both legislative and congressional districts redrawn “as nearly as practicable” equal in population. - Negroes, 'Whites Clash In Florida At Swim-In Protests trip, a pilgrimage to the Holy Land. In Jerusalem -he met. with Patriarch Athehagoras, first meeting in five eenturies between leaders of the Catholic and Orthodox churches. In December the Pope made the longest papal Journey in his-1 tory to attend thq 38th International Eucharistic Congress in Bombay, Indfa. , Cassius Clay, 22, self - proclaimed “the greatest.” won the world heavyweight championship from 29-year-old Sonny Liston in the seventh round in Miami Beach Feb. 25. THE BEATLES The Beatles, mop-topped rode ’n’ roll quartet from Liverpool, became the overwhelming Idols of the adolescents in 1964. Khrushchev visited Ifongary and toured Scandinavia .for 18 days. He gave Egypt a huge loan and received her support for Russian foreign policy. MADE A HERO . In April it was rumored he. * Lady Bird Johnson, the most, active American first lady since Eleanor Roosevelt, as woman newsmaker of the year, received her first honorary degree March 31, from Texas Woman’s University. * 1 .. Ana npiu aw was i uuiui cu uu. had died, but oh his 70th birth/ day .April 17, he was made -a “hero of file Soviet Union,’’ the country’s highest award. Then in October Khruah- Vietnamese Soldier Beats Villager To Get Cong Secrets BIG STORY — Men run clear of a falling section Of a five-story building in Anchorage, Alaska, in March as an earthquake left the city in rubbles. The Alaska quake was chosen one of the top stories of the year. iVf.LVK THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER '81, 1964 WMMMMp County's Top Sports Names, JANUARY Jan. 3—Pontiac Central ups city series record to 10-2 by beating previously undefeated Pontiac Northern, 7360, despite 32 points by Roger Hayward. Jan. 5—Pontiac’s Hayes Jbnes finished fourth in 1963 James E. Sullivan balloting for nation’s top amateur athlete-sportsman. * * . * Jan. 6—Mike Samardzija Jr., of Pontiac, wins star sfudded Calumet City (111.) bowling tournament's individual prize and helps Huron Bowl to second place in team event; Jan. 13—Walled Lake quarterback John Thomas is named among five Michigan high school gridders on Scholastic magazine’s All-America team. Jan. 14—Imlay City cagers go five‘Overtime periods to snap Capac’s 53-game regular-season winning streak, 70-67. f Jan. 14—Unbeaten Waterford Kettering makes Waterford sixth straight hoop victim, 73-62. Jin. 17—Pontiac Northern sets' school scoring record in 104-49 rout of Waterford Township basketball squad. * * * Jan. 19—Miniature Schnaiiizer Mowery’s Matador from Miami, Fla., surprises to win'Pontiac Press Best-in-Show trophy at Pontiac Kennel Club's show which attracts more than 600 dogs, Jan. 24—Hayes Jones races to world record :5.9 for 50-yard high hurdles at Toronto’s Maple Leaf Games while winning his 49th consecutive victory indoors. iPebruary Feb. 1—Hayes Jones wins 50th straight indoor high hurdles event in the Boston A.A. Games pnd announces he’ll retire at end of outdoor trade season. Feb. 7—Clarkston high school athlete Randy Armstrong wins Flint Golden Gloves novice middleweight , boxing championship. Feb. 3—Pontiac Northern begins search for new varsity football coach after Bob Dingroan is appointed mentor at Lansing Eastern. Feb. 13—Holly Board of Education promotes Ben Sherman to varsity basketball coaching position after failing to extend contract of incumbent Bob Pence beyond 1963-64 school year. Feb. 12—Anderl Molterer, 32-year-old Austrian pro, wins second; night’s International Professional Skiers’ Association racing event and over-al) championship at Pine Knob by more than two seconds. Feb. 13—Franklin Hills announces Ted Kroll as new head pro. ★ t a a Feb. 14—Birmingham Sea-holm swimmers post 40th straight dual meet victory with 60-45 triumph over Royal Oak Kimball before crowd of 2,600 fans. Feb. llr-Bloomfield Hills wins both.boys’ and girls’ team titles in tbd annual Mt, Holly Invitational High School Ski Meet. Feb, 21—Kettering streak reaches 13 as Captains claim Tri-County basketball title with 69-58 victory over Romeo. Feb. 24—Frank Kownacki resigns football coach’s position at Lake Orion High School and Dale Jessie is promoted to the Job. Feb. 23—Geoff Smith o f Bloomfield Hills qualifies for National Junior Alpine championships as a member of -the central division team of UR. Ski Association. feb. 23—Kettering finishes with first unbeaten regular season. basketball team by making L’Anse Creuse 15th victim, earn state wrestling championships/ Mar. 12 — Seaholm booted apt of state regional tournament on ineligible player ruling. Mar. 13 — Doug Webster of Royal‘Oak Kimball becomes first state swimmer to crack 4-minute barrier with 3:59.7 timing in qualifying for the state 400-yard free style finals Mar. 13. - Joel Gaff of Waterford sets Western Michigan University record with 2:20.3 clocking in 200-yard ' breaststroke. Mar. > 14 — PCH cagers whip Mount Clemens, 86-72, for flags A regional championship; Sea-holm wins state swimming title; and Royal Oak Kimball’s Doug Webster sets national 400-yard free style mark with 3:56.7 in winning state event. Mar,-18 — Pontiac Central advances to state semifinals following 65 - 63 quarter-finals win over Monroe. Mar. 20 - Fred Zittel of Pontiac Central is named county coach-of-the-year by Press and All-Cottnty cage team lists Bruce Rod wan, Feradale; Roger Hayward, Pontiac Northern; Earl Hook, Kettering; Mel De-Walt, Pontiac Central;' and Bruce Nyberg, Birmingham Seaholm. Mar. 28 — Centra) drops 83-77 semifinal decision to Beaton Harbor. Mar. 23 - PCH’s Mel Dewaft only unanimous pick for All-Saginaw Valley Conference basketball team. Mar. 22 - Walled Lake’s' Craigie Battery Sales (team), Romeo’s Doris Roth and Ann Aikman (doubles), and Paf De-Longchamp (Singles) reign as champions of the Pontiac Women’s Bowling Association 31st annual tournament. Mar 25 - Harry (Bud) McGrath promoted to varsity basketball coaching Spot at Clarkston. Mar. 26 — Dave Schmidt is named football coach at Pontiac Northern. Mar. 27 — Ferndale’s Bruce Rodwan is picked oh All-State Class A first team, and Mel DeWalt of Pontiac Central on second team. Mar. 28 - Billy Hardwick of San Mateo, Calif., wins PBA North American Open crown at 300 Bowl by beating Pennsylvanian Fred Lening, Floridian Bill Allen and Californian Ed Bourdase. Mar. 30 - Walled Lake Dave Eby, bowls 300 game in the Wonderland Lanes Classic League and goes on to a series, both firsts for him and the establishment. APRIL ‘ Apr. 6 — Earl McKee is named winner of Pontiac Press most valuable player trophy for city Parks and Recreation Department’s adult men’s basketball league. Apr. 12 — Pontiac- entrants Perc Secord (esquire divis and Dick Kirby (junim^ifovice class) capture state^hampion-ships in table^tennis competition iat Cobo Hall. Apr.-12 — Pontiac’s 300 Bowl team takes lead in American Bowling Congress Tournament’s regular team division with 3,11T total at Oakland, Calif. Apr. 17 - PNH clihches Press - sponsored All Spoets Trophy for first time by beating Central,*5-0, In baseball. Apr. 24 — Mike Samardzija, Jr., bowls 299 game and 758 sCries in return to Huron Bowl Classic competition. Apr. 25 — Hayes Jones inducted Into Drake Relays Hall of Fame. Apr. 26 — American Bowling Congress confirms 300 Bowl of Pontiac as regular team event champions. Apr. 25 — Oxford thinclads capture Marysville Relays Gass B~ competition with Romeo second. x Wy May 1—Canoeists Albert Wld* ing and Robert E. Gillings Returned from Texas where they had won the. 500-mile Texas Water Safari. May • 14—Wayne F. Case, former Grand Rapids Catholic Central coach, takes over as basketball coach at Rochester May 13—Pontiac’s Monroe Moore grabs second place in the Greater Detroit Master’s championship. May 19—Kettering wins Tri-County League track crowns. Milford takes Wayne-Oakland title. Orchard Lake St. Mary collects Northwest Parochi ‘ League baseball champk Northern ieball title. Hills sets record in winning the Press Invitational Golf Tournament. May 29—Birmingham Sea holm wins Oakland County track'championship.. JUNE June**—Joel Gaff of Waterford is named swimming coach at Flint /Northwestern. June 6—Royal Oak Kimball defeats Kettering, .4-3, to win Pontiac Baseball Tournament. June 3—Local caddies receiving Chick Evans scholar- Golf Association of Michigan August 8 — Robert Lorenz of Pontiac captures the Sen Men’s International Cross River swim at Port Huron in a record time of 15; 06. ★ August 9 — Tom Long and Dakrin Ornekian, both of North-ville, take the doubles crown in the Oakland County Open Tennis Tournament, Long downs Ornekian to win the singles crown. August 12 — Diane Grassi of Pontiac wins intermediate ladies freestyle in the North American Amateur Roller Skating championship in Kentucky. August 13 — Pontiac’s Scott Harrity, 11, takes speed title in North American Roller Skating championship. .* August 23 — Dick Robertson wins 35th annual Pontiac Men'! Medal Championship. August 27 — George1'Archer of California set a course record (65) In the opening round of the Carling World Open at Oakland Hills Country lub. August 30 — Bobby Nichols wins $200,000 Carling -Open. Arnold Palmer is second. Aug. 31 — Dayton Shanahan of Wixom wins Micliigan Pub-linx Match Play championship by defeating Detroit’s John Kurach, 1-up. ' SEPTEMBER Sept, l - Bloomfield Hills’ shooters Bob Thiefels and Larry MIKE SAMARDZIJA JR. HAYES JONES DICK ROBERTSON DON SACKETT Feb. 2J—Ben Donaldson sets Otto State swimming record with 1:48.2 clocking in 200 freestyle as Buckeyes; lose, 57-48, toplichigan. Feb. 23—Hayes Jones closes (indoor track career with 55th cofteecutivte high hurdle win and world record of 6.8 seconds fai 60 yards at All-Eastern Iijmtational games in Baltimore. I MARCH £ar. 1 — Midwestern Baptist Seminary captures Mkdii-gaft Christian College Athletic Aaociation basketball title by bating Grand Rapids Grace Bible, 87-64, for 11th straight % . 6 — Clarkston ends! Kettering string at 16 with j | 54j|2 district title conquest at, Grand Blanc. i . ‘ i Mar. 7 — Pontiac Northern’s {] Dave Beebe pnd Don Weyer j j ships from Golf Aslociation M | tie lhe world two-man Michigan were Ron L. Liming and Joesph C. McNeely of Pontiac. Mfl June 11—Pontiac Press names S All-County Baseball Team: KerK^r Miskin, Clarkston; Ken Savage, Seaholm; Rick Trudeau, Walled Lake; John Kaspar, Milford; Bud Williams, Walled Lake; Larry Waytowfoz, Berkley; Carl Stefanski, Rochester; Dan Armstrong, Troy; Kem Hillstrom, RO Kimball; Ed Sparkman, Milford. ★ * * June 13—Wally Park and George Prieskom win 15th annual Pine Lake invitational Golf Tournament; June 18—Former U. of M. fullback Bill Tunnicliff is named football coach at Bloomfield Hills. June 21—Gyde Skinner and Charles Barker win Gtv Best-Ball Tournament at Pontiac Municipal Golf Course. June 21—Pontiac Rolladium Skatin® Cl"b finished first in the Michigan Roller Skating Championships. Jbne 22—Alison Cram of Birmingham wins Michigan Hunts Perpetual Trophy Class in Bloomfield Horse Show. June 30 — Ed Harrison' 70, whw the 1964 jGity Senior Golf championship at Pontiac Municipal Course. JULY July 6 — Rochester's Board of Education adds snow skiing U) the list of varkity sports. ' July 12 — Harry Nederlander and Gene Eylefteam up to wifi'*' the. Forest Lake Invitational Golf Tournament- \ ■ July 17 — Sharon Miller of Pennfield downs Mrs. Dorothy Thompson of Birmingham to win the Women’s Michigan Golf Association championship I at Tam O’Shanter Country * Club. July 20 — Paulette ‘Feather’ Frechette and Francis Bertram win the Pontiac Mixed Two-Ball Golf title. July 20 — team score for 28 gauges by breaking all' 200 targets on the Way to winning the title in the Michigan Skeet Championships. Sept. 3 — Rochester’s Don Healy wraps up the United States Wayfarers Sailing Championship at Chicago. Sept. 3 — Pontiac's Huron-Airwfy defeated Battle Creek, 4-1, in the Michigan State Amateur Baseball Tournament. Sept. 6 — Huron-Airway was handed a double loss in tb* Michigan State Baseball Tournament and eliminated. Sept 6 — Pontiac’s Micki King places 6th in Olympic Trials for women’s diving;* misses berth. Sept. 7 — Don Sackett, baseball, and Jim Long, softball, named most valuable players, in city recreation leagues. Sept. 7 — Utica wins Clinton Valley League baseball title. Sept. 9 — Douglas Stapleton (pike), James Camahan (blue-gill), Frank Kimmel, (rainbow) and Rudolph Peabody (black bass) named winners in annual Press Fishing Derby. Sept. 11 -r Ted Kroll, pro at Franklin Hills, and Mike Kukes teamed to win the Michigan Pro-Am golf championship. * * * Sept. 12 — Rex Cawley of Farmington cracks the world record for the 400 meter hurdles with a time of 49.1 seconds in the final Olympic trials. Sept. ,13 — Pontiac’s Municipal team, paced by Dick Robertson’s 70, won the RecreationAssociation of Michigan team golf title for the seventh time in eight years. Sept. 15 — All Pietz bowls 300 game in West Side Classic. Sept. 16 — Jim St. Germaine, 1-7, of Northville, youngest player in U.S. Amateur, wins first match before being ousted. SCpt. 25 — Kettering routs Pontiac Northern, 264). Sept/ 27 — St. Michael edges city football rival St. Fredrick, 7-0. ’ ' OCTOBER Oct. 3 —Birmingham Seaholm wins Oakland Couaty cross-country meet. ' Oct. 9 — John Van Sicklen, Iowa State tackle from Walled Lake, is named Lineman of the Week, by the Associated Press. .Oct. 10 - James E. Wilson of Bloomfield Hills elected president of the Michigan Thoroughbred Breeders Association. -Oct. 10 — Waterford trips Pontiac Northern, 9-0. Oct. 10 — Don Sackett named winner of Pike Memorial Trophy for plav hi Pontiac recreation ‘ entered in North American Basketball League. Oct. 28 — Pontiac Northern harriers defeat Pontiac Central, 24-33. Bill Hollis of Chiefs places first. Oct. 30 — Kettering' whipped L’Anse Creuse, 27-17, in the showdown game for the Tri-County championship. NOVEMBER Nov. 4—Mike Samardzija Jr. holds second place after the opening block of the Professional Bowlers Association National Open; finished 21st. Nov. 6—Dryden gains share of Southern Thumb grid title by /outing Memphis, 330. • Nov. 6—Troy clips Lake Orion, 254, to claim Oakland A football crown. Nov. 3-Mllfocd swamps Clar-enceville, 39-0, to win Wayne-Oakland gridiron honors. Nov. 7—Royal Oak Kimball cops state Class A cross country run.. named on All-Big Ten offensive team at tackle. Nov. 24-Jack Craig, Orton-ville, enters 260-pound buck in Press Big Deer contest; eventual winner. Nov. 27—Walled Lake tackle Roger Ruminski op AP All-State. Gass A team at tackle; Kimball’s Craig Irwin named at guard; tackle-Neal Peterson of Pofitiac Central and guard, Jim McFarland of Milford on second team/ Nov. 26—Pontiac Nationals snap two-game losing streak to win first NABL game at Muskegon, 103103. Nov.. 28—Lions sign tackle Jerry Rush from MSU as second draft choice. Dec. 2—Cass Lake stocked with 25,000 splake. Dec. 4 — John Van Sicklen, Iowa State tackle from Walled Lake, named to AP All-America defensive team; Jerry Rush on second offensive team. Nov. 11—Pontiac bowlers— George Chicovsky, Larry Crake, Joe Foster, Les Rothbarth and Murphy—depart for Venezuela where they will represent the United States in the Federation Internationale des Quil-leurs. Nov. 13—Kettering defeats! st. Frederick, Waterford, 134, to end season! * ' * * with 31 record,' I Dec. 9 — Pontiac Northern Nov. 15—Former Pontiac Cen- swimmers dunk PCH, 6333. Dec. 4 — Tackle Roger Ruminski of Walled Lake to receive Thom McAa . Pontiac Press Bronze Shoe as County’s most valuable prep gridder. Dec. 7 — St. Michael wins ’ Jim Brown Memorial Trophy with 67-41 basketball win over tral star Walter Beach helps Cleveland Browns beat Lions, 37-21; scores on 65-yard interception. Nov. 10—Arthur G. Sabourin, ith the longest entry, and James Turner, with the heaviest, declared winners in the Press Pheasant contest. Nov. 18—Pontiac keglers set team marks in Internationale in Venezuela. Joe Foster hits high game 241; second in all-events. Dec. 17 — Pontiac Central wrestlers pin PNH, 2321. Dec. 28 — Bob Ferdea wins ' $500 handicap singles event with 702 in Bowlerama. Dave Lamson and Bill Nlcholai take $250 doubles. ■ Dec. 19 — Kettering wins Waterford wrestling tourney; Pontiac Northern takes Oakland County mat event Dec. 27 — Walt Beach lauded for play with NFL champion. „ „ _ . , Cleveland Browns who defeated Nov. 21—P o n t i a c Central | Baltimore 274 in title game, downs Northern, 184, in city , Dec. 29 - Pontiac Central gridiron finale. whips PNH, 6356, in first meet- Nov. 25—M1 c h i g a n State’s irig of two -schools of current Jerry Rush, from Pontiac , I basketball season. BASKETBALL, SCOKES 2 Cage Squads Run oiid Run and Run.. ASHEVILLE, N.C. Ill — The players thundered up and down the basketball court for nine straight hours and when the final whistle blew, the Catholic Youth Organization had edged a YMCA squad, 890473. The game was arranged by Asheville Catholic High School Coach Charlie Monday with the idea of setting a marathon record for basketball. Tipoff was at noon Wednesday and all ten starters, stock it out until 9 p.m. A five minute half-time was held at 4:30 p.m. for the players to change shoes, drink orange juice and eat a chocolate bar. Otherwise the gpme continued uninterrupted. ★ At dr Munday was satisfied with his production. “The boys finished strong and played good defense,’’ he said. . However, he wasn’t particularly impressed with the offensive display. .Munday recalled that he played in an eight-hour con-r test in Canton 22 years ago in which, the final score was 1,303768, with high-scoring honor* going to a teammate who tallied 500 points. ROGER RUMINSKI New Record Set on Aussie Lake by Speed Ace PERTH, Australia Donald Campbell broke the world water speed record with 276.33’ miles per hour today and became the first man in history to establish Nodus «f, bot), iand and water speed rec-Bloomfield Hills Country Club ords m the same calendar year, finishes first to toe annual Mich- on the f 1 r-s t run on L a k e £,os ! Dumbleyung he reached 283.60 Knollwood and Edgewood coun- „ ^ the ^ try clubs. I —„ u July 27 - Roland Rednet of, *n,,p ? ’ Orchard Lake sails to victory in' j: the Shearwater International Campbell already held the ex-Racing Association’s North toting water speed record of American championship at Cass 1260.35 m,p.h., which he set up at Lake. | Lake Coniston, England, in May July 27 - Frank Crowell, I1959 ■speed record for conventional lidrive cars with 103.1 m.p.h. at Lake Eyre- South || •®n Schflsol. Austral. I July 30 — 300 Bowl's softball Campbell set up his new mark I team trims Arro Realty, 33, to on the anniversary of the death I take top Pontiac Class A title. ! of his equally famous father, Sir I July 31 - Ted Kroll wins Malcolm Campbell, himself a I Michigan PGA championship at I former holder of both land and II Saugatuck. . I water world records. * . -----------—:------- II * AUGUST 1! August.5 — Dave Keaggy of Ohio Quintet Repeats I Drayton Plains led the men’s | II division of toil National Archery 1! Championship to New York. Oct. 15 — Farmington’s Rex Cawley wins 403meter hurdles race for Olympic Games gold medal. Oct. 16 — Pontiac Central wins first football game in two seasons, 74, over Bay Gty Handy. Oct. 17 — Hayes Jones of Pontiac wins 113meter high hurdles race at Olympic Games. Oct.. 5 — Fisher Body wins " Industrial Golf Championship. .. * ★' ♦ Oct. 23 — George Chicovsky, Mike Samardzija Jr. and Shirley pointer earn berths in the National All-Star Bowling tournament. Oct. 23 - Walled Lake takes sixth straight Inter-Lakes football crown with 52-7 bombing of Pontiac Northern. Oct. 27 — Pontiac Nationals Michigan M, Princeton 78 Iowa 78, Minnesota 74 Fifth Place Arliona 57. Southern California Si Savant* Place Michigan State »3, Wa»hi*gton n Santa Clara 73, St ____________ Third Place San Jose State 54, U. of Pacific 55 PMh Place Loo Angolas Loyola ISO. St. Mary's Calif. 71 Seventh Place - UC Santa Barter* 107, Pepperdlne 80 FAR WIST CLASSIC Oregon S Oregon Si a 48, Tennessee 27 Purdue if, Washir Portland 47 Seventh Place iilngton **— ecus DePaui 47, OMahama City 44 Third Place Brigham Young IIS, Xavier, Ohl Fifth Place Creighton 72, LSU 77 - State 45. Oklahoma 41 Seventh MM7 State 47, Nebraska 42 Third Place • Tech 75, Georgia T« -,UM BOWL w Mexico 55, Texas western Navy 88, Itochetter Third Place Harvard 54 liUTII “ Virginia Military 72, Arks Third Plada Cantenary 77, JMaalselapI 44 MAONOLIA INVITATIOI [ATIONAL Mississippi . INVITATIONAL umptlon 82. Springfield 42 Janler Cat lege HeMday Teeraemont Ann Arbor University High 44, Lan Waver ty 44 Byron 44, Flint Holy Rosary 45 U. of M. Writes State's Top Story, J AugySt 6 - Fred Ewald of Birmingham carded a 72 at Warwick Hills to.take medalist honors.to the 42nd.annual Here’s a listing of the top 10 sports .stories in Michigan in 1964* as selected by sports editors, sports writers and sports-casters. , The rankings 'Include total Last July he broke the land / points with 10 points given for a. first place vote, nine for sec-ond, etc. First place votes- are in parentheses, followed by total pbtots. . * * * _ ' The top 10 stories: . 1, Michigan wins Big Ten football title and trip to Rose BowL (13185) - 2. Owner William Gay Ford of Lions fires five assistant coaches, and head coach George Wilson quits two days later. (3188) 3. Michigan athletes capture nine medals in Olympics (3 111) f ' * * +■ ■ 4. Michigan shares Big Ten basketball title and reaches FLINT (AP) - Bluffton of Ohio succfssfully defended its Flint Junior College Holiday | Basketball. Tournament cham-pionship by defeating Flint JO to the finals Wednesday night '8376. ’ quarterfinals of NCAA touma<-ment. (106) 5. University of Detroit drops varsity football, (89) ' 8. Dave DeBusschere named player-coach of Pistons. (71) 7,. Ted Lindsay returns to Wings after four - year retirement. (61) 8. Race driver Eddie Sachs of Warren is killed in Indianapolis 500.(41)' . 9. Red Wings finish fourth, but almost win Stanley Cup. (36) 10. Benton Harbor, River Rouge, Grosse Potote St. Paul and Britton-Macon win,, respective prep basketball titles. (30) Others, with point tola Is: Lions sign five of first six draft choices, J20); Wings let Toronto draft goalie Terry Sawchuk fori ferenf play, (13); Lions lose crucial game 34-0 to eventual divisional champion Baltimore Colts, (11); Tigers have mediocre start and finish fourth, (10);. .Michigan’s basketball team' 1964-1965r*beatsska is 9-1, still smould tver losing the last gamy sea- son to Oklahoma. BoWl. PERFECT RECORD Arkansas brings Broyles ol Arkansas says it has I made Nebraska doubly-tough. since it will be trying to atone for the joss that marred a per- Arkansas, which shut out its last five opponents with one of ] the Southwest Conference’s j finest defenses, is a six-point. Laccfl Skaters \A/;„ / C.-Anfc*I favorite. Broyles does not subt VvJfl U L rvffllo | scribe to-it ahd.Bob Devaney, the Nebraska coach, says only that Arkansas should be favored because it won more games. of Rolladii/m Pontiac roller skaters ti first places in the Rolladkun’s post - Christmas invitaobnal meet that attracted 350 skal from seven states. Gerry McNeive teamed competition for the first time with Sandy Cohsorta to win the senior dance. They also placed second to free dance. John Odneal and Judy chaels won free dance. Scott Harrity carried off the juvenile boys figure skating ti- mQ.1 Both coaches called lor a, |»"d Peggy Gardner -as tot; Tom McKnolly. Nebraska has a slight edge in both offense and. defense — to the statistics — but .Arkansas has been the toughest to score against. The Cbmhuskers gave up 75 points while Arkansas’ stingy defense allowed only 57. And over the last few games, the Razor backs were invincible. There are a number of other lings working for the Razor-backs. Kep Hatfield is the nation’s leader in punt returns and Arkansas also has one of college football’s finest place-kickers to fed to a sophomore quarter-1 lines. I He also As the possible ■ • ~ • “ ' answer to Hatfield — he has run back punts and kickoffs MB yards. gear*. . . back, Bob Churchich, who ^Boyles says has “the most poise of any sophomore quarterback i’ve ever seen.” The offense also hinges around the smallest fallback ever to appear in the Cotton Bowl -7 Frank Solich. He weighs only. 155 pouiids but has gouged 444 yards 6ut of enemy But Broyles concedes nothing to Nebraska in the way of quarterbacks. He calls his Fred Marshall “the nearest to a complete quarterback I’ve ever nad.” Southfield. Wins Crown in Northwest Tourney Southfield, Cranbrook and Northvllle were .the only area prep basketball teams to garner victories last night in tournament play. The win by Southfield was the biggest one since it earned them the championship of the annual Northwest Suburban Invitational' Tournament at Red-ford Union. The Blue Jays beat the host team, 63-59, behind Ray Schlaffs 18 points. junior-studded lineup clicked for a 58-50 Verdict over Taylor Center. - Mark Cushing and Jerry Imsland scored 14 and 13 pace NorthviUe’s second win in seven tries. Monroe whipped Detroit Thurston, 60-51, in another consolation game. biggest TV audience to history for a sporting event. This will be the first night game in the 31-year history of the event and the weatherman says the weather will be perfect, with temperatures to the 70s. Because Namath’s status to doubtful, the odds on the game have dropped Alabama to a three-point favorite. Before Namath went down, the Crimson ride was a solid touchdown choice. Bryant will start Steve Sloan, ho has played more than Na-iath this past season, at the quarterback spot. Sophomore Wayne Trimble and kicker Buddy French will back him up. Sloan has an injured right knee too, but he was working to practice Wednesday as if nothing ever*had happened, causing Bryant to smile a little for the first time in two days. • w ★ ★ Royal feels the game could be decided by a field goal and baa been working his kicker, David Conway, overtime. David Ray, who set a national record for kicking this past season with 59 points by way of his toe, has been working hard -at his specialty to the Alabama camp. Namath spent about 20 minutes passing the football to team trainer Jim Gobstree Wednesday and seemed to be having little trouble. However, he favored the right knee when he walked. NBA Standings EASTERN DIVISION I Angeles Louis IS .282 I Resets Francisco 1M ... * New 320-Page HOME SHOPPING CATALOG Ask About Your Copy at Gator Bowl kind of work this afternoon that will taper off from the heavy practice pace of recent days. Jones scheduled a 45-minute drill in shorts for Oklahoma, ,“We will review the kicking game and rehearse offensive and defense assignments,” he said. . Films of a half-speed scrimmage Wednesday were rushed through tile developer to be shown to the squad this morning and point out mistakes. * ★ * ' If the team takes the field Friday, it will be for at most 20 fhinutes to keep the players active. ^ , to junior girls figures. D1 a n e I Downing took honors in novice ! ladies figures. Intermediate dance were Dennis Horrall and Diane Downing. ' .. * .. ★ :.r * Skaters from Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and New York competed to the ninth annual 22-event meet. Invitational meets were originated at the Rolladium and this event is used as a measuring stick of skill and progress nationally by skating dubs. New events are originated, .tested and judged each year at Rolladium for possible national use. Nebraska offense Others of interest competing: to that tournament were Walled | Lake (a 69-58 loser to Ypsil-anti), Farmington (64-56 victim of Livonia Bentley) and! Berkley (77-68 loser to Wayne). Cranbrook took fifth place to the Riverview tourney with a 57- j 51 triumph over Taylor Center. j Jim Bailey hit 7A points and pulled in 18 rebounds to pace pie winners '(4-3 over-all). Northville’s Mustangs c a p-tured seventh place at River is I Rouge’s Invitational as their UNITED TIRE SERVICE Early Bird Special! HEAVY DUTY SNO-OAPS 30-MONTH ROAD HAZARD GUARANTEE! * Exchange Wttttmta tut Mere—Plus Tlx ATTENTION: [. Your Deportment (loro, I NiNwnl Credit Card Give* Ye* li UNITED TIRE SERVICE •'WHERE PRICKS ARE DISCOUNTED—NOT QUALITY” 1007 Baldwin Ave. 3 MINUTES FROM DOWNTOWN PONTIAC FOURTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 81, 1964 Suggest Co-Op Slate for Milwaukee Fans CHICAGO W- Milwaukee Braves owner Bill Bartholomay has denied making a reported 41 million offer to permit the Braves to move to Atlanta for next season, rather than waiting for the 1M6 campaign. Bartholomay, a Chicago insurance executive, made the de- SPARTAN DODGE ★ ★ ★ DODGE DART AND DODGE TRUCK SPARTAN DODGE 211 S. Saginaw, FE 8-4541 Iriiy Your Holiday Filat to u. ui don't forget : to renew you supply. EXPERTS CAMERA SHOP nial Wednesday amid suggestions that Milwaukee get a 1965 program of “borrowed" big league baseball by having different teams play there. The two developments in the mixed-up Milwaukee baseball picture were: -He branded untrue a published report in the Dayton Ohio News that the Braves will pay $1 million in a cash settlement to the Milwaukee County Board for release from 1965 contract to play in Milwaukee. Owners Phil Wrigley of the Chicago Cubs in the National League and Charles 0. Finley of the Kansas City A’s in the Amer-League promised cooperation in any over-all major league program which might bring big league baseball at Milwaukee On a cooperative basis in 1965. LEND LEASE The lend-iease program might work like this: The Cubs, A’s and other agreeable clubs would play a home stand in Milwaukee which would total about 50 games. In return, the Milwaukee County Board would, free the Braves from their 1965 stadium contract and permit them to move to Atlanta in April 1965. Although Bartholomay squashed the 41-million report in the Dayton News story, he said the Braves “recognize a financial obligation to Milwaukee and would be willing to meet an equitable settlement.” Wrigley and Finley have expressed a desire to help out " ‘ Braves by playing some in Milwaukee in 1965. . '■it ★ In New York, however, Commissioner Ford Frick said the lend-lease program is “not feasible” if it’s Just a matter of filling in for one year. If all the fictional League chibs came in the matter would have to be brought up for league approval and if the American League js brought in, then it would become a matter for the commissioner’s office.” 7*r the New Year hold for you all.,. good health, good times and good fortune. We look forward to serving you next year1. Aiiftlk I , CASS AVE. TIRE t BRAKE SERVICE IMR Ora — ,11. FE 2-8422 Cazzie's Shot Ends Contest Wolytrine* Overcome 14-Point Deficit NEW YORK W —Bill Bradley sat hunched over on the Princeton bench, nervously twisting a towel, and watched the lead he had so spectacularly forged against the nation’s top-ranked college basketball team slowly fade away. When Michigan’s Cazzie Russell tossed in a 20-foot jump shot with three seconds to w winning it for th* Wolverines 80-74 — Bradley burred to the dressy ingroom. / it ★ it An hour later the door was still locked. / “He doesn’t want tojitttt anyone,” Princeton Coadh Butch van Breda Kolff explained. “He doesn’t want tb talk to any one. What can. I /Say? I really don’t know. I/asked the kids what I should say, but they couldn’t telline. Maybe I should have takqn Bill out when he and saved him. Maybe ft’s toy fault.” AP Phttofax KICKING ABOUT - Princeton ace Bill Bradley puts everything he has into this shot at the basket against Michigan last night in the Holiday Festival at Madison Square Garden. Bradley missed this shot but wound up with 41. points. Watching the kicking effort are Michigan’s Johq Thompson (center) and Larry Tregoning. U. of M. rallied to win, 4(F7fe” Duke Downs OSU in Double Overtime fm C 0 L U M B U S, OhioXAP)— Eighth-ranked Duke bit tied stubborn Ohio State through two overtimes Wednesday night before defeating the Buckeyes 94-99. The Ohioans averted defeat twice by a matter of seconds before finally going down. ' * * * % Duke’s Steve Vacendak sent the Blue Devils into the lead for good with 1:20 remaining in the second overtime peridd'and teammates Ron Herbster and sophomore star Bob Verga sewed it/up with a pair of free throws each. The regulation game ended at 71-71 after Ohio c e n t e r Jim Shaffer scored and was fouled frifofive seconds left. Shaffer missed his opportunity at the foul line end the game went into first overtime. At Los Angeles, UCLA had little difficulty subduing Utah but third-ranked Minnesota lost to Iowa 76-74 in the third- place game on Gary Olseon’s two free throws with three seconds left. * The Bruins, peanwhile,. rode Keith Erickson’s 20-point effort to their ninth consecutive victory and handed the Utes their first defeat in 11 games. Bub of all the tournaments, the ohe with the weirdest windup in this day of 100-point games was at Portland, Ore., where Oregon State held Tennessee to eight points In the first half and ended the Volz unbeaten string at seven with a 48-27 victory in the f i n a 1-e of the Far West Classic. * ★/, , Here’s the way the other, tournaments wound up: All-College at Oklahoma City —the granddaddy of all the tournaments Went to DePaul. The BlueDemon s, led by Jesse Nash’s 20 points and the work of most valuable player Jim Mur- ’ACULAR lley, Princeton’s 6-foot-5 America, Olympian and Scholar, put on one of the most spectacular individual performances ever staged in Madison Square Garden Wednesday night. The celebrated duel between Bradley and Michigan’s Cazzie Rusaell in the semifinals of foe Holiday Festival Tourney didn’t really develop. It was more Bradley vs. Michigan. * At/. *. i When he left the game with five personal fouls, Bradley had these statistics: IS field goals in 25 attenipts, 15 of 20 from foe foul line, 41 points,, nine rebounds and four assists. And foe man he guarded in Princeton’s man to man defense, Oliver Darden, scored one point for Michigan. And he also brought the ball down against the Michigan press. “He’s tremendous,” Michigan Coach Dave Strack said. “I saw him 20 minutes foe other night and 40 minutes tonight, and he’s just tremendous.” SHIFT DEFENSE Michigan shifted from a zone press to man to man press, and PrincetoriVGary Walters broke through for a layup that gave foe Tigers a 77-63 lead. But that was their last look-in. With Bradley gone, Michigan started stealing the ball, forcing Princeton mistakes, dominating the rebounding and slowly, steadily whittling away at foe lead. They outscored foe Tigers 17-f foe rest of the way. MICHIGAN PRINCETON OPT • V T Treg'ng 4 M 12 Bradley 13 15-JO 41 Darden 0 1-5 1 Hoorlaur 4 14 * Bunt In 710-10,14 Rosin'll 3 0-0 4 ThtmgR * “ • ’ * * Pomey 1 44 4 Adler Cbinwi o 0-0 0 Kecti nini o M o Tetel* Hn-MM Total* Michigan Fouled I H • 30 33-33 70 . JO 30—73 i7 Ion, Buntln. Haggerty Has It! OPEN FRIDAYS UNTIL 9 P.M. FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE Ntw Weldwood® V-Plank CRAFTSMAN HICKORY PREFINRHED PANELING Popular WOOD BEAM CEILING DESIGN fcr FeierCewercfal ICE FISHING yam hum o beautiful CraL_ liked Paneling—bj fmKKm SSonr. 4’x6’Panels only $141 ea. , foo Worm — 4 Inohuctiom Easy to Build with UPSON ALL WEATHER PANELS Thin uniquR idtt is suspended —*H"f brings the rich effect of wood beam ceilings, into any rookn of year home. Combined with famous Armstrong CeOing Penelo, them wood-like metal “beams” art ideally suited for off sow reome, lowering high ceilings, or covering unsightly —ni»gr- Taka ad vantage of this new, assy way from Armstrong ta crests this dramatic design and unique charm *59" ^■iMgernC SHHBcaMv W HAGGERTY LUMBER 6 softly co. 2414 HA48EIITY HWY, Waited Lake MA 44861 - EL 8-6108 7 A.M.4 F.IL-8AT.T4 Montreal Six Nips Toronto, Takes Lead By The Associated Press , The Chicago Blade Hawks must spend New Year’s Eve trying to earn back a share of foe National Hockey League lead. Montreal pushed ahead of Chicago Wednesday night, edging Toronto 4-3 on third period goals by John Ferguson and Jean Guy Talbott The victory gave foe Canadiens 41 points to 39 for the Black Hawks, who were idle.\* 4K it it4', Chicago plays at Detroit tonight while Montreal rests. The Canadiens spotted foe Maple Leafs two goals in -the first period but roared back for two in each of foe last two peri-Talbot’s goal at 11:65 of the final stanza was foe difference after Ron Ellis tallied for Toronto With 16 seconds left. ■* Ferguson had snapped foe 2-2 deadlock at 8:34 of foe period. Goals by Red Kelly and Dave Keon vaulted the Leafs into a 2-0 lead, but Claude LaRose and Bobby Rousseau fired in Montreal goals near foe beginning and foe end of foe middle period for the tie. ★ ,* * NHL Standings STOPS SCORING BID — Toronto Maple Leaf goalie Terry Sawchuk gets an assist from Allan Stanley (26) as hie smothers a scoring fry by foe Montreal Canadiens. Bob Pulford (20) and Bob Baun (21) hustle Montreal’s Dave Baton away from net while Henri Richard cruises in from right^ phy, defeated Oklahoma City 87-60 in the 29th renewal. Big Eight at Kansu City — Riney Lochmann Upped in a basket wifo two seconds left, giving Kansu a 53-51 victory over Colorado. Lochmann wound up with 15 points, thru less thai teammate A1 Lopez. Sugar Bowl at New Orleans— Despite the poor play of 6-foot-10 star Clyde Lee, Vanderbilt rolled to an easy 80-47 triumph over Louisville wifo John Ed Miller leading the way wifo 20 points. * ★ * Gator Bond at Jacksonville, Fla. — Gary Keller, a 4-foot-9 sophomore, scored 20 points and led Florida to a 02-49 victory over Text?. #MI# wfpTF &9P fgY i §1} jigs? i« $ Totol, M 33-34 ,4 TotalO 30 11-17 30 Totol foul*—Dull, 17, Ohio Walt 37. ““"“S4B00: 12,454. FT TP 785 gsr 7a i 13 1-4 27 Km 3 3-4 7 I I 1-1 J Clark 2 M 7 3 M 0 Y«1«, f U| 24 i 1‘? ! EHW (Hi PI Ttiata . 17 SMI 74 ........... 31 45—71 / . MM ..... ..........17 vJtb r»w— out—low,: Pooolot. Rodgor,) Mnnmota: Dvorank, Ngrlhwgv. Total foul*—Iowa 23. Minnotot* » yang ll 44 M j Hm 4 2-4 10 i Hnt'r 13-4 5 1 Kfich’l* O 04 0 > Chicago at Detroit Friday', Corn,, Toronto at Boston Now York'at Chicago ’ FMtherman, 173, Totltpo, Aril., 4. Wilson Ponders Oilers From AFL MOBILE, Ala. (UPI)-George Wilson, former head coach of the Detroit Lions, said Wednesday night he would decide within 30 days whether to accept offers to coafo teams in foe American Footall League. Wilson, 51, who resigned last week from foe Liou without explaining his reasons, said in an interview that two AFL teams have offered him head coaching jobs. He said one team matched what he was being paid at De-‘ troit and another “is offering me a great deal more,” He said, however, he woald wait the 30 days to see if any- tssssssssssssssssss IHBhIavyI^ NEW TREAD SNOW TIRES A TREMENDOUS BUY * FOR WINTER DRIVING BETTER-STRONGER FULL ROAD HAZARD GUARANTEE 4.50x13 7.35 x14 | » 7.00 x 13 .7.50x14 r 4.54x14 6.00x14 1 4.95x14 454x15 [ 7.04x14 4.70x15 TUBI sr mum uu Uc il WWTEWALLS $TBtn2^1980 CUSTOM RETREAD 444 Mt. Cltmtns St., Cor. Cast Bfod*, Pentiac Open 9 AM.-• P.M. Daily - Mione FE 4-4971 U. S. ROYAL TIRES Sr| your spmrm I* tkt trunk thing develops which woold allow him to remain in the National Football League. He did not rule out a job as head coach of the Chicago Bears. NOTHING ON BEARS At present, Wilson said, there was absolutely no truth to rumors that he will take over foe coaching duties of George Halas, owner of the Chicago Bears. Halas is foe only man in professional football who has been wifo one team, foe Bears, longer than Wilson has been with Detroit. *» \ ^ Ar Ar * W i 1 son declined to explain why he decided to resign freon the-Liou organization. He did not deny, however, that the release of five of his assistants was a factor. He said wherever he went in coaching, he planned to take them wifo him'. „ Thes* assistants are line coach Les Bingaman- Bob Nuss-baumer, both here to help Wilson with the North squad of the Jan. 9 Senior Bowl, Aldo Forte, Don Doll and Sonny Grandelius. Wilson, who hu been at Detroit since 1949, became head coach in 1957 after foe resigu-tion of Buddy Parker, coach of the Pittsburgh Steelers. Wilson stressed that he wu leaving the Liou on good terms wifo everyone in management, including millionaire owner William Clay Ford. “My future is in -/football,” Wilson said. “Fottball, and especially Detroit, hu been good to me. • “1 have no hard feeling against Detroit or anyone connected wifo foe team. Detroit is a terrific sports town. “I’m not,telling my reasons fpr resigning because I don’t want, to cause a stir. This thing already has been blown out of proportion.” . . > Phone FE 4-1 SSI H. W. Hntteilocier Agency, Inc. 306 RIKER BUILDING, PONTIAC, MICHIGAN V BONDS—FIRE— AUTO —MARINE m ■ LIFE—-HEALTH — COMMERCIAL ~ St. Louis Tops Detroit by 5 Coach DeBusschor* Has 33 in NBA Loss DETROIT (UP1) - The St. Louis Hawks Wednesday night won their second game in a row under new player coach Richie Guerin in defeating the Detroit Pistons 125-120. Lennie Wilkens had 21 for the winners, Bob Pettit 28 and Chico Vaughn 27 as the Hawks won their third straight game. Pettit, who came back to play Tuesday night after missing eight games wifo a back injury, also had 16 rebounds. ★' k > ie* Detroit player-coach Dave De-Busschere had 33 for the Pistons who led early in the game, 25- 14. But Detroit wu outscored 14-2 when St. Louis went ahead 26- 27 at the end of the quarter, t. Louis led 63-57 at the half. The. Pistons pulled to within four points several times in foe second half but usually a lay-up by Vaughn or Wilkeu took off foe pressure. *> * * After foe game, the Pistons announced they had released on waivers guard Willie/ Jones, a five-year veteran. / ST. LOUIS OftaOIT _ Farmor 4 0-0 13 DoB'c*a : 11 «-!•» Hogan 3 M «Dlj'oor 4 I * II PvHIt I 13-1331 Horffg IMS sum 1 3-4 IlMlg I S-i ll Vaughn » 71117 m3o» S 44 a wmSt* n w a scoif 11 >ji if Thom 4 4-5 11 Total* 44JW41» total* 44 30441a, St. LOOK ............. 24 IS 27 35-125 Detroit .............. 27 27 30 34—114 Fouiod out — Hon*. Totol fouls — St. Loult 32. Oolrolt.31. Russians Near Hockey Title COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (41 — Russia scored a 7-5 victory over Canadff in the International Hockey Tournament Wednesday night to virtually sew up the championship. -, ■it ★ it The triumph gave foe Soviets three victories in four games and six points in the tourney standings. Chechoslovakia, which meets Cauda in the flute Thursday night, hu e chance to tie Russia in the won-lost standings but the. Czechs would have to score more than 12 goals to beat out foe Soviets on a goals-scored basis. * * ♦ Russia has scored 23 in four games. The Czechs have-.ll in ; three games. ( THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 8l> 1964 FIFTEEN i Major Hoople Sees Bowl Win for ¥ By MAJOR AMOS B. HOOPLE Originator sf Bowl Games Egad, friend*, truly the cup runneth over for the football fans this New Year's weekend. One might say you pigskin devotees are assured of several bowisful of enjoyment. No fewer than five of the nation’s top * 10 collegiate powers — Michigan, Arkansas, Nebraska, Tex-. ready for their supreme effort of the season. ORANGE BOWL Texas 21, Alabama 12. The; best game of the day — er— | make that night! And when the j moon sets over Miami on Jan. 1, Texas will have roiled back I the Crimson Tide! , ■ COTTO NBOWL Nebraska M, Arkansas 10. The Hoople System’s upset special. Nebraska’s Comhuskers, a six-point underdog, will prevail by just that margin — hak-kaff! GATOR BOWL Florida State 26, Oklahoma i •23. The high-fjying Seminoles| will outlast the Sooners in a free-scoring contest. as and Alabama — will appear hi the bowl games. Go on with the forecast, and a Happy New Year to all! ROSE BOWL Michigan 10, Oregon State | University 0. It’s the fayorite score of the Wolverines who , licked another OSU (Ohio State University), by the same margin to get into die Rose Bowl. SUGAR JlOWL Louisiana State id, Syracuse 9. Okey Bayou, ^lis column’s Louisiana correspondent, r e-ports the stingy Tigers, who limited their opponents to a 7.9 ; point-per-game average, Vikings, Rams Swap Players Minnesota 'Completes Deal for Jack Show MINNEAPOLIS-ST. PAUL IP — The Minnesota Vikings Wednesday acauired veteran end Jim Red Phillips and tacMe Gary Larsen from the Los Angeles Rams. w * : The Vikings said it was part of the deal that sent Jack Snow of Notre Dame to the Rams. Snow, brilliant end for the Irish, was Minnesota’s first choice in the National Football League draft. But when it was evident the Californian preferred to play in warmer climate the Vikings gave the Rams an opportunity to negotiate with him. San Di) go of the American JR League also had drafted Sho) W * ' Phillips, 28' is a seveh-year veteran of the NFL. He is the third top pass catch/r of dll time with the Rams, having snared 333 for 4,95y yards and 27 touchdowns. During the past season the former Auburn star was bothered with a hand injury. He caught 17 passes, two for touchdowns. All-Star Berth to Tom Petrie Clarkson let Skater , Continues Point Lead i Arrow Auto Wash scoring star Tom Petrie of Clarkston did not score Tuesday night as. the Weatherman Has Littfe Good News for Skiers Michigan’s - recent wave of warm weather has spelled bad news for skiing enthusiasts in the southwestern part of the state. Most of the ski slopes in the southeast section of the state Oakland Countv sextet to the are report closed, or with Metropolitan Detroit Juntor p^,,. corKjiti0ns with a few ex-Hockey League improved 1 t * ceptions. third place standing. * * *■ \ However, thisb^ing^in the ^ operat6rs weren.t able M wijL- OV®" ., , , to make any Snow until very Sports did n0*nc0? . early this morning. Despite the raceH7hM22 g£ls and lf'^J* ***** conditi^,- several of the local i be open tonight’. assists. * v * * Petrie also has been named to the circuit’s All-Star team which will accompany the Detroit Red Wings. Monday to Hamilton, Ont., for an, exhibition double-header. The Metro Lea guy stars will meet Hamilton’s Junior B team while the Junior. A sextet will ^ $0^3,^ Michtoai tangle witK the Wings. (motorcycle ice ,racing will ge ; Also T>i<*ed_on ^All-Stars(un(krway Jan 10 _ Xhe were Farmtafrton s T I conditions permitting. >nd Royal Oak’s pave- Durkin,, f # %/ Motorcycle Races Set lor St. Clair The Southeastern Michigan This includes Mt. Holly, Pb* Knob, Jack Pine Valley (ad possibly Dry den) which will all welcome to the New , Year whether-or not there is skitogv Skiing remains good, however, in the extreme northers sections of the state. i ■AST MICHISAN Mount Frederick, near Frederic. S-4 bare, skiing fair to good, tow Valley. Gaylord, lour depot °*B?nti AppST'MMnMkl. Freeland, 10-base, skiing fair to aood. Mount Marta, hilt open. M a lord!*J ^aph^tL... Otsego Ski Club, private, Gaylord, 3 base. fair. Sylvan Knob, Gaylord, W base, fall ■ Houghton Lane, para open, skating, sledding. , PONTIAC AREA Drydsn, poor. Irish Hills, Clinton, poor. Jack PM Valley, Lakapert, no Skiing, but fectllttes pten. . Mount HeUy, fplr. : Pine Knpb, Clarkston, no skiing, but feciittiei Sllvarl I vuiag I dosed. bhth on the Arrow squad. Rhome Didn't Warm to Offer by Houston Players Claim NFL Eoss Unfair in Money Matter HOUSTOtl Houston Oiler President Bud Adams saKl I tiotml Football League players Wednesday Jerry Rhome passed Association attacked league up an offer of $106,500 over a commissioner Pete Rozelle four-year period plus an auto-1 Wednesday for changing the 0 w ■ I mofknyl in ivnink mAiiov fr*nm YOU BHlll Local Assistant Pro Fills Cleveland Post Jim jChapman, assistant pro under Warren Orlick at Tam O’Shanter Country Club for the past four years, has been named head professional at the. Chagrin Valley Country Club in Cleveland. j The head pro position is the DIME IfhlAR first for the 26-year-oid Chap-I man, a native of Scotland. Hie OAMSTON, mkhman club at Cleveland has a mem-Fhooo, dis-Mdi < bership of 500._______________. EVERYTHING FOR THE SKIER! SKI BOOTS •»-29.50 M Ladies’ Figure SKATES 11-5 Largo Soloclion of SKI JACKETS SPORTING ' V GOODS 6MW. Hufon^A ^ called for the league office to receive 15 per cent of the net receipts from the game. CHANGES TAKE mobile before signing with dji)fffSjito VXl* Howe5er * h^said National Football League Dallas divkJed P P 8 ‘ took it upon himself to Cowboys. / Ordeli Braase cf the Balti- j ?a"«e. the,hbr®fdo^ J Jj Even so, Adams American Football Uague OH- *Z£j*J* Z ^ th ers’ failure to sign the Univenfc , had -grossly un:] n?eant ^at in 1963 the ty of Tulsa passing record-set- fair in looking after league own-! commoners ^office took ter is “not a big loss.” ers but tailing to consult the i JJMJ"“ JjJM* ^'l*®®** He said the Oilers withdrew players on this matter.” * [XSndXS^ from negotiations with Rhome. According to Braase, in 1962 vear it is expected that before he signed with the Cow- j*bd the years prior to that, the ieaeue office will receive at boys because "we felt h, •£.£ g.-gf-m ,rom m , , * ______ _ |championship game between Baltimore • and Cleveland, | Braase said. j "This change is a flagrant | abuse of the commissioner’! j .. 4 p. powers and duties to represent tournament Champ ithe p,5yers #s weu *»the own- Olympic Skier Favorite Today in Slalom Racp VAIL, Colo. 'P - Olympian I Jean Saubert of Oregon State,) nosed out in Wednesday’s downhill, was picked to win today’s alaloijn race at the Alpine Holiday Classic climaxing nearly, two weeks of training by the nation’s top Meiers. : Miss Saubert, double medal winner at the Olympics in Innsbruck earlier this- year, ran) three-tenths of a second behind i , Sandra Shellworth, University) |/0f Colorado sophomore from Boise, Idaho, in the downhill. Twenty-eight girls are entered in the slalom run on the Giant Steps course. * ★ * Jim Heuga and Billy Kidd, students at University of Colorado, were favored among the 74 men entered in their slalom race. Heuga and Kidd finished third and fourth in Wednesday’s downhill behind winner Ni Oral of Stockton, Calif., and Bill Maroit of Aspen, Colo. Races have been /scheduled for nine ponsecutive Sunday afternoons. on Lake SI. Clair near | Mt. Clemens. The ice course will be in front of the Blue Boat! Brighton, clortd. Mount. ChrlsH*r"bx»ord, closed. WEST' MICHIGAN Big “M“, Manistee. 44 base, m«klng Boyne HlfhlanS*? Harbor Springs, 44 Lakevlew open, t 1 colder weather. Caberfae. Cadillac. IMS Inches a Feature events will be the j Michigan Grand Prix Feb. 7 and | the State Championship, Feb. Thunder Mountain, BOyne Falls, I stalling.” skis : SKI PANTS i. WELOEN5""1"6 Adams reported the offer to Rhome as $91,500 in salary over a four-year period, plus a»$15,-000 bonus and an automobile. In total, it was the biggest offer the-Oilers ever made to a rookie, but Billy .Cannon, who signed a three-year-contract at $33,000 per year for the first three years of the Oilers in the APL, still holds the Houston record to salary per season. A *. A Cannon, now. the property of Oakland- also is believed to be the highest paid pro football 'M' Hockey Team ers,” Braase said. | The association inVited Ro-BOSTON (AP) *— Michigan’s jgHg to meet with them later NCAA champions swept to | this week to discuss the matted, their third straight victory and captured the . Boston Arena Christmas Hockey Tournament with a 4-3 victory over Boston University Wednesday. Harvard defeated Northeastern, 5-1, and 45on third place. Michigan trailed 2-1 before MSU Reminds Fans . 'M' Game a Sellout 2 Sisters Share Award as Top French Athlete PARIS UBS'—=- Christine and Marielle Goitschel, skiing sisters who won a gold and a silver medal each in the Winter Olympics, .were named France’s athletes of 1964 bv (he daily sports newspaper L’Equipe Wednes- j day. „ . The paper’s choice annuailv rates near-official status. It is the first time that there have been two winners and the first time also that a man did not take the award. rookie untH a reported New the middIe pcriod ended, on Jim otfer of $100,000 per Quinn,8 {ir£ of two goals for EAST LANSING (UPI) -Michigan State’s athletic department issued another reminder today that the basket- Special STANDARD ENGINE MBIINJOU 6 CyL.,. • • *96" V-8's ,.. .*115" This Includes . . . Rings, Rod Boa r-ings, Main Boaring, Grind Valvos, Fit Pins, Doglaro Cylindor Walls, Gaskets, Oil anil Labor! —.-——>ALSO ■— FACTORY REBUILT ENGINES 695 AUBURN RD. iSSi Winter Resorts Maps- | York Jet .JPH year for three years, plus $d9,-1 j^h“utoV^s7ty!¥ut°Ow”w Immediate . Boerd .. _ water end Infer Sy euellHud non-electlve oft Ic la I, \ —-------‘nfed by the Townsh ____ jpprovel of the Seerd ■ . Works et ttae County oT OMiendl ■ sublect at ell times to the super*leery JtfeUtlen and cqMrol el the Township Spard, which shall have ultimate reegen slbility tor the avstem end for enforce-men* of thte enEnanca end any, additional rules end, rdPulMloni adapted wffh. re-“Tl %l offSn-s/employees and Ments ef the TewnArip Mard, Insofar ee melr i powers end c ____„ and shell not vi lh| authority — — Xm ... revenues of the pySEp shall askta and paid or trpneferred .!* Rje Jftem, as in Section li ef meateve- __________ .(twain .the tewnihip Cfjunty. pt DAltw, and shell be Of MAINS. rWftwT therein gravtded. ... J. EXTENSION . . jssfei Board or fay petlHert from property .. art. Petitions tier the consIrudBn ef new meins shall be addressed to the Township Bond upon blank hums provided tor that purpose. The township Board may* refuse lo pram, or may grant the same. allow operation of the etr-eendh ttonlng unit by direct me ef.«Mer trom the Waterford PMUMP rownship or by such gar-earn as may DO specially euthorlMd by the Water Oepertment. -4.J. Ne person, Arm' or corporation (hall open or cefiee le be tpuned any fire hydrant wtthefft . tlnf securing a "Permit I* Use Flre*Hydrwd." at the Water Department Office. A deposit m fifty del Ion < sso.00) win be required. Such parson, firm or corporation must report to ttwe - Water Department when such use' is wrmlneted, at wtikh time a hydrant Inspection will be mode end an Inspection charge ot IMS the east el the eetlmated amount of water used, end the cost at repairing the hydrant H -• tram ftp. deposit an posltor. tf the depeelf le Insuftlcieiit i. cover told costs, the permit holder shell pay the deficit. AS. The township water Department must approve the type, elm el openings, and types of i —** ■* drants Installed n private property shell In any manner oeetruct free access to or .place or -------- porarlly or, otherwise any obled, material, snow, debr*- — ------ —•— ture ot any kin twenty (St) teat such obstruction be removed at a pipes any preml.......... connection* for fire apparatus are pro-any pipe, each connection “ inseld pipes shell .h*« shell be taken or used threufi ■ openings or hose for any purpose a then for ekttngulsMng fires, except the purpose ef testing seM fire eq conducted under^a^sp partment. 4.7. Each premises ti Ice shall pay therefor a quarterly charge at follows: For 4" service connection — S 50.00 For 4" service connection — is.oo Far I" service connection -<4. The Tbwni —— water used by it i shelf pdy 030.00 per year 4 30c per 100 cubic that srallpy' Mr tTve 4* <» each eremtaeii AMs the’flrsi ^t.m.arMrg' liking on end ,ntr Section 10. . DEBT SERVICE CHARGE. On end after January 1, IMA , promisee connected to the system • pay a quarterly debt service cherg,. computed on «M basis effiwter sir, ,, forth below, such charge te continue ■OK Township's ebllgetlmt to me County ot Oakland Uhjg lw agpye ine,, honed contract have been fully Mi*, charged, to-wlt: Meter SIM OuertOrly Chergs WOA each prtm- —_____________,jig to any of th« Township water meins shell pay a capital •ecorJance with Frembe w structures fo the County queHu-MOls of !*T*r •<^»»u*o Pay such ’charge "HI M^ifNd lS£ ^ Sf"ifS^ZfoZsr'mSsr' Sllfl w;' Sas^bwteTffi and In Mitt event shall p*y the first in »* Issuence effhetapISi P*rmit. The "ceeh amounts" and "in. Ste Inetellmem ^**"*“.4. ihsr' Yw ’ . J IS »*S 1 ^'Ty^Stw ___^mentioned centrart I Oakland, shad pay a on charge competed up ^ yy to hie advanfMern^~payim ^nt'SSSS,.'?' ** s^pay, prior to letuei* e» 114. Premises connected te water Wjlns hereafter tlnenced by lend a,. ... required, .ft .... __ _ furnishing and ki- te supply pipe, curb slop, stop Ttr-rS Water : . main, te the/pseperty Mined by the Departr shall not apply te on services m by private parties. The service pipe the property line to the premises be considered private plumbing an maintained by the owner of me m Failure to keep service Section 5. USE OF WATER. i.l. No steam boiler ihgll be directly connected to the water servlet pipe. —* owner shell provide a tank of tuff capacity to afford a supply for at — ten (14) hours, into which the service pipe shall discharge. which he hat possession. •53. Where awmrahie occupied by tiles, ^or wh • a business building It charge for. water will be mane agomsi she owners of the property, tor me whole: Provided, however, mat a pulldlng or buildIngi under one ownership cgnsWIng of stvoral promises may be served by more then one water serv- terved by one meters ter— ‘ (rate from Failure ef type arrangement, ne um, in a manifold dr-pay for water received will discontinuance of water to 5.4. Where a building, o as a tingle building , or fitted with one service pipe. . ef being divided by sale or —............ . has been or may be hereafter subdivided and each subdivision shell be separately owned, the eaparete division or division* so made must be qoMtecIM ‘ by separate service pipes * but capable r otherwise. or interfere In any way with cock, valve or fixture connects system by placing In, on or ' tiding materials, rubbish, t type air catwnonlng unit* will be i lowed. An approved water conserving type shea be «ne: a. Which It equipped with cooling tower, atmospheric condenser, • spray pend, or other equipment which then directly or Indirectly cool refrigerant, end. lest by evepqretton or by flush mg Rian II gallons of water ft Waterford Water System p 7.7. If e motor falls to ft register, the consumer will fat charged i average quarterly consumption, t __ ’* __ “ time; stated' I . premises will be'tesiid by hie Water jSTdani thL.’Tn' - ^*vr^.^y«v?n«r.CUt^ I *^An w * charged a< Ml unpaid * be restored. adjusted ts hereinafter provided. Jwv charges shell be the NIMI be* the obligation of fere wlfh or move ZJTXoZ | ^ any service connection without tint re-1 cowuniptlon chbroes *rom the by-pest ’h*" tm partment. velvet. Inspection and inspectors. toremen and empl _______ boerd whose duti .. o enter upon prlyMe premises Inspection and examlnattf- " " ctures or attachments rtfh the water w win De prevxiea with a badge or ether credentials as. the Board deem proper to Identify them as m lied agents of the department. N specter, foreman, or ether employe < bqard shell be entitled to enter ... any private premises, unless he .carries t presentation _____ _____antlelr —J- s at all** reasonab ^"’MircheriS ±5, * thereof. Including the .examination Of the entire water Supply and plumbing system upon sold premises. No person shall refuse to admit any authorized Inspector _____ from said premises sfisr glvir twenty-four hours notice to the owner i occupant df said premises. 1-3. Ne person net an authorized offlo or employe ef the Township Board itu have or wear or exhibit any badge i credential of the Boerd. It shall be tl duly of each and every officer *~J " —| " “y Board «twn ----------- orthwith, te : Beard et . A minimum dUdrierty wster c — shall be made »------- i premises conn ■ of multiple c quarterly t „ __ ____ water -for each, such taper _ _______ pency without further charge. Ad|ust-— wIN gi made to cemeenseti far ‘ which continue lor • full irterly charge shall be computed on bests of malar size as set forth >w, which charge shell permit quer-y usage of the specified guMMy of ter without further charge, tevrtt; Mu -----Water Usage WnbtHid (Cubk Feet) t 4.00 14M Mi I4M 15.00 2,000 ..I. Should mere weteV be consumed by any premises in any qverter than the quantity permitted far Hie minimum ^—e at specified above, then an aiftl-l water' consumption thprgo, shall •do for ell water ceneumoe In ex-of Mom specified quentmes. is JtJ. s "Mice is required to be fh» seme may be given, ,r0v,»lp"* . 13.4. Any | violating any ordinance, up Hundred (0100.00 end In the Impo.______ costs, the court may r tenfence thefft default of the'payment /the fine Imposed and costs the -cf-*?**?.,,be. cbMlnyTIn the Cognty Jell M Oakland CMnht, for any per Ion "M. exceedmb nsfify (OOV days, or both *uck. flne. m Imprisonment M the discretion ot the Court. byfl«i bLSb8!^ teSTr T6wnshlp9^nl>»1 hum the date ef passage end shall take effect on Janumy 1, ffM. An affidavit Ih the fact and manner df.ouch CteHc— r**>r* "f the Township 114 Any and Ml ordinances and reso-lutlens heretofore adopted MBHjMKt rapeeltd rft tie ■ i Pewsd THE PONTIAC PBlteSS. THURSDAY. DECEMBER 81, 1964 SEVENTEEN 1 met 1 The folk)wing ere top prices covering sales uf lpcbii- *1 produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the .Detroit Bureau of Market*as-of Monday. Produce FRUITS Apple*. Golden Delicious, Du. 13.75 Apple*, Rid Delicious, bu. 175 Apples, JpnptMn, bu. . 2.5C VEGETABLES Beets, topped, bu. CAbMS*, curly, bu. ....... Cebbepe. Red, bu. ........ Cebbepe. Sid. ............ Cerrols, Cello F*. ....... Celery, II Honors* Persley Root Parsnips, bu. Persnlps, cello pak Potatoes, new, is ibe. Potatoes, new, 50 lbs. . Rod lends. M. I Squash, Acorn, bu. Squash, Buttercup, bu. . Turnips, topped, bu. .... * LETTUCE Celery, Ceppebo, Du. Poultry and Eggs Roosters over 5 Ibe. 23-34; Broilers end Iryers M lbs. Whites 1*40 DETROIT ROOS DETROIT (AP) - Epp, prices paid per dozen by lirst receivers (mcludlnp U.S.): ....Is* Grade A '—•“ I _____________Jumbo UVi petto larpe 32-37VS; larpe 3IW-34; medium 25-25; small 20-23; Browns Grade A larpe 30Vj-34; medium 25; small 20-21; checks 19- K * CHICAGO SUTTBR, EGO* / . CHICAGO (AP) — Chlcepo Mercantile Exchenpe - butter steady; wholesale buying Arises unchanged; *3 score AA 57%; tf A 57%; 00 8 50%; PC SOW; cert Hjjsrvu so c fw ■ Epps about steady; Whd4M*le buyinp prices unchenped; 70 per cant or better . Grade A whites 21; mlxed/21; mediums standards 25; dirties unquoted; checks 22. CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO (AP) —/ (USDA) - Live ’ poultry: wholesale /buying prices unchanged; roasters 23-25; special ted White Rock ttyers 10-19%. * Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK / DETROIT7!AP) (USDA) ~ Today’s receipts. Cattle 50. calves 25, hops'25. slaughter i demand ns 1 prices 5c I 'fsL r choice HM-tifi l Veelers prime 35-37; "oood 2WS7 *tand*rd 1S-25; cull and utllityi IMS. Sheep compered with last week’s slaughter lambs fully 50c higher. SI ter ewes steady; choice WU s 00-105 lb, 21.50-■■I woo led 20 50-21.5; v_. __ IRR them lambs 1*2 pells 00-105 lb 20J0-21J0. Good and chotee shorn 10.50-20.50;’ cull to good ewes 4.00- 22.50; good and choice « American Mocks NOON AMERICAN NEW YORK (AP) — Following H list of selected stock transactions on American Stock Exchange -with n ids.) High Lew Last Chi 13 24% 24% 24% +1 IS 5% 5% 5% 5 41% 41% 41%.+ V Aerolet .50 AmPetrofA .15 ArkLeGas 1.20 Asamera Assd Oil&G Allas Cp wt Barnes Eng Campb Chib CPhRO P«f Cdn Javelin Cinerama Creole P 2.60; Data Cont Draper 2 - pi* 13 25% 25% 25% + V 21 2% 2 7-15 2 7-14 a lit 17% 14% 16% “ SignalOII A 1e 19 20 »% » + % fioerrv R wt If 6Va #Vi — Ml !Cp Rte 150 47% 4« 47%-f1% Technicol .50 xd 5 15% jjfr-'i*™ + % Un Control .20 01 M tM. #% - $ ^Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AP)-Tho cash position ol the. Treasury compered with corn-.pondlng WgOBjlij^aO: 0K. *, IHI * 7.721 J40J20.10 WlthdreweUPteel^Yeer— jM#MBiW4J4 X -T®,a3)»^ff,5O4,S00.21 310,747.401,20070 Gold Assets— nCWed* 12.3 101J v. Oey BJ '*’ * 101.2 U 93,1 73.0 • 02.9 103.5 (M 80.5 mi 07.2 t B3.3 102.4 VI r M. Ralls U .. 459.5 140.2, j 52.1 149.1 Kl 09.4 Wi-Si / 241.1 121.1 134.9 1 Mart Gains in Year NEW YORK (AP) / -The stock market’s “traditional year-end rally” became a fact today as stocks advanced on a. broad front in active trading. Gains in the averages by midday put them well ahead of their level of a week ago —thus maintaining the usual trend for prices to be higher on New Year’s Eve than on Christmas Eve. * ★ . A Key stocks rose from fractions to well ovier a point. Oh the last day of 1M4, the market continued its. raUy , of yesterday, with one outstanding exception — gold-mining stocks declined. GOLD STOCKS The gold stocks, typically the refuge of investors in times of market uncertainty, took some sharp losses. These were linked to a more optimistic , feeling about Britain’s financial situation, the strength of the pound sterling and, with it, the question of devaluation. Steels, rails, motors, farm implements, aerospace stocks, chemicals, airlines, utilities, drugs and office equipments were among the gainers. . Prices were generally .higher in active trading on the American Stock Exchange. Syntex was up about 2, Horn A Hardart Bakers more than a point and Molybdenum about a point LIGHT TRADING ' Corporate bonds were mixed in light trading. U.S. Government bonds declined following announcement of plans to refund some $33.1 billion in shortterm securities. The New York Stock NEW YORK (AP)—I High Low Loll Chf. Vote Leaves Nigeria Tom Old Wounds Opened; Could -Split Nation LAGOS, Nigeria (AP) — Con-cern was widespread today that regional rivalries dramatized in a bitter general election campaign may split this most populous of African nations! . * * - *. Candidates of the National Nigerian Alliance swept to a commanding lead as expected in returns from balloting yesterday, boycotted the opposition, for a new parliament. . ,/ One Lagos aewspape# termed it a “half and half Election.” Millions of voters Stayed away from the polls in the eastern and midwestern s e c tors and in Lagos, the capital. Prosperity Cleared All Hurdles By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst NEW■- YORK—Americans tonight can toast a departing year which unprecedented prosperity proved so strong it overcame a string of surprises and threats. The good guys definitely bested the bad guys, .in the American economic story. But there were perilous moments and un-c er tain ties enough to stave 6ff any boredom. And there ing the hearts of the lucky holders. Corporate profits hit new highs In 1964, and so did dividend payments. Mostly this reflected record output and sales, but also more productive factory operations. And demand for goods 'inspired corporate decisions to spend more for new plants and equipment. Building of new homes slackened in the faU of 1964 and owners of some new, apartment houses hung out vacancy signs. But industrial, commercial and government construction gave that Industry a record year with the end not in sight. EMPLOYMENT HIGH This, along with record steel production and near-record auto DAWSON | output, helped lift employment were dreams of future rainbows I & » new high. And in turn, this in space that kept Comsat stock I alon8 with higher wage scales gyrating* to the wonderment of | ^ L!?!! many. Auto labor wage gains B year ago, thanks in part to the cut in federal income tax rales. But they paid as big a total tax bill, thanks to rising incomes and even more to higher state and local taxes. The stock exchanges and the Securities and Exchange Commission hammered out some new .rules for trading and tar members’ conduct. The public watched with interest, but tor the most part didn’t return to the market in the numbers that made 1961 a memorable year. So, despite all the uncertainties pt home! V* inflation talk, slowing ‘down of the rate of economic growth, the future -course of interest rates am! of ease or tightness of. money — and despite all the tiueats abroad — Viet Nam, C6ngo, the Red Chinese atom bomb, the shaky economy of Britain — Americans can count 1964 safety/in the comes "to art almost unbroken column eft the better years, per-in hand and steel nav increases I 56™* °* records. Consumers haps tee best. / ih prospect raised ^he spectre responded 'spending more And wrapped in globing pros-m prospect niisea tne spectre than ever before for goods and ^city they can wish each other of future i"JaUon./But. con- _ some $m billion, k/ / sumers mostly counted their I fay saved a b)f ^ than a/HAPPY .NEW YEAR! " / They responded to a boycottiblessings now — am cut, ris-plea by the' United Progressive “*8 *ncomes, more jobs. Grand Alliance. / * + * /> * * Defenders of J our gold fe- i . A union of parties Centered in I •*«*<*?• Sft. of dollars that kept the U.S. deficit in international payments high. More dramatically, they withstood the shock of the onslaught on the British pound that brought threats of its devaluation pr of international monetary chaos—with the U.S. # % # *» R % these southern Nigeria areas. CALLED VALID Voters in the heavily populated, largely Moslem northern and western-regions castiiallots. The leaders of the Nigerian National Alliance, whose power is based in the$e regions, insist the election is valid and will form the basis for a hew parliament. By midmorning, National Alliance candidates had taken 89 seats. _____________\ . United/Progressive candidates 20 ’»% ’»% were credited with .23, despite — - 4% 'the boycott. 20% +.% \ % * Successful*! nvesting * 4 % t % *» % # % By ROGER E. SPEAR (These bonds have all been sold, Q. "In' reference to buying (butiflnd available>me State State of California, tax exempt . bonds* yod say that lean of California 3V4!« due 2001 offered to'yield 3.50 per cent. I dollar, as/the leading exchange! Rave the sales fee’by buying recommend thatj/oui buy these, _____i____/ «_—.1*^.1.. I ___T I if they are stllL upsoid. currency/ inevitably involved. A record $3 billion bail-out fund saved the pound — for tee time being, pt least. UPSET MARKET Q. "I am 68 years old and retired — my wife is 65. Our house is paid/for. Income from savings accounts, stocks, and direct. Whom do I get ip touch with, for I am interested in 1 the 3tt’i due 11-1-92?/JJL A. I think you ire suffering under a^nisapprenension. What The fall of Nikita .Khrushchev! I said waslijaL^ if an investor] Social Security is ample. I Upset tee stock market momen-[ wished — he could save thej would like to invest about 32.-^arily but businessmen and con- sales fee charged by tax-exempt j- ooo in A are r i c nj. Motors. » m « .sumers alike went on their way j mutual fufKi* Ry buying good] Would ypu advise this?” J.C. Their leaders, however, had confWent that peace of a sort municipa/bondadirecUy, 'would continue — and with it I mentioned State of Cah- Hi said before the balloting that. . . .. . _ any United Progressives whn ihe Prespenty to which they won would faunedSresign have,kbe^me “/l to make tee boycott comp^ J^^46 months of economic ... —*' * ★ The^stock market recovered Editor Hospitalized th“ for Eye Treatment HExtends Pad But then it awedjo thie underlying uncertainties by faltering. I Even ’more disturbing, iKj^iled to provide the year-end/raUy, dear to the heart of tradition-1 B DETROIT (AP) - Harvey alists. Still, this New' Year’s I % Patton, managing editor of The Eve, prices of most stocks, j % Detroit News, Wednesday asked though not.pl! are nicely above - Detroit (ttPli — One De-! to be relieved of his duties and j their year ago levels- gladden-; ^ ^ wles’ American.Mohrs’/ could!teen be bought through bam or dealer at a fixed price year ^ed SeP^mbcr 30, 1W. including his moderate profit. !we« down M ^ centYrom the / . • ~ ■ fiscal/ period a yea! earlier. Profits came to $1.38 a share, J dowb from $2.01 in fiscal 1963. I do not look fpf the company to do any bettep thia year, since 11 am told that the early registration trends for pew Ramblers, examintion And treatment an eye ailment. • w \ * % He is expected, to be on a leave of absence for two to three months. Martin Hayden, editor of the, News, said Patton-would return to the News staff as assistant to the editor when his doctors! give permission. ./ Joint Panel Seeks to Cut Ford Strikes DETROIT (UPI) - A itewi News in Brief The union represents 2,500 workers at the big hotels and i - „„ ____i | threatened to strike tonight un- nanel set up by the Ford Motor , contract settlement was Co. and tee United Auto Work- ^ JL settlement was era Union may help cut down reacaea plant-level strikes Uke those State and federal mediators . which crippled, the firm last called the meeting between An undetermined amount of faU rr the Hotel and Restaurant Em- change, candy, cigarettes and % > * . ’ pioyes Union and the Detroit cigares whs reported stolen yes- union and management have Hotel Association. Bote sides terday in a break-in at Rizzuto’s agreed to set up a joint four- said they did not ask for the Market, 521 Whittemore. [man plant relations committee. meeting. | '* Gary Eastwood, 510- Lake An-1 Ken Bannon, director of the | unfort represents wowers gelus Shores, Lake Angelus Vil- union’s Ford Department, said at The. Belcrest, Leland ^m-lage, told sheriff’s deputies yes- the committee will try.to es* | bas?y- .Park ,Sb?lb?n’ P*ck‘Port terday that a pair of skis and tablish better relations at the Shelby, Royal Palm, Sheraton-poles valued at $150 were stolen plant level. Ifefi Stei. from the rack of his car. Bannon’ said the committee * * * * John Ran, 651 Alpine, Avon ,wi“ travel around, ‘he UNION DEMANDS TTh,Pl»H^,rs ’>h'K rssssl inotod.. yesterday that tools valued at, + + + I minimum wage of $1.50 an hour since the 1965 models have been produced, are not impressive. Hie shares sell/to yield 7 per cent, which in itself is an indication that the/ dividend is not entirely secure/ . In your position, and at your age, you should not assume risk. As an altemative, I suggest Jersey Standard, yielding 3Vi per cent. To order your copy of Roger Spear’s new 48-page Guide to Successful Investing, clip this notice- and send $1.66 w i t h your name and address to Roger E, Spear, care of this newspaper, Box 1611, Grand Central Station, New York, N.Y. 16617. * (Copyright 1964) $12Q were stolen from his garage. Stocks of Local Interest Fipuras alter decimal points are eighths OVRR THE COUNTER ’STOCKS Yh. faI Inu, inn —»AtlOnS d^ -- irilv represent actual transactions but re intended as a guide to the approx i-tale trading rang* or the securities. AMT Corp. .................. ’ . *?o *?5 tWendl semi-annual declaration. Special extra dividends or ——■■ —* nated as regular < following lootnotes. - a—Also extra a — — ■ \ i , v»w. uinnm rale plus stock dividend, c—Liquidating Diamond Crystal dividend, d—Oeclarad or paid In 1953 Ethyl Corp. - -..“-no. e—Declare or paid *’■*■—*■ *•“-I—Wald In slock during ‘ value on ex-dividend a. a—Paid Iasi year | attar sloe Declared or tatlon issue w>™ p—Paid Ihls year. _ —jrrad or no JCHm IMtan dividend maatlnp. r—Declared or --------- ~ ex-disIrTbution Keystone Income "k KOyitdhd Growth K “— Investors Growm g OigSiTi ’rv*^ ' Television Electronics Wellington Fund ________ Tuba Co. . 21.4 23.3 33.0 25. aid Asked f.r As a result, Bannon said he hoped that when the current contracts expire in 1967 “I hope there will be fewer problems" than there were in 1964. . , - | Local strikes at several plants j benefits, shut down Ford assembly lines in 1964, even though the two sides had agreed -on a .national contract. for nontipping jobs such _ maids and dishwashers, $1 an hour for tipping jobs like; waiters and doormen, a pension plan and improved holiday and vaca- j base period. Living Costs Dip for Detroit Area, Rise Nationally Living costs were down slightly for the Detroit area but up for tee nation, the U.S. Labor Department said yesterday. Nationally, the consumer price index increased 0.2 per cent to >106.7, with auto prices leading the way. This means -it cost $10.87 last month, to buy goods that cost $10 in the 1957-59 Birmingham Store Completes Expansion An expansion dou6ling its former size has been completed at the Atlantic Drapery Shoppe, 360 E. Maple, Birmingham, making it one of the largest *31 drapery shops in Michigan, ac-‘ i7u ij;“ j cording to Lester Morris, who : t il ie.52 opened tee shop three years ; 1479 1434. ago. . It M It If r* A. -A. ‘ _A_ - City Printing Shop Has New Owner ! tfnyS 18.03 IOTP sik. gt Fay-1 bonds DOW>JONRS NOON AVERAGES 3?^n«k?s ................ 147.14 20 Rolls .'......... 104.74 I) Utils . ...JLii,..... 154.il - Slocks ............./.... 304.02 10 Second gr*de tm 10 FubHc WflMUos . 115 I 10 Arthur M, Mansfield of 5186 Dumham, Waterford Township, hac purchased the Pontiac Letter Shop, 710-712 W. Huron. The founder, Raymond Zimmerman of 198 Ogemaw, is retiring as,owner of the 42-year-old printing concern, effective Friday. ' ’ w * Mansfield has been with the company 26 years and .has been production foreman for the past seven years. He attended Pontiac Centra! High School. . Donald W. Kah, 1066 Canterbury, has been named foreman. Kah is a graduate of St. Mi-manufactured by the Jentzen- Tchad High School and’has been V A feature of the new expansion is specially designed shelving displaying over 1,000 varie-. ties of drapery fringes and trimmings. The display arrangement was designed by Morris* and Miller Co. of Troy. with the firm since 1967. Detroit’s index dropped by 6.3 per cent and stood at’104.6 (or November, based on 100 for the base period. The area’s lower living costs were attributed mainly to a decrease in transportation, food, clothing and upkeep costs. Housing,- health and recreation were up slightly. Building Under Way on Addition to Plant AVON TOWNSHIP-vGonstnic-tion is now under way on a 670,000 addition to the Detroit Rroach & Machine Co. (riant at 950 S. Rochester. The addition to the existing machine building will add 4,800 square feet to . the plant, and will allow a. new materials handling system and relocation at the welding facilities. M m 'jt u a i^i^N T11E POM TiAC i HESS. 1 il L KSDAV> DECEMBER 81, 0)64 \ ONLY PRIDE HURT - The woman driver whose car wound up under this big semitrailer truck yesterday went to the hospital with only minor injuries — mostly shock — in the suburban Chicago community AP Photofax of LaGrange. Mary J. Wright of nearby Westchester was driving when/her car collided With the trflck and its /rear section jackknifed on top of the car. Guns Taxi Driver Teen Killer Took a Dai WASHINGTON (UPI) - His brother and a friend claimed he “didn’t have the guts" to pull off a robbery. Soy 14-year-old Washington boy hailed a taxi and 10 minutes later shot the driver through the bade of the head. , He then ran. six blocks into a Held and broke into tears. Overcoming his emotion, be returned to a party and watched television. The man he murdered was Charles G. Rutherford, 41. He was a veteran of the Corregidor /lighting and survived three years in a Japanese prison of war camp, and he died simply because of a teen-age dare. Washington police unfolded the story yesterday with the disclosure that the 14-year-old — whose name was withheld — had admitted the killing of Rutherford, father of four sons, 10 days ago. / / ★ ' ★ According to homicide detectives, the events that led to a senseless killing began at a teen-age party shortly after 1 a.m. on Dec. 20. The conversation at/the gathering was not normal talk about the Beatles and such tilings. It involved Street crimes and holdups. / FATAL DARE HURLED / It was the 14-year-old’s/brother, who is 16, and a friend who hurled the fatal dare.' The 16-year-old was even more obliging. He gave his brother the gun, a 22-caliber revolyer. The youth left the party and hailed a cab. Rutherford was. the driver. He was told tb go to Talbert Street. At the end of Talbert Street, Rutherford stopped. The youth in the back Seat, had the gun in his right hand. What was going through his mind, he did pot say. What he did say /is that he paid Rutherford the fare—$2, which included, of ajl things a hefty tip. RAISED HIS GUN / Rutherford routinely started to enter the trip on his manifest. As he was doing so, the 14-year-old raised the gun and fired one shot. Rutherford dropped the manifest and collapsed over the steering wheel. The 14-year-old grabbed the driver’s wallet and change carrier, ran the six blocks to where he broke down and cried and discarded the change carrier. He then returned to the party where he told his older brother and the friend that he had pulled off the robbery. Police said they either did not believe him or thought he was joking. His arrest came because of a tip police received on Christmas Day. •________ PCH Choir to Sing for Gov. Romney The Pontiac Central High School choir, directed by A. Michael Dempsey, will take part in the inauguration of Gov. Romney tomorrow in the Capitol Rotunda at Lansing. it • ..Ur ★ The 80-voice choir is scheduled to sing sometime between 3 and S p.m. The only other singing group on the program is the Michigan State University Glee Cluo. Boy Suffers Concussion A 4-year-old Pontiac boy, struck by a car yesterday on North Perry south of Madison, is in fair condition at Pontiac General Hospital with a concussion. . Injured was Donald Clayton of 814 Melrose. He was struck by a southbound car on North Perry, driven by Mary Bogle, 38, of 2334 Dryden, Metamora Township. Miss Bogle told police the child r*h in front of her car. /Shot Dad to Prevent a Beating' MINEOLA, N.Y. (AP) — A policeman’s daughter, shot and critically wounded him in their Mineola home Wednesday night tvyo hours after hC learned that she and her mother had been arrested on shoplifting charges, police skid. - Cam Ann DarConte, 15, sobbed to detectives that she pumped three bullets into her father, Martin, 41, because'she feared he would continue to beat her for being arrested. •‘"■[.it, ★ ' * DarConte, a member of the Garden City, Long Island, police force since 1956, was listed in critical condition in Nassau Hospital with wounds of the abdomen, chest and side. Carol Ann was charged with juvenile delinquency /in the shooting. She had been charged similarly after she and her mother, Lillian, wore arrested earlier in the da/ for allegedly shoplifting children’s clothes from a department store at Roosevelt Field, near Westbury. PETTY LARCENY j / Mrs DarConte, who had been booked on a petty/ larceny charge, was released in her own custody after the shooting so she could go to her husband’s bedside. DarConte, the father of five, had secured his daughter’s release after her arrest and drove her home. Police ,said Carol Ann told them he scolded her and slapped her on the way home. Later, the father left the house to try to arrange bail for his wife. But whep a hitch developed,, he went home without her. /. . * k w . Police said he went looking for Carol Ann and as he opened her bedroom door, the girl fired at him with his revolver, which she had token from a closet, Whep Police arrived at the home, summoned by a son, Martin Jr., 13,-they found Carol Ann sitting on the floor holding ha father’s head and crying. Deaths in Pontiac Area Detroit Woman Dies DETROI TfAPj - Mrs. Eva Conboy, 30, of Detroit, died today of injuria suffered Wednesday in a car-pedestrian accident | in Detroit. MRS. CLIFFORD FREER Service for Mrs. Clifford (Lassie) Freer, 60, of 28 W. Fairmont will be at 3 p.m. Satuniay in Pilgrim Holiness Church with burial in Oak Hill 'Cemetery, by the Sparks-Grlffin Funeral Home. Mrs. Freer, a member bf'Pil-grtm Holiness Church, died Tuesday. Surviving are her mother, Mrs. Gertrude Waldron of Pontiac and four daughters, Mrs. Donald McCarrick of Waterford Township, Mrs. Archie Stuart of Rochester and Mrs.- Raymond Hibbs and Mrs. Thomas Bennington, both of Pontiac. Also surviving are three sons, Joseph of Kalamazoo and William and Kenneth, both of Pontiac; 13 grandchildren; and two sisters, Miss Jessie Pickens of Pontiac and Mrs. Dell Wooldridge in Arkansas. MR. and MRS. R. W. PORRITT AVON TOWNSHIP - Service for Russell W. Porritt, 86, and his wife, Florence M,, 71, of 2954 E. Tienken will be 3 p.m. Sunday at Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home, Pontiac. Burial will follow in Perry Mount Park Cemetery, Pontiac. Mr. and Mrs. Itorritt died yesterday in an auto accident near Griffin; 6 a. A retired farmer, Mr. Porritt was a life member of Lake Orion Lodge No. 46, F&AM, and a charter member and past president of Lake Orion Lions Club. He also belonged to Elks Lodge No. 810. Both were members of Howard! Methodist Church, Orion Township and East Orion Farm Bureau and' life, members of Lake Orion Chapter No. 340, Order of the Easton Star. Their bodies will be at the funeral home after 3 p.m. tomorrow. Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. Stuart Braid and Mrs. Floyd Graves, both of Lake Orion and Mrs. A. B. Waite of Pontiac; a son, Robert of Pontiac; nine grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren. TAMMIE RAE SMITH INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP — Graveside service, for Tammie Rae Smith, 4-day-old daughter of former residents Mr. and Mrs. Denby H. Smith of Offjitt Air Force Ease-Omaha, Neb., was held this morning at Lakeviev/Cemetery. The baby died Tuesday after being ill since birth. Surviving besides her parents are her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. N. K. Payne of Waterford City Man Listed Satisfactory After 3-Car Collision • Andrew Reed, 49, of ^ E. Fairmont‘is in satisfactory condition at Pontiac General Hospital with facial cuts suffered in a three-car collision yesterday at Montcalm and Edison. * * * . Reed was riding in a car driven by Clarence Snider, 61, of thd same address. Their car traveling west on Montcalm was hit by a car coming from the opposite direction driven by Jesse Fink, 23, of 45 E. Cornell. * * - * The impact drove Snider’s car into another westbound auto driven by David Villereal, 31, of 1154 Genella, Waterford Township. Snider, who suffered only a minor injury, told police ' he looked, up and saw Fihk’s car coming at him. Fink was treated for Injuries at the hospital and released. I Totmship, Mrs. William T- Ap-Madoc of Clarks ton and Joseph L. Smith of New York. ROY D. WEIR | UTICA — Service for Roy D. Weir, 4.1, of 8906 Burkhiil was held recently at Milliken’s Funeral Home, with burial following in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Owner of Roy D, Weir Insurance Agency, 2795 E. Maple, Troy, Mr. Weir died after a short illness. He was a member of Utica Methodist Church. Surviving are his wife, Florence; three sons, Ritchie, Douglas and Brian, and a daughter, Kathleen, all at home ; his mother, Mrs. Lucille McIntosh of Mount Clemens; his father, Roy V. Weir of Maitland, Fla.; S sister; and a brother. Police Arrest Detroit Suspect Pontiac police arrested a^ Fisher Body Div. employe yesterday and turned him over to Detroit police fa questioning in connection with a murder early yesterday in Detroit. Arrested at 5:45 p.m. at Ken-nett and Baldwin as he reported for work was Ulysses Grant Shaw, 45, of Detroit. Shaw’s arrest was requested by Detroit police. * * * Shaw is being questioned about the fatal stabbing of Charles Johnson, 43, also of Detroit. ° According to Detroit police, Johnson was attacked in his garage about 7 a.m. as he was leaving to go to work. Another Member Resigns From Prosecutor Staff David F. Breck, an Oakland! County assistant prosecutor since February 1962, resigned today to return to private law practice. His office will be In the Birmingham Theater Building. ★ ★ A Breck, 34, of 928 Clark, Birmingham, has been in charge of the Court of No Record, which provides an opportunity for first offenders to be placed on probation without being charged with a crime. A. Au A He is the eighth member of the prosecutor’s staff to resign in recent weeks. -Junior Editors Quiz on- Skunk QUESTION: Why does a skunk have such bold Mack and white colors? ANSWER: Many animals have what is called protective coloration; their coats and skins blend into their surroundings, making them hard tb see. ■* Such coloring tends to protect the hunted animals frqm being seen,’ and it 'enables hunting animals to creep up on their prey unseen, The' skunk’s coat is startlingly different. Its bold blotches of black and white in the strongest possible contrast tend to make it stand ont against almost any kind of outdoor background. It is almost‘as if the skunk wanted you to see him. He does! This is precisely the reason for his color scheme, as aggressive as an advertising poster. It seems to say “Stop! Here is a skunk!’’ You are wise if you back away, for in the spray of nauseating liquid which thb skunk can shoot at you from glands near the base of his tail he has a remarkable weapon. A whiff of that sickening odor, and attacking animals lose their appetite, Ja the spray hits them, their lives will be miserable for days. The next" time they she that black and . white signal, they know what to do—melt away into the background.. . FOR YOU TO DO: To see how remarkably effective the skunk’s warning color pattern is, hold this newspaper page away from your eyes and look at it as a whole. Our picture is quite small, but the skunk will jump at you! Chiang Wants to Destroy Red China N-lnstallations Oakland Legal Society Moves to New Office The Oakland County Legal Aid Society offices moved today. Carleton Shafer, director of the office, said the Legal Aid Society moved from 221 National Building ip Pontiac to the Pontiac United Area Fund building at 132 Franklin Boule-r vahL A A A The Legal Aid office, which is a United Fund agency, provides legal assistance to those county residents who cannot afford private legal-counsel.. , / Ex-WSU Teacher Diets DETROIT (AP) - Maude Louise Fierp, 79, retired Wayne .State University sociology teacher, died Wednesday at a Detroit hospital. A native of Hannaford, N. D., Miss Flero taught at Wayne 38 years. Must Strengthen Peace, JOHNSON CITY, ;Tex. (AP) f — President Johnson has told Russian lenders that “the most . urgent business for all of us remains strengthening the foundation of world peacb.”. Along with New Year’s greetings and best wishes to the Soviet people and their leaders, Premier Alexei N. Kosvgin and President Anastas I. Mikoyan," Johnson said: A ■ A A “We can and should move to | . limit the spread of .nuclear-weapons; to achieve a verified worldwide comprehensive test - ban; to make a cutoff of fissionable material production for ' weapons coupled, with measures to safeguard the peaceful uses of nuclear power; and to agree RUG CLERK. PULL OR PART-tkne. Will tram responsible person. Ruse's Country Drugs. 4540 Ellto- “What do you suggest for a birthday gift far a girl who thinks my allowance is a lot bigger than it is?” Halp Wanted fiads 7 Wirfc Wwro^llaiE 11 WOMAN POR BABY SITTING, CAM Lakt irti, haM^ltoyVmost MAN WITH ELECTRICAL CON-tractors and^ haatlfto^^ttomorsJJ- 02-4219. WOMAN FOR LIGHT HOUSEWORK end cere tor girl, t. OR 6-1S92. YOUNG w6MAH Atfr TO tact with company Lnsadlng man qualified In theae fields tor au-parvlsery position, 24 years com-elnad sxpsrlsnca. OL 1-3042. achbol, part or full time. Must be good wliti children. 4734847. PAINTING AND ODD JOBS. 612-4317. ! TRUCK, LIGHT HAULING AND 5"ROOMS AND BATH, 1ST FLOOR with 2 bedrooms, S35 per week with S7S deposit. Small child wel-»me. Inquire at 273 Baldwin Ave. Call 334-4054,___________________ BACHELOR 3-ROOM, CARPETED, —•vote, nice, 332-437S. ____ BEAUTIFUL ELIZABETH LAKE exceptionally well furnished, l light, warm, clean, utilities inel ed. Exclusive location. $150 n El wood, 1-2410. , EFFICIENCY, VERY NICE, Everything furnished StO per month. SIS deposit required. Adults. FE S-4341. FbRNISHEri ADOITIONS'mm™™ GRAVES CONTRACTING . Free Estimates OR 4-til I CARPENTRY AND REPAIR WORK CARPENTRY, NEW AND REPAIR. . Free estimate*. 33S-W«1. 1 INTERIOR FfflTlR. KITCHEN'S, paneling, 40 years experlenc*. — PE >1135.____________________ (mwMXah Cement Work Licensed cement contractor. FE 5-9122 “CEMlNt WORK. REASONABLE. Free estimates. OR 3-4440 after t. COliidtaTV FLOORS. 40c SQUARE W. PI ojMW, OR 34217. . FLOORS AND ORIVlWAYK WORK - | cannot be bset, *““ —1 ***** Chimmy Owtaf ^ CHIMNEY AND FIREPLACE cleaning. Also chimney repair. Reasonable rates. 335-2355 in Construction Co. FE 5-9123 FEIST AMMEL INOlhEERINO Tessner Tree Service I types oI tree work. Free estates. Topping, cabling, ( ____________...., .. jrk, fertilizing. 437-2722. Washington, Ox-. TREE TRIMMING AND REMOVAL SALESLADY FOR PATTERN DE-partmont, Stewart's Fsbric -Shop, 2B E. Maple, Birmingham. SECRETARY POR LAW OFFICE. Typing, shorthand and filing required. Must • have office exoeri-ence. Can 330-4553. r£ Seles background, Nie paJd MICHIGAN PERSONNEL SERVICES C0RP. 770- S. Adams Rd. Birmingham 447-44-* WISDMAN CONSTRUCTION, piete service. Free estimates >7044, day or night. - Lew rotes, 334C0S4. Trucking SECRETARY NEEDED PART InstTUCtionS-Schools time Chart hand, dlrtaahane and """ Jul*°" HOUSES FOR SALE TO BE MOVED HAULINO AND RUBBISH. NAME your price. Any time. FE >0095. LIGHT AND' HEAVY TRUCKING riAbiab, fill dirt, grading end gravel endfmd end loading, FE2-Q6C3. time. Short ■■■■uRBsnaapamM 8 tor appointment. TEMPORARY WORK I EXPERIENCED Typists, Stenos, Demonstrators — Business Machine Operetors. 10 TALBOTT LUMBER Glass Installed In doors-and windows. Complete building service 025 Oakland Ave._____FE a-4»S . Muving and Storugs interior An 0 iexterior pelmiid,'tree estimates, guaranteed. Truck Rental Trucks to Rent Vt-Ton pickups lW-Ton Stake trims*-- tractors AND EQUIPMENT Dump Trucks — Semi-Trailers Pontiac 'Fbrrii and Industrial Tractor Co. I2S S. WOODWARD PC 4-0461 PE 4-1441 Open Dolly Including Sunday MEIER A OLSON UPHOLSTERING FE S-2S42 Free Estimates FE S-ISS4 ~l*l Tuesday-Frlday ’Manpower Inc! 14 S. CASS WAITRESS ANO KltCHEN GIRL. Super Chief, PE- 24051. WAITRESSES POR DINING ROOM, goad pay ,ptos ^ person.^ Reel's, O WAITRESS ATKINS BAR 114 N. Main. WOllad Lake WtjMAN TO LIVE IN FOR GEN- trisr........ WOMAN [OVER 34. PQI phases at general office w__ ing required, write P.O. Bex 4 ATTENTION! Mechanics naadad, enroll now •. Auto Mechanics Auto Body Collision WOLVERINE SCHOOL I4S W. Ford, Detroit WO S4 A Better Income by Learning IBM Machines LEARN. IBM KEY PUNCH, MACHINE OPERATION AND WIRING, COMPUTER PROGRAM- MIND. 4-WfEK COURSES,' P- PLACEMENT SERVICE, MONEY DOWN. , GENERAL INSTITUTE 22925 Woodward Fomdale ftCALL COLLECT 543-9737 FE 4-4509 FINISH HIGH SCHOflL1 A?H6mE. HOMES, LOTS, ACREAGE, PARCELS, FARMS, BUSINESS PROP- 1 ERTIES AND LAND CONTRACTS Urgently header WARREN STOUT, Realtor. 450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5414 (tolly 'til I MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE A 4-BEDROOM HOUSE IN PONTIAC Tripp, Realtor. FE S414I. r, FE 8-9005. ALL CASH FHA and Gl EQUITY 600ERN, ! aide nof-AI33S, __ * ting, no no delaya. Cosh f“-DETROIT. BR 24444. Rent Busimss Property 47-A LEASE WITH OPTION TOJMJY Business corner on main arter with garage suitable tor bump on 'Sowr. kuiLOiNG; Plus |U haxement. Founlalnebleau Rant MiscgltantBBS GET RESULTS Wi NEEO listings. C tor quick sale end tot DON WHITE, INC. 2B4I Dixie Hwy. Phone 674-0494 HAVE BUYERS FOR roperty ter qulc. ---- . tones Realty - PE 44510. dining ore._MMI ______...Bull! In 1*44. LM 90'x- 164'. II4,t4l — 42,400 down on land contract. . FLATTLEY REALTY 9244 COMMERCE 3634941 3-BEDROOM BRICK, FULL. BASE------* “ garage. Sylvan Manor. ... _____id patio, garage. $22,000. UrOQMown, 912S • month. J HAROLD R. FRANKS, REALTY 2SB3 UNION LAKE ROAD EM 3-3201 ^ SOBTItl $9,990 Rancher on your tot. Lovely bodreom^ rarjeh^ typefiomjv ft lSart'mFULLY INSULATED. C signed for boiler HvInS. No .mom BRAND NEW Shod room ranch .nemo, conveniently designed kitchen with birch cupbosrdj. toll basement, oak floors, s FULLY insulated homo. Only 111,MO. tl,-200 down. WE TRADE Y0UNG-BIIT HOMES rEally mEans better-bilt RUSSEL YOUNG, S3W W. HURON mlng end booling only—0 down, 170 (4. ___ collect. KE 74400. Gainer Realty. with 2 bathe, fireplace. 2 perches. ToWeflng trees, on Tlankee Rd. near , Adams., $27,500. Phone OL 1-4514 for Impaction. FRANK SHEPARD BATEMA® WISHES YOU A HAPPY NEW YEAR OFFICE CLOSED FRIDAY, SATURDAY AND SUNDAY See od Saturday, January 2, 194S BRICK RANCHEE ‘ early possession. Built Oh 73 ft, wide tot.' Has 3 bedrooms, full bosomont, attached Scor brick go-raoe. solid drive. Only 1500 down. . — r---* m,, ■ ___ Oeer . Phone 673-9926. Y. SCHUETT — Ml 6-8500 ■ dGnley street In Elmdala Subdivision near Auburn end Crooks Road. C.B.S. home, needs finishing. Must sail. SI.400 cash or terms. Call 363-7024, WE 3-4200 or 341-43741 Michael" Realty. ___________ HIITER ies.0$8,900 with 11,040 down. „ IT C. HIITER, REALTOR. 4 Elizabeth Loko Rd. FE 3-017t, “ A 44195. . HERRINGTON HILLS, old. Excellent location. RORABAUGH Woodward at Square Lake Road TO BUY OR TO SELL L PAUL JONES REALTY FE 4-8550 idroom, IV4 ir i Ideal famines' 2 nice homes 335 N. bath down, (now ranting for-ill per month), 4 and both up, par tially finished. 2-car garage. 414,-500, 53,000 down, bolonco on ' contract. Coll Wm. B. Mitchell. WILLIS M. BREWER REAL ESTATE 4 E. Huron FE 4-5141 of 442-0161 __condition. Terms. AL PAULY, Realtor 4S14 DIXIE, REAR -OR 3-3800___________Eves. FE 3-7444 LAZENBY ROY LAZENBY. Realtor 193 Dixie Hwy. OR 44)31 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE re Climb, easy Clean rue floors spills mop up pronto. Comfy oil hoot, attached garage, easy maintenance of olumlnum siding. Sll,-500, $350 could move you In. Than MERRY CHRISTMAS AND HAPPY “TW YEAR IN, REAL EST ______Opdyke Rood FE 2-0156 - FE 20157 I MIXED AREA TUCKER REALTY ___________33441700 Mixed Neighborhood WEST0WN REALTY 474 Irwin off East Blvd. FE B-2743 afternoons. II 2-4677 Eves. FIRIT IN VALUE MODEL 0 on your lot. OPEN 2 TO S P.M. DAILY ZallePs Real Estate "Custom Builders'' 2044 S. Rochester Road/ OL 1-0221 ~ NEW 3-BEDROOM BRICK HOME, 2-car garage, both end 14, and fJfpTS REAL?Y,r** NA 7-2IS0 ■k-x. .... -. geto Boole Loko Pull '4-Bedroom Colonial ooomont,; largo lot. delux s. Best offer tokos IL WE TRADE AND TRADE , Silver Lake Const. Co. 673.9531 NEAR PONTIAC MOTOR VACANT, IMMEDIATE POSSES-— |4to 3-bedroom home with petotf- living room, dl I basement, gas hi m and SOS month lo Mortgage Coot ivmajit the 1st m EVENINGS U S-W7 NORTHERN HIGH -AREA wood floors, torgo utllL Immedlats possssslon, HILLT0P4703. 3 BEDROOMS -54,800. LOW do EM >7700. 1 privileges. SPOTLIT? Walk to.'Wbrk » Harrington Hills ****** JT* bosomont,' gos hoot, mead yard. Storms ana screens. LOOK—0 1-COf attached garage. Only SU.TOB, Smiley Realty FE 2-8326 Opgn Daily 9 o.m. to 9 'PEOPLE WIT H CREDIT PROBLEMS AND RE- For Immediate Action Call FE 5-3676 626-9575 ANYTIME *AT. OR SUN. OR COMB TO 39* KENNETT NEAR BALDWIN REAL VALUE REALTY SELL OR TRADE - 3 BEDROOM ■■■■■■e n ■«£ Full Mm.’ ANNETT Central High Area rooms end sleeping perch up. Full basement, gas furnace. Let SS'xtdr, paved strr ‘ 111,150, PHA term}. Best Buys Today Rochester-Utica- t 624-4200 j Arws- lovely Shed room Cape Cod |, IRWIN WOOOEDLAKE PRIVILEGE Cozy lOodroiwi brtdt ranch m- Lzgrzjxz Go,LS°ilorn rooms. Located in Owkwood m#iwv Nwxt to n wWticrty conveniences and General Hospital Area } large hornet on come, containing approximately ft. ooo square feat, zoned professional servlco. tr trontagt on W. Huron, ITT on tide Treat, ■ling far B17B per month. MB. Terms. I WE WILL TRADE Realtors 28 E. Huron St. 1 Closed Now Year's Day FE 8-0466 CLARK NORTH END - 3-bedroom bungalow with full basement. Located within easy waking distance P letter Body. Hat gas heat, a> lavatory, carpeting, aluminum sld- GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR SH W. Walton _____FE S-71 NICHOLIE MB moves yi ■AST. SIDE -. Three - bedroom bungalow. Itvti end dbibM area, kitchen, full tel ment, oil HA hoot, newly do orated. Vacant. About 1350 mow you In. HERRINGTON HILLS J Throe • bedroom bride bungakx . kitchen and dining area, living room, full basement, oil HA hoof, vacant. Only SIMM with -------- NORTH SIDf Two • bedroom bungalow, and dining ofl, kitchen, full * MOO ' 011 *>jn ' v*c*n*' ‘ Eva. cell MR. CASTELU FE 4-531S ’ NICHOLIE HARDER CO. i HIM i and draperies — —ed. Oarer' ---------■ . Price, $10,C Tyrone StrMt-West Suburban Five’room home In good cond“' Carpeted living rooMvkltchen dining area, oat heat, alum siding, now two-cer garage i Vary nlce-slze lot. Priced at _ 9M90. Terms. Immodlato posses- Th* Price Has Been Slashed lh dlscrlmlni H (Man 3 I « Thermopane windows ._ _ _____ Kitchen with beautiful ma- acupboards, Formica tape and -Ms. Lower level has paneled '-family rooms with fireplace —- sliding picture window to SI____ patio. Plastorad two-car per ego. John K., Irwin Since l«5 FE MMt UL 3-5351 KAMPSEN furniture, (EMM -kitchen with all to will consider -Mfl trade. The price Is w. Owner It at *39, Neat Suburban Rancher l bedrooms, I vkot garage, US golden epparhmlty. Only p»,»S0. loon Loin V gas heat, ivy-car garage, front porch. Only 3E9M. I arms, or we will trade, getter hurry on this oat. THINKING OF SELLINGt WANT CASHT .Wp wM got It tor yaa - pi** us a try. CM Rachel Levety. Byron Regers, Hilda Btowart, Lae Kerr, Fred iBMMar, Lao Kamp- Warren Stout Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 54145 Open Evto 'HI I p.m. Closed Jen. let. 194* Multiple Listing iorvlco O'NEIL MlOVtl. W bedri---- for only tio.too. tetter tell nowT'" Lovaly 7-roont cinder block ranch an MeCktap street. 190'xl32' fenced lot, fireplace In living room, a "------------------------------I stools. Northern tenet to Pontiac Lerge^I'/i-cer0 I______ large blacktop area. Pino location. Roduebd BUN. ---------- -------- Township ' Lovojy 4_________________ “Brv ranch .with TVrcar ah garage, 3 full baths, 3 fire-oloctrlc built-lns, carpeted .. all drapes Included, nkt family room with glass sliding with « brick I ‘-TflOrxtlO') % IfbdCUO. Beautiful , ,ith ioo- i BE beach. Dock and raft Inclu WEBSTER SCHOOL DISTRICT -Neat MW---------------------•"------- fireplace, US - Wo accopt trades ™ . includes most If a One-Bedroom '■ Suits Your Needs friendly little 4-repm "BUD" Nicholie,. Realtor »m, Clemons St. FE 5-1201 AFTER S P.M. FE 54)198 id community water. WIN taka yvur present homo to trade. *450 MOVES YOU INTO THIS COZY 3 • BEDROOM ranch with gas hast, iv,-car garage, spacious lot an aavad street. Cloae to l-IST VERY SHARP WELL KEPT t-bed- n£Kl#«. . down plus coats. TIMES REALTY n» Dixie HVfy. MLS 47443*4 ________-OPEN* TO* CANAL LOTS Lnotes building sites Connected with Sylvan Lane JACK LOVELAND 311* Casa Lake Rd. 4S3-13S5 _________ CHOICE 1-ACRE " LOT! INLEUE-near Oakland Unlvarally. ar I-7S Interchange. SI .300 Beautiful rolling ceontry RHODES WEST BLOOMFIELD. Beautiful clous brick 9-roam homo, 4 rooms, -3 .full baths, targe recreation room with fireplace, .living room with fireplace, wall-to-wall carpet, dining all, glau attached garag Lake privileges on Cass Late. This property must ba seen to be I predated. 144,900. Terms. SUBURBAN t-room brick home, bedrooms, 10 acres of railing la on blacktop highway, Orion Tow ahlp. Convenient to schools. IB ml utos to I-7S. This residence la Ida., tor the largo family. Has many possibilities. Only *30,000. Ter— 3 ACRES with nice 7-room «_____________ homo, 3^ bedrooms. ^Large family shades Included. Ges condition unit. Largo _______ ______ ------ ■ ■ Oakland. SI3,000 0650 down p . *94 RESIDENTIAL LOT. North of___ ester off Adams Road. Borders Paint Croak. Exclusive neighborhood. Scenic Iqcatlon. Only $7,500. ALBERT J. RHODES, BROKER FE 0-2304 350 W. Walton FE 54712 MULTIPLE LISTINO SERVICE DORRIS A BEAUTIFUL MOOEL IN COf MERCE. Eye-appealing, white al mlnum sided ranch home with ttegH 2-car garagB. “I’ve always thought that no one was as careful with money as father, but my date came pretty close tonight!” Reserf Property $2 WHY RINT: BUY FOR LESS month. Mobile home loti. 45' $2,7*5, *25 down,*25 month. I lopped, gas, beach, fish, ' Bros. FE 4-450*, OR 3-12*5. Lots-Acrgggg j 54 BLOOMFIELD SCHOOLS 150 It. X 144 ft. >00, terms. Call lor plat or n HOUSEMAN-SPITZLEY FE 1-1331 Ml 4-7423 “—1— MA 4-3331 Building Sites Vi -10 Acres I MANY ON PAVED ROADS iy 134 Our offlat will ba dosed 'til Jan. 3. C. PANGUS, REALTY 430 M15 Ortonvllle Call Celled NA 7-3*15 Planning to Build? Check These Lots!. DRAYTON. One 100'xlSO', *1,100. DRAYTON. Three, 50‘xlSO'. (400 each. DRAYTON. Two 50'xl50\ *900 each. AUBURN HEIGHTS. Throe 4O'x30P', *700 each. CLAPKSTON. One ISExI**', *3,500. CURKSTON. On* 100'xlS*', $2,800. CLARKSTON, Two 5t'x115'. *2,(00 each. CURKSTON. One ige’xll UPPER LONG LAKE. < Office Supply Business “***“■**““*-----y yaara to this .. Must sacrifice In- MICHIGAN, Business Sales, Inc. JOHN UNDMESSER, BROKER 573 S. telegraph —- PARTY-BEER STORE Ne. 5143. Mato street locatl... ... Oakland County town. Goad equip-man! and fixture*. Plenty of park-tog. good gross and going, up ‘ year. Store on earner let ____ ham* on next tot. Fenced. Only *4,000 down Including real estate. STATEWIDE-LAKE ORION 33*4000 After 5, OR 3-700* PROFITABLE 3 MAN OPERATION restaurant. Real hot spot. *1,500 down plus inventory. ‘ lion tor 24 lur- -mein highway. Cell 7750 Caotov Late Rd, TRADE! MOTEL TRADE! Your opportunity to own ton-no summer and winter 124fdt in____ with coffee snap ahd 2-bedroom toll winter occupancy: Owners utv abto to ooerate. Will aall tor only Slt.500 on ' vary easy' farms or trad* tor your preparty. PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE Em. partridge A assoc., inc. ISIS W. Huron, Fid-Mi VACANT COMMERCIAL ildwin and Montcalm. 131x144 a nor or can b* divided. Orchard Laka Road, Kaege, Ids'. Cass-Elizabeth Lake Road, 100x135. Clemens St. 340x100. BATEMAN *3,100. a 75'x270', WARDS POINT. 4Cx275', $12,500. TERMS AVAILABLE 1 R0LFE H. SMITH, Realtor ■•““‘'Xr.......... VOUR CHOICE, 5-10 TO 140. OA Idilal basement tor cold weather play praa. Family room o....... with fireplace and glass torte 3 bright cheerful 1 OXFORD AREA. Home with lake privileges. **,*50. Truly a lovely 2-bedroom bungalow. Idoal retiree home, constating M 4VV sp. and vary livable rooms. SatpL. ________ floors, plastared walls, flraplaca, ceramic bath, well-planned kitchen, ■4||iMM| ' s glassed-in breeze-i lake, large fenced DORRIS A SON, REALTORS >14 Dixie Hwy. OR 4431 . MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE A-l BUYS CLARKSTON basement, May a RV lot wltoC>>scani at 515,(90. See I t, ell h Only *4,100. Terms. PHONE 682-2211 *143 Cass-Ellzabafh Road MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE •___OPEN DAILY * TO * Val-U-Way GoiA Representative $250 down, $42 a mo. Inc Hiding prtodpSl and totsrast. 3 badrooms, large living roam, kitchen and dtatag area, FA heat. w area, tiled bath. Iota of storage assvjTeSf rr^.r'- Walled Lake School District 3-bedfeom ranch, large Itotog roam kltahan and dining area with built-Ins. HM bath, utility room, storms and screens, gas heat, carport. Pavad street.. Only S4M down. R. J.(Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 34! Oakland Opan * 7 After hour*, FE 14413 ar FES-1144 . LIST YOUR HOME WITH US Sols Forms ACRES - 2-BEDROOM icres — 2 badrooms finished ■ roughed-in. acre dairy farm, ' H. C. NEWINGHAM REALTOR UL 2-3310 . 160 Acre 'Dairy Farm South of Lapeer -Greenhouse and . Adjacent Home in Lapeer Prudential Real Estate 01 S. Mato Lapeei v 664-8484 WANTED f type of good going busln vers with cash waiting. List \ tor fast action -In fh* sale da of your business. WARDEN REALTY Meaty to Um 61 , _ _ CLtoanaad, Mfyy' t-Grtey) _. LOANS » $1,000 sellors. Credit lift Insurance avail' abto. Stag to or ghan* FB Mill. HOME & AUTO LOAN CO. ' **• Mill » to I Oglly, let.»to1 WHEN YOU NEED $25 TO $1,000 Wa Win ba glad Id help you. STATE FINANCE CO. SO* Pontiac State Bank Bldg. FE 4-1574 Mertggfo Loots" 62 1st ond 2nd MORTGAGES SIMS OR MORE ' NO APPLICATION FEES r tower. Corner /. OR 44*10. , yW Chrtatmas ' KITCHEN UNITS B KITCHEN KOMFAC Visit our medal* on dismay. Terms Availabla *1 Pontiac Plywdod Distributors N, Cats _________ FE 2-043* LUMBER 4x7 V-groovsd mahogany I Rock lath 4x0x4k Plyscoro ......... SPEED *35, gas QUEEN AUTOAAATfC *70. Hort ' - mMam Sweet's Radis S Appliance Is WINTER CLEARANCE .1 10" Frigldalr* rang*. 1944 model. 1 Frigldelre freezer, upright. I Frig Ida Ira DtahwaalMr. ALL SPECIALLY PRICED. CRUMP ELECTRIC 3441 Auburn Ave._____ FE 4-3573 WASHER. S25, ELECTRIC STOVE’. S3S. Dryer, *25. Refrigerator with top freezer, *49, Gas stove, *25. 21-inch TV *25. Refrigerator 125. is Super Market 3-ROOM OUTFITS BRAND NEW FURNITURE $288 $3.00 WEEKLY NEW LIVING ROOM BARGAINS 7-pieca (brand paw) living roam: davenport and chair, team cushions, 2 Itap tlbtas, matching coffee table, 3 decorator lamps. All tor *129. Only SI J* weekly. NEW BEDROOM BARGAINS Bpiece (brand new) bedrooms: double dresser, book-case bed end chf*t, box ^ spring arid innerspring Jl».r$K50 weekly. WYMAN'S ID BARGAIN STORE r II W. Pike Store Only Me. living room suit* ..... $49.95 Guar! elec, refrigerator $4945 EASY TERMS FE 4-1I44 wi TAKE TRADE . INS. FAMILY Hama Fumlahlnga. 3135 Dixie " i Above m ij ar more) Burmeister's I AUTOMATIC WATER SOFT-er, alio removes Iran. $149. G. L. Thompson, 7005 M59 West. OIL BURNERS, COAL FURNACE. Taylor's, 402 Mt. Clemens St. POOL TABLES-BELAIRE LI 440900 * $50.95. Laundry h RED TAG SALE 30 per cent discount on any article bought with red tag. New and used typewriters, eddinj machines, desks and other office places — CALL FORBES, OR 34747! SpRSD-SATIN FAINTS, WARWICK Supply. 1471 Orchard Late. 8*3 2*20 STAINLESS STEEL DOUBLE SINKS Must be seen to to ^p-11025 Oakland Ave. FE 44591 THE SALVATION ARMY "— RED SHIELD STORE. Sale laml Contracts 1 TO 50 . LAND CONTRACTS urgantly wanted. See us balor WARREN STOUT, Realtor 450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 54145 DpipEvte.------------- Lands for Investment Acreage for Building. ■ Farms With Buildings UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE *445 Dixie, Clarkston ^hl) Eves. 435-1451 .OTS IN INDIANWOOD SHORES No. 1 new availabla. CRAWFORD AGENCY BY 3,11.41 - MY 3-4571 Rochester-Lakeville Area 110 finable 'w11"®' ,*rr,ln! frontage. Only V* mile pH Ro ter Road. *350 per sere. Annett Inc. Realtors 1 ^ WATERFORD REALTY O. Bryson, Rpeltor Van Welt GI 4549 Plate Hwy,____OR 3-1 51 HOME SITES, *0' x 100', SUNNY Baach overlooking beautiful WaL tors Late prlviiagat. 2 sandy beaches, docking. 059, Sld down, "* "lOhth. Owner. MY 34940. FRONT h6mBS, NEW AND CALC NORM RICE - REALTOR Iwwt hwfmty 9 AT MORGAN UKC, BALDWIN expressway. 10TX15O' .Jhv beating, IS — tram Pontiac. $1,995, no d Waterford Hill Manor LSrgt estate lots on one of Oak land County's most beautiful tub divisions. Priced tram $3,754. • OPEN DAILY TO t P.M. DON WHITE* INC. 2M.NJ*,LV «> • ACTION on your land contract, large or small. Call Mr. Hlltor, FE 2-0179 Brefcar. 3149 Elizabeth Late Read. WGRted Ceatwcfr-Mf. 6»A 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently wanted. See us before WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1459 N. opdyke Rd. ' FE 54145 Open Ever —----------- CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS, CASH Ify or land contract. Small. alble discount. Mortgages 1. Call Tad McCullough CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS- QllICK CASH FOR UNO CONTRACTS Clark Real Estate, FE 1-7991, FE 44913, Mr. Clark. SEASONlb LAND CONTRACTS SOLID MAHOGANY DINING . . „ chairs, S19 each, chrama high M-Fi, TV A Radios F rttolr. S4. Catf M4>9i —,—;— AFTER HOLIDAY SPECIALS, « P0™-6 .9F colognb...free Peel Table Deluxe -GE dlshweshei Humidifiers ......... (tactile dryer GE 4-spetd show-n-lell SPECIAL DISCOUNTS ON MANY 111 W, LAWRENCE ST. Hams until Dec. 31. .Y-Knot An- Everything la mar* tiques, 10345 Oakhlll, Holly; ME J Clothing, Ftirhifure, 75199. to Ml. East Of Dixie Hwy. TWO< LAMF, 4.FOOT "UJORES- Fluorescenf, 393 Or- . ,sa *79 J0 $23.99 _____ .. .. $199.50 terms Available HAMPTON'S ELECTRIC W. HURON FE 4-2525 OPEN TILL 9 P.M. -THURSDAY, TILL 7 ONLY • color . ______ ______________ co-Zenith Dealer — DALBY TV— FE $4902 - 34Q East Lehigh St. 1" BLOND RCA. 24" GE, BRAND FOR! SALE HARMON KARDON F500X. Excellent condition. $179 new, will $*11 tor Ills cash. Call after 5:90 p.fn. 'Ll 44192. Also sell Hannan Kardon Award Sartos A509 Intorgratad Stereo Ampli-fler M waff output, excellent cpn-fl—‘ price at Slit. MEANS: ALL FARTS, ALL Singer sewing machine/In wa cabinet, used. Makes button hum*. I _____ ,__-- - -______■ monograms, all sewing lobs done I RECONDITIONED AND GUARAN-by tatting of the built-in dial. 1 *““* **“"“*' *** Full price $58.10 ar easy payments. Domelco, Inc., fermariy Michigan Necchl-Elne. FE 94521. TWO PAIRS OF BI-FOLD MAHOG- ) together In f ir unit or $40 fc USED GAS AND OIL FURNACES. Chahdler Heating, OR 3-5*32. WEODING ANNOUNCEMENTS AT discount prices. Forbes. 4500 Dixto Hwy. OR 14747. Hand Tggls-Machinery 68 FRONT SNOW RUDE ATTACH-ment, fits any tractors, 4-loot. 449. Everett Trencher, .complete with gears, fits any tractor, iltS. Metal Lathe with motor, 999. 474-219*. ........... ..........RANGE, $24.50; gas range, S10; Phllco emt Columbia TV, SIS each; R| breakfast sat " . Stot large d oik bedrodm RCA HI-FI AND RECORD CABI-Kelvinetor re- net, cost S1B0, sell *50. FE 2-3344. WEBCOR TRANSISTOR TAP! RE-iiilii” rte7h-lr~ 7dn»~ it1. i W*r, *75. 225-2709 offer 4 P-th, b^akfirt it. X small | "BNTAL, walnut buffet, table end 4 chairs, $59; tnaplt drop-leaf table and 4 chairs, 929. Will accept any — sonable offer. COASt WIDE LINES, 371 E. Pike St. A SINGER I W- AND MS-HORSEPOWER SUMP console pumps, new, used and exchanged, console. | guaranteed, y6ur mo- ‘ I FE 5-5443. toad TVs. SEVERAL TO CHOOSE FROM. , . JOHNSON'S RADIO & TV precision to6u and TS5l I E. WALTON FE *4449 rhasf. SIM. 01/00. 6$ 21-INCH CABINET tv. all fgmifi . Sarvicq 7A nau^tubas and picture tub*. OR [ SBntlcg IV in-\ir>. ffniverMl Soft Wafer!~ For Sal* MisceHaneous FOR s I H3V n « condition. Calf L ■ $5.00 . Used. Just dial tor buttonholes, monograms, overcasting, blind- hamming, etc. 3 -—- —------------- antee. Cash Ork per month will nonoie. Kicnmai Brothers Sawing Cantor, Pentlac'i ONLY authorized Nacchl Dealer 495 Elizabeth Lake Read, acresi Item the Pontiac Man. 32543*3. A World Famous Necchi 1944 Demonstrator, In brand new cabinet. Has zlg-zagger tor Wfttao-holes, monograms, blind hams, ate. No complicated attachments to buy. Lifetime guarantee and free Instructions at Rlchman Broth----------Pontiac's ONLY wmsswm price 1*3.90 or 95 Elizabeth Late Rt. __ lh* Pontiac Mall. 3359313. LOANS TO $1,000 Usually on Drat visit. Q u 11 friendly, helpful. FE 2-9206 It the number to call. OAKLAND LOAN CO. M3 Pontiac Stole Bank Bldg. 9;1S to silt — Sat. 9:M tol K. 1. Templeton, Realtor 733* Orchard Late Read 89341*9 iAUTY SHOP. FULLY EQUIPPED Jrl or 1 operators an Ohil* HOT-SPOT DRIVE-INN jrtftta here. Inside and outsld* service, seats 99 people, SU.509 down Including VALUABLE reel eiteto. WARDEN REALTY 3434 w. Huron, tenttoc 333-7157 LOANS 935 to SI,000 insured Payment Plan BAXTER ! LIVINGSTONE Finance jC*. 491 Pontiac Stale Rank Building FE 4-1538-9 FINANCIAL WORRIES Let Us Htlp.You! BORROW UP TO $1,000 BUCKNER MOTELS B. CHAPIN, Motel Broker i EL 748*0 , ' I LOANS SO E. Lawrence HUR CHEST FREEZER 17 Me feet, A-l. 9149. OL 2-9701. BUNK BEDS Choice of IS stylet, trundle b triple trundle beds and bunk I complete. *4?.50 and up. P eaw'sPurn Pure, 219 ■! Plus BETTERLY'S BARGAINS . Used Organs No' Down Payment CONN Mat $13.50 r CONN 25 pads! walnut ..» SIS.75 r HAMMOND Spinet .... *15.75 r BALDWIN Spinet ..... $24.75 r LOWREY Spinet *15.75 r Used console piano, also upright, n good buys. ALL ORGANS AND PIANOS MOST GO BY DSC. 11, 19*4 PEARSON'S FURNITURE COLONIAL FURNITURE, LARGE ----erything tor your " — ma Furnishings, .... .....cor. Telegraph. davenKtrt And chair, blond selection. Family' H< Dixit kFy. FREIGHT DAMAGED FIRESTONE STORE id* w. Huron 333-7917_______ FRIGIDAIRE, i ga! AaHoR S3S, refrigerator portable JyP*wrlter ' . *33.50 :ur»‘s Appliance OR 4-t!*l 1 WEEK ONLY . ', by % Sapell paneling, 53.95 I' by 7' predlnlshed mahogany S3.31 10" and 34"' Birch by-fold doors with hardware 99.95. PONTIAC PLYWOOD I4M Baldwin FE 2-2543 1 IliCTRIC IRONS, SET OF laundry tubs, 2 Hollywood bed frames, good used clothing, shoes. FE 2-4250 mornlngs. *2,190.00 Value $1,550.99 PX12* LINOLEUM RUGS $3.95 EACH j MORRIS MUSIC Plastic wall me ie e». j M s *8!LP**!!h9? cheep. Across from Tel-Huroo FE 24547 GALLAGHER'S ANNUAL YEAR-END CLEARANCE Pianos and organs, a" finishes. Will tell at savings. Buy now — P*VGALLAGHIR'S MUSIC II E.. HURON FE 4454* ROYAL OAK STORE 4224 WOODWARD . BETWEEN IJ AND 14 MILE OPEN MON.-FRI. TILL * P.M. FREE PARKING 10-GALLON JOHN BEAN POWER sprayer. Excellent condition. Includes special spray gun. $70. UL . Zlg-zagger Take on payments at .55.09 per month tor 9 months ar new balance of S34.I0. 5 year Darts guar-antee. Rlchman GMIIiar* Sawing Cantor/ Pontiac's ONLY authorized Necchi Daatar. 441 Elizabeth ' -■•- 1 Rd., across tram lh* Pontiac AUTOMATIC ZIO • »G SEWN machkia. "Fashion Dial Modal. Makes button-holes, overcasts, ep- Bottle Gas Installation Two 100-pound cylinders and equip , 112. Greet Plains Ges Co. gat furnace and boilers, automatic water heaters, hardware and.else-trlcel supplies. Crack, sen, cap-per. Mack and galvanized pipe end * fittings. Sentry end Lowe Brothers paint. Super Kem-Tene HEIGHTS SUPPLY ear Rd. ' FE 4-14)1 BEAUTIFUL, AUTOMATIC ZIG-ZAG slant, no attachments • 11 ■ ■ li i ii. null price *44.44 or *444 mbnthly. I year guarantee. Oom-elco, Inc. (Formerly Michigan NacckHtoa) FE MS21. GRINNELLS YEAR END Piano Clearance Baldwin Pjpno Reconditioned and restyled $275 Used Grands W5 - Used Uprights $59. . Floor SampN Pianos *7175° ‘ LOW EASY TERMS Grinnell's (Downtown) » S. Saginaw . .FE S.714«' PIANOS: UPRIGHTS FROM THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSPAV, DECEMBER 81, 1964 TWENTy-QWft J1 D!yu«W^u* Choose - from Hammond, Lowery, 17 «. SALE OUI-------. Leaner* and I Ssles-ServlceFulpnetkl. jfwfcytiy' _ _ 74 GUNS—6UNS-GUNS! irownlna 22 rite . veatterby 22 rifle lemlngton 22 rite ve have , ..... tm .n It gun* In stock frontier KOUt mMT m Ur-.™. ■EAR Archery Equipment FI*h7NO Tackle Surf Beard or paddel Board MERCURY OUTMAROS 3.9-100 15210 I Cliff Dover's ami and Soon Canti. y R^, ftdty _ ME 44771 ■AIIUBIUH-^.. 24 Michigan Ava. PE 54244 (ROW MOBILE! — FOft WINTER fun Oo Ski-Doo. All modBB on display. UP to 40 m.p.h. an bare ground or snow. Only weighs 250 lbs. Coma In and taka a ride. ■ ILL COtLBB Beet* and Motors, 1 mile oast of Lapeer on Min. - Sand-Gravel-Dirt 76 BILL MALE'S BIT. FILL, GRAVEL. goring, bock hoe work. EM 3-4173. CHOICE lUlCH BAck DIRt, SIX yards for $10. dtllvorad. FE 44518. lake dredging, beach sand, gravel md fill, OR 5-3450.____ tOP SOIL, SAHP^ OkAVEU PILL. PONTIAC ply. •* 3-1544. Wood-Coal-Coke-Fvel 77 IS- AND 24-INCH OAK FIREPLACE wood, also slab wood. 33442*1. 1-A AGED WOOD, V liP, ALSO slab. PE S4MS ar FE M044. CANNEL COAL - tHE IDEAL fireplace fuaL.fireplace wood, fireside colors. OAKLAND FUEL A PAINT. 45 Thomas St. FE S41SS. —.4 AND LARRY'S — DRY SLAB wood. SIS cord, 2 lor SI* delivered. FE >4442 or 4798514 Pets-Hinting Dogs PGALLON AQUARIUM, FUMF AND tutor opt, |2. lOMfkn setup, $12 Crone's! UL MtS. 11 DARLING MUTTS, FATHER AKC ---- ----... T ceite. ta tvmi. AKC JET BLA^K M ARE YOU FLORIDA SOUND? Gat your travel traitor now. AVALAIR& CREES, H0LLYS. TAWAS 141* lo IS ft., self-contained ■ Winter storage available. ELLSWORTH AUTO * and TRAILER SALES -----covers and l any pickup, OR >5524___________ PHOENIX TlfufiC"CAMPtllS vacation until March 1st. Thank you tor your patronage. JACOB-SON TRAILER SALES ANO RENT. AL, 54N Williams Lake Rd., Oray-—i Plains. OR S42S1. TRAVEL TRAILERS A NO TRUCK campers. - Pontiac Auto Brokers, Party at WattonuFE 44182. Special Offer ...___it y wide "Factory Cast Auburn (ME) at Opdyfca (M>4) LOOK WINTER - SALES MARLETTE. GARDNER, YELLOW-STONE TRAVEL TRAILERS AND TRUCK CAMPERS. Also many good used trailers. OXFORD TRAILER SALES 1 mile south of Lake Orion on M24 MY 24771 Wind CWiIWb lit ALWAYS EUYING AND FAYING A*QWE FOR GQOO CLEAN CARS ASK FOR BEUlFS AT - BIRMINGHAM CHRYSHR-PLYMOUTH. INC. 2ti s. woSdwprd i - ia.Atoto AVERILLS but got the best" FE S4S7S EM^okte* California Buyers “~* tthsrp cars. CeH . . . . M & M MOTOR SALES Did You Know? village Rambler MANSFIELD AUTO SALES i buying sharp, Ms ... NOWI Sap us fade 1 SPECIAL PRICE PAID FOR 1255-1242 CARS V VAN'S AUTO SALES • OR USSSl .GLENN'S WANTED^ 1252-1241 CARS Ells worth AUTO SALES - * Porkhurst Trailer Soles FINEST IN MOBILE LIVING 15 TO 40 teat. Featuring new Moon-Buddy and Nomads. Locatsd halfway between Orion and Oxford an M24, next In Alban Country Cousin.-MV 2- WE NEED CARS I TOP DOLLAR FOR GOOD CLEAN CAES Matthews-Horgrtavts S3! OAKLAND AVENUE FE 44547 Junk Cars—Tracks 101-A RHMtlarnRfcDU-^ucKs Free taw. OR 3-25M. MMXff— .... SSJUNK CARS-FREE TOWtt TOP iiUlllM SAM ALLEN & SONS, INC, JUNK CAlti HAULED AWAY WOLVERINE TRUCK CAMPEltS jacks. brtprcomfc telescoping I Ihod Auto-Truck Porta 102 Wow rad Dead Cot tSSI BUICK INVICTA CONVERT!* Me. Like new. 471-5152. 1241 BUICk IFiCIAL. 4-OOOR, VI straight stick, raBle, plat, EM ' . stt ulFikkf It,i BOBBORST LINCOLN-MBRCURY 520 5. Woodward Btftnln MI 6-4538 1961 SUICK Special, 4-door, V-i auto., condition, S$9S> VAN CAMP CHEVY MILFORD MU,4-ISM COME VISIT RUSS JOHNSON'S Used Can Strip ms CHEVY It Neva coupe ... SIMS 1241 chevy Mfirknrdiep .. siiu 1244 FORD pickup .. 11425 1244 GTO hardtop. ... If60 VW Micro bus .... 1241 DODGE wapon 1241 PONTIAC Starch let IM2 FORD Gslaxta 1241 PONTIAC hardl 1241 FORD Galaxla 194T BONN EVIL! “ 1244 CATALINA 1241 CHEVY wagon,_ 1241 CHEVY EM AIT hardtop I 1252 DODGE 24aPrlBnM2B 1241 PONTIAC Catalina - 1242 RAMBLER 4-deor Clatsli 1240 CORVAIR "7«0" 4-1244 iONNEVILLE Vista mi TIMFEST w— -mi RENAULT IPJm 1241 CORVAIR Mann . < 1243 TEMPEST *deer, V RUSS JOHNSON 1252 BUICK STATION WAGON. YOU SAVE $$$ 1245 ir widas. 2 bedrooms, I down, payments,, at *42 par mo, d selection of used f AKC REGISTERED BEAGLE PUPS L. E. Wiles. 7*4 E. Tennyson, FE 5-3245. . , BEAGLE PUPS. AKC BEOISTEBED. . all Bava shots. FE 54315. BOXER. 5 MONTHS SO-4752 aniTTANY PUPS, IS WEEKS OLD, GERMAN AhIfHERD PUP, FE-mala, AKC roplttored, 4 weeks old. Will aamp nr 10 paupa stet-gun, pood TV, or ??? NA 7-4571. GERMAN SHORTHAIRED POINTER heated .. ... lance—A good and W wBas i Terms to your —... . . BOB HUTCHINSON 301 Dixie Highway OR 1-1*8 Drayton Plains Onan 2 to 2 dally—Sal. 2 to 5 SUNDAY, 1 Tires-Auto-Track 92 Truck Tire Sp*ciol$ * “ highway ... 54US , highway . SSI.2* snow nylon $42.12 200x20-10 ply, mud and n35-17|»hr mud and M4220. Richway Poodle Salon All bread professional grooming A complete llnetof pat supplies 221 OAKLAND dint ta Ztoberfs) Open dally 94 , FES-Otl SINGER CANARIES. ALL . Pf CRANKSHAFT GRINDING I ■car. Motor rebuilding ane grinding. Zuck Machine SI Hood. Phone FE 2-2551- SPRNIGER PUPPIES, AKC, TOP EVERY SUNDAY 1:1* P.M. Ipdrtlng Goods — All Types Doer Prizes Every Auction we Buy—Sail—Trade, Retail 7 days Consignments Welcome ■M AUCTION 5002 Dixie Hwy. OR 1-1717 NO AUCTION UNTIL JANUARY 7 at OXFORD COMMUNITY AUCTION, but always span for your conelgnmants. Coma see us. SNN on Hwy. M-24, now 9 miles N. 04 Oxford in Mat amors Twp. 47S-2523. Clearance Sale G.M.C. Factory Branch New and Used Trucks, E 5-2495 ____S7I Oakland .5195 CMC 4 1241 BSA 450. Jflt Allstate trfc^ •7251 Auto Insurance 1243 BUICK WILDCAT. 44PEED. 2-door hardtop. Buckdt seats, real fast. Only UAH. FISCHER BUICK 1240 CHEVROLET V - I 4-OOOR hardtop, axe. condition. Low mlla-aga. FE 244M. REPOSSESSION ilck Wildcat, candy apple rad, r hardtop, call Mr. Jotmaan, 1954 CADILLAC SEDAN DeVILLE, ------------— ----------r, automatic has radio and heatar. _____-fearing, whitewall l Full price 51277 Banker's Outlet > 1400 Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE>7I17 152 CADILLAC 4-DOOR SEDAN Da VlllOp 1*ewn0r, new car trade, jr most (Hit new, SU9S full prld 15 down. WE FINANCE Lucky Auto 193 or 254 S. Saginaw FE 4*2214 or FE 3-7853 12 CADILLAC SEDAN DE VILLE. Lucky Auto 193 or 254 S. Saginaw FE 4-2214 ar FE 3*7853 (Accost open to lots while street YudMn) •" ' 1242 CHEVY, 2-OOOR SEDAN. 1955 CHEVY, RUNS 9 YAMAHAS ,11 New 1245 Model; K 4 W CYCLE |) AUTO INSURANCE FOR.ANYONE u | - DON NICNOLIE / FE HIM » AUTO INUMANCE Stop In today tor no obligation quotation. Anderson Agency | FE 4*3535 1044 Joslyn Ave. shin, mi am-4137 1254 CHEVROLET BEL AIR 2-DOOR standard transmiuidn shift and/Corvam e.._._ — tires, SPECIAL TODAY, 9125. You will lova IMS beautiful mafalll-prten eutomoblle. Autobahn /Motors, Inc! / AUTHORIZED VW DEALER 1745 5. Telegraph '*FE S-44] PeraHaCorB . Clarkston Rd.i Homos a se^BsT WATERFORD COIN 5HO day Jan. 3. 2 a.m.7 p. building. 5449 Wllllama La 200 RALES ALFALFA AND BROME. , 49c dotlvorod. Udj ....F6R BALE, 19445 RATTALEE Laht Rd.. Davlsbura, Mich. *Ti**6tHV Xl^Xlm hay and 1 UBED WHEEL HORBE TRActors storting tram H50. uaad chain saw. Evans Equipment. 625-1711, SEE OUR line of homelite chain saws. Davis MachlnsrY Co., Ortonvllla, NA f-3222. Specialist for w tractors and machinary part*. SEE Jj|. FIRST ANO SAVE. JOHN DEERE, HARTLANO *“ —1 ware, Phona 432-7141. USED ■*-*•-“ * L5665*— USED IHt CUB LO-BOY TRACTOR WITH SNOW BLADE A-1 SHAPE, Si,225. KING 3R0S. 4-0734 FE 4-1441 Pontiac Read af Opdyko 14’ 1*44 MODEL BLEEPS 4 51,095. GoodalL MO S. Rochester. UL 2-4059. U loss hmMU 6ti6iiKAY For a ■ deal on a qualify travel centurT^travelmaster 11M4 12-fool Centuries left TOM STACHIER AUTO and MOBILE SALES Ml w. Horaq Bt. FE Ut» airItrAamudhtweight TRAVEL TRAILERS Bines 1W2. Guaranteed tar Ufa, Sea tham aij yat a damenstra* tton at Warnsr Trailer Balsa, MOB W. Huron (plan to Wn ana ot Wally ■yarn's axcltlng caravans). SHiisiml Boats-AccessBries AT REASONABLE COST 10 oar cant down—Bank Ratos OAKLAND MARINE 121 S. Saginaw FE t-4101 4*HARD TO FIND BUT EASY TO | deal with.* Rinksr, Steury, Charo-kee beats, Kapot pontoons, 1960 CHEVROLETS 2S Months Chtvy OK Warranty Patterson Chevrolet Co. 194 S. Woodward Ava. Ml 4-27: BIRMINGHAM ■apoi pontoons, cviM- , Pamco trailers. Tate | „w, ■ ... Highland. Right on Hickory Ridge Road to Demode SALES0'AT ’flpBICo] Road. DAWSON' LAKE. Ft _________________ 1245 JOHNSON'S ARE HERE CLOSE-OUT ON '44 MODEUI , ■niti Canoes Trailers "oWENS MARINE SUPPLY ^ 124 Orchard Late" FE 2-4022 SPECIALS 1245 Johnson Motor, 5 h-p. S227.50 PINTER'S MARINI UNCONDITIONAL WARRANTY. Autobahn Motors, Inc. BIRMINGHAM Special Ddal iw" 225 hp. IVe-l - reduction ir, hardtop, leaded. Free strip to TRAD? "* -MNK7MNANC« uSKS IOHN5QN MOTORS' ■“SPORTS MINbED' BE SURE TO VISIT OUR NEW . SPORTi OISPLAY DEFaStMENT lea skates, hockey sttdu. skfr sleds, toboggans. Buna, baseball, ar chary, fjshlm goods. Msrqry, Bcott-—marbw . bOAT9-MOTOR 5—TRAILER - CRUISE-OUT BOAT SALES 43 R, waBr “ Dally fw WE WILL L_. —. WWi Nor's boats. Motors. Lake Orion ... AUSTIN HEAlV CONVERT I-BLE, RADIO, HEATER, EXCEL-LENT CONDITION. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Taka ever payments af S44.M par mon't). call CMfelt MiK» lBr. ra>*s lMI.Vw CONVERTIBLE, EXCEL-lant condition, srhlta, 5952. EJ4 1-2212. 1942 VW. SUNROOF, RED, EXTRAS 1242 FIAT 500. 5^0 CASH. FE 1-1474 yw, ymrrf. RADIO. GOOO ' II. BIHBs 4MH. 1941 AUSTIN HEALY SPRITE, good condition. Tate over pay* manta. OR 4-jSll batwasn i and OVER 100 CARS I CUSTOM FORNEY - RATES Tel-A-Huron Motor Sales iri^o^ioTO problem, we trade UP arDOWW. FE 8-9661 BUICK LaBABRE 4-bo 6 R Sn^’exoaUent*1, (. Call 1394541. HUNORkUS OF PEOPLE USE PRESS WANT AOS AND (GET RESULTS!, )EVERY DAY- CHlVY V-S, AUTOMATIC, war steering, brakes, radio, new as. Engine needs work. 673-7910 - Credit or Budget PROBLEMS? We Con Finance You! 100 Cars to Select Froml Qall Mr. Dale FE 37863 LLOYD'S 1250 Oakland Ave. 1912 CHEVROLET 4. BEL Aik 2-door. Vpry nice. PE 1-7541. H. Rlg-glns, Peeler. - T 1252 CHlVY 5)97 King Auto Sales BEATTIE WISHES YOU and the FAMILY HAPPY < NEW YEAR BEATTIE S'SxTSJWtw.W.X "Home of SERVICE stter the sale" OR 3*1191 By Andewon 6 LfBaim Ntw and Used Cars 116 125$ DODGE, Sill, TAKE OVER poymonts. —-------u --------- tor wstk. $42.00 ____________________________FE 92110 Ml CHEVY IMFALA I•DOOR hardtop, VI owptnd. automatic, radio, power steering, brakes, 1MIB miles, extra Ntora — almost Nte new I 12,450. JEROME FERGUeON me. Rochastor FORD Dealer, OL 1243 DODGE POLARA, HARDTOP. 25 Months Chevy OK I Warranty 1243 Monza Coupe. Azure aqua wll aqua trim. Powergllde, radio, tea ar, whitewalls. Spare never teen o the ground. Only " “ matching Interior, good i onion. MY 1-1544. 1962 CHEVY BEL-aHI 4-DOOR, engine, automatic, radio, tea. 30,000 mHdS, and real sharp I *1,225. jilomrp«aveoN me. |m| ester FORD Pastori PL WW1, 1964 CHEVROLET 25 Months ChEvrolet OK Warranty 105 Bargains at HUNTER DODGE BIRMINGHAM'S NEWEST DEALER DURING OUR ' YEAR END CLEAN OUT . OF 1965 DODGES IMMEDIATE DELIVERY . CREDIT NO PROBLEM Also available the following one-owner trade*insi ‘41 "44(" 9-passenoer . 02,425 *11 "MO*' Convertibles air ... $2,695 *11 Chrysler 900 convertible .. 12,095 *19 Dart 2-door, sharp! .!.... 01,295 '63 "30" 2-door, lharpt 01,395 *63 Simca, Ilka new ., . .0 995 '61 Uwicer wagon ........ '61 Plymouth, like new *61 Plymouth 9-passenger *60 Qalaxla 100 ......... *61 Dodge truck ......... hunter dodge E CORVAIR. A-1 25 Months Chevy OK Warranty matching trim. V-I ------------(tsarina. 20,000 B1.12S Fawn >d 9-passbnger wagon. i (awn Interior. hues 1 V-S ongu steering, Patterson Chevrolet Co. 14 5. Woodward Ava. Ml 4-2715 BIRMINGHAM CMEVV IMFALA 2-DOOR ■rdtop. automatic, radio, whlto* alls. Firestone '500' tires, bamlit-il condltlan. »U10. Call 42*2124. 12*2 CHEVY IMFALA, 4-DOOR white intofiqr, ..T. , f spaed and posltractton, heater, whitewalls. 10,000 miles. Only 0142 down. ala Snort Coupe. Ember j black trim. VJ» angina. Pew f, pawar (tearing, only $2.3 Bltcayna 2-door sedan M.... green with all vinyl Interior. Pcyl-inder angina, Powergllde, poar* steering, power brakes, radio, ho< or, whitewalls. Lika ntw. Alto i ermine white with rad trim, la vary nice. Your choice tor on Km. Patterson Chevrolet Co. )dw«rd Ave Ml 4*27 BIRMINGHAM il. CORVETTE STINGRAY, FUEL nltcted, 4-spe ‘ | * er. MA 4-1914. 1963 FalcOn Sprint CpnVertible Cell Mr. Rogsr^Whlto at— McAULIFFE 1962 Cheyrolets • 25 Months Chevrolet OK Warranty mgtla convertible. Bright red finish with matching *“*“ “4,u* steering, radio i, heater, whitewalls. whBewails. .Extra Patterson Chevrolet Co. 1194 S. Woodward Ave. Ml >2715 Birmingham OLIVER BUICK 124-219 Orchard F E 2-2145 MONkA COUPE. EYE caltont running condition. FOR THE. PERSON WHf |3n INGI Full prl 125 down and ENJOY* DRIV-*1,125 With a " bank ratas Autobahn Motors, Inc. AUTHORIZED VW DEALER to mile north of Mlracto Mila 1755 5. Talagraph FE »4Q1 1242 CORVAIR, RADIO, _W|M WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Taka aver at Harold Turner Ford; Ml 4-7522. “ 1962 Chevy Imoala Hardtop Moor with redid, heater, automatic transmission, power steer* — Ready to go at 1963 CHEVROLETS 25 Months Chevy OK Warranty impale sport coupe. Polamar rad with black trim. V-I angina, Pow-erglide, power steering, radio, hoot-.er, whitewalls. A one-owner trada. Only 5142 down. impale convertible. Azure aqua with block top. VI engine. Power-glide. power steering, radio, hooter, whitewalls. Only .. . *1,225 Bel Air s-paudngar wagon. Azure aqua, VI angina, Powergllde, power steering, radio, teator, white walls. Only .v............... si,225 Sal Air 2-door sedan. SHvei with blue trim. Vi angfew.-l______ glide, radio, hooter ..77..., $1,495. Impels 4-doer sedan: Saddle ta with matching trim. VI sngim Powerglide, power steering, radii Mater, whitewalls/.. — $1,89 Patterson Chevrolet .Co. 1104 5. Wgbdjgjrd. Ml *P SPORTS COOPt vertible, $|Eh 2lhl*r 1963 CHEVY IMPALA Sharp I Lew down payment. ELLSWORTH AUTO and TRAILER SALES 4577 Dixit Hwy. MA 5-1411 , CHEVY H 25 Months Chevrolet OK Warranty 1244 100 otrlaa 2-door aadSn. I fomstic, gold wHh town trim. Hi finder engine, powerglide. rad Meter, whitewalls. Only 7.209 i $1797 McAULIFFE FORO , iORVEtTES 25 Months Chevy OK Warranty 12*2 cirvalio convertible. Fewer* glide, radio, heatar, whitewalls. Rad aM. white exterior, rad te tar r lor with block top. Only *1425. Patterson Chevrolet Co. 1*4 S. Woodward Ava. Ml 4-2715 BIRMINGHAM Patterson Chevralet Ca-u lot s. Woodward Ava. Ml *-:735 ' BIRMINGHAM Mil C M e¥V CHEVELLE. dear, v-l aMarosNc, radio, Ultra clean! Only 51.225. JEROME WE ARE A VOLUME DEALER '65 Chryslers —TODAY—* —Wa Can Deliver— '65 Plymouths -TODAY— - Wa Can Deliver — -65 Ramblers - Today - BILL SPENCE 0.450 OR 3-4471. Mew and U*#d Con Ml M2 FORD FAIELANB J50 4-DOOR sedan. BaautHut burgandy ftoWs with sharp fawn Intorter, V-i engine, jHwitoflc. radio, AMIKi whitewall Mb Priced af only *1,225 and carries our IS months CtevrajN OK Warranty. FATTER* ION CHEVROLET CO. JW WARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM. 4-2715. 1241 FAIRLANk 4, ITltk, 11,11 Ca« ME 4aaf ar FE 91715. 1963 FORD GALAXIE ELLSWORTH AUTO and TRAILER SALES 4577*Olxte H 1154 FORD FAIRLANE, be seen at 31 E. W Clarkston, MA 5-4*57. 1251 FORO FAIRLANE 500. 4-DOOR, mechanically good. Bast offer. Call after s, 131-4111. 1252 FORO FAIRLANE' 500. OOOD mbBmi j “ FOkb GALAXIE. If aMtD* Stic, good condition, 5500 o *■'“* for. <41 4-7251.______________ • JEROME OLDS and CADILLAC New Car Savings — Today . CALL FE 3-7021 ,„ M>OOR, AliTOMfSt 1C TRANSMISSION, RADIO. HEATER, WHITEWALLS TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN Tako over payments af 511.25 month. CALL CREDIT MGR., Parks, at Harold rurnar F o Ml 4*7500. Kb T-BIRD, GOOD CONDITION. FE 2-9775. _____________J 1249 FORD 5127 Kina Auto Sales 2275 W. Huron St. FE 94022 FALCON 1240, GREEN 2-DOOR, i ----------“ff, good whltowtl' " 5450. FE 5-7517, HAUPT PONTIAC 744 PONTIAC GRAND FRIX, r« dte - Motor, power steering, grates old car downl 1242 TEMPEST LeASANi CONVERT- O, heater r only Si 41425. r HAUPT PONTIAC- H Mile North af U.t. W Of CLARKSTON MA 261 FALCON STATION WAGON, RADIO. HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY MONEY DOWN. Trkt over ments pf $27.25 per month CALL CREDIT MGR.. Mr. Parks. Harold Turner Ford. Ml 4-7529. Credit or Budget PROBLEMS? We Can Finance Youl Call Mr. Darrell -FE 8-4528 —ANYTIME— SPARTAN DODGE INC. NORTHWOOD AUTO SALlt FE 5-2232 741 FORO CONVERTIBLE V-4. AU* TOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO, HEATER. WHITEWALL T I R E S. ABSOLUTELY HE MONEY DOWN. Teka ov« M mants of 511.12 par month. CALL CREOIT MGR., Harold Tumor Ford. Parks at buy Your next OLDS OR RAMBLER FROM H0UGHTEN & SON ROCHESTER MN.M HEATER. AUTOMATIC TRANS-MISSION, WHITEWALw TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Taka over payments of 522.75 per month. CALL CREDIT «AGfL MTu Farits, at Herald Turner Ford. IKE NEW 1242 FORD VICTWU 4-door, hardtop, 152 V4. crulso-mafic trl- power. 25,000 miles, 11497. WiH trada* FE 4*7H, 1242 F AL66n ST at I ON WAGON. iBgpiSr adnf “*- * *■---~ HW. ^-O-Y End-of-Year Sale s - December 22 — January 1 CADILLACS 1249 TO 1254 PONT IAC5.1949 TO 1244 FORDS 1*41 TO 1244 OLOS 1249 TO 1*41 TEMPESTS 1241 TO 1244 WILSON 1962 Ford Galaxi* 500 Hardtop mafic, pawar steering, adtlfewaNs. Only— $1696 ril Mr. Ed WMson at- McAULIFFE • . , FORO -CBfe Oakland Ava. FORO COUSArRY SEDAN, 2-passanger wagon. Y-9. Crulse-O-Metlc radio, teator. steering and brakes. Ilk* pgw jirofjgjoutl lav* IS. JEROME FERGUSON Inc. -Rechastar FORD Deelar, OL 1*1— 1941 TEMPEST 4-DOOR, STANDI 1968 Ford Convertiblo medium bhMffnlsh. . $2Q91 McAULIFFE FORD I Oakland Ava. FE S4iei U FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE 5TA- Credit or Budget PROBLEMS? W* Con Finance You! 100 Cars to Select From! Call Mr. Dale FE 3-7863 LLOYD'S 1250 Oakland'Ave. 1244 FALCON HARbtOP. V-I, RED -'“l black interior, only * *** I8. $2.250, FE 4*2388. a good i pickups. I CLEAN UP SPECIAL ..r 181 car* and trucks. 812 9 Economy Cara, CM Dlxte H 1244 FORD FAIRLANE 9D00R hardtop, standard transmission, radio, like new throughout! $1425. JEROME FERGUSON, Inc., r ' ester FORD Dealer. OL 1-2711. 1965 Mustong Convertible * This Is only tea months ok Honey gold ftnlah. Mg V4, powi steering, all th* extras. Only — Call Mr. Day* Sytvastsr at— $2999 JOHN McAULIFFE > condition. 411 Now wi Deed Cm 1*6 tW wagOn. fOuT *r, good shape. *425,1494212. 14* FbNTIAC cataliHX,"] GOING InT6 leRVlC*, Wpi over paymsnto m V9 FanBad. »■ ■ hardtop Vanterp. aid step*. '51 Ctevy Impel*, Mfbdr terd- noarB marpon ^artor^fuTsSea'anty'ldM." * ' COOPER!, 4271 DIXIB. DRAYTON Credit or Budget - PROBLEMS? We Can Finance You! 100 Cars to Saloct From! Call Mr. Dale FE 3-7863 LLOYD'S 12^0 Oakland Ave. Hydre- ■JSi 243 PONTIAC CATALINA WjoSl hardtop. Shiny midnight blue arm matching Ventura trim. ■*—— brakes, tm"'wheel, *T»dte, I whitewalls. Extra shirk a-§U2i *— Cii” AVE„ IMS PONTIAC CATALINA 4-OOQR *Low mUaag* Sr. Vary 1241 PONTIAC CATALINA CON-siflRis. Powor-Hydramstl—— with black top. F« K4721. SHELTON P0NTIAC-BUICK 155 Racteator Read OL 1-HI «1 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE. Full power. Reverb. AM-FM 'radio. Tinted glass, automatic antenna, whitewalls, aaesHaM ondMm. i mileage. 4769454 or FE 4-4P57. 244 WHITE BONNEVILLE WAG-on, hydrematic, power steering and brakes, with alter extras. $2,250. 312,1141. 4 PONTIAC CATALINA. 4-OoDE sedan, whitewalls, power steering, brekesl $2,159. 4M-2M7. We're wheeling and dealing tht all-new 1965 Romblers. See them, now! Used cars are being sold at wholesale to make room far the new car trades; ROSE RAMBLER 1964 GT0 Convertible this beauty I* a sun Are rad, 4-SPEEO, almost IBM new throughout! Only $2495 Homer High! 1254 LINCOLN PREMIERE. BEAU- 1963 Mercury 4-Door, Sedan McAULIFFE 1257 OLDS 29, 42,000 MILES, WW-er brakes* steering, excellent to- --------£g a -A- ^ 1962 OLDS F-85 Cptlass convertible. 1-owner. Clean and sharpl 11,325, terms. Russell Yeung. M4-1808.__________ Oldsmobiles 1959-1964s —Atony Modal* on Display— . Birmingham Trades Suburban Olds USED CARS EfRMINflMAM 1964 BONNEVILLE . 4-door terd*op. Automatic, POMr steering, pawar brakes. Nlcsl Lew down payment. ELLSWORTH AUTO and TRAILER SALES 4577 Dixie Hwy._____MA 5J4M rear springs, very good 1252 PLYMOUTH WAGON, RADIO, tester, VI, power brakes and steering; stick with overdrive, good transportation, gas. 114-1311. 1243 PLYMOUTH SPORTS FURY convertible, sharp, 1-owner car. 1964 PONTIAC CATALINA Hardtop. Automatic, power (tearing powerbrakaa, tow mitosa*- Sc* this ““. ELLSWORTH AUTO and TRAILER SALES 4577 Dixie Hwy. MA 5-)4ig reasonably priced dependability Is a must . . . Than look no further . . PON- TIAC RETAIL STORE Is th* pteca to shop, They have only, "First Class" "Goodwill" uaad cars that ar* prlcad honestly. You dent have to sattla tor second -bail. A phone call to FI 1-7254 er a short drive to. 45 Ml. Clemons SI., downtown Pontiac, talk with any af th* friendly salesman. They'll solve your used car problems to your absolute MM PLYMOUTH FURY 4-OOOR, i?S PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE, full powuri r*w fop and ports. Best offtr. Ml 6-1490. MARVEL xit Oakland Ava. - ' ft'* *" 1240 VENTURA, POWER I Ing and braitete 8M8. FE 49 Brand New Shipment of 1964 Ambassadors FULLY LOAOlb: RADIO. ^wISakseT»m CATORS, OIL FILTER, DOUBLE ACTION BRAKES VISIBILITY GROUP. LIGHT GROUP. INDIVIDUAL ||v CLININO SEATS, WMifi- w aXl tTSll* “uLl WHEEL COVERS. $1977.77 ' 222 dawn. M months sn balancs VILLAGE RAMBLER 666 S. Woodward felrmhqdtom ” Ml 6*3900 PONTIAC CATALINA COUPE. —JO miles. *1,400. UL 2-5049.' 12M P6NTIAC OTO. 4-IFEEO. fkl- 1244 PONTIAC STAR (SiflUnL ----' sedan, agtou *, double pew- radio, heater, wnitomlls. geld. -I'S, 477 S. Lapeer Rd., ,OSsn. 2-2041. 1944 bonnevillB; hVoromatic. (tearing,. brakes, antenna, whitewalls. Black 2-door -----... 82409 or 8189 and pt ever payments. OR 3-2245 after 8. 1244 PONTIAC 4-DOOR, SKY BLUE, tew miteaga. on*-owner,^eutotte2lc ing, radio, hooter. Price fUElli Henry Clay. FI BiMM. G.T.O. i 4-SPEED Do you have some place to go espadallyt his machine will solve your prob-.1. W# can .finance youl PATTERSON* IGE—DODGE TRUCKS . 1801 N. Main SI. ROCHESTER OL 1-85M. 1944 TEMPEST 4-DOQR. V8 Efe-glna, (—*-—*■- "—u* erakas. Hilltop Auto Soles, Ink. Annual Station Wagon SALE ’» Rambler Wagon .. iffifetrrri ‘41 Falcon wagon . *1.125 IMIMr......91J2J '45 Country Man . U44S •44 VW WPB*n . *t,725 ’41 Ctevy Wagon . *1.941 962 Oakland FE 8-9291 1964 PONTIAC BONNEVIUf Law miteaga. Law aawn payment. ellswobthSmo and TRAILER SALES ' KESSLERS DODGE \ CAR* ANO TRUCKS Sato* and Service . 1959 RAMBUR J ear atotto nwagen wtth rw. i, automatic frammliilan. 188 S. Bait f._ * FE 3-7161 SB "SELECT" UeBduCAAr*1 1 UW'iS! l No fair otter. daM ar- SUPERIOR RAMBLER ; 55a Oakland FE S-9«1 nTWHB RAMBLER t-06t>». teator, fuB equlpmant, IN IBM $11.11 par weak. «. SUPERIOR RAMBLER 550 Oakland FE 5-9621 TWENTY-TWO g THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 81, 1964 Their were 1,828,000 teachers I ate elementary and secondary in the nation's public and priv-1 schools in IMS. Wirtz-Henning Squabble Affected labor Settle Family Row in LBAdministration By NEIL GELBRIDE WASHINGTON (AP) - President Johnson has quietly negotiated settlement of an embarrassing administration family fight that had jeopardized relationships among his administration, Congress and organized labor. ■*? Under the settlement, it was learned today, Secretary of Labor W. Willard Wirtz has withdrawn his demand for the resignation of Undersecretary of Labor John F. Henning. * * * Wirtz’ attempt to fire Henning had drawn the wrath' of AFL-CIO President George Meany and Rep. Adam Clayton Powell, D-N.Y., among others. While Labor Department and AFL-CIO spokesmen .said they had no details of the settlement, these details were learned from highly reliable sources: To settle the Wirtz-Henning CALL NOW! Waterford Hill Country Club 625-2609 squabble, Johnson lent In a high-level mediator — Supreme Court Justice Arthur J. Goldberg, Wirtz’ predecessor as labor secretary. ‘GRACEFUL RETREAT It was Goldberg's presence at meeting with Wirtz and Meany Tuesday that provided the basis for Wirtz to make what was described as “a graceful retreat.” Meany had been furious over Wirtz’ demand for Henning’s resignation and had threatened to withdraw the big labor federation’s unqualified support of the Johnson administration. A ★ .★ The dispute between Wirtz and Henning was basically over a difference in policy approaches to important labor department programs, including what Students End Dixie Project Burned-Out Church Is Almost Rebuilt son calls his war on pover- Powell, chairman of the House Education and. Labor Corhmittee, had backed Henning in the dispute, expressing concern over the administration of the so«alled antipoverty program if Henning should be fired, HIGH REGARD The dispute was particularly embarrassing to Johnson because of his high regard for Wirtz and his election debt to Meany, who had thrown the full support of the AFL-CIO’» IS million membership behind Johnson’s successful campaign. Goldberg noted for his finesse in settling tough disputes when he was secretary of labor, was handed the difficult job of resolving the impasse lietween Meany and Wirtz. ★ ★ ★ The details of the meeting were sketchy, but Goldberg reportedly had sided with Meany and Henning even before John> son asked him to medirte^tbe dispute. Goldberg was^AFLCIO attorney before being named secre- tary of labor by the late President John F. Kennedy. Henning is a former California AFLCIO official who is held in high regard by most union officials as organized labor’s most prominent spokesman in government. Wirtz wax undersecretary — the No. 2 job in the department when Kennedy named Goldberg to the Supreme Court in 1962. . * ' * h Wirtz at that time was promoted to secretary, and Kennedy picked Henning for the No. 2 job of undersecretary. Wirtz reportedly was somewhat nettled because he had no say in the original appointment of Homing, and the two had clashed frequently on major policy matters. The chief difference apparently was the broad-gaira, intellectual approach oL'mrtz, a former lawrer-'and professor, and HemoSsSgt trade unipn approach. Most union officials thought Henning helped balance government programs . concerning labor through his long experience in trade union matters. White indorse 3rm Famous for Fine \ Food and Liquors < for Over 125 Years; ; New Year’s Eve i Music by < ; The Do-Mi-Sol Trio< ’ Russ Stump 1 Jim Moore ’Harry Jones; ■ Dmctnjt Frl. and Sat. Nights Metamora, Mich. '‘Among Hie HUM” Nights: 678-2560. ; ri-.J: SQUARE and ROUND DANCING GALA NEW YEATS EVE ■Mi, Or»y«r-i Orth. Garden Center Ballroom 2tS7 «Mm4 Detroit Donclnf Ivory Thun* Sat., Sun. CAMPUS |ALLROOM STARTS NEW YEAR’S DAY! Shsrt Subjects at ......1:00—3:00 — 5:00 - 7:00 - 9:00 FUTURE at... ............. 1:20—3:20—1:20—7:20—0:20 RICHARD BOONE in “RIO C0NCH0S” COLOR j MOLLY BEE “THE SWINGERS" RIPLEY, MtaMAP) - Col-lege students who raised a new Negro church on the ashes of one that burned after a civil rights rally began packing for home today. The new Antioch Baptist church stood unfinished but most of the major work is done. A modest steeple adorned the front. *T just wish we could have completed it before we left," said Marshall Aronoff, a student at Oberiin College in Ohio. The 28 white students still on hand — six left several days ago — joined a festive, three-hour civil rights rally in the church Wednesday night. SHERIFF OUTSIpE Sheriff Wayne Mauney stood outside during the meeting. He said he wanted to make certain everything was peaceful. The new steeple was hoisted just a,few hours before the rally. The benches were planks supported by concrete blocks. The light glared from bare bulbs hastily. strung along the rafters. The 200 Negroes who attended roared “freedom songs” and heard high praise for the students who turned their holiday . I into a “Carpenters for Christ-■ mas” project. Some students planned to continue work here until Jan. 21 fore heading back to class. The “‘carpenters” have had all the help they needed from Negioes in the area. WORK LEFT Dr. David Jewell, a member of the Oberiin faculty, said electrical wiring was not completed, and plumbing and bricklaying must be done, in addition to finishing touches inside. Oberiin was the moving force in the project. The work crew included students from Tulane, Yankton College, Northwestern, Massachusetts and Washington University at St. Louis. Six-sevenths of the atea of I tive, and only 0.8 per cent is Iceland is considered unproduc-1 devoted to cultivation. 51133 “sag FREE! DONUTS and COFFEE! FREE! Kisses For My President 7:15 and 10:50 “I’D Rether Be Rich 9:20 P.M. Only ALL THE BLAZING ACTION OF JAMES JONES’ GREATEST! Stsrts TOMORROW . _ TREMENDOUS! *'■- "‘mwis-atowDS-CROwis in tnnnin nans smashed! HELCtOVER lad BIG WEEK! ROCKT": dor* Hudson Day IDNyRaNDSB. Asunxi. t&juA, «AXA.-^cnrtn, beAt Sgnd^mo no pjweRs u...juOfcdeiMCW co-starring HAL MARCH * PAUL LYNDE* EDWARD ANDREWS PATRICIA BARRY* CUNT-WALKER ..m LAST TIMES T0NITE! FrtBMacMmray -NlfBam Kisses for my President at 7:05 and 9:05 lEWDSTODHY ATMHflCLE OFEMILY*- MHttT^'VEgymWE AFFAIR*} y PONTIAC PRKSS, THt3H8DAY; DECEMBER 81, ltfft *twenty-thrke r—Television Programs— Program! fumishad by »tation» listed In this column an aubjoct to change without notice. •swmjMRw S Chonwei a-WJMt»TV Chenwel 4-VOWJ-TV QmmgiY-WXYZ-TV Chortntl9-CKLW-TV CKenne) 56-WTVS THURSDAY EVENING . 1:11 m «) News, Wettber; Sports (7) Movie: “Operation Camri'Mln Progress) (t) Huckleberry Hound ^(56) Focus on Old U.N. 6:30 (3) (4) National News (7) (Color) News, Sports (9) Bat Masterson (Repeat) (M) Changing Work! (Repeat) / ■ ’ 6:45 (7)..National News 7:N (2) Leave it to Beaver , (Repeat) (4) (Special) Year’s Sports in Review (7) (Color) Michigan Outdoors New look at the ski country; tips on ice fishing (!) Greatest Show (Rapist) 7:30 (2) Munsters Lily’s brother, Lester the Wolf Man, turns up to wipe out the family’s bank account (4) (Special) Rose Bowl Reyiew (See TV Features) (7) (Color) Johnny Quest Dr. Quest investigates vol- • cano that won’t stop erupting. (56) Heritage 8:01 (2) Perry Mason Young engineer is accused of sabotaging controversial bousing project for his own gain. • (7) Donna Reed Jeff and Smitty rent apartment near college campus. (I) Stagecoach West (Repeat) , 1:39 (4) Dr. Kildare Debtor (Walter Mezak) knows he’s dying; what he doesn’t know is how to prepare his dependent wife for the inevitable. (7) My Three Sons. Friends’ marital discord gives Mike and Sally some second thoughts about upcoming marriage. 9:99 (2) (Special) Nuthouse (Repeat) (7) Bewitched (Repeat). (!) Show on Shows 1:31 (4) (Color) Hazel r Hazel shows multimillionaire how to reduce his " taxes. (7) Pevton Place Betty makes crucial decision. (8) Serial “A TYsin of Murder” (Part 2) 1I:M (2) Defenders Albert Dekker portrays ex- * racketeer, now leading citizen, arrested and charged with traffic in narcotics. (4) (Color) Suspense The- Roddy McDowell stars as skid row intellectual who tries to prove dead wino friend was ^innocent of murder. (7) Jimmy Dean Kay Starr, Homer and Jethro head guest list. (t) Wrestling !1:N (1)14) (7) (!) News, Weather, Sports 11:21 (7) Les Crane 11:21 (2) Naked City (Repeat) (4) (Color). Johnny Canon (8) To Be Announced 12:M (9) Movie: “Young Lov- ers" (195$) Odile Versois, Theodore Bikel 12:29 (2) (Special) Religious Music 1:91 (4) Lawman (Repeat) (7) Rowan and Martin — Variety 2:99 (7) News, Weather FRIDAY MORNING ,7-99 (2) Happyland (4) Today (7) Johnny Ginger 8:99 (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Big Theater 8:99 (7) Movie: “Courage of Lassie.’’ Elizabeth Taylor, Frank Morgan. 8:iS (9) Morgan’s Merry - Go-Round - 9:99 (2) Movie: “Field Cargo” Dana Andrews, Claude ; .Raines. • ' (4) Living (9) To Be Announced 19:99 (4) Make Room for Daddy (Repeat) (9) Ivanhoe 19:29 (2) (Special) Cotton Bowl Parade (See TV Features) (4) (Color) What’s This Song? ' (9) Across Canada 19:5$ (4) News 11:11(4) (Color SpoeUt) Orange Bowl Parade (See TV Features) .,(7) Girl Talk (9) Friendly Giant 11:11 (9) Chez Helene 11:29 (2) (4) (Color Special) Rose Parade (See TV Features) (7) Price Is Right (9) Butternut Square 11:99 (9) News AFTERNOON 12:99 (7) (Color Special) Mummers Parade (See TV Features) (9) To Be Announced 1:99 (7) To Be Announced (9) Movie: “Huckleberry Finn” (1921) Jackie Coo-gan, Mitzi Green. 1:99 (7) (Special) Inauguration Ceremony (See TV Features) l.’4i (2) (Special) Cotton Bowl (See TV Features) (4) (Color Special) Sugar Bowl (See TV Features) 2:99 (7) Flame in the Wind 2:39 (7) Day in Court 2:59 (7j News / 3:99 (7) General Hospital 3:19 (9) News7 3.-39 (7) Young Marrieds (9) Take 30 4:99 (7) Trailmaster (9)-Razzle Dazzle 4:39 (9) Popeye 4:45 (2) Movie: “Slaughter Trail” (1951) Brian Dpn-levy, Gig Young. (4) (Color Special) Rose Bowl (See TV Features) 5:99 (7) Movie: “Abbott and Costello Meet the Invisible Man” (1961) 5:19 (56) Friendly Giant 5:39 (9) Rocky and Friends (56) What's New 5:45 (9) Bugs Bunny 5:59 (2) Sports Television Features Bowl Parades and Games By Uetted Prese International ROSE BOWL PREVIEW. 7 JO p.m. (4) Don Kremer reports on U. of Mr trip to the Roee Bowl, shows films of both Michigan and Oregon Stats football games. FRIDAY \ COTTON BOWL PARADE, 19:99 «.m. (2) Allen Ludden, Marilyn Van Derbur report on Dallas event; Texas Gov. John B. Connally is grand marshal. Greene, Betty White describe 60 floats with “Headlines in Flowers” theme; among NBC stars on hand will be Chuck Connors, Fess Parker. . MUMMERS' PARADE, 12 noon (7) Les Crane, Kathy Nolan are TV hosts for traditional Philadelphia parade. ORANGE BOWL PARADE, U;00 a m. (4) Dennis Weaver narrates taped highlights of annual King Orange Jamboree Parade held previous night in Miami; grand marshal is Jackie Gleason. INAUGURATION CEREMONY, 1:30 p.m. (7) Live coverage of ceremonies, pageantry at Gov. Romney’s inauguration in Lansing. pOTTON BOWL. 1:45 p.m. (2) Nebraska (9-1) meets Arkansas (10-0) in Dallas. ROSE PARADE, 11:90 a.*. (2) Bess Myeraon, Ronald Reagan cohost 76th annual Tournament of Roses parade from. Pasadena, Calif.; golfing great Arnold Palmer leads parade. SUGAR BOWL, 1:4$ p.m. (4) Syracuse j (7-3) meets Louisiana State University (7-2-1) in New Orleans. ROSE PARADE, 11:30 a m. (4) Lome ROSE BOWL, 4:45 p.m. (4) University of Michigan (9-1) meets Oregon State University (6-2) in Pasadena, Calif. 'Keep Fat From Hubby's Dief MSMNVWNRNMMNNMMM Duke Thanks MDs, All Well-Wishers Crossword AIDI ARBOR (AP)-A’ heart expert told wives today how to keep their husbands living longer by more egre with the food served hint' - Stop serving him fat, juicy steaks' and loading his foods with butter and animal fats, said Dr. Park W. Wilis III, cardiologist and professor of internal medicine at the University of Michigan. Dr. Willis also is president of the Michigan Heart Association. The association took this holiday period to make public a stern statement by Dr. Willis." . “Actually,” Dr. Willis said, “the power to divert or delay heart attacks is largely in the hands of wives.” SCARY STATISTICS Citing some scary statistics on the incidence of fatal hear) attacks among American husbands, Dr. Willis said research indicates friend wife can do a lot to help by decreasing the l fat content of hubby’s diet. [ Besides the fat juicy steaks, Dr. Willis vetoed “baked goods loaded with saturated fat, shortenings or lard.” Emphasise die use of sknR milk end sherbets and minimil that of eggs; bacon and otbaf high-fat foods.” □ USED n rv| HAPPY HOLIDAY! HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) - The Duke of Windsor has expressed thanks to his doctors and the thousands who had sent him good wishes for his speedy recovery from abdominal surgery 15 days ago. The 70-year-old former British monarch leaves Methodist Hospital today. With Ms duchess, for whose love he surrendered the throne almost 30 years ago, he checks into the nearby Warwick Hotel. They will remain there about a week before returning to New York. Births Cqro/ Set for Inaugural; to Carol 'Hello, Lyndon' The following is a list of recent Pontiac area births as recorded at’the Oakland County Clerk’s Office (by name of father): 2 3 4™ 6 5“ r 8 9™ 10 rr \2~ nr ir RT" i5" rr ii" 19 ST sr E~ 23 a i 5T 27 W H m 34 35 36 37“ 3T sr 40“ *n W w 46 w 47 J 7T Jr 50~ 51 52 53 sr ST 66 87 ST p9~ 8r 8f 62" 55" 5r 65 I 31 By EARL WILSON NEW YORK — FDR’s favorite song really wasn't “Home on the Range” .. . Harry S. Truman undoubtedly got tired of hearing “The Missouri \£altz” ... but it’s certain now that Lyndon mm R. Johnson's most beloved song is “Hello, Lyn- KEEP PORCHES FREE OF ICE and SNOW don!” — not to be confused with “Hello, Dolly!” —sung with any lyrics that Carol Charming wants to sing. “The President,” one of his admirers just told us, “considers that ‘Hello, Lyndon!’ he never thinks of it as ‘Hello, Dolly!'—4s his song. “After the band played ‘Hail to the Chief’ at some recent functions, he said ‘Now why ’t you play my song?’ ” ■ | Respectful of LBJ’s tastes in songs, Carol Charming will dash to La Guardia Airport Saturday night, Jan. 16, when the curtain rings down on “Hello, Dolly!” and fly to Washington to get plenty of sleep Sunday, and plenty of rehearsal Monday, to sweep into the Inaugural gala Monday nitfit and sing, as it’s never been sung before, HIS song,. “HELLO, LYNDON!" * Nicholas i. Nylon.J Ml S. Rochester Michael J. Foley, 1094 Avon Manor j c. iicrl 1104 First out JWGravol Ridge Longvi JRWflW---- _ E. KnowMon. Sit Wilbrldg# Thomas' C. Fleming, *70 Wflwood V JZ____________Min wnlhri Ik F. Kalish, 540 Desoto . 333 Oakland wG. ounevent. 94 Calvart in Gonzales, 999 S. Johnson ^Wyoming ACROSS 43 Ear (comb, form) Following Dr. Willis' advice, the thoughtful wife would do as follows: “Serve chicken, fish or lean meat with the fat trimmed away. Cook with vegetable oils. [3-Piece BATH SET* 8-sag o-frWt NEW TOILET *16” Free Standing EXTRA SPECIALS! I Shower Stall With Tt Max E. Brown. Ill %. Colgate Gary E. Men. 767 Portland Floy* A. farm, 4. Walker, 253 W. Strtrthmoro I. Segerstrom, 130 Gladstone DOORS Sim • 36 x 80 • 32x80 (9195 Now I do too love the Beatles! But gee whiz, when Mitch Miller calls them “the Hula Hoops of Music,” geez ... The “greatest rustler of the west"? Red Skelton said it was the cowboy who wore silk and satin Levis . . ® Choo Choo Collins, the “baby Betty Grable,” now attracting Hollywood produce's, sounded like Marilyn Monroe when an interviewer asked what die wears around the' house. “Just my false eyelashes,” she said. (Edie Adams said, “All I have on when I greet my husband is my cohtaict lenses.”) ★ ★ ★ f. Barlow, 3434 Oiler B«aeh \ Grigg, 543 Judson r. YaR.g I Stanley 'G«y< 496 Elm Alfred W. Padd. 114 Lakejida James R. Merr, 327 W. Ketmetl James S. Street, 406k S. Marshall James R. Cslzmadle. *25 Spence Devld R. Chatfleld. 14 Clerk Jon F. Gilbert, 132 Gladstone Edward Roosevelt Hess. IMS Revere —Aluminum— WINDOWS arms installation Rochet. 4840 Pine Knob " Igel, 5405 pine Knob JIN. (AOW C. Wlllioms, M12 Mary Suo Ronald L. Shoven, Emery Brown Jr.r Jerry D. Tucker. 4 THE MIDNIGHT EARL ... Judy Garland and her boy friend Mark Merron hully-gully’d j at Sybil Burton’s private party for Dirke Bogarde ... Xavier Cngat’U see his lawyer about getting custody of his dogs back from.Abbe Lane. He says she left ’em with a sec’y while she.went!--*1 off heneymooning, and they’re not getting the proper “parental love.” •/ . ' . - . i •. *’'*'•. ★ / ★ . ★ WISH I’D SAID THAT: Fat men, says*a psychologist, are usually honest. You’d be honest, too, if you couldn’t run very fast.—Irish Digest. , " . • . REMEMBERED QUOTE: "Trust everybody - but cut the e«»vrON plains cards.”—Finley Peter Dunne. ■ -mB.— “■ - EARL'S PEARLS: Any bachelor can tell you-his favorite dish is one somebody else washes. Pianist ’Peter Nero guest-starred on Jonathan Winters’ TV show, and reports, “Johnny’s wild and unpredictable—h« has toe only director in television who works with a whip and a chair.” . . . That’s earl, brother. L 4.1 This u tonight 12 Exist 13 Follow after 14 Legal point ’ 15 Cravat 16 Flower 17 Night club — 18 Pieces out 20 Advantage seeker 22 Pigpen 24. Masculine nickname 25 Loiters ^ , 29 -Mariner’s direction Columbia j 3o Weight of Thailand 34 High card 1 35 African worm 136 Brazilian macaw 37 New Zealand parrot taka j 38 Ignited 39 Clamp 40 Makes mistakes 42 Native metal 43 Harem rooms ,44 Carpenter’s implement 46 Rodent 48 Tidings 50 Was borne , 53 Fairy fort 54 Hidden supply 58 Tear 60 Deed 61 Muse of poetry 62 British money of account 63 Tiny 64 More painful 65 Church seat ~TT 48 Discriminating 49 Royal Italian family name 51 Let fall 52 Ireland $3 Litigation . ' 55 Tahitian god of fertility 56 Stream in Switzerland 57 Route (ab.) 59 Animal foot fffaJW! IIN0S RIPS AND .... $34.95 ■ .... $2.95 upl B .'. $2.95 up ■ — I ■Save plumbing! 841 Baldwin ” FE 4-1511 or FE 5-2100 I BUYS 10" Admiral 14“ 1*7" Spartan 19M 17"GE 24®* 21" Halicraftsr 29M 21 "RCA 29“ 19" Motorola 2995 21" Phllco 3995 21" Motorola 39M 21" Admiral 3995 24" Muntz 4995 30-DAY EXCHANGE PRIVILEGE FE 2-2257 Jfmniww 515 E. Walton Blvd. CORNER JOSLYN Open 9 to 9 Highland CASTILIAN II, Mod- Buffalo 0*1 Maybe, . 6541 Clarkst g, 171$ Waumtgah William B. Oommer, 3043 $Mbatdt r, 4622 Hlllcrett Dennij A. Gryllckl, 2732 Embarcadero James M. MacKay, 2265 Gaorgaland Richard W. Robinson, 471$.. InMpcnd- William C. Kcause Jr., 42223 Lindsey MADISON HEIGHTS William a. Turner, bt4U Alger Larry W. Rigtitler, 343 W. Kenneth 95 Big Value/ DOOR CANOPIES WJN(7!0) RflOflCT 2PO) OB.WIIO(dWWJf9SO) WCARQ130) WPON(l 460) WJSKd 500) WH>l-PAA(94.y) DOWN 1 Burmese wood sprite 2 Iroquoian Indian 3 Period of time 4 Leaven 5 Abstract being 6 Devotee (suffix) 7,Rqgret! 8 Apportion food at tjble 9 Gaelic . 10 Nautical term 11 East (Fr.) 19 Worm 21 Writing fluid 23 Color 24 Cudgeler . 25 Body of water 26 Genus of maples 27 Equipment 29 Black (Fr.) 31 Disembark 32 Operatic solo 33 Cartographs 41 Compass point LET'S START THE NEW YEAR ON A GAY LAYAWAY OR EASY PAY PLAN Cduard* 6N.Saginaw Pontiac PI I n ..........1"" A al 7074. Mediferra- I I_____ LJ I “ necn ityllni. An- ! UNQUESTIONABLY THE WORLD’S wf yBlfBBfB.’ M" FINEST STEREO CONSOLE wide,IS deep,29“ Bill Petrusha & Sons rONISHT $‘|g95 wwj. New* CkIw, (MWf x'f. i.jji wxvt New* WJBK, Hawk | ACAR^ewt. Joe**8acar»lla wpon, Newt, Bporte L & V AWNING CKLW, FUHon Lewie J 6i30—WJR. Busin®,, Nw • VM/Jl wU*M»S_____ WXVL Afe« prefer I WJR, Douglai WJR. W World Sports ___J/XYZ. Lee Alan, Mutk WJR. Rie Rassoner, Music ItW—WJR, World TenISM WWJ. Red Wing Hockey 1:15—WJR, Evening Concert tiW-WJR, Newt. New Year's Ive Peace Forty 9:35—WPON, The World To- 14 :OS—wVyz, Mercew Murphy, wfonTn 11:11—WCAR, Medical Journel 11:2$ WCAR. Csrender CKLW, Mwlc HI Oaten I1:JB—CKI 1:JB—CKLW, MUSIC 'til Oew WJR. mw Year's tv* lllb-wwjf Mldnifht Miss frioav morninb CKLW. Perm News *RiK, N«ws. Avery WCAR, News. Sander, WPON, News. Arizona West- WHPI. McKenney, N 6:29—WJR, MUSIC He wpon. ■(pjjry ,■ • 1 7:BB-ckLy. News, Bud Davies . , WHFl. terry Peyne, New McKenney WJR.- New% Musk ; SrSS-WJR. News. Guest WHFl. I /JR. Lee Murra ,JmR7 ci« McNeill . WJBK. News. 1 1I:SB—WJR, News, Godfrey WXYZ, News; Music FRIOAV AFTRRNOON lt:te—WJR. Neon, Farm WWJ. Newt Music WCAR, News. Bill H Delzell Cliff Morris WPON, News. Ron Knight WXYZ. Merc Avery CKLW, News. Joe van 1:JB—WJR< Woman's World i:se—wjr. Newt Jim weed wxyz. Haws, Music . w^. n^LLl WCAR, Nine. Bscsrella J:JO-WJR. .MUSK Hall 4:43—WWJ, Rose BoWl Gan Pre-Inventory Clearance Sale! USED T¥s $2g» CONSOLES « TABLE MODELS RsjfcnatftQP.cd apd Guaranteed We Servlee MUfeke Jeeie and Ante Redies-TV s-»tsr>e end W-fl JOHNSON MDIO ft TELEVISION 45 tost Wolfoif ar. fE 8-4569 Famous Name Appliances Tgl-Huron Shopping Canter 332-0666 TltE PONTIAC PRESS THURSDAY, DECEMBER 81, 1904 TAVISNTY-FOUB CONTEST RULES: Babies born after midnight, December 31, .1964 to married parents who live in Oakland County, North of 14 Mile Road are eligible to enter this contest. (2)> ^ntry mu$t be mqde through the family doctor Have the family doctor send a statement to Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce, listing the exact time and date of birth, sex, weight, and name of the baby to* gether with the name and address of the parents (4)* en*r'es mu*t be delivered by 5PM, Monday, January 4, 1965 to the "First Baby Contest" in core of the Pontiac Area Chambhr of Commerce, Riker Building, W. Huron at Wayne Strwet./Pontiac, • Michigan y To make your arrival a Happier occasion the merchants whose names 4m listed on this page have a host of gift* for you, your dad and your mother. The Merchants Listed Below Are Giving These Gifts to the First’Baby GEE COAL & OIL COMPANY sruke St. - FE 5-8181 200 Gal. NeW Mobilheat Furnace Oil FITZPATRICK’S PHARMACY Next to St. Joseph’s Hospital, 880 Woodward Baby’s Room Vaporizer and Baby Care Gift Sampler THE PONTIAC PRESS $25.00 Savings Bond for Baby PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 85 Mt. Clemens St. Car Wash and Polish for Dad’s Car PONTIAC ENGGASS JEWELERS 25 North Saginaw Solid Gold Baby’s Ring K-MART N. Pony and N. Paddock at Olanwood Plaza Collapsible Baby’s Swing Seat and Car Seat Combination SHAW JEWELERS 24 N. Saginaw Diamond Ring for First Baby CONSUMERS DISCOUNT CENTER ITS N.'Saginaw 3 Dozen Curity Diapers W K C Inc. ISSN.Saginaw > Presto Bottle and Food Warmer FOX DRY CLEANERS . til W. Huron $5.00 Dry Cleaning Certificate STAPP’S JUVENILE B00TERY GRESHAM CLEANERS 685 Oakland $5.00 Dry Cleaning Stride-Rite “Firstie” Shoes JACOBSEN’S FLOWERS 111 N. Saginaw Flowers For Mother at Hospital GIANT DISCOUNT FURNITURE 1111 Wide Track Drive W. Casco High Chair for Baby PEARCE FLOWERS 559 Orchard Lake kn. Flowers for Mother at Home LEE’S LAWN & GARDEN LEE’S SALES ft SERVICE 1216 Auburn Ave., Auburn Haights, Mich. 1 Casa (40 Cans) Carnation Milk BAZLEY MARKETS IIN. Saginaw-4346 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains Family Sizo Ham BELL & makeover pages DECEMBER MICROFILMED DIVISION OMPANY THE PONTIAC PRESMKE OVEfl PAfifS Rebel Hostages Tell of Congo Savage The Weather v U.t. Wftenmr Bum VOL. 122 NO. 281 . * *4fr * * * PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 81, W04*~24 PAGES toofc/ng fpf Tori^ Graves COLOMBIAN COFFEE - Herbert N. Stoutenburg, dean of student affairs at Oakland University, sniffs the rich aroma of coffee brought back frpm Colombia.by exchange Says Exchange Student"/ student, Majorie Hannah. Home on a Christmas holiday, Miss Hannah of 414 W. 13 Mile, Rqyal Oak, will return to the University pf' Valle in Cali, Colombia, in January. Cali Stay 'Enriching' - LEOPOLDVILLE, the Congo Of)—Rebel warriors performed a savage war dance of death on the stomach of American missionary William McChesney until he# died, refugees said today. I McChesney, the sixth Americaftmisskmary to lie killed by Comitiunists-backed.rebels iftthe northeastern Congo, in the past two m o n t h s, was trampled to deatil^al Wainba . ^ • * ' ■. jiuring almost a week of . . l bloodletting last November. »:. After McChesney had died of. internal bleeding, the rebels continued k vent their fury on corpse, the refugees said then, flung his mutilated By JODY HEADLEE Hoke. Editor, Pontiac Press Making , new friends and adjusting to the culture of a foreign nation, is no easy task but Marjorie Hannah, 21, of Royal Oak, is finding it a gratifying and enriching experience. ' Miss Hannah, an 'April 1964 graduate of Oakland University, is spending the year os an exchange student at the University of Valle in Cali, Coldifibia. The Sooth American university and 011 are partners in the Alliance lor Progress program following an exchange of delegntions between Oak-Innd County and the Cnoca Valley in IMS. John E. Madole, 0 a ki n" f body Wamba Wver. County’s representative to. dall, This tale of -horror was is Working closely with the ex- pieced together from white change program. J hostages of the rebels rescued at Wamba two days ago. Showdown Avoided on Soviet Assessments ^neak Attack Hite Area of 1 Hearing Set on Machine at Junk Yard A show cause hearing on a temporary injunction against Sam Allen St Son, Inc., 22 Con-gress, has been set for $ a.m. Jan.-11. Pontiac City Attorney William A. Ewart and 15 residents filed suit yesterday in Oakland County Circuit Court against the scrapyard. . The suit seeks to curtail op-era tion of a metal crashing machine at the iunk yard and cites it as a public nuisance, disturbing the surrounding neighborhood. - Acting in behalf of the resi-. dents and the city, Ewart claims the machine is an enlargement of the nonconforming use restrictions on a portion of the “scrapyard. • -'TV •• ★ ★.. -* ' The suit also objects to the . smoke, offensive odors and Vi-, brations from the machine. -HEARING ORDERED « Circuit Court Judge Frederick •C. Zeim today*ordered the show cause-hearing for Jan. 11. * J The court action resulted from a lengthy dispute between the scrap yard and its neighbors over the machine’s operations. The City Commission attempted to, mediate the dispute" but finally ordered legal action. Numerous Gifts for 1st'65 Baby Prizes Are Offered for Parents* Infant . •7 admire the Colombians' ap- ^ ^ h ^ . . UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. »- “SS JISi ‘"tchlrcd 28 of theirprisonm ;Tbe U.N. Gffleral Audibly nah. “They are so gay and filled between Nov 24 and 28 started an 18-day New Year re- with the joy of living. And the e ‘ it * cess today after closing out 1964 pace they travels much more ^ toU f hJte h sU without a Soviet-U.S. showdown leisurely than airs here in the mJ^crSby thT raWs ^S 2* Russians' assemb,y United States,. nearly 200 with the latest refit- v<^e* , * ' J\ NOT ALARMING • gee reports. . • _ _ _ ■ •. _ .... '* _____ • • ■ The Security Council ended its.. “Por usance, if you have an FLOWN TO SAFETY year with a resolution calling appointment and you happen to when 110 Greek, Cypriot, Ital- for /a cease-fire in the Congo, arrive latarno one gets alarmed ian> Dutch and Portuguese refu- withdrawal of Premier' Moise ** ^ you were flown to safety, survi- Tshombe’s white mercenaries at all.” In Today's Press Local Economy Banner year seen for Pontiac - PAGE 1<. LBJ Team \ Family fight settled by Justice Goldberg — PAGE ' . •’ ' Senate Liberals appear split on filibuster controversy—, PAGE S. . Area News \.. .... . '41 Aatfology ..........It Bridge ...... :l.,...18 Comics ............11 Editorials ....... « Markets ...........17 obituaries ....... 18 Snorts .....•....■...tt-II, Theaters' . B TV St Radio Programs 23 Whoa, Earl _______ 23 M v An. imposing list of.gifts for the winner of the “First Baby of 196$ Contest” includes items for both baby and parents. . The three local hospitals, Pontiac General, Pontiac Osteopathic and St. Joseph Mercy, have agreed to waive delivery room charges for the winner. , Baby is assured a warm and comfortable welcome home with 288 gallons of Npw Mobil-heat furnace oil from Gee Coal & Oil Co. Flowers for mother are offered by Jacob-sen’s- > Flowers and Pearce Flowers. There’s dinner for dad and mother at the Green Parrbt Restaurant, 10 gallons of gas from Lee's Land, St Garden Sales'& Service, and a ny‘w tread tire from Motor Mart. * Other gift* include a ham for : the family from Baziey Markets; 85. dry cleaning certificates from Fox Dry • Cleaners antf Gresham Cleaners; and a car. wash and polish from the Pontiac Retail Store. Mother-gets a pair of IVniel Green slippers from Todd’s Shoes. The first baby of 1885 will receive a Casco high chair from Giant Discount Furniture, a Casco stroller from Family Home Furnishings, and a collapsable swing and car seat combination from K-MarL • Baby gets a first pair of shoes from Stapp’s Juvenile Bootery, three dozen Curity diapers from Consumers Discount Ceotec-, and a $25 savings bond from the Pontiac? Press. - * Then there’s a baby's, room vaporizer from Fitzpatrick Pharmacy, an Electro Presto warmer from WKC Inc., and a Baby Serv-n-ette bottle and food diamond ring for bgby. from Shaw Jewelers, Pontiac Enggass Jewelers will give a sterling sii-« ver charm, and diamond locket. vors of Wamba’s days of car- and further efforts by the Orga-nage told mnWH and often nization of African Unity to pan flirting stories. '* \ bring peace between Tshombe’s Today, with'the first shock government and the rebels, of freedom behind them, they The resolution was adopted ipoke more calmly. 10-t-with France abstaining _ ■ , . „ ;< — after its African sponsors “Thrtiah I will admit ” «ha survivors told how Mc- omitted condemnation of- the ■ ‘‘Colombian girls are chaperoned when they date,” s^e continued, “but, because I am an Ameritaui, no one frowns when I go oat with u escort AIR COVER - An armed U S. Army helicopter flies, over Vietnamese Marines yesterday advancing into the visage of Binh Nghia. One helicopter was shot (town in the battle area, 40 miles east of Saigon, and. four American crewmen were feared dead. Fighting between government Hoops and the Viet Cong continued today for the fourth dpy. - , Area Churches to Hold Watch-Night Services By MARY ANGLEMIER . ' Church Editor, He Pontiac Press Congregations of city and county churches of the Pontiac area will ring ouft the old and ring in the New Year with religious rites tonight. Plays, pictures and speakteii will be featured with wiu A time of fellowship with refreshments wilWoUow. they can’t get used to an~ un-~identified British missionary 7ebds. “ ■ k women in; services of Holy married woman and a man aaed about 50. . Pnmmnninn anri nravpr together without a dap- Ten qthe^Britons are report- ^ ^veral churches hhv^ S- YearVEve nJth a^rv^ erone ed to be among 86 missionaries E ™ recent events in tne - . w v»ar’. Ho,y Communion. The service * * * - >and other hktages r , , . - uted sendees tor New Yeart^,^,^- In addiUon to her studies, she last weekend by rebels and tak- o.i“n Day’ . * SILVERCREST is working with the Peace Corps en from Wamba. ^ Threeirea dutches New- yi!?._____________________ .... . teaching literacy to prisoners of They were rescued yesterday ^essed.Ithe Oeperaj a ME, Messiah Baptist and ^ steP* 6ased the local jail in Uieir own Ian- by white mercenary soldiers who ^““^^ yesterday ni^it until st Methodist — will par- °" bo°k ot the samtT name euaae Snanuh ^ ”, Jan. 18 after persuading Jordan ticiDate in a ioint Watch-Nteht will be shown at 8:30 tonight guage, Spanish. madejrn overnight dash across ^ Mali ^ SpUt a -two-year. Scetantaht in Silvererest -Baptist (Sh, COMPLETELY ILLITERATE country to save, them. term oh th^Security Council. _ ^ ^ ^ 2562 Dixie. “The man I am teaching The kidnaped refugees had yy, broke a deadlock that “ now,” she said, “is completely been, taken to Mungbere, scene threatened to necessitate a illiterate though he is 27 years of an earlier massacre by the formal vote, which would have old. - He comes from a family rebels. . * ^brought a Soviet-U.S. show- of 12 children aod has never had The refugees from Wamba ‘•own- r, the opportunity to learn* to read 3aid the rebel army chieftain, , The split-term agreement en-or ante. - ' , . •** ^ ■■ - — - - ......... • “Each teacher, assigned to one student, begins the liter-’ acy course by teaching the basic language sounds and how. to print. We spend one hour a day, three or four days a week with our pupil. “By the end of three months or a little sooner depending on the ability of the student, he .can read his own language and write in manuscript. o :tjr * A “They 'are so eager to learn,” she added. “And,in teaching them, we instigate a chain reaction. The method is simple (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) Slipper Drinking Is- Loaded Problem Press Will Publish Single Early Edition In order that Pontiac Press employes may spend the holi-. / day with their families, The Press wHI publish a single early edition tomorrow. Noftnal edition , times w.ill ISe resumed Saturday. Pv- • 1965 Will Debut in Near-Freezing Temperatures Old Father Time will welcome the New Year at midnight with skies partly overcast and temperatures riedr freezing. V ; ★ , -* •- o'. The forecast for tomorrow is increasing cloudiness, and warmer with rain ’Possibly -mixed with snbw, the high 37 to 44. Saoijr flurries and colder is the outlook for Saturday. Today’s variable winds at 8 to 15 nddl shift to south to southeasterly tonight. Twenty-doven was the low . temperature in downtown Pun-, tiac preceding 8- a.m. Tire mercury had climbed to 31 by l p.ifi; The service beginning .at 18 p.m. will be Bhld in the St. John Chorch, 443 Highland. . .. ^ - . . 1 „ Slides of various events of . u' ■ Re l°f Newman the palfThurch year wiU he AME will bring the message. Kviewed the Kmer andito-Choirs of the sponsoring church- riuBI daring ^ 10 p.m. hoor> ;Trt. Gen." Nichotas Oienga, es- abled Ipe assembiy’ to finish ail eswillslng i Testimonies and prayer will caped from Mungbere as . the th$ necessary .business of its GRACE LUTHERAN ^ gjTen ^ the new year ar- mercenaries burst into t b e vil- first 30 days by general consent. The congregation of Grace Lu- rives. xhe public is invited, lage. - without any voting- on* the floor, theran Church will observe New __ ST« MIvtlACiL Parishioners of St, Michael Catholic Church may offer confessions from 7:30 to 9 tonight. Masses oh New Year’s Day will be the same as on Sundays, i 5:55, 7:30, 8:45, 10, and-lliSO. a.m., and 12:30 p.m.' MARIMONT The annual Watch Night service jwill be held at 9 tonight at Marimont Baptist Church, West Walton at Hollywood. The Gin-gellvjlle Baptist Church will join in the service and fellowship hours. « The evening will begin with . the showing of the ‘-Martin Lather” film, uid close with b the observance of Holy Com-. munion at midnight. ‘ BEAUTIFUL SAVIOR New Year)! Eve will be . marked with a celebration of Holv Communion at Beautiful Savior Lutheran Church, 5821 N; Adams, Bloomfield Township. The service will begin at 7:45. BLOOMFIELD HILLS * The traditional Watch Night, service will be held from t until midnight in Bloomfield Hills Baptist Church, 3600 Telegraph, Bloomfield Township. ' j There will be a service of song, testimonies.of God’s leading bi the year, just past, and the Moody defence film, “Time and Eternity.” ; f Refreshments 'will follow In Fellow** Hall. ; ; • He clasiag moments of the old-year win be speat in prsy-(Continued on Page 2, CoL 7) Copter Crash Losses Are Heavy as Fighting^Confinuis ,at Important Town * SAICrQN, South viot Nam Viet Cong ambushed lOuYietnameoe Marines today# as they were opening fipves believed to coimtin the bodies of four serv- . Icemen shot down as fighting continued around Binh tJhja. A U.S. Marine captain. we; wounded in the ambush. A s The Marines fought their way into a jungle area where a U.S. Army helicopter was shot (town last night as ijt was covering Marined collecting the- bodies of government troops. Tie helicopter burst into flames and exploded when it htt the treetops.v A Marine search company reached the crash site this afternoon: and found four ffesh ’graves next to die wreckage, presumably containing the bodies of tire helicopter’s four American crewman. The Marines reportedly were digg&tg up the graves when a powerful Viet Cong unit ambushed tfiem. ' W ★ W •; . * . Vietnamese losses were be-UevedUo be extremely heavy. MARINES WITHDRAW The Marine unit withdrew, taking their wounded with them, 'and lata ip the afternoon were . preparing to attack the acta again with the whole Marino battalion. Government troops regained Binh Ghil, a town of 6,066 Roman Catholic refugees 48 miles east of Saigon, yester-■ day, bat fighting continued around it today for (he fourth day. It was one of the longest actions of the war against the CommnifisrViet Cong. The. Defense Department in Washington listed the helicopter crewmen as missing, but lt\. seemed almost certain that their (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) BOSTON- (AP) — No more bn New Yaw’s Eve do* gentlemen drink from ladies’ slippers -‘--tyrone big reason. A more enthusiastic acceptance of public health standards has nothing to do. with it; notes an article in the cprrent issue of the Harvard Medical - Alumni Bulletin. .The basic problem, it says, is (hat these days “ladles’flippers and shMO~,are just too big to drink from. “Once scarcely large enough to contain an aperitif, the shoe of the female has become a veritable tankard, holding 14 ounces or more. * * * “The ability of the male to-’ cope with libations has not'kept pace with the explosion '* the. size of women’s shoes.” DECLINE AND FALL ' In an article titled “Decline and‘Fall of the Female Arcfi,’! Dr. Paul J. ‘Davis lists several factors “which have contributed to the btossoming-*of the'lady’s' foot from the fragile and finely -drawn bud of the 1830s. “The average female* today is about 14 'pounds heavier than her counterpart of 38 years ago.No matter how this (Gontinhea oik Page 4 ) MARTINI NOT TEENY — Not convinced by the Harvard Medical Alumni Bulletin, Daniel White of Boston, Mass., de-Owes to. try out the old custom of drinking from a lady’s slipper. He uses shdwgirl Julie Daire in the experiment. The Harvard publication said nowadays ladies’ sbobs are.just 4oo big for anyone to he expected to drink from them. ;/T■: . ' > • • %}■ % ■ , State Leaders to Take Oath at Ceremony LANSING (APMIov: George Romney begins his second tenn at noon tomorrow in inaugural festivities where he’ll be surrounded by-Democrats. The hduMong swearing-in ceremonies for Romney and 24 other top state officials are only part of a day whose activities ; begin in the morning and should continue past midnight. The weatherman is mildly pessimistic, predkfting cloudy ' skies with possible afternoon’ -.rain and a mid-day temperature of about 40 degrees. Thoi||gh officially outnumbered by Democrats, Republican Romney is the star of the inaugural show. He’ll ^deliver ihe only major speech of the day at the swearing-in ceremonies. It’s expected ., to be short, with an emphasis on bipartisan cooperation in meeting state needs and keeping Michigan's economy moving. Rpmqpy-’s running mate, William MUliken, will take his oath as lieutenant governor. But 12 Democrats are scheduled to take oaths Tor.eight Board of Education and four university1 board seats, and two Democratic Incumbents, Atty. Gen.- Frank Kelley and Secretary of State James Hare, will renew their oaths. i . Ingle - and Roberts," whose Senate term expires next week, wrire both unsuccessful in the Nov. 3 election in bids for Judicial posts. Ingle sought an Oakland County Circuit Coart Judgeship and Roberts ran for the' new Court of Ap- Fee/in the Pinch? THE* PONTIAC PRESS, TH URJSJJ DEC KM HER 3LHiM Report Russia Getting Stingy With Aid .: CAIRO (APr — President T.amhl Abdel Wasser can expect litths if any food from the Soviet Union if the United States cuts off its mcMimillion-dollar food hid program to the United Arab 'Republic, sources close to the Russians said today. * ; SdViet Deputy. Premie;; Alexander Shelepin, One of the Kremlin's new leaders, told Nasser In effect that the Soviet, Union is no Santa Glaus. .these sources said. . Shelepin returned to Moscow easier this Week after a'10-day visit to Eg^pt. He apparently took k hard look at the way So-. Viet nuUtary and economic aid is being spent here. * .J>^1 The sources gave this summary of ShelepinY conversations with Nassef: .' * The Soviet leader came to Cairo to assure Nasser' that former Premier Khrukhchev’s pro-Egyptian policies are not being abandoned and that tM Egyptian can expect continued fruitful relatidns with the Soviet Union —but only on p realistic PROBLEMS AT HOME Bui Shelepin emphasised that the Soviet Union has problems’ at home, especially: in agriculture' kand vast committnents abroad..'' '■ “We are not arAph uncle like the United States and tire cannot Dedkafed Our relations will be -oiKY more realistic footing in the fu\ ■hire." ' „';tl ■ -i ■... After a * lukewarm start,. Shelepin’s travels and-speeches around .the country were given .splash. treatment in EgyptY government - controlled press Ihe Egyptians broke precedent by.inviting Shelepin fa share the podium' with Nasser, during ‘Victory Day” celebrations at Port Said last week. * /. * ‘GO TO HELL’ .♦It was pti this occasion that Nasser, probably with one eye on ShClepin, told the .United States in effect that it could take iits food aid program, and to hell" if it did not like his at Pontiac Hospital A $3,000 eleetronically-operat-ed carillon was dedicated at j Pontiac State Hospital yesterday in memory of the late Dr. Walter H. Obenauf, medical superintendent of -the hospital, who died last Jtfly. V Special guests at .the brief ceremony, conducted in‘ t h e chapel by Rev. Joseph Brady, chaplain or the hospital, were Mrs. Obenauf and her daughter Rebecca, of 11200,Clark, Spring-field Township. Fr. Brady asked a blessing . on the carilldn, followed by a tribute to Dr. Obenauf by Dr. Donald W. Martin, present superintendent of the hospital. County Solons to Head Units Two new state senators .from Oakland County were among 20 named today to head Senate committees. Assigned as chairmen were Sandbr M. Levin, labor commit- Other special guests included conductors of the carillon fund drive Mrs. John Whiting of Franklin and Mrs. R. E. Crabb and Mrs. Glen James, both of Bloomfield Township. Several hospital staff members also attended the ceremony. During his four-year tenure as superintendent of the mental hospital, Dr. ■ Obenauf o f t e n talked of the need for a carillon and the tranquil effect it might have on patients. A memorial fund was established soon after his death, and the goal of 13,000 Was reached in recent weeks through the efforts of volunteers, staff and patients. Operated by magnetic tape and a time clock,v the carillon can' be set to play, sacred or light classical music at designated times, as,well as toll the hour and the call to worship. It 'is also equipped to broadcast a siren-type disaster alarm by remote control and can be used as a public address system. » See Related Story, Page 5 . . S afford to throw. our mojiey around," one-Soviet source said.. We‘muOTftKJuro we are getting fulr-vahie for everything we give. support of the Congolese rebels. The United States has been providing $140 million worth of flour and other food items annually to Egypt. Nasser’s attack has raised demands in the United States to end further food shipments. The • U.S. government nounced Tuesday it was going ahead with existing’food, commitments to Egypt, but it ii)3i-cated it may shelve a request by Nasser for. an additional 335 million worth of food. Viet Marines Hit by Cong (Continued From Page One) Named as Interim Medical Director bodies wpre in the graves by the wreckage. . > “The Viet Cong have don£ this before — used graves of Americans as bait,” one U.S. adviser said. “They-know we have fif-go in to get them." ' > . . If the four .were killed, their deaths would raise t6 245 the number of Americans killed, in combat in Viet Nam since December 1961? tee, and Carl W. O’Brien, conservation committee. Both were e’ected to the Senate Nov. 3. Levin, 33, fomjerty chairman of thg Oakland County Democratic Party, represents the 19th district in South Oakland County. He lives at 1922 Edge wood, Berkley, A Pontiac resident, O’Brien, 34, of 513 Moore, Is the nth District senator. The district includes Pontiac, seven Oakland County townshipSkJmd Lapeer County. * A 71-year-old physician .has been named interim medical .director oMtontiac General Hospital, succeeding Dr. John J. Marra. who resigned. , Dr. Clifford T. Ekelund, 35 W. Huron, bias bden on the staff of Pontiac General for m o r e 'than two decades. He was chief of staff in 1941. Dr. Ekelund replaces Dr. Mar-ra, "Who resigned Dec. 16 because the medicpl directorship required more time than, he was able to give. " The Communists also captured two Americans and wounded nine others before withdrawing into the jungle /When 4| U.S. helicopters tended a battalion of Vietnamese marines to reinforce the hard-pressed government forcee at Binh Nghia. Military 'sources^Wstimated government casuaItfiS|^ggrly 300 dead, wounded and HAPPY HARMONY* —; AH was smiles between Nikolai T. Federenkot (left), Russia’s ambassador to the United Nations, And U.S. Ambassador Adlai E.Stevenson as the Secu^; . rity Council voted unanimously yesterday afternoon for a cease-fire in the Congo. The-council asked the' Organi Uni^?'10AUi|to push itsl'i council asked the Organization pf Atric»n-\Uj, to push iH1'efforts to restore harmony between the’ warring '^political- Jou'll Rue Drinking From Shoe' (Contimied From Page One) hew weight is distributed in our corset-based society, it is. still supported in the same old way: by feet Which respond to increased stress in pounds per square inch by spreading uot. “Shoe manufacturers and stylists have added to the apparent size of the foot, altering its natural and rather functional contours into something resembling an arrowhead. “Today there is only Casual relationship between the length and shape of the shoe and the length and configuration of the foot it encumbers; who can tell if the shoe fits?" . ' , . THE OLD VIEW \ “The .average female has grown callous to the centuries- 6 reverence for modest and retentions proportions of the Old New.Years Greetings Will Mix'With New Ones Birmingham Area News 'Critic's Choice' BIRMINGHAM — Work representative of regional-art, ie-lected by tbfe University of Michigan’s Michael P. Church, Wilt be exhjbitea at the Birmingham Art Center in Jamiafy.' 1 The exhibit will open Sunday with a 2-5 p.m. reception for the public at the centeif, 1510 i S. Cranbrook. 7* ’*• ' The “Critic’s Choice" display can then be viewed from 2 to 5. p.m. daily except Mon-. days through dkn. 3L ‘-V-fra Presented by the Bloomfield Art Association, the show ’will be installed by Jein Brotrii’ of Royal Oak.. “ • /' - Church serves a» U. of M Y assistant director of cultural activities tot the extension serv- ON ARTS COUNCIL , . He is a member of the De-. troit Arts Council and the Ann NESto YORK (AP) - Fairkt of an airplane, climb Pike’s Peak, dance your feet off, throw jpnk out of windows or just stand around Times Square with a million other revelers — that’s how some of the world will wel-. come in the New Year tonight. On Long Island, at Eastport, N.Y., Frederick Wild, 33, and Frank Gunman, 36, plan to fall out of an airplane at the stroke of midnight and pass a bottle of champagne between them as they drop from 12,000 feet to 2,-000 feet. Then, hopefully, they’ll Open their parachutes. Church Services Planned for Tonight The two sky divers have a combined total of more than 600 Jumps to their credit. A In Colorado Springs,* Colo., members of the Adman CIn b have figured out a way to get high and still stay sober. They will make their annual climb to the top of Pile’s Peak p off fireworks. “Grandmother’s feet, in her wedding pictures, discreetly A partial count showed at least 32 Viet Cong dead. VILLAGERS KILLED Two of the villagers also were killed. Their Catholic families buried them yesterday. The villagers are refugees from ’North Viet Nam and militantly. anticommunist. ' Full U.S. Weather B« PONTIAC AND VICINITY 4L colder today and- tonight, highs -today\ Report y cloudy and a little to 30.-Lows tonight In another action, government troops surprised an . infiltrating Viet Cong unit at Ban Thai, II miles west of Saigon, and killed about 42 guerrillas. Four government troops were killed and four On the' political front, talks IS to 32. Increasing cloudiness and wartirer with rate possibly. Saigon between: mivari until auAuC mu ITririaii klwko I* li I iffhf VM>l«kU ... T . ... ° mi mixed with snow on . Friday, highs 37 to 44, Light variable winds this morning becoming south to southeasterly 0 to li miles this afternoon and tonight. Outlook for Saturday snow florriep and colder. HtffhMl ana uml Thunti mMi m »i yum « u MW ■ • SSi-SS? 32 22 Los Angeles 44 31 Miami Beach 33 29 Milwaukee 34 24 New Or lean 1 SIR? S3 Om«lM Vietnamese. civilian and mill tary leaders and U.S. Embassy ! officiate, but the deadlock' oner j the. fate of the government persisted. violent individual perform-which the male is all too happ^ to stand aside and away from flashing spikes and rapierlike toes. .*• RUGGED FLOORS “Marble floors are ‘in’ again since wood and synthetic floor coverings are hopelessly inadequate to* cope with today’s Tieels. “Worst of all, die walk Sf toe female is now a threnody of slouching, mincing blinking, flopping,' teetering, limping and crutotewalkifig." Dir. Davis, a HRLSiarvard Medical School, graduate, says his own foot-sire 0C — “is perhaps what, stimulated- me to watch closely from the sidelines of life the inexorable expansion of women’s feet into gunboats.” Judge GOP Race in 14th District * is f iffTidiT? S Si Farmington Township JMStice is u Is 2 of the Peace Allen C. Ingle has is ft w«Rnaion 57 31 j announced that he will oppose . I Farrell E. Roberts for toe' Re* I publican nomination for^hk 14th ! District State Senate seat. > . Roberts has already filed fot j-the post left vacant by toe redeem death of Sen.-elect Paul : Chandler. NATIONAL WEATHER-ShowerS are due tonight in norfi)-era California and from southern Plains through leweriKis-sissiippi Valley into. Tennessee Valley. Snow or flurries frill, fan frdm Rockies eastward through northern Plateau and-Plains It will be colder iq southern*'Plateau and Atlantic ' coastal area and milder in .Mississippi. Valley. j Three Dexnocats^from Livofiff also have announced their' candidacy for She Senate post. . A special primary election has been scheduled for Feb.'15 frith toe genai j April ft al election set for WEE HOURS _ . in various night spots around were concealed beneath her [the world, music makers will wedding gown; today’s bride play until toe wee hours for hasn’t a prayer of hiding her those people who want to dance feet as she teeters down the [ out the old year and dance in •irie. , . I the new. “Several aspects ol our lives One .Los Angeles club, the have been changed by the foot- Whisky A Go Go, advertises it sh6e crisis: I wilbprovide “all toe Watusi and ★ 4p- * . Frug you ca^ stand.” “The dance has degenerated * *" * from a team effort into‘a stage The Sands in Milwaukee is Pfovide breakfast in bed the following morning —> so you dqn’t have to drive home — at |36 a married coiiple. \r M you’re in Rome, you can do as the Romans do — throw junk out . Of Windqws, although the law* There are rea- (Continued From Page Ond) er. The community is invited ’ to this service held annually, Pastor Harold W. Gieseke said. Arbor dlvic Arts Commission. For the last 1ft year#, be has sorved gs state secretary et the. cultural4'Activities' hoard for Michigan Week. .. Church was appointed by Gov. Romney to the Graphic Arts Committee of toe Mate, Coftncil for the Arts. He studied at the Wicker Art School, Cranbrook Academy of Art, .Wayne State University And the University of Michigan, as well as hi New Yhfk, With + hk extenskm pStf Church also is a lecturer in art ~in the U. dfthLY college ^ ar- ~ r cKitecture and design. '*V, ~ ; - He has organized the Upper Peninsula Arts and Crafta Couh-cil and the Univen^ty of Michi-gan AnnuaLRegionaltohihition^ BLOOMFIELD HILLS — The Bloomfield Nursery School, a cooperative school for three- and four-year-oid children, will accept applications for 1965-66 Saturday. 4 ■__^ The. schoolloccupiea-rt®ms~aL Christ Church^D-anbrook but is nopdenominational. Applications can be made with . Mrs: Hugh. Mack, 671 Pilgrim, Birmingham, after 9:30 a.m. Saturday. Ex-OU Student sons of life, and limb behind toe asYny pedestri- police icon an caught u|der toe joyful bombardment cap testify ‘ When the hellsjtpll 1965, from an abundance ,ot\ Italian balconies will rain fortola cascade of empty wine flask^, Whipped china, rust-stained A sVi n k s and cracked toilets, ' The old Roman.ciWtbm sym*j bolizes the removal of things old. and disliked to make room for the bright and hopeful things of the new year. ‘HANGOVER CLINIC’ For the morning after there’? toe “hangover clinic” of the Physician’s Wine Appreciation^ Society of New York. *, , j The society, composed of more than 200 doctors, wiH i serve a concoction called a “French 75” to its members Friday at a micjto’wn Manhattan restaurant. The drink Js made of three ounces of French champagne and one ounce of cognac. Dr.: Herbert Gould of White Plains, N.Y., the. society president, said "champagne and cognac, when mixed togethef, help restore energy and vigor in combatting indications of melancholy and depression. Just the thing for New Year’s Day.” throwing in free baby-sjtting service along with a complete evening of entertainment, /or $35 A couple. . W Many clubs are offering a continental breakfast, 1- coffee r , ' ” w w and rolls — to help sober up And if all hangover remedies the revelers before they start: fail- consider joining* toe Ice-toe drive home. berg Athletic Club at Coney Is- nnwAirwaOT TM Run ,and in Brooklyn. Its members BKEAKr AaT IN BED Lwi„ p,unge int() ^ frigid Atlan- The Sahara Motel ip Geve- tic on New Year’s Day to start land, Ohio,~Jji addition to a T their 47th year of winter swim-night’s entertainment, Will .even I mihg. • MACEDONIA *' V -Men, women and children will gather in Macedonia* Baptist Church at 9 p.m.- for the.annual. Watch Might service. , ’ > CHRISTCHURCH CRANBROOK Rev. Gerald B. O’Grady Jr. announces Chris} Church Cran-brook will be open tonight for those.who might wish to haye an opportunity for quiet meditation and prayer. The closing hoar will be after midnight.' AUBURN HEIGHTS U.P. *■ Members and friends pf the United' Presbyterian 'Churtlj. ip Auburn Heights will hold a'New Year’s Eve party in the church basement tonight. The evening will begin at 8:30 and close at Sl2;30 a.m.' * v The Moody film, “The Stones Vry Out” will he shown'. Sam Sheehy will lead group singing, and a talent show under the supervision pf Mrs. Leonard Hebei will be presented. Mrs. Harold' Burmeister wilt be in charge of group games, and the Wotoen’s Association wilj provide refreshments with Mrs. Robert Sipperley,- chairman. OAKLAND AVE. U.P. Ronald Huto, missionary intern, will bring the message at toe annual Watch Night service from 11:15 to midnight at Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Church. This will be. a candlelight service of Hply Communion. Finds Her Stay'. : m Cali Eiirichiqg (Continued From Page One) , enough that they caii, turn I around qnd teach fellow inmates ' j or the other members of toeir family when released from j>ruh' SHEER DESPERATION “In the mate."these prisoners ’ face sentences that’ run from five to seven years. And I feel it was sheet desperation at not being able to earn a living Hhaf , J tqrned_ them to crime m. toe first place/’ Miss (Hannah also pointed wrr ■ ■ oat that the jail is operated along modern methods with the Inmates learning skills in one of the institution’s three fnctories. ALL SAINTS EPISCOPAL A service of Holy Communion She feels that -coupling the new skill with literacy shou}d help-the prisoner adjust to a law-abiding society .when he isv released. During her, stay in Colombia, she is making her home with Mr. and Mrs, Mirco Fuchs, toe pnrents bf Renato Fuchs who as a part of the exchange program is studying at OU. ' . t ‘EXCELLENT IDEA’ “I think toe exchange program is an excellent idea,” She said, "and I hope ft will con-tinue.” ! Another April graduate of OU, a Dennis Parle, 21, of 244 S. Til- will be celebrated at 10 a.m, on New Year’s Day.in All Saints Episcopal Church. den, is also btudying at the Co^ nversit lumbian University under th« exchange plan. Area Man Dies in Trailer Fire - A 48-year-old man who apparently had. been smoking in bed was burned to death yesterday in his Farmington Township house trailer. The body of. Richard D. HunO-fek) was pulled from the smoke-filled mobile home in the Le-Blanc Trailer-Park, 21331 Hamilton. . - Plane Lands in Field; 43 Safe NEWHALL Calif. Uti — thief Cause of. the double engine sputtering .of the twin engines failure is bei ng investigated, was the first warning 43 passen-1 The odds are one in thousands ' gers»had that toeir Convair Air-1 that such a coincidence should linerWas in trouble. occur, aviation experts said. Over toe_ loudspeaker _ came [ Passengers attributed their escape to divine intervention, Capt. Wade’s skillfnl flying — .pilot,” said Rudolf Miller, 68, of El Centro, Calif., “and the good Lord was with us.” toe words of Capt, W. M. Wade; “Prepare for an emergency landing.” On flashed the light: “Fasten safety belts. No smoking.’’ or both. “I must c o m p liro o-n-t the “The pilot did a pretty terrific job,” said Gayland Smith, 22, of Fresno. “But/thece-might have been someone else up there with the pilot ’,..” Wade said he. was at 1(1,000 feet 15 minutes out of Los An- igeles when “a power loss oc-| ctirred iilboth engines." . “Under the circumstances,". said Wade, a pilot 20 years, “it was no harder than a rough landing with wheels." Two passengers were hospitalized for observation. The others I proceeded to . Los Angeles by -bus. Farmington Township police were called to the scene shortly after 19 a.m. Patrolman Richard Krueger was crawling through-the,18-foot alumi-trailer on his stomach ' lF~ when firemen arrived" They broke into the trailer and found the body ki bed. Aq-employe of-Star Cutter Co. 4n the township, Hunefeld lived .alone. . . .. !•'; Canada Hotel Offers 'White January Sale' A stewardess took the cabin’ microphone and said;. “Grab your pillows. Put your heads between your knees. ” • PERFECT LANDING The pUine dropped through ragged Clouds steeply, leveled out over farmland below, clipped a power line and then was sliding along te a muddy beet field to a perfect Vheels-up tending. Passengers harried out and -taw where they were: ta a flat valley, a few miles wide and long, - surrounded by the 50 miles of craggy hills that separate soqtherm/California and the San Joaquin Valley. , The passengers of a United Air Lines, milk-run flight from Fresno to Los Angeles yesterday became the victims of one incredible coincidence and the beneficiaries of a second: iteL w * ' *’ Both engines of their plane VANCOUVER, B.C. (AP)- -The Georgia Hotel here is ad-J vertising what it calb.a “White tfailed simultaneously over the January Sale." v | only flat territory within miles. / , ,> -y pv-, • ,yvr' , Airliner Site After Emergency Landing BE THE PQ^TtAC PlTKSS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 31,%6-i THREES Will Senate Liberals Push Filibuster Change?1 WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen-*■ ate liberals appeared feted today over whether to pph at ‘the opening of the new Congress for. a change in the rules to makeit easier to halt fllibust- Although Sen, Clinton P. Anderson, D-N:NT.. haireported the matter under discussion, Sen. Abraham A. Ribicoff, I> Conn., saM he doubts that any all-ept effort will be made. He said passage of the civil rights bill in the 87th Congress had cooled the controversy. . "Of course, I would vote for a change in the rules to make K easier to get legisiaden passed," Ribicoff said, “but I think most of the steam has gone out of the movement," ,______"__J__£_ Americans for Democratic Action has written Sen. Mike htomtfield of Montana, the DBft-ocrafic leader, urging himyto support a proposal which would permit a majority of ^senators to limit debate after 15 days g£^ discussion of any measurer^ OPENING SBtelON7 Mansfield has indicated he HAPPY m « As the N ow Ye or hopefully rings out its merry sounds, alj^btf us Here would' chime in witlHsest good- wishes/for the1 new season. f v JOE'S ARMY-NAVY SURPLUS 19 hi. Saginaw — FE 24)022 Ln Downtown Pontiac; expects some move to be made at Monday’s opening day session. i. Sen. Russell B. Long, D-La., a candidate for election as assistr Kseder, said in a separate iew he probably would vptg to <$f»se any change in the present nde. It requires qspray-al of twodMrds of those voting Ja order to unit debate. k llKPi * • x. .»• • •• situation is entirely different, rww~iii^“flir/cli rights bill has been said.' .‘“nils change would no' longer be aimed exclusively at the South.*? " :J \ been passed,” he proposed rule As, R-N.Y., a strong advocate of, making it easier to end fcilibust-ers, is delaying any decision on possible action tintjlhisretum from a Mexican vacation. LIBERALS CAUTIONED Sen. ’Paul DpUglas D-Ill., was .reported to have eeutloaed fellow liberals hgainst raising an Issue that might nfrro—-otef wounds and'cost them support in opposing anyfresh moveto DRSck cooft orders for the reap-portionment of ibaih' houses of state legislaturoii|l> aj population basis. Aides said Sen;-Jacob K. Jav- Sen. Richard B. Russelfe D- (ia., an opponent of rule changes, said he hopn there can be “an on of good feeling” in the Senate, He said aflght over ftm filibuster rule would, start the session on a sour note. ” iST'i..■ Previously the. liberals' have tried to get a change in the Hubert H. Humphrey, who has. voted for roles change prtP posals in tlje past, will ndt take offlcO as viqe president, until Jan,ao. Until, flirt Carl fljtydenTPxArfr., who. slip-ports die -present, rple,'will remain as the presiding .offlger. rules by p mnjnrtty vtiMjpl • / Hope's lips were chapped ,™r ‘^"^e C4f car*2 from the countless outdoor PlaM cra1^fat0 afc u”P shows he performed. Actress! ‘Tee1? *J£3. Jill St. John was nursing a Ja8k“'*ki ta Hu™" Towr4.hip limp: someone dropped a native| about ,our miles *hort of the crossbow orfiier ankle. No one | runwa^' i suffered any serious mishaps. The plane was oh a routine Military authorities weren’t j flight' from Cleveland to Detroit, taking any chance the. Hope] It was owned by Zanfop Air troupe might be the target of-lyanspbrt, Inc., a cai^onhly Red. terrorists. ■ jnfrfin*. ■ DESTINATION gECRET . * *' * Hope said “Our destiriaUonI only the second fatal was. such a secret we" really in 12-year history didn’t know where we were our- of ZantoP^ • . w selves. Reafly! ’’ • . plane did not catch file, ^ offer^, J* " j In Korea a helicopter carry- b^ ^^?Jka*e Was ?trewn School Systviti will begin Jan. 4; ing comic Jerry Colonna and over a area- Registration for Winter of Adult Classes Registration for the wjnter ^ ten term of adult education classes the general Asian situation and problems involving the United States and Japan, -J Commenting on his plan to have Japan play a more positive role in A^ian affairs, Sato ltd he hoped through economic ‘ cultural aid to build up long-stability i" the ^ar East. \ ■band leader Ues Brown developed engine trouble ih.a snow, storm and.had to make^a forced . landing outside Seoul.. : : \> | Ikei Mamie Will Attend Granddaughter's Party PALM DESERT, Calif, (UPI) —Former President and MrJvj 11 Dwight D. Eisenhower planjpf office at 2S*f W. Huron. The program has Men greatly expanded, according to Roy M-T Gallipo, supervisor/of adult education for the school. v J , High ’school/credit counseling and courses will be available at the' Adult Education -‘‘But the highlight was Viet Nani," said Hope. “We found "* a.Jff^f! 1 help their granddaughter, Susan,, ■ , W drcamedN.the. VieLiCong Lr 14th birthday to- f'1 cl«^s Will be conducted peppered all oyer the place. Wgj„hxJ-* . with a; i^imum of .12 persons the Viet,Co^.’’te?*n!Cti.0n ^L J*!c.Susan eld- ffi'Se'^bt ‘Those kids are the greatest|.?e oi the Eldorado, claLs wi„ Wgin L ,ll | country ciuo. j Registration for the winter term will end Jart. 7. ' ' . Americans ^.they’re staging a great/fight. I think we’re- Hold-ing our own!” »' /•-. draft. beer in bottles Conference Set | DETROIT (AP) — The Mii-! mformation concerning any western Child Welfare Confer- j t>hhse of the program can be ence of the American Legion j obtained By visiting or calling, will be Held here Jan. 7-9. thje Adult Education Office. ^ m Pfeiffer and only Pfeiffer « offers you the exact same beer on. tap and ui^ler the cap. If you prefer the taste of draft beer ihsist on Pfeiffer ■? draft beer in bottles -it's extra smootjt. more flavorful, the4 \ full-taste beer. | YOU WILL LIKI OUR tUSINlSS METHODS IMPERIAL-CHRYSLIR—PLYMOUTH--VALIANT sALis BIRMINGHAM «*vici • fJHRYSLER-PLYAa^tlTH • iBarnett’s 150 N. Saginaw St. Next to Sears YEAR-END SALE THURSDAY-SATURDAY-MONDAY STOREWIDE REDUCTIONS 20% -30% OFF Men's Choice Quality SUITS, TOPCOATS and OVERCOATS Now is your opportunity to experience wonderful, extra clothing satisfaction at truly important savings. r^^y0, I Our Rvfiular $125 CASHMERE OVERCOATS Selected _ —___ Imported $Ou89 Qualities - A!1 tailored in perfection bv one of the world'* On.-M make. Limited quantity ~ l,e early fur your ONE BIG GROUP MEM’S SWEATERS $10.95 to $12.95 Valuea $798 OPEN SATURDAY NIGHT TIL 5:30 OPEN MONDAY NIGHT ‘TIL 9 P.M. Remember — You Don't Need the Cash! just toy CHARGE IT! I Barnetts 1 50 N. Saginaw St. Next to Su m w Suit Against Baker Settled Out of CoUrf WASHINGTON (AP) - The civil suit that triggered the Bbb-by Baker investigation has been settled but of court and may be' dismissed, the-attorney for the firm that sued the former Senate majority secretary said to^ •day, David J. CaHiner, representing Capitol Vending Co.,“ said he will seek dismissal of the $300,-000 suit in U.S.,District Court today. There were unconfirmed re*, ports the suit had been settled tor around $30,006. Capitol Vending brought the suit against Baker and others in September 1963. It charged that Baker used his Senate influence to have Melpar, Inc., an electronics-firm, cancel its contract with Capitol and place it with another tom: Baker and. the other defendants —'the Serv-U Corp., owned largely by Baker; its secretary, Ernest G.- Tucker and Fled B. Black, a former Baker associate — .denied the charges. * * RESIGNS POST . ** Baker resigned his influential post — where he had become a friend to marty senators, including then .Majority Leader Lyn-dpn B. Johnson — rather than answeNquestions about hii activities. s The Senate Rules Committee launched an investigation into Baker's variegated business activities- It’s still going on. Heroic Mother Dies Saving Son iii Fire BOSTON IP—An heroic mother died saving her 1-year-old son when a 'fire raced through a five-story" apartment building last night. ■ Four persons died in toe Ore, including two of the wdnan’s daughters.;A/ • ’ v. The mother — Mr*. Hannah Perry, 26 — saved her ton, 'Emmett Jr,, by bspipg from a fifth-floor window with him entped in her arms. She died of injuries in the fall. The boy apparently. suffered only smoke inhalation. Her daughters, Betty Jane, 3, and Shelly Marie, 2, perished in the blaze, aa did Howard Allen, 42. At least six ether persons, including a fireman, Were admitted to Boston City Hospital Jot treatment. THKr >UNT1AC feRflSS, THURSDAY, P^CEMBJB StateSenate wm Posts DETROIT (AP) — Assign- committee, however, ment of . 20 cammfttoe chairmanships 1h toe Michigan State Senate waf announced today by 8en«te Majority Leader Raymond Dzendzel, Detroit Democrat. Dzendzel said the dergo a slight change, Dzendzel said, There WilM* a M ratio, instead of the present 74 dlvi- 7 * Gallaghers PRE-INVENTORY „ on .• sale] ■I ■■ LJPIp Pianos-Organs Save On ^ • T rade-Ins • Clow-Out* * Rental Return* • NEW : SPINET PIANO from *3990° Huy .Now .., No Payments *til March '65 NO MONEY DOW “Wh-I tin Our 32ai| Yri DOWNTOWN PONTIAC I*i E. Huron Si. -—'-.-Vf, t-OSM, Open Mon. a Kri. Iil 9 P,M. Munir In Our Huiinrss" ROYAL OAK 1224 N. fmMlwinl at 1 :* Mil.-11,1 Phone 519-.1855 0|ieu Evenins* ’iil 9 P.M. . CHEERED BY GIRL AMPUTEE - Patty Hundley, 17, *wh6se left leg was amputated aboxp the knee several years ago to half g. cancerous tumor, tolls Ronald Baker, 16, to * Los Angeles hospital how she gets along on her artificial leg. Ron,‘.who ran away from home when he learned Amputation •of his left ldg wasf necessary to save his life, returned voluntarily. Ron and Patty met yesterday.. His surgery was to be perfortopd today. Bon is suffering from .bone cancer. » Detroit Warned on Racial Strife . DETROIT (AP)—The National Association for the Advancer ment of Colored People and the Detroit Urban League warned/ 'Wednesday of potential racial strife in Detroit. • ■ In separate statements, leaders of the two groups made suggestions for improving/ what they suggested ?re deteriorating relations between the police department and the Negro community. - Francs Kornegay,/director of the league, said there is a* “growing and seething rise in tension, conflict and bitterness . over brutality, tynequal treatment, and the killing of persons without sufficient cause by policemen.’* - The Rev. James Wadsworth Jr., local president of the. NAACP, was asked if NegrA uiv-rest over alleged police brutllity could provoke a race riot. He replied; ‘.‘If we keep on like this we!re going to have one.” The two groups have joined with IQ. other organizations in urging that a civilian review board be set up to review charge*, of police brutality. But Mayor Jerome Cavanagh said he .saw no necessity for a review board if toe mayor and (Joiice commitaiciqer perform their duties. /.Wadsworth also*requested that the Michigan Civil Rights Commission hold a public hearing on police brutality .charges, while the Urban .League asked Cavanagh to ham* two civil deputy police commissioners — one of them a Negro-to ease toe friction. '. ment* were worked out at a seven-hour Democratic caucus which broke up at 2 a.m. Democrats will takeover control of both houses of the. legislature next month. Sen. Garlaqd Lane of Flint was named chairman of the powerful appropriations committee, regarded as the most important committee on the m "V ‘ • Sett: Joe Mack "of Ironwood was named vice chairman. Other members will be Sens. Jerome Hurt, Saginaw; Jan Vath~ Muskegon; and Ed Robinson and Roger Craig of Dearborn. STAFF TURNOVERS Dzendzel said the caucus also discussed the turnover in staff assignments—secretaries, clerks and others—but did not complete the, job.' Beryl Kenyon, who. was first appointed by the Republicans,' will remain in his position as Senate secretory. Dzendzel said theDemocrats, hoping for a harmonious ses-ion; decided to retain the ratio of tour majority members apd two minority members on each committee which watt into ef-j feet during the 1963-64 session tinder the GOP. Makeup of the appropriations the coning,! ......... see toe Democrkl«v iB for' the first time in* decades, Dzendzel. said he ekpected one of the toughest taakft ,t(V be reorganization of : state government fromits present agencies into 20 major meMs. The state’s newly adopted constitution to^iilrps toe re-organization. Other imrtunittee Troutt, F -chnel J. O’Brien, Retirement — Sen. John Me- Agriculture — Sen. Boggy Johnson, Marshall. .> Conservation — Sap. Carl O’Briem 'L Corporations — Sen. Raymond Dzendzel, Detroit; ’ Education — Sen. Gerald Dunn, Flushing. v ■ *' Elections — S e n. ^ Coleman Young, Detroit. Health and Welfare - Sen. Michael J. O’Brien, Detroit, Highways — Sen. Stanley Ro-zycki, Detroit. Infurance —' ’Sen. Bernard1 O’Brien, Detroit. ' . Judiciary — Sen. Basil Brown, Detroit. r Levin, Senate Business — Sen. John Bowman, Roseville. \ Sen. Stanley Novak, State Affairs — Sen. William Romano, Warren. ' Taxation — Sen. George Fitzgerald, Crosse Print*. /Seth IB- Tourist. Relations * — Sell. Charles Youngblood, Detroit. Veteraps. Affairs — ’ Sen. Paufity, Wyandotte. V ’ Charles Youngblood, Detroit. starting tridag every savings dollar earns 4% at the 'Commonwealth9. .. compounded and . these five reasons tell you hotter Red, white, a blue chip investment You won’t, get rich overnight buying U.S. Saving* Bonds. Rut for the long run, they make aa axeellent inveat-ment .7 You get a guaranteed rata, of in-tereet—8 3/4% when held to maturity / — 4o there’* too up* and down* to worry about. You alao got eortain tax advantages since Savings Bonds aren't subject to state or local income taxes and the federal tax can ho daferrbd until tho Bonds art cashed. Bat probably moat important is that Bonds pay off in more than dollars. When you get your Bond investment , hack you know It has helped Unde Sam strengthen the cause of freedom . (your cause) all around thia troubled ; world of ours. Buy U. S. .Savings Bonds and own a share .of America. It’s a,good outfit to do . business with. Quick facts about Sorias E Savings Bonds V Yon get hack $4 far every IS at maturity V Yon can get year money when • yen need it .. . V Year Bends ere replseed free if i—t, destroyed er stolen V Yon can buy Banda where yeu bank, or en the Payroll Barings Plan whore yen work Ivy I Bondi tot growth Buy U.S. Sawings Bonds STAR-SPANGLED SAVINGS PLAN • 7; FOR ALL AMERICANS mm -r-F" We pug interest on deposits starting at $1.00. (Some banks require a balance of $500.00 to earn thelrtop interest rate.) . • h s7 ’ . in only 90 dagegaur savings have , earned 4%. (Soma banks penalize you by paying only 1%to 3% if withdrawn before one year j .; 3 4 interest is eempesmded and paid every 90 tings. (Soma banks compound interast only onceor^wice a year.) This 'is assured bank interest with big hank satetg. (Not a dividend as offered Iff other type* of thrift Institution*.) 1 The Cemmensreaitb is the lmreest bmukUsBetreitietHsh 4% em . beeh srndnes meeemnts. LOOK FOR MORE NEW IDEAS FROM BANK OE-THE COMMONWEALTH THE PONTIAC PKESS, XHUESDAY^DECJSMBKR #1, I9g$ Bdrinei' Yedr Seen for City By ART 8CHEIFLE ..It’s agreed! Pontiac should Welly go places In 1966. The city's business, Indus-tf ial and civic Ijsaders are pre-dictlng a banner year for the Pontiac area. \ , ' la the industrial Add pay* all-time high of Aagast 1965. According to CM reports, 1 ceived an overage weekly stage of $147.13 hi the first nine months of the year. The national average for all factory workers, according to figures released last month by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, is $102.97 weekly. , ' - V * ’ * Pontiac Motor Division General Manager E. M. Estes reports Pontiac producing cars at a record rate. , MAY BE BIGGEST “D cc e mber could well bd the biggest production in our history and. the first quarter of 1969 'Should be bat" ever," he Added. « Currently the division employs 18,000 compared to 10,500 just two years ago. . Estes pointed out that plant ffdlities are being increased, i the program is com-e will have increased | and wareheps-i by nearly one-inserted. f in projecting, business for the touting year, Ckjvin J. Werner, a via president of General Me-j tors and gen-! erai manager] of CMC Truck & Coach Divi-j ston, said the '-Increased acceptance of j GMC’S n e w| models assures 'Use division and wfrnfr dealers they will continue tor enjoy a high level of businen activity in the 'coming year. OftE OF BEST .“Our broadened model ?ov-erage, increased application flexibility through more options and over-all grater product values combined to make 1964 one of our best years. » "GMTC sales,” he noted, “were np .approximately 15 per cent ova 1963—five pa cent greeter Jharsfen indue-try wide gain if 19 pa cent “Thanks to a model line unsurpassed in our 63-year history, we view the coming months with great optimism,” Werner summed up. OSMUN OPTIMISTIC The outlook is also bright for businen in Pontiac’s central business, district, according to Monroe M. Osmun, president of the Downtown Pontiac Business Association, • “He general economy is good and will contiaae to be good throughout 1666; .•“We will begin malting herdway on more Qff-street parking; „ • “Many stores will. begin remodeling botii interiors and1 store fronts;. NEW DEVELOPMENTS • “We will see the beginning of new developments within Wide Track Drive. Many new business developments are in the making now; • “Urban renewal lands, will be onoed fa sale, as mack of thoNrtd tape which involves socli\ undertakings will be behind • “Last but i is a marked b| downtown busina the future. Many i ready to put their shot the wheel and help r ’ centfal business district. * ♦ e ‘This should be a year of progress if we all work together,”. Osmun summarized. COMING DOWNTOWN He pointed out that during the closing months of 1964, people were coining downtown , and stores were busy, estimated a 10 per cent in business in most sto ver 1963, and a similar for 1965. Max Pontiac merce,' pattern which re ressaaa RECORD Pontiac industries at record levels, he j Adiuns also pointed new Wide Track Drive 4s fsM completes the picture if Pontine a an up-and-coming modern community. far the greatest achieve-‘ the year Is tbs promise of a hbqr College pathte , for Pontiac,”| Adams noted. “Pontiac* R20 Urban Renewal project is i moving along.j The apartment dweBbigs recently erected heve proved ADAMS qndrtnoutly, popular, and there an plans for a new concept which will bring added revome. 1966 TO BE BETTER l** All things point to 1965 as being economically better than 1964, Adams concluded. _ a' .* * Howard M. Nelson, generaf manager of Sears Roebuck Company’s downtown store reports business in 1964 as ex-anient. I - - beyond all expectations — the highest since 1929 which was an overall record yea of us,'1 Nelson said. “We have made an even higher projection for the first.six months of 1965, which NELSON is as far as we go jn business projections at this time,” he concluded. > . manager of the Chamber of Com-to the general lustrial activity Conthmed growth and development in the Pontiac area is evident in expansion plans revealed by Charles F. Brown, Consumers Power Company Pontiac division manager. ‘.Consumers Power Company’s »tiae Division u planning on year of substantial growth 'activity in 1965. Vie will be adding another 5,000 gas space hating customers,’*' Brown noted, “and installing ova 100 mites of new gas main. There are also major revisions to*’ electric facilities serving customers in Pontiac. -“The growth picture fa Pontiac and Qakland County, as it affects our planning appears excellent,” Brown concluded. ♦ * y. * I Alfred C. Girard, president of Community -National Bank of Pontiac, pointed to several factors indicating .a healthy eco- County DPW Lo Following Progress By BILL EASTHAM , The year 1064 was a big one' for the Oakland County Depart-merit of Public Works, and 1965 promises to be even bigger. DPW Director ^R. J. Atex-ander said the department su-' pervised, the completion — or near, completion—of nearly 619 million worth of sewer, and ■water projects in the country . this year. Construction plans for next ' year include water and sewer 'projects which will cost, nearly $24 million, according to . Alexander. ' The two biggest projects complete^ under DPW supervision ■ during the year were water systems in Farmington and Bloomfield Township: The Farmington job' cost $2.6 million and the Bloomfield Township system cost $2~1 mil-- lion. Both systems tie into the NEED HELP WITH YOUR-INVESTMENT PROBLEMS? | % ; rntsU K 2‘^274 > Watiing, Lerchen & Go. ’n.t N. SA6INAW ST. .PONDAC MKWOAN Momhor, Now York Stock Kodmngo Detroit metropolitan area network whieh will' eventually reach all the way to Flint. LARGE PROJECT , The largest sewer project completed during the year-was the Huron-Rouge-Nqyi system in Novi Township, costing 61.5 million.- s ’ • • ’ Others included section 1 of the 13 Mile Rad Arm, 8*85,-088; the M Mile Road and Maple Arm, $419,800; and the Sylvan Manor Ann, $248,008. The department’s largest project under way now’is the 87.3-million Waterford Township water systeft), scheduled fa completion next June. ^ • • * * * it is independent of the Detroit system,, utilizing wells for it# soured, of supply. -TROY SYSTEM Another sizable ’ project now under construction is the Troy sewer system, which Alexander said'will be completed in about 90 days at a cost of. 63.3 million. Also nearing completion are the WaRon . Heights - Mtia Arm, a $340,000 project near Oakland University, and fee Tarabusi Industrial Arm, a $778,dll job in Southfield. Nearly half of tisp cost of this yea's projects was provided by, the federal Accelerated Public Works Program. ★ * it. Most «f the remainder was fr nanced by-special assessment aad Revenue bonds, Alexander. WML* 'i. TIED UP Two projects which are ready to get under way but are presently tied tip in court, are the Sputhfiekl-Rouge sewer project, estimated'at $1.75 million, and, a $l.l-millioi^sewer system Tfi Lake Ofjon. Both, projects have been stalled by a dispute ova financing, Alexander said* but will be 'started immediately, if ifwiu< and when the court cleas the , way. ^ ~ ™ Scheduled to be started early next yea are the Walnut Lake \rm,7f $1.7-million sewer proj-ect in West Bloomfield Township; a sewer project in Wiiom estimated at $2.5 to $3 million; and a $1.3-mi!!ion Water system fa Pontiac Township. Others ate a $530,000 water system fa Keego Harbor; a $530,000 extension of the Farmington Township water system, and a $61,000 extension. of the Tarabusi Industrial Arm. $11 MILLION Scheduled for'late next year a early 1968. is the Clinton-Oakland sewa system, a $13-ihlllloct project designed to serve Waterford, Pontiac and - Avon Townshjps,;' ' Engineering plans are due for completion next month, Alexinda noted, and acquisition of right-of-way and ease-monts will be started in the next 99 days. Difficulty in obtaining easements. couM stall the project, he said. , Partial financing Will Be'provided by federal aid under the Water ^Mutton Control ,Act, according jo Alexander. nomk. climate^ in the coming OQNBTIIUOlkON “Due to the continued freeway construction that .id' a. population expansion whiph is- a,very favorable contributing facial to our economic growth," Girard] noted. “Such expansion a stimulant housing atruqtio sale of a- goods, mism for, the earning- yea there is aloo tbe facta of new employers' moving into 'ear area, as well as the expansion of time presently established. “The grata PontiacVa and Oakland County has mucMo be thankful for as a result oi a excellent business year in 1184. The outlook fa 1965 and a number of yeas shad should give confidence to aa business,” Girard concluded, v . ★ w. * w , Milo Cross, president of the Pontiac State Bank, reports an increase in deposits of 12 pa cent in 1856, and b opti-. mistic aput 1865. Loans have shown a propa-tionate growth, and Cross predicts a further increase in home building in the greater Pontiac, area a c c o m p a i nying the increase in industry and general development now taking place. Jama Clarttson, president of First Federal Savings and Loan Association of Oakland reports , 1864 as another MUMUS/tfAd banner year with approved real estate loans in excess of $34 million: He predicted they Will total $40 million^ in 1865. Of this latter amount, Clark- CLARKSON son ays, $22 -million will be for new construc-| of residential hoina.. our feeling that the next will show a phenome-in Oakland County which 'will greatly affOct all businessoin the county. We are very pleased to be f part of this tremendous growth,” Clarkson said. • W HUDSON’S TO “The fact that th^J. L. Hudson Company is trlplteg the size of its store at the\Pontiac Mali and additional shoj» will be opened, is indicative, a business at this center-” said Robert Witbotd, resident manager of the Mall ,. The Mali had an average business ^increase this yea of between 20 and 25 per cent ova An increase of flve-te ,16 pa cent is. generally considered normal for a shopping center during its'first two a three years, according to Wit- There is no way to predict what the volume will be when the additions are open, but . we do know that they are bound to attract more people to area,” Witbold said. . Speaking for the merchants of the Tei-Huron cater, R.‘ I. Mertz, manager of Kresge’s store there, said that each yea since Tel-Hnron was opened business has increased. ' *64 WAS GOOD* ^ ’ Mertz commented that “1964 was good and we feel 19$ will be better. “With the addition of twp 'new-stoni—Griswold Sporting Goods and BUI Petrusha it Sons, Appliances — we have an outstanding team of shops,V Mertz said; . ' “Our customers find it easy to park and they know'most of the stores and the people,” he pointed out. - Ex-College H«adOie$ GREENVILLE, S.C. (AP) -Dr. Bennett Eugene Geer, *1, a forma • president of Furman University, dted Wednesday. Geer had been assistant profes-$a of Latin, professor of Eng' “fishpond dean of the faculty before serving as President. m Ford Archives Change Hands DE ARBORIJ (AP)-Tha Henry Ford Archives, vsluod At more than $4 million and containing 14 mlllfoe photographs, letters amTofea memorabilia «f the first Henry Ford* changed a by Ford in 1929 r of Greenfield VU-ird historical rofiec-Greenfield ViUAM The Fad Motor Co. donated the archive to the Edison Institute, founded by Ford in 1929 and operator of W lage, tiie Fad hist tion, and Greenfield School. The archives’ half 41 million photographs taka by Ford include pictures of inventor Thomas Edison, Harvey, Firestone, the robber tire magnate, and naturillst John Burroughs, ail close friends of Ford. There are also historic Ford Motor Co. documents. * Edison Institute will make the collection available to research workas«kF authors. Hie archives narrowly escaped destruction in the Ford Rotunda fire hi 1962. They were stored in the Rotunda’s north wing, unharmed in the blaze. ibw **m omWHIom for iuefi initolloflon. wKarBs oomt. oxd a MM permit —wroO. Such oppllcotlont MM So mod* forint provktad by tho Wafor Dooort-mt. Tho owna-. imrTUw i^ ' NOTICE TO PUBLIC Proposal Number B-f-370 19 ind Pjoeo ir bids wlirpt publicly opoMd 1. tUS Crooks Road. . story brick vi Mock howo. 1 car • PtmdOf M 3 1. 2475 Crooks Rood, Pool.sc. I . story brick vonoor houai •ached 1 cor Qorott. - posal form. _ JPEpFICATIONS and BIO PROPOwv FORMS moy be obtained at tho Olstrli Office, No. *, nt Footherstone. P. C Box 3054, Pontiac. Michigan. JOHN C. MACKIE Commissioner Michigan Lansing. December 31, TH4 a NOTICE TO PUBLIC \Proposal Number B-f-371 'Control Section 63111-8 r Solo df Buildings Locotod Ih Oakland County, Michigan Seeled bids wHI Bd received until I0:M i.m., Thursday. January 14, tM4, at the 1. W East Square Lake Ro field Hills. Michigan, m house, 1 story frame ptry * .air garage, t M East Sguere Lake Lake Road, Bio Iflan. 1V» story b< >, I car brickgari i Lakd Road. Oku Btoom-y brick troy, 1 Bloom- veneer house wllh attached garage. TO BE. CONSIDERED, all Blda must te wBmtttad on the prescribed bid pro- trions and SID PROPOSAL -v----- District , W. o. ORDINANCE CO Providing far _________jamont, Malntanai.... ... and Control of the Waterford Water ply System and Any EstanaleR^TBa.. M 23 lection Thereof. EstnIMIsMnB ThMO and Regulations Governing Said System and Any Extension Thereof, and Providing PonaltlM tor Violation- Thereof. WHEREAS, pursuant to contract with ■— County gt oakiend, dated as ot 1, TS4J, as supplemented and the Charter Township of has uwdirlPkan tg .Operate, aintain end repair the ‘Water-Supply System" and la estab-......... jllacf such rales and cJt—- pertaining thereto as shall be naca to provide revenues sufficient Ms -nd for peyrnwn of the township's 'actual obligations to tlw county; WHEREAS, this ordinance Is to.. — ,.i order to carry out the townships re- COUNTY. MICHIGAN) GAINS: grd^Xrate! this ordinance, unless fifterwh by MM contsxt: -• 1.1. 'TWptiNp" maths Ihe. Charter Vbwnshla of Waterford, Oakland County, M'5T'llB«drd" and "TowAhlp Board" M the Township Boarq of said town-j. "Waterford Water Supply System", later System" and "Sysfem" mean ...lectiveiy an plants, work, anperitil end Instrumentalities, as Mie jama ahaM from time • ‘ Ih fhrakM? PM treatment of. iter, and/or the distribution of water the township. Including spodficallv e Waterford Water Supply System pa scribed In Ihe jbpye-mentlpnaa r~^ set between the County ot Oakl id the Township. . 1,4. "Water Department" moans lively those otflclals, employees ants ot the township Invested by wrd with authority MfrNM systar i.s. "Main" and "Weltr Main" tr those pipes, other vlhan. supply pipes ana services, pipes, uted ter conveying or distributing water. . -- "*—ply pipe" maans a pipe a makr and dntaMlng thence ding the curb cedi or vr‘— Ilea pipe'" means a plge i the prooerty Una Me pr ant that measure el ....i..... „.... vahaumptlon equal to &JTSRr V2XSI& STF3&XJ& ly |Of ^avjujsg dse^and^ tM^humbar of of pram Ism by the Township Board Is ^^^ TSlarlty VKdSd* b? occupants of a reakkmes qy a slnoia Section 4. ■ • $ ORGANIZATION AND . MANAGEMENT. „ 1.1. In pursuance at and within the imtts of applicable Jews encT the said onfrect wm ^ths County Oakland. and repair of the system, IndudMacoF MTHwer the Water anfe \ ....... jpprovlf ofMip &td fUbJlc Works at the County ot Oakland, but sublact at all tkrws to the lujaryfipry jfciAfleB^BWi' Of the Tawnshlp Board, Which shall have ultimata responsibility nr tho jystem and for anrarca-mont of this Ondlnpncs and aMy additional rules anii regulations adopt id with r* spert to the systom. J.i. Ail offlesrs, omptoyeds and agent* ot the Township Board, insofar as their functions pwtaln tg Mt* system, shall b* held strictly accountable for sdlinuiM of the powers and datlff. dytaeotad, n them, and shall ndf vary. Ham or axdoed thj authority — ----- side and pant or*Vhwn!nm ....^.riUrl'yTOv- mentlcned contract between tt»« tawMhip and Hi County af Oakland, and shall.ba “^ectto’n ^‘^(^NstoN OP MAIN*.\ SA. IxtwwJon m nr chMM ji watfr mm may ba inmftttri by fha Tawnihlp S^4,r*^^v,SLT?sn}|;lS ^ryaidTiT^i'7BjSee 9*BfV 'n*t re- Dapartmant in.all respects, but mo kn@vW^„§* b»^ot"V pipes must b* li —- fly* (5) teat of to* ba japacigd Ijalara |m| Sseparate Ik provlc lea, sha ll asMJw i ouallty h. , 4.1. No supply pi jm Rich dlamet.. .. Supply pipes MT larger JU. shall —Iterminad by the Water Dapartmant. 4.t, The charset ter I ppty pipes and motors ah— . ws and shall be paid when a r service It made: $125 for M" tap With « nil far 1" tap with V Where tlw supply lint ____________ feet in length, an addltlonaTchafga of S2.50 per foot thill r---- “•——» over ICO teat. thereof. ..... ...____Ion tar aprvlca larger sizes, the Board ot mr. prom Isos at...______ _ relectcd for cause, the applicant . —.T3—.A ::—i. Board bfcarVP •" kept a dSaiiod" record 'of 1 eluding labor,' and MMW « at thereto tho l$% surcharge to cat • Coat of superintendence, depreclatl rat* ter watpr use,. .. ___________ ■ Ml* WataK Department. Said tea for construction wafar lftatf — title tlw applicant to wafor for canah flan purposes far a period of netw... than Hint months. Where water ttNorp-vided. without a mater, tor construction at a building, any Wasting at wafor, whether caused by caralasanatt or by dafactive tbrtyras Is atrldly prohlbltad. For dlaragard ot, or repeated violation " Mila raquirament, the wafor may . turned oH by Hi* Water Dapartmant. Tlw wafor tarVIc* shall net o* hi mad — again ifntll an agraamant I* reached I tween tha parties Invotvad. 4.1,1. Ns supply pip# shall b* Install whan ID* aarvka -pip* la in lln* with driveway, tree, fir* hydrant, catch ba or other obstruction ■ 4.12. All supply pipes from ttw me... to th* lot lln* shall b* put In only by properly authorised employes of ttw Water Dapartmant. before receiving a par- mr tlw expanse of furnishing and . Hint ih* supply pip*, curb atop, atop i and malar. . .13. The water supply pip*, from In to the proparty lln*. shall ba i wd by ttw Dapartmant, But this c ___ill nar apply to old tarvicak Inti by private parti**. The service jilpt water service pip*. Tlw capMNv'ii' afford* tan (It) haursi. Inn pip* MyD discharge.^ than his..awn. ______M. , ownership , gt prop* ■aiil more dMBsCPlMn IH _ _________ _ business buUftlng It occupied by tw* or mor* *'— m — ------- single cberg* “* 5.3. No consisting ef several premises may. irvad by mor* than an* water terv- ___and malar •vttn approval ef ns* Water Dapartmant. In multiple meter bwfaHaHana, no master mater still be allowed, wtwn mar* than an* malar It Mrvad by an* water service, all th* wd by the service mutt op-a manifold type arrangement. _______ one unit In a manifold arrangement to pay for wafer received will ~i*wt M j discontinuance el stator to wt motor. 5.4. Whatp d building, originally. bulH l a single buMdinp or prtmltat and i) days antMMI 1.5. Wham the wi 1 by Hw author lit Ip Board tor any id Parsannai th* ...Mn mis rule It ....----- . ba turnad aft at th* corporation cock. In sthkft cat* tlw owner or occupant shall, flfc- T la again .turnad ar — *“ th* charges mad* by InNstom *, vslvt item ly ____ .... Idlng materials, rsfoblth. soli, ylji— ^ ^ iji KboI *«PPty-Am st evenKtrerbst -talar will WHI tha ----j-- No direct connection *1 any .. taf llna shall ba a"—“ 5.1. Only approved JWS^Bk eet^Mnj rx ■ squlpmont >r Indirectly .lMA w*» an .avaraga at MS than it gallant at water from Bw Watortord Water System par hour iit-ur Wfy •Haw operation bt ttw slr-ca frotntlw Wsforfsyd Water «ys aMhar In conjunction wnh a - tit m ay-''JJ£-“— ttwaahtric « For tM next «MB( cubic toot — 23c per IN cadMg foot For th# next f**^** cubic foet - ' M 20c BBT 100 cubic foet For aH over l,0*k«*t cubic foat -- Me jar in ariTk » i -f-3. TBs wafor ganBMlpHaB mfos sat Mih in mis taction MMMpMM atfoc-v* as to asdl prsmlta* wMh 3h* first imptall gusrtarty bttttnB an ant afMP prll 1, 1345. » \ Section 10. ■ J , .\> DEBT SERVICE CHARDt. • * ■ \ On and after January ,1, 1361, each pmmfoa* oannactad to fha systom shall R pay,.* auarforly dabf tervlca charge, iwWBIjjdJn mm baria of motor ah* at tat forth below, such charge M cohtlnua -until tha TbmiaMp'a abllgatlons to ttw county *1 Oakland mm jU’. Irmm^ tfonad contract hava -— Ouartarly Charge of Mm mh pay a capital accordance with eguSSaRen charge. In ttw^following provisions: porarlly or adforwls* I farlaL snow, df'-*' * fum afany k ........... . twenty (20) todT af any H . -—I abatruetton wtwn dlacovarad may ramovad at one*, by ttw Board ot dapana* at ttw peri— -----— Mi> laHfpM* wrj_ .. 5. Hydrants am Acifod' within ttw I right of stay or aatamanf Mid amt mn, firm or corporation desiring to ■ a hydrant movsd to anoftwr teca-(half bear Hw comp lata « ' moving said hydrant. 64. Wham pip** am pravldad shall b* taken ar utad through such ----ilngt ar hoi* tor any purpoa* — i tor axtlnpulshlng tires, axes* rpose gt tasting said tlrn i In such cat* Mw fast mw Hud b ____________T ______ ._ - jve-mantlOnad montract with tha County - Oakland, shall' pay a capital aquadsA-tlen charge computed conducted * i suparvlslon ot IB* Water De-6.7. 'Each premises to. or pay tharkter a quarterly charge service connection — $ 50.00 aarvka connection — 15.00 sgrvlca connection — 100.00 •xcopt that tor tiro hydrant rental •hall pay >20,00 par 'year for each I drant connactod to ttw tykfom. Su rental shall b* a*V*t>fo In equal quarterly allmanfs. \ » ration 7. ' \ WATER METERS. ~ — conqactlons except at ---1 ^ meter at th* ri ilp Board. 9999 J.... mant approval, at other than tha ash Hahad water rat*. -7.1. Th* supply pip* and meter, at*Nation charge tor which provision mad* In Section 4.9. shall Inclua* 1 coat at th* water Tnotar tumlshad th* Water Dapartmant and th* InsfM ^ ^ motor shall tweii dapartmant and will “- control. Thy be charged against and osllac s'- ——ik ar aeaeanf <^ ---------- .... meteri shall „ —---------—. In dry, clean, sanitary places, perfectly accessible, no Ian than II" from No— level or mom than 24" from floor tow with a minimum ef 6" from any wa It" tram top tor reading purosast Immovable eblect, with J gaff valve i both slots *f th* malar, and wham small leak ar Hw spilling of water w 7.4. By-passes are required on all IVk" and larger malar Inttailatlana. “ “ will net b* aHowad on I" i smaller. 7.»; AH services 1W" or lai Hw tMfe opening of Mils iPfo||P|P8^l tor IVk" torvlea pipes, r* tor all sarvka pipes ---- ' '' * " larger servlet pipes, uch tea shall ba plu 74;' The owrwr at -nwtoKls InttaUa oontlbl#' for Its -om treating or d nd from m fury‘or arson or porsons. 1 promises wham o function or at ttt* average quarterly cenwqtpn as shewn by ttw\ motor whan lg - ord Th* Accuracy of any malar Installfd any pmmltat will ba fasiad by fha Wa Department upon mquost ef th* customer, who shall pay -In advene* a fly# turn dollars to cover th* t Hw tost. If. an such tost, Mm matai Hw fas ef'SS.W v ir will b t service connactlan > totMHtjjL *« M^mR i an to Into motor friy ufflratP Water Ot mmava’ o or by-Pat Jp^ction AND INSPRCTORSi , foremen and emploi _ ________J -Board whose duty _/l» to anfor upon private premises i make Inspection and examination of — •--- fixtures pr attachment* used r authbrliad employe pf -yi Board shall, upon ttw pmaanfat or employ* of th* Township Board ths have or waer-or sxhlblt any badb* • credential ef ttw Board. If *h*M b* <1 duty artaach and tvary officer and si -.... of Hw Board upon ratlgnatian ._...a*al, forthwith, to ourraiMar ai deliver for Hw Baaid at Ha *Hk* ill badges and cmdanttots of Hw Township Board. . (a) in cases ot mutttpfo .—HR ■ muitlpis canwitortlal BtaRda** d By only ona sarvka Una and r, such minimum gudtBjny .OMB*' snail b* 14.00 tor each separata ratl-xtontlal ar cammarclal occupancy ef Hw PAMf ^ manta Installman ft. - discharge by paying fha asipTicabl* ‘ka*B H It Ik to hit advantage, by paying Otabalanct of th* applkabto "Install- hls remaining directly c nanced by agnyatl > agbal to .Hw applicable "caah specified In lacflon 11.1. • County at Otfcfnd. ssuance ef Hw WHu*. chary* proparty owner* by special je otherwise shall pay, prljkr of Hw lap-In parmH, a capital ...j charge equal to. enaJMH ef Hcebfo "cash ameurt" specified now connected io exlst- manf* (If any) • of connection chargea (deemed to ba In the nature of capital equalization charges) heretofore Imposed, and premises haraaftor connactod thereto ahatl pay, prior to Issuance of Hw tap-ln parmlt, a capital equalization chaigator Hw first amount apaclflod below for bto tecafhm. such charge being payable Premises in Yank* ef ttw \Lak*t Subdivision, Clwr-okee Hills No. t Subdivision, Lincolnshire Subdivision, Bavarfy island Subdivision, and Calaman-PrladnMfi Suo-divlslon Premises on Edgefield ‘remfiat on WSpdblnr •remises In Sylvfen S3 j determined b Board. Failure to recalva a excua* failure to pay fha b Bills shall be ouo and pat a Township III shall not whan due. Ha. wHhaut i wlfhln 30 . days after < notice shall b* sent to Hi nd If Hw Mil It net paid i stated In Hw nolle* malty of Two Dollar* (IMS) n bo charged and shall bo paid with all unpaid chargee before shall ba Hw obligation of Hw BnoMwao larvad. Consump-thalL be Hw obligation of rSfZxsSin ..•nd ^ consumption cnwfges o3%Zn j*ervS'\kn^Sh.rg« JUhkh, w “ I of each year, hava Bam -Jf 30 days or mar* riMTS result M I**. 134. Whanevsr nolle* It 1— ‘■—sunder, the sank personal aarytoa of a ........„ > Hw parson, firm, or corpatb-“ notlftod; or by sanding an th* Board to tha sramlad* .... ....--such dapaaltlng. f Mils oidlnanca'shall arer*oa^haW^by ny Court of compatont lurltdkflon to Ba ivaiid or imanfarcaabto tor any reason, nmabilna' provisions, haraof shall -“•-—i ba continued in AM tores mu Id have been enacted despite the ivsildlty of such provision orprwrttoani o held to b* Invalid. 134. Any parte "— 010.00) DeHart, and no! axcaadjng On* Hundred (SWMIl Dollars Plut Coats, and In tha bnpotltlan of such TM* and coats, tho Court may msST a forWar such flrw and Imprfoanmanf In tag dta- ar iSaxWi_______ from Hw date of passage and ahse kah* effact on January 1. fiuTimmffim. ih ift. prevtsfoni hafgfn. JMSTboST- WATtR^RDTOWNSHIP BOARO. ELMER R. PANOBONfR Waterford Tawnahfo Cork THE PONTIAC PRESkK THURSDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1964. ''T' V ‘ • ‘ \ • ,■ .v ■ H I 11 The foDowmg are top prices ' covering tales of Really ji produce by growers and sold by , them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as uf Monday. SfcxrHc Mart Re Produce NEW YORK (AP)-The stock market resumed its rally tag active trading early today. * * * Industrials .moved ahead on a broad frqnt, key stocks adding | fractions to a point ,pr more. 'Opening blocks included: den Aldeh, up, W at 13% on 20,000 shares;. Brunswick, unchanged at 9% on 12.5QP; and Btjiguet, unchanged at 1% on 10,000. , ’.the trend Was higher on pie American. Stock Exchange. Old Wound* Op Could Split' Nation \' Wednesday the Associated Press average of 60 stocks rose i 2.0 to 322.6. p*. Mk.*f p»r-- U» rM Mart *feM INCRIAStD JF . Ml *-i. rroular The New York Stock Exchange LAGOS, Nigeria (AP) - Concern was widespread today that regional rivalries drafttatizedin bitter general election campaign may split this most populous of African nations, Candidates of the National Nigerian Alliance swept to a commanding lead as expected in returns from balloting yesterday, boycotted the opposition, for a new parliament. One Lagos newspaper termed H a “half and half election.” Millions of voters stayed away from the polls in the eastern and midwestern sectors and in Lagos, the capital They responded to a boycott plea by the United .Progressive Grand Alliance. A union of partita centered iii these southern' Nigeria areas; CALLED VALID Voters in-, the heavily populated, largely Moslem northern and western regions cast ballots. The leaders of the Nigerian National Alliance, whose power is based in these regions, insist the election is valid' and .will form the basis for a new parliament. By midtaorning, National Alliance candidates had taken 89 seats. United Progressive candidates were credited, with 23, despite the boycott* Their leaders, however, said before the balloting that any United^ Progressives who would immediately resign to make the boydxt complete. OPENED WOUNDS The campaign opened many old tribal-regional conflicts. Most serious was the threat that Nigeria might-be dismembered. The premier of the northern region, Sir Ahmadn Bello, accused eastern regional leaders Tuesday of wanting to secede and form a separate nation. Bello said the oil-rich eastern region felt it would be economically viable apart from the rest of Nigeria. Prosper Cleared Alt Hurdles By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Aap^yst N&W YORK—Americans tonight can toast a departing year which unprecedented prosperity proved so strong it over-came a string of surprises and .threats. The good' guys definitely bested the bad guy* in the American economic story. But there were perilous moments and urn c a r t a i n ties enough to stave off any' boredom- ' And t h e r e DAWSON were dreams of future rainbows in space that kept Comsat stock gyrating to the wonderment of many. Auto labor wage [ gains hi hand and steelpay. incr in prospect raised the sj of future; inflation. But sumers mostly counted tneir blessings now —- a tax cut, rising incomes, more jobs. lng the hearts of the lucky hold- iuys definitely I Defenders of our ' gold reserves staved off a further drain of dollars that kept the U.S. deficit in international payments high. More dramatically, they withstood (he shock of the onslaught on the British pound that brought threats of its devaluation or of international monetary chaos—with the U.S. dollar, as the leading exchange currency, inevitably involved. A record $3 billion bail-out fund saved the pound — for the time being, at least. UPSET MARKET The fall of Nikita Khrushchev upset the stock market momentarily blit businessmen and consumers alike went on their way confident that peace of a sort would continue — and with it the prosperity to which they have become accustomed during the 46 months of economic upswing. Corporate profits \t ighs in 1964, and so qid dividend payments. Mostly this reflected record output and sake, but also more productive factory operations. And demand for goods inspired corporate decisions to spend more far new plants and equipment. Building of new homes slackened the fall of 1164 and own-of some new apartment houses hung, out vacancy sighs. But industrial, commercial and government construction gave that industry a record year with the end not insight. EMPLOYMENT HIGH This, akng with recced steel production and near-record auto output, helped lift employment to a new high. And in turn, this along with higher wage scales pushed the total of personal incomes to an almost unbroken series of records. Consumers responded by spending more than, ever before for goods and services' — some *400 billion. They sayed a bit more than a year\go, thank* in part to the cut in federal income tax rates. But they paid as big a total fax bill, thanks tp rising incomes and even more to hfebqr state and local taxes. , The stock exchanges an^the Securities and Exchange Commission hammered out some new miss for trading and jfor members’ conduct. The public watchad witiKintereSt, but for the most part didn’t rtfurn to the market in the numbers that made 1961 a memorable year. So, despite all the uncertainties at home — inflation talk, slowing down'of the rate of economic growth, the future course of interest rates and of east or tightness of money — and despite all the threats abroad -Viet Nam, Congo, the Rad' Chinese atom bomb, the shaky economy of Britain — Americans can count 1964 safely in the column of thd better'years, perhaps the best. And wrapped in glowing prosperity they can wish each other HAPPY NEW YEAR! * Successfuklnvesting ' By ROGER E. SPEAR Q. “In reference to baying State of California, tax exempt bonds, yon 'say that I eaa pave the sales fee by baying direct. Whom do I get in tonen with, for I am interested in the 1%’s due 11-1-92?” J.K. A. I think you are.suffering under a misapprehension.- What I said was that — if an investor wished — he could save the sales fee charged by tax-exempt mutual funds by bwing good municipal bonds directly. I mentioned State of California 3Vi’s due 11-1-92 frhteh could then be bought through a. bank or dealer at a fixed price includint^his moderate profit. The stock market- recovered to hit new1 highs in November. But then it added to the underlying uncertainties by faltering. Even' more disturbing, it failed to provide the year-end rally, dear to the heart of traditionalists. Still, this New Year’s Eve, prices of most stocks, though not all, ire nicely above their year ago levels — gladden- In a statement last night the United Progressives welcomed what they called Itello’s suggestion that PresidenrNnamdi Azi-kiwe call a conference to “break up the country and divide its assets,”. ,. A National Alliance spokesman said later Bello was not suggesting breaking up coaniry, but “has given an surance that, if the eastern region wants to secede from the federation,” the north woukTput no obstacles in ft$ way.. News in Brief URIAH, Ala. (A- *A youth hunting squirrels in a swampy area northwest of here has found the wreckage of a light plane which crashed three and* a half years ago. , ’ The Evergreen Highway Patrol Post said Edmond Jerkins, IS, discovered- the wreckage containing the skeletons of the two crash victims last night. Identification from wallets, and baggage in the plane showed the occupants'to be John Leu, 21, of Nashville, Tebn., and Gene McGill, 18, of Mobile, Ala. Thf plane was last beard from the Might of June IS, 1961, as was -en route from. Mobile to Birmingham. The pilot, McGill, radioed he was turning back because ‘of bad weather. A week-long search failed to locate the wreckage. An undetermined amount of change, candy,' cigarettes and cigares was reported stolen yes terday in a break-in at Rizzuto’i Market, 521 Whittemore. . Gary Eastwood, 519 Lake Ad-geltis Shores, Lake Angelus Village, told sheriff’s deputies yesterday that a pair of skis and poles valued at $150 were stolen from the rack of his car. John Ran, <51 Alpine, Avon township, told sheriffs deputies yesterday'that tools jvalued at $120 were stolen from his garage. - . Stocks of Local Interest Flour** attar decimal point* ar* eighth* OVR* TNI COUNTM STOCKS The following quotation* do nat- noca*. "^ '-----action* but irlta rdprmnt i re intended a* a Pearson Is Canada's 4 v f • 4 _ . /J Top Newsmaker of '64 DMT Carp........... Associated TruOt . Braun Spqlnaprtaa Citium Ultima* C Diamond Cryatal Bthvl Cera. Mohawk Rubber Cl Michigan Seamless - ¥l iff JIB If M % * OTTAWA, Canada -UR - For toe second straight year, Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson has. been chosen Canada’s man-in-the-news in 1994. . He was selected last night by news editors of Cans4iSn Press member newspapers and by ra-and television stations served by the Mews agency. MUTUAL FUNDI «.* 4 . 35.o i ATTiiinrea runa Chemical Fund , Commonwealth % Key stone* Income Karttan Maas. A 1- Growth . a Truat ... Ml llJl ; E liai wv Joint Panel Seeks to Cut Ford-Strikes DETROIT (UP1) — A new pangi set- up by the Ford Motor Co. and the United Auto Workers Union may help cut d o w n plant-level strikes'like those which crippled ‘the firm last fall. ’ n-' . * ' Union and management have agreed to set up a joint four-man plant relations committee. Ken Bannon, director of the anion’s Ford Department, said the committee will try- to establish better relations at toe ; plant level. Bannon said the committee will , travel around the country to improve relations.where needed. As a result, Bannon said he hoped that when the current contracts expire- in 1967 “I hope thebe will be fewer problems” then there were in 1964. •Local strikes at several plants shut down Ford assembly lines in 1964 evenf though the two sides had agreed oa a national contract. 'Birmingham Store Completes Expansion An expansion doubling its former size has been completed at toe Atlantic Drapery Shoppe, 360 E. Maple, Birmingham, making it one of toe largest drapery shops in Michigan, according to Lester Morris, who opened toe shop three years ago. A feature of toe new expansion is specially designed shelving displaying over 1,009 varieties of efrkpery fringes and trimmings. The display arrangement whs, designed by, .Morris and manufactured by- the Jentzen-Miller Co. of Troy. Hope to Avert Hotel Strike DETROIT (UPI) - A final meeting was'scheduled today to try and avert a New Year’s'Eve strike at 10 riSajor Detroit hotels. * Both sides wefe pessimistic and a strike by 2,500 employes seemed inevitable unless they were an unexpected breakthrough in .today’s negotiations. State and federal mediators, called the meeting between the Hotel and Restaurant Employes Union and the Detroit Hotel Association. Both sides ■aid they did not ask for the meeting. The union represents workers at pi* Belcrest, Leland, Embassy, Park Shelton, Pick-Fort Shelby, Royal Palm, Sheraton-Cadillac, Statler - Hilton, Tuller and Whittier hotels. • A . union handbill passed out to workers yesterday called oil workers to “prepare to battle strike to liken wax'.” UNION DEMANDS The handbill listed union .demands including a minimum wage of $L50 an hour for nontipping jobs such as maids and dishwashers, $1 an hour for tipping jobs like waiters and doormat, ar pension plan and'im- Cd holiday and vacation its. - '* A strike deadline was set for 12:01 a.m. tomorrow. City Printing Shop Has New Owner Arthur M. Mansfield of 5186 Dumham, Waterford Township, has'purchased the Pontiac Letter Shop, 710-712 W. Huron. The founder,-Raymond Zimmerman of 196 Ogemaw, is,retiring as owner orthe 42-year-old printing' concern, effective Friday. Mansfield has beep with the company 26 years and has been production foronan for the past seven years. He attended Pontiac Central High School. Donald \ Rah, 1066 Canterbury, has, been named foreman. Kah is a graduate of St. Mi-l chad High School and has been! with the firm since 1967. These bonds have all been sold, but I find available some State of California 3%’s due 2001 offered to yield 3.50 per cent. I recommend that you buy these, if they are still unsold. Q. “I am 60 years dd and retired — my wife is 06. Our house is paid for. Income from savings accounts, stocks, and A Social Security is ample. I ' would like to invest about $2,- 000 to American Motors. Would you advise this?” J.C. _ A. In a strong period ol automobile sales, American Motors’ earnings per share for the fiscal year ended September 30, 1904, were down 31 per'bent from the fiscal period a year earlier. Profits came to $1.38 a share, down from $2.01 in fiscal 1963. I do not look for the company to do any better this year, since 1 am told that the Ouiy registration trends for new Ramblers, since the 1905 models have been produced, are not impressive! .The shares sell to yield 7 per cent, which in ifrdf is an indication that the , dividend is not entirely secure. ^In your pbsition, and at your age, you should not assume risk. As an alternative, I suggest Jersey Standard', yielding 3M) per cent. - To seder your copy of Roger Spear’s new 46-page Guide to Successful Investing, clip this notice and send $1J9 with your name and address to Roger E. Spear, care of this newspaper, Box 1618. Grand Central Station, New York, N.Y. 10017. (Copyright 1004)'* Living Costs Dip for Detroit Area, Rise Nationally Living costa were down slight- ‘ ly for the Detroit area but up for thr nation, the U.S. Labor Department said yesterday . . Nationally, the consumer price index Increased 0.2 per cent to 100.7, with auto prices leading the way. This, means it cost $10.97 last month to buy goods that cost $10 in the 1957-59 base period. Detroit’s index dropped by'0.3 > per cent and stood at 104.6 for/ November, based on 100 for the' base,period. ..The area’s lower living costs were attributed mainly to a decrease, in transportation, food, clothing and upkeep costa. Housing, health and recreation were op slightly. • Building Under Way on Addition to Plant AVON TOWNSHIP—Construction is now under way on a $70,000 addition to the Detroit Broach &- Machine Co. plant at 050 S. Rochester. The addition to the existing machine building will add 4,900 < square feet to toe plant* and will allow a itaw materials handling system and relocation of toe welding facilities. m PONTIAC, MICHIGAN