SAIGON (AP) — North Vietnam began a week of mourning today for Ho Chi Minh and planned a state funeral for the father of Vietnamese, independence, The 79-year-old president of North Vietnam died yesterday after "a grave and sudden heart-attack," Radio Hanoi Reported. Tho W»othor The announcement said Ho died at 9:47 am. Hanoi time, which wak 9:47 p.m. Tuesday EDT. But Word of his death was withheld for nearly 21, hours, until about 6:40 p.m. EDT yesterday. In the interim Hanoi Radio prepared the North Vietnamese people for words of the death with periodic reports that his condition was getting worse. THE "Everyone tried their utmost and gave of their best to saye him at any price?’ Hanoi Radio said, “but because of his advanced age and serious illness of the sudden severe heart attack, President Ho has left us forever.” STATE FUNERAL PLANNED The broadcast said “the most solemn Home Edition ceremonial state funeral of our nation", would be' organized but it did not say -when the rites would be held. Inform"*! sources in Saigon said it was unlikely the North Vietnamese leader’s death would result in any important changes in Hanoi’s war policy. -■ Sr * * South Vietnamese and American officials in Saigon expect a triumvirate leadership to emerge in the next few months, made up of Le Du an, the pro-Moscow first secretary of the North Vietnamese Communist party: Truong Chinh, the pro-Peking chairman of the National Assembly, and Premier Pham Van -Puwig. MAY BE FOURTH Gpn. Vo Nguyen Giap, the defense minister and chief military strategist, may be a fourth member. ' ★ * * A likely interim president is Ton Due Thang, the 81-year-old vice president of the party. According to North Vietnam's constitution, he is to succeed the president if he dies or becomes incapacitated. , The weekly session'of the Paris peace talks today was postponed at fla re-queqt of North Vietnam. * " * * There was ho indication whether North Vietnam and the Vietcong would call a cease-fire during the mourning period. In San Clemente, Calif., a spokesman said President Nixon would make no comment on Ho’s death. - PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1960 VOL. W — NO. 180 ★ ★ ifc ★ uNiTaS'^M^amTtoNAL —78 PAGES 10« TON DUC THANG TRUONG CHINH VO NGUYEN GIAP PHAM VAN DUONG Court Date Near— for Waterford's School Board—— Tax-Reform Bill Cuts Asked They said that When the full effects House’s cut In the 27.5 per cent oil de-of the legislation are felt in 10 years, pletion allowance to 20 per cent, corporation taxes will have increased and continuation 0F fbatures taxes on individuals will have fallen. * _ —- A continuation of some present fea- SUBJECT TO AMENDMENT tures that, Kennedy conceded, would After the committee writes the bill to still enable a person with an Income of its .satisfaction, it Will be subject to a million dollars a year to escape all amendment on the Senate floor late this income taxation, fall. A A Ar When the Senate passes It, a final ver- A call for continued tax exemption on sion, approved by a conference commit- the income from state and municipal tee of House and Senate members will be bonds, although Kennedy promised to sent to Persident Nixon - perhaps by have further proposals on this contro-Christmas, perhaps early in 1970. versial matter later. * ★ * An end to the provision allowing tax- The 81.6-billion tax cut for corporations payers to deduct’-state taxes on gaso-was the big surprise among Kennedy’s line from their income tax. proposals, but there were others includ- As passed, the House bill would cost tog: the government 62.4 billion more in tax ' A far tougher administration line on oil_cuts than It makes up in new revenue Industry taxation then had been antici- arising from closing loopholes and add* pated, with unexpected supped for the ing new taxes. / WASHINGTON (JUPt) — The Nixon administration, asked the Senate today to trim the middle class’ tax cuts granted by the House’s sweeping tax reform bill and to make an unexpected (1.6-billion-a-year cut in corporation tax rates. Treasury Secretary David M. Kennedy and Assistant Secretary Edwin S. Cohen argued before the Senate Finance Committee that the House had been so open-handed in cutting taxes for individuals and. so harsh in raising business taxes that Its bill threatened, to ignite, a new round of inflation in the 1970s. The hearing was requested by a group of parents represented by attorney Richard M. Campbell. About half of the school district’s 8,800 pupils began half-day sessions when the fall semester opened today. IN THE WINTER The remaining pupils are scheduled to go on half-days in the winter, Waterford V elementary pupils have been put on half-day schedules to prevent tee school district from going into the red, according to school officials. They sought broad — and politically unpopular — revisions In the House’s handiwork. Chiefly they asked the <0.87-billion income test cuts approved by the House for 1972 be roiled back by (2.33 billion to a new total of (7.34 billion, ADC Clothing Fund Approved Was Area Resident Lung Recipient Dies Another group of concerned parents, also considering legal action, against the school bpard, still plans to inert at 7 p.m. today at the VFW Hill, 16(0 Air-port. A spokesman for that group, Mrs. Donald Keehn, 2990 Van Zandt, said that the problem of half-day sessions will be discussed thoroughly at tonight’s meeting, but that any legal action will probably debate by a 14-12 margin, split mostly be postponed until after tomorrow’s along party lines, with Democrats heavi- court hearing, ly in favor. - -— MEET THE PRINOPAU-Senlora reported this morning at the new (ff-million Waterford Mott High School at Pontiac Lake and Scott Lake roads. Introducing himself is the school’s principal, Daniel Hogan. Construction is-not yet complete, but sophomores and juniors will follow the seniors in starting classes tomorrow. The school wiU-have an enrollment of 1,300. had given U-M doctors hope that the operation could prolong Canuck's life to a considerable extent. „ Carnick hap terminal emphysema when he received the 1 eft lung of 17-year old Richard May of Jackson in a six-hour operation Monday. An autopsy will be performed. May was injured near Jacksori In a one-car automobile accident. He was rushed to Foote Hospital in Jackson, then to University Hospital. Within- two minutes after he was officially 'pronounced dead in the hospital, doctors started the transplant. FATHER OF FOUR Carnick was the father of four children and a Bloomfield Township resident for five years. He was an executive engineer with Copco Steel Corp. of Detroit and was a native of Youngstown, Ohio. Carnick was oleetteTand weighed about 180 pounds until his illness reduced him to 130, . A ■ *A- ■ A • His was the 24th reported lung transplant attempt. All have failed except the case of a man in Belgium who lived nine months after his operation. ANN ARBOR MR - Albert Lee Carnick, 50, of 4756 Brafferton, Bloomfield Township, who on Labor Day became the first recipient of a human lung transplant in Michigan, died in University Sewer Work in Waterford Drying Up Hom High Temperature to Hit Mid-80s Emergency clothing cost the-county nearly (150,000 last year. New appropriations will be necessary should more than the (90,000 be required this year. Increased state aid was expected to offset some of the difference in county participation, however. The store was the object of major objections, including a two-week sit-in Summertime temperatures will continue through Saturday in the Pontiac area with the high repching into the mid-80s. The low will register in the 80s tonight! The weatherman predicts there’s a chsraeof showers late tonight. tomomw and Saturday. “ ; Probabilities of precipitation in per cent are 20 today? 30 tonight and SO tomorrow. The low recording before 8 a.m. in downtown Pontiac was 82. At 2 p.m. the thermometer reading was 82. Some Waterford Township homeowners have been left not high, but-dry due to, construction of Oakland County’s giant (28-miltion Clinton-Oakland Interceptor ^Residents of Woodhull Lake Estates subdivision south of Eagle Lake say shallow wells-In the area are running dry as a result of the construction. ; A A " * At least one resident said she’d been caught dry in a shower when water unexpectedly stopped flowing.' • R. J. Alexander, director of the Oakland County Department of Public Works, which is responsible for construction of the six-township interceptor, yrftnitttri that ground water level is be- ADC mothers With emergency clothing needs were supplied at the store, but many objected to the quality and style of the clothing as well as the “indignity” of having to appear there. shower,”, complained Mrs. Frederick Denne, 4785 Sylvester. “I couldn’t go to work. I had to go to a neighbor’s to finish Washing and fixing my hair.” I OTHER WELLS At ImmQ six other wells at homes oa Sylvester, Midland and Sashabaw have gone dry in the past couple of weeks because of the sewer, fipe installation, she claimed. “There are still a few houses around that have well water,” she said, “but they’re spurting, and the owners don’t tA ariua thair u/at or a wav now." Toaohorf' Fey Unionization ^responsible for surge in state — PAGE A-12. Libya Junta‘troops take control tf second largest city - PAGE A-ll? ' ■ si - - 'Holo Info History Los Ahgeies "W uncowring prehistoric life — PAGE B*2. Area News..............i.,.A4 Astrology While Alexander expresses sympathy for, the residents, he said there’s not much that can he done while the dewatering is in proceSe. The only solution suggested by the Waterford Township Water Department reportedly has been to hook into 'the township water line—which could cost homeowners/as much as (900, according tb Mrs. Denne’s estimate. LONG AND COSTLY She said-it would take about a week and would cost the homeowner (575 if paid immodtotely, or (725 if paid over ton years, plus a plumber’s fee to run a pipe from tee house to the street property line. ^ , -Besides proving an inconvenience for residents, Mrs. Denne believes tee water shortage presents a health problem. She also noted teat Eagle Lake has .gone down four feet in tee last month. DRAMATIC RESCUE - Trapped A—2 Mrs. Pike told police she and her husband were doing research on a boOk and decided to drive through the desert for a few hours to "get the feel of the Judean hills.” She said the car got stuck in rocks and boulders about 3 p.m. . Then the couple set out on foot toward, the Dead Sea. After two hours of walking, Pike complained of leg pains and told his wife to go oh without him. Dinners on Pontiqc Twp. Mao Is Knifed .to Death |n fact, you’ll nave enough for several dinners by selecting one of our finer sets now. Take this one (we wish you would). Dark Spanish Oak dining room , that includes oval table, 4 chairs, and china cabinet for $349. You can have the hutch, too, for $149. Same set available in French or Italian fypyincial. A Pontiac Township man was found knifed to death yesterday in Ms camper parked in a vacant field a half block from the corner of Bagley and Wessed on the city's south aide; Dead it Floyd H. Staudaker, 54, of 3505 Auburn. Police said he died of a stogie knife wowd to the chest near his heart. HARVEY FURNITURE NATIONAL WEATHER — Showers and thundershowers are expected tonight over parte of Washington and Oregon, from the Dakotas through Nebraska, and Colorado, and to o halt from the Atlantic Coast inland through the lower lakes area and into the Miasissippi Valiey. lt wiB be blear and warm through much of the THJ5 PON IT ACFRFSS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1969 Air Force Plans 50,000-Man Cutback WASHINGTON (AP) - The Air Force will announce soon a cutback of about 50,00 This will bring the over-all reduction of U.S. armed forces past the 150,000 mark as the services comply with orders to economize. Closed plans to slash the Army by 34,000 men and the Navy by • 72,000 men and 75 ships. Additional retirements of Navy vessels are expected. Nothing has heen said yet about Marine Corps ’troop cuts. Pentagon .officials said these probably will be relatively light. that "there will be an inevitable weakening of our worldwide military posture.” Details i i how the cutback will be applied thfoughbut'the Atr Force still have not'been outtoned down, sources said. The Air Force’s cost-saving drive may lead to,fewer squadrons and further base dosings. The Pentagon already has die* *••• With obvious reluctance, > Secretary ^f Deteisr MelvhrR Laird announced on Aug. 21 that the armed services will have to absorb an additional $3-billion spending slash this fiscal year; Blaming the Democratic-con-* trolled Congress, Laird warned SPEED A SURPRISE Although the Nixon ad-ministration has looked ahead to armetjl force reductions as the U.S> commitment in Vietnam is scaled down, it had not planned on moving this far this fast. about 600,000 above the 2.7 million in uniform when the Vietnam war buildup developed in the summer of 1965. According to sources, the current thinking involves a reduction of 44,000 Air, Force enlisted men and about 6,000 officers. The slimming down will be ac-compiished. hot by mass releases The officer cut will be accomplished in part by early release of some due to retire or resign later to the year, and by turning' out some Officers who were kept on only because of the Vietnam war. The expected Air Force manpower reduction, together with the Army and Navy cutbacks, will bring the total of U.S. armed forces Close to 3.3 million men, about the level of late 1966 but stills *flT«l«nrn5iir~By tflefing In few^ replacemenots for men whoy Miches expire. Normally, the Air Force absorb}*-' about 125,000 recruits a year. ^ The Air Force is under orders to reduce its flight training by some 300,000 hours. ‘ Ttowever,1tTOyTiitoerstoodthat' none of this would come out of the training of new pilots. Rather, it will mean that veteran Air Force officers will have less opportunity for maintaining their flight status and flight pay. Birmingham Boaf Safe Seamanship Courses Near Nixon Cutback Plan ( Merger With Soviets Urged Worries Governors COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. -President Nixon’s construction cutback plan has the nation’s governors worried.-But they are stumped by the problem of how, politically, they can attack an inflation-fighting effort. The governors adjourned their 61st annual conference yesterday with n6 discussion of the constnibtion issue in formal session. G,rand Rwliton Grand Junction I Abandon Apollo, Proxmire Says There was plenty of corridor talk, but a threatened Democratic move to put the governors on record in opposition to the cutback never materialized. BLAST SITE UTAH NEW ARIZ. /MEXICO ---COLORADO WASHINGTON (UPI) - (.Sen.. William Proxmire, D-Wis;, suggested today the United States discard the Apollo i billion the first year and more the second year” -fay dropping the Apoiio pro-gram, which put man on the moon for to "internationalize the space program’ by merging it j with Russia’s. In an'interview, Proxmire said he would urge the Senate to eliminate money from “some or ill” of three flight last July. The Wisconsin Democrat said America should be proud of Apollo 11. He said the flight proved man’s ability to fly BIRMINGHAM - The Birmingham ’ Power Squadron will bold registration for its annual courses in seamansMp and boat safety at 8:30 p.m. Sept. UR East Hills TfiffioF BftgU "Schwlr Bloomfield -Hills. * • The power squadron is comprised of volunteer personnel who have successfully completed similar courses. Eight courses are offered during the fall term. , Instruction on safety aspects will examine all special boating hazards: handling of gasoline, enjjtoe ! com; partment ventilation, first-aid, fire fighting and use nf the radio telephone. SeamansMp instruction will concern maneuvering, docking and moiortog, knots, hitches, splices, and man overboard procedures. Instruction to navigational aids, charting and piloting procedures is designed to increase the sailor's familiarity with the techniques of running any type of craft' t. Small-boat handling instruction la geared for pwners of outboard-powered boats. The other three courses offered are mariner's compass, government and regulations, and rules of the road. Area Teachers Vote to Strike As originally conceived, the cutback,, expected to be announced tomorrow, was said to inVolve an immediate 75 per cent reduction in new federal construction. Weather Stalls N-Blast in West'. Apollo flignts scheduled to carry astro- tFe moon. But toe future Apollo pro-nauts to,the moon/during the next nine grpm, which envisions nine more moon montllS; landings spread over three years, is too He said “You could probably save 01 costly, Proxmire said. tooted to assistant comptroller of the. ' ” ' ‘ Bank. He previously served the bank as rvisor of the Birmingham teachers voted yesterday to strike tomorrow if, a contract settler ment is not reached to a scheduled negotiation session this afternoon. Disagreement on tire agency-shop clause is considered the major obstacle to settlement. Other unresolved issues include a board grievance procedure and a no-strike, no-sanctions clause. NEXT APRIL 1 Federally aided projects, the item of primary interest to the states, would be curtailed by the same percentage next April 1. Vice President Spiro T. Agnew gave the conference s preview of the plan at a closed session Tuesday. GRAND JUNCTION, Colo. UR Police Shooting Suspect Arrested supervisor of the bookkeeping department. Clise was employed by the. Federal Reserve Bank in Detroit for 1S», years before joining Birmingham-Bloomfield to 1965. Unfavorable weather conditions have caused at least a 24-hour delay in Pro-"dlof ject Rulison, a 40-kiloton underground nuclear blast in western Colorado. Project officials made the decision last 'A Louisiana transient accused of at tempting to murder in the shooting of a Pontiac detective Aug. 20 has been ap-t prehended to New Orleans, police there] said today. ing project. He has since -returned tp work. * EXTRADITION RIGHTS night after a weather briefing. Fprecaste-George McCormick, 26, will be brought* Donald Cameron, executive secretary of the Birmingham Education Association (BEA), the bargaining unit for Birmingham teachers, said he expects the latter two issues to foil to line once the agency-shop matter is resolve^. Some Democrats said* that move appeared designed to stifle criticism. J Republicans were virtually unanimous in saying they would ^support Nixon although they said theythad misgivings about thecutback. * i were for bad weather again tomorrow and possibly Saturday. Tentative agreement ton been reached on the salary scale and fringe benefits. 'COULD BE HARMFUL” * Michigan’s Gov. William G. Milliken said Nixon "is to be admired for his courage and determination. “However,” he said, “it fa apparent already that the impact could be very substantial and could be very harmful-to Weathermen said there was a strong chance of thundershowers over the test site, near the town of Grand Valley. Weather conditions halted the explosion 0,500 feet under the earth’s Crust after extensive legal maneuvers failed to do so. back, to Michigan to be charged on two counts of attempted murder, larceny of a polled Car and two counts of armed robbery as soon as extradition proceedings can be completed. Under the agency-shop clause, the school board would be compelled to dismiss any teacher who does not pay duea to the BEA. Currently, 785 teachers on the 940-member instructional staff are BEA members. Colorado’s Republican Gov. John A. Love, newly elected chairman of toe conference, said construction stoppage “could be distasteful,” but added it in-dicatas an appropriate administration move to adjust speeding priorities. -Justice Thurgood Marshall of the U S. Supreme Court refused yesterday to overturn lower court decisions that all necessary precautions had been taken and the explosion could proceed. In Denver, meanwhile, a federal judge denied another injunction request from a conservationist group which contended the u boast threatened the, safety of Colorado residents and could con-tamtoate ground ‘ water and the it-mosphere. McCormick is accused of attempting to murder Det. Lt. John DePauw and Det. Sgt. John WiUiatos when the pair tired to serve Mm with a warrant on the city’s south side two weeks ago. DePauw suffered two gunshot wounds in a fracas wMch triggered a bottle-throwing incident in the Lakeside hous- Officials of the Oakland County prosecutor’s office this morning said they did not know whether McCormick would waive extradition rights If be does, two city detectives will br dispatched this week to return him to Pontiac. Another man. charged in connection with the incident, Eltfi Rainey, 22, of Pontiac* is being held in Oakland County jail in lieu of 153,000 brad, Rainey also fa charged with two counts: of attempted murder. BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP - Roderic Wiley, 6425 Winglake, has been promoted to assistant professor on the business management faculty at North wood Institute to Midland. Wltey, a graduate of the Columbia University'School of police say Rainey handed McCormick the gun he allegedly used to shoot at DePauw, who stood only five feet away. the development of dealer management classes at General Motors Institute for 20 years and also nntro served as a guest WILEY lecturer there. He also was formerly national business manager for the Pontiac Motor Car Division of GM. ’ , Incomplete tabulations on the strike vote yesterday revealed 450 yes votes to 280 no votes. OnC Democrat, Gov. Marvin Mandel of Maryland, said the. anticipates that governors will rush to get new federal aid construction under way in time to beat any April 1 cutoff. Project Rulison is designed to free trapped deposits of natural gas. Soldiers Holt Hunt The Weather for Ex-Bishop Pike JERUSALEM (AP)—The Israeli army abandoned its search for Dr. James Pike tonight. it made the decision after a fruitless, daylong, search by troops, policemen and airplanes of the Judean desert for the former Episcopal bishop of California. Officials held little hope that he was still alive. Pike, 56, has been missing since Monday night, after his rerted car got stuck about eight miles west of the Dead Sea. His 31-year-old wife left him on a hillside and walked all night until she reached a road workers’ camp. THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SE-PTEMBER *4, 1869 FOR THE BEST IN MEN'S fashions, see THE PROFESSIONALS At BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER Pentagon Denies; Costly Viet Fuel Leak WASHINGTON (APJ - The Pentagon denies ’ c. ._1 , based on a report by its own auditors—that a 1987 collapse of its system to account for U.S, fuels in Vietnam cost the government $21 million. Defense Department spokesmen. said there is no evidence any petroleum had been stolen. The denial was in response to a demand from Sen. William Proxiinlre, DWis., for disciplinary action against those found responsible for what the military auditors called a complete breakdown in the accounting system. Frozmlre rejected the Defense Department’s reply. “The wide-open and notorious black market In stolen American goods in Vietttam'gives the Pentagon explanation id the J21 million loss a very hollow ring in-*I he said. Fiddle-free Color In a compact -portable Power-packed New Vtna* Color Sportabout Automatic "Locked-in" Fine Tuning (A.F.T.)— pinpoints correct fine tuning on both VHf end UHF. $399.95 SWEET'S RADIO & APPLIANCE PROBEIS The Wisconsin senator said he and Sen. Joseph M. Montoya, D-N.M-. have asked the General Accounting Office to conduct an investigation of the Defense Pe-partment’s system to procure, distribute and ^account for oil products'in South .Vietnam. The Pentagon’s auditing report, issued in January 1968, but never released to the public, made this statement: 'In view of the gross inadequacies in the, preparation, distribution and control of documentation for the? receipt, storage and distribution of bulk POL (petroleum) fuels and lubricants, the team concluded that there had been a complete breakdown in the accounting system • • •” >, ' , j to. - ♦ * Also detailed were situations in which the auditors said it was not possible to tell if petroleum products ever got to that in one case, “because of incomplete terminal reporting ... the Air Force stock fund suffered a loss of $21 million.’’ ' SITUATION UNCHANGED It said this occurred because recipients were not reported therefore could hot .be . “Ibis situation remains unchanged in, fiscal 1968,’“ it said. Barry : J. Shillito, assistant secretary of defense for logistics, told Proxmire in a letter that the shortage of $21 million in petroleum was only a paper product tb unauthorized users,” Shillito said. “To do so, : ever, is a distortion of 'the facts in and the intent of the report. ★ ★ to “The report clearly indicates that the loss represents products purchased by the Air Force stock fund, but used by either the Army or Navy for which reimbursement was not effected” v. V.-. - “One can speculate that this loss represents an actual loss of Parents Jailed Approximately 19,000 disc situations, an all-time high, quired services by the American Red Cross1 th its fiscal year. The organization spent some $15 million on these Adopted Boy, SARASOTA, Fla. (AP) - A 4 year-old boy adopted just two months ago * Horses who’ve had broken legs fixed “may limp for a while,” Ellis says, “but they gradually get over it.” Ellis says toe MSU clinic handles about 50 large animals with broken bones per year, most "of which are referred to the 'University by local veterinarians. STUDENTS SCRUB Students learning the operating procedures “scrub in and work with toe surgeon on operations,” he says. “They take over tin whatever they art capable of doing. This part of their training program* Otherwise we wouldn’t have any reason for being in business.” r" _ . : Hr ★ - a The operations take one to four hours, Ellis says, again depending bn the bone damage and the amount of surgical intervention required. Night Bus line______________ Started by U-M for Safer Campus ANN ARBOR (AP) - Nighttime bus service to provide greater security for students’in toe- University of Michigan central campus was initiated this week. The “Night Owl Bus Service” - will operate free for students and faculty every evening of the week during its fall term triaL The buses- start4heir-circuita at 7 p.m. and depart every 30 minutes until 12:30 a.m. The Ann Arbor T ran’sportation Authority is operating the buses under a contract with the university. Following a string of eight coed murders in toe Ann Arbor-Ypsilanti area in a little over two years, a number of other security measures have been initiated around toe university, including bright limits in the campus _area, additional police patrols at night and escort services Which coeds can use when walking about the campus^ Holly Schools Expanding Music and Arts Program Lake Orion Teachers, Board Ratify Contract COLT CRUTCH — A broken leg won’t keep this 4 ^-month-old colt down. The ambulatory cast, applied after the pony’s leg Whs mended in an operation at thev Michigan State University veterinary clinic, trill keep the horse on ita feet. Rock Collection Given to Library ’i ' " • "h : MILFORD — A’rock collection, with : special samples of fossils, ores, minerals and crystals from Michigan, is now on permanent display at the Milford Public Library. The collection was donated by - longtime Milford resident Clarence Travis, who has been collecting rocks for 30 years. * * * Hock hunting -.has -led Travis throughout thq Northwest and middle South states and'-Ontario. One highlight of the collection is-a piece of marble from the Taj Mahai/ LAKE QRION -The board of education and the teachers association ratified a new one-year contract Tuesday. Salary scales for the 197 teachers • in the district-range from $7,200 to $11,442 for those with a bachelor’s degree and $7,800 to $12,968 for those with a master’s degree. ★ * * The contract also'includes an agency-shop clause, which requires every teacher to either Join the association or tq pay equivalent flues if they choose not to join. HOLLY - The school district will be placing greater emphasis on fine arts instruction this fall, particularly at the elementary school level Three vocal music teachers will serve the elementary grades, and a full-time art and full-time vocal music instructor are assigned to the junior high school. Russell. Haddon, superintendent of schools, said the district’s millage renewal last spring enabled the district, to expand its teaching staff and provide more personnel in the fine arts areas. ~ Other personnel additions for the 1969-70 term joclude a second elementary physical education teacher to serve Davisburg and the Holly elementary schools and a school social worker. The district has been without a social worker. for two years. CURRICULUM CHANGES____________ _ The pressure of too many students for the number of available classrooms has limited curriculum changes at the high school, Haddon noted. The two major curriculum changes include adoption of a home and family living course, which will be offered to all girls, and the offering oil civics as a re-quired course at the ninth-grade level. Haddon said the civics course was changed so'Hhat students will, get some exposure to the operation of the public school system, the state, local and federal government and the history of Michigan early in their schooling. One semester each of earth science* and general science will replace too full _ year phsyical science course to meet the differing abilities of students. TEACHER CONSULTANT A new teacher consultant for*ecience and- health will work with physical education, general science and elementary teachers to upgrade the health and science portions of their teaching ’Or' '. W; ; # '■ ■.. v Haddon said he hired 33 new teachers this-year from a list of 250-appUcants.___ The. teaching staff will number 3,500 ..students are expected to be in class by mid-September. Oxford Junior College Offers Adult Education OXFQRD — DeUma Junior College, conducted by the Oxford Dominican Sisters, will offer credit and noncredit adult education evening courses for the 1909 faU semester. Among the classes offered are world literature, ojl painting, modern math and library practices. Courses in typing, shorthand and accounting will' also be ' offered. . ' College Aid^s Set With Class Data . TROY — Representatives of Oakland Community College and Wayne State University will be available to adults who wish academic counseling and program information next Wednesday and Thursday from 6:30 to 9 p.m. in toe.lobby of Troy, High School, 1379 Livernqis., OCC and Wayne State offer1 courses there. Sponsored by toe Ttoy Adult Education Department, registration for high-school qredit anti noncredit and Oakland Conanunity College credit courges win. be held Sept. 841 from 6:10 to 9 p.m. in the high school lobby." ’* Colors On '70 Car License Plates Writ Honor Oakland LANSING (AP) — Oakland University will be honored on the 1970 Michigan auto license plates. — The license plates will be gold with white lettering, OU’s school colors. ■k ★ a There also,will be $ new numbering system — with three letters and three — numerals on each, says Secretary of State James M. Hare. The 1989 plates and those in previous years have- had two letters and four numbers. “The steadily increasing number of automobile registrations in Michigan . demands a more flexible method of accommodating them,” Hare ays. “The new combination will permit the issuance of millions more plates without having to increase the number of characters on the tags. 5 20 MILLION PLATES ‘ '“We could, by Using every conceivable combination of letters and numeraia, issue more than 20 million plates without fear of duplication.” • The department of state expects, to issue more than 5 million gets of 1970 -plates,, the largest cumber in anyingre^ - year. At least 4 million are expected to go to passenger car owners. < , ,.;f t s dr-. - *♦ Hare notes that the expiration date for 1969 -passenger and motorcycle tags has hem extended to March 81, instead of the end of February. 'Commercial and trailer plates will expire on the last day of February, as in the past. T fpank ,'*■ the Pontiac press, Thursday, September *, im FIKHY CRASH IN N.Y. — Gasoline from an overturned tank truck burns fiercely in Warsaw, N.Y., near Buffalo, after the truck careened into a car. As of ' yesterday, the AS Wlr.ohoto drivers of the two vehicles were dead, and two resldentg of nearby homes that caught fire were missing. The crack-up occurred Tuesday. PASSED UP—While parents and children In Portage School District were marching to protest the elimination of bus service for about a third of the youngsters in Pershing School, the bus the children used to ride passed them by Vesterday. School officials say transportation cuts were necessitated after tax proposals failed recently at the polls. 3-DAY SPECIAL SELLING Pontiac Mall /WOMTGOA/IER WARD JIMI HENDRIX SMASH HITS ..4.19 FRANK SINATRA'S GREATEST HITS 4.19 SPECIAL Ffetula doRKS t^grancd L.: THE ASSOCIATION SMASH PHONE FOR FREE HOME SERVICE Our’carpeting consultant will bring samples to your home at no charge or obligation to you. Phone 332-0271 or 673-1275v FEDERAL'S DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS BUYJ SELL! TRADE! . . . USE PONTIAC PRESS WAhIT. ADS! ft BR0ADL00M SALE jL PRICE INCLUDES CARPET AND 40-OZ. RUBBERIZED PAD High density rubber kitchen tweed carpet Stainfree Herculon® Olefin level loop kitchen tweed - Tight level loop twood pile l» easy to maintain. SO common household stains wipo away. ^ 9 smart now shades. Savo nowl 9*12’ Stainfree solution dyed Acrilan® acrylic tweeds Dense lovol loop in heather twood -tones of October., loot,; goldon avocado, blue, olive, scarlet, twilight. * Shop - now! America's popular nylon tweed carpet Commercial grade nylon level loop tweed carpeting “ Pill, fuzx resistant, tpot dean- —fj* Jf . ablo, dense lovol loop, choice of eight smart now decorator «t. yd. colors. Quality ot a low price. 12x15’... 1J&80 Cumuloft continuous filament tweed nylon Durable, pijl and fuzz resistant, spot cloanable, mothproof. Your cneico of eight luxurious shades. W# sq. yd. Shop eorly for best splection. 12x15’... 138.80 RECORD EVENT! Warner Bros. 7-Arts and Reprise LP Albums of Favorite Artists YOU MAT "CHARGE IT" AT WARDS 5-6 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4,-lfMP OPEN TONITE ’til 9 p.m. - FBI. 9 a.m.to 9:30 p.m. - SAT. 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. BACK-TO-SCHOOL and OTHER DISCOUNTS lB'.' CDCC PARIflllC Simms'will pay for 1 -hour of parking in the o MlililUM Downtown Mall — Just havo ticket stamped at time of purchase (except tobacco and beverage purchases). -' Styles - American Made i Basketball Shoes Youth’s - Boys’ Irrs. of $2.98 Value* American made basketball shoes ifor men, youths' and boys,' With I cushioned innersole and arch j itype support, on sturdy canvas .'uppers. Black or white, and hi | J>or low cut tops. Nf Boys’- Girls' ENDICOTT JOHNSON Shoes 2.441 Choice of 2 Styles toys’ Winter Jackets Values to $8.96 — first quality warm * winter jackets. Teddy Bear jacket is reversible, has attached throw-back I hood. Sizes 3 to 7. Or Oxford weave Vnylon jacket with fleece lining and ir repellent. Sizes 8 to 20. ■ Choice of 5 Styles toys’ Winter Jackets Regulars to $15,98 — first ■ quality. Styles include a bronze widewale corduroy, hooded nylon jacket, wool pea jacket,' corduroy jacket with knit col-lar and nylon jacket. Sizes 6 to ^20 but not,in all styles. Basement 50% Fortrel 50% Cotton Perma Press , Beys’ Jean Style Pants For school or play or anytime, durable jean style.pants that are a permanent press blend of 50% Fortrel and 50% —cottorcHhey come in tons, black and —i olive in sizes 27-26, 28-27, 29-27 and ' ^31-29. f ” 'll V* \ ■ LIKE IT? CHARGE ITcr; I ______________or use your MASTER CHARGE CARD. Ask us o boutthe^lonbeiHonfO^ Ifwin Head - 6-Blade Sunbeam Shaver JJW Model 777 - Sunbeam , r twin head men's shavemaster has 6 blades to- whisk off the yw wulskers -quickly and with'no pull. J rSideborn trimmer for extra neatness. Comes with cord and case. Sunbeam 5-Blade Shaver -g m 03 Model 565 has 5 blodes, sideburn B ZM trimmer, on/off switch, hard cast. flip Top Floating Head bNorelco Speed Shaver ^ Microgroove floating head, gives close, fast, comfortable shaves. Easy flip top -cleaning and on/off switch, low priced model if sure to please. Full 20% Oiscount on All Models ^ TIMEX Wrist Watches ‘ JiJLself Winds - Calendars - Electric - Jeweled ~ Beys! * Girls' - Ladies’ and Men's Styles ESI All’8.95 Models..................... 5.56 AH *755Models.,... ..............6.36 Mi *855 Models 777777.777777777.7718 Ml *955 Model.................. 7.96 Ml *1155 Models................ 8.76 lMI *1156 Models 7... 7.7.........9.56 Ml *12.95 Models...........10.36 AH *13.95 Models........... 11.16 •*» *19.95 Ladies’ 17-Jewel..... 15.96 , \ *19.95 Men’s Calendar.. 7.. ,15.96 *15.00 Ladies’ Crass........ 12.00 r*»^1*25.00 Men’s Boetrio............. 20.00 al|*3050 Moil’s Calendar Bacfric.... 24.00 9More than'60 styles to choose from, including self-winds, calendar models, electrics, stretch bonds and leather bands and styles for everyone in the family, ' 1 V M, Sundries — Main Floor B |B ................. ' l r I ’Mr. Famous Name’ Permanent Press Boys, - Young Men’s Pants I First quality, permanent press $6.50, $7.00 I and $8.00 values, regular sizes 6-7-8-9-10-11-1 12 in plaids and solid colors. •' f Slims in sizes 8-10-12, first quality and permanent press $6.50, $7.00 and $8.00 volues. Choice of plaids and solid colors." Prep sizes 25-26-27-28-29-30 waists in assorted lengths Values $7.50, $8.00 and $9.00 in plaids and solid colors. With Built-In light ‘ARDEE’ Electric Scissors k)$7.95 list, Ardee 2-speed elec-’! trie scissors has built-in guide " light to eliminate shadows, table guard to prevent marring work surface. With 6-foot cord. 7V^-lnch Genuine WISS Pinking Shears J $8.95 list,' Wiss CB7 model 7Va-inch pinking shears with black ^handles. Make; all sewing much easier. Makes neat seams j that won't ravel. Sundries — Main Floor Luminous Dial — Self Starting Electric Alarm Clock \STA-PREST. They Never Need Ironing Boys’ Pants I Mr. famous name permanent press pants in waist sizes 28 to 36, values from $9.50 to’ $11.007Plaids and solid colors to choose from. Nationally famous brand pants for boys and young men. All first quality and permanent press arid machine washable. Stock up now at these terrific savings. Basement { Our_ regular $3.88 — .Depend-. A Bp able SYROCO electric alarm | * clock with lufnlnqps dial, self starting with attractive white case -with delicate srrolLedpinp, 2-yeor* guarantee. Regular* to $4.95. . . regulars in regular size* 6 to 18 v t permanent press finish. Styles for dress and casual wear and machine washable. Basement m 2-Key Wind Up Style Lux Alarm Clock Attractively Styled Girls’ Dresses ( Perky little back to school dresses that include; ] ’ tie backs, smock trims, shifts With assorted ruf- \ ' 'fie and ribbon trim in Dan River and easy care . fabrics. All firstquality. ( ] Girls’ - Misses’ Panties V Slight irregulars of 69c values. | Gifts' and Misses-'" panties of Lokferlon or rbyon In white and WeetpO’ Machine washable. Size* 4 to 8. Main Floor Warmly Lined end Smartly Trimmed Girls’ Winter Goats . Regulars to $29.95 — First quality, winter coats In a style she will love. A' A 3-way corduroy coat with a zip out lining thot becomes a nylon quilted ’’ it. A fur frosted coot of wide wale corduroy with attached hood and hing mittens. A corduroy cossack jacket with heavy duty zipper and i pile trim on cottar, cuffs and bottom; Or a wool belted check coat 1 with solid color Cotton 'suede', trim. Sizes 3 to 6x and 7 to 14 bg^nbtin, all styles. CoHifortablD and Warm 100% Rylon Girls’ S-t-r-e-t-c-h Tites Slight Irregulars cf *1.98 Values I Plain and fancy knit seamless style ' stretch tites for little girls, Snug elasti-cized waist stays In place. Pretty colors t to match her outfit. Sizes 6 mo. to 14 i alarm clock with a separate L-key -for windingttme and -IvOry cose '6nd “'/d-Y V t*, j years. Girls' Wear - Main Floor mm [Save On the High Cost of Hair Cuts Wahl Super 89 Clipper | $17.75 list,- you con beat the rising | cost of hair cuts by doing it yourself at home. Wahl super 89 taper electric —clipper is'adjustable, regular-Br cocrsfr1—I cut, |t'» lightweight and powerful, FREE can of oil included. Westlox Silent Alarm Clock $U.V5, list, #20024 Wettdex Moon Beam electric dock has flashing light r: alarm. Silent alarm wakes you with-\ out disturbing others, luminous dial ; you con rood, in .the dark. Buzzer rings 5 minutes later" If flashing .light;; doesn't woke yob, Attractively de- -signed for arw decor, flssj ' Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1969 Look 'am over, compare and you'll be sure to coma to the 'Friendly One' — SIMMS where people wait on you, help you and mi • * you don't stand in long, tiring check-out lines, where impersonal cash registers just gobble up your money.. . . and we've been Pontiac psapl* and fee for yourself this weekend. EDEB PARKING- in front of Simple and we pay for 1 hour rUSh rumuiiu- in the Downtown Parking Mali with onV purchase (except tobacco and beverage products). Have ticket ALKA-SELTZER 72 FOIL-WRAPPED TABLETS $1.89 value — *■ gO Jk Twin pac of 36's. B /|j, Ideal for car, purse H tt/t If or pocket. Foil H wrapped..r "hPL'. \ ANSCO CADET CARTRIDGE LOAD FLASH CAMERA KIT TiMite’ 5-Hr. Electric Timer No Cord-Plugg Directly Into Wall BN Just One Dial to Sat Protect your home with auto- ____ ajsBn mafic lighting. TI-MIfe electric MKt fk J flH I timer turns lights ON and OFF I yfl J for a 'lived-in' look that ll/I 1 discourages prowlers. Qn T IfpH il|| duty every day, just set it and — ■ ' Rlppl forget ft. Regular $7.49 for SB Wffci only- AQUA-NET HAIR SPRAY $14.95 seller — Drop in the film, aim and shoot. Take color and black and whites. Includes flashcube, film, batteries and wrist strap. $1.50 value — 16-oz. Imperial size. Regular, unscented and hard-td-hold. 3-QL Stainless Mixing Bowl 3-Quart stainless steel 'REGAL' *W| M A HBB mixing bowl for all ybur mixing H /■ /I Hii needs. Big enough to hold the H B I WEm biggest salads, etc H HH Housewares—2nd Floor JH. BANTRON TABLETS $1.50 value — pack 15 smoking deterrent tablets. ELECTRONIC FLASH UNITS ? FOR STILL CAMERAS w|k|s Viceroy 712 electronic flash B I H 91 for mosh still cqmeras. Save B I ^ bn flashbulbs. H H $1 Holds or Charge It GILLETTE ADJUSTABLE RAZORS CHOICE OF 2 NEW STYLES .$1.95 — choice of new ~E dW longer style or new, short ■ A IF stubby style. 4-01. Mirro Pressure Cooker Safe Speedy Cooking Ip-Inch Cast Aluminum ^Chicken fryer CORICIDIN 'D'TABLETS ,$129.95 value — Electric battery powered Super 8 camera with automatic electric eye and connection to adapt for Bell & Howell Sound System to take talking movies. Model 436 With built-in focus finder. $2.89 pack of 50's for relief of sinus, colds, hay fever problems. BELL * HOWELL CIIDCD AUTO-THREAD OUlUR $84.95 Value — Now Automatic threading projector has reverse and still picture controls. Sharp fl.6 lens, liglrtweight, easy to set up and operate. Bell & Howell model #346;:-------- - — Cool Bamboo Shades PERTUSSIN COUGH SYRUP $1.79 value-, 6 ozs. "I dh/d of 8-hour formula or N Wf JR New Wild Berry. I BELLA HOWELL STILL CAMERAS AUTO. LOAD 340 AUTO. LOAD 341 & 2984 s?49*4 I GROOM and CLEAN MEN'S HAIR DRESSING Long wearing bamboo shades let air in and keep sun out. And they roll up when not needed. Just wipe 'em clean. Plastic Freezer Containers SGood to 40 BalowZaro 32-Oz. Pack of 81. . . ..... .74* 68-Oz. Container, each.... 13* S 86-0z. Container, aaeh... .14* l WR For freezing or refrigerator use, won't break because of the cold. Complete with lid. ___Housewares—2nd Fleer ozs. of extra strength brightener by Colgate. $20.95 value —See -126-or 35mm slides this brilliant way . . . manual electric drive tool Now Is the Tim# to Fertilize 50-lb. Milorgaoite Fertilizer SALE ON TAPE RECORDERS $1.89 value - 7 ounces of cool and refreshing spray for feet. Milorganite Is rich In humus and vital nutrients that make it the world's most complete plant food. Does not bum and is easy to apply. Long lasting.' LIQUID PRELL SHAMPOO JADE 6-TRS. POCKET RADIO $i:09 value - the pearl of shampoos in 7 ounce size. Adjustable-Oscillating Melnor Lawn Sprinkler $5.95 value — AM pocket radio complete 099 with battery and case. Jade Model 1T56. (At mmmrnsn AM-FM CLOCK RADIO $39.95 value - Go to sleep with music, wdke up to music or alarm, 4 ^1189 10-mihufe snooze button resets WlWMl ^■Sp radio,; Solid state. Walnut grain 'AF\,-Af ™ WmW plastic cabinet. ' $1 Holds or Charge It CERTAN-DRI 84-HOUR ANTI-PERSPIRANT DEODORANT $3.00 value — 2- |fb(j ounce size of long- ■ BMeM lasting. protection. Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac \ THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 W ..> Chairman o( tha Board id h. rmuiiu. it John A. Rli.tr circulation Manaiar Production Housing? To meet the, goals established by , the Housing Act of 1968, America has to build some 2.6 million upits a year, both houses i and apartments.! The construction! forecast for this! ► year is only 1.5 mil* I lion. At this rate, the] Nation will be more! . than 10 millionl units, short before[ the end of the next' decade. romney With land, labor, materials and financing costs zooming, the price of housing at a current rate of 10 per cent a year, millions of Americans, especially those with low “incomes, are rapidly priced out of decent hous* ing. It is clear that the old way of doing things — erecting a dwelling brick by brick and board by board on site*-*-is no longer good enough. -No one is more aware of this - than George Romney, secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development, and one-time head of American Motors C6rp., who has launched a campaign called “Operation Breakthrough.’* Its aim is to bring automobile assembly , line methods into the construction industry and mass-produce small town houses to sell below the $20,000 level, preferably in the $10,000-I12,000 range. Already some minor, but important, breakthroughs can be reported: • In Detroit, Walter Reuther, head of the United Auto Workers, has been a moving, force behind the creation of the Metropolitan Detroit Citizens Development Authority. The authority has placed an initial order for 250 three-bedroom, factory-built houses with one manufacturer and 800 slightly more expensive homes with another. • On the legislative front, the first major step “to break the logjam of restrictive local building codes,” to use the phrase of the Urban Land Institute, is a bill introduced in Congress by Rep. William S. Moorhead, D-Pa. Called the Building Sciences Act of 1969, it would establish a nongovernmental institution to act as a clearing house and building code co-ordination center .for the entire Country. • In the private sector; 41 concrete firms operating 67 plants throughout the Country have formed a new consortium to produce building components. /. • Perhaps most encouraging of all, the 900,000-member United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners , largest of the AFLfCIOHautlding trades unions, has “modified its traditional procedures” by signing an a g r e e m e n t with a prefabricated housing manufacturer to put up 1,000 units in Rochester and Syracuse, N.Y., and Akron, Ohio. The union is also negotiating with the Urban League to set up centers to train unskilled Workers for employment in the company’s factory, ★ ★ ★ The day when houses or apartment modules will be rolling off the assembly line by Hie tens of thousands is still some years distant but the idea is well into the tooling-up stage. Volet of the People: ‘Citizens Should ‘Committee’ Pens Sex Hit We’ve all heard by now about the 25 newsmen who teamed up tp grind out a hoax on sex novels, ending up with the latest smash hit an the sexy novel lists. There’s not much more to say, except that with some subjects, at least, it seems' you can’t lose for winning these days.' Contest Deadline Casts Its Shadow That sinister presence you sense dogging your steps and jogging your mind is none other than Old Father Time complete with scythe emanating that the deadline for entries to The Press Annual Football Contest is steadily creeping up. In case you’ve been too preoccupied toting up your stock market gains or losses to pay heed, the Contest rewards the preeminent prognosticator with a $500 U.S. Savings Bond and a mythical crown befitting the Prince of Pickers. We can’t think of any living man, woman or child who would scorn a five-C windfall. Oh, sure, if you’re going to split hairs, maybe such riches would only produce a yawn for, ■ajr, Howard Hughes, the wheeler-dealer who’s been chipping away at Las Vegas; or Aristotle Onassis, who’s got both jack and Jackie; or maybe Princess Grace, whose Old Man ilas not only plenty of principal but a . principality to boot.—- But for the rest of us latching’onto a bond of such dimensions would be as Wonderful as drawing a fourth aC* in a game of five-card draw. » —— they must be enclosed in envelopes (THE' POST OFFICE WILL NOT ACCEPT POSTAL CARDS WITH ATTACHED ENTRIES) and addressed to: THE PONTIAC PRESS FOOTBALL CONTEST, P.O. Box 777, Pontiac, Michigan 48056. 4. The contestant rifio, starting with the first game, correctly predicts without a miss the outcome of the most games will be awarded a $500 U.S. Savings Bond. 5. Deadline for Contest entries is Satur- day noon, Sept. 13, and entries must be on hand at The Press by that time. Those arriving later, eveifthough postmarked prior, will not be considered. • ’■ 6. If in the final stage of contest, the few remaining contestants should have predicted the same outcome of a game, this game will be scratched and the contest advanced to the following game. -----7. Judges decision on all questions relating to the contest wlll be final. Sept. 13 □ Central Michigan at Western Michigan □ Sept. 20 All you have to do is read over the pies carefully, lock yourself off from all distractions, including marital, woo the spiritual gods of gridiron and inscribe their mystic manifestations on a contest , entry form or facsimile. V That done, sign said form and get It to The Press pronto (rule °3). Don’t try any fancy form of delivery, like, say, by carrier pigeon. There is a persistent rumor here that a contestant once tried that, bid the bird turned out to be a stool pigeon and tipped off the sender’* choices to another contestant, who won the contest. Come Tuesday, there’ll be farther cogent comment on the contest. CONTEST RULES 1. Everyman, woman and child 1* eligible to enter contest (except Press employee and family members) but are limited to one entry each. All member* of families may participate, subject to the same limitation. 1 iWnter, you simply check your predict tion of the winner of each of the 16 games below, (to indicate a tie, leave both boxes blank) .sign entry form or facsimile, and dispatch. \ 3. Entries may be deposited in Die Press’. Huron Street drop box or mailed. R mailed, Sept. 27 □ Notre Dame at' 1 Oct. 4 Purdue P OShippensburg at Oct. S Slippery Rock □ D Det. Lions at Oct. 11 Ctove. Browns □ " □ Nebraska .at Oct. is Missouri l~l □ Michigan at* Oct. 24 Michigan State □ P Waterford Kettering at Clarkston □ Oct. 25 P Washington at Novi 1 • Oregon jQ, P LSU , at Nov.,7 Mississippi □ P Pont. Central. at ' Nov. U Pont. Northern □ □ Auburn at Nov. 22 Georgia □ \ . D UCLA ^ " at Nov. 27 Southern Cal. P, □ Minn. Vikings at Nov. 29 Det. Lions □ □ Army at ” Dec. 8 Navy □ □ Texas at Arkansas 0 More Lives Than A Cat! N. Viet’s Patriarch Irreplaceable By WILLIAM L. RYAN AP Special Correspondent In the long run, Ho Chi Minh’s departure from the stage can have a decided impact on events in Vietnam and Southeast Asia. the Indochinese , Communist,; membership. He was one of party and Citizens of Michigan, beware. The State Legislature is going to hit us with another tax reform 'this fall.* The last tax reform w$? in 1967 and resulted jin a new open-ended state income-in 1967, an increased state gasoline tax in 1968 and an increased license plate tax this year. How will they increase taxes Without precipitating a major taxpayers’revolt? .• ★ n ★ The emotionally-charged educational system is the vehicle they are using to convince til that the state income tax should be increased. The .Governor has handpicked an education commission and a large citizens committee to recommend educational reform. These groups will recommend that the state income tax be increased to help finance our schools. Then, in the name of improving our educational system, the Governor and the Legislators will implement these recommendations by legislating a substantial state income tax increase, coupled with a meaningless property tax relief. , ‘ In the name of providing dollars for our Schools, the state income tax will most likely be _ doubled. This Will take another $300 to $350 million out of our pocketbooks. By applying the Governor's well-known reci|ation bond formula, our schools will receive only $90 to $1Q5 million, while $210 to $245 million will be made available for more bureaucratic empire building. —— ★-----------it—— ---------— Is not no\rW time to put a constitutional limit on our open-ended state income tax and stop wasting millions of tax dollars on duplicating commissions, fake committees, useless feasibility stud-ies and tax reform every nonelection year? director. He was its secretary ‘ operating out of China, in 1941, and again in the 1950s. Under Ho’s Hanoi regime, Chinh slipped and Ho’s passing can prove a' was demoted for the failure of strong blow to North Viet- agriculture in the North. He the South when the Vletminh were fighting the French. He is an expert on relations with other Communist parties and has traveled both to Moscow and Peking. ROBERT P. RUSSELL namese and Liberation Front morale. Particularly in his later years, Ho was not the stereotyped figure of a Com- bounced back,- possibly through Peking’s then strong influence in Hanoi. ■ IK Le Duan, now 62, once was 1 considered pro-Chinese. He %, '» seemed to shift in the 1960s, NtyWS A&QlySlB ^ after becoming the party’s munist strongman ruler, but rather a symbol, a father figure, a. personality who cannot be replaced. first secretary. Duan believed to have a strong machine in the party minister, Premier Pham Van Dong, now 62, an early Ho associate, is considered pro-Moscow. He began serving Ho’s cause in, 1925 when he set up the main revolutionary base in South Vietnam. Since partition in 1954, he has been premier and at one time s e r v.ed simultaneously as foreign ‘Family Needed Money Taken From Purse’ To the person who took $80 from my purse last Wednesday when it accidentally fell out of our truck at the Miracle Mile shopping center, that money was.to buy school clothes for our four children and 1 hope you needed it worse than we did. MRS. G. A. NELSON ROCHESTER It was in the name of "Uncle Ho” that appeals went from Hanoi to the North Vietnamese and the Vietcong, exhorting them to pursue protracted war to the ish, even if it should' tab 20 years. It was in Ho’s nanto that slogans were fashioned for the unification, of Vietnam. It was Ho whole name a dozen years ago was considered so powerful that it, alone, was believed capable of swinging a popular vote in any election. That may have changed under, Communist rule >in the North, but the natne remained______p o te n t, medicine among many in th*^ South. Tough Times Are Ahead for Doctrinaire Liberals ‘Write Senators for Equalized Tax Laws’ Gross inequities in our tax structure have undermined our confidence in our . government’s concern for the average taxpayer. Let’s speak loud and (Jain and let Washington know we’ve had enough. Write your Senators! we have good men representing us, so let them know we expect them to equalize the tax laws. We’re watching now; come election rime we’ll remember. MRS. GERALD N. BROWN 18 PEACH Question and Answer knew a husband and wife can Such have aa individual •■vings account insured for 815,888 plus • joint account lowed for aa additional $U,888, making (heir Insured total $46,818. However, if this couple has children with Individual accounts, would the children’* accounts also ba insured for dangerously o ^a’s doctrinaire liberals arc tune with the, nation’s mood, robably worse off than they have been in decades, though the surface evidence is decep-tively comforting to tt POWER OF MAN Thus it was the name of Ho,-rather than the office otthe 'presidency, which carried the authority with the Laodong (Communist) party in the North and with the guerrillas in the South. The question of a successor as president is thus of Importance mostly in what it may reveal about the present power structure. time w h e At he c6untry’s\de-mands for really eHgjfc five social action are ris-Ing steadily, their characteristic com-m i t m e rf to loud ver-bali.zing in behalf of pure, uncompro-mised causes is producing severely diminished returns. count'insured for 115,000. By BRUCE BIOSSAT . the issue of public mpney, NEA Washington Correspondent characteristic failing, today •JfJ™*** J* , WASHINGTON - A m e r I - puts them dangerously out of fU’1m “ch“ v • * WISHFUL THINKING REPLY Th* aplraling reaistance jjl--- Yes, each child may have an individual ac- many middle-class elements to the climb in taxes and government spending >* reflected' in an impatience which approaches . that ex-' hibited by militants who demand action at any cost. Whatever the program, the doctrinaires inevitably proclaim that the money proposed for it is,“inadequate.” Question and Answer In estates with everything held jointly between man and to be probated upon the death of BIOSSAT Some of their near-brethren, The hard truth is that millions of Americans think the inadequacy lies with those political figures who argue for new spending of more billions. Perhaps the most crucial factor in the doctrinaires’ problem, though, is | their wife, does the estate have .. ^ I____________ either person or does it automatically go to the sarvivar? DOROTHEA L. VIOLETT REPLY * Probate Court tells us the' only things that must jw probated are those held solely in a'deceased person’s name. Jointly held property need not be probated. We are not giving, legal advice, merely telling you what Probate Court told us. Ho frequently was believed to have been the arbiter of intraparty disputes arid the last word in Settlement of such disputes among members of what appeared from time to time to be1-* divided P o 1 i t”b u r-o. His presence could have been sufficient.to keep others from squabbling among themselves for power.------------ Until about five year* ago Do you hove a question about something? Just send it to "Question and Answer/’ Voice of the People, The Pontiac Press, P.O. Box 9. the pragmatic liberals who growing recklessness as to the Pontiac. Please sign your name and address, are more interested in means of attaining their Where practical, a pen name may be used unsullied principles, privately indicate contempt for doctrinarles. But if the strongly partisan liberals have opened up a more By RAY CROMLEY Itis to MVe this^roblemof problem is settled, there to . practical friends, it has not NEA Washington Correspondent uncertainty that the 19-year- very effective way to ease the won them new companions on WASHINGTON — Unpub- old, youngest-first draft has uncertainty among half the been proposed. young men of draft aga — - Way to Ease Draft Inequity Told there were strong, signs of Politburo i NAME ..... ADDRESS. CITY division in the Politburo along pro-Chinese and pro - Soviet lines. Much in the future' depends upon the progress of Soviet-Chinese hostility. FOUR TOP MEN It is probable that North Vietnam’s future rests in the, hands of four top pien-Le Duan, the party’s first secretary; Truong C h i n h, chairman of the National Assembly, Premier Pham Van Dongj and Marshal Vo Nguyen Giuf, Chinh has fbe reputation being strongly pro-Chinese, His name is an alias, dating from the days when he was with Mao Tse-tung in Yenan at the time of the historic "long march.” Truong Chinh means “long march,” a token of Mi admiration for Mao. He was formerly known as Dang Xuan Khu. . the radical left among the ftjhad 8pot studies make,It students, the black militants cle8r that «the inequity.. most and others. young people OPENLY CONTEMPTUOUS see in the The radicals are quite **01* tiiat openly contemptuous of 'them, *or ** much even as the doctrinaires turn- * * * even ble over themselves in pursuit y®*?* or so of their allegiance. they may The gravity of the doc- have to live trinaires’ dilemma is some- with a ques-what cloaked, however, by the tion over their fact that their influence often heads: Will -I seems greaterthan it is. or Won’t I be * i * * called to mill- Having easy access to, and . tary service? sometimes command of, im- Many young men beiieVe I Congress has yet to take action on the issue because -politically, -th-e 19-year-old draft Ig a hot potato. and at very little additional expense over the long run. The figure* show that today around half of all young men m ut i *nul jP 1® Pass their military Neither the White House nor physical or m e n t a 1 e x-Congress is anxious to be the animations and, therefore, ire one to tell the nation’s not taken into service, mothers that their 19-year- CROMLEY elds are going to, head the list of draftees. The President and the Department of Defense already have the' power to take' 19-year-olds first. But would rather t he SHORTLY BEFORE At present, these tout* are not given until a short time before it appears that the young man may be inducted. , By that time, if he has gone through four or five years of portant channels of publicity, that this uncertainty makes it responsibility for this decision coUeg®>®ay be 22, 23 or 24 they can make big sound impossible for them to work f*H On the lawmakers. **“* oW* H® h*» b**® faced waves. Their decibel count is out their fufaw. ^ „ ConyraM mww to be in no uncertainty tor a goodly amount of Theyrepstor lqw on reasonable the achievement chart. tainty. Their problem is- at least * ^ . threefold in nature. 1 * /. j Some say they can’t make PENCHANT FOR TALKING plans on graduate schooling For one thing, their great or for their occupation. They penchant for talking the game find employers reluctant to Instead of playing it strikes , take young men who may be .the pragmatic Democratic ‘ “ ' and Republican liberals as worse than useless in ‘a critical age when problems K A revolutionist pince his are compounding, youth in' the 1920s, Chinh For another,-foe partisan helped Ho and Pham found liberals’ Irresponsibility oh length of time drafted they don’t know when. Some young men hesitate to hurry to act onlhe matter: EXPECTED TO RESUME But Jppo'J ^ mllitary Meanwhile, the uncertainty ftoysical and mental testa fuels toe antidraft demon- were given to young men strations - expected to re- when they reached 18 years sume in earnest as students and six months? . go back to high school, col- Then, if past experience is lege and university this fall. any guide, half toe young men Die issue gives toe student would be found unfit for agitator some sympathetic military service and would be gat married, timne don t atari backing among the great pool free to make their life plans, advanced schooling for fear it of serious students. They would know im. win be. interrupted. Borne say * W * - - ' ' they volunteer tor aervtowjust But there is a partial way to end thia confusion. out. Until the 19-year-old draft mediately that they wriild not be called tor service except in a serious emergency. ZIP CODE THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, I960__________________ A^-9 No chill, weather ways to ward off the gloom of fall. Each with toasty warm 2ip-in liner and a show of sunny colors. All Zepel* treated Dacron* polyester/cotton. Machine washable, too. Seasonal Coats, -Pontiac 1st floor; also available stall branches.If more convenient call 683-3252. a. Shirt style, sizes 1018, rose, medium blue. b. Shirt style mini, 10-20 wheat, medium blue. C: Safari style mini* 10*18, pavy or natural, d, Balmaecan, comes in sizes.10-20 in navy or medium blue. 1—r A ■ 10 ■ ■ — 1 Morning THB PONTIAC. PRESS. THTTRSnAV. ■SF.’pTF.M'RFiR 4. 1969 - Dawns toFindCity Tranquil—and By ED BLUNDEN Dawn is ,a time of bpth tranquility and frenzy in Pontiac: The tranquility is on tlie residential streets and in the downtown commercial area, where all is quiet, late-sleeping long after dawn. The frenzy is on the streets. Over 40,000 persons are head-, ed for the early morning factory shiftswDrivers, determined to get to work on time, are ruthless as they press on. Don’t dawdle in the street— it’s dangerous at that time. The light comes slowly at dawn. It starts to glow at 5 a m. By 5:30 the light is diffused but adequate. By 6 the sun is over the horizon and its yet-weak orb is visible through the haze. Outside of the turmoil of the traffic, the streets are almost un- occupied. Here and there a pedestrian is spotted, waiting for the first bus or strolling toward a nearby destination. Occasionally, a casual derelict wanders along. ★ ★ ★ In downtown Pontiac, all is still. A small restaurant is open where early risers gulp coffee. A taxi cruises by, an unusual sight the rest of the day. The night people are seen going home. They are the hospital staffs, the bakers and the policemen. / Frenetic By 7 a.m. the day people begin to take over. The buses are running. The bars open. And job hunters walk by glancing at want ad clips. ★ ★ The motor traffic slows down to its lesser frenzy of daytime. Milkman Orville Reaver Starts His Rounds Sylvan Lake May Restrict Peddling The Sylvan Lake City Council last night received two proposals for an ordinance to curb and license door-to-door selling. The two proposals, one more Strict than the other, are to be studied for Mure enactment. Arriving At Pontiac Motor Division The council also approved the Oakland County Boat Regatta to' be held on the lake on Oct. 12. Absolute alcohol is ethyl alchol containing less than 1 per cent by weight of water. Mideast Attacks Told TEL AVIV JAP) - Israeli warplanes slammed at Arab guerrilla pockets in Jordan south of the Sea of Galilee for the second straight day today to silence Arab guns attacking an Israeli settlement, the Israeli army reported, r' A spokesman said the jets streaked across the border after the Arabs opened foe on the farming settlement of Maoz Haim, and that the planes returned safely to their base. plosive charges, the guerrillas cut off roads and occupied strategic positions to prevent the arrival of Israeli reinforcements, the communique said. “Other units penetrated enemy fortifications after finding their wau through mine fields and opening a gap in barbed wire and electric fences," it added. Make your own Hollywood bed ensemble - Sealy savings style! • MATTRESS e HEADBOARD • BOX SPRING • METAL FAM Choose the Sealy set you need,-pick the head- #4 | board that goes best with your decor — both irv DajyjJ eludedjn no extra cost! Complete 4-piece twin set includes medium firm, tufted mattress and Mr matching box spring. Biggest value of the year! f nwsfat> 1 sc. Me t An Israeli army spokesman in Tel Aviv denied the story “from beginning to end." “You are welcome to vipit the area and see for yourself,” he Israel gave no further details, and there was no immediate report from Jorddltf» In Amman, the Palestine Armed—Struggle—Command claimed Arab guerrillas launched Wednesday night their heaviest attack against Israeli positions since the 1967 Middle East war. Israel denied it. '22 POSITIONS HTT An Arab communique said A1 Fatah guerrillas attacked 22 Israel military positions along a 14-mile front of the Jordan River’s West Bank for five hours in a operation code-named “Spears of Fatah.” Armed with heavy rockets, mortars, bungalore torpedos, machine guns, grenades and ex- Extra-strong steel T-pol«V(old by the pair linn it has boon found advisable to support clotheslines at bpth ends. Uprights are 2" dia. steel tubing, 90" high, galvanized against Fust and wsather. • Israeli forces killed an Arab saboteur near El Hamma, on the Yarmuk River between Israel and Jordan southeast of the Sea of Galilee, Jordan fired several bazooka shells at the Israelis but caused no casualties, spokesmen said. • An Arab infiltrator was killed and an Israeli soldier wounded in a clash near Khan Yunis, in the Gaza strip. my, and is thus an objective dic- tated by the inevitability of victory.” Zbnolite Attic ■ Insulation keeps the heat in, Pour Zonolite right over the old fluff, level it off at the top of the joists and leave it. “ Heat bills go down, and so do goosepimples. Don’t wait for cold weather - come in Reagan Inks Bills on Campus Turmoil Regular 139.88 space-saving yoytlr ensemble UTICA 44SSS UTICA .0 , 7311000 MONKEY SHIES — Gdrdon Chordash and his shy pet spider^toonkey present this pictufe as they make their way from Miami,'Fla., 'to California.. The bearded Chordash is dressed in peasant style clothing from Colombia where he acquired his pet. ■ V\’ . V' ■ : WWNTOWN AND DRAYTON RUINS llilitfl LUMBER & BUILDING SUPPLIES SINCE 1890 T THE 1HmTlA<; j>RRSS; THIIRSnAV. SEPTEMBER 4. 1969 -ArrrlL Rings and sets to treasure forever Elegantly engraved sets Matching rings for him and ^ — a for har. . -beautifully an- J KX graved to catch tha light. Classic gold band sets Simply boowtiful gold bonds m a A A for him and for her.. .a fav- I orite choice of the young. *fceW%r Diamond Wedding rings Three rows of sparkling e Q ft diamonds for a lovely lody. “ A in UK. solid gold settinq. Our best fall vests at pre-season savings Make a bold, new fashion statement —wtthbody-hugglng'vests. Here are two of the best, at low prices. LEFT: Elongated vest is belted and ■ pocketed. Wool/acryOc._ Sizes S-M-L. RIGHT: Shbrt, with cable front detailing Wool/acrylic. In sizes S-M-L. OPEN 10 A M TO 0 PM. (Set. 9:30-9) Drayton open Sunday Noon to. 6 p.m. (Dnumloum closet Tries.. Wed. at 6 p.m.) DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) Libyan troops and tanks entered Benghazi during the night and tdok control of the country’s second largest city on behalf qf the new revolutionary junta “without meeting any resistance,” Tripoli Radio reported today. •No explanation was given for , the move, but Benghazi Is the capital of’Cyrenaica province, where desert tribes are known to be fanatically loyal to deposed King Idris. Col. Chouireb, is 700 miles east of Tripoli/Libya’s capital, and 300 miles from the Egyptian border. CALL FOR DOCTORS The broadcast said: “Libyan tanks and infantry moved into Benghazi late last night and in the early hours of this morning under the direction of the aripy officers commanded by the revolutionary council.” Another Tripoli Radio broadcast today made an urgent call for all doctors and nurses to re-port to the city’s-central hosp^ iali ........ ...... . — prescription, our product called borders'remained dosed to all The broadcast ^declared that |only” to prevent hostile ele-can and other foreign oil comps-;the You mu5t !<»• ugly fat, but selected foreign Arabsr but & Tripoli Radio broadcast ordered all ground personnel at •the city’s International airport to report to work, indicating the airport would be reopened soon. ASSURES COUNCIL Tripoli Radio also said the Greek ambassador in Tripoli assured the revolutionary council that the presence of the deposed in Greece must not be regarded as an unfriendly act of High School Pleased by Smoking OK Observers in Tunis believed the broadcast indicated opposition to the military regime of m - ’ * f: ' * Col. Saad Eddln Abbou Chouir-I The broadcasts gave no other eb which seized power Monday idela^s‘ ‘ j and declqredLibya a republic, i The official Libyan News; . Benghazi, the birthplace of Agency reported Libyan air I -----;taw- planes flew patrols over; the country’s oil installations Wednesday night after anti-Brit-; ish demonstrations in Libyan cities. The Middle East News Agen-[ cy said the demonstrations ; broke out-after Libya’s new mil- ! itary leaders warned Britain not , 1 to help King Idris try to regain his throne. . | inrun a Nine iu i i a m After the anti-British demon-' ! (,Af} “ strations, the government or- r? !!! dered the Llbyan ™ ^ce to ^^11 he offered another keep oil installations and'the! year of controlled smoking on port 0f Tobruk under constant the premises. ! patrol. Britain has a small base . “It worked so well last year,” Lin Tobruk, said Harold Schaible, the high * * ★ school superintendent, “that I’m The warning to Britain came going to offer It to the new stu- as a result of a meeting in Lon-j dent council.” \ don Tuesday between British * #• # * I Foreign Secretary Michael An experiment last year per-! Stewart and an envoy from the mitted students in grades gW- The envoy reportedly; through 12, who are 16 years of; */eque®t fr?m Idri? for age or over, to smoke during t intervention to put down their lunch hour in a small patio he i1u"t,a /?lewart reP°rtedly area outside the school building. ™1 airnnr(o anH Students must have the wrU- _ The.Jcountry * ?irports and. ten permission of their parents; to obtain a smoking permit, u • Last year, 78 students out of 735 MdrNflQG LICGflSGS had the privilege. | Schaible said the plan cut unauthorized smoking “by almost 100 per cent.” ■ Any student caught smoking Illegally can be suspended for five days for a first offense and ten for a second. He can be expelled altogether by the school board for a further offense. Libya’s new rulers. In Rome, more Libyan, stu- The Cairo newspaper Al Ah-ram published the first interview with Col. Chouireb. He told it that the revolutionary council 1 had the situation completely un- the Greek rul ing junta to ward der control and' tsmahltatnlng^ „ , . or your fbanr/ bsdk'.'OUihiBjrlrTr- more joined them today. ---Itiny t,b\,i .nd wily iw.lfewid. In Athens,. Libyan Ambassa-Get rid of excess and liv* lon*-dor Taher Caramanll said a *re'w 0|drrin*x eosts $3 00 end a Western diplomats.havo ox Lim,gwartnMhHWLmyairaup °f oadetol ----. ----*-—* ----•- - - - who took overv-the embassy guarantee: If not satisfied for any Wednesday have returned to reason, just return the package to their training schools in Athens. your dr/Jg?lst *nd get your ,fu'' the Greek gaverimment was al- meats from dlstupbing-the dem- n|eg. lowing the king to remain in onstrations of support .fqr the swARM INTO EMBASSY Greece "strictly as a private new regime. citizen." He arrived there Wednesday from a spa in Tur-1 ! I . .. , key where he had been taking Pressed concern about the new Embassy and drove out mem-mineral baths. I government’s leftist Stance and bers of the embassy staff who 20-hour curfew “for the moment I the fact that the more militant showed up for work. Thirty y-Arab nations are hailing theM" students at the University “Libyan Arab Republic” as an of Rome entered the building ally in their fight against Israel Wednesday, burned a portrait of and “imperialism.” But the juh-King Idris, tore down plaques ta said again Wednesday it referring to the Kingdom of'bitt would respect all International ya and hung cardboard signs; ____ obligations, defense'treaties and reading “Libyan Anab Republ-byan Arab Republic. Police concessions granted to AmerMic," The students remained in'made no effort to stop them. the new military regime. Before they left, the Libyan military students removed the .king’s photographs and declared the*gmbas6V-tcLbe that of the Li: I by: SIMM'S CUT RATI DRUG STORE — 98 NORTH SAGINAW________ MAIL ORDERS FILLED — RENT, SELL, TRADE - - - USE PONTTACPRESS WANTADST ALLfORffcl m Batty A. O'Hiim, 960 La staphtn l, Walaren, Wisconsin and Judith New pn” pants and ’’with it” sweaterings are now for fall We’ve plenty of now fall gear to iatisfy.your grouping urge. Combine a pair of pants from wide to wider with a sweater that’s lankier and longer than ever before. I to *10 LEFT: Button-front nylon/acetate tunic. Choose from white, black, navy, brown or purple. Sizes 30 to 38. $6 Gray striped Garrison pants with stovepipe leg, sash, chain. 8*18. $10 RIGHT: Wool V-neck cable sweater with belt and pockets. Choose navy or white. In sizes S-M-L. $8 Wool Garrison pants. Choose from navy, brown or plum. In sizes 8 to 16. $10 Our “Budget Value” seamless nylon hose Our first quality seamless mesh nylons have nude heel for ’ "sling” styles. Beige or suntan. Sizes 9 to 11 medium. 12„’4 ]~A—IT" THE FOyTIAC FRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1980 GO WHERE VALUE IS!!.r ifflll! These commercial type dryers were built for apartment house use. FOR A LIMITED TIME and a LIMITED QUANTITY • Permanent Press Cycle • Halo of Heat • Air Fluff Cycle • Porcelain Drum and Top All Brand IS mein Factory Crate* tumor ixeniCNci 12.3 cu. ft. 2-DOOR REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER "With GIANT 120-Lb. TRUE ZERO FREEZER Othsr feature*: Giant _ _ refrigerator .action with Automatic 17.8 »q. ft of amlf area, n . .. big porcelain eritper. Defrost pitta lota of deluxe door 18 DAYS featnrea including egg SAMI AS DASH traya, butter compart- ■ ment with diah and F*gGJ££: ample ull bottle itoraga DELIVERY apace and more. Hurry 1-Year Service' in and epjoy your* day! ---- .I-t' I America’s Favorite Handcrafted Fall L VF/VHF Delivered, Serviced, Fully Guaranteed..... Yon cau eaaily roll thla deluxe!'portable to your : favorite viewing corner on ita aturdy atand (optional, extra)! Include* hand-wired and hand aoldered ehaaaia, give* greater operating dependability. Alio haa big, rich aonnd-ing quality Zenith apeak-er. AII-chann-1 tuning, carryittf handle, too!.... A8MIRAL CHEST FREEZER With Lid Lock and Teniperature "Control 12.5 Cu. Ft.. '/&good OFPONTAC . J rlOts 51 W* HURON FE 4-1555 OPEN MON., THURS. and FR1. TILL 8:50 * w Teachers Pay tnState Linked ltd Unionization Rollabout Color WITH 180 SQ. IN. RECTANGULAR IMAGE only $34988 Delivered, Serviced, Warranted! LONG, EASY TEAMS, M DAYS SAME AS DASH! Wonderful Suipriae! Pleaaure for your whole family! Handsome Decorator Cate with fine Matching, Rollabout Stand (Opt extra) that makea it caay to roll from roointo-room! Haa UHF/VHF Tuning, big Front-Mounted Speaker, Sunshine Color Picture Tube—and more. LANSING PASADENA, Calif. (AP) - A professor' of planetary science at the California Institute of Technology says setting a goal of sending a man to Mars in the early 1980s would be imprudent because the cost of developing for the job might cause the program to run out of money. * Bruce Murray told newsmen: "The moon should remain the focus of our man-in-space program for this decade. If we do these things new, by the 1980s we will be ready to think about sending a man to Mars. There’s no hurry.'' 'No Barrier io €ontirmatian'r Dixie Dem Backs Haynsworth nors’ Conference this week in which five students will be BENT? SELL, TRADE - - - USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS Colorado. He is hopeful it will prove ao effective tool in combating campus unrest. -"We cannot preach democracy without giving our youth SCHOOL BAHD INSTRUMENTS Your child will.be ready for recruitment for Band l and Orchestra. See us now, while our stock is at its best, our prices the lowest. 4995 WILL BUY Completely flenovated • WIND OR BRASS INSTRUMENT • NEW VIOLIN OUTFIT • NEW SNARE DRUM OUTFIT ’ s Complete, incl. Cymbal ' BACK-TO-SCHOOL SPECIAL 20% off Jerms Edward9. 6 N. Saginaw Downtown Pontiac Come In and See Our Large Selection of One Owner, Late Model Cadillacs Today! JEROME 675 S. Saginaw 333-7025 elected to five boards, overseeing respectively the University of Massachusetts, Southeastern Massachusetts University, Lowell Tech, the 12 state col-leges, and the 13 regional community colleges. ! The five students will serve „ie year. They will receive expenses but no pay, and will be scattered among 80 other trustees. In a letter endorsing the plan, Sen. Edmund S. Muskie, D-j Maine, called it a recognition ’that the colleges “exist for the | benefit of students. Harvard Prof. John Kenneth Galbraith, whose own campus saw bitter strife , last spring, [wrote Sargent, “Your initiative | in this matter is in wise ! generous contrast with those Crime Files t in State Being Computerized| L LANSING (UPI)‘ — State crime officials said yesterday that Michigan is in the midst of j establishing a computerized. System of, checking criminal records. While aiding police in checking on criminals withlh Michigan, the system also is expected to spread to the rest of the nation where it will provide! interstate information. Under the plan, states could provide information in minutes [ that, otherwise would require days to obtain. In addition to the nationwide, hookup for records, the officials said systems for sending [ fingerprints and photos may be ' merited. WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. James O. .Eastland says, after his,own review and rejection ot conflict of interest charges, * ____P barrier to Senate confirmation of Judge Clement F. Haynsworth to the U.S. Su-' preme Court. The Mississippi Democrat, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee before which Haynswdrth is scheduled to appear, said Wednesday he has studied Justice Department files Haynsworth and decided there is nothing to the conflict of interest charge. The charge was raised six years ago by the Textile Workers Union of America when Haynsworth ruled in favor of a textile firm against which the union brought an unfair labor practice suit, - 1 , ★ * . * Haynsworth has acknowledged that at the time he pwned stock in a- vending inachlne company which did business with the textile firm. Eastland said he expects the judjciary committee hearings on Haynsworth’s nomination to. last two or three days. A number of dvr rights groupaJiave^ indicated they want to testify against Haynsworth. They say he has supported freedom-of-choice school plans designed to avoid desegregation. ★ ★ . * Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, the Democratic whip, told reporters Wednesday he has “a completely open mind” on Haynsworth. 108 N. Saginaw St. — Downtown Pontiac — FE 3-7114 OPEN FRI. 9(30 a.m. to 9 p.m. — SAT, 9:30 a.m. to 5t30 p.m. • , and SAT. ONLY at WKC! Bigger Loads Faster, Cleaner and In Less Time with a Regular *118 - SAVE *15 • Big 20-gallon capacity porcelain tub for fast washing^action • Polypropylene agitator is durable, gentler tcrfabrics W Double wall construcr tlpn keeps water hot • Durable acrylic enamel finish. - 15503® EASY MONTHLY PAYMENTS ARRANGED PARK FREE in Our Lot at Rear of Store or 1-Hr. in Downtown Parking Mall — Have ticket-stamped at Cashier's Office Seems like a funny time to talk about replacing a furnace, huh? Actually, warm, weather’s the best time to make home repairs. Like replacing a cranky old heating system with modern electric heat. And now’s an especially good time to convert. Right now, your Edison Approved Electric Heat Contractor will give you $100 for your old heating system when you change to electric heal! . Why electric heat? It’s comfortable-really comfortable. No chill one moment nor blast of hot, dry air the next. And operating cost is guaranteed. If you’d like more information on electric heat, send us the coupon below. Well arrange for an Edison Approved Electric Heat Contractor to call on you. Naturally, there’s no obligation. Who could think ofrefumacing atatime like this? THE PONTIAC JPHESSU. THUBSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1969 GE AM-FM portable radio. Solid state. AFC ....... TABLE RADIO. Solid state transistorized. Compact cabinet. . GE portable stereo hi-fi. 4-sp. automatic changer.......... BATHROOM SCALE. Dependable, attractive. Easy-read dial PROCTOR 2-slice automatic toaster, attractive style........ ZENITH 12" portable TV. Built-in antenna, handle . PANASONIC personal portable TV. Built-in antenna, handle PANASONIC 15" portable TV. UHF/VHF. Handle, antenna . $179 ZENITH 22" TV lowboy. Few only. Not all stores.. $199.95 RCA 20" TV. Wood console. Prev. yrs... , $299 ZENITH portable color. Handle, antenna. Prev. years $399 RCA 18" Color portable. Deluxe. Prev. years.......... SYLVANIA 18" Color portable. Dipole antenna. Deluxe ..... $439 ADMIRAL 20" Color portable. AFT. With cart........... SHARP 19" Color portable. Dipole antenna. With cart... . ZENITH 20" Color lowboys. Deluxe with UHF/VHF....... $529 RCA 23" Color TV. Wood lowboy Cabinet. Deluxe..... $499 SYLVANIA 20" Color TV lowboy. Early American Wood $579 PHILCO 23" Color. Wood lowboy. Tuning-lye...... f, $549 MOTOROLA 23"Color TV. Wood lowboy. Deluxe . '. ?! GE Stenio hi-fi console. Solid state. Contemporary. .. ,...., . - RCA Stereo hi-fi comb, with AM-FM, FM-stereo radio... STEREO HbFI combination with AM-FM, FM-sterea radio. Walnut GE stereo hi-fi, AM-FM, FM-sterOo radio. Tape recorder .. $199 SYLVANIA portable stereo hi-fi. Garrard changer..... . ADMIRAL Chest freesers, Stores 437, lbs. Deluxe. S&ve. ADMIRAL 10' upriaht freezer. Stores over 350 lbs. . . ADMIRAL 15* chest freezer. Stores over 500 lbs.... . ADMI^LJJl che^freezer. Stores 595 lbs. Deluxe.... DETROIT JEWEL 30" gas range. Floor models. Not all si ?H0T POINT 30" Electric!'range. Ft models. Net all storei PHILCO 30" Electric range. Automatic, self-dean oven WHIRLPOOL 2-eyen, eye-level gas range. Solar speed. HOTPOINT fuljy automatic washers. Prev. yrs. modejs .. HOOVER portable washer, spin-dryer comb. No plumbing NORGE 18-lb. cap. Fully automatic washer. Deluxe . ... HOTPOINT fully automatic washer. Dial cycle ... PHILCO 9,000 BTU's air conditioner. IT 5-v. Insta-mount...... PHILCO 11,400 BTU's air conditioner. 2-sp. 115-v. Insta-mount EMERSON 14,000 BTU's air conctBipners. 115-v. Insta-mount... PHILCO 27,000 BTU's air conditioners. Heavy duty. Deluxe... HORSE SIDE/SIBE conrumr AF»FH.IANCE CO. um WHIRLPOOL FOR n SLIDE WINDOW ] *,000 BTU'ft M|wMW* «Mun» mok.. 1 So.|f.ywn«lf qiftck«nd «a.y. 2 ipmSb. I Pwnsnllrt waiKabt, filter. Air uhautt 1 features. 115-velt plug-in. Model | ATMS-60-2. ' W: PONTIAC MALL ; OAKLAND MALL IN TROY IS SHOPPING CENTER I TELEGRAPH RD., CORNER ELIZABETH LK. RO. 1 OPEN DAILY 10 to 9 - PHONE 682-2330 ’ 1-15 at 14 MILE RD. OPEN DAILY 10 to 9 , PHONE 589HDT43 v THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1869 ROTISSERIE ROAST ♦1.09 raRTEUMSE STEAK -*1-39 FAMILY STEAK... mm imiTE STEJkK.......... 'i£ 69* FRYERBREASTS..... I .-iTn I *»torf«d . ijtiJISj fi,w* « mmm SANDWICH BREAD 90 /* T1 At Loaf fclf CHIQUITA BAHAMAS u.s.no.1 MICHIGAN POTATOES PEARS / V#. Cello Carrots ». t2c Sweet Coni *«• 39e COFFEE 4 FISHERMEN FISHSTICKS f ★ Start Your Set Today | ★ Add A Piece Each Week . m ★ Build A Set To. Fit Your Needs CAMPBELL’S CHICKEN NOODLE TOMATO VEGETABLES Q SPARTAN \ YELLOW CLING | PEACHES SLICED OR A m \ HALVES \ 29 oz. CAN £ W KELLOGG’S APPIAN WAY REGULAR ^-5 n NORTHERN ijCTTi ftWHRl #129B TheChartar Club navy blazer navy. Go It old school : in a single-breasted traditional three-button with natural shoulders, patch flap pockats and shining itietal buttons, in hayy flannel at $55, Gr join the new school: in an out-of-sight six-button double- breasted, with a slightly suppressed silhouette, wide peak WWj|B iBiij|| nHHR lapels, wide slant flap pockets and six shining buttons, in . Kj Bavyflarmelat$60. " .. Shop Monday thru Saturday to 9 AAONTGO/lAFKVl THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1969 SOLID WOOD DRAWING BOARDS with metal edge t j ok 18x24 . , only M95 DRAFTING MATERI ALS • Slide rules from $1.25 • Scales' • Compasses • T squares 0 Templates Pad* excellent quality paper — 276 sheets — 49c limit 1 FINGER'S Pontic* Pontiac Mall 682-0411 and (piano Wessons.,, J ...AND ALL THE JOY No. 129B DRAFTING SET in attractive velvet lined case. $14? 6"-JUMBO COMPASS in leatherette * nm case. only?25° 4'sticks of wax ; and seals 69c - Packets $1.09 EL PONCHO GRANDE Your fashion moment of truth... great little capelet put-on goes over big, over lust about everything you'll be wearing this Foil! It's of easy-care Orion* acrylic knit, edged all-around in deep self-fringe. Black-and-white or brewn-and-white, and in one nice, easy Bts-every- body RiNJNEUL’S The Pontiac Moll 682-0422 Uee Our Charge, 4-Pay Plan (90 Days Sana ae Cash) or Budget Teons Grinnell'i. home of Steinway, Knabe, M : Stock and other fine piano names. OF A GRINNELL PIANO Pali is "do something 'new time for adults and children—piano lessons, for instenci! And a new Grinned piano will add its own beauty to your home. 41" deluxe console with longer strings and exceptional tone. Italian. Provincial in warm walnut wood. $795 Bench extra PONTIAC JAYCEES COMMUNITY FAIR NOW AT Tk& 'BetuMul Ak-CmdJtimiL Moll... Located at the corner of Elizabeth Lake and Telegraph Roads has Two exciting shopping areas to please you. * The North Mall with Telegraph Rood entrance, and the South Moll with Elizabeth Lake entrance. Parking for 7,000 cars around the center is free. Open from 9(30 a.m. to 9t00 p.m. daily. Sunday 12 noon to 5:00 p;m. -A-' B—t THB PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4,1969 our stbre at She1bf& State will close^permanTentiy B- ^ . , *' . r^*** *g| pp Saturday September E; I m on Tuesday September 9 'pur beautiful new downtown store -..............' * ..................... igUncovering Prehistoric Lit LOS ANGELES (AP) Half a block off busy Wilahire Boulevard’, scientists are digging a Just behind the Los Angeles County Miiseum of Art are several fenced-off pools of bubbling tar, welling up from a huge oU dome ISO feet below the surface. The hpnes of countless animals—prehistoric saber-tooth cats, giant sloths, dire wolves one-humanbeing—- at re-creating in full detail this part of the world as it existed during the Ice Age, a S-mil-llon-year epoch which ended about lQ.ooO years agqT~ ' TAE CONGEALED cap strong enough to hold the weight of diggers employed by the County Miiseum of Natural were hauled from these tar pits in random excavations half a „ „„____H |______| __ century ago. The excavation is on a site hardened muck is hauled away Now a new “dig” has been! where the tar, exposed tot air in buckets, sifted and washed - *•-- —|m *“* k“—jjaabBERo a —- - - ■ As they slowly scrape their way down inch by inch, the started, aimed for the first time|and dust, has | • iii II animals that met dei wKsen Reported ResfingzWell’-*»*•*. WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. Everett M. Dirksen was said to be resting well after the removal of a cancerous Jung tumor, but his aides could not estimate when he would bo able to return to his GOP leadership duties. Dirksen, staff members said, they had been told the Senator >would remain in Walter Reed 'Army Hospital for up to six weeks. Meanwhile, Republican Senate Whip Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania was filling in for 73-year-old senior senator from Illinois. Doctors said the tumor—four-fifths of an inch in diameter-cut from the right upper lobe of pirksen’s right lung was malignant but had not spread. Also, they said, there was no sign further surgery or treatment would be Dirksen’s son-in-law, Sen. Howard H. Baker Jr., R-Tenn. said Wednesday he visited the senator, and found him “bright, cheerful and alert ... I most encouraged.” A breathing apparatus—later removed—allowed Dirksen only to nod as Baker talked with him. ★ * ★ Dirksen, long a heavy ciga: rette smoker, has had a lengthy history of serious illness. ,He left politics temporarily In 1948 after 16 years in the House because of rapidly failing eyesight. But he was elected to the Senate two years later. Dirksen has emphysema, progressive condition which causes the lungs to lose their elasticity and which may impair the action of the heart. 'Blacks Seeking 40 Pet. of Pittsburgh Trade Jobs' He broke his hip three years returning to the Senate on One medical bulletin issued Wednesday, gave this report on the senator’s .health: ‘Sen. Dirksen has had chronic heart and lung problems requiring occasional hospital and clinical treatment for a number of years. There has been ige lh this condition.” with solvent. When the solvent drains away, workers find the bones of hundreds of birds and met death in the These fossils are carefully cataloged by numbers showing the exact depth at which they wers found. The deeper the workers dig, the farther back into earth’s history they go. In this way Dr. Theodore Downs, chief of earth sciences at the museum, hopes to open a wide window onflWne pKT ALL SIZES “Earlier excavators apparently were interested primarily in the bones of large giant California lion, the faber-tooth cat, the giant ground sloth,” said Downs. \ ‘This time we are studying everything that comes out of the pit, not only large bones but ml-crofossils, the bones of rats, birds and squirrels, to help us reconstruct the whole ecology of this area at various periods of time." Paleontolorfit George Miller, in charge of the mid-city dig, believes there may be a lesson for modern men In the fate of now extinct creatures preserved in &etar pits. “Many may of extinction,’’ he says, been around for several thousand. years- and he thinks of himself as a highly successful animal. But the trouble with being successful is that the species often becomes over-populated.” microfossils of small animals and The fossils were taken from the IF YOU THINK THERE'S ONLY AND AGAIN (right) Two-trou AND AGAIN (left) Handsome plaids pattern a fine wool worsted. In this slightly shaped three-button suit traditional three-button suit, in long-wearing sharkskin with matching vest, two pair of trousers. $110 with wider lapels, matching vest $85 AND AGAIN ’ (left) Country Look cheviot gives an i|ftgliirii squire aspect to the .shaped three-button suit with deep center vent, matching vest $95 AND AGAIN (right) The total classic,: navy blue worsted, in a three-button center-vented suit with match ing vest, tra -“ditidnal details, $95 / #Your new V\ If f trench coatV f J* a , ’ pantsuit! Intriguing idea: the undauntable trench coat that adds flare pants and a shell to become the "hit" panfruit of fall! AND AGAIN (right) Sport coats, too, here in a versatile trio: wool-mohair Shetland coatmatching vest and harmonizing slacks. Coat and vest 69.50; slacks AND AGAIN (left) ,The slightly ' shaped two-button suit- with deep center vent;-- in multi striped wool Worsted, with matching vest, $95 double knit wpol by 1 /' famous fiutte. Sizes 1 8 to 16. $65 I (Also comas wifh a skimmer dress, 865 V FASHION: A HADLEY'S MULTI-CHARGE OUR PONTIAC MALL STORE IS OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY TO 9:00 P.M. * TELEGRAPH AND ELIZABETH LAKE ROADS PITTSBURGH (AP) - The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette said today a civil rights group negot tiating with construction contractors and craft unions is demanding that 40 per cent of skilled construction jobs in the . city be filled by blacks. < The newspaper ^aid the Black Construction Coalition wants a 310-million forfeiture bond established to insure the quota is met over the next two years. The coalition, a loosely knit group of the city’* civil rights leaders, wants blacks wifh prison records hired for some of the jobs, tha newspaper said. The demands were made Wednesday during a second day of talks called at the end of a week of demonstrations In the downtown area. The. negotiations continue today. There was no immediate comment from representatives of the Master Builders Association and the Building .Trades Council on,(he demands. Hie injection of 40 per cent black workers into the industry would mean the employment of about 5,200 black persons file . city’s estimated 13,000 construction workers. The1 builders association and the craft unions offered earlier to train between 80 and Iblack apprentices. Coalition leaders, before last „ week’s sometime violent demonstrations, rejected that proposal, claiming they had no hand in drafting it. ONE K-MYOF SHOULDER - THINK AGAIN , AND AGAIN (left) DeeptorTe b a by hopsac k ' 'stripes on a classic ’three-button suit with matching vest: , All in fine wool worsted at $85 AND AGAIN (right) The Quad-air® is a 4-piece en- -’ semble: Shetland wool coat, match -ing vest, matching trousers, and contrasting trousers. By Palm Beach. $100 ANSWER: Hie Greeks wrote down musical sounds by using letters of the alphabet. But these were not notes as we know them. Notes came because, in the churches, singers Chanted the services according to a system called plain song. In (I) we see, above the letters in an ancient script, odd little characters called neumes. These Were • also not hue notes. Hiey only showed whether the general chanting was to go up or down. With (2) we have true notes, placed on three staff lines. Knee the staff lines have definite musical tone meanings, so do the notes which are placed on them. The monk Guido d’Arezzo is said to have been the’first to put notes on staff lines in about 10M A.D. In (3) we look down on a piano keyboard. Notice the first white key to the left of the groups of two black keys; this, in the soprano clef, is the position of the note c. You will find c in two places on the modem five-line staff. Start with the lower c; check the names of these notes from our picture. It’s a neat system. Why not go on from there add learn to play the piano? All Proceeds For Community Development Projects SPONSORED CARNIVAL RIDES ' (Outside the Moll) Sunday, Sept. 7 is KIDDIES DAY!! Levi'? ", ?j > mm Sta-Presf Tr/mcut 1 PONTIAC JAYCEES For TJie Wholei t FAMILY! 1 (You can tom $10 cash plus AP’s handsome World Yearbook Af your question, mailed on a postcard to Junior FASHION'S THE ISSUE . . . SKIRT IT SMARTLY IN PATTERNS, PLAIDS! It's the season of the tweedy look ... start .your skirt wardrobe here where the price is unusually Mice and the news is collected for you! These are pure wool or acetate* bonded acrylic and a 11 i - iStWitJ \ y- bit of oil rigid with Everything you’ve come to expect from LEVI-trtm shape, extra long wear, top style,.. N get it ail PLUSi fabric most anything. A. Blue or green plaid flare, waist sizes 30 to 40. B. Brown or. navy herring-t. bone pleats; belted. -Waists 32 to 40. C Navy/berry or mustard/ rust plaid pleats, elastic waists 30 to 40. D. Black/whHe herringbone V with tassel sash, waists 32 to 40. matter how hectic the action. Two-ply Triloba! heather weave always snaps right back to its original crisp shape. It’s 65% Dacnjfi* polyester, 35% Avril* rayon—maRhina wash/dry/np iron. Black, greySblues, greans. Wsjsts 29-JB;. lengths 28-32. REMEMBERs IF ITS GREAT FASHION, IT'S HERE CUSTOM SIZES'. The Pontiac Mall Open Every Evening to 9 «R2*101O / Owlsr by woi) or phows 693.7500. Add 40c far delivery pim 30c forCO-P1* ond 4% tax The^ Pontiac Mall AMERICA'S LARGEST CLOTHIER uvian Bootblacks lakea^ShinefoJGL [■LIMA, Peru (UPD Th« bgpst bargain in Peru is the shoeshine, and Lima residents claim with pride that their city has the best shined shoes in Latlh America. A . shoeshine in Lima costs only seven cents for a production that may last 2 0 minutes or longer. -up11" r mi The Peruvian shoeshine boy is e serious breed, proud of his work and not In a hurry, even if the customers are—Hired waiting their turn. The trade, as it is passed down from generation t b generation, often on the same street corner, recognizes as a standard three br four coats of shoe polish, shined between coats, and mixed with various secret homemade concoctions that add special lustre. FORMULAS GUARDED Shoeshine boys carefully guhrd the formulas of their "special concoctions." "They bring out strange big liquids in bottles, sprinkle a . few drops On the top of a shoe, then- quickly hide the bottles again. , Lima residents are proud of their shoeshine boys, and a good "squeak” man will often draw an admiring audience. While the famed American "Chattanooga shoeshine boy" 6f song shined shoes “with a boogie-woogie beat," Lima’s shiners work to Latin rhythms, playing the rhythm on the shoe with their rgag aqd filling in the beats with "squeaks” made by pulling the rag against the shoe in a certain way. REEFS SHINING________ The length of the shine often depends on the "squeaks” — If "ie “squeaking’’ is especially musical, the pleased shoeshine boy will keep shining long after tha job is finished. And if a customer tries to leave * before the craftsman considers himself finished with his work, he gets a sharp glance that puts him back in his chair . * The shoeshine boy may be as young as 8 or 9, or he may be a grandfather. Many, whp have other jobs, take to the street comers with' shoeshine stands in their spare time, to add to their income. ★ * * But whatever the age or regular profession of the shoeshine boy, most of-their customers agree that they are ‘artists.” BIG thrill-play IT yOURSELP/ .QUESTION: Where did musical notes come from? • ;v.V : *. * , * GAME BOOTHS SPECIAL MERCHANTS , BOOTHS INSIDE THE MALL THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4rl969 B—8 Bill Attack Making, Sale of Cigarettes !^BO8T0N^A^^*1iilHhi*. would outlaw the manufacture, distribution and sale of rettes in Massachusetts ___ been filed with the state legislature. The sponsor is Democratic State Rep. James R. Nolen of Ware, who claims that cigarettes1 now are "much easier to buy-than-aJoaLoLbread.” even though they’ve been linked with heart disease and cancer. ‘‘Cigarettes,’’ -Nnlen said in unveiling the measure Tuesday, "are the most harmful product to the public health sold today, and yet they are sold in more places and with more convenience than any other product. "We can’t expect people to give up something that is always right in front of them,” he added. SMOKING NOT INCLUDED The bill stops short of making smoking itself illegal. - As for the financial issue involved-cigarette taxes produce more than $70 miUion annually in Massachusetts — Nelson said he thinks the end result would be worth it. ' 'AH of the benefits—even in dollars and cents—would be made up in the improvement in the health of the public,” Nolen ~Anlnteralvft_aearch is under way in the 28 school disP^ Oakland County for multihandicapped children not yet enrolled & school. Oakland Schools, the intermediate school district, has been requested by the state department of education to pilot appropriate educational programs for children with two or more handicaps for whom special education classes do not now exist. ^osts-wfr be met—from $100,000 grant, a combination of federal Elementary and Secondary Education Act funds and state subsidy. William Harding, formerly a special education teacher and counselor for orthopedically Traditional with a Twist! New 2 fly Trilobafabric has shapeholding snap-back! Educators Seek the Multihandicapped itflciTof Detrolt’r- handicapped stud e'Ut s -dsbom-Hi^-Sehool has been added to the Oakland Schools staff. 128 NOT IN SCHOOL , He will be assisted by Angela Varvarian, a teacher of mentally handicapped in Plymouth. Harding assumed his* post in mid-August with a list of 128 sSes of handicapped children not in school. About half of them have been identified as crippled with severe hearing or vision loss. ★ * ★.......... During tire fall, Harding an: Miss Varvarian will make home calls to obtain additional information and to screen children for potential educability. "The list I have is In->ncompIete,"HardingBai&—— Harding urged parents or others acquainted with a multiply handieapped child io. notify the special education director of their local school district, giving the child’s name, age and address. Although the present program is for school age children, names of younger boys and girls are being sought as ' a basis for long-range planning. By the first of the year, Harding expects to verify the names of 100 children who could j benefit from the educational r-Junior Editors Quiz < MUSICAL NOTES □ Making tailored instruction accessible to the children will! be the second.phase of the pro-1 Iflusical "neumes" (3)(2) later, true notes •bove Latin script ^ tmp em AeXybano. femlo*. £x>ttwui* N script: ' r HOORAY/I'M PLACING A SCALE PROM THE NOTES ! MOD ject. If the children a r ei mobile classroom might also be clustered—geographically, i t tried out as -the best wayjto * might be possible to Set upjreaoh a child whose physical classrooms for them. condition rules* oyt being An itinerant teacher with a {transported. Buim ^Ponttcus Mail PONTIAC JCS 1 st Annual Community Fair at The Pontiac Mall Shopping Center Today, Sept. 4 thru Sunday, Sept. 7 FEATURING THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1969 DISTINGUISHED SERVICE AWARD— Mrs. Flora J. Reiter (center) accepts the posthumous award of the Distinguished Service Cross for her son, Army Sgt Clyde A. Reiter, who was killed in Vietnam. Her daughter Pamela accompanied her. Brig. Gen. George M. Bush, deputj^commanding general of the U.S. Army lank-Automotive Command, made the presentation in a recent ceremony. Unmanned, Within Solar System 'Interstellar Missions Deemed Possible Corss, the nation’s second _ HIWH!_ highest award for valor, wasl.These ,are. J«P»er,,Saturn, posthumously awarded recently more remote satellites of the major planets, the scientists stuff of creation, said, "may bfe captured bodies So, in effect, from either within or without the. solar system.0 But the comets appear to offer man his best: chance of sampling matter foreign to his own neighborhood. Just, as meteorites are visitors from solar space to earth, many comets may be visitors from galactic space to . the sola!* system. : * ★ ★ Comets, among the rv mysterious of ail the objects in I the sun’s grasp, are huge but his analytical space, machines light. They trail tails as* much on interstellar missions of a] as 200 million miles long. But sort without ever leaving, his] their cores are tiny, only a mile or so in diameter, and their mass Is probably less than one 10,000th that of earth’s. Most of them come Inward; toward the sun at great speed from vast distances, billions of miles beyond Pluto. Hie solar orbits of 1,000 have been determined, but sclentlsts believe there may be 10 billion others. WASHINGTON (UP!) - Beyond the solar system — the sun ^nd its family of nine plane to — lies what astronomers call galactic or Interstellar pace. The nearest star to earth, other than the sun, is 25.5 trillion miles away. Can man, presumably a prisoner of the solar system, ever bridge so great a distance in order to find out what kind of matter exists out there? He may not have to, according to a recent scientific report. He may be able to send from a different batch of thelSclenco ’panel said, solar system. ----M---- A while back a panel of the HCr | Space Science Board Of the LAJV* Vj/VCII |National Academy of Sciences n ±L I I proposed that the United States rostnumously begin work at once on "grand ' tour" flights by unmanned craft to Pontiac Gl to the outer planets of the sun’s] The Distinguished S e r v i c ejrt ir.HTs vw.abs iriNf; nrco ina nolinn’o « n n A r» H. • .■rv’ftvmr to Army Sgt. Clyde A. Reiter, killed in action in Vietnam last December. ' HiS motile!', MI'S: Uranus, Neptune, and Pluto, ranging from 483.3 million to 3.67 billion miles in average distance from the sun. The grand tour flights would begin Reiter of 637 Benson, accepted The award alongwith the Purple Heart Medal from Brig. Gen. George M. Bush, deputy .commanding general of the U.S. Army Tank-Automotive Com- The Space Science panel said not enough is now known to project spacecraft missions to comets. But it said planning to that end should be started. Man wants to explore the great planets—Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune—because they may consist mainly of the primordial matter’ out of which the sun and its family, Including earth, were condensed some 5 Band Instruments Now Available on Grinnell's Instrumental Rental Plan . WITH OPTION TO BUY ! If your child takes band this term, you- can rent a Conn trumpet, cornet, clarinet, trombone, flute or violin for as long as you wish (3 month minimum) with unlimited return privilege! All payments apply to purchase! The Pontiac Mall, 682-0422 27 S. Saginaw, FE 3-7168 would never carry spacecraft beyond the fringes of the solar system. Nevertheless, one Cf them, the voyage to Pluto; might put a human contraption in sensing mand (TACQMl. Warren: in a distance of .matter'.which Is speciafceremony. - jmore representative of Inters; Wlllon years ago. Reiter, 23, was a 19 65 teller than solar stuff. But comets, although captives graduate of Pontiac Central! * * * |of the sun, may have originated High School. He entered the According to the Space Board]elsewhere in galactic apace Army in April 1966 and arrived P®nel. A has been suggested: in Vietnam in September 1968. *■* fW°* now the outermos He was killed while serving >* ■ 1 an l“mser ■»»iMySSil Jewish Cemetery the comets | terstellar space mission" provide ihgn with an “op- without aver leaving his home Space | portunity for the first in-1 grounds. ———___ „ IRITS 01969 OAl VERT BIST. CO.. LOUISVILLE. KY. It’s not pushy. Vandals Rip Up and more mysterious regions of] space. Some of the so-called minor planets, or asteroids, and particularly the comets which a COLOGNE, Germany (AP) A Jewish cemetery on the Rhine River has been vandalized and almost totally destroyed, Co- patrol on a mission to destroy two enemy bunkers. “The—citation—accompanying die award said,Reiter and the demolition team were preparing to demolish an enemy fortification when they came under intense enemy fire. Reiter mortally wounded while shielding a comrade from the I panel said. * land smashed, a police spokes- s with his body. . 1, And perhaps a few of the I man said. spacecraft might encounter In aJogne police discovered Wednes-tour of the outer solar system, day. may also consist of material More than 150 gravestones of from Beyond the border, the the cemetery were overturned -—^teJvouM^ougb,for its easy-talking ways. Soft Whiskey could soft sell you into forgetting that its 86 proof. Calvert Extra,The Soft Whiskey $1Q85 $488 $2$$ ... Including plumbing, electrical, plastering, and ceilings. ,We will help you design your kitchen lust the way you it. FREE FUUINlIra service. 100% satisfaction guaranteed. Call 602-6100. BATHROOMS... NO DOWN PAYMENT Moin Office Phong WE CAN MAKE YOUR OLD BATHROOM ... Into a madam up-tomato room at the lowest pried possible. We do the complete |ob. Tile work for walls, and floor, madicine cabinets in all sixes ana shapes. Beautiful Custom Built Vanities, with drawers and cupboards to please the ladies. Wa da all the plumbing and electrical work toe. COME 4* TOI OUR SHOWROOM./, and discuss yourKitchan and Bathroom problems with our planning exports Or call us at 682-6800 and we will coma to your heme with complete ideas, pictures and samplss for your approval. Mon., Tuet., Wed., Sat. Nil S:M OPEN THUBt. and FBI. to $ . Htt KITCHENS dkpSy Lire BATHHOOM M 110 PONTIAC MALL OFFICE BLOG., ELIZABETH LK, RD. THEFONTtAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER I, 1069 into two twin or one super-size bed. Ideal for family room, guest room. Green, red, gold cotton print. SAVE OR HODSONIAM SUPER SIZE SETS Queen size, 60x80”, mattress and box spring set. SALE ......;..... ....... MMO King size, 77x80”, mattress and * bene spring set. SALE . t i*. ..\ .;. MS0' Twice-a-year Savings on our with luxuriously quilted cover Bom kours for buy ihoppers Pontiac, Northland, Eastland, Westland and Oakland open Monday* Thursday, Friday and Saturday till 9. Hudson's Downtown open Monday and Wednesday till 8:50. HUDSON’S SALE 49.90 mattress or boxepring, lull or twin Here are 6 reasons why it’s such a fine value: _ | • ■■■•'■"- •. ■■■]: _ + ..a 1. Patented seat-edge construction gives you sag-resistant sleeping comfort, longer wear because it's designed to be sturdy. 2. Extra heavy pre-built borders with locked edges for longer wear-such an unustlal feature at this most unusually low price now. 3. Fine cotton felt upholstery—40 pounds in the full-size mattress — specially inner-quilted to prp-vide luxurious comfort. 4. Hundreds of highly tempered steel coils with double offset steel construction add to its comfort as well as its long wear. 5. Thick layers of cotton felt plus Insulo cushioning plus inner roll borders add to this exceptional twice-a-year Hudson’s value. ' 6. Richly quilted cover in-a Choice of full or twin mattress or box spring. Convenient credit terms. Complete Aval in 2 widths, 30” and 33”.' sturdy striped cover. Makes into'comfortable 74” long bed. In-nerspring and box spring on legs. SALE 69.90 SALE I with luxurious double spring cushioning.' Scotchgard* stain-resistant 1AA AA finish. Choice of gold, olive, blue. JB j!.ll Hudson’s Sleep Shop—Downtown. 9th; Northland. Eastland. Westland. PontiacOaklandt______________ B—6 MEET MISS DIANE, our own Jtyltsf and wjg expert, who will answer questions and personality-style the wig you purchase' , -that day ah fantastic savings on misses9 and junior new-season knits Through Saturday! Exciting double knits tor foil and winter are priced for tremendous pre-season savings. Ydull find styles 'that Couldn't be newer or more flattening. Here, just two from the* value collection, left, Week or royal Dacron* polye?ter/wool, 8-16. Right, purple/groy or brown/blue wool la sixes 7-15. Imported polyester knit separates UaUI EACH These, Smartly,styled, eosy-care seporotes ore priced ter wonderful savings. Of lightweight polyester kbit they can beworn yebrrtwnd, ““ are sure to. be favorites m ydor costidl, wardrobe. .Choose the long-sleeved, -striped mock-turtle pullover and 'solid-* turtleneck pullover Irt . sizes 36 to- 40. The flat* tering A-linp sk$ in 8-ft. Navy, brown and gold included ;1e the group. PONTIAC MALL, monday, tKursday, friday fir Saturday ta 9 ' TEL-HURON CENTER, shop monday thru soturdayte? m*HURON CB4TER - PONTIAC MALI THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, i960 Yanks, $ Viets Underfire After Copter Crashes in Cambodia SAIGON (AP) - U.S. end South Vietnamese troops clashed with “enemy’* soldiers inside Cambodia after an American helicopter was shot down Monday and crashed A mile across the border, the U.S. Command announced today. ★ *' ★, “The violation of Cambodian VISTA Volunteer-Editor Loses Eviction Skirmish DETROIT (AP) - Twenty-five-year-old VISTA volunteer and community newspaper edi- Mulder Charged to Petoskey Man [< (AP) A 28-year-old Petoskey man, John Duncan Wilson, was arraigned Wednesday on a first-degree murder charge in the fatal shootlng Monday of Adam Frank Daniels At Harbor Springs. Daniels was shot urttif at~22-caliber rifle at the house trailer of Wilson’s former wife. Wilson was arrested by State Police at the scene. ★ ★ ★ Wilson demanded examination and was returned to th< County Jail to await a hearing Sept. 10.* tor George Tyssen Butler will |be evicted from his Detroit irtment within 10 days unless appeals a Common Pleas Court ruling. A jury decided Wednesday that his landlord, Louis Sherman, could evict him, although Butler contended the eviction was in retaliation to code viola-tlon complaints he sent to Hie Health department. Retaliatory evictions are illegal. ★ ★ ★ The six-woman Jury decided that Butler had made the complaint after he had been notified :|of his eviction._____ Butler and Gregory Lee, coeditors ofthe commtmitynews-paper, the Oakland Lion, had staked the paper's reputation on the outcome of the case. The editors said they felt a victory would, have encouraged tenants ‘ t the neighborhood. ★ ★ ★ Butler said he would file an appeal in Wayne County Circuit Court as soon as possible. air space was unintentionalr' e U.S. communique said. One South Vietnamese and two “enemy” were killed, U.S. headquarters said, and two American crewmen and three South Vietnamese were wounded. The helicopter was one of three American aircraft which the U.8. Command today reported downed. Fifteen Americans died in two other crashes north of Saigon. BADLY MAULED Two other U.S. helicopters were hit Wednesday while supporting a badly mauled Booth Vietnamese force that forced into retreat after four days of fighting near Song Be. 80 miles northeast of Saigon. The helicopters made It to a Special Forces camp three miles south of the battlefield, but one American was killed and one wounded. The ‘U.S. and South Vietnamese commands announced that battlefield deaths dropped slightly on all sides last week as a result of a marked decrease in enemy activity. The a reported 18L- Americans, 854 South Vietnamese and 2,493 enemy killed, compared with 190 Americans, 898 South Vietnamese and 2,724 enemy foe week l^efoTe. Another 1,067 Americans were wounded in notion last week. ★ ★ ★ A spokesman for the U.S. Command said it delayed announcement of the downing of the helicopter in Cambodia-untii today because “initial ~H^| were spotty and we wanted to check ariddouble-check.” The helicopter was downed during a combat assault in KJen Thong Province, which borders Cambodia 55 miles west of Saigon. HIT BY GROUND FIRE dquarters said the heU* HE one of three Army UH-1 helicopters carrying Sourn Vietnamese troops into battie, was hit by ground fire. "The origin of the ground fire ia.unknown,”headquartwgsaidr "The area ih which the helicop-ter was flying is characterized by low, flat marshland on both sides of the border and the pilot directed the helicopter toward the most desirable emergency landing site.” '★ ; * #||g “The helicopter burned upon impact,” a spokesman said, “and file crew members and passengers came under small arms and automatic weapons fire.” One SCiith Vietnamese was trapped in the burning wreck-, igrariOie^ crewmen and three South Vietnamese were wounded by foe firing. , The other two helicopters in* the flight landed at the crash site, and their South Vietnamese passengers took up positions to protect the, wounded until they could be lifted out. They returned the fire, killing two enemy, headquarters said. "Following the brief contact," a communique said, “the wounded crew members * and passengers were evacuated by medical helicoptcr...The medl- .. celved small arms fire during its approach but did not sustain any d safe Readr-lo-go snythetic stretch n igs 18.90 19.90 21.90 Now you can have an .exciting, new hofrda at a moment's notice. These ever-ready modacryllc stretch wigs make it possible, and are offered, at sale savings. They're light and homforiabld to wear. They j-slyle-witivtf TOueb of your-brush-emdore •__— completely washable. And, best of all, they * can be packed in a tote or suitcase tr» trnVel with ynn nnywhorw. AIL ---_ in a full range of colors, plus blondes and frosteds. * , Topered-bock smooth (not shown) sale, 19.90 fluffed top, tapered back (A) sale, 21.90 Smooth, even look (B) sale prices, 18.90 Pontiac Mall — M, Sept. 5 . Noon - 9:00 p.m. Tel-Huron — Sat., Sept. 6 11:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. sale leather-look crushed vinyl bags 3.97 Youll wont to hurry In. for these great handbag values. Find-many casual styles/ shapes arid sizes Tah„ K brown and black m m the group. H THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1969 ' . bXt News of Area Ser trZ^S ™ 1™ f «>»«««» community men trapped on a hill during!Sullivan is stationed at Phaiilcooleee fiR?nwun 0n V*e\nam’ Army Rang, AFB, Vietnam. ® Sgft. William J. Martin III has' \* h i been awarded the Bronze Star. | A munitions speealist, he was He also has received—the graduated from Seaholm High army commendation, good School in Birmingham and at-ronduct, Vietnam service and tended Oakland Community Vietnam campaign medals. .College. Martin has been reassigned to' Bfjjj parents are Mr. and Mrs. Ft. Lewis, Wash, following James E. Sullivan of 3101 completion of tour of duty In CasWell Trov “Viefr^mr. ; ! ;1—i------------------l~ *■ ■■] —* His wife, Margie, resides at 3345- hk—Puntiae—Trails 6om>* -Airman Charles Hr-Fisher,' merce Township. ' j Fisher D. C. Spaysky of 4185 Midland, Waterford Township. SPAYSKY For meritorious service while engaged in military operations against the Vietcong, Air Force Capt. Marlin R. Kitchen received the Bronze Star Medal at his new duty station, Hahn AFB, Germany. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Kitchen, reside at 2883 Frankson, Avon Township. L Kitchen was, graduated from m . , _ _ i t 'Rochester High School and »» Wand Hr!. — Lackland AFB, Tex.—i—,—:from injuries sustained while 1 , - * ,* * serving in Vietnam. LETTER LINE He is remaining at Lackland ! „ * * * II Pfc. Michael S. Spaysky for training/as a security! He took basic training at Ft.! RA 68021109 policeman! jKnox, Ky. and "advanced! Hq. Co. 55th Maint. Bn. (D.S.) * * * j training at Ft. Leonard Wood, Camp Humphrey, Korea A graduate of Seaholm High Mo. , J APO San Francisco, Calif. School in Birmingham, Fisher [ His parents are Mr. and Mrs.| 96271 ~ ft Presenting the Fashion Corduroy Sale pownipwhj Eastland; The Pontiac Mall Open Every Evening to 9 HADDOW Seaman .IC. Mark W. Haddow is stationed at Yokohama, Japan. • As a member of the Navy’s Riverine Force (River Rats) in Vietnam), he received several awards including the ' Navy commendation medal, the Purple Heart, and unit commendation from the Sou t hi Vietnamese government and aj presidential unit citation, WWW A graduate of Waterford Township High School, he is the Hq)) of Mr. and Mrs. William J. Haddow of 653 Lakeside, Waterford Township.' He at-tended Western Michigan University prior to enlisting, and trained at Great Lakes, HI., and Bainbridge, Md. Mir Force Sgt. • Larry Skinner was a member of the Tactical Air Command team which took part in the recovery operation following Hurricane Camille. Operating from Kessler AFB, Miss., and Gulfport-Biloxi Municipal Airport, the 200 men provided C130 transport plane for cargo and airlift control element to jhandle the alt terminals, c o ns t ru c 11 o specialists, medical technicians and other personnel to hrip during the emergency. Skinner i4 a construction equipment operator at Eglin AFB, Fla. "' 1 * '* *— The son of Mrs. A, L. Thorton of' 5892 01 y m p Lc Parkway, Waterford Township, ha attended Waterford Kettering High School and Glendale (j|riz.) Community Colleger JArtny Sgt. l.C. Joseph H. Iwcker, son of Mrs. Gertrude B. Jones of 425 Midway has been nimed noncommissioned officer lit charge of the 7th Infantry revision pistol team at Camp Hivey, LKorea. „ The team is competing, in the Sth Army off-duty matches leading to a championship meet late this month.-- W ★ ★ Tucker is coach and Instructor. "Prior to his enlistment, he attended Pontiac Central High School. V - pie has received the soldier’s medal and army commendation medal. His wife, Aklyo, resides in Tacoma, Wash. Weed Flunks Test; No'High' Rating SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP) — Police thought they had quite a find-marijuana growing in the backyard of the police department’s new Ocean Beach community relations office. * * * -But Tuesday’s discovery, five days after the office opened, fizzled Wednesday when laboratory tests identified the four-foot vine as a weed member of the morning glory family. Capsule News of State Leaders Chubby -Skfip LANE BRYANT FUN FAKERY FOR PLUS-SIZED GIRLS Join the fun fur craze in a minicoat with concealed zipper and toggle closings. Acrylic/; modacrylic that's cotton backed, nylon/ polyester interlined for warmth. Frosted white, sizes lOVkto 141/2, $26 Order by mall or pfcaaa 6S2-7500. Add 40c fordalivaiy plus 20c for C.O.D's and 4% fox Th» Pontiac Mall BACK TO SCHOOL SPECIAL Thurs., Fri., Sat. and Mon. ONLY! HANDSEWNS - TEMPOS This is the first time Hudson's has offered this soft touchquality corduroyonsale^atthis price. Put together this Reason's shades in an exciting fashion story about pant suits, jumpers, vests, skirts and shifts. If you want s look that’s all you, make it with color-fast cotton corduroy in thick’n thin or wide. wale. Cotton, 42/45“ wide. So plan your fall wardrobe with savings in mind. Great ideas for home decorating too! Look for .these fabulous washable, wrinkle resistant corduroys, only 1.48 a yard, in Hudson’s Cotton Fabrics, Pontiac Mall. ^RM^i B—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1969 i imi »u SPECIALS Acrylic pile lining zips in or out to the weatherman's whims • Sturdy polyester-cotton sheds rain, snow • Plush fining keeps out winter winds • Pretty, practical styles to go anywhere Stay fresh and fashionable no matter what the weather is. Perfect to wear from now through the chilly winter months and back into spring, Go-with-everything colors in tan, blue, gold, terra cotta. Misses' 8-18. Season fashion-find in junior dresses Longer jackets and vests, the jumper look, pockets and pleats —- all trie new fall trends for juniors —— in practical bonded acrylic fabrics. Choose from the new muted fall shades. Sheas 7 to 15. Save now! A fashion tradition—the all-wool flannel skirt topped by a casual cardigan or crew-neck of carefree acrylic. Pick from a range of classic colors. Starts in Misses' 10-20; sweaters 36-42. A winning combination! new THE THINGS YOU NEED? USE WARDS. CONVENIENT CHARG-ALL-PLAN--JUSt^hY with reptile look COMFORT AND FASHION FOR WOMEN, TEENS Stylish slings of turtle-look print ^ on green, black or brown leath- Ji Ji er. Sizes B5 to 10. Gold -tone MpHf buckled pumps in necessary brown and Mack. Sizes AA61/} ^ to 10; BStoia Add an exciting accent to a new fall costume with a stylish handbag. In fabrics and leather - look vinyl in autumn accessory shades. AAOMTGOAAERY Ol’KN MONDAY TURD FRIDAY SATURDAY' I SI ND \Y 12 NOON TO A I .OHs OikjL.UJmJU. THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER UP B—9 Policemen in Civvies 'Blbzer-ing' Trail of Public Rapport L0N6-SLEEVE SPORT SHIRT NEVER NEEDS ANT IRONING Q. Long sleeve, solid / 3 for color, button •» down O ■ shirt ol poly ester-cot- ** ton. Foil colors. 6 to 18. Ref. 2.4t PONTIAC MALL Mill Ordm (untlntod only) AM sot pe»t*S». SorrY. No C.O.D/s vSiSb SaMjl. OJqaJU. ; 99: OPEN MONDAY flfRU FRIDAY U>:00 A M. TO 9:00 KM, . SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9 PAi: v SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 5 P.fML * 682-T9 i(> _ BLYTHE, Calif. (AP) - What happens when a small-town po-i liceman gheds his uhlform for civilian-style clothes? people seem a loti friendlier," according to Sgt. Hm H/Ketchum, “Since we changed ! to blazers and slacks they seem, to see us more" as human beings. The officers and the community are more relaxed with each other/' administrative and clerical! i workers have beety expertment-ing with blazers. i _ Said, Ventura __Chlef David jGeary: “Young"people are particularly impressed. It’s easy | for a citizen to be overwhelmed by the traditional uniform with Ketchum is one of 18 deputy sheriffs in the desert farming town of Blythe, population 8,000, near the Arizona border, Gone are the traditional uniforms, 'helmets and black boots. Replaced by green double-breasted blazers, shirk, ties and slacks. I the shiny badge, brass buttons and gun.” A few larger cities are joining in. Jacksonville and Fort Lau-1 derdale, Fla., are testing blazers for ranking officers. Miami and Seattle are reported considering tests of blazers for administrative personnel. But a spokesman for the] This theme Is common among 8,000-man Lot, AngeleB forc»hadrPeace offic,ers. \Vhiie many fa- thjs comment on the expert-! vor casual dress for administra- I H , 1 i tive types, they fear that patrol- ments: “The blazers-Slacks con- mcn Y„ slacks lose their identi-cept-“ma^*"be"'' okBy‘ for email] ty. towns, but in a big city there’s i too dangerous to patrol in any-] man in the dim light of a bar] thing but the recognizable uni-who thought the officer was! form.” - some guy trying to pick a! * ✓ * fight,” Blythe Sheriff Clark says reo-j ★ * * , = ognition has been no problem,!" Blythe Police Chief Hugh B. though early in the program an Ingram opposed the change for! too much of a chance of mistak-j Culver City Police Chief Eu-i officer forget to identify him|elflall patrolmen on any permanent! en. identity.” |gene Mueller said: “tt would be! and “almost got socked by abasis. “It would be silly to go to that * civilian-type-uniform," Ingram said. “Suppose an officer answered a prowler call. While | he's creeping around looking for the prowler he’d alnioat likely l get some buckshot in the teat of jthe pants from a jumpy home- Blythe's program is modeled] after one -in Dover Township,! N.J., where for three years meh in the ranks between chief and sergeant haw worn blazers.! Clark says Blythe is the first to put all officers, including patrolmen, into casual attire. They town is deemed a good I test area as it is isolated from other towns, has a cross-section of farmers and businessmen, and 25 per cent of residents are ' Negroes or Mexjcan-Americansi Only identifying symbol on| the blazers is a badge-shaped pocket crest. Officers carry guns, bullets and handcuffs un-| der their jackets. Helmets and] sticks are kept in squad cars. TWO FACTOR* SEEN Clark says he expects the experiment to show two things: “First an increase in the crime rate. Silly? No. Normally,! only about 60 to 70 per cent of crimes ire reported. If you establish better communication you’re going to learn about more crimes. Second, an increased crime clearance rate. With better communication,, thq.commu-nity will ( help solve more! crimes.” —In two other southern Califor-j Ilia communities, Ventura and! Culver City, police department Storm Victims Getting Food ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) - The U.S. Agriculture Department; Says food shipments to victims! Of Hurricane Camille in Missis-sippi and Virginia Will continue as long as they are needed. Russell H. Jones, regional'di->| rector of the department’s-Food ] and Nutrition Service, said 2 million pounds of USDA food Is being sent to a warehouse lnT Jackson, Miss. - He said 5- million pounds of food have already been sent, including canned fruit juices, pleat, cheese, peanut butter, dried fruits and vegetables and evaporated milk. jQualiCraft white fabric pumps TOTED7 FREE Open Daily 10 a.m. to t p.i Saturday 9:30 a.m. to 9 p.n Sunday Noon to S- p.m. Sheriff Bernard Clark, charge of the eight-month ex-j periment, says the idea is V see if there’s any truth to thej theory an officer’s uniform -impedes his work " The first reac-j tion among police officials has: been that it’s a good Idea for administrative types but not so good for street patrols. SURVEY OF CITIZENS Blythe'citizens will be sur-veyed this month for their reactions. But Clark is convinced the trial already is a success—“The' people feel they are treated dif-i ferently add look differently at1 the officers. And the officers! look differently at their job.” | Sale ends Sunday /AAOIVTGO/IAERYR Boys Foil clothes moke the scene % at BIG SAVINGS Alpaca-stitched golfer classic swings out in splashing colors! A. Comfortable, easy-going classic golfer is always at home on campus or in the. classroom! in all the top fashion shades. 14-20. Rea. 4.99, Jr. Golfer Sweater. Sizes 6-12 . .3.88 4.99 CLASSIC VPULLOVER IN SADDLE-STITCHED PATTERN B, 45% Lambswool, 35% _ j. nylon. Full fashion; ma-chine washable. Sizes § t/0 to 20. BOYS* JEANS IN THE NEW SCOTCH TARP, REG. ?.9f E. Tapered, jow-riding denim loans fn textured iron polyester-cotton. 6 to lir .f.> ■> 4.49, Huslcy slits. 3.49 BRAWNY STRIPED PULLOVER WITH MOCK TURTLENECK C. Subdued horizontal TP99 stripes. Rib-knit cuff -m and bottom. Machine washable. Sizes 8-20. ' JUNIOR BOYS* OXFORD SLACKS NEED NO IRONING F. Drassy-lookinq casu- 4% gg al slacks of polyester- ] roHon with Dermanent Al cotton with permanent crease. Slim; rag. 4-12; REG. 1.99 TURTLENECKS SPORTY SHORT SLEEVE D. easy - care couon knit shirt with* short sleeves and full turtle neck. All colors. 8-20. 3 for CHARGE IT* JUST SAY V Boys* classic buckle shoes IN POPULAR SLIP-ON OR OXFORD STYLES Rag* 8.99 EroWn monk-strap boot — in hand- "WA some grained leather with composition sole. 10-3, W 0 width ....jL*...................... " Rag. 9.99 Black buckle-wing tip—smart-look- , a 4 ing dress oxford in soft leather, 3*/j to 7, D width. SC B—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4/ 1969 OVER-THE-CALF SUPPORT HOSE See how. these handsome shades of olive, gold, blue and tan add lip to your wardrobe. Don't forget go-with-everything white, either. Sanforizad Plus' for lasting fit. Features "Spot Check" soil release finish and wrinkle resistance. M*r^* sizes. Discover new daylong comfort. Made of nonbinding Lycra9 spandex. Burma Hits Political Dead End of Socialist Road asking Ne Win to give him pow- the first time since his incarcer^round Ne, Win. They want the asked one of U Nu’s disil.|ation, U Nu this year toured]genera) to push on with his par. -StANGOON, Burma CAP) -much leash and, though it has1 systenC which has not struck Bflrma, once one of Asia’s most cells throughout the country, it deep roots,'Ne Win last Novem-, . <»>•»». .Vv -—i-—-•> - --- — , prosperous nations, has traveled is clearly subservient to the. her convened a 33-marNational lusioned followers who bellevesrfBuddhist shrines r n-indit and f(| seven years down its “own army1. It hak tihly 20 full mem-jUnity' Advisory Board, com- ’ “uv ‘11 "*“* lU* “® “““ Juj “ " | v^|y to socialism”—and has ar- bers, 13 of whom come^ from the posed mostly of old politicians, r»ed at economic stagnation!all-military revolutionary coun-to draw up proposals-foFB-newoi -*d a political! dead end. jcil, where real power lies. j political system. Jjj •* along with others, that the 62-1 then decamped for Thaitend, year-old,hope of Burmese demo-iwhere he denounced Ne Win’s ical reality. plying neither acceptance nor criticism of the proposals—but the presss unleashed scornful attacks on U Nu for about a week. WIN’DENOUNCED 3‘This is a-river of no return,”| Fighting Chinese-armed insur-! The board issued a divided, Ne w^,s response tp the 33* fcinmented one of the country’s] gents in the countryside, the j series of recommendations in man was delphic—im- leaders from the bygone days of army is itself stoutly anti-Com-| February—the most prominent.. pyliamentary democracyJmunist—though above-groundbeing that of the former prime ‘inly Ne Win can get us off it.” ex-Communists have been al-imlnister, U Nu, who baldly rec-f a * -a lowed to formulate the only par- ommended that Ne Win give 4The remarkable fact about ty’s increasingly radical ideolo- power to him and return Burma Burma today is that politicians gy. ]to the same parliamentary sys- of contrasflhg~vieWs; ^ex-eom^;—Apparently- groping fnr plter-jtem that broke down in thepaat. - munists-along-With democrats. natives^to the^present one-party!—Can you imagine a sane man claim that Ne Wih, the general!—----——■—--------r-------------------—- -j who has led the country sinc^l ---------- his 1962 coup, is on their side. | _V___» _________- - The many ex-Communists and others who now occupy important positions in the government and the Burma Socialist Pro-.gram party, the country’s only legal party, say Ne Win is a dedicated Socialist who will continue to hold their radic&l banner aloft. •HE’S A SOCIALIST ________ “Gen. Ne Win has initiated all j the Socialist measures we have] taken,said Thein Pe Myint, an; influential columnist for the government-controlled press, who openly describes.himself as pro-Communist. “Fascist." U Nu insisted he is still the legal prime minister ofc, Burma. this move dismayed many of his followers in Burma even more. They - felt that Ne Win was moving in their direction-only to be rebuffed by U Nu. AAA They fear U Nu has played into the hands of the “Burmese ty’s radical program and not liberalize the system. Whether Ne Win in fact wants to reach out to the liberals is moot indeed.— A A A The general does not feel obligated to speak out often op public matters, and no one pretends to know his mind. Abnormally short children may be helped in the future through 'use of a synthetic Allowed out of the country for I Socialists'’ harCTileTk Who sur I growth-hoamone. ETOffil . OPEN: Dallyi lO a.m. to'9 p.m. Sat.; 9:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. Sun.; 12 noon to 5 p.m. Sale ends Sunday “The liberals think that Ne] Win is on their side, but they don’t appreciate the true situation,” Thein Pe Myint insisted. AAA The “liberals” are the.politicians and journalists who ran] the country in its first, chaotic] decade of independence—and] -who spent stretches in jail after Ne Win undermined their collapsing parliamentary system, Despite their hardships under Ne Win’s authoritarian regime, the liberals insist that tfie general is no Socialist himself, that] he is fed up with the. “Burmese way to socialism,” and that he is' on the verge of liberalizing the economy and even bringing some old politicians into his all-1 military government. LEFTIST FLAVOR Burma’s modern political life always had a leftist flavor and] so the launching in 1962 of the “Burmese way to socialism,” a mixture of much Marxism and nationalism with some Buddhism, was no break with earlier political rhetoric. But instead' of rhetoric the! easygoing Burmese were given action: the government, in keeping with its program, began nationalizing everything in sight. AAA In part, the wholesale nationalizations were camouflaged attempts to drive out the large In-dim and Chinese communities, which'had dominated Burma’s commercial life for almost a I century. Today free enterprise Is almost gone. Most citizens • buy half their goods in government-owned shops, which often are empty, and the other half in the black market, which has eh-riched smugglers operating or the Thai border. EXPORTS DROP f$nce nationalization of the rice distribution system, Bur- __my» rice exports have plum. meted from about two tnillipn tons a year to 345,000 in 1968— lowest in a century. With exports totaling a spartan $100 million in 1968, the economy is simply running down for lack of spate parts and raw materials to keep it going. Ne Win has-never allowed the Burma Socialist Program party Power Plaids Save *20 on a deftly daring new fall suit Join the revolution in men's fashions. Youthful new shapes and shades for young men of all ages. See these interesting plaids that start at a whisper and go as bold as you dare. Elegantly tailored in rich imported wool worsteds. Smart two button styling and slightly wider lapels combine easily with today's sharp new accessories. Buy now and combine fashion-sense with economy. Wide color selection in men's sizes short, regular and long. Regularly $85 "CHARGE IT" *15 Savings! 'Now* Look Sportcoats 40 Luxury wool worsteds in new E rugged plaids. Expertly tail* *** ored for perfect fit. 2-but-ton, side vented model. RIO. SSS $7 savings on slacks , ‘18 Wide elastic waistband for trim look, comfortable fit. -Classic solids- in permanent press wool worsteds. Seva! REG. $25 Casual Slacks 599 RIG. 7.W Slim or requler cuts. Never need irorpnq. Shed wrinkles. Dress Slacks SIS RIG. W *1* - New 0acr o n* polyester worsted. Need no ironinqr. ^ Your Florshtim Shea Store Men's Accessories NEW WIDE TIES AT SALE PRICE 177 REG, p 2.50 Huge, assortment of new wider ties in stripes, patterns and solids. All new fashion colors. Brent Shirts NEED NO IRONING— IN NEW FASHION COLORS "CHARGE IT" AT WAJIDS THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 196» B—11 ---*—» Area Sedbee Aids in Camille Cleanup A Waterford Township Navy matt is home on lpave after spending a week in Gulfport; Miss., aiding in the (massive cleanup following destruction to the coastal area by hurricane Camille. 1 f, p ^ Pti luC'David Shortj 19, of 4450 Sedum Glen returned to the United States from Vietnam Aug. f7 and was scheduled to land at the Seabees Navy Base in Gulfport. The plane was rerouted to Tampa, Fla., after the pilot received word that hurricane Camille, had ripped the coastal town, including the Navy base. ★ ★ ★ Short, a heavy equipment Operator, had the option of tak-tag a 72-hqur pass and then an extended leave tp see his family or traveling the 60 miles Inland to Gulfport to help. He and about 100 others from Construction Battalion 138 chose the latter. ■ * ★ ★ "Basically, I went because saw that there was a job to do,”i Short said. I •k * • yS'\ He was part of three 12-man 1 teams that worked 24 hours a day clearing away wreckage Post at Aquinas GRAND. RAPIDS (AP)-Mrs. Judith K. Brey, a 1959 graduate' of Aqutaas College, has beeni named alumni director for the| college. so that emergency vehicles! cbuld enter the devastated city. j "We cleared about a 12-milef stretch," Short said, "And I. only remember seeing * ope (house__standing along the coast.” s / ★ * * Short said he worked for a week from 6 p.m. to 8 a.m. with other crews working during most of the day. Tiie roads i were clear when he left. . ★ * * "There was a lot of damage done to the base where many of the civilians and ml 111 a r y, (dependents received shelter in .the warehouses that were still standing,” he said. • *» * •* Short returns to the Gulfport Seabees base tomorrow, and expects to help in the reconstruction of buildings on-the base and further aid area residents. Smallpox throughout the world declined by nearly 45 per cent last year. DAVID SHORT ran lx Here's the plucky plaid.collection you've been waiting for and smashing solids, too. Bonded to acetate to -give fabric- body. 54>!*» §|9 BONDED, RICH WOOLEN GEMS MACHINE-WASHABLE HI-LOFT ACRYLICS Gotten corduroy in brilliant and subdued colors. All machine-washable, too. "CHARGE IjT" Coordinating diagonal twill solids with splalhy Fall plaids. Bonded and non-wrinkling too. Many attention-getting colors. 54" wide. Give your winter ward robe a lift with this special collection of wdols and wool-nylon blends. Smooth and nubby Simplicity Pattern #7829 -75c textures. 54" wide. WHY WAIT? USE YOUR CREDIT TO SAVE NOW-JUST SAY "CHARGE IT!*1 AAOIMTGOA/UERYl . \ SATURDAY 9iW A.M, TO 9 P.M. SUNDAY IVOON TO * 682-4940 Pontiac Mall dtfb JkkjL, tOcvJU. : ft Nixon Order to Start Draft Lottery WASHINGTON (UPI) _ President Nixon is on the verge of instituting a draft lottery, though it won’t be In the form originally proposed, it learned yesterday. Nixon apparently has given up hope Cogress will enact this year the draft lottery bill he proposed in the spring. > So he has decided to put a random selections system into operation on his own. ★ -* To the youth awaiting a call to arms, it would mean only one year of uncertainty Instead of two, three, four or even five years.',:;,:-.. ■ -lt was mot known when the system ^ould be Implemented but the executive order paving the way for it Is expected to be issued shortly. Nixon said as much in remarks to the nation' governors Monday night i Colorado Springs, Colo. Here is how the lottery would wsrk: ..... The President would direct the Selective Service System to abandon its present method of takhg the oldest registeres first, starting with 25-ycfar-olds and working downward to 19 year-olds. He would direct it to begin with a younger age group, probably the 19-year-olds. * , , .* ★ * • Assuming the 19- to 20-year-olds became the “prime age group,’ 'the local, draft board would be instructed to All their monthly quota with the oldest 19-year-olds available. In the first year of transition from the oldest-first to toe youngest—first, those above 20 and not yet 28 would be thrown in the first year pool with the *19-year-olds. ACTION ENCOURAGED I In 1967, when Congress ex-fended the Selective Service Act, it barred the President from Instituting an artificial lottery without first getting permission from Congress, but encouraged him to start making the youngest susceptible to the draft first instead of the oldest. |n recent weeks, key House and Seanate members let it be known chances of getting around to the draft lottery bill this year were very dim.^, ’ 5. Rep. F. Edward Hebert, D-La., chairman of the House Armed Services subcommittee fotthe draft, calfethe youngest-first method "lottery by Divine Providence.” British Travelers Hit by Typhoid LONDON (AP) - Seventeen persons were suffering from ty-phoid in Britain Wednesday. Nearly all had just returned . from vacations in North Africa. Doctors said they were unable to trace the source and advised people planning a. Visit to countries with a "typhoid history’’ to be. vaccinated. PONTIAC MALL OPTICAL 4 HEARINB AID CENTER mm “-■tip 1 •* uMj Phone—* • j *82-111J \ \ i HEARING AID DEALER ^ Wards Annual Fall Fabric Sale Fashion forecast wild n wool-y THE FALL FASHION CLIMATE CALLS FOR _____ THE BIG* BOLD NEW WOOLS — AND WARDS HAS THEM ALL! It's our big fall harvest of kicky, brave new wools we have to show you! Wools, wool-nylon blends, acrylics in new patterns, colors, textures. BONDED FLANNELS IN PLAIDS, SOLIDS ASSORTED WOOLENS iHia Save 2.02 on handy electric scissors 4,97 No _ m b r e tired sewing fingers! Easily cuts into fabrics, paper. Guide-lignt removes shadows. REG. 6.99 Most Popular Corduroy It's the plush corduroy looks for Fall! Sew suits, vests, jumpers. 44-IN. PINWALE CORDUROY Rich; cotton corduroy in the newest fashion colors .for fall. Machine wash! 87 44-IN WIDEWALE CORDUROY JUMBO-WALE CORDUROY 3 whales Der inch! Repels water spots. 100% cotton. Decorator's delight. SALE FURNITURE THROWS Mediterranean "Tangier*' Heritage or Lancer Foam-backed cotton throw* stay put! Print in green/blun. gold/brown, red/ olive; solid in avocado, antique gold, rad, brown, burnt orange,- blue* ; Reg. 9.99, 72x90-1*. ......... 7JC Reg. 12.97, 72*120-1*. .........10.11 Reg. 14.99, 72x1404a. ..........12.11 Foam-backed cotton throw in vibrant Mediterranean print. Choose youri from blue/green or gold/brown com-binations. 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The name is Key Underwood " Mefloftal '"Cwindog Cemetery; named after the man Who buried old Troop’, the graveyard's first interree, in October 1937. + * * Now the cemetery contains the graves of 70 dogs, all “Troop was one of the prettiest and best all-around dogs I ever hunted with,” says Key Underwood. “When he was 15 years old, I had him put to sleep and two other boys and 1 carried him out there and buried him. CARVED IN SANDSTONE » . "We found an old sandstone chimney rock and carve Troop’s name and the dates , of his birth and death. The next time I went out there I took a small board, wrote ‘Coondog Grave-J yard’ on it and nailed it to a tree. ----"I don’t know why I did it, but that’s what triggered it. ★ * w "Then We got a lease on about 10 acres owned by a lumber company. Iq the next two or three years, half a dozen dogs were buried there. “We began clearing it off and having meetings there once a year, and it just started growing. ONEOFAKIND "It’s the wily one of its kind in existence as far as we know, and we’re never been challenged yet.” ' What determines if a dog can be buried in the cemetery? * w “He’s got to be a hound and a coon dog of good reputation,” Underwood said in an interview. “Women sometimes want to bury their lap dogs there, and when I tell them ‘no’ they kind of get rough with me, hut I tell: .them we’d ruin the novelty df , It."-' , THREE DIRECTORS Underwood and two other men, John Burns and Joe Foster, are the directors. . Cost Tags Vary on Alaskan-Oil Government, Industry, Scholars Tell Guesses TULSA (UPI) — Petroleum Industry, government a n d academic sources are offering different figures on whatj Alaskan oil will cost.---- The industry is making plans' for moving oil hy jnpeline TiTrd tanker ship from the Arctic North Slope of Alaska, where a 10-billion barrel potential has been found. ★ W W .The staff of the Cabinet Task Force on Oil Imports has issued a report saying the wellhead cost of North Slope oil. should be 36 cents a barrel. ' The staff report also said it I should be possible to deliver the nil to Los Angeles for $1.11 and to Chicago for $1.36 per barrel. LOWER ESTIMATES An even lower estimate was offered by Prof. Morris A. Adel man of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, who Said the wellhead cost should be 17 to 24 cents per barrel. / ft ' W . Adelman said it should be possible to deliver a barrel of crude oil fo the U.S. East Coast for about $1.10 and that anything above that would be profit. ■ W * * Die staff estimate by the task force is particularly' significant, i since the staff will use the figures, in reviewing U.S. oil. import policies unless other evidence is offered that would change the figures. * Atlantic Richfield Co. and Humble Oil ft Refining Co., the. firms which made the big strike I on the North Slope^say the task J force figures by the task force i •are too low. They are not ready j] to provide an exact figure. Each Labor Day they hold Decoration Day at Yth cemetery. They jplant flowers and have a picnic. Dozens of people attend, stone by 0. C. Mayfield in 1959. The carving shows two. coon-dogsatthebottomof^tree trunk with two coons at the top. The longeet tripAo bury d dog was made in 1965 when Grant “I’m the sexton,” Underwood j Wheeler and several friends said “1 got out there every twobrought Ruff Redbone from or three weeks and mow it and Birmingham Ala. Most of the clean it off.” _ [dogs came from within a radius a a * | of 50-75 miles. Each grave is marked by aj * * stone monument, some u. elaborately carved. • In hJ* j* £*«•* ° htunti"g coons, Underwood estimates he CENTERPIECE CARVED has taken from 40 to 50 a year, The centerpiece is a monu- or more than 1,600. Old Troop ment carved from rockwood,got 60 of them. When Underwood first Began hunting, coon hides brought from $5 to .0 Odch. _r_~ Now, he * said, they are worthless, but he still hunts for pleasure and because coons are pests. trouble in corn_____ A bunch of coons arevjust like a bunch of hogs in a corn patch,” he said. He owns two coonhounds now — a Black and Tan and a Treeing Walker. WWW “A good country coon dog is dogs bring from $2,000 $3,000,” Underwood said. . The cemetery land originally^ was part of' an old hunting ground used by Underwood and his frjends. worth from $250 to $400, but High-priced registered 1 the more than 50,000 deaths each year from auto accidents, a third of the fatalities occur at.the scene, in the ambulance or within minutes after arrival in the.emergency OLD mm FAITMFt'L FPIFM) 1953 1959 Doggone Good Reputation Needed For Burial; AAOIVTGO/IAER ARD Save 1.11 on window shades Our best Milium window shade darkens the room, is easy to install. Trim it to match your decor, or enjoy it plain! . 'Regular-ifr xfoftr-sha.d* .tv- Regular 11.99, 73'/4x6-ft. shade .........1S.lt g2 r **omw*m aeweew jjriw Mean imwm |j-»- tm MIMM CMHMM Ftto emw 4* to 4* wtfe koUireirWe «$gi ir i» 1r Stop Pit* arms 4* to O” wMe becte U‘tell'«de wing* 11* to 17" deep. 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It* THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1969 B—13 dented Imbeciles Really Robots of Rote -----j. WiUy pl#yg otdpfr, p9ycholo- cheater Cathedfarma toy mlr ., Cal (AP) - Think fists, visitors, psychiatric tech-tar. He now has a full-size gut-1 lav.r- nidans and other , patients. He tar donated by a local family. |j W “He knows scores of songs," to chocolate: she said. “He’s learned them doughnuts at the hospital snack |rom t1te*^dh> and f*>m reV * j lords. All he has to do is hear a; “The. amount of people come .song once and he’ll remember it; to-play Willy!" exclalthedMrsJ—the tune, the melody and tharj! Lola Garcia, one of the ward’s words, too." psychiatric technicians. “But * * * inns.” i’r* a good checker player: ce on Willy. le plays two or three games day and hasn’t lost in nine ssrs. He has an IQ af 6Q. * f , Pretty good at dafes and ctl-llatlons? So ts Paw, who has in IQ of 33. fjm~W you instantly ★ * :> attack the royal family, but In tiny,lovely Sikkim, another play upon the nattonalist senti-Himalayan kingdom, Chins has ments of the people and urge no official role but makes its them to' shake off Indian con-presence felt with an estimated trol. 25,000 troops along the border. Although China appears un- Although china has no military commitment here, it Is the second largest aid-giver-44.7 million—with plans to increase it to more than $7 riSillion next ’ China views the recent Soviet suggestion of a "System of collective security in Asia" as a flagrant anti-Chinese military alliance. Numerous Faking broadcasts have denounced it as a Soviet plan to Join with the Unttad States In ringing China with hostility. ] More than a dozen new ambassadors have been sent from Peking, three of them to the key South Aslan countries of Afghanistan, Pakistan and Nepal. The Chinese are appearing, with the ususd liao buttons, at diplomatic receptions jjthey once spumed.1 In additioa, their economic projects j|n South Asian tentiaily fearsome force, government and pnvato sources surveyed in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Nepal and Sikkim see virtually no possibility of an overt Chinese invasion. Even India does not foresee a repeat per- SAVE Four-Speaker Console Stereo Afghanistan is not particularly trustful of Russia and wants ,a continued strong American presence. However, American aid has fallen from $10 itaillion in 1M7 to $11 million this year, iwith little chance of an increase i SAVE 70.95 ENJOY CAREFREE COLOR TV - WITH 171-SQ. IN.* SCREEN [in sight. To counter this, Af-ghanistan may seek an increased Chinese role to maintain a balance against Russia. China’s new ambassador wdD give the Chinese activities there more Authority. Its irrigation tweetwn combine for “big eet* sound reproduction. 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In January, Prims Minister Go to tho head of anyone's sowing cldss with this Words Signature® sowing machine and handsome cabinet! Don't be deceived by our low price — its quality and features are unbeatable. And it's simple to opwpta - ideal/ for young sewers. Renault Cost Cut ENGLEWOOD, NJ. (AP) -Renault foe. announced today it ls reducing prices of its imported automobies by $50 per unit to reflect thsreceot deyaf- Cabinet resists scratches. /WONTGO/WERV] WARD OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10:00 A.M. TO 9iO0 P.M. . SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9 P.M I'N'DAY 12 NOON TO 5 P.M. e 682- Pontiac Mat Available in Electric *158 new skull has eroded from*the! covered by 1,750,000-year-old OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10:00 A,M. TO 9:00 P.M. SATURDAY 9:30 A.M, TO 9 P.M UNDAY 12 NOON TO 5 P.M. • 682- '.BSbSkk^UJoJL. •'» B—18 THE PbNTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1969 Transplant Patients in Brazil Form Self'HelpGrpup SAO PAULO, Brazil UR -frazil’s living transplant patients have formed a unique dub to help each other obtain vital antirejection drugs. There are 37 surviving transplant patients in*this country —36 kidney, one heart—and most of them have trouble paying for life saving pills. and medical checkups. A possible solution: the Transplant Aid Association, organized last January by Walter Mendes de Oliveira, who became rLRln AnveHei’S^fiW successful transplant patient when he receved a kidney Jan. 21, 1965, at Sao Paulo’s Hosital das Clinicas, and 1%. Geraldo Freire, the man who performed the operation. "Nowadays, a kidney transplant is as otdLnary technically, as an appendix operation,’’ said Oliveira, 44, president of the new association. "For many patients, the real problems begin when they leave the hospital.’’ All 37 transplants were performed at , Hospital da s Clinicas. Many of the patients, however, live away from Sao Pa u 1 o .One is from Recife—1,550 miles to the north, and must make long trips, at least once every 40: days, to return to the hospital foMests medicine. Most of the and checkups. ■ [transplant patients take EXPENSIVE i Imuran, an antirejection drug This is expensive. The pa-manufactured) in England. Until tients often must hold. extra recently, a box of, 100 Imuran jobs to earn extra money, and capsules cost 517 new cruzeiros this extra work can be physi-jln Brazil—|l26-equal cally dangerous ta them. [average monthly salary for a The main prcmlem is buying [Brazilian officer worker nes runs as high Clinicas makes furthr discounts as two capsules a day. Hie . Transplant Aid Associaton .won a major victory last month when it persuaded the federal Finance Ministry to drop the 95 per cent import tax on Imuran. The pills now cost about |6S, and Hospital das Hie association c o 11 e c.t s money—from the better-off tranaplant -patients—and also from anyone else who wants to contribute-rto help less;------. fortunate patients buy an-[arid most of the patients are] tirejection drugs. - Sometimes; poor. the association can pay the en-tire eqst.— MORE AND MORE "The problem," said (Mfreira,] 'is that more aftd ' fH orrej transplants are being performed! Hospital das Clinicas soon witt have the equipment and staff to perform right kidn:e..yt transplants a month. .||o ★ * ' "There’s no' doubt lliat our ^ i association has been successful iso far," Oliveira said, "but we BEATING HEAT - Italian starlet Laila Shed wear a bikini (what a way to go) on a visit to the Cblosseum to beat Rome’s heat. Ancient Skull IsaBigFmd Most Complete;Yet of Manlike Creature By National Geographic Society WASHINGTON - Fossil-rich Olduvai Gorge, Tahzahia has yielded the most complete skull yet found of homo habilis, the manlike creature who roamed East Africa, two million years ago. "When the skull has been studied, it should provide important new information concerning the relationship of homo habilis to other early hominids,” Dr. Mary Leakey reported. The momentous discoveries of Kenya-born anthropologist Dr. Louis S. B. Leakey and his wife, Mary, at Olduvai and other African sites have thrown brilliant light upon m a h ’ s origins. The new skull was found by Peter Nzube, an African member of Leakey’s staff. ENCASED IN UME "Mr. Nzube showed remarkable powers of observation is recognizing this specimen as hominid,’’ Afr, Leakey wrote, “since it was not only crushed, but also encased in lime concretion with only small portions of the bone exposed.” The nearly complete skull lacks only the lower jaw, some fragments of the twain case, anTanwfa ei dn> unoer teeth. Earth pressure severely L ed it prior to fossllization. Still partly embedded In its matrix, the *skull has hot yet AAONTGO/IAER WARD ent Sale custom cycles REGULARLY 299.95 sheafs, 10 bafh towels, 10 ihirfs, end 3 t-shirts in just one load ' New suspension system gives greeter stability-needs no off-belenco switch */a-HP motor plus heavy-duty transmission has strength of commercial-type washers ' Front service design allows easy accass to parts, means lower service charges AVAILABLE IN WHITE, COPPER. GOLD. AVOCADO SAVE 41.95 ON A GAS DRYER 188 REGULARLY $229.95 • Choose Heat or afronly with your pick of with or without fumbling—also has a giant 13-lb. capacity *• Choose automatic or timed diy-Hiutomafie dry control "senses" when load is dry and shuts itself off • 3 cycles-—with special cycles for permanent press, "air fluff' for freshening all your blankets and woolens • Available in the newest decorator colors for your home***? white, coppertone, harvest gold and avoCado THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1969 Problems of Japan's Welfare System Not Unlike U S. Woes welfare recipients could not find jobs because they lacked technical ftkills. Others, he said, were migrants! to cities from farm areas, T He added 'mat welfare supplements tiie social security Incomes of the elderly. Kato said his office wants to. increase welfare payments by —As In America,—Japanese welfare payments are based on family size, Kato said. If a recipient spends the money on gambling or (kinking, he said, tile Japanese system provides for "payments in kind," such as food and clothing. official of Japan's health ~itiid welfare ministry says his coun-ttylwalfaie system more similar problems to the tipn of strong family ties. American system,' but on a ' £ ★ ★ Kato said that while many welfare recipients in America are members of minority, groups, Japan’s Korean and Chinese minorities account for a relatively small percentage of the welfare total. sponsored tour of welfare, facilities in the United States, said that; unlike the localized U.S. system, welfare in Japan Is handled by 46 prefectures The official, Eiichi Kato, said welfare recipients in Japan are about 1.5 per cent of the 100 million population. A major reason.for this relatively low BUT FIRST, WARDS SAVINGS! Men's waiter- repellent \ 5-pocket hunting coat Keep extra • warm this hunt-: mg saason! 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SATURDAY 9:30 A.M, TO 9 P.M l NDAY 12 NOON TO 5 P.M. • 082- Pontiac .QSL {kkju Uj&aJU. • 85 ^..N I [UBShfiao B—18 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1969 Tiny trechtensfeinTries Hard ToRebuff lis Operetta Image? ^estblister resistance Outstanding Quality Superior in Valua Exclusive Features Lab Tested-Approved Rag. 5.49 Use on wood, masonry, stucco. Drips in minutes. 16-ft. aluminum • ■■ >• extension ladder —^ STURDY COMFORT "D" STEPS Wards flat "D-Steps" ara^ a aui designed for your working | y; comfort! Hydro <• locked | rungs can't Joosen or lad* BOSTON (AP) ~ A group of Negro parents in suburban Medford says the busing of their children to schools in o t h e r neighborhoods “deprives Mack citiz^ps of equal protection under the law," because white children are n o t transported into their area. Hie allegation is made in a $300,000 civil suit Idled hi U.S. District Cburt Charging constitutional violations in the busing ofj Negro children out-of the Her-' vey School area of Medford- , The suit was filed Tuesday by' tap. 49.99 Powerful,delivers 2.5 CFM at 35 PSI. Durabla 3. ply diaphragm Sealed ball baer- 9-in. roller kit for all painting Vfifh roller, coy. %9! $1 Off! Antique kit, easy-to-use ' \ * . -A WARD VADUZ, Liechtenstein (AP) — This tiny country is celebrating its 250th anniversary—and trying to banish the idea that ft's all part of an operetta. Concert?, fireworks-, -and—a huge folklore festival provide the trimiriings for the 20-day program of anniversary events; but emphasis is on a space show presenting a less-known industrial face of this alpine nation on the Upper Rhine. small adjacent lordships which then received the name of his house. — Hans Adam never saw the land. Nor did the princes who succeeded him (hiring the next century and a half. In 1858, Johann H took over. Although most of his ruling also was by remote control from Austria he laid the foundations which made Liechtenstein a midget island of peace in an era rocked by wars. During the 71 years of his reign Johann dissolved the 58-man army, declared Liechtenstein neutrality during World War I, and linked the principality In a customs and currency union to Switzerland which also represents if, diplomatically abroad. Under Franz Josef’s reign, since 1838, the country was spared In World War II,' and eventually became a synonym for prosperity. Franz Josef H Is o rope's richest men. ie of EJu-Although the family lost much property in the postwar takeovers in Czechoslovakia and Hungary, he still owns a half-dozen castles a Ad palaces in Austria in addition to financial interests. His collection of 1,500 paintings, begun by tifs ancestors 500 years agg, has beeniinofficlally valued at more than $100 million. His approval is required for every law. MORE DEMOCRATIC 'Bui he la more democratic than many of his countrymen,” said an aide. “It has happened he rejected a motion because he found it did not give enough guarantee tor individual rights." Helping him run the- country is a five-man coalition govem-ment composed of the two con-servative parties represented in the 15-member Parliament, Favorable tax conditions have made foreign-financed corporations pick Liechtenstein as their nominal headquarters by regis- tering here. These “letterbox" firms pay a token tax and bav$r flo other obligations-—---- Their number is an official secret but people who should know estlMatoltmmor«tham.lQ4»0 -almost double the head of cat* tie in the country. Bank and tax socrecy is pert of the national security act. The show publicizes Liechtenstein’s hitherto largely anonymous part in thq United States - spaee program. The chief ex-, hibitor is a local company turning out protective coating material tor space module windows among its range of sophisticated . products. . i* The company, -the country's largest, had a major roje in transforming Liechtenstein; from farm economy to one of the most industrialized nations on earth, with per capita exports 10 times higher than those of the United States. SMILE BRIGHTENER Another local pacesetter, also proudly mentioned in annlversa-ry documentation, is Europe's largest producer of false teeth, These brighten smiles in 80 countries. “We hope that some picture-postcard notions about Liechten-stein will be set straight in the future," explains the government press chief. Walter Kranz. ‘"Hiey clash with reality.. You may call us conservative but we are • very modern state." Attempts to de-romantlcize the national Image, however, may not have much impact on the tourists attending the ah-niversaryi events along with the 20,000 residents of the 61-square-mile principality. They marvel at the -thick-walled 13th century castle, perched 300 feet above fids capital. From it Franz Josef H can see four-fifths of his land, sand-wiched between Austria and; Switzerland. Power Slowdown Stops Trading at NY Stock Market Black-Parents Sue in Busing Dispute MONTGOMERY 'Open dally 10 ujk* ta 9 pn Sat.9t30a.nt. to T |m£T Sunday Naan ta O p.m. SAVE 3.02 A GALLON! Our best exterior latex • ' - - - ■ ■ . ■ ■ aars ■; jj-e» covers in just one coat Such a good paint it won Wards prized, "Excellence Awardl" In fact, we beliava it's the most durabla coverage available to* day! Acrylic latex formula is last* ingly beautiful. I-coat covers all painted exterior surfaces; wood, brick, masonry. Self-cleaning and non-chalking white, colors. JUST SAY "CHARGE W. Rag. 1.99 ‘ORIGINAL’ IMPORTS People squeeze through 1 narrow, winding streets of Vaduz, besiege stands offering a variety of “original souvenirs’’ imported from countries as far away as China, or queue up fof postage stamps. More than one fourth, of the national budget comes from stamps. Officially, • the principality came into being Jan. 23, 1719, through an edict by Karl VI, Hapsburg ruler of what then was known as the Holy Roman Empire. It was final recognition for service generations of Liechtenstein* had rendered the Hapsburgs as Austrian gener-als, diplomats and administra-tors. To become eligible for a seat and vote in the Imperial Council of Princes, some land had to be found by the Liechtensteins which could be ruled at well asf lorded over. Hans Adam ' Liechtenstein purchased two SAVE 1.52 GAL Wards interior dripless latex 97 NEW YORK (AP) - Trading was suspended for a half-hour Wednesday on the New York Stock Exchange after a power failure caused the. exchange’s computers to shut off. Consolidated Edison Co. said « 138,006-volt feeder cable had failed, sharply reducing current in lower Manhattan. The computers were shut off by a safety device to prevent damage from operating at low current. Lights flickered but remained - on as thr stock ticker stopped. Trading- continued for several minutes, then the Board of Governors called „a halt until‘the ticker was turned back on. . The failure' carile at 12:28 p.m. EDT. GALLON GUARANTII 7.49, Soft Sheen Latex Enamel 5.97 •ofoty Me* gi vo tafor, »ur. locking action! Slip-rosiitoHl: rubb.r fool; adjuitabl., toll. ^loifclpt «of.ty »boo».^ 49.97, 2S-foot oxtoo-ilo« ...... ........42.99 No paint odor! Now you can decorate a room in the afternoon, entertain that night — dripless latex dries to a matte finish in 30 minutes. In-white and washable colors. B—-19 THE PONTIAC PRESS THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1969 Writer Tells of Adding Touch to Anatomy of 'Naked Stranger' Sale ends Sunday Storm Windows 1.57 OFF! SCOTTY 2-TRACK Seals Attack 20 Caspian Bathers During Supimer About 20 Switch stormsend screens easily, from insidel Extruded - aluminum master frame has ramovable inserts that make cleaning a snap. Maintenance free. UP TO 101 COMBINED INCHES, Moscow 500 P.M. SAHKDAY 9t30 A.M. TO 9 P.M’.S I M)A\ 12 NOON TO 5 P.M, * 082-TOTO - (WITOWSNOTE — GwrflTBlll McHumin, the editor; Vecaey it one of the 25 news-paper-men end women who wrote the best-telling novel "Naked' Coma the Stranger' under the assumed name of Penelope Aaha: A sports reporter for the New York Timet, ha, tells of his Own role in the project.) r By GEORGE VECSEY Written for the Associated Press It started three years ago. I hid never written a^Birty book. 1 had never even read aUlriy book. Bemie Bookbinder, the space authority; and Robert Maser, the gifted young columnist. Time passed. I moved on to ,theJtoir_York Times., My wife my hpme, My wlfa grabbed It .----- first.. *‘I want to see what you wrote,” she said. "Let me guess.” She read for a few minutes, until she and I moved on to a newer, smaller house that doesn’t need renovation. Meanwhile McGrady’s sister-In-laty, Billie Yong, posed as “Renelope Ashe” for us and Lyle Stuart,1 the publisher, purchased the book. * ... - ........................ Finally the book arrived at discovered a chapter about Morton Earbrow, the man with a paint-scraping wife. “You -fir*:," my "wife said; "Here I am, expecting our third child and you make it sound like we don’t communicate." "Artistic license, my dear. Besides, we might make some money out of this. They’ve trying to sell the movie rights." "Oh,” she said, "that’s better." From what I understand, the same' thing happened in the other households as wives discovered a seamy but lucrative side to their journalist-husbands. Our first reviews came. Martin Levin in the New York Times gave Penelope only, a "C” grade in “erotic fantasy." McQrady was philosophical. "Hie guy read the book,” McGrady said, “He cpn tell bad writing when he sees it." Then the word leaked out about our group authorship, and we were afraid that the public would lose interest in the book. But just the opposite. Bookstores ran out of copies. There was a third and then a fourth printing. We got letters from all over the world — even some propqstilbps. • And what’ of the Mure? Well, this experience has opened up great possibilities for all of us. We are hoping to go to Hollywood to write the screenplay — perhaps portray our characters in the movie. We are also thinking of forming's commune somewhere in the south of Spain, where we will collaborate on a new filthy novel the story of W*' journalists who write a-dirty book, and the cohspquences in ail their, private and public lives. "We’re going to call it: "You Can’t Go Home Again Naked." Then one day I reported for work at Nowaday, in aubu ‘ Long Island, and found a memo from Mike McGrady, the cool Columnist. He was inviting 24 co-workers to, join the first group dirty novel. Write a badly as you can, he cautioned. f • .★ * ★ •/ •4cok at tiie garbage that gets printed," McGrady said. "We can be as bad as they are. It’s a massive put-down, a hoax." I took the challenge home me. FLECKS OF DISTRACTION I sat at my typewriter, trying to find an inspiration. But I had a headache and flecks of dried paint- were falling in my hair. My wife was scraping paint off a window frames above my head. We were busy renovating Our crumbling old farmhouse. ~“How can I be a serious writer while you scrape paint,” I demanded. j Then the muse struck. I would write a chapter about a typical suburban man who can no longer "communicate" with his wife because they are too busy renovating their old house. “What are you chuckling about?” Marianne asked. "I’m writing a chapter for a dirty book,” I replied. "Why don’t you help, me fix the house instead," she said. 2-HOUR MASTERPIECE I completed the masterpiece in two hours. The next day I gave it to McGrady. He said, . "Great. Some guy wrote too well and we had to turn their copy back tor, rewriting,-But your stuff is just what we wanted." Not sure how to take that, I asked what the others had written. Bob Green, Newsday’s stylish crime reporter, had written about a Mafia gangster. Bob Waters, a boxing writer who has been in the ring, wrote abouta prize fighter. ★ ★ * Harvey Aronson, the columnist about suburbia, wrote about a husband who can’t get the courage to cheat on wife. Jack Schwartz, another columnist, wrote about a rabbi. Jane Mergold of t h e entertainment section wrote about a hippie couple. Bob Wiemer, who reads pomagraphy, wrote about a professional pomographer. John Cummings, ex-Marine, wrote about. an . ex-Marlne. Other ^chapters were contributed by MOIVTGO/WER WARD 11.07 off! 30-gal. gas water heater Delivers up ie 43.7 p £% gg gallons of hot water* DC Special glass lining protects against rust. Rfft. 69.95 79.75 40-gallon heater ....... .4MB Save $25 on an 80,000-BTU Wards gas hi-boy furnace REGULARLY 134.99 Now you can get expensive furnace features at a low, low sale price! Luxury modelhas a leakproof steal heat exchanger, a long-lasting, rugged cast iron Inshot burner, end a cushion-mounted blower. 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THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1969 Small Brazil Town's Political Rift Could Trigger a Shoot-Out SAO JOSE DA* LAGOA TAPA- But when the council met lest Some members oil the council, like me,” Jenuncfo explained, nobody knows) as council presl- . Jose Jooo’s City Council kept DA, Brasil (APX — Sao Jose da Lagoa Tapada has political fwobtams. Two men are claim* "tag the post ftUa&L Council president, and each has fired all opposing members of the council. One council president keeps City Hall locked, so the other one Isolds meetings in a first aid station. Old-timers here say it might lead to a shoot-out. June, the mayor decided thst however, sld since Janunplo had been elected and wanted t at a special meeting (the Janih dent. They «ry inauguration), a new coun-with Janunci cil president should be chosen at office—espec the regular meeting. fired two C “Nobody’s having another and replace election,’’ Januncio said. “My daughter anc Tapada’a reputation for vfo-fowna- ■■ Januncio got into a fatal gun-fight. JO years ago with some soldiers—it started in a political argument—but he was acquitted on grounds of self-defense. CALM CITY? “Sao Jose is a calm city," “Januncio threatened to kill me, but I’m not afraid,” said Jose Joao.' Townspeople were worried, Sao Jose da Lagoa Tapada Is a town straight out of a late show TV 'Western. It lies in Am dry scrub countryj of Paralba Stfite* in nortltaasteiin Brasil, far removed from the fnajor industrial centers , of file country. Population: about 19,000. SPECIAL ELECTIONS Following a national political reorganization in Brazil, special elections were held last year for Sao Jose's seven bity council-men. They were inaugurated in * " year, and Jan* innwMs 5'3^i S! January of ______ undo RoCha de Araujo was elected council president. ClTV Traditionally, the Sao Jose City Council meets from June 10-Tuly 10 and again fmpi Nov: 10-Dec. 10. The council president is elected In June for one year.- — Riverside® Glasbelt THE EXTRA MILEAGE TIRE !Th« tire that offers you up tp 40% more mileage! Bbaf glass belts make the difference. {Balts circle the bias-ply nylon cord body to improve traction (by keeping the tread design open), boost mileage (by minimising tread squirm) and resist impact damegp with tensile strength greater than steel. Guaranteed igainst tread wearout for 30 full months. Buynow, save! TWO FIBER GLASS BELTS CIRCLE THE CORD; BODY Allow greater traction, minimise freed squirm. Agencies Get Prod on Hiring of Nonwhifes working to employ minority group members. The governor, in a letter sent to file agency chiefs, said in a review conducted of the incidence of Negro and Spanish-speaking employes in classified state service indicates “more 42-month battery at our special low, low price IZ-yott exchange “We are still hiring: more black women in menial Mbs and are excluding black men from employment opportunity." he A battery that surpasses original equipment quality! Oil-protected plates prolong battery life. Epoxy-bonded top seals in power that insures fast starting. 50-pnonth XHD Battery conditions. Cuts Bank Bobbed 4th Time in 4 Years X-tra heavy-duty battery that enures more power. \ fits l&V .American cars. SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP) - “I don't believe it ... I don’t believe it. What is it? Do we have Mfban Co. was robbed for!the; B time in twoyears.Itiisp ^I the1, fourth time a Southland branch in the San Diego area has been held up in 90 days. AAOIVTGO/VIERY WARD open Monday mar Friday 10:00 \.M. TO 9:00 FM. s vn rd\y o;:jo A.M. TO 9 FM l M)\\ 12 NOON TO 5 P.M. • OH2- TUBELESS REGULAR SALE PLUS BLACKWALL PRICE * PRICE ' F.E.T. is' SIZES EACH BACH EACH 4.50.13 21.00*. 15.75* 1-50 i Xygj4 7J5-I5 28.00* |,9| 8.25-14 «.IBtl5 25.00* h^lilBO* 2.10 L 2.2Q 8.55-14 3l.00*r 23.50* 2.46 .... 8.45-15 2.41 ; *With trade-in tiro off your oar. Whitewalls $3 more each.;; THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1909 IdJ-thlund, Bobu* Boon for boor ohopponu Hudson’* Downtown open Monday ind Wednesday till 8 30. Northland, Eastland, Westland, Pontiac *od n«vi»n^ open Monday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday till 9. 129.95 Stowaway bod Bunk bod S3?ssr 10095 Panel bod. full or twin 29.95 76.95 Mirror Single 2S2$: 134.50 aSS1* 134.50 cht, 94.95 • IB • IB • t m -sJ 4fai| Chest 99.95 •1 Is 9 '• (IB # \j£\ <* o ) o <5> | —"—- ckwt 76.95 Bed, full £QQC or twin Ow*wO 17th Anna*! Bloomfield Antique Show,ill a.m. until 10 p.m. in Cranbrook School gym. The show, which benefits the Michigan Animal Rescue League Shelter, Inc., also runs Frldw and Saturday. Open to the public. SATURDAY Northside American G. I. Forum, 0 p.m., CAI building. Annual schol-arship dance. Tickets available at' door. youve got to €ome Pontiac We think you’ll find it most rewarding as yon browse through onr vast house. 114, count ’em, 114 exciting bedrooms to see, from mellow Mediterranean to comfortable Colonial and everything in between* Whether your tastes are subtle or psychedelic, there’s a Bedder bedroom . .. and bedding ... to match the mood you’re in ... aind your price range, too. We’re Bedder that way. At least that’s what people tell us. We invite you to see for yourself. Our Bedder Guarantee 1 All furniture may be returned within thirty * 'days for a full cash refund if you are not satisfied for any reason. 2# All furniture will be serviced at np charge for as , * long as you own it. - The Better ledroom People on Telegraph Ppad Winners in the opening night competition, ofthe animl Miss America Pageant were, left, Miss New Mexico, Patrwfa*Mplummet and, Hits Ohio, Kathy Lynn Baumann. MissBrummetbf, Hobbs, N.M., won the talent competition and Miss Baumann of Sotding Green, Ohio took the swim suit contest m the pageant being, held in Atlantic city,NJ:. .; ' *_LC**$ 3 We will refund the difference jp cash if you should happen to receive a lower price on the same furnitnre within one month. 1711S. Tategraph ML. BtowHIeW, BstwtM Minch Milt Mi Orchard Libit .STORE HOURS: MONDAY SATURDAY 9 TO 9 • CALL 334-4593 By JANET ODELL Women’s Editor, Hie Pootfae Press ... ^.‘‘lsn!t. lt discouraging to realize that every morning when you get "up, you’re' out of date?” “Fashion is for, the whole world and should be fun, not sober, dead or i religious experience.” g j “There must be something between conservative and bad taste.” “There is no explanation ter clothes any more — just “Do you like them?’ ” With quips such as the above, one of the fastest paced, most colorful and gayest fashion shows I’ve ever ex-perienced inaugurated Winkelman’s Salute to Italy. Calendar T hose Ro mans Are Fountains of Creativity A classtcpm-stripe V-neck car- digan sweater in navy tops a sleeveless tunic shell tn white and Claudio’s skirt is pure camel. 1969 fall—pleated. All fashions shown Stripes of taupe, gray and beige march diagonally across the ■ 100 per cent pleated wool dress at the left. By Sicem. The tunic-look dress at the right, also a wool knit, comes in red or blue with gray. By lncerti. All wool outfit of plaid pants with wide legsrlong cardigan jacket and ribbed sleeveless shell is the sportswear look by Framo. Also in plaid ts Frame’s Jacket dress of 1V0 per cent wool knit (right). He Promised Her Marriage After the Harvest Time She Questions "Taste Involved in Situation By ELIZABETH L. POST Of The Emily Post Institute Dear Mp. Poet: Recently my mother- in-law passed away. She had four sons and two jiaughters. Without saying anything to any of the others, one brother had cards printed which read this way: "Refreshment# at John and Mary’s, 10 Main Street." These cards were put Jft the cars outside of tin By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: I suppose a 29-year-old girl should know better than to get hersdf in a fix like this! but it’s too late now. Billy got me in a family way. (He is 42.) He said he would marry me right after harvest time. He didn’t have any cash on hand so I bought myself a set of rings and started right off wearing the wedding band because I was starting to show. I paid 30 dollars down on the rings and two dollars a week. Then I had a miscarriage. Billy says there is no sense in marrying me now. So now I am stuck with no husband, no baby and, a aet of rings. What should I do? : :..LULU DEAR LULU: I think you’re well rid of a man who might not have gotten around to marrying you at all. 1. don’t know how long you’ve had the rings, but > ^perhapstha jeweler will take them bade if you agree to stand s6me loss? Under the circumstances 1 think you came out ahead. % * DEAR ABBY: I know a man who ' insists that there Is ho such thing between a man and a woman as a “platonic” friendship. He says that given the time and opportunity they^Btil form ............." *-,at physical relationship. What do you think? ' MITZIE DEAR MITZIE: I think anyone who would subscribe to such a theory is admitting that he is incapable of holding the interest of a member of the opposite sex without a physical relationship. - * * * DEAR ABBY: Neat where I live is a creek, which naturally is a big attraction to the adventuresome little neighborhood boys. One day Iwas surprised to hear the father of oim of the boys tell the whole bunch that there were monsters in the creek, and if they played near it, the monsters would catch them. I disapproved of this “scare technique” from the start, but I just kept my mouth shut. It’s true that the hoy* don’t play near the creek an/ more, but I think more harm than good was done by that monster story. Today I hqd a sobbing bunch of kids in njy living room. They were afraid to leave because "the monsters are out there” (This was in * broad daylight. I wonder what they dream about?) . ■> . Ar /. * I also wonder what will happen when Junior finds out that Daddy lied to him, Personally I think it is wrong to lie to children to make them behave. Good old fashioned (and .honest) discipline builds better characters In the long run. As it says in Proverbs 22:6, “Train up a child in the way he should go, and when -he is old he will not depart from It.” What do you sayrAbby? TRUTHFUL RANGER DEAR RANGER: I’m with Proverbs. . *' * ■*„ ■ DEAR ABBY: Ask the man who owns the mute parakeet if he knows whether he has a male or female bird. If he has a female, he. had better forget about trying to get it to talk because only the males talk, * * * ' * And by the way, Abby, do YOU know KSRPto tell the difference between a male and female parakeet? And don’t tell me that it matters only to another parakeet.. PARAKEET OWNER DEAR OWNER: The male parakeet has a bluish, .brownish stripe across his beak. The female beak Is clear. Ha! Everybody has a problem. What’s yours? For a personal reply write to Abby, care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056, and enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. . For Abby’s booklet, “How to Have a Lovely Wedding,” send $1 to Abby, care of Hie Pontiac Press, Dept E-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac MIcb. 48056. Two years in the planning, this event heralds a complete line of Italian designed and' made clothing about to appear in every city where Winkelmans has a store. The gala begins on Monday. Peter Glen; a bouncy, talkative, alert commentator, came to Detroit from New York to emcee the show. He was constantly in motion and his refreshingly different patter did full justice to the cldthes. Knits and .more knits. Cotor no psychedelic mixtures, biit strong and clear and wearable — marks the collection. Pants are in for all occasions. Everything has shape and there is evidence that-designers are more aware— of the shape of the body. But it is soft shape. There was one maxi coat and a couple of'evening gowns. But the rest of the story was short. .._____A.., ? Glen says fashion should be silly and fun and pretty. He refused to take himself or the models or the clothes seriously. Preceding the fashion show, a taped interview with Emilio Pucd, famous Italian designer, was heard. Pucd who' looks like a successful business man (he is, in fact, a meffiiber of lhe Italian Parliament) was asked to make a fashion forecast. “Fashion,” he said, "is not oriented by capricious people like myself, but la Influenced by main events, such as scientific and technical discoverlehrOur time is dominated by the fantastic discovery of thi way to move men from earth to another planet. “For early fall or winter, I see a strong feminine and romantic feeling pervading fashion. . W« are,sawing into an era that, rather than unisexual, will be very 'bisexual. Men will took very mascullne snd women very feminine.”. The affair was catered just like a big party. My husband was very hurt. as qreri his sisters, so the/did not attend. Do you not find this odd and in very poor taste?—Mrs. M. J. * * Dear Mrs. J.: There was nothing odd about serving refreshments after the —funeralreven catered ones, but the way in which the invitations were issued was extremely odd. In the first place, only relatives, close friends, and people who came from out pf town should have been Invited. * * * Second, the invitation should have been by hand-written note or telephone. To drop them in all the cars new the church makes them seem like a political flyer or advertisement. And third, all the brothers and sisters should have been consulted first. Women/ THE PONTIAC PRESS, . , THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1989 C—1 " f THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER *, 1969 Glancy Tudor Mansion Setting for Annual Tea ■ Mr*. AlfredR. Glancy Jr/wllUeach year at outstanding open her Lake Shore Drive Detroit area homes. M r a. home in Grosse Points Shores Glancy’s Thdor mansion was for the 16th annual International built by Albert Kahn In IBM and Tea of the Michigan Division, Is highilghtedby a huge terrace Woman’s Natiohal Farm and overlooking the lake. Beginning Week of September Christmas Tree Bums in Home Oct. 1. Mrs. Wilbur H. Mack Is chairman of the tea. Otters Involved include Mesdames: J. Philip Wernette, Clarence A. Brosteau, Walter Patterson, WICHITA, Kan. (AP) - A Christmas tree was the cause of a fire In a Wichita home in the middle of the summer. Mrs. Alicedean McDuff was away from home at the time but she had inadvertently left a plastic Christmas tree leaning*against a.gas watef heater in her utility room. The boater switched on and ignited the tree which caused some damage in the utility room before the blase was ex- Enroll now! Classes limited Registration doses September itfh BISHOP METHOD Bishop I thru VI Rochester; Mrs. John Q. Nagel of Metamdra. This year’s event, will be held on Oct. 1 from 2 to 4 p.m. in the Alfred R. Glancy Jr. home on Lake Shore Drive, Grosse Pointe Shores. _- Confirming plans for the 16th annual International Tea of the Michigan Division, Woman’s National "Farm and Garden Association, is this member trio, from left, Mrs. James Lafer of Grosse Pointe; Mrs. Frank R. Chapman of GENERAL SEWING 'Little Brown' New Look Fete Whatsons on Anniversary Mr. and Mrs. Albert W. What-son of Monticello Street will celebrate their golden wedding anniversary at an open house at their* daughter’s home on East Second Avenue Saturday. Mr. . and Mrs. James B. coffee cream, brown is perfect — and sensible — for days at the office, yet splendidly sophisticated for evening wear. R is an utterly dependable color, giving a woman yglue as well as a switched-on look. Discerning women rate it better than black because it is softer-toned, looks marvelous on blondes, brunettes and redheads. Choose it with confidence if you want to reduce UNS1YLED TAILORING Sprague "have invited guests to honor her parents, who were married Sept. 6, 1919. The other Whatson children, Mrs. Edith Blocher of Dwight Street and Mrs. Walter Lingerfelter and her family , of Fourth Avenue, To Register Call 6824940 Or your Pontiac Words Sowing Machine & Yard Goods Dopt. glasses held at Since brown is so elegantly understated, b e imaginative with accessory colors. Team it | with red, yellow, orange, blue, pink, green and turquoise. i Mr. and Mrs.- Whatson, have five grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. FOR YOUR WEDDING . . . QUALITY and QUANTITY! | TO save time, in preparing a ! large dinner, prepare the vegetables a day ahe?d. They will keep perfectly without loss of vitamins if you place them in mason jars and screw the tops on tightly. Store in refrigera- Select a lipstick shade that will tone best with your accessories. Play up the beputy of a smooth, flawless skin when you wear fashion’s newest shades of brown. C. R. HASK1LL STUDIO °ra#n^icii” FE 4-0553 Ring Fire Alarm During Wedding GARRETT, Ind. (APT- Volunteer fireman Henry Moses had been answering fire alarms here for 35 years. But when the whistle blew the otter day, he failed to respond, because he was in the midst of being married to Eunice Parker of Garrett,, The whistle turned out to be a Molyneux’s cream colored lace and satin evening goum as shown at,Jail collection in Paris. Miracle mile PONTIAC MALL OAKLAND MALL MoCouultMA Co/ipeto ESTABLISHED 19.11 Zip-lined with warn acrylic pile. Choice selection of colon. NATURAL MINK ON GENUINE SUEDE COATS Just Arrived, Beautiful Ndw KITCHEN CARPET Select from a wide choice of attractive colors. Everyone** favorite ‘Suay Wong’ coat in great color*; luxury natural mink collar*. Fort labeled to 1I10W country of ori|ln of imported fan , Corner of Perry and Pike Streets 1K Perry SC • ■ ■ FE 4-25: Practical Glamour for the IHTMIEII THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4. I960 Teeth Grinding Often Caused by Worry By DR. HOWARD E. KESSLER Minhy readers tell me that they are quite worried about' the fact that almost every night they grind their teeth while they are1 asleep. The| are sure that? they are doing It because the grinding 4a heard by the spouse or room* mate. gg — These people have a right to ____— be concerned because they might easiry damage their den-tal -structures ,if this habit (called bnixigm) Is continued over a long period of lime. During the unconscious state of sleep you can put much more pressure on your teeth than when you are awake. 1 mi always amazed when I read ail of the numerous studies on sleep that have been made down through the years that we still do not know very much about what actually takes place within the brain of a sleeping individual. *. ■! After your , dentist has thosoughly checked the mouth and found tHat your teeth and occlusion are in perfect condition, what Is the. cause of nocturnal grinding? there are several reasons, but the moat common seems to be tension and late evening excitements Money, domestic, health and job worries' carried to the.pUlow often do it. for 61 years ;,. ■ the first step on, the way Back-To-School begins at FOOTWEAR FOR CHILDREN 245 Pierce, Birmingham Ml 4*0911 ' AND NOW IN WATERFORD 5899 Dixie Hwy. Independence Commons ... 623*9638 investing structures of their teeth because their stage of growth will usually institute immediate repair. In youngsters the habit is often caused by exciting late television shows or by scuffling with brothers and sisters just before getting into bed. TO PREVENT What can be done to prevent piiances lessen the damage night grinding? Avoidance of being done to the dentaT struc-worry, tension and excitement before going to bed is one of thej first things to consider. I have Are you or is a member of found that the power of sug- your family interested in Den* gestion is -quite—effective—In tistry II a Career? A new book many cases. - on the subject is .available free * ★. , *' ; of charge by sending a self-ad- Just before dropping off to dressed, stamped long en-sleep, say to yourself, “Now velope to: fir. Howard E. and for the rest of the night, Kessler, The Pontiac Press, keep your teeth a Utile bit apart!Dept. E-600 P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, and your jaw relaxed.” [Mich. 48056. New style for your old diamond Now we can make your diamond look so much lovelier in one of dur new, modern settings. We Will enhance the brilliance of your diamond quickly and beautifuiFy ... at a surprisingly low cost. -, riV- -it vr' Ring Sizing and Engraving done on premises II i c LOW OVERHEAD il An tow prices hrck u» far Quality Diamond* Bloomfield Miracle Mile Near Cunningham’'1 Bloomfield Plaaa Telegraph and W. Maple Then if your spouse or room* mate hears yqu grindinK again, during the night, he or she can sometimes reinstitute the suggestion by firmly repeating in your ear what you said to yourself before going to sleep. Children who grind at night are not so apt to damage the Perhaps the lower part of the brain picks up the statement. You do not even have to fully wake up for this suggestion to be seeniingly referred to the upper part of the brain, and.you will often stop grinding. '+ it- >■ • ,| In stubborn, severe cases of night grinding the .dent i st sometimes makes a splint-like appliance for the patient to wear while sleeping. These ap- “ Former Dryden residents, Mr. and Mrs. Vermn Smitk.~-mlL Jxehamred with an oven hbme~Trom ~2 to 4 p.m. at Sacred Heart Parish Hall in Imlay City, Sept. 7. The couple was married Sept. 5, 1919, at Mount Clemens. Their children are: Marvin, of Detroit, Mrs. JoAnn Ly-sell of Livonia and Mrs. William, (Marilyn) Brinker of Imlay City.' There are seven grandchildren. , Recent Rites Join-Few- A bouquet of roses and carnations accented Joy Marie Daniels’ satin and lace wedding gown. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Earnest A. Daniels of StirUng Street married Gary Wayne Adler in a Saturday morning ceremony at Perry Park-Baptist Church. Guardians of the bridegroom are Mr. and Mrs. William Adler of Fairmont Street. .*•—*' T" Alma Penny and Jerry Daniels served as honor attendants for the wedding. A church parlors reception preceded the couple’s departure for a honeymoon in northern Michigan. Mclnfyra-Wright St. Clement Catholic Church, Center Lone, was the setting Saturday morning for the marriage of Joyce Marie Wright and 2.C Electronic Technician, Keith Wallace McIntyre, USN. Beverly Sava was maid of honor for the bride who chose a Chantilly lace gown. A cascade of carnations and roses comprised her bouquet. Parents of the bride are Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Zisler of Warxen. • • —- —- Michael McIntyre was best £ JgT ARE BETTER AT • BETTER SELECTIONS • BETTER SIZE RANGES • BETTER FITTED Our fitters ore trained and qualified to give your child the individual and personalized attention hp should have . . . Trust us to know and care. Jumping-Jacks. The n«w demi-boots for your youngest scholsra. Not quite booth . ..not just up-fronts. Boot-shoes for class-timeand the new casual-time pant looks. Sleeked with polished, antiqued finishes... constructed for famous Jumping-Jacks* flexibility and fit. According to size, 12.95 to 14*95 - BLOOMFIELDT’LAZA SHOPPING CENTER I(Comer Maple end Telegraph) MA 6-2566 Charge Accounts, of Court* “We've Grown Big By Staying Small” . PRINTED PATTERN man for his brother. They are the sons of the R o b e r t McIntyres pt Troy- Following a reception -Warren Chateau Hall, - t h e netelyweds departed for a hpneymoon trip through Canada and the New England states. They will make their hofoe in San Juan, Puerto Rico, where he is stationed. Moore-Brand First Presbyterain Church of Royal Oak was the setting for the Saturday afternoon exchange of vows of Carole Joan Brand and James Richard WE SEE YOU going places this summer in a fluid skim with side-interest pleating flinging out beneath decorative buttons, cuff collar. Printed Pattern 4553: New [isses’ Sizes 8, 10, 12, 14, 16. Size 12 (bust 34) takes 2Vt yards 30-inch fabric. Sixty-Five Cents in coins for each pattern — add 15 cents for leach. pattern for first-class Send to Anne Adams, care of The Pontiac Press, 137 Pattern Dept., 243 West 17th St., New York, N.Y. 10011. Print Name, Address with Zip, Size and Style Number. ring-Summer Pattern Catalog. Free pattern coupon. 50 cents. INSTANT SEWING Book • cut, fit, sew modem way. $1.00. New“fN$TANT FASHION Book — secrets of successful wardrobe planning, figure flattery, accessory tips. $1,00. Clean and demoth woolen articles of clothing such as wool ses, shirts, skirts, and sweaters. Immediately wrap each one carefully in aluminum fob and store away until ready to use again. " ” ANNUAL BALDWIN INTERL0CHEN PIANO SALE Substantial Savings Each year at’tha and of tha Intarlochan Mason wo announce this unique sale. Grand!, Consoles and Spinet -pianos used only at Interlochen for nine weeks by dls. tinguished members of the staff and faculty, ora offered far sale at prlcss which cannot be duplicated. These pianos are returned te us and carefully checked, tuned and polished before delivery. Layaway Man $miley Bros. ~ Free Private Parking-' ~~ Thurs. aodFri. eves. carried a bouquet of daisies.' The couple is. honeymooning th northern Michigan. The couple was feted at a reception in the Kingsley Inn following the ceremony. . * . ★ ★ Mqid of honor was Jeralyn Marvin and best man Michael Mitchell. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Brand of Huntington Woods was gowned in Venetian lace. She carried a bouquet of carnations and Stephanotis. " Parents of4he bridegroom are Mr. and Mrs. Richard I. Moore of Oakland Avenu,e. r York-Ealem Nancy Lymr Ealem and 2nd. Lt. Kenneth Ray York, USA, married Sunday i n Galilean Baptist Church Highland. Martha O’Connor and the bridegroom’s brother, Alvin, led the bridal party. A reception followed in the church parlors. * * - ★ The bridegroom, who is stationed at Ft. Sill. Okla., is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Lester York ofHighland. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Kelley of Highland chose gown of chiffon with ace and WANT TO SELL LAWNMOWERS, POWER MOWERS, ROLLER SKATES, WAGONS, BICYCLES? USE A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIEpi TUr TO PLACETTOURS, CALL 332-8181. BLOOMFIELD Frigidaire 14.4 cu. ft. Frost-Proof Refrigerator Door Storage! Butter compartment. snick keeper, removable trtys for 24 eggs, deep door shell. Frost-proof! You'll never defrost again! No space lost to frost. Defrosts only when needed. Bottom Freezer! Holds up to 155 lbs. Roll-To-You basket for easy storing of bulky packages. ‘W'liere Quality Furniture Is Priced Right*9 Mondays and Friday* ’til 9 P.M., Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, , - Saturday ’trt 5|30 P.M. :2|3& Orchard Lake Rd.* 333-7052 Trade-in sewing machines •laei^Lumbar Belts • Maternity Garm.nf* •Surgical Most • Ankla Wrist and Knae Braces • Sacroiliac BaNt• Cervical Collars SINGER Sew & See Guarantee : With every used sawing machine go«« AND WE HAVE YOUR SIZEl credit toward the purchese of a new SINGER* sawing machine, within 90 daysl And Singer has aCredft flan to fit your budget. SINGER » PONTIAC MALL, 682-0350 TlWrWILVl, J53-1330 OAKLAND MALL, 5SS-501O BIRMINGHAM, 323 EAST MAPLE, Ml 4.0050 , Prescriptions 0T4.Q466or6T4.44S5 C—4 THIS PONTIAC PRflSfr THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, T9Q9 New Classes heduled at Arts Center Pontiac Creative Arts Center is offering several new classes In Us fall schedule for children adults. Jane Christenson will teach new. ideas in decoupage; Leon Haskins, commercial lettering; Marvin Beerbohro, basic and life drawing and Lorralne McCarty, new approaches in Icrjffies:' Barbara Weil of Royal Oak, | new to the staff, will be jteachirigwatcr tolorT ♦ * .' 1 Offered again are several popular classes: Creative weaving, taught by James Hansman; life drawing and painting, Tim Haven; creative j-acryHesy. .Ruth Loring-Janaa; m WU^NDliKS~.l?EY1&TJDinG2^~ Honor the Clyde Donigans * An onen house Sunday from I The honorees, wed on Sept. 5, . .. 2-5 p.m. in their daughter’a^Mi" in Muskegon, have- two I ^fp^e, Carol ~G*o oTaK , home on Orchid Street, wffllcWldwn, Mrs. ®el™er En,gfJ>r,et| beginning oils, Carol Miley and •— «**» -*BTiXSMf£ *■ versary of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde^Donigans, former.Pontiac resl-1 operation Artstart, cospon-Donigan. dents, jiow live in Cotter, ArkJsored by PCAC and Oak- land Community College, is ! for 3 to 5-year-olds, held Tues-‘day and Thursday mornings. Joyce Cotter, - Barbara Jones land Marge Gibson will again be {introducing the youngsters to I self-expression in music, voice, painting and sculpture. SEWSIMPLE By Eunice Farmer Dear Mrs. Farmer, I am planning a winter coat for collegej REGISTER NOW this year and would like some suggestions on what to use as Courses cover 10 weeks, Sept, warm linings and interlinings. Carol B. 15 through Nov. 22. Registra- Tr..:v."'— ... “ ' .. . {tions are being taken at the Pear Caiol, There are many variations to the ordinary type r,_.„ - m tn 4 n lining that wbuld not only add warmth to your coat but dash as Hally except Friday no WW>1 knits as ujining. D>w could |^gh ^ 15 cla^ses a" ®2SSfhaf,'lH,h«? dreMJwlth “ attached, hood that could a^rnoons and even- add additional warmth around your neck. i" 0 — p I ” . - " ... . . j, •- ; You could line the wool coat with, corduroy, wfaiqfa gives a Further Information may bej_ . ~ warm and comfortable feeling. However, because of the! obtained by calling or visiting r * thickness of this fabric, I wouldn’t advice usifig it in'the sleeves, [the Arts Center' on Williams' Rochester Town Hall Changes Speakek A change in program of the, -Town-Hall Series Is Miss--America, wtU round -CUt Motors CorporaUfflL. necessitated by the withdrawal Peggy Cass from her, scheduled appearance. 1 In her place, Kreskin, “Mr. SP,” will open the series on Sept. 24 at tne Hills Theater. Series ticket holders should use ticket number one for this lecture despite the change in speakers. Dig Into Soap MRS. K. E. PUTNEY MRS. C. W. CUTTER Couples Speak Vows in Candlelight Rites Marilyn Van Derbur, former the series on March 18,1970. v Miss Van Derbur, television and radio personality, is consultant to Best Foods on youth affairs and is the only woman presently making appearances as a guest lecturer for General Tickets for the series may be had by writing Rochester Town Hall, P.O. Box 304, Rochester, 48063, or from Selma’s Smart Shop, Welch’S-Op-thWlIH or ClassiqueTCoiffurfl, Rochester. Before tackling any “dirty’ Jobs, dig your fingernails into a bar of soap — Jthe soap will act! pro tectlb h against' troublesome dirt that leaves ugly* stains and traces underneath fingernails. ' Cotton fibers are dried-up “ lUBesor ceiiurose." ATTENTION COLLEGE STUDENTSl For your bcck-to-compus Decora-live Waste Baskets and TowerNeecTs . . . See our large selectionl Also SEE our WILD, WOOLY RUGS, A. R. HOUSEKEEPER PLUMBING 722 W. HumnSt - Phono 332-5061 Yf Barbara Ann ■ Johnson and •Keith Eric Putney were married Friday in a candlelight ceremony in First Open Bible Church. They wereiater feted at a reception in First Federal Savings of Oakland. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Friday evening exchange of Marvin L. Johnson of Briggs Street chose a .gown of nylon organza over taffeta with lace accents, She carried a bouquet of carnations with an orchid. The bride was attended by her sister, Mrs. Paul Hine. The bridegroom’s brother, Rodney, performed the. duties of best man. - ★ ★ ★ They are the sons of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Paynter of Central There is an insulated lining that is coated with aluminum, that has been highly advertised. I personnaly dont care,’ much! for this because it feels cold to slip on (guess it’s a "mental attitude, but it doean’t seem warm to me). There la also a lining that is satin on one side and wool on the other which works beautifully. Then you may go way out and use one of the new fake furs or fleeces for a lining. I would use one of the above suggestions and avoid an interlining. Thanks once again for coining forth with loads of answers to ‘ a reader’s question. Mrs. K. S. wrote asking for information about a tape measure converting the metric system of measure used in Europe to inches. It seems that they can be located in most large cities. , However, until you run into a shop that'carries them, Mrs, C.. S. suggests you take your metric tape measure and staple it to one i Side Of your regular tape measure, b this way you will have i both of them in front of you, besides putting two of them together will definitely make them stronger. (Again thanks to you 1 readers'I can pass on the following information: 100 centimeters! equal one meter. One meter equals 39’3Y Inches!). j......... Variety of Knits in Fashion Scene Fashionably speaking, cotton knits show up this fall smooth lisle Jerseys, with drape and sheen, as well as in chunky raised surface versions that have an—authentic—haruL crocheted' look. Raised-surface knits come in nubby, ribbed, or cable-stitched constructions, An Extra -Hint Here's an extra hint for hairwashing: Use a weU-lathered, The newlyweds are honeymooning in nbrthern Michigan. Ross-McCarty A reception In the Union Hall, Local 36 in Wixom followed the • wedding vows of Valerie Ann McCarty and Gerald S. Ross. For the ceremony in Our Lady of Refuge Catholic Church, the bride chose an A-line style gown of silk with Alencon lace accents. She carried carnations and roses with ivy. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon R. McCarty of Waited Lake was attended by Qynthia Burrows as maid of honor. Larry Ross, performed the duties of best man for the son of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley W. Cutter-Edelen Ross of Pontiac Trail, Westj * , ,, . _. , Bloomfield Township. Janet Marie Edelen was| pj^e newlyweds are honey-escorted to the altar of ^ mooning in Florida and Nassau. Lady of Refuge Catholic Church1 for her exchange of vows with Charles William CutteF o n Saturday. The candlelight ceremony was TAILOR TRIX WINNER Mrs. David O. Dyer, Clemmons, N.C., ii this week’s Tailor Trix pressing board winner for her following suggestion. — “Here's a little frick for filling the bobbin that makes my sewing easier. Don’t unthread the machine to fill a bobbin from the spool of thread you are using. Just flick the thread out of the upper tension Wheels, put the machine in neutral and fill away. The thread flows smoothly through the other gadgets as well as the needle.” (Bravo, this is one of file neatest tricks you readers have ever sent me. Re-filling a bobbin 1s one of those little aggravating chores, but with this new suggestion, you don’t even mind running out of thread.) A Crochet Look: me caiiaieumu ceiemuiiy was. Piexiform, an i mprovedl witnessed by honor attendants! Malimo-type fabric that com-j Rebecca Edelen, Jhe bride’s .bines an interesting blend of sister, and Donald A-Cutter Jr.,Irayoft and polyester, has a brother of the bridegroom. jthick-and-thln crochet look. ★ a a Completely washable, IPs ap-l TOebridechoseago)TO^f|pearThg in beachwear, organza with lace and carried a! sportswear and menswear. bouquet of daisies. She is the I ----------------;— daughter of Mr. and Mrs. For a special treat for the George Edelen of K e e g o children, make them banana Harbor.—- [milk shakes by slicing a fully * * ★ ripened banana into a mixing! The. son of Mr. and Mrs.|bowl, beat at a low speed with! Donald Cutter of Piainwell and mixer until smooth, and then his bride were feted at a+add one cup of cold-milk. Shake | stiff hair brush to stimulate-the! reception in Cass Lake Com-jhard to mix, using a quart Jarl scalp and remove particles oflmunity Center following the with a tight lid, or use a mix-j dead skin from its surface. j ceremony. . ler. Dear Mrs. Farmer, la there an easy or attractive way to] finish a vest out of corduroy? I have made them.reversihK but somehow they never seem to look professional. Since so many school girls like the tunic type vests that don’t button, I thought you might have a suggestion. Mrs. v. P. -r— - ★ 1 * Dear Mrs. V. P.t A California manufacturer has designed! one of the most attractive vest type corduroy ensembles I have ever seen.. The tunic was coordinated with bell-bottom pants to be worn with a long sleeve shirt 6f a soft fabric. Die vest finished with a self binding of corduroy about one inch wide. This must be cut nn the bias in order to work ground the curves and prevent excess bulkiness. Diere is no reason why this vest couldn’t be reversible. You could use an attractive print on one aide, place the two layers of the assembled vest together (wrong sides touching) pm andj baste the outer edges together and machine stitch the outer edges to hold together. You must machine stitch them about % inch from'the cut edge, then cut away the original % inch seam allowance and finish the raw edges with your bias strips of corduroy, matching print cotton blouse could midee an attractive alternative for an extra blouse. So you save more! .3 BUY! SEU! TRADE! 9 USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! SHRIMP FRY FAMILY STYLE "ALL YOU WANT" STEAMED SHRIMP, served Vi* Drawn Butter, DEEP FRIED SHRIMP, with homemade Snappy Saufe. Huge TOSSED SALAD* Choice of POTATOES, Hot HOMEMADE Bread. EVERY FRIDAY RIGHT 5 to 10 PM. Wood ward & Square Lako Rd. Ml 4-7764 BLOOMFIELD HILLS At Sibley's. • Miracle Mile Cabbies... .with snub nose foes... law-down heels in pow-wow shades. They’re eastside... westside... all over town. Acquire the total look .,. with a feeling of confidence. Smart, attractive contemporary casuals that will meet the needs ola busy and active life. Choose tie-ons, strapped, buckled or chain-links in a wide variety of j soft leathers, rich textures or suede creations. THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1969 SHOPPING CENTER WA.' Die Camera Mart's BUDGET- PRICED CAMERAjSPECIAt! PTTI SANKYO MICRO CM ZOOMSUPEP-8 MOVIE CAMERA Antique brown pabbla-grainad loathor boot, tolf-ttrappod and buckled In bras*. Side lipped, _ it* 9Mi" height makes it the perfect suit beet, as well as a casual winner. AAade in England especially for'Dexter. TEL-HURON STORE ONLY PRE-STYLED AND SET MADE OF HUMAN HAIRI VIGS Reg. $22.88 BRIEFS 8 to 12 Reg. Price 89c NOW 3 ,#r *2°* Sizts 14 to 16 Reg. Price 95c. NOW 3 GREAT SAVINGS ON SOFT LEATRER GLOVES Reg. Price $1.25 Hurry to Winkelman's for fqshion- —NOW 3fa,*2" TEUHURGN fe 59955 CHILDRENS; favorite leather gloves at this remarkable savings. Find an exciting collection of shortie styles,. beautifully detailed and lined with tricot. Black or brown, S-M-L. rayon F You're Just the gal to do 'Le Thing* and to wear 'Le groovy new coat look is complemented HOB' by the four flapped, mHr patch pockets « .. the buttons, going all the way up to the neck* liii'e, accent the longer, point* ed -collar. It's h.Ls., for her ... With a new look, baby 111: Olive Diagonal Wool Tweed, Sizes 5-.13. SHOP AT TEL-HURON where everything for the new term con be purchased PONTIAC MALL S. KRESGE COMPANY C~-6 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY,- SEPTEMBER 4, 1969 • • ___ — I H 108 N. SAGINAW ST.-rDOWNTOWN PONT1AC-FE 3-71.14 . 9:30 a.m. m\ 9 p.m.r-Daily Hours 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p,rn. By LINDA DEUTSCH HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Her I • love songs are tough, not tender. She conies on in mannish clothes—boots, leather vests,, pants. She belts out the words, a sexy snarl in'her voice. . | She is the new American * * chanteuse and she looks about |n as gentle as a lion tamer. i Whether the girl is Nancy Si-1 natra, Ann-Margret, Grace S -Slick or newcomer Jeannie €. Riley, the elements of style are t there. She threatens men, t wields her microphone like a li ____gun and sometimes, like Janis ‘ Joplin, takes a swig of liquor f right on stage. It's a style, that has been dubbed tough, m a s c uli ne, t aggressive and emancipated. " The audiences—including men c j —love it. The style is credited tl with resurrecting women sing-1 ers from years of oblivion in the _ sale of records. _ A PUT ON? /' BiSnsh’f this ali a put-on? —J Some of the singers say yes, that under the chain belts and leather they’re really softies. Others deny it, claiming they reflect a new feminine breed-r-the, invulnerable woman. “There was a trend toward masculine actresses in " jM Nancy Sinatra. “Then there was h trend toward femininity ... Now we’re back to the masculine trend. ★ . 6 Of her tough-girl image she says: “That’s not the real me. But I went along with it because I wanted to be successful, and I wasn’t getting anywhere with that sweet-little-girl voice.” ----Ironically, it was a man—Lee Hazelwood—who hatched Nan-cy’s new style. •FLOOZY IN YOIT _“Lee told me,** ‘There’s - ____floozy in you somewhere. You should sing like a 16-year-old girl who goes with 40-year-old men,”’she recalls.. Now Hazelwood has a new protege, sultry, red-haired actress Ann-Margaret. Hazelwood says she and Nancy Sinatra “The only reason their image worked,” he explains, “is that they are both small women. .. big. guy doesn’t fear a small woman; he doesn’t mind her being a little mouthy. If Nancy and Ann-Margret were the size of Sophia Loren, a guy would be gfrtrid.” At least one girl singer says she .and her image are the same. Grace Sick, vocalist of | the rock group Jefferson Airplane, says: “I wouldn’t call1 toelmage tough.It’s more definite. A woman who is perform- be more agp-essive, more mas- I culine. Women working on their | own have to be able to take care | of themselves.” ANYTHING NEW As a performer, Grace has! I been labeled shssy, bohemian, a | “hard chick.” She admits to! | being a rebel against her1 mid- j dle-class upbringing—rootless, wffltog to try anything new. In I m this she. feels a kinship to heft] friend, blues singer Janis Joplin. “Janis and I are from a place j in the countiyjthat’s.llke no oth-j f er,” she explains. “San Francis-1 co. It had freedom and indivual-j before any other place '. .It’s kind of interesting to watch!1 PRICES GOING UR? NOT AT CARPET CENTER! HERE’rWHY: WE BUY FOR LESS-AND SELL FOR LESS! WE CAN LOWER THE BOOM ON HIGH PRICES because we buy thousands of rolls atone time. Thus, the mills H are able fa give ys lower prices — and we pass the savings bn to you. It's as sinipla as that! But prove it to yourself. Compare our price with the lowest quoted anywhere else. Not only will we save you $2.00 to $5.00 a yard — but we'll install your order THE SAME DAY FROM STOCK! Why pay more... wait longer... when you can shop at Carpet Center? SPACE-DYED RANDOM CARVED EXTRA-HEAVY r COMPARE AT SB.Sfl ^ HUBBY NYLON ^ COMPARE AT SMS TWEED TWEED I Top - quality doopiy - tufted continuous Hi-Lo PLUSH LOOP ACRYLIC I filament nylon pile. Choose from 7 color 1 combinations. FIRST QUALITY! in a wida choico of docaratar colon. A roro valuo. FIRST QUALITY! 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Saftirday at Liberty Baptist, Church with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. His body may be viewed after 7 p.m. tomorrow at Frank Carruthers Funeral Home, < Mr. Bates; an employe of Pontiac Motor Division, died Tuesday. He was a member of the Liberty Church. Surviving are his' wife, Dorothy D.; four children, Willie J., Joyce Ann, Loretta and Sylvia, all-- at home; sister, Mrs. Elizabeth Houston of Pontiac; and five brothers, including CRarles J, of Pontiac. Mrs. Orlando Fink Service for Mrs. Orlando (IzoTaJ Fink, 68, of 30 Selmer will be 11 a.m. Saturday at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. -r Mrs. Fink died yesterday, She was a member of the Order of the Eastern Star 228. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs, Maynard Sacra of Bloom-field Hills and Mrs. Kenpeth Tribell of Okemos; three brothers; a sister; seven grandchil- Service for former Pohtlac d^S5L"ld diree Brent grand- resident Donalda Morrison, of chu&en. Mount Prospect, Rl, will be Memorial contributions* may 1;30 p m tomorrow at Huntooh Township, andlat C1 aerain School, Troy Mrs. Baker was also a member of Big Beaver United Methodist Church, JProy, and the Women’s Society, of Christian S e r v i c e and the Michigan Education Associate? Surviving are h«j husband, one sister and one brother. Memorial tributes may be Methodist Church. Fungal Home with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. ' Miss Morrison, a dietitian at Northern Illinois University, died Tuesday. Surviving are three brothers. Robert B. Neldrett Robert B. Neldrett, 68, of 140 be made to the Bethany Baptist Church. Anthony K. Jaworski Prayers will be offered for Anthony K. Jaworski, 15-year-old son of Anthony‘S. Jaworski of , #130 Elizabeth Laze, Waterford Township, ’ and the I late ‘Mrs. Jaworski, at- 10:45 a.m. Saturday in LoveadlOakland died this morning. Ar-Funeral Home. Requiem Massjrangements are pending will follow at 11 a.m. in St.1 Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Perpetua Catholic Church,. Mr. Neldrett Was a retired Waterford Township. {employe of Pontiac Motor The Rosary will be recited at Division. 8:15 p.m. tomorrow at the fu-| Surviving are a sister, Mrs. ner# home. ♦ : :Natlie Ingram of Walled Lake, Anthony drowned yesterday inland two brothers, Charles and Crescent Lake, W a ter ford Joseph, both of Pontiac. Township. He was a member of St. Perpetua Church and a student at Waterford Township High School. Church, Au Gres, with burial there in the Sims-Whinty, Cemetery; The Rosary* will be recited/at 15 p.m. tomorrow in Forshee Funeral -Home Twining. Her body may bd viewed tomorrow afternoon at the funeral home: ~ tl-— Kimberly died Tuesday. She was a. member, jjf St. Mark Church and astudentat Au Gres Elementary School. Surviving besides her parents are two brothers and two Sisters, Tim, Ben, Cathy and Ann, an afbome, a n d grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Philip Copper of Pontiac and Mr and Mrs. A1 Polliick of Mount Morris. Donalda Morrison Phillip H. Maxwell BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -Service for Phillip H. Maxwell, 45, of 6246 Hills will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co.; Birmingham, with burial in Evergreen Cemetery, Detroit. Maxwell died Tuesday. He was manager of Automotive Division industrial products for the B.F. Goodrich Co. and a member of the Detroit Athletic Club, Beaver Dam" Chib, Pine Lake Country Club, Club, Otsego Ski Club and the Society of Automotive A former Pohtlac gas station manager is being sought for allegedly embezzling more than $2,060* gash frOift the station where he worked^ Lay Gambrel, 40, formerly of 75 Clark, is being sought on the charge. He allegedly embezzled the money^front the Clark Service Station at 946 Oakland. Ait employe at the station told police Gambrel came to the station about 2:30 a.m. Tuesday and took the weekend’s cash receipts. He has not b since. Clark Oil officials - said the weekend receipts totaled $2,031. Gambrel has worked with the ffimpany about 1% years, they foid.' Surviving are three sons, Peter T., Phillip B. and Steven H-, all of Birmingham. Memorial tributes may be sent to the Foundation of Mentally' 111 Children, Bloomfield Kenneth J. McCombs Embezzlement Suspect Sought OAKLAND------- COMMUNITY C0LLE.GE / announces see Youth, 15, Drewns in Crescent Lake A Waterford Township-youth drowned while swimming in* Crescent Lake about 2:30 p.m. yesterday. Dead is Anthony fc. Jaworski, 15, of 6130 Elizabeth Lake. He drowned near Elizabeth Lake and Crescent Lake roads while swimming in deep water toward a raft, according to Waterford Township police. Jaworski was a student at ROSE TOWNSHIP - Service for Kenneth J. MCCombs; 62, of 10601 Eagle will be 2:30 p.m. tomorrow at Pursley-Gilbert Funeral Home, Pontiac with burial in Oxford Cemetery. Mr McCombs died Tuesday. He was employed at the Pepsi Cola Bottling Co. warehouse, Pontiac. 1 S mr v i v ing are three,---------- daughters, Mrs. Kenneth NEW YORK (AP)- Dayton-Tidabeck of Florida, Mrs. Hudson Corp., a Minrteapolis- Waterford Township High. Dayton-Hudson Sets listing Fete Wort' Bought TOAVERSE CITY (API -Arie DeBruyn, president of Timbirlee Hills at Traverse City, has announced acquisition nf ™ Wharf in Charlevoix. The Wharf is a new development of 39 condominium units on Lake Charlevoix. DeBruyn stated the condominiums will sell for $27,-1 500 to $47,000. Mrs. Bert Parker Mrs. Bert (Irlenej Parker, 70, of 2725 Frembes, Waterford Township, died yesterday. Her body is at Coats Funeral Home. Mrs. Parker was a membei of Drayton Plains Un-ltod Presbyterian Church, Surviving are her husband; one daughter, Mrs. Elmer Rossman of Goodrich^ one son, Arthur of Waterford Township; three sisters, including Mrs. Frank Durkee of Bloomfield Hills; one brother, Collis Scott Pontiac; end Dolphus Flemming of Texas and Miss Barbara McCombs of Oxford; one son, Kenneth L. of Davisburg; 'two sisters, including Mrs. John Elliott of Oxford; three brothers, Floyd and Earl Baker, both of Pontiac, and Fred Baker of pxford; grandchildren; and one greatgrandchild. Mrs. Norman J. Sinclair — Service for Mrs. „ j grandchildren. Parts Firms Unite Mrs. Stuart K. Baker WARREN (AP) - Micks. Thompson Enterprises of Long Beach announced Wednesday its affiliation with Holley Carbureter Division of Colt Industrie#. Terms of the agreement between the two manufacturers of high performance automotive components were not disclosed. WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP-— Serrice for Mrs.[operators; Norman J.~ (Charlotte A Sinclair, 72,> of 2682 Walnut lake, will be at 3 p.m. Saturday at Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton CO M p a*n y . Birnfr Ingham, with burial in Glen Edeh Cemetery, Livonia. Mrs. Sinclair died yesterday: She was. a retired secretary, having been employed with General Motors Truck and Cbach Administrative Office, Pontiac, Pioneer Engineering of Stuart K. (Hilda C.) Baker, 68, of 3034 Daley will be 1:30 p.m. Friday at Price Funeral Home, with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. Mrs. Baker died Tuesday. Before her retirement she was a teacher at Stiles School, Avon CHICAGO (AP) - Assets of the"Jim Gym Coro: of Detroit; a manufacturer of gymnasium qnd athletic equipment, purchased Wednesday by Mar-tin Yale Business Machines Corp. of Chicago for an undisclosed amount of cash. .The Martin Yale Corp. stated its new _ .- ___^ . _ acquisition will be moved to ^Detroit, the BMC Corp, of Troy nhi>»»»g Memorial tributes may bej sent to the Michigan Heart I Association. , . 1 Floyd Staudaker I PONTIAC TOWNSHIP -1 Service for Floyd Staudaker, 54, | of 3505 Auburn Will bell:fo p.m. 1 Saturday at Pomeroy/ Funeral 1 Home, Crosweil, * with b!Mlal| 1 Gym Firm Sold the Harold R. Davis Funeral Home, Auburn Heights,-1 h 1 s evening. Mr. Staudakerdied yesterday. He was employed at General Motors Truck and Goach division. , . Surviving are his wife, Gladys; two brothers; and one sister. -■ Brian C. Vwlzy WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP +* Service yfor Brian C, Velzy, 26, of 731 Sunset Will be 11 a.m. Saturday ‘at Elton Black Funeral Home, Union Lake, with burial in Percy Mount Park Cemetery, Pontiac. Mr. Yelzy died yesterday from injuries received In -an automobile accident. He was a machinist for Jay Bind Automation, Walled Lake. , Surviving are his wife, Sandra; one daughter, Theresa at Kom#; parents Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Velzy; grandparents ifo; tod William Etsenrath and Mrs. Ann Spencer, all of Poah^ foh brothers, ot PMkc tod Keimeth Jr. of Whit#:! l»ake - Towhship; tod three sitters. Merecfith, Diana and Sharon Velzy, all of White Lake Towship. PCH's Adult Classes Include Pilot Training L Private pilot ground school will be offered would-be and refresher-course pilots in two special adult education courses beginning Sept. 9 at Pontiac Central High-lehooL The courses are designed to prepare a beginner to pass fob required Federal Aviation Administration private pilot written examination and to refresh those pilots who wish to seek for higher ratings-★ .★ * • Both two-hour courses will be offered on Tuesdays tod Thursdays .at 3:30 and 8 p m. Registrations will be accepted next week at the adult education office ' rear of Pontiac Central High Schoof. Registration fee is $29-and equipment tqtalfog -. $29.75 is required, ★ ★ ★ Study units include meteorology, flight principles, aircraft and engine operation, flight instruments, aircraft perfonn-ance,-navigation, flight computers, radio, comimt-nication, federal aviation regulation#,1radio navigation, attitude instrument flight, flight publications, flight planning and. jofl practice and review. COMMUNITY SERVICES COMMUNITY EDUCATION DIVISION FALL-1969 college credit extension courses GENERAL INFORMATION: TIME: ^ ' .' - Two crodlt hour counot or* hold from 7-9 p.m. Thro* crodlt hour court** or# hold from 7-J O p.m. Four credit hour epuroos t or* hold from 6-10 p.m. Foil Samottor cla»»#» will moot ano ovoning par wook. ADMISSION •' Anyone may attand fill Oakland Community Coll*flD Credit court* who t»:. p 1. A high gchaSl gradual*. 2, A non high school grtjTdvart. 19 yoorg ar older. 3. A currant high school sonior with parnitooicw-from pqraat add high school principal. DATE: Fall Samattar Extomion Claiiai bogin tb# wook of September 15,1969. ' REGISTRATION: ^ TUITION; .. A pra-ragi.tration pariod will bogin tho waak of Saptombar - C ot oil fxtongioa Contort. Collogo distriot te*ld*nt*-$9 par credit how* plu* $1 lor _ Student Activitia* faa. Michigan non-eotlogodlotHtd tooMont* —$12 par credit hour, plu* #1 Sbfdont ActivMidk' fto NO Student Activitia* faa OHMud bayond lO cradlt hour*. A $10.00 application fa* must bo paid by all now applicant*. Pio-iogi»trotlon». Sapt*mb#r 8*17,1969 Rogiftration: Soptsmbor 75-78.1969 Lot* Ragi.tration: S#pt*mb#r22*25,1V69 ($5.00 Lat* Raglitration Fco) • - y~ii- *'** v,,, -1 _ BOOKS AND SUPPUES: Required texthnoks wilt Be aveneeie wr purenns* .n» CLARKSTON CLARKSTON HIOH SCHOOL, 859S Middle Lake Road Clarkoton, Michigan 48016 HOLLY COORDINATORS Donald Diced Phono 6344451 HOLLY HIQH SCHOOL, 920 East Baird Street, Holly, Michigan 48442 timlh Carina Non* *»■ ING 1ST English I....1IO ENG 152 EngliMII....,................ ENG 251 AmwicanUtwahml....,*.......306 MS 151 WwMCMIliaNon J....,...........305 hot. 151 AmarirenGnrenMMMt..:. 205 PIY 251 Introduction to Prychoiogy. , . ..110 SOC 251 Sociology.....................304 LAKE ORION LAKE ORION JUNIOR HIQH SCHOOL, WarMChrilitntiaa.., Introduction In Sociology.........” Foundation, of Modom Sodnty I....10 MILFORD 21Sa North Milford Road WHord, Michigan 41042 Conran No. Cooroo Nomo _ .;.J.Sanm CindBn __BUS 101_____Introduction to12 3 ING 104 tnn4ng tapeaiipi,..............Jj* 3 (NG 151 EngliihJ - t ••• -c •••••• HI 3 , ING 152 . Engllih f ENG 251 Amndcnnlllntnliirnl..........-vjlf * HIS 1S1 World Civilization.....................4 MAT 161 Calingo Algobn.................Jlf 3 Introduction toPoliticol Scionco .... 118 3 jm * % * | ia.116 n» 112 3 PONTIAC ENG 131 ENG 151 PONTIAC ST. FREDERlCit'S SCHOOL, 12 WhRtemoro^Street PonHac, Michigan 48888 , ______ Course Nam* Room C» ART 156 Art Approbation...............301 ! —*IntroductiontolualnoM....•••• ...305 • 4 _ __ English II «li,... . .V. ............ 306 S ENG 251 Atnnricon Ulnndufn I..............SOI i ENG 261 AftoAntndeon Utomluin.........301 . MS 151 . WnridChrlliintiMl......J........305 * HIS 152 Wnri4CMNinNM4l........* HIS 3*1 1 Afro Amorlcan llldny............ 305 ! PSY 251 InttnducHcgWfWji»l»»Y-....301 7SY 261 .. Hurnon Roiationt, Porronnol Prob... 306 - PSY 31V " u—luJnnu •» AdlncHnoo*-------SOS ROCHESTER COORDINATORS Manor Coopor Phone #51-0210 ROCHESTER HlflH SCHOOL, IBS South Livemois Rochester, Miehigah ASMS Couno Ntk Couron Nnmo ' Room CfMtli Itap- ]—ACC 251 Ptineinln, nF Accounting 1........120 4 W ■US 101 Introduction toOuUno.i............120 3 ENG 104 Rnoding ........................117 J W ENG 152 Ingliihll...i,t£v.v,..:...'.......JJJ ? ™ ENG 251 . ■ Amoricon litoroluio I..............«• . JZ MS 151 WotM CiulliioHon I.....'•...,.115 4 TH HIS 251; Amodcon Wdrayl,.... * * --j J4 -3 TH POC151 ■ Amoricon Govommont..............103 3 TH POL 251 Introduction to MHcot Icloncn.. • ]30 3 W PSY pst ■ Introduction to Pwcholouy.........105 3 TH | SSC1S'. Fmindotiooi ol Modom Society t.. 104 3 W Foundation, ol Mndom Snciuiy I 103 3 W WEST BLOOMFIELD ROYAL OAK Phono B49-2S2S 3SM West Thirteen Milt Road, Royal Oak, Michigan 48071 BUS 101 0US 203 ECO 261 1 SSCI52 Englhh II.........................202 Amoricon tltoroturo I. ...........302 World CivlliMtinn I...............202 Afro Amoticon Hlriotp.............305 Elomontary Algnbro with Onortotty 203 Cnllogn Algobround Trigcngnintty.. 205 Amoticon Goroimonnt........... 203 Introduction to PnllHeol Scinncn ... 204 Introduction to Psychology • • 207 Human Eolation*, Pomonool PmK.. 207 Principles of Retailing „ . .. ........107 Intermediate Typing........,,.... M2 Sociology...............,.,,.,....201 Analysis of Social Problems......207 FgundoHons o? Modom Society I... 201 Foundations of Modom Society II .. 301 ROYAL OAK TOWNSHIP I Dr. Josoph Hudson Phono LI S-I2IT ROYAL OAK TOWNSHIP-CARVER High School 21SSS Mondot*; Fomdalt, Michigan 4S22S Court# Hn. Cnuno Homo hrom Crodits ■ US 101 Introductina to Ouslnoss,.,......... 330 3 •» ECO 261 Economics I............,239 - 3 W ENG 1ST Engllthl.......................241 3 ' T ENG 1S2 English II......................243 3 - T ENG 231 Amoricon........................241- 3 W ENG 252 Amoticon litwaturo II............243 3 W . ENG 201 Afro Amoricon Utwaturo...........24S .3 HIS 261 Alt# American Hlstoiy .......,.. 241 3 M PSY 251 Introduction to Psychology,........243 3 < M PSY 261 Human Rnlotlons, Poraonnnl Ptob... 345 5 M SEC 101 Typing Fundamentals......,,,....225 3 M SIC 102 Infermedinta Typing 325 3 J ■ -SIC 112 intermediate Shorthand ., julrutjt.,«• 247 3 ____, W SOC 251 Sociology.......................245 3 W SOC 252 Analysis of Social Problems.......246 3 W- SSC 151 Foundations 4 Modom Society I. . .. 249 3 ■ T, TROY #19-4185 ACC IlF ACC 204 , ACC 231 ling II... ..105 BK> 151 BIO 161 BUS 101 BIAS 111' < BUS 203 CST IQt FCO 201 ECO 262 ING. 052 ENG 104 ENG 131 ENG 136 ENG 151 ING 152 ENG 251 ING 252 Intro, to Audiovisual Mat.« Equip. •. 102 General Biology I............... 2 Human Anatomy and Physiology I... 124 Introduction teOusInois.........106 Principle! ^Supervision.........10* tuHcs.'..... 102 ...........103 ..........104- ____--.,.104 “.To.<....i03 mlcotion... 104 is........ 136 Engllshl..4vrtL.y........... Ihglithr.,...;................ English II...... American Utnrahm I............ American LHorolvro II...... Cmotiro Writing........i......... 105 Beginning Frond, I....... ....,11* World Civilization I, ............. J07 World CMlisatian II............105 Amoricon History I....,,.,,,,,,110 American History II.............109 AfarsArmtomJGshKy.......... ....107 Ufa Scionco . ......‘.I yjLc;'. „ 3 Business AAothomo tics , . ..., . , . . . • * 15 Elomontary Aigobra ............113 ' Elomontoty Algobto with Goomonlry 114 Comparativn Mathematics I....... 110 ' Fund, of Marketing Thnory dad PlM.110 Music ApprodoNM ; Londsrahln nod Onninn. 10? AmoricanGmrnromnnt............ 110- Introduction to Political Scionco... 111 Urban and Stain Politics... .1.... 112 PhysicdiScinndn.........203 - Introduction to Psychology ....... 100 Human Relations, Ponaanal Prob.. . H1 Child DnrolnpronnF... ... In to Selected Psychology nl Adjustment toBoSoloctod Shorthand Fundamentals .,2) 1 I ntormodiatnShorihand 111 Office Machines................ 211 4L' WALLED LAKE Phono IS44202 WALLED LARI CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL, 2170 South OooHMreo Rood, Wallod Lako, Michigan 4MM Coursn Nu: - Course Nome-------------------Room—Crodllu —Os ACC 251 PrinctpUs ol Accounting..............400 '-3 N —BUS -101_____ Introduction to Ottoitms..........402 3 N ENG 052 . loslc English....................400 3. '1 ENG 15,1 . English I........................403 3 ENG 251 Amoricon Literature__,..........404 3 1 - HI3—151- ". World Civilisation IT... . .V..400 4” - - . - HIS 231 Amoricon History I.............t.....402 3 to PSY 251 Introduction So Psychology......400, 3 H PSY 261 - Human Relations, Personnel Prob... 403 3 * RET 132 Retail Salsa Promotion ........ 406 3 SOC 251 Sociology...... 40* 3 SSC 151 Foundation of Modern Society.... 404 5 to ..... PhwmSStilSlS WEST BLOOMFIELO HIM SCHOOL, 6610 Orchard Laka Read, Orchard Ukc, Miohigan 4IS2S Hl$ 151 World ChriH,otion I .4 T MUS 156 Music Appmdotron.............202 , 3 M PSY 251 Introductiont»Psychology..,.201 3 M RET 122 Botoil Solos Promotion.......... 204 3 T SOC 251 Sociology......... v..'..,|,... 201 3 Y For Further Information Call WATERFORD TOWNSHIP . ■ ■■ ■Phcng#T4-#145 1 CHART JUNIOR HtOR SCHOOL, . " Sit North Can Lake Read, Pontiac, Michigan 40064 Course No. Course Homo Ream Crodits ACC 251 * Princlplps ol Accounting I....201 4 ART 156 • ArtAntmcMiun...............202 3 . •US 101 Introduction t» Ouslnoss,.....201 3 ECO 261 Economics I.'...: ...........202 3 ENG 151 English I................ ...203 3 ING 152 MS 151 MS 151 MS 261 PSY 3*1 . SOC 251' SSC ESI Foundation* ol Madron Sucioty I.. Oakland f^ommuaity College COMMUNITY SERVIGES—COMMUNITY EDUCATION-flLEPHONE 338-6T01 Other Extension Court** At: Ocrkhty Hanot -Park, Madiwn Haight*. Oak PaEkp Scuth: Ly gw. THE PONTIAC PlrfBSS.' THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, IP69A^_ _ Misses! Half Sizes! Bonded |e Choose Irom our huge selectionl I • A-Hnes, skimmers, shift jumper dnswl I • Novelty buttons, zips, (addle-stitch trimsl |e Orion* acrylic, Coloray* rayon, Viscalorl* ra I on, mertte jeneytl Bonded to 100% acetate. eMimet' Sixev 10-18. Half Sizosi 14H-24M. i ............... Ladies’ Lovely Wyandotte Remnants priced to clear - Save 30% to 60% Libbiy “Sloe Tiara’ Save on 9x12 Ready Made Rugs, Heavy Nylon Pile in Tweeds, Loops and Plushes. All Remaining Slock ’It Chooee 3x7", 8x10* or 11x14* sisel .f Many wHh comer WBtt 27 S. TELEGRAPH jQPm trials., DIXIE HIGHWAY AT TELEGRAPH RD. PONTIAC Deposits, Rate Structure Cited Utilities' Policies Unfair to Poor By WHITNEY M. YOUNG JR. Executive Director ...... ‘ National Urbap League______ If 'BK« i'fl«dni«irvlb«r'ifi''«_ w*T!' taurant of a. department store, you can* always take your business elsewhere, but you can’t switch electric jmMT~ companies. wmm Public utilities like electric and gas companies are monopolies. Because they perform a vital public service and are protected, from competition, they are subject. to regulation JUL “>e state. But they also have a special responsibility to the . public — a responsibility greater than that of other private corporations who don’t en-jov the guaranteed profits and shelter from the free market. ★ * 1 * It seems that most public utilities are not living up to that special responsibility, especially as. it relates, to their treatment of the‘poor and to their obligation to use their power for socially desirable ends. While many companies in this field are Improving their employment policies, they have a long way to go. FAR BEHIND A federal study made a few years ago showed utility companies tagging far behind other industries in hiring Negro and other minority workers. A conimon complaint affecting all poor people — black and white — is the usual policy of requiring deposits. Before the , gas or electricity is turned on, most companies demand large cash deposits, sometimes as much as $100. popte Wt "Have to fiaf deposits. People who have good jobs, credit cards, and some of the other attributes of middle-class life/ escape such payments. Most often it is the poor, who can afford large cash outlays least, who are forced to scrape together enough cash to pay the deposit that turns the lights on. This is not only unfair, it’s unnecessary. Deposits 'are supposed to insure the company .against nonpaymeht of bills. One study of a West Coast telephone company’s debtors showed that five out of six didn’t have to pay deposits—they were considered good risks. •* * # „ If tills is typical, then it means that poor people as a class are required td pay the deposits thatf ensure companies against losses from defaulters who are not,poor. Here is another instance where the poor subsidize the better-off. „ In urban areas, most poor people and especially^ black people, live in the center city. It’s usually the older part of town where the pipelines and wires have already been laid and have been working for years. The real cost to utilities lies in stretching these lines out to the growing suburbs or to. new office and industrial buildings. But the companies calculate their rates on total costs in the whole area. That means" that rates in poverty areas are the same as the rates in the outlying districts that are" far more expensive to service. Again, the poor subsidize, through higher. rates, the suburban middle-classes, TidtaMeA. ojuuL *T OPEN THURS., FRI. & SAT. TIL 9:00 < Size Beserfptien C0mp. Bala Siza Description Camp. tale 12xl4’l” Orange ft Bream Leap m.N ofji mill” Beige Tweed 1MJB 0BJ0 12x11*4” Bald Texture 110.00 IB.BI 12x11*0** Blue Oraen Oprved ISMl 19.14 12x11*2” Breen TWiat 2BB.BB iiB.li 12x221” Bold Leap 211.00 latji 11X11*1” Bold ft Brange KR. 6ptt1B4l 141.15 12x111” Blue Oretn Tweed 200.00 115.50 12x14’4” Blue Indoer Ouldeer 120.00 1MB 1«x01" Clue Oreen Kitchen 0pt.1B4.BB •9.9C 12x141” Orange ft Bold Kit. 6pt.14B4B SB.BB 12X11* Bold Loop ,■ 11MB •9.55 12x121” Bold Load 1IB.BB IMS 12x12*11” Bold Plush 119.00 1II.M 12xini” Avscsde Texture 110.00 0145 12x11*11” Avocado Caned 110.00 11MB 12x11” Prints Weel Xtt, Opt. 12x11*4” Irenxe Texture tas.aa BB.M 100.00 •Ml 11x11*11* ’Bronze Random 1M,M •5.51 12x14*11” Beige Texture 220.10 11141 mtr Blue Loop 11.00 4MI 12x111” Bold Loop 141.11 IMS 12x121” Aveeedo Oarved 204.00 110.95 12x111” Mess Random 111.01 1H.K 12x111” Aqua Random 211 JO 11MB ; mini” Emerald Random 204.00 119.91 12x111” Aveeedo Carved 100.00 BI.BB mm” Cslsry Carved 1I4J0 •MB 12x121” Oreen Random 1444B •MB 12x11” Shamrock Plush 1*2.00 •MB 12x1’2" Beige Loop 01.00 IMS 12x111” Bold Tweed! m.M •Ml 12x01” Red A Black Loop 1«JB •MB 12X14*11” Emerald Tweed 200.00 11MB 12x111” Avocado Loop 110.00 •MB 12x11* laid leap 11MB •MB mi|1*! Avocado KRehen Opt. 171.00 109.15 12xt2’l»”leice Loop 102.00 JIMBj 12x14*4” Red KRehen Opt. _ UMO -9MB mirr* Mesa Twist tIMI 1BMB 12x111” Spanish Red Shag 119.99 119.91 12x111” Bold Nugget Loop ’ 90.04 •MB mtn” Bronze Random 14M0 •4.91 min”. Med Kit. Oet. 141.14 •MB 12x121" YoHear Random 100.04 •9.94 12x111” Sold Tweed 1 14T.M 1MB 12x24* Oeleden Random HfJB 199JI mm” Aveeedo Loop 120.00 1B.BB 12x111” Celery Caned 200.00 11MB 12x14*1” Bronze ft Olive Kit. Cpt.2ll.0l •MB 12x21’ Olive Oroen Loop I1M0 1BB.M mill” Blue Breen Loop 111.00 •MS 12x12* Bronze Nash 224.04 119.91 12x21*11” Bold Leak ■ 211.11 11MB 12x14*4” Avacade Plush 240J0 111.95 mil* . Capa Hue KH. Opt. 200,10 111.15 12x111” Purpla Plash 204.00 J2MB mm” Clover Broun KH. Opt. 214.01 120.04 12x21*11” Bold Leap 2CM0‘ 109.55 1x11*4” Pink OfPHParaial 211.04 110.05 12x211" Cold ft ftroon Leap 251.00 119.95 12x11*2” Orean 1 Brown Tweed UfM 110.05 12x21*11” Bold Loop 242.04 IBB.BB 12x11*1” Cold Tamed •0.00 IMB 12x21*1” Blue Broan Leap 200J4 155.95 12x21* Cold Loop 201.00 11MB mm” Bald KRehen Opt. 201,00 11941 12x111” Mad ft llaek KH. Cot. 2N.M 111.11 mis* Bold Shag . 2B0JB- »>4B ftt®” •»«. Ladies'32'Length Corduroy COATS • Choose the double breasted style; self-belted buckle trim backl e Or the single breasted with aH-round self-belt! e Contour patch or flap'pocketsl a T-shirts, shorts, briefs! • No Iron, non-pilling Dacron* 107W polyester and cotton; stays white, e. T-shirts i s-m-l-xl. Shorts, Briefs: 30-44. e Embroidered and locey styled e 100% acetate tricoti # Sizes M.UXL T MISS THESE EXTRA SPECIAL SAVINGS! PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4,-1969 Rugged Roles Belie Scholarly Nature of This Actor So nice to come home tol at the University of Southern California. ?*I have finished four chapters of my dissertation and have four more to go^the actor reports. *1 should be able to finish again last November and started writing the dissertation in London while filming ’“the Mind of Mr. Soames” and “Julius Caesar." - > ' . How did he choose his subject? By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD (4?) - The title of the Ph.D. dissertation: "A Historical Study of the Influence of the House Committee on Un • A m e r-^ . ing< ‘"deedi^^^^S This is the same THDMA5 Vaughn who zapped enemy agents as “The Man from UNCLE;" the shady politico feECLINA-ROCKER by November—provided another picture doesn’t come up. I hope ope doesn’t, because I’d like to finish up. This academic Sword of Damocles has been hanging over my headlong enough." Vaughn’s higher learning began at the University of Minnesota, where he Spent his fresh- j man year in 1951-52. He moved! here and continued' studying at) Los Angeles City College and!**;-""™ ...-• * ' noted stage figures as beingiuons,- L.A. State, now called Califor-]8'1 ,l was shipped back to Red or Vaughn, who U.S.C. nlaStateat Los Angeles, from lme' {has been active in liberal I geles I which he received big B.A. in * * * {causes, said he has approached! 1956. During this time his acting He began his work al!; over the subject with no point of viewl ' begin work toward a Ph.D. His | jnterksT IN POLITICS dissertation almost met with w« no .pedal si ' ' tion that caused it,” hO said. grew quite naturally out of my For All Your Washing ond Cleaning Needs See Us of . Econ-O-Wash BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CINTIR Richard A. Wwkt, Keego Harbor Mary L; McCarthy, 3395 Watkins Lai Jamas V. Morocco, Rochester Kathleen Parcalls, Rochester Curley Craft. S» South Paddock ECONOMICAL—A decade after introduction, Ford Motor Co.’a compact Falcon, to be offered only four months during 1970, offers economical, durable and quality.trans-portation. The Falcon series features two- door and four-door sedans and a four-door station wagon, with a wider option list and an improved six-cylinder engine. The Falcon line will be abandoned and the name placed on a larger car early in 1970. L-\»Z-IK)Y. complements the good, taste a mi satisfies liis everyjrelaxing mood . . * for rocking, TV viewing or com fort a hie napping .Illustrated above ora four.of more than 2U models with a size Jxtr everyone. Styles include Early American, Traditional, Contemporary and Modern. We will be pleused to help you select the right style chair for your lionie. Come in Hoop for a Drmonstrution Gilbert W. Theriault, Carlysle and Ethel M. Stephans, 1375 Lorraine Ranald W. Keselowskl, Tray and Sandra Mi LeVIgne, tit Oshewa Michael D. McLennan, Birmingham and Jaeephlni J: Furflano, warren Harold A Oenz, Farmington and Thtlma R. Walch, Farmington Ooldtn M. Blevins Jit, 4507 Rattek and Audry F. Crum, Clarkaton I Annie I * Snnnrnr. Walled Lake and Remember, You Always del Morr lor Your Money at FURNITURE FIRST TIME EVER! Convenient Terms - 90 Days Same as Cash Often Monday und-Priday-Nlghls ’til 9 P.M. CLOSED WEDNESDAY AFTERNOONS QUILTED TWIN or FULLS BOTH PIECES I L-U/jOt/U^ L-UJMLg- at L-(MeSt~ Oot£ 4 Bi • Sylvan » New Yorker • Roycroft Several Models of lech to Cheese Preasl LSvith all-over quiltings on 7 ft. tojlg, 6 ft. wide mattrasc wHh matching dual box springs, plus the complete ORTHO-PAK listed above! September Ask for "Col." Tom Bolling ■I I ki See Them , DETROIT PONTIAC * 2211 S. TELEGRAPH RO. 15707 LIVERNOIS Phone 861-4656 YOU CAN ONLY BUY ORTHO MATTRESSES AT ORTHO STORES! SAUSAGE TOMATOES HOME GROWN PEACHES Fresh Sweet CRAPES ORANGES potatoes SUPER MARKET £rth 470 MTV I ifvdt 4IMIaf7 :I C—10 Pudding Mix Will Separate THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1969 ---By CECILY BROWN8TONE—i—Perhaps tills pudding has In- Associated Pnti Food Editor trigued cooks over the years One of the most popular because, although it’s a two-puddings in American cuisine part affair, it's made in one comes in layers -f a cakelike!mixing" and separates during top and a custardlike bottom. l baking. Originally this dessert started jcomstarch mixture, k e e p i n g but as a lemon pudding. But cooks, eventually began to'give it orange flavor. And this year a really adventurous cook came I up with a grapefruit version. ★ £;★- d waterman .minutes. Add rind and lemon ,, 2 pounds fresh firm ripe1 Vtod* Wps' than apricots, pitted, halved j Cold water 2 medium oranges, cut into, 3 cups granulated suj 1 Mi cups cider vinegar 1 stick cinnamon, broken into pieces ^ ^ 2 teaspnnfnls whole clnves 6 whole cardamon, crushed 1 lemon, thinly sliced, then quartered 1 (8-ounce) package pitted dates, halved -------------------------I----- Place rind in kettle; cover with cold water. Bring to boil; then simmer 18 minutes, or un* til almost tender. Drain well." Purple prune plums make Bring to a full rolling boil and Interesting conserve and relish boil hard 1 minute,' stirring as well as jam. Constantly. Remove from heat. PURPLE PLUM CONSERVE skim ttff foam with metal 0 „ ■ ispoon. Then stir and skim for 5 2 pounds purple prune plums to coo, 8lightly and 1 orange i prevent floating fruit. 2 cups water “............“ Vi cup seedless raisins large saucepan mix mustard with vinegar, sugar, ....... . • .... 1 gallon ripe tomatoes salt, celery seed, turmeric and b. folly ripe peaches and 1% 2 cups finely chopped onion Cayenne. Bring to boiling pofot lb. fully ripe plums) i ? cups finely chopped sweet and add vegetables* 6 cups (2 lb. 10 oz.) sugar red pepper -I _ . T . , . 1 box (1% oz.) powdered fruit 1 cup sugar ’ 1 Reduce haat. and simmeT1I36 Dectin i itahlesMonssalt minutes, stirring occasionally. tel, rate, pits, .ml tel, U't.bl,£Lmustardsaad i^SateK *”• chop or grind 2 pounds peaches. 1 tablespoon celery seed Peach reiishP toes ex- .................. SKffi m walnuts % cup teaspoon cinnamon , Vi teaspoon 'allspice Va teaspoon cloves 6 cups sugar 1 box (1% 02.) powered fruit grated peel pectin , 6Vi cups sugar Halve and pit fully ripe ^ CUP vinegar plums. Chop.fine. Chop orange! V* teaspoon cinnamon very fine. Add water to orange: Vi teaspoon cloves f«. and simmer, covered, 2 0 Vi bottle liquid fruit pectin minutes. Combine undrained orange with plums. Ladle quickly into galsses or Halve (do not peel), ' ... j.. . . . .. " ‘ 'K. nnnnHci bhUaj nine 1 nnH hnt nnnrw>r I game. medium glasses. measure 5 cups into a very! 2Vi cups distilled white vinegar| PEACH RELISH SPICY PRUNE PLUM RELISH *ar8® saucepan. Wash tomatoes in cold water;! 4 cups prepared fruit (about 3 9 nwl Measure sugar and set aside, drain. Scald and remove skins;1 lb. folly ripe peaches) 2 pounds purple prune plums Mlx ggf. pect|n lnto fruJt in^^y chop y4 to 1 teaspoon each cloves, 1 medium lemon, juice and saucepan. Place over high heat In a large kettle, mix together, cinnamon, and all-spice* and stir until mixture comes to the tomatoes, onion, sweet red! 7*i cups (SVi lb.) sugar a hard boil. Immediately stir in pepper, sugar and salt. Stirring! 1 cup vinegar j ■ sugar. , ' Occasionally, boil gently -for 1 bottle (6 oz.) liquid fruit * ★ .* about 45 minutes, I pectin Bring to a full rolling boil and * * * 1 *Or use .any desired combina- boil hard 1 minute, stirring Tie the 'mustard seed, celery tion of spices. * *„ * constantly. Remove from heat seed, mixed pickling spices, hotj Peel and pit about 3 pounds Wash and pit fully ripe plums. and skjm off foam with metal pepper pod and garlic in a peaches. Chop very fine or Cut into small pieces or chop spoon stir and skim for 5[cheesecloth bag; add to|grind. Measure 4 cups into a •'*------------------------------------ large saucepan.. Add Measure 4% cups into a very r11 imp smaii pieces or cnop spoon Then stir and skim for 5 cheesecloth bag; add to|grmd large saucepan. Add raisins,!' Measure 3V4 cups chop-mjnutes to c00] slightly and'tomatoes. Boil gently, stirring I very , . .1 ||_____1 ned nlums. Place in large tnwnvri Pnri nr rankina; clove prevent floating fruit. i often toward end of cooking cloves, cinnamon, and allspice. walnuts and spices. Measure ^ plums. P^ace ....... ■".1; sugar and set aside. Add fruitsaucepan and add lemon juice Ladle qpickiy into glasses.]period, until very thick pectin to fruit in saucepan. an“ Pee*,.sugar’ v“,®*ar anaiCover at once with % inch hotj45minutes. Place over high heat arid stir,?P^es Bn?*L, Ka I1", roHlnglparaffin. Makes about 11 SEASON until mixture comes to a hard one medium glasses. I Add vinegar; taste and addi boil. Immediately add all sugarm ’ * ^ ------- more seasonings and sugar if j^Blr ......—sPread ,f D J U I and skim for nvTmfoutes, For a delicious appetizer you like. Remove spic^tog. Bread Helps cooling sUghtly. Ladle quickly 8Pread- mi* a Package of Pour boiling hot sauce into ' —irito a|ass"s or jars and gggi cream cheese with finely chop-!sterlized canning jars leaving To help eliminate cooking 1 except the/ 5 largest. Stack in graduated sizes, drone side up, starting with the smallest and/topping with largest plain bread, round to make 5-layer flowerpots. Secure each j»t with long bamboo pick. Garnish eachArith fluted cartot slice, radish rose and parsley, Makes 5 sandwiches. Care Prevents/Food Poisoning I Bacteria are ubiquitous. No I But a/peculiarity of this j should not come in contact with one knows how many species! "bug” is/tihat is can be present:other foods, especially thos'e to , there are; some 4,000 of these: j,, the ^tegtineg ^ animals orbe eaten raw or lightly cooked, small, single-celled organisms. * f. . .. , . ... i • , of the plant world have been'*"-^/‘"^tines of animals or • Before handling or; identified. I humans who have np disease preparing other foods, thorough- i ' , , , symptoms. These are “car- ly wash hands, equipment and I of bacteria ^"limited "kTthtwe Salmonella “carrier” surfaces that come into contact; m!Tt r“als cannot be detected by|with raw meat or poultry. bacteria are harmless and/fP^10" other before or after! . Keep ioods propeMyj beneficial. For example, th/slau8hter- “ fi'e meat Wom refrigerated, especially “precheese industry depends 1 £ is ^ficw"Uy pared” foods such as potatoe tirely on the activity If:cookcd- result. sa|ad, precooked ham, cuNards. microorganisms to produce Fortunately, Salmonella • Serve cooked foods very fla^rS, and apna* bacteria are easily killed byicustards. of finished products. / jheat so that normally cooked hot or very cold — don’t hold, Bacteria also are responsible! meat and poultry present no I them for long periods at room for cultured b u 11 e/m il k , hazzard. temperature, sauerkraut, pickles /and dryj safeguards must be carried I • t Wson thdtit|out on the home-front/General! * ^ buy.cracked or dirty| sausage, crops. BAD GUYS The “bad” b'a i t e r i a 1 n c 1 u d i n g / botullsm , staphylococca/ poisoning and salmonella infection — most often result/from the mishandling of fo6d at some point between the farm and the dinner table/ Botulism is ^caused by a toxin produced by bacteria. The pbson can be destrdyed by heat, but the spores — the dormant fnrrn of the bacteria — are relatively heat resistant. * Although not common, it is extremely serious — mortality is 70 per cent. In some Instances, all/who eat the contaminated food die. /Most cases of the disease have been traced to the consumption of home-canned food, particularly non-acid fruits and vegetables — string beans, peas, asparagus, olives, spinach and beets. Staphylococcus poisoning __the most common food-borne illness. It usually occurs in “prepared” foods which * are subsequently mishandled. Prepared foods: that are most susceptible are custard-filled bakery goods, salad dressings, gravy and precooked ham pr tonkue, iJStaph*’ is usually involved when large numbers of preventive food poisoning tips!?®*8 an? fvoid canned foods if for consumers include: TT* sweUed or bulged or the contents have an; • Raw poultry or meat off odor. —people-become ill at the same time after a,banquet or picnic. ★ ' ' Uusally two to four hours Intervene between sumption of the food and the appearance of the symptoms. Generally “staph" is not fatal to otherwise healthy people, and —recover^ takes place withifa-a few diys. Salmonellosis, is an infection which oecurs m the intestines of humans who eat food which is contaminated with Salmonella bacteria. Nearly all species of salmonella can cause Illness. O.Bm 7130 Antonio, T»x. MEXICAN FOODS FOR AMERICA’S HOMES GET THE REST FOR LESS ■ -/ at r IBAAJ&M O/ BACK TO SCHOOL Zn APPLE! 25 unclassified Iona Sandwich Gets New Look Tuna Tempter will be an, fin-mediate success with all tuna lovers — guaranteed to; Win new fans at every serving. It’s a combination of drained, flaked tuna, mayonnaise, chopped: pickle and chopped mushroom, j — Spoon mixtureonone half "oft a toasted enriched English muffin ‘ which has been spread with, additional mayonnaise, never with cucumber slice*, then remaining muffin half.! Serve with cherry tomatoes. i "THE MEAT INSIDEMAKES THE DIFFERENCE” MS 5s SLICED aiiiicu bacon 79! WITH THE •• . EET SMOKE TASTE FRANKS 79! nuMret, juicim m w11 BROWN *N SERVE -sjjgrrsst^ SAUSAGE BO* HE 3-MINUTE SAUSAGE 4040OZ. Fresh LEM MEAT LOAF MIX fQc mw,via lb. § 9 and Pork ARMOUR STAR Frozen TURKEY ROAST 2-lb. $089 Mixod Light 8-oz.pkg. £ A Dark Moat Michigan Sweet Ripe ' Cantaloupes Largo Size California Sweet sliiifiv ORANGES Dozen ASSORTED COLORS 1 IrH) 1 RED NORTHERN TOWELS 11 •'■Hi 1 HAWAIIAN PUNCH O r... 9DQ P^k JF Q ; . 1 90* Coif ECK-RICH SMORGAS PAC 1-lb. ARC Luncheon pkg. Meat BLUEBONNET Soft MARGARINE 36* Vlasic Kosher Dill Spears 1-pint 10-oz. Jar HYGRADE'S CORNED BEEF 12-oz. weight can SWEETHEART liquid DETERGENT plastic RIANT SIZE BOLD 3-lb. 1-oz. Pkg. VELVET PEANUT BUTTER 48* 1-lb. 2 oz. Jar or Crunchy fresh meaty COUNTRY STYLE SPARERIBS HUSKIES’ BUFFET CAT FOOD THE PONTIAC PJtESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER *, 1969 C—13 SAVE ON ALL BUILDING MATERIALS AT Kmart! Clearance of Fencing . ALUMINUM SELF-STORING COMBINATION DOORS . Reg. $22.45 ALUMINUM PATIO COVEjP® , * IB ft. by 21 ft. X TRUCKLOAD SALE W Our Reg. 169.77 IVw# Jr O Sunliner patio cover hat interlocking roof panda supported | «y heavy-duty ornamental column*. Built-in rain gutter*, g Finished in white acrylic baked enamel. May be level or $ .loped.•«.xii* A-HIGH STQCCACyLffiNCING “RUSTIC RAIL FENCING SET" Self-storing, spring loaded three hinge design. Bottom vinyl nweep, reinforced corners. Screen and g)ass included. 32”-36" openings only. Special Order ................... BRANDY ELM EMERALD SANDSTONE OAK YORKTOWN WALNUT WHITE FROST MOORISH OAK YIHYL WALNUT VINYL OKESTNUT HARVEST PECAN TRADITIONAL OHERRY IMPERIAL {SHERRY PLANTATION WALNUT CINNAMON BIRCH AVOCADO NATpALJHCKORY MMjp '_______________ PLASTIC COATED PANEL WHITE UCE BLUE LACE r. o.Vo GLENWOOD PLAZA NORTH PERRY GLENWOOD SEPTEMBER i, 1989 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURS., FRI., SAT. Canada, Puerto Rico, Australia df S.S. Kretge Co., with Starts In tht Unlttd Stotts, Permanent Press! MEN’S WORK CLOTHES ARE EASY-CARE! SHIRT Reg. 3.97 3 Day SLACKS Reg. 4.97, 3 Day Matching shirts and slacks ]sn i neat lookers! In Sanforised® ‘blends of 50% Fortrel® polyester and 50% cotton. They’re colorfast and soil-release finished! In gray, olive or spruce. Shirts: S-XL (med., long) and slacks:. 29-42 waist, 28-33 in-seam, *T.M. «f «b»r ind. Our Reg. 2.M ini 3 Day Only 100% flat knit cotton, double shoulder. Colors in S-M-L-XL. Our Reg. 68c- C9C 3 Day Only Fruit of the Loom. Boys’: 22-26; Men’s: S-M-L. White only. SWEATER STYLES for BOYS Our Reg. 6.88 • 3 Day Only Boys lead the fall fashion parade in these boldly striped mock turtleneck sweaters of 100% Orlop®, acrylic! Choose from our collection of autumn’s newest colorfast hues in Sizes 8-18. Charge It.. Our Reg. 88c 3 Day Only Jg Jf For men and boys, sises 22-38. 100% Sanforised® white cotton. Our Reg. 93c J|4( 3 Day Only &gfg Reinforced heel and toe. 90% wool, 10% nylon blend. Sara! COLORFUL PLAID WORK SHIRTS Our Reg. 3.97 "9 f SDayOnly Made of genuine eowhid tber. Official slae, weight. Our Reg. 1.77 3 Day Men’s colorfast Sanforised® cotton flannel long-sleeve shirts with full cuff, S-XL. Permanent Press! ELECTRIC BOYS' KNITS ARE SCHOOL HITS! Our Reg. 96c ylf 3 Day Only J Pins, necklaces and earrings studded with crystal stones. Our Reg. 2.44 • 3 Day All-cotton, lone-sleeve mock turtlenecks are in bright solids with trim. Sizes 8-18. MEN Reg. 3,88,3 Day 17 JEWEL WESTCLOX WATCHES FLANNEL SLEEPWEAR FOR BOYS Our Reg. 2196 3Day Only Fire retardent cotton flannel. Sanforised®. Washab|e colors in coat or middy style. 4-7. BACK-TO-SCfHOOL FLANNEL SHIRTS Our Reg. 1.22 3 Day Only Plaid cotton flannel shirts for boys hav$ long sleeves, button-down or regular collars. * Be prepared U> sQve-«mpfafor a Credit Card at Kmurt’s Service Desk! GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWC Our Reg. 14.96 3 Day Only M WQj| Choose women’s or men’s styles. Both are water and shock-resistant.* 9 K PIERCED EARRINGS “JEWELED” iN6S Our Reg. 1.96 9 JtJL 3Day Only Our Reg. 88c ^9 £9 ' Spay Only g£for*9 **■!». forever, finger! Big, ■might, bold costume accents. in sterling silver, with posts. SEPTEMBER 4, 1969 THURS., FRL, SAT OPEN DAILY 10-1Q; SUN. 11-6 A Division of I.S. Krosgo Co., wilh Stores in the United Stotos, Canada, Puorto Rico, Australio SLEEVELESS NYLON SHELL Our Reg. 3.9f «*- 8 Day* ChUrgelt Of 100%' nylon, these shells feature ribbed and novelty .details. Mod colors. 3440. SALE! ITALIAN KNIT BERET Comp, at 5.99 — 8 Day* Only JB BR Angora rabbit, wool and nylon hat bjr^^K Betmar is fully lined. Neutrals^ Colors. oHl d| BUCKLE BAGS ARE "IN OurReg. 4.68 — 3 Day* Only Genuine leather swinger bag can bo 'K shouldered, too. Black, bfown, tan! A | SLACKS! 8*13 SALE! COTTON SLACKS: 6-18 Our Reg. 2.97 —3 Day* Cotton corduroy in 2 styles. Fly front, 2 pockets. Flared or not. Belt loops. Autumn colors! * SHIRTS! 32-38 ?.%*•*• f%08 3 Day* ■ Long sleeved 100% combed cot-Nton oxford, 50% Avrfl* rayon I and 50% cotton. More. Many I .patterns. Charge It Wide legged and proportioned lengths in a great variety of plaids. Gobs of eol- SPECIAL! BEAU CATCHER SKIMMERS f Our Reg. 3.68 - 3 Day* Only . ; A There’s an offside bow to catch a beau. Vinyl patent in black! 540. In Two Lengths REAL GIRLS' PRETENDERS THE VERY IMPORTANT PATENTS Our Reg. 4.94 - 3 Daya Only Wipeable and flattering to the foot! In blaek or white gltmmery vinyl for her! Charge It Suburban and long coat styles! Of 100% cotton face, 100% cotton backing, 100% acetate lined, Etender for coats are white, uk, brown, beige with all around belts or not. 5-13; 6-18. SALE! BRUSHED SKI JACKETS WALTZ GOWNS FOR ©IRIS Our Reg. 1.96 3 Day* Our /leg. 6.88 — 3 Dt Charge It Charge It 80% acetate and 20% brushed nylon forms the waits gown. Lace at neck, sleeves. Cowl collar. Soft pastels. S-L. SALE! SNEAKER CASUALS Comp, atl.?9~3 6ay* Only Her sneakerdike casuals are suedeno V9IJ or corduroy. They swing with aleclcs,.1 flares, kilu, micros, minis. Black,smd, iiRm PERRY AT GLENWOOD 3-Cycle, 3-Temperature Washer and 3-Cycle Dryer *238 BOTH FOR ONLY Wither feature*: cycle* for normal and permanent prea* fabric*, 3 water temperature*, level 2 wash speed*. Washer with 2 cycle* for normal and delicate fabric* ha* vigorous, gentle speeds and built-in lint filter. Waaher with normal, delicate cycle*, ha* 2 washing speeds; regular, gentle action. Ha* 3 water temperatures. Electric Dryer -with ca«y-to*reach, front Electric Dryer has normal, delicate, permanent pres* drying and High, Vami. Air temperaturat for special need*. fluffing clothei Q. To qualify for a 2S deferment must 1 enter college In the first dims commencing after graduation from high school? Portable Color Television Black and White Portable A. No, if you’re Jnotidrafted-hefore you enter college. Once you enroll you must file a request with your board for a 2S deferment. SWEATERS 11 -inch dtegonalihea-•ure picture offer* oS sq. in. of bfatitiful color viewing. Color* stay true no matter how often set is moved. Auto* matic gain Control and VHF memory fine . tutting. 9-inch diagonal measure picture TV is lightweight ‘ Weighs just 14 pounds. The cabinet is made of high impact plastic. 44 *q. in. of clear, crisp viewing. .... shirts Uw* S»*are Easy Payment Plan Downtown Pontiac • FE 5-4171 CLOTHES 73 N. SAGINAW Graduate deferments are no longer given except in the medical field,. But If a young man does go into other graduate study before hegetsadtait call his_.board.JEilLnaw let him finish his school year. Formerly he could finish only his current term! Another policy change last "year made the student deferment good for a 12-month year rather than just the usual 9-month school session. This means that a man who runs into trouble making normal progress during the nipe mofiths can go to summer school and catch up. However, when you graduate in June that ends your studept deferment. : • ★ ★ ★____ '____________......T, Here are some of the questions and answers on other points; Q. My son is planning to enter a local junior college. Is such a college considered an institution of higher learn-- ing for which a 2S deferment may be authorized? , * e ★ 1 A. A junior college fit considered an Institution of higher learning. If a student is taking a full-time course of study and the credits are acceptable by an institution granting a baccalaureate degree, the studept is eligible for a 2S classification. If the student is taking Only a vocational or two-year course he would get a 2A deferment. Q. *I am a student with a 2S deferment and enlisted this summer in the Army Reserve. May I keep my student deferment? ..... ■ ★' ★ Hf.« ... A. No. You should notify your board of your change of status and youwill be reclassified to Class ID, member of e component. Q. What is the minimum number of hours I will have to carry to receive a student deferment? ★ * w ,■ A. As a student pursuing a four-year course you must have earned during your first academic year 25 per cent of the credits required for your baccaulaureate degree, 50 per cent at the end bf your second year and 75 per cent at the end of your third year. 2-Cycle Kenmore Washer and 2-Temperature Dryer BOTH FOR ONLY *198 2-Speed, 2-Cycle Washer and 2-Cycle, 2-Temperatore Dryer Successor? 2 c—is .THE PONTIAC PRESS, THUBSDAY, S£PTgMBEJl 4, m* Rules on Deferment of Collegians Eyed By JERRY T. BAULCH AP Newsfeature - WASHINGTON—With college doors about to reopen for a new school year it’s time for freshmen to apply for deferment from the draft and for undergraduates returning for another year to notify their draft boards they’re still students. The draft rules haven’t changed since last year, but let’s look at the ones covering student deferments and fihswer some questions: ' You have to be a full-time student pursuing satisfactorily a course of study that will lead to graduation in the normal time for the course of study you’re taking. This rule applies whether you’re in college with a 2S studentrdeferment of hSVFTTTTrade .school deferment: ....—— ........."r ★ * * Once you get a student' deferment you are no lohger eligible for a 3A deferment as a father, although you. might get one on grounds of extreme hardship. Within 10 days after you register for coliege you apply In writing to your draft hoard for a student deferment, telling the board whgre you’re- going to college. You can write a letter or get a Selective Service Form 104; request tor Under-graduate Student Deferment, from your draft board or pos-sibly from your college. CERTIFICATION FORM Then you make sure'the registrar provides for your draff board *a Selective Service Form 109 certifying that you are. a student under the draft law definition. Many colleges automatically mail the certificates to the draft boards for the students. Others won’t' mail them but will give the certificates to those students who ask for them. And some colleges fighting the system won’t provide certificates at all. Most draft boards require the certificates, but some will accept other proof of student status. If you already have a student deferment and are going back for another school year you don’t have to apply for deferment again but you do have to let your board know you are still a full-time student making satisfaefbry progress. This is done normally through the registrar providing the Form 109 for your draft board. Chicago Has Lunch Plan for Elderlyr CHICAGO (AP) — Luncheon service for senior citizens has started at six new centers in Chicago’s Nutrltipn Program for Older Adults. ' * * v#. Robert J. Ahrens, director of the Division for Sailor Citizens of the City of Chlcago*s D e p a r t m e n t of Human Resources, said the new meal service is part of a planned expansion in the nutrition program which makds meals available at reasonable cost. * *. * Thep^ be serving 1.500 meals a'day in 35 locations by the end o’f 1909. .* * * The program is administed by thr Divison for Senior Citizens with the aid of a $194,762 first-year federalgrant under the Older Americans Act. Persons 60 and oyer may visit the center nearest their homes. 'Our early experience shows that senior citizens throughout tht'city not only are welcoming the nutritious, reasonably priced meals offered but also the added opportunities for social relationships that are afforded during the luncheons,” Ahrens said. Ulbriclit Lead the Field BERLIN (AP*) - “Walter Ulbricht? What is Walter Ulbricht? He is a'Symbol. ThBt Is all.*’ .; 1 The speaker was a member of the sizable Soviet community in East Berlin. The Russian aware of Western speculation that Ulbricht at 76 may be growing too old to carry on his twin duties of chief of state and head of East Germany’s Communist party. ‘What is important,” the Russian emphasized,”““"is the party. The Central Committee. And they are very strong and would be in good hands Erich Hoenecker.” -H-e n a n k a r,—I7T—is- tha ideologically minded and hard* ■ lining native of Germany’s Western Saarland who is talked the front-runner for Ulbricht’a positim_-JBhen--ihe spade-bearded Communist steps down. munist regimes provide, teems a better’ bet than Premier WlHi Stoph. ..>'•••■ ■; . ILysy,1 %" After Ulbricht skipped an official trip to Moscow fbr what was described as the aftereffects of the flu, Hooecker Was pictured at his right elbow in a fDUow-up Politburo meeting. Everyone else, including Stoph,' had places at the sides of a big official table. Honeckpr made the major speeches on the Bovl*4 trip,; tasks that Ulbricht would have handled. Stoph 'was delegation leader but this seemed to be Probably only the leading East German and Soviet of-ficials in East Berlin know the exact state of Ulbrlcht’s health in his advancing years, or who will be his successor. Nonetheless, Honecker, from the meager evidence that Corn- organizations ainco he was 10 ' and, since thp Com-took ,ovisr Eaat Germany, has advanced step by step in the party’s hierarchy. Stoph', white-haired At 55, is a native Berliner who hae been a party member since 1931 Before and during World War H he was in the .artillery. His post War career, until he succeeded the deceased Otto Qrotewohl as premier in 1964, was mainly in the building of the East German military establishment. As interior minitier he was mostlyprotocol. HAS NO TITLE Honecker has no official state title but is secretary of the National Defense Council, which gives him a big voice in military and police matters,. His second wife, Margot, 42, the only, female member of the Ministers Council, holding the important ideological post of education minister. She gets public attention in East Germany second .only t o uibricht’s wife, Lotte. * * it Honecker was imprisoned by the Nazis in 1937-45. He has been a member of Communist boss of th* policl lhat became fhe Tfitional People's Army In 1956, when Stoph became During the year, of the Berlin Wall, 1961, Stoph was In persoQsil charge of coordinating and controlling the policy resolutions of the party’s central Committee. Some people recall him as “the real firebrand in the party,’’ the man in charge of putting down the1953 revolt against Communist rule. s the Soviet; source’s description of Ulbricht' as • symbol, »t remains an open question how dispensable n« really is. • , Undoutedly some Russians do not like him. But amoo Stalin’s time, Ulbricht has **«» loyal, ruthlessly hard, capable, wUy end always on the right side in shake-ups. The first telephone talk. New York to San Francisco, was on Jan. 25, 1915, by Alexander Graham Bell and ThoijMW-A. Watson. .j CALL NOW for your FAIL CATALOG of 198 RhiWEvening Courses- You'll find opportunities for paraonol onriehmont ond^pro- j>r>tand th7*prote»»iono|n^fiuidift" Join1&QC?lMw*ondsof o7ult» Joflny ovonlng count* at O.U. Classes begin theweek ofSeptember 22. Registration i* now goiife on. OAKLAND UNIVERSITY DIVISION OF CONTINUING EDUCATION ■ / Rochester, Michigan 48063 • Phone 311-2800, Ext. 2111. Sale End* Saturday, September 6 PAIR SALE: Washer and Dryer for One Low Price Q. I begin graduate study in law school this fall. Will I be entitled to keep my student deferment if I make satisfactory progress? ^ ., f ■ • it" .\it1 _ A. No. Deferment for graduate study is limited to students of medicine, dentistry and allied specialties. Q. I have been accepted for enrollment in medical school. How do I go about getting a deferment? — . . ★ , ★ . it A. Write a letter to your local board requesting such deferment. Set out the facts, in your case, sign the letter and give your draft number. After you begin your studies have your school send a graduate or professional college student oertitipite In your local hoard.... ---------_ mMMsh Bid Names Absent- ' :T-',' : . ■■ «• jfi'-if»': in Michigan Event By FLETCHER SPEARS The local stop by the gentlemen of the fairways Is likely to answer at least >one question, and that answer could determine If the first Michigan Golf Classic wilt also btfth* last one. The question foremost In the minds of observers here is: Will the golfing crowd shell out the cash to watch a mediocre field? _ Mediocrity In name only, not from a talent standpoint. If they do, and the s of the event which got under 'way this morning at Shanandoah Country Club oh Walnut Lake Road near here are certainly hoping they wilt, then it'll be obvious, that it is possible to run a tournament without certain n a m e players: None of the top 12 money-winners on -this season’s PGA tour have shown up.- • ■ Not only that, but 17 of the top 20 pro golfers have withdrawn from the Classic. Miller Barber, Dow Finsterwald, Marty Fleckman and GeorgTKfrudsoir were the latest withdrawals. PMllK Prtu mm , WATCHFUL CH1 CHI —• Eying the ’fftght of a Arive by Michigan Golf. Clamte at Shenandoah Country Club. Chi Chi Puerto Rico during yesterday’s pro-am preceding the in a best-bail 50. Firebirds to Surprise in Sf. Joe THE PONTIAC PRESS SPORTS THttRTSDAY, SEPTEMBER, 4, 1989 D—1- lies Bat Helps [Denny Win No. 22 KANSAS CITY (AP) — “Willie is my man,” Detroit pitcher Denny McLain [ said Wednesday night after outfielder I Willie Horton slugged two homers in : leading the Tigers to a 4-2 victory over 1 the Kansas City Royals. “He hit a three-run homer for me when I won my 20th against the California Angels,” McLain said, “and he did again tonight.” 1 ” The Tigers return home today .for a makeup game with Baltimore, Earl Waiting Pistons Plan No Bidding Battle for Bing DETROIT (AP) — Piston ace Dave Bing has kept his team’s officials waiting to learn whether he Is committed to jump to the Washington Capitols of the American Basketball Association. "I understand that he was ill and delayed his departure,” said Piston general manager Ed Coil, who was waiting Wednesday for Bing to return to Detroit from Washington. “We’ll just have to wait for him for another day.” The NBA Pistons learned Tuesday that Bing has agreed to leave the Detroit club to join his hometown Washington team and the ABA in the 1971-72 season. NO BIDDING Coil made it clear he was not about to become involved in'an “unreasonable” bidding contest to persuade the basketball star to remain with the team. He had waited most of ..Wednesday afternoon for Bing, before he learned that his top player^ had not left the capital until late morning. ■:--------- ------------- $65*000 contract *witMhePistons. Then the Detroit chib has a one year option that could keep him through 1970-71.--- “We can’t get into an all-out bidding war,” Coil explained, “because we’d have every player’ threatening to move over to the other league unless their contracts were re-written. That would be ndnous. “Anyway, we’ll have W wait and see,”. he said. “If Bing has signed a contract Wiih them, then we’ll consult pur attorneys” Detroit Prep, Signs Contract With Phils PHILADELPHIA (UPI) — Jim Essihn, sn 18-year-old catcher from Detroit, has signed- with the Philadelphia Phillies for 1970, the ball club announced Wednesday. Essian, a three-letter prep star from Detroit St. Martin High School, forfeited • football athletic scholarship to the University of Michigan when he signed the contract as a free agent. SJdte Baseball Summit T01$0 (AP) -r- tforu Shoriki, owner of Japan’s professional Yondurl Giants baseball team, left today for Ndw York to cotter with Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn on U.S.-Japan baseball ties. Wilson, (1241), is scheduled to start against Jim Phoebus, (i2-6). SIX HITTER McLain racked Up his 22nd victory against six setbacks bypitching La six-hitter. “I had a g.iad fastball »«rly and I had excellent control. Near the end of the game my slider picked up,” he said. Kansas City’s only runs off last year’s 30-game winner came on homers by' Joe ■Foy and Mike Fiore. Bill Freehan also homered for Detroit. Horton has been on a rampage, hitting eight home runs in the last seven games. Four of them have come in the last four games in Kansas City. .... ■' i ..... t v ■ -k_Jfc . : It is 469 feet to left field and it tails out to 421 feet in left center in Municipal Stadium, distances Which discourage many right-handed hitters—but not 5-foot-10, 205-pound Horton. "If I hit the bid! right, it’s going,” Horton said. “People talk about parks—F don’t worry about them.” The blasts off Kansas City's—Mike-Hedlund were Horton’s 24th and 25th homers of the season but he sajd, “I don’t know how many I’ve hit: I don’t pay that much attention. We won the game and that’s the main thing.” Royals Manager Joe Gordon’s comment on Horton’s hitting? “That guy is so strong, he scares you.” RED HOT BAT The red-hot Horton Hit his first homer , of the game when he came up as the leadoff batter in the second inning. Thie blast enabled the Tigers to tie the. score atT-1. The Royals took the early lead on Fiore’s first-inning' homer. Bill Freehan was next up and he followed with a blast that landed only about 15 feet from Horton’s. Then in the sixth, Horton smashed a tremendous drive oft the .» auxiliary scoreboard in left centei, scoring Kaline ahead of him and giving Detroit a 4-1 lead, - Foy- came back-'with a- homer in ther seventh, but the Tigei's home run lead held up and McLain had his 22nd victory-of the year: McLain was never in trouble during the game. While giving up-six-hits he -walked four and struck out six. DETROIT (4) “ KANSAS CITY (1) •brhbl TfcTIrS*- Tr««h It ..... 100 # SprlflBl rl 5 0 t • Norttirup cf 40 1# Normhr cf 1000 KHMe.rl.. - 1 1 0 0 Fiore 1b ■ 1111 C»sh 1b 4 0 2 0 Plnlella If -4 0 00 W. Horton If 3 2 2 3 Foy 3b ' , 41 11, MitCKRk 2b 4 0 1 or' AKOTH 2b 4 0 0 0 FroolMm . 4 112 Healy c ... 4 0 2 0 Wort 3b i < 441 10 HOTMMlU M 3 010 McLain p 30 10 Hadlund p 2 0 00 Ktough ph 1 0 00 .. cramp,.- - oo.oo Kirkpatrick ph 10 0 0 ratal...2....n < ♦« vSfij . ...-.o» 2 a % o»tr.it .....'.....tat oo2 ooi~4 Kantat City ...................100 001 000—2 ' DP—Kansat City 1. LOB—Oatrelt 4, Kantaa City I. 2B~Col 1 3B—Sprlggi. HR—Flora (10), W. Horton 2 (25), Fraahan (15), Foy (0). SB—Hornan-mf. S—McLain.. IF M R SR Bb SO !McLalol,'lW,2M) .....» * 2 2 4 * Htdlund (L, 2-5) .....2 7 4 4 2 4 Cham ...............,2 ■ ■,'2 O' iiw- I. fiV ( ,T—2:12. A-»,0W. ; Fidel'Stamps' U. S. MIAMI (B. ,— Prime Minister Fidel Castro is so proud of his Cuban amateur baseball team’s 2-1 victory over America last month that Havana .Radio, said the government!* bringing out a commemorative stamp r~ complete with linescorih, MAKES STEAL m1 Tiger second baseman Tom Matchick goes high for a throw and is backed up by shortstop Tom Tresh on a throw from the catcher during a steal by Kansas City’s Jack Hernandez. The Tigers won the game, 4-2. Expansion COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) — The possibility of expanding the Mid American Conference was postponed Wednesday until early December. A..." *. . , Athletic directors of the six schools in the league met here and decided to consider expansion, A recommendation will be made to faculty representatives at a meeting here Dec. 4 and 5 whether to keep the league at six teams or expand. The league was redueedlo stx teams- -{his summer when Marshall University .in Huntington, W. Va., was ousted for allegedly violating recruiting regulations. OTHER MEMBERS Other members are Ohio University, * Miami, Kent State Bowling Green, Toledo and Western Michigan at Kalamazoo, Mich. The athletic directors also indicated that the new Tangerine Bowl contract There’s no looking ahead for the Pontiac Firebirds ?rh0-remain in a deadlock with Lansing for the Central Division lead of the Midwest Football League. The Firebirds travel to St. Joseph, in the southwest corner of the state, to meet the Southwest Michigan Hawks Saturday night and it could be a troublesome visit for die F-Birds. The Hawks, representing, the Benton Harbor-St. Joe area in the MFL, are in the Lakes Division, of the league, and they are ready to throw a surprise weapon against Pontiac ... by the name of Colie O’Brien. IRISH QB ' O’Brien who quarterbacked behind Terry Hanratty at Notre Dame for three years giving the Irish several key victories is reported to be interested in playing football since he is still on campus at Notre Dame. The Hawks haye several former Notre Dame players on the roster including Tom McKinley, an outstanding offensive tackle. Southwest Michigan has . scrambler Mickey Stewart, a left handed passer, currently calling signals. ik • ★ ★ Jim Stauffer, an all-stater from St. John’s is a prime target at split end for the passing-minded Hawks. Running speed is provided by Willie Warfen and Sam Jones, and defensively the Hawks boast their main strength against any running game. - Hie powerful Lackawanna Lancers with the southern conference would be presented to the, BAG council of presidents in February. ■ it ★ •* The, current two-year pact between the two conferences expires after this season. The Tangerine Committee is seeking a three to five-year extension to the pact. scored twice on the ground against the Hawks and hqd to come from behind to win a 20-12 decision. Dayton defeated the Hawks, 31-13, and the Colts were the 'only other team to score a “ground" TD against the Benton Harbor team. All, other touchdowns against the Hawks have come on long pass plays, > «kick returns and errors resulting from fumbles and interceptions. FIREBIRDS BOLSTERED The Firebirds, fresh from' a 33-19 triumph over arch-rival Flint in a penalty-marred game, are expected - to bolster their running attack with the addition of Jim Little, a scooter who in his. trial as a runningback picked up 75 yards in ttyree carries against Flint. The return of Chuck .Stein to the secondary will also help^ the. Firebirds against the aerial game of O’Brien or Stewart. — Hie race in the two divisions has nar-rowed down to a two-team battle in each case. Lackawanna broke the tie in the Lakes Division last week in .upending rival Dayton, 12-8, in a game played before nearly 6,000 fans IrT Buffalo and a defensive battle which saw no scoring in the second half. Lansing, the closest challenger to Pontiac in the Central Division, has a tough assignment at Dayton, so the Firebirds need the victory at Southwest Michigan’badly if they hope to take the . division lead. Dayton then comes to Pontiac next Saturday, Sept. 13 while Lansing goes to Flint in what should be a victory for the Capitol City squad. The game this week wiii be played in ^Uicfcihaon Stadium ’first. Joe. It wilt jw the gjrst game on the new turf' of‘the-stadium which seats 5.200 fans. Fans following the Fi rehirds^ sfiould" leave the 1-94 Niles’ exit to drive Into St. Joe. ' MIDWEST FOOTBALL LCAGUI Laic.. Division . Central Division WL’FFFA, WLTFFFA Lackawanna 5 0 140 43 Pontiac ' 3 11 13? 44 Dayton 4 1 14t 5 Lansing 3 1 1 S3 4? S.W. Mich. >1 71 M Flint. . 1 4 0 43 107 Grand BapMs 1 4 55 144 Detroit 0 5 0 22 155 THIS WEEK'S GAMES ,. Pontiac at Southwast Michigan “It seems like back Injuries are very prevalent,” commented tournament director Marshall Chambers. - . PLAYING ELSEWHERE Four of the Veaf’s top professionals — ■winners of Ihe U.S Open (Orville Moody); British Open (Tony Jacklin), Masters (George Archer) and National PGA (Ray Floyd) are in Akron, 0., this week participating m the World Series of -Golf. ★ lit;* But while that quartet Isn’t on hand, and neither are Arnold Palmer. Jack Nicklaus, Gary Player, Billy Casper, Lee Terrino and Daveyf Hill, there’s still a considerable number of talented players _ eager to display their skills as they battle for the first prize of $20,000 in a $100,000 jackpot. ^ Among the 10 tourney winners this season entered at .Shenandoah in Bob Lunn, who captured the Hartford Open Monday by downing Michigan’s Dave Hill in a playoff. HOT ROUNDS . ' Ex-Wayne State End Is Released by Rams LOS ANGELES (UPI)— Ron, Berger, a defensive end from Wayne State University, was among five players the Los Angeles Rams put on waivers <, Wednesday. , ★ * ' * Berger was one of three Rams who received his outright release; the others - were retained on the taxi squad. New Coach Predicted BANGOR, Marne (AP)y-i A veterqn Boston Celtica basketball player Don Nelson predicts that former Celtic Tommy Heinsohn will be the next Celtics’ . coach, but that general manager Red Auerbach will wait to see if current-coach Bill Russell is going to resign. Bass Back With Rams LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Dick Bass, the leading all-time rusher among actfve players in the National football League, will make life exhibition debut with the Las Angdei tofue In a game Against the Buffalo Bills. FINAL SELLOUT OF 1969 PONTIACS Example: — — CATALINA COUPE DEMO V8 Engine • ! Company Car Whitewall Tires Hydramatic Trans., Power Disc Brakes'" Full Decor Group,. Power Steering, Push Button Radio. SPECIAL! TEMPEST Sport Coupe Full Decor Group Auto Transmission « Power Steering V8 Engine / Pushbutton Radio Whitewall Tires Daily Rental Car *2275 aw™ PONTIAC TROY-.642-S6OT 1850 MAPLE RD. (15 MI.) Bet; Crook* and Coolidze LOCATED IN THE TROY MALL mm mm) A couple of lesser-knowns on the tour' — Terry Wilcox and Terry Dill — served notice they’ll have to be reckoned with here as they carded course-record 67s yesterday in the pro-am, ★ As. - A Bill Mattson, Shenandoah’s host pro, set the earlier mark of 68 a couple of times and his score will continue to stand since it was recorded with the course playing" at par ,72 over 6,900 yards. , k DISTANCE CHANGED With the arrival of Uif tournament, the course has"been altered somewhat, playing now at some 6,800 yards and par For' their efforts Dill and Wilcox collected $900 apiece. TOP TEAM Another orthe tourney winners this .season, Tom Shaw, teamed wjth amateurs Bill Haines of Pine Lake and WJR disc jockey J, P. McCarthy to take the best-ball title with a 13-under-par 57. * Jr ‘ * Bob Goalby, shooting a one-over par 71, had help from Ray Barget and George Clark, both of Shenandoah, in posting a 58. Also at 58 was R. H. Sikes playing with another Shenandoah pair, Dr. Mark Dale and Mitch Ramsey. 1 Deane Beman, Mason Rudolph, Grier Jones and Shaw managed 68s. LOCAL NAMES Included iii the 144-man lineup are a number of Michigan players, including pros Mike Souchak-of-Oakland 4lffla, Gene Bone of Pay Pointe and current \state PGA champion Gfenn Stuart of -•PntHf V'-'-yr-- — Among the amatuers from the area are Pemn Green of Franklin and Gary Bailiet of'Rochester, Green is current state amatuer champion, while Bailiet is winner of the reheat Michigan Public Links match play dihmpionship. Single rounds continue through Sunday. (Tournament pairings are ' lifted dh Page D-2.) ii ■}y D—2 THE P()^TIAV riil'.SS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1969 TwinsPad Lead irt AL-sWest Crucial Series to Open Tonight Against Oakland MINNEAPOLIS ■ ST. PAUL (AP) — Rookie Manager Billy Martin was cautiously optlBM- tic but Minnesota twins Fresi- iad wItB’'' HOT PAY - Texan Terrv Dill loses his hat on this swing during the pro-am at Shenandoah Country Club yesterday which signaled the opening of the $lWjM0 Michigan. Collects Hole-in-One Greg Blust of Waterford aced the 165-yard No. 4 at Twin Lakes yesterday. He used a Classic. The 30-year-old pro came up With -» n„mh~ ^ for nine holes. It was the PwiiiM.Proas Photos by a«w whhot a number of sweet swihgr in carding a course record 67. The first round of the Classic.opened this morning..—’-x.-y dent Calvin Griffith scented American League playoff money. The Twins opened up a 6% game lead over Oakland in the American League’s West Division Wednesday by downing Cleveland 7-1, while the were splitting a doubleheader at Boston. like to come out of tibia one with three of four.” The Twins skipper said he would like to clinch the West Division "as soon as possible. I don’t feel that we would lose" any edge by wrapping it up too early. “I don’t care if we do it at The Twin& anri OaklantL oPen homo nr nn the mad. T dnn’( ” f - '“,JJ even care if we do it on an air- plane, just as long as we do it.’1 APPREHENSIVE He predicted an “ulcer se- a big four-game series tonight on the West Coast. 'If the Twins can win two of four in Oakland it will be Katy bar the door for us the rest of the way,” said Griffith. Martin noted that the Twins are six games ahead of Oakland in the loss column and added: 'If we have that same margin when we leave Oakland Sunday, they’ll be hurting.”. While a split would help the .former Champs Set for Musial Series BATTLE CREEK (UPI) Threfe former champions were Among the finalists paired up for the 31st Stan Musial World Series beginning today. Sanctioned by the American Amateur Baseball Congress, the double elimination series includes former winners Seattle, Wash., 1960, Coldwater, Mich., 1963, and Battle Creek, Mich., 1946 and 1953. Today’s pairings: Thursday** pairings: Seattle, Wash., Chany Studs vs. BaMt, tls., Bluas 12 noon EST. Fort Worth, Tax., Jack Williams Chdv- Lakewood, Ohio, Airmatic Valve flanta Buckhead 5:30 p.m. EST. Schenectady, N. Y., Krai Whistle Cl i. Battle Creek, Mich., Clark's 1:30 p. TSdns-and-hur^Oakland, Martin said, “Of course we’ll go out after every game. You're not However, Martin said he was a little apprehensive about the Oakland series because All-Star second baseman Rod Carew will miss the last three games because of a weekend military obligation. Carew, who returned from a two-week summer training camp a few days ago, leads the league with a .351 batting average. A A A Carew slammed a double in the sixth inning to ignite a five-run outburst against Cleveland Wednesday. Tony Oliva followed with an 'RBI single to break the scoreless deadlock. Harmon Killebrew cracked opposite field homer, his 39th of the season, to chase Indian starter Steve Hargan, 6-12. COLLISION COURSE -A Cloud Of dust is raised when Cleveland’s Eddie Leon (middle) collides with Minnesota catcher John Roseboro in a futile attempt to steal home during the third inning of Wednesday’s game at St. Paul. Leon attempting to score from second on a single, was thrown out by outfielder Ted Uhlaender while Roseboro left the game with a cut on the face requiring two stitches as a result of the collision. The Twins went on to win the game, 7-1. - CLEVELAND __________ ebrhW abrhbl lyder cf 4 « 2 « Uhlaendr If 4 « 11 Ilmchck 3b 4 0 » « Csrmv 2b 5 12* iksr If 4too Oliva rT 512 1 Horton Ib 4 0 0 0 Klllabraw 3b 4 1 12 - tt 3 11 1 Quillet 3b 0 0 O 0 3 000 Room lb . 4 110 3 010 Tovar cf ,, 3.1 .»♦ 2 000 Rosaboro c 1 ooo 2000 MltiarwM 02210 0000 Cardenas ss 4 021 ■* 1 0 0 0 Boswell p 3 01 2' 000 000 os m? 10 0-1 p 0 0 0 0 Paul p 0000 Total so t 4» ClavalaiNl MlnasMta ......... . TM3MT. “^DP-rClav*ll Cleveland 3, Minnesota .. ..— carew. hr—Klllabraw <»). Marratoon Hargan (L,5-12) S. 7 1 1 1 * Mjfi ’ * * C I 1 4 2 2 • . • •Oil I (W»l 5*10) 9 first hole-in-one for the 15-year- n Golf Classic ■ 0:00—12:00—Chuck Montalbano, Terry l2:00-0:-4|ICfe04» Crawford, Lorry l:13-4;13-Bob ttirrt 4:20-l:24-Cllff Brown?0Curtis Slfford, l:20-4?20?C4t* JSWor, Gory Groh, John Lots ■ Jorrir 4—■" 5:30—1:25—Bob Men no, Mike Reasor, 1:20-4:20- Jo Jo to End Baseball Career KANSAS CITY (AP) - Jo Jo White and Mel Harder, whose years in baseball total 85, announced today they will retire Padres Rehire Preston Gomez, Three Coaches at the aid of the season. White has been third base coach for the Kansas City Royals and Harder has handled the Royals’ pitchers. White has sprat 42 years in baseball and is 70 years old. Harder will be 60 in October and his 43rtf baseball SAN DIEGO (AP) - Manager Preston Gomez of the San Diego Padres and three of his coaches were rehired for next season. The three—Roger Craig, Sparky Anderson and Wally Moon—will -UnatoTby Bob Skinner, who a*nifWirte»frTlM resigned as managra of theieaeue managerand general Philadelphia Phillies last manager month, charging lack of support1 Harder, a rierht hand pitcher, from the front office. wop ws major league games, Sdnner will replace 50-year-1186 while pitching for Cleveland, old Whitey Wietelmann, who’ll He lacked only 79 days of com-manage one of San Diego’s preting. 96 years .as a major farm clubs next season.*" {league'player. White has been associated with baseball since he was s “peanut* boy. J ' wasn’t big enough,at 12 years of age,” he says, /‘so I sold pranuts.” .; Aftpr five years playing minor league ball White went to the Detroit Tigers in 1932 and was with that dub seven years. Aft- Giants of holding their one-game lead ini foe National League West. Losing pitcher Mike Wegener walked the . bases load with no outs before Davenport delivered PRE-GAME CHAT - Golf pro Dick Crawford (left) and his amateur partners, A1 Con ant (center) of Flint and Lee Scheel of Royal Oak, talk about things other-than golf prior to toeing off in yesterday’s pro-am at Shenandoah. Crawford posted a 71 which was also the trio’s pro-am score. Paid Record Salary Maple l^afs Sign Ullman manager Jim Gregory of The Toronto Maple Leafs of the Na-Hockey League an-playing as an outfielder he nounccdJWedncadmy that Norm unit this fall. But ha did not report for all practice because of acadtmic Teasong ahd has dropped out of school, Detach said. - , A . • A ; A Scheuren, a Junior in the starting offensive line, and Anderson, a sophomore, bbth left ft* team for personal reasons after a week of practice. he allowed 10 hits, walked five and hit a batter. The Athletics had at least one runner in each inning. They loaded the bases in the second, fourth and eighth innings. However, Nagy was tough in the clutch and surrendered just one run on left Campaneris’ bases-loaded single in fourth. The A’s finished with 13 runners left on base. ' “I just kept hanging in there end, the fellows made some great plays in the field for me, 21-year-old hurler said, “And with ail that, I only threw 121 pitches. I’m not even lanSlb If T i n ESb i,1 ]np 'RmiMs If 310 0 £H» lb joof t 1010 Otaoott c RJohnson ph i 0 1 0 Lonborg p Lewis pr 0 10 0 itoScrt p Honey c 1 0 00 Lyta p Talbot p 1 0 0 0 Moses pk Lachmon p 0101 Brook* Ph 10 00 wPKfflEjLv TMsI K SSZ!; ■ VSavo—LlndblaO. >B-Rooi. T—i:3o7 ' ^POH .10 * 15 4 Lachwntnn. PB^Soof. T^Sfta.1 A—IfttaT Bosox Mound Ace Sidelined With Injuries BOSTON (AP) - The Boston Red Sox, battling to hang on to third {dace in the American League’s East Division, suffered a crippling Mow Wednesday When right-handed pitching ace Ray Chip was sidelined with a strained ligament in his pitching elbow. Culp, who has a 174 record, apparently injured his arm during a routine warmup before Tuesday night’s game with Oakland was rained out. He had been sidelined several days with Manager Dick Williams said that Culp will not “touch a ball for ft) days to two Weeks.” Culp, whq, was dde to pHcb against Washington Saturday, will be replaced by Lee Stage in tito Only o| ★ ★ ★ “Every win is, a- good performance but P was glad to see the shutoUC I’ve been fooling around too long this season.” Maloney’s record now is 8-4. “Our guys made some good plays behind me,” the right hander said. He mentioned a line shot hit by Don Kessenger in the eighth with one out and Randy Hundley on second on a two-base error. by Alex Johnson in left field: First baseman Lee May speared the liner, jumping high in the six-game home losing streak, longest in the four years they have’been based in Atlanta. It also kept them three games behind leader San Francisco in the National League West, Atlanta starter-winner Ron Reed, )4-9, started the big Atlanta sixth with a walk, moved to third on a single by Felipe Alou and scored on a sacrifice fly by Tony Gonzalez. When Hank Aaron doubled, rlando Cepeda was walked in- ntionally, loading the !_____. Clete Boyer then hit a two-run double, chasing Pirate starter. Dock Ellis. Bats In Winning Davis' Hit String Longest in 20 Years LOS ANGELES UP) -couldn’t have been a more dramatic moment. Willie Davis, Los Angeles Dodger with a 30-game hitting streak on thp line, came febat with ope out in the bottom of the ninth, the score, tied 4-4 and Maury Wills on second base. With first base opeh. New York Manager Gil Hodge might have been expected to ■“v YORK LOS ANOELES abr hbl >b r h t ---- cf 4 1 1 2 Will, » 5 2 3 Harralion M 4 0 1 0 Mota It 4 0 1 fi '—i It 4 10 0 WDavis cf SOI ion 1b 4 111 Parker Its 4 1 2 ...—da rf 3 0 0 0 Koacp rf 4 11 Chartoi 3b 3 0 0 0 SuMKls 3b 3 1 1 Boswell ]b 1 0 0 0 Slzamora 2b 4 0 1 Dyer c 4 0 2 0 Torbora c 3 0 1 Weis 2b 3 0 0 0 Hallor e Koosmsn p 2 0 0 0 COslaan Koonco p 0 0 0 0 Crawl ore ... ... PfMI ph 1110 Mikkaltn p 0 0 0 Ryan p 0 0 0 0 Snarhaky ph I * * have Davis walked .intentionally. But he denied ever even thinking about it. -★ -dr “If there was a signal to give, I would hove given it,’’ Hodges stated flatly; ‘‘I pitched to him to. get him out I didn’t want to walk him JL________ , - Davis whacked reliever A| Diluaro’s first offering into ' field for. a double, bringing across Wills wlfli the winning for a 5-4 victory Wednesday, “Gil wasn’t going to pitch to me out of courtesy," said a tired but happy Davis, whose string stands at 31, longest in 20 years in the majors. “His lefthanders had handled me pretty good all night — I guess he figured they could do. it more time." ^ . . ★ . *. * „ t Davis said he was bothered by an upset stompeh, and that he hpd been olding the bat too higl) and wrapped around his body. Manager Walter Alston noticed it and mentioned It. Davis was ready In the ninth.. “I expected to get the. pitch he threw,” Davis said. “I said to myself, ‘here it comes, |hat side-arm curve ball.’ He got It up and I whacked it." by * *•" Amcllfwi^rPM ( iKHHIEHiMilt Ito, 1JO, San Frpnclaco. 1. WP—Kooiman 2. T—2:27. A-2M2J. San Dim 9-1 AAAlou Cf Allty 2b Star gel I II 2 0 0 til MMbn 2b 3 10 2 0 0 0 RJackson ss 2 l 0 4 0 0 0 Didier r 2 0 0 -1 0 1 3 0 1 0 0 Paaan'pB f 0 0 6 RReedV 2 1 0 0 Belinsky 0 0 0 0 Brown ph 10 0 0 CTaylor ph 1 0 0 0 Doyio p *“ * Upshaw p Ratak ss JMay c RUB 1 Bills p 2 0 1 0 Carty ph DatCantn p o o o 0 Gar r pr M----1 J> 0 0 0 0 Tlllmah c Total Pittsburgh PITTSBURGH ATLANTA abrhbl i 4 12 0 FAlou cf 4 0 2 0 Gonzalez » 3 0 0 1 H Aaron 4 0 0 0 Cf—** 5 12 R3 1 7 1 Total .. 0 0 • I 0 0 0 1 29 8 6 I • Of MMIX-I R Reed (W,f4-9)’ Doyle imm A- 4,317. Sava—Upshaw. WP-Doyl«. -T—2:24. philadrLphia Funeral Slated for Kansas Coach LAWRENCE, Kan. AP) Funeral services are scheduled here Fridsy for-J^ Albert R. ’§?fF Kennedy, the wlnningest football coach ever at. the University of Kansas, who died Wednesday at the age of 92. Kennedy practiced dentistry in Lawrence for 82 years he retired at the age of 89. A quarterback at Kansas for, three years and captain of the 1897 team, Kennedy played professional foot bail in Pennsylvania before returning h r rr bb to to coach~KU from 1904 to 1910. His teams compiled a 53-9-4 record. SAN DIEGO (AP) - Woody Fryman pitched a five-hitter and Johnny Caliison tripled home three runs as Philadelphia routed San Diego, 9-1 Wednesday night. Fryman, 11-11, beating the Padres for the third time in four decisions this year, lost a out in the seventh when the Philadelphia infield committed three‘ errprs following' a single by Ivan Murrell. •* The Phils sewed their first seven runs off rookie rigid-hander A1 Santorini, 6-13, who was driven from the mound in the sixth. S 22 5Q 1 i urtiw ss i> v « T5 0 f Llbrfn ss 19* 1 0 0 0 OBrown rf 3 00 4 1 oo Gaston cf 6 1 3 1 Cannlzzro c m « i 4 110 Santorini p 2 0 0 DRoberts p 0 0 0 , Ferraro ph 1 | 0 0 914 0 Total 35 110 .. I I $ 014 11 0—9 0 0 0 BOB fB#W‘ —^>»ipp»>w Roles, D Johnson M^Ryan,^Briggs. DP—San^DIsgo f. LOB- ^rTio 12, San I R ER BB SO Santorini (L.4-13) . 5 1-310 Okay Woman Jockey CHICAGO (AP) - Barbara Ader,° 31; of Needham; Mass., became the first woman in Illinois. history to be granted a jockey’s license Wednesday. 'Jeep* 4-wheel drive. .*. You've got to drive it to believe it Check the yellow pages and... PEA COATS NAVY STYLE SATIN QUILT ,LINING ANCHOR BUTTONS REPROCESSED WOOL Men’s ®S Boys’ *16*j C.P.O. SHIRTS 95% Wool ANCHOR BUTTONS NAVY BLUE $7*8 PLAID SJ98 JOE’S SURPLUS ARMY NAVY, 19 N. Saginaw - In Downtown Pontiac Shop Mon. nod Thun. UU 8:30, Wod., ‘til 6 P.M., Fri. ■til 9 ' .....r'1-"1 ■■'———- THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1969 D~0 Shoot for Atlanta Scalps Saturday WHO PAYS? Robert Holmes and Mika Garrett- In list week’s 31-21 victory over St. Louis, Holmes carried eight times for 74 yards and Garrett 15 for 51. ( Chiefs’ quarterback Len Dawson has thrown six touchdown In other games Saturday, the Buffalo Bills and O. J. Simpson, 14, tackle thd Rams 2-2, at Los Angeles; Houston, 2-2, is at New Orleans, 2-2; Cleveland, 2*14 plays the Redskins at Washington; Detroit, 3-1, and Philadelphia, 2-1, tangle at Raleigh, N.C.; Pittsburgh, 1-2, is at Green Bay, 2-2; Miami 0-5, faces Boston, 2-2 at Birmingham, Ala., and Cincinnati, 2-2, entertains Denver 1-3. st. Louis. 2-2. is at San Jfran-cisco, '04, In the only game Sun- quarterbacks jt’vs ever seen. I He’s a lot like Johnny Unitas. They’re both qulck in getting rid of the ball. And boy is ti»t Na-math accurate. ■ ■ pi it -«• * “It’s very tough to get to Nn-math,” said Landiy after studying films or the Super Bowl hero. “He sets up about three yards deeper than the ordinary quarterback. Probably the key to Namath’s excellent ability to move the team Is that he. has very good vision of the second- If you crash? If your boat is damaged? If you hurt somebody? The Jets, unable to obtain waivers on defensive tackle Karl Henke, recalled him and then traded him to Boston for a future draft dtotoe. Henke was one of six Jets placed on waiv-ers Monday, “The MinnesotaVikings, who host the winless New York Giants in a nationally televised game Saturday, have aquired quarterback, John Huarte and kicker Rick Duncan from the Philadelphia Eagles for a draft choice. Football League’s exhibition .wrapup weekend. . The unbeaten Chiefs, already fo-owners of one preseason record, are seeking sole possession of another. There hasn’t been an unbeaten AFL team since 1966 when both the Chiefs and the New York Jets each ♦hacked four AFL opponents. * ♦ # The Chiefs already have strung out the scalps of Oakland, Detroit, Cincinnati, Los Angeles and St. Louis as the AFL’s only undefeated team and are' favored to add Atlanta, 1-2, to Ute list. Atlanta will unleash its running trip of Jim Butler, rookie Paul Gipson and Junior Coffey against the likes of the Chiefs’ four against Los Angeles and two against St. Louis^and hasn’t been trapped in either. Bob Berry is expected to start at quarterback for the Falcons. Poscual Returns to Active List CDfCinNNAtt TAP) - Hie Cincinnati Reds have activated pitchers Camilo Pascual and George Culver from the disabled list and called up five players from their Indianapolis farm club. Both teams enter the game minus some familiar faces. The Cowboys placed halfback Dan Reeves and safetyman Mike Gaechter on the waived injury list, waived flanker Bobby Joe COnrad to the taxi squad and cut Bill Saul, former Pittsburgh linebacker. Saul was claimed by Giants Sdt Japan Totir TOKYO (AP) - The San Francisco Giants will play nine games at various stadiums In Japan next spring, Masaid Na-gata, owner of the Lotte Orions of the Japan Professional Baseball League, announced Wednesday. fflQNE 681-0400 /instate Cowboys’ Coach Tom Landry said. “But it will be a tough football game. I don’t anticipate two National Football League punts. SECOND TIRE AS LOW AS WHEN YOU BUY THE FIRST 600/650-13 TUBH.KI BLACKWAIL AT REGULAR EVERYDAY SitllNG PRICI. PLUS 1.B1 F.I.T. • Whitewalls. 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Reports from the training camp indicate the same type of problem has returned this yeair. Lundy said Csonka’s nose injury was bad at first, but “then he got it whacked during the Cincinnati game. “The blood had no outlet, so it went to his head and caused an infection. The nose bled like hell when he came out of the Cincinnati game." W dr k Csonka played three quarters MIAMI (AP)- Fullback Larry Csonka faced a round of medical examinations today that Miami Dolphins officials s|y could detemrind if his American Footbtdl League career is at an end. 'Csonka, bothered all last season by persisent headaches, has be$Q plagued by a series of ailments since cracking his none in tike Dolphins’ exhibition against Philadelphia in mid-August.- * “Larry hits the ground so hard he seems susceptible to head Injuries,” Coach George Wilson said. “I'm afraid now, for Larry*s ssdcc'tlRqwTrotrbut"'1t" could life bad. All 1 know now is that he can’t play Saturday nlght.” ■ , An All-American at Syracuse before joining the Dolphins phins’ preseason camp, trainer Bob Lundy said Xrays in the past two weeks disclosed "a questionable abnormality In the cf the Bengals game with cotton packs stuffed in his nose to absorb the blood. READYTOGO—Dwight Olser City shares a humorous story with fessional partner Bobby Mitchell juj teeing off yesterday in the prp-aily! ceded the MdUgan“CfoffT!laB!^ carded" d 72 and his partners failed to improve that, score. The 72-hole Classic opened Victory Makes Top NASCAR Winner K. C. Spurs Nominated ATLANTA (AP) - The executive'director of the North American Soccer League said today that the Kansas City Spurs has . become the first NASL team to be nominated for the International Cup of Champions soccer tournament ANN ARBOR (AP> - The University of Michigan’s first. -string offensive team riddled the defensive unit In a scrimmage sessions Wednesday. PI ★ * •* / A spokesman for the team said Wednesday’s “standouts were Don Moorehead, a junior quarterback from South Haven, WANT TO SELL LAWNMOWERS, POWER MOWERS, ROLLER SKATES, WAGONS, BICYCLES? USE A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD, TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 3324181. DAYTONA BEACH, Fla (AP) -r LeRoy Yarbrough’s horsepower fortune was fattened to" 3164,955 when the darkly-hand-some stock car king won toe Southern 500. . Already the biggest singleyear cash man in NASCAR hls-Ttory; the 30-year-old Columbia, S.C., driver won an unprecedented sixth major event Labor Day by easing past fellow Ford driver Dave Pearson in the final lap at Darlington S.Cr, to win 321,800. tion fur stock car auto racing; claimed 312,250 for second place td jump to 3150,470"; Yarbrough is #no threat in pbhrt standings since he skips rdany,. of NASCAR’s smaller races. Nearest 'to Pearson’s 3,213 poihts Is all-time career money -champ .Richard Petty with 2,999.. Moorehead completed passes all over the field, toe spokesman said. Doughty repeatedly broke loose for long gains, including a 65-yard run. The Wolverines wind up their Pearson, Grand National' point Matthews-Hargreaves Chevy-Land Hring Their Coi/eg/pn Tops Yacht'Field Minor Leaguers Join Yankees can single-handed yachting Suzuki '69 M. G. SUZUKI SALES The Mets purchased the contract of left-hand hitting outfielder Jim Gosger and recalled infielder Bobby Heise, first baseman Mike Jorgensen and outfielder Amos Otis from their Tidewater farm dub. ONE OF AMERICA’S LARGEST AUTOMOBILE SALES EVENTS . Chooso from a big selection of newChoviolots in stock. Many cars and bucks In stock are ready for immediate delivery. Come early for bait (elections! OU POKT NYLON GENUINE BIRCH EBm ,— if” , . —T. ” •>^•1 nwn-m wr iMUiono aiKSUmi. 2. Much Larger Trade-In Allowance on your present car so that wo mOy build up our Stock. 3. 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Ay retirement. hands are clearing up, ’ ★ ★ ik v I’m keeping my tingera "I am 38 now,” Venturi said. crossed. I am hoping In six “That isn’t old. I would give ninths to play golf as well as anything in the workd if this I ever did.” Hartfordf, Conn., Dr. Steve Wttlf-son. ■ “I came upon , him purely by accident,"’Venturi said. “It Whs at the Masters. I had just shot two bad rouhds in the 80s. Lfelt my career was gone. suggested this doctor. I was skeptical, because I have had 80 much trouble with my hands. But I looked him up anyhow. The improvement has been fantastic.” Shortly aftei\ winning the 1964 Open, Venturi was striken with FOREST HILLS, N.V. (AP) — Ken Venturi,, who went into a golf eclipse after a dramatic, victory In the 1964 U.S. Open Golf championship at Washington, D.C., Is essaying a com-back. He is convinced he cap play— and win—again. Tony Roche, the Australian tennis player. 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Henke was waived by the Super Bowl champions on Monday but when the Patriots put in a Halm far him, the Jets recalled the two-year veteran and traded him to Boston. ,.1( I—RECLAIMED CINCINNATI (AP) ,-r The Cincinnati Bengals reclaimed {our players Wednesday, lndud-l ing wide receiver Tommie Smith, whom they placed on waivers Monday. — None of the four was picked up by^anbther American Football League team and the Ben- Texas Tech, off the Minnesota Vikings roster, and Dan Berry, a running back from the Philadelphia Eagles. • Moylan was Minnesota’s 13th draft . choice this year, while Berry was the No. 5 choice of the Eagles in 1966. Berry, a former University Of California player, is still considered a rookie, however, since he was injured and never activated previously. JETS TRADE HEMPSTEAD, N.Y. (AP) r Karl Henke, 245-pound defensive tackle, was traded by the New York Jets to Boston, also of the Weatherwax, a defensive tackle, and rookie Ron Jones, a sixth-round draft choice from Texas-E1 Paso. COLTS CLAIM BALTIMORE (AP) - The Baltimore Colts placed two players on waivers Wednesday and claimed two others off the waiver list to keep their squad roster at 51. The Colts-’ asked waivers on Steve Barrett, a defensive back from Oklahoma, and Butch fRil-ey, a linebacker from Texas A&I. Riley was then placed on the Baltimore band squad. Baltimore claimed Jim Moy- acquired quarterback John Huarte and kicker Rick Duncan from, the Philadelphia Eagles Wednesday in trade for a draft choice. > Huarte, 25, was the Heisman Trophy winner at Notre Dame In 1964. Drafted second by the New York Jets in 1965, he played briefly with Boston of the American Football League in 1966 and 1967. He finished the 1967 season with the Philadel-phia reserve squad. Birthday Oraatlngi Launch Out Mr. KlJh Darby Trial Hazel Park Results Tight end Bruce COslet was reactivated for the regular team; • back Mark Stewart Wednesday i and guard Pat Talburt, a rookie i obtained from Kansas City Mon- day, did not pass his physical so I the team is one below the limit • now of 44 players. They have to Huarte was on the Eagles’ ac-, ive roster for part of 1968 and ompleted seven of 15 passes for 10 yards and one touchdown. A native of Anaheim, Calif., be-down to 40 by next Monday. the AFL ]p VtHl and with Wheeling of the ContinentalLeague in 1965 and 1966. GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) -The Green -Bay Packers placed two players on the waived injured list Wednesday, cutting ES9NIAYS - National Football League d to <45 players. lived were veteran Jim nbu> 3, Tidewater I, Columbu, est of-5 series, 2-0 kills 2. Syracuse. 1, Loulsllle leads Fseries. T-0 Texas League FLUSH INTERIOR DOORS Quality built beauty lor any room in your homo. Ready for paint or stain. thick, 80* high. 24” 30” 5 MIAN *5.69 ’5.88 HI IRCH *7.96 *8.59 *9 WOOD BI-FOLD DOORS I Fires 133 to Win | Dartmouth Tourney i DARTMOUTH, N. H. (AP) -Bufna, a little-known iMofasaional from the Truro, / Teen Signs With Phils / PHILADELPHIA (UPI) — Allen Joyce , an 18-year-okl shortstop and' the Philadelphia Philliea No. 1 selection in the special phase of the June free agent draft, was signed to a 1970 contract Wednesday. Thece^wnan TosKTng bi-folds put yoUr antirt cloeat within easy reach. Complete with el) hardware’ (he Dartmouth Open Golf Tour- Whitewalls, Tubeless mRiwTi ;*SXI? |CMQC| 7.75x14 waotvioii 7.00x13 I wDefO I 8.25x14 7.35x14 I mM g 55x14 Free Mounting BRAND NEW-FULL 4-PLY WHITEWALLS gJBHi - $14.95 I 1.811 7.00x13 - $15.95 • 1.94 7.75x14 - $15.95 I 2.20 7.75X15 - $16.95 f 2.21 8.25x14 - $18.95 » 2.36 8.15x15 - $18.95 4 2.38 8.55x14 - $20.95 I 2.57 | 8.45x15 - $20.95 < 2.57 1 Bums took the first-round lead Tuesday when he came through with a two-under-par 32 on the front nine and carded a 81, three under par on the back 9'x7 GARAGE DOORS __ Rochester Only WOOD tiA( Enjoy the warmth and beauty 0! Jn D'M jF this fine wood door. Low price BU , includes all hardware. « money and an additional $50 for «the low round on the first day. FIBERGLASS Thisdsstherwaight door glidat up at the touch of a finger. Lett in light. Completa with hardware Other sizes available 1969 FORD TRUCK CLOSEOUT ☆ PASSAGE LOCK SETS DEPENDABLE CHEMICAL FIRE EXTINGUISHERS Our two big locations, Metropolitan Detroit and Waterford, give us the area's largest selection of brand new 1969 Ford trucks At Year-End Prices. BUY MOW and SAY11 button actio quickly kills fire. fectlve. THESE OUTSTANDING PRICES ARE IN EFFECT THRU SEPTEMBER 10 ■ 2230 Crooks N. of MU Expressway Open Dally 84418 Tire Discounts TIRE SERVICE CO. 190 W. Walton Blvd. ph. Pontiac Flannery 5806 DIXIE HIGHWAY Phone 623-0900 WATERFORD t THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER i, 1069 D- Teen Volunteers Find Ways to Beat Summer Boredom , By YOLANDA BENAVIDES Summer, toy name i a I boredom. ; It happens every Auguat. Sleeping in la an effort and beach parties get monotonous. Fortunately school has come to the rescue and there are old . buddies to see, football games, parties — and plenty of homeword to pass the time. But how can you beat the summer syndrome next time around? Shelley Rogers, 2150 St., Joseph, West Bloom f ie 1 d Township, did it by tying on a bright yellow pinafore as a student aide at the Beverly Manor Nursing Home, 532 Orchard Lake. Shelley, 13, was one of nine [youths working Monday and (Friday mornings li jcupational therapy. The [students were ..under the direction of volunteers Mrs. Ivan [Wileox and Mrs. Charles l Newman. High School Students share the|they’re old and they forget, but week morning sessions financed same warm feeling for their:they do—they care a lot,” she!by the Women’s-Gub of Birth, tiewfound friends. Amused. * Ingham. ii "Half the battle was showing I them that I was interested In) what they were doing and that I wanted to work WITH them If there’s a sure cure for a blue Monday its the perky, freckle-faced blond tagged Miss Sunshine, according to Mrs. Wilcox, Three of her patients' have so taken to Shelley and her friend Jerry Lane that they insisted on ‘adopting’ them for'toe benefit of the ward. I Jerry of 2198 St. Joseph, West:lady with a joke for every visit. | The liberal arts major at ipollection available. ro g ( Bloomfield Township, w as! “I always use to think df a Oakland Community College’s. Since he had spent fflfshiHhMo teach* responsible for recruiting nursing home as a lonely quiet|Auburn Heights campus was previous summer working fori80 ' , Shelley. I place where old people just sat one of 14 students involved in a Head Start, Dale knew what The Marion High School| .The two Washington Junior .around on the front porch I remedial reading course. teaching would be like. .sophomore originally had ; TOTALLY INVOLVED E [QUICK TO SMILE------------. I The program,- which was 1—Put for the fiist time Dale [ striper, but found she was two' 1 Two favorites on their Friday Ijl i n e t e e n -year-old Dale Each tutor was assigned two:rather^an behind them like a! morning rounds — they'write Ovshinsky, 2700 Square Lake,[youngsters for the e n 11 r e supervisor,” according to Dale, lettqrs or plump np pillows —[Bloomfield Township, found his session. Each was responsible * * * are toe Hungarian man with the|own thing. this summer by for organizing his own study i iu- nnio r u thick accent (they call him the working at the YWCA, 269 W'program, as well as selecting! Mn ?*- a**? - “»a®™-i"» n** *- 2.S! process as well as her own! the children accepted 'her as a friend rather than a, teacher. |“It wasn’t always uphill,*” mused Mary. In fact, her first few weeks l added up to one very frustrated /] tutor who was a little too prsfen around the edges to keep l^r energetic duo sitting stilly long enough to read anything. / -• Instead she found people [initiated last summer, was Of-'found himself totally involved [years short of the minimum age j quick to smile, laugh and crack!fered to elementary school city,with his student’s problems andjrequirement, la joke or two. « ; youngsters with low reading;interests. For once he could youTH AN ASSET 1 [ “Older people have a lot of.skills. give them his full time and at-1 _. , . . . feelings; people don’t*think they Some 00 youngster s tention, nearly.impossible with n, JVf ^ y00”1 ***.] [care about things bec ause,participated In toe four-day-a-a classroom of 30youngsters. •* e YW> nowever, Decause: Determined to spark their interest Mary kept marching [down to the reading room for new material until she hit on lsqmething they couldrelateto. “The difference was remarkable,” she says. ‘T never knew children could be so perceptive, it’s enough .to make you go Into teaching,” toe smiled. TEAM WORK—Jerry Lane trims ceramic squares while Shelley Rogers and Mrs. Alice Atkins assemble wall hangings in the occupational therapy room of Beverly Manor Nursing Home. Famous for* Juicy Steaks and Roasts ond Round-Up Dinners Chuck wagon 5800 Dryden Rd., Dryden 796-2245 s, ★ Steve Miller Band ★ Butterfield Blues Band MEADOW BROOK PAVILION Oakland University Rochester, Michigan SeptembarS, 1969 JL_. 7 ;30. FlM.__ Informetlon: Cell 377-2000 Changes in Urban WASHINGTON (AP) - The [Have Nixon team has yet to make ; major changes in the government's three largest urban af-[fairs bureaucracies. Presidential appointees say programs of the Johnson administration remain fundamentally, unchanged. Nixon’s men, now veterans of f eight months on. the job, do take credit for some remodeling of the departments of Transporta- EM 3-8861 Children Under tl II RAWandVIOLENT! READING ADVENTURE-Eight-year-old Kathy Robinson, 101 Henry Clay, shares a favorite story with tutors Mary Linskey and Dale Ovshinsky . in a summer reading program sponsored by the YWCA. 'Psychologists May Not Help' We’re going to see, for example, that when an airport is built! sufficient highway access is1 available.” Down the street at the Department of Housing and Urban Development, Secretary George Romney is determined to bring to hefel cnce-separate fiefdoms His department-was formed in tion. Housing and Urban Deyel- fnf£ a collection of inde-°K ’.#and Hea th Educat,on[ pendent agencies. Romney has [ordered that one of these, the However ‘‘It’s fair to say we|Federa, Housing Administra. haven t made much of a j tion, merge its personnel, audit Sociopolitical Role Questioned "WASHINGTON (AP) — A1 and directing weekly' meetings [ever, the psychologist should be psychologist who tried to bridge j0f all groups involved and using extremely cautious In accepting J»e generation gap between Bos-ihig pyppriPnee a group thera-i ^ “defy, in' ton city officials and hippies . . .r . eluding some Tsycholoststsf, to says he found himself in an!Pist to courage communica-! perpetKuate two yntasie7: Identity edriflietr ~ ~ tion. " ^ __~ * "~~+ ' A - * . * TWO FANTASIES I “Firjrt, that the psychologist Dr. Stanley D. Klein, hired by. Summing up, he said: i ‘knows everything’ about peo- the Mayor of Boston to-‘‘take, “My experience suggests that| ple:.ai!d second* followin8 this yet,” said James E. Beggs,..u"'jand Jegal'sections with the rest'sald his frontlfne6 experiences '‘ha h8s J10"1* j psychologist ^cah Be especially dersecretary of transportation.,^ thc department. [disrupt the “fantasy’-’ that pSy-|kn®^d8^ that may be helpful|helpful in sociopolitical situa- <#lan o^rkiii s05ecHeart isaGLondu fJuoter ^echntoolofo Plans are in the offing at Trans-1 , . , -. . . ,. portation, as elsewhere, for de- DRAG IT IN . - l2JfJ| I centralization and better’ coordi-l “The FHA will in fact be part.ihe,Pfal in solvmg ^ociopolitical nation. o;- : of this department.” said HUD Problems- Transportation’'Secretary John|general counsel Sherman Un-i * * . Volpe annoiinroil-thht—wock I gei “We may have to drag it in Earlier this week, a number j the department’s first major kicking and screaming.” ^ of speakers at the convention of | de-central tea tion stop: the Fed-1 “Nft mj,4nr i NOW!! COOL! AIREC0NDITI0NINQ “No major housing programs era! Highway Administration’s lx*gun under previous adminls-regional offices and not Wash- trations have been dropped or ington officials’ will handle)Stored dfastically. The empha-day-to-day administration Of Sjs ls on better management federally aided state and local «nd de-centralization, highway safety" programs. ■■ | Romney maintains the Demo- CROSS PURPOSES icrats sinned by overpromising rm. j . 7, :'i . what the- department could do- The departments jurisdiction.„vpr ..WoC (o seale the American Psychological As- : y2=3KEEGO sociation—said psychologists! should be given a greater share' of the action in helping the nation solve social problems. Sunday Liquor In his report to the convention, the University of Massachusetts: psychologist recounted his ad- —it- j ■ * ___-_____down the appetite to what we and radroads to urban mass 0n toe plate,” said un- transportation and highway | ders^.retary Rfcha^ c. Van modalities j Romney js devoting most of ' his" energies to Operation Break-i through, a plan, to bring mass [production techniques Jo‘ .toe housing field. summer of 1968 when hundreds of hippies made historic Boston j Common their pad. j safe Way out ■ 'There were times, when con-, fronted by “large, unruly j groups,” when “I felt that all I could do was ‘maintain pay cool’ REGIONAL sroEAMLINING andtrjrtofigureasafeway^ut-[ THanapmentr-experts at toe poUtlcaily and physicqlly_fe A NUKSMY SCHOOL IN THI ARTS PONTIAC CREATIVE ARTS CENTER WILLIAMS AT W. LAWRENCE 10 WEEKS • ONLY $45.00 - BEGINS SEPT. IS TUESDAYS AND THURSDAYS Department of Health, Education and Welfare have concen-itrated so far on streamlining regional operations. Department sources say Sec-ictary Robert H. Finch hopes to transfer most decisions on program grants and supervision to his regional directors. The only major HEW reurgan- CALL NOW! 642-6211 SERVICES IMl IsN pm Sun., Mon., Tut*. Continuous All Day SM-44IS You Must Bo 18- - Proof Is Roquirod SHE NAD INVISIBLE j -TOWERS-, BUT THE " - fiilf ^KNEW WHEN IT WAS ! HENRTSNIBHT 2nd Hit "Woman For Alt Roatons'* izatlon so far was in the Office [of Education. Commissioner | James E. Allen Jr. reshuffled his table or organization to lessr en the number of bureaus re-porting directly to him-“Otherwise we’ve left the department untouched so far,’! said a Finch assistant. myself and others, ’ ’ Klein said. ‘To conservative police officials, I was a hippie or hippie] advocate; tp, some hippies, I was a plainclothes police officer; to radicals, I was a ‘Fascist pig;’ to the press, I was a ‘psychologist advising toe may- op doing, research on hip-pies.’ ” “I had to present and defend policies which, did hot always represent my point of v|ew."; Klein said he believed his achievement was organizing Slylr SKow Evrry Friday During Luncheon 12:30 to 1:30 ___ featuring: the latest >»ear by PENI’HOU SE FASHIONS and ^ OSMUN’S MEN’S WEAR . ___ Entertainment ________ , Wedneaday thru Saturday RENNE BADER, STEVE ANTOS “JIM GERAHDIN DUO” 623-0060 Your Host Mr. Ken Wright 5838 Dixie Highway, Waterford, Michigan iQr^b rtf D—:10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, Bridge Tricks From Jacobys THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1969 CAMPUS CLATTER NORTH (D) 4 4QJ2 VK87 . 463 4AKJ64 WEST EAST 410987 4643 v 5 ; V 632 ♦ AJ9872 ♦ Q105 472 4Q983 ; SOUTH 4 AK5 V AQJ1094 ♦ K4 4105 Both vulnerable West North East South* 14 Pass 2 V Pass 3 V Pass 4N.T,‘ Pass, .5 ♦' 'PasS 8“V— Pass Pass Pass Opening lead -4 10 He stopped quite awhile, gaz-|ed at the ceiling and generally! | went through the motions of a i man with a problem. All this thought did him little’ good. Eventually he had to go jover to dummy with the queen; a diamond and; go up with his king. West pro-; duced the ace and led a dia- j mond back and South was down! le. If South had just stopped to think at an earlier stage, hel (would have saved a lot of timej and his contract. He should have played “two carelessly and follow up byjrounds of trumps and proceeded, trying to recover from its ill!to go after the clubs. He wouldi effects. ruff the third club high, enter South looked at the dummy I dummy and with his third; for a full microsecond, hummed (trump, ruff a fourth club, get1 Astrological Forecast 11 Q—The bidding has been: West North East South 1 4 T>bi« Pass IV Pass 14 Pass 4 4 Paw ? You, South, Hold: 4AK984 VQ65 ♦AKIM 42 What do you do now? A—Pass. Your partner only happily and won the spade in back to dummy with the queen] bid one heart in response to j his own hand. Three rounds of of spades and discard one trumps followed with equajj di d 0„ the fifth dub todAY-S QUESTION speed, as did the ace, king and! _ . . ,., „ .... todays a third club. 1 11,18 play,would fail if the sec- instead of raising to four ... (ond diamond were ruffed, but spades, your partner has bid' * * * it rpnrpconlpH afar hot tor one no-trump over your one South ruffed that third club ^ "n,!1 *Pade- whBt do you do no . , , . ....... .chance for success than the . - «_______ and stopped for the first t me i„ , took . Answer Tomorrow order to contemplate the failure of the club queen to appear. _ .THE BETTER HALF By OSWALD & JAMES JACOBY It is rather futile to ' start locking the bam after the horse has been stolen. It is almost as futile to make rfh early play MENU TIP: -JPHW ^.. - tonight. Combine tradition with unusual. Accent tlrf visual.' Linens Important, at ara arrangamants, patte general sys-qppMI. MAKE •THIS FESTIVE NIGHT AT THE TA8LEV||ShHmgMCurr| - Cherri.._______ ARIES (Mar* 21-*prllY»): DIsruRtlor In routine, home environment indicate! ‘But maintain balance. You can ,gi ..essentials completed. Some are envlot and want to create distractions. B Taurus (April ao>: you m« want to go top far, too quickly. Know Ih end tighten Trams of selt-disclpllne. retatlvo may complain of lll-lwalth. B sympathetic, but do not neglect your ow needs. . GEMlhl (May 21-Jun# 20): One dneouraget reckless ipr*'"" '* ** Face that fact and the I Is selfish. re subject to qt ime. Don't tw dispel unfounded Mors^cm LiVitA pleys lmpartant you ... - -- tlvIUes. Be receptive. You could find romance — life becomes morq__mean- "^llRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)s C Daily Almanac By United Press International Today is Thursday, Sept. 4, the 247th day of 1969 with 118 , to follow. The moon is between its last ' quarter and new phase. The morning stars are Venus and Saturn. ■ - The fivenipg stars are Mer-cury, Mars and Jupiter. ; On this day in history: 'In 1609 Henry Hudson dis-covered the Isle of Manhattan^ In 1781 Spanish settlers ‘founded-the city of Los Angles: »| ; ‘ In 1940 Adolf Hitler promised the German people he ___would Invade Great Britain . . . a proffiise never carried $ut. Tin 1945 Adm. William Hal- I ley led the VS. Third Fleet Saagmi Bay, 30 miles from Tokyo, as Gen. Douglas MacArthur’s occupation of Ifttpan began. Study Bores Facts About / Stripteasers . SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The nation’s 7,0 firstborn and received little parental affection, especially from the father. Two sociologists say they reached that conclusion after studying 119 strippers in nightclubs from Honolulu to New York. They also said they thought tne girls began to display their bodies as to gain attention they did not receive at hpme; In most cases, they said, the! father usually was awpy from home: James J. Skipper Jr. andl Charles H. McCaghy, sociology —professors at Case Western Re-1 serve University, Cleveland, hm ported on their study Tuesday «,b#ftfe 3,000 delegate^ to the] r American Sociology Associa-j tion. •Compared with the average! women between agfes 20 and 30, j they said, strippers are taller, and heavier and have bigger| hips and “extreipely welWe-j veloped busts.” THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, S^PT^MBER 4, 1969 D—II Tlie following aril top prices covering sales of iocally grown produce by groweru and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as ol Tuesday. Produca FRUITS Appl.s, Applei, w », .... Applet McIntosh* Early, gjMgJ Blurttfrltt* ctn; : 375 PMChss, Elbert*, ft bu. .f.. 3.7S Peochao, Fair Havan. ft' bu..3.7S Peaches, Kal Havan, ftbu.....3.75 giMK JM Haven. ft bu......... 3.75 Paachaa. Rich Havan. ft bu... 3.75 Paachai, sun Havan. % bu. . .3,50 -TOt; - 8ws..«. «S. ......... ...» Mtts a Cebbago, Rad. bu. Jf.. 2.50 Clbflia, Sprouts, bu. .2.00 Cabbafa, standard Variety, bu.1,75 Stock Market Off Sharply NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market was off sharply in moderately active trading early this aftemodn, with declines ahead of advances by better than 450 issues.1 The Dow Jones industrial av- heading for 828.08. Analysts said some investors apparently continued disappointed by . the market’s inability to follow through on. its advance of lkte last week. They said the market could be test of the level on the DJI but added that “if the market keeps sliding, it could bring in some selective buying to buoy it a bit.” Cited as weighing on the market; in part, were reports cut back on federally financed construction projects as ah inflation fighting “The death of Ho Chi Minh also may have caused .sable uncertainty about the Yietnam situation.” an analyst said. The Associated Press 60-stock average, at noon was off 2.0 at 291.2, with industrials off 3:5, rails off .7, and utilities off 1.0.. Occidental Petroleum, which has large interests in Libya where a new regime has taken " _______ tin, off % at 28%. It lost a total of more 5 points Tuesday and Wednesday. Barton's Candy was the most-active issue op the American Stock Exchange, up % at 15%. Collins'Friend Is Arraigned YPSILANTT (UPI) - Andrew J. Manuel, who authorities feel could be a key figure in their murder case against John Norman Collins, has been bound ever to Washtenaw County Circuit Court. Manuel, 25, has been charged conversion for failure to return a trailer he and Collins, 22, rented and took to California. Broker Firms Eyeing Sale of Own BY JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst NEW YORK sopn, perhaps by the end of year, Wall Street may be practicing what it preaches, and &j lot of investors] and brokers! will be saying it’s about time. Lest the state-1 ment appear too broad in its] implications, a limited mean-is quickly CUNNIFF The New York Stock Exchange Celery, Pascal, dr. stalks Celery, Pascal, 1 to 5-dz. ctn. . Celery Hearts, Cette Pok. dz. bat Corn. Sweet, 5dz. bap........ - Cucumbers, 0111 Sin, vs bu. Cucumbers, Sllcert, bu.......... . NEW YORK (API - New York Stock 3.251 Excjtdnpte selected afternoon prices: ■ f-r —A— ■ ■ a.so n— .. AbbtLob 1.10 Egppfant. Long Type, pk. t Gourds. Pk, Bskt........... Kohlrabi, dt. Itch. .. . Okra, pk. MT............... Onions. GraCg dz, bch...... Address 1.40 252 72 71 Va 71ft +ift Parsley. Curly, dr. bch. ........ Parsley, Roj(. dz. belt......... Peas, Blackpye, bu...... ....... Peppot^^eSni, pk. bskt. V.'.'.'.'.'.' Peppers, Hof., bu. ..............3.50 PftPgHjt JjRMBtQ.. Pk, SsktZ .„, ,. 3.50 Peppers, Red Sweet, pk. bskt.....2.25 PdMIWS., Sweet,. bu.1...... ..... *** Potatoes, 50-lb. bag ...... SSik Su« Rhubarb, dz. beg. Squash, Acorn, bu, . Squash, Buttercup; b .Turnips, Tagger, bu.’!!'!!!':.'.'.’.'. LETTUCE ano greens Cabbage, bu............................. sceroie, Bleached, bb. .. Kala, bu. ............... ettuce. Bibb, pk. lukt. . ettuce. Boston, dz..... attuco. Leaf, bu. ..... ettuce, Hoad, bu....... OttUCO, Mean. — m AssdOG 1.20 Avco Cp 1.20 BlbckW 1.35 x34 23V, 23 BaltQE ' *'** | “ Boat Fds Poultry and Eggs , DETROIT POULTRY ' fj DETROIT (AP) _ (USDAI—Price paid per ngfesi tor No. l Hve poultry; Heavy r.cftyero, (Including U.S.): Grade A lum- P4ICAEO OUTTRR AND ROOS CHICAGO (API - (USOAI — Butt Wednesday: wholesale selling 1 prices towaeaStft higher; nlep1-- ** “■ *2 A Mi 70 B unquoted. ndrat 39-40; standards 41-41 ft. Beech Air .75 Belli Stl 1.00 i 2P4 JtH Boeing '1.20 - 145 36ft 3SMs BolsCas ,25b - 205 67ft 47 KMMTiJb 4S 27V4 '26Pb swm -BorgWar 1,25 3 254k 26 264b - flit My 1. Brunswk .1 BucyEr 1' JllM.C0 Bulova W __________llvaitock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (AP) — (USOAI—Tuesi Cattle 2.000. Slaughter steers choice 900-1,200 lb., jMNKmnad pood and choir-20.50-29; heltoi choice 750*00 lb., 27J0-2IMl goad 2 27.50, , Hope 400. uA-l end S' borrows or gilts 200-230 lb , 26.5044.75; U.S. 2 and 220440 lb., 36.25-26.50; U.S. 3- end 300-400 |b. SOWS 23,25-24. Vealoce Si. Inifh choice and prlrr 40-42; choice 36-40; pood 32-36. Sheep 400. Choice and prime 90-100 lb. otauKlg lombe^ 29-30; cull ♦- CHICAGO LIVESTOCK m Wti- 25.50-25.90; 3-4 260-300 lbs 24.76-25.50; lows Steady to 5$ lower; moderately active; 1-3 330-350 Ibe 24.50-25.00; 1-3. 350-400 lbs 23.75-24.50; t-« 400-500 lb( 23.00-24.00; 2-3 500-550 lbs 22.50-23.00. Cottle 4400; cakes none; trading on slaughter steers rather elow. steady To SO lower; helfert moderately acflvy. steady; cows and bulls steady to woiAi prlms 1.225-1,375 lb slaughter liters 30.75-31.50; 25.75-30.25; ^OOd 25.00-26.00; utility — JRH 19.75-21.00/ conners end cutters IMP 20.50; utility and commercial bulla 24.50- slaughter M 29.00; p< American Stocks / YORK (AP) • American Mock "iK,™ • tt, (MM.) Aero let, .504 . Ju>aUK@ Am Petr .40 Ark B«tU,.22d ,'i 22ft Aaomtro Oil ill lift AtlesCorp wt — BrdscanLI Jo Brit Pet .3*0 Compbl Chib Cdn Javelin Cinerama Creole 2.600 ' Dvnalectrnf F 2746 U-t 76 15ft 15 lL. - 66 179a 174b 17ft ... II OftlS-16 . * ••• 41 14ft 14 14V4 — T7 lift jl, iki — I 319b 31Vb 31ft — 10 |W • 9ft' Fed Reercee 13 W; Wj’» atari i *g ’| ’Li' simw M'f iT- HvdronSi!9 24 19ft 104b 104* -lfiS2B8f,'ie S 1714 1644 17 .. t sW -. I >2* 1 ■ iSS I acurry ; m2 'ZXSr 5 30*1 i... Mi -1 22 m 56 54b 5Vb OVb — '4 •iw-5W.ISr+ 239 6394 62Vb 62V» — H Svb Si* - 41 149b 114b . W The Associated Press 1969 Thdrsday's let dWwojJ ^ Eoh^ rted Record able ChorrHkW NY Cjrjv.U Q • -fsfej'i I. (hds.) High Low Last Chg. 6 %m 12'/a 12'/* ,. n 18% 18% 18% - % 389 26Vi 26% 26% W % 18 16% 16% 16% — 110 40% 40 40 . 35 21% 20% .21 130 26% 26 26 — % ^ 11 34%* 34% 34% .; .. 22 23% 23 23 — % 127 72 70% 70% —1% r ^29 18 17% 17% — Vk 225 45% 44% 44% — % 309 27% 26 % 26% —1% 99^ 34% 33% 33% — 10 47 46% 47 — V» (hds.) High Low Last Chg. » 125 49% 48% 49 ■*-.% 86 34% 33% 34 + %' g 10 60% 60 60 - % 128 51% 5T^ 51% > % witn «iucn 79 9% 9 ,9 —,% Global Marin 27 29 28% 28%-% 1 offered: Wall Street brokerage Witt/esses testified d u r 1 n gj houses ar,e considering going Manuel’s heairing that Collins, a meant approval to borrow from outsiders. the meantime, the exchange continued to study the idea of permitting the public to not only lend money to the brokers but to participate in their well, and ownership comes through the pur-of stock. SIMMERED FOR MONTHS The issue simmered for months, and then the firm of Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette, which doea considerable business with^mutual funds and other institutions, turned up, the heat. Catching most senior at Eastern Michigan University, forged a check and used false identification to rent the trailer, ' ”' J ^ , public; they are planning to sell their shares to investors. Go Poe .1 Gerber 1.1 GettyOil Gillette 1.4 28 35 34Va 34% .. GraceCo 1.50 _x._ ____ . , GrantteC Stl 29 ll% 15% 15% - \ Gt A8.P 1.30 56 281 Gt Nor * ilijllij! Gt West 10 4 % + Vk 104 29% Ws »% — % 132 31% 31% 31% J2 5,27% 27% 27% -MU ou ou 21 » — ■ __ 4590 459b — bb . .... 439 'N| 2594 269b -IVb GtWnUnlt .90 65 394 41 41 —194 ereenOtil 94 4 '2994 299b 2994 - 9b 66 1094 14V4 149b 4- 'k .113 2694 26 2694 -I- 9b 357 3794 363/ 37 .... 165 22Vb'2m 2194 — 9b 72 229b 2294 2294 - 94 •H— ,J 4996 4994 49H — 94 19 72 7194 >194—Vb a. .... ^14 + (J GulfSteUt .96 165 2294' J Halllburt 1.05 Harris Int I --HecloWnp .70 Here Inc ’ fauraek Holly Sup 1. Homelike ___ Honey wl 1.20 65 2794 - 26 269b- ‘ 1 31 479b 4794 4794 + 00 4194 4094 409b T 219 2094 279b 2094 — 9b 2 43 42- « — 94 t 7 439b 4294 4294 — *' 26 2794 27'/4 2794 + 42 4694 4594 4594 —1 ' 23 609k JHI ... 63 M94 3094 3094 - 104 2094 2794' 2794 .. 70 1494 1394 1394 — 94 ....... . 5194 . «U .... ..... 80 Am 224 16 159b- 1594 —. 94 p i 40 113 3194 3094 “ InperRand 2 23 4094 409' Inland Stl 2 60 30'/i 309 InterlkSt 1.00 3 30 299 iBM 4 127 340 Mg ™ _ inlHOrv 1.00 70 2094 2094 Wk — 9A intMlner .25p 48 1394 1294 1394 + 9b IntNICk 1.20b 110 3694 359b 3594 -" Inf Pa 1.50 A 3994 3994 3994 — Ug tat .95 105j»94J53„. ■ 37 3194 3194 — ■ 42 37 Jm 3694 — 03 5294 aii 5294 — W 24 2194 2094 3094 — **- 1( 6094 5994 5094 — 30 RMb 409k 4094 — x31 4794 6f94:JI9k + 593 'MM Wb M'A — JonLopan .10 11 1094 1114 109k .. 02 3394 33 (3394 + 9k 60 1194 109b Tl — 'A M 34V) 39V, 34'4 — 109 140V4 1469b 14194 . .. 121-1194 (094' 1094 — ' 4 ink a 2494:+ ' -, 2* 299b 299b 29 — 94 I. 99 3094 1194 2094 — 9k 10 3194 M14 3114 ” 60 30 3794 3794 102 V Jm 2694 204 1594 15 15 20 29 2894 2994 - 47 2694 2594 2594 - 1 "■ypt H 94 B » 26W, 27 + *z 8 2394 2394 23'4 j 10 6094 6094 6094 - ' Jr*794 KKI 33 1294 1294 1294 - . 125 3194 3714 - ~ X129 3794 3694 3694 — 94 319 5594 49* 5«4 —1H i 9 3294, - I . 26 36 , 33* 3M4 - It l.« 57 39 _ mi 7194 7294 + 94 6794 47 4794 + V4 S (H '4094 4094 —94 „ „ 3094 3894 —294 104 4594 4494 4494 45 26V4 26V. 2694 (hds.) High Low Lost C . .27 ,19M!-19 1994 - I 2294 2294 22V, — 94 Raytheon .51 RCA 1 , Reeding Co RoMHCn-.'.SO Collins is Mated for raignment tomorrow. He charged with killing Karen Sue N(t| Beinemati, an EMU freshman ~ whose beaten, and stripped body was found on the outskirts of nearby Ann Arbor July 26. ‘KEY’ FIGURE 10 1394 1394 1394 - RoanSel .35h 246 494 494 494 Rohr Cp JO 15 2794 2744 2794 + 44 RoyCCola .54 RoyDut 1 — RyderSys 33 214b 204k S 9 354k W 12 094k 8994 8994 + . 6 3194 3194 3194 .. 39 1194 11V. 114k. 19 40 3944 - 3944 94 5 2144 21V, 2194 52 2494 2494 2494— •/ 42 13444 13294 13294 —14 7 4194 4094 40W -IV 68 38 3744 3796 . . 19 2794 2694,-2694 —1 22 29 ' 2894 2894 — 9b * 12>A 13 nth ..H 7 2594 25 25 — 94 51 5094 '5094 5094 — 94 SCMCp .tod 43 3194' 3094 M'A — 46 SCOA Ind .60 4 20V. 20 20 .... Scott Foper 1 173 2944 29 29 — 44 M. 3794 365/ 37 —14 52 36 37V, 3794 142 6844 6744 68 + ,65 5794 5794. 5794^+ 1 35 35 ^ 35 ... 35 5744 57V4 57'A — 167 2944 2894 2894 — u 21 6694 659k 6M + 9k SCOA Ind .60 Scott Fdper i SbCLInd 2.20 Searl GD 1 JO SearsR 1.20o Shell Oil 2.4o SheliTrn ,73g SherwnWm 2 llCo 1.20 -....jrCo 2.40 Smith KF 2 SCar EG 1.19 SouCalE 1.40 Spartan Ind Sperry R ,35p SquareD .80 ‘♦Brand 1.50 Kdlleman ICal 2.80b llllnd 2.30 IIINX 2.70g lOMOh 2.70 - Vb JonoLau 1.35 Jotted, .60 Joy M<0 1 2394 .. 96 — 96 .1 3294 3294 32V. )10 2094 2094 *s" f-K— 44 219k 31'A 3194 + Vb 0 2Mk 2244 224b ‘T .2 204k 2044 2044 &SSSfA m 2 Kklwr Al l Kan GT 1.35 kirrMc fJO KlmbClk 2.20 Kresge SS .40 Kroger 1-30 14 83'A 03 ■ 49 6544 SSIA HHWHei 13 299k 3694 364b--t- 44 31 4194 41 4m —S 39 51 5094 5096 — 94 39 3794 3694 37V4 - 94 J»1.2, Texaco 1.60 TexETm 1.6 TaxGSul .60 Texaslnst .» KhLca'M B 16-2 16(4 169A.-S 62 23 ■ 25 4|W & 459b .. LoneSGa 1.12 tjtiglzLf 1.36 Long!, Lucky! LykYn • 89b 894 096 - 94 20 2694 34 3694 + V- 30 3094 2796 \ 226 6794 6644 fr + 9 20 09k 144 944 — 9 53'“269o 2344 2394 — 4 111 MVk 3094 3094 - 9 31 26 23'A 2394 —1 J4K9B lB'/e 18V. — 9 Transmr .50b Trent Itron TrlCont 2.90g 72 M44 CoxBdca, .5( CFCimr i.7i CrOuMHInd 1 CrowCol 1.51 crown Cork 1 -- HI CWIttlM 1.60 X71 36 — Curtin Wrt Dan Rlv 1.20 SaytnPL l'.*o Deere Co 2 Del Mnte 1.10 30 2694 2394 2396 IS 5646 56V) 5694 59 1694 1694 161,: —M— is MT W? 53 1994 l»k k-.- » wm'SP’fflT'tji 2 2644 2646 2646 + 94 96 269k 2694 2694 5 1344 1394 1M J— 123 1044 1746 1794 — —D— . it i Wmtto w§ a. I wl ,Dyna Am .60 Klll&dekJ feir WtA IP'S -94 52 30V4 3094 3044 — 94 t W H lBk + » 86 2344 23 2394 — J4 s I! m 6894 —1V4 ■1.. Pn,+ 94 74 SlW .31.; .RV4 + M m 124 12396 12344 —294 2144 m 2W> — as 1394 1294 1294 ... •—E~r* ' ■- / ; 360 1744, IPA, 1794 — 138 7594 -7594 7544 ... •* H 3944 .3944 — Wf- irBi™ i ll 12 2794 2694 26ft'—94 IS 2Mk 2294 2294 + 44 —N— •’ 14 2944 2994 2994 — 44 11 5144 5094 5094 —ft , - 4 <994 offt 6994 — £J XS « H’Ki *p" LM 6 mi 4494 6fti + 94 mm p as ^ 15 Sft ^4 2* NoNGa, 2.60 Bl NortSIm 1,229 f KH9I iljla ' 2»'6M|' 6ift!,4SftrV--9 SO ». 16 —F—' ‘ 273 6696 6244 66 +19 . 12 1394 1394 .1394 — J raftisr m ® •& 2Mb 20ft Soft + 14 — • 132 .67 6644 6494 — 5 2694 2694 2494 -17 2694 25 2594:— Rj 3746 3794 3794 . OhloEdlz 1.50 Okie OE 1.00 OklaNGfcLn OllnCorp .50 15 1994 - lift 1994 . 27 2494 2594 2M4 -9 26 26 H ' - 104 6494 6344 43ft -131' 2544 36ft 3514 . 91 74 74 74 ,• 12 4794 47 4794 r PacGEI 1J58..1J4 3544 3594 1594 .. 'eway 1,10 losLd 1.10 -SanF 2.40 32 3644 35ft 3594 -I —S-f- __________ 50 2444 24'A 2494 -16 M'A 32ft 33 - 65 2544 25 2594 170 4344 43ft 43ft.— 69 21ft 2144 2144 .. 6 6644 46 44 —1 16 139b 13ft 1344 — 79 60ft 59ft JO — ft 277 7144 70 ,i 7094 - ft 109 114ft 112ft 113 —194 36 13'A 13 13 —„4b 5 36ft 3644 3644 + 9' 32 38 3744 38 ... 10 43ft 4394 43. . v 20 2394 23 23 — 65 5794 5694 5644 — 194 34Vb 33 3394 —1 49 29' 2094 29 , .. 25 13'A 13ft lift — ft dH 4644 4544 454b " ■ 9 1244 32ft 32ft ... 10 3544 35ft 35ft - ft Carol ’ Blackmer and Virgil Hendricks, both of Hendricks Trailer Sales hfere,‘ identified Manuel as the person Who rented a trailer June 21. Miss B1 pi c k m e r identified Collins as the person who showed her a driver’s license with the name James Skotack on'it when-he signed for the trailer. Collins wrote an $80 check, she said, and signed Skotack’s name to it. 47.34ft 1194 3394 — ft 73 1994 1944 1944. —U— 135 2844 P 28 - UAL Inc 1 UMC Ind .72 Un Carbide 2 102 43ft 43ft 43 cussed with the Securities and Exchange Commission, which not only regulates the securities business but could destroy tbs entire plan should it not meet its criteria. * change community by surprise, DL&J announced to the world on May 22 that it planned to “i public” in violation of exchange rules. But at the same time it irules changes to the exchange board. DL&J made clear that it wished to continue a member of the NYSE. And the exchange made clear that it did not wish to lose the young, | aggressive house. DL&J held off The situation noW has come to its public offering. The ex-a head. Brokers need' money]change speeded its studies, badly tp continue with expan- ★ ★ * {sion plans, among other things,| Later this month a special ex-Manuel .has been called aand the only way to get that'change committee plans to key” figure in police in-1money is to tap the reservoirs of -—-—■—-—+ vestigation of seven brutal sex funds owned by millions of irL-slayings in the Ann Arbor- vestors. Ypsilanti area in more than two years. However, the bury factory worker has not been charged in connection with any ! the murders. Five witnesses at yesterday’s pretrial hearing gave testimony which linked Manuel to the trailer hq and' Collins took to the West Coast. [he sometimes takes the money!of Representatives - preparing 'with him. |to take over the State Supreme Brokers always have made their money by investing in cor-porations or in advising others to do so. But never have they permitted anyone but very, close associates to share in a piece of their own action. That was forbidden. SOME OF PROBLEMS These are some of the problems that led to stock exchange approval of the concept: • Brokers never have had a secure, permanent capital base. The funds they us come from owner-members of the firmer And when one of these departs: STRICT CONTROLS The SEC is going to be especially interested in provisions for assuring that the exchange and the SEC retain their regulatory controls. It is Expected that [strict limitations will be made the ex- on who can and cannot own slock. After that the issues must be submitted to member firms of the NYSE. There are 1,366 of and many are old-line firms ..which don’t completely approve of every newfangled idea, this one included. A majority of these members* must vote for a quorum to be reached. And then a majority of . the quorum must be for tile, is* sue before it can go forward. It could be cleared Within a few weeks. It could take months. It could fail. State Supreme Court Resists Eviction Plan LANSING (AP) — The House The growth of investor in- Court, chambers for office space stitutions, such as mutual funds, may have, a battle on its 30 Induitrlalz _IP.... SC:'....... ......... multimillion-dollar ders. These demand great sums of capital. It is all but impossible to handle such orders effec-tively without a large capital base. . • 1 . The need to modernize has required heavy expenditures of existing capital, especially purchase electronic computers and to modernize operational, or back room, procedures. ★ ★ ★ The need for capital was recognized years ago, and late in 1967 the New York Stock Exchange endorsed the idea of brokerage houses selling their debt securities to the public. Thls hands. “We’re not going to hold court on a street comer,” Chief Justice Thomas Brennan vowed Wednesday. "They wanted us to go away and work in our kitchens,’ 'But the court is going to sit where it sits until somebody satisfies us with adequate quarters.” ‘ Brennan commented on .statements earlier hi the week by House Speaker William A. Ryan, D-Detroit, that bids were about to be let for renovations in the high court’s office space and chambers in the Capitol. Mutual Stock Quotations ^ NEW YORKHAP) —The tallowing quotations, supplied by Ike Notional Association of Securities —Dealers, Inc., are could have sold (bid) or b (MkM) wodnsl 7.40 8.17 8.37 0.72 Aberdn , 2.30 4.60 ................... Afotre KM Alpha Fd 11.6712>5 Amcap 5.^ 6.50 Am Bus , ZM Am Dvjir 10.4611 ;44 AEx Spl 9.92 Am Orm 6.76 7.35 -^Am IhV 3.'/2 8.92 Am Mut 9.4810.36 AmN Gth 3.16 3.45 Am Pac 7.51 8J1 Anchor Groir . Caplt 8.85 9.70 Grwth 12.M14.D7 . Barg l Blair ! HI $t 7>3 8.23 Caplt Shr .7.08 7.76 Channlng Funds: Balan 12.1613.28 Com %t 1.77 1.93 6. >3 7.25 Incom 7.57 8.60 Sped *».93 3.20/ Chase Group: . Fund 11.86 .2.96 ----Frnt—-M.wiw.il, r Shrhd 11.7812.87 Chomcl a 18.31 20.xl Grwtli 4.50 M0 Vent — 6.78-7.36 Commc unavall Corns Bd $.07 5.51 cwmo^tBFOir Cap Fd 9.7610.67 -fwwm" %Vf 10.73 Invest 9.6310.52 Fid Fund 16.9318.39 Fid Triid • 25.44 27.80 Financial Prog: Owlm 6.52 7.14 Indust 4.17 4.56 Incom 6^4 6.94 Vent 8v46 9.25 FstF Va 10.8911.90 Fst InGth 9.761^70 Fst InStk 8.71 9.55 Fst Multi 9.98 9.M^ Fit Not 7.51 MS ~F4t iim -mrwM Flat Cap^7.75 .... Flat FiwT 6.^1 F|a>Gth 7.20 7.87 JPT4 Gth 5.o3 6.04 ^Foundrs 8.2619.03 Foursq 11.8312.93 Franklin Grouo: Com St 7.05 7.73 D NTC 11 J742i68— Util k 6.61 7 A4 Incom 2.31 2.53 Fund Am 9*55 10.44 ; Gen Sec 11.0611.06 Glbraltr 12.6312.63 Group Sec: Guardn 25 54 25.84] Hamilton: HFI 4.91 5.3f Gth . 7.04 9.88 Hanovr 1.36 1.48 Harbor 9.02 9.86 Hartwll 14.7016.28 H8»c L«V 11.9412191 Hedb Gor 9.96 8.96 4-51 An Indstry 6.05 6^1 , InsBk Stk 6.54 7.15 Inv CoA 1|!M14J9 Inv Gold 9.31 9.31 Inv Indie 13.7213.72 Nat Invst 8.02 8.67 W*61 ll.QOy' 5.53 6.04 4.42^4.83 ^tfl3 9.98 IDS ndl Mut Proa1 8.99 9.66 7M Z6l- -‘Tnncock ' a SMH.............. Cwlth AB 1.48 1.60 ewith cd 1.73 1.86 . Comp As 15.4215.90 Compel 8.40 9.21 Comp Bd 9.3110.12 —Comp Fd 9.9110.77 mm*tk 5.18 5.66 rd 16.2916.29 In Ttw 123 Consu In '4.78 JLO Cont Gth 147.1310.23 Corp Ld 15.4216.92 13.3714.46 ’ Crown W .7,05 7.70 Concord Bivitf $hri i® :i2| [ ‘rog * -tock Select Var Py Inv Rash +.vo o.m Istol 22.i2 i.3.32 14.9216.31 9.09 9.09 t— M8-9i06~ 21.37 21.37 Keystone Funds: CUS B1 19.44 20.29 CUS 82 20 29 22.14 Cus B4 9 3610.22 Cus K1 7.93 8.66 . CUSK2 5.31 5.80 vXUfftSI 17 87193; Cus S2 - 11.1512.17 Cus S3 f 30 9.06 a Cus S4y 5.22 5.70 , Polar 4.38 4.79 ' Knlckb 7mS 8.17. i iCnlCk Gt 11.0412.09 Lexlngt . .0.21 *1.16 Lex Rsch 15.4316.89 Liberty 6.31 6.90 Life Stk 6 jP 5.56 Lit* Inv 6 91 7.55 L.lng . 6.30 |4.89 Loomis Sayles: 1 Canad 38.95 38.75 mm $ t Mut 14.0814.88 rf lilpft .. 7.32 8.00 mm M.2 01.3 MJ Oil 70.3 88.0 70.4 MJ *U 01.4 ------J STOCK AWIftAGag x Complltd by Tho Assoclolod Pi 30 15 IS Ind. Rani Util I 30ft 20ft 20ft -,.«d 20ft Mft'ift 13 Oft Oft Oft 14 lift 23ft 21ft -ft!Year xSb j 'iJi'iMKwfc,. 432.2 133.4 137.7 291.2 435.7 1S4.1 138.7 293.2 ...434.2 153.0 1M.5 2*2.4 435.0 152.9 139.6 293.0 WJ 148.7 3SM +V -SEL 1*9.1 p-l .... 422.3 141.0 136J 285.1 JhsmBevmm m .435.6 165J 135.1 399.1 Grwth 12.5313.69 Stock 14.6516.02 Energy^ Equfty* Equt Gth Essex ft 23.20 24.7.7 10,9| 12.00 Bu 11.1611.16 irth 13.7515.M H 11.6512.73 Moss Gth 12.0613.18 ; Mass Tr 15.4016.03 Matos 4.96 4.96 Mathers ll.wil.09 MCpMl i 9.7010.61 MldA Mu - 6.70 7.32 Moody Cp 14.46 15.80 Moody's 13.5914.05 •' Morton Funds/, r-■ a Grwth 10.2711.25 j Incom .4.04 4.43 insur 7.80 0.55 :■ 9.31 10.06 MIF Gth 5.04 6.31 Mu Omo 5.13 5.50 MdSmln. 1M51KW Mut Shrs 10.26 10.26 Nitrttw 2J1 2.60 NEA Mut i5j9 tp) , Net tMoe 10.6711.54 . Pf HKM 7.57 Ineam , jj 4.00 Kook- —ZJ6 9J3. /Nat Woof 6.17 6.76 Nei Orth 9.9710.04 Neuwth 24.05 24.05 •flow Eng—9.610.70 Now Wld 13.5114.77 NY Vent 16.0010.39 Newton lLSfpi Noreast 16.2516.25 Ocngph 8.38 9.16 Onraga 8.28 1.40 100 Fd 14.0716.25 101 Fd 9.76 I0J7 One Wms 16.1316.13 Fa Mut unovail Philo 15.1116.56 JSir'nt 9.3010.16 RjBt Ss 7.07 8.60 Pino St 10.7910.79 Plonoor 12.941414 Plan Iny uneven Price Funds: Grwth ' 24.51 24.51 N Era 1J9 9.6» N Hor 26.65 26.65-Pro Fund 10.7610X6 . Provdnt 4.84 |J9 Puritan 10.0411.97 Puhlom Funds: •quit I0.o611.65 Georg 14.2715.60 Orth ijJtilSl ’ Incom An 9.05 . InvittL 7.20 7.17 Vista lOJi'lljy Voyeg 0.70 9.5) Rap Tech 5.01 5.40 Rivero 13.59 14.85 -Rosenth 0.40 9,19 . Schustr . uneven ScUddor Funds: — Int Inv 15.7916,04 Spel : Bel 14.8614.06 Com St 10.9410.94 Sec Dlv 11.5412.47 Sec Eqult 3.67 4.01 Sec Inv 7.72 1.44 Me Am TCMUJi ... $01 Spact 15.6617.12 Sh Dt«n._22J7. J247 Side 9.1410.75 sigma _ 10.0310.96 Slg Tnv TT.H1793 Smith B 9.64 9.6 Swn Inv 9.11 9.M Swlnv Gt 0.11 0.77 Am Ind 1t.i0l2.lS , Scion 4.62 5.05 Sleln Roe Fds: fill - M.4120.41 Cap Op 14.0014.80 Stock 14.29 14.29, Tran CO 7.00 0.51 Trav Eq 9.7010.63 Tudor Fd 17.0311.41 TwnC Gt 4.M 4.79 TwjjC .mC 4.70 lit . Accm 7.55 8.25 > incom T^W 15.63 Scion ,7S7 8.71 upd, c* . n 7,17 1,60 Vihia uno Fd: VaT Lin 7.06 .41 ^ Incom 5.29 5.00 ^spr iit JM ■ M' VnceS spl 7.00 1.52 -VamftRp--“ Vongd Var IndP Viking ... WL Morg 9.1710.02 WallSt In 11.001 ■ Wash Mu 12J01 Wellgtn *• “ ” West Ind Whitahll ~ 9|..... Windsor pi) j|.. Ryan said the contract for restructuring the quarto’s far House office and conference room, facilities likely would fed to a Lansing firm, Christman' Construction Co., which h^4 proposed, a Feb. 28 completion, date. , . . , Ryan noted that the high court had agreed to move into a new seven-story .office building be.’ hind the State Capitol to majq room for the House offices, but that space warnot yet ready too court occupancy. News in Brief Frank Pitcher of 86 Cottage tokfeity police last night someone broke into the basement of his home and s t o 1 e assorted items valued at $275. Reward yourself at Charlie Qrown’s. The fabulous “Brandy-urine Four,” direct from Salt Lake City. Thurs., Fri. and Sat-Sat: . nights. 675 W. Kennett, Oakland at Telegraph. Phone 12*7111. —AdV. O. D. O.' Rummage: Friday, Sept. 5. CAI Building, 5640 Williams Lake Rd. 9 a.mjl p.m. -Adv. He said “temporary quarter^” would have to be found for the justices. ' ; ‘As far as I’m concerned, the move to the office buiiding was the only one we agreed to make,”..Rrennan said.. “Those quarters not being ready, we’re not prepared to ’••‘"J'' * •,, if Brennan said-the justices,' meeting in Lansing Wednesday, “discussed the matter” and ’ve not decided to go any-where.’j^ . Zr ' ik.1' Stocks of Local Interest ires after deeclmal points are elghfhi OVER-THE sSrviaT'i CUrfeW Violations, "was all and plact: Propos. quiet last night," a police «5 »'N«?h •?$,.? spokesman said early today ow. Police ' I National Guard troops helped enforce a curfew after three nights of sniping, fire-bombings,' street fighting and looting. A city judge" y e s t e r d a y sentenced 12 curfew violators to 90 days in jail and $500 fine. “I want them to know we mean it if they violate the curfew,” he Self-sealing Asphalt Shingle ^.ROOFING . Wsterind_ ANTHONY IS. IDO son of Anthony H. Devoted brother of Mary Ann, Mark and Gregory. Dear nephew of Mr. and Mrs. August Konieczki, and Mr. and Mrs. John Madynski. Service SatUrm^ Lovend Funeral Home, 5391 Highland Road, Waterford Township. (673-1213, M-S9 between Airport Road, and Crescent Lake Road.) Requiem Mass at St. Perpetua Catholic Church, Saturday, 11 a.m. and Rosary at the funeral hoipe >Friday,8:'15 p.m. Cemetery arrangements VELZY, BRIAN Cf.; September 3, I960; 731 Sunset, White Lake Township; age 26; beloved husband of Sandra Velzy; beloved eon of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Velzy; —beloved-grandson of Mr. and-Mrs. William Eisenrath and Tun Kontroi' action as may bo KAYGA, PFCi WILLIAM DUANE; August 2t, 1968; 2565 Forester, Pontiac Twp.; age 20; beloved son of Mr. and Mrs. George F. Kayga; beloved grandson of Mrs. Sylvia Wilcox; dear brother 01 Franklin, Diane and Susan Kayga. Funeral service will be held Friday, September 5, at 11 a.m. at the Purslqy-Gilbert Funeral Home with Chaplain Forrest Stevenson officiating. Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery with full military honors. William will lie in rtate af the funeril home. (Suggested visiting hours are 7 to 9r3EV (Suggested visiting hours are 3 to 5 and 7 tog). Mr./Velzy may be viewed Fflday, September 5 from 4 to 6p.m.. YOUNG, EMMA; SEP- Street, Clarkston; age M; dear mother of Mrs. Melven Taylor, Kenneth W., Donald J. and Jsmes H. Young Jr. dear sister of Mrs. Edith Viau, Fred and ,JH e n r y Strahsburg; also survived by eight grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Friday, September 5, at 1 p.m. at the Sharpe-Goyette F u n'eiflT Home, .Clarkston. Interment in Lake Forest Cemetery, Grand Haven. Saturday, September 6. Mrs. Young Will lie in state at the funeral home. Death Notices BATES, JAMES B.September 2, 1968; 476 California Street; age 49; beloved husband, of Dorothy D. Bates; dear father of' Willie James, Joyce Aim, Loretta'and Sylvia Bates; dear brother of Mrs. Elizabeth Houston, Charles . J., Blonnie, Louis T., Willie P FOR YOUR .MOBILE HOME Awnings • Patios • Porches • Skirting , Phone 444-1212 26400 W. 8 Mila Rd. 114 Mite Wist Of Telegraph am-Southfleld I Petoskey I Toledo 1 /EL 7-2700j 3474482 j531-4185 SEPTEMBER MORN— Misty Butternut Lake,in upper Wisconsin presents this eye-catching scene as the sun (kits through the fog, streaking th| mirrorlike surface of the lake. 'Butternut is about 40 tpiles south of Lake Superior. McCOMBS, KENNETH, J,; September 2, 1969; 10001 Eagle Road, Davisburg; age 62; dear fattier of Mrs. Kern We Design • We Manufacture • We Install • We Guarantee THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY,- SEPTEMBER 4, 1969 for Is Dead at Elbert A. .Wright, vice president of the B of Metropolitan Detroit, Tuesday. He was 65. 1 Service will be 1 p.m. day at 'Bell Chapel of William R. Hamilton* Co. Birmingham, with burial h Woodlawn Cemetery, Detroit. ★' * * Surviving are his wife . Maryetta; one daughter, Mrs James A. MacPherson 0 Detroit; and four Mr. Wright of 273 Creatwood, Franklin, was actr In community affairs.( He w; an executive staff huffier - the Boy Scouts of America, a life member of the Optimist; Club and a member of the ~ Governor’s Youth Committee. * - it ★. Memorial tributes may be sent to the Boys’ Club of Metropolitan Detroit, 3 9 Livernois, Detroit 48210. PARIS (UPI) —• The United States, South Vietnam and the Vietcong agreed* to a North Vietnamese request that today’s Current Books GRIEVING FATHER — Diderot G|cca weeps over the body of his son Paul, 22, killed in a tworcar .crash yesterday near their Miami home. Neighbor Stefano Randazzo tries to console him. Police said, Paul was driving home when his car was hit by another on the passenger side. His car was knocked over and he was thrown out. Paris Talks Postponed a Week Twenty-one per cent of the more than 12 million visits to the Man and His World ex--hibitlon In 1968 )n Montreal, Canada, were mftde by U.S. citizens. Stranded Harlem Youths Start 150-Mile Trek Home DEAR PRINCE - The Unexpurgated Counsels of N, Machiavelli to Richard Milhous Nixon. “Translated’*’ by Edward L. Greenfield and Charles L. Mee, Jr. American Heritage Press. $3.95. There is an unusual gimmick In this little hunk of political joshery. The - pretense Involves the Renaissance author of “The Prince,” whose very name has become the symbol of cynical but pragmatic chicanery In the business of ruling people Machiavellian. Supposedly Greenfield andj Mee' have “translated” ,a| revised” version scheduled meeting of the Vietnam peace « conference >b e postponed for one week because of the death of Ho Chi Minh. The two top Com m u ni At negotiators made immediate preparations, to leave Paris by the first availabje flight to go to Hanoi for the. funeral ceremonies for the deceased leader. ★ it it According to procedural rulea of the conference, North Vietnam simply could have notified the other delegations that it was calling off the meeting. But instead a liaison officer of the Hanoi delegation called other delegations’ liaison officers and posed the move to the form of a request. According to U.S. delegation spokesman Stephan Ledogar, the Hanoi officer was told agree” by the United States. ‘NO OBJECTION’ After being in contact the North Vietnamese delegation, the Saigon delegation announced “The delegation of the Republic of Vietnam has received a request from the w. ^ other side to Pos‘P»ne ‘he 33rd Machiavelli s book, addressed . .. mMiinas PRESIDENT DEALERSHIP $25,000 FLOS N-lvdlng. excellent working condi llem. OeejWtkarncter and financial, referencee necessary. (IS,IN te M0,-gelred. Matter ! NORTHAMPTON, Mass.(.where the group had set out1 s (AP) — Most school children!Wednesday. .went back to reading, writing] They were taken to North-and ’rithmetic begrudgingly this Hampton Wednesday night for| week. But 26 Puerto Rican a bus ride to New York. Their .youngsters from Harlem,] chartered bus fare was paid by 'stranded at a summer camp,!the Hampshire Community Ac-started a 150-mile hike back toition Committee Imrr”f ! New York City, John Tories, the camp pro- I ' ' ★ [it it gram director, said a bus thatj The campers, aged 9 to 15J was supposed to pick up. the land * four counselors, were!group Friday never arrived, picked up on Interstate 91 near | and efforts to reach officials in Greenfield, some 25 miles fromjNew York over the Labor Day Camp Marigold in Heath from j weekend were unsuccessful. DECIDED TO WALK WANTED NON-FERROUS METALS No. 1 COPPER't. SO* No. 2 COPPER 45* BRASS . . . lk-25* RADIATORS 25‘ ALUMINUM *8* Price. Subject te Chans* Pontiac I Scrap Co. Torres said the campers decided to walk back home be-cause they had to be back in school this week. Camp Marigold is sponsored !by an Office of Economic Opportunity grant under the federal Human Resources Administration. I Officers who talked to the campers said the youngsters had been at the camp for two months under a summer program for ghetto children. “They were real nice kids,” State Police Sgt. Bohdan Bol-uck said. Boluck and five other troopers transported the campers from, the highway to the Greenfield Armory. LEFT MOST OF GEAR Qfficers said the campers had some of their gear with them, but had left most of if at the damp. Several, community, notion groups there took the campers to Northampton for the bus ride home. . fo President Nixon. The old author has kept pretty well in. touch over the centuries, and seems to -hive a ready familiarity with American politics. . - Phrased in an Imitation — or parody — of Machiavelii’s an-j tiqu’e style, the book proceeds to| I give Nixon a lot of unsolicited J advice on practically every topic you can think of. j Here and » there the Machiavellian device grows a little cumbersome, $0 that part of the bonk falls a bit flat. But i there are plenty of amusingly satirical comments on t h e present state of politics and government in America. Miles A. Smith (AP) r IN REVIEW, PICTURES I’VE KEPT, by Dwight Eisenhower. (Doubleday, $7.9tf) In effecti this is the autobiography of the smile most people knew as Ike. It’S a 237-page crash course on the man who led Allied armies In World War II and then became a beloved president in peace. Eisenhower not only selected, the more than 120 photographs, session of the Paris meetings until Thursday, 11th September. We have no objection that the next session be held next Thursday.” The delegation of the Vlet-cong’s provisional revolutionary government (PRG) issued a communique saying it, too, had agreed to the postponement. .* * "‘it. The communique also said that Madame Nguyen TW Binh, the PRG “foreign minister” and leader of the Vietcong delegat-tion, would leave Paris, today for Hanoi where ske would attend the funeral ceremonies for the deceased North Vietnamese leader. Die Hanoi delegation had already announced that chief North Vietnamese negotiator Xuan Thuy would be leaving Paris to return to the North Vietnamese capital. SEEKING CLARIFICATION At the meeting that was to be held today,; the United States was looking for a clarification of a North Vietnamese suggestion that a -large-scale and rapid withdrawal of U.S. troops from South Vietnam might have a favorable effect on the peace talks. Allied officials appeared resigned that they would have to wait'at least a week before they would -have any clarification of the seemingly slight shift in the Hanoi line. ★ * it Previously, the North Vietnamese had not shown any interest in any partial withdrawal, and had said .that a total and unconditional withdrawal was a legitimate demand of the Communist side. Police Curfews Maintain Calm in Strife torn Cities By United Press International 1 hour shifts Wednesday after two Police enforced curfews to!nights of disturbances. A $60,000 maintain relative calm early fife #t a paint company was today in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.; blamed on.a fire-bomb tossed Camden N. J.; Hartford, Conn.; I into an office. Dayton, Ohio, ail plagued Death Notices ~cTan “until I feel the city is safe and j Secure.” Torres said the decision to! walk home came after a group] discussion betweeir-counselors: and the campers. Their bus reached New York I early today. ...... THE CENTER OF ACTION. By JCrome Weidman. Random House. $6.95. Weidman’s new novel is good fiction — well-written, well-plotted, fast-paced,v and funny, A solid job-by a iirst-class pro- t^unF.BnAi.R qMikt fessional. The book details the life and times of Ted Leff, a very smart New York type who wants to get out of the Seventh Avenue garment district and up, up and away — in this case to the publishing world of Fourth Avenue.- You may not like Ted, but you can’t help but get a kick out of a guy who points out .in -the second paragraph that if you’re not interested in what he has learned: “Put this down, and go back to your TV set. I hope' It’s color, which is what you deserve.” • | Orchard 135 Branch Entrance on Hew St. 332-0200 late Wednesday enforcing curfew. Police said the situation ] was “not very bad,” but more] St. PAUL (AP)—Gould Inc. than 112 persons Were reported announced Wednesday the ac-arrested,57 ofthem for’curfew j quisition cf H. W. Tuttle* k. Co. violation. of Tecumseh, Mich, a manu- facturer of heating elements with annual sales of over $5 mllHon. - ...........y■-■■■■—r——: pleview. West Bloomfield Toitoshlp; age 47; beloved husband of Geraldine M. Forsyth; dear father of Mrs. James (Lorrene) A. Vlisides, Bonnie M. and Richard J. Forsyth; dear brother of Virginia, Mrs. Maire Isaac, and Mrs. Shirley Barkey; also survived by three grandchildren. Recitation of the Rosary will be Friday at S p m at the C. J Godhardt Funeral- Home, Keego Harbor, Funeral service will "be held Saturday, September 6, at I0~a.br at Our Lady of Refuge Catholic Church ^Orchard Lake. Intonaent in Pin# Lake Cemetery, West Bloomfield Township. Mr. Forsyth will Ue in state at the Funeral Home. (Suggested visiting hours are . 3 to. 5 aqd7.to9). ROBERT B.; 4, 1969; 149 Oakland Avenue; age 61; dear brother of Mrs. Nat All a Ingram, Charles and Joseph Neldrett. Puberal arrangements are pending at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. parkerT mrTirlTsW; September 3, 1969 ; 272$ Frembes, Drayton P1 a I ns.; age 70; beloved wife of Bert Parker; dear mother of Mrs. Elmer (Velma) Roesman and Arthur Parker; dear abler of Mrs. Frank (Jesaie) Durkee, Mrs- George (Wilma) Clark, Mrs. Owen (Leitha) TodA and Collb Scott; also survived by six grandchildren. Funeral arrangements are pending at the Coats Funeral Home, Drayton Plains where Mrs. Parker will Ue to state.-(Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) , STAUDAKER, FLOYD: September 3, 1999; 3506 Au-burn, Avon Dnmship; age | , dear brother of Mrs. Russell Gimmick, Lewis and ' Dale Staudaker.. Mr. Staudaker will lie in state at the Harold R. Davis Funeral Home, Auburn Heights until this evening, September 4, after which time! he will be taken to the Pomeroy Funeral Home,. Croswell, Mich, for funeral services and. Interment, Saturday, September 6, at 1:30 p.m. (Suggested visiting hours are I to I and 7 to 9). : r*, ""'.--.f-' For Won* (Ads Dial 3344981 POftTlAC PTOSff, THtJRSPAY, SEPTEMBER 4, J069 D—-1$ To Boy, Rant, SoB , or Tritdo Us* Pontiac Press . WANT ADS Office Hours: 8 o.m. to 5 p.m. Cancellation Deadline 9 a m. Day Following First Insertion ■OX REPLIES At ID.Mb today there woro replies ot The Press Office in -ft* boxes: C4, C4, C-1S, C-il, C-23, C-M, C-M, C-Z7, C-33, C-35, C48, C4I, C-41, C48 and 4#.' , ■ . T "AVON CALLING" _FOR SWVK IN vouWTiomI. an toET 1 CASH IN ATTHff KIWANIS FLEA MARKET Watorfgrd CAI OulMM *-*•—IB—^irflh Hunioon . FUNERAL HOME SPAPK54SRIFFIN FUNEJAL HOME Thoughtful sgvlca" gj nail VoorheeoSiple FUNERAL HOME. 333-1371 EatahlhSadOvar 46 Ysors Ceiieahry jtolt * 44 FERKY MOUNT SECTION I. lot 10. 1 ■i’atm.h Wt. div~ tnnu. ANYONE GOING TO -WOetliH MICHIGAN U. THIS WEEKEND. FROM THE WATERFORD-CLARKSTON AREA FLEAS! CALL4 Ml MM 0% 674-3030, AFT. I P.M. WILL PAY POE .PACKAGE OpUVBRY TO HOIKJE HALL. ... |lLL>kOBLEMSI DEBT CONIULTANTS -CALL helping Folks k * With Pool Estoto probltms tor S oonorotlono — Wo con hilp you I Martaaga loom. salts, now con-- structlan — trodai one Ml mertgagas. Wo (Imply gat tha |ob *"* EM 34703 ^Mr. and Mrs. Homoowner Do yau read financial ntfvlct an r«MM£ romadallng, pnylna Rani ■ sssatir./ THIN LOT: ^ “DEBT AID INC." rJ* HILP TOUWITJI THEM . PROBLEMS HOME CALLS BY APPOINTMENT FE 2-0181 jf 10 WEST >10 AON J l frimiit I ojf. SaruHto Oaktand County wig PjdSriia. wn ay toklaron. WITNOM^TO ACCiDBiT an ; , 1**1Gray Plymeultl andJSMJShw Vicinity el Cits-fllzsbeth REWARD! LA 1-2056. Oitrolt. /Garmon Shaphard, sliver-gray r. ^ 2630. Call MS- I ■ ...dark o..,. .___ metallic ftutf collar, nf, I. Com- foST, TOY COLLIE, sabT*—and I Whlla, null. Last aaan vicinity al » a—a-- — -^I.T'KIlfle", ""VyARD COR THE RETORlTo? a wicker purse leal on Edison SI. on Sat., Aug. SSIh. Papars lm-portanl, 334-SI6, , Will th8 PERSON Ihaf picked up Carman Shafflare puppy, 111 Harrison, Pontiac, July 30, Plaaaa bring back. CMId'a pel -•raised on bottle). Child grltvlng. • -Plaaaa return er contafct Pi s-3376. J PAINTERS WANTED, experienced only, SIMM, or lllilli______ 3 MEN to mark frsm' I p.th. to «Around 6 p.m. Also start time . ' City le* ' IIS N. Caw Avn, J EXPERIENCED^YARDMEN. tull - ttmg. S' Itgi. truck drivers, must' knew area, and lumber. Apply SIS N. Saginaw. M. A. Benson Co.. “ 2MN------------------------- Guarantee *750 per month, fringe benefits, teal advancement, Auburn Heights, call IsifISQ 16 HI )1 noon Prl.atijy, j •_________ f p6smON5 OPEN, an# drlvtr, malt and stocltroont clerk, and main office guard. Exc.. opportunity for man over so. Apply at Pontiac StstsBank, main office, 3 Men STEADY WORK immediate gpenhgi panelon for right r...__ and bantflle to start, Call 674-3233 25, M| N _ Needed Daily Factory workers; war irahousa men, kin drivers EMPLOYERS Temporory Service, Inc. FERNDALE ' ' 3330 Hilton Rd. REOFORD 34617 Grand River CLAWSON IS S. Main CENTER LINE j SMI 8. IS Mila An HflUOl ...m»rv Not an Employment Agency A~NEW AAODERN PLAflNG plant in Troy.. iiaadBlm*** wiin u*.- «ppfy v tii WMkteya. at Cfirtlt Procai 2260 stavanion Hwy, Between if aid 14 Mile A-f idtOK, pkCSTIGE ____________ Top Wages. Fringe benefits. Closed Sundeyi and HoiMaya, Bloomfield Canopy. fflwEL . Assembly .Department Machine set up for small assembly aqulpmant, 3 yrs. or more exp. in tool/ roam; S64-SS72 between I A.M. mid S P.M. ' .. _____ AUTft PAlRtS COUNfiR man. A lob with a future for a willing worker, must have knowledge of car* must have hurtle. Apply at Auto Electric, S3S S. Saginaw, AAltoMlCTlAtflfi. Exparlancad with tools only, S3SS par waok, fo 1 right man excellent oopnrtunlty, paid' vacation, banaflts. Jaapvax-parlanca preferred. Hahn Chryeler- v Plymoulh-Rar"------ — Asfc for eoifl AUTOMOBILE DEALER needs two car porters, axe. opfwrfunlty overtime. Apply hi ssoa^oixla Hwy., Wa ACCOUliYANt - fNtAbfeSTING. . — .... right man.--------------- Pontine Prats Box C-S 1 personal Intorvlow. BUTCHER, FuLL I 406 Orchard Li Market. 335-3733. IloV^ujanT- CLASSIFIED ADS FAMOUS FOR "ACTION" STEADY EMPLOYMENT! Never a layoff for the post 10 years. m Good-Wages • Fine fringe benefit program • Regularly scheduled-overtime l k Excellent iob opportunity •' • *'. ’. i / APPLY FOR: » Lath* Operator (• Machine Operator m Grinder Operatpr If• Gear Machine Operator | • Machinist r. APrtY AT:' 1 Lynd Gear Inc. ■ —7 mm Rocms Betweejr Uth Street, 37 Turk Street, ter, Mich- Pontiac, MielL ’ 8:30 & 5:30 Between 1:00 8. 5:30 SERVICE j,. .REPRESENT ATIVE A TREMENDOUS OPPORTUNITY r a young man with DELI L HOWELL CO. Gjd Mechanical and Electrical aptitude required. • COMPANY-CAR * • PROFIT SHARING . . • PAID VACATION • AND OTHER BENEFITS 0 you qualify call ItAVID V0LLMERS l- S7J-55I0 Wdp Wsstwl alius , s BUS Soy wanted for part tints' employment, apply In person only, Frank's Rootouranf, Kaogo Harbor. 1Srrais „®nA^'.V ,0^LL ** ® bench BURR HAND. Soma experience necessary. Days and •ftsrnoons. plenty nf overtime, good wages, and fringe banaflts, including fully paid Uui cross. Apply at Benton ^lyHlSt AMBAC iRpWsL 2S70 Industrial Row, v_TrK Equal Opportunity EtnUdWr. Banl^ Oealer Contact Wo Will Irgln mpn for this position In our Installmont lean dwartmanl. Job consists of calling an banks, ratal! d»i»« “'--sent outgoing 6.. Past axis helpful. Ap. I. Community parlance in auto Ply, Personnel. National Bank. Pontiac, Equal ortiDwyar. ■us driver —; private schlll, ye mi ajsa ■US BOY - EVENING ^arl,;~nXC| earnings, pleasant workr apply In person. Orehard Lake1 Country •“•“BOYS, A»TB7tO'"wirk~|~to .-4,30 and. 13 to S:3S, apnly In E»tjen Only,. 3:30 to 4:T p.m7 Ted's Pontiac 'Moll. ' ... Soring, mill ^ . VERTICAL MILL WYDROTEL PUNCH FINISHER SURFACE GRINDER DIE MAKERS .Day and njght shift, ovtiilmi, long - -- ------- program........... liberty Tool & Engr. Corp, 3390 W. Maple Rd., Walled Lake, ___ 434-3371 BIRMINGHAM PERSONNElT'OF-r'« - Young man with Inlarasts In public contact, collage helpful but not necessary. 447-SMO._ BUMP MAN WANTED,- hourly wages, «t23 Lapeer Rd., 373-1421 aik farOrvllto. _________. EarPENTEIIS AND CEMENT MIN C°- CRANE OPERATE Boom type crano, t CHEF TRAINEE, ruuitu man —Interasted In ^cooking profession, loam with tho bait, earn while ynu laarn. Bloomflald Canopy. 634-1M7. C«ll64LII4i.MOTeL' FULL T!MB> 'CAREER OPENING ...... $600-1790 ..iwuift to start with benefits such as company ear, Insurance, retirement and bonuses. Call 074-3333, f:30 a.m. 13:00 noon tomor-row morning. COST ACCOUNTANT 3 or 3 Mori college plus Industrial accounting. Stable medium size manufacturing Co. offering growth opportunity liberal banaflts and prof l sharlng *700 up. Call for lth-itrvlaw. 33405S6, 1 7,. CONSTRUCTfdNTHBLPERs7~t o r Block layara. Call 336-3063 attar 4. CAR-WASH HELP. ORIVERS and dryers, fulltime, Northland Auto Wash, 931 Elizabeth Lake Rd., S arty day axcapt Mon. Experienced ——Brake - G^>erator, Sheet Metal — Fabricator Panel Wireman GEMCO ELECTRIC CO, IMS N. Crooks Clawson EX^EDITQR-^HpP,, PRODUCTION! ibac industries; asrs No. 3,1361 SaMwIn___________ 6ETAIL DbAFtSjMAN, samt ax-perlenco desired. Would consider ■ zs—jiz. -tayenuoi. n pay. Vbba Servo oy, Mich. aWSSS. EMPLOYMENT COUNSELORilf you have tho abHlty end dstlra to work with people and have had stlos or public contact axpartanco, we will train you. Exaptlonaily-hlgh earnings first ys«r. Snslllng and tfMQML'Cair Bob Scott, 9* 3471, tor' appolntmant. EXPERIENCED CLEAN Up . with ligfif bumping and pal experience helpful, Can MY 1 painting Y 3-6266 EXPERIENCED AUTO SALESAAAN, must bs dependent, steady to work In one nf the best poy-pton In town. Nsw faellltlos, M»s of floor time. CALL OR SEE MR, BILL PAULSON PE 5-4101 OR SEE •T1S4S S. TELEQRAPH .......- — routa-motwageJB-ieW-teservIce-established route, guorsntood. selery, excellent fringe benefits. Call S o.m. to 4:30 p.ny FE 3-3901, EXPERIENCED mlscallantout v machine operators, cratetnt Machine Co. Inc.,- 3901 - Williams Or., Pontiac; PULL. IMmk and part flme hardware clartci. Apply In parson only. Tom's Hsrowsrti ..III B tlteArt- Ponllsc, Mich. ns gas s I with 4 FULL TIMi or port tlms lion mechanic wanted “ pbHBv£0.~illl. SJGTni. FOUNDRY LOCATED IN north , Kmw^ind 'orisk Good starting rsl Press. Box C44. F O R EM A N iDISUFAYCHER. Ex-perianced supervisors, oxt. banaflts and profit sharing program.- For-conf Idant la I Interview eon tact. Roadway Express Inc., 311 Osmun, Pontiac’. tO»tt-Op»ortunl*y Emptoyar - FOREMAN Manufacturing ausmbly area. Fringe benefits—salaried position. Birmingham ire*. 944-9172 between S AM. end 5 PA<. 1 H*l|i Wanted Mala - 6 have mechin. a nop axparianctp Wriia pbatin PftM Bok t&CZ GlNERAl FOUNDRY LABORERS WANTED Complato company paid , fringe " HmMM, L- jc - i ,: Y C. . ■ * Apply in parson . , 6 A.M. to ISA Systematiorr ' 39464 Novi Rd. N SSEMBLER. i. Plenty of L HYDRAULIC LAB ASSE Experienced or trainee. " 8»onD,U2feAfiSW.:"ii58 IndustrlsI Row, Troy, Equal Aw porlunlty Employaf. -HvDlMLic! C OMiM.lftC I A L ASSEMBLER. -.. Experienced o r tralnss. Plonty of ovtrtlmo, good wooes’ and fringe banaflts, Including fully paM blue cross. Day shift. Apply at ■*»•*» '■i-i-i— AMBAC Industrie: t opening for fu ........—w ...jsmon. Apply SI N. Hunter, Birmingham or ca 646-5300. RG PLATEN, pi IMawlf Biill 4lmai VQQQ fringe Ion, 33S- IMMEDIATE OPENINGS, for —WNWSIIMiyMiMrlllfn- to ftll position “with ' growing firm,” full time inside work, regular hours, far Intorvltw. oaa Mr. Brgndlko a* Jed Preducls Co., 1664 B. Avle Drive, Madison HalglltS, at 14 Milo INSTANT WORK -Man with cars’ and-others needed tor profitable temporary casual labor |obs. APPt,Y READY FOR WORK MANPOWER 1136 WIDE TRACK W. Includlng'^fully’’paM "Shto Cross. dual Opportunlf- **—‘— immediate openino tor man to 1raM ------------ career. Must be ...... 31 and over and have a car. Con-fact Mr. Sdiafar at 333-7161. I tor 3 young management schoor grad.. d Lanas 1269 Rich , JANITOR PuH 'TIfnc, Gresham Claanara, 60S Oakland. L A N DSC AP E, CONSTRUCTION laborer, II or older, tl.25 to start, overtime banaflts, call after 6 p.m. 663-1366'____ DiTHE HAND ‘ Immediate opening tor man with machine ahop background on Lathe, Grinder, and drill Press to do gsnsrol shop work on a .toll nr .. parf time basis. Telephone Mr. Vlzkelety, 341-3331, Wolf Tlstrelt Envelope Co., 14200 Dexter Rd., DolwH. • _________ lumber Yard truck drlvaT-yardman, exp. helpful but net aaaantlnl, regular work, good pay Apply^n^'s Birmingham Lumbor -MECHANIC - GOLF CAR, gnolltw and olactrlc, nor around work. Good pay and benefltt. 172 $. Saginaw. FI 449H.____________ MANAGER FOR AUTO waih. FE 3-Ttol fromS-i. ^ , MACHINISTS Skilled and aaml-aklllad openings on IntareStlnp dlvarslfltd work. Thla progressiva cutting tool com- ing tu.. the Industry, naflt program, , overtime, and |HEn. Ap-•reen, eclipse Counterbor. Bonner, FarMtola, Wa are SW Co. 166{ "machine OPERATORS and trainees for .LATHES .MILLS .GRINDERS Lynd Gear Inc. Rhone 65M377 361 Sooth Street Rochester, Michigan An equal opportunity employer - men wanted to work on goff MUTOO^ construction. Call Holly, •Wl^B’.iliitllTOirh hnowladna~ot tools and Modlom equipment. No drinkoro please, 63 W. Montcalm. mechanic wanted. Watty > for small p s s a m b I y ——•■•ant—3 yrs, or mors ex-partSMe In . tool room. 544-5172 behttkan I AM. and S P.M. W, Wl MIICEuiNfOUs Ms and driving small truck In town. Ogg Cleaners. 376 .t. Pika. MEN WANTED TO ’ w6rK ■ on Ir-rigatlon pips, Installation on golf coursas. Coil Hsilyi i»t«a. MECHANICS To aosambla machinery. Electrical wiring and Mitel experience dMiromrAuianMtfs. THORESON- McCASH iNC:— ___________68948101- : , ; MAN NEEDED."FOR supply COm-pmv, must ba able to use cutting torch and Mas -truck- Boulevard lor wflh g1 company1 fhaMIs Ir In IIS ftoidGinrbY too ond s vtsr you will be a manager unit of your OWN, Contact Mr. Ibh at 334-S136.134 p.m. machine edr-up idld opportunities tth men good mechanical skills to bo tvevhrpF ...........-ety, 341-2331, Dittrolt Envolopo Co., 14706 suPSttolaf MAN WANTED, axo • ’ mant work. Own 3*t66H. NEED t. Must In Ip Mutt t -"ffitotvltw call Mr.JUym«ri BEFORE rPM? NEEDED AT ONCE St V 2 -Collision Men with experience to fill our llalf, wa havt moved Into our bigger and batter facilities, with ill d.alor fringe banaflta. toe Mr. Bob Hazaltotii al— Matthews- Hargreaves NIGHT tdTCKEN IftlLITY man. I p.m. to 4 s.m., 6 days until Oct.1, and 5 days tharaaftar, gaud wages and working conditions. CBH JO 4-71ft any day axcsntMgn'. __ Needed.. at Once IN THE TROY-WARREN AREA " B SHOPMEN—with toms txgsrlsncs or. will train. Mutt hove ttsbls work .or school record. Servlco completad and In good physical condition *3.13 hour, 3 BEGINNING DRAFTSMEN Good schooling or light oxporlsnce. Service complete or Oxompt. 1476 UP, POREAAAN- General p r o d u C 10 n supervision experience. Sftblt work record, up to 6360 start. LAYOUT DRAFTSMAN 3 i -ikparl-- —• tural i This It a modern, nm ■ • ‘ company, r Up grading 0 banaflts. F< 334-0586 OWNER OPERATORS Mtn with fandom traders ctptbjs of hauling trucks on low body traitor* needed. Nsw ttrinMM delivering to Nsw York, Now Jersey, Del. and Penn. Call 301-496-7533. F. J. BOUTELL DRIVEAWAY CO. INC- An Equal Opportunity Emptoyar POT WASHER, KITCHEN cleaner. Exparlancad preferred. Good . Wages , fringts, paid vacations-. meals, uniforms. Apply In person PLANT ATTENDANT To oporato and maintain hloh presiure boiler, and work In amoral maintenance. Must have Detroit Boiler- Operator license. Sdlary depends on qualifications and experience. Excellent fringe benefits. Contact Personal Dipt. Pontiac Osntrel Hoopltal. Seminole at .W. Huron, Pontiac, Mich. Phono "33S-4711, Ext. 316. gflyhaurs, 543^741. Woodward Bloomfield ! i. Shell t fation,. nd Long Lake Rd. Ills. Apply a a,m. to 4 I etatlm fit-full end part Perry, batoffton 3 at dev through Friday. FULL TIME JANITOR needed, 6 days a week. Con . bo retired. Apply In penon Mlraeta Mila Drive-In thaatrb AWor 7 p.m. GAS StATlON. HELP ever. Management possibilities, apply Tulsa Station 5365 Highland. GENERAL: SHEET METAL WORKERS, WELDERS ...C H I N E OPERAT__________ , press operators, tamf-? bmib - sbtomatlc turret optrators. dean-Ing and- shipping. R ochat la r ■ Manutocturlng - Ca. IBP South Street, Roetwotor. 451-5577. time http. Apply 646 i Pontiac. CiaHT Oil. Be,““i -a4Bv4'6illlB':»SH ::,' Mil C.N A;N Ij»-.A N D MECHANIC gillIi 6BO Oaktand Ave. animal veterinary clinic, care of animals 3000 Ordtcnl L«k* Rd., KMflo HGrby,/f ' NewCfe^hings Pontiac branch of largo cor- created by July Promotions. Above average gusrenteed salary, discusstd during Interview. No ex-perlenco necessary. Must be neat ---■i&jfM to start Work ----- • S664|M, mod8rKization salesman - Quollllcallons: must be at Mott Journeymen With 5 years building experience. Dow Construction Co. m-31«, 331-191*. • ■ • bstwson a A.M, end S PM./ PART TIME MOBILE /truck washing, weekends, must bo able to drive ■ track, 6743413? 1 PART TIME HELP needed, for maintenance work on golf course. Could use retiree. Apply 306 E. Drahner Rd. betwaan Lake Orion condHlbn. Apply to GILL a PART TIME HELP, customer loading and warehouse work. Apply In person. Wlekns Lumber end ‘ Building iiippiy Center. 133B Crook* Rd.» w ml. N/ of M-Jf, Rodieslef. __________________________ Part Time Employment For High School And College -Students h •s of age V at this Apply in parson to: Lylo McLochlon THE PONTIAC PRESS KIML RBYaTB BALIM0N -Commercial, Investment, Business Opportunities and Land. We are lit need .- of hlgh-caflber teles , representatives, pretmably licensed now In- real estate but net necetaety. Wo have our own training program. Over Two Hundred Million DoItart In listings --------1—,. the residential mu SI liS5( torewi^it_g Real Estat* Saltsmtn "C" Clirk N you ore ambitious tor full time association With a good office In ah oxcalNnt location. Ov4r 37. years axaartmOo In toe,, Pmttac Coll for tn- radio DRiuii!r: DRILL PRESSES N. C. TURRET DRILLS Walji SURFACE GRINDER HANDS for WeSuStelSSM hBur r+ A +1 6'NTa .t TE44 DANT, mi|cttailksl|y^[tocllnwd, FE Mill, slNGLEMAN for" gonororcoro^of horsos ond stables, modern living toignire ovalleblo. Rod Bob Farms, 1*55 Ray Rd., Oxford. 43B-17tg bof. 4p.m~. aftor fc 6ML3773. r8kviCR'mTl6N,’'c ran b r able Standard, Birmingham. Needs gat pumptrf, part tim*,,s p.m.-io p.m. Oil Ml W6B. sfORE ROOM gnd receiving dark, oxp. preferred, plaatanf year around position, good amfwwN vacation, sic* leave, wonderful opportunity tar a young man to warn the food and beverage business. Call Mr. Dons for art appointment 693-0100. Orchard Lk. Country Salesmen Men's Clothing Appliances Auto Parts TV-Stereo Building Materials Then art full time career positions tor men experienced In salts. . Opportunity tor high aarnlngs Is hxesllllnt. Many •company banaflta, including profit sharing. APFLY PERSONNEL DEPT. Second Finer ^Maa4gemeFy- Ward - PONTIAC MALL . ..... ._. 11qrw i salesmen. Call on local IBM lumbar yards to sail complato lln* of building matorialt. salary, commission, company banaflts, ear {urelshsd. For Appointment call rHTp"P'l N O - R BCIIVING. Ex-narlanesd or treinst. Plonty, of ovartima, g«d waigu and fringe benefits. Including fully paid blue J,™*- Day thin. Apply at Banton Dlvlalpn_ AMBAC Industries, 2*70 todyrtrjal Mew, Troy. Equal Op- araa. 491-62H. STATION ATTB N6 A4I T, perlenced, aver 31,1*11 Ne SALES REPRESENTATIVE $10,800 to $18,000 COLLEGE GRADUATE To R E PR ESE NT' AN INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL - FIRM B XPAN DING INTO MICHIGAN. MARRIED. Age 31 to 37. Salas a— ——illty. Neat to active MARRIED. ability. Fla 1 appearance /contact will /A MAN OF I ’. Pleasing personality. I -me*. Accustom—* — -with public. In Oakland County and to associate hlmtalf with a company with "character and stability." PREFERENCE GIVEN to man with STARTING INCOME UP to 610,900, 614,666 obtainable In S years. 610,006-In 10 years. Higher ultimata Income. * 6460 MILLION In assets. 73 years In pi* ar* fudged by tho. company may keep, companies are ludgod by the people they keep." INTERVIEWS Wlil be held In Southfield., call Mr, Oaunt. 353-8903 tepiViefc "STikTioM' Artve-wdy help. Beardsley, Center, SI ■irmTnMfam, 1 SALES MANAGER For Mobil* Home Sales Ovsr 3,000 sltgs, eloi yf parks. SETUP & SERVICEMAN Pull tlrha position ' 338-6497 After 4: 331-4271 ITOCIC BOYS, GOOD working con-ditlons, excellent salary, P*id vacation, full ar part time, apply' Sherman's, Prescriptions. IS Mila . and Lasher, Birmingham. _ Sporting Goods Salesman Pull time — FrSFJ Excellent am ploy o* bonafttt elude: Purchase discount Paid v*aT y. Roadway Express me., Ill Osmun, Bnnflse. , . Equal Opportunity 1 tool and Die Maker Or manufacturing plant In Birmingham aNt. All round experlanca, xc. opportunity tor right man. 64-6173 batwaan I A.M. and 5 PM. TQOL ANt MODEL nwk*r,-jrui*t have layout oxparlonca, fringe benefits and excellent working conditions. Writ* Pantlgc. .Press Box C-34.______________. flR'f”MOtlftTBR, EXPERIENCED In mounting end balancing ear and truck fir as. Kxcelitnt hr*., ■ benefits, end pay. Apply 46 ’ Oaklahd Av*. Pontiac. TROY PLASTIC COMPANY Mddt porlunlty' 1at advancement, top in- _______________52 weeks e year. Jared Produeta, 1M0 Tamale City Drive, Troy. *0-7075 , USED CAR PORTER, would like older man wlta tome experience. 451-tB*. Ask Apr Pat - Jarvis. McKanzI* Ford.nRochaator.________ WANTED AGGRESSIVE NEAT APPEARING YOUNG MEN Who or* Interested In a career and Bedora. ■ WANTED: AUTO PARTS^Talertfe" must be experienced In sailing new ■a ‘—•'t parts for. all ’ ears. 1 Holler back A win Avi. Fh. 33 WANTED LAB TECHNICIAN with WANTED EXPERIENCED tool . die mekar*, long program t ovartima. 4360 Haggirty ' 6 laming over 21 jmmi m El -■■■■-- banaflta, Interested} Call FE 6- raining i Must fPP _______ ___________ MB .BO*' L IMS Roy Rd.. Oktord. call 636-1761 before 6 and after 6 cell sblfW. Apply otter 4 p.m. Big Gov Rgetaurgilf. iBB PtXlo Hwy. WE ARK LOOKING FOR pert time male, 16 years or omr, for primarily evening and weekend hours. Perry Phormfty. *66 East “Ivd. Pontiac, Min. Enual Opportunity BfWWWfW WAREHOUSEMAN. HIGH gradual*, draft exempt, m, wJJR necessary, 333-4433. An oquoi opportunity employer WANTED TRUCK MECHANICS Gas or diesel, liberal pay, insurance tarnished, retirement and full benefits;. See Mr. Coe, 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday tbfa Friday. GMC Truck Center Oakland at Cass Vf FES-9485 YOUNG SALESMAN TO WORI «...... TO WORK^In, l T3HF train. Oepan-.... .... tlma. .THE FLOOR |HOP, 136$ ELIZABETH LAKE VbiiNG '6MW'',yp W ®e -----—: assistant. 'Outsld* yar- work. Non-smoker i *3.40 per hr. m9S». Nelp Wonted FemM*______? GIRL PART-TIME^la 4 hours « i FULL TIME, PART .waitress- Tenuis's Rests-posit* Pontiac General Apply -In potion- 333-6639, 1 POSITIONS o collections — no dalfoorto*. ear lacoasary call before 13 noon At'3-7363,’i " . "• • M'difok, PRESTIGE restaurant. Top wagts. Fringe banatlts. Closed Sundays and Holidays- ami* Bloomflald Canopy. 636-1597- All AbdairtTwothers Want to help with school bill* and have a debt free Christines? WOrk ovonlnga now till December. Soil toys and gifts for: Playhouse Toy. Company Toys adorable, price* preat -Top hottaas plan, top p Nadallve-----^ Fres training, P parly pl collecting Terrific ei is M% a appointment secretary. Part-tim* 4-6 hr*, per day. Auburn Hatohta, call 952-1150, FH. IB a.m. wia'iB ATTENTION HOUSEWIVES toll toys, gifts, new tor “SANDRA PARTIES" -Over 76 par cant Amqrlcan mads toys —36 per cant Commission plus —Hosts**, up to IS par cant phi* SHOP AND C0MPARE1 ^.^CALL BETH WEBER ‘ ’ RETIREE FOR PORTER WORK i||, ■ > Evening Shift GIG bSTKrIVE IN 2460 Dixie HwV, STOCK GOV PART «R»a. -Apply 64 linger Co. Ponltae Malt. BEVERLY MANQR -- Convalescent Center ' 532 ORCHARD LAKE RD. ANNOUNCES THE FOLLOWING OPENINGS:. . . • FOOD SERVICE • NURSES AIDES _____ • HOUSEKEEPING -EXCELLENT WORKING ^NDITKWS. 4RAWNG PROGRAMS OFFERED. APPLY IN PERSON AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER 4 NOW :: DIRECT LINE FQR POMTI/ttr PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS ML 334-4981 We Repeat ptiAL 334-4981 iFOR FASTER SERVICE Dr~14 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1999 For Want Ads PwT 3344981 . Htlp Wantdd Fgmalt APPLICATIONS BEING ti......... sslestadto*. Mutt be over 21. Bx-portenco preferred. Apply .11 - person, Crocker's candlei, Pontli KiiT 11 Assembly and qualItV openings on oil shift*. In ...... tap* monufacturlng plant. Tapo-* Tronic*! Inc.. 4411 Pornlo*. Royal Oak. ■ ASSISTANT-RECEPTION It......... In Orthodontic office. Mutt bo able - —- 151-4404, *-5 - ~ ■VF .FOR MD, l, laboratory a X ' catering business, must bo between 21-25. Good starting salary. Day work only. Call 474-2S14._____________ A Young Lady Over 40 To 17.100 to tram for parsbm Interviewer position. Mr. Bui *01-1100. Atti ... ;ention housewives — sell toys a gifts, party PLAN, now through December. Excellent commissions, no Collecting, No Delivering, No Invest mant. Call - or write "Santa' Parties," Avon, Conn. 0*0 01 iTeltehono 1 £m»L *73-3455 ALSO BOOKINO PARTIES. IaBY sitter, 5 day*, Auburn Hetght*, 052-24iiu. EABY SITTER FROM 4:30 to 3 p.m. Vicinity of Tubbs Rd. and Crescent Lake ltd. Starting Stpt! l. ‘ “ d money to Help buy i required. F Call 3344054. BABYSITTER, UNION LAKE ai 5 days weak# 7:30 a.m. to 3 p Call aft. 6 p.m. 363-5566. bABY SITTER WANTED. 2 lx ' BABYSITTER WANTED 4 week, Pontiac Mall ar transportation, *01-2440: EE days. 5, *024042. 1 small child, BABY SITTER NEEDED for 1 Child, BABY-SITTING AND housework, ^iVTohi^Si.’* P.M. only. *73-3703. ■ BABY SITTER, rOspt.— days a week. S1.0O transportation. 3734X57. bABYSITTER IN mY home 0 a to 1 p.m. 474-37*4. bABYSITTER; YOURhohna 20 month old child. Prefer V“ Woodlow area. Call OR 3-1010. BABY SITTER WANTED, and reliable women to c-home . In Walled Lake i children, and will be near J FOOD walti - smrr, rull time, ape a.m., EM 3-0*11, or In BAR MAID, MATURE, ateady, family bar, days, married preferred. <01-1*55. Be A FULL TIME JSLJ ■ ‘ p.m.. Airway Lounge, Highland Rd., (M-M). BAR MAID, IN Springfield TOWnihlP, 4BS-1772. BEAUTY OPERATOR, experience BAR WAITRESS WANTED nights, over 21, no exper.. necessary. Wondtrland lounge, Richardson Rd.. Waited Lake. 7131.______ •________________ boo kkKKpEE, EXPERIENCED . Urlth BM dsatershlp, Kesgo Sates and servka, 3 Rd.. Keegejfarl BEAUTY OPERATORS AlbetTa Coiffures. All local Beauty operators, shampoo and manicurist. 3*34400 or BEAUTICIAN, GUARANTEED wage, 50, 55, *0 per cent commission, group Blue Cross-Blue ^COUNTER • RESTAURANT WORK {2rTnH^.'nd»urnBffi!! ad, oxpartonco not needed. White ToWer, 142NTSapInaw COOK AND WAlWIsi, full Of part time. Apply In jperson. Joe's Spaghetti House. IMS W. Huron. CURB GIRL For day and night shift. Apply In parson only, Blue Star restaurant ----it afOpdyk* and Ponttec Rd. CLEANING & KITCHEN Excellent workln 4 day weak, .. COUNTRY GIRL FOR dry cleaning mm Exp. preferred 'bur no 1. Will train. Full time paid - Appjy Cashier-Waitresses Tele-Tray Operator • Curb Hostesses Bus Girls Kitchen Help We are now wanting full tit help to replace our summer c lege help. Good wages. . benefits. Apply at ELIAS BROS. BIG BOY RESTAURANT Telegraph A Huron Dixie Hwy A stiver Lake Rd. COUNTER GIRL. APPLY It. ,_ Flash Cleaners. 339 w. Huron. CASHIER, EXPERIENCED. .... 11-year-old mMPWVNI working. 5 days. . 350. Live In .. BO. Maple Rd. Bus. *424701, owe. COUNTER GIRL WANTED. Day .. evening shift. Apply Huron Bowl Coffee Shop. 2525 Elizabeth Lake sary, call », Orchard L DAY BABYSITTER FOR TEACHER. perlence necessary, excellent opportunity for qualified applicants. Write Pontiac Press Box C44, d Fri. Must be t b Live In. 701-3777, In prlvi ’, utfea. Blue Cross plan. Apply at Ricky's, <10 Woodward. Pontiac. DRUG AND COSMETIC cl* 17. Pull or part time, MN Country Drugs, 4500 Elizabeth Lk. DISHWASHER and salad girl wanted for full .or part time employment. Apply In parson only. Frank's Restaurant, jtaaco Harbor. EXPERIENCED—GRILL cook, H —tone willing to loam, FE A X P E R IENCED BEAUTICIAN. EXPERIENCED IN PAYROLL, ac-counts payable, accounts receivable, some typing, Thomas Die ft Stamping Inc. 2170 V'—i Blvd. E. 373-03**.___. FACTORY WORKERS URGENTLY- NEEDED' ' Apply * a.m. to * p.m. EMPLOYERS Temporary Service, Inc. PERNDALB 2320 Hilton Rd. REOFORD 24417 Grand Rlvar CLAWSON . 45 S. Main CENTERLINE 05*1 E. 10 Mila Equal Opportunity Employer obNbfcJM- housework ter Dtys. Salary open. Apply t Bowl CoffOO Shop. 2525 Ellzi LokO Rd. / : ' i Wanted M. or P. 8 Help Wanted M. or F. ASSISTANT Department Managers Managemenfr^Trarn^es- ASSISTANT MANAGER. MANAGEMENT TRAINEE. .COME IN AND TALK WITH US ABOUT THEJE TRAINING OPPORTUNITIES Porsonnol Department, 2nd Floor AAONTGO/WERY] mmsmm PONTIAC MALL An Equal Opportunity Employer GRILL COOK to work afternoons 2:30 to liR closed Sunday--- holidays, b^HTlnCkiHd Piper RnWurant, 4270 Hii GENERAL OFFICE Piling, toll ttom, 40 hr*., high ■chool graduate. Intarvtowi Frl„ 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. or Mon., fo a.m. to 2 p.m. Town A Country Furniture Co., 4107 Telegraph Rd. at' * — , Lake Bd.,Bloomttetd Hills. Telwreph. 'Menoard S HELP WANTED—woman ol Eastc Cleaneri EM 344*1. , 1 HOUSEWIVES WANTED "— “— U *- * $1.50 1 Housewives College : Student's SALESLADIES Full and part time doslt.lohs available aalllng fashion Drayton Plalna Shopping C JULIET OR 4-1300 Montgomery Ward SALAD PANTRY GIRL, 2 pm., till 10 p.m. shift, oxportenetd preferred, goad wages, paid vacations, uniforms, mooli, pleasant WMUgg conditions, apply In p o Orchard Lak* Country Club. STENOGRAPHER, FOR gohorsl office «r-" - — * J—‘— — Fuller Brush ( w afternoons. *47-5*01. TYPISTS STEN0S SECRETARIES Homemakers occoptlng applications for tlmo wiling schsdulss. if available days or ovr-’— < and discuss • i 10 o.m. to 4 P.m. CALL MANPOWER_________3324314 TYPIST------- STENOS Temporary Work ! AMERICAN GIRL 442-3055 725 S. Adorns, I WE ARE LOOKING FOR A girl, II years or okter for full or port time employment. Parry Pharmacy. 4«» East BJvd. Ponttec, Mich. Equal Hudsons Pontiac Mall WAITR£SS WANTED. Full time. International Corporation fUlMbM ' brand rark In the Ponttec JIB and evening work. Must :hool graduate and. abte immediately. A b i KEY PUNCH OPERATORS . perlenced only. Apply 5 744 Wllltenif Lk. Rd. Drayton P'-'— Phono 473.1215. Steady year __ work, good wages, paid Blue Cross and vacation.—Need supervisors and assistant Supervisors. New Branch office ol Dempwy Key furnished. Paid B , uniforms and I i. Room tor advancement. LEGAL SECRETARY, portenco—necessary. . Hills area, reasonable wa wages, sh offices, i LIVE IN, UN-WED MOTHER, or lady ovar 17, more for horns 4how wages, coll anytime, 007-585*. LICENSED PRACTICAL NURSES $5800-$6700 IMMEDIATE OPENINGS PULL TIME—PART TIME Paid Sick Leave ttrapteMi THE PERSONNEL DIV. Oakland County Courthouse 1200 N. Tatograph Rd. * Pontiac, Michigan 48053 LIGHT HOUSEKEEPING wotting. Ogg Cleaners. 379 E. MATURE YOUNG LADY to train as assistant manager of Dry Cleaning Plant. Hours 7s3p o.m. to 4 p.m. Must hisvo transportation. Farm-Inglon Twp. area. 435-0004, 424-1057. SALES GIRL between 1145, needed tor Ponttec area, good bay, room tor advancomont. Coil mat Corp, 2734450, for Carl ' .STENOGRAPHER Good eatery/ good benefits/ excellent working conditions, Sound too good to bo true? If you don't believe It, than coll and find out about our waning for a stone con type at toast 50 w.p.m. si toko , shorthand. Call R. Harding, 542-4*40! Ext. 330. ETHYL CORPORATION 1400 W. Eight MU* Rd. Ftradate, Mich. 40220 An aqual opportunity employer SHIRT FOLDER AND packager | dry cleaning plant, oxc. w------- working conditions. Apply boss and d/lftrji SECRETARY-RECEPTIONIST. 'nMtowHteB —*•- 2222 Slept.-.—.. Equal opportunity SALAD PANTRY GIRL, 2 p.m. til 10 p.m. shift, experienced pre-ferred, good wages. Veld vacations. uniforms, meals, pleasant working Orchard Lake Country Cluto ' SUPPLEMENT YOUR INCOME ||*|d----1 to assist mo In test ___________________3434117. WANTED: LlvaXn weekends oft. 442-2144. WAITRESS, 124 PM. Monday-Frl- WANTED: 2 dAyspER week. iht Ironing-O wn Small Cleaning, iisiiwui ranch. 14 Mite-Adama arts. 447- WAREHOUSE, MALE OR tentelo fill orders, good opportunity. App., at Perry Pharmacy 505 Oakland necessary/ 1 vote*. ■ ■01.40 ■ ____ |__________ mission and bonus to start. Apply * a.m. to s p.m. Sterling Building WAITRESSES” Paid vacations Blue Croat paid. Paid up Inaurance. . Time and VY for Sundayi Apply In parson. - S. S. KRESGE CO. PONTIAr MAI I---------- Sot Mr. Flshur *:30-5 An equal opportunity employer Prank’s Restaurant. Keogo Harbor! Help Wanted M. Br f. BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED r« factors K A-nog., B-neg„ AB-neg. MICHIGAN COMMUNITY Can You Sell? , It. so, we hove Immtdtete opening for two real estate ulis people, Interotted In making money. Experience helpful, but not nocoswiy. Will train, ptanty of kte-- "— ------- Port-tlmo ond ..... ■poly In person Miracle : Orlva-ln — ““•-i— DISHWASHER, ahlfte. blue ______ ____ ...... benefits, Steak and Egg Raatauranf, ’5395 Dixit Hwy. FREE CUSSES , Man or woman wanted. Earn w you learn, Wa hava 0 offices, ... SS?■SSgr Wh° “n,, b* wronB. MILLER BROS. REALTY 333-7156 GRINNELL'S - PONTIAC MAUr—- NOW HAS OPENINGS FOR — ASST, BOOKKEEPER *.musicinstrument; " DR.WOMBN STEREO ___________ SALES - MEN OR WOMEN FULL -TIME— 40 HR. WEEK SOME PART TIME OPENINGS AVAILABLE MUSIC TEACHERS INSTRUMENTAL GRINNELL'S PONTIAC MALL 343 N. TELEGRAPH Seoi Mr. Breniser, Mgr. EMPLOYMENT AVAILABLE - a ply at Seminote Hills Nursli Homo, 532 Orchard Lake Ave, Immediate opening tor fun part time cashier. Must wi weekends. Apply betWsen 14 p. only. Blue Sky BaWg *- 2150Opdykt. __________ JANITOR AND KITCHEN htlp. No experience necessary. Top wages. Partoct lob for retlraes or couple. Apply Bloomfield Canopy. 4540 Orchard Lake Rd. 424-1517. Multilith Operators Advertising Agency North Wbqdword ores. Pieter Calling All Salespeople!!! YORK It on too lookout for contcfontfout toll-stortors ..wtth outgoing personalities. If rrwet this • doscriptlon, WANTED! 1! net Is,not nti train you to ----n t«am at YORK REAL ESTATE Coll Mr. Foley to *7442*3 Sales Help Malg-Female ^-A # JOHN 1C* i$\ IRWIN SALESMEN! . Wo have need of. Mvoral experienced Reel Estate Salesmen. FASHION MINDED (PREFERABLY) tom* I tessional background rwitonHl fashion field, will train 2545 yr. old womtn with smart wardrobe tor boutlquo antes shop In popular Birmingham •**“ caaggc -— SCtoUS only | Ebel.4424105. Bxportencod to work c. ________ Oakland . and Macomb Counties. Salary or drawing account available. Commansurat* on obill-ty. penn. Li,g.i*oo.___________ ROYER School ol real estate. Training bpl in too office end in to* fleli Classes start soon. For a career l real ostato call Mr. Davlton1ln to Oxford office — or Mr. Ware i Mr. Pacduotte tor althar Goodrlc or Lapoor areas. Ixtord Goodrich 24-2545 343-2211 —-------SALESMAN- This Is your opportunlti H ... wtht "•ground'- floor. GMC Rsal * Estate have openings tor 3, will *“w 1—r“------ poypton. BUYING OR SELLING CALL JOHN K. IRWIN 8. SONS 313 West Huron - Since 1*25 PE 54444_________ SALES FULL TIME openings_______ ladles and boy's departments. Excellent benefits and working conditions. 4‘‘ opening tor full tlmo porter, Hugnes-Hatcher-Suffrin PONTIAC MALL 2 SECRETARIES spots I 3 NURSE AIDE spots, Ponttec area Jerry Leggo, S32-*1S7 itss Pc--------- CLASSES REAL ESTATE ” Courses Covered Company Introduction'^ Sates Tools 4 Aids Appraising Salesmanship Financing . listings Preparation for Stats Examination ' POYER REALTY, INC.' "823 S. Loptsr Road--\---—- 628-2548 gram. Earnings unlimited. Plan to attend an Informational matting at 7:30 p.m. on Sept. 0, 1X0. For o reservation and furttwr Inform coll Mr. Muscott, 3304351. WANTED: jw tnack-barPSBBPmHIPVHHMHB and cocktail waitress. Apply strike A Spore Bowling Allay, 4047 - W, Maple at Telegraph, Birmingham. IKING PLANT, day .._ HAVE A FUTURE FOR YOU JN THE REAL ESTATE FIELD THAT WILL YIELD YOU EARNINGS UNLIMITED. WE WILL CONSIDER PULL OR PART TIME MEN AND WOMEN PROVIDED YOU MEET O U R QUALIFICATIONS. SEPTEMBER CLASSES STARTING TO TEACH YOU THIS EXCITING FIE1 “ “ NECESSARY. BONUS ARRANGEMENT. ASK FOR MR, SHUART. WARREN STOUT, REALTOR 1450 N. opdyke Rd. 373-1111 Mulflpte Listings_____ Sales Help Male-Female 8-A Sales Help Male-Female 8-A Transportation necesiar Janet-Dayls Cleaners MATURE YOUNG 14 'Ziv MEDICAL OFFICE assistant bon-ttac, 35 Ijr. weak, teTectton, routine lob., typing, PE 5-7121. tffteil nursing home. I in * m .9 M m * OLDER WOMAN TO core tor two chUdren In my homo. 10:30 p.m. till 7:45 a.m. Own tranoportaiton, references needed. Call after 4 p.m. S22.7407. ______________.. PARt TIME BAk waitress, 3434432. PERMANENT POSITION STTh PART .TIME OFFICE help, Sat. A PRESSERS FOR DRY cteonlng Store, Will train. Long Lake Rd. and Telegraph. 447-1743, RELIABLE WOMAN, CARE for 2 ■gtegri -youngsters In ^aato||iMbM lOT 24. *474452. R.N. OR A L.P.N. tor Doctors,ol ' Union Lske area. Send r»-"m Pontiac Preta Box C-12. RBCEPSriONIIY pok medico I ECRETARY FULL time Of for oxp. secretary for (pan dl vice president. Good shortlwn typing skills required. Exc__________ opportunity, salary and benefits. ENROLL NOW ^CAREER-OPPORTUNITY IN REAL ESTATE BATEMAN REALTY CO. ANNOUNCES THE ENROLLMENT OF ITS 1969 FALL "TRAINING COURSE FOR THE BE-GINNING REAL ESTATE SALESMAN. • Fundamental' ; Salesmanship^.; • Preparation foi Board “Exams • Real Estate Law , • Appraising . THE COURSE WILL RUN FOR A PERIOD OF 4 WEEKS. CLASSES WILL BE HELD AT BATEMAN REALTY C0„ 377 S! TELEGRAPH, MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY OF EACH WEEK FROM 7 TO 9 PM. APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE AT THE FOLLOVitlNG OFFICES! UNION LAKE 815f5 COMMERCE. RD. 338-7161 ROCHESTER 730 S. ROCHESTER RD. ' PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED 'ADS ARE FAMOUS FOR "ACTION" . f of Want Ads Dial 3344981 T11K PONTIAC lMjKSfr- THURSDAY? SEPTEMBER 4, 1969 A»»|>l»|!i—wt ^ Apwsj^ksa *S EX-SERVICEMAN $$0Q-FEE PAID INTERNATIONAL PERSON""' rf j|tNtRAL OFFICE 88$350 to 8475 •aeaptlonlsts, typists, accounting dark*. Variety of positions In Marin suburban area, Pat paid. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL ■ 11*6 ». Woodward, B’ham 542424* LIKE H6RSES? ' ual opportunity. Will train. • edema It iEiMife-ti- 447-***o MANPOWER DEVELOPMENT TRAINEE UM plua car. Bxcallant patantlaii tor young man with col lag* dagraaa. Faa paid. , INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL ■ wao s: woottwara, B'ham ata-Maa; Management trainee $6,500 - Fee Paid High Sclwal, 10-up, gerom fa managamant.Call: INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL . Ill-nos ... IMP W. Huron .rafflMtt I Light typing, a pleasant vale* ane personality madid for dlvaraltlac work with public contaelp. fitjir INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL IBMMP *“ - MjDDLEAttpp BACHELOR ta ahar* i -1-ROOM APTS. Call attfT ». Hi- i saggasac"1 ,,m» » Iwrn apartments, Went5i55fawT~ \ TO 5 0 H°««-, .LOTS, ACR ■ A0 E glSlE.WuW WARREN SJOUT, Realtor ahar* bath; S* P I Sal* Hoasts ROOM COUNTRY 49 Salt Houses wraKyiiTreiaik. . wciSim'amios.8 ___________ i raas. priVaTI brafi; garaga,? iia.t50 da a. MS Wk". Wwerti iTING SERVICE RECEPTIONIft" .E0R' SUBURBAN ' architect. I day w**k, boa-'*-office, 1450. PEE PAID. 'adama i adama _________*47-1110 ■ Rtpr-1116. Between 3:30 and 7:30 only.- Drayton" fSlathiTraii titoV™ » ROOMS CLEAN, carpeted, watt hour, r.ll i..—. _ -V" "I *“ side, varri and nnrrh tn In m0ltiple>l!Si , i day cash forvourhouse Or lot _ NO COST TO SELL PAST FRIENDLY SERVICE Aaron Mtg. & Invest. Co. _________SIM 144 APPRAISALS FREE GUARANTEED SALE 30 DAY LISTING We guarantee the aele of you homu in 39 day*. LAUINGER Rent Houses. Unfurnished 40 'jpTttS * bedroom, i cHlM • 3-BEDROOM HOME. U “ —-tur, atova, miM drapaa and carpeting. > (other furnishings It a~r_a, |,jg „„ plus utllltlaa. la occupancy. Raferehcta, 3 BEDROOMS ON PONTIAC Lake, good con, 4*24392. . , 4 ROOMS AND BATH. WKyHfl andwatarfall, 7 larm~ tedroom*, ,5 baths, 2 flraplacas, highlight this ISIS W. Drahner Rd, Only *59.590 with land contract terms. Open for inspection Sunday l to a, :latas. MS47M. basement new 216 car garagi more, P-90. Call Ray Tad*) atai. I j "!*}' ’’ $1300 COLONIAL. 4 BIOROOMS. Drayton M arae. lek# privilege*, m bath, custom carpeting, drapes. Family roam with flraplaca, formal dining area. MUST SEE TO APPRECIATE. $39,000-410,000 dawn (and contract term*,. 9 pa- ijM Intareat. CALL 472-1731. CUTE AS A BUG And glean ea e whlatla, da thla 1 bedroom bungalow, gt. new I Vi car garage, large corner jet completely fenced. Located lr: . FHA term*. Call: ra s PERRY PARK - Stop! Loo! And than you will buy thla It maculate 3-bedroom with a ft 49 Suit Heuseg RANCH, bungalow, 4 badroo..... dining reenv Mg kltchan, full baaamant, gaa heat, s car garage. Juat $13400. FHA rare down, CALL 4*1-0371. GMC WRIT SIDE. — 1 YORK Security dapgalt, I 90 E. MAPLE, Tl la all yeV n existing moi ■tan $ badr i thla real OR 44S«S bedrooms, no monni, OR S- A BETTER CASH BEAL FREE RENTAL. "elRviah ,. landlords, nod tenants waltl Art Danlala Realty, 4SS-1S47. FOR RENT 3 bedroom brick ranch fully carpeted. Sac. dap. required. lAvalWBla Sapt. IS. Phan* 424-10S2. ROCHESTER HILL SIDE, J bad- ----- *’*- dan and ree^ RANCH AROUND THE II_____________ refrigerator and atova, llvlne n_ carpeting and drapes threugheut.. 1225, sac. depi..and references. Is not a cottage but a year *i homo. Adults only, 343-0993. SMALL LAKE FRONT tfome, needs larga corner let. No doalng costs. Na qualifying. Move In Ir mediately. LAUINGER MARK REAL ESTATE COMPANY 1702 S. Telegraph 332-012, lake ’ privileges, immodii poasasslon, Birmingham Schoo ranch 4 bedrooms, alumlm aiding, flntahad recreation ream hill baaamant, 1W baths, gara) R*M -n with mtjk hast, brick frent. Juat GMC FE 1-7174 op j builder needs Vacant" ! with or without wattr and ., area OK. Fast da*- FRfo hour*, call agent, 474-1131. CASH NOW-* Atova later, No patnta, no cam-mission, got our prtda first. MARIA „„ REAL ESTATE COMPANY 1708 S. Talaoraoh 1 332-0124 RAY O'NEIL REALTY, INC. 674-2222 4033 L0MLEY DRAYTON PLAINS iw three bedroom, bath and hi II baaamant, large kitchen, n I with shad* treat, dote hool* and stores. DON E. MCDONALD Licensed Builder OR 3-2837 $13,99°. family tlza kitchen, fully Insulatad; large utility room. On your lot. ^eUNGmTHOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER BILT ---Russell Young, Bldg.- 334-3*30-5316 W. Huron St. 216 car garage and other .quality -r items. Acre lot la located lust oft J-Paramus St. or al and at Goldfinch £ SYLVAN LAKE - SAM WARWjCR - Has 4-btt cuatorn, Millt brick and ston. ,.r level. IVi bath*. insulated windows. Web^ter-Curtig Oxford-Orion S bedroom home an vary iconic and and half acres It baa two flraplacas. a&r•awssar- -«• - 3 bedroom laka treat home on large LAZENBY LAKE PRIVILEGES G. HEMPSTEAD Realtor b DRAYTON AREA, S bedroom, full baaamant, 2 car garage, t lot*, VACANT, house and. garage lust painted on the outside, efiy water, new aaptlc Raid. FHA aooroyadw*l6,5»‘»rs_Vtavyn^CAU., 411-070. ‘.7^ RAY CALL RAY TODAY I LAKE FRONT ROOMS, *37.5 and deposit ri ; ROOMS AND BATH, baby walcoma, *37.50 par weak, —-dap., inquire — bWu Call 33IM054. 2 bedroom home I MaiT ‘---------- clasp, ratars_______________ First and last month's rant ISO sac. dap. needed. KENNETH G. HEMPSTE REALTOR ^ 115 Elliabath Lake Rd., fE 4-82«4 $1,000,000.00 For tingle residence mortagea tor 1949 — for those who qufllfy. Private, confidential, consultations. Call Hackatt Realty, qak tor Frank 8f Bl"' EM 3-6703 AUBURN HEIGHTS AREA, ad home on large shaded .... city walur, paved a t r * a t: ,ldev-“- —■ . PINE SYLVAN LAKE VILLAGE S IVAN W. SCHRAM ■ till Joalvn FI 1-9471 ! REALTOR , MLS i| sarvlnd Pantlae am»i|E|gn|^ id gas In r, ptjona U ASSUME MORTGAGES on 2 new qualifies yo Associated .Ansa register affisri - Fairtarm atarta Sept. I following courses being offered ACCOUNTINS-CLERIC TYPIST BUS. ADM.-RECEPTIONIST SECRETARIAL Work WgiitEB MeIe II A*l CARPENTER, ROUGH and finish. SSSEftt, A-l CARPENTER WORK' AT A PAIR PRICEI f Additions, family itomt, kltcl— cabinets, garagaa, aiding, rooting, camera, are. Laraa or small lobe. , l DEW CONSTRUTION CO. PE t- 1 PROMPT, COURTEOUSSERyiCI BRIAN REALlV W* Sold Your Neighbor's Home u, uBMW* t-l»tlng Servlet ^kdayt 'Hi f Sunday KM. «ie Dixie Hwy. t am702 CASHI’ . PO* YOUR property WM. Mllia, REALTY ________1 ' 3SMM42 ; . PAYMENTS? Avals ISfl **»ta call agent today 474. ■lingubIit PAY, Brought up to data ai saved. Can work < ATTRACTIVE REDECORATED rooms and r -------- private anti Pontiac Prai BACHELOR, MAIN P LGOR,- FOR MAN. *11 w | BACHELOR APARTMENT. NON of Pontiac, on lake, $100.00 ,n ' -aa utilHF- — ' tg, refrigerate-, Tanga! 9rlv*!* Security dUatlt andi conditioned. PE S4129. —)ulred. C on t a.ejl ROOM PON EENY. ManTC FURNISHED 3 ROOMS and b “"ties furnlahad. FE S4413. I, ROOM. PRIVATE antranca I Lake ana. Call before t Em. 3-*lil. A REAL WINNER, 2 bedrooms, dining room, Colonial, full basa-mtni, gaa heat. *14,500 zaro down. CALL*401-0370. ^MG - A REAL NEAT and clean 2 story - *~—llow, fully carpeted Op an* , with 2 .bedrooms, dining and full bir-- - 1 * 0. F-55 RAY TODA-l PiM' IS ONLY - AS GOOD AS YOUR FINANCING. • Sold or tailing your heme? Let ua . handle vour mortgage. FHA or Gl. .a Low points. Aaron iUttg. & Invst. Co. 33M144 attacMd 2 car garage an baautltul round living m a rustic rural tutting for lust *24,900 with turmf. Sat it today. WARDEN REALTY 3434 W. Huron POtlac 4*2-3920 , - H na------- ---- ~ l'"OAKLAND HEIGHTS, DAILY AND SAT. AND Jldar 2-»tory farm horn* s Divorce—Foreclosure? Don't toae yqur home ua ,'Pr tree appraisal. .i-^n,,, rn,-n--. ,,y„, — - nS?| gfcJWBB-re--------FURNISHED APARTMENT! 'for SLEEPING ROOM FOR UWy, 315- COUFLE WITH 354100 i—■— FURNISHED APARTMENT for rent. iLUPING A66m$ ^ MEN Pon- area. Agent OR 6I449. 33*4003. 2 bad room*, garage, —,, —. drapaa, atova, refrigerator, < •AEV SITTING IN MY til PRACTICAL NURSE AVAILABLE’ r v , -■ ■ 47S4777 _____ Private ■ HMHPSMBIRHP _ I ah at tjg^and clarkal war« In home. tfErtWiatEfl CeepIis 12A will rumlsh awn l 474-1449. ___ hAviWo 'momee to Ihow i* a _ 11 W£!L •atat*. Ermfc onaii Realty capaMa of affarlng m m buytra many different homaa ft which to choaaa -at any given Hi An "O'Nall Sold Mina" sign, I " wryur ^ .AiiNCHASER.W^H IAKLAN. L L AGENT, - SEVILLE MOTEL, a APPROVED BY FHA Thla home hat new alum siding, large living ream, full tng room, full baaamant, carp..... throughout plua 2Vi car garage. Zaro down. S11S month. AUBURN t OPDYKE Nice 3 bedroom reach with 2 car garage ,and Michigan baaamant. Zaro down. *10,900 full price. Approx. 000 month. LAUINGER \ 474-0319 474-0010 AT ROCHESTER IMMEDIATE POSSESSION £ * GENTLEMEN, TWIN badt, Joslyn, FIRif.JNVALUES • RENTING WE ARE NOW- TAKING APPLICATIONS FOR • HOMES WILL ACCEPT ALL APPLICATIONS FROM ANY WORKERS, WIDOWS OR DIVORCEES. PEOPLE WITH .CSV.,,. PROBLEMS AND R E T I REES ARE OKAY WITH US. OPEN DAILY AND I SUN, . or Came to 294 W. Kennett Near Baldwin REAL VALUE REALTY For Imediatt Action Call FE 5-3676 - 6424220 FARRELL ORION TWP. S-badroom ranch on 1 acre lot Carpet In every ream. 2 lull baths. Beautiful recreation room In bate mant. 2-car attached garage will paved drive. Priced b a I e v reproduction coat. Call todayl FARRELL REALTY 2405 N. OpdykaRd. Pontl* - - - 37W5B-^T*»yfr-T-: GENTLEMAN PANMSR, extra LAKE OAKLAND* Batter hurry on thla an Beautiful trl-lavel with 2 budn_ large family roam. Nlc#Jy landscaped yard. 216 car garage and right acres* the street from the lake. Only S4,m down on PHA LAUINGER MIDDLE STRAITS LAki bad roam trl-level, bath and t. large family ream, dan, •», separate irpatadTlake dining room, newly a privileges, completely S2S500. t74-Hl|, ' METAM0RA SUBURBAN BEAUTY Have you bean leaking for a quality built homu with na succour if so, wa have thla lovely custom built ham* about 10 yrt. old ayallabj* tor your Inspection. A law. rambling bride ranch wHh s ‘ —W—u. »r»WCti ♦ " 11 dining room, extra large— baaamant, 2 car attachad "dayaar sitoaiaa.aw —»~ baautltu l i . acre "TSSTSIr J. A. Taylor Agency, Inc. 7731 Highland ltd. (MG9) Dally OR 4-MM Eva*. EM* badroom horn*. Lerety’ lanfa » Good .i^'hgiryaisss;; shad* treat. Trad* In tha aqutty on your praaant ham* or now mortgage available. LAKE FRONT T ^ fenced yard. Excellent bl______ boating and fMilng lake, dot* to »ehoo * and ahepplng. Only tu.50o with land contract farms. R0YCE LAZENBY. Realtor Open Dally ft 4626 W. Waltoni~ OR 44*1 ^ with toll basement, gat h**t, and recreation area, a homo that will >lc*s, laka privileged. 19 . *21,500. Immediate o. Show any tlm*. CALL irfirTi m ir garage, II Mi WIIIh* p< SOLD YOUR OWN HOME? Need help to, do** th* deal ana gat your cash? Halo la a* dose as Hackatt. EM 3-6703 -RI-LhVEL, $14,900 on y< Daniels Raally, 4*5-156/, uaxi 424-4494, Oardan City, 421-7M0. TRADE FLORIDA PROPERTY tor house of equal value in Oakland County, Wand* preaaHy * luusami asul mM*m |jy v room, patio and 214 car] RENTING SNYDER, $125 MO. KINNEY & BENNETT Excluding T and I '■ rs,ru«v I Buy Your House l-BEDROOM IN PONTIAC, SIW a menth, avanhiaa, MA *4400. ’■gggra. £W,*m AT MEN, HOMEpi I —. S-badroom brick, t Slataly air, conditioned, I t. attachad oareg*. I — S-badroom frame ri Me*, basement, 2 car gai country fat.. Office In Rochatfar ■■or Inspection call 4*l-ara. GMG NICE 3 BEDROOM tame* — on land cuh^. MMo down, SI2S mo. Call 6S4-1127 In A.M. 33S-1315 InPAL paints, n* commission. CASH NOW MOVE LATER Miller Bros. Realty SiVi W. Huron 333-7156 HANDYMAN - - Buylno hou*.. ... Arcadia Ct. 5 af 0 p.m. « lit W u Rent Office Spo^ ; 47 ROOM APAETMiNt UPSTAIR*. reference and dapoalt, *73-4144. 5 ROOMS AND BATH, heat, stave, *iid up. OR >1355. and garage, stsg mo. 1509 Opdykt, Pontiac no children or gat*. HfQCWI, ^AikARTAMlNT~tSr ^riettEj eeB PicerHf _ EXPERT PAINTING, realdantlal and MmmradaL^fra* aatlmatas, ln- LADIES DESIRi INTERIOR palnt-•tog naar Waterford araa. '— estlmslu. OR S4304 or OR 3- LOVELAND WANTS), Listings In the Kaago Harter arai Buyers waiting. i. 451-9795. $109 PER MONTH WALTON PARK MANOR U. n p racMantad opportunity—tor families with Mat than- *10,000 fn-come. 1, 3 and ■ 3 bedroom townahousas, adlacant to 1-75, only SS mln. to downtown Detroit. Op— dally and Sunday 12 to S p.m. 1 ceat Thurs. For mor# tnfarmatl call235-4171. AMERICAN HERITAGE APARTMENTS Rent Business Property 47-A 195 SQUARR FEET OF choice oftlca BY OWNER, ’S BEDROOM, ■“’-k, 116 UttUL.'attachad garage, cdnaf liraiBwitaly eft wiilta KmmCWS&m. • BY OWNER, SPACIOUS 2 bedroom brick ranch, 216 bath-conditioning and man) In feature*. 335-1729. BY OWNER. BRICK -■— siding, h Lake Rd. and lanitor strvici Corner of SIW Murphy Sti. across Tram remis State Hospital. KENNETH G. HEMPSTEAD Iff Elizabeth Lake Rd, Pontla FE 442*4 CLARKST0N AREA On AA-15, modem building avallabl now, ample parking- W-vu. 42; 3*40^ «W70. Michaala Rlty. ---- HOLLY Rds., J0'x70', *21,SM, 373-4314. BUILDERS CLOSEOUT, park ^■aLrf1 Jfea rear, door of droom colonial. ... ■ teswtsant, 1,000 fiat D TRANSPORTATION 'to Pa !_Jwn Rochester, Warkli . _-jrv*r- “ ** *-“’ *■ 451-0271. I LOTS — WaUXBD ' IN PONTIAC ' Immediate doalng. REAL VALUE REALTY. 44j-42». NEED 1 or 2 badraor buyer. Call Tarry. 474wb. Aa«nt.* furniture and (ppltanCM, Or what havayailf a B & B AUCTION »S9Btxl* Hwy. ON 2G717 Wan SPOT CASH POR YOUA EQUITY, - OR OTHER, PON QUICK ACTION CALL NOW, H A O S T RRALTOly JOR. ^40*50 or TRANSFERER — Looking far a house In th* Pontiac are* *" ~ large down payment wlL ___ over your mortgage. Call -my agent, 4114074. TRANSFERRED* — It 22 CADILLAC, MODERN | rooms, adult*. 231-iHg or SfeGasa; - COLONIAL VILLAGE Now rantlni 1 bedroom opts. OPEN: 1 ’HI dark DAILY 0 sq. ft. oh mam hwy, #~n PanNac, E* MMHMI -UILDING -x 44 or 50 x 40, air conditioned, —1 parking, tocatad •* MM—..oka RtL, Sylvan 447-1741 bar. 4 p.m. or 515-341 BIRMINGHAM AREA Immaculate, 3-bedroom trl-l_ large, wall landscaped loL paved HIITER ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES -Neat 7 rooms and bath. —-roundad by. treat. Cleat 1 teach. *14,m. Term*. BEAUTIFUL LAKE FRONT teeroome, *• baths, built ina, — ly room, nice sand teach. S car garage. You'll t Ha anal 114,000 e- haw S bedroom ranchers, full basements, aluminum siding, on your tot tar wa have Ida, CALL I. C. HIITER RIALTO11 -- ^' ELIZABETH LAKE. RD. ■ AFTtirfpJlllJ«W4Pr HOME IN THE CdUNTRY THIS NEARLY NEW HOME has lots of aibow room on acre alt* near Davlaburg, S roomy badroomt, family alzad kitchen with dliflng area, walk-aut.baaa-msnt, comfy gat i*at, *24,900 . on land contract. IT’S VACANT N. PERRY-GLENWOOD 1 bedroom (tucse ham* with lai living room, toll dmM nWto W,. LAUINGER *740319 ^ *] $ NELSON BLDG. CO. 1 badroom homa. Immediate p garage, toll basement, hardwood floors. Hi baths, bulIMn rang*, frem «Mi3M plua lot. Cbteteffam 1*0 "KINGSBERRY HOME" plans. Call today to tun yaur now homal Anderson & Associates !0M Joaljrn ' FE 43515 MAINTENANCE FREE MOVE IN FAST Why Laki rill show yt It problamt.—OK with ua. or medal sign on Carroll ten Commerce and I________ 34*4470 TRI-LEVEL, I14,*aa. Colonial *14,900. Ranch, . *12300) on your St. P1-1^ tlac 402-9444. ART DANIELS RjALlnK j |3 SCHOOL, i miKhm trHamh with brick tiding, large lot, bath and a halt, plus family ream. Avallabl* an PHA farm*. Waterford—Union Lake AREA - NICE 4 BEDROOM HOME, with milt tram and 2 •eras afi land wild Union Lake privileges. Thla alto Indudaa: dining room, 1 full teifts, two half talht and 216 gar Baraga. Avallabl* on a naw mortoaga. For (27,500. , INDEPENDENCE LARGE ENICIC RANCH —In indapandanca Two. 4 badroom*1 on 1 full acrw of land, good location and reasonable priced at *213119. FHA trama avaliabl*. CROSS REALTOR 6744105 No Money Down! Closing Cost Plus Good Credit Moves You In Wa have % 4, and I badreom VACANT CAPE COD newiV decorated, full testmanl boat, formal dining roam, PHI Pf^A^ejrownra,ff4l54 tedreiw wtewrarw wtSl wnhra 'room, toll baaamant, . gaa boat: FHA^apprevad. Call awnar'a agant WATERFORD offtra toll a room ranch with 116 bathe,; family rr~ flreplaca, than are 4 badroomt 5th poatlbla, braazaway, 2Vi garagi, 109 x 1S7 let, tonced. prlvllagas on Crescant Laka, 12! fin, RAY CALL RAY TODAYI ,974 fSpfllfe Miller Bros. ‘ Realty 5314 W. Huron ^--333-7156 - DRAYTON PLAINS 4 BEDROOMS 2.FULL I floors wooded IT'S QUIET OUT HERE THIS COMFY CINDER block homa la On qulat daad-and straat at Gran Lam, away from city COUPLE WANTED: REFRII EMBASSY WEST APARTMENTS Larga, . sound condition badroom unlta, all utllttlai electricity, cantral air cond Carpeting, awlmmlng po< badroomt. Minimum anb-yaar |it w. of 34' BY tV GARAGE With tan foot ’ automatic door opener, locatr- — watt side of Pontiac. 4423494. Sate Houses ___________ 2 BEDROOMS This- ranch stylo homa, 216 car garaga, larga living roo- — In, mutt ba tain to be ai *21,900, i contract farm*. WOLVERINE LAKE PRIVILEGES (-badroom ranch, full tastmem, lovely kltcban, 116 car attachad garaga, larga tot, pavad r--- OPEN ’ 9 A.M. TO 8 P.M. 2294 WILLIAMS LAKE RD. Dir,: Driva west an M-59, north an WNDaiha Lk. Ri_ badroom ranch^larga family roam, BEAUTY CRAFT HOMES 4744221 OWNER BEj WE'LL BUILD .... |M „„ your let and aava you a let of-monayl Terms, DEW Construction Ce„ FB-»21H tk PE »4»f. WILLIS M. BREWER WYMANLI 3*2 Auburn Mr*. t, 1 BEDROOM AND kltchan, apply 1*4 L I Back, call tor latest price Between 1 and | [room aparWnBnt*. *14* up, no ~ BY OWNER walking distance of g Truck and Coach, on land contrr— Immediate possession. 473-15*2. HAGSTR0M, REALTOR 4900 W. HURON----- OR 49159 MLS » Alter « P.m, FE 4308 Harold R. Franks, Realtor Trade for 3 Bedroom Hem* in Waited taka School district. Dandy 5 year aid, 2 badroom ranch, large living ream, larga andond summer family room, gap heat, garaga. Free ana dear. Family out-graw hatha, assuma balance on larger homa. Everett Cummings, Realtor 2553 UNION LAKE ROAD RM 5-3209 . H 2 laka*. *10,900 o, BACKUS ^AI.I.MARr air . WertEd H Rem^ BLIND COUPLE WISHES to rent hate*, can pay. up to Site pur month. ‘Mate ratorancaa. PrOtor AakUrtt Halahtoarea. MMS49. *>o.w«19l^ heed' ^EEPQgjy t'aam( •ladrtdly. Call aftor S p ANb > ROOMS, g Included; pgwiMM I 2 BEDROOM LOWER. *45 par weak, 2 LARGE ROOMS and private bSh, . ■' ' w«s*»,:rida'"W ■ Poir“s* 1 FE 2-7952. te^ftnhtot SB-40*7. Mr. Rich 3 2 BEDROOMS, LIVING ROOM, dl ROCHESTER AREA S-badroom, caraptlng and drapaa, air conditioning, swimming poo,I appUancaa, two ever existing ^tdr,n carpeted 1 bedroom, Ppntlac Wait _ tkto, lasGaTPeriiiStii. ; j *'|Rgwt Heebesi ioraWiwI 39 baaamant, gaa t>aat, brick terrace, only *7900 _ *1*00 dawn, taka ovar payments of *70 par mo. on find contract *t a par cant. CALL 4*1-0379. GMC PLEASANT LAKE S^tedrepntg alMtelck reneb^j kltchan with buin-huThlll h mant, lake privltoga*. (32,500. . IStwhiP! BACKUS REALTY S22 _________21 kY OWNER. 80' Laka Orion tram toga, 3 badroom, lVi bath*, *7,000 dawn to existing 4j Gl SPECIAL nd clean 2 badroom ranchar, ■L 2 car garaga, axeallam 1 TO mllaa wast af Pontiac, ovaa you In. HEARTHSIDE IMMEDIATE O C C U P ANCY — Spotless ranch on well lands “ J lot. City iawar. 3 badr OPEN WNDAY —-— Watartord. Cambraok Ll Dlxia to N. Rainbow Land. AL PAULY 173-3100 ~ EVES. 4CT42T2 OPEN 2 MODELS Open Doily 5-7 ----—except Fri. — Sat, ana Sun. 2-6 “Choate troth Raneti, TrLiavat or Colonial dtilliEr Prtood fror *31,000 Including lot. Taka Elizabeth Lake Bead 16 ml wast from Wllllama Laka Road i Colony Haigbtl. - HAVE YOUR OWN LOT? Chats* from tavarel priced from 917,10*. Excellent financing available K.L. TEMPLETON Realtor 2339 ORCHARD LAKE RD. 092-9900 waM¥ a good EUYt canto M aij Apertmert^ UNfenilsIied BBApertEwte, DirfEriihlioB 38 * RiDGEMONT TOWNHOUSE APARTMENTS J40iw, Two dnd Three Bedrooms ;' -4 Rpper Gas Ranges - f Hotpoint Refrigerators ’ p Carpet and Drapes x PSwiming Pool and Pool House Yr *1 UI *. badreoms... *34, prlcad right at S15J5D, FHA, RAY CALL1 RAY TODAY! 47 JOSEPH SINGLETON REALTOR - 429 0RCHARDLK.RD. 5354114 KELLER "OWNER RETlRI fONDALE SCHOOLS: homa with carpeted 11..... - dining room and badreom. Built In bookcase and natural ftreraaca it living ' roam. Wall landscapes wooded let with garaga, Land -infract farms. xWeWi sat trl-lavel, only 519,990 mil* to m Aim ranena* ana conniais ai m as *15,99* plus lot., GIROUX REAL ESTATE — *33* HIGHLAND ROAD 575-7137 ■ < 47548 QUICK POSSESSION! Only 55AOO down un land contra ar FHA torma and hu can. me right In ttm* tor school. Thla lx tar than naw brkk rentoiartias many extras. Make olfar tor quick MHtedaa. watorferd Rlty. 471- NORTH SIDE AI badroom raheh an ct car and half garagi, and tormi. Call tor *A appoint YOUNG COUPLES W# have a vary fin* tern*, paneled living town, lovely kitten nlct bedrooms, full basamant, with naw g*s tomaca, land deM will handla thla naw IMtng, HURRY) *1SJ9T IMMEDIATE POSSESSION - WATER FRONT Brand naw'aluthlnum ranch, S tedreoma, 116 bath*, carpalad through- j ■ Pull basamant, afliwiitd 2 car garaga, tdauq, refrlgwator and , at. ____ EXTRA SHARP - SOUTH SIDE r _ 2-yaar-old extra sharp 3-bod room homa, large caraM IMnd room, cqnvanlant kitchen with rang* «Ml rafrigerator. Only *17,f*A -Gtar t^ termfc-B»to4*Hk-*reiirn*w flaflhg te call today.- FRUSH0UR REALTY . REALTORS - ? MLS^ . 674-2245 5730 Wlllioms Lake Rd/ 674-4161 ,13—16 THE PONTTAC PtlKSS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1969 For, Wont Ads Dial $3:M981 Soh Houmi 491 Sal* Koussi ™0RDl AVON ON THE LAKE , A larga 2 bedroom home, nestled ■way among the treat on beautiful Lake Orion, featuring ptnelod kitchen, living room dlnln room, and a largo doted In porcl overlooking loka. Also a full baiemont, tvs ear- garage.. Don' -----—a tor only 020,900. Im4 GAYLORD INC. S W. hllnt Lake Orion en-tns ----- JOHNSON S WATERFORD TWP. fha terms on this lovely bedroom home, very neat i dean, high and dry basement « gas turnaeo, 2 car gars... Beautifully landscaped lot lOOxTsg ft. Owners moving North. Hurry aj this onel FHA 'TERMS . on- thlA-J bedrnnm tri-level hot with privileges Carpeted llvlnc JOHNSON 1704 8, YUagraph ‘ Brown JUST LISTED!! Extra shop bedroom trMevel. 1774 sq. I living area 14211 family room-, foyer, carpeting In living i hallway and all 3 bedri Walkout door from dining roe... a 12x12 patio, telephone leeks throughout this extra clean home. 2 car garage. Located In lovely Meceday Woods sub. extra, another lot < ARRO NEAT 3 BEDROOM RANCH Full bath plus mastar bedroom ha_ full bath with shower stall. Gas heat, screened patio, aluminum storms and screens, fenced reei — yard. CALL FOR DETAILS. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION On this lovely new 3 bedroorr brick and aluminum ranch. Over 10S0 square fed of living specs hardwood floors, loads of closel space. 114 baths, thermo windows, full basement, gas heat, 2 car garage, sp, jam ‘ m m with iaka THREE, BEDROOMS Salt Housts 3154 Francesco 49 Sole Housai brick home, 2Vk attached garage, fireplace, formal dining, 1 full end drapes. jiir VACANT: brick ranch with jv, cor garage and fenced yard:1 kitchen, living room, and hall a| carpotad. Land Contract o assume low Interest mortgage SILVER LAKE ESTATES > 5 NSW WtlnberQtr models to choose from Including /Colonials, end ranchers. Priced from S33,S00 to 141,900. A&G TWIN BEACH LAKE FRONT LAND CONTRACT TERMS Retired executives home located in one nf White Ltkes finest areas, -highly styled throughout, drop Is-land kitchen, secluded living room 2 natural fireplaces, pansled family room with full balcony overlooking Spring fed lake, and walkout lower cellent features that can be yours. •59,200 at 119,000 down. ANDERSON & GILFORD ' HALL PONTIAC VAST SIDE — 3 bedroom PONTIAC NORTH SIDE -clean and neat 3 bedroom beautifully carpeted living tiled both, largo kitchen with In oven and rongo. Priced J on PHA terms. Colt now toi appointment. /ILL BUILD -- 3 bedroom ronch -home with full best hardwood floors. Thermo wl with screens, 114,050 on yoi Coll for more Information. " LErS TRADE ■ ■ “ALL REALTY, Roolto. - May. - *25-411* Built In sfir Underground sin lot. Early .... I LOW DOWN PAYMENT . ON P.H.A. terms. Wo Inkier. Estate ife-vERY SENT ON ' toko your ; Miller Bros, Realty 53'/i Huron St. 333-7156 FE 5-8183 NORTHERN HIGH » Owen,. Kennedy Jr. High are where your children will attend school. 3 bedroom ranch wit*-alum, siding, life cor garagi Built-In oven and . range, tllL bath, yard completely fenced. PHA apon—1 *J— EAST SIDE Q Jnlfig roc..., . _ ../ed. NO DOWN PAYMENT. RANCH Brick and fram* ** *• Side. Carport. 49 MILLER AARQN BAUGHEY REALTOR EL I Z A BETH LAKE ESTATES BRICK home In A-] condition. Carpeted living room with fieaplaco, family size kitchen with now cabinets, vanity In hath, 3 bedrooms, full bosamant, with, lovely roc. room with bar. Garage, nice lot ond Ellz. Lk. privileges on ana oftho nicest beaches in the area. »23,vqo with - .* •. .John K. .. - IRWIN gas turnaca, 3 car garaga. for more Information, KEcB8 wM”*Aki • ° oWr NORTHERN' HIGH ARfA| ™. ___________one half. NO DOWN PAYMENT. VACANT. AUBURN AVE FRONTAGE Corner locations, 90 feet to a. Call for details. Nicholift-Harper Co. 7150 Dixie l,. Open Dally » "BUD" g. Cali iPfor'datii Sols Houses INVEST, DON'T SPEND . Small 2 family, all-furnished, full basement, approximately '* - grounds, located on Doug____ Bringing In good Income, Priced ot *14,500.00. NICHOLIE-HUDSON Associates, Inc. 1141 W. Huron St. 681-1770 after 6 p.m. FE 4-8773 49 Sale Houses NORTHERN HIGH SCHOOL FHA term* available on this ah bosamant, separate dining room, price 315,200, payments far less than LIVE YOUR DREAM MOTHER AND FAMILY ......... Will like this onel Lovely 23‘xll* kitchen with bay windows, oak floors. Plastered walla, 2 bedrooms down and 1 largo dormitory bedroom up. 1st floor utility attaching the 22x24 garag*. Now gas furnace, well and static system, on o corner lot 120x120. ROOMY AND TOP NOTCH A room tbr everyone In the family and Its In lop notch condition In and out. 2 moms In oil with IVk baths, beautlfdl oil formica kitchen, luxuriously carpeted living ond dining room, besoms" nt gas turn ourfl7,900. F I brick barbecue thOrs wilting DORRIS & SON REALTOR------ 2536 Dixie Hwy. MLS . OR 4-0324 •FE 5-8183 HIGHLAND ESTATES Assume 5V*% Mortgage This 3-bedroom brick ranch Is |u waiting for a thrifty buyer, k mortgage costs. No high Intere rates. You con_en|oy luxury llwlr In suburbia; Community^ wate paved streets, sidewalks. Fu bosamant, 2Vk car garage Frlqldalra built - ins, awning: Many other pleasant surprlsi awalf you! Full price only 325,501 SYLVAN SHORES Prestige oroo, value and happinai all will be yours whan you call < saa this 3 bedroom Capa Cod bi Enclosed Completed ______________ .......... basement, 'tiled floor, finished coiling, panolad walls, 1 brick fireplaces. Lake privileges, Sylvan Wideman WEST SUBURBAN antranca and din is kitchen freezer o. woshoi ornor lot « those ot city dwellers. Family room, t-ins, dinette, WII basmt., gas near, 2V-» car garage. Lorgo lot pli-iots more. 527,500. >•0" DOWN, NORTH SIDE homo MODEL New Ranch finished for showing at II! mil, off Baldwin, Big 4 rc Ho battik specious kitchen I room, birch cupboards, Por-countor, shining * — last, high and qry Plenty al i street 'Northern High. i. Just 117,730 full price i Val-U-WaY OFF BALDWIN Sharp 2 bedroom homo will largo 2 cor gorogo. gas h alum, storms and screens, i vonlont kltchon ond dining a Priced at 113,790 mova In for 09 NORTHSiDr 9rick front ranch# \ SOUTH WEST Larga brick front rancher with a bedrooms and full basement, gas heat, tile bath, beautiful hardwood floors, large kitchen and dining area. . Vacant, I m m ad I a i t possession. Mova In for about $600 closing costs. YOU CAN TRADE FOR ANY NOME WE HAVE FOR SALE Val-U-Woy Realty and Building Co. • ■ > FE 4-3531 345 Oakland Ava,_Open 2 |o 2 GILES ENTERTAIN MUCH? Hare is 12x34 r gas heat, aluminum storms "rains, on a paved street, gb coll.ond see for yourself. BLOOMFIELD- TOWNSHIP ____ ful 3 bedroom ranch, custom mada fireplace. In spacious living Ddm. bath and Vi, large glass porch rtiicn 1$ used as, a family room, call CHEROKEE HILLS ..'II never regret the day you finally decided to look ot this well built 3 bedroom homo whore charm aclous kitchen, am.' Braozaway, basement, large CALL FOR AP- OOZZING OUT-— ------------- Or your outdated, outgrown houai ■*— it plenty ot room. In th . . .—*~om home, with- largo i, yard It completely Clauds McGruder Realtor 3710 Eilzabelh Lk. Rd. 412-1720 Multiple Listing service Opr~ ** LEAGH I $7,000 —WILL BUILD - « I LAKE ORION—3-bO< WIDEMAN, REALTOR spoc, voent, *12. 413 W. HURON ST. . ‘ 334-4524 “Wn. rHA. EVE. CALL________ 335-0*421 ynnauBK- Largo 3-bodroom co- BUYING OR SILLING CALL JOHN K. IRWIN & SONS FE 5-2444 Attar 5 p. Iful year ika, 3 bad *2171, South of Lopt 0540 EVES. 71 BARt/ES: LAKE — 42574 *— -—id homo ' , family contract ot (5*0 EVES 02 ACRE FARM-42513. Vk mile off M-24, house, building, live stream, Vk mile ALMONT - *2540, 3 bodroon homo with 3Vk car garage, • largo lot. CALL *44-15* EVES. 723494*. 5 ACRE PARCEL — *235*, and *240*, good building tile. Ideal location, call 4*4-lS*o available. CALL **4-15*0 EVES. 4*4**117. WEST ftp MARLETTB — *25*4, 40 acroo, root nice 3 bedroom, modem homo 3 cor garage, 2 bom*. This ono Is 0 real beauty. For only •24,500, excellent terms. CALL 4*4-1540 EVES. 724-8270. JOHN A. ROWLING, Inc. REALTOR 122 W. GENESEE LAPEER STOUTS BEST BUYS 'I TODAY ; L0OMFIELD ORCHARDS- Vory sharp 4 bedroom ronch homo with Mml-flnlshad lower level, ilk baths on In floor and Vk down. Gas heat and Hot water. Sturdy brick and alu-constructlon. Attached 311,500. 0700 down plus costs. YOU CAN TRADE FOR ANY HOME WE HAVE FOR SALE Vol-U-Way Realty and Building Co. FE 4-3531 343 Ooklond Avo, Open 2 TED'S Trading 674-2236 SEMINOLE HILLS English colonial homo with L~JL~~im and 3 baths, 2 338-4018 *74-3143 , *73-94*2 EXCELLENT BUYS BIRMINGHAM and extra attractive. Consists of * rooms and 1V4 Botha. If features a color coordinated-klteh-on which Includes stove, refrlg-eralor and dishwasher. Fully carpeted. BaMmtnt -with -pan-eled recreation room. Attached 2 car. garaga. Excellent location, LAKE FRONT LAPEER AREA- Neat 3 bedroom contemporary style .on private lako with ox-S!!!!"’ “"d beach and boot Jock, outdoor stone barbeque. t*?,hlofOO tlroploceo, enclosed porch end Inis of storage----- Block ond stone exterior. TIMES SEE THIS!—— Salt Houses 49SoIb Houses WE WILL GUARANTEE THE SALE OF YOUR HOME OLD FASHIONED Something Different? cor. Impossible to describe. and attached gorogo. Located on o landscaped yard surrounded by 130 cedar trees. S24.500. SEE THIS TO-BAYil No. 97 LIVABLE LAKE FRONT BUILT AND DESIGNED tor fha pleasures and comfort dr lotto living. All brick rancher with glass walls overlooking tho lake. 3 lorgo bedrooms, ftnlshod basement, with aoperata kitchen and ffroe lace, Fgtlo, sundeck and dock Included. CALL TOOAYI _________________1 No. h MONEY WATCHERS I DO YOU WANT more for lust i17/90a. potlng, aluminum storms and •croons, got hoot, ond a fenced yard. Good schools and a SPECIAL BONUS, iwlmmlng pool for tho Tots.. CALL NOW) I No. 9* FHA APPRAISED ■ALL BRICK 3 bedroom « and on a blacktop sfroot. Immediate possession. *10,350 With a flexible Mllor. this won't lost lone. *o call , NOWII I ROCHESTER AREA coted on evar/tn sera of fond for 347,200 on Land Contract terms. CALL NOW! No 71 , FIVE NEW MODELS —■___OPEN SAT. A SUN. M p.m. I COLONIAL A MID-LEVEL:. W. Huron ot Voqrhelt Rd. KEYLON RANCHER AND TRI-LEVEL: tffllor Rd. at Koylan Dr. AVON RANCHER: Avon Rd. lust dost ot Crooks Rd. PONTIAC CLARKSTON ROCHESTER 338-7161 v 625/2441 651-8518 UN.- LAKE 363-4171 TUCKER DEW 4 BEDROOM IANCH HOME, located on the East, tide, near McConnof School.: in ovorydMgli, Wl family this can be yours for about *400 qpmploto. $35QnDOWN THIS NICE 3-BEDROOM HOME near St. Jooo con be your*, full bosamant, auto. heqt. A real bargain. NEW 3 BEDROOM NEAR AUBURN AND S. PADDOCK, kifehenTTuil basement, gat hoot. If you art a low Income family this can be your* for about $350 — If not tha down paymant I* $700 on ~FHAJ9rnrl$. 1 V.'/ ■ .■' / ■ -----"TUCKERtREALTY-------------- REALTOR Lm 003 Pontiac'State Bank Bldg. *34.1111 llrmlngham schools. $28,100. WALLED LAKE 2-BEDROOM^ Possible thlh Walled Lake a7o«. Family------- and rfcreotlon room; 2 flroploco*, glassod-ln porch. 2W cor otta ' Cass Lake Privileges BRICK'. RANCH WITH BEDROOMS, formal dining area h kitchen, family room, work ahop recreation.' room, 2-way flraploce studio celling*, many, m o n) Modal features, *43,200. '-MAX.. ■ BROOGK . 413* Orchard Like Rood At Pgptloc Troll MA 6-4000 4444890 A FEW IDEAS . Painty polish, hammer, nail* a enaroy art all this home needs $45,000. Call for mor# particular*. COUNTRY LIVING In the Davisburg area. You cat have horses on the iVi acres , tha! 49Sole Houses "IT'S TRADING TIME" FHA TERMS PONTIAC NORTHERN iijmiy ft lornS?'1 SESSION III """ DRAYTON WOODS QUAD LEVEL IMMEDIATE POSSESSION.— SitUI choice residential areas. Three :»™« attached gorogo, family room.i the huge living room ond built-in oven oi sold foSTOf 130.950. WE DO ACCBPT.TRADCS. EXCEPTIONALLY BEAUTIFUL Like front building alio Include* on Lotus’toko. Easy core alt ., living room, glassed porch. Retrlgdri go with thli solo. Calf for details < li of Woterfords this two bedroom bungalow tiding, flroploco In the stove, carpet end drapes CANAV FRONT • ' 72,ft. of canai front on cedar Island lake. Four b ranch with redwood trim hot 2tk both.. final built-lns. Wall to VM I I carpeting. Walkout basement feotti wot udWltorod In toother. Patio v WE LIKE TO WORK 1 —_ ..„d LISTINGS! If you would Ilka to have o knowledgeable; professional team pnisgnf your homo to " potential BUYERS ... contact . . ..'fffMnMMW,'Rm Blftl, Oloto Howard, Dick Bryan, ElofnO Smith, Leona Hunt, Loo Bogert, Elloan Moyer, or Dave Bradley. •1071 W. Huron St. 681-1000 large k on hi basemai flroplaces, family r ment with IlnM sttachod 2 cor garage en rood; Offered - of 142,901 WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE YOU 'JOIN THE MARCH TO TIMES! Times Realty 5»0 DIXIE HIGHWAY 423 0400 REALTOR Open f-2 Doily Office Open Sunday M. CHAMBERLAIN ROCHESTER LAKE ORION AREA - WHY NOT TRADE? [ROSE CENTER Haro is a larga home for the toi who needs five bedrooms In a r salting South of Holly. Ton room all. Thlt homo con bo usod ’ a OR 4-03*3" , '■ : PE3-717*! lOVYNSENDLAW ~ , mBr ^ OWNER TRANSFfeRnW* toko ovtr payments, 1a acrta# will Mil or part, la** man t hr*, from 9«v • tlac. Wooded rafraat' on country road, aaty accass, 1$ min. from. i* ! 331-9394 331-9295 75- $29 mo. taka Ifll TMf paymonf .... :/■' "i........... includes mtereat from 7 par cam - * - ** A NT ytor. Call Mirahall* Mlltcfg Property Sl-A! ra-i»3._________ - _ ---------------- m save BEFORE WE list. 3 good loll ‘ near Ket- . .m. 425-1730.^ in lama I SEYMOUR LAKlTAfcEA I private 70 acre* on Saahabaw Rd. Frlcod USm *“* for quick *alt. C. SCHUETT EM 3-7188 MSP Commerce Rd. Union Loko TAKE OVER PAYMENTS, wcraaBO 30x3* SHELL CABIN cor gorogo. Only o block fr No. 4-24 joy to uve in ^‘nnJ^rv^JK^^JA WHIZ T0 ^AN overlooks b o 0 u 11 f u yard. *21,SCO. I Sharp’ included plus a 3 cor gorogo and o <'h acre yard. Owners moving ,1a Florida, to you con hove quick possession. Priced ot |U*t *24,500. desired. Call anytime. *25^3S5 ■ 1L S-725*. ■'■'■'■ ■ ... ■ . ; Deer Hunters Dream NorStf —r- ^ V —- I* oit^prropor"f LAKE ORION AREA story fremo homo, sol on oil d fishing lake, 3 gonoraus size Irooms,—separate dining oroo, I 4H-1M3. _____ THINKING OP BUILDINGf WE, HAVE NUMEROUS lots ot Oil —sltspes—ond—oizea—leKe—lfento—qF— suburban. In oxcolloflt neighborhood wllh good schools near by, call Clark Raal Eatoto. 13*2 W Hliriui It; gB iMli VACANT 2 ACRES, 2W ACRES, * ACRES. 22 ACRES, TAKE YOUR PICK. ORION AREA. CALL h MILLS ROCHESTER ________ . air conditioning liv Hying 4 bedroom ,lw story brick house, 3 mooter bedroom, lull bou—.... __ full baths, largo country kltchon, family room, big. ceramic bath, soearolo dlrilng oroo, 3 room i closets galore, carpeted, completely garage. Investment and drapes. PrlcorT24.fOS. No. 4 42 CHAMBERLAIN 715 W. UNIVERSITY DR. ROCHESTER [FOUR BEDROOM j Soparoto dining mom, fireplace, [ basement ond e beautiful now oi Irwin "YES, WE TRADE!": .... It could hove four vary lot bedrooms, has a both end a ho|l i a basement. As a bonus It's In dependence Township whom tho k " “7 to CWrkston Schools. All at.310. You can'l on wrnm LOVELV 2 BEDROOM ratlromant or[ YOU Call t MlSS l»ko koma. Cedar Lako, Oscoda.[,UY|N0 acreage ASSURES YOU OF BREATHING ROOM, SOUO INVESTMENT AND ENJOYMENT. 1 •SBSiJU ACRES — Scenic land and tor walkout ter ,, posed basement , home, f miles N. of Oxford, •*,#). area. [9 ACRES — BffBhtly rolling, 4 m >. 2-*0 ACRES WILLIAMS LAKE -.............. or Ye», this real nice 3 bedroom hor ~ s located. ISSxlH' lot. Ha* I* locatod Vk block from Wllllor tho city convonlencta. Can bo Lake with privileges on tho 1st ght on land contract. Priced at This home ho* been complett v *18,250 wllh *2,000 down, or redecorated Inside ond out. F.„ ■—-----------' ‘ ‘ ‘ lust 10,100. No. 2-24 i FAMILY INCOME ~ presently used as on Income, coi be large family homo, and con bought on E-Z.terms. COMMERCIAL FRONTAGE N“* »">* r'kOn 5 rooms, f... o, sotting on a nice Gl SPECIAL * Throe, bedroom ^ rom dining space. Nearly furnace on a largo lot with troes, only ttt^gov 0,1; or P, ,!?'"«» ■ ——u extras. 2 large em for another In RETREAT FOR TWO CUtE FRESHLY PAINTED COTTAGE, mar 20 Milo and Rochaitar ^d» rr——— lek f J0xT7S' lot. ONLY $5000 DOWN Id's M Pontiac 3*77 S. Lapeer R lots—Acrit# . J ^ 54 1 ACRE ON CASS LAKE ROAD NORTH OP M-52 FLATTLEY REALTY *20 COMMERCE RP. 2Vk ACRES IN THEr Clarkston, - from M-15. 1 “menziesrialestate *25-5*15 If no / ACRES. ROLLING. WaedTd' ravin*, oj*-'- —" -------- of • kind, fared at *1! Me hlgl. ________ .... N^of Lake Orion, of- GREEN ACRES hear Offer Lake, *5.9SOr ..... down. - - C. PANGUS INC., REALTOR .OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK *30 M-15 Ortomdllo CALL COLLECT *27-2111 ■ Sale Farms . ’ . 56 60 ACRES 1,9*0 ff. on rood. Good older homo.' Needs minor . repairs, and -decorating. Hugo born and other 1 out buildings. Spring hoar house makes for Ideal pond site, *45,000 full price. Land contract ternts. 25 ACRES Horse born, 3-bedroom form homo, recently remodeled. Beautiful salting oh hill with axcOMfnt view. Ideal spot (or family the! loves the . outdoor IHg, S3f,500 full Meg, riding ring. Exceptional I Like now ranch home with—2—fireplaces. Hugo fgcrtwion. room. Many ex-Jras. fl2.500 toll prlM rtwn.r will 80 TO 800 ACRES In-Lower Michigan. Dairy, grain, boat or hegsl Nome your farm fWM|s, wa hgya It at Daan's "Mlehlgan'i Form Raal Estate Headquarters," . 220 N. Michigan Ave., Coklwatet,, Mleh„ Ph.: *17- adlolnlng stateTTand trees and fruit Irtes homo, alter Ortonvillt, aza,vM FARM 17’Jir ACRES bedrooms, living roon fireplace, dining ------ trots, H rnfU *1 tfh FARM 80 ACRES -rtrsim!1* P4»sWo, 3 largo C. PANGUS INcl REALTOR „ DAYS l WEEK “^ALLCOIXEcUAr^ HEARTffelDE* JL*n%«,JPf,YJKy.hsil»..i* aergs In fi1:.."* a. .on maK read. Koto REALTOR! ORCHARD lake ROAD i t 1344594 55Toc.s,rW i Ear Want Ads Dial 3344981 THE PONT?AC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER ,4, 1969 D-1T SaUF.ni. “ HOWARD T. KEATING sw* rw# MAH DISCUSSING VACATION With friends* "Ws stayed horns this year. We .took a pay-later vacation last-year." VACATION: 3 weeks op the sands-the rest of the year on the roots. '*■' In Davisburg Area — Beautiful 30 ecra horia (arm', Modem ranch type house. X flraplacai. Recreation room. 3 bedrooms. IVb bathi. Now kltelMn and utility room. .Blocktop drivowoy. Vary waiiktat. 1 bomo nowly w|rod. Automatic drinking cops for hertat. Submerged bloc-trie pump. Good won. Now riding ring. Tack room. Whlto board Clorkoton area ochooli. IVb rr to 1-75 entranco. 2,000 ft. of 0 Highway. pnco , Cottle Form j* illoo south of North Brdfigi, it 11 mil** N. of Lopoor. 10, » » with 2 story housa, modern, so now rants for ttto mo. Tha [ Is. under cultivation, ell-- Doslness 0|Mert»nHle» S9 LIQUOR BAR . Qno of Oakland County** tap bora located an* main u.S. Highway. Reporting approx. 0190,000 talas • year. Ideal tar oarfnan^*>Hm|lii SfantomWBfflm atop In tor appointment to sea' WARDEN REALTY MM W.-Huron, Pontiac 9# If no answer call 343-9340 Seile OfMeep MK Ya», y package prlo Price of HO, MO,000 and ht-GAYLORD. Call INVESTORS nklng for mori —_____—as, you need t* Wa .have a business that ■liable la you nowl No. I. .... ... ASK FOR. NEW CATALOG PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE ■low Woof Huron st„ Pontiac_________ •till . * wo urn Open Weak Nltaa *fll 0 ROYAL oAk. HAVE Class C II Lang fi 1 2 reads,.-1 of frontage on BUM la oshpalt, _________ ______ area. Good for future Investment, or farming at tho i prttgdf 'Wolj fertilized, tips ha Ml loon py “ Ftr Son MUetBtwsew 67 WO SAFES FOR iota, 033 a Piece, 1 electric stove, 140, refrigerator, 1 year old with 1c* maker, 075, freezer at bottom. 1 bed with •prlngi and mattrsfis, bookcase and dresser. 01 go. 4I2-4334. i atiHMa - drafting tablet, mlmaoorapha, told In Sapiambar at li par cant Off. Forbes Prhrtlpfl end Ofllce Sup. WESTINGHOUSE electric ranbe) doubla oven; VS. 3S4QM4. ' WMMBE3 AND DRYERS - . Whirlpool. Kal vino tor. Spaed Quean, Phllco, ate. Car load prices on all n*W 3-spaad, 3, 4 ' cycle washara and dryers. I 0119, terms available. ABC APPLIANCE 40035 Van Dyke 1 blk. S. 32 Mila 3314 E. 10 Mila TuOa.. Ml. * WALNUT DINING,! For Solo Miscellaneous 67 GIFTS—GAGS, JOKES. Lay-a-ways. Liberal Bin s 33(8 pixta Hoy. OR 3^474. ar Sylvan Laka, Keego Harbor. Bast offsr,- you tomova. 1.S42-7253 attar 4 p;m. ADDINGMACHINES.S3t.30. Porta-bta typawrltors,- *39.30, Dasks $34.30, I BM'a 049.3ft Calculators, 099.30, CltorinwltatOlTK, Cssn registers S39, Safas 019.30, Btgrog* CSblnOt* 039.30. Fixtures, F 11 e s $7.99. Stano chairs $12.30. Bookcases 034.90, Confarancas tables, postage maters, work bench as 019.30, wrapping oMntars. 34*4404, LonpX._________________________ HOT WATER hEatBr, 30 gol. gas. Consumers apptgvtd 009.39 valut, 019.95 and- 049.95 marred. Also electric and butane' heaters. Ter- LAWN SPRINKLING inch olaatjc alps, S3._ plastic pip*, 141 par piosiic nip*, os.51 par .... ... plastic MpE 010.01 JOT 100. G. A. ThomosonBi Ian, TOM u di aH6Ther pantaVtic sW — 709 N. Parry. Ws p.m. to 7. BRIDES - BUY YOUR WEDDING •MMRNonwrts at dlicount from, Forbes, 4300 Dixit. Drayton, OR 3- conN|Clarinet u'kE. ny g0| tilt tralMr, MRM .™.l* 'gggguul 030. FE 4-0344. North *ooo"*w*rd$' YOUNG MARRIEDS CL t co-slgntr 6I1-23W. CASH IN AT ? KIWANIS FLEA MARKET Waterford CAI Bulldina Saturday, Saptimber 6th » [iavailable for tala of your _ j* Call 673«9102 for raiarvatlon, co-6> oarage aaitg Sapf. wTf Need fumtture? U get you credit w AwtlqwEB 65-A ANTIQUE SHOW PI,_____.... union strati, soot. 3, 4, Noon Nil 10 p.m., Sunday flti 7 p.m. B L O 6 M F IELD7 ANTIQUE Field "Hills. Sapt. 4-5-4. in. 11 a.m.-ll b.m. CARRIAGE HOUSE A N going out of bualnost sa, Sat. 10-5, , *374 Big I COLLEGIATE SCHWIMN MU, i 43 lb. Bearcat bow, 334-7974. UCSAND _kn!iilQg~^B COLLECTION OF IRON banks, still and mechanical, also Iron animals, Y-Knsr ” “ CUTTER, GOOD CONDITION, »5. 403-4393. ________ HOME SOLD, MOVING Wtst, must sail aimqueo, dear to owner, fine 10 century furniture and Brlc-a-brac, Art glaia. Havlland set, dolls, drosdon, pewter, full yoars antique magazine. 1*40-1947. Much HIsFi, TV gad Radios 6 BED TV ,037.1 Ev. Walton, corner of Joslvn AdMlEiy. color tv combination, Ci'RAWO. »j 1 tQ 50r LAND CONTRACTS rgOntly needed. St* us before XI deaL , Warren Sout, Realtor 1450 N. OpdWte^Rd.,, ^ 373-1111 LARGE PR quick (JOMI If PLENTY OP_______________ stoves, refrigerators, and trodo-m furniture bargains. Little, Joa'a Bargain Housa. Baldwin at Wal-tan Blvd. FB *4043, AVACADO WASHER, dryer, 7 mos. LOANS 023 to 51,000 BAlffET1-ti^Sllir?NE— — Finance Co. 401 Pontldc State Bank Building FE 4-1538-9 STOP YOUR HOUSE FORECLOSURE Ifeo the Mil aSnoctor — atop all ybur credit problems — we have millions of dollirs tor mortoogss — widows, djyorcaos, and people with bad credit or*. 6.k. with us. ' ’ Anv-Rlsk Mortgage .1 - 398-/91 (an now - tar, * BEAUTIFUL WOOD grain — ' * 1—ivos ana 4 333-3703. Mo>qmi DID YOUR DEAL FALL THROUGH? to* Day. EM 34703 FOR THE FAST 43 YEARS -tgages for repairing, ai solldatlng bills, etc. li ill monthly payment, ■—row on your hor- tJii'm267 Swaps 9X17 WALL TENT and flberghis 'gBBBMEjM'*lf‘ •' —*g—1 yOuTOiMWl. W WOLVERINE boat and traitor: 35 ho. Etactrlc atari, S330 or gSGS - 19*4 and 7-pc. sets, $24.95 up. lorry alactrtc tlroalaco, tori coder chart. 45i-i3*L ■ iimmKB. CHEST) SECRETARY) antique -‘—sari and tabias. M. C. lip- CASH IN AT THE KIWANl* JfLBA MARKET watartord CAI Balldipg ■ :a ^avaluStom v — TEMPORARY, CUSTOM CURVED sectional safe new S750, now *173. Light' cranberry pouf, new *133,' now $49. Dinette; 4 Chairs, leaf, svjl Gray Chalr tS. Pictures — mile. 447-1443 -* p.m. ChROMI DINETTE SITS? yourself, save; 4 chairs, fdbla, $49.95 valut, *29*V ■>*• 4 chair sals, haw 1949 dMlgna; formica tops. Michigan Fluqraaeant, 193 Orchard-Laker FE 494B ■ ft. ......... FULL size SadT . dresser with mirror, king ___ chest, Ivory walnut finish, S100 or btaToffi STSTn i . I ■ CARPETING DuPont jtt Nylon, must sacriflc. l$Ys of Varda Of bettor carpeting, large selection of colors, regular St.95 value, kata', price* at only $4.1*.. aa. . yd- fra# estimates. Household Appliances. 411-3393. DINETTE WITH 6 chairs IWl.mtec. Hams. FE 3-4773._____________ DUG-THERM SPACE heater bads ~J y tongTjc. GOOD REFRIGERATOR BUYS Alto dosaaut an all floor otmplo rangos, washers, dryer* and TVs, E-2T firms. Llttl# BaMWtn. FE £iUS. UNIVERSAL _ 3415 Dhd* Sit. 10:134 NEW COLOR TV's priced Doran's Ar~“--------— E. Walton, SONY TAPE RECORDER, 300, steroo, original woo, v bast offer. 391-2090. , sTeRED AND FM combined. Wotsr Softs—rs WATER SOFTENER PROBLEMS? For sorvlca only casll Warren's Softener Repair. 473-3792 or 343- MATCHING CHIFFEROBE and year crib 330 for sat taat“--‘ fe.50, youth chair S3.SO, cane-bottom chair $10, I ■Miicait siife MAPLE BREAKFAST art, mahogany MAYTAG WRIlfgER condition. 43 E. Howard St. PEARSON'S FURNITURE HAS NOW MOVED TO 440 AUBURN, PONTIAC, FE 4-7191 . REFRIGERATORS, DISHWASHERS, dryers, washers, ranges,. crate damaged and scratched medals. Fully guaranteed. Tarrlfle savings. 'Terms,■ 7 '■■■■■ - CURT'S APPLIANCE 4414 WILLIAMS LAKE RD, 474-1101 RED MAPLE bunls bed, clwst and record cabinet to match. Also rum-mag* tala, 3173 BURDc Str**t, 4M-#104, oW Staff Laka Rd. chair, Choopi it Easy Straat. - Buttonholes, ate. — Mod# cabinet, Taka over payments of: $7 per Month for 8 Mos. or $56 Cosh Balancs Still Under Guarantee ’ UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER »1S Dixit Hwy. FE 44995 SUMMER SALE! Chair* and sofa* raupholstsrsd. 333-1700, free aslmata. , EFT. 4, AND 5, garage sale, 1 tlques, crystal, back fo tch clothing, you. nomo It, too ho 3402 Malta Lana, Mzierih an. Me off Laaliar, Blrmlfigtoam. . SEARS COLOSPOT 3,000 BTU, 132- SINGER DELUXE MODEL-PORTABLE $38 CASH or Paymsnts of $5 per Mo. - 3 Year Guarantee UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER 2et3 Dixie MANUFACTURER'S CLOSE-OUT STEREO WALNUT OR MAPLE CONSOLE 4 p.m. Jlshas, cabin cruiser, Items .too nun.,_____I .. _____ 3241 Erie Dr. Orchard Lake, b garden 10 ft. ^mention* Commarca Rd’., naar^Orchard Lake CHRISTMAS CARO SPECIALS OP 23 cards -par box. » off catalogua -ji_ —1 of MM born*. new. All itams 2Sc to $3. Electric stov*.- Zenith TV. BREAKFAST SET. MANY ITEMS: MUST — SOLO SAT., 10 TO ' 5, COOLEY LAKE RD, t Electric built In range 1 -—mass steal, 043 each. TALBOTT LUMBER leaves, and 4 chairs. Farm . j-gi "w8. |3B ,wo- of Stanlay antiques and n chairs, dottles, dishes, Mlsc„ Sat. 9 a.m. U5 Norwich Rd., Troy. 447- coax* maka offer. Jim Plpa. 627-2656. *bathtlf1BwI§iUa SHuHfu|R tau tub COLOR .TV BARGAINS, LITTLE Jet's Bargain House. FE 24142. GENERAL ELECTRIC AM-FM atorta. Early American, axe con- enclosure, aluminum frama« with sand Masted ^Imnjlaslgn, $28.95. 57 A. Thomason* 7005 M-59 w. FOR BETTER CLEANING, to kMp Huijif?iwMI^6i^ HAMMOND ORGAN M “-hogany Spinet, sxcallont RNSE ton. MY 3-4737. haMaooNForgan, t me. aid:, can 3 Orchard Lake* PE 44443M4. of bunk bads, _______ jncyclopadla 1 Other Mlsc. articles. 41341 LAWN.SPRINKLING to 2 ha., priced mx Thomason and Bah, MlDllilL APWPHWBjP aluminum boat, *50. 3 P aradlna btada, Bf* y, must TV, tap* Brltanlca, itxmi. 7993 M-39 W. her do/, to, ml's. Piano rontals, 332-0347. MORRIS MUSIC 34 S, Telegraph Rd., across from T*l Huron, FE 3-0347 B*ll Ringing Tropical Fish Sola ? 3 doys only. Sept. 4 ond 7 lor Mr ZtBra* - s for *1.9* -■-.-lor lto Nixxi*-- • - Mtortut Regular .mt Anetls 3 for tl Oo .—, Pot Shop, 40f Nowton D'><“ Lata oriaqt MV B-wi. COLLIE PUPS. Shew qua lit “TROMBONE AND STAfib.ml BNQLI3il*ETTii9'r:1'Fnft""p6l Warmed and shew. 1-99*4*73.. U1ED CORNET, I USED PIANO « CLEARANCE 1 - STEINWAY GRAND 9'2" - 3 Housa mmmmm no «, k ’form*, Orel* cutler fori r metel, stack of oik ond ry lumbar, moat bandsaw, ■I shelving, copper plpa 9, toil whit* pins moldings, place- -* birch plyweBd. ate. 33*9741. OLD OAK BARN BEAMS. UPRIGHT PIANO, *40. H. R. Smith MBNT, jsrtnt *piec# oem i 137.95) laundry tray, trim. 111 shower stalls with trim. 537.95 bowl oink, *39.95) lavs.; Ml tubs, $10 l $39.95) ••w, w,w M M Alps cut snr threaded. SAVE PLUMBING CO. “-* ~-!dwln. FE 4-1514. TRACTOR MOWER, : ipawer, purchased tfow lah summer. In good condition, g $223.09. Call altar 7 a.m. RAILROAD TIES railroad ties. Tubs and Hatchary R( 3, 9 MM P.m. dally. RUMMAGE SALE; Thursday, Frl-day and Saturday, 9:39: to 7 p.m. 4740 W. Walton Blvd,, Drayton Plains. Clothing, couch and chair, chain saw, and ettiar mild, , town*. 3 — GRINNELLS H mahogany 1 yr. eta, Tuat Ilk* 3 — NELSON 4 || walnut finish 4 — WURLI cellent playing 3 — GRAND StETTERGRAN S' at It phis cartag# .. 9323. Smiley Bro$.-FE 44721 CONSOLE PIANO. . RR----...........*373 WURLITZER SPINET, OX- 3I91W. Huron, 4*2-3339. SzT ACCORDION GUITAR, LESSONS, u Setee-servlea. Also piano tualnr Pulanackl, OR S439*. . PIANO AND GUITAR LESSONS 932-2374 SMWri'i^l^aPtorT'Oxferd.''' Offlo Eylpmttf 7 RECORD-O-PHONE, ■ u tomit.. answering sarvtca systam, IVb yra. aid, with tatakay. Coat,9700, tail far 9330. Bat. 9 9. 3 only, *74-2214. Sporting Gflod* » closing, «ut several #“** “■*“ |Z *' •“ .Jr cto*1 “ 1134. 174* GENE LITTLER AMPHICAT, SNO WMQB I L.E, camper, metarcycta, or utility trailer chatslt. 399-7293. ANTHONY, SWIMMING pools, f ratas. cali today far (Mails.. RHODES POOLS EMALE 3177 Pit , ling 4744744 iw siAiwcse t*T, DsiTotfir, Orchard Laka RortK afitf 3. BRtti"i(inEf^niLMki,!'sii, oto •—toad. FREE FLUFFY*. KITTiN». GERMAN 3*41%' : 07117 mala, shsts and Itoanaad, will tall tor *30. OR 44N4 or Evet. EM 3-7344. lit ad ' under .swaps No. 43. GERMAN SHEPHERD Pupplts, AtCt , isetTe ruaw, TgE, FUkLE, |KCf 1 mala, Mack, 1 jr ata. « Twatki. B334W1.___________ MIXED PUPFIBS ______ 14. S94GIIB MALAMITTB. MALE, 11. insnlht, loves children, $30, 434-4714. Moviiia, Must sell one 5 monto NORWEGIAN ELKHOUND) W rler, reglttorad. cheap. 334-1437. POODLE, AKC registered, whlto. POODLE GROOMING, 31 end POODLE STUD, BUCK REGISTERED ENGLISH Fainter pups. 2 me*. Out of Ch, Rtaglnt White Knight & Ch. Faladlns Royal Flush, ImlavCHy, 2244949. SEE STONEY AVIS Store, at 7*15 sump pumps, aoid. ranted repaired. Celia's, BE *4443. SPINET DESK, t reasonable. 433-339*. SIAMESE KITTEN QOIP CLUBS — i only 3 tii n ifttr 6 ihampootr $1, Hudsons Hardware Supply# 3671. ( Lake, ro.9 urayron riama. |._ Laktt. M2- LOST: ONE STRIPED Black Hawk' 1 water skit one Aqua-Mast ar .......... — water ski to Otter Lake WEST HIGHLAND.' Terrier, small shaggy and aTtoctlwialti t> rau. tamales onto.-1008 Con------ Vlliaod of CeMmqrae. Shepherd I *27-2934. mR SALEi Boat andlrrtiirrwso; SAMSONITE^ VANITY case, largr ^TSt^*'Sy|yT„ Lake 12 gauge Shat gun, *30. 424-20*3. . P"'1"’*" ffJIan"^^ tonmn FF*V 4073 or 332-431*’ —3Si«i—SS, W ' flreplec# screen and tnongt. fu i- aaBIB $89 FANTASTIC GARAGE SALE — 0574 MUST SELL 19«t AMFHI-CAT, *799, - J — slooTs. lamps, »ii4iHI~YNB I call bafera 1:39 p.m. 4224B74. A SU<5herUSmiK.F ^Si»H^imi»uro?C> pooTtable; SLATE, om’cto Priced la tall,' Hundreds of Pool TaM* Warehouse. 532-7305. ---------|snow_.sport and traitaf. win ‘take NITH COLOR TV, 21" Walnut Deals gas Terr I 221-47*4 FOR SALE Cl p TV, 1 iiT ciothas Una. 49S49S4. FOR SALE, OAS dryer. Marly new, S50. 1944 Pontiac 4 door hardtop, *200. 10W pickup Sr—-------- m contained. 91100. Boat, fraltaMjlO. 4*2-4434. FOR SALE BOTTLE jll C r.. on Tanx, and electric cottaga. Call 424-0493 , mrtai c GARAGE RUMMAGE SALE 71 HUSDON-OFF BALDWIN ----.-y items, adult* and t**i > clothing, baby llama. PI, .mite.' ' ** Tiiursi-Ftir.-: ' ~0:39 a.ir * GARAGE SALE.' 3 l. tank S43L ________ . — Carpenter'! metal mitre w 2**" by S'*" I mj to carton. 4*2-7179. deep freeze) 4 bra are way chairs) ARVIN 1 GALLON humidifier. Rrtattoa mater. Bhap baiter this winter. 133. Call 492-1304 after 4 "STOCKADE FENCE S' x SO*, sofa bed, ramota control TV, Dllpm tattle. ’ 2 - toiapla—tables,—end GE JH,tJ0Q BTU W^' AIR CONDITIONER ,$V80 Goodyear Sirvics Store ChriBtiMB Gift*________67-B FANCY CROCHETED plltow catat, gifoEl mad* quin*. S43>M9, “* t altar 10 a.m. If02 Pah 142 Grigga St. CRAFTSMAN .TOOL BOX, W . drive, comalata. 473-1121. MBTALVJLATHI Rochastor. Fri. 4 Bat. 9-4. Christmas tree, JII" iar,’ 339-9057._________J m INCH PMiSTlC draai pin* and fittings, no need to thread plM anymore, it goat together with gill*, all yoj) need Js a hack-saw Thomaac __________________________ WARDROBE trunk*, large noiseless Remington typewrit— BAB top alii die art, 444-3724. fjuKilY. .garage tala-: Walbrldga ’ off Auburn, 3 bio west Rochastor Rdu Frl., Sat. 10X11 WALL TENT, WITH rail GARAGE SALE) LOTS left —■ llama all markad dewn.___ 1172 GsmIIs st. att Pontiac GARAGE SALE: Tires, tools GARAGE SALE: 70 E. N*w York, off Baldwin, W*d.-Frl. 1»7 p.m. GARAGE SALE Thurs., Frl., Sat, alerting 3:30 a. i of mw cedar It , -r j bike, many extras; portable H point* diihwaihar, axe. cendltl -4SI-43SS. . ■■ 20 GAS FURNACES, 4 50% OFF All. Christmas and taetonsl Itams, many one of a I TREASURE CHEST, 3231 U 2U GALlJblToiLIAK^-ai burner unit for oil Birr 332-3743. PMPtii -East Long Laka Rdt. Watchforslgns. GARAGE SALE — bv Church Clast. * ft. floUiascsnt lights, storm door, furniture, clothing, 1MJ Lakewlnd, Nr. Whttftal) School a Orchard Lk. Rd. Frl. and Sat« ! " ■ ■■ c GARAGE SALE — Storm window: baby furniture, stove, rafrtaaratoi. washers, toy*, and mlsc. 4492 Dixie is fifflta/llimriKlIli' *.... lubdivlilon. Ee»- • 14, IS canta.M, ladies furs, drapes, furhlfura, iRAGE SALE, Aim. IS through and 23, ' except attar 3, during *11 day Saturdays) annquas, m i *W‘ ______ J chairs,1 3 .... mower, cat* doors, _ ............._ machlM, dlhatta tsbla and chairs: .. GIVEWAY TIME at Avon-Troy_______________________ Carart Warehouse. Carpet, rubber GARAGE SALE, pad and dalux* tnrtalirthn $4,44 ■>-—*— — • sq. yd. MfVy — this to * once-ln-Hlfrtlma .attar yrtiH* marchsMIsa It ayrtiaBkl «E9| JE. AuburnT® RAGE SALE .,,132 Thorpe Sale, . Pontiac, Sat. l*Ff. 4, 10 a.m. til 4 p.m., gas dryer, electric stove, ■imp, couch, child's _desk .and Mir, air com pressor, foot lacker, 1*47 JEEP, SNOW- axtras, snow mo bit* 19*9 nxa mw, ... *sr ,■ • g? acetylan* torch, carl and tank—7J GARAGE_ SALE: 3430 Maybe* Rd, Fraction of Grtobuil .Coat. BOULEVARD SUPPLY Rd. (batwaan I,:;6R6t|pir if. m reh. 1M3S W. 14 Mil* TANDEM - UTILITY TMIM, Rftfo • I tires. Ramp, tallgato $330. Hart land,-«>■«». TOILETS 342.30 VALUE. 517.95 and $19.95. Lavatorta* 314.95 complete. THE salvation aemy!^ .3X12x13:*". USED CONSTRUCTION ----- EQUIPMENT All make*. Good selection dozers, loaders, and loader ( ho4s. Alio trucks and traitors. MSN00 ar com* and sa* at Ml Harrison Equipment. 131 Cast Musical Goods 71 FLUTE AND 1 cornet, good con-dltlon. S50 tech. OR 3-234TT . 13 PIECE REMO drums SIS*. FE 4- ELECTRIC GUITjn; Ilk** or less. FE HEtr ,M FENDER JAGUAR. jAN^M^Nfo FOR SALE PIANO. -effar....aa Bull Complet* set of plumbing tools. 40 It. K copper. Copper valves and fitting.- lhsto: torch and tank. Rigid pipe cutter—rachrt^p^. SO ft. 1W GARAGE SALE: Doubt* Heaping bag playpen, bookcesa, table, 79MB-«T(V BOTTLE g*» zw heeler, used 4 me, $70. 4934314. GIGANTIC BASEMENT SALEI Good CjotolXB,. -»l' .sal) fasti 1912 Pramont, T*l-Hi finish, 9339. «31-3*n, ^m^SS°^i4^TTr1^ MONTH-END USED PIANO SALE UPRIGHTS , from ” $49 GRANDS $495- SPINETS fr,om $219 NEW FLOOR SAMPLE And rtudlo iiasd planet ' Pram ; *$495 LOW, EASY TERMS GRINNELL'S (DOWNTOWN STORE ONLY) 27 S. SAGINAW Opan Moh^ and Prt. Nights . TRAIL BOSS is here Mad* bv tt» .manutoclurar af JM famous AaacM camp traitor. This 4-whaal drlva, all tarraln vyhlcla, hU/Jhins .. . ....h (tearing ONLY $1,495 JIAA HARRINGTON'S SPORT CRAFT* icha Factory Horn* Town Daak Vi ml. E. Of LapMr on M-21 OFEN SUNDAYS 444-9412 • l, $32.30. 334-4349 v. '711 W MiirnnJ SKI-BOO'S! USED SKI-OOO'S 19 HP UP TO 24 HP ALL LATB MODBL8 IN A-l CONDITION. PRICEO FROM S495 AND UP. TERMS AVAILABLE. KING BROS. 373-0734 Pontiac Rd.- at Oedvk* . S.A.W. SAND AND GRAVE, til gravel products, fill, sand a, lift, crushad limestone, A-l t oil black dirt. PhoM 1944*43. ) - LIMB staM, ISA atomy ■ Fats-HuntingDogB ABC CHOICE Madia , AKC POOOLE^PuPjMt, tCHSHUND PUPS, AKC, HEIM KENN- * **’ ““ *t SmHpIlBB-SGfukB 79-A 1-A GROOMING Mr. Edwards' High Fashion Poodle Salon, all bread*, 7 day ttoak, iloomflold Pontlo* 335-5259 maple chairs) ~ Groan I davenport A chair redouble bad); 2 pc. w bad and vanity) Mrs'. LaoMrd Krnmar-Prop. Raymond F. Eltny, GoamUn Bud Hlckmett 'oanaML At Oxford. 4a»213t B & B AUCTION EVERY FRIDAY ........7:09 FM, EVERY muRDA)V weanling**. Priced to sail. 425-3593. ARPALOOSA GELDING, Excellent hors* for child. Altar 5, 7II-31W. FILLY IS MONTHS, part quar HORSES BOARDED, GOOD pi FalOMINO FARMS, 1085 H111 Road, Horaaa boarded, ranted, bought, and aold. 187-5*04.____________• BONY SADDLE, bridle, 2 halter*, FlNTO GELDING, chlldren'a or Udy» 425-3979. ____ REGISTERED P'lNTO, S AIHSTREAM ,,, ..... -- • 18 ft. to. 81 ft. ON DISPLAY Also Used Airstreams WARNER TRAILER SALES 098 W. Huron 4S2-SS3 J APAtHE APACHE Save over 8300 on new IMS camping trailers; also a tew new ISM models left at used trailer prices. Hurry, they won't last long. PICKUP CAMPERS DEW REY FLEETWIN-TOUR-A-HOME Save over $500 on now 1_.... and 10 ft. modala for Vi pickups In stock From S7SS. PICKUP COVERS STUTZ FLEETWING MOBILE TRAVELER From 1239 JIM HARRINGTON'S SPORT CRAFT Apacho Factory Homo Town Dealer 'h Ml. E. of Lapeer on M-ll __OPEN SUNDAYS, 444-9412 APACHE BUFFALO, fully uquipp'ed. Exc. condition. FE 2-7328.__ i!!'. BIG SAVINGS Prices slashtd bn ‘49 NIMROD I Campers. SALE Starts Sept. 0 r CAMBRIDGE Dl____ LIBERTY MONARCH REMBRANDT Available Immediately ‘ park space Colonial Mobil* Homes FE MU7 *74-4444 35 Opdyka Rd. 2731 Dixie "—ta 2 TRAILER' SPACES for 1 EACH IN STOCK REDUCED I i I CLEARANCE, .ALL ,1969s ^'BECIVErei up Nor* 'e&ft fWs SiO WNll»t excellent £ 2M0 mllaa. OR 324*4. IfteffORTONRANOER 7SBCC.'111*0 Danish King. Free Delivery within 300 Miles. W|JI trade tor most anything of value. Open 9W P.M. MIDLAND TRAILER SALES 2237 Dixie Hwy. 33t-*773 Anderson's Best Buys sklrtlM I 434-8452 el 12x50 GENERAL o extras. 852-4571. IN* HONDA INm 18U HARLEY DAVIDSON Sportster, XLCH, MO miles, I Ball Helmets, 81,7*0, Call *H*r3:30, FE S-ilM. $339 $695 $239 $268 $1095 $850 Newl 90cc Honda NeWl CB 350 Honda New! Honda 50 ... New! Honda Min) .. New! 650CC 8SA ... New! BSA Enduro New I 650cc T riumph $1195 Newl 750 cc Norton $1195 New! 250cc Ducatti . $495 MANY MANYMOR'EI 300 CYCLES IN 5T0CK LOW DOWN PAYMENT EZ TERMS , (Ad Prices Ptee Tax) ANDERSON SALE$ & SERVICE By Kate Osann 1965 JEEP Wogoneer $795 GRIMALDI CAR CG. 900 Oolcland Av*. FE 5-9421 Foreign Cars 103 1957 TRIUMPH TR3, I New and Used Troche 103 1949 FORD, 4 93,OOQ4'C if .1 p.m, -- DICK CANAAN! -— MOTOR CITY ‘ DODGE 855 OAKLAND AVE. FE 9-4521 Hew end Used (frer* 106 1965 BUICK Riviera Beautiful one owner, new I trade, full power, reasonable, brad# aaslar. GRIMALDI Buick-Opel » Orchard Lk. Rd, PE 2-9 5ir,«l«ajg.^ AUOETTE PONTIAC n w/Maple Rd. Trw 1947 ELECTftA SIS Coupe, ttowroom 1958 TR-1 excellent a excellent conouion, i green, »tops, 482-4834. BUS, 40,000 miles, *300. 493- 1962 AUSTIN HEALEY SPRITE $545 GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 Oakland Avt. FE 5-9421 Need* singe work, 31,475 firm. Call ’ T964 FIAT- --$425“ 1944 IMPALA SUPER inert < vertlble, brand, naw angina, 1944 CHBVY, VI FF, California car. 428-1742. 1944 CHdVELLE ^ MALIBU aupar sport, "tdoor IfiwrISiP. 'mm , spots, consoja. Good condition. Woodward, Ml 7-54 Hardtop. One aCtlML milts. 1947 L BUICK, Wegwey -1—,—-owner with 18,000 actual Folks, let's go tint elas*. Th» *> should be on the showroom floor. : SHELTON Pontiac-Buick *53 S. Rochester Rd.__4*l-» 1967$-1968s Electro 225$ 1 Doors—4 Doors With lull power, air conditioning one ownpr naw car trad**. Sava I bundle. We trad* aaslar. From $1995 . GRIMALDI Buick-Opel 19 Orchard LK. Rd. FE 2-9143 1967 Bulck Wildcat Convertible Power steering, brakes, mag wheals. Blue with white top. Full price. $2088 '44 CHEVROLET, Impela Jltlon, Ml 1945 IMPALA , COUPJI. V-< WE FINANCE No Money . Down 1945 CIMW 2-door ... ...*W® 19*5 Puntlau Moor hardtop..*991 1944 Falcon.... ........J4M 1944 Tempest convert.....*991 1944 Bulck special ..... 19« Corvalr, auto. .. ..■• jFJ 1944 Pontiac convert. .. S495 loss imiwlo eonvort........WJ condition. Cornet, large kitchen. tully equipped. 363-8489, CENTURY YELLOWSTONE TRAVEL TRAILERS QUALITY AT ANYBU DGET , STACHLER TRAILER ________kTltlS’VeiTpykrK*" ' SALES,- INC. Sri MEAf CUTTING. FREE^ft 3771 Hlghlerid (M-39)_482-9448 Check our deal on — SWISS COLONY ___... LUXURY TRAILERS FROLIC TRAILERS' AND TRUCK CAMPERS. SKAMPER FOLD-DOWN CAMPERS 13 to 28 on display at - Jacobson Trailer Sales i Williams Lake Rd. OR 3-3981 1944 , HOMETTE MOBILE Rtbsonabl*. 43*4558, Holly. 1947 DODGB VAN compor. automatic, will taka car a* n, call attar A OR 4-1291. A-1 Motorcycle Insurance 'ARMERS INSURANCE Agency < Pontiac across from Andarson* Honda. Phono 334-4597. Bodily Ir lMI RITZ CRAFT, $2509# 74 Closo 0-125CC 126-200GC 201-360CC 361-500CC I01-750CC -pruTsggyi" : Boats-Accessorlee 97 Junk Cara»Truckt ■ IQbk COHO SPECIAL. 2. FE 5-2424.__ pg 5.1002 CLEARANCE SALE i frankllns-Crou OAK HILL ESTATES HOME OF / . HOLLY MOBILE HOMES DIXIE HWY. AT OAK HILL RD, 1634-4442 Dally 9- | DETROITER ] [ AMERICAN SUNRISE PARK KR0PF Double WidMf Expands Custom built to your ordor Froa Delivery and Satup Within 300 Milts . AT BOB HUTCHINSON MOBILE HOME SALES 4301 DIXIE HWY. 673-1202 DRAYTON PLAINS- — Opan Dally /til • p.m. Saturday end-Sunday #tll S CLOSE-OUT'1969 CHRYSLER 8. JOHNSON MOTORS. DUO 8. GLASSPAR BOATS Winter boat & motor storaga YOUNGS MARINA ......Open dally 9 'til 4 ‘ Sunday 19 to 4 4030 Dixie Hwy. on Loon Lake Drayton Plalni ____OR 4-04T1 1-2-3 JUNK CARS FREE TOW I FE 2-2666 111 JUNK CARS, FAY FOR SDMI trad tow. FE 5-4079.________J COPPER - BRASS, RADIAT6R$ starters «nd generators, C. Dixioi 1964 MG MIDGET $827 GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 Oakland Ava. FE 5-9421 Suburban Olds 860 S. Woodward Birmingham ML 7-5111 1945 CHEVY IMPALA SS — 394 l 1948 ELECTRA 32 cc HONDA CL 350, 0450. MUST SELL — 1947 1 SEPT. SALE 1969 SUZUKI 500 « TITAN Rea. 9995 SALE $799, del. 12 mo*, or 12,000 ml. Warranty MG SUZUKI SALES 4447 Dixit Hwy. 473-4450! Drayton Plains FOR THE BEST DEAL ANYWHERE ON- Star Craft) Glastroni 8. W Invader boats. Johnson motors; Crest pontoons. Scrambler) Terri Cat end Trail Breakar trail bikes. Come To JIM HARRINGTON'S SPORT CRAFT V* Mile E. 0M-ap«r City UmHs Open 9 to I Mon-Frl. 9 TO 3 8ATi* SUN. MINT HYDRO-PLANE, must see Best otter. 402-1735. Used Auto-Truck Parts 102 2 CHEVY 4-BARREL end manifold, $15 each. '50 Plymouth Coupe, and '42 Ford. OR 3-M25. ________ OUTBOARD MOTOR BOAT, 30 hp on all new and used garden tractors - agricultural 4 used travel trailers and campers and industrial tractors. Also MUST 80 - Y4*r-9"d Prices. good buys on new and used Holly Travel Coach, Inc. dozers, ‘trenchers, loaders,[»ffA°VEH^’ufe THg AwLf iS> rakes, plows, etc, - hawthorne traveler Pontiac Farm and MmMi ?* :k Campers Industrial Tractor Co. _^_J_*2S-S.JiyOODWARD / FE 4-0441 /pi 4.1441 Open Dally IndudlnGSunday RaRMALL, F20 trbctor, *175. 1400 State Park 'Rb., Ortonvllle, — rakes and hay conditioner*. DAVIS MACHINERY, ORTONVILLE, NA 7-3292. Your "HumNIte Choln Saw - "Denier," John 1B—• e~< 'arts galore. CUB — WHEEL HORSE — Bolens - simplicity -Springfield, all reconditioned AND READY TO GO. *LL TeRWS KING. BROS. 373-0734 _ ' > Pontiac Rd, at Opdyke 3:30 and S:30 p.m. HAYDEN CAMPER SALES On M-59, Vk Ml. W. «f Oxbow Lk. 343-4404 SALE - SALE SALE^ te'ra Making Dtal») Now Is Ths Prices Sloshed covers custom bi 4800 Hetchory, D McClellan Travel Trailers 4020 Highland.Road (M-99) , PHONE 474-3143 Close Out on '69 Models • Watt Wind , , • Wood Lake • Bonanza • WHEEL CAMPER Just a tew left to choose from I SUZUKI MOTORCYCLES, 50ce. to 500 cc., oil Inlectlon, 12. months or 12,000 miles warranty. Cycle sc-ctssorles, Rupp's Mlnl-blkes. TAKE M-39 to W, Highland, right to Hlckbry Ridge Rd. fo Demode Rd., left and follow signs to DAWSON'S SALES, TIPSICO LAKE. Phone FLEETWOOD, 10*xS7*, carpeted, air conditioner, washer, d r»- - - !&r^.,h,d' M-°°t HIDDEN LAKE ESTATES ONlE OF MICHIGAN'S FINEST PARKS# Located lust 7 ml. N. of Rochoster, on Rochosfor Rd. * ROCHESTER MOBILE HOMES exclusive dealer for — DELTA HAMPTON > MARLETTE TRAVELOW PARK ESTATES CHOICE OF LOT PRIVATE LAKE, SWIM, FISH 0-0 dally, 12-5 Sun. ^ 732-2243 LIKE BRANDNEWI 1949 Marietta Homo, U'xSO'. 1 previously owned super-buy I SELECT MOBILE HOMES 8-dig. Corunna Ed., Hint *425.00. Call i - YAMAHA • KAWASAKI Mid Season Savings, all model complete selection of enduro's. Financing Available CLAYT'S CYCLE CENTER On M-21 I mile east of Lapeer 44 9241 ■, - Bicycles A OK REPAIRED BICYCLES. All Ovei 100 1969 Boats NOW ON DISPLAY Glastron, Sea Star_ North American Aluma Craft, Mirro Sail-fish, Sun-fish Mercury & Merc Cruiser K AUSTIN HBALBY sS>A|TM ___ 4m017 Tbu vw Excellent conditioi best offer, 335-3055, if no ant. FI 44949. 1965 VW, VERY CLEAN and kTgoo price. VEftV XlllAN Tyifi Skyark. Vlnyf* auto,, radio# 4-door $2,250. 451-1S11. 19U BUICK ELECTRA 2H 'ilk* newl Alr-condltlonod, stereo, power CORVAIR, cbRtA, iMd, silver, 4 yud,[()40 hp.^L^adwHh apt Ion. 1M5 CHEVROLET STAtlON wanolV. Air condition. automatic ■Ing. Full avallibla ________________ CaiiTljir. m JUNK 1,2, 3, JUNK CARS. FREE TOW ANYTIME. FE 4-167* 1966 VW $895 GRIMALDI CAR CO: 900 Oakland Ave. FE 5-9421 Rare* Immediate'deUvery. Cell Mr’ Parkj^fcridlt. . nten«ger Ipj .ESw Lv.'w,,, . __- - .... ■ TURNER FORD 1 lleage. *3100. Phone 3434049 or 3400 Mepl* (13 Mil# Rd.) Troy Mill M28. _______ 1 i mil* oatt df waoilwoni 19691UICK Electro I ?' / '* Yi1!!, .y'jiou CORVETTE SILVER wHh M«*k 1950 TR3* g gin* ano^MMMPmP transmission. 415 Pflgrth St. power, oeauinui oiue r i n 11 n , 'T.air,' matching Interior, fantastic tav- f?T.v,niS,JS Ings, we trade eetlerl i •rMjtejt atti GRIMALDI Buick-Opel cSITOiO 10 Orchard Lk. Rd. FE 2-9165 1949 BUICK ' ELECTRA, 2 door, j -‘—trie windows, air, 1,100 mites. ITEMS: 1964 PONTIAC 319 VO • power# complete, $55 7» Mustang engine $150 1965 Mercury 390 engine $150 -e0rd 353 englne*$135 ----6 cylinder 223 cu. $50 1964 Pontiac 389 angina $m 1967 Jaguar XKE Roadster ,000 miles. Sharpl $3795 VILLAGE RAMBLER ___ w.....a naw Inferior. .$475. 6l2-653>. 1963s—1964s—1965s ' CADILLACS 3434590. n* ' er ■ MALORY REV.PULL I pdsjtractlon,. cross r carburetor and link.-eng. Fanton mags Wl for a Chevy. “ transmission. OL 1- 1947 OPEL l.eaklng fi _________ vary little money. t 2 door. ! 2-Daor Hardtop* W* Trad* Etslerl Priced From $788 1944 CHEVY IMPALA ConvertlW*. power steering and power brake., automatic transmission, radio, heater, whitewalls, low mileage, white with black top, red Interior. 852-4151. 91230. _____ ' . *1944 CHEVROLET IMPALA, tew 437, 4 1 f" Chevy. Rocbsstsi REBUILT 293 ENGINE. STS. Cell “ --*tt e. new shock* ter 41-44 /--I • . T REBUILT 283 I Cruise Out, Ine.ls-|F^-Tmw h ■ Walton Closed Sun. FE 04402 Mercury, new HMMMHV in 9-0, **on.-Frl.. 9-5 Sat ■ - | regulator tits most_5*-42 GM cars . ,i.,ncd,nB GRIMALDI Buick-Opel . wlris'lhSC '* |«> ***\ SHELTON Pontiac-Buick , gas rnJiiui. S55 S. Rochester Rd. 4S1-SS00 . . lVOJ>aOmOC ; power ---- ieH—uw—SIR—eojun—m'n>.—7 4 d00r hardtop. Silver metallic I 11495. 19M _vw _bus,, 204X10 ^ miles. ' With matching Interior. Full power Larry Sheehan't factory air conditioning. HILLSIDE Rsctmasters, Tam, -------------- telegraph and Voorhels. FE *-7334. ft66 CHivBLLB. Buckets; 4 speed. 212, SI5Q0. 474-25H. 1947 CHEVROLET, STATION wagon. .........- transmission, V-4 angina. r, $1975. Cell 44 *1550. PONTOON BOAT, 2_____ start, carpeted, *1,250. 1 ytar v and UsBd Trucks t*U FORD CORTINA GT 2-door, with blaCk bucket seats, performance angina. 4 spaed SAILBOAT CLOSE-OUT. N*W. discount. Evenings, 4S»10M. SPECIAL YEAR and prlcos, t.. .... ... ------ - remaining Glasspar, Steury, Mirro-1 *100 lakes I ,______ Pron,.,oo^,‘' ; 1961 CHEVY y* Ton Take M-59 to W. Highland) right to Pickup, 4 cyl. stick, radio, heatei Hickory RldM-Rh. to Demode Rd., whitewalls, gbod-transportation, left and follow signs to DAWSON'S other trucks to chbbse from—; 6S^^IPS,c5 UAKE' phon*' Special $495 PONTOON BOAT, 24', 35 hp. John-! dim tftV ruCl,V son etocrlc,. for salt or trad* for' UK-L FOX CHEVY runabout bf equal value. 01,400.1755 S. Rochester I 601-1262. __________t U------j----2=----1 new, excellent ream piy tires. 442-3209. AUDETTE PONTIAC 1850 W. Mepl* Rd._________' $995 IBIRMINGHAM I CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 2100 Maple Rd. Tfoy, Mich. I 642-7000 --- 194*; excellent shape Ih new shocks, brakes, tlrae and t track stereo, * , 11942 TANDEM trucks, OR 3-90 GIRLS'BLUE BIKE. Ml Call aft* Boats-Acceisories PACEMAKER 10'x54', awning, tool - shad. axe. cond., nica tor retlro-*2,750. Call after 5 p.m, MS-2415. R0YAL—0R-REGAL ACTIVE 1 YEAR OLD TENT trallar, I sleeper, sink, S burner stove. Ice box, heater, extra tire, 4" cushion, 451-8*04. ;... IVt FT. CAMPER-REDUCED S1430 Welra-GOODELL'S 852-4550 I# TRAVEL TBaILER, good con-dltlon, many extras, 0900 or make llVi FT. 1*17 NO ASAD, sleeps six, near bath, separate shower. Hitch, mirror*, burning, tacks, 079-0140. 24' HOLLY S*lf-contelned, 2-door, full bath. Hitch and owning. *2100. 242S AngelU* Lane. OR 3-5558, 1*44 SCAMPER, 121 sleeps 4, )C* box* . g«- -te4A.ee wide 6«kWf1, NEW Yukon Delta 16-Ft. Trailer Monomelic toilet, gas-elec, refrlg. Many other deluxe features, $1590 ALSO NOMAD AND Hl-LO , VILLAGE TRAILER SALES 4470 DIXIE HWY. CLARKSTON .425-2217 SALES-SERVICB-RENTALS PICKUP CAMPER, telnad. SI.295. OR S-b275. ThT 1947 WAWA, SINK, stove, lee box, 4 Miner. 473.4101 ; PICK-UP COVERS FACTORY SECONDS, WHlL THEY LAST, peneied. Insulated, piece molded exteriors. Big tai Ings over regular prices, MOBILE PROOUCfS. 2599 CRUMB. WAP.-ED LAKE. 424-4*41. E-! cash. See at Clerk Reel Eetete, cor. W. Huron end Voor-hels Rd. Ask tor AAr.. Clerk or call Hertland, 482,7529.____ . Ibu fRAVEL TRAILER. Self-con-telned. Sleeps 6. 624-581 J. f*6S 14W TRAILER, seH-canfeihed,, plenty/a# storage, screen ho eluded. *1300. 731-9264. 1969 STARCRAFT TRAVEL TRAILERS INSIDE DISPLAV CRUISE-OUT^ INC. 43 E. W«non Dally 9-4 FE 8-4402 . j^LOSED SUNDAYS________ ALUMINUM W HbUSB trilter completely reflnlihed, Inside er ' out, .new carpeting, drapes tormlea, A-1 14*0) Will accei motorcycle. Northern prop, i pick-up In on trade. Phone atier 47S4447. • _________■ APACHE SPECIAL . If ,yeu have been • shoppl trailers all yaari com* see o 194# Apache. Here's where t shopping endsl Beautifully a pointed Interior, rugged franr tuUy equipped, in ifmlta numbers, w# are TteWjRHIWii our tact of 1969's — com* s *BY THE WINNER APACHE, SPORTSCRAFT MFG. 4140 Poley 423-0450 ■ W; TROTWOODS In seftty Camion Economy Independent wheel 8 JOHNSON'S Jdslyn FE 4-8051 W CAMPER BUS, 1946, tectory equipped with radio. Tull size bed, bullt-ln Ice box, exe. running cbm dltlon. M3S0. — | - WOLVERINE TRUCK C Jacks, Intercoms, shocks. Cab to camper-boots. LOWRY CAMPER SALES 1325 S. Hospital Rd. Union Lei EM 3-3681 AIHSTREAM WINNEBAGO Motor Homes—Trailers Reese aite'IJmw-Ttte/ffltches sold end inbtalted . . if. ' F. E. HOWlAND SERVICE 425? PIliB Hwy. • ~ OR H4H I YOUR OkALElTFOIN- . C SPORT TRAILER. GEM AND CORSAIR TRAVEL TRAILERS ,* Corsair and Gam pickup campers. Ellsworth Traitor Sales Nylon cerpbtlng over rubber pad. TOWN 8. COUNTRY MOBILE HOMES, INC. Telegraph at Dlxl* Hwy. 334-6694 Daily 'til i sat. B eun. 'til TRAILER STORAGE, pickup— dallvury. Aryl's Inc., Lake Orion. 693-5444. Will trade, 1*55 Liberty,’ !*')®', Auto Accessories 1965 BUICK v-4 cast Iron angina complete. 493P444. 2 WHEEL UTILITY trailer S7i after 327 CUBIC INCH •Mrt-bWck, I rad bearing, $75, Cran-cam, 1 M-372, like nem 4S942M. MUNTZ STEREO TAf 6 playtr# yvifh Tiret^tt^Tnicfc 92 repair, Mount# and balanca mag - J ^ "‘‘“la. Naw and usad rlcan ET, Creger, ss liras. Cheater I Co. 2635 Orchard Goodyear Polyol slicks. Market fii SLIGHTLY USED TIRES, regular 2 MOTORCYCLE HELMETS, | .condition. SS7-457I. 74, good cond., s trailer. 428-4515. TRIUMPH) 45* cc, custom lint, lots et chrgr—^u^^gr Hon, $471, StMim_____ 1945 HONDA SdkAMBLER, 25* CC. ---- 473-241*. 1944 TRIUMPH 508. Good shop*, 1944 BSA LIGHTNING 450-rebullt 1944 HONDA CB 140, low mileage, like new. 3300.179-6007. 1964 HONDA 305 ScrSmbter, extra* 1964 SUZUKI 130 TRAIL bike, good condition, 325*, 4934720. I960 TRIUMPH BONNBVILL*. 147^88^ HORNET, chugged, SS59. 1W7 CHOPPRli Sf>RINT 12$* aii^Uai must sell. S45*. 453-205I. . Pontiac Press Want Ads For Action ■ 11' SIDCRAFT 3, hydroplane, an class C 3* hp. Mercury engine with quick sllvur lower unit, el comjUetely rebuilt, call qayUmf 12' BOAT WITH trailer end extra 12' ALUMINUM BOAT, 3Vi hp motel and trailer, never used. 234-40*0. 12' ALUMINUM BOATS .........*11 000 Lb. up. Boat trailers ..313 13' Aluminum Boats .........*14 Trailsrs 3120, 15 UM*S $159.95 Big Coho buts, M‘ 8219. 15' *3*9. Sava $$ at Buchanan's 482-5381 FLAtROTTOM , •utb 1, 4234)11 beer UT STARCRAFT flberglet » Iters* Evinrude, electric start, eove-excellent condition, S400. 673-2273. 14* RUNABOUT WITH MOTOR, er trailer, 8300. 3344217. ’ 14* WOLVERINB^BOAT, Ttaller with new tires, 30 horsepower Ev|n— elec, start.. All In excellent dltlon. 8200. 3403 Grafton, J IS* FIBERGLAS, and trailer, 50 hp, 15 HORSE POWER EVINRUDE. J#* CINTllRy SUNSLED, Ford V-l, 32500. 3430231. 14' HEAVY DUTY, cockpits, ,r | complete 1 cushions. I • MERCURY ENGINE. Boats An Arrivingl Must Move Our Stock! Chrysler 2T with heed . The "Ski" Beet » ATTEX The Go-Anywhere Fun Vehlcl For Outdoor Sports . . . Uss it ter Winter too . . A wbrsstH* amphibious Driv* YourAttax right Into wster-msnsuytr with east. CLIFF DREYER'S MARINE DIVISION IMIS HpBy Rb«_H»lll' ME 44771 j%sssn^LSSsr 1 COHO BOAT, »' LONE Star ci cruiser, with 7$*ep. wtewen,. trelter. WJIDO, 4734097, ORRECT CRAFT) 17 f>. flbergles (very fast) nS- H.P. Interceptor ong.. ski tow and cuteum trailer hSw on Cess Lk. will dsmonstret* SALES BOATS-Motor»-T railers Pontoons-Sailboats In stock I PINTER'S WE TRADE-We FINANCE 1944 CHEVY Van, with y*s folki ready to do a days work. Priced at only $995. - SUMMER CLEARANCE I BOATS-MOTORS TRAILERS SSSS-SAVE-SSSS Harrington Boat Works — Telegraph — TERRIFIC DICOUNTS On ell boats, pontoons tnd bbnoe AT TONY'S MARINE Jortnson motors — n years r > exptrlenu. 3495 Orchard Lk. Rd. Sylvgw Like USED BOATS CLEARANCE _____rdf) 1-0'S. inboard Cruisers, Ou Many to Chooi LAKE A SEA I S. Blvd. at Saginaw YEAR-END CUEARANCB On Air tMS-Stock! New 1970 boat* a,____ BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER 1245 s. nan 101 Wanttd Can-Tracks ATTENTION For our western market — w* ---Pay ton doliar w yaw^-- - Car — bring your car and till* For cash to EXECUTIVE CORVAIR WANTED: used, EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Car Especially Chavellts, Camaras, Corvettes, era's, Firebirds and Averill's : Milt Mansfield AUTO SALES 300 . Olds ami •rfcet. To# MANSFIELD AUTO SALES "TOP DOLLAR PAID" GLENN'S f£CAR. m 964 CHEVROLET 4. Vi ton pickup. *1095 or good offor.-OR 34474, 3345 Dixie Hwy. 1967 FORD TON STAKE,' work. RMatetffn the____ SHELTON Pontiac-Buick 55 S. Rochester Rd. 451-5500 147 GMC' HANDY VAN IN GOOD CONDITION. KING BROS. INC. FE 4-0734 OR FE 4-1442. J947 CHEVY 84 TON. 4 whb*l drive, 4-speed transmission, snow plow, alt Ilk* naw, Mss than A00O miles, $2.150. will taka trade, 373-1571. - Gmc truc^ CENTERjfl 8:00 to 5:0* Mon.-Frl. 8:00 to 12:00 Saturday 701 Oakland Avenue ' 335-9731 tfMJWftD SUPER VAN, taka over ■*- new. M74234. John McAuliffe Ford -DUMPS- 1961 FORD F-400, with 1-S yrd. extra nice! 1943 FORD F-350 on* ton, dual wheals, with ivw yd. dump, axultenl rile*.—r—— BIG VANS 1944 FORD F-700 body, hldaway lift gala, ilcally, ready to work. SMALL VANS FORD Htftvy Dtrfv STAKES TRACTORS 1*45 FORD C-10M 534 V* engine, 2 speed, g speed, straight air. Sleeper ceb, new tires, mutt sea nits an*. PICKUPS W* hay* a good selection et new end used pickups, reduced and rba^y to go newl ~"Glose-Out: Deals On All 1969 Models John McAuliffe Ford Wa Moved . /" .. .- te-M.lte N. etJAiraete Mil* 1141 S; Telegraph Rd, " 1968 Austin Healy Roadster Red with block top. MM »clu* miles. Sharpl $ave Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury 1250 Oakland 333-7863 1*57 coRvetra m. 4-sp**d, 4H447*. ■' 1947 CHEVY Ceprlu SdooTRerdlep with automatic# powar, V$# vinyl roof. Nora is afyft and claatl SHELTON Pontiac-Buick $55 S. Rochasfar ltd.___4SI-M0$ 1969 VW, exc. cpndltten, n -I Here We Gol ARE YOU-READY? FOR A '69 FACTORY CAR OR * GM FACTORY . OFFICIAL CAR Loaded With Equipment New Stock Arriving Dally NO DEALERS PLEASE! CADILLACS .....*547* . . ,..gw 1969 OPEL Rally Kedet with Mg engine, S tack end oil gouge. Sell net w* trade easier. New only-$1888 GRIMALDI Buick-Opel AM-FM radio. Continental Kras. Going to Germany, m ' *2250. 332-3S29 after 4 P.m, ELECTRA 235s !- Parks credit manager for payment ^schedule at Mt -MMSr New lace-lion at TURNER FORD 24M Mepl* (15 Mite Rd.) Tray M«l l mile sasflit Wssdwqrd 1967 Chevy Biscayne 6 Cylinder $895 Bob Borst GOING in SBR^lfc^fr^ iairw AMI Vaitette eisn riuif mA(a. slit# Executive Cars \nc. ^ P.S. We've Moved! te mite N. of Miracle Mil* 1*45-S, Tetograph ltd. FE S- VW 1947, 2-DOOR SEDAN, red. , good SUM. DUNE BUGGY, TANGERINE flake, 1*4* VW. M H.F. 451-SL.. MG-B ROADSTER 1967,’ both tops. -a wheels, consol*, A leiOBfcTEiOM . MR_______>, 2-door sedan. II I, Exc. $1500. 4444139. Volkswagen Specials! 140 VW Sedan . ....*» )44 VW Custom Bus, Sun Roof. SSI 144 VW Squaraback. (Stafla Wagon) :..... ...MSI 1944 VW Fastback 2 doo ndlately i arlzad das BILL GOLLING ^im New and Used Cars 106 1965 BUICK Electro 225 Convertible Afith full pmu*r, air eendltl xi* owner naw car trad*. I. l*Hll,w*trad****l*r. GRIMALDI Buick-Opel I Orchard Lk. Rd. FB >9!45 1965 Bulck LeSabre 400 Adaet. -4utemlsHr. pewar staarlr and brakes. On* owner. ' .$1088 Suburban Olds 137 S. Mein St. Romi 752-4411 ... OPEN MON. and FRI., 9 to * p.m. TUfS., WED., THURS.. SAT. 9 to4 FJA. A | 1 ^nWWglr-— ’ SKSI1967 CHEVROLET STATION U ' SSfi v-S automatic,---- ‘ !' Slal pricefllg.'< MMA I PirKl. , - ~ . '• aftSK payment* tchadul . . WWI nrw location of TURNER FORD - • 24M Mapl* (IS Mil* Rd.) Tray Mall I mil* east of Woodward *' JOHN McAULIFFE FORD" 1*47 CHEVY Blscayn* 2 deer with 6 cyl. engine, automatic, radio, 1967 Cadillac Coupe DeVilla Blech vinyl root, block Interior. Spotless White flAlsh. PuH powsr, climate csntral. Oh* local owner. Wilson Crissman Cadillac AplLjLAC: W* COUF1 OeVllleTair conditioning, ell exlfas, you'll IKa the color. Priced to sail MA 4-1449, 1968 CADILLAC Eldorado Douskin finish, bulge - rout leather, interior. Leaded Ipment end still In naw car vmfft wry Wilson, Crissman Cadillac iter, power staaring. Bargs i day at, only—S9M. Full Fr P.S. We'Ve Moved! . Vb Mite N. at Miracle Mil* 1945 8. Telegraph Rd. FE 141*1 1941 CHEVY Impela Super Sport. V-8. automatic, vinyl tap. Yus, folks, It I* a baairty. Zippy at to* day n . was born. . SHELTON Pontiac-Buick , - >55 S. RUChester Rd. 451-S5M 1968 CHEVY SPORTS Van, V-8. ex-cellant cendHlon, auto,. 343JB41. 1958 CHBVRbLiT - 2 steer. V-4, howar steering. Full price *17M. Bank terms avatlsbl* her*. Im-madlst# delivery. Cell Mr. Parks eradlt manager ter payments schedule at Ml 4-7SM. New toea- TURNER FORD CADILLAC 1949 eadan DaVIII*. AM- riPBfw Ml ALL IIMB8 TERQME CADILLAC CO. 1968 CHEVY Biscayne 3 doer, with medium blue flnlelw medium blub Interior, 4 cyl sttek, rgdlte hitowr, backup Ughter-ceitu plat* safety package, other aa- i BILL FOX CHEVY 755 3. Rochester Rd. gitl-MB* -- CHEVY II « dS2.ft**rlng a $1995’ 106 Xtw id UuJ Cm Ills T-BIRD HARDTOP, tl radio and Kaoter. whit* >i sr ■ 6 CARNIVAL By Dick Turtle* I 01199 . 1965 DODGE Wagon BIRM IN GH AM ■ ■. CHR YSljER-PL YMOUTH TOWN & COUNTRY CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH ROCHESTER t N. AWIll St. . ’451-4: •John McAuliffo Ford .til CHRYSLER Imperial 2 dt -hardtop, with let black flnlth, w ■ bleak aardeva tap. full pew.,, and, air conditioning, daaranea special only-sites, full prlca, P.S. We've Moved! . to mile N. of Miracle Mile B S. Talaaraoh Rd. Ft 5-4ioi MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1744- Chryiltr, Newport, 2 door, hardtop, VI, otaarlng, brakes. radio, white walla, groan with groan In-tirlar, 11409, 477 M-24, Laka Orion, L FORD CUSTOM, automat I WOHihoir. 3U44S3. . MUIT4JW. ltd9 VI, tharp, i KESSLER'S- 1043 DODGE Moor slant, d, stick. a vinyl intarior. Whl.. at aaata, 4 cylinder, radio, haatar, whllawall .. Mustang Fastbacks 67't — 68's - 69's AS LOW AS $1688' . Call Mr. Park! credit manager for payment schedule at Ml 4-7500. New location 9 'TURNER FORD 2600 Maple (15 Milt Rd.) Troy Mill * dil Wbodward D A CAR'S ibllah your Want to • y--------^ Mundrw Call Mr. At f____... _______ ,1044 RANCHERO midnight blue with matching Interior. Power Hearing and brokta, radio, haatar, whitewall tlraa. 0409. Call Mr. .At (dealer) 412-2041 . nvnoroai 10 cnoow irorp Call Mr. Al (Ptitor) ^ 1 112-1061 >1966 CHRYSLER 300 DICK CANAAN5 MOTOR CITY .; DODGE 1967 Dodge Polora . door hardtop. Cordovan kJ«k_lntarlor; VO airtomatlc, p spy ttaarlng, electric clock, roar window defoggor. white with hoouttful I new COr warrant Only $2688 1968 CHRYSLER f door, hardtop, e blue beauty matching vinyl Interior, with a black vIHH lop only. $2495 1967 CHRYSLER 1968 CHARGER 313, torque filia, power ttaarlng. S3,499 DICK'CANAANS MOTOR CITY . DODGE 855 OAKLAND AVE. Pontiac - pe 3-4SM 1733 T. AUSTIN power, ear cant complete. 443-1 1929 MOOBL-A, good 1947 T-BI RD LANDAU. Air condition, 1940. PORD, 4 CYLINDER manager, for poymonfo tdtedulo of Ml 4-7500. Now location of TURNER FORD 1400 AAtpIn (IS Mil* Rd.) Troy Mall 1 mil# east of Woodward John McAuliffo ford 1967 FALCON 4 door. With • beautiful allvar blue finish, with matching Interior, radio, haatar, stick ahift, can't be told from now, aim under now cor warranty, summer special only OHIO full .P.S. We've Moved i I Vk MUt H, of Miracle Milo JUS 3. Telegraphed,...* 943 FAjRLAHE, MUST soil, boat 8»*Wt ON 3*5740. iMMasan0? T'*n*por,,*lor' 1943 FORO, FAIRLANE In dlllon ---m B ... Asking I 4744194. I^POy^GALAXIE. 940. Needs 1943 PORD, 3-OOOR, automatlefraal ite* FORD GALAXIB 500 XL good condition, 0495, 41441391 after 4. 743 FOR6~t-PASSENGER Country Squire Station wagon, Pord-a-nwtic. power brakaa and afar-1— at—n, I owner, 3575. 43441135. 1943 Fi steering, power pranas, pone condition, 3379, Buy Hero—Pay Hare, Marvel Motors, 191 Oakland, PE (4877. , ■ . 1943 FbkD GALAX IE, 3400. 194- 1941 CORVAIR, ’ pood 433-3090. $2195 I CHEVY CAty irdtop, tea and < beauty only * $1895 * 1967 PLYMOUTH .... GTX ■ 2-door, hardtop, sat and drive this performance cor at only $1795 1968 VW S-door, this little groan beetle li sharpie and today* price la only $1595 1965 PLYMOUTH FURY III vc. l-door, hardtop, V-t automatic, « power a rad sharpie, ealy- $1095 1965 CHRYSLER l-door hardtop, this geld beauty Taady-and only $1195 1964 IMPERIAL 9^r7hardt»rWirTWWar,ra^ tdtv air. what luxury an<| priced such a tew price or only l.:'l $995 . 1964 PONTIAC dHvtewIth'powor Hearing, drlva I away tor only ^ $795 1965 MUSTANG 2+2 Hordtop, vinyl top, wii drive, aoo tnla one for $695 1965 FAIRLANE Motion wagon, economy, 4, runt OX: and onto: $695 ; $595- .. '1964 VW Thlt rodtetw to priced right for onl) $495 SQaklaitd Chrysler-Plymouth 921 Oakland Ave. , , PE 904 John McAuliffe Ford 1944 T-BIRD Landdu With I power, and new Aral, runt Ilka now one, summer apodal of. o SlOli full price. P.So Wve Moved! MrMil* N. of Mlraclo Mil# FE ftellOl delivery. Call Mr. Parks, credit manager for payment schedule a* Ml 4-7500. New locatloii of TURNER FORD MOO Mapto (15 Milo Rd.) Trey Mall a------------ -^Woodward- 1944 FORD 2 door custom. Metallic blue with matching Interior. 4 cylinder, --------- . .. whUewol. Mr. Al (dealer) 443-2061 1944 PORD STATION wagon, V-l automatic. 9300. 437-3499. 1944 PORD VI GOIoxIa 500 H.T. “*~ or Blearing, ra,_ _________ ... RUST, motor good. Extras. Son gww.ln sorvlts^*P"C~^^“~-fc' mania at 344.30 each. 3185, Holly, 1945 MUSTANG CONVERTIBLE, 389 - V-S all accapoorlaa. STOO. 343- 1945 MUSTANG, 3490, 4-apaad, good 1949 MUSTANG CONVERTIBLE, 945 MUSTANG CONVERTIBLE. V-l 4-wMied, wide oval ttrap- Pull, nrico S499. Bank farms available nara. immediate dallvary. Call Parks credit managar ... payments schedule at Ml 4-71M. New.location of TURNER FORD MM Mapln (15 Mila Rd.) Trey Mall I mlte-eaH of Woodward Want Ads For Action ditidnlng, must’ i only S34B8. Full Price. P.S. We've Moved! powor steering and brakes, 1L0O0 • Vk AMI* N. of Miracle Mile —1 ' 1949 S. Tslagrs^i Rd. FE -54101 John McAuliffo Ford 1949 Fairtena Cobra Hirdtop. i anoint, automatic transmlasle radio, hotter, power steering ai brakes, Black cordovan tni Clearance special, 324M full prla P.S. We've Moved! automatic, ___„ Hearing. Beautiful canary yellow with black Interior. Clearance Special only 43414 full prlca. P.S. We'va Movedl to Mila N. of Mirada Mile ■ ---- ik-‘ PE 94101 1149 S. Ttlagraph Rd. Nbw and Usid Cars 106 1942 OLDS, 1 OWNER, good cond. UmB Caw 1969 OLDS 98 Hardtop *2 door with, Dili power, factory condltlnning, vinyl top, whllowa $3995 MERRY OLDS 911 N. Main St. 491-9741 ROCHESTER_ Final 128 Cars Must Go! 1969 Olds New-Ustd & Demos $-Save-$$, OLDS BEFORE YOU BUY A Lucky Auto Soles tor one or ,ine lines! as lections In town. Cara ban 106 Na» ami IM Caw 106 1944 VALIANT, 2 door hard too. many extras, 491-4255. 1967 Plymouth Fury III 4 door . hardtop. Cordovan with . bronze color Interior. Yt automatic, “3, healer, power steering. - « $1395 BIRMINGHAM! CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 3100 Maple Rd. . Troy, Mich. 642-7000 $avs $$$ at Mika Savoia Chevy 1900 W. Maple Ml +2735 1968 PLYMOUTH SPORT WAGON t passenger, torque flite. Via power steering. 12299 DICK CANAANS MOTOR CITY DODGE New and Usod Cars 106 I960 PLYMOUTH SATELLITE 2 door hardtop, with allvar gray finish, black Interior, black vinyl •op, 319 angina, aulgm■-‘,- heater, Ilka inaw white,._ . accessories —------- Reduced ta $2195 D—T9» Caw 186 1944 CATALINA, t owner, 9190. F« e-nn. 1942 PONTIAC STARCHIBF, 4 doqr, *200, 402-9092. 1993 TEMPEST, 9190. 1 -----UL 2-1209 OVER 7”" 1,000 USED CARS AT -TROY ■ ' Motor mall Maple Road (15 Mite) Between Coolldgt and Crooks ONE STOP SHOPPING AT AudettB Pontloc Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth Boh Borst Lincoln-Mercury Bill Galling VW Mikt Savoie Chevrolet 1949 OTO, *500 _______________334-EB9 New and BsadCaw 106 New and Uied Cars 106N>w ond Uted Cars 106 TOM..MDEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS all Cars available with low down payment! Easy GMAC Terms Available! 1967 CHEVY Impala ....... $1795 4 door hardtop, with V-0, automatic, opwer alaar-Ing, radio, haatar. whitewalls, one owner, vary IMS PLYMOUTH ROAD EUNnEr, 145, 4 apaad power. SHARP! DICK CANAANS MOTOR CITY n DODGE MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH Roadrunnar, 2 door, dlardtoi HO '4 barrel, automatic, pawl ataarlng, white walla, bronze ln,co or. 477 M-24, Lika Orion. 493-4341 1991 PONTIAC. 930 3. cloan and sharp, *335, 424-2310. interior. V-l ____________■ l^ggaga rack, 3395. Call Mr. Al (dealer) 432-3041 LUCKY AUTO 1933 PLYMOUTH 332-7437, good! 1742 PLYMOUTH WAGON, Ilka ... . sus PESG27I 1966 Olds Tornado Loaded with all the extras Including factory air conditioning, 2 Save HILLSIDE Lincoln-Mercury 1250 Oakland 333-7863 WATERFORD -STANDARD AUTO 340Q EHzehnth Lk, 431-0004 Suburban Olds 860 S. Woodward Birmingham Ml 7-5111 ffi'tebk powar whitewall liras, ths'MU' v •II Mr. Al (daniar) t 1969 CHEVY Impala ................ Save! 4 door hardtop, with V-0, automatic, powar Hearing. brakaa, radio, haatar, whitewalls, blue finish, black vinyl top. DEMOl 1967 PONTIAC Cor|yertible .... $1695 Catalina wtlh radio, power steering, brakaa, till •Marin* wheel, automatic, rad finish, black top, condition.________________ ________________ $895 i, auto-finish, $1195 +1964 OLDS Dynamic 88 ............ 4 door hardtop, with powar steering, brs matte radio; haatar. Whitewall*, light b sharp Inside snd outl' 1965 BUICK Skylark 2 door hardtop# with V-8# automatic# radio# whitewalls# ‘ 1967 CHEVY Bel Air .............. $$495 4 doer, with v-l, automatic, radio, hdatar, medium blue finish, the Ideal family car at an exceptional 1967 OLDS Cutlass ................... $1895 2 door hardtop, with V-l, automatic, power ataar-ing, radio, haatar, whltawalls, gold finish, fawn ..$1395 1967 CHEVELLE Malibu ........... $T795 Sport Coupe, with V-t, automatic, power ttaarlng, brakas, radio, yellow with « black vinyl top. 1967 CAMARO .... With V4, stick, buckets, ra finish, black vinyl Interler. $1795 solid block finish# Sharpl ON -US-10 at M15, Clarkston 1968 CAMARO 4-Speed .., with v-i, radio, haatar, buckala, under warranty. $2395 nlah. Hill MA 5-5071 1947 PORD XL, V-0, 1967 Mustang Coupe l. automatic, powar ttaarlng ar ctory air conditioning. Sharp. Wilson Crissmon Cadillac 1150 Hi 1 1944 WILLY'S JEEP, Call after 4 Call Mr. Al (Pooler) 1940 MGB, excellent condition, 343- 1947 MUSTANG HARDTOF 1947 MERCURY Coupe b^HtebteBd ie i, bucket aaata. 000, 343-2747. race cam, 3- 100, M-—- COMET, CLEAN ■IP------Full prlca. 31300. Bank terms available hart, immadlate dallvary. Call Mr.' Parka, credit manager, for paymant schedule at Ml 4-7100. New location of . _______TURNER FORD MOOAAapal (15 Mite Rd,) Tray Mall Imlwtisr ef Woodward 1947 MUSTANG Paslback, 399, 1- 1947 MUSTANG Y-l, work, 31409. 4914013____ 1947 BURGUNDY F AStBACK Mustang. ““ 4 —— — terlor. Bid , 299 4-spaad, white- 1947 T-BIRD, V-0 angtot, automatic transmission, radio, haatar, powar brakaa and powar steering, factory air condttlanlng, really loaded. 92495. Larry Shaahan'i HILLSIDE Lincoln-Mercury 1250 Oakland 333-7863 Private p ^<1450. 574-2719, matching vinyl Ir__ V-l, automatic, power steering. Excellent condition. New car trade In. Call <423219. AUDETTE PONTIAC v. Maple Rd. . Trav =4,0001- USED CARS AT TROY MOTOR MALL Maple Road (15 Mila) Between Coolldge and Crooks ONE 'STOP SHOPPING AT Audatto Pontiac ______Birmingham---- Chrysler-Plymouth Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Bill Goilinjj VW Mike Savoie Chevrolet Automatic# dL—— ________ Call 642-3229. | > AUDETTE PONTIAC 1150 W. Maple Rd. Trey 19M MERCURY MONTEREY, goad condition, must sail. (430. 334-8434/ 1944 MERCURY PARKLANE, 2-48 olds Vista cruiser smmi setter, air, full IpirrJjmjWM AM-FM, axe, cond. S3400. 447-747 1968 Olds 98 Luxury Sedan--- Full powor, factory air con dltionlna. vinyl top, cruise control. t $3195 Suburban; Olds 860 S. Woodward = Birmingham Ml iZ-5ll 1 1969 Olds 98 Hardtop I power, factory < vinyl 2 to ehoos $3795 . Suburban Olds 860 S. Woodward Birmingham Ml 74111 New and Used Can 106 Naw and Used Cars 106 New and Used Can 186 New and Used Carl 186 MERRY OLDS 1969 COMPANY —Cat Sale! , 1969 Delta 4 Door Sedan ....... $3295 . . Automatic, 'power steering and brakas. Air condition, tinted glass, radio. Whitewall tires, wheal covers and ylnyl roiof. 1969 Delta 4 Door Hardtop ...... $3395 Automatic, powar ttaarlng, brakaa, air condltleh, flirted glass, ..radio, whitewalls, vinyl real. Two ta chooyTrom. 1969 Delta Custom Hardtop ....... $3395 Automatic, power steering, brakes, air condition, tlntod gloat, radio whltawalls, whaal covers. 1969 Olds Luxury Sedan’..... I........ . . . $4185 MERRY OLDS, Inc. 528 N. MAIN ST. Rochestef ;^)L, 1-9761 —^ = * - M SPECIALS 1966 FORD Fairlane 4 Door With VI, automatic, power stooalag, krekaai blue with a white top, only— “ $1195 1965 FORD LTD Hardtop 4 doer with VI, automatic, power snaring, dark groan matching1 Interior. Only — 4 $1095 1967 MUSTANG 2 Door Hardtop With « cyl. stick# burgundy finish# rt«l Bharp^a^ at only— 1967 PONTIAC LeMans Hardtop 4 door with VI, automatic, newer ataarlng, brakas. Only— $1795 1967 PONTIAC . Tempest Custom Hearing, brakes^ Turquoise fln-lah, malchi^InteHor. Only— $1395 1967 FORD Vi Ton Pickup With custom cab, VI, aflek, ‘ Only— $1495 1967 FORD 2 < F-100 Pickup v»^rtSlo*haU?b6nlyU,0m*ne' $1695 V” 1966 FORD V& Ton Pickup With 4 cyl. stick. Only- // \ # $1195 * 1967 FORD F-250 W Ton With VI, « $1795 FLANNERY: FORD On US10 (Dixie Hwy.) ' —WATERFORD— ’ 623-0900 NOTICE: Unusual circumstances enable us to offer exceptional savings on certain Pontiac models such as Bonnevilles, Catalinas and Executives. .... This Offer Is Limited to Cars In Stock! EXAMPLES: — BRAND NEW — v 1969 PONTIAC -BRAND NEW- 1969 TEMPEST Catalina Hardtop With hydramallc, wheat discs, power ataarlng, brakes, (95x19 ' whitewalls, antique gold finish, (tack No. : 471 and all IMf safety features, tool SPORT COUPE With ‘decor group, 1 spaed, floor shift, push button rad whitewalls, (tack No. 904 and all 174# safety features. $2778.38 $2379.94 We Guarantee in Writing • Every One of Our. Quality Used Cars are Actual Miles I —(As Traded) Deal With P«opi«You Cart Trust! ' Where Honesty Is Our Policyl 1964 Buick Skylark, = ’ -y J with a baauflful bronze finish, white top. Power ataarlng, brakaa, buckttal 1966 BONNEVILLE ....................... ...... $1395 4 door, hardtop, power ataarlng, power brakaa.' wlnitows, s« 1964 CATALINA Hardtop ..................... .......$695 'Jetoor with power ataarlng, brakas, Hydramallc, ■■■““ whltawalls. J 1968 PONTIAC Catalina .... . ...... $2395 ’taring, brakas, radio, haatar, factory a1- 1963 PONTIAC Station Wagon .............................$595 Catalina. TiKdramatIc, powar ataarlng, powar brakas, radio, haatar, whltflWBlIa 7,':..“;.:.::.. $1495 1, heavy duly •brakaa. Oakland naw whltawalls, vinyl ton. 1968 PONTIAC 7... Catalina 4-deer sedan, powar sti County car, turba-hvcframatlc, b air conditioning,— TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS 1965 STUDEBAKER ,.. ....... 7 .$495 I 1962 Valiant 4-door . 7 automatic, powar,Hearing, radio, haatar, whltawalls. is good,.automatic, power ataarlng, radio, heater, and whl iltawalls. "PAINTER SPECIAL MECHANIC SPECIAL 17(1 PONTIAC CATALINA 4-door aadan, with hydramallc, power ataarlng, brakaa, haatar,- Oakland County Municipal car, rune , and drTvat good, naada a little paint. Only — .1745 CORVAIR 4-spead, hardtop, 2-door with radio, heater, white-walls, needs soma angina work! Only— $995 !;- $295 ■ PONTIAPTEMPEST ^ Open Daily Till -9^ P.M.^ ‘ . Open Sqt, Till .6 P.M. On M-24-Lake Orion j,' " • MY 3-6266 D—20 THE;PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4,. 1969 For Want Ad*. Dial 3344981 Now aodOteiCiw____ TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS Him care mint be wM < i ■ Regard ten of coil , laW^r ■ Ha?:::::::::::::: 1964 T-BIRD Conv.. 1965 MERCURY Hardtop 1964 MERCURY On»TOwner ... 106 1 New and Uled Can 1967 PONTIAC Catalina,' - ‘ hardtop auto., power brakes, Meet, 30,00 GRIMALDI Buick-Opel «0 Orchard Lk. Rd. PE 9-9165 1963 PONTIAC 9 P0»»0 0175. Private owner. 491-19 1964 PONTIAC CoHIIQ! custom. Olive — - Interior._VI heater, power ateerln - whitewall tires, 0395. Call Mr. Al (Melerl 0 vinyl 4 speed he-., transmission. « J| — AUDETTE PONTIAC U50 W. Maple Ad. , Ti 1967 PONT4AC . CATALINA 4 di sedan wlHT power, automatic, naw whitewalls, priced to sell only 91095. SHELTON Pontioc-Buick 953 S. Rochester Rd._____651,5500 brakiM 1964 TEMPEST, excellent 1967 PONTIAC CATALINA 1 dooi hardtop. Sliver blue with bloc) vinyl roof and Interior. Factory all conditioning, automate transmission, power steering am brakes and excellent tires. Low mileage. New car trade In. Call 642-3399. AUDETTE PONTIAC 1150 W. Maple Rd. Tsoy YOUR. CENTER 70 to Choose From —All Models-—All Colors-—All Reconditioned- Autobahn 962 Oakland Ave. 1965 PONTIAC GRAND Prlx, money down. LUCKY AUTO W W. Wide Xrock 1965 BONNEVILLE convertible, blu exe. Interior power steering a brakes, new tires, 9700. 33M399. 1965 PONTIAC LeMons Convertible New car trade, extra sharp. Priced to sell-Wa trade easier! GRIMALDI Buick-Opel M0 Orchard U. Rd. .„ FE 29165 PONTIAC, 2 phis 2, 1965, steering and brakes, black WRIW top, naw tiros, shocks, and brakes Honing, a: II. 673-1191 1965 TEMPEST UMIANS, beat i P-m. 974.3030. 6617 Manson Dr., oft Williams Lk. 1965 Bonneville 4 door hardtop. Rad with 32,000 actual miles. Lika naw. Mur m to appreciate. $1095 transminion. Full price Bank terms avallab a here, mediate delivery. Call. Mr. f credit manager, lor payi schedule et Ml 4-7500.. New 1967 PONTIAC CATALINA, 3-deor -----' hardtop, V-9, Mtm— | inly 174“ ' ____ miles, like m II price. 91795. 335-4751 ._ Standard Auto r- New end Used Cars MARMADUKE 1,000 USED CARS AT * TROY MOTOR-MALL Maple Road (15 Mila) BatwMn Coolldge and Crooka ONE STOP SHOPPING AT Audette Pontiac Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth ■ Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Bill Coiling VW , Mike Savoie Chevrolet GO! HAUPT PONTIAC blu* top. Keep America beautiful, buy this one. SHELTON Pontioc-Buick 955 9. Rochester R6. 451-5500 DEMOS NOW AVAILABLE 1969 PONTIAGS 1969 BUICKS FANTASTIC SAVINGS II you want to steal One of these — come on -over, and save BIGII SHELTON Pontioc-Buick 955 S. Rochester Rd, 451-5500 iM'riS no p, powar. CATALINA, 3-dn owner and locall By Anderson and Leeming New fad Used Cm 106 1,000 USED CARS AT TROY/ . MOTOR MALL Maple Road <15 Mile) BatwMn Coolldge and Crooks', ONE STOP SHOPPING AT Audette Pontiac Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Bill Golling VW , Mike Savoie Chevrolet “We keep all sample cases for 30 days, but no , salesman has dared come back to claim one!’’ New and Used Cars 106 R hardtop. Like inireir^onditk Call 642-3289. AUDETTE PONTIAC 1969 PONTIAC FIREBIRD^ V-i automatic, vinyl top. Full price 92299. Bank terms available hare. Immediate Mllvary. Call Mr. Perks credit manager tor payment! 1950 W. Maple Rd. schedule at Ml 4-7590. New tact- _,____"________ tlon of d| ----------- TURNER FORD 2600 Maple (15 Mile Rd.) TrJ I mile eps»'of Woodws 1963 Tempest LeMons Coupe Wilson Crissman Cadillac 135Q N. Woodwerd A PAINTER'S SPECIAL 2—1968 Pontiacs, 4-door, automatic transmissions. Power steering and brakes. $1026 full pricer No money LUCK Y AUTO ' 1940 yv. Wide Track , 6-7649. . condition. MA 1949 GTO400 4 barrel, turbo-hydromatlc, red,- block vinyl-top, full power, owned by girl, 5,000 s, *3,400 or beat effar, 391-05 PONTIAC, 1969 CATALINA-wagon. 3 power brakes. Racks, deluxe trim! 879-6560. 969 GRAND PRIX, ClOWI, , low mileage, air, AM-PM, 4-way gwrar, vinyl top, rally wheels, 6SV Pike end Peddock. 1965 GTO RAM-AIR4M, 4 weed. SM "John McAuliffe Ford 1965 -PONTIAC Bonneville elation wagon, with beautiful deep metallic burgundy with matching all vinyl lntleror, «um 1966 TEMPEST 6, CONVERTIBLE, 'vary nice condition, OR 3-5116, eft. 19M PONTIAC EXECUTIVE-^r steering, r Wm 91195. M Larry Sheehan's HILLSIDE Lincoln-Mercury 1250 Oakland 333-7863 C a PLUS 2, radio, ir ateering and brakas. 1966 BONNEVILLE COUPE.. Extra sharp. LOW mileage • trade. Vinyl top. auto.----- steering and brakas. Ont warranty. Just 91567 full price. Flichar Buick, SIS S, Woodward, Ml 7-5600. ________________ 1966.4-DOOR PONTIAC Catalina. [inetlc, power, .exc. 16 TEMPEST 2 door. Light areer matching Interior. 6 cylinder Mfic. power steering on* INK very, good tires. Naw car trade In. Call 642-369. AUDETTE PONTIAC 1950 W. Maple Rd.' Troy $1595: Suburban Olds 860 S. Woodward Birminghom Ml7-5111 1967 FIREBIRD, . _ I gnMr^MMrhig, 91-550 or S. 1967 PONTIAC^S&NNEVILLE, . . Mr. Perks, credit manager, ter payment schedule at Mr 4-7500, naw location of TURNER FORD IS-MIte Rd.) Troy-Mete east et Woodward 1,000 USED CARS AT TROY MOTOR MALL Maple Read (15 Mila) Between Coolldge and Crooks ONE STOP SHOPPING AT Audette Pontiac Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth -Bab Borst — Lincoln-Mercury —_____Bill Bolting *W ~ Mike Savoie Chevrolet Ppntiac Press Want Ads For Action 1,000 USED CARS AT Maple Road (IS Mile) between Coolldge and Crooks TROY MOTOR MALL ONE STOP SHOPPING AT Audette Pontiac ■ Birmingham Ciirysler-Plymouth Bob Borst ^Lincoln-Mercury Bill Golling VW Mike Sovoie Chevrolet ^ 1967 CATALINA. . CONVERTIBLE. Bright ridwlth black too/ end Interior. Automatic,, ndwer steering and brakes. 5 new whitewall tires. Ona owner naw car trade In. Call *42-3289.,'^ AUDETTE PONTIAC lisg'w. Maple Rd. Troy f949 TEMPEST LaMANS, l-door hardtop, 9 cyl. euto., power steering^ radio, whitewalls, clean, 625- New and tlsad Cars 106 Niw and Usid Cars 106 Nbw and Used Cars 106 New aad Used Cars 106New and Used Cars 106New and Used Cars 106New and Used Can 106 1969 LtMANS 2 I MR) . hardtop . with black bucket seats V-S, automatic. Power steering an, brakes. Console. Low m I f a s Bought here new. Call 642-3289. AUDETTE PONTIAC 1950 W. Maple Rd. Trey MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1969. LeMons, 2 door, hardtop, V9, ----tie, power steerlhg, radio, white walla, with black vinyl - ileage. like new. 77 M-24, 693-9341.__________ 1969 CATALINA -2 door hardtop. April geld with matching ’■ roof, factory air, automatic. HUNTER DODGE GREAT • FINISH . TRADES 1967 LeMans Convertible Red with white top/ Power steal Ing. radio, stereo tope, wire wheel and whitewall tlrea. Stock 3736A, - $1995 $1495 —, 1966-Dodge- Sports Wagon Automatic, 6 cylinder, radio, atoek 5500A. 1 $1295: 1967 Chrysler Newport 4 door sedan. Automatic, elr 'e. dltionlng, power eteerlng, brakas and Windows, whitewall tires, radio and heater. Stock 9575A. $1995 1967 Dodge Polaro Wagon A-passenger, power steering# radio, whitewall tires, stock 9547. $1695 1968 Dodge Oort— 2 doer, V-4. pdwer steering,' stereo radio. Sharp carl Stock 9572. $1-895 7 We do not turn speedometers. HUNTER DODGE 499 S. Hunter, Birmingham Ml 7-0958 I >2,150, OR 3-0387. 1968 FIREBIRD 2 door hardtop. Sprint engine, 3 speed floor shift, custom trim, r«lly wheels, red line tires. Bright red with matching inferior. Excellent condition. Cell i GRAND PRIX, expresso miles. less then 17,000 miles. 647-11)7. stick. hardtop. Nbw and Used Cars 106 169 PONTIAC EXiCUTfVB. passenger, wagon, full power, « 429 engine, many other optloi 93995. MS-7949.__________ 1969 GRAND PRIX 2-doi "Model J". Bright red bucket seats. Factory steering end power dL_ console. 9,000 actual miles. Bought here new. Call 642-3299. $3695. AUDETTE PONTIAC 1950 W. Maple Rd. Trey 1969 PONTIAC Catalina wagon. 13,goo. 997-4217 or 997-4519, after 5. 969 CATALINA Liberty blue wi factory -glassrTXX—. MS.,.............. Automatic. 9,800 actual miles. New spare. Executive car. Call 6 spars. Executive car. Call “"'AUDETTE PONTIAC .1850 W le Rd. 1,000 USED CARS AT - tr6y MOTOR MALL Maple Road (15 Mile) Betwei Coolldge and Crooks ONE STOP SHOPPING AT Audette Pontiac Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth -- Bah Borst — Lincoln-Mercury Bill Golling VW Mike Savoie Chevrolet New aad Deed Corf. Iff# CATALINA J (tor. verdiij green with black vinyl top. Pee-, tory air conditioning, tinted lit* power atoerlhe end broket automatic. n»w aeere tire. 10,801 actual mlioi 9 GRAND PRIX. .Factory air, ewer. -Blue with-Wick vinyl top. et'a go 1st dels. This one should, is on the showroom t|«or. SHELTON Pontiac-Buick 855 S. Rochester Rd. >51-5500 >2,M0,85M224. 1949 2 DOOR PONTIAC Venture. $2800. 482-4105. 1MFAIRLANB 1947 BARRACUDA „ CATAUNA# ;NAA0T0P, power, Mai 1t4f PONTIAC Factory Official aBMBSBiP" AUDETTE PONTIAC 150 W. Maple Rd. Trey 1963 AMRRICAN RAMBlJr, i t PONTIAC 4-door sedan. "MO^IW". rsn eioiow * 4dl0. «NlML IPifO* Locally owned. Cill 442*3289. $3495 AUDETTE PONTIAC 1050 W. Maple Rd. Troy f FIREBIRD 400 2 deerherdtop i-speed transmission. 10,000 actual nlles. Bought Iwre new. Dart iraan with whita bucket seats. Excellent condition. CeU 442-3299. , AUDETTE PONTIAC 1959 W. Maple JM. Troy Need a car? almost anybody iron no credit. 7S care to _P —-"mK Irv — D It mgr. A I or PE 1 New iieel Ueei Cogs 106 tit*' AMBASSAI 9750. 673-2313. « JEEP, Unton Like. Sf^MlM. 1964 VW, 2*SSS Jltechenjceiry 1963 RAMBLER STATION WAGON $147.50 GRIMALDI CAR CO. Ooklond Ave. FE 5-9421 vaur erei , „ IHirf Draft exemptT . c.„ map^ite 1967 RAMBLER Ambassador easier. Plrat— « $1488 , GRIMALDI Buick-Opel 210 Orchard Lk. Rd. H H ^aymantsj schedule at 'li *W '^TURNER FORD 2400 Mapla (15 Mile Rd.) Troy M 1,000 USED CARS AT TROY : -MOTOR MALL ^ Maple Retd (IS MM) Between Coolldge end Crookl , ONE STOP SHOPPING AT Audette Pontiac . Birmingham . Chrysler-Plymouth > Bob Borst ~Erhcbln-Mercdry ' | Bill Golling VW Mike Savoie Chevrolet New and Used Can 106 Naw aaA Ueed Cart 106New aad Used Care -106 2 door, custom 6. 1948 PLYMOUTH 1948 CORVAIR 1945 Bonneville VAN CAMP CHEVROLET On N. Milford Rd. ■ Q ‘I HAHN TODAY'S SPECIAL - . 1967 FALCON 2-Door Sedan'. Automatic, radio, hooter, with true economy tor llttli .......$1195 —1968 PLYMOUTH EuryJll- $1995 4 door hardtafL automatic, full power, economy v-i, vinyl Intenor, mist blue, noyr cor warranty. Price reduced for quick sole. 1966 FORD Galoxie ..; $1195 500 4 door sedan, with V-8, automatic, powar steering, brakes, midnight blua, with blue matching interior. Ideal fsmlly carl 1969 JAVELIN SST 2 door hardtop, with factory .air automatic, full power, factory to select tram. .... $2895 ' conditioning, V-9, -official cara. Two 1966 OLDS Dynomic 88 $1295 4-door laden, with full power# excellent condition, must let to appreciate.' 1968 RAMBLER Rebel . 4-door aeden, V-9, lull powar, tlenlng. new car warranty- $1995 factory air cendl- 1963 CORVETTE Fostbock .... $1895 4-$peed/ 327 engine, hurry will not lest at thli 1969 CHRYSLER Wagon j conditioning, new car werrentt .....' $4195 »w»r, factory dtr r. Factory official 1967 CHARGER Hordtop ...,..$1795 2-door, with full power# V-8# wide evade A-1 can* j dltlonl Chrysler-Pfymouth-Rambler-feep ClarkstQ'n 6673'-Dixie Hwy. ■' MA 5*2635 si :. .' i m The" Largest and Most Fantastic Annual Used Car Sale of Sales in Oakland County—Now in Progress at—Matthews-Hargreaves 2=LOTS IN PONTIAC TO BETTER SERVE OUR CUSTOMERS- OUR MAIN LOT 631 Oakland Ave. Right. Next to Our New Car Showroom! 1968 Chevy II Nova Sport Coupe With V8. powergllde, radio, heater,' - whltewella, block vinyl top. Grenade gold ffntih. Only— $1695 1968 . Chevy ImpaloASport Coupe MLh Vi, automatic, power ataarlng, radio, neater, whitewalls, factory vgrrylv_eve1toble. invar fnltf flu- 12295 1967 VW - Sunroof adlo, heater, tuxedo Mai "$1395 1967 - Pontiac atalina Sport Coupi V9, automatic, sower sti i, raeig. hMtir.' wmti vinyl root, emerald grti $1895 O 1967 Chevy . Impola 4 Door Hardtop With the 327 VS engine, automatic, power steering, brakes, factory air welfsTtropFcal turwloso'hnlsfi. OntyL $1995 1968 Fiat 850 Series $1395 : 1968 Pontiac' Tempest Sport Coupe th V8, automatic, power stearin vropicai Turquoisa rmisn. i $2295: k vinyl i. Only .1967 Camaro Sport Coupe V9, automatic, powar at heater, whitewalls, blacl I mao ivory TUiish.omy^ $1795 1968 Jeep— 4 Wheel Drive ayar's anew plot must sea to ah. Only— $2695 BUDGET LOT 630 Oakland Ave. Across From Our Main Showroom! 1965 1965 Corvair Monza Coupe ,$1095 1965 Chevy II Station Wagon With 4^cjjL anglne^powargllde, I 'lnlah. Only— $795 1967 Ford Cortina 2 Door With automatic, radio, hdater, red finish. Only— $795: Ford Cortina *2 Door tstonding bright red eedy to go et only— $495 1965 Chevy Impola Sport Coupe h v-9, automatic, radio, hea tewalls,, silver mist finish. On $1195 1965..... —Chevy - Convertible h automatic, powar ataarlng, ra-heater,7 whitewalls, fire anglm finish. . $1195 1965 Ford Sport Coupe radio, heater, trspL - $695 1966 - Ford1 ' Falcon 2 Door Sedon th redlo, hooter, stick shift, i nditionlng, moreen finish. $895 1965 International Scout 4 Wheel Drive MctoOMl fcSb, green PfInto $1295 ' OVER 400 NEW AND USED CARS-TRUCKS TO SELECT FROM -jmmsmgfcmttmMmm Oakland County's Largest Volume' Chevrolet Dealer , ■ , , 6310ciklcpid Ave.^ ' - FE 4-4547 630 Ocddond Avfe. i J THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER i, 1969 D—21 53 Soviet rivar ____ 54 Honey making 13 Cravat < ' T 14 “Somewhere 56 Lion'e home ——the *7"After the —— «r____________ Reinbow” trie 2$ “On the Sunny 58 Eternity ,___of the 59 Lariaean *tMa«n mountain 60 Athena UTjrpaof 16 Sea eagle 10 Group of play era 11 Strays . 19 Observe , Sails in 38 Decay 39 Musical tone 40 Sat 41 One (Fr.) aOSleeping 62 Abound ' DOWN 22 Eaten away 1 Kind of 24 Furious storm jacket 28 Pub game 2Flower 33 Tropical plant 3 Brood of 34 Challenge pheasants 35 Time gone by 4 The dill MBrnrUdend 5 Guides 37 Penetrate 6 Melody 38 Wind 7 Travels 6 Solitary the Sunset 44 Deep-toned 23 Overtime ’ ■ ' ■ ' (•b.) 24 Kind of 452boehri 46 Chest rattle 47 Feminine ________ appellation 28 Greatest - 49Aperture quantity' 50 Comfort 27Clarinetist, ' SIGetup ------ Fountain 52 British 29 First man »»-,/ streetcar 30 Coarse file 55 Goddess of 31 Woody plant the dawn —Television Programs- ^ .4 i ;?• yJ . r •'+■ * . .■ • ' Programs furnished by stations llstod in this coluntn gro subjoct to change without notice! ' BtMlsrl-WJBK-TV. 4-WWJ-TV. 7-WXYZ-TV. 9-CKIW-TV. 50-WKBD-TV, 56-WTVS-TV, ft2-WXON-TV - Renin C — Color THURSDAY NIGHT - News, 1 r" r- 4 5 4 n r1 r- 16 H If- w (6 nr if li 1 1 | ^ 1 33 3fi r W Wa 44 45 46 47 1 44 do 51 52 to 54 56 57 58 59 M 61 62 wiuon. Kay Medford Slants Accent to the Role Site By EARL WILSON HOLLYWOOD - In New York, we live ln acorrtplex of i, buildings, where one of the most illustrious tenants is the great actress Kay Medford. —-----Wrdiscovered our-dearly beloved neighbor— here making a CBS TV series—playing a mid-] western spinster. She, with her New York voice] that has the grating whine of the subway in til That voice came over loud and undeniably New- Yorkish on the, set of N(i 460) WJBK(1300) WHH-fM(94.7) rnio/vAPTstNooN ltlM—WJR, N«wi, Firm WCARr Navn. Rod Miller WPON, News, Mmlc ■ t CKIW, Jim Edwlrdt WM Hank O'Ntll wjbkI k: orB'.»i.y CKLW, Steve Hunter r WCAB, Newt, Ren Rose ~ : ■WRMt'WBM. ___________— WHFI, Don Alcorn dilS—' <:je-wwj. Toder kijteyiew . weoN, Phone Oplnlftn WJR, Sue inee e, T*Me v wja, WirL ......... 151 TitS-WWJ, Recetreck. Re-j »ert, SperteUne WJR, RMeMer Report, Wood end Water! 7|«—WJR. nTlB*r Reef, »iW^roN,wew«,"Tirrv Dixon f.-ee-CKLW, Scott Reoen 1«:M—WJR, Scores Stwwceee litW—WJR, Newt t*#-WWJ, Ov« WJ6, Music T ■ee--wxvz, n< jiro Devlr WCAf; News ' muripe ilK.Titn j -XW; Mart . WHFI, Ire J. < . FRIDAY MORNING (tie-WJR, Muele Hell WCAR, News, Bill Delzell WPON, News. Arizona Weston q ‘ wxyz, News, Dick Purtan WHFI, Marc Avery It^W^MorrlaXarliop I:IS—WJR, Sunnyslde, / t IWJrWIWS CKLW, Frank Brodle wjbk, Tom sfimnen . «tlS- WWJ, Ask Your NeWo ll:eB^k%h)M5$/Wy . WC.AR. News. Rod Miller Hilj-^WJR. I WWJ, Bob ueasiey WWJ, Newt ■ uee-wjR, News, < 1:15—WJR, / . Rodgers and the Young; bloods guest. : (7) C — Joey Bishop fc-Harvey Stone, the Miracles and Charo guest. (50) C — Merv Griffin— Soupy Sales, Terry O’Meara, Eddy Arnold, Phil Leeds and Merv’s 9-vear-oid son guest. 11:35 (2) R - Movies: T. “The Dark Angel” (1935) A pair of lovers’ lives are all but destroyed by . blindness, Frederic March, Merle Oberon; 2/ “Triple Trouble” (1950) - The Bowery Roys find . their good intentions trip them up. Huntz Hail, Leo Gorcejf 12:24 (9) Viewpoint 12:30 (9) C — Perry’s Probe — "Science and Religion” 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) R-Texan ISO) R —PeterGunn 1:30 (4) (7) C News, Weather „ 3:30 (2) C — News, Weather 3:?5' (2) TV Chapel FRIDAY MORNING 5:50 (2) TV Chapel 5:55 (2) On the Farm Scan 6:00 (2) C — Black Heritage —The future of the black student movement 6:39 (2) C — Woodrow the Woodsman (4) Classroom — "Sounds Into Music: Music Speaks” Batftnk zzr (4) C — Today—Sched- 1 sellers Arthur Rubinstein, Peach Corps Director Joseph Biatchford, film crit: ic Judith Crist and Jamps Farentino and Joseph Campanella of “Hie Bold Ones.’’ — (7)~C — Morning Show — Dr, Leroy Augenstein of the State Board of Education will dlscuss decentraiizatidn of th Detroit public schoris. 7:30 (2) C—News, Weather, Spwts 8:00(2)C—?C ap ta In Kangaroo 8:15 (9) Warm-Up 6:25 (9) C - Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 8:30 <7) R — Movie: “The Devil’s Disciple” (1050) Burt Lancaster, Kirk Douglas (9) C —Bozo 0:00 (2) R C—Lucille Ball (4) C — Dennis Whol^ 0:10 (2) R C - Beverly Hillbillies (9) Friendly Giant 9:45 (9) Chez Helene 10:09 (2) It C—Andy Griffith (A) C r^ PersoDaOty w (9) R — Mr. Dressup 10:15 (9) Pick of the Week 10:30 (2) C - Merv Griffin (4) C - Hollywood . Squares4 ' received after the assassination of her*first, husband, President John F. Kennedy. Vivien Mrs. Chassis went to Greece it was decided there was no longer a necessity to have an office," iter former social secretary, Nancy Tuckerman, explained yesterday. “Hie mail is not sufficient to warrant an office. She’s a private citizen now.” Miss Tuckerman has taken a job with Olympic Airways, owned by the former first lady’s husband, Aristotle Onassis. Actors Post Reward in Slayings Peter Sellers and fellow actors have posted a |25,000 reward for information leading to conviction of the killer of actress Sharon Tate. "Someone must have knowledge or suspicions they are withholding or may be afraid to reveal,” SeUera said yesterday. Two of his associates in offering tin reward are Warren Beatty and Yul Bryaner. Miss Tate and four Other persons were slain in her California home last month. SMU Establishes Bob Hope Scholarship Fund Southern Methodist University has ea-tabUshed a Bob Hope scholarship fond for students in the arts.-- The comedian contributed about $1 mil-' lion for the construction of the Bob Hope Theater on the SMU campus. Ralph Rogers, chairman of the scholarship committee, said, ’ “TMe scholarships are our way of-showing appreciation.” arsnip Fund I U. S. Official Repeats Mastery of Bosporus U,S. Consul General Douglas Heck has proved after IS *r the swift currents of the Bos- porus Strait separating Europe and Asia, tiled guests indUde piatt- Heck, 50, from Chevy Chase, Md./ first swamThe straits * which connect the Black Sea and, the Sea of Marmara when he was 12. Tuesday he did ft again. Only expert swimmers are advised to try the foat, which requires bucking a strong side current while navigating the strait at its narrowest point, 3,000 feet across. Most of Fortune .left to Charitable Fouodation Mrs. Ailsa Mellon Bruce left most of her estate to a charitable foundation she established in 1940, her will dis- Mrs. Bruce died. Aug- 25. Documents filed in Manhattan Surrogate.’^ court said only that the estate was “more than $1 million," but it has been estimated at $600 million. She was the daughter of Andrew W. Mellon, former sec-retarjr of the treasury. Her charitable foundation — which aids medical education, conservation causes and colleges — is named after him. TENUTA’S RESTAURANT Tender, Golden Fried Fish Dinners CAN m i | Also * CARRY-OUT . H I IN j|NBN FE 8-9539 CORNER OF HURON and JOHNSON (Across from Pontiac Gunarai Hospital) A look at TV - He Focuses on Outdoors terest winter weather to find (Hrir wbjecter^f^ "But not untQ we had tested our own gear thoroughly and put our special cameras to the test by storing them in the freezer section of the refrigerator,” he said. it A ff The wi»|f, he found, it a much-maligned species—“Their reputation for ferocity is undeserved and, whl)e a hungry wolf might attack a horse, we could find no documentary proof during the past 50 years that one had ever attacked a man.” Anotherprogramin thewrka consists largely of film and £ sound track shot by "a bunch of amateur mountain climbers” tackling a rugged peak in Af- Honors Slated for Heroic Dog Great Dane Credited With Saving 2 Lives ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) Great Dane named Top will be honored as a hero tonight at a dinner. Top, credited with saving the [lives of two .children within eight weekp, will receive medal, a gold-plated lead and ", r, gold plaque, custom-made blanket and a year’s supply. of dog food, IDs owners, Min Nonna Clark and Alan Patzwaldt, an actor from Los Angeles, will receive a $1,000 savings bond. " • • A ■ Last Spring, an 11-year-old girl named Margo Tacot, neighbor of Patzwaldt, took the Great Dane for a walk. She started to cross a street, not no-tiefaig a truck bearing down on her. Top is credited with pushing the girl backward to safety. He was struck by the Writ, however, and suffered a fractured leg and broken ribs. A week after the cast was removed from his leg, Top was allowed out in the yard of the apartment house where Patzwaldt lives. 7 DRIPPING WET-Moments later, said, Top was back at the doorway, barking furiously and dripping wet. When Patzwaldt opened the door, Top bounded to swimming pool-in the yard, Patzwaldt said he found e l-year-old boy at the bottom of the pod, dived in and brought the boy up. The actor applied mouth-to-mouth resuscitation. The boy was taken to a hospital and recovered; •• ... it' 1* Top’s actions led to his selection as dog hero of the year in a [irpmotion by a dog food manufacturer, Ken-L Ration, which is sponsoring the dinner. ‘THATS UNUSUAL’ “But that is unusual-to find,1 really good stuff," Rosten said. ' Most documentaries are made by getting an idea and following A well-done documentary, involving color film and extensive travel, can cost more than $250,000. < < | All networks have been on tha lookoiit for actually programs in the science-adventure-wildlife category since CBS, several seasons back, had a surprise hit on Its hands with tha National Geographic series. The shows drew not only critical cheers, but also audiences large enough to be rated in tha top 10. .: J ABC signed 0. Jacques Cousteau for a series of specials about his undersea ad-entures. NBC suit Hugh Downs halfway round the world for a special about tbesrrival of man in'America. ■ The National Geographic series will continue with four programs during the coming season. The first will show wild animal rituals and was filmed by e German naturalist. PLUMBING DISCOUNTS S-3-Piece BATH SET ; ■....... GUMP PUMPS VANITIES CABINET SINKS TUB Enolosures I EXTRA SPECIALS! . Z lound^Troy oedTAu.*19.95 Z | Stoinlese Steel Stake • ...*22.9*1 A«MMVMerHMtar tea! ■ fioi/Cr PLUMBING i 841 Baldwin ! FE 4-161$ or FC MIN' . I- I jrs urwee ru mee. S ^oo>na>jL««i.onow4 ■ ■nMasmoMB 10” Motorola 16” Philco 11” BOA *24** IT” Portable w* 21” Groslay *29* 21” Motorola *M*# 11%— ♦3f?a 21” Silvortona *39*3 21” OE *3«*s 21” Zenith S0-DAY EXCHANGE PI2-12S7 WDNI S15L Walton Blvd. Corner loalyn Opon9to9 "V D—22 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER *. I9Q9 Self-Set Electric Alarm Clock Set it when yen get it, then forget it, Repeat alarm clock jre* sets alarm automatically every day . . . has acrosS-the-top alarm silencer/adjUstable light and sound conWols,0 wake-up calls. Deactivated only by sleepdate weekend shut-off feature. Plastic; wood-grain vinyl across top. Our Best in Brown, Beige or White. ■„; Reg. 10.$9 m Sears Lacey Tulip Figure Perfenters Cantrece® II Has a Way with Know Where to Shape You and How filled . . . Great The fit, beauty and support of this Perma-Prest® bra won’t wash out. Stretch sides, back and straps. Lace cups. Natural cup style has cotton Cordtex® lift for support, contour style fills out in-between cup sizes. Available , in white, aqua and yellow. In popular sizes. Vyrene® spandex panty combines extra, panel control with enough stretch to fit almost every figure ... won’t lose its firm control. Has lined nylon lace front panel stir-rounded with power net. 6 garter detach and adjust. White, aqua, yellow in $,M,L,XL. *ri Bra and Girdla Dapt. Regyiar 4.50 Bra or 3.47 oach Regular $9 Panty ’■ 099 You don’t expect miracles but you do expect panty hose to fit with i.„ sags or bags. Quite' frankly, we agree. So, that’s what you’ll get. The Can-trece® II panty hose are regular knit to fit like second skin. Elasticized waistband. Nude heel; reinforcedtoe, Available in great leggy colors ... Bare Bei|e, Sunset and Mocha in Petite, Average and Tall. Regular $2 m Open Monday, Thursday* Friday, Saturday 9 to 9, Tuesday, Wednesday 9 to 5*30 2 $ SEA1S.XOEBUCK AND CO. Use Your Sears Revolving Charge Sears Downtown ftii % Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171 t constitution, he is to succeed the president if he dies or becomes incapacitated. The weekly session of the Parle peace talks today was postponed at the request of North Vietnam. ceremonial state funeral of our nation" would be organized but it did not say when the rites would be held. Informed sources In Saigon said it was unlikely the North Vietnamese leader’s would result in any Important changes in Hanoi’s war policy. Communist party; Truong Chinh, the pro-Peking chairman of the National Assembly, and Premier Pham Van Duong. MAY BE FOURTH Gen. Vo Nguyen Giap> the defense minister and chief military strategist, may be a fourth member. "Everyone tried their utmost and gave of their best to save him at'.any price," Hanoi Radio said, “but because of his advanced age and serious illness of the'suddent severe heart attack, President Ho has left us forever." STATE FUNERAL PLANNED The broadcast said “the most solemn SAIGON (AP) — North- Vietnam-be- The announcement said Ho died at gan a week of moufatog todqy for Htf 9:47 a.m. Hanoi time, which was 9:47 Chi Mini) and planned a state funeral p.m.' Tuesday EDT. But word of his for the father of Vietnamese indepen- death was withheld for nearly 21 hours, dence. , 'until about 6:40 p.pv EDT. yesterday. The 79-yearold president of North In the Interim Hanoi Radio prepared Vietnam died yesterday after “a grave the North Vietnamese people for words and sudden heart attack," Radio Hanoi of the death with periodic reports that reported. his condition was getting worse. South Vietnamese and American officials in Saigon expect a triumvirate leadership to marge in the next few months, made up of Le Du an, the pro-Moscow first secretary of the North Vietnamese A likely interim president is Ton Due Thang, the 81-year-old vice president of the party. According to North Vietnam’s The Wetothtr . Chance PONTIAC TON DUC THANG House Tax Reform Bill Hailed, Hit year and slice the tax increases for corporations by $1.4 billion. |L4? BILLION A YEAR MORE Overall, the-proposal would bring In $1.07 billion a year more than the tax bill approved overwhelmingly by the House on Aug. 7.-The House bill Would cost $2.4 billion a year by 1972, a figure Kennedy said he wanted to cut to $1.3 billion. Both proposals, however, would cut individual taxes for nil but the highest income brackets below what they are now and raise net corporation taxes, although the administration would like to lower the corporate rate 2 per cent over $1,400, instead of 15 per cent with a $2,000 ceiling, as the House voted. It is now 10 per. cent, with a maximum of $1,000. The new deduction stUI would allow four million taxpayers to Switch from itemizing their deductions to the standard deduction, Kennedy said. This combined with the new rates and the low income allowance would reduce taxes for 63 million taxpayers and remove six million people from the tax rolls entirely, he said. DEDUCTION PLAN Treasury’s deduction plan would cost an estimated $770 million a year compared to $1.34 billion for Hie House bill, Kennedy emphasized cutting the cost of the bill, a subject of great concern to the inflationconiclous administration. This year and next—the period the government thinks is critical in curbing . rising pricea-foe Treasury’s bill would bring in considerably more than it gives back in tax breaks. Only in 1972 would it begin to cause a loss. By then the government hopes inflation will be under control. In 1972, for example, a family, of four with an income of $10,000 and deductible nonbusiness expenses of $1,000 would pay $1,114 under present law, $958 under the House bill and $1,012 under the Treasury proposal. WOULD PAY NO TAXES A similar family with income of $3,500 now pays $70 blit would pay no taxes under either proposal, while one with $4,000 income would pay $65 under the House bill and $81 under the Treasury proposal instead of the $140 now assessed. The administration also is asking that everyone who escapes from taxes be excused from having to file a tax return. WASHINGTON (AP) - Treasury Secretary David M. Kennedy said today the House tax reform bill gives too much to sotpe taxpayers and takes too much from corporations, but he nevertheless hailed it as a milestone. “The administration urges its enactment at the earliest practicable date," Kenhedy said in testimony prepared for the first session of Senate Finance Committee hearings on the bill. number of respects,” Kennedy added, but he did not recommend changing the House reduction of the controversial oil depletion allowance. I The Treasury proposal, spelled out in ah 81-page statement prepared by Assistant Secretary Edwin S. Cohen, pould after 1971, trim the House reductions for individuals by $2*5 billion a Treasury approved -of the income tax rate reduction for individuals, but asked that the standard deduction be raised only to 12 per cent, with a ceiling of Area Teachers Voteto Sfrtlce Was Area Resident Kennedy suggested the Senate reject foe House' plan for classifying all single persons ever age-85 as heads «f households, contending that foe Ugh taxes of unmarried people could best be reduced by a new, lower tax rate. Under foe Treasury plan, a single person with foe same taxable income as a married couple would have to pay no more than 2$ per cent higher taxes. The difference now is sometimes 40 per cent. ipientDies Birmingham teachers voted yesterday to strike tomorrow if a contract settlement is not reached in a scheduled negotiation session this afternoon. Disagreement on the agency-shop clause is considered foe major obstable to settlement. Other unresolved issues include a board greivance procedure aim a no-strike, no-sanctions clause. MElBTlllEPftlNCIPAL-^ Seniors report this morning at the new $4.7-million Waterford Mott High School at Pontiac Lake and Scott Lake roads. Introducing hijity self is foe school’s principal, Daniel Hogan. Construction is not yet complete, bid sophomores and juniors will follow the seniors in starting classes tomorrow. Thp school viH We an enrollment of 1,300, ANN ARBOR (ft - Albert Le* &rnick, 50, of 4755 Brafferton, Bloomfield Towft-ship, who on Labor Day became foe first recipient of a human lung transplant in Michigan, died in University Hospital at 6:44 a.m.H today. Dr. Williajm Hubbard Jr., direc-tor of foe Univeraity I of Michigan medical center, said Car-JH nick’s new lung was functioning Detter had given U-M. doctors Jiope that the operation could prolong Carnick’s life to a considerable extent. Carnick had terminal emphysema when he received the left lung of 17-year old Richard May of Jackson in a six-hour operation Monday. An autopsy will be performed. May was injured near' Jackson in a one-car automobile accident. He was rushed to Foote Hospital in Jackson, then to University Hospital. Within two minutes aftei* he was officially pronounced dead in the hospital, doctors started foe transplant. FATHER OF FOUR Carnick was the father of four children and a Bloomfield Township resident for five years. He whs an executive engineer with Copco Steel Corp. of Detroit and was a native of Youngstown, Ohio. Carnick was 6 feet'tall and weighed about 180 pounds until his illness reduced him to 130. , High Temperature to Hit Mid-80s Sewer Work in Drying Up Hom Donald Cameron, executive secretary of foe Birmingham Education Association (BEA), the bargaining unit for Birmingham teachers, said he expects foe latter two issues to fall in line once the agency-shop matter is resolved. Tentative agreement has been reached on the salary scale and fringe benefits. Summertime temperatures will continue through Saturday in foe Pontiac area with foe high reaching into foe mid-80s. The low will register in the 60s tonight. V The weatherman predicts there’s a chance of showers late, tonight, tomorrow and Saturday.. * ★ ★ Winds northeast to east at five to 12 milea per hour will become east to southeast tonight and southeast to south at eight to 16 miles tomorrow. Probabilities of precipitation in per cent are 20v today, 30 tonijgit and 50 tomorrow, eowners tog lowered to afford dryer ponrirubtion r due to sites. He said, however, normal supply ’s giant „fo(Hild resume once constrdction is com-‘ pieted later this year. CONTINUOUS PUMPING “The only way we can put this mammoth seWsr in is to put in deep wells and coritinuoddy ‘ pQmp water out-of the ground. It’s called dewatering," foe DPW chief explained. Its effectiveness' may have Exceeded Alexander’s wildest dreams. “Our water stopped yesterday morning while I was to the middle of my shower;’’ complained Mrs. .Frederick Denne, 4785 Sylvester. "I couldn’t go to work. I had to go to a neighbor’s to finish washing and fixing my hair.” • OTHER WELLS At least six other wells at homes on Sylvester, Midland and Sashabaw hata gone dry to the past couple of weeks because qf foe sewer line installation, she claimed. “There are stiU a few houses around that have well water,” sne said, “but they’re quirting, and th^ owners don’t want to give their water, away now." Hubbard cited no CARNICK tingle cause of death. “The patient was a very ill’ man before foe operation and he failed to survive the initial recovery period, always a significant risk* in Extensive surgery,” said Hubbard. Doctors said there was no sign of infection or rejection, two major factors which affected previous lung transplant operations elsewhere. GAVE DOCTORS HOPE . Their ability to control these factors Under foe agency-shop clause, the school board would be compelled to dismiss any teacher who does not pay dues to the BEA. Currently, 785 teachers on the iMO-member, instructional staff are BEA members. ' His was foe. 24tb reported lung transplant attempt. All have failed except the cake of a man to Belgium who lived nine months after his operation. At least one resident said she’d been cautfht dry to a shower when water unexpectedly stopped flowing. R. J, Alexander, director of the Oak-land County Department of Public Works, which is Mponslble for construction of foe six-township interceptor, admitted that ground water level is be- Incomplete tabulations on the strike Vote yesterday revealed 450 yes votes to 280 no votes. Unfctitisetbm is responsible for surge instate — PAGE A-12. Junta troops take cofitfo! isf second! largest ■ ,;Lm Angeles ‘digV uncownrtog prehistoric life - PAGE B-2. , While Alexander expresses sympathy for foe residents, he' said there’s not mpeh that can be done while foe dewatering is to process. '. The only so’luUon sUggestpd by foe Waterford Township/Water Department reportedly has been to hook into foe township' water line—which could cost homeowners as much as $900, according (a Mrc Donno’c ndimatp ' m ' tq Mrs. Denne’s estimate. \ B • LONG AND COSTLY M; mm She said it would take about a week B and would co$t the homeowner $575 if ||| paid immediately, or $725 If pato over B ten yean, plus a pldraber’s fee to run a H pipe from the house to the street proper-|§§ ty line...... .- •>. • & Vw; Besides proving an inconvenience for :J residents, Mrs. Denne believes the water X | shortage presents a health problem. She *i also noted that Eagle Lake has gone P down tour feet to the last month. « f DRAMATIC RESCUE -* Trapped 50 feet above foe street, workman Albert fireman Ed Raper Brubach dings to a building contice to Wheeling, W, fa. (left). Atop an aerial ladder, \prubach is lowerec THE PONTIAC, PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1969 for Ex-Bishop Pike JERUSALEM (AP) Troops, policemen and airplanps combed the Judean desert again today for Dr. James Pike, to* officials held out little hope that the former Episcopal bishop of California was still alive. Pike, 56, has been missing since Monday night, after his retted car got stuck about eight miles west of the Dead Sea. His SLyear-old wife left him on a hillside and walked all eight until die reached a road workers’ camp. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Pike told police she and her husband were doing research pn a book and decided to drive through the desert for a few hours to “get the feel of the Judean hills." She said the car got stock in rocks and boulders about 3 p.m. and they were unable to free It despite trying for about two hours. Then the couple set out on foot toward the Dead 'Sea. After two hours of walking, Pike complained of leg pains and told his wife to go on without him. Dinner s on us I In frcvyoull save enough for several dinners by selecting one of our finer sets now* Take this one (we wish you would); Dark Spanish Oak dining room that includes oval table, 4 chairs, and china cabinet for $349. You can'have the hutch,too, for $14% Same -•etfW^iidb^B in French or Italian Awvincia). , ! f A Pontiac Township man was found knifed to death yesterday, in his camper parked in a vacant field a half blotk from the corner effeagley and Wesson on thediy’s south side. Dead is Floyd H. Staudaker, 54, of 3505 Auburn. Police said he died of a single knife wound lathe chest near ids heart. HABVEY FURNITURE NATIONAL WEATHER — ihowers and thundershowers are expected tonight over parts of Washington and Oregon, from the Dakotas through Nebraska and .COMs, and to a belt from the Atlantic Coast inland through the lower lakes area a» the Mississippi yalley. It will be clear and warm through much of the Air Force Plans 50,000-Man Cutback WASHINGTON (AP) - The Air .Force will announce soon a cutr back of about 50,000 officers and men. This will bring the over-all reduction of U.S. armed ' forces past the 150,000 mark as the sendees comply with orders to | Details as to how the cutback ( will be applied .throughout the Air Force still have not been buttoned ■ down, sources said. I The Ah Force’s cost-saving drive I may lead to fewer squadrons and | further base closings. I Hie Pentagon already has dis- closed plans to slash the Army by 34,000 men and the Navy by 72,000 men'and 76 ships. Additional retirements of Navy vessels are expected. Nothing has been sqjd yet about Marine Corps troop cuts.. Pentagon officials said these probably will be relatively light. *,♦ * 4r With obvious reluctance, Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird announced on Aug. 21 thaf the armed services will have to absorb an additional $34>illion spending slash this fiscal year. Blaming -the Democratic-con-trolled Congress, Laird warned From Our News Wires COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. -President Nixon’s construction cutback plan has the nation’s governors worried. But they are stumped by the problem of House Focuses on Toy Safety WASHINGTON (AP) - Making consumer bills its first item of business after summer vacation, the Hojuse turned today from tires and motorcycle helmets to toys. The toys bill would prohibit sale of such modern toys as electric ovens and miniature rockets with protruding fins if the government ruled them "dangerous due to electrical, mechanical or thermal hazards.” ■ a m w w r '*% Known as the “Child Protection Act of im,’1 the bill would add to the rules under which the Department’of Health, Education and Welfare tests toys to determine whether they’re dangerously explosive, f l a m m a b j e ^radioactive, poisonous of rash-causing. The toys bill yas expected to sail through the House this, afternoon pnd go to the Senate as easily as a tires and motorcycle helmets bill which passed 321 to 0 yesterday. RECALL program The bill would extend to tire, manufacturers the program for recalling and. repairing trucks and cars with safety defects and would authorize the secretary of transportation to set safety standards for motorcycle helmets. ,4 y some 300,000 hours. * However, it was understood that none of this would come out of the training pt new pilots- Rather, it will mean that veteran Airl’prce officers will have less ojiporfunity } their flight status for maintaining t and fU^it pay. Birmingham Nixon Cutback Plan Worries Governors how, politically, they can attack an inflation-fighting effort. The governors adjourned their 61st afnnua! conference yesterday with no, discussion of the construction issue in formal session. '★ "h 1t There was plenty of corridor talk, but a threatened Democratic move to put the governors on record in opposition to the cutback never materialized. As originally conceived, the cutback,. expected tobe announced tomorrow, was said to involve an immediate ?5 per cent reduction in new federal construction. NEXT APRIL 1 Federally aided projects, the item of primary interest to the states, would be curtailed by the same percentage next April 1. Vice President Spiro T. Agnew gave the conference a preview, of the plan at a closed session Tuesday. , ★ V, Some Democrats said that mqye appeared designed to stiflemriticisml Republicans were virtoally unapimous in saying they wouldk support |Nixon although they saidthejcbad misgivings about the cutback. £ ‘COULD BE HARMFUL’ Michigan’s Gov. William G, Milliken said Nixon “is to be 'admired for f^s courage and determination. “However,”: be said, “It is apparent already that the impact could be very substantial and could be very harmful to 'j WVOM,NO p Cheyenne I Vo?tel Vli,0B •0w,w msnOT I UTAH COLORADO "*ITS|I)IJ“ AtM2* EX NSW Mexico |Q too 1 Miles Weather Stalls N-Blast in West Admit Copter 'Criminality' or No Release—N. Koreans PANMUNJOM, Korea (AP) - North Korea said today that It will not release the three crewmen of an American helicopter shot down Aug. 17 unless the United States admits they were on X criminal mission. The United States said it would- admit only that the helicopter had entered Communist territory inadvertently in violation of the Korean armistice agreement, and would give assurances that such an incident would not recur. Maj. Gen. Lee Choon Sun, representing North Korea at a meeting of the Military Armistice Commission called to discuss the release of the three Americans, demanded an “unconditional apology” admitting that the helicopter was on a “criminal mission,*’ as well as a written assurance that there will be no more such Incidents in the future. U.S. Marine Maj. Gen. Arthur H. Adams replied: “It is preposterous to , state that we dispatched the unarmed helicopter willfully or with any hostile intention.’’ % GRANT) JUNCTION, Colo. (Jl Unfavorable weather conditions ‘ have caused at least a 24-hour delay in Project Rullsoh, a 40-kiloton underground nuclear blast in western Colorado. Project officials made the decision last night after a weather briefing. Forecasts were for bad weather again' tomorrow and possibly Saturday. * * ■ Weathermen said there was a strong chance of thundershowers over the test site, near the town of Grand Valley. Weather conditions halted the explosion 8,500 feet under the earth’s qrust after extensive legal maneuvers failed to do so.' PLEA; OVERTURNED Justice Thurgood Marshall of the U.S. Supreme Court refused yesterday to overturn lower court decisions that atU necessary precautions had been taken and the explosion could proceed. In Denver, meanwhile, a federal judge denied another injunction request from a conservationist group which contended the boast threatened the safety of Colorado residents and could contaminate ground water and the atmosphere. • v ■ac^ord1in8 —“— 10601 Eagle will be 2:30 p.m. to Waterford Township pc tomorrow at Pursley-Gilbert lirJf”®rs*lmwas • studen Funeral Home, Pontiac with Waterford TownshiP *B8h-burial in Oxford Cemetery. , • Mr McCombs died Tuesday. Doyfon-HUQSO 1 He was employed at the Pepsi ' pontiac0ttliI,g c°‘ warehouse’ Sets Listing Fe Surviving are three ' , daughters, Mrs. Kenneth NEW YORK (AP) — Daj Tidabeck of Florida, Mrs. Hudson Corp., a Minneap Dolphus Flemming of Texas based diversified retailer, and Miss Barbara McCombs of ““—J * mj| g—‘ “ Oxford; one son, Kenneth L. of Davisburg; two sisters, including Mrs. John Elliott of Oxford; three brothers, Floyd 1 and Earl Baker, both of Pon-1 tiac, and Fred Baker of Oxford; 1 Robert B. Neldrett Robert B. Neldrett, 68, of 140 Oakland died this morning. Arrangements are pending at Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Mr. Neldrett was a retired employe of Pontiac Motor Division. - Surviving are a sister, Mrs. Natlie Ingram of Walled Lake, and two brothers, Charles and Joseph, both of Pontiac. Mrs. Bert Parker Mrs. Bert (Irlene) Parker, 70, of 2725 Frembes, Waterford Township, died yesterday, Her body is at Coats Funeral Home. Mrs, Parker was a member of Drayton Plains United Presbyterian Church. Surviving pre her husband; one daughter, Mrs. Elmer Rossman of Goodrich; one son, Arthur of Waterford . Township; three sisters, including Mrs. Frank Durkee of Bloomfield Hills; one brother, Collis Scott of Pontiac; and six grandchildren. Mrs. Stuart K. Baker TROY. — Service for Mrs. Stuart K. (Hilda.C.) Baker, 68, of 3034 Daley will be 1:30 p.m. Friday at Price Funeral Home, with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. Mrs. Baker died Tuesday. Before her retirement she was A teacher at Stiles School, Avon Dayton-Hudson Corp., the nation’s 14th- largest' pan-food retailer, was formed .in June by the Dayton COrp. of Minneapolis and J. L. Hudson Co. of Detroit, both long-time department store operators. Mrs. Norman J. Sinclair WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Service lor Mrs. Norman J. (Charlotte A.) Sinclair, 72, of 2682 Walnut Lake, will be at 3 p.m. Saturday at Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Company, Birmingham, with burial in Glen Eden Cemetery, Livonia. Mrs. Sinclair died yesterday. She was a retired secretary, having been employed with General . Motors Truck and Coach. Administrative Office, 'tyftgrF, Bought TRAVERSE CITY (AP) — Arie D e B r u y n, president of 'njpberlee Hills at Traverse Ciiy, jia8 announced acquisition ofJwWharf in Charlevoix. The Whajrjf te a new. development of 39,am3 Both two-bour courses will offered on Tuesdays and Thursdays at 3:30 and 8 p.m. Registrations will be accepted next “week at the -adult education office at the rear , of Pe Tervino and Davey Hill, there’s still a considerable number of talented players eager to display their skills as they battle for the first prize of $20,000 in a $100,000 jackpot. Atnong the 10 tourney winners this season entered at Shenandoah in Boh Lunn, who captured the Hartford Open Monday by downing Michigan’s Dave Hill in a playoff, scored twice on the ground against the HOT pATTNnc Hawks and had to come from behind fo . • win a 20-12 decision. A couple of lesser-knowns on the tour Dayton defeated the Hawks, 31-13, and - Terry Wilcox and Terry. PUL- served the Colts were the only other team to notice they’ll have to be reckoned witiT score a “ground” TD against tile Benton here as they carded course-record «7s Harbor team. yesterday in the pro-am. All other touchdowns against the * * * Hawks, Have come on long pass plays, Bill Mattson, Shenandoah’s host pro, kick returns and errors resulting from set the earlier mark of 68 a couple of fumbles and interceptions; . * , times and his score will continue to nrownnina nor stprfd stand since lt was recorded FIREBIRDS BOLSTERED course playing at par 72 over 6,900 The Firebirds, fresh from a 33-19 yards, triumph over arch-rival Flint in a rtreTANrR changed penalty-marred game, are expected to DISTANCE changed bolster their running attack with the ad- With the arrival of the tournament, the dition of Jim Little, a scooter who in his course, has been altered somewhat, trial as a runniogback picked up 75 playing now at some 6,900 yards and par yards in three carries against Flint. 70. The return of Chuck Stein to the * * * ’ . secondary will also help the Firebirds For their efforsts Dili and Wilcox c«-against the aerial game of O’Brien or lected $900 apiece. Stewart, TOP TEAM ' | The race in the two divisions has nar- . ____- . ,|,u H rebirds to Find Surprise in St. Joe WATCHFUL CIO CHI — Eying the flight of a drive by Michigan Golf Classic at Shenandoah Country Club. Chj/Chi one of his amateur partners is colorful Chi Chi Rodriguez toured the club in 68 strokes, while he and his partners tamed of Puerto Rico during yesterday's pr6-am preceding1 the in a best-ball 59. / There’s no looking ahead for the Pom tiac Firebirds who remain in a deadlock with Lansing for the Central Division lead of the Midwest Football League. The Firebirds travel to St. Joseph, in the southwest, corner of the state, to meet the Southwest Michigan Hawks Saturday night and it could be a troublesome visit for the F-Birds. The Hawks, representing the Benton Harbor-St. Joe area in the MFL, are in the Lakes Division of the league, and they are ready to throw a surprise weapon against Pontiac ... by the name of Colie O’Brien. IRISH QB ’ O’Brien who quarterbacked behind Terry Hanratty at Notre Dame for three years giving the Irish several key victories is reported to be interested in playing football since he is still on campus at Notre Dame. ^ „ W The Hawks have several former Notre Dame players on the roster including Tom McKinley, an outstanding offensive tackle. . .. Southwest Michigan has scrambler Mickey Stewart, a left handed passer, currently calling signals. • 'A ★ ~ Jim Stauffer, an all-stater from St. Tiger second john.g ig a prime target at split end for goes high for the passing-minded Hawks. L thifSS Running speed is provided by Willie ! Warren and Sam Jones, and defensively ®* the Hawks boast their main strength ran the .game, against my mnning game. The powerful Lackawanna lancers THE PONTIAC PRESS THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1989 Willies Bat Helps Dermy Win No. 22 rowed down to case. ■ Lackawanna broke the. tie in the Lakes Division last week in upending rival Dayton, 12-8, in a game played before nearly 6,000 fans in Buffalo and a defensive battle which saw no scoring in the second half. Lansing, the closest challenger ( to Pontiac in the Central Division, has a tough assignment at Dayton, so the Firebirds need the victory at Southwest Michigan badly if they hope to take the division lead. Dayton then comes to Pontiac next Saturday, Sept. 13 while Lapsing goes to Flint in what should be a victory for the Capitol City squad. The game this jveek will be played in Dickinson Stadium in St. Joe. It will be the girst game on the new turf of the stadium which seats 5,200 fans. 'Fans following the Firebirds should leave the 1-94 Niles’ exit to dirve into St. Joe. v . MIDWEST FOOTBALL LEMUe Wilson, (12-8), is scheduled to start against Jim Phoebus, (12-6). SIX HITTER McLain racked up .ins 22nd victory against six setbacks by pitching si ,*»x-hitter. “I had a g tad fastball early and I had excellent control.^Near the. end of the game my slider picked up,” he said. Kansaf City’s only runs off last year’s 30-game winner came on homers by Joe Foy and Mike Fiore. Bill Freehan •also' homered for Detroit. Horton has been on a rampage, hitting eight home runs in the last seven games. Four of them have come in the last four games in Kansas City. ^ J* # ' /V ' .ir-. . W j . ... '■ It is 369 feet to left field and it tails out COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) — The with the southern conference would be to 421 feet ih left center in Municipal possibility of expanding the Mid presented to the MAC council of Stadium, distances which discourage American Conference was postponed presidents in February. # many right-handed hitters—but not , 5- Wednesday until early December. * * * foot-10,. 205-pound HOrton. 1 (j| ■ .s* • jj|g gjjjy|| gj|||g|g|jjj “If I hit the ball right, it’s going,” Hor^m said. “People talk about parkSr-I don’t Worry about them,” The blasts off Kansas City’s Mike Hedlund were Horton’s 24th and 25th homers of the season but he said, “1 don’t know how many I’ve hit. I don’t pay that much attention. We won the game and that’s the main thing.” Royals Manager Joe Gordon’s comment on Horton’s hitting? “that guy is so strong, he scares yoti.” RED HOT BAT The red-hot Horton hit pis first homer of the game when he came up as the leadoff batter in the second toping. The blast enabled the Tlgers to tie the score at 1-L The Royals took the early lead,on Fiore’s first-toning homer. * Bill, Rreehah was next up and ke followed with a Mast that landed otoF The athletic directors also indicated about Hneet from Hortori*s. ' that the new Tangerine Bowl contract Then in the Sixth, Horton smashed a tremendous drive off the auxiliary scoreboard to left center, scoring Kaiine ahead'of him and giving Detroit a 4-1 lead.- ( Foy came back with a homer in the seventh, tat toe Tiger’s home run lead held up and McLain had his 22nd victory of the year. McLain was never in trouble during the game. While giving up six hits he walked four and struck out six. ? Detroit (*> I Kansas city im •., . iftriiM , ■■torhM. Tr.ah as >00 0 Spring* it* 5*16 , NSHsmrt > m 1i 2 * iUpaJ ? ? ? Kalina rf 3 I 0 0 Flore lb 2111 iSOm-- 4'Mel’gisMF m, taJh Frnftan c ' 411 1 ; MHw *’ * ft’l# ipiirfSb >• 4jl f.-lMMW*'- J«i« KANSAS CITY (AP) — “Willie is my man,”: Detroit pitcher Denny McLain •aid Wednesday night after outfielder WilUe Horton slugged two homers to leading the Tigers to a 4-2 victory over the Kansas City Royals. “He hit a three-run homer for me wheit 1 won my 20th against, the California Angels,”, McLain said, “and he dd again tonight.” The Tigers return home today for a makeup game with Baltimore, Far! Waiting Pistons Plan No Bidding Battle for Bing Athletic directors of the six schools in the league met here and* decided to consider expansion. A recommendation will be made to faculty representatives at a meeting here Dec. 4 and 5 whether to keep the league at six teams, or expand. DETROIT (AP) — Piston ace DaVe Ring has kept his team’s officials waiting to learn whether he is committed to jump to the Washington Capitols fd. the American Basketball Association. /’I understand that he was ill and delayed ids departure,” said" Piston general manager Ed Coil, who was waiting Wednesday for Bing to return to Detroit from Washington. “We’ll just have to wait for him tot another day.” The NBA Pistons learned Tuesday that Bing has agreed to leave the Detroit club tolmt hi* hometown Washington team and, flip ,ABA in the 1971-72 season. NOflDDING ; i Coil mags it Near he*was not about to become involved to an “unreasonable” bidding contest to . persuade the basketball star to remain with the team. He had waited most of Wednesday afternoon tor Bing, before he learned that his top player had not left the capital until late morning; ■ % ' * * * Bing has this season remaining bn his $65,000 contract with the Pistons. Then the Detroit club has « one year option that could keep him through 1970-71. “We can’t get, info an all-out bidding war,” Coil explained, “because we‘d have every player threatening to move over to the other league unless their contracts were re-written. That would be ruinous.. “Anyway, we’U have to wait and see,” be said. “If Bing has signed a contract with them, , then we’ll consult our attorneys.” The league was reduced to six teams this summer when Marshall University in Huntington, W. Va., was ousted for allegedly violating recruiting regulations. OTHER MEMBERS Other members are Ohio University, Miami, Kent State Bowling Green, •Toledo .. and Western Michigan at Kalamazoo, Mich. Example: ' HBmk CATALINA C | V8 Engine j Company Car Whitewall Tires Hydramatic Trans., Power Disc Brake^^^jr Full Decor Croup,. Power Steering, Push Button Radio. SPECIAL! TEMPEST Sport Coupe . Full Decor Group .. ^ Auto Transmission Power Steering ( VB Engine Pushbutton Radio g Whitewall Tires Ex-Wayne State End Is Released by Rams LOS ANGELES (UPI) -r Ron Berger, a defensive end from Wayne- State University, was among five players the * Los Angeles Rams put on waivers Berger was. one* of three • Rams who received his outright release; the others were retained on the taxi squad. Detroit Prep Signs Contract With Phils New Coach Predicted V. BANGOR, Maine (AP) ^ A veteran Boston Celtics basketball player Don Nelsbb predicts that former Celtic Tom-tay Heinsohn will' ta the* next Celtics’ taabh, but that general manner Red Auerbach will wait ;tc See if cunent coach Bill Russell is going to resign. PHILADELPHIA (Ufl) — Jim Esslaq, ait lg-year-old catcher from Detroit, has signed with thie Philadelphia Phillies tor 1^ the ball club announced Wed-oMday. ■■■■ , , . Ewan, a three-letter prop star mom Detroit St. Martin High School, forfeited a footoall athletic scholarship to me University «rf Michigan when he signed tta qdirad as si free agent : Daily Rental Car Hi Eldelfffipmps' U; S. ... MIAMI (B — Prime Minister Fidel Castro , is so proud of his Cuban amateur baseball team's 1-1 viqtory over America last month teat Havana Radio Said the goveriunept to bringing out a commemorative stamp -- complete with toteseorea. Bass Back Wlfh Bills IDS ANGELES (UPI) — pick Bass, the leading A ltvt vme rusher among active players in the National FaOlbtu Leagito will make his exhibition debut with the Los Angeles Rams in a game against the Buffalo Bids. PONTIAC TROY—642-8600 State Baseball Summit TOKYO (0) i* Toru Shoriki, owner of Japan’s professional Yomiuri Giants baseb^ team, teft today for New YiS’k to confer with Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn on U.SUapan basebml ties. oisaa cars u%m) ,/ $ THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4,1969 III If The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by groweru and sold by them In wholesale package lots. • Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Tuesday. Produce Apples, McIntosh, early, bu.......5.25 AdpM. Wealthy.bu. .................. 3.75 Aram. William'* Red, bu...............330 Blueberries,'12-pt. ctn...........V. 3.75 Peach**, Kal _______ ____ ___________ Peaches, Red Haven, % bu.......3.75 Peaches, Rich Haven, bu.,3.75 P»eeim.;Su|i Haven. % bu....... 3.50 Peart, Clara Favorites, bu. * ■* Plums. Burbank, eb bu. VEGETABLES Beans, Green Round, bu. .. Beans, Kentucky Wonder, bi Beans, Roman, bu. ........ ...53.75, i. Wax, b : 3.75 Beets, Toppad. bu...... Beets, dz. belt. ...... Broccoli, dz. bell. ................ .... . Cabbage, Curly, bu. ...............2.50 Cabbage, Red, bu. ....... Cabbage, sprouts, bu. ... Cabbage, Standard Variety, Carrots, dz. bCV ...... Carrots, Cello Pak. 2-dz. . Stock Market Slide Continues NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market slid lower moderate trading early today as it continued the downtrend of its previous session. The Dow Jones industrial average at 10:30 a.m. was off 3.63 at Declines led advances by about 100 Among higher priced stocks, Great Western Financial opened on a block of 19,700 shores At 26, off m. Gulf States Utilities opened bn a block of 15,000 shards at 22, up %. * w ★’ Opening prices included: Spartans Industries, Up Vi at 23Vi on 32,000, shares; Eastern Airlines, off V4‘at 17V4 on 31,900 shares; Pan American World Airways, off Mi at 16 on 20,000 IBM was off 1 at 339%: Control i shares; American Telephone Data, off % at 146%; Polaroid,jTelegraph,. off % at 52%* on off % at 124%; and Du Pont, off 17,700 shares; and Atlantic 1% at 124. I Richfield, up % at 113%. The market .closed lower Wednesday, although some late selective buying helped it trim some of its earlier losses. The DoW Jones industrial average was ioff 4.75 at 1:30 p ip. but then, turned to close off 2.11 at 835.67. The Associated Press 60-stock average closed off 1.3 at 13.1 Trading time at the New York Stock Exchange was cut by more than half an hour because of a power failure: Prices were mixed on the American Stock The New York Stock Exchange Collins' Friend Is Arraigned YPSILANTI (UP!) — Andrew J. Manuel, who authorities feel could :be a key figure in their murder cUse against John Norman Collins, has been bound over to Washtenaw County Circuit Court. Manuel, 25, has been charged with larceny by conversion for failure- to feturn a trailer he -end Collins, 32, rented and took to California. ggj|i ■* ★ Witnesses testified during Manuel’s heating that Collins, a senior at Eastern Michigan University, forged a check and " ‘se identification to rent the trailer. NSW YORK (AP) - Corn, Sweat, 5-dz. bag .......... Cucumbers, Otll -Slz*. vs bu. Cucumber*. Sltcers, bu. .......... Dill, dz. W ■■.................... Eggplant, bu. .................... Eggplant, Long Type, pk. bikt. .. Gourds, PE Bskt. ................ Kohlrabi, rn. beh...... "-l! A*?- 5 % Onions, Gtgen, dz.____I Onions, Dry, 50-lb. bag Onions, Plotting, lb. .. Parsley, Curly, dz. ben ParSMy,'Root, dz. bch. Pass, Blackaye, bu. ... Peas, Glean, Dll....... Peppers, Cayenne, pk. bikt. ........ 2.5 Peepers. Pimento) Pk.' Bskt. ..; u Summer, '+ bu) . . . . . . . _ ___J, 14-lb. bskt. .......... 1 Tomatoes, Vi bu. ........ ....... Turnips, dz. bch. ............... Turnips, Topper, bu......... ... ' lettucb and greens Escarole, Bleached, bi Am TAT 2.41 AMK Cp .30 AMP (he ,48 Ampax Corp «n a Armcost 1.60 Armour. 1.50 ArmstCk .r Lettuce, Head, t Lettuce, Head, d; Lettuce, Romalne Mustard, bu.T... Sorrel, bu. ..... Poultry and Eggs DETROIT tot*) ii. (USDA)—Price B*T tW* L #»* Poultry: H DETROIT EGGS DMROIT (AP> — (USDA)-Eog prices pewWwd- OB*Mw* 139.8 2934 .....m3 188.0 iSi-A pel ......«M HM mi 299.11 Sale of Own Stock J0& JOHN GtWNlFF - ;• 'AR Businesa Apalyii ... NEW. YOWC -. Sometime soon, perhaps by the end of the year, WaU Street may be practicing what ,;IL " preaches, and a lot of inveatoni d brokers win, be saying! it’W about timer. I best the stated! ment appear! too! broad in its meant, approval to borrow from otttsidojk In ; the meantime, the exchange continued fo study the idea of permitting the puljlic to not only lend money to the broker^ but to participate in their ownership as well, and ownership comes through the purchase of stock, \ SIMMERED FOR MONTHS The issue simmered for months, and then Jhe firm of Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette, which does considerable business with mutual funds and other institutions, turned up the Collins is Slated for raignment tomorrow. He charged with killing Karen Beinemsn, an EMU freshman whose beaten, and stripped body was found on the outskirts of nearby Ann Arbor July 26. ‘KEY’ FIGURE Manuel has been called a “key” a figure in police investigation of seven brutal sex slayings in the Ann Arbor-Ypsilanti area in more than two years. However, the bury factory worker hps not been charged in connection with any of the murders. Five witnesses at yesterday’s pretrial hearing gave testimony which linked Manuel to the trailer he and Collins took to the West Cobit. -* * * Carol Blackmer and Virgil Hendricks,' both of Hendricks Trailer Sales here, identified Manuel as the person who rente! a Waller June 21. Miss Blackmer identified Collins as the person who showed her a driver’s license with the name James Skotack on it when he. signed for the trailer. Collins wrote an $80 check, she said, and signed Skotack’s name to it. ing’is quickly CUNNIFF offered: waft Street brokerage Sm-TsSJM _________ l present detailed proposals foH making public ownership possit ble. After that a maze of com} plications must be cleared. ,) FJirst, the putter must be disj cussed with the Securities and Exchange Commission, which hot only regulates the securities business but could destroy the entire plan should it not meet its criteria. j STRICT CONTROLS The SEC is going to be espeir daily Interested in provisions for assuring that the exchange and the SEC retain their regulatory controls. It is expected tha) strict limitations will be madfe Catching most of the ex-Ion who can and cannot own sell their shares to investors. ./ ★.★ * Brokers always have made their money by investing ity corporations or in advising others to do so. But never have they permitted anyone but verji close associates to dure in a piece of their own action. That was forbidden. The situation now has come to a head. Brokers need money badly to continue with expansion plans, among other tilings, and the only way to get that money is to tap the reservoirs of funds owned by millions of in-| vestors. SOME OF, PROBLEMS These are some of the prob-| lems that led to stock exchange] approval of the concept: • Brokers never have had a icure, permanent capital base. The funds they us come from] owner-members of the firm,'i And when one of these departs LANSING (AP) — The House he sometimes takes the money of Representatives - preparing annoupced on May 22 that it planned to “go public” in violation of exchange rules. But at the same time it suggested rules changes to the exchange board. DL&J made clear that it wished to continue as a member of the NYSE. And the exchange mode clear that R did not wish to lose the young, aggressive house. DL&J. held off public offering. The exchange speeded its studies. ■ I *ir. >:+ . Later this month a special exchange committee plans to After that the issues must be submitted to member firms of the NYSE. There are 1,366 of. them and many are old-line firms which don’t completely, approve of evbry newfangled idea, this one included.' IK. ★ * A majority of these members' must vote for a quorum to be reached. And then a majority of the quorum must be for the issue before it can go forward. If could be cleared-within a few weeks. It could take months. Ir could fail.' State Supreme Court Resists Eviction Plan : with him. ]to take over the State Supreme # The growth of investor in-jCourt chambers for office space stitutions, such as mutual funds, - may have a battle on its means multimillion-dollar ders. These demand great sums of capital. It is all but impossible to. handle such orders effectively without a large capital!Wednesday. . ftseai “We’re not going to hold court on a street comer,” Chief Justice Thomas Brennan vowed base. • The heed to modernize has required heavy expenditures *of existing capital, especially to purchase electronic computers and to modernize operational, or-back room, procedures. ★ . 4t * The need far capital was recognized (years ago, and late in 1967 the New Yoric,Stock Exchange endorsed the Idea of brokerage houses selling their debt securities to the public. This “They wanted us to go away and work in our kitchens,” ha said. “But the-court is going to sit. where it site until somebody satisfies us with adequate quarters.” . , Brennan commented on statements earlier in the week by House Speaker William A. Ryan, D-Detrott, that bids were about to be let for renovations in the high court’s office space and chambers in the Capitol. Mutual Stock Quotations INVESTING COMPANIES ^.Niw.TPhK (AP) , —The following quotations. sUMtfM W jt the National Association et Securities ' could have bran sold (bid) er bougftt (asked) Wednsdy. , Bid Ask ‘ Aberdn 2.38 4.8#' Adyisrs 7i4B 8.17 Aftllletd 8.07 8.72 . AfuM . 10.4010.40 - Alpha Fd 1U712.35 ’ juGSd1 S.JS *.!0 Am 3.to 3.55 > , Am Dvln 10.4811.44 f ARk Nd 9.92 Am Orth 8.78 7.35 ARI flu, < iM 0.02 -Afh MS Kflnjo AmN Gilt 3.18 3.45 Mn P«C 741 O Anchor Grou . ■ ju MM 12.3414.07 Mlf . Or *0.72 . Fd in* 9 98IM2, • Fid Fund 141 tSf ‘ Inc Bund luiiiN Inc FdB 7.20 7.09 lodamd 10.1511.09 SaSiltHId 13.5714.03 inMtry at 4.81 InsBk Stk 6.54 7.15 Inv CoA 1551 )450-Inv GuM fin 051 Inv lifllc lift 13.72 . : Invas Bos 12.22135* lnmGr3T5.4i .... wi Net Secur Ser: Incom 5+9 8.00 stock iu'fa Nat west Aft 6.76 Nal Grlh 9.9710.04 Neuwth 24.05 24.05 Now Eng 'fJOlpO , Now MBS Ij51.14.77 NY Vent 16.801O.39 N«Wt0n 15.2816.08 NdrMM ‘ s 18.2516.25 i'-SM 9.1* Mm '".KSI 1.40 lop Fd -IWliJS lit Fd . .4,781857 ri* % pa.mut• . unovaN ■ 15.1118.5* pBanm ■ #.3o io.i* «T<„ fS ixp Mho st n.w 10.79 Plonodr 12.M1AI4 Plan inv unavail Prlco 'Funds: !'■ i Provdnt 45415# Vista 10.8* t{55 Voyag 8.79 f JR Rap Tech 5.01 -4+f Am lDd11.)012.!J Tntprse 0+0 tW9 Edulty 9.821051 -*T 17.8419.55 Evertl In 14.4315.77 lyplWr ' 2358 24.77 Felrfd 10.fi 1250 Farm Bu II.UIIJm Fed Grth lS.n 15.03 Ftd Cop 11.4512.73 News in Brief Frank Pitcher of M Cottage told city police last night someone broke into the basement of his hone and stole assorted items valued at $275. Reward yourself at Charlie BTOwn’s. The fabulous “Brandywine Four,” direct from Salt Lake City. Thurs., Fri. and Sat-Sat, nights, 675 W. Kennett, Oakland at' Telegraph. Phone $3^7111. -Adv. 0. D. 6.' Rummage: Friday, Sept. 5. CAT Building, 5640 Williams Lake Rd. 9 a.m.-l p.m. —Adv. Ryan said the contract Tor re> structuring the quarters for House office and conference room facilities likely would Bn to a Lansing Arm, Christman Construction Co.* which had proposed a Feb. 28 completion, Ryan noted that the high court had agreed to move into fl new seven-story office building be-* hind the State Capitol to make roqm fpr the House offices, but that space was not yet ready for court occupancy. t' - ft ‘ 4 He said “temporary quarters” would have to be found for the Justices. ’ .. ‘As far «I’m concerned, the move to the office building was the only one we agreed to make,” Brennan said. THEY’RE NOT READY' “Those "quarters not being ready, we’re not prepared to move," Brennan said the justices, meeting in Lansing Wednesday, “discussed the matter” and "we’ve not decided to go anywhere.” Asked if the high court would stay in- the Cgpitoi, Brennan replied: “We did not decide to do otherwise. Nobody voted to move. Move Where: We’re not going to Just get out of our offices.” He added that he had been told the quarters in the seven-story office building were “no closer to being ready than they werp last May.’’ • By ROGER E. SPEAR — In times of 9 bear market, there’s talk about Selling abort. I’d Bke information 1 this method. - HJB. A — When the market is weak you sell a stock you don’t own hoping to feuy it later at a lower price. The possible difference between selling buying creates your profit. Short, .gdlijng. requires a margin accoiiot ,and, ^.margin call may come IT your-stock-rises when yifo’ro. rapeoting it to fall. Since evert seller' requfres a buyer, your -broker must deliver to their, buyer the slum you sell. HO borrows them from bis Q - Coming to the United States 26 years ago at age 26 I |' t he newspapers and became interested in stocks. I work for Uniroyal so I bought some of Its Stock; also Ford; General Telephone; Mobil; Pan American Airways; Sears, Roebuck. What shall I do with Pm Am? — A.S. A — You deserve praise fc£ your accomplishments. I wish there were space for your entiTO letter. < ' ' ^$5^ * w ' W : In your situation I believe pan Am should be switched to a speculative growth stock with Street account ’— or’ elsewhere fewer complications affecting it: — and Inter rbttuha. them L jeromMeMl American Air and later when, you; have-bought them terest expense ySr may h0 ad a premium on the shares; and if these pay you must! reimburse ybttr broker for this. ■ Hazards in 'ihbrt selling Timing and mgrket fluctuations — tend to cause greater mental strain..thhft -trading' long, Ybu better leave short selling to me ............... j I some roanagerii of the ecyitedjcated hedge* funds have ^iaiw''>u-mittod to frustration in their flttempte to profit from short selling. The theory sounds ehpple^ yet the #rac&4e, esp be dii^rditeandaibfiy. American Ait in pollution-control and| cdVm’jYonr Short position, Befideo broker’s .fees apd pfe vflKf fW b *«? a'jMy • ' . Lie. ... . « . Smnnrtanf onmnmanf important equipment manufacturer and Livingston Oil, meK uoned here earlier, is miwfatf While yon’re Aott, ^ATV operates. Hold your ottiier stocks lot*, further capitaligWMp , 10 (Copyright 1969) | Treasury Position 5,785574,102.48 8+27581+33.71 34,99.908,270.4F gj! x5«5*9556,508.37 355,220,078590511