rh»- W»afh0r I. WMIMr atiruu PerKlil CoUer, Flnrriei (Datallt M PHt 1) THE PONTIAC PRESS o.iHpm6 Edition VOL. 124 NO. 89 ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. THURSDAY, MARCH 24, 1966—84 PAGES PmHk Prau PM* SWEEPSTAKES SMILE8-Mr. and Mrs. James Campion, 2609 Warner, West Bloomfield Township, are $140,000 richer today. They held a winning Irish Sweepstakes ticket In yesterday’s Lincoln Handicap at Doncaster, England. Salary Budget for County Is OK'd by Unit Requested Increase $1.3 Million Over Last Year's Figure Drifts Block Roads Area Man Wins in Sweepstakes A tentative 1967 salaries budget of $8,907,-282 for Oakland County Employes, calling for an increase of 92 employes and a cost hike of $1,374,-000, was approved today by the salaries committee of the County Board of Supervisorsi The salaries committee also pproved a revised vacation schedule, increasing vacation time for e m p 10 y e s with five years 6r more of service. County department heads had request^ a total of 151 new employes, but this was trimmed to 92 on the recommendation of the County Board of Auditors. Cost of the new positions is estimated at $528,117. A $600,000 expenditure was included in the tentative budget for salary increases to present employes. , , ,, , • 1 ft/vnn Also included was $125,580 for What would you da with $140,000? the county’s share of hospital- “Buy a sailboat,” says Mrs. James Campion, ization insurance premiums for "Pay off the mortgage,” says her husband. leniployes. Of course the Campions, of 2609 Warner. West Bloomfield Township, will have to give $70,380 of their Irish Sweepstakes winnings to Uncle Sam, but they’ll still have enough left to buy a good-sized ------------------------sailboat and pay off their tentative budget prepared by the salaries committee. iaHSentener Policy Altered 'Inadequate Facilities' Cited by City Judge IVb-year-old house. Fortune smiled on the Campions ”7estaday“whenrT~ horse ; named Riot Act won the annual race at Doncaster, England. Scvea Detroit area residents held idnuiag tickets on the race, but only three will share firsHdace money of $149,H9 Citing alleged “inadequate facilities” at the Oakland County Jail, Municipal Judge Cecil B. McCallum today announced he will no longer sentence certain offenders to terms at the jail, ★ ★ * McCallum also revealed he had amended the jail sentences of ten men to periods of probation because of conditions at the jail. “I don’t want to send anybody in there if they’re going to be abused and as it stands I have no way of knowing if they will be,” he said. The suspended sentences included one for soliciting, one for unlawfuUy driving away an au-tomobUc, two for petty larceny, one for driving under the influence of liquor, and five others. The judge’s action follows by one week conclusion of preliminary examination in Municipal Court of a 35-year-old inmate before the final 1911 budget was approved last fall. To meet anticipate 1967 expenditures the county will require an allocation of 5.98 mills to meet minimum requirements when the county allocation board splits the IS mills in Mayj^ The county’s present allocation is 5.30 mills. “I really feel no different than did before I won,” Campion said. Last week he got word by telegram that his horse had been drawn, netting him $3,677. LISTENED TO RACE Yesterday he listened to the race on the radio with fellow workers at Dickson Tool and Gauge Co., Detroit. “Everyone was congratulating me,” he said, “but I toU them I haven’t seen the money yet.” His wife had a different reaction. She said she has “never been so thrilled in my life.” Her dream is to buy a sailboat to use on the lake in front of their home. ‘We have a rowboat,” ^e said, “but everyone has a sailboat and I want one too.” Mrs. Campion first heard the news from her father who called her after the race was on charges of sodomy. The prisoner, James Sykes, (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) r In Toda/s Press School Vote Rochester educator backs pool, auditorium. — PAGE A-4. School Affairs Contracts awarded for building work. — PAGE B-14. Sanitary Sewers System urged by Oakland County officials. — PAGE D-t. Area News ........... A-4 Astrology D-19 Bridge ............. D-19 Crossword Puzzle F-11 Comics D-10 Editorials A-6 Food Section D-3-D-4 Lenten Series ..... A-ll MarkeU F4 Obituaries ......... F-4 Sports ........ ■ C-1—O# “My family could have the money spent before the tickets are out for the next race,” he said. Living at home with the Campions are four children, Patricia Matteson, 21, Michael Matteson, 16, David Matteson, 10 and Elizabeth Campion, 5. . F-2 TV-Radio Programs F-U Wibon, Earf F-11 Women’s Pages B-2-B-7 Campion says he’ll probably pay off the mortgage on his home but beyond that he “just wants to hold on to it long enough to make some plans.” This number, however, was trimmed to only 15 by the The proposed salaries budget allows 15 new health department employes of 43 requested. It specifies nine additional < ployes for the Sheriff’s Department and six for the prosecutor’s office. These departmental requests were 12 and nine respectively. VACATION DAYS Committee members suggested 12V5 vacation days for employes with five to 10 years service. Presently employes receive two weeks vacation until they have 10 years service. Employes with from 10 to IS years would get three weeks vacation, those with 15 to 20 years 17^ days, and those with 20 years, 20 days. Storm Closes Schools; Gars Abandoned Blizzard Blamed for 28 Deaths. In Plains, North Central States FACT AND FANCY—Strong winds with gusts up to 45 miles an hour caused some problems in downtown Pontiac yesterday. Cleaning up debris after a large window was smashed at Waite’s department store are Allen Travis, display manager, 37 S. Shirley, and William Lawson, 833 r«ntl«c Prtu PlwtM hv Uwart a. N Dunreath, Walled Lake. Swept off his feet (with the help of acrobatics) Allen Zajic, 3257 Wendover, Birmingham, exaggerates conditions faced by pedestrians. April Vote Due on College Unit Osteopathic Bill Faces Delay LANSING Uf> — Supporters (rf committee to allow time for a bill to establish a state osteo-patMc college authority learned today they’ll, have tp wait until April before the measure is passed by the House State Affairs Committee. study. The bill failed by one vote yesterday to clear the committee and — although backers claim to havq that vote lined up — acting committee Chairman Vincent Petitpren says they’ll have to wait until after the April 1 deadline for reporting out bills in the house of origin. The measure, which would establish a 19-member authority to construct, operate and maintain an osteofuithic college, was passed by the Senate last year. It* was held up in the House Despite bbjectiong that thb bin would conunit the state to appr<^riate as yet mined amounts of money in future years, and that it left many questions unanswered, the biU received six committee votes. 7 VOTES NEEDED Three committee memberd voted against it, two abstained and two were absent—Including DeLorean Chairman of Scout Fund Drive Old Man Winter Pays Return Visit Old Man Winter was suppo^ to have left Sunday night, ' here he is, huffing and puffing and blowing in snow flurries with a vengeance. But don’t give up on spring. The next few days will be cold with snow flurries and highs of 33 to 40, but warmer temperatures are on the way. , Today’s winds southwesterly at 15 to 35 miles per hour w4U diminish slowly tmil|pit The Clinton Valley Council, Boy Scouts of America, has named John Z. DeLorean, a General Motors Corp. vice president and general manager of Pontiac Motor Division, general chairman of its $550,000 Lost Lake Reservation Development Fund drive. Arthur J. Brooks, president of the council, made the announcement today. In accepting the top post in the campaign, DeLorean pointed out that support must come from “everyone who is interested in the future of our community.” For the first time in the 57-year history of the Clinton Valley Council, the public is being asked to support a major fund drive. The $550,000 goal is to purchase and develop 2,284 acres of land 15 miles west of Clare. A freezing 28 was the low in downtown Pontiac at 8 a.m. today. The mercury registered 32 at p.m. ailing Chairman John Fitzpatrick, D-Detn^t. It needs seven votes , to get out of the 13-member committee. Opposing the bill were Reps. Thomas White, D-Detroit; Albert Kramer, DOak Park, and Thomas Sharpe, R-Howell. White said he was concerned as to whether the legislature would be approving “a quality school, and quality schools cost money, or one that is under-financ^.” Poll of Doctors Boosts Hod^ May Be Indication of Future Success Osteopaths have pledged $8 million toward its construction and say they could get federal funds if the school is backed by the state. Prospects for eventual state support of Pontiac’s projected osteopathic college a p p e a r as fresh as recent spring breezes. An air of doubt this winter clouded hopes of state support, but results of a statewide poll of medical doctors and osteopaths indicate possible favorable action on pending legislation. The statewide poll would appear to preclude any immediate chance of a merger of die The North Oakland County Home and Sport Saiow starts p.m., tomorrow at the Cmnmu-nity Aettvities, Inc., building, 5640 WilUams Lake, Waterford show can be found in a special Wyoming had two deaths each, tab section in today’s Pontiac j Press. ‘POSITIVE DATA* “There is a total absence of positive data on this question, Kramer said. “The answers apparently are unavailable to anyone.” “Where are they going to get, or train, the other people a school needs — people like Sharpe asked. Proponents argued that the state already supports other health sciences — such as medicine and dentistry—and that citizens who prefer osteopaths have as much Tight as those who prefer MDs to expect the state to help produce them. State suppiMl also could help relieve the growing shortage of doctors, they a " The Big Show By the Associated Press Winter roared back into « the western’Upper Peninsula yesterday, piling up four-foot snowdrifts and closing schools. The storm, part of the blizzard that whipped through the upper Midwest the past two days, deposited 11 inches (rf snow at Houghton and closed sdiools and {businesses in Marquette, Alger, I Baraga and Iron counties. Drifts 5 feet deep blocked streets in Isbpeming on the Keweenaw Peninsula. Scores of autos were reported abandoned on U.P. roads. K. I. Sawyer Air Force Base was closed to all nbnessential aircraft. Marquette qirport reported 22 inches of snow on the 3*Day Event Features ^ Home, Sport Displays Full details on the three-day The U.S. Weather Bureau said that Although the bifUnt of ^ storm has passed, snow flurries would continue throughout most of Michigan today. PLAINS STATES The iK»rth central and Plains states were buried today under nuuwive snows. Sdiools and roads were closed and at least 28 persons were dead. Nebrqska counted 17 dead from the early spring sitrm. Minnesota and Iowa each had three dtad. South Dakota and The Waterford Jaycees, sponsors of the event, The storm hurled a one-two punch of sleet and snow at most of the area. The ice ri|^)ed down anticipate 19,80l persons will ipo^er lines a^ powerful vdnds attend what they caU the big- , „ o i i, gest show in Northern Oak- 1 (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) land Comity. | ---------------- Saturday and Sunday opening time is noon. It closes 11 p.m. all three days. Proceeds will be used to fi-. ance two $800 scholarships given hi^ school seniors, q)e^ conununity projects and youth sports projects, including Junior Olympics, golf, tennis and bowling. Viet War Will Bring Inflation—Socialist PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) Norman Thomas, six-time Socialist party candidate for president, says the war in Viet Namj came a doctor for racehorses will lead to a severe Inflation. He said at Providence College that a great struggle already exists between the military and civilian industry for supplies of certain metals. Im-PRESS-ive There are impressive bargains in the advertising columns (rf The Pontiac Press — but the biggest bargain of all Is the paper itself. A thin dime buys an im-^ pressive array of biformation and entertainment, all packaged to please onr area readers. Tomorrow don’t miss: • Photo feature on a Milford Township factory where “heads” roll. a How an Austrian girl be- on a farm near Oxford. • Women’s auxiliary groups aid area medical facilities. • Area eager named to AP All-State basketball team. Amalgamation was the ke question raised by the House State Affairs Committee in con-1 sidering a bill to create a 10-member osteopathic college authority. 'Seeing Saucers Just Sign ot Spring' “Scoating prepares the boy of today for the responsibilities he must accept at a man,” aald DeLorean. Wholehearted community efforts throughout this area will enable our scout leaders to be ready to give every boy who is noyr a Scout, and those who wish tp join, the chance to be-. long to the gang which believes In ‘juvenile deemicy’ rather than jttvenUe delinquency,” Dcl^e-an concluded. JOHN Z. DELOREAN The college is slated for a 164-acre site at Auburn and Opdyke. EVENTUAL SUPPORT An appropriation to provide operating funds for the projected college was deleted from the bill. However, backers anticipate creation of the authority would eventually lead to state support. Dr. Benjamin F. Dickinson, Pontiac surgeon and president of the Michigan Association of Osteopathic Physicians and Snrgeons, was pleased with results of the poll. “I’m immensely pleased with the results,” he said. “It proves ofHcjiaUy that the House of Delegates does speak for grassroots physicians as we’ve said.” On the merger question, ostoo-(Continued on Page 2, Col. S) By BOB CONSIDINE CHICAGO Didn’t have to be told that spring is here. The flying saucers have appeared. In today’s age they are as much a harbinger of the vernal equinox as the crocus and shafts of new love. The latest visitor from outer space “landed in a swamp” near Ann Arbor Sunday night and successfully eluded the efforts of at least 40 persons, including a dozen police, to get to know it better. It appears that it was convoyed to earth by four sister UFOs (Unidentified Flying Objects) which skeddadled back to the cos-mcis once it had settied down on what one ' witness declared was a “bed of fog.” A farmer mid his son told police they approached^to nHthin 500 feet of the object (they happened to have a very long tape measure with them), obsii^rved its blinking lights, noted it was “pitted like corql rock.” about the length of a car shaped like a football. ' “Look at that horrible thing!” the son said rndely. Whereupon (he visitor CONSIDINE One can’t blame it after such A reception. ^ UFOs seem to have that one great thi^ in conunon, complete sensitivity. ThejKtii^ appear just before earthlings can say “welcome,” or “where you from, Mac?,” take a picture, grab a sample, or snatch one of the crew—generally described as small and green-colored. ^ Watch for other sightings. HALLUCINATIONS ‘UFO addicts, while they can never pre-»£nt anything except a rdmantic {account of their hallucinations, fall back solidly on the fact that the U.S. Air Farce does indeed maintain aOTall but active division dedi- CContinued on Page 2, Cbl. 3) 4^- 4'^ A—* THE PONJIAC PRESS, 'fHURSDAV, MARCH M, 1968 A^re UFQs Said Seen Over State Former Village President Dies Funeral Saturday for Orchard Lake Man Former Orchard Lake Village President Fred J. Walls died yesterday after a brief illness. He was 72. Born in Orchard Lake, he served as president of the village, now a city, from 1954 through 1964. He lived at 5669 l^ore. Funeral service will be conducted at 1:91 p.m. Saturday at the C. J. GoAardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor. Burial will be in Roseland Park Cemetery, Berkley. Commerce Lodge No. 121, F&AM, of which he was a member, will conduct memorial services at 8 p.m. tomorrow. . An engineering graduate of the University of Michigan, Walls retired as manager of International Nickel Co. of Detroit. NUMEROUS SOCIETIES ' He was national president of the American FoundiTmen’a Association Sod helon|Bd to numerous prbfessipnal engineering sobieties. Ho wiii alse past president of the West Grand Boulevard Kiwanis. His MaMnic affiliations fai-clud^ Moslem Temple and Pontiac Commandery No. 2, • Knights Templar. Surviving are his wife, Elsie; one son, Frederick J., and a daughter, Mrs. Donald L. Stone, both of Orchard Lake; six Kandchildren; a sister, Mrs. H. Smith of Pontiac; and one brother. The family requests contributions be made to the U. of M. Medical School. HILLSDALE (AP)-Additjon-al reports of mysterious flying objects over Hillsdale were being investigated today—a continuation of week-long stories of strange objects in the night skies. Wednesday’s reports came from two local residents who said the objects, one red and orange, the other blue and green, moved across Ihe sky at high speeds. Mrs. Larry Wolff, Mr. and Mrs. Angelo LoPresto and 12-year-old Susan Merrill said the objects appeared between 9 and 9:30 hovered momentarily before the lights went out. Elsewhere, Shelby TownsMp police have receiv^ three reports giving varying descriptions of unidentifed flying objects in the Ryan and Auburn roads area. The three reports described le objects as “the size of compact car with a light on top,’’ “fairly large with a blue li^t in front, a white light in back and a spotlight shining on the ground," and one simply all lit up.” Meanwhile, William Van Horn, Hillsdale County civil defense director, report^ the discovery of the remains of several flares near Hillsdale College. The use of flares to perpetrate hoax was discovered in West-port, Conn., Wednesday by police Captain Louis Rbsenau. He said his department believes five persons purchased weather balloons, inflated them with gas and attached railroad flares. “This sort of thing will not be tolerated,” Van Horn sam, adding there would be arrests if the prank was repeated. Spring Brings Odd Things (Continued Fnnn Page One) cated to tracking down reports of such sightings, however preposterous. In their minds, or the minds of sOme of them at least, this proves a great conspiracy on the part of the Air Force to conceal from the American public the tremendous news that we are not alone in this oniverse and are repeatedly being visited from beyond by intelligent creatures capable of spanning millions of miles of emptiness and entering the earth’s atmosphere without being consumed by friction. The Air Force compounds the charge, in their estimation, by rofusing to announce how many peopie it has aissigned to huch detective work, what the budget .is and other details.. Air Force findings tend to depress UFO buffs but never truly discourage them. p * ★ Some yrays ago a man gave the Air Force a vivid description of a flying object about the size of a DOS’s fuselage, described its windows and general contours and swore it had landed along a highway on the east coast of Florida. He showed reporters and oUi- This is not to say that every-ie Is automatically a liar and a- faker who feels duty-bound to report that he has seen something in the sky or on the ground whic|t his intelligence tells him should not be there. Piggins Indicts 6 More Today At Dayton, Ohio, the Air iPorce said today it hopes to come up with an explanation within the next 24 hours for the unldantified flying objects si|^ ed in Mf theastera Michigan. Maj. Hector (Quintanilla, Wright^ Patterson Base, project officer in charge of the Unidentified Flying Objects Office, said the investigation of the Michigan sightings is beginning to shape up hope to have a reasonable explanation sometime Wednesday.” Dan L. Martin, suspended head of the Wayne County Sher-riff’s road patrol. Charles Gillette, Louis Le-Kar, John Moon, Jackie Watson, described as meiabers of United Auto Workers Local 182, and Ben Ratkos, listed as the former Crash Ignites Fire VERONA, Italy (AP) - Six persons burned to death and 11 were injured today when flames from a gasoline tank truck spread through the wreckage of 10-car highway smashup. Snowstorm Hits in U.P. (Continued From Page One) DETROIT (AP) - Circuit Judge Edward S. Piggins’ one-man grand jury today returned six more indictments charging conspiracy to obstruct justice. Named in the new indictments stacked the snow into impassable drifts. TRAVEL HALTED IVavel was virtually halted over the area. Four men were found dead In a car stalled just east of Howells in northeastern Nebraska yesterday. Police said they had suffocated. A man driving a snowplow found two brothers dead in a stalled truck near Greeley, Neb. Minneapolis-St. Paul, part of the area which escaped the Dakotas-Montana blizzard three weeks ago, was in the eye (rf this week’s storm. 14 INCHES of snow/with winds whipping drifts to 4 feet. Much of the Twin Cities hostaiess was paralyzed yesterday. Of the more than one million persons in the two cities, there are about 700,000 workers and most were unable to get to their jobs, according to an unofficial survey of some employers. Named as a coconspirator but not a defendant was Paul Pac-iorek, a suspended sergeant in the Wayne County road patrol. Judge Piggins said today’s indictments followed his probe ef alleged traffic ticket fixing involving the Wayne County road patrol. ★ ★ The indictments were handed own a day after Judge Piggins indicted Wayne (bounty Sheriff Peter Buback and his top aide. Undersheriff James Bommarito on charges of willful neglect of duty. In the latest indictments. Pig-gins charged the*^ defendants conspired to obstruct justice, and “to impede and interfere with the fair and impartial administration, determination and disposition of certain motor vehicle violations and offenses; and did endeavor to influence and impede the due administration of justice.” Courts, schools and business places were closed and an estimated $l-million business was loss of the day. AIRPORT CLOSED lines and taxicabs were unable to operate until late last night and the Minneap6lis-St. Paul Airport was closed from 3:30 a.m. to 10:30 p.m. Norfolk in northeastern Nebraska had 18 inches of snow on top of a Mnch layer of slosh and ice. Many areas of the town of 15J88 were without electricity for more than a day. Downed power lines also cut electricity in dozens of smaller Nebraska communities. Life 'Saved' 152 Times, but Death Is the Victor DALLAS (UPI) - Mrs. Lo-rene Hawks, who “died” 152 times since last Saturday, only to be shocked back to life, fi-’nally succumbed today. The 51-year-old widow, who suffered a heart attack last weekend, had been repeatedly “shocked back to life” by impulses from a battery of machines known collectively to doctors as “The Monster.” ers the scorched grass it had rested on momentarily before it had taken off. A few days later he announced he was bnilding a roadside diner that would be an exact replica, and a few days after that confessed it was ail a gag. A boy, who produced snapshots of a blurred, round object flying at a 45Hlegree angle against an empty sky, admitted under questioning that it was a lid off the family garbage pail which he had flung into the air and photographed in flight. LOTS OF THINGS He Qj^ay be told later by the Air .Force that what he saw was a meteorite, or fireball, a weather balloon or an ordinary jet or plane reflecting the fading sun’s light, flying trash or lots of other things that can become airborne and glow. He may or may not be reassured. UFO clubs have some fairly responsible members. Jackie Gleason, for ex-ample, is thoroughly Convinced that we arC under regular scrutiny from outer Like other UFO buffs, he cannot explain why these nice people don’t debark and stay a while. The strangest correction probably ever sent out on the wires of old INS concerned a flying saucer and its imnates. INS carried a farmer’s account of the landing in his pasture of an extraterrestrial vehicle swarming with 14-inch tall green men. , He had second thoughts short time after issui story to INS and estimat ughts a lim thjs atod thb ches. INS dutifully put out a correction. Osteopaths' Hopes Up After Poll (Continued From Page One) pathic physicians vo^ed 1,338 to 195 against, While MDs voted 5,-520 to 1,234 in favor of amalgamation. MADE aAIM Dr. Dickinsen pointed out that spokesmen for the Michigan State Medical Society had claimed 80 per cent of the DOs wanted amalgamation. An .estimated 89 per cent of the state’s nearly 1,888 osteopaths and 88 per cent of the nearly 18,888 MDf replied to the questionnaires sent out by the state committee. Dr. Dickinson saw no reason why the State Affairs Committee should not now go ahead and report out the authority bill. However, a move to dP so lost by one "vote yesterday. A second more-favorable vote was expected, although Dr. Dickinson said he had been informed it may take two weeks to have the bill clear the House committee. SENATE PASSAGE The Senate has already passed the bill. Two other questions were asked in the unusual statewide poll. On the question, “Should both DOs and MDs, on the basis of (Ckmtinued From Page One) was bound over to Cirrait Court for arraignment after a younger inmate testified he haid been “drugged with goofballs” and sexually assaulted by Sykes. A fight stemming from the Feb. 3 incident led to an investigation ordered by Sheriff Frank W. Irons. The iM-obe revealed smu|gling of., dope, including marijuana and butiturates, to inmates of the jail. McCallum said fines and ,, . Istricter pr(^tion requirements ^ instituted in cases Jail Sentence Policy Altered McCallum said results of the investigation, testimony of two jail, inmates at the exanqination of Sykes, and an interview with a foiTner prisoner figured in his decision to restrict sentencing. MAIN CONCERN “My main concern is the lack of means to segregate youthful offenders from hardened criminals at the jad,” said McCallum. The jail, scoired last month by State Jail Inspector Robert J. Russell as not meeting state requirements, was toured yesterday by McCallum and Irons. The sheriff told McCallum facilities were not available at the jail for separation of all youthful and first-time offenders from repeaters and other criminals awaiting prison sentences. Birmingham Area News State Provides Outlino on Telegraph Widening BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP - Plans to widen Telegraph Road from f^ to eight lanes were revealed this week by the State Highway Department. The question of when the project will begin was left unanswered, hbwever. Included In the plans, which agree with a study conducted by Vilican-Leman and Associates with three exceptions, are a 88-foot median separating the north aqd south bound lanes, crossovers in the median, a maximum of 284 feet and a “New Jersey” turn at the Maple intersection. Township l^upervisor Homei; Case said he was able to obtain the report after warning highway officials that he could not block issuance of building permits along the highway without a clear expression by the state. Vilican-Leman had earlTer suggested that an equal strip of right-of-way be taken from state would necessitate a loop, or “New Jersey” turn, for left turn movements, cutting behind commercial establishments. FATAL MISHAPS ’The Maple-Telegraph intersection has been-the scene of several fatal accidents in the past few years. Highway officials have repeatedly said that actual widening of Telegraph would not be programmed for at least five years, but Case said it appears right-of-way acquisition at the Maple and Long Lakn intersections will begin this summer. ., both sides of Telegraph at M te suggests that Mile. The slate suggest 54 feet be taken from the east side. sidered eligible for staff appointment by the govmiing boards of public-suigtorted hospitals,” MDs voted 5,010 to 1,706 in favor. A spokesman for the osteopathic association said this ques-tkm had not been pressed by in all Osteopaths Voted M24 to 102 vdiere convicted offenders might otherwise receive jail terms. “The heck of it is, some of these men should be confined as a disciplinary measure,” McCallum said. DIFFERENCE The second area of difference centers around the Long Lake intersection where the state will take 54 feet from the east side for right-of-way. Township officials suggested taking it all from the west side. in favor of state support for an osteopathic school of medicine, while MDs voted 6,491 to 230 against it. MD spokesmen have opposed the college and state support “But as it stands. I’m not going to send them over there (to the county jail) until we’ve got the facilities and means to take care of them. Disagreement on tiie highway department’s plans to reduce the right-of-way acquisition several hundred feet south of the Maple intersection was also expressed by township officials. ‘This is bound to cause a The rightrof-way plans of the Former Girlfriend of Bugsy Siegel Is Found Dead SALZBURG, Austria (AP)-Virginia Hill, once a girl friend of Bugsy Siegel and other American underworld figures, was found dead near here today. Police, who gave her age as 50, said there were no indications of foul play, but because of her background, they ordered an autopsy. She had been living here with her Austrian husband, ski instructor HaiQ Hauser, for the past 12 years. She made headlines as a witness in the televised Kefauver crime commission hearings in 1952. In 1954, she was indicated on charge of evading $80,180 In federal income tax payments. It was in her Beverly Hills curve near our most dangerous home that Siegel was pumped .................. full of bullets on June 29,194L intersefbtion,” said Case. fi Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St. -Downtown Pontiac the visitora as lO in- for it on the^groundi thaLthere would be a merger of the two medical professions. 3 School Districts Report Big Flu Toll -k at what 88c buys this weetcqiMl ft Simms-large lizoftef famews brand health and beauty aids .. .plus hundreds ef unadvertisod special^; . . so come in and aava »!.. ^ "*e must reserve the right to limit quantities. Avondale school officials today reported a high incidence of flu absenteeism while Bloomfield Hills and Rochester school systems noted a higher-than-normal rate of pupil illness. Absence of 128 of 697 Avondale pupils was called a “tremendous increase” over the normal rate by school officials. Rochester and Bloomfield Hills school officials called their absenteeism abovp normal but not alarming. Some other area school districts reported significant increases in absenteeism due mainly to flu but most said the number of pupils off sick was normal and a few reported above-average attendance. Classes resumed today at St. Frederick’s School. The school was closed when 68 of the 281 pdj)ils were out Tuesday. H.L WITH FLU Some of the nuns who teach at the school were ill with the flu this week. th Pontiac Central and Pontiac Northern high schools report increased absenteeism, with Central the hardest hit of the two. West Bloomfield Township schools have a different problem — measles. Flu absenteeism is minor. Among school systems reporting normal absenteeism now high incidence a few weeks ago were the Oxford, Walled Lake and Milford school systems arid North Farmington High School. MUCH LOWER Our Lady of the Lakes School in Waterford Township reported that flu absenteeism has been much lower this year than last and present absenteeism is minimal. Also reporting lower than normal sickness for this time of year were Waterford-Kettering and Waterford Township high schools. DRU 6*t COSMETIC DEPT Famous MOUTHWASH 880 $1.29 value Choice of 'Colgaies 100/ 'Listerine/ 'Lavoris' or 'Micrin'.Vimit 2. MAALOX’Macid $1.49 value—12 ounce! or 100 tablets of No. 1 or 50 tablets of No. 2 Maalox. Limit 2. IIP Stray DEODOMNTS $1.49 size—your choice of 'Stopette', 'Secret', or 'Sudden Beoutyl' Lltpit 2. 'Mum' S HairSimp $1.50 size—large size of 'Hidden Magic' hair spra^witlvTIexi^^ Garment Bags $1.50 Value—jumbo 88‘ Brandon High School reports normal absenteeism for pupils but a high rate of days off for illness among teachers. Simms Bros.-98 N, Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Windy and much colder today with snow flurries locaUy heavy near Lake Mkh^an, highs N to 37. Mostly cloudy and colder with occasioaal snow flurries tonight, lows IS to 25. Friday partly cloudy and contianed with poosible snow flurries, hi^ 33 to dl. Winds westerly 15 to 35 miles diminishing slowly late toaight. and Friday. Saturday: coM with chaace of snow flurries. Another Shipent of Fine Quality Room Size Rugs Arrives at SIMMS Save Va on Fine 100% Nylons In Smart Solid Colors and Tweeds 0x12 Fi. Size... .. 23.99 12x12Fi.Size......... 31.99 AYERS’ Diraction: SeutlMMtl S«n Mf. Thwidw rt t-.m p.m. Sun riM. erlMy .t <;» ..m. r«£S? Hmarmwa ... a|aWiWi»iow.h»r. ^^fMWwr; MMlly turn, » J3 Um OrlMn. 7t 47 ipwitioii 44 It ftew Yortt II 4t Tr4VM’M C. S4 M Ofn.ha M 10 AttwoMfOM a » PhoMlI. 77 «S S25!'*.. K *! “• ‘•Wf <• *> Uim.rck M V S4II Uk« C. SI 07 12x15 R. Size......... 12x18 Fi.Sizs......... Just arrived — another shipment of fine quolily room size rugs, A large telection of solid colors and tweeds in cut pile and loops. Foaih rubber, jute Dr rubberized bocks. All of long wearing nylon. Mqke your selection qorly. Not os shown— slight irrs. 98 North Siginaw Straet SIMMS5f Hugs I BauiMtiit Livtl 8I« Shoe Bags 88' $1.50volue-^rein-forced vinyl sHm bogs hold 6 pairs of bdiet' shoes. LILT’ Permanents size—the home permanent for any tyfie Limit 2 permanents per person. 89^ lustre Creme’nor.” .50 size—11 ounces of this famous Shampoo lotion or liquid form. 88^ HAND or LUXURIA size jar of famous 'H.H. Ayers' hand cream Luxurio cream. Limit 2. Cream 880 \SIMMS Registered Pharmacists tGuarantee Filling Your Prescription as Ordered~-No Substitutions! ... and you gat tho frosbost phaimaeouticals at lowoil prices! Here Are the Priie Winners of Last Week ^ BETTY DELLING Balboa St. Pontiac, Mich. Elesirie Toothbiusl AARS. H. OUON 72 Putnam ' Pontiac, Mich. SIMMS..''!.. y DRUG a GOSMETIO ' -Main Floor THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MARCH 24, 1966 A—^ The Deuces Are Wild EAST ST. LOUIS, lU. (UPI) —A brick thrown^' through the window of a dvil rights office here carried » note from a lUg called “Deuces Nine.’’ It asked police to reopen a pool room which was recently closed down. 'A SVtA/AS FREE PRIZES To Bo Qivon Away In Mint Dtfrt. Wh • riertabla TV or om el big SIMMS N N. tagieaw - led Fleer Soviets Said Orbiting 'Spies ORLANDO, FU. (AP) ^ The Soviet Union has orbited 46 satellites which probably were spy in the sky spacecrafts, according to one of the Johnson administration’s specialists on Soviet space activities. lb ..W . ‘‘Nobody has suggested anything other than photo reconnaissance’’ for a particular series of unmanned Cosmos satellites, said Dr. Charles S. Sheldon II, senior member d the National Aeronautics and Space Council’s professional staff. The council is the President’s top advisory group on U.S. space policies. V * * The 46 satellites — launched since 1962, including five this year — “don’t fit any pattern’ of scientific, navigational o: conununications-type satellites, Sheldon said. LOW FLYING “They fly low 100 to 200 miles above the earth — and after eight days they disappear from orbit,” probably to be recovered so film inside caa be removed, the space expert said. Sheldon, who came to Orlando to speak to local members of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, said he doubts the Soviet Union intends to place warheads in mdrlt as a threat to the United States, however, u it could not do so without being discovered. ★ * ★ Concerning the race to the Simms Bro$.-98 N. Saginaw Si. SetaFimEastsrTable WHh fieoMM URKER Somi-Pereslani China DinnennrsSelt ...andyoHoantnn give ’am for Eatlar Gifis moon, Sheldon predicted the Soviets may soon launch a large unmanned space station and follow up with a smaller qiace-ship with men inside to rendezvous with it. Sheldon said Wednesday he believes the Soviets could hoist an orbiting laboraUwy wei^ilng from 40,000 to 50,000 pounds into orbit, “and you could get a lot of people inside a space station that weighs 50,000 pounds.” NEAR FUTURE He also quoted Soviet coi nauts who suggested the Soviet Union will put up five or more men in the near future. “The Russians have several options and it’s only a game which will cMne first," Sheldon said. “They need extended time in orbit — perhaps 14 to 30 days fw a single mission — and their greatest lack of all has been the failure to demonstrate maneuvering capability.” guesslnglSUte Law Officer to Retire EAST LANSING (AP)-State Police Capt. William Ward, commanding officer of the personnel division at East Lan^ headquarters, will retire April 1 after completing more thim 26 years of service. Ward will beaming personnel <^cer for the A^culture Department. Choice of a variety of 10-pattorns 45>Pc. Dinnerware Sets n-Shunlost Steal Gooheaie Raduead Ena Nara Far Eatlar Halday llaab 2 Qft Saucepan Covered Cake Pan 1 Qt. Saucepan 1« tc0Mr.No,n3l. I BVti Ct« Dutch Oven sjnum 499 Priem dfa laoyy goug* olumlnuin (or largo oaei,M«p«olc.Na2075. 5 Qt. Dutch Oven 5imnu 479 Frico W Prlca Aluminum eovorod coko pan fort Mering and corrying g No. 5813. 10*’Frypan Simmt 199^ Priem I Exiro hoovy aluminum wMi toHod. tooling. Froo ipalulc No. 595a Slight irrt. BQt..DutchOven Simmt 022| PHem O ' 7 Qt. Covered Kettle Simmt 439 Priet W I Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. “ ‘ Just because it's Easter, it doesn't mean you have to pay the top dollar for your fashions! Look at Simms Sproial Buys ladies’ dresses $6.98toS7.98 actual valamt —you pay only This group has ribbon btlT shirtmal^ of Amol tri-acetate, textured 2-pc rayon in li^ look with darted bodice or Don River combed cottons in woven stripes plus other deluxe dresses for spring and summer. Size 12 to20 and half sizes to 24V^ $8.98 to $9.98 actual valuet — tnko 'em for Carefree stay fresh fabrics in stripe top sheoth dress, plaid jacket dresses, linen weave rayon in the Chelsea look, the white collar on block with slim skirts and the 'tunnel woist' look dress, combed cotton in tiny wown flojpera Sizes 10 to 20 and half sizes up to 2416? Spring and summer styies.‘ dazzling and elegant ladies’ suits $7.98 to $12.98 actual valuet —you buy at S97 Styles includat 2-pc. Amal and cotton knits, 2-pc. 'Chelsea Look' rayon and cottons, 2-pc. suit with appliques, 2-pc. double knit cottons, 3-pc. block and v^He costumes and o double knit costume with jacket, blouse and skirt. Choice of rich colors for spring and summer wear in sizes 10 to 18. deluxe double knits 'Ban-Lon' and 'Antron-Nylon' 2-Pq. Co-ordinates Actual $9.98 Values -But Look 497 Choice of 2 styles In the 2-piece co-ordinates—Antron Nylon hos_fl_sleeveless V-neck top and slim skirt . . . Ban-Lon knit comes with o % sleeve collor top. Antron Nylon in beige, pink or blue, Ban-Lon in fucio, Nue or ' cornel ton colors. Sizes 10 to 18. madras look plaid is zip lined ladles' coats rain ’n’ thine Actual $16.98 tmlum-iunt only Hardy cotton sateen .Is craveneHe finished to repel water, spots and stains permon^y. Nev4st version of the tradHional Chesterfield— slim lined, ffop-pocketed. Zip lining is acrylic pile, coat is rayon lined. Blue ii^aid in sizes 10 to 16. wool and nylon imbbed baskotweave luxury spring coats $24.98 value —hut you ge% it for Luxurious' texture of 90% soft wool ond 10% nylon lor extra plut luscious colors to choose from. Superb tailoring/shaped and half-cuffs, bound buttonholes, flap pockets Lined In finely woven rayon satin. Misses/junior sizes 5 So 14 or beige twied in Size l4Vi to 24'6. « north lafla«w-l Moln Floor Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac FiM^riSata#* S a-iR. to 11 pA Win Tour Easlor Ham Froo 40 Civon Away at SIMMS No purchaso nocossary just fill out a tickot whon you shop at Simms and you may ba Hra lucky wlnnor of on* of 40 dolkious canned hanss. Drawings start Aprp4 watch Simms ad for list of winnort nomos. “Would You Beliovo This?... Coupons Aro Like Extra Money at SIMMS. ‘Get Sm*aif and clip these Coupons for extra Discounts Now. Monoy saving ceupons to uto at Simmt Sundry doportmont. Sixtoon bargain itoms for your soloction. Prices good for Thursday-Friday and Saturday. Wo rosorvo the right to limit quantities. ^ l7//> Zhis Zi’iifvii Electric Battery Charter $5.95 Litt \ Recharges regular size ' 'D', medium 'C' penlite ize and 9 volt size. Charge to 4 batteries at once. Limit I. I 4' Reshargeabb FUtSHLIOIT I Ash Flash rachargsobls l'flashlight, thin streamlined ^ style. Limit 1 with coupon. il/p Zhisumpou ‘Britsse’ Craytss Box of 6 16 Page Coloring Book For Only 5c regular seller, 6 assorted colors. Limit 2 with coupon. 10c regular seller, 16 pages, 6^ssorted subjects. Limit 2 with coupon. Clip Zhis Ci’iipiniWU8<-'lii’ r^-mill increase in taxes,” noted Dr. Early. “And it will cost a %-mlll whether the pool and auditorium are approved or not. NOT SAVING MONEY ' “People who are against the pool and auditorium yill not be ’saving money.” This is the point Dr. Early hopes to drive home. Through the State School B6nd Loan Fund, school districts that levy Rochester now levies 6.5 mills. It can meet the Loan Fund requirement by increasing taxes H-mill. can borrow the additional needed monies from the state at little or no interest. 'This law was devised to aid fast-growing school disMcts such as ours,” explained' Dr. Early, “and provides for present needs while spreading the debt over a longer period of time.” ' auditorium is being put to the voters for the second time. It was narrowly defeated last year “only because enough people didn’t go to the polls,” according to Dr. Early. “There seems to be enough Interest now to warrnnt bringing it np agnin as a separate proposal,” he said. SECOND TIME The request (at 'li pool and Both the pool and auditorium were originally planned ii) 1954 as part of the high school, to be added is funds became available. Proposed Pool Would Be Housed In Building At Left Oxford Board May Trim Proposed School Budget OXFORD — A preliminary budget which may have to be pared to keep the school district out of the red is being considered by the board of education. The roughly estimated $1,012,-000 budget is about $100,000 more anticipated income. Schools Supt. Roger Oberg He said, however, that such things as blacktopping will be cut out if necessary In order to avoid a deficit. Breeder Gets Award Again ROMEO - Howard H. Colby, owner of Colby Dale Farms, has rmr^n\ ^nrnvina "*">ed a Gold Star Guern- Cereal Beetle spraying ^ Breeder for i965 by the WASHINGTON - The Agriculture Department has awarded a contract to Desert Aviation Service, Mesa, Ariz., to spray up to 1,250,000 acres in Michigan infested by the destructive cereal leaf bwtle. The company will apply the spray with up to eight airplanes. Including two B17s, one Lockheed PV2 and up to five World War II dive bombers. American Guernsey Cattle Club. This is the seventh year Colby has won the award, based on production records of 59 cows averaging 12,659 pounds of milk and 615 pounds of butterfat. To' qualify for the award, a said the expected income is about $956,000. This plus a $40,000 cash reserve would almost meet the $1,012,000 fig- herd must be registered and We’ll have to wait to what we, get from the county allocation board and what our enrollment will be before start making these adjustments,” said Oberg. MORE TEACHERS ’The $100,000 increase consists of salaries for 10 additional teachers amounting to about $53,000 on the present salary schedule, needed improvements and supplies. It is presently estimated that instruction will cost $719,000; administration, $46,000; health services, $800; transportation, $74,000; operation, $114, 000; maintenance, $43,000; fixed show production records at least 15 per cent above the breed average, in addition to meeting rigid health requirements. charges, $5,150; and capital out- lay, $6,900. “This is Oil very rough,” said Oberg. “We are just using it for a reference." In Farmington Twp. Talents Shine at Science Fair FARMING’TON TOWNSHIP-For awhile this week, the Bond Elementary School gymnasium looked like an up-and-coming rival, to the Cranbrook Institute of Scienpe. ’There were displays showing chemistry and physics principles and others relating to health, plants, minerals and animals. Tliere wag a miniature elevator that really worked; a stethoscope so you could listen to your own heart; a model of a manned satellite... In all, 340 projects were displayed at the school’s science fair. The exhibits were assembled by pupils in kindergarten through sixth grade at the school, which has a total enrollment of 498. DISTINCTION Believed to be unusual in the area, the fair is the only one held at an elementary school in the Farmington district. With a simple format, this is the kind of project organization expected of junior and senior high school students who enfer stondard science fairs. This was the second science fair the school has staged, the first held two years ago. Volunteers . Sought for School Study TROY — School district residents are being asked to volunteer for a committee to advise the board of education on a proposed bond issue. Schools Supt. Dr. Rex B. Smith said the committee would study the district’s needs then recommend how much money to ask for. The pool would be a relation six-lane pool with diving area, instructional area, community locker and d r e s s i n g ro(»ns, folding bleachers and paved access driveways. It would be located in the south side of the gymnasium. BROADEN PROGRAM Dr. Earlf points out that the pool would broaden Rochester’s physical .education program by providing daily instruction for gradhs five through l2. Until this year fifth and sixth graders have been taking swimming 4nstmcti«n nt Oakland University, bnt in-^ereased enrollment at the University makes this impossible this year. “Swimming is an essential part of a physical education program,” said Dr. Early. He points out that a pool is recommended by the North Central Association, the high school accrediting organization. The community as a whole: would also benefit from a pool. It would be used by the YMCA, Avon Youth Recreation Association and other public and service organizations. TO SERVE MANY It would also provide a year-round swimming facility for adults and their families, parochial school students and such groups as Girl Scouts and Boy Scouts. Auditorium Seating 700 Would Serve Entire Community The committee would also help promote the bond issue. The proposal is scheduled to be on the June school election ballot, although it is expected to be about a month before it is Dr. Smith has suggested bond issue of $2 million for new school sites and development of existing sites. He said it should take care of the district’s future needs. RECOMMENDED He recommends five new jun- ior high sites, three new high school sites and 17 elementary school sites. In other recent board actions, the name of Alexander Wattles was given to a new elementary school to be built in a section bounded by 17 Mile, Rochester, 16 Mile and Livernois. Watties was one of the early settlers of Troy. the school, a second elementary school, a junior high and a bus garage will be taken AprU 5. Senate Unit OKs Farm Bill meetings, etc.. Dr. Evly point-edout. It would also benefit the community by providing needed space for adult education, dramatic groups, musical or-ganizatioas, travel series, variety shows and other uses by local organizations. The only stage facility now available is in Central Junior High School, which was built in 1916. “It just is not adequate,” said Dr. Eorly.' PLEA FOR PASSAGE ' School officials will be carry- ing the plea for passage of their proposals to as many segments of the cmnmunity as possible in the next few weeks. Meetings are scheduled with numerous groups and officials will be available to speak to any group that wants them. “We want to get as many Informed voters out as possible,’' said the superintendent. ★ ★ ★ , Voting registration deadline is Monday at 5 p.m. in Avon, Oakland and Shelby Townships. REGISIRATTON HOURS Avon Township residents may register at the township offico today and tomorrow from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. It will also bo open from 1 to 3 p.m. Saturday. Oakland Township residents may register with the township clerk at 1800 W. Buell. Tlie township hall at 4393 Collins, will also be open from 1 to 3 p.m. Saturday. Shelby township voters may register at the township hall, 49960 Van Dyke. Voters must be registered in their respective townships to bo eUgible. Dr. Early said that based on experience in other communities, the cost of operating a swimming pool is estimated at $10-$12,000 a year, which can be made up in fees and rentals to organizatious which use the facility. From an educational and so-| cial standpoint, an auditorium' is also important, points out Dr.' Early. Designed to seat the proposed facility would include theater-type seats, a pith jection booth, coat rooms, ticket booths and paved parking areas. It would be located at the northeast corner of the high school. NEW OPPORTUNITIES It would open up opportunities for student participation in dramatics, group instruction, lecturing, musical programs, class JUmart OPEN DAILY 10TO10 SUNDAYS 12h)7 Womens* and teens* fiashionable U*throat bow pump# in Flreviel raede with tnflex sole. Available in pastel pink, pastel bine, bone and pastel green. Andf at Kmart you can charge it! North Perry Street at Glenwood CAN YOU BEAT ’THAT? Fascinated by what he hears, Robert Murray concentrates on Kristin Hurlin’s heartbeat, amplified by a stethoscope at the Bond Elementary School Science Fair. The two sixth graders are usiqg a portion of a display assembled by fifth grader Bruce Deighton. Robert is tile eon of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Murray, 29311 Aranel, .WttilttDOii L’s. RarsDts are Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth {fiirlin, are^ both I’ermlngtoD Township. Principal Weldon Petz said he hopes to keep it biennial so it will not dominate the year’s curriculum nor become less interesting to children who participate. OPEN HOUSE Projects were assembled Monday and an open house held Tuesday, the latter attracting some 400 persons. Every child who participated received a certificate of recognition — there were no i»izes awarded. Each display was accompanied by a form on which the child indicated the nature of his project, what he hoped, to demonstrate, what lie had learned by earring out the project and whether be had had any help from his parents. LANSING (AP) - The Senate Taxation Committee t o d a. abruptly approved a 2^-fold increase in property tax exemptions for farm equipment. Farmers, now exempt from property taxes on the first $1,000 in state-equalized value of their equipment, would get a $2,500 break. The increase would cost local units a -total of $2 million in revenue, said State Tax Commission Secretary Edward Kane. Sen. Charles Zotlar, R-Benton Harbor, said the exemptim increase would be meaningless unless the state reimburses local unjts for the $2 million. “Tliey need the money, and if they don’t get it from the equipment, the tax rate will just have to go up and the farmer will pay anyhow,” said Zollar. Art Work on Display ROCHESTER - North Hill Elementary School tonight will le first in a hold the first in a series of eight'open hoosds and art ex-to be conducted at area etenentaryadwhla. Art work by the pupUs will be ihown-from 7-tp.m. <4*^ Smashing new Spectator Jacket Importad Sueda Laithar plus Twaadtd Knit First-clafa aoconunodationn aU tha way-gat aboard: S-tonaauedeleathar panels with hidden pocketa. Matching auede-covared Subtly tweeded knit (etdoray/aeryUe) laminated to keep It lightweight and extra comfortable. Fun lining ef rayon twilL 2-tone $2195 Use our New mere cenvenieM The Pontiac Mall Shopping Center THE PQI^TIAC PRESS. THURSDAY; iffARC A—5 People in the News By ne Asiociated Prcn Queens, N.Y., Dist. Atty. Nat H. Hentel put his hot line into operation last night to receive tips on narcotics peddling. The first five calls on the line, taken by Hentel, were: , A man who hald the wrong number. A member of Hentel's staff who complained he couldn’t get through. ' ^ Another staff member with 4he same complaint. A man who said that on four tries he got a busy signal, two no-answers and a disconnect. A third staff ihember sdio toM Hentel: “Your wife wants you to come home atid bring some bagels.” Finally, the sixth call was what the hot line is all about. It came in at 5:32 p.m. and was a tip about some teen-agers selling pills and marijuana. ‘ Ah investigation order was issued, then Hentel turned the telephone over to detectives who will answer it regularly 24 hours a day. - * ' Dropout Danny Kayo Entertains Educators Before 4,NO elementaiy school principels in Portland, Ore., comedian Datany Kaye confessed that “I was terrible in school.” Even so, Kaye, a high school dropout, was honored by the principals for hb work for'^UNICEF, the United Nations Intemationai Children’s Emer. gency Fund. Kaye has devoted 12 years to raising money for the group, which recently won the Nobel Peace Prise, and to entertaining children around the world. He got messages from President Johnson and his childhood music teacher in Brooklyn’s Public School 141, Mbs Peggy Cress. She toM him: “Yon have come a long way.” KAYE “I was terrible in that class,” Kaye said. “I was terrible in school.” With the ceremonies at the National Education Association sponsored meeting out of the way, Kaye clowned, danced, mugged, conducted a chorus and led a group of costumed schoolchildren in entertainment for the prin- Another Actor May Turn Politician Friends of actor Wendell Corey say petitions have been circulated to nominate the Sl-year-old actor to run in the 2Sth Congressional Mstrict in California. Corey, who won dection to Oe Santa Monica Ctfy Council laft April, would face incumbent Cougressmasi Alphonto Bell tor the Republican nomination in the Juno primary election. Corey’s friends said he would announce his political plans at a pews Conference tomorrow. SHOP TONITE, FRI. AND SAT. TIL 9 A Farah blend of polyeetw and rayon Trim and tapered THINS Roloxed good loob and octtvo comfort, perfect fit and sharp styling In a hanc^mo dress fabric of 65% polyostor. CotoriiBlock, Gray, Browm WolM J9 W M" Uoglh, 28 10 33' a?®® FaraFr«Mw NEVER NEED IRONING WOMEN'S SHOES STREET FLOOR loyt* wear... SaeoMl Moor /y THE PONTIAC PRESS 41 West Huron Street Pontiac, THURSDAY, MARCH 24, 1966 RAIK>U> A. mzonuui) Uuen J. Rn M»n^n|t Kdltor ' Legislators Disqualified for Offira Regardless of the fact that l>einocrats Sen. Basil W. Brown of Highland Park and Rep. James Bhadlit of Detroit have resolved their income tax delinquency ^th the Internal Revenue Service, they have a clear duty to resign from the State Legislature. It ill behooves anyone to p a s s smug Judgment on the behavior of others. But the culpability of the . two la^akers in failing to declare and pay taxes due the Federal government renders them unfit for the legislative trust imposed in them. As makers of the law they cannot be breakers of the law. ★ ★ ★ Both men point to heavy financial pressure in extmuation Of their guilt. But it is likely that millions of other Americans who conscientiously pay their income taxes as a prerequisite of good citizenship could relate comparable financial straits. We think that as a body the integrity of the elected representatives of the people compares fiivor-ably with that of any other cross section of American citizenry. But if an agency as sensitive to wrong-d 0 i n g as a state legislature is to merit respect and confidence its image cannot be besmirched by backsliding ° members. ★' In this situation, ps in so many .other government posts of trust, the dictum that “Caesar’s wife must be above suspicion” has direct application. President Sukarno’s Loss Is Indonesia’s Gain A net gain for the West stems from the action of Indonesia’s ruling military junta banishing nominal President Achmed Sukarno to the country on a one-way ticket for the “good of the country.” Sukarno himself is a beneficiary, it would seem, since there was much to Indicate that an aroused anticommunist, anti-SuKARNo populace would sooiLtake matters into its own rough hands. Indonesia and Sukarno have long been a thorn in the side of the free world since the international playboy and dictatorial ruler maneuvered the string of Islands, with more than twice the area of Texas, away from Dutch control after World War II and set up a self-styled Indonesia Republic headed by Sukarno. Although the recipient of $583.5 millions of foreign aid from the U. S., Sukarno early oriented himself with the Communists and proved an erratic and chauvinistic chief of state. Recently, an attempted take-over \ Discount Rumor NY Stock Exchange Will Move If you’re In the market for an inside tip, don’t take much stock in reports that the New York Stbck Exchange has unalterably 1 i q u i -dated its $50 expansion plan, will pull up tickers and move out of town .^because the Citjr has proposed a tax Increase on stock transferal that would up its present $l-million 3deld by 50 per cent. Although the Exchange is understandably bearish about the tax threat, tiiere is scant reason for any of 40 cities interested to feel bullish about prospects for acquiring the trading center. With Manhattan the acknowledged money mart of the world and the stock market and brokerage establishment so closely keyed to It, we’d say there’s about as much chance of the Market bidding Wall Street adieu as there is of Congress running out on Washington. ThAt is to say, don’t sell New York, short. President Is Patient With Labor By JAMES MARLOW Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON — President Johnson is not the man to magnify in public any differences with individuals or groups so long as he tiiinks there may be a chance to persuade them to return to camp. This does much to ex-1 idain Johnson’s easy man- ^ ner Tuesday when a girl reporter at an impromtu news conference asked about the recent statement of George Meany, presi-j dent of the AFIrOO Meany hrf said in the' marLO^ future the huge labor or-ganization would not be allied with either Democrats or Republicans. Johnson told the questioner she was apparently more distressed about this than he was. them, as he explained in a very emphatic and biting way. It was enough to give Democrats some chills about this year’s congressional elections. Meany blasted the Democrats for falling to deliver on promises and laid down political bidepeiidence as a goal for the AFLCIO. te make the best of aa nnhappy sitna-tioa by saying that in his view the AFL-ao has always been independmU and fhetUbe. The labor organization backed him in the ItM presidential race and the AFLCIO backed Democratic presidential candidates hi daetton after electian fqr years. Ihe AFLdO support is a very big and iBgMrtant help to the Democrats. But now it is Irritatod with the Demo-evAs md limay is disenchanted with “It is quite obvious,” he said, “that if we ipre looking around for a party to adopt and control that we don’t want the Democratic party because they can’t delivo*. “So we can’t buy either party. We don’t work for any political party, a^ether it is Republican, Democrat, (K anything else.” ENDORSED CANDIDATES In recent years, besides 1964, the .AFL-CIO endorsed the Democratic presidential candidate ^ 1962, 1956 and 1960. Bat Meant suggested labor retara to the policy of one of its early leaders, Samuel Gon^ers: supporting indhidnal candidates on“ their vottorrecords, regardless of party. If the Johnson administration figured it had the AFL<30 in its pocket, the Meany statement may disillusion it a bit and-this may have been Meany’s purpooe-ocare it into paying more attention to labor’s de- What the administration does from now <» to satisfy labor will be more reveaUhg than the Prosidefit’s ea«y, casual comment Voice of the People: Suggests Citywide Effort tb Reduce Littler Problem The litter problem in Pontiac is becoming worse every year. It is not only an opportunity, but an obligation for the candidates for the City Commission to state what they would do to better this condition. ★ ★ ★ Many civic groups would again assist in a . citywide operation to beautify Pontiac if some offleial aid were given to maintain improvements made. Updated antilitter ordinance enforcement; additional receptacles, especially in outlying areas; anti-litter signs and penafty warnings conspicuously post-ted: "and distribution of brochures would reduce littering. MARGUERITE SIMSON PRESIDENT, BALDWIN-WALTON COMMUNITY CLUB Suggests Residents Report Road Conditions why don’t people who live on gravel roads In Waterford Township call the road commission to have the roads graded? The roads are terrible, especially around the schools. •HRED OF THE BUMPS Gtizens Discuss Watm*ford School Proposal 'We Are Making Great Strides!' ^------------------- David Lawrence Says: of Indonesia by Communists— backed by Red China and covertly blessed by StncARNo — went on the rocks. The coup was thwarted by a patriotic group* of the military headed by Lt. Gen. Suharto. By way of national face-saving, ^i;esi-dent Sukarno was suffered to retain his title though little of his power. But the onetime revolutionary hero couldn’t appreciate a good thing when it fell on him, and became so obstreperous and conniving that his de facto bosses finally gave him a well-earned bum’s rush. ★ ★ ★ Economic Side Effects Evident Our taxes will be increased two mills ahethar the Waterford Township school proposals pass or not. This Is not a new tax and has no bearing on this issue. These are the last two mills of the mlginal millage we voted for five years ago. By spreading this millage out and using it as needed, new people moving here also shared in these taxes. ^ ★ ★ ★ The school board is asking os to let them coatfame at the same levd instead of taking the tax redactions we would have if more facilities were not needed. When an Increase is indicated, we will be the ones to say yes or no. MRS. JOHN HOKE WASHINGTON — President But this do^’t Johnson’s hesitancy “to put problem of individuals earning by federal law' m’t solve tiie minimum pay per hour required WATERFORD TOWNSHIP / brakes” on the current eco- relatively low incomes. Reassuringly for the West, Gen. Suharto has replaced the pro-Peking ministers In the Indonesian Cabinet and named a moderate, democratic figure as acting head of state. Indonesia with a population upward of 100 million is a country rich in raw products ahswer on the necessity of a federal office building proposed for Pontiac, the answer is disbeartening. Is there no one left who stands for what he believes? I am dis- If it is explained as a steady Rmnnev in- appointed. I thought people in my area had more integrity! the dollar, in the last few years, ^ ^ January aithou^ attractive, has never it is mwe readily grasped. The prkto tiiat peo|de pay in general have risen hy 17.2 per cent in 1$. years, which means that the over-aO cost of living has gone up so that ft takes $1.1? now w poy fw what 100 cents boiTght 10 years ago. \ This r e a sonin comes fro been able to set any national fires, and geography is against *Youth8 Stole Sign TeUing of School Event’ u . . o A , mmmmmmmmmmJ out of the presidential running It is contended nevertheless Michigan gov- ^ . _ J® that the wages and incom^ of emor. As one even if he ^ the S^te race most people have increased diir- of them put it: Montgomery this fall. Freshmen legislators ing the same 10 years. \ “Romney is not my dish of notoriously ladc piditical sex ap-•k * * \tea, but this guy has all the re- peal. If, for instance, thd entire ‘ ‘ “ population is divided into the it i, it Last Saturday night several youths of rather questionable rh..-u. reliabilify stde a publicity sign - the painting of whidi had Charles Percy, who would several hours — frwn the sdxxd grounds. The sign was have been a strong contender advertising Pontiac Central’s annual spri^ musical. The State if he had won the Illinois guber- should further its many programs to hdp curb juvenile de-natorial race, will probably be linquency. NED BARKER 60 CHEROKEE Compares Politicians to FaUen Dictator disposable income figure for the nation as a whole, it would ap- and pear that there has been an speT increase of 42 per cent in “per capita” income. A fallen dictator recently claimed to be a great lover — be fervor of a Mormon dis- TARNismrn MAGE ^ country, his peqile, women, art, and best of all he which he is. He honestly i himself. Doesn’t that sound like some of our poUticians res that God talks to him, ^ ^ >av M. at lut SAMUEL HAGON PONTIAC, TOWNSHIP fte platform he’s a real w^^SuTaTriag Z ner, by telling a couple of off- b worrying about SSSmaUy^ as*^£ ‘More Prayers Would Help Beduce Criipe* ^ If we had more prayers offered to God there wouldn’t bo 17 A 1 /I in the homes Riot doffins * k k so mudi crime in Pontiac and the United States. Sheriff Irons y erpal Urcnids are coming home Viet Nam , J**? of s^ld be more letornt tward other ch^ ooml^ to ^ j^ in 1968, ^eripa weD turn ^ * P<»4iWe longshot, but if the Let us aU pray to God and hope that tim ^ces wUl be to a man who canb^ bade * the old-time religton.” \ Mr. and Mrs. william G. Muirhead of West Bloomfield Township; 53rd wedding anniversary. Mrs. E. R. Vogel of 6653 Highland Raod; 85th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Edwin A. Burns -..of Lake Orion; 53rd wedding anniversary. ^.Uziie Meyers of 56 Neome; 81st birthday. Mrs. May Allen of 532 Orchard Lake Ave.;* Romney’s birth in would probably not dfaquidlfy him for the presidency, sinb^ ixognosticators are changed, correctly forecasting the temper of the times two years hence, Romney may be the best bet. If he wins reelectfon to hto ‘Why Do Courts Let Murderers Go Free?’ Why do the courts aitd the people let murderers go free Kb American rarenb on^*W«* term thb November, at w1j«i someone vdio steab gets four or five years? Justice b temporarily living tfaers; but a hut ha’ll be the man to watdi ufair. It’s time we started putting murderers behind bars, more difficult hurdle for Ito h ’68. MRS. LEINORE WOODBEXX mi^t be the attitude of the ku syMi«M) LAKE ORION Mormon Church toward Ne- of Rochester; ISrd birthday. groes. CLOSE IDENTTFICATION He b not in a position to reverse the Mormon tenet that Negroes are an inferior race, but because of hb. close identification with the church (he’s a fmmer president of its Detroit stake), be might be politically saddled witii ib racial position. He GOP ktaffnakers ml^ e suffered the n b tte ■nrmal date for correcting tiiese holes? DELIVERY DRIVER REPLY As soon as the ground begins'to dry aftef spring thaw. If frost leaves sUnoly with little damage to streets, repairs can be made quickly. A fast thaw can mean damage, requiring mare time. Sometimes . temporary winter repedrs are made if damage is bad enough up PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MARCH 24, 1966 special MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE SPORT OR DRESS SHIRTS 1.88 CHARGI IT REG. 2.50 DRESS SHIRTSi Our vttn Sir* . brand. Fin* combed cotton. N*ckt 14-17. REG. 2.99 SPORT SHIRTS. Ivy button-down, r*gular tpr*od collars. M*n't siz*s S-M-L-XL reg. BOYS' SPORT SHIRTS IN SHORT SLEEVE STYLES 144 CHARGE IT What a buy on th* greatest looks going for young sportsi Checb, solids, stripes and novelties in washable cotton. Sharp Henley necb, lace-tie Ponderosa, morel Sizes 8 to 18. amazing: BETTER SLIPS, DUSTERS FAMOUS MAKE PAJAMAS 2.00 CHARGE IT SUPS, PETTi'S. Nylon tricot with lace and applique trims. 32-40, S-M-L. DUSTERS. Peter Pan, no-collar styles. Easy-care. S-M-L PAJAMAS. Tailored long-leg styles. 32-40. lookie! 10.99-11.99 VALUES! GIRLS' SPRING COATS 9.44 CHARGE IT A-lines, low belts, side tabs, whit* over collar stylesi Acrylics and cottons with urethane foam lamination for shape-keeping. Pink, blue, maize. Black/whitts checks. 4 to 14. sale! REG. 2.99 MATERNITY SEPARATES 2-»5 CHAROI IT Now - into - summer tops, skirts, sportswear in easy-care fabrics. Gay colors to perk you up. Mix and match a wardrobe, now. 8 to 20. incredible! JUMBO WIDE! WHITE! WASHABLE! 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Savel 24*45" .2 fer II 24*70" ...2.99 STATIONERY VALSv TO $1 Vellums, fabric weaves, floral designs, whites and postals. Stock upl Giftware Dept. ' boxet 88* OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9 Drayton open Sunday nooO to 6 DOWNTOWN AND ^ DRAYTON PLAINS A—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TH^IISDAY, MARCH 24, 1968 fo Be the Word on Future LBJ Jaunts I ... WASHINGTON W - TIr* White House sbys President Johnson’s future travel plans probably will be kept secret except for those occasions when he is making a public appearance and large crowds are desired. A spokesman revealed this yestei^ay shortly after the President returned to Wash-in^n from a hasty — Snd quietly arranged — trip to New York to attend the funeral of die wife (rf R^. Emanuel Celler, D-N.Y., chairman of the House Judicial^ Committ^. Johnson’s des^ation was not announced until he was airborne. The New Yiwk trip will set the pattern for similar presidential journeys. lliis is because, the spckes-inan explained, speed and sar- prise are two elements in the President’s trips that can adO greatly to security. > The need for secrecy will be greatest on trips to large cities where the President would travel past high buildings, the source added. WBitodf AP PiMtofax JOHNSONS AT FUNERAL - President and Mrs. Lyndon B. J<*nson leave Temple Beth Elohim in Brooklyn, N Y. yesterday afto- attending funeral services for Stella Celler, wife of veteran Congressman Emanuel Celler, D-N.Y., who died Monday at the age of 75. The Johnsons returned to Washington immediately after the s«^ice. I Secret Agent of Drug Industry j Tells of Wholesale Intrigue WASHINGTON (UPD—Hyman L. Moore-plump, bespectacled, with a penchant for coin collections-was weU pleased with his hew man. He moved about the Moore Drug wholesale shop with lureness. He was an attractive asset with a dimpled smile and black hair framing a darkly handsome face. Moore was so pleased diat an hour and a half after David Terpstra was hired last Aug. 1, he gave him a raise. Yesterday, before a Senate Judiciary subcommittee, Terpstra told how he spied on the H. L. Moore Drug Co. in New Britain, Conn, on behalf of a Philadelphia drug company. ★ ★ ★ The testimony came in the opening phase of an examination of the snooping tactics in business and government. And, coincidentally, the day after General Motors Corp. acknowledged its use of private investigators to probe the background of a critic. Will rfonor Brokeman for Rescue Attempt < A cigarette that tastes rich...and mild, too. Light up a Half and Half, the pipe tobacco cigarettf Your search is c GRAND RAPIDS (AP)-An homx’s banquet is scheduled tonight by the Chesapeake & Ohio Railway to salute Iwake-man Francis Brown of Adrian for heroism in a train fatality. Michael Pellerito, 6, of Holland was killed Feb. 27 when thrown fr<»n a bridge over the Black River by an oncoming train. Brown had crawled to the front of the moving locomotive in a vain attempt to reach oiit and haul the boy aboard. GET INFORMATION In the Moore case, Terpstra was an i^rative of Inter-County Surveys Inc. of New York which was hired by Smith, Kline & French to see how Moore was getting drugs that he ■(dd below recmunended prices. Terpstra used the confidence he gained at file Meote company to compfle a report-based on his memory and discarded packing slips—of where Moore was getting his Moore charged that the spying was a “Gestapolike” attempt by big manufacturers and suppliers to drive him out of business. He said it had him “so danmed scared’’ he tfsed a pay telephone for important calls, fearing his business phone was tapped. " ★ ' ★ ★ John Saviano, chief of Inter-Survey, said Smith, Kline & French paid him $6,000 for Terpstra’s services. He said the aim was to uncover evidence of fraud costing the^ company about $80,000. DIFFERENT RATE Saviano said other wholesalers were applying a 15 per cent discount rate for retail drug sales while actually selling to Moiffe. The discount should have been 6 per cent for such sales to Moore. In a statement, Smith, Kline & French said it disliked , using a hired investigate- but said it was obliged to do so to see that “our wholesaler distribution’’ agreements are enforced uniformly.” Subcommittee Chairman Edward V. Long, D-Mo., said the company has “a remedy at law” preferable to resorting to “this type of spying.” ★ ★ ★ At least two other drug companies had access to the ! Terpstra investigation of Moore’s operations, but their identities were not made known by the subcommittee. Installed Chain Link Fencing Sean eatimatea the coat of ^our fencing Job. There ia no obligation. 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There has been no explanation of his delay In transmitting it. dong with a message, to Capitol HiU. ★ ★ * Johnson and Atty. Gen. Nicholas Katzenbadi have given several members of Congress private previews of the bill And once it's submitted. Chairman Enumuel Cellar of the House Judiciary Conunittee is expected to call immediate hearings. According to sources who have seen the latest proposal, its chief provisions run along these lines: NEW PROVXSIOWS Housing: Racial discrimina-tkm in the sale or roital of all housing—old and new, and even if privately financed—would be banned. ★ ★ ★ While the. attorney getteril could bring suit where he found a pattern and practice of discrimination, the normal remedy would be for the prospective buyer or renter to bri^ suit against the seller or landlord accused of disci^imination. Such legislation, which is expected to stir sharp controvtfsy in Congress, would theoretically open up previously all-white suburbs to Negroes, aMuming the Negroes could afford to move. Juries: ’The___________ tralion proposal would be directed at both state and federal jury systems in an effort to end the all-white juries that prevail in many parts of the south. RANDOM CHOICE Instead of the “key man system” by which prominent citizens recommend jury lists, prospective federal jurors would be chosen at random from lists representing the entire adult pi^ulation. Intimidation: lliis provision would make it a federal crime — with penalties gradual to fit the nature of a specific crime — to barm or intimidate persons attempting to desegregate public facilities. * * It also would empower the attorney general to initiate court action to end harassment or intimidation of Negro pupils (or their parents) wIm are attempting to attend previously all-white schools. The intimidation law would go fi beyond the postCivil War stat- ute making it a crime -i.witb a maximum five-year prison sentence and 110,000 fine — to conspire to deprive others of. their civil rights. A beating, under the proposed law, would carry penalties fm* the state involved. A dvil rights murder could carry up to life imprisonment. Service Is Held ANN ARBOR (AP)-Funeral serviM was held Wednesday for Zenas Clark Dickinson, emeritus professor of econcanics at the University of Michigan. EHckinson died Tuesday. He was 76. He joined the unive^ty faculty in 1023 and retired in 1956. Harassment Made Adoption Impouibl* White Family Gives Up on Adopting Negro Child FULLERTON, Calif. (AP) — “Have you checked the kids lately? One of them might be gone,” a man said menacingly on the teleidione. Such anonymous callers, garbage throwers ai^ other vandals have won, says the Rev. Albert C. Cohen. He and his wife are going to send their adopted Negro child, David, 2, back to the adoption bureau. ^Wo Ihsaght we eoald staid it,** said yesterday, **bnt ndOer of as has tte stamina to do tto Job.** His wife, Ann, said: “It wu the worst decision we ever had to make. I know we’ll have second thoufdits, but we must do It. It’s best for David that we stop right now before he’s old enough to remember.’* Cohen, 98, Maming harassment for their decision, said, *'Wa thought we could stand up and be counted, but we’re scared now.” “The judge would have signed the final adoption papers for David next month,” he said, “but we have to give up. We’ve tried. “We have suffered personal harassment aid verbal harassment for almost a year new.’’ Cohen, a 1949 graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy, is the Protestant chaplinon the Cahfomia State College campus here. He servod as a line officer in the Navy for five years. The Odiens, who are nhite, have four children of their own. They moved to this grot^ Los Angeles suburb last July from nearby Whittier, where Cohen was pastor of a Con-gregatiooal cbur^ “It was all right at first, although all our friends, black and white, told us it wouldn’t he.’’ Mrs. Cbhen. 93, said. \()u ( ail (Omit cm Us . . . (^uiility Costsi I\c> More' at Stairs at the regular No trade-in Cross Country with 27-Month Wearout Guarantee Sears ALLSTATE NYLON Tires 2nd $ Tire Guaranteed Against All Failures For Tread Life, No Limit on Time, Mileage, Roads or Speeds, Plus a 27-Month Wear-Out Guarantee. Famous Allstate Quality . . . Re|)lace Now! ’TUBELESS BLAC^ALL SiM 1st TIm-Plna Fed. Tax 2m1 Hm-No Trade-In 6.00xlS 18.15 81 6.S0xlS 20.75. 81 . _ 7.50x14 27.25 81 8.00x14 29.85 •1 6.70x15 24.65 81 'TUBELESS WHITEWALL SiM lalTIre-Plna Fed. Tax NoTrade-Ix aadHre NeTnd*- la 6.50x13 24.65 81 7.50x14 81.15 81 8.00x14 38.75 81 8.50x14 86.35 81 . 6.70x15 31.15 81 7.60x15 36.35. —ii AUPrice$PluMFed.Tax I )ii\, nlou II I’ontiiir IMiom 11, .•>-l!TI A—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MARCH 24, 1906 'Religion Calls for Discipline (EDITOR’S NOTE - Tkk b the 28th m a 40-part teries by famous and unknown persons on how faith in God changed their Uoes.) By BOLL BRADLEY AH-Anericu Basketball Player During the 1964 Olympic Gaines in Tokyo — where I played basketball for the U.S. team - a Russian track star gave me a small doll as a token of his friendship. In return I presented him with the Rus-j aim translation of a book which is the most im-! portant thing in the world to me: the Bible. If he reads and studies this Book, I thudc he may come to understand why BRADLEY I feel ao strongly about it. Once I believed its message Intellectually but it t09k a period of fnjistration during my freshman year at Princeton b^ fore Christ became the central force in my life. ■k ir For the first month or so at Princeton things went along pretty well until I got hit with some of those frustrations and doubts most all freshmen have. I worried I,wouldn’t make my grades, and I also wondered if I’d make the basketball team.' TOUGH EXAM But the real crisis came at examination time. In particular, I never shall forget a French oral exam. The .professor couldn’t seem to make a ques-;mean that suddenly all my dif-tion simple enough to get an an- ficulties disappeared. Christ did swer out of me: I left the class-jiiot promise that but He did room discouraged and returned promise to give us strength to to my room. There, I threw myself dowa on the bed and let my emo-tioiis take over. Mott at the tears I shed were ones of self-pity. though I wwdd have denied it then. I tried to rationalize about my situation without success. After a while — I don’t know how long — I sat up on the bed. ★ # ★ An idea popped into my head. A few days earlier I had received a phonograph recording in the mail. It was an album of famous Christian athletes telling about their experiences. They were people I had heard Fellowship • of Christian Athletes’ Conference at Lake Geneva, Wis. NOT LASTING I recalled the commitment 1 had made to Christ two summers earlier at the conference. The experience had been real, but it wasn’t lasting. I suppose I turned to the recording ' ‘ ' ing I could recapture that moment. I placed the needle on the hand where Boh Pettit, a great professional hasketbaU player whom I always have admired, discusses his faith with the same enthusiasm with which he plays basketball. On the record he said: “There is another team that I’m part of. I’m not the most valuable member, and I may not be on the first team, but I’m on Christ’s team. And here you’re not playing for sniall DALLAS, Tex. (AP) - The Democrats H(U1 hold their own ^ in the electiiis this year says Hi®. Cliff Carter, execuUve directof ^hnst m the hearts of men. i National 'DemstoHoldOwn in ^66 Elections' handle any problem in life. * A ★ As 1 began to study the Bible, some of His promises became clearer to me. Verses that I had read many limes before without understanding now came alive with new meaning. NEW ADVENTURE Instead of reading the Bible lit of a sense of duty, I suddenly found it a new kind of adventure which I actually enjoyed. Because I want to be in top-notch condition to play my best, I do not smoke or drink. have to practice regularly. I must work hard for a go^ mental attitude.. During a gahte there must be no distractions — just total ( tration on basketball Christianity has similar disciplines. Like basketball, where there is no such thing as a bom athlete, there is no such thing as a natural Christian. It takes work. It requires a devotion to Christ above anything else. You can’t go halfway. * * * Jesus told us what He thought about tepid followers when' He said, “because thou art lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot, will spue thee out of my mouth.” WIDE APPLICATION I find wide application in this verse for it tells me that lukewarm dedication in any endeavor is not enough to succeed. This IS just one of the truths I have discovered in the Bible, the greatest source of wisdom and really the Book of Life. * * k Now, perhaps, jou can understand why I call the gift I ;ave to the Russian track star in Tokyo the most important thing in the world to me. School Dean Retiring NEW LONDON, Conn. (AP) - Stanley L. Smith, a graduate of West Point, will retire next September as dean of academics at the U.S. Coast Guard Academy. FINE NEW GUITARS NEW GIBSON ELECTRIC Get this big new modem sound with this brand new beauty made by Gibson. The ^ "Kalamazo9'' is a solid body gui- $11 ^ tkr with 2 pick-ups and rich tone. 11^ GRINNELL'S, Pontiac Moll, 682-0422 “PANARAMIC" STEEL STRING GUITAR Value-packed full size steel string guitar. Slim, fast, low action neck. Rosewood fingerboard, mahogany with natural top. Cover and strap included. ^ f 27 S. Soginow St., FE 3-7168 of the Demor^ratic Committee. Carter told a ^oup of party financial backers that majority parties usually lose about 44 seats in off-year congressional elections. “We will buck this historic and traditional trend,” he said. His words were on target. Suddenly, I was able to see that I had failed to give Christ His rightful place in my lifq. I was physically, mentally and spiritually baidcrupt. BURIED IN FILE . The regular disciplines of prayer and meditation and Bible 'Radio Froe Europe reading that are necessary for Christian growth had been bur-Reoches 22 Million' lied in a file with some other 'items labeled, “Things I know Radio I should do.” DETROIT (AP) Free Europe reaches more than 22 million people behind the 'Iron Curtain and gets an aver-\ age of 1,000 letters a month from them says the president of U.S. Steel Corp., LesUe B. Worthington. He told SO business leaders that RFE has “become an intimate part of the daily lives of a populace highly disenchanged with the governing regimes.” RCAVlCTORi,^ COliORTV HOME ENTERTAINMENT CENTER IN DRAMATIC DANISH STYLING Features NEW 25” Rectangular RM HI-LITE COLOR TUBE l-Speakar Solid State Stereo FM/AM Radio with FM Stereo New COLOR W of its finest with new Hi-Lite Tube delivering brighter color pictures than any other previous RCA'Color Tube. Solid State Stereo Phonograph features 8 matched speakers for the ulKmate in dynamic dimensional sound, year's i f My next step was obvious to me. Beside my bed, on my knees, I asked (jod to forgive me for being so foolish as to tliink I could run my life or accomplish anything meaningful without Him. I asked Him to take ever and guide me in all my actions. From that day forward things have been difierent. I don’t SWEETS lUOlO I APPUINCE . 422 Wm» Huron FE 4-5677 OfmMamdmjrmmdrHdmrEaosdMgs'Tilf FM. ^ SEARS lto\>MlO'Ml I’-Wlii 1 ilOll) I I t THE POSTiAG PRESS, THURSDAY. MARCH 24. Ig66^ 1 A—11 PRE Fflriwi WlMl IX/v MEN'S and BOY^' SALE! CLOTHING iPannanaot Pnss $299' up ADAMS HATS 795J95 SLACKS $4.96to$12.W All Wuthtr Coats $18.95 to $22.95 |»0 CLOTHES 71 N. Saginaw Yanks Given Quick Care in Viet Nam By Esther Vu WagMMT Tnfty WASHINGTON - The AmerP few.” so many owed so much to so and to boepitals near their can GI' has never received better or quicker care and treatment than in Viet Nam today says the man who should knohr, Lt. Gen. Leonard D. Heaton, surgeon general of the Army. During World War H, only 4.S per cent of each 100 wounded soldiers could jnot be saved. Daring the Korean conflict the figure was reduced to ii per cent. Today, the percentage fatalities in relation to the total And help comes fa^. In Viet such recuperatitti gives signs of Nam, he said in an interview,!being prcdonged. that the Army suffered a week-| Six ailments make up the ma-ly average of ISO wounded and jority of the diseases treated by 600 diseased patients. Some 00Army Medical Corps in Viet 'homes for recuperation, when per cent of wounded are off battlefield in 20 minutes. Of these, 0S.3 per cent are reactivated in IS days. Others will be sent for 00 days to Okinawa, Guam, Japan or Honolulu before being returned to duly. Nam: diarrhea, malaria, respiratory difficulties, head and chest odds, skin fungus infections and hepatitis. | Heaton, while commanding Walter Reed Medical Center, here, operated on such famous, patients as President Eisenhow-| iBiiues in reiauuu lu uic Between 13 to 15 per cent er and Secretary of State John number wounded is less than 1|^U be sent to the United States'Foster Dulles. ' per cent, Heaton said. | One reason: “Tl»at Omalli brave band of helicopter hro-bulance units and helicopter pilots.” Of this group Heaton paraphrased ChurchUl: “Nev^ have I Bring This Coupon With Your thooo I SHOE REPAIR SPECIAL HALF SOLES ookiMthw, Rubber Of "f A Csupsn Oesd Fri., tat. and Man. Only All Work QuarantBtd! Sw So KRESGE^S DOWNTOWN PONTIAC STORE B«iM sen, ChmsSs mmd Desks toMaSek AlsmAviAtsUmfU NoMMHqrDewii ciuunyc Hollywood dImMURo ensemble SImmans Hallywaad •nsambU, Inaludas durebla washable plastic bcedbaard. ' Quality i Bunk Bed AAAPLE or OAK BUNK Rugged Sturdy Oak wood with o mollow glow ... guard roil... loddor •SI No Money Down - 36 Months to Pay TUNE IIH Three •99 SLEEPS Three Sansational triple bed, complete With mattresses, guard rail and ladder. Only Includes MsMresses Free Dolivory NO MONEY DOWN TRUHDLE BED Solid Maple Tnmdla led, .oomplata ^ with noma brand mattress V andba.0. IneludM MattrstSM ^ Wall terror [ jqx SPRING rtSurMI®® ............. *48" "“"JTiiiETlowr» THHirKlfo 7Jy"“" BUNKLAND 338-6666 Open 9 til 5:30 - Mon., Thin., Fri. 'til 9 1672 S. Tdlograiili, PonKae SetwotR Iqaaro Ukt and Orehard Laka Noadt a sisos 6 to 16. ' JR. BOYS^ MATCHING SUITS Now Spring thodoi in rayon tharkokint. 2 button styling. Solid thodot, for Spring or Eattor woor. MEN'S SPRING HALF-SLEEVE DRESS SHIR1S • Now spring stylo hall I skirts lor. Tab o5le» and but- Ion down otylas. Sisos 14 * tol7; ? Siz«t 6W2 BLACK OR BROWN TWO YANKEE STORES IN THE PONTIAC AREA ★ MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER * CORNER OF PERRY ANO MONTCALM STREETS * FREE, EASY A B-2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MAECH 24, 1966 *A New You' by Emily Wilkens Exercises Can Work Wonders CHAPTER4 Does the very mention of the word “exercise” make you picture a group of athletic ^is in old-fashioQed bloomers doing strenuous calisthenics at six o’clock ta the morning? If so, then you’re out of step with the times, for one secret of modem exercise is that all motions in everyday lift can help keep you physically fit, if you know how to use your muscles to the fullest. ^ ★ When you wake up in the morning, don’t just' wander out 1,0 the kitchen in a daze. Instead, try this simple stretching routine designed to limber up the most determined sleepyhead. W ★ While still in bed, alternately stretch out your left hand and left leg; your right hand and leg. Then S-T-R-E-T-C-H both arms and legs. Now try to stretch every single part of jyour body—feet, thighs, hands, neck and so on — just as an animal does. Pretend you’re a lion cub and really loosen up. ROLL INTO BALL Tumble out of bed onto the floor, rolling yourself into a Mrs. Farnum to Be Hostess at Convention Hostesses to the M1 c h 1 g a n delegation of Democratic women for the Campaign Conferende in Washington, D.C. Aprtl 17-19 will be Mesdames Billie S. Farnum, G. Mennen Williams, Patrick V. McNamara and Philip Hart. More than 3,500 Democratic women representing all SO y states are expected to attend \the biannual conference which I with a general session AVil 17. ★ ★ ★ Monday, delegates will be ■ to the halls of Congress Iw a “Morning on Capitol Hill\ program during which they wiiK visit with their senators and obi^ssmen. They will ^return to die Wash-IngtMi Hilto^for a luncheon honoring nine^^Mtional women from names submitted from jroughout the country. A gala banquet 99th Congress will day night. Tuesday morning, a and luncheon will ' of the S3 Democratic go Full-time registrants of ference then will go to the House where they will be ceived by Mrs. Lj^on B. John- ball by hugging your knees with your arms. Rock back and forth on you)- ^ine as far as you can, keeping knees tight against your chest. , Then roll a little extra side-to-side on problem areas—thighs, derriere, shoulders, back, or whatever. Be sure there’s a rug or mat under you, by the way. This morning stretching and rolling routine takes only a few minute and sooi becomes automatic. It helps you wake up and start the day with a smile. Do you slump, slouch and shuffle into a room, collapse into the nearest chair, and wonder why no one pays much atjention to you? The way you walk, sit, bend over and, stand adds up to total beauty *— the kind that makes all eyes turn in your direction. No matter how good or had your figure is at present, it will look better with perfect posture^ The most beautiful clothes are spoiled by a sloppy stance, . by holding yourself erectly you can make even inexpensive clothes look marvelous. ★ llr If you’re too short, take comfort in the fact that you can add at least an inch to your height by standing up straight. If you’re tall, good posture is just, as important, for you only emphasize your height when you slump and slouch. Practice posture until it becomes automatic for you to carry yourself with pride. Use any dormant acting ability you may have and pretend you’re a princess — proud, regal, careful not to drop the glittering crown you wear on your shining head. Have you ever seen a prin- cess walking around with her tummy out and her chest caved in? The spine is a rod or plumb line through the middle of the body. To straighten this line, you have to pull your shoulders as close Together as possible, then down. Pretend there’s a string attached to your head behind your ears, pulling your head up. Now,Jift your rib cage out of your Vaistlinfe. Automatically, you have a longer, swanlike neck and a slimmer torso. Stand in this position for a moment to get accustmned to it. ★ * * Cling to that line, even when you walk, but try not to become rigid. With a litUe practice, a regal posture can bwome second nature. DONT PLOD And speaking of walking, don’t just plod around. Always point your toes straight ahead , and walk on the balls of your UF Annual Awards Tea Will Honor Volunteers The 1966 Annual Awards Tea at which volunteers of the Pontiac Area United Fund’s 55 agencies are honored for their work and association will be April 21 at Pine Knob Resort, beginning at 1:15 p:m.\ This year, over 160 ipen and women will receive engraved plates or certificates denoting their years of service to the UF’s various agencies and committees. Speaker for the program will be Elinor K. Rose of Royal Oak, syndicated poet, writer and author of several books of poetry whose topic is “Once Over Lightly.” CHAIRMEN Tea cochairmen are Mrs. Paul Gorman and Mrs. J. D. Boardman. They are working .with Mrs. William J. Freyer- muth, invitations; Mrs. Adrian Ish, decorations; Mrs. William G. Wrii^t, program; and. Mrs. D. Richard Veazey, publicity. ★ ★ ★ In charge of the tea table are Mrs. James Cowen of Clarkston and Mi^s. Francis McMath of Birmingham. Mrs. John Bills and Mrs. Traver Miller have charge of hostesses. Mrs. Board-> man will handle displays. Awards will be presented by Women’s Division chaimum Mrs. MerreU D. Petrie, Virginia Loveland of the PAUF and Ted Pearson Jr., Oxford, who also will be master of ceremmies. \ A * The a^air, expected to attract over 200 from the greater Pontiac area and southern Oakland County, is being sponsored by Pontiac State Bank. mphony Rehearsal to Aid Children's Hospital Women’s Auxiliary of the Children’s Hospital of Michigan will sponsm- a benefit entitled “An Afternoon to Remember” on April 13 at 1:40. p.m. in Ford Auditorium. N The ev^t will be an All pictures are kept fnr tWo months, then discarded. They may be called for any time after publication. -I THE WnTIAC press. THURSDAY, MARCH 24, 1966 Dainty, ‘imported^ cups^nd saucers will be prizes at Ateme chapter's annual card party Wednesday. This Order of Eastern Star group mil present the party tWhich is open to the public, af 8 p.m. in the Roosevelt Temple. Shoton wrapping the treasures are from left Mrs. Eugene t. Clines of Eldridge Street; Mrs. Earmon H. Howard of Giddings Road and Mrs. Royal Clark of Exmoor Road. Merger Will Intensify Breast Cancer Studies Promise of i long range •My which hopefully wlO help toward the elimlnatloii of breast cancer as M number one causa of cancer deaths announcement of the merging of four nathmaily recognised \cancer control agencies in Do^ Aimouncement of the merger was nude by Leonard N. Siimnons, chairman of the board of trustees oi the Michigan Cancer Foundation, w ★ ★ Insight Into the organisa-tion's prime objective was outlined by Dr. Michael J. Bm-nan, r • t i r 1 a g physician in charge of the oncology divi-sion of Henry Ford Hospital president of die foundation. GROUPS JOINING The merging organisations are the Michigan Cancer Foundation, the Detroit bwti- R & M for Spring Fashion-. Foaturing Those Brand Names td. M'i DRESSES * Jonattian Logon ► Fou.'vc;! Young SPORTSWEAR COATS tute of Cancer Researdi, the Michigan Cancer Registry and the Cancer Datectkn Center. Undv the merger, the Institute of Cancer Researdi, the Cancer Registry and the Cancer Detection Center will become divisions of the hflehi-gan Cancer Foundation. it it it “One of the major programs which we have already ,dis-cussed with national scientific advisory cfunmittees,” Or. Brenaa said, “is a long range study into the cause — or causes — of breast cancer, a* ★ ★ “Studies in experimental Wash ere Where Waslvbefore-wearing is always a good rule for napped fabrics in bright or deep-tone colors. For example, red flannelette sleepwear may rub off on skin or sheets unless excess “surface” dye is flushed away by a series of sudsing and rinses. Bandsmen Are Chosen for Concert TheaS-cltyJunior High Honors Band is made up of the best players from Pontiac’s six junior high sdxwls. They arwchosen on the basis of competitive auditions. Saturday at S p.m. in Lincoln Jr. High School Auditorium, the band will present its Guest conductor will be ^ liam Moffit, assistant director of bands at Michigan State University. Also to be featured is the university of Michigan French bom ensemble. ‘it it * Tickets for M concert are available from band members or at the door. Don't Squeeze No-Iron Fabric Miracte fabrics that require no ironing will look their beat if you don’t squeese them at all after rinsing. Put them on tfooden hangers, smooth seaims, collars and cuffs and all^ to drip dry. \ Cool but Sweet To frost a glass for a cool drink, dip glass rim first into cold fruit juice of the desired flavor, then into powdered NS-320 oar often developa from a background of prwcancenus through endocrine treatment,’’ he said. * SEEK — IDENTIFY To seek out and identify pre- changes which occur in women edio are prone to breast cancer, it is necessary to study and compare the hormone secretion pattern, the genetic hereditary consti-tttthm and the internal structure of the breasts of wmnen who do not have the disease, but who subsequently develop it, with normal women in whom it does not occur. With this unification of can-cer control facilities present under one leadersh^i, Dr Brenan said the Michigan Cancer Foundation anticipates an accelerated cancer con- trol program through the opportunity it afimils for closer cooperation with colleges and universities, hoqdtals and major industrial research laboratories in this area. SPECIAL FABRIC SALE at SINGER PAULINE SUE McARTHUR D.I.T. Professor Talks of Change Professor Jerry Tobias of the Detroit Institute of Technology spoke Tuesday before the membership of Beta Omega, Lambda Chi Omega sorority. The talk entitled, “Changing Times from Rural to Urban Cemununities” was given in the Desiax Avenue home tt Mrs. Martin McLaughlin. Plans were discuamd to attend the nationar convention to be held in Detroit in June.’ Shanium Rodgers /or Jerry Silverman Shannon Rogers created this feminine/two-Mce dress for Jerry SUverman. The buttmnd-back, sleeveless overblouse is simply cut'and slightly fitted, ending in scallops. A - lb See chart for size best for'you. ‘w w«M HIM *unsni 4 14 3$ MW" wHh Us seaUsped overlap. It is, in real^, a sM^ As •eft tfeboW.peeUng from la-rbleuse is pep-MtotbesUrt An ideal deidga for any fab- ric,, b from, U|d>tweight sen or cotton piques. Spadea's exclusive ready-to-wear sizes produce a better fit. I W » W 17W" I 40 It 41 17W" >Prwn Him «K Nock to Wolil Misses Size 12 requires 3% yards of ST* fabric without nap fv Two-Piece Dress. To order Pattern NS - SM, state size; send $1.25. Duchess of Windsor Pattern Boidc with 56 designs is available for $1.00. Booklet A Sewing Ups by wwld famous designers is available for 50c. Address SPADEA, Box 983, G.P.O. Dept. P-6 New York, N.Y. lOOM. SINGER^ PONn/kC MALLS hHOWNO CEirmiS Pbon* M2-ISM T Pituta r or A athtiWt Cwhlta Pbrt of the fashion fun of Spring is ouh-fitting the Young FoBcs of Arthur^ where we ore dediodled to sm their fashion needs. Choose from our new collection. FEATURING PRIME BEBF--STEAKS—CHOPS PLUS Our Famous Smorgasbord Buffet ★ Banquet atjd Private Party Facilities-F. Ward Ouradnik, your host e Cools wMi tho Impiro Woial in Navy and whHo chocks The Rotunda CQuntry Inn 3230 Pine Lahp Roed Phone 682-0600 e ntfod stylos In postols e Booy styloi in chocb and solids e Bstekbohod A-Iino cools fai pink, e 34k end 7-1A nsmiiniVE coordinates . . . have that sportive, bright, festive look, styled to flatter ond relax. The mood is eosy . . . Ifs planned that wayl In dramatic combinations of yellow, green, brown and Mge. Sixes 8-16. Blouses, pant, skirt and waistcoat. Mch 10.98 or: s~roc5i-w can you pep up the kitchen? Inexpensive new curtains, new ha^ware, fresh topping for work' counters? member that kitdien and bathrooms are key areas in appealing to a prospect. UGHTING IMPORTANT Cali in the carpenter if there are any loose door knobs. COME IN NOW...DURING OUR BIG The Studio-Model 1RP625 In groce-ful Contemporary fin* furniture. Annual Sal* Priced. Revolutionary ASTRO-SONIC Solid-State Components are 10 times more efficient than conventional- tube radio-phonographs Sllll-Stiti SKrtt FM, Tw* MifatvH klfli-ini- Twi MtMsril FM AM Ridii- ciiacT H* liu Waoiiri till Trillt Hirai^^havi DiUMSd SlyIVi pkb-w- Anpliliir-with 30-watts -reproduce true bass tows equivalent acoustical effi- tMalshes discernible : power. without distortion. . ciency of 20 cone speakeri and stylus wear. NOW ONLY ’348“ Music becomes magic... everywhere In the room... with the advanced Astro-Sonic scousticsl syatemi. They project sound from both cabinet sidea and front to extend thrilling stereo separation to thievery width of your room. Gliding top paneia allow •ntoit convenient access to record player, ail controls, and a large record ftorage aiUa— without disturbing your top^f-set decorative accessories. And remember, wUk tkt exebuh* Magnavof Mkron^ic Pkiytr, your rteardi can bn a UfOimet The HaMwaid-Modei l-RP62t den^ 12* tee* Wloolsrs. In beeutMRy Proportioned Danlah Buy NOW Choo .e frc Other Maqnavor Solid S widest selection of beautiful "CLAYTON’S 2133 Orciiai^ Lake Road-Phone 333-7052 Check carpeting and rail-Ittga on atairwaye. One little Bomething mi|deaBaat to remember yen by. Give aome thought to the Ughting. Would more wattage provUo a more cheerful atmoophere? Wonid rearraagemeat of lampa mue a room mare Inviting? Never forget that you have to spent a little money in order to make a lot. So be aa critical as you can of your home. ★ ★ A One more word: when your real estate agent is showing the house, don’t tag along. Let him do the talking abwt price, terms and whatever else is on the prospect’s mind. ★ w ★ He has a lot more experience in this field than you have. At ★ ★ (You can write to Mary Feeley in care of The Pontiac Press.) ANNUAL SALE SAVE s|00 ...on many magnificent models! Only these ASTRO-SONIC* Solid-State STEREO FM and Monaural FM/AM Radio-Phonographs ...let you enjoy the ^ beauty of music! NOW ONLY’349“ Music becomes magic... everywhere in the room... with th* advanced Astro-Sonic acoustical systems. They project sound from both cabinet sides 4nd front to extend thrilling stereo separation to the very width of your room. Gliding top panels allow most convenient access to record player, all controls, and a large record storage area— without disturbing your top-of-set decorative accessories. And remember, wAA the exelusivt Magnavox Micromaiic Player, your records can Iasi a lifetime! The Otto Janciks of Shortridge Street, Avon Toumship, announce the engagement of their daughter, Sylvia Rose, to Patrick Michael Joz-tnak, son of the Michael Joztoiaks of Madison Heights. She attends Oakland Community College. Her fiance is a student at Tri-State College, Angola, Ind. TheWiUiam H. Langs of Wolverine Lake an-nounce the engagement of their daughter, Suzanne Marie, of Arlington, Va., to Philip Charles Kannan, son of the N. G. Kannans of Wilson, N.C. He is an alumnus of North Carolina State University. June vows are planned. ^ Old ? iJ0S£PHfAf£ £om4AN GIFT PROBLEMS? • ••SOLVED TRE CASTLE OIFT SHOP 370 S. T*l*eraiph^PMiNae WOMEN’S WEAR 123W.MAnE,BIUIIIigilAM No tmman can be quite so stunning aa the tajl one who capitalizes on her height instead of regretting It She can wear spectacular acces-aoriei and hlgh-atyle clothes whldi are more or leas lost when worn by a shorter woman, njat’a one reason for the above-average-height of most models. Along with above-average-height must go much better-than-average posture. Beautiful posture is essential if your height is to be a positive value rather than a negative oneandifyouaretobelm-preashre. Carry yourself like a queen and stand Just as taQ as you can, spine.itrai^t, tuuuny in, hips under, and knees and sheers relaxed. You can wear heavy exotic earrings, chunky bracelets and carry chic big pocket-boqks with ease and assurance. No delicate pearls for you! So far as shoes, you can take into consido’atimi the height of your husband or date and how they feel about H. There is surely no problem here! Tliere are so many attractive aboea with shaped heels which are not high. In fact you will be just in style with a lower heel (shoe not man). You can wear the big beautiful flashy dramatic colorful prints which are so popular today and which the shorter or fat woman cannot get away with. I would not advise you to wear stripes which go up and down. If you are madly in love with a dress which has stripes be sure that they go round and round you. You can break the impression of height with tops and bottoms of a contrasting color. For instance, a light blouse and a dark skirt or vice versa, or a dress which hat the same. Wide belts of a contrasting color are flattering. Any buttons or design diould go acroBS instead of up and down. If you have a small bust and large hips, you should choose a light top and a dark skirt. If your bust is large but your hips are too slim, reverse the technique. Never be aetf-conscious about being above average in height or even taDI TUs is an advantage aa you grow older too. at SIBLEY'S Miracle Mil* Captures Fashion’s Fancy for Spring Everything new, everything beautifulu ev^hing fine—that'i what Fknheim has in it(»e for you this Spring I And whether your choice is a low-heeled Rambler, a elasaie Florsheim or s, high faahion Serenade, you’ll enjoy the very same elegance, the special attention to superb quality that has made Flonheim famoua. Shoe Illustrated •17. Other Women's FLORSHEIMS Fiem $17 to $19 ‘‘Miehicu’i UiSMl FlortktiM Dealer’ {shoes m Uee YaMr Security Chorgo or Midtigaii Jankord lltoMfisU Mirasls MIb South Telegraph at 'Square Lake Rd. fe e-970e CHmo EYeningt'tne THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, ^,-MAH( I 111 ICH 24, 196(^ B—7 Frankenmuth Vows for Richard Beufels Honeymooning in •re tbe Richard Alan Beut (Corinne Florence Bleke) who were wed recenOy in St. John’s Evangelical Lutheran Churdi, Frankenmuth. A dinner - reception in the High life Inn, Saginaw, fol-K lowed tbe afternoon ceremony * performed by the bride’s grandfather, the Rev. Oscar Fedder of Chicago. Parents of the couple are the Walter F. Blekes of Frankenmuth and the William F. Beutels of Pinehurst Road, Independence Township. LACE BODICE An Empire bodice of illusion lace highlighted the bride’s gown and train of white satin Post Marks 47th Year A gala party in honor of its 47th birfliday was held by the American I^lon No. 20 and its Auxiliary recently in the post home. Dr. Lynn Allen .spoke at the event where Mrs. David War-rilow served as toastmistress. "Cuests included Commander and Mrs. Ralph Bogart, Mrs. Allen, Mrs. Agnes Dust, Mrs. Pearl Brodrn and Mrs. RayJewep. faille worn with veil of sBk She held a Aoscgay of white Phalaenopsis orchids and lilies of the valley. With honor matron, Mrs. Roger Groulx of Madison Heights, were bridesmaids Dee Kowalski, Detroit; Pamela Pullis and Mary Nerow-skl. Royal Oak, ‘and Mrs. William Beutel, Oak Park. Timothy Jockwig of Ldn-sing was best man. Ushering at their sister’s wedding were Bert Bleke, Valparaiso, Ind. and Dwight Bleke, along with William Beutel and Lewis Wint, Ciarkstdn. ’The bride was graduated from the Henry Ford Hospital School of Nursing and her husband is enroll^ fdr graduate study at Michigan State University. MRS. RICHARD ALAN BEUTEL Some Dress Tips Fmr a practical way to hold. some ties on the inside of your closet door, put a cup hook on either side and stretch a heavy rubber band between them. The ties will not slide off. • If you still have trouble tieing a bowtie, do it Just like you.put the bow knot on a shoelace. ’Then look at a mirror to smooth it out. • You can restore the shiny look to scuffed and grimy rubbers by applying liquid shoe poUsh. Silence Often Says a Lot How much time do people actually spad in talking? Careful measurments show that it’s only for a total of It to 11 minutes daily, on the average, with men ranking about equally with women, an anthropologist reports. ‘The standard spoken sentence UAes only IVt seconds,” explains Dr. Ray L. Birdwhis-tell of Temple University Medical Center. We do far more communicating with body movements,'with our eyes and eyebrows, fs6ial expressions, hands and shoulders, and also with OUT silences thi^t sometimes can say a very great deal, he adds. The Tragic Toll Half a million children under 5 years of age accidentally consume poisonous substances every year. About 500 of them die. Widov/s Life Is Dedicated to Service DEXTER, Mo. (UPI) - It mlf^t be hard to believe, but kfrs. Geneva Massey really gets letters from wtnnen thanking her ‘‘for my kindness to their husbands.” 'These are the times I know I am doing a worthwhile job,” Mrs^pssey says of the letters':^ ters. Mrs. Masesy’s job since 1951 has been to volunteer for more than S,700 hours at tlie Veb erans’ Administration Hbs|dtal in Poplar Bluff in southeast Missouri, alnibst 55 miles from her Dexte home. hfrs. Massey, a widow since 1938, also is a nurse’s aide at a convalescent htxne and does other volunteer work at a cUnic. She does the volunteer work, Mrs. Massey said, because her luisband, a World War I veteran, told her that he ap-ineciaM the work ot voiun-tem when he was hoqtitaUxed before his death. Briah Arrives Word comes from Oiicago of the March 20 birth of a son, Brian Charles, to Mr. and Mrs. Arthur G. Gasche (Karen Eidher). Grandparents are tbe David Eichers (tf Winterberry Drive, West Bloomfield Township. bedroom villago presents- . iaHy Amofieon bodfoodi furnttwW < . . boairttfuNy finisliMl bt •fidurino chorry-wHfi occMt ptacM In Wontlwcnnt erann. Com* in and nxalninn this mognificnnt colIncHon of picfur- ^ •tqun fumiturn—wn will bn pinatnd to hnip you plan yoi/r ! bndioom, dining raom and dnn in Eariy Amnrican Chnny Gtovo trIpU drwsswr...... .134.50 „ night stand........44.50 postwr bed.......... .89.95 chest-on-chest.........121.50 bedroom village (FORMERLY POST FURNITURE) 1532 S. WOODWARD, BIRMINGHAM 5 BLOCKS NORTH OF 14-MILE • Ml 4-1410 OPEN DAILY 9 AM. to 9 PM. BUY, SELL, TRADE ... USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS T" Here's why Beker's stores ere so busy! Discover why smart fiuhion shoppers have made our exduaive QnaliCraft the best-sdling brand in the land! Sef all the new 1966 shoe looks at their freshest, have fun ehoosing from big, exciting selections! Examine the luxury-quality shoemaking that means such stand-out value at these low prices. Here, just a £bw fresh and sparkling black patent upper styles from dur zingy yoimg-spring collection. 7M.M9 QualKkafr (aanalslB, die imall-hoelad y««B4g lodn^^mang priosd. Ifatdifmated handbags are our apecialty. Viait our complete dcfwrtment ' Cnat valuea, tool Z99to7.99 Pontioc Mall Shipping Center £ THE PONTIAC PRESS. THUBSDAY, MARCH 2 • OmCIALSIZE BASKHBUl • GOAL NET • MASONITE BACKBOARD Reg. 23.00 1499 Official tin, rnoidod, Detroit Piston's basicotball. Sturdy 12 hook, 48 thread outdoor goal. 36"x48" waterproof, laminated tempered masonite backboard. SEW UP ^ SAVINGS NOW! SUAAAAER FABRIC SALE! THIS WEEK ONtYI FANTASTIC SUPER 8 MOVIE SALEI TELEPHONE 335-5471 45” Woven Stripe SEERSUCKER 77' Volues up to 1.29. Th« sum-m«r cloth that requires litrte care or ironing. Fabulous for sportswear. Lowest price in years for this quality goods. 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Efforts to Form New Cabinet Prove Fruitless in Indonesia JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) Indonesia’s qew leaden met again with President Sukarno today without reaching agreement on a new anti-Communist . cabinet to cope with the na-i tion’s political and economic The meeting brought Sukarno . together with a presidium of t'JW civilian and military repre-I lentatives who have been tr^g to forge a cabinet f(r four days, i Another meeting was scheduled I later today, sources said. I ' ★ ★ ' ★ ' t There was concern in some ^quarters that unless the pmidi^ ’ ^fum rrached a decision on a new V cabinet soon, the students who ^tivpled Sukarno’s 100-man cabi-:net Would again stage street I demonstrations. Meanwhile, Jakarta remained fcalm and the military shortened rthe nightly curfew by 3% hours. « While the presidium deliber-f «ted. Influential political parties ^ dxinessed their support for Gen. ^Iidiarto, the new strongman, f The powerful Moslem party •iNahdatul Ulema issued a state-4,ment saying there is "strong I'ground for endorsing and sq>-f porting" Suharto. It urged the to move against manipulators and graft and corruption, increase productivity and reject foreign aid which has strings attadied. The Cathdic party also announced its supp^ for Suharto and called for a new f(»«ign policy that woukfbe “independent and active and guided by national interests.” ‘ Sukarno appeared at a Pakistani reception Wednesday ni^ and declared:i“I am still president of Indonesia. I am still preme conunander of the armed forces. I am stiQ leader of tiw Indonesian revolution." Sukarno appeared in good hu-nvMT and wore a field roarshal’s uniform. He spoke in Englidi. ■’Abroad they say I have been pled,” he said. “Abroad they say I have been ousted. Abroad they say I am a sick man, nearly dying. 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So every morning Heidf trote^ alongside Burnett’s car and the. only exercbe be gete b holding her on a leash out the window, j 'Mine Safety Changes Won't Cut Coal Profits' PIKEVnXE, Ky. 90 lananeo. You gal co^ ■ |.y. ling and Inrtollotlen. ■ etoaM LUXURUUIYMRYUC SHEW SCULPTURE - 1S.ia Yai — FINE HTLON PLUSR bcollant quality. Our (pp lallar. 6*! ^ans PlHE FLOOR COVERIWPS Open 9:30 to 9 DiHy Exeo|it Tbts. Tilt 6-Sundgy 13 to 6 P.M. TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER WEST HURON AT TEEGRAPH-334-9544 FREE HOME SERVICE A fgluphotia call la a)| M talwa !• Jutt Call THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC. MKTIIGAN. THURSDAY, MARCH 2i, 1966 C-1 Bengals, Red Wings Slip Past Foes Tigers Now 10-2 After Tight Win Defroit-Rouge Sfeelers SO smoothly for the Tigers lately that they even got away with giving up a cotq>le of runs Wednesday. WASN'T EVEN CLOSE - Atlanta Braves’ Mack Jones slides across 6ie plate ahead of the throw dnriiig a sixth-inning uprising against the Detroit Tigers yest«6ay at West falm Beach, Fla. ’Ilgen’ catcher 6ill FMe^ waits for the ball that came too AP PImMU late from left fielder Willie Horton, who picked off a fly ball off the bat of Frank Bolling.,The ball was deep enough to permit Jones to scamper home. The run mattered little, however, as the Tigers won, 3-2. NATIONAL LIAeUS PllUburgh Atlanta ........ San FranclKo St. Loalt ...... Chicago ........ lAOUB ' Chicago MtHnoro CalHomla ■oaton Waohlngl St. Louli A Loi Angtiaa 1 Houiton 13, WaNibigtan 7 Chicago A A Cincinnati 3 Now Vwk A t, Boolon t Kanias CNv 11, Balttmgra V Minnesota S, Phlladelpltla 4 Cfaval^" i'Un' Francitn 1 Chicago N A —•- * « N A California 3 TiSay's Oatne I vs. Boaton at l Baach, Caltl Chicago / I. MInneaota at Orlando, a. St. LouU at It. Palirt-ra. Clncbmatl at Tampa, I. Houston at Cocoa, Fla. 1. Calltornia at Holtvlllo, (night) Waat il^jNin A, vs. Phlladalphia at Clasr-Kansas City va. St. Louis at St. Palara- P.R., (night) . Minnesota at ! U.ofM. 4th in Golf Outing MIAMI, Fla. (AP)-The Uni-versity of Michigan golf team held fourth place after the first round of play Wednesday in the University of Miami golf tournament. Michigan shot a 295 against the University of Flcwi-day’s leading 287. John Richart and John John Schroeder of Michigan each shot par 71 but were four strokes off the pace of the individual leader. Bob Murphy of Ftorida, national amateur champion. Murphy fired six birdlea for his 67. Tankers Test Rarefied Air AIR FORCE ACADEMY, Colo. (AP) — The nation’s foremost college swinuners their coaches had their eyes as much on the effects of the dev-ated altitude as on eaian-studded University of Mi(diigan elects to keep their boys at home arrived here only Wednesday. Roy Saari on USC is defending the three records he set last year in the 200, 500 and 1,650-yard freestyle events. Another multi-title defender is Gary DU-ley of Michigan State in the 100 and 200-yard backstroke. Other standouts defending individual records include Tom TVethway of Indiana in the 200-yard breaststredee, Carol RoMe of Michigan in the 400-yard indi- vidual medley, Ohio State’s ]^b Hopper in the 200-yard individual medley and Bill Craig of USC in the 100-yard brea9^ stroke. One memory of things past is le problem of dead beats. A new timing device, developed at the University of Michigan, judges finishers within fineline allowances of five one-mil-lionths of a second. Hank Aguirre and Teri^ Pox conobined for another stellar pitching performance as the Tigers whipped the Atlanta Braves, 3-2 for their seventh straight victory and 10th in a dozen Gnywfhiit League games. Both Atlanta runs were unearned. ★ ★ ★ Aguirre said he felt better warming up than in the game but added he was satisfied with his six innings wortc. Aguirre’s toughest inning was the fourth when Rico Carty hit a leadoff single and Mack Jones followed with a double in the right field corner^ LOAD BASES I Frank BfekyoutSze ^youtdtokt timore with the Bullets getting the home court advantage for their meeting with the St. Louis Hawks. “The money game, baby, we won the money game,’’ ^ed big Wayne Embry as the Royals entered their dressing room after upsetting the Celtics. The underdog Cincinnati seemed, as surprised as the crowd of 9,510 that they had taken Boston much easier than the score indicated. ’Tournament began today was the man most familiar with the course. Dan ces of Jackaon-viHe. “I’ve played this course many times I couldn’t count them, and I’ve had several 66s,’' Sikes said after tying for first among the pros in a pro-am {xw-liminary Wednesday with a slx-under-par 66. CREDITS DEFENSE Royals’ Coach Jack McMahon credited his defense with the victory, as did Jerry Lucas, one of the heroes of the big Victory. “The defense did it, the fense did it,’’ repeated McMahon. “It’s one thing to talk about it and another thi play it as tough as we did. Auerbach felt it was a game “Everything we did in the j first quarter was wrong," he !said reflecting On Boston’s sorry i performance in which it scored only 17 points. I “We were just as bad in the third quarter,’’ he added. “We cut the lead to three points and then we gave up the ball three times without taking a shot.' “Our shooting was worse thaq the percentage (406 per cent on field goal tries) indicates," Auerbach said. “The percentage went up at the end when they let us in for those easy layups. U.S. Horse Takes DONCASTER, England (AP) A Black Saturday looms for England’s legalized bookies following the victory of the American-owned and bred Riot Act in the Lincolnshire Handicap. Riot Act, owned by Mrs. John F. C. Bryce’s Mill River Stud at South Arlington, Vt., won the one mile Lincolnshire Wednesday as the 8-1 favorite i packed field of 49 horses. ’The Lincolnshire, on which the Irish Sweepst^es based, also was the fhst what is known as the Spring! ^ Double, linking the Lincolnshire' g and the Aintree Grand Steeple- ■ chase. ‘ “ NHL Standings W L T Ph. OP OA isS =:■ as,5 YIAR ROUMD WORK. APPLY HOLLY TOOL R N 111 Roaett* St. Astros Muscleman After Team Berth By the Associated Press lard, but the previous lack of the Frank Howard is reacty to long bail hasn’t bothered the north; Dave Nichdsonioutfielder, who has been spray- Atlanta 3-2 for their seventh in a h(^ for a trip south. Ing enou^ other hits. The New York Mets increased their record to 8^3, rallying for five unearned runs iri the ninth inning and a 7-6 victory over suit was a 13-7 Exhibition vlcte-lwish the season was starting!Pittsburgh. Bill Mazeroaki’s ’iliey met bdore starting their “I’m ready to go north,” the respe^ve travels, and the re-|6Joot-7, 255 pounder said. ry for Houston over Washington I nqw. I’ve never felt this way e Wednesday. (before so early." f * * it I Nicholson, on the other hand, i Nicholson drove in six runs j would like to feel that his lusty with two h(Hners for the Astros performance against the Sena- 5 vHiUe Howard unk>aded a 506-|tors will help get him headed ning homer miile eighth-inning foot homer for the Senatixv. soutb-from OklaluHna City to homers by Clete Boyer and Bob-The homer was the tirst of the Houston. |i^ Murcer gave the New York error started the rally, and Jim Hickman’s two-out, run-scoring single capped it. Minnesota edged Philadelphia 5-4 on Rick Renick’s ninth-in- spiing tar the monstrous How- HometownPro Ties in Pro-Am Sikes Plays Familiar Links in Jacksonville AFTER POSmON | The 26-year-
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ROYRL TIRES Swgliieaml «a begy joET qwrw l» llw mwli THE IPONTUC PRESS, THUUSDAY, MARCH 94^ 1966 C-^ PCH Thinclads Open Saturday in Huron Meet Lavalais, Tipton Lead 12 Lettermen; Strong in Field Events Strength in Qeld events and experienced depth in distance races mark the Pontiac Central track team that will debut Saturday. ' The Chiefs will participate in die annual indoor Huron Relays at Eastern Michigan University. ★ ★ ★ Coach Dead Wilson is building the team around 12 lettermen. Leading the veterans is Don Lavalais who high jumped <-5 and long jump^ HVh last spring. A sore knee has hampered his preparations for the EMU meet. “Don should be able to clear 1-7 or M this spring,” said Wlbon. Hurdler Bill Tipton could become one of tlto best in the state. His best time in the high hurdles last year was 14.7 seconds. His fastest trip oyer the lows was 19.8. Tipton, however, has been forced to miss several practices because of the flu. Harold Bobo-mores are miier Larry Hurst, long juniper Robert Johnson, sprinter Walter Noel, pole vault-er Walter Terry and hurdler AL ton Wilson. The Chiefs wiU compete against 62 other Class A schools in the Huhin Relays starting at 1 p.m. Class B conpetition is scheduled Friday at 2 p.m. Sailor Sinks; Still Leading ADELAIDE, Australia (AP)| -- Larry Marks and Dick Hughes of England in Muchgcha Four, crossed first in Uie fifth heat of the World 505 Yachtihg Championdiips off Adelaide today. John Cuneo of Australia, capsized his boht. Daring Kestrel,, but refloated it and finished in second place just ahead of ' Denmaik’s Paul Elvstrom, Jim Hardy, Australia, was fourth across the line. Under the points system for the worid 505 Chanmionships, this gives Cuneo a dear lead with wily 4% points lost and one heat to go. Hardy is in second position with 7 points lost, Elvstrom third with 944 and Marks fourth with 1144. 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Tiirbe Hydra-Malic* atitomalie Irone* ndeelon, power steering, power breliee, end other optlone you'd expeet In any Ihie wagon. Yg«*ve |ot ioiiriTa k to bdim it! Sec jom * Jeep* dealer. Chedt the Yellow Pageg. BUY, SELL, TRADE ... USE PQNTIAC PRESS WANT ADS River Rouge Ace Tops '6' All-State FYank Price, latest In a long line of great River Rouge players, leads the flashy Cla» B high school All-State basketball team announced by The Associated Press today. Kennedy McIntosh of South Haven, the only junior on the team, is the tallest member on the third annual AP team, selected by a statewide panel of sports writers and spOrtscast-ers. McIntosh is 6-7. .Kevin Blodgett of Jackson St. John, Jim Gibbons of Blissfield, Ken Parrish of Cheboygan, Bill VanderWoude of Grand Rapids East Christian, Jim Goodrich of Fenton, Urn Thomas of Willow Run, Bob Kroeger of Dundee and Jim Uecke of Menominee round out the elite 10-num squad. Price broke Willie Betts' aU-time scoring record at River Rouge despite playing in 35 fewer games. He averaged almost 20 points a game, grabbed al- Area Prep Diamond Stars Earn CMU Varsity Berls Three former 1963 champion-ship'^game performers in Hie Press-Parks and Recreation De-pvtment Pontiac High School Invitational BaMball Tournament are tean^tes on this spring’s Central Michigan University varsity. * -k * Pontiac N o r t h e r ii ’ s Mike Burklow, a versatile \tandout for the runner-up Huskiei Weckerly and Kim Hit both members of ch Royal Oak Kimball, made the 28-man CMU varsity. Burklow is listed as an infielder but coach Waldo Sauter also has indicated possible mound duty for tiie 5-11, 166-ponnd sophomore. Weckerly, a 64), 160-pound mittee expects to have more than 26 acceptances to choose from this spring. Pontiac Northern and Pontiac Central sm^e as cohosts to the tournament. Southfield’s Blue Jays, the defending champion, is expected to be a definite contender this year with most valuable player Ted Simmons returning as weii as No. 1 hurler Dale. Hayes. " ★ ★ ★ Tournament teams are chosen based on season and league records, phis past tournament performances. All games are played at Jaycee Park. This year’s playing dates are May ^1-22, 27-28, 30^1, and June Reflect your best image in the cod/ and lustrous look of a Mollaire Suit by Hart Schaffner & Marx. This is a rare find—a suit worthy of special display on those occasions when you put your best self forward. But practical, too. Mollaire is HS&M’s cooling blend of mohair for crisp, frosty highlights, finespun wool for sQky softness and Dacron* polyester that holds a crease and shuns wrinkles. Even through the muggiest days. MoHaire merits the meticulous attention of HS&M tailors who press and shape the suit eyery stitch ' of the way so that the look you buy is the look you keep. Batrt Sehaffner db Marx at 9500 junior letterwinner, is an outfielder. He won the iilost valuable player award in the 1963 1 prep tournament and was an all-county selection. ■k k k Hillstrom is a lanky sophomore pitching prospect who also won all-county honors, as did Burklow, in 1964. TOURNAMENT Application blanks for' the 1966, fifth-annual prep baseball invitational have been mailed to all eligible schools. Increased interest is evident. The 1965 tournament had 16 teams for the first time, and the selection com- ;Baseball AAeeting Set An organizational meeting for G. Collision’s entry in the city Class A baseball league will begin at 6 p. m. Saturday. Manager Trueman Lamphere requests all 1965 team members and new prospects to meet with him then at 4700 Ross Street, or Contact him at 674-3301 if unable to make the meeting. BASESALL CUT DOWNS By Tlw AssocliM Prau BALTIMORE - Outfielder Osve cM^er George Firion, pitcher ICAGO WHITE sox' - Sewnd ---- Dm Littleton, outfielder I Bredford, pitcher Gerald Nyman. SAN FRANCISCO - Outfleldari widenon and Bob Bonds, mtlelden -chrodor. Bog ^thrktge and Bob Ho---------- ^tdm Tom Stewart, Al Stanek and Dae CHICAGO CUBS - Pttchart Chuck ..artanstein and Paul Jaackel, catcher Oadgo CAMPER Sleeps 6 Adults EQUIPPED WITH: Vinyl Covwrwd Foam Up-holstaring, CempUfo Dinatta, 2 Bum«r Stova,' ic* Box, Sink with Running Wat«r, CabinGte, Zipparod wardrod*, Win-dow Bcrwan and Drapas, Panalod Walls, Vinyl Floor, Hoatar and Elovat-ing Top. Complot*.. I34SSI0 most 300 rebounds and Is considered a better ball-handler, dribbler and shooter than Betts. TOUGH SCHEDULE Blodgett, playing for a team which has a tough hidependent schedule, scored 424 points in 19 games, sinking 47 per cent ot his shots. He scored a city school scoring record of 45 points in a game in which he only played one haV. Gibbons broke the Lenawee County string recwl for ttae regular season with 485 points, a 30.3 average. He averaged almost 40 points in tournament games. 1 k k k Vanderwoude, playing on the onty B team in a Cla^ A league, had a 49-point game and averaged 24 points in addition to picking off mere than 300 rebounds through the season. McIntosh averaged 18 points a game and blocked 93 shots in 16 contests. Goodrich, seeing limited action for a well-balanced Fenton team, scored mwe than 22 points a game. 11 REBOUNDS Thomas averaged 21.5 points and 11 rebounds a game for a Willovt ‘Run team which im-phived as the season progressed and scored a pair of victories over River Rouge in the tough Twin Valley League. Kroeger, a guard, led his team to a second strai^t league cbamiMonship by scoring an average of 22 points a game. Uecke scored 346 points in 16 games to rank as one of the Upper Peninsula’s top scorers. BRAND HEW Tubeless Whitewalls FULL ROAD HAZARD 7.50x14 .... 1.00x14 GUARANTEE! • • •-••*** FREE MOUNTING! 4 •'*37” Factory Remolds NbR. THURSpAYi MARCH 24, 1066 Baseball on Defense MILWAUKEE, Wis. (AP) ^ Circuit Judge Elmer W. Roller got a look at the other side o( the coin Wednesday as deposi> tions of the two top Braves' executives became a part the trial record in unsconsin’s antitrust suit against baseball. * i, * The grey-haired, p(dce^faeed magistrate has been adced by the state to order the Braves to return to Milwaukee this {Kason unless another National League franchise is awarded the dty. But the defehaa told Judge Roller ^t to do so would be a financial catastrophe for the Braves. ★ ★ ★ Baseball attorneys quoted from a deposition of Braves’ President John McHale in an effort to show the effect of such an order on the club w calls Atlanta its home. "It -would be disastrous," McHale said in the deposition. "It would bankrupt the Bhives’ o^ ganisation. NO OFFllR Bravtt Board Chairman Wil-llein C. Bartholomay was quoted as saytag be never received a “bona offer from any Wisconsin resident to purchase the baseball team. He said efforts to interest Wisconsin investors to share equally with his group in stock ownership of the club shortly after its purchase in 1962 were unsuccessful. ★ it He said he was "tmrifaly disappointed" that commitments to the club by business leaders in a season ticket sale 1964 were not met. Barthobmay said the group had pledged to sell ?,■ 500 season tickets but the canv paign sold only 4,391. Of these, he said, the Braves sales team, which included several playets and Manager Bobby Brdgan, accounted for all but 482. Modesf Cassius Says He'll Quit if Chuvalo Wins TORONTO (AP) - A suddenly modest Cassius Clay uys he’ll retfiw if George Chuvalo strips him of his heavyweight title next Tuesday night. ★ ★ ★ "I’d have to retire." he said Wednesday after sparring eight rounds in preparation for his 15-round scrap against the Canadian champion from Toronto. "Once I lose, that’s it." But there seems littte diance of that happening. Qay, Is a IcqMided favorite. WWW one Toronto bookte said a few small operators are taking bets wHh day a 6-1 favorite. DOWNTOWN PONTIAO ODEN lOWLINO 3 Gamas $1 335-7822 II N. DERBY , DONTIAC Driver Dick Petty in'500'Pole Post ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) - Richard Petty of Randleman, N. C. looking to his first race since the Daytona 600 when he injured a hand, has captured the pole position for Suiiday’s 177,000 AtlanU 500. WWW Petty shattered track records Wednesday as he led eight qualifies, ioaring with his 1966 Plymouth through four laps the 1.5 mile track at an average speed of 147.742 miles an hour. His fastest lap was 148.141. w w w The old track records were 146.47 for the four-lay run and 140.898 for a single bp set in 1984 by FYed Lorenzen of Elmhurst, HI. FOR BOATS JOHNSON MOTORS and Sappiias-It's — Tony’s Marino WHti M Vra. R«Mlr axMrtMc* 269S Orckard Uke Id. Kn|0 Harber 482-3860 I Runs Away With Match NEW YORK (AP) - Luther L a s s i t e r, of Elizabeth City, N. C., has a high run of 137 in defeating Frank McGowan of Brooklyn 1588 Wednesday in the World Pocket Billiards Championships. SALE 1966 Olds HUGE DISCOUNTSI BUY NOWI Full Foqteiy Warranty 24,000 Milas or 24AAonths Jerome MOTOR SALES WMt Track Oriva FES-TItl FEM2U RET FELLAS! Look at thoso buys in SPORTING GOODS • TRICK SH0E6 mkmutim • BISEBILL GUnrES WaWb At IMIm mML iMSMnd hf •utrtMidbie pkvHt. T«a e*Mwv- *6" SNMitItjlleStMB • BISKETULLS Meh V#a baSi Jw >8l«lo» Japanete pitcher plans to pitdi in Japan during wri Murf" ■ - ' — Buffalo Leader They fought back from an 11* uable Player. polbt deficit to whip BartleO-ville, veteran Oklahoma ABtU team, 71-67 in night’s finals^ Denver conquered Akron, Ohio, 77-74 for third place. Russell, checked in the early going, shook loose from the Oklahoma defense late in the first half to pull Dearborn within one point, 34-3S. at balftime after lagging 10 and 11 points during much of the half. Russell and his running mate from Mkdiigan, Oliver Darden, were unanimous selections on the 10-member All-Star Tournament team picked by sports writers and sports broadcasters. Bartlesville widened the gap ) six points in the opening minutes of the second half before Russell, a two-time All-America at Michigan, and Dor-rie Murrey oi the University, of Detroit combined to leOd Dearborn into a 61-59 lead with less than eight minutes left. The teams ^rere tied 49, 55 and 59 before Murrey’s jump shot put Dearborn ahead for Canadian Trim* Yank in Curlin9 Tournam«nt and 1360 to build a 24-pint lead Wednesday after two rouiids in Professional Bowlers Association’s 137,000 Buffalo Open. Burton’s 2707 total for 12 games bettered Bobby Jacks of New Orleans, who shot 2683. Les Schissler of Dem Cok)., hit the high game of the tournament, a 279. Carmen Sal-vino of Chicago rolled the high sik-game set, a 1406, to lead after the end of the first round. VANCOUVER (AP) - Cena-dian champion Ron Nwthcott scored a come-from-behind 13-10 victory over Dr. Joe Zbacnik of the United States Wednesday and finished unbeaten in the round-robin section of the International Curling Championship. Northcott scored a three the 10th end to overcome a 941 lead by the Americans. The Canadian rink, front Calgary, finished the seven-round series with a perfect 6-0 record. They got one bye. T)w iMders aftar It ai i ^aiiSThoda, ValparalM, tndM 2S7S. t. Lm Schissler, Denver, }SW. 7. Jack Blondolfllo, Houiton, 25M. I. J0hn Petraglla, Bmeklyn, N.Y., S 9. Don Scott, Cleveland, Ohio. 25M. 10. Buzi Fazio, Detroit, 2547. II. Dick Weber, St. Louis, 2544. 12 Wally Wagner, Brea, CalH., 2545. U. Johnny Cnapniah, Kansas City, I !?'ske«i Foromsky, El Pasob Tex„ 253 " Glenn Allison, Loa Angawa, 2104. Ray Koahlar, Bayshora, N.yT^ Top Gagers Paired in Women's Outing ^ In Washington PadA.Y(nu(g Member of MieMgtm Mar^tto Dmalore A$ttu DIXIE HWYa ON LOON UKE DRAYTON PUINS OR 4-0411 Bullfighters Detoured WASHINGTON (UH)-Promoters of a bloodless bullfight, which was a huge success in the Houston Astrodome, are flabbergasted that their dforts to stage the event in Washington are being detoured. Israel and Irvin Field, whose promotion is designed for excitement without the killing that accompanies bullfights outside the United States, are attempting to present the event May 13-15. ★ ★ ★ But the Washington Humane Society challenged them Wednesday by asking: “Is there not enough violence ii) Washington without this?” The Field brothers question the word “violence." In a |)loodIes8 bullfifdit, the bulls are not hurt. Instead of sharp^iointed swords, the glue is attached to the banderillas so that the weapon merely sticks oo the outside rather than the inside of the bull. ★ ★ ★ > The Washington Corporate Counsel Office and the U.S. attwney will make the final decision whether or not to stage the event. GALLUP. N.M. (AP) - (Juar-ter-finals play in the National AAU Women’s Basketball Tournament opened today, A-Matic, Radio. <2291^ CUSTOM 5004-Door Night Mist Blue V-8. 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THURSDAY, MARCH 24, 1086 V/ C^7 Iron Cross Latest Teen Fad I YOU CAN BUY . “Everything At Mays WORD OF CAUnON - Erwin Smith, 70-year^ Rockford, lU., driver looks at tha sign ho has Installad n the rear of his car wMch gives other motorists a message he thinks they should heed. Smith says he has never been in a serious traffic acddent. S. African Woman Battles Apartheid JOHANNESBURG. South Africa (AP) - To associates, Helen Suxman is the conscience of South Africa. To pcdltkal foes, she is a constant harassment She la ths most outspoken cri-tic of the govermnaid’s sipu-tbeid policies, which call for the races to live apart For five years dw has waged a foody battle in Parliament against aparUidd laws and practices. WWW Her Progressive party is contesting for M seats in next Wednesday's national election, which will name 170 members of the House of Assembly and * no doubt restore Prihie Minister Hendrik Verwoerd to power. Mrs. Suxman, backed by hundreds of Progressives is to persuade theiparts of Africa. What I envisage white electorate that the present peace in the country cannot last is not a black takeov^ but genuine Mack-white partldpation ip the country’s government. “The black states of Inda- pendent Africa may Insist on universal adult franchise, but we don’t have to satisfy them. 8AHSF7 CmZENS * * ♦ “We have to satisfy our own She has made more than lOOjAfrlcan citixens and I’m sure major speeches against the gov- they would setUe for less than emment’s policies. ithaL There must be a reason- Often when she speaks in Far- able compromfoe, with a quali-Uament, members of the Ver- fied franchise, based on educa, woerd party adwwWge her.uon and abilHy, whereby the left untackled. 'The time to make reasonable loe^iiHis is in a position of strepgth,” she says. “Social change shoiild be pomitted, not fortiiddea'’ is battling to retain her own seat in tbe Houghton district, in a wealtlqr area suburban to. Johannesburg. Her (n>ponent is of the United Party, the main parliamentary opposition. Ve^ woerd’s party considered its prospects so slim in this disiriet that it did not nominate a candidate. FAIRLTOOOD Mrs. Suanan’s own chances seem fairly good, but her party’s hope of gaining many seats in Parlianient is slight. She is now the party’s only representative there. Her positian is that tbe government heaps injustices on people sinvfy because they are nonwhites. The' term “non-wdiite" is used here to cover both bladi Africans and those who have mixed Mood, generally including East Indian ancestry, and are called colored. WWW Mrs. Suzman believes her chances of getting action would be brighter if South African women were nme like Americans. “Compared with other countries, South African women don’t puU their wei^ suffl-ciently in public and political life,” she ays. WOMEN GROUPS “In the United States there is a very active and powerful League of VImm Voters and the Federation of Wonon’s Clubs with membership running into millions. Somethii^ similar here would be a great help to women, many of whom are political escapists.” She visited the United SUtes in 1962^ undo* the State Department leader program and studio ed race problems in the South., She ays h« Interest in politics stems frnn a desire to see social justice. She first entered Parliament as a United party member 13 years ago. When that party’s liberal wing broke away to form the ProgreMive* party, she became one of the ^>linter group’s ardent campaigners and won her Houghton seat on their ticket in IMI. w w w Ever since, she has bben a ttmm in the government’s side. “I despiN the idea of Bon-wfritM being Udced around from pUfor to post,’* she ays. She argua lUs way: The praent peace in South Africa hu been wOO at a price the whites didn’t have to pay. The nonw^tes had to pay the price -r foiled removal from homes in which they had lived for years to accommodate the government’s residential segregation program; low wages, barriers to their progroas in industry, poverty, malimfrition, pass laws, deprivation of rights and responsibilities on grounds of color alone. WHITE ELECIYMRATB She bolds that ilia job of the impact by chanting “Listen to the Mother Sui^riot.” She is impervious to gibes and hasn’t hesitated to tell Justice Minister azar Vorster that wanted him to “keep his mouth RACIAL GRIEVANCES “The radal grievanoM we are apparently re^ to bequath to our children are shocking to contamphte,” Ae says. “I don’t see the hard crust of apartheid being dated in the foreseeable future. Yet I cannot see, how the nonwhites’ present uneasy peace can continue forever. Black nationalists and wfatte nationalists will have to “The blacks are simply not gi^g to be aUe to take over here as they’ve done in other African would have a real right to participate in the government of a multiracial South Africa.” Mrs. Suzman, 49,. comes from a rich family. She was once a lecturer in econcnnics at Wit-watersand University, her alma mater. Her husband of almost 30 years is a physician. Their home "Blue Haze” is set in a three-acre garden. Their young-daui^ter is at medical school; the older,, married dauj^ter is an art historian in London. ★ ★ * For recreation she swims, plays bridge, and golfs. Her golf handicap ha jumped fnnn 11 to 17 and she suggests: Golf and politics just don’t mix, especially when you’re the political one-man band I’ve been for years.” United Frealate^tfonal The old iron crou, a symbol of Nad Germany awarded to IBtler’s troops, ha become a new fad among many American teen-agers too young to remember World Wv n. A nationwide survey showed today that teen-agers from the borou^ of New York City to the beacha of Southern California are decorating thenwelva with replica of the iron crou and anything whidi looks like it, including Maltca crossa and Army marksmanshfy m*dals.. In sbme area, especially among tbe motareycfo set, tdenn^fers have donned World War H German helmets and “They’re one of tbe hottest novelty itenu we’^e had in the past five or 10> years,” said a q>okesman for Swank, Inc., in New Y(wk City, vdiich manufactura the items. WWW “We prefer to call them Maltese crossa,” tbe spMcesman said. ARE RELUCTANT Some store owners are reluctant to handle them hecftiM of the remembrance of World War H, he said, ’’but we teU them they’re not Nazi crossa, but Maltese crossa.” Sra.’RoM Bass, D-Tenn., who caBed attonthm to the fad earlier this wed, said^ “I would imaglBe that 99 per ant of the teenagers da’t knew what the ^crossa mea.” But if the youngsters don’t, their elders Robert Wilkips, principal of Pierson Junior Hi^ School in Kansu Qty, said he first saw one of the crossa hanging from the neck ol a schoolboy in a hallwiy. RECOLLECTION “The first recollection that came to my mind when I aw it wu of a big German taidc during World War n,” he said .didn’t like the connection.” 9 Louis Sbermu, who operates a war surplu store ia MAwanka, Wis., but he stopped selling them. “I’m a member of tbe Jewish faith and I don’t believe in this sort of thing,” he said. MAYS CREDIT STORE y.. DOWNTOWN P around Qui Nhbn. It was the largest Korean operation to , date. ,, ' ' COSTLY TO ALLIES The tide of battle also was costly to the allies. The U.S. ihilitary command, reported 80 Ama-icans killed, 816 wounded and 17 missing or captnred in the fightiiu last w^. ’Ihis conqMired wra 100 killed, 808 wounded and eight missing or captured ths week before. ★ ★ ★ The number of South Vietnamese killed rose from 131 to 232 last week but 6ie number of missing de<*lined from 97 to 73. Vietnamese wounded are pot Communfat losses rqwrted by the allies declined sharply during the week of March 13-19, with 827 khled and. 50 captured compared with 1,2M killed and 106 captured the wedc before. REST FOR ’tHE WEARY - Exhausted ^ and depressed, these Marines rest after ca|>-turing an enemy position during recant fitting near the hamlet of Rich Nam, southwest of Da Nang in South Viet ^am. The Concept of Mobility AP PIWWM Marine casualties mounted when they landed by helicopter in heavy Viet Cong fire. The Viet Cong had them surrounded and pinned down flirough a night of battie. Army Air Arm May Sprout WASHINGTON (AP)'-^ Army planners are considering formation of new, swift air cavalry reghnents and squadrons which could replace or suiq>lement tank-equipped armored cavalry units. W 4 ★ Cavalry units are used chiefly for reconnaissance and screening missions. For example, three armored cavalry r^ ments are posted in West Germany along the Iron Curtain. In event of an enemy probe, these regiments likely would be the first to make ground contact. ★ * * Air cavalry regiments, using helicopters for movement, would be considerably faster and would cover more groimd in less time than armored cavalry outfits driving tanks and jeeps. Creation of new air cav^ the air mobility concept. The success of the 1st Cavalry Airm^ile, Division in Viet Nam has racouraged Pentagon officials to consider widening the extent of helicopte^moonted fighting units. ★ ★ ★ The pew budget requests inds to convert one regular Army division, either infmtiy or airborne, to an air cavalry organiutkm with about 428 helicopters. 4 ★ 4 Beyond that, there have sugg^ions that still another air cavalry division may be formed by next year. Helicoj^er production is growing slowly and the demands of the war in Viet Ntun are so heavy that the second air cavM-ry division may not c being untU late this year. Currently, there are 1,608 belicap-ters in Viet Nam being used to haul troops to battle areas to piHivide Are support against Conununist guerrillas and other Red trdops. NO RE(^ There ^ currently no air cavalry regiments in the U.S. structure. There are some air cavalry squadrons and troops organic to divishia and as pmt of armwed cavalry regiments, but only a minm pari An afr caval^ regiment probably would be for^ of three squadrons and would total some 3,000 men and possibly about 275 helicopters. CAPrrOLA, Calif. (OPlAAfter passing an ordinance reflating the display of outdoor sfis, city officials learned of a vi^ tion invdlving a sign which extends too far from the building at city hall. Why do more Scotch Thinkers drink McMaster’s? Yes, sir, McMaster’si^s you a smooth $7 Scotch valub for just $4.97. Hqw come? Ingenuity. The^ ship it to this country in barrels, bottle it after it gets here. Big tai\ savings. Big savings on shipping, handling, etc. When you can get a fine, light Scotch with 4 ^ J great taste at a great / price-stay with it! V 4/5 qt. __ TixURPOSE FURNITURE FAMOUS MAKE HIDE-A-BED A tofo fay day, a comfortable fult-iize bed wMi Inmnprtaf mottren by night r. 1/3 OFF MANY OTHER ITEMS THROUGHOUT THE STORmSO SALE PRICED . I' •*youmu»th0$e$kfled-- lUssaaguorvtetea** fH4231 NO MONEY DOWN - MQNTNS TO PAY eesstasetraasaattaaa,atttttaaaiama^eaaaattaamatat99t8ttt8Him9tt98ff.tM8im.ltm£ C-id ’ THE I^ONTIAC PRESS. ^HUysbAY, MARCH 2jA, 1966 British Polls Point to Labor Party Landslide LONDON, (AP) — With Brit-j April Fool’s Day. The polls have ■in’s national election only a w almost perfect recc^ in pre-wedc from today, aO die public dieting the winning party in (pinion poll^ point to a landslide'past elMtkms. victory for the Labor govern-! since polling began on a na-ment. • {tional scale after World War II, The only one wrong was the The DaUy Mail’s National Opinitm poll, published today, Daily Express pqll of 1964, whidi pve the Conservatives a margin of 0.8 per cent of the popular vote in an election that turned out to be a cliff-hanger. gives Labw 50.5 pm- cent of die votes of those questioned,the ConiservaUves 38.3 per < Liberals 7:6,. others and unde- 1 SAjme flllCr fvUrlU f»OJ ll^ O o «sssu MSM^ Whether they are right wUl be* 14 of the 15 siffveys published injTh® ^bor victory margin was|cided 3.6 per cent. It said La-known only after the votes are! the last six elections have pre- '-9 P®" ce"*-counted—in the early hours of dieted the outcome correctly. MAJOR POLLS Try for Sheepskin —Thanks to Sheep KINGSTON, R.I. (AP) Inhere are still enough sheep Rhode Island for two students to work their way through college shearing them. ^ GENUINE DIAMONDS! MAJOR POLLS The^major polls now in operation are the Gallup poll, the Na-tion*al Opinion poll, the Daily Express poll and Research Services. They give Labor an average lead of about ILper cent, and it hardly varied ^ince I the campaign began two weeks I ago. bor’s lead of 12.2 percentage points had fallen from 13 points a week ago. * * j, Gallup, published in the Daily Telegraph, shows Labor’s lead down to 8.5 points cbnlipared with 12 points two weekjs ago. After excluding 7 per cent "don’t knows,’’ the polll gives Labor 50.5 per cent. Conservatives 42 per coit, Liberala 7 per cent, others 0.5 per cent. ' Baby Okay After Fall SAUSALITO, Calif. Oh-A 15-month-old baby girl fell 50 feet from a Sausa-lito luxury apaAment but landed unharmed m shallow San Francisco Bay s waters. She was quickjy i rescued by her father. Tlie child, Adair Erhard, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Werner Erhard, wiggled : through a second-story : balcony railing Wednes- ? day police said. The • mother saw her facing i and the father raced i downstairs and pulled the \\ baby out of two feet of | water. She was examined at Marin General' Hospital | where she was pro- \ nounced unharmed. Charles Henry IH and ’Ihom-s Noyes said good diearers have become as rare as bladi-snuths. So the two students at the Umversity of Rhode Island’s: School of Agriculture have gone into business cliniing the crlt-' ters for spring. i British polls are based (»i he assumption that their samples can be extended unifrarnly throughout the country. Thus, a margin of 5 per cent in the popular vote and the polls dhould lead to a margin of about 100 seats in the 630-member House of Commons. But British voting patterns are not that uni- 20,000 votes or more over their Conservative opponoits. A national swing of several percentage points may give Labor a few thousand mwe votes in such a district—but it still elects only one member of the House of Commons. And prime ministers named on their Commons majority, not on the size of the pqMilar vote. In 1051, Labor actually won more than half the popular vote,' but many votes were wasted in the safe Labor seats, so the Conservatives won control ofi Parliament. Tot Had Big Time on Stroll | SAN iTlANCISCO (AP)-It was a beautiful day fbr a stroll yesterday. So Brian Kramer, 2, clutched a njckel in his hand and set^t in his pajamas while his mother slept. He got as far as 6th Ave. apd Clement St., where Patrolmen John O'Connor and Francis Gannon gave him a lift to the Richmond District Police Station. Brian loved tt there. He got doughnnts, played aroond with the typewriter and tried on a cop’s hat. After an hour, or so, Brian was reclaimed by his mother, Esther Kramer. He still had his nickel when he went home. Hunt for Canoe}st ELK RAPIDS (AP)-A search by Antrim County shoe’s men. and U. S. Coast Gudrd units| continued without success for formTa'Irf tere te wh^“the Earl Jacki^. ». of tisUcians run into trouble: missing since Tui^y **0 out by canoe fa* a BIGGER MARGINS fishing trip on Elk Lake. In some mining districts of Authorities said his car was Wales or Yorkshire, for exam- found on the lake shore Tuesday pie. Labor MPs have margins of afternoon. \ Announcing The Opening of New Offices of Dr. Hubert H. Curson Podiatrist—Foot Specialist 536 Weft Huron Street Pontiac FE 5*^29 One and One-Half Blocks West ^ of Pontiac General Hospital i MAPLE GENUINE PATCH QUar CHAIRS CHECK THESE FEATURES 100% Foam Cushion f<^ Comfortable Spring Bass Solid Maple Trim, Hand Rubbed Finish.' (genuine Handsewn Pbteh Quilt Box Pleated Skirts CHAIR ^69 SWIVEL $-70 ROCKER /y Mr. and Mrs. CHAIR AND OTTOMAN Baautifillly stylad In Early Amnlcon to giv. you |usl' whot you wont and wpad in quality and looks. Both dxitrs include matching oops. You have a wide selKlIen of colon and fabrics to se-Uct from. (SpKiol or- *199 3-CUSHION SOFAS Johnson Oarpor Colonial Stylo RECLINER Qualny, th. way you wantjt. Th. 3 cushions or* mode of 6-tnch crown foam rubbw to give you bWtor oomfoit and more ywors of wwr, Nwy or. also rtverslbl. wHh zippw IT "Buris." Th. quolNy will match ^199 $129 l-PioooMapIo DINEHE Table b 36x54x64. fhw quolliy coMtruction to gb. you many, many ywri of comfort ond^d M59i £r*^^ $20 . ts MoMowd M., Cemer Pontkm Loico Rd. M IMNeWesPefaiMibelliU^ad. U| BOYS rn WISE SHOPPHISI SHOP SAVON THIS WEEK FOR MONEY-SAVING VALUES m Heritage (Eulmital JfiirintmT DRAHON PUINS 4M9 01X11 NWY. Open Dolly 9-9, Sot. 8-9 Suii^9f6 QLENWOOO PLAZA 29 S. QLENWOOO Open doily 9-10,Mt. 8-10 ^ SMndoy9-7 PONTIAC MALL 429 S. TELEQRAPN Opon doily 9-9, Sot. 8-9 Sunday9-« PdeeteffMfive Hirw/gh ABwidoy Match 31. RIgM DfPtND ON mnaHmj THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. MARCH 24, 1966 C~ll Slate House Gets Lobbyist Control Bill LANSING (AP) - Prompted by one lobbying scandal and the threat of another, a House ocm* mittee has reported out a Ull to tighten restrictions on lobbyists. . Ihe House Policy Committee has placed a measure the House ertiich would require a lobbylM to report every three months to the secretary of state. ★ ★ ★ Hie report would have to show “the total amount of expenses paid and obligationa incurred by the lobbyist himself or apy agent in connection with, relative to, his activities as legislative agent for the preceding quarter, except tliat he need not include his own personal living and travel expenses.” Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley earlier this week obtained warrants against Kenneth Gremoce, executive director and lobbyist for the semipublic Peoples’ Community Hospital Authc^ty; PUBUC FUNDS Gremore and Frank Rodwell, the organization’s f«mier treasurer, were charged with unlawfully using or allowing to be used the organization’s public funds. A Senate bill was killed in the House earlier this month after reports circulated that House members received hints of campaign contributions in return fqr passage of the bill. ★ ★ ★ Speaker Joseph Kowalski, D-Detroit, later confirmed the reports, saying several House members came to him to report they had been indirectly approached. Hie lobbying bill has been in the House Policy Committee since last year. Hie lobby bill also hits at a problem that has come up in the past-that of the lobbyist who represents more than one in-|than one group to file a sep terest. The bill as repoled out rate registration form for eai requires the lobbyist fv more|—paying a HO fee for each. Science Quiz By m BROWN PROBLEM Permanent pictures of magn^c fields. NEEDED: ^ magnet, K»ne white cardboard‘s iron filings, an atomizer or wat^ sprayer, salt, a can of aerosol paying paint. DO THIS: Place tbe card over the magnet, sprinkle the iron filing on the card, top lightly 'MR6AIIS nake short \ to make short work of your yard chores! WHEELBARROW LAWNtnONiaR — N-OSS ,..57EAEaUABAmXE,., *13*” and they wUl assume a patteni representing some of the 11 n of force of the magnet. TWO WAYS Thaw are two easy wayi lor preserving the patterns. . Use the atomizer and spray salt water on the iron filings. Repeat after a fow hours and let the experiment stand ova-Hw.next morning the outline of the flfings will remain on the card as rust, and the filings will fall off the paper. 2. Set up the card with iron filings as before, but this time spr^ the card lightly with a dark Celpr of paint from the aerosol can. When the paint dries, a permanent record of the pattern of the iron filings will Brush off any loose iron ings. ng to Science News, tbe method of preserving the mags of magnetic lines of force ^ described by a sixth grade David Power, of Bala-Qni^,P Tbe pai^t spray method leaves the filings jinittem in white on a dark badc^und. Tbe salt water method n^es rustVui white. House GOP Leacjer Discusses Inflation WASHINGTON (AP Gerald R Ford, R-Mich., said Wednesday he is sure the administration will ask for a tax increase, w In discussing inflation with newsmen, the House Republican leader said he does not bdieve Preshlait Johnam can avoid asking for There has been speculation At If a tax Increase were to be requested it might be delayed until after the November elections. Johnscm said Tudsday he does not want “to put on the brakes too fast” and has not decided whetho- to propose a increase. CHECK INFLATION On the question of dealing with inflation. Ford said one way to check it Is to reduce federal expenditures and another is to increase taxes. Johnson, at his news confa-ace, called attention to sane recent economic readings that re on the noninflationary side. ★ ★ w Reforing to Johnson’s remarks, Ford said he thinks the Pi’esident “should talk to housewives” eho have to go to the maricet^riace. Ford also said he thinks the increases in the wholesale price index “ought to be a wan^'' Xpollo Ship Dwveloped 1101 Spot*'in Test CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) — An unmanned Aprilo space-' ship sent on -a test Right last] Feb. M developed “hot spots”: I it plunged bade to earth. Project officials said the 11,-iHMund qwcecraft will gat aproved insulation as a result of thetest WKC £ 108 NORTH SAGINAW HOME OF ACCEPTED BRANDS of fpous DOUGIAS Dinette Sets USE OUR OONVBNISNT LAYAWAY WLAN...NO EXTRA CHARGE PONTUC: 260 Ntith SifiBaw St-CUBKSTOJI-W3TEBrOBD: Oi Dixit Hwy. IbH Ntrlh tf Wttoiftii liU Doth SloirM Op«n Sundoyt 12 Noon 'til O^ M. C—ia THE P0NTI4.C PRESS. THURSDAY, MARCH 24, 1966 Russia-Chiha Quarrel Forces Both Nations to Reconsider Relationship With the West JOHN M. HIGHTOWER AP Special CorrespeadeBt WASHINGTON - Tlie Increasing^ angry quarrel between Russia and Red China has now reached the stage where each country must consider radical changes in its relations with the West. The turmoil in the Communist j bloc exceeds even that of the| Atlantic alliance where FYame is pursuing a policy of independ-| ent action strikingly similar to the self-assertion of Rcyl China against Russia. •a a ^a • Tbe Johnson adnuhistration is; under heavy inessure from its China policy critics tq find some way to ease tensions and improve relations between Peking *^and Washington. But any real change in this relationship in the near future is ruled out by the experts, eveni 'Viet Is Seed of Future War' U. Would Be Bitter ot Defeot-^-Expert CAMBRIDGE, Mass, i An authority oh China said today that fte Viet 'Nam war could lead to “a direct military or pobtical confrontation” between Communist China and the United States. Prof. Lucian W. Pye ot Mas-° sachusetts bstitute of Tedinol-ogy (MIT) believes the confrontation might become military if the United States is defeated or is forced to withdraw from ^et Nam. “If (he United States loses, the next time China pushed her, the U. S. would go right for die jugular vein . .. mainland China,” said the quietspeaking scholar who also is a government adviser China. Pye’s -thecHy is this: If the United States sustains a battlefield defeat or is forced out of Viet Nam, the American people might force a confrontation with China because “they would be very bad losers.” ★ ★ ★ A United States victmy in Viet Nam, Pye contends, would cause China to lose face in Asia and theref(xe would not be as threatening. SAME LETDOWN “If the confrontaticm comes and China loses, it will be th; same kind of letdown ga happened with Russia aftei-'Cuba (the 1962 missile crisis) when Russia’s power was weakened in the eyes of the world,” said the 37-year-old political scientist who was born in China of American missionary parents. Deteriorating Si no-Soviet reladons would make any American-Chinese conft-onta-tkm more direct, he'said in an interview with United Press International. In a less bleak appraisal of the future course ofU. S.-Chi-nese relations, Pye expressed , the view that China will undergo “Great and very hopeful” political dhanges foUowing the death of Mao 'Tze-tung, chairman of the Chinese Communist party and therefore the most powerful man in China. ★ ★ ★ Initially after the death of the i 72-year-old Mao, udio has been reported ill for some tjme, Pye expects China would be governed by even stricter leaders. * ★ * But in the long run he be-leves younger intellectuals lid tate charge and chart a flexible course. * I III ' 1 EARN MORE those qmong the critics. All ognize that in (China’s present altitude of bitter political hostility to the outside world, the United States is slated for .sbrne years yet to |riay the role of archvillain. Moscow disput came Wednesday with China’s publication of an angry note rejecting an invitation issued Feb. 24 to send a delegation to the Communist party con^ss opening in Moscow next The latest blast in the Peking-1 This is the first time the Red Chinese have decided to boycott such a meeting. The break having reached this point U.S. and other Western diplomats are looking at various possibilities for dramatic realignment in the world: —Soviet leaders Leonid I. Brezhnev and Alexd N. Koqrgin may conclude a nooaggression pact OT some other kind of friendship agreement with French President Charles de Gaulle when De Gaulle visits Moscow in late June. —The Soviet chieftains also. or alternatively, may unexpected new enthusiasm for a treaty with the United States and Britain to halt the spread of nuclear weapons.. ♦ ★ -Red China, wdiile pressing Red revolutionary programs in Latin America, Asia and Africa, may very well open new trade channels and perhaps even improve political relations with (he countries (d Western Europe. Some of the beet informed American officials say there is presently no way of predicting whether any or all of these possibilities will come to pass. What is apparent is that relations among the great powers are in a state of accelerated change, bringing in a period which holds a grave risk as well as hopes for improvement. - ^PPUM»«S- ;ALE THURSDAY, FRIDAY and SATURDAY PONTIAC MAIL STORE « OWN DAILY 9 am. to 9 pjn. IBM \e\ PI OPERATC In a remarki Be an PUNCH ;|IAT0R kably short tiina yon can bec^e a qualified ^ey Punch Operator Learn to earn k hifli salary in the interesting field \ Von can keep your present Job while attending the special Soreek night school program Free Aptitude Test Phone 333-7028 PHtiac lisiKss OPEN DAIIV 9 to 9 lEY DOWN • 3-YEARS TO PAY 'J THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. MARCH 24, 1966 Kraft Macaroni T 01. 15' 'I FRESH (CUT UP) FRYERS 33.V HYGRADE BALL PARK FRANKS 69, TWO COLORS Shop Foodland Any Day for everyday Low Prioot THE MOST POPULAR ITEMS ARE LOW-PRICB) EVERYDAY WEEKLY SPECIALS ARE PRICED 7 FULL DAYS • • • • • • • • « • • • • FRYERS 29! ‘ LaaaPraab FORK RQ,t STEAK V v K? ' Q0< CUTLETS 09"’ MOAeiWNR irAnoiHbMiAiik UK DID ROAST D® OMACbaloa ^ ^ SL 89 -^ MCTWT. Ml* Pkg. Bho. banquet ALL VARIETIES IMIKIIS spartan usda fancy grade a _ ORANGE T< wSrwwgFiB strawberries •••••• ■*1!^ SPARTAN TRAY PACK. LEAN SLICED ▲ ^bacon~69^ IS* Nn HaMlR Mi. ktNtot 19< I SoigLmI-I^^ CHEESE CAKE CHOCLATE CAKE french FRIES SPARTAN FROZEN Sumhim NYBROX Mtnlwy CHOC. Bf KiMMX BMlgiwr MAXWELL HOUSE REGULAR OR DRIP COFFEE 2 Lb. Gan Htnliey CHOC. 33. CREMIBm 39* Frank’s PORE VMHLI* J enn I Dain Law. Cal. Fruit, 1-lb. cm Bala SliaaO ar CnalifO 1-lb., 4-«b Pineapple 20^' Cocktail R...S1 Pinaaonls Oflei ROBIN HOOD 25-LB. BAG •taMan1-nl.,14-at.aMi Orance ^ 4Cl Drink tf ZO "OOD 25-LB. BAG naSHPROOUCRFLOU California Sunklit Naval 0MH6ES lis Sixa U.S.N0.I Macintosh tfriES b.f CRRRCTS (Pkl-) gbeehchiohs radishes (Fk|) Instant 1191 Tomato A $1 CtRaa I [juico 4 far 11 Mix SSTiSSr “ w in««n KTwlS^ .ta g» mcMig .-e. Inn, Lag CaMn 1-pt., f-aai battia SPARTAN SLICED WHITE iiksor. OR OVENFRESH POTATO HP A ■ BREAD H " hamkattla I Rmprata ManNaria 11-ai aana I lanswaat Raart baWa Mb., l-ai. |br 55H*"*"5Jllag39« S4.M KLEENEX 125 COUNT 2-PLY FACIAL TISSUE C TOWELS I S RaH Pkg. IAara-ffAlt-ai^BMi 5T ALL VEGETABLE A CRisco’-^ofr lewr Ml ewakaaarbaaf ■aaiaMb.Bai — ^ c RICE-A- OQe CHOC. CO RRNI V«l MW WM SEALTEST, BORDEN'S OR NYE SKIMMED MILK Vi Gal. m THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. MARCH 24, 1966 Sanitary Sewer System Is Urged by County Officials ByJOBMUUJM A Hattvy aener aystem is the only ideal method of sewage disposal as far as ofTiciais of the Oaklaod County Health Department and Depwtment of Public lliey view septic systems as adequate on a temporary basis. Cesspeals are eat of the qaes^ 1^ present day Rob^ T. Coleman, dh^tor of environmental health for the County Healfli Department, looks to the day when the county will be ser^ generally by sewer systems. tk . It lUs goal is shared by t h i DPW, according to its director, R. J. Alexander. SOUTHERN AREA . Coleman said sewage disposal poses little problem in the southern area of the county which generally is saved by the City Detroit sewage treatment system. . The sitoation is "Our sanitarians actually spend more time on sewage dis-p^ inspections in the northern half of the county than bn food handling Inspections,” Coleman "This is because septic systems are used in most of this He termed the efficiency of septic systems as a “tolerabie OXFORD METHOD Despite the extensive use of cesspools in Oxford, Coleman said he knew of no other community where this sewage disposal method was used significantly. "Oxford is unique iu this "There may be isolated cases where they are used elsewhere but very few." ★ ★ e The Oxford problem came to 3 Zoning Bids Are Opposed Watorford Board Will Considor 4 Requests light Feb. 16 when the health committee of the County Board of Supervisors refused to approve rebuilding of five business places damaged by fire' until adequate sanitary sewage disposal was installed. BASEMENT CESSPOOLS All of the business olablish-ments used basement cesspools, for sewage disposal as do many other commercial and residential units in the village. A sohithm to the preUera ' would be'the establlsluneat of a village sanitary iew«t^ lys-tern. South of O^erd, ^ major sewer project for the central part of the county is already nearing the construction stage. ★ ★ ★ , Presently, the DPW is negotiating a-contract with seven county municipalities plus the northern portion of Pontiac for the proposed Ginton-Oakland Sewage Disposal System (EDITOR’S NOTE: The route 6f this proposed trunk sewer is fhown in the map at right. Proposed diameter of various segments of the sewer indicated m inches.) I1I.SMILUON . The $16.5-miIlion project is expected to serve a population of 210,700 by 1990, according to Alexander. Included in the project are the townships of Avon, Pon- ..... tiac, Waterford, mdepewtence. West Bloomfield and Orion and the cities of Pontiac and Orchard Lake. The system will connect to the Dequindre interceptor which the aty of Detroit wUl extend froml4Mileto23VkMUe. rk it * WEST Hopefully, the project will get BUXIMPEU) under way later this year and • be completed in a year. SHARE COST ’ Besides sharing in the cost of the Clinton-Oakland trunkline, the participating municipalities, except Pontiac, also would pay for their individual intemai sewer systems, Intemai systems would feed into the trunkline. Alexander estimated interest of 612,127,500 on the 30-year bond issue for a total project cost of 628,027,500. \VSgSE? Four rezoning requests, three of them recommended for denial ^ the Waterford Township Planning Commission, will be considered at a future meeting of the Township Board. Proposab recommended f^w denial by the planners are; • A request to rezone from local business (C-1) to extensive business (C-3) a parcel at 7670 M59 for whidi the applicant proposes to enlarge a restaurant establbhment. • A request to rezone from general business (C-2) to light Industrial district (M-1) a parcel at 5340 M59 for establishment of retail stores and offices. • A request to change from \C-f to multiple dwelling residential dbtrict (R-2) a parcel on the nmtheast comer of Pontiac Lake Road and M59 for apartment units. According to planners, tte existing land uses at 7070 MSI and 5840 MSI are legaUy non-conforming. The planners feel Hut the parcel at S340 MSI is not a proper location for manufacturing zoning. The third request was recommended for denial because api^icants did not furnbh reie-vent information such as site plans. Recommended for approvri was a request to rezone from single family residential (R-IA) to R-2, a parcel on Malcolm Drive for constructioq of 88 apartment units. PAVING POSSIBtt.ITY The planners recommended to the Township Board that ttw applicant rimihl explore the possibility of paving Malcolm Drive to hb property. I to real SI71 Caaky Lake; twa from ena- Income over the 30-year period, mainly from connection charges, b estimated at 633,340,-900. projected POPULATION Waterford Township, with a projected p o p u 1 a t i on of 85, 000 and an anticipated 24,286 connections, would pay about 40 per cent of the total. Pontiac’s total cost would be 6968,000. it it it Avon Township will contribute about 26 per cent While Pontiac and Independence townships each will pay slightly more ftan 10 per cent. West Bloomfield Township’s share will be 6.1 per cent, Orion Township, 4.7 per cent and Orchard Lake, 1.4 per cent. Snakebites Not as Rare as You Think By SciOace Service WASHINGTON - Snakebite accidents are a lot more common in the United States then most people realize. Instead of only 1,000 or 2,1 a year, as some recent estimates have shown there have been almost 6,700 poisonous-bites during at least one l^month period. By sending questionnaires to S,53S hospitals, 36,627 physicians, Dr. Henry M. Parrsih bite Btndy. Legs took n Latest Fad Requires Cliff, Car, Match SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Police have had n fence constructed in hopes of quelling the btest teen-age fad. Officers said yesterday teenagers recently have sbden cars, set them Mire and shoved fiiem over cliffs “just for the thrill of watching them explode.” Auto theft inspector Rudy Nieto said, "It’s become quite a fad among the high school kids.” \ CARROTS cnu 2 S 25 CELEBTa 29 TbMAT0ES^23 ONIORS'^riC LETTUCE the body. not a single bite. for more than a th 2,836 victims whq were actually hospitalized. Next in line were copperheads (28.6 per cent) and cottonmouth moccasins (7.3 per cent). Divorces Nancy L. from Oovid C. Slonton VloU R. from Stonloy SwMf Wynon* M. from WoNar L. Far Barbara A. from Chattar F. Ward Alma M. from DonaM R. Howard Dorothy from William Wllbraham Garaldina from Joseph H. Boyd VIcforla a. from Frank J. Van Loon Elsla J. from Jamas Stragoa Marilyn J. from Herbarf L. GrlHIfh Josapnlno from Wlllla A. Bawls Uathar K. from Oaorga I ^ DIMII ViorCQC DHuUIiSMCKED BACON wiH»*u9lb. HOT OOSS £ 3"^ i FRYERS St. 3U LIVER ^ 391 t UMRIRSER SL 531 ROAST 591 1 STEAKS St 591 BOLOSHIIV 391 s PICNICS ^wH(^E^ 49ib. ROAST 451 ere rcqneits t pare^ at 6BA4) to Mufie bmily (R-IB) Mr two houMs and one front IIA4 to IU fer constmetioa of eight apartmeat aaib) Abo tabled was a spedpi approval request by First Baptist Church of Drayton Plains to Thu plamdag commlsskin ^^pahlielMariapAprfiSIsa HMtatf rsfiiiti and a gjia Patricia M. vt. emasf W. .. Pago P from Oaorga Wrtglit eiuo e. from Jomao L. Lucr cartruda F. from Wilbur L. Diana J. from John L. Walki Agnaa R. from DavM R. Aut Francis L. from Editti J, Ml Donna from Irvin D. Spick Patricia from Richard B. Kd Oopothy J. from Rkfwrd A Wayna K. from Dawn L.. Thomas G. from Lou A. L._______ Nancy L. from Oiry A. Rankin Carol J. from Robert W. Klla • Virginia M. from Donald C. WIckwIrd Brenda J. from William E. Smith Earl M. from Mary E. Thomfah . Reger from Constance Cola Albert E. fromilyfh M. Reynolds MIMrad A. from Rwuiofh C. Marftna Jr, GdraMna 0. from Konnoth o. Watts Mary J. tram Richard J. Zyskl JOM S. from Norman J. Okki NoHto M. from Joe WlHiama gttPWgfcSZw sKS-WogmWfwi F. Poat Sr. . Federal Grant for Recreation Land Is Due Congressman Billie S. Far-num, D-19th Dbtrict, announced today that the Waterford Township School Dbtrict will receive a ^,158 federal grant under the Open Space Land Program. Thb grant vrill aid the schod dbtrict in acquiring 39.6vadres of recreation land in the stdnir-ban Pontiac area. The land eeaabb of two sites: WatertHd west play-field and Houghiaa. play* ground. « Famum said these sites will be used for baseball diamoiv^s, pbyfielda and track and field activities. * it * The federal grmt.wfll cover SC per cent of the total s " iiqpM pnjeet cost of NR416. NIMK CAUF. SWEETI , Florida Swott mm\ IIT 1 AAORTON \ POT PIES 1 OHIOKj, KEF, TURK. 8-Oz. / 5-8PL sss 6pm Wsakly v ^ C to 9-Fii asf Sal. 9 to PRIOES SUBJIOT TO MARKIT CNANOI | > 608 W HURON STREET NEAR WEBSTER SCHOOL THE PONTIAb PRgSS> THURSDAY, MARCH 24, 1960 Spaghetti Helps Stretch Protein Foods 8PAGHHETTI WITH SWORDFISH iDatmeal Crust Encloses Layers of Apples, Nuts Apples are the hidden flavor-maker in these delicious coddes. Better make plenty. They melt away when guests have nibbled their fir,St one -> seconds, and thirds niust be on hand. Apple Watamt Bars 1 cup sifted all-purpose flour H teaspoon salt % teaspoon baking soda 1 teaqxxm cinnamon m cups rolled oats (quick or old-fasliioned uncooked) % cup firmly packed brown sugar H cup shortiening, melted 1 egg move top sheet of waxed paper. Place doogh over fUliag. Remove othdr sheet of waxed paper. Press doagh lightly aroond edges. Bake at 350 degrees for 25 to 30 minutes. When cod, sprinkle with confectioners sugar. Cut in bars. Makes 18 bars. By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Food EdUar When spaghetti is served at your house, does the family cut it up before eating or do they wind it around their forks? If you have yoimg children, the latter method can be r a t h e messy. How you eat spaghetti is not the point — how you prepare tt is. All pasta (spa^etti, macaroni and noodles) should be cooked in large quantities of boiling water. Because spaghetti and macaroni double in amount when cookhd, be sure to use a big kettle. Do not Overcook spaghetti that is to bg haked or froien. The baking or reheating will complete the eooUng. Nine to 12 minntes is nsaaUy enough. Stir occasiOBally to keep spa. ghetti foom stickfaig. Ground beef, luncheon meat and swordfish are appetizingly combined with spaghetti in the ’oUowing recipes. CREAMY SPAGHBTn CASSEROLE ^ 1 lb. ground beef 1 cup chopped onion Ml cup sliced celery 1 cup sliced celery 1 cup shredded carrots salt. Simmer 10 minutes. Stir in milk and 3 slices bacon, crumbled; remove from heat. Place % cooked spaghetti in 2-qnwt casserole, pour th % cup coarsely ch(q)ped walnuts S cups thinly sliced peeled apples Mix and sift flour, salt, baking soda and cinnamon. Add remaining Ingredients except nuts and ^)ple8. Mix until smooth. Press half the dough in bottom of greased 0-inch square bakfng pan. Sprinkle walnuts ' over dough. Arrange apple slices over walnuts. Roll remahUng dough he-tweea 2 sheets of waxed paper to form a Odaeh square. Re^ Almond Pie Has Syrupy Layer Inside Better make the servfaigs rather small when '‘Golden Almond Pie” is on deck for dessert — it’s pretty rich fare! TWo kinds of syrup go into the making of this pi^ pie, which has crisp sliced almonds sprinkled on the crust as well as on top. Almonds supply most welcome crunch ami flavor in an array of pies, cakes, cookies, hot breads, salads, soups, vegetable dishes and meat and fish casseroles and sauces. ; Golden Almoad Plo eggs Ml cup brown sugar, packed Ml cop dark com syrup Ml cup light com symp % tea^Moosalt 1 teaqxxm vanilla Ml teasjxKMi almond extract 2 tablespoons butter or margarine Vi cop sliced ahnonds Unbaked 94ncb pastry shell Beat eggs lightly. Blend in sugar, syrups, salt, flavorings and butter. Place half of almonds in bottnn of pastry shell. Pour syrup mixture over almonds. Sprinkle remaining almonds on top. Bake in S^egree (moderately hot) oven 2S to 30 minutes. GooL Makes 1 (0-inch) pie. Care in Buying Frozen Fish Pays For the best quality, buy froien fishery items from storage cabinets that register zero degrees or below, and in which tha packages are not stacked higher than the load line. Avoid p^kages not uniform in q^pe, for a d^) in the paduge indi-calotthawlng. * * If the package thawed somewhere en route from the processing pIsBt to flit consumer, there will fia froaen liqifld inghk the package. Top quality frozen fUbery products should have little odor. Keep frozen fishery products' at zero degrees until ready to use. Thaw in the refrigeratitf overnight, put the entire pack-1 age into a plastic bag and thaw under cold running water. It is not advisable to thaw froBto fidiery products at room tenvanlure. Once fishery prodf ucta .Mfo thawed, cook them. Do not thaw and reflreeie. APPLE WALNUT BARS - Here’s a cookie recipe that is a bit different A layer of sliced apples and chopped walnuts is sandwiched between two layers of oatmeal crust Serve warm with ice cream as a dessert rx cold as a cookie. 2 (S^.) cans tomato sauce with cheese 2 beef bouillon cubes, crudied 1 teaspoonsalt V4 cup milk 8 oz. spaghetti, cooked 6 slices bacon, codeed crisp Brown beef and onion; add celery, carrots, tomato sauce lag spaghetti aad saaee. Garnish with 8 strips bacon. Bake at 821 degrees far U miaates. Serves 5 to 8. LUNCHEON MEAT TETRAZZINI 2 cans (12 ounce each) bmdi-eon meat or chcqiped ham Chop Filberts for Pancakes The pancake continues td enjoy one of the . es among foods. It has found its way into mealtime menus, fit>m fo-eakfast stacks, smothered in syrup to sophisti-cated desserts like French Crepes. And the pancake, in whose honor eating {daces have been named, is a fine party re-fi-eshment, needing only fragrant coffee as proper acemn- Hiese Sour Cream Fifoert Pancakes are particularly appealing because of the delicious nutty flavor. Soar Cream Filbert Pancakes 1 cup dairy sour cream Vl cup water 1 cup sifted all-purpose flour V« cup toasted wheat germ 1 teaspoon baking soda Vt teaspoon salt 1 tablespoon sugar 1 tablespoon vegetable oil 1 egg V4 cup finely chopped filberts WWW Combine all ingredients ezee^ filbCTts. Beat or blend unUl wdL mixed. Stire in nuts. Bake on moderately hot griddle, turning when underside is golden brown. Makes 8 to 10 pancakes. To toast wheat gmm, spread in shallow pan. Bake at 400 de-grees, stirring occasionally, )4iulCaiuhnFjiuli Unclassified JONATHAN APPLES c79* U.S. No. 1 Fancy Molntosh APPLES DEAN'S DAIRY PRODUQS MViMRip. TOMATOES lib. lof 25' U.S.Ne.2 All Purpose POTATOES $-149 50 lb. ■■c Large 24 ox. Loaves PRESS RREU 6-»1 EVERYDAY LOW PRICE Doon'sGrado"A* MILK 3 Vigil. $1 nartont | Just Arrivnd • (2IERRI0S • POPCICLES • FUDGECICLES Box of 12 ‘ ic 49' Fairmont Fromlm ICECREAM RiC.Mellttail Vi Gal. lAfiC 25^ Largo Sizo Ttmpit ORANSES Dog. I Calif. GRAPES 19* Full 1 Pound POTATO OHIPS 490 fib. Big 10PEIIDAILYaiidSlHIDAY9-8P.M.| Form Boy Market 411 ttlZABiniiAM ROAB JhsI Wait if Taltgrapli^OppiSlIiTIlt Mall tk cup thinly sliced onkm Vl cup butter or margarine Ml rap flour Vk teaqxxm salt Ml teaqwow dry mustard . 2 cqpsmilk 1 rap half and half or undiluted evaporated milk 1 can (8 ounce) sliced mushrooms, undrained 1 package (7 ounce) spaghetti, cooked and drained Ml ciqi sliced stuffed olives Vl rap sherry (opthmsl) Vk rap shredded Parmesan Cut one can of hmdieon meat r chopped ham into 8 even slices. Afake 6 or 8 slashes one side of each slice, not qu throu^. Qit remaining can of luncheon meat or chopped ham into Vk inch cubes. Saate enioa in batter er . margarine. Blend hi floor, salt and mnstard. Add milk and half and half. Cook stirring cenataatly nntil thkk and tmMth. Stir in aadrsined mnshrooBBS, meat rabes, spaghetti, olives, sherry (if nsed) aad Vk cop Parmesan cheese. Poor into rtaOow kHpunt cas- Airange meat slices on top. Bake in moderate oven (350 de- grees) for 15 minutes. S)>rinkle| Heat oUves. almonds imdpors-1 swonUah In servliv remaining Vk cup cheese over ley in butter inixture; combine ' top. Returh to oven until mix-with spaghetti. Airanga with! ture is hot and bubbly, about 5 to 10 minutes. Yield: 6 to 8 servings. SPAGHETTI WITH dUL Qar-lUosa and Vk cup butter or margarine Dash garlic powder . Vk teaspoon pei^r 2 tablespoons lemon juice 4 swordfish steaks (IVk pounds) Salt ' 3 quarts boiling water 8 ounces spaghetti Vk cup slic^ stuffed olives, V4 ciqi s.livered toasted 2 tablespoons chopped, parsl^ Melt butter in saucepan; add garlic powder, pepper and lemon juice. Brush swordfish with some of butter mixture; sprinkle with salt. Broil 3 inches from heat source 5 to 8 minutes per side, or until fish flakes easily. Meanwhile add 1 tablespoon salt to rapidly boiling water. Gradnally add spa^tti so that water eoatinaes to boil. Cook BBcovered, stirring oc-casion^y, nntil tender. Drain in colander. LUNCHEON MEAT TETRAZZINI Fresh Blade Cut Pbrk Shops Portion PORK LOIN ROAST HAMS GS! MARKETS Quality' Meai$ Since 19B1 Ti Nprlh Saginaw.^ PoiiHao Op«n Frkioy Evo>nings,^il 9 P.M. TkUAdlmEff^BoihSUrree FHdktymmdSeiturdar 4348 Digit Highway-Draytaii Opon Wodfioedays 9 A.M. to6t30 F.M. Tfiomdoy fhni Sotueday 9 AiAto 9 FJ4. Sundays9AJ4.l»6PiA. __________, THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURsi)AY. MARCH 24, im Bake Cheese Eg& Cakes on Griddle at Table During the Lenten season when meatless main-dishes are in great demand, the egg again has a starring role. In this par-ar scena its supporting cast is sharp Cheddar cheese and they' team up beautifully in a new and exciting entree “Cheese Eggstacy Cakes.’V The slightly beaten eggs are combined with flour and seasonings — plus just a hint of onion for extra spark. Shredded Cheddar cheese is stirred in just before the thick batto' is poured onto a hot griddle or skillet. Cheese Eggstacy Cakes 4 eggs, slightly beaten 2 tablespoons chopped onion M cup flour 1 teaspoon baking powder % teaspoon salt ^ teaspoon pepper 114 cups shr^ed Cheddar cheese 2 tablespoons butter or margarine ★ ★ ★ C 0 m b in e eggs with onion, fkmr, salt, pepper and baking powder. Stir in cheese. Heat butter or margarine in skillet or on griddle, just hot enough to siszie a drop of water. Pour 14 cup amounts of mixture onto hot s k i 11 e t or griddle. Brown well on both sides, turning once. Serve immediately with spieed CHEESE EClGSTACY CAKES—They look they’re an excellent main dish selection for fruit or other relish. Make! A like little, pancakes, but they’re really more Lent. Try them’ some time for a branch, servings. of an omelet. Full of sharp Cheddar cheese. SUE DATESi T March 244lareh 30 HtLLS BROS INSTANT coffeeS9^ SWEET TREATS WITH A FRENCH ACCENT — It’s easy to devise dozens of devas-tatingly ridi-tasting, yet calorie-trimmed, desserts irtimi you start with this simidifled recipe for Basic French Custard Cream. Shown above. Meringues with Chocolate Cream, Cream Puffs with Almond Chiffon Cream, Toasted Coconut Cream Tartlets, Strawberry Cream Tartlets (flavored with kirsch). Lemon Cream Tartlets. Try French Pastries STOKUEY FRUIT COCKTAIL 19* 1-lb.< ^can Take your choice from "the i 1 cup boiling water dazzling array of tempting pas- 1V4 teaspoons butter tries and creamy confections 1 teaspoon vanilla (or % tea-shown here. Typical of the spoon vanilla and other fla-sweet treats you might expect vonhg as desired) to find in a French pastry shop, / * all of these (and a baker’s dozen more) can easily win a permanent niche in your own repertoire of favorite sweets. Different as they lode and taste, each of these desserts is based on one fundamental ipe, Basic French Custard Cream (creme patissiere). Quick and exceptionally easy to make, the foUowh^ good and basic recipe relies on a convenient-tiHise, new pantry shelf staple, non-dairy powdered creamer to provide extra richness of flavor and satiny smooth creaminess at bat a fraction of the calorie cost of fresh cream. Another cahuie-saving ingredient, the non. NEW PARLIAMENT Then the crier t^ over, roaring out the command for ian eiA(»tinn and » new Parliament within 30 days of dissolution, excluding Sundays and public holidays. Royal Wilson’s first diity was to teO the queen of his {dans and get her q)proval ~ whkdi she gave by letter from the Caribb^ where she was on tour at the time. A few days later, on her return to London, she issued the of the House of P prisoners and lunatics may not cast a ballot. Peofde with close royal boo-necthm like Lord Snowdon, Princess Margaret’s husband, are allowed to vote. They seldom do, however, so m to avoid any political taint touching the royal family. of the proclamatim hi pabUc places, among them on a Gnarde seatry hexes hi WUte-hall, a ^ce familiar to tom*-ists. The lord chancellor then issued his writs calling an eleo-tion and the campaign got under way. When the nation goes to file polls next week, only the queen and her imm^te family. vote, she Is required to caa-cM all eagageineats on election day and hold herself ia readiness to act Is head of state. presence in the connliy March 31 Is obliga- If the Labor party is returned to power, Wilson will simidy pick iqi the reins of government TIM one-button Jeckot... a fresh new approach to fashion. Trim In lino and loan In look. ThotwtwnofsMk... sn-ttmefavoritofor Dacron* end worsfod... for the consMentJy neat took that keeps Ks press but doesn’t he/d a « dissolution Mardi 10 and set about reorganizbw his administration. SEEK AUIHENCE But if his party loses to the Conservatives, he will seek an audience with the queen at Buckingham Palace and fwmal-ly tender his lesignation as prime minister and first lord of file treasury. Heath — he cannot go nnfil seat for — and ask hfan to form a new government. In the official audience room, I special chadiber near fix queen’s private quarters on the secmid floor of the palace, Heath will kneel and kiss the mon-ardi’s hand to signify his acceptance. Then he will go away, form his cabinet and inform the queen idisa he is ready The new ministers subsequently will be called to the palace to pledge their loyalty to tte drown. On April 18, the 44th Brifish Parliament of modem times will assemble at historic Westminster where the first order of business wili be to elect the speaker — Dr. Horace King. And three days later, queen will ride in a golden coach through the streets of London to perform the official opening ceremony before red-robed j^rs and mbming-si members ot tho House of Cioin-mmis gathered togefiier in the ancient House of Lords. The Fifth Rose. You don*t see it. You drink it. ftho RRL Rose is what we call our new taste. *riiis new taste makes Four Roses one of those rarest of | diingst a whiskey that actually tastes good. Not Just smooth, and not bland. Biit good. And if that’s not enough for you, this whiskey has an-1 other thing going for itt it holds its own in a mixed drink. | (A trick that supposedly only the old-foshioned heavy | whiskeys could pull off.) As you’d expect, this new taste wasn’t something we L came up with overnight. I Fariromit. I For one things we had a cupboard foil of 14KX> different whiskeys to urotkwith.And before we foundjust the right I combination (tome 50 different tatting whiskeys and I grain neutral spirits in all) a lot of new gray hairs had J appeared on the scene. If you want a good tasting whiskey that stays good I tasting no matter what you mix it with, ask for the whis-I key with the Fifth Rose. ^ m .a WAAk , Better known as Four Roses. 4/1 01. WW REG. 92.00 JAR 10 1/4 OUNCES LuitoCume SHAMPOO. REG. $1.05 MISS CLAIROL CREME FORMULA BE8.1JIBVnU0Fn SOMINEX TABLETS REQ. SSe TUBE OF FAMILY SIZE CREST TOOTH PASTE.... 63< REQ. 1,29 SIZE COHTAC HASAL MIST.... 77C B0TTU0F1H,B-flRAlN ASPIRIN TULEIS ....... 9< SQUIBB'SFROXIDENT REQ. 19.99 ELECTRIC TCCTHBRUSHES14*^ "Doetrie toethbruehae keep Ibe guiae ia better eeaditien and prevent tbe fenaattoa ef eelealw, aJeraeyCitydeiitlatolalau.’’ _______________ Pjliiics McMiRt SPRING FANCY COLOGNE 02.00 SPRAY 02.5G SKIN PERFUlfS 02.00 SPRAT IdST ti.76 PX7STINO POWDER 02^- REG. $1.49 10 OUNCES LADY ESf HER CREAM REG. $1.00 8 OZ. BEAUTIFUL HAIR 59^ PRESCRIPTION FILLED BY US QUALITY DRUuS LOWEST PRICE 148 North Saginav Huron Street 4895 Dixie Highway k'mirvfrr’nifrrn y: D-« THE PQVTIAC PRESS/ THURSDAY, MARCH U, I'*' i ■: **# Fancy Chtfies Artt His Trademark Weslern-Style Viet Killer Collects Cong lor Bounly BjrTOM TIEDE TAN AN HOI, Viet Nam -(NEA) — Nguyen Van Rat St, la a curious feiiow. A blend of p(»q> and preposterousness. ooiwboy hats and combat boots he struts dirough this village for ail the world like an Oriental Hopidong Cassidy. Ihd^ he presents an almost comical flgure. Except nobody laughs at Mr. Rat Not for very long, Mr. Rat is a headhunter. A sadistic killer who stabs his victims in their sleep, blows them up with explosives, or Strang them with his slend- But, of course, Mr. Rat is not a rat in the strict sense (d the word. He is on our side, you see, and the only people he disposes are Viet Cmg. VERY EFFECTIVE And dispose he does, with awe-inspiring efficiency. By his own count he has stabbed, hanged, throttled, suffocated, drowned, quartered, bayoneted or stoned to death 1,064 Communist conspirators over the past 17 years. Be did away with Us first at age II. Since then he has averaged one killing a week. “How do you know the count?” he has been asked. “I keep their ears," he an- Nguyen Rat’s colossal con-teno^ for the enemy ip this conflict is rooted in a couple of dissimilar things. One , his mother, father, grandmother, grandfather and two sisters were butdiered by the Cong and, two, he is paid hand-somdy for each proven C(»n-munist killed. BOUNTY HUNTER He is, in other words, a bounty hunter. His sympathetic and generous government pays him |10 for every adversary he kills and |15 for every foreign weapon he confiscates. Thus endowed, hfr. Rat, a onetime dunghOl worker, has become rich and idfo- Ss boots are handmade, his ouflanUshly camouflaged coveralls ti^Oy tailored, his indi-long fingeraails meticulously manicured info stiletto sharpness. He has a two-inch hunk of gold wrq>ped around one finger and some smaller pieces wraifoed around' sev^l ihowyteeai. NOTICl OP PUBLIC SALB N«nc« l( iwrWy givwi by tlw i tlin^ ttMt «n WadiMiday, March 3D, ItM, at 67! Oakland Avanua, Pontiac, Oakland.,County, Michigan, public Mia of a iwa OMC HMTtTtV Truck, Sarlal No. O1M0G, will ba hald fOr caih to may ba mada at 0S Oakland Avanua, Pontiac, County of Oakland, Michigan, lha plaea of storaga. OatWi March 21, IM6 Yallow Melori Cradit Corporation M2U W. 7 Mila, Datrolt, Mkhlgar By t. R. KITCHENS Cradit Dapartment March 23, 24 and 2S, 1M4 ADVERTISEMENT Birmingham Municipal Building janitorial Sarvice SaMad propoMit andoraad "Blrmlnghan Munldpal Building Janitorial Sarvico' will ba raoalvad at lha offica of tha City Clark af lha City of Blrmb^m, Michigan, ualtl 2:00 p.m., EST, Thuraday, March SI, 1*46. from quallflad contractors far lha lanitarlal Mrvica at tha City 1>I SlrRtMiam Mwild^l Building at r^lch tuna Mm will ba publicly opanad. Tha SMfk oontitli of tha daai:'--anaarllana af lha Birmingham Mu **5em6Mlona may ba ablalnad Oly Mmagar't ONkw Municipal___________ big, Mminghaffl, MIchlMn, up to IS o'clock Wadnaaday naan, March 10, 1000. Tha weoasaful bWdar will ba laquirad fa paaB bonds and osrtificatss of Insur-aneaM to eom^ with tha City Chartar _______ _________________IS lha right to ralacl any or aH prapeaals, to vnlva any Mlsrmallty In lha propoMls rt-calvadl and Is aoeapi any nrapoMl which It Wall doom fa ba irmi favorabla to lha City. IRENE E. HANLEY ' City Clark March 24 2S and if, MM He wears sideburns, a mus-tchae, a goatee, a tied-down .45 pistol, a wrapped around 3(k;aliber carbine, and a dainty necklace. He is, quite naturally, a ladies’ man. And he has six kids to prove it But for all of this peacock pageantry, Mr. Rat lives a rodent’s life. La*t year, while he slept Us boose was blown and gutted by avenging Viet Cong. He escaped , but some of his family didn’t. It was neither the first nor foe last fone his einemies have tried to trfo) Mr. Rat. There have been 10 nearly successful attempts but only one of these drew blood. ★ ★ ★ Now, jittery guerrilla groups are offering an unprecedented $5,000 reward for him . . . dead, not alive. The price interests Mr. Rat. “A lot of money for one poor man;” he says. But as far as frightening him: “No. One gets used to ducking.” DOESN^'FtlNCH To be sure, Mr. Rat shows no sign of flinching. His increasing confnmtatton with the Cong, in fact, is only adding to his grisly p^uction. Where he n s e d to hunt only one at a time, he now tries for two or fom. His record is a dozen, his average now 10 a monfo. The more he kills, however, the less Mr. Rat can bring back. Disliking the burden of hauling whole cadavers, he has resfMled to simply chopping off a victim’s head and returning it as proof of kill and, of course, as product for payment. ★ ★ ★ Thus they call him The Headhunter. Thus they speak in hushed whispers when he’s in town. ★ ★ ★ At the sound of his footsteps and the glitter of his exaggerated garb, young girls blush, young men sweat, children star dumbfoundedly aod policemen look the other Kray. And nobody, but nobody. Tennessee Valley Authority electricity is distributed by 158 dectric systems. ANNUAL MEETINO NfN« It harabr ahran Itwt Ite Minte teoNARD twmr MmkbMmSfStSS THURS., FRt., SAT. mai~f| A Division of the S. S. Krosge Company wHh over 900 Kresge, K mort and JupHer Stores. [: Spring Discount Spectacular Fdmous GENERAL ELEQRIC Quality AM/FM CLOCK RADIO Charge It 3 Day* Only! Low in price but higb in quality features! I^dio turns its^ on automatieally to your eboiep^of FM or AM. GE clock bas sweep second ban£ is self-starting, selfregnlating. Features 5 tnbp^ 3 transistors, plus rectifier for top perfon : Our Reg. 16.88 i 3 Day* Only! i Rresto eaiyelean frypan ttnasB eleani Foods cant alkk I to DnPont TcflonW cooUng BUifoee. 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Canvas Pish eraol wHft Snap Fastoaers, 8 Psokals.......141 Johnny Palmer set includes 8 pieces: Golf cart has 12” double ball bearing all-weather protection. 2 woods, 5 irons, all with leather wire wheels, adiuitable padded bag 14'... 11.11} II*... 12.N| Oontocr grips plus vinyl bag. brackets, aluminum construction. oovarsi 14’ ... 1I.M} II*... 21.M), Wesion*b ToanwENNl Qaaon Sal^ MJI ChafieIt.SDaysI ir ...24.N| ir...l1JI. 24"x21" BATHROOM VANITY IS R^DY TO INSTALL Ournmg.4i.l7 ffT TT S Baypuht g/,/ iXnhite glitter plastic laminate vanity blends with any color scheme, beautiful styling fits into any decor. 24**x21** vanity comes ready to install, complete with bowl and rhn, chrome handles and hinges. Other-sises to 36**. Charge It GLENWOOD PLAZA NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD IHifi i*UN KJii&S, XAlUK&lJAy, MAKCH 24, 1966 "WHEN I SAY BLOODY MARY, REACH .FOR SMIRNOFF!" Irish Character Is 'Boyle-d' Down ByHALBoVuS F^EW YORK (AP) -IriBh is a pleasifft, not an Industry. Now tbat St. PatriA’s Day This personal inqxuvidencei It is part of his nature never stops at the military leyei. Ofl>- to divorce a wife-or an oppw-Us taltot|tunity. there. They like to hire him to In p^diological terms, the run their operatioos by land andr^^'*’"^ ^ * manic-depressive by «. «. b, -r b«.u« and secretly feels the^ world pride under stress is to achieve purpose with the lent loss. BOYLE about the Irish far as I known them. Some years ago, in a burst of youthful per-' cei^, I wrote in ezdamatory affection a favorable place about the Srish. * . Answering the question “What is it to be Iridi?’’ this was a point I made: ST. PATRICK’S DAY “On SL Phtrldc’s Day, to be Irish is to know more glory, adventure, magic, victory, exultation, gratitude and gladness than any other man can experience in a lifetime.”' . ★ ★ ★ A lonesome friend said, ‘Well, that’s very nice, but thej year has 365 days. How does it feel to be Irish the other 3M days.” ★ ★ ★ Wen, some of the Irish I’ve known are like this: life is their favorite challenge but death is not their worst enemy. ■■ ! CELEBRATE BIR'IW They celebrate birth as they do departure. They are proud of a chU being bom and aren’tj particularly sad if a rdathre over 80 yields a final breath. They know tbey’U meet him in Some regard the IriA as too rash on eartii, and peiluvs they are. Their conduct, however, reflects a confidence in heaven. ★ ♦ * 1 But sure as they are of eternity, nothing breaks an Irish family’s heart more than if one of fiieir young ones is called to God sooner than they want to let him go. Performance is the flower of die Irishman’s desire. Joy is part of his way. EXTREMELY LOYAL He is fantasticslly but Us biggest quarrels are among his own. ★ ★ e He loves horses and the sheen ot their sleek sides and the betting upon thUr abilities. But he can walk as far or run as quiA-‘ hr as any num on earth. He himself is a horse on foot j . ★ ★ ★ 1 His mouth runs eVen fa He is a great talker, a prodaim-er, an arguer, a seeker after evidence. Sometimes he puts his swift fbot into his fast moufii. Then he gets himself into trouble. Reckless and careless as be 'local, Stato ReginiM Yield ResponsibilH/ „ - TROY, N.Y. (AP) - The fed- Hls biggest muscle, however, government has taken on IS his tongue. That gets him into ^ progr^s because of abdi-inore glory and trouble than ^3^^ ^ „,p^bility by state anything. With it he charms the devfl and also betrays the thing he holds most dear — loyalty. * * a w Well, to wrap it up, the way it local governments says Luther H. Hodges. ---------- * * w Hodges, former secretary of commerce under Presidents John F. Komedy and Johnson, mistakes him. He laughs in sor-:feels to be Irish 366 days out of row and sorrows in laughter, ^the year, including St. Patrick’s He is both a pagan warrior Day, is to enjoy s gossip with told a college audience that may be of himself, he is thrifty and God’s soldier, earth’s ad- immortality, like a child talking each level of government looks in command of others. venturer, heaven’s sentinel. to a forever father. to the level above it for funds. He Is generous. Since he has ever owned his own country comirietely, he will lend his shirt to anybody — and bmrow the other fellow’s coat lif^t back. when THE DEPENDABLE \ HofW b It possible to eoDnomize when you modernize? The answer b simple. Wfckesi, the world's largest Lumber and Building Supply Company, is able to purchase material in carload jots at bwer cost than anyone, thus it costs you less because Wkkes sells for less ... it’s os simple as that. 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PHONE COLLECT HOME IMPROVEMENT DEPARTMENT wicicE^ r-T‘“ T-- ROMEO EAST SIDE OF ROUTE 5S 2 MILES SOUTH OF 752-9191 LUMBER & BUILDING SUPPLY am HOURS Monday thru Friday — BKK) A.M. to 5dK) P.M. Saturday — 8K)0 A.M. to 3KK) P.M. ^Flntln Music dnee 16T9 Our Popular "Holly" Spinet Piano to make youiMHome Musical! Expertly crafted our own “factory at Holly. Michigan, this lovaiy spinet it beautifully slyled in lustrous walnut -r today's most , popular finish. Full 88-note keyboard and fast repeating action. Compares with pianos selling at much moral bench ONLY INaUDED PONTIAC: 200 North SafiBAwSL ^ CLABRSTON-WATERFORD: On Dixio Hwy. Jut North of Watoriord Rill Both Storat Opon Sundays 12 Noon 'til 6 P. M.- OTHER MARCH-OF-PROGRESS PIANO SPECIALSI BUY, SELL, TRADE ... USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS 6RINNELL JR. CONSOLE Only 45" lone. Fits In everywhere note keybeerd. « *379 GRINNELL SPINET PIANO ‘429 Full 6 8 - n 01 e keyboard. Fast responsive Action. Oeeorotor fin- CLAYTON SPINET PIaNO Full 88 - note key- « , ' board. Crofted by GrIfTnell's. Mohogony. ' ^ ' STECK CONSOLE PIAI^P Save $120! Italian Rrovmclol sty beoutiful wolnut. ‘895 GRINNELL’S, PonHoc Moll, 682-0422 Downtown ..Pontiac,-27 S. Saginaw St., FE 3-7168 D-«, THE PONTIAC PRESS, THUESDAY. MARCH «4. 1»W Hopes Rise for Recovery of H-Bomb PALOMAI^, Spain (UPI) Hope rose ^rply today that | U.S. H-bomb lying in 2,500 feet of water off the Spanish coast would be recovered soon. flilhlT H-HoI^ — A frogman leaps from the mothersh^, Privateer, of Miami, Fla., for^an underwater check of tte ReynoUs research submarine, Aluminaut. The sub is help^ ing to retrieve the H-bomb lost in a bomber-tanker crash more than nine weeks ago. The bomb ii in 2,500 feet of water off the Spanish coast. Spanish government sources predicted early recovery of the thermo-nuclear weapon lost in the crash of a B52 bomber more than nine weeks ago. 'Ae 22-foot, tworinan snbma-riiie Alvin made several dives yestenfaqr, apparently trying to sectire a cable to toe wei^ M so it could be moved to a •affr position before bdng 1 ed out of die water. The Alvin > trying to drag the bomb to an underwater plateau, about 300 feet uixier the surface, where U.S. Navy divers can secure cables to it. Baby Dies After Mauling by Two Dogs RIALTO, Calif. UP r A baby was attacked and killed by his babysitter’s large Great Dane and German shepherd dogs, sheriffs deputies rqxMi. Investigators said Robert F. Hamstreet Jr., 18 months, had been bitten at least 20 times. Officers said the babysitto*, Phyllis House, 37, told of entering her back yard Wednesday' with the boy in her arms and attempting to tnake the two dogs stop digging a hole. Deputies said she told them one dog grabbed the boy bxim her arms and began mauling him, then the other dog joined in. , Mrs. House suffered numerous injuries trying to save die boy, officers said. MOTHER b%IUm •( ckiMm... IwtoMitoMfe ...ir imMiMna NO INTEREST IN TV -r this 4-year-old gorilla at the Pittsburgh Zoo.recently lok Us mate and zoo officials yestenlay install^ a television set to provide companionship for the animal. The gorilla, hoWever, appeared more interested in eating pineapples and haying his picture taken^han watching television. WHITCROFT JEWELERS 7tN. Soginow St. FE 8-4391 Foreign Scene Rnns Live in Red Shadow By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News Analyst In the fall of 1961, Finnish President Urho Kekkonen returned to Helsinki from a viedt ■to the United ■States and wry-lly demanded; J“Is the r^b-■Uc stm standing?' It was a re-I of lof two bitter |facts of life ■which the Finns have had to learn since 1939. One is the absolute necessity for getting along with her huge neighbor, the Soviet Union, and the oAer is that whatever may happen the Finns must depend upon themselves. Together they form the key^J stone of Finland’s foreign pU-Icy. Internally, as wdl, the prazlinity of the Soviet Union oserelses a profound infhi- NEWSOM For this reason also this week’s Finnish elections take on special impwtance. For die first time since 1958 the Finns in Finnish foreign policy and on their side the Finns feared Russian demand for bases on Finnish territory. CRISIS AVERTED Kekkonen’s diplomacy fwe-stalled a crisis and the Finnish voters bowed to an implicit Soviet demand that Kekkonen be reelected. In 1983 Tanner retired from Social Democratic kadenhfe. Taking over as new party chairman came a mjld-man-nered moderate, a newspaper editor named Rafael Passio and a moye to brihg the party back from its political exile. In this week’s parliamentary elections, the Sociai Democrats emerged the big winners. As Socialists, the Social Democrats long since have aband Marx but in combination with the Agrarians th^ could bring to Finland the political stability it needs. But the final outcome may depend upon the Russians. bility. Taxes on {voperty supplied nearly 45 per cent of local and a^e ho^T of political ste->tate revenue throughout the na- |tion last year. World's Lorgtst Mognovox Dsoler Annual Sal© FINAL DAYSI SAVE UP fO $100 in OUR FACTORY-AUTHORIZED EVENTI Sqvo $50! SOLID STATE STEREO FM-AM RADIO-PHONO NOW ONLY Mognavox - 23" MOBILE TV Complete with CART Bring "Gtncart Hall" raaliam Into your home! * 40 watts of undistorted music power • Stereo FM-AM radio • FM Stereocast indicator • Two ^ ^ O 1000 cycle horns * Two 15" bass speakers • Micromatic record player with diamond stylus guaranteed 10 years, 1 year guarantee on all parts, V/ X w 5 year guarantee of Solid State parts. No down poyment required GRINNELL'S, Pontiac Moll and Downtown Pontiac, 27 S. Saginaw St.—Use Your NOW ONLY )90 G>nsole viewing in an elegant acoustical walnut finish wood cabinet that you can move anywhere! 3 IF amplifying stages. Automatic fine tuning. Optically filtered 280 sq. inch tubel 82 UHF-VHF-(channels. 90 days service; 1 yr. parts guaranteed. No down poyment required Chorge, 4-Pay Plan (90 days same as cash) or Budget Plan 169’ Largely because of their special relationship with the Soviet Union and the resultant sharp political divisions within their own boundaries, Finnish history since 1958 has been one of a auccessicHi of weak coalition governments and dismal fail- UNIFYING FACTOR The single unifying factor has been Kekkonen, the president and seemingly the only politician the Russians trust. Among the approximately 4.S miDion Finns, approximately 25 per cent vote Com-mnnist. Hie other two largest parties have been the Agrarian, recently renamed Onter, and the Social Democratic party made up of rig^t-wing Socialists. Kddco-nen la an Agrarian idiose term ip office extends to 1968. ’The Communist party has not participated in Finnish governments for years. The Russians frowned upon the leadership of the Social Democrats and that left only the Agrarians, usually a minodty, to form a government. 8PKIAL HERO Eqieclally distasteful to the Ruasiana was social Democratic leader Vaino Tanner, who became a special hero to Americans when he led the Finns in their hopeless war against the Russians in 1939. Tanner as much as any man is. credited with keeping the Finns out of the Russian satellite orbit. In 1961, K^oken was for9ed to break off bis American visit because of Russian fears that a Sodal Democrat-backed candidate might take over the Fin-idah presidency in elections ■cheduled for 1962. The Russians feared a change y |lv«i of the dlvliton n nontlac Township. - *—I patted by the t to divide Pre- cinct «2 Into two procincts ...___ with the Election Law. Precinct #7 will be bordered •outh by Sooth Wvd., on the u„. - ■ by the Grand THB PONTIAC PRKSS, THURSDAY. MARCH 24, 1906 Tax Measure OK'd by Senate Offari Local Uniti Assossmant Optiont LANSING (AP)-The Senate approved Wednesday a year, kx»I option version cl a tax assessment bill said to be word) tS-5 millkn to Detroit. Republicans and Democrats worked out a compromise making the poeasure acceptable to outstate Areas and permitting it to go inti^ effect this tax year. The House^ was e^>ected to go along with the S< amendments but there was some question whether Gov. George Romney would approve the measure. The bill, in essence, permits local units to apply eith^ straight line depreciation schedules or accelerated depreciation schedules to business persmtal property this year only. The celerated schedules will go into effect everywl^ere next year. YEAR OF GRACE '' Designed mostly for Detroit, the compromise measure in effect grants one more year of grace to local governments trying to adjust to state tax commission regulations wl‘" ‘ losing too much revenue. Industry had fought for required use of accelerated depreciation schedules. This permits the value of machinery and equii»nent to be written ct at a hi^ rate when it is fbirly new and at a stow rate later. This is similar to the way new car depreciates in value. ★ ★ ★ Straight line schedules, sought by governments with a high industrial tax base, require am equal writeoff each year wheth-' er or not equipment quickly} loses some of its value. Detroit officials testified an earlier hearing that they would lose $5.5 million in revenue if accelerated depreciation were used instead of straight line. PERMANENCE As passed by tiie House, the bill would have made straight line sdiedules permanent. But Senate Democrats had to give in to Republican one-year, local option demands so- they could muster enough votes to give the bill immediate effect. Without inunediate effect, it would have been meaningless for this tax year and only ac-clerated schedules could have been used. Republicans stili oposed flia bUl 00 a 21-12 vote, but gava It immediate effect Ctoeing date for tax boards of review was extended to April 4 so local units could take advantage of the meastire. Last year the legislature had directed the tax commission to implement its new accelerated depreciation schedules over a two-year period instead of one^ year. Wayne, Macomb and Oak-; land County units had com-' plained then that a complete! switch would cost them too much money. REQUIREMENT The overall changeover is in 1X^9 FRI6IDAIRE SPECIAL PURCHASE aQ property be as-,sessed at 60 per cent true cash value. Previously some areas had assessed business personal property at a higher rate than real property. Romney indicated last year he would not go along with further delay in implementing the depreciation sdi^les. But Wednesday, he would not My vdiefiier or not he’d sign the bUl. 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MUMVOX aolro-toaio sold-slato atarao aavo$M 349*50 rafularly ITOJO 9 MIcromatk: player, diamond stylus 9 Two 1000 cycle exponential treble horns 9 Stereo, FM, and Monaural FM/AM radio 9 Graceful contemporary styling 9 Storage for over 125 records MUMVOX 23-ii. portabls tv wini RNNioni iiyiofl ownoi 150*® wtth ftaad 9 Fully automatic 9 Complete Full Year Warranty ' 9 280 sq. in. picture area 9 Makes all picture adiustments for you 9 Telescoping dipole antenna t FREE FACTORY WARRANTY 9 FREE SERVICE 9 FREE DELIVERY IK-10 TilE PONTIAC PHESSj THUlfePAY, »IARCH 24>1966 Jacoby orr Bridge NORTH 0>) t4 *A3 VAK5 ♦ KQJ94 «Q103 WMT EAST 4KJ98 4 108742 VQ104 V 9862 ♦ A72 453 4A85 474 SOUTH 4Q5 4T J7S ♦ 1088 4KJ988 North-South vulnet«ble Wm* North Eairt South !♦ Pass IN.T. Pun 3 NX Pan Pan Pan Opening lead—4 8 By JACOBY 4 SON One of the prettiest defenses we have seen for some time was put up by Mey- JACOBY one finest players, had a tough problem on the opening lead. Ob-’ viously his partner would not anything to speak of, but Meyer deicded to try to find him with the queen of spades. Hence his opening lead of the six spot. I Doug, the inventor of the weH-known Drury convention, was sitting East, holding one of those hopeless hands. At least his partner had opened his one suit. The three was played from Hiimipy aod if Doug had blindly played third hand hi^ and stuck in his ten spot the curtain would have rung down on any defensive efforts to beat the hand. However, Doug never plays blindly. He selected the eight of spades i his play. Since Meyer, had opened fourth best declarer could only hold one card higher than Doug’s eight spot and .that one card could not be the ten. Meyer would have led the king if he held king-queen-jack. South won with the queen and promptly led the deuce of clnhs towhrd dummy. Jhis gave Meyer a good chance to go wrong. Had'he ducked that club, Sondi would have gone after diamonds and made nine tricks. Meyer did not go wrong. He went, right up with the, ace of clubs and led his king of NY Will kecrui) Puerto Rican, Negro Policemen NEW YORK (UPI) - Pbllce Commissioner Howard R. Leary announced a $2.9-million pro-dred would have come up with gram last night to recruit 1,000 spades. This wasn’t a really hard play for him although we doubt if one player in a hun- it. It was obvious tO| him that Doug, not South, held the ten of spades. more Negro and Puerto Rican police officers. A spokesman for Mayor John After this scries of defensive V. Lindsay said the program plays there was no way for South to avoid the loss of three spades and two aces for down one. Paan Pass 2 4 ? You, South, hold; 4KQJ78 4A54 4A7 4842 What do you do? A—Pass. Aay bid' at this pobit te Just lookinr (or troa-Me, You may find bonehed anodes tai baek of yon. la any event the head should beldpx to your opponents. « TODAY'S QUESTION You paw. West passes, your partner bids two hearts and East bids three clubs. What do you do now? ay lYpNlY OMAua .. ixprcu good arul utMactlon. / memberi. Avow ning good tor r»l»«tog loclal TAURUS (Apr. X • May »>: yourtcK from hormful extomol - ■ ^s, if possible. Be selfish to e that you live up to best In yourself, fend to seek perfection to opprecieto whet Is evellable. GEMINI (May 11 - June »): Y«» now discover what persons ctosa to . really think. Truth It not always pleas-anf ... but if can make you strong. Know this — react accordingly. Empha-si» undarttanding, good will. cancer (June II - July out falsa pride. Key It HONESTY. Friends are sWeera In desire to be helpful. Don't hesitate to call - - Malor ambition it close to Knew this! * Uto (July X ■ Aug. 73): Shake a« bSl^Be' ’^uTeln " do iwr best. Don't attempt things to all parsons. Conci BE SPECIFIC. VIRGO (Aug. » • Sept. 221 proper pacing. You know what do ... bU it It nacestar, .. — METHOD. Be analytical. AvdW wasta et ,ilnia, energy. Realiu co is %aenllal. banaficlal. libra (Sapt. 22 - Oct. 22); Highlight varsatlllty. Ramambar you do potseu tense of. humor. Money question can't be solvad it you get hysterical. Listen to reason. Plea of mate or partner it worth heading. ^ SCORPIO (Oct. X - Nov. 21): way 0 a littli SAGITTARIUS (Nov. X - Dec. Spotlight ability to be EFFICIENT, t appreciate your ettorts. Know this -your best. Attocialet, fyllow-workert d Say Hepatitis 'Pools' Exist By Science Service BOSTON, Mass — Great pools of chronic hepatitis, unobserved and iqidiagnosed, probably exist throughout the world, acting as a potent source of infection. The hepatitis usually remains undiagno^ because it is not accompanied by jaundice. Its common symptoms are I a feeling of doll, nondescript | stomach pain and a sensation of fullness; tenderness in die , area of the liver; and, in later I stages of the disease, malaise I and loss of appetite. | A study revealing the size of this “large probable worldwide reservoir’’ was conducted op some 3,500 military men in Tai- All seemed to be healthy at the time of screening, but 81 or 2.3 per cent of them reacted, positively to a serum test, in-' dicating a liver problem. LIVER BIOPSIES When 66 of these men had liver biopsies, it was found that 86 per cent had hepatitis, la «aqr easet, the disease ever, the chaaces of its grts^ to a laore ae state hrtagiaf liver damage were high, as was shown la feOowHqistadies. The study, reported in the New England Journal of Medicine, was done by Lt. Comdr. WilUam C. Cooper, Dr. Richard K. Gershon, Lt. Comdr. Shieh-Chieo Son, and Lt. Comdr. JaaMs W. FYesh of the United States Naval Medical Research Unit No. 1 Thn state that much cirrhosis af the liver may he explained I progressioa” THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. MARCH 1966 Dokh sprites ip wHk ssm aW^iy katissM kswlgtsr, m< MisIm I Mirphp tills ikt ptrftci fsoltolt Change of season, change of pace. Look to the traditionally fine crofts-monship, the superior fit, the distinctive styling of J&M's new spring collection. (Above) The Broxton, a dashing plain-toe slip-on, neatly narrow, with ■''boxer top" construction. Smooth black calf, 37.50. (Ceriter) The Scotsman Wing, a hi-rise slip-on with hidden gore and boxer top to hug the foot. Smooth black calf, 37.50. (Below) The Hampton, a wing tip lace model in a classic business style. In black or brown llama coif. 29.95. All styles In sizes 7 to 12. Examine these Dobbs hats closely: yoi^'ll find there's not a stitch In sight. Thot's because Dobbs felts the edges by hand. The result: q trimmer, neater edge ... a brim that holds its shape. (Above),’The Golden Coach, with medium brim, $25. (Below left), The Carlyle, with norrow brim, $20. (Below right). The Carmondy, a medium brim model, $20. Dawn grey, chargrey | or brown. m I (W w I out PONTIAC MAU STORE IS OPM EVBY EVaUNO TO 9 PJA. OUR BNUNMONAM STORE OPEN THURS. AND FRL TO 9; UT. TOliM - ■ A»*.^::lt’i»-'< '.Riyaa ^NTIAC PR»«S| ygUESDAY, MARCH 84, im -• ONE COLOR YOUR CHEVROLET DEALER IS IN SUCH A STATE THAT IF YOU COME IN NOW AND TRY TO BUY ONE OF THESE BEAUTIFUL NEW CHEVROLETS HE'U DROP SOMETHINS ON YOU ; THE PRICE DOUBLE DIVIDEND DAYS! NOW AT YOUR CHEVROLET DEALER’S ' Authoriiad Chuvroltt Dealer in PonYiac Clarksten MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES, INC. HASKINS CHEVROLET, INC. . 7 ' U 631 Oakland Avt. 335-4161 ' 6751 DIxi# Hwy. . 625-5071 20^ N. Park Blvd- Oxford .Rochester J -i ; ' HOMER HIGHT MOTORS, INC. ^ CRISSMAN CHEVROLET CO. T, ’ I 160 S. Waahinron 628-2528 Lake Orion AL HANOUTE, INC. 7S5 S. Rochestar L' I' , ' Jl :................................ * TWO THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MARCH 24, 1266 Teens Likely Building Target ■ '■ . VnU the nation's home builders be selling to teen-agers in the years ahead? - Cwld be, sayS the Tile Council of America, mindful that half of die people living in the United States at the end of this decade will be under 25 years of age. ^ The trade association of the nation’s ceramic tile mann-factnrers, who supply an important building product for new homes, cites a continidng dr^ in the age of home hiqr-ers as an indication this possibility. FHA recently reported "that the average 1965 FHA home-buyer was 33 years old, younger than ever before. • . w w w ' Younger buyers plus the apparently continuous rise in stand- ards of living may spell many changes in the appearance of the itation's homes, the Tile Council says. * - . LIKELIEST RESULT More custom-built homes with less conventional designs seem to be the likeliest r^ult of the trend, the Tile Council figures. Increased variety in styles as well as in the indiyiteal building compnents has been evident in new home constmc-tion since the end of World Warn. Ceramic tile itself has had many face liftings in that period Felt weather stripping ghied to the underside of each rocker on a rocking chair will keep chair from being n«sy and marring the floor. TILE SPLASHBACK for a sink .lends glowing cdor to a kitchen and is easy to make and install Pattern 478 gives mo-saic-tUe designs for it and for large and small trays and bot-.dish blocks. Beginners’ directions for this fascinating craft are included. This pattern is 35 cents. It is also one of four full-size patterns in the Mosaic Tile Packet No. 78 — all for |1. Pontiac Press Pattern Dept. Bedford Hills, New York. R^,' LEASE, SELL. BUV HOMES. PROPERTY. COTTAGES, CARS, GOLF CLUBS--USE POWIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS. tp PLAGE. YOURS, GAU. 3SM181. ' HEW T-FT. VACUUM CLEANER NOSE All Cldik, No Plattie fst MiMaa cxeiMMiwmiTiMi ■raulUMSIEHN Wt Ssnice All Makes and Models SEWING MACHINES and VACUUM CLEANERS SEE YOU AT THE and SPORT SHOW MHTUC’t ONLYMmOilaO NECCNI DEUn RICHAAAN BROS. SEWING CENTER 4SS EUiaboHi Uko M. Across From Thu AAoll Phono: 336-I2IS 25 Skpelhn’s S/ol- T2acfm^ 46 47 46 45 -44 JeucBpts 60 Go RoLfs RlX/tS ^kc S9I9 Mahorc/tk Mohrcifde 43 so ' 51 52 Ncv/ Michigan Bell mdu. Home ff.OnMef tbnv^ Gwtric floor Plan 1966 flowio$Sboris SHOW 37 ■Healih 38 furmna Siamp . 39 tawson 36’35 £v3ns Equipment 34 Carpejt . 2Z Corm^unil-ij Heakn(i V-10’19 \ Savoie !insulation 16 - /r \ , Mu \ pofl- UJsler /5-/G Pichniaif SrofheiS 9 Gornmunifif HesHrKj to Jaifcees u Currie, Wriijhr !Z Waf^HorJ Schools /s\ Port! Co'Op CmditHniep i4 Vravfloh \A/i(j \ 40 t)awsori 4!arlo life } 5 Cooleif Somfer ' ■■ 6\ First , feJm! 7 SiJIeif F/ectric \ 6 Aisor Aluminum ' ■’v. ■x^ THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MARCH 24, 196« THRliE Variety's thie Beat 5 a Waterford Township Jaycees anticipate an attendance of 10,000 this weekend for their 12th annual North Oakland Cou^ Home and Sport Show at t h e Community Activities, Inc. building, 5640 Williams Lake The show will begin tomorrow night at 6, continuing until 11. Saturday and Sunday, the show will maintain hours of noon through 11 p. m. Last year’s 3-day event attracted 8,500 persons. About 40 booths will be set up inside the CAI building, according to Jaycee officials. Among items displayed by merchants and manufacturers will be boats, campers, carpeting, water softeners, aluminum siding, wigs, furniture, slot racers, appliances and sewing machines. CAMPER DISPLAY In addition, there will be a camper and house trailer display on the blacktop outnde the building. Also on exhibit wiO be a U(^^eight motor-cycie which was driven to a world speed record. Admission for the show is 50 cents. Children ' will be admitted free. Free parking is available, according to the Jaycees, . " ★ ★ ★ \ ■ Several prizes will be awarded, including a motorcycle donated by Roy’s Harley-Davidson Sales, 203 W. Montcalm. « DRAWINGS Several boothholders also will present prizes following drawings. . \ Each boothholder will hold keys for the “Treasure Chest,” from which 60 prises wiil be given away. ^ Spectators can request keys to try to open the “Treasure Chest” and receive a prize. it it it “Treasure Chest” prizes range from desk lapips and lawn equipment to electric tooth brushes and carving knives. PIXIE CONTEST Winners of the Pixie King and Queen contest will be crowned Sunday. For boys and girls aged two to four, the contest is sponsored by the Waterford Township Jayce^ Auxiliary. ' *' Pictures of about 40 children have been submitted for entry in the eonte^ Each picture , wiD be attached to a box wifll a money slot. Boxes containing the most mon^ will constitute the king and queen. V ★ ★ ★ The Jaycee Auxiliary also will operate a booth featuring baked goods and candy. CONCESSIONS A concession stand will be opeYate^ by the Jaycees. Special chicken dinners will be soW as will hainburgers and hot dogs. A mouth-to-mouth resuscitation class will be offered by the Oakland County Sheriff’s Department. \ * Games will also be offered as a part of the entertainment. DOOR PRIZE ~ Gayanne Mansfis^, Waterford Township’s Junior Miss, lBits atdp motorcycle which will be the main door prize at the North Oakland County Home and Sport Show this weekend at the Community Activities, Inc., building, 5640 Williams Lake.' Miss Mansfield is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Mansfield, 5186 Durnham. $5)0QP in Proceeds Is Club's Aim X Waterford Township Junior Chamber of Commerce ej^eqts proceeds from the three-da^^ home and sport show to total about 15,000 from boothholders’ fees, door receipts and food sales. It would represent‘about one-third of the Jaycees’ annual budget of $15,000. wiU be used to fi- nance two $800 scholarships for high school seniors, special community projects and youth sports projects, including Junior Oli^pics, golf, tennis and bowling. \ -------- FOUR THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MARCH 24, Wells Serve 26 Pet. of US, Public Real(?) Fish Story •» * Dolphin Abandons Ship There hre more than 10 million private wells in the United States, serving about 26 per cent of the population. * New wells are being sunk at the rate of at least 1,000 per day. There are several reasons tor this. For one thing, it indicates ttat pace of hons-ittg is ontstrind^ mnnkipai water supply systems. For another, pele are growing tired of chroilic water shortages that they have to endure for months at a time, year after year. •“ ★ ★ ★ Finally, groundwater, found “deep in the bowles of the e a r t h," is virtually always “pure” water or is easily treated. It’s not subjected to the constant pollution and contaimna-tion to which surface waters often are exposed. PREDICT BOOM Many water supply experts are predicting a genuine boom in the growth of private wells, not only for private homes but to supply the water for the many theaters, bowling aUeys, shopping centers, restaurants, etc., that are springing up beyond'' muncipal water mains. ' Modem compact pomps that are virtually aoiseless and maintenance-firee come in a large range of sizes to serve both private homes and commercial and institutional establishments. A qualified plumbing contractor or water systems dealer not only will do a reliable installation job, he’ll help the prospective buyer select the right-size pump fw his needs. ★ ★ ★ What’s more, he will obtain and maintain records on the depth of the water, its mineral content and so on, and this information always is available to the owner for his future use should a larger water supply, servicing or any other “attention” be needed at some future time. Acclimatize Your Plants Tropical plants will feel more at home in Northern climates if you make sure they’ve been professionally conditioned by growers in your area. ★ ★ ★ The pros acclimatize tropical plants with the right soil mixtures and grow them in unglazed red clay flower pots to insure healthier roots and proper drainage. ★ ★ ★ Tropicals should be guarded against too mUbh light and water. ^ When you next paint your home, try using a single color scheme with varations throughout. It makes everything appear larger. By f»CK WOLFF Newspaper Enterprise AssB. Fish stories are not the norjmal fare in this corner, simply because the purpose here is^ examine means by which fish can be cau^t, not lost But a rather totriguing tale came to ipy attention, and I can’t resist passing it al^. Last' month, Harry Miller and Rocky Robinson went fish-flig on the Michell One off the island of Eleuthera in the Bahamas. Their purpose was to test new tackle. Midway In the afternoon, Harry tied into a bull doliMn, or perhaps it was the othm-way around. In any event, the battle was on. Harry fought the good fight, and after 25 or 90 minutes came out a winner. House Plants More Colorful The Easter parade of spring house plants is mwe colorful than ever this year. Professional plant growers have come up with some radiant'’hew hues to enhance your house plant collection. Clay-potted Easter lilies, always popular in their traditional whites, take on additiiMuil drama in new shades of orange, lemon and even red and bronze tones. Timed to reach bhwm jast before Eastrn', timse lovely \ Rorai heralds of spring shonM be purchased in tiie ^t bud stage so tiiey’D blossom after yon get them home. \ Lilies like plenty of\water, but should not be soaked. That’s why prc^essionals and prize-winning amateurs keep them in unglazed red clay pots, so excess moisture can escape slowly. Keep lilies in sunny windows, at temperatures b^ tween 65 and 70 degrees. ★ ★ ★ Deep rose red colors are new features in the popular hydrangea family, another Easter best seller. And, as always, you’ll find an interesting variety of colors in professionally grown tulips, hyacinths and crocuses. BUDDING STAGE ''Many florists and garden centers will have them in the budding stage, together with new shades in the dramatic gloxinia and amaryllis varieties. Multicolored white and pink azaleas, which fit sO beautifully into any setting, are available in both the new compact sizes, as well as in 'the longer-stemmed varieties. Colorful caladiums, fittonias and new varieties ot table ferns, which are staging a big come-back in home decoration, can add interest to your Easter plant gift selections. All Easter flowering and foliage plants should be kept in porous red clay pots to give them better environmmts for longer, healthier lives. The dolphin was i gs«d size, roughly M pounds, and,,! when brou^t aboard was promptly deposited in the fish box. Hairy was‘happy. Rocky was happy. The dolidiin wasn’t After 10 minutes, a gentle thumping was heard from the direction of the fiA box. It got louder and louder and then the lid to the ffsh box began to rise rythmically. “Some fighter,” said Rocky, admiringly, HATCH OPENS Harry was about to agree when the lid flew open. He leaped from his chair, dashed to the fish b<«, put both hands on the Ud and pushed frantically downward. The lid closed, but another mi^ty thrust ripped it from Harry’s hands, and the ddpUn came straight up and out of the box. " Rocky, aghast, just stood there, while Harry lunged for the fish. He didn’t make ft. With a vigorous flip, the dolphin was over the side and gone. Harry lodced at Rocky. Ro<*y looked at Harry. “Who will believe me?" asked Harry at last. “Don’t ask me,” said Rocky. “I (HJly saw it.” there should be a moral here someplace, but the only one I think of is: A fish in the box is worth two in a boat. AMERICA'S GREATEST BOAT VALUE Siwdy 14-foot worfchooo for long-time fbMng service—deep, heavy duty aluminum hull; dry dde, heavy duly keels and gunnels, maximum roominess. See the F-7 today! / ^ Nbie year "no fine print" guarantee, tom Trade for Economy, Trade for Power TRADE UP TO MERCURY MARIIIEPAIIITopto....50%OFF CRUISE-OUT, INC. 63 E. Walton Nnliac, Micli. OPEN DAILY 9 TO 9 FE 8-4402 1-11 to Ishlwhi liN ice tor a BOAT Build a Big 2'A-Car Do-It-Yourself and Save! We specialixo In Garage materials — our large quantity buying makes these values j^ssible. All Kiln Dried Lumber INCLUDES: e Plates e Rafters e All Ext. Trim e Nails e No. 1 Kiln Dried Douglas Fir Studs e Roof Boards e Premium Grade No. 106 Siding e Shingles e Cross Ties e Window ALL MATERIALS FOR A BUS 22x24 2 RCAVIGTOR MARK XI MwHatthereby easing sc^e of the bathroom rush hour prcMems in fantilies with otherwise inadecpiate faciUties. A quality installation conmts of a shower, handsome enclosure and A receptor tub with boilMnseat iame strength. If this blows out or file circuit breaker keeps tripping, don’t fight it. Consult an electrician. If a new appliance Is being Bsed, coasalt the book of in-stractioaa to make sure you know how to i^rate It. When the refrigerator begins to defrost and the light is out, make sure that the cord is plugged in the wall socket and that the temperature dial is correctly set ly set. ★ *0 It may be set too low for the shrives. Manual defrosting shciild be accomplished before the *lce becomes one-quarter inch thick. SMELL OP GAS Should the smell of gas pervade the kitchen, it may well be the pilot light has gone out. Ttds can happen if a draft blows through the room or the pressure drops below normal. The pilot light on top of the range can earily be relit. If it’s Oe one la Oe oven, open the doors to let gas escape befhrereUghtlBg. TUe flooring that is correctly installed seldom, if ever, gives difficulty. But if it were not laid properly or if an excessive wriffiit were abruptly dropp^ on a auction of the floor, a tile might possibly become loosened. * * * You don’t have to call a flooring eqiert to fix it. Remove the tile and riiow it to your dealer who wUl teU you the proper od-hesivetouse. REPLACE TILE Simply apply the adhesive and re^ace file tile. Always be sure to let the tile set at least three di^ before washing the floor. B jonr aatamatic washer lufeses la ran it auy be (1) that the hose has Uaked (2I the landtag door is not shut fast (t) the land is too heavy or oibalanced (4) suds are dogghv drata (D water fan-ceta are eat tamed On. or «) more than one cycle bottom has been pushed. When an automatic dryer stops, dieck controls to see if setting is right ★ we See whether door is closed. If it’s a gas unit, the nuun valve and pilot light should be fully on. See that the lint screen clean and that the exhaust valve is not clogged. If the clothing is unusually wet or the temperature in the room is colder than usual, set timer for a longer period. Some things are best left to repairmen. These include TV sets (except for checking antenna and lead-in), repairs to gas or oil furnaces and anything that would be a physical strain on the amateur or taat requires special training and tools to do the Job right, . AT YOUR Opnn Daily Except Sunday 9 to 9. DECOR by ASHTON 54M Dixie Hiway, v Waterford. 614-2293 Wash Pillows in Cloth Case When washing foam rubber pillows, put them in a cloth case. Soak in the machine, turning the pillow over once in the S to 10 minutes. ★ ★ ★ Do not agitate the pillows nor dry them in the dryer. ★ ★ ★ Dry pillows outdoors if po.*^ sible. H not, use a fan inside to dry JUK HAGAN MUSIC .GENfEI Oakland County^s Complete Music Supply House THOAAAS- WURLITZER Muik liwhweMoiii Mutk blitTumMto Pianos and Organs Set Owr Selection Of Used Pianos and Organs SAVE 4St Elizabeth Lake Rd. Across from Tho Pontiac Moll 132<«50C T21S Cooley Lake IM. Union Lobo HUSKY TRACTORS with extras you don't pay extra fbri Exclusivo Fstt-SwNeh Pow«r-lock HNcfc for changing powtrod attadanonte oosihr, in minuttsi No bolts to tuf at strotch snd constsntly ali|n. PTO (Powor-Tsko-ON) dtIW. Raisa or low-sr attachments uitdor full powsr. Dirw* drivt sssuros positivs powsr to attach-msnts at all woiMng hoi|hts. Two speed ranges for twice tho number of goarod working spoods offsrod by any other compact tractor. Choota tho^ono moat afneiant aptM for. the Job. Controllad dHforanUal puts antra troctloli at your fingaitipa'to gM you out of sHp-pary spots other tractors stay In. (Hualv 1050 and 880) FULL RANGE OF ATTACHMENTS AVAILABLE Mowus ROTARY mum sNew atAos' sNoweASTm ‘ unuTveAST 3 COMPACT tractor MODELS — 6 TO 10 HORSEPOWER golins—First In pswsnd RqUipiiwnt, since 191S1 BOLENS Model 650, 6 H.P., Priced at Only . . . KING IROS »S25" rEr-im PONTIAC ROAD at OPOYKE Parts and Service. FE 4-0734 EIGHT THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MARCH 24, 106« FaciHties May Be Overlpaded Plan Vacations in Advahce The Outdoor Recreation Association has issued a warning to sportsmen to make their summer vacaUon plans and reservations early this year because the nation’s prosperity is expected to cause , an overloading of many outdoor facilities. ★ ★ ★ The international association - which is comprised of professional guides, outfitters, lodges, resorts and campsites — re* ports that reservations at the top-rated facilities wili not be available much longer. ★ ★ ★ Bob Blair, president ORA, said, “If last summer is any in^cation, many favorite fishing and camping facilities will be filled during much of the summer.’’ Although many facIlUlet are expanding to acconunodate more sportiunen this year, “The demand may be greater than the snpply,” BMr said. “Outdoorsmen have more money and more time for vacationing than ever before,” according to ORA’S president. Bl^r said there are sufficient accommodations available for sportsmen who plan in advance and write fw reservations. Without advance planning, sports- CROWDED PLACES -and this has caused problems who seek a camp site in South Full Camp’’ signs can be seen end at many state-owned camping boom continues area outdoors enthusiasts Michigan. The “Sorry it every summer week-Is. Entertainment Sink Gains PopifllT The popularity ol the entertainment sink is growing by leaps and bounds, right along with the continuing popularity of the family or recreation room. The newest entertainment sinks come with a large variety of built-in or optional equipment. You can get them with ledges containing wells for bottles, ice buckets or soap drawers. Some come with corner gooseneck faucets or glass-filler faucets for installation in tight places. ★ ★ ★ You can get them with blenders and soap and lotion dispensers. Extra ledges to widen the basic sink, for convenience and a luxury look, also are available. Other items growing in popularity for installation at the entertainment or kitclm sink include instant hot water or ice-water dispensers and ice-nudc-ing mhchines. Igniter Device May Replace Gas Pilot Light The pilot light on fhe gas range, that infernal flame that maddeningly refuses to he an eternal light, may soon go the way of unicorns and dodo birds. One manufacturer has introduced an electronic igniter, reports Business Week, to replace pilot lights on gas stoves and clothes driers. * ★ ★ A The “electronic matdj” — which issues a spark to ignite the gas — uses a silicon^Mn-trolled rectifier. The device, which costs $10 to $20, saves its price in gas over a few years. The company adds another advantage: Stoves, when not’ in use, won’t radiate heat because there’s no pilot li|^t burning. It’s not likely tiiat you aver considered that flame a great heat producer, but take tt for what it’s w(»th. men and their families may find it difficult to find a place to stay at the last minute. PUBUC SERVICE " ORA offers a firee public service to help outdoorsmen plan extended vacations or weekend outings near home. Information is furnished on hunting, fishing or camping in any specific geographical area In the U.S., Can-India, Mexico and New For infutnation, spwtsmen dioHld write the Outdoor Recreation Association, Lovejoy, Georgia 90250. State whether you wish to hunt, fish or canqt; pro^sed vacation dates and tte geo^aphical areas to be visited. The association also is publishing a directory of 100 fa-vwed hunting, fishing and camping spots. The annual pi lication is called the Outdi Guide, and the 1966 issue came off the presses this month. The p-ice is 50 cents. The .Guide also contains articles on camp cooking, cooking wild game ^ fish, ’Tiger hunting in India and a set’of tips for wives of outdoorsmen. The publication is designed to enable a sportsman to plan a complete vacation. Information is included on rates for accommodations and the costs many extra services. Complete regulations and license fees are listed on hunting and fishing in the U.S. and Canada. 1 wpy Sprwgw® GRESHAM Complete Custom Drapery Setrice in the aniiwer to''one of your biggest Spring hoiuatdeaning rhores. All fabrics look better, last longer throui^ mo'dem nrofeaalonal Dry cleaning processes. Serviees include taking down aiid rehangtng for only a snuill additional fee. All draperlee premt^asiired,' expertly cleaned and clicked by management for any possible repairs then ’ re8trelched,.perfectly to original sise and diape. Unlined Draperies — 5c Lined Draperies — 6c Decorator Fold Only Ic Jo BLANKETS • SLIPCOVERS KeturvMtl To S|irlM|t Frmli AmI Convmdma Piekmp And Delivery Aervfoe FE 4-2579 605 Oakland Av«nae. eVourDrc*- ^sConaeTrue.. Come See! IMS's acwisT, atiT mmon, mmt nemm sosts! lOU (MLP.) BOATS . THE LUDESSHIP LINE ThrFoMHy Bndfot Lint BOAT and GAMnNO TRAILER We Carry A Complete Line of MERCVRY OUTBOARD MOTORS JlnJ^ OUTBOARD BMTS - THE FINEST IN FIBEROUM FAMILY SKI OUTFIT STARGRAR BOAT 35 H.P. MERCURY ^1195 SAVE *500 ON I96S CLOSE-OUT IT* and 18* Stem Orive RUNABOUTS FREE CANVAS TRJULER Included with complata OUTFIT SKI M595 MR BOAT , CENTER •^BOATINGS GNE PGRT GF CALL^' ^ 1215 f. WGGGWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM atAdanitRtad . JG 5-4727 Ml 7-5III USE OUR CONVEMEIfT FIT YOUR BUDGET PLAN OPEN SUNDAY 112 Noon 'til 5 P.M. AAen., Thbrs., Fri. 9-9 THE PONTIACJ PRESS, THURSDAY, MARCH 2«, im NINE 'can 9O0ttt JUST LIKE DOWNTOWN — This home office reflects the casuai atmosphere lors Open Monday & Friday 'til 9 P.M. TEN THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MARCH 24, 1«66 Suitable for Contemporary, Traditional Decorative Wallpaper Now on Markd TTie French had a woi^ for it ' — “trompe Toeil” which simply means “fool the eye." In. the 18th centuiy, an amusing faidi-ibn flourished for embellishing walls with garden vistas,'stone balustrades and carved moldings, even a compote''of fruit, all cleverly painted on in fascinating perspective. Now current wallpapers bring the same choice to every hand talented enough to snip and dip. For provincial tastes there are tiles, the delicate Ddh of Holland and the bold scndls of Spain, authentic in design, with cmmUed edges to.delight an antique buff and dark lines of groat for die final tooch of realism. Tradition suggests these for dadoes, then ringed in a neat row around the ceiling, framing windows and doors with color, splashed across a diimney front or behind the kitchen range. W ★ ★ The flavor of a faraway farmhouse is complete when^tiles combine with crusty white papers that capture the look and feel of stucco or the pebbled walls of Greek peasant houses. DECOR UNLIMITED Architecture by the roll provides decor unlimited and all in a matter of creativeminutes. Walls of books in bright colors, some in neat rows, some entrancingiy askew, are seemingly real enon^ ’to take from the shelf. Broad garlands of flowers might ornament screois, border a wide doorway or festom at ceiling height. ★ ★ ★ A hand-forged iron grillwleMy offset whatever you are able to do to influence the purchase of new housing,’’ one qiecialist pointed out. WWW Long-range market prospects —those within the next 10 years -are not necessarily the same as those today, flie conferees were told. The trend toward teen-age marriages and the housing needs fliey create, along with housing for the elderly, housing for returning servloBmen and encouragement of more home ownoidiip by low income groups all will take on added importance in future years. SECOND HOME Hie “second home’’ or vacation home market is also looked to as a possible area of expansion. As one program participant pointed out — “like the airline industry 20 years ago, the honae building industry is looking for future ways to expand. - w w w ' “The jets of today are a far cry from the planes of the ’40’s. Housing concepts may be just as revolutionary in the next 20 years. We need to be ready for the jet age in bousing.’’ Empty outdoor electric light sockets can be kept clean and dry b y inserting a burned*out fuse. Pontiac Mali Open MONDAY through SATURDAY CAFEtERU * DINING ROOM CAFETERIA In a warm, colorful setting with soft musle playing. If you care for more coffee, our “under the orange tree” col Too bar has an ample supply-eomplementary, of course. DINING ROOM —rich red cari^ts, walnut paneling and Scottish decor accents our “Scots Room.** . READ and WEEP or SEE US! The Social Security Board says that out of 100 persona now ape 2? at ape 65 the picture will be this: \ 2.3 will have died — 16 will be destitute — 32 will be poor — 23 will have annual incomes of less than 12300 — 3 will be well-to-do - 1 will be rich. 71 of these folks will either ^ be Dead or Dead-Broke. Did you knotc that^at age 25 you can . inve$t /eaa thfin $25 per month tutd hgvo a guaranteed monthly income of $100 beginning at age 65 to ta»t as long as you live. . . Which will you be? W'e have a proffrant for you! Make a date to ride a horse Whael course) JUST Touch NOW! MORE POWER in a riding ROTARY MOWE • Floats a aiawar 12” wMa a Total tba pawar of 8 horiat •. s WITH Jl/Aeeldina^ BY WHEEL HORSE, OF COURSE ‘ Sava time... save work, with thafinaat WORK-PROVEN Airtomatk transmission in lawn li garden tractors. Whool Horto Whool-a-Motic Drive lots you do oven tho toughNt Jobs sasior and Riora prafassionally jUfftL iiwsi. TOP TRUES • EUY TCRMS Eliiniaates Sbiftiii Jpstsnt Spsid Chaigis Instant Forward ft Reverse Changes Maxinmn RPM at Slaw Graand Speeds Test drive jiThoS^-STnatic Automatic Transmission TODAY TWELVE f : 'M ■ ; *■ ^ THET PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MARCH 24, 19 ONE COLOR -t- W(e**re ouit tlte R«II lalaices sm Dropped Patterns Kow at Size Description Sale Price 14x12 Beige Nylon 75«*. 37-10x15 62S;.Gold Tweed Nylon 199" 12x9-8 Red Plush Nylon 25®® 24-4x12 White Cotton 49*1 15x15-8 oriern. Mauve Acrilan - 89’® 15x12-6 Turquoise Nylon 59" 15-8x12 Bronze Acrilan 69’® 12x8-6 White Nylon 39’® 12x9-11 Red Nylon 69*® 12x10-9 Royal Blue Nylon 75" A UH9 Gold Acrilan 65" S 15x8-10 Beige Acrilan 59’* W 23-5x12 Commercial Green " 89’® \ 12x9-7 Gold Wool Scroll 95" . 1 i rooit l Kenneth G. HEMPSTEAD INSURANCE Its Elizabeth Lake Road Cmmt Mwpiv a. • SMb t ar SMitac StaB PN.FEM2t4 ■ DofCt,Thravo It Away... S : BfUlILD IT TODAY! I Let eur croftsmen restore new cemfsrt, higher qwoiity into veur eresent meWress = or box spring ... Compare before you bvyi p ONE DAY $0795 ■ SERVICE m CmmrmmtMd tm WrMiig 7 Fean ■ We SpecieliM In oamoRDie MaTmtsa la-r. . „ OXFORD AAAHRESS CO. ■ 497 North Perry Street, Pontiac gervfagFenltocOMrdl years FE 2-1711 $55Qoo MOVES YOU IN! "r FEATWES: e Full Basement e Maintenance-Free Aluminum Siding a Built-In Bedroom Ciomts with Convoniont Storago Abovo e 40-Gallon Gas Hot Wator Hoator.a Tilod Tub and Showor Area • Formico Window Sills o Full Insulation e Exclusive Thermal Break Windows • Pavod Stroots O Community Water a 70'x140' Siie Lot and Larger e Walk-Thru Both e 140-Sq. Ft. Family Room e Garago and Flroploco Optional. FAMILY-TAILORED HDMES iteciWNinni As Lovv As M4,95D Per Month Includgt Principal, Inlaratf, Insgranca and Taxas Inclwdos Principal, Intarest, Inaurance ond Taxas. As Low As M5.60D *115 Per /Month Includas Principal, Interest, Insurance ssd Taxes Take CkchoMl LaU Rd. 10 Cemmoreo Rd.i> take Cemmerce te & Commerce ndt, turn left en S. Cemmerce Bd-, turn rtgkt at Otengoiy St Leftto Loo Aibeles Bead. Amsricaira Hdiiiss OPEN 1 P.AA-B P.AA - aosod Thursdays 601 Ids AiIidIss 624-4200 FOURTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MARCH 24, 1068 448J060 Ducks Bagged Early Teal Hunling Proved Helplul WASHINGTON (* - The experimental early teal hunting season last year “demonstrated the opportunity for providing additional hunting if sportsmen are willing to learn waterfowl identificaticm,’’ according to Director John s. Gottscbalk of the Bureau of Sport Fisheries and WUdlife. ★ ★ ★ ^ OottSchalk reported that t h e experimental season in which 20 states in the Central and Mississippi Flyways participated last ^ptember provided 257,180 additional days of hunting for sportsmen. ★ ' ★ ★ <■ It also helped the bureau gather information on the early migrating blue-winged teal. ★ ★ ★ Bureau surveys, Gottschalk said, show that 201,972 free tealhunting perniits were issued in the 20 states an$} that 448,060 ducks were bagged. AU three species of N o r t h American teid — cinnamon, green-winged, and blue-winged —were legal game during the season. The objective was to permit additional hunting of the early-migrating blue-winged teal. “The birds killed during this experimental season came from populations that normally migrate early and are generally unavailable to hunters < during the regular duck-hunting ^a-son," Gottschalk said. He added that one of the studies conducted indicated an illegal