Thm Wfofhtr II. (. WMlhtr lurtra Pwacnl Orinie / (OMaiii Pant I) . ■ ' / / ■" ' Hoina Edition ■ VOL. 12.? NO. 307 ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAy, JANUARY 31, 1908 —60 PAGES uNnE5'^?WsVfN°Tlfl5fT ■ in SAIGON (AP) — A Vietcong suicide squad perished under fire at the U S. Embassy to^ay while guerrillas afield pressed attacks throughout South Vietnam that were costing them 10 men dead for every allied soldier they killed. ★ ★ ★ President Nguyen Van T h i e u proclaimed martial law. Snipers were reported still firing on parts of the sprawling airbase, some of them only 200 yards away from the new “Pentagon East," U.S. military headquarters of Gen. William C. Westmoreland. Five Americans and II guerrillas were killed before U.S. forces regained control of the embassy compound, scene of the As darkness fell, U.S. Army helicopter gunships raked Vietcong troops trapped at the west end of the Tan Son Nhut' airbase. Thd Communists extended their coordinated lunar new year offensive across the country while concentrating against Saigon their biggest assault of the war on the South Vietnamese capital. Parts of Saigon became a bat-tlegroqnd. Related Story, Page A’10 most spectafular in a series of raids in Saigon. Eleven Americans were wounded In the six-hour engagement there. Gen. Westmoreiaijd^said he believed the enemy attaoka were a diversionary effort “to take attention away from the northern part of the country." * * ★ The threat there is a major offensive by North Vietnamese divisions, some already south of the demilitarized zone. Tanks, artillery and machine gun fire rattled through the streets. Civilians as well as military personnel fell in the crossfire. Thieu called on his people to remain calm. His proclamation of martial law means that the Saigon government will rule by decree until further notice, rather than under the constitution inaugurated last year. He ordered the closing of all places of entertainment but told his people: “Our armed forces have had the situation under control since the very outset." While peace appeared restored at the embassy, action continued in various parts of downtown Saigon 20 hours after the shelling of the city began, signaling the start of guerrilla action. , Three explosions were heard tonight in the downtown area, and a military spokesman said it was believed mortar fire was responsible. There was also the possibility that it involved allied rather than Vietcong initiative. In a general appraisal of the situation,. Bunker said “Certainly none of these attacks have been successful." Military casualty figures were ln> complete, but spokesmen said allied forces had killed 2,643 Commgnist troops across the country In the 48 hours before today. Millions of dollars of damage were done to U.S. aircraft and other facilities in the shelling of nine American air bases. Reds Hold Part of Hue U.S. Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker said the attack In early morning darkness on the new $2.6-milllon embassy, hailed as terrorist-proof at its dedication last fall, “was obviously premeditated and planned well In advance.” SAIGON (AP) — Vietcong troops apparently have taken control of a section of Hue, (he old imperial capital of Vietnam 4IM miles northeast of Saigon, military reports indicated today. That city is a center for Buddhists who in the past have voiced opposition to the government in Saigon. Consumers Plans in SdENE OF TERRORIST ATTACK - This photO^iagram shows the U.S,J em-basky in Saigon and pinpoints how the Vietcong attack of last night was carried out. Also shown are the areas where U.S. forces entered the embassy grounds to AP WItOpSsW fight the VC. Five Americans and 19 guerrillas were killed before U.S. troops gained control of the embassy compound. . -Continuing growth will result in the investment in the Pontiac area of $5.9 million during 1968 by Consumers Power Co., Charles F. BroWn, Pontiac division manager, said today. A new service center for the division is under construction on Featherstone Avenue. Completion of the building, which will include office and warehouse space for 390 employes, is scheduled for this spring, Brown said. 64,800 gas customers in a 420-square-mile area. Brown said. City commissioners last night gave expected final approval to an open-housing ordinance for Pontiac. The ordinance becomes law Feb. 9. The vote was 4-3. The same foui\commissioners who last week gave prelipinary approval to the ordinance voted in its favor this week. Voting against open .housing were Robert C. Irwin, District 2; John A. Dugan, District 5; and Wesley J. Wood, District 6. ★ ★ ★ An amendment offered last night by Commissioner Marshal! broadened the type of housing to be excluded from provisions of the ordinance. GM Layoffs Up Despite Accord “Total mq^itnres for 1967 equaled 96.1 mOlioB. However, this iadnd^ the largest portion of the expenditures for the new service center. Construction on other facilities is up in 1968,” Brown said. RECORD EXPANSION The Pontiac area investment is part of Consumers Power Co. record llfff-milliwi expansion and improvement program in 1968. The company provides elecMclty to . over 1,000,060 customers, and^ gak to over 750,000 customers, in a combined service area which encompasses all but one of the 68 counties of Midiigan’s Lower Peninsula. Voting in favor were Commissioners T. Warren Fowler, Sr., District 1; Leslie H. Hudson, District 4>; James H. Marshall, District 7; and Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. The ordinance will prohibit discrimination by reason of religion, race, color or national origin in the sale or rental of any real property located in the city. AMENDMENT .Violators could be subject to a fine of up to $100 or up to 90 days in jail, or both. City Commmission Okays Spending of Income Tax Specifically excluded are duplexes, three-unit or less apartment buildings, and rental of rooms (to three or less personsij in a single-family residence,. * ★ ★ In each case the dwelling must be occupied “as a home by the owner or a member of his immediate family, or by the lessee of the entire structure, or a member of his immediate family." DETROIT (AP) — Despite reopening of two foundries and tentative strike settlement at a third, layoffs in General Motors Corp. plants across the country rose to 128,700 yesterday. While recalling 11,100 to work, GM Related Story, Page A-2 said that it had laid off 20,800, effective as of midnight. The gas department will install nearly 85 miles of new gas mains and services to bring natural gas to an additional 3,900 customers this year. In addition, improvement projects involving several miles of older mains are included. . ★ A ★ ' A new six-inch steel line is being installed to replace a cast iron main In Waterford, Pontiac and Orion townships. INCREASE SUPPLY Three major electric idauts account for large iharos of the 1968 capital ^dget of his company,,Brown said. The PaHsadn unclear plant, 39 milef west of Kalamazoo, is expected to be in commercial operation by 1970, with iaitiai capacity of 710,lOt kilowatla, hud Oven-tual capability expected to exceed 900,000 kilowatts. GETS APPROVAL The amendment was approved by a 4-2 vote. Voting against It were Commissioner Irwin and Commissioner Wood. Commissioner Dugan abstained. The new layoffs, as have others over the last 10 days, were laid to a parts shbrtage in supply lines from foundries at Defiance, Ohio; Saginaw, and Mas-sena, N.Y. BY BOB WISLER Despite opposition of two of its members, the City Commission decided last night to spend the city’s income tax money. The commission .voted 5-2 to utilize money collected from the disputed city income tax and to cut the property tax levy by 3 mills ($3 per thousand of assessed valuation). Circuit Judge William J. Beer earlier this month, but income tax foes have filed s4>peal papers hoping to eventually overturn that decision. Irwin said the commission was creating a situation where “one type of property owner can discriminate and another can’t." The income tax was declared valid by I U In Today's Press Bobby vs. LBJ Kennedy rejects political challenge—for now — PAGE A-9. Pueblo Force apparently ruled out In attempt to regain crew—PAGE B-6. ‘ OCC Football Community College to field grid team this year — PAGE D-1. ★ ♦ A Area News ..............A-4 Astrology ............. C4 Bridge ..................C-l Crossword Puzzle ...... D-ll Comics ................. C-8 Cowboy Story ........ D-7 Editorials A4 Food Section .... C-l—C-4 Markets ■ D-6 Obitiiarles ........... B-tt Sports, ...........D-1—D-l Tax Series .......... D-7 UMators . C-ll TV and Radio Programs . D-ll Wilson, Earl ... .... D-ll Womea's Pages ______B-1—B-l City Manager Joseph A. Warren was ordered last njght to prepare a revised 1968 budget calling for use of $2,211,000 in income tax revenue and $2,981,000 in property tax revenue. The total is up some $933,000 from the budget approved by the commission earlier in the month. That would have used only the 10-mlll property tax levy authorize by the city charter. Warren said the increased revenue available will allow some new services including the hiring of 12 new police officers. He said the amendment only tends to “sweeten this type of legislation" from a “practical, political point of view." ■A * * Marshall said the amendment was for the benefit of older residents with large houses and without children at home, who rent rooms or small apartments to “supplement meager incomes.” (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 4) GM said It was not yet certain when pipelines will be refilled and all workers returned to their jobs. The foundries were struck in support of demands made by the United Auto Workers Union In bargaining for new at-the-plant working agreements which supplement the national GM-UAW contract. Together, the foundries employed 11,200 workers. A central division foundry at Defiance wenj back into operation Monday, and a Chevrolet foundry at Saginaw returned both its gray iron and nodular iron divisions to work today. Workers at a Chevrolet foundry in Tonawanda are td vote tomorrow on a new agreement. The supply of gas to Pontiac and nearby areas will be augmented by a 2>A-mile 16-inch main to be built on Columbia Avenue from Princeton Road and the Grand Trunk Western Railroad to the intersection of Dixie Highway and Telegraph Road. Part of the new main will replace an existing six-inch line in the same general location. Preliminary engineering work on thu Ludington pumped storage hydroelectric plant will get tuxier way in 1968, but actual construction will not start until 1969. A third nuclear generating station, to be built by Consumers Power, will be located near Midland, and about $1 million will be spent on engineering work in 1968. Fog, Light Rain A general rebuilding of sections of electric lines serving Bloomfield, Rundell and Paddock substations is scheduled. Brown said. Forecast for Area A new distribution substation, labeled Stockwell, is to be constructed near the downtown area. Construction will start soon on the new Catalina Substation, Montcalm Avenue, to serve the electric metal melting requirements of Pontiac Motor Division. The new Tempest Substation will be placed In operation by summer. The division serves 14,500 electric and and dismal is the outlook for the Poritiac area through Friday. W weatherman predicts foggy with ^iods of light rain or drizzle today, ^night and tomorrow with little change in. temperature. The low will register 34 '38. Mostly cloudy and colder is the outlook for Friday. Precipitation probabUiUes in per cent are; today 10, Umi^t 40, tomorrow 60. The low recording in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a m. was 30. The mercury, registered 33 at 2 p.m. Death Toll at 1 in Pennsylvania Blast EYE PAY HIKES The bulk of the increase Is expected to go for employe pay and fringe benefit increases. Negotiations with city employes are continuing this week. The commission also voted 5-2 agajnst the city attempting to seek an early hearing in the State Supreme Court to an appeal'which might lead to eventual Invalidation of the income tax. PI-ITSBURGH (AP) - The death toll climbed to seven early today in an explosion that rocked the business district of suburban Ingram, shaking homes a half mile away. One person was still reported missing and 17 injured after firemen pulled a badly-burned unidentified body from the wreckage. In the minority in each of the votes were District 2 Commissioner Robert C. Irwin and District 4 Commissioner Leslie H. Hudson. ★ ★ ★ Irwin said that although there is no question the city government. needs the additional money to be derived from an income tax “you can't spend something you don’t have." Workers at the scene said one man was thrown 90 feet across railroad tracks. Three were hurled against an Iron fence 25 feet away by the explosion yesterday. •CITY NOT SURE’ What had been a row of five business shops was leveled almost to the street. The buildings exploded while a 12-man Equitable Gas Co. crew was ripping up sidewalk outside iooking for a gas ieak. Five of the dead were Equitabie workers. He said the cityi Is norhure that the income tax will not in the future be invalidated and that the tax money will have to be returned. Irwin said the city should before spending any of tho Income tax ••make every possible effort to determine whether or not we have an income tax.” (Continued on Page A-3, Col. I ) WORKING ON GAS MAIN “Who knows what triggered the explosion?" said a gas company spokesman. "Actually, the real cause probably will never be kndwn. I The blast ripped apart a beauty shop, a tailor shop, two real estate offices and a cleaning shop. There were apartments on the second floors of the two-story frame buildings. . « EXPLOSION SCENE — Volunteers carry away debris from the scene of an explosion yesterday in the b^lness district of Ingram — a Pittsburgh suburb. The blast — btlicved triggered by gas — killed at least Seven and injured 17. One person was Still reported missing. The explosion ripped apart a beauty shop, a tailor shop, two real estate offices-an a claW' Ing shop. ip rt THE POXTJAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 31, 1968 IX rif% iM' , I Korea Irked by Pueblo Emphasis j,i.' SSOUL (AP) South Korea’s for an over-all settlement of the prevent recurrence of any pro-^reign minister Mserted today Korean situation, Foreign Min-vocative acts by the North Ko-Ithat mwe attention should be ister Choi Kyu-hah told a news rean regime,” he declared. I^*?.*?* ,, , , Ibipartban support '.4o’4lS888sinate President Chung, Choi said his government also ^ . ?Hee Park than to North Korea’s will object to any direct bilater-' *'“‘'"8 Democratic Repub- seizure of the USS Pueblo. His al talks between the United party and the opposition remarks were interpreted as an States and the North Koreans ^hinhiln party put aside their \ expression of government dis-^and to any proposal to exchange squabbles to provide bi- pleasure with U.S. handling of the Pueblo crewmen for North support for the Park the current Korean crisis. iKorean infiltrators. gov^ment in the crisis. The V The South Korean govemmentj “A basic settlement of the Assembly went into „ ----- jieiueiiiem oi me : , . ' will ‘‘categorically oppose” any|current crisis lies in taking firm session and was expect- .......... - ' •• to adopt resolutions asking additional UiS. moves to empha-l measures to assure the security a •• ^alze the Pueblo case in efforts of the Republic of Korea and „ decisivi >------------------------------------------------ ----L_____ _________North Korea action against House Near Passage of First Item in Plan to Protect Consumer In Washington, the White I House continued to put heavy i stress on diplomatic efforts to free the Pueblo crewmen. Sen. |J. W, Fulbright, D-Ark., chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said after breakfast Tuesday with President Johnson he got the impression Johnson was so hopeful of avoiding military action that there was no talk of a deadline for relase of the men. I At the United Nations, a Not felt Here Normal Production Seen by Weekend Birmingham Area News Commission Modifies Plans for Ring Road BIRMINGHAM-The City I,, Commission has acted t o The consulting , firm nig- Genera! Motors plants in Commission has acted to gested, and the commission Pontiac will not be affected by modify plans for a portion of approved, widening the street to a lag In parts supplies, ac-!“ring i" the w®*'® of a^three lanes by narrowing the cording to company spokesmen, report from Reid and Cool, city .planned center Island and cUt-I * * * i traffic engineering consultants. | ting the width of the two lanes Several plants around thej ★ * * i planned from 12 to 11 feet, nation are expected to be facing! The portion of the ring road, e p^viNG PROGRAM layoffs due to parts shortages planned loop around the city’s. „______»i. »» caused by the temporary halt inj central business district, af-! Prompt action on the matter production at three large foun- fected is Oakland s t r e e t T®® dries recently on strike. | between Woodward and Park. Assistant City Manager John i nn. . . . Saefke, because the Oaklaml TOe last of the strikes wasj The two lanes westbound improvement is scheduled as settled Mo^ay but due to 1^ planned for Oakland at that'part of the city’s pavinrpro-lag in production, some GM point, Reid and Cool warned, gram fw this war plants have had to send worker. *ould probably not be home. Indent to handle traffic flow' I In Pontiac Monday some 6,0M during peak hours. I . 7*?!“***^ .* were off. However, production! », j . *u P®***hiUty of testing the ring is expected to be back to the road plan before making further normal by the end of the week. , ^®“” *® ® *■ ® • change* existing in- I Call-backs resumed today at he®®™®® Part of tersectlons. Pontiac Motor Division, where ““ ®*»* ‘®*- ''^® 5,000 were off and at General •®"®® w®®'** then be sufficient Motors Truck and Coach*®® Oakland from Hunter ** to J.. WASHINGTON (UPI) — The-House neared passage to-J day of the first item in the Johnson administration’s program 5;jfor consumer protection, a “truth-in-lending” bill designed ’ to make it easier for buyers to find the best credit terms. The measure has bipartisan support and a final vote was due late in the day after a dispute was settled over interest reporting requirements on revolving charge accounts. Basic provisions of the measure call for most merchants, banks and finance companies to state to the prospective boiTOWer the annual percentage interest to be charged on his loan or credit purchase. Rep. Leonor K. Sullivan, D-Mo., charging the biff contained ‘‘gaping loopholes,” pressed for elimination of a provision that would exempt certain merchants from having to state the interest rate on an annual basis. \ ★ * * These are catalogue houses, department stores and other businesses that use revolving credit accounts on which interest is charged by the month. Such firms would gain a competitive advantage over smaller businesses, she said, since a monthly rate seems like a smaller charge than the same rate figured annually. A second ‘‘loophole” Mrs. Sullivan sought to eliminate was a provision exempting transactions on which the annual finance charge is less than |10. source familiar with U.S. views said he believed ^ the United States would soon abandon its attempt through the United Nations to get the crew released. Security Council members reported no success in their ef-foi*ts to break a U.S.-Sov\et deadlock over an invitation to North Korea to join the council debate. The most serious of many North Korean infiltrations in recent weeks was the invasion of Seoul Jan! 21 by a 3l-man guer-|rilla squad under orders to kill President Park and other high officials. They were stopped AP Winplwtt U.S. BOMB? — Sailor Nikolai Kalnev of the Soviet ship Pereslavy-Zalessky stands beside part of „ the bomb in Vladivostok that Russia said was dropped by U.S. planes and damaged the ship in the North Vietnamese port of Haiphong. Russia said this part of tb,e bomb bore U.S. markings. The vessel arrived in Vladivostok yesterday. This picture is from Tass, the Soviet agency. Division, with 1,000 off. ’Die ®o**W "ot handle the Fisher Body plant was hot af- projected from fected by the strike. , Park. * * ★ |---------------------------------- ' —------------- All three of the plants In' Open Housing for City Given Final Approval Pontiac have approved national I agreements. All but Pontiac iMotor have reached local lagreerhents. Negotiations are continuing at Pontiac Motor, which is one of 70 out of 168 GM plants without local settlements as yet.. Cify Cabby fs Hammered, Shot, Robbed The report listed six Intersections at which changes will eventually be necessary to handle traffic flow,'and emphasized, ‘‘Testing the -plan without completion of the proposed revMons will result in severe traffic congestion at those intersections.” would (Continued From Page One) referendum election , . - - The possibility of a referen-*^® ®‘^‘**”®"P®' .half a mile from Park’s resi-p,ecUon on the ordinance,^.*'® "®* .‘*’®‘ dence. South Korean and Ameri- than just that, ac- ®‘ ®**’ H®**®®" ®®“* |Can troops have so far killed 26 wording to a man who I of the intruders and captured against it last night. Offices Looted in Waterford ^A Pontiac cabdriver is in fair Stationing patrolmen at the corners would be required to ease congestion, the report said. ONE-WAY TRArnC ^ Reid and Cool also recommended that the ring road be (Condition after being shot qnd!one-way when completed, hit in the head with a hammer Otherwise, the report said, the during a holdup early today. i heavy traffic volume would I Two youths, about 19 years'make widening of several old, are being sought by police I streets necessary, in the attack of Herbert L.| Fraser, 60, of 1108 Myrtle Machines worth $450 Defense Aide Resigns t6 Teach af University “I’m going to rnn a rcferen-OfTHER DEVELOPMENTS aum if I have to run all over Hudson said be About $30 was taken in the were robbery. the referendum would b e Joseph Mercy Hospital follow- defeated,” he said. Other developments in the Kb-this state barefooted,” Bennie rean crisis included the resunnp- Lee Burnett of 23 S. Paddock tion by North Korea of intrusion said. Township. feels that, Township legislation typewriter. police said a checkwriter and ing the 3:15 a.m. incident, told police he picked up the pair on South Sai^aw and drove them total to an address on Howard a Cab driver for the Co., suffered WASHINGTON (AP) - Solis Horwltz, assistant secretary of defense, has resigned to become a professw at his alma mater, ^the University of Pittsburgh. *• : Horwitz became Tuesday the first top-level Pentagon official to follow the pending departure of Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara. ;■ * * * A congressional aide for a decade, Horwitz moved from Capitol Hill td the Pentagon under McNamara at the start of ffie Kennedy administration and ^helped draw up the blueprints for reorganization within the Defense Department. He was assistant secretary for adminis-;.tration. open-housing be passed by t h e an adding machine — unui „ „ Legislature, if not in the current value' of $350 — weft taken ”*^^*“* attempts in the American sector r„mmi«innpp n..cran ^ session In the next session. | from Dr. J. G. Margolis’office. Fraser, I demilitarized zone, an an- *‘because of the feelings in He said this would have the' ^ typewriter valued at $100 Yellow gry anti-Communist^ rally in : Question effect of enforcing open housing '^®® 'eported stolen from the bullet wound in the head, ac- Seoul, and reports reaching „tjii g statewide so that Pontiac would ®*^'®® ®* Hr. Thomas W. Follls. cording |p hospital officials, j Washington that one Pueblo referendum ” ’ not be in the position of being a *'®''®® ®®‘'* ®"*''y gained A speifl bullet wai found in, crewman was dead but that the “We’re only wasting a lot of ®‘‘y open-housing law breaking the front-door glass th^ taxi. Police did not know 'others were being properly .. Dugan surrounded by ciUes without ®"‘‘ unlocking the door. immediately if Fraser was shot ' Commissioner Fo w 1 e r sa;d, ®uch ordinances. ■ ------------------ _with his own gun or that of the Divis^inn ranpiil!? however, that he thinks a Hudson said, at the minimum, .i r j i .. .. o mniiary spoxesman said. | The ordinance will give hope at $100,000 was stolen during the Many People Wanted Matching: Chair and Rug:... “We had 15 calls in less than three hours from our Press Want Ad. Wonderful results.” Mrs. M. K. ( GOLD rug" irxis', GOLD MOOBRN chtir. IRC. condition. PRESS WANT ADS 8ft, your direct line to many people dally who very likely are seeking what you have to offer! Try one and see. Dial .332-8181 or 334-4981 .. * L .... d^lkCSIimn SaiQ. »" C.mmi»ioner Hu<,»„ ,,id h.|;hai U*r,r.7~pi.'w5o;a«:-^ Senate Tuesday. j---<___ . ®ouvmced last week that a he said. (police said today. OTHER RESIGNATIONS Several high-level members of the McNamara team have lndi-| cated they will remain in their! Pentagon posts at least through Clifford’s beginning months. But there have been reports Air Force Secretary Harold Brown, a top physicist, may be leaving soon. The date Horwitz’ resignation will take effect was not an-' nounced. .1 Searchers Comb High Sierra 16 Missing in Snow Hunted The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINI’TY-Cloudy bud mild today, ffigh 87 to 42. Foggy with periods of light rain and drizzle tonight ’Thursday with little temperature change. Low tonight 34 to 36. Southeasterly winds at 10 to 20 miles per hour. Friday’s outlook: mostly cloudy and colder. Chance of precipitation probabilities: today 10 per cent, tonight 40 per cent, Thursday 60 per cent. OROVILLE, Calif. (DPI) — Searchers battled deep snow and bittpr cold today in California’s High Sierra to locate 16 persons missing or marooned during the Pacific Coast’.s worst storm of the winter. * * * More than three feet of snow fell above 2,000 feet yesterday in mountain areas north of Yosemite National Park. Some Sierra hamlets measured more than five feet of snow. cisco police Lt. Eugene Caldwell and his 12-y<*ar-old son at at a hunting lodge where they had stayed five days waiting out the storm. RESCUED BY COPTER Sheriff’s Capt. Richard Stenberg at Oroville said heavy, wet snow collapsed several roofs of homes in the Paradise area. Western Pacific Railroad’s California Zephyr passenger train carrying 180 persons was freed yesterday from the High Sierra after being stalled overnight by a snowslide. TMlay In Rnntlnc .Loml ••mptrilure pricndlng 8 a.m.; 30 Al I n.m;! wind Vnincitv lo m.p.h. Dlrndlon: Southtnat Sun aMl.Wndnniday at S:M p m. Sun riant Thuraday at 7:47 a.m. Moon tatt Wadnaaday at 8:01 p.m. Moon ritaa thuraday at t:35 a.m. Tuotday In Pontiac ... . (at rocordad downtown) Hlghaat temporatura jo Lowaat tamporaturo it Maan lemparature 3i.s Waathar—Cloudy aarly morning, tunny Rfternoon Zero visibility and drifting snow have closed intermittently Interstate 5 between California and Oregon and Interstate 80, the major trans-Sierra highway. Snow slides shut down U.S. 50 between Sacramento, Calif., and Lake Tahoe last night. ★ ★ ★ Heavy snow also fell over most of northern Nevada yesterday, slowing traffic and hampering air travel. Wind gusts of up to 40 miles an hour whipped snow into drifts and chains were required on all major highways in the storm area. .. A helicopter reached one stranded family and dropped a bundle of food to the ocenpants of the summer cabin who became trapped during a weekend visit. Search was unsuccessful for the second day in a row for a single-engine plane missing in the Mt. Hamilton area south of San Jose. * * ★ Near-zero visibility prevented search planes from going up yesterday and a ground party was unable to find any trace of the plane piloted by Vicki Moffitt of Stamford, Conn , a student at Arizona State University, Tempe, Arlz. NOTICE All employees of GMC Truck ond Cooch Dirition's Plant 3 G-10, Von Operations are to report at the beginning of their regular work shift on Thursdoy, Februory 1st. This includes oil workers in production, moterial handling, maintenance and inspection. Signed: GMC Truck and Cooch Division General Motors Corporation * Dpwptpwn Tumpgrpturtt * » ».m....... 30 n p.m, 7 p.m..... 30 13 m. I 8.m........30 1 p.m. ♦ P.m....... 30 2 p.m. 10 P.m.... 31 Oiw Yppr Agp IP Rpptlpc Hlghptl ipmppTPturp LowppI Ipmpprpturp ‘A8PPII tpmpprplurp AIpci „ Flint G. Rppidi a HouglUon “ Houghton Lk " Mproupttp Mutkooon Poll., ton Trovortp C. 4 Albuouprqup .3 Atipnl 24.5 Blimorck WPOttwr—SIppt morning, lunny anor. ' aoiiton noin _ Chicago HIgMtt M Lowhi Tomporolurop ^)onv#r*” ^ O*** '» »» VOpri Dotrolt I" )•** -7 In ITO Duluth Tuotdoy'i Tomparpturoi ! 35 It Fort Worth tS 4t 37 34 Jackionvillo 77 5t 37 25 Kansti City 44 37 2* M Los AngalOi t1 a 3t 30 Miami Beach 72 (3 » 34 Mllwiukaa 35 3t 37 36 Now Orltoni 72 57 32 4 New York 43 3« 33 21 Omaha 40 31 55 32 Phopnt. 70 40 4» 47 PIttiburgh 43 35 St. Loull 30 37 RARE SNOWFALL A rare snowfall laid a white blanket of two to three inches on parts of San Mateo and Santa Clara counties south of San Francisco last night. 40 55 37 5. Fronclico 40 58 20 5. Stc. Marit 27 41 26 Wtihinolon SI Warm air moved into Oregco and began melting an accumulation of nearly five inches of snow. Most schools were closed in the state yesterday because authorities believed more onnw would fall. Heaviest snowfall was in the giskiyou Mountains near the California border. ‘ Inkster Schools Get Reprieve WfAFNIt IUMAI7 . ISSA Two days of rain soaked low lying areas of northern California, triggering}some minor flowing and numerous power failures. Nearly four inches of rain fell at San Jose, Calif., in a 24-hour period. ★ w ♦’ Heavy snpws were expected to diminish today In northern mountains. Weathermen said the Pacific stoirm would move south with rain spreading to the mountains of southern California. < AP Wlrtphalp AWAIT BREAK Authorities awaited a break in the weather before sending out search teams to look for missing persons. Some of those stranded, induing at least nine children, were sheltered in remote cabins and cut off from communications. Others were fekred at the mercy of the storm. Six persons were rescued yesterday. NATIONAL WEATHER - Rain is forecast tonight for part of the Pacific Ckiaat and the Mississippi River Valley. Ihe Northern Rockies region is expected to receive snow and snow flurries. Rescuers bucked through deep drifts to reach three Sacramento college students snowbound in woods near Oroville. A search team in Plumas County found tavern operator Leo Gamey in his car surrounded by 10-foot snowdrifts. Sheriff’s officers at Red Bluff, Calif., found San Fran- LANSING (AP) —Last-minute financial arrangements by the poverty-stricken Inkster School District will permit the district’s nine schools to operate at least until April 12, it was announced today. Inkster Supt. Dr. Edward Fort, who previously warned the district could not afford to operate beyond Friday, said today he had been assured of enough money to meet payrolls at least through April 12. Some legislators who have worked on the Inkster problem said delaying the district’s fi-jnancial crisis until then would give the Legislature time to work out a permanent solution. < Fort said he had been assured by the city treasurers of Inkster and Westland that some $485,000 in local property taxes, collected by the cities and turn^ over to the district, can be available in I time to meet Friday's payroll. ATTENTION NRTIAC lOTDI MVISKNI EOUYES • All employes of Plont 6 (Foundry) ore to report for work fodoy, Jonuory 31 at thoir rogulor storting time. • All production, sanitation, moteriol ond roliobility ompleyos of Plonti 9, IB and 1 (Hoot Treat) ore to report for work fodoy, Jonuory 11 ot thoir regular storting imo. • All skilled ond nonskillod omployot of Doportmont 26 (Mosfor Mfcnonic) ond Deportment 28 (Plont Enginooring) ore to report for work today, January 31 ot thoir rogulor storting time. • All omplovos of Doportmont 1634 (Apprentice School) ore to fopert for work tpdoy, Jonuory 31 ot thoir regulor storting time. • All omployos of Doportmont 1450 and Doportmont 1550 (PrMsod Metol PlonH) ore to report for work today, Jonuory 31 at thoir roouloi storting time. * All other employes will be notified at o later date when to report hock to work. ' i Signal: Ponfiac Motori Divition Gtntral^ Motora /f THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 31, 1968 JtiL. to Spend Income Tax (Continued From Page One) Irwin said that the com* mission action to spend the money would be somewhat of a hammer over any future jurist which might have to decide the validity of the tax. ★ * ★ He said this theory proposes that by spending the money would make it more difficult for a court to order it returned. 'ANSWER IS OWED' Agreeing with Irwin, Hudson said: "we owe it to the people we represent to get an answer back." Hudson proposed that the city go to the Supreme Court in an attempt to do this. According to Warren, $500,000 will be needed for employe pay raises and fringe benefit increases. The comm^ioners who approved utilizing the tax cited the Circuit Court decision which has npheid the validity of the Income tax and the uncertainties of the appeals procedures. District 5 Commissioner John A. Dugan said that no matter what steps the city takes the state statutes setting the time limits on referendum elections would rule out an electorate vote on the matter. ★ * ★ Other uses for the increase, he said would be; New police officers, • (12), $78,000; longevity pay for employes, $80,000; additional upkeep of local streets including chloriding, grading, graveling, sealcoating and sweeping, $79,600; income tax ad- ministration, $60,000; permanent patching program for local streets, $75,000f increased snow clearing and ice removal for local streets, $24,300. ♦ * w Also, an additional attorney for city .business, $8,000 (nine months; hew library books, $10,000; new street lighting, $10,000; increased catch basin cleaning, $5,000; administrative assistant for manager’s office, $4,500; contingencies, $33,500. VALroiTY QUESTION The validity of the city’s income tax is teing questioned by attorneys for Cecil C. Mullinix, chief distributor of petitions which would have called for a referendum election on the in come tax. Police Action District 1 Commissioner T. Warren Fowler Sr. said the city was bound by the recent court decision to collect the money and that it should be utilized. •k it * *T don’t know what in the world we would do with that much money except accumulate it” if the funds were not utilized, he said. ’TO REVISE BUDGET The city manager said that he will revise the budget in accordance with the commission's decisions last night. * ★ ★ „ These revisions will allow an increase of $968,000 in general fund spending, he said. Pontiac police officers and Oakland County sheriff’s deputies investigated 63 reported incidents and made 11 arrests the past 24 hours. A breakdown of causes for police action: Vandalisms—6 Burglaries—5 Larcenies—14 Auto thefts—2 Disorderly persons—5 Assaults—5 Armed robberies—1 Attempted murder—1 Shoplifting—2 Property damage accidents—19 Injury accidents—3 The City Commission was ready to order a referendnm election when Winston L. Livingston attorney for Pontiac police officers and' firelighters, challenged the validity >f the petitions in Circdit Court. Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. price-off Nationally A-Maln Floor Judge Beer ruled that the petitions were invalid because of defects in the forms. He declared Pontiac’s income tax valid and ordered the city not to hold an income tax election. it it it In doing so, he also niled that Mullinix did not have the right to intervene in the case and defend the petitions. it ■it k Pontiac fireman and policeman, and the city. FILE APPEAL Mullinix* attorneys, Robert D. Cloon and Robek D. Cvn-ningham; have filed appeal papers with the State (lourt of Police Probing XheH oi Business Machine^ in City They can’t appeal the decision fiiat the income tax is valid becanse they are not, in the ftrict legal sense, involved in the case, according to City Attorney Sherwtn Bimkrant. Pontiac police are. investigating the theft of nearly $li960 worth of business ma-chineg stotoh in a break-in yesterday of the Herrington Hills Elementary School, 541 Bay. Entry to the school was gained by breaking a window, according tq Chester B. Drobek, a school engineer, who discovered the burglary. After the thieves gained entry, a side door was pried open police said, apparently a 0 The suit started by Liv-jseveral trips could be made ingston, of legal necessity, in-’back into the school to carry volved only the plaintiffs, a out the 10 machines. Appeals, in an attempt to overturn Beer’s decision that Mullinix could not intervene. Skirts Will Stay Short, Declares Mod Designer LOS ANGELES - The, midi and the maxi will loie out to the mini, says designer Rudi Gcrnreich. I The man whose mod styles included the topless swimsuit pooh-poohed the trend toward ••Tl« .ppelLte proce» ,™ld first determine at the court of ^ ^ beheve that skirl skirts appeals level the question ^horV’said whether or not the Circuit Court decision denyinf^ intervention!^’’®*®®® Tuesday to present a should be affirmed or reversed," I show of his Bimkrant told the commission. He called the miniskirt it i, i, I “part of our time.” * He said that if it is eventually dow^m"^h?" determined, in the Court of Appeals or the State Supreme Court, that Mullinix should be allowed to intervene, further proceedings on the validity of the income tax would take place on the 1930s look of “Bonnie and Clyde." Detroit Teen Held DETROIT (AP) - Kelly Pett-m Oakland County Circuit^ay. 16, of Detroit was being Court, ^and these also would be held in the juvenile detention subject to appeal. home in Wayne County in con- * * * Inection with the fatal shooting “Needless to say, no one can of a 13-year-old companion. predict with absolute certainty the eventual outcome,” Bimkrant said. He said the final decision could be as much as two to five years away. Pettway told police he accidentally shot Ronald Franklin, also of Detroit, Tuesday while showing the younger boy his father’s 45-caliber pistol. rms TINY /INIIH HFARING AH) I WORN IN THI l AR NEff ZENITH “ZENETTE” This tiny, tlaak Zanith weight jutt 1 /6 ounce •. .. and fits in the ear. Powered by Zenith's miniaturized Micro-Lithid® Circuit in your choice of two performance levels. For most mild end moderate losses. Thoughtful design end precision performance. No dangling wires or tubing. Please listen to it. e The quality gaee in before the name goet on Pontiac Mall Optical $ Hearing Aid Canter 882-1113 Simms, 98 N Saginaw St. 9j.m.l’01130 p.m. THURSDAY Mofiiinf? -Be beta l/i/hen Doors OPenbt^ Tomonw Morning... LOOK for SUFjEH DISCOUNTS InB/etyPept... On£very Ccxmter... On/)H3-f.loors...LOOK For m smNQS... VALUES GALORE IN EVERY DEPARTMENT so This famous 3Vi-Hour Sole is only at Simms and as usual you ore getting 'extra discounts for this event... .w plon to be here Thursday morning with your friends and neighbors . . . take o leisurely stroll through the store . picking up thd advertised items — and keeping an eye out for the hundreds of un-advertised specials found everywhere. in the store. Rights reserved tp limit oil quantities. SAVE on these DOOR-BUSTER VALUES! 9 A. M to 17 30 ONLT Pkgr Of 24 ‘Reselvo’ SeHzer Tablets long Sloovo Wtiito Dress Shirts Th* therapy seltier lobfets by Sriitoi Myers lor reiiof *1 excess oddity. . X Pheckt-ScHd colors cSwXardgood* Move Applianoss Easily Jippfianoe RoHert Chroma Platad OEM Toenail Nipper $2,99 Seller Drups—Main Floor Men's long sisev* while dren shirts wHh PIIIBSQBHBBBMSllidQHnSn spread collar. Siz* 16 only. CoHon and machine washable. Basement In Shattarproof Bottle YO-5 Shampoo $1.99 Value 15 ez. size. Choice of 2 types. Mokes your hair do VYhiot you won! It to. 89$ DrvQt’^Malii Floor FREE Gillette Foamy Gillette Razor $1,00 Value Gillette's super speed rozor ond package of super stoinleia Meet double/ edge blodes with 1.3 oz. foamy fr... D„o,_Mo[n Flc»r 59$ Pul rollers under refrigerators, stove*, etc. Makes cleaning easier. LImtt I set. Hardware—2nd Floor Reg. 69e Setter Famous Gem Saenull nlp-psr wtih natural curved^ |o 12 30 ONLY Reg. 98e Value 5-pc, sot tncludud pocket flnhilght and 3 bollertet | and 2 ballpoint pant. Sundries—Main Fteer 59$ Hour Price 30-In. Plactio Top Kitehen-Bar Stool Pkr.of100Unhrcakahla Poker Chips Ladles' assorted slacks of denim, cotton or nylon stretch and some corduroy. Mostly •olid colors. Sizes 8 to 1Z ' Mein Floor a "ubber 9x18” stair Traads SVz-Hr. Price 79e Value rWhIl* they lost-Kitchen or bar stool ^wlth plastic top and chrome legs. Houtewerei—2nd Fleer Inlorlocklng poktr chips 116 InchM In diameter, unbmokobl# and wgih-oble. Sundries—Mein Fleer mmm lOf %.0otton Warm Linad CMiirt SM-Pmh 2-ai.,*>%» awwaw .v I TROY — Marvin Ueinhard, an accountant, has been elected president of the Troy Chamber of Commerce. I Other officers for 1968 are Cleve I Masson of .Sears Roebuck & Co., vice I president; Richard ilalpin of Halpin I Bros. Printing, secretary; and Wallace ; B. Hud.son of Surplus Lines Corp., ^ treasurer. TRAIN DERAILED — Despite this extensive, crash that saw 15 cars and four locomotives of a Grand Trunk freight train leave the tracks near the main street of Smiths Creek, St. Clair County, only one crewman suffered AP WIrtplwM injuries and those were minor. The crash took place yesterday when the freight bumped another freight that was moving onto another set of tracks at a switching junction. THE PONTIAC PRESS WEDNESDAY, JANUARY .'11, 11)(>8 A—4 keaNews Board Quiet on Millage Loss ROMEO — No immediate action Is planned in this school district following Monday’s millage setback, Supt. of '"Schools T. C. Filppula said yesterday. “The board members got together to receive .the election results,” Filppula said, ‘'but there wasn’t really any discussion. I don’t think they’ll be meeting for a couple of weeks.” The board’s request for eight mills — three renewal and five new — for five years was rejected by a lopsided 1,045-683 count. In November, a request for the same increase had lost by only seven votes. tfation trimmed spending in several areas, Filppula said. Among them were teaching supplies at all levels, maintenance supplies and down payments on new equipment. ★ A- ★ More of the same is in line for the district in the days ahead, the superintendent added:“We’re facing a deficit budget of $65,000 to $100,000, and we're going to have to sit down and formulate more cuts.’’ Asked about the effect on teacher salaries, Filppula commented, “There are rough days ahead not only for Romeo, but for many other districts. “It’s coming to the point where no matter how we feel about Increasing teacher salaries, we aren’t going to have enough money.” ★ ★ ★ After the November loss, the adminis- $108,000 LESS In addition, the loss of the three-mill renewal means the district will have $106,000 less in operating funds for the 1968-69 school year, he said. Prior to the election, Filppula had Indicated areas likely to be affected by a millage loss, including teacher workshops and conferences, extra-curricular activities, and overtime work. An increase in the district’s average class size, presently at 25-30, probably would alsO;be necessary, he said. MD Talks of Heart Advances New advances in the treatment of heart patients, like those now in practice at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, could save an estimated 45,000 lives annually in this country, according to a Pontiac area heart specialist. Dr. Michael C. Kozonis. “The new approach — intensive coronary care units — should cut the mortality rate from heart attacks about in half,” Dr. Kozonis said today. “Since the intensive coronary care unit was installed at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital last October, we’ve had about 70 patients in it and have lost only three.” Pointing to the serious nature of heart di.sease in America today. Dr. Kozonis noted that “during all of World War I we had 126,000 military deaths. Last year alone, we had 150,0M coronary deaths in persons under 65. 'Phe grand total for all ages in this country last year was 500,000 coronary deaths. “With the new coronary care units, it was estimated by the Bethesda Conference of the American College of Cardiology in 1965 that we ought to be able to save 45,000 lives per year,” he said. and what can be done to prevent them, and Dr. Allen Silbergleit, a cardiovascular surgeon on the St. Joseph Mercy Hospital staff. DR. MICHAEL C. KOZONIS STAJi-F CARDIOI>OGIST Dr. Kozonis, a cardiologist on the staff at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, will outline these and other advances in heart treatment at a Public Heart Forum, in the Pontiac Northern High School Auditorium on Feb. 16 at 8 p.m' The heart forum is cosponsored by the Michigan Heart Association’s Oakland County Heart Information Unit and The Pontiac Press. Michigan Heart Association, i.s one of three featured speaker's on the program. ’The others are Dr. Murray B. Levin, a specialist in internal medicine on the Pontiac General Hospital staff who will discuss why people have heart attacks ADVANCED TECHNIQUES Dr. Silbergleit will speak on heart transplants and other advances in coronary surgical techniques. He took postgraduate work with Dr. Christian Barnard and Dr. Norman Shumwa.y, who recently gained world attention with heart transplants in South Africa and California, respectively. Tickets for the event are free and may be obtained at The Pontiac Press; St. Joseph Mercy Hospital; Pontiac General Hospital; the Pontiac Area United Fund, 132 Franklin Blvd.; Crittenton Hospital in Avon Township; the Heart Information Unit, 277 Pierce, Birmingham; and the Oakland County Health Department. ★ ★ A Persons may also obtain tickets through the mail by sending orders to the Heart Information Unit. Per.sons without tickets will be admitted if seats are available after those with tickets are seated. Judge Will Speak on Law and Teens Dr. Kozonis, president elect of the WALLED LAKE—“The Law and Mr. Teen-ager” is to be the topic of a talk by Municipal Judge Gene Schnelz tomorrow at 8 p.m. in the Walled Lake Junior High School cafeteria. Schnelz, a member of the Walled Lake Youth Protective Service Committee and an attorney was invited to speak by the school PFA, which is conducting the meeting. ★ A * Also participating in the program are Dean Smith, dean of .students at Walled Lake Junior High; Mrs. Charles Duff; Mrs. Floyd Mengel; and Mrs. Robert Upchurch. AP WIrtphttt (t’cnlcr), a Wpst- * Her court includes (from left) Phyllis Unglw of Dowau-ern Michigan University sophomore, daughter of Mr. and lac; Cynthia Sargent, daughter of Mr and lire FrS w Mrs. Miller, 791 Rix^h Spring, Bloomfield Hills, gent, 124 Chbrlel RoShSer? L^ly Bel^of was crowned 1968 .Snow Queen at the university Sunday. and $usan Lamed of Flossmoor, 111. warren. \ , V \ . \ THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 81, 1968 A—»5 Clearance Women's Shoes SALON SHOES 19.90 Desifimer names such as Margaret Jerrold, Palizzio, Newton Elkin, Andrew Geller. All great values. FASHION SHOES 10.90 14.90 Mademoiselles and Paramounts, 14.90. Proteges, Rhythm Steps, De Muras and Naturalizers, 10.90. CASUAL SHOES 9.90 Joyce, Cobblers, Capezios, Ninas, Penaljos, De Muras and Sandlers now priced to save. WOMEN'S SHOES 12.90 Hill and Dale, Selby and Paradise Kittens—many fine names now priced to meet your budget. YOUNG FASHION SHOES 6.90 Smashing Smartaires — many styles all from our recent stocks. Come in for these values today. MISS DETROITER SHOES 8.90 Our current stock in many colors and styles. Low and mid heels from well known manufacturers. Hiiioi'i PoMtUc 1ft floor; alio Domitowi Dotiolt, NorthlaBd, East* laai aal Woitlaid. \ FASHION CLEARANCE OF MANY DRESSES Save on Mrs. Detroit Dresses Save on Pontchartrain Dresses Your choice of ihisses’ dresses, sizes 8 to 20. Select fall and winter styles from the large collection priced to save for only 6.88 to 14.88. Many spring styles for daytime and evening. Spring wools, acetates and after five fabrics in a wide variety of colors. Sizes 8-20. 17.88. Save on Mrs. Deroit Dresses Ann Carter Women’s half size dresses. Orion® acrylics in beige/ black, blue and toast bonded to acetate. See these great values now! 10.88. Save on St. Clair Shop Knits Save on Young Junior Dresses Great values on Dacron® polyester/coltons. Shirt styles in many beautiful pastels. With embroidered, lape and ribbon trims, 4.97. Choose daytime 1-piece knits from a fine assortment. We’ve many fresh, colors and styles with beautiful detailing, 20.88. Or select exciting 1 and 2 piece imported knits from countries like France, England or Belgium. We’ve many styles and colors in fine wool, 6.88. Hurry in today for outstanding savings and selections at Hudson’s. , Hudson’s Pontiac 1st floor; also Downtown Detroit, Northland, Eastland and Westland H XJ 33 S O 1ST ’ S lk«F tvMiBii at Ralioi'a—Faatlac. NoitklaBl. laittaad, Wasttaad opai till 9 f.m. Moaday. Thariday. Fiiday. Satarday; Dowatown Datiolt opaa till 8:30 p.ak Moaday aad WtdatiAay \ i/' . V- THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 Wfst Huron Street Pontiac, Michigan 48056 WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 31, 1968 |o>i lx*l jw W. rmantiB imuUt* Vic* Pritldent •ad Ultor Btnr J. Rikd KaMglBC Editor John A. Rilit Secretary and Advertising RiCHAsn M. FmcisALs Treasurer and Finance OMlcer O. MAaSHAI.t. JOassN Local Advertising Manager Color the Federal Budget Red JOHNSON Although the spending total spelled out by President Johiison’s budget message delivered to the Congress Monday sur-* prised few, the text' nonetheless hardly makes for something to read yourself to sleep by. Over-all, the Administration would spend the record-1 breaking amount of $186.1 billion dur-| ing the 1969 fiscal year beginning July 1. It is iSome $10.5 billion more than the U.S. Treasury is now paying out under the 1968 budget which figures to wind up with a $20 billion deficit— the biggest in “peacetime” history. ★ ★ ★ In submitting his proposed budget, LBJ foresaw a deficit of $8 billion — on the assumption that $10 billion is forthcoming from the 10 per cent income tax surcharge which he declares,a fiscal must. Congress has yet to see it his way. “Defense,” of course, cuts itself the lion’s share of the spending pie, slicing out $76.7 billion, almost a third of which is earmarked for Vietnam. Other priority areas for Federal dollars, with substantial increases, are attacks on poverty, crime, and pollution. The total is as much money spent by one President in a single year as was spent by all 32 Presidents from George Washington, starting in 1789, through half of the third term of Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1942. That’s 153 years, and includes all the wars through the first year of World War II. ★ ★ ★ Because for the first time the budget is drawn up in “unified” form — a departure from the traditional three variant versions — spending totals $47 billion more than it would under the former format. That is small comfort since, like the old, shell game, the pea is demonstrably Under one of the three shells. A sleeper in modern Federal budgets is the interest on the national debt. The latter will hit $387.2 billion by the'end of the 1968 fiscal year, June 30. The interest, amounting to $14 billion (total Federal spending in 1941 was $13.26 billion), increasingly becomes a built-in expense as the Government pursues its policy of borrowing money to finance its mounting operating deficits. ★ ★ ★ Two political cliches long favorites of glib politician are “Point with Pride” and “View with Alarm.” There is little about the proposed budget to which the Administration can point with pride, much which the Country can view with alarm. Commend Jaycees, ‘Guiding Spirit’ on Pageant We render a well-deserved salute to the Pontiac Junior Chamber of Commerce on the superb Junior Miss Pageant recently staged by the organ-1 ization. It represented the 10th such event the Jaycees have sponsored, with the entry list growing from nine in 1959 to 47 in 1968. The current winner ot I the State Junior JORGENSEN Miss title, Pamela Smith of North-ville, will compete for the America’s Junior Miss crown in Mobile, Ala., in March. In 1965, Patrice Gaunder of Stevensville won the State title here and went on to take national honors. With the growth of the pageant, preparation of it has be- come virtually a year-round job. Since 1962, Richard Jorgensen has been the guiding spirit behind the annual productions and, though assisted by the majority of local Jaycees, deserves major credit for their success. In recognition of his dedicated and continued service in the promotion of the events, Jorgensen was awarded a State Senatorship by Junior Chamber International which carries with it lifetime membership in the chamber. He is only the second Pontiac man to be so honored. We commend the Jaycees on their enterprise in making the Junior Miss Pageant the outstanding social and entertainment highlight it has become and congratulate Impresario Jorgensen on the fine recognition given him. Ohio’^ Antiriot Laws Prove Boomerang Black Power advocates who claim that the law and law enforcement are stacked against the Negro may get a laugh, if not a lesson, out of this: ★ ★ ★ In its last session, the Ohio Legislature gave new powers to city authorities to cope with civil disturbances. Though no one would admit it publicly, the law was a conse- quence of and a precaution against racial rioting. ★ ★ ★ A Cleveland area mayor was forced to invoke the new powers for the first time in the state the other day—not to clamp down on Negroes in that city’s Rhugh area but to stop a violent altercation between opposing factions of a church in a white suburb. How Flattery Made a Justice By RAYMOND MOLEY tf Felix Frankfurter had respected the independence of the Supreme Court as much as he said he did, he would not have written mosC of the 1 e t tif r s' and t e le -grams now p u b 1 i 8 hed with commentary by Max Freedman in “Roosevelt & Frankfurter: spondence, 1928-1945" (Littie, Brown). For they portray a man winning a place on the court by lavishly flattering the President who had the power to appoint him and then, securely seated on the bench, a Judge continuously meddling in ^ecutive affairs. Aid If Frankfurter'' had ckerished .the rejpdtation he an thf cool after Pres-Raeaevelt died, he ^ V i. >," ; ■ would not, as an old retired justice, have permitted the publication of this correspondence for years to come. But he was apparently prqud of the power and influence be had exercised for years. The result is a book which may not enhance the reputation of its two principal characters but will be immen.scly useful as a text for people interested in the wiles and ways /Of palace politics. ★ ★ ★ The text is 80 to 85 per cent Frankfurter and Freedman, and the rest the restrained responses of Mr. Roosevelt. PROVIDER OF JOBS It has become quite gen-eraliy known that, in his private capacity as an intimate of men in power. Frankfurter was a most active provider of jobs for his friends and proteges. Those appointees included a ■Core of lawyer-assistants for Jnstices Holmes and Brandels Voice of the People: ‘Letter to Congressman Brought Prompt Results’ I took advantage of your suggestion to “Write Your Representative” and ofi Jan. 5, I wrote Congressman Jack H. McDonald regarding our Social Security benefits. His two letters in reply stated he was personally looking into the matter and followed with a telegram advising me of his findings. We received our checks on January 27. My wife and I are grateful to Mr. McDonald for his efforts and feel it was through his help that we received action. In these troublesome times we need many more of Mr. McDonald’s caliber in public office. He finds time to assist the little man. RALPH H. GRIFFITH 18 N. SLATER, LAKE ORION Letters Discuss Action of City Commission When four commissioners can and will sit in judgment of the voters of this City and tell them that they are the only ones to know and do what is right, it is time to abolish all elections and be ruled by the four. PATRICK M. GALLOWAY 483 TALLAHASSEE Any person who challenges the Validity of rule by the majority is striking at the very vitals of democracy. Recently at the Pontiac City Commission meeting a public official uttered the statement that "the majority of the voters are wrong.” All important issues must be decided by the voter. DELBERT ARTHUR 864 SARASOTA As an observer of the way the citizens and institutions of Pontiac have handled the issue of open housing, as a whole they are to be commended. When my community is forced / to face this issue I hppe we will do as good a job of it as David Lawrence Says: Pontiac has. ______________________IL. DAVID F. CARR 7 6884 DESMOND, WATERFORD Inflation Effect on Budget Seen Replies fo Complaints About New Airports I’m amused at letters in your Voice of the People that Dec '—And After The Moon There's Mars, Saturn, Ver)Us, Jupiter, Pluto—' -----------------^-------------------------------- LAWRENCE 23 years, to and literally hundreds of young men In government offices. This activity went on even in Herbert Hoover's administration, when Secretary of State Henry Stimson and others responded readily to the recommendations ■ of Frankfurter. He was probably responsible for the appointment of Stimson as secretary of war in 1940. ★ ★ ★ In matters of policy he also had great influence with President Roosevelt, for he concerned himself with a whole area of domestic and foreign policy. EFFUSIVE FLATTERY The tone of the long correspondence is marked by the effusive flattery of the,President by his friend. Freedman notes; “He was an artist in adulation; and sometimes, forgetting the artistry, he laid on flattery with a trowel.” But F. F. knew his man. Mr. Roosevelt loved it. \ WASHINGTON - Everybody here is talking abobt the $186-billion budget that President Johnson has proved to Congress. But few people realize that 15 years ago, in 1953, all the items he has just recommended in his budget could have been bought for only 8122.4 biUion. Going back fiscal year 1945, the same budget would have requried a total of $79-8 biUion in expenditures. This is what inflation really means. Even when one subtracts national defense spending and examines merely the social welfare and civilian segment of the new budget, the 1953 amount would have been $83.8 billion for the same volume of expenditures in the nondefense part of the federal government’s list of projects which now cost $106 billion. The effects of rising prices are as noticeable in connection with U.S. Treasury receipts. Thus, approximately $178 billion is being collected from taxes and other sources of revenue by the federal government, but it would have been necessary to collect only $94.4 billion to accomplish the same purpose in 1945 and $140 billion in 1953. This is another way of saying that the 1968 receipts of $178 billion represent an inflationary cost of $84 billion in comparison with 1945 and $38 billion in comparison with the money paid in 1953 by the general public to the federal, government to support its programs. In current dollars, the new budget constitutes the largest annual outlay in American history. But it is only fair to note that much of the in-crea.se over other years is due to the wage-price spiral, which sends up costs. Once inflation starts, of course, it is natural for wage rises to be demanded Likewise, Social Security benefits, which originally could cover the major part of the expenses of the aged, no longer are adequate because prices of consumer goods have gone up substantially. Hence, Social Security payments have to be raised periodically to offset some of Verbal Orchids Mr. and Mrs. Harold Walton of Almont; 5Lst wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Wilkins of 4105 Orchard Lake Ave.; ^|62nd wedding anniversary. John E. McCormick of 20 Thorpe; 80th birthday. Mrs. Millie Lndtke • of 146 Crescent; 86th birtl^E A the upward movement In living costs. It has often been said that “everybody talks about inflation, but nobody does anything about it.” ^ The President and members of Congress are given each year reports from economic experts who tell them that “deficit spending” is essential and that it doesn’t really do any harm to the economy. Thus, the government has been spending more than it has taken in year after year, and will be doing the same thing next year even if the President’s proposed tax surcharge is enacted into law. The theory of government economics should be to raise enough revenues to meet expenditures and not resort to borrowing money, except in emergencies. «M, 1 .. •fall Syndicata) Bob Considine Says: V.S. Is Object of Scorn as a Result of the Pueblo day. NEW YORK-The humiliation of the Pueblo case—dramatized by Tass’s photograph of the captain and crew being marched ashore, hands up — must deli g h t both friends and foes of the U.S.. It is perverse | yet human nature to gloat!________________ secretly over CONSIDINE misfortune visited upon a friend. The nonaffected are made to feel superior. They played things right, see? The friend, the big and powerful and rich friend, somehow goofed, right? Sorry, and all that sort of thing, but certainly glad it happened to somebody else, particularly to the big fellow. As for the foes, they must have gotten a big lift out of Pueblo. This could keep Ho Chin Minh in the Vietnamese war a bit longer, strengthened by his renewed belief that Bomehow—like the Republican party—we’ll find a way to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory. The situation, which in all probability was not incited by cither Moscow or Peking, has comforted both. * * * The Russians were given the opportunity (and took it) to prove to the rest of the Communist world that it is not, after all those dirty-pool charges by the crazy Chinese, a tool of American imperialism. RUSSIAN JACKASS Moscow said it would not lift a finger to intercede with North Korea to return the men and their ship, and the Russian jackass in the U. N. brayed long and loud over the following weekend. Peking has been effectively snubbed by North Korea for more than a year. It has been a source of embarraSBmenI In view of the fact that a lot of Chinese “volunteers” died in the course of pushing Donglat MacArthur’s troops southward from the Ynlu to below Seoul just when North Korea n«s about to thro^ In the towel in that war. I The Pueblo business enabled Peking, after due deliberation, to issue a solidarity statement which might very well heal the troubles of the immediate past. * ★ ★ Fidel Castro may now have second thoughts of stepping down as president-premier-maximus-ultimus if the Pueblo case convinces him that the crowd that masterminded the Bay of Pigs invasion has been given a second chance in Washington. NOT DICTATED The writer makes no foolish claims to 20/20 vision in international matters, but would like to put forth the proposition that the North Koreans move against our ship was not in any way dictated by higher and^tronger authority. attack new airports because of many reasons except the correct one: it would force the writer to move and he doesn’t want to move. ★ ★ ★ All progress calls for the removal of impediments that are in the way. Otherwise we couldn’t have this big nation. When a new airport is proposed 100 years from now, many houses will be In the way. But the writers will squawk about land costs, inflation, the high cost of living, the advantages of another site, and why don’t you move the houses that belong to someone else. They figure those “someone elses” don't count. Just me. I count big. STUDENT PILOT ‘Side Streets Need Supply of Salt Barrels’ Since the D.P.W. has been cut back due to lack of money, it would seem logical that sufficient salt barrels would be placed on side streets so that people could spread salt around the area. KATHERINE McGEE 269 DELLWOOD Comments on Cooking School and Show This is the first year I have attended the cooking school and I thoroughly enjoyed it. The fashion show was very nice; however, why not show clothing more within the price range of most housewives? How many of us are able to buy a $40 dr6ss? MRS. PEGGY SHAW 2835 ROWAN DR,, WATERFORD Question and Answer Is there anything a woman can do to keep her husband from getting a divorce besides contesting? CONCERNED REPLY Mr. Prout of Friend of the Court tells us very little, legally speaking, if there are grounds for divorce, unless it can be shown that both parties have guilt in the matter. In that case, Mr. Prout says the case could be throicn out. Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Imperial Sunset Newsday Great Britain ceased to be a world power long before anyone would admit it, but her indomitable resolution masked the inevitable day when the sun would set on the British Empire. Now, to the sincere sorrow of her allies, she has been forced to concede the obvious. By the close of 1971 she will have left the Far East, except for a handful of troops in the crown colony of Hong Kong. TboM who revere the principles of individnsJ and national liberty will mourn the retirement ot Britain to a minor role in world affairs. The country that sired the Magna Carta and thereby inspired our own Bill of Rights, the country whose civilized skills and incomparable bravery helped keep the world at peace for long periods of time has had an unforgettable influence on history. Americans In particular will never forget. But now the question is; Should the U.S. take up the torch Britc^s havb put down? This is a wholly new' .era and we already are committed to the defense of Vietnam. We have troops in many other places. We must recognize the dangers o f overextending ourselves. The U.S. cannot police the whole world any more than the British could. Still, we cannot disregard the challenges that are increased all the more by diminishing British power. It is a good time to remind those independent nations in the Pacific that they must help us In order to help themselves. The costs of maintaining their independence cannot be borne alone by the American people. Those Asian nations which look to us for support must be allies in more than name. We must be able to count on the active assistance of our friends in the Pacific and Asia. Bus Problem ... Port Huron Times Herald Clearly the problems besetting bus service in Port Huron are difficult. Unless some answers are found, the Transit Company will be forced to close down in a few weeks. Just as clearly, the answers will not he found in a quarrelsome approach, or i n uninformed carping about what is wrong with the operation. Yet la the interest of the many wha need bos transportation here, an all-out effort to find a reasonable solution is indicated. Considering the financial troubles of the present system, people might look askance at the reference to "many” who use the buses. ★ ♦ -Sr If there wer6 “many” riders, the system would, perhaps, be solvent. Yet the reference is accurate because — even though they do not ride buses every day — there are many people hereabouts who have no other practical means of transportation. Taken together, the needs of the citizenry are urgent. At the same time, obviously, the Transit Company cannot be asked to operate at a loss. That means that every prajctical means should be considered to keep the buses rolling while providing a reasonable return on the company's investment. Th* Aiwclatad Praa* I* antmad axclutlvaly to th* ua* tar rapubll-catloti ot all local nawt prlntad In It.li nawipapar as avail a* all AP new* diapalcliaa. Th# PMlac Prat* It Oallvarad by 5? cant* a waafci wtiara malM In Oaklanil. Oanaita, Llv-taOtlm, Macomb, Lapaar and WaiManm Co«(ntlat It la tll.00 a Mkhlpan and :;**•* • year. All mall tub- yy°"V PWbl* In advanca. OMIapa hat bean paw at Ih* M MrcSba'r*w THE*PONT|AC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. JANUARY M, 1968 A-^7' ^Could Be Paupers Cemetery' Police Probing Prison Graves and CUMMINS PRISON FARM, Ark. (Jl — State police probed in secrecy today seeking to determine if three skeletons recovered from unmarked graves were inmates buried in a paupers cemetery or victims of a vicious prison justice. •The hones were unearthed Monday from a grassy boot-tramped field and their discovery raised the question; , ^ How many more bodies might ^hat area might also have the bad publicity it would bring the state. He promised to make a “full complete report” to the people after the investigation was complete, but said he didn’t want to” wash dirty linen other < bodiei would todicate there bad hem jkinl play;) He sidd he bad heard^iiimors ever el^de coming to Arkansas in US3 that prisoners hdd been killed,’ buried on the prison before the nation for weeks on grounds and listed on the end as each body is dug up.” POSSIBILITIES lie beneath the Shallow depressions that dot these 15,270 acres of Arkansas River land? Reuben Johnson, 59, the strapping six-foot inmate who led investigators to the graves said that years ago he helped bury about 10 or 12 convicts who were “shot with a pistol, a shotgun or just beaten death.” Looking back on his 30 years In prison, Johnson claimed that as many as 2,000 inmates had been quietly consigned to unmarked graves. ★ * * State police Maj. Bill Streub-Ing, who is conducting .the investigation, discounted Johnson’s story Tuesday. After visiting the grave site and pouring over prison records, Streubing said he thought the graves probably were in p paupers cemetery. UNCERTAIN “We don’t know for sure, but In our own minds, we believe it is,” he said. He called off further digging until pathologists conclude tests on the bones already unearthed, and he indicated that his investigation would be conducted in secrecy even after the reports are in. Gov. Winthrop Rockefeller told neivsmen later in the day that he thought the information should be withheld because of records as escapees. ________ Former Prison Supt. Dan D _,T' .’uT. . Stephens said he was aware There might have been foul cemetery in the area where the ^ skeletons were found — one ......____________ „—-------------- ceinetery for.prisoners who the skull on Labor Day in 1940,” he said died and had no family, the been a cemetery — a paupers and no" one claimed their bodies. GRAVES KNOWN Johnson w. N ^ 'S'* " ' A*" S Xv «X| ^ V -V <1- < ' ^ ^ OUlEFREnER On* of Michigan's -Original Discounters: CLIP AND USE LIKE CASH Csupon Good Thru F*b. 1, '6S Coed On Th* Furchoi* Of Any F#rf. TV Sttrto, Drytr. CLIP AND USE LIKE CASH Coupon ^ Good A Thru ^ Fob. 1, '6t Good On Tho Purchoto Of Any Kongo, Wothor, Dithwoihor TAPPAN 30" GALLERY SEU-CUANIMG RANGE I . li.rl Freel Fully outomatic, clock timor, „lf eleetricallyl And has warming tray. NO MONEY DOWN 3 FUU YEARS TO PAY ♦29« O. ■TWpoint ®*ANT 16-tE autoaiatic washer”^ f Wirt, P^»»i fobrio. Btui * , 3 w.,., I,’'**'*' •"•Ck. J *«lk WESTINGHOUSE Top Loading P«M», Sm. dl». o nia i tl'"r COLOR TV L.-'Eg - ..-T .iwr ”-”?il“0RTT" iMlufWo on-MfOon In 4 tanaulor kcroon wllh '"•••" molot Irrtoro''*"’*"**' 1 Horo l> • """P'*y* *°^„'^*.'!!u"o»cluilvo lnrton>-yl ISO H|. In. A M*ond» ond Inrtont coW I ____J -0 mmern. ttlctur* W • ...__ »499 Sound ot OMO, plctun* * Hlumlnolod pop. IIM. A tlim >'l"< booulifol «l« «369 a. 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Mmreot voh»mo •wMml. AaNMwHtiuiwMiiMoL $299 FULL SATISFACTION GUARANTEED INSTANT CREDIT 3 YEARS TO PAY Fretter’s Pontiac S. Telegraph Rd., Vz Mile South of Orchard Lake Rd. FE 3-7051 Fretter's Southfield on Telegraph Road Just South of 12 Mile Rd. Fretter’s Oakland 411 W. 14 Mile Road Opposite Oakland Mail 588-8300 Opt* Daily II l8 lotaNday II ta 1 mo vnyi iVT!^ [m tn vorldI Ii THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 1968 A—9 TRANSMISSION MOTOR TROUILE? CALL MIDAS 334-4727 Many Easy Years Couples in the United States spend about 15 to 40 years to-sjether between the time the last child leaves the home and one or the other spouse dies. ing Johnson-for Now WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. Robert F. Kennedy publicly rejects—at least for the time being—the idea of carrying his opposition to administration Vietnam policies into a head-on political battle withe President Johnson. Kennedy told newsmen Tuesday he will not run against Johnson in any Democratic presidential primaries “under any foreseeable circumstances.” ir ir -k This still left the way clear for the New York senator to enter Following Demotion the race against Johnson if the President seeks his party’s renomination as expected. But Kennedy’s use of the term “foreseeable circumstances” indicated he feels there's little chance events will change his course. Some Kennedy backers have been pushing harder than ever recently for him to enter the primaries, especially since Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy, D-Minn. —a fellow Vietnam policy critic —appears to be making little headway in his bid for the presidential nomination. Although Kennedy would not spell out any circumstances that might cause him to change his mind, it was indicated Vietnam War developments may hold the key to his future position. A sudden cease-fire or opening of peace talks in Vietnam, some observers have reasoned, could spell political disaster for any would-be nominee critical of Johnson’s policies. ★ ★ ★ Kennedy said he would “continue to speak out on issues that affect the United States.” Meanwhile some other Senate Democrats opposed to administration war policies are conspicuously excluding from attacks on war policies a President they expect to head the Democratic ticket in November. NO VALUE Chairman J. W. Fulbright, D-Ark., of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee has told friends his position this year when he seeks reelection is that everyone knows how he stands on Vietnam. Fulbright said he sees no value in continuing to criticize the President's war policy on every occasion. ★ * * Sen. Wayne Morse, D-Orc., similarly has toned down his criticism of the President over Vietnam, although he maintains he is standing firm In his opposition to war policies. The sea otter feeds on shellfish by diving for a fish ai\i a stone. Then, lying on his back, it places the stone on its chest and hammers the shellfish open Ajler-lnvenlory Mcn\s Shoe Clearance Pedwin Oxfords Regularly 12.00 Pedwin & Roblee Regularly 14.00 Porto Peds Regularly 24.00 Highway Official's Pay Cut ^ LANSING (UPD - The State Civil Service Commission has reprimanded a high-rank-" ing state highway official because of criticism resulting from a Highway Department investigation. Frederick Tripp, former deputy director for administration, will have his $23,657 salary slashed by $3,000 and reduced to a lower state classification, the commission said. Tripp was criticized by Atty. Gen. Frank Keliey in a report of an investigation o| the Highway Department for conducting outside business activities without approval of his superiors and also obtaining a loan from the Highway Department Credit Union by having some of his subordinates act as cosigners. Tripp, who was demoted from his position as chief of personnel, finance, procurement, equipment and management services, is expected to appeal the commission’s decision. He was named manager for internal services without any responsibility for personnel, finance or other functions he formerly supervised. “The State Highway Department has reorganized its executive operation and in so doing has substantially reduced the responsibility of Frederick Tripp,” the commission said in a statement. 1^. entusui ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY " \v Matching Finsline Twill Work Jackets 4.98 REDUCED THRU SATURDAY! Big Mac® Penh-Prest®’ work sets take your roughest wear and stay neat! This Penn-Prett® polyeiter/cotton fineline twill work set will stay fresh and hew looking wash after wash without ironing. Just machine wash and tumble dryl The shirts are tailored with French fronts, two front flap pockets and long sleeves. The pants have plain fronts, cuffed hems and a sturdy brass zipper. Several colors to choose from. PANTS RED. 4.H, NOW SHIRTS REQ. 1.98, NOW 4.44 3.33 RU96ED WORK ROOTS ANO OXFOROS WITH FOIL ORAIN GLOVE LEATHER UPPERS 11.99 Six-inch shoe has flexible Pentred® oil resistant polyvinyl chloride soles, full cushioned insoles. Moo-toe oxford with oil resistant Du Pont Hypo Ion® synthetic rubber sole, cushioned insole. SHOP MONDAY THRU SATURDAY,,, TILL 9 P.M.,,, CHARGE IT! • tseuu S WOOOWASD ItootlwsMd Shefping CntP. • miORA^H A SO UKI II—iwkeld |•wnship • la-MILI A VAN DYKI Tack thegiilm Cnkk A-^10 Attack on U. S. Embassy in Saigon THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 31. 19fi8 It Was a Battle for Survival 5AIG0N — For the handful of Americans inside the glossy white U S. Embassy, the fight that began at 2:54 a m. today was one of survival. The 19 Vietcong commandos who blasted their way through the embassy’s ornate concrete outside wall with explosive charges made it clear early on that day they intended to stay until they were killed, and to take as many Americans with them as they could. * ' * * For the young soldiers of the 716th Military Police Battalion, crawling along the exposed gutters and sidewalks toward the besieged embassy, the mission was to clean out the enemy before he could get inside the building. Unlike Americans fighting in the countryside, they did not have the help of fighter-bombers and artillery. They had to do the job themselves. WELL PLANNED The Vietcong planned the embassy attack well, a trademark of the CIO sapper battalion that over the years has attacked a number of important Saigon buildings. They dressed some of their commandos in the black pajamas of the Vietnamese peasant, others In the white shirts of the Saigon white collar worker. All carried perfectly forged curfew passes. ★ * ' When the attack began, those In white shirts fastened the top button as a mark of identification. Those in peasant garb pulled re(f arm bands up their •leeves. They were believed to have gathered near the embassy in taxis, by sampan down the nearby Saigon River, and on foot. ORA^SHING DOWN At the designated time, enemy mortars and rockets began crashing down on the capital grpggily sleeping off celebrations of the lunar new year. ★ ★ ★ The Communists dommandos sprinted down the wide tree-lined boulevard, dodging from trunk to trunk. The Vietnamese guards outside the embassy Kelley Fights Halt to U. P. Rail Line LANSING (AP) - Atty. Gen. FYank Kelley has filed a brief with the Interstate Commerce Commission opposing a proposal to abandon a passenger train rout In the western Upper Peninsula. ★ ★ ★ The Milwaukee and Soo Line railroads have asked the commission for permission t o abandon the Copper County Ltd. from Milwaukee, Wis., through Green Bay, Iron Mountain, Champion and Houghton-Han-cock, to Calunict. "A ★ A Kelley said this is the last passenger train serving the Upper Penimsula west o f Lshpeming. He said there is no other reasonable public transportation available to those servOd by the train. were crouched down to avoid the incoming shells. The Vietcong laid the charge in an instant. The loud explosion blew in the northern corner of thei embassy outer wall and they were inside. ★ ★ ★ j Rockets, fired from across the! road, tore four jagged holes in the concrete lattice-work facade of the building. Bullets pinked the scalloped portico. One Marine guard in the em-' bassy fell dead and seven oth-; ers were wounded. Two Vietnamese embassy drivers were cut down by bullets. SEARCHED IN DARKNESS The Vietcong meanwhile, searched in darkness for another entrance to the building. The cherrywood doors of the main entrance, although battered by rockets and grenades, held fast. One part of the Vietcong force was trying to hold off the American relief troops with grenades and small hrms fire while the other part looked for a good place to plant explosives. ★ ★ ★ ' Pfc. Paul Healey of Holbrook Mass., called from his U.S. military police patrol, was crawling up near the outer wall. He lost one buddy killed, then another, and he was pinned down. Other military police had scaled an apartment house opposite the embassy and their heavy fire into the emjjassy garden cut down some of the sappers. URGENT CALL Maj. Hillel Schwartz, S."!, of Tacoma, Wash., newly arrived in Vietnam, was called urgently to his field radio and told his first helicopter assult in Viet- nam would be against his own embassy. Dawn was breaking in Saigon. The moan of ambulance sirens shivered through a city well aware that an enemy was within its midst and fighting. ★ ★ ★ Crouched outside the em- bassy, Healey and a score of others were quietly given the order to move. j “My job was to open the front! gate and get inside,’’ Healeyj said. He slammed against iti with his shoulder and he was inside, sprawled on the dewy grass. POURED OUT As grenades and automatic weapons fire poured out at Healey and his buddies, they presumed that the Vietcong had occupied the lower floors of the embassy building. Not so, ai soldier said later: “They tried j to get in, they nearly got in. But in the end they did not make By 8 am. the military policemen had cautiously occupied the 30-foot wide lawn between the embassy building and the outside fence and were preparing to enter the building. They believed some guerrillas might be hiding in the basement. Fifteen enemy bodies were sprawled on the ground. ★ ★ From the first chopper, Schwartz and six other paratroopers leaped to the roof. Eight seconds later t h e helicopter was gone and another was hovering in. It was a perfect assault in the most unusual circumstances of the war, but too late for the kill. Moving down through the six-story structure, the paratroopers found no resistanc'e. The battle for the embassy was over. FEDERAL STATE • CITY MELTON TAX SERVICE OR 3-3332 1424 ALHI i $COtTLK.^O. ? AkHI PONTIAC MAU 2 ^ ■ • mienAPH HOURS; Daily l;N R.M. to II Ml. Satunlays I A.M. to I P.M. Sanlayt 1 P.M. ta I P.M. lniW|iiii|li|iN4ll|il| Burglars Hit 2 Area Firms, Take Change Burglars gained entry to two northern Oakland County bust-, ness establishments and escaped with an undetermined amount of money, Pontiac Police learned yesterday. ■k it it The burglaries occurred at the Four .Sea.sons Inn at 10197 Dixie, Springfield Township, and the Waterford Hill Country Club, j 663.3 Dixie, Independence Town-1 ship. Entry to the Four .Seasons Inn | was gained by raising windows, police said. Change was taken from a cigarette machine. The intruders broke a window pane on a side door to gain en-, try to the country club. Money | was tak^!n from a jukebox, police said. * w ★ 'fhe possible theft of several] casies of whisky from the club also is being investigated. DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Offers FREE PARKING ON THE COURTHOUSE LOT (CORNER SAGINAW and HURON) hirniihed by ihe. Follouiing Merchnnts: ARTHUR’S 48 N. Saginaw St. OSMUN’S MEN’S WEAR 51 N. Saginaw St. BOBETTE SHOP 16 N. Saginaw St. GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP 51 W. Huron St. CONN’S CLOTHES 73 N. Saginaw THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 W. Huron St. ALL VICTOR PAINT STORES CARRY A COMPLETE LINE OF MARY CARTER PAINTS X "ECON-O-WAU" PRII-PASTED WALLPAPER » »]99 per roll 1M N. (Iflnaw tl. Ntxl t* ttirt Ttnaimw m-tiMi N1 WMI Nmiw) H. at Tataarapn a«. TMtpMiw Maim As an IDS representative, you write your own paycheck, set your own hours, and determine your own retirement income. If you can qualify as an IDS rci>rcscntalivc, you’ll he in business for yovtrsclf. A'oii'll work 'oul of an oflicc near—or in—your home. And you’ll enjoy tlicsc advantages: l-'rce training. 'Die opportunity to earn from the start and to retire on a substantial fivo-/ignrc income. Life and hc.illh ins'iiritncc. Yon’Il aho he representing the largest financial organization of its kind in the world. (The IDS group of eompaiiics includes 4 mutual lunds one of them is llie world’s largest; an insurance comptiny; ;m investment eerlificate company.) 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The long-wearing wool worsted is tailored in smart 2- and 3-button models in many colors, potterns, sizes. 59.85 NATURAL SHOULDER 4-IN-1 SUITS OF ENGLISH IMPORTED SAXONY This great suit idea is really four outfits in one—for it includes a coat and matching slacks, contrasting slacks, and a reversible vest—all tailored in an English imported saxony . :....79.75 SPECIAL GROUP OF FAMOUS NAME SUITS IN YEAR-ROUND FABRICS 'T'ou'll find labels like Eagle, Hart Schaffner Cr Morx, Austin Leeds and Hammonton Park—in year-round weight pure wools — and all in many styles, patterns, sizes. 79.75 to 99.75 FINEOUTERCOATS BY EAGLE AND HART SCHAFFNER & MARX From two of the leoding clothing makers in the country, 0 huge group of impeccably styled outercoots. Choose from both dress and casual models in tweeds, cheviots, saxonies, velours and fine worsteds. Good coh or choice, too. ,. $84 to $96 more examples zip-lined velour COATS: in a split ragUn model; in both multi-color mini-checlys and muted Glen plaids . . , 63.85 GGG & LOUIS ROTH SUITS: superbly tailored suits in rfSany handsome styles, imported fabrics, distinctive patterns . . ....................119.75 to 199.75 FAMOUS MAKER OUTERCOATS: dress and casual models from makers like Eagle, Hart, Schaffner & Marx. Alparu-na. Choose from tweeds, velours, cheviots. herringbones, plaids and solids in a full siie range .....,•.79.75 to 99.75 FAMOUS MAKER 2-TROUSER SUITS: tailored by Eagle, Hart, Schaffner Cx Mar*. Frost tr Frost, Belvedere and Kingswood............63.85 to 129.75 IN MEN'S SPORTSWEAR FAMOUS MAKER SPORT COATS from names like Eagle, Petrocelli, GGG, Stanley Blacker, and Hart. Schaffner Cr Marx in many models, fabrics, colors....... .......................39.85 to 89.85 DRESS SLACKS in fall and year-round weights; many shades . . 13.90 to 29.90 ZIP-LINED RAINCOATS In Dacron* blends; some permanently-preissed 26.99 FALL AND YEAR-ROUND SLACKS traditional and continental models 3.i/b FAMOUS MAKER SLACKS In belt loop and adiustable waist mridels . . 17 90 Nivr FALL SPORT COATS in a large selection of styles, fabrics, patterns . . . ......................34.90 SPECIAL GROUP OF OUTERWEAR: suede, suburbans, lined short jackets ......................14,90 to 74.90 CARDIGAN AND PULLOVER SWEATERS: many famous makes and imports; in pure wools, wool blends and suedes .... 10.99 to 49.99 PURE WOOL SWEATERS: Shetland wool crewneck pullovers or lambswool V- necks — each...................10.99 SPORT SHIRTS: with buttondown or regular collar; some permanently-pressed Dacron® blends; in solids, stripes and plaids ....................... 4.79 SPECIAL GROUP OF SPORT SHIRTS: wools, Italian knits, fine silks ... ....................6.99 to 22.99 BAN LON KNIT SHIRTS In mock tur tieneck and pullover models....5.79 ALL COTTON VELOURS in zip turtleneck and V-neck styles .........4.99 IN HATS AND SHOES FAMOUS MAKER HATS In narrow or wider brim stjyles; each with hand-felted fdge ..........................11.99 WRIGHT ARCH PRISERVERS; entire stock; in smooth or grained black or brown leathers........28.90 to 32.73 BOSTONIAN SHOES; black or brown brogues; black tassels, brown wing tips .............................19.99 FAMOUS MAKER CASUAL SHOES: suedes, pigskins and leathers in several styles .................6.St to 7.81 IN FURNISHINGS FAMOUS MAKER DRESS SHIRTS: permanently-pressed; white or solids 3.99 NECKWEAR: includes pure silks and ipure wools.............1.99 to 4.39 UNDERWEAR; all cotton briels 2 for $3 m OUR WOMEN'S FASHION SHOPS MINK-TRIMMED SUZIE WONG COATS styled in suede with side slits and panel front; sizes 6 to 18 ...........$59 CAR COATS: Includes wools and piles; sizes 8 to 18 ........24.99 and $33 FALL AND HOLIDAY DRESSES; In wools, knits and blends 12.99 to '29.99 ORLON® KNIT SHIFTS with cowl neck or placket front; 10-18 10.99 FAMOUS MAKER SLACKS AND SWEATERS: slacks in sizes 8 to 18; sweaters in sizes 36 to 40 each . .9.99 ROBES AND LOUNGEWEAR; quilts and fleeces in assorted colors 8.99 to 13.99 NYLON OR TAFFETA HALF SLIPS In white and pastels; averages and shorts ......................2.99 and 3.99 IN BOYS' AND STUDENTS' WEAR FALL JACKETS for boys and students In a larga group .......U.99 to 14.99 BOYS' AND STUDENTS' SUITS: 3-buf-fon Ivy. 2-button continental models in wool and vyool blends; sizes 6-14. 22.99 to 12.99; 15-20, 34.99 to 49.9'9{ students’ sizes 35 to 42 . .39.99 to 59.99 SPORT SHIRTS In plaids, checks, solids; sizes 8-20, 2.49.2.99| student ........................2.99 to J.99 , CORDUROY SLACKS in traditional and continental models; sizEs 6 to 12 rag arid slim, 1.69 to 4.49; waist sizes 26- 32 4.99-5.99 0«r Pontloc Moll Stort Optn Mon., Thori., FrI. nn4 Sat. to 9 p.im Our Birmingham Store Open Thun, ond FrI to 9 n m Too*, ond Wod. to 5:30 p.m. fat. to 5:30 p.m. . ’ ’ 309 N. Tologroph Rd., PonHac 300 Piorco St., BirminghU ^ \ U XHK I’ONTIAC I’HKSS. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY ;il,’1908 Ar-ll People in the News President Johnson, while meeting yesterday in Washington with Mard! ot Dimes poster child Timmy Faas, disclosed that his 7-montlM>U grandson burned his finger when he dipped It iif a bowl of chili. The incident occurred last Saturday at the LBJ Ranch in Texas. A White House spokesman said Patrick Lyndon Nugent stuck his hand in a bowl of hot chili and Was treated by a doctor for slight finger burns. He is “fine now,” the spokesman added. S JOHNSON Kosygin Ends State Visit to India Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin ended his six-day state visit to India today and fiew to Kabul for talks with Afghan leaders. A Kosygin aide said he would he staying overnight before proceeding to Moscow. Prior to leaving India, Kosygin made a brief airport statement praising the Indian KOSYGIN leaders and people. Wilson's Popularity Hits All-Time Low ■ CLEANS ITSELF AUTOMATICALLY, ELECTRICALLY! No more drudgery for you! No more steel wool, rubber gloves and broken fingernails! ■ CLEANS OVEN RACKS, DRIP BOWLS, TOO! ■ And, ell for about the price of a cup of coffee! 5-ytar Warranty backed by Ganaril Motors! l-year Warranty on entire Range for repair of any defect with- out charge, plus 4-year Protection Plan (parts only) for fur-iuitae ..................................................... niching replKoment for any defective Suftoe Heating Unit. Surface Unit Switch, or Oven Heating Unit. Prime Minister Harold Wilson’s popularity in Britain is at an all-time low, a public opinion poll published yesterday reported. The poll, in the London Daily Express, said 62.5 per cent of those questioned were dissatisfied with Wilson as prime |ininister, compared with 48.75 per cent in a similar poll May 9. A total of 68.8 per cent were dissatisfed with the Labor government's conduct of affairs, and only 30.3 per cent said they would vote for the Laborites in a new general election. WILSON Actress Patricia Neal Resumes Acting Three years ago, actress Patricia Neal’s career appeared ended when she suffered a stroke that left her without sight, speech or use of her limbs. New happily recovered, Miss Neal returned to New York yesterday to begin work on the film version of Frank Gilroy’s Pulitzer play “The Subject Was R|Oscs.” “I hope I will make a beautiful film. I hope it ail goes well,” she said on her arrival at Kennedy airport from London. She was wearing her “lucky” 21-year-old forest green hat and dyed black mink coat. 2133 ORCHARD LAKE ROAD French Blonde International Cover Girl BUY! SELL! TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! Sylette Blanc, 20-year-old blonde from France, was chosen yesterday as the International Cover Girl of 1968 in a 15-nation competition in Ldndon. SAVE30< on 2 cans of Van Camp’s Pork and Beans and,your favorite wieners. The simple pleasures are best..l 'eiyoy Van Camp’s Park and Beans. Clip and Mall Todayl _, ■ Beans *n Wieners OfFer P. O. Box 5104. Clinton, Iowa 52732 I’m attaching 2 complete Van Camp’s Pork and Beans labels and a brand identification from my favorite wieners. (Offer good on all sizes of Pckrk and Beans except 8 oz.) Please send me my 30c refund. (Limit, one refund to a family-one request to un envelope, please). Name. Addreis. I City. State. .Zip Code. Admiral Winter Windfall Sale! MtimirtML Solid-State Walnut Lowboy CONSOLE STEREO Kmart Price noat Pay only 7.50 per month No money downl I’M/A.M radio, all-transistor; slide - rule “lock-in” tuner; four speakers, “Phantom 3rd channel”. Five year warranty. JMmIral. Color TV COLOR STEREO THEATRE ^|Hj| per month pay only. ADAAIRAL COLOR CONSOLE pay only 14.53 per month MODEL 241ST The Weslchester liy Adniirnl ... roinplele enlertaiiuiient unit. Color TV witli 20-inch diagonal Viewing area, stereo, FM/AM, FM stereo radio. Many features. Cash price 595.88. 293 sq. in. viewable area. MODEL 201L Fine furniture cabinet . . . contemporaiT walnut veneer*. Pre-set fine tuning, instapt play, automatic color circuit, color balancer. 20" diag. measure. Cush price 399.95. 227 sq. in. viewable area. BIG SCREEN COLOR TV PORTABLE COLOR TV, CART I6.7Z month pay only 12.80 per month pay only MODEL L.SS.'il Another of Admiral’s fine cul)iiiets . . . this in walnul contemporury. Big 293 sq. in. viewing area (23" diug. measure.) Color “iocks in” electronically. Cash Price 8438. MODEI. C'.BOOhT Admiral quality features in a compact __..1..., vuL'/i’ill.'inn... portulile! Iiihiant play, VHF/UHK tuning. 180 sci. iq. picture area (18” diag. measure.) Star brown finish. Deluxe carL Cush price 8348. M€imlr€aEi 1*11 vonfy 7..70 ■ per month MARK OF QUALITY Pay only 7.50 per month POCKET RADIO 49S PHONOQRAPH A. 6-iranslstors. MocelYTOlR. PORTABLE l»RT 108»* BIG SCREEN TV 129»» ADMIRAL Lowboy 17777 B. 4-speed; solid^^ _ _ stsle. No. 9 9 YMI3I7. niark-sml-wliile, Ui" (disg. liiras.); deluxe esrt. slim iimdel HI s(|. ill. vievtslile sees. Exietided rrriwiisidar screen; 19” diug. iiiess. Atlinirsl model (Il9,‘>.'tl’. Wsliiiit cnniole. Inslsnl pisy; wide-angle sereeii; VHF/ lilt Sf|. in. viewalile area. lJHF.Moill'IJ2ll I. TMi oWsr aaptrs* Mertk $1, IM0 \ m Kmart guarantees the quality GLENWOOD PLAZA — North Perry at Glenwood T^HE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 31, 1968 Navy to Build King-Size Amphibious Assault Vessels .v* WASHINGTON (AP) - The Navy plans to huUd nearly $1 billion worth of battleship-size amphibious assault vessels to carry Marines, helicopters and landing craft to combat areas. , Hie new ships, designated LHAs, would vastly streamline Marine over-the-beach and encirclement tactics by combining features of four specialized Navy vessels. They would be more than twice the length of a football field. Industry proposals for 4he first of several LHAs^ to cost about $123 million each were submitted to the Navy late last week for evaluation, officials said Tuesday. The Navy will pick the winning design within four months, these sources said. The fiscal 1969 defense budget unveiled Monday provides the money for one LHA, and other funds will be laid out next year for three more. The Navy hopes for four or tion is still being ironed out, the amphibious assault ship would displace about 40,000 tons, extend about 700 feet and measure loo feet or so across the beam five beyond those. |-narrow enough to go through! The LHA could carry at least Although the exact configura-the Panama Canal. a Marine battalion landing team By comparison,, the battleship' New Jersey, being reactiVited for the Vietnam war, is 45,000 tons, 887 feet and 108 feet at the beam. i of 1,800 men, their necessary supporting equipment, 30 or so helicopters, tanks, other vehicles and several landing boats. New Many Wear falseteeth W»iiUM*W*rry Do your foiM tooth Mutoy Mod om^ lMnmoobytUppUis.4 Days Only ^ SAVE ON STURDY STEP STOOL AND SEAT COMBINATION Our Reg. 6.97 4,96 Charge It NEW “FLOWER PILL BOX” HAT 3.68 Our Reg. 4.S8 4 Day One aise fits all. Choice of many colora. Charga itl Prints, White and Black GIRDLES WITH 2-WAY STRETCH For kitchen or utility room. 2-tone beige and black step atool with rubber tt«ad, vinyl aeat. Height, 29”; width, 18” Contac’ for Quick Relief of Coids* Our Reg. 1.28 97* 250 Cuneco Aspirin Tablets Our Reg. 52c Our Reg. 87c 4 Days Only 66* 10'» Lycra® tpandex fiber girdlet in your choice of printt, whitet and blacks. One tise fita all. You'll want several at this low price. Charge It at Kmart. The “time-releaHe” cidd fa|i-aiile. *UmiP«d quonHty, non* lold to dooloril Mon's & Womon’s 17-lewel WATCHES 11“ all” Ditcount Price Charge 1$ Dependable Swiss movemania. Choice of styles. Gift boxed. WOMEN'S TWO-EYELET WEDGE HEEL OXFORDS Our Reg. 2.97 4 Dayt Only 1.68 Soft vinyl uppers and wedge heel, full cushion inaole, boupey crepe sole, moccasin vamp. In tan, black and white. Size range to 10. Save now! Charge it! MEN'S AND BIG BOYS' Apollo Work OXFORDS Our Reg. 2.97 4 Dayt Only 1,68 Full pigskin covered cushioned insole, moccasin vamp, and lightweight flexible crepe sole and heel. Vinyl uppers, in green, sizes from 7 to 12. Charge it! I MEN’S “VAN CORT” BELTS A AC 46. 97c •A AA, SET OF 3 MEN’S TROUSER HANGERS Sat Our Reg. 7Se 4 Day TVouiier bongora for naator clothe*. BOYS’ COTTON PAJAMAS Our Reg. 2.17 Sanforiaed® cotton broadcloth In style. Siaes 3-14, RE-MANUFACTUREO SPARK PLUGS 68* Bat afl Our Reg. 8U.S7 4 Day Rave now on famou* brand apark plum- Cbarga III “FOCAL” MIDGn VIEWER'for Slides 68* SAVE ON ACME ANTIQUING KITS 3.68 FOLDING ALUMINUM BED 9.68 Our Reg. 11.96 4 Dayt Only Our Reg. 97o 4 Day Our Reg. 4.28 4 Day Singlo-alido viewar. LIghtwoight ' Easy application 0|ver now or piaitic construction. old inrface*. Chargo it. Fold-away aluminum-frame bed, 24”x73”xl2” aiie, with 2” poly foatti mattress. 4-leg construction. Chain link helical lupporta. Limit 1 to cut-tonier. Charge It, WEST BEND 30-CUP PARTY PERK 7.87 Our Reg. 8,86 4 Day Antomatlo time tomperatur# control for porfoet browing. OnrReg. 9.97 4 Dayt Only "PRINCESS" EXERCISER 6.68 Slim-cycle exerdser features 1” diameter tabular ateal frame, baked enamel finish, vinyl hand grips, moldad vinyl pedals, saddle seat, adJuaUibla vinyl foot capik WOODEN EXPANDO HAT, COAT RACK 68* Onr Rag. 77e 4 Day Hang hat* and mat* on thi* ax-pandablo peg rack. Charge it. TOILn BRUSH, PUSne HOLDER 68* SAVE ON KRESCO* VIBRATOR SANDER 6.96 Otic Reg. 77c 4 Day _ Brush in ll* own plastic holder. Avocado, while, pink or bluo. Onr Reg. 7.44 4 Day Two amp* Sander for all your honald C. Broi^, Ozone Valerie, 8, who has lived more one of 34 foster grandparents employed by the Commission tor Senior Citizens ^ to tend metally retarded children. * ★ ★ than half her life in toe Illinois State Pediatric Institute, a facility that cares for mentally retarded children. Grandparents program, composed of men and women over 60 years of age, earn less than $1,500 annually. This income is supplemented by enabling them to work 20 hours a week for pay at the rate of $1.40 an hour. The grandparents’ role is to provide .< institutionalized children, dependent-neglected children or any children with contact with an older adult. Most are assigned two children. ★ ★ Mrs. Hepp is pleased that Valerie h||s begun to smile when she sees her. The country’s biggest pipeline stretches 1,531 miles from Houston to New York and can deliver 42 million gallons of oil a day. It is operated by one man in Atlanta. Park; Spec. 4 Brian T. Cady, Edmuton; Spac. 4 Jamea D. Sacco, SyrKuaa; Spec. 4 Manuel Caallla-Vazquez Jr., New York. NORTH CAROLINA — Sgl. Anderson L. Ruderson, Jamestown; Spec. 4 Harry J. Boston, Conover; Pic. Kenneth R. Howell, High Point. OHIO - Spec. S Martin I). Klann, New Philadelphia; Spac. 4 Patrick C. Mortus, Twinsburg; Pfc. James B. Rutledge, Columbus. PENNSYLVANIA — Capt. Roland Belcher, Philadelphia; Spec. 4 Martin W. Weleskl ML Cabot; CpI. John E. Barron. Homestead. TENNESSEE — Spec. 4 Anthony Smith, Memphis. TEXAS — Ptc. Kenneth L. Blackmon, Barger; Spec. 4 JImmla R. Bllsaett, Houston. WASHINGTON — Ind LI. Richard H. Walker. Spokane; StaH Sgl. Emile Cole, Seattle. WISCONSIN — Pfc. Harlan T. Pacha, Arlington. NAVY TENNESSEE — Equibment Operator (Construction) Harry 6. Hodges, Sevier villa. MARINE CORPS ARIZONA — CpI. Joel F. K o a s t e r. phoenix. CALIFORNIA—Ptc. William O. PoHen-barger, San Diego; Lance CpI. Arthur Bustamanie, San Fernando, Lanca CpI ton, ProvManct. TENNESSEE — Lanct CpL DavM O. Stawart, Mamphlt; Snif Lt. Ratidaii D. Yaary, Klngtpoil. ^VIRGINIA - LBIica CpI. Charlai E. HbrrIt, Norfolk. Died of wounds : San Dim... COLORADO — Ptc, John J. Donava, Edward Sanchez Jr., Los Angeles. CONNECTICUT - CpI. Ro^rt nail, Bloomfield. S. Bag FLORIDA — Lance CpI. Richard G. Mangrum, Lynn Haven. INDIANA — Ptc. Ronald L. McDuffie. Gary, KENTUCKY — Lance CpI. Delmer Anderson, Bellevue. MAINE — Ptc. Douglas E. Googint Jr., Yarmouth. NEW HAMPSHIRE — III Lt. Allred B. Russ, Peterborough. NEW JERSEY-PIc. Charles S. Sickler. Ewan. OHIO — CpL Richard J. Healy, Toledo; Ptc. Louis T. HazzarU. Lima. PENNSYLVANIA — CpI. John F. Dies- Electric Perk, that heftiep Mend was madetbpine! Available In 1- and 2-pound cans Save fO*t New Chase & Sanborn Electric Perk is here! It's the best thing that ever happened to an electric percolator. A special blend, a special roast of the heftier coffee, made to make ^ ^ electric percolator coffee taste better. Try it. It really perks up your electric percoiatorl ! g on New I ^ Chase & Sanborn I c or any g Chase & Sanborn ! w Roasted Coffee i10« TO THE OtAUR; For oadi osugoa yoa aecapi si a«f •oiboiliod iisol. at »MI psy yoa Uia Isoa valao plat atasl htadBng •hailts, ptpvldad you pod ypui cpitonwr ht«p complltd wllk thp tpimi of IMI pitp;. ppy olhp' PppNopUop PppilHotPS liiiid, Ipvotapi thpwlai yptr pprchpia of I jfleif Pi slock l« cevpr El caopoai lidppiiMd mptl bP tkpwa appp ngpitl. VoMllproMMIad Isspd w ittlilclpd. Your mail pay pay talas Its. Caxh Vila# 1 ;ZMk at I caal. kadaam aaly ihiouah ays laaiasadtaHaa ar by nislllnito Sitadatd Braadt lac cl;F 0. Bos mz. Binniaihcni, AIcbcml 3S20I. Oflci loodoolylaU.S A.OtIcrtIfflIlidIa OHS' (oapoa Mf caa. Offer Mplrcl DcecPibctjriSS*. 10« rSMOmen nslE PNOOUCT OS STANOSnO WMNOS SC CM^SSfUlBOlC^, 1505 < Kent Counly Eyes Single Police Setup GRAND RAPIDS (AP)-Con-solidation of all police departments in Kent County into a single system is being recommended by Leonard Anderson, chairman of toe Kent County supervisors. Anderson, who made the sug gestion to the county’s safety committee, urged a study get under way soon and pointed out that toe cost of maintaining a sheriff’s department has tripled in toe past 10 years. He added he was not necessarily advocating cfxisolidation under the Grand Rapids Police Department, although it was understood this would be a matter for consideration by toe committee. College Head Resigns Post GRAND RAPIDS (AP) -Msgr. Arthur F. Bukowski announced Tuesday his resignation as president of Aquinas College, effective Feb. 1, 1969, to enter the missionary field. He has been president of the Roman Catholic college nearly 35 years. , A native of Bay City, Father Bukowski, 62, graduated froip St. Joseph Seminary in Grand Rapids- and Catholic University of America at Washington, D.C. ^NIW MEXICO V Lanca CpI. Andrpw ^HIO^'PIc. Roy E. Wolft, CItveland, Changed from missing to dead —hostile; ARMY FLORIDA — WO Tim^y H. Artman, Hlalaah. ILLINOtS^pl. Donald W. Kaap, Frao-port; slafr Sgl. Wlllla J. CoHrtll, JolM. "MAINE - CpI, Bonton Michaud, Fort Kont, MICHIOAN -4 CpI. DPUglM i. Mclirpy, Tdytar. MISSOURI - PM. Jamoi E. Thompion, Bonton. NEW MEXICO — Spac. 4 Jim D. Mar-tinaz, Chamisal. NEW JERSEY — Spac. 4 William E. TIaman, Dalanco. NEW YORK—Sgl. Jalfray Paraz, Elm-hunt. OHIO — Spac. 4 Eugana M. Wllllami, Yaungatown. WISCONSIN — Pfc. Victor D. Tomezyk, Dorchaitor. PUERTO RICO — Spec. 4 Louli E. Borry, St. Thomas, Virgin Island. Entry In sarvict: San Jupn. NAVY CALIFORNIA-Lt. Richard W. Homuth, Spring Valley; Lt. (|.g.) Thomas E. Pettis. Chula Vista; Aviation Machinist's Mata 1. C. Ronald P. Souev Sr., Chula Vista; Parachute Rigger I.C. Eurtka L. Schmittlou, Chula Vista. AIR FORCE NEBRASKA — Capt. Manta L. Moor-berg, Grand Island. Missing as a result of hostile action: ft ARMY Pfc. Robert $. Trujillo 2nd LI. John M. Scully M. Sgt. Richard F. Williams Spac. 4 Warren E. Newton Ptc. Jackit W. Hall PM. DarrI svkaa PM. Richarv R, Raha Pfc. Morris C. Ptckalt PM. David N. Harkar PM. Howard M. Blaaan Pfc, Jamaa A. Daly Jr. PM. Jama. H. ^StrljJjml Jr. Mai. Irby 0. Tarrall Chained from missing to captured:'*' ■ ' ‘ a NAVY 'V Cmdr. Robart J. Sctiwaltzar AIR FORCE , Col. Edward S. Burdatt Died not as a result ^ hostile action: L , ■ ARMY ■ FLORIDA Spac. 4 Culllt W. BryaM, Fort Myars. ILLINOIS — PM. Robot L.' tPtt. Reeb- ' OHIO - PM. Wlllla R. Dapnla, Clava-Isnd. PENNSYLVANIA - Staff Igf. Claranca ‘ Claycomb, Altoona. rEXAS-Spac. 4 Alfgi IMRINB C------ WASHINGTON - CpI. CIIHard 0. Wart, Kant. , Changed from missing to dead —nonhostile; ARMY TEXAS — WO Ronald L. Martin, CorsL cana; Sgt. Norman R. Andarson, Amarillo. NAVY NEW YORK — Seaman Apprantleo Kan-noth W. Barslow, Brooklyn. Missing not as a result of hostile action; ARMY Pfc. Emory S. Cannon Pfc. Raymond N. Wabtr DRYAIRTROUBLES? Coolerator® AUTOMATIC HUMIDIFIER $74.95 Eliminato troublaa coutad by Karsh, dry, bokad-out wintpr olr. Thit now Coolarator Humidifiar moistpns tha air, filtora it of duat aiMi impuritios. You foal comfertabla at lowar tamparoturas. Phone 333-7812 « consumers Power Mt-1650-8" I am HOIKDBnK nor Floor Care Money Sav^ Specials! Eireka Eledric Broom Spaeial Low Prica fl905 Delivery and Service Included! No Money Down! EASY TERMS-15 MONTHLY Here's floor care the easy way with this sweeper vac broom. It's liRht-weight for easier handling with 3-wpy action cleaning. Has throwaway bag, adijustable brush for rugs and bare floorsl Hangs up neatly and out' of the way when not in use. Enreka Canister Vacuum Complate with Attaehmantt #24^® Delivered and Serviced! No Money Down! EASY TERMS-J5 MONTHLY It’ll roll eaaily from room to room making your house cleaning that much easier. Has Super suction to pick up the most imbedded ,dnat from your floor coverings and bare floors—complete with .S attachments for upholstery, draperies and crevices. l)set big, throw-away dust bag. HOOVER Deluxe 2-in One Vacuum SALE $4650 EASY TERMS, NO MpNEY DOWN! Big, beautiful und deluxe—U*a the famoua HOOVER that beats, ua it sweeps, as it eleans! Enjoy It noty for much less than you would guess. Has Rug Thick* ness Adijustmenl — big Throwaway Dust Bags — Toe Switch — and many other impulur HOOVER faa* turea. THE GOOn HOVSEKEEPOG SHOP ' Downtown Pontiac OPEN MONDAY* THURSDAY and FRIDAY NITE ’TIL 9 W. Hnron-wQ^pon Hoadcy,j|^nr»d(y Friday *UI 9-FB/MSS8 S,‘ I- 6e Calleid on a Speech? Ponlltc Pmi PiMl* by Ibward n. Ntbl* participant at the annual art show given at The Pontiac Mall ts Mrs. Charles Kerr of South Johnson Street shown with last year s entry. The large supply of sea shells before her is just a sample of the varied items she uses. Today's Woman Artist Avoids Monotony By YOLANDA BENAVIDES With the annual art show at The Pontiac Mall just >:around the corner, ypu won’t find 89-year-old Mrs. Charles Kerr biding her time. Seeing her at her work table , with a large supply of sea shells spread out before her, you might imagine her more at ease with knitting npedles. Not so. ★ w w A spritely senior citizen who likes to avoid the “monotonous,” she specializes in working with the unusual; using melon seeds^ grain sthlks or maybe pepper pods to create unique mosaics. ★ ★ * Even then, she seldom limits herself to the same materials. Tops, from poppies, oats, peas, beans, and assorted seeds, including apple and cucumber, are just a sample of the varied items she works with. ★ * w An active participant in the Mall show for the past six years, her first project was entered through a senior citizen’s group. After that she was on her own. , * ★ “Now I’d hate to miss a year,”^ she says. “Part Oif the fun is meeting so many people, and I’ve made a lot of friends, too. ‘NOT WORK’ “Of course it’s nice to be doing something that you «jon’t think is work,” laughed Mrs. Kerr. “1 can’t paint, couldn’t draw a straight line if I wanted to,” she mused, “but its just as much fun making something from nothing.” ★ ★ ★ Starting from scratch seems to be the key word when she’s at her best, which Includes trying a talented hand at Calendar THURSDAY Pontiac Area Leaders Association of Camp Fire Girls, 9:30 a.m.. Community Services Building. Candy sale plans. Oakland Writers’ Workshop, 1 p.m., YWCA. Regular meeting. FRIDAY Area Wellesley College Alumnae, 7 p.m., Bloomfield Village home of the John Campbells. Annual husbands’ night dinner. Bonneville Jnnior Duplicate Bridge Club, 7:45 p.m., The Pontiac Mall Community Room. All beginning and intermediate bridge players may attend. Pontiac Rebekab lodge No. 450, 8 p.m., Malta Temple. fUHiwasiiiXbi „ Girs Exhibits Works Russian' bom artist Anatol Girs will be honored at a “meet the artist” reception and one man exhibit from 2 to 5 p.m. in Birmingham’s Galerie Do. Boicourt, Feb. 4-29. w a ♦ He is a member of Society of Fine Arts “Zacheta,” Society of Graphic Artists, Society of Advertising Artists—all in Poland. ^Iso a member of the Gutenberg Society (Gutenbcrggesellschaft) in Mainz, Germany, and the Monks and Priars Chapel of Private Printers in Detroit. Slate Florida Picnic The annual picnic of former Pontiac area residents now living In Florida, or visiting there, is scheduled March 5 at the recreation hall in Trailer Estates between Bradenton and Sarasota on U.S. 41. another favorite pasttime, making hooked rugs. She’s made 80. Two of her late husband’s favorites, each a picturest]ue home setting, decorate her living room walls. ★ * * ♦ “ A native of England, Mrs. Kerr came to the United States in 1912 looking for work. From a family numbering 16, she was only one of four to venture to this country. ^e moved to Pontiac after a whirlwind six-month courtship with Charles Kerr, whom she met while working in Bloomfield Hills. * * ★ “Because of the war, clergymen were scarce and they were only available on Sunday mornings so we contacted a friend ■> and he arranged a small ceremony right here at home,” she said. SE’TTLED “When I first saw this house, which was the only one we think she’s overdoing it. Please give tis bewildered parents some guidelines. BEWILDERED DEAR BEWILDERED: Tell your daughter to sit down with a pencil and paper and figure out exactly how “independent” she is. Advise her that when she is able to support herself entirely — and that means pay for her room, board, clothes, transportation, entertainment, travel, doctor, dentist, and insurance, then she may live where she chores, and by her own rules. But as long as she lives wifh ' you, she will have to live by yours. DEAR ABBY: This will amuse you. I’m sure: The other evening I was in the company of an elderly couple I have known for over 50 years. The subject of your column came up and the lady remarked that she doubted very much if all those letters in‘your column were “real.” Arid the gentleman agreed that you surely must make them up yourself because people couldn’t be that “peculiar.” Briefly, hett iM tile background of this couple: They are not married, but have been engaged for 49 years! They have traveled all over the world together, she as “Miss” and he as “Mr.” They qre both independently wealthy and neither has ever been married. I once had nerve enough to ask her why they never got married. She replied, “If l married him today, he would ask for a divorce tomorrow. A man needs his freedom.” This lady is past 80, seems completely fulfilled, and she walks five miles to her stockbroker every day. J. B. (AMSTERDAM, Holland) DEAR J. B.: Thank you for writing. (Could your friends have originated “The Dutch Treat?”) DEAR ABBY: You are my la.st and final resort. I just don’t know which way to turn. 1 had been in Vietnam for six months when I lost my eyesight in an explorion. I was recently shipped home with an honorable discharge. In February I will be 22. My problem is my girl friend. Before I joined the Marines we were getting pretty serious, and I told myself that if I came home I would ask her to marry me. Then this happened. I still love her very much, and she says she still loves me, but how can I be sure she isn’t just saying it because she doesn’t want to, hurt me? Abby, I wccldn’t want her to marry me out of pity. How can 1 be sure? Should I ask her to be my wife? STILL LOVES HER DEAR STILL: Love is Usually a two-way street. Ask her ! Jean Scolaro Exchanges Vows With Clifford Joseph Poremba Jean Ellen Scolaro, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John L. Scolaro of Franklin Road, was married recently to Clifford Joseph Poremba. His parents are the Joseph A. Porem-bas of Pepper Pike, Ohio. WWW For the ceremony in St. Hugo of the Hills Church, the bride was attired in a Bianchi gown of ivory peau d'ange, fashioned with scoop neckline and accented with pearl and crystal embroidery on the bodice and flared sleeves. Similar embroidery accented the pill box which capped her fingertip veil. She carried white roses and ivy. A chapel strain completed her ensemble. Mrs. Rush Wilson was matron of honor for her sister, with bridesmaids Edith Rosaen and Patricia Little. DMis Kasten served as best man With' Rush Wilson III and Louis des Rosier as ushers. A honeymoon trip to Miami, Fla. followed a reception in the Bloomfield Hills Country Club. MRS. CLIFFORD J. POREMBA 8-8-h-h •.. Hou8e of Bedrooms has lots of Grand Opening buys that are real sleepers. Don’t let the *110 savings on this set throw you. We’ll probably raise the price next week. 1711 S. Tiliirapli M.. l|•omll•ld, Bitwiin Miricia Mil* and Orobard Laka M. ^ STORE HOURS; AAONDAY-SATURDAY 9 TO 9 • CALL 334-4593 "(W.. After all, its our Grand Opening and we have a right to do grand things so everyone will know us. Thats why we chose*this nbtural oak finish bedroom as an advertising feature. Of course, with* \ 114 bedrooms in our store we have a problem in choosing which ortes to put in the paper. We think theyVe" oil grand and this one is no exception. It has a 9-droWer plus 2-dopr dresser, a 6-drawer plus 2-door chest, a framed mirror, oqd a headboard and frame. It's onotlier better bedroom buy so maybe you'd better come see it. Later on it will cost $609,00. Right now: $499. ▼'J.. "K f ' The Better Bedroom People on Telegraph Road house of bedrooms ! > I I I I ' • Ill 'A fa ' Tim rONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 31, 1968 Thomasvills Dining Room Suite Reg. $588.80 .......SALE $469 Everything Reduced from Top to Bottom Modern, Transitional, Contemporary or Mediterrariean During DOBBS Storewide Sale you can purchase Famous Name Brands such as Bigelow, Broyhill Premier, Flexsteel, Founders, Lazy-Boy, Serta, Simmons, Thomasville, Wieland, and Many More and receive immediate Delivery. No need to wait 6 to 12 weeks, but If you care to Special Order, you con do so now at these Special Sale Prices. SALI *199 n,*1059... Sofas..................*157 h, *788 *79 to *419... Chairs................. *49 to *289 *339 to *1299. . . Dining Rooms . . .*239 to *988 *299 to *1199... Bedrooms...............*197 to*799 *49 to *169... Tables ............... *28 to *137 *39 to *219 . . . Lamps............... *15 to *179 *7’® to *18’®... Custom Carpet... *4’® »®*14’s*o. yo Terms to Suit You. Professional Design and Interior Decorating Service 'V.-A.* 2600 WOODWARD, BLOOMnElD Near Squera iska Rd. - LI I-22M, fI l•TI3l OPEN; WED., THURS., FRI., SAT. 10-9 (Mon., Tues. 'til 5 P.M.) Admission Silences Critics By MURIEL lAWRVNCB DEAR MRS. LAWRENCE; My husand fcp an only ebUd. Since his faOiar’a death two years ago, his mother |« at'him all the time for neglecting her. feel worailasa, too, That’s what nangeaerate parson whom yon maln» it a waste of time to even cannot fanprove.'* * try to defmid ourselves against That ended the criticism. It their fiiulMinding. replaced my accuser's desire to HU uie nine nir "eaiecnna aer the mOTS nervous-1*®®‘ ^ uie lime lor negiaciuv nor. ourselves *» ® moral stranger. Though we 4>and as much time "LI And that is the nolnt. vou Le. witJhTer s« Itls'niiver ^ ^ hairier they are. For in our I _ ^ j® ***® y®** *®®- * .®“’ " " I nervous seU^efense. they read S® ^ng as these compulsive crit- enough. As soon as the time comes our desire for their approval of u® fn cau annrihv ** t®®**' *'**•** generally to say goodby, ahe atarta to v|rtuo,S creaturea. But if we complain about how lonely she’ll be till be sees her agahi; He is so upset after aeeli^ hor he can’t sleep. Mrs. Lawrence, be is a good SOD but she’s out to make him feel like a bad one... ANSWER: llicn he’d' better decide to be a bad one, because the only way of shatUng Mf her flow of criticism is dwer-ful agreement witii it. cheerfully agree that we are as bad and wrong as they say we are, their accusations faUflat. # I know that such cheerfnl agreement with a critical relative can turn off the flow of reproadies because I’ve used it myself to do it. The relative whs not my liu- f—1 mother but a sister of hers. For aunt I could do nothing share their standards of rightness and goodness, they can terrinise us with accusations of how badly we’ve failed to live up to them. Indeed, they derive their whole power from tile fact that we share their moral notions. . themselves to be quite worth-j less. So they ve got to make us thlt wan’t instantly cSntra-1 dieted. And for some time li Betrothal Told of The engagement Ann Whitney to Larry L. Sargent is announced by her parents the Gordon E. Whitneys some tried to deal with this compulsive accuser by “explaining” how good had been my inten-Gioria *'®"® **®** * merited her “ moral approval. Then, one day, when I’d been told how bad and wrong was of Woodelm Street, A v 0 n something I’d done, I said, Township. Her fiance is the son “You are undoubtedly correct, of the late Mr. and Mrs. I do everything wrong. What’s Leonard N. Sargent. An early more, I am going to conUnue to. July wedding is planned. < iSo now let’s settle for me as an Bobette^s Annual Clearance SALE! all famous brands SAVE UP TO SWEATERS-SLACKS SKIRTS In Matching Colors WEEK-BNDER SLACK SUITS . DRESSES, Spooial Group Ineludts All Aftor 8 Drossss SEAMPROFE LINGERIE Robe and gown sots, alto all flan-ntl gowns and paiamat. Betiard Artsmls STRETCH PANT-TITES New Satltl Calert V2 Maehint WssNshla •nd OryaMf TALBOT KNITS Tops and lontM SAVE TO 14 oH Bobette Shop 1 6 N. Saginav/ Op6n AAon. offd H. Evwnlngi til 9 Chorgw Accounfi Mlchigen |oniierd PARK FREI PE 2-6921 Downtown A summer wedding is planned by Kfistin Voy danoff and Sammy Dan-ovac. The bride elect is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Steve Voy danoff of Elizabeth Lake Road. Her fiance is the nephew of Mr, and Mrs. Stafko Petrovic of Windsor, Ont. USAF Captains Plan to Marry ; Capt. John E. Howell, USAF, son of Mr. and Mrs. John A. Howell of Marlborough Drive, is engaged to be married to Capt. Janice I. McKechney, USAF. w ★ ♦. The bride-elect is the daughter of the Clayton iMcKechneys of Lakewood. 'Calitir She is a graduate of .Pacific Lutheran School of I Nursing at Tacoma, Wash., and is stationed at Merced, Calif. 6 A ★ Capt. Howell was graduated from University of Michigan School of Law and is a member of the California Bar Association. He is presently serving at MacTan Air Force Base in the Philippines. f It yc carp flAn’ >u need et, t MAf Qon into I ger your car. pet. PONTIAC CUSTOM CARPETS W *11'to wall valuag \ , • Call our Magic Carpat S*rvic» instead. Like a greyhound, you can leave the driving to ut. We'll arrive at your home with a jillion samples of famous carpeting with names like Magee, Alexander Smith, Roxbury. You'll sit snug as a bug, looking at a rug, matching carpeting to your decor right where it is. Price-wise, you're wise to call us, too. Dial 334-0177 and relax. 1672 Telegraph Rd. for those who must shop. c THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDkEsbAY/lANUARY 31. 1968 African Art Shown dt OU On. Monday, Oakland University will op’-n a maior collection of primttive African sculoture donated to the University bw former Governor G. Mennen Williams. The exi|ibition teatur“s about SO of more than 200 works given to the University last summer. Williams collected the caryings during his tenure as Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs under Presidents Kennedy and Johnson, The collection has been added to the OU Art Gallery’s already established p e r m a .n e n t collections which concentrate on primitiye and contemporary art. The former goyernor’s gift represents mainly the art of West Africa, a yast territory of peoples and nations between the western Sudan on the north and Nigeria to the south. The exhibit, which will continue through March 3, will be open from 12:30 to 4:30 and 7 to Place a large square of bacon Sunday. It will be closed om . ^ j . Monday except for the opening ‘‘“'"ing the last date, the Gallery is located on hour of cooking. This makes the' main "floor of Matilda R. the yenison much tastier, for it Wiisoh Halk i adds needed fat and moisture. Crayon Scribbles'. Need Extra Care During time out from watching television, youngsters still scribble on walls and their j clothing with crayons. To rer move crayon stain, first loosen it with kitchen shortening, then apply a detergent on the stain and work until the outline of the stain is removed. * ★ ★ Launder. If the stain remains, use a bleach safe for the fabric. On wool or silk, sponge with tri-chloroethane. Rinse and launder. Venison Roasting Furniture Casters Buying new furniture. Consider those with casters or rollers. It is much easier to move such furniture around when you don’t have to lift it. Mobile fuhiiture is a boon to a single person who may not have anyone to help rearrange things. The engagement of Karen Elaine White to Dennis Elwood Johnson is announced. Their parents are Mrs. Nelson White of Blaine Street and the late Mr. White and the Elwood Johnsons of Fenton. A fall wedding is being planned. ' Just a FsW More Days of TODD’S MID-WINTER Cimmim OF FINE SHOES ADDITIONAL REDDCTIONS OF DISCONTINUED STYLES SAVE UP TO 50% 20 W. HURON DOWNTOWN Open 9:30-5:30 — Friday to 9 Serving With