■x; The Weather U.S. Wminw lurMn Firtcait Partly Cloudy, Warmer (OMiMt M Ph« 1) THE PONTIAC PEESS Home Edition VOL. 123 NO. 311 ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1966—30 PAGES For Viet Policy Talk LBJ, Aides Ry to Hawaii WASHINGTON (AP) - President Johnson took off to Hawaii today to review the course of the Viet Nam war and to step up the flow of American health, education and farm aid to beleaguered Vietnamese villagers. The President announced at a news confererice in his office yesterday that he will hold three days of talks in Honolulu with South Vietnamese leaders and U.S. diplomatic and military officials in South Viet Nam. Johnson will be accompanied by four Cabinet officers and other top advisers. H18 announcement came amid renewed congressional criticism of the administration’s Viet Nam policies following the refusal of Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara to testify at a future public session of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Among those who will meet with Johnson in Hawaii are South Vietnamese Premier Nguyen Kao Ky, Chief of State Nguyen Van Thieu, U.S. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge and Gen. William C. Westmoreland. Accompanying Johnson will je Secretary of State Dean Rusk, McNamara, Secretary of Agriculture Orville L. Freeman and Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare John W. Gardner. Johnson said he would remain in Hawaii until Tuesday night, returning here sometime Wednesday. Huge Drive Seeking fo Crush Cong SAIGON OJPIl-The U. S. Army announced today it had thrown “substantial rein forcements” into battle In Viet Nam in an effort to crush large Viet Cong elements in a division-sized hammer and anvil action by the 1st Cavalry Division and U. S. Marines. The pincer operation in the coastal area 300 miles northeast of Saigon was the biggest American operation of the war. It was aided by 155-milli-metcr artillery pieces flown into action by helicopter for the first time in military history. The Army announced expansion of its ground war against the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese regular army units as part of a triple coastal offensive that has killed at least 1.266 Communists since it first began early last week. ★ ★ ★ The number of Communists estimated wounded and Viet Cong suspects captured added hundreds to the number of Reds put out of action. PUSHING NORTH The U. S. 1st Cavalry Division which thus far has killed 711 Viet Cong, first in “Operation Masher" and now in “Operation White Wing," was pushing north from the Bong Son area along north-south Highway 1. Some 5,0M Marines were driving south toward the cavalrymen in hopes of closing a trap. The Marines’ “Operation Double Eagle" has killed a total of 116 Viet Cong including 90 by naval and air bombardment in support of the Marines. ★ * ★ Farther south and not directly involved in today’s pincer action, the 101st Airborne was conducUng “Operation Van Buren’* which has netted 439 Viet Cong killed. ★ # * • The 101st killed 25 yesterday in a bitter two-hour fire fight. ’ Exact size of the big operation was not known. The Army called it a “multibrigade’’ operation, also involving South Koaean and Vietnamese troops. In Today's Press PCH Rebounds Central, Waterford cagers win — PAGE C-1. Senate Seat State forces aligning for cominig election -r PAGE A4. Famine Aid LBJ reassures India.on : forthcoming assistance — PA'GEA-5. I Bridge B-* i Astrology ........ B-S i Church news . B-S—B-ll ; Crossword Puzzle .. C-11. i Comics ............ Br5 I Editorials ........ A-4 Home Section B-1—B-4 ' MarkeU C-5 f Obituaries ’ C4 I Sports C-l-^-S i ’Hieaters C4 I TV^ Radio Programs C-11 I Women’s Page A4 AIRLINER WRECKAGE-Tlie fuselage of a Japanese airliner i? recovered from the waters of Tokyo Bay yesterday after crashing with 133 persons aboard. The disaster appears to ^ the world’s worst involving a single plane. Nearly IW bodies remain to be claimed from the waters. (See stoiy. Page A-2). Johnson’s inclusion of his welfare and agriculture secretaries among the conferees assured that civilian as well as military problems of Viet Num would be considered. It indicated* the United States Js ready to expand its over-all aid program to help the Vietnamese farmer as well as the military. Some Congress members have been calling the rice paddy worker^he forgotten men of the war. \ * * \* Johnson made it clear, however, that the meetings are not going to be the prelude any! major shift in military policy j such as some of his critics have! been demanding. i NOT ANTICIPATED ‘That is not anticipated at all,’’ he said. “I wouldn’t anticipate. . . making any changes! one way or the other.’’ But he! added: “I wouldn’t say that we wouldn’t learn some things from the meeting that would cause us to either improve the situation or strengthen it.” The fact that Johnson is being accompanied by Freeman and Gardner — as well as Rusk and McNamara — drew applause from Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfie.J of Montana. Mansfield, principal author of the grim report on the war which touched off congressional debate on Viet Nam, said Johnson was taking the inifiative in ‘doing all we can in the fields of health, education and agriculture for the people of South Viet Nam.’’ * ★ ★ Sen. Allen J. Ellender, D*La., chairman of the Senate Agriculture Committee, said be wishes the President good luck but he doubts “he will be able to accomplish very much with the South Vietnamese leaders.' Quakes Hit Greece; Hundreds Homeless ATHENS, Greece (AP) — A serjes of earthquakes rocked central Greece before dawn today, killing at least 1, Injuring 50 and leaving hundreds homeless. The Greek government declared a state of emergency in the area and sent army rescue teams and medical supplies, The tremor’s epicenter was near Kardhitsa, about 150 miles northwest of Athens. The towns of Fouma, Ales-tia and Krenti were totally destroyed and II other lettle-ments left M per cent uninhabitable, reports said. A 30-year-old mother of s 1 x children died when she was DETROIT (APi-City health ^er officials said Friday a second farmhouse, case of diphtheria has been discovered in the neighborhood where a 4-year-old boy died of the highly contagjpus disease. Find 2nd. Case of Diphtheria Detroit Youngster Lived Near Dead Boy Social Welfare Minister Michael Galinos left for the area by helicopter and ordered all available tents sent to shelter Dr. Paul Salchow, epidemiologist with the Detroit Health Department, said, “We weren’t stirprised to find another case. We would be very disturbed to find more, but again we would not be surprised. “I wouldn’t call this an ep* demic yet, but -we’re taking every precaution.” David Jaime, 6,^on of Mr. and Mrs. Fernando Jaime, showed a positive reaction to the test. Salchow said. ★ ♦ ♦ He attended Preston Elementary School. ATTENDED SCHOOL Brothers and sisters of Lonnie Hill, 4, 9on of Mr. and Mrs. Bozy Hill, also attended the ichool. Lonnie died Monday of diphtheria. The Hills and the Jaimes live a block apart. Young Jaime and five of his brothers and sisters were hospitalized, David for treatment and the others for observation. Tests have been conducted on almost 400 children attending the school, but no other cases have shown up. HOMES ABANDONED Most residents abandoned their homes at the first tremor, shortly after midnight. As they scurried out in- the dim light a more severe shock followed seconds later, knocking down many buildings. Some victims were caught in their sleep. Reports rei^ching Athens said many of the homeless took refuge in schools' and churches, the injured were evacuated to the nearest towns. * * e National police continued to search debris for more injured. UST TOWNS HIT The Athens Seismological In-stiute said the tremor rolled through the big towns of Trikka-la, Larissa, Kardhitsa and the districts of Magnisia and Ethiot-is. The heaviest ^amage was caused by landlUdes in small villages surrounding the area. Police said the landslides cov; ered scores of homes with of earth and roCk. Cityhood Drive Order Is Lifted Board Now Can Air Farmington Twp. Bid A Circuit Court order was lifted yesterday which had restrained the Oakland County Board of Supervisors from considering the proposed incorporation of Farmington Township as a city. ★ ★ ★ Circuit Judge Clark J. Adams dismissed the 4-day-old order, agreeing with County Corporation Counsel Robert Allen that the action was preiffature. Because of the order, the boundaries committee of the supervisors was unable to review incorporation petitions Tuesday. . > As a result there was no recommendation to the full board on an election for the proposal. it it it Allen said the commitfb will meet again next ’Tuesday to schedule another public hearing, after which it will present its views to the supervisors. FILED SUIT MONDAY The restraining order was granted to Conrad Braseth, 21217 Waldon, Farmington Township, when his attornej', Wendell Brown, filed suit against the board Monday. Braseth contends that the petitions are invalid. The temporary restraining order was needed, he said, since the law states that once the board acts on the petitions tl.3y can not be challenged. AV eiwMax CI^E-UP VIEW-This photo of the moon’s Wface sent back by the Soviet spaceship Lppa 9 was received by the Jodreli Bank radio telescope in England yesterday. Scientists at the observatory termed the pictures “quite sensational.” started today a series of radib readers saw such headlines as messages completing its lunar research program, according to PERSISTENT CRITIC Sen. Wayne Morse, DOre., a persistent critic of Johnson’s course in Asia, commented that it would be better if he went to the United Nations — that is the only place left for the settlement of this war.” it it it Sen. Abraham Ribicoff, D-Conn., former secretary of health, education and welfare, called Johnson’s action “beUted recognition of the fact that “it’s going to take more than bombs win the support of the South Vietnamese people.” LunkEnding Research MOSCOW (AP) - Luna\ 9 a schedule in an official Soviet announcement. ’The announcement did not say how long the broadcast period will last. The unmanned spaceship for the first time brought down instruments softly enough on the lunar surface so they could convey data back to the earth. It landed Thursday night and produced sensational on-tiie-qMt moon photographs. ’ ★ ★ Tass, the official Soviet news agency, said today’s* session “will complete the fulfillment of the set program for lunar researched by the automatic station Luna 9.” It did not clearly state that afterward the spaceship will stop functioning. Luna been siuyounded by secrecy since its launching was announced Monday. Tbe Soviet Union has not released the (ihotos sent back, although these were picked up in England and have been seen by millions. Instead, Soviet newspaper 'M>eam Coming True’ “We’ll Be Seeing Yod, Moon!’ ★ . ★ * Papers also published pictures of two pennants aboard the spacecraft and photos of the moon taken tiirough-telescopes on earth, but gave no indication when the close-V photos received from Luna^ would be released. BEING STUDIED “The information recei^^ is being analyzed by scientists tk^ will soon published,” the Viet Academy of Sciences m-nounced. ’Tbe Soviet military newspaper Red Star disclosed that the spacecraft had landed slightly off target after its 3^ day flight but gave no further details. The British observatory at Jodreli Bank intercepted the Luna 9's photo transmissions, fed through a newspaper’s Wire-photo equipment and converted the dots of light and shade into diarp pictures that were then relayed to much of the world. * it * Sir Bernard Lovell, Jodreli Bank director, said the pictures were “quite sensational. Lovell said it was possible the Adams until such time that Bi turns to-court after )hC board of supervisors malce^ its deci- t the question open Brown re- The hpanng before Adams previqudly had been scheduled but the date was i^oved up at the request of County officials, who wanted prompt answer. Russians deliberately intended to have Jodreli Bank’s sensitive, 250-foot-wide radio antenna pick up the photos. “I doubt if the Russians are getting better pictures,” he added. ★ ★ ★ The huge, saucer-shaped radio telescope monitored three complete pictures in 45 minutes. The fourth was of poor quality. Lovell said the first few photographs “tend to confirm the view that the moon’s surface is hard, sponge-like and of a pumice stone substance. It would be perfectly satisfactory, not only (Continued on Pagy 2, Col. 9) County Draft Call Doubled Next MSnfh Oakland County draft boards will call 250 men for induction in March — double the February call — and some of the March inductees may be mar-, ried men. * ★ ★ In announcing March draft quotas' yestenday. Col. Arthur Holmes, state selective service director, said draft boards may call married men if necessary. Statewide, the March draft call Is for 3,230 men compared to a call for 2,800 inductions this month. Pontiac’s three draft boards will call 137 men in March compared to 62 this month. it * it Board 05 called 34 this month and will call 33 in March. A total of 25 men were summoned this month by Board 67, and 21 are scheduled for March. 83 IN MARCH Board 331 callbd only'three men in February and will call 83 next month. The March call foivthe Farmington draft board, No. 328, is 10 compared to 33 this month. * A ★ The other three county draft boards, all .in Jhe Royal Oak area, called a total of 30 this month and will call lOS in March. BULL SCORES—Mexico’s leading matador, Jaime Bra^o, gets a free ride on the horns of a but! at the premiereof “bloodless” bull fighting in Houston, Tex., yesterday. The crowd at the famed domed stadium numbered Texans See Bullfight: Ole, Y'all HOUSTON (UPD-Bullfighting, bloodless style, got a roaring reception last night from a record 40,321 Texans. The second night of the United States' premiere of bullfighting was scheduled for tonight. lighted by Mexican matador Jamie Bravo’s two plunges between . the horns of his 1,000-poun’d bull. The crowd screamed “Bravo.” All the while the electronic scoreboard Promoters hoped for a capacity ^ the all-weather stadium ev 48,000-pers8n crowd. Ported “oles” ffbm the crowd. Matador Paco Cambio’s The opening show was high- mastery was recognizable to all present. He used skillful capework to drain the energies from his bull, which leaped the fh-st retahibig fence and sent cameramen and ring attendants scatter-Nl- The promoters of the fights (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) Mercury lo Reach 30s in Area Sunday A warmer tomorrow with the I mercury pushing toward a high of 34 is tbe weatherman’s forecast for the Pontiac area. Lows will slide to 8 to 16 tonight. Skies will continue partly overcast Monday with temper- Morning wmds variable at 4 to 12 m i I e 8 per hour will di-linish slightly tonight. AAA Today’s low reading m downtown Pontiac prior to 6 a.m. was 14. By 2 p.m. the mercury had climb^ to 26. A—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. S4TURDAY, FEBRUARY i, 1966 Belgian Premier Quits in Face of Strike NEW YORK (UPI) - James Av Pike Jr., the oldest son California’s controversial Epis^ copal bishop, aimed a hunting! rifle at his mouth yesterday and shot himself to death in a drab,! $5-a-day hotel room. Police said the 22-year-old | youth fired two shots from the' 30-30 Savage rifle. i The first missed. The second ripped away the right side ] of his face and head. AP PhotoMx HOTEL BLAZEl—Two firemen carry hose up a ladder while fighting a multiple-alarm fire that swept through the four-st(»7 Montcalm Hotel in downtown Debnit early this morning. Two persons were killed and five injured. It was believed that the death toll was kept down because the fire station is next door. In San Francisco, a spokesman for Bishop James Albert Pike quoted the youth’s father: saying “I just don’t understand it. I have no way of ex-! plaining it. He seemed reasonably happy.” \ Site of Japan Jef Crash Flowers Dot Watery Grave TOKYO (AP) — Flowers worst single plane disaster in bobbed in the icy waters of To-history, kyo harbor today where a Japa-| nese jet airliner crashed with: The All-Nippon Airways 133 persons aboard, three:Boeing 727, with 126 passengers minutes away from a safe land- and 7 crew members aboard, ing. Tile flowers were dropped by relatives who were taken in a small coastal freighter to the site of what appears to be the Texans See Bullfighting slammed into the choppy Tokyo harbor as it banked toward its final approach Friday night. 'The plane was crowded with Japanese returning from the annual snow festival on Hokkaido, Japan’s northernmost island. (Continued From Page One) hope to expand \pto a nationwide series of contests. The six bulls emerged unscathed except for a flesh wound suffered by one animal when an overzealous attendant who missed the special saddle-carried harness meant for the banderillas. 100 MISSING Eighteen hours after the crash, nearly 100 bodies were still missing. Cause of the Tokyo crash is still uncertain. Witnesses, eluding fishermen and seamen in the harbor, reported seeing a huge fireball erupt in the sky. It was not known if the fireball occurred before or after impact. BULLS SOLD The bulls were bound today for a slaughterhouse where officials said the animals would bring about 18 cents a pound on the wholesale meat market. Rescue workers, including U.S. military men and fishermen, worked through the night under searchlights and parachute flares. Some bodies were’ found floating at the crash site and a few more were found strapped to their seats in a tion of the fuselage. Eldest Son of Bishop Kills Self Doctors Voice Boycott Threat King's Decision Key to Plans for Protest BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) -King Baudouin deliberated today wheUier to accept the resignation of Premier Pierre Har-mel’s governnieht in the face of a threatenied nationwide doctors’ strike. Ill-million building bond issue has been officially placed on a special April 4 schools ballot. The board of education has approved the bond pri^sition prepared by bonding attorneys at Miller, Canfield, Paddock and Stone of Detroit. School trustees approved the size of the request Jan. 26 but indicated it might 'Be altered slightly before the final draft of the ballot. “This was a mixed up kid,” said a detective who read aj long, rambling note left by the| youth. SATISFIED’ s. Bishop Pike said he was "satisfied” the victim was his son. But the Very Rev. John Butler, a friend of ^e family and dean of New York’s Cath^ral of St. John the Divipe, was to make the formal identification today. Police said the youth’s note “was more like a note book. It rambled on and-on.” It was found in a waste basket in the room. The note contained observations on life and suicide. On one page, there were six drawings. They showed a man, a bird flying toward the man, the bird landing on the man’^ shoulder, the bird sitting on his shoulder, the man holding a gun as the bird took flight, and the bird falling as if shot. LIST OF NAMES The note ended with the words “goodbye, goodbye,” and a long list of men’s and women’s first names. Young Pike was a student at Cambridge and was transferring to San Francisco State College. He was to hafe registered there today. NOW A NOVITIATE-Ferdinand Waldo Demara, at one time called the ‘Great Imposter’ and about whom a book was written and a movie made, is now a novitiate at an interfaith monastery at Wien, Mo. WIEN, Mo. nand Waldo named “The Great Imposter” F,pther Starmann sqid De- for successfully Impersonating a.mara presented letters showing surgeon, a college professor and | he was ordained by the Ameri- Metro Transit Unit Proposed M/ssour/ Monastery Home for 'Imposter' (AP) — Ferdi-1 accepted on the condition there Demara, nick-i would be no publicity.” The government offered its resignation Friday after nouncing it couldn’t solve the dispute between the doctors and the state-run health insurance system. Only hours previously, bloody the government settled a coal miners’ strike whjch lasted a week and left two dead. The doctors announced they would cancel the strike, scheduled to start Sunday, if the king accepted the resignation and negotiations were resumed. Baudouin was expect^ to consult party leaders and chairmen of both houses of Parliament before making up his mind. If he accepts the resignation of the Socialist and Catholic coalition government, a political deadlock could result which would lead to elections within 40 days. STRIKE CERTAIN If he decides to reject it, the the communUy. doctors are almost certain to go w 1 Birmingham Area News $11-Million Bond Issue for Schools Is on Ballot BLOOMFIELD HILLS - Anfthe cost, according to City Clerk Robert J. Staler. BIRMINGHAM - The Ro-maine Galerie, 250 Martin, will feature the paintings of Douglas Hilson at the riiow’s opening to-fiiorrow between 3 and 6 p.m. A Cranbrook Academy of Art ^aduate, Hiison is represented in the permanent collection of the Flint Art Institute as well as in many ix-ivale collections. Now definitely established at 111 million, the proposed bond issue would carry, a debt retirement schedule spread over 2S years. The Birmingham - Bloomfield Coin Club will present its second annual cojn show tomorrow, 10 a.m. - 6 p.m. at the Community House, 380 S. Bates. It will not increase district property taxes more than 50 cents per 11,000 of equalized valuation, board members have assured constituents. llie George D. Hatie coin and currency collection will be on exhibit a^ well as the exhibits. of the club members. FINANCING ’The building program, designed to carry the district through 1970, will be financed through the state school loan fund. While approving the official proposition Thursday night, they also discussed methods Of informing the public about, the impending election. Daniel C. DeGraff Jr., PTO Council president, is to head a citizens committee which will arrange for board of education members and school administrators to speak to groups in on strike. a civil engineer, is living as a postulant in an interfaith monastery. “I expect to stay here the rest of my life,” said Demara, Friday when he was interviewed in the quarters of the Brotherhood of Christian Unity. "I have come here to Wien to dedicate my life to Christian unity, ..to work and prayer,” he| said. “This is the only interfaith community in the world.” Demara, subject of a book and movie titled, “the Great Imposter,” picked a desolate place to hide from the publicity he says follows him whenever | he is uncovered. Wien, with a population of 35, is away from major highways in a farming area' of northern Missouri. 'The membershio of the brotherhood stands at five. can Evangelical Church, headquartered in Chicago. By Demara’s own account, he transferred to another order, wpt AWOL from the Army and Navy, and became a Trappist monk. He says he later taught psychology at colleges in Erie, Pa., and Lacy, Wash. The FBI arrested him in Washington and he served m years as a desert- The country’s 10,000 doctors and dentists struck for 18 ^ays years ago to protest changes in the health insurance program calling for free treatment of widows, orphans, disabled and retired persons. er. Bad Luck: Big Truck Gets Stuck The building program proposal is aimed at keeping pace with an enrollment boom in the district. This time they are demanding an increase in fees under the health insurance scheme. N( tiations broke down earlier month after the government offered a 5 per cent increase and the doctors demanded 25 per cent. They also object free treatment of patients at Socialist-run clinics. The government reimburses the doctors for fees and drugs that patients cannot pay. Most jof Belgium’s 9.6 million people STUDENT POPULATION Projectionvindicate the number of students in the district will jump from the current 7,-617 to 12,(XI0 in the next five years. Highlighting the proposal are plans for five new elementary schools, to be bnilt over the next five years at an estimated cost of 15,818,786. Funds also would be provided for completion of buildings authorized in a |7.6-miUion bond issue approved in 1964. Additional money needed for these projects includes 11,405,050 No Moon Shots for Red Public (Continued From Page One) for the landing of men, but for heavy vehicles.” The scientist said (hat the dust on the moon’s surface seemed to be < niy a few inches thick in the area photographed. In Tucson, Arlz., Dr. Gerard Kuiper, chief U.S. experimenter on moon shots, said it was good to hear that the dust was not deep. We don’t have to worry about this any more,*’ he said, added thht the jagged lavalike surface was nothing like earth. “No one is going to walk very far on this,” he said. NOT TYPICAL Another U.S. scientist said the photos of that part of the moon were not typical of areas photographed by America’s Ranger moon shots. br. Eugene Shoemaker, a Ranger experimenter from the U.S. Geological Survey, said the photos show “substantially more blocky protuberances than any we saw with Rang- benefit from the national health for the district’s second h i _ insurance plans which will be school, 1231,000 for West Hills "I am surprised by the angularity of the blocks and of their abundance,” he added. “If they A truck driver »lio took his mllUon it, the red thlf yeur. Junior Hi|,h Sct»ol «;d ff.3110 County One of Six on Which Bill Focuses The Weather Full U. S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Variable cloudiness with a few scattered snow flurries ending this morning becoming iqostly fair by early afternoon. Highs 20 to 28. Partly cloudy tonight lows 8 to 16. Locally lower in the interior. Variable cloudiness and slightly warmer Sunday, high 26 to 34. Winds variable 4 to 12 miles today. Monday’s outlook; considerable cloudiness and warmer. Loweit ttfnpcritur* preceding I e At I e.m.: Wind Velocity 4 Direction: Varleble Sun >et> Seturdey at S;S3 p.m. Sun rliai Sunday at 7:4! a.m. Moon lati Sunday at 1:43 a.m. AAoon rliaa Saturday at 5:N p.m DotMitawn Tamparaturaa Lowest ten Mean temp Weather: LANSING (AP) - Rep. ”’il-lliant Fitzgerald, D-Detroit, has introduced a bill to create a transportation authority to serve the Detroit metropolitan drea. Fitzgerald said the Detroit Street Railway “would, of course, be the nucleus for the new authority, but it would involve other existing systems, too.*’ Fitzgerald is a former legal investigator and commission secretary for Detroit DSR. ! The proposed authority would operate a public transportation ! system centered in Wayne County and extending \into Oakland, Macomb, Washtenaw, Monroe and St. Clair counties. This Oats In M Yanrs Friday's Tamparalurp Chart 11 2 1 Fort Worth 57 34 3 Jacksonvilla 50 » -I Kansas City 31 II -1 Los Angalai M 40 5 Miami Baach *1 41 1 Mllwaukaa It 3 2 Now Orlaans 52 23 Friday In Famine Lowest lemparatura Bismarck 9 Chicago Waathar: Cloudy, f Cincinnati " I Denver Detroit 23 t Salt Laka C. 43 ,14 34 33 $. Francisco 51 53 23 13 S. S. Marla 34 .3 - ■ ------ 51 40 37 32 Washington NO INTENTION ‘There is no intention of driving existing companies out of business by competing with them,” Fitzgerald said. “The authority would acquire them by one meafls or another.” The bill would set up a five member commission appointed by the governor to run the authority. have been misquoted and lid8| SOUTHGATE (AP) - James on bond and awaiting Circuit about. I would like not to have|C. Wurm, 58, of Southgate, was j Court trial on a charge he broke any story at all. When I came j killed in an automobile collision! into a West Bloomfield Town-here, I gave Father Starmann at a U.S. 25 intersection in this|ship house last summer and my full l^ackground and I was Detroit suburb Friday night, j raped a housewife. The authority could operate buses, monorail systems and any other form of transporation that might prove suitable, Fitzgerald said. He said ‘ the main income would come from fares, but the authority could accept grants, loans or contributions from the federal government ajid other public or private agencies. NA'nONAL WEATHER - Generally fair weather is forecast for- tonight east of the Plains states except for light snow and flurries iA northern New England. Shbwers are predicted from northern California nprthward and snow and flurries in the northern and central Rockies. Cold temperatures are confined to the northeast and northwest while the Mississippi Valley and plains show a slow rising trend. London Paper Reports Summit Moves on Viet LONDON (UPI) - The London Evening News reported today from Geneva that moves are under way there tor a Viet Nam summit meeting bi Switzerland which President Johnson would be expected to attend. It said the moves were being carried out in diplomatic circles and had Vatican sup- BROTHERHOOD Father Joseph Starmann, Roman Catholic priest, founded the brotherhood in 1964. ‘People have the idea that, I went through life thumbing my nose at officialdom,” said Demara, known now as. Brother Frederick. “That’s nof so. My life really has been a series bf tragedies.” David McBrayer, a photographer for the Daily News-Bulletin in nearby Brookfield, spotted him at a Parent-Teacher Association meeting- this week on one of the few forays to the outside world Demara has made since he came here last Thanka-giving. ■GOOD REASON* ) I have eye off the road when another motorist swerved in front of him came to an abrupt stop yesterday when the top pf his truck failed to clear an overpass on Orchard Lake Ave. Dennis S. Romanowski, 20, of Detroit, told Pontiac police he was watching a woman driver who .had “cut in front of him” when the accident occurred. The front part of the van, owned by Grinnell Sash & Door Co., ripped against the bottom of the Grand Trunk and Western Railroad viaduct near W. Wide Track. Romanowski was treated for injuries at Pontiac General Hospital and released. The truck was towed away. for a bus maintenance facility. Man Is Bound Over Other items in the building , . I A. I I package ae a swimming pool in I on bir ^ west mus junior III M3^auil Ull UIM |j^.^ jroom addition to the second high A 25 * year - old Commerce school, $1,194,950; four school Township man has been bound sites, $660,000; and athletic and over to Circuit Court for ar-recreational facilities at both' raignment Feb. 16 on a charge high schools and West H i 11 s of 11,000 pictures.^ of assault with intent to com-Junior High School, $217,640. The first U.S. attempt at a mitrape. , ----------- j soft landing is expected in May, indeed.” Shoemaker said Luna 9 may have'landed inside or just outside the rim of a ers- America’s Ranger 9 spacecraft transmitted 5,815 photos of the moon just before it crashed in a crater last March. Two previous Ranger flights sent a total reason to qvoW Southgate Man Killed news people,” Demara said. “I, ® Bloom^eld Hills residents can Ronald G. Bowers of 2905 now obtain their new driver’s Welch was ordered held by Commerce Township Justice John C. Weick in lieu of $10,000 bond. licenses, Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. • 4 p.m., at the Municipal Building, 45 E. Long Lake Road. Bowers was arrested by §tate Police Jan. 22 and charged with assaulting a 13-year-old girl in' her Union Lake home. The new licenses now feature a color picture of the applicant and the city has rented a camera enabling cesi- and probably will require several tries. The U.S. program lacks much Information about the failure of the four unsuccessful Soviet efforts that preceded the Luna 9 triumph. Compensation Hearing „ ,1 dtnts to get the licenses iocal- At the time. Bowers was free! * The rental fees for the camera are $1,080 yearly,-but the commission, feels the service rendered to residents is worth LANSING (AP) - Legislators plan to open a hearing Monday on wi. Iher new, higher workmen’s compensation benefits should be extended to workers injured before the nfew rates went into effect last September. Bulldog, Bulldog, Bowsie Wowsie Yale Triumphs Tensie to Threesie (EDITOR'S NOTE: Yale supplied the punch and the lowl at the Ivy League jacks classic yesterday and a bulldog rolled back a pussycat. UPI jacks editor James V. Healion chal-"tenged the uhnner but John RothchldofYale declv -t) 19, his female counterpart on Linda was named managing the Harvard (irimson, with ‘ editor of the Crimson. John By JAMES V. HEALION UPI Jacks Editor NEW HAVEN, Conn.-The pride of St. Petersburg, Fla., remains the jacks champion of the Ivy league today even though his female opponent contends his suave Yale aides plied hpr with champagne. . She took it sitting down. As a fact of matter, that’s they way they played the game—sitting down. The game was played in the board room of the Yale Daily News which was crowdeij^ with Yale- men, of course, one of whom said khortly after the match started: “Okay John baby. Wrap it up.” A FOUL PLOT John responded with vigor. He was up to “tensles” at the intermission while Linda, a claimed this was a foul plot to undermine American nun-hood and challenged her to the jacks game. * He said this would be a test of ber femininity. With the Yale victory cheer, “Bulldogs, Bulldogs, Bow, Wow, Wow,” ringing in his ears, he declined a chal: lenge to another match advanced by UPI’s jacks editor. in two trays.. One contained a silver bowl full of ice cubes, a bottle of champagne and a soft drink! John was accompanied to the match by four tuxedo clad aides. Linda wore On the tray were poised the jacks and two red balls which rested on a field of green felt. With the aplomb of the late Adolphe Menjou, one of Roth-child’s aides poured t^e buhbly. Both contestants sipped it while sitting in high-backed leather chairs. MERE TECHNICALITY The aide also poured the soft drink for the referee who was arched on a stool nearby. She was a lovely little really know much about the game, a mere technicality. Rothchild removed his gray suede gloves, flicking lint from his, tuxedo. Then the referee blew the whistle, and John and Linda sat on the floor to have a go at it Like Minnesota^ Fats, the pool hustler, John occasionally called for talc to dry his moist palms. ^ ★ ★ ★ \ Linda lost in the sec^ round. BIT OF STRATEGY At the end of the ihatch, she congratulated her oppon- John Rothchild, 20, nunaging editor of the Yale Daily News, bested Linda McVeigh, charming lass from Ana- simple blue-green shift and giri of eight, Polly Prelinger, ent but asked later about her helm, Calif., was working on what her adviaer described the daughter of a Yale pey- 1 o s $, she chuckled, “You threesies” and “fivesies.” «»“Mary Jane” flats. chologist. notice they were plying me The whole bit started when Rothchlld’s aides trundled ^oUy conceded she did not with champagne.” ■u A THE PONTIAC PRESfe, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1966 , 1 ■ A—a\ THE NEWEST AT CONNOLLY’S IN DIAMOND RINOS CONTKSSA • • • FROM $1BO Delicately detailed and very graceful, Contes$a establishes a exquisite new lc»k in diamond rings. This ring introduces a exciting new design direction . craftsmanship. Registered Jewelers American renaissance of JEWELERS DOWNTOWN PONTIAC IS West Huron - FE 2-0294 Williams Silent on Bid for Senate Seat Simms Bros.~98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac By ENDRE MARTON Wf^HINGTON (Al*) G. Menrien Williams, the onetime “boy wonder” of Michigan politics, is maintaining a discreet silence in the face of speculation he plans to resign as assistant secretary of state for African affairs to run for the U.S. Senate. w ★ w Anything hQ could say, Williams said in an interview today, might appear as an attempt to force the hand of Democratic Sen. Patrick V. McNamara, 72, who has declined to say if he will seek a third term this year. Hoffa Is Ready to Throw Support to Detroit Mayor DETROIT (AP) — James R. ,Hoffa said Friday his Teamsters Union would “certainly go all-out” in support of Detrdt Mayor Jerome Cavanagh if he runs against former Gov. G. Mennen Williams for the Democratic nomination to the U.S. Senate. January moans file transfor time in many officot. Trans-for to inactivo filos moans saving of valuablo spaco, fastor filing. TRANSiFER FILES Rrlirve your active files with . these iiiexttensive all-nber, metal reinforced fiber, or all-metal transfer files. As low as $4.10. STORAGE BOXES Ivowest cost method for ]>rotecting inactive records. .Strong fiber board with laities and fasteners. As low as $I.M. FILE FOLDERS Start your new active file with fresh folders. Transfer old papers in their folder for easier reference, less damage and loss. lOU folders as low as $2.18. Your FUiHgSupplyHeaiiqunrlrr$! OFFICE SUPPLIES - A4AIN FLOOR General Printin| ft Office Supply Phone 335-9261 Free Forking With Validated Ticket Hoffa told a news conference that during Williams’ third term as governor of Michigan he reneged-on a series of promises. He declined to give details. * * * Williams now is assistant secretary of state for African affairs. He has said he will seriously consider running for the Senate if Patrick V. McNamara decides not to run again this year. Cavanagh has said he looking into the possibility of running no matter whether McNamara seeks reelection. ‘1 have respect for the senator, I suppdrted him,” said Williams, who served as governor for 12 years before President John F, Kennedy appointed him to the State Department post five years ago. Elected governor at 37, Williams will be 55 this month. Last October, Williams knowledged he would consider a race for the Senate if McNamara decides to retire. Asked about this today, Williams said he would not repeat the statd^ ment. NO CLEAR PATH Even if McNamara retires, Williams would not necessarily have a clear path to the Democratic nomination for senator. Detroit’s 38-year-old Mayor Jerome P. Cavanagh, fresh from a resounding reelection triumph last November, said Jan. 7 he was giving “most serious consideration” to a race for the Senate. MbN^mara said Friday he thought he would make a decision by April 1 but declined to say what the dwision would be. ★ ★ ★ “I have no idea,” he said, 'the timing is not too impw-tant. There is no reason to be tied down on it.” The filing deadline for Michigan’s Aug. 2 primary is June 14. ■nnRD TERM Although Gov. George Romney has been mentioned as possible Republican candidate for the Senate, most Republican congressmen here expect him to seek a third term as governor. The length of the gubernatorial term is being increased ■ from two to four yearSk Sources close to Williams say that the possible candidacy of Cavanagh has confused the political picture in Michigan. How- ever, the same sources claimed that the former governor would dijoy support from many of the state’s to^ leaders .if he decides to make the race. ★ ★ ★ Despite WiUiams’ silence, he frequently retqrns to Michigan to make speeches, mainly to the state’s minority groins. The speeches, however, deal almost exclusively with affairs of Africa, his main concern for the last five years. “I always enjoyed this job, it was a tremendous challenge and I was fortunate to serve my country in this job when Africa was opening up,” Williams said. If Williams resigns, the man most prominently mentioned as successor is Ambassador Joseph Palmer, director general of the Foreign Service and one of thb department’s top African experts. GOP Hopeful Claims Lead Central Committee to Eye Candidates IN TODAYM CHILDREN OUTGROWN SKATES, SLEDS? SELL IT WITH A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD., EASY TO USE. JUST PHONE 332-8181. TAKE IT TO BLOCK! Thera', no myttery . . ..just fa.t, accurate, guaranteed serv-that co.t. you very Jittle and can lave you a lot of work, worry and even moneyl See BLOCK todayl : GUARANTEE = Amorka's Largatt Tax Sarvice with Over 1000 Offkaa’ 20 E. HURON PONTIAC 4410 DIXIE HWY. DRAYTON PUINS Weekday.: 9 o.m. to 9 p.m.-Sot. and Sun. 9 to 5. ft 4-9235 ^MHIiNO APPOINTMENT NECESSARYh ST. CLAIR (AP)—Backers of Sen. Q^uy VanderJagt of Cadillac were claiming what amount-to the lead in the race for the Republican nomination for U.S. Senate today. Meanwhile, backers of Gov. William Millikin were trying to keep him out of the Senate race. A * ■ ★ The scramble for the GOP nomination for U.S. Senate was the main issue as the Republican State Central Committee gathered for a midwinter meeting. More than 250 delegates were expected. ' Other candidates continued campaigning for the party’s nod to run for the seat of Sen. Patrick V. McNamara, D-Mich. MSC PROP One of the most vigorous campaigns was carried on . by Prof. Leroy Augenstein, cochairman of the Michigan State University biophysics program. U. S. Rep. Robert Griffin, regarded by many as the strongest candidate, was not expected to arrive until today. ★ A A VanderJagt claimed the backing of the., majority of county and district chairmen from the three county metropolitan Detroit area. He met with them late Friday night and said "They issued a statement saying they were extremely impressed with me and that they preferred me to any other can-1 didate.” j VanderJagt, a former student for the Presbyterian ministry, a winner of a Hearts national speaking contest and a former television newsman, rated his chances as excellent ^ause of the combination of outstate support and metropolitan Detroit area endorsement. Several Milliken backers, meanwhile, claimed Gov. George Romney would try to impose Miiliken as a Senatorial candidate on the State Central Committee. LOT INCLUDED Formica Kitchen, Built-in Applien^ Heat, Heavy Duty Iniulation. 90 ft Water Front KAMPSEN REALTY - FE 4-0921 1*7B to Fronton Exit, turn South on Qrango Noll Rd. to Riviora Shoro Drivo to 1B290 Catolina Drivo. KAMPSEN sign. ofen 'ifi in TONITE III IUp.M. Montday Hours: 9 A.M^ to*' 10 P.M. ‘ Shop at Simma Today or Monday for theta epecialt. We reaerve the right to limit quantities. All prices subject to stock on hand. Pay More? What for? Simms is Right Here In Pontiac! 7-lnch Combination Paint Pan and Roller Simms Price All. metal pan and 7-inch roller complete and ready for any interior painting. Limit 1. Hardware—2nd Floor 'Anchor Hocking' Teflon I Ovenproof Baking Dishes Reg. $1.49 I Your choice of loaf pan or round ond oval casserole for cakes or one-dish dinners. Teflon I coated for no-stick, no-scour cleaning. Housewares—2nd Floor 16 Ox. ^Roux' Fanci-Full Hair Rinse $2.25 Value 99° Instant make-up for your hair. 12 colors to choose from. Cosmetics—Main Floor 2 in Package—Woolly Paint Roller Cover Simms Price Woolly replacements for ' paint rollers. They come. I a package. Be ready for spring painting. Limit 2 pkgs. Hordwaro-2nd Floor 'West Bond'Aluminum 8” Teflon Skillet Reg. $3.29 8-inch aluminum soulq pan with T<(lon coating. Get a nylon spatula free. Skillet hqs bokelite handle and hanging ring. Housewares-2nd Floor Excedrin’ Tablets $2.59 valut, boNis C Q if 225 extra ■ 99 Irengih pain reltsv- I labitti. ■ Floor Drugs-M TrtsKs’ Hair Tonic 96° .49 volue King #. Keeps hoir 3t all day with-t grea» - pre-Its dryneu. Drugs-Mo In Floor Discounts All Dver the Store-Simms, 98 N. Saginaw Remington 'Loktronic IV' |'Casco’ Heat and Massaga Cordless Electric Razor iThermal Massager. $38.95 Valued ^39.95Fafue ^ Cordleti elsctric ^cleon ihavei with 0 cord, fan be •charged ony-^where in the world I) AC, 348 cutting edges, .'756 whiil^er guiding slots. Sundries —Moin Floor 1 0 Transistor 'Rhapsody' ck#t Radio Powerful 10 Ironsis-tor radio gats oil the local area stations. Ready 16 ploy. Complete outfit, , Radios —Main Floor Amoricon Mode S'/ixIlVa” Hylon Rug Cut Pila-Foam Backing 6 attractive solid colorr to choose from in these cut nylon pile rugs with soft foam both. ' .Basement Around - the • World 3- $34.95 Band AM-ShertWave- Fn/ue Marina Band ^ || || 8-Transistor Radio ■ ^ Amarican Mada-Washabla ‘Btacon* Blankets Irrs. of $2.98 • Value Delicate rose prints on white . background. Choose Ra^on acrylic blend blanket. 98 North Saginaw Stroot SIMMSA. Saving You Mere Since 1114 THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 West Huron Street SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 5. 1966 HAROLD A. FITZOIRALD Pontiac, Michigan AdTtrUiint Director O. itUMmUX JO»AM UktI AdTtrttalnii Luna’s Lunar Landing a Soft Eclips,e of U.S. In„, the space leapfrog between Russ^ and the United States, the Reds, with their Luna 9 soft landing on the moon Thursday night, are currently a leap ahead. The Communists got a flying start in the interstellar race when they put Sputnik I into orbit in late 1957. The U. S. Gemini series had gradually overtaken the Soviets until the feats of Nos. 6 and 7 last December had given us the undisputed lead in all phases of cosmic performance. ★ ★ ★ Although the Reds jubilantly proclaim that Luna 9 has moved them significantly ahead in the run for the moon, U. S. Space authorities do not see it that way. They point out that along with our own “Surveyor” soft landing on the moon scheduled for May, we have perfected manned moon-landing technoi-ogy well beyond that of our rivals. In any event, we congratulate the Russians on their momentous accomplishment which they may justifiably hail with pride. Since then, g%s has chalked up record after new record. In 1965 alone, it added nearly 900,000 customers, bringing the total to an average 37.4 million of whom 34.3 million are residential. Gaa consumption j^ouched new peaks. And the gas utiiity and •pipeline companies spent the immense sum of $1.9 billion in 1965 for plant improvement ahd expansion of services. And another fact deserves mention. There are numbers of municipal gas utilities in the U.S., but they ptovide service for only 7 per cent of gas customers. Putting it another way, since 1958 a total of 2,215 communities have been added to gas utility lines. Of these 1,915 were introduced to service by investor-owned, tax-paying companies as against 300 by municipal systems. ★ ★ ★>. Thankfully, this is one area of public service that has been relatively free of the voracious proliferation of big government with its tax-eating bureaucratic apparatus. ‘Wealth' Plan Is a Blockbuster Hedda Hopper Buster Keaton The week saw the passing of two luminaries of the entertainment world. Hedda Hopper, for three decades a chronicler of Hollywood movie life, and Buster Keaton, deadpan comedian of the silent-film era, bowed to the fate that awaits all mankind. Miss Hopper’s jpmmalistic career was bom as her acting career, which embraced many Bro£idway hits and. movie triumphs, began to fade. Her . gossip column, syndicated by newspapers across the Country, was noted for the frank treatment of movie moguls and stars alike. Also noted was the columnist’s penchant for bizarre hats. ★ ★ ★ Keaton, after a professional life of vicissitude that saw him bankrupt in 1934, staged a remarkable comeback during the last 10 years. He caught on with television comedy roles and made large sums by appearing in TV commercials. Although born in Kansas, he had long had roots in Michigan, having for many years made Muskegon his summer home. A multitude ojT readers and viewers will mourn the loss of the two consummate artists yho provided so much entertainment and interest for their followers. 150 Birthday Candles Lit by Gas Industry This year the American gas industry 'Celebrates its 150th anniversary. And it will be one nationwide birthday party deserving of wide participation and interest. For many years after its commercial beginnings in 1816, gas meant but one thing: illumination. The Oasll]g;ht Era is a bright part of our history. Then came the electric light and some thought this doomed gas. But the gas industry began searching for, and finding, new uses for Its product in such fields as heating, cooling and incinerating. The big breakthrough came in the 1920s. Prior to that time, most markets used manufactured gas. There was plenty of natural gas, a superior fuel, but it was located far from the centers of population. The development of welded steel pipe paved the way for, the long-distance pipelines that now bring natnral gas to Just about every nook and cranny of the country. U- . :■ ■■ A By NEIL GILBRIDE WASHINGTON {JO - President Johnson gingerly plumped on the doorstep of Congress a monumental share - the - wealth plan, that outshines even his own “Great Society” vision—and quietly tiptoed away. So vast is the 210-page proposal to reshape the American economy that Johnson reportedly shied like a Texas stallion from linking himself with it at a time he seeks $13 billion to press the war in Viet Nam. “I think the White House was quite alarmed,” said Joseph A. Beime, a member of a little noted presidential commission that dropped the blockbuster report in Johnson’s lap. Just one of some 75 major proposals in the report—a guaranteed minimum annual income for every American family—would cost up to $20 billion a year alone. ★ ★ ★ Beirne, president of the AFL-CIO Communications Workers of America, is one of five members of the 14-member commission which said the nation should put the same urgent priority on a massive social . and economic revolution that it does on fighting Communists in Viet Nam. ‘CAN BE DONE’ The United States can afford both, he said. Beirne, miffed at the way the White House suddenly issued the report without a word of endorsement, said he believed Johnson—or his advisers—feared it would give further ammunition to Republican efforts to cut bhek “Great Society” programs because of the war. Although the lyhite House didn’t send a single copy of the report to key members of Congress — a usual courtesy — early reaction confirmed this fear. ★ ★ ★ “I think the Congress wjll take a close look before they expand any ‘Great Society’ programs,” said Rep. William H. Ayres of Ohio, top Republican on the House Labor Committee which will consider the huge economic proposal. ASIA FIRST ‘‘Frankly, I think we should be spending more time worrying about our boys in Viet Nam,” said Ayres. But Rep. Carl D. Perkins, D-Ky., cautiously endorsed the guaranteed minimum income idea. Not even Perkins, No. 2 Democrat on the Labor Committee, or chairman Adam Clayton Powell, D-N. Y., got a copy of the huge economic report. ^ ★ ★ ★ Nor, in issuing the report of the National Commission on T^pchnology, Automation and Economic Progress, was there any of .the usual White House fanfare accompanying a major document — no picture posing of the President with the commission, no television cameras — and little explanation. “They just handed us this massive report and then asked if we had any questions,” blinked one bemuseid veteran White House reporter. Verbal Orchids to- John M. Crawford of West Bloomfield Township: 92nd birthday. Frank VanConant of Lake Orion; 88th birthday. S. E. Mlnard of 88 Norton; 92nd birthday. Mrs. Lillie Collins of 54 Seneca; 83rd birthday. Willet Hazard o| 2942 Old Orchard; 92nd birthday. e Pascal, one of the great mathematicians and scientists in France during the Seventeenth Century, is remembered as the discoverer of Pascal’s law. This is the principle that liquid in a vessel exerts equal pressure in all directions. Also he was a man of great faith. Although educated by his father in a devout environment he did not do any deep religious thinking until the age of 32. As the result of his sister’s influence and a deep spiritual conversion, he then gave away most of his possessions and spent the reh of his short life (he di^ at 39) in religious writing as well as in scientific pursuits' He believed that only through Christian revelation do we gain perfect knowledge. “’The greatness of wisdom is nothing if not from God,” he wrote. “Reason can go so far and no further, but there are no limits to faith.” Religion in America: Faith Gives Substance to Hopes him if he exists, but we cannot, writ large and amall through-in the same sense, trust him to out the univerac. * Everything that exists, from So much for what faith is not. ^ . j conscious human minds, is per- suasive proof, to some, that be-Dr. Farrer says it is an hind all this there has to be “attitude of mind” which is “a supreme creative will . . . open and responsive to the an infinite and changeless evidence of a creator that is cause.” By LOUIS C^ELS United Press International What is faith? Christian theologians have been trying for 20 centuries to formulate an adequate answer to that question. One of the first attempts was made by the anonymous author of the New Testament’s epistle to the Hebrews. He said that “faith gives substance to our hopes, and makes us certain of realities we do not see.” To Martin Luther, faith was not so much a matter of believing in propositions as of trusting in a person. “Faith.” he said, “is a lively confidence in the goodness of God.” In our own centuiy, the great (NEA) - Everybody'know. If. W lor S f Th°“gh Of Ronald Rea- me.” .bleb i, a, •■^U.autbdnUca’.. ing” as the physical senses of sight, touch and hearing. Washington Notebook: Neighbor Backs Reagan in Hopes He Will Move Drive in Pacific Palisades share Democratic Gov. John King his conservative views, many smashed a long standing Repiib-of them were quite upset at lican tradition when he won Latest to undertake the I*’® California Republican guber- election in New Hampshire.' He Li a I, c a I lu U41UC1 uiac i ii c . . , , classic task of defining faith is candidate the distinguished English theo- d’® oost logian, Austin Farrer, warden repaving of Keble College at Oxford Uni- J®!*; versity. His thoughts on the sub- divided on an ject are contained in a short, share very 'readable book entitled “Saving Belief.” Dr. Farrer takes issue with the view, very widespread today, that faith is primarily an act of will, a sort of dogged determination to believe year is not about to forget that he needs plenty of GOP votes to gain another term this November. Speaking recently in Boston to a wholly Democratic gath- T h e grum-biers argued thaj the cost should 'be ap- gan’s frontage ' is practically f^*P’^^ffcans . . .And things for which we find Uttie double anyone else’s-they felt ® ^or no persuasive evidence. ' he was getting off pretty light. J^mMhbe^ “ "“Faith is neither an attitude when a Reagan neighbor of ’ ' ★ ♦ ' we adopt in looking for hn known liberal persuasion When Republican Senate lead-object of conviction, nor an recently revealed to a friend er Everett EHrksen announced attitude wejwH-k up to bolster that he was planning to spend recently that a new “grass a convicUort already lodged In day. a week working for roots” movement was under our minds, he Mys. Reagan's election, he was way in support of his const!- "F.llb taplie, g«,uip, ppr. •"‘“'•‘J’ ™*y.ndm«t 1. npidlly MiMiop. and permasioo i, i»l «'». IJ* M'y *«y »e cm genuine unless it comes from get him off the street.” wrhT the thing which persuades us. ♦ * ★ lifh hlm ’ * It cannot be got going by stok- of the disarming things wiin mm inguptheifurnacesof the will” about Democratic National Church, generally classified u. nil nnA. <^bairman John Bailey is that aeemed just a hit I *1*0 inadequate has never tried to conceal y attention to them with a large flashing ring, no nfatter how popular the style. Furthermore, the type of jewelry worn changes with the time of day and the activity. When engaging in active sport, jewelry of. any kind is out of place. In the daytime, a gold or silver bracelet, a string of pearls, and earrings, unadorned by large stones are more suitable than the brilliant gems that go well with evening clothes. A pretty pin or clip to set off a dress or suit is lovely at any hour. In shdrt, the choice of jewelry Is limited only by the good taste and the budget of the wearer. RESIGNING . Q: I am faced with the problem of having to write a letter of resignation to a club which I have been a member of the past five years. Will you please tell me to whom the letter should be written and also how to word it? A: A letter of resignation is written to the secretary of the club and reads something like this: “My dear Mrs. Town, It is with great regret that I find it necessary to resign from the club and to ask you therefore to present my resignation at the next meeting of the governors. Very sincerely, Helen Jones.” ★ ★ * The clothes of the bride’s and groom’s parents as well as those of the wedding guests are described in the Emily Post Institute booklet entitled, “Correct Clothes for a Wedding Reception.” To obtain a copy, send 10 cents in coin and a stamped, self-addressed envelope to Emily Post Institute, in care of The Pontiac Press. ★ ★ ★ ’The Emily Post Institute cannot answer personal mail, but all questions of general interest are answered in this column. A D K Sorority Sets Meeting Zeta chapter. Alpha Delta Kappa sorority, has completed plans for the chapter’s area council meeting, Feb. 12, in th« Hotel Statler-Hilton, Detroit. ★ Elizabeth Halsey was cohostess for a recent gathering in the home of Mrs. Eugene Carey on Navajo Road. Proceeds from a surprise auction went toward the scholar-ship fund. Early February Vows Are Pledged by Four Couples From Area LAUINGER- GOTTSCHALK Reception in the Italian-Amer-ican Club followed the nuptial vows of Jacqueline Marie Gott-schaik and Thomas Michael Laulnger, Friday, in St. Michael Catholic Church. Rev. Richard Lauingec officiated at* his brother’s wedding. They are the sons of Mrs. John MRS. T. M. LAVINGER e. i - ' Lauinger of East Fairmount Avehue and the late Mr. Lauinger. The bride, daughter of the Samuel J. Gottschalks of Coqley Lake Road chose a chapel-length sheath gown of. white peau satin appliqued with reembroidered Alencon lac8. JEWELED 'HARA A jeweled tiara held her illusion veil and her bouquet |vas a cascade of carnations and miniature white roses. Mrs. David Ross of Clarkston - attended her sister as bridesmaid- along with Mrs. William Sedarlund, Mrs. Robert Miller and Kathleen Lauinger. Michelle Dearborn was flower girl and Richard Lauinger, ring-bearer. Vicki St. Dennis was maid of honor. ★ ★ ★ With best man, Frederick Lauinger, were ushers, William Gottschalk, Lawrence Traynor, Albert Harris and Ralph Lane. The couple will honeymoon in Miami. EDGE-INMAl^ Off on a New England honeymoon and a visit to Washington, are Timothy J. P. Edge and his bride, the former C. Sue Inman of Ruth Avenue. Brother Robert Cross officiated at the Friday rite in the Waterford Church of Christ, followed by a church reception. Parents of the newlyWeds are the Joseph W. Inmans of Lapeer Road, Orion Township, and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Edge of Livonia. White peau satin fashioned '' MRS. T. J. P. EDGE the bri^s princess-line gown and traiir’appliqued with Alencon lace in floral and leaf motif. CRYSTAL CROWN A triple-tiered crown of crystals held her bouffamt illusion veil and white orchids centered her bouquet of white roses. Mrs. David ’Thompson was honor matron with bridesmaids, Mrs. Samuel Hecker, Mrs. Joseph Birdad of Detroit, and the bride’s ^ister, Mary Inman. The bridegrqom had Gerald Blumquikt for best man. David ’Thompson, Samuel Hecker and' Joseph Birdad wel-q ushers. WUEST-SMITH J 0 i h i n g ski enthusiasts on northern Michigan slopes this week will be Mr. and Mrs. John Nicholas Wuest (Susan Ann Smith) who were wed Friday in St. Paul’s Methodist Church, Rochester. k k. * Reception in the church parlors immediately followed the double - ring, candlelight ceremony 'performed by. Rev. J, Douglas Parker.. Parents of the newlyweds art the Clare M. Smiths of Rochester and the John H. Wuests of Whims Lane, Oakland Township. SISTERS A-TTEND Linda and Merry Smith attended their sister who was gowned in white silk peau de sole with Alencon lace overlay on bodice and sleeves. Her court train wa§ detachable and the ■ illusion veil was elbow-length. MkS. J. N. WUEST Harbert, She carried white roses, ivy / and Stephanotis. V Completing the list of attendants were Michael Bright, maid of honor; Mrs. James Crosslin of Romeo, and Hilda Klein, bridesmaids. ★ ★ a With Donald J. Bishop, best man, were ushers Jim d'osslin, Douglas Darling, East Lansing; Joseph Chayka and E d w a r Ramsey. COOKmEGAND Sharyn Marie Wiegand chose a gown of Chantilly lac^ and tulle over white taffeta, for her marriage to Roger James Cook, Friday, in St. Benedict’s Catholic Church. ★ ★ ★ A bouffant illusion veil and bouquet of pale blue Stephanotis and white orchids completed her ensemble for the evening rite performed by Rev. Joseph Kil- coyne. Parents of the couple are the Robert Wiegands of Gateway Drive and the Harry Cooks of North Perry Street. k k k Attendants Included Kathleen maid of honor, and bridesmaids, Sharron Ferris and Mrs. Maxin Schlanek. Susan * Hortz was flower girl ancLJames Wyllie, carried the rings. ★ ★ ★ On the esquire side, were HaT-ry Cook Jr., best man, with Michael Wiegand and Danny Wagner as ushers. The couple left for a northern honeymoon after a reception in the Coral Reef Room, Airway Lanes. • IfIRS. R. J. COOK HIE VoATlAC i-AiKhS. ^A'i'LiiDAY, FEBKUARV 5. Il966 . A—7 in'County Contest Essay Winners Announced First - place winner in the, Oakland County Lincoln Essay Contest ia Ruth Valdes of 43787 Dequindre, Troy. A senior at Troy High School, Ruth entitled her entry, “For Us the Living.” It supports Lincoln’s s3E.ong belief in democracy, not only for the people of the United States but for ail mankind. Ruth won $1M ia g o v e r n-ment bonds and an ali-ei-pense trip to Lansing to view the legislature in action. Mary Ellen Quinn of 2070 W. Valley, Bloomfield HUls, a student at the Academy of the Sacred Heart, won the $100 second prize. ★ ★ ★ Third prize of $75 was awarded to Darryl Holliday of 3721 Township. He is a student at . West Bloomfield High School. OTHER WINNERS A Hazel Park High School student, Kathleen Seabrook of Hazel Park, was granted the $50 fourth prize and a Rochester High student, Nancy Norton of 371 Charles, Rochester, the $2$ fifth prize. Contest Judges were Circnit Judge Frederick Ziem; Dr. William Boast, En^h department head at the Highland Lake campus of the Oakland County Community College; and Grant Howell of R o y a I Oak. Names of schoools and contestants were removed from all entries before the judg^ took place. ★ ★ ★ All winners will be guests at the annual Lincoln Day dinner Wednesday at the Pontiac Elks Temple. Awards will be |H«sent-ed at this time. Guest speaker of theanvening will be Congressman W. S. Broomfield, R-18th district. YourAuthoiiied Ranault DcaUr In Pontiac RftM MOTOIII BIBLE REBINDING CHRISTIAN LITERATURE SALES 55 Oakland Ava. FE 4-9591 f fif You Don’t Know TARPET I fKnow Your Carpet Dealer Call George GEORGE TUSON Mgr. of Carpet Dept. ELLIOTT’S Furniture Co. Architects Get Citation for OCC Facility Architects for the. Orchard Ridge Campus of Oakland Community College have received a citation for the design of the facility, according to OCC President John E, Tirreil. The Orchard Ridge project was one of 28 of 400 school designs selected for entry the architectural exhibit competition of the American Association of School Administrators (AASA). Top awards will be made at the annual AASA convention Feb. 1M7 in Xtlantic City for designs of elementary and secondary schools, community colleges and admlnstrative buildings of colleges and universities. Collaborating on the design of the 13-building Orchard Ridge Campus in Farn^ogton Township were the firms of Giffels and Rossetti of Detroit and Pe^ kins gnd Will of Chicago. ★ ★ * Construction work on the campus begad last fall. Opening is slated for September, 1967. Special For This Sunday Only-Noon to 7 P.M. Sunday Only BOYS’ COMBED CpON POLO ^SHIRT Our Reg. 87c BF Shrink resistant, reinforced at all strain points. 'Taped neck style in solids and stripes. Sizes 3-8. Sunday Only! SPECIAL SALE! Women’s, Teens’ Tennis Oxfords Charge It Bal oxfords with canvas uppers, full cushion insoles, rubber soles. Black or white; sizes to 10. Notice to Book Users Is Issued by Library Books borrowed from affiliates of the North Oakland Li-| brary Contract System should! be returned to the same library, announced Mrs. Laura Weiss, associate director of NOLCS. * ★ ★ k Member libraries of NOLCS are Brandon, Highland, Holly, Independence, Milford, Orion, Oxford, Waterford Township, Pontiac and Walled Lake. Plenty of Free Parking Available Quality-Made! Colorful Too! I ROOM SIZE VISCOSE RUGS PRICED LOW % Comp, at I ^ Sunday I Only! ^ Now! Famous for long-wear and easy-care Visi Wcose loop mgi in full 8l4xllV1t sizes! Rap diat k: hide soil, mp that resist stain and footprints! ^ Get yours now in a decorator colorl FORA UNITED TIME ONLY Can SAVE-SAVE-SAVE Our ClassM or* Now in Full SossionI StaSa CoUata CtcmImUm ora Com$tamt{r <» DmmtmdK it Full or Part TImo Clauot ir Froo Kit of Equipmont it D.V.A. Approvod it Pay at Uttio at $5 WooMy INQUIRE TODAY ABOUT OUR SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAAAl Call 335-9249 NOW and SAVEI Customer Service AVAILABLE TO THE PUBLIC Mon. 1-9; Wed. and FrI. 9-Tuet, Thurs., Sat. 9-5 Wm Montaira v»Sh Evory CoM Wo¥a A$ Wofk Dom by Sonhir Studamsi Gay Solids and Prints SAVE ON WOMEN'S SHIRTWAISTS Sunday Only! 200 Many styles to choose from, including roll-np sleeves, bermuda collars . . some coat fronts. Fine wash-'n-wear cottons and blends in wide selection of colorful solids, prints. Sizes 10-20, SS UV2-2m ■yf A 'A ■ ' r POLE LAMPS IN CHOICE OF TWO ATTRAQIVE STYLES Our H.g. 4.96 A ||V Sunday Only itofipp Pole lamp with brass plated pole and three plastic shades, also pole lamp with beige or black pole and three white plastic shades. Adjustable heights. While quantities last. ADULT FULL SIZE 3-LB SLEEPING BAG WITH CANOPY 5.38 Our Reg. 8.99 Sunday Only! Warm ^^db. synthetic fiber insulation, colorful print lining ^ull length, heavy-duty aippfr allows complete airing of bag. Mothproof, non-allergenic. Limit 2 per customer. Just charge it! * KING-SIZE DECORATED METAL TRAY TABLE FOR SERVING STATE COLLEGE oL BEAUTT CULTURE 47 North Saginaw-Pontiac A warm and comfortable blend of 70% Orion® acrylic, with 30% nylon.- Knit with ribbed top ... in sizes 8 to 11, choose w}iite, blaifk and other popular colors including darks and pastels fdr the girls. Charge it at Kmart. ■DaP.MRrp.T.N. sp Full-Front Auto Floor Mat in Choice of Colors Our Reg. 2.99, 3.59 Sunday Only! Individual metal tray table is 16W*x22V4”x25Vk”, on tubular metal, brass-plated legs with protective plastic lips. (Choose from three attractive patterns: “(iolden WTieal”, “Autumn Time” and “(^Iden ShtoII”. 1.38 Deeply ribbed rubber keeps feet dry and protects car’s interior. Extra-thick contour fiilted. Easy to install and keep clean. Clhoose from a widg selection of decorator colors to match car’s interior. CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD Child Guidance Clinic Post THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 5, 1966 Directorship Still Splits Boards 'Honesf Crook Has a Legal Tax Dodge HELSINKI (UPI) - A citizen filing his tax-declaration itfetic-ulpusly filled in everything except the spaces for his income. In a note he wrote: “No taxable Renewed efforts yesterday by the Oakland County Mehtal Health Services board failed to provide a solution |o the ques-ton of who should direct the county's child guidance clinics. In a joint meeting with the board of Child Guidance Clinics Inc., the two boarids agreed on all points of a contract proposed In Detember by the Mental Zoning Change Before Board A rezoning request for the manufacture and sale of travel trailer campers will be considered by the Waterford Township Board Monday night. The proposed zoning change is from RA-1 (public recreation)! to M-1 (light industrial). | The Township Planning j Commission and Oakland | County Coordinating Zoning | and Planning Committee have ^ both recommedned denial of the request. l The [X'opos^ business would be located on Williams Lake Road between Hatchery and South Shaker. Charles Booth is the applicant. Final action is expected Feb. 14. * ★ ★ In other business, the board will consider specifications for a proposed new fire truck body and equipment. ESTIMATED COST Estimated cost is between $12,000 and $15,000, according to! Fire Chief Lewis Goff. I The board previously approved specifications for the | fire truck chassis, f(»r which bids have been advertised. Estimated cost is $7,500 to $8,000. The annual fire department report will be presented to boarjl, members, along with last month’s building department report. ; Health Services Board except |(or hiring a psychiatrist-director, some board members have indicated that the difficulty in finding a person for the job might throttle the program; The state does not require that a child guidance clinic director be a psychiatrist but a clinic must have a psychiatrist as a staff member at least on a hplftime basis. In other business yesterday, the board authorized the mental health program administrators to develop statistical information on specific program needs. This impasse has existed for, * , ★ ★ several months. The board indi- This would involve breaking cated that a special meeting will down general knowledge already be called later this month in an I available for application to spe-attempt to reach a decision. Icific county communities rather Although the budget provides!to the county as a whole. for the directorship specification. The contract provides for financial support by the Mental Health Services Board for existing child guidance clinie programs and support for anticipated expansion of psychiatric services to children. Members of the Mental Health Services Board, however, still are undecided on whether to require that 'the director of these clinics by a psychiatrist. FACTS ABOUT PHARMACY by HOWARD L DELL Your Neighborhood Pharmacist There is only ONE Baldwin Pharmacy nt Baldwin, Comer Grandie 6 Blocks North of Ooklond A Baldw'm Pharmacy 'Tir’ 219 Baldwin income. Have been living smuggling.’’ Tax experts checked and found the man had been convicted of smuggling last year. And he won’t pay any taxes because criminally obtained money is not taxable under Finnish law. Winning the Mayorship Was Relatively Easy WALCOTT JUNCTION, Wyo., The only other residents of (UPI^ — It’s Mrs. Rod John-1 the town are their three chil-son’s tumj^ be mayor of Wal-|dr®"- cott Junction in southern -----------------— Wyoming. Her husband w^s A sonnet is a lyric poem of mayor last. ^ 114 lines. Yputh Law Confab Set LANSING (AP) - A conference on youth legislation has been scheduled for next rs-. day and Friday at East Lansing by the 'louse Youth Committee. SATURDAY AND SUNDAY PUNCHES OPEN NIGHTS UNTIL 9 • SUNDAYS UNTIL 7 LARGE STURDY PLASTIC 10" TEFLON COATED SWING TOP HAMPER FRY PAN BY MIRRO BIG BOX 200 COUNT FACIAL TISSUES STAINLESS STEEL KITCHEN KNIVES Patricia, Lawford Meet at Restaurant NEW YORK (UPIf Mrs.' Patricia Kennedy ’ ford showed Thursday night ai the! posh Colony Restaurant with I actor Peter Lawford, from I whom she was-divorced in Sun Valley last ’Tuesday. i The restaurant said Mrs. Lawford made the table reservation by telephone from California the day after the divorce. A guest quoted the late President Kennedy’s sister as say-. ing she and Lawford met *lo discuss their four children. ! STAFF'S S ■ '915 W. Huron Street at Telegraph Road TWO YANKEE STORES IN THE PONTIAC AREA ★ MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER ★ CORNER OF PERRY AND MONTCALM STREETS SUNDAY AND MONDAY SPECIALS! OPEN SUN. 12 TO 6-MON. 9:30 TO 9 BECKWITH-EVANS GRAND 0PENIN6 iFine Nvlon. Wool and Nylon Pile Plush Luxury Quality Compara to 8.50 Space Dyed Nylon Pile > Colorful Twood 501 Textured Twist ^ 5 colon. Vory Hoovy. Ccynparo to $8 Nylon Pile Plush * tong color lirro. ^on*o. Good wooriisg . . . HUVYWEIGNT WOOL TWIST Beautiful color lino. Long wearing. ACRILAN" ACRYUG Pluth Luxury Grade. Very Heavy. '5V »2?.* '3'» '3V >Q98 LUXURIOUS ACRYLIC CARVED RANDOM SNEAR $750 Real dense heavyweight acrylic pile. Beautiful decorator color line. 12x9 » Green Loop Comp. 109 49" Gran 12x13.4 Gold Twist Comp 136 74" d Openir Toxturo Comp. 130 79” ig Remnc 13x19 Gold Twist ^ Comp. 10S 69“ int Giveo 12x9 Boigo Loop Comp. ISd' 49" iways 12x19.1 Sandalwood Loop Comp. 140 69” 19x9.19 Boigo K. Bark Comp. 140 59” 12II0.T • * Lavender Scroll Comp. 100 59“ 11.4x14.6 Gold Tone on Tono Com» ISO 99” 12x12.10 Boigo Tono on Tono Comp. 104 99” 12x9 Boigo Scroll Wilton Comp. 119 49" 12x9 Sandalwood Tono on Toni Comp. 144 .59", 12x9 Parch Plush Comp, 100 69" 19x9.3 Blue Shoar \ Comp. 139 1 89" 19x11.9 Martini Loop Comp. 110 99" 12x9 Parch Shoar Comp. 120 49" 12x9 Orango 49" 12x9 Boigo Loop Comp. 100 49” 12x14 Boigo * Twood Comp. 160 94" 12x11.11 Block and Brown Twood Comp. 10S 69" 12x14.7 Chestnut Seroll Comp. 175 99" 12x14.1 Oreen Loop Comp. IM 89" 12x11.9 Cocoa Shoor Comp. 191 119" 12x11.2 Angol Shoor Comp. 2SO 176" 12x9 Groan Twood Comp. lOi 469" 12x9 Candy ttripo Comp. S4 39" 12x9 Boigo Twood Comp. 101 69" 12x14.^ Bark Twood Comp. 109 59" II LUXURIOUS CARVED WOOL PILE $ Beautiful decorator colors. Real heavyweight. Very dense. A matchless savings Becfeu/itK-- Evom: PINE PLOOV^ COVERINGS Finn Nvlon Wool and Acrila ACRIUW’’ ACRYLIC SHEAR Very Fine Grade in 8 Colon * ACRILAT ACRYLIC TWEED 10 Lovely Colon PLAIN TEXTUI^ED NYLON s Many Beautiful Colon 501 DuPONT NYLON Our heaviest with 20 yr. pro-Roted Wearing Guarantee ACRILAN ACRVUC Pile Tweed. Beautiful color line. WOOL TWEED In 4 Beautiful Colon TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER WEST HURON AT HIEGRAPH RD. 334-9544 y THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 5, i960 B—1 Brass Crown Candelabrum Centers Avocado Felt-Covered Table ,1 I background for LIVING Home Has an Adjacent Greenhouse By JO0Y HEADLEE Home Editor, The Pontiac Preot February’s blustery winds and drifting snows don't bother the LeRoy H. Frailings. They know winter will soon be over, for Mr. FraiUng has captured a hint of spring’s promise In his “blooming" greenlMxise adjacent to the house' Designed by Frank R, Chapman of Oakland Township, the home’s versatile in-teribr plan lends itself to either contemporary or traditional furnishings. Mrs. Prailing has chosen an attractive blend of colonial pieces and antiques spiced with European accents. Paneled in Philippine mahogany, the living room features a studio ceiling, its crossbeams bolted together with ornamental iron bolts. Light floods the dark-stained ceiling through a side skylight. . On top of the divider, separating the bedroom hall from the living area, is a massive hand-blown bottle in green. “My father was in the mining business," said Mrs. FraiUng. “And my mother gave me this bottle which was once used in the company’s chemical laboratory.” A piano stool, refinished by Mrs. FraiUng in avocado with gold leaf, is used as a cigarette table before the beige and brown wool sofa. From Spain, an interesting oak three-legged chair stands between the sofa and the grandfather clock. Balancing the built-in bookcase arrangement on one side of thf fireplace are an antique clock which belonged to Mrs. Frafling’s grandmother and a distressed-pecan stereo cab-Uiet witt a Hlled-travertine marble top. On the cabinet are pictures of the FraiUngs’ son and his family (Capt. and Mrs. Lee FraiUng and Cindy, 4, and Robbie, 2) and th^ daugh- ter Lynne, now Mrs. Thomas Ludwig. Under the sidewall book shelves is a Victorian chair in hand-carved walnut. Mrs. FraiUng created the chair’s needlepoint covering, a floral print against an antique-red background. Captain’s chairs covered in a forest-green leather are grouped about a rbund table in the room creating an informal card or dining center. On the paneling near the grand piano hangs a modem decoapage resembUng an age-old icon and an authentic wooden candle-shrine from Spain. Mrs. Frailing’s silver and ruby glass collection are displayed on the room’s pine hutch. Opening off the dining portion, of the Uving room is the master bedroom. Serving as the room’s vanity bench is an antique organ seat finished In off-white with gold leaf. A Victorian love seat, framed in white, is upholstered in gold silk. •S- -‘M' ' - ->• Am , -mj PontiK Prtu PHMei by EOwbrO a. NabM Lady, 8-Year-Old German Shepherd, Basks On S’.n-Splashed Avocado-Green Carpeting Of Living Room Pompeiian-Green Wrought-lron Pieces Furnish Glass-Enclosed Porch Overlooking Private Pond '"Tl ■ i - ■ 5| 1 ■ . Antiqued Gray-Green Paneling Of Master Bedroom Complemented By Provincial Print Wallpap^T Sliding Bottle Glau Ol^ors On Counter Conceal Condiment Shelves Home Of The LeRoy H. Frailings Found In Picturesque Setting On Sheldon Road, Avon Township i ' B~2 THE PUNTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 5. 1966 You Can Have OCCUPANCY IN 45 DAYS at . . . 4-bedroom COLONIAL $28,900 12^5 3-Bedroom SPLIT LEVEL $26,800 Century Old Cactus Is Family Heirloom Mr. aad Mrs. Joseph Pyle are proud their family heirloom - a cactus plant over 100 years old and handed down for three generations. The plant originally belonged to Pyle’s grandmo^er, after which it remained in the home of his mother, Mrs. Emma’ Pyle, now 84, until she passed it on to her son. W A ★ It blooms once each winter with bell-shaped pink blossoms. Don't Starch Hem of Sdsh Curtains Never starch the hem when laundering sash curtains. The rod can then be pushed through without tearing the curtain. A finger from an old glove slipped over the end of the rod makes it go through much easier. DIFFERENT TWO^TORY: Although it has two stories and many tpaditional features, this pleasant house gets a contenyorary look from its streamlined design, with a bow* windbwed living room by itself at the left side. G-a STATISTICS Design G-22 has a living room, dining room, kitdi-en, family room, foyer, -lavatory, two-car garage, portico, rear porch, laundry and storage area on the flrst floor, with the livability .sections adding up to U05 square feet, there are four bedrooms and two full baths on the second floor,- With 90 squkre feet of habitable space. There is a partlai basement under the living room. Over-all dimensions including the two-car garage, are 70’ 4” by 81’ 1”. Two-Story Design Follows Traditional Layout The traditional layout of a two-story house calls for all the daytime rooms to be on the first floor, all the bedrooms on the second floes'. ’15,950 $1,600 Down Commerce Area, Just 12 Miles From Pontiac "3-BEDROOM TRI-LEVEL, ATTACHED OARAGE BRICAK and ALUMINUM, FINISHED REG. ROOM, CORNER LOT, PAVED STREET, BUILT-INS, AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY F.HX and CONVENTIONAL MORTGAGES PHONE 363-7000 Frank Marotta & Assoc’s 3195 UNION LAKE RD. UNION LAKE oocond floor plan This arrangement has lasted throughout tiie years simply because home owners w)io select this type of house generally do so to obtain the advantage of having the slewing quarters well separated from the living area. Architect Samuel Paul has followed tradition in designing this eight-room dwelling’' for House of the Week: that is, the four bedrooms are on the secuid floor, widi the four other rooms on die first floor. But he has made a notable departure in a separate living room, a feature of increasing popularity during'the last year. A stone fireplace, parquet floor, paneled walls, cathedral ceiling and large windows, front FACE BRKK • WE MAKE IT • WE INSTALL IT • 100% GUARANTEE klingelhut brick go. HP IP 7 ytl!^*tp"^y 4162 W. Walton, Drayton Plolns Phone 679-7507 CtmpMp ppprallpn^lrpni cly pltp It lnst.ll.llm firsi floor plan FLOOR PLANS: The four bedroms and two baths on die second floor are located directly over the family room, kitchen, din- ing room and foyer, leaving the living room and garage as one-story sections and producing an interesting and pleasant design. It's Money Out of Your Pocket So Why Not Ask A Specialist? Planning to remodel your home ... build an addition or remodel your kitchen? Select your finandng carefully ... the choice is yours to make... insist on reading the contract... know that you are paying the lowest possible rate.. . . know what is best for you in terms you can clearly understand. , 1 ASK A SPECIAUST IN HOME REMODEUNG LOANS ...ASK FIRST FEDERAL and rear,'add to the over-all I elegance of this room. The balance of the ground floor also Is attractively laid | out, widi many features usually reserved for more expensive homes. A large flagstoned foyer, with space for a built-in planter, leads directly to all rooms, including the second floor. A tiled powder room is located immediately adjacent to the entrance, also doubling as the family “downstairs bath.’’ A formal dining room, with a large bow-type window, faces the front, while a family room is to the reir of the foyer. The family room has a sliding door leading to the rear patio and a pass-through for ease in serving food from the kitchen. ★ ★ * The eat-in kitchen is a roomy and cheerful ensemble. There is a comer sink and a matching built-in wall oven, caddy-com^ style. There is plenty of space left over 'for a dinette table and chairs — and there isfa sliding glass door leading to Ai covered flagstoned porch, an ideal setting for outdoor barbecues and snacks. For the utmost in convenience, the washing machine and dryer are located in an alcove adjacent to the kitchen. A laundry chute from the second floor eliminates the need to ‘carry wash down the stairs, and a folding door can close off the entire alcove when not in use. There are four bedrooms and two large baths on the upper floor, with an abundance of closet space. All of the bedrooms open to a roomy gallery and hall, which has an outside window and is nicely related to the open-well staircase. Just as architect Paul combined the traditional, two-story interior layout with a contemporary approach to the location of the living room,' so has he mixed the two styles in an eyepleasing exterior. Note that the outside of the house, while traditional in detail, has a long, streamlined front, with large bow windows and nich overhangs. It doesn’t quite fit into the idea of what a two-story house should be, but a glance at the artist’s rendering almost certainly will make you Agree that it is highly attractive. And ‘those who like traditional exterior features will find plenty of them, including the Shutters, small-paned windows, flower boxes and cov-. ered portico. There is plenty of storage space at the rear of the two-car garage, including a closet near the back door, a space for gar-| There also is a door leading den equipment open to the out- from the garage to the kitth-side, and a storage area on the en, mighty convenient as a [inside. Istepsaver and in bad weather. How to Build, Buy. or Sell Your Home Full study plan information on this architeetKiesigned House of the Week is included in a 5G«ent baby blueprint. With it in hand you can obtain a contractor’s estimate. You can order also, for 81, a booklet called YOUR HOME—How to Build, Buy or Sell it. Included in it are small reproductions of 16 of the most popular House of the Week issues. Send orders to House Plans, The Pontiac Press, P. 0. Box 9, Pontiac, Michigan 48056 I Enclosed is M cents for baby blneprfait on j I G-0 □! I I I Enclosed is $1 for YOUR HOME booklet H ■ I '-'I I Name ..........................................| 1 City 761W. HURON STREET Downtown Pontiac - Cldrkstbn - Drayton Rochostor Woliod Lako - Loko Orion - Now's the Hma to Take Advantage of Our NEW LOW, LOW WINTER PRICESI • RECREATION ROOAAS • FINISHED BASEMENTS • KITCHENS • BATHROOAAS Complete Home Remodeling Center As Low as NO MONEY DOWN Up to 84^onths to Payl NO PAYAAENTS I TIL JUNE BIG BEAR eWRTRUgnm 111 NOnM KRRY Operator on Duty 24 Houra THE KOyTIAC PRESS, SATURDAV,i^EBKUA^V 19H6 Elecfrical Producers Meet Demands ^ Producers of electrical wiring I devices and related equipment are working overtime to meet the increasing demand of the comfort and convenience-orient-1 ed housewife, who is plugging in new electrical appliances at an unprecedented clip. | With U.S. electrical producers now generating over one trillion kilowatt-hours per year and adding some 1.3 million new cuto< mers every year, wiring device manufacturers are facing the broad-based problem of providing suitable and safe devices to handle the burgeoning electrical load. With all this excessive wat- ■ ,.This is a dangerous practice | Listed below are four tip si lamp cord extensions represents tage pouring into the Ameri- 'and one that has been reduced for the consumer. lone of the greatest fire hazard can home, the entire electrical 'significantly by the introduction! , .pj,g common intermarriaae'**®"**” ^ **®*"*‘ industry has to keep a watch- of the newly-designed fuse. j,*. u . ^ j ful eve on safetv factors ' heavy-duty heater cord used ^ ^ No manufacturer is p e r* mi snch aonliane^s as nnrtable In addition to the individual mitted to market wiring devices heaters, titers, roto broUers wiring device manufacturers — bearing the Underwirter’s Lab- electric irons, fry pans, waffle who turn out the myraid of re- oratory seal of approval unless,u-ons electric coffee makers ceptacles, plugs, switches and each componeflt of that device,gnd heat lamps with domestic has been tested and approved. related electrical equipment — such organizations as local housing authorities and utility companies, the National Ele ^ KARS OF (Jl ALII^ Bt II.DINt/* > DIXIE GARAGE (and Reverse Charges) COINSTRUCTIOX ((HVII’ANY - 5744 HlUHLAM) ROAD BUY, SELL, TRADE . . . USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS ALUMINUM SIDING FREE ESTIMATES! SAVOIE INSUCATION CO. 6561 DIXIE HWY. 625-2601 . wide configuration chart to pro-1 tect the consumer from Ihad-vertently placing ,a high-voltage appliance in a low-voltage receptacle. Last year, these configurations were updated at a substantial cost to the industry. , I aThe National Electrical! I Code now requires that all re-| ceptacles must be grounded for safety, in the past, many home-; owners received shocks from some of their appliances. UND OPPORTUNITY 27.5 Acres of Trees and Hilli MAX BROOCK INC. ' MA 6-4000 [Town & Country; Garden Center : 5812 Highlend Rd. (M59) Just Eaif e( Ik* Airport. OR 3-7147 In some cases, serious acci-| dents have been reported. The; net result of the grounding edict i has been a substantial reduction' in this type of accident. • The industry has introduced a^^amper-pr/)of fuse, so designed! that it is difficult to insert a foreign object behind thb fuse to open the circuit. A few years ago, a safety In-'spector in a small New England town made a check of fuses ini residential homesites in the area. At the end of the check,! the inspector had collected 4,-^ 1000 foreign objects, which had! I been inserted behind fuses to lopen the current. THE BATEIUH TRADE-IH PLAN Guarantees in Writinf; SALE OF TOUR PRESENT NOME Buy Now ... Sell Later! PONTIAC CALL - ROCHESTER PII-T101 FOR 0L1-IS1I S7T t. Ttlagraph appointment 7S0 S. Roohatttr Ri 'pA£ifleu/^Operung t / THE WONDERFUL WORLD OF YEAR ROUND COUNTRY CLUB LIVING Spriog-tod^^ lolcM cov.ring ‘■AKI VOORHIIS -D*.p, .prinB-f.d lok* ^•urreund.d^ by g*ndy rolling t*rrain^and h.ov^ly wood.d NOW IN THIS COMPLETE NEW TOWN! Minimum Lots 80' x 120' pric«cl from *4,490 Including Water, Sewers and Underground Utilities TERMS 25% DOWN —3 YEARS TO PAY! . Be among the first to purchase your homesite in KEATINGTON, the*complete New town in your future! Located in Orion Township, Oakland * County, this master-planned community will have four nradel homes open this Spring. Sandy beaches will be awoiting the first swimmers of the season.P>Full improvements, including underground utilitios, nearing completion in this model community where yeor-oround sports ore always at your front or back door. •• LAKE FRONT LOTS from *8,900 • BOATING • BATHING • FISHING • SAILING • PROPOSED GOLF COURSE, MARINA, COMMUNITY HOUSE, SHOPPING CENTERS AND APARTMENTS These Four Beautiful Model Homes Now Under Coustruclion! priced front *24,900 to *28,900 itfcluding base lot CLARKSTON Tri-Lovoli, Two-Story Coloniolf, Quad-Level* and Ranch Homes with three, four and five bedroom plan*, 1 Vi to 2’/* both*, paneled Family Room with fireplace and model kitchens are features of these custom homes. n Sales by KEATING OF MICHIGAN, INC. NTIAC Tok* Chrytler Exprsitwoy (1-751 to Roldwin Reoil Exit end turn right to Solo* Offico, cornof Woldon Rd. SS060 W.13 MILE RD. Ml.e BSDO SALES OFFICE OPEN AT KEATINGTON SATURDAY, SUNDAY 11-7 P.M. B—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1966 Noted Door Called 'Cross and Bible' The famcHis six-panel Colonial | a Christian household and was door found in millions of Amer- (Intended to ward off evil. ' lean homes is also known as a! Popular in Ani|)nica since Co- lonial times, six-panel doors of ponderosa pine are avsilable today as stock items at lumber dealers. “Cross-and-Bible" door. This is because the center stile ind crossbar whi^h’ divide the upper four panels outline a cross, while the lower two pan-1 els represent the open pages of An embossed vinyl asbestos a Bible. tile floor does not stx>w inden- ^ * tations made by spike heels and The door originally signified is easy to keep clean. Buyii^ ' a home is a major investment! ... possibly the largest you’41 ever make! Tor this reason, it, is extremely important that II' FT J wisest ch ' IIC lr&Q6 >«ur ?"»«>'« »n