The Weather u WMthar ■urMM Ftncatl Sunny, Colder THE PONTIAC PRESS ONE COLOR Home Edition VOL. 123 NO. 310 ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN,* FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 4, 1906 -44 PAOfes Soviet Moon Vehicle Trpiismitting Pictures May Be Worst Single-Plane Disaster Ever Searchers Recovei Three Bodies, Debris in Tokyo Boy Waters The board proposed to reduce the millage allocated to debt retirement by one from Its present eight to seven to offset the difference, thus leaving the total levy on- TAKES OFFfCE-Ward E. Partridge (center) accepts the president’s gavel as he takes over from Thomas P. Bateman (left) as head of the Pontiac Board of Realtors at the organization’s annual banquet last night. Applauding is Ray O’Neil, named Pontiac Realtor of the Year. OCC Is Sued The proposed project includes construction of a third high school, estimated cost 44, 952,000; three new elementary schools, total cost $1,783,800; a new board of education administrative building, 1201,000; and widespread improvements at‘existing schools. I Conktruction would begin this] / /qq year and be completed ^thin: five years, according to (Khool SH.OHSCHOOL L I Nine Acres loJiXaT tlifV“n“'ia?Uk^' Community College’s Pontiac and Oakland County are booming econom- Rnad-Scott Lake Road site al-new administrative offices in ically and the trend will continue Upward, a noted ready owned by the district. iBIoomfield Hills yesterday be-1 business forecaster told the Pontiac Board of Realtors Says Boom to Continue in City, Oakland County TOKYO (^ — A Japanese airliner with 183 persons crashed into Tokyo Bay today in what could be the world’s worst aviation disaster involving a single plane. An airline spokesman, reporting the recovery of three bodies, said there was no sign of suryl-vors. All-Nippon Airways, operator of the plane, announced (wo rescue boats picked up the bodies and established that the plane had crashed into the bay. Until then there had been hope {the plane might have escaped disaster. It had been listed as missing for more than five hours. s6uth LANDING SPOT—’This diagram shows the approximate arpa where Luna 9 accomplished a'soft landing on the moon, according to an announcement today by the SovietT «P Phototax Union. The news agency Tass said the landing was in the area of the Ocean of Storms to the west of the crater Reiner. The new elementary school sites would be situated at Crescent Lake, Eagle Lake and Twin Lakes. 'Dr. TaU-oe insists that Uie construction program, if accepted by voters, will not increase the board of education’s tax authority of 31.71 mills. The district currently operates on 29.71 mills, but a 2-mill reserve is available to meet new expenses. “During the next three years, * the tax rate will go up those two mills irrespective of the vote^’’ said Tatroe. This Is due to rising opera- the college from using the nine-acre parcel at Opdyke and Hickory Grove for anything but residential purposes. The city alleges that the college is in violation of the zoning ordinance, since the for- School Officials predict that (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) In Today's Press came the target of another law, last night. I "James C. Downs Jr. of Chicago directed his opti-City Officials filed the acho" Liistic outlook to a near capacity crowd 6f over 500 asking that the court restrain annual banquet at the Pontiac Elks’ Temple. The event was highlighted by the installation of Ward E. Partridge, 4545 Dow Ridge, Orchard Lake, as president of the organization for 1966. Partridge, an are^ realtor for 35 years, succeedM Thomas P. Bateman of Bateman Rellty. Before leaving office, Bateman was presented with several awards from the National Board of Realtors and the National Traders club, and another from the Pontiac board for distln-guishen service while serving as president. The Pontiac Realtor of the Police Report Major crimes in city up I slightly in 1965. - PAGE j C-i. if Missing Clue Khrushchev letter ^o V JFK on Cuba relvealed. -- tPAGE C-9. Waterford Board I Purchase of land at two i school sites approved. ^ I PAGE D-4. » Area News ......... A-4 i| Astrology ..i.-.... C4 Bridge ............ C-8 Crossword Puzzle . D-Il Comics C-8 Editorials A-6 High School B-1 Markets D-4 Obltoaries ........ D-6 Sporfs ........C-1—-C-S Theaters .......... ’TV-Radie Programs D-11 Wilson, Earl . ... D-lf Women's Pages B-8—B-11 reverted to its original residential classification. The college administration moved into the new quarters in mid-December. Shortly thereafter, nearby residents filed a $1 million damage suit against the college, claiming the facility would change the residential character of the neighborhood and reduce property values. At the same time, city officials, through their attorney Da vid Pence, warned the college unless it moved from the location by. Christmas a suit would be filed. Pleasant Weekend Forecast in Area All aboard the plane were Japanese. PLANE DEBRIS Shortly after midnight, five hours after the Boeing 727 vanished, a Japanese lighthouse ship reported spotting an airplane seat, a body and a book of life-saving instructions. A Japanese defense forces patrol boat lent words it had recovered part of a Jet airliner wing. The debris was reported sue to. eight miles from Tokyo Airport, which is on the edge of the bay First Direct to Earth JODRELL BANK, England (AP) — The. radiotelescopic observatory here announced today it is receiving sensational pictures of the moon from the Soviet Luna 9 spacecraft. They show individual rocks on the moon’s surface, a spokesman said. htoSCOW (fl - Luna 9, the Soviet mechanical moon pi- lar almost two weeks, oneer, has transmitted to earth pictures of the lunar landscape, the Soviet news agency Tass reported today. An announcehient distributed by Tass gave no indication when the pictures would be made public. It would be the first ever transmitted directly from the moon’s surface to earth, after earlier Soviet and American pictures sent from spacecraft above the moon. [ with'it today, totaling three hours 29 mihUtes. Luna 9 “has begun scanning the lunar landscape and transmitting it to the earth’s surface,” the announcement said, ’The space vehicle landed yesterday in an area of the moon that will be in direct sunlight BATTERY POWER This would' permit a number of pictures to be sent, if Luna 9 continues working properly and sunlight can power its batteries. , The announcement, made 26 hours after Luna 9’s landing, said four radio communications sessions had been held Year Award was presented to Ray O’Neil, 2497 W. Walton, Waterford Township, for his con-fributions to (jie profession during 1965. O’Neil Is president of O’Neil Realty, 3520 Pontiac Lake, Waterford Township. GETS STATE AWARD He received the award from the president of the Michigan Real Estate Association, Charles Kimball of Alpena. Downs, a business analyst since 1931, injected only one sore note in prr cting the continued prosperity, “which is at an all time peak. “The economy,.is going to be (Continue on Page 2, Col. 7) just south of the main part of Tokyo. Villagers on the shore and a pilot of another plane reported seeing “a pillar of fire” rising from the bay aj about 7 Y-m. Just when Tokyo International Airport lost'contact with the incoming plane. An oil refinery employe told police he heard an explosion about that time. DETROIT (AP)-Ford Motor Co. reported yesterday that business never has been so good. ord-breaking profits and sales | accused a North Birmingham, 1965 followed a similar report] Ala , man of being the Klu Klux Klansman who ordered the slaying of Mrs. Viola Liuzzo in A Japanese defense forges helicopter sighted an oil slick about two miles from the airport. RAIN IN AREA A light ram kept the helicopter pilot from verifying the cause of the slick. Another helicopter (Continued on Page 2, Cq||. 3) Up 24.7 Per 'Cent Truck Division Sales on Rise The weatherman promises Pontiac area residents a pleasant weekend. Partly cloudy and a little colder with lows near 7 to 14 tonight, and highs of 16 to 23 tomorrow, is the temperature pcedictlon. Sunny skies may be expected tomorrow and most of Sunday with the mercury rising toward a warming trend beginning Sunday. Morning 10 to 22 mile ^r hour winds northwesterly will diminish to 8 to 15 miles tonight. A low of 19 was recorded at 7 a.m. today. The thermometer regltterad 29 at 2 p.m. Up a record 24.7 per cent, new model GMC truck and bus sales are off to the best start in history, according to Calvin J. Werner, a vice president of ^ General Motors and g e n e r a 1 manager of GMC Truck & Coach Division. CALVIN J. WERNER Werner reported today that I 41,717 trucks and buses were delivered to the domestic market in the first four months o^ new model production. He sakl^e October through January figure tops the same period in 199445 by 24.7 per cent and is the highest sales ivilioi chalked up by the division in the first four months of any model year. Werner attributed the high sales to a favorable economic climate, uninterrupted produc-and the acceptance of the division’s full line of trucks and buses. Ford Reports Record Sales, Profits in '65 Ford’s announcement of rec- Says Klansman Ordered Death ‘Teiemetric information was received during these radio links from the station,” it added. “It confirmed the normal functioning of the flight system. Transmission of the lunar landscape was carried out on command from earth.” IHtt.D SILENCE Before this announcement; the Russians had been characteristically silent about information receiv^ from the mechanical pioneer sitting on the plain named the Ocean of Storms, though the British radio observatory at Jodrell Bank said Luna 9 had transmitted radio information and pictures. Information from Luna 9 “is being processed and studied,” the announcement said. It said radio contact was to be made with the device at 6:30 p.m. Moscow time today and at 4 a.m. tomorrow. Southerner Accused in Mrs. Liuzzo's Death WASHINGTON (UPl)-A Congressional investigator today by General Motors Crop, or Monday. Chrysler Corp. is expected to have an equally rosy picture when it releases its annual financial statement next Thursday. . American Motors, fourth largest of the auto companies, reported Wednesday it made over $4 million in the last fiscal quar- Selma last March. The witness, Robert Thomas, 37, pleaded the 5th amendment to all questions put to him by the House Committee on Un-American Activities, which turned its inquiry of the Klan today to Alabama and the Contact periods are limited to -the time when the moon is visible from Soviet territory — and tonight it hung big and brilliant in an icy Moscow sky. SAFE LANDINGS Prof. Nikolai BarpbasKov, a Ukrainian astronomer connected with the lunar probes, predicted “safe landings on the moon of manned interplanetary ships in the near future.” Barabashov told Tass the most important achievement of Luna 9 was proof that the moon’s surface is not covered with deep drifts of dust that could engulf a spacecraft. He pointed out Luna 9 had I ter. Liuzzo murder that triggered'land a solW s-urface or it I the investigation. have been unable to In January alone, GMC do^ mestic retail sales totaled 9,996 units, an eight per cent Increase over January, 1965. Ford’s profit picture showed the firm made $703 million last year, 39 per cent more than in 1964, the previous record year. Net jncome per share was $6.38, in 1965 and $4.56 in 1964. NEW RECORDS Henry Ford II, board chairman, said his firm’s consolidat-Qd sales, net income and factory sales of autos set new records for the fourth successive year. GM’g report shdwed it became the first U.S. corporation ever to earn more than $2 billion in a year as it reported a reconf $2.12 billion profit, 23 per cent ahead of the record set in 1994. Ford’s consolidated sales of $11.5 billion were up 19 per cent over the previous high set in 1964. The Detroit civil rights worker was shot Uvdeath in her car on] mingham. ’The 1966 truck line features 116 basic models, while the new bus models Include GMC’s »-foot “Luxury Liner.” Ford’s per-share dividend in 1965 was boosted 50 per cent to 60 cents, making the year’s total $2.10 per share. Thomas refused to comment on a direct charge by the committee’s chief investigator, Donald Appell, that he directed Collie Leroy Wilkins, Gary Rowe and two otheewnen to g<^ to Selma on the night Mrs. Liuzzo was mOrdered. transmit radio signals back to earth. Two Jtovlet astronomers spoke of Luna 9 showing the way for putting instruments ’ on the moon, capable of giv- ing a wide range of scientific loon’s information about the mod surface. The two astronomers\ implied as snoi waeain n ner ^ ^ road between Selma and Bir-is expected from the unmanned “automatic i tion,” main purpose of which has been pictured here^as proving the ability to get working instruments on the moon. The Russians had four earlier failures. Rowe, who turned out to »>«lh an FBI informer, testified court in Alabama that Thomas was the man who gave out the murder orders. As a rpsult of ^ Rowe’s testimony, four Klans-men Implicated in the C8M were] Alla Masevich said the convicted of federal charges, jgoft landing “makes it possible FEDERAL TRIAl^ I to send to the moon thfe most di- The federal trials followediverse apparatus with the ^object proceedings in state courts atl®^ collecting.sciehtiflc informa-which no convictions were ob-|^‘°", transmitting it to jearth.'’ Thomas sat i m p a 9 s 1 v e 1 yl Alexander Mikhailov, of the Aiiuiiias aab i iii u a a s i v c i v _ , , _ « through the questioning, dccom- Observatory nearpn- panied by a lawyer. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) I . A—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. I^IDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1966 For Orchard Ridge Catnpus OCC Board OKs $9-Million Bond Sale Sale of $9 million in bonds to sale will be filed today with an interest in buying underwirte the second phase of,the Michigan Municipal Financej^^oy^l Oak city park, construction of Oakland Com-1 Commission and sale of the SALE STUDIED munity College’s Orchard Ridge bonds is expected in late April. Royal Oak city officials cu^ campus was authorized < 1 a^s t night by the OCC Board of Trustees. College President John E. Tir-rell said that the bond issue e conditions, said. Downs, "people SAVE MONEY signals. ‘ now are’inflation minded,” and Borrowing money from thCj initial reaction that;added that he believed that'they] state bond loan fund, which of- ^na 9’s soft landing put the So- Red China Is Mum Over Moon La/iding LONDON (AP) - Political leaders around the world joined today in congratulating the Soviet Union on its su'r''-ful moon landing. But there was no immediate reaction from Red China. Newspapers and radio and television s*.'‘.ions in most countries gave the soft landing of The amendment would allow the vice president to act as president if the president were incapacitated. Among other provisions, it would allow the president to fill a vacancy In the oL fice of vice president with the approvahof a majority in the House and Senate. Retired Film Exec Succifmbs to Illness SHERMAN OAKS, Calif. (AP) — Herbert J. Yates, 85. retired president of Republic Pictures Qorp., died Thursday' night at hfs home. He had b^n in der dining health since he suffered a stroke in Italy last autumn. Among those present when he died was his wife, actress Vera Ralston. Yates and the former Czech ice-skating star were married in 1952. President Johnson was one of the first to hail the Soviet feat. “You and the people of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics are to be congratulated for the great success of Luna 9,” he said in a message | to Soviet President Nikolai Podgorney. i i Vice President Hubert H.l Humphrey, chairman of the! U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Council, complimented Soviet space offidals on their “stamina and persistence in attaining this lunar goal.” fers a^ low interest rate, will save residents hundreds of thousands of dollars, said Tatroe. Borrowing would be over a 25-year period. Cost of the election was estimated at $2,500 by school officials. Asked by board members, why the issue couldn’t be included on the ballot in June’s regular school election, Tatroe replied that other important questions may be presented then that would encumber the proposed building project. He was referring to a county vocational educational program, currently being discussed, and* a boundary dispute included in the proposed annexation of the Dublin Sctxiol District by the Walled Lake system. viet Union ahead, of the United States in the space race. Western experts amended their ahead in different phakes. •k it it Sir Bernard Lovpil, director of the Jodrell Bank Observatory, said the race to put a man on the moon is “still fairly even now.” SOFT LANDING were being apprehensive. “Depressions are out of style,” he said. “They can’t' happen under our present sit- Downs is chairman of the Real Estate Research Corporation, an economic counseling firm; chairman of the board of the Bank of Oak Brook, and vice president and director of Downs, Mohl & Ck>., one of-the The Soviet Union has gone nation’.s largest management ahead in the techniques of soft firms, landing,” he said. “The Ameri-; cans already achieved the other In addition Downs is director feature of rendezvous in space.!of eight corporations in the field Both countries now have^gO n e of real estate, oil and insurance. each to their credit.” “If the U.S. Surveyor pro- successful this year and if -the U. S. S. R. achieves rendezvous, they would still be level.” The prcxiuction business is going to be gbod because you are going to buy and the government is going to buy in record amo]|nts,” Downs told tbs realtors. A fifth City, Commission Incumbent has entered his candidacy in the March 7 primary. James H. Marshall, 63, of 185 . Jessie filed petitions yesterday for the District 7 nomination. Sfolls Death Threat on Radio President Charles de Gaulle of France offered “the cordial admiration of the French people” in a telegram to Soviet leaders. Home Founder Dies AS niMMx NATIONAL WEATHER-Snow and flurries in the northeast and Rockies anfl rain and showers in the Pacific states is the prediction for tonight. It will be colder from the central-Gulf states into the northea^ and warmer in the Plains DETROIT (AP)-Servic: for Mrs. Anna Fisher Ward, 83, sister of the automotive world’s Fisher brothers, will be held Saturday in Detroit. A 40-year resident of Detroit and founder of St. John’s Home for the Aged, Mrs. Ward died ’Thursday. JAPANESE MESSAGE Prime Minister Eisaku Sato of Japan in a cable to Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin hailed the landing as “a remarkable contribution to the stu^y of the kpace.” ' ' I “A great, feat of science and technology,” said Prime Minister Keith J. Holyoake of New Zealand. Scientists could not agree whether the landing put the Soviet union ahead of the United States In the race jo put a than on the moon or only in one phase of it. NEW YORK (UPI)-A radio interviewer stalled a would-be suicide for 15 minutes Iast,nighl In a radio conversation heard by thousands of listeners in the New York area. The despondent housewife finally agreed to disclose her telephone nutnber and police rushed Jlo her home in Staten Island before she had carried out her suicide tNreat. A neighbor who had been listeniAg to tbc program arrived at - the same time. The interviewer, Long John Kebel, said the woman had telephoned* him before, early Wednesday dnrlng his midnight to 5 a. m.>EST show, and ~lold him she wanted to take her life but had “chickened out.” hands,” Nebel said, “so I wrote a note to my director, Ken Regan) to tell the police to listen in and instead of taking six or seven calls as I usually will during the 15 minutes I stayed with her. I dropp^ the commercials.” The woman, who was neve^ ideniified on the 1^, told Nebel she had hot lef j her home In a year, that her 19-year-old son had just joined the Navy and that she was depressed. She said she was afraid to tell her husband that a doctor had suggested she receive psyi:hiatric treatment. ASKS FAVOR As the program neared its scheduled end. “I told her, ‘you call me when you feel' Nebel told the woman, “1 want you to do the urge again’,”^ Nebel said. She was the first caller lasjj^-night on the 7:45 to 8 p. m. telephone interview program Nebel also conducts on WNBC. Nebel said she asked if he remembered her. ‘CHlCKplNED OUT’ “You know, I chickened out,” she said. “WeU, this is it.” “I realized I had tronbie on my me jfi favor.” He asked her to give Regan her number and promised to call her back. “Oh, yes, John,” the woman said. JAMES H. MARSHALL Commission Incumbent Enters Race Marshall was appointed In the fall of 1964 to fill the commission vacancy left by the de;.:h of Emmett S. Wellbaum. Marshall retired last year after 40 years at GMC Truck & Coach Division. He was a clerical supervisor. He was an unsuccessful com-lission candidate from District 7 in 1960. BOARD MEMBER A board mimber of Chriflian Temple, Marshall is married and has three children. Bom in Shelby Township, he attended schools in Washington Township and Romeo. He came to Pontiac in 1919. Marshall said he is seeking nomination to complete thp nuuiy projects already igider . way. He said he was interested in upgrading District 7. Marshall is the foilrth to file for District 7 nomination. With th^ number, police traced her ad-dresa. A doctor from St. Vincent’s Hospital hlso was alerted and treated the woman at home. Nebel irtcr said he took the death threat seriously because in 1957 a despondent woman called him and later killed herself. OF the incumbent commissioners, only Leslie H. Huj^on and John A. Dugan have ^ indicated their election plans. FULL COMMISSION However, reliable sources Indicate the full commission wiU seek reelection. The deadline for filing nominating petitions is Feb. IS. ■r iHE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. FEBRt^1|lV 4, A-"—8 U.S. Jets Hammer North Viet Targets iconscwer fo Volunteer for Viet War SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — U.S. Jets struck North Viet Nam with mounting intensity today, but two more American planes were reported lost in the renewed air wat and a U.S. helicopter went doWn in South Viet Nam. Ground action in South Viet Nam dwindled to only light sporadic action against minor Viet Cong, units. Operation Masher, tte big allied drive on the central coast led by the U.S. 1st Cavalry (Airmobile) Division took on a,hew name — Operation White Wing — and a new and as yet unannounced objective. STILLWATER, Minn. (UPI)-A gi^up of inmates at Stillwater State Prison who say they “know how to fight dirty” have volunteered for service in the war in Viet Nam. 1 Car Finally Stopped Home Burning; Cries Ignored ORLAND PARK, 111. (AP) —i. The mother and children were A mother of four said several taken to Silver Cross Hospital in h.r cries Thursday before one of ^he house was destroyed, them stopped and rescued her. The mother did not learn the children from their blazing rescuer’s name. house. -----------— Mrs. Eugene Chapman, 26, told police she detected the fire as she worked in the kitchen, but smoke and flam^ prevent-' 5iinins Bros.-91 N. Saginaw ed her from reaching the children in a bedroom on a lower Inmates William Aird and Wil-1 a r d La Jeunesse said they polled 42 prisoners and found 38 willing to go into the military service. They wrote Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey and level, the joint chiefs of staff askfngj' ‘ » * w to go to Viet Nam. | Police recounted the story this “The cons want a chance to prove Ihemselver." AW Chapmans tave no tele- ■V-re Wllnp to light and Ihe T eons hno. ho» to llghldhlp.- Why should kids going to col- before^one stopped, broke a win-lege and young married men dow and rescued Donna. have to fight, the inmates .said years old: Debbie, 4; Peggy, in their letter, “when we’re will- 2*'i; and Sheryl, 14 months, ing to do the job.” The planet Jupiter has 11 COFFEE BREAK - Officers of the U.S. 25th Infantry Division take a coffee break as smoke rises in the background from bbmb blasts of U.S. support planes near the perimeter of their area in South Viet Nam. The tvyo planes lost in North Viet Nam raised the number'of jets downed to five since tlie resumption of the air attacks five days ago. U.S. officials list four airmen as missing. A twin-jet ASA Vigilante from the carrier Kitty Hawk was crippled by ground fire Thursday and crashed two miles off shore about 35 miles northeast ot Vjnh, a U.S. spokesman said. Re.scue craft spotted the Vigilante’s life rafts aboard two Communist boats leaving the area. The two crewmen were listed as missing in action. ^ PILOT MISSING I U.S. officials belatedly an- ning” Division from Hawaii, wasiThe allied columns were facing WILLING VETS nounce that an A4 Skyhawk'sent into action for the first [north, where U.S. Mariftes a few william Perry World War II from the carrier Ranger was time. A battalion of the divi-|miles away around Quang Ngai credited’with capturing written off as lost and its pilot sion’s 2nd Brigade killed 11 Vietj were assembled as a powerful 240 German soldiers, said he missing in action after it disap-Cong and captured 11 in small I block ing force in. Operation informal survey in the peared into cloud cover on .skirmishes 20 miles northwest of Double Eagle. prison commissary and found Tue.sday. Saigon, near Cu Chi. veterans more willing to enlist The crew* of the two otherj Another battalion flushed a destroyers had shellM U.S. planes lost earlier were viet Cong company in the same,P0P«‘ated coastal areas in Nghe rescued by helicopter. area lit the onset of a new oper- An Province Thursday in the * * * ' , ation Thursday but the guerril-| first attack on North Vietnam- Hanoi Radio claimed North las vanished in a,tunnel escape ®se territory by U.S. warships. - Vietnamese gunners shot down route. The Americans said they fKe U.S. jets Thursdav and cap-destroyed the labyrinth. ’ “if we don’t stop the Com- tured several American pilots. ★ ♦ * Population of Las Vegas, munists In Viet Nam,” t w 0 CORRECTION In Wednesday's Edition, February 2,1966 ^nder Annual Tax ^ale the Title of Allison Green should hove appeared os STATE TREASURER 10: The inmates suggested Minnesota could “furnish a battalion made up of cons” and suggested they be in units by themselves s6 they would have a “motive for outfighting everyone ehc.” The i In South Viet Nam, a Marine helicopler lost altitude utter It i/kini™^ '* "® ligliU»8 Owm i" »ur to,* utl Iruto Ihe Chu U1 eoukt- to « '«« «■ S- «n,uu. back pant.” jumped from less than World War II veterans said. V • 7 T ..Ta » Th Communists in an operation in “2 n Province, 50 miles .soa 200 yards from shore^One i„ ,j,e of the crewmen was injured fa- ,, , „ ~ „ „„torriiiny the president of the They claimed the raise in petitions against all seven board base pay excluded several ....... l|W|'Yli']]li ^'.*1" that the manner in AKhA I ' peered to be simply a public-* ity- maneuver, that the offer was made at an “illegal meet-I ing" and that the public had no say as to how its money NEWS' members. The petitions seek recall of | the board members “because of ^e manner in which several : meetings have been handled.” They charge the trustees with “denying the teachers’ and the public the right to speak out ^t board meetings.” board under very tense condi- The teachers claim tl\at last week after a $200 raise was offered to the teachers, the board PRAYING HANDS—This shrine, symbolizing hands raised in prayer, is on the Faripington Tbwnship copiplex for the Roman Catholic Sisters of Mercy. The sluine stands alone on « peninsula in the center of the multiimlilon-dollar com- plex. The chapel in the background, utilizing the same symbol^ is one of the buildings on the 125-acre site on Middle Belt between 11 and 12 Mile. would be spent. The present sal-ary ranges from $4,800 to $6,725 for a bachelor's degree and from $5,100 to The recall peUUons were to 17.025 for a master’s degree. Dems to Listen to Cavanagh a special meet^ and closed to ‘o give the teachers a $500 boart mTmbera w^^^ ^ said they^.wiirbe held up until'|o_r00 raise without increasing! WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN- Charities Studied Eye Farmington Fund Excess ' * FARMINGTON — The Far-1 the amount spent to help needy create the surplus, despite the SHIP - Detroit Mayor Jerome ^yngton Exchance Club haslfamiiioc a* rhristmas fact that some 150 requests for. after the Monday night board of _ upiron mayor Jerome rinh ha.lr " " " eriiiration mecfintr nuncpnn'MT PI AM- v. . •„ u .u . >™"8ton Exchange Club has'families at Christmas. Itf rebuttal, the board issued DIFFERENT PLAN Cavanagh will be the main has found itself with a surplus] pr-cWeni Conrad Sulll- a statement saying that tension COMPROMISE LOOMS j He said the teachers had a speaker at a joint meeting of of some $9,000 in its Goodfellow conrau sum- caused a misunderstanding. t He said that as a result of compromise proposal which the West Bloomfield and Farm- fund. i l“nnp"v » S “3- The statement said that the mee t i ngs between represen-satisfa"-ington Democratic Clubs at 8 * * * , y. * board was faced with an audi- tatives of the board of educationoffered by p.m Wednesday at West Bloom- Exchange Club members now —-■ “'>" ^-*“0 Orch- are trying to find a suitable use for the .sum, which represents School Holiday Idea Deflated; How Tire-Some and of the teachers groups, a board.^ . . ^ Township Hall, compromise seems to be in the i retaliation to the board de- ard Lake Road. making. Wilson Nickels, head of the Teachers Club Action Committee, said a compromise would also mean a withdrawal of the injuDctioo. Nickels said a proposal was drawn up at the meeting last curricular activitik. LAPEER-^itieone went will now be “given ^eat lengths Wedpesday groups concerned for ap- nial'of a raise the teachers] ' * ★ ★ 'the difference between the have been, boycotting all extra-^ Cavanagh has been mentioned amount of money collected in prominently in state Democrat- recent Goodfellow drives and ic circles as a possible candidate for the U.S. Senate. ing and toys to provide Christmas gifts for families in Far: m i n g t on and Farmington Township. Contributions have been generous enough in recent years to Troy Church Group ... „, , ' Chairmen Paul Livingston of ^ West Bloomfield Gub and ri6dr missionary AWo vagnozzi of the Farming-ton Club said a siimlar invi-, o ■ . tation would be extemled to Avi e. to divulge the content of the sistant Secretary of State G. t 150 tif-es on 51 ____.____Metnoaist L-nurt n ^ *ro> tinned as a Senate candidate. to try to get a day off/f^orti i school here. School that about Proposed Stamp Tax Measure Could Hike County Revenues Ignore Swem, Council Says Tax Rolls Supplied by County Treasurer LAKE ORION - .New fuel was added to the fire of controversy over the statt^ of Robert J. Swem as village assessor this week by action of the Village Council and the county treasurer.* In it.s regular meeting Monday night, the village council, which voted Swem out of the office last May 24, passed a resolution urging citizens to Ignore any correspondence they receive from him regarding their taxes. His position was strengthened yesterday, however, when he was given the annual tax rolls prepared by the county treasurer’s office. County Treasurer James E. Seeterlin explained, “As far as we’re concerned, he is the duly elected assessor of the Village of Lake Orion. We have no record of his being removed from office.” help were answered this year. \ Seeterlin said the treasurer’s i, i, * ‘I position is backed by an opinion Three club members have .“T been appointed to study the mat- '^‘'■ch advises al county of-..ilu - flees and departments on legal ter, with a central suggestion being for the establishment of a student loan fund to help high school graduates with further training. REPAYABLE LOANS school buses yrere deflated stranded ajo^ig the highway f and at home yesterday. hold a luncheon at th^church at moon Tuesday. 1 Guest speaker will be Mrs. L, , . . r • r' Roland Brown, a missionary Holstem-Fresian Group from Taiwan, Formosa. Not only were the tires de- I EAST LANSING WIt-James, * * * flated, but the valve caps jchestnut of Allegan was named! Pupils in the seventh and wet^ removed, police said. i president of the Holstein-Fresian eighth grades who wish to know /Die maneuver failed be- Association of Michigan yester-dause school officials broad- day. cast emergency messages ad- Dairy breed association eleC-vising parents to take their (tions were held at the Michigan children to school in family State University Farmers’ Week] LANSJNG fUPl) — County] Lockwood predicted that The interest-free loans would be paid back after the persog who borrowed the money was employed. Other alternatives, like the possibility of providing clothes for needy children throughout ithe year, are being considered, j Sullivan said. Expected to report back with- affairs. NO EFFORT MADE The treasurer said Albert J. Rhodes, who was appointed assessor by the village council last Nov. 1, has made no effort to obtain the assessment rolls. Swem’s status has beeu a subject of controversy almost from the Pln\/ "^e bill would empower lU Ofuye I fo levy 3 tax on con counlevy a tax on contracts for the sale, exchange, assign-imCA-Children In the Utica ment or transfer of real pro^)-area will have an opportunity to erty. The money would go into stage play of “Alice In imeeting which closes today. lEaster. more about the Methodist church are invited to attend the junior high membesship class wliich meets from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m.,--- „ . . jeach Monday from now until!Wonderland” put on by an all- Between State Dems, GOP the general fund of each county. The federal government currently levies such a tax, at the rate of 1.1 mill per dollar value of the contracts. The play will be presented at (he government Is ex-___________________________ I and 3 p.m. tomOirow and pected to relinquish this taxing dotte among them, netoiM ITaK 10 m CVkAlKir Tim. ^ . ____ ^ teen cast from the three junior high schools. See Clash on Vets Homeslead Tax Bill tax. As worded now, the bill assigns a tax on all property transactions and gifts worth $10 or above. But Lockwood said plans are' to raise that miniinum to about $100 before the tax becomes effective, presumably on Jan. 1968. again Feb. 12 in the Shelby Jun- to the states in 1968. lor High School auditorium. Some Democrats, Sen. Garland Lane of Flint, chairman of the appropriations committee, and J(^ E. McCauley of Wyan-expressed reservations on the proposal. Lane said the extra the resignation, but the council voted to accept it a month later. PTA to Hear Speaker I apparent success, to obtain on Legal Responsibility whitt: lake township ^ Several legal aspects of parent-child responsibility will be presented to the PTA at Lee Brooks School, at 7:30 p.m. Feb. 9. Attorney Richard L. Murphy, jiustice of the peace and former trustee of White Lake Township, will present the topic. He has since attempted, with- ter. Soon after the appointmmt ol Rhodes, Swem, with the help of Rossman, obtained the village tax rolls from the clerk’s office. He has since kept them at his home, where he is preparing property valuations on which Gentle Rein.” A question-and- the 1965 winter ,tax statements answer period will follow. > will be based.^ * * * ' Republican senators are back-should go to the state, and Mc- The performances will take ing plans to earmark the stamp Cauley called it “just another the place of the movies normal- taxes, for the counties, as Sen. itax on real estate,” ly spheduled at Sterling and Emil Lockwood, R-St. Louis, putj The bill was laid bver for LANSING (AP)-House Dem- bom Heights, associate major- to the veteran with the greater^‘^‘’ools on those two h yesterday, ‘.‘do all the work” furUier study after brief debate ocrats and Republicans were ity floor leader disability is justified when yoU| set on sT collision course fiver ol collection. yesterday. veterans homestead tax exemp-tions today. "Ours is a better bill,” said harm others. Thorne, sponsor of the vetoed The Democrats want to raise measure. "It gives more bene- the property tax exemption for fits to more vets” all disabled and pensioned vet- Neither side intends to give “The governor said, he was erans and their widows from an inch—at least the first time vetoing it because of our the first $2,000 to the first $3,500 around—spokesmen have said, financial position last fall. Well, in state-equalized valuation on This means Democrats will our position is better than ever homesteads of about $20,000 have enou^ votes to pass their now. That’s no longer an cash valuation and below, program in both houses. Gov. excuse, and he just might| * ★ * Gwrge Romney will veto it. accept our bill.” | 'This is intended to restore the and House Republicans will * ★ ★ I unexpected cuts made back up the. veto. The “technical 5hanges,”jthe Legislature4switched from * * * Thorne said, include language]locally assessed to state-equal-; Romney already has said he jo ensure that the measure ized valuation. * would veto'the bill if it is the would apply to Korean ar^ Viet] . ★ * ★ same as the one passed last Nam veterans. | Romney hast proposed '"-j fall. It is identical to the vetoed Romney’s program, which stead, sliding-scale benefits! measure. House Republicans would grant a sliding scale of ranging from $3,000 , to $5,000 already have said they would benefits pegged to the percent-j depending on degree of disabil-back the veto to a man as they age of disability, “would be ity. Widows of nonpensioned or did lasj.fall. ^ more difficult and costly to nondisabled veterans would get * * * . administer...it also would harm $2,b00, and nonpensioned, non- In tf caucuk of about 90 the World War I veteran, who disabled World War I vets minutes Thursday, Jlouse Dem-is allowed only a $3,000 annual would ^efthe same, under the ocrats decided they would pass income in order to retain his Senior-Gtizens Exemption Act. their bill “with a few minor pension,” lliorne said, adding:] The Democratic bill was re-technical changes,” said Rep. “I don’t think the argument ported out of committee earlier William Harry Thorne, D-Dear-that it extends greater benefitsSthis week, NOTICE TO DOG OWNERS Oakland County, Michigan Tima 1:00 P.M. to 4:00 P.M. 1966 Dog License will be avoilable ot these clinics. License Fees: Male $1.00, Female $2.00, Unsex^ed $1.00 On March 1, 1966 License Fees will be Male $5.00, Female $7.50, Unsexed $5.00 '' Wixom Municipal Building ............ 49045. Pontiac Trail Avon-Rochester Precincf^Hall . .276 West Auburn Road White Lake Twp. Community Hall. M-59 and Porter Rood Highland Township Fire-Hall...........Highland, Michigan Animal Shelter ..........1200 N. Telegraph Rood Holly Township Fire Hall..................Holly, Michigan Farmington Township Fire Hall.......21420 Wheeler Street Brondon-Ortonyille Fire Hall ... OrtoitVille, Michigan Oakland Township............4325 Territorial Rd., Goodison Novi Township Holl..................... 25850 Novi Rood Animal Shelter ..............., 1200 N. Telegroph Road It Is neevsUry that all dqg owners In Oakland County produce a certificate Feb. 5 Feb. 5 Feb. 6 Feb. 12 Feb. 13 Feb. 19 Feb. 19 Feb. 20 Feb. 26 Feb. 26 F»b. 27 that their dog (or dogs) has beer! vaccinated against rabies within the last 12 months with Tissue Vaccine or within 24 if vaccinated with Modified Live Virus in order to secure a- 1966 dog license, if such owners do not possess such a certificate, one may be obtained from, their local Veterinitlan, or at one of the County or Township, operated clinics which will be held at the above locations. ' Fm for Robitt Vaocinotion at tha abova Clinics is $2.00. . _-^0 , Our Entire Stock WOMEN'S COATS ■ Excluding Cashmere Reg. 39 99 $0^90 to 45.00 < Z. ^ Choose from this wide selecr fion of unfrimmed, fur Trims, man made fur fabrics, Kdsh-i^ moor and many more. Tweed, plaids and a wide assortment of solid colors. Sizes 6 to 20. Chorge it. WAITE'S COAT FASHIONS . . . THIRD FLOOR ■i -.'I- STARTSa20 below! NEW INTERNATIONAL' CUB CADET TRACTOR with Snow Thrower or Snow Plow Attachment Alto dots dozoni of othor choros tho yosr^roundl Cleor snow from driveways, tidewajks, parking areas, fast and easy. The powerful^ub Cadet has, direct drive. With no belts or 9hains there is no * power loss-not even when you-tackle tall snowdrifts. And new automatic compression release in% sures starting in coldest weather Come spring, yoJ can mow in style and co*hifort-or plow, till, and do dozens of other chores-ovpr 50 work-saving attachments are available. Three new Cub Cadet models, 7,10, and 12 hp, designed for long Ufa. Seo them here, now. Buy on codvonient terms. King Bros, Poatlae Road al Opdyko FE 4-1662 FE 4-0734 PARTS aid SERVICE THE PONTIAC t>KESS. FlliDAY, FEBRUARY 4. 19^^ A—3 Heavy Snow Blanket Still Snarls Parts of the Northeast; Rain Dampens West Coast By The Asnciated Press ily good, the Weather Bureauj A stprm whisked rafo inland | said, along the West Coast today from San Francisco to Puget I The'heavy snow coating was Sound, while parts of the North-|ieft behind earlier this -week in east remained snarled by a heavy blanket of snow. The weather picture in the rest of the country was genpral- the Northeast by the worst blizzard barrage in seven decades. Cleanup toil continued, especially in central New York State where Oswego was over-1 recognized in expected abate-1 whelmed by 102 inches of snowjment of the northeast water which left drifts piled as high an' shortage. 30 feet. I Lack of water for city reser- -unni 6 n /wsirn ''0*'’® “*• been an :hools CLOSED increasingly grave problem in Even as schools remained the heavily populated quarter of i closed in the heavy snow area, the country. | the visitation’s silver lining was I Forecasters usually examine [the possibility of flood threatiblizzard. The one- to tHree-foot from such heavy snowfall. jsnowpack will add vital mois- This worry was not absent, ‘“'’e ‘o th's parched area. The but the Weather Bureau alsol®‘°‘'®^ ‘‘rain into de- had this observation' The four-|Pi®t®0 99 ^Z.OO Many assorted styles to choose from. Blue, black reversible sizes 4, 6, 7, only. Charge Yours ot Waite's. Boys' Wear.. .Second Floor Girls' Assorted Sweaters a *1.00 Wide ossortment of styles to choose from in 100% Orlons. Some slight irregulars. Charge Yours at Waite's. ' , . Girls' Wear... Second Floor Girls' Winter Coats MOO $10.00 Choose from ^ wide ossortment of solids, and tweeds.' Assorted sizes-*ond colors, tharge Yours of Waite's. „ - _ Girls' Wear... SeconcRFIoor Girls' Nylon “Stretch Pants a *1.88 Girls' 3 to 6x nylon fleece stretch pants. 100% nylon and completely washable. Many.ossorted colors. Charge It. Girls'Wear... Second Floor Girls' Nylon Stretch Tgps 's ^1.88 Choose from a wide ossortmeni of colors in solids and stripes. Long sleeves. 100% nylon stretch. Chorge J'- Girls' Weor... Second Floor Boys' Orion Ear Muffs 66" Choose from o wide assortment of colors. 100% Orion ear muffs for those cold windy doys. Charge It. Boys' Wear... Second floor Boys', Girls' Hats, Mittens K99 66" Boys' ond girls' assorted hats ond mittens In many assorted styles and colors. Chorge Yours ot WaHe's. Children's Worl&... Second Floor Infants' and Toddlers' Sets Reg. 4.00.6.t)0 Reg. 7.00-11.00 3.88 *4.88 Boys' ond girls' styles to choose from. 100% nylon , stretch. All are washable ond colorfost. Slock ond Jumper sets. Children's Wear ... Second Floor Disc. Peter Pan Bras Reg. 2.50^3.50 Reg. 196-6.00 7.00 7.00 Choose from contour, padded ond push-up stylet. All ore completely washable. White and block. Assorted colors and sizes. Slimweor . .. Second Floor Perm-Press Dress Shirts a *3.49 65% Dacron polyester ond 35% cotton. White dress shirts in tab and spreod collars. Need no ironing. 14'A to 16'/i. Men's Weor... Street Floor Men's Kentfield Underwear a 3.,*2™ Choose from T-shirts, briefs ond boxer shorts. Combed cotton T-shirts and broadclath boxer shorts. S-M-L-XL. > Men's Wear... Street Floor Men's Assorted Sweaters $8.00 Choose from cardigons, ond slipovers in solids ond patterns. 100% wools and wool blends. V-necks and crew hecks. Men's Wear... Street Floor Men's Broadcloth Fa jamas a 2 *5 Sanforized 100% cotton broadcloth in coot or middy styles. Elastic waist band. Sizes A-B-C. Charge It. Men's Wear... Street Floor , Men's, Women's Hair Brush ^'00 $1.44 Genuine bristle brushes with quality wood handles. Mony styles to choose from. Chorge Yours ol Waite's. * X ■ V Cosmetics... Streer Flodr Foam Corduroy Pillows Reg Wc 1.39 / / Choose from round or sqoore sofa pillows. Woshoble corduroy covers. Choose from many decorator colors. Charge Yours. Notions... Street Floor * • Jumbo Garment Bags Reg. r) 1.99 21 for Sturdy metal frome with duroble vinyl covers. Full length zipjSer for access. Holds 16 gorments. As-* sorted solid colors. Notions... Street Floor Ladies' Costume Rings R«g 0 $f 1.00 Z for 1 or 59c each Choose from a wide assortment of rings In birth-stone, friendship and many rthrm. Charge Yours. Jewelry... Street Ffoor ' Ladies' Textured Nylons Reg 0 ^ $029 '1.65 0 for 0 or $1,15 Pair Famous brand textured hosiery in several (lesigns. Navy, black ond brown. Sizes 8'/i to II. Charge Yours. Hosiery... Street Floor Jacquard Terry Towels , Reg. 1.99 Reg. 1.39 Reg. 59c Bath Towel Hond Towel Wash Cloth ^1.58 98f. 48= Lovely ioequord towels it) your choice of 5 lovely decorator color^. One of the leading manufacturers. Chorge It. Domestics... Fourth Floor Floral Percale Sheets Reg. 3.49 *,g, 4 49 |(,g. 2,59 72i(IOeinch 8lxl08-inch Cases $244 $044 $j94 Finest quality cotton percale sheeits In pink, blue or gold florol patterns. Shop Waite's ond Sove. Charge It. Dom'estics... Fourth Floor Vinyl Tablecloths Reg. 2.99 Reg. 3.99 Reg. 6.99 Reg. 7,99 52x52-lnch 52x704nch 70" Round 60k88-inch $j48 $]98 $048 $098 Lovely flannel bocked vinyl tablecloths in 'your choice of 2 prints. Just wipe clean with o damp cloth. ' Tablecloths... Fourth Floor Assorted Bedspreads Reg. 6.99 1 / to 17.99 ^ /2 Off Choose from several styles in twin ond full sizes. Many decorator colors to choose from. Charge Yours ot Woile's. • Bedspreads ... Fourth Floor Print Kitchen Terries 46" 100% cotton ferry is soft ond obsorbenl. Sevqfol lovely colors to choose from. Shop Woite's ond Save. Chorge It. Domestics ... Fourth Floor Down, Down and Feather Pillows , Reg. to $ Q Q Q 14 99 ^0.00 Down and down and feather pillows. Your choice of pit^k or blue down proof ticks. Buy now during this , gigantib sole, Domestics.'.. Fourth Floor Belleair Seasonaire Blankets — a/ *5.88 Keeps you wt^ In winter ond cool In summer. Lorge 70x90 u(ch size. Choice of severol lovely decorator colory / Blankets... Fourth Floor Assorted Curtains Reg. 2.99 1/ to. 24.99 72 Off Large gr^p of tiers, 6nd ruffled tie backs In several colors, fabrics ond styles. cKarge Yours at WaTte's. Curtains... Fourth Floor Assorted Draperies Reg. 6.99 1/ to 26.99 72 Off Large group of drapes in several lengths, widths ond fabrics ond colors. Charge Yours ot Waite's. Draperies... Fourth Floor Drapery Fabric Sale v Reg. 1.99 1/ to 2.39 /2 0ff Wide assortment of Rayon ond Acetate ond, cotton fobrics to choose from. Many prints ortd solid colors. Charge It. , Fabrics... Fourth Fl^r Cotton Plaids, Solids Reg. $128 1.99 °Yd., 100% cotton sportswear fabric In 0 wide assort- ' of lovely colors. 45-inch widths. Charge Yours Fabria... Fourth floor • lOp^ Wool 9x12' Braid Rug 68*00 ^59.00 Double core oval braid rug In your choice of 4 colors. Approximate size. Matching 6x9-ft. Rug Reg. 32.95 .. . $29. Rugs...'Fifth Floor •V 9-Trans. AMtFM Rpdio *15.00 Built-In antenna for strong clear reception. Includes batteries, earphone and carrying case.. Charge It. Radios... Fifth Floor r AM-FM Stereo Console - $130 Choose from lovely walnut or mohogohy finished cabinets. Fully guaranteed. No money down on Waite's easy terms. Stereos... Fifth Floor Upright Vacuum Sweeper & *45.00 Full t-yeor worronly ogoinst .defective ports ond workmanship. Disposable dirt bags. Chorge Yours ot Waite's. Sweepers ... Fifth Floor Electric Carving Knife fee $8.99 Lightweight and eosy to hondl#.. Eosy grip hondle mokes you on expert in the ort of corving. Chorge Yours. ••($ Housewares... Lower Level Service for 8 Dinnerware ' '^19.77 Ideal for ony occasion. Choose from 5 lovely patterns. Complete service for 8 dinnerware . . . Charge Yours. . * . Chino Dept.'... Lower Level 101-Pc. Bavaridn Dishes 74.95 $68.00 Fine translucent china is Ideol for any special occo-, Sion or -for everyday use. Complete service fbr 12. Charge It. China Dept.... Lower Level 4 Shetland Sweeper Vac - $18.44 Lightweight, yet powerful. King size disposable dirt bog. Easy to handle and convenient to store. Charge It. Housewores... Lower Level Women's Sno-Boots Reg. to 15.00 Reg. to 1AOO 7.90 -^10.90 Group of women's snow boots in flot, stocked heels ond dress styles.' Choice of block, brown or green. • Charge It. ’ * Women's Shoes ... Street Floor Women's Asst. "Frolics"-9*00 ^4.90 Group fo women's Frolic Stocked heel ond wedgies styles. Choice ol .block, brown and ton. Charge Yours. ■ ^ • • 1 Wom^en's Shoes... Street Floor - j \y ■ THE PONTIAC PRESS « West Hurw Street «T,J Rir« Pontiac, Michigan !■■F;H(n■ARV 4, 196fi vice PrMident i ^eio MrCfiiv iMichi^ran Bell T^kes ‘Long Distance’ View As evidence of its, faith in Michigan’s present and future, Michigan Bell Telephone Co. announced a 1966 e?cpansion prog rani totaling $175 million. Exceeding last year’s capital outlay by"$40 million, the expenditure will provide nine new^ buildings, 22 building additions and * expansion of service facilities. ★ ★* ★ Locally, the company has earmarked $4,117,000 to be spent in the same categories to keep pace with the area’s population growth and booming economy. An equipment in-. novation to be introduced this year in Pontiac and adjacent communities is Touch Tone telephones on - which pushbuttons repface the conventional dial. ★ ★ ★ The ,statewide spending program will add hundreds of new employes to the utility’s present personnel of 23,400, said Mij^'higan Bell President William M. Day. He added that increasingly atlractive rates and a rising level of service are mainly responsible for the great upsurge in telephone usage. Since public utilities have not only to keep abreast with local development but indeed to anticipate it, the projected expansion program , of Michigan Bell is gratifying as-^ surance of its favorable outlook for the Pontiac area. We commend the company on its long-range, progressive measures in meeting its commitment to surpassing public service. Death Stalks Aerialists Working l^ithout Nets For the secorld timV within four years tragedy played an unsched-^ . uled role in the Shrine Circus hdld annually in Detroit. During Tuesday’s matinee, Luis Mubillo, called the world’s greatest aerialist, fell 45 feet from his walk-up wire. He suffered severe injuries from which he is recovering in a Highland Park hospital/ In 1962, the Great Wallkndas met disaster when their hlgh-wire seven-member pyramid collapsed, if* Two of the troupe were hurled to their deaths, another paralyzed frorfi the w^ist down and a^ fourth sustained minor injuries. ★ ★ ★ * Both catastrophes had one thing in comhion—the performers were w;orking without a ssnety net. Top aerialists traditionally scorn nets as a refle<‘-tion on their consummate.skill and courage. But such disregard for j’lersonal-•‘safety is most unreasonable, and the significance of it almost certainly ♦ lost-on audiences. Many states require the u s c of safety nets for aerial acts. Indeed, propo.sals to make them mandatory have been made in both, the Michigan legislature and Ttle Detroit City Council. But they failed of adoption. ★ ★ ★ ‘ ■ It is now time —- considerably past time—that state legislation be enacted to protect aerialists against their own misguided sense of fearlessness and the public against the shatteMng experience of seeing them killed or maimed. You are as good as cleared of any suspicion that some time during Christmas-New' Year hilarity you may have succumbed to the uninhibited spirit of the season and bestowed or received a festive kiss under the mistletoe. For the Portland, Ore., Bureau of Health came out right before New Year’s Eve with a .sober warning (given with a ^straight face and an evident nose for news) that promiscuous parly pecking might” result in any of the dread maladies list- , ed above. , ★ ★ ★ Now, this is a pretty hard rap at romance. But not too hard. For there is a simple w&y to handle it. ★ ★ ★ Just let Congress do to kissing • what it has done to cigarette smoking. So the eager swain says to the waiting girl: “You understand, of course, that 'this kiss can cause mononucleosis, canker sore, tuberculosis, scarlet fever, diphtheria, trench mouth, tooth decay or a cold?’’ ^ Then if they STILL want to proceed — cheers for romance and nuts to germs! Health Killjoys Blow Whistle on Kissin«: Feeling fine? , Noitrace of niononucleo.sis, canker sore, scarlet fever, tuberculosis, diphtheria, trench mouth or tooth decay? Not even a cold? Then you are more than healthy Negro Has Made Economic Gains By STERLING F. GREEN . WASHINGTON (AP) - The President ob.served in his State of the Union message that the past five years of unbroken growth have been gobd years for Amerior To this Andrew F. Brimmer* adds: “These have been the best years for the Anierican Negro.” l^rimmer was not talking about the gains that were measured in the biggest and boldest headlines, those in (the area of civil rights. He was talking about better incomes, higher living standards, and the escape from poverty of hundreds of thousands of nonwhite Americans. One of the top-ranking Negroes in government, Brimmer is assistant secretary of commerce for economic affairs. At his command is one of the greatest statistic factories in the world. It has ground out some 'arresting, facts, which Brimmer has summarized. PRO.SPERITY REACHES He said: “The period of expansion has endured so long that prosperitylhas begun to ^ep into the nation's backyards and byways populated primarily by Negroes.” These were among the pieces of statistical evidence that supported his statement; ^In 1964 the number of jobs held by nonwhites jumped by 300,000. Last year the total rose by another 200,000. By the end of 1965 the unemployment rate,for Negro male breadwinners - adult married men living with their families— was less than 2 per cent. That is the same as for married male whites. PERSONAL INCOME The,share of total U. S.‘personal income V'ing to nonwhiles since 1962 has risen faster than that of the white population. .So there has been a genuine improvement in the economic welfare of Negroes. In 1964 the median family income of Negroes actually grew faster than the income of white families, in both percentage and dollar figures. The family at the middle of the Negro income scale had a $374 income gain, or 10 8 per, cent, in 1964. The comparable ligure for white families was $310, or 4.7 jier cent. ' . In the same year (^he nunfcef of while families living below the poverty level—at incomes of' less than $3,000 a year—was reduced by 3.2 per cent. That compared with a 7.5 per cent drop in the number of Negro families 19 the poverty zone. HAS FAR TO GO. But if the Negro has come far, he started late and has much further to go. While the country has enjoyed five firil years of prosfjerity, Negroes have had only three. It took two years for the fruits of economic growth to reach nonwhites in any sobstahtiai way. V erbal Orchids to - Mrs. Alfred Griffin of Fenton; 8?th birthday. George E. McKnight of 95 N. Sanford; 80th birthday. Voice of the People: UtORRiS-^ Okoy—You Try It! David Lawrence Soys: Indifference Threatens Freedom WASHINGTON - Indifference of, the people toward what is going on in government is today one of the principal rea-.>».ins why human freedom is being endangered. It’s only when the people become thoroughly informed and] fully aware of' .efforts to t a k e LAWRENCE away from them their fundamental rights that they are arou.sed and begih to tell their elected representatives to safe^ guard those rights. How many people in America today know that there is pending;^ in Congress a bill which, if pas.sed, can deprive them of certain rights and impose upon them a form of despotism'.’ Under the French kings many , years ago. the doctrine p r e-vailed' that "the right of working is a royal right which the prince can .sell and the subjects must buy.” .Sen. Sam ,1. Ervin, Jr., Democrat of North Carolina, in citing the above quotation, de-efares that any law which would make possible compulsory unionization in America is an adaptation of the do**-trine prevalent in France in those despotic days. For, the senator says, the right to work is being considered a labor-union right “which the labor union can sell and the individual worker must buy if he is to be allowed to earn a livelihood for himself and his loved ones with hi.< own hands and talents,” It is indeed surprising that so few people know that the proposal at present before Congress goes to the heart of free government. STATES’- POWER For hitherto the states have had the (jower to regulate labor-management relations within their own borders. Now they would be deprived of thjit same power, and the federal government would authorize compulsory unionization wit()out affording any state the privilege of writing its own laws- on this subject. * Sen. Ervin a few days ago made this significant comment in his speech before the Virginia Bar Association; “It is appropriate to note in passing that since the Supreme Court’ had adjudged the act of Con'gress barring Communists from union otfices to be an unconstitutional bill of attainder, a union-shop agreement may compel loyal Americans to become involuntary members of a Communist-controlled union which is disloyal to them and to their country.” . ♦ * ★ The alibi is offered that neither the federal nor state government requires anybody to join a union, and that this matter is left entirely to the employer and the union to cover in a negotiated contract. STRIKE THREAT But, realistically speaking, the employer is threatened with a strike unless he accepts the conditions demanded by the labor union, so the net result would be that compul.-orv uni;inizati'.in could come into force everywhere if the proposal before Congress is pas.sed. There are some evidences that public opinion is gradually being aroused on the whole sub-ject„ Until the American people, however, voice their protests and demand that their elected respresentatives who have announced that they will sujiport compulsory unionization change their position, the danger of further encroachments on freedom of the individual in America will continue. Bob Considine Soys: Big Bombers' Fate Stirs Less Controversy Now Resident Urges Action at High Accident Corner How many more accidents will occur at the intersection of Wise and Carroll Lake Roads in Commerce before the road commission will act’.’ Four accidents have happened there in less than a month, one leaving two persons dead. A warning sign has been erected but the stop sign is where it has always been—too close to the intersection. We were told after a petition was circulated that ” a blinker would be installed but nothing has been started. If the road commission can’t take the word of the police department that this is a dangerous im tersection, the safety program is lost, making: the police department’s job more difficult. ★ ★ ★ Governor Romney asked for aid in his safety program. He should start by shaking up a few offices. CARROL LAKE RESIDENT ‘l-awhreakiii}; (lilizeiis Shoiilii He I'ickeUMr Tuesday I saw a woman walk across Saginaw and Huron against a complete fed light while three children, about eight, ten and twelve, stood and waited fbr the green. Lawbreaking citizens and saps like this should be given tickets, ‘ I WAITED ‘Mo.sl Companies .Vre (iood as Their Drd* One hears a lot of complaints of making a fast buck but let's have a change of pace and say it's good to find we have dealers , who are decent and ethical in their businesses. 'Most are not onlv as( good as their word, they do not overcharge! Companies such as these restore one’s faith in human nature. . MRS. S. ZIMMERMAN 875 ORLANDO Reader l)isaj(rees Willi Righl-lo-Work L)iw Many of the 19 states with "right-to-work” laws are the poorest in the Nation. The 31 states without the same law are the most prosperous and require the least Federal aid per person. Industries with 4he. highest rate of pay are the large ones like steel and auto industries. Except in “right-to-work ” states, plants producing steel and cars are union shop plants. * * * Nearly all the companies making steel and ears are making record profits. I can't see who loses. The workers are winning, management Is winning, and the towns, slates and Uncle .Sam are winning with a bigger tax cut from both the high wages and high profits. ★ ★ ★ The big argument for maintaining "right-lo-work” seems to be that a man should be free to belong or not to bejong to a union, those of us who pay, union dues don't like supporting free riders. The law says we have to. Negotiations cost money and so do grievances and arbitrations. Costs come from union dues. We pay them because we know^, the difference between wages and working conditions in union and non-union plants. 1 cap't see what a great thing “right-toswork” laws are. ANDREW MONTGOMERY , 24 W. TENNYSON ^Ameriran People l\r«Ml Somrihin}; Prartirar there is no historic precedent to support the theory that we can turn masses of white or nonwhite beings into pro-American capitalists by bombing, burning and strafing them. It didn't work for Hitler and it isn’t working for us. Should the American people unite behind Senator Fulbright and put a stop to this suicidal nonsense? We need something more practical. GEORGE W, LONG ROCHESTER The Almanac By United Press International Today is Friday, Feb. 4, the !l5th day of 1968 with 330 to follow. The moon is between its first quarter and full phase. The morning star is Venus. The evening stars are Mars, Jupiter and Saturn. In 1789, presidential electors cast all 69 electoral votes for George Washington. In 1926, the “Charleston” craze reached its peak when John Giola of New York City danced the new step for 22 hours and 30 minutes. He claimed the Charleston endurance championship. In 1948, Ceylon became a free and self-governing dominion of the British Empire. NEW YORK-Secretary McNamara’s testimony asserting that in a few years the U S. could defeat both the Soviet Union and Red China by missiles alone is an emphatic reiteration of his intention 1) to let the remaining m a n.n e d bombers find their way to the scrapheap and '2) further proof he will never resusci- CONSIDINE tate the orphaned B70. In a*more argumentative day in military annals, the secretary’s blunt sounding of the death knell for the bjg bombers and the sacking of sgperbly trained SAC crews that fly them would have ignited fiery dialogue. • But there is every indication, particularly if LBJ wins another four-year term in 1968, that McNamara's ban will drown out all rebuttals and bring about compliance. He has Wn firmly convinced for some time that our intercontinental range missile, although never tested with the warhedds they are now built to carry, arc superior to any manned-bomber weapons system. There is little chance that his mind can be changed, except on direct order from the President. And that’s not likely. NO EXPERIENCE Except for a few low-yield A-^mbs detonated in space by now obsolete missiles before the partial nuclear test ban. we have no experience in delivery of nuclear or theflnonuclear warheads to the dozen (or hundreds) of targets (hat would have to be hit with precision ■ if the secretary’s confident' appraisal bore fruit. This envisions a day in the not very remote future when the chief deterrent of World War III, and main chance of the continuity of the Pax* Americanus, will rest on thousands of untried missiles imbedded in American soil. The Russians may have comf around to NcNamara's ban-the-bomber philosophy some years ago. They appear to have nothing in the way of a modern bomber in production. As long ago as 1957, Krushchev was contentedly telling the Hearst Task Force that he' could blow us to bits with his ICBMS, But he, too, never got around to demonstrating that he could, nor have his successors. Could we be on the edge of the Stalemate of Doubt? Barhrrs Kediirr Kairs for KMrrlv If you have wondered why many elderly men l]ave hair' extending over their'ears and collars, rest assured they are not careless nor have they joined the b<‘atnik group. Chances are these retired citizens postpone haircuts because they can’t afford the $2.25 charge. Seems the barbers could give them a lower rale on condition they come on weekday mornings when business is slow. CITIZEN roinmruls on Civil Ki^litH of While IVo|»le In a recent letter George E. Smith expressed his concern for the civil rights of white people, referring to Mr, William J. Pulle who admitted that he refused to sell a building site to a Negro strictly because of his race, as he was afraid it would affect his financial interest adversely. it it ir There are many white folks who do not share Mr. Smith’s concern and who place more' value on a man’s dignity than'any financial consideration. . • RICHARD B. SARTELL WATERFORD TOWNSHIP Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Just Omitting ... The International Team.iter Two men were seated in a bus. One of them noticed hii friend's eyes toere closed. “You feelinq sick?" “No.' I hate to see all these ladies standingf Communist Teachers? The Arizona Republic Yale president Kingman Brewster Jr. has branded Staughton Lynd’s speech in Ha-, noi as “a disservice to the cause of freedom of dissent, freedom of travel, and conscientious pacilLsm.” Brewster did'not comment on the legality or illegality of the 10-day trip Lynd, an assistant professor of history at Yale, took to North Viet Nam in the company of two other Americans, including a Communist. But he did say (hat the use of Lynd’i presence in Hanoi “to five' this aid and comfort to a government engaged In hostilities with American forces seems to me inconsistent with the puepose of fact-finding in the name of peace.’’ It is unlikely that Lynd, Respite his intellectually-bankrupt arguments and unscholarly mien, will be relieved of his teaching pos|. ’ The ultra-liberal view is (hat he should not be. For he is engaged in merchandising ideas, the argument goes, and students must be exposed to a variety of ideas, however unpopular or false. But a more sensible argu-^ ment was given some 15 yea ago by philosopher Arth Lovejoy, founder of the Ame can Association of Universi Professors, who remind those who insisted that a Coi munist had a moral right teach in an American univi ■ “'The beiibver in the indisp sability of freedom, whether ademic or political, is not th< by committed to the cAncluj that it is his duty to facilitate destruction, by placing its « mies in the strategic positi of power, prestige or influenc n»wt dispatchM. Tht PontiK Pr«M li d«|lv*r«d tr esrritr lor SO emti a wtek; whart mailed In Oakland, Ganasaa, Llv-Inoslon, Macomb, lapaer and Washtenaw Counties It Is tts.00 a yeat! elsawhera In Michigan and ■" Stales SM.00 a year. All mall sub-Kripllons payaMa M advene*. Poslaga has baan paid at the M Mutual Relation... The Butler County (Pa.) News-Record * The bank robber shoved a note across to' the teller that read/“Put the money in a'bag, sucker, and don’t make a move.” The teller pushed back another note; “Straighten your tie, stupid, we're taking your picture^” / THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 4. 1966 Halt Ordered on Drug Test WASHINGTON (UPI) ^ Human testing for an oral,contraceptive has been stopped. Its developers found cancer in dogs given the experimental drug. llie Food and Drug Administration (FDA) said yesterday the drug, identified as MK-665, contained an element never before used in oral contraceptives. It is not on the market. The FDA said there was no indication, however, that those oral contraceptives now on the market were unsafe. According to FDA administrator James L. Godded, four of six dogs examined showed signs of breast cancer after 52 weeks of receiving from 20 to 40 times the human dosage given 340 women. No suggestion of cancer has appeared in the women who took the drug, but the FDA said they will get long-term examinations under a follow-up program. COMBINATION M-665 was identified as a combination of Mestranol and Ethynerone developed by the Merck. Sharpe and Dohme pharmaceutical firm. Hedy,'Just Tired,' ' Says Cemeteryl ! Romney is scheduled to attend Dropped From F/Vm ^uit Is Mistake A—7 PdNTIAC MALL OPTICAL CENTER * IviNinC* >IH liN im-lltS . ' • » DETROIT (AP) — A woman HOLLYWOOD (AP) — “I was think a life is more important who sued Brookdale Cemetery, So tir^ from sleeping only one,than tedinicalities?” charging its operators had mis-, hour in four days. I just sort ofl Gordon’s spokesman said plaped the body of her husband collapsed for a day. That’s hu- T'- ' .. .................... n, isn’t it?' Thus actress Hedy Lamarr, exotic star of the 1930s and 1940s, explained her aj)sence from . work,- which resulted in her firing Thursday from her IS Lamarr “expressed re-|said Thursday she “^lade _ji ts” when informeH she wnc'mistake.” '' grefs” when informed she wasjmistake.” ' ’ being dropped, “but she con-' Shown Police Department .curred with him under the cir- photographs and files, Mrs. Vir-cumstances.” iglnia Davis told Circuit Judge Room-To’Room COLOR TV Josep]) G. Rashid she erred; when she said the body buried was not her husband, Jimmy A. ‘TRIED MY BEST Miss Lamarr said, however: first starring role in 15 years. “I was doing everything they * * * ‘ wanted me to do. 1 posed for It was not, said producer Bert stills. I went to a press confer- „ ★ I. Gordon, because of her arrest ence. I tried my best.’’ Rashid Wednesday sub- last week on suspicion of shop- Her, attorney, Arthur Law- poenaed Mrs. Davis, her broth-lifting $86 in goods from a de- rence, said the actress had been er John West, and their mother, partment store. under pressure duping the last Mrs. Dora Williams. Miss Lamarr was replaced in;week b^ause of her arrest and! Mrs. Davis had sued the cem-“Picture Mommy Dead” by Zsa the attendant publicity, scripti^tery and an undertaker for $3-Zsa Gabor, Gordon said. jchanges she learned of just last;million in damages for herself CITES BUDGET ' trouble with a bad tooth i and $1.8 million for her six chil- ^ and worry over her son Johnjdren. T9, who had to report for his TO DROP SUIT ! 9®*’ attorney, Mayer Morgan-said the suit will be from phone calls, tel^rams.j^poppgj Explained Gordon; “The only [j*- remaining scenes are those In which she (Miss Lanuur) ap-| I pears. I have great admiration | for Miss Lamarr as an actress! and as a woman. , hnt said, ■’butwithamd-j The actress. 51. is due for i lion-dollar budget, the people' financing the picture wiU not '^"'^'"""‘. a petty thefti Rashid said evidence showed ’■ I conclusively that “the right! Model 29P01 Deluxe features Include; all 82-Channel UHF/ VHF reception, slide-rule UHF dial, telescoping dipole antenna, rare-earth bonded-shield picture Hfleiic cmt tube with 1 year Warranty, Automatic Color Mon-Itor, and full power transformer chassis. ’ OPTIONAL EXTRA charge Feb. 9. She’s denied man was buried in the right jssiuie ueiays. . . Davis said Thursday Gordon said he learned . Miss would be oleas^ bhave her in Pi’^iP^raphs taken of her hus-Lamarr was hosoitalized for band at the morgue and of the ..amarr was irospitaiizea tor g future ‘picture. Miss Lamarr the Brookdale crave nervous exhaustion Wednesday declared “I will never art u ^ . .J"® urooKoaie grave When he sent a studio car to JS’” pick her up, jji which she played Ml 0^5 with FREE Installation and ^3.0 Service rSMlWW*""' The use of Ethynerone was new, the FDA said, and testing was shorter than for oral contraceptives now on the market, “I just needed a good night’s TELLS OF TROUBLES — Actress Hedy Lamarr talked to newsmen at the door of her, Hollywood home yesterday, telling how “nervous exhaustion,” the shock of being arrest- . ,________________^_______ ed for petty theft, and the need for rest caused her to give sleep,” Miss Lamarr told news-up the first major movie acting Job she’s had since 1951. men at her Hidden Valley home. She was accused last week of stealing $86 iii miscellaneous “Should one day’s sleep upset merchandise from a department store. them that much? Don’t you WALTON TV 515 E. Walton Blvd. Open 9 to 9 FE 2-2257 the mother 'of a 16-year-old daughter, was her first major one in films since 1951. She has made some television appearances since. Lots of people in .town have moved np to this ear.^ Let ns show yon how persnasive a Chrysler can be. I. th. 300 3-Doer Honttep. Once you look our Chryslers over, you'll (discover how easy they are to own, and understand exactly why we’re breaking alf sales records again this year. Follow the leader. novo np to CHRYSLER OAKUND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH INC. 724 OAKLAND AVRNUI PONTIAC, MJCHIGAN BILL SPENCE INC 6673 DIXII HIGHWAY CURKSTON, MICHIGAN eitiunff 4UMAViPIBtTOUAUIV» compare mm-PREST 6.98 TOWNCRAFT* NEVER-IRON ORLON/RAYON SLACKS Mqehina wash . . . dry ... and waar! Yas, you navar, navar hav# to iron thasa luxurious Orion "" acrylic/ocatota/royon ravarsa twist slocks . . . thoy'ra Pann-PrastI Hondsomaly toijorad in tha most-wontad ttyUs; Univarsity Orod, Continantal. Quality, stylo, footurai — ho couldn't ask for anything moro. And that goot double for Ponnoy't fontostic low prico. Comporo. Sisot 30 to 42 wide ossortmont of colors. \ PENNEY'S MIRACLE MILE THE PONTIAC PREgS. FRIDAY. FEHKUARV 4, ] DU POBJT 501 !ivr ■ DU PONT CERTIFICATION MARK FOR CARPETS WITH ALL NYLON PILE MEETING DU PONT QUALITY STANDARDS IIQIIDATION SALE Are Building A NEW SUPEII CARPET STORE On Dixie Hwy. at Loon lake Near Howard Johnson Restaurant. Wo have one of the largest stocks ot 501 Nylon carpet in.Oakland County and it must bo sold boforo wo make our move. Karon’s prieos are the lowest ever. So to insure the best soloction buy now. All sals prices are on existing inventory only. Below Are Only A Few of the Mony Bargains Available SPECIAL; DC-8 PAHERN : 15-YEAR ] ^DUPCOTI 501; NYLON DC-8 PATTERN 1ANTEE MfEAR GUAI lAquidation Price , $fi49 U Sq. Yd. 3 ROOMS INSTALLED i WALL TO WALL ' 30 YARDS INSTALLED OVER RUIBERIZED PAD Just imagine ... 30 yards of this 100% DuPont Nylon in your home for only $10.08 Per Month. • Jjl} 501 and Continuous Filament Nylon Guaranteed 15 Years in writing. ^279“ YARDS CASH PRICE MONTHLY PAYMENTS 35 $325 $11.74 40 $372 $13.12 45 $418 $14.75 50 $465 $16.41 55 - $511 $18.03 A 6d $558 ^ $19.69 SUPER DUPONT 501 KT NYLON 20-YEAR WEAR GUARANTEE Ijitliutlnlion Prirr 30 YARDS INSTALLED OVER RURRERIZED PAD SUM. ”501“ NYLON Guaranl«*d 20. Yaor. in Wrifingl Just imagine . . . 30 yards of this, super 100% DuPont Nylon ^ your» home of 10.62 per Month. YARDS 35 40 45 50 55 60 CASH PRICE $343 $392 $441 $490 $539 $588 MONTHLY PAYMENTS $12.10 $13.83 $15.56 $17.29 $19.03 $20.75 PLUSN PILE 100% NYLON Bedroom Carpet Approx. 1,100 Sq. Yds. $J 149 fsq.Yd. S 100% ACRIUW PILE Gold and Beige Only 5 Pcs. Total Approx. 130 Yds. 189 ¥sq. Yd. 100% NYLON PILE Random Sheered Coprolan Approx. 550 Yds. $1 :t9 § Sq. Yd. SPECIAL NYLON 10-YEAR WEAR GUARANTEE 3 ROOAAS INSTALLED WALL TO WALL 30 YARDS INSTALLED OVER RUBBERIZED PAD Just imagine . . . 30 yards of this 100% DuPont Nylon in your home for only «222 YARDS 35 40 45 50 55 60 CASH PRICE $259 $296 $333 $370 $407 $444 MONTHLY PAYMENTS $9.36 $10.69 $11.75 $1 3.05 $14.36 $1 5.67 HOURS MON. and hKI. - 10 to 9 ' TUES., WED., THURS. 10 to 6 SAT. 10 to 5:30 DUPONT 501 NYLON TWISTS Tripplett by Coronet Mills ^ App'rox. 800 Sd Yds. T29 gSq.Yd. sf;r;ioo% WOOL pile. $ 059 % Inch Pile ,r I Only 1 12 Ft. Roll I^Sq.yd. COMMERCIAL NYLON TWEED $ A69 Approx. 500 So. Yds. for Offices, Stairs, | Family Rooms, Recreation Rbome 6820 DIXIE HWV., DRAYTON PLAINS Free Parking In The Rear and Front of Our Store : I . ■V .t - l: THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY^ 4, 1966 A—9 Washington Scene Gl Bills Pay Dividends By Esther Van Wagoner Tufty WASHINGTON - Bipar' san sentiment is evident in the Congress' to give the GIs fighting during the col*al leaders. Democrat Billie S. Farnum, U. P. Timberland Sold DEARBORN (AP)-The Ford Motor Co. Fund has announced the sale of 50,087 acres of Upper Peninsula timberland to Connor Lumber and Land Co., Wausau, Wis. A fund spokesman said the sale completed disposition of substantialy all Ford Fund U.Pr timberland. With this kind of educational assistance 180,000 doctors, den-and nurses trained along with 360,000 teachers, 150,000 scientists, 107,000 lawyers, 243,-000 accountants, 36,000 ministers, 700,000 businessmen, and 17,000 writers and journalists. Several bills have been intro-duced differing only slightly from the formed bills. Farnum, for example, would increase the I amounts qf money provided to meet the higher cost of educa*-^ tion today. .X ualuBprlcBill Mfeatgredl 2r CONSOLE TV DIttInctiva Danith Modarn ttylad lo-boy conaol* In gralnad Walnut color on aalact hardvraod vanaart and solldt. 22,000 Volta PIctiAa Powar. AQR 6>A* X 2%* Front-Mountad Spaakar. 1U®® Zenith 23" TVs Start at $I69.9S HO POINTED CIRCUITSI Matal chatsia has up to 200 tlmos graater boat conduction ability than phanollc utad in printad circuit boards. This maans loAgar TV lifa. extra care in full performance • 22,000 Volta PIcturo Pmrar • Custom VIdao Rang# Tuning Systom • UHF and VHFSpolllta Panala • “Capacity-Plus” Quality ComponanU • Exclusiva Automatic “Frlng«-Lacli”areult extra care makes the quality difference in Zenith TV TV-RADIO SERVICE Opan Friday Ivaa. 'til 9 Call 335-6112 770 ORCHARD LAKE AVE. t: M ONTGOMERY WARD SATURDAY ONLY SORRY, NO PHONE, C.O.D. or MAIL ORDERS ALL ITEMS ON SALE WHILE THEY LAST! Stock vpi.now-acefale panties are runproof 59° REG. 89e • Carol Brenf briefs have elastic leg a Wash and dry in a Jiffy • Comfortable, absorb-ent, cool, too Value and comfort-conscious young women will want to stock up today on Wards comfortable acetate briefs. Knit for long wear with flexible elastic leg and waist, priced for real sayings. White, hips 32-43. GMs’ -warm two piece Ski Pajamas 1” REG. 2.19 Choose two-piece girls' ski pajamas in 100% cotton flannelette. They're machine washable in lukewarm water. Don't pass up this outstanding value. Buy now and really save. Also choose girls' 100% cotton,' full length flannel pajamas. Reg. 2.99 1.77. Grow sleepers have double-thick knees Brushed cotton knits with .self-fabric knee patches for extra strength. 1-4’s have grow row of snaps, 3-8’s cuf extra long. Machine wash. 1 33 Save *9.99 new-on all-weather coats! *10 REG.1I.N, Don't miss this out^ standing value. Notice the quality fea- ' tures; the Dacron polyester and combed cotton in solid colors, rich plaids; washable. Sanitized zip out lining; Sta-flex interfacing; storm-tab collar; Balmacadh styling. Mitset' sizes 8 to 20. Award-winning shirt with fhe "extras” PUIS-VAWl IN DAOteuSceTTON |99 Inner or outer style shirt with so many extra quality details: Italian collar,, roll sleeves, double-yoke action back, Pacron® polyester taffeta lined collar. Assorted prints, stripes,solids in Dacron® polyester-pima cotton. 32-46. 20 color slides at *1.16 savings! Wards good qoality wall mount cabinet And processing's included in Wards low, low price! Wards 35mm color film has natural, true-life color, 25 ASA rating. 20*exposures. 1 08 Sturdy weldedeteei, white baked-enamel finish, two sliding window glass mirror doors. 3 roomy shelves. 24% x20%x8% overall inches. 12" Luxury yarns at an exciting low price FOR THIS EVENT ONLY YOUR CHOICE 77 ■REG. $1.19 100% WOOL knitting worsted in |iffy pull skeins that you never have to bolt. Mothproof, 4-ply. 27 wont^ colors. REG. $1.09 100% MOHAIR yarn Imported from Italy. Beautiful bruihed mohair in a rich, luxurious . yarn—washable, too. 40 gram ball, 16 lovely colors. WARD SPEQALi 'MOHAIR fluff yam ... a silken-blend of mohair and Orion**' acrylic with the soft look and feel befitting your finest knits. 10 colors. 1-Oz. ball. OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. Pontiac Mall TELEGRAPH ROAD CORNER ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD TELEPHONE 682-4940 /. A—10 THE PONTIAC PfiESS, FRIDAY. t^EBRUARY 4, 1966 MiOlE E. Germans Give U S. Unit a Hard Time BERLIN (AP» — They drivci which connects West Berlin and Skowronek tried to reach the ited to U S. headquarters in the nearest town where the car West Germany. cars with American Hags and Russian letters on their license plates that read, “American Military Mission.” they operate by agreetnent with the Soviet Upion but often are chased by East German poUce. were escorted by the Soviets to The man who commands mission in a military station West Germany similar privi-w ^ * wagon but turned back to get j ^^al was once the U.8. Vln this case.” he declared. Soviet help when a npck ‘our teams encountered Communist efforts to keep them from the crash site, but we late'f smashed a window i side. 1 the ^v-i^one ofjoccupied Germany. OTHER AGREEMENTS always draws a curious crowd. When the Blast Gentian police catch up with him they are confronted by a scene decidedly friendly to the American car , The Sbviets also have mission and its driver, jvicw lu Soviet headquarters,” Siww-|exchange agreements with the recover the three oharred "seemed surprised,British and French, who like the bodies and evacuate the ^uch viol^e had devel- Americans have their mission wrecked aircraft.” oped and promised to take ac-hgj,dquartersy in Potsdam. The , Six weeks later, Skowronek^“n.” jallied missions’ vehicles eiUi added,^a U.S. Air Force recon- E. GERMAN POLICE and leave Potsdam via a We; ^ naissance plane was shot down! within 30 minutes East Ger- ®*'’!'" that is guarded by by Soviet bombers after ■ the man poUce arrived to send the'Soviet soldiers. , colonel added that the plane wandered over the East apparently well-organized dem-1 * * * ' Soviets also made good the The unit is the U.S. militaryjWest German frontier. “Soon,” onstrators on their way in thej A repeated East German har- damage done to his mission’s Liaison mission to Soviet forces.he said, “the Soviets ‘admitted trucks that had brought them.jassing tactic is to try to block a headqWters in Communist East Germany,[shooting down what they de- But as the rioters moved away, mission car, hemming it in be- . * ‘ them is a slight, blond UJ5. Army colonel who dives out of airplanes for amusement and who drives a sports car that can outrun anything the East German police have. SETTLED BY SOVIETS All the East German harass-ments I have desctibed,” Skowronek said, “are settled eventually by the Soviets, who accept final responsibility for our trav- commanded by Col, Paul 'G.jscribed as an‘espionage plane,'they caught another mission car tween East German*vehicles. Skowronek. His headquarters is and I was surprised whenJhey trying to reach the headquar-|Since the United States, like thejmission provides an oppor- I nearby Potsdam, East Germany, in a villa originally built for a Hohenzollem prince in * 1910. Skowronek rarely speaks In "public about his job, but he told a meeting of the West Berlin chapter of the Association of the U.S. Army about some of his experiences. TWICE IN 1964 turned over to me the (three)iters, crew members who had para- The car’s driver. Army Spec, chuted from the crippled 14 Lonnie Glasscock III, San An-planc-” [tonio, Tex., won the Soldier’s STORM HEADQUARTERS Medal, cited for his heroism in Last June an East German I fringing h»s vehicle through a mob stormed the mission’s lake-i»'«i°f large rocks that show-side headquarters just outside ^red broken glass on his face. Potsdam. The mob protested 14 . * * ★ U.S. Viet Nam acUons. Usually action taken by East Germans against mission per- Skowronek emphasized that . ,[iiie mission provides an oppor-other Western allies, does not ^ j^r direct contact with .. T-. a luuuv lui uuci;i wiui recogmze he East German gov-ljj, ernment, he Americans refuse propaganda, to deal with the East Germans - - ^ and demand that a Soviet officer! be brought to the scene. “For 18 years,'’ the colonel said, “the Soviets have lived up to the agreement under which Because East German police like to follow mission cars, Skowronek often drives his own 1964 sports car. He says it can we are able to operate in the Soviet zone of Germany.” IN EXHIBITIONS Skowronek. a 1941 West Point He recalled that twice in 1964 Demonstrators snapped a flag ^onnel happens out in the hin- do 135 miles §n hour and can graduate, someUmes travels to •he and the soldiers, airmen and;pole, desecrated an American terland when mission teams outrun the special sedans the European countries to take part; Marines of his unit had to try |flag, smashed the building’s tour the countryside. By agree-East Germans use to follow U.S. in sports parachuting exhibi-| and reach U.S. military "planes window, wrecked the first flooriment with the Soviets, mission! mission personnel. Mission tions, an avocation he began shot down over East Germany, and overturned a mission car. personnel may travel without teams usually drive custom-while at Ft. Knox, Ky. ★ ★ ♦ ! Airman l.C. ■ 'Thomas L. Voss, escort throughout East Ger-| built olive-drab sedans that can * ★ ★ ■ j In January 1964, a U.S. Air 22, Mila, Ind., was alone in theimany, except in military r.e- negotiate all types of road sur-i He has volunteered to go to Force jet trainer was downed [building. He latar received the by a Communist fighter plane [Airman’s Medal for his heroism and three Americans were | in repulsing mob members who killed. The U.S. plane had [tried to enter a second-floor strayed from the air -corrkjor window. „ stricted areas. j faces, a capability that enables; Viet Nam when las assignment The 1947 Soviet-American;the Americans to move over ends in June. “I doubt that Viet agreement, under which the|normally inaccessible terrain. [Nam will be any more exciting Potsdam mission was set up,| Skowronek said that when heithan my. work with the liaison - • ........................... ...............-vk grants a Soviet mission accred-iis followed he pulls his car intomission,” he observes ISNTITTIME YOU BECAME A • ? 2-CAR FAMILY? MateyaursecqndorsdeinnMMe FORD DERUR,4^pl8E0 CRR ’TRUES See these cars I New stock traded for opr White Sale Fords and Mustangs—on display now for your selection. Thrifty buys for the 2-car owner or the 1-car owner. All makes, all model&in a wide range of prices. Thousands ird Dei to choose from. For your protection, every Ford Dealer A-1 Used Car comes with this exclusive ^-Way Guarantee—1. Serviceability Guarantee: Your Ford Dealer has inspected, road-tested end, if neceslary, reconditioned every A-1 U^d Car or Truck and guarantees that it is in serviceable condition. 2. First-Month Guarantee: Under this guarantee your Ford Dealer, for the first 30 days (or 1,000 miles), will give a 50% cash discour^t from his regular retail price on any repairs he makes that e(re necessary to keep your car or truck in serviceable condition. (Except for tires and tubes, glass, or radio. And, of course, except in the case of accident or abuse.) 3. Two-Year Guaranteq^: Under this guarantee your Ford Dealer, for an additional period of two years, will give a,15% cash discount from his regular retail price on any repairs he makes that are necessary to keep yqur car or tfuck in serviceable condition. (Except, of course, in case of acci-dent or abuse.) JOHN McAULIFFE FORD, INC. t'r ■'?; mi' v 630 Oakland Avonuo PenHac, Michigan ,.I , ., .f A of Winter Apparel Ladies' Winter Coats FUR TRIMMED Regular to $125 »39.»89 A good' selection of oil wool, interlined coots luxuriously topped with mink, fox, or squirrel. ' UNTRIAAMED Regular to $69.95 $29-^39 A closeout of all our winter coots at prices that yyill moke it worth your while. There is plenty of winter left. Men's Suits-Sport Coats-Topcoats We've drastically lowered the prices of our luxury quality clothing. Every one of these prized models represent the peak of tailoring art, the finest of fabrics, the epitome of style. Unquestionably the best values of the season. Not every style or size in every color, but a wide selection to fit all men. SUITS Regularto$100 Ml ~ 1^51 SPPRT COATS \ RaguJar to $55 *19 »*34 •TOPCOATS Ragular to $100 *44. *78 Shoe Clearance WOMBH^S SHOBS Discontinued Styles Naturalizers DRESS rag.tai6.oo 9^^ 790 American Girl DRESS ^ r.g.toii.oo 4^^ American Girl CASUAL . I•g.to9.oo 3^^ AIBff'S SHOBS Discontinued Styles Polio Peds rag.to23.95 14« Portage-Pedwin Portage-Pedwin rag. to 14.95 r90 Saloctad Greup 500 rag. to 12.95 CHiMren's SHOBS Discontinued Styles 4# Buster Brown-Poll Parrot 3^^ Use A Convenient Lion Charge Plan ■’I THE PONTIAC PRESS t 1 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 4, 1966 B—1 Students Cast Its 'Carnivar Time By MAXINE ROSENBERG Musical comedies are ‘in’ for high school productions and Birmingham Groves is not to be left out. TTiii year, Dramaticus is presenting the Broadway hit, ‘“Carnival.” “Camhrar is the story of a young orphan searching for her dead father’s friend. D. R. Vander Woude, sponsor of Dramaticus, began tryouts for the play before Christmas vacation. Homerdom Period Moved Up at WTHS By CONNIE PHILLIPS First hour at WTHS comes eariier as homeroom now follows the class period. Students go directly to first hour from 7:40 to 8:36 a.m. and to homerooms from 8:40 to 8:56 a.m. The change was made to cut down on late-comers arriving while the homeroom period was in session. Rehearsals and production work on the sets began immediately. CAST MEMBERS The cast includes: Patti Barling, Lili; Bruce Callner, Paul; Linda Appleblatt, Rosalie; John Lyons, Jacquot, and Chip Ger-dan, Marco. Others are Ell B. F. Schlegei; GaU Lanard, Princess Olga; Cariene lU-quet, Gladys Znwicki; Sheryl Blair, Greta Schlegei; Karen Raquet, Gloria Zuwicki; Alan Prystowsky, Grobert, and Nancy Uren, first card girl. Still others are Jim Locker, Dr. Glass; Roustabouts: Randy Judd, Fred Barrie, Jim Andrews and Robin Schneyer. Singing in the chorus are: Vic Bommarito, Barry Barnett, Jim Docker, Ron Musto, Daryl McGhan, Steve Sullivan, Larry Thomadsen, Jeff Berwick, Pat McDaid and Vicki Detleffs. JOIN CHORUS Others are Margie S^ell, Cindy Marshall, Merle Carson, Pat Whitney, Gait Eubank, Cindy Reynolds, Pat Crouse, Sue Camerata and Boys’ Glee Club members will attend the Sontheastern Michigan Solo and Ensemble Festival to be held tomorrow at Madison Junior High School. Soloist Paul Thomas, WTHS Junior, will do “Velvet Shoes’ and Barbara Humphries and Kathy Ann Ryden will sing duet. ’The Boys’ Glee Club, under the direction of Robert Crumpton will sing “The Old Ark's Movin’.” ♦ 2 NEW TEACHERS Two new teachers were intro--d u c e d to Waterford at the change of the semester. Ronald Kosk| will teach biology and Barbara Cook, typing. Square Dance Proceeds Will Aid Trip Club By ROSE 'raERIOT Brandon's Senior Trip Club is sponsoring a square dance tomorrow, at 7:30 p.m. in the high school cafeteria. Myron Burt will act as caller for the evening. In order to reach the set goal for the June senior trip, parents have , also offered to help raise tho money. The square dance is just one of the many activities. Student advertising chairman for the dance, Nancy Hanna, has spent the week making and distributing posters. CAPS, GOWNS Seniors 'were measured for their caps and gowns. ’The traditional navy blue has been chosen by a committee of seniors as the gown Brandon’s Ski Club is making plans for its trip to Boyne Highlands. Each week, the club will ski at Mt. Christie instead of Mt. Holly. Wiley, Marcia Proctor, Mary Vast and Helene Mclnt)^. Tom Sapanaro, set directoi This research and the new revolving sets for the scenery will make the school’s total cost for the production near $1,400, the mbst money invested in Groves'' history for a dramatic production. Groves’ presentation of “Carnival” will open March 17. 'Cool' Dance at Troy High By LYNDA STEWART eztmive rdsearA on tbe play PN to Enter 14 Soloists in Festival By AUCE TURNER Fourteen soloists from Pontiac NOTthem will enter the annual Solo-Ensemble Festival tomorrow. The festival will take place at Madison Junior High and will feature students from Oakland County schools. Among the soloists are: Janet Bendes, PhulUs Daniels, Tom Ellis, Sheila Heath, Cheryl Heldberg and Kathy Uack^. Completing the list are Kay Jones, Gary Manley, Monica Patterson, Lillian Ristich, Carol Seriiors and sophomores atjScarborough, Nancy Sumpter, Troy High sponsored a winteri George Wren and Joy Young, dance, the “Snowball,” last^ Several of PN’s musical en-weekend. sembles will participate in the ‘Virgina Blankenship was- • ■ eWted queen; Merwin Mc-Kechnie, king; Randy Haley Midwinter Concert Set at Walled Lake By RON MOORHEAD Walled Uke *^h School’s fourth annual Midwinter Concert will be held Feb. 15 in the school gym. Tickets went on sale Monday and will cbntinue being sold through the night of the concert. Traditional highlight of the Midwinter Concert is the program’s closing feature, the combined choruses and concert band playing selections from musical comedies. Selections from Paul Yoder’s “Vincent Youman’s Fantasy,” Lemer and Loewe’s “Brigadoon,” Rodgers and Sondheim’s “Do I Hear a Waltz?” and Sherman and Sherman’s “Mary Poppins” will be played this year. As a result of voting by the faculty and senior class, Cheryl Andrews has been selected as Walled Lake’s 1966 D. A. R. good citizen. Being a National-Merit Scholarship semi-finalist and maintaining a 4.0 grade average are also accomplishments Cheryl has achieved. Cheryl will compete in a state and national contest by writing an essay. WRESTLERS VIE ’ Tonight, Walled Lake’s undefeated wrestling team>will visit Farmington High School and Walled Lake’s basketball teams play host to Farmington. The junior varsity game starts at 6:30, the varsity game to begin at approximately 8. Following the game, a dance will be held in the gym. The Daughters of the American Revolution award was organized to give recognition to senior girls who have served their school, classmates themselves as well. SCHOOL ROLE Cheryl has fulfilled each of these qualifications. She I been elected president of the Girl’s Athletic Association, French Club, Future Teachers, and Oakland County Future Teachers. and Helen Gordon, prince and princess; Jim Holtus and Charlotte Wells, duke and duchess. The “Rogues” supplied tbe music for the evening. Juniors held a class meeting Wednesday to plan this year’s festival. GROUPS PARTiaPATING Among the groups attending FROM FINALS TO FUGUES - Carl Gra-pentine of 3014 Crumb, Commerce Township; transfers his attention from studying for exams to rehearsing for Walled Lake High School’s fourth annual Midwinter Concert. The concert will be held Feb. 15 in the school gym. Tickets went on sale Monday. She is also a member of the National Honor Society, Natural Science dub and year- the festival are the Northern Madrigal Singers, Howlin’ Huskies, the Male Ensemble and Quartet and the Girls’ Ensemble. ’The Girls’ Athletic Association and Ski Club combined their activities Thursday for a trip out to Alpine Valley, their second trip of the season. WEEKEND TRIP Ski Club officers are collecting deposits for the weekend trip planned for the end of February. Future Teachers held a bake sale in the student lounge Wednesday, featuring homemade fudge and candy. Tdday, Virginia Blankenship, Helen Gordon, Marva Helmlck, Carol Iverson, Rick Shaver and Diane Ulseth visited Seaholm High School to watch its school day in action. New Faces Greet School Returnees By LINDA WtUGHT Students at Emmanuel Christian High School returned to classes Monday. Old students came back and were greets by a group of new faces. The juniors were happy to add four classmates to their roster and the freshmen were pleased to acqbire two. The journalism class will publish ita first newspaper for this year. News Highlights From Schools in Area Lake Orion To enter the festival a group nnut apt have, over sfatteea members and must have been in existence for at least one Three judges firom various universities will rate students. Five is the highest possible score. Lynn Whipple and David Landers have joined the English department. REPLACEMENT Miss Whipple replaces Mrs. Theodore Wiersema who now holds the new position of Northern’s Reading Consultant. Landers will replace Judith Pfaffenberger who recently married. There are eight student teachers at PN this semester. Diane Lermaney, Judie Rolph, Barbara Brady and Frank Tay-low will teach in the English department. SUPERVISORS They will be under the supervision of Stanley Rogell, Kathryn Miller, Raymond Hull and Jack Brown, respectively. Rita Hoey will teach under the supervision of Mrs. Bruce (feely in the homemaking department Student teaching under John Tousley in ^ music depart-Hartsoe. By NADINE WILUAMS Last week the senior class of Lake Orion High School voted on Who’s Who categories for tbe yearbook, “The Dragon. Elected were: best all- around, Connie Rowden and Edward Williams; most likely to succeed, Patricia Ward and Gerald Spicer; most athletic, Christine Arnold and Dennis Brophy; and class flirt, Pamela Christopher and James Weaver. Others were class wit, Diane Steffens and William Rathburg; most attractive, Barbara Clay and Bradley Kenyon; most popular, Darlene Hi^th and David Dewey; most smdious, Etnily Batinski and John Duddles; best dancec, Helen Jandasek and Alan Garcia; class rose, Susan Piassey Terry Brookens; and most musical, Mary Ann Yasiatls and Sam Hart. 11 others were niost courteous, Janis McLaughlin and John Karvala; most friendly, Patricia Whitlock and JeTry Pomeroy, and contributed most to class, Nadine Wiiliaihs and Gregory Mann. By KATHY MORGAN The Rochester High School senior play, “The Man Who Came to Dinner,” will be presented March 31 and April 2. Darrell Zi'nk fills the role of Sheridan Whiteside, the egotis-ticaP radio commentator who breaks his leg. Irene Layman is Mrs. Stanley; Tom Jacobson, Mr. Stanley; Victoria Ohs, Maggie Cutler; Peter Kjolhede, Bert Jefferson; and Peggy Wlcr; Lorraine Sheldon. Included in the cast are: Diane Willits, Margaret Mallory, Chuck Prather, Annette Pintal, Florence Pitts, Kathy Morgan, Debbie MacDonald, Bob Kellogg, Bob CUrtls, Dick Jarvis, Dick Schlecht, Randy Root, Ralph Hoopes and Randy Dien- Shirley Drinkard isjhusiness manager, Debbie MacDonald publicity ,chai(man and Marilyn Price, student assistant. Clark$ton By LINDA LONGSTteTH Holly High School got back into the routine of school work By CATHY iftdlA^DRON A quartet of 0"^*^ studdti. Govemmeiit' this week after ^ four-day vra-tion. ' ! class rem'eseni^vei will carry n buckets .lisit week’ to .collect j money for the March of Dimes. This project, based on class . competition, is headed by Kar- en .Caldwell, Caroline Giles, and Joette Schultz. At the pep assembly next Friday, the bucket with the most money will be an-Its class will be awarded a monetary prize. Clarkston’s vocal music department recently held tryouts for the Wayne Oakland County League Choir. Sopranos chosen were Gwen Ostrom, Marcia Porter, anck Jeanne Slinkard, with Jeanne Shoots as alternate. ALTOS Wanda Atkins, Becky Smith, and Diane Wagner will participate in the League Choir as altos, Cathy Lessard is the alternate. Tenors selected were Richard Barry, Lynn Howey and Sue Dengnte. The bass singers are Paul Taylor, NOlan Camell and Bill Booth. ALLEMANDE LEFT — “\nd swing your * comer lady,” calls Ron Bindig (right) of 1280 State Park as Maiy Gates of 32U Allen and Tbm Rexford of 40 Elizabeth practice for Brandon High School’s square dance. All are residents of Brandon Township. The dance, to be held tomorrow at 7:3ft p.m. in the cafeteria, is sponsored by the Senior Trip Chib. Doug Burnett and Greg Suver are the respective alternates for the two groups. . Clarkston’s choir, with its teacher, Charlene Williams, will host a League Choir rehearsal Tuesday. Rochester Martha Ricketts, Christine Farrell, Nancy Hall, Janet McCoy, Debbie Hoover, Debbie May, and Penny Hodek. By ERNESTINE MOORE Report cards" were given out at St. F r e d e r i c k Schod this week. To become an honor student, 16 honor pdnts are necessary. Seniors who met and went above this quota were John Carry, Mary Lou Manion, MUftibeth Shore, Marilyn Hiller, M^ha Kluwe, Margaret Fitzgerald, Mary Smith, Mary Sdupansky, Holly The junior class is sponsortbg a comnninity dance for the entire family titled “Leprechaun Ueap.” It will be held March 12. Tickets are available by contacting members of the junior class. This is a money making project for the junior-senior prom in the spring. Sixteen members chosen to represent Holly High School in League Choir attended their first rehearsal at West Bloomfield Tuesday. This will also be the location of the first of two evening concerts, the first to be held Feb. 16, Oxford By ANN ASHLEX A new addition to Oxford Area Community High School faculty is Don Orchard. Graduated from Western Michigan University in December, Orchard is teaching metal and machine shop at OHS. OHS Choir members Diane Schalau, Rick Laidler, and Rosemary Brady will be participating in tomorrow’s Solo and Ensemble Festival at Madison Junior High<6chool in Pontiac. Freshman Girls’ Ensemble, consisting of Debbie Skibowski, Barbara Specht, Carol Prince, Gay Schmidt, Anita Redman, Tina Howell, Marilyn Meisner and Gay Hallock. Others are Karen Bergnum.l St. Fred's Ernestine Moore and Kerry Kammer. Juniors receiving honor cards were Peter Miller, John La-Londh, Thomas Quarles, Gerald Harrington, Steve Hamilton, aAd George Zaha. Milford By RICK WIXtHH Four Milford High School students will travel to Bloomfield Hills Tuesday to compete in Wayne-Oakland ,(bounty League Knowledge Bowl meet, ft ★ ♦ Wednesday the WOCL band will play daytime assemblies at ..........Holly. My da Song Is Theme of Junior Prom By MARGARET WEAVER “Some Enchanted Evening” as the theme of the junior class prom at Avondale last Saturday. The juniors put together a beautiful winter scene in silver and blue which featured an old-fashioned sleigh as the center-piece for the dancers who enjoyed the rhythm of the Invictas. Preparations are being made for the Junior-senior play, “The Egg and I,” under the direction of Margaret Rose. The play is a hearW wanning comedy written by Betty MacDonald. Tryouts began this week for 1 cast of nine boys and 13 girls. The play wiU be presented the week after Easter. The French Gub of Avondale, under the direction of Claude Wiseman, is {banning a bowling party. On Monday the seniors at Avondale will order their and name cards. Avondale’s science students are busy working on their sorted projects for this yeiiiiis scleiice fair, which will tahe pli^ in March. The newly formed Spoi^ Gub has been raising funds to purchase training films for all sports. The club has been organized by the coaches to promote greater ■ athletic interest and skill among our high school boys. STEAK STUDY — Prior to preparing a luncheon for the St. Michael High School faculty, Leona Drake (center) of 689 N. Perry and Kathy Bienlein of 2394 Ivanhoe, West ' Bloomfield Township, study choice meat cuts under the guidance of their home economics teacher. Sister Mary Harold, S. S. J. WBHS Group at Meeting By MARGIT MlSANGYI West Bloomfield High School Student Council attended a league student council meeting at Milford High School yesterday. The junior class has also begun to plan the junior-senior prom to be held Tn Oakland University’s Gold Room. West Bloomfield will travel to Holly for the basketball ganie tonight. Attending the game will be a small band consisting of a few band mdmbers, to pep the students and boost their spirit. The band has been organized by Barbara WUson. SI. Mike's Class Prepares Luncheon for le Faculty By MICHAEL THORNBERRY The home economics class al St. Michael’s High has been hard at work this past week preparing a luncheon for the faculty members. Under the direction of Sister Mary Harold, the class is learning how to serve a nutritious meal. It by Principals of schools taught y the Sisters of St. Joseph met at St. Michael’s for a conference to discuss plans' for the second semester. TOUR school Following the meeting, the educational heads toured the facilities of St. Michael’s. Monday marked the opening of Catholic Press Month. Under the supervision of Sister Callista, the school librarian, the auditorium is devoted to the display of newly-edited books. Students were given the results of the Air Force aptitude test this week. Scoring included the fields of electronics, mechanics, administration, and general intelli-* gence. •/ B—2 .1 " THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 4. I960 Foreign News Commentary Political Crisis Slows Italy's Progress By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News Analyst Italian Premier-Designate Al-(Ip Moro is a 49-yearK)ld politician who preferred thfe role of king- maker rather than king. But in May 1963, the Christian Democrats, whom he h a d served for five years as party secretary, called upon him as the only man able to form a government out of the hodgepodge of. Italian politics. He failed the first time but in December 1963, finally succeeded in forming a center-left coalition in which for the first time in 16 left-wing Socialists would participate. Coming in NEWSOM as deputy premier was veter- | an Soiciaiist party leader Pie- | tro Nenni. Nenni’s,,participation itselfj marked a revolution in Italian; politics because it meant a^ break in the close ties between; the Nenni Socialists and the Communists which had existed! since the end of World War II. j But it gave Moro an almost impossible task. Somehow he had to bridge the gap between the conservative right wing of his own Christian Democrats and Socialist demands for far-reaching social and economic changes which could frighten away business. MOUNTING INFLATION He also had to contend with mounting inflation, and latent Socialist opposition to Italian participation in the North Atlantic Treaty Alliance and to U. S. action in Viet Nam. NOTICE! CITY OF PONTIAC COMMISSION MEETING Notice is hereby given that the weekly Pontiac City Commission meeting which would normally /" be held Tuesday, February 8, . 1966 has been re-scheduled, as follows: / ,The next weekly meeting of the City Commission will be held Monday, February 7, 1966 at 8:00 P. M. E.S.T. in the Commission Chambers, 450 Wide Track Drive, E., Pontiac, Michigan. Olga Barkeley City Clerk But these were not the issues that twice brought him down.' Hb first government fell in June 1964, on the issue of increased subsidies to private schools, mostly Roman Catholic. His second fell in late January 1966, on a compromise attempt to balance lay and church influence in state nurseries. ★ ★ ★ The common tie among right, center and left elements of the Christian Democrats is thei close link with the Cathblic Church. The church itself has described the compromise as fair one. Yet in each case, under cover of the secret ballot, members of his own party brought about his downfall. FORMER PREMIER A quiet, but still undetermined element in these negotiations is the influence of a former premier, former foreign minister and former Italian delegate to the United Nations, Amintore Fan-fani. Fanfani lost his job as premier on the charge he had led his governmnit too far in the left. He resigned his U. N. post in December 1965, as result of criticism of his jiart in purported peace - feelers brought out of North Viet Nam by an Italian friend. Fanfani controls a large segment of the Christian Democrat [ left and there is a suspicion he f longs !or a more important role at home. * ★ ★ The current crisis delays long-overdue Italian tax reform, aid | to depressed southern regions'! and a low-cost urban housing 9 program. Italians also grumble, a against an austerity program S which has slowed Italy’s eco- a nomic boom. W a i t i n g in the background S with its own plans is‘the Italian z i Communist party, the largest in ? Western Europe. APPLIANCE SHOPPERS, OLIIE FRETTER HAS THE DEAL! Otf€iiAti>ek AMUaawT WTT C*Ur TV? KUri My omini ncri.u.!,. Tt. J •t ipplUiirrl. TV SALE SUNDAY 10 A.M. to 7 P.M. PONTIAC WAREHOUSE Telegraph Rd. V2 Mile South of Orchard Lake Rd. EASY doluxo dryor with throo tonporalurt contrail ... only Sill. IS Pound, two-ipood HAT-POINT woihor, witli 1 wolAr lovolt . . . Sill. II cubic tt. WHIRLPOOL fo-Iricorotor hot oilrt lorco frooior, provioui yoir't - iHoOol . . . SIM. Hoovor Vocuum Clotnor Solo ... all floor tompltt drotlicofly lodueod ... S21.ll EMERSON Oilod Walnut eobinot Sloroo with FM-AM ond Multi-plot radio... Sloroo phono, 4-ipood . . . only Sill. PORTABLE DISHWASHER • 2 washes • 4 rinsos • top loading (4«0«p< Whirlpool) tguMgi Morry-^olr o law! RCA WHIRl/OOl 14.1 M.ft.9-4f REFRIGERATOR • lutlir and Epf Stori >oori. With trida raitTirs i6w, LOW SALE PRICI riioo-vuT tncivi w A^#t4r#»drF##2#* 2 Spaed, 2-Cycle AUTO. WASHER • Ntrmtl w Small Litd Stiliiit • 1 Ctmol'lt Waf— ’--— S«ftiot< • T.p-Nalth Hal M7r WRINGER WASHER • Hoavjr Duly Wrln«w- • Throo Van* AtIUtor • Safoty Oft-Oo awllch • Lmrfo laay to Ml Coaloei FRETtER'S LOW, LOW Q lAUPRKEW/T / O RCA VICTOR PORTABLE TV »tTTIR'S‘ ’114” PONTIAC WAREHOUSE TELEGRAPH RD. Vi MILE S. ORCHARD UKE RD. 1 Milt Nxtrth ofMiraeU MU* * Open •Daily 10:9-Open Sundo'y 10-7-FE 3-7051 NO MONEY DOWN-UP TO II MONTHS TO PAT The sassafras tree has three S distinct types of leaves. All 2 three may be found on the same tree at the same time, and even on the same twig. IVING ROOM BARGAINS ; ern, colonial ond provincial styles. Luxurious fabrics in oil wanted colors! | ost jpith zippertd loom cushions Save up to S100. Hurry, some one-of-a-lcindl || ^98 S^258i 99.95 ■ ' loose your fovorite style and finish from thil huge selection.. .oil at just 0 ^ roction of their original prices! Single, double and triple dressers in the group. I «248| 0 I Rap. $09.95 S-Fc. Dinalto I WI«h4PI0iticChoirt.. .. OlG I ..... ’ ‘64“ I ikb)^, 3606*40^. "r*. W HOTIL-HOIPITAL FINE SIRTA FIRM SINTA WILT-TOP 4 .... ^98** iUnON-TUFTSET SMOOTNTOPSn in. FLORAL TICK ^^vY.lnut geiMp,, $S995 $I;Q95 MR MR 88 88 8888 oaiuto 7-Pc. oinotto ee Ame Wolnut.......... lOO Per Set Per Set Per Set sa.'s'.'Sl »198“ ORCHARD FURNITUREMS THE STORE WHERE ONLY THE LOOK IS EXPENSIVE. OPEN MON. AND FRI. 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M. OPEN DAILY 9 A.M. TO 5:30 P.M. QUALITY FURNITURE NOT BE OVER PRICED. NEED ORCHARD Phone F[ S8II4-5 FURNITURE COMPANY G Serry, no ehene er mell erdero token. All ooleo final, ‘po lo* No rofunda er oxchongeo. Sold (or Immod-leto dotivery; wo oferage. 164 ORCHARD LAKE AVE., PONTIAC 2 BLOCKS WEST OF S. WIDE TRACK DRIVE JMUARY limntonrCldaranod • No Monty Down a 24 Months to Pay • 90 Days Cash • Fr«« Dalivaiy • Fra* Parking • Good Strvico DEAL DIRECT PAY AT THE STORK , NO FINANCE CO. , I INVOLVED ^ FANTASTIC VALUES! HUGE REDUCTIONS! THE rOMlAt 1 FKlL>Ay. 4. I'JGti Briton Oaims jCal/forn/a Stilt Bogged Down on Smog Control 6/cfi Soviet Smear SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP)|equipped with crankcase smog|fuel and toxic carbon monoxideithey are sold, and then ohly bi districts and have not exempted ana aeain « sending a nbine^i . Siv vAorfi ttftor AnaMmAnt a# StlDDrASSATS. t/\ hflrmlAac narKnn on/lllA 'iif^Kon /wuin4iAi» . . . .... __. . i Geared to Scandal — Six years after enactment of , ithe nation’s first statewide smog Charges Pamphlets control tow, CaWomto still is trying to get fume oppressors on half its 10 million motor vehicles. The legislature decreed in 1960 that car^ and trucks registered in the state pnuat be equi{^)ed with devices to control the unbumed gases given off in engine exhausts. LONDON (AP) - A British legislator is fighting for political survival against what he alleges is a Soviet campaign to ruin him by scandal. He is Cmdr. Anthony T. Courtney, former head of the Russian department of British naval intelligence. He has waged a campaign in the House of Commons to tighten Britain’s security system. He has demanded that diplomatic immunity be withdrawn from the high proportion of “cooks and chauffeurs” populating Iron Curtain embassies. Now, he alleges, the Russians have hit back by seeking to ruin him personally, politically and professionally. TOP GEAR Dixie Beauties Flying I Lincoln University, 104-year-|old university at Oxford, Pa., to Ball in Washington |was the world’s first degree-' granting college. WASHINGTON (AP) - Louisi-i--------------------------- suppressors. ’66 MODELS Another 306,000 vehicles are equqin)ed with exhaust devices as well, which were requM on new vehicles starting with 1966 models. Crankcase devices have been standard on new cars sold in the state since 1963, but engineers say both control systems are needed. to harml^ carbon dioxide and 10 urban counties which areithemselves from the program, load of its most beautiful girls! Worry of r™'' false teeth 70 ner rent nf the state’* vehi ^ardi Gras ball of the Louist- " „ " States veto- . Slipping or Irritating? At Ci 1 n I* earlier than 19^ ★ ★ ★ Asks M0I6 P0IIC6 totally exempt. The ball, in traditional Mardis | air,into the engine and promot-ing^iore cc.nplete and efficient' combustion. Failure of manufacturers toi produce exhaust systems that were, inexpensive and efficient for older cars has bogged down! the State’s program to require!^ devices on used vehicles. Controversy, lack of a cheap, simple exhaust control system have hampered the effort to curb the engine exhaust fumes that are blamed for as much as 80 per cent of California’s eye-stinging smog. Donald Jensen, executive officer of the California Motor Vehicle Pollution Control Board, reports that some five million vehicles — about half the total in what has been called “the state on wheels” .— Courtney told newsmen the campaip slipped into top gear tost July with the mailing in London of a scurrilous pamphlet accompanied by pictures apparently taken in Moscow. Recipients included his wife, who started divorce proceedings but dropped them; political associates. a newspaper, and Col, George Wigg, a government minister with special responsibilities for security affairs. At the time the pamphlets were mailed, Courtney normally would have been in Moscow on a business trip. He is an export consultant specializing in East-West contracts, speaks Russian, and has p^veM widely in Cknn* munist countries. ^ Courtney did not make thej Moscow tri|k because, he says,| ................-|el he had to stay in London for the I Conservative party's election of a new leader. Had he made it,! he believes he would have been! arrested. HORSE TRADING “1 can only suggest they wanted somebwiy like me to indulge in a bit of horse-trading j with some of their spies we, have arrested over here,” he' said. Courtney says his decision not to go to Moscow caught the Russians off balan<-e — that they intende(k to arrest him first, then distribute the pamphlets. Courtney, 57, is a former navy heavyweight boxing champion., He was deputy head of the Brit-1 ish naval mission in the Soviet| Union in World War^l. After the war, he took his post In naval intelligence, retiring in 1953 to make his new career in East-West trade and politics. MAY WITHbRAW SUPPORT He sits in the Commons for East Harrow, which chose him in 1959. The district’s Conservatives have told Courtney ‘they, are considering ^ withdrawing their support and choosing a! new candidate. He is fighting this. ' ■ Pills Linked < to Decrease in Birth Rate BOSTON (AP)—A Harvard demographer, a population expert, saaid yesterday the na-i tion’s birth rate ►•’ts dropped 2ol per cent in the tost 10. years and> much of the decline can be attributed to the increasing popularity of birth control pills. Prof. David .M. Heer of the Harvard School of Public Health said the declining birth rate is reflected in information provided by the U.S. Bureau of Vital Statistics in Washington. “Half of this drop was expected and I’m sure the pill has a| great deal to do with the other half,” he said. Heer added that there have been no studies to scientifically confirm the affect birth control pills may have had on the nation's birth rate. ‘GOOD THING’ He also saidlthere is no ac ment ambng demographers as to what would be the ideal birth rate, but that he believes the 20 per cent decline "if a good thing.” “We find it very difficult to provide an adequate education for the number of children we have jiow. A reduction in - the nqmb^ of births would ease tWs,” Heer said. "Many families,” he added, “have more children than they can adequately support.” Pr. Andrew J. Elia, clinical professor of obftetrios at Boston Unlversitj ersity Medical School, also crfdlted blrJi control pills for the decline In the birth rate. State research engineers say 10 per cent of ail gasoline consumed by motor vehicles escapes from engines unburaed. These gases create the eye-stinging, throat-burning smog. Crankcase devices control those escaping gases, known as “blow-by,” by trapping them and carrying them back to the engine for complete burning. UNBURNED FUEL Exhaust control devices convert the remaining unburned tato orUuB^ J r ASTXXTH on 7 Help Train Sheriff PROVIDENCE. R.I. (AP) ____________ .............. ........ Gov. John H. Chafee plans tOinia|ce spre the devices are ask the state police to help train I stalled and working. Rhode Island sheriffs in the art —Crankcase and exhaust de-of transporting prisoners. vices on any 1955 to 1962 model The governor defended Sherifficar sold in the state. *' Jean-Marc Fontaine who had, * ★ ★ said no extra precautions were Present state^policy is against taken to guard six prisoners,requiring exhaust systems on who escaped last Friday, though,used vehicles until the Pollution ed emergency legistotTon d^^^^^ received a tip one might try|Control Board has certified two Ing the law’s effect until this *® „ , |®'' "i^re devices as workable year, and then only when own-^ Fontaine told and has an installed price of ership changes constently get- less than $65. Only one such de- IIHRAM ‘ Certified, but it UIUSAN touNTllvS* “They can’t just call out the was decertified in an argument Now used cars need not be Marines with every tip,” the;last year over charges of mono-equipped with the devices until governor said. pgly.' Jensen noted that Copgress, in passing legislation to require smog-control systems Jn 1968 mode^l cars, didn’t even tqckle the used-car problem. In California, the devices ere to have been required on used cars in 1964, but mass confusion among motorists prompt- Jensen is arcing the legisla- hundreds of persons prominent| jture to strengthen the law to re~ I in government, diplomatic and- ermiy.Nocummy. ffooey.pMtytute quire: I military circtes. I FlJafkrra —Annual compulsory inspec-— — -------------------------——-—— -------------- tion of all motor vehicles to JUNK CARS , AND TRUCKS WANTED - HIGHEST PRICES.PAID -We Pick Up FE 2-0200 I PONTIAC SCRAP ■ erase m K. Wri Chevrolet Impala Sport Sedan unth Body by tieher jiMiidfiii THE CHEVROLET WAY We Aissed over parts no bigger than your thumbnail to smooth Chevrolet’s ride. We added new bushings and softened body-to-frame mounts. We again put in soft-acting shock absorbers and soft-working coil springs at every wheel. By soft, though, we don’t mean mushy. Chevrolet’s Way makes for a smooth, solid ride. Very steady on curves. A bump jumps from the Wide- Stance wheels to the supple springs and shocks—apd pffft! It all but disappears. And so does, we hope, the last of anybody’s reasons for buying a more expensive car. Shocks and coll springs art niatchsd to aach diffsrent body styla for a Jat-smoother rids. Soft contoured new Strato-bucket front seats come standard in Super Sports for relaxing comfort on every trip. The powerfully smooth new Turbo-Jet V8 is available in all ’66 Caprice, Impala SS, Impala, Bel Air and Biscayne models. Eight features now stendatdv'for your added safety: Seat belts front and rear • Paddod instrument panel • Padded sun visors • Outside mirror (usi it always before passing) • Shatter-resistant inside mirror • Two-speed electric wipers for bettor visibility In a downpour • Windshield washers • Back-up lights. All kinds of cars all In one place... at your Chevrolet dealer’s) ^ CHEVROLET* CHEVELLE CHEVT n*C0RVAIR* CORVETTE AutHoHsad Chaivrokt Daolar in Fontioc Clorkaton MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES, INC. HASKINS CHEVROLET, INC. 631 Oakland Ava. 915-4161 6791 Dixie Hwy. 625-5071 ' Oxford J HOMER MIGHT MOTORS, INC. CRISSMAN ». Woahlegron 628-2521 755 S. Rockoator AL HANOUTE, INC. 209 N. Park IM. 692-2411 Rochastar CHEVROLET COMPANY 652-9721 / f'' \ THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 4, 1966 Shortage of Construction Workers Slows Projects in Many State Cities By Tlie Associated Pre«' , He’s the construction worker, additional overtime, better I workers are ‘moonlighting at He’s one of the most wanted ispecifically the skilled trades-; men In the state. Both large I creased job security, and small dties are looking for him. and SAVE AT B & G in-|two and even three johs to take advantage of the scarcity. ^ , . , . slowdown of construcUon proj-1 SELLER h MARKlirr I Enticements include offers of ^ this “seUer’s market’ dustrial planU across the state , many small industries say they are looking for bricklayers, are the first to feel the jMCh. electricians, carpenters and ce- The firms which financially are ment finishers. “ unable to meet requests for iiMCKii I pn I ARORFR and guaran- The shortage extends to the,,ap,j trained craftsmen, unskilled laborer, even. Ma^ projects have be*n low^ .. men’ cause of a lack of common la^rers. ter’s benches, forsaking retire- The need is no res^ctor of the readily avaiUble population or geographic areas. I In Kalamazoo, a city of some 82,000, the Michigan Employ-. ^ . ment Security Commission' .The higher saan^ nece^ary (MESn has a Ust of, some 66attract qualified employes occupations in which men are have resulted ui uicreased con-| neeaad/ stfuction program in Ann Arbor | ir it -k costs increased from A15 per Across the state in Flint.'sduare foot in early 1965 toj with Nearly 200,000 residents,.more than $22 dollars this year, contractors are working with Some lowering of standards $ame job as a qualified carpen- ter for the same pay but can’t join the union. But many companies say they can’t afford 1ft lower hiring standards. ' “We can’t risk poor workmanship,” a spokesman for a Midland company says. “Safety is 'a very important thing to Os and the safety of our people and plants is very much dependent on quality workmanship.” In many cities, such as Ann Arbor, Saginaw, and Grand Haven, spokesmen deny any lowering of work standards, either nW dr in the fdrseeable future. The shortage is not without its apparent incongruities. In Royal Bond Paint 2uu.’5,90 ASBULTmt„^ 4 Firit g « ^ Ouolity Qm. U) CERAMIC TILE hH>r,w.ii eQc Sq. CERAMIC WALL TILE 4V4”x4V4»» QCc Wt Lean Tools Vll _M.n.M4 0s PLASTIC COAHC DURABLE PANELING 5 Shod** First Quality PLASTIC WALL TILE STOCK COLORS ^ formerly 1 C NOW I PANELING LUAN MAHOGANY SOLID VINYL TILE-9x9xVo'» 19; TUB ENCLOSURE PONTIAC'S LARGEST TILE CENTER Our Own inxtallatien work done by oxports ORN MON., FBI. *t» OiiO F.M. - FREE PARKING IN REAR Malaria Among Yanks Up After Viet Battles EL PASO, Tex. (AP) - ’The Grand Rapids, for instance, thej "You name it," he said, “aid MESC says they are tryinjg to we need 'em.” attract out-of-state workers, but at the same time says some 00 per cent of those receiving employment benefits are from the construction industry. BUILDING PLANS In Kalamazoo, construction in late 1965 was slowed by the lack of .skilled workers, although building plans were down nearly 30 per cent from 1964. The need for workers fleeted in many areas in local unemployment figures. In Ann Arbor the percentage of unemployed in 1965 fell to the lowest figure in’ the state, with .018 of| the work force idle. | An all-time low unemploy-1 ment figure of 2.7 per cent of^ the available work force was reached in Benton Harbor last year. . Many builders and industrial firms, while concerned at the Tredicts State to Win DETROIT (AP) - Lt, Gw. William MilUken predicted Thursday night that Michigan would win the “Keep America Beautiful” contest this year. coniraciors are wuiiuni^ wmi oumc luncitiig labor unions titying to recruit,for tradesmen is inevitable^^d^jee of ma^ria^ong^ ^ In some cities, notably Flint, unskilled workers the shortage of workers has carpenters if they can 334-9957 If You Don’t Buy From Us, Wo Both Lose Money TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! made two major battles with the Viet^ld weather, when construc-nound a Cong, an Army genefal report- tion again begins its yearly up-swing. . nnp But, said Brig. Gen, Robert E.: One M idland contractor one contract r. leiount, commanding general of summed up the situation of LOCAL INDUSTRIES [NONUNION WORKERS William Beaumont Army hospi-|many when he explained there In others, like Benton Har-[ Some use has been made of tal, the outbreak apparently are some H trades represented bor, Saginaw, Niles and Grand “permit workers,” who do the now is under control. in his business. Haven, the pinch is felt primarily in local industries. James M. Scovic, services manager at Dow Chemical Co.’s plant in Midland, says nearly project at Dow has been affected by the shortage. And, he adds, the shortage is expected to continue. ★ * ★ Gov. George Romney recently told the annual convention of I the Michigan Press Association that the state’s current building plans consist of 100 projects worth $450 million. He said 70i of these are worth $300 million, are for higher education alone, and are to be paid for in cash. “Our problem is not paying for these projects,” he said.! “The problem is in getting! enough, skilled labor to build! them.” RECRUITING WORKERS The University of Michigan, which has extensive construction plans for 1966, is recruiting workers from Michigan, Illinois, Ohio and Canada in an effort to meet its anticipated needs. Several companies in Grand Haven are advertising in out-of-, state newspapers for skilled I workers. In many areas the IMESC is buying radio and television time to advertise the 'need for qualified tradesmen, i w * ★ 1 Overtime and working conditions are the prime bargaining tools for contractors and companies searching for workers. The W.E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research in Kalamazoo said one local firm reduced working hours from ten I to eight hours per day and promptly lost one-fourth of its ! 400-man work-force. Contractors in the Benton ! Harbor area say some skilled SHAWS ^Michif(an'$ Fine Jewelen ELEGANT NEWl 9^6 STYLES Each a mastarwork of true fashion design, revealing the brilliance and beauty of a perfect center diamond. Choose now—pay • later. SHaWS I Michiwn’t FINE Jtwelert I Up to 2 Years to Pay 24 N. Saginaw IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC 2 DAYS ONLY, FRI. and SAT., FEB. 4th-5th Open Tonight til 12 Midnight Saturday 12 Noon 'til 9 P.M. Ron Sandage Lww Borer ^ LOOKlI > Free Coffee and Denuts > Free Balloons for the Kids We Dare You to Check Prices and Compare! 8 Months FREE Senicn On Any Color TV or Stereo Purchased During This Sale We Service Our Products Direct From Our Store by Trained Technicians COLOR TV W* have just received a freeh shipment of yralnut and maple^and even portable*. 6 MonOis Free Sarvica We Will Not Knowingly bo UNDERSOLD SELF CLEANING Range ' 2 Only Regular $369.95 Check and Compare J348A „ *289*' While They Lott! PORTABLE TV Large selection of styles and models to choose from in all price ranges. Please Compare These Prices 12»N152B W* 18” N509B ^99““ 19”M403B ^129““ ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL COLOR TV-^0 COMBINATION Walnut or Maple (Ai It) 3 Only* Ragnlar *895** *724 00 STEREOS 20% off Of Our.Nagular Priea! CURKSIIIN APPLIANCE 6 N. Main SI., Clarktion Fiaiily ef Fm Nrking IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 621-2700 THE gdNTIAC PkESS. FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 4. B—5 State Capitol Due to Get New Look LANSING (AP)—The state'sjsuch a rapid start is possible—| Historic, esthetic and economic ment on Lane’s suggestion that which would then stand merely architects' will start programming a new capitol in several weeks in a move to answer Michigan's newest public building question \ , Has the present Capitol had it? "if we get programming done values must be considered, said if the Capitol cannot be suitably as a historical attraction. „ right pway. Blum. As yet there’s not eyen;remodeled, new legislative] Prices for the wings are not OTHER PHRASE j® a naw capitO''chambers and governor’s of- at ttte firm estimate stage yet, might cost. ifjpgg complete a ^uare but guesses range to $10 AIR CORRIDORS - around the present building, million. Building and fire experts have criticized the structure for A six-month study by the Detroit firm of Smith, Hinch-man and Grylls will explore the alternatives of remodeling the ^year-old structure or building a new center of government. The question, , meanwhile, complicates efforts .\to design[ In the programming phase, architects would decide what would be needed in the building and how these needs would be handlei^tnicturally. Exploration of how and where to add legislative office space began in 1964 when architects and legislators visited other Capitols which had received additions. CAPITOL COMPLEX - This is an architect’s mo^l of proposed and existing buildings at the State Capitol in Lansing. Model shows proposed wings on the capitol building. Supreme Court building’(top, center), flanked by two other proposed buildings, highway department (right, center), Secretary of State and Revenue building (left center), and the Stephen Mason building (L-.shaped), already completed. U.S. Suffers Pickpocket Gap years as being a firetrap because of its vast air corridors. Lane said this week its wrought iron framework could bend and collapse in event of fire. Gov. George Romney declared I Thursday the building can’t be ^ ^ » jneglected any longer. He called . - .u I evolved from]for a blbe-ribbon citizens’ panel new legialatwe wings for the'desires to avoid blocking theito study both the Capitol and Lapitol grounds. jj,g Capijg] mixing the state building needs into the 2 OBJECTIVES two houses or separating them'21st Century.. “Now there are two objectiyesJ^®® much. | , for the wings,’’ said Sigmund! Dismissed were alternatives The architects withheld com-Blum, the firm’s director of!“f a bi“ck or U-shaped exten-design, in an interview. •’a®*’, or lateral “They must relate to the extensions to th? right and left existing building and we must'°t ii’® CapitoL jwork with the possibility of LATE THOUGHTS j there being a new capitol. It’s Thoughts of replacing rather an tntrigumg design problem, than remodeling the Capitol! TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) have entefed the^ plans only inlThe supply of Florida winter agreed the last four months, said Blum. I vegetables will be down, but Cold Wave in Florida | to Cut Vegetable Crop Legislative leaders _____________________ ^__________ ____ _ ____ By HAL BOYLE ! Nine out of 10 persons, asked! Hangnails seem to be an af-B.V spring, the architects plan'little reduction of citrus pr’oduc-NEW YORK ,AP)-Jumping our most valuable larmtliclion among young lolkr. 1^ t*ame'''Ihe no!lh 'ekPectei aa a result ol inclusions ™ ..................... - snouia irame the north and the governor's office and other the recent cold wave. America^ which leads the'"®P’ ® man or woman south sides of the existing inhabitants of the Capitol to The State Agriculture Depart- world in so many fields, has complained about Capitol. assess space and function ment said rains falling befofe ! More men tell the truth about them. ‘ Sen. Garland Lane, D-Flint, needs. weekend’s cold front pre- themselves to their lawyers A boy today may know mpre Senate’s building expert, * * * vente’d destruction of vegetable than to their ministers. They his age than his grandfather®^® under | Putting these requirements on crops, but said sweet corn, cu- feel that if they can just solve he certainly doesn’tlOis year..paper in the form of remodeling cumbers, squash, tomatoes, the problem of ^staying out of pjgy gj'’j,^j g^^mg of mar-'^™^®®^ director Robert Yokomjversus rebuilding will take an-peppers and radishes will be in loll iko., imtor.. ^of Uic architcctural. firm says other four months. below-normal supply. jail now they can worry later yes. about how to get into heaven. suqpessful halfback. PET SUPPLIES 1/2 Off ALL MARKED DOWN TO LOOK AT THE EANTASTIC VALUES Dogs and Cats Coats and Sweaters .. 98c up Dishes . . 4Sc up Toys.........13c up Flea Tic and Spray ... 69c Work Caps . .... 49c Choke Chains cting-standard equipment throughout in the lush, plush new Mercurys. INcw Dual-Aclion Tailgate for wagons-lowers like a platform for cargo, opens like q^oor for people. Interval Selector Windshield Wi|H*rg—they.adjust for sweeps of 2 to more than 10 seconds for downpoprs, drizzles, or just occasional mists. *Opiioml Many standard safely features—including backup lights, emergency flasher, padded dash and visor, 4 seat belts. Move ahead with Have you driven a Mercury lately? Take a discovery ride at: LLOYD MOTORS LINCOLN — MERCURY — COMET 1250 OAKLAND AVE. LINCOLN-MERCURY DIVISION - 333-7863 B—« ONE COLOR THE PCWTIAC PHESS, F Bargain* ar* *«r liiistaes*! Everyone get* a «air, ;M,J never undereo|d;; «sk yoiir nwghbor about tbe deali »he got bare!. „ HOTTEST D UNITED HOME OUTFIT] HIGH PRICES WITH 1 IN TOWN! RED HOTPf FROM CHAI PLETE HOI \MAKiWAYm THiSmUU! i. 'T BEAUTY BY THE HOUSEFUL!^ 2-PIECE UVIMG ROOM ^-pc. Colonial sotting with convortiblo spring sofa and foam cushioned lounge chair. 3 GIGANTIi 4-PIECE BEDROOM 4-pe. Colonial grouping includes fpll size bed. Double dresser, mirrors ond large chest. 7-PIECE DIRING ROOM Beautiful maple finish table with 4 matching/ chairs, hutch and server. See it today at United! COLONIAL ROOMF FOR ONE LOW, LOW PR NO MONEY DOWN Nt LUW, LUW I^K «2S HOME OUTFini DRAYTON PLAINS SHOPPII 5050 DIXIE HW UP TO 36 MONTHS TO PAY PLENTY OF FREE PARKIN( i' :;'v .. 'i. DNLCIILQR Br^7 U M TOWN D» RICES ON EVEliYTHING TING FIRES AWAY AT THE HOHEST DEAL OPEN WONTS til Bn mmsiz-sn DOWW»EASy CREDIT IRS TO COMUSEFULS! iAV>® 1 oT' ^0®'’ .S'tl' j\e° ^\\V\ L.\»' o®A£rAan-S^®''^^^itsj-or Ches' [ Oravt®'* One ^ed Breaks I fte Price Barrier’. ...ii; price feff Tt»o Rootn stcuoii^ TT • 3 Huge Pieces in Modern Up-To-Date Styling ' Luxuri lOUS noose Ti C«,h„5 „„d C,„a,vaio„ woK, notti UDiitfitsiii li^-SavliiKPrieD^i ’Q nfuirwcMi 'Ossyp UVIHS Lot!} Pf '^®Wo 'ooeTr '■//Ji flooiir 0/7C/P, '«>g oo/n. IS-YEU GUMUNTEE! OPEN KITES ’TIL 9 P.M. SUNDAYS 12-6 P.M. ^ r*se ^ [Comfor/aOto ooi Woaiani IV/ce ice( Q —"•III springs /©A NO MONEY DOWN EASY CREOIT TERMS ★ i/? LWAYS GET MORE FOR YOUR MONEY HERE ! n OPEN ^ NIGNTLY •ULS UNTIL 9 JICE SUNDAYS 12-6 K iV\ 3 ROOMS* lOF FORNITUREi At One Low, Low Pricei »Living Room • Dining Room-> Bedroom 8DIEPC -rIEbC BEDROOM MODERN ___I___________ full slie boekcote bed, land- scope mirror plus moHress and No Money Down Nig 3-pc. sectional with cemfortable foam cushions, cocktail table and two step tables in beautiful walnut finish —and a pair of elegant box springs. 5-PC. DINEHE table lamps. Beautiful modem S pc. dinette. Table with 4 attractive matching B—« THE PONTIAC PRESS FRIDAV, FEBRUARY 4. 1966 r WOMEN'S-SECTIDN Vincent Price Due Here .Mrs. Joseph L. Bennett, Illinois Ave-", nue, (left) and Mrs: Fred G. Coleman, present a hat, suit’and furs fashion show West Iroquois Road, are in a musical and details of next yeafs Pontinc-Oakland mood. They’Wanticipating the Town Hall Town Hall will be announced. The brunch Musical Mad Hatter’s brunch Feb. 22, is open to the public with reservations 10:30 a. m., at Holiday Inn. Arthur's will obtainable from Mrs. Coleman. Both Share Same Anniversary Picks Sister’s Big. Day ABBY By ABIGAIL VANBUREN DEAR ABBY: There are 365 days In the year, right? So will you please tell me why my sister had to the day of my wedding versary forher^ wedding date? Don’t t e 1 i, me she forgot, be-^ cause she was" my maid of honor and s h ei l^new perfectly * well that that was my wedding date. Now all of my future wedding anniversaries will have (o be shared with her. That just burns DEAR BUR*NED: Even though you are burned up, don't make an ash of yourself by voicing your disapproval. * * * DEAR ABBY: About four years ago my sister-in-law gave us an old beat-up baby bed that she’d had in her basement for ten years. My husband sanded it down, painted it and ftked it up like new, ,and we used it until our baby was four years old. Then we traded it along with a lot of other qdds.and ends on a new set of bedroorn furniture for the child’s room. My si.ster-ip-law heard about it and demanded that we get the baby bed back for her. (She had no use for it, she just wanted to start trouble.) Of course, by then it was too late. Well she has a very big mouth, so she spread it all over the family and different ones took sides, and now there are lots of hard feelings. I admit I should have asked her before getting rid of it, but honestly, Abby, I had no idea she wanted it back. How can I patch up this mess? FAMILY ROW DEAR Fi^MILY: Ask her how much she thinks the bed was worth, and insist .that she take the cash. Even if it’s expensive, it will shut her big mouth, and that’s worth something. DEAR ABBY: One of my best friends has a heart as big as tjiis world. She knows what it is like to be forsaken, so she has been attempting to provide a home for forsaken animals. How can I tell her tactfully that she cannot keep a house full of cats? Abby, the odor is indescribable. She works, the house is closed all day, the smell comes through the walls. ‘ * The odor dings fo her\cIo|h-\ . ' Frames Are Topic of Talk “Framing Pictures" will be /he subject of Richard Palulian’s talk at the Pontiac Society of Artist* when the group’meets on Feb. 11, 8 p.m. in the Community Services Building. ing. Whew! I ’am afraid she will lose her job. These cats have not been “doctored” and they are producing more cats; cats which have never seen the outdoors! Her kindness to these poor creatures is misplaced. Her nose must be numb. What can be done? HER FRIEND DEAR FRIEND: Both the De-partment of Public Health and the Humane Society should be called to investigate\ the living quarters of your friend. And' a mental examination is very much in order for her. She has a “good” heart, but . I fear the trouble is in her head, poor soul. ★ ★ * CONFIDENTIAL TO WORRIED MOTHER IN AUGUSTA, GA.: Don’t worry. If an American serviceman wants to marry a Vietnamese girl, he must first obtain the permission of his commanding officer. His fiancee is then checked for security by the U.S. Embassy in Saigon. She must also, be cleared by the Vietnamese police, which issues certificates of “good conduct” to approved prospective brides. A very small percentage of American GI’s actually marry natiye girls. Panel Tells ADK Unit About Schools Abroad A program on foreign education was presented before Epsilon chapter. Alpha Delta Kappa sorority, Thursday, in the home of Mrs. Norman Underwood on James K Boulevard. Mrs. Owen Wright was cohostess. . Hugh Mingle, registrar at Michigan Christian Junior College, was' moderator for a dis-cu.ssion on Ethiopia’s efforts to reduce illiteracy and changes in Germany’s educational system which reaches more children. ETHIOPIAN STUDf^NT Panelists were Mengesha Wo-noaferrow of Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. a student at MCJC, and Renter Kallus, visiting minister from Wiesbaden. Germany. Proceeds from a Valentine Day games party in the home of Mrs. Lester Mack on Beverly Island Drive will aid the chapter’s altruistic fund. The ADK state luncheon, April 30. in Dearborn Inn was announced. * ★ ★ Mrs. E. Cleo Wiley is general chairman of the ^tate convention in September. Hostesses will be Pontiac chapters of the sorority, with the Epsilon group handling the table decor. Noted actor and art authority Vincent Price’s appearance* at Huron Theatre Wednesday is awaited eagerly by Pontiac-Oakland Town Hall subscribers. The celebrity’s versatile dramatic talent will be displayed as he reads “The Letters of Vincent VanGogh to His Brother” at 10:30 a m. Best known for his stage and motion picture appearances, Mr. Price has written a book “I Like What I Know.” Although he does not sketch or painL Price- has gained renown as a major art collector and critic. The California College of Arts and Crafts has given him an honorary, doctor's degree and Ohio Wesleyan, the L.L.D. Mr. Price is also a board member of the Los Angeles County Museum, a patron of Working Gals • Are Featured in Competition Electrical appliances will'be awarded to the ten finalists of the Detroit Edison’s “Queen of the Kitchen” contest. •^The cook-off is held each year in cooperation with the Central Business District Association’s annual salute to Women Wjio Work week which begins March 13. . ★ ★ * Entries are being accepted now among women who work for a one-dish meal that can be cooked in an hour or less. Recipes should be sent to Electric Living, 2000 Second Avenue, Detroit, Mich. 48226. Deadline is midnight, March 1. Home economic experts from newspapers, radio and television will serve as judges. The ten finalists will be guests of the Edison Company at the Women Who Work week banquet in Cobo Hall on March 15. Recipes will be published in a booklet for general distribution. Open House Through an , error, the open house celebrating the 50th wedding anniversary of the John Lobziens of ■ Leonard was announced for Saturday. The event will take place on February 12. several contemporary American artists and an art consultant and buyer for Sears Roebuck and Company. An amateur archaeologist and anthropologic, Mr. Price once lectur^ on the ancient Mayan culture before a uniyersity group in Peru. Following his performance a celebrity luncheon is planned at pevon Gables. Reservations may be made by contacting Mrs. John Napley, Bloomfield Hills. Little Girls Should Not Wear Heels By The Emily Post Institute Q: I have an 11-year-old daughter who has been pestering me to buy her high heel shoes — not spikes, of eburse, but a moderate heel. She tells me that quite a few of the girls in her class wear them. I don’t think high heels are in good taste for one so young. May I please have your opinion on this? A: I very definitely agree with you. Little girls should never wear high heels, even moderately high, before they reach their teens. BRIDE Q: My daughter is a nurse and at the present time is serving in the Women's Army Corps. She holds the rank of lieutenant. She is planning to be married /his coming May. I would like to know how her name should be engraved on the invitations. Will you please advise me? A: Her name is engraved as follows: marriage of thejr daughter Elizabeth Anne Lieuteant, Women’s Army Corps etc. Q: If a boy asks a girl to dance with him and she fefuses because she doesn’t like the way he dances, may she then dance with a second boy who asks her? A: To refuse to dance with one boy and then immediately dance with another is an open affront to the first one — excusable only if he is intoxicated or otherwi.se offensive so that the affront is justified. But under ordinary circumstances, if a girl is dancing, she must dance with everyone who asks her, and not make exceptions. VINCENT PRICE Gem Exhibit, Diamond Film Shown ABWA Hugh K r a n d a 11 of Detroit showed a film, “Romance of Diamonds” before Tipacon Charter Chapter, American Business Women’s Association, Jhursday, in Fortino’s Steak House. . , ★ * Huge free-standing red hearts centering the table, held many fine jewelry pieces displayed by Mr. Krandall who told of the mining, grinding and polishing of the diamond. ' .« ★ ★ ★ Included in the film was a showing of the Mikimoto cultured pearl farm in Japan. • Guests for the evening were Mrs. Rene Hoffman, Mrs. Barry Heiple, Mrs. William Webb, Mrs. Gerald Gola, Hester M. Reynolds, Mrs. Charles W. Wood. Mrs. Svena Brandrup,® Mrs. Ken-nett Lamb, Mrs. Robert LaHair and Mrs. Robert Dean. Balenciaga and Chanel Keep Sanity in Designs Talk to Youth, but Also Listen By JEANNE NELSON Some have a preconceived picture of the typical police woman as a big burly mannish-appearing female. But disproving this, Birming- Phyllis Smith Harris of Lorraine Court sings in „ ‘0 scene from “The Marriage of Figaro” opposite Eugene ' M^h'*^***"i*'°* *i*v**k^i V Mount Clemens at a performance pit on by the the^ Butler "m^uiii *o/ Arts” continuing education Opera Workshop class at Oakland Butler, Ohio. ' University recently. The Opera Workshop will be re-- One of his watercolors was peated this spring ps one of 165 continuing education chosen to be the exhibition courses for adults which start the week of Feb. 14. ] Workshop students are scheduled for a spring perform- 1 the meeting is open to pro- Ance March 17 before the Birmingham Newcomers 'ipective members and guests. Club. Workshop director is Dr. David DiChiera. ham Town Hall had as its speak- • er Thursday, Dr. Lois Lundell Higgins who looks more like an attractive wife,, mother (which she is) and garden club member, than a former director of crime prevention for the state of Illinois. “Youth on the march — which direction?” was the subject of her talk, stressing the point that “youth is our future.” ★ ★ * It's Ironic, she said “that countries who have the most wealth and contribute the greatest amount of welfare to others, have the highest delinquency rate.” And “odd” she goc!^ on to say “that we can communicate in ’ outer space but not from block to block.” ♦ ★ . * Pointing out that we must not turn away from youth when they reach out for help. Dr. Higgins reminded us that we must listen as well as lecture. She instructed the crowded theater “to keep . young, for there is where the refif hope lies. Being old is only deserting yOur ideals. We’re as young as our faith and a^ old as our doubts.” ★ ★ ★ §he agrees with many parents that there is overemphasis on sex and that the. clothing worn by teens is bound to have a pronounced effect on the opposite sex. At the luncheon in the Village Woman’s Club after her talk. Dr. Higgins answered questions ranging from advice on how to apply for admissipn to the University of the,Seven Seas, to the narcotic problem in our high schools. Tq the latter she replied, “don’t underestimate It.” She said Michigan has one ofm the toughest penality laws in the United States for peddlers and pushers, but the situation does exist here as in other states and adults should never lose sight of that fact. “Don’t panic, but do keep informed.” She ended her talk with the statement that while adults must try to understand why a boy or girl is delinquent, it still stands that understanding cannot mean condoning. « PARIS (UPI) - Cristobal Balenciaga, one of Paris’ most influential fashion designers, tried to quell the “bare khee” insurrection today with skirts more or less covering the knee. “Slightly covering the knee,” or mid-knee and sometimes lower” was the way buyers described the Balenciaga hemline. ELEGANCE "Balenciaga still is the best designer in Paris, and his show was very elegant—nothing like the other Paris shows—not one gimmick," one buyer said. Balenciaga scorned the white patent leather little girl shoes, ,^textured stockings and bare cutouts that have swept Paris. “Not outer Space or baby look —just clothes for elegant women,” was the way one happy buyer put it. * ★ * The Spanish - born designer’s decision threw cold water onto the enthusiasm of the faction supporting skirts that show the knees—and then some. CONFUSION . Buyers appeared coniused about the whole thing. The first reaction of one was, “We will let the customers decide if they want their skirts long or short.” Balenciaga's daytime dresses were sheaths that were more fitted than at the other designer's salons, clearly outlining the bust line and the waist. Chanel's Knit Wear For the first time since .she started designing in 1910, designer Gabrielle Chanel showed knit wear, a highiight of her spring collection. Of course, the 1966 Chanel girl still will wear the classic Chanel cardigan-style suits with linings matching the blouses, much to the relief of Chanel suit lovers the world over. But Chanel fans can tell the 1966 model from 1965 by the little changes.' WWW This . spring the suit Jacket and coat pockets were slits instead. of the small, puffy patch pockets. She put her famous chabi-and-leather woven belts on dresses but not on suit skirts. Every suit skirt and most of the dresses were straight, narrow and wrap-around. DISTINCTIVE TOUCH Buttons still were on the jacket cuffs, turned back to reveal fabric matching -Ihe blouse. But the little gold lion’s head button used on Chanel suits and coats since 1954 was purged in favor of a new button with twp “C” letters intertwined. WWW For^ ladies who want more proof‘they wear Chanel was a slim blue silk dress scribbled all over in white with the words “Chanel Paris.” The navy coat worn over the dre^s was lined with the same silk. Dental Kits Distributed by Auxiliary The Auxiliary to the Oakland County Dental Society has provided more than 30 schools with posters and kits of tooth paste and brushes in observan6e of Dental Health Week Feb. 6-12. WWW Members assembling mat«t-rials for the project include Mrs. John Clarke. Mrs. William Shelton. Mrs. Charles Murray and Mrs. Robert Vedder. Others are Mrs. Robert Hcln-len, Mrs. R. B. Kavieff. Mrs. Mario M. Trafeli, Mrs. W. C. Whiteman, Mrs. Peter Gryson, Mrs. Vince Greeson and Mrs. S. T. Masty. WWW The auxiliary is now formulating plans to make available to high school girls, various -types of information on dental assisting and hygiene. w - w w Students will tour the U of ,M and U of D Dental schools on Career Day. Lectures and a . luncheon will highlight the day. Showing off the colorful posters to be distributed to area schools by members of the Women's Auxiliary to the Oakland County Dental Association are Mrs. William Shelton of Eastfield Drive, Farming-l ton'Township (left), Mrs. John Clarke of Hargrove Court, also Farmington Township, and Dr. Richard M. Henderson, director. Dental Division, Oakland County Health Department. THB,PONTIAC PRKSS. FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 4, 1966 Mr. and Mrs. Ernest A. Howe Jr. of West Clarkston Road, Independence Township, announce the engagement of their daughter, Linda Elaine, to Charles Lewis Houston, son of the Elton C. Houstons of Meigs Street. PRINTED PATTERN Make her feel enchanting as a princess on Chrj^tmas — sew Empire robe in long or dress len^. Choose dainty print — OR make skirt velveteen a corduroy, contrast top. Printed Pattern 4S»: Chii-drea’s Sixes 2, 4, I, 8. Siic I long robe yards 8S-inch. FIFTY CENTS in coin for each pattern I- add 15 cents] for each pattern for first-class mailing and special handling.] Send to Anne Adams, care of] The Pontiac, Pattern Dept., 243 West 17th St., New York, N. Y. 10011. Print NAME, ADDRESS I with ZIP, SIZE and STYLE NUMBER. Early June vows are planned by Margaret Susan Sagamang and Terry Lee Miller, son of Mrs. Arnold Phillips of Fernlock,Street, Oxford Township and Norman Miller of Transparent Drive, Independence Township. The bride-elect is the daughter of Mrs. David Sagamang of Sebek R^ad, Oxford Township and the late .Mr. Sagamang. A May wedding is planned by Gloria Jean Feole, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert R. Feole of Woodlaipn Road, Commerce Township and Machinists’ Mate 2.C. Jan William Hadley, son of Mrs. James W. Hadley of Highland Road and the late Mr. Hadley. Her fiance is stationed at the U.S. Naval Submarine Base, New London, Conn. Elizebefb Lee Morgan Weds Stephan Johnson A reception in the OxboW Lake home of the Erwin J. Morgans followed the recent marriage of their daughter, Elizebeth Lee, to Stephan Alan Johnson in the Episcopal Church of the Advent. The Edward T. Johnsons of Pontiac Trail, West Bloom- Fifty Women Join Society Fifty new members were received In the confraternity of the Rosary Altar Society, Our Lady of the Lakes Catholic ChuQch, at a meeting Wednesday. The society’s meeting in the church hall followed a service conducted by Rev. F. J. Delaney, pkstor. * * * Mrs. Lawrence Centilli, so-clety president, introduced Mrs. Lawrence Pope, chairman for the group’s Easter Monday luncheon. * * * After a talk on the Christian Community Division program by Rev. Lawrence Kaiser, assistant pastor, 175 guests were served refreshments by society officers. field Township, are parents of the bridegroom. FLOWER BAND A band of white carnations and yellow rosebuds, holding her illusion veil, complemented the bride’s floor-length gown and matching coat of French lace. During the rite performed by Rev. John Wigle, she held a bouquet of white and pink carnations combined with yellow roses. Joanna Morgan attended her sister as maid of honor, with bridesmaids Mrs. Robert Carrels and Kathy Foltz. Thomas Pernar was best man. WilUam Davies and Robert Carrels were usihers. * ★ ★ The couple will reside in Ann Arbor where she'recently was graduated from the University of Michigan. Her husband will continue his studies in the school of natural resources. Save Wool Scraps When making wooleb garments, be sure to save scraps, especially the long string-like ones. Threads may be pulled from the scraps later to use in darning a worn or torn spot in the garment. They will be the exact color and texture for the mending job. The Beauty Boom NEW YORK (UPI) - Women will spend more than ever in 1966 at their hairdressers, predicts Bruce S. Gelb, president of Clairol, Inc. He says bemty salon sales should surpass $2 billion in 1966, a 100 per cent increase over the $1 billion spent in 1958. JHeumode •TIP-TOE' SEAMLESS SHEERS SALE! t in either plain knit or mlcra Reinforced heels and toes. 82 N. Soginow St. Oil Continuum Center Women’s Test Program On Feb. 15 Oakland University’s Continuum Center for Women starts the spring session of a psychological assessment course which has already served 250 women. The five-session course is under the direction Dr. Kenneth H. Coffman and Dr. David G. Lowy of Oakland U n i V e rsity’s Psychological Services. Enrollment is open to any women, not just - to those seeking admission to college. The two clinical psycholo-administer four 7-10 p.m. lay sessions of tests of interests, values, aptitudes and abilities, then give each woman a personal evaluative interview to interpret her test scores. Following the psychological testing course, women wbo took it may avail themselves, without additional cost, of the services of the Continuum Center’s educational, employment and volunteer placement advisers. The coordinated program of personal assessment followed by educational, vocational and volunteer work guidance is, being offered as a package for the first time this term. Also new this term will be the format of the fourth testing session. At the fourth session womeif interested in returning to any collejge will take the College QuaMcation Test and College English Test to measure their potential. Women more interested in going on to volunteer work or employment will go to an-another classroom for the Occupational Interest Inventory Test. Any registrant who desires both sets of tests may return for an extra testing session. { The Continuum Center f o f | Women opened last fall, though the University conducted a pilot testing and counseling program last year. ! Age range of the womjen | who have enrolled extends . from 22 to 55, but the largest ' number have been t h o s e in their early forties with three | children, all of school age or i Continuum Center advisers are geared to helping such women find creative roles outside their homes as family responsibilities lessen. up. Small Fry's Dry To quickly dry small stuffed toys that you have washed, place them in a hair dryer hood. ferl|9W • For Shut-Ins • For Business Associates • Friends For Away • For Helpful Neighbors - *750 .„d *12" Othei^ to $25 JACOBSEN’S FLOWERS ' for 42 Yenrj Downtown Store 101 N. Saainaw St. Pontiac Phone F£ 3-7165 (.reenhouie. Garden Store and Nursery. Lake Orion Phone MY 2-2681 Worlds gpeotest disappearing act .r.pBPftipmBd In ynur own kitchonl MiuuiitflimHaHui IVEN makes oven soil vanlsii like magic! Cleans itself (oven racks, too) automatically! . You don't need a hat and a wand to perform this trick. Just two simple controls; set the "clean** lever and turn the "start” knob. Away goes oven soil! • Cook-Master control starts/cooks/stops oven-all automatically at the times you select. • Big 23* wide oven holds the largest turkey you can find. • Full-width storage drawei removes for mpp under range cleaning. A WEEK AFTER SMALL DOWN PAYMENT Even less with a good trade-in. 2-Speed Jet iciion washari Patented Deep Action Agitator cleans deep-glves all your wpth Deep Action cleaning. Jot-simple design for top dependabiliwi i047 Load It In ironti Frigidairs Dishmobils has convenient Roll-To-You rKks that make loading and unloading ■ snap. Tha whole unit rolle to tho sink for uto, storae almoet anywhere. CRUMP ELECTRIC COMPANY 3465 AUBURN RD., AUBURN HEIGHTS f'e 4-3573 - UL 2-3000 WOW! WONDERFUL WIGS OF 100% HUMAN HAIR AND THE WORKS! *80 Hove one of our beautiful human hair wigs, adjustable lb size, and pitched in with It, a smart vinyl patent carrying case valued at $8, plus a wig form, fool Select blonde, off-blacic, black, light, m mediurn or dark brown or auburn. Millinery Salon — Second Floor 18 th« Young Approach to Spring. A neot Box jockef and a short slim skimmer dress with squared away neck, and leofher bell. All expertly tailored in rayorvocetate check. Red with white. Sizes 12V{j to 2016. Ifreit Salon — Second Floor Get with it., for Jr. Potitos. ft's the mosfl You'll loVe one in stripes, print or solid color, with the bulkiest sleeves. Sizes 5 to 13. 10.98 SporUmear—Motn Floor B^IO THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 4, 1966 GORHAM STERLING There Are Strings Attached to Gift MADE TO ORDER PROGRAM . Limited offer Now till March 2nd you t can order any of more than 200 Gorham Sterling flatware designs. It is impossible to maintain a complete stock of all these patterns, but Gorhams Annual - Made - To-Order Program makes it easy to fill-in or add to your treasured pattern. This program is your assurance that when your Sterling is Goriiam, it's always available. So don’t delay, if you have one of thol^ time-honored designs, now is the time to order. By MURIEL LAWRENCE DEAR MRS. LAWRENCE: Last June I sold $5,000 worth of stocks left me by my husband to help my son buy a country home for himself and his family. I did this because he was so worried about the overcrowded condition of the city school my |two little grandsons went to. I'Hien I was told that I had to| spend Christmas alone because! his wife’s mother and sister! were visiting them in the newj house over the holidays and thatj there was no room for me. Myi mother used to say there’s no fool like an old fool..... ANSWER: Not a fool. Just March 2nd is the deadline! _ Row Morilo 1933 The Store Where Quality Counts b FPEDN^au/l ca Pontiac's Oldest Jewelry Store 28 West Huron Street FE 2-7257 RENT, LEASE, SELL. BUY HOMES, PROPER'TY, COTTAGES, CARS, GOLF CLUBS - - - USE PONTIAC PRE§S CLASSIFIED ADS. TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 332-8181. TiTOT8TrrrrrrrrvrrrrrTTrrtrrr$T*TrTTnnnnj The KINGSLEY IM Superb Farilitiei for ... Weddings Engagement Partiea — Bgrhelor Dinnera Ideal Surroundings for... Banquets Dinner Meetinga— ^ Buaineta Gel-Togethert Incomparable Atmoiphere for.. Birthday Parties Wedding Anniversariea — Familjr Celebrations The Perfect Setting for . . . Office Parties Card Parties, (^oektail tiatherings FOR RESERVATIONS CALL MI 4-I400-JO 4-5144 JAAJUUUL8.8.0 Ak X LtLUJUUlAJLUJLL8.0JUU»JLaJUtj a little dishonest with yourself can’t eat Christmas dinner with andyoorson. jadmiration. You s^, you didn’t tell himi ^o it may nrt ^ what you L- u really want at all. Why not know that you were helping him buy ^ then? -mink about the idea of the house in return for the right having a quiet talk with this son to visit it when you wanted to. of yours that will make clear to You didn’t make it clear that him Jhe real cause of your hurt' in providing the children with'a ,?°“8h the . ^ . , . . , , ‘ truth may lose you his gratefql better school you hoped to also it may gain you his provide yAirself with family understanding affection, companionship on family holi-] r also could release him from days. So he h^ ho way of know-the sense of moral inferiority ing that this visiUng right was that 'children often feel when part of the bargain, had he? jthey’re obliged to admire a no- April vows are planned by Nicole He was left with the impres- hie unselfishness in us that they on that vou helned him buv idon’t possess themselves. >. ^ Sion that you helped him buy [don’t possess themselves, his house out of interest in his However, I advise yon to children, uncontaminated hy withhold the truth untU yon any interest in yourself. ashamed of interest ... j in yourself. Maybe you should consider correcting this false impression, ^s a matter of probability. Correcting it, of course, in- holiday invitaUon may have volves the loss of your son’s Sd- withheld from you just l»-miration of your unselfishnels. “"‘I family However, that admiration didn’t want to spend Christmas prove very useful, did it? You with someone to whom they owe grateful admiration. NICOLE KATHERINE ERGO Enroll NOW! Enrollments Taken Daily at Your Convenience poivnAC BEAUTY COLLEGE 161^ E. Huron Phon* FE 4-1 854 . Study the Icrtest techniques and hair fashions. Call Miss Wilson for further information ' ! GLOBE America's f/n&sf UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE! SOFA AS PICTURED 97” AS LOW AS $457.00 $24 EXTRA FOR TRAPUNTO STITCHING CUSTOM COVERED IN YOUR CHOICE OF GORGEOUS FABRICS AT SALE PRICES Take advantage of this unusual opportunity to order GLOBE upholstered furniture — America's finest —custom* covered to your order.Tou will find’in GLOBE as in no other line, decorator selected fabrics, exacting design, luxurious seating comfort, and workmanship of superior quality. You con practically, tell it's GLOBE when you seet it. Pictured ore only a few pieces from the 'fast GLOBE collection—all sole pricedi DISTINCTIVE WING CHAIR OF UNUSUAL STYLE WITH PLEATED SKIRT-BOW CORNERS. From $167.50 TUFTED LADIES' CHAIR WITH DRESSMAKER DETAILED SKIRT. SALE PRICED From $167 BUDGET^ TERMS OF COURSE OPEN FRIDAY EVENINGS designers of home and OFFICE INTERIORS Valentine for Family Straws and glitter, hairpins and glue, Red paper hearts, some effort by you. Glue small hearts directly onto straws. Larger hearts I should be glued to pipe-cleaners cut in half. These, plus six pipe cleaners od a two-inch styrofoam ball,' are the ingredients for a charming Valentine centerpiece p r e-pared by the “Glad” home service group. Select white, pink and red straws from a box of assorted plastic straws. Cut into two to four-inch lengths — you’ll need about 100 pieces. Put a speck of glue on the top of hairpins and insert one about an inch inside each straw length. „ Brush glue on other end of straws and sprinkle with glitter. While glue is drying, cut out paper hearts (12 thumb-nail size, 12 one-inch and a few two-inch). When all are dry, poke halr-ipin ends and pipe-cleaners Into styrofoam ball: leave a small space for tree trunk. The tree base is a paper cup fillfd with sand or gravel. Insert sharpened stick (dowel or pencil) as tree trunk.,Glue straws vertically to cup. Cover entire surface of cup and tree trunk with gold paint. When completely dry, lower bail onto spike of “tree-trunk” Finish off With a perky red velvet bow. Art Program for Chapter A program on art was present^ before Xi Gamma Alpha chapter. Beta Sigma Phi sorority, 'Thursday in the home of Mrs. Donald DeVoe op Arizona Street, Avon Township. Mrs. Hazel M Nauman spoke on the different forms of sculpture and media used in painting. ’The group plans a dinner-dance Feb. 19 in The Elks Temple. , Guests were Mrs. Stanley Ferguson and Rosella Geistl. Make a Valentine topiary tree for a romantic centerpiece and let it proclaim your feelings for the whole family. t 9:00 A.M. TO 12 NOON A delightful way to enjoy Sunday Breakfast! Bloomfield Hills, WOODWARD AT SQUARE LAKE RD. VISIT TED’S AT THE MALL / THB PONTIAC PRESS. FHIDAY, FEBRUASY 4, 1966 B-n German Girl Speaks fa Sisterhood The Congregation B’hil Israel Sisterhood met Tuesday evening with foreign exchange student Monika Warlaweryl of Germany as guest speaker. Miss Warlaweryl was Intro-duifed by Raymond Hull. English teacher at Pontiac Northern High School and sponsor of the Students’ International Club. The club works throughout the 3f%ar to raise funds for international students’ trips to this country. i Monika, a 12th grade stu-*dent, related her impressions of America. A question and answer period followed, with Inquiries as to present activities of former exchange students visiting the Sisterhood in previous years. At a business meeting plans were announced for a “Springtime Discotheque” and a Mother’s Day smorgaslwrd. Mrs. Michael Davis was chairman for the session.' Mrs. Belmont Kershenbaum of Yorkshire Road was refreshments chairman. A. simple stockinette stitch toith a cabled border donon each side makes this boy’s pullover sweater a very simple garment to knit. Directions are given for sizes 10 through 16 in the free instructions which are available by sending a self-addressed, stamped envelope to (he Needlework Editor of The Pontiac Press. Leaflet PK 3141. row Old ? Someone who had worked for yean with older people was asked how to grow old vibrantly. She answered, “If you wish to be a lovely knd loved woman of 80 you will have to start working on it . early, maybe about the age of 17.” I have always believed that individual personality, traits become Intensified with years. If a woman has a sweet dis-posidon In youth she will probably be even more loving and understanding with the increased perception which experience brings her. If a woman is hard to get along with in youth she is apt to be “hell on wheels” in older years. If she has always been selfish she will really concentrate on herself in age, UNLESS she recognizes her faults and makes a real effort to correct them during younger years. P^IOPLE CHANGE This latter happens so often! So many folks work all their lives to improve their attitude and make a conscious deliberate effort to correct their faults. Among these you will find some of the loveliest, most rewarding people you know. BUT, it is madness to expect someone who has been stingy 'all of his life to suddenly become generous, to think that someone who has always been critical will become tolerant because of age, or someone who has thought .pnly of himself will, overnight, begin thinking of others. Habits of thought and outlook are just as strong, if not stronger than habits in posture. food and hail-biting. Practice sets and deepens habit. People cannot practice negative thoughts for years and then change suddenly. Age does not always bring wisdom and tolerance. Sometimes it brings a narrow viewpoint and bitterness. It all depends on how we practice during the years. So, it seems to me, that if we hope to have a happy old age (we’d be happier now, too) we should begin putting a little tenderness and understanding in our hearts, a little NOW 9PEN EVENINGS Dr. £. D. Van Deusen tool Sprrialilt 5648 HighUnfi Road UR 3-133S tolerance in our minds and viewpoint, as ^ell as money in the bank. If you would likaHo’ have my leaflet “Individu^ Happiness,” send a stamped, self-hddressed envelope with your request to Josephine Lowman in care of The Pontiac Press. Brighten Whites OI(d Foshionetd Way Linens sometimes will turn slightly yellow in storage. An old-fashioned way to bleacli them is to select a sunny day, saturate the linens with thick hot suds and hang in the sun to dty. Wash as usual. Linens stored in blue paper or blue plastic stay white far longer than ones not so stored. Dots Not Dashing Polka dots, once as much a harbinger of spring as the first robin, are in a temporary decline In the new collections. Only a few designers feature them. Sigma Betas Set Plans for Dance Margit Misangyi, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Misangyi, Orchard Lake, made her debut recently at the “White Rose Ball" in Detroit’s Harmonie Club. Gov. George Romney was honorary.chairman of the benefit ball, held for art student scholarships. Members of Gamma Theta Chapter, Sigma Beta Sorority, Inq., are planning charitable and social events for the coming year. President Saundra Burnette has announced a semi-formal spring dance. Proceeds will go to charity. ,, Other projects include baking cookies for Viet Nam, an Easter candy benefit sale and a mother-daughter banquet. Don't Wash Eggs Washing eggs before storing destroys their protective film that keeps out odor and Check Immunizations Area parents may be interested in the following, physicians-suggested immunization schedule. Routine exam., DPT (Diptheria, Whooping Cough, Tetanus) No. 1, Oral Polio ......................... Two Months Routine exam., DPT No. 2, Oral Polio .... Three Months Routine exam., DPT No: 3, Oral Polio .....Four Months Routine exam., Tuberculin Test ........... Nine Months Routine exam., DPT Booster, Measle Vaccine . .12 Months Routine exam., Trivalent Polio, Smallpox Vaccination ....................................... 15 Months Routine exam., DPT Booster ...............Three Years Kindergarten exam., DT, Tuberculin Test, Trivalent Polio, SmgUpox Vaccination ........................ Five Years A toboggan party is planned Feb. 12 at Bald Mountain. Later, the group will meet for refreshments at the home of Mrs. Louis Norberg. TRI DELT Three groups of the Delta Delta Alumnae chapter of Binning-ham will hold a joint meeting Feb. 16 at 12:30 p.m. in the Huntington Woods home of Mrs. Frank M. Wiseman. The slate of officers Ml be presented and plans discussed for the ne^ directory. Tray favors will be made for hospital patients. ^ Summer vows are planned by Linda Lee Neff, daughter of the Robert N. Neffs of Shimmons Road, Pontiac Township, and James C. Bailey whose parents are Mrs. Hilliard LaFrance of Genes Road, Pontiac Township and Willard D. Bailey of West Tennyson Street. Those planning to attend are requested to call their group chairman. 'Sweet' IcJea A dainty sachet cushion makes a nice favor for a bridal shower. Pass these pretty favors to the guests as they, leave, using a dainty be-ribboned basket from which to distribute them. Visit Sunny South Mr. and Mrs. Harvey W. Perry of North Lake Drive are leaving today for Florida where they will spend the remainder of the winter.. By HEARNS^ DOWNS ~MAQEE-BEAniE-L00MWEVE, Etc. ★ SHOP AT HOME SERVICE ★ Complat* Sclaetient of SAMPLES SHOWN IN YOUR HOME • Carpsting • Ruga • Cuitom Draptrias • Floor Tile • LiiMloum HEARNS FLOOR COVERING FLOOR COVERING 2685 WOODWARD AVE. BLOOMFIELD HILLS DINING • Cocktails • Luncheon and Dinner • Banquet Facilities Join tho Inn Group at tho Piano Bar Friday and Saturday Nights The Rotunda Connti^ Inn Reservations 682-0600 •32^4^1 Pine t.uke K(j.,Oreharfi I.aLe RENT, LEASE, SELL. BUY HOMES, PROPERTY, COTTAGES, CARS, GOLF CLUBS---USE PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS. TO PEACE YOURS, CALL 332-8181. AUTOMATIC 2-MINUTE CAR WASH Lot* You Stay In Your Cor Toltiraph Pd. at Long Lakt Hd. Routine exam., DT Booster, Smallpox Vaccination ten years Tetanus booster every ten years after ten years of age. Smallpox vaccination every five years after ten years of age. KINNEY'S SHOES For tho Whole Family PONTIAC MALL MIRACLE MILE Meet Friends tor BREAxhST and LUHPK Alweyi Qeed'Coffee HIKER FOUNTAIN RilOf Bldg. - Lorty THREE UNIQUE SOLUTIONS / FOR SOLVING OFFICE FURNISHINGS PROBLEMS Herman Minor's Action Office provides a new climate to support and stimulate your working capacity. It allows a variety of sitting and standing postures, control of interruption and conversation And encourages .meaningful clutter with built-in facilities for display of material. Recipient of the 1966 Alcoa Design Award and the A.I.d. International Design Award. Try boforo you buy . . . flr>d out which lr)»trurnont It b#$t for you! Wo will holp with a timpla, provon Mlaction mathod davtiopad by tha largast bartd Inttrumant manufKturan In tha world. Choosa from AmaNca’t finatt, Salmar-Burtdy or Conn. Lawit Fumitura at Your Harman Millar Offica Solutlont Daalar alto offari tha Exocutlva Offica Group Work Organizar (a compidf* offlca-wlthln-a-dotkl and tha Comprthtntiva Storaga Syttem (a. vertical cradanza which putt your wall to work). COST 18 25 AS LOW AS I WEEK PER RENTAL APPLIES TO PURCHASE IP YOU BUY As Advertised in the Wall Street Journal OPEN FRIDAY AND MONDAY EVENINGS TIL 9 P.M. OPEN FRIDAY EVENINGS CALBI MUSIC CO. 119JIorth Saginaw FVl 5-8222 FREE CUSTOMER PARKING REAR OF STORE Ahm's coat sale Fur Trims regular to ^325 $79J199 A great selection of opulent furs in minks, foxes, or beaver that accent fine fabrics both domestic and imported. Untrimmed regular to $135 *39. *79 Here's your chance to buy a quality coof at prices ..we.WWW /wwi IV/ i/uy u ^uuiiry i.our \ not normally found at Alvin's. Buy now and save. Shoe Sijle Save , up to 50% , Caressa-Mr. Edston regular to 16.00 *10 Andrew Geller DeLiso Debs Town & Country r#g, to 30.00 *16 rag to 21.00 ^]2 -ragto 15.00 Town & Country - California Cobblers CASUALS reg. to 12.00 ^5 HURON at TELEGRAPH w B—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 4, 196® If you don’t want to get lost in the new car shuffle Demand A New Deal! from Rochester's newest Dodge Boy Frank Todd is your new Dodge Dealer with the cars, the deals, the service, the smile that are yaur passport to happy driving. He says "'Down with dull driving. Up with savings!" And he means every word of it. He not only has great service and talks a good deal^ Frank Todd actually delivers. Gel Bahied the*Wheel With a Rebel Deal. The Money Yon Sava Will Be Yonr Own! SIE CHARGER! Fabuloui ■MW faitbaek now oii diiplayl ROCHESTER DODGE THE DODGE BOYS FIVE STAR SERVICE CENTER ^ Five Service Specialists on Duty I ^ ^ 223 NAM STIEET PHOKE 651-S10S Here's what all your friends and neighbors are talking about Jhis is^"Action Line"-the most popular newspaper feature In Michigan. And only the Free Press has it Subscribe now. Read "Action Line" ^ every morning in the action paper. 9rtroU4ft^e IJtess CAIL 222-6500 / for home delivery P *"- Wond,y 8:30^' 1*231. 4:30 In U T"*- OrdlS *'ve. '• *>rot«r j. 1 "*«««■ they'r. solid P'** obsolete •‘«>rseS has started again. Stories of discontent; angry itatenients against coaching and management, and denials of course, Hire all. in the news again today. . Discontent and grumbling is nothing new *with the Lions, at least for the past four years. The difference between winning and losing hasn’t been because of the shortage of talent but in the lack of attitude and the abundance of discontent. A major blowup took place at the start of the season in 1964, after a few shaking explosions during the 1962 and 1963 campaigns. Who have been the targets of these explosions? Bill Ford? Edwin Anderson? Rusis Thomas? George Wilson? Harry Gilmer? Milt Plum? Joe Looney? Assistant coaches? There have been incidents of all sorts in recent years which have mounted and never been really dissolved, and every namt* mentioned has at one time or another been the target of criticism. FUSES PLANTED We’ve seen the fuses of some of these explosions planted and we’ve watched the targets change. The mpny incidents have been reported in various degrees—some overplayed publicly and some squelched to lesser proportions tharl made known. ★ * ★ There have been several player-behavior problems in the past which tin]p later healed, but since 1962 the healing has been slow and many other wounds opened. ., The first fuse was set in the 1962 game at Green Bay, when Milt Plum threw the pass which was intercepted and later results In the Lions’ 9-7 loss and eventually cost them the title. Things which were said following the game could not be put into print. Immediately after the season and during the playoff bowl In Miami, the betting scandal broke and the Lions were involved in the thick of it. Feelings were never really healed toward Lions’ Management - as players claimed they were “betrayed.” * ★ ' * A couple trades in 1963, West Coast incidents in 1964, more trades, coaching chhnges, contract squabbles and player brawls, in 1964 and 1965 kept the smoldering pot aflame. The change of ownership did not resolve the problems which many hoped for and expected. ★ w w Players and coaches have come and gone since the first smoldering started on an October Sunday 1962 in Green Bay, but memories are long and discontent returns for public viewing on schedule every year. When will It end? Who’s in position to say? The long winter of discontent in pro football has taken another stormy turn with the revelation that members of the Detroit Lions have held a secret meeting with an eye toward getting $2 million in increased salaries and bonuses. ★ ★ ★ William Clay Ford, owner of the National Football League club, acknowledged that veteran players had met recently with a Teamsters Union member on hand, and had reached agreement on the $2-million figure before deciding to let the issue drop. Ford, however, emphasized that “it all has blown over.” Still it is another indication of growing discontent among veteran players in both professional leagues over the lucrative contracts being handed out to rookies. Last month former St. Louis Coach Wally Lemm confirmed that veteran players on the NFL’s Cardinals had held a similar meeting while lineback Nick Bueniconti of the American League’s Boston Patriots publicly discussed player dissatisfaction over the huge bonus trend. t Ford, meanwhile, was asked to confirm a report that the Lions had held such a meeting. ★ ★ w. When he did, he was asked If the demands included a reported $300,000 in increased salaries. “That was a low estimate,” said Ferd. “It was $1.7 shy ‘ of the mark. “As I understand it, they, (the players) decided there was no reason to make such a demand and it all has blown over. I have been told there is no reason for me to worry about this.” WWW Ford said he didn’t know why a Teamsters official had been at the meeting “unless whoever organized the meeting thought it would be beneficial to have somebody with collective bargaining experience there.” Ford’s comments came aft-'er two reports said that 14 “disgruntled veterans” had met. The group, dissatisfied with the high money being paid out to untried rookies and draft choices, held a discussion and wanted, as a group, to enter into legal agreement among themselves to go to the Lions management "and ask for $300,-000 in bonus money this year, above and beyond their salaries, to be paid to the group. * ★ ★ It’s reported several of the players backed off from this, questioning the legality of the move. It was obvious that dissatisfaction with Gilmer was evidenf and that the veteran group was highly critical of the front office. Receiver Gail Cogdill, mean-v^|e, wl4^ quoted as criticiz-ii$ Coach Harry Gilmer at a Wednesday night yaking engagement, saying if the Lions’ rookie COach returned next year he “might be the only one who does.” ★ ★» * Cogdill denied making the statements, although two re-por^rs who attended the function at which Cogdill spoke said he had been quoted cor-rectiy. AI.SO among the statements attributed to Cogdill was (Continued on Page C-5, Col. 3) 'Protected' Howe Leads Win Wings Defeat Boston, 4-2, for NHL Tie Gordie Scores, Gains Assist for Delvecchio Despite Threats ketball pacesetter, Michigan,! faces another road test Satur-i Unbeafables Beaten Avoids Cage Upset The Amigo’s Club just avoided an upset, McDonald’s Drive-In coasted to a win and Lakeland Hardware took charge in recreation basketball action last night. The Pontiac program saw the once-beaten Amigo’s Club rally to overcome the All-Stars, 57-55, ''and McDonald’s top The Unbeat-ables, 61-49, in men’s league action. Class 1) victories were posted by the All Stars, SMI over Perry Park, and East Side, 66-27 over AUSainU. In Waterford Township, Lakeland ripped previously unbeaten Ryeson’s Market, 84-49, Buckner Finance ton>led Wayne’s Serv-. ice, 57-48, and Bundy Built HUmes nudged Zilkg Heating, 71-64. RALLY Cy Green scored six field goals as the Amigos overcame a 34-23 halftime deficit. The All Stars’ John Hooper and Willie Ratliff were contained after get- ting 10 points each in the opening half. Ed Wasik’s 20 points paced McDonald’s to its seventh win in nine starts, offsetting Cedric Patterson’s 19 for the Un-hea tables. Lakeland took the lead in the township Continental League by outclassing ^yeson’s. Mike Reed’s 23 topped the winners’ balanced offense. A- * ★ Buckner’s Duana Presson hit 23 in its third win; while Randy Parsons had 24 as Bundy won its first game with a third-period outburst. PNH Swimmers Score Route, 85-15 Sophoifiore-Iaden Livonia Stevenson high school, with its own pool still not in operation, was no match for Pontiac Northern swimmers yesterday. The Huskies walloped the visitors 85-15, and in ORhibition 400 yard freestyle relay team broke the existing pool and vgrsity record in 3:43.6. ^ On the relay team were Bfuce Walls, Dave Pennybacker, Carl Hiller and Steve Yedlin. PNH 85, Livonia Stevenson 15 7M tTMdlty rtUy—TNH (Mtrtin, Coh llni, Herroun, OMck) 2:03.3. 30 trtntyh-JIm Moort (PNH) Kuhn (PNH) Tim Smith (LI) M 5. 200 frtMtyl*-S. Ytdiln (PNM Giry, Htmlllon (PNH) Plllpl* (LS) 7:00.1. I 300 Ind. mcdlcy-Penny^cIctr (PNH) Bob Brogan (PNH) LIttIa (LS) 2:27.4. Diving—Maun (PNH) (Livonia no an- n) mo. ! 00 Buttartly-Cottar (PNH) Harn)un (PNH) Kinnic (LS) 1:01.2. ^ 100 Fraastyla-Oaack (PNH) Dc (PNH) Quint (LS) 1:10.4. 100 Backitroko-Bragan (PNH) t (PNH) Ragan (LS) ltl{.4. ^v'aS !!Tpi 1 Wayna't Sarvica 0 BOSTON (JT) - The authorities seemed nore disturbed than Gordie Howe Thursday night that the superstar of the Detroit Red Wings had received threatening letter. Howe, given a police escort while he was in the city for Thursday night’s game with the Boston Bruins, didn’t let it affect his playing as he scored his 20th goal of the year and assisted linemate Alex Delvecchio on the Detroit captain’s 300th National Hockey League goal. WWW Police ringed the stadium to be sure that nothing more than a few chiding remarks from the fans was thrown at Howe or that no unauthorized individual approached him. And, except for a brief display of tpmper which netted Howe two minutes in the penalty box for a high stick, there were no incidents. Detroit won the game 4-2 and climbed into a tie with idle Chicago for the National Hockey League lead. Boston Police Capt. Peter J. Donovan headed the police detail keeping watch on the 37-year-old Howe. He said he was sent a copy of the anonymous letter Howe received at Detroit two or three weeks ago by the FBI. NO LEADS Donovan said the writer identified himself as a 6-foot-4 Negro weighing 240 pounds and he said the letter was mailed from Brooklyn, N.Y. He also said a detective interviewed Howe without picking up a lead., . Howe’s reaction was one of L'Ani"?r irritation at the publicity. LlIkTorten .rwir,^ cou.ino ,‘‘N?w my wife will be wor-JX*“ ttii. ried, he complained. And ----------■ - (Continued on Page C-5, Col. 3| Wolverine Cagers Can t Afford Loss By United Press International I The Illini, also winners of •Die Big Ten’s erstwhile^ bas-jthree road games, at Wiscon-Indiana and Michigan,-will be at home against Wisconsin in the televised afternoon game, with the Spartans a 14-point choice, the biggest favorite on the board. day and if the Wolverines 8Up,i‘‘® Ohio State, the championship chase couid pud Illinois was a lO-point fa-be wide open the rest of thejvorite, while Michigan State wiil way. Michigan was knocked into first - place tie with Michigan State by Illinois Tuesday, and now the Illini also rank as title contenders since each of the three clubs has only on^ Big Ten loss. Thus Michigan’s road game at Indiana assumes extra importance because both Michigan State and Illinois wiii be home with whatever edge the home court offers for bids to remain close to the top rung. Michigan has won each of its three league road games so far, at Ohio State, Northwestern, and Wisconsin, and Saturday appears at Indiana, where the Hoosiers were six-point underdogs. But Indiana earlier knocked off another title pretender, Iowa, on its own court and loBt at home only to Illinois. Sports Events Flint Ctntral at Pontiac Caniral Pontiac Norttiarn at Watariord Bay City Cantral at Saginaw Sa^naw Arthur Hill at Bay City Handy It Northvllla •t^ Clarancavllla Rules No Contest Ref Stops''Big Train' Eait Oatrolt at Rotavllla Port Huron Cantral at Mour Orchard Laka St. Mary I Our Lady ot Sorrowt LOS ANGELES Uf> - A scheduled 10 round bout between top ranking heavyweight con tender Amos Big Train Lincoln, 203Vk, of Los Angeles', apd San* Francisco’s Heray Clark, 215, was declared a no and Wallad Laka Quadrangular • ------ BMEelBan ' ***** Mjchlgw JC at Grand Rapidt I Grand HAGGERTY HASH! PREFINISHED PANELING .. . DESIGNED BY NATURE WITH LASTING BEAUTY TRUCKLOAD SALE Fiberglas OWENS-CORNING FIBERGLAS INSULATION 2 days only FRI., SAT., FEB. 4th and 5th SPECIAL PRICES "Natura Gfain" is a reproduction of nature's most creative designs in wood-—on a practically indestructible base, protected by the- finest overcoat sicence has developed. chack that* advantagas; • Oil traatdd to mlnimix* mevditidnt • Sdaidd bock aid*, ka«pa out meiatur* • Noila ar« h«ld anualy-won’t pop out a Bokod-on Motomino finith a Groin boa doplh ond warmth a No ckippine, aplitting or dolaminoling a Appliai and hondloa with wood tooli SPECIAL PRICE NOW ONLY %95 4’x8’xV4'’PANELS each Our 6 and 3 Insulation plan will warm your hoart. And your budgof. 2«x15” KRAFT FACE 100-Ft.nioll........$3.66 3»xl6” KRAFT FACE 70-Ft. Roll......... .$S.a l'/k”x15’* ALUM. FOIL 1.5,140-Ft. Roll... $4.66 2V4'*x15 ALUM. FOIL 1.6,106-Ft. Roll..44.16 3 f055 NAGOERH HWY. Wallod Lako-MA 4-4651 ■atwoBn «. MsplB snd PoRtiBO TrBlI "MICHIGAN'S MOST MODERN LUMBER AAART" Opon 7:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.-Fri. Nito to 9 p.m.-Sat. 7:30 o.m. to 5 p.m. C—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 4, 1966 4voncfo/e Scores Win 2*0 Over Madison, 55-47 13 30-MMlt.MHawJGJoR.MM ' .■ I- FREE MOUNTING 1 \ Avondale kept its faint Oak- Fitzgerald is at Troy in to-, quarter. Junior Lee Saunders lafid A League title hopes alive night’s games. of Avondale tallied eight of 16 I”** rncc muuniinu m *Uckongo-WWt1.UMoM I PLUS TAX ■ Op*n Daily 8-9-Sot. 8-6 I UNITEO TIRE SERVICE tUT Baldifto Avn. by outscoring Madison in each| Last night s win puts Avon-j ^ {j^g in the HmI quarter, period for a 55-47 win Thurs-dale (6-5i in sole possession of . v a j day night fourth place at least until to-! Junior Archie Ai^ersw had , * * night. Should Clawson (€-4) 12 and sophomore Bob Burt 14 ' stumble at Rochester, the Yel-Jo aid the winners' cause. Dave The game had been moved up f;;“Xckets“S"sharTthTrd'Erwin contributed 18 and was Clawson visits .............. „ , ,, ,, ,lkpu rphnnnHpr thus (iplnir I'RXster^Lake'^OrbTW'toir*^ I once-beaten Warren Cousino and While Cousino (9-11 is only JUST ARRIVED! See Our Brand New Selection of Imported English Pipes! a game in front of runner-i Fitzgerald (8-2), the Patriots lead Avondale and Rochester by four games in the loss column. 332 Hamilton Row, Open Fri. 'til 9 mn BUY, SELL, TRADE. USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS. One more defeat will eliminate either the Falcons or Avon. The underclassmen played a key role again last night for coach Nick Neira„A slow first half found the visiting Avondale quintet in front, 19-15. DEFENSE “The boys played a real good defense and that kep*t them in there the first half,” Neira said this momifig. “We began running in the third quarter.” I Both teams equalled their 1 opening half totals in the third „jj|key rebounder, thus helping start the fast break, attack. Sophomore Tim Blach paced Madison with 16 points,^taking! advantage of the open lane in the Yellow Jackets’ 1-2-2 defense. The zone, however, was instrumental in limiting the scoring of the Eagles’ top shooter, Jim Combs who had all three i of his field goals after intermis-l sion. ! ICE ACTION BUT NO SCORE - Bemie Parent (30) ' goalie for the Boston Bruins makes a sitting save off the stick of Bruce MacGregor (16) of the Detroit Red Wings Jn the first period of their National Hockey League game in Boston. Forbes Kennedy (rear) threw a body check on MacGregor as he went for the shot. Detroit still won the game, May Get All-Time Top Pay AVONDALE (SS) FO FI MADISON (, Erwin ........................ , Saunders 6 4-5 U Putnam 3 3-4' I Anderson 3 4-9 12 Blach 5 4-10 1, Burt 4 3-3 14 Cox 4 0-0 I B'tkowlak 1 1-2 3 Combs 3 1-3 Jacobs 0 0-0 0 Dash 0 0-0 i Joyner. 0 0-0 0 W'olowsKJ 0 0-0 , Willie Mays Anticipating Salary Hike ” SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -| The center fielder of the San high of 52, hit .317, knocked in ; Willie Mays may become the Francisco Giants pulled down 112 runs and scored 118 himself. The All New Tempest SPRINT Choose This Spirited Beauty In Tempest - Custom or LeMans Models! 207 H.P. Overhead Cam Six! Hera'i tlie new woy to get-up-and-ge without tpending o lot of doughi Pontiac doei It again with their fabulous Overhead Com Six-stepped up with a 4-barre( carburetor that deliver! real live vpower-that goet like moat V-8'ol This beauty will delivpr all doyjong and do It economically, too. The Sprint hot ipecial outpenolon, heavy-duty otabilixer, sports striping, and you dreii it in any cover you wont, Tempest plain. Custom or a deluxe LeMoni model .. a thrifty iports cor that will leave them all wondering what'o under the hood I Shelton Has Them In Stock! Plus AIL of the Other Famous Tigers fiTO’s - BONNEVILLES - CATALINAS - 2+2’s STAR CHIEFS - EXECUTIVES - BROUGHAMS Set the Big Trade-In at Shelton s-Now I Choose Your Bi^iick Today! ALL BODY STYLES-ALL MODELS \ USABRES - ELECTRAS - INVICTAS - SKYLARKS SPECIALS - RIVIERAS - GRAN SPORTS Come iny see why people prefer a Shelton Deal! SHELTON PONTIAC BUICK, Inc. S55 S. ROCHESTER RD. "ROCHESTER ■ ^ 651-9911 Open Mon., Tu«i., Thori. 'til 9 Wad., Fri., Sgt. 'til 6 Tigers Trade fop Catcher , highest paid player in baseball [$105,000 or so last season. Noi He also captured the National ihistory by this time next week.[one got more, [League Most Valuable Player I i think I had a good enough * ♦ a” [Award for the second time, [season in 1965 to merit a raise,” Mays won the major league jQp piQun£ iMays said Thursday. Ihome run title with a career DETROIT (AP) - Detroit Tiger relief pitcher Ron Nlschwitz was traded to the New York Mets Thursday for minor league catcher Jim Handley ^nd an undisclosed cash transaction. Handley was assigned to the Tigers’ Montgomery, Ala., farm club. ■ ! Nischwilz appeared in 20 games last season apd had q 1-0 record- Gymnastic Events Start Tomorrow ■ A six-week Saturday morning gyninastic program'for elementary, junior and senior high school boys and girls will begin tomorrow at Pontiac Northern and Pontiac Central gynjs. There is no charge for the program and after six weeks it will be climaxed by a “Gymnastic Jam^boree,” Sat. March 12. [ cfiildren from 4th through 6th grades should report at 9:00! a.m. Junior and senior high! school boys and girls will start at 10:30 a.m. Chub Feeney, the Giants’ vice president and general manager, said last month, “I suspect reports of $125,000 for (former Boston Red Sox outfielder Ted) Williams might be a little high. But regardless, Willie will probably top all figures.” Feeney negotiates contracts Walled Lake Solon Files Deer Bill \ • ■ LANSING IJ’I—A separate season for hunting does and fawnj is proposed in a bill filed for introduction by Rep. Clifford Smact, R-Wall^ Lake. This is the latest in a series of deer bills introduced that have included proposals for a tworyear ban on shooting antlerless deer and a one-year moratorium on such hunting in the Upper Peninsula. with all the Giants except Mays. That little chore is left to Feeney’s father-in-law, Club President Horace Stoneham. If there’s ever been any haggling between owner Stoneham Smart said the purpose of his bill basically is to improve hunter safety. “If we are going to allow an open season on all deer then we should have a, separate antler-less season to prevent hunters !;from ^shooting at anything that Mays, no one’s ever heard about|moves,” Smart said. “Separate seasons would necessitate greal-'er care by hunters to insure Ithat their target is legal ” Mafmen Meet in Tournament at Fairgrounds Some 150 wrestlers representing 28 clubs, colleges and universities are expected to be on hand Saturday for the Michigan Wrestling Club’s Olympic Freestyle Invitational Tournament at the White Hall on the Michigan State Fairground. The preliminaries will get under way at 12:30 p.m. and the finals “ The bill would establish a separate season for taking deer of either sex five days after (he season for shodting bifcks with antlers more than three Inches long. " J Cage Results CDLLBOI fmpl» 11, N»w York U. 49 olby II. Main* 12 Unhattan 77, Iona 39 1IT II, King! Point >3 SOUTH 7 tn n m The North Carolina 113, Wiki Fo /.ju p.m. inc inu ,j AP Phatatax MANY SOUVENIRS - Home after a nationwide tour of award dinners, San Francisco’s slugging outfielder Willie Mays poses among his collection of trophies. He,is expected to sign baseball’s all-time high contract next week. Last year’s contract was estimated at around $105,000. ground is located at the comer of Woodward and Eight Mile. j Manhaii 79 On hanil for the meet will be rwn. vrtiiavan 92?ch*ttanoo9* n such outstanding wrestlers as wkhii* 94, oraklftT*” heavyweight Larry Kristoff of j f,*'- the Chicago Club, who placed | ,, fourth in the 1964 Olympics etj*«" Barbara 43 Tokyo and third in« the 1965 oatroii Norihw*^#m , . ,. , I Oalrall Cantral 57, FInnav 4* world championships in Eng-_____________________________ land. Repcesentlng the Michigan jyyo A'$ Sign Contracts Club will be Bill Riddle of Li- ” vonia, a prime prospect for the 1968 Olympics. He was a Gold Medal winner in the 1963 Pan-American Games in Brazil and runner-up in the 1964 AAU championships. add beauty to your home $fi^£T'oday! LOW LOW PRICES (penhPet) ELM... AxBxVri .. . *4** CHERRY AxTxVe . .. MAHOGAHY... THREE COAT FINISH AxlxVe... M*® BIRCH... 4xTxV«... ®5®* AxDxVe... WALHUT... 4x8x»/4 ... ®11** PREMIUM STOCK The finest top quality in Superb Finishes! GET YOURS TODAY DICKIE LUMBER CO. Houre 8 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. Soturdoye 8 A.M. to 1 P.M. 2495 ORCHARD LAKE RDAD, Phone 682-160Q KANSAS CITY (AP) - The Kansu City Athletics said today relief pitcher Wes Stock and outnelders Jose TartabuU and Tommie Reynolds have signed 11966 contracts. When you can hear your MUFFLER see your MIDAS MAN FAST, EXPERT SERVKX' FREE IHSTALLATION > MUFFLERS GUARANTEED* •gainst ruat oorrmlon, blow-out, tven normtl wtar-ouf for a* tong as you own your car. Written guarantaa good in 450 Midas Shops, coait-to-coast, U.S. and Canada. •RaplacaS If ntcaaaary (or aniy a aarvic* chara*. ^ 7-435 SOUTH SAGINAW 3 Blocka South of Wido Track Drivo Oaan MaaSay! Ii3l a.ai. ta Tvaisay Ihra PrMay liM a.m. I MUFFLERS a PIPES • SHOCKS /i-: THE PONTlACp PhESS. FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 4, 1906 C—8 FAaORY REAAANUFAaURED ENGINES 100 EXCIUNfiE for Most 6-Cyl. Enf ines Special Low Prices for Overhauling Your Engine! 6 Cvl. .... .*95" ,«o Cyl. V-8's *115 This includas . . . Rings, Rod Boaringi, Main Boaring, Grind Valvos, Fit Pint, Doglazo Cylinder Walls, Gaskots, Oil and Labor! STANDARD ENGINE REDUILDERS 695 AUBURN RD. • 338-9671-338-9672 Renew License of He&vyweight ! Ernie Terrell CHICAGQ (AP) - The Illinois Athletic, Commission has re- ' ■ newed Ernie Terrell's license to light, warming up the possibili-| ty of a heavyweight title bout in| ^ Chicago with Cassius Clay. I * * * I Target da^e, if the fight can be arranged, is April 19. | ir if ie I Terrell, recognized as world champion by the World Boxing! Association, was denied a license in New York last week. The New York Commission said Terrell had been hobnobbing with Bernie Glickman, am alleged pal of underworld! figures. I * * * I Terrell' said Glickman never has been more than a booking' agent for his rock ’n’ roll nightj club group and that he was not! even that any more. i 'Catfish' Hoping to Avoid Links Frying Pan PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (AP) tournament. And such fellows “'I like to catch catfish but Ijan, with 66-74; R. H. Sikes, 70-70 -I."'* by Harold Kneece, a. per- as Arnold Palmer, Bill Casper don’t like to eat ’em,” said and Jack Rule, 72-68. sonable young man with the Jr., and Ken Venturi could Kneece. He added he generally nickiiame of Catfish, the unher-'make up a lot of ground in the carries fishing tackle with him aided professionals of golf qon-three remaining rounds. on his golf trips, but not this tinned to> dominate the $100,000 ★ ★ ★ time. Fishing, especially for Hope Desert Classic as play - Kneece, whose nickname,catfish, is somewhat foreign toj Palmer, with 71-70, was tied at 141 with six other players but his morale may suffer without a distinguished suppprter. That would be former FTesi- HAROLD KNEECE resumed today. [stems from his boyhood, when this romantic sage-and-sage-jdent Dwight D. Eisenhtw But the 31-year-old Kneece, he loved to fish, leads the field brush country. iwho took personal commaira of from Aiken, ' S.C., and hisjby four strokes with successive! Tied up at 140 as the third Amie and his Army Thursday friends in the front ranks couldlrounds of 68 for 136. Iround began were Jack McGow-lat the Eldorado Country Club, remember one important point. | There are still 54 holes to be played in this five day, 90-hole LM SPRINGS, C»llf. (AP) iMer the second round of Desert Golf Clistlc: . Id Kneece McGowan ............ PCH,Kettering| Doug Sanders Al Bessellnk Rocky Thompsi Bert Yancey, RO Kimball Gains Tie With Hazel Park Billy N Xv You’ll SAVE - CASH and CARRY! Crampton Billy Maxwell Ken Venturi Homero Blanca Pontiac Central rallied to nip Saginaw Arthur Hill, 26-22, and cMrie^'^oSty ^Waterford Kettering ^ dumped f;"iie cupi't" Lake Orion, 33-13, in high school ---------- ~ wrestling Thursday night. * SUPPLIES Lead Cut by 2 Points in Table Tennis Loop Fir/F.L. (Construction, Max. 25% Std.) Each 2x4 .56 J7 .92 1.07 ' 1 1.23 1.38 1.53 Each 2x6 .73 .91 1.24 1.58 1.95 2.21 .2.46 Each 2x8 1.14 1.43 1.94 2.26 2.58 3.05 3.39 Each 2x10 1.51 1.88 2.46 2.87 3.28 3.87 4.30 Each 2x12 2.10 2.62 3.14 3.67 4.19 4.72 5.24 Royal Oak Kimball gained a 20-20. tie'with Hazel Park when [Larrv Zimmerman scored a pin! in the heavyweight match;! Dorris and Son Realty closed while L’Anse Creuse trimmed the gap by two points Thursday winless Farmington Our Lady night in the "Pontiac Table Ten-^ of Sorrow^ 26-16. ; nis Association League in Pon- tiac Central High School’s girls gym- Central’s Dan and Ben Rodriguez and Bill Hollis posted consecutive pins to pull out the Chiefs’ seventh win in 12 dual meets. Aluminum Combination Windows, All Sizes opto.36 "x?4" Each $10.95 FIR PLYWOOD 4x8, per sheet PLYWOOD SHEATHING 4x8 Vi" AD Interior, good 1 lido..... Vi" AB Intorior, good 3 lidoi.... Vi" AC Enlorior, good I lido..... ; Vi" AC Extorior, good 1 lido..... : \4" AC Extorior, good 1 lido..... ; Vi" AC Extorior, good 1 lido..... : Vi" AD Extorior, good 3 lidoi. . .. . Culling Bfrrlrr an your full ihrri of iinrallabitnirnih inringrai ; SIDING, per square : Aluminum, without backar, whit*............... ■ Aluminum, with laminated backar, white.................... .3.59 . 7.56 .3.88 .. 3.89 .,5.35 .6 30 . .7.65 24” 28” W CD . . W' CD.. CD.. CD.. Pgr Shoot .2.44 .3.12 .3.95 .4.40 Dorris won seven points against Francis Fuel while league-leading Elliott Engineer-Kettering squared its record ing was held to a 5-5 tie by at 4-4 and readied itself for next third-place Club 99. week’s big match with Water- Kennerly’s Service tied Rich-ford- ardson’s Dairy for fifth with a * * * 6-4 win over the latter; while Hazel Park’s Steve Butash Pepsi-Cola similarly decisioned lost a 13-7 decision to Kimball’s Buettner’s Cleaners in a battle Mann f6r the first defeat in his for seventh place, career. FOLS’ Cliff LaFond won Einoit Eng. '»/« Ken'iy'i sv his 13th straight but only had P^Titcou’' help from brother Tim and ” Mark Hartwig. STEEL GARAGE DOOR All-Stool doori, comploto with hordworo, lock 9x7 . . 46.50 16x7 . . 91.00 (Glazing on all doori ovoilobU) REMOTE CONTROL DOOR OPERATOR . . GARAGE $119.50 V PONTIAC CENTRAL M SABINAW ARTHUR HILL H ♦5 poundi-JIm DawuHi (SAH) d*c. Jofinion, *-0; 103—L«n TInvIlIt (SAH) pinned Henry, J.35,- )12-N. Z. Bryant (PCH) dec. Gerwin, 7.0; )JO-Ted Blaka-man (PCH) pinnad Raymond, 3:00; )27 —Ron OuHle (PCH) doc. Holl>ngiworth. 0-S; 133-Bob Vogt (SAH) dec. Mullen, '3-2; 131—Paul Ruiz (SAH) dac. Powell, IJO-*; 145-Mik# Jank (SAH) dac. Houser, iS?: 154-Oan Rodriguez (PCH) pinned Gilbert, IN: 165—Bill Hollis (PCH) BEAUTIFUL WALL PANELING Mt" Unfinishad V Groov* Mahogany — 4x8........3.98 Vi" Pr*finiih*d V Groov* Mahogany — 4x8..........4.95 Smoked Birch . Antiqu* Birch . Ruvtic Wolnut Per Sheet . . >/d" 4x8 •o. 7.28 . . Va" 4i8 go. 9.88 ,y4"4x8.a. 11.88 PUIIDPU’C IMP ^ UnUlUin O mu. to serve You! 101 SQUIRREL ROAD, AUBURN HEIGHTS, UL 2-4000 Utica, 781-2000 -Washington, ST 1-2811 - Romeo, PL 2-3S11-Lapeer, MO 4-8581 I KRTTERINO 33, LAKE ORION 13 »5 pounds-Dave Ormsby (WK) dec. Lietke, 4-0; 103-Chrls Shell (LO) pinned Cokley, 4:43; 112-Woody Reese (WK) dec. Jordan. 3-2; 120-Rrian Hepburn WK) dec. RocheHo, 11-7; 127-Mlka Carrothers (LO) dac. Gobler, 5-3; 131-Don Hodk (WK) dec. Livingston, 5-t; 130 —Lorry Brocioui (WK) pinned Walters, 5:32; 145-Jack Moss (WK) dec. Mel-lendorf, 32,• 154-BIII Riggs (WK) pinned Shelby Largent, 2:54; 14S-John Webster ^ |(WK) pinned Thor, 3:22; lOO-BIII Schultz l|(LO) pinned Postit, 1:5T,- and heavy-1 weight-Cl ini Jones (WK) dec. Dave (.argent, 11-0. tHURSOAY'S P|6HTS By Ttie Asaeclatad Prtu PORTLAND, Maine-Tony Akxigl, Paterson, N. J., stopped Sgt. Brady Clay, Fort Oevens, Mass.. 4, heavyweights. FRANKFURT, Germany-karl Mllden-berger. West Germany, IT4'/7, outpointed Eddit Machan, 1T2V., Los Angolas, ^allt.. LOOKING for A BEHER DEAL? Pontiac Catalina 4-door Hardtop’ Bigger and better dealt on Pontiac Wide-Trockt are our butineti. We may be a little out of your way in location be we are never out of the way in dealt. Step in and let our experienced tolet itoff unleaih a special money saving deal on one of our '66 tigers. Rambler Classic 770 Hardtop See our complete line of '66 Ramblers . .. the cars with quolity built in . . . not added on And remember you'll hold the winning cords when you deal with utl ' S A Good Deal for You . . . Means a Great Deal to Us! RUSS JOHNSON 89-M24, Lake Drion 693-6266 Nazal Park 2t, Rayal Oak Kimball 20 ♦5 pounds-AyotIa (HP) pinned Hlch-mnn, S:5I; t03-Davlds (HP) dec.' Smith, 44);112-Ragan (K) dac. Allison. ie-3,- 12IF-LeBlsnc (HP) dac. Fakonar. 4-0; 127-Conner (K) dac. Reed, 5-2; 133 -Mann (K) dec. Butash, 117; 13»-Jar-men-IKl dK. Burger, 14; 14S-^c-j Lalcher (HP) dec. Gantz, 3.2: \54—' Bratchulls (HPI dec. Garvar. II: 14S— Kunze (HPI dec. Stuart. 4-2: 110-Gallery (K) dec. Webster, 12-0; Haavywelghl-' Zimmerman (K) pinned Threat. 1:55. i OLDSMOBILE SWING FEVER SALE Brand New 1965 Models GOOD SELECTION TREMENDOUS DISCOUNTS SUBURBAN MOTORS CO., INC. 565 S. Woodward Ave. Birmingham Ml 4-4440 Come in ... WIN A TORONADO Millions of people who can’t agree on who’s going to win the pennant, which end of the pond to fish, which channel to tune in or ojiything else... agree on this Seagram’s 7Crown-The Sure One atA&HAM ptSTtUiaB:.CCMfANy. New YOBL CITY^ SUN&tO WHISKtY 80 PROOF. 65% ORAIKl NtUTRAl SHMT5. 9 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 4, 1966 SLATE UP TO Y2 OFF! POOL TABLE SALE NEW SLATE 4x8 Reg. ^190 FISHER New Slate ’450 BRUNSWICK EDGEBROOK M90 POOL HALL TABLE W Slate-All Equip. ’275 ^ AMF Continerttal ’275 VALLEY NEW $325 Bar Style Slate *175 OPEN DAILY 12-9 SUNDAY 12-S PACIFIC POOL BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE ARCADE City Bowlers Risking Titles «* I A hot second-half race looms! Lakewood Lanes had a good for the West Side Classic bowl- scoring Sunday night as Dick eVs if the current standings are I Austreng in the St. Benedict any indication — only four | Mixed League rolled 243-244— points separate the leaders 668 and* George Dank 221-207— from seventh pkce. ;630. Syjvan Lounge and Gorman j Among the Sunday night Pin-Golf Products have 24 points spillers, Les Grlpentrog’s 232-apiece arid a two-point edge 240—661 was best. George Tur-over third-place Huron Bowl, ner added a 220. Four teams are tied for fourth There was a 703 • (284-232) ^ recently by Bob Leibler In the Your Convenient .F.G00DRICH STORE Last Monday night at West Side Lanes, Les Pennell had the best series, a 663 on 214-245, and Doug Swords the best game, a 255. Chaz Palaian scored 2^6-219-857. Pontile Prt» Photo Starting Order Not Interesting to Car Owners Cooley Lanes Senior House League. Current leaders in the Dublin Doubles Tournament at Cooley are Union Lake’s Jack Henkel I PIN BUOY — Pontiac’s 700 and Gary Moore with 1246. Bill] Club members are regroup-Shave and Harold Hankins of| ing their forces and veteran j Walled Lake are second with i bowler Joe Foster has been 1243. voted the office of Pin Buoy. Women Elks' Teams Vie in Tourney F*ontiac’s Ogg Gleaners and Esther Baker will risk their! handicap titles from 1965 this! weekend in the ninth annual , \ By JERE CRAIG For such a short month, Febniary has a lot of im-P^tTaTEiks L^grsio Ses events; not the least of these National Invitational BoMing ^ is the observance of National Bovyling Month. Tournament. MostVif bowling’s 3B million active participants will year’s 702 would give Mrs.i''^**^ establishment and challenge the pins this Baker a good chance to repeat month. School programs, winter leagues and tournaments, and the cold out--------------------------------------^^----------------- doors make February one' WEST SIDE LANES Mofldiy Ponliac AAotor Mlxad High Gomes-AI Terry, 240; Bill Flippo, DAYTONA BEACH, (AP) — The owners and drivers eSiidoos,'’.::?' of high-speed Ferraris, Mark II Fords and a single Chevrolet-powered Chaparral say they couldn’t care less which starts first in the 24-hour Daytona Continental Saturday afternoon. “I’m not interested where we qualify,’’ said Jim Hall of Midland, Tex., who helped build the new model Chaparral. “When the race lasts 24 hours, it doesn’t matter where you start. Block, Axit a Com High Games and Series—Don Plumb, Beagles, 078 (243-237); Buzz Barnum, " -—--I; Gene Thompson, MIrovsky, Beagles,. Poodles, 651 (258- Airedales, 244; Ji..............,,, Fla.'236; Dave Brockmiller, Poodles, and . «----- n,,. studnicki. ries—Sonny Santa Friday Wtstsida Mtrehants In the singles with one more weekend to go since the current leader South Chicago’s Jan Manbros with 686 last Sunday. Femdale’s Elk^ Ladies team hit a record 3007 12 days ago, however, to make things more difficult for Ogg Cleaners, which hit 2996 last year, Pontiac teams have won the last four ^es. Last wee!^nd’s oply changes were in the team and doubles events. The third, fourth and fifth place team totals were im-II, , - I , proved (including a 2884 by \NrijOr TAr IaK'fourth-place Oakland Chrysler-YYMICl lUl JUU Plymouth of Pontiac) ^ j The current leaders; Baseball Picks *^ldiy 242—615; Did NEW YORK (fl - Joe Reich-Meirwrir'Vnd Ken ler, Associated Press sports Ferdon, 2"'22<. 22 years and a widely known expert in the field of NsDeau, Tiis Ed baseball joumalism, was named director of public relations for 226-2?1- Fridoy T Spill Conversion-Joan stottiemyar’ (1201 l33seball ’Thursday by Commis-William D. Eckert. Bob Grw,| Reichler, 50, is an intimate of .countless people in the gairie,r I rookies and super-stars, coaches ' (1-637; Walt Misiewicz, 224; Don | Elko TMm, Ftmdala Elko Tiam, Molina, Ml. ___ Elko No. 2 Team, Barberton, Ohio 2018 Oakland Chrysler-Plymouth, Pon.------ V,—Chicks, Paorla, III. 5. Gaorgi Taam (iamhardt _-y Shaw, Fort Wayna, Ind. 2. Lorralna Harger Mary Bo«ren, Muskagon of the most active bowling ®P«cial rs T^uck and Coach are hosts Bdwling Congress Is now ap- ‘ms for the annual GMBA preaching the three mUlionmarklof Michigan Girls Club Tourna-while the American Bowling jment. Congress has more than 5.t mil-' The tournament will begit lion. next Saturday morning at So big Is women’s bowling I Huron Bowl with the team becoming, that this May will I event. The singles and double^ be National Ladies Bowling ' will be Feb. 19-20 for Month, providing a separate distinction. While none of us can send! ^*®'‘e than $2,000 in prizes and birthday cards to Abe L. andr®Ph*es will be presented. The George W. to commend their top prize U $150 for the team .title. ’The state GM girls’ clubs approximately 450 women entered. Thursday Oakland County Employtt Carroll Shelby of Los Angeles.ls.rrvR!jr5?5';%Tn°"Dicr“^^^^^^ , , international manufacturing'^" „uron bowl d • • .u .u z .u I Taam *"wi« champion said he felt the same' Monday eomiac Canaral Hotpital ' neicpier is tne author of Uie 1, Jan Manbros, S. Chicago ciiaiiip UII, bdiu nc leil llie bdme, High Serlns-Margaret Romanalll, HoH- Encvclooedia of Baseball op.i2 Allhaa West, Lansing about the three Mark II Fords m*n's Quality Meats, 525. . c-ncycmpeui^ 01 Daseoaii, ac-|j ch,notie schupsan. Kaiama; -------------- Bawiart knowlcdged as the most com-'f ■ ■ ■ r«g«^-Vern‘*“ * Dan Fife Still in Point Lead are in Flint, Saginaw, Lansing, Detroit and Pontiac. Last week. It was reported that a 7-10 split was converted I by 18-year-old Ricky Lance in a 300 Bowl Junior League. Actually. Ricky (who has one 'arm in a cast is only 10. Ill North Perry in his garage. think we have a good Brown'll chance to win, but the big race FE 2-0lZ1iwe are pointing for is the 24: nigh Pins Above Averagc^Vernlta (65 a^rage), 68-84T2;"EHiI prchensive work on the sport’s 134; Maxint Yontz (21),|records, statistics and history;! :Etn;nX"~58. (203). ""*1 T!""’ AlljsofDanzig, hours of Lemans,” Shelby said.lVrm ------------------- --------------52; Miss B-Haves, 50. ............. I THUNOERBIRD LANRS ......... i. Georgia Emert, Peoria, I X SPECIALS! Resin - TITE FLAKEBOARD FLOOR UNDERUYMENT ^;y^lTE Engineered specifically as a base for tile and lljii^iy resilient floor coverings of all types, Resin-TITE Flakeboard floor underloyment is o vgid free ’D Q groinfree, manufactured wood panel, produced to strict standards of performance. 3/8"-4'x8'.......2.99.. 1/2"-4'X 8'..........3.95.. 5/8"-4'x8'.......4,57., 3/4"-4'x8'.....,.5,95.. RMk/CO -Genuine prefinished hardwocxl PANELING 5-COAT PRE-FINISHED PANELING Genuine Hardwood Face 4'x8' NX Roll INSULATION $300 ptr100sq.ft. ptr 100 sq.ft. . .*5"" ZONOLITE^ AHIC INSULATION $105 L I Per Bag 10” Channel Groove Rough Red Cedar Paneling *185*2 Lumber 4495 Dixim Hwy. -OR 3-1211- HOURS- ‘ OPEN WCEKOAYI MONDAY tlmi FRIDAY • A.M. to iiM P.M. MTUROAyI frtn DA.M. te 4 P.M. CIrn, Birmingham, ! M BOWLINO CENTS " High Saries-Georgina O'Neill (127 « erage), 5) Shrifiad (1 A native New Yorker, Reichler attended St. John’s University before entering the newspaper field. He and his wife, Ricky, live in Roslyn Heights, N.Y., and teir son, ^Hijh^ Gama-Marionjpgyj^ IS 8 frcshman at Tufts. 24 15 6 54 165-124 Clarkston s Dan Fife shows no The 17th annual Red Run sign of letting up in his bid for Golf Club Invitational Bowling the Oakland County basketball Toumament-the biggest and . . . oldest of its kind in the state— The 6-2 sharpshooter, who gg,,, tomorrow and next plays any position, wound up Saturday at the Royal Oak’s with 43 points last week - a; R*d Run Lanes, school record — against West ' Bloomfield and the big outburst includes 96 teams moved his average up to 32.6 *!®P'^**”i^8 20 area golf, coun- Montreal 5, Toronto 4 Announcing the '66 Automobiles complete with winterizing, summerizing, insurance, tune-ups, all parts and labor, towing, license plates, 9 tires and a spare car. / There’s one catch. The extras are yours only if you don’t buy the car. They’re yours if you lease it .from us instead. ll’s-those extras that make a two-year Kinney lease cheaper than hiiyiiig a new car every Iwt) years. , * For a flat monthly rale, you get the ear you want; we gel the headaehes of maintaining and insuring it. Kinney maintains ihpiisands of cars, so we pay less than you would for winterizing, summerizing, tune-ups, repairs (including parts and labor), towing and the four extra tires we give you (two snow, (wo replacement when you need them). Kinney also buys insu/ance * for thousands of cars. So you get your coverage at a saving, too. (The cost of leasing includes $500,000 to $1,000,(K)0 public liability, $100,000 property damage, deductible colli- . sion, and fire and theft.) As. for the spare car, it’s yours to drive if yodr car is ever tied u|> for major repairs. And with a Kinney lease, there are also potential income tax savings, and there’s absolutely no financing charge. Just tell us what make car _ you want anti how you want it equipped. We’ll happy not to sell it to you. 210 Orchard Lake Ave. at Williams GAR LEASING FE 2-9101 ’ I Kinney Car Leasing I 210 Orchard Lake Ave. I Pontiac, AAichigan 40053 I I Leaiing. I underttond that I am under no obligation. I NAM6............................................. I ADDRESS.......................................... I CITY...................STATE..........PHONI,.... ^ I now.... own........IgaDeo...................... I \ (moke and year cor) /• J ■J for 10 games. In collecting the 43 points, Fife hit on 18 of 23 shots from the field. And it has been Fife’s shooting that has carried the Wolves into a first-place tie with Northville (7-3) fry and athletic clubs competing for handicap doubles, singles and team trophies. Pontiac-area country clubs included are Orchard Lake, Pine Lake, Forest Lake, Oakland Hills, Birmingham, Meadow- Well hack of Fife is J o h,n Canine of Hazel Park, wKo owns a 26 5 average for nine ington. Roger Peltz of Royal Oak Kimball (25.2) holds down the third spot. OAKLAND COUNTY SCONINO 0 FO FT TF AVO FKt, C(*rkston 10 112 102 326 32.6 Cunitw, -Htzel Park V IS 60 tW MJ PMtz. RO KImbOll II in 71 271 15.1 Dunlop, Forodoli 10 00 33 »0 qj ZIero. Watertord 10 16 40 720 2fl St'plan, OL SI. Mary 12 III 40 160 2I.( Millar, Oxford 12 106 43 2S5 ll.) T. Baughman Country Day 7 M 13 140 21.3 Krogultckl, OL SI. Mary 11 100 17 2S5 11.1 M. Rafftrty, Grovtt 11 OS 42 111 21.L Chudy, RO ShrIna II M SO 226 10J Holloman, Oak Part 10 03 11 106 ~ ' Combt, Madison It 01 41 223 Wllion, Farmington 11 64 70 231 SImmont, SouttifloW II 100 36 136 . HuoWor, WalM Lk. II 01 SI US 10J ------- ■■ “ ......... 83 77 — Imtiand, I 161 11.6 I 1IJ MurtskI, RO St. Mory Pivloff, Crtnbroo Hagland, Barklay SprIngar, Walarford OLL 70 SS HI 17.S 71 as 180 17.1 30 SI 130 16.2 11 II 47 200 16.0 lAOINAW VALLIY CONFlRaNCI • FO FT TP AVO Burki. BC Cantral 0 00 S3 233 36.1 Abbay, BC Handy 11 10 73 iJl 11.1 Bograkos, Flint Cantral Tl II : I 17i McKtnna, WMtnOy, . Jiijs;' 'f- ABHA LEADBBS O FO FT TF AVO M 0 73 33 IIS K.S Cousino 13 123 X 161 10.0 Lapaar II 7S 63 111 101 apatr It 64 61 180 17.1 .1 Oalrolt II 66 SO 116 16.0 N'WMiam to 62 40 164 16.4 Watch For Our GRAND OPENINGS OTThs OXFORD MARINA Sea Ray Boats . . Yamaha Motor* cycles . , . ^. Johnson Motors .. Plus a complete' line of Marine .Supplies and Scuba Diving Equipment. 10 N. Washington Oxford 628*1035 M966 Is a BIG year b,,....*1966 is a small Take Your Choice Jim Butcher^s OaklARd Chiysler-PlymoflUi, lie. 724 Oal^nd Ave., Pontiac Phone 335-9436 Where Better Service Bring* 'Em Back THE PONTIAC PKKSS. _FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 4, 1966 C~S Executive of Mets Calls Team Novelty Cogdill Denies Gilmer Blast Kentucky's Dumpier 'Hard to Handle expansion in 1967, or later, with of End's Statement an open mind. I “They were only interested in the game when it was new and >gbile it (the club) was on the top,” Grant said under direct examination by Bowie Kuhn, special counsel for baseball. “In 1964 they made a Hercu- NEW YORK (AP) - Donald Grant, chairman of the board of the New York Mets, testified Thursday that Milwaukee became a poor baseball town when the novelty wore off. “Is your ,team a novelty in New York?” asked Willard Staf-ford, Wisconsin state counsel in ccoss-examination. [lean effort to'sell baseball but “It sure as hell Is,” replied the figifre reached only 900,090,” Grant. Grant said. “It was the straw On that tone, the New York that broke the camel's back." phase of the pretrial maneuvering in Wisconsin's antitrust suit against the Braves and the National League ended. They were to resume taking of depositions in Chicago today, with Roy Hofheinz of the Houston Astros next in line. Grant said 'he considered baseball dead in Milwaukee at present but later in the testimony said he would view future LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) - Iterything well.he can rebouiid, even against much taller men. said the 167-pound Indianapolis, they were kev rebounds” h« * was after a pracUce session, he can shoot and he can pass," He moves like a cat, as Rupp Ind., product is the “best shot I added Conduct Investigation and Kentucky’s Louie Dampier Rupp said. ' put it, “He’s so very fast.” have coached" „ Damoier scrambles for loose sat pulling a heavy wool sock Riley is 205 pounds of pure Rupp calls Dampier “the “The thing that is deceiving'balls Snder ^“ basket and over the tape on h« ankle^ iS!* ^ Woot-3most fantastic shot I’ve ever about Lduie is that he also getelmany times gets a secoii sh^t ms teammate Larry C^leyiframe. And his ^ and I’ve seen some good rebounds," the Baron noted, after missing even though he is said, “Man, you were hard to swings. He seldom misses a Up, ball players in my time.” He “He got nine at Vanderbilt^and the Wildcats’shortest starter handle out there. ' ' _ ---------------- Denver Bowler Leads Tourney K^IAMI, Fla. (AP) — Les (ConUnned from Page D-1) a blast at the Lions’ salary schedule. “The management told ns the Lions were the highest paying team in the league,” ,Cogdill was quoted. “But we did some investigating. The team rates 10th” in salaries in the NFL. Despite Cogdill’s denial Lions’ General Manager Eki-v win' Anderson said the club would make a complete investigation of the matter. “If it’s found that Cogdill made such statements,” said Anderson, “we will then take the necesshry disciplinary ac- 16 bowlers into Friday’s semifinals of the Professional Bowlers Association $40,000 Hialeah-Mi-ami Open. Schissler averaged 214 as he shot 1,147 over the 24 games |of qualif' ing. Th* leaders: Denver, Colo. Wings Defeat Boston, 4-2, for NHL Tie I Ed Bourdase, Frttno, CalH. Dick Hoover, Akron, Ohio j Bob Strampe, Dttrolt,''M “Insurance rates are on the way up and it’s no wonder,’ ^ ^ , looH wfinf 1 ’u,iii Iin Although this was 5.8 per cent more than 1964, convictions Hanger said. at the time.” recalled Caverly. RECOGNITION iHatt., 225 Inf. (ABN), will un- ... »............ . . . _ _ . now remarried and living at 1515j ‘ ^v God that's mv uncle ” training as part of a Sashabaw. the buddy shouted. ’ force program “I didn't know where they hadi • i. i . Sherman in the Canal gone, but I never gave up hope! As luck would have 11. It |?one. I that someday, somewhere, li *bat the buddy was , weeks will consist i would meet my son, " added Caverly’s cousin. Pvt. I „( day and night training, with Caverly, a door fitter at Fisher P»"‘'ac- only a brief ftspite from 5 } Body. ■ Caverly explained that though p.m. Saturday until noon Sun- “But who would have ever be-he didn't know his father, he day, according to one of the --^-------------------- always carried the picture onl volunteers. the chance that someone might "yje’re going to be pretty well I be able to identify it, [occupied,” said Sgt. Charlesi Austin of 725 Kenilworth. The photo was taken at Fort “We’ll undergo tactical tfain-Roberts, Calif., during World ing, including the full-scale at-War II, and shows Caverly in t^ick of a mock-up Vietnamese an Army uniform. village.” IINE WAS BUSY Commanding officer of the r. J J 1 . training company is Lt. I’eter Increase Rote Lower '‘r’’ .Than in Recent Years'™'”!,'” t" T''' long distance to tell him the Armory at 7 a m. topior-news but the line was busy. scheduled to depart Despite an increa.se of 81 re- Later, they reached Purdy's from Metropolitan Airport a( ported ^venereal disease cases mother. Mrs. John Purdy, 3811 12:40 p.m. and arrive in Pan-last year in .Oakland Countv Queensbury. who in turn con- ama late Saturday. ovv the 1964 total, the rate of Caverly and related the -------------- T , ... story to him. irirroa^p was Inwer than in re- C'l i T _ _ _ It 1 was a little hard to O/Of© I rOOpGfS WILLARD 1). CHEEK Name Speaker lor Scout Event GM Physicist to Talk at Recognition Dinner Calvin J. Werner, a vice pres- increase was lower than in recent vears. Last year there were -1,095 imagine after all these years, reported cases of venereal dis- said Caverly, “but 1 was con- TrOnc/orroW ease compared to 1,014 in 1964, vinced,.better yet stunned, when • I I^l Cl I CTU according to figures released 1 g®* a letter the next day.” i r\ I todav by County Health Direc- * ★ * 0110 PrO/TlOf©C/ tor Dr. Bernard D. Berman. Enclosed was his old. Army ^ . Venereal disease has been picture and a note which began:| ^ . on the rise both locally and "Dear Sir, 1 am Writing this’ State, Po ice Trooper Clay on nationallv in recent years, in regards to information I hive Babcock -statioited at the Dr. Bermhn said. [about my lost father.” - Pontiac post since 1961, will be ! * I promoted to corporal Sunday A total of 846 cases were re- TELLS STORY gpj assigned to the Calumet ported in the county during 196.1 The young soldier told of his post. and the 1962 total wi)s 670. [talk with Purdy and then ended Thif announcement Was made * * * with: . !this week by Col. Fredrick E.^ The rise from 670 cases in, . ^ j Davids, department director. ‘ouch «itl me Also transferred was I ih r ‘he Charles L. Weber of the i over the three year period. ; ^ 480 CASES , Attached to the letter was an- A 1951 graduate of Pontiac There were 480 cases of ^00- ^,^,^^ jj,e writer. Central High School, he h a s nrrhea reported in 1962 com- ••yes, he looks like me. Y.es, been reassig[^ed to the New Buf-pared to 892 cases last year. very definitely,” Cave r 1 y falo post. Three years ago 190 cases beamed. syphilis were reported eFD TWICE L Caverly and his sop have talked twice this week on- the Dr. Berman estimates that phone but only for brief perioifls. “He’s been living in California and 4ie’s been in the Army for seven months serving with the artillery,” added Caverly. "We’ve been too excited to bother about details, ^ut he is THRUWAY THOROUGHBRED-Powerful diesel engines featured in GMC Truck & Cohch Division’s steel tilt cab tractors are helping Red Star Express Lines of Auburn, N.Y., to move these giant double-trailer rigs over the New York Thruway well within the minimum speed limitation. “GMC trucks might not go to schiHiI, but they sure make their gradt^” This is one of the puns frequently heard on the New York Went of General, Motors and Thruway, general manager of GMC Truck Thruwav provisions require Coach Division announced trucks to maintain a minimum " legal speed of at least 26 miles [ ■'*""■"[ Phys'cist at the GM Re-per hour on steepest grades. La^ratories, Warren, will kick off Boy Scout Week. When the trucks are pulling,Monday evening at Oakland Un-two g i a n t trailers, this some-] iversity. times becomes difficult. - Flower Committee Deserves Bouquet while 203 cases were recorded ; last year. \one of five venereal) disease cases in Oakland Counly is reported. Nationally, about one in eight cases is reported, he said. Gonorrhea was most prevalent in the 20 to 25 age gkpiip during 1965 with 339 cases reported. » ; 15-20 AGE GROUP A total of 222 cases occurred Qf «'rangements in the 19 td 20 gfoup and there he^^.a^ make. expected to come home either Saturday or Sunday depending were 156 in, the 25 to 30 c'ltegory. Syphilis, a disease which , may ipan several years, had 1 greatest frequency in the "Maybe it will be permanent ly. He talked pbout a medical discharge” ' ★ Caverly said if he.cqmes home $$ to 60 age group with j^e two of them will cases reported. another search for. his old- There were 24 syphilis cases est son. Melvin. 22, Who hasn’t in the 5(} to 55 age category and been seen since he .was put up the next highest total was 23 for adoption when lie was only in the 20‘to 25 age group. fwo. i BABCOCK WEBER Babcock, 31, of 3607 MaHnert Waterford Township, enlisted in’ the State^Police in 1956. A native of Bear Lake, he is married and the father of four chil-J dren. j 5 YEARS Weber, 32, formerly of 11390i i Mile had served at 'New Buffalo five years before being transferred to Romeo. An eight-, year veteran, he is married and has no children. | His'ipother. Mrs. Jessie W.l-Weber, lives at 37 Kimball. |, By JOE MULLEN Thanks to someone’s realization that women are more naturally associated with flowers than men, the male members of the Oakland County Board of Su(>ervisors have been relievpd of a pre.ssing anxiety. Years ago, both men and women served on the flowers committee of the board of supervisors, - • , But since 1950 the committee, which oversees purchase of flowers for infirm or deceased supervisors or county officials, has been strictly a distaff organization. In the old days, the possibility of being named to the flowers Vommittee hung heavy over the heads of male supervisors. * ★ To many, tbe flowers committee appointment was viewed as a punishment for below-par performance as a supervisor. •LOCAL JOKE’ ' Despite the modern trend that virtually assures female-only membership, the possibility of a male being appoirfted to the committee remains an active local joke among, supervisors. Last spring, when committee appointments were a^roachihg, a supervisor was overheard in a courthouse corridor jokingly reminding a colleague that a Vacancy existed on the flowers committee. "You’d better shape up.” he warned. Actually, the flowers committee serves a useful function which is much appreciated "by the families of the sick or deceased. MAYOR PRO-TEM Chairman of the committee is Mrs. Elizabeth W. Mitchel, Mayor Pro-Tem of Lathrup .. Village. ' Active in numerous civic affairs, Mrs. Mitchell also serves on the welfare committee of the board of supervisors and is a member of the Oakland County Community Mental Health Services Board. The othfer three members are Mrs. Dorothy Olson. Waterford Township supervisor; Mrs. Virginia Solberg, a member of the Madison Heights City Council; and Mrs. Marguerite Simson, a Pontiac housewife active in various civic affairs. * ★ 'll A flower fund’ ^ maintained by periodic $2 deductions from the 86 supervisors who are paid $15 for each commtitae meeting they attend. LONE MEETING ^ Members of the flowers committee have had only one formal meeting since the committee Was formed in 1931. / This was in June 1964 when Mrs. Mitchell became chairman. By conducting their business immediately before or after a board of supervisors session, the flowers committee members voluntarily forego the usual $15 meeting compensation. Cheek will be guest speaker at the 4th Annual Eagle .Scout Recognition Dinner for the Clinton Valley Boy Scout Council. Werner is serving as general ■hairman for the 6:30 p.m. event and master-of-ceremonies for the dinner program. This program is a testimonial to the importance placed on the achievement of these young men by their parents, scout leaders, and the business and educational leaders of our community/' Werner said. SPEECH TOPIC Werner added that Cheek will speak on the topic "Bridge Builders” to the 32 scouts from taining a smooth flow of traffic,!the Oakland and Macomb area a.ssefts Albert T. DeRoose, Red .who have achieved the rank of Star’s vice president and safety eagle scout in the past year, , , , I As a physicist, Cheek's spe- This added safety factor, plus been the develop- the savings in time, is particularly appreciated, .says DeRoose. Not with GMC Truck & Cmch Division’s aluminum tilt highway tractors operated by R e d Star Express Lines, Ihc., of Au>-burn. N.Y. LONGEST HAULS By concentrating its new GMC trucks in the Buffalo-Syracuse area where the company's longest hauls originate. Red Star has been able to come up with substantial time savings. More powerful and better able to haul over long distances, these GMC’s have cut from one to two hours off running time. The added power also means safer transportation by main- Six Students at OCC Receive All-A Average, Six Oakland Community College s t u d e n tji received a 4.0 grade point average (straight A) for the first semester, OCC Dean of-dent Personnel Arthur Jal-knnen announced last night. Receiving perfect grades at Highland Lakes Camnus were Gary Andrews,' Huntington Woods: Carol Brookes. 39955 14 Mile, Novi; Sheron Chisholm, 136 W. Longfellow; Jeffrey Con-e 11 y, 986 Paaorama, West I 0 0 m f i e 1 d Township; and Harold Hayden, 1533 Bawtree, Milford. James Hearn of Royal .Oak was the one straight A student at the Auburn Hills Campus. . ' ■ ' I ■vY:";: ■ ■■ ment of radioisotopes for inapplications. At GM he has invented and furthpr developed many peaceful "ses for t!.e radioactive , atom. More recently he has been concerned with dramatizing General Motors research activities at the 1964-65 New York World’s Fair. EACH SPONSORED In addition to the recognition banquet, each eagle scout will be sponsored by a local business or professional man. Each scout has* indicated his vocational interests and the. sponsor for each scout is a successful business or professional man picked to match the scout’s vocatioiial interest. ' The eagle scouts are guests , of4heir sponsor for the afternoon of the banquet, spending several hours With the sponsor viewing first hand his vocation and meeting the people with whom he works. THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1966 C—7 HmaniFWmm SPIN ABSTRAG ART KITAfWMACHINe Lets you croaM your own 5" X 7^ pictures Now you can create original abstract art with the unique spin painter. It’s easy ... just put in a 5" X 7" card ... turn on battery operated machine . . v add paint ^nd watch the unique design appear. Kids 6 to 60 iove it. Kit comes complete with paint, cards and machine. Art ?( \ low Special Reg. $5.95 *5 .• Wotercoler Bruth Just For Watching U Demonstration. Now thru Feb. 12 Bring Thii Ad With You- Tandy Crafts ^ Phono 682-0710 COMPARE forVALUE! RCA VICTOR 2Hnch 90 DAYS FREE SERVICE RCA VICTOR MMIPiaiD STEREO With FM/AM and FM Stereo Radio RCA Victor oppEg ypups COLOR TV NOW RCA Victor sportabout Pick of the Portables W 1-YEAR PICTURE WARRANH! • 90-DAY SERVICE! 121 N. SAGINAW - FE 5-6189 Your S/trclnIiil» OMN MONDAT AND FRIDAY NIONTt UNTIL I P.M. Current Books ^ THE EMBEZZLER. By Louis shot in their home — father, Auchincloss. (Houghton M ’lin. mother, son and daughter. i $4.95.) This j0 the story of Guy Prime. Writing in 1960 as a bitter and self-justifying old man, he tells in his memoir about his downfall in 19% as a crooked manipulator of 'securities — other people’s securities. ★ dr ★ Guy betrays himself as snob who thought he belonged to “society,” though his world Capote has written a biography of each of the princ^ls, based on meticulous research, and woven thdm into a tale of suspenseful horror. It’s a stdiy that provokes many questions regarding crime that plague society — relation-; ship of early background' to criminal behavior, parole, capital punishment and the sequence' really was spurious; as an en-|of events once a crime pattern vious business rival of his anas- is set in motion, suming friend Rex Geer; as a foolish status-seeker, lording It- ACROSS THE WESTERN over the newly rich in the country club which he promoted; as a pretender who felt he had to keep up with richer people. ★ ★ dr The revelations of G;wr and Guy’s wife Angelica,, which follow, are illuminating. They sum up Guy Prime’s false world, and finally one must wonder how much this is the failure of a man or his time, OCEAN. By William Snaith. (Harcourt, Brpce. $6.95). | If you wonder why supposedly, sane men cross the ocean in small sailing yachts, you can! do no better than read this book| by a well-known racing skipper. A 47-foot yawl big and ex-j pensive, by the standards prevailing among modem yachtsmen — is small enough in the! middle of a storm at sea. Waves mount mast high, the IN COLD BLOOD. By Tru- crew is wet, cold and sleepless, man Capote (Random House and there is a certain amount $5.95). ‘•nn^e''' Capote set out to write a novel with real prople as the cast of characters in a news-event setting. He chose a multiple murder—the slaying of the Clutter family of Holcomb, Kansas, in Nov. 1959. The Clutters, a well-tOKlo farm family were found bound and Unlike some sailors of w i d e experience, this man writes well and entertainingly, and gets through to the reader some of the queer logic that makes itj all seem worthwhile. Divorces n R. McNtlicc, Current Best Sellers (CamplM by PubIKhtn' WNkly) FICnON THE SOURCE, Michener THOSE WHO LOVE, Stone THE LOCKWOOD CONCERN, O’Hara UP THE DOWN STAIRCASE, Kaufman AIRS ABOVE THE GROUND, Stewart NONFICTION A THOUSAND DAYS, Schlesinger KENNEDY, Sorensen A GIFT OF PROPHECY, Montgomery GAMES PEOPLE PLAY, Beme A GIFT OF JOY, Hayes H«l«n L. frem Edwin B. F< Amo* from Cbfhbrin* Btbcl Lou E. from Shbrtdan A. N Ethel M. from Donald L. Young Loretta A. from Josopb M. Maynard Jr. Nancy J. from Ollvar D. SI. Cyr Gloria A. from JanA A. Davis Barbara A. from Robart F. Rowland James E. from LaDonna Halletf Donna J. from DurrbI L. Pierce Ellzibbfn from Joi^ Wilkinson Sign# from Richard V. VanEmmerIk Patty from AIbbrt Moytrs Ethal B. Irom Howard D. Thornall , Lahore L. from -Jerry TImberlake John from Mary G. Palan Gloria J. from Douglas G. CrotMu Charles from Iron# Nichols Anthony N. from Margaret E. Davis- Victoria L. from Donald L. Ruagar Lanora M. from Harold F. LaFond ‘ m^lb from Curtis Dunnwn IKlam*5?!*)TO(?Manr' Hiri^s. Edith M. from Carleton C. Gamdntr Stanley D. from Twila Ntphaw Jam E. from Wlnaton C. Htbarf Loubllb Mf. Julia H f__________ ____ Mary A. from Hollis D. Douglas Albert A. from Betty M. AtkTns Louella A. from tames M. Pollard Bobble S. from Jerry Dotson Mary A. from Ronald J. McNab Beverly A. from Gerald H. Wolgast John C. from Margaret $. WIedr Hellls K. from Pafrlcle A. Roger I Alen H. from Judith Cery \ Derlene M. from Robert T. Wylend Rhebe S. from Edward F. Avis Jock E. Irom Mlgnonne Maxwell Franoee D. from James R. Fleming Joyce from Ralph E. Coskey Velma L. from Thonaas 0. Parham CHILDREN OUTGROWN SKATES, SLEDS? SELL IT WITH A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. EASY TO USE. JUST PHONE 33M181. SUSPENDED CEILING *24 8x12 CEILING Tkb Med*ni C*iting, •oiily inttall«d, ponoli. (ocoufticol) PANELING Beautiful 4x7 V GROOVE LAUAN $249 SALE! POLYETHYLENE FILM 4 Mil (.004) 24x100........22.U HyxIOO*.......MO 10x50-........4.71 16‘xlOO-____..1MI 16x50-.........1.U reW—Many other SlaeWefiifnSlffc PLYWOOD 0oo4 1 Sida Vd 4x1......2-U % 4x0......1>99 Vk 4x1.....0.28 % 4x1......0.20 A4 4x1......0.M SHEATHING ZONOLITE INSULATION Aluminum Foil Sido 1V9100to.lt. 16” Ml tv* 1l«o.fl.1$r*.l7 IV9 10 iq. ft. 10” 1.11 1V9 H sq.ft. 14”4.10 Houttfill Bag.. $1.00 AlH.0BBib. Door 22.00 ShBlvIng 1x12. e. 12c COVID FORMICA SINK TOPS ■ Whito with goldoMOg n flock, lin. ft. *0 cGung tile J 8V2* 512V2' 42' FORMICA 39* lq.Ft. $12 95 FURRING STRIPS 1x2........2e 1x1........Ic lord PUSTERBOAllD 4x8xV4”....1.II 4x0xWl..1.85 4xlxV9”...U0 Masonite Undorlaymont 4x0 1” MAHOQANY FLUSH DOORS SO” Wido ■! BIRCH PLYWOOD' BoairtMul Stock %x4x8 FREE DELIVERY ^^y 9;30-5:30, SAT. TIL 5 ----------------------—- ALLEN a U/MBMRn. A 1114 HIGHLAND RO. AT WILLIAMS UKE RD. Ono Milo Wopt of Pontiac Alrpeit OR 44118 In M-S9 PIOH OPEN SUN. 10-3 \ WE NEED THE ROOM FOR NEW MERCHANDISE ARRIVING DAILY! Heavy 501 NYLON SL 13 Beautiful Colors to Choose From Sq. Yd. Heavy WOOL Scroll Ss 13 Beautiful Colors to Choose From 825. Discontinued 501 NYLON Several Colors a Sq.^Yd^ ^^95 Sq. Yd.’ See the Largest selection of DRAPERIES Custom Made, Mural ^ and Ready-Made Large Selection Embossed Inlaid Linolenm • Corlon G Tessara G Montina g Patrican C O V E R I N G 35U Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE 4-7775 y NOTICE! Members Chief Pontiac Federal Credit Union OAKLAND UNIVERSITY kOCMCSTCP. MICMigtN h Foundation Holl ' S Fllig.rold I ll.Sludml fiMidpne* (FM IPM) e Motllda R. Wllim Hall (FtN M B Shidtnt R.ddwict ond Dining I Do Ysu Kiuhii Wbif Do Vbu Kiuhii Wkm? 25tli ANNUAL MEETING' CHIEF PONTIAC FEDERAL CREDIT UNION February 5,1966 7:30 P.M. Oakland University, Rochester, Michigan -Sports and Recreation Building IMPORTANT INFORMATION (See Above Map) • FREE ShuttU But Saryica will b« providod (6:45 p.m. 7:30 p.m.) lor your convonianc* from th* parking lot to th* Sporto aitd Racraiation Building. • Guosto may drivo thair automobiloo to th* Sporto and Rocroation Building to lot passongort off boforo parking in tho dooignatod lot. * • Follow tho arrewt - ift only a short walk. CHIEF PONTIAC FEDERAL CREDIT UNION OAKLAND UNIVERSITY ENTRANCE Meadow Brook Festival ROCHESTER 0—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 4, 1966 Jacoby on Bridge Law Blamed for Suicides BEN CASEY ' NORTH 4 ♦ 75 " TK62 .♦K8 2 ♦ KJ1064 WB8T EAST (D) ♦ S2 4KQjS64 VJ10I4 V>5 ♦ Q10 96 4754 ♦ »7S «A2 SOOTH ♦ AlOS TAQ7* ♦ AJ3 ♦ Q85 Neither vulnerable Tor bidding and opening lead see article. partner to open a suit when you North plays West for the quepn, .. really don’t want it led. <4ten and nine of diamonds. JOHANNESBURG, South Af- 1, ». L Suppose that East playing weak two bids and passes his hand. one of South Africa.’s race-segregation laws; John Saville, 60, Q—The bidding has been: |-u„. Kimself ' West North East South South has’a perfect opening. Rdble. no-trump bid and makes it, 24 24 Pass ? jwhereupon North takes him You, South, hold: lan empty gasoline can next 'right to three no4rump. West ♦*to78 tas^qi054 4882 |his body a few hours after he' is on lead and will almost surely' appeared in court. Another elderly white mani was found burned to death with to What do you do now? lopen a heart, whereupon Soutti owrtid*a^wne, [Will have no trouble making at four least ten tricks. - , today’s QUESTION I Now see What happens If East ^ou bid three spades and .opens a weak two bid. South partner bids four clubs, iwill have a terrific problem. If what do you do now? THE BERRYS By JACOBY & SON he passes East will simiily play at two spades and go down one trick. If he bids two no-trump, it is a cinch that North will take Answer Tomorrow One Of the ^eat advantages him to three and, after West’ Woman Named to Post of the weak two bid is that opens a spade South wll find jerusaLEM, Israel (UPI)-it gives you a chance to tell himself gomg down two tricks, ^e^j lead" Tilings will work out better !party last night formally named "^hpn otherwise * elects to double the i former Foreign Minister Mrs. two -^-spade bid for takeout. Golda Meir as the party’s sec-North will bid some number 6f retary general. Mrs. Meir, 67, clubs. If he bids only three | resigned recently from the gov- Both had been arraigned under this country’s immorality} act, which forbids loye acrodb the coldr bar. 1 An Indian woman arrested !with Savill was jailed for six months by a Durban magistrate. More than 5JK)0 persons of all races have been convicted since 1950, when the government decided to step up enforcement of the immorality act. Official' figures show conviction of 2,614} White men, along with 1,208 Af-| rican and 1,072 colored—racially mixed— women. Only 118 white clubs, he will play the hand ernment and was replaced by)women and 119 African men| there and wind up making his | Abba Eban. were convicted. ' Ipart score. If he bids four 5, weak bids with a North can make five clubs on good suit? There a squeeze if Eastmakes the is little point in telling your normal opening of a spade, and f ^ ¥ it, 4 ifS it ^ Astrological Forecast . . . Alirolosy p»int» tlw wiy." ARIES (NWr. 21 - Apr. )»): Moon poiltion strosses reoponsl toward children. Creative atforte caad If you fulfill commitments, analytical - and patient. Evening f ROMANCE. TAURUS (Apr. 20 - May 20): I position accents security, communit rations. Check with authorities. one .basket. People make promises few have authority to act. Know th.. be "creatively sceptical." **’i' CANCER (June 21 - July 22): Money, Pl.SC Income, possessions - all are spotlighted by Full Moon position. Before you advance . . . family agreement Is necessary. Act on knowledge acquired In recent past. LEO (July 23 - Aug. 22): Full AAoon In your sign points up tensions, contradictions. Walcoma challenges, opposing viewpoints. Avoid wishful thinking. Be realistic. Than you make progress. VIRGO (Aug. 23 - Sept. 22): You are called upon to make certain concessions. ', valuable contact. Japanese Enjoy Jumping Balloon TOKYO (AP) —’There’s a new gimmick in Japan—the jumping balloon. The balloon is an adaption of a wartime balloon developedaby the Japanese army. Only today it’s for fun. The ballo(>n, some six feet In diameter, is inflated with helium and attached to a person’s back. This enables him to jump about 100 yard^ in the air, then float gently down. Only one setback—balloon and enough gas to fill it cost'about 500,000 yen or $1,500. Marriage Licenses M Wsshlr Donald _____ Phelps, 2927 Sllvt Ragi SwaaL^^eego .arland Chancey, 49 Seneca Norman Cottier, Southfield and Anna Levine. Southfield v William Passeno, Troy and Carol At- kinson, Waterford James Garris, 341 Amben dra gMkInson, Waterford Rdhald WIrsIng, RIne, Birmingham Wlaland LaNIcca III, Farmington and Gloria Gulku, Detroit Davkt Herr, 3200 York and Clara Whittaker. Rochester Paul Koenig, 1109 Boston and Julia Haien, Walled Lake Stephen BItterle, Troy end ner, Kaego Harbor Richard Stamper, 190 N. Shelba Hendrix, 12 N Padd Carl Hopklnson, Keego Irlene Haseihuhn, Regers Cll. William Bailey, Farmington Cleveland Barnes, 319 Dll Annie Smith, 20 Drexel Billy Friar,' Walled Smith, Walled Lake Thomas Crabb, Roc Taylor, Pleasant Ridge Charles Hunt, 570 Bloo JeNerson, 570 Bloomfield Farmington *s. Holly a Carson James, Troy and Cynthia Cambridge, Messachusetts Mkhaal ReMIsh, 3SM Cresltiavep and Betty Frank, RocKaster Jamas Pyle, Orlonvllla - " ..... MaervOrtonville g^SS-KruWaitV^lll^S. , Glen Stoed, 307 LJMa Vista end Lillie Ttipmas, McrAogea, Oklahoma I ^Mkh^^^^Peegr^ Wixom and Cheryl S^wwle Owya^^ktord and Charlotfe} ____ Alward, Jr„ 3905 Crasthavr Barbara Samuel, Davisburt ■ Hue, Jr., Mt. Clemens “ IS, Farmir -— THE PONTIAC PRESS, fAiDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1966 Ptering Surgeons Report on Human Heart 'Plumbing' 9 By ALTON BLAKESLEE AP Science Writer CHTCAGO—Surgeons are leaping aheacT with bold and brilliant new “plumbing” inside the human heart. It Is plumbing in the sense of putting in new “pjpea” to feed blood into disabled hearts, or in cleaning out rusted natural pipes. And it has come along so well, a California heart specialist said today, that now it could be possible to bring relief to perhaps half of the millions of people suffering from crippled hearts. ^ Further, said one pioneering surgeon from Canada, new techniques should soon make it possible to predict blood flow to any part of the faltoing heart. New or improved surgical taihnlques were . described to the American College of Cardiologists, with ini^ results called encouraging. The heart Is a muscular pump whose walls get nourishing blood through four coronary arteries and their many branch-l ^ When these bccoane clogged with fatty “rust,” heart attacks or painful or crippli^ attacks of angina ensue. Tissaes once fed through a natural pipeline may die. The surgical solution is sometimes to clean out the rusted pipes or — more and more — to pid in some new piping, in ingenious ways. Now it is possible to pinpoint the locations of blocked arteries, and then to choose what kind of plumbing will help the individual patients so that half might benefit, said Dr. James A. McEachen and associates from Saint John’s Hospital, Santa Monica, Calif. Dr. Arthur Vinebcrg of Royal Victoria Hospital in Canada !^d a goal, now in sight, is capability to redirect the blood flow„by combined methods so that any or all blocked arteries are ta effect bypassed. Sixteen years ago, he developed a technique of cutting an artery in tRe chest — the left internal mammary artery — and inserting its freed end into tunnels created inside the heart muscle. The muscle then^^ck-!1. develops small blood'channels to distribute this extra :blood. CHICAGO (AP) Plagued by student violence, Chicago public school authorities have cracked down with locker inspectkms, wrjMlse searches and police patrols. There have been four„student stabbings, three shootings and assaults on teachers at the schools in less than three weeks. Announcing A Consulting Service for Industrial and Commercial Building Projects Why not let 28 yean construction Experience "package'’ your huiUing problems and insure that the building you went is delivered at a price you can afford? ARCHITECTURE AND ENGINEERiNG SELECTiON SITE SEUCTION COST ANALYSIS PROJECT CONSTRUenON From $5,000 to $5,000,000 we oKer a comple spared tl construction service and you are spa heodachesl BUILDING CONSULTANTS DIVISION Schtmwr Centtructien Company 343) Pontiac Road Pontiac, Michigan 4G0S7 ToUphono: 335-9441 Crackdown at Schools p-*-9 m Chicago NEW YORK (AP) - One of the last missing clue#in the Cuban missile crisis has been disclosed with the publication of an emotional, rambling letter from Sovief Premier Nikita Khrushchev offering a solution. The letter to the late President John P. Kennedy had been left but of previous accounts of the 1962 missile cemfrontation. In two incidents Thursday, a 9-year-old boy was stabbed at the Bledler Elementary School on the West Side and a 17-year^ old pupil at the Gage Park High School was slashed. Police questioned four pupils after the krtifing of Keimeth Krupowicz, 17, following a brawl at the school’i^ entrance where some 100 students gaOi-ered and began Jeering. KNIFE WOUND An 11-year-old youth was beipg held by police in the stab-of ; ........................... bing of a 5th-grade classmate. The victim was treated for a knife wound in the abdomen. Police called a meeting Thursday attended by some 30 school principals and officials seeking measures to deal with those responsible for the attacks. Some measures announced after the meeting included: — Surprise searches of students and their lodurs in schorl. Such Items as baad>all bats, long nail flies and needles will be forbidden. — Questioning and arrests of youths loitering in the vicinity of the schools who can not give a legitimate reason for being there. School dropouts will be kept under special surveillance. — Increased police patrols of school neighborhoods and the stationing of more police guards in the schools. The meeting was called by Police (Commander Harold Miles of the Englewood District, a South Side neighborhood in which .most of the trouble has occurred. STUDENT REVOLT Miles blamed the incidents apathetic and fearful parents and on a nationwide ‘V ' revolt against authorities. Parents, he said, “don’t want to get involved for a variety of Just in.,, your best buy In a big screen sllm-styletl 1966 remnL handci'afted ir PORnim nr withZOJDOOVOUSOF nCrURLPOWERfor urisurpassed picture brightness! HANDCRAFTED! NO PRINTED circuits; NO PRODUCTION SHORTCUTSI 100% h«ndwir«d clwttls connections! Rugged metal chassis hss up to 20Otlmes greater heat conduction ability thsit phenollc-uied In printed circuit boards. This means longer TV life. thBSb Zgnith features develop world's finest 19f tv performance • Zenith Patented Custom "Permi-Ser VHF Fine Tuning • 3-stages of IF Amplification a Automatic “Fringe-Lock" Circuit • Horizontal Linearity Adjustment • Front Mounted Speaker a ‘‘CapNltf-Plus" Components ALSO ZENITH COLOR TV "Airt STEFANSKI ELECTRONICS StR 1157 W. HURON FE 2-6^67 Nikita 'Sped' Letter to JFK on Cuba Abel said State DepartmentjWashington the night erf'Oct. 26,| The letter was acted upon ini Undersecretary of State expats agreed that Khrushchevil^. ^ |good faith by Jhe United StateSjGeorge Ball recalled that a few had probably dictated the letteri Former ^tary of StateL^ . subaeouent withdraw-1 Soviet experts in the SUte De- ' to a secretary, then hurriedly|Dean Acheson is quoted as say-l , ‘ subsequetrt withdraw Ipg^ment worked through the dispatched it without editing or|ing that Khrushchev appeared!®' Sowei missiles from discussing it with other Soviet to be “either tight or scared”jCuba and the lessening of ten-|of us went to bed with a vasit leaders. It was received in'when he wrote the letter. isions. Isense of relief.” In it, Khrushchev implies that Fidel Castro would demobilize the missile force in exchange for a no-invasion pledge. The letter, which led t» ending the U.S.-Soviet confrontation, is contained in “The Missile Crisis!” by Elie Abel, chief of the London bureau of the National Broadcasting Co. At that time, he whs NBC’s diplomatic correspondent. PUBUSHEB The book is published by J. B. Uppincott Co. otPhiiadelphla. Abel said that Khrpshchev ^ggests that Kennedy issi hp-lnvasioa pledge and fecall the American fleet guarding the seas around Cuba. With such a pledge, there would be no further need to keep Soviet military specialists in Cuba, the formqr Soviet leader said. The letter, quoted by Abel, concludes: “If you have not 1«4 your self-control, and lensibly conceive what this mi^t lead to, then, Mr. President, we and yon ought not now to pull mi the ends of the rope in which you have tied the knot of war, because the more we pull, the tighter the knot will be tied. And a moment may come when the knot will be tied so tight that even he who tied it will not have the strength to untie It, and tten it wtn be necessary to cut that knot; and what that would mean is not for me to explain to you, because you yourself unde^ stand perfectly of what terrible forces our countries dispose. “Consequently, if there 1 intention to tighten that knot and thereby doom the world to catastrophe of thermonuclear war, then let us take measures to untie that knot. We (the leaders of the Soviet Union) are ready for this.” Bills Urge Agency for Traffic Safely WASHINGTON (AP)-Bllls to establish a national traffic safe-|ty agency were introduced in iCongress Thursday. ’ Reps. James A. MacKay, D-Ga., and Robert T. Ashmore, D-S.C., and Sen. Vance Hartke, D-Ind., said their bills call for tablishment of such an agency in the Department of Commerce. They said the agency would provide national leadership to reduce traffic accidents and losses. This would be done by research and application of the findings. Some things work so well that nothing can tahe their place ANTI-GRAVITY MACHINE Modern lagndry appliances notwithstanding, there are still times when nothing else can do the job of a gqdd ol,d-fashloned clothes pin. Invented In the days of forgotten history, its design has withstood lha test of lime, and its utiiity iives on. Newspaper Ciassified Want Ads are like that. Invented In Colonial times by people with a communications problem, nothing else has come along to replace them. Want Ads do more things for more people at lower cost than any other kind of advertising. A PONTIAC PRESS WANT AD WILL WORK FOR YOU TO PLACE YOUR AD DIAL 332-8181 / X ■ WPCmED KAW SCOTCH -fe c—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 4. 1966 Sfate GOP Casts About hr U S. Senate Candidate By DICK BARNES AuociaM Press Writer LANSING — Democrats say| the Republicans don't have any-1 body to run for U.S. senator I this year. ^ Republican Goy. George Ron^ ney insists the opposite is true—i ’ -the party has a batch of candidates and is having trouble! narrowing the field. More and more there is talk of a primary election contest for the nomination. In September, leaders were confident they| would unite behind one candi-J date by late 1965. That target! date has been continually pushed back. Chances of a primary contest will increase if GOP leaders; meeting in St. Qair this weekend cannot narrow the candi-jdate field. ! CANDIDATE LIST On the eve of this meeting, here is how the candidates’ strohg and weak points appear to stack up: John Feikens, fonrier piarty chairman and cochairman of the State Civil Rights Coirimis-i sion — his strong civil rights; record and Wayne County resi-| dence could dent normal Democratic strongholds. I—still discussed despite his owni 'disclaimer that he’s a Demo-' crat. Qvil rights and urban appeal could be strong. OUTSTATE WEAKNESS Democratic background would! hurt outstate. Biggest fear is that'^ven if supported by party | jleaders, he might be opposed inj a primary and. if beaten, the party’s appeal to minorities ‘would be seriously damaged. U. S. Rep. Robert Griffin— ! liked within party organization and would probably stand best chance in an open primary. I John Martin—has a k>ng record 'of ^v^mment service and probably would be acceptable in mc^t areas of party, y-LITTLEKNOWN He is "iiot especially well known, however, nor viewed ai a strong campaigner. ! Michigan State University biochemistry Prof. Dr. Leroy Augenstein — a young, articulate, energetic self-starter who believes more knowledge of science is needed in government. self-starter, litBe known outside his district, whom party feaders would much prefer to have seek the Democratk-held 3rd Congressional seat. IS DISCOVERED NoWordYel ' But he is not seen as dynamic campaigner. Somej conservatives object to his tak-j ing Gen. Dwight Eisenhower’s side against Sen. Robert Taft in 1952. ® Former Detrbit City Councilman William Patrick, a Negro by McNamara Senator Still Leaves Room for Speculation WASHINGTON (AP)-All the signs are that Sen. Patrick McNamara, D-Mich., will not reelection this year but he declined today to say what his decision will be. “I have no idea,” he said. “The timing is not too impofr tant. There is no reason to be tied (^wn on it.’’ Laterf however, he said he thought he would make his d& cision known before April 1. There has been wide speculation, that McNamara, 71, now serving his second six-year term in the Senate, will step down this year and that G. Mennen Williams will resign as assistant secretary of state for African affairs to run for the Senate. HAS NO PLANS Asked about this in a separate Interview, Williams replied, have no plans to resign.” However, Williams, who served 12 years as governor of Michigan, gave no indication that he might not change his mind. But his congre(jsional record, j especially in the labor area, would bring into the campaign issues such as repeal of Taft' Hartley 14 (Bj, which would, hurt in Michig§n. > GOP National CommitteemSnl ; He is little known and question whether his approach is naive. His only chance would be through a primary yet with 'exposure, he might turn out to be the most attractive of the lot. State Sen. Garry Brown of I Schoolcraft — another energetic Haven businessman — ran respectable third in the 1964 GOP Senate primary, says he’s interested again, but is discounted by party leaders. Michigan State University President John Hannah, Detroit councilman James Brickley and Wayne County Circuit Judge Edward Piggins — mentioned eariier but out of consideration now, Lt. Gov. Wiiliam MiUiken-probably the strongest candidate the party could field, but understood to want to stay on the state ticket with Romney. BUY NOW AT RECORD-BREAKING SAVINGS! A SALE SO BIG-WE’RE HOLDING IT IN ALL 19 GIGANTIC STORES Some sources pointed out that McNamara’s delay in annoiftic-ing his decision leaves Republican Gov. George Romney up in the air in regard to the possibility that he might run for the Senate instead of seeking reelection in the fall. Romney is serving the year of his^second two-year term as governor. However, the governor elected this year will be chosen for a four-year term. NOT-nED DOWN Romney has been widely discussed as a possible Republican candidate for president in 1968. If elected to a fqur-year term as governor, Romney would not be tied down with reelection plans in 1968 if he sought the GOP presidential nomination. The percentage of the fcncign-born white in the total U.S. population dropped 8.1 per cent between the population censuses of 1950 and 1960. \ PRE-HUNG ALUM. DOOR RE6UUR-C0MBINATI0N Cash and Carry Complete *24“ nil AtiiiiiiiE 11) Nothing Held Back • Hundreds More Uila^yertised Items • No Money Down Outlil iB Slim eont«m|iororY SlylB Slim Sophisticated Styling . Tweed Covering In Assorted Decorator Shodes . both sofa ahd batchiho chmr ohly . OPEN NITES TIL ; SUNDAYS 12- 9 P.M. 6 P.M. t * WORLD WIDE WAREHOUSE CLEARAHCE PRICE v: ONCE IN A LIFETIME VALUES FROM WORLD WIDE EVERYTHING MUST GO-INCLUDING THIS OUTSTANDING ... ROOM ENSEMBLE ALL 14 PIECES OHLY... * LIVING ROOM Luxurious 3-pc. .Ktienol With distinctly. biKuit tuftMl back, buoyant foam cushion., t.x-turod nylon cev.ri. ,3 fabl.i and 2 Idmpi. Extanaion tabU with pla.Iic top plus 6 matching saddla-bock chain. PONTIAC LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU • NORTH SIDE DIXIE AND TELEGRAPH # WEST SIDE MIRACLE MILE • EAST SIDE jililMlwtrl OPEN HIHITLr UNTIL 9 P.M. SUNDAYS 124 LOOK FOR THE WORLD WIDE MESSAGE ON MICHIGAN’S LEADING TELEVISION STATIONS THE PONTIAC fKESS, FRIDAY. PEBR^AJIV ^1966_ Ramsesl Nefertiti Move Up in World ABU^SIMBEL, Egypt (AP)-T^e colossal temples of Abu Simbel have been hewn from their ancient home and the front of Abu Simbel Mountain looks newly shaven. For 32 centuries, the statues of King Ramses II, his queen Nefertiti and an assortment of gods and sacred birds looked upon sunrise across the Nile. Then they had to be moved to escape rising waters due to building of the Aswan Dam. Salvage experts cut the twin temples into 950 chunks, weighing 20 to 30 tons each, ahd transported them to storage areas. Two years from now, reassembled, the king and the others will be greeting the sunrise from higher ground. History has many tales of Ramses’ fondness for dismembering his war captives. Today, the swashbuckling Ramses, the beautiful Nefertiti, the arrogant sun god Amdh-Ra and the I People in the News] By The Associated Press “It is something, the high wire. Something you have inside of you, that is what it is.” Speaking from his bed at Highland Park General Hospital, fhe Great Murillo longs to return to the high wire that nearly cost him his life. , “You are way above everyone else,” he says, waving his hands. “The people are yelling. Then you turn around—four times—and the pe<^le are" screaming. That is what you want to hear.” Murillo, 32, a one-time Chilean soccer star, plunged 45 feet to the ground in Detroit Tuesday when he lost his balance. He does not like safety nets. His tight rope is thin, he says, and not everyone can see it. "Somebody screams: ‘Where is the rope?’ That is what I like to hear,” he said. “I know that to them it is thrilling. “Then I jump rope and people are holding their breath.” Detroit’s City Council is considering making safety nets mandatory, but Murillo protests: “No, no, no safety nets. They are not good. I do not like them. Th^ people do not want them.” ■ ^ MURHXO ; SPECIAL OFFER 25c{«mlab !«f! MomfoN SOJh. BAG'E’I'* REGAL Wild Bird FEED MIXTURE-20% Sunflower 25.t,»2« GENUINE REDWOOD BIRD FEEDERS *4”..-*5” REO All FfXD & LAWN SUPPLY Drayton Start Pontiao Start. Clarkttan Start 426S Dixit Hwy. 2SM Wtodward 6178 Dixit Hwy. ORS-2441 FE 2-0491 MAS-2148 god Ptah are strewn about the ground, dismembered and helpless. The baffling smirk on Ramses’ face is still there. In 1958, the Egyptian government announced it was going ahead with building the £wan Dam which would create behind it the largest man-made lalie in the world. Annual floods of the Nile threatened to submerge entire Nubian desert and inW date the towering temples of Abu Simbel along with 26 other temples, churches and sanctuaries. UNESCO-the U.N. Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization—launch^ a “now or never” campaign urging nations of the world to rescue the Nubian monuments. The United States and Egypt are bearing most of the $36 million cost. Serious work began three years ago with a thorough excavation of the two temples, cofferdam was built to shield the temples. The Nile flooded twice, but work went smoothly behind the temporary dam. When cuUing started last year, a few explosive charges were used to remove the upper part of the mountain topping the two temples. Then, with electronically guided saws, chisels and other tools, Italian experts cut the huge monuments in what was termed the greatest archeological surgery in history- SHIFT OPERA'nON The cofferdam will be flooded in August, but by then the whole operation will have been shifted to the temples’ new site, above the reach «nall air^ld, a chib and a swimming pool. A hotel and a tourist bazaar will also be built, Mackel said. When the two temples get their new home, Mackel added, they will continue to stand majestically on the Nile^ facing east. Three Are Killed as Mine Roof Falls in Virginia NORA, Va- (AP) - Three miners were killed Thursday when they were buried by a collapsing roof deep in the narrow corridors of a southwest Virginia drift mine. A fourth miner was injured j but three Others escaped whenj tons of slate tumbled down, three miles from the entrance of' the Betty Bee Coal Co. mine-Killed in the collapse were two cousins, mrvin Baker, 21, and Cecil.Baker, 25; and a miner who had worked for the firm only 45 days, Avery Rose, 31, the father of four children. D-1 AP Ph»lof«> READY FOR MOVE -Giant stone effigies from the colassal temples of Abu Simbel ground after being hewn from centuries,- these statues of Egyp-i-tian kings, queens and deities looked upon the sunrise across the Nile. Now they have to be moved to escape the rising^ waters due to the building of the Aswan dam which will help in-dustralize Egypt. kCiiV<»»'rr W FLOOR COVERING 3330 DIXIE HWY. • ^ OR3-I209 so BEAUTIFUL...so DIFFERENT SO UNBELIEVABLY PRICED Close-out on 2 rolls of Wool. Save *6 per sq. yd. Osq. vd. 501 NYLON 12’xl5’Room Installed with Heavy Sponge pad ^ . . *185 Open Monday and Friday ’til 9 P.M. Flint Man Found Dead on Bus in Missouri JOPLIN, Mo. (AP) - Alfred Rames, 68, of Flint, Mich., was found dead Thursday aboard a Greyhound bus in Joplin. Coroner Wendell Fuhr said-a await their move to higher!heart attack was the probable Iheir ancient home. For 32 cause of death. SHOP 1 . " A BLCXDAAFIELD h MIRACLE MILE CO ISk. / STORES & SERVICES WITH «100r* DEPARTMENTS 1 h' PARK AT THE FRONT DOOR OF YOUR FAVORITE STORE i f 1 Bloomfield Miracle Mile Shopping Center e TELEGRAPH at SQUARE LAKE RD. OPEN EVENINGS Romulus Youth Enters Plea at Trial for Father's Death DETROIT (UPI)-A Romulus Township high school football star pleaded guilty yesterday to manslaughter charges in the! strangling of his father after a quarrel last spring. | The surprising move came as the first-degree murder trial of Ken n e t h Steve McClure, 18, opened in Wayne County Circuit Court. The youth admitted killing his father March 22 after a violent argmnent about the vibtim repeatedly beating his wife and children. McClure and his 17-3^r-oId brother, Bruce, put their father’s body in. their car and parked it on railroad tracks at a crossing in an attempt to make the death look accidental. Both boys were still charged with removing and mutilating a dead body. Defense attorney Joseph Louisell described the boys’ 55-year-old father as “an absolute sadist — a man who took great pleasure in inflicting pain and great hurt.” Circuit Judge Theodore R. Bohn said sentencing on the reduced charge would come within six weeks after he receives a report from the Probation Department. McClure, who remained free under $20,000 bond, has been accepted as a freshman for the spring semester at Northern Michigan University at M a r-quette. Bohn said he suggested tl;e youth', who was football captain aqd a school leader at Romulus High School go ahead with his plans for an education. “I just felt he should not waste a semester if there was going to be probation,” the judge said. I We have the home for YOU! ' 3-BEDROOAA ' , COLONIAL", ' % 8714 EUZABETH UUCE RD. Va Mile West of Williams Lake Rd. IMMEDIATE OIXUPANCY Priced at Only *21.900 1^3-BEDReOM COLONIAL ★ FAMILY ROOM with FIREPLACE ★ FULL BASEMENT ★ BUIlT-INs TAPPAN APPLIANCES ★ 2*/>CARAnACHED GARAGE ,★ 1 BLOCK* FROM SCHOOLS ^ Wot«rfoni School, ★ PAVEO STREETS ★ AND MANY PLUS FEATURE ★ Sale$men at Model AAODEL OPEN 3 to 8 Doily 12 to 6 Sat. and Sun. Call 363-0878 or 363-2278 plus lot 5^ IN FOX BAY ESTATES \ FEBRUARY. SAMNGS! Mwr s 108 NORTH SAGINAW 30"'Gas Range by Brown With Exclusive deluxe features e Safety-Lock Oven Rocks e Lift-Out Oven Bottom • Four. Giant Bonus Burners • PolishiKi Burner Cops • Four Range Levelers • Low B.T.U. Flash Tub Ignition e Beautiful blue-grey Porcelain finish distinguishes the interior of oil ranges by Brown, assuring rust-proof durability and effortless cleaning. A reol buy! OTHER MODELS AVAILABLE AT COMPARABLE SI^VINGS! Regular 119.95 Special dt... $98 NO MONEY DOWN Credit Arrangsd to meet your individ- FREE DELIVERY bV eur expert and FREE PARKING Let eur attendant park yaur car In WKC'l privote parking let at rear at our tt6r#. Yai. It'i D—2 THE PQ^^TIAC PRESS. FRlD^v FEBRUARY 4, 1966 During the winter months,' |m dties and states spend 25 to * 5() per cent of their total street maintenance -budgets (or snow ? removal and ice control. Serving Fine Liquort E>JOV UKLICKH S LUNCHE.S AM) I)I.»EKS A t THE DancinK Fri. and Sat. N'iahia Mrlamora, Mich.—678-8201 ‘*AnionK the llilli” State Pair Files Suit Sonic Boom Harm' ' GR^Np RAPIDS (AP) - An Antrim CoCmty couple filed suit in U. S. Distilc)^ Court Thursday, seeking re^Vei;}^ of* $5,634 in damages allegedly caused to! their home by a sonic boom from the flight of a U. S. Ahr, Force plane. The complaint was filed by Insurance Co. of North America as agent for J. B. and Gertrude Faas of Central Lake. SQUARE and ROUND niiiTriruM Qarifeit Center Ballrooin Woodward, Detroit Dor>cii>9 Ivory Thurs., Sol.. Sue. CAMPUS BALLROOM ^ F«iiWI aiul Unnwii SaiKing l«wy Tmi., Fri., $•». riNEST ORCHESTRAS ■■at ROTH RAURQSiSallV AH Photefax “ IT’S A FACT!” Scribes SAVOY LOUNGE IS BUILDING A 24-UNE BOWLING CENTER With Automatic Pinsetters • Billiard Room a Quickie Bar • Nursery NEW LEAGUES BEING FORMED! Our Dining Room and Lounge will remain open every day during our building program .. . Featuring Chor-Broiled Sjeokj, ond Lobsterl LUNCHEONS SERVED DAILY ~ Scribes SAVOY LOUNGE 130 S. Telegraph Rd. - Phone FE 4-6981 HEDDA’S TRADEMARK - Movie gossip queen Hedda Hopper never forgot the impression her first store-bought hat made on people on Easter morning. She promised herself that if a hat can .get the attention of so many people, she’would never go bareheaded. Her flamboyant, enormous and often outlandish hats remained a trademark of the syndicated columnist until her death in Hollywood this week. HELD OVER 2nd Smash Week! Hedda, Louella Competed for 'Social Arbiter' Honors By BOB THOMAS AP Movle-TV Writer HOLLYWOOD-It was an odd-ment of fate that the two reigning queens of Hollywood Journalism should have been removed from the local scene pre-c i s e 1 y t w 0i months apart. On Dec. 1, the name of Louel-| la Parsons was] removed fro the column shi had conducted! 'or 40 years. THOMAS The ailing colunmist, confined a rest home, was supplanted )y her longtime associate Dorothy Manners. Li Proudly nm Prasents “lAST WEEK” RAY KING -TRIO” • Piano Comic • Vocalist • and M.C. 7504 Dixie Hwy.1 Mile North of M-15 ruled on separate throne?, each «nd hence could be ruled by jealous of her own domain, each ready to deal out punishment to those who sought favor with the opposite queen. ‘BENEVOLENT’ Their reigns were despotic, yet curiously benevolent. Mrs. Parsons — for that was the name of her first husband — imposed her will with a smiling lady columnists. Show business is now too dif-|P fuse and tod diverse to be cen--| tralized in one sun-ridden Cali- [» sphere now spreads from Holly-wood and Vine to Rome’s Cinec-u:^i itta to the studios of Tokyo. Tel-evision is a giant that defies j This is not to .say that Holly- -v face and iron hand, ever ready has had it as a news ini^Mn,:)irt^ MJr/»nKmTi ' - bn » w i J ui u i to punish those who did n6t deal source »*)*’*S l_ vU IQJltirs LA_ WNon|l\ bD V V 11 V her exclusive stories. | Hollywood will continue to be I ADULTS SAT. 1 tO 5 P.M. 90c, NITES and SUN. $1.25, Children SOC | Mias • JDNES-PWE-ITOftl'BWD' BoimBSktST-ffleHN-SWiNN Mrs. Hopper — it was the j source of the glamorous, the name of her only husband — didn’t smile when she lacerated her enemies. They were many, since she oppos^ those indulged in liberal politics. bizarre and the fascinating. But there will never be another Parsons, nor another Hopper. On Feb. 1, death came to the seemingly ageless Hedda Hopper, who had successfully challenged Mrs. Parsons’ rule as social arbiter of the film colony For 2(k)dd years, they had Sticking Pedal Offers Driver a Grand Tour Both conducted fierce defenses of Hollywood’s reputation and were quick to chastise those who transgressed the moral code. Both were castigated for mother-hen provincialism and ridiculed for misuse of the lan-| guage. Yet they added to the color of a glamorous age which I is. alas, very nearly at an end. SUCCESSORS? CARLSBAD, N.M. (AP) Thomas Perschbacher, Carlsbad, told officers his accel-| erator jammed as he was backing out of a driveway. Police reported the car then did the following: Who shall replace the Mmes-Parsons and Hopper? Probably no one. Their successors are pretenders to thrones that no longer exist. Gone are the days when Hollywood was a tight little town that 68, ruled the entertainment world, MIRACLE MIL IIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIII s FIRST RUN! = MORE THAN, 11= ASrc ' IHH . “tl is BKAT" ^ ^ iHrHr (Highest Rahng^j = N.y. Da%r Ninvf 5 ^^ATHRHIER!” SOPHIA MCWlMBSSSi WREN CIWREWHi „mm tSKJBWBMBs Quitit) "TKWSi Pontiac’s POPULAR THEATER WMk Dayt; C*iri. IM.m. U 12 f.m. r SAT. 10:4S A.M.to 1:lo P.M. I EAGLE Knocked down a street sign;! knocked out a house porch support; tore off the comer of the house; went through a clothes line; smashed through a fence; pushed over a carport support on another house, and went through a wall in the house, I ending up in the^kitchen. ! Perschbacher was uninjured and no charges were filed, police said. LAST NIGHT! “The 10th VICTIM” At 1:25 - 9 :30 Begins Tomorrow ^KeMOnON PICOJRE WIlKSOMECKiAIG 10 OFFEND EVERYONE!! ^OW SHOWING " N0WSEEHQ1 THE WEST WAS KIDS 25' “;ri With This Coupon > THE MIRISCH CORPORATION tnun, BURT LANCASTER LEEREMICK JIMHUnON PAMEU TIFFIN i«J(lwSTUIIQa> THE HALLELUJAH MetroGoIdm-MAyar tad rilmwaysprMit Mirli^IUpsoltoirj Production ■ ■mas Loved ROBERT MORSE JONATHAN WINTERS ANJANETTE COMER Dua Andrewt • Milton Berio • Jiinet Cobdm ■ John Gielgud lyMcDowill Tib Hunter-Mugiret Leighton • Liberm-Roddy Robert Morky • Berben Nicholi- Lionel Stander iRODgTEIGER.Ii^.luV ScMOhr hr Terry Soutben ti4 Cbriito^ Isberwood^ ADDED: "YMKEE DOODLE MOUSE” f- .iiiiuiimHwmttiinuilI CHIIDRIN UNOCn 12 FACE BLUE SKY . iH-caa MAUit ml DAIVMN OPDYKE AD. AT WAITON IlVD. ||| 332-3200 TAKE 175 TO MT. CLEMENS ID. ||| ■ lifrt.aBHwnHiaw i I—millDDHi I expect anything... IL-—iihiwiii ^ S MOjoUYl^'^ S 3 frtombwolhwb*^ 1 tHiySMIUS SIEiraHIU. _ ^ _______________ iniiiniilillllllllllllllllllllUHIlllllllllllllllw.»>-i«MnuuiuUUllttU\I ^ tHE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. FEBRUARY^ 1966 Qandb MUSIC FRI., S^. and SUN. Featuring The New Sounds of The KNIGHT FI| RS ANNUAL MARCH OF DIMES DINNER TUES.. FEB. lit. V. M-59 and ELIZABETH LK. RoadA FE 3-9879j SUNDAY SPECIAL! Dinner Served 12 ISoon to 11 PM. ChickM and Dampliafi CM's Salad-PbtotMt $4|a Vegelahlu-RollsABunw I | PARTIES-BANQUITS Prival* Diniftg l^eom Snting Up To 70 P«rtoi»« ICIOSED MONDAYS | 1650 North Porry At i>ontiac Ro*il Phont FE 5-9941 i Safe Control of Insects Is I U. S. Reports N-Test WASHINGTON (UPI) - The I Atomic Energy Commission con-'ducted another low-yield underground nuclear test yesterday at / in II C Nevada test site, the fourth v/iycU in w. p. announced this year. WESTEHN Dri?9-1« Seafood • Chops Chicken Dinners CAMY OUT SiRVKf 333-9077 Wide Track Drive at W. Huron FE 2-1170 Fine Foods — Liquor SATURDAY 7 to 11 P.M. International Smorgasbord **Childreif Price on Smorgasbord*’ MONDAY NIGHT “BRING A FRIEND” SPECIAL One Dinner Full Price — One Half-Price Bl’.SINESSMEN’S LUNCH SPECIAL PRICES - COCKTAIUS 4 to 6 DAILY HOME IN TWO TOWNS - Raymond I'ongshaw Jr., 26, holds daughters. Cheryl, 6, (Idt)-and Lisa, 2, as he stands on the Somerset-Swansea, Mass., town line. Long-shaw has been ruled eligible to run for as- sessor in Somerset because he sleeps on the right side of his house in Somerset. He eats on the other side in Swansea and just to complicate Uiinjrs, he pays some taxes to both towns. By Science Service 'yi/ WASHINGTON The “great ^ awakening'’ of Americans to demand slum clearance, clean-rivers, and clear skies also iiv* eludes using safe biological methods instead of harmful chemicals to control destructive insects. Man is now entering a “golden age of biological sciences” in his continual battle against insects, Dr. E. H. Smith of North Carolina State University, Raleigh, told a four-day symposium on scientific pest control. Scientists are searching for exciting new methods to ma- ^ nipulate the biology and environment of insects to keep down their huge populations. For instance, natural enemies of ii}sects such as bacteria, viruses and protozoa are being bred and released in the vicinity of crop-damage insects. Research is being carried out to breed plants and animals' that are resistant to the damaging insects. LETHAL GENES PIwimRMUI Good Friends Meet ...i Everyone enjoys Qjir fine selection ! of foods andJteverages in a delightful \ atmosphere for all occasions. ENTERTAINMENT Every Friday and Saturday ■ % TYRONE HILIHOISE RESTAURANTand UOUKTAIL lAIUNGE On U.S. 2S Expressway at Uenler Road Exit 6 Miles North of MS9 - 29 Miles From Pontiac Quarter Is Refused in Coin Rebellion Ijisects with lethal genes are being developed so their off-I spring will not live, and the sterilization of male insects so no offspring will be produced [at Columbus, Ga., were refusing! was a localized revolt. But I has already proved highly suc-WASHINGTON (UPI) - The'^ copper-cored was still gripped by the oppres- cessful in controlling the screw snow, the Viet Nam situation“ |sive atmosphere that has been worm in the southeastern United and the Senate filibuster akmej A number of alarming ques- hanging over Washington this states. By DICK WEST were enough to. make it a dismal day in the capital Wednesday. On top of t'h a t, another crisis suddenly loomed up with! the House of' Representatives convened at noon. NOW . ' Appearing At Huron Bowl Lounge MONDAY Jerry Libby p at th« Piano tions immediately flashed across week. Scientists are discovecing that ! my mind. IMPORTANT NEWS insects live, reproduce, feed and I Would this escalate into frat- Then I discovered that relief *hhin ra^er rigid limits in : ricidal warfare between the was only a few blocks away. ^ ‘I'"®- temperature, Post Office Depahment and Word arrived that Miss Ameri- humidity and other factors in the U. S. Mint? Would coffee, ca was holding a news confer- meir particular environment to candy and cigarette machines ence in a downtown hotel. "'h*eh they^have adapted, join the rebellion? Interviewiifg beauty queens [i Close to panic, I rushed into is not one of my strong suits. I the corridor and dropped one of The cat gefc my tongue. Once the new 2S-cenL pieces into the I have asked the standard 'nearest machine. To my relief, question, “How does it feel to a soft drink bottle slid out, along be Miss America? I can’t Rep. Howard H. Callaway, R-.with 15 cents change. think of anything else to say. Ga., reported^ that the stamp| That convinced me that the Nevertheless the nrosnect of machines in the federal building j machine uprising in Columbus with Miss America seemed sev- They're Here "Jack and The Misfits" DANCING 6 NIGHTS A WEEK TUES. through SUN. 9 P.M. to. 2 A.M. Keg and Anchor 4195 Oixi* Hwy. Drayton Hu ins era! watts brighter than anything else in sight, so I went right over. As soon as I saw Debbie Bryant of Kansas, who currently holds the title, my spirits lifted. I didn’t have to ask her anything to know that she was a very intelligent figure. SMARTER MEN Fortunately, we were joined by a couple of other reporters who are more adept than I at interrogating beauty queens. They elicited the information that Miss Bryant had pot been stuck in the snow anytime recently. This was such a welcome change from the general run of conversation here I felt like jumping up and dancing a jig. And when asked how it felt to be Miss America, Miss Bryant said it felt fine. Which was mu-sfc to my eyds. If she had said “I hate every minute of-it,” I don’t think I could have stood it. Now Appearing By Popular Request! MONDAY thru SATURDAY FRMK DUnO and FLOYD RAM For an Evening •of Fun and Entertainment Go Airway! r AluiiagLai® 4825 Highland Rd. (M59) Phone 674-0426 Marking on the side of a ship showing its cargo capacity known as the “Plimsoll mark; CHRiiET mn if/wff tiriie IN THE PONTIAC AREA! ^ The Most Reitiarkable Innovation In Entertainment Since Television Bring the Whole Gang SEE YOUR FAVORITE SINGING STARS ... Vic Damon*, Delia Raato, Jamat Darran, Joi Laming, Jody AAillar, Frankie Avalon, January Jones, Groonwood Country Singers . .. and many othorsi DAZZLIN6, EXHILARATING BUUTIFUL GO-GO GIRLS In New Dimension SOUND and COLOR! It*$ Brand Netc .. . You*U Enjoy Hours of Fun and Entertainthent DON’T FORQET- Chalet Inn Famous Sandwiches Serving Daily Except Sundays 'til 2 A.AA. Along With Your Favorite Beverages in One of Pontiac's AAost Friendly Lounges. 79 North Saginaw PHONE 333-9145 DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Convenient Parking Rear of Building CLOSED SUNDAYS Presents a Special March of Dimes JAM [SESSION A *1.00 DONATION FEE WILL BE CHARGED-PROCEEDS GO TO THE MARCH OF DIMES-COME OUT, ENJOY THE FUN AND HELP OUT! 100 S. CASS UUCE RD. phone 682-6300 thp: roxtiAc pkkss. fri'dav, February », lo 4#* 4.; - '¥i' MARKETS Caution Prevalent Seeks to End I The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets'as of Friday. Market in Moderate Recovery Produce ■ Appifs. Drilclous, Rrd. t Apples, Jonathan, bu. Apples, Macintosh, early, bu. Apples, Northern Spy, bu. Apples, Steel Red, bu. Apples, cider, 4.«al. case VE6ETABLES Beets topped, bu. Hor,seradlsh, pit bskt. Leeks, di. bchs. , Onions, dry, SO-lb. bag NEW YORK (AP) — Selected “On the downside, Boeing was sales and earnings. Orders ac-blue chips picked up some ™nspcuous with a 4-point loss, ] cumulate enough to cause a strength early this afternoon as AVERAGE UP * delayed opening on a block of the stock market recovery con- The Associated Press average 22,000 shares, with Ford rising' tinned on a moderate basis of 60 stocks at noon was up .5 at'114 to 55%. It improved slightly Dealings were considerably ^ with industrials up .6, rails in price later. j:|o slower than yesterday, re-uPj3 and utilities up .3. EARNINGS REPORT A^nsfield Set to File Cloture Petition In Waterford Twp. School Land Purchases OK'd The Waterford Township The Township Board will be ,‘iCommunity Day” In Waterford Board of EMucaUon last night approached to finance the Township. . authorized purchase of'land at other 50 per cent of the price. | Qtizens fpyrr business, Indus-two school sites at'a total cost addition. PTA groups are try, lalMj^wucation and com-of $49,000. being contacted regarding pur- munitj/organizations are invited Cost of the land at the pro- p^ase of ponchos for student to visit schools in the district posed Eagle Lake elementary ggfety patrols, according to Wil-'that day. school site was $39,j)00. helm. ‘ In sUll other busines, the fleeting usual preweekend cau-j The Dow Jones industrial av- Partnipt, Cello P Potslon, 50 lbs. Potatoes, 25 lbs. Radlihm. blo-“ Rhubarb, hott Rhubarb, hotl Squash, Aeon . _ _ Butternut,' b Squash, Delicious, t Squash, Hubbard, b , . , no . Liggett & Myers was off more j;,jition as well as hesitancy con- erage at noon was up 1.73 at j^an a point on a disappointing 2 00^®'^'’''’^ the market prospects.- 982.96. ^ ^ . earnings report. Other tobaccos };“ * ★ ★ were mixed. Lorillard gained a '•M Gains of most key stocks went . American Telephone resumed fraction. American Tobacco 2.S I from fractions to a point or so. i‘ts recovery from its recenti dipped slightly. Jioo'A few of the higher-priced, lows, opening on 15,000; Gains of a point or more were ’“more volatile issues showed shares and .advancing well over scored by International ^ele-'•75i wider gains in the morning but 0 point as the session continued, jphone. Pan American World many of these were clipp^ Buyers were drawn to Ford i Airways, Air Reduction and In-q bpek as the session wore on. by news of its record quarterly i temational Harvester. j The New York Stock Exchange WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield plans to file a cloture petition today to try to kill the union shop filibuster. The filing automatically will bring a vo^e on the debate-limiting procedure next Tuesday. - * ★ w Mansfield said Thursday that if this attempt fails he planned to file another petition Tuesday. This would trigger a second cloture vote Thursday. The filibuster, now in its 11th ‘ jday, has blocked Mansfield’s The other $19,OM b for an * * w 8,^acre addition to a fntare'^ The equipment is rubberized junior high school site on Hoi- nylon, colored bright orange. ■ ■ “ ■ March 9 was officially set as pital Road. An agreement, shifting responsibility of the Recreation Department and Community School program to the Board of Education, met final approval ■ ist night. The agreement, as originally presented, was passed by the Township Board last Monday. The Board of Education had re-i . quested a wording chaqge In the' DETROIT (AP) — Diphtheria contract until last night. on persons who may have 8P1 IT rrvsTC ' ^ si-LJi 1.USIS died of the disease Monday were Both programs are financed continued today by Detroit equally by the Township Board Health Department officials. board approved second semester contracts for two teachers.^ and accepted the resignations of others. Continue Tests lor Diphtheria; Detroit Finds No Cases in 400 and Board of Education. The No evidence of infection was efforts to bring before the Sen-1agreement, cemented last night.lj ^ O Kill Ciwfinn MR lie for q nno-vpnr trial nprioH Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (AP)-PricM p*ld p»r po lor No. 1 live poultry: Ropitors hoavy typ* ov*r S Iba. 24-2 ! NEW YORK (API-Following li ; of Mieettd itock tranaactlons on t J York Stock Exchange with noon a -A- ;.) Hiy ^ ' Gen“cig' l.'.v .. Genl^nam I B 32Vj 32'/. 32'/. H .. . A 59W 51'/* ^ w... 2.40 75 lU tm, 114 H *• Chg. Gen Fdi 2.20 . 32 78'/* 78 78'/* H ^ + ff.GenMIll* 1.40 ’• ““ ' DETROIT EGOS DETROIT (AP)-Eftg prici dozen by first rtcalvers (Inch Whites Grade A jumbos large 43'/*-47W; large 43-44i Browns Grade A large 42Vi-43; medium I9'/i-40. CHICAGO BUTTER. EGOS CHICAGO (AP) - Chicago Mercantile Exchange—Butter steady to firm; wt —-'-1 prices 'M to_',* AlllsChal .75 k 40: *0 B St'.i .Jre'ia;‘"a);%fA ................ 574*; cars 10 B 40; 8t C 584*. Eggs firm; wholesale buying price to IV* higher; 70 per cent — Grade A whites 41)/*; mixed 4 24 75'* 74'/s 75'* 4 33 527* 524* 524* - 28 24 254* 24 52 4744 474* 474* -t 8 84'/. 85** 84 - 48 324* 32'/j 324* -t 24 344* 344* 344* -f L Amerada 2.80 , I AmAirlin 1.25 .-.'"'A Bosch 50q • bell*,'' AmBdest 1.60 ..........- ........j; medi-lAm Can 2.20 vms 38; standards 38; checks 31’/a. jAmCrySug 1 CHICACraSK'-tr,. Rock fryers 21-^2. Am Hosp .40 MmInvCo 110 ...n MFd/ Livestock Getty on .10* Gillette 1.20 Glen Aid .50a Goodrch 2.20 150 1054* 1044* 105'/i 18 374* 37 37 - 0 404* 40'A 40'/* 42 38'/* 38V* 38V* >3 12H 124* 12H -f- PhllMor 4.20 '/* Pit Steel 4* Polaroid .20 4* Procter G.2 '/.jPublklnd .34f '/* I Pullman 2.40 ate a bill to repeal Section 14B'is for a one-year trial period, of the Taft-Hartley law. 'The other business, the board section allows • ^ates to outlaw appointed three architectural union shop contracts under! fi^ms to serve as architect-which covered employes must designates for projects pro--.) Law Last chp. join the union. Nineteen states po,ed in the $13-millkm build-1 .*• have such bans. j ing program. OPPONENTS CONFIDENT j They are Wakely-Kushner As-i Opponents of the bill were sociates; O’Dell, Hewlett and \ 4 47'!* 6m 4?'* -t- —R— 153 S2'A 514k 5144 - 1 44'/* 44'* 44'A -I- _ 23 39Vt 3»'/* 3»V* - V* 18 38 374* 38 -k- ^ ■ GtWSug 1.60a -•iGreyhnd .?0 - ’/*|Grumn A .88 „ i GullMO 2.20a ’ '’'Gull on 2 1 lOV* 10 10'/. -f I 41V. 41',* 41' * -I- i 214* 21'* 214* I 544* 54 54 - 15 8544 85',. 11 . 3»'/* 85*4 f 40 ' -I '/* ixgnr ^.orp '*!RoyCCola .40 . , RoyDut 1 85g 'A'RyderSy .10* Sateway St 1 StJosLd 2.40 17’/* 174* 174* -I tested ’Thursday, officials said, but the possibility of an epidemic of the highly contagious disease was not discounted. An autopsy Wednesday determined Lonnie Hill, 4, died of diphtheria and tests were begun Luckenbach Associates and Harry Denyes Associates. | Also last night, the board of-j fered to contribute one-half to-i ward the cost of capes, rain-| coats and caps for school cross- . iint Hits High Cost'" of Viet Kills immediately on about 350 pupils at the boy’s school. The.boy’s family, Mr. and Mrs. Bozy Hill and their six children, apparently had not contracted the disease, department physicians said, but a second test would be necessary to insure there was no infection. Diphtheria is characterized by the formation of a membrane, usually in the throat, and infla-mation of the heart and nervous system. It has an incubation period of two to four weeks, requiring examination of all who may have come in contact with the boy during that period. TRANSFERRED Dr. Paul Sachow, health department epidemiologist, said I the problem of checking stu-idents at the boy’s school was i complicated by the transfer «of 11 children to another school CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP)-(USDA)- Hogs 5.W; ulthers 25 to mostly 50 lower; 1-2 IHF ,b«J».5;^.r 2^240"’r27.^^ 7.75; 1-3 350400 lb. sows 25.00-f75 CettI* 5,500; calves none; tleugtit -.......... - ‘ ...-WtVt. Am Tob 1.80 ---- Inc .60 Treasury Position 22 19’,* 194. 191. , V 34 S4V* 554* 55’/. - 4 132 lO'/i 104* lO'/j + ', 11 48'/* 48'/. 48'/* 13 514* 51'/. 51'/* -I- ' 37 11'/* 11 11 + V 10 78'/i 78V4 78'/. -I- ■ 31 20'A 20 20'/4 -F 4 570 414* 404* 41'/» -fl' 30 394*'%94* 394* 8 47V* 444* 47 — ', » 2444 24'/* 244* - 1 2 3444 3444 3444 -F ', 14 92H 92'/4 92V4 -F V 54 22'/. 21'/* 22'/* -F ' Hoff Electron Atlas Cp Auto Cent .80 Avco^ 1 BabcokW 1.25 8 5,715,251.334.97 8 5,518,194,137.3; Its Flicel Year July 1- *5,242,394,542.03 59,721,929,839.11 ‘"nllll’iitlw'W.s'l*' 4I,831,850,515.« IF 43'/* 424* 43't> 28 52H 51'/* ,524* + 4* 24 374* 37 374* + 4* 4 244* 24'/j 24Vi,- - 29 14'/s 16'/. 14'/. 22 334* 33H 33". - I 494* I I 71'/. f >L Si inTi:; chering 1 SCM Cp .* InferlkSt 1.6C intBusMch 6 IntHsrv t.Sfl IntMiner 1.2( 9 20'. 20'* 20',i 8 494* 49 494* 33 54 53'/* 53'/. 25 434* 41V* 41’ . 4 84'/* 84'/* 84'/r 11 39'/* 3844 384* 31 498 497 497 89 49 484* 49 13 744* 74'A 74'/s 19 948* 94'/* 94'/. 3 114* 114* 1I4> 87 33’/* 33'/* 334* 113 ^ 724/* 73'/. I 77'/j + 293 1704* 147V. 149V. —2'A Jones L 2.70 24 71 70 71 -FIV*ijay MIg 2.50 20 38"* 384* 38’/i -F 'A I Joy Mfg wl 15 47V. 474* 471* + '/. confident that they would be L able to defeat cloture as easily r; as they did last October when Mansfield tried it during the first floor fight on the same leg- " islation. p The measure’s supporters'*"8 guards, conceded that they did not see COST OF $70$ how the required two-thirds! EsUmated total cost to outfit could be mustered to choke off guards is $700, according to the filibuster. ggt. Raymond Wilhelm of the * * * township police department. . ^ Lpst October cloture got 45--- ' school s 1,000 pupils. ii it "4;: + S votes while 47 senators opposed WASHINGTON (AP)-Sen. Dr. C. Dale Barrett, head of 22 %% ^4* "w-F w it. Thus'^it was 17 short of the 62 J. W. Fulbright told David E. child irnmunization at the ' that would have been required. ^ foreign aid administrator, health de'^artment, said; “At Many senators believe that ^ ' It' today that the United States isjthis time there is no epidemic, next week’s tests will dispose of J* OUCCOSStUl & psini issiip w till” in Fulbright, Aid Chief,, . ^ He said if any of the 11 show in Dispute at Hedring ‘inficafions of infection tests would have to be made on that ^haronStl .60 iheil Oil 1.70 ihellTra .B4g -----m !o’f20 1.804 Socony 3.20 . V. SouPR Sugar . *4 SouCalE 1.25 , Soulti Co .96 SouNGas I 30 , SouthPac 1.50 * -h Ry 2.80 , „..ry RanO S^araD LM I'uiStd Kollsman piston Cal 2.50 JStOMInd 1.70 . xCtS'OI' NJ SOe TTkMdimhin * 1 25'/* 25 254* -F 1 74* 7H 7H the bitterly controversial issue for this session. BACKED BY LBJ - ' The House passed the 14B repeal bill last July 221 to 203. ? Investing *29H 29H+i’''‘Johnson repeatedly By ROGER E. SPEAR I BucyEr 2.40a ’ 3 494* Stocks of Local Inferesf 1 55 ii;/* 204^ 20’i ■/ II'. 22'* 22'. 58 494* 484, 494* .iKernCLd 2 40 fr daalar prlcai ol maiaiy '1 a'” infar-daalar changa throughout the day. commlislon. AMT Corp. A»*oclatad Truck Braun Enginaaring Citizens Uflllflet Cists A Monroa Auto Equipment Diamond Crystal Rally Girl Mohawk.Rubber Co. Dttrex Chemical Pioneer Finance ........ ' Wyandotte Chemical markets CampRL ./ rices do Camp Soup markdown or Oan Dry j r=^iL I 34',I Lr ' SI? z I'll-: II A la 0 VxBTvr I r i./v T S'Cent SW 150. '2° 121 Cerro 1.40b 37.4 39.0 cerl leed .80 12!2 13!i1c! 3.0 3.3 Cl - ',*iLockhdAirc 2 F 4*.Loews Theat - 4* LoneS Cem 1 iLoneSGa 1.12 F14* Lo?Slaf'd^VM F 4* LTV .50 F 44 LuckyStr 1.40 4 49’* 49 494. + 14 24Vi 23*. 234. .. 8 744i 74 74 -I 30 33'/j 32',. 32'5 23 244t 24 ,24'. + 7 14'/i 14** l6'/j 13 14. 8'. 8'. J 8 32V. 324, 324, 18 57 .......... 21 744* Packaging utfCh V40 rlDru^ .BO r^jlThiokol .35« ,4.Tidewat Oil TImRB 1.80a TransWAir 1 very high cost per But we’re continuing our investi-kill” in the Viet Nam war. gation. A dispute between Bell and “It’s too early to close the the Arkansas Democrat, chair- books,” he added. man of the Senate Foreign Re- ------------------ lations Committee, enlivened the renewal of public hearings! C'rnchi Mlipfc into President Johnson’s Viet V-lvJoll nUllo Nam. policies. .....VO -V....... Fulbright, spearheading an PODf/OC MOtl 7.V 78 jSi + SiUcally one hour after the Senate! ^ y»“^ »>y Senate criUcs of 7 ^ convenes two days later. In this' f" “• * k"®* * ! !>«'*«« underlying the Viet j 80 794* 80 + V*!pasp it will he Tuesdav oinre no' **"'®*‘ «W*eer 0* Corn Prod- , Nam fighting, said that we are i ...... S Bi jS +Saturday. '‘k* ‘® beginalng to know what the |^ 124* 12V. m. -- Wj ★ * ★ But even if cloture were in- I 37^ 37V* +';f> has endorsed it. I 334* M4* M4* - Once a cloture petition f!!!! filed, the vote comes autonqa- (Qj, “I notice you frequently mention Corn Products and more about this company.” J.B. I A Pontiac man was injured in a two-car collision this morning war means In lives and suf- ‘h® intersection of East Pike fering for Americans and South Tasmania. 2, 254* 25 25'/. + 4i;voked. thcrc Still would bc a (A) Cpm Products is a great! So Vietnamese alike. IwSileZe'’wIThL^'inlaU? 21 M'/. 32W 55,I long row ahead of the bill. world food enterprise, interna- “Do you know how inany Viet condition in St Joseoh 4 M'/* 54 54 -V*| Each senator still would be livnal leader in corn refining Cong were killed l^t year?” w ^ ■T^27'/. 27'/. -'/*h“"'^^ distribution of'Fulbright asked the/witness. Driver of the other r-ar Ver 4j 2^ g + Jithe motion to take it up. packaged foods. With the excep- Bell said he did U have ex-' „„n SsSn M S IK N Pmv “ r fiPn-es. but he estimated It and elfas^ fr^rn TJ193^ ml*'i«'/*^4;|adopted and debate began on strike coupled with new prod- was nearer .30,00$ than the Il,- Z h2t^ ^ released from 19 ti’'* ^ If’® ®n unlimited uct introductions resulted in a 247 Fulbright said his commit- ___________ 3 “!* + ,, number of amendments could small decline — earnings have tee staff estimafed. a i i: offered and a second filibust- risen in every year of the past v matitg M i3vl 12J* 174* - '* er could be mounted before the decade. Dividends have also ■ 1 final vote. risen in nine of the past 10 —I- 12'* 12 F. 59H 594* - zi 33 324* 324* 54 II’/* 184* 184* -F 24 25'/> 25'/. 25'/j - 23 30V* 30V* 30V. 13 47'/. 47 -47'/* + 58'* 50'* -F - v»;Un Elec 1 12 ■ ''iOIIC»l 1.20 4 Pec 1.80 . -n Tank 2 * UnAIrL 1.50* MUTUAL FUNDS Keystone ferowth K-2 Mess. Investors Growth Mass. Investors Trust Putnam Groivth Television Electronics Wellington Fund Windsor Fund 117 12J ChrlaCIt 1. 33.3 34 2'Chry^.r 7 Bid Asked ClllesSvc I CBS 1 5 25 24’* 24V. - • 134 59'/* 5844 58'. 45 30'A 29’/* 30'* - S3 45'* 44'/* 45 * - 15'ii^ 30 51'/. —M- American Stock Exch. Figures atter daclmal oolnls ar* eighths! Col Gas 1.34 Col Piet .541 ComICre 1.80 ComSolv 1.20 Comw Ed 2 'Con’ldis 1.80 CbnElecInd 1 iCnNGos 2.30 IConsPow 1.90 Contalnr 1.20 n 2.40 Aarojet 50a Am Petrol A . ArkLaGas I. Asa mere Cirywlde" Rliy Data Coni • Equity Cp^ .lit noon coxBdeas .40 saiH Og 10 84, 8'/> 8HF '*; Cudahy PX 0 4 44'. 44'* 44'*- '* I Curtis Pub 19 2 5-16 2'. 2 5 16+114 Curl Wr 1 23. I», t*» 14*+ '* 26 27’, 27S* 27'*-! , 54 10'/ 104* 104*- 4* OanRIv 1.20b 44 9 7.16 9’, 9 7 I6 + 5-14I DaycoCp .50b 44 20'* 19'* 19’^- '* 'Deere 140a 45 I \ 7". « + '* Delta Air i 5 2'/ '2'/j 2);-M4 DenRGW 110 . ......... 15 27 24'/. 27 + 13 2'3 24, 2'/j 13 32V. 32«* 324* -t 73 474* 44'* 474* F 25 72 71'* 71',* 9 14’* 14V. 144* - 22 44’* 44V* 44’4 + 32 294* 29 294, + 39 50’/. 504* MV. + 2 38’* M'/> 38'/, 10 44’/, 44'/i 444* - 7 55’* 554* 554* + 4*;MacyRH 1.40 '/. Mad Fd 2 24e '* MagmaC 2.40 '* Magnavx 1.25 ’/•iMaralhn 2.20 '/.|Mar Mid 1.25 ’. I Marquar .5* '* ran'iuiir*'^ iMavDStr 1.50 >4 McCall .40b */$ MCDonA .60b •/^'McKms 1.70 ’/klMeodCp 1.70 46H 46^4 "1H • 60% 60% ..VW 45 91^ Uhl' cp oi? * .75 9W UGasC^ 1.7^ USBorax .BOa USGypsm 3a US Indst .12g U|^ Lines ,2b US 10 3244 324* 32V* 3 344* 344* 344* F 24 43’* 43'/* 43’* F 34 18’/. 184* 18’* F 17 39 374* 39 F 4 52'* 51’* 51’/s - > Rub w 22 29’* 294* 29’/, + VI ^ 4 l4'/3 144* 144* - '/.! 92 214* 2IH 214* - V*|Van»d C 29 S'* 354* 354* ’a!^*"* c! 34 58'* 5744 574* + W.VaEIPw 134 M'/4 M'/4 M'/. + '* it S:* Sv! l\ t X ]\ S 454* t H wIKwal —V— 5 314* 314* 314* 4) 2744 27'/. 274* I 35'/. 35'* 35'/. Ur, 1 37’. (a Mo Pac A . * Mohasco .80. * Monsan 1.40b MontDU 1.40 *!MontPow 1 48 '.IMontWard 1 *lMorrellCo 1b *; Motorola I *1mI5I TT 1.12 J 48 67 474* +1 WUnTel l.M f IT'* *)'* 1}'* + '* \ 264* 26'/. 241.-V V, 'JJ?^ 5 w’/i 5*'^ + J* wii!I^"'co 2 i 5',. xL, - r? wmnDix 1.32 > ^4* 32 40’* 404, 404* - 40 81'/. 797, 81',. F 5 224* 224* 224* ' 9 35’/, .35' 1 354* F 15 14’* 144* 164. NCashR 1.20b 1 254* 25' j —N— 71 78'; 7444 7 8'-. + V 13 52’i 52'/, 52’* - V 2 304, 304* 304, - V WoolwoL... . -- - Worthlngtn YngsISht 7en1th R •Z— 30 218'/. 217 27 41’* 41'/. -. .. 28 139V. 139 1394* - 4* The Associated Press "" Recornmend Lot Rezoning City planners have recom-^ mended a rezoning and an alley ' vacating for a future Pontiac State Bank branch on Pontiac’s north side. Commercial rezoning was recommended for two lots, one facing Madison and one facing Le-Baron, to the,east of the alley parallel to Joslyn. The City Planning Commission also recommended vacating the alley, which runa parallel to Joslyn between Madison and LaBarbn. Final approval is up to the City Commission. years, and price appreciation 44 2 11-14 2 1M4-1-14 Fly Tlg»r I 24( -4 27’* G>n Ddviil 13 S - Gen Plywd 2 10’* Giant Yel 40e 15 15 Goldfield 15 2 Mickey Air MeCrory wf Meed John . Mich Svger .1 Melybden New Pk Mng Pencdl Pet 4 ’ii'4 ii low- V* 2i4*tii , >v. IJ 12 32V, 32’/, 32'/* + ”J 13 334* 32’* 33 - W 3 41W 414* 414* ■ 234'* 234 234 r •* EatonYe 2.20 EdgaGG ?0g ElBondS 1.55 EIPasoNG 1 EmarRad .40 31 20 19** 19W+ '/. Evarshart >34 14'* 14'* 14'i 5 31V, 31V. 3I’*+ W , , , 24 8'/. 8'/. 8'/. FaIrCam X Cp .40 541 1104* 104'* 106’*F2V. Feirch H ,„...ilCor.75 32 14V. 144* 144* Ff"*"'*' Un Control 20 19 44, 44* 44, f '* F add Cor Copyrighted by The Assoclafad Press 1944 Syntax C week Aeo YeeT A|o“ 19«4 High TIM AttKiel Ind. Rolls Utll.Slecks pie "Pow i. siia 2W4 iwi 344:4 fmc’’cp'l "* “ FoodFalr .1 32.4 301.5 161.3 366. 31.9 197.6 1 70.1 364. m.4 149.3 111* 300.0 I7S.8 119 4 1(7.2 332.' 04.4 150.7 148.9 184. ;si«f..z 24 20'/; 20". 204* + '* '5 27W 17»* 27W + W to 477/1 47W 47’* 9 23’* »W l3’/\+ '/. 19 13 214* 224* 3 18’* 18’* 18’* • 23 43'/. 438* 43'/* + ' B 39 38’* 39 . 5 28’/. 28 28'/. + 20 M’* MW 504* + 10 43 42’/. 43 + 24 19'V 19 19W + ' 59 23 224* 224* — ' 2 84’* 44H 44'* + ' 10*75’/. 754* 754* - 5 80 80 10 19 23 2244 23 + 554 55W 554* 554* + _ 54 2444 24',4 2444 *■ 4* lit Utzt IlclalJ ► 'ibin‘r*“’annu' he last ouarler during the same period hasj||^^ amounted to 270 per cent. The shares did little in last year’s market, partly because of a temporary slowdown in earnings and partly because many sound, conservative growth stocks have been ignored in the rather speculative climate of 1965. Com Products’ foreign operations account for about half of profits. Share net is believed to have risen to around $2.45 for 1965 and the annual dividend was recently lifted* to $1.60 — where the curt-ent yield is three .per cent. Finally,' since the stock has had no important rise in 1965, I believe it should hold up better than most stocks when and if a decline sets in. This is a fine holding for the conserva-iive investor. I Boger Spear’s 4$-page Investment Guide is available to all readers of this col-Public hearings on a pair ofj umn. Clip this notice ~'knd Fulbright Muck by his estimate, and said the administra- rnplates spending a Area Woman Hurt in 2-Car Accident total of $15/8 billion in military and economic assistdbee to . South Viet Nam before this fls- A two-car collision on M59 at cal year ends. Pontiac Lake Road yesterday With il,247 Viet Cong killed, i resulted in the hospitalization of Wman said, “It works j a 29-year-old Milford woman, a very high cost per satisfactory corldition at yil»/ [Pontiac General Hospital is Bet- ’ / ,. ! ty Ann Motley of 632 Canal. Belj came back to say Viet I The other driver was Siegel deaths, in his recollecUon. w. Judd, 70, of Grand Rapids. somewhere in the neigh- ______________________________ • of 37,306. I News in Brief ‘I suggest you check the 9rd and get an accurate ihe, ” Sen, Frank J. Lausche, Waterford TdWnship police are lio, broke in to say. j investigating theft $f two books Fulbright said witnesses in of money orders from Perry the new hearings will appear by,Pharmacy, 4417 Elizabeth |.ake. invitation only and the sessions will continue "as long as they *^*arle Anderson, 2909 Wil-are fruitful.” Hams Lake, Waterford Town- ■ ' ._________ [ship, reported to Pontiac‘police I today theft of a coat, valued at Pontiac General Hos- rontiac Woman pm, 461 W Huron rezoning requests were ad-! send $!.$$ with your name |;|jour«ed one month for further and address to Roger E. N«wb«rry J NVCeDt 2.084 NligMR 1.10 NerllkWlt 4* Mi: iS Occld«nt .70b OhIoEdli 1.04 OlInMilb 1.40 Slil’b'i^Vr’HI IPkcGEI 1.20 I 2744 .G7'/7 2744 + 1 40 48 41 4 82'* 12 82 29 25’* 254* 2544 IS 13444 1341* 1344* + 20 MW Sw S’* + 2 ss s: »W ’b’JiS iS2i8?|1w ... 42’* 41H 42>* +1' 4 38'/* 28W 28'* — ' x32 404* 40 40 - 1 13 584* 58W 58W - « 33 214* 21 214* + ' JT lit S'* S4*Tii —p_ _____________________ 19 14'. 34'* 34'* - 4* P»nWi. (n—FortIgn l(i 42 27'4 27 27 47 124* 12 12 - '* ------------------- IS 254* 254* 254* + W 39* M4* 52W 534* +14* 4 40'* 40'/f -40'* I BONO AVBRA015 dVcr.r.iiSn.--s4“cwi"iT! P'*"®' ?'.*Vh» ITEM ADJOURNED Commercial ^rezoning for an office building at the southeast comer of Baldwin and Poplar was one it^ adjourned, while Residential-3 rezoning was also held up. The latter rezoning wai for an area bounded by Walton, Jaycee Park, Leheigh fand High wood. A 14$-nnH apait’ ment project la proposed for the area. lollowng lool^lei ^ r»fiT*plui tIocS dfvidend.''c-Liouldatlno dividand. d-D*elar4d or paid In 1945 plui Itock dividand. a-Daclarad or Mid so lar this yaar. f-P*yabla In slock during 1941 asfimalad caih valua on ai<+llvl-dand or ax-dlstrlbutlon data. g-Pald Jirt yaar. h-Daclarad or mW a«ar rtock dIvF dand or split up. k-^larad or P»l^ yaar, an aceumulatlva liiua ’»Uti dIvF . D*jiis4i^*? !ii!r*!jSrpi« dlvMand, t-PawTln tioefc.. during aitimatad ettb valua on ax-dividand dlslrlbt^on^ d^| i^'SrfAr.WrlS* Spear, in care of The Pontiac Press, Box 1618, Grand Central Station, N.Y.C., N.Y. 10017. (Copyright, 1966) Drowns in Bathtub Four coats and a pair of gloves, total value of $213, were reported stolen from Odhland A 21-year-old Pontiac woman University yesterday, accidentally drowned Ih the Poodle Beauty Salon. Owner, ‘ bathtub of her home yesterday Grace Stanley, Keego. 682-6401. Hotel Fire Is Fatal to 8 in Green Bay morning. Bernadette Ann Koenig, 794 Kenilworth; may have suffered an epileptic seizure, according to Pontiac police. She was found in the tub, halffull of water, by members of her family. - y|-ln’ bmkrilpley < ^ng rwrg*nlz«d und >rC 1.20d . ...J) 0 3.40P Phil* El 148 Phil Rdg 130 48 81'* St 18 75 74'* /4'* 13 '80H MP* 804* 14 35 W/, 35 9 5446 54'* 54'* 8:518:? 8:5 TiJ liM.uow 2 J • SK xii GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP)- Say City Man xK..Y.r.mq u., A series of amendments to the that de- ' r dty\ucV‘Sl5v K>n>ng ordinance were given fa- ®’^ thr^story Astor KjUgJ 5g|f )e Hr8rr.r™?‘'»!'>r: day after a long illness. MRS. AMOS L. BARNETT TROY —Service for Mrs. Amos L. (Emma) Barnett, 73, of 3011' Oakhill will be tomor- ilton Co., Birmingham. Burial; will be in Grand Lawn Ceme-j tery, Detroit. | Mrs. MacDonald died Tues-j day after a long illness. A for-j mer singer who used the profes-1 In the I Ana.,lSe,:ie\tsTe7e by the'«' "" ____________________"rliS^ldaUiburial in Perry Mount ParkiCeHa Olsen, Mrs. Shirl^^ Godhafdt Funeral Home ol the City Plan rComrtil.slon and »*I<1 Cpmpfprv land Mrs. Ruth AlUl Comwell, all X' Commla.ion I. hereby appointed to make cemetery. brother Harbor. ^i:'r.,;r.!onT.vToL\*to'??.Tu'biI? Moose Lodge No. 182 will con-Mrs. Barnett died yesterday mZr®.’Jdo^ted'’* pur'Tuam ® memorial service at 8 DANIEL M. MACDUFF 1 after a short illness, mi*« Amended”' *'’* P"!' ^ Pu^sley: Daniel M. Macduff of 155* Surviving are a son, Richard, Section 3. Funeral Home. YVolfe died yesterday. His bodyjE- of Troy; two brothers; a sis- noti^r or°the'*iime*^and pla^ oi”ihe Jub| Mr. Davenport died yesterday ig at the Voorhees-Siple Funeral^®*’! grandchildren. j iic ,h- Iinaj^^pas^ge^oijhi.: after a long illncss. He was a Home. i mRS. FRANK BUELL ■ member of the Friendly Gener-; Mr. Macduff was a retired en- v«it poRD Servire for Mrn * .l B.plin Church and Moose gineer ,1 Pontiac Motor K'lpyTmlncTefSl, 78 o"; . .. ,, *328 E. Liberty will be 3:30 p.m.! Surviving are his w^^ at the Richardson- Mide' 'end'oessed by_the City Com-l Rp„,,ip_ f„r RornaripHe . Bird Puneral Home. Burial will era!' clfJuli . ___ -f Pontiac, hbruary, A D. 1*64. WILLIAM H. TAYLOR, JR n„ct tan' Lodge. vision. dale oli , I fission of! BERNADETTE ANN KOENIG ^ i Requiem Mass for Bernadette Choiniere’'or Stiliwater, Minn.; . . „ . roa^niorv Ann Koenig, 21. of 794 Kenil-g son. George of New York City; be in Oak Grove Cemetery. Mayor Worth Will be 9:30 a m. Monday gnd six grandchildren. PUBLIC AUCTION Mrs. Buell died yesterday af- OLGA BARKELEY gt St. Michael’s Catholic Church " a '‘’"8 She was a ^ with burial in Mt Hope Ceme- MRS. RALPH L. OSTRANDER member of the Milford Metbo- ^tery ' Service for Mrs. Ralph L. ^ "m**‘?n . Elliabeth Laka Road, Pontiac, Mich., a The Rosary will ^ recited at (Grace 1.) Ostrander, 69, of 3257,. c . wm ii*"sow P'"’ Sunday at Donelson-Coventfy, Waterford Township,' Surviving ^sides her husband to highest bidder. Stereo may be In- Johns Funcral Home. ;will be 1 p.m. tomorrow in Coats ® * sbeced at above addresv ^ ^ yesterday. Funeral Home, Waterford Town.*a Norm®n Mor-^ lAn X-ray technician, she was a ship, with burial in White Chap-'Sa" ® , -----o* c . r: .._ _ '^grandchildren; and two great- The following c PUBLIC AUCTION • told i ih. rik Michael’cs Church, el Memorial Cemetery, Troy. , --------— -"I Surviving are her parents, Mr. Mrs. Ostrander died Wednes- grandchildren. iardl*“ii7*V*kJ St? PwtiK,"'‘/wch?»m!and Mrs. Anton Koenig; a broth- day. 1*61 Dodo* 4-Dr., green Serial 3J163364 |---------------» - - 1*53 Buick 4-Dr. Serial 4A1I03IJ3 PUBLIC AUCTION l*S« Chev. 3-Or..black Serial C56FI736II On February 7, 1*66 at 10:00 a m. 1*51 Merc. 4-Dr. Serial 54463041/ 30* N. Park Blvd., Lake Orion, Mich., The above cars do not have a Michigan, 1*63 Chevrolet Cory. 537. Serial Title ■ 30337W3**M7, ................- Twenty-seven other vehicles with MIchl- Auction lor c___ gen Titles will also be sold at this sale, may be Inspected February 4, 1*66 Februar PERRY T. DANIEL MRS. LOYAL C. RILEY I AVON TOWNSHIP - Service Cory 537 Serial No Service for Mrs. Loyal C. ‘‘>r Peny T. Dpniel, 64. of 3082' ' ^ “}‘'hid*ier'’''r« >o,E.ry .p..a,se.s Go^Sle FOR THE RIGHT MAN. AP- co«n,y: U«d Car Porter PLY TO PONTIAC PRESS „uam!'® BOX NO. 69. .1 «.^n,.*Aop^ \"%a?;SnnarDt^ ^’’^Main sfTlirk,.on"^Nj ‘^riw-:5J-°LjlUf''°*NTS,‘-lL.| HoSTa, IsT*-'"" ISiyT Of f^rry. RE MOO E I --------------------------steady . paKT time work 6! Help Wonted Female 7 loABY SITTER TO LIVE IN. CARE ! lor 3 children, motharlaai home, '“I-1 phone FE H063. Help Wonted FemoU r'v" I AVRPa-----IbABY SITTER.'viCINITY aUbuRN 3M-3M7 “ Ave 335-50IN. - ---------— A^A Auburn Rd R WEEKENDS . ruung man M to 35 lek—car necessary Id Company—64a-Ma3 facto^, business aV^a -RETIREES WANTED: FULL AND PART 1 bartender. Broiler man. App person. Rotunda Country Inn, Pine Lake Rd„ Orchard Lake WELDERS-HELPERS I completely! must enloy, . Bloomfield I BOOKKEEPER TO TAKE CHARGE office, must be axparlancM rough trial balance and Gov-nmanl reports, permanent in, call for appointment, wd Housekeeping' Shop of PORTER NEEDED URGENTLY Must be sober, dependable and willing to put In a good day's work. This Is a good iob lor someone willing to work. See Mr". Massey at: STATE WIDE AUTO 3400 Elizobeth Lk. Rd. ________FE 8-7137_______ PRODUCTION GRINDER TOOL LATHE HAND MAINTENANCE HELPER • MIDDLE^AGE PREFERRED SALESMEI)! Full Time Position Selling In Carpet Area EXPERIENCE DESIRABLE BUT NOT ESSENTIAL . ;• Apply in Person I Employment Office j Hudson's , Pontiac Mall I P«- YOUNG BARBER Oft APPRENTICE inetits. _to start, Feb. 14th, Ballard's Barber Shop-138 Baldwtfi, Pontiac. I See BUI Bennett at shop._ YOUNG MAN "26” to 2$, GOOD education who wants to get <' Am willing to train and e< to^a^sition wheee he can business Irotti a Wgh qualSi Overtime, fringes, day M. C. Mfg. Co. Ill Indlanwood Rd. Lake Orion ------------------------ An Equal Opportunity Employer ; SHIPPING CLERI rpiS' ^“art ng wages: S13S BETWEEN AGES OF • driver salesman lor on agents, Clarkston. For details call ^ tact ^lAuPe Lesse ip stylist. 682.0421. Wnd" rial balance. Exparianca contracts prafarrad. GENERAL. EX- Curb Waitresses Ted's restaurant has openings loi curb waitresses day and nighi shift. Most be II, uniform ano nneals furnished, top wages with tips. Paid vacation, insurance ben afits. Apply In person only. . TED'S WOODWARD AT SQUARE LK. RD, HOUSEKEEPING A Ifting while mother r from 'a broken leg. H^ Wontod M. or F. SURGICAL technicians . ■... S| Woiitod N^sokay GooiA^ il PIECE OR HOUSEHOLD. PIANOS. I M. C.llpparB~FE »7WI. 87^0414, after 7.PM. tAIOS, HOLIDAY INN OF F jK-c^tlOl S. Talegraptr. P MA-TURE baby SITTER, fransportaflon, 5 days. 852-3H3. MATURED LADY, LIVE IN, MORE for home, some wages. (^11 5:30 p.m., 852-2615. ^ MATURE WOMAN TO CARE FOR OFFICE Permanent opportunities 'for ■ following positions: Billing Machine operator Typist General office clerk Good working conditions, Va tions, and discount privileges. . Apply Pers< X-Ray Tachniciant Position available Immediately registered X-ray technician In C oral Hospital. Good salary, liberal benefits. Graduate technician would be considerad also. Contact Personnel Office. St. Joseph Mercy Hos- §1181, Pootlat, - call 338-9111, e*t. 37, between ♦ '" -------- Soloi Holp, Mola-FowoU 8 A d Sc rt tim contiei ilg^'s Fastest Appraisers o ptrsonn«f - " — fic oppor Spies time. TarrF opportunity to ' ....... YORK, One of Growing Real Estate ........ .... '—*“• Drayton Plains, to qualified. Office, located Pleis^ of“*MK.. , Start Immediately your chr— ' 674-0383. PROFESSIONAL. PHONE SOLICITORS mission. For n CASHIER r dining room with hostess e> rienca. Night shift. Apply at Bii y Restaurant, 20 S. Telegraph. .CHECKER time position for e Heitors to work from 0 Apply Room 705, Pont REGISTERED PROFESSIONAL NURSES LICENSED PRACTICAL NURSES duty, $4.00 j»r shift, w ferentlal. Sloo per we< Help Wonted Female Young Men ' Move Up with one of Michigan's fastest Rowing andjargest retail necessary, married men 30 to 3S, years old. with two or more years of college pre----- --------j husfle night duty, $3.00 per shift. Personnel Dept., Pontiac ( Hospital. _______ PRODUCTION WORKERS Millwrights Electrjcions Pipefitters Maintenance Welders Machine Repair ' packaging and crating; i express and truck shiprr have potential to learn p I e t e dapartment fun; minqham area. Call Ml , steady FULL TIME CLERK, FOR i ?reigh' ''rates ° clafm '"f•“'*1'’®' ! swer giving experience, yunmica-Press Box**" **P«itn, ^SISTANT DRAYTON R'IliABLE BABY“SlfTER,-5 DAYS^ of'*!£^no"is:,"k w*rr;*=\i;i'ii *■ “*• „ . _ ? y £on'hac_Pre*ss*BM^ ” .fO” :'-'GHT ferred, enthusiasm s re important. If yoi rt ahead fast, this I: J do it. We sore stores ays. tanagement positions $^1,000 ^. 673 6758;_____________ LADIES, 3 EVENINGS PER Interesting, profitable ............................... f opening 4 RON RALSTON general sales manager World Wide Home Furnishings In; necessary. Call FE l-l SILK FINISHER, FULL TIME, steady work, top pay, apply at Leslie Custom Cleaners,' 32716 Franklin Rd. at 14 Mila Rd. 626- worklng conditions and merit creases In salary. Please send y< resume to Box No. 79 for a pron reply. : AUTO. ACTIVE HOUSEWIFE WAITRESS SALESWOMAN 9 per month while learning » field Professioniil tralnlhg. I lerience needed. Call 674-2K.., ______________________p.m. tonight. Full or part time. Used Tar Porter aT^n-^^^y-^"JoV - ^ r*!' wllMng ^M. D^My. 673-0007.________ my Thompson, "sa?«^MBnIger/ATTENTION RN'S Oncl^ LPN'S I ShHto^ Ponftac-Boick, 8S$ S. Roch- OPENINGS. CALL 338-7154 WANTED- roofers: LOTS OF ■—*• top pay. Call 673-9590 or 338- 9 to 5:30 p.m. Call alter 6 _ _ - p m. or weekends. 333-4)37. i ^ $UPPUS$ - igtffPMtNt Dressmaking, Tailoring 5I.D-; ALTERATIONS ALL TYPES, t |j ALfERATIONs" ' Heating Supplies ■‘FiTsT“\mlfY^'-i'y®'^‘^' . heating, sewer, ur8L reas prices. 683-1814 water hne installation. 338-0643. ----- RETAIL PLUMBING rencing | and heating supply Parts and Replacements PONTIAG FENCE CO. ”Aye,----------------------- ^soywi ;n.”°r«n. _ _OR 3-6595 Floor Tiling ^ Basomant Watarproofing Ial's , tiles. . free, .estimates, “H°s,.vrLakfTe^:';ph“\";t'u, JOHNSTONE WALL REPAIR ~ " ramT^^^^ Rental Equipmant Building Modarnization fToof”Swding youraal.. „ FE 4-3177, ArchHocturol Drawing NEW HOUSE AND RE6 plana drawnt. 363-6508. DEPENDABLE' WOMAN NEEDED - cTe^I^:, SECRETARY Work Wanted MuF“ COOK^NG.^HOURsj ^relary position available. Typ-' KEEPING ING AND______ ___ SOMEWHAT FLEXIBLE. SHOULD! HAVE OWN TRANSP. CALL AF- quale' TER 6:30 P.M. TO ARRANGE FOr' — INTERVIEW. MUST HAVE REFS. Wonted Miscellaneous WantodJi^lURt 32 3 OR 3 BEDROgM, FAMILY DESIRkS S OlbkOOM REASONABLY PRICIIL- Apartment wanted, preferably Watarford Township, for iln businessman with good |qb, I.. nllhed, or unfurnished. Call OR 3-3016 avanings after 6. SINGLE LADY WANTS 4 ROOliA flat. Occupancy not later than May I. 331-9101. AAonday through 2 MONTHS RENT Rnflji^ANetED ....... H^ fumliha' ilapd: 873-1391, YOUNG EXPECTING COUPLE DE-Sira Furn. or partly Furn. apart-----• OR 4-1261 Shore living Quarters 33 Wanted Jteql Estate^ ITOsb Dally ‘HI I MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE BUY FARMS AND ACREAGE, any size. 3015 Franklin Rd., Bloom-fleld Hills. FE 2-2164. -L. Smith. ___11 IE OR| 646-8797. DIETITIAN ----------- liberal benefits. Con-iCARPENTiER WORK, ADDITIONS tact Personnel Dept. St. Joseph! or sma|^ lobs. FE 8-2198._____ ??rixL“2*37*U'’,;;n*'9 ?fJl ’.S I SITUATION FOR CHILDLESS COU-Background In Institutional dietat- P'* wRR husband employed ' or home economics. Apply' northwest - rs,w>_______A n___4t_. Z*1J \ \A/nm«n tt PerBonnel Department Pontiac G#n-i Dining Room Waitresses Detrolt-Pontiac ________ keep house and baby ----- J weak. Separate furn. pay own utilities. Must have car. Recant rat. Apply Pon- ). "Call Milford, 887-5475 attar license. 674-0225. SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS Cl O.SFni and fireplace - Waltreaaaa apply ti"....... ' *...... . ....... rmingham. Ml 4-I0II I CEMENT WORK waltres The r fork part tli BLOOMFIELD FASHION SHOP __ PONTIAC MALL________ f'ice']obs,'' Day and' riighf' 'shHI TRIAL BALANCE BOOKKEEPER, available, Insukance benefits, peld experience In payroll, pay- vacation. Apply in person aniy. ables, receivables, billing and cost, TED'S ---------------------- WOODWARD AT SQUARE LK. RD. I Rochester Paper C 'ALTERATIONS, IRONINGS AN6 sewin^g^ FJ 5-8547^________________ HOUSECLEANING, $10 A C Need transportatlen. OR 4-1074. YORK WAITING. FOR FURTHER DE TAILS OF OUR UNIQUE GUARANTEED SALES PLAN CALL OR 4-0363 CASH 48 HOURS LAND CONTRACTS-HOMES . WRIGHT 2 Oakland Av»._FE ^91 FOR GENTLEMEN. CLOSE'TO DOWN-lown. No drinking. 24 Norton ' FE 2-1771 MAlOr SERVICE. COFFEE, CAR. patad. TV, telaphona. Sagamore Molal, 789 NICE ROOM FOR GENTLEMAN SLEEPING ROOMS F 1, Pontiac. 8S2-4959. I With I Rent Farm Property MODERN 300 ACRE DAIRY F “ ‘“4, 6 ml. S. of Itpfor, i collacf Flint CE 5%P3. Rent Stores Rent Office Sppie InI office FdR RfST . small shopping canter. Call Tom Bateman or Jack Ralph C — ^t BvvlMit Property 47-A ATTENTION DOCTORS! FOR LEASE Available now. Approximately ... clarksfon.**^* cmi'lunetlon'^ wl^ an operating dental sulfa. Paved parking area. 4 treafmant rooms. Private office. Business office and Ir-conditloned. Reasonable rental arrangements Ci NORTH POINT REALTY . »04 S. Main Clarkston tA 5-2341 . MA 5-1582 KEEGO HARBOR Office space — former city offices - Ideal for beauty shop, professional offices of other — BEDROOM RANCH kitchen with snack I room, carpeted living attached garada and corner loi, Elizabeth heat, 2 car oara^? cEim to sforat and schopl. Only 810,500 and farm STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE 2661 S. Lapeer Rd. 628-1080 338-0000 ka Orion 573-7(>So Roch-j I DRAYTON PLAINS-WATERFOR6'WAITRESS. NIGHTS, FULL TIME.'IRONING, ONE DAY SERVICE. 3 young ladles needed Immediately! Apply In person. xHuron Bowl Donna Holcomb. FE S-7917.____ Sr __________________ SECRETARY AWAY7 b?plnS'7nrpUr;n*,*i','3ngS*A^^^^^^^^^^ ------------ hour Guar, plus bonus. CaS Korry.i .y".Lo4V“cuit:T lor school rhllrirvo I in o m lo a;”*".'*®” WA_NTEO, DAY SHIFT. CALL TODAYI ______MANPOWER-^-8386 _____ WOMAN wants' BABYSITTING OR for school childr Dalaney. F*^’ Drug-Cosmetic Sales housewrk. 332-3519. Ca'il' Mrs.l : Coney Island., 1651 S. Tale- Busineil ServiCB FE 3-9120._______* I ELECTRIC motor SERVICE-Rf pairing and rewinding. 318 E. Pika. Phona PE 4-3M1 T» - north OR WEST ience preferred. Call Mrs. ,...n from 7 to 3. 651-9381.__ EXPERIENCED^GIRj-^^^FOR SMALL i*334’’45“2" * EXPERIENCED WAITRESS. APPLy In person. DeLlsa's, 6980 N. Roch- ertei^Rd.' Roch^ler. ______ EXPERIENCED NURSES AIDES —' ‘-lusekeeper for nursing home, MI5 between 9 and 5 onl^. WAITRESSES Dining Room and Curb Eull or part-tima. Paid vacaliont. Hospitlllzation. Lunch hour and food allowanca. Apply in person. BIG BOY RESTAURANT Telegraph 8, Huron or _plxle Hwy. & Silver Lake Rd. WAITRESSES ' PART Credit Advlion DEBT A Dreismaking I tailoring 17 nights. 674-0424 after 7 p. Immadiale openings. WAITRESSES FULL AND PART time, dish washer full time ' ply In person Rotunda Inn taurai anted, d, incama Tax Sarvict 1 HOUR OR MORE SPENT ON , each tax form to bring you "* maximum savings, free pick uz delivery to your home, average Restauroiiti EXPERIENCED PARTY PLAN DEALERS , Are yeu looking tor tomething dif- Playhouse Compony, Inc. World's largest TOY distributor | Is looking for women to supervise dealers to sell toys August to De-“0 delivery. - ■ S5 LONG FORMS PREPARED ANO IS needed. Paid whiia youj ilforms and meals fur-' None .higher except businesses, lid vacation and hn.pitxi.l C«0fB8 E. Lyle, FE 8-0252. kpply 725 Hunter Blvd. $5 LONG FORMS PREPARED Experienced____________OR 3-3332 possible discounts. Call 683 1830. Ask lor Ted McCullough Sr. ARRO REALTY __5143 Cass Ellzabeth Lake Road_] Cash Buyers ! For Homes and Farms. ELWOOD REALTY Beauty Crest OPEN 2 to8 Dally 6 to 8 Sunday $15,550 TRI-LEVEL LONIAL -"BEAUTY - C R E S Cholda RANCH - CO. 500 (plus II ilka The*" CRESTS'"' RANCH, ”tHE *ItAtV-S?Li?°L‘E°V*'^f.‘- " Coma ou' checkbook. (Airport Road batw willfama Lake Road). BY OWNER: 1W-STORY HOUSE, .......I on large lot. Sea or can all day Sat. UL 2-5121. ............ i'BRICK F----------- home, built lust for fha owner with extras you don't get In 8 production built home. Anderson Insulated windows, extra high base-, menf with rouble floor loisfs, 'plastered walls, extra large lot and all good sized rooms. Just two miles from 1-75, walking distance to a nl£a shopping area. Priced right at $16,500. Quick possession. Mrs. Green Phone 682-3074. FAMILY TAILORED HOMES dverfised on the Today and Tonight 814,900 •rca Rd. -..... to Glengar,, DIorah Building Co. Take Commerce Rd. to S. Coitv “ilengary, (2 milea). ulldTng C :lng^ a formal d the 15'x23' living room.’ The Into-nor of this magnltlcahl home was recently remodeled, using plens b' • f90lstered erchltect. 870.000. Terms. L-208. Call 0 M S. Main St. I BEDROOM, DEN, 2 BATHS, CASS *-it home 535,000 FE S-4TI9 3-BEDROOM I Lake front, sandy beach, 50x200' lot, Cyclone fence, large mod. kitchen, stone fireplace. $24,900-25 per cent *”*"fLATTLEY REALTY 620 Commerce____________363-6911 3 B E D R 0 0 M, TRI-LE7EL,~I'/1 I bath, brick" and aluminum. Lot _____toi itw _____I 60x120. $16,500. 682^6636. _ NEED 200 listings 3 FAMILY-ORFoN-NICE INCOME ■ ‘ __FE 37061 -Ally Raalty-6739701. PONTIAC 6 BEDROOM HOMET SOUTH SiOE, RENTING $5§ Mo. Excluding faxai and Insurance ONLY $10 Deposit WITH application‘s Sfhar' *•$» il tern kitchen w . Cell ) _OR 4-2222 or FE 34619_ QUICK CASH FOR YOUR HOME OR EQUITY WE BUY, SELL, TRADE B LIST CLARK REAL ESTATE 101 W. HURON FE 37881 _______RES. FEjy8l3____ SPOT CASH FOR YOUR EQUITY, VA, FHA, OR OTHER. FOR QUICK ACTION Sik*- haostrom realtor. OR 4-0358 OR EVENINGS VACANT LOTS ANO HOUSES Wanted in Pontiac end Waterford. Immedllte closing. REAL VALUE realty, 626 9575, Mr. Davis. we'need listings' IWANTED: FULL AND PART TIME ALL BOOKKEEPING AND INCOME bartender. Apply in person, Ro-, Tax Service. Trained In latest ‘ tunda Countrv Inn 3330 Pint Lake' revisions, 10 years experience. Rea-1' , ---------- ------------ Blr-'i-.fv, Apartments, Furniihad 37 I reliable babyiltter. Light house- -'"k and Ironing. 5 days. 7 a:m. E FE 30602. I IDES. 2-ROOM-ANO-BATH. ON LAKE -tonabla rafas For service In air I°*’“* Nwy. 6232546. minVam, Pontiac, Waterford areas^ ___y. J. SourlaJ.___ BOOKKEEPER ANDj Itant, reasonable ratN FLOOR SANDERS POLISHERS WALL PAPER STEAMERS ri e.eirn POWER SAWS Ite Immediately for Erickson. Seles V 1 STOP BUILDING, SERVICE.! CARL Remodeling, Recrea- R~Gr5NYDER~FL66R”L7mNG tion rooms, roofing, go- _»»nOlng and finishing. FE 30592 rages, all storms and •*‘ll*'din;*:nTtinirh‘inT332‘-.6^T^^^^^ screens, aluminum siding, ieonard's floor service ' l can jack, free estimates, up to 20 25 yrs°'?x',JS?ienr.**Mw^^^^^ c'r^i^VTON-'RooFiNG company, yeors to pay. Vermett 8i» Fnrnaca Repair Insu^ranca and^o«m, 673-9397. avsue ,0 mas.er me 100.i young-riny ~re iT~c7ip unia Sons Builders, FE 8-61.15, HOT TAR FLAT ROOFS, SHIN- w;I.^*?u*iiy*«n«*i*i;, '&! ~ OR 3-9590. 2110 Dixie. _ "’umiy Heaimg. 674.2166 , ' GLES AND^EPAIRS, LARGE «"ecte5**r Mr'*'Bl.n*d"‘*29(»T! assess Xn*ty"li« 3-CAR GARAGE, $899 OIL AND GAS SERVICE. FURNACE ftp CM A| I ocotaco ' Olanwood Rd. Lake Orion. i 51!.^ S ** adva^emenl ADDJTIONS,*^ MOREYS -682 1810; . _^0R SMALL, 852-1450- 'exFeWn-ced SWITCHBOA-Rb OP. -------- -........ 0 nuVvLLLANER 952 Joslyn Open Roofer V '*f^OO^feEPAIRS ' 3-9590.'''" LONG FORMS PREPAREO-Indlvldual and business. ■---- Call FE 30602. ________3-4121. ______ :i WOMAN FOR HOUSEWORK I OR 31628 ________[ IWOMAN FOR BAB'r, sTtTING AND ^housekeeping, Drayton area.!sjoNEyCROFT NURSING Convaloscant-Nursing 7-3 PM, 3|J_______________________________ area. OL WOMAN FOR KITCHEN. APPLY';;----------------------------- . ._i B'» Dixie Moving and Trucking Bend^roiyPE 37833.___ BEDROOM BRICK, WE3T SIDE, i» brokws. M2-U83. _ ROOMS, a*TH AND BASEMENT,! new furnace, k-**'"' ----- , . .WORKING COUPL'E, NI»HT SHIFT, AA AAnuiMP Of growing man-'desires baby titter for children, AA MUVING 1. Requisites in- 3 and 6 years to live In or out. Careful, enclosed vent, Insured, . ^rsonallty, neefi Judah Lake Subdivision. FE 38187 low rattt, fraa atllmaltt, UL ^appearance, Intelli-' • • —— — BOB'S VAN SERVICE MOVING AND STORAGE LOVELY APARTMENT Clean, 3 rooms, private anfr and bat^ carpeted. Clota ib d... town, off street parking. Middle aged couple prafarrad. No chllortn' or pats. FE 2-7007. : 3237 SIGNET newly decoratad, la^ garage, I'/S andscapad. Easy terms, Im late possession. 814,500. T3PEN SAT. AND SUN., I TO . Silver Lake Const. Co. 332-0092. 7 ROOM HOME MILFORD-CLOSE TO X-W. PROVING GROUNDS AND .w, WIXOM PLANT. FAMILY rS 1'T BATH, 7'^ CAR GAM' SHEPMD'S I _ OtA-Ktl ________ ■ AUBURN'HEfGHTS BUIiAeR'S MODEL 3 bedroom. Basament. 3 car at-tachad garage. Ready to move In. Price 816,950. Haven't Lane off Grey Rd. Bet. Auburn and Adams Rd., 853 3340. After 5 p.m . 852-1 5052. Nawmayer Bulldl^._ I BARGAIN ~ ' I OKAY W OPEN DA.. ------------------- OR COME TO 290,fiENNETT NEAR BALDWIN REAL VAL^E REALTY Clarkston lmmadjdt« Action Call FE 5-3^76 626-9575 IvlI^M on! WEIR, MANUEL, SNYDER & RANKE r garage. Poatetslon In April, -ah Lake Etfalat. Call attar m. FE 35993 _______ BREWER REAL ESTATE WM. B. MITCHELL, Salei Mgr. I E. Huron FE 45181 Evat. Mr. Gragery, FE 35219 _ HAYDEN 3-BEDROOM TRI-LEVEL IMMEDIATE CASH . I FOR HOUSES, FARMS, ACREAGES ' LAND CONTRACTS, EQUITIES 1 ROBERT TOMPKINS__ 3782«|x GRAVES CONTRACTING NEW ROOFS, REPAIRS,'insured • _an<^ guaranlaed. CairTon^8«-6543. j |ROBER1 PRICE ROOFING, BuIlT-i upj^llng. Fred EsL FE 4-1034. I ROOFSEnEW, RfFAl'R ~ General Mainlenance 682-644o| insurance ollice ZoZ j ment, top wages. Taylor AganCy Sand-Gravel-Dirt fringe benellls. FE 2-9349. resume giving age, training and ,, experience, Pontiac ^ast Bo^ 99. H [girl e\perienced in GEN^R. ' f Davis Dry Cleaners, I All types of remodeling, _ -we don i b^J--FE 3 kitchen cupboards, addi- landscaping tions, attic rooms, recre- c.Rcp.irF wnnn csirwu pmw' ! '®f *»s< ation rooms, ' aluminum L"®: 'fucking, end loader FE 8 2205'' ■ Snnd-Cravel-Dirt GTRf'goR'ribHf^^ Siding, rooting. Free esti- Lumber 'gravel and dirt delin^ry I w w. Hur mates^ No down payment. y,,«ot'T lumber ' ................................ ^ G & M Construction Co.,! »«rvlc#r wood or ^ FE 2-1211. 86 N. Saginaw. Tree TriiAming Service *Sn**cI5 “*''‘"9 ""•* S»®™»«_JeBL TREE TRIMMING, REMOV- . rr“ee*E"sttS^';X^ SMITH MOVING CO ' 1 3*5to"*" ‘"'• CARPENTRY AND REPAIR WORK *"^ «**" ~ s __________OL 1-1255 _ Nursery—Doy Care COMPLETE REMODEUNG SERV- ^ Ice, kitchen cabinets, addlllont, ■ EDUCATION AND CARE iiHi-Kinu --------------- concrete. work, brick and block. Special lor Working Mothers - , urep . .tt menu, *.tmL,;*“;fdrnt'’*roo'i?n^ ' "b*'. ..HfULING AND RUBBISH. NAME I Swamped with work N.«5 2 ladies no dewn payments LapTalt ConsL Pointing and OeCOroting U?ow price. Any jme_. FEJ4095. 1® *" FE 2-2500. LIGHT MOVING. TRA'sh HAiifFn I PAINtiNG AND reaiOT^ble. FE 4-1353 PAPER4HANGING i M. or F. ACCOUNTANT WRIGHT REALTY* ,^ut man^ LIGHT HAULiNO^'t^'MoviNa |Aportmenti, Unfurnished 38 fe 29141 Ews.*ai*I? fe 315111 LOCAL MOvIng! i PIECl OR'' ® E D R 0 0 M APARTMENT. Rt-! BIRMINGHAM houseful. M. C. LIppard, FE 5-7933. *'®''®' OP'Y-I File* reduced, must sail. 3 bad- ,FE ________________ ! room ranch. Flr*t raasonabit otter AND 2 BEDROOM, NEW. NEARI accepted, immadiale occupancy Mall. Air and sound conditioned.! 847-4013_______, ReMa’?r8for“Adull?om'v*^N«*M^^^ Bl^OMFIELD h1lLS-VACa'nT“ petlng. all bultt-lns. 2-ca'r attached > Painting and Dacorating 23 AND PAPERING. YOU _ _Orval Oldcumb, 8730496. iAPPLICATIONS NOW BEING' AC*| *’No**fo'b*^ " canted for motor rniii. Hriu.r. erlesa home. Love children, complete charge, live In. Apply Box _______________________ 73 Pontiac Press._______________________________ expert tree SERvTcE, trim- QRILL and COUNTER WAIT-I ming and removel. 334-0066. ------ ------------------- ---- — Trucking .. Y'!'®?' FE'2-6006. HIITER NORTH SIDE-axc. 5 roc ‘—‘1, all large rooms, i new gas furnace, 3 I. 810.500, terms. 'a*llowlnca'*l)I"Mdil'!5ni’’*'''''^'N^ REASONABLE, FRE ■ Iiuwence in^a«ilian| .,..oun isas apply Pauls Hamburger 332{>eauTY S . Telegraph Rd. 785 Pontiac Trail I'mala or l Walled U- ' - - - portunity for retiree supplement to present Income. Call FE 392n or^FE 39273. The $83 to $111 Mo. 424-7228 or 547-8454. II Corp. quick poasesilon. 8)3,150 and up. CALL.B, C. HIITER, REALT()R, 3792 fliz. Lake Rd. FE 2-0179, altar 8 p.m. 613-6437. Carpentry trior bnd exterior, afllc _______ _ . FE 8-0095. _ LIGHT MOVING, TRASH HAULED KITCHENS, RECREATToN room's *' .....-------------------------- ^d .family roorm^FE 4.94^ THOMPSON _ , _ EXTERIOR LIGHT AND HE'AVY TRUCI^G, ^uaran7e.d.'Te.,o*n’ra•'r:^.s.*£l^ ^r^^^ F*E~*«: „ ...... __________iiNTERLAXES PAINTING AND DEC-' INTER OR FINISH, KITCHENS,! orbing. Al work. OR 4-389, F*e"'file's'** -! PAINTING"ANb^ECbRATTNG: — - - Call alter 4 p.m., FE 2-8284. ’AINTItfG, PAPERING. CAULK'i reas. rales, Tom 343-...... I ^Mbvl. 349-0822. i BRICK, block, ccaaeut cidc ' *t___ » t ' t---------- n-Ton BRICK, BLOCK^ CEMEitT |p,^No VUNIlio AND REPAIRING Cement and Block Work I------------- Guinn's Construction Co. FE 4-7677____ Eves FE . *.‘2‘S5'’:S Fuller I ^006 home than ISFkEEP^R-TO LIVE BLOOD DONORS » URGENTLY NEEDED -I Positive X Nag. 87.00, 810.00 - I. DETROIT BIOOD SERVICE Pontiac " ' 343 -Wide Track C TransportatioR DRIVE A NEW CADILLAC TO NEW York City, Philadelphia, gat al-■--------- 6736944. bafhi. Larga IlyPng room with sliding glass door leading to rtdwood-scraenad pal-lo; fully’' equipped kitchant. Cement Wark BLOCK, CEMENT, FIRE-' ' Fj Piastering Service " * pair*"?IY2*7o|***' ***° **'■ Truck Rental Trucks to Rent rRu'cKS - tractor's" **' ANO EQUIPMENT Dump Trucks - Saml-Trallari Pontiac Form and Industrial Tractor Co. 825 S WOODWARD YOU'RE GOING TO CALIFOR-„ nia, deliver a lata modal car for 00 MOiM Motors, 1)50 Oakland Avt. - 3319261.__________________ FF l-eexs RIDE-FROM ST HOSPITAL RD TO w Pontiac Wall. 5 days a weak. 9:X '-a"p m ' J?JJ® ___ ________Wad V p.m.-7 p.m. RIDE WANTED FROM COltNER COOK. EXPERIENCEb. DAYS - ®,Il3 WaltMi to BjlOwIn Ptrt-tima waitress, nights. " “ X ,» B .7 ■ 0l«l"»8lhar, nights. Apply 8 3:M P.M._ _ I Pizza, 819 Woodward. Pontiac. HELP NEEDEOr »*n *t?enipurleliuii*^*?[*i' Vooctwli RO_____ -FEli 36437._____________________________ HOUSEHOLD HELP. 2 TO 2 DAYS. Experience, tranaportatlon and raf-arencas needed. Franklln-Long Lk. Area. Call after 8 o.m^M^3S4*4. HOUSEKEEPER, LIVE IN COUN- .... -----------------,j lid vacation Must drive Ceramic Tiling . _ _ A-l PLASTERING, EXPERT PATCH NEW ANO REMODELING WORK 7® y»«f* «»P 332 9554 MlibJi"Zb-5lK*’‘*' *"* ‘ ,EST'.«*TES Open Dally Including Sum € Wall Cltanari have recent ___________ _ lo slart^FE 30042. HOUSEWORK. 3' 6aY$. S32.' 1-344] adults. Own transp. rot. MA 6-7031 t I IBM'KEY PUNCH OPERATOR ' ---Applicants must have high schoi education, previous key p u n c I experience, and be witling I work afternoons. Apply Personni CLEANERS '’•®' ■ P*"'l8c General Hospllel. ■ “ IMMEDIATE OPENINGS IslerOd technologists. Starting _ ary depending on qualifications and axperlance. Apply Personnel Dept., Pontiac General Hospital. OFFICE MACHINES SALESMAN —' general line office suppllaa printing salesman. Must be ht' ! 21 and a high school graduala. | ood opportunity In an asfab-expandl^ btuInMS. - Home Owners, Insurance Terms Available STOP IN TODAY Anderson & Associates FE 4-3535 1044 Joslyn BIRMINGHAM - ONE BEDROOM nearly new. Applla- —-"'lonlng. eak guar ral PrInI tjy. IJLW ^ professional OEMONSTRATOR. _ f*'rlniihg'ai^”bffrca'**?upp*n« I'-W- Ljwranca. fontlac. 335^9241. --- ---- ---- FI 37181. “cora^? oVoT r&ra* "MT^iFJlEra ■ iL^** Ji'"'a£L:a •Pplltncw ano DlVia It ---- . B & B Auction ELIZABETH E3 _______f, 895. EM 34290. BEDROOM, ON POTiTTAC Buzz Bateman Soys® * MAY WE HELP YOU TRADE THE EASY WAY ’ LOW DOWN PAYMENT IN the city, lust 8600 down plus ck than average 3bedraom brick Colonial « num awnings oven windows an* porch, fi Good convanlant city locafion al 813,500 oi #73 SPACE A-PLENTY LARGE AND SPACIOUS. 100 Family ri^, **10/1 r;;;x*b!...... r oarage. Aluml- New Models One to fit evary pc LAKE ORION HIGHLANDS: Open Son. right on Flint St., right on Orion Rd. 4 .aka Orlen, to Whittier ULTRA HOMES SUB.: Open SAT. 8, SUN. 38 p. St. eppotitp City Airport. LAKE OAKLANjPSNORES: Open Id S88hsb8w, rlBm to W8lfon, rigi BATEMAN REALTY PONTIAC M.L.S. REALTOR ROCHESTER FE 8-7161 OL 1.8518 377 S. Telegraph Rd. 730 S. Rochester Rd. THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 4. 1966 Sato Haasat • House FOfc. SALE. Sato Hoasas _ WEAVER Near schools and public beaci Prka tIS.SOO. Call 634-SSS7 alli 0:00 lor appointmant. ROLUY IncSmE - 5 ROOMS . down, 4 up, lanced, gas heal, *" 49|Sato Hoatas AT ROCHESTER 3 liedroom I me oain, carpeting, %ll 'bawrnei breeieway wllh attached 3'/y c garage, paved driveway, Vlllal swaler and sewer. 010,500, terms. 49'Sato Haaots t TIZZY By Kate Osann II P—7 Frushour DAILY completed. Select X,’ d Interior decorat- •MILTON WEAVER INC., REALTOR 'I*,.. J" f!“. ''"'•P* Roetw***' ”• ‘‘-'-refslty_______________« court# and fakt Underwood Real Estate 435-2«IS If no ans. 41i-47U _______Mr, Marvlp Mantles____ HOUSE IN YALE, PRICED TO I. TR 0,0703. HOUSES! HOUSES! ALL NEW j 3 BEDROOM RANCHES TRI-LEVELS 4 BEDROOM RANCHES COLONIALS SUBURBAN LIVING 100 FOOT LOTS VILLA HOMES, INC. RED BARN VILLAGE NO. 1 and Oxford behind Alban's Counir Cousin. Model Phone 4M15«S_____ Immediate Occupancy BY OWNER •-•'ge 4 bedroom. 5 yea Living room, 34x14. Full menl. New 1W car garage down. 1165 Cloverlawn FE Key to Gracious Living In th|e 3-bedroom brick home , 70 fool lot fronting on tree-lined street. 25 foot robm; fbrmal dining room, nr ern kitchen,' An older residei well maintained. Call for appo LESLIE R. TRIPP, REALTOR-APPRAISER FE 5-11*1 (Evenings Ml 7-327t) ^KE~i»*4~YbUR~'VE*AR^ OF%E-clilon. It vou own a home too r family comfort-and convenience, .. . which you no longer want to maintain, call OR 4-3223 and let an O’Nell Realty Represenlatlve ex- Mixed /"r Neighborhood First raMth Ire Pay^ts tike rent MODEL ^i^N AFTPPNOONS 1-,^ND SUNDAY yESTOWN REALTY , M Bl F^. MODEL HOME OPEN , 1M1 CRESENT LAKE RD. W. OF PONTIAC OUT M 5* Will build brick 3 bedroom ri.., er with attached ^car garage, tull NO Discount Trade ‘ choice. Zuekihe -------f the finest custom n Oakland - County, pres- ently construction terford, Rochester, Bloomfield, ------------ We also guarantN In writing you only "MOVE ONCE" e\ ,your present home sells the next day. 'No obligation, free appraisal on your, home and tha one — wn and assunse existing . Monthly payments of onth. Including taxes i I. Cute 2 bedroom ho ■nlnum storms and screens, fenced *McrULL0U6H TeaLTY .Ted McCullough, Jr. Waterford WATKINS HILLS : veterans Struble -aoowN LUXURIOUS LIVING brIckTanch, huHt by^th^Ml BulldEr Weinberger. This t . tile family room with stone fireplace, 2W-car attached garage. Selling for t34,t00. We will take your house In trade. FIRST OFFERING 3-BEOROOM BRICK RANCH home with unfinished f e m 11 y attached 1-car garage. Just a stone's tl Compact But Comfy THERE ARE 5 ROOMS with full dining room, recreation ra basement, gas heat and 3<^. .. rage with paved driee. Selling on land contract tor »,500. JACK FRUSHOUR MILO STRUBLE REALTORS MLS, F4025________ FE 2-0473 ANNETT Family Home - 90^ roof/ i - Living r i"n'ckr’'p< ir WIsner $( -.m, saparata I, large kitchen oesement, new gar Bgar garage. $l2.00i taths, large carpeted JIvIngit room, ormal dining room, kitchen with )ullt-ins, pended family roam with k fireplace, oasement IMMEDTAT^ POSSESSION New 3 bdciroom ranch. aJumlnum siding, full basamant, 7 car garage; tfes heet, large *0x300 ft. lot. Rdvlleges on Williams Lake, tlS,-*50 wittvTo per cent down. basement*, ,W. Terms 3g^inQjg s; LAKE -f RONT 3 bedroom bungalow. Ilka dltlon, large 12x10 ft. Ilv tiled bath, excellent lake frontage b«».Ua, for swimming and boafing,' local- RBaiigi ed close In — Cla-"-*— —^ >13,500 terms or tree WATERFORD REALT' I. Bnrson, Realtor OB'" 540 emue Hwy. Van ,Welt L?WS. IRWIN famMy r garage - lake privileges - J. L, DAILY CO. Start the New Year With ' a New House FOR LESS COST THAN USED TAYLOR MODER See Thij OUTSTANDWG VALUE 7*2* Highland Road 5 miles .West of City Airport 3;Bf^R00M TRI-LEVEL CASH 50 Ltts-AcrBafe Iwliitis Off^Bhtot 59 iullough J ■r>d Rd.e f i Lake Property 51 f BEAUTIFUI* LAKE FRONT ON LK. 5 '• OPEN DAILY 6 TO 9 SAT. AND SUN. 1 to 6 WE ACCEPT TRADE-lh Beats Renting! I you given up on finding a I to rent? We have a ‘J-bed-ranch home, with a large llv- Sato Heusei mZLER 0, >270 down, plus '^closing I—Monthly paynwnts only >53 Idxes and Insurance. Ca" “ 3-bedroom home. , n (13'x20'), nat-l z-' fireplace, tull slie dining..--'' luum, all carpAlng and drapes Included, sunrpdfn, kitchen with double slKk. 3 nice bedrooms and.,.%eramk bath up. Basamenf with efficient boiler tsT HW baseboard he*L^2-car garage, blacktop ^Hve. >1*,)00, terms.- .. 8-0466 MLLER 4-BEDROOM COLONIAL I New England style. L..... provincial kitchen cabinets bullt-lns and dinette, fu" Lake Front Near 1-75 Ideal home for tha fam full basement, or, nicely lend-Springfield NICHOLIE Can be bought on land contract. approve. wim wou DOWN PAYMENT, we « Oc.o"kHUETT d NORTH END LI inrSisWri. ;ar attached garage, tul 0,7m on your lo^ See ACRES WEST OF PONTIAC. BRICK BRICK Three bedroom o carport. Bath an e bath. Vacant INCOME NEED A HOUSE-SHORT OF'CAShI Southeast of city, 5 u Eves. Call Mr. Castell FE 2-7373 , Full Basement S400 MOVES YOU IN VILLA HOMES_________*2> II NO MONEY DOWN Tucker Realty—FE 4-1545 _______ (WEST SUBURBAN TRILEVEL In ["LIKE NEW" condition. Featuring a It you are having problems selling'large, bright carpeted living room, 3 your home, let us be of help to large bedroqms, IW ceramic baths, you. List wllh us. 1*'x1*'*" family room with large brick fireplace and 2'*-car attached GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR .garage- See this before you buy.i MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE ! Only >2«,*50 on easy farms. t> W. Walton fE 3 7**3‘ ---------------------------------lOAKWOOD MANOR BRICK RANCH. {This 7i'7V spotlass home is a pleas- LAZENBY GAYLORDkir OPEN SUN. a-4 P.M. 750 Collier, Off Joslyn A very attractive 3 bedroom sub-urben home with built-in kitchen, tull basement and special feature -- a swimming pool, on a lovely 2 acre wooded lot. OFFERED BY DAN MATTINGLY, FE 5-*4»7 OR OL 1 0222.______ _____ ORION TOWNSHIP TRI-LEVEL 3 bedroom home built In 1**0. Large living room, large kitchen, city Ready I MY l^Ml’o? fTV***3”“'^“ THREE BEDROOM home, num. Extra large garage. Ji tide village of Orion,*>11.5C *'*"■ ■ payment. Cal >■***3. )le fireplace, 3 large bed-I basament, 2W-car garage us an mieon a IV.-acre lot. >37,.'"* s mortgage terms. 'AT AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR FE 3-g2«2 I *70 W. HURON OPEN *JO *_ \7/ // >1*50 down I Lawrence W. Gaylord Broadway at Flint taka Orion ____MY 2-2IJ1 or FE M693 BUD' trade. Shick, **3-3711, KIntler Realty^__ ORTONVILLE - F Tn E OLDER OPEN 3 Models ,i Bloomfield Township For Tha large lemlly—4 ___ room brick end Ireme rench home with big lot, 2 cer gi inclums corpeted living roor thru fireplece, built-in Hl-F WEST SUBURBAN 3 bedrooms, large living room, separate dining room, lull base-“*■* ■’ garage, nice nelgh- “I know It’s downhill all the way to the dance, but how about coming home?” , ALMOST COMPLETE ut still lime to choose ,u», ilors, 3 bedrooms, aluminum sld- Plus Crescent Lake privileges. Only . ..... _ cupancy. Act now! . LARGE FAMILY Bl-level—situated on aln 3 car garage. Brand ih Ing throughout. Built I Fish tor trout In your I New listing. >31,900, >3 GILES WEST SURBURBAN y »»x30?*lf.?* BLOOMFIELO TOWNSHIP-.Beautl-tul ranch home, 2 fireplaces, — peting In living room and rooms, plastered wells, gas LINCOLN JR. DISTRICT - I family home, large living r< brick fireplece, hardwood fk plastered walls, new gas t GILES REALTY CO. ARRO CASH FOR EQUITY-LAND CONTRACT WE BUILD-WE TRADE CLARK FAMILY INCOME - OSMUN ST. 2—'/> baths, full basement wM gas furnace., Stoves and refi tors In all units. Saparat trancas. 3 lots. Incoma of >i —i. - ehown by ai mant. >10,950 with A BONNIE ranch hofn Macaday Li budget . Sim WANTED - LISTINGS ON A ^ „ ’^'"'ES OF PROPERTY - What I you to sail? Our qualified npneing. Buyers welting. CLARK REAL ESTATE 13*2 W. HURON ST. FE 3-7)>i FE 5-3**) pr FE 5-5146 Multiple Listing Service O'NEL ! to your Be fulflllei front home, dreamy kitchen, front home. 2 fireplaces. That caf-peting throughout tr lavAl to lake fi Rromises to her ol ig can ba reailied Full price $3>,500. Walkout low-int. All ycur gracious llv-In this hume. ly appt. only Ns. . 1-7 BRICK RANCH Ideal locatiT'" Walking d baths, country ^yle k built-in's, tull basement yard. t1*,*00 with SI fumisbad. Has a good *0x230'. alto hat been ... redecorated lust recently. t one as It onlyt?»*»0O- 15' family room. Full basemen I'S^ar garage. Only 115.500 -Terms. SPOTLESS 5 - ROOM BUNGALOW 111,500. T 100x137 tODt loi leges on Welkins fi'r;^.A':'"?bi;“ DUCK LAKE PRIVILEGES WANT 1 END OF ic;*e;r., e 50x10 mobile home oWnert don't nd contract "iSr It go t7,500 ooum, easy monthly HOW CAN YOU GO wSoNG? _ _____ WARDEN REALTY 3434 W. Huron, Pontiac 333-7157 Everett Cummings, Realtor 35)3 UNION LAKE ROAD EM 3-3200 _____________2*3-71>1 HOME SITE), lO- > ling, >1000, beautiful WaF usad-J. L. bally Co. I WALTERS starting PRIVILEGES, ( »■ area, building 11,200. . SYLVAN 435-IM* no ans. 334-0222 stone fireplace, partial basamant, gas heat and 2 car garage. Excellent neighbor'-—* —- good 1, >143 pe ncl^r^b Sislock & Kent, Inc. 130* Pontiac State Bank Bldg. 1*2*4____________________33M295 Noilhern^ropert^^ -A CABIN IN GLADWIN COUNTY. rooms " ----- 3-335). TIMES COME ALL THE WAY UP the country atmbsph t fleeting privacy. towej^ I irca£l*Soma™wl md lOotUy tjolll' WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE YOU "JOIN THE MARCH OF TIMES" Times Realty HALTERS LAKE PRIVILEGES, near Pina Knob ski area, building $1,200. » -SYLVAN It no ans. 334*222 WATERFORD TOWNSHIP IN PARTRIDGE “IS THE BIRD TO SEE" DRIVE-IN BONANZA Fully equipped and ready to a*. Excalimt locatlan In a growing ™*BP®^I*V Tor y*tf BUT BAR BUY larw building made to order for restaurant, night club, or ga-go dance bar. Located In fast growing ssrto°;sV^Sio&"^- ^ PICK OF PARTY STORES jn!"- HR* of P^rkif^. Grossing 1250,000 stead! y Increasing. Liquor carry out with top-notch aqulpmant. Own-er retiring. FIvt-tIgura Income h yours tor $7,500 down plus InVan- “Cartridge real estate 1050 W. HURON, FE 4-3501 SEND FOR free CAT>L00 “ YEARS FROM NOW You'll . HAGSTROM REALTOR ’. HURON OR 4*351 EVENINGS *>2-0435 NO PLACE LIKE THE COUNTRY big sturdy homo with 5 ims. and a nice large barn acres of land and 'A ml Id frontage. 532,800, 54,000 C. RANGUS, Realtor *30 M15 Ortoi Call Collect NA 7-2*15 PARTRIDGE. IS THE BIRD TO SEE' BUILDERS BONANZA 1 A. gentle rolling land with Sato Land Cenfracti 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS WARREN STOUT, Realtor 150 N. Opdyka Rd. FE Mitt Open Eves, 'til ) p.m AQION 2 Elliebeth Lake Road, Near golf course and lari Excellent for subdivision oi dating Investment. >53,51 IK Wanted Centracte-Mt^ 60-A HORSE LOVERS The city executive who wants to raise his tamllv In tha c'------ this H4 FOR SALE; CHOICE NORTHERN Michigan Property. Cell or write BLEVINS REAL ESTATE HARRISON, MICHIGAN _______ ______!« 9-53*1_____________ Resort Proparty PONTIAC 25 MINUTES, MILFORD area, wooded lots, SO'xISO', $7*5, S10 month. Pith and twlm. Bloch Bros. OR 3-12*5._____________________ Lets—Aertapa 54 LOTS ON WALTON BLVD. IDEAL for walk-out baiatnantt and with Sliver Lk. prlvlleget. S3,*00 each. ACRES, OXFORD AREA, «. 'til S p.m. Underwood Real Estate W2415 It no ant. *25*25* Of *25-1453 dOMMERCIAL BUILDINO Of Clarkston. $3500-t7000. I acres, rolling, soma w< proved road, $5000. . of Clarkston, > ter, softener, paved drive. Priced pried living room. Large lot. price 113.000. Cell J. Phipps. >-301*. Representing H. A. F OXFORD AREA Beautiful 10-room country _ ... 3 acres of land, large cheerful rixtrns,^^ tlrplace --- basement, oU 1 storage above, large t C. A. WEBSTER, Realtor TRILEVEL - RANCH -Priced from SI4.490 | Features In these brick num 3-bedroom homat 1,500.00, s< l!oke Front Lot contract. nnw ■ A-vrxinu r. i. CLARKSTON AREA - Spacious loi, ROY LAZENBY, Realtor available m beautllul Green' 3*3 Dixie Hwy. OR 4-0301' tZ'!,. t j^mgl. UdltM S*rvjce__________| £'i„*''“ii;"d?;.ml WATKINS LAKE FRONT Plan ahead, summer will before you know It. Be al locatad In this cozy li home situated on e oeauti , only 44 acres. >00 FOOT FRONTAGE •o- 0-3. on Cranberry Lake, White Lake Twp. No radii barriere. *73-5305. r. 333-7*73. TIMES I. C*ll for details. _ _ family ■ .-V.. garage, gas neat, mar-' 'ble sills, 7'^ baths, ceramic and' pood workmanship. They bbught lor only 10 p— —‘ Drive out M5* to V "Dixie ship, ol . visburg Road: Ike" in Springfield Towr US-10 lust north of Di ■ 4S'x3l*'. lacing th. nwesi. Sloping gently toward lake. Only------------ I land contract. “Bud” Nicholie, Realtor GIROUX MY_J OR I ROCHESTER Ranch, 4 bedroom, 1 acre, beeu-i tllully landscaped, 20 x 40 pool, _meny_exlres. Owner OL l-lisf ROCHESTER AREA Sperkllng new 3 bedroom rancher. Full batement. Gas heat. Nice shaded lol. 115,950. Open Sun. Nix Really UL/llllI UL 2-5375 UL\2-4074 KENT a large game presarva wltfi aka* and all forms of wild this home. Two putting greens li you golfers. S30.S00. Call - MAX A. HARTWIG, INC. SYLVAN LAKE PRIVILEOES 7 bedroom, full basement, n.„ D. Substantial down payment. . TEMPLETON, REALTOR NEAR PONTIAC CENTRAL—3 bad- FLOYa KENT INC., REALTOR 0 Dixie Hwy. “ * FE 2-0123 or 80 ACRES e with building*, d. loll, p*rtly tlllad HI-WOOD VILLAGE SUB 3 baaulltut lots, woo5.1 Itting a / fl*,5« la financing. UNREASONABLE DOWN PAYMENT- w monthly paynsents. II price S5.0 WEST SUBURBAN RANCH. t1«.*50 20 ACRES rlppRn I IN X 200, other NDIANA LIMESTONE t MINUM, abMiutely .10 m on the exterior ol this eye-appealing 2-1 ' This beivtlful h_____ the professionally li I AFTER * CALL CLARK WHEATON horn, sltuatw. among' ' "UoS?!* LS?SS‘"hJ^sS^A. Johnson & Son, Reoltors ...» avveral other out-*—"-* logs. This layout could ba ______ parable to anything ,N*w Eng- overs, wim lust a imia and a lot at Imagination, wait on this one. This eting type property, when will be lust one less tor pick from. Be llrit, e sorry. Only «25,*N, 10 Times Realty -70 Dixie HIGHWAY (South of Waterford Hllll _______ ...J" (inly SiSM "cowS qR_4-03M____________«Py. »•* . «|j»!Ly I lend contract, loads of closet IRWIN multiple listing SERVICE STOUTS PERKINS STREET: \Thli I’-T-itory with many features, will provide you with comfortable living quirteri. Living room, full- flreelec* In living room, slate floored family room and kitchen, <<•11 and 2 car garagl. An ----------- ie of Arad at $47,500. • SMITHA WIDElvmN -.............. REALTORS 334-4526 ROLFH H. SMitH, Realtor WATERFORD . HILL iVal-U-Way DRAYTpN PLAINS Ino room, gat heat,'tarnllV size klichen, large lot. S450 down, I carpeted. 12*.*90. hardwood thtort. AL PAULY, REALTOR 451* Dixie, Rear OR 3-llM EVES. OR 3-72*3 WATE R FRONT. 3 BEDROOM RANCH. Attached garage. Conven-tant kltdhan with bulItTni and For- NEAR MALL Redecorated 3 ■ bedroom hor ■ irge living roc down, M I Best Buys Today Elbow Ro6m- 4 bedroom aluminum rancher west of Pontiac with betemenl oil forced air heat, 3 batt« paved drive, specious 34xM < mant block garage, N x 343 I PrIetd at 111,950 with terms. Kettering High- 1704 S. Telegraph FE 4-2533 Brown CUSTOM BUILT T Charming I* toot, carpeted living room, carpatad dining ''*•- kitchen It e dream with........... appliances, formiba cabinets, three lyga badroomi,' l baths. Urge nicely landwao^ lot, two car ga- ®"'y ***<♦*> wiib down or your praient home WATKINS LAKE AREA. Large living room with a firtplaca, a 17 toot country ityla kitchen, all plastered walls, ceramic tile bath and a two car garage are only a few of the features this well constructed rancher hat. Priced at SI3,SN with a S3,SN down LES BROWN 50* Elizabeth Lake Road " * *•■* -ir FE «-35*4 KAMPSEN ^***Why'?!on't You?*^ I'm Looking Over A Four Leaf Clover- ‘•B'-'j.’: RHODES that I'vai FIRST It me lociiion or llac's west side, SECOND two way fireplace for tl.. ...-Ing room, and kitchen, THIRD '- “-a three bedrooms, thara'i naad explaining tl Ing lit the batam.... ........ In knotty pine, braaztway a two car attached garage. Pric $13,950- ^al priM 0 :.»di b West Bloomfield * School District 1 I for that new car. This turn--• y«h) ’can pick your own| paochas and plcrhc on the patio. Call nowl Price,JU2,*50. Terms. i ir inflation BOTAERINO YOU?I I. hardwood floors, | n(S: ATTENTION BUILDERS 3 FAMILY INCOME nCUCI flDCDC This it tha way to live, with UtVtlUrtKJ the other party paying tor your RESORT SUBDIVISION AVAILABLE property. Each unit pays S30.N|—" ■ *-----" N{ Roads In - 51 lots lenis era' — lolal I Income! acres, c r asking' platted. No. 0-4 15 minutes to Pontiac, 17 minutes is&O ARLINGTON, 100'X233*, NEAR PON-tlac Lake, high and dry. Corntr tot. t1,*N - tarma. MODELS BUILDERS CLOSE OUT $2000.00 SAVINGS $175,000 Terms r STEADMAN 'd144 WEEK-i. AND SUN. -L; REYNOLDS AT ST kL ESTATE, 1-439-4144 rSf |.*3*dl0* EVES. A ir Cra»- HANLEV, 4 Idle. HO'xIlO', cent Lake, needs i llttli site tor walk-out basemei HAGSTROM REALTOR 4*(j0 W. Huron . _____OR 4-0351 Evening* *12-8435 occupancy, vlll be toll ■ybe he'd ilka to be your I .....--- Dixie Hlphv^y to Cam- brook Lana, (at Our lady Laktt), lalt to tnodals. RAYVO'NEIL, REALTOR — Pontiac Lake Rd. Open * .. . OR 4-2222 MLS FE 5461* SCHRAM Now Doing Custom Building On Available Building Sitesl Your, Plan or Ours Custom Builders 2l'x40' with aluminum tiding, bedrooms, belh-and-a-baH, f u I betemenl, 2-cer gexage — Onl II'A ACRES for | horses, t4,**S. Term*. location for raising C. PANGUS, Realtor 630 MIS Ortonvllli Call ceilact NA 7-2115 _ Clarkston Area Homesites lot, blacktop ilraet S3J50 Iraam, 1-20 ft. ' ---- corntr let MM Rond, t Sale er ExcIi«ii|e 51 Coast-To-Coast TRADES Tom Bateman FE 8-7161 Realtor Exchangor CASH For your equity or land contracts. Don't Msa that heme, amallest poasibla dtacounta. Call *12-1120, 5143 Ca**-eilzaiie(h Lake ’Reed AND CONTRACTS LOANS -r TO $1,000 To consolidate bills Into one menth-ly paymanh Quick servica wttli LOANS TO $1,000 Usually an first visit. Quick, friend- FE 2-9026 la ttia number la call. OAKLAND LOAN CO. 2tt Pontiac State Bank BWb. 9:30 fa 5:30 - Sat. *:2B teT LOANS S25 te S1JM0 ba'xter' e riiiiNo^NE LOANS S2S TO S140S NEED CASH FOR BILL CONS6lIDATION7 BORROW UP TO $1,000 ratiramant. GOOD LEASE. Clarence C. Ridgeway ’ REALTOR I W. WALTON PHOI* MULTIPLE LISTING SERViCE “ lY StORi Jncludhjg SDM llcsnst, fixtures properly wllh * rooms ________ above. Price 113,900 plus tory. Ttrms, good corntr. BREWER REAL ESTATE B. Huron FE *5111 Orn plus costs. List With Schram , ond Call the Van JOSLYN AVE. FE 5-947I CANAL LOTS Chbics building sites - *0kl47. Connteted with Sylvan Lake. . JACK LOVELAND 2110 Cau Lake Rd. ___________**>-12*1 CASH . ....Ta' . Wallad Lake, Mich. ____________ .... ba .renovated or ramovad. Contact Mrs. illzabetb R. Leva. 401 NE 43 St., Boca Raton, Florida. 33432. I outsldal grill. Undargreund iprlnkllng sys-' tarn. Pancad yard. J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor 1*3-6*04 10751 HIBhland Rd (M-59) yOung-bilt homes RUSSELL YOUNG, i .list With Us-We Sell a Home Every 24 Hours! R. J. (DICK) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 3« Oakland ...... • C^.^*j? Attar hour* PE S-I9B4 er PS $14,950- I New I*** modal ranch home on yaur lot or ours, aluminum ix-i itrlor, oak fleers, IW baths, largt dining arsa, custom cuo. boards, formica coupte Why not raise your own vegetables . — fiexi winter, lot Is ISO'xSSO' No Loroe Fom IV rrying about painting-aluminum ying a _________ g Is already < sTormt and seraans ti everything Is ntw. look together, oksy? 1 miny exfrVs.''CalVTO'DAV'7o’5e our plant. Eat* *-— f garage. Warren Stout Reoltgr 1450 N. Opdyka RtL Ph. FE »41tt Open Evas. Till I p.m. * AAllMldhlA I I a lO-Rcre Island and Indian-5 Shores No. 3. Aha will put In contact with a raautepla ALBERT J. RHODES, Broker FE S-23M 351 W. Walton PE 54712 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE bedroom rancher with I'/b Mrtplaca In the. Ilvl^ Thinking pf Selling? WANT CASH? Wa will oat It lor you-giva us a try. Call Lea Ktrr.TonyEltalo, Rachel Lovely. fcSl.r?H"IPdritei'ir,*“”' 1071 W. HURON ST. MLS PE 44*21 Alter I p.m. Call FE I413* IwijpmE Property 50j 4-lf REAL ESTATE I sleeping rooms-wllt net: minimum maIntena'rKa and**work tor your InvHtment - price tirl at 119,500. Cell tor dttalls. ^ | 4-229*1 _____ II _ 1 APARTMENT ------unit - hat Ining room, kitchen, ■to bath. Mixed are land cantract with VON REALTY •II -Rei Evas. OR HI-HILL Paved roads, get on ............ . peer Road, 2 miles North of I .. mtersectlon. Low as 12750, SIM down odmi lata atternoons and Sundtp. LOOK FOR THE LADD'S SIGN! 5144 DIXIE niOHWAY Attar 5, FE 4-1*41, OR 3-32*1 • RICK “ - llding. I im, dinir ^bls?- LADD'S 3M5 Lape*r Rd„ PantiK 4*40 RKhtster Rd., Troy nil*____________FE 5-92*1 URGE ICJTS •diolnino rttidentlal tots — 41 >LTY Pe I PONTIAC AREA ESTABLISHED ' ^ AUTO PARTS AND GLASS SHOP INTERESTED IN PARTNER OR S.D.D.-S.sisr~ No. **1:. A very modern parly store In Oladwln-Houghton Lake .area, | cabins on proptiiy plu: nica living quarters, prott of sfu, 200 P. A I. statemanf Only SIS.OO down and will taka soma proparti Included. STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE _*i s. *21-1000 draw I II rati .aitita li lerp corner lace-1*33. No food, tket around 124,000 plus stock I handle. Make an apnointment to General Molars. COSMETIC STUDIO Would you Ilka to own y< business? Established in ..........lai steady____________ ' brand. Advertised in I magazines. Frsnebitad. train purebatar “bateman _ COMMERCIAL OBPARTMBhT Opan S-5 3*9 5. T*l*graph Altar 5: Fr*-**41 FE 4-11 credit llle Insurance e\ BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY NFA? YOU Swept engine, l. .. . bar. 334-1131.______________ BRAND NEW 1**4 SEWING . . ;(i*nga tor Sr. WtWi WILL TRADE S, 1 '.oW'c, ^1#. Villaoa SInivpv. w, uni-vartity. Rochattar. OL OMk AND SEE OUR PINE SB-lection of iprlhg clothing. Shop and Sava. Opportunity Snw. if. ■-----Churth 155 W. Atepla, Elr- , MEN'S SUITS, SPORT JACKETI, Alto XIM*** I. »A*ri. MOUTON COAT, 510. IN G006 gt^'th/n'g' . FUR COAT, WEDDING size 10: 3 trench coatsi " -har arfklaa Sole HoOTEliald CaeJi ^5 1 EVERY DAY VALUE Brand New Furniture Name Brand Appliances langat, Rttrlwitors, wathart, TVa At Truck Load Prices 3 room quality outfit Nothing Dawn ^ S2.7S a waab Beautiful living room Chalet of color In nylon 2 end tables . 1 coffee table "2 beautiful lamps 4 pc. bedroom suite WALNUT OR GRAY MAHOGANY Box spring, mattress 2 boudoir lamps 5 pc. formico dinette 9' by 12* rug 32 pc. set of dishes MAY f ORCHAS* separately LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE 14*1 Baldwin at Walton PE I-M4I ' ■■ • "'01110 llr“----- FIrtf Traff •asrth' Parkir oM-75 Saf. * '’f/P D—8 THE PpNTrAC PRKSS. FRID^. I«:EHHrARY 4. 1966 Salt HMMhtU 6Mdt iSlStl* HewthoM Gtad* (l> tfIGE ) PEk CENT] LARGE 7 PIECE DINING ROOM LAOV'S I ncwl $47 SO i»l OA l-UM. 1 rino. c --- .. Ru«;-------------- 651 For Salt Miictllaiittat 67 Sptrtiai Gttdi SNOWMOBILES 74CARMVAI i hide-abed (EXCELLENT) »«.•; .♦5, gas space heater S?«, apartment electric range $27. dining i rOom suit $25. S piece dlneHe $1< Easy washer $3». 3 Piece bed- "^RESPONSIBLE PARTY PLATINUM DIAMOND ler stoof, 4 5 kt. 4 smaller latfr's platinum 10, Ky Dick Turner jHouMtrdltri 19 Wonttd Cart-Tracks Now and Uttd Tracks 103 To make payments o( LAVATORtESe COMPLETE. %3i CRUISE-OUT, INC. M^_^JValton. _Open *■*. FI so Sona-Grovtl-Olii peds. dressers. Chests, ana cabinets. Everything' at J prices. LITTLE JOE'S TRi DEPARTMENT. •••- - - in cabinet. Do hems, bultonboles. designs, etc. by dialing. 5 year' guarantee Call credit manager. RICHMAN BROS. SEWING CENTER 335 *203 $56.16 CASH PRICE ' PONTIAC lake builders sup- X‘rd_^?e'TE rrS3.'*"": "" SA7ToT,iRAVETrFuT-DlR t.JE 2-0042. f"TAPPAN GAS RANGE.' 1 Old. good condition, S7S A dining room suite a ‘ SINGER AUTOMATIC ZIG ZAG Sewing machine - deluxe cabin Call *73-97*5 shower stalls with trim $34 *5; 2-bowl sink. $2.*5; Lavs., $2.*Si tubs. $10 and up. Pipe cut and threaded. SAVE PLUMBING CO., $41 Baldwin. FE 4-15I*. .,r "U'rs. embroiders, etc Pay oti •’•L*'*'' $47*5; 3-pi*(|e bath 1 MORE IlME .. account in * months at $« [ i t,— t,im « BRAND NEW FURNITURE 3-ROOM OUI r. rs - “ $278 (Good) '^'erkly ^ month Bu'ys 3 rooms ( $378 (Better) $3.00 Weekly 'i;i;N'ju»E^ consists ot: $478 (Best) $4.00 V . -kly ta^^. 1 cocktall labi* tmt 2 tabi NEW LIVING ROOM BARGAINS lt!j^5-i!vC"ro.Tsuit*"'Xo'“';; ll'^*r«)l.^r!;an;iss'"atw^ b*o5, ‘T^c^pSlng *"tiwls riTaUl^Tcb'fM^ ’ ''•""W 1“'’ ■■ *5T?n'’i'2Llr”' *" »**. * Chrome chai nica top tabit. 1 bookcase, _ ____ JFE 5-7W. _ JNE OF THE B'EST .baseboard j-alin^JqR J _________________ bMrd '"heat*wllh”“m*«rri *'°°° SOIL -AND - »5 M-»r "■ ° ^ w'^YEbr' uK fo^^^^ PLUMBING BARGAINS. F R E E »>‘ *5 30^iion Wood-Coal-Coke-FbBt 77 S I OAK-BIRCH. ALSO SLAB. DE-liver^. FE $-$755, FE. $-*84*. = IREP'LACE wood' DELIVERED, seasongd POOL TABLES-BELAIKE LI 4-0900 - 353-6520 NEW BEDROOM BARGAINS rce (brand new) bedrooms: -■ —..... bookcase bed anc • -nersprln< chest, box spring mattress, two vennr' for S)2*. SI SO weekly. PEARSON'S FURNITURE ro E. Pike FE 4-T Between Paddock and City Haii Open Mon, and Fri. 'HI * p.m.. rTvATCHINfi MAPLE'tables, good condition, $40. Light gr< WYMAN FURNITURE CO. ___ ., ...... new. .$35........ .... . Brown and turquoise. Cell alter 4 Darling. 33S-44 _ t _.P____________! _ ____ 5 MONTH (3Lb““B'OXERrR'EASbN-' PORTLAND CUTTER, NEW PAINT, able-332-3S*3. ' r,'ixx~r?r.TH' °^ la'p66dle'~trimm^ : ^_________ poolng $3 uo. 625-2075. I4°^he^l l^lTT^CYHiHUAHUAYuP^sfuD ____ FE A4*«r OB W747service._ IMATODDS, 332 713*. * . “''^ “Clkircb ' QlTAKER-Yu-Yn«Af-,—r-p-A-C-F 2 POODLES, BLA.CK TOY MALE, 3 MNGys LIGHTWEIGHT PORTABLE Sewing machine. Zig Jagger.iREFRIGE'RATOR, II CUBIC FOOT'.'aIREDALE PUPS, AKC, i Puttonholej, an^attyhm^ good condition, S3S Call 334-7716. w«'ch.dw^ «amily pets a- -. HURON -QUAKER AUTOMATIC SPACE' heater. 50,000 BTU; 1*51 Cadillac, . good body; 1*5* Ford front •“* lh_$J5JIAL6:*044. PIECE, 2 CHAIRS AND SETTEE, SPECIALS ON room $23.95 a‘5-"1oi.* TALBOTT LUMBER I light apricot, also II'i" chocolate. ihogany paneling, $2,** to $6.50. | 625-2*63. ick and Pecker tools and De-i i) Pets—Hunting Dogs GLENN'S I BEATTIE DIXIE HWY IN WATERFORD FORD DEALER Since 1*30' or Service after the Sale" OR 3-1291 .^‘2?®'2$.________ ;C CHIHUAHUA PUPPIES, Th^e.J males. EM 3-3075. _ ;C PEKINCiESE PUPPIES. ALSO itud service, call *" '— inyime. ■=■= 7-iAKC COLLIE PUPPIES, WORMED,: f'oot'frigidaire WI machine, Stromberg-ci s. ^0 Coolldge. H7»-0*5». SI¥6ER ^ '■AUTOMATIC Dial zig-zagger in walnut i shots, guaranteed.^ Also Collie si ~t6Y~APRicof'’ PUPS, Auction Sales “What good does it do to learn to fdrm my own opinions, Mom? For instance, the one I have about taking a bath every Saturday night!" SUZUKI COMPLETE JUNIT^CARS, PICKED up. Free tow. H. A H. Auto Seles & Service. OR 3-5200. Autobahn Motors, Inc. AUTHORliED V Everything to meet your m Clothing, Furniture, Appllan r—-----------=:■ AA.p^' ‘^•*1 zig-zaooer m walnut console, iwu LAmr, 4 ^uu 1* cu. FT. *cDj Does hems, buttonholes, fancy pal- cent lights. Ideal lor -- freezer comb nation Sol L door. Ex- 5 guarantee. mW shoos, S1*.*5 value 110 *0 cellent condition, Must's*drifice,| payments of 15 00 monthly See factory showroom, I *100. 53 Neome. FE 8-34*4 p,y paian„ pf ppiy j3og, Fluorescent. 3*3 Orchard fr^SIGNATURE PORTABLE TV.t Call credit maHMer, RICHMAN _________ $90, 338;*037. ____I BROS. SEWING CENTER, 335-9203. insole. TWO LAMP, 4 FOOT FLUORES-jAKC COLLIES, 1 SABLE, 1 TRI 61 —. .1-.-.. .,,„i —■- benches,! wks„ make otter. FE 5-0615. 1 '.'■'<* lAKC DACHSHUND PUPPIEl Stuol Ve Bogs. ESTELHE'MS, FE 2-088*. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1 Farm equipment auction wilt household goods. Located 2 83 Travel Trailers BOOTH CAMPER ALL MODELS IN STOCK TUKO SALES, INC. 7 E. AUBURN. ROCHESTER UL 2 53*3 Used Auto-Truefc Parts 102 17*5 s Teicoraph ' fe $ 4511 Auto FInanci.ig 104-A I GMC V AIR CONDITIONER SALE Drastic reduction on all air conditioners In stock FRETTER'S warehouse OUTLET $650 S. Telegreph___FE 3-7051 HEYWOOD - WAKendLp STOVES. REFRIGERATORS, NEW, I linoleum, and good used furniture.' Stoney's, 103 N. Cats at Wide ! Track, FE 4-1730. __^_____ i TAPPAN GAS RANGE, 4(T', EX'-| WANTED __ _r SHOP, 55 WILLIAMS, FE| ; 46433. Canaries and parakeets. BRITTANY PUPPIES, ol Imlay City i Creek Rd-. 2'ri mi. w. ig jus . Hunter's Creek Rd. Consisting ol a 1*47 John Deer 8 traOtor with cultivator. John Deer 2 - bottom I. 4267 LaForest, Water. .' $30-$35.' OL any pickup. — lord. OR 3-5526._______________ CLOSE-OUT SALE 1965 NliVlIlOO CAMPERS CRUISE OUT, INC. Egst Walton, daily *6, FE SUZUKI 220 gallon oil tank. n. 673-001*. ( 7-362$. champagne living i tsmoagi •actional, . ------ - tables and ^revolving coffee table. Exc. condition. OR 3608*.________ APARTMENT-SIZE GAS 0\ ELEC--*—^5. Chrome set. Baby S25, REFRIGERATOR, S35,,__________________________ ve, S3S. electric stove, $35, WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS ... ____ids, misc. FE 5-2766. I discount prices. Forbes Printing WASHER $25. GAS STOVE, $35. RE- D'*'* Irigerelor with top freezer, $4*.| ^er, $35. TV,^W. JJactrlc itov^, HWY. OR 3-r767, t. FE 5-2766. WELDWOOD . HEADQUARTERS CANINE COUNTRY CtUB Introducing Canine photography b j campers. Thank y appolnUnent. Clean, comtorlable. im ' ' * W CoWwater, Flushing A.C. & CHIMPANZEE AND CAGE, $ MOS.' Swartz Creek COME ON bu-r AND SEE THE new 1*66 Apache camping trailer. All models in stock. You get uo to 5176 in bonus It you can buy March 1st. We also have i5 models Ih stock for rt AKC champion . 24 champions In raised v 673-074*. -jCOLLIE, FEMALE, 2 YEARS OLD. trie stoves. Chrome set. paoy turn.- BUY AND SELL USED FUR- ture. Oval rutf. Rocker. Misc. OR I niture and appliances, TV's, from 3-9444, ' $14 and up» 375 Auburn Ave.___ APPLIANCE i WYMAN'S ____________________________________________________________ SPECIALS At^o^MoTpike^sto^oniy i Hond Tools-Machinery 68 cute fluffy bi^ack kittens Odd living room Tables From $ 4.*51 a™. * irtable TV S **,*5 O^EAilonol chain From i 6.95I BEAMS-ANGLES-PIPES-PLATE .1, ,A,ith >i| at-2-sbelf bookcase $*.*5 All sizes new and used 3a9ji2-oc. Hying room suite ... $2* *5 Metal tote boxes, 42x55—S24 *5. FREE PUPPIES RCA CE 10 foot 'Ipool electric dryer, -ee Edison Inslalle- ^^^ ^^ Ouar. elec, refr SPECIAL AUCTION SALE 7:30 P.M. SATURDAY KAWASAKI WHITE BULTACO VAN TECH i JON TRUCK, $60; 1946 nuitR, »jv; 1950 Ford Convertible. $25; T9S0 Chevy. $50; 1957 Olds hardtop, $7$; 1951 Olds, $150; 1955 Ford motor and transmission, $15 ' 11*53'FORD'WITH A 1*50'PONTIAC ^*'’•'9'' Cofl r $175 0 PARTS AND SERVICE DEPT. body, $125 _____ 1*55 R ANCH WAGON 'pARTS, 'bOOD motor Also electric nnolor, 6 volt battery. 85*$ Cooley Dr, Union Lake, EM 30071. 1*57 PLYMOUTH transmission' Just rebuilt, ' ......... 105 ENGLISH FORD, PERFECT, I. 332-7052. 4 SPEED I960 SUNBEAM ROADSTER WITl. x.sM.ss.r,x. HEATER AND WHITE NSMISSION wall TIRES, ABSOLUTELY (, $65 , 334- kJo MONEY DOWN. Assume - . _------ . . _ . i weekly payments of $6.88 1*58 CHEVY WAGON, 283 ENGINE,' CALL CREDIT MGR. MR. ----------- 5-3005. Parks at HAROLD TURNER ----- - VII 4-7500. SUZUKI CYCLES, 50CC-250CC. RUPP CgaoVrYvoTiTH niia^ Mlnibikes as low as 112**5. Take M5* to W. Highland. Right oni K.A'"':..'’'.'.?* J)?'"'. . ?).®1 Hickory Ridge Rd. to Demode Rd. Left and follow signs to DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSICO ' ' “ oiler refused. Must sell.j'»*2 RENAULT, GOOD CONDITION. 18 REAR AXLE. V ,. Clarkslon, 625-1711. stock. Tools, drill motors, senders clacks, skillets, cgn openers, lamoi jewelry, groceries, dresser, chest beds, maftresses and box springs Couches, chairs, tables, linoleum ’ terps, droo. cloths, ■■■—'—'' FflEE Boats - Accessorlei _ _£•" 6T63265 lake' 19*5 CHEVY, — : 5-8723 after™.' __________ ffj CHEVY FORD tC.MET -FALCON r 370, FE _ HITCH AND INSTALLATION ..P.-S63; 7'/a h. detW^m. B S. Blvd fEJ-70 GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP automatic KENMORE washe"'oi.k mItot* “ * Valley bumper pool table, 4 cues, ,J7rewers. Oak. 333787*. '_ ..... AWkBLE-TOP ------------- — - I table SI 2; BEDROOM SUITE 16*; LIKE NEW Norge electric ra buffet SIS; oing vanity dresser w.m ao-z mirror S2*; upright piano mirror 1125; player piano slight repairs 160,' aparlmeni electric range SIS; bed cor $25; Phileo TV f I SOS; Used and reconditioned and dryers, electrical ana staves. 306 North Saginaw ! 330-4465. Also odds and ends at 160 Baldwin.______________ BRONZE OR CHROME sale, BRAND NEW. imalt size (round, d tangular) ‘ ‘ id, drop-leaf, r ..... ____ lb 3. 5 and 7 _____S24.9S and uo. PEARSON'S FURNITURE >10 E. Pika_______________ FE 4-7 DRESSER' iiace fixtures. 1. ________ lUijues, JOW Oakhill, FREE TO GOOD HOME pies - FE 2 *470. _ GERMAN SHYpHERD' pUp. NO _ papers. $U.J»3.6287^ _ MALE pALMATION LI'YER AND AKC, • ^housebroken. $50 624-3322 Krafr drill'”'pres$.''^**36780 ^etter MAlTl'nPlbO^bL'C'^SMA BLACK, 6:30 p.m. purebred without papers, $40 MA production and tool room machinery. 500 to choose from,' MIXED PUPPIES^ MALES. ot other limes too i . I-SI500 IpULEVARD SUPPLY ^wer~krafV table' ....... Craltsi j Ellsworth Trailer Soles ' I 'olne,'new'dKk'lng, 6577 Dixie Hwy. MA 5-1400 ---------^MA-KEYOUR--------- CHOICE OF; 1 *1“ ^ Streamlines-Kenskills 1 discount on i“ Franklins-Funs-Crees and Mpnitors IT* SEA RAY, 1*63 I. board outboard, 15C llhl V6 Buick, canvass M bes^ oiler. MA 6^1541 |35'TEb'AN CRuFsER. REBUILT E^N-, I*M^ f ORD PIC^K^UP. - 1**3 VW. NO Payments of $7.f2 r. Mason at 335-410I. New and Used Trucks 103 ’’J^nitew'i^ii,; «*. , ?-3?45. - ----- , , ----------- SHAPE.^ ■ - • — - • gatly. After 5 p.m., OR 4 2668. 1965 KARMANN GHIA COUPE LOW 1957 JEEP PICKUP FRONT WHEEL MILEAGE, Sea Blue beauty^ full And p. $597. $5 down. SS LUCKY AUTO FuiL 0 2 HORSES AND C. -S*rvl Is Over- I alter the Sele- TONY'S MARINE ^ Orchard Lake Rd. 12 3660 AVbib'THE ru$)h —"-ilshlng f—' ----^■ » '51_ JOHNSON TV - WINTER SPECIAL i . & H. model 655 A dragline, fair condition. Cal. D.3.000 angina. No trade price, 17*50. BODY-HARRISON EQUIP. CO, , ‘ * Lake Rd. 3M-4000 70 AKC registered. Holly 634-*473. NORWE'gTaN ELKHOUNO. MAI I yr. 673-9S04 after 5 P.m.___ i PEKINGESE, AND RE'GISTER'ED toy Fox terriers, stud service. FE; 2 SHETLAND poNEis. 6*2-0*72 OR Holly Trovel Cooch, Idc. ________ ______ 15210 Holly Rd , Holly ME 4 6771' ARAB GELDIN9, BAY, $750. Also ____ Oi^ Dally wdjundeys- j ut board mechanics J_^3'T0N pickup, SHARP! Autobahn Motors, Inc. it Works. 135 Broi 0 MFG. SALES I weekdays and i If 3345 Auburn Rd. P. FE 3-743$. BOAT SALE Now Going On In OUr New Indoor Showroom I Superior Flambler-Ieep iCaimrat'Sarvica PERSONALIZED GROOMING POODLE SUPPLIES . HOUSE OF POODLES-10 Dixie ~ 01^-0*20 - altpn TV FE 2 2257 Open $ 515 E. Walton, corner of Joslyn 2'3 " RCA TELEVISION, S40. __________« 4-4314.___ $mTe 4-413*1. For Sale Mitcellaneoui 67 1.4>: certificates Included. : BEAUTIFUL UPRIGHT P stud pony, make offer, also ;tlne'''*^^ilh*^e \oveii ^ chickens. 588-0287, ajter 5-30^. 'oidj 'Po<)dle'."6i2-4478._^ p z r J PUREBRED DACHSHUND PUPPIES Hay—wrain—rood Til 223 Russell WREB'REDr8~WEEK~bL07"SIL. 1500 BALES NICE GREEN MIXED 4 0 ^•*ck German Shepherd hay, 65c bale OA 8-2302. ‘I'la.Aifw l Must sacrifice. $25. 62B'24$4.'30Q BALES OF ALFALFA BROME Cliff Dreyer's Gun and Sports Center , iJbT CHEVROLET AUTHORIZED VW dealer 15 S. Telegraph 1965 VW Sedon TOM STACHLER 84 AUTC AND MOBILE SALES "CLEAR THE DECKS" SALE Guaranteed Motors None ct merchandise. Terrillc sevlnj ■ YEARS. COME VISIT US At Our New Location FOR SPLENDID BUYS Rf 627-M triple trundle b comolele7 si*.SO’ end up. Pearson's Furniture, 210 E. Wke^_____ CANOPY BED, TWiN SIZE, wftlTE, CLEAN * YEAR CRIB. CHEAP. COAL FURNACE. OIL BURNErT Taylor, 602 Ml. Clemens St. Cb'MPLE'fE HOUSEHOLD. BUNK j S3*. Sectional 118. Rugs $12. YEAR OLD BEAUTIFUL KEL vinetor retrlgerator 1200 Or best oiler, also 14 cu. It. chast Iraezer SIOO. Ml 4-0543. SN07w7rRE_sT3N 'WHEELS ' 7Sg, TeTi^TaC,' SAV?' OTHER PIANOS-SCRATCHED _ _ , MOVING- LARGE DISCOUNT. dqG HOUSES, 3-PIECE PINK BATHROOM SETV 1710 S TELEGRAPH-', MILE S. julated 748 Orch "■* bulll-ln hand basin, S4*.*5 i 6f 6rCHARD LAKE AVE. — — - - --------i -^6/’G°yE^ys/AVL*'^^“''^ Conn. Theatre Organ this ooe. MORRIS MUSIC 34 S. Telegraph Rd. Pontiac ss from Tel-Huron_^ 2-0567 REGISTERED CHIHUAHUA PUP-' hay. OA 8-2056._________ Ji'J^stTse'Si^^^ *"■ Farm Produce ! ^ ®3^?f4poooleTtud’sepV.I ' W6797------------------- fE 5-903* APPLE - CIDER TOP quality fruit. MANY tl Queen ■ Overland - Concord trailers. Ice. : I TOY T . 3340 W. HURON FE 2-3*8* private'party'wilC pay cash lor good used 16 to 20' sell con- PINTER'S Balance of factory warranty S1695 LLOYD MOTORS LINCOLN MERCURY - COMET 1250 OAKLAND . 333-7863 JEEPS GALORE 25 NEW VEHICLES-FRESH STOCK give ! I pickups allows i u SSOO off sale price! 20-GALLON AQUARIUM, StbCKED..^ Dormeyer electric mixer, men's’ mention._______ _______________ fRMBY ELECTRIC StO'ifE, Miscellaneous household goodt ' rug. 1 12x11 rug. OR 3-1 ELECTRJC STOVE S2S _________ 674-26*1 _____ Everything goes. Leaving ■ r, S35. Clothes dryer, $25. 332-4-FREEZER, VERY GOOD CONDI-tion. 1100. FE S-1303. . COMBINATION REFRIGERA-or and deep Ireezer, $125. G.E 40 . electric ...... *'3"xl'6", $25, E. E. Clan ^233 Potomac, Rochester. i,E. ELECTRIC CLOTHES DR' ar, maka an offer. FE 2-0977 alter 5. Giant Furniture Sale 9 TO'l p.m.. Sat. EVERYTHING BARGAIN PRICED Pet Suppliei—Service 79-A it Oakland University CLEARANCE! 1965 Models Now On Display DEAL TQDAt Ponliacs New end only Author l/i Superior $150 bu. I RXL FRUITWOOD CUPBOARbi - APPLES, FRESH FILTERED Cl }der, wholesale and retail, 'open dally till 5 P.M.—home made doughnuts ROME FORD, RbchesI ,ia. ni MERCURY-MERCRUISER DEAlER I water CRUISE-OUT, INC. Id lights 83 g Wallon Ooen ''■6 FE > 4402 550 Oakland A r*' Ford CLOSEOUT l*5l' CHEVY PICKUP, ; Rambler-leep $1395 Pontiac Retail Store f PICKUP, 12*7. A RUGS $: rEACH I II paneling, ( 757) 1075 W -n Sal., Feb. 5 DPW Yards, II tiac. Michigan. ! I Cider 27 ABANDONED AND IMPOUNDED^ Diehl's Orchar Cars, by the Pontiac Police Depl.| 1478 E. Ranch no. o mups a. m ' ■ ' ‘ ' ■ City ol Pontiac Holly lust oft Mlllord Rd *73- 1. Ja^s, Intercoms, :l boots, size 13. Argus C-3 camera, 3-skln ranch i scarf, FE 2 77*1._______ b" ixi'V' m'e’sh by 1 BATHROOM FIXTURES, OIL AND — furnaces and bolters, evtomatic »r heelers, hardwire and — I Plains Gas . Co. »UCS, LIKE NEW, SO do with Blua Lustra. Rent ' electric shampooer SI. " ------- E. Wellon. CGUCH; CHAIR.’”ruGS; STOVE; C>-EARANCE OF USED' OFFl'CU DINETTE SET; REFRIGERATOR ....................... — '-‘— - —and machines. S35-S7S Printing and Office Supplies, 4500 i BEDROOM SETS; COUCH; RE- Ulxle Hwy. OR 3-*767. We alsolluy. FRIGERATOR; PIANOS. ^ REDUCED DUR-i Hwy. Forbes Printing S. OtUca IIS SALF SiinnllM \A/m *lw4i Kiiu IKam rtD ING THIS SALE BABY GRAND AND PLAYER PI ! 3-*>67. ANO, SIOO OFF. C ------- M C. LIPPARD 55* N. PERRY “gib'son'refrigerator. $50' ■M 6-3114 . buy th*m. OP 3 VOLS. ENCYCLOPEbliW, 1*44, 2 .... 'll $35. 543-3515. _ I FOR dusty concrete FLOORS ------ . I Use Liquid Floor Hardener GOLD COLORED DIVAN i Simple Inexpensive Application ____ 21 Lexington iBolce Builders Supply GOOD WORKINO'rEFRIGERATOR I, S35. Washer L'.ff MEATHKIT FM STEREO TUNER. Holds 361 lbs. All test freeze shelves Bonus storage door JIM'S OUTLET AND GARDEN CENTER Sheets, ISO percale, high polished toffon. Irregulars. Double fitted, SI.7*, Hats, 11.4*. Fitted twins. I. Pearson's FurnI E. Pika St.. FE _ METAL BUNK BEOS, sTo. DOUBLE bed, tIO. Reclining chair. tIO Ice Chest, 15. _FE MM4.______________ NECCHI, LATE '65 ng. Automatic zig-za ^onbelat, tfc. Guaran #«m#ott ot tS.OO It* I4/.42 cash prict. Call ci FE 5-ofS* For the Finest in Top-Quality Merchandise Shop MONTGOMERY WARD PONTIAC MALL GARAGE DOORS Sleet one piece, sectional, wood am llborglas. Factory rajacts In soma sizes. Garage Iront remodel-Ing, Free Mllmatet. Berry Door Sales Co., 2300 Cola Slrtof, BIr-mingham. FE 2-0203 or Ml 4-I03S. GOOD USED VACUUM CLEANER-....... -"ARANTEED. ___ - , GUARANTEED. ALSO REBUILT KIRBYS 'WITH SAME GUARANTEE AS NEW ONES. KIRBY SERVICE & SUPPLY CO;, 2417 DIXIE HWY. CALL ^74J23A______________, HOT WATER HEATER. 30 GALLON, ------ Norge — " " 36,000 BTU. I Veer 3-6466. Cqll alter time Saturday.____________________ ETbCITING NEW THOMAS ORGAN- icltlng new Total T -lal Tone ---------- D u II _______ Farm Equipment 'auction ^ ^ p*M^'°^ ‘ HORSEPOWER -piDiNo TRAC- Housetroilers 89 AUCTION LAND and snow blade, ifts. lOXSa 195* PALACE MOBILE HOME I . furnished, automatic washer. Frlgl-' ,CTOR, model B with snoW' dalre appNances, storms, screens! I and carpeting, FE 4-0411, take over payments. 1 KING BROS. 125' BY 8' CENTURY, UrfE'1964 Irielte; storm windows; washer; , FE 4-^662 . . . JC'J ' S SPECIALS - USED Hum. runabout, 35 h p. . A lax tgrailer. AM lor LUCKY AUTO Owner says ketion complete furnishings of a local residence Bunk beds; guitar; piano rolls; folding single bed; baby bed; bas- molors, Grumman canoes, Kayot,l*5$ CHEVY't.-TON PICKUP pontoons, Pemco trailers. Take CjSMJM-45y. From_*-5 p.m. RlOj" 1*61 '/S-TON CHEVY PICKUP W FE 3-7954 IMF John McAulitfe Ford 'Hickory Ridge Rd. to Demode Rd. tex and rack. 682-57SI. wn's S*a"le, '.“"TTotl’co'’Lek’e'’ Pmne INTERNATIONAL 1*65 Main *-217*. ' > 'on Huck 4 spe. Pontiac Rd. at Opdydke______ FOR . I E R 'C U R V JACK HAGAN MUSIC CENTER 46* Elizabeth Lake Rd. EXPERT PIANO AMOVING PIANOS WANTED .....T Service _____EA^J-7B2i guitar (KAY). JUST L D TRACTOR, PLOW, DRAG Ida. FE 5-5750. . I-HORSE SPRl'NGFrELD ALL SET UP 1 take i HIGHLIGHT-)**) FORD FUTURA-i tractoi, ............ - Romantic red, fully equipped, a, - 6840 Coolldge Rd. I79-095*. lovely car in above average con-:MICHIGAN'S LARGEST (REAL) Oltion. , J tarm servlet store. John Deere, Plus many more Items new ai used loo numerous to menllo paint; housewares and clothes; oi spring and mattress. GUITAR^ E THE AUCTON W 1300 Crescent Lake Rt lord Police Station Wa still h '.'AUCTION Hartland Area Hardwar, ■ roe slock of all ----_ - _*>JCJION x.Mu, u. vv„.,.. f^at lops, clai: AuJtION S'ALE SATURDAY, 7J0 sics, electrics and amps Drum Pf *' Blue Bird Auction, 16853 outllls all colors. Ulxle hwy Call M. BaMow, Hclly, AAfTDDIC JUIIICir ' 637-51*3 tor immediate dlsbosal ot MUKKI6 MUilL | houseJwW estates and misc. 34 S. Telegreph Rd. 1 EVERY FRIDAY ' 7;30 P.M, EVERY SATURDAY '*7:30 P M. USED EQUIPMENT M-F 202 tractor and loader. Ferg. 35, like new. Case diesel loader and Case gas loader, several Ford Complete parts ai ON OLIVER F Massey^e^gusw Across from Tel-Huron FE 2-0S67 every SUNDAY KENT ELECTRIC GUITAR AND Soorting Goc^s-AII Types louble oick-up, exc Ooor Prizes Every Auction EM 3-Mir 1 IN* ’' OPEN 7 DAYS-V to 9 SEE THE NEW )*66 MODELS now on display It special . r SMALL n6lson piano, 'upright, good condition. 338-4603. _ .AYER PIANO. ______ 33t-0)0a.____ trade IN SPECIALS Hammond organ with Leslie er, SI295. Culbranten E, 25 SI750. Floor model Wurlllze BlITAUCtiON' ■ I '■•“'I?' 5W^U]xie_Hwy__ _ _OR_^2717 - . --- i-iKE MONDAY, FEBRUARY ^ 12 NOON, Travsl TroilBrs on the spot financing • IFREE DELIVERY-FREE SET-UP WE GUARAN3EE A PARKING 'mall I SPACE, for Large selection at \r wides. HOLLY'PARK, CHAMPION i PARK WOOD ANO PARK ESTATES MIDLAND TRAILER SALES 4, com.'»s\djx^hwv , ie tollel FE . SEE THE _____ 1'*” G'MlffRAGfOR AND TRAIL-, * Larsen oisilli" i er. Exc. condition. 110*5. 628-3344.1 HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS ’tnoi«°'’?u,rom°?ib,‘ i^utS "Your Evinrud* Dealer" I sharpi 5850. JEROME FORD, 10*9 S. Telegraph ________332-0033 Rochester FORD Dealer^ 01^*711 ■ i1*6l ENGLISH FORD '.'s TON PA'N-al, good running, liras and body, •• >PU»* K'l, prIvOla. SI75. 363-76S0. |i*61 CHEVY v"i0" TRACTOR, 41* engine. 2-specd axle. Power sieer-' Ing. Sharp! Save! JEROME FO’'* 1966 VW ince balance ot $1599 in McAuliff« Ford SEE US At ThB Cobo Hall BOAT,SHOW IMF PATTERSON CHEVROLET., I •625. Mbw and UtBd Cart 1(W MICHIGAN TURBO CRAFT OAKLAND MARINE SALES 2527 Dixie Htghway-Ponllec _______ USED CRUISERS' '63 Owens 30' Express, 6-sleeper, 4 Owens 26' Express, 225 h.p. lully equipped, 35 hours I Owens 24' Express, 115 h,( fully equipped, low hours 4 Coronet, 23' llberglas ■ " -10 Volvo, DO DODGE '/i-TON PICKUP LONG WHEELBASE. V STANDARD, - ----- I. BURKE, 33I-4S2I. SPAR- WHY NOT OWN AN "OK" USED CAR Shop thB big lot at MATTHEWS-HARGREAl/ES 631 OAKLAND AVENUE FE 4-4547 1954' BUICK SPECIAL. STANDARD 'Q, no V fjberglas cruiser,' 1**2 SCOUT WITH ;:ULL TOP. 4*48 Bowers Rd. Consisting ot 52 head ol Holstein dairy catlla (40 cows, 10 bred hellers, 2 open hellers), Suniet OXFORD TRAILER' SALES 13 to 60 ft. I NEW 1*66 MODELS ON DISPLAY LAKE & SEA MARINA OWENS DEALER ' - ' *■ - FE 4*517 Airplansi ______h pric*. .................. aoer, RICH^N BROS. SEWING CENTER, Pontiac's ONLY author- -------------lee's ONLY . bed Nacchl dealer, ^s^. alFRIGlRATORI, STOVES, S20 X. Mbhltan App lance Co. 673- servlce. mn value 14**5. Take' with. Michigan Fluorescent, 3*3' Orchard Lk. FE_4-84*2 HUMIDIFIERS Speclil sale - regular t St.*5., Chandler Heeling. C JIM'S OUTLET ANCHGARDEN CENTER Light flxturet for ell roomi » 3 5632 delleri, .gless a... . II2S. AM fixl 2301 Dixie 1**5 BOW LLOSE-OUTS ine't Archary, 714 W. Huron APACHE CAMP TRAILERS Buy early and Apacht laclory d talar, BIlL mile east ot Lap* Co. Sportsman's Clup et Watertc PRIOR'S* AUCTION FRIDAY, FEB. 4, 7 P.M chests', tables, chairs, china cabl-■ ‘"ilsh (hairs,'bobblnturnadi RIVER BANK Mobile Village 3637 Lakevllla Rd., Oxford. 1 Pontiac's NBWBst Mobil HomB Park SATURDAY, 7 P.M. Hall's auction sale. 70S W. Clir ton Rd. Lake Orion. Italian mi atcordlon, 120 bass. Toro sn blower, wardrob*. chest al dre Irigeralor, TVs, elecirlc slove’s. NEW 3 piece canopy bedroom sul ALJO BARTH CORSAIR PILOT-OWNER LOOKING FOR A PILOT V IS I single engine ptane, jid coniUder renting to m* isure (Ise .only, over I! tagged Experienced In es single engine plane. Ma Illy man In middle 30's, r ' aree resident. 626-7*6* i condlllin. Only $555 11*53 BUICK. g60D TRANSPORTA- JEROME FORD, Rochester FORD Peeler, OL I-**!!._______________ M4 FORD '/I fON VI, CUSfOMf Ceb, radioSnd healer. >1400. OR 4-1208. ' STUOEB-XKER TRANS-STAR, Trailer .Hauler wllh the V8 engine, | 5 speed* O '-- *-----*"'■ heidldp.^^^AulomaMc. 1959'BUICK 1*65 CHEVY PICKUP, ''i ' qON.j - - -------a.)jo7, I 1**5 FORD PICKUP, V-l, EXTRAS,; 402-4131. ' payments ol S3.00. We handle Mr" I3an*e?* *" *Ve 8-4071 Capitol Auto WantBd Cart-Tracks 101 FACTORY BRANCH New end Used Trucks FB 5*415_________675 Oakland BUICK LeSABRE, VERY NfCE ___)wner. 33F 7542. _ must dispos'e of — iti*i buTc'k? BUYING SHARP CARS BUD MANSFIELD USED CARS 1301 Baldwin. 2 blocki N. of Walton FE 2 2041 California Buyers For bherp cats, cell . . . ,-M & M MOTOR SALES ■ ^Ibs MA S-141 to men-td-dally. clxMPERS e. I Winnebago Id Phoenix bile home* to lit your budget. IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY EXTRA Hard to Findl 1963 INTERNATIONAL Scout- with 4 wheel drive, 1 lion. Consignment! Iloneer MY 3-1171 or MY wT4l7” JACK HALL IS NOW BACK FROM VACATION BUYING SMALL AND LARGE ESTATES Also used trillcri end comoeri. Pickup coveri. Wo loll ond Inittll Roes# and Driw-titt hitchoi. HOWLAND SAjiBS and RENTALS 224S Olxlo Hwy. OR 2-1456 Opon » ».tn. *tll * p.m.;_ BRADLEy CAMPER ALUMINUM covori for any pitk up, 673-9521 RWER BANK ' MOBILE VILLAGE PhonB; 338-6583 . 3*5 S. 1 OPEN: Mon.-Td*s?rhuri.'I’s lo » CLOSED WEDNESDAY OPEN: FrI.- Sot.- lun. 12 to * EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Car "Chock Itw rofl. than got Iba bast" el Averill - $1295 BEATTIE 4 DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD 'Your FORb DEALER SInco IMO" 'Honrio ol Sorvici etter OR 3-1291 REPOSSESSION 1*41 BUICK ELECTRA 225 CONVERTIBLE. BEAUTI-FU' TAN FINISH, FULL POWER. WE WILL BRING TO YOUR HOMB FOR JUST U.n WEEKLY WITH NO $SI DOWN. CALL MR. CASH - 331-4521 SPBRTAN. 1**2 BUICK SPECIAL CONVERTIBLE WITH AUTOMAT-1C transmission, RADIO AND HEAYER and WHITE- It SS.*2 ^ NO MONEY C wetkiy paymei CALL CREOI ............... liM’BuiciTR'iWEiOriHARPrsi^^^ vo^blKk Inlorlor, lull po*«r. FB l'*'*4~BTTTclFip’ECiAL tbM'^RYT-blo, whil# wllh block lap, powtr steering, oulo. 62S-2511. / '.I THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1966 D—» ■d NMVM4UMdCan 106 IM4 BUICK WILDCAT t DOOR hardtop, light blua with dark blua intarlar, V4, and brakaa. autr aton. radlo_jnd hi tIMS. RATfeRK- ______________ CO.. I1M S. Woodward Avo., Blrm-Ingham, Ml A-IW. Better Buys at Lloyd's 1963 FALCON Twpdoor hardtop. VI, radio haatar. $1095 1965 COMET 4.door wagon, VI, automatic, radio, hoator, balanca ot tactory warran- 1964 PONTIAC 1965 MUSTANG VI, automatic, radio, h anco fadory warranty. $1695 $895 "*$1495 $3295 1965 PONTIAC ataangor wagon. VI, automatic, aror alaoring and brakea. pdwor at haatar. $2895 I. Wagon. VI, auto- 1962 FORD 1963 FALCON Squire wagon, healer. Reck on $1095 2JDOOR, FIBERGLAS ■ Min. ^ CONVER ___ _______NO MONL . DOWN, E-Z finance PLAN at - Estate Storacje 109 S. EAST BLVD. FE 3-7161 ' Nmv ERd tlMd C«rt 104 IMPALA 4-DOOR, Mew —d Uwd fari WEEf EEd IhEd Cew 104 IMI COMET, KYLINDER, STICK ahift. npw ttraa, WSS. 173-dlW. Weak Creditl No Credit! INSTANT CREDIT-SPOT DELIVERY $10,000 DISCOUNT SALE I ($5 ,Pown delivm any car) too CARS TO CHOOSE PROM ALL CARS BARGAIN PRICED^ FOR QUICK SALE. ALC makes AND MODELS Its CHOOSE FROM. ONE YEAR WAR-, RANTY, FINANCING NO problem, we finance OUR OWN CARS. ASK FOR MR. ROSE. FE 1-7137. State Wide Auto 3400 Elizabeth Lg)(e Rd. FORD INC. ____WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM IfaS COMET CALIENTE 2 DOOR hardtop, i cyl. stick ihm, r"*-heater, whito vinyl top, rad I S,S00 actual mllaa. Pricad to _... JEROME FORD Rocheator Ford Dealer, OL1-1711. Ml MERCURY CONVERViBLE, tinancing. FE 84071 Capitol Auto apeclal..... BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH REPOSSESSION 1914 DODGE, MUST SELL TODAY. MATADOR RED SEDAN, VI STANDARD. ANY OLD CAR DOWN AND BANK RATES ON BALANCE AT JUST W.47 WEEKLY. CALL MR. BURKE, 33I-4S2I. SPARTAN. THEY MUST GO! I»M Ford 2-door t 1tS7 Pontiac, all power T95* Pickup, Ford, 14-ton __________ ______ ______ . 1958 Plymouth 2-door t 87 power steering and brakea. Mamr S Chavroleta, '82, ‘59, '57. ReaaonabI extras (4 to select trom). JEROME ■ ........ ............ ■'------■ FORD Rochester FORD Dealr- OL 1-9711. ___________ Lloyd Motors GLENN'S L. C. Williams, Solesman 952 W. Huron St. FE 4-7371 FE 4-1797 Houghten & Son OLDS-RAMBLER-GMC CUTS PRICES ON OUR COMPLETE STOCK OF QUALITY USED CARS I Goo^ Selection Available Now Check These ValuesI GLENN'S 1964 9 pass«ng«r station wagor Malibu Chevy 7. ■ L. C. Williams, Solesmon 952 W. Huron St. 7371 FE 4.1797 1964 DODGE DART GT Beautiful ivory with black bucket seat Interior, 145 h.p., automatic, radio and haatar, factory warranty, “'"''“$1495 Full Price Hunter Dodge SPARTAN ONLY SPECIAL 1985 CORSA COUPE IN SPOTLESS IVY GREEN FINISH, WITH THE WHITE ACCENT STRIPE, SPEED, 140 HP. ENGINE, GUARAN. TEED 5,000 MILES. WITH GM FACTORY WARRANTY IN EFFECT. 055 OAKLAND AVE. (W mile N. of CASS AVE.) FE 0-4520. 185 CHEVY MALIBU SPO^ coupe. In warrar......... Illneaa torcea aala. manta. 383-8900.________________ M5 CHEVY IMPALA SUPER apart VO, double power, auto, wood tilt whaal. extraa. FE 2-7105 attar 3:45 pm.___________________ 1985 CHEVY WAGON 8-paaaanger, VO auto., power Ing, brakea. A fine value 02,195 HASKINS CHEVY___________AAA 1985 CHEVY BEL AIR VO 8 aenger wagon, Powergllde, h radio, power brakea, ataorlng window, FE ^5850. 10 appreclatod, 802-au. 198V FALCON STATION WAGON WITH AUTOMATIC transmission, radio AND HEATER AND WHITE-WALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Aaaume weekly Mymenta of $5.00 — CALL Credit mgr. Mr. Parka at HAROLD TURNER. FORD, Ml 4-7500. 1981 FALCON STATION WAGON. 1959 FORD WAGON ... $149 CASH., Opdyke AAotora, Pontiac Rd. at Op-1 dyke. FE 0-9237._____________________j 1999 FORD 8, STICK, $250. TERMS. | SPARTAN ONLY SPECIAL 1981 FORD AND JUST WHAT YOU NEED FOR THAT 1ST. OR 2ND CAR. A NINE-PASSENGER COUNTRY SQUIRE WITH VS ENG.. AUTOA8ATIC AND ALL THE POPULAR FORD WAGON -FEATURES. NO $ DOWN. NO PAYMENTS TIL SPRING. JUST $0J7 WEEKLY. CALL MR. BURKE AT 338-4520. 055 OAKLAND AVE. (',4 MILE N, OF CASS AVE.) MUST DISPOSE 0^ -*1981 T-BIRD~ No money ' “------■' 00.07 weekly. WILSON OFFERS MORE CADILLAC 1964 FLEETWOOD FIremlal turquolae finlah, equipped with every luxury option. Including tactory air '*$2i9^"‘ BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH Woodward___Ml 7-3214 Pretty Ponies 1965 MUSTANGS 7 USED MUSTANGS TO CHOOSE FROM CONVERTIBLES HARDTOPS 2 PLUS 2's FULL EQUIPMENT^ As Low As $79 Down HAROLD TURNER FORD INC. 484 $. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-751 1985 MUSTANG 2 DOOR HARDTOI 289, beat otter. 802-5583._ 1962 CONTINENTAL Ith full power, air dondlHonlng, automatic tranamlaalen, radio and heater, arhHowall tlrwa. onT-049 deem and weakly paymom $14.92. HAROLD TURNER 4-7580 $995, a 5 Whyaall, III, Mfa-15 Mile SPARTAN ONLY SPECIAL 1981 MERCURY. A LUXURIOUS MONTEREY SEDAN -WITH A DAZZLING GOLD FINISH, POWER, V8. AUTOMATIC AND THE BUILT-IN LUXURY OF A FINE MOTORCAR. NO MONEY DOWN, NO PAYMENTS 'TIL , SPRING. CALL MR. CASH AT 338-4528. 855 OAKLAND AVE.) 4 MILE N. OF CASS 1983 M E R C U R Y CONVERTIBLE, SPARTAN ONLY SPECIAL VINTAGE CAR IS IN M ja CONDITION, NO $ DOWN AND payments OF JUST $8.97 WEEKLY. CALL MR. BURKE AT 330-4520. 855 OAKLAND AVE. (-4 MILE N. OF CASS AVE ) Station Wagons 1965 FORD Falrlane Demoa, 5 to chopaa trom, H all have new ear warranty, 8l>- " tomatic tranomlulon, radio, hooter, whitewall tiraa, only 049 down and weekly paymanta of $1.00. HAROLD TURNER $5 Dn. $5 Wl $5 Dn. 05 wl $5 Dn. $5 wl $7 Dn. 07 wl $7 Dn. $7 wl $8 Dn. $8 Wl $3 Dn. 03 wl $5 Dn. $5 W N ON DUTY PRICES ;.iSLASHED! FE 5^101. McAullHe. TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND HEATER AND WHITE-WALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Aaaume weakly paymenta ot $8.80 -- rxi I FoBniT UAD AX, „„L FINANCING CALL MR. DAM AT FE 84071 Capitol Auto USED CARS SMALL AD-BIG LOT 50 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM CHEVELLE REPOSSESSION-. 1903 OL_DS CUT-laaa. |le money Boam. Ptymar-ot 010M wookly. Call Mr. Maa at 335-4101. McAuima.________ 1964 Olds Cutlass Bucket aeata, conaolo, radig • heater, power ateering and brah automatic whitewalla. You mi aM thla,^W5 down, paymenta Villagt Rambler 'STATI0NWA60NITIS' BOTHERING YOU? here are several cars that Prices Slashed! Buy a car today at KING AUTO SALES Michigan's Largest Volume Used Car'^ Dealer 9 Lots • Specialist in cars $195-$! 495 • No red tape • No Deloys Easy Credit • Giant Savings • 100 Cars to Choose from WE'LL SELL YOU Any Car Below For As Low As $5 DOWN 1960 Chevy Impale 4-Doer Hardtop $195 1959 Buick 2-Door Hordtop, Powtr $295 FI 4-7371 1955 CADILLAC^ 4 DOOR, 6666 condlllon, 5400. FE 5-5395. 1955 ^AblLLAC, EXTRA SHARP, •Ir conditioned. 1500. FE 34012. MUStnBTl^E OF-1959 CAOIL- lac Coupe OovTlIe: No --------------- ' down. - Poymonia of M.I7 Coll Mr. Murphy ot FE 1959 Cadillac Coupe DeVilIc ly Down, Only — $997 full Price VILLE. MUST SELL TODAY NO 555 NEEDED, FAY-------- OF JUST - - OLDS-RAMBLER-GMC 528 N. Moin Street ROCHESTER ____ OL 1-9781 , ...1, 51395. pIItTERSON ROLET CO:, 1104 5. Woonworo Ave., Blrmlnghom, Ml 4-2735. _ 914 5. woooyi . CORVA’IR, 1982 MONZA, 4-SPEEO,' - It 8725. 383-4773. 1958 DODGE - " ■ JEROME MOTOR SUES 1980 Wide Track Dr. FE 3-7021 CADILLAC 1984. SEDAN DEVILCe, full powtr, 8xc„ SW5. Owner iQovIng city — Ml 4-9399. _ 1988 WHITE CADILLAC, I PWNRR, lull poWer with tlr-condlHonTno, 1962 CHEVROLET $999 Full pVice' ”"^ LUCKY AUTO 1M0 W. widf Track FE 4-1006 ____or_ FE 3-7IS41 Hunter Dodge 1499 $. Hunter ntor 15 Milo Rd, I BIRMINGHAM___847-B95I Superior Rambler-leep * j>0 Ooklifid Avo._^ FE BUY HERE-PAY HERE 1954 Chevrolet Bel Air 2 door aulomotic, full price 897. MARVEL 251 Oillltnd Avo 1957 CHEVY, CLEAN ’ ________*?*•’»«_ ___ 1952 CHEVY'MODEL 210. AUTO trtnimlation. Good condition. 2-4872. IMF > John. AAcAullflo Ford 1962 Chevy malic. No Moi Ivory, V^ly p $7.87 .... DODGE DART 1959 Pontiac Cotallna 1980 Rambler wagon ---- IMI Buick convortiba 51895 OPDYKE HARDWARE FE M488 1961 DODGE KING AUTO SALES 6695 Dixie Hwy. Clarkston MA 5-2671 package bucketa and conaole, ‘— “*■ ■—led with many .............. newl JEROME FORD, Rxhealer FORD Dealer,' STRAIGHT OL 1^711. _ 1985 FORD OALAXIE 4 DO 0 R: Etop, VI automitlc power atcr-rtdlo, haatar, 5,000 mill F'S^R'Di^e."ro'L?9? - - - Wide Treck 'W or FE 3 7154 ".J,* "**'*”’* °" SPARTAN DODGE 155 Oakland Avo. Te M52*8 SPARTAN ONLY SPECIAL 1981 VALIANT WITH A SOFT. GREEN FINISH, KCONOMI-CAL SLANT • SIX WITH STANDARD TRANSMISSION - PERFECT 2ND CAR -FULL PRICE 1397. 155 OAKLAND AVE. (•/. MILE N. OF CASS AVE.) FE 8-4528. r96rSY¥0UTH Sporta Fury, cenvortibla, powar afoorlng, automatic, V-t, a beiull-tul Wuo, drive thla one end buy, only— $1395 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 14 S. Woodward *_^ M2H, 1963 VALIANT VIOO, 4 door, radio and h e good mile maker, one o full price 5895. OAKLAND FE 4-1808 Ikl^^ A IMF •Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM Jutl 8881 of Oakland, KESSLER'S IRDTOP , AUTO-}N. RA- LUTELY NO MONEY iX>WN - Aaaumo wtokly ptwnonta Oi tt.M. Call ^edit MOR. Mr. Parka at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. . IMF John McAulllti Fori 1964 Ford Galaxie Hardtop Filtbfck "500" 2 doer block, and factory oquipr down, FInonct Balance o' $1397. ► 11945 FALCON WITH AUTOMATIC tronimlialon, radio. Mg 8-cyllndor tnglne, priced at 81595. JEROME FORD. Rochtalor FORD- Dealer, OL 1-9711. aaaume weekly paymenta of 55.00. \ We handle end arrange ell tl-, nenclng, Cell Mr. Den el: FE 84071 • j Capitol Auto I 312 W. MONTCALM j.u.teMt_ot^iend __ I CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 180 COMET 2-DOOR WAGON, NEW 724 Oakland Ave. 332-9158' triea end muffler, good condition,------------------------ _____________ ,l REPOSSESSION BARGAIN DAYS I f?.MV...«LL,jopAY,^i943 1953 Plymouth, atick 5 58 1957 Plymouth ..... I 75 1980 Ford, atick 5150 IttOiChovy, 3-door, real nict 5275 - ' • jfo - FE 5-3271 or FE 5-2397. 1557 CHEVROLET, SOOOR 8, Cmo‘'l^i hunS^"**' "**' EUSWORTH AUTO SALES 4577 Dixit Haey. ‘ MA' 5-1400 1983 CHEVY WAGON 7i, WHITE, Mwer atoering, brakea, elr con-dllloner., power lock retr end and lltl. 27000 milea. SUg). 893-2717. DODGE CARS AND TRUCKS 1943 Chevy 3-ooor t cylinder automatic, radio, .clean, prIcad to aolll JEROME FORD, Rocheator FORD Ooolor, OL 1-9711. 1983 CORVETTE COUPE '3867 ■Pood, AM-FM, power winder 1963 DODGE "440"“ 7 tor hirtffop, 3l3 -«nglh€,. matJc rtdte «hd heattr, In side and autr tff down, and I39.X par month. Hunter Dodge 499 5. Hunter near 15 Mile Rd. BIRMINGHAM 887-0958 1959 FORD GALAXIE 4 DOOR AU to., rocohtly ovorhouM, original owner, 5245. 824-9583.____ _ 1959 WHITE FORD, STICK 8, SNOW' now JaHon,~ll'fl0* f’e*'2-^•)jifr"T» IMF I FAUON oITUXE. 4-DOOR. ri-iag"*' ^ “ "" g FE 29223. KYU. 1980 FORD CONVERTIBLE . NINE PASSENGER 1984 Ford Country Squire wagon, outometlc, power : end. brakea, lugoage reck kllng black with rad Interior $1695 Full Price Hunter Dodge itetloni ^ ileering | Only I Left. -Company Owned Demo- 1965 Ford XL Convertible with e 332 engine, radio, heeler Crulie-O-Metic ‘renamlaalon, while walla, come In on this unit today $avel BFATTIF IN WAT EAUER Sll ---re otter th OR 3-1291 VALIANT SEDAN. NO „ NEEDED AND PAYMENTS OF JUST 17.17 WEEKLY. CALL MR. eURKE, 338-4521, SPARTAN. CADILLAC Only once, or maybe twice o yeor, a cor of this calibre comes along. This 1963 Coupe De-Ville was owned by a retired Vice-President of General Motors - hos. less than 12,000 actual miles which con be verified by the previous owner. Loaded with equipment and absolutely immoculote inside and out. WILSON OF BIRMINGHAM Ask For Lloyd Wallace 1350 N. Woodword ' Ml 1959 Mercury 4-Deor Hprdtop, Full Fa $295 I960 Dodge 2-Doer Hardtop, Fewer $395 1961 Falcon station Wioen, n't Vouro $495 1963 Dart A Beautiful 2^Door $595 1962 Ford ConvortlMo, Raol Nice $695 1961 Chevy Impolo Hardtop. Nice $695 1960 Corvair with Aulomtilc Tranam $495 1961 VW A Real Truck ter That Job $395 KING AUTO SALES 3275 Hufon (at Elizabeth Lk.) 3384088 I. D—10 PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 4. 1966 Ummi Cmt •1964 PLYMOUTH ■•IVKierf I door Iwrdtop. radio i and haatcr. 4M angina. 4 on floor, sharp, full prioa SI4fS. OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH ri4 Oaaiaiid *ya New eiMl Used Can 106 New and Ui^ Cm <106 Naw and Used Can 106 Nim aad Usad Can 106 Naw aad Utad Can j06 New and Used Can W -r-K -r/ir4 il*** GRAND FRIX. 17.000 MlLIS,T*aS PONTIAC CATALINA 4 DOOR GLENN S IHl AMERICAN SOOOR. BEAUTI-fm OMn OIMe Gpaen finilih, eute-metk transmlsswn. This is the kind of used car everyone is look- lee us LAST For A Greet DmI er* ot^Vln^r ^ “*** Penllec NO MONET OOWN-WE FINANCE CREDIT AUTO SALES 12S Oakland at wide Track FE 2-*214 . I**4 Catalina coupe power tfeer- deluxe trim, *120*. OR 1-301. — w—i-e i--w GLENN S *52 W. Huron SI and brakes, blue with matching roaiiis bdiw FE A737I FE 4-l7*7 interior, almost like new, 1965 GRAND PRIX ing tor. We sell only select used cars for repeat business. ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP EM 34155 KEEGO PONTIAC ULES A SERVICE 682-3400 New and Ustd Cm 106 New «mI Uud Cm 106 see us FIRST BOB BORST SHELTON LINCOLN-MERCURY ‘ 0 S. Woodward Birminfl MI 6-4538 Weak Credit! No Credit! INSTANT CR€DIT-SPOT DELIVERY $10,000 DISCOUNT SALE! ($5 down delivers any car) IM CARS TO CHOOSE FROM ALL CARS BARGAIN PRICED FOR QUICK SALE ALL makes and models TO CHOOSE FROM. ONE YEAR WARRANTY. FINANCING NO PROBLEM WE FINANCE OUR OWN CARS ASK FOR MR. ROSE FE a-nj’ Stole Wide Auto 3400 Elizabeth Lake Rd. 144 Pontiac LaMA>«s coOFe. «' cyllndar. automatic, power $tear- “■*’» lr*'ln'“‘!^l“*’iSd*'VJi’ ‘sMtsSw PATTERSON ^EVROLET CO.! — 1104 Woodward Ave, Birmingham'. Ml '4J7M________________ ¥ a t-ige4 - OWN Tempest Itaa Lemant i excellent, mthltewall orm ptus snow tires, bucxet radio, many extras. $1895 BIRMINGHAM dltlonFrig, reSly CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH cessorles. . ... . .. -j. i sharp: 1965 steering, power brakes, «. DMieiMSUr I r -.......... SHORT EMPLOYMENT? ISO cash or agurvalent trade-in Williams, Salesman I 5%*“cSSe'" * *51 W. Huron St I TIC Corp. Mr. toow, Ml O-SSOO. i BONNEVILLE Convertible 1*45 OTO, TIgIr gold. CORDO-van top, Positraction, ‘‘ console, vibaasonic rm er S?3*0. FE S-OWl. 11*43 RAMBLER 4-DOOR "i DEMO SALE 1*45 BUICK Skylark 4 door t«45 LeSkBRE 4 door 1»4S PLYMOUTH “bELVEDERE~1 '*45 WILDCAT Hardtop. J dc ’ 'ww*'. No CKi^T^ed. 1*45 ELECTRA 4 door es Opdyne Morors- Pon- |i Opg^e ,FE 1*45 SPECIAL Deluxe 4 do 1*45 SPECIAL Convertible $2495 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE lowest price, call us at Rosa Rambler. We sell only select used, cars for repeat business. ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP EM 3-4155 FINISH WITH CONTRAST-• ING BURGUNDY INTERIOR -TORQUEFLITE VI POWER STEERING and factory WARRANTY FOR YOUR PROTECTION. FULL PRICE. *2.1*7 *55 OAKLAND f AVE. ('. VILE N. OF CASS AVE 1 FE MSM ir GM W DOUBLE ‘ CHECKED USED CARS 65 Mt. Clemens St. (AT Win'S TRACK) FE 3-7954 Spotleis. $24*5. 3M-*333. 1*45 BONNEVILLE SPORT COUPE, all power. Hydramatic. air conditioning. 7,400 .miles, extras, *2.?*5, WABifL V*5* PON', .... nice, best offer. UL 2 332*.____ 1»S* PONTIAC CATALINA 4 DOOR, very good condItKn, *550. 473-0427. 1*42 PONTIAC Star Chief 1*61 ELECTRA 4,dmr sedan 1*44 WILDCAT 2 door Hardtoi 1*43 OLDS ■'«*•' Hardtop 1*63 CADILLAC Coop* DeVilh i*4l FORD Gelexi* 4 door ‘ Transportation 5 Spec:ials . 60 PONTIAC 4-PASSENGER WAGON, THAT YOU CAN TAKE THE WHOLE FAMILY ALONG IN LUXURY IN THIS POPULAR MODEL -POWER, AUTOMATIC, AND KID-PROOF, ALL-VINYL TRIM. NO DOWN, NO PAYMENTS -TIL SPRING. JUST *4*7 WEEKLY. CALL MR. BURKE AT 33B4S2*. OLIVER BUICK Full Wkly. Price Pymt, 1*54 CHEVY, eutometic *47 * .00 l*S* MERCURY, 2 door t 7* *1." 1*57 PLYMOUTH, stick $ 7* *1. 1*5* FORD, Wagon S *7 $1.00 1*57 CHEVY, I cylinder $ *7 *1.00 l*S* OLDS, Hardtop t *7 ll.r 1*5* CHEVY, Impale 4 S1*7 $2,-i. 1*40 RAMBLER, Sedan $1*7 $2.25 1*41 METRO, S' ......... 1*57 PONTIAC, 1*41 RENAULT, - - CHEVY, 2 ]*40 PONTIAC, * PASSENGER ....—■vouenc,, x uuo, • gon, clean Inside and out, mechan- 1*44 TONTIAC CATALINA CON- 195* PONTIAC, Sedan Ically oood. FE S4)4$*. vertlbl*, very clean, power brakes, i«ao DODGE. 2-door ----------- -............. “"**r xt^rino. nnM PLYMOUTH, Stick I* BUICK, 2-door *1*7 Ss!2S *2*7 *2.75 1*40 TONTIAC BONNEVILLE, CON-vertlbl*. full power, lull price. 13*7, payment of *3.10 GLENN'S ______ __________ *3*7 *4.1 1*40 CHEVY, Impale *5*7 *4.3 1*42 CORVAIR, Stick *5*7 *4.3 1*42 TEMPEST. Wagon $7 dn S7.( Estate Storage 109 S. EAST BLVD. FE 3-7161 15,000 i custom triir — Ic, powc miles, L. C. Williams, Salesman *52 W. Huron It. E 4-7371 FE 4-17* , 1*61 CHEVY, Wagon 1*42 FORD, Galaxit 1*41 PONTJAC, Star /Chitf only $2*7, No Money Down, 4. lume small weekly payments. W* handle and arrangt all financing. 1965 / TEMPEST Credit MAN on duty VA^Y MORE TO CHOOSE FROM WE HANDLE AND ARRANGE ALL FINANCING CLL MR. DAN AT FE 8-4071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM I____ Just east of Oaklano 11*45 GTO CONVERTIBLE. HEAVy! FE 84071 , Capitol Auto* ! 312 W. MONTCALM i Just east of Oakland_ f*40 SPONTiAC CATALINA, TAKE over payments, FE 4-163*. 1*41 PONTIAC, 4 SPEEDF 1*41 TEMPEST WAGON, EXCEL-l#nt condition. AutomatICr —*•-whitewalls. >500. MA 51152. TmT PONTIAC BONNEVILLE $1595 PONTIAC I^RETAIL STORE __________________________ 1*45 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE, DOU-{ ble power, $2,4S0. Real sharp. OR 3-S30S. ________ X-OAKLAND COUNTY CARS, $1,4*5 EACH, FULL PRICE $5.00 DOWN. CAN-------------- NANCED AT BANK RATES. LUCKY AUTO bank rates. Opdyke A^rs, tiac Rd. *t Opyke, FE $-*137. 1*42 BONNEVILLE, 4-D6oR HARD- lop, loaded ------------ — OR 3-74*4 : 4 d60R CATALINA, ng, bwer^akes^tul- T*42 PONTIAC S1005. 4*2-4427.______________ f*42 CATALINA 4 SPEED, MUST sell, reasonable. *52-22*4 65 Mt. Clemens Street (AT WIDE TRACK) FE 3-7954 *C«»d1lon!;l»M PaNTIAC CATALINA, factory RUSS (JOHNSON / REPOSSESSION MOST SELL NOW, 1*62 PONTIAC HARDTOP. NO SSt DOWN AND PAYMENTS OF ' JUST 510,47 WEEKLY. CALL MR. BURKE, 330-4S2I. SPAR- TALINA, llo, heatt Pontiac-Rambler On M34 In Lake Orion MY 3-6266 GO!! HAUPT PONTIAC 1*44 BONNEVILLE V 1*44 .TEMPEST 4 door, VI, aulomat- 4 CATALINA 2 di 1*44 BUICK wagon. 1*44 BONNEVILLE 2 door ha________ aulomatic, power steering, brakes (we have 3 to choose from). ---- 117*5. Estate Storage 109 S. EAST BLVD. FE 3-7161_ 11750. NO MONEY DOWN Buy Here - Pay Here CAR PRICE WEEK 1958 t-BIRD FULL POWER $59i $6.06 1958 CHEVROLET GOOD TRANSPORTATION $97 $1.01 1961 PLYMOUTH 4, STICK $297 $3.03 1959 PONTIAC RUNS GOOD $197 $2.02 1962 FORD 2-DOOR HARDTOP $497 $5.05 1962 FALCON EXTRA CLEAN $579 $6.06 1960 CHEVROLET 2-DOOR $397 $4.04 TEL-A-HURON AUTO SALES 60 S. Telegraph FE 8-9661 Across From Tel-Huron Shopping Center $ave Homer Hight - MOTORS, INC. IMF 1964 Pontiac LeMans Sports Coupe I with e 336 engine, candy apple i red, loaded with goodJes, uel Down, Finance flelcnce. of • $1647 IMF Ku PdNtlAC, 1 OOOA CATALINA, mm gver pgyineti». IlKOi*. a«4 ORAND FRIX, new TIRfl, tvMHitafW'wngrr io-ra*-- ■ NORTHWOOD Auto Sales YOUR CONVERTIBLE - HARDTOP AND COMPACT DEALER ' so CARS MUST BE SOLD THIS WEtK \ 1962 VALIANT . $297 1960 PONTIAC . $597 1962 CORVAIR , $597 1960 OLDS . . $697 1962 FALCON .. ..$397 ^ 1959 PONTIAC . ..$397 1962 SUNBEAM $497 1961 OLDS . . $797 1962 PONTIAC $897 1960 PONTIAC $697 WE FINANCE-NO CREDIT PROBLEMS We Accept All Credit Applications CALL CREDIT MGR. Northwood Auto 2|023 Oakland Ave., Cor. Telegraph Rd. Next to Spartan's FE 8-9239 FE 8-9239 BIRMINGHAM TRADES GET THE SWING FEVER WIN A NEW TORONADO! 1963 OLDS "88", 2-door hardtop, power steering and brakes, a buy at....................$1495 1962 PLYMOUTH Fury 9 passenget station vi/bgon, power steering and.brokes, sharp Birminghom trade ................r. $1095 1965 OLDS "88" 4-door hardtop, power steering, brakes, electric windows, factory air, transferable new cor warronty . $2695 1963 PONTIAC Bonneville coupe, automatic, power steering and brakes, tinted glass, silved finish, block vinyl top..... $1595 1965, OLDS "98" convertible, power steering, white top ................................ $2895 brakes, windows, seats, red finish with 1964 PONTIAC Catalina station wagon, power steering, brakes, dark blue, matching in-terior, $1995 2 YEAR WARRANTY ‘ 635 S Woodward Ave. Birmingham 647-5111 VACATION TIME COMING? Let ,Us Furnish the Gasoline! ■ ■ 'a r“ r” r purchase a New or Used Car from Bill Spence, you may ^ 1^ f" f” pick up Gas at any Mobil - Gulf - Texaco -1 1 \ l_ l_ area. Stop in today — - Shell Station in this —100 Gallons of Gasoline—' PLYMOUTH CHRYSLER COMET . MUSTANG 1965 Plymouth 1963 "300" Hardtop 1965 Red 8. White 1965 Convertible Fury III 2-Door Hardtop. Loaded with accessories. Save over SI,000.00. A. beautiful car with ^ very low mileage. This one carries a low Beauty. Low mileage, and Is with a burgundy finish, black top, 20* tngine, real aharp. War- lEEP FORD Pickup vw WAGONEER 1965 Universal 1963 Immaculate 2 Real Nice 4-Door Custom with full metal cab, lust like new, but it carries a used price. Inside and out, low mileage, excellent condition. Mie-owner beauties to select from. Very clean, good throughout! station Wagon, radio, heater, automatic, 4-wheal drivt, real sharp throughout! ■ BILL SPENCE Chrysler-Plymouth-V aliant-Rambler-Ieep Clarkston 6673 Dixie.Hwy. ■ ma 5-2635 FABULOUS FEBRUARY SELL-OUT" Safe! Wi As 61 February 4,1966 ... STATE WIDE AUTO OUTLET MUST RAISE CASH ... 100 Automobiles will be sold at fantastic savings to the public only. If you r have had credit problems in the past, been in receivership, bankruptcy, repossession, garnisheed . . . we can help you. We have a new finance plan ... "STATEWIDE FINANCE" ... All you need is a steady job. 1958 MG Weekly Payments $3.48 1961 Buid^ Radio and heater, w Weekly Payments $6.48 1960 Chevy Weekly Payments $6.48 1961 Chevy Weekly Poyments $5.48 1961 Plymouth Belvedere Sport Fury 2-Door Hardtop. Weekly Payments $5.48 1961 Opel Weekly^ Payments $1.48 1962 Mercury r 3-Ooor Hardtpp i Weeklyl Payments $7.48, 1959 T-Bird Automatic Iranimitilon, radio end h Weekly Poyments $4.48 $395 $697 $695 $597 $595 $195 $795 $495 NO M O N E ■Y DOWN 1962 Mercury Meteor Automatic IranxmlMlon, radio. I Weekly Payments $7.95 1961 OMs ■ Super Converllble. Powtr iti brake*, radio, heater, metallic blu top. Weekly Poyments'$8.48 1954 Dodge '/S-Ton Pickup Truck with a naw r Weekly Payments $1.48 1959 Cadillac Fleetwood Sedan Weekly Payments $5.48 1961 Chevrolet Weekly PayiTj^nts $6.48 1961 Pontiac Weekly Poyments $8.48' 1961 ForiJ ■ Weekly Payments $5.48 1962 Tempest Weekly Payments $^.48 $795 $895 $195 $595 $695 $895 $595 $695 STATE WIDE Auto Outlet FE 4-5967 3400 ELIZABETH LAKE RD 1 Block W.of M-59 (Huron) THE PONTIAC PKKSS, FRIIJAV. FEHKl AllYi 4, 1966 D—11 -Television Programs- Program! fumUhod by stations listod in thisd Edward P. 5a^, 26 of to CRmegie Hall—and the other night as I gazed upon that i "ah® Springs,, Colo. They chose hallowed stage where Toscanini and Bernstein have trod, I be-|E® serve their sentences im-held Hairdresser-to-the Stars Ernie Alder comb- i®ea>ately rather than spend ing out wigs and hairpieces upon the heads of Ewo additional days in jail and WILSON numerous models ... to piano accompaniment. “Hairdressers have the power to take some of the ugliest women in the world and make them attractive,” he said. Lena Horne, one of the prettiest women b the world, and a friend, wore a wig so Ernie could use her as a model. Carol Burnett then strutted out in an exaggerated wig. A man in the audience called out, “What are you doing later?’ serve the weekend terms. Washtenaw County Circuit Judge James R. Breakey Jr. sentenced Robert M. Sklar, 19, of Huntington Woods, and Douglas W. 'Truax. 20, of‘Grand Rapids, to 12-day terms to be served on weekends. AIRoediniTV MYa-|l24 Oalby Radio I TV FE 4-9102 iih w. oiirkitM as, uki StIm Sltfaniki Rad)e-TV FE 2-INT nil W. IliirM, PmiNm Swaat Radio 6 TV FE 4-SITT Ml LiM(k, Pfirtiic Orogan’i padio-TV 125-2161 4111 ClirkitM 14., eiirkdin d’l Radio-TV FE 5-6112 TroyTV-Radio TR 64666 IM4 UMfMl*,TMy Johnion Radio-TV FE 6-4566 II ■ W.U.. Walton Radio-TV FE 2-22IT lill.WiitamtaiiNM 671-0111 WKC, Ine., Sarvico 6T4-1I16 IIDUI«awy,.Dri4tMrWM Lakoland Elac. 1UI Ht|klii4 14, Nntiii Raymond Lauzzana, 24, of ' ‘What am I doing later?’ ” echoed Carol. “What did you Detroit was sentenced to 16 have in mind? Because whatever it is, the answer is yes.’ Lena Home, escorted by Jack Cassidy, denied the persistent rumors that she and her husband Lennie Hayden are separating. “I’m going to Hollywood to join him,” Lena said. “We haVe invested too many years and too much talent together to divorce. Unless,” Lena said, with m confident smile, “he’s keeping something from me—and if he is. I’ll shoot him!" ★ ★ ★ ' Danny Kaye and wife Sylvia Fine pointed “Shame-on-yon” fingers at me at 21 ’cause I’d printed they’d split when they hadn’t... Ex-Mayor Wagner there at a political friend's dinner snid, “I’m Jnst keeping in touch” . . . Bob Hope fell In love with the sterling silver putter given him by Fight For Sight and carried it on the plane to Chicago. it it it THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . *v A terribly ugly whispering campaign is heard in Hollywood about a top male star . . . What’s this about a big feud between Dan Ingram, WABC disc jockey, and the Triboro Bridge toll collectors? . . . “Sweet Charity” sold $18,000 worth of tix the other day, and people are quoting the line about dance hall hostesses: “Who dances? We defend ourselves to music!” days to be served on weekends. Lauzzana’s attorney, Peter T. Darrow, said his client received M heavier sentence because he had a record of 10 traffic violations while «the other defendants had no records. In another development Thursday, Truax said his draft board in Grand Rapids had reinstated his student draft deferment. He was one of 15 students who were reclassified 1-A after the demqnstration. Truax’ attorney, WUliafti Wreford, commended the local board “for objectively considering the evidehce.” • “The board, apparently realized the trespass problem was not a matter to be considered by them but was a matter to be considered by the U. S. Depart" ment of Justice,” he said. Twenty-eight other persons' were charged with trespass at the same sit-in and convicted in Municipal Court. The sentences were upheld in Circuit Court and are being appealed .to the State Court of Appeals. CKLW, Niwi, MuMc WJSK, Tin OrMn Hormt WCAR, NlWl, J«« UicirlHi WXYZ, Newt WPON, NfWk, Sport! WJR, Bull lib Ntwt . MinMS I, Phoo4 0-- rZ, AOx D( WXVZ, Nt ------ r-— DrWr 4:4S-WXVZ, NlWt, SpoHl WJR, NfWi, Sport! TiM-WXYZ, Bd .MerVWl WCAR, Ron R040 WPON, Ntwi, Johnny Iront wwj. Nowi, Emphailt WHPI, DInnor Concirt lill-WXYZ. Lm Alon, WJSK, P ll:ll-WXYZ, Dinny Tiytor Show llill-WJR, Niwi, Klllldo- lliN-W^, NOW! PInil WJR, Ntwf, Sport! IA1URDAY MORNIHe lilS-WJR, Aericuiluro WWJ, Howi, Pirm CKL^ Niwt, Bud Divlot lilB-WJR, Ntw!. Sunnytido lilO-WJR,^uilr I.... fiN-WWJ, Ntwt, Monitor WCAR, Ntwi, Jick Sandor WJR, Niwt, Mutle - lATURDAV AFTIRNOON WWJ. New!,. Muilc WPON, News, Ben Johnson WCAR, News, Bill Deliell WHFI, Bill A Ken WJBK, Gtorgt Toles CKLW, News, Joe van WXYZ, News, Music lllB-WJR, News WHPI, tuck Puller CKLW, News, Dive Sheter R. Knight k-WPON, N XYZ, OiVi AUTOMATIC HUMIOlPIlR CHANDLER HEATING CO. 5480 Highland Road OR I-S632 ^ Don’t Miss Yankees Big Work Shoe Sale Over 30 Stylos Reg. 13.9T teathar Insulated Reg. Fleece Lined RVQT *9 Rubber Insulated I /{eg. »7.97 Service Oxford D and Widths zTi Buckles 197 Men’s Toe Rubbers... 1*’ Perry at Montoalm-Mlracla Mila NEED HELP? USE PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS. LOW IN COST. FAST IN ACTION. PHONE 33«18l. ■i--. D—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 4. 1966. Authorities Urge Calm in Shooting KOSaUSKO, Miss. (UPI) Autliorities, warning that acts of violence would .^jpt be tolerated, continued a search today for persons who fired shotgun blasts into a civij rights “freedom house.” Officials said yesterday an “intensive investigation” was under way into the shooting incident Wednesday night in which two civil rights workers were slightly knicked' by shotgun pellets. “Hiere is no reason for citizens to become overiy d i s-turbed,” the officials said in a statement. NEW YORK (AP) — Slum I fore," says Ann Roberts, execu-dwellers whose aparttnents arelUve director of the city’s Eco-without heat in the subffeezing nomic Opportunity Committee, temperatures are being put up i * ★ , ★ by the antipoverty'' program at| And judging by the comments the Astor, one of New York’s'from the newest occupants of »st-known hotels, at reduced;the Astor Hotel, a 62-year-old -ates. I landmark in the heart of Broad- don’t think this sort of | way’s theater district, Mrs. thing has ever been done be-|Roberts must be right. Civil rights workei^aid the shooting occurred at a rt.a m e building housing nine woHters in a Negro section of the town.\ ATTEMPT MARCH About 100 Negro school children attempted to march downtown to protest the shooting yesterday but were halted about three bocks from the school. Donald Salisbury, 19, of Pulaski, N.Y., was trated at a. hospital for a chest wound and released. Richard Klausner, 19, of Grin-nell, Iowa, received a knick on the head during the shooting and did not require treatment. ★ ★ ★ Gunter Frentz, a Freedom Democratic party worker, said four shol^n blasts were fired by the occupapts of two cars and that he and another civil rights worker returned fire from shotgun and gave chase but lost the cars after a few blocks. , The two wounded youths vUhre among 20 Oberlin College students here for a voter registration drive among Negroes. Posf Guards After Threat on Dr. King CHICAGO (AP) - A death ■ threat report against Dr. Martin Luther King resulted ’Thursday night In a heavy police guard when he visited a South Side church for a community improvement conference. King was accompanied by uniformed policemen on the drive to and from the Kenwood Ellis Community Church. Police •were posted at the church doors and barred visitors from enter ing while King was in the build Ing. Detectives stood indoors during the meeting of about 100 peighborhood residents. ★ ★ * The precautions were taken after James Westbrook, program director of the church community center, told police he received two phone calls early Thursday night within a short time. The first caller asked for details on the route King would take to the church. The second call, apparently from the same man, police were told, included the advice: “You’ve got to stop my son; he has a gun and he’s going to kill Luther King.” After elaborating, the caller laughed and hung up. ★ ★ ★ Westbrook said he thought the phone calls were a prank, but didn’t want to act on th^ assumption that they were. Births The following is a list cent Pontiac area births as recorded at the Oakland County Clerk’s Office (by name of father) Keith Franium, vvaiiMi vi Richard Gamatt, Orion Arthur Goff, Barklty J C. Hardin, 210 W. Yalt AAlichall Jaruial, 1017 Lakavlaw Richard McGregor, Utica Philip Moody 111, Drayton Plaint Nolan Scott, 32» W. Wilton Robert Smith, Jf* N. Parry Edmond Wailk, Clarktton Wiley wayland, 22t4 Hampton Terrenca Davit, SI Lorraine Rex Harrit, Drayton Dexter Jarrett, 310 Herthay Carl Ralbiti, Union Laka Waymon Fowler, I23t Faelharttone Carl Selleri, IIS W. Prlncaton Cherlat Baepla, Orion Harl^ Oulek, Laontrd Willard Burdick, MIHotd William Willett, 2M BIteo Ronald Grentden, South Lyon Francitce AAoran, SSI Anderion Jamet Jehnton, mvi Highland jamet Shipp, I3t Raabur^ Darrell Sump, Rochester Joee Vlllebol, 3I Portage WlUlem Walter, 4lt Orchard Late Robert Martino, S3 S. Shirley Milton Laaman, Walled Lake Lawrence Thlteutl, Ortonville Leonard Thomat, ^1 Mayfiae Dextar Walt, SIM Lytw idwal^^lJl^lljStO Lancatter Uheidt^teTit^^ theNlaW Shivering Slum Dwellers Beat the Cold; Get Free Ride, Stay at the Astor “My room Is so hot,” says Nadine Bond, 27. ★ * ★ Less than a week ago, in the midst of a blizzard, she, her husband and their three small children were so cold in their Harlem flat that “we could see smoke coming out of mouths.” With hundreds of others suffering the 6ame fate because of landlords who fail to provide heat, the antipoyerty people decided to act, and quickly. * V * “We just didn’t send everyone ..ho was cold to the Astor,” points out Mrs! Roberts. “We do have limited funds.” « Mobile units were dispatched! to the city’s most poverty-stricken areas to accept com-] plaints. If the. complaints were! justified, teams of Civil Defense' workers Evacuated the families! that were willing to leave. Some! were afraid to go, fearful their apartments would be looted. | Most of the tenants were given temporary shelter in anpo-ries. But a lucky handful, about SO, ended up at the Astor, compliments of the Economic Opportunity Committee. ★ ★ ★ Sixteen of them were still there Thursday night, eitho- looking for other apartments or waiting for heat in their old apartments. . * * * -“We’ve been glad to accommodate them. They’ve been no trouble at all,” said^d Styles, manager of the hotel that hosted theatrical greats in its mwe glamorous days. stoimHe mid-mntBP^Ie THESE DINING GROUPS HAVE MAR-PROOF TOPS-AU SPECIARY SALE PRICED V Vm kjjmdm choose from colonial, itolion or modern-priced to pamper your purse! EAR^ AMERICAN SOLID MAPLE—Authentically styled, crafted of genuine Northern Solid Hard Rock Maple. Eoch reflects the warmth and enduring charm of our Colonial Heritage. An investment in good taste protected with Armor-Gord plastic tops. ONE-PIECE OPEN CHINA 36' x18“x66“... $139.95 42” ROUND TABLE extends to 60” w/2 leaves $79.50 MATE’S CHAIRS.......................each $19.95 48” BUFFET..............................$119.95 MODERN WALNUT—An excitingly new design. Bold and straightforward furniture for today and tomorrow. Crafted of warm walnut veneer with fops protected by Armor-Gard plastic. You'll love it, and its modest price! ROUND EXTENSION TABLE.................$79.95 SPINDLE BACK SIDE CHAIRS ........... $19.95 36” CHINA........................... $119.95 60” BUFFET...............^..........$139.95 ITALIAN CLASSIC—Mediterranean ipiTIt and elegance scaled to the needs of the modern American home. Completely compatible vvith any size dining area ... traditional or contemporary. Finished to the peak of beauty in rich Modena brown. A collection designed for living, luxury and enjoyment. Protected with Plastic Tops. OVAL EHENSION TABLE-42”x60” .... $99.ll5 CHINA-40”x16y4”x7iy4” H.......... $159.95 CANE BACK SIDE CHAIRS ......... each $29.95 CANE BACK ARM CHAIRS ........... $37.50 BUFFET-62 'xl7%'x32” H ...........$159.95 CONVENIENT CREDIT IMMEDIATE DELIVERY* PONTIAC 367 S. SAGINAW • FE 3-7901 OPEM MONDAY AND FRIDAY TIL 9 I DRAYTON 4945 DIXIE HWY • OR 4-0321 OPEN MONDAY. THURSDAY. FRIDAY TIL 9 The Wedther U.I. WMHMr BuraM l>MMnl Sumy, CoMer THE PONTIAC VOL. 123 — NO. 310 _ BNECOlflR pnwmm PAGES ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. FRIDAy, FEBRUARY 4. 1906 -44 PAGES Soviet Moon Vehicle Transmitting Pictures MOSCXIW (^1 — Luna 9, the Soviet mechanical moon pioneer, hae transmitted to eartii pictures of the lunar landscape, the Soviet news agency Tass reported today. An announcement distributed by Tass gave no indication when the pictures would be made public. It would be the first ever transmitted directiy from the moon’s surface to earth, after eariier Soviet and American pictures sent from spacecraft above the moon. Luna 9 “has begun scanning the lunar landscape and transmitting it to the earth’s surface,” the announcement said. The space vehicle landed yesterday in an area of the moon that will be in direct sunlight for almost two weeks. BATTERY POWER This would permit a number of pictures to be sent, if Luna 9 continues working properly and sunlight can power its batteries. The announcement, made 20 hours after Luna 9’s landing, said four radio commnnica- wlth it today, totaling three hours 20 minutes. functioning of the flight system. Transmission of the lunar landscape was carried out on command from earth.” “Telemetric information was received during these radio links from the station,” it added. “It confirmed the normal HELD SILENCE Before this announcement, the Russians had been characteristically silent about information received from the mechanical pioneer sitting on the plain named the Ocean of Storms, though the British radio observatory at Jodreil Bank said Luna 9 had transmitted radio information and pictures. information about the moon's surface. Two Soviet astronomers spoke of Luna 9 showing the way for putting insinunents on the moon, capable of giving a wide range of scientific The two astronomers implied that only a sparse amount of information is expected from the unmanned “automatic station,” main purpose of which has been pictured here as prov-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) M “MzartztiO — Japanese Airliner Vanishes With 133 Board OKs Waterford School Plan The Waterford Township Board of Education last night endorsed a $13-million school building program, proposed by a citizens’ advisory committee and recommended by Supt. Don 0. Tatroe, setting the stage for a March 28 special election. Voters of the district will consider two questions: • A 113-million bond issue to finance construction of new buildings and improvements and additions at existing schools. • Extension of the current 15-mill operating levy to 16 mills for a five-year period from 1969-73. The board proposed to reduce the miUage allocated to debt retirement by one mill from its present eight to seven to offset the difference, thus leaving the total levy un- The proposed project includes construction of a third high school, estimated cost $4, 952,000; three new elementary schools, total cost 11,783,800; a new board of education administrative building, $201,000; and widespread improvements at existing schools. Construction would begin this year and be completed within five years, according to school officials. NEW HIGH SCHOOL The new high school would be located at the P o n 11 a c Lake Road-Scott Lake Road site already owned by the district. The new elementary school sites would be situated at Crescent Lake, Eagle Lake and Twin Lakes. Dr. Tatroe insists that, the construction program, if accepted by voters, will not Increase the board of education’s tax authority of 31.71 mills. The district currently operates (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) In Today's Press Police Report Major crimes in city up slightly in 1965. - PAGE C4. Missing Clue Khrushchev letter to JFK on Cuba revealed. — PAGE C-9. Waterford Board Purchase of land at two school sites approved. — PAGE D-(. Area News ........ A-4 Astrology ......... 04 Bridge ............ C4 Crossword Pnszle ... D-11 Comics ............ C4 Editoriab ......... A4 High SchoM ....... B-1 Markets ........... D4 Obituaries ........ D4 Sports ........C-l-C-5 Theaters ......... D-2 TV-Radio Programs D-11 WUson, Earl...... D-11 Womea’s Pages B-8-B-11 TAKES OFnCE-Ward E. Partridge (center) accepts the president’s gavel as he takes over from Thomas P. Bateman (left) aa head of the Pontiae Board of Realtors at the organization’s annual banquet last night. Applauding jp Ray O’Neil, named Pontiac Realtor of the Year. Boom Will Continue, Forecaster Predicts Pontiac and Oakland County are booming econom ically and the trend will continue upward, a noted business forecaster told the Pontiac Board of Realtors last night. James C. Downs Jr. of Chicago directed his optimistic outlook to a near capacity crowd of over 500 attending the Board’s 50th Truck Division Sales on Rise Up a record 24.7 per cent, new model GMC truck and bus sales are off to the best start in history, according to Calvin J. Werner, a vice president of General Motors and g e n e r a manager of GMC Truck & Coach Division. Werner reported today that 41,717 trucks and buses were delivered to the domestic market in the first four months of new model production. He said the October through January figure tops the same Iteriod in 196445 by 24.7 per cent and is the highest sales chalked up by the division in the first four months of any model year. Werner attributed the high sales to a favorable economic cllmats, uninterrupted production and the acceptance of the division’s full line of trucks and In January akme, GMC domestic retail sales totaled 9,996 units, an eight per cent increase over January, 1965. The 1966 truck line features 116 basic models, while the new bus models include GMC’s 36-foot “Luxury Liner.” annual banquet at the Pontiac Elks’ Temple. The event was highlighted by the insUllation of Ward E. Partridge, 4545 Dow Ridge, Orchard Lake, as president of the organization for 1966. Partridge, an area realtor for 35 years, succeeded Thomas P. Bateman of Bateman Realty. Before leaving office, B a t e-man was presented with several awards from the National Board ors and the National lYaders club, and another (rom the Pontiac board for distinguished service while serving as president. The Pontiac Realtor of the Year Award was presented to Ray O’Neil, 2497 W. Walton, Waterford Township, for his cop-fributions to the profession during 1965. O’Neil is president of O’Neil Realty, 3520 Pontiac Uke, Wa-terjfoiti Township. GETS STATE AWARD He received the award from the president of the Michigan Real Estate Association, Charles Kimball of Alpena. Downs, a business analyst since ini, injeoted only one sore note in pre "ctlng the con-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) Hits High Cost of Viet Kills TOKYO — An All-Nippon Airways plane with 133 Japanese aboard disappeared into the darkness over Tokyo Bay today and apparently crashed — the world’s worst disaster involving a single plane. Authorities officially listed the plane — a Boeing 727 jet — as missing but said it almost certainly smashed into the waters of the vast bay. Villagers on the shore and a pilot of another plane reported seeing “a pillar of fire” rising from the bay at about 7 p.m. just when Tokyo International Airport lost contact with the incoming plane. An oil refinery employe told police he heard an explosion about that time. Fulbright, Ai((Chief in Dispute at Hearing WASHINGTON (AP)-Sen. J. W. Fulbright told David E. Bell, foreign aid administrator, today that the United States is paying “a very high cost per kill” in the Viet Nam war. A dispute between Bell and the Arkansas Democrat, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, enlivened the renewal of public hearings into President Johnson’s Viet Nam policies. Fulbright, spearheading an attack by Senate critics of policies underlying the Viet Nam fighting, said that we are beginning to know what the war means in lives and suffering for Americans and So h Vietnamese alike. “Do you know how many Viet Cong were killed last year?” Fulbright asked the witness. Bell said he did not have exact figures, but he estimated It was nearer 30,000 than the 11,-247 Fulbright said his committee staff estimated. S’nCKS BY ESTIMATES Fulbright stuck by his estimate, and said the administration contemplates spending a total of $15.8 billion in milltar]i and economic assistance to South Viet Nam before this fb-cal year ends. With 11,247 Viet Cong killed, the chairman said, “it works out to a very high cost per kill." Bell came back to say Viet Cong deaths, in his recollection, were somewhere in the neighborhood of 37,306. Jet Believed Down in Water of Tokyo Bay Would Be the Worst Single-Plane Disaster; Search for Survivors A Japanesei defense forces helicopter sighted an oil slick about two miles from the airport. RAIN IN AREA A light rain kept the helicopter pilot from verifying the cause of the slick. Another helicopter sent a vague report of sighting debris in the same area. The plane was on a 600-mile flight from Chitose, northern Japan, to Tokyo. Almost all the 126 passengers lad been on a holiday to the snow-covered city to attend annual snow festival, a winter Motmjpoii < LANDING SPpT-This diagram shows the approximate area where Luna 9 accomplished a soft landing on the moon, accord-ing to an announcement today by the Soviet The news agency Tass said the _ was in the area of the Ocean of Storms to the west of the crater Reiner. OCC Is Sued Over Use of Nine Acres Oakland Community College’s new administrative offices in Bloomfield Hills yesterday became the target of another law suit. City Officials filed the action asking that the court restrain the college from using the nine-acre parcel at Opdyke and Hickory Grove for anything but residential purposes. The city alleges that the college is in violation of the zoning ordinance, since the former nonconforming use has reverted to its original residential classification. The college administration moved into the new quarters in mid-December. Red Space Achievement Hailed by Political Leaders LONDON (^1—Political leaders around the world joined today in congratulating the Soviet Union on its successful moon landing. But there was no immediate reaction from Red China. Newspapers and radio and television stations in most countries gave the-------------------------- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) erty values. Shortly thereafter, nearby residents filed a $1 million damage suit against the college, claiming the facility would change the residential character of the neighborhood and reduce prop- “Yoa and the people of the Union of Soviet Socialist Re-pnblics are to be congratnlat-ed for the great success of Luna 9,” he said in a message to Soviet President Nikolai Podgomey. Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey, chairman of the U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Council, complimented Soviet space officials on their President Charles de Gaulle of France offered “the cordial admiration of the French people” in a telegram to Soviet AP eiwMtax UFE4AVING LETTERS - A packet of letters from his sweetheart Is credited with saving |he life of Rick Rhoden of Detroit while he was fighting in Viet Nam. His bride-to-be, Mary Sexton, holds the packet over the helmet with k pencil inserted to show where a Cong bullet paa^. The letters were inside the helmet and protected Rhoden’s head. soft landing of Luna 9 yesterday top attention. President Johnson was one of the first to hail the Soviet feat. Ford Reports Record Sales, Profits in '65 DETROIT (AP)-Ford Motor Co. reported yesterday that business never has been so good. Ford’s announcement of record-breaking profits and sales 1965 followed a similar report stamina and persistence taiK,, ^ attaining this lunar goal.” General Motors Crop, on * Monday. leaders. JAPANESE MESSAGE Prime Minister Eisaku Sato of Japan in a cable to Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin hailed the landing as “a remarkabie contribution to the study of the space." American Motors, fourth largest of the auto companies, reported Wednesday it made over $4 million in the last fiscal quar- Pleasant Weekend Forecast in Area The weatherman promises Pontiac area residents a pleasant weekend. Partly cloudy and a little colder with lows near 7 to 14 tonight, and highs of 16 to 23 tomorrow, is the temperature prediction. iSunny skies may be expected tomorrow and most of Sunday with the mercury rising toward a warming trend beginning Sunday. Morning 10 to 22 mile per hour winds northwesterly will diminish to F to 15 miles tonight. A low of 19 was recorded at 7 a m. today. The thermometer registered 28 at 1 p. m. Chrysler Corp. is expected to have an equally rosy picture when it releases ito annual financial statement next Thurs-day. Ford’s profit picture showed the firm made ^03 million last year, 39 per cent more than in 1964, the previous record year. Net income per share was $6.33 in 1965 and $4.56 in 1964. NEW RECORDS Henry Ford II, board chairman, said his firm’s consolidated sales, net Income and factory sales of autos set new records for the fourth successive year. GM’s report showed It became the first U.S. corporation ever to earn more than $$ bjl-lion In a year as it reported a record $2.12 billion profit, 23 per cent ahead of the record set in 1164. Ford’s consolidated sales ot $11.5 billion were up 19 per cent over the previous high set in 1964. Ford’s per-share dividend in 1965 was boosted 50 per cent to 60 cents, making the year’s to-U1 $2.10 per share. -S' 1/ THE PONTIAC PHESS^ FRIDAY. tTiBRUARV 4, 1966 OCC Board OKs 19-Million Bond Sale Sale of $9 million in bonds to underwirte the second phase of construction of Oakland Community College’s Orchard Ridge campus was authorized last night by the OCC Board of Trustees. College President John E. Tir-rell said that the bond issue would cause no change this year in the one-mill tax levy voted for support of the community college. He added that it is likely no additional tax levy will be necessary next year and possible that none will be needed for several years. He based this theory on prospects of increased state and federal aid coupled with a continuing substantial increase in Oakland County’s equalized valuation. Commission and sale of the bonds is expected in late April. START BUILDING Construction of the second and final p h a s e of the Farmington Township campus is slated to begin shortly after bonds are sold. Last August the board of trustees authorized a 97-niiil-lion bond issue for the first phase of the Orchard Ridge project This stage of construction is scheduled for completion by the summer of 1967 to accommodate 3,000 students in the fall. An application for the bond sale will be filed today with the Michigan Municipal Finance Retired Film Exec Succumbs to Illness SHERMAN OAKS, Calif. (AP) — Herbert J. Yates, 85, retired president of Republic Pictures Corp., died Thursday night at his home. He had been in declining health since he suffered a stroke in Italy last autumn. Among those present when he died was his wife, actress Vera Ralston. Yates and the former Czech ice-skating star were married in 1952. an interest in buying a 45-acre Royal Oak city park. SALE STUDIED Royal Oak city officials currently are studying the possibiii-ty of selling the park site as well as an alternative measure suggested this week by a city commissioner. The suggestion is to sell a par-cel of downtown Royal Oak property to the college. The final phase of construction probably will be finished in early 1968 providing facilities for an uitimate 5,000 enrollment. ESTIMATED COST i^chitects have estimated a cost of $8.3 million for the second phase of the Orchard Ridge project. Trustees, however, agreed that the bond issue should be $9 million to provide for anticipated construction cost in- Presently OCC has two cam-, uses in operation. Highland Lakes in Waterford Township and Auburn Hills in Pontiac Township with a total enrollment of about 3,000. The college has been seeking a site for another campus in the southeastern area of the county and last month expressed Voter Registration Monday Is Deadline City residents have until 8 p.m. Monday to register to vote in the March 7 city primary. City Commission nominees and possible nominees for the city’s two municipal court judgeships are to be selected in the primary. City Clerk Mrs. Olga Barkeley said her office would remain open until 8 p.m. the last day of registration. Mrs. Barkeley emphasized that for residents to vote in i the proper district any change of address should be re-i ported by Monday’s deadline. Residents who have not voted or registered in the last two years must register to be eligible to vote in the primary. 3 CANDIDATES Three candidates must file in a given district in order for a primary to be necessary in that district. In the primary, voters cannot cast ballots for persons seeking nomination in any district other than the one in which they (the voter) resides. Voting for the municipal judgeships is on an at-large basis (citywide) in the primary. Five candidates must file before a primary is necessary. Continue Tests for Diphtheria No Cases Found in Detroit Check of 400 The role of the real estate broker has been “distorted and obscured’’ in the growing controversy over open occupancy, the president of the Birmingham Board of Realtors maintains. DETROIT (AP) - Diphtheria tests on persons who may have come in contact with a boy who died of the disease Monday were continued today by Detroit Health Department officials. No evidence of infection was found in any of the some 400 tested Thur^ay, officials said, but the possibility of an epidemic of the highly contagious dis-ise was not discounted. An autopsy Wednesday determined Lonnie Hill, 4, died of diphtheria and tests were begun immediately on about 350 pupils at the boy’s school. Plane rips houses - a naming two-engine plane rammed a row of houses in the Mexican section of Phoenix, Ariz., yesterday, killing three persons and injuring seven others. Witnesses said the converted World War 11 aircraft was approaching the airport AP with its right engine aflame when it veered away suddenly. It clipped a vacant frame house then, rolling on its wheels, smashed into three other houses. Two of the three killed were aboard the plane. The boy’s family, Mr. and Mrs. Bozy Hill and their six children, apparently had not contracted the disease, department physicians said, but a second test would be necessary to insure there was no infection. Diphtheria is characterized by the formation of a membrane, usually in the throat, and infla-mation of the heart and nervous system. It has an incubation period of two to four weeks, requiring examination of all who may have come in contact with the boy during that period. 11 TRANSFERRED Dr. Paul Sachow, health department epidemiologist, said the problem of checking students at the boy’s school was complicated by the transfer of It children to another school last Friday. He said if any of the 11 show indications of infection tests would have to be made on that school's 1,000 pupils. (Continued From Page One) ing the ability to get working instruments on the moon. The Russians had four earlier failures. Moon Shots Transmitted, Soviets Say EsIimaledCosIs Are Listed on Walerford School Plan Major estimated costs in the proposed $13 - million building program for Waterford Township Schools are: Della Lutes. $183,500; Man-ey, $14,000; McVittie, $258,000; Monteith. $207,500. Dr Alla Masevich said the soft landing “makes it possible to send to the moon the most diverse apparatus, with the object of collecting scientific information and transmitting it to earth.” DEQSIVE STEP’ Alexander Mikhailov, of the Pulokovo Observatory near Leningrad said Luna 9 was “a decisive step toward establishment of an automatic observatory on the moon, and toward subsequent landing of a man." The success of Luna 9 enabled the Soviet Union to bask in the glory of the first soft landing of instruments which could give information denied to man in ages of moon-gazing. The official Soviet news agency Tass said: "Radio contact with the station on the surface Dr. C. Dale Barrett, head ofiof the moon is reliable. Trans- child immunization jhealth department, said: "At this time there is no epidemic. iBpt we’re continuing our investi-Igation. missions are on 183.538 megacycles. The instruments on board the station are functioning normally." • New high school, Including 1,000-seat auditorium and swimming pool — $4,952,000. Elementary school improvements, including construction of 20 multipurpose rooms and 18 instructional material centers-$5,514,000. • Three new elementary schools — $594,600 each or $1,-783,800. Improvements at Waterford - Kettering and Waterford Township high schools—$333,000. • New board of education administrative building—$201,000. • Additional school sites — $100,000. • Improvements at C r a r y and Pierce junior high schools “1,500. BREAKDOWN The following is a further breakdown by school: Waterford - Kettering: $120, 500, including bleachers, athletic field lights and four tennis courts. Waterford Township- $212,- 10, including parking lot expansion, new track, bleachers and tennis courts. Pontiac Lake, $55,500; Riverside, $20,000; Sandburg, $178,500; Schoolcraft, $303,000; Silve Lake. $20,000; Stringham, $294,- area or neighborhood, he said. Waterford Village, $288,500;' Williams Lake, $312,000. Other allocations are Pierce, $68,000; Crary, $30,500; Adams, $242,500; Beaumont. It s tTO ®arly to close the; -p(,ere was no official word on $295,500; Burt, $363,000; Chero- books," he added. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PON’OAC AND VICINITY - Variable cloudiness and colder with light snow flurries becoming heavy at times near Lake Michigan today. Highs 20 to 27. Partly cloudy and colder with scattered snow flurries near Lake Michigan tonight, lows 7 to 14 above, locally colder interior regions. Mostly sunny and colder Saturday. Highs 16 to 23. West to northwest winds 12 to 22 miles today becoming northwest 8 to 15 miles tonight. Outlook for Sunday: increasing cloudiness and warmer. Hlghtil lcmp«r*lur« At I t.m.: Wind Velocity I Direction; Norttiwoit Sun Mti Fridoy ot S;SI p.m. m rliet Fridoy it 4:M p.m wit temporoture eit temporoture n temporoture e Yeor /kpo In Fonlioc An Addison Township woman, accused of killing her former husband and his wife, will undergo further psychiatric tests to determine if she is now capable of standing trial. Circuit Judge James S. Thor-burn yesterday scheduled - a sanity hearing for Feb. 16 for Mrs. Jane Kendall. 45, of 1480 Noble. Eiconoba 31 13 Jockionvlll Liming Merquetto Muskegon Konioi City 3: Loe Angelet ;i I MIomI Seech r I Mllwoykeo 3i ! New Orleoni 4i I Phoenix O Plttiburgh 3 Silt Like C. 4 ' $. FronclKO 5 S. S. Merle t Soottle 5 i Tempo $ 1 Wiihlngton 3 NATIONAL WEATHER-Snow and flurries in the northeast and Rockies and rain and showers in the Pacific states Is the prediction for tonight. It will be colder from the central Gulf stales into the northeast and warmer in the Plains Hearing Set on Sanity in Two Deaths Birmingham Area News Realtors Define Stand Over 'Open Occupancy' Allen A. Strom has issued a statement defining the realtors’ role as they see it in response to proposals of the recently organized Birmingham - Bloomfield Committee on Open Occupancy. Committee members who have expressed dissatisfaction with the statement and disbelief regarding some of Its content plan to issue a rebuttal. Strom’s statement was made after a meeting of members of the realtors’ organization. It is basically that of the Michigan Real Estate Assoqation a^ the National Association of Estate Boards. He indicated that the realtors will, as they must, remain neutral ip the controversy. John C. Palms,’ chairman of the open occupancy group, said he was “very disappointed” in the statement and hoped the realtors would give further consideration to the matter. “We had hoped they would come up with some definite action,” Palms said. ‘It is basic to a fair understanding of the p r 0 b I e m s Involved that all concerned realize that certain of our peoples are not yet prepared to accept all racial, creedal and ethnic groups as social intimates or as neighbors living in close proximity," Strom said. HAVE NO RIGHT’ Realtors, who serve only as agents and not principals, have no right or responsibility to determine the composition of any Board Okays School Plan for Waterford (Continued From Page One) n 29.71 mills, but a 2-mill reserve is avilable to meet new expenses. TAX RATE During the next three years, the tax rate will go up those two mills irrespective of the vote,” said Tatroe. This is due to rising opera- I “Unless required by the : terms of his contract or ex-I pressed instructions from his ' client, no realtor should assume to determine the snit-abUity or eligibilHy of any prospective mortgagor, tenant or purchaser,” he continued. Strom noted that a realtor should submit all written offers made in connection with the sale of a home and should also “communicate to his client all factors which the realtor believes might be significant to his client in the formulation of the; client’s decision.” School officials predict that school enrollment will jump at least 4,000 from the present 16,-400 to 20,400 by 1970. Strom also said that realtors ‘may properly oppose any attempt by force of law to withdraw from property owners the right to freely determine with whom they will deal with respect to their property, irrespective of the reason therefore . . .” “This election will not influence the tax rate in any way," Tatroe added. the size, shape, construction or| *^*'**' Cooley, weight of the spacecraft but it! 5210.000; Covert, $273,000; is thought to weigh more than' I>onrlson. $206,500; Drayton 3,000 pounds. Plains, $275,500. WENT OKF AIK JS’’ »' '*»"»«• »•“ transmitted facsimile pictures from its landing at 9:45 p.m. Moscow time (1:45 p.m. EST) SAVE MONEY Borrowing money from the state bond loan fund, which of-jfers a low interest rate, will save residents hundreds of thou- until 10:05, went off the air, and resumed signals shortly after midnight (9 p.m. EST). The British scientists had no means of unscrambling the signals. After an initial reaction that Luna 9’s soft landing put the Soviet Union ahead of the United States in the space race. Western experts amended their ahead in different phases. Mrs. Kendall was released from Ionia State Hospital for the Criminally Insane last week, less than four months after she was committed on an order by Thorburn. At that time Hiorburn ruled that Mrs.- Kendall could not assist in her own defense because of her mental condition. Hospital officials now say that, she has been restored to sanity. Three psychiatrists were appointed today by Thorburn ti examine Mrs. Kendall. Thej are doctors George S. Evseeff, Edward M. Wisniewski and Jay Van Zoeren. 1ST EXAM Wisniewski and Van Zoeren .conducted the first examination, and later testified that Mrs. Kendall was suffering from acute paranoia. If Mrs. Kendall is found sane, she will be arraigned the same day on a charge of first degree murder in the shooting of her ex-hnsband Glen, 45, and his wife Lucille, 46, of Detroit. They were shot in front of Mrs. Kendall’s home’ Oct. 2, 1965. Mrs. Kendall is being held in the Oakland County jail. 000; Houghton, $178,500; Leg- gett. $204,500;^Lotus Lake, $178,- Sir Bernard Lovell, director of the Jodrell Bank Observatory, said the race to put a man on the moon is “still fairly even now." State Man Escapes Injury in Plane Crash TOLEDO, Ohio (UPli-A Michigan man escaped injury last night when his private plane crashed on the ice of Lake Erie during a heavy snow squall. Stanley Rimar, 37, Oak Park, was flying to Detroit from Jacksonville, Fla., when his single-engined Cessna plunged onto the ice. Rimar walked away from the crash. Borrowing would be over a 25-year period. Cost of the election was estimated at $2,500 by school officials. Asked by board members, why the issue couldn’t be included on the ballot in June’s regular school election, Tatroe replied that other important questions may be presented then that would encumber the proposed building project. He was referring to a county vocational educational program, currently being discussed, and boundary dispute included in the proposed annexation of the Dublin School District by the Walled Lake system. The committee’s proposal, presented to the realtors in December, included the request that realtors take action to bring at least five Negro families into the area by Sept. 1. COOPERA-nON The committee also asked the board to cooperate with out-of-town brokers who have Negro clients seeking homes in the area and to adopt a policy favoring open occupancy. ■‘The realtors are not neutral,” Palms said. “They are actively keeping Negro buyers from even contacting sellers in the community. The Negroes are being put off by very subtle means.” JAMES H. MARSHALL Commission Incumbent Enters Race Boom to Stay, Says Speaker A fifth City Commission incumbent has entered his candidacy for the March 7 primary. James H. Marshal, 63. of 185 S. Jessie filed petitions yesterday for the District 7 nomination. (Continued From Page One) tlnued prosperity, “which Is at an all time peak. “The economy is going to be strong as long as there is no political disaster," resulting in a war. Downs said. Marshall retired last year after 40 years at GMC Truck & Coach Division. He was a clerical supervisor. “Records in all phases of business have been broken month after month,” he said. “But in spite of this there hangs over a gloom because of the conflict in Viet Nam.” APPREHENSIVE Due to the excellent business conditions, said. Downs, “people now are inflation minded,” added that he believed that they were being apprehensive. He was an unsuccessful commission candidate from District 7 in 1960. BOARD MEMBER A board memixn- of Christian Temple, Marshall is married and ^ three children. Boni in Shelby Township, he attended schools in Washington Township and Romeo. He came to Pontiac in 1919. SOFT LANDING “The Soviet Union has gonci ahead in the techniques of soft landing,” he said. “The Americans already achieved the other feature of rendezvous In space. Both countries now have one ich to their credit.” “If the U. S. Surveyor p r o-gram is successful this year and if the U. S. S. R. achieves rendezvous, they would still be level.” OstMpathic Center Slates Open House A four-hour open house will be held Feb. 12, at the College Development Center of the Michigan College of Osteopathic Medicine, 900 Auburn. The open house will be held 1 to 5 p.m. The single story development center is the first building to be erected onihe 164-acre college ^Ite at Auburn and Opdyke. The building la used for offices. Stalls Death Threat on Radio NEW YORK (UPI)-A radio interviewer stalled a would-be suicide for IS minutes last night in a radio conversation hoard by thousands of listeners in the New York area. The despondent housewife finally agreed to disclose her telephone number and police rushed to her home in Staten island before she had carried out her suicide threat. A neighbor who had been listening to the program arrived at the same time. The interviewer. Long John Nebel, said (he woman had telephoned him before, early Wednesday during his midnight to 5 a. m. EST show, and told him she wanted to take her life but had “chickened out.” “I told her, ‘you call me when you feel th^ urge again’,” Nebel said. hands,” Nebel uld, “so I wrote a note to my director, Ken Regan, to tell the police to listen In and Instead of taking six or seven calls as I usually will during the 15 minutes I stayed with her. I dropped the commercials.” The woman, who was never Identified on the air, told Nebel she had not left her home in a year, that her 19-year-old son had just joined the Navy and that she was depressed. She was the first caller last night on the 7:45 to 8 p. m. teiephone interview program Nebel also conducts on WNBC. Nebel said she asked if he remembered her. She said she was afraid to tell her husband that a doctor had suggested she receive psychiatric treatment. ASKS FAVOR As the program neared Its schedule «iid, Nebel told the woman, “1 want you to do me a favor.” He asked her to give Regan her number and promised to call her back. “Oh, yes, John,” the woman said. Marshall was appointed In Ihe fall of 1964 to fill the commission vacancy left by (he death of Emmett S. Wellbaum Marshall said he Is seeking nomination to complete the many projects already under way. He said he Was interested in upgrading District 7. Marshall is the fourth to file for District 7 nomination. Of the Incumbent commissioners, only Leslie H. Hudson and John A. Dugan have not indicated their election plans. FULL COMMISSION However, reliable sources indicate the full commission will seek reelection. The deadline for filing nominating petitions Is Feb. 15. Japanese Airliner Vanishes Vifith 133 (Continued From Page One) carnival featuring giant snow statues. Seven crew members also were aboard the plane. CHICKENED OUT’ “You know, I chickened out,” “Well, this is it.” “1 realised I had trouble on my With the number, police traced her address. A doctor from St. Vincent’s Hospital also was alerted and treated the woman at home. Nebel later said he took the death threat seriously because In 1957 a despondent woman called him and later killed herself. Weather was good when the plane disappeared. An airline official said the pilot had reported a malfunction in his in-, struments and that he would ipake a visual landing. He was given clearance. Seconds’ later contact was broken with ground control. THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 4. 1966 DUPONT 501 DU PONT CERTIFICATION MARK FOR CARPETS WITH ALL NYLON PILE MEETING DU PONT QUALITY STANDARDS LIQUIDATION Are BulMing A NEW SUPER CARPET STORE On BIxle Nwy., I Near Howard Johnson Rostaurant. Wo havo ono of tho largost stooks of 501 Hylon oarpot in Oakland Cous^ and it must bo told boforo ‘ movo. Karon’s prioos aro tho hiwost ovor. So to insuro tho host solootion buy now. JUI mIo prioos aro on oxisting invontory only. Below Are Only A Few of the Many Bnrgolns Avniloble SUPER 20-YEAR WEAR Liquidation Price NYLON GUARANTEE 30 YARDS INSTALLED OVER RURRERIZED PAD Just imagin* . . . 30 yards of ^is sup«r 100% DuPont Nylon tn your homo of 10.62 p«r Month. YARDS 35 40 45 50 55 60 CASN^ICE $343 $392 $441 $490 $539 $588 MONTHLY PAYMENTS $12.10 $13.83 $15.56 $17.29 $19.03 $20.75 PLUSH PILE 100% HTLON Bodroem Corpot Approx. 1,100 Sq. Yds. $J 149 f Sq. Yd. S 100% ACRILAM PILE Gold and Boigo Only 3 Pcs. Total Approx. 130 Yds. 189 Vsq.YA. 100% OVLOH PILE Random ShoorwJ Coprelon Approx. 550 Yds. $1 J79 #Sq.Yd. SPEOIAL DC-S PATTERN NYLON PATnRN 15-YEAR WEAR GUARANTEE Liquidation Price rR49 If Sq. YA. 3 RCX>AAS INSTALLED WALL TO WALL 30 YARDS INSTALLED OVER RURRERIZED PAD Just imogin* ... 30 yards of this 100% DuPont Nylon in your horn* for only $10.08 P*r Month. 501 and Continuous Filomont Nylon Guorantood 15 Yoors in writing. YARDS 35 40 45 50 55 60 CASH PRICE $325 $372 $418 $465 $511 $558 MONTHLY PAYMENTS $11.74 $13.12 $14.75 $16.41 $18.03 $19.69 SPECIAL NYLON 10-YEAR WEAR GUARANTEE 3 ROOAAS INSTALLED WALL TO WALL 30 YARDS INSTALLED OVER RURRERIZED PAD Just imogin* ... 30 yards of this 100% DuPont Nylon in your homo for only OUARANTIID 10 YEARS IN V $222 YARDS 35 40 45 50 55 60 CASH PRICE $259 $296 $333 $370 $407 $444 MONTHLY PAYMENTS $9.36 $10.69 $11.75 $13.05 $14.36 $15.67 HOURS MON. and FRI. - 10 to 9 TUES., WED.,THURS. 10to6 SAT. 10 to 5:30 DUPONT 501 NYLON TWIST $ TrippUtt by Coronet Mills Approx. 800 $4* Yds. WOOL PILE % Inch Pile Onlyl 12 Ft. Roll >059 USg.Tii. COMMERCIAL NYLON TWEED $^69 "^Sq.Yd. Approx. 500 Sa. Yds. for Offices, Stairs, Family Rooms, Rocrootion Rooms 5828 MXIE HWV., BRAnON PLAIHS V/. Free Parking In The Rear and Front of Our Store '/ THE Mr. and Mrs. Ernest A. Howe Jr. of West Clarkston Road, Independence Township, announce the engagement of their daughter, Linda Elaine, to Charles Lewis Houston, son of the Elton C. Houstons of Meigs Street. Early June vows are planned by Margaret Susan Sagamang and Terry Lee Miller, son of Mrs. Arnold Phillips of p'ernlock Street, Oxford Township and Norman Miller of Transparent Drive, Independence Township. The bride-elect is the daughter of Mrs. David Sagamang of Sebek Road, Oxford Township and the late Mr. Sagamang. A May wedding is planned by Gloria Jean Feole, daughter Of Mr. and Mrs. Robert R. Feole of Woodlawn Road, Commerce Township and Machinists’ Mate 2.C. Jan William Hadley, son of Mrs. James W. Hadley of Highland Road and the late Mr. Hadieu. Her fiance is stationed at the U.S. Naval Submarine Base, New London, Conn. Elisabeth Lee Morgan Weds Stephan Johnson PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 4, 1966 OU Continuum Center HAKE OVER PAfiES^- Women’s Test Program Mak6 her feel enchanting as a princess on Christmas — sew Empire robe in long or dress len^. Choose dainty print — OR make skirt velveteen oi corduroy, contrast top. Printed Pattern 4832: Children’s Sizes 2, 4, 6, 8. Size 6 long robe 3H yards 35-incb. FIFTY CENTS in coin for each pattern - add 15 cents for eilch pattern for first-class mailing and special handling. Send to Anne Adams, care of The Pontiac, Pattern Dept., 243 West 17th St., New York, N. Y. 10011. Print NAME, ADDRESS with ZIP, SIZE and STYLE NUMBER. BE ALERT to What’s New! Send for excitement - packed Fall - Winter Pattern Catalog. 350 design views — school, career, glamor styles. Plus coupon for free pattern — choose it from Catalog. 50c. To keep stamps that you enclose in letters from sticking, place in wax paper. I Pontiac Mall I i Hearing Center A reception in the Oxbow Lake home of the Erwin J. Morgans followed the recent marriage of their daughter, Elizabeth Lee, to Stephan Alan Johnson in the Episcopal Church of the Advent. The Edward T. Johnsons of Pontiac Trail, West Bloom- Fifty Women Join Society Fifty new members were received in the confraternity of the Rosary Altar Society, Our Lady of fhe Lakes Catholic Church, at a meeting Wednesday. The society’s meeting in the church hall followed a service conducted by Rev. F. J. Delaney, pastor. Mrs. Lawrence Centilli, so-c i e t y president, introduced Mrs. Lawrence Pope, chairman for the group’s Easter Monday luncheon. ★ ★ ★ After a talk on the Christian Community Division program by Rev. Lawrence Kaiser, assistant pastor. 175 guests were served refreshments by society officers. The Beauty Boom NEW YORK (UPI) - Women will spend more than ever in 1966 at their hairdressers, predicts Bruce S. Gelb, president of Clairol, Inc. He says beauty salon sales should surpass |2 billion in 1966, a 100 per cent increase over the $1 billion spent in 1958. field Township, are parents ' of the bridegroom. j FLOWER BAND A band of white carnations and yellow rosebuds, holding her illusion veil, complemented the bride’s floor-length gown and matching coat of French lace. During the rite performed by Rev. John Wigle, she held a bouquet of white and pink carnations combined with yellow roses. Joanna Morgan attended her sister as maid of honor, with bridesmaids Mrs. Robert Carrels and Kathy Foltz. Thomas Pernar was best man. William Davies and Robert Carrels were ushers. ★ ★ ★ The couple will reside in Ann Arbor where she recently was graduated from the University of Michigan. Her husband will continue his studies in the school of natural resources. On Feb. 15 Oakland University’s Continuum Center for Women starts the spring session of a psychological assessment course which has already served 250 women. The five-session course is under the direction of Dr. Kenneth H. Coffman and Dr. David G. Lowy of Oakland U n i V e rsity’s Psychological Services. Enrollment is open to any women, not just to those seeking admission to college. The two clinical psychologists administer four 7-10 p.m. Tuesday sessions of tests of interests, values, aptitudes and abilities, then give each woman a personal evaluative interview to interpret her test scores. Following the psychological testing course, women who took it may avail themselves, without additional cost, of the services of the Continuum Center’s educational, employment and volunteer placement advisers. The coordinated program of personal assessment followed by educational, vocational and volunteer work guidance is being offered as a package for the first time this term. Also new this term will be the format of the fourth testing session. At the fourth session women interested in returning' to any college will take the College Qualification Test and College English Test to measure their potential. Women more interested in going on to volunteer work or employment will go to an-another classroom for the Occupational Interest Inventory Test. Any registrant who desires both sets of tests may return for an extra testing session. ’The Continuum Center for Women opened last fall, though the University conducted a pilot testing and counseling program last year. Age range of the women who have enrolled extends from 22 to 55, but the largest number have been those in their early forties with three children, all of school age or up. Continuum Center advisers are geared to helping such women find creative roles outside their homes as family re- Small Fry's Dry To quickly dry small stuffed toys that you have washed, place them in a hair dryer hood. • For Shut-Ins • For Business Associates • Friends For Away • For Helpful Neighbors $6°o. *750 ..d »12” Others to $25 JACOBSEN’S FLOWERS for 42 Year» Phonr FE 3-7165 (;rrrnhouse, <;ardrn Slow and Nurarry l.akp Orion Phonr MY 2-2681 JXeumode 'TIP-TOE' SEAMLESS SHEERS SALE! i 82 N. Saginaw St. I* WMi RmIIm Mall OaHcal CaiMar Our Servi€^e$ Include y,. • Haoring icianlifically tatlod • Hooring intirumonia • AM moka* of hooring inttnimont* lorvicod ; • lor mold* cualoin fittod I •FioahkoltorioaoiroiloUo lor moat old* Tlws. B. Applfton I C^UMM*mHm,4Mjlm4k0l0aUI ^ I aiMaja.taiiNaji.BaiLT I N2-1IIS Dplprgpnl-Prool, Oven-Proof, Service for 8 63-Pc. Set, Open Stock Regular.......$59.95 SALE *29*^ DIXIE POTTERY ! ri281 Dixie Highway OR 3-1894 | Worlds greatesli disappearing aat ...pBPfbrmeil in your own kitchenl ■nNIIHIflMIfiUI makes oven soil vanish Cleans itself (oven racks, too) automatically! /7II F .J7| You don’t need a hat and a wand to perform this trick. Just two simple controls: set the "clean’* lever and turn the "start" knob. Away goes oven soill • Cook-Master control starts/cooks/stops oven— all automatically at tha times you select. • Big 23' wide oven holds the largest turkey you can find. • Full-width storage drawei A WEEK AFTER SMALL DOWN PAYMENT Even late with a good trade-in. 2-spead Jet action washori Agltatpr cleans daap-flves all your wash Dsep Action cleaning. Jet-tlmple design lor top dependsbilltyl uodit mironii snap. The whole i rolls to the sink tor us% stores almost anywhere. 12“ PDIIUD ^t-^CTRIC UnUIVIr COMPANY 3465 AUBURN RD., AUBURN HEIGHTS FE 4-3573 - UL 2-3000 i PARK FREE WOW! WONDERFUL WIGS OF100%HUAAANHAIR AND THE WORKS! »80 Have one of our beouh'ful human hair wigs, adjustable to size, and pitched in with H, a smart vinyl patent carrying case valued ot $8, plus a wig form, tool Select blonde, off-black, block, light, medium or dork brown or auburn. MUlinerySalon — Second Floor COSTUME is the Young Approach to Spring. A neat Box jacket and o short slim skimmer dress . with squared away neck, and leather belt. All expertly tailored in rayon acetate check. Red with while. Sizes 12Vi to 20Vi. ltre$M Salon — Second Floor sisvd yjAo im THE PONTIAC PRESS, FKIDAY, FEBRUARY 1966 PwiIlK Prnt Plwt* SON RETURNS-Floyd Caverly of Brandon Township proudly displays a photo of his son, missing for 20 years, and due to arrive home during the weekend. The other snapshot is one of Caverly that the youth carried in his wallet in hopes that it would be recognized by someone. It was. Annual Police Report Major Crime in City Up Slightly By DAVID J. COOK Major crime in Pontiac rose only .5 per cent in 1965 over the preceding year, according to the annual crime report Issued today by Police Chief William K. Hanger. , There were 242 more major crimes reported last year than in 1964, when the total was 2,077. Major crimes are listed under seven ciassifications designated “Part I” by the Fed-erai Bureau of Investigation. Less serious crimes, designated “Part II,” were up 1.3 per cent. • Murder and Nonnegligent Manslaughter: Seven in 1965, down two from the preceding year. , • Robbery: A decline of 7.2 per cent — 154 last year; 166 in 1964. • Aggravated Assault: In- creased by 50 per cent over 1964, with an assault total of 249 last year. • Burglary: Up slightly, with 794 reported for 1965, and 784 the preceding year. arson to disorderly conduct, amountd to 6,794 last year. This figure represents an increase of only 86 over 1964. In both crime categories. Hanger rated as “excellent” t h e Pontiac police department record of offenses cleared by arrest. Area Man Finds Son After 20-Year Hunt “Any increase in crime, however slight, is northing to brag about,” Hanger said, “but we feel we’ve held the line pretty .well considering our shortage of manpower. DETROIT FIGURES “Detroit’s Part I figures were up about 16 per cent last year. “The national index for .1964 was about 13 per cent,” he said. The report showed the following in the seven Part I classes of major crimes: • Forcible Rape: More than doubled — 16 in 1965 and seven in 1964. • Larceny over $50: Jumped 12.2 per cent, 801 in 1965 and 714 the year before. • Auto Theft: Down from 231 in 1964 to 198 last year, a decline of M.3 per cent. Reported crimes in three other Part I subclassifications—negligent manslaughter, nonaggra-vated assault and larceny under $50 — were down 119 from the 2,906 in 1964: OTHER CRIMES “Part II” offenses, covering 17 other crimes ranging from Arrests in all Part I classes totaled 2,139, or 42.7 per cent of reported offenses. NATIONAL AVERAGE “This compares with a national average of 24.5 per cent,” Hanger said. “Our arrest rate in burglary and larceny cases, where we rarely have witnesses, c I i mb e d somewhat (over 20 per cent in both instances), but it’s still not where 1 want it.” Police arrested 2,251 persons in connection with Part II crimes. ' complaint and then declines to prosecute the guilty individual. The report doesn't contain a detailed breakdown on convictions. CITES DIFFICULTY Hanger pointed out the difficulty of interpreting arrest rates and of relating arrests to convictions. “And If we do get into court, we can find our case dismissed before trial or eventually a verdict of not guilty returned by a jury.” JUVENILE CASES When juveniles are arrested, many times they are turned over to juvenile authorities. Thus, some crimes may be solved while there Is no conviction in a criminal court. The chief noted, howeevr, that legal sanctions against false arrest excluded any police departments from making token apprehensions to improve arrest figures. “Any time you make an Illegal arrest,” he said, “you can get killed in court. WILLIAM K. HANGER “There is no valid way to compare arrests and convictions,” he said. “We (police) can lose out in three ways. “Sometimes a person files a “No department could afford damage suits like that.” Pontiac police closed 100 per cent of reported criminal homicides and 86 per cent of aggravated assault cases with arrests. By JIM LONG Floyd Caverly’s 20-year dream of finding his missing son has come true. This weekend, two decades of searching will end when Pontiac factory worker and his son are reunited. *1110 41-year-old Brandon Township man lost track of his son, Merle, when his former wife obtained custody of the boy when he was 2H months old in I94S, and then moved out of the state. “I was in the Army and there wasn’t too much I could learn at the time,” recalled Caverly, now remarried and living at 1515 Sashabaw. "I didn’t know where they had gone, but I never gave up hope that someday, somewhere, would meet my son,” added Caverly, a door fitter at Fisher Body. “But who would have ever lieved it would come about the way it did.” The circumstances s u r -rounding the father and son reunion developed from one of those “Isn’t it a small world” Young Caverly, now 20 and an Army private stationed at Fort Sill, Okla., was comparing notes last Friday with a buddy and passing around family snapshots. He handed his friend a yellowed photo of his unknown father that he carried in his wallet. RECOGNITION “My God. that’s my uncle,” the buddy shouted. As luck would have It, it turucd out that the buddy was young Caverly’s cousin, Pvt. Lester Purdy, of Pontiac. Caverly explained that though he didn’t know his father, he always carried the picture on County Report Shows VD Up the chance that someone might be able to Identify it. Increase Rate Lower Than in Recent Years Despite an Increase of 81 reported venereal disease cases last year in Oakland County over the 1964 total, the rate of increase was lower than In recent years. Last year there were 1,095 reported cases of venereal disease compared to 1,014 in 1964, according to figures released todav by County Health Director Dr. Bernard D. Berman. The photo was taken at Fort Roberts, Calif., during World War il, and shows Caverly in an Army uniform. LINE WAS BUSY When Purdy and Caverly got /er the initial shock, they attempted to call Caverly’s dad long distance to tell him the news but the line was busy. Later, they reached Purdy’s mother. Mrs. John Purdy, 3811 Queensbury, who in turn contacted Caverly and related the “It was a little hard to imagine after all these years,” said Caverly, “but 1 was convinced, better yet stunned, when ■ got a letter the next day.” Venereal disease has been on the rise both locally and netionally in recent years. Dr. Berman said. A total of 846 cases were reported in the county during 1963 and the 1962 total was 670. The rise from 670 cases in 1962 to 1,095 last year represents a 63.4 per cent increase over the three year period. 480 CASES ' There were 480 cases of gonorrhea reported in 1962 compared to 882 cases last year. Three years ago 191 cases of syphDis were reported while 213 cases were recorded last year. Dr. Berman estimates that one of five venereal disease cases in Oakland County is reported. Nationally, about one in eight cases is reported, he said. Gonorrhea was most prevalent In the 20 to 25 age group during 1065 with 339 cases reported. 15-29 AGE GROUP A total of 222 cases occurred in the IS to 20 group and there were 156 in the 25 to 30 age category. Syphilis, a disease which may span several years, had its greatest frequency in the 55 ta 99 age group with 27 There were 24 syphilis cases Eleven to Train in Canal Zone Traffic Mishaps Up Over '64 Area Reservists to Get 2-Week Course Eleven Army Reservists from the Pontiac area are scheduled to leave tomorrow morning on a two-week training jaunt to the jumgles of Panama. The men, from D). Batt., 225 Inf. (ABN), will undergo the training as part of a special reserve force program at Fort Sherman in the Canal Zone. The two weeks will consist of day and night training, with only a brief respite from 5 p.m. Saturday until noon Sunday, according to one of the volunteers. Traffic accidents in Pontiac were Up nearly 10 per cent last year from the 1964 total, according to figures released today by Police Chief William K. Hanger. The total of 4,426 accidents surpassed the 1964 figure of 4,051 by 375. The report also listed 17 traffic deaths in the city of Pontiac in 1995, an increase of four over the preceding year. Hanger said figures showed nearly one-fifth of the city's accidents occurred between 3 and 5 p.m., the peak traffic hours for homebound workers. Police issued 2,397 tickets, 873 for “hazardous driving behavior.” CONVICTIONS Although this was 5.8 per cent more than 1964, convictions of drivers involved in accidents dropped by nearly 8 per cent. Fully half of the drivers cited were ticketed for speeding “We re going to be pretty well occupied,” said Sgt. Charles Austin of 725 Kenilworth. “We’ll undergo tactical training, including the full-scale attack of a mock-up Vietnamese village.” Commanding officer of the training company is Lt. Peter Shunck, 6582 Longworth, Waterford Township. The men will leave the Pontiac Armory at 7 a.m. tomorrow, are scheduled to depart from Metropolitan Airport 12:40 p.m. and arrive in Panama late Saturday. Enclosed was his old Army picture and a note which began “Dear Sir, I am writing this in regards to information I have about my lost father.” TELLS STORY The young soldier told of his talk with Purdy and then ended with: “If you are my real father or not, get in touch with me. Please answer. It means the world to me.” Attached to the letter was another photo, one of the writer. 'Yes, he looks like me. Yes, very definitely,” Caverly beami^. TALKED TWICE Caverly and his son have talked twice this week on the phone but only for brief periods. “He’s been living in California and he’s been in the Army for seven months serving with the artillery,” added Caverly. “We’ve been too excited to bother about details. But he is expected to come home either Saturday or Sunday depending on what kind of arrangements he can make. “Maybe it will be permanently. He talked about a medical Caverly said If he comes home for good, the two of them will begin another search for his oldest son, Melvin, 22, who hasn’ In the 50 to 55 age category and been seen since he was put up the next highest total was 2$ for adoption when he was only in the 29 to 25 age group. Kwo. The single decline in accident statistics occurred in motor vehicle-pedestrian accidents, with 84 reported in 1965 as against 116 the preceding year. Hit-and-run accidents. continued to plague both innocent victims and police investigators. GAIN OF 162 leading cause of traffic A. total of 607 were reported in 1965, a jump of 162 over the preceding year. Of the 607, only 264 were cleared with apprehension of a suspect. ‘Insurance rates are on the way up and it’s no wonder,’ Hanger said. ‘Accident figures keep climbing and damage claims go right along with them.” High Mark on Grades for Trucks State Troopers Tranf erred and Promoted THRUWAY THOROUGHBRED-Powerful. diesel engines featured in CMC Truck & Coach Division’s steel tilt cab tractors are helping Red Star Express Lines of Auburn, N.Y., to move these giant double-trailer rigs over the New York Thruway well within the minimum speed limitation. State Police Trooper Clayton L. Babcock, stationed at the Pontiac post since 1961, will be promoted to corporal Sunday and assigned to the Calumet post. The announcement was made this week by Col. Fredrick E. Davids, department director. Also transferred was Charles L. Weber of (be Romeo post. A 1951 graduate of Pontiac Central High School, he has been reassigned to the New Buffalo post. BABCOCK WEBER Babcock, 31, of 3607 Mariner, Waterford Township, enlisted in the State Police in 1956. A native of Bear Lake, he Is married and the father of four chil- 5 YEARS Weber, 32, formerly of 11380 35 Mile had served at New Buf-five years before being transferred to Romeo. An eight-year veteran, he is married and has no children. His mother, Mrs. Jessie W. Weber, lives at 39 KimbaU. Flower Committee Deserves Bouquet “CMC trucks might not go to school, but they sure make their grades.” This is one of the puns frequently heard on the New York Thruway. Thruway provisions require (rucks to maintain a minimum legal speed of at least 29 miles per hour on steepest grades. When the trucks are pulling two g i a n t trailers, this sometimes becomes difficult. Not with GMC Truck & Coach Division’s aluminum tilt highway tractors operated by R e d Star Express Lines, Inc., of Auburn, N.Y. LONGEST HAULS By concentrating its new GMC trucks in the Buffalo-Syracuse area where the company’s long-' auls originate. Red Star has been able to come up with substantial time savings. By JOE MULLEN Thanks to someone’s realization that women are more naturally associated with flowers than men, the male members of the Oakland County Board of Supervisors have been relieved of a pressing anxiety. Years ago, both men and women served on the flowers conunittee of tt)e board of supervisors. But since 1950 (he committee, which oversees purchase of flowers lor infirm or deceased supervisors or county officials, has been strictly a distaff organization. In the old days, the possibility of being named to the flowers committee hung heavy over the heads of male supervisors. To many, the flowers committee appointment was viewed as a punishment for below-par performance as a supervisor. ‘LOCAL JOKE’ Despite the modern trend that virtually ■ the possi- Actually, the flowers committee serves a useful function which is much appreciated by the families of the sick or deceased. MAYOR PRO-TEM Chairman of the committee is Mrs. Elizabeth W. Mitchel, Mayor Pro-Tern of Lathrup Village. Active in numerous civic affairs, Mrs. Mitchell also serves on the welfare committee of the hoard of supervisors and is a member of the Oakland County Community Mental Health Services Board. The other three members are Mrs. Dorothy Olson, Waterford Township supervisor; Mrs. Virginia Solberg, a member of the Madison Heights City Council; and Mrs. Marguerite Simson, a Pontiac housewife active in various civic affairs. More powerful and b e (t e r able to haul over long distances, these GMC’s have cut from one to two hours ofl run- The added power also means safer transportation by maintaining a smooth flow of traffic, asserts Albert T. DeRoose, Red Star’s vice president and safety director. ■ This added safety factor, plus the savings in time, is particularly appreciated, says DcRoose. WILLARD D. CHEEK fjlame Speaker for Scout Event GM Physicist to Talk at Recognition Dinner bility of a male being appointed to the committee remains an active local joke among supervisors. Last spring, when committee appointments were approaching, a supervisor was overheard In a courthouse corridor jokingly reminding a colleague that a vacaney existed on the flowers eom- A flower fund is maintained by periodic $2 deductions from the 86 supervisors who are paid $15 for each commtitee meeting-they attend. LONE MEETING Members of the flowers committee have had only one formal meeting since the committee was formed in 1931. This was in June 1964 when Mrs. Mitchell became chairman. Six Oakland Community Col-| lege students received a 4.0| EACH SPONSORED grade point average (straight A); addition to the recognition for the first semester, OCCDeanj banquet, each eagle scout will of S'"dent Personnel Arthur Jal- be sponsored by a local business L---: “You’d better shape up,” he warned. By conducting their business immediately before or after a board of supervisors session, the flowers committee members voluntarily forego the usual $15 meeting compensation. Six Students at OCC Receive All-A Average Calvin J. Werner, a vice president of General Motors and general manager of GMC Truck and Coach Division, announced today that Willard D. Cheek, a senior physicist at the GM Research Laboratories, Warren, will kick off Boy Scout Week, Monday evening at Oakland University. Cheek will be guest speaker at (he 4th Annual Eagle Scout Recognition D i n n e r (or the Clinton Valley Boy Scout Council. Werner is serving as general chairman for the 6:30 p.m. event and master-of-ceremonies (0 r the dinner program. This program is a testimonial to the importance placed on the achievement of these young men by their parents, scout leaders, and the business and educational leaders of our community,” Werner said. SPEECH TOPIC Werner added that Cheek will speak on the topic “Bridge Builders” to the 32 scouts from the Oakland and Macomb area who have achieved the rank of eagle scout in the past year. As a physicist. Cheek’s specialty has been (he development of radioisotopes for inapplications. At GM he has invented and further developed many peaceful uses for the radioactive atom. More recently he has been concerned with dramatizing General Motors research activities at the 1964-65 New York World’s Fair. kanen announced last night. Receiving perfect grades at Highland Lakes Campus were Gary Andrews, Huntington Woods; Carol Brookes. 39955 14 Mile, Novi; Sheron Chisholm, 136 W. Longfellow; Jeffrey Con-nelly, 966 Panorama, West Bloomfield Township; and Harold Hayden, 1533 Bawtree, Milford. or professional man. Each scout has indicated his vocational Interests and the sponsor for each scout is a successful business or professional man picked to match the scout’s vocational Interest. The eagle scouts are guests of their sponsor for the afternoon of the banquet, spending several hours with the sponsor James Hearn of Royal Oak viewing /Irst hand his vocation' was the one straight A student and meeting the people with at the Auburn Hills Campus. ^whom he woi^ks. THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1966 Ramses, Nefertari Move Up in World ABU SIMBEL, Egypt (AP)-, Salvage experts cut the twin The colossal temples of Abu temples into 950 chunks, weigh-Simbel have been hewn fromling 20 to 30 tons each, and their ancient home and the front of Abu Simbel Mountain looks newly shaven. For 32 centuries, the statues of King Ramses II, his queen Nefertari and an assortment of gods and sacred birds looked transported them to storage areas. Two years from now, reassembled, the king and the others wili be greeting the sunrise from higher ground. History has many tales of Ramses’ fondness for dismem- upon sunrise across the Nile, bering his war captives. Today, Then they had to be moved tolthe swashbuckling Ramses, the escape rising waters due tolbeautiful Nefertari, the arro-building of the Aswan Dam. Igant sun god Amon-Ra and the People in the News: By The Associated Press “It is something, the high wire. Something you have inside of you, that is what it is.” Speaking from his bed at Highland Park General Hospital, the Great Murillo longs to return to the high wire that nearly cost him his life. “You are way above everyone else,” he says, waving his hands. “The people are yelling. Then you turn around—four times—and the people are screaming. That is what you want to hear.” Murillo, 32, a one-time Chilean soccer star, plunged 45 feet to the ground in Detroit Tuesday when he lost his balance. He does not like safety nets. His tight rope is thin, he says, and not everyone can see it. “Somebody screams: ‘Where is the rope?’ That is what I like to hear,” he said. “I know that to them it is thrilling. • “Then I jump rope and people are holding their breath.” Detroit’s City Council is considering making safety nets mandatory, but Murillo protests: “No, no, no safety nets. They are not good. I do not like them. The people do not want them.” SPECIAL OFFER 25c|REauLAii IPRICE ’STZ" .MORTON 1 ■Snellens 50-lh. BAGH'^1" REGAL Wild Bird FEED MIXTURE 20% Sunflower 25i=",»2" GENUINE REDWOOD BIRD FEEDERS REGAL ilMI & LAWN SUPPLY Drayton Store Pontiao Store . Clarkston Store 4266 Dixie Hwy. 2690 Woodward 6676 Dixie Hwy. .......... MA 6-2745 OR 3-2441 FE 2-0491 Ptah are strewn about the ground, dismembered and help-’Rie baffling smirk on Ramses’ face is still there. In 1958, the Egyptian government announced it was going ahead with building the Aswan Dam which would create behind it the largest man-made lake in the world. Annual floods of the Nile threatened to submerge the entire Nubian desert and inundate the towering temples of Abu Simbel along with 26 other temples, churches and sanctuaries. UNESCO-the U.N. Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization—launched a “now or never” campaign urging nations of the world to rescue the Nubian monuments. The United States and Egypt are bearing most of the 336 million cost. Serious work began tl years ago with a thorough excavation of the two temples. A cofferdam was built to shield the temples. The Nile flooded twice, but work went smoothly behind the temporary dam. When cutting started last year, a few explosive charges were used to remove the upper part of the mountain topping the two temples. Then, with electronically guided saws, chisels and other tools, Italian experts cut the huge monuments in what was termed the greatest archeological surgery in history. SHIFT OPERATION The cofferdam will be flooded in August, but by then the whole operation will have been shifted to the temples’ new site, above the reach of the waters. Already several walls of the king’s temples are rebuilt. An official ceremony was held to mark the start in reassembling the big temples. Egypt’s tourism minister, Aziz Yassin, guided huge cranes placing in position statues of four gods: I^h, the sun god Amon-Ra, King Ramses II (he deified himself before his death), and Nubia’s god Re-Horachti. Beneath the four statues, Yassin placed four of the Egyptian National Char-copies of the Koran, four copies ter, and several coins representing the five nations doing the salvage work — Francs, Italy, Sweden, West Germany and Egypt. Little restoration work is planned. The scars caused by dismantling will remain, “for they are inescapably an important highlight in the history of the two temples,” says the project manager, Carl 'hieodor Mackel of West Germany. The 1.500 Egyptian and European workers and engineers the project are housed in small colony and hundreds of tents near the temples’ new site. 'There is a small airfield, club and a swimming pool. A hotel and a tourist bazaar will also be built, Mackel said. When the two temples get their new home, Mackel added, they will continue to stand majestically on the Nile, facing Three Are Killi as Mine Roof Falls in Virginia NORA, Va. (AP) - Three miners were killed Thursday when they were buried by a collapsing roof deep in the narrow corridors of a southwest Virginia drift mine. A fourth miner was Injured but three others escaped when tons of slate tumbled down, three miles from the entrance of the Betty Bee Coal Co. mine. Killed in the collapse were two cousins,' Marvin Baker, 21, and Cecil Baker, 25; and a ihin-ei who had worked for the firm only 45 days, Avery Rose, 31, the father of four children. READY FOR MOVE - G colassal temples of Abu Simbel ground after being hewn from their ancient home. For 321cause of death, centuries, these statues of Egyptian kings, queens and deities looked upon the sunrise across the Nile. Now they have to be moved to escape the rising ters due to the building of the Aswan dam which wili help in-dustralize Egypt. $hdl FLOOR COVERING • ^ OR3-I209 so BEAUTIFUL,.,so DIFFERENT SO UNBELIEVABLY PRICED Close-out on 2 rolls of Wool. Save *6 per sq. yd. W5 LFSq.Yd. 501 NYLON 12^x15’ Room Installed with Heavy Sponge pad . . . . 185 Open Monday and Friday ’til 9 P.M. a n t stone effigies from the I await their move to higher Flint Man Found Dead on Bus in Missouri JOPLIN, Mo. (AP) - Alfred Rames, 68, of Flint, Mich., was found dead Thursday aboard a Greyhound bus in Joplin. Coroner Wendell Fuhr said a heart attack was the probable SHOP BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE 52 STORES ft SERVICES WITH «1001» DEPARTMENTS PARK AT THE FRONT DOOR OF YOUR FAVORITE STORE BloomfwM Mirael* Mile Shopping Center TELEGRAPH at SQUARE LAKE RO. OPEN EVENINGS Admits Murder Enters Plea at Trial for Father's Death DETROIT (UPI)-A Romulus Township high school football pleaded guilty yesterday to manslaughter charges in the strangling of his father after a quarrel last spring. The surprising move came as the first-degree murder trial of Kenneth Steve McClure, 16, opened in Wayne County Circuit Court. The youth admitted killing his father March 22 after a violent argmoent about the victim repeatedly beating his wife and children. McClure and his 17-year-old brother, Bruce, put their fath-body in their car and parked it on railroad tracks at crossing in an attempt to make the death look accidental. Both boys were still charged with removing and mutilating a dead body. Defense attorney Joseph W. Louisell described the boys’ 55-year-old father as “an absolute sadist — a man who took great pleasure in inflicting pain and great hurt.” Circuit Judge Theodore R. Bohn said sentencing on the reduced charge would come within six weeks after he receives a report from the Probation Department. McClure, who remained free under $20,000 bond, has been accepted as a freshman for the spring semester at Northern Michigan University at Marquette. Bohn said he suggested the yoilth, who was football captain and a school leader at Romulus High School go ahead with his plans for an education. ‘I just felt he should not waste a semester if there was going to be probation,” the ju^ge said. We have the home for YOU! 3-BEDROOM COLONIAL 1 j 8714 EUZABETH LAKE RD. V4 Mile West of Williams Lake Rd. IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY Priced at Only ★ 3-BEDROOM COLONIAL « FAMILY ROOM with FIREPUICE ★ FULL BASEMENT ★ BUILMNs TAPPAN APPLIANCES ★ 2>/>CARAnACHE0 GARAGE ★ 1 BLOCK FROM SCHOOLS Waterford Schools ★ PAVEO STREETS ★ AND MANY PLUS FEATURES ★ . Saletmen at Model MODEL OPEN 3 to 8 Daily 12 to 6 Sat. and Sun. Call 363-0878 or 363-2278 ®21.900 IN FOX BAY ESTATES FEBRUARY SAVINGS! ROh?-: 108 NORTH SAGINAW 30" Gas Range by Brown With Exclusive deluxe features e Safety-Lock Oven Rocks e Lift-Out Oven Bottom e Four Giant Bonus Burners e Polished Burner Caps e Four Range Levelers e Low B.T.U. Flash tub Ignition e Beautiful blue-grey Porcelain finish distinguishes the interior of all ranges by Brown, assuring rust-proof durability and effortless cleaning. A real buy! Regular 119.95 Special at... , $98 NO MONEY DOWN OTHER MODELS AVAIUBLE AT COMPARABLE SAVINQS! In Our Own S.rvicn Daportmant by (oclofy troinad ax-parts. Wa Ouorantaa Sothfoclian. CrsditArrangsd FRIE DELIVERY by our axparl and FREEPARKINQ Lai aur attandani park yaur car In WKC't privala parking lot at raor at out .tora, Yat. Jti. VOVBUYHIRK, PAYNIRIUD WIOURULVIS SIIIVIOK,OKLIVIR A 16633920 The following are top prices covering sales of locally groWn produce by growers and sbld by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Friday. Produce paum Apoln, Mllcloui, GoMwi, bu. Applu, Delicious, Rod, bu. Apples, JonatMn, bu. Apples, Meclnleeh, eerly, bu. Apples, Northern Spy, bu. . Apples, Steel Rad, bu..... Apples, cldpr, Ml. case . vaeBTABLII NEW YORK (AP)-The stock market was mixed in active trading at the opening today. Changes of most key stocks were small. Chrysler was unchanged at 59 on 6,800 shares. International TeleiAone was up Ve at W/% on Westinghouse Electric was Cabbage, Curly, bu. . Cabbage, red, bu. Cabbage, SM., bu....... Carrots, cello oak . . Carrolt. topped, bu. .. Celery, Root, di. .. Horaeradlsh, pk. bskt. Leeks, dz. bchs. Onions, dry, SO-lb. bag 2,200. Douglas Aircraft was off %' at 96Ve on 1,500. General Dynamics rose % 59% on 1,800 shares. U.S. Steel was unchanged at 52% on 1,500 shares. Ginn & Co. Radishes, black. W bu................... Rhubard, holhousa. 5-lb. box ......... I.M Rhubarb, holhousa, 5«. box ........... 1.» Squash, Dellctous, b Squash, Hubbard, b Turnips, topped, bu. ttTTI_____ Lettuce, Leaf, Hothouse, bekt. .. Poultry and Eggs DITROtT leOS DETROIT (AP-Egg prices paid fur dozen by lirst receivers (incli^li^ 0 S.l: large 44-s7'/S; lerge 4 Mil: small 31. I 43VT; medium N »Vb; checks 17-30VT. CHICAOO BUTTER, EOeS CHICAGO (API - Chkago Me-Exchange — Butter firm; wholeseL Ing prices unchanged! VI score AA SOVt; n A ww; eo B stWi m c a'>4i c *0 B WWi N c sle buying pri I 70 per cent incKengei r Grade > s 3/1 checks 31. a buying pries oasters UVV25; changed t( del led W Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (AP)-(USDA) - CaNIe 100. " II enough steers and hellere hi supply —........... —■ ......."ss strong at Mart Mixed in Active Trade opened oh 14,600 shares, changed at 37%. General Motors slipped % to 104% on an opener UNCHANGED tion and Radio Corp. rose Ve to 52% on 5,000 shares. 62% on 2,000 unchanged shares. American Telephone opened on 15,000 shares, up % at 60%. Sperry Rand was unchanged at 18% on a 10,000-share transac- Boeing sank 4 to 168 on an 4,400 [opening block of 8,800 shares. Thursday the Associated Press Average of 60 stocks dipped -2 to 363.9. Prices were mixed on the American Stock Exchange. Giannini Controls gained a fraction. Felmont Oil and Louisiana Land were unchanged. Molybdenum, Brown Co. and Brazilian Traction lost fractions. WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield plans to file a cloture petition to^y to try to kill the union shop filibuster. The filing automatically will bring a vote on the debate-limiting procedure next Tuesday. The New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK (API-Following li —A— Air Rod 1.50 illScSnio I7*44lC 4044 4M4 I 35 Inc .M wx Cp con 3.750 6 474% 464% 4 14 1446 144% 1 . 1 OlH 014% OMb -I-72 114% 1144 114% Atchlnn I.M Atloi Cp Auto Cam M Avco Corp I Avnat 50b ....... 5744 -1 6 514% 514% 514% - < 7 »V% 374% 374% 4 7144 71 714* -I- ' Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AP)-TII* ol the Iroaiury comparod •ponding dalt a yaar ago. Jaa. 17, IN* Jaa. 17, WM 5 5,715,351,334.07 I 5JI1,104.137. Dcpoilta Flacal Yaar J _________________ 50,711,010430.11 wiihdrawalt Flacal Ytar- 7044K6S4.030.61 61431450,515# X-Tolal Dabt- ................. 310410.706,715.01 ^abczWW I Bandix I.M Banguot .05* Bath StI 1.50 BIgalowS I.M Boalng la BolaaCai .« a‘ni52‘T5 + 4% 15 304% 30H 504% - 4* 5 46t- “ 170 14W fl 70 il 314 LonaSCam I I 14044 1674% 10044 -144 ^ J 52 7 4744 474% I 43H 41H 434% II 101H 101H 1014% 37 114% 11>/4 11'% II 304% »»% 30*% 3 17'4 11'4 13'4 Long III Lt 1 Lorfllard 14 LuckyStr 1.4 MadFd I.M* 7\ Sm 51H - Mar MM 1.25 Sfocks of Local Interest Flgurat attor dacimal point* ar* alghthi OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Ouotallom Irom th* NASD ar* rapra-.^1.11.,. ini»juaiar prkaa of approxl-Inlar-daalar markata commltslon. a ratall markup, markdown c Chackar Mol AMT Corp................. Aaaoclatad Truck Braun Enginaaring Cltlzana Ulllltla* Claai A Monro* Auto EquIpmanI Diamond Cryital Kally Girl Mohawk Rubbar Co........ Oatrax Chamlcal ChrlaCII I.IM Chryilar 3 CIT Fin I.M CItlaaSvc 1.50 ClavEIIII 1.56 Wahr Corp................ Wyandott* Chamlcal MUTUAL FUNDS I 10.04 I 743 ’? 4 3444 IM 3444 t 44 13 50'% 504% 504% + 4% 5 474% 474% 474% Marquar .35* Martl^*;^ MavDSIr 1.50 McCall 40b McDonA 60b McKaai 1.70 *—"Cp 1.70 I 374% 17H 3744 10 474% 47 47H 4 I 14 34 14 ? 8'% 8'% 8'.. ^ ISi 8,4 852 * •5 iov% 5o'* lo ^ 1/4 + ' 1% -I- ' Col Oaa I.M fsSd’l »a 1.10 ” 3144 ^ L - f SXS5J 5ti4 ConaPow 1.00 Cont Mot .a Cont Oil i.a Control Data Com Pd 1.60 CoxBdcai .a CrowCol 1 ■“ 14 604% tt4% r M -H 15 71 TK 71 -t- W 1252 3^! jrownji^Cor American Stock Exch. DanRIv 1.30b OaycoCp 50b Daer* flO* Dolt* Air I DatEdk L4^ DIamAlk 1.10 Aarolat 50* * w ’ m!% wt? +*ii Alax Mageth lOg 3 1344 1 3H 134* ' ■' ArkLaGaa 1. Aaamara Atlai Cp wt ... Barn*! Eng 14 30 Brai Trac .M 4Hvin% DougAlrc 1b DowCh I.Nb Drapar 1.30* Orau Ind 1 OukaPo'ivar 1 duPont 6d ^a^p'!w 1'* - ____.. . J044 +1 406vliM low 10’'* f14 _... . ..... 45 3-1* 04% 0 5-16 +3-16 Brown Co .60 16 31 304% M 4 " Campb Chib 51 044 1 516 0 >16-t-l Can So Pat n 10-16 3'/% 10-16-M-Cdn Javaim 51 114% 114% 114% -t- ClrywM* RIty 31 14% 34% »% .. Craol* P 3.60* 1 30H 304% 304% -6 Data Com 1 11 15 15 - EquIlyCp .101 364 4W 44% 44% -f Fargo Dili 4111-16111-163 11-16 Faimt Dll .15g 0 OH OH 0'% . Fly TIgar l.34f 31 30'% 30 M'4 -F G*n paval 13 5'4 S'/x 5'% -f Gan Plywd II 10H 10H 104% 'f GlanI Yal 60* IS I5H 14H I4H - 0?'B**"p*t 8 ?H I''* 3H +' J Kodak 1.40* EatonYa 3.10 ElBondS 1.55 EIPaioNG I EmarRad .# End John Ethyl Cp .50 EvaniPd .I5r Evariharp 1 4 1744 6 I64t 356 13 3 lOH r 16H -F 'A ! loH + 44 - ! 6742 Molybdan ......... N*w Pk Mng IS SH X-. .. Pancit Pot 11 14% I'A 14 4air,?j%ir3!2t8 4H 4H 4H Thandav't !•( Olvidandi Oaclarad —D— 18 8 8 3 3% ^ 50H -F H grrTT+si 1 4m 41H JIH + 4% ’5 8X ? ?tiri«4%in4%rr 13% i «iTSrH.«? Jadiwr L60 F!Rf*fcp*1.40 FalChrt 1.171 Flintkol* 1 flidfilr’^O . . FrSJRcp 1.5i If ^ 511% 31 Bh !5h ^ I 75H 75H Gan Cig 1.50 &ST7i Gan Fdi I.M SanAAol 5.15g OanPrac l.jC QPubSvc ;4* 8t'’.Y*’^1 i;8 fi 7410s 7 41H 6 35H 41 MH 2*3ti lirs racaCo 1.50 lABP I 10* liwsug OulOMO 1.10* Gulf Oil 3 GuH SUt .71 '0 85% ^ ^ ' ”a i?52 I?H 1?52 -F ”4 352 3% sail rr 852 sa-a (hdt.) High Law Last Cha. _____Co .0* * 33W 33'/x 33'/4 -F H SouthPac 1.50 4 4SH #'/> 45H StOIIInd 1.70 30 70H 60 70H -F 4 6m 67'% 67H . ' SlauftCh^.48 “ IDrug .60 ansJP 2 5 6H 6H 644 I 2044 lO'A M'A -F '4 I MH 60 MH -F H 1 53'% 53H 51H + H I 43H 414% 41H +1H 6 I4H 144% MH I 30'% 30H 30H I ao #7 mVi +IH TennG*i 1.16 Texaco 1.40* TaxETm 1.05 TtxGSul M Texailnitm I O 06H 06H 06H - H 3 11H 11H 11H + ■" n 8’* 852 8^+.. 4 70 77H 77H FIH 10 131H 1J1H 111H 1 71H 71H 71H 0 7SH 7SH 71H 0 56H 54H 56H 2 a 60 w 13 24H 24 24 1 76H 76H 74H - H 12 33H n 31 — •Cp 1.70 ..... MM 1.30 USBorax .10* USGypwn la US 'u.2l. ’5 USPlywd 1.a US Rub 1.20 3 IM 16H 16H -6 OH I'/x 1'4 + i sa sa S52f 17 744% 74H 74H 11 73H 714% 71 6 IlH 11H 12H t H If 40H M 60H -F H 11 33 13 13 F H BSSBasaia I’sarsa • I 41H 4IH 4I'4 13 50H SDH s6h —M— It a a a - H WaihWal 1.00 15 50 51 SO - 10 lOH lOH lOH - 1 I6H 16H 16'% in »l n 31 3IH 3144 . 6 51H 53H „ . . 3 ISH 35H 35H — 10 56H 50 SIH F 100 SOW 50'/4 SOW F 3 51H 51 '■ ‘ 11 «H 60' rta 45H 50H - H 34 H 67H FIH 13 76H 76'/j 76H - . 3 37 37 37 - H 6 35'% 15'% 15H 16 31 13H 13 . .. 37 30'/4 M'/4 30W ilai flgurat ar ..*!*•> otharwiM dondt In Ih* fortb>~.v ------ dribunamantt baiad on th* lail quarterly - aaml-annutl declaration. Special or xtr* dlvlda^a or paymenti not dailg-atod at regular — .4—..4.—. ■- <•.. lUowkig footnotat *-Alio extra c V5JH’8r! —N— 31 77\k 7h\» 77^ i 8a 182 sa... 17 66H 65 ISH FIH r T vr NatGypa lb “■ -Id 3.1Sg Itaol I.M Tea .10 I 30H 3IH 30H - ffl^i.^ii NJ Zinc 1« NYCmt 3.0I« WX.t'12 Nlta Pw 1.44 Northrop I ^itAIrl L30 * SOW St'4 SO'% 1 15H I5H im 1 43H 044 43H 2 lOH IPH lOH - H 1 27H 17H 17H F H 1 8'a 8 :: TTtSatSaiUaFH Bsasn Swta 111 852 8a 8a F H 17 153 151H •“ OhIoEdll 1.06 OlInMath 1.60 Otit Elev 1 Owanilll 1.35 111 41H 41H 43H FIH 4 MH M'% MH xlS iSh M 60H 0 SIH gH ^ —P— 1 MH MH MH -14 77 “ " ParktOav It Ptab Coal I Penney I 50a PaPuAl I.a ll'/4 13H U ^ 51H i 6 an an 17 MH M I 15 35 35 - ' Panniell PepilCo 1 — PtliarC 1.20* E"i5 PhllMor AM Phlll Pat l.W PltnayBar- • PHPIat* : 3 73 73 73 M 0I'% II 01'/ 6 704 74H 7441 7 MH OOH 004L ... 0 MH MH 340% — H 6 54H S4H 5646 - 4 OOH OOH OOH 16 57H 57 57H ’18a 8 r ., 1 I4H 14H I4H M 111H IIIH IIIH - H iianaiaia 4 67H 67H 67H ' I 23H 13H 13H —P— 8 ’8h ’8h ’tin - H RCA .00 60 51H 51H IIH F H 'irsarFH otding Co olchCh .101 Rtyn Tob 2 RhaamM I.M sr ' ■ RydarSy n41H 41H qH F H OH «H OH F H 7 q a'% 44H 16 MH 5IH MH F H isa sa sa-H 7 OH u an ' 1 MH MH 144% 4 41H qH 41H 11 17H 17H I7H ID iti^pir bifise teuCalS l.tO jaasaiaJ.; ihU' 8 na 8a na 11 8 822 8h sa.i 11 OlH 01H OlH - ' 17 MH lOH lOH FI Mansfield said Thursday that if this attempt fails he planned to file another petition Tuesday. This would trigger a second cloture vote Thursday. The filibuster, now in its 11th day, has blocked Mansfield’s efforts to bring before the Senate a bill to repeal Section 14B of the Taft-Hartley law. The section allows states to outlaw union shop contracts under which covered employes must join the union. Nineteen states have such bans. i MH MH MH F 1 76H 76H 76H I ISH 25 25H F ....• 4*H 6»H .. • 32H 32H F 2 MH 4*H ,,-------- igii82 852 t:2 5 21U ...... 32 100V4 11 3 44ard will be approached to Hnance the other 50 per cent of the price. In addition, PTA groups are being contacted regarding purchase of ponchos for student safety patrols, according to Wilhelm. The equipment is rubberized nylon, colored bright orange. March 9 was officially set as “Community Day’’ in Waterford Township. Citizens from business, industry, labor, education and community organizations are invited to visit schools in the district that day. In still other busines, the board approved second semester contracts for two teachers and a^pted the resignations of two others. 'Instant Refund' Tax Revision WASHINGTON (UPI) - Congressional tax-writers are considering an “instant refund” income tax revision which conceivably could boost the take-home pay of millions of Americans. But at the same time the plan under discussion by the House Ways & Means Committee could undercut part of President J6hn-son’s tax proposals aimed at producing additional revenue to fight the Viet Nam war and check any inflation threats. The instant refund proposal, advanced by Rep. John W. Byrnes, Wis., ranking Repab-lican on Ways & Means, would reduce the amonnt of money many taxpayers have over-held from their paychecks. At present 37 million taxpayers have a total of $6 billion more taken from their pay-checks than they actually owe in taxes come April 15. f 4 i t -■$: # Successful g Under the Byrnes plan, taxpayers, instead of waiting for their refunds until the end of the tax year, would, in effect, get them instantly by having less taken out of their pay-checks. WOULD AFFECT PLAN Byrnes conceded that his pro- ' /nvesffng * $ ■»' ' $®- '■% By ROGER E. SPEAR (Q) “I notice you frequently mention Com Prodnets and would like to have your reason for doing so. I know a senior officer of Cora Products and would like to know more about thh company.” J. B. (A) Com Products is a great world food enterprise, international leader in corn refining and strong in distribution of packaged foods. With the exception of 1964 -- when a major strike coupled with new pr^-uct introductions resulted in a small decline — earnings have risen in every year of the past decade. Divides have also risen in nine of the past 10 years, and price appreciation during the same period amounted to 270 per cent. The shares did little in last year’s market, partly because of a temporary slowdown in earnings and partly because many sound, conservative grbwth stocks have been ignored in the rather speculative climate of 1965. Com Products’ foreign operations account for about half of profits. Share net is believed to have risen to around $2.45 for 1965 the annual dividend was recently lifted to $1.60 — where the current yield is three per cent. Finally, since the stock has had no important rise in 1965, I believe it should hold up better than most stocks when and if a decline sets in. This is fine holding for the conservative investor. poskl could have an effect on Johnson’s plan to raise |400 million in fiscal 1967 by boosting the withholding rates on high-bracket taxpayers who usually wind up the year owing the government money. But neither the Wisconsin lawmaker nor a Treasury official would estimate what the effect would be. The Byrnes plan would permit a taxpayer who expects big itemized tax dednetions to hifonn his employer so his withholding rate could be adjusted downward during the year. It would be similar to claiming dependents under the pres- (Q) “The term ‘par value’ when applied to stocks confuses me. If a stock of a new company sells at |26 wHh a par value of $5, what is the real value of the stock?” R. E. (A) The actual value of a stock ia the price the market will pay for the shares — the $20 in your illustration. Par value itself ia a device whereby a corporation’s shares are given an arbitrary figure for legal and bookkeeping purpoaes. As far as Investments go, par Value rarely has any bearing on the real worth of the stock con- Roger Spear’s 48-pnge Investment Guide la available to all readers of tUs eol-nian. CUp this notice and ■end $1.M wHh yonr name and address to Roger E. Speor, In care of The Pontiac Press, Box 1111, Grand Central Stotion, N.Y.C., N.Y. 1M17. (Copyright, 1916) Considered by Congressmen ent system, but would also permit a taxpayer to claim as deductions certain expenses—such as high medical costs. The Byrnes proposal was actively discussed yesterday during the Ways & Means Committee’s first closed session on the President’s $4.8-billion tax package, designed to raise revenue mostly through temporary tax changes. i One of Johnson’s proposals is to put withholding rates on a sliding scale so that the total amount taken from paychecks more nearly conforms to the amount tax due April 15. At present income taxes are withheld at a flat rate of 14 per cent. The administration plan is for a graduated scale of from 14 to 30 per cent. New Mexico OKs Succession Move SANTA FE. N.M. (AP) New Mexico is the 17th state to ratify the presidential succession amendment to the U.S. Constitution. The State Legislature made the move Thursday hours after the Colorado State Legislature had ratified the amendment. The amendment would allow the vice president to act president If the president were incapacitated. Among other provisions, it would allow the president to fill a vacancy in the office of vice president with the approval of a majority in the House and Senate. Recotntnend Lot Rezoning City planners have recommended a rezoning and an alley vacating for a future Pontiac State Bank branch on Pontiac’s north side. Commercial rezoning was recommended for two lots, one facing Madison and one faciqg Le-Baron, to the east of the alley parallel to Joslyn. The City Phumiag Commb-sion also recommended vacating the alley, which runs parallel to Joslyn between Madison and LaBaroa. Final approval is up to the City Commission. Public hearings on a pair of rezoning requests were adjourned one month for further revisions in the site plans. ITEM ADJOURNED Commercial rezoning for an office building at the southeast corner of Baldwin and Poplar was one item adjourned, while Residential-3 rezonlng was also held up. The latter rezoniag was for an area bounded by Walton, Jaycee Park, Leheigh and Highwood. A 146-unlt apartment project is proposed for the area. A series of amendments to the zoning ordinance were given favorable recommendations by the city planners. The amendments primarily would give updated definitions for residential zoning classifications. Pontiac Woman Drowns in Bathtub Crash Hurts Pontiac Man A Pontiac man was injured in a two-car collision this morning at the intersection of East Pike and South Tasmania. William J. lYrell, 21, of 185' Whittemore was listed in satisfactory condition in St. Joseph! Mercy Hospital. Driver of the other car, Ver-' non Lawson, 38, of 186 N. Perry I was treated and released from^ the hospital. A 21-year-old Pontiac woman accidentally drowned Ip the bathtub of her home yesterday morning. Bernadette Ann Koenig, 794 Kenilworth, may have suffered an epileptic seizure, according to Pontiac police. She was found in the tub, halffull of water, by members of her family. Car Rams Fireplug; Driver Hospitalized Area Woman Hurl in 2-Car AccidenI A two-car collision on M59 at Pontiac Lake Road yesterday reautted in the hospitalization of a 29-year-old Mllfo^ woman. In satisfactory condition at Pontiac General Hospital Is Bet-i r Ann Motley of 632 Canal. The other driver was Siegel W. Judd, 70, of Grand Rapids. I A 21-year-old Pontiac man was hospitalized yesterday after his car rammed into a fireplug on North Perry near East Howard. Walter V. Bowen, 21, of 461 Nebraska is reported in fair condition today at Pontiac General l^pital. Impatient for Patients EXETER. England (UPI) -Authorities plan to sell a smallpox isolation hospital naar here because of lack of patiants. It’s only had one in the 41 years It's been In existence. ■ [.