The Weather THE PONTIAC PR VOL. 124 No. 240 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1966 —44 PAGES SSSlilBI PMB. Romney Raps LBJ; Undecided About '68 WASHINGTON UR — Michigan Gov. George Romney said yesterday that President Johnson “wmild have been beaten this year if he had run,” but insisted he still has not decided whether to seek Johnson’s job in 1968. ★ ★ ★ Ronuiey, elected to a third term last week by a record margin, said the Republican party “has a large number (rf candidates that could beat Mr. Johnson.” He didn’t name them. Asked in a television-radio interview whether he would encourage, ignore or discourage his {Mresidentiai boostws, Romney said: “I’m going to decide at some point whether to become involved or not... I just haven’t made a decision yet... I’m not a candidate.” ★ ★ ★ He said a decision would hinge wi such elements as “whether the people want you RICHARD NIXON BARRY GOLDWATER Tanker Blast Kills 2, Injures 7 Off Oregon SEATTLE, Wash. (AP) - A tanker, with its captain and a motorman dead and seven other crewmen injured from a time bomb explosion, anchored early today off Astoria, Ore. where a search was made for other bombs. The seven injured men, all Chinese, were taken to Astoria and a hospital where five were treated for bums around the eyes, another for leg bums and the seventh for abdominal bums. A dem(dition team from the Naval Ammunition Depot at Bangor, Wash., was flown to Astoria to search the tanker. 'The team was summoned after a Columbia River pilot taken aboard outside the mouth of the river reported another device resembling a bomb had been found in the master’s cabin, and the crew thought there might be more aboard. The 535 foot Liberian vessel, the Grand Integrity, was off the Oregon coast yesterday, headed to South Korea from Longview, Wash., when the bomb which killed the captain. Ho Liensiu, and the motorman, Chiu Yungjye, exploded. In Today's Press Airliner Crash Fifty die in Japanese tragedy - PAGE D-ll. Arizona Slayings Teen suspect under psychiatric care—PAGE B-13. Black Market U. S. losing millions to Viet profiteers — PAGE D^13. Area News .........A4 Astrology ........ .D4 BrMge...........;.D-5 Crossword Puzzle ... B-5 Comics ....... ...D-S Editorials .......A-4 Markets ...........D4 ....D-7 D-1-D4 ....b4 TV-Radio Programs D-U Women’s Pages B-1-B4 . .. whether you have solutions for jffoblems that are better than what is now being proposed.” OPENS UP Though stof^ing well short of an announcement of candidacy, Romney was more open about the topic than ever before. Prior to the election he repeatedly said, “take care of 1966 before worrying about 1968.” Immediately following his third-term vtatwy — in nhich he led Repubilcans to a near swe^ of Ifichigan — the 59-year-4dd governor did say he is flatteredL .by presidential talk about him. Asked whether his refusal to endorse 1964 GOP candidate Barry Goldwater mij^it hurt his presWential chances, Romney said “Sen. Goldwater knows Mdiy I did what I did.” ★ ★ ★ TThe former president of American Motors Corp. touched on a broad range of issues, including: ★ ★ ★ • National defense: “From 1958 to 1960, tile Democrats argued we had a missle gap. Secretary of Defense Robert S, McNamara dissipated that in about two months. Now he has confronted us with the fact of Rusisian defenses against missiies.” ★ ★ ★ • Viet Nam: “The No. 1 problem is the big credibility “I am concerned about certain aspects concerning which I haven’t got specific answers in order to make specific sug- • Foreign policy: He said that since 1960, the nation has not become stronger, ties to Europe are weaker, the United Nations is weaker, there is a bigger gap in relations with underdevelf^ied countries and relations with Communist nations arfe weaker. GEORGE ROMNEY Fail to See Bombers Retaliate Vapor Trail Reported Plan to Block Romney in 1968 Is Denied WASHINGTON — Barry Goldwater says it’s “not true” that he and Richard M. Nixon are collaborating to try to block any bid by Michigan Gov. George Romney for the 1968 Republican presidential nomination. But Goldwater, though not closing the door on Romney, said the governor still has “a lot of homework to do” with party leaders to atone for not endorsing Goldwater in the 1964 presidential race. Romney, meanwhile, said he still hasn’t decided whether to run for president. Goldwater was asked yesterday on a television show, if he was coUabwating with Nixon to stop Romney, as the questioner said, “it has been written and reported.” “No, that is not true,” said Goldwater. “I happen to be a Nixon backer, but I haven’t seen Dick Nixon in person in over three months.” Nixon is regarded as another likely candidate for the nomination. DIFFERENCES Romney, appearing on another television show, continued his move to gloss over old differences with Goldwater. Though saying “I just haven’t made a decision” on whether to run for president, Romney was his most candid so far in acknowledging he is thinking about running. He and Goldwater did join in attacking Secretary of E)efense Robert S. McNamara in the wake of McNamara’s announcement that the Soviet Union is deploying an antimisrile system. ★ ★ ★ “Just another incident of where McNamara is not leveling with the American people,” said Goldwater. MISMANAGEMENT? “Perhaps we have a gap in this (antimissile) respect now as a result of mismanagement of these Democratic administrations,” said Romney. CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) — With split-second timing by control centers on three continents, the Gemini 12 pilots today tried twice to photograph — but could not see — a wind-whipped yellow vapor stream spewed by two French rockets high over the Sahara. ★ ★ ★ “We saw no cloud,” reported command pilot James A. Lovell Jr. the second time around. “Pictures taken, but no obser-vatiwi.” “You know what they say, e’est la vie” — that’s life — Lovjril said. “They’ve had visual observation from the ground,” flight controllers radioed after the second rocket blasted off about 8:07 a.m. * ★ * . “Wish we could say the same,” Lovell replied. ‘OUGHT TO BE’ “That’s where we ought to be,” chimed in Edwin E. Aldrin Jr. ^ The international experiment —along with contrd problems caused by two of Gemini 12’s maneuvering rockets not working — fwced the astronauts to ask for a 90-minute postponement (rf a final adventure outside the spacecraft by Aldrin. On the last excursion planned by a U.S. astronaut outside a spaceship until 1968, Aldrin planned to poke the upper half of his body out of a Gemini 12 door for 40 minutes beginning about 10:15 a.m. (EST) to snap pictures of stars and sunrise. ★ ★ ★ The session was originally planned one orbit earlier, at 8:47 a.m. SUGGES’nON “We’d rather put our EVA (extra-vehicular activity) off one more rev and do a good job,” Lovell suggested to mission control. ★ * ★ Flight controllers said they would think it over. After N. Viet Attack LBJ Discusses His Surgery, Gains by GOP SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (5^ — President Johnson returns to the White House today, optimistic about the surgery he faces Wednesday and philosophical about Republican election gains. “I don’t think the country is going to the dogs” Johnson toid a news conference yesterday in the modernistic municipal center at Fredwicksburg, 15 miles west of his Texas ranch. The President planned to leave Randolph Air Fwce Base here lor Washington in midmoming. Johnson announced he will enter the Naval Medical Center at Bethesda, Md., late tomorrow and be operated on there early V ‘ Doctors wiU remove a growth from his throat and repair a hernia along the incision from his 1965 gall bladder-kidney stone surgery. RETURN TO TEXAS Saying the twin operations “will take perhaps less than an hour,” Johnson predicted he would remain in the hospital “a very few days,” then return to Texas to spenfl much of the time until Congress reconvenes Jan. 10. ★ ★ ★ He forecast a more united Democratic party and a strengthened GOP. GETS ASSIST—Patrick K. Daly, manager of the new secretary of state office at 4520 Pontiac Lake, Waterford Township, places a 1967 license plate on the automobile of Mrs. Michael Kroll, 758 W. Huron, who doesn’t seem to mind one bit. Sale of Plates 'Good' at Office in Waterford Shifting Winds to Bring Cooler Temperatures Shifting winds will bring cooler temperatures this afternoon with toni^t’s low in the 30s. The west to northwesterly winds at 15 to 20 miles will diminish by tonight. Clear to partly cloudy skies with coder temperatures will dominate the weather scene Predictions for Wednesday include partly suniw skies vrith little temperature change. I GM Film Shown 1 300 Teens Talk Safety | More than 300 area students attended the Teen-Age Traffic Safety Conference Saturday at Pontiac Northern High School. The half-day session included a General Motors Corp. film, brief lectures and student discussion groups. The eighth annual conference was organized by the Traffic Safety Committee of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce. Safe-driving hints were offered by H. C. Dumville, an executive engined* in automotive safety engineering at General Motors Techrtical Center, WarroJ. He also narrated a GM film “Safety First,” which showed the GM crash research program. Dumville said that drivers should “develop driving skills and judgment so they can leam to drive defensively and cope with any situation that mi^t'occur. “A driver training course is only the beginning,” he explained. “A good drivw will do pos^raduate wori( with a good, experienced driver and keep Patrick K. Daly, manager of the new secretary of state office at 4520 Pontiac Lake, Waterford Township, describes business as good despite a general unawareness among people that the business is there. Daly opened the township’s first secretary of state office May 9 at his home across the street from the new location. He moved the operation to the new 1,800-square-foot facility after neighborhood residents complained. From Nov. 1 through noon last Friday, 843 1967 Michigan license plates were purchased at the new office. ★ ★ ★ Of toese, 704 were for passenger cars,-45 for coitunercial vehicles, 88 for trailers and six for motorcycles. “The only problem we have is getting people to know we’re here,” said Daly, who also uses his office for his justice court business. Prior to this year, the Pontiac secretary of state office had set up a substation In the township hall for a brief period each year to sell license plates to residents. Daly plans to open substations in White Lake Township, Keego Harbor, Sylvan Lake and independence Township for brief periods in February to make it convenient for residents of those communities to buy license plates. Deadline for purchasing 1967 plates is Feb. 28. With the opening of the Waterford Township facility, there (Continued on Page 2, (3ol. 4) Lowest temperature reading in downtown Pcmtiac prior td 8 a.m. was 36. By 1 p.m. scattered sunshine warmed the meii^to42. B52s Answer Red Atta(J( on Yank Troops SAIGON, South Viet Nam (/P) — B52 bombers struck back today at North Vietnamese troops which inflicted heavy casualties on a U.S. infantry company near the Cambodian border. The giant Stratoforts, in one of three raids, hammered at North Vietnamese concentrations 16 miles northwest of the Plei Djereng (U.S.) Special Forces camp. - Hiis was near the area where an estimated 500 North Vietnamese regulars attacked a compaiQr — 178 men — of the U.S. 25th Infantry Division yesterday. A U.S. spokesman said the infantry company suffered heavy casualties in the initial Communist assault of a battle that lasted 1V4 hours. He said 26 North Vietnamese were kilied. ★ ★ ★ Elsewhere, only small and sporadic skirmishes were reported as the ground war lapsed into a lull. bad weather Over North Viet Nam, bad weather dimited U.S. air blows again yesterday. American pilots flew only 71 bombing missions, well below the daily average. The strikes all were in the southern portion of North Viet Nam and five missions Hit at Communist positions inside the demilitarized zone. ★ ★ ★ Pilots reported destroying or damaging nine structures in the buffer area, while elsewhere they attacked barges, trucks, bridges and rail lines. THREE CLASHES The battle around the Plei Djereng Green Beret camp, 230 miles north of Saigon, was one of three clashes yesterday involving U.S. 25th division troops. 3rd Straight Record for Pontiac lines For the third consecutive 10-day period Pontiac and Tempest sales have set a new all-time record, it. was announced today. ^ 'Thomas L. King, general sales manager of Pontiac Motor Di-visiffli, said Nov. 1-10 sales totaled 26,992 units. This, he pointed out, surpassed the previous rec^ of 25,124 establtehed a year ago. LI’LONES Dumville suggested young drivers leam to control skids 1^ practicing gt low spefsds in onp-’ (Ckmtii^e^ on Page 2, GoL 1) High School Saturday were (from left) Mrs. Fran d43ean WBsonrcoordinator ef-driver education of the Pontiac Schools and chairman of the Miller, secret^ to director of the Michigan State Pontiac Area C3iamber of Commerce Traffic Safety Safety Commission; Marty IScR^molds, head of Committee; and William Covert, instructor at the customer Pattons at ^ Highway 'Draffic Safteto Center, Michigan State Reis, 16, daugh^p rf Mr. and Mrs. A| B. Reis, 236 Une^ity. p “I don’t mind learning about birds, but bees scare me!” * ‘HV', THE PONTIAC PRESS. JilONDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1966 Hunt for Kidnaped Baby Ends Happily in Denver DENVER, Colo. (AP) — A 41-|Douglas, (rf Denver, for in-iretum of their son. Hospital jfrom Uie hospital area about the hour search by pWice and FBl!vestigation of kidnaping. Detec- physicians said the 9-pound, 13- time the baby was missed, agents for a kidnaped babyltive Jack Groginsky said the ounce baby was in good condi- Sc»tt Werner, agent in charge ended happily Sunday with the woman, after being advised of tion, but had “a touch of a'of the Denver office of the Fed-safe return of the Way-old child her rights, admitted taking the cold.” jeral Bureau of Investigation, to his parents. i child, The husky son of Mr. and; * -k * Mrs. William Bacon of Denver' No charges have been filed, was abducted early Saturday | Police will discuss the case morning from a fourth-floOT with Denver Dist. Atty. Bert nursery at Colorado General i Keating today. Hospital. i Bacon, 29, and his wife, Re- Police are holding Susan becca, were overjoyed with the 300 Students 1 Attend Traffic Safety Confab (Continued From Page One) ty parking lots. So. when necessary, the driver can handle a skidding car on a crowded highway. ANOTHER SPEAKER ' Another speaker was William Covert, an instructor at the Highway Traffic Safety Center! at Michigan State University'. | He told the audience that one out of every two drivers on the roads to6ay would have an injury-producing accident. “Pay attention to that little hand on the speedometer. It’s your decision. When you go so fast, just remember, your car must still go a certain length to stop,” he said. ir k it Covert added, “Teen-agers should take their offenses seriously since the record you are building now will go with you throu^ life.” STUDENTS ASSURED A representative from the State PoUce, Cpl. Harold Wade of the Redford post, assured students “there are no ‘danger-teen-ager ahead — nail him’ signs, but police would get teenagers, as anyone else if they violated the law. jotting into small discussion groups, teen-agers considered special driving problems and then reassembl^ to report results. One group decided the basic driving cre^ should be “cai tion, courtesy and control while driving defensively. ■said Mrs. Douglas apparently Detective Dick Rennick attri- lost a baby by a miscarriage buted the discovery of the child recently. ■good old legwork.” Investigators pored through nearly 700 trip tickets from taxi companies before they found cme that indicated a trip was made BACK IN MOTHER’S ARMS — Mr. and Mrs. William Bacon are all smiles as they look at their baby boy shortly after he was returned to Colorado General Hospital last night in Denver. Agent-in-charge Scott Werner of the FBI said the baby was taken by 29-year-old Mrs. James Douglas of Denver, who apparently lost a baby by miscarriage six weeks ago.- ENTERS NURSERY “Apparently Friday she decid^ to go to a hospital and get a baby,” Werner said. He said Mrs. Douglas entered the nursery that had two babies in it while the nurse on duty crossed the hall momentarily to get supplies. “One baby was crying,” Werner said. “She took the one that wasn’t crying.” ★ * . * Police said Mrs. Douglas told them, when first questiwied, that the child was hers and it had been delivered at home. The physician she said delivered the baby denied the woman’s story. Then Mrs. Douglas told police: “My husband and I wanted a baby. I treated him like he was my own.” CALLS HUSBAND She said she telephoned her husband James, 48, when she got home and told him she had given birth to a baby boy. After Mrs. Bacon was told that her child was safe she kept repeating, “I got my baby back. That’s all I wanted.” “I can’t say everything. I have the feeling I’d like to run down the corridors and yell,” her husband said. Both parents expressed sympathy for Mrs. Douglas and her husband. “We heard the circumstances and there are no hard feelings,” Bacon said. “We wish them the best in their ordeal to come.” Birmingham Area News Plastic or Paper Bags Urged for Trash Pickups BIRMINGHAM — The City i mingham would have for using Commision is to discuss use of the bags would be for aesthetic plastic or paper bags for vtih- reasons and for additional con-bish collection tonight. talners for seasonal material T. C. Brien, superintendent of the department of public works, recommends in a letter to the commissiim that use of large plastic or paper bags be included in the regulations and that residents be encouraged to set out only regulation containers and the rubbish bags. He said the only reason Bir- such as leaves or grass clip-Jings. He also suggested that bags be distributed by local merchants and that use of plastic or paper bags be up to the residents. Plane Bombs Cuban Plant HAVANA, Cuba (AP) - The Armed Forces Ministry today “an unidentified airplane flying from the north” dropped three American-made bombs («i the Cepero Bonilla chemical plant in Matanzas, on Cuba’s north coast, before dawn Sunday. Others decided that current I a brief communique pub-driver education courses were Ushed by the Communist party pretty good but that more driv-jpaper, Granma, said one of the bombs caused damage “of little importance to the roof warehouse.” The plane then! flew north, the report said. | ing time was a must. This group' also said more teachers were needed on the driving ranges. BOTHER TO PARENTS Another group unanimously agreed that the driving age should remain 16, not be raised to 17. They said it was Tnore practical because teen-agers could be more independent and not have to bother parents ev-erytime they needed a ride. PonNac Pra»» Photo INITIAL ENTRY—Noe E. Morales, 19 Tacoma, found hunting good in the Upper Peninsula’s Iron County last year, so he returned Saturday for the opening of deer season. He brought down a 10-point, 171-pound buck that this morning was the first entry in the annual Pontiac Press Big Buck Contest. Head Start Dispute May Be Over Soon Project Head Start classes operated by the Pontiac Board of Educatm may get under way early next month. Top school and Office of Economic Opportunity (OEO) officials met Saturday in an attempt Dr. Sam Likely Won't Testify Tank-Led Israeli Forces I Attack 3 Jordan Villages TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) — U.N. observers obtained a Israeli forces attacked three cease-fire about four hours after Jordanian villages and clashed the tank-led Israeli forces swept sharply with Jordanian ground and air forces Sunday in a raid retaliating against guerrilla attacks from Israel’s Arab neighbors. Shooting also erupted again across file Israeli-Syrian border. Both Jordan and Israel claimed they inflicted heavy In a similar attack made by Cuban exiles on the port ofj Nuevitas in northeastern Cuba! late in September, a plane! dropped three bontos and one exploded, causing minor dam-' age, according to the Cuban government. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Variable cloudiness with shifting winds and turning cooler this afternoon. Highs today 46 to 52. Clear to partly cloudy and cooler. West to northwesterly winds 15 to 20 miles this afternoon and diminishing tonight. Outlook for Wednesday: Partly sunny with little temperature change. Today In Pontiac tamperature preceding 8 i .m.: Wind Velocity 10-15 rr : Variable Is today at 5:13 p.m. Downtown Temperatures L Highest temperature ... jLowest temperature .... i Weather; Saturday, Sunday, partly sunny two miles across Jordan’s border. The Israeli troops withdrew. Firing across the Syrian border ended about 6:30 p.m. k k k Premier Levi Eshkol of Israel said the attack was a “warning raid” against Jordanian centers he charged were Used by Fatah” commandos as bases for sabotage inside Israel. CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) , . The second-degree murder , since June, retrial of Samuel H. Sheppard [begins its fourth v(eek today with growing indications that he may not take the witness stand as he did 12 years ago. Defense attorney F. Lee Bailey hinted in early examination of prospective jurors that Sheppard might not testify. to resolve problems connected with the school district’s applb cation tor federal funds to back the $248,832 program. A joint statment issued this moming indicates bath organizations are “anxious to resolve the remaining questions and get Head Start in operation as soon as possible, hopefully by early December. Schools Supt. Dr. Dana P. Whitmer and his staff met this morning to discuss ways of solving the two main problems which have caused the application to be rejected six times Hearing Slated in Girl's Death Charged with manslaughter in the Saturday afternoon death of a 14-year-old Pontiac girl, Paul A. (Tony) Gonsales of 44% Seneca was to have been arraigned today in Municipal Court. k k ★ The 21-year-t)ld Gonzales allegedly shot Barbara A. Noell of 205 W. Princeton once with a 22-caliber rifle‘at Gonzales’ home about 12:30 p.m. Satur- iay- Police said tfie shell entered the victim under her right arm. A student at Kennedy Junior High School, Barbara was the daughter of Mr. and Mr. Joseph Noell, also of 205 W. Princeton. Israel claims the El Fatah raiders are Jordanians acting under Syrian instigation. AERIAL ATTACK Israel made an aerial attack last July on a Syrian installation in retaliation for El Fatah sabotage, but the terrorist raids have continued. Three Israeli soldiers and an army commander were killed and six wounded Saturday when their car hit a land mine in the area of Sunday’s raid. Escanaba . « Gr. Rapids . n Houghton Otif Year Ago In P Highest temperature Lowest temperature Weather: Cloud/ ly's Temperature Chart ' 43 3d Detroit 47 34 41 3t Duluth 40 181 50 35 Fort Worth 72 451 38 34 Jacksonville 70 50 47 35 Kansas City 65 34 39 29 Los Angeles 78 54 48 39 Miami Beach 81 68 39 34 Milwaukee ' “ 42 36 • Orleans 72 63 34 new York M 33 34 8 Phoenix 48 32 Salt Lake C. 62 45 49 41 S. Francisco 62 57 51 30 S. S. Marie 35 25 62 27 Washington " " NORMAN BUCKNER Finance Finn's Founder Dead NATIONAL WEATHER—Rain and showers are in store for Florida and the Pacific Northwest. The northern fiockies will have rain and snow showers, and northern New England wiH have snow flurries. It will be warmer In the Nortiieast and northern Plains and cooler in the Great LalMi|igk>n. • f Norman Buckner, founder and president of the B u c k n e r Finance Co., Pontiac, died Saturday after a brief iilness. He was !. A memorial service will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at the Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co., Birmingham. Buckner, 2720 Pine Lake, Orchard Lake, organized his firm in 1917, and later es-t a b i i s h e d branch offices throughout Oakland Counfy. He was a native of Luther, Mich., and a member of the Birmingham Temple and th Franklin Hills Country Club. k k k Surviving are his wife, Augusta W.; a daughter, Mrs. Leonard L. Grossman of Orchard Lake; a son, Noel A. of West Bloomfield Township; one sister; three brothers; and 10 grandchildren. The family requests that any memorial tributes be made to St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, Pon- The Israeli attack, in brigade I strength, was made on the Jor-I danian villages of Samu, Hirbeit I Karkaz and Jimba. The villages I are about 30 miles south of Je-I rusalem in a bulge of Jordanian ' territory west of the Dead ^ An Israeli spokesman said the ground forces encountered stiff resistance from the Arab Legion at Samu. DOG FIGHTS Israeli and Jordanian jets clashed in dog fights. Israel claimed it downed one Jordanian plane. Jordan said it bagged two Israeli jets. At the United Nations, Jordan’s Ambassador Muhammad El-Farra said the Israeli troops killed 26 Jordanians — 13 soldiers and 13 civilians wounded 54 and captured three soldiers. Bailey has not confirmed it, but it is understood that defense planning does not presently include the 42-year-old former osteopath among the remaining witnesses. Sheppard spent three days on the stand in 1954 telling his story of what happened July 4, 1954, when his first wife, Marilyn, was bludgeoned to death in the couple’s lakefront home in suburban Bay Village. A CONVICTTON The 1954 jury, composed of seven men and five women as is the present one — convicted him of second-degree murder. He was sentenced to life imprisonment and served nine years before he won a review of his case then U. S. Supreme Court reversal of the conviction. If Sheppard doesn’t take the stand, it could 'mean that another star witness from the 1954 trial, Susan Hayes, also won’t be called. The former medical technician at Sheppard’s osteopathic hospital was not called by the state in this trial. The main criticisms leveled at the school system concern the absence of a parents’ advisory committee for the program and the lack of pupil integration in the classes. 320 INVOLVEb 'The program is expected to involve some 320 children. Tlhe Oakland County C o m-mission on Economic Opportunity last week resolved to investigate establishment of its own Head Start program for Pontiac. At the same time, the board of education was approving a plan to bus pupils for the purpose T)f integration to submit with its seventh Head Start proposal. Attending Saturday’s summit-level meeting were Whitmer, School Board President Monroe M. Osmun, OCCEO Chairman Carl F. Ingraham and OEO executive director James McNee- ly- According to jtolice, the shooting was not reported to them until about a half hour after the incident. CONFLICTING STORIES Because of conflicting Stories from witnesses, police brought th^ to the station for further qu&ttoning. At first, they told police they were ping hunting and the gun accidentally dis- BLOOMFIELD HILLS - A Bloomfield Hills man, long active in scouting, has been awarded the Iver Beaver, the highest I honor bestowed 1 on a volunteer ’ leader by a local Boy Scout I Council. He is Charles | B. Neely, Harsdale, who" was honored re- NEELY cently at the annual meeting of North Trails District of the Detroit Area Council, Boy Scout of America. Neely, merchandising manr ager of General Motors Corp., praised for his many scouting activities over t h e years, including his work as chairman of the Together Dinner in 1965. Father of two Eagle Scout sons, he currently serves as committee chairman for Troop 1026 and is a newly-elected vice chairman of the North Trails District. He has also been active in the YMCA and Red Cross and is vice president of the Men’s Club of Christ Church, Cranbrook. Later, at least two admitted that Gonzales fired the weapon at the victim who reportedly was sitting in a living room chair at the Seneca Street address. One witness told police the victim said, “I hope you shoot yourself,” to Gonzales just prior to the shooting. Gonzales, then, allegedly pointed the rifle at the girl and fired. ' Police found the body on a living room couch. Publishers' Poll: Romney, Johnson to Vie in 1968 BIRMINGHAM - Rep. William P. Hampton, R—Birmingham, is a member of a special committee of the House of Representatives which will hold a public hearing in Lansing tomorrow on promotions dealing with supermarket and gas station games and contests. A simiiar hearing was held in Birmingham last month. The committee is trying to ascertain legality of the promotions and their effect on retail prices. 'Price-Wage Curbs Ready' uhc. 'm. In 1954, she testified <7on-cerning a love affair with Shepard. The state contended that Marilyn Sheppard learned of the illicit romance and in an argument over it, Sheppard beat her to death in the bedroom of their home. NO MOTIVE The state has suggested no motive in this trial. Sheppard has maintained, as he did on the witness, stand in 1954, that he was struck from behind and knocked unconscious when he tried to close in on the slayer. Waterford Sale of Plates Good (Continued From Page One) are now six secretary of state offices in northern Oakland County. The others are located in Pontiac, Lake Orion, Milford, Holly and Birmingham. “I’ve been trying to get one in Waterford Township the last eight years,” said Daly. “I figured we needed one.” Thus far, Daly has had customers from all over northern OaklamdXovnW, prtmariljrfrom Waterford Township and Pontiac. A few of his customers have been from outside the county. The 38-year-old Daly says justice work still occupies most of his time. 6 EMPLOYES Daly employs five women fulltime and another part-time at his office. \ In addition to selling plates^! they handle title transfers, title applications, 48-hour permits for house trailers and hrtransit plates, which allow out-of-staters who buy a car in Michigan to drive legally to their home states. NEW YORK (AP) - House Republican leader Gerald R. Ford said today the government’s Office of Emergency Planning has a standby program of wage and price controls ready if needed, but added: “I don’t think it will be needed.” He said the agency wouldn’t e doing its job if it didn’t have such a contingency plan on paper. Such controls would require congressional approval. k k k Ford told the Grocery Manufacturers of America that the Johnson administration had done little to fight inflation, but called wage and price controls “a last-resort measure.” He said House Republicans would “first seek deep meaningful cuts in unnecessary federal spending as a weapon against inflation. If spending is not cut substantially, then I believe the administration will ask for an across-the-board increase in personal and corporate income taxes. CONTROLS “Wage and price controls,” he said, “would be a desperation measure thrown into the breach only if other less drastic measures fail to halt inflation.” Ford termed the OOP’s 47-seat gain in the House an argument against extending terms of House members from two years to four. He said off-year elections are 'a safety-valve for the American people.” He called the elec-tiwi a reminder that “the American people are basically middle of the r^d.” ». BOCA RATON, Fla. (AP) — A Miami Herald poll of publishers showed today that most believe President Johnson and Michigan Gov. George Romney will be presidential rivals in 1968 if Johnson’s health permits him to run. The poll was taken in connection with a meeting of the ^uthern Newspaper Publishers Association. Some publishers expressed the belief that-former Vice Pres ident Richard Nixon will be the Republican nominee. Damage Slight in Bank Fire A fire in the furnace room of the Detroit Bank and Trust Co. at Woodward and Hamilton, Birmingham, early this morning caused very little damage, according to Fire Chief C. G. Nun-nelley. He said an estimate has not been made of the damage but that it was “minimum” and confined to the furnace room. The fire was discovered at 6:25 a.m. by ,the bank porter. Nunnelley said it had probably been burning for some time because soot covered the furnace room floor. The fire was under control in a few minutes, according to Nunnelley, and completely cleared by about 7:30 a m. Cause of the fire is being in-vestigated. Nunneliey said it may have been caused by a leak in the furnace. Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. Buy For Yourself or Layaway For Christmas Gift-Giving All Major Credit Cards Honored NEW! ARGUS Flashcube Instamatie Camera Set Model 264 Instant Loading-Electric-Eye $52.00 vnJue—sensitive electric eye camera with programmed shutter precision viewing camera with instant loading feature, flashcube for 4 shots without, changing bulbs. Complete with color film, bulb and batteries. $ I holds. m H3A0 ]WIII THE rUMJAC PUKSS. MUNDAV, NOVEMBER U, 1966 Word to Wise Teachers Get Parents of schbol children take heart! ★ 4- There are signs that teachers, who often seem like stone walls to parents during ent-teacher conferences, may be softening. The staff news, put out for Utica teachers, mldtes some sign of awareness of the truly noble character required of a parent to subject him or hnrself to a concise rundown on all thh faults he’s passed on to his children. “Be tactful,” the teachers are advised. “It’s wise to point out a child’s good qualities as well as discussing his weaknesses and failures. ★ ★ ★ “Explain so other? can understand,” is among the added advice given. IN THEIR SHOES “Learn to listen” precedes “Try to put yourself in their shoes so you can figure out why as well as what tiiey are saying.” Fathers particularly, but mothers too, have learned to dislike the semiannual IS-minute evaluation period. They emerge worry-lined or in some cases just plain mad depending on their dis- “Avoid argument,” the stwy tells teachers, “For it wily makes parents resenthil aid forces them to think of counterarguments to bolster their side the discussion. ★ ★ ★ “Sometimes (parents) are afraid to ask questions that make them seem stupid,” said the staff news. What each side hc^s for in any given confrontation is a reasonable adult across the desk — even though the only solution, and that not permanent, is an all-A grade 1 little girl or boy who wouldn’t do anything wrong for the world. Sewer System OXFORD TOWNSHIP - A move to provide sewer smrice for the village and part of the township was initiated last week. The Township Board considered a resolution asking the Oakland County Department of Public Works to make a study and develop recommendations for a sewer system which would serve the lakes area west of the village in conjunction with a proposed village system. The matter was tabled until after a joint meeting of township and village officials with the DPW aronnd Dec. 1. The paving work on five streets in the lakes area was resumed over the weekend and is expected to be completed tomorrow, accffl^g to Supervisor Lee Valentine. The project hit a snag with the early snowfall and complaints from residents were*^aired at'the Township Board meeting. ★ ★ ★ The primer coat of tar was spread the day before the big snowstorm. Subsequent rain turned the improvement “into one of the stickiest messes Oxford Township has seen in a long time,” according to Valentine. Also at last week’s meeting Mrs. Nina Chamberlain, serving her third year as township clerk, submitted her resignation and the board appointed newly elected Henry La Doucier to the post effective Jan. 1. Mrs. Chamberlain is retiring. School Board Rules Tonight on Grievance FARMINGTON — The board of education is scheduled to rule tonight on a grievance filed last month by the custodians. Local 1456 of the American Federation of State, County Municipal Employes claims that their contract calls for overtime pay when a building is used after normal school hours. Schools Snpt. Gerald V. Harrison said tte administration contends that overtime is not required if a person works ei^t hours within a day or 40 hours within a week. In other business tonight, the board is to discuss a cwisiruc-tion schedule for a third senior ' high school. ★ * * Harrison said projected figures show that a third building will be needed by September 1969. PART OF BOND ISSUE Funds for the proposed building vrere part of a $6.1-million bond issue approved by voters last year. A new supervisor of buildings and grounds is also to be appointed tonight. He would replace former supervisor Raljdi Burke who retired in June. Other items scheduled for action tonight include bids on a bridge over a stream near Dun-kel Junior High School, possible purchase of a 4iew ^diool site and a request from parents for a new ddewalk along 14-MQe at fte Eagle Elementary School. School Study Participants Being Sought WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Letters are being sent to about 50 residents of the West Bloomfield School District asking them to serve on a citizens study committee. ★ ★ ★ The first meeting of the committee is to be held at 8 p.m. Nov. 22 at the high school, 3380 Orchard Lake. ★ ★ ★ The committee is to study the philosophy, curriculum and subjects to be taught in the ^.5-million building to be ready for occupancy by 1969. ★ ★ ★ Funds for the school are included in a $7-million bond Issue approved by voters last spring. Road Toll Lowest for Fall Weekend School Vote Urged on Oxford Program OXFORD - School officials here have been advisfed to seek voter approval for a $2.2-mil-lion bond issue sometime in 1967 fop the purpose of adding elementary classrooms and a new junior high school. ★ ★ ★ The recommendation made last week by Dr. Louis Fales, consultant in school organization and plant for the Michigan Department of Educa tion. A report made by his assistant, Richard Hendra, in regard to the Oxford curricn-lum was highly complimentary. The board was advised to take advantage of the Michigan school bond program under which a district need not levy more than 7 mills for improvements. ★ ★ ★ Oxford now levies 4.8 mills so voters could expect to be assessed 2.2 mills for the life of the improvement program. ★ ★ ★ The district’s citizens’ committee for schools has been given the information made available by Fales and will consider it along with data gathered by its own members before making a report back to the board. Violinist Fritz Kreisler ea more than $3 million during his career. New Pavilion Dedication Set Fair to Aid Students By the AssocWted Press Michigan recorded its lowest wjeekend traffic death toll this fall—12 victims — during the past weekend. * ★ * Those killed in highway accidents were: Richard Le Blanc, 17, of Windsor, Ont. and Marjorie Sargent, 20, of Pleasant Ridge, in a three-car accident Sunday on a road near Plymouth in Wayne County. CAR CRASHED Paul H. Faulkner, 23, of Taylor, when his car crashed in Romulus Sunday. Randall White, 13, of Detroit, struck by a car Sunday while delivering newspapers. ★ ♦ * James Gaydosh, 10, jpf Tip-ton, in a two-car, head-on crash Sunday eaSt of Ousted in Lenawee County. Mabel King of Detroit, when the car in which she was a passenger and an auto collided Sunday at a Livonia intersection. Kenneth J. Settles, 26, of Chief of Police Listed Serious Following Stroke ^rankfort, and Larry Shon, 23,' of Livonia, when the car in which they were riding ran off Ann Arbor Trail in Livonia Sunday and struck a utility pole and tree. Teddy R. Bailey, 19, of Detroit, when his car ran off a Detroit street and hit a tree Saturday night. Andrew C. Law, 59, of Benton Harbor, when his car ran oft a street and crashed near Benton Harbor Saturday. Aloysius Skowronek, owner of the Step Inn in Cheboygan, when his car went out of control and overturned Saturday on U.S. 23 in Rogers City. Mrs. Barbara Allen, 25, of Detroit, in a five-car smashup and resulting fire on the John Lodge expressway in Detroit Friday night. Mix-Up Stalls Fire Hall Pacts ROPHESTER - Kiwanis Club will dedicate its newly built open-air pavilion to the village in ceremwiies at 5 p.rn. today. •k it -k The pavilion, built on municipal property at the site of the village’s Art ’N Apples festival, was a chib constnictimi project It is located back of the village hall. Kiwanians donated thousands of hours of labor and between $5,000 and $6,000 to the project, according to Kiwanian Robert Shipper. All work was done by members with the exception of pouring the concrete floor. k k k The finished structure is rustic appearing — its low shingled roof supported by ivooden beams over a concrete floor. Shippef says future plans call for addition of a fireplace and kitchen. The building, open to use by any group, will be accepted by Manager William Sinclair for the village. Kiwanis President Carl Queck will make the presentation. An international fair to raise funds which will help promote the exchange of students between American snd foreign countries is slated from 5:30 to 10:30 p.m. Friday at Avondale High School. Sponsored by the American Field Service (AFS), Avondale Chapter, proceeds from the fair will help make it possible for ■ students of average homes to live in a foreign country for up to a year with a participating family there. Now otadyliig on the AFS l^an at Avondale is Ruth Maria Garcia of Honduras. She is living at the Robert Morrow home, 6937 Beach, Troy. Foreign foods, toys, hand- made gifts and Christmas decorations will be sold at tiie fair, by costumed club members. k k k A smorgasbord, featuring both meat and fish, will be served. Homemade candy and baked goods will be on sale and a taste table will offer samples of foreign recipes. k k k Game booths are planned. A student committee will sell hot logs and pop corn during a ‘sock hop” in the high school gymnasium. k k k Mrs. David W. Hackett, 1380 Ruby, Avon Township, is general chairman of the fair. She is assisted by Mrs. Lewis bury and Mrs. Dan Vander-Broek. UTICA Police Chief Hazen Anderson, 58, of 8235 MacKay is listed in serious condition at St. Joseph’s Me^ Hospital, Mt. Clemens, following a stroke sustained yesterday afternoon at his home. Anderson has been chief of the Utica Department since about 1945. He has two more years to go before reaching retirement age. While ill his position is being assumed by his brother, Sgt. Edward Anderson as acting chief. NOVI TOWNSHIP - Township officials hope to award contracts this week on an addition to the township fire hall. Bids were opened Friday but confusion over heating specifications delayed awarding of the contracts, according to Township Clerk H. Lloyd George. George said the two low bidders will be called in to discuss the specifications this week, prior to awarding the contracts. The $16,000 to $17,000 addition will about double present facilities at 25850 Novi, adjacent to the township hall. It will include a new bay for trucks, a drying tower for the fire hose and a training room for new firemen. “We are just too crowded in in the. station as it is,” said George, “and this addition will help eliminate a lot of confusion and congestion created by the crowded conditions.” He said it is hoped matters will be straightened out this week so the footings can be put in before the ground freezes. Money for the addition is included in the budget. George said bids have run somewhat higher than anticipated but that there is money to pay for it. GOP Club Will Meet The Waterford Township Republican Club will meet at 8 p.m. tomorrow at Pierce Junior High School, 5145 Hatchery, Elmer R. Johnson, president, announced today. Utica Planners Slate Meeting Romeo Players 1o 'f nter Laughing' ROMEO — “Enter Laughing,” a play by Joseph Stein adopted from a novel by Carl Reiner, is Romeo Players choice for presentation at 8:15 p.m. Friday dnd Saturday at the Community Youth Center. Cast members include Art Farrell, David Barron, Trudy Freeman, William Wagner, Ann Conway, Norman Engel, Mi-James Schultz, James Crary, chael Hunt, Timothy Hogan, and Gehry and Richard McLean, The play is the story of a young boy, an employe in a sewing machine factory, who buys his way into a very amateur theatrical company. His acting is hilarious as he romps through romantic scenes with the manager’s daughter, another naive office UTICA — The Planning Board has sent a letter to all city residents urging them to attend an information meeting on the general development plan at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at Eppler Junior High School, 45461 Brownell. Urban renewal director Stan- fellow’s (Tate and ley Swierezynski and city plan- girl, ning consultants will be present Tickets are available at the to answer questions. |door. Yule Parade Set in Rochester R(X!HESTER — The Chamber of Commerce has planned the annual village Christmas parade for 2 p.m. Dec. 3. An invitation has been extended to businesses, industries and organizations to enter floats. Already contacted and signed up for the parade are the school of Rochester Senior High, Central and West Junior Highs, and the Avondale, Trpy and Utica Senior High bands. They Help Friend LOUISVILLE, Ky. (JO - As Hulbert James was attending a meeting here of the “Citizens Action for More Police,” some-10,000.00). 5'/4% 5% $10,000 SAVIXGS CERTIFICATES Earn the rate of 5>A% when held for a period of 12 months. 4%% $2,500 SAVINGS CERTIFICATES Earn the rate oir4y4% when held for « period of 6 months. 761 W. HURON STREET DOWNTOWN PONTIAC-CLARKSTON-DRAYTON PLAINS ROCHESTER-WALLED LAKE-LAKE ORION-MILFORD $5,000 SAVINGS CERTIFICATES Earn the rale of 5% when held for a period of 9 months. PASSBOOK SAVINGS ACCOUNTS The/rale of 4V*% ia compounded and paid quarterly; which givea an annual yield of 4.318, a high rate of return paid on regular inaured paatbook aavinga. ^ M B3Afl JWMf ... -.... / TUB roxTiAC rnr.ss. moxday. xove.mber u. i966 New peachy idea for baby’s dessert! Gerber Peach Cohbler. Imagine juicy ripe peaches and other choice ingredients... made smooth and mellow for baby's delight. That’s new Gerber Peach Cobbler-in both strained and junior sizes. A sweet reward for your little sweetheart. But what baby won’t know (and you will) is that Gerber Peach Cobbler is enriched with Vitamin C. (Trust Gerber not to forget the vitamins or the flavor!) Gerber< Desserts for babies arrd toddlers Inspired by the Indians ... a handsome, jacquard-weave crewneck pullover sweater for knockabout wear by Brentwood. The sweater is an Acnlan acrylic knit and contains Blue “C” spandex for comfort. The jacquard-knit sweater of Acrilan acrylic fiber with a bold design is a big fashion for men this fall. This classic crewneck with the comfort of Blue “C” spandex stretch comes in navy, burgundy, black, loden', antique red, with two contrasting colors . . . from Brentwood. Area Pair Takes Vows on Saturday An evening ceremony and Ireception Saturdayiin St. Paul LuUieran Church marked the vows of Cheri Kathleen Monroe and Kenneth Joseph Pirochta. The Ralph F. Moores of Third Avenue hnd' Mr. and Mrs. Louis Pirochta of Shim-mons Road. Pontiac Township, are parents of the couple who chose a Niagara honeymoon. ★ ★ ★ With her sheath gown and train of white peau de soie appliqued with Alencon lace, the bride wore a bow head-piece and silk illusion veil. She carried miniature white carnations, ivy and a white orchid for the six o’clock ceremony. With Carole Moravec, maid of honor, was Mrs. James Bailey, bridesmaid. Peggy and Vicki Monroe wei;e their sister’s junior maid and flower girl, respectively. Lewis Pirochta assistwl his brother as best man along with ushers James Imboden, Charles and Ralph Monroe, and William Robinson. Daniel Yanska was ring-bearer. MRS. K. J. PIROCHTA NewFaJi hairstyl^ Special Hair Catting by Oscar Bloniqiiisl Pennaaent Waves . . , .from $10 Sluaupoo, Cut and Styled . . $5 OpenEveningt by Appointment appoincmenu not aliOTs necrsury. BEAUTY SHOP FE 2-4959 AOtOSS FBOH POiSTUC SrAT* BA.NK BLDG. 21 KOBim SACPVAW - DOTnVTOWN PONTIAC AppointmcBt* Bol t romim Guild Planning Benefit Party Guild 11 of All Saints Episcopal Church will sponsor a benefit card party Dec. 1 at 1 p.m. in the Rose Kneale Room. Proceeds will go to the children’s choir. Mrs. Frank Stull is general chairman. The event is open to the public. Tickets may be obtained from Mrs. Maxwell Shadley, Ottawa Drive. Budgeting by Month Gives Clear Picture ! By MARY FEELEY Consultant in Money Management [handle niy income—and how Dear Miss Feeley: How ouri*”uch for savings, if any. money is to be spent has caused C- W., Staunton, Va. considerable conflict between Dear C. W.: The first thing my wife and myself. But there (jg }g bring your whole must be some way the problem i financial picture into closer can be ^Ived. I feel we need focus. Look at it by the month, your advice. | rather than by the year. The We live in a $20,000 home; I unvarnished facts show up which is paid for, and has been much mbri^ clearly that way. for five years. I am 44 years ___________ * i. j i ij j -f ■ . ' Before we\eet to a budget old and my wife is 42. We have f. ■ , ® ku . breakdown, which you can use three children — a boy 17, a sen- ^ .... .... as a monthl’ lor in high school, who has a! I part time job making $30 per week. He has a car on which he I would like a breakdown asigested budget is $686 for the to how you think we should month — instead of the $66( you actually net. The reason: I thing it’s only sensible that your son contribute $20 a month toward room and board. The remainder of his $30 week still provides for $5 weekly savings, plus a few dollars for personal grooming items, and some recreation money — in addition to upkeep of his car. Small as it may sftem, this additional $20 will enable you to make regular savings deposits and provide something for personal allowances for your wife and daughters. Housing (property tax), $21; household operating costs, including heat, utilities, telephone, cleaning supplies, maintenance, $70; food, $190; clothing, $60; car and furniture payments, $83; personal allowances (figured weekly. 14-year-old, $1; 10-year- \A\\| 7A. (Iraml Opening celebration for six days: Monday through Saturday. Come visit us. Pick up your Free Catalogand have some refreshment on y of our grand opening days. Take home a free cojiy of our (jhrisimas Book, and try catalog shopping the Aldens W ay. (To place an order siniiily < all FF .T-yitll. The mercliandise will he ready to pick up in no time.) 0|>en an \ldens CRFI)IT*B.VNK .\ccount-il‘s only a matter of minutes. Or you can open it hy phone witli >our first order. .No inpncv down —up to two >cars to pa> I makes a monthly payment of $26, and keeps his car up. I pay his liability insurance which is right high. Our oldest daughter is 14 and the baby is 10. My net earnings after paying state and federal income taxes and operating expenses and a small retirement plan, is around $8,000. We seem to have less to spend now than when I was making less and paying for the home. Listed below is a breakdown of my major expenses: Fuel for heat, $230; real estate! and property taxes, $244; car payment, $660; vacation, $200; furniture payments, $336; insurance payment including home, cars, $420; average doctor and dentist costs, $275; average electricity, $210. Total, $2575. The balance is spent on food, clothing and miscellaneous. It seems that we still never have the money we need for recreation or the clothing we ought to have. guide from now on, consider t'h e s e unchange-ables: \ You’re going\through peak years of finaneW strain, with your three children becoming increasingly expenave. Their needs were not so great during the years ™en you were paying off the mortgage. In about eight years\ from now, when your son is self-supporting and your oldest daugher has presumably finished\her education and has a job, \ the strain will ease considerablyl You and your wife Will be in early middle age, with y e a f S| ahead in which to relax some of] the disciplines you mus| enforce on yourselves now. So dpn’t look at life as a confused i muddle and wonder why you don’t have the things you think yoi^ should have on your income, of living has risen substantially since those years you lodtk back Wife Says Her Mate Should Stay By ELIZABETH L, POST Dear Mrs. Post: When a friend of my wife’s drops in to chat with her in the evening, is it necessary for me to drop my book, turn off the television or interrupt whatever I am do-■ g to talk with them? We have had a few words about this.—Jrim K. * ★ ★ lar John: You should not be expected to join the “hen” party but you and your wife should come to an agreement before it happens again. You should have the courtesy to greet her friend and chat for a moment or two, but then either you should go to another room to continue reading, or if you are watching television on your only set, your wife should grant you the consideration of going to another room to talk. SEALED NOTE Dear Mrs. Post: Isn’t it bad manners to seal a note which is .. rn to be delivered by hands?— old, 50 cents; your wife, $3.50; ^ VA.. «7sn-i ^Snes. you, $7.50;) $54. Miscellaneous (church, gifts, contributions), ^0; medical, $23; recreation and vacation, $40; car upkeep, $50; insurance, $35; savings, $30. Total $686. Right now your prime needs are life insurance and savings. When the car and furniture obligations are paid off, try to put at least $75 a month toward these purposes. The children are going to have to help earn their education. Dear Agnes: To seal the note indicates that you do not trust the bearer to restrain his curiosity. He may, if he wishes, seal it in your presence. ★ ★ ★ What is your most puzzling etiquette problem? Send your question to Elizabeth L. Post, in care of The Pontiac Press, and don’t forget to include your name and ad-idress! Mr. and Mrs. Edward Dobiesz of Beaufort Street, West Bloomfield Township, announce the engagement of their daughter, Linda Irene, to Mark Richard O’Brien, son of the Frank J. O’Briens of North Pontiac Trail, Commerce Township. You’ll note, in the figurfes be-: '^hey plan to wed in low, that the total o£ thii sug-| early spring. The income you havd now may well not be even the equvalent, in purchasing! power, of the m 0 n e y you piade five or ten years ago. 1 Sour Cream Makes Tender Coffee Cake Bloomfield Miraelo 'IK HOUR DOOR PRIZE DRAWINGS (]ome visit us during any one of our 6-day Grand Opening Celebration. Drawings each day! Come visit us—you may go home with a steam iron, a mixer, a 50-piece towel set—or any one of well over a dozen merchandise prizes. SHIRT SERVICE REpiimiiND AinRATION SERVICE Or visit Your copy of our exciting Christmas Book! A persona! gift advi.sor packed from cover to cover with holiday ideas for everyone ... all that’s new for you, your home, and your family! Shop the easy modem way ... with Aldens! FE 5-9401 US at 928 W. Huron, Pontiac .Dry Cleaning Special. M0H.-TUES. and WED., HDV. 14-15-16th MER’S SPECIAL TROUSiRS OR SWRATERS 2 for 98* MEN'S TWO-PIECE SUITS M.09 Bloomfield Miracle Mile Only Dial 332-1822 By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Food Editor Readers often call or i write, asking for recipes. Usually they are generous about giving us a recipe in return. Mrs. George M. Scott of Crescent Lake is pleaSed to share her favorite coffee cake recipe. The mother of two grade school daughters, she loves to try new recipes. She does a variety of activities with her girls. Boating is enjoyed by all the family. Mrs. Scott says she’s a good mechanic too. COFFEE CAKE By Mrs. George M. Scott 2 cups sugar % pound buter or margar- 4 eggs 3 cups sifted flour 1 pint sour cream 2% teaspoons baking powder V 2 teaspoons soda 2 teaspoons vanilla 4 teaspoons cinnamon 2 cups chopped pecans 1 cup sugar * *% * Cream sugar and butter. -Add eggs, one at a time, k beating well. Add flour gradually. Mix sour cream with baking powder and baking I soda and add all at once. J Add vanilla. | Mix cinnamon, nuts and sugar. Alternate batter and | nut mixturp in greased 9x13 | pan, ending with nut mix- $ ture on top. Bake 50 min- ^ utes at 350 degrees. Serve | warm or cold. there’s still time . •. to have your furniture REUPHOLSTERED before Thanksgiviig! # Onr skilled craftsmen can re-bnild and renpholster your ftunitare to look **brand new” again! At money- ’ \ saving prices, too! ^ PHONE TODAY! ^ WILIUHWRIGRT Xi, Furniture Makerg and VphoUterert 2700rcha*dJL«k«7-a-^-Ji&4.0558 cAShA= Serrina OaUind County Over 3S Teari U'liii w B—4 3m WINTER CRUISE HEADQUARTERS THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. NOVEMBER 14, 1966 Agents For All Cmise Ships Anywhere In The World PONTIAC TRAVEL SERVICE Pontiac Mall Shopping Center 108 MaU Ofilce BuUding Phone 682-4600 C. R. HASKILL STUDIO 1451 Mrs. Thomas Kimmel 1 Mt. Clemens St. Tt0enty-Four SxlO-inch ' fiill color with album Price Includes: * • Picture for Press J • Just Married Sign • 9 Wedding Guest Book O • Miniature Marriage Cer- * tificate • Rice to Throw J • “Ev. aWILbINGMATEr FE 4^553 ; ALL PERMANENTS $J95 NONE HIGHER -New Lustre Shampoo 2 —Flattering Haircut 3— Lanolin Neutralizing 4— Smart Style Setting HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY High-shaped evening dress of burnt Bonnie Harris Is Wed Wixom’s First Baptist Church was the setting Saturday for vows exchanged by Bonnie Harris, daughter of Alex Harris of Rockwood and faster daughter of the Harley Millers of Wolverine Lake and Timothy Louis Finkbein-er, son of the George Fink beiners of Detroit. ★ ★ * Gowned in a sheath of white peau de soie the bride wore a crown of seed pearls from which a short illusion veil fell. She carried red and white roses on top of a Bible. ★ ★ * Evelyn Beckley was honor maid with bridesmaids, Mrs. Richard Campbell (the birde’s sister), Mrs. Roger Finkbein-er knd flower girl, Cathy Campbell. * * * Attending the groom as best man was Ron Karvonen. The groom’s three brothers, Terry, Dennis and Roger ushered along with Earl Hall. A reception followed in the church parlors before the newlyweds left for a Niagara Falls honeymoon. MRS. T. L. FINKBEINER Not Faster, Safer If you suspect a gas leak, brush a lather of soap on the pipes. The soap will bubble at the place where the leak is located. N e V e r use a match. That could cause an explosion. Linking Agreement With Love is Mistake By MURIEL LAWRENCE DEAR MRS. LAWRENCE: Should a husband side with a child against his wife? My hus-1 thinks it’s all right for our 15-year-old girl to take a neighbor’s little girl to the park every morning instead of staying at home and doing her own chores. I think it’s wrong as charity begins at home. If my husband were not siding with her about keeping fliis job, she’d be at home mornings minding heritor her and saddle yourself with own business. She has laundry —'■ ... and cleaning to do . . . ANSWER: Why should husbands have to side with wives if they don’t agree with the wives? What a question to ask! You’re doing this child’s chores for her, aren’t you? Why? Nobody asked you to. You've told yourself you’re obliged to take on her chores extra work. Why don’t you stop doing them? Know what? I bet you can’t stop doing them. I say this because the kind of person who must overservice othier people is also the kind of person who must control them. We must have our husband’s, our child’s agreement with our view of her job at any cost. Of course, we can’t frankly say such a thing. The command for control of their opinions would be too starkly exposed in such a statement for us to be able to face. So what we have to do is to try to justify our right to their agreement by overworking Ourselves. We take on the child’s chores and saddle ourselves with this extra work in order to reproach her and her father for their presumption in disagreeing with I wish you could stop doing this youngster’s laundry and cleaning for her. Because the longer you do it, the madder you’re going to get at your self-imposed obligation to do it. And the madder you get at this extra work, the less likely you are to know what you’re really mad at — their refusal to allow you to control their opinions. I’m not scolding. If we’re a person who must have other people’s agreement with us, we can’t help it. Agreement and love were made the same thing for us by our parents. We learned only too early that COLD WAVE SALE NEW from ZOTOS FLUID WAVE with cut ‘n set $^95 Budget Wave $"25 0 ■ Complete Beauty Salon NEISNER’S 42 N. Saginaw, 2nd Floor Balenciaga, for his new fall collection, fashioned this arresting hat of black coq feathers. A diamond R.. 'i warmth, approval — and what they told us was “love.” The trouble is, agreement isn’t love. People can love us very much and still disagree with us. 624 cluster pinched in center adds to effect. It has to be seen to be believed. 119 WEST HURON FE 4-1536 Open Daily 10-10, Sun. 12-7 MON., TUES., WED.- WKC USE WKC’S LAYAWAY-FOR-CHRISTMAS PUN! ^ l A 108 N. SAGINAW OPEN TONIGHT TIL 9 FOR HOME ENTERTAINMENT AT ITS FINEST! Magnavox ASTRO-SONIC STEREO RADIO PHONOGRAPHS 'The Hallvard" Magnavox space age solid state circuitry is ten times more efficient than ordinary tufce sets and rnan/elously trouble free. In an elegant acoustical wood cabinet you get a magnificent stereo FM-AM radio and Micromatic Record Player with d^iambnd stylus guaranteed 10 years. One year guarantee on parts and one year service. YOUR CHOICE of 2 styles 379^^ \ . Ini This easy to knit shell, just •; stockinette-stitch is about the Smartest top to wear. Knit this shell, sleeveless or sleeves, round, or V neck! Easy, knit a few! Note crochet trim. Use sport yam. Pattern 624: sizes 32-34 ; 36-38. Thirty-five cents in coins for i each pattern — add 15 cents for each pattern for Ist-class | mailing and special handling. Send to Laura Wheeler, The ' Pontiac Press, 124 Needlecraft Dept., Box 161, Old (Chelsea Station, New York N. Y. 10011. Print Pattern Number, Name, Address, Zip. 1967 SUCCESS! Our new I, Needlecraft Catalog sparkles i with the Best of Everything — ' smartest knit, crochet fashions, afghans, quilts , embroidery, toys, gifts. 200 designs, 2 free | patterns. Hurry, send 25 cents. 12 Unique Quilts from famous American museums. Send 50 cents for Museum Quilt “ ' No. 2. Value! Quilt Book No. - sixteen complete patterns. 50 cents. Warmly Lined in Fleece! WOMEN'S BLACK LEATHER BOOTS Our Reg. 6.96 3 Days Only ASO Charge It > Stepping smartly into the fashion picture this winter... black leather 10-inch boots with back zipper and Courreges-style heel. Sizes to 10. __________w; \ CHARGE IT” at Kmart THE rONTIAC PRESS. MOXDAY, NOVEMBER 14. 1966 Tidbits Ant%v*r to Provlout Pint)# ACIOSS 45 Qdlege degree ISnudl quantity • So^ 46 Chatter (odL) 6 TrifUng amount« out , 11 Deatruction ^ H>ud coreiing llW««y^ 5*^tgr^nt 20 aose 23 Ten (comb, form) 25 Symbol for iwn 26 Smallest particle 28 Bitter vetch 29 Observe 30 Strike lightly 31 Gone by 32 Tiny fragment 34 Bit of matter 51 Terrible 37 Usual practice 53 Small margin 38 North Syrian 56 Child's game deity 40 Small dot 42 UlUmate 44 Flower part 46 Type in literature 47 Alaskan highway 48 Fuse thoroughly 49 Roman goddess of harvest 50 Defensive 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 r 20 21 r Pi 28 29 30 ^1 32 1 35 39 40 r 43 44 uT 7T JT" 48 50 Sn ■|p 153 5T bb 57 ba ibS bU 61 |62 14 ocrats blamed the war in Viet Nam, voter apathy and a white badciash fw wipi^ out the first l^nslative majority they held in 30 years, f(ff elecUi^ the state’s first Republican senator in 14 years, for reversing the partisan complexion of the state’s congressional delegation and perpetuating Gov. GeOTge Romney in (rffice. State GOP Credits Long Effort for Surge LANSING (Jl — Stunned Eton- hard woric by Republican candi- dates. The party, says chairman Elly Peterson, has been building to last w^’s cliimuc si^ the Section of Lawrence Linde-mer as its chairman in 1957. ‘TEMPORARY ROADBLOCK’ “1964 when President Johnson triggered a similar Democratic sweep of State offices was merely a tei|nporary roadblock * " " ion our road back,’’ Mrs. Peter- And, of course. Democrats re-J son said, luctantly, peripheral Republicans eagerly, and ind^iendents'awriHpng independently credited the coat- P**‘***' tail effect of Romney’s record I tLtCTRIC IP win for last week’s political upheaval. Only partially true, sa^ the inside Republicans. They’ll admit to the Romney coattails. The rest, they say, is due to nearly 10 years of building and months of incredibly Boina These rates imUZherrapiiMteii! Another party regular said Lindemer help^ break the hold of the pa^’s old finance committee, allowing it to reestablish contact with the people. Lindemer was one of the few unsuccessful GOP candidates Tuesday’s election — losi to the popular Democratic At-ty. Gen. Frank Kelley. working —hard —in every part of the state, Mrs. Peterson said. Volunteers passed out Utera-ture and rang doorbells In every district—including what Republicans consider the hopelessly Democratic Wayne County. And as for working candidates, she added, “We had candidates who iiteraliy knocked on every door or rang every doorbell in their % i t'i December in Gemini 7. concept that envisaged the government joining with private groups toward the goal of improving America. Many businessmen, some- Business Notes Mother Back After 5 Weeks NEW YORK (AP) - Bubbles Smollen, 9, who, for five weeks, took care of her father, four brothers and two sisters, has her mother back again. nieresa Smollen, 30, “returned home Sunday to the family’s three room, M9 a month, Bronx flat. She disappeared Oct. 4. Left behind were Bubbles — Margaret — husband William, 48, and six other children ranging in age from 10 months to 11 years. Mrs. Smollen was brought home by her husband from “ by. Pa., where she had been working as a machine operator. CALL HUSBAND She identified herself to two Darby policemen Saturday, and said she wanted to go home. 'They called New York police, L. R. Caveney has been pro- who notified the husband, moted to assistant to the gen- “It was stupid,” Mrs. Smollen eral manager of Bryant Com- said, “but I thought if I worked puter Products, a division of;we’d get enough to rent a little Ex - Cell - 0 house and we’d be together Corp., Detroit, [again.” I 26’/» 26’/» 267% + [Magnavox .80 73 45 Treasury Position l| WASHINGTON (AP)-The cash position 1 Cert-I ol Ihe Treasury connpared with corre- Cessr sponding date a year ago; [ChiM Nov. 7, 1866 Nov. 5, 1965 Chi P Balonco-.............. : Chris - '"‘"13,366.76 4,736.220,087.93 Chry; 72.81: citiesSvc 1.B0 'ClevEIIII 1.68 38.97; CocaCola 1.90 iColg Pal .90 23% 23’% 23'/j -I I 26% 26% 26% ■•iMayDSIr 1 JM.]o ?iMcDonn .* J McKess 1, 18 183/4 185% 1834 -f U 3 29H 29H 29H + ’ T 4 20 20 20 + ’ 20 17 32W 32Vt 32^ + ’ -X—Y—Z— ________.. 1 17 180Vj 180’% IBO’/j -1 YngsISht 1.80 " ■" ' Zenith Rad 1 Copyrighted by Sales figures a s otherwis •ments ba! semi-annual c a dividends o d as regular are me iwing lootnotes. plus stock dividend. ”c—Liquidating dend. d—Declared or paid ' stock dividend, e—Declared "lis year. I-Paya"- ‘ , estimated cash Turkish Mobs Protest Yanks dend o I—Declared ot n date. g-Paid If 13,859,272,537.09 , 04,647.78 debt nof;comlCre ComSolv 1 PjCol Gas 1.36 American Stock Exch. I 51% 51% 51% 4 Data Coni Equity Cp .181 Fargo Oils Fly Tiger 1.241 Gen Devel Gen Plywd It Giant Yel .60a Goldfield Gf Bas Pet Edis 1 JO ConElecInd 1 ConNGas 3.20 ContOII 2.40a Control Data Corn Pd 1.60 CrowCol 1.87t Crown Cork Crown ZeH 2 Day PL 1.32 Deere 1.80a Delta Air 1 DetEdis 1.40 Del Ste^l .60 [ 59'A »% 59% GenI .20 .. .eWooJ Nat Steel 2.50 Nevada P .84 EngEI 1.28 f (Tent 3.12 I 39% 39% 39’/i ) 50% SC/i 50% I 45% 45% 4S'/4 — ’/• Occident .70b 31 7 15-16 7 13-16 7 13-16- ' 18 U’/a 10% 11%+T, ! 23% 23% 23%+ Dist Seag I DomeMn .80a Dow Chem 2 duPont 3.75e Duq Lt 1.50 DynamCp .40 EaslAirL .45e Itatoahi** In'* Wido?.^ : Copy®Sll’^ T OOW-JONES AVERAGES 4S Stocks BONDS 40 Bends ................ 10 Highar grade rails . 10 SSlic uiinHta”!'* ' 10 InduatrlBlt .......... 9 33% 33% 33% + % 70 43% 43’/k 43'/ii + ■■ 22 59% »% 59% - 6 18% 18'/4 18% 4- 1 28% 28% 28% .. 7 163 163 163 5 29% 29% 29%- 6 12% 12% 12% 4 —E— 31 65’/a 65>/4 65% - 35 125 124% 125 4 4 2S>A 251/4 25% 10 36 36 36 4 2 31% 31% 31% 4 9 18'/a 18% 18% .. ieLack RR EthylCorp .60 EvansPd JOb Evarshp JOp Fedders .70e FedDStr 1.70 Ferro Cp 1.20 Filtrpl 2.80 6 19Va 19% l*Va .. 1 16'/4 16% 16% + -F— 13 115% 114% 114% 4-12 14’% 14% 14’% 4- 2 43Va 43'% 43% + 3 48% 48% 48% •(■ ! 17 12% 12% 12% -F It 16% 16% 167% - 1 46% 46% 46% ... 13 33% 33% ’33% + —r-G— 1 19% 19’% 19'% 4 23 18'/a 18% 18% 4 GenDynam 1 8 4 Gen Elec 2.60 19 9 Gen Fds 2.20 7 7 GenAAot 4.55e x88 7 PacG El 1.._ ^P?,roV“ PacTBT 1.20 Pan Am .60 PanhEP 1.60 ParkeDav la Peab Coal 1 PennDixie .60 PaPwLt 1.48 PepsiCo 1.60 PllzerC 1.20a Phelp 0 3.40a Phlla El 1 ■■ 5 67’/a 67’% 67’/a 4 XI2 38% 38% 38% 4 26 36'.'a 36% 36'4 4 4 29% 29’% 29% 4 65 1(P4 10% 1(F,i 4 7 27% 27% 27% - 8 58% 57’% 58% 4 13 40’/4 40% 40'% .. 4 38’% 38% 38% -1 26% 26% 26% .. 4 64% 64% 64% + 4 22% 22% 22% + 5'I‘48% 48% 48%-3 51'/a 51'% 51'% 4 3 47% 47% 47% - 4 33% 33% 33% .. 7 26% 26% 26% 6 104'% 104 104'/4 4 3 30’% 30’/» 307% 4 132 37'/4 36’/i 37% 4 ■ 3 26% 26% 26% ,. 7 54% 54% 54S/4 - ' 13 36% 36% 36% - : 7 16% 16'% '16'% 4 ' 16 57 57 57 + : 8 19% 19% 19'% 4 ’ —P— , an accumulative issue year, dividend ornltted^ d dividend, t—f.,_ ... ------ ---- estimated cash value on ex-dIvide ___ ________ meeting. paid In 1966 plus stock dividend. t-Paid in slock during 19M, ' lated cash value on ex-divideno or ibutlon date. z-Salea n lull. [llvidend. y-I I. x-dis-Ex c ....... ww—With warrants, wd—When distributed. wi—When Issued, nd—Next day delivery. ' I 343/4 : Stocks of Local Interest Figures after decimal points sra eighths OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Quotations from the NASD are rei sentative inter-dealer prices of approximately 11 a,m. Inter-dealer markets change throughout the day. Prices do include retail markup, markdown ” Bid Asked 1.20 12 39'% 39% 3 2 32% 32% 32% - PjtPlate 2.60 AMT Corp........... Associated Truck . North Central A Caveney, who lives at 2375 S. Commerce, Walled Lake, also will continue as manager of contracts involving all government CAVENEY and commercial sales c®d contract negotiations. Russell G. Goemaere, president and general manager of Goemaere Industries, I n c.. Utica, and Norman A. Wold, sales manager, were recently appointed to the board of directors of that company. Goemaere has also been appointed to the board of directors of the Rochester Paper Co. But after paying her room and board, she said, she found little left to save. Neighbors and even strai _ flocked to help the motherless family last week after their plight became known. ISTANBUL, Turkey (AP) -Angry mobs shatter^ windows of the U. S. consulate, damaged American cars and destroyed nightclub early this morning in the southern Turkish city of Adana after eight U. S. servicemen allegedly accosted Turkish women leaving a movie house, press reports said today. The reports gave this account: The servicemen, from the Strategic Air Command base at Incirlik, near Adana, took refuge in a nearby nightclub. An angry crowd gathered, shouting anti-American slogans and demanding that the Americans be handed over to them. Police took the men to a police station for protection. The mob shattered the windows of the police station, then about 50 young persons marched to the U. S. consulate. They damaged American cars on the way. grew in numbers over the months. FEDERAL POWER The biggest surprise to busi- Bss came when it realized the voluntary guideposts — limits on prices and wages — had a great deal of federal power behind them. Consensus had become control, they cried. Price rollbacks occurred in aluminum, copper and steel, enforced by the administration through a call to patriotism, by threats to unload government stockpiles, by the fear of further regtilation, by tlueats to rescind government orders. •R ★ ★ Many businessmen hollered when their own companies were denied price increases that the government deemed inflationary. But George Champion, chairman of the Chase Manhat-k, became a general spokesman. ‘In the name of consensus, we find government telling labor management what wages acceptable, telling aluminum producers what prices are justified, telling banks what rates are permissible,” he said. OPPOSITE SIDES Strains shivered through each position. Perhaps because of their very natures, government and business found themselves often on opposite sides. And inflation threatened.! The big question by early 1966 was how to handle the inflation; by cutting government spending increasing taxes? Either would lessen demands on the economy, which was showing signs of overheating. * ★ ★ The administration did neither at first. This, as many businessmen view it, forced the Federal Reserve to step in with a dampener. It did so, by raising interest rates. Later, the administration suspended for 18 months a tax credit that business had grown fond of. And it promised to cut federal spending. The tax issue is still in the air, as are some interest rates. Editors' Confab Starts Tuesday in Colifornia Colin B. Batchelor was recently appointed agency manager of the Pontiac Metro- jpPllEk politan Life In- W ^ surance Co. branch office. | Batchelor lives at 6187 Borowy, Commerce Township. He joined Metropolitan as an agent in the BATCHELOR Pontiac office in 1961. Two area men recently received new appointments in Chrysler Corp.’s styling office. Donald H. Beyreis was appointed manager of color, fabrics, materials development and mastering. ■nPzK 1.50 Tcl El 1.28 G( Pacific lb Sfietto fjo ’ Glcn AM .70 I 10 GoodZIch 2.40 2 66'% Gaociyr U5 V’ 48 25 43’/t 43'% 43'/i ...... ^ 32Sk 32%,-32%„,... 23 36 36 36 — '% i 26'% 26'% 26'% - '/- 20 41% 411IU 4I'/4 4 RalstonP 1.20 Rayonicr 1.40 Raytheon .80 Reading Co Revlon 1.30 Rexell .30b Reyn Met .75 Reyn Tob 2 Roan Sel .35e Rohr Cp .80 Safeway St I StJoeLd 2.60 SL SanPran 2 StRegP 1.40b Sanders .30 Schenley 1.40 Schering 1 SCM Cp .40b Scott Paper 1 SeerIGD 1.30 Sears Roe la Seeburg .60 Shell Oil 1.90 ShellTra .B7e SmlthK 1.80e SoPRSm .SOe SouCelE 1.25 South Co 1.02 SouNGas 1.30 31 153% 153 153'/4 ... 2 6'% 6'/4 6'/4 + 4 48’% 483/4 48’% ... —R— 52 48'% 473% 473% — 6 48'% 48'% 48'% .. 3 27% 27% 27% + 18 48% 48'% 48% - . 15 14'% 14'% 14'% -f 3% 19 43'% 43'% 43'% - 11 28% 28% 21% ... MUTUAL fiUNDS Chemical |tund .............. Commonwealth Stock .......... Keystone Income K-1 ......... Keystone Growth K-2 ......... Mass. Investors Growth ...... . — Mess. Investors Trust .....15.95 17.43 Putnam Groiwth .............. Television Electronics ...... Wellington Fund ............. - Windsor Fund ................16.34 17.76 20 36'% 36'% 36'% - . . 34 7% 7% 7% -t- % 10 20'% 20 20'% + '% 4 37'% 37'% 37'% - '% 2 16'% 16'A 16'% -P '% —S— 15 26% 26% 26% 7 36% 36'% 36% . .. 1 35% 35% 35% - % 31 28% 28'% 2I'% ... 34 51% 503% 51% ■ — News in Brief Catherine Northern, 36, of 40 S. Paddock reported to city police Saturday that two women robbed her at gunpoint of $100 . . . . and rings on Soiith Saginaw be-17 26'% 26% 26'% ~ tween Water and Pike streets. 5 38 373% 373% - '%[ 26 wJ 15'% i5% + v%| Pontiac police are investigat-1 ^ 20** ^ ing a burglary at Walton Radio 4 41% Me^ 42 50% M M -I-'% E. Walton, today in which four 4 39'* 39* + '% television sets valued at $600, were stolen. ’ GMC Trucks Being Equipped With 'Light Line' A plastic “wire” that transmits light like copper wire conducts electricity is being used by GMC Truck & Coach Di-visicHi of General Motors to illuminate automatic transmission selectors in trucks. The flexible “light line” consists of light-transmitting fibers around comers or through tight places. In varions GMC track models with antomatlc transmissions, the light line runs from an existing bulb beUnd the dadiboard to the transmission gear selector on the steering column. It transmits light from the bulb to the selector, illuminating it so the driver can choose gears quickly and easily at night. GMC Truck & Coach is the first exclusive commercial ve-tdcle manufacturer to adopt ffie material, call SeeLite, and put it to practical use in trucks. CORONADO, Calif. (AP) -The 33rd annual Associated Press Managing Editors convention gets under way Tuesday with a meeting of the board of directors at the Hotel Del Coronado. R ★ ★ The business session is the first item on a schedule of activities that will carry delegates through the weekend. About 1,000 persons are expected to attend the week of speeches, panel discussions and business meetings. | Harry J. Reed, managing editor of The Pontiac Press, will be attending the sessions. Highlighting the general session Wednesday are speeches by California’s governor-elect Ron-Reagan and Walter W. Ros-tow, special assistant to President Johnson on foreign policy affairs. Businessmen now are described as less decisive and certain. Many are waiting to see if the administration feels it should do something further about cooling the economy. R R R A more subtle change has occurred also. More and more, businessmen turn their senses towards Washington, although they try also to feel the pulse of activity at the state and local levels. This, some say, was reflected in conservatives being elected last week. Government and business still are searching for the proper stance, and Thomas S. Gates, chairman of Morgan Guaranty Trust Co., suggested it should be one of creative tension. R R R “Let neither side be suspicious of the other, but let each be watchful,” he said. There was a friendship, perhaps a fair weather one; perhaps a romance, too, but never ^ a honeymoon — even though, tired couple in an old marriage. | Reagan has scheduled an informal talk. Rostow will discuss ‘The United States in Asia.’ The atmosphere of Mars shows no signs of containing methane compounds and other reducing gases that are considered necessary for the formation of pre-life chemicals. BEYREIS BINGMAN Thomas P. Bingman succeeds Beyreis as interior design man-, Plymouth-Chrysler-Impe-rial studios. Bingman of 4695 Walnut Lake, Bloomfield Township, previously served as manager of Chry-sler-Imperial interior design. He joined Chrysler Corp. in 1952. BeyreiS/ of 6630 Conunerce, West Bloomfield Township, joined Chrysler Styling in 1957. Compitod by Th* AsitclaiMl » It 18 .. .. RBiit iiM. uni. Ebb. l.Y(i Net Changa ...................-l-.l Noon FrI. 71J »0.» 81.2 21.3 Prev. Day 71.2 90.9 81.2 t1.2 Weak ago 71.2 90.9 ,81.2 M.3 _.. Atonth ago 71.5 90.3 82.0 92.3 16.0 Year Ago 00.8 101.0 87.5 " * 1966 High 79.5 101.4 86.1 1964 Low 71.1 18.9 79.2 1965 High 83.7 102.5 61.9 " Pa-tik. Of Piy-Rato Had Raeord akit iRapM^V . Klngaford Ca ........15 Overhead Door ... .15 Scott indji^ias .. .05 Q 12-15 12-30 Successfuhfnvesfing Si By ROGER E. SPEAR Q. “I am a schoolteacher, aged 27, married and with one young child. I own 75 8 h a r e s of Continental Telephone and nine American Telephone which were bought to supplement my retirement pension. Should I keep these stocks and what others would you recommend for my particular goal?” G.U. A. You own two excellent stocks for your objective. Continental Telepfanne has been growing rapidly in recent years. Its p-incip^ operatkms are in small towns and rural areas and a good record of growth has been compiled mainly through acquisitions. Earnings should exceed $1.00 a share this year, which would be about double the figure redorded in 1963. would hold both your telephone issues. For future investment, I advise a conservative policy wiUf emphasis on quality and consistent growth. For your goal I Hke Com -Produ^, Merck & Co., Standard Oil of CaUfomia an^ Texas Utilities. I ff Q. “Our stock club agreed that I write to you for advice on the iM’esent depressed condition of the maricet. We started our club in I960, and at present we own a number of stocks (such as Uni(» Carbide and Sherwin-Williams) all at losses except American Hospital Supply. We have conflicting ideas and would like your opinion as to what policy we should adopt under {wesent conditions: 1) save our $200 per month until the market st^i^s; 2) average holdings where our losses are heaviest; 3) buy high-priced stocks which we oi^-narily couldn’t afford. Your advice will be annreciated.” L.S. A. For some time past I have been suggesting to readers with new sums of cash to invest that they maintain as far as possible a balanced position in stocks and cash reserves until the market stabilizes, in your circumstances policy number one above seems tiie soundest eomse to follow at present. (Copyright, 1966)