Supreme Court Opens to Face Explosive MH Out he did not comply with election laws. ‘g . Vietnam and Jivl) righta. demon- tfanurt at the court, exemplified by third-party presidential, candidate George C. Wallace’s statement that Warren “ham’t got enough legal sense to try a chicken thief In Alabama.’* FIRST CASE f ■N«^aaBMaE' Ironically, the Qrst case to be heard by the court centers on Wallace’s ¥d for the White House. His lawyers are trying to compel Ohio to put Wallace’s name on the ballot ant month: The itatecounters Court ‘As government has strained to do ^ Times survey showed Nixon more,” he said, “our people have felt leading to 34 states with 380 electoral constrained to do less," votes - 270 are needed for election - A 36-year-old Waterford Township woman was killed Saturday night when site was struck by e car while she reportedly Fas walking in ** •< .... toe middle of a road Oakland near her home. Highway Story C. Nolan, 4861 Toll in ’68 Riverview, died at Pon- ■ _ ■ tiac General Hospital 1 1V after being struck by a x -M* car driven by David uer Ymt Garnett, M, of 4978 Hob- to Date 109 son, on Frembes north ....'■ ..*'* of Hatchery at 10:50 p.m. This past summer’s construction strike is primarily blamed by school administrators for the lowest increase of Oakland County students in seven years. Total enroUpient of the county's 28 local school districts is 233,452 students, 5,207 more than a year ago. It is the smallest increase since 1961, by about 1,000 students. Southfield has doubled its student population, since 1961, West Bloomfield has doubted it& since 1963 and Farmington has doubled its since 1959. Waited Lake, No. 7, has 10,002 students, up 307 from last year and Bloomfield Hills, No: 8, has 9,lll, up 345. Four of the 10 districts with the largest number of students last year found that they had less students this year. Several school superintendents have said the construction strike didn't permit new families to move into school districts, according to Mrs. Polly Carlthers, director of public information for Oakland Schools. REASONS CITED She said other reasons for decreasing or «»ghtiy increasing enrollments are harder-to-get mortgages, harder-to-find housed torbuy and a decreasing number of children mitering school. As a result of the enrollment declines and smaller increases than expected, many school districts face tighter budgets because they will get less money from the state than anticipated. Garnett tohj Waterford Township police he didn't see the woman. The accident hi still under investigation. Battleship Shells Reds SAIGON (A!*) - The battleship New Jersey continued farther up the coast of North Vietnam yesterday, shelling an artillery site and supply point near the Ron River about 50 miles north of the demilitarized zone, \ ' it A A tiie ship arrived on firing station fort Monday but her first assignment^ were against North Vietnamese army strong-points inside or "just north of the demilitarized zone. B The state gives each school district about $207 per enrolled student. Wk Enrollment increafeewere about twice 1 as large in 1984 and 1966 when gains of 1 10,000 students were recorded. I PONTIAC LARGEST i Pontiac School District continues to be I the largest in the county with 23,866, only H 187 more than a year ago. A 350-student 11 increase was expected. I Royal Oak, the second largest district, 1 enrolled 19,861 this year, down 339. ■A A A H Nine of the 28 districts counted fewer m children than Jast year. They are: Royal H Oak; Birmingham, fourth-largest jn 1 county, 17,845, less than 100 decrease; B Berkley, lOto-largest, with 8,598 students, 1 down 248; and Femdale, ninth-largest, 1 8,406, down 103. If Others showing decreases were Oak 1 Park, Avondale, CUrenceville, Hazel. 5 DISTRICTS’GAINS BIG 'Five districts gained enough students to fill a (few 20-room elementary school. Mr? > • , •#? * ; A 'V : They are: Waterford, No. 3, with 18,284 jtudenta, gain at 623; Soetltfield; NorS; With 16,185, up 711; Farmington, iwng ■HHERH '* .. SttiJ ■— Kiitlll Thieu said there were no plans for an allied summit meeting before the U.S. elections, hut said he would “like to meet with President Johnson and the Assembly in Saigon today. With him are Vice President owted nrpsident to discuss the relations President Nguyen van mieu (center or picture; reviews an Nguyen Cao Ky (left) and Prime Minister Tran Van Huong elected president to d scuss toe relations airborne troops before addressing the National (to the rear in Ughtcolored suit), of our two countries.” ■ ■ ,_______. .. S. VIET BRASS ON INSPECTION — South Vietnam’s President Nguyen Van Tbieu (center of picture) reviews an HHH running third Nixon spoke on the heels of a New York Times survey showing him leading in states with more than enough electoral votes for election — and showing Democratic candidate Hubert H. Humphrey trailing in third place behind third-party candidate George C. Wallace. The Times survey showed Nixon leading in 34 states with 380 electoral votes — 270 art needed for election — Wallace ahead in seven states with 66 electoral votes and Humphrey leading in four states and the District of Columbia with 28 electoral .votes. The Washington Post survey showed Nixon leading in 32 states with 348 electoral votes, Humphrey in seven states with 46 electoral votes and Wallace six states with S3 electoral votes. In other developments: • Humphrey picked up endorsements over the weekend from the New York Timm, toe Atlanta Constitutiin, and the Denver Post. • Incumbent Democratic UB. Sen. Daniel K Inouye won renomination over William D. Lampard in toe Hawaii primary Saturday. Lolich Is Last Hope for Bengals firSt inning Cards — Lou Brock doubles to left. Julian Javier grounds out short jo first. Curt Flood singled to right scoring Brock. Orlando Cepeda at bat, Flood steals second. Cepeda hit a home run to left with Flood scornig ahead of him. Mik eShannon flies to center. Tim Mc-Carver called out on strides. Three runs, three hits, no rerors, none left. Tigers—Dick McAuliffe pops to center. Mickey Stanley flies to center. A1 Ka-line strikes out. No runs, no hits, no errors, none left. , SECOND INNING Cards—Ron Davis grounds out, pitcher to first Dal Maxvill pops to short. Nelson Briles strikes out. No runs, no hits, no errors, none left. Tigers — Norm Cash singles to right. Willie Horton bounces into doubleplay, third to first Jim Northrop bounces out, pitcher to first. No runs, one hit, no errors, none left. FIFTH INNING Cards — Briles struck out. Brook doubles to left. Javier singles to teft frrt Brock was thrown out trying to score, Horton to Freehan. Flood flies to'left No runs, two hits, no errors, Mfleft. Tigers — Wert pops to short. Lolich strikes out McAuUffe caBod out on strikes. No runs, no hltat wo errors, none left Jr SIXTH INNING Cards — Cepeda fiiei to right. Shannon grounds to first Mc- Carver flies to righk No runs, no hits, no errors, none left Tigers — Stanley flies to center. Kaline singles to left Cash walks. Horton grounds out, first unassisted Northrop walked intentionally filling baaes. Freehan bounced to short who throw to second forcing Northrop. No runs, one hit, no errors, three left. St Mils 3, Detroit 8 THIRD INNING Cards—Brock singles to center. Javier* at bat, Brock thrown out at second trying to steal, Freehan to McAuliffe,: Javier bounces out third ot first. No runs, one hit, no errors, none left. Tigers—Bill Frefbafr flies to left Don Wert walks. Mickey Lolich strikes out. McAuliffe bounces out third to first. No runs, nphits, no errors, one left. FOURTH INNING Cards — Cepeda strikes out. Shannon bounces to first and goes to second on Cash’s error. McCarver walks. Davis flies to center. Maxvill strike! out. No runs, no hits, one error, two left Tiger*—Stanley triples to right.Kaline bounces out, pitcher to first- Cash flies Sunshine Chasing Cloud Cover Away SERIES FANS—Rain during most of the fourth game of the figers-Cardinals ----------------- . . World Series-play yesterday in Detroit apparently didn’t dampen the spirits of to left with Stanley scoring after toe Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey and former Dodger"star Jackie Robinson, catch. Horton Styles to center. North-Humphrey stayed to Watch the Tigers go down to defeat, 10-1, white Robinson, rop singles to right scoring Horton, who is g»n»ru»hpti"g for Humphrey in his race to the White House, left the game Freehan flies to right Two nuns, three .’£’ ‘ hits, no errors, none left. Sunshine was to chase away thta morning’s gloomy clouds and send temperatures into the low 60s. Tonight will be fair and <$Mi with tile low folling lntp WJW to jj range. The warming trend was to 1 ,vi time tomorrow with partly sunny skies. ; This tnomtag’s westerly wind? at 8 to IS miles per how were to mnqf to the sou fewest at 5 to IS nkilaa by tonight. Clouds will bring back the threat of fall abowera by, Wednesday wiib-Jta temperaturesin tha 90s. L^ tbermometfr readhig in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.ot twhty was 4$. By 2 p.m. the mercury stood at Il Cbeiiptii of rain la per OMt ere today 5, toni^R near ten and tomorrow 19. * THK WNTIAC 'yftKSft MONDAY, 0CTOBEE 7t *968 Birmingham N*ws Rezoning Hear/ng Tonight by Defense Chief gc around the outekirfo-of Birmingham’s central busiiiesrclisirtrt • + '■« , \ * A JV**:. ,,> Also on the agenda is a report from the city manager Suggesting permanent-improvement of parking lot number 7* near the Community House. , ,., ;a_-The commission is also expected to make a formal' statement tonight regarding the Johnson, Johnson and Roy Urban Design report presented at a Planning Commission meeting last week, according'to assistant city manager John Stttk*t / BLOOMFIELD HILLS - Ralph Nader, author of the best-selling “Unsafe at Any Speed,” will appear as the second feature of file Oakland Community College Contrast Series next Tuesday at 8:30 p.m.‘ at the Cranbrook School-Auditorium, Lane Pine ROad at Orchard Ridge Road. - jt ■* .#' Published in 1909, “Unsafe at Any Speed,” an account of the designed-in dangers in American automobiles, led to Nader filing an Lnvaslon-of-prlvacy Suit against General Motors based on an investigation of him ordered by GM. 1 This will be Rader’s first public -appearance in the home of file automotive industry. $ ^ w ,r - w. Tickets or information can be obtained from the OCC Community Services Division. ,, BIRMINGHAM<- A public hearing on the- reeoning of a parcel of cjty-ownefl property on Oakland between Hunter and Woodward from residential to public use will be held-tonight at 8 by. the Ofy Commission. ^ Vfe. j ■■■ f- The parcel would be part of the Ring Road project to be undertaken by the city. The road would route through-traf- the city, which stands 100 miles inSkie Communist East Germany., Clifford’s trip is reminiscent of a gambit by his predecessor, then Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara, almost exactly six years WASHINGTON (AP) - Secretary of Defense dark M. Clifford intends his WtogT Baffin visit this week 1 to be a pointed reminder to the Soviet Union of U.S. determination to protect Western rlghtl in that encircled dty. , Clifford was scheduled to attend the Oet. 10-11 meeting of the NATO nuclear pHilfinl group in Bonn. This gave him the chance to go to Berlin, where he will inspect U.S. armed forces and tour At that time, U.8. authorities were concerned that the Soviet Union, under Nikita S. Khrushchev, might be getting ready to heat tip the long-standing Berlin Hdfcf Senators Woman Forces Plane’to Cuba McNamara visit & McNamara made a two-day visit to West Germany and inspected U.S. ground and air units, In effect, he gave the Russians clear notice that the United States was ready- to wield nuclear Weapons if necessary , to defend-. West Berlin. ■, -/ ^ The Gifford visit fits in with a general pattern of a tough U.S. government attitude toward the Soviets to the wake of the Rus sian-ied invasion ' of Czechoslovakia and 'subsequent threatening statements aimed at West Germany end West Berlin. AMERICANS CONCERNED American authorities, jure concerned about a heavy movement of Russian troops into Central Europe, particularly some 17 divisions tatoCzecboalovakia. It is the U.S. view that the stationing of highly combat ready Russian troops to Czechogfevakfa—where there were tjo such troops before; August, ij raises a potentially grave threat to We Sft Germanyand other NATOcountries. • WASHINGTON fa- - At least half of the Senate favors one plan or another to halt U S. bombing of North Vietnam, although conditions, under which the air raids should be stopped vary. * * * Twenty-seven senators of the 85 who responded to an Associated Press survey 'said they favqr ah unconditional bomb-tog halt. They were opposed by 18 senators who said there should be l» fBN their bombing reduction to the current stage of the war. In between were 23 senators who said they would insist on some matching action by Hanoi, either to reducing the. level of the fighting or In compromises at the bargainihg table to Paris* Neither of Michigan’s two U& senators, Republican Robert Griffin or Democrat Philip A: Hart, was listed as taking a stand for or Sgainst a halt in U.S, bombing of North Vietnam. 18 IN OPPOSITION The 18 who opposed any reduction of the air war predicted that a bombing halt would result in wholesale military infiltration from the North and stepped up, costly ground action to the South by Communist Writs taking advantage of a toothless American air dragon. ’ MERIDA, Mex. (AP) —.-A 35 year-old found, life to Mexico intoterable, hijacked «’ twin-engine turboprop airliner with 17 pitot tofiy toCuba. Mexican authorities said- the woman, identified as Judith Vazquez, entered the cockpit ami pulled a gun from beneath a whim shawl. The pilot, Captain Ricardo Eroga Troyo, stria' that after ordering him to fly to Cuba the woman said hysterically, “I’d rather be killed or jailed in Cuba than return to Mexico.” : .Lypr1 #‘vi ' She was believed to be the first woman to seize a plane and take it to Cuba. The toepHit took 'pipce as the Aefomaya plane flew over Mexico’s Tsla Mujeres, the “Isle of Women,” on its way fa Merida. . V1 Jp After seven hours in Havana, the plane, which carried 14 passengers in-' eluding three Americans and a crew of three, returned to Merida Sunday night. ' * kr. ★ In addition to Mrs. Vazquez and her daughter, Silvia, 12, and a two-month-old son Ernesto, two unidentified women passengers remained in Havana. , In Havana, Mexican, Ambassador Miguel Covian, who arranged for the release of the passengers and plane, said ha found the hijack difficult to explain “when there are regular commercial flights between Mexico and Cuba.” Last week, State Department officials reported that the.regular winter meeting of NATO foreign ministers would be moved up from mid-December to mid-November In Brussels so they can consider steps to stiffen the alliance and its military forces. Both Clifford and Gen. Earle G. Wheeler, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff who will accompany the Pentagon chief to Germany, have made it pain they regard It as important to maintain a substantial American troop presence in West Europe.. .< , [ L ;|p- ; KEEPING THEIR EYES ON MOON—Youngsters of tfie Amateur Observers Society keep their attention and telescope focused on the moon from an improvised observatory atop the Empire State Building in New York City early yesterday mornnig. The kids spent a chilly night watching and waiting for toe total eclipse which began about 6 a.m. Stages are shown through time-lapse photography. Rusk and Gromyko Air WorldPrr&h bombing halted unconditionally -r. at toast on an experimental basis — maintained it would be an acceptable risk in an all-out attempt to end the fighting. The AP survey was conducted after , -ifia flurry of -congressional and political debate sparked tor. Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey*! Sept. 30 Vietnam policy speech. Ji RALPH NADER Dubcek PFogram Fearedi of End UNITED NATTOMifi, missiles and .sntbnlssllee tost Secretary Of State Dean Rusk tout Soviet , governments have agreed to enter Foreign Mintttefc: Andrei A. Gromyko -As Pf exchanged views on ,a broad' range of on -the; MldqwTSst* the Soviet i world problerils Sunday- night during three-hour dinner meeting thstt* both sides caifod ireful. Thd meeting was the first extensive^ s^H conference between the two diplomats since Soviet troops invaded $*B Czechoslovakia Aug. 20 and put a chill to IjU international relations: They had met , informally * Wednesday at the Soviet Mission to discuss the Middle East I situation. m By United Press Interaafional Wet snow fell to the Hgher mgtihtains of wffthera-Now England tyly'ltfadiy; with two indies of tlto "tohtfo' stun measured at Mt. Washington, Nil. Scattered showers, with snow at toe higher elevations, were falling from the North Pacific Coast to the northern and central Rockies. ■Shade to'-Review Clark's license In Idaho and Montana, warnings were The suspension or revocation of the issued to motorists and stockmen as a medical license of Dr. Ronald E. Clark, cold rain dropped at lower elevations serving a 3-15-year prison .sentence, will and snow fell above, 4,000 feet, be considered by the Michigan State ★ * ★ Board of Registration in Medidne. In other parts of the nation, cloudy, * k * damp and chilly weather, with some Oakland County Prosecutor S. Jerome locally, heavy rain and fog, covered much Bronson said today he has been informed « of the eastern part of the country,' ex-that his request for a hearing on Clark’s tending from tower Michigan to New license had been Received by the board England, and from Mississippi to “and that they intend to take action.” Georgia. •To continue the policy Of seeking accommodation with Moscow, agree to semipermanent stationing of occupation troops in Czechoslovakia, and salvage as much as possible of the “post-January” program to make more humane and democratic. • To balk and give the Soviets the same choice they had after invading the country Aug. 20-21, that.is, formation of a military' government to rule Czechoslovakia. Gromyko, ‘ coming from Rusk’s 42nd floor suite at toe Waldorf Astoria Hotel last night, told reporters no agreements were reached but “these discussions were useful.” “To say that agreement was achieved would be saying too much,” he said. “Each agreement has to be preceded by a great deal of work.” Gromyko said he and Rusk touched on the - Vietnam war, the Middle East, disarmament, European security and U.S.-Soviet relations. v He said they discussed no specific date for starting talks on limitation of ; RUSK '*§........ GROMYKO minister asserted he would “prefer not to say yes and no|jto say no.” UJ5. officials issufed the same list of subjects. ’ They too called the talks useful but said no agreements were reached and no arrangements were made for future meetings. OTHERS AT TALKS With Rusk, who hosted'the dinner, were Ambassador J. R. Wiggins, new U.S. chief VC delegate; Charles E.( (Chip) Bohlen, deputy undersecretary of state for .political affairs, and an in-terpreter. Gromyko was accompanied by the Soviet ambassador to the United Nations, Jacob A. Malik; Anatoly T. Dobrynin, Soviet ambassador . in Washington, and an interpreter.' Earlier on ABC-TV’s “Issues find Answers,” Rusk said such meetings were “scouting expeditions”' to look for “any point on which we can make some progress.” “We sort of sniff around,” he said. He said Americans would be glad to see the Soviet Union “take a responsible part” in helping Vietnam move toward peace. A meeting between President Johnson and Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin had been discussed before the occupation of Ctechoslovakia, he said, but; added none was planned now because “it would be rather difficult.” The Weather Bronson said that he received a letter At Augusta, Ga., almost an inch of rain over the weekend from Dr. Luther fell in one hour. Leader, executive director of the board, Rain delayed the start of the fourth indicating it wiU consider the matter. game of the World Series yesterday, and , *r * * spilled as much as three indies of pro- The prosecutor has attempted to have cipitation in the Tennessee Valley, the license of Clark,. 58, <4 Farmington Township, suspended or revoked since the physician was found guilty June 28 of giving a fatal overdoes of sodium pen-tathol to Mrs. Grace Nea), a nurse who worked part-time in his office at 30775 Grand River. HE’LL BE PREPARED “I’m pleased that a hearing will.be held,” said Bronson. T intend to be prepared to make a full presentation,of the reasons and grounds why the board should take away Clark’s medical license,” said Bronson. • Bronson said nO date for the hearing was set, but added* *T trust that there will be no further delays.” ■ Following Clark’s conviction, toe boapd reportedly annooiced it would take no action until Gaik exhausted all his appeals. . •, ’ ;;V: Allies Turn Up Red Stockpiles SAIGON (AP) — Thousands of allied troops scoured the battle-scarred mountain valleys near Khe Sanh and the jungled foothills southwest of Da Nang today in new offensives aimed at spoiling enemy attacks. Task forces of UR. Marines and American and’ South. Vietnamese Jto-fantrymen met Uttle resistance, but continued to turn up valuable enemy munitions stockpiles, probably hindering or even delaying any offensive plans. One stockpile found two miles below the center portion of the demilitarized zone yieMed 200 rounds of 152mm artillery amipninifion plus 100 fuses. This was significant because it marked the first known time in tie war that 152mm ammunition had been found in South Vietnam, indicating that the enemy might be planning to .try to move big Russian-made guns into toe South. The 152s, the biggest in the enemy’i arsenal, can fire a 90-pound missile 10.5. miles. Military spokesmen, in delayed reports, announced the loss of four more American aircraft to enemy ground fire over the past three days.- ONE YANK DE^D They included an observation plane and a reconnaissance helicopter helping the allied ground'Yroops search for the ehemy,. a Navy .^A7 Corsair fighter-bomber downed ovfii^iNora'-Vietnam, and an assault helicopter hit oear 'the-Cambodian border northwest otSiOigqq. One American was reported Hilled and five wounded and seven South - Vietnamese soldiers wounded. Detroit Tiger pitcher Denny McLain gives a benefit concert on the electric organ in Pontiac toniM with proceeds going to support youth work in the city, ■ W • '•# ' k ^ Tickets for the 8 p.m. perfwm-ance at Pontiac Northom High School ale $3.50. They are on sale at Grinnell Bros., 27 S. Saginaw; C. R. Haskill Studio, 1 University; J. C. Penney Co. in Miracle Mile Shopping Center; and OsmUn’s at 51' N. Saginaw and ? Tel-Huron Shopping Center. Tickets will be sold at toe door. To Return to Work in Week Edison Linemen The event is being sponsored by the Downtown, Pontiac .Kiwanis Club, the Pontiac Area Hammond Organ Society and toe Denny McLain Enterprises. A strike by about BOQ Overhead southeastern Michigan, from the Thumb linemen of toe Detroit EdiaaftvCo. too* area to Monroe, lasted more thqn four months wiU be The strike started June l and tested over next Monday when the men return through some of the wont storms ever to work with a nOw three-year eontrict. to hit Oakland County as for as damage • ./ k ‘!f to wiles were concerned. The new pact, which rilportedly «alls • ■ for a 93-cent per hour pajr-increase wer Many dulays a three-year period, as 'Vttified bji a\ Broken ’wires , were ' fixed b y union-member vote yesterday. supervisory personnel and volunteers . v Wr W fiwm tbe^^company, though many. deSiys The union, Local I? of the foteriw- jfo raptors were r^rted. tional Brotherhood of SI e c t r i c a l Union members had bean making Workers, represents workers m a seven- about 84.50 per hour under the old con- •county area covering most o f tract, union officials said. Hanoi Sends Cong Aid HONG KONG (AP) — North Vietnam said today it Is sodding 50,000 tons of rice, 100 tons of medical supplies, and 10 million; yards of cloth to toe Vletcong and its sympathizers in South Vfomfiih. ' ■, $ • %'.I 'K • The broadcast , by Radio Hanoi fo-dicated, but c|idf him directly giiy/ that this was the civilians’ glft qtofii forlitt- 'rqitmw 'Rmw. Uv 'fmpmp*vr*i ' NATIONAL MEATIER—Show is forecast tonight for Montana and snow flurries are wadicted for the central Rockies them will be showers in Southeastern Florida, MjiW Will be warmer from cegtral fm$ to the western Great Lakes and cooler from the Tennessee Valley to the Gulf Coast. FORECAST THE PONTT.Af. ™ss> MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, I9fl8 Ipxdri Ihe^HHle^ NEW YORK (AP) - Richard If, Wim’i Republican presidential campaign is'staid by' US manages to be proving fim moat expensive ever waged, «**b # jpww tag expected to run well over $20 million. Nixon A’a ali fefii t e s expect •pending by both 'parties in tito White House race to teach record levels. This to in put‘a product of inflation and in large measure the result of escalating outlaps for television. Q. Is it truethat SIMMS Nir putanyitem from the ■ CAMERA DEPT, in SIMMS Nk FREE LAYAWAY 9P ’til Christmas for only *1? a Nixon resumes Eb campaign today, with appearances to Washington and Buffalo, N.Y. advertising drive. ' * The basic Nixon approach to a on^ihour program oft a state or regional television hookup: Those shows cost between 130,000 and $40,00 each. Campaign officials say at least nine are planned. ' ■ Nixon also.to using network radio, which gets his voice on Florida, Tennessee, Virginia I and New York. . ■ BRIEF RETURN 1 Agnew will return to Mary-land briefly Wednesday and < that fly to Now Yorkto tape a' television show. 1 He leaves Friendship Interna- < tidiial Airport this morning and] arrives at Raleigh, &&} for a i downtown rally shortly after j noon. He tapes a television show in the afternoon and leaves for j Jacksonville, Fla., about 5 p.m. f to Jacksonville, Agnew Will , attend A nally at the Civic Audi-, toriom at 8:30 p.m. Agnew plans to leave Jack-sonviQe Tuesday morning and anWe'to Nashville, Tenn., to, appear on television shortly be-. other televiskai appearance Tuesday afternoon . and then leave tor Roanoke, Va. W? ‘PANA-VUE’ lnstamatic&35mm Slide Viewer ..... . “wtofli mother television appearance and a public rafly are ached-uled. The rally is to be at Roa-noke College. ; The Maryland governor to to stay ovpntijfdit in Roanoke and fly to Baltimore to the morning where he will stop briefly aftd flien fljy to New York City to tape a television show. | All This Week at Simms [ ST Electric-Eye Camera Set Complete WATCH OVERHAUL / RnR " with PARTS end LABOR at ll JJ ' this prica .. . your watch will ba yy " UP disassembled, cleaned and oiled, W 1 —adjusted and timed electronically. A 1 M Genuine factory parts, wed and * you' get full year guarantee on labor. Parts include stems, crown, mainspring or balance staff .at this price. $4.98 Seller —now $47.00 Value Congress Eyes Votes, Pushes Adjourfthkiif SAWYER Crestline Deluxe 500 Watt Hik Slide ■ Projector vote to go home anyway, regarding presidential nominations as strictly Senate busi- get l-h(p!refl flilng in the new downtownpaming mall when you shop SIMMS discount annex passage of the undtoar nonproliferation treaty, tile only other major obstacle to adjournment. Mansfield believes there are enough votes to wto Senate approval, but the jwo-blem of getting enough lawmakers to answer quorum calls could delay a final vote interminably. members — all up for reelec-tion — are anxious to wrap up several pending bills, a n d hopeful President Johnson wmdd not submit another Supreme Court nomination that would again tie up the Senate, 205 ovaiiobie parking spaces bl the downtown parking mall - all within steps of Simms annex front door . . . and we'll stamp your ticket for i kdur-of free parking with any purchase. aU specjqlslnthfsodv.fortonfte{tues. Awed, only. ___________ ite 'til 9 p.m., tues. & weds 9 a.m. m.—between White TowcTr and Sears - unpainted furniture prices this week-end only I 5-drawer chest Both Rouses, meanwhile, moved fast toward adjournment. Scheduled for Senate approval today was the $84.95 value —■ show the new Super 8 films on this model 346 pro|edor. Forward, still and reverse projections. FI-6 lens, bright lamp, 400ft. reel capacity. Healtii, Education and Welfare Department money bill,'.which tiie House surprisingly passed Thursday. NEW LANGUAGE The bill, altered by a con-ference committee, contains new language to affirm HEW's authority to withhold federal aid to school districts which refuse to comply with the agency’s BELL & HOWELL Monitor 960 Auto-Slide Projector Regular $169.95 — Now Only Electric - eye automatically focuses the slides and corrects the focus for you. Pre-View • knotty pine chests With hardwood knobs, model 8305 chest is 15 x/2? x 42 inches. before It's shown on the screen. Automatic self-timer plus other deluxe features. 6-drawer chest #8316 15x27*42 inches....... 3-drawer chest #363. 15x27x28 inches .......... 8-drawer chest #8318 15x42x34 inches........... Sale of REALTONE Transistor Ratios ■toe AM-FM Portable Ratio 10-drawer chast #8310 15x52x34 inches..... . .. Realtone Jade .2218 radio with AM and FM broadcasts. AFC lock on FM band. 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Only $1 holds. Delivered Catk Price 9 smooth finished knotty pine • 17 x 30 x 30 Inches. 3 side drawers’--, 1 center 4 model 604. - 5-Band Portable Radio Ur tQOLt%m? Customitt Your Baraga $67.95 value AM-FM-Aircraft, Police and Short Wave band. 14 transistor anti-perspirant Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac CAMERA DEPT. Discounts SIMMS DISCOUNT ANNEX 144 N. Saginaw St. SIMMS DISCOUNT ANNEX 144 N. S SIMMS >aginaw lilt: night of injuries Saturday in Sfoswttoee County when $0 cap in sddchjftwua passenger overturned. ia GeneM. Lokojarvi, 36, Livonia, ’killed in a beag-on collision with another car at Mariman and Bonnet streets in Livonia. 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1968 A- School Boundary Proposals Get County Air Tomorrow Holland J. Langerman, Walled Lake assistant Superintendent, said the Huron river forms a natural boundary between the Walled Lake and Waterford. school distrHy and his administration is proposing everything north of tits river go uMiaiant superintendent said, only one student is involved in the change and the board «f education will pay his tuition to Waterford Township High School until he graduates. He added that If tbs proposal is approved, the Huron Valley School boundary will be a straight line instead of a jagged one. Scherer explained the confusion Is a result of the consolidation of miry small school districts over the past 8 years with no consideration to political and geographical boundaries. The request to change the boundary for the Walled Lake District involves about 9 acres located at the junction of Upton Lake and Elizabeth Lake roads, to be transferred from the Walled Lake School district to the Waterford School TROY MARKER—An historical marker oonanememting the founding of Troy Corners was dedicated yesterday at the home ofJudgetaoLMra. Norman Barnard, SMS Uvemris. The home was built in 1837by Johnson Niles. The house is on me site of Niks’ first home, built inn 1881. The hearing is at the Oakland Schools building at thecounfy Service center. Huron Valley officials are proposing to accept .an otter Brent the Waterford School district to .transfer an area of its land which jets out into Huron Valley school district to that school district. the land in question is located east of Oxbow Laito in White Lake Township and ia surrounded on the east, west and TROY—Thanks to two garages and a porch, Steady drizzling rain yesterday south by the Huron Valley district. afternoon didn’t stop the ceremonies ai the home of JpdgevNorman E. Barnard, -o- __________ Troy Historical Commission dedicated an historical marker commemorating the ONE STUDENT INVOLVED founding of Troy Corners by Johnson Niles. Clifford A. Scherer, Huron Valley the Barnard home was built by NOes on tee site of the tog cabin that was his —. :.y ■ - first home in the area in 1821. The two three-car garages In the yard there provided shelter for the more than 150 people attending the ceremonies. /......vi______’............. ...... One garage sheltered the Troy High School Band. Facing the band, about SO M ■ feet away, the second garage provided protection for giiests. A side porch on the house, centered between the garages, provided a sheltered speaker platform. * ★ The Barnards opened the first floor of their historic home to visitors follow-fog the ceremonies. Attending the ceremonies were Jennie / Esta Lakto Morrow, grirolrgrandr daughter of Johnson Niles, and his great-great-granddaughter, Esta Morrow H The present boundary line now falls across mostly vaciut landL School officials want to settle the boundary question before fsmittes move into the area, He was a major force in the overthrow P/aaue Marks HlS Home of Rep. Charles A. Halleck as GOP v leader and he was coauthor of the Lan-drum-Griffin Act He got Into toe Senate by appointment after the death of Sen. Patrick V. McNamara, butfae won the seat on his own is IMS by upsetting G. Mermen (Soapy) Williams, a six-term Michigan governor. * ^ * I Troy Founder Is Honored Hearingon Cityhood Scheduled in Oxford MRS; ROSS R. CAfJLAWAY Almont Vote Set on Sewer Bonds OXFORD TOWNSHIP A public provides for the establishment of a State hearing on incorporation for Oxford and Boundaries Commission to replace about four square miles; of Oxford county committees. Towpship wifi be conducted at g. pjn. rfrftnr wahji -Oct, Maltha Oxford High School student BrTOBTFAIL8 center. An effort by Township Supervisor Lee No date for the election has yet been Valentine to place the matter before toe set, according to spokesmen for toe state has failed, according to an Opinion County Board of Supervisors Boundaries- by Corporation Counsel Robert Allen. -'ll He maintain* that, though the state commission wifi have authority after late November, toe county has the power to settle ail pending cases. Chairman Picked to Head U N. Dqy WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Mra. Ross R. Callaway, president of toe West Bloomfield League of Women Voters, has been appointed United Na-tions Day chairman for toe township by John N. Doherty, township supervisor. United Nations Day will be celebrated Oct. 24 as a joint community effort with the cooperation of the West Bloomfield School District, the West Bloomfield Library and ,the township League tit Petitions for incorporation have proven valid, and foe state census count has shown the required population for incorporation to cityhood exists, toe committee determined. Ute Village Coundl'nhanlmoualy agreed to put toe issue up to the voters In the special election at a recent meeting. In other business, the council also approved a version of toe present traffic code to be in accordance with the lflchfoan uniform traffic code. election. A simple majority Is all that ia reqtlired for cityhood, seconding to elections officials. The proposed Jxnindaries include some 111 trillion of the township’s total assessed valuation of |18 mifiton. It includes four subdivisions plus the three major gravel industries of toe area and foe Sea Ray Corp. on Lapeer Road. A question of jurisdiction has apparently been determined hi favor of the county. A new state law last summer Women Veters. UA Sen, Robert P. Griffin, R-Mich., who sparked the fight that blocked confirmation of Abe Fortas as chief justice of toe United States, will speak in Royal Oak tomorrow. Griffin will address a public meeting •of toe Oakland County Young Republicans at 8:88 p.m. in toe Belanger Rouse, 12 Mile Road and Main. A social hour will precede the meeting-U.S. Rep. Jack McDonald, a Republican who is funning for reelection in toe 18th District, will appear with Griffin. J&Z ~ % '■ The 44-year-old Griffin, first elected to toe Senate two years ago, spearheaded the drive which forced Johnson to withdraw the Fortas nomination last Wednesday at Fortas’request Griffin’s congressional career started in 2168 With a victory over a three-term Gforibfook , Events Following is a list of upcoming events at Cranbrook Academy of Arts and Sciences in Bloomfield GARDENI Take an autumn color tour of the 40 acres of gardens surrounding the home of Cranbrook’s late founders, Mr. and Bin. George (3. Booth, during the laxt month the gardens are open. Garden hours are Tuesday through Friday from 1-5 p.m,; 10 a.m.-0 p.m. on weekends., There is a small admission charge. ACADEMY OF ARTS GALLERIES — Continuing exhibit, ’’Betty Parsons’ Private Collection,” through Oct. 20. The Galleries will then be cfosed until Nov. 0. Regular hours are Tuesday through Admission. PLANETARIUM - Topic “Color the Sky,” Wednesdays at 4 Saturdays and Sundays at 8:30 p.m. Poison Chestnuts Sold in S; 4 Buyers Sought SHELBY TOWNSHIP - Three women and one man who bought chestnuts yesterday at a flea market located on Van Dyke Road are bring sought by township police. The chestnuts are horse chestnuts, described by police as “deadly prison” if eaten raw. ir ★ ★ Consumption of the chestnuts will cause depression, then convulsions, followed by unconsciousness and, almost always, death. There is no known an- < tidote for toe poison, according to police. Police are urging those who bought the chestnuts not to eat them unless they have been thoroughly roasted. The people are asked to contact Shelby police, so they know that everyone connected with the chestnuts has been reached. Meeting in Avondale Avondale Board of Education will meet in special session at 8:30 tonight' at the board; offices, 72 S. Squirrel, Township, fo approve final architect’s plans on the new high school and to appoint a new assistant principal at toe . senior high school. County Center Fumigation May Halt Protest Briefly A small group of protesters, demanding more money for recipients of Aid to Dependent Children (ADC), continued forir picketing and sleeping-ln at the Oakland County Social Services building over toe weekends The demonstration is now. in its third week. . TmII itik ★ Ttetxmth^ theproteat will probably have to be broken sometime this week, according to Daniel T. -Murphy, chairman of the board of auditors. ij j .Vi . ★ ★ Murphy said the building is fumigated monthly, as are other comity buildings, and the time for spraying has already He said he didn’t think toe protesters would want to stay In the building while foe insect poison Is applied. |M FOR CLOTHING The protesters, led by members of county groups, including foe Voice of OaUand County Action League (VOCAL), are storing $60 additional clothing money from the state and other welfare system. It has been collecting petffiods asking toe State Legislature to reassess the prepam. The petition drive is headed by Mrs. Charles La Veque of SUN. East Blvd., Pontiac. W. > ti ■ W She said she wished to see rhore emphasis placed on training of the poor enfiwwre enforcement against possible dieating. v h 'tit ' it l) Mrs. La Veque said a program is bring prepared wind! wifi be used to direct discussion along tyedfic fines at the meeting. Her group is invttlitg all interested parties to attend the meeting. it it it It is hoped to be able to formulate a positive program which will be approved by toe group and forwarded to Lansing, she said. Amateur Radio Unit Will Meet tomorrow The Oakland County Amateur Radio Society will meet at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at Riverside Elementary School, 5280 Farm) at the rear of Waterford Township High School. The Bell System science series movie, “Thread of life,’’ will be shown. $'• it . it . All amateur radio operators, novices, technicians and anyone else interested is invited to attend. The ADC program is administered at the county building at the county center, Telegraph and Pontiac Lake Road. However, payment levels are determined by state and national agencies. EMERGENCY AQ> The county administers only emergency aid through the Social Services Board, a three-member body appointed by the board of supervisors. . * ” MKpSjS' aw EWE,. Pa- (AP) -r- Hubert Hi ‘‘the people-and not. the poll-Humphrey said today -that as sters nor anybody else” w®l ™L» T52 *“* a Pr«ident. SpS me letti^fed up ™th ™IIU> VISIT ■ • *. ,■ the tactks of his two rivals. Humphrey’s remarks were Opening a three-city swing prepared for delivery at a down-through Pennsylvania’s Indus- tpwn rally before he heads east jltS HERE! Most spectac r CbAT EVENT OFfTHESE^OI you trust?’ Muskie Campaigning Close to the Campus WASHINGTON (AP) - Democratic vipe presidential candidate EJdmund S. Muskie apparently plans to keep his campaign as close as he can to the college campus in the next few dnys,\a tactic that has. worked well recently. The Maine warmly received on campuses during a western swing last week, had appearances scheduled at Syracuse, N.Y. University today following a brief speech in Washington. ★ * ★ Muskie then heads on a nine-day tour of eastern states^ and aides indicate he will appear at as many colleges an possible. The tall, lean senator seems to appeal to the Idealism of the young people, particularly those who hyH Sol?, Eugene J. McCarthy’s bid for the Democratic presidential nomination. MR. CLEAN In Colorado and California last week he saw signs reading “Welcome, Mr. Clean,” a phrase used to described. McCarthy, a close friend of Muskie. Another sign fliat popped up on the Western trip read, “Today’s Abe Lincoln—Muskie.” Sr it Muskie made a traditional po- litical appearance on a Sunday television interview show, CBS* “Face the Nation.” He said that neither he nor his running mate, Hubert H. Humphrey, have been told that the price of a McCarthy endorsement is a pledge of a total EVIDENCE REQUIRED He said that his position now, like Humphrey’s, requires 'some evidence ... not a condition or a quid pro quo or reciprocity, but some indication’-that Hanoi is ready for sincere peace talks. At foe University of Colorado and foe University of Southern California last week, Muskie withstood hecklers od Vietnam and foe draft tar carefully detailing his stand and inviting opposing spokesman to “communicate” reasonably on foe quee- He drew long applause at each stop from several thousand ^ students for his fielding of questions. At California Western University Friday, Muskie won more applause when he tdd one student: “Hubert Humphrey made Gene McCarthy possible in Minnesota.” ASK BAG for a cash advance (foiling foe cmN you nod for fall fin-up projects, bach-fo-school expenses or the new fall fashions is a simple matter at your GAC office. You get prompt, personal attention ready cash to help you take advantage of fan sales... and convenient monthly payments to fit your budget Stop In or call. Get a hash advance from GAC to help you meet fall expenses... or for any good reason. loans up to sum KDEjGAG finance corporation ' J* or PONTIAC ■ . ------wotwAC1 f 3444 W. Highland Roed .vf- - •«><>"• M2-92O0 CAC FINMte^OSI^Ttra flf MCHBTBt 201 South Main Street o! ..... .Phone 651-4224 GAC FINANCt COSFOXATION 8260 Cooley Like Read,..!.Phon* EM 3-4I|l His reference was to n report that Nixon had assured securities traders he favors loss federal government regulation of their activities. Humphrey admitted that “The Democrats are running behind*’ but said “We are moving up fast.” similar On Sunday, while watching the' St. Louis Cardinals rout foe Detroit; Tigers in the fourth World Series game at chilly, rainy Tiger Stadium in Detroit, Humphrey gave a similar message to one of his key labor supporters, President Walter Workers union. ★ , w 'They, will get big pluralities in foe midwestem (farm) states where there aren’t many electoral votes,” he told Heufofr, adding “We hope to squeak by in the'big states likqi New York and Michigan by one or two percentage points.” He flew to Detroit fal foe game, then returned to Washington for the night before going to Pennsylvania. I I _______________ cratic National Commitfai rt*-leased two more polls it had IgjjjWpdi^eBi^ vice pr^fdtot ' forrt'n^fittts ahead in New York, the other putting him just two behind Nixon in Ohio. NIXON IS AHEAD But surveys by the New York Times and foe Washington Post continued to show Nixon well The Times and the Atlanta Constitution both endorsed Humphrey for president. * w ★ The Democratic nominee is concentrating exclusively on the big states this week. He has appearances scheduled in Utica, N.Y., Tuesday and in foe New York City area Wednesday,. Thursday and Saturday, with trips to Boston Wednesday and Cincinnati Friday. planning! Penney* coat scoop - the incredible result of careful, painstaking work with our top resource*all to bring you the most wanted styles at truly—_. ----- impressive values. Everything about them, the very finestl Expensive fabric blends and luxury suedes shaped via perfectionist tailoring into your favorite casual and dressy looks. The detailing — button trims, pocket and collar trims — precisely placed‘and just sol Opulent fur trims chosen as carefully as they’d be for a fur coatl Could you ever believe you’d find coats like these at prices like these? If you know Penneys, you know you can! LIKE IT...CHARGE ITI SELF TRIMS FOR JUNIORS, PETITES, MISSES FUR TRIMS FOR MISSES 50.88 BUY! SELL! TRADE! ... USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! WKC OPEN TORITE ’til 9 n.m AVE at WKC--* GAS RANGES SAVE *12 On 30" Gas Range • Regular *129 Seller • Ease of operation with freedom from care are built into Brown Ranges • Good Housekeeping Seal • This Model has the standard broiler----------- * Regular *279 -r SAVE *21 now This two-oven style gas range has the luxury look of the built-in plus all these deluxe featuresi • Timer Clock • Fiberglass Insulation • Oven Light in Both Ovens • Porcelain Broiler • Porcelain Burner Box • Low BTU Flash Tube Ignition • Polished Burner Caps • Spill-Free Top and Many More • Latest Cdk>rs, including 'Harvest Gold/ * Not exactlyas shown. PARK HOSTS? 1 Hr. in Downtown fT^St^SW^SSS^ 1 108 N. Saginaw — FE .3-7LA4»£ PARKING MALI - Hav* ticket B Daily Hours: 9:30 a.m. stamped at cashier's office to 5:30 p.m. , NO MONEY DOWN AT WKC NO MONEY DOWN Here's "Cooking-on-the-Double" FINESSE Twin-Oven Range 1 Voice of the People: THE PONTIAC PRESS 1 1Replies toRecmt Letter I'on'Pteii tiipfrbo i... To ex-commissioner John Dugan: In March of K this year Mr. Havilsen^aid oe kad becn aiAhorized 1 ]w the City Planning Department to make an ef-1 fort to kelp rfcbiuld downtown Pontiac, He devel- - oped th« most magnificent plan I have ever seen, by mid-June; It was presented to the public in July He is convinced the photic inuat ham ample to viaw theulaa SO it continues to be presented through AugurtrSeptemher ami Octo-ber. to eneouragecitizen participation. .2’ * ' ' • ' Actually, he muatbeat least IS months ahead of any normal schedule. It took Mr. Taubman two years juit to come up with a plan that ip^ ceptable to the dtlsens of Pontiac and unacceptable fp to Sears. Enough sour grape*,Mr« Dugan, there is work to be done by aU of us mho insist flu seeing Pontiac rebuilt. BERNICE B. HUMPHRIES ifLfc 711MENOMINEE ; Mr. Dugan, the statement you to pe-Pontte Press . Is ridiculous. You would have had us mold a It million as- — rijar^tog fotthatwould taketheCRytey^topay fryfr yog had many years to produce and you failed. j£ MRS. T. E. FREEMAN Area Has Been, Well Served by GMC Truck & Coach and Coach Division carried on with j/igor'and''^ality. This pntire area can be overjoyed at the tremendous announcement carried iii Tuesday’s Pontiac Press. That gigantic institution on South Boulevard is forging ahead as never before and is contributing epicmaking advances in truck and coach circles. 1 kkrM, pEftfirJ Today the Track and Coach Division, is One of the great in* dustrial plants in America in its own tight. Very few manufacturing units across the Nation are f* big, as lusty and as strong. And the future is rosy. : ^ As modem commercial activities across the Country grow,5 the need for trucks is more add more apparent. They make possible the building and delivery of things thatihdividual , i home owners need in great pror; David Ujwrence Says: fusion. ---- The passenger cars will inevitably convey the greatest thrill to the average citizen who can own them, but the GMC Truck and Coach Division is one of the great industrial organizations in the United States— or the world in general. «Have Demonstrators Served Ow Country?’ Disadvantages Of B^ing A Lqme Duck! Having just mid the letter written by Neil’s pdoud mother I wonder if these demoUstrators hive served their tithe ta the Armdd Forces that protect our Country and make it possible to “ys togo to coUegeTor if they are at Oakland University to nvoid serving. ^ Along with many other mothers, I have n sen h» Vietnam for his seated time because he hat; enough pride in Ms country and cares enough about his family to want to protect it. He believe* Ms country is right and has the courage to prove it It disgusts me to think h* has to read to hi* own home town papers about the demonstrations. MRS. JAMES SNYDER 80 PUTNAM ‘Han Mankind Forgotten the Fear of God?’ We have been preaching Jove of God, love of neighbor, love of all mankind, and the world seems to get worse. Dare we deny the fear to God which is equally as strong s* His love? Let uafask God to deliver us from our malignant enemy which is usually ourselves. . ; '. l.a. a. Few of us actually buy trucks, but in this area we bow before them. We are conscious of the. very, important part the truck plays in our personal lives, as countless commodities are delivered directly or in-directly by the almighty truck. It carries the substance or the finished products of almost everything we encounter. LeMay(^pf^^N-jgpread Pact Without hesitation I say today that very few American industries anywhere have tile possibilities ahead for growth, expansion and solidarity that confront the GMC Truck and Coach Division. I stand bareheaded* bowing lew and leading widespread applause. And happily, the big plant is in strong hands. Top management and supervisory personnel are strictly upper, echelon. Martin J. Caserio is one of the most astute administrators in the automotive field or any other activity. The future looks exceedingly bright for tills great institution—and for you—and you—and you— who live -here and profit accordingly. proliferation treaty, and indicates a belief that strong alliances with “basic military superiority’ are necessary to prevent tntMcar war. REAL KEY The real h(y td tote nuclear WASHINGTON - Entry of retired Gen. Gurfis E. LeMay into the political field as a running mate ____ of Wallace ■ could1 unwit-ttogly help to bring about in flH For the past half century, tills wonderful institution on South Boulevard has been the balance wheel of industrial activities in the Pontiac area. The great stal-wart is always in action. Ovrir the decades that precede the current era, the Truck plant was a staunch employer of labor that kept going well when other affairs eased off or even retreated sharply. In those critical times the GMC Tpuck throughout the 'world,: including the peoplesbehind the Iron Curtain! ’ " Eventually the truth will penetrate, and if the provisions for . “gen e t a 1 Question and Answer I’m having stone proMems with my local, AFLCIO 1348. Local 188 nt *4% W. Hnron had asver heard of it, sad I’m aot getting anywhere with the people ia my union. Can you teU me what I should do? MRS. MAXINE LEWIS 1243 STANLEY 1?$ no wondetyou’re confused; Wi hod to check six different union offices before we found anyone who knew about your local. However, you can tyke your problems to your staff representative Harvey Clark at Metropolitan Council 2$ in Detroit, 961-4833. Question and Answer 4 *: The. pact is awaitingr&tt fication by the UiJ. Senate. Undfr its provision; the United States, along with Russia and other nuclear powers, would agree not to supply weapons to other states, and the nonnuclear countries Would agree not to accept or develop them. Bob Coftsidine Says: Each Candidate Feels. Good About Something Nixon’s Commanding Lead... As the presidential campaign So-o-o-o-o, come election day, hirls along a sustained and chal- millions of Dewey supporters aging pace, front runner1 Richard complacently remained at home, dcon clings tenaciously to the rath- confident their man was a shoo- • commanding lead He. established in. These defections cost him iring the early stages. the White House. Harry Tru- The people are for him. man pounded down the home They like his style. stretch all-out and passed him W '★ ★ /-'•*'' before tiiey reached the wire. Vortliennore,' almost the en- ,*gSv ■ • tire Nation look. lonflogly Nothin*’. copyrighted peUtt- toward a change of some sort. caUjr- The monotony of Rcontinuation is one of Mr. Humphrey1* biggest .handicaps. .The .citizens across the land.wantnew faces and ideas in those vital Federal NEW YORK—For aU their oneted troope around the White feverish air, the candidates House, Each candidate to pleased with bis chosen man. Agnew proposes repressive measures to guarantee “law and order” that Nixon, operating on the Mghest political plateau of Ms life, would not deign to mention. LeMay speaks candidly -of using the A-bomb, if necessary, to knock offthe opposition in Vietnam. MusUe, the best man of the lot, rtotok, says to a.dox-en words what toe rice president tries to say to a thousand: that the people in the end am be counted upon to vote into toe White House the man they feel they can trust implicitly with that terrible Gen. LeMay is an outspoken 1 n d ivi d u a 1 who has participated in many a controversy,. It so happens that he wrote an article for the Saturday Evening Post wMch was published a few days ago but was - prepared before Wallace announced tost he had picked LetMay as a rice-presidential candidate. to that article the general raises some interesting ques-!„ B ... . tfods about nuclear Airfare, Further, in this particular in- comes out against the non-stance, there’s another challenging circumstance. This man Wallace cannot be regarded lightly by either camp. His inroad on the voters of both parties is many times what it was calculated to be at the outset. Wallace could siphon- Off enough votes from each to prevent Nixon from reaching a mathematical Supremacy which means more than 50% of the total. Then the decision is thrown into the House of Representatives. Dick Nixon ■ hasevery reason to be-:^H lieve that he H| will be toeH next president H| to the United ■ States and^M that, for n change, rno last mtoute catastrophe is CONSTOINE In sight. He is so far ahead he no longer has to say any- REPLY 1 While there’s no ordinance against it,, the BXJ0A. safety code deals with hazardous conditions, under which the City building code operateS, aw includes barbed wire fences in that category. Aside from this,, it is also strongly discouraged because laws of trespass do not apply to children, and serious legal complications can result from possible injury to children who may climb the fence. trap theyll be cut off the air. You never —-just never ^ hear this from a skilled TV^rb..........: Fred Astaire will re-c e i v e an' honorary knighthood from England’s Queen Elizabeth, making him the second American so honored. Doug Fairbanks Jr., was the first. Hubert Humphrey is glad he said that, if elected. He’d trice a chance on stopping the bombing of North Vietnam. He didn’t clear that one (or any other complete speech) with President Johnson. George Wallace is, happy tolto toe polls which, here and there, show Mm nmntog ahead of his Democratic adversary. SITTING PRETTY,, Nixon is sitting so pretty he doesn’t even fear an election fraud, which probably was one of the things that defeated Mm in 1960. He has more money to spOnd than Humphrey, Wallace and Uie Vegetarian candidate' .:^Nn* bined. And then some, .However, a* time passes, * disturbing thought has origi-nated fir the backs of the minds of many ardent Nixon supporter*. Reports that are too glowing and too filled with confidence cnti actually be dangerous. We have'proof of this. Witness Mr. THOMA* Dewey. Running *gainst HARRY Truman , he was so far “out hr front” that his supporters slackened their pace and began resting easily on their oars. "He’s in.” You heard this on every ride and it seemed to be true. Almost everyone believed it, except Harry Truman who never relaxed for a Reviewing^ Other Editorial Pages Salazar clung to Portugal’s portions of Africa, of Asia and what was left of its insular “Strange stories of the death of kings” that loom so large to history. For this modest, retiring man, reserved in his public life, ascetic to private, embodied toe strange destiny of his people., It was Portugal's fate, to the springtime of imperialism, to send out Its caravels-into worlds newr to Europe and to contest with Sp*in the rule of half the wiirld. Nixon and NATO Stuftgarter, ZeUmg Nixon’s speeches to New' Orleans and in North Carolina could have been made by a German politician concerned about the Federal Republic’s security. Hence, the pressure remains on the Nixon camp to keep the ball rolling and to keep voters anxious to visit the polls. >This promises to be a ding-dong election with the fur flying in all directions and that old Devil can HterdUy take the Undermost. When the $90 million Queen Elizabeth II crosses the ocean on a shakedown voyage early in December, 500 Cun- For toe first time it has been admitted in the United States that Washington is largely responsible for toe choices. Nixon reacted for ard employes fection, be able to resist the germs of change now borne by every wind? .....A A,..*.,. | ' Poor, as most to Europe now reckons poverty; proud, with a millennial heritage of trtBtor y; ~iyHffiatteall? deprived to those political springs that enable % nation to shape its own course, Portgual after Salazar pre- families will be aboard as, “test passengers.” The new Queen requires 300 less crewmen than the original. ....... • • . Overheard: “If It had to give up wine or women, I’d study the vintage.” .......V Current Comedy says we have a balanced economy these days: “Crime is up and convictions are down.” . . . . . . . . Dept, of Cheers and Jeers: the C’s Philip Barnum, our Own heart transfer 'Patient; the J’s—-those 8 to 5 odds on the Criminals. —Harold A. Fitzgerald enough of the South to hand, hav*^f “X, Humphrey lassoed Muskie tor .** present Juncture a his literate liberalism; ethnic lead"8 .American politician appeal amf winning image. ««?*•#?» to * Wallace got LeMay beckuse revitalization of NATO over the genera) can talk as tough *U other U.S. policy- aims? about cleaning up things In * * *, VietnartTas mTOce cim talk Who wooid have betteved a about solving things in Wash- month ago that, led by Nixon, ington by throwing 30,000 bay- the Republican senator s -———--------------------1---- would oppose an early _ ratification of the non-pTO- Vorhal OrrhiHc liferation treaty? Much ton Yeroai yrcnias happen the *i«cuom Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hoskins But it cannot be denied that of 15 Park; ' NATO still has a chance. 56th wedding anniversary. - stranger fortune of a depleted state to carry into the harsher light of our times the glittering fragments of empire —' for Premier Salazar to defend the heritage of Prince Henry theJiavigstor. .. J___ An atypical authoritarian, Salazar can look back on a reign of some 40 years, to a day when the sMfU of power have telescoped history. He found a tumultuous Portugal, and kept it stable, if subdued. Civil war racked Ms Iberian neighbor; raster war* engulfed all toe rest of Eittppe, all the earth,, the skte* above and toe seas below, and Portugal remained at ptope, in fact If not -eitogefltor in name. / And tohqn the roar of massed artillery died away toto the rattle of small arms, and the empires crumbled, And in Conclusion. m the well-thumbed Scoutstdl vour nprinatetic re- me Glenda Tur- According to the Engineering Manpower Commission, there Will be i need for 740,000 engineers and tychtrieiana by 1975 and present projections " only^ forecast .440,000. Young man, think this over.......... ' i, .Federal Judge Hilton Pollack gays hi notices when the long-|^red and bearded males appear in pcpT for sentencing, they’re com- Siv cleaned up...-------------West ^insiders believe Wayne Morse «ril have a rough time in the Oregon slitoto* If he doesn’t mend some of hto sagging Dem fences. Overheard: “Life’, Golden ^ Age is when the children glenda are too old to need baby sitters and aren’t ready to borrow the car.”_____...... Amateur and informal W speakers who stop and say “uh, uh” every ten words should be told in advance that if they fall into this ancient /End of Empu$? International Herald Tribune The omens that totoftot about the sickbed of Antonio de Oliveira Saiazar ere more portentous this most of the of Winter Rark, Fla. formerly of PoRtiac; 101st birthday^ PONTIAC/PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER k 1968 Wallace Raps Poll, Says He Will Win dence LeMay’s stand on nuclear, weapons will be accepted by voters when they fully under, stand it. LeMay has said this country should make every effort to avoid* war, but once involved in hostilities' should not -rule out use of nuclear weapons. He has said be does not believe they are needed in Vietnam. Washington was the first stop on a coast to coast campaign tour for Wallace this wee^ Baltimore tonight; Boston Tuesday; Scrahton, Pa., and Albany, N.Y., Wednesday; Evansville, 2nd., Peoria, fll,, and Duluth, Minn., Thursday; ;Kargo, N.D., Cdsper, Wyo, - and Denver Friday, and Smt Lafce City, Boise, Idaho, and Beattie Saturday. recliner padded com f off Reg. 129.99 i is deeply l for extra ■is vi VM viuju fbe announcement came last Thursday at a time when Wal-SEOUL (AP) — An American lace was receiving widespread spldier was killed and two oth- national attention on his earners wounded in a clash with paign swing through the Mid-North Korean infiltrators thing vest. f * the demilitarized zone, the U«S. The news corps accompany-Army announced today. big . the candidate had suddenly, The three men were part of a tripled in size before & an-patrol from file 2nd U.S. Infan- noUhcement and he had to chafr* try Division that was attacked to additional propjet atr-Saturday by an unknown num- liners to accommodate them, her of lnfiltrators, the announce- ‘CHOICE PRAISED’ ment said. Aides say letters froin- sup- 3 ^ ★ ★ : * porters, many enclosing contri* Hie dead soldier was identl- butions/and praising Ms choice fled as Spec. 4 Stephen A. Nas- of LeMay,, havpf increased to sdni of Brewster, N.Y. about 15,000 daily- at this Mtat- In a separate announcement, gomery, Ala., headquarters. mUitafy spokesmen released . *• Aw the names of two U.S. soldiers The announcement of a run-kUled: by North Korean infiltra- ningmate added a new natfodal tora in an ambush Sept 27. s tone and legitimacy to Wal-They were Pfc. Michael B. lace’s campaign, his managers Reynolds of Cranberry Lake, say, and LeMay has brought N.Y., and Spec, 4 Joseph E. withtaim a new Issue—oucleer Caper Jr. of Danbury, Cdnn. weapons—to help dispel any be- The men werelin a vehicle lief Wallace’s only concern la that was ambushed south of tbtilaw and order. DMZ, the announcement said.. j. The advisers expressed confl- LeMay portrait t Is Removed by His Migh School COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -!■ South High School removed a portrait of retired Air Force; Gen. Curtis Jp^LeMay soon aft-1 er he was named to become George C. Wallace’s running mate, tee principal said.. | The portrait had hung for sev-f eral years at South High, Le- Beautifully designed and sturdily construc-m ted to take years of wear. Toast, P|4 olive, oxblood or black vinelle covered chair shifts to rocking, ■ sitting, reclTnihg. TV viewing with just an easy movement. , The principal of the predomK nantly Negro jtthool, Harold washbum, said the picture was removed at file request of sever*], al students. He said the students] did not want LeMay’s picture] banging M the school because he was running with a man who1 is “an avowed racist.’’ A snow scene Replaced LeMay’s portrait. Olive m mwM Buy the most exciting SINGER* sewing machine ever—the newest Golden Touch & Sew* machine-in attractive contemporary cabinet. • New Built-in Buttonholer makes perfect buttonholes easily. J • Exclusive Push-Button Bobbin. Sj f • tlectrbnically adjusts sawing spesd to fabric thickness. * A. Regular 129.88 wing-back recliner 3-way Country English redinar has button-tufted wing back, black vinelle cover wipes clean. B. Regularly 69.88 rocker or recliner Your choice of 3-position recline r or swivel rocker. Covered in black, olive or beige vinelle. 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As is always Insurance,” .sate the shrapnel- the Case in the Biafran war, tattered billboard on* the they had- fled from the ad-outskirts o! the City. vanning Nigerian troops, con- “Do you know anyone who vinced that they would be wants1 to buy inruaoce?” in- slaughtered, quired Col. Joseph Achuzia, Now the city contained only \ commander -of Biafra’s 15th the dead and, the wounded, Division. ‘Tthink maybe it is which ‘ neither side had been too late.” >■ able to evacuate during the Ahead Sunday lay the early fighting and subsequent deserted streets of Okigwi and shelling, just beyond that a knob-shaped Among toe dead reportedly green hill from which toe were four Red Cross workers Nigerian army had been lobbing who had elected to remain mortar and artillery shells behind in the city. Sunday morning. “They were urged to get “The shelling was so heavy away, but they insisted on the earth trembled under our staying and were shot down,” feet,” the colonel said in toe said ‘Achuzia. “The first precise English accent he ac- Nigerian troops entering a city quired white serving with the always kill every white man British army in Korea. they find, thinking they are Okigwi, a city Of 5,000 people, mercenaries. Usually it is a day had fallen to toe Nigerians a or more before responsible of-week ago in a lightning thrust ficials get in to halt toe killing.” that put them less than 50 miles Dime were unconfirmed from toe provisional capital, reports, alluded to by Biafra’s Umuahia, Biafra’s last re-head'of state, Lt. Col. C. maining large city. Odumegwu Ojukwu, ina news Now toe secessionist troops conference Saturday, that the were- attempting to retake Red Cross workers had been Okiwgi and stem the march on shot by drunken Nigerian the acpital, but the steady soldiers. .; '*& bombardment from the 800-foot- Word of their tete bad spread high hill prevented the troops to the people of Okigwi waiting from getting any farther than patiently to reoccupy their the outskirts. homes in dingy lean-to set- At first light CoL Achuzia Oements in the bush just off the i planned an assault on the hill contested highway leading to commanding the city. Awaiting the city, beyond the hill was a division of “Why do you newspapermen Pictc Uj> Junk C*») FE 2-0200 SAVff Lost Battalion Survivors Gather at NY Reunion NEW YORK r- Fifty Tldddn, bow .iWt** # J years ago Sunday, David dining room of a Manhatt Tulchin crouched in a trench in hotel Sunday, «Xchangli toe Argonqe Forest in France, reminiscences with 25 oth ducking German bullets and survivors of the World War Mailing Dates German lines, but whose members stood their ground for five days and five nights against overwhelming odds. Out of 554 men from the First Battalion, 908th Infantry, 77th Division of the American Expeditionary Forces who began the battle, only 198 survived. Each year, the steadily dwindling number of survivors WASHINGTON (UPD -The Defense Department says Christinas packages going by ship lb Vietnam should l* §«teited before Nov. 9 and airmail packages before Dec. 11. The Poet Office Department expects to deliver about one million pounds of mail a day to U.S. troops in Vietnam | and other Pacific points during the preboliday season. Postmaster General W. Marvin Watson said he was sending a, four-man team to oversee opera-toms to ensure “toe speediest delivery in his- » “We advanced until we found Germans, although actually it wasn’t Until -the morning after the seige began that we knew we-were surrounded. You expected that by lunch time the problem would be solved.” Tliese Items SUced 'Freei SHOPPING CENTER TEliSuMBO., OWNER SUtgHTK ifi RD-OPEN DULY It TO 1 • PHONE-602-2330 tifa Accept Food Coupons NO MONEY DOWN NO PAYMENTS ’TIL 1969 NO MONEY DOWN NO PAYMENTS TIL 1969 em&NlY/Nm MtKsmppm NO MONEY DOWN NO PAYMENTS TIL 1969 __THE-PQNTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1968 cAlou/ ,5s <3Ttmfeto ^ent tanol BE SURE YOUR CHILD HAS THE ADVANTAGES OF PIANO Children can't Judge what music will mean to them In adult life. Only VOO can see that they don't miss out. The first step IS to come to Grinnell's and ‘ «*l*et your piano Here's what you'll 'GOP Plots to Keep ;§£g Negrfi Votect Home' Yes, Just $8 par month using our >Renta!f Purchase Plan, and every dollar 'Will Sppty if you buy! Lessons, are available. Big,;selection of famous piano names, styles and finishes. inta*thatined-Tout ofe very fonts Into tfae Made community He likes to paint oat tbat, dur-te keep people home ” fay cm* tag fab tenure, Communist coup-tending there is no difference tries did dot succeed id altering between tm candidates, Robitt-a single boundary or ingulfing son told reporters as be flaw any new territory. As be stated here with Humptatey to attend the ease at one recent private the World Berios. meeting: Robinson, who said his infer-, “The Communists have not mation came from “a very re- made a gain—and they’ve got Uable source” who attended the iota of trouble.” SSO&SfcSf'S MEiTAlW VICTORY volt-wracked Dominican Re-public-another controversial move.-In Ida own words, and expressed repeatedly to small groups: ‘‘My Judgment is that when history b written, you’ll see that we prevented another Cube.” In Johnson’s view, a Communist triumph in the Dominican Republic would have infected touch of Latin America and led to the emergence of Castro-like (3|ock Repair Antique Clock *»•: Specialists ■ p|T , 3 ::T"Sales & Smklf fig The TIME SHOP 646.7377 Three versatile styles you use throughout your heine eee priced for ixitting savings ■ *Hr Yd* ■ Fine indoor-outdoor carpeting "Alfreico*' tweed lr» rugged Herculoft®olefin pile with Duragen waffle-rubber backing- No extra podding ne-cessory. Blua-grabn. orange, gold, avocodo and green. 19 feat width only. Install It yourMlf.lpUt* with scissor*. at 7.95 >~£ New tweed-solief loop broadloom Continuous-filament nylon ptle In a new oil-loop design of subtle tweed and solid combination. In rich shades of red, peacock, lima and bluastona for formal decoration*. Indoor-outdoor Acrllan® tweeds Acrllan®acrylic broadloom pItel Use It everywhere. ovon ^ outdoors. Polypropylene backing ntot affected by water. Red, blue-green. forest, goi«k blue heal|gjf;fweid«. ■NT ; ■ owyjntnm f|S sdoys Noon to 6 DRAYTON PLAINS ULU: 332-0271 BUY! SELL! TRADE! ... USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT AP$r GRINNELL'S, Pontiac Mall, 682.0422 Open Ivory Evening 'HI 9 Use Your Charge, 4-Poy Plan (90 days same as cash) or Budget Terms ,27 S. Saginaw, Downtown Open Man. and Fri. 'til 9, PC 3-7168 Uitis ^ probably the best offer you've had: today: Here it is: When you make a Long Distance call, dial it direct instead of having an operator place It Person-to-Person, The difference? Well, say you're calling between Detroit and Grand Rapids. Three minutes. Person-to-Person day rate costs $1.00. Dial it yourself, and those three miputes cost only 60£ So you wind up saving 40A That's a healthy 40 per cent saving. And at nighttime you save even more. It's pretty easy money. All you do is: 1. Dial 1. 2. Dial the Area Code—if it's different from your own. 3. Dial the number you want. th« And if you reach the wrong number, it's on us. Just call the operator. She’ll see that you're nbt charged for it. So for smaller bills agd faster calls, dial them direct. THE PONTIAC* MONDAY, OCTOBEH 7,-1968 U~M Scientist to Trace Substances in Animals' Bodies . DEARBORN ■ — How ■ are | The system determines the' adMUntcea used after they enter age and rate of usage of various the body of atf animal? latistp«« ^t6 the help^ of This Is just we of toe 75pi. P Thigh Highi, Sheqr Agilon* Stretch Nylon. L60?k P Knee Highs, Sheer Agilonl Stretch Nylon.. 1.05 pr. ST7.ES: Please give regular hosiery sizes when ordering sheer stockings. When ordering Panty Hose by phone or mail,\ please give your height to assure proper fitting. HUDSON EASTLAND CENTER j' { { WESTLAND CENTER 8 Mil* ROMs- ‘ J. . Warran and VMagneRoada . JTels^ . i till 6:30 p m. Hudson's Northland, Eastland, Westland, Pontiac, Oakland; Mon., Thura., Pri.. Sat. Pontiac mall yand Elizabeth Lake Road LONDON FOG POLYESTER FOR HER, FOR BETTER, FOR WORSE 'C''* polyester-eottonClaeth Cteth; The better or worse pail: that's one of the best things about these jaf 4^| London Fogs, for they're handsome on the outside and 2fjHined ~Tn Britilj (sleeves and all) in snug, wafm Acrilan* acrylic pile, so*you can wear rnstchA them when the weather's rotten or wonderful, wear them when Andwi the occasion calls for dress-up or devil-may-care.*His is the Andes: ihQH (model ii • j U * 1 1 ' ► iw* t f* OUR PONTIAC MALL STORE IS OPEN TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY TO 5.30, MONDAY, THURSOAY, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY TO 9 pin. TELEGRAHPH AND ELIZABETH LAKE ROADS Firm Direction Needed Here by a Retiree Monday; October % ms Noted Pianist to Perform The season’s opening concert of the is 8:30 p.m. Tickets will be available at Fwdac Symphony Orchestra will feature the door, pianist, Ruth Burczyk, acknowledged as one of the area’s most exciting keyboard artists. ~ Tr '■■■■- looking on: The notice “Please can at desk before visiting residents” is disregarded.—Mrs. Dora Si.. 2 Dear Mrs. S: Yon nave done almost all that you can foK-exceptfo be firmer. Make your questions definite request. “Would you pleas* wait for me in the lobby, I’ll be with you in about ten min* Jpia.”.... . - If your meal has, not arrived, you might accompany thi visitor to the lobby and aea that she is comfortable. NOTES Dear Mrs. Post: Dp you think a bride should bold off acknowledging her wedding presents until sbe receives a card with a wedding picture on It (the latest fad), which sometimes takes a few Stie will perform the familiar Liszt Piano Concerto No. t in E Flat Major. Mrs. Burczyk’a reputation as an artist, has been Vrideiy acciaimed throughout the music circles of the midwest. RESNICK Felix Resnick will again conduct the Symphony concerts this year to be held in Fontiae‘‘Northern High School. He is a graduate of Wayne State University with a Master’s degree in music, has studied violin and conducting at JulUard School of,lfusic, New York. This program will include the orchestral works ’’March Slav Op. 31,” by Tschaikow8ky; “Faint” Ballet Music by Charles Gounod and “Little Suite” by Harokf Laudenslager. Hundreds of times I have heard path pie say that they hate to write letters because they don’t know what to say. I have never found any trouble on this score because I always write immediately when I am filled with appreciation, sorrow or joy and all I do is express right from the heart exactly how I feel at the time. Therefore, when a bride gets a wed* Hie first of four Detroit Symphony ding present, it would be so mm* easier, Orchestra open rehearsals scheduled for if, la her enthusiastic and grateful mood, this season will be held in Ford ^w®uU ** and write a' short Auditorium on Wednesday at *p.m. **£ STpoint <* * * * of acknowledging * wedding present a Violinist Christian Ferras will join few months late because of waiting for conductor Sixten . Ehrling and the the wedding picture and just the word Orchestra for a working session on “Thanks’' on it is the lazy way and cer-music for this week’s Thursday and tainly not the proper way.—Mrs. Duffy Saturday evening programs. Except for foe addition of a Wedding Plans Told microphone near foe conductor and foe presence of an audience, Symphony open Mid-January vows are planned by rehearsals are conducted in the same Linda Joyce Felice and David Michael manner asregular rehearsals. Beaver. „ > General admission is $1.90. Proceed? Parents" Of the betrothed couple are go to the orchestra musicians’' sup- Mr. and Mrs. Prftik Felice of Fourth ptemental pension fond. . Avenue and David Braver of Royal Oak. RUTH BURCZYK Calendar Chairing the project is Mrs. truce C. Butzier (2nd from left) of Satterlee Road, with assistants, Mrs. Austint A. Sansone (left) of Quarton Road, Mrs. M. Reid toacGuidwm of Titthaii^fklce atid Mrs. Ralph R. Bowen of WaddinQtoii Rokdy all of Bloomfield Township. ■ Before the busy task of addressing envelopes to thcBrother Rice Math$rs* Club telephonebridge party begins, four members take tmi'&fammy mother nature’s tolorfut autumn dress. The affair, iohichfs slated Oct. 2$ at f p!W *6 h benefit project tg raise funds for school grounds. Drayton Plains extension study group, 10 «jn., home of Mrs. J. R. Dugas of Shawnee Lane. Alpha Beta chapter, Delta Kappa Gamma, 7:30 p.m., Oakland' Schools’ Building on Campus Drive. Mrs. Florence Willett, on “Value Patterns in Political Areas.” Parents Without Partners, Pon- Sho's Too Aggressive County Supervisors’ Auditorium. Afterglow follows this general meeting. freeze just; for thr vrkftfr because they hardly ever used^it. Last night they cam* ever and told us we could keep foe freezer because they had bought themselves a new one! 2 Abby, we really were mad. Can’t they understand that we don’t want them to rive us things lgfo fort? t feel like re-uirnhig the freezer. We didn’t want it as a fife, we only wanted to ust for the whiter. We can’t afford very much just yet, but we want to be 6n our own. What can we 46 with parents Uke that? ON OUR OWN : DEAR ON:: If you sincerely want to be fon your own,” don’t ask to borrow anything for foe day, the week, or for tadeaiik signed. "Love.” saving. miss youMuch.’’, (And this dumbbell:! sends twfom hls. home address yetf) My husband isn’t entirely innocent, either. He knows she is out of Tine,; but hesays, “What can I do? She’s an ex-cellent secretary and I need her.” r I have pome to foe end of my tape, Abby, What do I do now? HAj) IT DEAR HAD IT: PH tell you what not to ^ Dm tdl him if he doesn't fire hef yra'H'Jeave. There are more secretaries whe have become wives, than wives who've become secretaries. Steer .tdearofftfe office. Never mention her name, and forgot her. And-most important, don’t let hhn become the kind of husfand whose wife doem’t “understand” him. ffhen you think of carpet, think Of (Armstrong DEAR ABBY: We are newlyweds and ha|ve this problem with my folks: When We ifoM to lOM sometfoag of theirs we cannot yet afford, theyfletus use it wfrh-out hesitation, then they won’t take it back. For examptfc: WOULD YOU BELIEVE Made and Quarantaad by the Makars of tfie Famous Armstrong Linoleum! That You Can Buy Famous Armstrong Carpeting f°r SJI95. ... Carry A Complete Lina of Kitchen Carpeting! Charles Pollock's Work an View invDetroit Art exhibition of recent paintings of Charles Pollock is oft view at. the Gertrude Kaste Gafliery, Detroit, now through Oct. 31. . v Pollock received his training at the Otis Art Institute In Los Angeles and under Hiamas.Hart'Benfoh at the Art Students’ League in New York, Kg- ..1 - Pollock, a brother of the laty Jackson Pollock, was awarded a gyagt-from the RatRwflAris Council In 1M7 and was the recipient of a G u g g e n helm FeUwobjp, Hfa work^ itpriran^a In the Whitney Museum of American Art,, the Art Institute of Chicago and, other peitoanent collections. Y ' The gallery is open Mondap fordugb Saturday from 11 a.m. to $ p.m.. ,; 9’x9* LINOLEUM RUGS $ii5 mp-ra. Genuine CERAMIC Mr,,t and Mrs. J^^illidm Glueckert of Detroit announce the betrothal of their daughter, Elizabeth' fherese, to Frederick H. HerveqkHeis the son of Mrs. EdutifS Herveat of North Johnson Street, and the late Mr. Her-veat. Miss Glueckert is a graduate qfMdrygfove College. Her fiance is presently enrolled in the school of business administration, University of faetroit. NO MONEY DOWN 36 MONTHS TO PAY From SYLVIA WAYNE OPENING SPECIAL OZITE CARPET (Foam Rubber Cushion Back) Colors $489 DO-IT-Stock Tip g^7g, yoursilf VefeipjeerTec^ Slated atPSH Keynote speaker at foe Prathte State Hospital Volunteer Teal Oct; 16 wiH be Wtf&TV news eporrapondent, Sylvia Wayne. ' The native Detroiter and graduate of . W'aynf^t* University will address foe groqp, assembled in honor of the nearly I^^Mtihfeera at foe hospital, on foe topic. *fWl|iy Bother? I HaveM* Own IWMftftis. ^ : Misk Wayne, a roemher of foe Detroit Press fimo and Theta Sigma Phi, national professional fraternity for women in rainmuhfoations, has' been associate with news ttim since 'TCiMfhMr fop program siatad fo-tiM i BhackiwWme hospital’s main building ty.'fed ^Av^Fanifrefoa, director of com- B" ^mtatibns.;.' r n tea follows registration at 12:30 MIKA COUNTER TOPPING 4'x8' Sheets Wood Pattoms and Whit* with Gold Flock. SOLID VINYL fit w Vinyl Asbestos 4 TILE I2”xi2” l(t/J let Quality — Marble Chip Dosign, Spatter and Gold 9"x9” r ea. _ — to Address Group lopte- riiaHHMBBHHP! «»«> HUDSON’S i 682 442 2255Elizabeth J^tQNTDOC UkeRd. iWSKKaHBBbaBHHHl PARKING OpeaMonday ptd Friday 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.; Tue.., Wed., Thurs., & Sot. 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. ■J PRESS* MONDAY, flCtOBRR 7, 1968 Textitoreswch cbewlzto haw ^b?*l^™!!£Hljffi *°* ApuMiB Ml hips illI ..j Wedding Chimes Note "YQUR HEALTH" SEVEN DANGER SIGNALS T. Recurring headaches 5. Nervous tetisiee and/ Neck twin or "crick" or dk»ne»*. 3. Grating and popping A General body muscle Watchers Carrying a bouquet of lily of Mw. l^ | Shelton 81 the valley with white cama- britfesmaida: tions, Joy Ann Cramer was On the esquire side wen escorted to the altar of Dixie Michael Bilajeu, beat man, Baptist Church Saturday eve- and ushers Jerry Roughton, ning where she spoke vowfc with Greg Quick and Patrick Harry Gene Edwards. Shelton. The wedding ensemble worn Forming a reception at the by the former Miss Cramer was Oakland C o u n t y Sportmpn’s fashioned from satin and lack Qub, the newlyweds departed with matching Watteau train, {or a northern Michigan honey-To complement her attire, she t^ttn wore a bouffant veil of elbow parents of toe bride are Mr. length secured with a sequined and Mrs. Robert W.Cramer of cluster of rosebuds. Loon Lake Shores. The Tuesday g Faihionette Hub of Pontiac, 7 p.m., Adah Shelly I: W if 1 m '.. |f| WEDNESDAY M • Waterford Fashion Your /FlgUrd^CWt&^T '$&> Schoolcraft School. THURSDAYS ‘^hu Cal Cutters of Keego Barker*. 7 p.p>„ irteity Methodist Church. . Waterford TOPS Club, 7 p.m , Waterford Town- Moore-Hannon Newlyweds, the Anthony C. Moores (nee Joyce Ann Hanon) departed tor abatwymoon trip to Niagara Falls following vows Saturday In Free Methodist Church, Oxford. For the evening ceremony, toe bride wore an A-line gown of silk organza with • Chantilly lace trimL To complement toe Empire gown fashioned with fingertip sleeves - and Empire .Waist, she chose a double crown of crystals and pearta with’a shoulder length illusion veil. White carnations, and roses > FRIDAY * SATURDAY • SUNDAY October It, 12 and IS All Sales Final! Cash or Lay-Away ... Will Call Club of Pontiac; 7:80 pM, Adah Shelly Library. Pontiac TOP& Gk,v 8 p.m., Bethany Baptist .Chunto^viss^'^fi; ’ MRS. A C. MOORE Are Your Shopping Habits MRS. H. Gi EDWARDS IHURON CLEANERS Im SHIRT LAUNDRY 944 Wtft Huron St, Board Takes Record Action up in some places from 90 cents to |lAg In, Ian tope than it took Junior tqoutgrowbi# snowsult; HEATHSVILLE, Va. W) -In one of the fastost actions on -record, t h e Northumberland 1 County Board of Supervisors' Important News PERRY’S ANNUAL COSMETIC SHOW r^jSMl ^.★ Wednesday, October 9th ^iDeiponstratiom On Beauty Care By Leading Coemetic Manufacturers * Actually, you can look in Just about any direction. Some of toe price increases thgt have inched up onus range from the quart of buttermilk that has gone up, in some retail stores, from II cents to 25 cents, to ‘ toe corrugated container that’s three to five par cent more expensive at the source. No matter where the price rise starts, you can count on getting your share of it wooer or later. mid services. Maybe some of the newer, less familiar brands in toe market that offer more attractive prices are worth a Nobody belifves It’s true economy to sacrifice quality. If you’re not getting your money’s worth, you’re on the losing end. However, when the cost of living gets stiffcr end stiffer, the thoughtful consumer should re- Jeanne Duran, Women’s Editor of Redid Station WJR Will Be The Hostess For The Evening < ' Items that may be affecting the health of your own Individ-, ual budget are being noted by consumers from all over. For example, they report: jQpy cleaning is up in some places five costs; car insurance in general, up two per cent; drive-in movies have gone WOODWARD AVENUE % Mile North of Quartern (16 Mile) Get Your Frqo Ticket At Any Perry * Pharmacy Or At The Door Low pockets in high style is the ; keynote, to this pin stripe shirtwaist dress, from potion of America. It is very much with-it. told at the Social Security office that I can’t get the Special Age 72 payment unices I worked ■ t tita a »i« * » *••• m ULIJinumi UAJULfc Pontiac Mall WARNING ’ )f any of these symptoms persist CALL YOUR CHIROPRACTOR □ fulling BEWITCHING BITTY GLOW TREATMENT PERMANENT, BY RESTOR Tha wave with ths famous Restor conditioning treatment built in to "rostor" damaged, broken, split hair to normal, natural beauty. Whether you prefer cuds or gentle waves you’ll discover a new naturalness coupled with an eaiy-te-manago eofffuia.^ RECTOR’S m BUTT GLOW PERM W W Birthj j Rateffl^Rdor' | BETHESDA, Md. (WMNS) J American women are not suo-1 cessful in having toe number of n children they mtt when they hem.” Tmi sad .news' from the National i Institute of Chill Health and Human Development which i sponsored .re*a*rch by sociologists of toa llniv^rsity of Wisconsin an&FnMgton. m | [’■ In a sampie of 4A19 j married omen under to, living with their husbands,^ tbWfeported this doesn't a yet have a child they did not who may rationalize a child (bey now have. HOPEFUL One Atony .note: Despite tha remits of the survey, made in 1965 and recently tabulated, one ntthc sociologists believes that these statistics will trhangf' because the women interviewed previously “were not fully knowleageable about oral contraceptives which had only become available In 1960.” M a New Viewpoint about CONTACT LENSES Wearing contact lenses is a secret only you and your doctor need know. Ask about the many advantages of contact lenses. It is possible that you may onjoy a new freedom from glasses. A becoming, natural appearance and the other advantages that minutely* sized contact lenses can give. If yeti think you would like to wear contact lenses^ your inquiries are invited. KNa4frm®fi 109 N. SAGINAW ST, E. STEINMAN, O.D. Daily 9:30 A.J^ to 5:30 PM. Friday 9.30 A.M. ta «t30 P.M. FE 2-2895 DIVIDED PAYMENTS AVAILABLE Don't overlook the importance of accessories, warns the American Institute of Men's and Boys* Wear, for the carefully selected belts, pocket squares and jewelry are the finishing touches to the totally well dressed man. Upper left, a pale blue paisley silk square; lower left, a square in p navy and green spaced print; upper right, a red. navy and gold mini-print, and a bright yellow floral prm$xtewer right. Belts for all occasion^ are shoum: a dark olive with border stitching and a large buckle, a black and brown reversible dress belt with a squared buckle, and'a burgundy webbed sport belt accented with a brass buckfe. jprrrnTrrrrrrrmrxrr www > i irrrrirrrrrrmTinc goes inside • Wicker for the fall decorating season-see our fine selection of wicker furniture and accessories* for the bedroom, den, family room, living room, recreation room; also featuring decorator classes ahd a complete line, of supplies. Register now for our next deqp-rator class. Beginners starting. Oct. 22 - Glass and repousse, Oct. 24 -V A '. at ■ i j- THIS PONTIAC P&gS& MQTOAY, OCTOBER % 1968 Need Guides for Art Center Nuptials Said on Saturday* bfK.J.Obertt If you've got rutty water, GET REDOUT*! Amazing RIDOUT Mlt nuggets wkh P«pM*t|r notttf of ton tasteondiron ■ •taint — in laundry, stake, tuba and ^ . & FOR YOUR * WEDDING^,. QUALITY sad QUANTITY! St. Benedict’s Catholic Church was the setting Saturday 'll* vows spbkep by Sandra. Lei; Schaeffer and Kenneth John Obert. Their parents are' iMfr' and Mrs. Richard L. Schaeffer and the Fredrick Oberts; both families ofPetham 'Street. various forms of art and tours of workshops in painting, ceramics, wane ltd, and If you don't, get Diamond Crystal Salt C. R. HASKILL STUDIO snppfc - * • feiosss The 0 a k 1 and C on n t y Volunteer Bureau is looking'fin volunteers to act as outturn enrichment tour guides who can bring alive for young visitors their tour of a renowned art center. An excellent course in art and bow to present it to OBERT Completing the wedding party were |frs: Steven Main, Mrs* William Jerddnson and Mrs, Marilyn Mbs with ushers -Vern Bolton, Jade Hoffarth and Don UJ.Males Switching to 'Rugged' Watches Of the 200,000 plus diver’s matches sold l§st year, of A reception in Bloomfield Centre Hall preceded the newlyweds’ departure for a honeymoon in Florid* and the southern States. ' ——J course, most' were sold to authentic skin divers—there are around three million in the U.S. —because of the watch’s deep The Modem Way frrrnmrirrrnrmr TrrrrnTrrrinnc HIGHER PAY Speedwriting ] Wort a lob theft iMwer dull—yet will add on •xtra $1000 and MORE d year to your Income? Lot Speedwriting abc Shorthand quickly qualify you for the glamorous secretarial position of your choice. Taught exclusively by i In this area, Speedwriting Is the modern shorthand that uses the familiar abe's. It's EASY, NATURAL Write, phone or visit us TODAY for details. fob" fall fashions burst v forth in dazzling, like-new vj. j brightness when care- ^ fully maintained with Fm Professional Dry- . cleaning, Glorious tweeds, popular knits, classictaftayfahd boxy I. Announcement I I , SHAMPOO & I * * HAIRSTYLE 21 194°° A No Appointment Necessary PHONE FE 5-9257 "Between Lawrence end Pike SC WANT TO SELL LAWN MOWSRS.POWER MOWERS, BOATS? Uffi A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD---TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 332-8181. . Andre’s Spectacular Specials! INSTANT HAIRDO! $0450 Our STRETCH Wig "J* 100% HUMAN HAIR One Size Fits ALL J"jTYLED Any Color HAND TIED 100% Homan Hair WIGLETS Style ^ AI.LSHVDESRrir. 849.UI) SUPREME PERMANENT IQ95 ;Coiii|.lrlr *39°° Wigs Vietnam Girl Comes to U.S. as Gl's Bride 'HARDIN, Mont. (UPI) - Her means snow, but she seen the white crystals until die came to the United States from war-torn South Vietnam. Mrs. Anh Tuyet (Ann Snow) Johnson, 20, was working in a Saigon dress shop when she met her husband, Danny Johnson, 21, formerly of Boulder, Colo. He was serving with the Army. The pair was married in 1967, in a civil ceremony in Saigon, after Jotaunawas discharged. The U.S.A. was a new’world for the young Vietnamese gfrl — a world of sewing machines, automatic wgshers supermarkets and speeding "its. But Tuyet wasn’t completely token in. She Wasn’t convinced toe automatic washers cleaned as well as her hand scrubbing, and she said the supermarkets didn’t have toe variety of fresh produce found in the Saigon markets. “She expected all the women to bo as beautiful as toe ones she saw in toe movies,’ Johnson said. “And s^e was surprised to see that'people were so big.’* ‘Asked about the war,'Mrs. Johnson said, “I have seen many people die. I have seen many bad things.” She said she remembered her father saying them had . been fighting in Vietnam since 1945 — three years before she was bom. Tuyet said she was concerned about the recent fighting Saigon because her parents were there. But toe has received a letter from her mother saying the family was well. The family home at Chau Dok, near toe Cambodian border, been destroyed. “It was a small house,” Mrs. Johnson said. “We were poor but we were happy and we loved each other." Geoffrey Beene likes glistering fashions for fall evenings . . . and this floor length dress gets its glow from Lur-ed* metallic yarn. Jeweled flowers emphasize see-through top for those who dare. Vinyl Cover-Up for Typewriters Homemaking executives love the new feminine, typewriter covers made of gaily printed vinyls in a dazzlement of colors. These are fun for students, tdo, and a great homework brightener. ★ ★ ★ They can he made at home, using vinyl-by-the-yard and a little cording, or prowl sta-j HP tionery departments for ready-1 had made styles. Just make it a habit to wipe such covers off occasionally with a sudsy sponge; fids will keep colors bright and the desk invitingly dean. - waterproof characteristics specially designed features for timing dives. 1 #s A’ ★ But it would be safe to say that many divers’ watches < sold to people who weren’t really sUn divers—that is, many of those who bought diver’s watches have never dived any deeper than to the bottom of a martini glass in search of an dive. Much of toe watto’s popularity out of the water can be attributed to its nlggedness and ighly masculine styling. ATHLETIC STYUNG The diver’s watch is built to withstand pressure at great water depths so it is naturally more durable on land, and its athletic styling is attractive to toe average American male. One of toe leaders In manufacturing skih diver’s watched if the Waltham Watch Company of Chicago* Waltham designed two styles of watches for toe skin diver market — both with the waterproof and timing characteristics needed for skin diving and both within the price range of the non-divers. * ★ * The company’s Diver Davis WB, which is guaranteed water-proof to five atmospheres (about 165 feet), is a handsomely styled watch with 17 jewel movement, calendar, luminous hands and dial and' rotating bezel for timing the diver’s air supply. Priced at only $50, the wateh is well within toe reach of real skin divers and “Walter Mltty’ skin divers. FOR DEEPER DIVES For deeper dives, guaranteed waterproof to 300 feet, and a selfwinding movement, Waltham has the Auto jDiver WS. The Auto Diver WS has large, luminous hour dots and. hands and a rotating bezel for the murky depths, plus a calendar and 17 jewel movement. It retails for $120. Both skin diver’s watches are nationally distributed. Duplicate Bridge ^— TUESDAYS YMCA Bridge Club, 7:30 pm., in YMCA. All bridge players may attend. Friendly Bridge Chib, 7:30 p.m., Donelson School. Lessons during game. FRIDAYS cate Bridge Club, 7:45 p.m., The Pontiac Mall. All beginners and intermediate players may attend. SATURDAYS Bonneville Duplicate Bridge dub, 8 p.m., Hie Pontiac Mail. All bridge players may attend. ALL PERMANENTS te NONE HIGHER Includes All Thlst 1— New Lpstre Shampoo 2— Flattering Hate Cat 3 -Lanolin Neutralising 4—Smart Style Setting^ NO APPOINTMENT* NECESSARY HQMiYWQon mm Open Mornings at 8 A.M. . 78 N. Saginaw Over Bariey Mkt. 338-7660 Only Spaadwriting Schools can offer these LIFETIME Alumni Privileges ^ FREE transfer anytime—FREE Nationwide Employment Sendee—FREE Brush-up Training Naw Class Begins Monday, Octobar 23 18 W. Lawrence St. FE 3-7028 Don’t Miss Our Annual FALL All workmanship 5 Yean 87® Orchard Lake e PE 4-0558, It's a WORLD SERIES GETSOMETHMG EXTRA Yes, now through the World Series you can save money on any GE Console Color TV and with each purchase, receive FREE a 12" GE Portable TV. FR|E with the pnhaso of any GE Csss eh Color IV. Offer only good through the Serieol cuaxsna applunce s furniture co. 7183 N. MAIN, CLARKSTON -OPEN DAILY 9:30 <284899 THE POfrTI£C PRESS. MOfty&AY, Speaker toShoY* Medical T^hmlpgisH Set A§endct #*'#* PPP ||| v \ Technobgiitfe h®**«fot it body,'* | 1j Guest■ speaker at the Wed- Crittenton. Hospital for fos , vV^ ..•'$£■ : J_ nesday meeting of foe fofofo Oct: Hmonthly meeting Whdi Jfengng.'* heayy Jg Association to the GbbMlfe Wednesday atr8.p.in. A meat Bp coat hanger dustries of Greater Detroit will 0r ^ is sometimes tta fl» evening's agenda will to- much for a stogie banger. WJfo S'SEft"? dude speakers, Hpr two coathangers together^ ^-lCfl!S?ta mt^BBvMa Wl*ww» wdDrGeorge Rose, cellophane rtape * «r ■ *■».»!» ta St5®® who wifiaddWbsthe group on strips of doth anty you toe folk- .<0Wxd{M_.Whit tN Tbey?,,have a roallyztropg hangef.j Engagement Rings Now Worn by Four Announcing the betrothal* *f their daughter, Mary Ann, to Pfc.* Dane Bertram, USMC, ore the William V . Bollards of Baybrook Drive. Pfc. Bertram, son of the Howard Bertrams of Is* land Park Drive, is currently stationed in Vietnam. Fall 1969 vows tore slated. Mr. and Mrs: Vertum Wilmot of i Loon Lake Shores announce the betrothal of their daughter, Jams Leah, to James E. Banks 111. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Banks Jr. of Mary Sue Street, Independence Township. Hie engagement of their daughter, Celia Kay, to Robert Stewart Simpson, is announced by the John H. Stresen-Reuters of Spruct Street,' Bloomfield Township. Vows are slated May 24. The prospective bridegroom is the son of the William C. Simpsons of Beverly HtUs. The bride elect is a student at Oakland Community College and her fiance has attended Cleary College. The betrothal is announced of Karen Louise Dengate and David M.jKittredge. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Richard Dengate of Hadley Road and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Kittredge of White Lake Road, both in Independence Toumship. i Sc-fooTtfej FINE QUALITY FABRICS Cause Mix-Up INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (AP) — A comedy of errors caused some excitement at St. Vincent's hospital here. don’t feel any hunger for food or erotic calories while anesthetized, do you? Well, many drugs font don’t produce 100 per cent unconsciousness may still depress your nervous system 10 per cent or more and thus allay your appetitie for victuals, as well as romancing. The many varieties of tranquilizers and sleeping pills, will fovioudy lessen high blood |ressure ami Insomnia. , But they can meanwhile reduce your stomach hunger and yotff sexual appetite, tool injuries states this, shocking “The relative oxygen deficiency from smoking force cigarettes is equal to thii of traveling at a 7,500 foot altitude . . . drivers should be advised to refrain from frequent smoking prior to and during periods of night driving or at high attL ANY COMBINATION SEWING NOTIONS pectant wife from downtown and getting no answer, called the hospital. He was told that Mrs. Hill had checked fo and had given birfo to a daughter. Mother, Daughter, Father, Son ft LOOK BETTER ft FEEL BETTER ft LIVE BETTER For smoking zooms the carbon monoxide content of foe Mood as much as SOS per cent, < thus provoking heart attacks, ! It also blunts our depth vision. Baseball Utters and basketbaQ-ers, take care! • Some people think alcohol stimulates, but it doeaTtt It merely reduces ode’s mentality temporarily to a lower age level where we are unaware of the seriousness of our actons. , Sometimes fids helps a new husband forget his mother-fixation so he can function ardbntiy, but this is the exception to toe CUSTOM DRAPERIES be a chain ML CRanb smoker. ■ “His chronic cotigh baa cleared qp to the past six weeks and be looks fine. “Bat he is platonic and won-dent if he will always be an impotent husband toe rest of Ms ENTER A NEW Our BASIC COURSES' to Vanish Inches and Founds V v I HAS YOUR *88^ PERMANENT gP® GROWN? VjTffl Are Those Little Stndghtends In Back Annoying Yon? WE CAN HELP YOU! Ask About Our Glorifying PROGRAM for SEPT. "Dr. Crane,” you confess, “when I quit cigarettes, I got foil” But alcohol likewise is a bask: depressant of the nervous system. $ven a few drinks will reduce your reaction tone by an average of about 10 per cent, thus explaining the high incidence of automobile casualties. It isn’t the drunken driver bid merely toe follow who had a couple of beers, who is the highway hazard in this high speed automotive age, Bat cigarettes will likewise predispose you to auto accidents! Our A.M.A. report on auto i Give Polo Shirts Second Life Boys’ long-sleeved polo shirts usually wear out first at toe elbow. To make them lode neat again and to double the length of their life, cut off toe knit BmtMENTS NO APPOINTMENT . NECESSARY Beauty • Eliminate* “Puffy” Condition! • Brifhten Complexion J • Firm SajtRing Muscles I O Reduce Double Chili • ■ above toe elbow. Finish by resewing the wristbands bade on toe shortened sleeves. OPEN DAYS WEEK IO a.m. — IO p,m. Monday thru Friday 10 a.m. — 6 p.m. Saturday 1 p.m.6 p.m. Sunday NYLONS TWICE-A-YEAR MODERN SAUNA BATHS... Where those 0xceu pound* visually melt LUXURIOUS SUNROOMS. ..Thorn solarium* provide concentrated sparkle. Gives you hours of sunshine in just a few minutes. FACILITIES FOR MEN" AND WOMEN CALL NOW or DROP By TODAY 0 OPEN 10 AM to ID PH Famous CAREER GIRL SEAMLESS, NYLONS for long, long wort WALKING SHEERS WITH REINFORCED TOES and HEELS.. . MIRACLE NO-BIND TORS. ALSO AVAILABLE,WITH SLENDERIZING SEAMS SMART GIRL Plain or micro dress sheer. nude heel and deml-toe. , OVER 250 Affiliated Studios Coast-to-Coast and WORLD-WIDE 3432 W£8t Hiircifi ,§t. Just West of Elizabeth Lk. Rd. at Highland GIFTS WRAPPED_,FREE.ALWAYS I OAKLAND COUNTY PHARMACEUTICAL ASSOCIATION Igputiey EALTHSPA 'vmss. motpay, October r, m* 81 Executives Give Aft flrnk to Business other, end willbe j|ncerned with local and regional questions. vs:■ “They will discuss how arts organizations can approach budnesA” said McLellan, “and how we can make business more receptive to their approaches.” NEWSLETTER SETUP • | , J| | WIf ' ''Wft The Committee also has established a quarterly news-letter, "BCA News,” which la mailed to about 6,500 readers. Nearly 6,000 of them' are presidents of major corporations, and thO remainder are metobtox of aurtw councils and other ^aft qlganizattona throughout tibm country. \ / A speakers’ bureau Ins, been set up and has oh call 38 business men who are prepared to explain how buisiness and the arts, can get together. The committee also is planning to issue stone reference materials, to,measure- what la being done today and to help business justify Its participation in theorts. ■ JnPW YORK ® — Established less than a year ago, the Business Committee for the Arts, toe., already is creating flMrpf communication between torn worlds*- business and cuttohe. Tjt ta,M««mpt national organization "dedicated to sttaiulating sepport of the arts for the business commu-i *ortilatioa waa whwbnced lato ral % l^ bbiig- ms ^HIon, formto' Secretary af the Trea^. jibo is the flVIllWnlnfdlA’a nftniwmnM “The fink thing we went to do to to create a climate, so that wheh an arts organization goes to a business, it will get a hearing. Wt want to open doors.” / ■ ' The origins of BCA date back to 1965, when such a committee was suggested by the Rockefeller Panel Report, “The Performing Arts — Problems and Prospects.” . In the fall of 1966 David Rockefeller, president of the' Chase Manhattan Bank, renewed and expanded the suggestion in a speech before the National Industrial Conference Board. Last October the formal organization was announced. Thus far the arts have not been faring well in attracting the corporate dollar. Corporate giving for all charitable purposes in 1962 amounted to 1.99 per emit of total net profit. In 1965 corporate donations for ail purposes were 9700 million —to which the arts received |19 million. ,3|to committee consists to, 6l prominent executives from all regions of the country. It is noVa {grid-raising or-i ganization, nor does it plan to serve Os a^copdUiti'for chan, neiing funds to specific arts organizatic*w> ' < ^ * Ito chief functions are to provide Information and re-boartW, to show arts organizations hour; best to approach busmtm people for support, and to encourage the participation of more business people in file advancement of file CURTS APPLIANCE Factory Autliorited White Deulrr 6484 WIUIAItt LAKE ROAD OR 4-1101 —>■*. Aside from financed help.howcan corporations aid the arts? |p “By providing management assistance and technical help.” said McLellan, “And by contributing materials or services. For example a transportstiin company could provide bits service to a cultural event. Or an electrical company could contribute lighting and electrical equipment for areptotorrtl^^ ' What can the committee do for arts groups? “Cultural organizations need help in preparing their presentations to business,” McLellan skid. “Recently an CWflWSBENCESET........j i !r$Sm opening projects is a series of regional roiind-table conferences. ^e firs| was Sejit. 13 and 14 ip Atlanta. “These will be SmsiE conferences,” odd Goldwin A. Mc-LelUto, presideht of the committee. “We do not believe in having large meetings which do nothing but listen to a ---awjy of speeches. - ~ ★ . * . .*, . “There are about 10 business men and 10 people from the arts at each cohfer&tce. They will learn to talk to each NEW DELUXE Jet Action Washe: JET-AWAY M LINT REMOVAL! Jst-Away rinse actually “Ms” lint and scum oul rJET ACTION FOR NEW DEEP CLEANING! JET-FAST SPIN cuts drying time. Leaves clothes extra light end dry. [ REDUCES TANGLING! Clothes corns out ao loose ind easy even apron strings seldom 1 year Warranty for repair of any defect without charge, plus 4-year Protection Plqn (parts only) for furnishing replacement for any defective part in the complete, transmission, drive motor and large capacity water pomp! Backed by General Motors! / • *1/ SUDS SAVER BIG VALUES IN PORTABLE TV Completely Installed “ INCLUDES: Up to 252 square fetat of carpeting expertly installed with pad and tacklcM installation *J^P*Jj;''en tha motal door strips are included- Absolutely NO EXTRAS! Deluxe Personal Portable Big Picture 19” Portable TV You've seen this famous nylon a< Is os long wearing as any carps and It's mothproof, mildew froa < Fran Delivery, Service and Warranty! Only $7.35 Monthly or, 90 Days game ae CesH The family favorite because; it gpBs anywhere easily for viewing - yet delivers full-sise rectangular pictures. Has famed Zenith Quality Fla Speaker—Handcrafted Chassis—3 IF Stages. Delivered, Serviced and Warranted Eaay Terms .. . or, 90 Days Same As Cash 12-inch (ding, meas.) Screen {•'Ideal for “personal viewing.** Packed with Zenith ‘big-set' features mentding the Handcrafted Service Saver Chassis. ' CARPETS INC • 148 N. SAGINAW ST. SHOWRbdiM OPEN DAILY 10 until 9 S SATURDAYS 10-6 CALL HOW for FREE ESTIHATE OF PONTIAC 51W. HURON OPEN MON., TOURS, and FR1. TILL 9:00 $ THE POKTiAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, J96» m. FARMER JACK Sli^dB|coii FARM MAID GRADE A Large Eggs LARG&SLICEO, \ grade-t Mr. Pitts J Bologna ! J Cantor Cut I Pork Chops FARM MAID CRINKLE CUT ■ FrenUi S Mas ! GOLDEN, RIPE, DEflCIOIlS Chiquha Baititottls Farmer Jack’s FARM MAID ■ .Pork i® Sausage "Ml9* YEARLING STEER SLICED "B * * iNationir Institutes of Health, a ,i*ner * federal ■» to ®duca* That meant Cohen foas as- department undersecretary «mi ^ ^ sured of the office only until the a“istant “««*«** feggflffi ’jSffififtff Number presidential election. NOT OOWnNO ON IT . 'th* tricks — developed fa three But the 55-year-old bureau-j Cohen has been fctfag more decades of work fa ihg heart of crat'lfad fanner professor hasjlBte he was beginning a tilpiySmeit tjeen acting more like a lion term in the post than nearing * - than a fame duck. Even Aides the end, Some observers believe —,.tu h(, nrjmn.ni. mn* _p_ express surprise at the boldness be may, indeed, be near thel^^f^^^^ ^ r . .. . . statements on racial* issues Todays . -Carstairs: ift ten%M years ahead or its time* program, the nation bis, Aid to foie more people out of poverty, it should be broadened and benefits should be raised from the present $55 a month for individuals and $82.90 rat: couples td at least $70 and $106. have sucked Mm into a whirlpool of controversy. &Ut Cohen still holds forth With sweeping proposals* for what he hopes will bring a better life, to all Americans. ! CAP8UUZAlB^;'v. Fro*** the fafarvtew *«d from statements in speeches and elsewhere, here is a cnpsullzation of Cohen’s view of the present and future foom-the-top^ $40-billion-a-year HEW complex: HEALTH—Medical costs amt fees will continue to go up, though perhaps at not so rapid a rate, at least until 107SiFUrt of the reasm is tbut it wintake that long to relieve significantly the acute shortages Of doctors, nurses and other medical personnel. (Medicaid isn’t reaching |ven mi of the poor people, and it might have to be broadened to include even families with incomes up to $10,000. a year if they baye many children. % >t ~ In spiff of iinexj>ectedly Mgh costs, |fedicald “has been a. real success story — “the really remarkable thing fo that, so many states are getting iii at some level.” Thirty-eight states and tlnee territories now have Medicaid. DAYS ONLY With These Coupons Only LADIES’ ONE or a-|4li TWO PIECE *®gl PLAIN DRESSES - - - - - UMES’ SUCKS, Hg SWEATERS OR KHV HAIM SKMtrS SK. Only the Johnsons knew the troth, Would you believe thojr only 1 out of 105 familtes knows how much intorast they pay for auto financing? Here's a shocker: One hundred «md five families were asked that question'in a university survey. Only one .family (let's call them the-Johnsons) knew.Jhe true gonuoLinterest they were paying._ Of thirty families who thought they knew, estimates ranged from 5 to 12 per cent interest, when actually they were paying 12 to 40 per cent. There's a reason for this wnfusion. Many car loans are advertised at $430 per hundred. People think this means 4Va per cent trua annual interest. IT DOESN'T. You're actually paying nearly 9 per cent-^hen you ceHvgetft. (Not everyone qualifies: It applies only to new ears, depends on the down payment, etc.) More you buy a car, cheek with your credit union first. They'll not only give you the true c$sf on car financing, but rock-bottom rates on a loan as well. It pays to be a credit union family. Contact the CU whom you work—or the one in your parish or neighborhood—or write Michigan fiiiRfour Martinizing -2ojMy U/ifint Qmm ' M-59 at: Crescent Lake Road WATERFORD PLAZA — 673-883: ffii"r $;:Telegrepk Read ■ TVL-NURON S. 11335-1934 II South Squirrel Road Auburn Heights - 852-3131 CREDIT”! UNION : ALLSTORES DPEN?:30A^g7i00^M. Trees fell and earth wasmoved then came the dwellings of Man industry began to slowly bloom tiie product of creative hands. Roads linked the rising worlds cities rose to touch the clouds Voices called their wild ideas to be written by creative hands. The job of running this planet takes effort and working plans the varied moves of completion all done by our creative hands. No matter how strong the labor nor how involved the final end the nation began and continues by an effort of creative hands. -JfonjSiBretcoll. 'life',*«*:■ 'UmJPfjy.J^V4Vl»jUriyy. MQN PAtVQCTQBKR n 1968! Exam Is Postponed forSayhtg Suspect _ HASTINGS (UPD — A preliminary hearing for Gerald Nuen-|ldorf, 25, of MkkUeville, accused W#Si Wjtiwymii** Wta...f&forattorftoy.muttony.Adamt sts* •<» >» p*5si wnm-.-.mr: ■**tfatfeto.g6d»the ■Min all rtf fltiftiM and flri. F «« May Avert; School Strike Tokyo Blasts Injure 6 Tied to leftists ih Pdnfta^ Nearby NY Bpgrd \■ TOKYO (AP> —Six si believed by police to be f Mrs. Aportol died Friday. She ’ M a taembap,, of.St. M&cyta Greek drthodnt C h ® eh, > Detroit. ’ Surviving besides her hufibprjtf ; are a son, John R. Apostle qf | Orton Township; a grandchild; ! backed by parents and demon- tanned it “a step toward com-► strators in the predomihaMly pliance,”but added: • Puerto Rican and Negro he* “If .the same kind of amv i Ron, to take back 85 teachers, grace, noncompliance and Ja> : Die appearance of the teachers tinddatfani' exists tomorrow I has elite touched offviolence morning as it did before, then I or they IHve been admitted to there wilt be a strike Tuesday • the $£hqpls but not allowed -to or Wednesday." ---:p-r~----- ■■——f-------;—rr*----*----1"1-----“ i ■ } * * * | The teachers have walked out I The AFL-CIO United Federa- twice since the city’s 900 schools f tion of Teachers has a new opened Sept. 9 for the fall term. were injured by two exptqgtons in a Tbkyo apartment Sunday night. ; Elmer j. Lovell ' TROY 4 Service for Elmer J. Lovell, 81, of 1031 Boyd will be l p.m. tomorrow at Price Funeral Home. Burial wifl.be in Mount ' Avon Cemetery, Rochester, j; Mr. Lovell, a retired foreman [it the old Ferry Morse Experimental Seed Farm, Avon Tewhship, died Saturday. He | was a former Troy Tranship 1 oonstable rad had served as a. school crossing guard and .ptegrouhd supervisor it Big A^'V&«prles CfOW I great-grandchildren! tot Mra^Cfaj»rlMrMr$, Bernard Brown ■ Sr. (Nannie) Crow. ef^ffll State ______, ,______________ will be 1:30 p m. Wednesday at WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP — the^bhnelson-Johns Funeral Sirvtee for Mrs. Bernard R* ^^Tteial in Perry (Gladys M.) Brown SrTTt, of Mouai M Cemetery. i10?65 B0gle Lake will be 1:80 Mrs. Qpow died Saturday. P-m^ tomorrow at William Surviving are a son, Everett Suiflvra and Son Funeral Hone, of Ponfec; two grandchildren; Jjm Burial will be In geyon* great-grandchildren; Cnapw Memorial a brother. Cemetery, Trqy. J ■. 1 Mrs. Brown,'a member of Ronald W. Hodge 1 Royal Oak’s First Presbyterian Sam for Ronald w; Hodge, Ch“rcl'. died yesterday. 08 * Sip Neome km be 1:30 surviving are a son, Bernard p.m ^Thnraday at the Sparks- *• *• « Detroit- •»* Ms Griffin Funeral Home, with grandchildren, burial in Roseland Far!', e t:.U Cemetery, Berkley. Robert E. Field Mr, Hodge dled yesterday. He BLOOMFIELD' HILLS — was a machine repairman at Service for former resident,! General Motors Corp. Truck & Robert e. Field, 48,6fMi*mi,t Coach Division. Fla., was to be 4 p.m. today at BeavUr Elementary School. Surviving -jure • his wife, Mame; two sons, Donald J. of Avon Township dnd Marvin R. at hotee; a grandchild; and a great-grandchild. Fire Hits Stable; be h^^irp'Jd. Wednesday at prtvi the funeral home. Mr, Hodge . Mi was it member of Elks Lojige day, 810 aaiilb* Central Methodist dent Churdh.:'k; Adai He It survived by his wife, He Mable; , a daughter, Mrs. Club Theodore Carlson of Ridunonrf, Club Va.; his mother, Mrs. William Detr Hodge of Ptptiac; three mitt brothers, including Pad of Sif P 0 n 11 a c ; : and t o u r -Bait grandchildren. Ddn fe fflou Mary C Nolan 9 inch) Requiem Mass for Mary C. field Ndiaifc;M..of 4IM, Rterviao, s M< Will.: be sent1 l(h30i ajn. Wednesday at .St.jor tl Mary’s .CatbMfo C3wrdi, Royal tion. O^. Bwial wiU be ht Holy SepuldtffOeffletery, Southfield. A Rosaty will be 8 p.m. tomor-row at MNfliam Sullivan & Son Funeral Borne, Royal Oek. G . Mbs Nolen, a dental hygienist... in Birmingham, died yesterday n4$ of injuries sustained in an auto Fm( sBddent.'W^1' • “ - ^ Surviving are two brothers, Pflnt . Two of the horses were strude by cars as they raced through > rainswept streets. poUcc^lPi ; the aid of the American Society ■lor the Prevention of Cruelly to Animals, roun|ed t^ the anl* imalsir.- cv~^Sr. Those captured were put in vans and taken to a stable in Jamaica, Queens. i City Gas Station Robbed of $32 f . .. a member of Oakland Avenue Uhl ted Presbyterian The Clark Oil Station, 382 Church, Pontiac. j Orchard Lake, was robbed of Sliryivbig are a sen, Fred of $32 early yegtehtoy.: Clarkston; three grandpWMn^f The attendant, Robert Byas, eight greatgrandchildren; and 17, of 054 Franklin Rood, told two brothers. j Pontiac police that he didn’t see £S v A* J. , a gun, te that the bandit held Mrs. Morton c.s Horns hy, hand in hfo pocket as if he BLOOMFIELD httjjs ^|had a weapon. - ■ -j Private service for Mrs. Morton ; COLEMANS including James Nolan of Pontiac; three sisters; and a, grandfather, Dennis Barry ’ innerspring or foam latex. Ptrtact Sleeper Impttitl Twin or Full Size mattress or box spring............ $##.50 " Queen Size 2 pc. set ..........................$239.50 King Size 3 pc. set...........................$339.50 108"N. Saginaw sr ___FE 3-7114 RTA Mattresses in LOWER LEVEL FURNITURE DEPTf PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER T, 1968 tetter said. “I used totes restricted fireman on the New Jersey. The hit, No. 3, feed valve never did worfcright. I just wanted you to know that before yea get to Vietnam.” Snyder was astonished by the .ABOARD USS NEW MtSgft Off Vietnam AP -There frihudi more to tills old battleship than her 16-inch guns dating to Worid War H. Nostalgia is parf of it ■*- but donl forget the buglers and the captain’s bathtub. mothballs and the past to her third war, this one in the South China Sea. There wereplenty of lettara; too. The skipper, Capt. J. Edwards Snyder of Grand Forks, N. D., quotes one 'from an ex-sailor who labored in a fetter room In WortdWaru, ~ FIREMAN’S ADVICE “Dear Capt. Snyder,” the “The only thing I can pot my finger on is that the people look at the New Jersey as a symbol of the years when the United States was on top,” Snyder says. 3$ feBeve we stiQ are, blit I think there are many people in visitore to the Alp at the Philadelphia Navy Yard, the Canal Zone, Lonf BeadrrCWit, and Hawaii. _________ In Hawaii one day Snyder Navy has got. Comfortable. They ride the heavy seas aaqr-Yep, I like time babies.’ There, 3s neariy perfect quiet on the ship's upper decks when the guns are not firing. Sailore pad along the passageways on frr«to|A;TiMife dick of atypewrtter, jg^ipyr HSiPI GANfURAN QtMIflY The flag quarters dice occupied by Adm. William (Bali) Halsey remain locked behind his bridge. Halsey liked mottling betted they say, than talking with the crew and vlsltliig their mass. He wounnY recognise tie spaces today- * Fluorescent lights h a v e replaced bulbs. TUe covers the The captain’s bathtub in his quarters was picked up in a Philadelphia junk yard for $12.75 out of his own pocket. THl 1M2 First Quality As long as .tile ship was getting an entire crew ml at mice, Snyder saw to it that two bugle-playing seamen were Included Most ships used taped calls to :)iiretiften. lbe New Jersey’s big guns, twice the sim of time of any other ship ih tiw Navy,, are hitting enemy targets which are often, in military eyes, not worth the chance of toeing costly U.S. aircraft and crews. YPRitET GETS HOT v When the guns are firing, the temperature reaches 130 to the No. 2 turret of Chief Gunner’s Mate Harold Sykes, 37, ICebaae, N.C.- . /. The breeches of the three guns rest in separate pits which take up the front two-thirds of the turret. The stainless steel breeches, the hydraulic lines and copper and brass tubing are kept gleaming. gteef decks which had to be buffed three' times a .dag. Checkered tablecloths covered mess table*}, but off-duty sailors still sip that distinctive Navy coffee and play aceydencey. r Air-conditioning is perhaps the major improvement SEVEN STAR 13 Each LARGE SELECTION A S^Tiooth IBfend 4M*Mfc«ss.'..e.*y Sq.F AH FIRST QUALITY ASK OS ABOUT KITCHEN CARtiT WE CARRY A LARGE SELECTION Of CARPETS FOR ACL YOUR NEEDS OPIM MON. and HI. 'TIL 9 P.M. v, »n UTIMATH AND IMMIDIATI INSTALLATION , The 2,700-pound projectiles I travel on loading trays from the magazines and seat in lhe barrels- wtok a “thong” sound. klaxon blares three times, and the shot is off with a roar. The breeches pump bade tour feet in their pite. 1 Standing down, the chief RmnOi °F BATTERIES spttialhf lintifU ensile fllOW, LOW Our Beg. The SOMERSET Model S2950W Full Zenith Handcrafted Quality! Beautiful Contemporary styled compact console in grained Walrlut color. Zenith Super 50 Handcrafted Chassis, Super Video Range Timing System. Sunshine* Color Picture • Tube. Advanced Zenith Color Demodulator Circuitry. ■ CysSx iik* IttC**rP_ New Zenith Two-Year Warranty Oft Cofbr Picture Tub# No Down Payment-36 Months To Pay and Sava. TEL-HURCM" CENTER DOWNTOWN PONTIAC... BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE A&SS&efc TRAFFIC jammers CHARGE n At All KRESGE Stores & octobbH 7, itfas Militants Fight Plflnf to^fteabten Family-Pfanning Clini member group from the. Pittsburgh Catholic Diocese. “Planned parenthood should treat the black people the same as whites,” Haden says. “You know as well «ut 1 do that white people would not let birth con-trol clinics be set up in their neighborhoods. Btrf there areeiintcs located ^ the white Swissdale and SewicMey^areas of the city. a The agency operates under a graduated fee system according to fee patient’s family income. Some pay nothing. so fea^'wei^L Jthve to build houses for than:” - *§c g® *-:* *>''; * Their furo^ is aimed at those clinics which receive funds from fee Office ‘of Economic Opportunity. The.Planned Parenthood Center of Pittsburgh received a grant of a little over $100,000 .front the federal poverty agency for 198?. . There. are 18 Planned Parenthood 'embte ; |p None of fee other clinics has ben singled out for criticism by Haden’s group. Greenlee also is chairman of fee health committee of fee Pittsburgh Branch of fee National Association for fee ad-yhlwHaent for Colored People. Op. Dec. A of lasfiyeturhe and PHtsburgh NAACP president Byrd Brown, a Negro attorney, charged at a news conference feat Planned Parenthood was keeping the Negro birth rate The women say they consider fee clinic in fee predominantly Negro Home wood-Brushton area a necessity.; It is operated by Planned Parenthood, a nonprofit international family planning agency. ‘ * vj And fee Hopicwood-Brushton Citizens Renewal Council, to which the protesting women belong, says it intends to reopen fee dinic as soon as a new building can be found. LESS DIGNITY g Haden and other. Negro militants claiih' the centers treat Negro women wife less dignity and respect than' white vroftien... And they claim the federal government has set up fee clinics in ghetto areas ty deliberately keep fee Negro birth rate as low ah possible. “The idea,” says DT. Charles E. Greenlee, a Negro physician and a member of Haden’s I group, to make less niggers Greenlee also epxounds his views oh hirfe control in “The Thrust,” the weekly newspaper published by, Haden’s United Movement for Progress and one of the projects made possible by a 811,000 grant to the 3,700- Colkg4j$0cf^ Cuts ,Out Pomp Mtet A*P tor and SAVINGS You «•>"*" TOp QUALITY Magnificent ENTERTAINMENT you ■ pictures AUTOMATICALLY! 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The Kremlte. on the ether hand, is insisting that the Czech party’s central committee be msde up of the Bohemian and Moravian members of the present national central odjsojp congress delegates have beep elected dticS the fall of Antonin NovoUty’s Stalinist regime, and the liberil delegates would oust all the haid-liuteg central com-mittees members. PRAGUE .(UP^:. ;p..r>;C»ech-[ oslovakia is one v|Qrd, bdt, it is not tele nation. Therein lies • problem the Ruaeians are ex-. Bohemia and: Moravia. The ideological makeup of the new Czech party leadership will Actually, the Slovaks have had may . of, their own administrative organizations for yea^ but now they are suc- It is made up of Czechs and Slovaks, two proupd national cultures with different i languages add strong -rivalries Czechoslovakia since its birth 99 y‘ The old problem of Chech-Slovak relations has cropped up agate as a key issue in the struggle between Czechoslovakia 1 and its Soviet occupiers. 1 The Kremlin has indicated1 that it intends to use tee planned * federalization of Ih e coun- i tty as a> means of gaining firmer control over both Czechs * and Slovaks. REFORM promised On Oct. 28, after half a century of political ferment, the ] Slov'aiar'wilr Wffla theirold 1 dream of cultural independence. < Federalization, one of the reforini . promised by. th e regime of Commurait party < leader Alexander Dubcek, is I scheduled to go into effect that i day, the anniversary of the j country’s founding. < Under tee system, the two 1 living in the prosperous lands of Bohemia and' Moravia, dominated tee country’s culture and economy and the national national language groups will each have their own national administrative systems — from Interior Ministry to dogcatcher -- plus an umbrella organiza- tion similar to the federal government of the United States. How strong the federal leadership Win be is yet to be bureaucracy, was, _te_. tact, the Czech bureaucracy. ★ * * The Soviets Will have a chance to influence the formation of the Czech side of the new Communist party and governmental structure, much of which must be organized from scratch. Woman Guides Read onVC Prison Camp HANDSOME VELVET UPHOLSTERED SOFAS IN FOUR STYLES . . I EACH IN FOUR SIZES ; M'^e, reg. $309.o6 „ g ■ h* SIZ| RE6. $369.00 SALE... *319* 84" SIZE, REG. $419.00 sale ... ^349°° Pictured above are only* two sofas of four styles and four sizes. We invite you to come te and choose the size and style which is just right for your home of aparfment — plus you jmay select the desired \color. from our present stock, or special order your velvet-upholstered sofa from a large array of decorator colors. Styled in four sizes to fit any room dimensions. TIm, luxurious velvet covers look far more expensive than the modest price .. j^nd now, during our Special purchase sale, you'll save even more. » The combined force landed on the island shortly after dawn from Navy patrol boats. The boats then set up a Mocking force and sank a sampan attempting to escape. A spokesman said the occupant of the sampan escaped Into the brush along the river. Seventeen other guerrillas surrendered; to the patrol boat crewmen. There were no allied casualties. The spokesman said the freed prisoners all were Vietnamese and Included a national policeman, South Vietnamese army troops, government militiamen and a few civilians. He said some of the prisoners had been held captive since the enemy’s Tet offensive last February. SAIGON (AP) - A South Vietnamese woman led U.S. Navy commandos and government troops to a Vieteong prison camp where her husband and 23 other prisoners were held, tee Navy announced today. ■ * * ★ A spokesman said tee prison compound was located on Con Coc Island at the mouth of tee Bassac River, 77 miles southwest of Saigon in the Mekong Delta. . ^ In the raid early Sunday, eight UA Navy Seals—sea-land comfsaadosr^.ntf the Vietnamese force overran the camp and captured two Viet: cong guards plus documents •nd South Vietnamese money. 90" SIZE, REG. $469.00 $389°° Budget terms of course free Delivery INTERIOR DECORATING SERVICE OPEN FRIDAY EVENINGS J.JAOINAW ST. ATOKCHAtP IAKI Aft. 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Stop in today and moke th* dimple arrangements forourSove and Pay Plen ty go to work for you ...no mow checks[to write, we do all the book work for you. 1 OAKLAND Downtown Pontine - Drayton Plains - Rochester - Clarkston —^Ifllford — Welled Lake *-Lake Orion Waterford -Htoientelty~r*3 Bengals Unable Brock-Gibson |l Minnesota First in Central Loop After 24-10 Win THE POPmAC^PTtESS MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1968 MINNEAPOLIS (UPI) - The Detroit Ligns, hidden under’ the bright orange 9y MONO L KlARNS glow of the pennant - winning Tigers this lywti Ufc«r, Fwelw Fiw fall, refused to bespoilers Sunday when “ ^ the Tigers cranked. Yesterday’s game will go into World The Lions added to the Detroit grief by Series history as the Trarreety of Tiger being trounced 24*10 by the Minnesota stadium — '68. its. wwaiias,»- Central 1 * * ★ v The entire spectacle from start tf And while the Tigers bats boomed like finish was a disgrace and most of the matchsticks, those Vikings were drop* blame must be gteced on the shoulders ping quarterback Bill Munson five times of baseball commissioner William for losses adding up to 28 yards. The Eckert, who sat fa the front row pigylng Lions offensive line was humiliated big shot with Hubert Humphrey rather trying to protect Munson as the Vikings than concerning himself with the oMlga* kept up the seige. -_. tions which were his fa permitting the -. /tv ^ * National Ltap? opponent* dt the.St. Louis Cardinals must have some sympathy for the adroit Tigers, 10-1 losers in yesterday’s fourth game of the World flams, i - Hiey must experience the task efife-tag Lou Brock and Bob Gibson durifag * 162-game attain, while the Tigers have yet to figure oht a way to stop theta in what may be an abbreviated World Series. The Cardinal stars are chaffing tip World Series records as if they on going out of Style. -vv' STOLEN BASE RECORD --®rolefc-haa-already stolen seven bases and has tied the series record ofl4 held by Eddie Collins. Yasterday he helped cr&sh the Tigers andlito send Denny McLainto the warmer tfanrers of the clubhouse while tbs teams Were battling under cold* miserable showers for lotir fliurs fa soggy Tiger Stadium. Gibson, meanwhile, pusbde his series rscord over all to six straight wins , , has struckout 10 or more batters In five series games and became Hie first pitcher to hit two hbme runs in total series (day. The victory yesterday gave the Cardinals a 3-1 edge in the aeries and left it SOI up to Midmy Lolich, the only Tiger to defeat toe Cardinals. Lolich faces Nelson Brites today. He defeated Briles to the second game last Thutaday..............■■ doesn’t think his two Series losses rub any Of the luster off his 31-victory season, the first to the majors to 37 In the top of the fourth toning, Norm Cash went to talk to relief pitcher Daryl Patterson, and to the bottom of the inning Willie Horton went to the dugout to clean his spikes and Jim Northrup went to exchange his bat The Cardinals countered the delaying tactics by sending Julian Javier to second on a steal which wasn’t even close. Plate umpire Bill Ktonanton then called the rival managers togefiier to disease the tactics which were turning the game into a fared., M After allowing i fait in each of the first four innings, GibajM struck out Jim Price and Dick McAulliffe and retired Mickey Stanley o& * fly to center. That made the game official, end It was only three hours and 2S minutes altar play was to have started. ' :r*/- The Cardinals, meanwhile, amassed 13 hits, including a home run by Gibson in the fourth and three hits fay Brock — a homer, a triple and a three-run double to the eighth. •' '.«£*★. ♦ p .' • Brock stotethird after his double, giving him a record-tying seventh steal to fitfe Series and a record-tying 14th for all of hjs Series play. TM first mark he tied was bis own; 4L« • * 4Pc the Cardinals did we* have the Tigers with tha almost impossible task ef corn-tog babk Item a 3-i deficit. Only three teams fata data lt^and one of than wasn’t the11967 Boston Red Sox. The Bed Sox were down 3-1 to the r.e«yn|h but then came tack and won MAKING ADJUSTMENT-St. Louis Cardinal barter Bob Gibson (arm raised) tugs at his undershirt after Detroit skipper Mayo Smith Sunday decided to agitate him far complaining to the umpires that the white portion of Gibson’s understeeve was showing oh his pitching arm. Umpire Tom Gorman, catcher Tim McCfarver, third baseman Mike Shannon (left) and shortstop Dal Maxvill watch the pitcher niftalMs'siwfak't LETT WAIT FOR AWHILE—Five of the six umpires on the field to take cover, while Jim Honochick (background) working Sunday’s World Series game at Detroit confer near motions to the ground crew to bring out the tarpaulin. After the mound Airing the third inning about the increasing rainfall, a delay of 74 minutes, play was resumed to the despair of the At left plate umpire Bill Kinnamon waves for the players capacity crowd. Today's ST.XOUK DETROIT Brock If McAuliffe 2b Javier 2b Stanley ss Flood cf Kaltnerf Cepeda lb Cash lb Shannon 3b Horton if MeCarverc Northrup cf. Davis rf Mathews 3b Maxvill ss Freehan c Brites p, 19-11 Lolich p, 17-9 Umpires—Harvey National League Umpires Lash Out Against Managers plate: Hallo? American League first base: Gorman National second- base: Honochick American third base: Landes National left field foul line: Kin-namon American right field foul line. , Plate umpire Bill Kinnamon lashed out at both managers Mayo Smith of the Tigers and Red Schoendienst of the Cardinals for opposite tactics during yesterday’s rain spattered game. While Kinnamon explained the conference he held at home plate with the two managers during the fourth game of the World Series, another umpire, Stan Landes, angrily blasted people to getting on the umpires. “We called both managers out,” said Kinnamon, talking about the home {Hate conference. We didn’t want one team to be hurrying and we didn’t want one team to be stalling. One was not to delay and one was not to speed up. “While we were disucssing that Smith said, ‘White is showing under Gibson’s uniform line.’ ” HOLD MEETING At that point, the umpires and Cardinal infielders converged on St. Louis ace pitcher, Bob Gibson, and he proceeded to adjust his uniform, pulling up the under shirt above the elbow so the white didn’t show. It was, however, damp. The loss snapped a two-game Lion streak which had included a stomping of the Chicago Bears and a surprise upset of the Green Bay Packers. In fact, it seemed the defeat was because the Vikings were probably brainwashed with films of Munson and what he does to the ball. Minnesota had noticed he likes to hold it as long as possible to make sure his receivers are in position and they came at him tike Bob. Gibson going for a strike-out. It was scary and the Detroit, offense never even got moving. As for millions of TV viewers across the country, comfortable to their warm easy chairs, they probably didn’t care less whether the game was played or postponed because of the weather. HAVE OBLIGATIONS -Butr the obligation of the umpires and the commissioner was to the teams bn the field an# the 53,000 fa toe stands. Any other game in regular season would not have been allowed to start. BITTER BATTLE The bitter defensiye battle broke only 4 whan Minnesota’s Bill Brown plunged for two fourth quarter touchdowns, with his first TD midway in the period breaking a 10-10 tie. Then with about two and two-half . minutes remaining, Brown dove over to a second score set up by a 51-yard pass front! Joe Kapp to Gene Washington. GaryCuozzo, replacing Kapp to the second period, moved the Vikings to their first touchdown, a three - yard run by Jim Lindsey. Early in the drive, though, Cuozko broke his left shoulder and will be out for several weeks. So Kapp returned and notched 17 points on the scoreboard in the last half. ' There was no indication, no forecast and no hope of the rain quitting. But it was no secret that a postponement would have cost NBC somewhere around 8100,000. The game, delayed twice for 37 and 74 minutes, with temperatures dropping into the 40’s, turned into a farce as the Tigers did everything to delay it for heavier rain and the Cardinals' did everything to speed it up. The Tigers started mound conferences, plate discussions, taking full counts and even dropping fly balls, which of course were denied. Just once did Detroit show the style that was cooking for the Lions in the previous two weekends. In a drive that started in the third and rambled into the fourth periods, Munson started by throwing to Earl McCullouch and Mel Farr. The Cardinals began stealing wrecklessly, swinging at most any pitch within reach and were urging the umpires to stop the stalling tactics of the Tigers which in themselves caused delay. There have been past World Series which have had delays. The delays were from one to six days in 1911, 1922,1951,1956 and 1962. Munson got to McCullouch for 49 yards to breathe life into a dusty Detroit offense, getting the Lions out w a deep hole to the Minnesota 33. Two plays later, Farr caught a Munson-spin on the Viking 21 and crashed through three de-. fensemen for Detroit’s lone TD. In the first quarter, Jerry DePoyster kicked a 33-yard field goal for Detroit to cap a long drive. Cuozzo had replaced Kapp, who was knocked dizzy in the first period and had double vision in one eye. After the game, Kapp said he could not remember his part in the victory — engineering two fourth-quarter touchdowns. Down to only one quarterback, Vikings' Coach Bud Grant said he would announce today plans for more depth at the position. Rookie quarterback Bob Continued on Page C-3, Col. 1 Because of postponements, one of the Series was never completed until October 26. No one wants to prolong a major event if the conditions are poor but playable, or if there is hope of improvement. But yesterday, it rained before the game, when it started, when it was called, when it resumed and when it was completed. Eckert sat in pompous glory putting the responsibility of the game on the umpires. . - The umpires in turn threw the responsibility back to the commissioner while 53,634 dreriched fans sat with the chant of “Rain, rain, rain.” Kinnamon also explained the short conferences he held with Tiger first baseman Norm' Cash, who came from first base to talk to Detroit Daryl Patterson in the top of the and Jim Northrup, who returned dugout to exchange bats. “AU I wanted to do was (Cash) don’t take and you’re behind, he said, ‘Bill, we have to like any other game.’ I argue. It’ll take longer,’ I want him to take too long.” Kinnamon also explained the situ at the World Series regarding weather problems. , ’'All six umpires are in charge, working under the jurisdiction of the com-missioner,” he said. “Every decision regarding the weather had to be discussed with the commissioner. UP TD COMMISSIONER The commissioner had the final say. The commissioner, before the game, left it up to the umpires’ judgment when to stop the game — that is, call time.” Landes, meanwhile, angrily criticized people for making umplra “the whipping boys.” "When they want to hang something on somebody they hang it on the umpires,” he shouted. “They shake the umpires the whipping boys. We have the guts to make the fatal decisions, but fata of times we don’t have the authority. “What we want is the authority to go along with it, and me don’t get that. That’s why we strike. That’s why we ask for better working conditions. / “What makes this different from any other pSe. Here, feel my uniform. It’* THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1968 Saturday's Welcomirti Home d inning 5tfi lrmiiigfg% Orlando Cepeda's, 7-3 McAuliffe's, 4^3 McCarver's, 4-2 Ailing Earl Riding Tiger Doubtful List GAME ST. LOUIS N i *b j SATURDAY’S GAMES ST. LOUIS (N) AB R H 1 McAuliffe Had Hopes of Game Postponement “They had to start the game,” second sacker Dick McAuliffe said. “I was hoping it wouldn’t continue. Of course, if I had a 4-0 lead, I would want to play it.!’ Monday’s starter Mickey Lolich noted, ”1'wouldn’t want to pitch In those conditions. You could slip on the mound and hurt your arm or something and’ your career couldfre ruined.” BB—Gibson 2 Horton, Mathews. McLain 1 Javier. Patterson L Cepeda. Hiller 2 Maxvill, Gibson. SO—Gibson 10 Cadi, Freehan 3, McAuliffe 2, Stanley, Horton 2, Price. McLain 3 Cepeda, Javier, Maxvill. Lasher 1 Maxvill./ T—2:34. A—53,634.... UMPIRES — Kinnamon, American League—Ftatoi-Harvey—National League First Base; Halle? American. League Second Base; Gorman.National League Third Base!; Honochlck American League left Field Foul Link; Landes—NatiQMd- League Right Field Foul Line. r . j Tigers Favored 13-10 In Today's Series Game OL^JTALLING-Umpire Ail! kinnamon tells Detroit manager Mayo Smith and Norman <&sh to quit stalling and get oil with the game luring this meeting nea&Jhe pitching mound in yester-dayTWorld Series game in DetrerT" Kinnamon told Cash to get going after toe. first baseman moved in to talk; to pitcher Daryl Patterson. That brought Mayo from the dugout. LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UP!) - The Detroit Tigers were fawned at 13-10 to win today’s fifth game of the World Series against the St. Louis Cardinals..., However, the Cardinals, who hold a 3-1 advantage in games, are solid 3-1 choices to win the Series. * -k Mickey Lolich, who gained the only Detroit victory, was scheduled to pitch today against Nelson Briles, his second-game victim. TOUGH CARD — St. Louis’ Bob Gibson, almost untouchable for the Tigers on the mound, showed another side yesterday in the fourth game of the World Series as he belted a fourth-inning home run off reliefer Joe Sparma. The big pitcher later picked up another RBI as the Cards won, 10-1. LOW BRIDGE — Detroit slugger A1 Kajitte ducks to avoid a pitch by St. Louis Bob Gibson during yesterday’s World Series game in Detroit Kaline collected a double and single but the Tigers lost and toll behind in the Serles, 3-1. 'Catcher is Tim McCarver. a : Kaline's, 2-0 Brock If Frustrating Series | World Series Bax Scores for Tiger Backstop By JERE CRAIG Appropriately Detroit Tiger catcher Bill Freehan made the obvious comment about the dub’s precarious position after yesterday’s third loss in the best-of-seven 1961 World. Series. “We couldn’t have hour backs any closer to toe wall,” the ace backstop stated., The situation undoubtedly is most lr-ritating to Freehan and 31-game winner Denny McLain since they hive done the - least to help the Tigers’ Series cause after doing toe most to spark them to Detroit’s first American League pennant in 23 years. Freehan has gone hitless — toe only Tiger regular without a safety in the for garnet— and his three strikeouts Sunday raised his total to seven in IS at bats- In addition, he has' two errors bddndtoeplato-CHANGES Yesterday he was dropped from seventh to eighth to the hatting order, but hip luck didn’t change. ' “I had toe pitches to hit; I just couldn’t bit ’em,” the big catcher said fratddy. When asked if toe Cardinals’ weekend outburst of hitting at Tiger Stadium was the result of bad pitching or inaccurate reports on the Redbird hitters’ . weaknesses, Freehan commented: - “It’s probably a combination of both. If I knew toe remedy we’d stop them.” in his career asked to come out of a game. “My shoulder has been bothering me since toe Baltimore series last month, and it was real sore today. But that’s not an alibi,’’ McLain said. *T forgot to take a pain pill before the game and it took ine much longer to get loose,” he added. Apked if he could pitch to relief tomorrow he said, “No.” And Wednesday? “I don’t lutow."' ’ So tor his twp Series starts, the 31-game winner has hurled less than eight innings, surrendered seven runs and is 0-2.' One of yesterday’s runs off him came on a high chopper over the mound by Mike Shannon to. the first inning; Mickey Stanley, the converted outfielder, charged over from shortstop to grab toe ball bflt his off-balance throw lacked enough steam to nip Shannon at first for toe out that would have ended the toning. “I think I could have thrown it a little harder,” Stanley second-guessed In toe clubhouse. “I tried to flick the ball with -my wrist. Had I tried to throw it any harder, I’m not Sure where it would have gone”’ He explained. The one bright moment came when Jim Northrup rifled a shot into the upper deck to deep right centerfield. “I think if you don’t look for a fast ball from Gibson you’re crazy. It was a fast ball right over the {date,” he reflected. “It was a thrill for me, but I would much rather have won the game,” Northrup added. “Anytime you hit a home run in the World Series, it has to be a thrill” '• Flood cf .4 2 2 1 1 0 Flood Cf m 5 i l 0 Maris rf 2 2 1 o 2 0 Maris rf .. !i' 0 T Cepeda lb .. 5'. 1 1 3 10 0 Cepeda lb .. 4 0 ! 1 0 McCarver c . 5 I S 3 5 0 McCarver c 5 i 3 1 Shannon 3b . .4 0 2 0 0 1 Shannon 3b .. ..-..v.; 5 ■t' 2 1 Javier 2b ... ...... 4 0 1 0 2 5 Javier to ... ......4 1 2 Maxvill ss .. 4 0 0 0 2 2 Maxvill ss .. ............. 4 :*•. 0 0 Washburn p . Hoerner p ... 3 on 0 o Gibson p 3 2 1 2 2 or 0 0 0 Totals 40 io it IT Totals . 38 7 13 8 27 9 DETROIT A DETROIT (A) I ab r h hi AB R R BI D A McAuliffe to 0 0 0 McAuliffe 2b 4 2 2 1 0 1 Stanley ss ■■ 4 o 0 0 Stanley ss .. ....jiv-3 ’■ 2 Kaline rf :... 1> 4 Kaline rf ... 4 j t 1 2 ,1 0 Cash lb .... 4 0 0 Cash lb .... 3 0 0 0 (* l Horton If .... 3 0 0 0 Horton If .. 2 0 0 0 0 Northrop cf 4 1 1 1 Northrop cf 4 0 0 0 7 0 Mathews 3b '...2 0 1 0 Freehan c . .....3 0 0 r « 4 Freehan c .. 3 0 0 0 Wert 3b ... 4 0 0 0 3 2 McLain p .. .......>...v^ 1 0 o 0 Wilson p ... ....r..‘i o o 0 0 2 Sparma p .. 0 0 0 0 Dobson p .. 0 0 0 0 0 0 Patterson p 0 0 0 0 a-Matchick . 1 0 0 0 0 0 aPrice ; 1 0 0 0 McMahon p 0 0 0 0 0 0 Lasher p .... 0 0 0 0 Patterson p 0 0 0 0 0 0 bMatchick .. 1 0 0 0 b-Comer ... I 0 1 0 0 0 Hiller p .... 0 0 0 0 Hiller p .... 0 0 0 0 r 0 Dobson p . 0 0 0 0 c-Price 10 0 0 0 0 Totals 31 l 1 1 Totdls 31 3 4 3 a-Struck out for Dobson to 5th 23 10 a—Struck out for Patterson in '5th to- b-Singled for Patterson in 7th c-Flted out for Hiller in 9th SL Louis (N) . . . . 000 048 360-7. Detroit (A)*............... 002 010 000-3 DP—FTeehan to Wert. LOB—St. Louis ,............. S*4 Hoerner ....■.............. 3*4 Wilton (U ......... Dobson .................. McMahon ................. ning. b-Flied out to center tor Lasher in 7to inning. St. Louis ............ 202 200 040-10 Detroit ......... . 000 100 000-1 E—MeLain, Freehan, Mathews, Northrop.' DP—Cepeda to Maxvill. LOB—St. Louis NT. Detroit A 6. 2b-Kal|ne, Shannon, Javier, Brock, 3B —McCarver, Brock. HR—Brock, Gibson, Northrop. SB—Brock. IP H R ER Gibson - W 9 '"5 1 1 ' McLain — L 22-3 6 4 3 Sparma ..r... 1-3 2 2 2 Patterson 2 1 1 0 0 Lasher ...... 2 i' 0 0 Hiller .......0- 2- 4 3 Dobson 2 i 0 0 If the St. Louis Cterdinqto go on to claim their second straight world’s title, which they are now heavily favored to do, the turning point would have to be Saturday’s 7-3 victory at Tiger Stadium. The heat Tigers and their followers entered toe first Beries game in Detroit since 1945 full of high hopes after the Bengals’ impressive power display Thursday in squaring the Series at Busch Memorial Stadium. When A1 Kaline stroked a Ray Washburn delivery deep Into -the left field seats for a.third-foning home run with Dick McAuliffe on base, toe 53,634 fans gave him a standing ovation. The Tigers held their 2-0 lead into the fifth totting when veteran Earl Wilson pulled a muscle in toe fifth inning while pitching to Curt Flood. The flashy $t. Louis center fielder doubled to cut toe lead to half. Wilson then walked Roger Maris on tour pitches. Pat D.obson came in to face Orlando Cepeda and got him oh a popup. Then came the telling blow of the Series. Tim McCarver caught a 2-2 pitch low and inside and ripped It well into the upper deck to right and suddenly the. Cardinals led, 4-2. Although Dick McAuliffe homered in the bottom of the iunifjg to make it 4-3, the homesters never recovered from toe sudden turnabout. The relief pitching faltered further, Don McMahon yielding a three-run homer to Cepeda to the seventh. Meanwhile, Joe Hoerner bounced back from a poor second-game relief performance to save Washburn’s victory with a solid effort over tfiST final three and two-thirds innings. Thus the Cardinals’ pitching, rather suspect after the first games (beyond the .work of Bob Gibson, that is) suddenly proved Its value in a pivotal game While the Tigers’ faltered. 7 • ★ ■ Moreover, the Redbird batsmen unleashed a home run offensive that overshadowed toe powerful Bengal bats. The pattern continued Sunday. •, rf ■ fry" - ' 'i;. Wilson’s injury, extending a season of similar misfortunes for the Tigers’ 22-game winner of 1967, throws the rotation into uncertainty. Manager Mayo Smith likely will turn to Joe Sparma if Mickey Lolich can prolong toe classic today. THE PONTIAC PIIRSS. MONDAY, OCTQg&B 7, 1968 Briles Again Facing: Bengal Ace Southpaw CltisSy Spartans Topple Badgers BAST LANSING (UK) - Michigan State may no longer have stars like Bubba Smith and George Webster but the currentcrop of Spartans can't be faftftMt for thatr courage^ --The Spartans trampled hapless Wisconsin, 39-0, Saturday in their Big Ten opener at Madison, Wis., for their third straight victory, ' _ Two of the best piayers an the undefeated Spartan squad, starting guard Ron Saul and bis twin brother, Rich, the defensive signal-calling linebacker played outstanding games less than 24 hours after learning their father, Greg BROCK ON THELOOSE — Record - settihg base thief Lou Brock of the Cardinals slides under Bill Freehan’s throw to Dick McAuliffe in the fifth inning Saturday. The flashy runner picked up three steals in the contest, and set a Series record yesterday by adding his seventh stolen base. Vikings Lead Loop After Halting Lions Continued front Page C-l Lee was expected to be activated from the taxi squad. “When you get excited, you don’t feel too much,” said Cuomo after the game. “1 knew something was wrong. I wanted to keepin there. HAD MOMENTUM “We bad the momentum and I didn’t waafr to go out and lose that Besides, I run. Kapp also gained 33 yards rushing on four carries, “I’ll have to read about it in the paper,” Kapp said. Meanwhile, the Minnesota defense held the Lions to 73 yards rushing and allow* ed Munson 13 completions for 196 yards. , “We knew we had to stop ther long passes,” said Grant. “We wanted die kind of rush from the front four that MAKES IT THROUGH - Michigan State’s Thomas Love1 0H» finds a hole in University of Wisconsin’s line mid makes short yardage before being downed by linebacker in the game in Stewart Wins Driving Crown Wifiv Ford in U. S. Grand Prix Only the Mexican Grand Prix remained for these two to settle the 1968 title. ★ ST it Denis Huime of New Zealand, who was tied with 1011 at 33 points entering this race, crashed his McLaren-Ford on the 93rd lap. Huime, who was uninjured when his machine spun off into a culvert, ranks* third at 33 phiats. Stewart’s race average was more Bum five m.p.h. faster than the 1968 record set by the late Jim Clark of Scotland. Stewart's fastest lap of nearly 127 m.p.h. bettered the old 128.48 m.p.h. record, set by HID when he won lastyear’s race. Mario Andretti of Nasareth, Pa., in a LotOs-Ford, started hrtH6 pole position and grabbed the lead at the start. But Stewart moved into first two laps later and began to pull away. WATKINS GLEN, N.Y: Hi - Jackie l&wtorTdrovw bb Matra-FOrd Formula One auto to victory Sunday in the 10th Grand Prix of the United States and along the way he tot two track records. The 18-year-old Scotsman finished the 248-mile course at i record average speed of 124.89 miles per hour, finishing more Burn 24 seconds ahead of Englishman Graham Hill’s Lotus-Ford. John Surtees of England finished third to a Honda and Dan Gurney of Costa Mesa, Calif., placed fourth in Ms laFr Gambrtll . McOultouch I • RCCKIVINO Mo. Yds. Lg- 0a. TO T r i g $ ii & i . -i r*l‘l • Wl *'■ W' *•: #'• . 1 t O Totals Brown ' " * 1 Aft. Yds, Lg-On. TO 1 Ir u i Soy Totals Kara Couzzo Is 1 ? MASSIMO M 5 1 • S 3 32 0 Totals Washington Staslay . Lindsay mm' '1 aaetM * J' 1 No. Yds. Lg. On. TO ■ ?■ ■■£§ fF ™l f' ■■ i a ,« l Totals . »■ ♦ * 0 ^, 1# si ~i World Saul, had been killed in an automobile accident Friday afternoon. SHINES ON DEFENSE Rich made an interception in the second quarter and returned the ball 49 yards to set up MSU’s third touchdown. The interception halted Wisconsin’s only venture into Michigan State territory on its own (the Badgers got into Spartan territory once by taking a punt on the MSU 47). I5’1*,' * * ...... Quarterback Bill Feraco ran for three touchdowns and the Spartan defense was airtight, allowing Wisconsin only 31 yards rushing and 90 passing. Michigan State roiled for 260 yards on the ground and 108 in the air SCORES THREE TIMES Fetaco scored on a pair of first quarter one-yard runs after setting himself on key passes and runs, and then went , in again from,the one with 19 seconds in the third quarter. ★ * * Tailback Tommy Love, the Spartans’ leading ground gainer, scored on a two-yard smash in the second quarter and Michigan State added its final score with p seconds left to play when reserve bade Earl Anderson plunged over from the (toe. BOOTS FIELD GOALS SERIES HASSLE - Catcher Tim McCarver of St. Louis gives umpire Bill Kinnamon a piece of his mind after a - call in the second inning of the Cards-Tigers game in Detroit yesterday. Kinnamon ruled Tigers’ Bill Freehan had not swung at a pitch that would have been a thind strike. Left-hander Mickey Ldlch today has the monumental siiaignmcntof shutting the windows at Tiger Stadium before the Cardinals fiy the coop and head to St. Louis with the biggest booty of afi. Bit world’s championship. _ -. <' : V' ■TsTt* *. Three reeks ago the Tigers’ mound crew was in top shape, hurling 11 com-' plete games in a row as the team wrapped Up the American League penaaht. Today it is in ail but fuH retreat with only Lolich, who posted the Bengals’ lone victory in Game No. 2, left to keep the Redbirds from taking home the cham-ptom^T " ; His rival in this afieraoon’s fifth game of the best-of-seven showdown is Nelson Britos, the Cardinals’ 19-gam'e winner who was victimised by the Tiger bats and Lolich’s sharp mound work when they won* 8-1, Thursday in St. Louis. ★ * 3 Manager Mayo Smith admits he doesn’t know Who will work Wednesday if the two teams need to play a sixth game at St. Lotus. “McLain probablv can pitch again, hut Ms shoulder is bothering him and we’ll have to wait. Wilson is a day-today matter, he says his shoulder feels better tMaj Gary Boyce kicked 38 and 41-yard field HumohreV BrinCIS sate in the second and third period. nuilipjll^y Ul lll^O Smiles in Gloom goals ii w : w Or Hie defeat was Wisconsin’s eighth in a row — longest losing streak in Badger history. —J The game, which followed easy victories over Syracuse and Baylor, probably was the last breather for the Spartans, who face the Wolverines at Michigan Saturday,. then tackle Minnesota, Notre Dame, Ohio State, Indiana, Purdue and Northwestern. Even in the gloom of Sunday’s crushing defeat that put their backs against the proverbial wall, a few of the Tigers were able to smile during a postgame visit with Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey. The Democratic Presidential nominee sat through the entire game in the rain, then visited both iockerrooms to pay his respects to managers “Red” Schoendienst and Mayo Smith, Cardinal mound ace Bob Gibson and Tigers WUlie Horton and Denny McLain. . “Bob has been a big help to us and will be doing some more work tor us in the campaign,” Humphrey revealed. “So will Horton be helping us later,” he added. - Ex-Northville Star Excited Wolverines Awaiting Unbeaten MSU By JERE CRAIG ANN ARBOR — “I’m really excited about it, I can hardly wait to be out there in front of Bie crowd and everything.” Former Northvilte High School three-sport star Jerry Imsland bubbled with enthusiasm Saturday, after the University of MicMgan had flooded the Navy’s bflge, 32-9. The 8-2, 218-pound end led the Wolverines’ para receiving corps with five catches for 52 yards in the lack-lustre game enlivened mainly by the broken field running of defensive back George Hoey and a small buff-and-wMte dog. Imsland matriculated from Northvifle to theUniveraity of Kentucky but after his freshman season decided he would enjoy the U, of M. campus more. The aggressive junior is playing hiS first varsity season for the Wolverines and this Saturday he will be starting in what is the epitome for most prep grid ders in the state: the Michigan State-' Michigan game. sure to lure more thhn 108,000 fans to the spacious Michigan Stadium — with a 2-1 mark despite an opening game loss to tough California. MSU now is 3-0. In addition to Imsland, the Wolverines have two other Oakland County residents on their starting units, and a third one is bidding to regain iris spot after a frightening injury. Defensive tackle Dan Parks hails from Birmingham and defensive end Phil Seymour is a Berkley resident. Parks played at Brother Rice, while Seymour (a cousin to Notre Dame All-American Jim Seymour) went to Detroit Salesian. Seymour, particularly was effective against. Navy, showing good speed and lateral movement while defending both against the Midshipmen’s passing and running game. The 6-5, 235-pound Parks wasn’t in on as many tackles but his hefty presence in the defensive line usually required double teaming by the blockers, leaving sophomore middle guard Henry Hill free to penetrate into the Navy backfteld which he did frequently. Out of the lineup entirely Saturday was flankerback John Gabler from Royal Oak. He was carried on a stretcher from the Duke game the preceding week and had X rays for a neck injury. “John got a little scared,” a Wolverine trainer reported. “The X rays wqre negative, but John had trouble with dixzinera early in the week and couldn’t ^racttcerttwas-feltbesttcr kcdahUnout of the Navy game,” he continued^” “We think he will be all right for the State game.” The wiii over Navy started very slowly. The Middies held the lead, 34), after a 20-yard field goal by Tim Cocozza in the first quarter. The only real early excitement to Bie crowd was providtod by two dogs galloping up and down the field. The sec-cond of which was a small mongrel who After the second run it jumped into Bie stands, scurried around away from pursuers by running under the empty benches in the end zone secUon, before leaping back onto the gridiron. ★ * ★ About the same time the fleet Hoey caught a Navy punt, broke free down the left sideline for 63 .yards before going down at the Navy six-yard-line. Standout halfback Ron Johnson reached the end zone in three tries, —j -------■—it * * The next time the U.-of M. had possession, it drove 85 yards to take a 13-3 lead. In the drive, Johnson (the U. of M.’s first Negro grid captain) became the fifth best ground gainer in the school’s history. day. It could be Sparma.” TWO READY The Cardinals, meanwhile, will have Ray Washburn and ace Bob Gibson ready — both of whom have registered Series’ victories already — should the Series go beyond today’s fifth game. Lolich reports be feds fine, but adds, “I’m not sure I want to be healthy.” This is a joking reference to Ms strong showing in the second game although he was suffering from a very uncomfortable boil. Smith inserted veteran Ed Mathewa into .the Tigers’ lineup Sunday and Bie old pro responded with a sharp single and just missed a home run with a blast that curled foul. He also had an error. “I haven’t decided whether 1*11 use Ed at third Monday,” Smith said after Bie CHALLENGE Lolich went out to the mound today knowing he might be trying to keep Lou Brock from adding to his record to stolen bases — and wishing he had some football films to do it with. ’’Football clubs use films to scouting. Why shouldn’t baseball?” Lolich Suggested. “Baseball doesn’t seem to have come to that yet. When I asked to some films of Brock, I was told the scouting reports are enough. ‘Tm a firm believer in films. But our club doesn’t do it. I don’t Biink most of the dubs in baseball do. If you want to see something, instead of just hear about it, why can’t you?” it it, . h What Lolich is suggesting then is very simple: that baseball dubs substitute film sessions for the scouting reports that they now use — and which several players in the series have said they don't pay too much attention to. SOLUTION But until the day when baseball uses film that way, Lolich will have to get by some other way. He had the answer to that, tod. “See that,” said Lolich, pointing toward catcher Bill Freehan, who was holding the big-game rifle he had just received as a gift “There’s how to stop Brock.” . MONDAY Cowboys Deaf Loss to Cards ISdyaj’S- Scores Lone Chicago Touchdown ST. LOUIS (AP) - A 56-yard field goal by Mike Clark and a pass interception by Chock Howley broke the back of,the rallying St' Louis Cardinals and quarter, In carrying the unbeaten Cotta Sunday to their fourth, National Football League victory, 28-7 over the injury handicapped Chicago Bears; With their ; first two quarterbacks sidelined, t h e Bears relied almost exclusively on the running of Calc Sayers and he could produce only once, aSO-yard touchdown jaunt early in the second quarter for the first score of the game. QUICK WORK In quick succession then, Morre)l hooked up with Willie Rlchardaoh for a' $0*ytrd touchdown with John Mackey for 48 and Jimmy Qnr with 38. Saturday night. Other Jets are Verlon Biggs (86), Gerry Philbin (81) and John Elliott (80). Charger guard Watt Sweeney (71) if in background. New York won, 28-20. - ! CHARGER HALTED w Dick Post (22) of San Diego is stopped by New York Jets defensive back John Sample after a short first-quarter gain in their game ip New York touchdown; Be hit tight end Jackie Smith for U yards, fullback Willis Chreshaw for 42 and flanker Dave Williams for, 25, moving the ball to the < Dallas throe. After two runnlng ' HE GOT AWAY t Quarterback Virgil Carter of the Chicago Bean looks like a goner as 295-pound Bubha Smith of toe Baltimore Colts bears down tor a fourth-quarter tackle in yesterday’s game. Somehow, Carter escaped^, only to be by FredMiller for a three-yard loss. Colts won, 28-7. Roms Keep Slate Clean Falcons Clipped, 38-7 Tarkenton's Passes Los Angeles Hands 49ers 24-10 Defeat the National Football Falcon 43, Starr completed att- ATLANTA UR - . Backers. «mg by WoWwcAle*. ,yart prat. Eajaraa^ an .straight tat. a * * * i stubborn Atlanta defense for 211 Donny Anderson gained 18 claudis James’lor the score W in the third quarter end .nd u, yards an a driU «t>«Uy| fteTS, the ^whipped the Falcons 3A7 Sun- afta the. half and also caught a^g^ qjnttr^o a ntnefard •30-yard pass from Bart Starr, ^ te ^ . ■ ‘f°r a first down before scoring ^ Fateong tied tt in ^e-tes- spoiled Norm Van from 11 yards out. 'the second period as Johnson ■ —‘e Falcon After the kickoff, Falcon computed "41 and « yard quarterback Randy J oh ns on pngaWi to Bob Long to get a fumbled attempting to pass and first down at toe tome. Perry mr---„.t the Packers had a first down at Lee Dunn carried tt over from to ici.ua m toe first, the Atlanta two. Starr com- the one. 21-yard fid. goal by P*etnd a one-yard pass to Mary , to.sw- — — i-ssu&tm. i $ • n«Mww ~ itaMltt “raj After Ray Nltschke to- tSjffljgjjg *g ", Green Bay only a 10-7 halftime tercepted a Johnson pass at .the pjm»1 «**« NEW YORK (A - Fran Tarkenton passed for three LOS ANGELES (AP) -Quarterback Raman Gabriel passed for .one touchdown, ranj 'for.ona toiif set up the other! Sunday In leafing the un*. defeated Lost Angeles Rams toL-a 1446 victory over the San Francisco 49ers. “Ti» ball-hawking visitors' from, Northern iCaHifortaMa ;»®S~ mained in contention until toe 09*®11* final quarter when their EVEN GAME quarterback, John Brodie, suf-j Atlanta played the Packers on fered an injured elbow on i g^iy even terms in f ‘ ““111 play when a 48er touchdown hal{ ^d a XI-,-. J ------------- - P . - threat was repulsed jby a chuck Mercein with f 0 wmlfotottig for toe score, penalty. j seconds left in the half gave} ~ BIG DAY t- ' :•■ ;-V • ■■ n ’ A crowd of 69,520 tohjerobrial T ...... Coliseum saw Gabriel hit Berate .RHjj Casey on a 41-yard touchdown pass play, socre on a one-yard VH dive and then hit two passes for 50 yards total on a drive fin- IB f.kad nK Kx/ Hanm DtAT’S one- , ' '_fl.... Giants turned five New Orleans mi«/npg into 31 points and beat the Saints 38-21 Sunday in a National Football League game, f The victory was the fourth for the Saints’ 26 and turning tt into a 7-0 lead. , By halftime, the margin had grown to 24-14 vrtth the help of an interception by defensive tackle Roger Anderson that led to another touchdown and a penalty that gave Pete Gogolak a shot at a 40-yard field-goal on the last play before intermission. The Giants, aided by interference calls on Dave Whitsell and John Douglas, pulled away in toe final half. Don McCall’s naming and the passing of Bill Kilmer kept the Saints within striking distance until the final girted. Kilmer threw touchdown passes of 12 yards to Monty Stickles and one yard to Tony Lorick. Dolphins Pin 24-7 Setback on Houston HOUSTON (AP) -i .The Miami Dolphins mixed the timely passhig of Bob Griese and the bndsmf rime of Larry Csonka and JimKiick to upset the Houston Oilers 24-7 Stoiday in an American Football League game. The victory by toe previously winless Dolphins severely brawnsSfart Ex-Steelerin 31-24 V CLEVELAND (AP) *- Second string quarterback Bill Nelsen, making his first start of toe season, led the Cleveland Browns to, a 3144 National Football League victory over the Pittsburgh Steelers Saturday night. ished off. tor Henry Dyer’s one-yard smash. . •..■•*,. - 4rV • • a,j ■ , |. Hr Roms dominated the first half and scored two touchdowns before 4ler defensive end Clarkj Miller picked up a Gabrieli fumble «t toe Ram’s 34 and ran to the three. Three {days later, Brodie hit Clifton McNiel with a six-yard ; fearing aerial. San Francisco had a chance to fib in the third period withr their «mly sustained thrive of the afternoon. Alter moving from I their own 22 to a first down at the Rams two, they could only reach the one in three plays and settle for a seven-yard Arid goal by Ttoimy Davis. .. ....... .... 4Nr* SAMS 12 1 Washington Prevails in Squeaker, 1744 LONELY VIKING - Minnesota Vikings’ quarterback Gary Cuozzo sits atone holding his arm during the second half of . toe game against toe Detroit' Lions yesterday in Minnesota. Cnd z z o suffered a broken left shoulder during the first half. Vikings won, 2*48: WASHINGTON (AP) - Sonn; Jurgensen passed for on< touchdown and ran for anotha as Washington withstood i furious fourth-quarts: Griese hit Karl Noonan with a 50-yard scoring pass for one Dolphin touchdown. Csonka TH. PMMHVi . ■< £1 *r wirvpnssro SwTlnwplM, ..........| Z--$ H* ........ .......................................................>■- uSW-3SSv « dabrM <©3? SUB SCORES - Cleveland’s Charlie Leigh, filling in for 1 run (OMMtt kick) i injured Gary Collins, starts on a 18-yard sweep that brought toe JK^W.yw fr#m ■*««• (O.VU Browns thgjr fir8t score against Pittsburgh Saturday night. «*> jsteeler Ray May (59) grapples at Leigh’s leg while Ben McGee j(60) gives chase. Browns won, 31-24.______________________________________ OAKLAND (AP) - The Oakland Raiders exploded for 21 points in the third quarter and defeated Boston 41-10 in an The victory left the Raiders 4-0 and was their 14th straight in APL tegular season play. Penalties and the Patriots* pose rush, tod by Dennis Byrd and Ed Ptdjpott, had given Boston a 10-7 halftime lead until i Warren Wells watt 41 yards on an end around play early In the third quarter to make tt 14-10. Pass interference and roughing the passer penalties s^t up p 17-yard touchdown toss from Doyle Lamonica to Hewritt Dfeoo and^toe Raiders got their State Colleges Fare Better Than Tigers with a tour-yard rollottt dash that climaxed, an 84-yard sewing march by the Redskins with _____I —l__a- l» uenver or ops buffalo, n.y; w- j«n . 1 Stenecud missed two field goal ftonnrv/c IT) 7 attempte, then booted four Denyuis, iu-/ threeqwlntau -fara row*to give a the Kansas City Chiefs an 18-7 tr\r Fircf \A/in American Football League vic-lOr ruST VV in tory over toe Buffalo Bills Saturday night,.y ' DENVER, Colo. (AP) - He also missed a”fiy tor an Quarterback- Steve t m n k 1, extra point after the Chtefo’ playing for the first time since only touchdown - hi* first miss a pre-season injury, hooked up ** * professions! after 68 con-in the last four minutes with v®*lons- s " , , rookie Mike Haffoer to pass the u Kansas City reUed matoly on Rnaimo » 10.7 tts ground game while Buffalo . . Fnntheii mustere PwM MM MH JiTS-k,t - f- and caught two passes for 64 Charlie Taylw to btiUd a 17-0 yards. Washington lead Jn the tidrd _______ * * _ *___________portoii Kmmw the mqiae fought In anotoer MIAA opener, back in the final quarter on a Alma scrambled past Hope 34-6 26-yard sowing strike by Norm as the Scots racked up their Snead and Haymond’s long 14th victory in a row. dash. Quarterback Tom Jackovac rim»dmpw« ...'...........• • passed____for__two touchdowns ww«K!-%o wwa u Zif------------ while Hope’s lone TD came on a 20-yard pass from Groy Kaper m pm* from smm to Barry Rumohr in the second <>p*h«'y1m0od u punt r-urn (B.i.r quarter- w5J2jo,iu # a ★ swim RtMkint Hillsdale roared back to the m!aMn?y*rd«w « m second half for 24 points and a IS ” 24-16 win over the University of ,3t4 "tS, Missouri at Rolls. vSSFpwSiLi « J Quarterback Mike Harding ---------------- triggered the Dales’ scoring y $ Go|f QaU Win, bash as he tossed to halfback -M-__________ Fred Whitt for-13 yards and MELBOURNE (UPI) - For Central' it was a third a four-yard run with 30 seconds then repeated the pdss for 15 Shelly Hamlin shot a record-victory against one loss. 'remaining. yards. .breaking^ to give the United „ Eastern Michigan gained the_____ -7 * * * {Bowling Green mat record as da f e n s 1 v e! Albion and Olivet opened up hfiftfpoit Jerry Warkentlen t b e Michigan Intercollegiate wmu-fg^m a 100-yard pass ln-|Athletic Association conference (Mowan kick) ‘ terception after picldng off an with hdst Albion ungraciously Akron pass. The fourth quarter I grabbing a 44-6 win. Halfback ki».2. George Blanda added field goals of 19 and S3 yards and threw a 14-yard touchdown pass to Dave Kocourek in the fourth quarter. Akron, utuq, ia-7. j ^ayM university was Two tong return runs by gbutout by the University of C«ntraPs I*a**^. Adams and Bob jjjmoiaChicago Circle 13-0 for Ziliski countered the hosts’ ^ Tartars’ second loss in three •tinging attack. Adams scooped ^ ^ season phicago’s QB up an Eastern ffliuoto punt in Jlm teal connected on an 18-the firm quarter and ran tt for yard ^ to end David Jackson 75 yairir vridto Ziliski took a for ^ first touchdown in the thttt£quarter kickoff and raced half and Don Gotkowski 95 yards. bame up with the second TD on .f!::''*:;" - * M victory against one loss. . Eastern Michigan gained the^ * * * Utol record as daf e n s i v e! Albion and Olivet opened up Jerry Warkentlen the Michigan Intercollegiate w« a 106-yard pass fat-1 Athletic Association conference (m^wi play when Gary Garrison o?i« « o—io women’s golf champfaxuliip _ ! Saturday. from Bordoav: Mig8 Hamlln from Stanford Ktpllm (Suva University, had a total of 308 j for a 72-hole-toumanient. TJtfR gOKTTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1968 Sti James Bla moved beyond tbeir own 42 carries. For the day, the Daley yards for their flnrt touchdown thereafter., had the' ball for $7 {Bays from which came on Mika Webster’s Thi Dales scored as time rap scrimmage while the Titans ran nine-yard run. Dave Calrde ad-out inthe first haft and'the TD only 39/* f ddd the extra point oa a run. came on an eight-yard pass interception ‘ The Lakers then added a six- from quarterback Bob Na*evaert ..^'pointer inthesecondpertad on to end Jim Yavello, who also * pass from Calme to shined on defense with two pass ^ Pat Morgan and Jim Tracey interceptions. The pitch ended a ~> raced «*«« from two yards 47-yard drive'and thescore was Sfi, J2 out in the third for the final on Hu » ?n.varrt run nn » ****** left In the half, tally. *1695 ! PM! complete >1 (UNATTACHED) ..., " Beautifully Constructed 2-CAR GARAGE AND 50-FT. ASPHALT PAVED DRIVEWAY NO MONEY DOWN-FREE ESTIMATES quarterback Mick Krogulecki That result left the Dales alone in first place1 Mfc a 4-0 ntarib, while the Titans and Waterford Our Lady t Air* the No. 2 spot With M records. •,v *1 The help that the Titans need could come from the Lakers of W^erfdrd $ii> Lady, who tura-ed back St. Frauds de Sales in a Homeconning encounter Saturday night, 1M. In another Saturday game, St. Rita whipped Hoy Oak St. Mary, 20-6, while the Eaglets of VVwao- , PUNT BLOCKED The safety came hi the third when the Oales broke through to block Kellie Dean’s punt at the'lO. The bhll ToHed through the Titans endzone. Halfback Tim Boyer and fullback Girard Holland were the workhorses In the Titan attack that accumulated only 61 yards on the ground. On the other ride, the Dates picked, up 108 yards rushing, Rutecki hdt FOLS’ defensive end Greg Main pteke off the ball at the OLSM and walked into the endzone for his team’s second touchdown. Sqrrtws picked up the first score on a six-yard run around end by Ross Pattern. ! The Eaglets, now 1-3 for the season, made it on the 9Coreboard tn the third quarter when Date Roman raced in i from 15 yards out. The. Lakes of WOLL took the yards total offense. The visitors deepest penetration was to the eight early in the game and they never threatened after that. Royal Oak Shrine ran Its record to 3-1 with a 10-13 nod over St. Ambrose. Bill Nitschman scored on 9 and 10-yqrd runs and picked up 111 yards rushing to pace Shrine. End Mel Patterson added the other Shrine six-pointer when he recovered a fumble in the St. Ambrose endzone. BUY! SELL! TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! with Wigman gaining 115 on 19l opening kickoffand marched 80 Orchard Lake St. Mary suffered tbeir third straight loss in a 12-6 setback against Farmington Our Lady of Sorrows, BIG OBSTACLE The only real obstacle standing between St. James and the title at this pebit Would be the Lakers of WOLL.. The two tangle on' ttuuLakers field Oct. 19, and a. WOLL victory could toss the league into a three-way tie. AT THESE LOW PRICES! fire tt one at Ferndate, the Dales’ defense was just too much for the Titans; A, ‘ Pontiac Catbohc also turned in a good defensive game, but the offense was unable to crack the St. James alighnment that has shut out four foes. One consolation for the Titans is that nOM>pponent had held the Dales7 to IMS than three touchdowns this season. In winning, the Dales picked up a touchdown in the second period and added a safety in the third Tlife Titans made only one - real threat and that came early s as they marched from their own r 46 to the Dales 22 before losing ■ the ball on downs. Thejr never ; statistics ^ „. .aims trun tohubi ' ^ . ■ - * Eastern Driver Posts 10th Win on Race Tour America's Favorite Winter Tires SEATTLE (AP) - Mark Don-onue, driving like he knew the nearby Kent Pacific Raceway track as well as his own driveway, wpn the 300-mile Trans-A- AFt Standings merica Sedan Championship race Sunday—his 10th victory in a series of 13 races across the codntry This year. cuncnea me iutuoiuu puuii icoaiHO play ggfoSgfc jAMesst marathon over a 2.25-mlle coarse in three hours, 26 minutes, 20.2 seconds. Donohue finished two full laps in front of the second-place Firebird, driven by Craig Fisher of Toronto. ... / ., Ron Bucknuna, La Cahda, Cal-if., and John Hall, North Vancouver, B.C., finished third and fourth, respectively, to give the Ford Mustang team second in the national point standings, Guaranteed to go thru ice, mud and snowier we pay the towt Our guanntaa extends to new Firestone Town,A Country Him on drive wheels of passenger can, for tha antlra life of tha original tread design. Clahna paid by dealer or itora laauing tfaa guarantee certificate. NFL Standings ■•Marti caaHnaca Capitol Division Cranbrook Drops 28-14 Decision Mount Pleasant pushed across a couple of touchdowns in the fourth quarter to down Cran* brook, 2*14/ 7’ Craig Tuohy put Cranbrook ahead at start of the game as he returned the opening kickoff 85 yards for a six-pointer, and he picked up the Cranes other tally on a 30-yard pass from Dirk Meters in the tough period. Dieters kicked both Ha .to? 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'• j FE 3-7917 Buick-Opel Inc TELEPHONE: 832-9101 S10 ORCHARD lake road ‘Just 2 blacks wast 'd Saginaw1' FIRESTONE TRUCK TIRES Windshield Washer Solvent Firestone SIZE TUBELESS ILACKWALLS . TUBELESS WHITEWALLS Mask. 1st TIRE 2nd TIRE 1st TIME zee tire a. so-u *24.00 *12.00 *27.26 *13.62 •1.81 8 95-14 25.25 12.62 28.50 14.25 m§ 7.35- 14 7.35- 15 26.50 13.25 29.75 14.87 - 2.08 2.05 7.75- 14 7.75- 15 27.75 13.87 31.00 15.50 ' 2.19 2,21 S.25-14 8.15-15 30.75 15.37 34.00 17.00 2.35 Ut 8.55-14 •.45-15 33.75 16.87 37.00 18.50 1.64 2.54 8.85-14 1.IS-T5 37,50 18.75 40.75 £0.37 2.86 1 W 'jMgtisUm THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. OCfOTMHRffrt. Brewer Wins $55,000 Winner ■ But it was too late and now the Firebirds can only hope to, salvage three more victories, one *p $ T-aokowanna famm this Saturday night at Wisner Stadium. do...stop Pistol Pete Mikola-jewski, but even this wasn’t enough to prevent their 15-7 defeat at We hands ofthe Dayton Colts, Saturday night at WlstHrStatfiBn. For the first time this season, Pete failed to throw a touchdown pass, but his passes put the Colts in a position to get a pair of touchdowns on ~dbart gainers by Angelo Kiminas and Roosevelt Mell. The Firebirds had scoring opportunities by moving inside the Dayton 20 twice but failing to cross paydirt. Doug Holcomb entered the game in the final quarter and completed a pair of passes to Ron Bemis for 39 yards and to Gerg Hanson for a 20 yard touchdown with 6:12 left in the To start the ftedond half, Pontiac started on its own 18 and marcbed to the tyayton 5, where a sure touchdovra pass to Bemis, all alone in the end none went into the ground. Dayton then came back and after apoor punt on the Pontiac 21, failed to move the ball and settled lor a 26 yard field goal to make it 184. SPARKS TD Holcomb the ex-Purdue quarterback who had tinea periods of wannup, brought Call with confidence temporary help from 4HBB MANP®WER COLT STOPPER — Ron Edwarda rf J^ JPO^WL j'lrfr-birds brings Dayton’s Roosevelt MeU to a halt after the speedy Colt gain*! a few yards. Mell scored one ol the two noyfam touchdowns Saturday at Wisner where the PhrOb^, lost, 15-7, in an MFL game. Opens With Win Champ Retains title DORADO, P. R. (DPI) Jack Veghto of Oearwater, Fla., captured the Amateur of the Americas golf crown far the second straight time Saturday. . Mrs. Joel Smith of Allentown, Pa., took the women's title. LANSING, Mich. (AP) ihmUU Town and Country Sh Jimmy Karas, defending U.S. Oxford’s Wildcats are still looking for their Arid victory of Springfield, Fa., won a first-round straight pool match of the 125,060 third annual open tournament at the Lansing Civic Center. Raras’s 150-114 victory over Lou Butera, West Pittston, Pa., marked the first time the semi- SATURDAY'S ■XHISITIOM “ PRO HOCKSY yards. He hit Lee Stanko with sc(H*ing passes of 3 and 27 yards and fired a 15-y arder to fullback Mark Carroll. Carroll picked up • Designed far heavy duty use • Piston, rod hardened to wear • Big capacity oversize piston Riverside® Town and Country shocks give a more stable and comfortable ride on city streets, country roods and high-speed expressways. Made to hold your tires on the road, keep you in control Perform better than most original equipment quality. V Oxford’s lone score came on a four-yard scamper in the second period by Darrell Marsh. ■ In other games Saturday, Detroit Thurston slipped past North Farmington in a Northwest Suburban League game, 7-6, Madison Lamptaere ran Its record to 4-0 with a 22-0 decision over Lutheran East while Detroit Country Day ftaeoie control; HEADQUARTERS OF Personalized* Service Prefinished PANELING Australia May Choose Juniors hr Cup Team MELBOURNE (AP) - Australia’s tennis selectors may choose all junior players for the Davis Cup Challenge Round in Adelaide, South Australia, in December, Harry Hopman, the nonplayihg captain, said today. ■ ★ -it •••★ t* > Hopman said that on present form Sydney Juniors Phil Dent and John Alexander “must have a good chance of playing both Riverside®SOE battery —------------s INSTALLED FRIE 42-MONIil GUARANTEE 10,000 Sq. 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BLOODY SUPPRESSION Tlew is also speculation as to what effect die bloddy suppression of the protests by Mex- ican students might have on the visiting teams, many of whoae The other farce la Avery Brundage, ramrod straight Si-year-old president of the International Olympie Committee, to whom any suggestion of cancellation or postponement would come as the severest of personal blows. PREPARATIONS The combination o{ the government and Brundage is “The Game* of the 19th Olympiad, a friendly gathering of the youth of the world in amicable competition, will proceed as scheduled. “We have conferral with the Mexican authorities 'and we dividual competition is supposed to count but to which unofficial tab is always kept on the medal score. to this Russia has outscored the United States slightly in the previous four Games, but the Americans have taken consolation by dominating what they consider to be the two blue ribbon sports, track and swimming. athletes are also students. Some form of sympathy protest may Ok/dhomon Top-Winner The same pattern seems certain for these Games. The American swimming and trade teams, loaded with world record holders and having the advantage of the enlargement of the swimming program from the IS mm’s and women’s events at Tokyo to 29 here, still will probably wind up second to KANSAS CITY (AP) - Bennie Osborn of Sand Springs, OU& was the biggest winner in the American Hot Rod Associations fifth annual world point championships Sunday. Osborn took home $4,Q00 of the $100,000 purse. He had the fastest elapsed time of 9.97 seconds in covering a quarter-mile from a standmgstartwith his tael dragsterTHe was traveling 1 227.78 miles an hour at the end tion agreed to Integrate Its team once outside the confines of th# African nation. Russia to trad medals. There is speculation as to who might emerge as th&. gold medal hero of these games. In I Tokyo four years ago Don Windsor Entries IWtCH9 KnHerlng Nips Mott Kettering’s Captains downed Waterford Mott, 28-32, in crosscountry Friday. Kevin Reave led the winners with a time of 11:13. The Captains’ Datve Mey- nmiiriTnTivnr DeerHunting Husbands PORTitoRAVEL SERVICE MONTGOMERY UNITED TIRE SERVICE 1007 Baldwin Ave, Min. From Downtown Porrtie OPEN MOMMY III HI FRIDAY SATURDAY:9:30 A.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 5 VERACRUZ, Mexico « Veracruz gave a magnificent welcome to the Olympic hath Sunday to a display of pageantry, music and dancing that it will be hard to match. The welcoming function, held to the city’s new football stadium, had Its climax when Carlos Diaz Veto, toe last runner on the mute frank toe waterfront, arrived into toe Stadium and leeelred a thunderous reception. On one side of toe stadium were 14,100 local school children, all dressed to white uniforms who waved flags with red, yellow, blue purple and green, the colors of toe five Olympic rings. 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USE YOUR FEDERAL CHARGE PLATE FALL SAFETY SPECIALS SIZE B—SALE ’ PRICE ^ j - EXCISE - , TAX, 700-13 ' 16.96 . 192 695/735*14 '• 2.06 \ 750/775-14 16.00 ’ 2.19 " 800/825-14 16.00 2 5.35 1,. 850/855-14 18.00 2.56 640/735-15 16.00 “ 2.05 2 670/775-15 710/815-15 16.00 2.36 760/845-15 13.09 2.54 885/900-1 & 1900 i \ THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER^ f, 1968 Schirra More SeriousAbout ApoUb'7 SMMrilMl. wife atkat arnica we might havabamta the past, that might cause something like We’re much mote serious about that to happen again.”' f Show Starts 12:00 Need Continuous - 334-4436 ENDS TUESDAY CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) — After years of preparation marred by terrible tragedy, America’s astronauts Friday few Is Dominant issue of This Election Year By WHITNEY M. YOUNG JR. Executive Director MONDAY & TUESDAY are [issue in this election campaign is one that some candidates cater Tuesday Only Special! 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The world U getting increasingly complex; people find if hard to understand the new attitudes of their children, or the new assertiveness of black citizens who woe silent ' sufferers for tod long. NEWLY WON-STATUS We have to understand too, that much of the insecurity that haunts so many otherwise well-off middle-class people is due to their newly won status. Barely a generation ago, the parents of today’s affluent middle classes were standing on unemployment lines or were employed in relief projects like WPA, PWA and others during the Depression. i . And many who get so worked up because of welfare grants to black mothers conveniently forget tint the welfare checks their own mothers got 30 years ago kept them alive and enabled them to go to school. SLUMS TORN DOWN the government tore down blade slums to make way for expressways that rushed white people out of the central cities, and ffle government lent them moneyand fesured their mort-gages so they could create a suburban dream world into which blade people could not tnove regardless of their income, culture or education. , • ft * ft Some of these same j are now screaming about government spending on poverty, tod they didn't turn down the handouts that helped put them into the middle class, and they aren’t returning ray of the money they the still getting from government sources. 8PENDING ON POOR Their beef isn’t really about government spending, but government spending on today’s poor and on measures to help {fogroes and other minorities reach the same middle class status they’ve just attained. And that’s the fear that is gripping go mumy people today. So long as blacks are confined to ghettos, rendered powerless dependent, many people feel secure and oven superior. ——.............if -...— But once they see a black family moving into a neighborhood, a bladk child at school with their kids, a black supers visor on the job, they feel their status is threatened. ft’s an irrational fear, even a hysterical reaction, but it exists and some candidates for office are shrewdly appealing to It. CODE PHRASES Law and order and crime in tile streets become the great code phrases that gather the insecure around safe issues. Few talk about justice, without which there can be no law and order. Crowds cheer when George Wallace thlks about running over demonstrators in his car, or letting the police loose on anyone not of the approved color or political opinions. - - ★ * * Some of the statements I’ve heard in recent weeks smack of a kind of neofascism that represents a side element in our political life. begin pursuing the moon with the first manned earth orbit flight of the Apollo spaceship. At 11 aon. EDT, a towering Saturn IB rocket is to thunder into the sky carrying the three-man space crew on a journey intended to last nearly 11 days. sM* “ w........... Commanding the Apollo 7 crew will be a veteran of Mercury and Gemini flights, Navy Capt Walter UlScfairfa Jr. With him i will be too space rookies, Air Force Maj. Doan F. Eisele and civilian astronaut Walter Cun- Schlrra, who wifi be the first man to fly three times into space, says it also will be his last trip. At 46, fie said, he’s getting too old to watt two or three years for another minion. SPRINGBOARD MISSION Eisele, 38, the' guidance and expert, and Cunning- ivigationexpei ■—4 From liftoff, to splash-down, they Ore to ride the Apollo ship for 10 days, 21 hoifrs, 40 minutes. They are to check all the systems—firing the engines, exercising the control, electrical and life support equipment and generally qualifying the craft for more ambitious flights to follow. The spacecraft has more than two million functioning arts. Success would be a tremendous boost toward the U.S. goal of landing men on tin moon In I960. sjg i The National Aeronautics and Space Administration plans a moon orbit flight by tin Apollo 8 crew in December. Apollo 8, commanded by Afr Force GoL Frank Borman, is planned as an earth orbit teat but could be changed to a lunar orbit mission if than are no major problems on the Schirra trip.’ YOUR NEWS QUIZ PART I - NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL Give yourself 10 points tor each correct 1 The area of Equatorial Guinea becomes independent from.... on Ootober 12. a-Sjpaln b-France c-Portugal 2 In what part of the world is Equatorial Guinea located? 3 President Johnson, Baying that the national welfare was threatened, asked the courts to order striking .... workers back to their Jobs for an 80-day “cooling off*' period. a-New York communications b-East and Gulf Goast dock c-Indiana munitions 4 The President made the above move under the Act a-National Security b-Taft-Hartley c-Smith 5 Republican Max Rafferty and Democrat Alan Cranston are battling for a United 8tatea Senate seat representing.... a-California b-Arizona c-New York State PART II - WORDS IN THE NEWS Take 4 points for each word that you can match with its correct meaning. 1...interrogate a-have a third party try to settle differences 2....arbitrate 3....proliferate 5...merge b-grow or spread rapidly c-questlon closely d-combine two or more organisations e-glve way or admit PART III - NAMES IN THE NEWS Take 6 points for names that you can correctly match with toe clues. 1.....0dumegwu Ojukwu a-Premier, Communist 2...Boeing 3...,.Suharto 4.....Chou En lal b-Blafran leader c-began producing record-alzed747 passenger jet d-typhoon left about 5,000 homeless in Philippines e-President, Indonesia THE PONTIAC PRESS Monday, October 7,1968 Match word clues with their corresponding pictures or symbols. 10 points for each correct answer. Marcelo Caetano took over as Premier here TWIGGY a Senate committee la studying repair prices Republican vice-presidential candidate Spiro Agnew signal for the start of Mexico’s Olympic Games West German Chancellor Kurt Klealnger ...... major tribe of BiafrS, the breakaway Nigerian state 7....* model arrives lnU.S> with “new look” 8... J. Russell Wiggins named as new UN Ambassador Columbus Oct. 12 Day is 10..... Voters agreed to a new constitution here HOW DO YOU RATE? (Score Each Side of Quiz Separately) 71 to tt petals • Goad. 01 to MO point* - TOP SCORE! 41 to 70 point* - Fair. •1 to to point* - toed tort. 40 ar ttotor???-MPrajj^ FAMILY DISCUSSION QUESTION What are some of the reasons nations take part In the Olympic Games? \ THIS WEEK'S CHALLENGE! After merging with surrounding local gt units,.... became our nation's largest city In area. NO ICO< d government • VEC, fee., Madlwn, Wheenata Save Hit* Practice Examination! ANSWERS TO TODAY'S NEWS QUIJ STUDENTS Valuable Reference Material For Exam. in tot tot tot tot tot tot tot tot »zinh ibbmm B-tt«rt«n « u-1 a-a ^ mmmm •PM®ld ‘aiiiAuoaqotf :20N211VH3 p-g Se-» tot toj le*| i|| 1HV4 «•* tot tot feoiiw rotortfe-1 «i uw 4 THB PONTIAC PRESS, MOKIMLY, OCTOBER 7r 1968 ROBIN MALONE Jacoby fan- Bridge ♦ 1072 ¥075 k Sll# +RQJ10 BYfffilGrafreri r: , lN.T. Ml .;V--c; % . Opening lead—♦ K By OSWALD AND JAMES JACOBY Oswald: “It is a pretty good rule to via a trick when you can, on the theory that it might aever back to you, but^H there are plenty of occasipa^H when it is Better to hold^H off for aiitfiile”^Hp|l| m: ■'TheySM up worn# ccaecm w&nmM wo. is tF wwm, «(*/>) REALLY?W&& CAPTAIN EASY “The only logical explanation Is—there are mrnxm panty raids, because there are no more .GOOD HEAVENSI*^ MDU USUALLY SET CARRIED AWAY A* WITH YOUR PRAWIM6 AMP FOR SET C| , 1D STOP WHEW YOU REACH THE EDGE OF THE PAPER—I'M JUST FEWCIWO IN THAT COW YOU'RE r—.—--ff, WORWWO ON, IS ALL/ J what eoes on- WHAT DO YOU * THIklK YOU'RE . DOIN' THERE Daily Almanac By Ualted Pres* International Today b MMd«r, Oct. 7, the 281st day of 1968 with 85 tofoQinr. The moon is approaching its last quarter. The morning stars are Mars and Jupiter. TELL ME, fiELDSTOWE. wreAj ARCHITECT WHO kWOWS CITY WHAT KIND OF HOUSING do YOU think we AJeet> TO ANSWER TW PROBLEMS of the as ernes these PLANNING. NANCY OnftdsdlpinKfcfcK'y: WHATS THIS? .EAST IT I Jt&NT GO rTO WASTE SOMEONE LOST A GET-WELL 3 card: r---y BALL PARK BOARDING HOUSE I READ ABOUT I PONT BELIEVE ALL it WUEN TUEyANDU REAt>, CLYDE 7 DID YOU HEAR THE <[ BR006UT IT TO -*u--l^RJOWERS.V BOWERS! IHIb lb IHfcWU>tKI> Y l i\NtV» I BOY! HOW COME YOU / SHOULDNT STRAYED SO FAR. J‘HAV|HAP from homeL^Ithatonerir VTHEiOAP J HE WAS STILL ERA66IN'4 wrcisrr Crowd Flees Fire at Vegas Casino DbNALfr DUCK fLlKE l*OR ) jLIKe WORK i wnaerf rjsR the S ^VTater. w. p.toe LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) - A Are chased gamblers, cocktail ROOM nice •rctodlfl ]Following the approval of tbe Yemen- PopO»j Yemeni officersjarms deal in July, a new Soviet dent to'Russia, last month furl ambassador was appointed in weapons training. ■■ - Khartoum because, in Ule words Mow the Yemen premier andjof Pravada, “the atmosphere is strongman, Lt. Gen.. Hasson el becoming ever more favorable Amri, is In Moscow to work out]for the> development' of a new armd agreement. He has cooperation’’ with Conunun&t said a new offensive by his countries. / royalist opponents, backed by * 4 ★ neighboring pro-Western Saudi! Sudan formerly brought its Arabia, is imminent. arms largely from Britain. Sown, in Africa, has signed a South Yemen wrested in* 196-million arm# agreement I dependence tram Britain last WflbKtoili,includingMI&Jets,November, and a leftis t Newly iimdvei} with ’tbe Soviet Union are Yemen, Sudan Jandthe farmer British colony of lecunisiB am -r;-----: for allegedly Way Discovered to lb, a Soviet BAKERSFIELD, Calif.—A new ion came to first s Soviet Acryline uses a startling mw vs* e end of April. ^^^^pUbKamm rmplstes later, the technical uats ■ix'^mTbftera rejresC' ONLY AT where 1 Compart Any Time! fBut Kronur, In * Width Solo—prtoo Spoololo On Offoro Yeu Thl* ItomoYou Wont And Hood -1 notion Of So*-’ .. .. -E,___________J Mtoroo... *Doop-cut Discount Prlcoo In Evory\ „ . _ Dopntmont Evory Doy Of the Wook.\ -Tho Extra 5ov- [fforo You A No- *Kn»oor Ton Amy Brand Boof-And 10WHI5 dOMMUNITY ANSWER: In the 800s, in Anglo-Saxon England, authorities begin to organize people for, military purposes. Racb 10 families was called a tithing, and bad a tithing man in charge. Ten such tithings were 100; the man in charge a reeve. Several buadreds made up a county, or shire. Tire county boss Was tire shire reeve, and this became shortened to sheriff,fewtied w«jstui use. This whole system later became adopted for police -dRAtVsuch police were not paid. In 1829, a group of pairtbjfcemen was organised in London by Sir Robert Peel -ytney' were soon called “bobbies” after Peel’s first name. The first American police wore citizens who, served without p^bl^wiSblheYpe af^cities, paid pabc* groups were soon afnMM:• - ■ i. .5.- V->• * The little policeman toy shows tbe Change. With his beard, necktie and plain hat he looks like a civilian, but bis button, badge and nightstick show him to be a real cop, a word, whieb is said to have come from the early copper star, policemen wore. UJS. B T-Bone Steak f LOIN CHOPS. axelutlva I «n $•■&*! «ala*( Ifliltfe l«t*ritr and ' WnwMm**#. folding’59” (You Ban win $10 cash phis AP’s handsome World Yearbook if your question, mailed 4m a postcard to Junior Editors in care of this newspaper, is selected for a prise.) WS. fiface lendeMtf, Steatf Sirloin A Rib Stem! 1 TENDERAY BEEF vfco4At U.S., CHOICE oning 4TH * 5TH RIOS U.S. CHOICE TENDER AY Porterhouse I** rryw mi or sreasis u S94 MICHIGAN GRADE V Skinless Wieeers..2A* PESCHKE'S Sliced Belogaa oooooWTPKgM9^ Smoked Hums PULL • WHOLE OR SHANK HALF I BUTT PORTION 49.1 5# FRESH ROASTED Spotlight Coffee 49 3J-LB J-LB KROGBfi LABEL Fruit Cdckfail MAKE PIZZA FAST WITH |H| Appian Way Pizza m!“ 25* Jewel Shortening .3 - 39* FOR COOKING OR FKYJNG CHOICE OF GRINDS I-LB CAN 69* LADY MYERS STEMS PIECES __. Mushrooms i..........£kW* Maxwell House coffee. SPAGHETTI WITH SAUCE SUPER CLEANER A - Franco-American^12* Miracle White............. SPECIAL LABEL Biscuit Mix^^^^.2!4 29* Joy Liquid..“”“.55* SiS#nRip? Bananas |# Tissue U.S. NO. 1 . Yellow Onlona 339 w. Receive The XfaAf To Limit GRANULATED steimSTstSi Pioneer Sugar5.'49‘ LIGHTLY SALTED BUTTER CAT OP VALUE 31# STAMPS Ml JCmaer In Dotrolt An4 Eootmm. imB. ThoKtforCo. Land O’ Lakes ■ CLOVER TALLEY SOLID 1 Rail Margarine ■ MORTON FROZEN MINCE. APPLE OR ■12SBSSSN Pumpkin Pie. 1-LB CTN •eeeeeeeee WITH THIS COUPON ON ANY 2 lA$ SLICED BACON ROLL \, , V;1'- ‘.’1 ;, % > I, p| ® A *$ if*-# ■ *&&* •Vf&k't ** <48^ The independence ofhewspapcrs is important because tlnundependence is your best assurance fliatYOUR liberty, and independence will bejno-tected and preserved. 1 ; ^ 'V' J ' ; 'Ik-.. • Newspapers make up the first fine of defense against encroachment on the right of the people to know. They are outposts ever on the alert to noteajarmaigiials mid callforaction When dangerthreatens. ,-l Through centuries of history, people have learned that liberty is rieyer entity leisure against violations. Even in a democracy such at oms there is the ever presdii threat of “managed hews*” the efforts to transact pubfiibusiness in sehrecy^the controlled press conference andwtd- i— This fight to keep newspapers Independent is YOUR fight; for it i&your independence which we are courtrooms, in labor headquarters and government bureaus,in execu-tive mansions and legislative htdls—today, as in the past, independent newspapersfight thegood fight in defense of YOTTRiibcrty. NEWSPAPERS the Independent Medium For Daily Home Delivery CS11332&181 .■ THE PONTIAC WBESS, MONDAY. OCTOBER 7. iwi tfs a Pleasure to Sho 44SE. Mc«S». I 7M An bum Av*. GRADE A LARGE TOMATO CATSUP PESCHjp SLICED BACON FRUIT COCKTAIL CAMELOT FROZEN FIRST CUT CENTER CUT BLADE ROAST HILLS BROS. com Swansdown Assorted CUE MIXES ROUND BONE SHOULDER ROASTS » PEOPLES FOOD MARKETS F Bat. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1068 mUBI SSSBJv kSSI toBusinessinU.S. The forming «re top prices covering sales nf'fediijhtfMA produce by growers and sold by them inwholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Mvtate. a* : . ,:'JlwkfriCt Mart Struggles YORK iAP) — Theiof the leaden unchanged. The erage at noon wad up 2.17 at MtoMatotota|M|rinfiiuir actiur Wto’fiMHBflfj'ty ' onto its winning streak despite [conflicting published reports—a Prices were irregularly high-the pressure cl profit taklngjpfckup in orders reported by er on the American Stock Ex-early this afternoon. steel mills together with price change. Saxon Industrie! Trading was active. Gains I cote by several leading comps- openedlate, down 4% at 67 on s"S outnumbered losses by fewer nies. N 3,000 shares.. Mohawk Data 6 0i than 100 issues on the New York] Gains and losses ranged from 'Processing gained 2, Charter Gil ’i Stock Exchange. foaetieto to 1 or 2 points gener- and Leasco Data Processing h lix Associated Press average] ally. K •' preferred a point or more. ffiSEutS* ^ ' ^ Some analysts said the mar- Consolidated Oil & Gas °£fP'gijgy w••••'■ ^3^.0, with Industrials up .8,Iket was ripe for a correction dropped a coupleof points. Sibo-wSSSJS^bi1^ IS1 rails off .2 and Utilities off .1. [after its three-week upsurge. ney Cklrp. was the volume lead- bmm, ort^SunS^hf*.Steels were mixed, with somej Hie Dow Jones industrial av- er as it edged higher. /pSSnSt Applet, Mclntoth, tat, ttrM, .. 4.00 U fsla it, Reman, bu. .... riittiM Sprout*, bu. ......... Cabbage, StamUnl v«rmv. bo. . Ca/rote, Cedo-Pek, 1 (ft. ....... Carrots, topped, bu. ............ New York Slock Exchange NE wyork (AP) - New York Stocki » ■ , ,jj|B*chongo Mtactwl morning' prlcee: L t ---- ••• . BtM low LMt c8SI < ■ i*jl NSW YORjClAP) - No wYork Slock OAC Cp 1.40 1.75 Exchongo aolictid noon prlcat: i|Swp A rfs. < > l F J* Ct . 1.50 Addma 1.40 N Wt m 10% -I . .7*Admiral 8 «% 21% 1IH ... .. .25 AlrRebtn Ut V 32 It* JH* ..... rm8t& ifeSik* K!1 A PhlllPet 2.00 (Ms!) HM UW I Apollo? Crew Gets Checkup By PIfiL fHOMAS ami alcoholism among' workers fon’t known; but the cost is: • 17.5 billion a year. - HUH And that figure b a feefl- tor Friday Orbit Sholffg^y | ■ KENNED (UPJf -7 astronauts Schirra, Dona Eisele and •Walter Cunningham t o d a y bought' medical clearance for tYiday’s launch pn a demanding ! 11-day, 4-milhon-mile space fligWaroUndearth, ' The pilots, fresh from |l weekend of rest, tacedfiieir last major preflight- p hy s i c a 1 are ready for die Surveys Hint ConfrolHouse NEW YORK PVP | be angered with a postflight examination. published Jedsy i a certain they|dicated Republicans will gain tie trip and to number of seats in Congre he cAmnaridi»ikU i<>n Ww iwuuiwk
~Wtard«alar jtrwit 1 a §8 ssis 31 53% 52% 52% — % “20 ^29% ^1 27% + ^ ^ Hi SBu'.i Bjnfiai ssna'grS.Rai at #s_ V r-;® -Hi 9 Og 2 Jm S% nib — 5 14 32% 31% 31% — mmr ........ a.» •.« uan wnr ■.« Atsoclatad Trodl 104 li.O DaycoCp 1.00 aw I? OonROr _______Chemical Narlh Central 11 m O S ® p-_: % S iP pii>5 ttiKi K, “if, a® ® s » » ® 8 3 4! 4L. . I IPS-l 2t 07% 00% 04% - % 5,r A. JR 12 lllfll r. R| |W nrd«7'a 1M Dividends Daciorad , _ Cambridge Nuclf (x) « 88 !» r» 2ks& 3 35% 35% 35% cirwit^iV:;. 10 lr)4i (Jt) «« 40% F + % •“ It 2»0 22% 22% ■' 44 54!b 50% 5«b a il JJK (SarSf nS ifo t, PacLtg 1.00 f Pac Pit .15a ? PacPwt ].» ‘ P0CT4T 1.20 PanASut 1.J0 Pin Am .40* Panh EP 1.00 ParkaDavlb 1 PannCan 2.40 PannDIx ,00b Penney JC 2 PaPwLt 1.50 %. 20% 3 r 30’/. — 141 PhelpsD 3 “li" 72 54% 541 H 37. 301 7 70% m —p— 45 34% 3414 34% » 8% 27% 27% Ic p r+« 18 a% a a% + % 200 'Mb 34% 34% +1% 02 11%, 25% 25% — % 30 £% 37% 37% . 40 8% 77% 27% - % ’ *r^k 3314 ^1 - % 105 Mb 74% fib-% 10 30% 30% WN W3%’3%- 45 47% 9% 47% - 7 71 7014 70% - 40 07% 47 07% 7? 10% 77% 10% 4 h I . There was no doubt about the la health of die diree men j fMlSS however/7 Sddrru; Eisele aou a xm % I Cunninghairt anpear in perfect 07%-% condition and they'are eager —r- w ■ going. They have been estimated the pr«fc84kl« 4 tSb m Mb+ % preparing for this flight frari Republican House total at 197 13 47% 4% 47% w % ^re tbaj, ^ years J seats. “It’s a lot of work, a hell A lot of work to got' one of these1 ^Both surveys . things off,” 8dMrra said in a Democrats are almost certain recant interview.' He is a to retain control of the Senate, veteran of Mercury end Gemini* & Ate present Congrew space flights and expects to Republicans have i87 °f the 435 retire from tiw space pilot Hou* *&*r <* the 100 business after the o r b i t a l in the Senate. ’8 SS 88 3S?~ 72 it% iK m 47 44% 4414 44% — % SI MM M Mb + % i 7% — V i 27% — 7 k 42% — b X BZ* a 3% an F t is StUS4mF '2.21 41 55% StRcgP 1.40b R » shakedown run of Apollo 7. COUNTDOWN STARTS The preliminary countdown On the 22-etory space maddne WON’T BB ENOUGH Newsweik said a poll of its correspondents in the 50 states indicates Republicans w(^ nut enough it ate con-* ‘ M ,te be By 7” » |« g g +jjlceeding smoothly toward an gStfC?! #:W^*n“rrld*y4 . * ‘ , . ' I wins inough electoral rotes to sbdCftt'2.20 * m Sears Ro 1.21 150 47% 07 &»i°50 » 44% 4M gP“^ la 117 37% S% 34% — % Ee.*/5. fwwMM SmlttiK_ 1.80a M £ Mb gb + % V.0t 8 mb Mb V — % 1.40 B:3ff 47% 8|b'+,% •is. ns m ist m t ■I% amlBi sioiltnd SfOIINJ 74% 74% — % lb 100% + open the generation of African manned n- Times fnade Hs estimates (greet precursor of the flight ofj - w: . „ *!llL,e!?OI,to!!!. -or.fcft “The survey indicated factors -u resujt jj, mWB _ains for the Republicans, possibly mnugb to .Win narrow c mnt roi of the Houie,” the Times said. 'The same factors appeared at work in the races for die Senate.” /•V ‘ • rt W 'if 'jpSB Newsweek’s speculation about congressional election of the Mpd president wife based on the constitutional^ provirfon that leaves the choice of a chief executive to die House if nb candidate receives a majority vote | in thgtolectoral college. around the moon and back in that December. The object of the voyage of 3 Apoilo 7 is to prove eophisfleated new ' m *5 37% 35% 34% — % HH + % 490 47% 441 45% + % Success would prove that the MS billion program to land men on die moon before the end of next year is folly recovered from the Apollo 1 fire which kflled the first ApoUo crew M months ago. XTEN8IVE REDE8IGN “The Apollo the product of^extenaive in the past year and a ^ In such a contingency, each to«*craR is state would cost one veto, anti 26 votes would be necessary for victory. —W—X !4 m if sis. 1 M£m sssssatr ■ | fi r hi, '8 H-r St ™ ifilt —V— ii m m at# 31 »%.S% 3Mb+ 14 IH lz*%+% IIBK-'ll#!: IpESS SfLvmrn SfejSb"ga^!?tagg txtra dividends or Mymwi^ilMl.dlWh d—Declared or paV,in mulatlvo Jmm wtth avMin dtvfdiind omWodt doborroid or no i taken, at IM ^WeiWmeeMjRL^r 'Ck during *19M, £tjr half,” the space agency said in The magazine estimated that, as of today, Nixon could count on the votes of |0 Mate delegations to 19 for Hubert B. Humphrey, i for Wallace and 8 ded. - ' WlnnDIx 1.54 Woolworth 1 XeroxCp 140 YngetSht 1JI ZenWyR * a weekend statement “The real of tie capability It is checked out in space with men at the codtroL” ★ .-,#9;; a- 9 The next Apollo, the Apollo I spacecraft that may make the December moon flight, was scheduled to be mounted on its towering Saturn f rocket today in the Saturn's e *s e m b 1 y building. The entire 363-foot machine is to be moved from the 52-story “garage” to the Oceanside launch site a day before Apollo 7 takes Off. ★ ★ * | As a further Indication of how die moon flight program is picking up momentum, the Apollo 9 command ship arrived here over the weekend. It will be launched in February March. The lg-fan Apollo 7 will be the last of the tiuYC-eeaters in the moon program to be launched by a Saturn IB rocket, a 224-foot, two-stage launcher that packs a total of lig million of thrust the Saturn that will take over in December M million poupids of push in dace stages and tt the only American rocket with iH § to ^ 100,000-pound ApoUo to the Amwrican Stock Exch. YORK (AP) • American' Stock » nutouTir^- ~£=- few&A ■’ m AudOII I, _ AtlatCorp wt Ir ^ - PSL1® i aW& v* 151 13% 11% 11% 1# UK 15% diS to 7% 7% 5% 42 17% 14% 15% ■ 270 13% 12% 13% 7 40 39% 37% 7 14% 14% M% 12 31 to% to% 26 17% 1® 14%-% m* 1*% + % Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AP) — The Ion of the Treeeury Oct. 2. ared to Oct. 3, 1747 dollert): 0.727445,975.30 4,750,077,411.21 llscal year July 1 17+14,347.73 |M ___74.0fi7.8M73 47,347,527,101.25 Total debt x-355.23M14.777.tl 335,171+3+1443* Gold Attoli . 10,347,044,135.17 13.003,217,292.0* x-InclUdes 537,775,715.35 dobl not nib-loci to ttotulory limit. | News in Brief Carl Anderson, 24, of 305 Hughes told Pottdiic police yestoday that items valued at 1489, including a portable TV, a stereo and a radio, were stolen in n brenk-ia of his home. meat sources put t «s #ha|A' $7.5 bilUon ayerr. Jp.if* a-man." . -^PaBT:; “Our figures are those tbst] 8te^tod Habbe, In an article can’t ‘ be gone bcIftW*' ’ doatotg wtih ak^M|W|t.to)d the VpMtomoti tow "weJagOtCM ' ‘ mjmm mininwm of 5 J pw cetit of tbe H «gM|i Every . ectlv on the payrdl m| I ifjmliliiT i nil ■■ employer less than $1,585 a age range- A copapany Is apt to year-'But these Sre foirly .conservative figures. They could run much " The cost figure, VonWlegand lid includes loaf; dmO; •ve pay, accident pay era. alcd disability payments, and twtiremCmpcyraentS. ON . Tt iSe toatoMilfie rgf calculate costs run qp by the hungdyer worker who Is on the job nut Isn’t performing as well ftshe would normally. ,'*v' “There’s a warm body then; but iKv-lvto*-td^toiiifom|| Girl, 16, Killed Battling Police Chase Ends in Indiana After Ohio Robbery NEW HAVEN, Ind. (UPI) ~ A teen - age girl jfronk Virginia was killed yesterday ta ft gun battle with Indiaito State Fwce following a robbery te Ohio In which |8 and g credit card iWere taken. i Dead was PeggjT Lee Corbin, 16, Woodbridge,Va. * . if'?/*: ♦.' v? Authorities said she allegedly sarticipated in die holtop of the Van-Del truck stop at Delphos, Ohio witii a youth identified as Charles Waxier 4r., IS, no known address. Police said the couple then ed along VS. IB SC idiana state line, beln by Ohio pdice. Tb*y wtiw ItQy ally stopped at •''roadblock set up by indiana Stitie Pidice 24 In New Haven In Afllen County, adjacent to die Ctofo state line. MAN GETS OUT Authorities said Wader got out of die car when ordered to do so. .. But while trooper Toth Glad-ieux was attempting to mifoiNi ) Corbin’s seat bed, he said She placed a 32-caliber automatic pistol against his stomach and ordered him to “tiack up hr you’re 4 Gladieux stepped bade; - • itiffljm it The girl then reportedly trii|d to get out of the car asp fbtoti twice at Ttbdper Steve Harris and Nhw Haven Town Marshal Jack Swygart. She mined both of thmi. The offtosn then returned the fire, fatally wounding her. was dead on arrival at Parkview Hospital in Fort “foyne. Waxier was taken to the Allen County Jail in Fort Wayne. tomes usually are fairly long. have a considerable investment to’ these workers, and they,in:« put sadly replaced. This is. J eqpctoafiY' trtit-.M those at the manager fQd..; executive totodoim PROGRAMS INSTITUTED In an effort to:ecinhat ] ill extol o Ha m 'anti Ito tofeds, '! Habbe said, “maay oempanies foarahfWitov^iricohDRm-trol programs hr 1966 have diem , today." He iukf the CoafitoOBCe Board made tortntiir to USOand again ttts yeto^of the Vteini and at- ] tirades of top executives of loo i companies on alcoholism and drtaknw problems. Fifty of : queried responded,. to , and, “although there are the'con- j I shows xaoncern for those -With drinking problems and an interest in company programs of control and rehabilitation.” J Habbe said the latest study imaio* :1Ma greater awareness i the part, of die executive of tile alcohol problem in business, and -a,.Mgv ropdtocai to tatoT steps todtodwith it."" - \ Ten yeers ago, he said, 81 of the 50«tomimes rd>lieddut if they did have: an alcohol pro-blem it was nothing to ^worry about but, in the lsi|st* study only 16 gavethli mswer. CONCERN INCREASES ■Ten years ago, three companies said their problem with alcohol pas serious enough to give them concern. Today, nine are concerned. The remaining companies take mid positions.” While more, companies today uccognixe the alcohol problem is a serious one, Habbe said, “this change gives little solace to serious students: of : alcoholism, w|p point oat that relatively few c o m paotTS ierceive the true dimensions of the drinking problems to fbeir oganizations, and that IttiQ fewer have been motivated tp the ptoaL of instituting control VonWlegand agreed that while some progress was being made toward recognising alcoholism as an illness “In the great majority of cases not too ■much progress has been made here.” Every company that doesn’t have an alcoholism program, he said, “does have an ‘unwritten policy that says, essentially, management wtil pay cash prises and other economic premiums to any employe who cah successfully conceal Ms "The man who admits be has been out on a binge won’t get lick pay. But if he can eoncCil this, he gets paid. “The employe who no longer can conceal his alcoholism usually is fired.” M~ lill By ROGER E. SPEAR Q-4 ton wttemptoyed, 41 and would Eke to art up a pension food. I have in mind mtag |M ~ jha idea ft would be Have you any mi mat “ * " ^ —R.M. A—If you are digible under the terms of the Keough Act— > professional or seUrCfopkiyed in an unincorporated bustoes*~you can set aside the amount you have in mind, tax-free, if it does not exceed 10 per cent of your annual income. Also tax-free are the income add' capital ooyoor * Bank Dividend The hoard of directors of Birmingham»- Bloomfield Bank have declared a dividend of |1 per share on bank capital stock outstanding to shareholders of recond, Oct. 9. . iSlo+o/'S the accumulating period. ★ ★ A .■ You ham five choices as to the method of investing: special issue governmental bonds, insurance annuity pittM. qualified hank trusts, open-end mutual fuhds or face amount certificates. A mutual fond, variable insurance aflbulty and certain bank trust arrangomente have aDDredadMpoten^;Snd watidl provide fluctwtingjktBom^ must depoSit the same percentage for any fulMitoR otWNhP09 -defined as wortditg wet 20 ground, hours a week for mare than five . 3 ' ths a year —with ttoee or more years service; , . Since these arrangements cannot be withdrawn, except in cases of severe liability or death, until age 59%, a very thorough study should he made prior to committing yourself. Q—We have held Quaker Oats for many yews^bct tt has just reached the price we padd. ""•ould we coatlmie to told or 01 even?—J. F., B. M. Ar-In my opinion now that several problcm areas have eaa (lived, Quaker Oats is an above-average growth situation. In the last agement team (fimotodcleome marginally profitable operations which off, course aKacfod total •ales; however, profits moved op T8.Y per cent hf the W ended June 30. The niinji iiienjji turnaround of its Burry division, a tighfenjng of. foreiipi operations Slid the excellent reception aatorded ntoty tatoodnead gro-eety WWtoets should push fiscal 1969 earnings into new high (Copyright, 1966) Local Czech Officials Rebuff Us—Pravda B i|||l yill HHDh MOSCOW (AP) —Pravda every where—no time, the situa-complained today that efforts ofltion does not allow It, the work-S®riefr Spiddiers to establish ets (or peasants) “are- not friendly contacts With Czechos-J ready" for such meetings” — tovaks are still being rebuffed Pravda said. “Many people by some local officials hank already been punished for •‘-Tbe number of contacts is in- mertingjfc w i t h soldiers: They creasing from day to day,” the have been reduced In their jobs Communist party newspaper re- or even dismissed. Even chil-ported In a dispatch from Bra- dren are prohibited from com-Qghopeof fegjg^atfr “Let no one think that the Soviet paepte want to,lores their friendjdiip bn anyone. Oar pin* pie have feelings of dkplty and pride in their country.” Pravda admitted there had Pravda added Soviet soldiers been a time following the Aug/in Czechoslovakia seek contacts 20 invasbn wbeQ Soviet soldiers because they want the popula-met with “passionate argument/tionto understand “the reasons westing people ■■■■■ soldiers runs into the open resis-tance of local authorities and party leaders/ insults and meances. But this behavior is now passing, Pravda said, and “the characteristic feature of these days to...calm and comprehensive Talks on Eow to"weand acF to gether in the future.” ‘FRIENDSHIP EXPRESSED* “Ordinary people and honest workers take every opportunity toexpress friendship,” it said. Tfcn it cited a number of cases in Slovakia where if charged local authorities had thwarted Soviet efforts to be .friendly. “The excuses are the same why they came here and they are confident that in meetings with citizens of CSeehostovikia they would help bring about a real, rather than sham, normal-ization of the country.” Star* Team Up in Concert ; for $30,(XX) Scholarship; • ' towAvciwmu* NEW YORK(AP) - Doha gave a concert Sunday night, toping to raise gMMW for a permanent Billy Strayborn Scholarship the Juiliiard School of “Satin DoU”on the violin; top Music. — dancer Bunny Briggs and comic Abo «n the program tome lues singer Joe Williams, in fine voice; rhythm and Maes singer Lou Rawls; Geoffrey Holder and Carmen de Laval-lade, who danced a supple flirtation; Bay Nance, who played Strayhom was the composer of “Take the A Train,” made famous by the Ellington band. ..; Ellington—had p French bom and piano. WHAT’S A MOTHER TO DO?-Mrs. Murphy, a basset hound, Mems unable to control her litter of 10 pups, who are intent on getting out of the confining wash tub. Debbie and Kim Lennon of St. Petersburg, Fla., enjoy the antics. Death a Suicide Nationalists Oppose Government The death of a 50-year-old Pontiac man, found Saturday in a pickup trade parked |n his garage, has been ruled a! suicide, according to Pontiac' police. Robert E. Schliter, 146 W. Strathmore,. died of carbon monoxide poisoning, police add. He left a not., Service Slated ELECTRICAL at INDUSTRIAL ENGINEER Graduate Engineer for Development of Computer -—Digital, Process Control Systems, 2 to 5 Years of. Recent (Logic Design and/or Control Computer Programming experience is desired. .. Opportunity, for creative work in development and application of Digital Control Systems to test automation and manufacturing processes. Write stating qualifications, experience and'pres-\*nt salary to: * -\ Personnel Department MANUFACTURING DEVELOPMENT G. M. Tech Center ik Mile and Mound Rdf. Warren, Michigan 48090 J5K j, GA (it. 3>oneUE CDonaU 3£. Johm * You Can Look To Us . . . - % . . for every service that to required. We mean this sincerely- The facilities of the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home are planned to see that your personal duties, as weil as our services,' are completed properly and In good taste. (Plupte FEDERAL 4-41(1 (PaJdnq O* Our (Pm ""[raj "ms 'WEST HUKSN ST. PONYIAC T ; # • r « jt.i the dty and a police car was By a firebomb. BIAS CHARGED The violence erupted with nationalists charging discrimination against Northern Ireland’s Roman Catholic minority. Most Catholics under the northern Ul- KAI AMA7no 71TPD _ An ^ SFWrmaaA want to unite KALAMAZOO (UP!) — An TrU(, nanithlin ♦„ organization of parents offered Inquiry. The British government, however, handles defense and foreign relations for Northern Ireland but leaves police matters in Irish hands. MESSAGE TO WILSON The Lomtonderry Trade Council messaged Prime Minister Harold Wilson in London protesting: “The citizens of this a set -mf proposals Sunday to settle mine of the problems that shut down Central High School last month. * An organization called the Committee of C o n e e r n e d Parents proposed that the 2,200-member student body be divided Into two sections, each to attend school half-days only. It said this would reduce congestion in halto and cafeterias, therefore minimise the threat. of conflicts between students. with the Irish Republic to the south. Demonstrations began Saturday with a civil rights march protesting alleged abuses agajnst Catholics in housing, employment and voting regulations. 7 A -free-for-all between about 100 black and white students more than; a. week ago shut down the school for a week. The clash came during the noon- hour recess, _____ . ____ The committee of parents said half-day classes -would allow all students to eat at home, rather than at the school. The school board was scheduled to act on the committee’s proposals tonight. Central High School also was plagued by racial strife last year. About 400 of its students are Negro. ________________ COMMITTEE PROPOSALS Other committee proposals Would require the transfer of problem students to the Hurd School, and suspension and prosecution of any student found in possession of a yveapon or involved with assault. * city were attacked indiscrimi-jin Vietnam since December. He nately by police ... and women was due to retiirn Oct. and children were not excluded! from police excesses ... We strongly urge the government to take action." Russian Satellite to Relay Radio and TV Signals MOSCOW (AP) - A new communications satellite, Molnia 1, was put into orbit two days ago, the soviet Union announced today. ★ * * ft has » high rfipticai orbit, putting it over the Soviet Union for tin larger part of its flight. The angle of orbit to the equator 65 degrees and foe period of revolution is 11 (hours and 52 minutes. J * Tass said the satellite will be used for long distance radio and telegraph communications also to relay Soviet television check on programs to-the extreme north- taireir from a cash :register em parts of the country, Siberia, central Asia and the Soviet far east. The satellite equipment, which includes a system for correction of the orbit and a power supply unit, is functioning normal, | “ ■ I, Tass added. Thirty demonstrators, including a member of Parliament, were hurt in clashes Saturday afternoon. The list of injured tripled Sunday and included three children. Service for Sgt. John A. Wood, 19, of 370 Nelson will be 1 p.m. Wednesday at Sparks-Griffin Funeral home burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Ticket prion for 2,836-seat, MMMrniunleH^^ S*reyto»i>i.wbr 12.25 tollOO and/v^iSatioM ‘ that came in, sponsors were optimistic the $30,000 had been obtained. Strayhom was a long-time cocomposer, coarranger and friend of Ellington; he died at age 51 May 31, 1907. The evening began with “Take the A Train” fry the Ellington band, with solos by Ellington on piano and Cootie Williams on trumpet. SINGS 5 SONGS------ :.. Lena Horne, in African hair style and wine-color gown, sang five songs backed by the Chico Hamilton Quartet. She also sang “I Got It Bad” with Ellington playing piano and said she last sang it accompanied by Stray-horn. Miss Home isn’t often heard in New York, but her voice still is as liquid and inviting as tawny brandy. Timmy Rogers. Last hem before the lively “Jam with Sam’’ by the Ellington group, was “Explorations to D,” a classical piece which Tony Bennett sang a new song Sgt Wood died Sept. 27 of by Ellington, “Making That ROBER HILSMAN Ex-JFK Aide Guest Speaker woulds received when a booby- Love Scene;” a song Ellington Fririnw nl I ‘ ‘ Al Hibbler, “just a IUU/ Ul KJSJ “It Don’t Mean Thing.” To shouts for more, he returned to sing “I Left My Heart in San Francisco.” Charges of police bratility trapped truck exploded in Viet- wrote for were raised and the government «>«*>• - So,” and broke it in London was asked to hold an Surviving are-his wife, Linda; up with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Herchel Wood of Pontiac; two brothers, Marie and Herchel at home; four sisters, Pamela, Barbara, Vicki and Lisa, all at home; and grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Marchbanks and Mrs. Grace Wood, an of Arkansas. “ ~ A Pontiac Northern High School graduate, Wood had been Hanoi Decries The next lecturer in Oakland University’s speaker series is political scientist who served al' President -Kennedy’s principal 'looter on the firing lines of Southeast Asia. William Craig, Northern Ireland’s minister of home affairs, Countered that police “used no more force than was necessary.” He said there was evidence that tht Irish Republican Army, the outlawed nationalist insurgents, had infiltrated the civil-rights movement. Church Split on Plan to Raze Building Roger Hilsman, former r\»l ri f » 'assistant secretary of state for Ul KB bombingVu Eastern affairs, wiTT ^ answer the question, “Who „ .. ' . makes American foreign- SAiGON (AP) - Radio Hano! ^ a talk entitled says U.S. planes, taking ad- ^^^1 Politics and the vantage of heavy ndns and Mg Amerlcan » floods,” intensified attacks against dikes and water conservation projects in North Vietnam’s southern panhandle during September. IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — Members of the First Presbyterian Church have rejected architects’ plans to demolish their 112-year-old church building- Be preservation was the central is-There is no doubt this was a sue jn a church trial earlier this Republican front,” Craig said. year. The congregation voted 158-56 Sunday to' reject the plans and Jeft the future of the building in doubt. Efforts by Joseph E. Baker, an English professor at the University of IoWa, and his wife to, save the building as an example of 19th century Gothic resulted Two Men Hold Up Pontiac Twp. Motel In a broadcast monitored in Saigon, Radio Hanoi said 138 portions of dikes had been heavily damaged during the month. The radio added that 136 workers attempting to repair the alleged damage were killed or wounded. ♦ * . * The report, from North Vietnam’s Ministry of Water Conservation, detailed individual strikes on dikes and said the alleged attacks “are utterly odious crimes running counter to international law and human morality.” A Pontiac Township motel reportedly was robbed of $150 early yesterday by two men pretending they were looking for a room. ★ Herbert Stephens, manager of the King Motel, 1300 Opdyke, told Oakland Ceunty sheriff’: deputies that the money was when he went 1 room. The robbery occurred about 40 a.m. The thieves were believed to be driving a blue Plymouth, according to Stephens. . One of Many Uses Radioactive Atom Keeps Time WASHINGTON (UPI) - The radioactive atom is ohe of the better timekeepers in nature. A specific atom emits characteristic rays at a known rate. Thanks to man-made electronics, atomic frequencies can be used to regulate dories which gain or lose no more than a few seconds a year. * * A . So now a watch company (Butova) is doing resteTch aimed at getting the atomic clock down to wristwatch size. This is just cme example of how hard ingenious people are working to saddle the atom with ever more chores. IN PROSPECTING The Atomic Energy Commission and the geological survey are trying to get it to take over the labors performed of yore by the bearded and sweaty prospector working with primitive tools borne to the scene of operations' a tired burro. The up-to-date prospector us& the rare, man-made element Californium-252, which has the faculty of -ahqotihg out neutrons. These subnuclear .projectiles make radto-actiye the minerals they hit. MA by the rays emitted by thus bombarded minerals the atomic prospector can quickly determine whether they contain gold, silver, or other valuable metals. ★ ★ ( ★ The AEC also has developed a small portable X-ray mineral analyzer which can' be used in the field to make quids studies of every thing from the ash content of coal to the constituents of wet cement. BEST-KNOWN The manifold' uses of radioactive materials !radioisotopes) in industry, medicine,; and agriculture have been much publicized. ! Radioisotopes, for example, supply the energy for implanted heart stimulators (pacemakers) and for electrical power systems Aboard spacecraft. Lew well-known, “neutron activation” devices for doing a lot of things, including detection of art forgeries. By taking atomic “fingerprints” of pigments used in paintings,, it is now feasible UrTlate and cataltfjjue art works in a way that will make it practically impossible to fake an old master and get by with it. in their conviction by a church court of “disrupting the peace and unity’'* of the congregation Appeals by Baker and his wife to overturn the conviction by a panel of laymen and dery and their suspension from membership, offices and communion in the church wore rejected by state and national Presbyterian ruling bodies. The Bakers were accused of making abusive and derogatory statements to other members of the congregation in their campaign to save the building. PTA Dinner Set Highlighting the first meeting of the 1968-’69 school year for members of Kennedy Junior High School’s PTA will be »of stateforFar Eastern affairs. He will speak in a public lecture at 11 a.m. Friday, ht, Wilson Hall auditorium and witi answer questions in an open discussion period at 2 p.m. that day in the Oakland Center Gold Room. Hilsman, who has been A _ 'ofessor of government at Columbia University since 1964, has a wide-ranging background of professional soldier, government administrator, intelligence expert, scholar, diplomat, and teacher. APPOINTED BY JFK He was appointed by President Kennedy to serve as one of his administration's c h i e f foreign policy makers. Hilsman served initially as director of the State Department’s Bureau of Intelligence and Research and, to this capacity, went to Vietnam, Laos, and India. In 1963 he was chosen to replace W. Averefi Harriman as assistant secretary family dinner Tuesday in the cafetorium at 6:15 p.m. * * * A discussion entitled “Vandalism,” led by Jim Lathemer, police counselor at Pontiac Central High School, will precede the dinner. A question and answer period will conclude Lathemer’s talk. The crises he faced in this, post included the Buddhist [revolts and the coup against President Dim in Vietnam, territorial disputes between Malaysia and Indonesia, Communist troops in Laos, and thp ideological rift between Com-' China and the Soviet if TIGHT SQUEEZE^-Marhts Andersen of Ryomgard, Denmark, must negotiate this narrow 65-foot-long alley connecting his back yard with the street. The Danish shomaker carries- a tape measure with him whenever he shops for a new car. Union. ..._________ TIM Board M Trwtaat of tha Com- a, IM at It* Offlc. of Physicali Facll I-tlat. Second Floor, BolMlns fcD" Orchard Proposal! must bs on forms furnlshod amount.of «Na.»W cwMgp)^ tha pdimuniRy Cr — Wans and I r Collagt, Farmintfon, Mich ¥&&rWJZZ. but no will bt mod# far K SJt turn of »uch Mtio furalth Sflltftdory 1 and Later B MaMrlal B to ntoS^tTrnnltS^timym fna right to rolact any and an bids In «Ma or In part, and ts wslvs any InlpiliSBIIaa i THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1068 FOR Linda Borgeson Sogers sports I big smile and a Wgbttttetr as she boosts Robin Malone for president. The lovely Denver model, who bears a striking resemblance to her comic-strip candidate, is pictured in front of the Colorado SMfte Capitol. * Death Notices AVEHY, IRVING; October s, 1968 ; 2940 St Clair, Avon Township; age 70; dear father of Mrs. Gerald Hill and Mrs. Robert Cwrigian; also surviveh1ois grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. Mr. Avery was taken from the Harold R. -Davis Funeral Home, Auburn Heights, today to the Myers Funeral Home, Ionia, for services and burial at 2 p.m. on Tuesday. BENDER, JACK M.; October 6, 1968; 363 Dover Road; agefii; dear father of Doris' M. Bender. Elk’s Lodge of Sorrow win be 8 p.m. Tuesday. Funeral service wiU be held Wednesday, October 9 at 3 p.m. at Spar k s-Griff in Funeral Home. Interment in White Chapel Cemetery. Mr. Bender wffl lie in state at the funeral home after 3 p.m. Tuesday. (Suggested visiting -heurafFto S-and-Y-toHR^CSeB* tributions may be made to the St. Joseph Hospital Building Fund or the Elk’s Lodge No. 810, Pontiac. Death Notices also survived by three grandchildren muf ‘eight grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, October 9, at 1:30 p&Cit Voorhees-Siple Chapel, Res. Theodore R. *" officiating. Interment in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. Geliske will lie in state atthe funeral home. (Suggested visiting hdffii* 9 to 5 and 7 to 9.) KELLY, HAROLD VALE; October 4, 1968 ; 233 Judson Street; age 73; beloved husband of Sophia Kelly ; dear father of Mrs. Robert Burton, Eaton, William *and Franklin Kelly; dear broker of Douglas Kelley, also survived by 4%,godchildren. Ftt-neral service will 6ie held Monday, October 7 at li a.mL at All Saints Episcopal Church. Interment in Perry Mount Pak Cemetey. M. Kelly will lie in sttte at the Huntoon Funeral Hfane. LOVELL, ELMER JAY; October 5, 1968; 1031 Boyd Street, Troy; age 81; beloved husband of Mame Lovell; dear father of Donald J. and Marvin R. Lovell; also survived by one grandchild and one great-grandchild. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, October 8 at 1 p.m. at Price Funeral Home, 3725 Rochester Road, Troy, with Rev. Edwin C. Wagstaff officiating. Interment in Mt. Avon Cemetery, Rochester. Mr. Lovell will lie in state at the fimeral home. NQltfCSS t 9 S ■M)...............m Directors ..... 4 Cemetery Lots.........4-A Personals ............4-8 lost and Pound...5 EMPLOYMENT Kolp Wanted Mali..........6 Help Wanted Female........7 Help Wuntsd M. or F. 8 Solis Help, Mole-Female...BA 1 pBOiBW Employment Information ...M Instructions—Schools.....19 Work Wanted Male .......11 Work Wanted Female........12 Work Wanted Couples... ,12-A SERVICES OFFERED Building Sorvices-Supplies.. .13 Veterinary ................14 Business Sendee ...... Bookkeeping and Taxes......16 Credit Advisors..........16-A Dressmaking and Tailoring. .IT Gardening ...............18 landscaping ............18-A Garden Plowing...........18-B Income Tax Service ...... .19' Laundry Sendee ..........20 Convalescent—Nursing ......21 BROWN, GLADYS MATTICB; October ’ 6,, 1968; 1612 Greenleaf Road, Royal Oak; age 74; dear mother of 'Htenerd R. Brown, Jr.; also puTMrivsd bv four grandchildren. Funeral ■)js held Tuesday, October^! a\ 1:30 p.m. William Funeral Home, 70?tWvll Mile Road, Royal Oak, wit Thomas Kennedy officiating' Interment in White Chapel Cemetery, lint. Brown will lie in state at the funeral home. COOPER, JOSEPH (PERCY) October 4, 1968; 15.740 Freeland, Detroit; a ge’ 70; beloved husband of Mary Cooper; dear father of Mrs. Theresa Sabo, Margaret and John Cooper; dear brother of H a gold L ♦, C oo per- 7..alio survlved ^ y Te v e i grandchildren and -one greatgrandchild. Recitation of die Rosary win be tonight at 7:30 at Barash Funeral Home. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, October 8 at 10:30 a.m. at Buresh Funeral Home, 13831 urita Schaeffer, Detroit. A second service will be held Tuesday at 11 a.m. at Fractals Blood Church. Interment in Oak view Cemetery, Royal Oak. Mr. Cooper will He in state at the fitteral home: CROW. NANNIE (MYRTLE) October 5, 1068; 221 State Street; age 79; dear mother of Everett Craw; dear sister of William O. Ferree; also survived bp two grandchfl- dren and seven great-grand-children. Funeral service wUl be held Wedesday, October 9 at 1:80 p.m! at Donelson-Johns Funeray Home. Inter-met in . perry Mount Park Cemetery.' Mrs. Crow will lie in stafh at the funeral home. (Suggested Visiting hours, 3 to 5 and 7-to 9.) HODGE, RONALD WILLIAM; October 8, 1960; 42 Neome; age 63; beloved husband of Mable Hodge; beloved son of Mrs. William Hodge; dear fither of MrS. Theodore — (Sandra) ■ of Payl, Loyal and Max Hodge; also survived by four grandchildren. Elks-Lodge of Sorrow will be held Wednesday at 8 p.m. Funeral service win be held Thursday, October 10 at 1:30 pjm. at SparksGrlffin Funeral Home. Interment in Roseland Park Cemetery. Mr. Hodge will he ill state at the funeral home. (Suggested Visiting hours 3 to 8 and 7 to 9.) Moving and Trucking........22 Painting and Decorating....23 KIRKLIN, CLYDE C.; October 5, 1968; 5658 Hummer Lake Road, Oxfordfage 64; beloved husband of Nellis Kirk-lin; dear father of Mrs. Helen Ferguson, Mrs. Ida Tipton, Mrs. Patricia Ward, Herbert, Roy, Clyde, Evelyn, and John KirUto; beloved brother of fibs. Pearl Adams, and Clarence Kirklin; also vtved by 16 grandchildren. Fu-uneral service wUl be held Wednesday, October 9 at Plus, at Open Bible Church, Oakwood. Interment in Mt. Pleasant Cemetery, Oakwood. fifr. Kirklin will Ue In state at Bossardet Funeral Home, 29 W. Burdick, Oxford, until noon Wednesday. REICH, FREDERICK; October 4, 1901; 7 S. Williams Lake Road, Waterford Township: age 64; beloved husband of Beatrice Reich, dear father of Fredrick and FaUkfin Reich; also suvived by six brothers and five sisters and three gandchildren. Funeral services were held fids afternoon at ,3 p.m. at Coats Funeral Home, Drayton Plains. Interment in Crescent Hills Cemetery T~ TURRENTINE, PORTIS W. •October 4, 1968; 34 Augusta Road,; -age, 67; beloved husband of Marie Turrentine; dear father of Paul Tur* rentine;-dear brother of lifts. Jane Curran, Arch E. Spencer Turrentine. Funeral .service will be held Tuesday, October 8 at 3 p.m. at Donel-son Johns Funeral Home. Interment in White Chapel Cemetery. Mr. Turrentine will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours, to 5 and 7 to 9.) The family suggests memorial contributions may be made to die Michigan Heart Fund.......... arrangements are pending at Donelson - Johns Funeral Rome, where Mr. Turrentine will lie in state. (Suggested visiting hours. 3 to 5 and 7 to nv Thft family suggest memorial contributions may be made to the Michigan Heart FUnd. WAGNER, BETTY JEAN; October 8, 1968; 1291 Malcolm, Waterford Township; ago 44; beloved wife of R-i chard Wagner; beloved daughter of Bessie King; dear mother of Christine, Cathleen, Connie, Jeffrey, Richard, Steven, Mark, and David Wagner; dear sister of John King. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, October 8 at 1 p.m. at Four Towns Methodist Church. Interment in Ottawa Park Cemetery. Mrs. Wagner will lie in state at the Elton Blade Funeral Home, Union Lake. GELISKE, OTTO M.; October 6, 1980; 7970 Perry Lake Road, Independance Town's hip, Ciarkston; age 87; dear father of Fred Geflske; dear brother of Albert and Max Geliske WOOD, SGT. E-5 JOHN ALLEN; September 27, I960; 370 Nelson Street; age 19; beloved husband of Linda Wood; beloved son of Mr. -and Mrs. Hershel Wood; beloved grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Marchbanks and Mrs. Grace Wood; dear brother of Pamela, Mark, Barbara, Vicki, Herehel and Lisa Wood. Funeral' service will be held Wednesday, October 9 at 1 p.m. at Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Interment in Television-Radio Service.,.. .24 Upholstering ....... ...«,24-A Transportation ........i...25 Insurance .................26 Doer Processing..........,27 — Mtitai .'7—; Wanted Children to Board. .28 Wanted Household Goods...29 Wahted Miscellaneous......30 Wanted Money..............31 Wonted to Rant ..........32 Share Living Quartets..... .33 Wanted Real fiitato........36 RENTALS OFFERED Apartments—Furnished ... ..37 Aportmente-4Jnfurnished ...38 Rent Houses, Furnished ....39 Rent Houses, Unfurnished.. .40 Property Management... .404 Rent Lplm Cottages........41 Hunting Accommodations 41-A Rent Rooms ....v*........42 Rooms With Board ........43 Rent Farm Property.......44 Hotel-Motel Rooms........45 Rent Stores. •.....•.,.....46 Rent Office Spoco .........47 Rent Business Property.. .47-A Rent Miscellaneous ........48 REAL ESTATE Solo Houses ........49 Lake Property ............51 Northern Property ......51-A Resort Property ..........52 Suburban Property........53 Lote-Acnage .............54 Sole Farms ............ 56 Sale Business Property ....57 Sole or Exchange.......,.58 FINANCIAL Business Opportunities......59 Sale Land Contracts ........60 Wanted Controcts-Mtges... 60-A Money to Lend...............61 Mortgage Loans .62 MERCHANDISE Swaps .....................63 Solo Clothing .............64 Solo Household Goods......65 Antiques .........•.....65-A HI-FI TV A Radios .........66 Water Softeners'........ ,66-A For Sale Miscellaneous .... 67 Christmas Trees.........67-A Christmas Gifts .........674 Hand Tools-Machinery......68 Dp It Yourself ............69 Comoros—Service .........70 MOilCoj floods ............71 Music Lessons .. .......,71-A Office Equipment...........72 Store Equipment ..........7S Sporting Goods.............74 Fishing Supplies—Baits .....75 Sond-GraveL-Dirt ..........76 Wood—Coal—Coke—Fuel ....77 Pete-Hunting Dons .........79 Pet Supplies—Sendee.....79-A Auction SUlos .............80 Nurseries ................81 Plants-Trees-Shruhs ....81-A Hobbles and Supplies..... FARM MERCHANDISE livestock .................83 Meats...................83-A Hay-Grain-Feed ...........84 Poultry................. ..85 Farm Produce ...........,.86 Form Equipment ............87 AUTOMOTIVE Perry Mount Park Cemetery. ‘ ‘ .............at The John will lie in state funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 9.) Travel Trailers............88 Housetrailers..............89 Rent Trailer Space.........90 Commercial Trailers......90-A Auto. Accessories.91 Tires-Auto-Truck ..........92 Auto Service..............93 Motor Scooters............94 Motoreyciss................95 Bicycles ..................96 Boats—Accessories ..,...,.97 Airplanes .................99 Wanted Care-Trucks.......101 Junk Care-Trucks .......101-A Used Auto-Truck Parti ...102 New and. Used Trucks.....103 Auto-Marine Insurance ...104 Foreign Care..............105 Mew and JJsed Cars ......106 of H» fin, InMitlon «f th* ed».rU«. t which ho. k... thmugh th*onon. DM tm atmmimm- —>.» W«t Ad. I. Card of Thanks OUR SINCERE THANKS and appreciation to th* Member* of tno ■ bwmtMm Raitt Oreonualton. for Mr hold and assistance on sept. *, 1PM. The family of Joseph Hommann ondWoMb ISwlBi > drive an wo ■ wutwi , ' Commiulon END WORRIES Let covneelon provide you with confidential mmav mnnaaoiHaNf service that hao helpod momande can't narrow ygunaif art of dabti Oat ttw tnlp yoi^v* bean looking for by taking all your Mil* and dltcuulng your nrohtema: 1H8T-AID, Inc._____ 504 Commwdt^Naf'l. Bnk., Bldg. HALL TOR RMNT, RECEPTIONS. Mm church, or NR hi > TIRED pf GETTING far those who « Jeckaon cqtiart,. MICHldAN BELL 6W4097 BOX REPLIES . At 19 a.m. today there were replies it The Prow Office te 0 ' C-l, C4, C-7, C-8, C-ll, C-tt, C-14, C-U, C-lt, 018, C-23, C-34, C-38, C-45 and C-48. COATS uraywFWMH1-1^ J. OOPHAibT PUNERAt. HOME Keeoo Harbor, Ph. UPKOO, dOnelson-johns FUNERAL HOME Huntoon Serving Pontiac for JO year. n OeKlena Ave, FE M SPARKS-C-RIFFIN PUNritAL HOMa^ ^ VoorheesSiple FUNERAL HOME. »MS7l Ettebllehed Over «5 Yeere Comotery Late " ' 4j| PERRY MOUNT PARK,,J ANY WITNESSES TO THE accident Yellow Cob and white Chaw. ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING £^,yp*mdv!5&S:..FB M,a AVOID1 GARillSHMfeNTS Oot out of debt wnti our plan Debt Consultants FE 8-0333 A SPECIAL MESSAOE to 'ted •pllttor*. When you vote for Mt min rather man la party, jmi Saetsriln County triiauror Is right man. Vote Stator November 5. COMPLETE POODLE HAIRCUTS, HOLIDAY UlA^TH CLUB berthlp ----r — m-mt. sock IT TO 'SM.6A6dY win that election November S. Signed: Children of Jamga E. Seelerlln, Oakland CoufBy neoauror. Sue, Wlo PAKtlBS. W10B by FE 2-7992._____ » BUYING-SELLINGLOOKING-TELL IT TO 260,000 People Pontiac Press WANT AD Phone 332-8181 t MAN FOR MOT TIMS RngrieW ment, prefer: middle age, utRh- 2 M en part Time S week for pgpandablg mon to J744HM botwofe 4d!30 pan. ■ 3 MEN STEADY WORK fpPENTERS (ASSISTANT CITY ENOINIER) DwAitmfry WANTED i & Water Sf. Rochester 651-5300 Sgg.^SSS SWBS3 AmWelders EXC. FRINGE BH(EF1T5 mmm ■ ■ '^gnyjs arm i«._ ^ ... . OotiiMdW ****>. v FOREMM .TQOLMAffiS, riaanta&Mr, .Maintenance Men Avan Tube Division HIGBIE MFG'CO. 50 Men Wanted TUKDAY 6 A.M. KELLY LABOR DIVISION ^IWNmDABLE 1 t .MfrttUEWJIItftH "NEEDED AT ONCE" wiw * want* , wrtra cash far steady Mirt time wartcT «-m. to or phywcalw hand!copped can- ‘“excellent POTENTIAL CALLMR.MMUH A Topless Salesman ELECTRICIANS M!n*MlettoiL mSuar^mulWng of tueh o* uted in «i Apply 1a.m. to Jh-m. Monday through Friday Or eond reauttM to-Employment Dept. . DETROIT EDISON CO. qulrements — topless earning ADV5A»ifeEMtelfrt- OipPORTUNITY, Full trtngu ba Inc. Standard Oi Herilend, Mich. M-5* at U.S. 23, AufTisgeoBZ ■ Experienced mechanic kt bp piny uwngd car* fir indwtrlal plant, g«M ■. wagaa, ggrmgnant n! iliwiBB&ii llwyw Iw. • T JN.S Ti OW AL _ ORGANIZATION. THE RICHARDS £3 ific. wj«i50 — $625 ay Indoctrination period. Advertising Department $750 Month »I4. Mutt till noon Friday KSn Chrysler, 62S-2ttS. ACME-GRIDLEY operator.? SMIml nlghti. Dan ALCCmJ^NEWEST SUBSIDIARY Ilia ananthge for manadomeht trelnaot ana sale* parionnal. Car ycaa^7i»i:DaK - RC WELDERS EXPERIENCED, Michigan TrenitnilT Triillvn 45H Dhlaltwyw Drayton. APPLICATIONS NOW . IhING ae-cepted for umara, full tfmo. Apply Miracle Milo Orlvu-ln Theater APPLIANCE SERVICEIMAN J^Oya par week.. 4j>» of labor, S airtoma$*,^T»^rri,P2irft . AUTO BODY MEN pora and palntors. experlencad, ymrtcMa renditions, lota of parson la Gtorga SPARTAN DODGE Automatic Transmission RebulkNrs first eta** to I4.7J installer* first class HJS 7KW1K_. . Town ^lil«km. JM S. Saginaw. AUTO .jOPY R«gAIKMAN. -CM experience, no Salwiay work, frlngo_bonofHi, contact Kon Dud- •US EOY WANTED, BODYMAN Jerome Cadillac Body Shop. Ex-PorMncod, raforoncea. Plenty of wot*. Contact Tom Tracy Body Um Ummm m WM ENGINEERING • CITY OF TROY $2.95 to $3.86 Per Hr. ChuUanBbM spp lob, training . arsxrt achoal'graduate wm EXPERIBNCflT'fTI JU't • TX UV k Drlvar. PE WML________■ Orlvar. PE WML ENJOY DRIVING -MOTOR ROUTE Openings iff OAKLAND COUNTY AREA APPLY H. M. STIER Circulation Dept. THE PONTIAC PRESS EXPERIENCED MtUlNO mgditm ExpBrienee Salesman FACTORY WORKERS FOR PRECISION STEEL CASTINGS ... NOi-ETtp. Necessary . ’ EXC. Bfh|BFIT$ INCLUDING: 6 " ~ i Cross 26 Wk. Sick Leave 9 Day Holiday $8,000 Life Insurance Job Security ENGINEERS ‘ CASTING LAYOUT MEN CHIEF INSPECTOR ARTCO INC. STclSeM-- GENFRAL PRODUCtRW , Immadlat* oponlngi for jmBfli production MpkjM4'§lf Al J'ftAFT MFG., CO. lip sawa B&f jss»°?si ua cotwtt Twawm. Ovtd i.'Ortrtl Kvffi Detroit LO MIJB. j GENERAL FOREMAN Manufacturing Company — Welled Bl— Graduate or Equivalent ENGINEERS j '* ’and EXPERIENCED DRAFTSMEN CaH Mrs.-Clark at Johnson & Andersen Inc. 334-9901 GRILL MAN Pgr nights. MUst have txporlonca ^Hatasr%Jts HOUSEMEN ___ ._ .... .. wlmoul cooking txMriffKi for tucouiful rtstaurMlt tn Wnt Skx>mfleld7 c days a weak, salary opart, iny# Pa ^w»:rp.sr,Ajrfc wJgjgL INHALATION THERAPIST shift* m modarn ctograwwa 42S Sod Ganoral Hoapltel/ Compotltlvo aalerlaa, llbaral hlnaa banaflla, For MHIwr Information contact JANltORS PART TIME MORNINGS JBSfe JANITORS locatad in Wallad ..mediate oponMgs far le an opportunity for raliiMpymMt with excellent VALC0MATIC PRODUCTS IIRTY* LABORERS SEE MANPOWER Man with car. alio needed. A.M/^t^OiScK W. LATHE/ AND fURREt seasonal employment, PV 1*8 iMhMM*. IncT ano Wlxom Rd., fquai Opportunity Employer MOONLIGHTERS Coat et living fag htoht Solve earn of your mafiy wacmi fiSw' chains.. Wb have opening* Sr ■ m m m ¥m R i s u L 1 £ 7 USE ■te.'^r.Vr / PRESS IS: A N M M ft; S 332 8 1 8 1 i QCtiOBtlft T, 1968 wmt ■. HMHHfip: DEPARTMENT.-THIS IS A NSW ONE MAN DEPARTMENT OFFERING A GOOD OPPORTUNITY TO GROW . CORPORATION PREFER a HIGH school . GRADUATE, DRAFT FREE AND DEPENDABLE " Wh«#KN6FiTS OVERTIME AND GOOD JOB ^rv tSilpy^F^ APPytAT igARBER ST. MECHANIC Pontiac ■ wi&mT Company Pald'seneflts ^JWgilBpw ■■ - United Parcel Service aii^endnce Mechanic . Requires CHy dustrlous young man to Mini car. aattlng. ,'•» x«a all fir Marcuty-Uncom . Ilrtea at at jSp expanding, new car ttealarshlp. Mawb4mdfm.aoM earning* for one who will make thomosfofth* opoortunltle* .offered. Saa *-*— Manager. ■/.: HILLSIDE IMP OAKLAND /^~^yye6ttflAC! w*trsCN! men NO EXKMENCt NEEDED IHQfll “““■“f *SS*M 3 ^ KjKf __ d for the oNtariani. Plus rtlS BenS Caccident* gg£h*l FOR INTERVIEW PHONfe FE 8-9444 NEEDED PRODUCTION WORKERS PONTIAC Motor Division - PONTIAC, MICHIGAN An Bqaar Opportunity atops wanted • grader, earth tod. PB H337. t _ offiSTboys ADVERTISING AGENCY Worth Woodward Area. immediate ^<,Ca ^dl * liberal banotttsf^cali1 Ml Personal Dint.. . & -JT ;■ AN EQUAL OPPO RT UNI T*Y 1 EMPLOYER “ Iters HsJpWairtedMnW PORTIR- longer on light unskilled factory and warehouse jobs requiring no previous experience. . APPLY 4 rm.-4 p.m. EMPLOYERS Tamp. Service, lfl school craasM guard* at vaHMi locations and ichoolt In tha City of Birmingham. Approx. 10 hr». par week at MJp par hr. ‘ rust-oleum route ■ OXiVer, kaa in REAL ESTATE SALESMAN Maw house i ______ ^^wjl^^if^esiree: cali frushour; realtor 674*2245 parts i SBftjpa-W conditions, cantacf IjutwiBSTab^ “* “Siting iTc. SCREW MACHINE OPERATOR L?P/lE f*D>?5lDMAcSimE CO. 17*4 Pontiac Or. ~ l«yl»an Lk.) STORE MANAGEMENT POSITION . A, continuing rapid axpantlon Is ---- —Mr yalNIod man. Retail desirable. We oft training progrem start yail as an ai '‘"Advance executive BENEFITS MN Miss Woodard. 3SMNI to datMls and oppomtmant with ou district meneger. WinkleEian's i@sn 2l9km»J*JSJL f RapSssnfatS Hudson's SCALES ENGINEER phono, ale.. You wlH para ham. Como to lor Mirwow. PONTIAC SOFT WATER COMPANY K A.jMCMAMSERtAiN ST. WANTED: USED CAR PORTER, 1* or avef. Regular sw day* jar waak. No layoffs,, frlnga banofns. call Tommy OwMspn. Solos tuEfomT""* WANTED % TRUCK MECHANICS « dk' . .V . - DOMESTIC HELP, GENERAL Gas or Diesel. Liberal pay^ COUNTER GIRL fir dry cloanort. ^£.^£2* ^ltl mimhlr"*5^;" l experienced or Will ttaln,full thna.| cSSSSL SlpR 8S!mW'r' 09 t MA e-7300. 4570 Telegraph at , . [ Maple. LADY FOX GENERAL houpework, ■ . .r 1 ■: ji-..-. . ■■■- llve-in, 5days, own rm . bam. Tv. Chrutmos Shopping ^a>okty,^Ms. WE NEED also Mala Help needed for ____IKEBPINO, S S, mow, Por doy, 4 days per week, at your wenoon. Control High ana Christmas damping topi For in- 4743, attar 4 pjn. tervlsw cap HI 44430 or wrfia PO maintenance, apply IS STENOS state Mfg. Corp., 70945 Von L.P.N. $3.50 Por Hour I ‘ ‘ ahWLI fringe BOX ti, ursyion risins. COMPANY EXPANDING TO Pontiac area, wonts part-tbns omaa OhHs, h^^ggr^pmaanarm- • a,T- -- ------— - ^poss^B^srKkir ICTCEH2E2S25 15 Junior, Senior Typists iDyke, Romeo; Mich. 5 Key Punch Operators Part Time—17 to 70 -ittana and asalnnmsnts! Cashiers, concessions and ' hourly refes Tor top; man. Sw your favorite movies , ... ._________i KELLY SERVICES ^gyP^HrT{5 insurance furnished and full retrce>! fSeVeirces! Mlddtebeft-Meple srSi. See'-^^ ' Steady Employment . .. - - DENTAL ASSISTANT. RECEF- Mr! Coe, 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.j tioniet, ^mg. SntlKPress.Pontlec, Michigan. * DRAPERY WORK-~R60M needs Monday thru Friday. GMG Factory Branch Oakland at Cass FE 5*9485 equal opportunity employer EXPERIENCED WOi general housework, children, s day Wifi, EXPERIENCED BOO I omen knits, 4474310. KEE PER tolldsyt and vacation it Odvle dgnor. ofi4o» MATURE BABY SITTER, live • Fall Jobs For Fail Clothes AT American Girl Jr. WK, Sr. — Dictaphone Oprs. — PBX Oprs. — Teletype CPprs. — Comp. Ojxp. — Keypunch Oprs.. Owphot^Oprs. — Clerks, filing * HIGH ■ VASA] HOLII PERSONNEL CONSULTANT $5,000 UP Prestige Birmingham office. Bom rate glut Incentive plan. CaH Mrs International personnel ------ 1 HO i. woodward B'ham. 4434341 SiSr*’or<%|] PjgUj OPJRATORfc^g^fin—* 1 — Men's retell clothing •xpw’lence preferred, out not MMntlol, tail or atR^tmit,^ avail, mtny employe Bonetlts, apply in person, ReMrt Clothes, *" “ «—■"*“ »^v«aniAw,y: ' 7B nW W __________ YeUMfl ,AM#r WILUNOmtsorn UDAY PAY 0 BONUSES, Birmingham Mams Pwm, Rm Phone 642-3053 jncuB Salesmen HehsWeetedFeemle A TELEPHONE GIRL __nlngs up to 4150 per hou hours POT doy.1 coil Mrs. W 474-32U Tueedov H. ACCOUNTANT, EXPERIENCED IN r multi-company environment, with some 4m processing bockgra—’ excellent opportunity Mr caliber hfividual eeeklng CTollonge. >»■ roar resumt .. Mr. Shwhmer, Bax 107, Utica, TV-Stereo -Building Materials ^hTwra^'ipotohnaf'Is iCSoo'ona up. Soma sales experience necessary, bat we will treln you tfiM JOWt spnM,1m have one or tho finest employee benefit programs In the country. , if you ora presently In selling nnd wish to mfit p chiitoi, hivestlgele our earning opportunities today. APPLY PERSONNEL DEPT. Montgomery Ward’ Pontiac Moll An pquol ppporhwllv smptoyer SERVICE STATION sttsndsnt, - h nBBK.......... AUTO DEALER' TV TECHNICIAN, Tech TV Servlet, ia?403. AubUrn Roches,*r’ TROY PLASTICS PLANT, top to- ii mm Or., Troy, or call Iftl L TME SERVICE ti M MACHItfl'ST OR tool or an erouM tmL.hkture. i.W4»iBMVMk0 t0r°!Xr! . .. . .ICATIONS., F 6 R • men, local vending com-Call Ft 3-7441 end between ____.urs m.f AMto:fBfc^~7 TV TECHNICIAN, .finertartee to TAKING ’sam SURFACE GRINDiil ' WMU ' sam & » SIDING APPLICATOR d yppr round work n.. lerfence, top wag e ■ “ 'ym tools, root: fwS I's^try Branch. 47] Oakland Avwum, Pontiac, 335-94S5. An 4qwl opportunity employer. f.,. ^,..•■> • , Watchmaker I TP manaap watch repair department in Pontlec. Can earn $15,000 or morn par yaar. Cell *115. "furniture, trainee.' Dalton"Servlet Powir Plant Engineer Ttrpd. pt >lgB t-IT7$ or PE 2407L___________ BABY SITTER AFTERNOON shift. 3 Pransportatlonl^&aow'.1" itAUTY' OPfRATOR, Chat liputy Snlon. 674.334f. ^ffiw*(iWllirLY n 1 tiw o* uiircny, msvy inouarry togkai toPornmiM and power ^^Ptj^ng and JliP i»™utt ...HHI «s®s^r»arssa Our fiMdtrn bio-ltd at RochMttrr small community/ from all bi^dty C8U US COLLECT AT ■, 567-5300 . EXTENSION • . , ■ 5641 PERSONNEL REPRESENTATIVE PARKE-DAVIS ? P,0.80X118 DETROIT, MICHIGAN WfiS&ZZf* 48232 to i am. pidljjiL ____lAID ANb WAIYrESS Ltoerty uim|», M BAR AND miU, necessary, Shelby »•■, «.«■■ tm dftsr 4,- ;v- j . •XiRMAlffWAltRESS weaML T^mttrlin. Uke Orion. 473-1 A* GRILL COOK An opening for an experienced grill cook on the night shift. Good earnings, free Blue Cross and life insurance. Vacations ■and Holiday pay. in person only. TED'S woodward and Square L *"--fiokl Hllf '"eke uTJnV Lake'^lrugs.^SOSO Coofey L Rd„ Union Lk„ Michigan 343*4I«. GIRL PULL TifilfFOR doanlng Beauty Solon, 1] N. Saginaw, FE S4237.___ _______________________ GIRL FRIDAY, Chrltflen Company, Union Lake PPM. >3.25 per hour. Ajjfi Box IIS, Union Likt Poet GENERAL OFPICirTYPTNgTflllnfl, ““ —— Retail Ills. 443- furhlture In 1 mice, could use expectant mothers x oidsr woman. Full end pert — n^5 par hour plus ..................— ■■-^-1 office HOUSEWIVES Now that the chi school, would you chullonglng lob? M you hove a nice appear • ’ pleasant personality, .train you Mr sales ex—_ openings ere for days or evening schedules. Apply personnel dept. 1ND FLOOR HI A.M. TO 4 P.M. Montgomery Ward “TMBTMT" HOUSEKEEPER, LIVE IN. care Mr InvpIW, FE 3+444. S HOUSEWIVES Set nd under Buelnets portunltles No. S7. HOUSEKEEPER AND EASY sitter. SALES MINDED us with OSlindL wimST Equal Opportunity Bmplover ^ntment^caff*>lMi SEFA'S SUPER MARKET apdSI -tit- 1 toon. Need help In matt, produ ra*J5, Sa" tpMjpfjfm.^. ■ mMM ''ARE YOU CARNINf A WAITRESSES DAYS OR EVENINGS, FULL OR! > PART TIME, EXC. EMPLOYEE CSSSBSW.5F5!?! SSSSSf .*nEt|Sy4'K SStiSjnLggUC^ •x M A C H U S RED FOX, 6676 cGRTAiN~Afflrf ffTi s t» r * a D -TELEGRAPH RD„ BLOOM- gar^yir.SwSKSSSll,^SSS5!;,. PARTS AND COUNTER FIELD HILLS. i gfe, *&0J,rvl»rm‘^' DEPARTMENT Yang women Mr lawn.end gard division. Coll 447-1313. Ask tor A, Walton, Wool Ptesser ssrsssi^sssssn Paid holidays and vocation p^raSS Janet Davis Cleaner. 4703007 ' WANT ID "Part " tIMi 'fifiTu 3ctpi.ai«i!!r‘:! WAITRESSES At-lb KjTgff days or 4444333. WAITRESS Production Control Clark ■ w^K^-OFF^Sii I year offtot tx- Jack’s Ortve-ln, 33 W. Montcel WAITRESS, DAY OR ntaMi ——* -------------------»ry. Ft M Highlit ... J Droyury, downtown I FULL TIME SALESMAN, excdlanf earnings, company bemflts. Apply 1 of Moling Shout. SS N. tigtoPWi 1 Pontiac. __________________ 1 RIAL ESTATE v SALESPEOPLE * WANTED n Your Own Disk v Your Own Phone ______________ Large Spocius Office Liberal Commission CALL JOE KIRK LAUINOER REALTY 674-0319 6744)310 Excellent employee's benefits. M. C. MFG. CO. IIS Indlenwood ■eke Qrton 473-2711 PAYDAY; Every Day Work a day, a week, or longer son light unskilled factory and warehouse jobs requiring no previous experience. APPLY 4 a.m.-4 p.M. EMPLOYERS Temp. Service, Inc. WAITRESS, cuke GIRL evunlngj lo’sii&s'V Apply In person Super Chief Drfyiil OfKrtng aruw *whlle*r^n - '* company school. SISAM REALBST, TriM, w^iK^raHran CLAWSON REDFORD FERNDALE CENTERLINE 17 Grand River 2330 Hilton Rd. 1541 E. 10 Mile THESE ARE FREE JOBSIMM art PART.TUAE^ WORK HOME. 1 R.N. SUPERVISOR Salary above average. Phono 423- * mm- RETIREES r— omen ora wanted to S< ARE YOU REALLY 'Ivlng? Or |us* existing? Coil Mr. *o*ev. YORK REAL ESTATE 4744013.......... ,i a.................. MONTH, COUPLE FOR 40 INTERNATIOmL PERSONNEL rncdfL Pontiac prop.. Full, ISIS W, HuwnTitoRNsc* SI4MET > $550 FEE PAID TOP SECRETARY "SSL 'j?’%SLS! city of Blrmlnph i^ijuel Opportunity E^mpj^wr^ RELIABLE EASY SfftEE, night 5:30 p.m. to 3:3> «jn. jlSJItl tSST nmL, Mil time .pan------------ position. Excellent storting solary, assured Increases, generous fringe benefits including reltsoment program. Apply to Spglnaw General FtMBttOl. Personnel Department Stenos - Secretary Typist - Key Punch General Office Work Profitable temporary assignments. Available now — Pontiac area. CALL MANPOWER__________333-S3I4 SHIR+ PRESSER - FULL TIME, 0 0.0 0 FAY. GRESHAM CLEANERS. 4M OAKLAND. SECRETARY Girl Friday. MFG. Rap.. SoythftoM. 359-3410 until 10:30 o.m. 535-41t3 after 7:30 p.m. Consider port time to tfert. SHIRT FOLDER, experienced on aquipmont, .... ____ -_______ Boo WMtt Ctopnors, Btrmlnghom. Ml 44733. STENO Walled Lake Firm. 4 typist wlffi knowledge < variety of duties In telephone receptionist. Phone 624-153S. ft. Apply In pern ‘1 Hamburger's, WOMAN WANTED. MORE Mr home " <•»« salary. Companion for daaf ly lady. 5 day waak. Live In !*• MifR housekeeping and ha. 4P7-4744. After 7. 4344I7W. YOUNG WOMEN nr $60—$80—$100 STENOS-TYPISTS v jmtfmW - GENERAL OFFICE «0 W. HUFUR FfiHOC 334-4P7l $350 AND UP i SECRETARIES INT^NSRnKJNAL'p^twS’EL 3S w. Huron Ponttoc 334^771 t, BOOKKEEPERS Very oood skills, M trial balance. INTERNATIONAL FElttOtSiC W10PQ W. Haran FawIMc »M771 $450—NO FEE FINANCE TRAINEE unit mSm. iPL, ______________. . charge, plus your oportmfit. Ap-;— ply 1301 E. McNichols, Detroit. H.1 Bloch. 10-13 p.m. or Phono, 344-1 IXEH ACCOUNTANT-OFFICE MANAGER RESPONSIBLE FOR BOOKS THROUGH STATEMENTS AND SUPERVISION OP WF rc f EMPLOYES. FRINGE BENEFITS, SALARY OPEN. OUR EMPLOYES KNOW OF THIS AO.---MAIL CON- FIDENTIAL REFLIES TO PONTIAC PRESS BOX C-34. BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED II RH Positive S7JS 11 RH Neg. with oosltlve factors $7.50 Ameg., B-nsg., AB-neg S10 '■‘-sg. SIS MICHIGAN COMMUNITY BLOOO CENTER 1 Pontiac FE 44747 1342 wide Treck Or.. W. Mon.. Fri. 7-4 i„ Wed., Thurs. 10-5 SONNEL MSI— CAN ^TOU SELL? FEEL LIKE LIFE is passing you by? Call Mr. Fotoy, YORK REAL ESTATE. OR sfifa. EXPERIENCE SHbllT ORDER cook. Pina man and wa" " RoaMurant. 4SH614. . Will train. Full time. R XQM.‘ I INCOME Adequate? Cell ■*■“ REAL ESTATE. $600 PLUS CAR SALES TRAINEES $l,000-FErpAID _____PROGRAMMERS__________ Ago 32-45, H.S.G., exp. required. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL ■0 W. Huron Ponttoc SSM771 $MW Public Relations Trainee 31-35, H4.G., no oxp. nec. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL loop w, Huron Pontlfi 33M771 $6,600—FEE PAH) IN TE R N AT ION AL "PER WNNE L , 1000 W. Huron PenllBC 4S»d77t $7,200-FEE PAID Office mgr. trainee, age 31-30, INTERNAfl&NAL PERSONNEL 10S0 W. Huron, Pontlec, 9MWI $8,400 INDUSTRIAL SALB CaUIngonopen accounts. Fee paid. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 080 w. Huron Pontlec 134-4771 A SHARP GAL to assist a prominent dentist, efi train. $300. Silt Personnel'"8 nM117' aScMMo A TOP. LOCAL FIRM ql ■nsass it SPOT FOR THE pal With General Office ability. CKO, can Kathy King. 331-9137, Associates . 6Fi*Atoft," £hE2 Colt- looWiIld AfcBX Church ....................- irikV SjjrilXrLIVi |X: > children. OPII 44S7W4. .______________‘ BfeAlJtY 0F6RAT6RS Mr CMmetjc' Help Wanted female 7 Help Wanted Female 7 Help Wanted M. or F. SHelp Wanted M. er F. 8 WE HAVE THE FOLLOWING VACANCIES Telephone Sales HOUSEKEEPER: Reliable persqn to train-supervisa and schedule staff. Experience preferred but willing to Earn a substantial weekly income making train right parson. calls from our Pontiac office, circulation salts. CALL FOR APPOINTMENT Mrs. DoGrow Earn whila you learn. Ago no handicap, no barriar if over 18, full or part tima. FRONT DESK CLERK: Reliable and personable "Full Tima" Evening and Day shifts. PORTERS* Full and Part Tima. , CAU FOR APPOINTMENT Phone for interview . .MISS CORY Mr. Ian Buckham • 338-9762 HOJJDAY.llffit of Ponikte--' 1 Mil S. Telegraph ■ MM • t- * ;\V- * .■ ■ ■ 334-2444 ‘ -W THE PONTIAC PRKSS.* MONDAY, OCTOBER ,7, IU6B S3SM'®®! rERNATtONAL PEI Will PAY CASH, , IMMEDIATELY FOR ALL HOUSES, BUILDINGS AND VACANT LAND. CASH IN 8 HOURS FE 8-9880 .! WOODFIELD CONST. GO.- VOULO "uke' lJkNP( aaitrjct «c SchMt?i^MtSj33l'by prlvat owner. PM. Wdroonrt. : jV "jWWffTl l|~T Listings on vacant land am (turns. Id ..hL nartrataw an Waterford area. - RECEPTIONIST! ;,Mat|ir>';gal-'lu Ray. 334-2471, Snaiilng and* Snail- •' umlM EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY building 1 S’ £ Your plan or gura ■.S®/ 1 »>.ias*« Lauinger 674-031? VA-FHA 6740310 ■ Adorns and Adorns 647-8880 ’ dental assiitaWT: Hart is m 1 exciting spot tor the. sharp gal who B W^rSwill^and^iirtllilS?1”"' S FINANCIAL ANALYST i $12,000 Up HAYDEN FOREMAN! ^gaaalva.jin aTg7g man la work wild top firm S 9,100 MACHINE' OPERATOR: Rellned , • type man to woiii wtlh goad eogv MtcKaNIC: Need two "strong man TRW^SrUtER foitinltt" tutura'fSr hard working man .. S 4,000 ATTENOaMY:~ EMatMlt opportunity for sharp Individual ... SUM RaPt *»_ m jehWMure adtpncaniwt < M»T INDUSTRIAL ENWHCER!, Good I opportunity to gar up in ~tg wand -........... — sto.ooo MARKET 1N6 AWDjALES: Mari'S '"WSWIS1™ BODY FENDER REPAIR ACETY-ARC WELDING hcu-arc welding WQLVflUNLSOlOOL 1 'Dqtrfi*..; McDonald LICENSED BUILDER 0B 31837 HIITER WSyfefiffies n, 3 zoned heat, attached tear Iff Sat twa ana. “ j r« SIDE -, 3 t, gas heat, targatot. IIXwEi s.«jraatI7.HMQ S. Waodwo Steady 15,100RECEPTIONIST: 4 Amp MUM tA hMSlraRnltus lr ?andscaped :e wKlvlsfon iylvZn^Lahti fK^«mwt,'li>kra? garage, owner **y*/'s*|i"f flJ.too, COSWAY REAL ESTATE ANDERSON HsJHZF Everett1 Cummini ‘‘"vCTeed Listings!!! Anderson & Associates LAZENBY SLIPcbVKS BWA1S RENTING! D R ESSMAklNG. ALttljtATIONS. [BEAUTY RI# I HOMES li •erjrtlypurwfl flOftAWAY SCHRAMi MODEL HOME OPEN SAT., SUN., 1-5 ANYTIME BY APPT. saszflrugis- IMS? YOUR CHOICE 3 ROPROOMa with IUH basement. SILVER DOLLARS SH m plus COUNTRY SPECIAL. 3 Mr i j Aist With SCHRAM iructian,] , And ON the Van J**nrtng PonHac mm ty Hr j “i T?it cn># ’ St BIRMINGHAM BOAT : CENTER ■ Starcraft, MAP. _ *Sdjng Miiiippiji ■ MARRIED BEAUTYRITC HOMES HUNTOON SHORES SJ5A^Loe^*ltf®mllai nol?h 3 ••:^,TyRapB« AOtg^nLLlHST s« bring your family over ti sect our modal at 1053 N. aka Nagg taday. Sales exdu* * RAY O'NEIL REALTY ^ 35M Pontiac Lake Road SERVICE brick, new born*, 4734171 CARPEnTIRS---OREASr MILLION Ws, CLARKlI Complgtg Carpentry u cabinets, additions, wind ss\,WS$3£j BLOOMFIELD ORCHARDS G.SCHUETT- A SYNDICATE EM 3-7188 LOVELAND HACKETT 363-6703 aspects going through your - call us tor an appraisal. VON REALTY "^IWJjURON EMOVAL AND TRIMMING. DOLLY MADISON FROM-(145 eck — pool — air condlt S8S-1125 YORK ISWRAYiNa, fertilizer ' weed i. Call tor free ost. 474-3945, JCKING. 3'HOMES "OXFORD SNYDER •fedHayss?®5" "Brmimiiw KINNEY & BENNETT YEAR ROUND C0T1WK Trucks to Rent WTon Pickups rn-Ton Stake TRUCKS™ TRACTORS . AND EQUIPMENT Semi Trailer* Pontiac Farm and Indusrtiai Tractor Co. I3S t. WOODWARD FE 4-0441 PE 4-1441 ■wusr RENTING $78 Mo. Excluding t*xw and insurance . . . ONLY $lfrBsposit - mffirav OSCAR SCHMIDT 6744)363 KING-PHIPPS AGENCY 1*97. S. Uwaarfcf ' RAY REAL eSTATB’ ' i 7 Offices to better PONTIAC WIST SIDE SELLING TRADING BUYING 1 rati estate today. RAY REAL ESTATE 6894)760 RAY REAL ESTATE PEOPLE WITH CREDIT. PRO* LEMS AND RETIREES ARE OPgN DAlCY AND SAT. AND SUN. ‘ REAL VALUE REALTY For liraneimfe Action Col) FE 5-3676 6424220 I Transferred couple with 2536 Dixie Hwy.—Multiple Listing S«rvi«*-4744)324 Ti) K I’tm'UC JatMML MONBA V. OCTOBER f.i mm Near Fisnar |9 Body ffijamsTssss CMM» Hk I :; pfeON WARDEN WEST SIDE 4 BEDROOM rsiaps- yy&irsii dewnTbantwaitl CaiPOti *830$ ^iClTyaldr Agency, Inc. Tm Htohlat^ Rd. (m^or 4«N6 •fKi shaded lawn. $22,000 la ftiii 'JtfiBszmr:--' IfftiW. Huron. Pontlf 452-3920 1 AVAIUBLE NOW designbg for happy living! ^ You'll flndacMrtti :*ndjcMvanlanca ’'-•-'.plus pKstlwand pleasuro In a ham* J%tc|n.ngZ^.?»3Mra4m with toll basement. 9am nmrtv decorated Owners pgent ■ ^NZLER ; tiUp wTeiteitoto W4ing Butlaar*. r r JONEtSON PARK j discover Mf:wall toay'r# bultt and easy to-tnaMhitn. WD b* proud aa ?SwLTfS2rtSl ISd*y^,L J‘™»vUtomei area ’ NEW ALL BRICK RANCH * Kitchen, dining area with sliding tfgjb doors. 3 extra siibadniton*. 9 ■w bMha, basement tor recreallpn, an attached 2 car brick garaga. On L SAiWater' r O'NEIL REALTY INC. S526 Pontiac Lake (d. PR 4-2323 Office Open t to 9 TixlrnSy. 1 SfBT * ♦yictT1 Jton,T’ ^sT*X T - Partridge "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" Ontf # y*t« cM. m baths. Carpet vestment it *11,986. S , JOHN KINZLER, Realtor 5319 Plx|* Hury. 423-0335 AftOBS fltim PBcbotB-Moito-Mutt^WLtotto^ Service fi 1". JWBlR|gg»- gwgl'V room »« epyy W-Mown ygalntmwit. Wideman ^fe5RI:.6& OWNER LEAVING STATE V «43Mt ; _ ^ ^ 9454759 PK^DN e^tiXaL*7ba8rooitis?"khdSn^es room! •tta^d*wrM*f0a!umlnum ^extortor. pgiar Rfouclp for _ BUT-HOMES W$Zm -CAU ® AF-i° J AND.J^M.TY Mini LARGE ^BEDROOM RHODES j •roe. Specks*'VlKhS*witaH amp to 1 cupboards, family dining room, 2 baro, IM>WrtojiwWn*i^^ : Brown l IRWIN wmmxm SSSMSr farsiL. ■» SHIM ■«AUTI>*UL BRICK RANCH w «w, whip jLfjJxPRsS wms&sZsCsss' ^ . LES BROWN gffij 2 FAMILY INCOME REALTORS MMNEgfT m ^^AcrrasitarnTtonflid S&i) ^ NEARWALLtPLAKf - U ■■■ COMPACT EASY ____£ mawmiimmBKHM ■■■_ tew**4* iHMnf Iff —l^W.4, —I, m—M ,«ro«, r.om. Oulck g£m,t9P9li.v-.i** «*■. ... ... ^ mmMmm REALTY I ’PIAN Tnmlf for Thas* Laka Frent Homes TIME TO RELAX S£kB|S si™** 1 Acraa Onto SwfiWi , jjjjj* ‘Tf^sarjs.'SK WIN WITH SHINN ^ * ; 83 Worm TtOaraaft 330«bO MILLER Completely ra'm W. «« REDUCED PRICE , to'ASi «WM«' CASS LAKE FRONT | I wfe, jS^faltg *wiH AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR ST SIOE — OTTAWA HILLS b REFRESHING ilf ffi^rtlyiaraSfexiftt rfiawly decorated Inside. II SIDB .6* DOWN clow to X5X j$a_^2l srS£?$S ^Tro^H Bill Eastham, Realtor ' WATERFORD PLAZA ------ ••• J») f ..■-ffppqyw. w«t sjomm,mSm iltchon with bulft-lns, ^iJrlgerator. j “■ -A*"*1i”TvfSS Ml FSlI tTA^ a -Rd. (M-MJ 674-3126 CLARK Bl i BEATS PAYIHG RENT: {UjM brick terrace M good condition. BAH :w^W£W5 dripes RHSKfi floors, I ELIZABETH LAKE E5: 6 ittAW *7.958 only WJIr | ImRECTIONS: caw to Union Lake : jm. basement, 3 car garage, Wlaka tiWK^Wnk lacawaa. Mrs only S41MIL tj 'I WHITE LAKE TWP. HIM 3 badroom -->— g££S wim grapy^gj^T SI AMO, FHA TERMS, | ST. MIKE'S AREA <*UiP FE 5-8183 SSMJSILd6 ■ FtP*1 '•fPPfpWr * ■■ Mat. Mmtto , k~..np Garaga. Easy FHA i LET'S TRADE i. HALL REALTY. REALTOR 4M9 Dfxta Hwy. US-41 H Open dally 9fcfit. M aa cjgy ■-—-- TifiKI TO WORK hay* th* kay and FINICKY PEOPLE gaMffipjsJTi lama Shady Igt futures I twin |^alW« fireplace,acraanad patio, basa- “®KSaiii tached 2V&-< only 129,95 1 KSS0 aiding, utility room and VW guarantaadl BRIAN REALTY . . Multipit Lilting larvlca Weekdays fill t Sunday 10-4 390 01x1* Hwy. 425-0701 YORK CLARKST0N SCHOOLS to%2ms,^h^g raem?r,2°batai SSCMtiPi: natural, prlvata showing WHEN YOU SMK OUR SERVICE "JOIN THE MARCH TO TIMES" Times Realty a.0^STES,LXT,OHRHSrA,y, daily OFFICE OPEN SUNDAY t-i -EMKi_____ A. i. RHODES. REALTOR ruflyuflbSjM" SMALL FARMS, ROOM FOR Mrsaa i . ‘ tMkOE 1 ACM OF LAND - go wWTpsrJl badrsom ran taatyrfiw Nrniil dwiM roe SSin.^lw^r.nd"^ Bf3F“ 3 BEDROOM RANCH wl —ia—#7P— am itr ki S&r . CROSS. Rlolty A Investment Co. —Wa pay cadi Nr usad Mmaa— AW4T103 garaga, farms. I. 0. WI0EMAN, REALTOR GILES" WVal-U-Way t-atw Lakasanaf W running on Lotus Or. apprmlmataly SS.OOO built . up. improwad batch, and 10x14 HPML tor boat storaga. flraplaea . It lamhy room. oUMilnum siding l- wWtfWr'r 2 bedrooms with full bosament, ras^ng^KM^Jn0 EXCELLENT INCOME PROPERTY 1 family with full boaomont, 2 fu b&p*dnrW.I,Tng^*M! Call lor furthor Information. Claude McGruder Realtor L ElUabath Lk. Rd. 782-S7J HpM Listing Service OPEN f UKE ORKDN J JUDAH LAKE LacRd*5JT,a large* lot" dnfy*$4M move* you.Jn. . ,,.. NORTH SIDE 1 Sh;^ V^‘nt!^ovaH'l*n fi“r’hco.*?*' VACANT Immediate possession goes with, this sharp 2 bedroom homo with, full basement. Gao hast. Hla bath, alum.:jmrmuE&’ICPlfWt JP"c“ yard. Only S4M to mguo you tn. ^eCAwNeThRaAvDeEfFo°r"s^ Val-U-Way Realty and Biittmtig .Co^ FE 4-3531 >W Oakland Aw. Qntn t to t ARRO BRICK Vocont. throa-bedroom brick wlH * % tin . E 2-7273 Nicholie & Harger Co. v» w. Huron st. PE H1B MJETT digSEPia te«ia. YORK INVESTMENT SPECIAL Brick onortmont S ’ and 1 to .. -- ~t --z —basemonf. 2VS baths, 2V3 a fSS.m £ i . nRff- .yy. garaga, potential saw month c, caUus t2aoy.Ppo*n,m*nt ^ " S^prJnomia. For prlvata allowing YORK WALLED LAKE AREA 4 bedroom ranch, got hoot. I..,-medlato possession, only 014,900. For privolo showing cad. YORK yE BUY WE TRADE 'jfO-TiM FE 8-7174 702 S. Telagraph Pontii YORK UNION LAKE AREA 1 acres across from Cooley Lake. I bedroom layout, now gas furnace YORK AVON TOWNSHIP Aluminum sided ] badroom rant... sJftiir pri“-For pr,vr YORK UKE ORION £ 2b,trm,2mirKS?' 22,900, forms. Per private show YORK tdlijjoMRtt .IP VON Zoned Commercial 49 lafce Prepyrty KAMPSEN IT'S TRADING TIME" » oxbow UKj,mowr ssjmsr"" taarmBBaSa invut ?oday , ss£2rfcj:,J2,'a 5s%"3A stra-jB, prasefi rdSm This property la In pood ton-" ssSESr | •1 Auburn Haights—Gl H you mod o comfortable and axnt- MpMgn homo — tMo N HI tl tins a.WriiptHi and n jNoyrgpm. M£mI3uwjm LAKE ANGELUS LAKEVIEW ESTATES SI 2,900 Ol. ?^V0rtttLTY'' ■ HOLLY OPPICt.. FOLLOW YOUR STAR And it win leed yoe lo title cun bodraam,--■ mm~: aMteYSiBt,. ftBTnCr & 16LS*VEL mant. 10x34 living rown, It r ” dining room, it x 1| kitchen > JL not t SI t,900. split, rodi ‘TlvWt «S gpKH A HEATED POOL i.p»rxr stasis Mg^“ m i (spturm. its Mcalad flloh i FREE-FREE-FREE Unpolhitad country olr, the aa small of tM flowers In spring •ho baautHul view of the m colored countryside In the let rolliiur'pctii onnoMcraMa M vbtyl tldod 4 badroom Capo Cod homo. 14 x 23 living ra— fireplace. U x 14 dblhtg r hill basoment. AJw It x 34 swlm- W.srUvM.^VM.'* WE BUILD-TRADE ROYER REALTY. INC. PHONE: 634-8204 Holly Eranch ,, Htdly Fh priced alt ZERO DOWN—FHA This older two ahwy homa conveniently located on the < m J2H? -*T tyalklno dfth three bedrooms, basement enrana. Aim p acraanao kt I— poren. It's clean and Wtarp at SMS’*-* •aP^'inWt TODAY. JACK Frushour REALTOR WE TRADE. HOME OF ,PLENTY 0 ROOMS I STORY, 3-cer attached garage wllh full baae-mant. flnlahad off Mr nice recreation room with wot bar. 3 fireplaces, 4 largo bedrooms with built-in cabhtata, on largo lot -125x700' with many large trees. Thft Mmo. la surrounded tat SOO.Mo to 8100,0M homes. Call ON ELSIE BRICK RANCH, don't mist toeing this lovely 4 ■ bedroom homo, situated gn m acraa with . loads of fruit trass and a garden M It else features m baths, cgmpla'ialy finished basathant with kitchen, 2W-cir attached I garage- Wa will toko your 1 present hemp ta on trade. I ONEIDA TRAIL UKE ORION 5NYbS£& wuxmr\ kssr, SrTS,%'nr, blacktop Slraol, the tot la I S22.900. terms. For nrlvaf, •haw 157x225’ with extra sharp homes | call, around It. Full price $25,900. Homes by “Mostercraft" MODELS OPEN DAILY 1-7 P.M. EXCEPT FRIOAYV., ■ SCENIC-------- VILLAGE, l DIR. Highland Rd. Wtal, left *----—“follow -—■ MLS M'i O'NEIL WHY NOT TRADE? '{ST alLrtJSi*' •StTte 674-0819 674-2245 ]3 ACRE RANCH «M*ntsssan.rnSMprssJ’ •*w,lliams.la,c* *a s*^*m*M lib. SI f.M Salt Ileuses 49 Sale Hemes OTTAWA HILLS—V ‘:;u' r~- - II TM U3CASION ■<* 1*>I% 3 badroom bungalo doscrlbo lM:spolloaa condBlon of this-lovely he tor p posalbla 4m bedroom, a fall haeOmoTif, f f|pimrtow|mn(i* 'iSSraMr imwpoto— and • 3Lw,narago with automi HQyat SM.950 you liM batter IMni. TMra-la-’amle, ba-n.Jarpt appointment DON'T l THCRB WON'T IB TIMBI This 3 bedroom bungalow In too city SrAND AND GRACIOUS {PACIOU3 BRICK COLONIAL, touched with < fioor ornmwunanl. wHn .wifti>lg tlroolaca in JL_R| I Kafil w - *•" —SSL*. roam, 4 •sized kt many Itattobl my o aHe you expecting? . MORI FOR.YOUR MONEY? ’Note la to* "Buy pi tbs Yoarlf A ioLyfel^_fet1^t>Sm?*^Foil r* «f mm in ROCKWELL STREET- ! Located lust oft ‘Franklin, this large 4^ rym and bath family Sparkling ^TmJnjgLVKM. AND SPACIOUS , Ing oak floor* and oil hoot. TWa to a well arranged family horn I* storaga. lira, Md both up, carpatad liv-modern kitchen, W bath tww5SSSS I_________ 50x150. farm* to outotan- Inj room, recreation mam ... __ LIKE UKE LIVING?- ^j*»t m and both. I atory Wtto tola 3 year old ColonUI."bi7t 'ir7ou •d garage. Vary attractive too It, you'll like it much boner MSSl"'1 P« ♦«*” on oppointownt. Sr& X.^oliT «w*r- ^ r. no. toUMCwilract. I LOOKING FOR LOCATION?- IISL8St.« 2°cSLD.S|. {-9S***1 fK. ■!5^'-J!?l1^8SL,5 mosphore but° still ypu can Veniov sSil. —R n* mSid wt% city ^ontlK N id sheet an SF-c.... .... ■ badroom, bath ant '• carpeting; firepla: paneling In to* ROYER IIMRMMWtHMiiiv JMHIIV n to poymonh of only S13S. at par cant including tanas and tone#: 30 day* poafaaelan. No. 1-31 CRESCENT UKE ESTATES ^1^^: *.'sss home has a beautiful site with 163 ROYER BUILT E SS^tYSeON'T FUMBLE THIS ONE iivtog room. Rock-tacad brick, A llttla daty and tola on* will tfmplact. 3 full bath*. Largo sold. Extra - * matter bedroom, 13*xir»". Full bungalow full __ __ boaomont. SItoatad on 3 aero*, ft. garage. Plenty of extrae included Local* Iwrt Off 1-7*. nearest exit 1 to price at S13.980. G. Y. or P.tLA. mil*. terms. Coll now, wo have to* key. URGE FAMILY Possession Immodtoto. No. M Th“ T^.'ttjr^^g WHEN VICTORIA WAS ra te-n, lot. VA terms avail*We. s QUEEN S This splendid daalgi M B ffiaaXXw tp,arwjasp.%^~ p0u*bmt?'ot tondcapirkL NUR OAKLAND UNIV: SSSc*SS y^nwwetton^wl. Bultt 0*r«fltW wSh "additional S35.. KVvtofc iwh-lGf WESTRItTaf*DP°W*A T e R FORD VT. «2*:°«Si HOWARD T, KEATING 1J860JW. 13 Mil* Birmtaghan *44-1234 . 544-795 "An Bxtroordinary value" 6 Acres With a beautiful 3-badroom horn: In more than an axcallant condition. Barn tor 3 horses, ractnfiy built tola June. Nous* baa proximately im aq. ft. Th* n balcony atoapwn amp. Rffi K&>*i$rt.rtIS£i parage. Recreation room. Laundry roomL Bito, Most ot tos windows am thomtopana, am— —tog and senons. Thera rtsrtMO apace. Beaut.... __ M drapes go With to* houto. Lam* wooded picnic area *»— 1* land contract. "Another Howard T. Keating unusal for a more < abundant life" Also for a future investment in Kalkaska Co. IS mil** (1 wBffw,ya mast* stats and Kalkaska Co. r qulremanfs. A real bargain ♦CLOOO. Phon* u* tor particulars. C. NELSEY, SALES AGENT ------ OR 634*9825 TED'S Trading HERRINGTON HILLS FHA OR Gl Tarms available tor tola 3-badroom brick raitoh style homa. Full Maemant, gas heat, alui- &pA SSS^d 1 carman, paved F3 Call now — imm* WATER WONOERUND On Whlto Lake. A lovely bow &iSrf«i,u?h» beach hoosa and boat tilt. 1 carpet and driMa are Include-. Stun* fireplace, large 10x23' family hSme. *fSMEFte ZLFR TRADE at S34.I80. see this horn* and others in Iivtog color to our all now Val-U-Vialon show homos. COUNTRY LIVING out boaomont, on to ocros of 1 with • stream. Built-ins, flrepl._, attached garaga and constructed with to* btot oulldtog materials. Excellent atmosphere tor dilldron. WAND 9* PRALL ST., houses used as dormltorlps wllj n|t jyer.ltSo annually, priced at S0,— HEMP- FE 4-S2S4 195 ELIZ. LAKE RD. your •Iting 1 MILLION Dollars have bean mad* a: to us to purchase and assun contracts, mortgagee or hotnas, lots of acreage 0 Wa will give you cash ta equity. Our appraiser Is a your call at: 674-2236 LOADS AND LOADS Of potential. You can *n|oy to. salt-satisfaction of finishing oft this 4-bedroom homo with fireplace and toll basement. This horn* la on - ----E Nads . Into on* nesflakat. HONEST $1,500 MOVES YOU IN iS&tclS5wlM!m“(Sl ^ NEW HOMES WITH AFUIR A 3-badroom ranch (amity n and baaamant lqr t1S,f9g ahn A 3-bedroom trt-tavol with tot..... room tor St7JN pug loll A i-bedroom 2-story colonial, family room md .hoeomonl lor tTf.tto plus lotT WhoFs yours? - - McCulloughs'aeeuty Cratt you can small too nown can tool to* pride of m . ... can st* to ivty Crow Homei TED'S CORNER THE REALTOR to a professional Realtor and real estate ____ARB HOT A SYHOtfyMv.il Jirajb.«rtft.r; 'qSX McCullough realty MjhlonB Rd. toe Ideal place Hr those looking tor « inodor*loljt priced starter homo. Include* 3 mo* bedrooms, full bnomaWf and it's in ex-celtont condition. City, water, NOTHING DOWN__________ $13,900 UKE PRIVILEGES This delightful 4 room brick Is located to ttw wing* at Wolverine Lake. Every thing you would want to * homo. 3 largo bedrooms, largo living room with soporato dining Him, family room, toll baaamant, doer welt to balcony. Located on * beautifully FULL PRICE $21,900 120 ACRES y Noma has 3 large ooarooms — 1 with shower, large country kitchen, separate £%Tsi,Kwa SO acraa gaod far com, Mtalf*, etc. aOxSg'earn, 11x34' crib and data Ms. FULL PRICE $30,000 DAN MATTINGLY AGENCY OFFICE MODEL 4424000 335-4022 LENT INCOME AREA, 2-car g a available on land conireo. Small down payment, call tor detail*. CROSS FAMILY AND Mm Caj^MT JjSaRl' SU«*»u9 McBAIN ayKajs-ts 5&Je3£f«. CROSS Rtolty and li COMAMBC w month. W/m tm "fairlane REALTY INC 446 POnEt. '■ ..as aaaK» f "SB£&S8t Q^tarildtoj^ n. rawnp «. ACRES NEAR DAVISBURG and 10 acri fartialb In Clftkrtan area, can tor data Us. ****aa,Nsa, aw UNDERWOOD TSffWi ,JSS Ilk. to sel! as whole «IJ»0 I ACRES, 3 PONO»,..IBCLUtthDl, aw ACRES ffirfKSSju'j "““•nUOMB. WAGNER SMITH I4VEST IN THIS LARGE Mamlly Income home near etty schools and shopping. Th* property It MjjM commercial. Mb tor reasonable land contract terms $13,958. INCOME A 2-famlly east at ____ valuable M-59 frentag*. ranted to ar--”— £=s‘ at MB 1 The Rolf* H. Smith Co. Sheldon B. Smith, Realtor *“ S. Telegraph V 333-7848 llac, 290' of ». Presently into. Offered lain Property 91 3 BEDROOM-VACANT Brick flraptbc*. 1 Commerce Lake, gar workshOB 14x30'. Onl trlvUagta on rslAMTelw; s wwlbiriIalTstate 3f14W» ISO Mo., other N 343-5240 MIDDLE STRAltS LAKE PRIVILEGES with "rae" roam apace. Gw h 5E2L. SSAdJOLr1* oarw. 129,900 full grid* MORRIS UKE' FRONT TWa years Bid and to a condition, thts on* WlB pal ay*. Mur bedrooms, 3 iljM.ltotiBi, jgr ■ BBgife-ipliS BROOCK *74-20* MA 6-4000 4 MILTON*WEAKER* INORMJtot ill W. Utitor- REAGE A PLEASANT CONTRAST NO CROWD NO SMOKE NO N9ISE COUNTRY ACRES IH ACRES, tor among Pina f »£3S&?'&r2P£iKi 'ngten. C PANGUS. Realtors OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK _ ! 1 ^CkLL COLLBCT SIF&I*1* CURKSTON AREA 1 VpijjfSI: 1.74 ACRES.an Jatry^Laka Rd. '»Tj?«af4ss5’ ■ K[»1» Bushim Proflorty'.'jfrjj! Partridge " '■111 I "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" THE PONTIAC l>M8fcxMONPAV»^ [CARNIVAL 59|Sda Housthold Goods Dlck-ton&W^doMhCEltattOOs * ^M^SggLSSgfe^ Jt RRONf - aBgw •owm K. L TEMPLETON, Realtor 1339 Q9tCHARO ‘ '"*** ’ fictkA CHOICE WOQUttT SCENIC HOMESITES ' AL PAULY tf«&lS«.'0#k,nBB' ORIOfWNDWJWOOO ROjT ?^Sv,nsfe«. $5,500. GREEN ACRES 14*9 S. L*P*«r M. «*> cholc«, 120 ix W buildlno BpEER $» ACRE* -', SYLVAN ina WK »w *»* wn WWW P , and a 4 badro»m 8|Eartimit* «> v vacant now, ready la reova In. H- ,mimk for free catalog m wSnwrmwy ww wad yard, N. (■ QMM ffi 5 futRey realty Pontiac. «1,000 -$4,09# dawn. POSSIBLE MULTIPLE SITE m acre*, WatorlOrd .Townrtilp vicinity ot Craaeant Utt„A. HA* Ad*.. QiOjioo.r. *m» dlttone? office”; Insulated steal ' SCENIC WOODED HOME SITE ■ vM COUNTRY living WITH CONVENIENT LOCATIONS , Ssa.HLHIII. gjgvugat LADD'S OP PONTIAC 391-330Q M77 t. LAPEEBRD. OPEN DAILY Sdt f«rwt , M 40 ACRES, NORTH OP Lapaar. 3 ‘»3reom ,$SX ^--2- *!r FACTORY On Indwtrlal 10 a highway near 1-75 and to NE Pontiac Nawjjr building, a air - <— gas haat, doubl building, relitort— - 9100,000 — *25,000 down. COMMERCIAL BUILDING 40x00, 4 rear* old, l acre ot Ian near OxferdT iasartoroftlcos « business. 939,500 — Term*. ORION ROAD Between Rochester and Lake Orta 8Vi acre* partly zoned commardi — Homo and Graenhousa. AUBURN AVENUE Avon Twp., near Crook* Eoai 314x204' - (42,000 — Tarm*. BATEMAN COMMERCIAL A INVESTMENT 377 S. Telegraph Rd. 338*9641 Waakdaya after 5, Sat. and Sun CALL 332-3759__________ MILLION McCullough realty 1 TO SO LAND CONTRACTS rgantly needed. See ue before Warmn Stout, Realtor 1450 H. £P^«VtpJS» *I 4540 Dixie' Hwv. OR 3-1355 HAVE 9100,000 AVAILABLE to buy] $5.' land centred*. _ , JOHNSON 1LBORAPH RD — *—• jotjes 1-5400 OR EM 3" Butine» Opportunities 66 Units ex;. 80 to 866 ACRES iojSQHs 2£=^ssMrsurvT UNDERWOOD BfgH____ jimBHlE NEAR MfTAMPRA StSCS® used re horse b*nL«2*.W9«torm»- c A. WEBSTER, Itsol Btate Oakland 8-2515 MY 2-2291 S7 13*JWEgfc $190,000 d( <23#$. Ilfnt yield. Mr. Bloch. ede^n (tore, Baldwin at Walton: - a. pi met. • ? APARTMENT ^GAS STOVE..- 935, Wringer-wa*|w^ 9Kt'bunk bods, . ^ Attwtion llooiwyWtt^ f' SttSfeHMag, National Undaimld i FUlUdiunBiHi Brand now ’Pai#r« MM Wfflc , 45116 Coss (Utictf) 731-0200 FREE OELtySRV L U tangular) table* In tv ► and > |aM>g«BPURHmjRE^ wmm chair*. Caah m .jw,r Hutchlnipn Mobil# ttottto 4301 WxC Hwv.. Orayton ,P lond KNEEHOLE DESK, •'—* gray oak doubt# bookcase dratMr and chatt. complata, gNTOfe BUNK BEDS Furniture. 330 E.*r * 6XA^''fcVAL'-|T PliRNiWRk ■PivM. „ JBgk____ jMHHHPWMf :E 3-7149 7VA l«Jsale!*9£ "bagirewr*. oCl- SSSf*o?'aVtwoSIp*^ feof m!h Sratbw ttabita1 at9 oQ&r^$«7» •» outfit several office*. OR P9747; aSSTHfiarw® :w hreter , 949,951 »pibc* Q^SP 939.95; H*l#r yiy7trwL.$;tJ StOrtGi^pwMiiit uSnP «hr pow •• 1 TO 50 UND CONTRACTS Urgantty naadad. See us before you Warren Stout, Realtor ISO N. Opd^JM. . FE 5-9145 Open Eye«T *tH 9 pjw. « «M- No** Calls or* coming hi regularly from Investors wWhlng to PUncboe* land controcji. lom ^ aoatpHng^ few SaSU!» toll — Hovo. k wlfh im. SMv°:KMr National Unclaimod FURNITURE Brand now ^ HOUSthdd Goods 45116 Cass (Utica) 7314)200 FREE OBUVERY , Why no, Bill,your call didn’t surprise me.. .6u( it certainly did surprise my wile and teannage daughter!’’ AuHInHooty Sprite, 930.* . . .. Too W,liawBM.M. f 'T: 1 ... -■ p%s$: BE THE BOSS Lease Milk Route Good Livelihood . Guaranteed M^st^jdve) Good A^.y^^RP3T. I Pontlac-Bloom- LOANS . 925 TO 91,000 COMMUNITY LOAN CO. . E. LAWRENCE FB B-C COLOR TVs jawTawM. »>*«7s.*sf, sizes. » color*, reasonable, oli-l ______ g CUSHIONS-CUSHIONS Custom mad* tor DenWt, Cpkml and (tontomnorary elwlri at iota.. 20 to eir Wifi JlLAi-. selictod grS

r ... wwiM r k Hydraulic |ral9. Make ANCHOR FENCES ______NET DOWN , FC Wfl BABEMENT SALE; LA'O IE $. clothing, size 12 and 14, boys good cMhKi, si** H glssswars and furniture,,0J(752 *HaletSrv'%l.. Pom iwa. . ~ ... „ BARN »*>!< - Thousand OgM. cloths*! U JaytS si 111 W. LAWNHKK at. _ '&B^r$arelhire. SftWi.-.-' ~ UBiP1 ROtijAV. MPWN?I* ¥~h»B , ^hSuGHTCN'S P^ivER^e^R mW-mgELwr””™ UPRIGHT PIANO. Coppertaie Kelvlnstsr go* rang* with UBftT tt0lnLUUI6A6 !ma, bWt 377t Highland Im^SS) TwiTKIil . 5Hz : ... 1 -*—■ - . 'AESttc WABHBO WIPING naob. a* ww aa 24C par lb. 2S I0. boxes to 300 lb. ImSww, exc. condition. cSn. Changer, . Smith Corona ojae. ioTtfieEwor SKIROULE SNOWMOBILES Parts and sorvtco on. all maha*. OAKLAND SNOWMOSILE gSSEndi ■ 4 SJrnar easHov#. Maytod combination AigiMiffi omasfs; - xs&bm B A B AUCTION very pttWtY "flBP®**- caSWi^l Mflhs... ? TYLERS AUCtlON A,t; T*«EB - snrecn, fir,. F}n* and BLUE $yy:j reasowabto. DIB ydur sAJfcWfc» h 'BUD" NEW WAREHOUSE BUILDING JMIK CLINIC OR OFFICE W*«E*„»» X Orayton ..Plains, sorvtoa* (doctor or dentist's of-flce or cIMc, brokor's attic* otc.). Priced *t 911750, terms. NICH0LIE-HUDS0N Associates, Inc. 49 University Orton FES-1201, after 6 pin. FE 2-3370 --'afRss® caH*o*rrwrft* william tJMS MW. At awM* allaSle. Call tor ; nights Partridge "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" WHOLESALE BEER A WINE distributorship. Just 2 hour* hr Detroit, a vary proRtabls operatic Hto as much as you ynsh. TI vary woli bo a partnership, young brother* could really m* big monay herel All aqulomsnt BENCH WARMER COAT, (Ip II ---1 man's sis* 4*44. to color, good condition. 44, ottor 4iMn. . ^UTcXMih‘,a.,^. ■aah. Call ottor 4:30 p.m. OR -i*«MMigafew#!KP- HOUSEHOLD SPKIAL ”8FUAEH«a“SX?SU0F _____ n> rx|T im ■ ”"i SAVE UP TO 50% SUVP WAREHOUSE CLEARANCE box spring iiiEE.wRBfl BACK TO SCHOOL SALE ..LuusiZa y J 5 SS?H8?ae GUNS—GUNS—GUNS Qno ot thf largest seloctloi.. Wre«wby,Cv!ffrvc»i»stor! R* Colt owl Smith-Wesson - Try before y*« bay jnour range. "'M^ofi^rflaHr SKI-GOO'S —Complete Stock— FROM $691 I HEAD FENHIES, 75C * imtock r~l3 ATTENTION Double D Ranch horses for rent S3 BUY A HEART SAVIR I toR SALE."S ik. Waterford. 41 s, oil Size 1A 351- 2417 DIXIE HWV KIRBY SWEEPER Mb Kirby Sorvici & Supply Co. I»■««, Next to Kmart BhowdiiB Corner WABHjjt PARTS its? piidoHwg. twSr^^Bir I y?* SWEET8** I RADIO AND APPLIANCE, me WAREHOUSl SAUE OPEN » . _____'CwgBiw *M.... . refrlgorators, ranges, waahai "■“* — —w- ovary 'ml do ottor r rmatton on this on* No. 145405- ‘ ASK FOR FREE CATALOG PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE .10» W«lit HUfPtL8trt P0ntl> * Pft.. ..unfr ■ oSnOally and Euwiayi EXCELLENT PL5EA9URE HORfB. ■ ----- feed, medicine, grooming ■STmk iiiBm. ' COMPREBI jag Mn - ml * -jjrem. autos ia BunoaT iJSa’^nd AND ORav8l. *(I sjgr area* delivered. 473-5514, Wotor- ~ - REOISTiRED anc - WmSSsming Also buckboard T setter wagon, iitoS^BteiiEga * like N,wT^n»»N j gar buckboard and cuftors, cheap, Ml-d PONY CART and hamate and 13* BASS HOHNEil AiWlUMh >*>' * KENT Establlthod In 1914. LOCATED NEAW PWTlAC-UX-ibl vacant tot slz* 150x400 f lOjio^ buitnow. For quick aalo, ZONED M-i — am...--r.-L-v.d housas pn property. Room to build. HrjBeaNIn “ ' bS*b. FLOYD KENT, INC, Realtor Owner Retiring MUST SELL appliances or ofticos. Only 91951 LARGE GARAGE. Pronto on strasts. Only 947,MB. Terms. A: J. RHODES, REALTOR FE 9-2304 25B W. Walton PE .54712 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE THUMB AREA BAKERY cated In active small city- Has not shop also. . Largs brick gjx.r£to»S® Warden Realty _______________ 4BM92B TEXACO STATIONS Unh!S5Sty*Drtv* at l-STlhsilsc Also Commence and Groan Lake j Rd,, Blopmftotd Township. Modern 1 ' U and 2 i Eva*.«tW5ilat. 1 TWIN BED UNIT — DU and mattress, podded hm exc. condition. 935. 424-4923, 1 REFRIGERATORS! 1 laundry tubs, 95. 9535875. 3 PIECE TURQUOISE SECTIONAL, 2 walnut sndliktos. 4B2-4043. National Unclaimed FURNITURE Brand now Sofa, Mr. A Mr*. Chair* ONLYBin 45116 Cods (Utica) 731-0200 FREE DELIVERY 1 NEW 39" GAS RANGE, biii frjwarSiinBt ‘SKSfKfyg s^jsunsif'kiwr Antiques, Fum., glass, rui ..^JmirfcousctSi**. ; ^ v. cra.z.^T«^F,ms II and recolrs ot all typw. 343-9341, HORSES. «M k. W* hoy and pasture, w .. and marts i ROMEO MEAT CENTER -dressed mini*. A tkto or foryoortaBttw^fri^r; NO SMOKE MbATS, Ova ana mr. ana mi, V,....-. TV” Scotchguarded zlppered reversible .MomSat. -__kij. W..... MiarUMM KfiU I REFRIGERATORS, indltlon, 910 and ffi. I USED REFRIGERATORS, Maple bedroom suit*, dou chMt, mirror. BoaWtssi tor 9149, batonc* duo oi or *5 mo. 14 cu. ft. rofrlgorator, si balance duo 9142 cash o Maple 'chest of drawers oi Now 14" color portable 9249 cash or 91150 mo. JUST OPENING Tht Apple Tret. Open Weekends, -evenings and by appointment. FE n value, sar.n. eiso o cr . New ItM designs, torn he^^TE^CT1' •boW E. SLAOE _ ..... S cam RRIVATE ANTIQUE SALE of t contents of th# bento of r —* Corej- **— 1 ,*83 ty 929.99. Florence Carey Ttiur*., Frl., Sat., I Nepasslng St. Downtown Lapaor. i§: BARGAINS IN USED PRACTICE PIANOS Uprights and Brands, all cleai tuned and dslivored. Morris Music 3*0*1- 3-3779. bowwh^Inlm^inwhT^t Sm nnan rial a »s I * t« n avalist I*. For additional ■itirni totlnn rIee— rail Mr. . I - 5354917 SWEET'*, ... Davlsburg 5 M.’ 9454. HHB IS-A to 4 ■ ii stagaJ¥s or 95 month. RCA block and ahlta, *40. 425- 929.99. ' "" H5Q0M;~ tBtOnd f Mattress or box spring, oi ,' i&’e J. A. Toyior Agency, Inc. YOUNG MAN OR COUPLE ———* i. tooting parly ».------- nont. Bond return* of F$MGj H. mKHTT. Wmm isUdTKM . .. 7c Floor Shop—2255 Elizabeth Lake “Across From tho Moil 22 .CUBIC FREEZER, excellent ws *78. M— Call bejwean 9 system, plays all slz* 54 p.m. FB 94739. arid for *149, balance duo ],» USED TV ELECTRIC ---------- unusual design* m downs, , b* lloms, regular, torrlflc i Fluorescent, 393 Oi I slat Hlde-A-Bed sold tor $209 5« E Walton, t • anawr 59Business Opportunities Sf ------ II month. 0uf ^ mwm°Ld*a Ier j, .- HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE 8as«*,are Bis E. Pike *t„ FE4-reti. MISCELLANEOUS FURNITURE 5 p.m. Make Money In Your Spare Time Nothing To Sell Bo A Distributor For •National Pina Company m Hu pizza bandwagon. B* a distributor for America's largest j tostost growing Company of It* kind with over 450 distributors. EARN 5790.00 A MONTH OR MORE J M Do you NOUS * t*w hours ot spar* ttm* avary week? You can turn This Wtttod tlmo Into 97*1.00 a month or more. SERVICE ©SaWny*secured ACCOUNTS sdjrPm motorw! m&i“r ' SS* « SiTW^toS SKaTRJ^W «s& 332-3773. I. (fall a "sri-ja?."; *0 Of 22 N v TUOS, tl, «. FOR SALE .: television, pa National Unclaimod FURNITURE Brand now 4-ptoco Bedroom Sc Onto *** 24 seta M ■ 45116 Cass (Utica) 731-0200 PEEE DELIVERY better car- unclaimed LAYAWAYS EXC&LLlNt; . iFFIClItTf .-_v-economical, that's Blue Lustre carpet and upholstery cleaner. FLOOR||^URNACE, i^ROOM hjiiltj L Wke, dlniM T£ro*hmgma light fixture, glrPs bowling shoas slzi l man's wlntor cast, Ilka nsw. 3 4919 after *. FUEL OIL HEATERS, diangad 8S»r?lSffi------------ rauiu, . systam. I record changer, play* #« *B Remote speaker Provisions. S tor *199, balance dud only 5 iw, nwm \r 99 month. estimates. Household Apollar 1968 SINGER CONSOLE 194* Slightly used Singer sowing machine In stylish walnut cabinet. NECCHI DELUXE AUTOMATIC Zig Zag sowing modiln* cabinet model — embroiders. Msrrmg&j $5.90 PER AtafTH FOR fi» X3fc«Ta®WsSl ige space. Sold S299, balanos P APPlIancev 31*4293. , Notional Piaa Company •xf-sr «§ ■Ur&rissss’ Aik for Mr. Arthur Full prteo, *44.20, or assume payments ot 94.90 par month. Call Colloct, Captlol Sowing Cr*< Manager til 9 p.m. 261-7912 CAPITOL SEWING M A C H I N 1 ___________SALES__________ 1968 T0UCH-A-MATIC New tawing machinal, does fan stitching, mikes buttonhole*, ot-So Id for (124.50, balance only *31.40 , or pay 91.10 par wook. Call day or S night, 33*2544, Imperial. 9 MOS. OR $53 CASH BALANCE Universal" Sewing Cantor 2415 Olxto Hwy. P~ I PORTABLE DISHWASHER, TMT^a^'ue^w-aBij PRE CHRISTMAS SALE otter. JIb-2944. - . --,,,.,-,7.,-.' 0 1949 White sowing1 macMna- Ootox* WAREHOUSE SALE OPEN to to* heavy duty modoi'wlth zig-zag and public. Eimre Ihy#ntory of ri*w button hotoor. iSos all Sney and Zenith! RCA, and JAMoraljC tv», practical sawing lust bjv dialing, color TVs, and stereo* mm b* aold. No attachmanfs needed. 20-year Every Itam dlsdountad ,lt“ onto 9*9-50 comptot* reasonable offer refused, SifiM. SA - tlloncot, »M2*3. io-9 - Hilt Appliance, 241*14. m COLONIAL sofas, between Woodward and creoi t, pictures, dishas. 391-1 Roads. - utr1 - _z!Ni+h, ffoRtABLi 4)rtrj*p.~ speakers, 4 months old. Call 55 185* alter 4 p.m. GARBAGE DISPOSAL, ft hors Statntoss Staifsinks, 33x21, *29.50. sable Launa Plywood, 4x*xV M’94 talbStt lumber Hid “SALl conwv TV, u Urtarta Lan*.~< t«tfMsaha . aiRTCH BJLAT ClarliMt wfto a EVERYTHING MUST GO TO MAKE ROOM FOR OUR 1969 MODELS rhomas was JBfSi now M9J Kp ---“1*1 • W wmbSs-sui - Bob French. *944510 attor « p.m- - S.A.W. SAND AND GRAVEL a* ■tMsVg » * vL Ji WMr&Trifgii. Nts-Hutim Pogs 7$ "^^LMSCTWkN ESKIMOS. PUBS, gSoo^iVg. Tropical Fish, Pot Supplies. Unch ChorijTs.Pot Shop, *9* W. Huron. Vi Mila fe. of TotogrMh. 3324515. OPEN SUNDAY 1 - 4 P.M. t-Ljav.ia Urea. IL.J-. A-X.J 04 nay-vrim-roea oh Clartnco Potorty 5< 55c ptrcrat» 6____ A^tfei. pjalc: ,YCS)R _ own, Rico xs Horto 0 Grenoor Rd, (_____________ i YOU PICK JONATHAN «to Snow $ Appjgiy bring eontolnor • • - Mldutoy Rd.,' Ctorki^,'MA 5-39l2'. > Farm EgElgEunt ’ - *, ALLI^CHALMER jiyODEL B, Snfh APPLE CRATES, GOOD condltton. -m-f^siSs Michigan, MA 4-32*1, »• feuECTRiC CREAM SERaRATBRx. 920;'cow, bam stanchion*, 91 aa., pip* stolt dlvldsirs, drinking cups, etc., camant silo, used far flagstone, etc. ns' ta-Dto. • . . FOR RENT: 550 Adams gradtr with * •ta,-“T grader operator on land. # 1.000; . m* ir refused, (until tall • v‘jSSriassons GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. $ 171* S. TELBORARH^ ) PE 44591 * OPEN MON^ShD ^El. TILL , * ROGER'S DOUBLE TOM Drum Set. AKC CHAMPION POODLES, (ailing out. 49S41IS. -- afqhah fQpptps, .ctaMpiSn Itpck! black matkod *- DEXTER 424-4M9. MOR,$5^U"bP^V *5US*i?l6JZ’fcSrS GARAGE FOR SALE ust bo-removed from aroporto at c*. *25. Dick Vlluat, FE 4-353U a HOMELITi" CHAlif BAlMi 1} ^ : - ' Homellt* and Naw. ktoa Dealer, Joito Drew part* gatarev , T SEPTEMBER CllARANCE WHILE T>IEY LAIT- .Kgga;=. D rkllng mower, list prteo *390, SAVINGS GALORE ON PIANOS { 'H* from S35|up Buy fitor al Vw i 1. SAGINAV :304:30' . tomato's *191, selling price * and fawns, 9150 ...oosUpM’?***f Tsctars and Implements. ... Pontiac Form and Industrial Tractor Co. - , ^.325 t. WOODWARD _ ^ Opan Easily Including Sunday ^ . THB rONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1968 ifBljV tsaNiar ISFacheomp trailers _jBwni«tTO Aw gfggwywffa: CENTURY YELLOWSTONE STACHLER TRAILER Cheefcour dealon-SWISS COLONY ^SWMKR JMWJffiKV'1- Jacobson Trailer Sales MW Williams Lake Rd. OR 3-SW1 EL CAMINO AND Port Ranchero. £n~-T. ttaT MummIm* MUVI In Mg;18 00 7 WINNEBAGO 65 aifef, 1255 Dbri* HwtL, Pontiac. OR 3 SISH HUNTERS SPECIAL ‘ EVANS EQUIPMENT m oiit* hw. cttra*ton 415-7111 4H-ajM N0W QN DISPLAY- ITravelmate *&«&&£ SR 82 easure Mate jgm ^ Holly Travel Coach, Iik. lint Holly Rd., Holly ^M« 44711 OAKLANDWMWR Lynx covers and sleeper*. Parts M mwwm PIONEER CAMPER SALES Traitors: Jubilee. Globa Star Csmpars: Svrinwr, Mackinaw, Travel Queen, Caribou, Barth Covert: Stutz Bearcar, Merit MM iMB Stoe. JROTWOOD KOAD-ASIUTY . . .DURABILITY JOHNSON'S TRAVEL «■* TRAILERS cerner 65«2._______ condition, sacrifice, tak* ovi payments. Call 451-1*51 altar IN*' HOnOa, MO jcRAMBLER, MjM Insurance, >450. Evantnga. ratal*.' cond. INI Suzuki, 120, 1 CLEARANCE PRICES. ..JP> Suzuki cycles 50cc to SOOcc. Rupp-Mini Mkat from S144JN,. j „ Tak* M4* to W. Highland. Rloht to Hickory Rldgo Rd. to Oemed* Rd., loft and follow signs to DAWSON’S SALES AT T1PSIOO LAKE. Phone 42F217*. HONDA 300k O > see 4440 Elizabeth HONOA « CC AND helmet. *150. Law mltoap*. 4514*71. Motorcycle Sale SPECIAL PRICES ON ALL MODELS Anderson Sales & Service ’TELEGRAPH PB F7102 Suzuki, Hodaka Bultoco Motorcycles Alto many mini Mka* to d ' tram MG Sales ._i Drayton 471-4451 big ciBMwer IN* MN.-agg motors, « I mm wo in BMi IK -Hw*' Mum Used Ante-Track Nrts 102 TOf Im* 8ss.*8ar- CHK»VWd®!?* INSIDE BOATAW • MOTGRSTGRAGE ' PAUL A. YOUNG, INC. 4*90 DIXIE HWY. /, plow. tlUO. Attar 5, 4253M4. 1*44 POkD, 4 wheel drive, posl-tract, taWtfflKLlWN,, air rid* shocks, saddle tanks; heavy duty. 7N4512 or 7984500, Almont. ___________ 1*44 JtiEft jBWr' w-bw AND Cliff Dreyer's Gun and $ports Canter -MARINE DIVISION— ’ v .. 210 ttoSyRd. Holly ME 4-4771 —Open wily and TwtW*— TOM RADEMACHER INS- atavyJSAu.fl_. side bmu. 4 cyl- stidt shift, ndtoj trash air.haator. Camper special to ml*«J,from.*y tor h fca cor*._ EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR that EXTRA Sharp Car Ispeclnlly 4 speeds and corvettes, 'check the raid, man gat the boo Averill's Mansfield AUTO SALES 300 MANSFIELD AUTO SALES 11*4 Baldwin Ave. STOP HERE LAST M&M ‘TOP DOLLAR PAID" GLENN'S FOB "CLEAN" USED CAR* PE4-7»7i * *>14-17*7 We w o ii I d like to buy tote model GM Cars or will ac* . cept trade-downs. Stop by today. TKZY TWEtt iuSTSjKlRlCAta^ariir, pra8S59 ternational sCout, « drive, axe. condition. LI > Bog, and _ Used Cue— NEED A CART - Now In I 1966 Ford With V4, riilS radtoThaatar, Only $1395 FLANNERY Low WMW-PnyMIH^^m 1*42 CADILLAC. Pull POWtr, I conditioning. 1*43 OLDS 4 door S auto. 1*63 BUICK ConvartIMe. 1*42 CORVAIR 2 door Monza 1*42 RAMBLER 2 dear Auto. 1*44 CHEVY 2 doorftel Air. im FORD Palrlan* Wagon. 1*44 FORD 4 door aadan. 1**3 buick spaclaridaer 1*45 CORVAIR?doorJfdan. l^feRdMF- 1*45 FORD Country Sedan Wagon l«S MERCURY 4 door Hardtop. On N. Milford Rd. ( 1963 BUICK, AUTOMATIC . DEALER 1*44 WILbCAf, I USSR HrAltlSME:n TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLD* from. On US 10 at MIS, ton, MA MOT. _______________ TOM RADEMACHER MSChJ?Mu_ Ida, VI automatic, radio, trash Ir haator, wnjf n rani monay- AiUTABY uioDOE POWW Western Ante jnseynce MEHne 154 AUTO INSURANCE Low Rates - Broad Protection Easy Payment Flan CMl today far- quotation ANDERSON & ASSOC., INC. Foreign Cm 10S *51 VW, IDEAL FOR dune buggy 731-9S12, attar I pjn._ 140 AUSTIN HEALY, body ra- r^ita£r'.«#&tafs&. xm 1*44 MO mIDGIT. *50*. pM Ifta MO MIDGET'RED convortibl*. ndltlon, . . be rgI RodMttff. ,B?^felli i 'NT mochnnlcal T651-9340, 1*44 "TRIUMPH. Good condition. 1*44 VW, GOOD CONDITION, *1*5*. I*j7 JAGUAR, ySplua-2, rad. 4*3- ___id condition, attar 5.------ 1*67VW, iUN ROOF^4 speed, radio, whitewall tires, 11400 actual miles, owner, new car g,-—— 49* SOUTH HUNtIi ■1LM IMPH SPITFIRE, B.R.G., GM< 5 h S tires f«l ■ to appra lents. 391 imper, eclate. autobahn YOUR VW CENTER SPRITE -1*4#—MARK W^nwj^vary good ex- T0P iUALITY NEW AND USED IMPORTED CARS & JEEPS ARE FOUND AT —GRIMALDI CAR CO. -900 OAKLAND AVENUE VW OUNi POOGY 1*45 chassis, Hldf RJUL I— * “”** 332-0724 attar New and Used Cm GOl HAUPT PONTIAC By Kate Ounn 1967 CAMERO Hardtop# 4 cylinder, standard transmission, white walla# radio. . $1695 “Not THAT, Herbie! It’s my chrysanthemum from last Saturday’s football game!’’ JEROME CADILLAC CO. 1*10 Wide Track Pr. ■gain, call Credit Manager, Mr. LUCKY AUTO Transportation i Specials BUY HERE PAY HERE CHIVY: WHEN YOU buy If MARKET TiRB give It a satotX chock. 2435 Orchard 1 19M^CHEVY^ORIGINAL U00 or best 1*41 CHEVY V-S, 1*5* CHEVY, 2 booit, eutometlc, excellent transportation. Sis, Buy Hart — Pay Haro, Marvel Motora, 251 Ooktand, FE MW*. VAN CAMP CHEVROLET 1*55 CHEVY, iM«AACULATE con-dltlon. 50* h.p., 327 angina, 4 spaed Muncto, 516 Axel, il. slicks, glass front end, *1400. 334*042. 1*57 CORVETTE, 427 L-«, altar - FE 4-0134. hjgww- 1*57 NOMAD, 327 ENOINE, Hunt shifter, trectlon Masters 51*0, " 4*2-7344. i ________________ 95* chevy impalA, converi excellent mechsnkel condl______________ .ba).Ycyd^.,M!r"- 1*40 CHEVY, RUNS *150, 34340*6 MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTK 1944 Sultk LeSabre cony* black, whjta tap, white Ini auto,, double power, raHH whitewalls, SI3*5. 477 M-S4, Lake Orion, MY MMl. _______ tat BUICK SKYLARK, Maroon with white vinyl top and white Interior, 4-speed with console and bucket soots, exc. condition, 334*444. *44 BUldK ELECTRA. 6. window radon. Full power. Pint S45D. FE 1*45 BUICK SKYLARK sport) ' ' ‘ tin-whaoi 1940 CHEVY, NEED A CART — New In the area? — Repossessed? — Garnisheed? — Been Bankrupt? — Divorced* — Got ■ probem? Loll Mr. White at Kino Auto, I BUICK GRAND SPORT, vln er. Only *39 down, waak., ------------—|| price *1495 paymentsp*lL*S. Pull price *1495. Ml 4-751)0. HAROLD TURNER FORD fig _ 1943 MONZA CORVAIR *150, coll 423-0297. 1963 CHEVY WAGON. Ol *—uportatkm, *200. 3M-02**. CORVAIR MONZA, 4, speed, 1967 BUICK SKYLARK Sports a gold with black Vinyl top ano « terlor, auto., power steering, ay sole, bucket seats. *2200. Aft. WILSON CRISSMAN CADILLAC of Birmingham Phone Ml 4-1930 1350 North Woodward ELECTRA, intoning, $3595 GRIMALDI YOUR BUICK-OPEL DEALER y Orchard Lake_PE 2-9145 1*54 CADILLAC LIMOUSINE, *500. 1964 CADILLAC sum ss. vnr.t,stiam betwran 0 a m. to 4 pjn. ■p 1*44 CADILLAC CONVBRTULE> - ^owar, factory air, 031275, Ml 1M7 CADILLAC 4 door*, alFi Bagyrar**,hd f 1*47 CADjLLAC HARDTOP II power, factory a it In top condltk GRIMALDI MMP^Poon iadan. brown with brown vinyl c. condition, low mltaago, ____ic, air candlHapSig, tally BfaaSjSjBF custom paint. SalaOo!*ras haatar, wMtowoIS, tinted matt. 8,soo actual mllaa. $3695 : 1965 Tempest LeMans 1968 GTO 2-Door Hardtop Cmoh 8-cyllnder, automatic transmission with nheater and pawar. A raal buy tor- $1095 glass. ^pooltraction^axlft^ dhc brakes, roar window ,mr $2995 1965 Catalina 2-Ooor Hardtop $1395 1966 LeSabre 1-doer hardtop, power staorlng, power brakes, dynafloW. radol, hoator, now whitewalls, two tone paint wife matching Interior. Shorn. x$1895 1966 Grand Prix -2-door Hardtop ^jSDCW*sLSfrssiia $2295 1966 Bonneville Convertible White with Mock top. Full factory egulpmont and power. Never could you buy one eo cheap. $1795 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE USED CAR LOT, NEW AND USED CAR*$Aip OPEN ALL DAY SATURDAY Corner last Wide Track and University Drive FE 3-7951 Aag gOyTlAC PREaS. MOXPAY, OCTOBER 7, J9G6 Program* fymished by stations listed in Hilt column or* subject to change wlthewt notice! 'Laugh-In' StfllSdchiig and a critically acclaimed study of state of Bihar, where too little w^ter and too many people spell fcg starvation. *• \t ’ l:J» (2) C - Firefly Affair ^*;BU1 does, some painful searching of conscience t when Cissy asks permission to majrfy t, member of- one of Vienna's oldest and wealthiest •;ry'.»"tjsjftfi (9) C — Tommy Hunter 1 “Selections jt n elude — musical salute '.td^tfa. Maritimes. . i W:90 (2) C r, Carol Burnett , — ■ Comedienne Nanette Fabray and singer Trini Lopez guest. Sketches in-elude soap opera spoof on incredibly tangled relationships in a smalltown. (7) C - Big Valley T' Lew Ayres. makes rare TV appearance in unconventional love story. (8) C • “ Front Fags Challenge (»)C- News, Weather, Shorts (56) Joyce Chen Cooks lit SI (!) R - Danger Man — U.S. banker in charge of America’s NATO funds in Route is mhrdered and Drake investigates. (50) C — Les Crane (96) Fdk Guitar Phis (62) R — Star Perform- 11:90 (1) (4) (t) (9) C News, Weather, Sports (82) R------Movie: ‘'Breakthrough” ( 1963 ) This story of railroad worker's plot to break out of ftast Berlin to freedom. Eric Schuman, Maria (96) Art Studio ' 12:46 (86) Singing, Listening, Doing :jfo6i (4) c —News 1:99 (2) P-Love of Life ,i#':G~MafohG«n* r (7) C — Dream House • (9) R — Movie: “Safe at Home” (1962) William Frawley,, Mickey Mantle .1:96 (86) TeU me a Story liK (») C * Mews .. Wijl Carol Duvall 1:19 (2) C ^ As. the World Turds - (ft C - Let's Make a' Deal . • (2) C ~r R’s Happening 1:46 (96) Listen and Say 1:96 (2) (facial) Political Talk — Humphrey (7) Children’s Doctor 2:90 (8) C—Divorce Court —(HbC——Days of ^Qur Lives (7) C r- Newlywed Game (96) Science Is Fun lilt (86) Of Cabbages and Kings NPC-TV’s “Rowan and Martin’s Laugb-ln” is eocjdng it tothe 7V feature* WHAT’S NEM, 6 p.m. ;■ (9) C -What’s Mp Line? (8fo;ftC~ Flintstones (16) Woat's New - First; of five-part program showing 'beet life ■ Friend Although it is rather early in the season to be making ratings judgments, all the statistics thus far — daily and otherwise time 47 Two in cards *7ghatw flavor eaiMmetee IB Cental eovBfcr 24 At a 52 Abound . distance 53 African wild 25 8p*ed sheep (var.) contest 54 Pith of a IS Always subject 28 Fixed course 55 Fencing 22 Greenland sword 'outage- 57 Judean king some may do better in the national ranrali — included: “Hgwidi FlkfrO* ;#|p| lift,” “Blondie,” “Adam-12,” “Lancer,” “The Ugliest Girl in Town,” “Journey Is the Unknown,” tiie big-budget “Name of the Gems,” ‘The New Adventures of Huckleberry Finn” and the Phyllis DBkr and Don Rickies Shows. “Laugh-In” second only to CBS-TV’s new “Mayberry R.FJ).” series. And although “Mayberry R.F.D.”—the successor to the Andy Griffith Show — probably earned its hi ah rating mainly because of Griffith’s fictional marriage on the opening pgrade (50) R - Make Room for Daddy 6:46 (56) Come, Let’s Read 1:96 (2) C- Secret Storm (4) C-Another World f> (7) C—General Hospital i (6) R —Real McCoys (56) R—Topper (56) Joyce Own 2:69 (2) C - Edge of Night (4) C-You Don’t Say (7) C—One lift to Live (9) C —lively Spot (50) C’rr Captain Detroit (56) Human Relations (01) R—AnnSothem 4:00(2) C-House Party (4) C—Donald O’Connor (7) C — Dark Shadows ; (4) C — New*, Weather, $psrtt < (7) C — Nawa - : (50) R —I Love Lucy I (56) Voice of the New Broad - “Defeatism in ftbstto Schools” ’ 7:36 (2) C — Chmsmoke — Trailing outlaw* to a small Mexican village, Matt ft taken to tew by close watchers of the numbers race that NBC-TV’s “Julia” Is already a hit, and that CBS-TV’ Doris Day situation comedy is o star a Negro actress, Stars . Need Da rk G lasses MmwM....“T.... (4) C I Dream of Jeannie — Tomorrow’s news paper (Jeannie’s handiwork) announces that an astronaut broke his leg, but it doesn’t say 11:90 (2) R - Moyle: “Sherlock Holmes and the Voice of Terror” (1942) Film concerns mysterious Nazi radio b r o a d c a s t which terrorizes English populace. Basil Rathbone. (4) C — Tonight <*-> Bob Crane is substitute host. (7) C — Joey Bishop — (61) R-Robin Hood 4:15 (56) World Traveller 4:26 (2) C - News 4:39 (2) C-Mike Douglas (7) R — Movie: “36 Hours” '(1964) James . Garner, Eva Marie Saint, Rod Taylor (9) C —Fun Time (50) R — Little Rascals (56) Kindergarten (62) C — Rae Deane, Buga Bunny and Friends 6:99 (9) ftC-Batman Because of Kids' Flashbulbs (9) Take 30 (50) R - Kimba , f (56) TV Kindergarten TUESDAY AFTERNOON 12:l0 (|) C —News (4) C —Jeopardy (7) R — Bewitched (0) C —Lunch With Bore The autographiacs now swarm down on them with flashbulb cameras that almost blind them at the^^^^^^^ stagedoor. , So many flashbulbs have been popping around Broadway that I thought Spiro T. AgnewIM was in town. Actually, it was the flashbulb tids^f fifing away at David McCallum getting started in “Flip Side” . . . or at Diana Ross and the^^H Supremes, at the Jefferson Airplane, and at Ed^^H Sullivan. u|t’8 the electronic age,” Ed said laconl-^H cally, remembering when a scrubby pencil and^Hppip a dirty scrap of paper were the tools. WILSON Now they all, have cameras and they pop—pop pop. Even Celia Gordon', the queen, has cameras. “Celia and Her Mom” are a combo. Sen.: Muskie, Democratic 12:15 (56) Friendly Giant 12:15 rato. ;(4). C ' — Movie:, “The ; Rare Broad” (i486) Fictional account of the introduction of the Htfeford breed to .western cattir herds. Film follows bull, Its owners and their sad* die tramp guide as they head for Texas. James fttewart, Maureen O’Hara, Brian Keith. . (9) C >• Outcasts — Corey owes to avert a double tragedy. wfc«» Jemal la framed for the . . murder (f a man who knew too much about an • embittered lawman. “ffo) ft Perry Masoii ;: (56) NET Journal - Two perspectives on India deal > with country’s jffahpt to In order to “put up” the Prince of Wales to decent style, when be was a guest at the White House, President Buchanan slept in a hallway. Pair From Brazil Write Best Song in Rio Contest $ Radio Programs Luck Fails to Hold BAKERSFIELD. Calif. (AP) — Richard Hinzo, IS, escaped serious injury to * collision Sunday in which the other motorist, Roy Stevens, 48, was killed. AS < Parents Help Fete 50th Anniversary OLATHE, Kan. (AP) - Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. Everitt of Girard, Kan., helped their daughter, Mrs. Fred Banka, observe her 50th wedding anniversary Sunday. Everitt, who manages an income tax service et Girard, is 92 years old and his wife. Rhisa,) is 90. They will observe their WorJi J:J4-WWJ, Today In ' **' Tkm diW-WXYZ. Dava Oil*, (14S-WWJ, RavRw; Smpha- l:W^Snyj, Navm j ; .WJfcJgW* . ;■ . uU The population of Norway Is 7:IS-WJR. Debt Consultants of Pontiac, Inc. r f" r 13 If* ST 4o w 56 3T 62 W 90 ! PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER j im I Press Freedom Colled Trigger .to: «a»sfS* -i^ -a. ^:... J ,....* L. .. readers to express themselves, production processes Dickinson points out that Ms changing, and if the newsp own Philadelphia Bulletin car* reporters ore better-!rained ries five more pages of new* role tit the newspaper and. features than it did 2#basically1 the lame as It ;':/r: ' been sthce the days at tile ■,’i suppose our story in little ny pres*- , h h:\ Redwood'' (»y- It w»: men*' > • ME drataStferi&WB more, Unto -■ . Peo£ ttow«Sgw. and the doings at city tour-and In view of the changas taking try to crowd them into 70 to 100 pia^ are we keeping pace with ‘.y. ,i__.the. «» * serve? , , / ilSach community newspaper must tailor its yoduct to ttoiTpr^iitW^ wfP adgey ^U'tedrisht. Humphrey's Son SaysWolcomes Indicate Gains ' two years ago are described to an extensive study this year by the APME Production Processes Commftfce. Larry Jinks, managing editor of the Miami Herald, Which has one of the."Jurist modern newspaper plants, writ*! as chairman of toe Processes Committee: **Ask any editor -and hell tog you this is A revolutionary age to \ newspaper production ... - even if laborious type-handling processen are carried out in- the shadow pt the computer.” ERRORLESS FUTURE In a separate subcommittee report, Cortland Anderson of the Suffolk Sun and RUssell WOfiA of the American Press ^Institute concluded that advanced electronic printing processes ; Wifi bring “errorless composition and a merger of the composing and newsrooms.” Farfetched? Who’s to say that anything Is impossible? . But even if the newspaper NEW YORK (AP) - Hubert H. HI, to, the Vice president’s son, says be tsiflnd* ing increasing support for his father while campaigning for Um. - -i !IGHTW|feHT 7f TV Son/—for Rig World Series-size action from t v compact portable TV. 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No cgst or obligationi DRAYTON 4945 DIXIE HWY • QR 4-Q321 OPEN MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY 'T!l> ' PONTIAO■iSBUBLSABIMAW* FE3-7901 OPEN MONDAY, THURSDAY AND FRIDAY mi 9 ROONJ-SiaE SAVW6SI SIZE/."- i* AAtE HMCE» .. *x!2'. $ *58.56 , $ 78.08 ^2'xl3'6" $ 87.84 12W j! 8 .97.80 12W 1 Court Opens to Face txpTbs/ve l/sf o Demonstrations (or unpopular causes are bound to attact hecklers. Heckling has the potential of touching off violence. Must the demonstrators yield? Along sinfiiar lines, should officials have authority to prohibit rallies that could incite spectators to violence? ! The question is brought by the National States Rights party, burned in 1966 from holding public meetings In Somerset County, Maryland. The remainder of the week will be devoted to si series of private conferences. Next Monday the Court mil begin to announce ridings and will start a round of hearings. Vietnam and etvi rights demonstrators—and a group of rightists, as well—are testing the power of police to limit dissenters activities in the interest of order. They present a difficult First Amendment problem. , rON (AP) — The tranquil eqing the Supreme Court’s fay stands id contrast to the ses on its docket and the over President Mutton’s Ironically, the first case to be heard by the court centers on Wallace's bid for the White House. His lawyers are trying to compel Ohio to put Wallace’s name on the ballot next month. The state counters teat he did not comply with election The political cainpaiga also has been thrust fit tee court, exemplified by third-party presidential candidate George C. ro.vr.AC. TfoietJ Talks Tough, j Says Reds Failing SAIGON (Aj*> —President Nguyen Van Thieu declared today the enemy has failed in every attempt to bring "disastrous consequences” to South Vietnam in 1968. But he said that for peace to be realized the Hanoi regime m u s t acknowledge its aggression and agree to abandon its attempts to take over South Vietnam. I" ■ 5, r:4 / , ' i .... “The mort reasonable way to end this war hi for bote sides to scale down the level of hostilities leading gradually to a cease-fire effectively controlled and guarwteeg,” Thieu said in a speech to the National Assembly on the first anniversary df the creation of the body. TMeu emphasized that he believes South Vietnam is militarily and politically gaining tea upper hand in the war. “I reaffirm today that^we will not concede any portion of opr territory to the Communist aggressors, and we will not accept any form of coalition with the Communists,” he said. "Abo. national reconciliation does not mean teat we are willing to accept a Communist Trojan HoTse in our midst leading to a Communist takeover by political means.” war than. we. the defenders. By refusing to respond to our gesture of goodwill in de-escalating this war, the Communists, are obstructing the peace talks.” OBSTACLE TO PEACE Thieu said South Vietnam and its allies had agreed'to tee cessation of bombing of part of Norte Vietnahi "in the hope that it might lead to peace." He called this a “calculated risk.” He said Hanoi had agreed 10 preliminary talks in Paris, but be added “the Communist aggressors have a greater responsibility to de-escalate this Hanoi is attempting “to delude international public opinion” Thieu said, by claiming the continued bombing of North Vietnam south of the 20th parallel is an obstacle to peace negotiations. “We are willing and ready to take any action which can hasten the es|tablish-ment of a just and hohorabto peace, but we cannot take any action that will prolong the war or will reward aggression. .. It is now up to Hanoi to let us know how a total cessation of bombing over the remaining part of North Vietnam will bring both sides closer to peace.” S. VIET BRASS ON INSPECTION - South Vietnam’s Assembly in Saigon today. With him are Vice President President Nguyen Van Thieu (center of picture) reviews an Nguyen Cao Ky (left)' and Prime Minister Tran Van Huong honor guard of airborne troops before addressing the National (to the rear in light-colored suit). Nixon: People, Not Programs Woman in Area Is Killed by Car A 36-year-old Waterford Township woman was killed Saturday night when she wat struck by a car while tee reportedly was' walking in the middle of a road MVlittAriiie. • Mary C. Nolan, 4661 Rlvervtew, died at Pontiac General Hospital after Aging struck by a car driven by David Garnett, 24,014978 Hobson,-on Frembes Construction Strike, School Rolls Linked Oakland Highway Toll in’68 This past summer’s construction strike is primarily blamed by school administrators for tee lowest increase of Oakland County students in seven years. Total enrollment of the county's 28 local school districts is 233,482 students, 5,207 more than a year ago. It is the smallest increase since 1961, by about 1,666 students. - ----- with 15,900, up 635; West Bloomfield, 4,174, up614; Rochester, 8,070, up 582. By The Associated Press Republican candidate Richard M. Nixon, showing a commanding lead in the three-way presidential race in two new surveys, says people and not vast new government programs are the answer to city and poverty tils. Massive new programs, Nixon said in a radio broadcast last night, in New York, would only “drain tee federal treasury to soothe tee public conscience” and would fate Nixon said reliance should be on private enterprise, and on millions of Americans who he said stand ready to help if they knew what to do. “As government has strained to do more,” he said, “our people have felt constrained to do less.” A Washington Post 50-state survey also showed a commanding lead for Nixon, and a toss-up between Humphrey and Wallace at this point for third place. But Wallace, in Washington to address United Press International editors and the National Press Club’, disputed the Times survey and said he is going to finish first. And Humphrey in Erie, Pa., said “it’s the people and not tee pollsters or anyone else” who will elect the next president. Related Stories, Pages A-3, A-5 Southfield has doubled its student population since 1961, West Bloomfield has doubled its since 1963 and Farmington has doubled its since 1959. Walled Lake, No. 7, has 10,002 studente.up 307 fromlastyear and Bloomfield Hills, No. 8, has 9,111, up 345. Nixon spoke on the heels of a New York Times survey showing him leading in states with more than enough electoral votes for election — and showing Democratic candidate Hubert H. Humphrey trailing in third place behind third-party candidate George C. Wallace. The Times survey showed Nixon leading in 34 states with 380 electoral votes — 270 are needed for election — Wallace ahead in seven- states with 66 electoral votes and Humphrey leading in four states'and the District of Columbia with 28 electoral votes. The Washington Post survey showed Nixon leading in 32 states with 346 electoral votes, Humphrey -in seven states with 48 electoral votes and Wallace six states with 53 electoral votes. A former campaigner for Sen.Eugene • J. McCarthy said the Minnesotan has set four conditions to be met before he will endorse Humphrey. Gerald N. Hill, of San Francisco, who headed McCarthy’s campaign in California, said yesterday he had been authorized by McCarthy to release the conditions. Hill said they are that Humphrey agree to: • A halt to the bombing of North Vietnam. • A national election in Vietnam including “all elements” of tbe political structure. • Reform,of the U.S. military draft system. Reform of the Democratic party structure. Garnett told Waterford Township police be didn’t see tee woman. The accident la still under investigation. Battleship Shells Reds SAIGON (AP) - The battleship New Jersey continued farther up the coast of Norte Vietnam yesterday, shelling an artillery site and,supply print near tee Ron River about 50 miles north of the demilitarized zone. Four of the 10 districts with tee largest number of students last year found teat they had less students this year. Several school superintendents havA said the construction strike didn’t permit new families to move into school districts, according to Mrs. Polly Carithers, director of public information for Oak-_ land Schools. In other developments: • Humphrey picked up endorsements over the weekend from the New York Times, the Atlantic Constitution, and the Denver Post. • Incumbent Democratic U.S. Sen. Daniel K Inouye won renomination over William D. Lampard in tee Hawaii primary Saturday. Lolich Is Last Hope for Bengals The ship arrived on firing station last Monday but her first assignments were against North Vietnamese army strong-points inside or just north of the demilitarized zone. REASONS CITED She said other reasons for decreasing or slightly increasing enrollments are harder-to-get mortgages, harder-to-find Jhouses to buy and a decreasing number of children entering school. As a result of tee enrollment declines and smaller increases than expected, many school districts face tighter budgets because they will get less money from tee state than anticipated. The weatherman promised warm and clearing weather today for the Detroit Tigers as they try to avert losing the World Series to St. Louis in Tiger Stadium. Mickey Lolich, who hit the only home run of his professional baseball career and beat the Cardinals for Detroit’s only series victory, is manager Mayo Smith’S pitching choice. - The state gives each school district about $207 per enrolled student. Enrollment increases were about twice as large in 1064 and 1966 when gains of 10,000 students were recorded. Opposing him is 19-game winner Nelson Briles who lost to Lolich, 8-1, last Thursday. The Cardinals hold a 3-1 Series edge after beating the Tigers convincingly Saturday and Sunday in Detroit. ond most successful pitcher in Series history with a 7-1 record, surpassed only by Lefty Gomez’ 6-0. He set records for seven straight wins and seven complete game victories. H^truck out 10 batters to become the first pitcher ever to read) or exceed that total in five Series games, and he boosted his total series strikeouts to 84, 10 shy of Whitey Ford's record. Should Detroit win today’s fifth game, set to start at l p.m., the two teams wiH return to St Louis for a sixth meeting Wednesday afternoon at Busch Memorial Stadium. PONTIAC LARGEST Pontiac School District continues to be the largest in the county with 23,866, only 137 more than a year ago. A 350-student increase was expected. Royal Oak, tee second largest district, enrolled 19,861 this year, down 339. The Redbirds’ bid for a second world’s championship in a row, must share the spotlight with outfielder Lou Brock of St. Louis who needs one stolen base for new 1 Series records of 8 and 15. TIES RECORDS Nine of the 28 districts counted fewer children than last year. They are: Royal Oak; Birmingham, fourth-largast in county, 17,645, less than 100 decrease; Berkley, lOte-largert, with 8,598 students, down 248; and Ferndale, ninth-largest, 8,406, down 103. " Others showing decreases were Oak Park, Avondale, Clarencevilie, Hazel Park and Madison. I DISTRICTS’ GAINS BIG Five districts gained enough students to fiU a new 20-room elementary school. They are: Waterford, No. 3, with 18,284 students,.gain of 623; Southfield, No. 5, with 16,185, up 711; Farmington, No. 6, J5 • ^ A Pontiac Pr*M Photo by Mrtrd t. NoMo SERIES FANS—Rain during most of the fourth game of the Tigers-Cardinals World Series play yesterday in Detroit apparently didn’t dampen the spirits of Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey and former Dodger star Jackie Robinson. Humphrey stayed to watch tee Tigers go down to defeat, 19-1, while Robinson, who is campaigning for Humphrey In his race to the White House, left the game t* Sunday he .tied the marks for both one series (seven set by him last fall) and total Series games (14, held by Eddie Collins). “You’re darn right I wanted it,” Brock said after the game. “There was a record: yon know it and I know it. And when there’s a record in force you take a shot at it.” First baseman Norm Cash of the Tigers has gained a lot of respect for the speedy Cardinal while watching helplessly as Bengal moundsmen try to keep Brock close to the bag. “Brock has shown me more than anybody in our league," Cash said. “We don’t have anyone who plays with tee pitcher like he does. He's a gambler, a real goto! one.” GIBSON ADDS TO RECORDS Sunshine Chasing Cloud Cover Away Sunshine was to chase away this, morning’s gloomy clouds and send temperatures into- the low 60s, Tonight will be fair and cool With the low telling into the 40- to 46-degree range. The warming trend was to continue tomorrow with parity sunny sides. pee This morning’s westerly winds at 5 to 15 miles per hour were to swing to the . southwest at 5 to 15 miles by tonight. ‘: Clouds will bring bade tee threat of fall showers by Wednesday with the temperatures in tee 60s. While Brock was driving the Tigers wild yesterday with his baserunning and hitting, St. Louis pitcher Bob Gibson added to his records, becoming the «^c- Low thermometer Pontiac prior to 1 R.m. the mercury of rain in per cent are near aero and tomorrow lO. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, by Defense Chief WASHINGTON (AP) — Secretary of Defense Clark M. Clifford intends his yfaft Berlin visit this week to be a pwfted reminder to the Soviet Union of UgJ: determination to protect Western ; ri|fhts in that encircled city. Clifford was scheduled to attend the 0& 10*11 meeting of the NATO nuclear pQunting group in Bonn. This gave hkj^the chance to go to Berlin, where he w^lt inspect U.S. armed forces and tour Woman Forces Plane to Cuba /jdERIDA, Mex. (AP) - A 35 year-old woman from Argentina, who said she ' fqund life in Mexico intolerable, hijacked a' twin-engine turboprop airliner vjith 17 persons aboard Sunday and ordered the pilot to fly to Cuba. * * * •Mexican authorities said the woman, idbqtified as Judith Vazquez, entered the cgckpit and pulled a gun from beneath a white shawl. The pilot, Captain Ricardo Eft$a Troyo, said that after ordering h$to to fly to Cuba the woman said-hysterically, “I’d rather be killed or jailed in Cuba than return to Mexico." ■ ★ * * She was believed to be the first woman to seize a plane and take it to Cuba. The incident took plgce as the Aeromkya plane flew over Mexico’s Isla Mujeres, t&e “Isle of'Women," on its way to •After seven hours in Havana, the plane, which carrie^-14 passengers in-cluding three Americans and a crew of three, returned to Merida Sunday night. _ ★ ★ ★ :in addition to Mrs. Vazquez and her daughter, Silvia, 12, and a two-month-old son! Ernesto, two unidentified women p&ssengers remained in Havana. , dn Havana, Mexican Ambassador Miguel Covian, who arranged for the release of the passengers and plane, said h* found the hijack difficult to explain ‘'when there are regular commercial flights between Mexico and Cuba." the city, which stands 100 miles inside Communist East Germany/ Clifford’s trip is reminiscent of a gambit by his predecessor, then Secretary of Defense Robert S. 'c McNamara, almost exactly six years ago. At that time, U.S. authorities were | concerned that the Soviet Union, under Nikita S. Khrushchev, might be getting ready to heat up the long-standing Berlin problem again. McNAMARA VISIT So McNamara made a twoday visit to West Germany and inspected U.S. ground and air units. In effect, he gave the Russians clear notice that the United States was ready to wield nuclear weapons if necessary to defend West Berlin. The Clifford vihil fits in with a general pattern of a tough U.S. government attitude toward the Soviets in the wake of the Russian-led invasion of Czechoslovakia and subsequent threatening statements aimed at West Germany and West Berlin. AMERICANS CONCERNED American authorities are concerned about a heavy movement of Russian troops into Central Europe, particularly some 17 divisions into Czechoslovakia. It is the U.S, view that the stationing of highly combat ready Russian troops in Czechoslovakia—where there were no such troops before August — raises a potentially grave threat to West Germany and other NATO countries. * * ..* Last week,-State Department officials reported that the regular winter meeting of NATO foreign ministers would be moved up from mid-December to mid-November in Brussels so they can consider steps to stiffen the alliance and its military forces. Both Clifford and Gen. Earle G. Wheeler, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of . Staff who will accompany the Pentagon chief to Germahy, have made it plain they regard it as important to maintain a substantial American troop presence in . West Eujbpe. y-.- [- . .. • \,t ; feTrmifigbWiS flPp ■' O Mtt! Rezoning Hearing Tonight gmmma. Dubcek Program Feared at End PRAGUE (AP) — Czechoslovaks feared today that the Dubcek regime’s pfpgrara to liberalize and reform communism is nearing an end. ★ ★ ★ ' Killing bodies of the Czechoslovak Corhmunist party plumed a series of meetings to discuss the commitments forced by the Soviet Union at talks in Moscow Thursday and Friday with party chief Alexander Dubcek and Premeir Oldrich Cernik. •T't ■ _ " h ★ ★ An informal gathering of party leaders was expected to be followed by a session <$ the 21-member presidium and, finally, a meeting of the 160-member central committee. * Communists said_ the alternatives were: .• To continue the policy of seeking accommodation with Moscow, agree to semipermanent stationing of occupation troops in Czechoslovakia, and salvage as much as possible of the “post-January" program to make more humane and democratic. • To balk and give the Soviets the same choice they had after, invading the country Aug. 20-21, that is, formation of a military government to rule Czechoslovakia. N The Weather ; - f, U.S. Weather Bureau Report .PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Cloudy this morning becoming partly sunny and a Httle warmer this afternoon, highs 57 to 63. Fair and cool tonight, lows 40 to 46. Tomorrow partly sunny and wanner. Winds westerly 5 to 15 miles per hour, be-'dapjfri southwest to south 5 to 15 miles tonight. Wednesday outlook: Chance of 4)MWen and not much temperature change. Precipitation probabilities 5 per cent zero tonight and 10 per cpnt tomorrow. FORECAST jnfcuMt Show low T#mp«fo*0f»» Ixptittd •Smut Tuo*d°V tialaUd pgjffl KEEPING THEIR EYES ON MOON—Youngsters of the Amateur Observers Society keepL their attention and'telescope focused on the moon from an improvised observatory atop the Empire State Building’in New York City early yesterday mornnig. The kids spent a chilly night watching and waiting for tne total eclipse which began about 6 a.m. Stages are shown through time-lapse photography. Rusk and Gromyko Air World Problems. UNITED NATIONS, NY. (AP) —. Secretary of State Dean Rusk and Soviet, Foreign Minister Andrei A. GrbmyKpA exchanged views on a broad range of world problems Sunday night during a three-hour dinner meeting' that both sides called useful. The meeting was the first extensive ' conference between the two diplomats since Soviet troops invaded Czechoslovakia Aug. 20 and put a chill in international relations. They had met informally Wednesday at the Soviet Mission to discuss the. Middle^ East situation: ★ c ★ ★ Gromyko, coming from Rusk’s 42nd floor suite at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel last night, told reporters no agreements were reached but “these discussions were useful.” “To say thpt agreement was achieved would be saying too much,” he said. “Each agreement has to be preceded by a great deal of work.” Gromyko said, he and Rusk touched on the Vietnam war, the Middle East, disarmament, European security and • U.S.-Soviet relations. He said they discussed no specific date for starting talks, on limitation of missiles and antimissiles that their?, governments have agreed to enter into. jfr As to whether they n»ade:pny progress* on thA Middle East, the Soviet foreign ‘ BIRMINGHAM - A public hearing on the rezoning of ,a parcel of city-owned property on Oakland between Hunter and ‘'Woodward from residential to public use .will be held tonight , at 8 by thejfiity -Commission. The parcel would be part of the Ring Road project to be undertaken by the city, the road would route through traf- HalfofSenators in Favor of Some Bomb-HdltPlan WASHINGTON W) - At least half of the Senate favors one plan or another to halt U.S. bombing of North Vietnam, although conditions under which the air raids should be stopped vary. , Tweffty-seven senators of the 85 who responded to an* Associated Press survey said, they favor an unconditional bombing halt, They were opposed by 18 senators who said there should be no fur* . ther bombing reduction jto the current * stage of the war. «#. < M "★ ft In between were 23 senators who said they would insist on some matching ac-tion by Hanoi, either in reducing the level of toe fighting or in compromises at the bargaining table in Pari*, -i • Neither of Michigan's two U.S. senators, Republican Robert Griffin or Democrat Philip A. Hart; was listed as ticking a stand for or against a halt in U.S. bombing of Noijjh Vietnam. 18 IN OPPOSITION , The 18 who opposed any reduction of the air war predicted that a bombing halt would result In wholesale military ihfiltration from the North and stepped up/ costly ground action In the South by Communist units taking advantage of a toothless American air dragon. The "senators who said they •want the bombing halted unconditionally — at least on an experimental basis — maintained it would *be an acceptable risk in an all-out aftempt to end the fighting. ★ ★ ★ The AP, survey was conducted after the flurry of congressional and political debate sparked by Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey's Sept. 30 Vietnam policy speech. Humphrey said that as president he would consider stopping all bombing “as - an acceptabfe -risk for peace." He said that before, acting he would ‘‘place fcey importance on evidence —direct or indirect, by deed or word — of Communist willingness to": restore the demilitarized zone between North and South Viet- fic around the outskirts of Birmingham’s central business district,. , Sr, -Or. ' Also on the agenda report from the city manager suggesting permanent improvement of parking Jot dumber 7, negrthe Community House. The commission is also expected to make a formal statement tohigkt regarding the Johnson, Johnson and Roy Urban Design report presented at ,X Planning Commission meeting last week, according to assistant city manager John Saefke. # RUSK GROMYKO Allies Turn Up %. NATIONAL WEXTHER^-Snow is forecast tonight for Montana and spow flurries ^ predicted for the .centra! Rockies. There will be showers in southeastern Florida, jjjgd ft Will be warmer from central Texas to the western Great Lakes and cooler Him the Tennessee Valley to the Gulf Coast. , if l . ' t ‘ Red Stockpiles ~~$AlGON ( AP) — Thouoande of allied ; troops scoured the battle-scarred mountain valleys near Khe Sanh and the jungled foothills southwest of Da Nang today in new offensives aimed at spoiling enemy attacks. Task forces of US. Marines and American and South Vietnamese infantrymen met little resistance, but continued to turn up valuable enemy munitions stockpiles, probably hindering or even delaying any offensive plans. ★ ★ + One stockpile found two miles below the center portion of the demilitarized zone yielded 200 rounds of 152mm artillery ammunition plus 100 fuses. This was significant because -it marked the first known time in the war that 152mm ammunition had been found in South Vietnam, indicating that the enemy might be planning to try to move big Russian-made guns into the South. The 152s, the biggest in the enemy’s arsenal, can fire a 90-pound missile 10.5 miles. Military spokesmen, in delayed reports, announced tRe loss of four more American aircraft to enemy ground fire over the past three days. ONE YANK DEAD They included pn observation plane and a reconnaissance helicopter helping the allied ground troops search for the enemy, a Navy A7 Corsair fighter-bomber downed over North Vietnam, and an assault helicopter hit near the Cambodian border northwest of Saigon. One American was reported killed and five wounded and seven South Vietnamese soldiers wounded. BLOOMFIELD HILLS — Ralph Nader, author of the best-selling “UnaityYtAny Speed," Will appear as ff§h| second femire of the ; Oakland, Community College Contrast Series next Tuesday* at 8:30 p.m. at the Crtabrook School Auditorium, Lone Pine Road at Orchard Ridge Road. ■- * * * Published in 1965, “Unsafe at Any Speed," an account of the designed-in dangers in Aiherican automobiles, led to Nader filing an invasjon-of-privacy suit against General Motors based on an investigation of him ordered by GM. ir *• ★ , pi? This will be Nader’s Rest public appearance in the-home of the automotive industry? J r % “ Tickets or information can be obtained . from the OCC Community Services Division. House Unit LBJ Programs WASHINGTON (AP) - The House Appropriations Committee today cut .deeply from the administration’s request for funds to launch its new low-ffidSffli housing program, and to expand the fqpd stamp program. Also sharply trimmed byi the committee were requests for money to enable the administration to enforce the new open-housing law, and for a juvenile delinquency control program. * * * The cuts were made in the final’appropriations bill of the year, which the committee, reduced from $270 million requested by the administration to $101 million. The House, scheduled to take the bill up tomorrow, is likely to go along with nearly all the recommended cuts. Chief casualties were the food stamj) program, which Confess recently ex-pandedj- and-the^ww housing, program designed to increase home ownership among low and moderate income families and make more rental housing available. , President Johnson asked for $90 million hr additional funds for the toed stamp, program, which helps poor families get more food for their money. minister asserted he would “prefer not to say yes and not to say no.” - — U.S. officiate issued the same list of subjects. They too called the talks useful but said no agreements were reached and no arrangements were made for future meetings. OTHERS AT TALKS With .Rusk, who hosted the dinner, were Ambassador J.R. Wiggins, new U.S. chief U.N. delegate; Charles E. (Chip) Bohlen, deputy undersecretary of state for political .affairs, and an interpreter. Gromyko was accompanied by the Soviet ambassador to the United Nations, Jacob A. Malik; Anatoly F. Dobrynin, Soviet ambassador in Washington, and an interpreter. Earlier on ABC-TV’s “Issues and Answers/’ Rusk said sUth‘ '(heelings were "scouting expeditions" to look for “any point on which we can make some progress, "i “We sort of sniff around,” he said. He said Americans would be glad to see the-Soviet Union “fake a responsible part” in helping Vietnam move toward ^^eeting between President Johnsfl^ Congress recently authorized Such and Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin an increase, but the committee had been discussed before the occupation trimmed the appropriation itself to $20 of Czechoslovakia, he said, but added million. The funds would be in addition none was planned now because “it would to $225 million already appropriated for be rather difficult.” this fiscal year. Ralph nader Wet Snow Falls in Mew England By United Press International Wet snow fell iq the higher mountains of nprthem New England early today, with two inches of the white stuff measured at Mt. Washington, N.H. Scattered showers, with snow at the higher elevations, were falling from the North Pacific Coast to the northern and central Rockies. ★ ★ ★ In Idaho apd Montana, warnings were issued to motorists and stockmen as a cold rain dropped at lower elevations and snow fell above, 4,000 feet. * ★ * In other parts of the nation, cloudy, damp and chilly weather, with some locally heavy rain and fog, covered muctf orthe ‘wmtfr extending from lower Michigan to New England, and from' Mississippi to Georgia. ★ ★ ★ At Augusta, Ga., almost an inch of rain fell in one hour. Rain delayed the start of the fourth garq? of the World Series yesterday, and spilled as much as three inches of pre- . cipitation in the Tennessee Vatlty 1 Will Return to Work Denny Plays Here Tonight I Detroit Tiger pitcher Denny Me- j 1 Lain gives-a benefit concert on the | K electric organ in Pontiac tonight | I with proceeds1 going to support j | youth work in the city. I Tickets for the 8 psm. perform- ; | ance at Pontiac Northern High i I School are $3.50. They are on sale | 1 at Grinnell Bros., 27 S. Saginaw; 1 C R. Haskill Studio, 1 University; 1 J.’ C. Penney Co. hi Mlracle' Mile ’I Shopping Center; and Qsmun’s at / 51 n. Saginaw and Tel-Huron I Shopping Center, Tickets will he | Edison Linemen Ratify Contract A strike by about 800 overhead linemen of the Detroit Edison Co. ’ that' lasted more than four months will be over next Monday when the *pen return to work with a new three-yeajh coptract. h ★ * The new party which reportedly call* for a 93-cent per hour pay increase over a three-year period, as ratified by a union-member vote yesterday. ★ ★ The union, Local 17 of the Interriar tional Brotherhood of E 1 e c t r i c a 1' Workers, represents workers in a seven-county area covering most o l southeastern*Michigan, from the Thumb area to Monroe. The strike started June.l and lasted through some of the worst storms ever to hit Oakland County as far as damage to wires were concerned. MANY DELAYS Broken wires were fixed b y -supervisory, personnel and ' volunteers from the company, though many delays In repairs were reported. Union members Jiao been making about $4.50 per hour under the old contract, union officials said. i; i sold at the door. ■k * * The event is being sponsored by ] the Downtown Pontiac • Kiwanis j Club, the Pontiac Area Hammond Organ Society and the Denny Mc-LainEnterprises. ' 4 Hanoi Sends Cong Aid HONG KONG (AP) North Vietnam said today it is sending 50,000 tons of rice, 100 tons of medical supplies, and 10 nXIllion yards of cloth to the Viatcong and Its sympathizers in South Vietnam. * . * ”, The broadcast by Radio -Hanoi indicated, but did not directly say, that this was the civilians’ gift quota for 1968. f? . mg PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTQBKft 7, I9fi8 Wallace Raps [Poll WASHINGTON (AP) m George C. Wallace says a poll showing that he couM finish aeo oad to Richard M. Nixon for president is wrong—he is going in finish first. lf^- ■ Wallace, in Wadwjtgten lor speeches today at a meeting of United Press International editors and the National* Press Club, disputed a New York Times survey that said Wallace waa running a distent second to Nixon 'but ahead of Democrat Hubert H. Humphrey. Gl Dies, 2 Hurt in Korea Clash SEOUL (AP) — An American soldier was killed and two others wounded in a cldsh with North Korean infiltrators along the demilitarized zone, tlRMLS. Army announced today. The three men were part of patrol from the ted U.S. Infan- Times knows anything more about public opinion than this microphone,” Wallace told newsmen Sunday. HMK^mes survey showed Nixon leading in 34 states with 380 electoral votes,' WallaeC ahead in. seven with 66 electoral votes and Humphrey winning in four states and the. District of Columbia with a total of 28 electoral votes. POPULARITY ON RISE’ / Election requires 270 electoral votes. Wallace’s campaign managers say the former . Alabama governor’s popularity has taken a sharp rise partly because of what they call a perfectly timed announcement that former Air Force Chief of Staff Curtis E. LeMSy would be his running mate. The announcement came last Thursday at a time when Wallace was receiving widespread national attention on his campaign swing through the Midwest. The news corps accompanying the candidate had suddenly tripled in size before the en- try Dtvteton QMt was' atfacked ^ ^ additional propjet air* T. ... .■ ' i____,4 ItriAM Ia onnnmmnnato tnPm Saturday by an unknown number pf. infiltrators, the announce- dence LeMay’s stand on nuclear weapons will be accepted by vwtes when they fully under- dit. LeMay has said this counj should make every effort to war, bitt once involved in _T ties should not rule out use of nuclear weapons. He has said he does pot believe they are needed in Vietnam. liners to accommodate them. ‘CHOICE PRAISED’ ment said. s Aides say letters from sup- * * * porters, many enclosing contri- The dead soldier was identi-'buttons and* praising his choice fled as Spec. 4 Stephen A. Nas- 0f LeMay, have increased to sani of Brewster, N.Y. about 15,000 daily at this Mont- Washington was tile first stop on-ipfcoast to coast campaign tour for Wallace this week. IQs schedule includes stops at Baltimore tonight; Boston Tuesday; Scranion, Pa., and Albany, N.Y*, Wednesday; Evansville, Ind.," Peoria, HI., and Duluth, Minn,,..Thursday; Fargo, N.D., Casper, Wyo. and Denver Friday, and Salt Lake City, Boise, Idahb, and Seattle Saturday. Lei/May Portrait Is Removed by His High-School • !I I I I 1 COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -nouncement and he had to char' «nUth High School removed a two additional nrooiet || reftoe»r Force Gen. Curtis E. LeMay soon after he* was named to become In g separate announcement, military spokesmen released the names of two U.S. soldiers killed by North Korean infiltrators' in aif ambush Sept. 27. They were Pfc. Michael B. Reynolds of Cranberry Lake, N.Y., and Spec. 4 Joseph E. Cayer Jr. of Danbury, Cbrin' The men were in a vehicle that was ambushed south of the DMZ, the announcement said. gomery, Ala., headquarters. * * * v........ The announcement of a running mate added a new national tone and legitimacy to Wallace’s campaign, his managers say, and LeMay has brought with him a new issue-nuclear weapons—to help dispel any belief Wallace’s only concern to law and order. The advisers expressed confi-1 May’s portrait. George C. Wallace’s running mate<4he principal said. The portrait had hung for several years at South High, LeMay’s alma mater. * * * The principal of the predomi-’ nantly Negro school, Harold WaShburn, said the picture was removed pt the request of several stbdents, He said the students did not want LeMay’s picture, hanging to the school because he was running with a man who is “an avowed racist.” A show scene replaced Le- Reg. 129.99 recliner is deeply padded for extra comfort Beautifully designed and sturdily constructed to take years of wear. Toast, olive, oxblood or black vinelia covered choir shifts to rocking, sitting, reclining, TV viewing with just on easy movement. LAST WEEK A. Regular 129.88 wing-back recliner 3-way Country English rediner has button-tufted wing back, black vinelle cover wipes clean. B. Regularly 69.88 rocker or recliner Your choice of 3-position recliner or swivel rocker. Covered in black, olive or beige vinelle. Save! £ go ^ • C. Regularly 99.88 rocker or recliner wivel rod *79 D. 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As electrons are emitted radioactive samples, they rlact with the/ liquid producing a flash of light (scintillation,). The count light flashes then are counted! by a machine using distinct advantagesZyOver a Geiger counter. Fwst, all substances must be dried before being subjected to a Geiger counter, whereas they may re-' main in their original state for the liquid scintillation system; Second, the Gpigei: counter only measures radiation in one direction whereas the system measures radiation in all directions. f Most important, however, the machine is able to take multiple measurements over time so that data can be compared, giving accurate record of both where the radioactive materials are utilized and how much is being consumed. Radioactive lsot/opes of various elements will be fed to animals or plants. Various portions of the animals or plants can then be subjected to tile system to analyze the use of the radioactive elements. - SHOP FRETTER TODAY - YOU'LL GET PRICE, SELECTION, SERVICE OLLIE FRETTER Guarantors Your Comploto Satisfaction General Electric Wood Walnut FM/AM RADIO APPLIANCE, TV SHOPPERS, EVERYTHING IS READY FOR YOU N0WI EV0tf FRETTER STORE IS CHOCK FULL OF FACTORY FRESH .1969 MODEL MERCHANDISE AND THEY'RE PRICED TO MAKE YOU BUY NOW) NO MONEY DOWN, NO PAYMENTS TIL 1969, 3 FULL YEARS TO PAY. ALL 10 FRETTER STORES OPEN MAY TR 9. 14" COLOR TV a Portable with UHF/VHF • 21,500 volts' of picture power a Telescoping dipole antenna • Solid-state 3-stage video IF amp. • Zonith handcrafted chassis • Vinyl dad metal cabinet ""COLOR TV 13-COLOR TV Walnut, Wood Consol* • 227 sq. in, • Lighted tuning panol • Full S2-channel reception • 25,000-volt chassis • Ono-sot fin* tuning control a 25,000 volts of picture power • Ultra-sonsitivo A 2-channel tuning * High gain 3-stag* IF amplifier # Automatic "fringe jack** circuit ItCJl 12" DIAG. PERSONAL PORT. TV Solid stats VHF/UHF tunur. Swill- *89“ nan 8 SPEAKER CONSOLE STEREO COMB. *399 88 Whirlpool 2-SPEED 2-CYCLE WASHER 9 2-cycles, 2 speeds • 3 wash and rins* tomporaturos • Magic lint filtor TBPPJUl DELUXE ELECTRIC SELF-CLEAN RANGE • Automatic dock and oven timer ’* Lift-up top for easy cleaning • Plug-out surfaco units • Self-cleaning even 'f'hjtpuoinir 24 FT. NO-FROST SIDE-BY-SIDE a 314.3 lb. freesor capacity • 4 full width refrigerator sholvos a Slido-eut moat crispor • Only 35W wid* TTXBB NEW81N H JFRETTER’S Pontiac S. Telegraph Rd. Vt Milo South of Orchard Lake Rd. FE 3-7051 FRETTETS Southfield IFRETIEIFS Oakland 1_ On Telegraph Road 111 W. 14 Mils lodfe^yi,c5| Just South «f 12 Milt Rd. I °Prt^0»WBud Mall ^ ouLMM I 686-6300 dmriOOU | Open Dally it t* I-today 18 to T | •: ‘ i, * v ■■ - v> • “v -;rL' av v . Triiisr T0PTOAND • fashion go hand-in-hand when you shop in Hudson's Children's Departments Trench coats with the look of antiqued leather j‘[ 4-6x$20 7-14$22 The luxurious look and feel of fine leather in machine-washable vinyl with acrylic pile lining. Windbreaker cuffs in sleeves and convertible-collar for extra warmth. Girls Dept. Snappy bench warmer is ready for cold weather 714*13 Laminated cotton corduroy with quilted lining, acrylic pile-lined hood, zip front. Patch pockets with leather; raglan sleeves. Comes in dark green. Now in Hudson's Girls Dept. tmm \ i m jumpers 4 6x3.99 7-126a69 Talk about value! And fashion! For all their beautiful detailing and good looks, they have a very practical nature—'they're washable vinyl. Brown, welt-seamed and tab trimmed. Girls Department. m Come see Denny McLain and his Orchestra at the Pontiac Mall Monday, October 14 at 7:30 p.m. NT plAAfTTM* fR-PT.T. I ■ * THE PONTIAC P&ffSS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1968 Now you can have an opulent hosiery wardrobe—our complete range of regular and fashion styles--when you buy Hudson’s Own Brand at sale prices like these. Every Style of Hudson’s Own nylons is included in this sale, from sheer to opaque panty hose to support hosiery, glitter t~| Opaque Panty Hose, Plain Knit .. □ Opaque Mesh Panty Hose.. □ Ribbed Opaque Panty Hose.. □ Glitter Panty Hose.......... □ Opaque Stockings.. . Q Glitter Stockings.................... H Seamless No. 1 Dress Sheer Plain Knit. ' O' Brl&afVefl Dtess Sheer Micro Mesh ... □ Cantrece® Nylon Mesh Toe and Heel.. 2.50pr. 2.50 pr. 2.50pr. ■$3pr." 1.70pr” jf] Hudson 100 Seamless Walking Sheer. □ Agilon® Stretch Nylon Dress Sheer tl Cantrece" Sheer Nylon Nude Heel 0 Daytime Sheer Agilon® Stretch nylons— fc/ Or} Sheer Support stockings 1.20pr. *1,3.«» 1.30 ^r. 1.40pr. 8/4.30 1.40pr. s/4 20 3.25pr. 1.30 pr. □ Sheer Nylon Mesh Panty Hose 1.75pr. 3/VJ:. .90 pr. □ Sheer Action wear" Nylon Panty Hose.... 2.25 pr. .90 pr. Q Sheer Agilon*' Stretch Nylon Panty Hose.. 2.75pr. l.lOpr. H Thigh Highs, Sheer Agilon® Stretch Nylon. l.OU^f. P Knee Highs, Sheer Agilon® Stretch Nylon.. 1.05 pf • a/s.is you could wish for. Styles like Agilon, Cantrece, Walking Sheers. If you’ve never tried Hudson’s Own nylons thjs is your chance to discover their long wearing qualities and superb fit as you save on every pair. If you already have a favorite style, or styles, you may order by phone and save, just dial 223-5100, or visit Hudson’s Hosiery Departments. COLORS: 5 * Opaque stockings and panty hose in fashion shades of brown, black, navy and pewter. Glitter stockings, pewter, panty hose, silver, gold. Sheer nylons are in shades of tan, taupe, off-black, brown, creamy beige, fashion colors. SIZES: Please give regular hosiery sizes when ordering sheer stockings. When ordering Panty Hose by phone or mail, please give your height to assure proper fitting. SALE Hudsons Own Brand Nylons 19 j styles for day or | evening, m-town or sports wear HIJDSO 1ST * S _TL1i AWn rciuTFR EASTLAND CENTER I WESTLAND CENTER PONTIAC MALL OAl£^_^ MW* wTr_rrr»u - arg - ^>3^ ■ Downtown open Mon., Wed. till 8:30 p.m.; Tue... Thur.., Fri. Sot. till 5:30 p.m. Hudson'. Northland. Eastland. Wsstland. Pontloo, Ooklond. Mon.. Thur.., Frl.. Sot. till P* en you think Vx 5 Colors In Stock* <389 $q. Yd DO-IT- YOURSELF Vinyl Asbestos 4 Ai/ c TILE I2”xi2” I £L /2 eo. 1st Quality — Marble Chip Design, Spatter and Gold Genuine CERAMIC TILE From 39« SOLID VINYL TILr 9"x9" 2 • Phone 682-4421 FRONTDOOR PARKING ^OpcinMonday and Frida^|^^^ Tuc»., Wed., TAjurs., & Set. 9 A.M. to 6 P.M.j Calendar ' TUESDAY American Baslaess Women’s Association, Land-O-Oak chapter, 6:30 p.m., Bedell’s. Installation of new members. WEDNESDAY Drayton plains extension study group, 10 a.m., home of Mrs. J. R. Dugas of Shawnee Lane. Alpha Beta chapter, Delta Kappa Gamma, 7:30 p.i&^ Oakland Schools' Building on Campus Drive. Mrs. Florence Willett on “Volue Patterns, in Political Areas.” Parents Without Partners, Pontiac chapter, 8:15 p.m., Oakland County Supervisors’ Auditorium. Afterglow follows this gepefw meeting. - / Needed ^Here MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1968 B—1 Pianist to Perform The season’s, opening concert of the Pontiac Symphony Orchestra will feature pianist, Ruth Burczyk, acknowledged as one of the areas” most exciting keyboard artists. ♦ ★ ★ Performing the familiar Liszt Piano Concerto No. 1 in E Fiat Major, Mrs. Burczyk’s reputation as an artist, has been widely acclaimed throughout the musto-circles of the mldwesk RESNICK Felix Resnck will again conduct the Symphony concerts this year to be held in Pontiac Northern High School. He is a graduate of Wayne State Univefsity with a Master’s degree in music, has studied violin and conducting at Julliard School of Music, New York. ★ ’ ★ ★ This program will include t h e orchestral works “March Slav Op. 31,” by TSchaikowsky “Faust” Ballet Music by Charles Gounod and “Little Suite” by Harold Laudenslager. Resnick Begins his eighth season as conductor of the Orchestra. Concert time is 8:30 p.m, Tickets will be available at the door. by a Retiree By ELIZABETH PfMt* Dear Mrs. Post: I should like to know of some tactful way to handle the following situation. In the dining room of a retirement home, visitors come In, seek me out at my table, and STAND (there are no extra seats) conversing with me. There is no way that f can seat these persons or offer them coffee. Should I ask them to go with me to the lobby or my room, leaving.-my (date of food? I have said, “Would you like to sit in the lobby while I finish?” but always get a RUTH BURCZYK Open Rehearsal Slated Wednesday in Detroit The talk goes on with other residents looking on. The notice “Please call at desk before visiting residents” is disregarded.—Mrs. Dora S. Dear Mrs. S: You have done almost all that you can do—except to be firmer. Make your question a definite request. “Would you please wait for me hi the lobby, I’ll be with you in about ten minutes.” . \ If your meal has not andved, you might accompany the visitor to the lobby and see that she is comfortable. NOTES Dear Mrs. Post: Do you think a bride should hold off acknowledging her wedding presents until she receives a card with a wedding picture on it (the latest fad), which sometimes takes a few months? Hundreds of times I have heard peo> -pie say that they hate to write letters because they don’t know what to say. I have never found any trouble on fids score because I always write immediately wheff I am filled with appreciation, sorrow or joy and all I do is express right from the heart exactly how I feel at the time. and When something of theirs we us use it with-won’f take it back. For example: We asked if we could use their deep SYLVIA WAYNE Volunteer Tea Slated at PSH Keynote1 speaker at. the Pontiac (State Hospital Volunteer tea Oct. 18 will be WJBK-TV news correspondent, Sylvia Whyne. lie native Detroiter and graduate of Waype State University, will address the group, assembled in honor of the nearly $300 volunteers at the hospital, on the topic, “Why Bother I Have My Own ProbWBjfc* •' -, Miss Wayne, a member of the Detroit Press Club, and Theta Sigma Phi, national professional fraternity for women in .communications, has been associated with the television news team since JanutaY£N?«j2 ■v Chairing the. program slated in the snack bar of the hospital’s main building' is Ted A. Panaretos, director of community relations. Jibe tea follows-registration at 12:30 p.m. 7 ^ Charles Pollock7* Work on View in Detroit An exhibition of recent paintings of Charles Pollock is on view at the Gertrude Kasle Gallery, Detroit, now Oct. 31. received his training at the Art Institute in Los Angeles and under Thomas Hart Benton at the Art Students’ League in New York. ^ g ' . - ★ * _ A Pollock, a brother of the late Jackson Pollock, was awarded a grant from the National Arts Council in 1967 and was the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship. His work is represented in the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Ait Institute of Chicago,; aid other permanent collections. J * * j f , The gallery is open Monday through Saturday Grom 11 a.m. to 5 p.hi. Mr. and Mrs. J. William Glueckert of Detroit announce the betrothhl of their daughter, Elizabeth Tkerese, to Frederick H. Herveat. He is the son of Mrs. Edward Herveat of North Johnson Street, and the late Mr. Herveat. Miss Glueckert is a graduate of Marygrove College. Her fiance is presently enrolled in the school of business administration, University ofcDetroit. - ... Judge Philip Pratt to Address Group Judge Philip Pratt of the Oakland County Circuit Court, will be the guest speaker at the Oct. 9 meeting -of the Oakland County Medical Assistants’ Society. Entitled “Behind Enemy Lines in China,” the address will covet* Judge Pratt’s servipe with the U. S. Army OSS during the period from 1943-46. Reservations may be made through Betty Smith at the office of Meredith Green, M.D. on South Johason Street. ThrHHnner meeting (6 p.m.) is open to all Who work in the offices of a doctor member of the Oakland County Medical Society. Drs. Everett Steffes, Jack Nessel and Paul Lahti will ho the society’s guests for the evening. ★ ★ ★ The Oakland County Society recently was awarded the State silver trophy for membership, which will be on display. Members Elizabeth Fabeck, Colleen McClements and Mesdames RobeipLenz and Robert Jones attended the con-,-, yention at the Pontchartrain Hotel, Detroit, is delegates. Theffirst of four Detroit Symphony Orchestra open rehearsals scheduled for this season will be held in Ford Auditorium on Wednesday afternoon at 2 p.m. * * ★ Violinist Christian Ferras will join conductor Sixten Ehrling and the Orchestra for a working session on mri&ic for this week’s Thursday and Saturday evening programs. * ★ * Except for the addtition of a microphone near the conductor and the presence of an audience, Symphony open rehearsals we conducted in the same manner as regular rehearsals. General admission is 81.50. Proceeds go to the orchestra musicians’ supplemental pension fond. Therefore, when a bride gets a wedding present, it would be so much easier, if, in her enthusiastic and grateful mood, she would sit down /and write a short note at once. ( From my point of view, this new way of acknowledging a wedding present a few months late because of waiting for the wedding picture and just the word “Thanks” on it is the lazy way and certainly not the proper way.—Mrs. Duffy Wedding PlahsJIcil^P Mid-January vows are planned by Linda Joyce Felice and David Michael Parents of the betrothdtf •'ftyrple are Mr. and Mrs. Frank Felice of Fourth Avenue and David Beaver of Royal Oak. She's Too Aggressive By DEAR these His C5irf Friday Isn't 'Weak' ^ .postcards signed, “Love,” saying, “I of foiss you so much.” (And this dumbbell oho sends them to his home address yet!) My husband isn’t entirely innocent, either. He knows she is out of line, but he saysj, “What can I do? She’s an excellent secretary and I need her.” -I have come to the end of my rope, Abhy. What do I do now? HAD IT* not fire from him when she she goes on vacation she i freeze just for the winter because they hardly ever used it. Last night they came over and told us we could keep the freezer because they had bought themselves a new one! | Abby, we really were mad. Can’t they understand that we don’t want them to give us things like that? I feel like returning the freezer. We didn’t want it as a gife, we only wanted to ust for the winter. We can’t afford very much just yet, but we want to be on our own. What can we do with parents like that? ON OUR OWN want to Before the busy task of addressing envelopes to the Brother Rice Mothers’ Club telephone bridge party begins, four members take time to survey mother nature’s colorful autumn dress. The affair, which is slated Oct. 23 at 1 p.m. is a benefit project to raise funds for landscaping the school grounds. Pontiac Pron Photo Chairing the project is Mrs. Bruce C. Butzier (2nd from left) of Satterlee Road,' with assistants, Mrs. Austin A. Sansone (left) of Quarton Road, Mrs. M. Reid MacGuidwih of Tilbury Place and Mrs. Ralph R+Bowen of Waddington Road, all of Bloomfield Township. Wirnim mm THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBERS 1968 4 * - "YOUR HEALTH" : , ' SEVEN DANGER SIGNALS 1. Recurring head achat 5. Narvout tansion a 2. Nock pain or "prick" or WmMmt. 3. Grotirtg grid popping 6. General body nwi noita when turning tension. h*od- 7. Pain between 4. Backache or leg pain. shoulder blades. WARNING If any of ihtM symptom* persist CALL YOUR CHIROPRACTOR D. H. H. Alexander 1028Jos^nAve^ FE^2^0111 Carrying a bouquet of lily of the valley with white carnations, Joy Aim Cramer was escorted to the altar of Dixie Baptist Church Saturday evening where she spoke vows with Harry Gene Edwards. The wedding ensemble worn by the former Miss Cramer was fashioned from satin and lace with matching WatteatT train. To complement her attire, die HURON CLEANERS FUR VAULT CLEARANCE HUNDREDS OF FURS SOLDATA TRACTION OF ORIGINAL COST • FRIDAY •SATURDAY •SURDAY October 11,12 and 13 All Sales Final! Cash or Lay-Away . . . Will Call CLEANERS SHIRT LAUNDRY >A OPPOSITE ASP ifs HURON THEATER Wedding Chinees Note Vows ■i; Soap and Water Best for Face I am a great believer in isoap and water for the face,” says Olga Zubic, a Yugoslav skin specialist who has practiced cosmetology in such glamour spots as Paris, Vienna, Salzburg, and Milan. She feeb that American women use too much make-up, especially in the morning, and that they cannot receive thir benefits of sun and air ‘‘with all that junk on their faces.” Her beauty recommendations? Soap and warm water, a warm rinse followed .by a cool rinse, plenty of fresh air and exercise — a sound complexion program for all wore aN bouffant veil of elbow length secured with a sequined cluster of rosebuds. BRIDAL. PARTY Cramer, the bride’s sister, was maid of honor with Linda Legault, Jennifer Siegwart and Mrs. Patrick Shelton a s bridesmaids. On the esquire side were Michael Bilajeu, best man, and ushers Jetty Roughton, Greg Quick and Patrick Shelton. Following a reception at the Oakland County Sportmen’s Club, the newlyweds departed for a northern Michigan honeymoon. Parents of the bride are Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Cramer of Loon Lake Shores. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Leslie E. Edwards of Silverhill Drive. Moore-Hannon Newlyweds, the Anthony C. Moores (nee Joyce Ann Hanon) departed for a honeymoon trip to Niagara Falls following vows Saturday in Free Methodist Church, Oxford. For the evening ceremony, the bride wore an A-line gown silk organza with Chantilly lace him. To complement the Board Takes Record Action with iSmplYe'^gp fingertip sleeves waist, qhe chaw 8 double crown of crystals And pearls with a shoulder length illusion veil. ' White carnations and roa comprised the bridal bouquet Karen Le Tourneau was maid of honor with Lynn Anton of Dryden and Geraldine Graves of Flint ie bridesmaids. Beat man was Glenn Wilcox of Imlay City with Marvin fix y*&t, Winston Moore, Barney Martin and Curtis Hannon as ushers. Prior to their honeymoon departure, the daughter of the Spencer Hannons of Evart and the son of the Wilton Moores of Barber Road, Oxford Township were feted with a reception fat the church hall. Barking Engine Caused by Dog WATERVILLE, Ohio (AP)-Instead of purring, the automobile engine harked. Firemen found a stray dog lodged between the steering post and the eogfoe. After 30 minutes of dismantling and disconnecting, the dog was freed, apparently unhurt. Weight Wafch4r$ the, 7 fun., Adah Shelly Obrary. WEDNESDAY Waterford Fashion Year Figure Club, 7 p.m., Schoolcraft School. THURSDAYS-Cal Cutters of Keego IfRrhEr; ■? p.m., Trinity WateiftM .701$ Club, 7 p.m., Waterford Thym* ship High School. Jolly Holly TOPS Club, 7:30 p,fn., Holly Plaza, Community Room of Cft-izen’s Commercial and Savings Bank. Weight Watching Jills of TQP9, foe* 7:30 pan., Pontiac Unity Coder. Fashion Y'ORr Figure Club of Pontiac, 7:30 p.m., Adah Shelly Lnirary:' Pontiac TOPS dub, * p.m., Bethany Baptist Church. Chemistetfetp With Cleaning EAST LANSING, Mich. Textile research chemists have developed a new technique to satisfy - 'consumer complaints shout ’ soiling problems f ; durable press garments. tiled "soil release,” it is j^fiptoarfly; onl i ' fibers, marketed trademarlca such Fortrel and Kodel, according to Bernetta Kahabka, textile specialist with Michigan State University’s Cooperative"'■•Be-tension Service. The "soil release’ . also are better known by their trade, names: .Visa, Come Clean, Scotcbguard, X-It and IberSi. Miss Kahabka said polyester fillers trad to hive an affinity for oils, therby requiring special cleaning treatments, prior to the development of soil release drip c e s s e s, pre-treating of heavily soiledl areas w a s recommended. Rubbing foe soiled area with unfilufod liquid detergent and allowing it to work on the soil for a few minutes before laundering was the way remove heavy or oQy dirt. -Some automatic washer manufacturers incorporated a pre-wash or soak cyme in their machines to help remove .oily substances. Are Your Shopping Habits Outdated? But these solutions will not absorb: water. Water and detergents cannot penetrate the pofofotcr, “whsk and. wear” fibers to release the eoiL l I? "■ ; ■ ''' The soli release systems do hot prevent soil from entering the fabric, but they do allow it to leave faster, Miss Kahabka Textile chemists and manufacturers agree font'the new soil release Rystema aW not "mfoadp cures*’ for. Ml soiling problems, blit they are an advantage to clothing care. Consumers must cere for treated articled aa suggested by the manufacturer foMiflvethe moat benefit from Birth Control in the,i/.S. Rated/Poor' yrrrtrr TmfrnrmrmrmrmnnnnrTmnnnnrrinr Important News PERRY’S ANNUAL COSMETIC SHOW . SOON! October 9th s fe * Begins 7 P.M. Till 10 P.M. Instructions And Demonstrations Off Beauty Care By Leading Cosmetic Manufacturers * FREE SAMPLES * NOR PRIZES . ‘ * REFRESHMEm Jeanne Duran, Women’s Editor of Radio Station WJR Will Be The Hostess For The Evening BIRMINGHAM MASONIC TEMPLE WOODWARD AVENUE % Mile North of Quarton (16 Mile) Get Your Free Ticket At Any Perry _ Pharmacy Or At The Door - HEATHSVILLE, Va. (AP) -In one of the fastest actions on record, the Northumberland Coiinty Board of Supervisors granted a request of Mrs. Emeline A. Hall, clerk of the board. She asked the board to does it hurt?” pare her salary from $1,800 to All you know is $1,200 a year. that it “hurts She gave no reason for the!a]] over.’ request. By MARY FEELEY Consultant in Money Management Trying to find out what ails jthe budget these days Is somewhat like going to the doctor and having him ask “Where !sf AAOIVTGO/IAERY IWAUH il Pontiac Mall , Trlf)(ru|ih at Elisabeth l.k. Rd. Dp, □v^ailing BEWITCHING BlITY GLOW TREATMENT BY RESTOR Low pockets in high style is the keynote to this pin stripe shirtwaist dress from Dalton of America. It is very much with-it. Of course, the! diagnosis of the budget that’s fast losing) weight is simply that there isn’t enough money in the till to meet the bills. But it’s edifying to know why thefe isn’t, and, in what areas it’s oozing away. There’s even a chance that you might plug a leak here and there if you know where to look. ★ ★ ★ Actually, you can look in just about any direction. Some of the increases that have Inched up on us range from the quart of Buttermilk that has gone up, lb some retail stores, from 18 cents to 25 cents, the corrugated container that’s three to five per cent more expensive at the source. No matter where ihe price rise starts, you can count on getting your share of it sooner or later. 4r ★ A Items that may be affecting the health of your own individual budget are bring noted by consumers from all over. For example, they report: Dry cleaning is Up in some places five, cents; car insurance in * general, up two per t; drive-in movies have gone lup in someplaces from 90 cents to $1.50 in less time than it took Junior'to outgrow his snowsuit; having a lawn mower sharpened can cost you $1.50 more than it did last year; women’s shoes are up, in some spots, from $7.95 to $8.95 (same shoes); some paper towels grew in price if not in size from 43 cents a package of'two to 47 cents; some flower and vegetable seed packets, up five cents; some repair service calls, up from $6.50 to $7.50 and more. * * * ' Even the cost of beer bottles, we read, 1s on the rise though you may not have felt that one yet. EXPERIMENT So this looks like as good a time as/any for the consumer with shrinking funds to experiment with a wider range of brands in food, merchandise aril services. Maybe some id the newer, less familiar brands in the market that offer more attractive prices are worth a try. * * ★ Nobody believes it’s true economy to sacrifice quality. If you're not getting your money’:' worth, you’re on the losing end. However, when the cost of living gets stiffer and stiffer, the thoughtful consumer should review her buying habits and do more comparison shopping in hath price and quality. * * * Dear Mary Feeley: I will be 72 next month. I was told at the Social Security office that I can’t get the Special Age 72 payment unless I Worked three quarters Of this year. Will you explain fids to me? I am a widow, and neither I nor my husband ever worked under iSodal 'Seairityi Why can some age 72s get fids benefit and others have to work for |i? Mrs. C. E., Worth, 111. ★ * ★ Dear Mrs. E.: The answer’s simple: there had to be a limit somewhere in dispensing these funds. When the plan was set up in 1966, file built-in limitations were, stated this way: ★ * * If you are a single man or woman and were bom before 1896, you may receive the special payment of $35 a month (it has been raised to $40). If you were born afi you can receive these payments when you are 72 if you have credit for the amount of work undo* Social Security shown in this table: Year Born Credits Needed Men Wome 1896 2-Y+years Same as for 1897 1-% years 1-A4 years 1898 2-14 years Same as for regular S.S. benefits The table goes on up, according to specific rules. Credits count no matter .in what years they may have been acquired. But since you were bom in 1896 and have never been covered, unless you can find a way of earning them now you’re'Just out of luck. BETHESDA, Md. (WMNS) -'American women are not successful in having the number of children they want when they want them.” This sad news frotniheNational Institute of Odld Health and Human Development which sponsored re liar ch by sociologists of the University of Wisconsin and Princeton. In a sample of 4,810 married women under 45, living wjth their husbands, a third reported that they have already had at least one unwanted child — and this doesn't include those who will yet have a child they did not want, or those who may rationalize a child they now have.' HOPEFUL. One sunny note: Despite the results of the survey, made in 1965 and recently tabulated, one of the sociologists believes that these statistics will change because the women interviewed previously “were not fully knowleageable about oral contraceptives which had only become available in 1960.” Tha *Mavu with tha famous Rotter conditioning treatment built in to "rostor" damaged, broken, split hefir to normal, natural beauty. Whether you prefer curls or gentle waves you'll discover a' new naturalness coupled with an easy-to-manage coiffure. RESTOR'S ^ BUTY GLOW PERM W including clem# ihampoo and styled tet ^ Get a New Viewpoint about CONTACT LENSES Wearing contact lenses is a secret only you and your doctor need know. Ask about the many advantages of contact lenses. It is possible that you may enjoy o hew freedom from glares. A becoming, natural appearance and the other advantages that minutely* sized Contact lenses can give. If you think you would like to wear contact lanses, your inquiries are invited. 109 N. SAGINAW ST. E. STEINMAN, O.D. Daily 9:30 AM. to 5:30 P.M. Friday 9:30 A.M. to 0:30 PM. FE 2*2895 DIVIDED PAYMENTS AVAILABLE Don’t overlook ihe importance of accessories, warns the American Institute of Men’s and Boys’ Wear, for the carefully selected belts, pocket squares and jewelry are the finishing touches to the totally well dressed man. Upper left, a pale blue paisley silk square; lower left, a square in a navy and green spaced print; upper right, a red, navy and gold mini-print, and a bright yetfow floral print, lower right. Belts for all occasions are shown: a dark olive with border stitching and a large buckle, a black and brown reversible dress belt with a squared buckle, and a burgundy webbed* sport belt accented with a brass buckle. snrrrYrrmrmTirrrnTfrirrTrrrrmTnTrrm^^ 11 rrc Wicker goes inside | for the fall decorating season-see our fine selection df wicker furniture and accessories,* for the • bedroom, den, family room, living room, 1 recreation room, also featuring decorator classes and i a complete line of supplies. Register now for our next decorator class. Beginners starting Oct. 22 - Glass and repousse, Oct. 24 ■ at WICKER WORLD Birmingham 442-9741 • THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1968 C. R. HASKILLSTUDIO °tontu^mich" FE 4-0553 c^educeSizeof GHipsfWaistline NOW - reduce tin of hipI, wuittline. ab-homel Ife effortlcu! beemuM they don't set enough exercise. Nuptials Said on Saturday byK.J.Oberts Soc-Elert 8 Nuptials Wedding of Oct 5. Mon. VIC.... \ v St. Benedict’s Catholic Church was the setting Saturday far vows spoken by Sandra Lee Schaeffer and Kenneth John Obert. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Schaeffer and the Fredrick Oberts; both families of Pelham Street. Jan Schaeffer, the bride’s ster, was maid of honor with William Jenkinson serving as best man. Completing the wedding party were Mrs. Steven Main, Mrs. William Jenkinson and Mrs. Marilyn Bliss with ushers Vern Bolton, Jack Hoffarth and Don Banaszewski. •73ec/s Send coupon for fuBy illustrated Information on -How the Ha-' RtlK-A-ciior tan Woman can Beduce Siu of Hips, .. .. WalctUne, Abdomen and Thighs" No coat. NATIONWIDE* Ho obligation. s—« ^\<538e/ Rtlix-A-Cizor, Dipt. 10-08-26 81007 ce Sim of Hips, Witstlin,------- ..... . ist. No obliption. Soot lo plain omolopo. RS. □ MISS □ MR. _ "How to Reduee Sire of | Hipe and Waietline" No eoit. ■ No obligation. 1)007 :________:___ ymryrrrm'mTinmnrmrmTyTnfyTnnnnnnc Fab Fall fashions burst forth in dazzling, like-new brightness when carefully maintained with . Fax Professional Dry-» cleaning. Glorious tweeds, popular knits, classic tartan and boxy bold plaids will look better longer for best appearance on every occasion ... So call today for convenient pickup and delivery. Quality Cleaning Since 719 West Huron PONTIAC FE 4-1536 !Huuut iuut mu juuuuulrjlr 81 jut mmmjuum Need Guides for Art Center Mrs. K. J. OBERT “And gladly would he learn and gladly teach.” Do these words apply to you? Have you always loved art and wanted to know more about it? A well known local cultural center is offering an exciting opportunity to learn more about art and to share this knwledge wth young people. ★ ★ ^ * The Oakland County Volunteer Bureau is looking for volunteers to act as cultural enrichment tour guides who can bring alive for young visitors their tour of a renowned art center. An excellent course in art and how to present it to young audiences is offered free of charge to all cultural enrichment tour guides. 1 The course will include some art history, a discussion of the various forms of art and tours of workshops in painting, ceramics, vUaving, and metalsmithing.—" Trained cultural enrichment tour guides may choose the time when they 'can conduct weekday tours. * * 1 For more information call the Oakland County Volunteer Bureau, in Birmingham. For the early evening rite, the bride selected a traditional gown of Chantilly lace accented with pearls and rhinestones, designed and sewn by her mother. A pearl-trimmed lace petal cluster held her shoulder-length veil of tulle illusion, and be acarried a bouquet of white oses. A reception in Bloomfield Centre Hall preceded the newlyweds’ departure for honeymoon in Florida, Texas and the southern states. U.S. Males Switching to 'Rugged Watches If you'v» got ratty water, GET REDOUT! Amazing REDOUT salt nuggets with Papd-far gat rid of iron taata and iron stains — m laundry, sinks, tuba And bowls — while they rachirga your watsr conditioner. ^ Uee REPOUT lika regular ssit. If you don't, get Diamond Crystal Salt NUGGETS Thera's no bottar rechar than NUGGETS. Purs u NUGGETS keep it working well. soc feat 30-SR2-2 U.S. MALES The sport of skin diving is causing a new trend in men’ watches, according to latest fashion indications. More and more American males are | from ordinary watches rugged- looking, gadget-bedecked skin diver’s wrist watches. Of the 200,000 plus diver’s watches sold last year, of course, most were sold to authentic skin divers—there are around three million in the U.S. —because of the watch’s deep Andre’s Spectacular Specials! INSTANT HAIRDO! '$0/150 Our STRETCH Wig , 100% HUMAN HAIR 1 ana One Size Fils ALL STYLED 100%; Human Hair WIGLETS Style *9" Vietnam Girl. Comes to U.S. as Gl's Bride HARDIN, Mont. (UPI) - Her name -means snow, but she never- had seen the white crystals until she came to the United States from war-torn South Vietnam. Mrs. Anh Tuyet (Ann Snow) Johnson, 20, was working in a Saigon dress shop when she met her husband, Danny Johnson, formerly of Boulder, Colo. He was serving with the Army. The pair was married In 1967, in a civil ceremony in Saigon, after Johnson was discharged. The U.S.A. was a new world for tiie young Vietnamese girl a world of sewing machines, automatic washers supermarkets and s p e e d i n | cars. But Tuyet. wasn’t completely taken in. She wasn’t convinced the automatic washers cleaned as well as her hand scrubbing, and she said the supermarkets didn’t have the variety of fresh produce found in the Saigon irkets. ‘She expected all the women be as beautiful as the ones she saw in the movies Johnson said. “And she was surprised to see that people were so big.” ’Asked about .the. war, Mrs. Johnson said, “I have seen many people die. I have seen many bad things.” She said she remembered her father saying there had been fighting in Vietnam since 1945 — three years before she was born. Tuyet said she was concerned about the recent fighting Saigon because her parents were there. But she has received a letter from her mother saying the family was well. The family home at Chau Dok, near the Cambodian border, had been destroyed. “It was a small house,” Mrs. Johnson said. “We were poor but we were happy and we loved each other.” WANT TO SELL LAWN MOWERS, POWER MOWERS, BOATS? USE A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD - - - TO ,PLACE YOURS, CALL 332-8181. p The engagement is announced of Sheryl Lee Utley and Jon K. Hartman. Their parents are the Robert E. Utleys of Farmington and the Vern R. Hartmans of Steffi Street. The bride elect has attended Central Michigan Uni-versity, where her fiance is completing senior studies. Vinyl Cover-Up for Typewriters Homemaking 'executives love the new feminine typewriter covers made of gaily printed vinyls in a dazzlement of colors. These are fun for students, too, and a great homework brightener. * * ★ They can be made at home, using vinyl-by-the-yard and a little cording, or prowl stationery departments for readymade styles. Just make it a habit to wipe such covers off occasionally with a sudsy sponge; this will keep colors bright and the desk invitingly clean. waterproof characteristics and specially designed features for timing dives. ★, ft ★ But it would be safe to say that many divers’ watches were sold to people who weren’t really skin divers—that is, many of those who bought diver’s watches have never dived any deeper than to the bottom of a martini glass in search^ of an olive. Much of the watch’s popularity out of the water can be attributed to its ruggedness and highly masculine styling. ATHLETIC STYLING The diver’s watch is built to withstand, pressure at great water depths so it is naturall; more durable on land, and its athletic styling is attractive to the average American male. One of the leaders in manufacturing skin diver’s watches is the Waltham Watch Company of Chicago. Wgttham designed two styles of watches for the skin diver market — both with the waterproof and timing characteristics needed for skin diviflg and both within the price ingeof the non-divers. The company’s Diver Davis WB, which is guaranteed waterproof to five atmospheres (about 165 feet), is a handsomely styled watch with 17 jewel qiovement, calendar, luminous hands and dial and rotating bezel for timing the diver’s air supply. Priced at only $50, the watch is well within the reach of real skin divers and “Walter Mitty’ skin divers. FOR DEEPER DIVES For deeper dives, guaranteed waterproof to 300 feet, and selfwinding movement, Waltham has the Auto Diver WS. The Auto Diver WS has large, luminous hour dots and hands and a rotating bezel for the murky depths, plus a calendar and jewel movement. It retails for $120. Both skin diver’s watches are nationally distributed. Duplicate Bridge YMCA Bridge Club, | * 7:30 p.m., in YMCA. All : 1 bridge players may at- | 1 tend. Friendly Bridge Club, 7:30 p.m., Donelson School. Lessons during game. FRIDAYS Bonneville Junior Duplicate Bridge Club, 7:45 p.m., The Pontiac Mall. All beginners and inter- gj mediate players may at- p tend. | SATURDAYS ' 1 Bonneville Duplicate | Bridge Club, 8 p.m., The | Pontiac Mall. All bridge | You can buy REDOUT and NUGGETS at many places selling we conditioning aalt For mort information and a list of REDOUT ai NUGGETS aealora noar you, write §| DEPT. D*4S 8 Diamond Crystal Salt Company St. CUIR, MICHIGAN 48070 players may attend. ALL PERMANENTS 3»5 to 595 none HIGHER Include* All Thu: 1— New Lustre Shampoo 2— Flattering Hair Cut . 3 —Lanolin Neutralizing 4—Smart Style Setting: ’ NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY Open Mornings at 8 A.M. . 78 N. Saginaw Over Barley Mkt._338-7660 The Modern Way to HIGHER PAY Speedwriting ABC SHORTHAND Want a ]ob thql's never dull—yet will add on extra $1000 and MORE a year to your Income? Let Speedwriting abc Shorthand quickly qualify you for the glamorous secretarial position of your choice. Taught exclusively by us in this area, Speodwriting is the modern shorthand that uses the familiar abe's. It's EASY, NATURAL Write, phone or visit us TODAY for details. Only Spaedwriting Schools can offer these LIFETIME Alumni Privileges FREE transfer anytime— FREE Nationwide Employment Service— FREE Brush-up Training New Class Begins Monday, October 23 18 W. Lawrence St. FE 3-7028 Don’t Miss Our Annual FALL EASY BUDGET TERMS 90 DAYS CASH m ^ 1 SAVE 35% .o 45%! ON RE-UPHOLSTERING or NEW CUSTOM FURNITURE WILLIAM WRIGHT Furniture Molten and VpkuUteren 270 Orchard Lake • FE 4-0558. *¥ All Workmanship Guaranteed 5 Yean Phone today . . . we’ll be dad to brim fabric samples to your home. It's a WORLD SERIES GET SOMETHING EXTRA Yes, now through the World Series yoLncbn save money on any GE Console Color TV and with each purchase, receive FREE a 12" GE Portable TV. FREE with the purchase of any GE Console Color TV. Offer only good through Wt* Swivel CLARKSTON APPLIANCE S FURNITURE CO. 7183 N. MAIN, CLARKSTON -OPEN DAILY 9:30 ^9- 625-3500 ... THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1968 s Now Worn Four Announcing the be trothal of their daugh ter, Mary Anji, to Pfc Dane Bertram, USMC are the William V. Bal lards of Baybrook Drive. ■Pfc. Bertram, son of the Hotoard Bertrams of Inland Park Drive, is currently stationed in Vietnam. Fall 1909 vows are slated. Mr. find Mrs. Vernon Wilmot of Loon Lake Shores announce the betrothal of their daughter, Janis Leah, to James E. Banks III. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Banks Jr. of Mary Sue Street, Independence Township. The betrothal is announced of Karen Louise Dengate and David M. Kittredge. Thei'f parents are Mr. and Mrs. Richard Dertgate of Hadley Road and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Kittredge of White Lake Road? both in Independence Township. The engagement of their daughter, Celia Kay,,to Robert Stewart Simpson, is announced by the John H. Stresen-Reuters i)f Sprucfi Street, Bloomfieid. ToUmshipc Vows are slated May 24. The prospective bridegroom is tfie son of the William C. Simpsons of Beverly Hills. The bride elect is a student tit Oakland Community College and her fiance has attended Cleary College: Case No. G-575 Speaker to Show Medical Technologists Set Agenda Ancient Carvfhgs Guest speaker at the Wednesday meeting pt the Women’s Association to tne Goodwill industries of Greater Detroit will be Detroit resident Mrs. Wil-Choma, long time student and collector of American an tiques, who in recent years, has become interested in the folklore of Puerto Rico. In the course of five tripft to that island, Mrs. Choma has accumulated a collection of ancient carved wooden figures of saints. ! These figures, made by “san-tares,” . or saint-carvers, were venerated by many generatieqs of country people before the era of Christian missionaries. She will exhibit her collection and discuss the significance of the life-like figures. The meeting will be held in the Goodwill Building, Brush Street at East Grand Boulevard at 1 p.m. Any interested person may attend. The Pontiac Society of Medical Technologists will meet at Crittenton Hospital for the Oct 16 monthly meeting Wednesday at 8 p.m. . * ' •+ ★ The evening’s agenda will include speakers, Dr. Alexander Ullmann and Dr. George Rose, who will address the group on “Globulins — What are They?’* and “The Fluorescence Antibody,” respectively. When hanging a heavy garment on a wire coat hanger, the' strain is sometimes too much for a single hanger. Wrap two coathangers together with le tape or selvage strips of cloth and you then have a really strong hanger. Our PrimArejUw! WHILi-U-WAIT or SHOP SERVICE KRESGE’S V ' Downtown Stern Shop Hour: 9:» to SsSO If you find yourself running short of skirt hangers, use a couple of spring-type clothespins and pin skirt by the band to an ordinary wire coathanger. So*^o1bhiei Watch the Side Effects By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE G-575: Lon J., aged 42, has high blood pressure. “Dr. Crane,” his wife began, “Lon is now taking tranquilizers and his blood pressure has dropped to 145/90. . "Meanwhile, . his physician! /ordered Mm to wop smoking,! for he used tol be a chain DR. CR4NE smoker. “His chronic cough has cleared up in the past six weeks and he lodes fine. “But he is platonic ami wonders if he will always be an impotent husband the rest of his life.” IMPOTENCE Modem men have the same basic gastric and erotic appetites as their ancient caveman With one major exception! Modem men often depress one or both appetities by means of drugs! The cavemen didn’t have access to these demasculinizing herbs. ★ * ★ You laymen can readily perceive that anesthesia will produce total unconsciousness, so the surgeon can remove your appendix without your feeling any sensations whatsoever. Obviously, you meanwhile don’t feel any hunger for food or erotic calories while anesthetized, do you? Well, many drugs that don’t produce 100 per cent unconsciousness may still depress your nervous system 10 per cent or more and thus allay your appetitie for victuals, as well as romancing. The many varieties of tranquilizers and sleeping pills, will obviously lessen high blood pressure and insomnia. But they can meanwhile reduce your stomach hunger and your sexual appetite, too! And two of the most widespread depressants of sexual vigor in America are alcohol and tobacco. Tobacco, for example, is well known to you readers as a means of curbing your gastric hunger. “Dr. Crane,” you confess, “when I quit cigarettes, I got fat!” But alcohol likewise is a baac depressant of the nervous system. Even a fevTdrinks will reduce your reaction time by an average of about Jft per cent, thus explaining the high incidence of automobile casualties. It isn’t the drunken driver but merely the fellow who had a couple of beers, who is the highway hazard in this high speed automotive age. But cigarettes will likewise^ predispose you to auto accidents! Our A.M.A. report on auto injuries states this shocking fact: ‘The relative oxygen , deficiency from smoking three cigarettes is equal to that of traveling at a 7,500 foot altitude . . . drivers should be advised to refrain from frequent smoking prior to and during periods of night driving or at high altitudes.” For smoking zooms the carbon monoxide content of the blood as much as 300 per cent, thus provoking heart attacks. It also blunts our depth vision. Baseball hitters and basketball-ers, take care! Some people think alcohol stimulates, but it doesn’t! It merely reduces one’s mentality temporarily to a lower age level where we are unaware of the seriousness of our actions. Sometimes this helps a new husband forget his mother-fixation so he can function ardently, but this is the exception to the rule. | Wrong Hills Cause Mix-Up INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (AP) -A comedy of errors caused some excitement at St. Vincent’s hospital here. Miohael Hill phoned his expectant wife from downtown and getting, no answer, called the hospital. He was told that Mrs. Hill had checked in and had given birth to a daughter. * ★ * He rushed to the hospital and saw what he thought was his daughter, but the mother was Glenda Hill, not his wife, Linda Hill. He later found his. wife had stepped out of her home for a few minutes just before he had called. Give Polo Shirts Second Life Boys’ long-sleeved polo shirts usually wear out first at the elbow. To make them look neat again and to double the length of their life, cut off the knit wristbands, shorten the sleeve above the elbow. Finish by resewing the wristbands back on the shortened sleeves. The Pontiac Mall Elhtabath Lake at Talagraph Rdi. Phone 682-3930 FINE QUALITY FABRICS • SEWING NOTIONS V • CUSTOM DRAPERIES HAS YOUR PERMANENT GROWN? Are Those Little Straightends In Back Annoying You? WE CAN HEI4P YOU! Ask About Our Glorifying PROGRAM for SEPT. Special - PERMANENTS from $69S 42 N. Saginaw Street -NO APPOINTMENT . NECESSARY Beauty Shop FE 8-1343 Your Pharmacist Cares About Your Health ] National Pharmacy Week, October 6-12,1968 OAKLAND COUNTY . PHARMACEUTICAL ASSOCIATION NYLONS Famous CAREER GIRL SEAMLESS NYLONS for long, long wear! WALKING SHEERS WITH REINFORCED TOES AND HEELS ... MIRACLE NO-BIND TOPS. ALSO AVAILABLE WITH-SLENDERIZING SEAMS SMART GIRL Plain or'rnicro dress sheer.*. nude heel and demi-toe. 55°2prs.$1. GIFTS WRAPPED FREE .. . ALWAYS I JHeumode iKosiery. Shops 82 N. Saginaw St. lit \ TIME EVER OFFERED! ENROLL NOW! for the price of 1 ANY COMBINATION Mother, Daughter, Father,. Son ENTER A NEW WORLD OF HEALTH FUN AND RECREATION JOIN Our BASIC COURSES to Vanish Inches and Pounds • MAGIC SWISS FACIALS Swiss facial Contouring machine stimulate*' circulation, firms and tones thc96 muscles of the facial areJ;eliminates double chin, wrinkles, excess, flesh and' “puffy** condition. 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FACILITIES FOR MEN AND WOMEN CALL NOW or DROP By TODAY • OPEN 10 AM to 10 PM It OMlflfdto HEALTH SPA OYER 250 Affiliated Studios Coast-to-Coast and WORLD-WIDE 3432 West Huron St. Just West of Elizabeth Lb- Rd. at Highland 682-5040 v ts ■ " THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1968 Deaths in Pontiac, Nearby Areas '| F«m k PnriprmftHj May Avert School Strike - for Staying Suspect Jack M. Bender Service for Jock M. Bender, 65, of 363 Dover will be 3 p.m. Wednesday at/ the Sparks Grifik Funeral Home, with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, fray. Mr. Bender died yesterday. He was a supervisor at the Fisher Body plant in Livonia. An Elks Lodge of Sorrow will be held at 8 p.m. tomorrow at the funeral home. Mr. Bender was a past exalted ruler of Elks Lodge IU0. He is survived by a daughter, Doris M. Bender of Pontiac. Memorial contributUons may be made to the St. Joseph Hospital Building Fund or to Elks Lodge 810. Mrs. Charles Crow Service for Mrs. Charles (Nannie) Crow, 79, will be 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mrs. Crow died Saturday. Surviving are a son, Everett of Pontiac; two grandchildren; seven great-grandchildren; and a brother. Ronald W. Hodge Service for Ronald W. Hodge, 62, of 42 Neome will be 1:30 p.m. Thursday at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home, with burial in Roseland Park Cemetery, Berkley. Mf. Hodge died yesterday. He was a machine repairman at General Motors Corp. Truck & Coach Division. An Elks Lodge of Sorrow wiH be held at 8 p.m. Wednesday at the funeral home. Mr. Hodge was a member of Elks Lodge 810 and the Central Methodist Church. He is survived by his wife, Mable; a daughter, Mrs. Theodore Carlson of Richmond, Va.; his mother, Mrs. William Hodge of Pontiac; three brothers, including Paul of Pontiac; and four grandchildren. Mary C. Nolan Requiem Mass for Mary C. Nolan, 36, of 4661 Riverview, Waterford Township will be 10:30 a.m. Wednesday at Mary’s Catholic Church, Royal Oak. Burial will be In Holy Sepulchre Cemetery, Southfield. A Rosary will be 8 p.m. tomorrow at William Sullivan & Son Funeral Home, Royal Oak! Miss Nolan, a dental hygienist in Birmingham, died yesterday of injuries sustained in an auto accident. Surviving are two brothers, including James Nolan of Pontiac; three sisters; and a grandfather, Dennis Barry oi Royal Oak. Frederick Reich Service for Frederick Reich, 64, of 7 S. Williams Lake, Waterford Township, was to be at 3 p.m. today at -Coats Funeral Home with burial in Crescent Hills Cemetery. Mrs. Reich died Friday. Surviving are his wife, Beatrice; two sons, Frederick of Chicago and Franklin of Portland, Ore; six brothers; five sisters; and three grandchildren. Dr. Portis W. Turrentine Service for Dr. Portis W. Turrentine, 57, of 34 Augusta will be 3 p.m. tomorrow at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Dr. Turrentine died Thursday. Memorial contributions may be made to the Michigan Heart Fund. Mrs. Richard Wagner Service for Mrs. Richard (Betty Jean) Wagner, 44, of 1291 Malcom, Waterford Township, will be tomorrow at the Four Towns Methodist Church, Union Lake, with burial in Ottawa Park Cemetery by the Elton Black Funeral Home, Union Lake. Mrs. Wagner died Saturday. She was a member of. Four Towns Methodist Church. Surviving are her husband; three daughters, Christine, Cathleen and Connie, all at "home; and five sons, Jeffrey at home, Richard of Saginaw, Steven of Detroit, Mark of Highland and David of Oscoda; and one brother. Mrs. George Apostol ORION TOWNSHIP -Service for Mrs. George (Sadie) Apostol, 84, of 1341 S. Hemingway was tp be 1 p.m. today at Flumerfelt Funeral Home, Oxford. Burial was to follow in Ridgelawn Cemetery, Oxford. Mrs. Apostol died Friday. She was a member of St. Mary’s Greek Orthodox Church, Detroit. Surviving besides her husband are a son, John R, Apostle of Orion Township; a grandchild; and a great-grandchild. Irving Avery AVON TOWNSHIP - Service and burial for Irving Avery, 70 of 2940 St. Clair will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Balcom Cemetery, Ionia, by the Myers Funeral Home, Ionia. Mr. Avery, who died Saturday, was a retired mechanic. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Gerald Hill of Pontiac Township and Mrs. Robert Carrigian of San Antonio, Tex.; nine grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren. Mrs. Bernard Brown St. WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP -Service for Mrs. Bernard R. (Gladys M.) Brown Sr., 74, of Bogie Lake will be ! p.m. tomorrow at William Sullivan and Son Funeral Home, Royal Oak. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mrs. Brown, a member of Royal Oak’s First Presbyterian Church, died yesterday. Surviving are a son, Bernard . Jr. of Detroit, and four grandchildren. Robert E. Field BLOOMFIELD HILLS -Service for former resident, Robert E. Field, 48, of Miami, ■ was to bFt p,m. today at Christ Church Cranbrook, with private burial. Mr. Field, who died Thursday, was a former vice president of MacManus, John & Adams Inc. He was a member of Rec Club, Orchard Lake Country Club and Ad Craft Club Detroit and served on committees for the United Fund. Surviving are his wife, Barbara G.; two daughters, Debra and Anne at home; his mother, Mrs. Albert J. Crane of Naples, Fla.; and two brothers, including Charles K. of Bloomfield Hills. Memorial tributes may be sent to Christ Church Cranbrook or the Michigan Heart Association. Otto M. Geliske INDEPENDENCE TOWN-SHIP - Service for Otto M. liske, 87, of 7978 Perry Lake will be 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home, Pontiac. Burial will be in Oak Hill Cemetery, Pontiac. Mr. Geliske, a retired employe of Pontiac Motor Division, died yesterday. He was a member of Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Church, Pontiac. Surviving are a son, Fred of Clarkston; three grandchildren; eight great-grandchildren; and two brothers. Mrs, Morton E. Harris BE0O*£FIELD HILLS -Private service for Mrs. Morton E. (Edith A.) Harris, 39, of 931 will be Tuesday at Bell" Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co., Birmingham. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mrs. Harris died Saturday. She was a member of Franklin Hills Country Club. Surviving besides her husband are three sons, Scott M., Paul E. and Stuart L., all at home; her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Louis M. Marko o f Detroit; and a brother, Harold M. Marko of Bloomfield Hills. Memorials may be made the Paul E. Harris Fund, Sinai Hoospital, Detroit. Clyde C. Kirklin BRANDON TOWNSHIP -Service for Clyde C. Kirklin, 64, of 5685 Hummer Lake will be 2 p.m. Wednesday at Open Bible Church, Oakwood. Burial will be in Mount Pleasant Cemetery, Oakwood. Arrangements are by Bossardet Funeral Home, Ox-f#rd, Mr. Kirklin, retired from CMC Truck and Coach Division, died Saturday. Surviving are his wife, Nellie; four sons, Herbert, Roy and John, all of Oxford, and Clyde of Waterford Township; four daughters^ Mrs. Helen Ferguson of California, Mrs. Ida Tipton of Waterford Township; Mrs Patricia Ward of Pontiac and Evelyn of Oxford; one brother; one sister; and 16 grandchildren.. Elmer J. Lovell TROY — Service for Elmer J. Lovell, 81, of 1031 Boyd will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at Price Funeral Home. Burial will be in Mount Ayon Cemetery, Rochester. Mr. Lovell, a retired foreman at the old Ferry Morse Experimental Seed Farm, Avon Township, died Saturday, was a former Troy Township constable and had served as a school crossing guard and playground supervisor at Big Beaver Elementary School. Surviving are his wife Marne; two sons, Donald J* of Avon Township and Marvin R. at home; a grandchild; and a great-grandchild. Waterford Has Light Agenda The Waterford Township Board meeting tonight is expected only to last a few minutes, according to township officials, who say neither any old-nor new business is on the Only. three reports will be presented to the board: treasurer’s report for the months of July and August, and the fire and police reports for September. Synthetic emeralds were first produced in Germany in 1930, according to the Encyclopaedia Brifannica. < HASTINGS (UPD — A preliminary hearing for Gerald Nuen-dorf, 23, of Middleville, accused of first-degree murder in the shotgun, slaying of his wife, Claudette, 23, has been postponed by Municipal Judge L. E. Barnett to pet. 31. ★ w ★ The delay was granted defense attorney Anthony Adams Saturday after he asked more time to study the case. tfc ★ Mrs. Neuendorf was found dead Sept. 16 in a shallow grave in the Yankee recreation area. They formerly resided at Wyoming, Mich. Fire Hifs Stable; 50 Horses Die, Others Run Wild NEW YORK (AP) - More than 50 horses perished and about the same number fled their burning stable and ran wild Sunday night during fire at a stable in Brooklyn. About 120 firemen to the three-alarm blaze, which burned out Carroll’s Riding Academy in the Canarsie tion. The fire was under control in an hour. * * Two of the horses were struck by cars as they raced through rainswept streets. Police, with the aid of the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, rounded up the ani- Those captured were put in vqns and taken to a stable in Jamaica, Queens. ★ ★ ★ The cause of the blaze was not immediately determined. City Gas Station Robbed of $32 The Clark Oil Station, 382 Orchard Lake, was "robbed of $32 early yesterday. The attendant, Robert Byas, 17, of 654 Franklin Road, told Pontiac police that he didn’t a gun, but that the bandit held his hand in his pocket as if he had a NY Board Suspended NEW YORK (AP) - The Board of Education, acting to forestall a third strike threatened by teachers against the city’s 1.1-million-pupil public school system, has suspended the controversial governing board of Brooklyn’s Ocean Hill-BrownsVfite district. The board announced Sunday a 30-day suspension of the local board and directed Supt. .of Schools Bernard E. Donovan to assume direct supervision Ocean Hill’s bright schools. The suspension stemmed from the local board’s steady refusal, backed by parents and demonstrators in the predominantly Puerto Rican and Negro section, to take back 85 teachers. Th% appearance of the teachers has either touched off violence or they have been admitted to the schools but not allowed to teach. * * * The AFL-CIO United Federation of Teachers has a new strike vote set for today.. termed it “a step toward compliance,” but added: “If the same kind of arrogance, noncompliance and timidation exists tomorrow morning as it did before, then there will be a strike Tuesday or Wednesday.!’ it it it The teachers have walked out twice since tffo’city’s 900 schools opened Sept. 9 for the fall term. Female mosquitoes are the UFT President Albert Shank-1 only ones that bite, and they er, when informed Sunday night are also the only ones that of s the board’s suspension,! buzz. 6 Tied to Anarchists TOKYO (AP) —Six students, believed by police to be affiliat-with an anarchist society, were injured by two explosions in a Tokyo apartment Sunday night. '■* * 3 i Police said they arrested six other students in tile same room when they found handmade bombs hiddetfbTa closet. The two explosions were believed to have been set off accidentally. The six injured students were hospitalized and were expected to be arrested when discharged from the hospital. Coleman’s Furniture Mart 1st in furniture, carpeting and appliances^ Lift Your' Entire Living Room Out Of The Ordinary . .. SAVE *100 on inis 9-PC. LIVING ROOM SUITE FOR ONE WEEK ONLY! Regularly 939900 LUXURIOUS 9 PIECE OUTFIT . AU These Distinctive Pieces., • CHANNEL BACK SOFA • MR. A MRS. CHAIRS • MATCHING OTTOMAN • 2 STEP-END TABLES • COCKTAIL TABLE • 2 DECORATOR LAMPS Make Your Sale Selections Now! Truly a thrilling value ... a chance to save $100 on wonderfully styled and carefully crafted furniture that includes comfortable reversible foam cushion sofa and chain . . . walnut finish end tables and coffee table plus two beautiful lamps. 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Features that are designed to help you forget your troubles by giving you a great night's sleep. Choose firm or extra firm, mnerspring or foam latex. Perfect Sleeper Imperial Twin or Full Size mattress or box spring.......... $89.50 Queen Size 2 pc. set......................... $239.50 King Size 3 pc. set..........................$339.50 PERSON-TO-PERSON CREDIT • No Down Payment • 90 Dave Same at Cash • Up to 36 Months to Pay 108 N. Saginaw - FE 3-7114 SERTA Mattresses in LOWER LEVEL FURNITURE DEPT.^ THE PONTIAQ PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER y, 1968 SS New Jersey a Hull Lot of Things aboard uss new JERSEY, Off Vietnam AP — There is much more to this' old battleship than her 16-inch guns dating to World War II. Nostalgia is part of it — but don’t forget the buglers and the captain’s bathtub. ★ * * . Nearly a quarter of a million people — mostly middleaged — visited the New Jersey as she a her way back from mothballs and the past tocher third war, this one in the South China Sea. There were plenty of . letters, too. The skipper, Capt. J. Edwards Snyder of Grand Forks, N. D., quotes one from an ex-sailor who labored in a boiler room in World War n. FIREMAN’S ADVICE “Dear Capt. Snyder,” the letter said. ‘‘I used to be a restricted visiting to the fireman on the New Jersey. The left, No. 3, feed valve never did work right. I just wanted you to know that before you got to Vietnam.” Snyder was astonished by the visitors to the ship at the e military few two .evening hours. I Taking up his invitation were ) 12,000 soldiers and sailors mid > their families. Philadelphia Navy YareL-the Canal Zone, Long Beach, CiufT and Hawaii. In Hawaii one day Snyder H You Don't Buy From Us. Wo Both Lose Money! TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! 1075 W. Huron St. Phone 334-9957 _ I VINYL ASBESTOS TILE i2xia First Quality 13C Each LARGE SELECTION CERAMIC TILE 1x1 .....39* Sq. Ft. 4Vix«V4.. 39* Sq.Ft. All FIRST QUALITY rocks back and forth on the back legs of his chair. Sykes is partial to cigars, wears his hat on the back of Ids head like all chiefs, and sips coffee. Country and western music fills the turret^. 1 SHIP* COMFORTABLE “Every time the old man hollers for a bullet, we got one for him,” Sykes drawls. Of battleship life, he says, “these ships are the best thing the Navy has got. Comfortable.1 They ride the heavy seas easy. Yep; I like these babies/ There is nearly perfect quiet on the ship’s upper decks when the guns are not firing. Sailors pad along the passageways on errands. There is the occasional dick of a typewriter. . . A A "A The flag quarters Mice occupied by Adm. William (Bull) Halsey remain locked behind his bridge. Halsey liked nothing better, they say, than talking with the crew .and visiting their mess. He wouldn’t recognize the spaces today. Fluorescent lights have replaced bulbs. Tile covers the steel decks which had to be buffed three times a day. Checkered tablecloths covered _______ ____ mess tables, but off-duty sailors Most^ships used taped calls tol still sip that distinctive Navy ‘The only thing I can put my finger on is that the people look at the New Jersey as a symbol of the years when the United States was on top,” Snyder says. I believe we still are, but I think there are many people in the world who no longer believe this.” GIFT OF GAB Snyder/ 44 , is a Methodist minister’s son with an unruly shock of black hair, a fast walk pver the Jersey deck, and a gift of gab kept at a high polish with aidless chats with his Officers and crew. His career credentials include command of three ships, tours in nuclear weapon and oceanographic research. The captain’s bathtub in his quarters was picked up in. a Philadelphia junk yard for $12.75 out of his own pocket. AAA As long as the ship was getting an entire crew all at once, Snyder saw to it that two bugleplaying seamen were include* 190% Continuous Filament NYLON CARPET »e on liannil IAKF —363-62 * OPEN EVERY NIGHT TIL 9 * PLENTY OF FREE PARKING pLiHWON SHOPPING CENTER-FE 3-7819 UNION LAKE RD., UNION LAKE-363-6286 PONTIAC DOWNTOWN DRAYTON 1 BLOOMFIELD [ * . I MALL PONTIAC "CHARGE H" - At All KRESGE Stores THE PONTIAC PRESS Bengals Unable toSfopCai’ds' Brock-Gibson By BRUNOS KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press' _■ National League opponents of the St. Loitfs Cardinals must have some sympathies tor the DetroitTigers, 10-1 losers in yesterday’s 4th game of the World Series. they must experience the task of facing Lm Brock and Bob Gibson during a 162-game season, while die Tigers have yet to figure eut^L way to stop them in what may be anV abbreviated World Series. P . The Cardinal stars are chalking up World Series; records as if they are going out of style. STOLEN BASE RECORD Brock has already stolen seven bases and has tied the series record of 14 held by BdiSeGoUins. Yesterday he helped crush the Tigers and to send Denny McLain to the srs of til waftner showers of die clubhouse while the teams ware battling under cold miserable showers for four hours In soggy tiger Stadium. , MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1068 Gibson meanwhile pushed his series, record overall to six straight wins, has struckout 10 or more batters in five series games and became the pitcher to hit two home runs in total series play. The victory yesterday, gave the Cardinals a 3-1 edge in the series and left it all up to Mickey Lolich, the only Tiger to defeat the Cardinals. Lolich faces Nelson Briles today. He defeated Briles in the second game last Thursday. . - Before gaining his seventh straight complete game Series victory, Gibson had to work and wait through four hours and 25 minutes of rain, mist and cold. That was a lot longer than McLain was around — the 31-game winner removed himself from the game during the. 74-rr' minute, third-inning rain delay — but V when the game finally had ended, the pitchers found themselves making similar post-Series plans. ★ * - * McLain disclosed he asked to be taken out of the game because his right shoulder was bothering him. But he refused to use that as an alibi for a performance in which he was rocked for four runs and six bits in 2 2-3 innings. At the same time, McLain said he' doesn’t think his two Series losses rub any of the luateK.off his 31-victory seasbn, the first in the majors in 37 y^ars. “I don’t think it’s embarrassing to get ' knocked about in a World Series',” he ea said.' “It took a heck of a lot of work to get here. I don’t think it hurts anything. “There are guys , who have lost two games before. Sandy Koufax lost two a few years ago and Whitey Ford lost two before that.” START DELAY By the time the rain was falling heavily enough tacall for a delay, the Cards had rappeofive hits and three more runs off McLain/ When piay resumed 74 minutes later, Joe Sparma took the mound and four others were soon to follow. In the top of the 4th inning, Norm Cash went to talk to relief pitcher Daryl Patterson, and in the bottom of the inning Willie Horton went to the dugout to clean his spikes and- Jim Northrup went to exchange his bat. 'The Cardinals countered the delaying tactics by sending Julian Javier to second on a steal which wasn’t even close. Plate umpire Bill Kinnamon then called the rival managers together to discuss the tactics which were turning the game into a force. After allowing a hit in each of the first four innings, Gibson struck out Jim Price and Dick McAuliiffe and retired Mickey Stanley on a fly to center. Thai made the game official, and.it was only three hours and 25 minutes after play was to have started. The Cardinals, meanwhile, amassed 13 hits, including a home run by GibsOn in the fourth and three hits by Brock homer, a triple and a three-run double in the eighth. ★ ★ * Gibson’s blow made hime the only pitcher ever to hit two homers in Series play, and Brock stole third after his double/ giving him a seventh steal in this Series a tying 14th for all of his Series The first mark he tied wa the second belonged to Eddie Collins. IMPOSSIBLE TASK? What Gibson and Brock and the rest of the Cardinals did was leave the Tigers with .foe almost impossible task of comp ing back from a 3-1 deficit Only three teams baye done it, and one of them wasn’t the 1967 Boston Red foot. Hie Red Sox were down 3-1 to foe Cardinals but then came back and won foe next two games, fo the seventh contest. however. Gibson mastered. Jfan Lonborg in their oniy duei. The way things look now Gibson might not have to go through a third battle with McLain. In fact there’s one question ah to whether MCLUin would pitch again in foe Series if it'went to the seventh LET’S WAIT FOB AWHILE—Five of the six umpires on the field to take cover, while Jim Honochick (background) working Sunday’s World Series game at Detroit confer near motions for the ground crew to bring out the tarpaulin. After the mound during the third inning about the increasing rainfall, a delay of 74 minutes, play was resumed to the despair of the At left plate umpire Bill McKinnamon waves for the players capacity crowd. Today's Lineups ST. LOUIS DETROIT Brock If McAuliffe 2b Javier 2b Stanley ss Flood cf Kaline rf Cepeda lb Cash lb Shannon 3b Horton if McCarver c Northrup cf Davis rf Mathews 3b Maxvill ss -Freehan c Briles p, 19-11 Lolich p, 17-9 Umpires—Harvey National League Umpires Lash Out Against Managers plate: Hpller American League first base: German National second base: Honochick American third base: Landes National left field foul line: Kinnamon American right field foul line. Plate umpire Bill Kinnamon lashed out at both managers Mayo Smith of the Tigers and Red Schoendienst of the Cardinals for opposite tactics during yestery’s rain spattered game. * ★ * While Kinnamon explained the conference he held at home plate with the two managers during the fourth game of the World Series, another umpire, .Stan Pontiac Pcpst Photo »v Edward R. Nobia MAKING ADJUSTMENT—St. Louis Cardinal hurler Bob Gibson (arm raised) tugs at his undershirt after Detroit skipper Mayo Smith Sunday decided to agitate him by complaining to the umpires that the white portion of Gibson’s undersleeve was showing on Ms pitching arm. Umpire Tom Gorman, catcher Tim McCarver, third baseman Mike Shannon (left) and shortstop Dal Maxvill watch the pitcher adjust^ sleeve. $•. Landes angrily blasted people for getting on the umpires. “We called both managers out,” said Kinnamon, talking about the home plate conference. We didn’t want one team to be_ hurrying and we didn’t want one team to be stalling. One was not to delay and one was not to speed up. “While we were disucssing that Smith said, ‘White is showing under Gibson's uniform line.’ ” HOLD MEETING At that pointf the umpires and Carding infielders converged on St. Lauis ace pitcher, Bob Gibson, and he ' proceeded to adjust his uniform, pulling up the under shirt above the elbow so the white didn’t show. / A! ★ ★ Kinnamon also explained the short conferences he held with Tiger first baseman Norm Cash, who came over from first base to talk to Detroit pitcher Daryl Patterson in the top of the fourth, and Jim Northiup, who returned to the dugout to exchange bats. “All I wanted to do was tell him (Cash) don’t take too long. It’s raining and you’re behind. When Mayo came out he said, ‘Bill, we have to play the game like any other game.’ I said, ‘Let’s not argue. It’ll take longer,’ I just didn’t want him to take too long.” * ★ ★ Kinnamon also explained the situation at the World Series regarding weather problems. “All six umpires are in charge, working under the jurisdiction of the Commissioner,” he said. “Every decision regarding the weather had to be discussed with the commissioner. UP TO COMMISSIONER The commissioner had the final say. The commissioner, before the \game,( left it up tq the umpires’ judgment when to stop thd game — that is, call time.” Landes, meanwhile, angrily criticized people for making umpires “the whipping Ways.” “When they want to hang something on sdniebody they hang it on the umpires,” he shouted. “They make the umpires the whipping boys. We have the guts to make the final decisions, but lots of times we don’t have the authority. “W||t-we wgnt is the authority to, go along with it, and me don’t get that. That’s why we strike. That’s why we ask / for better working conditions. “Wbat makes this different from any other game. Here, feel my uniform. It’s not even wet.” Itjpras, however, damp. Minnesota in Central After 24- MINNEAPOLIS Lions, hidden under glow of the pennant -fall, refused to be sraicn ounuay wiieii the Tigers crumpled. j The Lions added toAhe Detroit grief by being trounced 24-lf by foe Minnesota Vikings, dropping Detroit out of a tie with the victors fo# the lead in the National Football pague’s Central Division. ■jf’- ★ / ★ A And while the Tigers bats boomed like matchsticks, those Vikings were dropping quarterback Bill Munson five times for losses adding up to 28 yards. The Lions offensive line was humiliated trying to fttotect Munson as the Vikings kept up foji seige. ★ * * The loss snapped a two-game Lion streak .'Which had included a stomping of the Cpcago Bears and a surprise upset of m Green Bay Packers. In fact, it seemed the defeat was because the Vikings were probably -brainwashed with films of Munson and what he does to the t#l- < Minnesota had noticed he likes to hold it as long as possible to make sure his receivers are in position and they came . at him like Bob Gibson going for a strike-out. It was scary and the Detroit, offense never even got moving. BITTER BATTLE The bitter defensive battle broke only when Minnesota's Bill Brown plunged for two fourth quarter touchdowns, with his first TD midway in the period breaking a 10-10 tie. Then with about two and two-half minutes remaining. Brown dove over for a second score set up by a 51-yard pass from Joe Kapp to Gene Washington. „ Gary Cuzzo, replacing Kapp in the second period, moved the Vikings to their first touchdown, a three - yard run by Jim Lindsey. Early in foe drive, though, Cuzzo broke his left shoulder and will be out for several weeks. So Kapp returned and notched 17 points on the scoreboard in the last half. * * * Just once did Detroit show the^style that was cooking for the Lions inShe previous two weekends. In a drive that started in the third and rambled into foe fourth periods, Munson started^fby throwing to Earl McCullouch and MCI Farr. ■ ★ * * Munson got to McCullouch for 49 yards to breathe life into a dusty Detroit getting the. Lions out of a deep hole to the Minnesota 33, Two plays later, Farf caught a Munson-spin on the Viking 21 and crashed through three defensemen for Detroit’s lone TD. In the first quarter, Jerry DePoyster kicked a 33-yard field goal for Detroit to cap an 80-yard drive in seven plays. Cuozzo had replaced back Kapp, who wasknoeked dizzy in the first period and had double vision in one eye. After the game, Kapp said he could not remember his part in the victory — engineering two fourth-quarter touchdowns. Down to only one quarterback, Vikings’ Coach Bud Grant said he would announce today plans for more depth at the position. Kookie quarterback Bob Yesterday’s game will go into World Series history as the Travesty of Tiger Stadium — ’68. It will be remembered as the day Ma-^ jor League baseball sold its honor even its soul, to television. The entire spectacle from start to finish was a disgrace and most of foe blame must be placed on the shoulders of baseball commissioner William Eckert, who sat in foe front row playing big shot with Hubert Humphrey rather ■ than concerning himself with foe obhnjr tions which were his in permitting JP game to be played. * ' * a ^ As for millions of TV viewerMOTMs the country, comfortable in tty warm easy chairs, they probably dpm’t care less whether the game was/played or postponed because of foe wither. ... HAVE OBLIGATIONS / But, the obligation o0he umpires and the commissioner wat to the teams on the field and the 53,000 in the stands. Any ofoer game in regular season would not have been allowed to start. There was no indication, no forecast and no hope of the rain quitting. But it was no secret that a postponement would have cost NBC somewhere around 5100,000. ★ * * The game, delayed twice for 37 and 74 minutes; with temperatures dropping into the 40’s, turned into a farce as the Tigers did everything to delay it for heavier rain and the Cardinals did everything to speed it up. The Tigers started mound conferences, plate discussions, taking full counts and even dropping fly balls, which of course were denied. The Cardinals began stealing wrecklessly, swinging at most any pitch within reach and were urging the umpires to stop the stalling tactics of the Tigers which in themselves caused delay... There have been past World Series which have had delays. The delays were from one to six days in 1911, 1922, 1951, 1956 and 1962. Because of postponements, one of the Series was never completed until October 26. * * * No one wants to prolong a major event if the conditions are poor but playable, or if there is hope of improvement But yesterday, it rained before the game, when it started, when it was called, when it resumed and when it was completed. * * ★ Eckert sat in pompous glory putting the responsibility of the game on the umpires. , . * ■ The umpires in turn threw the responsibility back t6 the commissioner while 53,634 drenched fans sat with the chant of “Rain, rain, rain.” SINGLES SHARPLY — Veteran home run hitter Ed Mathews of foe Detroit Tigers responds to his surprise starting assignment in yesterday’s fourth World Series game by singling in bis first at bat. Later h^nissed a home run by jot a fqy feet with a belt into the uppec deck neuj. to the nght field foul pole. ^ I Kaline's, 2-0 Tim McCarver's, 4-2 McAuliffe's, 4-3 Orlando Cepeda's, 7-3 Tigers Favored 13-10 in Today's Series Game Frustrating Series I World Series Box Scores BB—Gibson 2 Horton, Mathews. McLain-1 Javier. Patterson 1 Cepeda. Hiller 2 Maxvill, Gibson. SO—Gihson 10 Cash, Freehan 3, Mc-Auliffe 2, Stanley, Horton 2, Price. McLain 3 Cepeda, Javier, Maxvill. Lasher 1 Maxvill. ^-2:34. A—53,634. UMPIRES — Kinnamon, American League Plate; Harvey National League First Base; Haller American League Second Base; Gorman National League Third Base; Honochick American League Left Field Foul Line; Landes National League Right Field Foul Line. LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI) - The Detroit Tigers were favored at 13-10 to win today’s fifth game of the World Series against the St. Louis Cardinals. However, the Cardinals, who hold a 3-1 advantage in games, are solid 8-1 choices to win the Series. * * ★ Mickey Lolich, who gained the only Detroit victory, was scheduled to pitch today against Nelson Briles, his second-game victim. AB R H BI O A Brock If .... 4 1 3 0 5 0 Flood cf .... 4 2 2 1 1 0 Maris rf ... 3 2 1 0 2 0 Cepeda lb .. 5 1 1 3 10 0 McCarver c . 5 1 3 3 5 0 Shannon 3b . 4 0 2 0 0 1 Javier 2b ... .4 0 1 0 2 5 Maxvill ss .. 4 0 0 0 2 2 Washburn p . 3 0 0 0 0 1 Hoerner p ... 2 0 , 1 0 0 0 Totals . 38 7 13 DETROIT (A) 8 27 9 AB R H BI O A McAuliffe 2b 4 2 2 1 0 1 Stanley ss .. a 0 0 0 0 2 Kaline rf ... 4 p 1 2 1 0 Cash lb 3 0 0 0 8 1 Horton If .. 2 0 0 0 1 0 Northrup cf 4 0 0 0 7 0 Freehan c . 3 0 0 0 6 2 Wert 3b 4 0 0 0 3 2 Wilson p ... 1 0 0 0 0 2 Dobson p 0 0 0 0 0 0 a-Matchick . I 0 0 0 0 0 McMahon p :. o 0 0 0 0 0 Patterson p 0 0 0 0 0 0 b-Comer ... i 0 1 0 0 0 Hiller p 0 0 0 Q gjw 0 c-Price 1 0 0 0 0 6 Totals . 31 3 4 3 28 10 a-Struck out for Dobson in 5th b-Singled for Patterson in 7th c-Flied out for Hiller in 9th St. Louis erformance to save Washburn’s victory with b solid effort over |he final three and two-thirds innings. SHOWS WORTH Thus the Cardinals’ pitching, rather suspect after the first games (beyond the work of Bob Gibson, that is) suddenly proved its value in a pivotal game while the Tigers’ faltered. ♦ * * Moreover, the Redbird batsmen unleashed a home run offensive that overshadowed the powerful Bengal bats. The pattern continued Sunday. * * * Wilson’s injury, extending a season of similar misfortunes for the Tigers’ 22-game winner of 1967, throws the rotation into uncertainty. Manager Mayo Smith likely will turn, to Joe Sparma if Mickey Lolich can prolong the classic today. McAuliffe Had Hopes of Game Postponement “They had to start the game,” second sacker Dick McAuliffe said. “I was hoping it wouldn’t continue. Of course, if I had a 4-0 lead, I would want to play it,” Monday’s starter Mickey Lolich noted, “I wouldn’t want to pitch in those, conditions. You could slip on the mound and hurt your arm or something and your career could be ruined.” * LOW BRIDGE — Detroit slugger A1 Kaline ducks to avoid a pitch by St. Louis Bob Gibson during yesterday’s World Series game in Detroit. Kaline collected a double and single but the Tigers lost and fell bdiind in the Series, 3-1. Catcher is Tifn McCarver. ‘ THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1968 Continued from Page C-l Lee was expected to be activated from the taxi squad. ' , , », , . “When you get excited, you don t feel too much,” said Cuozzo after the game. “I knew something was wrong. I wanted to keep In there. HAD MOMENTUM “We had the momentum and I didn’t want to go out and lose that. Besides, I knew Joe wasn’t in very good shape on If*"”,, , . ;■ Cuozzo completed five passes for 46 . yards on the drive. ' “We just started- playing football, said Kapp. “I can’t remember a thing. I felt like I took a shot to the head. It just sort of wore off as the game went along.” * * * Kapp completed six of 14 passes for 100 yards, including a 5Uyarder to Gene Washington that set up Brown’s one-yard Buckeyes Bead on Keyes, Boilermakers By Associated Press Ohio State, once the scourge of college baseball gets the opportunity this week to become a leading contender for the national championship. The Buckeyes face Purdue’s top-ranked Boilermakers and the elusive Leroy Keyes at Columbus, Ohio, Saturday. It’s been 14 years since the unbeaten and untied Buckeyes of 1954 won the national title, but if the 1968 edition of the scarlet and gray can whip the Boilermakers they will move up high in file ratings. With the slippery Keyes scoring three touchdowns, No. 1 Purdue had an easy time trouncing Northwestern 43-6 Saturday. It was the third straight for the unbeaten Boilermakers. m * * ★ Ohio State, No. 6 in The Associated Press poll, similarly stayed unbeaten. The Buckeyes made it two straight by overcoming Oregon 21-6, helped by touchdowns by Jim Otis on a 35-yard run and a 55-yard pass from Ron Macie-jowski to Bruce Jankowski, Washburn, Hoerner (6) a Wilson, Oobr- •" MgMgi son (7), H Washburn. McCarvar. McAullffa. Sunday, Oct. a'si Dstrolt Detroit Gibson and McCarvar; McLIain, Spart-— - BaiMa— (4), Lasher (4), Hiller d Freehon. W—Gibson. n (I) and Fi i. HRs—St. I eceipts $431 ilstloner's ■ WtM Detroit c National 91 American L Attendance-^?! mST* Last Hope to Cage Cardinal Spartans Topple Badgers EAST^ LANSING (UPl) - Michigan State may no longer have stars like Bubba Smith and George Webster but the current crop of Spartans can’t be faulted for their courage. The Spartans trampled h a p 1 d s s Wisconsin, 394), Saturday in their Big . Ten opener at Madison, Wis., for their third straight victory. Two of the best players on the undefeated Spartan squad, starting guard Ron Saul and his twin brother, Rich, the defensive signal-celling linebacker played outstanding games less than 24 hours after learning their father, Greg BROCK ON THE LOOSE — Record - setting base thief Lou Brock of the Cardinals slides under Bill Freehan’s throw to Dick McAullffe in the fifth inning Saturday. The flashy runner picked up, three steals in the contest, and set a Series record yesterday by adding his seventh stolen base. Vikings Lead Loop After Halting Lions Saul, had been killed in an automobile accident Friday afternoon. SHINES ON DEFENSE Rich made an interception in the second quarter and returned the ball 49 yards to set up MSU’s third touchdown. The interception halted Wisconsin’s only venture into Michigan State territory on its own (the Badgers got into Spartan territory once by taking a punt on the MSU 47). ★ ★ ★ Quarterback Bill Feraco ran for three touchdowns/and the Spartan defense was airtight, allowing Wisconsin only 31 yards rushing and 90 passing. Michigan State rolled for 260 yards on the ground and 100 in the air SCORES THREE TIMES Feraco scored on a pair ~ of first quarter‘ one-yard runs after setting himself on key passes and runs, and then went in again from the one with 19 seconds in the third quarter. * * * Tailback Tommy Love, the Spartans’ leading ground gaiper, scored on a two-yard smash in the second quarter and Michigan State added its final score with 27 seconds left to play when reserve back Earl Anderson plunged over from the one. BOOTS FIELD GOALS Gary Boyce kicked 38 and 41-yard field goals in the second and third period. SERIES HASSLE — Catcher Tim McCarver of St. Louis gives umpire Bill Kinndmon a piece of his mincK-aftera call in the second inning of the Cafdsr Tigers game in Detroit yesterday. Kinn-amop ruled Tigers’ Bill Freehan had not swung?;at a pitch that would have been a third strike. s Wisconsin’s eighth losing streak in Ba in a Badger run. Kapp also gained 33 yards rushing on four carries. ‘Til have to read about it Tn the paper,” Kapp said. Meanwhile, the Minnesota defense held the Lions to 73 yards rushing and allowed Munson 13 completions for 196 yards. “We kneW we had to stop ther long passes,” said Grant. “We wanted the kind of rush from the front four that wouldn’t give Munson that extra second.” DETROIT RUSHING Alt. Yds. Lg. On. TO The defeat was row — longest losiiig history. The game, which followed easy vlfr tories Over Syracuse and Baylor, probably was the last breather for the Spartans, who face the Wolverines at Michigan Saturday, then tackle Minnesota, Notre Dame, Ohio State, Indiana, Purdue and Northwestern. jf Mich. SI. Wi»c, 'Rusrtlno yardage 240 J1 MAKES IT THROUGH — Michigan State’s Thomas Love (26) finds a hole in University of Wisconsin’s line and makes short yardage before being downed by linebacker in the game in Madison Saturday.. MSU won, 394). Humphrey Brings Smiles in Gloom Even in the gloom of Sunday’s crushing defeat that put their backs against the proverbial wall, a few of the Tigers were able to smile during a postgame visit with Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey. The Democratic Presidential nominee sat through the entire game in the rain, then visited both lockerrooms to pay his respects to managers “Red” Schoendienst and Mayo Smith, Cardinal mound ace Bob Gibson and Tigers Willie Horton and Denny McLain. “Bob has been a big help to us and will be doing some more work for us in the campaign,” Humphrey revealed. “So will Horton be helping us later,” he added. Ex-Northville Star Excited Wolverines Awaiting Unbeaten MSU By JERE CRAIG ANfr ARBOR -1Tm really excited about it, l ean hardly wait to be out there in front of the crowd and everything.” Former Northville High School three-sport star Jerry Imsland bubbled with enthusiasm Saturday after the University of Michigan had flooded the Navy’s bilge, 32-9. The 6-2, 210-pound end led the Wolverines’ pass receiving corps with five catches for 52 yards in the lacklustre game enlivened mainly by the broken field running of defensive back George Hoey and a small buff-and-white dog. Imsland matriculated from Northville to the University of Kentucky but after his freshman season decided he would enjoy the U. of M. campus more. The aggressive junior is playing his first varsity .season for the Wolverines and this Saturday he will be starting in what is the epitome for most prep pid ders in the state: the Michigan State-Michigan game. EAGERNESS His eagerness is understandable. The Wolverines will go into the contest -s O. J. Simpson and No. Southern California won their with Ted Hendricks, the Mad Stork, and the University of Miami Hurricanes. O. J. scored two touchdowns in leading the defending national champions to a 28-3 triumph before a night turnout of 71,189 ' in the Los Angeles Coliseum. Stewart Wins Driving Crown SS With Ford in U.S. Grand Prix WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. (A - Jackie Stewart drove his Matra-Ford Formula One auto to victory Sunday in the 10th Grand Prix of the United, States and Simpson gained 163 yards on 38 carries the way he set two track records. b CAiitkam fol mn/la it throo in a rnw __° ______k.iIl.j a as Southern Cal made it three in a row and remained unbeaten. It was the first defeat in three starts ffo the 13th-ranked Hurricanes. TOR a AT A* GLANCE --- TOp - »— *---------HI n California, 3-0, boot Miami, Fla., 21-3. 3. penn State, 3-0, boat Wait Virginia 31-20. 4. Florida, 3-0, boot Mississippi State 11-14. s. Notro Dame, 2-1, boat Iowa 51-20. 4. Ohio Stata, 2-0, boat Dragon 21-4. 7. Nebraska. 3-0, did not play, open data. I, Kansas, 3-0. boat New Mexico 40-7. I! UCtA. 2-1; lost to Syracuse 20-7. 10. Louisiana State, 3-0, boot Saylor ,40-14. II. Alabama, *4, loot lo Mississippi lw. 12. Houston, 2-0-1, boot Cincinnati 71-33 Friday night. T3. Miami,-Fla. 2-1. lost to Southern California 28-3. 4. Arizona state. 24, lost to Wyamfltg 27-13. ----------see, 2-0-1, boot Rice SMi 14. Georgia, 2-0-1, boot South Carolina 21-20. 17. faxas ASM, 1-2, Idol to Florida State 20-1 1«. California, M, beat San, Jose State 44-0. If. Michigan Stata, «L baat WlacowMo 3»-0. 20. Arkansas. 3-0, baat Taxaa Christian 12-7. The '^-year-old Scotsman finished the 248-mile course at ,a record average spedtl of 124.89 miles per hour, finishing more than 24 seconds ahead o f Englishman Graham Hill’s Lotus-Ford. John Surtees of England finished third in a Honda and Dan Gurney of Costa Mesa, Calif., placed fourth in his Lotus-Ford. . * Stewart jumped to second place with 36 points in the race for the world driver’s championship with his nine-point finish here. RETAINS LEAD Hilf retained the lead at 39 points after picking up six points for second place. Only the Mexican Grand Prix remained for these two to settle the 1968 title. ★ * ★ Denis Hulme of New Zealand, who was tied with Hill at 33 points entering this race, crashed his McLaren-Ford on the 93rd lap. Hulme, who was uninjured when his machine spun off into a culvert, ranks third at 33 points. Stewart’s race average was more than, five m.p.h. faster than the 1968 record set by the late Jim Clark of Scotland. Stewart’s fastest lap of nearly 127 m.p.h. bettered the old 125.45 m.p.h. record, set by Hill when be won lagt.year’s race.' Mario Andretti of Nazareth, Pa., in a Lotus-Ford, started in the pole position and grabbed the lead at the start. But Stewart moved into fijrst two laps later and began to pull away. sure to hire more than 100,000 fans to the spacious Michigan Stadium — with a 2-1 mark despite an opening game loss to tough California. MSU now is 34). In addition to Imsland, the Wolverines have two other Oakland County residents on their starting units, and a third one is bidding to regain his spot after a frightening injury. Defensive tackle Dan Parks hails from Birmingham and defensive end Phil Seymour is a Berkley resident. Parks played at Brother Rice, while Seymour (a cousin to Notre Dame All-American Jim Seymour) went to Detroit Salesian. ,Seymour, particularly was effective . against Navy, showing good speed and lateral movement while defending both against the Midshipmen’s passing and running game. The 6-5, 235-pound Parks wasn’t in on as many tackles but his hefty presence in the defensive line usually required double teaming hy the blockers, leaving sophomore middle guard Henry Hill frle to penetrate into the Navy backfield which he did frequently. Out of the lineup entirely Saturday was flankerback John Gabler from Royal Oak. He was carried on a stretcher from the Duke game the preceding week and had X rays for a neck injury. “John gotta little scared,” a Wolverine trainer reported. “The X rays were negative, but John ha^l trouble with dizziness early in the week and couldn’t practice. It was felt best to keep him out of the Navy game,” he continued.” “We think he wjll be all right for the State game.” The win over Navy started very slowly. The Middies held the lead; 34), after a 26-yard field goal by Tim Cocozza in the first quarter. The only real early excitement for the crowd was providied by tvfb dogs galloping up and down the field. The sec-cond Qf which was a small mongrel who covered the 100 yards three times. After the second run it jumped into the stands,, scurried around away from pursuers by running under the empty benches in the end zone section, before leaping back onto the gridiron. About the same time the fleet Hoey caught a Navy punt, broke free down the left sideline for 63 yards before going SOLUTION down at the Navy six-yard-line. Standout halfback Ron Johnson reached the end zone in three tries. Briles Again Facing Bengal Ace Southpaw Left-hander Mickey Lolich today has the monumental assignment of shutting the windows at Tiger Stadium before the Cardinals fly the coop and head to St. with the biggest booty of all, the world’s championship. * * * Three weeks ago the Tigers’ mound Crew was in top shape, hurling 11 complete games in a row as the team wrapped up flie American League pennant. Today it is in all but full retreat with only Lolich, who posj$d the Bengals’ lone victory in Ganttp#f6. 2, left to keep the Redbirda fromtaking home the championship. His rival in this afternoon’s fifth game' of the best-of-seven showdown is Nelson Briles, the Cardinals’ 19-game winder who was victimized vby the Tiger -hats and Lolich’s sharp mound work?'when they won, 8-1, Thursday in St. Lotiis. ★ h * Manager Mayo Smith admits he doesn’t know who will work Wednesday if the two teams need tp play a sixth game at St. Loius. & “McLain probablv can pitch again, but his shoulder is bothering him and we'll have to wait. Wilson is a day-to-day matter, he says his shoulder feels better itoday. It could be Sparma.” TWOREADY The Cardinals, meanwhile, will have Ray Washburn and ace Bob Gibson ready — both of whom have registered Series’ victories already — should the Series go beyond today’sjifth game. Lolich reports he feel* fine, but adds. “I’m not sure I want to be healthy.” This is a joking reference to his strong-showing in the second game although he~ was suffering from a very uncomfortable-boil. Smith inserted veteran Ed Mathews into the Tigers.’ lineup Sunday and the old pro responded with' a sharp single and just missed a home run with a blast that curled foul. He also had an error. “I haven’t decided whether I’ll use Ed at third Monday,” Smith said after the game. CHALLENGE L'Olich went out to the mound today knowing he might be trying to keep Lou Brock from adding to his record for stolen bases — and wishing he had some football films to do it with. “Football clubs use films for scouting. Why shouldn’t baseball?” Lolich suggested. “Baseball doesn’t seem to have come to that yet. When I ashed for some films of Brock, I was told the scouting reports are enough. “I’m a firm believer in films. But our club doesn’t do it. I don’t think most of the clubs in baseball do. If you want to see something, instead of just hear about it, why can’t you?” ★ * * What Lolich is suggesting then is very simple: that baseball clubs substitute film sessions for the scouting reports that they now use — and which several players in the series have said they don’t pay too much attention to. The next time the U. of M. had possession, it drove 85 yards to take a 13-3 lead. In the drive, Johnson (the U. of M.’s first Negro grid captain) became the fifth best ground gainer in the school’s history. But until the day when baseball uses film that way, Lolich will have to get by some other way. He had the answer to that, too. “See that,” said Lolich, pointing toward catcher Bill Freehan, who was holding the big-game rifle he had just received as a gift. “There’s how to stop Brock.” WOLVERINE SCORES — Michigan’s Ron Johnson (40) dives from the three-yard line to score the Wolverine's Saturday at Ann Arbor. Throwing key blocks are Dan Dierdorf '‘Craw (48). Navy’s Chip Estey (40) arfb Bill McKinney (70) n Michigan won, 32-9. Flmr C—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER T, 1968 Brewer Wins $55,000 SOUTHPORT, England (AP) — Gay Brewer pieked up a check lor $55,000 Sunday for winning the Alcan golf tournament, then said lie probably would take a couple of months off. * * ★ “I’m going, to Australia, but I don’t have many commitments and I doubt if I’ll play much real golf for the rest of this year,” “ said the 36-year-old Texan, who won pro golf’s For vacation replacements Call with confidence ft temporary help from MANP0WER" Loading and warahous* Halp. ganaral labor*ra, factory halp (man and woman) 13S8 Wide Track West 332-8386 Pontiac gest purse for . tlfe second straight year Saturday. Brewer posted a 13-under par 72-hole total of 283 on the rugged 7,140-yard Irish Sea Coast course in finishing three strokes ahead of Peter Townsend of England. If he (Townsend) hadn’t had a double bogey six on that second hole in the last round, he would have made a real strong challenge,” said Brewer. “With a little more experience he might have won.” U.S. Open champ L’fc e Trevino’s even par 296 was a disappointment on the course, but he charmed the British with wit, gaiety and frankness. Trevino is remaining i n England to play in the eight-man select field ^of the Piccadilly World Match ,P 1 a y Championship starting Thursday at Wentworthem. He brushed off -reports the Piccadilly people had refpsed to give his manager, Bucky Woy, seat at a ceremonial banquet. Firebirds Stop Pistol Pete, Still Lose The Pontiac Firebirds accomplished what they set out to do. ..stop Pistol Pete IttplB jewski, but even this wasn’t enough to prevent their 15-7 defeat at the hands of the Dayton Colts, Saturday night at Wisner Stadium. > For the first time this sea Pete failed to throw touchdown pass, but his passes put the Colts in a position to get a pair of touchdowns on short gainers by Angelo Kiminas and Roosevelt Mell. The Firebirds had scoring opportunities by moving inside the Dayton 20 twice but failing to cross paydirt. Doug Holcomb entered the game in the final quarter and completed a pair of passes to Ron Bemis for 39 yards and to Gerg Hanson for a 26 yard touchdown with 6:12 left in the game. A scoring possibility was thwarted in the closing seconds of tiie first half when the officials awarded the ball to Dayton after a third down play. The series started at 1:13 lei in the -half and these were the; order of plays as charted by three play-by-play statisticians. 1. On the Pontiac 36, pass failed. 2. Five yard motion penalty assessed against Dayton. 3. Ball on Pontiac 41, Harrington passes to Hanson for 16 . yards and first down. 1. Harrington is thrown for a 9 yard loss from Dayton 43 to Pontiac 48. 2. A pass failed. 3. Still on their own 48, Harrington passes to Blazitz to the Dayton 39, making it 4th down and 6 yards to go with 21 seconds left to play. At this point, Dayton was given the ball and a pass Chuck McElligott went for 35 yards as the half ended, with Dayton leading 12-0. ★ *-■ -it. To start the second half, Pontiac started on its own 18 and marched to the -Dayton 5, where a sure touchdown pass to Bemis, all alone in the end zone went into the pound. Dayton then came back and after a poor punt on the Pontiac 21, failed to move the hall and settled for a 26 yard field goal to make it 15-0. SPARKS TD Holcomb the ex-Purdue quarterback who had three periods of warmup, brought new life into the offense with four completions out of nine attempts for 85 yards. /MONTGOMERY I "l VAl M Town and Country Shocks Regain control; Halt fide sway. INSTALLATION AVAILABLE SAVE 3-10 A PAIR, GET RIDING COMFORT, TOO • Designed for heavy duty use •, Piston, rod hardened to wear • Big capacity oversize piston Riverside® Town and Country shocks give a more stable and comfortable ride on city streets, country roads and high-speed expressways. Made to hold your tires on the road, keep you in control. Perform better thdfr , most original equipment quality. Riverside®SOE battery 42-MPN1H GUARANTEE INSTALLED FREE (1) FREE replacement within 90 days of purchase; (2) After 90 days Wards will replace the battery, charging you a pro-rat* d amount of the current no-trade-in sailing prka for each month fro of purchaiu. • Tops most original equipment • Gives great reserve capacity • Gives heavy-duty performance Don't wait for an inconvenient moment for your battery to go dead. Replace your old one now at Wards and be sure of dependable starting power, no matter what the weather conditions are. Your best value in batteries is Riverside® — at Wards! Just Say "Charge It!" Wards Charg-all card is your ticket to nation-wide auto service-with no money down! Come in to Wards today and just say "Charge It!" WO\ Far as long as you own lha car an which your Rlvanidu Doubl-lifa mufftor was III provided It remains on that “ car, if tha muffler falls far any reason return It to any Wards branch and wa .will replace It free. If Wards originally installed tha muffler, wa will install tha replace-mant free. This guarantee does not apply to mufflers Wards guaranteed Doubl-life muffler Never buy another muffler for as long as you own your car. See Guarantee above. ' 12.99 Chev. 54-64 . . . 9.99 12.99 Ford 60-63 . . . 9.99 699 BilliardKhamp Opens With Win LANSING, Mich. (AP) -Jimmy Karas, defending U.S. Open Billiards champion from Springfield, Pa., won a first-round straight pool match of the $25,000 third annual open tournament at the Lansing Civic Center. Karas’s 150-114 victory over Lou Butera, West Pittston, Pa., marked the first time the sami-retired veteran had defeated a first-round opponent. ★ if ★ In last year’s action at St. Louis, Karas won 11 consecutive matches after losing his opener to Luther Lassiter of Elizabeth City, N.C. 'Lassiter Sunday lost his first-round match to George Pawleski of Racine, Wis., 15-94. PHONE J 682-4940 But it was fob late and now the Firebirds can only hope to salvage three more victories* one against a strong Lackawanna team this Saturday night at Wisner Stadium. * p ' 'pt 'IW The Firebird running attack netted only 59 yards, 4>ne of the big factors jn all four defeats. The teams two leading rushers by average, Bob Brown at a 9.1 average in 27 attempts for the season, newcomer Ken Mapp who has a 5.4 average in just six tries, did not carry the ball once. . I Rushing . COLT STOPPER - Ron Edwards of the Pontiac Firebirds brings Dayton’s Roosevelt Mell to a halt after the speedy Colt gained a few yards. Mell scored one of the two Dayton touchdowns Saturday at Wisner where the Firebirds lost, 15-7, inanMFL game. SCORa BY QUARTERS ... U 0 0 7—7 Champ Retains Title DORADO, P. R. (UPI) Jack Veghte of Clearwater, Fla., captured the Amateur of the Americas golf crown for the second straight time Saturday. Mrs. Joel Smith of Allentown, Pa., took the women’s title. SATURDAY'S EXHIBITION PRO HOCKEY National Laaau* Chicago Z Toronto 1 Datroft 4,------ . CITY MIDGET FOOTBALL 24, Longfallo* wiartTfwJn"? Harrington 7 Malklm 7, Baldwin 6 Wllson-Frost 14, McCarroll 7 Bethuna 6, McConnell 0 Crofoot 14, will Rogers 0 Wisner 12, Webstar T) HEADQUARTERS OF Personalized Service Prefinished PANELING ... Beauty Combined With Durability For Any Home Or 10,000 Sq. Ft. of DISPLAY AREA Prices Start at $2.98 I’ve Your Convenient Michigan Bank Card Oxford Drops Fourth Tilt; North Farmington Falls Oxford’s Wildcats are still looking fot their first victory of the 1968 football campaign The Wildcats were saddled with their fourth loss in a Saturday in a 26-6 setback against Chippewa Valley (2-2) as they failed to handle the passing of quarterback Paul Miller. SHARP PASSER Miller flipped three touchdown passes and completed 10 of 18 tosses for 189 yards. He hit Lee Stanko with sewing passes of 3 and 27 yards and fired a 15-yarder to fullback Mark Carroll. Carroll picked up the other six-pointer on a three-yard run. * * ★ Oxford’s lime score came on four-yard seamper in the second period by Darrell Marsh. In other games Saturday, Detroit Thurston slipped past North Farmington in a Northwest Suburban League game; 7-6, Madison Lamphere ran its record to 4-0 with a 220 decision over' Lutheran East while Detroit Country Day Australia May Choose Juniors for Cup Team MELBOURNE (AP) - Australia’s tennis selectors may choose all junior players for the Davis Cup Challenge Round in Adelaide, South. Australia, in December, Harry Hopman, the nonplaying captain, said today. ★ ★ ★ Hopman said that on present form Sydney juniors Phil Dent aid John Alexander “must have a good chance of playing both the singles matches gg well the doubles. ★ ★ iir Hopman said “Australia’s two top players, Bill Bowrey and Ray Ruffels were far from impressive on overseas circuit this year.” See and Drive the Exciting New Pontiacsl CAR FOR 1969 1969 CATALINA HARDTOP COUPE On Display and Ready for Delivery We will meet or beat any deal. We will not b'e undersoldI PONflAC-TEMPEST On M24, Lake Orion, 693,r6266 dropped a 12-7 decision to Hawken of Cleveland. SHARES TOP SPOT Thurston’s victory enabled the team to move into a tie with Livonia Franklin for the Northwest lead. ★ * * Craig Mutch scored from the two toy cap a 65-yard drive in the seebnd period and end Jack Weston ran the extra point. Paul White lugged the ball six yards for North Farmington’s six-pointer but the extra point kick went wide. PASSES HURT Country Day’s record fell to 1-3 in the toss to Hawken. Bod Hyatt ran 25 yards for one score and hauled in a 65-yard pass for the second Hawken tally. Lou Harp scampered eight yards in the third for Country Day’s lone touchdown. Quarterback Jack Z w e m e r assed to end Jim Thorsen for te extra point. Quarterback Bill Watson paced the Lamphere attack with a pair of touchdown passes » and passing yardage of 218 for the day against Lutheran East. Watson teamed with end Dan > Maluzhinsky on a 93-yard scoring play and connected with Kurt Mitter on a 40-yarder, both -coming in the , second period. Rick Brubaker’s two-yard plunge and Art Tancredi’a 21-yard field goal wound up the ; scoring. STATISTICS NF DT First Downs Rushing ... II IS Yards Rushing-Passing .77-58 106-81 Passes intarcepted'by w-i-. a - i Punts and Avaraga ..... 3-46 3-26 Fumblo»—No. .Loot .... 1-0 2-1 Mam and Yarda . SCORI---- alg Mu' Estiva wil._ SCORE BY QUARTERS orth Parmlngtan ...i 7 • a—7 latrolt Thurston ...0 • t 6—6 U.4>. Net Pros Tourney Victims DURBAN, South Africa (AP) American pros Earl Buchholz and Marty Riessen went down to defeat Sunday in the first round of the Natal Province Professional Tennis Tournament. South Africa’s Ray Moore beat Buchholz, of SL Louis* 6-3, 2-6, 10-8 while England’s Roger Taylor defeated Riessen, of Evanston, 111., 6-3,11-13, 8-6. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1968 PONTIAC LAKE INN 78SO Highland Road PHONE 878-8888 EMSKEEGO Sidney Poitier y "TO SIR WITH LOVE” Diok Van Dyke “DIVORCE AMERICAN STYLE" Schirra More Serious About Apollo 7 CAPp KENNEDY, Fla, (AP) •. Astronaut Walter M. Schirra Jr., • who“reridezvoused” with Santa Claus and played "Jingle Bells” to his last space Sight, says there will be no such fun ana gaqies on the ApoQo 7 mission scheduled to start Friday....... There sire several reasons, he said in an interview. Among them are the seriousness of the mission, the memory of the Apollo 1. crew and the fact there are no spectacular highlights in the Apollo 7 flight plan. Gemini 7 in December 1985, the Gemini 7 commander, Frank did< f , double take when he saw a "Beat Army" sign In Schirra's wind'dw. Schirra is a graduate of the Naval Academy and Borman is a1 West Pointer. Later in the flight, Schirra astounded the mission control center with this report:' “We have an object, looks like a satellite, going from north to south, up in polar orbit lotos like he may be going to reenter soon. It looks as if he’s trying to signal us.” But the Navy captain noted he and the other members of the crew, Air Force Maj. Donn F. Eisele and civilian Walter Cunningham, are punsters, and added with a smile: "I don’t now what effect this will have on air to ground communications.” When Shirra piloted Gemini 6 to the historic rendemus with Seconds later, the control center got the message when Schirra played “JiQgle Bells” on a miniature harmonica he 12 NORTH SAGINAW IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC MATINEES DAILY OPEN 11:48 A.M. Show Starts 12:00 Noon Continuous - 334-4436 ENDS TUESDAY MQNDAY & TUESDAY are we might have been in the past. We’re mqch more serious about It because this is a much more complicated machine. We’ve got a goal that is rather hard Achieve, particularly one that we have to follow on when we lost three of our compatriots. Wd don’t want any mistakes that might cause something like that to happen again." He referred to the loss of the three Apollo 1 astronauts in a launch-pad fire at Cape Kennedy last year. The Schirra team is to fly the mission originally assigned to that crew. we get back home to do some sort of antic to celebrate this mission." Cunningham reports Scbtrra’s uns infected his fellow had smuggled aboard. “I think the children of this country are happier that we might have seen something up there," said Schirra, noting it was the Christmas season. JESS KIDDING About Apollo 7, Schirra said, 'Despite the puns, we have not ben the kid-around types that. Schirra noted most of the 8-day flight will be devoted to checking and rechecking the systems, qualifying them for a moon mission. “So there are no highlights as there were on Gemini 6,” he said. “When we pulled off that rendezvous with Gemini 7 we had something to celebrate, guess we’ll have to wait until crewmen. /“Wally’s a punster from way back," Cunningham said. “He’s pretty good at it But like a typical punster, he throws out about a hundred of then! and maybe three of them are gems. Kmart Qlonwood Plaza North Pony Street - Corner of Olenweed 338-0433 Donn very quickly decided he wasn’t going to'fight and he joined Wally as a punster. In the last couple months I find that, in spite of myself, I’v< | to throw out a few crummy puns myself." First Manned Flight of Apollo Is Friday WALTER M. SCHIRRA Fear Is Dominant Issue of This Election Year By WHITNEY M. YOUNG JR. Executive Director National Urban League It is becoming very dear that the war in Vietnam isn’t the top campaign issue. Neither is III crime, law and FAMILY NITES FEATURING Tender, Juicy, Yummy CD IC H . WORK rnltll CHOPS SHRIMP Monday Tuesday STILL $159 ONLY *1 Bring- the kid*, grandpa, everybody. To the most mouthwatering dinner buy in town. Fried fhrimp the way you like them, our own Swedish meatballs, royal roast beef, vegetables, crisp salads, and more! All you can eat. Even lower prices for kids. Beverage and dessert extra. Open 7 Days a Week HOURS: 11A.M. -2 P.M. and 4:30 - 8:00 P.M. Daily We’re Open Sundays 11 A.M. to 7 P.M. 755 BALDWIN at MONTCALM | smorgasbord Your house of hospitality from coast to coast. YOUNG loud—fear. We would have *to go back a good many years to find an electorate as frightened and insecure as the present one. order, or inflation. I think that the dominant issue in this election cam paign is one that some candidates cater to, but none mentions out Back in 1933, Presiden Franklin D. Roosevelt told i frightened nation: “The only thing We have to fear is fear itself.” Those words bear repeating today. What people are afraid of, of course, is social change. The world is getting increasingly complex; people find it hard to understand the new attitudes of their children, or the new assertiveness of black citizens who were silent sufferers for too long. NEWLY WON-STATUS We have to understand too, that much of the insecurity that haunts so many otherwise well-off middle-class people is due to their newly won status. Barely a generation ago, the parents of today’s affluent middle classes were standing on unemployment lines or were employed in relief projects like WPA, PWA and others during the Depression. And many who get so worked up because of welfare grants to black mothers conveniently forget that the welfare checks their own mothers got 30 years ago kept them alive and en-1 abled them to go to school. SLUMS TORN DOWN The govemmeift tore down black slums to make way for expressways that rushed white people out of the central cities, and the government lent them money and insured their mortgages so tfiey, could create a suburban dream world into which black people could not move regardless of their income, culture or education. CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) — After years of preparation marred by terrible America’s astronauts Friday begin pursuing the moon with the first manned earth orbit flight of the Apollo spaceship. At 11 a.m. EDT, a towering Saturn IB rocket is to thunder into the sky carrying the three-space crew on a journey intended to last nearly 11 days. Commanding the Apollo 7 crew will be a veteran of Mercury and Gemini flights, Navy Capt. Walter M. Schirra Jr. With him Will be two space rookies, Air Force Maj. Donn F. Eisele and civilian astronaut Walter Cunningham. Schirra, who will be the first man to fly three times into space, says it also will be his last trip. At 45, he said, he’s getting too old to wait two or three years for another mission. SPRINGBOARD MISSION Eisele, 38, the guidance and Some of these same ] are now screaming about government spending on poverty, but they didn’t turn down the handouts that helped put them into the middle class, and they aren’t returning any of the money they the still getting from government sources. SPENDING ON POOR Their beef isn’t really about government spending, but government spending on today’s poor and on measures to help Negroes and other minorities reach the same middle dass status they’ve just attained. And that’s the fear that is gripping so many people today. So long as blacks are confined to ghettos, rendered powerless and dependent, many people fed secure and even superior. But once they see a black family moving into a neighborhood, a black child at school with their kids, a black supervisor on the job, they feel their status is threatened. It’s an irrational fear, even a hysterical reaction, but it exists and some candidates for office are shrewdly appealing to it. CODE PHRASES Law and order and crime in the streets become the greaf, code phrases that gather the insecure around safe issues. Few talk about justice; withou which there can be no law and order. Crowds cheer when George Wallace talks about running over demonstrators in his car, or letting the police loose on anyone - not of the approved color or political opinions. Some of the statements I’ve heard in recent weeks smack of a kind of neofascism that represents a sick element in our political life. ham, 36, the systems engineer, hope Apollo 7 will be a springboard to future fights for them, including the moon. From lift-off to splash-down, they are to ride the Apollo ship for 10 days, 21 hours, 40 minutes. They are to check all the systems—firing the engines, exercising the control, electrical and life support equipment and [ generally qualifying the craft for more ambitious flights,. to follow. The spacecraft has nr than two million functioning parts. Success would be a tremendous boost toward the U.S. goal of landing men on the mo 1969. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration plans a moon orbit flight by the Apollo 8 crew in December. Apollo 9, commanded by Air Force Col. Frank Borman, is planned a earth orbit test but could be I changed to a lunar orbit mission I if there are no major problems I navigation expert, and Cunning-Ion the Schirra trip. YOUR NEWS QUIZ THE PONTIAC PRESS Monday, October 7, 1968 PART I - NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL Give yourself 10 points for each correct 1 The area of Equatorial Guinea becomes independent from.... on October 12. a-Spaln b-France c-Portugal Match word clues with their corresponding pictures or symbols. 10 points for each correct answer. j In what part of the world is Equatorial Guinea located? 3 President Johnson, saying that the national welfare was threatened, asked the courts to order striking .... workers back to their jobs for an 80-day “cooling off" period. a-New York communications b-East and GuH Coast dock c-Indiana munitions Marcelo Caetano took over as Premier here TWIGGY a Senate committee is studying repair prices L The President made the above move under the .... Act a-Natlooai Security b-Taft-Hartley c-Smith Republican vice-presidential candidate Spiro Agnew 5 Republican Max Rafferty and Democrat Alan Cranston are battling for a United States Senate seat representing.... a-Californla b-Arizona c-New York State signal for the start of Mexico’s Olympic Games West German Chancellor Kurt Klesinger PART II - WORDS IN THE NEWS Take 4 points for each word that you can match with its correct meaning. 1 ..interrogate a-haVe a third party try to settle differences 2 ..arbitrate between two sides b-grow or spread 3 ..proliferate rapidly > c-question closely . 4..concede d-combine two or more organizations 5...merge e-give way or admit PART III - NAMES IN THE NEWS Take 6 points for names that you can Correctly match with the clues. 1 ..odumegwu OJukwu a-Premier, Communist China b-Blafran leader 2 ..Boeing c-began producing record-sized 747pas- 3 ..Suharto senger Jet d-typhoon left about 4 ChouEnlai 6,000 homeless In Philippines 6...Elaine e-President, Indonesia 6...„ major tribe of Biafra, the breakaway Nigerian state model arrives in U.S. with “new look" 8... j, Russell Wiggins^ 3 named as new UN IBO Ambassador 9.. ... Columbus Day is Oct. 12 10.. .,* I gf ^ Voters agreed to a new > ty&L. constitution here V & HOW DO YOU RATI? ( Scots Each Side of Quiz Separately) 71 to 80 point* - Good. '91 to 100 point* - TOP SCORE! 61 to 70 poMs - Felt. 81 to 90 points • Excellent. 60 or Under???- MJflj FAMILY DISCUSSION QUESTION What are some of the reasons nauoUB take part in the Olympic Games? * 10768 0 VEC, Inc., Medlion, Wlicantin THIS WEEK’S CHALLENGE! «o. After merging with surrounding local government M1I became our nation’s largest city l^i area. f Save This Practice Examination! STUDENTS Valuable Reference Material For Exams. ANSWERS TO TODAY’S NEWS QUIZ 0-81 10-8 trt IJ-L id* in in *H* WH p-g ie-t la-c io-| <0*1 Nil MW •PH0|j ‘a||!AU0«|9vr I30N3TTVH9 p-g la-9 lq-8 l«-I <0*1 >11 MW I iq-t iq-f tomwnem-lft-m M|* «§§y Golden Ripe Bananas ASSORTED COLOR$ KRAFTS U.S. NO. 1 Yellow Onions Michigan potatoes 20 - 79' Compart Any Time! *Weakly Sale-price Special* On Items You Want And Nmmdi < * Deep-cut Discount Prlceu In Iv«nrj Department Every Day Of The Week, i * Kroger Tend* ray Brand Beef-And Tender ay Takes Tlbe Guesswork Out Of Buying Beef. *7e*tden&ty SteM Sirloin Steak $09 Rib Steak Round Steak. I LOIN CHOPS. THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER ?, 1968 ^Soviets Have Gamed New Midwest Footholds if BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) . —i The Russians have rearmed 'Die SovisfcyMfln has won im-1 Egypt, Swia and Iraq and in-portant pew footholds in»Arab creased the Soviet* presence co|intrie§» the 16 months sinoe there. They are active in seven the 1967lHtie East war. lout of the Arab League’s 14 wn'u. FIND CO©~ GUARDIAN COMMUNITY ALUMINUM AWNING , Rif- $92 50 SiV* $43.50 ^$io INSTALLED 14 Attractive Valance FOLDING^ MCTUIt WINDOW iNSTAuiD ALUMINUM AWNING NaB. *119. You Sava *59.» Aluminum 8IDIN0 and TRIM is by for your best buy IDOFIIIfl gutters-downspouts NaeoIMS Get our estimate today Phone 444-1212 26400 W. Eight Mil* Rd. IV2 Miles West of Telegraph East Old*' I Pontiac I Downriver I Birmingham-South field I Toledo n 1-86101FE 5-94521 AV 5-35951 Royal Oak EL 7-2700 | 531-4605 We Design • We Monufocture - We install * We Gut states — Egypt, Syria, Iraq, Yemen, South Yemen, Algeria and Sudan. t H * The KrdmMn has increased its naval presence in'the eastern Mediterranean to a record 44 ships, including the aircraft carrier Moscva . which i s capable Of landing Russian Marines by helicopter. A ft *•<- Unconfirmed reports say the Russians are surveying the Syrian'' port of Tartus to establish facilities there. Soviet ships are said to have already established a permanent QUESTION: How did police'come into being? ★ ★ ★ i ANSWER: In the 800s, in Anglo-Saxon England, authorities began to organize people for military purposes. Each 10 families was called a tithing, and had a tithing man in .charge. Ten such tithings were 100; the man in charge a reeve. Several hundreds made up a county, or shire. The county boss was the shire reeve, and this became shortened to sheriff, a word we still use. This whole system later became adopted for police Jrather than military purposes, with the idea of protecting the citizens and upholding law and order. At first, such police were not paid. In 1829, a group of paid policemen was organized in London by Sir Robert Peel — they were soon called “hobbies” after Peel’s first name. The fun. American police were citizens who served without payout with the rise of cities, paid police groups were soon The little policeman toy shows the change. With his ’ beard, necktie and plain bat be looks like a civilian, but his buttons, badge and nightstick show him to be a real cop, a word which is said to have come from the early copper star policemen wore. , (You can win $10 cash plus AP’s handsome World Yearbook if your question, mailed on a postcard to Junior Editors in care of this newspaper, is selected for a prize.) presence in Alexandria and Port Said. / { - » NEWLY INVOLVED Newly Involved with the Soviet Union are Vemen, Sudan and the former Brnish colony of Aden, now called the Yemen People’s Republic. Last December, when the pullout of Egyptian troops from Yemen , was imminent, the Russians agreed to supply the republican government with a squadron each of fighters bombers. strongman, Lt. Gen.. Hassan el becoming ever In April, a shipment of 22 tanks plus rocket-equipped armored vehicles,■ self-propelled gups and ammunition arrived id Yemen. Forth Yemeni^ officers went to Russia last month for weapons training. Now the Yemen premier and Soviet Union for training. Following die approval of the arms deal in July, | new Soviet ambassador was appointed in Khartoum because, to the words of Pravada, “the atmosphere is Amri, is ip-Moscow to work out a new arrps agreement. He has new offensive by his royalist opponents, backed by neighboring pro-Western Arabia, is imminent. Sudan, in Africa, has signed a $96-million arms agreement with Russia, including MIG Jets, antiaircraft weapons and tanks. the Red Ska’s southern outlet (t« Israeli shipping. ■fayorable for the development of cooperation” with Communist countries. * A Sudan formerly brought its arms largely from Britain. South Yemen wrested independence from Britain Inst November, 'and a left is government was installed.. It1 assistance agreement Sudanese officers are in the protpptly threatened to block Soviets. A gift shipment of 4,000 Three months later, the government fired 40 British pitots, navy spe army advisers for allegedly being /‘spies and conCtAr* revolutionaries.” to late March, a Soviet military delegation came Aden to'study its defense needs, Mk i a Soviet small automatic weapons pnd 65 military vehicles had arrived hr Jtdy* followed by the first ambassador at the end of April, Foilr months later, the fan- Way Discovered to ; Hold False Teeth : BAKERSFIELD, Calif, — A new djuicoverjr icalled Aeryline is big • • news. Users say. it fits plates so I beautifully they can’t believe it ■ Acrylintfuflea a gtiMn# now vs. • cfuimprinepe.nl poverished government signed Stag: military and technical >' assistance agreement with thellng. Acryline fsit aUcfrug stores: ; ONLY AT KROGER TENDERAY BEEF 1R 59* MICHIGAN GRADE 1 Skinless Wtoasrs..2»*99< PESCHKE'S Smoked Hams PULL SHANK HALF WHOLE OR BUTT PORTION 49 59 Sliced Bploafla.. 14-OZ JBi eeeWTPKG"BW KROGER LABEL Fruit Cocktail 5«. *1 l-OZCANS | (E PIZZA FAST WITH Appian Way Pizza £25* LADY MYERS STEM A PIECES Mushrooms..................y™,I9* SPAGHETTI WITH SAUCE Franca* American :F$LI2* JIFFY BRAND Biscuit Mix............2 Vi #*29* FOR COOKING OR £rYM Jewel Shortening.3 39* CHOICE. OF GRINDS Maxwell House Coffee..™.49* SUPER CLEANER Miracle While..............Sir SPECIAL LABEL ley liquid..............;JSMW CA TOP VALUE dV STAMPS vfumvbAicu Pioneer Sugar.. 5 ■« 49* LIGHTLY SALTED* BUTTER Land O’ Lake*..........£74< - WITH THIS COUPON 6B CLOVER VALLEY SOLID : S in Roll Margarine....^. 12* I 5UtEDBAC°N ■ NORTON FROZEN MINCE. APPLE OR ■ Valid thru Wed., Oct. 9, 1968 _J 1-LB 4-OZ ■» Pumpkin Pip...........25* THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1968 The following'ere (op prices covering sales of locally growta produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished hy the Detroit Bureau of Mtirfceta-as of Thursday. Product AnI» C#rtl#iH/buf^f... A; • ■ • • 1 1 ApplM, D«liclou>, Golden. Du. ....rSM. Cantaloup*, bu. '.........3J0, wSiS9WmSSS gsj&WlaBafefl Sifoc/c MartResumes Advance stock market resumed its advance in heavy trading early today. Gains outnumbered- looses byjl more than 200 issues. More than a million shares changed hands in the first half hour. mss Cabba»«' Stwdard - mPMSmM&m', 1 Cinngglll^.fPPPMS^1 iPI^ * f‘1 cSSn&5S- at Cejery^Pweai ’ Htartsf o«M Corn, SwefcT.Mz.Bw ! The Dow Jones industrial av-erage advanced a point or so. Strength was scattered throughout the list, and most gains wire limited to fractions. Control Data rose a point. Du £ont was a point lower. naoq$#£NT ^showing Despite a pickup in orders re-ported by major steel mills the Steel stocks put on an.' ‘|||i| Jent performance. Jones & jjmghlin was up a fraction, Re-2.m jpublic off sli^itly, U.S. Steel un- gearsRoebuck ahead fraetional- iy. Rails wera slow in,getting un-er way. JPenp-, Central and Sou^riirn Pacific added frac- Opening blocks included: American Gan, up % at 49% on ^{fSDO shares; Southern Pa- ssa KRS3«j».:::: Leeks, dz. ToST •>. Onions, 50-lb. MM ...... Onions, firsMrm tafis.....J® Onions, ek*lhi«r».n>. big Parsley, curly, SfcBdi*. • Parsley, Root, dz. bctis. s5$jSp& y mT::.v::.v'g pfiS&fc ph~. b'"*" H Peppers, Rao Sweet, pk. ssafwfti Motors wen unchanged to a bit higher. Mail-order-retails advanced moderately, with Montgomery Ward, Woolworth and dfle, unchanged at 42 on 5,000; and Allied Chemical, unchanged at 36 on 0,600, •Prices rose on the American Stock Exchange. : 4 • * j On Friday The Associated Press average of 60 stocks rose i.7 to 355.7, a new high for the year. Suspects Queried by Detroit Police DETROIT (UPI) Police todey were questioning two suipecta in the beating death of a gas, station manager whose bound-and-gagged body 'was found in kis car. passerby discovered the body of Josep Risek, 51, Dearborn, lying face down in his car on the city’s West Side early yesterday.. He had been Apollo 7 Crew Gels Checkup Countdown Starts for Friday Orbit Shot struck in the back of the head several times and a bloody tire iron was found nearby. * ★- ★ The car was a half a mile from Risek’s gas station, where he had been last seen a" Saturday night. * * *. Police were holding employe of the station an former employe for vestigation of the slaying. GAPE KENNED (UPI) -Apollo 7 Astronauts Walter Schirra, Doan Eisele and -Walter Cunningham today bought medical clearance for Friday’s launch on a demanding 11-day, 4-miHlon-mile space flight around earth. The idiots, fresh from Weekend of rest, faced their last major preflight p b y s i c a checkup to make certain they are ready tar the trip and to gather data to be compared with a postflight examination. The New York Stock Exchange There was no doubt about the health of the three men I however. Schirra, Eisele an [Cunningham appear in perfect condition and they are eager to get going. They have- been preparing for this flight for more than two years. a lot of work, a hell of lot of work to get one of these things off,” Schirra said in a recent interview. He is veteran of Mercury and Gemini space Rights and expects to retire from the space pilotl a-man.” business after the orbital shakedown run of Apollo 7. COUNTDOWN STARTS The preliminary countdown on the 22-story space machine began yesterday and was pro-ceedirtk smoothly toward an on-time launching at 11 a.m. EDT Friday. Tips shot will open the third generation of American manned space flight, and may be the direct precursor of the flight of three astronauts into orbi around the moon and back in December. known, but the cost is: upwards $7.5 billion a year. Aqd that figure is a con-i servative one, says Ross VonWiegand/ industrial sultant to tne National Council on Alcoholism. Some management sources put it as high $7.5 billion iyerr. it ★ . ★ ’Our figures are those that can’t be gone below," VonWiegand said. “We figure a minimum of 5.3 per cent of the total work force, or about 3 million employed people, has alcoholism. Every active alcoholic on the payroll nationally couldn’t cost a n employer less than $1,585 a year. But these are fairly conservative figures. They could run much higher. The cost figure, VonWiegand said includes lost time, sick leave pay, accident pay resulting from alcoholism, disability payments, and earlier retirement payments. ON JOB, BUT . . . It also includes the hard to calculate costs run up by the hungover worker who is on the job but isn’t performing as well as he would normally. “There’s a warm body there, but he isn't functioning,'1 VonWiegand said. “He’s a half- age range. A company la apt to have a considerable investment on the nert of the of In these workers, and they are the alcohol problem in barium. By PHIL THOMAS AP Business Writer their companies the MW ¥DBIC ^ Tbe eeuN of loom usually era fai alcoholism among workers isn’t service employes in the 3S-tod0 Boozing Brui to Business in UM mm lie gratis* iitirtf liipg- interest in company ywgriiito of control 0*1 rehabiHtati».N Habbe said tbe Uteri study not airily replaced. This is-i especially true of those at the manager and executive echelons.” PROGRAMS INSTITUTED In an effort to combat alcoholism and its effects, Habbe said, “many oempaniee that did not have alcohol-control programs in 1958 have them today. He said the Conference Board made a study in 1958 and ____ this year of the views and attitudes of top executives of 100 companies on alcoholism and drinking problems. Fifty of those queried "responded, he said, and, “although there wide differences ... the consensus shows concern for those with drinking problems and an Stephen Habbe, in an article dealing with alcoholism and the business community in the October issue df “The weon-ference Board Record,” notes: Surveys Hint GOP Won't Control House The object of the voyage , of Apollo 7 is to prove that the sophisticated new breed of spaceship is mature enough to transport men on the 480,000-mile lunar roundtrip. Success would prove that the $25 billion program to land men on the moon before the end of next year is fully recovered from the Apollo 1 fire which killed the first Apollo crew 20 months ago. EXTENSIVE REDESIGN “The Apollo 7 spacecraft the product of extensive redesign in the past year and a half,” the space agency a weekend statement. “The real test of its capability when it is .checked out in space with men at the control.’ The next Apollo, the Apollo 8 spacecraft that may make the December moon flight, was scheduled to be mounted on its towering Saturn 5 rocket today the Saturn’s assembly building. The entire 363-foot machine is to be moved the 52-story “garage” to the oceanside launch site a day before Apollo 7 takes off. " ★ it "k As a further indication of how the moon flight program picking up momentum, the Apollo 9 command ship arrived here over the weekend. It will be launched in February or March. The 16-ton Apollo 7 will be the last of the three-seaters in the moon program to be launched by a Saturn IB rocket, ttMO foot, two-stage launcher that packs a total of 1.8 million pounds of thrust. The Saturn 5 that will take over in December generates 8.8 million pounds of push in three stages and is the only American rocket with enough power to propel 100,000-pound Apollo to moon. BONO AVlBAOjft _ Compiled Bj Th# AjNcMM Rrm Ralls Ind. Util. •— • | 66.0 99.7 81.1 NOon Frl. Pr®v. day Week ago Month Year 89.5 81.9 _____ ___ _____ _____ __ _ 89.1 81,7 rear ago 68.2 91.4 BOM 92,1 tw,9 ISSfiF tti SI 35 fi I* mm iR 73.0 95.5 04.9 ft* 64.6 16.1 79.0 (9.1 Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AP) - Th# CMh POIi-■ -* IB# Treasury Oct. t 196# com. t. 3. 1909 (In dollars): ; 3M09.14#403AO S® 47467.537,00.35 * xOH,230,411,799.83 334,171,834,164.35 News in Brief Carl Anderson, 24, of 305 Hughes told Pontiac police yesterday that items valued at $439, including a portable TV, a stereo and a radio, were stolen in a break-in of his hornq. Bank Dividend 1116 board of directors of Birmingham — Bloomfield Bank have declared a dividend of $1 per share on bank capital stock outstanding to shareholders of record, Oct: 9. NEW YORK (UPI) - Two surveys published today indicate! Republicans will gain a number of seats in Congress this fall, but not enough to give them control of either House. Newsweek magazine said that, if the election were held today, the GOP probably would win 200 seats in the House of Representatives, 12 less than a majority..Hie New York Times estimated the probable Republican House total at 197 seats. ★ * it Both surveys agreed the Democrats are almost certain to retain control of the Senate. In the present Congress Republicans have 187 of the 435 House septs and 37 of tbe seats in the Senate. WONT BE ENOUGH Newsweek said a poll of its correspondents in the 50 states indicates Republicans will not control enough state congressional delegations to be of electing Richard M. Nixon if George C. Wallace wins enough electoral votes to throw the presidential election into tbe House. Hie Times made its estimates with caution. ir it w “The survey indicated factors that could result in more substantial gains for the Republicans, possibly enough to win narrow eoirtrtyl of the House,” tha^g^rwaid. “The same factora appeared at work in the races for the Senate.” Newsweek’s speculation about congressional election of the next president was based on the constitutional provision that leaves the choice of a chief executive to the House if no candidate received a majority vote in the electoral college. it it it In such a contingency, each state would cast one vote, and 26 votes would be necessary for victory. The magazine estimated that, s of today, Nixon could count i the votes of 20 state delegations to 19 for Hubert H. Humphrey, 3 for Wallace and 8 tied. The nation of Scotland includes 186 inhabited islands. ZsaZsa Will 1 Retire to Beauty BUDAPEST, Hungary (AP)-Visiting her native Budapest for the first time in 30 years, actress Zsa Zsa Gabor told friends today she intends to run a beauty parlor when she gives up acting. Her shop sign will say “beauty care, a la Zsa Zsa,” she added. She didn’t say where the shop would be. Killed Battling Police Chase Ends in Indiana After Ohio Robbery NEW HAVEN, Ind. (UP!) -A teen - age girt from Virginia was killed yesterday in a gun battle with Indiana State Police following a robbery in Ohio in which $8 and a credit card were taken. Dead was Peggy Lee Corbin, 16, Woodbridge, Va. ★ 4 wj Authorities said she allegedly participated in the holdup of the Van-Del truck stop at Delphos, Ohio with a youth identified as Charles Waxier Jr., 18, no known address. Police said the couple then fled along U.S. 30 across the Indiana state line, being chased by Ohio police. They were finally stopped at a roadblock set up by Indiana State Police 24 in New Haven in ADen County, adjacent to the Ohio state line. MAN GETS OUT Authorities said Waxier got out of the car when ordered to do so. it * * But while trooper Tom Glad-ieux was attempting to unfasten Miss Corbin’s seat belt, he said she placed a 32-caliber automatic pistol against his stomach and ordered him to “back up “or you’re dead.” Gladieux stepped back. * ★ * The girl then reportedly tried to get out of the car and fired twice at Trooper Steve Harris and New Haven Town Marshal Jack Swygart She missed both of then. Hie officers then, returned the fire, fatally wounding her. * ★ • ★ She was dead on arrival at Parkview Hospital in Fort Wayne. Waxier was taken to the Allen County Jail in Fort Wayne. and a new readiness to ttico steps to deal with It” Ten years ago, be said, 21 of the 50 companies replied that if they dkl have an alcohol problem it was nothing to worry about but in the latest study only 16 gave tills answer. CONCERN INCREASES “Ten years ago, three companies said their problem with alcohol was serious enough to give them concern. Today nine are concerned. Hie remaining companies take mid positions.” While more companies today recognize the alcohol problem as a serious one, Habbe said, “this change gives little solace to serious students of alcoholism, who point out that relatively few companies perceive tbe true dimensions of the drinking problems hr their oganizations, and that still fewer have been motivated to the point of instituting control programs.” it it it VonWiegand agreed that while some progress was being made toward recognizing alcoholism as an illness “in the grea^majority of cases not too much progress has been made ' sre.” Every company that doesn’t . have an alcoholism program, be said, “does have an unwritten policy that says, essentially, management will pay cash prizes and other economic premiums to any employe who can successfully conceal his alcoholism “Hie man who admits he has been out on a binge won’t get sick pay. But if he can conceal this, he gets paid. “The employe who no longer can conceal his alcoholism usually is fired.” Russians May Have Tested Satellite Arms BERLIN (AP) - A spokesman for the Wilhelm Foerater Observatory in West Berlin said today the Soviet Union may have tested* its new satellite weapons system again recently. Harm Zimmer said Cosmos 244, sent up Oct. 2, was the apparent vehicle. According to measured data available to him, Zimmer added, Coemos 244 was separated-from its rocket during its firet orbit and “aimed” for a landing in south-central Asian Russia. * ♦ ★ It was the first such suborbital shot by the Russians for some time, a type that is used to test a space weapons delivery system, he said.' Zimmer described this subor-ital system as one with lass than a full orbit, ranging in altL b about 180 to to 200 miles . or in between an intercontinental ballistics missile and a true satellite. By ROGER E. SPEAR Q—I am self-employed, 41 and would like to set up a pemiou fund. I have to mind using $000 a year with the idea it would be tax-deductible. Have you any information that would help me? -R.M. A—If you are eligible under the terms of the Keough Act-professional or self-employed in an unincorporated business—you can set aside the amount you have in mind, tax-free, if it does not exceed 10 per cent of your annual income. Also tax-free are the income and capital gains on your investment during the accumulating period. ★ *■ ★ You have five chokes the method of investing: special issue governmental bonds, insurance annuity plans, qualified bank trusts, open-end mutual funds or face amount certificates. A mutual fund, variable insurance annuity and certain bank trust arrangements have age tor any full-time employee —defined as working over 20 ground, hours a week for mare thaa five! cannot be withdrawn, i cases of severe liability or death, until age 50%, a very thorough study should h|made prior to committing yourself. it it it , Q-We have held Quaker Oafs tor many years, but it has jast reached the price we paid. Should we coatfenw to hold er •ell even?—J. F., B. M. A—In my opinion now that several problem areas have been successfully resolved; Quaker Oats is an above-average growth situation, hi the last marginally profitable _ which of course affected . 13.7 per cent in the year ended June 20. The nicriwiliri turnaround of its Burry dlvlriipit of foreign open* appreciation potential and would tions aad the provide fluctuating income. You accorded newly must deposit tbe s • earnings into mm8 (ConMght, lift) ;,ss. MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1908 Stars Team Up jn Cancert for $30j000 Scholarship hoping to raise $30,000 for a per-BB manent Billy Stratum SChofor- ■ ship at the JuiUiaTd School of HH )tfnsip Strayhorn Was the composer ■ of “Take the A Train,” made fa- ^K~f> ' " mous by the Ellington band. I Ticket prices for 2,836-seat, ■ Philharmonic Hall ranged from $2.25 to $100 and, with donations Hp pY t * that came in, sponsors were op- B|BP *. f ' ' timistic the $30,000 had been Ob- ■h * 3 t tained Hi, Strayhorn was a long-time j cocomposer, coarranger and |H Ifriend of Ellington; he died at age 51 May 31, 1967. •Tho-wve-Wm v HHHHHhHI nine began with “Take the A I •' .Train”' by the Ellington band, on getting out of the confining wash tub. Debbie and with b ranngtnn on piano .ennon of St. Petersburg, Fla., enjoy the antics. ^ wilIlams trumpet. .....,,,. —J.--------l----_-■% ..vt.'------pv|~' SINGS 5SQNGS • I Lena Horne, In African hair C • f I i J style and wine-color gown, sang \Pn/lfP \mtPn [five songs backed by the Chipo JVl W «Vw JlUIvU j Hamilton Quartet She also sang Loqql £zech Officials Re^iitt Us~Pravada MOSCOW (Aft) —Pravda everywhere—no time, the situa- Ttllv m*YTi.u 1 HI complained today mat efforts of Soviet sokfctters to establish frixoiUy.jenii^jiith Czechoslovaks are Still being rebuffed by some low officials. “Hie number of contacts is increasing from e^govern-jment of Northem/lreland injured 96 demonstrators, police and bystanders, officials reported. Shopkeepers in Northern Ireland’s second largest city worked into the night Sunday iii i streets littered with stones to re- School Strife Plans Offered place windows clashes between demonstrators. Six policemen and a fireman were hurt in the skirmishes. Demonstrators threw stones id police in steel helmets, supported by a water cannon, broke up a crowd of 800 with a baton charge. Crowds of teen-agers smashed indows in the central part of the city and a police car was hit by a firebomb. BIAS CHARGED The violence erupted with nationalists charging discrimination against Northern Ireland’s Roman Catholic minority. Most Catholics under the northern Ul- I Service for in the] Thirty demonstrators, includ- Wood, 19, of police add ing a member of Parliament, were hurt in clashes Saturday afternoon. The list of injured tripled Sunday and included three children. Charges of police brutality were raised and the government in London was asked to hold an inquiry. The British government, however, handles defense and foreign relations for Northern Ireland but leaves police matters in Irish hands. MESSAGE TO WILSON The Londonderry Trade Council messaged Prime Minister Harold Wilson in London pro- vat ama7aa nipn An ster government want to unite KALAMAZOO '»B«i«tEsie|a«R»« ttjuLXJiXRAJULRlJUULJUty An organization called the Committee of Concerned Parents proposed that the 2,200-member student body be divided into two sections, each to attend school half-days only. It said this would reduce congestion in halls and cafeterias, therefore minimize ;the threat of conflicts between students. RECESS CLASH A free-for-all between about 100 black and white students more than a week ago shut down the school for a week. The clash came during the hour recess. The committee of parents said half-day classes would allow all students to eat at home, rather than at the school. a , a * The school board was scheduled to act on the committee’s proposals tonight. Central High School also was plagued by racial strife last year. About 400 of its students are Negro. COMMITTEE PROPOSALS Other committee proposals would require the transfer of problem students to the Hurd School, and suspension and prosecution of any student found in possession of a weapon or involved with assault. south. Demonstrations began Saturday with a civil rights march protesting alleged abuses 'against Catholics in housing, employment and voting regulations. Russian Satellite toMelay Radio and TV Signals MOSCOW (AP) — A new communications satellite, Molnia 1, was put into orbit two days ago, the Soviet Union announced to- It has a high eliptical orbit, putting it over the Soviet Union for the larger part of its flight. The angle of orbit to the equator is 65 degrees and the period of revolution is 11 hours and'52 minutes. Tass said the satellite will be used for long distance radio and telegraph communications and also to relay Soviet television programs to the extreme northern parts of the country, Siberia, central Asia and tile Soviet far east. The satellite equipment, which includes a system for cor- John A. felson will be 1 p.m. Wednesday at Sparks-Griffin Funeral home with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. ' Tony Bennett sang a new song SgT Wood died Sept. 27 of by Ellington, “Making That 'style mid wine-colo: [five songs backed1 I Hamilton Quartet S— I “I Got It Bad” with L playing piano and said 4(1____ sang it accompanied by Stcay-hom. Miss Horne isn’t often heard in New York, but her voice still is as liquid and inviting as tawny brandy. ‘The citizens of this city were attacked indiscriminately by police ... and women children were not excluded from police excesses ... We strongly urge the government to take action.” AAA William Craig, Northern Ireland’s minister of home affairs, countered that police “used no more force than -.was necessary.” He said there was evidence that tht Irish Republican Army, the outlawed nationalist insurgents, bad infiltrated the civil-rights movement. A A A ‘There is no doubt this was a Republican front,”. Craig woulds received when a booby-trapped truck exploded in Vietr nam. Surviving are his wife, Linda; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Herchel Wood of Pontiac; two brothers, Mark and Hercbel at home; four sisters, Pamela, Barbara, Vicki and Lisa, all at home; and grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Marchbanks and Mrs. Grace Wood, all of Arkansas. Pontiac Northern High School graduate, Wood had been in Vietnam since December. He was due to return Oct. 20. Love Scene;” a song Ellington wrote for A1 Hibbler, “Just a Lucky So and So,” and broke it up with “It Don’t Mean a Thing.” TO shouts for more, he returned to sing “I Left My Heart in San Francisco.” Two Men Hold Up Pontiac Twp. Motel A Pontiac Township motel reportedly was robbed of $150 early yesterday by two men pretending they, were looking for a room. A A A Herbert Stephens, manager of the King Motel, 1300 Opdyke, told Oakland County sheriff’s deputies that the money taken from a cash register when he went to check on a Church Split on Plan to Raze Building IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — Members of the First Presbyterian Church, have rejected architects’ plans to demolish their 112-year-old church building. Its preservation was the central issue in a church trial earlier this year. The congregation voted 158-56 Sunday to reject the plans and left the future of the building in doubt. Efforts by Joseph E. Baker, an English professor at the University of Iowa, and his wife to save tiie building as an example of 19th century Gothic resulted in their, conviction by a church court of “disrupting the peace and unity” of the congregation supply unit, is functioning normal, Tass The robbery occurred about 2:40 a.m. The thieves were rection of the orbit and a power believed to be driving a 1968 blue Plymouth, acpording to Stephens. One of Many Uses Radioactive Atom Keeps Time You Can Look . - to Us . . . ... for every service that is required. We mean this sincerely. The facilities of the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home are planned to see that youf personal duties, as well as our services, are completed properly and in good taste. , (Phone FEDERAL 4-4511 *P(vJdnq J[ On Our ‘Premises = IS pm $55 WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC WASHINGTON (UP!) — The radioactive atom is one of the better timekeepers in nature. A specific atom emits characteristic rays at a known rate. Thanks to man-made electronics, atomic frequencies can be used to regulate clocks which gain or lose no more than a few seconds a year. AAA So now a watch company (Bulova) is doing research aimed at getting,the atomic dock down to wristwatch size. This is just one example of how hard ingenious people are working to saddle the atom with ever more chores. IN PROSPECTING The Atomic Energy Commission and the geological survey are trying to get it to take over the labors performed of yore by the bearded and sweaty prospector working with primitive Tools borne to the scene qt operations by a tired burro. The up-to-date prospector uses the rare, man-made element Californium-252; which has the faculty of shooting out neutrons. These subnuclear projectiles make radioactive the minerals they hit. And by the rays emitted by thus bombarded minerals the atomic prospector can quickly determine whether they contain gold, silver, or other valuable metals. A A A The AEC also has developed a small portable X-ray mineral analyzer which can be used in the field to make quick studies of everything from the ash content of coal to the constituents, of wet cement. BEST-KNOWN The manifold uses of radioactive materials (radioisotopes) in industry, medicine, and agriculture have been much publicized. Radioisotopes, for example, supply the energy for implanted heart stimulators (pacemakers) and for electrical power systems aboard spacecraft. AAA Less well-known, perhaps, are the “neutron activation” devices for doing a lot of things, including detection of art forgeries. By taking atomic “fingerprints” of pigments used in paintings, it is nbw feasible to date and catalogue art works in a way that will make it practically impossible to fake an old master and get by with il? V Hanoi Decries Dike Bombing SAIGON (AP) - Radio Hanoi says U.S. planes, “taking advantage of heavy rains and big' floods,” intensified attacks, against dikes and water conservation projects in North Vietnam’s southern panhandle dur-1 ing September. AAA In a broadcast monitored Saigon, Radio Hanoi said 138 portions of dike* had been heavily damaged during the month. The radio added that 136 workers attempting to repair the alleged damage were killed or wounded. A A' A The report, from North Vietnam’s Ministry of Water Conservation, detailed individual strikes on dikes and said the al-attaeks “are utterly odious crimes running counter to international law and human morality.” PTA Dinner Set Highlighting the first meeting Appeals by Baker and his wife of the 1968-’69 school year for to overturn the conviction by panel of laymen and clerjr and their suspension from membership, offices and communion in the church were rejected by state and national Presbyterian ruling bodies. The Bakers were accused of making abusive and derogatory statements to other members of the congregation in their cam-to save the building. members of Kennedy Junior High School’s PTA will be family dinner Tuesday in the] cafetorium at 6:15 p.m. AAA A discussion entitled “Vandalism,” led by Jim Lathemer, police counselor at Pontiac Central High School, will precede the dinner. A , question and answer period will conclude Lathemer’s talk. ROBERHILSMAN Ex-JFK Aide Guest Speaker Friday at OU The next lecturer in Oakland University’s, speaker series is a political scientist who served as President Kennedy’s principal troubleshooter on the firing lines of Southeast Asia. AAA Roger Hilsman, former assistant secretary of state for Far Eastern affairs, will answer the question, “Who makes American foreign policy?,” in a talk entitled “International Politics and the American Public.” AAA He will speak in a public lecture at 11 a.m. Friday, in Wilson Hall auditorium and will answer questions in an open discussion period at 2 p.m. that day in the Oakland Center Gold Room. an, who has been a professor of government at Columbia University since 1964, has a wide-ranging background of professional soldier, government administrator, intelligence expert, scholar, diplomat, and teacher. APPOINTED BY JFib He was appointed by President Kennedy to serve as one of his administration’s chief foreign policy makers. Hilsmah served initially as director of the State Department’s Bureau of Intelligence and Research and, in this capacity, went to Vietnam, Laos, and India. In 1963 he was chosen to replace W. AVerell Harriman as assistant secretary of state for Far Eastern affairs. a A A The crises he faced in this post included the Buddhist revolts and the coup against President Diem in Vietnam, territorial disputes between Malaysiaand Indonesia, Communist trams in Laos, and the ideological rift between Communist China and the Soviet Union. nn.. r4CALALTBjAflONS oAKrsrgoz SLQOMPISLO HILLS, MICHIGAN Th» Board of Truatooo of the Com-nunlty Collage District of ports of Oak-,jnd, Livingston, Lapoor and Washtenaw Counties. Mlchloen iOaklend Community College) will receive sealed bids for .the rehard Rldae Cempue..iloctrjcel Altor-’ is. Budding "P'-Ooto Procewlng, ri:80PJd.7«.O.T., ’•— -uete rrocessmy, , E.D.r., Tuesday, October res at me Office of Physical Facilities, Second Floor, Budding "D" Orchard Ir&rcS. TIGHT SQUEEZE—Marius Andersen of Ryomgard, Denmark, must negotiate this narrow 65-foot-long alley connecting his back yard with the street. The Danish shoemaker carries a tape measure with him whenever he shops for a -new car. W 1 * by mo owner ora bo aecmnpanlod by Bid Bond Or Certified Clwck In ■mount of fivo per cent (5%) of nronosel submitted. Proposal shal [SjSW! lairad on'or rt^SSch^oyv'&fobor0! MV7oTl»SS«F«rsd Ridge Campus, J7055 Orchard Lake Road, F*A*ehoc!kVfor**5oSonmust bo submitted at a deposit for two (2) sets of plans ■nd specifications, seme to bo refunded rts>*ofn^)lSdlnfl documents, .. v.——11 bo furnished the prime bidders only upon payment of the cost of reproduction. Those must bo relumed “ refund will bo made for the re- ^bSgr. g ------------- d Labor I, Material Bond, etch In the fount of MOft of the Contract, me total it of which shall bo paid by tho ec-pted bidder. All proposals submitted shall remain m for a period of thirty (30) days or official Oparin* of bids, rhe Board of Trustees reserves tho jht to roloct any and alt bids In whole In part, and to waive any informalities Board of Trustees „ Oakland Community College •' Bloomfield Hills. Michigan HELEN fCAISBA, Secretary September 30, October 7. 1M3