' SHOTGUN GUARD — A barck:hesU)d tank driver provides w cover for a comrade cruwiing to safety in dense jungle about an M48 ta|;ik team of the llih Armor^ Cavalry Regiment. 40 miles northwest of Saigon after their tank was korcked out Shotguns are a favorite weapon of many soldiers in densely by armor-piercing rocket grenades, The soldiers were part of forested areas. ---- —^— ---------------------—-------------^—_____ ^ - Milliken Sees Abortion Bill OK From Oar News Wires LANSING - Gov. William Milliken declared today he thinks an abortion bill will be adopted by the Legislature. The governor said in a news conference he would favor the approach of a limited reform proposol contained in a 79 on Jetliner Believed Dead bill sponsored by Sen. Gilbert Bursley, R-Ann Arbor., # ★ ★ Senate leaders had been speculating the emotion-charged issue of abortion Related Story, Page Bri law reform would meet approval in the upper chamber. “I believe that some |>roposal has an extremely good chance to pass,” said Senate Majority Leader Emil Lockwood, ' R—St. Louis, who has pledged his support for (a bill authorizing abortions under limited circumstances. MONTERREY, Mexico (AP) -Seventy-nine persons, including Mexico’s hope for the Davis Cup and a former president of the nation’s ruling party, are believed to have died In the crash of a Mexican jetliner on a mountain. Related Story, Page C-7 Minority Leader Sander Levin, 1> Berkley, said “there’s a better than 50-50 chance" the Senate will pass a measure reforming the Michigan law that now allows termination of pregnancy only A helicopter pilot who flew over the wreckage of the Mexicans de Ayiacion plane reported debris was scattered across the side of the mountain 30 miles west of Monterrey and was burning hours after the crash yesterday. He said there was no chance anyone survived and no sign of life. On the passenger list were Rafael Osuna, Mexico’s top tennis player, who engineered his country’s upset victory over Australia in the Davis Cup Inter-zone play last month, and Carlos Madrazo, former president of the Institutional revolutionary party, and his wife. The chief of Mexico’s highway department, Raul Chapa Zarate; the president of the National Fiscal Court, Generoso Chapa; and their wives also were reported aboard. Church Rector Discusses Impact of Black Demand py NED ADAMSON Christ Church Cranbrook of Bloomfield Hills Is — M the surface ^ a weil-heelml lard. 1 , , ■ w 'W! ■ Search parties were within eight miles of the scene when bad weather and rugged terrain halted them last night. Soldiers, police and volunteers would try to climb the mountain today. w ★ ★ Two U.S. Coast Guard helicopters from New Orleans, La., and Corpus Chrlsti, Tex., and several helicopters sent by the Mexican government were to try to reach the scene today if there was a break in rainy, foggy weather. ’The spacious and sprawling Gothic edifice with an assessed property value of fl.5 million and a towering carrfllon reaching Into the sky—smacks of wealth and power. ♦ w ♦ Last Sunday 20 representatives of the National Black Economic Development Conference peaceably entered the church during the 9 a.m. worship service and presented a black manifesto. A considerable amount of the language in the manifesto, which calls for reparations from white American churches totaling |S00 million for alleged racial dlscriminatloi^ strong and dictatorial'. John, Watson, former editor of the Wayne State Univm'sity student newspaper, thp South End, presented the manifesto. ’ . A sample of its rhetoric . . . "We call upon all white Bloomfield Hills' Christians to awaken to the call of a civilized 20th Century. Religion no longer can be used as a cloak for continual lack of GMC Truck Adds to Record String GMC TruckvA Coach Division poried Its eighth straight month of record shies with 13,538 tru» and coach deliveries in May, Martin J. Gaserio, vice president of General Motors 0114^ divisional general Monthly GMC salesNiast September have surpassed previous Words set for comparable months, he said. Itie former May sales high was 13,443 sk last year. Calendar year truck a^ cogch deliveries through May totmed 64,313 units, a 7.4 per cent increase over the prior record of 59,861 for the same five inontluL_established last year, Caserio Jhe Weather U.S.■WMiMr SuruM eortc* Partly Cloudy, Cool (OtWMt PW« 1) Home Edition THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 1969 VOL. 127 NO. 102 ★★ ★ -68 PAGES Kto PSH Holdup Trio Eludes City Police when the life of the mother is in danger. ’The senators voted to debate the issue next Tuesday. ★ * ★ Chahchs ot favbrable action appeared dimmer in the lower chamber, where Speaker William Ryan, D-Detroit, a Catholic, opposes abortion law reform. Discussicm of die, abortion question came yesterday after' Sen/* John McCauley, D-Wyandotte, squeezed out the. necessary' 20 votes to order preliminary debate on a proposal that would remove criminal penalties against licensed doctors who perform abortions in licensed and accredited hospitals. ★ w w Bursley’i bill — which leaders believe has the best chance of passage — would allow abortions when the mental or physical health of the mother was endangered, when there was ^‘significant riskV that the baby would be seriously deformed and in cases of rape or incest. By JEAN SAILE Pontiac police said three men sought In coonectidn with the $25,409 armed robbery this morning of the Pontiac State Hospital Credit Union have apparently “vanished." A stativide alert has been sent out with descriptions of the bandit trio and a possible getaway car. A brief road blockade by area police departments was lifted shortly after the holdup on the theory the bandits didn’t leave the city. ★ A ★ Three men were picl^ up by city police for questioning within hours after the robbery but wdre released. ’Two (d three men sought by police held eight hospital employes at gunpoint at 7:11 am. and forced Charles Dowling, the credit union manager, to unlock a vault and a safe inside the vault. AAA Pontiac police say $20,000 in a vault bag was overlooked, as was an unidentified sum in the cashier’s till. The robbers, armed with revolvers, reportedly entered the credit union office shortly after it opened at 7 a.ni. Today is payday at the hospital and the credit union, which normally opens at 8:30 a.m., was open early to* accommodate those on the midnight shift. Patrolmen 'Thomas Patch and Rexford Hagood, alerted by an alarm tripped by a cashier^ were on the scene at 7:14 a.m. A A A ■ , Patch said they met a black Mustang carrying three males as they entered the grounds. “It was traveling at a high ratei of speed,” Patch said. “As soon as we found out what had happened, we put out a BOL (be on the lookout) for the car and the men.” A A A Only two nfen entered the office, ac- coRHingJo Dowling. He said three credit union employes were at work, two other staff people were present, and three customers were In the office to cash checks. One of the bandits reportedly held a gun to the head of one customer, identified only as Darwin Spaysky, while the second went behind the counter and held a gpn to Dowling’s headf ' The remaining hospital employes weirb forced to lie on the floor while the robbers took $1,400 from the cashier’s section, and two cigar boxes containing $9,000 and a bag containing $15,000 from the vault. Another customer, John Midwinter, was hit on the side of the head and forced to enter the office as he came down the basemerlt steps leading to the door. He reportedly was not seriously injured. AAA ' Two of the suspects were deescrlbed by hospital Authorities as being between 5 feet 7 and 5 feet 10 and 25 to 30 years old. At least one was reported wejarlng a goatee. Both Were Negro. the credit union was robbed of $60,000 op Feb. 1, 196k. That robbery has not been solved. compassion, for continued hypocrisy, for the continual exploitation and oj^res-sion and proRtoerlng.’’ And the manlfedo’s concluding graph (Continued on Page A-4, Col. 2) President Clambers Onto Car To Make Speech In San Clemente, Calif. Critics of Military Up in Arms WASHINGTON glpiL Senate critics of administration military p 011 c y , including at least one Republican, are taking strong issue with what they see as President Nixon’s implicaUons in his speech at the Air Force Academy that they are “the new Isolationists.” Joining the barrage of Democratic dissent was Republican Sen. James B. Pearson of Kansas, who said he doesn’t know any fellow critics of high-level military spending who want unilateral U.S. withdrawal from Vietnam or to disarm alone. A A A “I disagree with the President,’’ Pearson, an ABM critic, said in an Interview. "What we want to do Is to prevent the start of a new nuclear arms race. And I don’t thlpk it’s isolationism' to oppose excessive military spending,’’ Sen. William Proxmire, D-Wis., ac- In Toddy's Press Brandon Schools . "Millagft vote Monday poses quandary for voters — PAGE A^. ' • ■ Greyhound Racing state House sponsors scratch vote - PAGE A-14. Looking Back . Ghosts ot past Inhabit aban-' doned farm — PAGES C»M, C-ll. Area News ...............A4 ..........C-U ...........C-W*’ Ble .......D-H Comics ................C-1* Editorials A-8 Food Section . B-14-B-16 Markets ............... Oil Obitnaries . C-14 Pictore Pages -----C-ll» (Ml Sports ..............OI-C-9 Hieaters ................Oil TV and Radio Pragrams . D-17 Vietoam War News A-M Wilson. Eari ............018 Womsn’i Pages .. Sex Education: Handle With Respect r. (EDITOR’S NOTE — This it the first of two articles on the sex education contrmwrsy in Oakland County schools.) W MARY SUNDSTROM “We want to teach that sex Is a , normal, healthy function of the human body to be treated with respect,’’ deenres Jerry Strickler, sex education specialist for Pontiac Schools. Despite' this seemingly ixoble objective, Strickler — along with a mushrooming number of schoolmen, aoross the county, ■ is having to battlo lex classes. Sex education has stirred parontal wfath even more than taxes. Pontiac School District — the largest in Oakland County r- has felt relatively little heat from thccontroveysy that has flared elsewhere. However, Pontiac’s program'is not yet as extensive as sex education is elsewhere. ■ JUST BEGINNING In fact^ most school districts in the county are just beginning to expand their s/tx Instruction. Only one a2heol district, Birmingham, now claims to have a detailed kliidargartenrl2th grade pro-gram. l._- ■. There art other districts, such as fontiac and Bloomfield Hills, where K-12 sex education is contemplated or already* in the planning sfages. A * * Sex education in most Area school districts can be classified as the“grow-‘ litg-up” Instruction concerned with specific body changes that begin to occur about the fifth and sixth grades. Area school districts with this type ot Instruction include Waterford, Huron Valley, Troy, Farmington, Cilarkston, Rochester, Holly and Romeo. “Growing up’’ involves films on menstruation for girls and physical maturation for boys. ' L Current controversy appears to spring from what some parents think will be taught in expanded sex classes, although in’at least one area district — Walled Lake W strong objections are being raiSied againsLwhat is now offered. AAA What is being taught? For the most part, a full-scale sex education program Includes all phases of growth and development. It is designed to help children Understand themselves and identify with their own sex. ‘IT’S A SUPPLEMENT “The schools are aiming to supplement what the children have learned at home and at chilrch," said Norman Quinn, director of health, physical education and athletics at Bloomfield Hills. (Continued on Page A-10, Col. 1) Damp and Cloudy Center of Storm Is Walled Lake Weekend Forecast (EDITOR’S NOTE - This is the first of three artteles on the Walled Lake School District's sex education pro-gram.) By LOIS FRIEDLAND The center of the storm over sex education in Oakland County schools hovers over the programa In the Walled Lake School district. Human reproductive sex-education programs for fifth- and ilxth-graders and possible future programs for older students were sttaeked by soma parents and supported by others at a recent. public hearing on sex educatjon in the school district. ” . The more than 300 parents attending the bearing were assured by Supt. Dr. Gjriurge Carver that no human reproductive sex education would be given to anyone below the fifth-grade level. Garner, whose sprawling d i s t r i c t covers iiHich of western Oakland County, also told parents the administration wouid work with staff, parents and clergy before^presenting any (utura programs. I (Continued on Pago A-IL; Col. 1) V v:,..; II, ; It looks like Pontiac area residents will have a damp, cloudy weekend, according to the weatherman. Partly cloudy and cool with a low of 52 'to 58 is the forecast for tonight. Cloudy and mild with a chance of showers and a high of (W to 74 is tomorrow’s prediction. Partly cloudy and continued cool is the outlook for Saturday. ★ * ■' A ^ Precipitation probabilities in per cent are 30 today and M tomorrow. The low in downtown Pontiac before I a.m. was M degrees, By 2 p m. the -- thermometer had raached 60. cused President, Nixon of attempting to intimidate congressmen probing the role of the military budget in Ammican life. Proxmire, who Is chairman of a joint Senate-House economic subcommittoe holding hearings on the military budget and national priorities, objected to what he termed rirong language'^ in Nixon’s speech. Proxmire protested that Nixon was trying to intimidate “those who question whriher America’s role In the world can be best served by a large and expanding military force instead of a more vigorous dedication of our resources to our domestic programs." .. Sen. J. W. Fulbrigbl, chairman of the foreign relations committee, acibused Nixttn of trying to make critics appear unpatriotic. “Neither I nor this subcommittee Is attacking the military forces of this country,” fulbrlght said. “We are ques- . tinning the political judgments that led us into this quagmire.” ” Another Democrat, Sen. Gaylord Nelson of Wisconsin, said it was unfortunate Nixon implied that “those who arc vigorously oppo.stng the ABM and defense boondoggles are u n i l a t e r a I dlsarmers and new Isolationists.” A ’ A A ' "It Is not' unilateral disarmament to urge that we get down immediately to the business of arms control negotiations, with the Soviet Union and, in the mean-tlitic, hold up the deployment of hew weapons systems such as ABM which threaten to accelerate the deadly and costly arms race,” Nelson'said. , . Sen. Alan Cranston, D-Callf., said that , no responsible American advocates that-V the United States lay down its arins ' a'ione. ■‘What is sweeping America Is a demand that we readjust our priorities and . our goAls 'so that we tackle the immense ' problems we face at home and abroad with realism and not with fhetoric,.’’ Cranston kaid. , DWArv.WsD.CK :r": THE rONTlAC PRESS, THURSDAY.'JUNE 5, 1969 'U.S. Nearly Quit at Omaha Beach' DR. HARVEV BURDICK Candidate Hits School Disfricf on Information “There is a sheer lack of information given in and taken out in this school district — between the administration and the community, administration and teachers, and teachers and the community,” charges school board candidate Dr. Harvey Burdick, professor of psychology and chairman of the psychology department at Oakland University. Many people of Pontiac are growing suspicious of the school board, they feel that decisions affecting them are made before the whole issues are made public, when it is too latb for the people to ask questions, Burdick said. “Concerned or angry people don’t often express their feelings in gentle tones. But we should not confuse the style of expression with the content of the complaint,” he said. ‘Tt appears that some people In the district are disinterested or apathetic about school affairs, but actually there are many obstacles and barriers for all people to speak. Members must seek out the opinions of all people in the district so that they may give voice to them,” Burdick said. Another problem Burdick sees is segregation. “A segregated school system works against equality and quality of education. 'The school board shouldn’t hide behind Pontiac’s housing situation, which . is sen'egated, to justify a segregated schoolsystafi,”he8ald. Burdick has been on sabbatical leave from OU since January. He teaches a course at OU required of anyone going Into teaching and has been substitute teaching during his leave in a number of Pontiac schools. Burdick, 43, lives at 190 Ottawa with his wife, Dolores^ and three children. He presently is vice president of the board of Family Services. BAYEUX, France (AP) - “What people don’t know is how reajly close the Americans on Omaha Beach were to turning around on D-Day. The truth is I didn’t know when I wrote ‘The Longest Day ... ’’ said Cornelius Ryan. Related Story, Pgge D-7 Ryan, whose book about the Normandy invasion has soId .lO million copies in 10 years, is among those who have returned to the scene for the 25th anniversary of the landing on June 6,1944. , He said he had the feeling that something was "missing— not quite put toilether 3rd Latin Nation Cancels Rocky SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) - A third South American country — Chile — has shut the door to Gov. Nelson. A. Rockefeller’s mission, but the Nixon administration shows no sign of calling off the tour. ' President Eduardo Frei’s government decided Rockefeller had better stay away after two days of clashes between police and students in the capital. Yesterday a ■ group of students stoned the U.S. Consulate and burned an American flag. * * * A Foreign Ministry communique Said; “The Chilean government has informed Gov. Rockefeller of the convenience of suspending his v|sit to o^^f^country." Thc'^communlque added that Foreign Minister Gabriel Valdes would be in Washington later this week and would call on President Nixon. Valdes also will get together with Rockefeller to discuss “the purposes and objectives” o f Rockefeller’s visit to Cillle, the communique said. GOODWILL GESTURE? . Many Latin Americans consider the tour primarily a good-wlV gesture. Rockefeller's second swiiig last week wps curtailed before it. started when Peru said he wasn’t welcome because Washington had cut off military aid to Peru. h A A . That leg was trimmed some more when Venesuela over the weekend asked lor postponement of the governor’s visit after students threatened demonstrations. In seven of the nine ebuntries Rockefeller has visited, violence has marred his stays. The Weather .....................................................................I....y Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Today ifiOBtly cloudy with chance of showers this forenoon. Partly cloudy and warmer this afternoon, high 73 to 78. Tonight partly cloudy and cool, low 82 to 57. Friday cloudy ind mild with showers likely, high 68 to 74. Saturday outlook: Partly cloudy and cool. Winds northwesterly 8 to 18 miles per hoar today, variable under 10 miles per hour this evening, Woming ly 5 to 15 tonight, shifting to northerly at 10 to 20 miles FrIday.'Trobabi cipitation: 30 per cent today, 50 per cent Friday. t.ow«it tampWilur* practdina ■ At I a.m.; Wind Viloclly I m.p. DlrMtlon: .Nsrlinmt iss eWyVL!i“.r- Moon wit Tlmridky it 10:31 n.m Moon rlttt Snldiy )t 13:43 t.m. of pre- 1} m. 13:30 p.m. 1 p.m, ., HWliMt tnd LtwtM TtmptrahirM TMl Dilt In 37 Vtirt In 1010 30 In 1V43 Wtdnatday’t TimptraMrat I 50 44 DtIroU 71 13 44 Duluth 41 >4 41 Port Worth 71 37 34 Knnita City Ol 5* 47 Loi Anotlol 70 43 43 Miami Itach 07 44 40 Mllwaulcaa 70 41 41 No# Vork 74 43 47 Omaha 04 S3 30 PhoanlK too 43 44 Pllliburuh 73 43 31 01. Loult 43 40 47 Tampa 33 10 40 0. Laka City 30 77 43 0. Pranclico 43 4^ XStton *7$ he, wrote about the invasion. But he said he learned about the near faiidre at OrnlKa Beach only after his book was out. , For Ryan, the success of the invasion hinged on one hour of decision by Gen. Omar Bradley after virtually no progress had been made in six hours. STATEMENT PREPARED < “Bradley Will deny it to his last days, but around noon at Omaha, we were getting nowhere and thinking of pulling out,” Ryan said. Back ip England, Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower already had prepared a one-sentence communique announcing failure, Ryan said. “Looking at whaj the consequences would have been, the best thing you can see is another invasion, but one that would have taken 18 more months to prepare if the first one failed,” Ryan continued. * * it- “In that time, the Nazis might have sued for peace and we might have been forced to let them off on something approaching their terms. Or, then, if the invasiori were delayed, we probably would have met the Russians at the French-German border.” Ryan said he had a “corny, un- professional-sounding” explanation of what got the Americans moving at Omaha around 12:30 p.m. and taking firm hold around an hour later. ★ ★ ★ ‘’Finally, guys started just getting tired of being hit and not moving. A sergeant kicked someone in the pants. Another man said he preferred getting killed going up the beach’ rather than sitting on it. Does ttiat sound like junk to you? ’That’s the way it was, though. There’s no better explanation.” Hopeful Urges 'Better Budgets' in Waterford ' “I feel that it is possible to give Waterford students a better education without deficit spending by better administration,” said David L. Fulkerson, one of five candidates running for a single seat on the Waterford School Board. , * * ★ He continued, “The solution to the problems facing Waterford as well as schools throughout the state hinges on the proposed state tax reform to relieve the burden of property owners.” ''^“Waterford residents will conUnue to pressure thefr representative in an effort to throw politics out the window and work for what is best for students in the Stfte of Michigan,” Fulkerson said. ★ ★ ** “The equalization factor is something that needs to be changed immediately in order to provide relief to our school , systems,” hC added. PON’HAC DIVISION EXECU’nVE Fulkerson, 42, of 2945 On agon, Waterford TownShip, Is an assistant plant superintendent at Pontiac Moior Division. He served three years on the finance committee of the Waterford school board,.^was president of the Crary Junior High School ipTA for two years' and has been a Cub Scout leader for two years and is a little league football coach. . ★ t it ' ■ A past chancellor of the Knights of Pythias Lodge 277, Fulkerson is, a member of the Bjiks, the Indian Guide Club of the YMCA and the Pontiac Chamber of Commerce. He is married^, and the father of six children. He feels his position at Pontiac Motor has given him much experience in working with budgets and in the field of Birmingham Cuts Detailed if Mi Vote Fpils BIRMINGHAM Should the board of education's 7.5-mill tax renewal request be defeated in Monday’s school ele^on budget cuts in excess of |3 million would be necessary, Supt. Eh*. Jdm B. Smith said today. Personnel who might be cut include associate teachers in art, music and 'physical education, those teaching elementary foreign languages and those receiving supplemental pay. for coaching athletics and dramatics. it , * * There also would be an increase in class sizes and elimination of honors and accelerated courses and nonreimbursed special education. Other potential reductions include elementary school librarians and secondary school librarians and counselors. Others included are c o n s u 11 a n t s , coordinators, directors and supervisors, office PERSONNEL Potential office personnel eliminations would include half of the elementary schooPcierk-secretaries, team clerks and building clerks. Custodial and maintenance service would'ako be reduced. Instructional supplies and administrative supplies and expenses generally would be reduced. The adult education, summer school and intramural sports programs also would be eliminated. Central administration personnel also would be reduced in addition to a curtailment of data processing and the , recruitment program. The health services program is listed as another potential cut. Transportation would be reduced to only that required by state law. Field trips also would be eliminated. BOND PROPOSAL Smith explained that under the $3.7 ^ building bonds proposal, Grpves and t Seaholm high schools would receive ad-1 ditional general classroom areas, a combination auditorium, increased^ physical education facilities and rehabilitation of existing area;|. CHARLES E. 51EISSNER School Aspirant Raps Board's 'Ihdecisiveness' LAKE CONDITIONS; St. Clair - Small craft warnings in effect, southwesterly winds 15 to 25 knots today, becoming variable 5 to 15 knots tonight. Partly cloudy through tonight. Huron — Small-craft warnings in effect, nqgjlswest winds 15 to 25 .knots today, becoming variable 5 to IS knots tonight. Partly cloudy through tonight. Erie,, west half ~ Small-craft warnings in effect. Winds southwesterly 15 to 25 knots today, becoming light and variable tonight. Fulkerson said he felt that In Waterford all teachers will eventually have to belong to the union and feels his experience In iabofr relations makes him well qualified as a future board member to meet any situation that may arile regarding teacher contracts or negotia-Hlons. « AS WIIUpMM NA’nONAL WEATHER - Showers are expected tonitfit alon# the Gutf Coaat from Tezag Hmxigh Florida and Georgia, in the western Great Lakes area, from add New Y< Ohio north tfarough Peaneylvaiiin anld New York, and parts pf California, iho and Oregon. Elsewhere:, aiininyl' aqd warm weather will {pfevail. ■:1]f| 'I' ■"".i'-I: California, Nevada, ■A«v Charles E. Meissner, one of . seven candidates who will be vying for two seats on the Pontiac Board of Education lyionday, says he feels that , the board Should have better communication with the community, should make positive decisions and should support teachers. “There is much dissatisfaction over the drift and indecisiveness of past board policy. A community cannot be guided by policy ddcisions as obscure and as easily compromised as those of the past. “I hope to help reunite Pontiac’s citizens behind a board that'will earn their respect by the wisdom of its decisions,” said Meissner, 33, a sales engineer for Newark Detroit Electronics. Meissner said he feels an answer to the communication problem might be advisory groups made up of teachers, students and special interest groups: active PARTiaPA’nON “It is necessary for the school board to expand to an active participation of the community in board affairs through advisory positions,” he said. Meissner says he feels the job of the school board is to educate, not. to integrate, the schobts. “It is the Job of the city to integrate the housing,” he said. He salli he would like to see d reemphasls on programs of realism in Pontiac Schools, and an end to costly experimental glamor concepts in education. “1 would strive for return of order, mutual respect, and . valid educational process,” he said. Meissner lives at 476 Lynch with his wife and four children. He served for 12 years with the Air Force, and is a" member of the Greater Lansing Association for Retarded CMMrrtt, the board of canvasseri ahd the Herringtoa Meet the champ at Anderson THE BONNEVILLE/T120R ' ^ T»B)MP» It’s a 650cc twin carb..VAROOOOMl Twin downs.wept chrome plated exhaust VAROOOM! Cast iron clutch.........VAROOOM! Telescopic hydraulic forks .. VAROOOM! High performance 9s 1 pistons.VAROOOM! Twin Wind Tone Horns............VAROOM! Illuminated tachometer...VAROOOM! Drive it away, today..... VAROOM! NDERSt 1645 S. TELEGRAPH in f>0NTIAa • FE 3-7102 OPEN MONDAY-FRIDAY. 9 'TIL 8; SATURDAY 'TIL 5 HONDA • DUCATI • TRIUMPH • MATCHLESS NORTON • MONTESA • BSA • MOTO GUZZI make Dad the chairman! Our famous Stratoloungers turn a tired father into a happy man. He just leans back, thg footrest automatically comes out and Dad is glad. Covered in a choice of fabrics, leatl^ers or naugahyde, this is one gift" -he’ll love. ' A from *79.50 ARVEY furniture THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 1969 A—S Copper"twists''with glint* of gold! Blue "twists" with hints of greent Silver Grey "twist*" misted with brisk Picturethisintoday’s Important shaped silhou* ette>*prisp lines that stay crisp because they’re taj* lored into a wrinkle-defying blend of Dacron* polyester /fine wool worsted. Picture yourself cool, shapely and handsomely wrinkle free—at Bond'stoday. CiMMS* « * N» e«ynmiii ★ Many M-neM f* |Mnr th« Ponfiiic Moll ■w- ... Bell Expansion Plan Is Within the Law, City Plan Board Say? ByEDBt.UNDEN The not violated the city ordinance on off-street parking its 112.5-million expansion of its downtown facUities, the City Planning Commission ruled last night. The ruling was^ announced after the planners, went int(|' a two-hour closed-ddor executive session. The secret meetii^ was held after a public hearing on the issue. The planners also announced they would be working on revising the ordinance to be, certain the language included BeU’s facility without doubt. The company is adding to the south of its facilities at East Huron and Mill. The addition, for inore electronic equipment. expected to add about 200 workws to Bell’s work force. The’ Communications Workers of America (CWA), through its lawyer, Jerome Mulligan, has heen claiming the conspany is ' violation of the city ordinanq| that no additional parking spaces for the new workers were provided for in planning. ‘BROKE OWN LAW’ Mulligan also charged the City Commission and Planning Commission were in violation of their own ordinance in issuing building permits. However, after deliberating last night, the planners stated Ball was covered by the part of the ordinance which concerns downtown commercial buildings. This ordinance calls for the city to build parking lots. These lots are in turn paid for by parking-metcc^mvepiie. After the Planning Commission statement, Mulligan said he would persue the matter further, but did not elaborate. Mulligan repeated charges he made to the City Commission downtown parlcing 'any mote than other businesses downtown are required to, Russell said. In other business, % planners rejected a request for rezoning of a five-acre parcel east of Baldwin and south of Kennedy Junior High 1 . slnglie family to multiple fadiily residential The request was made by Hel-Wln Construction, which seeks to build a »7-unit apartment house. In prievious hearings, residents near the proposed project objected on the basis the area is plagued by flooding due to inadequate storm sewers. A storm sewer which will connect the area with the Galloway Creek system is in the planning stages, it was explained. However this project still may be six years away. Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac SEE SIMMS I On Ptgns A-6 and in Today's Pontiac Press for Those Extra Wnokond Discounts! PUIS Those Extras at SIMMS: FREEPAnaiK in. downtown parking mail for 1 hour with any purchase (except beverages and tobaccos) at Simms. Just have ticket stamped at time of purchase. 0NM6E IT ■ ■ ■ get Instant Credit at Simms . . . use our 30-doy, some as cash plan or your Midvvwst Bonk Cord or Free '"Layaway. Ask about the beSt plan for you. SIMMS!* 98 NORTH SAQINAW ST. DOWNTOWN PONTIAC SIMMS DISCOUNT ANNEX 144 N. Saginaw St. had been allowed to go ahead with the building without provided additional parking. He said the ‘‘deal," which allowed the company to buy t h e parking lot on the construction site by providing a smilar^ized lot across the street, was an ordibance violation. He also charged city commissioners and the plihnners had not ^Oboperated with him in supplying infwmaUon on project. FREE PARKItiG; Mulligan’s efforts have been labeled an attempt to get free parking for ths CWA employes. Mulligan said his But he pointed out that his church and the church in general is only scratching the surface as far as social responsibility commitments are concerned. “Of courlse we are not doing enough-I- no cue has." ■''J ” The compromise on legislative control wer distribution of the bpHds — $285 million fof pollution control and sewage treatment -projects, $50 million for ou^tate and suburban connecting sewers — should “breeze through" the upper house, according to one Senate leader. after holding out against Senate insistence on the more formal scheme for approving by passign a'blll. “There won’t be any abuse or pbrk-barrellng," predicted Rep. Warren ^maere D-Roseville, cochairman of the House Conservation Committee. * A A ■ . The House substantially revised a SenatcKirlginated bill that called for the local treatment and construction projects. Pear of pork-barrellng and a desire foF the ch5ngS!'‘**‘"« House and Senate conferees agreed yesterday on a two-stage legislative ap. proval of projects recommended by the water resources commission. Appropriations committees, Of both chambers would conduct detailed reviews of. the commission’s recommendations, then a joint resolution would give the final stamp of approval. House,, delegates claimed a victory Consenrationists and civil engineers say projecte should be approved by early ■‘Ivantage of ^structlon seasons and avoid sbarlhg material and labor costs. ' Milliken reiterated those arguments, . L . "n** Senite suspicion of a House plan for rebates to immunity treatment planU drowned out his voice for a time -V *.4'’ fS THE PONTIAC ^RESS, THURSDAY^ JUNE 5, 1969 A—5 Finaf Senate Action Due on Several Bills LANSING (AP) p. Bills auth- would regulate formation and orlzlng election day liquor sale, operaOon of bank holding own- ownership of bank | stock and nonpartisan Suprente Court elections today faced final Senate action as the upper chamber worked against a Friday deadline for paisage of biUs. The Senate was to convene at 10 ^ Workhig late into t^e night Wednesday^, the upper chamber passed ^9 bills, .turned down two and^ave prellthary approval to more than 20 others. At least loo bills — including controversial proposals to order compulsory a^itrati'on in police and Are disputes and liberalize Michigan’s abortion laws-atill awaited initial Senate consideration. > will “legalize a sitiia-Aoq that currently exists in Michigan,” said Sen. Geoi‘ge Kuhn, B-West Blbomfield ToW ship, chief sponsor of the pro- NARROWLY DEFEATED Senators narrowly defeated the election day liquor sale Measure Wednesday, voting 10^ 11 for the iwoposal sponsored by Sen. Stanley Novak, D- Detroit. • Novak promised a reconsideration move today, in hopes of picking up the one more vote ■eeded for passage. The banking, bill — companion to a second measure that Sen. L. Harvey Lo^e,' R Waterford Township, led supporters ai the bill to provide nonpartisan primary for MichinlliT^preni Membera of the high; court now are nominated at party conventions, but run on nonpartisan ballots. “This poses a major change in our system,” warned Senate Majority Leader Sander Levin, D-Berkley. “The partisan system has been worthwhile. “It’s safe to predict that we would be passing an empty piece of paper over to the (Democratic - controlled) House where it will be killed," he predicted. Lodge also pushed for Senate approval of a bill requiring all candidates for public office and administrative appointees to file their fingerprints and criminal and traffic conviction records the secretary of sti CARNEYS POINT, N.J. (AP) — A series of chain-reaction blasts, their origin still a mysr , ited some 140 tons of gunpowder Wednesday, leveling four storage buildings at the Du Pont Go’s explosives plant and killing three men. Four others are missing and presumed dead. Toll BelievedJ in Plant Blast The structures in which the seven men were moving buchqi bags of powder just disappeared, leaving only shallow craters on soft grassy m^sh-land along the Delaware River. They were one-story, corrugated iron buildings, 30 by 60 feet. Bodies of three men were found. Immediate identifiqatlrai was made of one—Francis J. Quinn, 30, West Deptford, N.J. Investigators probed > the charred earth and searched the underbrush for clues to the missing, and to the cause of the detonations that sent shock waves as far as 30 miles, breaking windows and tumbling dishes, and furniture. Flying glass and debris inside the 03O-acra Bite of the 78-year- old plant injured 56 workers. Agnew Denies Guilt in Real Estate Deal BALTIMORE, Md. (AP) Vice President Spiro T. Agnew has denied any "implication of wrongdoing or fault.y judgment" in the transfer of valuable state tidelands to a iwlvate developer a'month before he left office as Maryland governor. Agnew said he has asked Maryland officials to prepare a full report on the transaction involving 190 acres of marshland sold by'‘tiie state to developer James A. Caine pt Ocean CSty, Md. . Deeds transferring the 190 acres from Maryland to Caine were signed Dec. 20, 1968, by Aghew and two Democratic members of the state Board of Public Works. 'I am astounded at the thrust of these accounts and am particularly resentful of the Impli-catiod that I furtively signed these deeds shortly before leaving office,” Agnew said Wednesday in a statement release from his Washington office. Caine subdivided the 190 acres and an adjacent 30o acres-at the Maryland seashore resort Into more than* 2,000 lots selling at prices which his real estate agent quoted as $4,000 to $8,000 each. $300,000 TAB State officials had estimated the cost of purchasing the land and paying the state for fill from Assawo Bay at $300,000. A study of records involved turned up no evidence that Agnew personally p^ted from the transaction, financially or otherwise. . In'his siatement, Agnew noted that foe two other signers — Maryfahd Comptroller Louis L.' Goldstein and Treasurer John A. Leutkemeyer—are respected Democratic officials.” ‘STARTED BY DEM* He said the transaction originated with the administration of Gov. J. Millard Tawes, a Denio-crat who Agnew succeeded in 1967. He asserted the transaction— which drew objections from state agencies while it was pending befwe the board of public works—“stands-to be bf considerable economic benefit" to Maryland. Ijelpus cSebrate our.: The Grand Opening of the 21st Community National* office, that Is—on Joslyn Avenue across from Pontiac Motor’s new Administration Building. The celebratiorrstarts this Thursday, June 5th. There will be special hours for the first three days. A great drawing on Saturday, June 7th. And free buckets of Kentucky Fried Chicken with every new account opened l>y June 14th with an Initial deposit of $25 or more. Of Course fried chicken and free prizes alone are no reason,to do business with Community National. / « , Convenience and service are what count—and the new Joslyn Office is a good Indication of what banking at Community is all about. More offices. More services. In short, more bank for your money. That’s Community National. And that’s something to celebrate, GRAND OPENING Matic, original shoe shiner with brush and buffer. Botteries are extra. Drug* — Main Floor Woolite Cold Water Wash so S1.50 voluo. liquid or powdor form, for fIno fabrics ..v9 V Moroline Petroleum Jelly Wilkinson Sword Blades 77 $1.45 voluo, pitg. of 10 itolriloM stool doublo odgo blodoi. § § Pepto Bismol Tablets 121 $I.$S voluo, pltg, of 50 chowoblo toblols... Ml New Turns Flavor Pak RQi 89c voluo, I OO's. Apolhocory jor of 4 flavors... s.. V V Dippity Do Setting Lotion 77c $1.35 voluo, 8-ox. slzo holr sotting lotion by Toni...... i f Wash Up Moist Towelettes 98c voluo, pkg. of 35. Romovos soil and grlmo. V V Noxzema Skin Cream SQc $1.45 voluo, tO-ox. jor, grooMloii and modicoiod.(XV Woodbury Body Lotion ioc $1.00 voluo, 14-ox. Rich In lanolin.. A V Dial Spray Deodorant 7qc Alberto VO 5 Hair Spray Pursette Tampons $1.79 voluo, pkg. of 40. Regular or plus typo.. 20-In. Breeze Box Window Fan 1366 You can 'COOL IT' with thli- 20-Inch Breeze Box by ESKIMO. 2-speed window fon with push I twitch ond carrying handle. Cools up to 5 rt ............ with H-“ ------------- Breeze Box Pen with Boll-abeut Btanil...........2I.BB 20-inch Lasko 4-Blade Electric Fan 2495 2-speiid fan circulates fresh temperature you m enamel gHIl cleans ec With earring handle Lasko Deluxe Reversible Fan 2-speed Ian with extension panels to fit windows 27" to 37Y4" wid “• turns fan on and off v temperature change. Safer ty switch and carrying Pane — 3nd Floor Choiem of 3 Stylet 'Regular $25.00 Sellert 2©«» Give Dad this smartly styled electric Timexwrist watch. He'll never wind It — just turn it on. Precision movement with jump sweep second hand, waterproof, dusiproof and shock resistant. There are 3 handsome models to choose from. Sundries - Main Floor Waterproof Calendar Timex Watch Modsl 21171 men;i Time* wnsi wolfh hoj luminous dial, chrome cose, woter-prool, sweep hond, colen-dor and leather strop. Sundries — Main Floor Metal Strotch Band Timex Black & DeckeM4-lnch Drill At Simm$ , The Ideal gift for any handy'man. This Bldck & Decker electTic drill which drills Vi-inch holes in steel and ys-lnch in hardwood, 115 volts, 1,9 amps, 1/7 H.R., 2250'rpm with geared chock and trigger switch. Tools-2nd Floor FEDTRODeluxe Battery Charger This Timex watch I stretch bond on a calendar model with waterproof diol, sweep second hand and luminous diol. Sundriat - Main Floor Norelco 35T Shaver 'GIvs Dad (amfortabla shaves with this Norelco triple floaling hood shovur. Rotary blades shave 35% cloMr, Complate with pop-up trlmmor, and en/olf'ewltch and sasysnop-olf cleaning. Norelcoc.H.» 45CT Shaver If Dad likes a rechargaabla shaver this Norelco 45CT shaver li for him. Use it with or without a cord,, it has triple floating heads and sideburn trimmer feature. Sundriei — Main Floor Imported Briar 20-Style* Dr. Grabow Pipe Twin Head 6-Blade Men's Sunbeam Shaver Famous Dr. Grabow Eldorado Imported briar pipe with jusioble screw stem. Choice of 20 styles, gilt boxed. Model SM7S . Sunbeam' shavemaster with double head, sideburn trimmer and zipper corry case. Sundrios — Main Floor Quality American Made Polished Chrome Plated 96-PC. Indestro Socket and Tool Set Model CH-ACD Fed-tro battery charger recharges transistor lotteries, penlite -xind D and C size batteries. Recharges up to 5 at a time. Instruction included. 2nd Floor Extends to 6-Feet bn Retriever As showtr—golf ball retriever with shaft of high strength aluminum. Assures ijuick clean pick-up every time. Sports —2nd Floor Hi-Impact Polypropylene Slats Swivel Bar Stool Simms ^ Price Just 788 Popular Danish design bar stool with slatted seot and back of hi-impact polypropylene slats, with full swtveL and legs of heavy steel tubing. Chrome •and black satin finish comjplernents any decor. 29-inch height._ Housewares—2nd Floor Star Drag Push Button Shakespeare Reel 3-SjieedPottahl$ G.E. Hand Mixer #1771 Shakespeare reel with all metal push button construction, removable aluminum spool and safely slip star drag cotilrol. With 90 yds., 8-lb. mono line. Reg. $13.00. Sports-2nd Floor Model Ml 7 GenemI Electric portable mixer with 3 powerful speeds, beater ejector, a vinyl base gu^rd. Weighs ^ less than 3 pounds. Housewares—2nd Floor Big 96-pc. Indestro tool set Includes just the right tool to handle household, automotive, aircraft and * electrical tasks. Includes o complete set of sockets, screw drivers and other tools such os hacksaw and es. Ignition set, vise grips, hex wrench, etc. In mefol storage box. Hardware—2nd Floor Remhrandt Outdoor TV Antenna REBABRAiNDT Do-it-yourself 0UTDOOII ANTINNA KIT wHh •xefutiv ITATION DIRICnON CONTROL Large Double Mantle Coleman Lantern #228F Coleman double mantle lantern with large ventilator, reflects light down when hanging. No up-glore. Perfect for night Sports-Ind Floor Handsome Ship’s Wheel Weather Barometer Rembrandt 'Allas' outdoor TV Ontenno for color, or black and white. Complete iwjth Inside direction finder. No motor, comes with lead-in wire mast and slond-offscrtws^^ 2nd Floor 37-Pe.StaiHl8s$ Steel Tableware Set Indicotes good weather, unsettled, n and fair. Precision instrument mode ins West Germany. Sports 2nd Floor laiinawtt. SIMMSifl Regular $11.88-you nhver need to pel-ish or pamper this stainless steel toblev wore set. Includet 8-eoch knives, forks, spoons, 0 sugor shell, butter knife, se^. tng spoon and salad fork and spoon Porlslenne pattern. Heusowarot-2nd Floor Daisy Trinuned Patio Torch No filling or pouring of fi put the enclosed wicks into i orated cons uotop the blocl Weatherproof daisy trim i decorative touch. With two oz. cons scented fuel. hl9usaworM-2ni " ^ . THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 1969 A—r > i - DISCOUNTS OH GIFTS FOR DU or GRU-DISCOUIITS ON EVERYDAT ITEMS I KODAK For DAO or GMO SHOP AND SAVE ON BETTER SIMMS 'BUYS’ V.I.P. Look Elegant SAMSONITE Royal Traveller Attache Case 1900 3-inch size Reg, $27.95 5-inQh size Reg. $29,95 21?? Quietly elegant and impressive Royal Traveller attache case has retractable handle, curved corners and hidden lock. Strong but lightweight magnesium frame. Slim but a sutpHsing amount of space inside'. Colors include black, olive, or gray. -r Basement Sl^rt Sleeve 100% Cotton I Men’s Shirts pockat, or flaac* linad iwaat shirt with ribbed knit a IS S-M-L — Baiamant Leather or Fabric Uppers Ladies’ Shoes A variety of ilyles includes sport shoes of cord, canvas uppers, flats and loafers. Sizes 5 to 10. First Quality Mr. Famous Name Men’s Dress Slacks keg, $9.50 Sizes 28 to 38 Reg. $13.00 Sizes 28 to 42 5»» 099 Mr. Famous name dress slacks, first quality and permanent pressed blend of 65% Dacron polyester and 35% Avril rdyon. Tapered no-cuff legs or Dak or ivy style Dacrpn and polyester with regular cuffs. — Basomont Slip On or Oxford-Style Canvas Shoes '’^Comfortable canvas uppers with thick crepe soles, cushioned Innersole and arch type support. Choose from navy, brovim or block in sizes 10 ! a-Basement 7 to 12. Permanent Press T-n* Jeans Men’s Valuet to $6.99 F Choose from men's drees jeans, young men's chinos or denim jeans, oil permanent press In the popular dim st^. Sizes 28 to 36. —Basement Famous VAN HEUSEN Pennanent Press- Men’s Sport Shirts Regular $6.00 Value* Get Dad several of these famous Van Heusen sport shirts. They're Permanent press and first quality, short sleeve styles in a buttondown collar plaid shirt or a gold plaid with con-ventionoL collar. Sizes S-M-L. -Basement 3-PiQcrii^nier Boy^ets Choice of 2 Ilyles Including knit shirt and shorts plus white beach ponts or T shirt, shorts and long pants. First qugl-ity. Sizes 3 to 7. Machine Watheble Playcldthes Carefree summer ploy-clotbes include stripe seersucker blouses, sleeveless with button: front, elastic waist shorts thot match ond hove 2 pockets. Knit T shirts hove short sleeves and shoulder buttons. Sizes 2-3-4. Oxford Weave Nylon First Quality Men’s Sport Jackets Regular $8.95 Value* 497 , Just the thing foe cool summer evenings. 100% nylon jacket with gripper front, slash pockets, plastic cuff on regular cut sleeve, and drawstring bottom, in a deluxe oxford y/eave. Popular, colors include copper, maize, white, lobster or rhubarb. Sizes S-M-L. — Basomont Some Permanent Press Ladies’ Shorts j!l9 Value* to $2.99 press styles. Colors include . solids, checks, stripes and floral prints. Sizes 8 lo 18. Italian Made - Leather Ladies’ Sandais Regular $4.98 — popular Italian sandals made with all leather tops, podded Innersole and black strap. Choice of 4 styles. Sizes 5 to 10. T-Basement Many Popular Styles-First Quality Ladies’ Dresses, Suits and Orion Knit Co-ordinates Values to $9.98 — Big selection of summer dresses including shirtwaist styles, sleeveless prints, cottons, washable fabrics, etc. Suits including a navy blue wool with scalloped jacket, mini print spring suit, etc., and the 100% DuPont orlon knit co-ordinates wit^hoit sleeve tops and elastic waist skirts, ^style dnd fabric for every occasion. —Main floor for goo Prints and Solids Ladies’ Blouses $3.98 Tailored styles to wear with shorts and slacks include . paisley print, solid colors '^and stripes. SizDs 8 to 38, but not in all styles. —Main Floor Short Sleeve 100*/e Cotton ^pranny Gowns 'Attractive girls' granny nite gowQS of 100% cotton in - *1 a delicate floral pr|nt with ribbon trim, ond 2-bUtton :top. Sizes 4 to 12. —Main Floor Bell Bottoms or Slim Cut Ladies’ StacJts Value* to $7.98 Just arrived — a great selection ©fV^olld colors, stripes/checks and flowered prints. Fabrics include ' cottons. Dacron and cotton blends, nylon knits, cotton knits, denims, etc. Most ore permaneql press and sizes from 8 to 18. —Main Floor Cod Comfortable Short Sleeve Boys’ Sport Sl|irt| • ReKulari( and Turtleneeke • Aerilan Knits and Layarad Leek Regulars to j^2.98. You'll ^nd several styles to pledsV your boys^n thlVc6llec-\ tion qL-Sport shirts. Styles Include regu-la^^ort sleeve shirts, knit shirts, turtle-)cks and permanent press Creslan mat shirts. Solid colors and prints. Sizes 8I0I8. -Bo* SSMMSiE A124 Camera Set value — with camera, *■ be, roll color film and , I O • «.$1 holds. JL^V A3I4 CAMERA SET 29“ A414 CAMERA SET 39*^ $41.95 value — auto, electric eye camera, color film, flashcube, batteries. $1 holds. $51.95 value — auto, electric eye, auto. film.advance. With film, cube and batteries. POLICE & AM RADIO $29.95 value — Alaron model BIOAP. Battery operoled. With battery, earphone. $1 holds. 7-TRANSISTOR WALKIE-TALKIE $24.95 Value Alaron B7U with call signal. Up to 1 mile range. With battery. .,$1 holds in layaway. You Can Be Sura If It’s WESTINGHOU$E WESTINGHOUSE STEREO PHONOS $129.9S Stller CHAROE IT Model PS63D28 as shown — portable Stereo record player with deluxe pull-down player and swing-out speakers. Come, see and hear this fine Stereo Phono at Simms this week. PRQiECTOR - RECORDER STABLE •9S Valut ARGUS ELECTR0MAT1C SLIDE VIEWERS $20.95 Value For 126 or 35mm slides, electric drive, too. Holds up to 30 slides. $1 holds or charge it at Simms. rodloi and r»-All n 2 AC eullaii. $1 hold*. on TELESCOPES $1 holds or ohafga it J40 POWER TELESCOPE 0084 F $49.96 Valu. - Model 631 iiO 254 POWER TELESCOPE $5995 Value -model 614. 300 POWER TELESCOPE $75 Value — model 653 . \400 POWER TELESCOPE ^89.95 value — model.641 . PLAYS ON AC ft BArrErfY AM-FM radio 84 SOLID STATE PORTABLE TAPE RECORDER $34.95 Value 19 $29,95 Value iya4 DaWniown Panyia Hi-Power deluxe quality 'Lloyds' AM-FM portable radio ploys on AC hoine current or battery. Take anywhere you «want. Model 8HS3|B. $i holdi dr charge it. Mayfair #1607 r eroted. Comai with mike, aamplw tope, batteries ond earphone. ~ recorder. $ 1 holds or charge. THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 West Huron Street Pontiac. Michigan 48056 THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 1969 ' H»oiP A. FtriotiitLD CbPtrmtn of the Boerd HnwAeu If Purr.oEXU). II Pfeildent and Publliher RicHife M. FiTrcHAiB Tretiurer add Finance Officer Aeio McCm.tT' Agency Shop a Poser The Pontiac School District finds itself in the middle of a sticky legal dilemma that came to life with the recent dismissal of eight teachers who refused to pay dues under' the “agenjcy shop” clause of the .teachers’ labor contract with the school district. The clause pre.scribos that teachers who elect not to join the uniori mu-st nonetheless pay dues or face termination of employment. The agency shop provision is being vigorously pushed by organized labor not only in the educational field but in other areas of negotiation. :ir ★ "★ Bulkin the case of teachers’ contracts, the clause humps head-on into the statutory status of teacher tenure, which is in effect a form of civil service security. |n conflict is the question of whether tenure should take priority over a provision of a labor contract that in turn is implemented by another statutory requirement that school districts must recognize and bargain with representative teachers’ organizations. So far, the State Tenure Commission has ruled in two eases, and the Wayne County Circuit Court in one, in favor of agency shop precedence. But a sound case can’ be presented Tor the opposite viewpoint, and in our opinion the logical one. Since the issue is almost certain to arise with increasing regularity, it should he resolved without delay by decision of the Michigan Supreme Court or by clarifying legislation. 'You're Not Exactly William Tell, Mac!' David Lawrence Says: ROTC Opposition Unsound Curbs on Campus Strife Ne^ed Those students who demonstrate against ROTC may have a valid point insofar as they protest the compulsory nature of the program-on some campuiSes. But as in other area.s that arouse their social concern, they all too easily jump frhm validity to vacuousness by demanding that ROTC be abolished entirely or that academic credits no longer he given for it. In the name of freedom or humanity, not only would they deprive othc^r .students of this particular educational or career option but would deny the officer ranks of the Country’.s armed forces that desirable civilian “flavoring” which ROTC graduates have traditionally provided. ★ ★ ★ They would not by any means atrike a crippling blow at pilH-tarlHm or the military, which could always produce all the officers it needs through officer candidate .schools, but ihey could seriously lower the/quality of leadership in the mijitary. As Gen. William C. Wkstmore-i.ANi) remarked recently, "It would be a disaster to have our men led by Tgndrarnu.ses. It is o.s.sential lo have the ROTC continue to turn out the type of educated officers we need.” The activist’s answer to all this, of course, is that war is evil and that anything that contributes lo it or enhances the prestige or power of the military is Jikewi.se evil. But until such time as this Nation and all nations can Jay down their weapons and disband their armies, Jt is difficult to see what good cause Is being served hy an antimilitarism that, carried to its extreme, could result In an Intellectually impoverished military establishment isbiated from the mainstream of American life. LAWRENCE Poles, Marx Poles Apart It i.s no new.s by now that the longer the followers of Marx try to make his theorie.s work in practice, the mpre they demonstrate that there are a few basic points about humian nature the master did not tafte into account. Sof the latter j.s the hope for 1 gain a.s a motivator for in-economic activity, legal or olherWi.se. The late.st evidence that it .springs eternal, even in the socialist brea.st, comes from Warsaw. • Five Foies have been convicted of counterfeiting for using a stale-owned printing plant to make a few bucks on the side— literally. Adding Insult to in jiirv, they were turning out not good, or bad. Polish zlotys but dollars —1150 and .$20 U.S. bills. Annual Exodus Near in N. Carolina BIO.S.SAT By BRUCE BIO.S.SAT , NEA Waiihington CorrrKpondent RALEIGH, N.C. — In a fpw weeks, at high- school graduating time, It win happen again as it has often before; Graduating young Negro boys will flock to has and train stations to head north from North Carolina's lo-bacen lands and other rural sectors. .Sometimes In past years whole graduating dasse.s of 40 or more have gpne north the very day they received their diplomas. They head |or the great ghettos with a Suitcase of clothe.s, a few dollars, and the scribbled address of a friend or rtlatlve. This heavy exodus of the young male black.s is not just a North Carolina phenomenon. It is Southwide. IVJpre-over, older blacks and poor job-seeking whites join In flow,, loo. ' * * * in Nofth CarolInd, jhe net outflow used to be immcn.se — adding up to about 3,10,0(M) people In the 1950s. Since then the state’S loss of population has been slowed almost to a hall, as rising In- dii.strial levels pulled I n olLscKlng numbers of newcomer.s. OUTFLOW GOE.S ON But the outflow goe.s on. North Carolina Negroes once made' the inner cotes of Washington, Bnltimore and Philadelphia llieir great migration largols. Today, Ihe rnlgranls’.^ Im*, ■pad is spread trioie widely (o include lesser cities in Ihe .senliofird region. 5 * , * 'I'he real news, however, Is llml anollier huge nmihward movement may be in Ihe making. The mechanizalion of lohacco ’harve.sting is at last In sight. And that portends another minor revolution which, in perhaps Ihe next six years, could wipe out some Ifi0;0fl0 form jobs held mostly by Negroe.s. IN THE WORKS That total Is the potential migration pool in Ihe time ju.sl ahead. •*■■*■* Bight now 'no perfected haryesting machines are at work plucking the big tobacco kaves- North Carolina" State University has built a reasonably w o r k able prototype, and there are other experitnentaf efforts, b u t commercial prpductlon is yet, lo come. The big farm e(|ulpinent makei's are not interested at lhl.s point, Tliey need not only a vastly bigger domestic market than North Carolina and other produeers of fluc-cured lohacco can provide, but a large foreign outlet as well. CIIANtJE WILI, COME Ecoiioniisls sludying llie North Carolina coastal plains do not Ihink, Though, (hat this reluctance will block Im-, pending cliange. They foresee inducing .some s m alter n.anufaclurers lo produce tlie harvesters which will revolutionize lohacco prodiidion. 'I'he drive to nieehanize seems Inexofable. it is not halted even by the threat of another long sfiell of net outmigration from the .state. *r * * While the technologists pour •over machinery, blueprints, manpower experts and general planners try lo find ways to keep North Carolina's ; potential nftlgration pool from flooding north, If Ihey fail it moans thousands more people packed inlo northern inner eillet^ And diminished’ markets and labor resourcel! here. * ★ ★ .Say.s former Gov, Terry Sanford: "Wc Ju.st can't stand Ihe kind of migration we’ve fiarl -•-of our best young people, black and while." WASHINGTON - President Nixon’s speech Tuesday at ’vladi.son, S.D., was an eloquent argument against campus riots and disturbances Rut it doesn’t tackle t h e: main q II e s t i o n that’s bothering Ihe Amor lean people: Why aren’t disorders o n the campus dealt with as promptly as riots Imd flis-ruplions outside the university grounds'' Are colleges sanctuaries? The*ba.sic Issue is who is going to enforce law and order. Again and again in their speeches, high officials In the administration have indicated that they think It is the Job of the states and the cities. ★ ★ * Any suggestion that the federal government might intervene has been rejected in advance as the beginning of a police slate. But the net result i.s inaction. Colleges ami uniyersilies are within Ihe jurisdiction of cities and states, and if property i.s In any way damaged by acts of riotous citizens, or if the operations of an Institution are disrupted, the loi-al police would be expected naturally to gti to the cam'pu.s and make arrests. AFRAID OF INTERVENTION But universlly authorities • have been Ihlervcntion Have dlscpiiftged It. This is llie heart of the problem. There arc, hpwever, aiv plicable federal laws which are being transgres.sed every day, but the Department of Ju.stice has undertaken very few prosecutions, ★ A ■* All over the country campus disturbances have been Increasing. Yet every charge that “outside agitators’’ have been Influential In .starting the trouble is rebuffed even hy some high officials of the Nixon administration. What’s cau-sing concern Js the fact that Ihe Department of .luslice is not asking fedr'ial grand juries for In-dlclmetils of Ihose individuals wlio have lieen responsible for sliraulaling campus riots and have gone from stale to stale . to carry out their objectives. The Constitution places upon the federal government the obligation to put down any form of insurrection. It says specifically that (he federal government must protect each state against ‘‘inva.sion’’ or ' ‘ d o m e s t i c violence.” States can request such aid. The big question is why punitive measures have not been ' taken against those organizations which have been openly calling for insurrection in America. .Certainly the time is long oveidue for joint efforts of the federal a'htt-a4»te governments to root out the in.stigators of ‘ domestic violence." .PUbllilwrt-HaM Syntflctli) Bob Considine Says: ‘ Viet Dissente^rs Punish the Wrong OutfitJJSO NEW YORK - People ... Places ... One unhappy aspect of the growing disgruntlement over the war in Vietnam is that USO contribu- against both left and right-handed pitching. He had a lot qf suggestions about how I would rotate my pitchers. He thought I should reverse my left' and right fielders. “I finally said to him, ‘would you consider leaving the paper and joining the team as a coach?’ The guy looked iasulted. “ ‘How cqiild I?’ he said. ‘I don’t know anything about baseball.’ ’’ Voice o.Mhe People: ‘Urge Rochester Voters to Vote Yes for Schools' ' The League of Women Vpters of the Rochester aWa urges voters iii the Rochester School Bistrict to vote in favor of the bond issue and millage proposals on June 9. We believe the Rochester Board of Education has fairly assessed the needs of the school district. If we are to maintain the standards of good education which .have been set here, we must accommodate the growing number ' of children and support the requests for funds for additional classrooms and for operation of the schools. MRS. DONALD C. HILDUM, PRES. LEAGUE OF WOMEN VOTERS OF THE ROCHESTER AREA Two Discuss Vote for Huron Valley Schools The young mothers of the Huron Valley School District are to be applauded for their door-to-door campaign in support of the school millage election June 9. Obviously these mdthers know the score. The quality level of their children’s education is the issue at stake. I am confident that under the leadership of Governor Milliken relief from the present pattern of property taxeit will come—hopefully for the school budget year of 1971. Until it does we must see it through on our own. Even then, from all present indications, relief will come only to those school districts that have done what we nrfti.st do on June 9—vole sufficient support as to become eligible for increased state support. Any excess which we may have voted above minimum state requirements (yet to be established) can rightfully be expected to be rescinded when such aid arrives. ★ ★ ★ The 6-mill addition sought above the present'15 mills means $1.20 per week additional for the owner of a $20,060 home state equalized at $10,000. Measured in terms of lifetime improvement opportunity for our 6,800 Huron Valley school children, who can tell us of a better buy? Vote yes June ii. WILLIAM L. mainland OAKLAND ORCHARDS, MILFORD It was my understanding that the raises in property taxes the last few years did no*f benefit the .school districts. Because of this, many school districts have requested increases in millap to offset the higher cost of living. Huron Valley School District will vote for a continuance of 15 mills and an additional 6 mills for operating expenses on June 9. After losing its bid for more millage last winter, why did not the Huron Valley School Board use its efforts and money in an attempt to persuade the Stale Legislature to change the methods of taxing for schools lo a more equitable basis? It is becoming more difficult for people to own a decent home. I can’t imagine how those on pension, Social Security and heavily in debt can afford to continue lo pay the increasing property taxes. VERY CONCERNED 9iie»tinn ami Answer I have a relative disabled in another state who could probably be helped If he knew how or where to go about It. Is there somewhere I could write or call to see if there are any facilities near him? MRS. D. L. K. An office has been set up specifically for that purpose. Write HELP, Box 1200, Washington, D.C. Question and Answer What do soldiers In Vietnam want besides pre-sweetened soft drink mixes and gum? What’s the beM way to mail them, and what kind of packing is needed? MRS. MARSHA MEIER Majestic Prince bites. He (has playfully chomped small REPLY .S’cnrf nothing scented, such as soaps, after It is a human reaction of tho.se who oppose this war. But it much to do with the fact that thev all .seem to love him and hghtweight Underwear and T-^hirtS, combs, U.SQ^ does a lot to lighten the s^Vs just a big, playful kid blades, lightweight plastic raincoats, burdens of those who are who'Mves life. And filet see-throiigh plastic bfiefcasesi magazinesf canned goods (espe(fially meats), pre-packaged ready-to- fighting the war, does It? Not many of the 540,000 men now in Vietnam fought like tigers to get there. ’Their number came up and, like the mignon. tiked Derby winners have Ooodsm cpns well-sealed with masking Of friction , ,, , , , .. .. threatened to bolt or rear ^ope. Chocolate and hard candies tend to melt and afraid of sgch good .soldiers they are, they vvhen the traditional Blanket Twn together. Airmail is best because surface mail and sometimes went. Simple as that. of Roses was placed on their Can inn ^ LIFELINE TO .STA’TES USO is their chief lifeline to Ihe States. It provides places where they can scrape the muck of a dirty land off their bodies and uniforms; whether they can bile into a genuine hamburger or take a long cold drink of milk.shake. USO Roses was placed on their necks. Majestic Prince was delighted. He began eating the roses. He- also tried to browse among the Black-Eyed-Susans which are beiJtowed on the winning critter in the Preakness. They turned out to be plastic, but that didn’t matter can take too long. Packages under 5. lbs. can go oAM (space available) — for surface rates they go airmail if apace permifs. To be sure it goes airmail, you can send any size package PAL (parcel air lift) for surface rales plus $1. Pack things the same as you would to keep them intact if you were sending it anywhere else. Service recruiting officers u.u..,n..„.,v.i..anc. .ov, - ■ . , -...... Qucstions obout whot to s means to them a place where ”juch. Majestic Prince likes Office can give you other mailing information they can write a letter home, . if you need it. catch a breather. USO brings them the kind- o f entertainment for which they hunger: Fun, laughter, stars. So why starve USO just hecau.se It’s a lousy war? USO makes it less intolerable. The address is in your phone book, and your contribution i.s tax deductible. ’Ted Williams was supposed to have been detained in a nut house by this date in the ba.scball .season. That was the Jjwl pilgrim-* age North of Preservation Hall ^and Plays Encore By DICK SAUNDERS 'That magnificent thing is> going to happen again right in our own backyard — and it’s only a It really did turn inlo a love story between the audience and performers. Those, who came loved the music, and the musicians responded in kind with a performance bursting with warmth and drums, along with Pierce On trumpet. prediction. A man of his great past skills on the field and his Verbal Orchids and Mrs. J. Mansfield . of 2630 Patrick Henry; 56(h wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Jacobs of New Haven; 51st wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. T. M. Ncisey oT 8120 Gale; 57th wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mi's. Frederick R. Schwartz of Holly: 57th wedding anniversary. Charles Tuscany bad ballplayers, derisive fans and stupid ba.seball writers, could noL conceivably kee|i his balance beyond the flrtst of June. Well, he was cheerful the Billie and DeDe Pierce Jazz B an d from Preservation Hall In qAiiNDFRU New Orleans. I remember I^ack in the early months of 1968 when 1 These people are symbolic of the early roots of a great American art form In music. Their roots are In blues and , folk strains and the end pro- Ahd I have no doubts it will ductus jazz, be Seated June 13 when the 'The inescapable fact is that band Tpoear.-i in concert in the.se people are not going to Brook .shell at be with us forever. In some respects, we are in the twilight of this pure strain of New Orleans Jazz. ’They are artists and an art form not to be missed. ’Their music is a sweet echo chipper, and relaxed the other steadfastlyv insiMed to people accompanies the band day at the luncheon in at Oakland University that ‘“’trips and plays sousaphone. ^ Washington that l a u nch e d New Orleans jazz could not f^^t’s changed is Washington Post sports editor only be sold to area residents, everyone’s a year older. Everyone In the band has seen 60, with the exception of Allan Jaffe, proprietor of Preservation Hall, who Shirley Povich’s new book. "One of your colleagues came up to me the other day and gave me some advice," the , tn a n a g e r re many parents who support the sex education programs in the schools. Birmingham Schools have an Incorporated K-12 program, because “We want to teach at the teachable moment,” said Dr. George A. Hallock, director of pupil services there. “The whole context of sex education here is through implication of responsibility and respect in a family,” Quinn said. •BOUNfi TO COME UP’ “'The questions are bound to come anyway,' and its helpful to me that the children have some background when I ansjwer them,” a mother told Strickler at a parent session. School officials claim many of the calls Into their offices about sex education are of an inquiring nature, not necessarily for or against. ‘ He said that the district wants to be able to teach sex education as the subject comes up, as in the classnoom where guppies kre born, qr in biology or science classes. Parents want to know what kind of programs are being conducted, which ones are best, and what teachers are in charge of dispensing the infofmation. Pontiac School District presently has a condensed program with four hours per year for fifth graders and five hours per year for eighth graders. 'This would help children realize that , the changes in their bodies and functions of the Reproductive organs are normal and healthy,Rie^ said. This way no special emphasis is put on sex education, as id “crash” courses. The children accept it as they do other functions and .systems of the human body,” Hallock said. Watdrford Township has been planning with district citizens for a year and will begin its program in fall, with a pilot project at Silver Lake- Elementary. School., X When the program has competed its first year, teachers and parents involved there will work with teachers and parents in other schools. HUMAN RELATIONS TWO SPECIALISTS Two sex education specialists. “Our program does not ju.st include pictures and parts of the body. Our plan is wholly to help youngsters become mature, responsible Individuals. Our emphasis is on human relations,” he pointed out, TEACHER SOUGHT Holly Schools are planning to have a senior high school program as soon as they can find a qualified person, who will also teach about drug, tobacco and alco-• hoi abuse, according to Schools - S\ipt. Ru.sseit Haddon. Farmington School District’s “growing-up” program is extracurricular and children attend only on the request of their parents. Farmington al.so has an adult education course to help parents talk to their>hildren about sex. The Ideal Gift For Father’s Day UA-*-Boy* , RECLINA-ROCKER^ m matter which choose, your iolection is ..certain to be popular wim father for years to come. He’ll love how It reiponde to ;r.leJil*h.^rockin«.loun«N.W«i^^^^^^ nappinc, reclining even to full bed position. You II dla- cover beauty end comfort thit good teste. Apd you’ll be thrilled, too. with styles there ere to chooie from; porary, Traditional, Modern lend Spanish. And they ert available in hundreds ot fics and vinyls. We, your authorized U-Z-Boy* dealer,wiu asslet you with the Mlectlon. Strickler and a woman teacherMrs. Nancy Landers, go into each elementary and junior high school for the lessons, on consecutive days. The first two days for fifth graders and first three days for eighth graders are in segregated boy-girl classrooms with the respective male or female teacher. The remaining two days are coeducational. The Bloomfield Hills School District, where administrators found that about 94 per cent of the parents wanted their children to have ,sex education in school, is in the process of developing a K-12 program. Administrators have met for an entire year ■ with Oakland County Health Department nurses, PTO presidents, princi- All of the school districts are careful about the way they plan their sex education programs, since a state law specifies that the programs must be voluntaiy and that parents may request thal their children not receive sex education. All of the school districts have reported that no children, or only a few, have been pulled from their sex education or “growing-up” classes. (Next: What opponents say.) Convenient Term* — 90 Dari Same aa Caah Open Monday and Friday Nighia ’til 9 P.M. Styla 833 Famous Muskin 12x36' complete pool package Sun Swimming Pool Chomicols •Chlorine cenrentrote I •PH|lelete (jet ot tpeciol low price! Save' Regular 10.99 folding golf cart Hold* itandard golf bog* Roll* ^^99 eetily over any terrain. Fold* BIG WHEELS BY MURRAY Reg. 13.99 Tot Rod or Fire Chief auto YOUR CHOICE .Reg. 14.99 wagon or 12.99 tricycle •Tot Rod, bucket teat, roll bar, boll beoring reor axle ’•Fire Chief outo. moulded tire*, fire bell and more. 11“ •Steel wogon, boll bearing wheel*, chrome hub cop*. • 16' trike Step-up platform, *teel frame Turq. YOUR IH88 CHOICE lO • 24 99 fire lruc|. Vermllllon/w white trim • 24 99 troctoi outhentu engine block • 21 99 trike Chrome fendei handlebar* All-weather 3/8" oval vinyl porch roll-ups C99 Heavy doty *lot roll-ups wipe cleon. Choose white, / green, or fruitwood fihith. \ 4*7 .. . 7.M i*7 ... *x7 ... Il.n 7*7 ... 13.99 8*7 ... 15.99 10a7 . . 30.99 Wide, sheer Dacron® panels in five sizes 47 "x4554 '. 63", 72" or 81" lengths. Snowy white Dacron® polyester panel* ore completely woshoble, need_ little or no Ironing. Easy-core window beauty. Jacquard towels In new exotic colors 1.00 Plump VIrtron® filled bed pillows 2" 75 9x12' cotton Oriental reproduction rugs 199 39 Woven jacquard coHon terry both lowdlt in doi*y pattern. Green/gold cronberry/green or eronge/bronze. Watt) cloth. 19* KItthaa tawoli, 3 lor $1 For the utmost In sleeping comfort. VIrtron polyester won’t mot, bunch. Cotton covert. Wosh. 21x27” size. 31x11 •l•*.3 l•rS7 31x39 llsa, 3 llr »9 Exquisite pofterns. Color* to brighten every room in your home. Eoiy-fo-cleon, long-wearing cotton .pile. 34x53 ..... 3.49 3ti*2 4.yy All sixax appmximxta Aluminum and web furniture for patio Reg. 108x82 Bunting 3-plece potio set 7^2-ft umbrella and sturdy metal table Choir. Sturdy aluminum 299 frortte. multi color plastic webbing Folds Sovel Chaise Ho* comfortable ^777 3788 five position ad^ustobl* 599 bock fqldt fpr storage 'Ball-glide glider, rocker with matching choir Thick innertprlngi-foom cushions Aluminum frame*. Gordeh umbrello ho» handy for rotting ond lowering Tobl white ennmeleH *#««« __ OPEN to A.M. TO 9 P.M. L-XL. Washable. Gat sat for summer, no-lron polyester/ cotton plaid, solid shorts. Sizes 30-42. Fbrtrel* polyest^/ ojort. cotton. Ass't. co)6i 30^44 vyoist sizes. Shirts 14>a-17,^pon,le Work Cloihot Dopt. Sufiwrb group oi mon 8 6.99 roboi Men t SI Waldorf nylon or Orion box .Mon't 7.|9 cotton t«rry beach coatg 6.00 3-.S2 7.00 Famous Woldorf robot Irt .solid coktrt, poBornt. ■ All fino fabrics, $-M-L-XL. Ankle, mid-colf, over calf STA PUTnylon; hi bulk Orion, 20colors, I size 10-13. Fine looking obtorbent robes In ass't. colors. Ideal for beach, both. S-M-k-XL. CHOICE Men’s regular 2.99 knit shirts or 100% Tetrojene dress shirts for summer 2*5 KNIT SHIRTS: 100% combed cotton In. a choice of stripes, solid colors, contrast trim with crew necks, collar models and deaf) chest pockets. Sizes S M L XL, Sdvel DRESS SHIRTS ' Tetrolene*^polyester tricot Is permanent press. In white and solid colors, two pockets, short sleeves, other fabrics In-the group. Sizes 14!^i to 17. ^ OPEN 10 A.M.Tq9P. n dflNin Su •a «lj^ Tew. I. (Sat. 9:30-9) te'6 p.ei. DOWNTOWN ANP DRAYTON PLAINS iMl A>-12 U.S. Scout Plane Downed Over N. Vl THE rOM’lAC I'HKSS. THU SAIGON (AP) An unarmed American reconnaissance jet was allot down over North Vietnam today by antiaircraft artil lery, the U.S. Command < an- It was the first sudi downing [the wat^. A rescue helicopter pickpdfthem up three miles off reported in nearly six months. The two crtwmen of the |2|tbo North Vietnamese city of million Aif ^orce RF4C steeredpoiig Hoi, about 45 miles north their crippled plane out over ^of the demilitarized zone, Tonkin Gulf and parachute^nto / One of the fliers was Injured ------------------------------™nd was flown to the hospital U.S. Is Still Probing Police in Ohio City ship Repose. GUN ATTACKED ed States halted the bombing and has ringed it with antiaircraft guns. OTHER CRAFTS DQVmED The U.S. Command also announced that a small Army observation plane and two Army UH-1 helicopters were shot down Tuesday and Wednesday The U.S. Command said It did|in various parts of South Viet- nam. Thirteen Americans aboard the three aircraft were killed. One helicopter was downed > COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A U.S. attorney says the Justice Department will continue the investigation which led to federal grand jury indictments Wednesday charging eight Co. lumbus policemM with conspiring with gamblers. “The Columbus project is not completed,” said Phillip Michael, a special U.S. attorney from Washington. He declined to say what direction tlie future probe would take. not know the exact location in North VietnamNpver which the plane was hit. But it said the plane’s two F4 fighter-bomber escorts attacked the enemy an-» Brodt and Frank Starkey, andi ^ Division 40 miles north of Patrolman Gai7 Roach. Robert Seven Americans were Martin and James Marcum, aU of the vice squad: and Frank \ t « 1 ^ Vietnam since the United States bombing the North last numbers operation in Colum-lj^^;;*^^ 9. When it stopped the bombing, the United States announced it would continue reconnaissance flights over North Vietnam and they would be escorted by fighter-bombers, bus Listed by Makley as co-conspirators, but not indicted were; Police Sgts. Melvin Helmpndol-lar and John Kaiser; former policeman Wilbur living In Florida; Frank Drun-gold, described as a numbers operator; Charles Wilkins, Michael Caiafa, Lewis Mullins, Art Lee and Cornelia Banks, who The policemen were charged with accepting payoffs from organized gamblers. A ninth man Iwere not further identified, described as a Columbus numbers Operator, was charged with making payoffs to policemen. The grand jury named nine othOtr persons, including two jra- Uceihm, as co<;onspirators: BEt^ED TO COMMENT Both Mayor M-E. Sensenbren-ner and\ Police Chief Robert Baus declined to> comment on the grand jury findings, saying they wanted w study the indictments. Publl\ Safety Director Fred Simon, who heads the police department, said he had no Immediate plans to suspend or: penalize the Officers. No arrest warrants were Issued. It^vjas the 920th American plane ^ot" down -o/er Norjh Vietnam since F^ 7, 1965 when the United mates began 'full-scale bomblng|of the North. Hclmandollar and Kaiser had: Military ..sources said North appeared before the grand jury Vietnam has build up a major after being granted immunity supply depot ar^d the coastal for their te.stimony^ Icity of Dong Hqi since the Unit- The second helicopter was shot down Wednesday 35 miles southwest of Da N^g, killing five Americans. OnA crewman was killed when the obagrvation plane was hit Tuesda^ night four miles northwest of Pleiku, in the central highlands. In Saigon, meanwhile, l^uth Vietnamese police were put bn a 100 per cent alert following the worst rash of terrorist explosions in nearly a month. Two varieties of wasps have been imported to successfully check a blight which' attacks olives grown in California. Know yourshadow Acting U.S. Dist. Atty. Roger Makley said all would be summoned for arraignment in U.S. District Court Juno 13. The Indictments, varibusly allege conspiracy to use Interstate facilities to aid racketeering, conspiracy to defraud the United States, and aiding ^nd abetting in the use of interstate fa-cilRies to aid racketeering. NAMED FOR INDICTMENTS All nine accused were charged with conspiring to prevent the f^eral government from lawfully collecting wagering taxes. > Named in the indictments Capt. Jerry Ryan, chief of the Intelligence section; Capt. Robert Taylor, chief of the vice squad; Lt. William Voorhls, a vice squad officer; Sgts. Robert ALSAR MAGIC 1/4" GIVES EVERY ALUMINUM SIDING PANEL A RICHER, DEEPER MORE NATURAL idWLINE THAT WILL MAKE YOUR HOME lUT IN THE NEIGHBORHOO Boat Classes Set Oakland County Sheriff’s Department will offer pleasure boating cla.sses at 7 tonight and June 12 to permit youths 12 to[V 16 years old to operate motorboats rated at 6 horsepower or more. The classes will be held In the County Supervisor’s Auditorium, Telegraph Road. The course must be taken before youngsters can operate the speciRed motorboats. When the sunlight falls on aluiDinum siding a shadow is created under the area where each piece meets the other (as seen in the illustration above). The thicker the butt ...the deeper the ^ shadow line. y Alsar siding has anj extra thick Vi' ShadowJ Line Blutt. A full 50% deeper than its competitors., GET A FREE N< OBLIGATION ESTIMATE. CALL NOW 357-2400 Norlh. MSI, south or wnt-Oul of town coll collsc|. Fsetoty-and Showroom - 21121 Telsgrnph Road. Notili of B Mila Road. GOME TO ALSAR'S BUILDERS SHOW ^ THIS SUN. IT:00 TO 4:00 j ImjiHtMigblaM'sslil^ndliigHt / { MiwIietMW of iliimlim aldiiig. Gat I frao hind misor |oit IW tho rido. . 1 Now . . . light at thS height of the seaioe. A huge, huge agforimeiit vdtik ttauy. many colon —and everything a girl needs in sportsweaT for e summer-full of fra. 4 to . . . 7 to U. Tremendoue savinge: Girls’ Pontieo 1st Floor. Downtown Dstroit & Branches. Here'* m, sampling of the savings: ellarsdpan^* prints;.... . siMt 4-OX, l|.47i>14.3.47. sd Ian|i^«s in ilorsl prints:. 4-6X, S.a!^.14,;3«47. e Pant drassbs. a hugs sslsetteoi:. . 4-6X. 3.S7| 7-14,4^47. e Slsevslasstartlsnsek knit polos: .44K, Lt7| 7-14,1.S7. e MH-riffain solids... a.......44X. L37| 7-14,3.47. XJ33SON THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 1969 A—13 the dad shops Shop under the sign of the Dad Shops. You^ll find them throughout Hudson's, filled with gifts to make his day last a liHle longer. If you can't come in call lS^-5100 or your toll free suburban number. Shop the Dad Shops! ijS W«tden p«rma>press see-through B pajamas. Designed ifi the short sleeve, knee length style.’Light v/eight for summer comfort. Never needs ironing. Dacron* polyester/cotton. Blue, green, gold $9 2 Weldon fattersall terry shave coat. It's a smart fashion idea. Made of cotton terry. Soft, absorbent and definitely coibfortable. Handsome colors to choose from. Complete size range. $11 3 Weldon at ease wear. Comfortable lounge wear for Dad. The cotton shirt in a fancy,print is handsome and colorful. $9 Alpine shorts made of cotton corduroy, are smartly styled in assorted colors $6 4 Jiffie* slippers by Esquire for comfort you con really feel. A wide assortment of different and exciting patterns to choose. Machine wash and dryable. $4-$6 a) Cabana, cotton terry lined. $4-$6 b) Sportster, cotton teirry lined. $4 c) Tahiti, cotton mesh. $6 d) Montego, Irish linen hopsack. $6 5 Weldon Gift Pockage. Short sleeve, knee length pajamas and shave coat. All attractively packaged. Permanent press. Dacron* polyester/cotton. Comfortoble in . blue, green, gold. Sizes A,B,C,D, $14 Find thts. at Hudson's Men's Furnishings Deportment, Downtown 1st Floor and branches. FATHER'S DAY IS JUNE 15TH , . f • ' -isi,, A'iii ■ , 'Jll'; .HI Lid Eostlond ‘ Westland Pontioc Oaklond .li ■ A l AAI I AL'Itr * yi I A—14 'lili. THE POXTIAC PRESS. THUR'SDAY. JUNE 5, 1&6» State House Sponsors Scratch Vote on Greyhound-Racing Bill LANSING (AP) - The Mldiigan House has had its first outing on the legislative track with a bill to establish greyhound racing. But when the voting bell rang Wednesday night, it wouldn’t make a move. (A-track betting controls, backed by Rep. George Montgomery, D-Detroit, ji n d parochiaid were scratched. REVENUE SIGHTED. The Greyhound raciM Issue, which some say could add as much as $15 million to the $19 million the state now takes in from thoroughbred horse and harness racing, remained alive, however, as sponsors nullified a defeat-bound roll-call vote. Saying “Every’dog ha.s its day,” Reps. Dominic Jacobefti, D-Negaunee, and Roy Spencer, R-Attica, turned to rebuilding the support that so suddenly fell away. Two other proposals offered by Rep. James Farnsworth, R-Plainwell, and Mrs. Josephine Hunsin^r, D-Detrolt, would have directed, that all proceeds from the proposed eight-circuit greyhound program go to sup-p 0 r t education. Farnsworth specified the money be used for parochial schools; Under the bill, little revenue actually wwld be turned over to the state. The lowest local government would get 5 per cent of the proceeds from its neighboring track, and the con-troling county would receive 10-percent. All counties would share 70 per cent of the annual proceeds. and licensed track operators would pay 5 per cent of all parimutuel wagers^ plus one-half 0^ the “breaks" — odd change saved from rounding off the value of winning, tickets. LIMIT ON BILLS? Much 0 fthe lower chamber’s nine-hour session was taken up with rejection and reconsideration of a bill to limit the nseasures legislators could propose each session. mittees would have unlimited drafting rights. _ other action, the House approved measures to: relativos ellgibla lor old »ge Rep. Alfred Sheridan, D-Taylor, concerned about the House’s slow pace M dealing with some 1,800 bills, proposed to limit representatives to seven bills and senators to 21. Com- Sheridan’s measure lost on its first ballot by only one vote, 55-54. Attempts to revive it later threw Democratic ranks into turmoil, sparked a midsession caucus and postponed final resolution of the matter. • Exempt legislators from possibly having to pay city income tax in both Lansing and their constitutent areas. • Exempt children and adult relatives from any obligation to support parents or other • continue Aid to Dependent GhUdren for 30 days after the reconciliation of their separated parents. • Require employers to pay farm workers biweekly and issue itemized statemeills of all deductions. Preliminary action on the bill began smoothly when Rep. Raymond Kehres, D-Monroe, won approval for an amendment to cut the required distance between any dog track and a thoroughbred or harness racing track from 75 to 35 miles. That would allow a greyhound track in Monroe j County, between Detroit and Toledo -area tracks. Montgomery, a cosponsor of the bill, failed to win support for a plan which he said would generate an extra. $150 million in state revenue! from off-track .betting with licensed betting CURB Montgomery proposed parimutuel agents be authorized to accept only prepared offtrack wagers. He said his amendment would eliminate some $4 million that h e e^itimated is channeled to illegal bookies. Nevada Street Cleanup Is Set The Nevada Street ^ub has called for a weet cleanup starting at 9 a.m. Saturday. Residents are asked to assemble at the end of Bagley and work will proceed toward Motor. A city truck will accompany the cleanup squad to haul away rubbish. ^ Draft to Call 185 From County in July State Selective Service headquarters has ordered local draft boards to deliver 2,106 men for induction into the Army in July, including 185 in Oakland County and Vf from Pontiac boards. Twenty Inductees will come from Pontiac Board 65, 14 from Board 67 and 33 from Board 331. 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As a matter of fact, you’d h^ve to use 20 times the maximum rei:;iommended doeage to kill most fish. Aquathol Plus is a product of Pennsalt, leaders In the development of aquatic weed control chemicals. Ws effective, economical and, easy to use. If you have any questions about your particular weed problem, or need help in application, just ask the dealer nearest you In the list below. Act now...so your lake will be clean, weed free and ready for summer fun. Pennsalt Chemicals Corporation, Agricultural Chemicals Division, 111 Windsor Drive, Oak Brook, Illinois 60521 ^pennsalt) .f V ; , PCI'MMI IMCMlrai Supply MI-2613 PUNT Main Undacapini 742-1434 PONTIAC Standard Oil Co. 334-1514 StaiMlard Oil Afante: «IMmi«NAM EdRItmcko M4-S290 PIMBNTON , Jack Da Rosa 229-9822 CLARKSTON Bob Jonaa 625-3656 " :P'P^P. s'(. ' ' :S; ' ' ■ ‘'..t ; •' . ,s', ' . .. J ' HflUJAIIIffQll h-6ou|lati Swirtz CrMk Elwator Produean QavMar 762-513* i Lumbar Co, 653-4215 655-21C1 PENTON MILFORO RobortPsitn Noll Braun 266-6071 NOVI WAUtb UKI Dick Bur Olin Evans 349-1611 624-2131 /■ r ' S' • ' "J , i J mm pum Of copvmm PAPmC PIAR Alt STORtS. I®lay@3pe SIM^IS SUPER SPECALS TONITE, FRI. & SAT. ‘BVTMITOIUTIG ELECTRIC CAN OPENER and KNIFE SHARPENER PORTULE CMnWNE gp^ TAPE PLATERS Model 1442 Hipster—the original tape player for cartridge tapes. Limit 1 per person while quantities last. -CAMERAS MAIN FLOOR Low Priced at Just touch the switch and it automatically grips, punctures, turns and opens any size can ... then shuts itself off. Knife sharpener in back to sharpen any knife. Limit 1. -HOUSEWARES 2nd Floor 98 Ni Saginaw St Downtown Pontiac 1-HR. FREE PARKING IN Downtown Parking Mall Wjth Purchase! m CONDITIONER For Sliding Windows 6,000 BTU NOW Eu»y Termsl Plugs into ordinary IIS* volt current, has 2-fan speeds, tliermoslatlr control, 3-way air direr* -linn, . Installation. Kit 8,000 BTU, 8189 included, ______________________ Other Modtds and Cnparities from J2.S Cu. Ft. 2-Door Biggest freezer iretion ever that we’ve seen in a refrigerator priced lo low! Hos giant 120-lb. True zero freezer capar-ity. Other Featureai Clsnt refrigerslor - see* tion with 17.8 sq. ft. of shelf area, big porrelain crisper, plus lots of ds« luxe door features in. eluding egg trays, butler eompariment, ample storage apace and more. The Good Housekeeping Shop NO MONEY DOWN R7.10 Monthly: 90 Bayt Sam» as Cash 51 W. Hurolf OpenMon., of Pontiac Thur$ & Fri. *tll 8tS0 PM. FE 4-1555 BANK by lAe 10*>‘ EAKN from the 1** with The GOLDEN 400 PLUS Free Checking! Pontiac The Bank on ^‘THE GROW^ 12 Convenient Offices Mambmr Federal Depotlt huurance Corp, with Deponltt tmured to $15,000,00 Bank NOTICE DOWNTOWN KRESGE’S GRAND RE-OP^NING SALE STARTS TODAY SEE THIS WEBIESIM1PS and Vmmn PRESS FOR OUR OROR-RUSfER SPEGULSI JULIA ROGERS Today's Woman • Painting Colors Her Life ByJUNEELERT’ A lifelong interest in arts and crafts hgg recently culminated in the flowering of;, a career for Julia Rogers of Birmingham. IKidowed last year, Mrs. Rogers expresses great appreciation of her late husband’s encouragement and pride in-hw artistic efforts, believing that the ci&itacts she hhs made through the years ill art circles are responsible for her present occupa|ion in the art field. ★ * ★ Julia came to Birmingham with her family at age 5, and early displayed art talent which was encouraged by her teachers. Upon graduation from high school, she entered Eastern Michigan University, studying art for about two years, until the depression made it necessary for her to earn a living. ' * * * Marriage to Carl Rogers two years later ended the college dream, though Julia continued to attend extension study classes and to exercise her talents at home. ★ ★ * A daughter, now married and li^ting in Rochester, and a son, a senior at Olivet College, also contributed to keeping her busy during those years. WATERCOLORIST She joined the Pontiac Society of Artists some 18 years ago. Describing hefkelf as primarily a watercolorist. Julia also produces collages, mobiles antf various crafts Hems . . ; papier linache, decoupage, sand castings, etc. ♦ * * —• Interested in gardenlj||**’also, Julia studied the art of dwarfing trees and has several specimens on her patio. Refinishlng furniture is another of her skills. ★ a * • Ij>st fall, members of the women’s auxiliary of St, Joseph Mercy Hospital asked Julia if she would serve as ad^sor and workshop chairman for their May fair. Though she had not been involved in this kind of activity before, she consented, and from October to May piled up 5WI hours of volunteer help to produce articles which were sold by the auxiliary. * a * A couple of months ago, Robert Thom, well-known Michigan artist, with whom Julia had served on the board of the Bloomfield Art Association, Invited her tp work with him. Her job involves transferring prints of original paintings to canvas by a reverse transfer process, coating the surface with a colorless gel and painting the highlights in the manner of the original/, painter. These “facsimiles,” as they are called. are then suitably framed and sold to persons who prefer something more like a painting than the flat prints they could otherwise afford. Of her new career, Julia, says, “It is really exciting and I love it. I’m working With paint all. day long. The only thing, that disturbs me is fighting that traffic on the expressway.” . * ★ Another exciting development of the past year was when Mrs. Rogers was asked to teach a class at Pontiac Creative Arts Center, in 1968’s summer workshop program, and again in the fall 10-week course. She is there now every Wednesday afternoon. -— She said, “1 get a lot of women who think ihey can’t do things. They say, ‘Oh, I’ll never be able to do that.’ But, after they’re shown how, it becomes simple to them, and they’re so pleased with themselves that they didn’t give up. “I just face up to the challenge and try to overcome it.” * ♦ ★ Mrs. Rogers has won several awards for her paintings over the years. Among them are a watercolor award from the Bloomfield Art Association in 1963; a blue ribbon from the Union Lake Women’s Club exhibit for a watercolor collage in 1966; a second for watercolor in another .vear at Union Lake plus a first i*” rnndia. Sex Equality Clothes YA4CA Pool Scene DETROIT (UPI) - Discrimination because of sex is out, according to federal law, even in the men’s poof at the downtown Detroit YMCA ‘ where Lynne Weatherholt is the new lifeguard. The comely, 28-year-old brunette has a polite answer when asked by startled male swimmers about what she’s doing there. ★ * * “There were not enrtugh males to go around. So I was hired,” she says. “Besides, you’ve heard about the law against discrimination because of sex haven;t you?” The YMCA may be pioneering in a new field, but everything’s all right — men and boys must now wear swim trunks at all times, a situation that left one member rather embarrassed when he forgot his swim togs and rushed into the pool. * * .' V “I turned the other way,” said Mrs. Weatherholt. “He plunged into the pool.’.’ Continue Game With Guests Is Solution . By ELIZABETH L. POST Of The Emily Post^Instltnte Dear Mrs. Post; Recently we were playing cards with a couple when some other friends dropped in. We invited them to join us in the game but they refused. 'They continued-to . slay so we quit playing, cardk so we could entertaih This teemed unfair to the invited guests. Should this happen again, how ^ can I handle the situation without hurting either party ? — Betsy * * Dear Betsy; Your obligation is always to your invited guests — not to those who , drop in unanpounced. You should have , offered the unexpected visitors sonte refreshments, and asked iThert to join you or “kibitz,” but yoii should have . continued the game. Even if the game had not started, but had been planned befotehand, you would say, “We were planning on a game of hearts ^ would you care tp join us or watch for a while?” Only .if the invited guests insisted on postponing the game should you give it up. Joy of Giving Is Suffering Because of Ungrateful Ones By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: Every time my wife and I go to visit a friend or relative, my wife thinks she has to bring a little gift for the children. I think it’s a nice idea when the children are appreciative, but 1 put my foot down when it comes to a certain family. My wife’s sister married very well and she has three spoiled, selfish childi%n, under ten years of age. No matter what we bring them (and my wife always spends a little more on them just to make a good impression) U is received with, “Oh. is that ALL?” Or, “I "have one just like it.” I told my wife that from now on, we’ll bring those children nothing. She says she agrees, they don't deserve anything, but if she name empty-handed her sister would look at her funny. What would you do? TILLIE’S HUSBAND DEAR HUSBAND; I would let my sister look at me any way she wished. Weekend in Japan AirService Indudes Abortion Run PORTI^D, ^Ocjk^^(AP) - When Oregon want\an abortion, they may check with travePagendes before worrying about a doctor. And by an almost routine procedure they can be flown off to Japan with,ail medical arrangements made in advance. The situation was hinted at during the recent controversy in the state legislature dyer liberalizing Oregon’s abortion laws. One argument by proponents of changing the law. was the contention that any woman with the price of a plane ticket could gel a legal and medically sound abortion in Japan. * * * To test the assertion, a woman who was not pregnant made a random phone check of .some travel agents. In a nervous, faltering voice, she told each agency she wanted to go to Japan “for medical reasons.” They got the idea. Bpt the first agency, a large, nationally known outfit, told her, *^e donl^" handle that sort of thing. Sorry. Goodbye.” Another .well known agency was more sympathetic but only referred her to the Japanese Consulate. She phoned there and was told that it had no medioal connections but it would issuelher a visa. "What you do in Japan 'is your own business,” she was told. VARIED RESPONSE The third agency call drew this re.sponse; “Is this for an abortion? Yes, we’ve handled it before. But It’s not the kind of thing you like to talk about on the phone. Why don’t you come in and see i^? I’m sure we can help you.” , From another travel ligency; / “Are' you referring to an abortion'^ Yes, we can taki care of everything you. We work through someone in San Francisco who arranges for the doctor and hospital. You can leave Portland | Wednesday morning- arrive in Tokyo Thursday, have your operation on Friday and be back home Sunday.’! The total cost, said this agent, including about 8700 air fare and 850 medical feef, would come to "well under 81,000.” Japanese law allows abortions if continuation of pregnancy might affect the mother’s health from a physical or eJonomic viewpoint. Interpretation of the law is left to a licensed physician. * The Oregon liegialature bas enacted a new abortion law, which takes effect Aug. 23. It will permit abortions when there is a .substantial risk that the pregnancy would greatly impair the physical or mental health of the mother, if the child would be born with seriops physiciat or mental defect or if the pregnancy resulted from rape or, incest. The present law permits abortions only when the’mother’s health'|ls in pei^l because of the pregnancy. •* * -*• ^ But there is nothing illegal, according ^to Oregon authorities, about leaving the state to h*ve pn abiRticn perfortHid in a foreign country. There are no estimates of how many women do. MOTHERLY APPROACH Another travel agent phoned gave this response; “Do you need an abortion, my dear?” a motherly voice asked the caller. "We can arrange everything.” She said It was not commonly known outside the travel Industry but one airline handles a kind of abortion-service package plan for the agency. The agent said a representative of the airline meets the patient at the plane, escorts her to her hotel,^ coptqcts the doctor, arranges for an examinatlhn and for the operation, usually the follwing day. \ . The agent said the doctor normally used ■ Is very understanding of this kind of problem, my dear. One time 1 sent a young girl to him and she was so nervous he took her shopping in downtown Tokyo before the operation to calm her down.” ' and would discontinue bringing gifts to ungrateful children. W A * dear aBBY ; What does a wife, who really loves her husband, do when he asks for 1‘permission” to spend one night with his old girl friend to find out if he has really gotten over her or not? Boyd and I have been married two years and have a small baby and I want this marriage to last. 1 am 23 and Boyd Is 24. I knew Boyd went steady with a girl all through high school, but I assumed that after we were married he would forget about her. Now he tells me that she had an unhappy marriage and is back in .town again. Abby, I have my pride, I don’t want Boyd wondering whether he still cares for his “first love.” I Will say this for him, at least he was honest with nrie. He could have seen this girl again without telling me and I would have never known. What do you advise? HEARTACHES DEAR HEARTACHES; Don’t hang MV medals on Boyd for his “hbnesty.” Irs a maneuver. You are married to an immature 24-year-dld who is looking for "mother’s approval” to be a naughty boy. Let him know that you are not his mother, you're the wife he took when he promised to forsake ail others, and that’s what you expect him to do. it * h Everybody has a problem. What’s yours? For a personal reply write to Abby, in care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48956, and enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. ♦ * ♦ Hate to write letters? Send 81 to Abby, in care of 'The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-690, P.O.' Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056, for Abby's booklet, “How to Write Letters for All Occasions.” Fim U. Roberts. Keenan Jr. (left) Uaves sewir.sh#i|i chapel at the U,S. Military Academy with hi» bride, ceremony after WilliamH-, graduated from the aca> the former Lorretta J. Caasidy, At right 2nd. Lt. demy in Went Point, N. T. Wednendny. Keenan, Stephen J. Willianu! leaves loith his bride, the from Mountain Home, Idaho, graduated from the former Constance M. Cassidy. The sisters from academy two years ago. Williams is from Ctnctn-HtghUmd Falls, N. Y., were married in dmble nati, Ohio. j; We’ve just reduced the price of this famous Broyhill by •100. And that’s just part of it! Sure, pri(!e is important and a *100 off price on this beautiful Broyhill set could well be the best buy you’ll ever make, but that’s only part of the story. Equally important is the qitality of the set. Yoo’U fall 111 love with this massive, elaborate Spanish set finished in a rich Bolero brown. Jiiftl visualisse the lonfi; 72” iriple dresser, door ehesl with loads of drawer Hpa.0. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 480U. an i^iMurtment house for them outside a sunny window. Eigldj Summertiitteliithe « Perfect Time for Youlo Look Beautifnl Won..Tues..Wed..W 20% OFF on; QualUr Ppnnaiientt New Wood Stain sunny or twelve compartment feature ventilation air wrap-aroimd porch, apd _ aluminum* ro^. Available in aj green-and-white baked enairielj . BrautxSkop Rik^ Bldg., FES-7186 in Aerosol Can Having a tooth filled is far more than just plugging a hole. Since it is actually treatment of a disease, the dentist must use his training, experience, skill and judgement when he fills a tooth. A new wood stain comes In^ the form of a cmicentrated and is applied ' by | aerosol. The maker says it is' fadeproof, permanent, and has^ three times the coverinig and staining power of liquid stains. It also is water soluble. * A new book about keeping your mouth healthy can be yours free by sending a self-addressed, stamped long envelope to Dr. Howard The stain, with the con-: sistency of shaving cream, i comes in maple, mahogany, walnjit, fruitwo^, avocado and' driftwood. . I 1 ODALITV aed QUANTITY! • Fra* CaunMU>( M WidiUiii Cum Booh • Fr«»'ljirj, “Jmi !l»rrl«a” Sl»» • C. R. HASKILL STUDIO FE 4-0553 Open House for Couple New Features in Tablecloths An open house In the Elks Temple Saturday from 2-5 p.m. will mark the 50th wedding-anniversary of Mr. and Mrs, Harry Kimmins of Hickory Grove Road, Bloomfield Township. Marri^ in Baltimore, Md., June 4, 1919, the couple has two children, Mrs. Harold J. Hackett Jr. of Tilmor Road and Dr. Robert R. Kimmins of Orchard Lake. There are four grandchildren. New tablecloths on the market give you all-cotton washability, plus durable press and soil release finishe^. What can you do with leftover sour cream dip? Stir it into green peas, lima beans" or mashed potatoes. i Save Oi (lOmril-Arteniis IVjlon Tricot Travel Set Now is the lime to slock up on your favorile Gosssrd-Artemis Irsvel robe, pajamas and gown al prices lower than evert Wonderful nylon tricot ... so paekable. Pink or Blue in P. S. M. L. Pajamas 32 thru 40. Robe Pajomas Gown Slippers Rag. IlM 9.99 5.99 2.99 Choose the style you want and then make your selection from many Scotchgarded finish solids, tweeds, Matelasses and durable Naugahydes. The three Reclina-Rockers fcnliired above are sure to enhance your decor. These chairs respond smoothly and gently to your every wish . . . rocking • • • lounging: . . , watching TV . . . even full bed reclining^ The selector mechanism lU'ovides just the right leg rest comfort l>osilions for perfect relaxation with or witliout reclining the chair. Immediate delivery in lime for Father’s Day. Forty years ago, La-Z-Boy pledged itself to establishing a tradition in comfort and bSauty. With the addition of each new chair stylsr to their line, they have hold firmly to this promise. Throughout the world, La-Z-Roy is synonymous \yith irresistafole comfort and beauty. Towne & Country is proud to offer this outstanding collection, just in time for Father’s Day giving. You’ll love the unusual savings on these world-famous, genuine La-Z-Boy Reclina Rockers. '' OPIN MONDAY THROUOH SATURDAY PROM 10 A.M. TO 9 P.M. CONVINIENT TERMS TO SUIT YOUR , BUDGET ■ MVAl OAK. 114 W. 4TH ■ UANOAll. }I0 W I Mill • IIAMIKOHAM. 141W. MAfll ^ ■AONnAC. Tfl MUAOf) ■ KOCHnnK. KOCH Hill. riAIA s wUTHriiio. ni-iwiivi !=• LJ R ISI I T U FR E 4099 Ttltgroph Road — juil South of Long Ltike Road — iloemfiold Hilit - Ml 2-IS22 23400 Michigan ju$t Ca%t of Tolograph Road — Dtorborn -< LO S-3400 < ■y\\ A'* ■■ ■ ■ ■ :: THE PONtlAC PRESS., THURSDAY. JUNE 5, 1969 Tell of Officers, Funds New officers of the Pontiac-Oakland Town 41all, Inc. are announced. They include Mrs. B. B. Roush as president; Mrs. Fred Cockle and Mrs. William Taylor Jr., vice presidents. Others are Mrs. Mph Allen and Mrs. “ .......... secretaries: Mamhssian, treasurer. Proceeds from last season will be distributed in this manner: Pontiac Symphony Orchestra — $2,0000.1)0; ^aytoh Plains Nature Center - $413.21; Pontiac Creative Arts Center — $400.00; Pottti.acvCommunity Arts Council $100.00;Citizens Ross E11 i 011,1 Committee on Youth $100;00; Mrs . Elizabeth Scholarship at Pontiac Business . Institute - $275.00. Committee members arc. Mesdames; Donald 0. Johnson, Vem Barker, William Wright, Donald Murphy, Richard Veazey,- Harry Hall, James! Cowan. Members Ready " * Exhibit Pieces Pack Travel Kit Add that touch of good taste to your summer entertaining^ Community and Oneidacraft Di Stainless Iced Drink Spoons are now at summer sale pricss. Tall, tapered and practical In IQ exqiting patterns. A wonderful gift. . The assembling of an exhibit I be entered in the Michigan Conference of Handweavers, to be held in Ann Arbor this month, will be the order of I Keep a first aid and comfort businpM at the June 13 meeUng kit In the car when making a!»^ the Detroit Handweavers and jlong trip. This can include Spinners Guild, plastic bandages, an antiseptic, cleansing tissues, eye lotion in a plastic squeeze bottle, extra sunglasses, suntan lotion^ comb bnd brush, aspirin, anti-nausea jireparation, nail clippers and nail files? The meeting will begin at 11 a.m. in Room C in the Concourse, Northland Center, adjoining parking lot E. “Crackle Eave” is the exhibit’s theme. Bright and early Wednesday morning, a busload of women left The Pontiac Mall fbr a day at the Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn. All set to go on this trip which concluded the season’s Woman’s World Series- are (from left) Mrs. Robert Schlosser, Troy, tour director; Mrs. Leora Stevens, Cottage Street and Mrs. Ethel Taylor, Ruth Street. Heart Patient Watches Daughter Graduate KALAMAZOO (UPI) - Nancy Barnum, 17 marched up for her high school diploma Wednesday night in a ceremony her father never expected to Ffiilit> Barnum, Michigan’s fir4 heart transplant patient, told his daughter, Nancy, "you lool just fine.’’ Barnum was rushed to the University of Michigan Hospital^ in Ann Arbor over the weekend when he had a sudden temperature rise but doctors released him after tests. On Sept. 19, Barnum, then 49, received the heart of Herman lopenhoff, 38, who died after a brain tumor operation. He was released . from the hospital in December. Barnum, who says not all his memory has returned, stitl has participated i n Democratic politics and attended things like a high school commencement. Naiu^ is the youngest of the Bamum’s four children. Pontiac Mall Tttbgraph at Elizabath Lak* Rd. Phon* 682-4940 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY^ JUNE 5, I960 Poll/s Pointers Serves as a Trap DEAR POLLY ~ I find old jend of hose as it drains into my socks, particularly h e a v I e r r^ub. — CONNIE are ideal for' affixing around the end of the hose draining fi'om the washeT'4ryer. 1 secure the top Of one on mine I do a load of clothes. You should see the lint, hair and other debris it catches, then turn the sock inside out and hang it up to dry for use again. Sure keeps the drain from getting clogged up and POLLY'S problem -DEAR POLLY - How does one apply dry-skin or suntan lotion to her own back when there is no (me to assist? ^KATHRYN DEAR POLLY - When machine sewing, try using the tip of an eraser pencil to guide your material rather than your fingers. The pencil is easy to hold and the tip is smaller tiun there is no splashing from ^id a finger. The eraser holds the slippery material much hotter. - ULLIAN Carol Jean Clarkson ^nd William Qardner planning to toed Sept. 5. The bride-elect, a senior at Hurley Hospital School of Nursing, is the daughter of the Jule Clarksons of Dover Street. Her fiance is the son of Mrs. R. Elizabeth Root of Mt. Morris and George Gardner of Highland Park. DEAR POLLY - When hemming a dress or skirt noadeof double-knit materia! I use bias tape instead of seam binding sewed on the bottom skirt, then whip the hem in by hand. It will mot pucker or show where the hem is put in as so often happens with seaiii binding that has a no-give selvage. AVIS DEAR GIRLS - A seamstress in the alteration department of a smart shop once told me that holding the hem back so that the stitches could be caught a bit below the binding helps in putting in. hems. They do not show a line on the outside. I have found this most satisfactory on coats and heavier things — a great find as these days most m us seem always to be putting up hems.' ■POIXY You will receive a d celatn flnish is dishwasher safe. Heavyweight aluminum heats evenly. Includes 1, 2-qt covered saucepans, 5-qt. Dutch oven, 10-in. shilier. •-P9. t«t . . . . . SALE PRIDED 1S.ST Prioad Saparataly 1597 Ilseirleal A^lonct, D«pf. 7-Speed Blender Bandy pashdiattaa 8-Speed Blender Has Tsnsh-n-G« Fss« 8fI.41.IS lurs Ihsi parmiu stop. ^0*9 iiari ssllon, S-eup gisis •< " < aonialasr. Ceramic Clad 7-Pc. Cookware aluminum w kote Teflon-Il let inoludea 1 ered saaoet Dutch oven, 1 skillet tS-po.aat... Op*n Maaday, Tkarsday. ‘'Prlday, Satarday 9 to 9. Tatudar, WadaiMday 9 as 5iSo I Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171 vr • V THE PONTIAC ^FRESS, THtjRSDAY. JUNE 5, 1969 Scars Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE g, 1969 Still standing as straight as an arrow in the halts of Pontiac Central High School is this statue of Chief Pontiac. Mrs. Johnnie Mill-mine of Meigs Street and William Foster of First Avenue, stop beside him for old-times’ sake. Their class of ’49 is planning a reunion at Pine Knob Ski Resort on June 14. Colorful, Haiid-Diecoraled Straw Bags Spark up siiininer outfits with a decorated strawr Reg- Price ba;:. So many colors and styles to pick from to suit all your moods. Wood handles, straw handles. foshion Acceisories ■ ncv 488 PCHS Class of 1949 fo Reune FoKSmooth, Super-Sleek Legs \ Reg. $2 Pr. - Cantrece Nylon Panty Hose fit O pr. * O like a seco^ skin! Mesh knit. Pro- V f;;* -C portioned fi^r all. Basic colors. ^ Reg.98ePr. ■ Cantrece Proportioned Stretch p,,, cq Nylon Hose fit so smoothly thanks |'pp | to stretch coostmction. Basic colors. StmHoiIaivDsiiL Mne Knob Ski Resort will be' the setting for a gala Pontiac Central High* School class of ’49 reunion next Thursday. > ‘Mrs. Johnnie Millmine and Robert Newlin are cochairmen for the event which begins at 7 p.m. and features dinner and dancing. Others working on arrangements include Joseph Partney, William Foster, Mrs. i Sit down, and let eveyone admire the unique flattery of the pretty collar. Stand up, side darts create a smooth, slimming line. Printed Pattern 4761; Half Sizes 12'^, UVt. WA, Wk, 20'/i, 22'/4, 24'A. Size 16V4 (bust 37) i takes 2V* yds. 39-in. Sixty-Five Cents In coins for each pattern ~ add 15 cents for each pattern for- first-class mailing and special handling. Send to Anne Adams, care of The Pontiac Press, 137 Pattern Dept. 243 West 17th St., New York, NrY. 10011. Print Name, Address with Zip, Size and Style Number. Over 100 new fashions close as your mailbox in new Sprihg-Summer Pattern Catalog. Free pattern coupon. 50 cents. New! Instant sewing book. /'Save hours — cut, fit, f , ■ modern, expert way. Over pictures. Only $1. An excellent way to stretch small amount of left-over hum| Is to mix it with cooked macaroni and a cheese sauce. QUALITY REPAIRS ON AU MAKE HEARIIIG AIDS Color$i • Block Grain • Cordovan Calf • Brown Grain • Ton Calf Featufesi • Wolf • Balonco Troad • Double Loathor Solf • Loofhor Llpod • Stool Shank Latlics% Men's 17-Jcwel Tradition Watches HAVE AOQUIIATI twill MOVBMINT 14-Foot Long Gym Set With Slide UWN iWiNQ, QMDE RIDE, IWINDt, TRAREtE PONTIAC MALL OPTICAL A NEARINQ AID CENTER Noma Brandt Available • Florthoim 0 Porto-Podt o Sobago 0 Huth Puppies W* Honor SMUrityCharg*-Michigan Bankard- MoitcrCharg* Ladies', Men's dress watches have precisiern movements. Reg. 39.9S 10 69.95. beauliful styling. Rigidly tested for high standards. mm •» (LFJL 8 legged gym set adds.balancc and strength to frame. Variety enough to challenge your child’s whole baseball team! Unassembled. Steel. Reg. 64.99 49^9 Toy* IIM11I jtmi ^ ^ Nusnasio DULoi. Store Hours 9 to 9 Mon., Thurs., Fri., Sof. 9to6Tuos.,Wod. TEL-HURON CENTER Optm Nenilty, TbevsSsy, Sslurdsy * fw 0, W«>n«d»y » u, 5»50 Sears Ssap I. ji IL,", ■, --..r i'? ‘ .. ; Downtown Pontiac aPhone FE 54171 'Jilt-.. :1: THE PONTIAC PRP:SS. THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 1969 B-7 ALL AT ONE LOW PRICEl *90’® ^ ^ Many Styles to Choose From • All Shock Resistant • Anti-Magnetic Watches • Dust-Res istai^t Watches $1.00 DOWN $1.00 WEEKLY PARK JEWELERS and OPTICIAMS 1 N. SAGINAW (ComwPikaSt.) FE 4-1889 State Unit Holds Election LANSTtIG Un - Michig^’ Blue Star Mothers, holding their annual convention at Lansing, reported they spent $11,000. last yhar on . patients at six veterans hospitids in ths state. Mrs. Grace Shipley of Johns, retiring president, was honored for long hours spent in Civil Defense work. Mrs. Betty Edelmayer of Detroit was elected new president of the group, composed of mothers of veterans of World War II. and the Korean and Vietnam conflicts. Other officers elected included: First vice president, Mrs. Marge Fleagle, Greenville: 2nd vice president, Mrs. Marie Woods, Bay City; 2rd vice president, Mrs. > Audie Wright, Riverdale; 4th vice president, Mrs. Ruby Hall, Port Huron; recording secretary; Mrs. M. A. Ozbum, Detroit; f i n a n c i a i secretai^, Mrs. Alice Brooks, Flint; treasurer, Mrs. Sylvia Kage,. Rochester. intf rfor« Benigner’s «nUh Up to 40% Off oA ' Bunching Tables ; Mirrors, Pictures, .Lamps,and Other Inter- — Woodward esting Wall 642.0430 kDecor. •Saera-Lumbar Bolts • Matorntty Garmonts aSurgieal Host a AnMa Wrist and Knaa Braeat a Saeroliae BallsaOarvIcal Collars and Corvieal Traction ate. "FITTED ACOOROINO TO YOUR DOCTORS ORDERS”... MALE AND FEMALE HTTERS, HOME FIHIMQ AVAILABLE. CALL FOR APPOINTMENT. . Alsoacomplateconvalatemtaidsdapartmcnlltiturinci Whaal Chairs-HaspHal Dads-Crutchaa-Canti-Dvtr-bad Tablet — Walkers - Patient Lifts — Gommodet -Shewer Chairs — etc. FOR RENT OR SALE 674-0 Prescriptions 4390 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains 674-0466 or 674-4455 WANT TO SELL LAWNMOWERS, POWER MOWERS, ROLLER SKATES, WAGONS, BICYClES? USE A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD! TO PLAC® YOURS, CALL 33WI181. A July 5 wedding is planned by Mary Frances Yost and Radioman 2.C. William K. Chapde-laine, USN, son of the Paul Chapdelaines of Chamberlain. Street. Miss Yost, daughter of the Petef F. Yosts , of Plymouth is an alrmna of Albion College where she was affiliated with Delta Go, mm a sorority. Her ' fiance is stationed at Ft. Allen in , Ponce, Puerto Rko. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wild bf Birmingham announce the engagement of their daughter, Rebecca Ann of New York, to Donald E. Olson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Olson of Pleasant-ville, N. Y. Miss Wild, and her fiance are graduates of Parsons College, Iowa. He is presently stationed with the United States ' Army in Korea. New styles in nien’s cotton shirts show the widereaching effect of the Thirties on the fashion world. Shirts have bigger collars and are worn with wider ties. Moreover, the outlook calls for lots of color. In both cotton dress shirts and sports styles, designers featuring blue, pink, yellow, spruce green, and Teds from melon to mulberry. Women iii White One of Pon,tioc*s Lorgaat Uniform Oopts. We Have a Uniform for You Famous Brands osi a 24 Hour Duty SlMi rong* from Jr. 5 to 15, ragulor 6 to '20, half titei 14Viito26'A. MATERNITY UNIFORMS Sixoa 6 to 18 Wo Carry NaneyCaklU '^IVuroot Shoot BobQtte Shop Chmrgo jieeouult 16 N. Saginaw Downtown Pork Froo FE 2-6921 Dining U the round? ihk “Carnival’* tablecloth sets the scene for a convivial dinner party. The fabric w sunny yellow; the fringe and hairpin lace edging, a gay Spanish red. The finished cloth measures 88” in diameter. The yarn used for trimming is cotton. Free instructions are available by sending a self-addressed, stamped envelope to the Needlework Editor of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600—P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056 along with, your request for Leaflet S 864. BIQ EXTRA VALUEI EXTRA BIQ SETl Bridetime / Summertime © Carpet Brightens Basement Stairs CQlVlPLETE / HOSTESS SERVICE COMMUNITY* ■ TAINLEBS To brighten basement stairs, carpet them with deck canvas, ixtra-tough cotton fabric available at awning shops or marine supply houses. It comes In 31 to 33-inch widths. Glue canvas' down with fabric cement. To give the natural-colored fabric a bright look as well as more durability, paint each step a different eye-cAtching color. Perfect for bridal giving, or for the oxtri entertatniiw that summer brings. ChooM from tbit arrsy of flno dMlins. VMMIs*, CsnttlS*, FroiMIro' Woodmsrt*, Paul Rsvars* A iupeit value hi Communibf Stalnleee... long the favorite of those who seek the fineet Quantity Id limited so don't deliqr. BERVICE COHTAINSt 10 UiipoOM, S dinnsr hnlvtt, B dinnsr, tofki, I Mup •poont, B ssisd forks, a tesd drink spews, a ooeMsIl forks, 2 table ^ •poons, 1 sold moot fork, I plsrcod. table spoon, ^ 1 butlsr knife. 1 S«»a« spoon. Buy Rowl Olfar tnda July 31, IBBB /\AOivr( .o/\At KY IlmlEilJ Pontiac Mall Telegraph at Eliaabeth I^ke Rd. Phone.682-4940 -ggj- At Siblefs ... MIRACLE MILE MAMA MIA ITALIAN IMPORTS From across'the sea — Italian catiliala and Bandals. In leather aa^aoft as a Mediterranean breeze. Styled for the .active life you lead. Available in a vast array of colors and styles. •4.99 - *15.99 MICHIGAN'S LARGEST FLORSHEIM DEALER OPEN blooufield Use Yew BeearHy EVENINGS TIL 9 miracle mile center Oherge er BNolilBea Bankenl 108 N. SAGINAW, DOWNTOWN PONTIAC - FE 3-7114 OPEN FRI. 9:30 A.M. to 9 P,M. '- SAT. 9:30 A.M. to 5:30 PM Shop WKC’S Lower Level Furniture Dept, For DAD’ or TrRAD’BUDGET BUY GIFT SPECIALS 'y UTILITY PRACTI-LITE . $14.98 Ssllsr - SAVE $7.10 SMOKER'S STANDS $788 ASSORTED BOOKCASES from on aiiortmenf of ^ T O O I and finlihoi and lizei., Hv I C. gih for Dod or Grod. 'P Qand i, see ond love, • ' «p RECLINERS and ROCKERS Come, tee the wide vorlefy of imokert' stand* fo choose from. Gel one for: Father — It'll be a remembered gift, $A88 and CARD TABLE .SET Reg. $54.50 SAMSONITE cord table lef has ih# cord loble ond 4 matching choirs. Get If for DAD ond SAVE $14.62. Limited quonfifles of relaxing recllneri or swivel rockers. Choice of covers ond color* while they remoin In stock. V $5988 $3988 LIQUPR CABINETS J$5988 Regular $129.95 - SAVE $70.07 now. Choice of Mople, frultwood or Wol nut finishes. See These And Other Practical Gift Ideas At WKC! NO MONEY DOWN - 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH - BUDGET TERMS DADI/ CDCH I'’ WKC'S Lot at Rear of Stbr# or 1 -Hr. In Downfowii Parking r/\Klx iKlIiI Mali — Hav# Ticket Stamped at Coahler'i Office / ;■ ■' . ii .:tr * ■i THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 1969 News Route Blind Boy's Bag PHOENIX, Arte. (AP) — Eaeven-year-old Mitchell Malone knows the 35 customers on his evening paper route by their “hedges, fences or how short the grass is cut;” Mitchell also admits he sometimes counts his steps so he’ll know exactly where to throw the paper. Being blind is only a small handicap for jtiim. During his several months on the job. The Phoenix Gazette'said, Mitchell has never received a "kick” — a complaint from a customer who has been missed. After getting out of his sixth grade class In the afternoon, Mitchell rides the school bus to the spot where he and the other carriers get their papers. Then he walks his route alone, keeping one foot on grass and the other on the side-walk. ■ “I know the houses by hedges, fences or how short the grass is cut,” he skid. “1 also count my steps some times.” At one house he puts the paper in a mail box. There’s a dog inside the fenced yard. “The dog’s a good friend ot mine,” Mitchell said. “But he doesn’t like newspapers. He chews ’em up.” kUtchell, vriio has been blind since a brain tumor was removed at age 6; does have one problem. Like other carrier boys in his suburban area, he likes to ride a bicycle. When his mother, Mrs. Neal Malone, recently caught him on a bike, the paperboy found himself in the doghouse. in Copter Crash HE’S UNDAUNTED - Mitchell Malone doesn’t let the fact he’s blind^keep him from being a newsboy. The 11-year-old has 35 customers on his route in Phoenix. The gift that starts die home...a Sweetheart Chest...by Lane* ThrM Ml vf four gtrl. wU mriw twMilMert CliMlt YOUR CHOICE A. irom lh.tr b.yfrl.ndt g.l marrlud within a y.ar ... _ •nd fllrl. Iinuw ihii. Whul loulii b* a b.lt.r glfr than . *70 •II* mt lh.i. b.avtllully conitruct.d ch.ili for your girl • y*-' •n iraduollun duyf I. #4020, oil we' dSVixtdMicK YOUR CHOICE 99,95 A. #40S0, dark eak*. I. #40Sl»Cenloinp. wotinit*, (otf-rlilng Irop. C #4032, mupl.*' or YOUR CHOICE 119.95 or driftwood oak*. a. #40S4, walnut*. uphohtMod tap C #40S7, moplo* I 159.95 JL iMipIt* Imho 1TO.95 ly end frldM,'f>9 ay,WMiMtd«y, I t, lehmliW. i 333-7052 2133 ORCHARD LAKE KD. BIRMINGHAM, Ala, (UPI) -The \vidow of a Michigan Arnty < major killed in a Georgia helicopter crash last year 1 filed a $l-miIllon suit against persons and firms responsible for the maintenance and ' manufacture of the aircraft. Mrs. Anita L« Johnson 'of Mount Clemens, Mich., filed tl suit in connection with the death of her husband, Maj. David H. , Johnson. He was stationed at Ft. Ruker in Alabama. Named in the suit were: Bell Aerospace Corp., Ft. Rucker; Textron Inc., Montgomery; Bell Helio^ters Inc., Enterprise; Bell ( Helicopter Division, Textron, Inc., Montgomery; Page , Aircraft Maintenance Inc., Rucker; Avco CorpT/ * *Montgomery; Bilb Wilson, field ( representative. Bell Helicopter Inc., Ft. Rucker; M. N. Bell, i statutory agent. Bell Hdicopteri ' I Inc., Enterprise and Leslie j Locke, statutory agent. Belli \ I Helicopter Inc. THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 1960 B—0 COLLISION-PRONE.-> The Australian Aircraft carrier Aewiriphoi. Melbourne, shown here, has twice sliced other ships in two, ship, and has suffered boiler, and catapult problems since the jas been involved in at least one other scrape , with another happier days following commissioning in 1956. ' %upid Once Strolled Deck Fortune Lands on Carrier MELBOURNE, Australia'were causing political problems. (AP> ^ They caUed the Mel-:The cabinet decided the Melbourne the “cupid carrier” on bourne was obsolete. Then she her maiden voyage for the Aus-tridian Navy. Full of fight and new teeth, her weapons were hidden behind a load of automobiles, fur^ niture, refrigerators and washing machines—the gear of 4. scores of British brides of the Australian navy men who had was reprieved in 1960 to become an antisubmarine carrier. When the Communist crisis developed in Indonesia, the government decided the carrier was invaluable to Australian defense. Fourteen Grumman Tracker aircraft and 10 A4E Skyhawk fighter-bombers were gone to the other side of the purchased from the United world to bring the ship home, i States, and the Melbourne went it * |jnto dock for modifications. She , She was a happy ship in those put to sea for her shakedown ' dJ^ys In 1956, almost 20,000 tons!cruise with the Voyager early in oppride and joy for the RoyalilOM. and the first tragedy fol-Awtralian Navy. Capt. J. P. Stevenson took com-| mand of her. He had been naval attache in Washington. | Four months ago, after a year t dockside, the carrier was about to return to sea when a Japanese freighter struck her a glancing blow on the port side. The side of a gun platform was crumpled, and the muzzle of a 40mm gun was crushed. Early last mofjth Stevenson Why Worry About Cooking This Summor? :bici:erdelisbi 1SC2W;Huron - Call 882-3800 680 N. Porry - Call 134-4959 OjEUVEaV AVAlUSLE took his ship to 'sea for extensive exercises. The SEATO maneuvers followed along with the disastrous date with the Evans. RENT, SELL, TRADE - - - USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! Now, 13 checkered years lat-^ the ship once described as th| most mpdern light carrior ^flitat has the tioeviable record oh having sliced through two oilier warships. I^T COLUSICM ,»|jn Feb. 10, 1964; during exercises off Jervis Bay, the Mel-bfume cut the Australian destroyer Voyager in half and sent the |15.7-mlllion vessel to the bottom. Tuesday it was the Amerlci lowed. The Voyager went to the bottom with the loss of 82 men. The Melbourne rescued sailed to Sydney with her bows torn. Repairs took three months. A royal conrunission of inquiry put the major blame for the collision on the Voyager. MASSIVE REFTT Meanwhile, the Melbourne went into drydock for a massive |7.8-milIion refit. Last October destroyer Frank E. Evans in tin South China Sea. wanted. 0 KAY FURNITURE INSTANT CREDIT W« Honor All Crtdlt Cards it DOWNWtlH FAfHER! n SIT HIM DOWN! SLOW HIM DOWN! CALM HIM DOWN! WITH A THRONE OF HIS OWN! Amaiing Comfort Chair it Warms!...it Vibrates!... itRaeliaas! STRATOLOUNGER SAVE *30.88 RE6UURLY *129JS $99 ACCEItEO Comfon beyond beiiafi Settle bock in thii Stratolounger and lei yourself drift into dreamy relaxation. With a flick of the switch ... the three position vibrotor will ease your tension. Switch on the built-in healer to relieve a tired back... an aching muscle. You con lean bock into your favorite lounging position. Back, seat and ottoman adjust automatically to any position you desire ... without handles, cranks or levers. This chair not only adds up to comfbrtrit's head and shoulders above others In fashion, tool Dod will love this rediner and it's slim, lean lines designed for modern living. Select yours novv in handsome decorator colors. ■TAY ■%pim OPEN DAILY H0URIl9ll8'HI9P.M. PIIIINinHlE 37 *•1 can't help feeling dismay that it happened again to ttie Melbourne,” said Australian Navy Minister Clive Kelly. “A lot of people will look upon it as 'a';|pnx on the vessel.” ^on 'after the Melbourne ar-rftted in Australia to launch the I navy’s jet age with Sea Venom! filters, the ship acquired the' t^ of “troublesome lady.” |^^n,T FOR COLD i Tleslgned as a British warship (Mng World War II, she was bMt to withstand arctic waters ■ ■■ lid reinforced against the cold. Dhe warmer southern waters! ft Australia, her crew labeled er the hotbox. Her one-acre leel flight deck was like a giant idiator. Despite air conditioning in the pgine room, stokers worked in eat up to degrees. TIitrA'g Ntver Been A Better time to Buy Than Now! MONTHS AGO aur buyors shrawdly gutMed thdt the prices were bound to skyrocket due to coHstont Increases in the cost of labor and moterials. So we bought enormous quantities of carpet while prices were still low. MUCH OF THIS INVENTORY IS STILL AVAILABLEI Howevor, whon It's gone -who knows what the prices will be? gONT WAIT! SHOP NOW! NO MONEY DOWN* 3 YEARS TO PAY STILL Dodm CABFET CENTEB After a year in Australian wars, the Melbourne’s aircraft itapult system developed a ructural wehkness,. and she as stripped of her planes for veil II1UIIUI9. Two fears later she entered ) South Oiina Sea for the first ne to participate in SEATO ercises. Leading a line of fwarshlps down the Johore iraits for Exercise Sea Demon, I carrier strained her boilers, re needed her maximum 23 its tq create enough wind to Shch her planes. But her boll-I were sd enefustdd she hid ;turn back to Singapore for re- lack home, defense costs SELLING Ol EniiM Sto«k JEWELRY, DIAMOND end BIRTHfrrONE RINGS, WEDDING RANIMI. DIAMOND engagement SETS, waty;hes, CXMTUME JEWELRY, WALLETS, LUCfiAGE. PRICE NO ORJECT. TREMENDOUS VALUES. ■rERMS AVAILABLE! vard’S' the PONTIAC PRESS. AT FOODLA SUPER MARKETS EXCLUSIVE OFFER FROM "THE FINEST W QUAUIT 'CANOE MUFFIN CUSTOM DESICNEDi FORCED STAINLESS Tableware SAVE OVER 40% Ju'f ON A COMPLETE SET STARTING WITlii if custom designed... forged stainless tableware... save over 40% on a complete set! START YOUR SET TODAY! Here's how our plan works with each purchase of $5,00 or more, you are entitled to buy one unit. . . with $10.00 purchase or more, two units . . . with S15.00 purchase or more, three units,^etc. Build a complete service for eight, twelve, or more ... at savings of over 40% Crest - Regulsr or M Toothpaste Lavorit Mouthwash Prill Oonoentrati ■4' .1 ^ . ' 1,1. jrHURSDAY, JUNE 5, 1969 B—11 ymciijM-Bhd.crt ... Chuck Roast ^BSfrTom. .. ■i Afk i^TuTLfTs.....»>89« ■—■nib wMOHonnnF ,u eile WMOHWoiiowim eMisvmw •-^-<-,>.■88* GHKKROm......'*' 80 BUCKS. ">^ 28” BAYS ENQLISH Muffins RnilUIRorLIMML Hawaiian Red ^ BOmENSorOOOIITIIVFIIISH lUmmMl MHk 35° BiillMnrilk 39° HALFBALOTN. ivBH rns9n ROYAL GOLD • OLD STYLE . BAVARIAN RYE BRSAD unntuwfjMi IEEFmPORKMUI>B-Q. [[!»••••••••••••'•••• nc|. HUTU oirmni IS* SALE DATES THURS., JUNE 5 thru WED., JUNE 11 Inetudina SUNDAY, JUNE 8 3 20 0i.Wk for oviNnukM , UMGlieiUES 2 2/SWt. m i. i'l i ' B-^12 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. Asia Free Mart Floats Like a Crap Game VIETNAM-CAMBODIAN; BORDER (AP) - Like a dice game floating one jump ahead I of ^the police, the international! free market moves back and' forth at the whim of official-1 dom. One day it Is on the Cambodian side of the border, and most of the goods and custom^ era are Cambodians, along with a sprihkling of r^le-toting North Vietnamese, Vietcong and Cambodian troops. Two days later the market is back on tho Vietnamese side, and the vendors and their goods mostly Vietnamese.. The only troops visible this time are South Vietnamese. | The market, located near the point where the main east-west' highway between Saigon andi Phnom Penh crosses the frontier, is one of half a dozen that exist along the disputed battle-;torn border between Cambodia and South Vietnam. | EASY CROSSING Although the two countries have no diplomatic relations and the border is closed and guarded at the regular crossing points, the markets provide an easy way for limugglers, draft dodgers, intelligence agents and ordinary travelers to cross from one country to the other. inamese troops based in their | Cambodian sanctuary ]utt| across the border. They have been used to funnel smuggled goods from Cambodia into the Saigon black market, and to funnel stolen goods from American post exchanges in South Vietnam into the hands of Vietcong and North Viet- Like any other Southeast Asian outdoor market, the border li;ee market is a cluster of wood and bamboo stalls offering a wide variety of goods-ciga-rettes and canned food hom several countries, Japanese textiles, ^Chinese chinaware, rice, soap, cosmetics, Jeep parts, chickens, pigs, fish, American C rations and marijuana. One woman—one of the chief entrepreneurs of the market-even has available a pretty young girt, who smiles on cue for any man who may he look-|| ing to purchase a wife. HIKED FOR YANKS For the regular customers. the prices are cheap, duty and 11 tax-free. For Americans, whO| are not frequent visitors to the! border area, the prices are automatically eaeaiated. A, five-liter Jug of Portugese wine costs them 1,500 piasters-about 112 at the official exchange rate. The market stands in the middle of open paddylgnd, about SOO yards north of the border station on Route 1 and squwely agaiiM what is generaUy regarded as the border. The exact line is in dispute within a range of atotit too yards. land other vehicles, loaded with igoods to be sold, are lined up at the bridge over the Oriental River hours before the barrlera lifted. NO INTERFERENCE Despite its wildcat character and aomewhat precarious location in the middle of one of the war’s hottest areas, the free market has continued to flourish withodt serious trouble or interference from either 'government. The flow of goods to and through the market begins about 7 a.m. every day, shortly! after the road is open to traffic, i In * Go Dau , Ha, the Viet-; n-imese district town six mites j to the east, three-wheeled cabs' NEW t U WashsraOryer Strvieo CoMags FurnHura Haugahyda-Biant Faam Pads tUY 0413. FiirnilUre '1' BOUNCING ‘BOUTIQUE’ - This International free market may be set up at either side of the Vietham-Cambodia border, depending on the shift of the politial winds. 1 frairTap AS WlraphoM Goods run fr^^apanese textiles to U.S. Orations; customers from North Vietnam--cse troops to American GIs. YOU CAN RELY ON CHURCH'S FOR QUALITY, SERVICE, SAVINGSI oiil BUILDING SUPPLIES MULEHIDE 240 LB. SHINGLES - only $938 pnrbun^ ROOF COATINGS 1 gal. Fibar Roof Ctg. .BO S gal. Fibor Roof Ctg...... .2.90 1 gal. Plaatie Roof Cmt..90 B gal. Maatio Roof Cmt. •.. .2.80 1 gal. Foundation Otg...... .00 B gal. Foundation Ctg.2.45 SOL SEAL Standard Strip shingles offer a tiful and economical new i need to remove your old shiru Just cover them with a new/beautiful Mulehide roof. In whi^, black, and soft pastel colors. 1INGLES HARDBOARD STANDARD « Va" - 4x8 leTO "i/4« - 4x8 3^0 TEMPEp Ve" - ^8 2e60 '1/4« - /4x8 4elO hardboord for Ibf* homo ROLL ROOFING Only ‘ Haovy 90-lb. roll with gronulofad minsral turfaca. On# roll eevsn a full 100 tquaro fast. While, black and pattal color*. #50 SMQOTH ROLL ROOFING VISQUEEN I’xIBO' Hall. .$ 2.H 4'xtBO’...... 2.1B I’xlOB'_____ II’XIM*.., t2*xtM'....... ROWE “CLASSIC” LADDERS 4-ft. Stepladdor..................4.60 6-ft. Stepladdor..................8.15 6-ft. Stepladdor................ 6.90 ID-ft. Extenaion ................19.76 20-ft. Extention.................24.70 24-ft. Extontion............... 29.60 284t. Extention . ...............37.60 II Prlea. Co.h arid Carry 6 YARDS TO SERVE YOU 107 SQUIRREL RD. UL 2-4M0 WASHINGTON •14It VAN PVKI rll-TMl IlllN PARK to CHAMfAONi LUMBER & BUILDING SUPPLIES SINCE 1890 OPEN MONDAY, THURS. & FRIDAY 'til 9 P.M. 17-19 S. SAGINAW ST; Downtown Pontiac 'me ^ FE 2-4231 Convenient Credit 90 Days Same As Cash MfrecliMsfsr IkadMmM... tion of reclining chairs offers him or her the ultimate in seating comfort. Many rockar-recliner models are also available. All are available In durable, wipe-clean vinyl fabrics of true leather-grain design and a wide assortment of decorative fabrics—both in full ranges of exciting, high-fashion colo/s. For beButy and durability Insist on EVEBSOFf yiNvi. uPHOLaTaiw A vinyl fabrip so supariar Oiai 1. f. Goodrich wirronit “EVtrfOft" Vinyl tabrio Will net apllt, iotr, chip or boeoma brittia due taaaniaot wlih hhlr or body oil SI any time wllhin three yoan. wk ON HIS DAY ■Vla*rTVaiidtalax“ “folly ricilw ind rtl BUY! SELL! TRADE! ... USE PONT!AC fRESS WANT ADS! i 'iiil.li ,il■ !'l 'i It! Ill 'll' ii: THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE . Unrest Grows in Malaysia Emergency Situation in By WILUS JOHNSON KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) — This.country once saw itself as an Asian example of parliamentary law and democracy. Now the word is “emergency,*’ and many things are done in its Aame. Thousands of persons have been arreated in the last month, the press has been muzzled and Parliament is suspended along with state assemblies. No one can predict when de-mecrpcy will return, but increasing numbers seem to be growing impatient with curfews and the extraordinary powers wielded by the National Emergency Council. : ★ ★ ★ 'Rie emergency will be over, a council member said recently, “when politicians are ready to stiui talking again of bread and butter, of houses and schools and the cost of living—the basic issues." * * ★ Until then, he said, “What we need are not men of poiitics but of good will.” * * * But some politicians, especially those of the left, are saying the emergency iS used for a cover for the council to remain In power indefinitely. The tempers of Malays and Chinese, who three weeks^ago butchered each other in the streets of this capital, remain explosive. Their volatility, fed by distrust add talk of revenge, has often cornered the council iritj) statements and actions that in themselves engendered more distrust. ★ * * WhUe the eight-man council warned of the dangers of rumors, the absence of hard news in the controlled press produced a fertile bed for gossip. * ★ * The coundi continuaUy spoke of “futher improvement’", and “return to nprmalcy.” At the same time it admitted to “tensions and sensitive areas," arson attempts and sniping at curity forces. * * * “If t^e coundi is waiting for the situation to become more normal than now, it wili be a long wait—perhaps a permanent wait,” said an opposition party leader. “Arson and such things can be correded by police action in the trouble areas, by Why buy extra milk today? Your husband would be happy to go after it Sunday afternoon. an emergency from which everyone draws the worst conclusions." FEARS RACIAL ENMITY The prime minister, Tunku Abdul Rahman, 67, now considered a figurehead in the shadow of his deputy. Tun Abdul Razak, 47, the Gyrations Coundi diief; worries about the perpetuation of crisis through radal enmity. If, it should spread into • the classrooms, he said, “the children would grow up to hate one another, and the trouble would be endless.”* * * Last month’s rioting left 840 dead or missing, hundreds of homes and shops in ruins—and a harvest of hate. Chinese make up 40 per cent of Malaysia’s 10 million people. Fifty per cent are Malay and the rest mostly Indians. The Chinese greatly outnumber Malays in this capital. TOUCHY ISSUE Many people fear continuing strife unless the structure of Malaysian society is changed. This is a touchy political issue because many laws tend to favor the Malays. “Malays gave the Chinese citizenship overnight in exchange for special positions,” a government official said, recalling the days of preparing for independence from the British. 'If the Chinese want to un-sqramble the spedal positions, the Malays will say, ‘Let’s start unscrambling Chinese dtizen-ship, too.’’ The plan, he said, was to reduce the gap between the industrious Chinese pd the happy-go-lucky Malays who lacked education and business acumen. I PAY BULK OF TAXES The special positions include: Malay preference in civil serv- ice and placement in universities. But tax money is paid! largely by the Chitose, who have long controlled commerce. * ★ w Conflict led to the secession of Singapore in 1965. ’The government says Singapore had to get out because its million people, most 'of th^ Chinese, and its importance! as a center of commerce would tip the social structure. Singaporeans say they withdrew because they' were tired of Malay domination. • ★ * ■ * Within Rahman’s Alliance: party, which has governed since independence in 19M, legislative seats have bpn divided among the party’s ms-tinct Malay, Chinese pd Inmp components. As far as the Chinese are concerned, their allotment never measured up to their role md numbers in society. ★ * w The party suffered badly in the May 10 elections and although it retained a pariiamen-tary majority, it iost some key states. Informed sources are convinced the political procession by Aliiance supporters Majt 13 which set off the killing pd burning, was heaviiy infiltrated by Malay extremists wanting to nullify the elections. ‘NEW IDEOLOGY’ Alliance members who comprise the ^rations Council have the experience of a dozp years of democracy, pd say they wpt to return to it. Party leaders are talking of a “new national ideology” which may require a new, multiracial party and reformed representation. ♦ * * But the horror of the upheaval remains deep within those who participated in it or suffered from it. One example is a young Chinese man who once supped beer with Maiay companions. The other day he giared at the National Mosque—the pride of jJIL TamaROFF BUICK-OPEL SOUTHFIELD, MICHICAN J X Tamaroff Buick Pwes The Way To Savings-Selections •Satisfaction Stock MUST Be Reduced to ^ttow Blacktopping! NOW PRICED TO GO! EVERY CAR IN INVENTORY . . Highest Trade-In Allowanee Anywhere! 4| ILOOMHB.0 TWF. MAPLE II MILE RD. "'■T2 lIRMINeHAM 1} MILE RD. U I II MILE RD. a L TAMAMW lUIOKOm 10 MILE RD. § 1 MILE RD. 1 y V DETROIT ALL MODELS AVAIUBLE FOR IMMEDIATE DEUVEHY Telogroph Rd. Just South of 12 Milt— Across from the Tel-Twelve Moll PHONE 353-1300 EVtry PurchaM AMurad Comploto Sdfitfaefion ot Tamaroff Buick-Opal lUY BUICK THE TAMAKOPF WAY 1SeGjzwitK.-^oins FINK f>i.OOR COVKRINO! CALL 834-9844 TIL4UR0N tHOmSG OENTni 371. nUOOAMI B~ljl THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. JUNE 5, 1969 Chicken Dishes Are Always Good Choice By JANET ODELL Food EiBtor^ The Pontiac Press Chicken may look better than usual to you after con^dering the price of meat these days. Fortunately, there is a good supply of whole diickens, cut up brdler-fryers and individual pieces. Today, we’re giving you some new recipes, any one of which may turn out to be the family'! favorite. gravy starts with a can of condensed soup. Chicken and Vegetable SkUlet is a savory combination of chicken pieces and lima beans. You may use any other vegetable if you prefer. The CHICKEN AND VEGETABLE SKILLET 2 tablespoons butter 2 tablespoons shortening pounds frying chicken Cup flour V« Teaspoon poultry seasoning 1 package (10 oz.) frozen lima beans Vi Cup sliced celery % Cup water Vi Teaspoon salt 1 can (8Vi oz.) small white whole onions 1 can (lOVi oz.) condensed cream of chicken soup 1 tall can (13 fl. o z) evaporated milk 2 tablespoons chopped parsley In a large deep skillet or chicken fryer melt butter and shortening over low heat. Coat chicken pieces In flour mixed with poultry seasoning; reserve any leftover flour mixture. chicken is tender. Sprinkle with parsley and serve over hot fluffy rice. Makes 6 servings. Fry chicken in the skillet over medium heat, turning pieces to brown well on all sides. Remove skiliet from heat and pour off fat. Place frozen lima beans and ceieiY around chicken. Add water and salt. Bring to a boil then' cover skillet tightly, reduce heat to low and simmer A fine example of a typical Spanish dish is Chicken and Rice Sevilliano. Similar t p Paella but not nearly so complex a dish, it combines diicken and rice which are sauteed in oil,, then cooked along widi olives and vegetables in wine sauce. A typically Spanish touch the sprinkling of ‘ almonds. TO THICKEN Remove from heat. Sprinkle in reserved flour mixture, blending smoothly with liquid in skillet. Drain onions and place in skillet. Mix condensed soup with evaporated milk and pour over all. Return to heat and bring to a J boil, thert reduce heat to low Cover skillet arid simmer 15 to 20 minutes longer, or until CHICKEN AND RICE SEVILLIANO 3 tablespoons butter Pound fresh mushrooms, halved or quartered V5 Cup olive nr salad oil 1 broiler-fryer chicken," cut up (3 to 3V5 pounds) Salt and pepper 2 cups rice 1 large clove garlic, crushed 4 cups chicken stock or broth 12 very small white onions 1 cup small pimiento-stuffed olives , % Teaspoon oregano 1 cup dry vermouth or white wine (or additional chicken stock) Vi Cup toasted blanched almonds In large skiliet, melt butter and add mushrooms; saute over medium heat until lightly browned. Remove from skillet and reserve. Add oil to skillet and heat. Dry chicken and sprinkle with salt and pepper. Fry in hot oil until browned on all sides. Remove chicken Staid reserve. Fresh western grapefruit gives oven-fried chicken gourmet touch without a lot of expensive ingredients and work. The pan gravy is out of this world with mashed potatoes. So what more do you need to complete the meal but a simple salad and a beverage? ' SAUCY GRAPEFRUIT OVEN FRIED CHICKEN 2 broiler flyers, cut into serving pieces Salt and pepper Flour Salad oil Add rice and garUc to skillet and cook, stirring frequently until rice becomes slightly opaque. Add 2 cups of the chicken stock, then pour into a large shallow baking dish, scraping all juices into dish. Arrange chicken, mushrooms, onions and olives over rice; sprinkle with oregano. Pour re- degree oven 30 minutes, ui^ cover and sprinkle with, almdnds; bake 10 minutes longer pr until rice and onk are tender. Makes about 1 to 2 cloves garlic, crushed or finely minced 1 grapefruit, peeled, sectioned 1 grapefruit, peeled, cored finely chopped* Vt Onion, chopped % Cup dark com syrup V« Teaspoon cinnamon 1 tablespoon flour V* Cup water / % Cup freshly squeezed oran^ juice 1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce Season chicken well with salt and sprinkle lightly with pepper;-coat with flour. Add garlic Nutty Cookies Sure to Please There’s always rooin in burl files for a good cooky recipe. Here’s one we think many readers will keep and use time after time. | “Almond Toffee Drops’’ — the ame nearly tells the story. These toffee-flavored drop Mint Candy Is Flavor for Icing jcookies are “loaded” with crunchy roasted diced almonds. This is a fine cooky for box lunches, to serve with milk for a snack, to have on hand foe a fruit-and-cooky dessert. < ALMOND TOFFEE DROPS V* cup butter or margarine IV4 cups brown sugar, packed ^ teaspoon vanilla A plain box cake mushrooms into a spectacular dessert when It is frosted with a “quick and easy” mint topping. to hot oil and brown chicken pieces on all sirfeS; transfer to shallow baking pan, skin»slde down. , Reserve all juice while sectioning and chopping grapefruit; coiribine juice with chopped fruit in saucepan. Add onion, corn syrup and cinnamon; bring to a full boil and pouf over chicken. USE FOIL Clover with aluminum foil; bake at 350 degrees foi: 30 minutes. Turn chicken; continue baking, uncovered, for - 30 minutes, or until tender. Allow grapefruit sections to stand at room temperature w h;i 1 e chicken is bi^ng. Place baked chicken on warm serving platter; top with grapefruit sections . and keep warm. Pour pan drippings. Intp saucepan; skim off fat. Blend in mixture of 1 tablespoon flour and water; add remaining ingredients. Bring to a boil; cook 2 minutes, Serve as a gravy with chicken; excellent accompanied with mashed J^ust whip a pint of whipping cream with V« cup of con-, fectioners’ sugar until it stands in soft peaks. Carefully fold in! one-half cup of after dinner! % cup sifted flour 1 teaspoon baking powder V* teaspoon salt 1 cup roasted diced almimds Cream together butter, brown sugar and vanilla. Add egg and beat well. Sift together flour, baking powder and salt; blend into creamed mixture. Stir in almonds. *To chop grapefruit easily, cut in half, lengthwise; with shallow “V” shaped cut, remove white center core. Place cut side down on board; cut crosswise and len^liwise into very small pieces. Makes 4-6 servings. Nice With Pork Heat, canned cling peach Drop by teaspoonfuls onto!halves slightly. Fill center y,i)h greased and floured cooky!a spoonful of apple butter and a sheet. Bake at 325 degrees spinkle of cinnamon. Serve as about 15 minutes. Reihove from!accompaniment for pork chops, pan at once and cool on wire | roast loin of pork or baked I ham. Hot canned clings and [meats pair up perfectly. CHICKEN AND RICE SEVILLIANO SAUCY GRAPEFRUIT OVEN FRIED CHICKEN BEEF ROAST GUTS| LBa MEADOWDALE B9< GRADE #1 45' CHUNK, LB. PETERS Q lbs. V SLICED Vfor PORK CHOPS S^.99 PORK ROAST 00 ORANGES..^ 39' LEHUCE 2-29' CELERY PASCAL STALK 29' TOMATCES FRESH CELLO PKQ. 29' Green Onions FRESH 2-.19' GIIAKFR0IT&S<.39< Op*H Witkiy l-S»Fri.» S-l 608 W. HURON STRtEl NEAR WEBSTER SCHOOL ,4!- tliE PONTIAC PRKSS, TljURSDAY. JUNE 5, 1969 B—15 Hooray for the diet menu with elegant fare! Tlieae’s no reason for waistline watchers to I' themselves to the kind dreary foods that make them feel deprived. And unflavored gelatine is just the kind of pro- serving dish on top of the mold Cheddar cheese are used in this different cheesecake. Bake the rich custardy mixture in a vanilla wafer crust. Garnish with whole glazed strawberries and whipp^ cream. Diet Salad Includes Asparagus even k novice cook can with ease. I^p the mold in a bowl or pan of warm (not hot) water to the depth of its intents. Run a small sharp paring knife'around the rim. Hold a duct that adds sparkle to the diet menu. The product has no flavor of its own, combines beautifully with a wide variety of diet and turn upside down ... if the contents don’t slip out readily, repeat the pmess. Asparagus Aspic offers a Bhinunering comUnation o t Shred Cheddar Cheese for Baked Dessert packages (Ikiuncet Aach) se, softelied i Strawberries are available now, red And sweSt and delightful. From, California comes a recipe for a different kind of cheesecake. Whole strawberries garnish the top. WITH STRAWBERRIES IV4 cups vanilla wafer, crumbs 2 tablespoons butter 0 margarine, melted asparagus, minced celery, and diced pimiento enlivened with nippy ingredioits ... the flavor Is wmderful. With cold cuts or shrimp, it’s a supof) dish for a lunchMn; at the dinner table, it accompanies steak, chicken, or a roast. The recipe was created in conjunction with the editors of Weight Watcher’s Magazine and is approved for use on the "Wei^t Watchers” program. Ih^ unmolding is so easy % cup shredded sharp Ot^ar cheese Vi cup sugar Sometimes You Cut lettuce, not Tear It % teaspoon grated orange peel V* teaspoon grated lemon peel 2 tablespoons flour 1 cup heavy cream 1 pint fresh strawberries Light com syiiip Mix crumbs with butter; press over bottom/ of 9-inch springform pan. Bake in 350 degree (moderate) oven 5 minutes. Cut or tear? Lettuce, that is. combine cheeses and sugar in bowl; beat until fluffy. Beat in eggs, 1 kt a time. Blend in p^s, flour and % cup of the Some salad lovers cringe at:cream. Pour over crumb crust the thou^t of patting a knife to'hi pan. a head of lettuce. While tbe| Bake at 350 degrees 40 hand-tearing method is prefer-minutes until cake is set in red tor making a tossed esiad center. Cool on rack. ' or “cups” of lettuce, there are' * ★ * many othei* interesting ways of. Arrange the whole serving lettuce which do require strawberries on top of the cake. use of a knife. Wedges rafts (cross cut slices) . chunks . Brush with com syrup, remaining cream until stiff; shredded lettuce then using a pastry tbbe, pipe h a sharp all need to be cut knife. It is Imjportant to remember, however, that cut edges of lettuce do tend to more rapidly than tom edges because of the oxidation of the milky in a border around the No Sticking When making popcorn fa«% . _________ ________ i s dip yOtff hands in coM water released when juicy lettuce before forming the balls. This cells are broken by cutting. jwill allow you to form the balls By tearing, the cells are left jwithout the mrn sticking to Intact, so for lettuce that needs your hands. You can make to be prepared well ahead,'neater, more attractive balls in tiaring is recommended. i half the time. BARGMN CENTER T4nsuiHW-iinnnziirs ‘"'■lUUUIUS RIPE ONLY! 10* lb. ^ GRIEN CABBAGE ONLY 7^, lb. ^^-PASCU. CELERY 24 Size 15' • MUSTARO •1IMMP viec • IfOUJUd) ONLY lyiB. Wt Otny » OomM. Lin* If IMmi raods : U4K.$*H|ttWS, dream it*s one of your prized diet recipes I Keep in mind that unflavored gelatine is used as a refreshing diet di^ too. Taken a half hour before the meal, it cuts down mealtilne appetites. Or try a gel drink when you want a hlgh-calorie snack between meals. an envelope unflavored gelatine into a glass of vegetable juice cocktail, buttermilk, or skim mild. St& vigorously and drink at once. Next time you have guests in the offing ... or want a s^ial treat for just the family . try Asparagus Aspic. It’s a most elegant dish ... and no ime wUl Makes 4 servings. ASPA^GUS ASPIC 1 envelope unflavored gelatine cups cold water, divided 3 tablespoons white vinegar 1 teaspoon salt Non-nutritive sweetener equivalent to 4 Yb teaspoon tobasco 1 cup cut-up cooked asparagus 1 tablespoon cimpped parsley 1 tablespoon nninced celery V« cup diced pimento Crinkle gelatine over ^ cup cold water in a saucepan. Place over low heat and stir gelatine dissolves, abo minutes. Stir in vinegar, sweetener, tobasco and remaining 1 cup water. Chill until consistency of unbeaten egg whites. Fold in remaining ingredients, turn mto a 3-cup mold. Chill until firm. Unmold ' Let Centerpiece Honor Grdduote Here’s a simple-to-fix, stunning centeipiece that can be made the day before gradukr tion Thei Mortarboard Cake calls for two layers of white cake, one a 9-inch round, the other a 9-lnch square. Place round cake on plate that is slightly smaller than cake surface, then taper sides of cake with a knife to form the hatbotfom-- Covo* a cardboard square vrith foil, then place square cake oil cardboard. Frost first sides, then top -■'t with a butter tyfie^ frosting. Center square layer"on top of the round layer. The tassel is a licorice strand pressed into the bottom of a vrhde gumdrop. MORTARBOARD CAKE WANT ’TO SELL LAWNMOWERS, POWER MOWERS, ROLLER SKATES, WAGONS, BICYCLES? USE A LOW COST PONTLAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADi TO PLACE YOURS, CALL SSSSIU. Asparagus Aspic looks like a dish from an aqMosive restaurant... and it’s a snap to make. Perfect for the diet n fFith Your FAMILY SIZE Refreshing Summer Drink Ideas Dole Kneoppio Knk firapofniit Drink Treetwoel Pink firapnfrutt Juhn Realemon Umon Juioo im.»i4Sb25* impMOfoRI* splurID* Bllie Star Whole cmcKEa V4 slivered toa.sted almonds , •* * ■. Mix crumbs with sugar andj cinnamon; blend in butter. Press evenly and firmly over bottom and sides of a 9-inch pie' plate, leaving a small standing edge. Refrigerate. * * * Break candy into top of double boiler, add milk apd cut-up marshmallows. Place over hot water and let melt. Blend well and let It become quite’ ooolAbut not firm, Fold In whipped ^cam aqd pour into crust. Gapish with slivered aimonds. refrigerate until set. Yield: 8 servings. Maine Sardines atin name — and, through history, the herring has been of the most valuable of all food fish. It is quite obvious in the jrears to come, these tasty, delightful little fish will continue to hold their Important place in the dietary scheme of things. PENOBSCOT RABBIT 2 cans (4 oz. each) Maine Sardines 2 tablespoons butter V* pound process cheese,| Fiesta Macaroni and Chepl^e shredded ^ perks up meatless menus. In % cup milk I saucepan, cook V* cup chopped 1 egg yolk green pepper in 2 tablespoons % teaspoon dry mustard 1 butter ^hr margarine untP Salt and pepper [tender. Add 1 can (15 ounces Buttered toast ' macaroni and cheese, 2 table- Sauteed tomato slices spoons sliced ripe olive and 1 Drain Maine Sardines. Melt tablespoon chopped plmlento, butter over direct heat in top Heat; stir now and then. Makes part of double boiler. Add 2 to 3 servings. Sauteed Tomato Slices . . Cut firm tomatoes in medium thick slices, dip in French dressing and sprinkle with salt and pepper. Drop slices onto a hot skUiet, turn almost Immediately. Let sizzle about 1 minute, lift off with broad spatula. Add Color 8i1ain to Be Great Hit You can adapt a Mexican favorite, bean dip, to your kitchen with the assistance of molasses and canned beans. Purep contents of a large can of baked beans in blender (or: put^rough food mill) with tablespoons light molasses, 1 tablespoon vinegar, i tablespoon prepared mustard, Vk teaspoon pound cloves, and Vs teaspoon pound cloves, black pepper. Mash puree into 6 ounces cream cheese with fork. Taste for seasoning. Chill well before serving with crisp raw vej^etablea and crackers. FRESH, SWEET CORN 0N>HB COR '5'FOR 39* . • CUCUMBER a GREEN PEPPERS • RADISHES • GREEN ONIONS 2-19' FIRST OF THE SEASON FRESH PEACNES 3"”-99* SEEDLESS QOLDENPINK ‘GRAPEFRUIT 6«»36* Larga Site 3d Qpulol UuA.,UJuJt.l MICHIQAN U.S. NO. 1 POTATOES SOlbs. n.79 O/ Better Food Buys Corner of Olailciton anil Sathabaw Roads Vfi Mile Nerlh af laehakaw IxM f OPIN DAILY, iXOIPT MONDAY 10irt)fo TiOO 'i “QUALITY” 1$ MR MIDDLE NAME KLSnltE VEGPABLES BORDEN’S non dairy CREMORA pke. ^ EASY MONDAY WV Pink Liquid detercent • Cream or Whole Kamel C(HM • Cel SHEEN BEiMS • Slowed TOlUTOES Choice of Grounds MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE 2 a. $114 can I KINO SIZE d.P.Q. OVEN FRESH Old Style BREAD FRAZER Mandarin ORANGES 5 weight cans I 00 FRISKIES Assorted CAT FOODS 15'OZ. weight iM 0% fk • Chicken • Fish SAUD DRESSINGS Mm • Italian C • 1000 IsIC • Russian e 1890 8*oz. bottle Aieortod Varieliot 8ANQUET CREAM PIES nUCi Fresh ORAN "A" CHICKEN PARTS LEGS or BREASTS life - » with portion attached YOUR CHOICE 14-oz. weight pkg. GREEN GIANT Ffosen VEGETARLES 4 10-OZi $1 00 .• waigbtpkgs. I • niixor mateh • Peat Corn Oarrot Nniiatt' U.S. No. 1 BanaRas •» 12” INDIAN HIVER WHITE GMKFRUIT . -*W. U.S. No. 1 Hothottta Tomatoes . e ib49« Fresh LEAN ALL BEEF HAMBURGER Fresh COUNTRY SHLE SPARERI8S ‘ 59' " 59' SWIFTS PREMIUM Ihiek tHced 8ACQN SWIFT’S PREMIUM SUOEBBtCM 09c SWIFT’S PREMIUM Brown’n Servo sausaoi SWIFT’S PREMIUM FRANKS » 59' 09« tEU.TUTBUTnilWlK.r ^ MM* CHOCOLATE aiLK % dUC tORBEH CREESE *uno *71? 5B< KRAFT SOFT PARKAY Mb. etn. 36' To Limit Ouantitica 1110 W. THB PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 1969 B—ir Campbsirs NOOMl-O SOUP 1«Vi-Ox.O«nt ' 8 ]0D Cans HAWMUUl Gerber’s Strained Baby Feeds Whoi^SmrniiMrt ImiMelad Open Sundays 9 A.M. to 9 P>M> Green Giant Kitehen-Slieed GREEN REMS Green Giant SWEET PEAS 1-Lb. Cans Green Giant Whole Kamel or Cream Style FA’S Logeabln' aic24e,»44Ciitfi. w Maxwtil NoHtt llff e IIMTANT corni INII.US Brandywin* Piaeas and stamt JBa.Qx.'lOO 0 Cana I ;UPER MARKET 1249 BALDWIN AWL JUST ONE BLOCK OFF COLWBIA AVL ■B NOAM or , , . IPERSAVINES J PUFFS FACIAL TISSUE 200-Comil --Id aaf "To »ra PI'S* I PiNtbury Chaiea of Flavora ,,. ||Ce CAKI MIXM I'oi: a 1-Lb., iRUIT COCKTAIL i3-oi. M KOTIX RaA.Pk«.Bf12 ^5^ Grade/A’ Snail ERGS $|00 ^1 ROAST m BoMan BI|M BANANAS . w U.f.No.taaw . CALIFOBNIA POTATOES 89* PbikarWhHa GRAPEFRUIT -FROZEN FOODS- Traaawoot rman ORANGE JUICE Praian WhlBpad Tayiilng REAL WHIP zsr Slim Jim FRENCH FRIED POTATOES 2*^4b. 20® RIB QQ( STEAK “ W Froth SHoed BEEF 4A( LIVER 99 U.S. eovt. 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A steady drizzle that began early in the sixth inning of the first semifinal game couldnH- keep defending touma? ment champion PNH from a M conquest of Rochester. But play n^ began in the second game and after A half-hour dday the decision was made to let Waterford (24-S) and Milford (IM) play their semifinal gqme at ,4:30 p.m. today with the title tilt to follow at about 7 p.m. * * ★ ■ ■ ■ ,. Bob Hukka and Rob Clancy combined tq pitch the Huskies into the finals for the fourth time In the eight years of tourney play. Last June they nipped Clawson, 141, to become the first northern Oakland County squad to capture the coveted ti- tle. Previously PNH lost to Southfield In 1965 and Royal Oak Kimball in 1963. THREATEN Rochesto'i bidding for a second ap-.pearance in tiie finds after losiqg to S’field in *67, managed only thrcd hits but had the tying run on second base in the third, fourth, sixth and seventhoin-nings. ^ A rare play Northern Its 24) lead in the open^ inning and the game concluded with the unusual sight of first- base umpire Wes Roberts calling the final batter but on strikes, In the. opening inning, Rochester starter A1 Thomas issued his only base oq balls Of the game to leadoff batter Lurry Heltsley. A stolen base, second hitter Andre McPhail’s perfect bunt for a hit and a subsequent stolen base by McPhail put runners on second and third with one man out. Cleanup hitter Warren Latumeau laid down a good squeeze biiht to score Heltsley and McPhail kept running from second to slide under catcher Mike Scally’s tag following the return thfow from first base. ■ * Dave Clancy added another safety and stole second in tlie inning, but no other Husky advanced beyond first base after that. Thomas bore down to record eight strikeouts and allow only two scratch hits after fhe first inning., ! Les Littlejohn and Stan B a b i u k sandwiched one-out singles around a stolen base for Rochester’s lone market THE PONTIAC PRESS THURSDAY, JUNE S, 1869 C—1 Kaline's Return Bolsters Tigers RUNDOWN VICTIM -- Aiirelio Rodriguez of California’s Angels is tagged out by Detroit ngers’ catcher Bill Freehah during the second inning of their game in California last night,. Rodriguez tiled to score from third on Bill Voss’ grounder to ’Tiger shortstop Mickey Stanley^ The Bengal shortstop fired the ball to Freehaq however, who combined trith third baseman Don Wert in the rundown. Tigers wort in 10 innings, 54. Mexican Tennis King Osuna Believed Dead in Jet Crash MEXICO CITY (AP) — Rafael Osuna, fhe king of Mexican toinis, was among 79 beUeved killed Wednesday in tiie mountaiq crash of a Mexican jet airliner about 31 miles west of Monterrey. Bad weather and the isolated area ^here the plane crashed caused delay in ieacl^ the site. t Osdna, 30, realized one of Ms greatest aioMWons in a colorful tennis career only to days ago. He kd Mexico to a stunning 3-2 conquest of proud Australia in the North American Zone Davis Cup competition. The triumph over the Aussies was the first in 12 meetings between the two countries since 1924. It meant the Aussies would not he able to reach the Challenge Round for the first time since 1937. ’’One of my last ambitions in tennis was to bggt. Australia,” Osuna said. ‘Tve always wanted to win the singiee at Wimbledon, but you can’t have everything.” U.S. CHAMPION Osuna achieved other great tennis ao-| complishments also. He became the first M'xican to win the U.S. men’s slnglM title at Forest Hills, N.Y., in 1963. He was a member of the championship men’s doubles team at Wimbledon two times. Whan he was wily 21, be teamed with Dennis Ralston of the United States for the victory in 196L In 1962, ha repeated playtaw With countryman, Antonio Palafox, ^ It WH In the Wimbledon triumph with singles crown in 1962. Ho took ttw doubles ttle in the collegiate ranks in 1961 and 1912 with Ramsey Barnhart and in 1962 with RilStqn Ss his partner. During the last four years, Osuna reduced the time he spent in international tennis Competition. He limited Mmself to the big toumamenu and the Paw Cup. puBUO mBunoNi IW the past bso years, ha has boai w the ^lic iwlations Staff of an Amertoan Ralston that Osuna skyrocketed to tepnis prominence. Osuna was a star at Southern California and won the intercoliegiate tobacco company and spent much of hiS tinie outside of Mexico. , ★ ♦ * Osuna and his blonde wife, Leslie, had four children who ranged in age from 4 monthsno 10 years. The airliner which crashed was on a domestic fli|d>t *md was a Mexicana de Avlacion 707 Jet. Hie crash occurred in the Tress Plcos Mountains. The crash and Osuna took the headlines in Australian newspapera. Bill Edwards, president of the Lawn Tennis Association of Australia, said; "Like everyone else in Australian tennis, I was grievously shocked to hear the Al's Bat Spurs Detroiters Past California, 5-4 ANAHHIM, CaUf. (AI>) - A1 Kaline won his battle of the ancients from Hoyt Wilhelm, the World War H vintage knuckleballer. So the Detroit Tigers w i n g eti homeward today having snapped a three-game losing streak after Kaline drove in four runs and ignited a tenth-inning rally Which gave the defending world champs a 5-4 victory over the California Angels Wednesday night. .. * * ♦' Kaline, returning to the lineup after twisting an ankle last Saturday in Seattle and missing three games, singled to left with one out in the tenth to open the' Detroiters’ winning rally. -w * w ’ Tiger Manager Mayo Smith then replaced Ms veteran star with pinch-runner Dick 'Tracewdcl, who promptly stole second and wait to third on a passed ball. One oqt lato', Tracewskl came home" on an infield single by Bill Freehan and Wilhelm was saddled with Ms fifth loss against two wins. BIG HERO Kaline, though, was thd night’s Mg ' hero. He doubled home two runs with a line single off Angel starter George Brunet in the first after singles by bick McAuliffe and Jim Nortonq>- He brought home another run in the third with an infield out and hit a sacrifice fly in the seventh. ;★ * * That gave the Tigers a 4-2 lead, but Joe Sparma, who hurled a one-hitter against Seattle his last time out, was knocked out in the seventh after yielding eight hits. Pat Dobson replaced him with two runners on base and then California catcher Tom &itriano tied the score with a twoAut blo single. The Wednesday win did Detroit no good in the standings, as Baltimore maintained its 8^ game bulge over the Bengals with a 6-1 rout M the A’s. ’ DiTBOITC^^^^ CAUFOaMiaMI^^^ 4 1 to Alomtr Jb S 0 1V McAulin* lb ■ t f ■ JohnitDM cf 4 10 0 Norlhrup ct 4 t it Frtgo«l 4 10 0 Katlit* rt 4 0 2 4 Rddurd) If 4 110 Tracowikl •• 0 10 0 Sopot 1b 111# W. HortM H 4 0 1 0 A. h^louti lb soil Cosh 1b 4 0 10 Sitrlono c 10 11 . i?ji ro?8 ssjssd'? itu s?%:/p ass HIcki ph 0 0 0 0 ......iiii gssau ...... ...JR s!s iss ts IP H a aa es to 8SSr,:v t i t t I McMahon (W, 1-1) .1 I 0 0 1 1 WhorS S S ? ? K. Tatum .......1 10 0 11 WnSrtm' CL, ill I I i ? I WP-iparmo. PB-lalrlano. T~0:W. A-10.M7. HUSTLE PAYS OPF Outfielder Jlfh Davis, who waa a catcher much of the seasQit |dM inlo loul fround to mak* • putout ih Rbclmtar m Pontiac North-im’s D^ tntbot M tin fifth tanliil lata Mlbt. ^tar DMls ‘made a nnMiw catch in iMrt right«bo Durochar punantadly received; A toy bear from Genge Halas of the (Aicago Bitfs. A pair of tickets from Gussie Bunch for the 1969 World Series between tiie Cardinals and Tigers, * w * A nose guard to accept sour PMIIM PrN. PlMt* CONCENTItATlON Intense lefthander Rob Clancy of Pontiac Northern winds up during hit strong threA and one-third timings of reliM pltebing last nigM as tM Huskies defeated Rochester, 2-1. aancy vftilffed four'and yielded one tilt. A dum dum bullet for use if his Cube fail to win the National Leagua pannant. AndawlgfrAiaYtaBfyiMsr. Tha 62>ye«ivold Oub niMger will marry Lymw Walkar GoUbladd, Junalt. 4. Titans Land Cage Ace DETROIT (APT - The University of Detroit TiiesdAy . announced that Calumet, HI. School basketball star Gerald Smith will ^ playing tor the Titans next year. The 17-year*oid Smith was the second boy signed by new Titan OoMfl Jim Harding. He also got Detroit Noriilni AU-SUter Tom Marsh two By Hm Associated Preas Big GianU, llttie Giants ... they're all 10 feet tall to Gene Mauch and his Incredible Shrinking Men. The bottom of the San Francisco batting order fell upon Mauch Wednesday night, leading the Giants to an 8-8 victory over Montreal that ran the Expos’ lo.slng streak to 18 games- a record for major league expansion clubs. a ★ k Jack Hiatt, Hal Lanier, pitcher Mike McCormick and Don Mason stroked the big hits off rookie Mike Wegener in a five-run fourth inning explosion that tent the Expos spinning within five losses of the all-time mark —set by Mauch’s ,1961 Philadelphia Phillies. The New York Mets, whose 17-game expansion tailspin in 1962 was eclipsed by Montreal, equaled their record winning string of seven games by nipping Los Angeles 1-0 In a 15-lnning struggle. PIRATES SCUTTLED Streaking San Diego b 1 * n k e d Philadelphia 34); torrid Cincinnati swept past Pittsburgh 5-3; St. Louis edged Atlanta 4-3 and the Chicago Cubs topped Houston 5-4 in other National League games.* Wegener took a 34) lead into the fourth inning at Montreal, walked Willie Mays and then got two quick outs - Willie McCovey on a po|M)p aqd Ken Henderson on strikes. * ★ a But Dave Marshall drew another walk, Hiatt and Unler rapped run-scoring singles and McCormick sent the Giants ‘ ahead 4-3 with a two-run double before Mason’s RBI single capped the rally. Three ninth Inning runs wrappod up McCormick’s third victory and left Mauch bleeding sarcasm in the tomblike Montreal clubhouse. “Mike (Wegener) was pitching great until that Lanier, McCormick and Mason came up in the fourth,” said the embattled Expos’ pilot. LOW AVERAGES Lanier and Mason, who went into the game batting .221 and ,214, respectively, each went 3-for-5 to paefe the Giants’ 12-Mt attack. Sr ★ *■,' The Mets broks a scoreless tie In the J5th when Tommie Agee raced home front fiml on a single by Wayne Garrett that skljqfod phst eenter fielder Willie Davis tor a two4>aia error. After Met second baseman A1 Weis cut down pinch runner BiUy Grabarkewits at the plate in the top of the 18th on a brilliant defensive play, Bud Harrelson drew a leadoff walk from Pete Mik* kelsen in the bottom half. Agee forced Harrelson at second, then sped aroiind the bases when Davis overran Garrett’a sharp single to center. ■a a. a The victory enabled the Mets to match their seven-game winning streak of July, 1966, and sent them two games over tha .500 mark. (Continued on Page G2, Col. 2) Central's Garcia to Compete in Midwest Meet Roily Garcia of Pontiac Central is among a group hf Michigan high school seniors who’ll journey to Elnihurst, 111., for the Golden Mid-West Invitational track meet Saturday. The Michigan seniors will be competing for honors along with top performers from 15 other statw on the one-day event. a- a. a Garcia will be competing In the long tump, an event In which he has recorded 23-feet-6-ln(;hes this season. He faces strong competition from Oscar Wallace of Illinois whose best effort Is 24-feet-8H-inches. , * Redford Union’s John Morrison will be on hand to run In both the high and low hurdles events. Morrison’s 13.6 clocking in the highs Is the best In the nstiem tl)la Berkley’s Lairy Presser, an early-season aeniatlon when he posted a leap of 6-feet-8-lnches In the high jump, vriU be dueling othei’ exceptional Jumpers. WHlIe Polk of Flint Northern will be running in the 100 and 220-yard dashes, while Midland will have Mike Murphy In the 440-yard dash. Baseball Huddle Set AH aasa B city recreation Wiseball team managers will convene at 7 p.m. today in the personnel oHIce conference room at City Hall to diaoqM formation of a new men’s league. i;r '.4 V C—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. JUNE 5, 1969 l^rranoski Posts IZfhSave as Twins Win Win 1-0 In 15 Innings Mats Outlast Dodgers (Continued from Page C-1) lin two riiM with a double and Southpaw Jack DiLauro, mak- collaborated with two rdievers Orst major leagueon a four-hltter that propelled Koa carew rlirerSgjart, dueled Dodger fastballerithe expansion Padres to their Home; Nears Record u ® consecutive victory. ' briUiant innmgs. Each gave up ■ * * * Held by Ty Cobb two hits, Singer retiring the first 18 Met batters and DiLauro setting down the last 19 Dodgers he faced. LEAGUE LEADER Singer also fanned 10 to take the league strikeout lead with ST: PAUL-MINNEAPOLIS m — Ron Perranoski saved his 12th game in relief and Rod Garew stole home for the fifth time this season as the Minnesota Twins topped the New York Yankees 4-2 Wednesday night. ‘‘A year or two years ago, we Perranoski, for the second lose a game like that,” said Met straight night, came on in the star Cleon Jones. “That’s the eighth and dashed a Yankee difference. We’re not beating threat. He gave^up^an infi^d^Qyr8g|ves anymore." single to Bobby Cox to load the bases before forcing Roy White Into a groundout. Pitcher Dick Kelley knocked Kelley held the PhUlies hitless for VA innings and checked them on three hits until the when he needed mop-up help from Jack Baldschun and Billy McCool. Trailing 3-2 in the ninth, the Reds rebounded for three nins and their 11th triumph in 12 ^ nnove within two games of Atlanta’s fading West Division leaders. Pi-ed Whitfield’s pinch single delivered the tying run and Jiht Stewart singled home the win- Homer-Hilling Birds Roll Pasl Oakland A's, 6-1 •brhbl RuiMlI rf 7 010 Horrolion USJWib Koica If 4000 CJOIWIH -------- 4 0 f 0 SwSods'rl Cfjwford Pr • • 01 RrSylor p Toiliorg c 2 0 10 0 Carew then provided an irfsur-ance run in the last of the eighth. He singled and, after Harmon Killebrew and John Roseboro walked, Carew triggered a triple steal, beating reliever Lindy McDaniel’s pitch to the plate. TTie American League record ; OAKLAND (AP) - Don Bu- and triggered a three-homer at-for stealing honrie. in one season jjgUgj ijpgj pUpl, jgpjj that carried the red-hot is SIX by Detroit s Ty_Cobb m game over the right field fence Baltimore Orioles to a 6-1 victo-SALTiMoat OAKLAND >y over Oakland Wednesday In 1917. Pete Reiser of Brooklyn I abrhbi »brhbi • ■ set the major league mark ofipHti^nnnd if i ooo Talvi?wi ** loooi 1 in 1941! 5010 RJockion rf 2 0 O 0 ,, , .. 1 in HHo. IpRobinin rf 2 ii 0 0 Bcndo ^ 3 0 0 0 run, Jim “Catfish” Hunter, 34, 2b 3 0 10 Shomaky ph 1 o I 2b 0 0 0 0 Otl> pr 0 0 0 , 3 0 0 0 McGrow p 1 0 0 KBoyor ph I O o O Ooiptr iT 10 0 ■-----p 0 00 0 ph 1000 "•wwoprJ P 0 0 0 0 Fairly pb 0 0 0 0 - 0 0 0 0 Tommy Hall, 3-3, and Yankee powom ib m AAi _ L a f ®RoWnw 3D 2 □ I a wongiy cr ace Mel Stottlemyre, 8-5, were DJohnioii 2b 40 00 ooroon 2b locked in a scoreless duel g*,';™'? ' U00 HSSlor* p 1060 through 4% Innings when the'"«>*•»'• p ^ ® ^"S'tiPph ?ooo Twins gave their rookie the edge with run-scoring singles by ^i»i Leo Cardenas and Ted Uhlaen- —^ , der in the fifth. Roseboro start-»«• *, .Y*? 0 0 10 o'i J ed toe rally with a one-out . , , ,|r. Otkianii'0. 2B—B.'Roblnion, Powoll. Han had faced a minimum of MR-Buforo isi, powpii nw, pairympit 16 batters and had allowed but *a-<.MP.n.r..,^ »F_B.kobjn.K. 2^ retired the next two batters before Boog Powell unloaded his 10th homer and sixth in the last eight games over the center field fence. one hit when the Yankees nicked him for a run in the sixth on Gene Michael’s double and onr of Horace Clark’s three singles. 'The Twins scored again in their sixth when Carew doubled down the left field line, and eventually scored on a sacrifice fly by Graig Nettles. Bill Robinson clouted his first home run for the Yanks leading off the eighth. MINNBtOTA Clark# 2b 3 0 3 1 Uhlaandr ef 4 0 1 Cox 3b 4 0 10 Car»w 2b 4 2 3 Whit# If 4 0 0 0 Oliva rf 3 0 0 papllon# 1b 4 0 0 0 Klllabraw 1b 2 0 0 Ein> c 4 0 0 0 N#tll#t If 2 0 0 «Slmyr#*p ? # g g ” J J 11 Mcrnmlaf''p 0 0 S 0 ^arrnoakl p 0 o 0 i SEATTLE (AP) - Lee Maye doubled in two runs and Tony Horton singled home ti as the Geveland Indians scored five times in the third inning and went on to rout. Seattle .19-4 Wednesday night. ’ Sam McDowell, S-6, struck out 10 Pilots in 71-3 innings and Stan Williams finished up, fanning three more. Frisco Golfer Senior Champ RYE, N.Y. (AP) - The fifth try was the lucky one for Bill Scott Jr. of San Francisco, the new U.S. Seniors Goif Association champion. Scott, a SO-year-old mechanical contractor, won the title with a second-round I par 74 Wednesday. 'That gave him a final 36-hole total of 143, two strokes better than the 145 turned in by. runner-up Fred Kammer of Detroit. T(»nmy Tailer of New York finished third at 147 with J. Walcott Brown, Sea Girt, N.J., WH-liam Terrel, Charlotte, N.C., and Di|ve Goldman, Daliss, in a fourth at 148. Phoebui (W.6-1) HunKr (L.3-6) Clay Dalrymple hit his first American Leai^e homer in the fourth, Powell doubled home run in the seventh and Brooks *. Robinson hit a pair of. sacrifice SR ss so flies to account for the 1 Oriole runs. ra/; 6666R..... "USS liiS&'S ilnrs « 4 « 2 0 JoMph ph I, T-2;1*. A- 5,14». • vvp- Right-hpnder Tom Phoebus coasted to his sixth triumph in • seven decisions on a five-hitter. Indians Romp to 10-4 Victory _ 35 3 I 3 Tol»l 30 0 4 *pUiX. ;ss!s::!i= »!?lS5S2h"l.“i***,B’-:K'iilSy“*“ ‘ IP H N BR BB SO m#V (W.3-4) 11-3 3 0 ,0 - ' ■Michun ....... 1-3 1 0 0 ...cCool ... 1-3 0 0 0 Champion (L.O-I) I 4 11 ■'■rrafl 1 2 2 2 $#V#-Mecool. T-2;17. A- 3,4SI. With one out In the third McDowell got an Infield hit and Seattle starter Mike Marshall walked Jose Cardenal and Larry Brown. Fred Talbot replaced Marshall and walked Ken Har-to force in the first the game. Maye and Horton followed with their hits and the Indians had a 5-9 lead. i The Royals nicked Coleman for a first inning run on singles Howord Spurs Senators Past Royals, 3-1 KANSAS CITY (AP) - Frank Howard’s double set off a two-run Washington rally in the sixth inning, giving Joe Coleman the margin he needed to pitch the l^nators to a 3-1 victory over Kansas City Wednesday night. ° Loser Dick Drago, 3-3, walked Mike Epstein after Howard’s double, but the strategy back-firied when Ken McMullen and Bemle Alten stroked consecutive run-scoring singles. Epstein had hit his 13th home run leading off the fourth to tie it. tBATtLB ------- d"V2"l"o H#rp#r 2b 3 1 0 . Ul\ M#y# rf 5 12 3 Comer rl 3 11- THoHon 1b 5 0 12 Mlncher 1b 4 0 1 Kllmcbck 2b 4 1 2 0 Rolllni 3b 4 o l Pultar 2b 1111 H#n#v c 3 0 0 5 110 K#nn#dy •• 3 2 1 3 13 0 M#r4btll p 0 0 0 . 1 0 0 0 Ttibol p 0 0 0 0 VoU Sp!o#% Whttaktr ph 0 0 LOB^livil by Pat Kelly, Joe Foy and Lou Piniella. Hp permitted only five more hits, however, in.postbig his third victory againri five losses. KnII. 2 2-3 2 0 0 2 2 1-3 3 3 3 Soy#—SWIIIIiml. McPowtil. T-3j10, A -p 2000 * • • -JSSiirr p D^Waihlnpton 1, K«nitl City 1 Grid Owners Huddling Pros Eying Cut in Player Limit NEW YORK I AP) - Pro foot-bai< s club owners discussed a poiMble cut of the player limit today as they- pressed ahead with committee, reports tiiat hive been sidetracked since the lengthv realignment talks. ‘j^e-player limit, which is set at 36 in the constitution of the Aiperican and National Footbsdl Leagues, was voted to the 4h-man level by the NFL in 1964 with the AFL following that GIMMICKS pattern two years later. i A rule also was recommended * « * that would outlaw gimmickry In Now the owners are consider-!pl««ehlcklng shoes by restrict- ■ ■ ■ ■ that We Asked if trimming the player limit could be construed by the Players Association!; in both leagues as a way of cutting down player payrolls, Roselle said; 1 don’t know, you’d have to ash them. Maybe there are some clubs thinking that way, but I think ill most cases It’i^ the other reason.” ' Etter, who uses a metal weight on his kicking shoes, and Curley Johnson of the New York Jets, who ties up the point of his kicking shoe with the laces. ner before Bob Tolan’s RBI double capped the rally. Matty Alou hit his first homer since 1967 for the Pirates, who took the lead with two runs in the eighth. CAUGHTONCE Lou Brock singled in the eighth, stole second for his 24th theft In 25 attempts and scored on a single by Vada Pinson, sending the Cardinals past the Braves, who have dropped six of seven. Bob Gibson gave up seven hits bn the way to his seventh vi<;tory in 19 decisions. %rb 4 oe 1 4 0 2 0 Wilt 2b S • 0 2 0 0 Tot#l On* out Whin 53 0 0 0 Totil winnhw run tcorid. .... OOrMOMSOOBfiO — .... 000 001 iw too OBI — eiTtoBum^H^ 3 2 3 0 0 2 0 Climinti rf 3 0 2 CINCINNATI ■brhbl itDwart cf 5 2 3 I'iwaiou < Tolan rf 4 0 11 Habnar AJohnaon If 5 13 1 Stargall »ar*z 3b — iwicWc* 4 0 2 1 singuliln'• 3 0 0 0 c"M. H#lmt 2b 3 0 10 Ptgm ph 0 . . Chinay u 3 0 0 0 Sunning p 2 0 0 WhlHMO ph 1 0 I 1 Kolb ph 10 0 WooOwrO li 0 10 0 Hrttnilin p 0 0 0 Culvir p 3 0 0 0 ilktr p o o 0 Carroll p 0 0 0 0 CTiylor ph 10 0 Grangtr p 0 0 0 0 Total PUMBurgb .. oooooioto-E^Tolan, tangulllin. OP-CIncInnall 2. LOB-Clnclnnatl 2B-Tolan. HR-'M.AIo 1—Tolan,. Allay, I- iarroll ( [unXi 71-3 4 3 2 1 2-3 1 0 0 2 0 PB~Banch. T- ‘?g'r*S?l 51111 4 1 1 tt I ISIIi 4 0 0 0 1 ftnUaran A 4 0 0 0 fte* r Martha I Jf ■b r h M -go 2b 4.0, 5 111 M____ - 4 13 1 irand < 0 0 0 0 aim ^ 2 0 3 0 10 0-10 1-‘SSS SIS Total 34 0 121 Tolal 32 3 0 3 E—WIna, Moli, DP~Sin Franclico 2, mkk IW,M) 'o vm B«3 I -3I44. A LANTA iJacki^ a lAafon rf iarty *if L 31 2 0 MCifvir a . Mlllan 2)1 4 13 1 Ihannon 3b : 4 0 11 Brock 2 a 4 0 0 0 eioOO Cl 4 0 0 0 Rlnion 1 4 0 0 0 --- ?!?» drive a IHtla -save a lot , PLUiMBING ]i “sr Washlnglon a!'*Mlnnwta, nlghl Oakland at Oetrolt, r— Caiifornla'''at ClaveiawJ nloh Saattl. at.B?!tlmor.,^nlohl^ EXTRA SPECIALS! 15«S£i'3&T-;;:.v.^?SSS:*-S I $49415! ifiavePLUMBiaej 841 BaWiirin | I FE 4-1516 erFE5-2lN 70th Anniversary San Diego 3, Philadelphia V Taday'i Gamat SI. Louli (Torrei 1-2) at Houston (Roy 2-1), nio - Only I SAU CAGE HAM — Benise Long, 18-year-old basketball whiz from Whitten, Iowa, the only girl ever drafted by a National Basketball Association team, hams it up on San Francisco’s Hyde street cable car line with employes Cornelius Miller (jumping) and David Kieval. She arrived in San Francisco yesterday hopeful of signing a contract with the Wgrriors. . Cincinnotl at Chleags Pittsburgh at Atlanta, SI. LOUIS al P—*“ ■ Now York at Montraal at L Phlladalphla I night ------ .light in DIago. night I AiiMlaa, night San Francitco, nil White Sox Win Pro Ball Interests Girl Cage Standout ............0 10 Schefalhl 2b 5 0 3 Barry ct 0 0 0 0 DJoitaa 1b 5 101 Aparklo If 4 1 3 B Yalrtmkl If 3 0 01 CMiiy If S 1.) 0 RSmith ot 4 0 21 HdpkInI lb 3 12 3 WalfbelH 00 101 Mccraw 1b 21 • a ACwilglro rf 4 0 01 .... OBrtan 3b 412 412 2 GRiKin C 4 01 ........ .4122 Slabart p 000 Bradford cf 4 00B Jarvla p 000 John p 4 0 00 IMoeea ph . 1 0 0 Landia p 0 0 0 Tolal 30 712 7 Total 33 2 1 3 :blcago .. 0 1 3 0 02 010-7 lotion .... 1 1 0 000 000-3 E-Scholleld. DP-Chicago 2, B-*— ’ . Boston *. 2tabaOBrltn. pkins (3). Knoop SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The first thing I thought heard I’d been drafted,” says Denise Long, “was, ‘Do I have to play?’ I thought it was like "le Army.” After she learned that the 0 choice was strictly hers and that being drafted by the San Francisco Warriors M the National Basketball Association was something more than just publicity ginunick, Efonise got Intrigued by the idea of playing professional basketball. .- So Wednesday she arrived in San Francisco to*see if maybe she could play and go to college at the same time. Warriors’ owner Franklin Mi- euli was in Detroit at National j?l!" Basketball Association meetings when Denise, her parents ai^ sister arrived, but he is diib back today and has promised to take her for a look at several Bay Area colleges. If she can find on§ she likes and if she and Mieull can agree to terms, she could be the iwnlw-stay of a girls’ league that’d play before the Warriors’ regular games next season. Averaging 69 points per game during her senior year in high school in Whitten, Iowa, “ had her fill of basketball and was thinking about giving it up. Tt wasn’t as mudi fun anymore,” she said, more pressure. I was getting ' ' of it. But vriien I got draft- Ex-Tennis Queen Undergoes Third ed the enthusiasm sprung v§ a little. I think people are gdng to be interested in girls’ basket-bali.” Denise is 18, stands 5-feet-ll _ • iPN X* ^ ® bright and lively girl' Recent Uperationiy/ium pictures somehow seem not to do her justice. A trip; ail SHOPPING CENTER Mon. thru Sat. Open Sunday 124 REMODELING i FE 8-9584 DALLAS (AP) — Maureen Connolly Brlnker, queen of the women’s tennis world in the 1959b. underwent surgery of unspecified nature Wednesday night at Baylor Hospital. Her huslmnd, Norman Brlnker, said the operation—her third since lb69^wa$ regarded “as successful as c o u IQ be expected.” He estimated his wife ' e in the hospital at least two weeks. ’Then known as “Little Mo,” le former Miss Connolly occupied the women’s tennis throne in 1962-54 until a leg injury in a horseback riding accident ended her net career. She won the U.S. and Wimbledon titles three Umes each and In'1954 scored an unprecedoited grand slam, winning the U.S. Wimbledon, French and, AuBtra- to Neiy York and an appeal*-ance on the Jedinny Carson show made her nervous, she said, but she enjoyed uieeting Gene Tunney, Jack Dempsey, BobnHope and especially Robert! Wagner. “He’s a real cutie,’ After she had heard the Warriors-had drafted her, Denise said she thought it was a joke. 'Tve had people come up to me and say, “Denise, someday you’ll be playing against Chamberlain,’' you’ll be drafted by the Boston Celtics.’ “I knew I could never play jainst men,” she said, when they said it was a , league, then I thought it i^d go. Girls’ basketball shouldn’t be thojight of as any less feminine than ice Daini Queen iSUNDAE STOP Vau can't hoy a imOcR ar Bail wi Miiar trao# an yt Rlaa yao tratla i I at a laaiaf arMa. leg a cutback, probably to 38 or 39, as a method of Increasing the talent available to foe clubs iitg footwear to shoes 1 at the bottom of the standings. said Com- “In most cases, mlaekmer Pete Rozelle, “clubs dtrira the iMktor like to get ■ ■hot at (he players cut from foe D ivailable for general, purchase, I in,-sporting goods stores. To be- I comp effective for the 1969 sea- I son, It requires eight of 19 votes I In foe.AFL and 13 of 16 in the .1 NFL, The rule would Affect at laaat two kickors, Atlanta’s Bobby shelt^on PONTIAC -r BUICK - OPEL .V9 Mila Sou* 0l PaMMWR RochoMr 65M500I ’IlMiroeU'bFMrtdolbloiia oandtio in a waxlity of flavon. Enjoy ono todayl bk MIHLIlftO DAIRY DUIim_ 2888 BrahBrt Laho Mr Koege HirtNHr We Now Have a Large Selection of Late Model, One-Owner Cadillacs Available, Come in Now V(hile the Imeniory Is High, JEROME Cadillac Sales 675 S. Saginow, Pontioc 333-7021 Tire Discounts krinovAL BRAND NEW WHITEWALLS FULL 4.PLY Wlda Track—Bios Typo NOT SECONDS E 11x14 F-TO.I40-TO-1B G-1i-14H*T0*1l URGER SIZES SLIGHTLY HIGHER LIFETIME GUARANTEE-.INSTANT CREDIT - ##_.# «w»«WAUS 14lxlS-|1I.Ni||.H 1.1lxl4r.|f|.IB t gtJi LTIxll-|f|.Ni 91.21 •.2lxl4-$fD.Mtf|j| MUII-lli* AI2JI I.HXI4-91D.II 11241 M9xll-$iS I S.IT Hourt: Hioii.-Fri. 1-8. Sat. ■#« TIRE SERVICE CO. 190 W, Walton Blvd. Pontiac Ph. 332-5888 TflE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 1969 C-^ 1 TUBILISI IXCISI TAX TOMIIU Sill IXCISI TAX 520-13 1,35 500/ 560-14 1.50 560-13 1,57 500-15 1.30 590-13 1.47' 560-15 1.74 640-13 1.71 600-1i\ 1.59 SIZE PRICE F.E.T. 650/700-13 16.00 1.81 695/735-14 16.00 2.06 750/775-14 16.00 2.19 800/82^-14 16.00 2.35 850/855-14 18.00 2.56 735/775-15 16.00 2.21 815/825-15 16.00 2.36 845/855-15 18.00 2.54 885/900-15 18.00 2.81 Save $5 on our best battery, now only With •xchangvl Quol-Ity battery guoron-tead for five yoortl Croup 24, 29 — w YOUR CHOICE Transmltsicn fluid. <|t. ilM 47< 47< Hlgh-d«f«rg*nt oil. 10W40 47«, Shull X100 20‘wt. motcr oH , oil 47* to. YOUR CHOICE ixtro toH, Mh. pollihing cloth 97« Quality load levelers give a smoother ride Replace worn shocks with standard shocks Inotollation oyollablo. Provonti ovorload >wag for 0 tofor rido. Save I 24“ Initonotion ovolloblo. r pitton-doubit action. For molt Amoricort con. 2.7“ BRAKE OVERHAUL Horo is what wo do: • Install now linings • Chock whool cylindors • Chock mastor cylindors • Turn all four drums • Chock groaso soals • Inspoct fluid linos • Install now fluid and blood and adjust brakos • Tost drivo automobllo 27 88 tol^od|usflng $4 mdro « Save on our lifetime guorqnteed muffler Instollotlen ovolloblo. Deu- 0tt bio wrapped, frlple-dippod, OO For most American ears. frqnt end c^llgnment at our special low price We Bet coster, set comber, center steoring and od|ust toe-in. Most automobiles. 688 < I FEDERAL’S AUTO CENTERS (jpen Mori t ttr u '>.it ') lu b I’b mm:: • ; ■ i'ii C--4 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. JUNE S, 1969 National Outlook Improves for Locaf Roller Skaters The roller skating -road ifrom ■ - • - •, Ark., l*0Btiac to Little Rock, can be long and full of detours. But members of the Roiladium Roller Skating Club are~liopelul_ of* making the Journey in sufffcient numbers to regain the team supremacy in the North American Cham- The mower of the year is here! pionships once consistently en-i Little Rock later this summer, joyed by the local rink squad. | First, however, there will be a This will be determined in major detour to Eudid, Ohio, !for the Great Lakes Regional I championships. Top three Fifnnc Form Ouf ^^is meet advance to I will I v^wi the North American. 2 Relief Hurlers It takes quality as well as MONTREAL ^ Montreal! quantity to win the national ti> Expos at the National Leaguditie. Twenty-two first places in announced Wednesday night'last weekend’s Michigan State that relief pitchers Carroll Sem- meet at Roiladium gives an in-bera and Steve Shea have been assigned to Vancouver of ther*----------------------------—■ dication that the host club has the promise. ‘The team is the strongest it has^, been'in four years,” said Mrk Bert A'nselmi, wife of one of Roiladium’s co-owner and a team coach. “Our skaters met nil the predictions of the professional staff, and then some, in the state meet.” Roiladium Skating Clubs won trophied for most first places in aft and speed and the Oaken Bucket for most placements in |champ, was named Michigan'for having the most speed both divisions. The first four places will compete in the regional. Several regional titlists from Roiladium, University and Flint Rollhavoi did not compete because they automatically qualified a s defending champions. I State Roller Skating Queen and will compete fdr the national crown at Little Rock. Rochester Skapig Center vea^back to (»m- Gayla Grammer of University, a defending regional skating Club also mov( petition this year with several lacements^ s|l^. Rolladiutif sp^ coach Bob Martin was awarded the trophy champions in the state meet. A new challenge trophy in memory of Richard A. Grossr former speed champion for the Roiladium Club who was killed in Vietnam, ■ was placed in circulation for the Juvenile Boys relay. It was initially won by the Northland Club. RENT, SELL, TRADE--- USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! NEW 1969 . JACOBSEN State Roller Skating Results Key Start 4-Blade Rotary Mowers Pacific Coast League. Sembera pitched 29 innings in relief, compiling a 0-2 won-lost I record and a 3.10 earned run av- had a 2.87 ERA. fK’ f Cl«m*n» Arena. .Ml. AAorrIi Skalaland, Van KIrl. Flint. RoMadlumi. 2. --- Flint Rollhaven. Midland -Roll Arena, aiRLS—WOMBN'S SINOLRS 3. TerreMo I V Oeorborn JuvfeNlLE B--1. Anne MorloAnwlml, Rolieoiura. Campbell, Hlllsdalei 2. Kcl y Good, OIRLS—WOMIN'I SFBRD ... . 3. Tammy Grimih, warren;! JUVENILE 2 Flint; 4. Kimberly Campbell, Roiladium. IMt. Morris. ■neisa JUVENILE-1. Iidlara W i t n I o w s k I, SENIOR-) Gall Ambassador; 2, Janice Overcash, Fnnt;|Krlstino James, A Parent,'3. Jolla Hamilton, Univartlty; 4. JoaniWells, Northland. ■ ' ‘ ------- ' INTERMEDIATB—r. Vicki V ^ .i Flint Rollhaven. Midland-Roll Ai - ^ iVps I la nt I dw’o d I and. ' Deal — ^ IV 1 « rt ni IRollerdrome. Waffen Adoior City. V*| GIRLS-WOMEN'S FIGURES ■tllv ^ lAmbassador; Jerry I Pickard, Nc Flint; 3. San issador; 3. Caro :3. C Lucille Slernetl, Ingles, Hillsdale; 4. Kathy ackolski, Clawson Northland.^ 12. Cheryl Paterson, Ml. Morris, nces WIsnIimskI, NOVICE-1. Petricle Hanley,! JUMlbR-l. Cindy Booker, Roiladium;I nces H I n k I a, Ambassa^r; 2. JoAnn W I s n I a w sk I, 2. Dabra Watts, Ml. Morrisi 3. Sandra: Ambassador; 3. Linda HIne, Roiladium;;Travers, Skating' Cantor; 4. Kim Janice Overcosh, 4. Shelly Covert, Roiladium. Ansalml, Roiladium. 1 >n. University; 3. INTERMEDIATE—1. Robyn White,I JUVENILE A—1. Mary Heath 4. Jean Dowli. Roiladium; 2. Grace Ridings, Northland. »«ii.hi..«.. a e.,k.. ------ SENIOR-). Linda Gyenese, Flint; 2. JUNIOR - 1. Betty Jo Whllmore, Gall Robovllsky, Norl Rolladluin; 2. Candy Bell, Roiladium; 3. Hildebrand, Northland. Gall Figa, Universlly; 4. Brenda Crab- BOVS—MEN'S thland; 3. iroL Northland. _C3 starts like am! You lust tum on tha powsr with Jacobson Kay Start No tug, no pull, no strain. And tho naw Jacobaan automatlo choka at-aursa fliat timt starting. For tha uMmaca In mowing eonvanianca, aafsty, quality, maka It aaay on younaH with Jacobaan. 95 tABV o Eloetrlo kay starting o 4 bladoa for twica tha cutting action o Fold-down handle o 2t* cutting width 0 Instant Stop-Qo control oivpoworpropollod modpla HALVERSON Sales and Service 8465 Telegraph Rd. IlnBliilhain, Ph. 147-SSet /i/orelco*'^ RECHARGEABLE TRIPLEHEADER 45CTL Me lie 'mbessedor. INTERMEDIATE — illedlun - - - Colleei JUVENILE B-1. Tobin An . - ----..olledlum; 2. Scott Ryder. -- Roiladium; 3. Cherlene 3. David Flge, University; . , wsrrsn. JUVENILE-I, mbassador; 2. ____ obert Heaih. Roiladium; I Clemens; 2. ! Shauns C-). I, Rolledlun ___ inlay, Ahmessedor; 4. Susan' tin, Norlhland. •OVS-MEN'S FIGURES in Shomock.3. Vickie ..... Jones, Film; 3. Pelerson, Ml. ... ---- , ---,,1 JUVENILE D-1. Ann C Ronald Shue, I ...........— Roiiadlur... .. -------------- Rod Wright, Flint; g.iShomock, Ambassador; 4. Kurt Anselmi, —tns: 3 Gordon IRolloaium. I Slave Marshall, „N.OyiCE-1, Kevin, Van Klrk,_ Flint; 2. Edward [penny Kane, Northland; 4. P be HarveyV'MVdlend;' ---- -----Jum. MIXED SPEED RELAYS - • - "adlum ir — rd McKei Rue); 2. Northland; 3. Rol Rich; i; 3. Tim INTERtiEOIATE—1. Scott F rity. 2. Julia Hamilton, University; ,1'Mlke Crickmore, Flint; 3. Mark Revere, Michael PAIRS TWICE AS ' '='»Ea IIIIUI. nu Crickmore, Flint: MANY SHAVES PER CHARGE i^^-'’'"^-'’?' ESQUIRE . mlwssedor; y. josepn u a lain Norlhland; 3. Jack Tllll, Northland; Raymond Swaraj, Ambassador. JUVENILE — I. Paul Jones. Flint; 1.. Mark Pool, Ambassador; 3. Teddy. JUVENILE—). Sus . _ . ZsiblockI, Northland; 4. John Hamilton, Ambassador; 2. Laurel Haasllp-RobartI Universlly. . Heath, Roiladium; 3. Laura Schulli-I JUNIOR - 1. Alex Kane, University; J.'james Branson, Midland. Douglas Ingles, Hillsdale; 3. Bobby JUNIOR-I. Carol Ingtes-Douglat Woodyard, Fllnl; 4. Rod Wright, Flliil. Ingles, Hillsdale; 2. Shari Inglas-Charles! NOVICE ■ I. Lawrence Skulnlck. Campbell Jr., HIHW*la. Ambassador; 2. Dennis 2 a m p I a r I. nOVICE-I. Candy B a 11 - D o u g I a s lAmbassador; 2. Chuck Thompson Conklin, Roiladium; 2. Gail FIga-Hobart ■'niversily; 4. Ron Prulll, Flint.. Brown, Universlly; 3. Mary Crickmora- INTERMEDIATE -- 1. Kurt Ansalml, Bannis Logan, Fllnl; 4. Sue Van Kirk-“ 2 Robert Brown, Universlly; Kevin Van Kirk, Fllnl. -------- ----------—, intermediate -I, Shelly Covert- RoDert Tannka, Rolladl»m SENIOR-1. Roby Crickmore, Flint.' FOUIL. VICE-1. University (Rob ___ FIg'a, Dick Leighton, rai ----- Splllar); 2. Roiladium (Marty Tan Diana Shelly Covorl, Jerry Brennan, C Hyali), Chappall, , Tom Kar senior - 1. Ron GUI la Mon 's¥Nl6R-iT' R’o'iry'n ’ While MU ALMOST ........ ............... ■ ............ i DANCE ' FOUKS I FREE — 1. Linda Oyanasa-AAIk# NOVICE- * -'* Kim Anfelmi-John Gall Fifl'« ............. .. Brenda Crabtr*- - " Richard Leighton, Univeriltyj HMdebrand-John bdneal, NorthI |Witho^thoutB«r(l . ....... .......... - ;Bit ClOMSt, moat eomfortlblt shaves. So PAul Jonas, Fimt; 3. Irene Hogan-Bryan I Roiladium (Edw; ;Cioia WB dare any bladt to match thavaa | S*' m? ciamin»***“" VKi'ih ® d”.ii iwitb It Comaa with all tha iKtiai that hB’ll LyUNIOR - 1. Sandra Gham Donaldl Grag Houle, John flfui Mih, with hta Naraliw Trh.l.l,..d.e Clemens; 2. Kim Cailor-Kurt SENIOR RELAY- .. ___ nna only WIUI nit noraico Iripwhstusr. Ansalml, Roiladium; 3. Angela Kraud- LannI, Slava LaRua, Howard McKar- Alex Kane, Roiladium; 4. Janice rocher, Marty Tannka); 2. Ml. Morris; 3. Ovarcash-Bobby Woodyard, Flint, Norlhland; 4. Ambassador (Jell Ooolln, I NOVICE — 1. Susan Marlln-WIMIam Doug James. Gary Dunlap, Ron Ermartl. iRIchardson, Norlhland; 2. Gall SENIOR-1. Slava LaRua, Roiladium; I Robovllsky Jim Wilson, Norlhland; 3. 2. Ramon Hawity, Ml. Morris; 3. Bill iJoan Goodall Richard lalghlon, Unlvarsl- Trospar, Northland; 4. Marty Tannka, ly; 4, Linda Varhlna-David K a r I , Roiladium. Roiladium. | tNTERMEDIATE-1. Eugene SI pa, ; INTERMEDIATE — I. P a I r 1 c I a'Roiladium; 2, Lawrence Oawe, RldlhgsRon Robovllsky, Norlhland; 2.'Norlhland; 3, Gary ----- ‘ Gall Rldlngs-Josaph Ellis, Northland; 3.14. Douglas Ja—— ' NIW YORK, NIW YORK 10017 icoiiw" _ h • "J • v/.m »/k_ Chapre^^^^ . North Americon Philips Corporation 100 lAST 42nd STRUT Jamah Ambassi^or.^ . MIctiaTa "owan™Li7ry Ro^^ Skallng"^ntar; *3.'"Mlehaai .SkulnickI Ambassador. Kobplle, Norlhland; 3. Ronnie Ermart, ,1 SENIOR - I. Linda Oyanasa-MikaiAmbassadori 4. Jainaa Oil, Ml. Clenwns. Crickmore, Fllnl; 2, Diana Vandar Hagan-I JUNIOR-), John Lannl, Roiladium; 2. ............. — iMIchaal Bradburn, Ml. Morris; 3. Doug Ingles, Hillsdale; 4. Eugene Caltnacci, Rgn Guslatwn, Ri Ambassador; ......... .lobar' -•----- Garaldlni Jamas P a r son s ilcanlar. Kana, Rolladl.um; 3. iqsbI PBICE BLAST SVER SAFETY 4-M.Y WHITIWAUS M 7.75k14 ■XOItl TAX 2.29 7750 •1 7.76x16 XXPIMTAXUI M 8.26x14 IXOItBTAXXJe 3500 4 8.26x16 IXOIIITAXSAe M 8.66x14 IXOllITUtlJI 86“ ft 8.46x16 IX0ltlTAX2.M TNI WILOeiT OF TNI WIDI OVAL TIMS Wide Tiger Paw KING TIM .. Alice HqlcombChucki JUVENILE Unlvarsltyi 2, Sue Shallbourne-i Roiladium; 3 ...—.G,ry|,|„ j Kav Paterson, Ml. Clamant; 4. I Henley, Roiladium; 4. ,ave Drrnnaii, Northland.-JUVENILE C~l. .Jeffrey Lucai SPRING SPECIAL NEW GALVANIZED 48” FENCE UNIVERSAL’S 11 GA. STEEL PRICE INCLUDES WIRE: Hoi Dipp.d Oclvomiad Alio., LINE POST: O"' TOP RAIL* Iniidw Anri Owl Wllh SI««vw IncluHwd * M«nu^oeluffd To G S,. Marrlll DIngass (Kan-I; (. Bab CMam (Eaitam). T1 faab ? -..-..-a —. (Naw rword. OM racord by w Robart PARIS (AP) - Rod Laver and Ken Rosewali, two of the world’s top tennis stars over the last decade, staked their reputations against two rising yOung prize money winners in the semifinals of the French Open Tennis Championships today. HifeoLTS - 1, jlSi br« »! 44) YARO RELAY - 1. Lbicalni I. j^TTH^RADE imT4% wadhinBian'a Vnoilt Your Best SetForihe Dollar Spent 1S’to26’ ONDISPUY Jacobson Trailer Sales, Dmvtoii Plalm OR 34981 Make it eiasyl witb K’VsIamiaum sdjosubft sbsif hardvnn I EaYNobliwiUlMimailMHB DUIL-IWOSEinUU»EIS* •ip||Mlelesolehelvee,imisl ^ CUPS CHEER K-lfaimcn innSnSNkmaScS ESSigasiiM . >1 ES57.TSffSXtS A III Oakland Avta FE4^ World's Best in Tennis Staking Reputations Laver, 30, top favorite for the first prize of $7,000 faced Tom OM^er, the 25-year-old flying Dutchthan. Rosewell, 34, winnhi title last year, hSd to play Tony Roche, who is 10 years his Okker, battling It out with the three Australians for the title, is the big favorite with the crowd the Roland Garros Stadium here. He is bidding to become the ..first European to win the French men’s cpown since Spain’s Manuel Santana in 1964. Austridians have won it each year since then — including Roche in 1966 and RoseWall last yeai*. TfO SETS Okker, then an amateur, was the first man .fo topple Laver after open tennis had been inaugurated last year. But that was a two-sets match Queen’s Club, the warmup tournament.which precedes Wimbledon and which always produces a crop of upsets. Since turning pro, OkkPr has played Laver twice and lost each time. Rocha" eliminated Rosewali from the first open Wimbledon last year. Rosewali has said he might retire this year if be wins Wimbledon — the big title he hashevetw^n. Meanwhile the United State’s hopes in the women’s singles * were reduced Wednesday to one — Nancy Richey of San Angelo, Tek., the defending champion. VAMT SALEi EXTERIOR latex honae paint is self-piinimg. Coven every type sidingr _j coven similar colors in one coat. Flows on fast and sieooth and dries to a beautifnl, soft luster in 30 minutes. Clean-up is easy.. .just use soap and water! In 13 coloirfastsliadea......4.77 gallon PaIntagAeeeaaoifea do«r. OttbMW QU SIS' S3* bWN mirm QL,raib SW.. 135 Unnr ft. PL. raS.SriBB. Mbtklni r«lS(rniU.raS.BHBB.... .............. SsMb iwr wlm i"M|BlBrl hM.ifi.si .Smm Point DfpartmMI I’’ T" x« 4” 88*’ 2" 87* 2^ 99« :r99* INTERIOR latex flat paint coven any color in one coat! Flows on smoothly without brush or roller marks. Dries in 30 minutes to a washable, 8pot*and*stain resistant Onish. Clean up with soap and water. Choose yours in white or decorator colon . . . . 4.77. gallon OB Baae Opldoor Sears Sprayer Sale _________. ___r in 1 eoau NoB«hidkiiq; white, eolon. Oompsot. Delivar* ... 1.2 CFM at 20 PSI. 29’^ IISB.1.M Saars Latex Ssmhfilots . ^mel. For cabinet*, trim. 30-min. drying. Colori. RSI.I.M RS|.tJt (t97 tJgal. (Ssmi'filots cabinet*, tri ig. Colors. 4,97 ^ gal. anatfalst I eoat eov KMaln. diyi Q97 tJgal. 5” fam. InelndM 8* air hole. 35 PSI. 14 HP mo. tor.6’*fprBy. ^ 3.7 CFM M » m 159’^ * 714-gBRon l*nb. SeanUleiinatPalBt Is driplcs*. 1 eoat eovers like eolets. SIMaln. drying. RSM29.IS IVfHPTsnkTyps Eleetrio. Dallvart ^ ^ 7.8 CPM at 40 PSI. 20gaUon tank. ^ tears Redwood Fisish dries to a high fdon. For redwood look on other 7.8 CFM at 40 ^1. 279^^ 20-aallon tank. " ^ . t-Oah Faint Tai^ Maximum 60 PSl. Rdg.4.M Maximum 60 I%1. Preiiure feed, ragu* lator, aafety valve. Reg.l9.lt 29’^ Ladder Sale Alumhmm aUi>ur. iHMe ladder for home needy.’* Reg. Prioo 11“ b. irtxtsnsion Aluminum exlen* eion ladder. Haa 15Y4'*baae. 2t.9l 20-ft.... 19.11 21.99 24-ft.... 24.91 34.99 21-ft.... 11.11 Reg. 16.99 14” 0.1'ComUnation Step-ledder exten* aion eomblnetlon. UghtweiglK. II.N 14t.... 21.11 ii.n i4t.... tin / • Rsg.2Mh 24” (Not Shawn) 2i»ttepsteel Aluminum, with no* akid feeti. Folda for storage. Reg, Fries 4^ Udders are tske.with prteaa Uae Seare Revolving Charge Ogew Menday, ThMraiay» Fvidoy* Satardoy t I* t* f losido Sears <197 tJ gat. D ; lii-;. I - '' i .i', i! ii.'k > THE POXTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. JUNE 5, 1969 NBA to Draff by Phone Player Demands Studied DETROIT (AP) —Owners of I jKennedy, however, Reclined | National Basketball Association to comment bn or make thei clid^ conclude their three-daymlayers demands public. i annual meeting today, with de- <<1 have' never felt any of the cisions Still up in the air pnjpiayers demands were out of players’ association demands Une,’* Kennedy said Wednesday Golfing Gal Gains First Home Win and rule changes. A news conference by NBA Commissioner |>Walter Kenne^ dy was canceled late Wednesday when ' owners became locked in debate over demands by the players association. The players reportedly were seeking better travel and hotel morning when asked if the demands were unreasonable. * * ★ The players association meets later this month in Hawaii. The owners also were expected to act on rule changes, including the placing of a greater penalty for deliberate, last-min- accommodations and an in- ute fouls, crease in pension allotments. At. present, players travel in tourist I The owners decided Wednes-class and their pensions for vet-1 day to conduct the college play-eran players are $600 a month er draft next May by phone at age 65. 'rather than at a meeting. DOUBLE BUNK BEDS HEAVY DUTY GOV'T SURPLUS Oriel* iron b*d ii th* ilurdroat 0*0 mad*. Angl* iron it 2" x 1V4" pimantion of b*d it 31" x 76". Idool lor hom*t, Mmpt, raiertt, and hont- TtRS NEEDED. Springt juti fit into MAHRESSES ^B^^t THERMOS POP TENT FIBERGLAS FRAME 8.16-Ox. Drill-S*wn-in Floor 9-Ft. 7-Ff. ’97.00 ’00.00 *2 lb*. Illbt. Lightweight Counpletely Portable — No Stakes dip°r.M0A8 WHITE CANVAS - Navy Style Hanmook.. . .’5.98 CAROLINA ROPE HAMMOCK. .’9.98 JOE’S sSURPLUS 19 N. Saginaw - IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Shop Mon., Thun., 'til 8:30; Fri. 'til 9 Tues., Wed., Sot, 'til 6 P.M. FE 2-0022 Mrs. Midge Cova withstood a hot putting round by Mrs. David Mortimer of Birmingham with soiine strong chipping and flne putting of her own to register her first Women’s Metropolitan Golf Association victory on her home course Wednesday at Novi. Mrs. Cova toured the family owned Bob-D-Link Golf, Course with a pair of 40s to win the WMGA yearly outing there for the initial time in eight years. Mrs. Mortimer was three strokes behind her with 42-41—83 despite needing only 24 putts for the 18 holes. NINE PARS Mrs. Cova took a respectable 30 putts. Only 13 on the ' side, and had nine pars for her to some excellent chip shots. Mrs. Mortimer’s putting earned her seven pars. The victory continues Mrs. Cova’s success in the odd-numbered weekly outings. She has won the WMGA’s first, third and fifth tournaments this spring. A season-high 65 members competed yesterday at Bob-0-Link. Next Wednesday the WMGA will play Highland Hills. OOLF i k OC , FIUM t. Mldg* Cov«, Novi ....... . .. .... j. David Mortimtr, B'htm... .42.4)—U Mrs. Max Bvam. Sovthfttid .. 43-42-XS Mr>. Frank Langford, p. HgMi. 42-4«-ai Mra. Hanry Pramick,' Doarborn “ " “ Mra. Nick Panasluk. Elm'f, Ont. Mri. Gaorga Sehada, Dalrolt ... . Mrs. Jamas Coartnay, Livonia . .S24»-)00 Miss Phyllis Chandler, Haml. 49-51-100 I nu, H*,_Mrs BvanS 15 ' “ Plight ______ Delroll ......... Wolla, Delroll 45-47—M ------- Delroll 48-44-92 Sllz. Del. 93 ( )«l JACKSON (AP) — Michigan! He has earned more than may have one of its stronger 171,000 this year, contenders for the National. ** "“T have escaped notice, open Championship in 32 years g r, oil , the year’s most consistent play- when Dave Hill of Jackson steps Lrs He has been in the mon^ golf’s biggest in 16 of 19 tournaments and also at Houston next'has been secmd in the Bob Hqiie 90-hole maratiuMi, third in the Texas Open and sixth in the Colonial Invitation. Hill Contender in U. S. Open Hill, a 10 - year veteran of the pro tour, is now at the peA of his career. He calls the latter the toughest test of all. also made a fine ing in the Masters and already has clinched a place for mext year’s Masters. believes defending champion Lee Trevino, playing in his home Urea, will be the toughest to beat. ★ A ★ A fine shotmaker for many ears and an outstanding put-ttf most of the time. Hill has often been\ unhappy his game although he has won five tournaments, a record that many othe^ highly rated play- It was no flash in the pan vrtien the 3^year^ld Hill won the Memphis Open last Sunday for the seeond time. It brought him a $30,000 piixe, the tops of, TOUGH TO BEAT his career and boosted him to| ’The open will be over the fourth in the money list this Champions’ course, which Hill, ye**". has played well in the past. He| This year has made changes in his game, which have brought a control off the tee that he never had before. shots has made what he, calls “wonderful year.’’ Although proud of his money earnings, he likes even better his scoring average, which hovers around 70 strokes round. He is shooting for the Vardon ■Brophy for the lowest average, which would earn him a place on the Ryder Cup team that will face the British. RENT -A’CAR 3 Month Summer Special $050 lyl P«r Day S’’ per Mile '« Chovy Nova - VA Hm* But right now, he has his eyes on the o^n. Michigan’s last open champion was the late Tommy Armour in 1927. A continuation of Hill’s present form, and a few breaks might bring j ‘You build from the tee out,” the major breakthrough he has; 'he said. ilong sought, and of which manyi This new accuracy on all believe he is capable. i C.A.R. RENTAL A LEASE, Ine. 631 OAKLAND AT CASS PONTIAC • FE 54161 • P j 1 - 7 ‘ ^ C^ci^ Third riloi 51-57-1 ■22)-77. Mrs. F. W. Allen." WaT'bak Mrs. T. F. McCoM.'e. Detroit 55-53-Low Net-r-Mrs. William Yogus. BIrmIr ham 113 ('32)-€0. j Sprinter Wins I With Handicdp HENDERSON, Ky. (AP) -, Sprinter Jimmy Hines proved Wednesday night he can beat a horse—at least with a 110-yard head start. Hines, running 220 yards, beat a pacer called .Business Man by 30 yards. The sprinter, who has signed a pro footbal! contract with the Miami Dolphins of the American Football League, ran the 220 in 20.2 seconds around a curve at Audubon Raceway. Foiher s Doy is Sundoy, June 15 Dad tagt-off in graat form in the Arnold Palmer windbreoker jacket, oclion-styled in eosy permanent press Dacron polyester ond cotton. British ton, bright gold. blue, lime or toast. 36 to 46 sizes. 16.00 Jacdbision'0 Man's Shop 30^. Woodward, Birmingham Thursday and Friday to 9 -'I 'V- '.'i • ; [■ ii- r'l 1 HURRY! SALE IS FROM TODAY TO JURE 11 .. and Top-lt Off with an Owens-Coming Fibergias* Here’s an ideal way to remodel or recondition any ceiling. Prefinished grid system and large lay-in panels are easily and economically installed. Provides beaul^, insulation sound conditioning And easy upkeep! S' X 4’ size, panels. PEBBLE PANELS 97 ( Suspended Ceiling ... Light it with a GRiD LiGHTFiXTURE The pedect finishing touch. Fits flush to your 0 g| MhllR celling for a unique "sky light” effect Takes ^ | 240 watt lamps. Easy to install. I Rm Reg. $14.77 LUMBER & BUILDING SUPPLIES CENTER Bloomfield Miracle Mile Sq. Like and* Telegraph Rd. Open Dally M^PrMayM . 4101 Baldwin Rd. Near th« Cornar Of Holly and Baldwin Roads iiJr, ■ '''‘"l .1- [ /I \ ■ V. . THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 1969 C—T C^CKis> TBDCELQAD SALE! Bm OHLY! TRUCKLOAD SAVIRBS ON OUR COmETE LINE OF (TUALITY LADDERS! I ALUMINUM EXTENSION LADDERS 16 F. FLAT RUNG ALUMINUM STEPLADDERS 6 F. DELUXE Ptrfect for repair work outside the home. Sturdy construction. UL approved. Die cast alum, locks. *141* Solidly constructed for the ultimate in safety. Spill proof) multipurpose pail shelf. 14 FT. ROUND RUNG ECONOMY MODEL Has ipiit proof fiin|S for lafoty, I-beam rails. UL approved. nO.88 MS also available atWIckes... * 20'-40' FUT RUNG MODELS FROM *20.81 to *59.88 *16'-24'ROUND RUNG MODELS FROM *15.85 to *27.95 * STA^E STABIUZERS *5.84, Ret. *8.49, SAVE 10% *10??. 4 FT. PLATFORM LADDER Folds flat to hang In closet. Safety platform. $0 70 Wnt-W love $1.09 ♦ 2 FT. STEP STOOL *5.88 «5FT.ALUM.STEPLADDER *10.88 *8 FT. HEAVY DUTY INDUSTRIAL STEPLADDER *20.88 C—8 THE rOXTlAC PRESS, THURSDAY. . Horse Race Results Hazel Park Results I FRIDAY'S ENTRIES 1M-S17SD ClAlmlnif « Furlongti Tight Lumber Royal Gin Firm* Luck Hasty N*shrull«h Cornish Royal** Bronie Eoultv Susquehanna Squaw Mr. Pen Kirk Royal Everett Dorothy's Chance tnd-Wm Claiming; s Fvriangsi Hazel Park Entries 7ih—SSSOg Allowance; i Furlongs; Ocean's Ahead Nu --------- Thirty Day Not# Northville Entries Favored King Out of Derby American Girls Doniinafe Play in Net Tpurney Robt. SorWn, Mr. Kish ,.y. Particular Royal Dick Page RIt Red Dare Monkey Dollar AAagnagraph gi 4 Furlongi Schllssel Sirturbanci Everett's l.asl Don Hullh rhAnni«'« Rev Romen Crob' Pesco Pete Nu Coast Purple PlrinH Whispering Pf winoa Piltie Cutfit Mr to Claiming; 4 Erlangs: Ndsnuia Rugged C*5asf Doll Market Countess Marl Circumspect 0-So Good time Bit ^tow.14000 Claiming; 1 Mile: Sherbeauty Geelong I Pace; 1 Mile: 21.20 9.40 6,201 C. Marc Sirturbance Hull6 in^Cr^nar i Claiming; '4W> aterDUO SunriSr mub Fellow Lodger Clark Fork P-ahoran Her Peach Special Cher Hiliylilly Park Guv 10 Claiming; Furlongsi itiv-l90e Claiming Pace; 1 See So Grand 2 Sun Chief Dearborn's Hal 7th~tl200 Cand. Pace; 1 ^ MANCHESTER, England, Unseeded Valerie Ziegenfuss, Fretz, Patti Hogan and Stephan ^ (AP) — Apnerican girls are: o£ San Diego scored the biggest i ie Grant. Tory o dominating tiie Northern Lawn victory, upsetting second-seeded nian.«i KnstV rig . I Tennis Chaidpionships. Jddy Tegart ot Australia 8-6, 2- l^ight Invtider New Six U.S. giris advanced to the 6,12-m ^ / ! ,yThVM5JciVw'Er«. __________________ • • ■ quarte;-finais Wednesday while * * ^ . na&oya, Jap»»-FW",,,u,!i'*'^*j5 came with the Russian Olympic Entrant for Race Clark Graebner of New York Jojning Miss Ziegenfuss in the ',„v;’’team in the City Auditorium and Tom Gorman of Seattle Matw Ann ■ uer.A^. wev.-Art Aidereic, ; made it that far in men’s play. Tilt With USSR Set DENVER, Colo. (AP) - Donald Eingsby, general manager of the Denver Rockets of the American «Basketball Associa-: t,ion, said Weijnes&ay the club’s 'rookies will play an exhibition e Breaktr ____________ Star Boy Rusty Colnag# Pop Top Rod Dragon II Northville Results Sir Rux Pick HAZEL PARK, Mich. iAPi-Ogden Phipps’ King of the Castle, the. pre-race favorite, was withdrawn Wednesday from the 850,000-added Michigan Derby at Hazel Park Race Track Saturday when he developed a soreness in his left and Tom Gorman of Seattle round;, of eight were Mary A™ ^ jy nen’s play. ! Curtis of St. Louis and Califor- BS5ion!*"o.' ■_________^.................. WEDNESDAY'S RESULTS Winsom* Dav Tie Maronv Road Braak Arrc Flash Tinker Tom 6.00 4.40 3.10 Bay Acri in nn is an . Monday Star Mike's Battle Papa's King Cool Wampum Alice's Champ Dally Doubla: (3-31 Paid S1I.30 3rd—MOO COnd. Fact; I Mila: Cleo's Brel 3.60 3.60 Cottonwood Clevar 4.40 Double R. L. 4lh-|f0g Cand. Tret; I Mila; J. S. Rad Eagle 13.60 6 30 'The King romiped to an easy victory in , the Michigan Derby Trial last Saturday and also 3 40 victories in the Louis-j ,3M iana and Illinois Derbies , this Mighty A s Dinar fight lawn backaches 8 ways* JACOBSENo Chief.Tractor • A apqada forwtrd- ^Mowing,'fertilizing, seeding, spraying, rolling, sweeping, aerating and raki/ig. Not to mention snow - throwing, hauling, plowing end so on and on. a Super ChM 12 H F.v SEE US FOR LOW, LOW PRICE WE TAKE TRADES Large Selection of USED MOWERS and TRACTORS Manus Power Mowers, lnc^ 3116 N. Woodward LI 9-2440 2 BIks. S. of 13 Mile Mon.-Fri. 8-8—Sot. 8-6 2.60 ,2.40 2n^27M”a«lmlng; 4Vi Furlengt: Dame Scot * Kitty's Cub ubitr U-4) Paid $4.40'* (4-7) Paid $25.40 lyear* “SSm'ir'ar"’"' ' '‘“''sTVn, 3 60 Mcanwhlie, Mrs. Shielal _____\.°};' Pierce’s Night Invader was an- 4t^»3700 Claiming; 6 ,,, nounced as an entrant in the 3 80 roo Michigan Derby, the top race of Furlongs: ; the year at the suburban Detroit | 3 60 iJo: thoroughbred track. The race ""■'covers a distance of 1, 1-16 _ _______ miles. p.]_K' ” ............. Night Invader earned $117,354 j as a two-year old. last year and i Stb-337%6 Claiming; Jimzbarb Scientologist Some Hairan 4tb-$3400 Claiming; The Hack ____ ..- .- English Prairie 3.40 3.00 - - a.r Doublet (4 4) Peid $52.00 /rn-»e4og s.taiming; 4'^ Purlongs: Charcap 9.60 4.70 i. Furtengs: \4.6S ,s.o |fb-$4200 Claiming; 4'/i Purlongs; 12,40 6.00 2 80 finished first in the Jersey ’ 5» Derby Trial two weeks ago. He was fourth in the $137,100 Jer-j sey Derby on Memorial Day. 4.60 3.60 , * * ★ Eddie Nelpy, trainer of King > »fi4,3i6 pf fCastle, said the horse “has apparently injured a muscle in the area of the left stifle. It does not appear to be serious, but it would be foolish to risk permanent Injury. The mishap rejjorledly happened in his stall over the weekend. By Tha Associattd Prtti ir H Pet. . Cards Ace on No. 6 37 104 13 34 ,s 49 184 31 S9 48 180 17 55 40 139 23 42 39 149 23 45 40 146 32 44 47 183 23 55 Boston. 17; RJackson,' F.Howard, Washington, 16; fw York, 14; Yaslrzamski, Fpstein, Washington, 13; I Baltimore, 13. t Marc Bergeron of Birmingham aced the 164-yard No. 6 hole on the south course at Detroit Golf Club Tuesday. | Marc used a 3-iron for the shot and carded a 36 for the nine' holes. Help us move We have.no room forf^the cars Our (lock of over 100 new care is dwindling and we must sbII Bvary last one, b«cauED our houl-aways are loaded with furniture and tuppliet.' Join the move now, and get in on the hundreds of dollars worth of savings. |J0HN McAULIFFE FORD Yes, this is it, our inventory must move nowl So com# in today and save while you help us move. To Our New Telegraph LocciHon 630 OAKLAND AVE. PONTIAC, MICH. FE 5-4101 — ____________________________ MrNally, Balllmora, 7.0, I.OOOi LonborB, Boilon, 5-0, I.W*); Lyle, BoC— '™' Phoabur -------------- ' ’ Delroll, "r H FcI. Saillmor*,' Vl, .157) Leileh, C Jot*. McCovay SF .. .Alou Pqh R Allan Phi A.JohnMn CIn lilteCovay, &r'' IPhlli^tlphl 37 139 32 ___ 45 187 33 43 .337 39 149 30 50 .336, 51^)84 24 61 .332 41 134 30 44 .321 45 183 36 60 .321 I Runt 17; 13; with your purchase of INTERNATIONAL* CADET 60 RIDING MOWER FREEI CART-A-AWAyi FREEl Special limited offer) When you buy a Cadet 60. Riding Mower, ydu get a free caift (36*x20*x 10%*). Now you can cut a veivet-snhooth swath one minyte and haul off the clippings the next. Cadet 60 has powerful 6-horsepower engine, 4 speeds forward and.reverse, easy automotive-type steering, many other features. 32-inch mower (included) has cutting heights of 1V& to 4 inches, adjustable on-the-go. See the Cadet 60 in action. Stop in today and take advantage ► 6f the Cadet 60 Cart-A-Way I ^ With a mi Curt Fiicad at Only •46500 KING KNOS. PONTIAC ROAD «t OPOYKE PONTIAOy MIONIOAN . Fg44Nlaa4FB4-l1M pmr/ncjn>. ^N mc4.ovey PhM8d«lph ..Mrv, Clfvclnni...... Bitching 4 OKiBibn* nb^rnpthy. (^hiffigo. 4-0, 6'0. SWi B«ldsthun, Sam Diego, 0, l.000,\ HoMYrnimy ChlcAgo. 8-1, ,889» lenkln*. thlcnw, 0 2, .0(8); Mc^...... tew York, Ni-I, .IHM). Two Post Wins in NCAA fipurney HAGGERTY HAGGERTY HAS IT! j^l^ppryTo .SPRINGKIKLD, Mo, (AP) -.Southwest Missouri Slaty and 111 inois .Slate of Normal scored first-round victories Wednesday! in the NCAA College Division baseball tournament. 'Phe hometown Bears erupted late to defeat Florida Southern 6-3 W^^floesday night after llli-noi.s State downed Puget Sound 5-3 in an afternoon game. Only 83‘” Utrt't honaSila pioiiriion taainw 6t,. ihth and lmi~at a budaai prkt! 1 h, SBNTK V f advi It Kra. riepla.ian. l.numhar mm. bar. I'm Oimjdf. -15^ « . Si* li-todayl Natal t l-lif broika, nl Ikt CaUI. »llli ataalat taaacily. taiu.a Mlinii. 7 drawtii. hum Undtmiiltla' "C ” labd. Oimaniianv 0glii*f-J*kl' a WVf I UH'i In«<»-I5' ■ U’l ir.Wfl|M:tWlbi. Only 99.95 Only 139.95' bta iilt laaluta. DimaniiMi; Oulw laa'lt*-)* * U GENERAL PRItTINQ OFFICE SUPPLY IT W. LAWRENCE STREET -----------------Ml PONTIAQ PHONE llE-Wii C^ejiaK' POSTS 3” X 1’. * . 79c 3” X 8' a a a 95C 4” X 7' a a $1.03 4”‘x8'..$1.16 4” xl O'. $2.35 5"x 8’.. $1.29 EACH ALL Nl , CASH AND CA.RRT PAINT PAN & ROLLER SET 10-FT. $950 SECTION L 240-lb. SELF SEALING $370 Iquart CASH A CARRY (ISARDEN REDWOOD HEADQUARTERS) V—:-----lor LANDSCAPING———^ Build InSivIdublOy Into your void with varto-lilo Rqdweod lymborl Fothion o hondaomo forte* lo^ privoey, Oe-conl (hrub. and gr**n-#ry with pon*l*d plonl- W , If * Holmes gained his first varsity win by striking out eight Thurston hitters gnd retiring the final five men he faced. REDWOOD CITY, Calif. (AP) — Wayne Zahn of Tempe, Ariz. hel«Hhe lead by 82 pins today aftei 18 games in the po'fiOO Smallcomb Enterprises Bowling Classic. Zahn took over the lead in the six-game afternoon round and maintained it in six games Wednesday night. He had an 18-gamie total of 4,273 pins for a 239-game ayer^ age going into this afternoon’s ' six games. The field, cut to 80 Wednesday night, will drop to 16 who virlll go into match play tonight. Ed Bourdase of-Fresno, Calif, was Kcond with .4,191 fdns., A single, unsuccess I u 1 fielder's choice, RBI-double add two-run error put the Eagles In front, 3-0. But Grows came right back to tie after the first two Falbons in the third were retired. . COSTLY ERROR Two walks, Mike McLfen’s two-run triple and a cosdy error knotted the score. Another error opening the fourth set up Meyer’s cIiHch two-out double. ■Thurston won the earlier meeting between the two teams, M. in eight innings. _ a: GitovBs 4, D. thurstonV) B. Qr»«« . .....Ml IN »-4 4 1 Thurilgn ......N4 MO »-l 4 1 flOLMES (1-2) and SchrKk) CARR and Toledo Hikes | Adus//ms, Dr. King Were Watched—FBI League Lead Panllac Pma Photo BLASTS BIG HIT-Second baseman Clint Meyer, a standout all season for Birmingham Groves, { elimaxed a .397 season yesterday with the game-winning two-bagger as the .Falcone surprised Detroit Thurston,"S-S; and kept it from the outright championship of the Northwest Suburb an League. Rained Out Rec Games Slated to Be June IS Mudhens Pin Loss on Louisville Nine ' 1 HOUSTON (AP) — An FBI I Muslim sect, of which Clay is ! agent indicated in Cassius Clay’s a member, had been under way federal court hearing Wedhesr[since the late 1950s. day that federal agents had the By The Associated Press Toledo’s International ^ague-leading Mudhens widened their margin to a game and a half over Louisville on the. strength of a three hit performance by outfielder Ike Brown and pitcher Tom Timmerman Wednesday night. Brown got all three Toledo hits, including his ninth homer of the season, as the Mudhens | clipped the second-place ,Cot-' onels 2-1. Timmerman won his ninth complete game victory allowing only three singles. /> ' In other action. Tidewater i topped Buffalo 11-5 to stay withr j in six games of the lead in sixth place, Richmond^ whipped Syracuse 3-2 and Rochester beat! Columbus 5-3. - I late Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. under electronics surveillance several years. Robert Nichols of the Atlanta, Ga , FBI office also testified before ‘Judge Joe Ingraham that an investigation of the Black Ingraham' admitted into evi-oence summaries bt four taped conversations but refused to admit a fifth on ground its contents .fOUld endanger security if revealed. A Sept, 4, 1964, summary pre- paied under Nichols’s supervision quoted Clay as adyising Dr. .King during one taped conversation to take care of himself and , “w a t c h out for them .whitfeys.”" ' A March 24, 1964, nummary prepared*by the FBI in Phoenix, Ariz., quoted Elijah Muhammad, head of the Black Mus- Tigbt End Okays Pact With Rams UNITED TIRE SERVICE WHITEWALLS Jl FULL PLY! ANY SIZE 6.50x13 - 6.65x14 - 7.35x14 7.75x14 - 8.35x14 - 8.55x14 W*t4lll Hub $2.24 F.E.T. It Track Fibarclat Battaii Radial Bias Typa Palyaatar Cord Tlraa OWtHIOII.TMRUFRi.ttBl - SXT.M - CLOSEDSU|ID*Y ^ The city softball schedule was rained but last night and the games have been rescheduled for Sunday, June 15. At Bea^ette, Pontiac Press No. 1 will meet Local No. 596 at 7 if:m., with M.G.M. Cleaners taking on Jf. A. Fredman at (:30. .Local No. 596 and Congrega-tional Church meet at 7 p.m. at Northside. with Oxford and Huron (3uif tdnglfng in the 8:30 nightcap. In a 6 p.m. game at Aaron-Perry No. 3 field, Johnson & Anderson plays D e s i g n e r s Cabinet; LOS ANGELES (AP) -r- The Los Angeles Rams said Wedne.s-day they have signed their first round draft choice, 235-pound j tight end Bob Klein of the University of Southern California. Chief scout John Sanders hailed the 6 foot 5 Trojan “as the finest blocking tight end to come out of college football In the last 10 years.” make a better minister than fighter ajid telling Clay "to keep quiet” * / The hearing was ordered by the' 0.S.-Supreme Court after Clay appealed his conviction on a charge of refusing to be inducted into the Army. Ingraham placed him under a five-year prison, sentence and fined him NO BUM STEERS HERE! ^ ARE YOU UNDER 30? . " Set up a *30,000 life insurance estate overnight ^^088 WATERFORO. For oil the facts on this Allstate "10 year term" renewable policy, the men to see are at— 4381 Highland Road AA-59* ■" 'W ' ■ ®' At Pontiac Lake Road From Tht STRAIOHT TALKINO FORD DEALER of Pontiae Araa PHONE 681-0400 FLANNERY /IIIStHtB' BIOS DIXIE NWY.. WAtERFORU K^HHn Pontiac Women Set ) for Softball Opener UNITED TIRE SERVICE "WHERE PRICES ARE DISCOUNTED--NOT QUALITY" 1007 Baldwin Ave, 3 MINUTES FROM DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Teams it) the Pontiac Women’s Recreation' Softball League open the season next week. Entered in the league are Town & Country, Pontiac Press, The Bombers, Standard Auto Sales and Gethsemane Lutheran.” Fields at Oakland Fark and Jaycee Park will be used for league games. PANELING Pre-Finiihod V’GROOVE UUAN »2.781*3.59 OxYlhMtT SxUSbBtf ^^*195 Intorior-Extorior ■ a gal. i MIIbMa Aoiltf Bathroom Vanity Latox - mm Only reuy-mueTyeiive FEnCE EASY TO imCT ntEFABRIOATlO SECTIONS OF REOWOOO FENCE i i’ high COUNTER TOPS •3“' • ROOF SHINGLES *15** 235 lbs., 4 eoliirs 225 ■ bvndle-BAO SPECUL GEIUNGTIU Complata with matol hangars, tlhi. 19*«. WhHo12x1t..loaa. AooaoHoal 1114ooa. STAIRWAYS ♦10" Pro-Asoomblod Room Olvidoro 12** Spring plungar caillng and llaor auppartt. Slyrana Iniart. 26“k9^*. CQlori, paflarni. PLYWOOD 0000 ON r Mx’/4 0. SPECIAL IRE SIDE B. b ♦a" RAILROAD TIES For Patio tkuhJtCmny TILEBOARD For Kifehoino & Batho Pink Marble 4x0 Shoots H9M.9.9S $095 OOMBINATION SCREER DOORS »21 95 00^ -7374 Mighlaad R4. at Wifflamt Uka Rd. OB 4.0016 0FEUSUU.10-3 '■■I ■- IT OOODWYEAH SERVICE ^STORES TAKE YOUR CAR WHERE THE EXPERTS ARE I pt iraal writing dapand* MUly In • baB rnbM fm. lMWB,aty|fa. . Brake & AHonment Service XaliaMa badk frwat wiwala. ATTENTION: owners of Boat, Camper & Utility Trailers... aoooyrcAR "SUPER-RIB" TIRES ...on oroB the road i real bmto far wearl 0Ba aaanvE/^n GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE m GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE 1370 WMt Track Drirt - *-335-6167 525 ElizobttN Uka Rood 338-0378 TIIR PONTIAC I»UKSS. THURSDAY. JUNE 5, 1969 f By JEAN SAILE I buried in thf country heroad. rural America, stands and awaits the onc“oming tide of new subdivisions. Dust devils skitter across the empty floor. Ill-fitting doqrs creak eerily in the wind. Windows — which once reflected the glow of a potbellied stove — look eyeless oh the world. People change, too. Nobody cares about the house any more. The farmer is dead now — his body was laid out In the s gone, too — gone to me lactory, me city. to what they considered a more secure life. _ Born in the master bedroom, educated at the one-room country school, they’re now the fathers of college-educated ■ children who look on a farm as an ill-afforded luxury. ^ And the hou^ itself is an anachronism’ — hard-to^-heat big rooms, away from the good roads, expensive ti) maintain. HORSES, HIKERS GONE Its nooks no longer harbor a bookwohn Nd longeTvdoes the kitchen groan to the activity of wramer canning. And outside, 400-horsepower cars speed down the country road where once horses and hikers held sway. or the smell of fresh homenuide bread. The lye-scrubbed floors are warped now — too many rains h^ve blown their dampness into the very fabric of the house. Pontiac Press Photos by Edward R. Noble The good, rich soil which fed generations lies unturned, a crop of thistles sprouting there. The delapidated bam sways in the wind, never again to waft the smell of fresh-cut hay, never again to see new life — a calf, a piglet, a. colt — struggle to its feet add nuzzle for nourishment. Money and technology did it. The pursuit of more than new-turned emth could produce — the expense of fighting drought and hail and too much rain the back-breaking, sweat-dripping work of pushing the soil for the necessities of life. There were, the taxes that didn’t stop, and the probiem of getting help. Hired hands who could get a factory job at nnore money didn’t cotton to sun-up risings and midnight fluittings. And so the stnali farms went. A big slice of peaceful, independent life went, too. And it’s not going to come back. They ~ All Piled Aboard For The County Fair Tin Cup, Well Water-Nothing Sweeter Too Many Harvests, Too Many Days THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 1969 C—11 mi--:;,•” “v j_i« IL , • - i . - -i" ' * V If. /“ aid off with the hit Broadway musibal., “1776," I based on .the American Revolu-'tion. : All,his torn bet\ ______________________ miisic and the desire to teach history. Ws life Edwards haS been etween the desire to make ’The stsuling of piano lessons I way through college, and he successful conductor and ar-took Edwards several years at the age of 10 in a neighbor-! spent p year and half teaching ranger for such popular singers more to find first an agent, hood charitable / institution history in high schbol. yas Mindy Carson and Lisa Kirk. Flora Roberts, and then a pro- saved him from the sheets. | ★ * * I He also composed musical’ducer, Stuart Ostrow. The piano helped him earn his “'Then, I chickened out,” he scores for half a dozen Elvis reluCTANT LISTENERS "But as a kid in the slums of Manhattan it looked more like I’d wind up a hoodlum,” be recalled. “I was running with a street gang and getting into trouble.” jMillCaberri Featuring the LATEST FASHIONS FOR SPRING by PENTHOUSE FASHIONS Entertainment Wednetday thru Saturday RENNE BADER, STEVE ANTOS Flat ' “JIM GERARDIN DUO" OPEN«DAYS . CLOSED SUNDAYS 623-0060 Your Holt Mr. Ken Wright 5838 Dixie Hilchway. W.I«rrord,M«U«ra said. “The glamor of si Grad's Better Than Perfect H DOWNTOWN PONTIAC YOU MUST BE IS - PBOOF IS REaUIRED OPEN 9;48 A;M. - CONTINUOUS All DAY I 3lck Wdman!! in a Sick World!! l^llFt^U^tCOlO^! Mm “IlfiwJW’ OPEN DAILY 11 A.M.to 9 P.M. ^ FRI. and SAT. 11 A.M.10 11P.M. FREE Now at c^#jotr. IN BME FOR FATE’S DAY SENTHIEL AUTO SPOT LITE .. Durable, colorful,, plastic, 10-fdot long cord plugs Into doth , board elgoretto lighter, always ready for ute. With the Purchase of Any Bucket or Barrel of Fi|ed Chicken IS pieces of delicious B^er ( Wid chicken and ' flolilan fr*nich FAIiLY BUCKER 19 pieces of Mod chlclton, rails ohdgroyy. AM AROOT 80R IPIOIAL OAIXRWO OATH The W«h«t Vneng iSmehtn to Hr feemd 4eyieherm ■ 33B-9484 providence, R. I. (AP) - IA Brown University student “broke the bank” academically, so to speak, by compiling a four-year average higher than the 4.0 usually considered per-; feet. , Donald E. Krecker, 21, Norristown, Pa., achieved the feat via a record of one A-minus, eight A’s and 23 A-pIuses for his 32 courses. According to the formula used by Brown and most college, this gave him a 4.1S6 average. ness drew me. A man of great versatility, Sherman worked as an actor in productions of “Pins and Needles" and “My Sister Eileen.” PIANIST WITH BANDS He performed as a jazz pianist for bands led by- Benny Goodman, Tommy Dorsey and Louis Armstrong. He became a Presley films and wrote some 300 songs, among them such hits IS “Wonderful, Wonderful!,” ‘Broken-Hearted M e 1 o d y,” ‘See You in September,” and ‘Johnny, Get Angry.” ■VBRY PMMAY — I FJI. It I Mk— FISH DlNNiR “Nobody wanted even to listen to me when they found out I was trying to |[et a historical musical produced which had no, big dance number or a female! star,” he said. | “Oddly enough, when the time came to raise the actual money, it wa^ po problem at all. We financed It at 1506,000, and the producer brought it in at' 1400,000.” I On opening night, last March, ‘Throughout his successful mu-sica[l career, however, Edwards was bothered by guilt pangs. “My conscience bothered me because I had turned my back on history,” he said. “So in 1961 I finally made up my mind to do . _ _ . something about it. 16. Sherman’s bank account was! HRirTNAT MIIWA! ’ audiencc gave ORIGINAL MUSICAL j^e play a standing ovation. "I had always been interested When the morning papers and In the American Revolusion, so television reviews confirmed the Reg. $1.6$ 1 09 a WOODWARD AYE. at 14Vk Mila Rd. a 16126 W.B MILE RD. a 10N1TELEBRABN RD. Ntar nymautti Rd. I decided I’d write an original historical musical about the adoption of the Declaration of Independence. “I wanted to base it on my own hero, John Adams, the holler guy who kept things stirred up. Holler guys don’t get the reward, but without them things don’t get done.” SHERMAN EDWARDS Deciding that the project hadi to be a total commitment, Sher- Edwards isn’t crying any-man dropped all his other activ-jmore. His pl^y won four Tony ities, living on his savings while-awards, it will bring him in at he researched the period and least $150,000 this year alone, wrote the score, jand he is busy writing another That took several years. It, historical .musical. I “The historical field has anything and everything for any- He was graduated Monday, receiving a bachelor of science degree, summa cum laude. He majored in applied mathematics, and will continue his studies at graduate school at Stanford University in the fall. | Brown officials said Krecker’s average may be the highest compiled in modern times. A’s EXPLAINED ^ They explained that a mark of A is worth 4.0 in the scoring system, with every four A-pluses earning tbe student one extra point. Thus the 32 A’s gave Krecker 128 points, while he gained an extra five points via all his A-pluses. The total of 133, divided by 32, the number of courses be tbok, gives the 4.150 hi, ,„„Jth7Bullets‘ Diu-go»^^^^^^^ as an"actors want to play! T rHamlet,’ all actresses want to play prostitutes, whife rarely should either one do it,” she added, most of his school years, verdict, Edwards left his celebrating friends and went into the men’s room and broke into tears. “My wife followed me," he said, “and soon there were all these people, both men and women, standing around the men’s room laughing and crying.” NOT CRYING Liz Ash^fo Tempt Fate if She Plays 'Naughty Girl' body and everybody,” said the man who convinced Broadway that history can be taught tunefully, entertainingly—and profitably. By EARL WILSON NEW YORK — Beautiful actress Elizabeth Ashley told us sitting at P. J. Clarke’s having hamburgers with her Wends AAiiiiCDnC drive-in theater IfUmMcnlil: "'*• OPEN NIGHTLY chiwran ui.d.r ii fmk FIRST SHOWING 8:00 shawtim. dm p.m. IJaneIomIaI iwiiani NOWSHOWINO LIMITEO ENQAOEMENT HURON Adultsg iTJroiL,! after her “understanding” with George SKwn - fa considering playing a naughty m the Brown marching and pep a Broadway show, “Her Bed. His; Couch,” but she points out, “I haven’t even, begun to negotiate — I’ve given them a list of*; directors...” / She emphasized that though she’s been an-nounced as doing the show, it’s not definite. In || the future, she declared, eyes snapping eloquent-ly, “I’m not determined to do anything, I’m only determined to live life,” As for tbe future, he says he hasn’t made up his mind whether he will eventually pursue a career of college teaching or take a teclmical position in Industry. Krecker graduated first In his classes at Eisenhower High School in his hometown average of 3.05 in 1965. He has one brother. James, 22, who finished seventh in his class at the samd schfml one year earlier and will receive a master’a degree from Princeton University late this month. DAD’S NO GRAD They are the sons of Mr. and Mrs. Gordtm R.. Krecker. The father, a director of personnel administration for a steel concern. says he has no college de- dto,;e"an7remaTned" gree. Speaking of living life, a woman fan of Tom Jones threw her panties at the singing star while he was on the floor at the Copa-cabana .. . itex Reed says his discharge from “Women’s Wear” was the politest firing he ever heard about: nothing but compliments ... Democrats’ll pick up the line of Henry Ephron, author of ‘iMy Daughter, Your Son,” to wit: “Everybody knows Nixon was elected, but who’s the President?” For months — in fact, since Jackie Kennedy became Mrs. Onassis last October — El Morocco’s Maurice Uchitel waited for the newlyweds to come In and make their first nightclub appearance togilitlier. Then Uchtil yielded operating control of the club to Joe Norban. On May 30, when Uchitel and public relations In new serpen spluiMlor... The most nia^iiHieenl |>ielnre eier! DAVID QSELZNICKS PROouenonor MARGARET MIICHUiS CKHHEVnXH THEWIHIir wmm raNIMGH LESUE HOWARD OlMAdeHAVILLAND WEONESDAY-SATURDAY-SUNDAY at 1i10-li00-Ol4B YNURS., FRI., MON., YUES. at 1:30 Only man Jim Mitchell were both in the country for the holiday week-list friend for end, the Onassises arrived with a French journalist friei ■'tn.m. Juic] Famous tor icy Steaks~ond Roasts ind Round-Up Dinners CHUCK WAGON 3800 Orydon Rd., Drydin 796-2245 THE AAIDNIGHT EARL tiEEGO YONIOHTTiNanillilO Hie Ereen Berets Bill Cosby and Sidney Poitler dropped into Nepentha and the club played Cosby’s “Hooray for the Salvation Army Band” album which it hastily ordered from the Colony Record Shop ... Burt Lancaster, at Joes Pier 52 with his teen-age daughter, said his Hollywood castle is for sale qg^50,000, as much as he got to star in “Castle Keep.” Cynthia Dalbey, one of the beauties In Woody Allen’s “Play It Again, Sam,” is leaving to marry Chicago writer Don Logay . . , Burt Reynolds, discharged from ihe hosp. after surgery, must keep off his feet for two months ... Ray Mllland said at Chateau Madrid he relaxes by reading maps and studying geography. WISH I’D SAID THAT; “Remember when kids used to en-1 roll for college?” asks Sally Rand. “Now they enlist.’’ l REMEMBERED QUOTE: “Thrice blessed are our friends:! they come, they Way, and presently they go awayi’'-Rlchard Kirk. EARL’S PEARLS; They were talking at the Cattle Baron about a mamrfacturer of unisex clothes , who returned the latest aketchds to his designer. They weren’t ridiculous enough. Jockey Club’s^ Herb Cruder called that special number to report a street pot hole: “The entire East River Drive and West Side Highway.” That’i earl, brother. Sunday Liquor Only at MOREY’S QOLF tt COUNTRY CLUB YOU WILL SEE ' LIVE LOBSTERS at Sanplbla Fricaa SALAD TABU INDESCRBABLE gernty WodneAqr buEfet LUNCHEON Iranr lot. * S«e. lUPPIT IRiAKPAST 'TILNOON 2310 Union lako good UNION UkKI RENT, SELL, TRADE - - • USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! C-~14 'HIE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 19fi9 Deaths in Pontiac, Neighboring Areas JL 1, .f .j •- rf..„ 4 Are Mute of Hearing on Drug Charges Four persons jailed after an Orion Township narcotics raid were arraigned yesterday and released on $1,000 bail ^ach. > James Meyers, 24, and his wife,® Mary, 23, of 1397 Beach Mrs. August J. Cremer i® of Pon-Methodist Church, Orion;jphn Kubinec of Holly; two Service for Mrs. August J. ui*^' -t r. u ^nd sons, Michael of Flirit and: were charged with possession of/ (Heien L.) Cremer, 66, of 166 ®ES 340 Lake Orion. ^ I William of Holly; three sisters; I narcotics and stolen property. Charles Lane will be 1:30 p two brotheis. bn?*^Xughte^^ ^Mr^^*Delbert T'"'* seven grandchildren. i Jerome Shaw, 24, of 209 E. Saturday in Gloria Dei^ Mrs. Roland Loudcs Casev of Oxford:' three*' Lutheran Church with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery by Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. Mrs. Cremer, a retired secretary at Community National Bank, 4ied yesterday. She was a member of Gloria Dei Church, Bloomfield Townshouse 50 & Up Club and the Lutheran Church Women. Mrs. Roland Loucks Casey of Rbchester. Examination was set for June 23. Four police departments,; including the Oakland bounty' Sheriff’s Department, raided-the Meyers’ lakeade cottage Tuesday night and seized what They stood mute before! they suspect is marijfiana arid District Judge Robert Shipper I drugs. ________^ Jackson, Lake Orion, and Thomas J. Lumbardo, 24, who lived at the/Beach address were charged with possession of marijuana. Mrs. Roland (Cordelia) grandchildren; and six great-Loucks, 83, of 91 Pine Grove grandchildren, died yesterday. Her body is at the Huntoon Funeral Home. Mrs. Douglas Eckert She was a member of the' First Church of the Nazarene. I RAY TOWNSHIP — Requiem Surviving are seven children,' niass ■ for Mrs. Douglas Bruce E. Fry of OWOS.SO, Melvin I (Virginia) Eckert, .38. of 20144 Skelton of California, Mrs. Edna'32 Mile will be 11 a.m. tomor- ^.,11 I Surviving are a daughter Vore of Laos, Howard Loucks of row at St. Clement’s Church, Lity nordwore Mrs. Donald earn of Waterford petroit and Mrs. Frances Operator Is Dead at 39 .Service (or Mrs. Henry A. , I (Helen Amne) Kampsen, 77, of Mike Toteff, co/owner and 661 E. First will be 10 a.m. operator of Tom’s Hardware,!Saturday in St. Michael Catholic died this morning. He was 39. | Church with burial in Mount Service will be 11 a.m. I Hope Cemetery. Saturday in All Saints Episocpalj The Rosary will be recited at Church with burial in Ottawa!g p.m. tomorrow in the Huntoon Park Cemetery, Independence! Funeral Home. Township; a son, Richard of Cummings, Walter Skelton and Rp'’lin Cemetery, Allenton, by jPopjigpj seven grandchildren; Mable Loucks, all of Pontiac; Roth s Home for Funerals, rand four brothers. three brothers, including Alex Romeo. 1 Bigger,of Pontiac; a sister; six A Rosary will be said at 8 'Mrs. Henry A. Kampsen srandchildren; 23 g r e a t- p m todav at the funeral home. grandchildren; and two great- Mrs. Eckert died Tuesday.' great-grandchildren. She waS a member of St. Clement's Church. Charles W. Spence I Surviving are her husband; Charles A, .Spence, 75, of 1180‘hree daughters, Joyce, Mary Wide Track died this morning. Pamela, all at home; 10 His body i? at Huntoon F-uneral ®”"*' Pai'l- Ga^ry, Gerald, Home. Anthony, Carl, William, Alan,| Mr. Spence, a retired employe '^»'’t^- .G‘“'g'as Jr. and Darrell, j- Township. ’ ' ^ ‘ wrr KamDsen died t h i s "t Pontiac Motor Division, was all 0^ h^ome; her mother, Mrs. An Elks Lodge of .Sorrow will nnorning. She was a member of a member of the First Church A""f Gar.son of Rom_eo-be conducted at 8 p.m. tomor- st. Michael Church, Mescola’"' the Brethren. rnur In DAnnlo/vn. T/vkinn L'tmnnnl . ... . . . « • ii_. Klirvivincf iirn brothers, including Emil of row in Donelson-Johns Funeral r;uiid '^Daughters of Isabella ' Surviving are his wife, Freda; Armada; and five sisters. Home. , ’ Women a Charles H. of Pontiac: including Mrs. Dolores Lecluyse! Surviving are his wife, Jessie; , his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Peter Toteff of Pontiac; one child, Lynn, at home; and a brother, Tommy P. of Pontiac. Toteff of 4061 Silver Birch, Waterford Town.ship, was a member of All .Saints Church and Pontiac Elks Lodge 810. He had been active in the State Hardware Dealer As.sociation. Crash oiiM24 Fifty & Up Society. Surviving arc three daughters, Mrs. James GrCene of Bloomfield Hills and Mrs. Troyce Hudnell and Mrs. Leland Cotter, both of Pontiac: six sons, Herb J. of Kansas, Virgil of Kentucky, Raymond A. of Chicago and Alcuin, l^eo F, and Cyril A„ all of Pontiac; two sisters; two brothers; 2 1 grarfdchiidren; and nine greatgrandchildren. Alfred E. Randall ISmith of Miirphysboro, 111., and Romeo. Mrs. Caroline Johnson o f Chelsea; a brother Daniel 0. of « gijndcdiildren; and ^ORTH BRANCH - Service* two great-grandchildren. Alfred E. Randall, 65, of Raymond M. Bishop PON’nAC TOWN.SHIP - u .r , * imerai nome, iveego burial 1, NculU H'’uneral Home, Keego Ilarbor, j!„j iu- ■ ’ —. ' iwiin Duriai in ixorin Farm- Funeral Home, Pontiac. Township. D. . , , Mr Randall died yesterday. Pnni,i " He was a retired dairy farmer, . . nrniu^ ^ Tt. of the National John Lambeth Organization and a .Service for former Pontiac; post 377 and Eagles Lodge I2»r ! I/*II r # I- resident .lohn Lambeth, 64, of Surviving are his wife ‘''""'"g'"’- \ K K FflthPr of 1 ' P ^"‘'"•■iMuriel: two daughters, Mrs!, IxlllJ I QIIIV/I Ul Jday at the Larrison Funeral George Davis and Mrs. Robert‘7" Tv Home, Mio, with burial in the|(;oj,sman both of Trov three‘ Sylvan Lake and Mrs. t...._____________ I_______ uonsman, DOin 01 iroy, inree „i-arH llnlmes of Trov one A Pontiac Town.ship father of'G'"''’'''’" Cemetery, Luzerne. isons, Marshall E. and Ross M., Lambeth, who d i e d both of Pontiac, and Martin J. , was an accountant five was killed last ni^ on j ^ M24 in Orion Town.ship w^ his .! for the GMC Truck and Coach Woterford Gl Killed in Viet Richard Holmes of Troy; one son, Ronald E. Silverwo^; one brother, Elton of Milford; and seven grandchildren. The body may be viewed after 3 p.m. tomorrow. Mrs. Tony Schutz Pvt. James W. Clay, 19, the son of Mrs, Charles Councilor of ter. He was a security guard at 5950 Wellington. W a t e rf or Pontiac Motor Division. Townsh(p, was killed in action in Vietnam May 29. Truck driver Carl Monlgom- Servicb 'are'' pending at the try, 56, of Hamtramck told Coats Fuperal Home, Waterford , Oakland County Sheriff’s depu- Township. / ties that he saw the smaller, day attended Waterford / truck coming up behind him | KeUe'iing High School before headed south at a high rate of | enlisting in the Army July 18, speed on M24 near .Silver Rell i%«. He was .sent to Vietnam on Rf6d;^ ‘ ,Miiy 15, 1969. volunteered / * * * for Ihe Vietnam a,s.signment. /Montgomery said he tried to He Is survived liv his mother gel the tractor oft the road and falliec. Jack Clay of Allen, but that il was struck in the 'Ky., and two brothers, Roger rear. Montgomery was not hurt, and Jack, both of Waterford. home; one sister, Mrs. Margaret Hancock of Clarkston; two stepsisters, Cassie and Leora Jacobs, both of Clarkston; his stepmother, Mrs, ^ Martha Bishop 0 f Clar'kston; and two RO.SE TOWN.SHIP -grandchildren. quiem Mass for Mrs. Tony (Kay) Schutz, .54, of 17260 Fish Edwin A. Burns [Lake wiil be 11 a m. Saturday LAKE ORION -ir Service fori at St. Rita’s Catholic Church, Edwin A. Burns, 82, of-229 E.j Holly, with burial in Lakeside Jackson will be 1 p.m. Saturday Cemetery, Holly, by Dryer at Allen’s Funeral Home with Funeral Home, Holly. burial in East Lawn Cemetery. A Masonic memorial service will Jie 8 p.m. tomorrow at the funeral home. Mr. Burns died this morning. He was the' retired owner and operator of Burns Barber Shop, A rosary will be .said at 7:30 p.m. Friday at (he funeral home;' Mrs. Schulz died this morning. She was a member of St. Rita’s Church, Surviving are her husband; Lake Orion. Mr. Burns was a two daughters, Mrs. Gene member of Lake Orion Burhardt of Ohio and Mrs. m Ou/v CuAtonie/tA We Have Won All Contests Sponsored by Buick Division ! //it A^om & Aofm & Agdn You have again made us No. 1 in all Buick-Opel sales in the entire Southern Michigan area. Your support and our continued competitive prices and personal service made this possible. Thanks again to our fine staff of sales and service people for their total effort in helping to obtain this goal. Ciiiinatill BuieferOpti m. 210 Orohard Lakt Avt.~ Pontiac-FE 8-6121 lock-lt-to-Me' Drive in County Is Praised Oakland County’s "lock-lt-to-secretary; Stanford C. Stod-me’;car safety-belt campaign is dard, president .of Michigan the most widespread ever con- Bank, Ircasurci, and Sol D. ducted at a local level In the Lomerson, chairman of the nation, a traffic improvement board of county road corn-group was told yesterday. i missioners, member at large. Albert B. Kelley, vice presi-l Among directore elected to a dent In charge o f com- two-year term were Charles municatlons for the Insurance I Edwards, Jr., chairman of the In.stitiite for Highway Safety in Oakland County Board of Washington, D.C., praised the Supervi.sors; (ieorge Fulker.son, campaign before more than 190 member of the Oakland County community leaders at the sec-Board of Auditors; Willis M. ond annual meeting of the Bewer, Sylvan Lake coun-Traffic Improvement Assocla-lcilman; and Charles R. lion (TIA) of Oakland County in IicVlieg, prc.sid'-nl of DcVlieg Southfield. ' Machine Company The promotion campaign to i, ' ★ * encourage motorists to wear Directors elected to a one-scat belts is a demonstration year term to fill vacanclc.s project for other areas of pp.suiRng from a change in country. ^ business or re.sidenlial status In other action at t h e ^^„bert Forster, direc- meetiiig, Edwin 0. George, president of Detroit Edi.son Co. who lives at 352 Barden in Bloomfield Hills, was elected president of TIA by the board of directors. His term is one year. SUCCEEIIS AVERIIX George succeeds Paul H, Averlll, Birmingham newspaper publisher. Others elected include; tor of the traffic and highway .safety section of General Motors Corp. and F. J. McDonald, general manager of Pontiac Motor Divison Among those re-elected _ fWo-year term as directors were Marvin L. Katke, vice, president of manufacturing, -Ford Motor Company; Edwhrd R u s i n president of Troy National Charles B. Kass bf Ethyl,Bank; Loy Sutherland, of CUrporalIpn. vice president; and Sutherland Oil Company; Lowell Eklund, dean of con- Durward B. Varner, chancellor tinuing education at Oakland "f Oakland University; Eklund; University, a member (A large of the executive committee. - l^elerted as TIA officcra -jvert Mrs.' 0. Howard Willett, Jr., vice president of Birm-Bloomfield Bank, George; Potter; and Mr Willett. Homer Case, B 1 o o Town.shlp supervisor, Reeled to a tWo-year term as chairman of TIA’s Board of Trustees. 108 N. SAGINAW ST, - DOWNTOWN PONTIAC - FE 3-7114 OPEN FRI. 9,30 A.M. to 9 P.M. - SAT. 9,30 A.M. to 5,30 P.M. FRIGIDAiRE Compact FOOD FREEZER Stores Up to 406 Lbs. BUDGET WAYS TO PAY - NO MONEY DOWN; 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH UP TO 3 YEARS TO PAY REFRIGERATOR IS FROST-PROOF ATOI • 14.6 Cu.tFl. family size refrigerator • Big 126-lb. top freezer • And you'll never defrost again — it's automatic • poor storage, too • Twin Hydrators for produce. FRIgIdAIRE Jet Action AUTO WASHER FRIGIDAIRE ELEaRI-CLEAN V ELEaRKS RANGE • 2-$peed washer ' — regular plus delicate • Deep Action Agitator • 2 Jet-A way rl rises • Gold water wash setting, too. Electrl-ClMn oven cleans more than itself - it ' ins the o oven rocks ond surface unit drip bowls • Cook Master oven eonfrol itorts, stops cooking outomotlcolly. • Cosy view surface unit controls. PARK FREE IN WKCS LOT at Rear of Store or 1 Hr." fn Downtown Mall -*■ Have Ticked Stamped at Cashier's Office \ THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 1969 C—15 MARKETS Investor Anxiety Felt N.yief Attacks Air Travel Soars in a Clouded Sky The following ar« top pricey covering sales of ocally grown produce by groweru and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the NEW YORK (AP) - -rte “ early Wednesday. thlg afternoon to maintain Produce moderate advance. enuiTt On Wednesday the mapket SSSiS: i&": ca„ hi. : : : : 1:” an early rise evaporate and •i"*".!:' r“i h„ trading. Mart Struggles to Hold Ga/n^Nixon at Paris Applu. Mclntcih, C.A.. iMi. .. App'inl flol^llwn iwl &. bo. Associated Press 60-stock Slfr KS............. Vg average at noon was ahead .6 at Radishes', Rrt, <*i/bch..........I industrials up 1.2, Radishes, While, di. och, ....... 1,S0i______________________________ Rhubarb, dz. bch. Tomatoes, k——— Turnips, dz. . ; s!oo At noon the Dow Jonep aver-i3.oo'age of 30 industrials showed a *j®|galn of 2.71 at 931.55. ■ ?•?* The Aasncinted Pn rails up .1 and utilities up .1. With Wednesday’s brief optimism about, an early start on reduction of U.S. troops in South Vietnam dissipated, brokers said investors again felt anxiety about the progt^ toward peace and continu^ concern about tight money. V. Trading was fairly Steels, mail order-retails, farm implements, aircrafts, chemicals and airlines were mostly higher. Motors, rubbers and building materials declined. Advances and declines of individual issues were about even on the New York Stock Exchange. 'PARIS (Ap -- North Vietnam accused President Nixon today of outiioing former Presi-Prices were mixed on the dent Lyndpn B. Johnson in in-American Exchange. Gains of tensifying'the Vietnamese war about a point were posted by in pursuit df “neo-colonialist Great Lakes Chemical and aims.’’ | McCulloch Oil. Plant Industries' South Vieti Outc|Qing LBJ on Escalation—Hanoi and Consolidated Oil lost a sion of the e) point. By>v JOHN CtINNIFF AP ^Businesp Analyst i NEW YORK-XTove the I clouds, were today’s big com-.mercial aircraft crjiise in a tranquil, congestion-free atmosphere, the sun shines all day long, dark storms! blow over>thn{ landscape low. The situation! is analagous tO; that faced byj the nation’s ________________ at the 20th ses-jports. They CUNNIFF the big airliners that soon will come Into use precludes additional expenditures for improving the airports to serve them. Considerable support exists for raising funds by taxing users of air facilities, but the industry remains split within its ranks on how these taxes should be applied, and disagreements exists industry. Among the suggestions made raising revenues are head taxes on persons using terminal buildings, increases in the taxes on aviation gasoline, an increase in the tax on airline ticket, a>dx on cargoes. wtikher these possibilities are sufficient, or whether the federal government will have to step in more heavily, remains to be seen. But unless the impasse is resolved, some stormy weath-evlies ahead. Collard, bu. . Lettuce, Bibb, P Lettuce, Boston, Lettuce, Leet, I Lettuce, Remain Mustard, bu. . The New York Stock Exchange lenjs. If they qan’t, they and the economies they serve will live under a ‘ ' The potential is this; president of the American Bar Consequences. Association yesterday condemned illegal acts of violence college campuses NEW YORK (AP) - Now York Stock | Exchangt teltctcd aflamoon prices j —A— 1 Poultry and Eggs ...... lAd J5-J4; heavy type'Ao ------- ----- Whites Atr OPubUt 1.60 AbbtLab t.t. Tno U.S.). Grade A (umbo 38-40; t 33V4.37; large 3J-34; --------- mall 18-10. CHICAGO BUTTER B RGOt CHICAGO (AP) — (USDA) — Butter: wholesale selling prlcas Wednasdm unchanged; OSjcora AA OMU 02 A t7M*i iM dallviired to Chlca Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (AP)-(USDA)-Wednesdoy'tiAmPhot"”.00g tinal livestock: , AMK Cp .38 Hogs 100. Barrows and gltts OS lower At- ’ U.S 1-3 200-025 pounds 05.75-24.05, 2-3 A 220-240 pounds 25.00-25.75; 3-4 240-2701 Am pounds 24.00.35.00. Art Sows 23 cents low....... ■ ' ™ — pounds 21.25-22.00; 2-3 21.25. Cattle 200. Trading ... IK 3k U7 4410 43W 43W -f 4) 241b 23H 23H- 22 17 1444 1444 - 33 44% 44% 441* — 44 88V. 874* 88 + 138 39% 38% 38% - IB 35 31 451% 12k 444* 1495 35% J14 — no 21.5023.00) canner 20.( Vealert 50. Not onousi. Sheep 300. Small timply eteady. Several lots choice ehorn old crop sleugh*— 31.00; cull to good slii CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AH) — (USDA) — calpis --------- 400500 lbs 30.7S-M.«;„M 50(7400 19.75-20.75) boert 1IJ(MI.50. KlSh" c’hSS 35.0034.25) choice *»-l,ff »>s^yjeld grade 2 to 4 34.«l^.*Sz Jl™. •'1? choice 33.0(734.00) J®-J^33.0O) elend- erd and low good M.SI730.75. •t Chg. '/% — V4 I ....... .M 70»)% —1 29 35% 35% 35% - > 141 26% 69 31% 130 71 Va 29 35% w- 25 36% 36' 192 113 1 09' 44 39% 39 6 93% 92'/a vj’/i — 63 22% 22'/4 22Va - Tremendous increases in airielsewhere’’ as leading t travel are in prospect tor the anarchy and a lawless society, next few years. The Federal | President William T. Gossett Aviation Agency forecasts a of Bloomfield Hills said those doubling of passenger miles by 292 1)3 1 09% 112 -73% 33% 32% 33% - 34 SO 49% SO -7 % accused the North Vietnamese and Vietcong of trying to delay negotiations “because you expect a military victory.” ’The United Statds was more restrained, asking’ North Vietnam whether it was prepared to withdraw its forces in a peace settlement. i Ha Van Lau, North Veitnam’s deputy representative, devoted almost his entire speech to an and a tripling by 1980. „ [,y not buying title Insurance, attack on the Nixon administra- SOARING INDUSTRY |- . ^ . In a letter to William B. Ross, tion. He sat in for chief negotia- the end of this year the tDCf/n© CXpOrt acting assistant secretary-com-tor Xuan Thuy, who is in Hanoi goeing 747; capable of seating ■ » ; missioner of the FHA, Proxmire for consultation. ^,arly -iflo passengers, will be In /_ +4^ ‘TRYING TO WIN TIME’ operation. In addition, personal ly OvY lTCniny lU to overcome reluctance in the and commercial craft are ex- mortgage industry to dropping pqcted to Increase by 100,000 be- ^fOO/T) Tc/rD/D©^*^'* Insurance. 34% 35 + '/4 44% 45'/4 + '/i 45% 45% » 34 35% +1 zm 30% - .....- 44% 44% + .. 14 31% 31 31% + % ................. + H — ’/i 11 44% . 4 5 43% 4 20 52% S2% SMb 135 '36% 37% 31 37 77 76% 76% f 40 44% 43% 44% +1 71 37% 37% 37% — 41% 4V 26% 2 have tremendous potential if they can rise above th^ir prpb-| News in Capsule Form CHICAGO (UPI) — Theiwho defy law must accept the Proxmire Quizzes FHA WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. William E. Proxmire, D-Wis., asked the Federal Housing Administration today when it will follow a Government Accounting Office recommendation that it save $2.7 million a year “Mr. Nixon is trying to prolong the American military occupation of South Vietnam to win time to consolidate the puppet administration and army of Saigon,” Lau asserted. Has he calculated how longer the American troops would have to remain in Southr Vietnam to achieve this atm? How many troops will it need to achieve the impossible, namely foK 1980. Traffic of this sort can bring big economic advantages area, for whatever else travelers do, they spend money, her for business or pleas-they almost always take along their checkbooks. Rut there are problems. RENO, Nev. (AP) - Industrialist William says he has spent $4 million on development of pteam vehicle engine, Wednesday he is shelving ventional steam stcamturbines. Mediator Seeks Accord JACKSON (UPI) - A private mediator from , Wayne State University tried agate today to bring Consumers Power Co. and 5,200 striking menabqra of the Michigan State millty Workers engines for Council to an aveement that could end the 59-^-old strike on its feet the Saigon ad- £S'"devetoli!lI •, shelving it tempoi-ar. against the giant utility. .7=. oi„i, “ oi airpnri aeveiopnwJii ,,y ^ jy,.. ministration, that sick man at di.rtng the Dast fow"'vearT The 1 the end of his strength?” b v kts are the codirector of the Institute of - nig ]eis are more reliable than re-Labor^ and Industrial Relations ciprocating engines,” L e a r at Wayne State University, met U.S. Ambassador Henry Cabot airports are caught in a web Lodge, who 1 e a v es later in,of human, technological and fi- the day en route to Midway Island for the meeting of Nixon Sunday with President Nguyen Van 'Thieu of South Vietnam, asked a series of questions about the Vietcong’s 10-point peace plan. 43% 44% -flVb 3) 41% 4)% 84 28% 2 '* 49 38% 38% 3B'/i -7 ' ____ _ . 39 52% 52% 53% -7 ’ Spartan tnd 825 25 36% -71 SperryR ,35g 90 5)z/« 51'/, 51'/j - ' SquaraO .80 76 32V, 32 32 - SI Brand 1.50 61 47V, 46% 46% -7 ' « 2.30 152 68V, 67V, 68V, -7 ' 1.80g 353 5 84% 84 - • ltdOllOh 2JO 2340 95% 91% 91% -3f t Packaging 42 161* 16V, 16% — —3 ............................. Half to Firing nandal problems. SOME PROBLEMS Among them; Suitable sites re difficult to find; the cry of suburbanites against airport noise is becoming shrill as a jet; the problem of ground transportation has not bi^n solved: money for improve-' said. I with both sides separately and together for almost 13 hours Wednesi^ay in the first re^lar bargaining session since early May, ;------------------ Conferees Shift ments Is lacking. steam jJower to help solve smog | | ^ . I !■ I Congestion at airports, com-problems, said his firm and J Km V^|>|4y\l AiH ^/0f Urged ® coigrol-ltwo others are working on two y JLllUUI HIU 25 46% 45% 46%+ .'^ 190 37V, 38% 37V* -7 % 26 ftVi 54 541* -f % 72 84% 43% 43% —T— 1S^» .. 87 29% 39 »V* 381 83% 83 ^ m 27% 27% 7m 211 30 29% 29% 149 124V, 123% 123% 20 23% 23V, 23% 357 35V, 34% 35 64 17 V, 17% 17% 13 46V, 45% 45% 36 35% 35% 35V, 3 34 33% 34 63 43 42% 42% . .. 134 34% 33% 33% — 1* 45 lOV, lOV* 10V* — V* 38 33V* 33 13V* -7 V* 60 39 30% 39 -7 % 273 30 30% 3 % — —u— 11% II 11V, 43 43% -7 1* 30V* 30% . 60% 60%-% 40% + % =lJJ Jo 13% 1»* ■ ^ ^ 63 76% 75% 76 —1% HI. 20% 27% 21% -7 % 29 39V, 38% 38% -- % ........... PHILADELPHIA (AP) Former Vice president Hubert H. Humphrey, stressing that peace settlement in Vietnam must be acceptable to all ttie people, urged today followed by “free elections open to all political groups.” Humphrey, in what was billed as a major foreign policy address to the lOth constitutional convention of the Pennsylvania APL-CIO, proposed that an International Peace-Keeping Corps 'oversee the cease fire, tee srithdrawal of all outside mill tary forces and t|he elections.' g47% 461 467/a 46 35 33% 33 111 47 46'/$ 46^/i -.V— 22.. 22.. " 32% 22H - ' _w—X-Yr-Z— 24 42% ..... TTo-’"- '/k : 36%k 3 '/i 271 23 by Tht A««ocl»l*d PrMj 1969 rwiM nolod, ralot ot lor«oolng labl* or* • •<-••0 on Ih* I*f1 quai daclarallon. SiMch i., or paymanlB nol pim ap raguar ara Idanllflad In tha illowliig fooTa -■—Alto axir' -■ TU vaiua on ox-dlvldond or tx-dlalribu dote, g—bfclarad or paid lo wr Itili ytor. It—Dacltrad or mM, iT— dlyidiind or apllt up. k-^tclpri Sards' tributad. wl -witM laauad. nd-Noxt day - %l vf-ln' bankrupfey or racalvorahlp or —1%,btlng rtorganluid intdar tha Bankruptcy - H«Vflj?«_aB|umad bT.auch^eom- t %lfa*r Ttiura-ay-a ,« OKild.^ iers, was pointed up this week i separate automobile engines-by federal limitations placed'and- his firm expects to have one prototype flnkshed within 60 days. hv HlimnfirPX/®" “‘^hts Iqto and ouj qf alr-uy I Iunifjlinsy ports serving Chicago, Wash- ington and New York metropolitan areas. e fire’ Who should pay for these improvements? 'hie local public? The federal government? Passengers? The airlines themselves? Some airlines have argued that their heavy Investment in "I hope very much that such strategy could be advanced by this country at the earliest pos- less congested sites, moment,” said Humphrey. acknowledged’ that it t be rejected, like other suggestions for peace have been turned aside in the past. But he insisted that "within this strategy can be found the core ol tee approach that ultimately can stop the killing in Vietnate and move the struggle to the political arena.” Humphrey said his proposal, If advanced by President Nixon, would put pressure on ail the combatants to try to work out a peaceful settlement. Humphrey said the Vietnam War was one of the great issues campaign, and is no less im-war was one of the greatest Issues in-last year’s presldentiaij portant today. Delays already are costing the airline industry heavily. The cst of overtime, extra crews, fue’ and lost time is estimated by the industry to cost more than $109 million a year. This figure doesn’t include josses to regional economies resulting from poor service, and these losses can be enormous. Corporations,, for example, are reluctant to establish branches In areas not easily acceuible. BIGGES1' PROBLEM? Perhaps the biggest problem of all is to^flnahee the Improvements neMed in terminal facilities and runways, and in some relocate airports In M HORSEPOWER One engine, the main power unit of a car, would be S inches by 10 inches and develop horsepower,- he said, and other would be an auxiliary power unit 6 inches by 5 and produce 100 horsepower. iLaNSING (AP) - House and Senate leaders are regrouping Md enlarging their negotiating te^ms which must try to settle differences between the chambers over the $847.4-million public school aid bill. The two chambers have approved budgets for the coming school year that are some $4 j million apart, but the Senate re-•T’ve got $4 million into this “^cept an interhouse program to dale, and I'expecticompromise that cut out $1.4 to have another $5 million jn/oH'lon for the dissolving before I have anything tO|''^**y'® County Nankin Mills show,” Lear said. He said he School District. alao would develop steam en-glnes for buses, trucks, boats and airplanes. “The funny thing about turbines is that* as you go up In power they become more efficient and relatively smaller,” Lear said. Turbine engines have fewer movjng parts than conventional steam engines, are e efficient and arc to lubricate. Seeking fresh approaches, House Speaker William A. Ryan, D-Detroit, and ^ate Majority Leader Emil Lockwood, R • St. Louis, are planning to increase their bargateing teams from three to seven members. Senate Education Committee Chairman Anthony Stamm, R-Kalamazoo, says only three of each team would vote on a|l proposals, while the other four arc lo participate in the talks. News in Brief William Gunn, 2$, of 11 Esther told Pontiac police that someone broke into his residence between yesterday afternoon and carty today and stole clothing, a camera and a rifle valued at $1,404, # 46 r\ IW.JONI OCKf 30 Indus 20 fUlIt 15 U1H» swr* ,sm . IIIJHOiO . .. 72,07404n Jo InSwIrteil^.. ..:.. . ;; 6o.oo7i^ : 80.06-0.OS Public Auction, Rummage, Bake Sale, Flea Market, Sat. June 7, 11-5 Bathany Bible Camp, Elizabeth Lhke Rd. west of Airport Rd. -Adv. It is in the area of construction that H. B. Fuller anticipates the greatest growth. Innovative building techniques utilizing Fuller adhesives, which sdve both time and money over conventional construction A-As an engineer, your son "'•'“’ods, will help to s(ilve the probably will appreciate the "“"flng problem of low-cost potentials of H.B, Fuller Co.,^ * maker of over 4,000 adhesive products. Although incorporated Q;~You have mentioned in tee By ROGER E. SPEAK Q—Our son w" _ from engineering college shortly and we would like to make him a gift of a grqwth stock. What stock would you recom- •quo AVI unallag^xTI^^; St. Andrew’s Hirlft Bunpier close-out Sale. Many bargains. —Adv. .Uon.1 toh. e ?•.«««»■. 1915, the company went public only a year ago. Since 1963, sales have more than doubled, while profits have been reported annually. Earnings last year at $1.10 a share showed a 35 per cent gain year to year. First-quarter results of 30. cents were double those ^a a Yo per cent certain Trensury iiondB are accepted In payment of federal estate taxes If owned by the decedent at tee time of death. Please g|ve me the exact name of one you would recom- adhesives “to tee bearer” or to n specifle nqme? — A. K. A -€ouj»on bonds made out “to the bearer” arO more Immediately negotiable Rallt IM. uni., Fga. L, YE.. .. 62.4^ ^14.8^ ^ ^ 89.7^ ^ 7T.T |j. .™.thXo m 86J al »:o nl "P*” ‘•'■y washer, imai applications including bonds are to be kept in a vault. is ii w Si '&T ■ . * • * ’ “ 5„”, s.™' pS”S"« rr. . * . . niim<>rmM aDDllca^UonS Includins IrmM# in n vnnU Rummage, St. Paul’s Church, laminating cooking pouches fpr bearing on the choice because - - .. packaging frozen «nods. rates, the usual 165 E. Sq. Lk. Rd., Bloomfield Hills, Sat., June 7. 7 a.m. ’till 1p.m. —Adv. Altlough 92 industries Cbnrch Rummafa and Bake Sale, Saturday, 9 to 1. 67 N. Lynn, between Huron and Elizi-heth Lake Road. -Adv. sorvedf 37 per cent of sales are to the paper "and paperboard teduslry, If/per cent to wood products and construction and 15 per cent to the packaging field. . Interest rates, tee. usual ‘■® criterion is cost. Since the bonds are acoepted at par, the larger the discouni the bettor. For teat reason a 8Vii per cent 11-1546 Treasury bond selling In the low 70s would be my choice. THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 1969 Ex-Lobbyist Against Clean-Wafer Bills h Hickel Aide WASHINGTON (UPI) - A former lobbyist who allegedly battled lor the U.S, Chamber of Commerce against waterpollu-|Walter J. Hickel tion le^slation has been named‘Undersecretai^ Russell Train deputy' assistant interiorlwere available for comment Dallas JFjS[ Plaza to Be Built Soon secretary for water and power development. when the Interior Department announce f h e appointment TuelB^ of James G. Watt to Neither Interior Secretary the |26,000-a*ye8r post. When Sen. Emund S. Muskie, D-Main, reported in February Watt had been lobbying fpr the Chamber of Commerce against water-pollution legislation sponsored by the Interior Department, Watt was a $98-a- day consultant to Train and under contract through March. * ♦. * On Feb. 10, in a letter to Sen. William PrOxmire, D - W i s., Train said of Watt: “We have no intention of putting him in a policy-making position." to days later In D e n v e r Hickel said Watt was i “competent fellow" and added tiiat he considered policy-making positions to include only those of undersecretary, assis- tant secretary and b u r a a u director. I It is estimated that 00 per cent of the half a million eye Injuries a year could be prevented if people wore glasses with protective lenses. DALLAS, Tex. (AP) - Cwi-struction of a plaza in memory of the late President John F. ' I Kennedy should begin fh July jor August and be completed by I November pr December of this year, County Judge W. L. Ster-rel; said Wednesday. A desip for the plaza by ^ Phillip John has been ap-^proved at a special meeting of I’the County Commissioners Court and the John F. Kennedy I Memorial Commission. I Site of the memorial is in This week’s honored teen [downtown Dallas, near ‘thfe from Waterford Township Is a plaice where Kennedy*'was as-srhool journalist who aspires tojsa.ssinated in 1963. The plaza BETSY POOLE Teen of Week Is MSU-Bound financed by public sub-.scription. His Belongings Shipped Out? be a physical education teacher. She is Betsy Poole, a senior at Waterford Township High school antHbe daughter of Mr. and Mre. Frederick J. Poole, 12.38 Ileitch. Betsy is managing editor of the 1969 Waterlog yearbook andj Is a member of a journalism | TRANAS, Sweden (AP) -organization. Quill and Scroll. .Swedish artist Be r til San-nii.s fall she plans to attend dergaard returned to Tranas Michfgan Slate University and recently after a several-month major in'phy.sical education, ab.sence. At school, she has been a Where his apartment had member of the girls’ ski team been .stood a boat yard. for three years and the tennis ' ‘ ............ team for one year. .She was an exchange student with a high school in Long Island. N. Y. MSU Professor Will Research Black Stereotype EAST LANSING (AP) v A Michigan .State University pro-fe.s.so'r is taking a one - yearj leave of absence to determine' how stereotypes of Negroes differ from those of other ethnic '[ groups in America. Dr. John Appel, associate pro- " lessor of American thought and language, will do this research , at the Smithsonian Institution,^ Washington, D. C. His research will Involve catjjj toons and photograph.s of imrn grant groups in the 19th CentuiF During a previous p r o j e il,| _ Appel researched stereotypef of the lower-clfiss Irish in the 1890 span. He said he fophd traits ascribed to the lri^/re-| markedly similar to tho/e/at-j tributed to the Negro 60 years later. THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 1969 1 Paris Air-Show Trip Broadens Horizons By DICK WEST WASfflNGTON (UPI) - A question has arisen as to why it WHS necessary for a sizable contingent of U.S. congressmen to attend the air show in Paris this week. • Congressmen need to be well - informed in order to leg-islate intelligently. • Some legis-l,ation trans- WEST cends national boundaries thrusting Congress into the areas of global resiMnsibillty. • Information involving other areas of the world can best be obtained by visiting those areas. * W A The Paris Air Show, for e* ample, provides a congressman with an excellent opportunity to familiarize himself with Paris Air Show. ★ * w He could stay in Washington and let witnesses testifying at congressional hearings describe the air show to him. He could also read newspaper accounts and look at films. NOT SATfSEACTORY But none of these methods of gathering informations serves as a satisfactory substitute for seeing the air show in persoq. . A congressman who has seen the Paris Air Show with his own eyes obviously is better informed about the Paris Air Show than a congressman who has never been to the Paris Air Consequently, he is better prepared to consider any legislation involving the Paris Air Show. At the present time, to my knowledge, there is no Paris Air Show legislation pending. But that doesn’t mean the trip to Paris was unfruitful. ANOTHER JUNKET? Next year the congressional committees that would handle Paris ,^r Show legislation, should any such legislation arise, must decide whether to send delegations to the 1970 Paris Air Show. ★ * ★ Information obtained at thh year’s Paris Air Show doubtedly will prove valuable in helping committee members arrive at that decision, A congressman who h a already been to the air show knows better than anyone else whether he wants to return, and aliK) is in a position to advise dingressen who have hot been tq the air show. ' Eventually, as you can the UiS. Congress will become the best-informed legislative 23 Americans Are Listed as Killed in Viet WASHINGTON (AP)-TWenty-three servicemen killed in action in the Vietnam war have been' named by the Defense Department. The list includes eight men from the Midwest. ASMY SA.- Ipte. 4 6*ry A. Nwvw, 0»v-NtSOTA-Pfe. KIcMrd N. WhH*. P»C. D»vIiI a. HWfleii, Sr’S?!’ Wrife *cW; etc. W*ynt B. ewvin. Mount «IOWA etc. Ktllh A. Kotllltort, Britt. .Died of wound.s: ABMY IOWA..Pic. ThomM A. Nobol, Kootn. .SOUTH DAKOTA-Spoc. S Corl R. Martin, Claghorn Canyon. ’ Changed from missing to dead -hostile: ” ARMY MICHIBAN - III. KMiwOt O. Itnan, EPtIntu Waadai ipac. 4 ^hMl P. mart Plo, WIIHam H. BoOit if.,' VHIaia. WISCONSIN - $Bt. William A. ivant, Mllwaukaa. . „ Missing as a result of hostile actions ARMY Spac. I “Armantlo L, Rnmirat, Pl«. Mario Lamalta. Died not as a result of hostile action: "prate ■ ■ ; to dead body in the world on matters pertaining to the Paris Air Show. We expect more from Con-press, and we get It. Alumni's Choice HOLf^ND (AP) - A Grand Rapids man has been elected president of the Hope College Alumni Association. Frederick A. Vandenberg, assistant to the president at American Seating Co. of Grand Rapids, is .a 1952 graduate of the school. Illinois has the largest coal reserves in the U.S. Girl Triumphs in Difficult 13-Yedr Battle for Diploma COVE GAP, W. Va. (AP) -Kay F. Williams will be rewarded for her 13-year battle Thursday when she meets her 151 classmates at Wayne High School for the first time and receives her high school diploma. Kay, 18, was stricken with polio and double pneumonia at the age ot eight months. She spent I 'T wanted to be the first one much of early life in an iron hn my family to graduate.” she Her parents, Mr. and Mrs. finedto b^ ora wheeleha.r. L ^ Bht Kay, a bright, bionde. be- ® ^S'***""**’ spectacled girl with « huge TOOK 13 YEARS share of .jdetermination, had a! It took her 13 years to earn goal. !her diploma because illness forced her to miss one year of home tutoring, but she maintained a place on the honor roll. Kay said she spent five of her 18 years in hospitals, years in the nOw-defunct Milton Memorial Hospital in Hunting- I lAipaired ^owth can a ' "At times when I would get sign of HI health in infants. discouraged, my teachers just told me to go on” she said. Now she’s looking ahead and wants to take a training course at the State Rehabilitation Center in Charleston. Save 61.95 now! 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THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 1969 Picturesque Railway Line in India Is Neaping End of the Road By M. S. KHAN OOTACAMUND, South India (AP) r- One of the world’s most pictures«iue railway lines — the Ml^mile Nilagirl (Bhie Mountain) Express — is soon to fade into history, a victim o f modernization and a lack of passenger trafflc. The Nilagiri Express once was a very popular line, hauling British rulers, mdharajas and an assortment of their followers " up from the intense heat of the South Indian plains to the cool,*| green, hill station, Ootacamund. ' But the train has alwaysjdelayed for as long as it took:all its 70 years there has noti A pilot walks on the track history. The govenunent-Owned maintained its s i x - h o u rjthe conductor, the driver andj been a single accident. | well before the start of the first [Indian Railways, a^ to be the j schedule. some of the nonroyel There are no route-relay train, and it it only after he I Sometinnes, in those early passengers to shout them off sigfthls. jreaches the next station that the years, a herd of hlephants from the track. | Engineers looking after the train is allowed to pass the the Nilagiri jungles would be Punctaality apart, the Nilagiri i Nilagiri track evolved their own previous one. found on the track, and on those Express trains have a record of | method of ensuring safety dur- * occasions the train "would be|safety unparalleled in India. Injing monsoon months. I But aH this will soon pass Intp biggest network'in Asia, has been expanding and modemining itself to bepdme a fast npode of ■ doomed to the scrap pile. Not only is this onetime efficient slow for the 1960s, The Nilagirl Express is thus but it is also proving uneconomical. Ooty is no longer the summer capital of Madras, nor for some reason is it the most hill stations. And so it will soon be to the Nilagiri Express, turesque drawl will be more, its magnifidient clack will be - of goodby Run on a rack, simijar to what Is called a cog railway in. other parts of the world, the train climbs from virtual Sea level to 7,000 feet in its 28-mile Two special rack bars run| between the tracks, forming ai ladder up which the steam I locomotives climb with pinions. !i MESHING TEETH ! The racks have been installed i so that the tooth of one Isi directly opposite the gap of the | other, insuring that the engine j pinions do not work off the I racks when rounding turves. i There are no racks on thej level stretches and the train i makes a little letter speed in{ those areas. ' 6-Man Camper at *200 Savings ! WARD The train pas.ses through 16 tunnels, stops at 10 stations, averages 5 miles an hour, andj during the rainy season a man I has to walk In front of the train making sure that the rails are intact aiid that no boulders have fallen across them. ■ No one remembers who first: thdhght of laying a railroad I track between the hot little | town of Mettupalayam in Coim-i batore district and his "Queen of the South,” popuMirly called Ooty. But records show the suggestion first came in 1854. | TECHNICAL PROBLEMS The suggestion, however, remained an Idea for nearly four decades, partly because of the Coat was another problem. Original estinlatei put it at 1960,000. It ^ was Idler revised downward to $316,000. But the capital couldf not be floated in London. Finally, a British resident of ' Nilagirls, Richard Wooly, advanced the money on the condition he would get the contract to construct the railroad and be its manager. It was In the early 1890s that people of the s u r r 0 u n d 1 n g villages heard the first defening explosion. The Nilagiris (Blue Mountains) were be dynamited to drill 16 tunnels. TOOK SIX YEARS It took six years to construct the line, which, according to the •present chief engineer of Southern Railways. T. Komaleswaran, still is a unique feat of engineering. Six tiny cars are pulled by one. and sometimes two small engines. Our comfortable 6-man size off-the-ground camper YOU KEEP SAVING EVERY TIME YOU TAKE A VACATION *499 Forget reservations and costly motel bills when you make this 77-sq. ft. camper your vacation home! lO-oz. army drill steel body are made to take heavy use. Road cover forms canopy. Mattresses, spare tire and wheel included. REGULAR U99 The train covers the 28 miles In six hours. The name Nilagirl Expresp may or may not have been the offshoot of Wooly’s sense of humor. The train was a great success.. Today people may travel: by it for a joy ride, but in those: days it proved an efficient mode ' of transport. CROWDED IN BUMMER In summer It used to be difficult to get a place on the train i because the then government of Madras would move its capital to Ooty for the hot months. Moreover, royalty in the area, both Indian and British, would make a beeline for Ooty which earned the namejif a "queen”; for its beauty. While the train timetable shows 10 halts on the way, the train slops oftencr than that, usually after every 20 minutes. .Sometimes,-the conductor will stop the train and request the passengers* to alight as to enable the tiny steam engine to communicate, a steep gradient. An unannounced reason is that the train has no lavatories. Save d big 24.01 12-FT. ALUMINUM BOAT This brawny .OS I g«. aluminum boat ft lightwaighti SamLV bottom and full langth spray railf aiiura a smooth rido. Eaty’loading. d-HRMCTOR Ignition itartlngi, I9A0 4/]-gal. rimeto AOT |y|| 139” 5-HR MOTOR Recoil itortor; 119" fuel tonk. pivot *r 0 -verit, air cooled,RM. 119.99 RM.I1M BOO-LB. tRAILIR A-(frema, tllt.bfd If All trailer has 000- ■ * ' lb. capacity. RM. ||9.99 Boys' drogsfer Mustang has hi-rise handlebars 39’5. Boy's hf-riso bika has knobby roar drag tira for racing. Rear coastar brake. Gold-tone enamel frame with chromed fenders. Girls' modal with basket, rag. 40.99, 41.99 ^ Sovo $5! 26-in. middiowoight biko 34.99 31 99 * Boy's, girl's models * Slim end racy This beauty has adjustable chrome handlebars, coaster brakes, chain guard. With big rear safety reflector. Sovo $3! 3-Spood lightwolght bIko REG. 39.99 36 99 • Boy's, girl's models * Adjustable saddle Wards 26-in. bika combines classic styling with durable construction. Enamel finish. 3-spaad twist-grip gear shift. Savt $51 ThG 29" 79" Unic|H« UnicyelGl 24** iib. 19.99 A^ita seat, rims. Rid anatnal jframa. Adjust-abla handlab«rs. Quality eonstruetod bicycle built for twol Adjustable saddles. Precision onginaorad. Bucket seat adjusts to rider's haigbt. .Fun! ~ VI I KDVV 9 .0 \.\1. ro 0 I-M "I MlV) I..: h» i’.M, • ',r ■ V ■I'A' THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 1969 VJ/. A' D—8 Kelley Files Suit Seeking to Bar Cosmetics Firm From State against. Koscot Interplanetary, Inc., a Florida cosmetics firm, asking that it be banned from doing business in Michigan. ; * * ■lh had d&reed Iki ptr cent raise for the armed ses. .. f ’W ■ * Ir. Zilcri also criticized « ree-law published last week -tated that certain senior rtillltary officers would luraged" to retire early to open vacancies for offlcdrs. CaralJtJfc’j said such a decraa ^n the way to a „ I*. deanse Its ranks el pposition. H' Save 2.50 gallon WARDS ACRYLIC LATEX OR OIL BASE HOUSE PAINT Regular 7.49 ONE-COAT ACRfU^C LATEX Resists moisture, fading end blistering of wood, masonry and stucco. Non-chalking white and colors will not stein lower surfaces. No lead pigments. .Clean-up in soapy water. ONE-COAT OIL BASE ^ Covers with one coat but protects like two. Use on exterior wood or metal. Resists mildew, discoloration, Non-toxic. Easy to applyl White and most-wanted decorator colors. liom at a rata not to az-caad 450 iq< ft. par pal-Ion. If thb paint toll* la convar at itqlad hora, bring lha labol of Ihit to Intvra covaraga, or, at yawr epiian, funii lha compia Save 2.50 on guaranteed one-coat dripless latex 499 ftellee We'va taken all the hard work out of painting for you! Just open the can, roll or brush on one aasy-to-apply coat. In 30 minutes .it dries to a soft, matte finish without an odor. Latex lets you clean up with no fussing . . . just soapy water. “CHARGI Save *4! 16-foot aluminum ladder Ribbed ”D-Staps" are ^ ^ A A designed for comfort, ^ 9w sturdy performance. RARi .Mr?:ua. rungs cant twist. Rag. 24.9f 20-ft. laddar .....18.99 Reg. 29.99 24-fr. laddar .24.99 OPEN MONDAY THRU I RID VV 10:00 A,\l. JO 0:00 P \U SAruKDAV Oi.io a.m. ro o p.m. >1 NOAV 12 NOON TO P >T. • 602-I9 IO :jlh' THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. JUNE 5, 1969 ?Auto Club Wants Parents to 'Belt Your Childrert tor Safety o'A. DETROIT (UPI) - “If you ,'vlove ‘am, belt 'em” is an old . slogan dedicated to sparing the child, tnit it has nothing to do ’ with spoiling the rod. .' ~ It’s also tile slogan of a hew . ' drive by the Automobile Club of . Michigan to reduce injpries and deaths to children in huto accidents. It’s a campaign that ' could be, and perhaps should be made nationwide. seat belts should be worn by all child passengers over 5 years old. What about the infants then? SPECIAL BELTS They advise child seats for the Mdlers. ’The seats should fit onto the seat of the car so the safety belt is utilized to hold Ispedflcally for the undeNl the sea down. jgi^p and they sell for ilMer The club also recommmds NO-special child belts to resfralnj * * * the child. These are available | General Motors also has almost everywhere now. Both 1 designed what might be called General Motors and Ford have an auto crib for Infants too designed children’s seats small to be restrained in a lid’s seat. Ibis Is a H«4own child’s seat. This is a lie-down item which Is then fastened to the seat of tha car with the car seat belt. It is positioned so that the baby rides backward, ac-comidishlng a twofold purpose. First, the parent can see the l»by at all times. Sseond, In the event of an accident, the baby is restralAed in the ridbig crib by the cirb itself, tbere are bdts in the crib which would hold the baby in the crib in case of a hard bounce or a roll-over. Babies under 5 years of age should net be beRed in a seat with restraint belts similar to olifer children ot adults because their bodiies are pot suffietentiy developed lor their internal organs to withstand the great pressures exerted by the belt In a sudden stop. 1 The Automobile Qub^of Michigan is hopeful tiut stits campaign, being waged ^th biliboalds, pliers and bumper stickers win reverse the upwfrd trend of child injuries In auto accidents. . ^ The auto club bee a alarmed when statistics showed that tnjpries to child passengers betweeh the ages of infancy and 14 yeai*s Jumped more than 58 per cent from 1967 to 1968. In Michigan, nearly seven out of every 10 children Injured in traffic were riding in cars. Only three of 10 were pedestrian or bicycle victims. Since Michigan is a fairly typical state, it’s probable that this ratio applies pretty closely to the nation as a 'BELr THE CHILD So the campaign is on convince parents that not only should they buckle seat belts on themselves, but they should also belt their children. Reynlear Staats, coordinator of special projects for the Auto Club’s Safety and Traffic Division, says a child standing up in a car, or lying down on the back seat becomes a human projectile in a sudden stop. Whether the car is in an accident or not, the child stands a good chance of being injured by being thrown against the back of the front seat, the instilment panel or the windshield even if the driver escapes an accident by hard Jamming on the brakes. He points out that safety-conscious communities have made great strides in reducing pedestrian accidents to children, particularly those going to or from school. EFFECTIVE Safety precautions and procedures have been particularly effective for school-bound children. Staats said that of all children injured in pedestrian accidents, only one in 10 is child on the way to or from hchool. This is because concerned communities and parents made it a point to preach safety and insist that their children practice it. But there has been no such campaign of preaching and practicing for children in cars ... yet that’s where most traffic injuries to children occur. The auto clutyadvlses that Shetland Pony Is on Way Out By National Geographic Society WASHINGTON - The Shetland pony Is beidg put out to pasture by a young America that wants to sit taller in the sdddie f Children still love ponies, some are turning to breeds they won’t outgrow. Little "Sheltles’’ — form 28 to 42 inchtn high at the shoulder —-often leave youngsters’ feet dragging after a few years. Yet the ponies gre Considered man-sized mounts in their native Shetland Islands north of Scotland. STRONG KOR SIZE They are not only the world’s smallest horses, but pound for pound are rated the strongest. A Shetland so small a fanner can pick it up may also carry him and his wife for miles over the rugged Scottish Highlands or isla^s. The harsh life on the Islands made Shetlands what they arc: small and hardy. Severe climate and sparse forage—heather or perhaps only beach seaweed during some months—developed the breed. /V\C)IVTC;0/IAERY WARD BIG 12-HP GARDEN MARK* TRACTOR Powerful engine by Briggs & Strafton is mounted to virtually eliminates vibratdn! With 4 speeds plus reverse, built-in headlights. and a chassis designed for better vision and handling ... it's great! Quiet Synchro-Balanced* power gets the biggest jobs dona... a quality performer. Mowtr Msebmtmt 42-ineh tractor mowing attachment Floats' with ^ It^es ground contours! Save MOW Mighty 1244P Tractor You gat the industry's finest features. Keyoper-ated electric starter, power take-off warning light, adjustable headlights, dependable 4-sfmed transaxle, Synchro-Balanced* engine. Mowtr Macbment M>4$UaUt RE». %U9 Save 20.11 on 25-in. rider Even today, the sleeker looking Shetlands favored i n America take less care than any other pony. Ibey through the adnter with only a few bales of hay to supplement grazing. Islanders say that Shetlands are "foaled in the field, live in the field, and die In the field.’’ Many live 80 or 40 years. B-HP MOOD. FOR MOWING EASE h99 199’ RIG. 229.99 * Rugged Powr-Kraft* angina, racoil startar ' Autoniotiva-typo transmission Floating rotary blade takes tall grass in stride ... you relax in comfortable cushioned seat. Raar-wheal differential easy to handle. Save *251 Self-profiled I 3V2-HP ROTARY CUTS 20'* PATH 99 99 REG. 124.99 • Rugged power of a ■ * SVj-HP engine ., ' New Pullrand-Go. instant starter Fully automatic fuel, system combined with Pull-enthGo starting get you under way quickly. Instant-action height adiusters, 20-inch steel deck. Sava *20! PuH-andGa porfoefeutf log rotary 6.11 off-^"whispering" 18-fneh hand mower 38” Cuts silently because the 5 double-riveted blades never touch the bed-knife. Catcher available. REG. 44.99 RIG. 19.99 NO MONEY DOWN Powerful 31/2* HP Powr-Kraft* angina, new Pull-end-Go startfoiQi new euto-matic fuel system. for bntwit seNup age. Instant jiilfllit adiusters. All deluxe features included. 10.11 off! Adjifstable handy trailer iwOepei Hifehet to rear of riding mow- . er, lawn tractor. Swoops 30-in. ! path with rotating bruslvas. 7 ' adjustable grooming heights. REG. 99.99 THE PONTIAC TRESS. THURSDAY. JUNE 5. 1969 D—5 Young Drift in Aimless Despa ir Without RFK, Unruh Sdys SACRAMENTO. CaUf. (AI*) -- American young people stiU ■uffer a sort of aimless despair ever tbe death of Robert P. Kennedy one year ago, says J«sse Unruh, Democratic leader ef the California Assembly. / Unnih feels Kennedy would be president now had he lived and feat American youth would be less attracted to radicM assassination are far. far deeper and more injurious than, td- Unruh, who was the late______ tor’s California ipsidential campaign chairman and longtime adviser. “I think the impacts of that Cattle Drive like Old Days (Almost) Unruh was standbig near Kennedy, savoring a victory fe the June 4 Califonda preeldenUal primary election last year, 'ihrfau ^ishara Uium candidate in a cwwded hotel kitchen walkway In Loa Angeles. Kennedy fell to the floor mortal^ wounded. Death came 24 hours later. "You can*t really understand PUEBLO PINTADO, N.M. (AP) - Ihe 7W head of cattle being driven across northwest New Meixco toward sununer pasture in Colorado bawl and raise dust Just like those on (Md West trail drives But trucks and cars.are pulling camp trailers behind the herd, the cowboys on horseback coimnunlcate by walkie-^lkie radios and portable steel fdhces are used to keep the herd together at night. The herd of yearling charolals . cattle, a French breed, reached the Pueblo Pintado area Wednesday, about 70 miles and five days out of Bluewater, N.M. It still has about 90 miles to go to Pagosa Springs, Colo. tbe depth of despair to which the young people sank after tiut,” said Unruh, now 47 and develoidng a corps of youthful backers of his own for a likely run for governor of California in 1970. "The young people are still sort of poking around in comers GOP Powwow LANSING (AP) - The Republican State Central Committee will meet June 13-15 at Traverse City. Featured speakers will be U.S. Sen. Robert P. Grif- fin, R-Mich.,' and Gov. WQUam MUIiken. A reception at tin home and a beach par-. . sored by the Grand Traverse County GOP cwtnmlt' tee will be featuils in addition to the regular business meetings. Since 1930, some 13 bills have been introduced in legislature to designate a New Jersey state song but none has been adopted. Area Service Perspnnel Capt. Robert A. Green, 26, of 4350 Motorway, Waterford Township, has received the Army Commendation Medal for outstanding achievement in the leadership of his company in ’ Hanau, Germany. ' Green received the medal in Saigon May 24. He is stationed in Cho Lon, Vietnam. Army of-' ficials said it was unusu^ to , award the medal for achieve-; ment in a noncombat zone. ' Green is married and the father of two children. scholastic honory and Sigma Phi Epsilon social fraternity. During his senior year, Peterson received private pilot training in conjuction with his ROTC studies. Spec. 4 Ronald E. Pass, the son of Mr. and hArs. WUlard Crosby, 3128 Angelus, Waterford Township, is stationed in Cfo Oii, Vietnam. Pass enlisted in the Army Nov. 14, 1967, after i " . Waterford Kettering High School. He took basic training at Ft. Knox, Ky. and Advanced Individual IVaining at Ft. Leonard Wood, Mo., and Fort Bennlng, Ga. He was sent to Vietnam, July 9, 1968. Marine Cl>l. William G. Jbson Jr., the son of Mr. and Mrs. Williaip 6. Gibson Sr. of 475 Third, recently rotumed to Vietnam after spending month’s leave with his fanm, Gibson Just completed a year of duty near D& Nong, ^etnam, and is returning for six more During his tour' of duty in Vietnam, Pass has receive the Bronze Star vrUh V for valor and Wo Purple Hearts. He win i;etum home July 9 after completing a year 'in Vietnam. PASS GILLOW Marine Pvt. James GiUow, 21,' the son of Mr. and Mrs. George Gillow of 2840 Pontiac Lake, Waterford Township, is stationed at Camp Lajune, N.C., after recently completing basic training at San Delgo, CaUf. He is a. 1966 graduate of Waterford Township High School and worked at GMC tMck and Coach Division prior to' entering the Marines. Army Lt. Jerry L. Craig, the, wn' of Mr. and Mrs. Gorpld Craig of 675 S. Cass Lake, IVaterford Township, recently fompleted special forces raining at Ft^ Bragg, N.C., and jecame a member 0f the Green Berets. Craig te a graduate of Kfaterford Township High School and Michigan State University. Next month he will many Sherri Walker of Blr^ inghufft and Inter is idieduled tor duty at the John F. Kenne^ War School, Fort Bragg, N.C. for paradratist tralning- Alr Foroe 2nd Lt. John T. 'eterson. the son of Mr. and STThomas Paterson. 6140 mdersonvUie, Waterfoid Town-hip, recently reported to oiiirfinn Air Force Base, Del "0, Tex., for flight training, n, a graduate of I Kettering Hl^ a bacbelcr M ^ Hi was a member of Phi Slmga Eta national omsoN C. AYRES G. AYRES Army Pfd. Charles W. and Spec. 4 Gary L. Ayres, sons of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Ayers, 5684 Maybee, Independence Township, are stationed in Germany and - South Korea, respectively. Charles attended Clatkston High l^chooi prior fo entering the" Army'July 16, 1968. He received basic training at Ft. Knox, .Ky., and advanced individual training at Ft. Leonard Wood, Mo. Gary, a 1967 graduate of Cbukston High School ^ employed by the ^and Trunk Western Railroad before entering the Army- He received basic training at Ft. Knox, Ky. His wife, Linda, live in Pontiac. ^r Force Sgt. Harry H. Big-ham, son of Mrs. Lloyd Bighain of Holly is stationed in Spanway, Wash. Blgham attended Pontiac Central High School and graduated 1 Hmer ngh Sdwol In Topeka, I^., in 1989. He tortc hmte train^ at Lackland Air Force Base, Tex., and sermd two months In Da Nang, Iflet* • I His Wife, Glynes, resides In Ipswich, Army Pvt. Kenneth D. I of Mr..and Mrs. Iwin, Ortonvilie. Ing at Knox, Ky, li''" looking for things to do -i for projects-lioping that somethhig will come along that will give them hope again.’’ , ^'4 U’ Unruh said one reason he supported Kmnedy was that “He reached those groups that were fast becoming unreachable by every other means: the young, tbe black, the poor, the left-out.” “I thought that the grohps that are the most dissatisfied the Way things are today—and therefore tiie most volatile— were willing to let Bob Kennedy have a few years, or a certain amount of time, to work in that direction.” It is import for rps to have someone in pow-"who cares—who really cares,” Unruh feels. “That’s the reason I have grave doubts as to what this administration in Washington can accomplish, and the reason I think ^s administration in Cai-., iforhia has nothing to look forward to but continuous strife.’ Unruh referred to the Republican administrations of President Nixon and Gov. Ronald Reagan. Unruh said many who Join :ampus protest movements 'i^e much mote vulnerable today to the siren and clrcesin song of the radicals than they would have been had Bobby Kennedy lived and gone all the way.” SAVE $20! SUPREME AUTO AIR CONDITIONER... BEST PERFORMANCE FOR COOLING ANY SIZE CAR Enjoy tho finext in cooling comfort! Our Supremo unit offer* fingerKp control and uniform cooling for city and highway driving, plus a special pre>chill setting. Dual 3-speed blowers and 4-way louvers give car-wide cireulatipn. Modem slim-line design gives plenty of lag room; recessed conttel panoL;** $20off!SpecialoireonditioiiGr S|RQ Powerful blowers and wlr louvers elreulate evenly W for comfort. Installation available. SOME 1969 MOOa CARS CUSTOM-WTUD AT SLIGHTLY HIGHER PRICE YOUR CAR'S LAST MUFFLER! SALE ENDS SUNDAY Deabl-Ufe... guaranteed for the life of your ear Don't fool with e feuHy muffler • * • gft get e Riverside* muffler with life-time j| raplecement ggafanteo. Zinc-eOeted steel. Most Fords, Chevys, Pontlses. INfTALUD Before you go on vacation make sure your shocks are safe! Install Riverside® HEAVY-DUTY Town & Country SHOCKS 5 44 lACH IN PAIRS RIOUUR 4.99 lA. Good shocks keep your tiros on tha roadl You ratain full staaring control for tho graatast safaty. Dasignad to provido o mora cornfortabla ride on rough country roads. Top "heiivy duty" parformars! Rivorsido* deluxe shock cdMorbcrs —-......—, trol, restrain axcassiva movamant IN FAIRS Poiilific M;i MONDAY TmV ITUDAV H) A.M. TO 9:00 O.M. SATl iD)4VO;:iO A.M, 'I'O <);00 I'.M. ^l,^D\^ 12 \00\ TO .") I'.M. • 0K2- IO10 Mi' Sift" ■'I ■Al' THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. JUNE 3, 1969 Pentagon Is Offering New Health Policy ■ By JERRY T. BAULCH Aisociated Press Newsfeatwres WASHINGTON — A' new low-cost health insurance program that the Pentagon is putting into effect Sept. 1 will partially solve a big financial headache Ujat many men leaving military service fun into — especially those with pregnant wives. I’ve gotten a lot of letters, as have members of Congress, complaining because at pffsent a servlcenian loses on day he get out all rights toj'^edical benefits provided by th< military. It’s ordinarily weeks or months before he gets into a civiliafi plan, usually a group plan after he gets a [. job. Most civilian plans don't;^provide maternity benefits in the first 10 nmnths of coverage. So even if a man gets mt^ical insurance soon after he gets out he $1(11 has to pay the costs of having his child,(hn average of about $500. i The Army has been permitting men with pregnant wives to extend theiri, service long cnough®to have the children born in military ho.spitals: But Chairman L. Rondel Jlivers of the House Armed Services Committee pfpdded the Pentagon to come up with a better answer. , BAULCH SHORT-TERM POLICY I a man is processedf at the separation centers starting Sept. 1 he'll be given p chance to sign up for the short-term policy, which will biib good for 90 days and the man can convert to one of the' insuring company’s regular health Insurance poliices. A man without dependents will pay $16.50 for the 90 days and be insured with Mutual of Omaha. A man with dependents [)SsLb ------------------------------------------------ will pay $90 and be Insured twith Blue Crossl-Blue Shield, which will include maternity benefits. Under the family plan, Blue Cross-Blue Shield will pay up to $12 a day for a semipri-vate hospital room, but pay all of the costs overseas. The doctor will be paid In full up to the usual fee prevailing in his airea. Home Selling Advice If you sell your home that was purchased with a GI loan guarantee and the mortgage Isn’t paid In full, the VA rtsminds that you’re still liable for payment if the second owner defaults, unless you take one important step: Write the VA office that guaranteed your loan before you sign a sales contract and ask for the necessary foimTS and instructions on how you can be released from personal liability. And get this completed before you sign the bill of sale. College Credit Problem Henry C. Stone, the director of the Ft. Monroe, Va., Education Center, Sports that many men In military service taking extension courses from colleges are finding the courses “very often just are not worth a darn when it comes to being accepted’’ toward a degree. Often, he says, colleges wllljcave decisions on whether to count the course as credit toward a degree up to various department heads. And this often causes students to become entangled in red tape or blocked by Judgement they would have no way of anticipating. Some of the extension courses don’t count toward a degree even in the colleges that provjded them. There are some colleges, however, that do formally recognize the So It’s wise for a student to work with his military education officer and, if posssible, seek counsel with the college he plans to attend. Airmen's Early Release starting next January, airmen serving in Southeast Asia and other short-tour areas who return to the United States with less than six months of their enlistments left will be released at the port^ But this won’t help those in overseas jobs with tours of 18 months or longer. If they have less than six months wherj their tours end they’ll be kept over and brought back just In time for the expiration of their enlistment. a. This will replace the present complicated system that depends on an airman’s skill and where he Is stationed overseas. The policy in regard to officers will remain the same. An oflcer can be separated at the port If he ..returns from freign duty with less Uian 180 days service remaining. Ihis Is automatic for offleers with less than five years service if they are otherwise eligible for release. Officers with more than five years service must apply. Marine Law Branch The Marine Corps Is setting up a law enforcement branch ^s a'career field to coordinate the training of law enforcement specialists such^as military policemen, investigators and corrections men. ' ** « « w ‘ ' Since 1954 .such billets have been filled by Marines from various other career specialties. Tidbits Ihe Navy Is having a hard time keeping Its enlisted divers, so the Defense Department has okayed a pay raise of from $10 to $20 for divers of all military services. This will push four cla.sses of divers to $110 extra pay, the same as that new earned by diving Officers. ( President Nixon’s tax proposal contains good news for service families. Their dislocation allowance — one* month’s basic quarters allowance — would not be taxable as It Is Jiow, This would be retroactive to Jan. 1, 1969, If Congress '^approves. The Army, turned down proposals that various branches be permitted to wear berets. ^ that leaves the green beret of the Special Forces the only one authorized. C The Navy has come up with a prototype uniform In its effort to make its petty officers look .snazzier. It’s part of the program to enhance the prestige qf its top-ranking enlisted men. ; Army Times says the Defense Department is working on a proposal to give officers in critical skill shortage areas bonuses similar to the continuation pay received by doctors and the $15,000 special bonus Congress is cotlsiderlng for nuclear officers who sign up for four more years. Under present plans the bounus would be $3,760 for each year of additional service beyond the officer’s obligated service. Paper Halted in Malaysia KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia per had been suspended. They (AP) — Acting under emergen- are not required to do so under powers, the government the Thursday suspended the China ed in the aftermath of Malay- PresB, It Chinese daily newspa-jsia’s recent racial disorders. '-'I lor per. I In recent days, the newspaper Authorities gave no detailed had iaihlished articles crltlciz.-explanation of why the newspa-jlng the emergency government. New Roqd Aide LANSING (AP) - Tlie State Highway Department has nounced the appointment Marvin Ray, I^ansing business- ANN ARBOR (UPI) - The University of hflchigan has an- lay, i.ansing nusiness- , , ’ . “ , * . equal opportunity of- ""finced the appointment o;f two ficer. He succeeds the lato head new divisions Clarence Taylor Jr. of Lansing. crash forces on the Rav will be responsible for | human body in Its Highway heading, the department’s pro-jSafety Research Institute, gram of equal opportunities for Heading the biometerlai all employes. ! group will be Dr. Richard G.' Snyder, a physical an-iVirginla University, will lead thropologlst and formerly prin- ------------------- cipal research scientist With the Automotive Safety Office Ford Motor Co, the new biomechanics gropp. ppS are to be part of lienees Division of the Dr. James H. McElhaney,. a the Bios institute. Snyder >' will study impact physiology, or the effect of McElhaney will concentrate on head iiijurles. Each will also have teaching duties - Snyder in anthropology and McElhaney In mechanical engineering. theoretical and a p p 1^ e d forces on living biological mechanics instructor at We$t 'systems in auto crashes, while developing and .various auto safety features, 'along with passenger restraint and protection systems. / Prostate cancer is «r# be-/ fore the age of 40 but autopsies Research In the Biosclences on males over 60 reveal thak Division is directed toward 1$ per cent had a prc^afic ma-•--------------------1 u a t i n g'lignancy. . WHEN YOU lUYTHI FIRST S.00-13 TUBELESS BLACK* WALL AT THE REGULAR PRICE PLUS T.S9 F.E.T. EACH RIVERStDE® ST-107 TIRES Buy two Rlveriide® ST-I07't and sav® $8, buy 4 and save $16! 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Smooth and quick. 2 fibor qloia bolts to ineroosA mlloiaeo. traetiom Tough poly- oitor cord bMy. . month ijmmd woar guarantaa- f • WU* MSt-M •// |WN» (4 0* i0hUt xHaT (S) Poj) j i ‘|(• \I (I 11 f ^ TIIHI I-Kihw |o VM, To \ I I \.M. n I i>.\| ■'I \n v'l 12 \oo\ ro :> p.m, . f,p2-pn11KSS. THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 19«9 tV7 By BOYD LEWIS / Preiident and Editor Newtpaper Enterprise Assn. CAEN, Normandy — stand here on a beach knovm as “Omaha.” Stand on a cliff called Polnte du Hoc. SJand at “Gold” and “Juno” and “Sword." ^ Here where the men came ashore on the sixth of June in 1944, buying with blood the beachhead that doomed Nazi Germany, stand and consider the perilous Grand Decision of Gen. Dwight David Eisenhower which forever makes I>Day stand for Day of Decision. D for Decision Day, 25 Years Ago “Do you see any reason for us not to go on Tuesday?” Ike asks Monty. . / DEFERS FINAL WORD “I would say go!” Thinking out loud, Ike says, “The question is just how long can you hang this operation on the end of a line and let it hang there.” Eisenhower noted that the commander-in-chlef, Gerd von meteorologists’ report ^as pro-Rundstedt, T^hat ;was to con- OR NOT TO GO? Meaty teOa Ike: *T wonld say took place during early June * i, a 1S44, which would lead Gen. Let minds leap to a tent in a Eisenhower to sepd forth his storm-lashed grove on t h e with the words: English shore, to a leaden day ^®’ii 8®! In June a quarter-century ago. ! ACCOUNT COMPRESSED Ike Eisenhower, the man of! This account is compressed Abilene become supreme allMiinto three days - the fourth, commander crushes a dgarette| fifth and sixth of June. armies in control of most of ORDERS OF DAY 'Europe — from the Arctic tip of They are his orders of the day I Norway to below Rome, from which will send American,^the west coast of occupied, British and Canadian troops, | France to the marshes of tinent. airmen and naval forces into;Poland where hordes of their successful assault upon ajPussians and Germans are! And tossing at sea in the Channel awaiting orders to steer for France, would have to be recalled for refueling. Secrecy would be lost. Assault troops would be penned back behind barbed wire. Morale would sag. ‘SUSPENDED ANIMATION’ Eisenhower saw this as “a sort of suspended animation involving more than two million men.” Another month’s delay would cOinpress the time ieft for major campaigning on the Con- Eventually, after getting all views on tides, naval refueling problems and cloud level for the bombers, Eisenhower defers the final word until Monday morning. Back to the little tent on the coast. Back to the lonesomeness of autli^rity. Back to the bunk in the trailer truck and a few restless hours. BOSS AWAKE bably intended to inspire confidence in Stagg’s next “astonishing declaration.” By the following morning -the sixth of June — said Stagg, there would ensue a period of relatively good weather hertofore totally unexpected! It might last as much as 24 to 36 June and took off by motorcar hours. WEIGHS RISKS The decision then: To land as many troops as possible within that good weather interval, with the chance that the Germans cduld counter-attack and wipe them out before they could be reinforced or supplied. Ike paced a few moments weighing the even greater risks I of a one-month postponement to centratis the heaviest - Nazi defense forces in the Pas do Calais region. This was the area only 20 the almost impenetrabie| The second Geri^ decision fortifications stri|ng along which played a part here Was Normandy was lightly manned that of Field, Marshal Erwin when the Aniericans, British!Rommel, the “Desert Fox,” and Canadians thrust ashore at | who after a remarkable com-H-Hour of D-Day. jpaign to upgrade the Normandy And even after they were well I defense systems decided that miles from the English cliffs i lodged ashore the German high and Hitler’s generals regarded command was deluded into it as a prime target for in-holding an entire army vasion. A flood of planted false [nervously stationed at its guns rumors did nothing to dissuade in the Pas de Calais because them. they thought the Normandy Thus it was that a portion pf assault was only a feint. the weather would not permit an Allied landing before mid-June and took off by motorcar to celebrate his wife’s birthday inUlm. Lucie Maria Rommel’S birthday was June the sixth. await favorable moon, winds and lowtides. “OK,” he snaped. “We’ll go!” Then he went out to visit the troops in‘the field and show them a confident face. European continent dominated by Adolf Hitler’s armies — specially against the flat beaches between Cherbourg and this Normandy road junction. “You are about to embark,” he writes, “upon the Great Crusade, toward which we have striven these many months. inflicting daily slaughter upon [“Crusade le another, [“always was lurking ★ ★ * background the knowledge that The long awaited second j the enemy was developing new front, which P r e s i d e n t and presumably effective secret What follows is a general’s ' Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill have promised Russia’s Josef Stalin, is teetering on the brink of a decision governed by moon, tides and winds — a decision which in the exhortation of his troops to lend must be made by one man, “total victory.” jlke Eisenhower. And then the man inside thej An invasion force of more r weapons on the French coast.” 0 He could not even guess the •- effect upon the crowded harbors n of Plymouth and Portsmouth if d the Nazis could begin showering e them with VI “do^le bugs” or I, V2 rockets. NOTES SIGNS uniform writes the last words ofjthan two million men has been his order: “Good Luck! And let assembled, fitted and trained to‘orhis US all beseech the bles.sings of battle pitch in the fields of fm. and noble undertaking. , great ARMADA Sunday the fourth. Mickey notes CHOSEN DAY | A naval armada greater than signs that the commander has Thus begins the operationjthe world has ever seen Isjhad a fretful night, a. tray of known as D-Day. In anqyj waiting to transport and protect cigarette butts, ha If-read, pirlance the “D” merely stands these forces to the French coast!westerns. It is 3:30 next morning when Mickey McKeough goes in to waken his boss and finds him open-eyed. Tent and trailer are “shaking and shuddering” in the gale and a horizontal rain lashes the jeep as Ike drives to headquarters. Stagg begins his weather report at 4 a.m. with a state-. would write in ment that the forecast of the! No account of the decisions of Europe,” there previous day had been borneiP-bay would be complete out and that had the landing!without recording two decisions: attempted on the fifth it on the German side. | would undoubtedly have ended! The first was that of the' in‘disaster. ' IFuhrer himself, backed by his, Epilogue AAOIVTGOAAER WARD Finish First with for a chosen day of an opera-^ tinn.; In this case it must carry broader connotations and these we may explore. On D-Day, June 6, 1944, on these sandy beaches fronting the English Channel, the first decisive blow was struck which was to lead before the end of a single year to the destruction, defeat and capitulation of the Third Reich. Today while vacationers dot those beaches still marked by a few rusted relics of landing ships or artificial harbors, generations too young t o remember may find it difficult to believe that a German nation with superrace delusions once actually planned to conquer the world. from ports 90 to 200 or morel Wind batters the grove. Ike miles away. 'Thousands of bom b e r s fighters, transport planes and gliders will soften the German Atlantic Wall and drop the airborne forces behind Nazi, line.® to disrupt, com-| j,e, strides into the con-municatlons, seize bridges, blow fgrence ,robm, a comfortable drives two miles to Somerset House, the large estate the main headquarters i s located, close by the invasion port of Portsmouth. up key installations. The infantry must go in at low tide if it is to breach the obstacles and two daylight low tides are a requirement. The supreme commander begins his ordeal of decision on June 4 in his forward headquarters in the grove of trees. SLEEPS IN TRUCK His office is a square of canvas with walls lined with stained until that D-Day of cases and the “canny Scot” who Decision a quarter century ago!® concrete, floor covered by a meteorological board, quickly| lu. itij. .t rope rug. gives his report: “Low clouds, library, grim faces await him. They belojpg to Air Chief Marshal Sir Arthur Tedder, chief of staff; Lt. Gen. Walter Bedell (Beetle) Smith, chief planner; Air Chief Marshal Sir Trafffrt l^h-Mallory, for air; Adm. Sir Bertram Ramsay, for sea, and Lt. Gen. Sir Bernard Law Montgomery, for ground foAces. GIVES REPORT Group Captain J. M. Stagg, " ■"'[) heads the did the malevolent [tide of Hitlerism begin to ebb knd free people begin once m( breath in hope. SAME UNREAU’TY Even to the small band of American war correspondents, broughth back by Pan-American World Airways to Normandy to commemorate D-Day as has been the custom every five years, these events have almost (he same unreality by now as the invasion of England by William the Conqueror In 1066 which Is chronicled on the famed Bayeux tapestries just down the road from here. But if DDay is to mean more than ah historic holiday future generations, one must study the almost unbelievable torment, tension and" firm courage which produced the Great Decision, outweighing all the many little decisions. ★ f ★ That was the decision to launch the Allied armada across the English Channel against'’ the Nazl-fortlfled French Coast on June 6 during | gives his report: He sleeps in a converted high winds, formidable wave truck in the grove nearby with action.” direct lines to the White House and NOi 10 Downing Street. Despite .his relative Isolation, Eisenhower is the focus of an enterprise of awesome complication. As the fateful days of 5-6 June approach when it is hoped that Air forces cannot soft defenses. Naval'guns cannot be trained from tossing ships. Landing craft would-be smashed on the beaches or sunk before , they left the sides of mother ships. One voice is raised for attack wind and tides will b e'on Monday the fifth, favorable, he is acutely aware,iMongomery is concerned by as he tells it later, that all of the “great disadvantages of south England is “one vast military camp . . . a mighty host tense as a coiled spring.” aware of WALL He is also aware that the Germans have used slave labor to throw up a wall of concrete and steel on the invasion coast with underwater obstacles, mines and defenses in depth at every crucial Adding to the tension the I i landing delay” and believes might be risked. Eisenhower paces a few moments. Tedder advises caution. SIMONIZ. 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Let us, therefore, reconstruct [consequences Eisenhower® saw mounts and is unrelieved by an from the memories and as “almost terrifying to con-jequally gloomy liveathcr jreport memoirs of those who template.” 'at the next meeting of thp staff partictpkted the events which! A great landing fleeji^^||^y that same evening. FOR DAD ON JUNE 15th! Peerless FM-AM Radio Desk Set JUST SAY 'CHARCE IT’ AT WARDS AUTOMOTIVE CENTER Detergent proof! It combines the easy application of liquid with the durable protection of a r SIMONIZ'^ PASTI CAR KLBENER ^ ^^ 'N . SyMONIZ«^ LIQUID CAR KLEINER >^,...!! . - ■ ' / With FM antenna, Shaeffer ball point j5eh, rnetal letter opener, merno pad and utility box. Walnut finish. BODYOARD LI9UID CAR WAX VISTA SMOOTH SUNR GLOSS WAX \ ■' Pontiac Mall OPEN MONDAY THRl I RIDA> 10:00 A.M. TO 9:00 F.M. SATI Rt)A\ 9:30 A.M. ro 9 t'.M. SI NOAY 12 NOON TO .'v P.M. • M{2-I910 r D—« LANSING (AP) - Two Sen-alf critics of Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley’s probe into charges made by a reputed Mafia tipster called, today for a Senate investigation of the way Officials are handling the mat- ter. Kelley Probe Critics Ask Senate Check Oakland County prosecutor and the attorney general. A group of Oakland County citizens asked the attorney general to can for a grand jury investigation of the matter, the resolution says. Sens. George Kuhn R-West Bloomfield Township, and Robert Huber, R-Troy, introduced a resolution which, if approved, would set up a five-member Senate committee to “study the handling by local and state pub> lie officials of the charges ihade by Peter L a z a r o s (the informer).’’ “The attorney general has in the ensuing three months taken no action to allow or deny the request, nor made any announcement of his fundings resulting from the investigations,’ it says. Kuhn asked the U.S. attorney general earlier this week to take over the investigation of Lazaros' allegations of bribes and payoffs to public officials. BETWEEN RACES — One runner In the Junior Olympic ganies at Pontiac State Hospital’s Fairlawn Center School yesterday 1 that boating is more fun than par- ticipating In running and swimming events. The contests are an annual event for children at the hospital. He also has complained to Gov. William Milliken about the length of time the investigation was taking and the failure of Kelley to seek any warrants against officials implicated by Lazaros of 2410 Dolesford, Troy. ■AWARE OF PROGRESS’ Milliken told Kuhn that the executive office was aware of in the investigation and Deputy Atty. Gen. Leon Cohan said the Justice Department already was involved in the BUY! SELL! TRADE!. ..USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS 1110 Kuhn - Huber resolution cites charges by Lazaros that have been brought to the attention of the State Police, the 'rRwriM^’SiCHioAi gourt lor Be ewinty W W iSS'inottar or nw pMlllon concornltifl Koron Lynn Navarro, minor. TO: DavM Navarro, falhor of aald Volltloir having hoon Iliad In thio Court llogliio that oa1d child comoo “ ^rovliiono of Chaptar 712A of liioVaMnl whi«ibSrtt*W*^faih^^ rh% R!."*^i.£i;!S J'lam th. iio th. •oBBio Of' tha Wafa _______ _____, .akiand Counly Sorvlca Conlar, In tha City of Pontiac In tald CoMnty,,on tha IJIh day^Mm A.D. ilna o'cloek In tha targnoon, . haraby commandad to an lly at oaM haarlng. no Imaractleal to maka para haro^ this aummont and no— I ba aarvad by publication of a Moy waak prdvloua to aald haarlng In tha llae Prana, a nowipapor printad and nwman ' 'no'rmai “n«LSi' "There is no official determination of the truth or falsity of certain charges involving important public officials, which is a gross Injustice not only to persons under suspicion but to the public as well.’’ ^^Zoni^Mli Pontiac, Oaklan Tho Tow—-That ■■ ORDINANCB NO. 1! ..-Jnanco------"— » (Zoning Ordli____ _ _______. -ontjac, Oakland County, jvnchloan. ha Townihip O* Pnnll«r Orir«In.. That tha Mlo To chango from AO to C4: Part of tho SE M of Sacllon at, T3N, RIDE, Pontiac Township, Oakland County, Michigan, do-tcrlbod aa bag at a point on tha NIy lino of Suparvlsor^a Plat No. 11 aa rocordod In Libor 30 of Plata, Pago 51, Oakland County Records, Igcatad S 7««30'3D" -E 301.74 ft and S 75^40'* B 14f.M ft alone d Ilna from tha N 'A cornor of Soctl— Ih S 75«3>'40" E alone NIy Subdivlal a 707.t1 ft, th N 00*ir3D" W 100 ft. -------.. from AG to RM MulHpIo: •art of tho SW 'A of Soctlon 33, -rSN, noB, Pontiac Township, Oakland County, HIDE, pon MIchlean, ____________ .... ... Cornar of Soctlon 33 and procaodlr into alono tha East-Wosl >A Ilna of So n 33 S ll^'S7" e 1143A7 ft to a poll.. - Waat Ilna of Opdyka Road (130 ft ■-nown at M-34; th -■— *■" Opdyka Road on i .13 ft, Radius 5445.1....... .... _____ 09®37'34" and whoso chord boars S 10»3S'(M» W 047.01 tt; th S MOSS' 34" W 140J0 ft) th alone ------------ " of Maddock Acrot Subdivli 30) S 07O44'3O" W tf3.00 ft. ... ...... .... Wost Ilna of Sac. 33 N oiosiyof" W 1130.71 ft to tha point of bap. Containing 34.3 County, Michigan, May 34th, 1 a) alto kno It Ilna of O Is horoby givan I ... racalvod W' thi Pontiac, 3040 Opdyko I “'chlgan, until 0 o'clock r, July 31, 1'— '------- 1*40, tor a pastangar-typo ______J by tho FIro Dopartmont. «jrurar?t»‘M.'i!'« _.J?'w'!h*bo^wKiad at 3:00 P.M. Monday, July 21, 1*4*. Th* Township tksiljncti li> SjiUiilorcI .S:il\ ;K(MV s;i\ s: SiiKiitoiv s;i\ s: Siilsiiiorc' s;i\ s: S;il\iitoi‘c sM\s: ' I'h, If »/■(■(/, ttuU in iIh' >/"0.i(/l( iJiul mid to I hr jirkv U lthoiit widiriil to /(.v iijiprnnvvx urhlr. \Vr iiiit ihrsittniliainl drtuih m iiiirdtlDd null " S;il\iUorc viNs: Siil\;llnrc s;l\ sl SiiKiitorc sm s: “Thr $tiiO unrl up mru'. Hiiit Iwh I hr nriinr nhrin h( ad-runitnivlion anoi k A J a'V BELL, THELMA E.; June 3, 1969; 101 Putnam St.; age 57; beloved wife of Leslie Bell; dear mother ,pf Ronald L. Bell; dear sister of Mrs. Arthur J. Goyette, Mrs. Harry Randall will lie in state at the Lambert, Curt and Harry] funeral home after 3 pm. Gilbert. Funeral service wiill Friday. (Suggested visiting! be held Friday, June 6, at 1 hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) Back to the 1967price...69.95 NOW FOR 1969... Robert Hall brinjirs you the same superior quality the Crown Juilliard is famous for-the sam^e luxury fabrics, the same superb tailoring at the same 1967 price! Come see the CroWn Juilliard.. .the 69.95 suit that should sell for $100. . NO. 131 P» LAMBETH, JOHN; June 4, 1969; Starr Rt., Lewiston (formerly of 'Pontiac); age 64; beloved husband of Ruby H. Lambeth; dear brother of Rdbert and James Lambeth. Funeral service will be held Saturday, June 7, at 1 p.m. ft the Larrlson Funeral Homp, comer of 11th and Pearl, Mio. Interment in Luzern Cemetery, Luzern, Michigan. Mr. Lambeth will lie In state at the funeral home; N IWU'OS" E 300 GRETA V. BLOCK, GRETA V. BLOCK, Juno 4, 5, 4, 7, 1 Death Notices Death Notices Saturday, June 7, at 10 a.m. at the St. Michael’s Catholic Church. Interment in Mount Hope Gimotery. Mrs; Kampimn wUl lie in state at the fUimral home after 7 to-nlght.\ . ' , ; LOUCKS, CORDELIA; June 4, 1969; 91 Pine Grove Avenue; age 83; dear mother of Mrs. Edna Vore, Mrs. Frances Cummings, Mable Loucks, Bruce E. Fry, Walter and Melvin Skelton; dear sister of Mrs. Ida Holbrook, *Alex, Ben and Otto Bigger; also survived by six grandchildren, 23 great-grandchildren and two g r e a t -great-grandchildren. Funeral arrangements are pending at tho Hun toon Funeral Home where Mrs. Loucks will lie in state. RANDALL, ALFRED E.; June 4, 1969 ; 7822 Mowatt, North Branch (formerly of W.' Bloomfield Tw^.); age 65; beloved ‘ husband of Edith Helen RandaU; dear father Mrs. R(*ert E. (Shirley) Jubelt, Mrs. Richard (Jean) Holmes and Ronald E. Randall; dear brother of Elton Randall; also survived by seven grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Saturday, June 7, at 1 p m. at the C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor. Interment in North Farmington Cemetery, Farmington Tdwnship. Mr. IN LOVWO MEMORY of Aljnp M. I toior* wi» potsoil owoy Juno 5, Bpwor* wbo poisod owoy J OfloB 0 fc«oly IwortKho Of Ih* bn* wo fovrt u sadly I ------ family. 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I It SERVICE STAfiON Mechaolc lor I be ovor 18 years Birmingham < ------------- . , , From 9-1 p.m. 0 can use 3 collogo students who Are yOU looking for SUm- NEED~3 TANDEM'dump drivir^^^ M • ?, " *d&m.nt: •?!:?,mer employment with o at . O'MY CrilTAFietth i.s eia* o oa an ... outomotlvo repair, alignment perlence helpful. Salary to II7S wk. Contact Mr. Beardsley, a I multi-million dollar Corp.? CHECKERS DETAILERS SPECIAL MACHINE-AUTOMATION Opportunity • ' ------ Positions art i h scholarship to the col-ir choice, x-oad. mmer earnings of tl44.58 at Interview, call Mr. ........... good d record. Call CO «llf or SI B OWCE BOYS ADVERTISING AGENCY call Bill, 33S-7983. SERVICE STATION Manag mtchanic, over 35 yaars local ralorancas, must b openings (or lull llmo ------------- oltico boys. Fine opporlunltlas tor advanctmenl. A good driving record rogulrod. Coll Ml Personnel. An Equal Opportunity; Full time and part tin schedules avallabis. Apply PERSONNEL DEPT. 2nd FLOOR Moatgomery Warci , PONTIAC MALL f" L® An equal opporlunlly_employar Kanos. Advert,sing Taleswo/iw^ for i Dma spact sal“— ' elusive area weakly ft DO A MANS JOB-GET A MANS ' Atenographer, lubml handwriting .statin, typing-shorthand apfod, sa available, 5 c ce Orion location, w in’^a^l $155 cerweek Call Miss Turcotti 332 3639 GRILL apOK NIGHT ShIfT^ <. Dealer. FE PENSION LADY iHi! ! iookihg I los. Phone 332-5114. RECEPTIONIST for doctor's office, experience preferred, typing required. 33-1-2568. IMMEDIATE OlENING R|CEpYiONIST tor D a m o r y -, » Beauty Salon In Birmingham, ex- irk' ?^r**[*®.* rallabla, free' MlllnS^in «-! Bxrlng- training porli| 5 day Rds., BlMmfleM Hills. SUMM'E^r' Jobs FOR^racenr high | IHIC train, tort rah Ing perlof, 5 < ivartima fvalh sick pavAlla ■|n''*pV;s'S|oT TED'S prolerr (spapVr.l week with ovirllma fvallabie, Traa ' nity lor Bluo Cross, sick povAllo Insuronco RN» OR LPNs tro In- and psnslon, vacalloh, and holiday pay. Apply In porsaf| or call 334- .... ...iSteTlVn- 1355JW. Sllvarball. RN YNSTRltCTOR (or c 11 n 1 c a I ............................ .Rlr'y iq., B-neg., AB-neg. no I >0' 113 MICHIGAN COMMUNITY I .BLOOD CENTER FE 4-9947 ^ RETIREES ELIGIBLE ... ______ ; Ing managamont of 9 unit Bayporl ’ , urea motel and boat livery. No •- food or beverage operation. Rental-linens, do not require laundry. At least $1,600 will be phid lor season S operators. June IS to SOpl. 30. El->. Ilclency unit It provided lor living at site. Every other weekend off. Phone Mr. Baker, 9 to 5 weekdays ' at Flint 743-3471. Caretaker Couple preferred. Experience quired. New 64 unit building In Pontiac area. Apartment utl Se^ return, to ,Ponllac Press CARETAKERf lj liNIT ago du* Jo cxpi xperlence 1 need to be ...................... personable and want to be professional. Hera Is what''““ •-our people: I. Profit Sharing a. Paid HospitaMxatiQi 3. Paid Ufa In------- I. Paid Vacations 5. Free Training 6 .Bonus Plans 7. Guaranteed Salary 8. Monthly Contest Prin 12. Advancement I you ft yc. this . e 5-dey Success ' Is quality? Coll’' Mr. 'Giioraa tor rSn" lldentlal Interview today. 674*1131. ; HA.VE YOU CONSIDERED a" carler In sales work? Above average income with excellent benefits. Will train. Call Mr. Wyalt, 682-8880 bei. 10 and 13 a m. GOLF COURSE Help, Moray'! uoir enc _Cub. 2380 Union Lake Rd. "^DESIGNERS DETAILERS PRESS WELDERS OVERTIME Rite-Way Design Service 3833 Eliz. Lake 681-0220 CAREER OPENING 3 man ntodod for now positions with oM ostabllshod firm. $750 month to ttirl with bonotlte auchl as company car, I n a u r^a n c a retirameni and h----- 0.520, 9: MAINTENANCE exchange type water sollonars, .11 «nri Country rogulor route, steady veer around I work. Apply In person, Pontiac ~ ' Soft Water Service Co. 3 4 Chamberlain. HANDYMAN NEEDED to work In and around aportments 673-5168. LABORERS CITY OF BIRMINGHAM ($2.96-$3.32) ^ order SCHEDULING oxc. personnel policies, 333 0257, bet. 10 o.m. and 4 p.m. ■reliable BABY SITTER lor 2 children, ages 3 and 7 from 0:30 to It of Public V ipllc^rons DEPARTMENT Adm. area with upgrading tial. Must have goM mi fltuda plus some mech. iniei $550 UP stable w(" — - -full frlnm I It Shari ------ .. ... .. V-...., Must have axperlanca. • “•I!.®':I Phone Mr. Sargent, 447-3373. . .hu, .nri weekends. Shsll ; , , W—i- '—L and Long Lakt' ALVIN S Of PatltlOC hOVe i_,l^ Q . ---- — — , »s-j oIRL FOR real esta 16 office. mature mind, onq department tieads. tvpmq required. Pleasant wi and gel along ,,, conditions. 5Vj days! i! MUSI have a 892 W. Huren. /^liller Bros./Realty » t • » » 531', Huron . - Golf GIRLSI, . _ _________ ion Lake For dry cleaning plonl. Will! train. Wardrobe Cleaners, 1038 Paid holidays and Yl|ciallons. APPly 333 9380. DirnirirCEPODC Liberty Cleariers.. iMk lor ■ Mr. SHIRT FINISHER, Prospe BOUKKtfcKtKb Mitchell, mi 4-0223: fl ■ Appiv 53< S Woodwan GENERAL OFFICE/ifork In Doc- Ingham. MU'« I507, I and be able I BAR RESTAURANT V icesaary, $400 par month nignis. FE 5-9381. jarantaed. Call Mr. Robeili. 542- BARMAID. Steady 153. and Country Club, lecetsary, man can be ralirtd or imployad. Ml 6-3391. Calling All Salespeople YORK Is on the look out lor conscientious sell starters with oulgo-Inq psrsonollly. If you meet this description, you ora WANTED Fxpfrlfncfi not nvedi^d, w* will 333 7156 ■ Flush ClOflnpn SILK FINISHER ai YORK REAL ESTATE. Call Salesmen 051 S. Eton, COLLEGE STUDENTS Inlornational corporation now hiring for summer employment. Company will hire several young men immediately lo be developed lor monagarlil positions for tho BASIC REQUIREMENTS I. Attending or accepted at an i credited cgflege. , , . . 3. Able 10 work until Sapt: 1 1969. Oppdrtunity lo SI.000 In Sepiomooi. -------.... - oil expanse paid trip to Europe. Working schedule, position and earnings will be explained In persorfal Interview. Call Mr.i Fredricks^balora 2 p.m._M5-M46. fuSTODIANS' NEEDED, Huron Valley School, Milford, LIbgral salary plus fringe benellfs. 685-1 153L Ext. 55. _ 6rSHWASHERS, ALL shifts, full lime. Apply Bill's, 575 S. Hunter, Birmingham.____ CelIVERY AND iln in. 18 or ovor.| Full or port time. Perry Pharmacy, M9 E. Blvd. Equal Opportunity Employer BiLl'i^RY" WARlHOUSr Birmingham location. LICENSED REAL ESTATE SALESMEN WIFH purchasing EXPERIENCE Coll Mr. Goorgt at Ray Real Estate 674-1131 L~AT-,e OPER«TdC'Afternoon shift, it you are In -iberal fringe benefits. Apply In -and want the, person, Benton Corp. 2 ? ’ “ ---- ------ Industrial Row, Troy. LATHEl MILL and shaper hands progrtsslve dies. Steady 58 I weak. All fridges. 334-4523. MECHANIC WITH OUTBOARD OPPORTUNITY FOR XEROX, SCM, A. B. DICK COPIER SALESMAN S. 682-47 SERVICEMAN Fantastic Opportunity/ MECHANIC EXPERIENCED I n ^eulboard motors. Call FE 5-5660. “ MACHINISTS Lathe Operators Ni>ed6d for fast growinb .mlddlt-•tzed company. Top rotes, olt fringes, steady non-seasonal employment. Apply In person, PYLES INDUSTRIES, 28990 Wl^m Hit. Wixom, Mich. Press, Box C-10. Pontlacy M Outdoor Work ROCHESTER^ FIRM DFSIRBS FULL TIMX men TV-Stereo Tires APPLIANCES hesa -are Wall paying poslllons vith opportunlllas for advancament. txcallsnl company banallls Includ-ng profit sharing. Apply PERSONNEL DEPT. 2ND FLOOR Montgomery Ward PONTIAC MALL charge to work Ponllic onCi B inqham area on convenlonl porary ,------------ KELLY GIRL ,91 1338-0338 s oftlce. 5 hall-d« ^ typist Beautiful Oxford office o t'ua’lf.V ' action ........ is-*--' IwIcK. 674-0363. . DISHWASHERS ipht Compeny benai icatlon, ^ply in person ELIAS BROS BIG BOY RES1TAURA Telegraph 88 H(iron FREt CLASSES anted, E, I jeeking . ... .......... I gressive young men over 21. Some tales background helpful but not nocossory. r GUARAfjTEE PAY CHECr^ Liberal bonus plan, rapid aehloy*-moni, oil company benamt. If Qualified, must own aulo, and be willing lo start Immedlolfly If telotlod. , Chll Mr. Kent 563-8200 PAINT SALESMEN - “ Nalltmal paint company dasirai dealer and' paint »nl,tmon lor Pelroll and Punllac area. Wa oiler lop flight benollts, vacation', car and expanses, etc. An- Equal Op-porlunltv Employer. Call 548-37/7 or' write lor aopoirtiment DeVne Paint Co.; 642 E. 9 Mila Rd., Ferndale, Michigan. REAL ESTATE SALESMEN knowledge el bookkeeping required. Apply Dunhom's, Sportmg Goods, 33096 Northwestorn Hwy., Ferm-Vlre. Schloll sitter-housekeeper, 50 YEARS Call to Wo hive 8 o"icis" 300 Oakland and who can't bt wrong.' J*!*!” Equal ( BABY SITTER. 0| Rd. Evtry Sat. 33S-e|57^ BABYSITTER Tn MV" ...M ...va good ---------- ... Good pay. Call 671-1540 attar 5:30 5368 Evi p"t- .............'housekeeper, BABY SITTER................. “ parlanced, raltV"?*a!m.-4:30. Mall area. Children 13, 11. 8. $30. 682-oiiica work, I 8755 altar 4:30 p.m. 4341, shampoo girl,. Ilcarilad, alto iplatOi receptionist. LeVerne's Heir I Fashions. 301-1330. ---------..,v...4.-3i-3,. 33v«2i."“’' SMILING WOMEN HO'usTklEPINO,“CTO^^^ rnust »' Coll 338-0374 -- ' ovollable. Commensuroto oi high school graduate 642-96501 typing and general of oloyar Write Post Office Box r'Lapoor Aubutn Heights, giving porlunity Employer. . ... MBt- _______ THE AGE OF 31 AND 33. EXCELLENT earnings with . ..... . fringe benefits plus the Equel Op-i OPPORTUNITY FOR AD-1 ...........—"^klT. LANDSCAPE EX- SHOP Trainees Or iom« txperl#nct on «ri!a. Call aftar 6 P.m. 363-4939. BABYSITTER lii my homa for nui rAer. call aftar 5 p.m. 674-1396. Buffeteria Help . DAY WEEK. ___ ..... 335-6461. HAIRDRESSER WANTED. At laast I yr. experience. Apply In person, 42 N. Saglnow, Noltner's Beauty Shop. KEY PUNCH OPERATORS EXPERIENCED ONLY, tkady year round work, day and night fhlMi open, 55 or more glrn needed right now. Paid Blue , paid life insurance and TYPISTS TYPISTS TYPISTS Profitable temporary assignment* available nnw Pnnllar. Blonmtleld. MILLER BRDS. REALTY Man, ages IS and over, now Is fti FULL CHARGE BOOKKEEPER, "i™t •» »'»Ft «" exciting career I 18500 fo $9500 e year, Bloch Bros, tf*' M'»» and manogomen Phono, Mr. Chose, 633-9330. i One of Oakland and. M s c o m coon with' plour» ...i.i.ni I. s'ounly't fastest growing rtol ttlal Figures, Jittltlom In ,irms Is In need of young ttwrgoll F*®Fl® '® ••I"* •no menagi ......—- ...... -Chuorl, ment positions. Step out of you 633-1333. present lob and Into a 5 figure Ir GRANTS MANAGEMENT training come the firti ytar. Wa offer |>roqram iiaedt^^m a n a g a m a n T < '"*•' •>'•!• clattaa an rastaura'nl trainees Also need of- 7 - Hospllolliatlon plan for you an lice clerks. You have a chance lor your, lamlly. rapid rdvancamant here, wllli 3 Free college courses In rei ..------. ------- estate alter licensed. Paid Vacalinn • Hollda Pay pointment making, ' eekly, IS plan. s lo whelhor or not you TAKING APPLICATIONS Women who hi torVlews Felice's TYPIST MAINTENANCE MECHANICS repairing ■ i*c".^/ GIdnoy, 447-1213 for Inforvlow. DESIGNERS Maximum roles. 141 Weyna S downtown Pontiac. delivery man Part lima, 5:30 p.m. to 10 pj Mortav Drugs, 340 Main S Rorteslar, 6|l-8511. _ . . ““ DESIGNERS SPECIAL MACHINE-AUTOMATION Opportunity •" ornlacl oa oyarl Pip/ P I V^lla _ ___pmt opEratTons" helpful' 'but • 't)T NECESSARY. .... -» . pfto'FlTsHAR*INl'‘^''°''’ i i””'look"g-fir'' LIFE INSURANCE KooTShvsieal r'"*'* PAID VACATION In good physical c PAID HOLIDAYS. I...?™ tim« tchddulN available. persdnnel dept. 2ND FLDDR Montgomery Ward PDNTIAC MALL paid vacation. Apply [ Dempsey Key Punch t Service G6434 So. Don Hwy. Grand Blanc: 1-694-7I8I 694-S131i An Equal Opportunlly Employer 643-3055 krTCHEN HELP. UNION Lake area, 363-4131. , kitCHEN PREPARATION. NO #x-perlonco necessary. Apply In person, Machue Red Fox, Z..". Telograph al Maple, Birmingham. KEYPUNCH DPERATDR Salary $3.80 to 63.35, oxcollont r. 377 E. Blvd. S. TYPIST Tatlon Dopl. ! aduale v pssory. High School lo $3.83 hi lexslon. Call OMC Real Elll Jim Klncannon al 681-0786. SALESMEN Experienced prtlarrad hut ---Bnloy many Apply In parse il O^rlunlly Pars , Apply Clly ol I inel Office, 450 wide Inlng desired. M. C. DIVISIDN Kelsey Hayes Co. 118 Indlanwo^ Rd„ Lakt Orlo 693-8311 O^r ..... ...UR. ut 'Oakland Cotin-1 HwT.','clarktton. p*ldtntt, High School!* . irai (or (6.E.D.), ahd hava EmploVIIIBIlt AgBnClBI laast one full vear of drall-' • "»:'l EXPERIENCED I Apply Pontiac Prict Bros. C«. I Rd., Clarkston, 625-5990. Opportunity Employtr. / MACHINE designer/ MUST BE EXPERIENCED. RULL BENE- ; FITS, OVERTIMfi APPLY PER- m,... -...*----- I SONNEL "GRF>XE, SUTTER mtchanlcs. Salary comtYitnsuratt i PRODUCTS ca; 407 HADLEY ST., with oxoerlonco and ability, alt ; HOLLY. MICH. k*"?®*; •*®' *®''p"|*, ■MAN TO W^RK on largo horst 2SR9 Wixom*W., wtxor i farm, mu^ havt own Iransporta- 1-.:'' wixgm no., wiku tion, permr—* •-*- vh-lnltv/rall An Equal Opportunity Employtr WOMAN 21 OR 0> •*' 1, stoady i....... )x Dry CItantrs,' I office. I ™ ,«r«v-=w-'™f«r .0. Kr«"'—■ ” -xiToiiK help JACKSON at.651-8573. $3.14 HR. M train mod KITCHEN HELP WOMAN 21 Tjmo. PART TIME HELP wanted. Ap^y And up lor exper^nc,' | and working conditions. See Grill Cooks and Bus Girls i Ch^’j#Hohl,'' 300 S'! Perry or *33^0586 " ' LPiin Co.?"M'Bo?d'X‘pon'llSr“ wJmi’"HospHaMio®flon*'’'?nd oSwr W. Hu 1307 W. Huron. o ujuu Phono 334-0914. ao5 I* ®'"®'WOMAN FOR Oenerol cipanliig In PRODUCT ENGINEER b^y ' sitter,^^ to 3:30 elias bros, 'lieiuE ' M...r hxw. deoree in }nolM^ b!T.''9iS ' * * T ' F t"-' Pr»V'«" Plains area. OR 3- BIO BOY RESTAURANT "'«■ ^ _ BENE' h»v« wgretjn^^^ Ext. 210. _, 8422 after 4 p.m, Itltgrapn B Huron • WOMAN FOR GENERAL «?•'• SERVICE WORK; Tm”*0??d '?Smmls»lon" ‘^tr^nlno^f^^.v.^'-OwrhanlJ 6*lT,? Dr'Jly1orWo".S(,,7"or'3"t^^^^^ iJi PART time, DAYS-FLEXIBLE MSr[i7 Bewly sSton, honing, 3 days. Own Iranip. 624- r/„x, call bel. 7 p,m. 674 0033. ^ .... r.r r.niiired _6_34:13l4jir evi. 634 1999. MATURE WOMAN Ip live In. Cora y l«p rKlIHran II Aeefi' O I inSOfanCe OFTPCt IH P MIChl-' call 628-1798. MANAGEMENT TRAINEE S60(Kt750 MONTH An 'Equal Oppporlunliy Employer riv earnings ' ataady year round wo/K, ClVDE CORPORATION "”n^feq“sr Opportunlly Employtr™'^, No experience nocessary. If ilf-OA-VATrON rail 'm TaylSr aM-S needs man. lo handle tolophono,| . . . !. dispatch trucks and general office bSScmpIngTolpful, ciarkslo|r area. Send resume to Pontiac Pr«» Ro*; daodoranl Inal "maker.'' •‘'•®"$»’ed Beaufy-’Rlte” "cabinets -■ 7 3 4 0 Sho*"li*-- Highlend (M-59 Plaial, Pontiac, -■ ' PRODUCTION WORKERS steady work. Oi|r well esiebllshe BABY SITTER, over 17 yeers, home, 6:30 to 5:30 p.m. Cel No salts, book tnllous man payo slmdls tools, axp Ih, t4 5-3777. 1015 It and 13. LakSsIdt ■ -”.-'7- noma, werxends olt II desired. 473 6/3-7993. 1602 or 338-0988 deys^ BOOKKEEPER, PAY roll, accounts cp/j g oKleet, 4'/, day week, ..... "'■•'"•t'l* Ber*"t oxporlencod, age end salary ex peeled. Reply to Ponllac Press, Box C-S7, Pontiac, Michigan. LPN's, must have Michigan license. ri Ponllec, houi e telh payable and ractivabi I to trial I C -26, 9 * ix/ERTiNClD' TREE temporary or stoady,------- ----- 335-6572._________.______________ h people and have had MACHINE OPERATORS If y to VL tfllM or pouiifc wwi.9*v. W# will train you. Ex high earnings flt;»t.y" and Snelling, call Bob • 2471.___ iXPBRIBNCED SIDERS, Scott, nelling t, 334- H ughes-Hotcher-Suf f rin Oakland Mall____ PARTS CLERK “ , .om;"ri’r'l.5'c;. 'K?i wjlne’c^jf-yn^ TIfti avollfibit with' U8.#.k**.U/.*^h ....... y In parson - between 9 a.m.-5 p.m. to 2971 In-dustrial Row, Troy, botween 14 _and 15 MHO Rd., off Coolldgo Hwy. ! axpfVloncod praftrr^ but not Pontiac Press Want Ads „._...y buck •vollabl^ 332-5231. Kwo Htbor.“U^gg. , '®'Work Wonders. Dial Direct recent high - 334-4981 opportunity lor odvoncomtni. Ap^ Z.“ 1VX c CMlnaw f Wanted Mole permanent full time positlor ------1---A ■- vrr .. _________, with siphons Mr. Doug Smith, ____„.u- Shipping and Receiving ® a?iaJ®^ ^ Rasponsibla high school .Vbv' ' ftITTPB “ Matiir* ~ Mrson nr*rl7rar Excollont chanca for advaTicamont. ViSh*6 m*i P*^**^**'"' Paid holidays, vacations and frlbqa “JjJ ’ p.m.i In. J32-5492. banafits. Apply In parson at 3187 3J8-6719 aftar_ ? p.m. I P M SO Par Hour «ar AP^^^^ n"o«?,''pSr'lSi^f'n."c*.V,a:r li^arkSis.*-'"- *«•«“......................... •'"" medical ASSISTAXT or nurs. tor « - physicians U a, axpbrl^onced surrounding. 334 VAITRESS, “will TEACH, tlmt, Fl ' ' - “ ......... ~ I, plaasant waaktndA Ponllac, Mich. 338-4751, Ext. avD GROOM WANTED . sas-oow HOTEL DESK CLERK Shouw be able lo work any ahlll Good worklnq conditions and hliig benellls. Please apply In persor Woldion Hnlel, 36 fc. Pike 51 Ponllac, I MEDICAL TECHNOLOGISTS ASCP Re^l > $3ig, call Pat Cary. Assficlates Persiinnol. 4 NURSE AIDES poiltlonsl 'will train, $260. call Kathy King, 113-9157, Associates Personnel. _ BIRMINGHAM Ottlco', Carol 353 .IlMd. CHOATE 6 CHOATE BOOKKEEPER Small ollKe In Ponllac. Need In-suranca background. Take charge, $43J. Call Jill Keyes. :i.s'/ 3000. aiOATE 6 choatb CAREER TRAVEL, $600. Elian ' - - - CmOATE A CHOATE p.m, nil 12 mionigni, ...... ,.... to 12 midnight. Sun. 3 p.ml to 10 p.m. Bar work, 683-1730. (perienced • .Cl PRK TVPISTi,' Pertact (or Tie, part lima nr Get qfiiita axnerlance here. "MsontlH Deparm"Jn'l'*' Id™' io"‘w*ll*oxT'"M«^^^ CRiTTENfoN HdSPITAL i jiir' University Drive 152 1000, CHOATE 6 CHOATE DENTIST;' uFganlly needs IraInatiio ductlon al our goncrale pipe plant for thos# who wont steady work a" PORTERS n Lakt oroa. EM 3-' II lima counter control clerl ^ V 175 S. Saginaw. _ f^TTPERliNCtD COOKS, gop wages. Blue Cross and Blue Shield. Alp^ In person, Kingsley Inn, Ml dXPERriNCiD7A5AtURE7'r#liob^^ full time silosmin for local tMrIIng goods tlorti knowMeo of ikiing, fishing, hunting. Coll 646-1416. ______________ ssi!N,s:^7fE:yr:: '•S,*«i^.SS"%nd”*ha*vr“a W' Cue Club. 1663 S. Telegr 6Help Wanted Male the aulOmolivi mission, hiph commission w Phono: 334-4951 _l< PULL tIm'E CH ?frst*Baplls!°Church, Birmingham. Call MI/655®. .. -- FACTORV WQBk, tor m»" ®.''®': J®' simple orllhmellc, r • ® " L.CIhi.' mechanical •»?•'' •'''• I* Apply 217 central, block oft Saginaw St^ Pontiac., . 8Ti!.^(!ild W Tal.gr.ph and Maple Rd. 636-3Ht*''• or Mrs, Evens al MATURE GIRL tor halt days ol delivering wholesale plumbing and .333TM.3-... .. typing and general oKIc# work In heating supplies. This is a CHURCH SECRETARY. Part timo In our olllce. Moll' Inlormallon lo permanent position. Mull hove summer, full lime rest ol year. Poll Olllce Box 65,'Ponllac. good references and driving Mual be proficient In typing and .. , ttxy-s record. Hodges Supply Co., 500 mlrtieographlng. Reply lo Box C-17, M Auburn Avo , Ponllac. Pontiac Press, lVljri.il,yO TRUCK DRIVER to pick up waslo CLERK TYPIST FuII llmt, days, Crillonton Hospital oil, Rellabif. 335-36T9, Rochtsitr. See Mrs, Theakslon, TIRE mounter - Experlancsd In CITY OF TROY Housekosping Deparlmenl. 'oo'intlng and balancing, car. and S4IOO-$Se30 MATURE WOMAN lor housework, :k tiros, oxc. hours, benellls Inlorotling dlvorsllltd work wllh lor 3 aiiuljs, 13:30 lo 4:30 p.m. 5 - - ------------ • ‘---------■ deyf weekly, own Ironspoitatlon, Sylvan-Keego area. 682-6853. MEDICAL SECRETARY Rochaslar In* OAKLAND COUNTY ASC co •* zT^vrf^xjr meet public, knowledge ol e In, no praltrred. Phone 673-3635 o ■* olllce, 4515 Highland Rd., I avenlndS oVfiCE MANAGER FOI 'ihr. In/ office supply ar al pnsl-i anihutlasllc. able lo S.303. Call furmlno Snvlllng a nd oQod t SI 8813. SS! '' .ffs!;:; KEEPER, I Sharing lalurdayS. WAITRESSES .... " fuAS BROS: BIG BOY RESTAURANT Telegraph t Huron . Dixie and Silver Lake Rd. 4 WAITRESSES llac. Cana some ""dafiin.' Olilcii necessary. Call Mr. SI I* PA_RT time. KITCHEN FoiI'IOENERAL OFFICE: Varlaly and Dirlll seciirlly lor the Gal who hoedi In. I ---- .. .. „.n, WAITRESSES I pay. Apply at 45 Oakland good opportunity for advancamtnt. I., Pontiac- -Exceilant working conditions and “ warehouseman gsr,' g?;d*sr'w,{«“‘Jood^.ySlSS wrliinltv Id loom wholtialo. ability. Apply lo Parionnal bepi. Opening In Redlolegy - Full Hme, pump and wall! mo W. Big Baavtr Rd., Troy, 689- experienced preferred. Excellent blXr, This Is a 4900. I salary ahd banatits. Apply ®J'*A arlenca Blue an Anders, 534-laMIng. ■fhiir. " "p-,1 'a'.T GOOD TYPIST, 8350, Llli ' HSJida'^s, 6M-'1730.*" ' ' *"* '^««' CHOATE & CHOATB RESIDENT MANAGER, Couple, lull MEDICAL RECEPTIONIST H"» Will tram, pleasant parson lo nlT!,® I? Ponllac el 957 N. answer phone, make appolnlmanls. (?r^'l;rr"irXM,%*Ili'(o?'ohh^ "'T* husband handy with tools tor RECEPTIONISTS minor repairs. Free 2 ijodroom iin lownhouse with allached olllce plus 5425 UP good waves: No ' dependent chll- EiiIov an exclllno career wetklno eo ^ssaM *®”*' **’" PvbllL Some typing, re- liilelllgenl, BR 3 3026, quired. Norih suburUen area, Fee SHIRT WASHER, air- conditioned Paid, pleol, good salary, benellls and INTERNATIONA! PERSONNEL Insurance program. Birmingham ISIO S. Woodward, R'ham. 642-8368 Cleaners, 12.53 S. Woodward, RECEPTIONIST, $336, Sally Birmingham, Ml 4-4620, 3.52 3000. CHOATE .A CHOAT< Including typing, soma adding! machine work. For appointment H'tip Wanted I mrtSoJ iiktiEiccAiMiri. c&rtinion lAborArt. RBPolfi? ready for work 6 a.m. Ip 6 p.m. EMPLDYEItS Temporory Service, Inc. assssF Ivlachine Operators . And Trainees For LATHES ' MILLS GRINDERS . . Lynd Gear Inc. . Subsidiary of «^ Conciec Corporation Phone 6514377 361 SdUTH STREET (ROCHESTER, MICHIGAN (uol eppertui|tty employe), Srinananl potman with • B™*!"# icosM^^^ Full, ’’xISTTrEVnai u/scditai prograMlva c^jmny - n,gh„. >^gg|y m p,„„n. sav- CRITTENTDN HDSPITAL ■"^)*a?lir%';k.‘'’Di*y W.nf-lSl Ul. R«*. 133-9I57. ...........®"’'i Counter Personnel i 'ciirFE s-iiw carTalasm^ Tn'i Sin'lVanWaS'^ppry*''?.".!; &.?a' Soma axperienca nacassary. 0«xl. BCeni Cleaners, S046 Highland Rd., LergmSund mmr dl! ' or coll *73.m3. . lTeM"t:m“mLIA’'N*‘"v»iLSON"*j: ^ ' CLERK FOR MOTBL, Pull tlryxi. $0N, Ml ,4,8978 c8ll from 9 a.m. WANTCD; CXPCRieNCED^acMy. A48 IIM8. fo noon, If MATURE WOMAN to watch 4 ichool n aga chlldram full tima. 852 770) belwean 12 and I , day Wed. and Sun MATURE SITTER COSMETIC, DRUG and card |T F'''>!*r daparlment, experienced preferred, H*"'"®'"®,., H''**; ifoh' Call Tl 4-4406 * “ny. 46 hour week with IrIng* to 3 P m. 334-1940. ...fe. 1 eiBii I *0. in ariii benetlta and good working con- NCR BOOKKEEPI dlllomT Mills Pharmacy, BIrm- onerdtor. must _. .. ....................., 4 lo 6 walla wllh cable loIJs and ingham. Ml 4 3066. , Accounllng Dept, lor Huron Valley mquch MACHINE opera.„............ ™,"d SOCTORS 1' GIRL OFFICE near frfiiml, MIHard, liberal salary plus ^mYdlate openings. Apply between ? 10 Oanaral Hospital, must have In- hinge benefits. 665-1531, Ext. 55. , p * Imperlel Molded Mor'i sursnet and olllce experience, NURSES AIDES, will train, GMn Products, 3331 Oakley Pk. Rd., rhfoJjih’F'ri,,'7'fi sVm; "] «od jal.ry^ no avenlngi, age. IB-....... ............. .................. ..................... wanted FOR warahooia . eprk, I-A 12.96 par hour lo ifart, must hava'c/ I High School Education, call FE 3- ......... - ........ - nl^l. ^Bow^"l00*s’ CMi'lBk* ffd.' iWANTJED. HOUSEKEEPER TO Sales Help Male-Female 8-A Sales Help Male-Female 14 ■ ■ ' twain 40 and 55, 5 Apart--- ------ lulrad cooking ri V.C-..X. cleaning woman for spi Call 3.I5RI4I. building, 3 days per weel wanted, a retired MAN, llviriq irarisnortallon, 334-410/. on »"''alsacurily check who would COMPANION far elderly I Ilka lo aarr> ex ra moMy dplr^g pa ..pey, and 1:66 of 334-8201 all 682 3646. WAITRESS Bxparlancad dining room wallri for the baaulllul Royal Scot Or Excalltnl working hours, no $( TED'S Pontiac Mall WAITRESS WANTED Bloomfield, 2 to 3 doyi • w Part Loki Ipply If I pef^fin •nl, 975 Orchfird :."c^Nla*n"A(!*^irfn!.«l"^^ “"''I s«S7*i5Sno I An f WICKES LUMBEA and Building Supplies h»8 an opening for an oufsida, lumbar lalaiman. Salary, eommltllw, c*r. Excellent frinoa banam Program, axparlenca In s»'“i,"4..T2r:'*^.N*''S53!’i!."i''t* must hava'cASHIBR FOR " ’ In Bloomfield cant grocery full fima, no hsm^rtillon, CLEANING" L A D I E 17 ALSO t. 1255 w. Sllverbell. t Wantid Famola ly Rd. 7 Help Wontsd Famale 7 ENROLL NOW CAREER OPPORTUNITY IN REAL ESTATE . BATEMAN REALTY CD. ANNDUNCES THE ENROLLMENT OF ITS 1969 . , . "TRAINING COURSE FOR THE BEGINNING REAL ESTATE SAIESMAN." r hour. Ml ;. 'In Ponllac, Call altar 6 p.n . . ' FlfllSHEit: al d plant, goad salary •uranca program, Claanars. 1253 5. W< 'OUNb MAH FvOR . rrtall'tira.plgra, ---... fringa banatlff,... opportunity . advancamani, will train, apply ... .................... I parson, 4^M Highland Rd, Ponllac. /g^D COSMETIC Clark, ov ilKlw Waialad famale 7 17.efull or pan llmal. Russ' Count neip tvainaa rwmiiia » orupi, 4500 Elliabath lake Rd. 4 GIRLS TO work waakendi, pan time as maids. 789 S. Waadwarri. ACCOUNTING CL'ERK . ...... Bxparlancad, to typa Invoices •"« Bxatl-LBNT OPPORTUNITY In handle accounts racaivabla racords* offica, - no lagai axparianca Trana-Tuba Inc. 3340 8coM Laka '^^J,,;"ryrmusUiva fast Rd.p RoMidC. _ I • ■'attention HOUliWIVlSI Hara i» • lob ybu can btrtdlt i not nMtflCt vdur famttvl Itll T •"IanORA PARTIES' . , , Direct 3344981 pat-1377 • " ar " 483-17741 ' I It 11 . ' ' Oltica, : UinalP worf.'' F e'3.6332,' ’^'"''jWont Something^Done Fast? - Dial RNS LPNS NURSES AIDES ' -Naecied SEMINOLE HILLS NURSING HOME - 532 ORCHARD.LK. ' . APPLY IN PERSDN MONDAY - FRIDAY 8:30 to $ 7' I’undarrjental Salesmanship Preparation for Board Exams / Real ^tate Law Appraising THE COURSE WILi RUN FOR A PERIOD OF 4 WEEKS CLASSES WILL BE HELD AT BATEMAN REALTY CO., 377 Sv TELEGRAPH, MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY OF EACH WEEK FROM 7 fo 9 P.M. APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE ^AT THE FOLLOWING OFFICESi .. . CLARKSTON .6573 DIXIE HY. ORION/OXFORD 120 S. LAPEER RD. 730 S. ROCHESTER ROCHESTER i PONTIAC 377 > TELEGRAPH UNIO^ 8175 COMMERCE RD. lOit LA^E P—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. JUNE 5. 1969 For Wont Ads Dial 334-498^ Wonttd Rcal’Eitofo SECRETARY *y. E*c. h( FEfe“ifrS’ ----- - ilcSiTARY: T(ww*?cri'po»lllc local txKUlIvt. Shorthand ana — typing hart. Ago opon. No , wtekamls. S40B. Call Jo WIIcoig! 334-2471, Snalling and Snalling. Secretary; pifsonabia ' cal i naeded for spot tnuch demand with leading,top notch company. Start ndwl i3«8. Call Lynn AndaritCl34- _24n,JnalllnB and Swlllng^ _ Mrottion^chooli 10 ELECTRONIC AID 1 DAY CASH FOR YOUR HOUSE OR LOT NO COST TO SELL FAST FRIENDLY SERVICE Aaron Mtg. & Invest. Co. ___, ;_33MI4|. Aportmants, Furnished 37 3 ROOMS, NEW carpaling, privata, quiet, for 1 man. North end. 332-4376 after 5 p.m. ■•lit Houses, Furnished 39 it Juno 15, $140 monih. 624- 673^ii6. ftectrootc » Chii(t loam ro maa. s.ornTien Instructor*. T • I a v I s 1 o n and haadphones. Sassloni bagin Juna 33. can Now! __ PH0NC£ a«j6613 Registrations Now Being taken for 6 week eummar day and evening classes. BEGINNING JULY 7TH GREGG SHORTHAND STENOGRAPH (MACHINE SH.) TYPING, ACCOUNTING ' BUSINESS LAW, MATH Income Tax MICHIGAN SCHOOL OF BUSINE5 U E. Huron St. TM.saoa l icensed by MIc 3 ' LARGE ROOMS and bath, no | Bant elantaa Unlurnichaii iO Children, priv. antrahca, S33.30 p,, UUrumiSneU UU weak, 350 0ap„ call attar 2 p.m. I 332-3927. _ _ It BEDROOM, 3 large room's/'Privala' "" Man qr couple pralerred. 673-1 APPRAISALS FREE ' GUARANTEED SALE , ,30 DAY LISTING !%"tl?«rrA5uira TCi I Wa guarantaa the tala ol ypur" week. 682-6449. L™/....- ___ I home In 30 days. S onriiSt boiuATc .nir..,. hiiL DOWN-3109, monthly. Includes T A T TT’NT/^'T’n i 1 rhiMrin miTf w*'*''- maintinanca. Town- LAUINOER ! aL“'6«T-0?68.“'’’ ho_u._.., 1337 Ch.rryl.wn, 335-6171. 6y-(t3J9_____ ^*" A BETTER CASH DEAL All cash lor homes, Pontiac an> Drayton Plains area. Cash In 4 houra. Call home purchatini d DIxia. FHA approved^ Owner, FE 5-9145. ; A SALE IS ONLY _ /, AS GOOD AS YOUR .FINANCING. •"“asHT RE4UY 5'i" i. Td«L Ulllllles turn: Adulla only. 327 perl end Iasi months rent plus dep. 628- . Y"-.. 7T T 7" 1------------ I . , AT ROCHESTER 329,500 - Ranch. 3 bedrooms, bese-menl, tlreplace, 2 Car garage. “*•* ^’|*“** J*®"***- attractive BRICX; RANCH Ini BY OWNER, MIDDLE SIralla Lakaj BY OWNER L *•—rington Hill*, near accast to! privileges, 3 bedroorm, 3 t^ths, ^rnam home Off Unlvertlty 1 M-». 3 bedrooms, hardwood > dbn or 4th bedrwm, attachad 2 eafi ^s.7524 ' ** kaiomant. ojii hoot.' garaga, i acre, 363-9607. . ----- . ----------iCorner loi wrm This sharp, tr BY OWNER 'finished full basemant, all bolif-ln! room. Sun deck a car attached ga Lake . privilege! ■■ -s. through S ^ _______ ully fenced back, ” f OS WAY ma recreation yard. That'S'hot' all, tor $24,900, VA' “argi p"*o :o? 123,900 CONVENTIONAL. P-62. -1 ".,riT..,i.. r.ii D..I Rest Fstnta 674- Wolverlna Cah Rj It the street parking, no pets or RAY RDS OF DRAPERIE lew gold wall to garaga, carpeted living room, carpeting go [with this beautiful bricli stove, refrlg., washer and drver/*”*^^ ^ Wdterford. Lots of other furnishad. $200 p_er mo. with sec.'K r?» .IM* JjMi- Agent. kUTI. 2 bedr lament and YORK REAL ESTATE ----j, $35 p.......... :iulre at 273 Baldwii Couple and child. 62 CU ROOMS AND BATH, professlor '• req > 623-0947. >DERN 6 rooms, s ication, suitable for irIon-Oxford and N. I istrict. also profess 91-2868. __ "new 3 bedroom br'ick rireplace, lake ...—^M iviiwynu. cvvn iiiiS Is not all! R-36 TODAY!_________ * >RALL ST., 2 " around homes, excallanti floor. Si High School 10 LOS ATOie^ 6240165. _ BACKUS^ OFF BALDWIN 2:famiiv alum, sided dwelling wil A. .. „----A ^_.a 2 fenced lot COSWAY REALTOR 681-0760 Rochester. Brick oms, 2Va baths, lamlly room liraplact. Central air con-1 Ing, 2''s car garage. Many NORTHEND , full I: w alum, siding andj . $18,5( , EHA» I buslrres > Univer 5-ROOM, 3 ROOM I Paddc h. State FE 0-7176 OR 4<0363^ upper d 2-room upper. Pike. Deposit. nice clo! Bity. 627-282 Rent Loke Coftoges 353-0770 $400 d a. 335-9676. no chlldrer Work Wanted Mule 11 BEHIND IN PAYMENTS? Avoid additional legal costs. Ci ‘"-y. Agent, 674 4104. t- CASHI *■ FOR YOUR PROPERTY 1 $35 p« . .... . —- - ------ --W Ready to move, retire, or lose your 2754, !*. 585-7212 or 3W-8692. propt^. Call Ol for fast cash^NiCE CLEAN 2 room. Apply 154 A1 RUG. Carpat cleaning and house' h Perry. 'ujnljoUng and office cleaning. FE, WA/1. MILLER, REALTY loiDER SINGLE 'WOMAN only'. BACHELOR'S EFFICIENCY, north of Pontiac on *-■ -utimies 625-3803. NEWLY REMODELED 3. I ...au B,. --pg, Robinv 16'x26' -..W..W ,.vi 12'x24' .. backyar., a to schools. Macedi tr garaga. ----s, gas heal dows, marble .................— n iA'if7A' possession. Lot 83i210', Water A-1 CARPENTER WORK ^ ^ AT AFFAIR PRICEl cabinnis, 'garages, siding, roofl.... cement, etc. Large or small lobs. DEW CONSTRUCTION CO. FE 8-2198 or FE 8-3529. Open eve. Mil 9. IlECTRIANS ■ WANT ■ PART time work. 6S1-3570 or 752-2021. 6eNERAI. CLEAN-UP, light hauling and yard work. FE 2-0771. HOUSE PAINTING IN OR OUT Soinmim Plt.tman 335 0876 LIGHT HAULING work. 687-7069. LIGHT HAULING AND COUPLE WITH 15,000 down desfre 3 bed rot . Agent OR 4 In Wateri, ----338-6943. ..g home with 2 poin, living room, din- and kitchen on first — _ i " ‘in M ' : BACKUS REALTY | baseKenf his laundry' 0'*'“ Rochester -332-1323 338-1695] gat hot air furnace, 3 OWNER new 3 bedroomi , priced ct 317,000 with UL^--V5!X®"!!X__ ■ ranch, lull baiament and attached) on PHA mortgage, we ATTRACTIVE 5 bedroom home, 2 cor garage. Ceramic bath, oak ecuring m o r| I g a g e , desirable Golf Manor area. No floors, gas neat, TharmopanO wln-lonlhly paymat^tl would' be about agents. 363-5227. - ------— i'"nn. "riri 8^—OWNER. "3 r«i7.w, '^Tut vrauid nearly cover. r«rn*iMi mntt n Nice beautiful lake FRONT. Good monthly Installment, an ex- u,i»h hr-oLur/ ... ................... *'d"UcgS2r. like'.'Vs'mo.'lnc: CLEAN CABIN ON trout stream. ---334-8204 quiet area near Harrison responsible family. FE 4-1988 < No'chiTdYen o7 p-el’rOepoV.T FE 2 7098 ■ 338- COTTAGE ON LAKE, sleeps swimming, boating^ MY 3j5056. ( N. LAKE"FRONT, 2 bedrooms, modert ! furnishings, safe beach ‘‘and boat Can be rented weekly or foi I season. 9443 Mandon, off Roun< I Lk. Rd. 363 2712. WALL"ED lake' Lake front, taason I Lake fr homes, j contract. s,y,u, y M.FM;fpoms, Tull finished, jJJjJfy yoJr n?«d“rCaM7o^ basement, 2 fireplaces, tW baths.' 'JL--------------^ ----------- eltached r cat gardge, pool. 7 *ake,*‘355!li8p. Cali"agent ait. *4, 682- _____________________REALTOR CRAWFORD STREET, living room, dining room, 2 bedrooms,., stool In basarnant.- -atot-irirTlnd sli**"*' clean. Low cash price or will consider land contract. Anderson & Associates M4 Joslyn FE 4-3536 Evenings FE 2-4353 or 682-8039 j Clarkiton School Area ! Locat.”"' 0^ Clarkston-i COLONIAL - W IPI “Rt'e^nte-r'MW M:.„.?fn^ifv^= Rd,^*tlA 'd-aa^aV Waller'i Lake privileges, tractive trt-lavel. ‘ largt bi ....ng llvlnq-dlnlnq-kltche., 2 car garage, warm, finishwl! Cash for Your Equity HACKETT 363-6703 A entrance. i facilities. 31 Saginaw. _________________ .RESPONSIBLE’cOuA j.'Clean and! family only. 342-0267. .. neat, 3 targe rooms> Central Pon- BEAUTIFUL STUDIO room, liac location. $34 per ^k. .Includes lady — .. " BRIAN REALTY s. No child! BEDROOM A P ....., '111 9 Sunday 10.4 5785 Dixie Hwy. 673-0/57 DEI INOIIENT PAYMENTS broiiqllil nveslor call my aqenf 681 0766 Divorce-Foreclosure? k ol any kind. 332-7260. MR CHIMNEY MAN^ HrejUares p"rthes''and''planters. 6M-275I Flowing, lawn work, iighi i Ing, tree trimming. 334-8417. WORK WANTED, general labor, shill only. 623-1275. nre-io.y. Work Wanted Female ”hJf,^eVihl'^Iar'kiion''“, j $30,000. Call Earl Howard . , Realty, 674-2222 or 363-0531. / jp *• ™.e-. ______..t. Reply Pontiac Press Box C-25. , , COLORED GIRL wants |ob b a b-0(. Ponllac sittjnq, nights, FE 5-7013. ^ estate SlRL^WANTS light housework pd.I by the mo. 5 days e wk. 627-3384, rECRETARYa WITH l a g a I 7 BEDROOMS. Rochester. $l| 3^ ROOMS, ^(jOU ref, ,3082 •' IRONING, one r Mail. Cash. y quatiflcation o 3 BEDROOM APARTMENT 338-6952' Woodhull Lake. OR 4-0244. 4 ROOMS AND BATH. Pri bedroom FrIgidaIre and air a up to «f^f‘onlng furnished. 852-1320. if D'Neil 4 ROOMS, WITH refrigerator CASH FOR YOUR HOME I , ■ „ ‘ V, ... Cl EAN PROMPT, COURTEOUS SERVICE AportmentS, Unturnmied 38 ienlleman.'315-6893'. CLEAN SLEEPING ROOM (or T. Ponllac, 852-4959. CLEAN, QUIET, allractive Id il.50:\MV; Men. 673-1091. - ^ ■ CLEAN ROOMS, FOR men, 3 $13,990 d THE BIG RANCHER - 3 bedrm., family size kitchen, fully insulat^, large utility room. On your lot, ,"1 YOUNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER BILT Russell Young, Bldg. - 33«83(I^3WJV. Huron St.___ 34(>0 DOWN AND $109 MONTHLY Moves you In — town house, icludes heat, water, maintananco. FE’ 47073 att^ ChBrrylawn,_335-6t7l. lyent. ■'AVO'n'—'"New'3 ■ RAY I,'all fully ... . .... ..arc-' ------ cuoancy. A Home. Lots wi aion. your selection to build iq "llvq arqq." — Open 67W488___________SYLVAN lots ------ ------ -------------- largo acre compiqltly sprinklerad tot across tha road from Loon i i' "" 'Iving room ■ il dtnl— - refined formal dmlng room with crystal chandelier, gr*-' ------‘'— ceramic baths,, lached 2Vi necessary I baautiful h principle only $31,700. Phone 673-2054. _ ______ BAY WINDOW In the living room ol this aluminum ranch In Drayton makes it unique. But,-that's not ell that's nicel There's i' llnished rec room In the basement, and a separate utility-workshop room. Also, three bedrooms, 2'/s car garage. Price Is righll P-92. CALL RAY TODAY 1 674-4101 ' 674-1698 ' COMMERCIAL Here Is an excellent corner tot with 145 ft. (rontago on Walton Blvd. Pertaet spot for a doctor or a lawyar'i ottice. Included art 2 houses for only 135,000. Land eon-trscl terms. Call BRICKS DON'T NEED PAINT Blodmileld Orchards. 5 year old ranch, 3 bedrooms, full basement, hardwood floors, family room with i natural tlreplace, bullt-lns. min- YORK I?30 N^MIltordLRd. MU S-IS67. ' " CHOICE LOCATION bedroom, full_, blnjm^. fg>m, „ , .v. ms. TOM REAGAN REAL ESTATE " 2251 N. Qpdyke -_______33t4)1M 3 DRAYTON PLAINS - IVj Acres, this 3 bedroom brick I FHA, $140 MONTH, VA New 3 bedroom brick rancher, lakeside homes, exc. fishing and bathing, Clarkston area. Lako , TV c 42 EMPLOYED YOUNG LADY, kitchen prlv.Vef., W. side, FE 2-4782 sleeping rooms."Close to Robot Hall's hare. After 2 p.m. 335-5173. VERY NICE sleeping rooms I private home, $12.50 per week. FI 3 7619. capable of offering buyers many different which to choose at any An "O'Neil Sold Mine . 2125. ' calling OR 4-2222. Building Servicet-Suppliei ' BI OWN IN INSULATfbN, I ; $109 MONTHLY _________ ' TownhousfB, 1337 Cbern 6171. Agent. American Heritage Apartments building. Completely carpelei rnnriiiioning, lot^ of closet t.. utilities INCLUDED NICE, QUIET, cool r 43 .. ..... Aluminum Bldg. Items fiiiuuic-avou working man. 682-8152. . ••• NICE GENTLEMAN, IN A nice ALUMINUM SIDING, S T 0 R M S | CARPENTRY home. 674-3643. ^ I screens, outters, shutters, w ROOM AND BOA'rD, O I x o n ' 5 ... ... ----- ------------- I': “^ogoiT- .. ......SipiNG......... I _ . Carpeting rent, ■' c u s t d m ” I NEED . T APPLIANCES BY HOTPOINT , HOME^MPROVEM . , S^'and BLOOMFIELD^ MANOR WEST HUDSON'S PONTIAC MALL ‘make one stop save YOU TIME AND MONEY AT BENSON LUMBER CO. blnal. 814.95 ALUM. VINYL AND ASBESTOS AWNING-PATIOS JNstallation, SCREENED-IN OR -iL.kSB ENCLOSED EAVES TROUGHING lunt ol wood comhlnallr 81 5766, ra forced lo,/ft>ove qu will buy ymir7S«ouaa, 24 hours, Ca|j; my ac iar, 1x12 Place i'' rough plywood CD pad I WILL BUt’ YOUR HOUf; ANYWHERE, ANY CWIDITON, NO POINTS. NO COMMISSION CASH NOW; MOVE LATE MM Cash Investment; ipany 333-7824 * ■’> INVESTOR buying! ME *-0«7. ________ . c'rafted'^ Rent Fnrm Property 44 APPLIANCES B Y HOTPOINT ......................... pasture for RENT. EM 3-2881. 6 p.m. Rent Office Space 47, to'9 2301'DIXIE NEAR courlhouaa, 1 r,saii‘&. 3- - -loo^iq. call NOW ............DAY iinri»r cnn^tructlon FE 4-4588 i NIGHT--6ll'2S00- TERA/.w aa T R.!,;*, .1. dealer-ask for bob or red ......... .. .VAILABLE now in one op iki€TAt •'“‘cimwr “$d,rndiP.ig. I r’'"t -^82-3882 Rochester's finest and newest ol- ’'''f^.l'^STALL Jt?.' USED % yard Im'mEDIATE OCCUPANCY | Orchard Lake & Middlehelt Road 2300 Woodrow Wllsoi ..... HOUGH LOADER _ _ _ BURTON EQUIPMENT CO. i «'-p«*8-.^w-u85: ”;,L776^ Rd^ lawniHOwer Service ^ ^ L _ i backhoe w“Tm!88I8**^^^^ LawNMOWER SHARPENING AND | Jrivew'ay Carpet Cleaning " ........... Wa Bring Faclory to You. FAST SERVICE - QUALITY WORK CARPETS TERMS cJeanad. Far i.*'-'°37 ;HOME REPAIR, paneling,"roof andj work. 634-8888. Fencing rates, 335-4706.1 A-l CHAIN LINK Fence Ir AND UPHOLSTERY j ' ) 338-, ________ . ______ GRAVEL, uir grass killer, and waad killers. Call I reasonable, 338-1201 er 674-2639. for tree estimaia. 625-4OT9, 674-3945,1 dozing, BLACK DIRT, field sand 674 4449, ans. rec. C 8. H ipraylng. | ,nd all gravel products. 682-7197. SOUTHERLAND'S LAWN^cWtiNG fop SOIL, BEACH and fill land, ail ..... .. X...jrf6, proaucis, r e a a a n a b I a. I Prompl^llvery. OR_W497.______ TOP SOIL, the” very bqit,~6 yards, -‘Tllvarad. alio sand aiM jy gravel, fast delivery. *7i- 0549 or 338-0514. _______ VIBRATED PROCESS,' black dTri ' and peat. Auburn at Opdykt, loading dally, 7-7 p.m. 3*1-23gi, 391-2618, Septic Tonk Installation BEAUTIFUL ^3 and panned rec.room. Rich « wall carncllng. Relrlgaratar Ilea commercial spaces. Fine quality _raiea. Tree aslimales. 334-M6I. ] jyis. UN I VERSif Y STUDENT,"'' carpat, CHA I N~l1 N K”"F ENCI NG” ....... ■ ■ Quality work. '^leaning. Inexpensive, 335-6893. , I .95 81.20 , 819,95 ' labre saw, each ........... 312.95, Flag poles, 2f' . $50.00 j M. A. BENSON COMPANY I Lumber end Dullderi Suppllei . 549 N. Seglnew^ ! ^NEi 334-2521 ; OPEN I lo 5 ■ ■ Saturdays la 12 ! Butinais Sarvici 15 FINAL TOUCH dacorallng, palnllng; ol .all lypss. 682-6042. space on second floor of local if' ........... ........ bank.- Contact Mr. Hosley, 335-8157. i posseinon. $200 mo. Rtply I NEAR NORTH OAKLAND County, O.... <- « ; saglnaw-Grand Blanc I-/51 ^ Ponllac Press, Box C-5. Great Oaks Apartments SAVOIE INSULATION ee Esilmales 625.2601 Antenna Service BIRCHETT ANTENNA SERVICE 'chain link and wood fthca. FENCING for -------- M,.| ; Building ent tiled'1025 OakTend lerv- ------ Moving, Storage TALBOTT LUMBER / xervice, wood or alumlnuf ..................... end Herdwa A 338-3784 expert - FENCE ^ InM.ll^on '.Or WHY WAIT Al l summer ■ lop qiiallly lendstaping. A-1 Merton Blue sod. Pfolaaslonql grading (or drainage and beauty. Prompt tree esiimelas. 8 5 2 - 3 5 7i. Engel, I andscaplng. Moving and Trucking 22 LIGHT HAUIING, ANYTHING n( enykind. 363-1072, Corky Orlwlne, Painting and Decorating 23 experienced painter wanis RM' PAYS GASH FOR HOMES ALL CASH IN 48 HOURS WE ACCEPT 30 DAY LISTINGS GUARANTEED SALE 674-4101 . C10009 South I if Genesee Coun-1 ^ Vuclie Knigh* »r 23S-2547. . 138-.1274, Asphalt i aving r specialty. 628-1673 0 '3-1916. ton . I perience, free 625 CedarlB ) house. Located and ^reat Oi o.vsa., v„» half mile east . LIvifrnols. 651-2460. NOW ■LEASING BRAND NEW-WATERFORD Crescent ■ Manor Apts. 1744 Crescent Lk. Rd. ____.*73-'’'*. A-i Cusiqm Cement ConTraclors , Patios plain and colored — , driveways — basements. Anything Ron. In cement. 623-0207. AAA CEMENf WORK i Patios, basomaids, drives, walks UM-HUI I mMiiiinii 1 *»oUno$,Blc._334-5666 or 625-2122. FIREPLACES, .. I ASfHALI UlbCUUNI ALL BRICK REPAIRS, chimney,'__woshlng, 693-L855;__________ _ .35 _ - Spring Special . porches, violations corrected tuck- 0nion“';:a‘ke"roL. Lerge ottic.,!"^Floor Sonding with plenty at parking. Formerly'' AAA ASPHALT PAVING _°f. CEMENT Work.) 1^1!' Sealing. Fe>5^328, ( ^specialists. FE_4^ Howard Acker, SN YDER BROS. MOVING CO. , Pontiac, 682-5482. | Local and long distance moving.' ■COMPLETE SEPTIC WORK, ttwor ’ lines. 6M-3042. _____ Skin Diving G RIKIRT, INC. HAVE Aquo-lung will travel, salvage recovery, wa divi l' anywhere, anyplece, anyllmo, free Modern storage. Plano Sod '-GOOD SOD DELIVERED, SOc a tog new "offices, *'■ carpeted, heal, lanllDr furnlsh«_. ________ Road. Call John Slier, 674-3136. A. JAY ASPHALT ! ■ oanalad a nd DRIVEWAY SPECIALISTS, FREE i”r c™dllton?d, ^ESTIMATES, F^ 5-4980. _ I ASPHALT DISCOUNT L irnished. 2520 Airport consullanl. Call lor; - ' FM ------- REALTY. Rent Businass Property 47-A i I pallo, basement, driveways, 623-;fL00R SANDING and laying, 0287. i ALL 'TY 5515. INSTALLATION AND REPAIRS -I ___________ ____ portabla dqg kennels and runs,! A„nl of Allas Van Lines yard. Lay It yourself. 332-4210. ■'■rry rees., rales. 681-1847, ask tor , ----------------- ........ Outboard Tunu-Up Service ' Spraying Service Fireplaces t Tired ol paying high prlcea tor ANY SIZE, ANY type, planting, ^ J gutboird s«rvice?‘See George for: removei end fn/tiilrtna. 363.7995. reasonable estimate, fast service. 3005/ _ Piano Tuning PIANO TUNING-REPAIRING CHIMNEYS, brich. WE SPRAY MOSQUITOES. 363-7295. FE 2-5217 'em" Tiioa." FRANK'S AADCO ASPHALT [all'types at cdment werk. 625-|Fi-0pR sANpfNG AND FINISHING! Painting ond Decoroting I Pavingco.. Ilcansad and insured. I «’*• - l,„h^TayTor ''------------ -ree estimation 332r463l! BASEMENTS AND BRICK Rent BLOCK 2 bedroom units fi ly controlled heat ana ait I li X y r 1 0 us carpeting I, privata balconies, plentyi rncivtLc ipace, ground’floor laundry i franca In every building, beautHulj 8-0421. 'looking includes 30'x50' BUILDING,*for store, office. , perking W. Huron. FE 3-7968. DIXIE and" Holly Road, 30x70 com- M2-6975' A. G. Kosiba Asphalt j _ du*lrS''repa|r."6S? I --------' New drivewiyt, perking lata, BLOCK AND CEMENT werlc'Pan- CUSTOM FLOOR COVERING estimates. Swaaping Sarvicu ..Ilac. 39M173. ______ Icenae, bonded, and CaeicotlCRETE FOOTINGS, wallt ’',OR''3'.63io'’ OR 3-3776! "jr'^tc.'iPa:* air. "j^ive, Sr.r„A»onan*c"a‘:, and 625 5891 tha C Union I (ac.lllllaa; Rant Busineti Property 47-A CUSTOM CRAFTED APPLIANCES By "HOTPOINT" SEE MANAfaER APT. Nn. 107 12-5 P.M. Only, dally by appl. or CALL 673-5050 NOW TAKING APPLICTIONS lor Enlira aecond floor, parllllonod ptllce apace with lavalorlea. aervlcid by paaaenger alevalor. depoall require! Spokane Dr. NEW 2 BEDROOiWS, ' Igerator, carpellng. 2 adjacent bldna. acroaa (mm ASPHALT PAVING Realdontlel and comniarclal No job loo small Work guarsniaad. Free aatlmatea P(5nt1AC ASPHALT CO. FE 4-0B4 _ ____ DOMINO CONST. C(f. Drivewaya, parking tola. LIceni conlraclora._ Free eat. 674-3955. PROTECT your' d'r I v a w'a y ....... • ----------------Ilh, ......... ... ......... large imalL 627-3047. CEMENT WORK, ALL KINDS General CamenI FE 8-9916 CEMENT WORK ' .^olftct.'"I OSCAR SCHMIDT .....” 1-A reliable PAINTING, Interior, | I ej^lerJor. Fjme eat. 33*^4. _ | - 1A CUSTOM PAINTING, realdanTlai, iparking LOTS, _______________ • I commercial, quality work, raaa. [ drivewaya. Commercial 0.1 rales. Insured, JUI2-463S. i Residential, year round ggrvi 5930; M-15,'Clarkiton, 6ZS-2to6. 25 "yea'r''0LD unlvefilty student - ........... or ) wNl^paln,. Top qujUIW work a, In- GariiBn Plowina a-i painting work floors. GUARANTEED. Free estimetes CAVANAUGH'S TREE ---•' GARDEN PLOWINGv disc, 682-0620. r.nra«...pi a... .a “ ‘ ***'“~‘* '“'<‘743. A-I PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING A-1 BASEMENT weterproofinOf fr« estimefei, call Mi-I294a Beoch Servic# Interior and^ e x t c r i or 45^2 DIXIE HWY., DRAYTON decorstlng, reasonable rales and free asllmalei. 335-5010. LOTS - WANTED IN PONTIAC Ladies desire interior paint-1 tod, WHtartord area. Fra# esil- , T' • tnalea. OR 3-8,104 or OR 3-2956. SPOT CASH ^«Wr2-r/4"3SM^R%'b°R“Su\K"Vfro"N , - SgU^^coratin ^b'-aVtorTor roJsf’y VvE^ii .ioyg;'"'?pac.:;p. . FE 5 2511 or FE 5-4223 | niNGS F.E 4 /OOS. 1 ‘ Moarrielv at Painting and P a P E R I N G, wants to buy small house with! P*'’'^AllSr 6 p m. Call 182-90/2 rtaldtPlial and toinmerclal spray ; jArden space. 681-2095. |NEW DELUXE elllclency 14. Ponllac Annnta Inr Danltisre Ing Orvel GIdtumb S> Sons.i - area, Ready fnr occuhancy. $132,50 Annfiti IHC., KCOITOrS wSh»„k.«g,kxi. 29 '-"J**- ■ ,; J.-,, .ur..! s.i. n.,„. ! s a aociiON 'kHLSsj3 bedrooms,' i birmipgham 1009 Dixie Hwy. ■ OR 3-371/;, pooMS, PRIVATE Belli and en 7660 S Rothesler Rd. 85'/1/00 WAYS TO (Inence this gracious BOAT CENTER WanreT MilCBlidneOUS 30j lr»nce, .v.rylhlng lurnl,t,ed. FE 5 VALLEY PLACE APTS. I ir^c" o^nnSlsoST^k," > »OpMS,W.klna^gm rhr.^^4*mt:2;» I i Mbo.^d B aliirnm 338-0466 SANDED^ 49 STEEL .SEA WALLS any location, reasonable, Clark 625-4073.______ BEACHES CLEANED ppCKSJNSJALLED 6IL-g300 Boots and AccestoriBS porches, etc. Licensed i Phone Poi^ac, 391-3516. CHIMNEYS, PORCHES and cement work. PE 5-8983. I COhAmERCIAL,' INDUSTRIAL and residential brick and cement work. GUINN'S CDNST. CO. 3.14-767/ or 391-2671_ CONCRETE""OR STONE retainer ralntor.cad with ileal. 363- P"IE LOST ON E'WOR K _______*73-2236 ^____ fireplacaa', ate. 673,0967. Ceramic Tiie i town the Ires, Free estimate. *»? '049- nr 335-5253, ________ Thompson " ........ fe 4-8364 bill's'tree trimming and" HUSBAND-WIFE TEA'm ' Palhting, wall washing, 20 yra. experience.' GARDNER'S TREE SERVICE 625-3514^ L. 335-6744 __________ INSIDE-OUTSIDE PAINTING. ' Do TREE CUTTING, FREE estifnates. ........................ FE 5-3761. ;Trurt‘Rtpalr -— ~ ‘ I Sewing "* IOUALITY work assured; Paim-I .TPUCK a' traFler ...J .a'ww.Yab”-'"”' M7S4. Fret a, Jnnitorini Services WHITE GLOVE Building Main- .|A-1 LIGHT MOVING. TRASH h PORTRAITS: Wedding, baby pIc —a, your hi-------- —- npt service Iloa, 334-3802. Ung and removal, etui* 1-A MERION BLUE SOD, pickup ol DAN'S CERAMIC TILE, slate floors,' Garble sills. Install In homes, old ir new. Free 151. 674-4341, 625-1501. | Dressmaking, Tniioring Fr«e asllmaiM, J. Landscaping 338-8314. AAA~ SPRING'‘cleanup, kw...-. ;i-A ALTERAmNSj, SUIT^^^^ Len&ptogV'lH^li^ Schoenaee'f ^ONDRA PLUMBI^^ *i,J^!AJING ...... , 673-7160 or 62S3521, '_ rees. Vervllles! A1 LIGHT oddTebsT TRucKTNCi'IFenrkSi Plasterissq Sarvira : . 4-2347: ® ™ A-1 light haulin^reaiIon: ERING, NEW WORK or pisFMFNTV^Y-^fJ^"------------------- ling, trie esllmeles. 363-5607. ® cIconpd^OR >6417^*' hauling" and" RUBBiSHTTiiing Plumbing & Heating COPPER, BRASS, RADIATORS, itarfari and gantrafort. C. Dlxton,; OR 3- . F E 4-4;i40. 2 ROb/yiS and BATHy^claan,^ uppa^r OPFN EVERY DAY M only. Ca I AWN 'eDOER - Oes operated.j ........ Boal covir for 14'. 62;M106 aft. 6. a p m. FE V-4269 Local” historian wanli to buy , rooms AND BATH. West aid. German WWII war souvenleia, 334-1 ci,„„ professional woman, noi 9105. smoker, ref., reas. FE 5 594 4. VvANTRD; LIONEL O Gauge elec-^j ROOMS. ADULT day workers, N lrl< Iralni, 67.3-020.5. ; „„ drlnklnq. 401 N. Paddock, 32 1 ROOMS AND BAIH, : 651-4200 I Rent Houses, Furnished I Box 434, Chari I Below .convent! I $.14,900 with Irai •*t,2 bedroom, larba —— edlelely or » jlx, Mich. 41 Aluminum ___________d a, slern ~- 1265 5. Woodward al drasias, 335-4207. /Mrs. »baake. I alterations.'ALL TYPES, KNIT • dresses, laathar coats. 682,9533. ’■ DRESSMAKING AND eltarillons ot all types. 681-1792'. A-l'SOD LAID a with liirni Wanted to Rent g BFIIROOM HOME rant with option 674 1388. >rV Krk iR 3-64W aft.l FE^T6842'! 2 BEDROOM HOUSE, would rant for --------------ranMng for $115. 'TrNr.nrrc'iTf 363 7890, ^uilding Modernization A-I OAkAGES, 20x20, I Ponllac. 3,18-1646. Poiilioc PidSS Want Ads Family of 4 de.slrei 3 hiwiroom f>oniV'.'Refs."!i9q95M ” Work Wonders. Diol Direct MINISTER, wife and 1 chlldr - 334-4981 A Press Want Ad Plus A Few Insertions Equals Profitable Results por'chesi'masonery work.' 711-4137, NEW ANO^ R^E^ ALUMINUM SIDING, masonry woHi ‘----latlons, storm windows Inum guitars, ronllnq, pre-CBs' Slone, addlllona, attics, R a c, AINIELS REALTY, 7030 Dexlar- 3.'’?; ’I"*'’';;;" ii^ey Rd, HA 6-4696, 1230 N. m/ fill dTv or Xht illinrd Rd, MU 5 1567, ' - "to"' Birmlnoham, or Ponllac. term lease. Ml 6-0621. WANTED TO RENT: 2 car gi Cass Lake or Union I aka an slorsgt. Evas. 602-1180 drinker end smoker would like small turn, apt. niai N.W. sIda. OL 3-46SS In Davison. Shore Living Quarter! 33 housework, Ponllac Praia Box C-16,_Ponllac. WILL S'HARE'MY horrie with 1 or 2 employed women. -Elltabelh Lk, Area. 6814065. VouTeO' WORKING ■ GIRL TO share her home with aame, 363-5082, Wanted Reni Eitnte 36 1 to 50 HOMES, LOTS, A C R E / G E PARCIHr^FARMS, BUSINESS PROPlRTies, AND LAND CON-TRACT. ^ > WARREN STOUT, Reoltor 1*« N. Opdyke , « M1*S Ureanlly need for Immediate taltl “ • Pontiac vultiplR*listVng servi'ce' NEW APARTMENTS They are all townhouses, one, t'^o, and three bedrooms. Furnished gas heat,\ air-conditioned, refrigery ator and gas stove are incluaed. Carpeted and draped.' Coin-operated laundry facilities, swimming pool, ample parking, storage lockers. We have them from $165 per niQpth with a one year lease, children ore 'Welcome., No pets. The only utility you pay is electricity. The reht agent is on the premises. Ridgembrit Apartments 967 N. PERRY 332-3322 strMi, one. Call aL- - ,............... ........... > ANb 4 BEDROOMS. Nawly I dacoratad, $49 down, AR^i ?fLTj OAINIELS REALTY, 7030 D# ‘ rit^f ................ MIMnr BEDROOM, FULL* garaga, 2 lotR, PBiiuuin nnnimni araa, $27,500, 338-2703. 3 BEDROOM HOME - • ---- • • orallng.l Elvvoodj MnnPDMi7ATI0N - _____________ Ctmanf work. 625-5515. Corpentry Free G 3, L PLUMBING It - FE 8-0643. ! 2491. yqur price. Anytime. FE e-d09S. LK5HT HAULING, tree" removal, --------- ---- Call FE 8-8*19. *81- Envoitroughing astjmafa. 682-7197. Al'S LAWN'MAINTENANCE* Spring' and fall claan ups. Cutfing»i farfitiring and spraying. 673-3992. | C & D LANDSCAPING 1 portable Sod apectollsts. Lawn Maintenance. ........... .. ....I mobile hp'ni CLARKSTON. GREENS « S*'"' r*'i'5".ii2r .132-6919 COMPLETE LANDSCAPING j g, Sodding, seeding, shrubs. I Licensed Nursery /Man. 683-7850. EXCELLENT QUALITY Merlon Blue " sTlveVVake"- —1 43 J.*. ..J -- ‘-•t;light HAULmG"“AND“liiwiri5. Do If. 673-0377._ i Reasonable. 682-7516. ^essura wash, swimming ilty, 682-2410. 3 BEDROOM, cc_____________________ - lot. In vlllaga north of .Lapear, $7500, by owner. 651-6622, aft. 3:30. S ROOM YEAR AROUND homt, lake privileges, 2 small bedroomi, glassed front porcha fireplace, part Basement, equity down, 3/53 Navarra, off Jackson Blvd. White MASTER CRAFTSMAN ' ENGLISH BLOR. Speclalijing In all types nf custom homes, sd-dlllons. Convert your rar. room to English Tudor Pub. Beloro yog; decide, look al my work and prict.' 338 9430. I 50DERNIZATION ■ ■ Additlona ot Staled IlkkFnew. . . _______ end bath down) 5 roomk and b, up. Ideal 5 bedroom home or c sed for" Income properly, ............ p.m. 62t 39 esllmeles. 334-2879._ ! l interior‘and EXTERIOR Family rooms, rough or finish dormers, porches, recraatli .. rooms, kllcheps, helhrooms. Stall licensed, Reas.' Call atler i p.m.. IS, 674-37 M & S GUTTER CO. UCPN$ED-BONDED Complete eavrstroughing servica Free esL 67.3-6866, 673-5662 EUctriciil Strvices RIC ■vies FE 4-8191 ^ ^ Excavating A-1 BULLDOZING, Finish arading. ' Backhoe, Baiemanti. 674-2639. PE ........ - . .per Delivered. 682-1904 after 6_p.m. LANDSCAPING, ferfllliing, bedwork. 337-85-06 or 335-9826. YARD AND DRIVEWAY grading. FE 5 3307. Lawn Mointinanct DALE'S LAWN Service, complete lawn care, phone 693-2768. LAWN SPRAVirtbr Mlfl Lllf RS, areas killer and weed kllleri. Tor (ree estlmite. 62S-4019, ---149 ana. ree. C I. H Spraying. LAWN va1:"UU"mTd, ratii price, free eitlmptet. *IM7«I. Roofing CaWn grading. 61 backhoe" W^K,^^^WChlng,'M^^^ IB U L L D O 2 I ,N O , TRUCKING, owner. C.»H allor ' ADDITIONS AND‘•ilerallont, pdfch| repair. FE 5-1331._ i 3-ii65. CARPBNTRV AND CEMENT work'DOZING, BACKHOE, BASE/MB'NT’S ACRES, lovely 5 bedroom term" tree esllmnes. 852-5252. ' trucking and septic tanks. 623-3735. ■ 2 baths, large chirkan <■ \ ^ je f CUTTING Ing,_FE_2-wwi. ^ L A WN“cUT Tl NO^ Y —• -aii__________ O, ■ROTO-tlllIng, 112*. ALEXANDER ROOFING, specializing In hoi ter, end shingle rooting. 13*8 I9/T2^h'rs.*’"‘ A-Z CONTRACTiNG AND REPAIR LICENSED ROOFER, tec lory guerentet. Froe eit._36M827. IrowN RbpFINO'Co, WO ipdciailz'o In shlngloi. Free eat, 334-3720. REPAIR Leaks";" RESHINGLi qualllV work. Intxpenilve. 335*(9l wrwTii Not BroHassskf LIGHT HAULING Basement Clnnlnb _Call anytime, 338-fliW< jrevel end front-end loedlngr F#> Truck Rental ^ ti Trucks to Rent W-Ton Pkkups IW-Ton ttaki TRUCKS - tractors AN^ EQUIPMENT Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. . 825 5. WOODWARD FE 4-0461 , FE 4-l*fl ' Open dellyjncludlng Sunday BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS. Walla claanad. Reat. SattafPCtM •«l- EE laWn C OTT . ... trath hauled. 334-11-LAWN CUTTING Service eree, 6M-1231. _ __ Juws LAWN MOWING end yard mair*------ —‘ ir Mitiord ...uyonT^!«72sr''- WOMACK ROOFING c5. Fra* estimetea _ ___ FE 8-4343 33 Sgnd-GravtI-Dirt > 2" WELL DRILLING, I K.'"J coop, close lo Rt and Oxford, 29 per Lake Orion sacrillce 6 a Ironiage, 87, Put A Press Want Ad loi Work — Prof^ably. Dial i Direct - 334-4981 For Want Ads Dial 334-4981 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JUXE 5, 19fi9 D—11 SolaHoatw *»ord<.iri.n'3l FIRST IN VALUES RENTING 7 ARE NOW , ,, , TAKING , Applications FOR HOMES SPT ALL I . __ „NY WORK OR DIVORCEES. PEOPLd WITH CHEDI PROBLEMS AND RETIREE ARE OKAY WITH US. OPEN DAILY AND SAT. aND qr or como ?o MUsTseIl. Watorlord Ti j*'* J!y*** . 491 Sab Housti MILLS ?? 'lt**°"L"nd "*y . *wo »lory'TiiI SYLVAN LAKE SAM WARWICK - *lu rri- '•''•I JW, bolhs, insulatod windows. ------- ... ..... LAKE ORION, MICH. PHONE; 693;83T1 Charles Mills, Broker MR. GARDNER Still time to plant your oardai Ai* In'^ Pontiac "I wp. with full bosemont and IW car osroja. Don-1 hesllalt. Call YORK REAL VALUE REALTY For Imediate Action Call FE 5-3676 - 642-4220 GETTING MARRllD iS'JuNET'wo havo lust tha homa lor you. For lust SM.m on FHA terms, you con have two bedrooms end a f '-----— the city ot Ponlli eossesslon Is svallabl. ... ...... lor more Intormatlon today. P-75. Ray Real Estata__________474-4IOl ’*'5 Strattord Rd., MJ.750.00. OPEN SUNDAY 2-5' P M^jjSHOWN any YimE. CALL “ TQtKEOEALTY"^C0. 703 PONTIAC STATE BANK Delrolt, 9 miles P lunctlon, F Is Realty. «37-2i;7, 353-0770, 755-0403. Sale Houses 49 Wideman 4 BEDROOM HOME FHA TERMS' ' PONTIAC GENERAL AREA ' spacious older Home. In qood cor ditlon, 2 beths, carpeted iTvIn# an dining rooms. T cor garage, nice lol SI5,^, FHA terms. EAST SIDE Bungalow, Ideal tor retired. coupla Large kitchen with breakfast nook —'Ing room, 2 bedrooms, Mfomonl, .-j lifal, garage, extra largt lot only »,9S0, FHA TERMS. * I. 0. WIDEMAN, REALTOR 412 W. Huron St. maSL. EVE. CALL ■ 332-4490 Home With Elegance Largo colonial on 13 acres, 4 largo carpeted bedrooms., and 24xa' family room with fireplace. This comlortoblo homtl has a S zonr* hot water heatino systom. 2 baths, basomsnt and garage plus many olhar extras such 1 Inlercam thibughout, $49,501 S15,S00 down. c. PANGUS INC, Reoltor OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 130 M-15 Ortonvil.. CALL COLLECT 027-2015 1 “house for SALE, BY OWNER ^_UL2j;2442. • " HOME ON ACREAGE ’ In Orion Township, .bedrooms, IVj story.. RAT _________ UNDER $5000 STARTER HOME ' ON YOUR'LOT . plus securliv . P. J. Mason Cohslructlor IEALTyT 2503 highland RD, . 0 ' ........ VETERAN? If'so, you can hav. ...„ lasbostos ranch In Pontlee tor only S7,000. And:’SIOO Is all you need *- Ray Roal_Eslsle_ 674t4I0I i COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE Lois of extras In this 3 bedraoitv brick r^ch. Fsill basement, paneled family room with . tirepioee, large living ' room, -—-‘'-'•ig room, kitchen In natural brick GILES CHARMING DOLL- HOUSE Tender loving cart has mede It.. home a reel bargairi, vary nice all the way from the 2 bedrooms through the carpeted living room and on down i to the basement which has an ell shaped rac-room with beautiful bar built In. This really Is a bargain at only IIMOO, call tor ah appointment. ' SHARP AND CLEAN 5 room ranch with basement, gas hsat, aluminum siding, alumlm— storms and sertons, l',y t garage, located on a paved stro priced at-only $14,400 an excelli HANbY MAN 's tor you, priced iOl or , don't hesitate, call dining wall which has grill ________________ rotlsserle, eating spec#..Air conditioned, humidifier, air tiller,; Salu Houmb EASTHAM family kitchfn, nlog 4 piece bi FHA S15.S00, this 4 bedroom with living room, dining room, full bosoment can be yours tor so Unit. Csll to-■day for furt***“ Salu Hqusm ARRO PLENTY OF SPACE For a garden with this c bedroom aluminum tiddd M*h tireplec* and wgll to /wall carpating,/ full basamani, can h-purchasM on FHA or 61 terms. •' NOTHING DOWN TO Ot'S Coiy 2-badroom bungalow wl crawl space, gas heat, pull^lov Claude McGruder ......... Realtor ThiTr'tno” windows Jt'O EUtabelh Lk. Ril. _6828?20, I imUeL'J-J*!LP9. Jo7yl« h Hying NEW ROOF ADOS TO the _ ............. shake . .. ... Joaded — for your family, i, big living room * -......... 1'hi baths, 2'A M'P-IS'' '• ^ CALL RAY TODAyi. . : SNYDER, fi^^KINNEY& BENNETT M-CLEAN 474-4101 eat 1 -$23;990 UNION LAKE PRIVILEGES Fine 3 bedroom Cepe Cod, . teched garage, lull basemenl, small barn. Very sharp — 30 days posiesslon. \7 $27,500 HAMPTON HILLS New dallghttul subdivision Inca lust iouth ot S. Blvd. dnd watt . Wirral Road. RANCHES - TRIS — QUADS -- COLONIALS. PRICES RANGE FROM $45,000 GREATER BLOOMFIELD REAL ESTATE 4190 Telegraph Rd._____ 444.4500 NICE-N-I 2 BEDROOM. SUN ROOM, FLATTLEY REALTY 20 COMMERCE RD. 343-4981 NEW MODEL HOME Open dally 9 to 4 E. J. DUNLAP Custom Builder 2717 Sllvertlone Corner Waltnn 3BI19B or 338-4497 OPEN j TRI-LEVEL MODELS 1 OPEN 2 P.M.- -TIL DARK [NEAR CLARKSTON 1498. 33Fy»£___________ WALLED LAKE AREA Cozy 3 bodroom alum, ranch, close I to sohoolt. Land contract or FHA terms. ■ ART DANIELS - REALTY 1230 N. Mlllord Rd. In Rochester W. Unlvortlly (Jnmtlo 431-4IOOOR 334-3100 WYIWAN lewis REALtV 7~~] f I t kuburn |-< ( 1 Y h" [-< HIITER LAZENBY ALUMINUM. RANCHER 3 large bedrooms, oxlro large llv. Ing room with soparoto dining area, l',V baths, full bosamtnl, alumavua windows and screens, sliding doorwall to patio area. Situated on a lOO ft. Tot. Only $22,500, 10 pet. down. WEST SUBURBAN W; QUICK ' PO.SSESSION — on this 7 room, J ceramic tile baths, lireplace, 4 car garage. Just 2 years old. Land contract terms. Call today. NORTH SIDE — 2 bedrooms end y room, VY baths, J. borders lake. 81I.50O. to Crescent only 118,990 WE BUILD -Hl^hland^ Rd. JM-591 "*k ' right Also ranchas, colonials as low 01 814,990 plus lot. : GIROUX REAL ESTATE *73.7837___H'llbl»n«l alum, .tiding. On your lot. To saa modal call i. C. HIITER, REALTOR, 9792 Ellz. Lake Rd. 662-6080, aflarj _ HALL' IF YOU'VE JUST boon married, this I bedroom ranch is perlect lor It has a beautltul setting; rlooklng Bunny Run Lake, and I trees In lully fenced yard. Also room. Only t12,SOO VA. ill,500. ».»,ih to the morloege. " *“ Call Ray Reel Estate nstalled, FHA approved, cell toda 3 BEDROOM custom brick ranch locattd In Clarkslon. Featuring •— basement, 2'rS Sullf-*In5'*m'^kllche'r., . living room. Priced OXFORD TOWNSHIP , ---------------------------------------- --- Bead inr ihi.i basement, I'/i car attached garage, paved drive, I'/s ceramic baths. -lead at HOLLY-OFFICE Country Living Can be yours Lsrgs spacious home bull Civil War era. Hat .possibilities. For an Investment for living In the country. sets on 2 aero corner lot. Ft only 819,950. Swim in your . own back yard I room Cape Cod with attached garage. FIreploco and lamlly roam. Setting on 5 acres of ground with large swimming pool. $29,500. PHONE; 634-8204 -.....— -jr yard. Is action. Priced for fa ‘~aoo money available. $600 DOWN I, lake privileges across FE5-8183 Cash For Your Equity or Land Contract 682-2211 MARGARET MCCULLOUGH REALTOR 5143 Cast-Ellzaboth Road OPEN 9-9 MLS . Sun. 35 ____ 4* AVON LAKE FRONT A 4 badroom-'^beautyl Over 2400 sg. ft. ot living area In this exciting homo. Something dlftorent In ovary r#om, 2 coi*--'-'- kltchens, 2 tiald-slona tirat walkout basement onto 480 lovely lake trontaoe on Lake. Morlgage may be at: at low Intei-ost rales, POSSESSION! EXCLUSIVE SALES OF WEmBERGER^ HOMES 474-0474 Salt Houm 1530 CROOKS RD. ANNETT brick hoMe in cxcollant eOn. ditlon, lull basemam. Extra lot tor parking. 129,900, farms. IS ROOM BRICK - WEST SIDE kpprox. 11,000 sg. ft. ot usable iraa, Ideal tor ofllces, doctors' JInIc, union hall or church, ------- L..— .. ,xcaiiant con- ir'sldis e'ntra^s!"lronl stairs, 4 lavatories and Carpftted living room. KItenen 6, dining area. 1V^ baths. Utility. Gas HA haat. Vacant. Nawly dacorated. Only 61,000.00 down. SOUTH EAST SIDE Three bedroom two story older home. Living A dining rooms. Kitchen. FmM basemenl. Gas HA heel. Vacant. Only 8800.W down plus costs. SOUTH ANDERSON Three bedronm ranch bungalow. ----- . Kitchen, Gat HA heat. ' decorated. Only plus costs. Living A dining I x,..h‘^^:'"bL.™nT"’'oX"’"]1.4‘'/ol.* BARBER "SHOP FHA term*. ^^tpllenj^ nasi J ROYCE LAZENBY, Realtor j 'BUD'' LAKE OAKLAND HEIGHTS 3 bedroom brick ranch. C™_ sited living room, targe kitchen and dining combination. KINZLER and alumlnuiT :harm. 6 _______ 1 23 ft. finished r car attached garage. Outside patio and grill, fenced yard. 626,9CO.OO on FHA. Approximately $3,000.00 down Including closing cost. WEST SIDE Barbecue ____ _ _ ______ ____ Good beach. A new ottering. Better see today I 11 PM. FARM COLONIAL Remodeled 5 bedroom 2 bath large older lamlly home on —---------- Lake Rd. Beautltul t.B a; I in se d I e t a r loc,.' .iqvi w. Huron St. FE 5-81 Val-U-Way, miller IVAN W. LEACH RAY your appointment, WILL BUILD — 3 bedroo ranch home with full t IAMBI .A.ii.R. hardwood floors. Thermo WILL BUILD «'Uti screens. $14,950 on ,,, .... FINANCING IS AVAILABLE ''’'OF"?"''®'’- .«*:*!»' 5925 HIGHLAND RD. (M-59) let's trade |33B-40JB.... 474-2124___ 715o’Di*' J Open Evenings, Saturday 7 _ 3 BEDROOM RANCH, IVV baths,' _______________ „„ 45”".J'r1rV(3S1or3, £gShroI SCHRAM OFF BALDWIN 3 bedrooms, I2xl5 living i 10x15 kitchen and dining area PERRY PARK 2 bedroom brick home with bi Irani and 2 car garage, ges h( tile bath, located on a large Priced at 115,750, move in KEEGO HARBOR Sharp 2 bedroom with ft rnent, new gas furnace, {AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR s formal dining room. Lovely full b la best locatloAa in Investment on your this Immense home House hat three possible 4 r- • ' garage, full wall to wall ----— ■-■- r, out buildings and commercial gravel^'' pit. Call us tar more Intormatlon. P-,“ ckt.,RA>LJOPAYI. • . 474-4101 :L«*tion,. Investors Special Mi?,!'*'",?.' 4 bedroom Ca^^od, lull basemen^ BLDG. CO., OR 3-0191. 7L . .. ..? - _WJLL_CONSIDE^-rRADE) ""fe'*"o-49S2.'''oR 4T449. ______ OPEN 9 A.M. TO 0 P.M. 2294 Williams ■ ---- List With SCHRAM 4' and Call the Von * OPEN EVES. AND SUN. nil Joslyn Ave. FE . REALTOR 3 Serving Pontiec Area for 20 year ig’rooirnr oak' floors7"gi | ^ T t_^TT .........BK-^j U N r.l I, WHY NOT TRADE? SEWARD ST. sharp 3 bedroom horns asameni, gas heat. Ilia storms and screens, w_ . .. „„„„„ wall csrpeting. Located on a large close to low; CLARKSTON SCHOOLS Lake front on Whipple Lake. Sharp 7 room home’ on a targe s'"—— lot. Features Include 2 very sylvan lake and sherpl '»“•! bedrooms, 3 baths. Newly carpi I living nnd dining rooms with drai I Full baamt., gas. heat. JW j gsraga. Large corner lol. Very sti .... In a prestige area. $24,950 lull pr '"’jCell tor appointment. •“WEST SUBURBAN ESTATE 7 at . --------- _ _ ga close to town. Lovely 3 bedroom -- . corner lol. Priced at ranch with carpeted living room with $14,500, about 1450 moves you In. , fireplace. Full besmt. with rec. '■oom, lamlly room with fireplace, ili**car'ga'raQe™l^^ wlfh horse Immediate Possession kitchfn With dining bastment, gas haa., --- recreation room. Den and shower & stool down. IV) car garaf^ fenced yerd. U2,900.00, « proxlmataly $2,5% I n c I u d I r closing co.st on fTh.A. NICHOLIE-HUDSON Associates, Inc. 1141 W, Huron SI. 681-1770 after 6 p.m. FE 2-3370 TIMES ■rgar and batter lakei. Prici ...S7.000. Easy terms. JOHN KINZLER, Realtor Multiple Listing Service property bt r parking. $59,500, garage, ----- .. smallgr home to tri WE WILL trade Reoltors 28 E. Huron St. Dtllce Open evenings B, Saturday 1-4 with gitod «leal dock, sprinkler, aft. 2 car ---- -light consider Ida. an Evenings B, Si 338-0466 FARRELL Silver Lake fstatas II brick Weinberger ranch I lan 4 years old and lust a st alk to grade school. 3 badrcoi family room with fireplace. 2 c -—chad gareoe. Extra neat a It throughout. All this satll .............. lol In a.-------- STOUTS Best Buys Today i WHAT A PRETTY RANCHI- goad looking 3 bedroom home bum in 1965 and I ildentlai >ec-l nt drive. Raved %\ o’down Plus attached \j car 1 Auburn Heights.......... —. ...I.,, Beet and I -------------- ...d Sr7ck ..... ..... Dak floors. IriasI yard with chain link tanctog. SEE Hi JOIN THE SWIM SET- Laka Drlon area is tha setting for this 3 bedroom culle with 45 tael pi take frontage. Part basement with ell heet end gas hot water. 3rd bedroom Is large 12x30 dandy tor the children. Includes >"->* located GO BRICK!- Orion. Png range, and dryer. Yol owner for only $27,950, —- financing, lo cal 'efrigerator, washer) MLs| Val-U-Woy Realty twimming pool. All li For Information call: N E L S O N oiMid c BLDG. CQ . DR 3-fiiei , Directions; Drive West < IS Lake R .[f S^OOO lake over S2,500 Vacant. Agent tor owner _ 52, OR 4-1649. LESS THAN A YEAR old, 3 bedroom brick and alum., ranch, Commarct Vlllaga area, full basa-meni, 4T4 per cent morlgage. 121,900, Cell 343-3123. .i ____ Live Where You Play j At Pleasant Lake, Highland t BUY DIRECT FROM THE BUILDER, 3 bedroom con-1 temporary model. Beamed celling and tireplec# In living room, largej family kitchen, 1'4> ceramic trial bath, corner lot. $26,900. Eatb ""’(hi'’ui?Sl('’^rner Lot T;,^dHiom:;F^tom^ 3 BEDROOM BI-LEVEL with 22' family room, 1'.^ tile bath, oak floors. Walk to your ‘-«<-i' a" ’ uran nomes _ 0/ RAY” : oilers an older hoit ____iCT condition. Faaluras . kitchen, four bedrooms, 2 full belhs. , patio In b JOSEPH SINGLETON REALTOR 42^S. Pj^DOCK _ _ 335;B11( KiNiSPHIPPS CLARKSTON Sno^appla Dr. ~ Neat and cleaii 3 bedroom ranch, ' caribctod living CALL RAY TODAYI 474-4101 PONTIAC LAKE FRONT. Rustic year around home, 2 bedrm,, gas furnace, complelely lurnlshad, beautltul view, sa--'" $14,000. Weekends Weekdays after 5 p. WARDEN 434J«, Huron- Ponftae_^_^ _^^ Les Brown OOM COLONIAL, full well brick firef ENJOY YOURSELF Your tnlire lamlly will love the wide open spaces- surrounding I h I s{ ond Building Co. FE 4-3531 3_45 Oakland Ave. Open 9 'o ^sTON HILLS : ~ brick ranch to very .n Feeturlng built'ln oven atiu la Hied bath, carport, anchor lei yard with nice landscaping. 118,500 on FHA or Land Coni heal. Carport and pavari dr Priced right at $18,500. Warren Stout, Reoltor 1450 Ny Opdyke Rd. FC 5*6165 Delly til 6 I Salt Houiat __.33JL45M___ QualityNe^Homes By ROSS . COLDNJAt!* RANCHES SPLIT LEVELS INCL. LOT FROM $31,900 CALL MODEL OFFICE LAKELAND ESTATES 623-0670 Y2 Mile N. Walton Blvd. Doily 1-8 P.M., Sun. 11-6 BUILDERS OFFICE FE 4-0591 iol* Houiet 49 ikllni 2700 iq. It; ot llvlno area.| ot rolling country side for in In Riimn^er end ile**'*'““' Large alal fra c#'"ftyer ' '""luded and'3 dobf-walls, 2Vf beths, full wall tiraplacfs and 2'/ii car garage. This large family h a very convaniant traffic Dniy 4 years old, with — ot closets and storage ----- —‘ Inside to appraclata the this darkston area hon ... . - » than lust a homa tor yr $54,900 Invsslmant In an area of .„ creasing values. No. 4 29 M "toL'prtoM"etlgET ^N EARLY JUNE START ltd. ifsnk fnr that miirh needtd home. large 3 10x22 cerpetsd living QUICK OCCUPANCY Nothing everything [nclu^s^ bath oft ____ trees. Must . . e c h .IpreclBte. Priced 6 7 4- 3 JOO.ILand........... TU 1-4894. ■ - Iroom home, extra large throughout. I'/i - " —im. Lot has I lireplace, 7'n cr many large I beautltul landsci — •- — ifronta— -- and custom d STRUBLEi WE TRADE Ronch Model, 1200 Whittier OPEN DAILY 2-6 Dlrstlloni; M-59 Across from Air A LITTLE FIXIN Is til this 2 bedroom home n for real comly living. It has < .....12' kitchen, alumli I ^J^^be^ llreplaces. Fenced yard i /aliabla i FE 2-0262 I'■^7= 414 W. HURON OPEN 9 TO 9| heautlful Cass Lake. ' --"ilhllHIei only $21,500.00. |$41. i-ifrontafle on Big Sliver Lake. Onlyi t.'$41,500. Why not trade up? No. 3-91 excellent c beautiful kitchen with bullllns, and doorwall to patio, extra 'j bath oit led den ' >’*•': entrance and vtUr room, this rnnin 9 modern raileher It all brick, hati 4 nirliv attached carport and fenced yard. ' possible FHA at $26,500 with $3,000 dovm. If/aterlord Really, 473-1273. .ROeHElrBR Suburban Spacious 4-badntom ranch. Family kitchen, 2 baths, carpattoo ant* KING-PHIPPS AGENCY 1097 S. LOP««T HU. _ 420-2S05 Ladd's, Ine. BALD EAGLE LAKE ideal year arouhd_ llvtog, 76' of frontage on Bald Eagle Lk.-near Clarkstoh, nice 2 bedroom home, lamlly room with fireplace, sandy beach, boat dock, garage, quick possession, only $23,900. Lend con-trecl terms. Ladd's, Inc. 852-5375. RocHester Area $29,900. Tr» COUNTRY LIVING { BRAND NEW — 3 bedroom ranch with hardwood floors, country style , kitchen, dining room and full REALTOR I S^"ln™l"e'd*Twp?Use 4940 p,., ^^“LcRoTsTeALTy" *■. 674-3105 LM-I140__ MU 9-1114! , T RHODES A REAL BUY! -lull basemant, shaded corner ic . . water, FHA termi See this on# today. A., J. RHODES, REALTOR A&G WATERFORD HILL $49,975 120 DAY OCCUPANCY Custom designed tSOO touare t— brick colonlol, new carpeting end drapes Included, landscaping an" paved drive on 100x240' woods canal front lot. Ora of tha fins homes fhel denotes the tuecatt i the protettlonal man. Modal open by appdlntmenf only. ANDERSON 8. GILFORD Building 8< Realty 3081 Highland Rd. (M-59) 412-9000 MODEL 4037 Gordon Rd. 4BI-I9IB JOHNSON I LIFT YOUR LIFE I out of the ordinary. Counir, ..., wifhoul the mllaede. Natum whispers, tend smiles ell around this private ; world coniliting" ol an acre lo I 'Striking 3 bedroom, t'/j baths, full^ basemenl, 2 car garage home.; Children lit this picture - room to ipley ball, Ulle will lake "•■“I meento^n this elegant ho THIS HOME NEEDS A FAMILY Large elum, sided ranch with bedSxims, l'/> baths, relrigerale stove, 2'/j car attached garage. I»r( tot. Bachelor says give a lamUy chance to en|oy this -- «n $26,900. No. 8 WOULDN'T IT BE NICE ■®r''SL'Tourhomr;nrbi'*‘h."pp'y'; imlortabla end content. All brick Herlor with hardwood carpeted ,.oors elono with 3 bedrooms, llvlno jram^ kitohV JUST ___ LAPEER. Very ..... . . home on Opproxlmately 1 MILLERBROS. REALTY EXECUTIVE HDME t. This very taro* ranch has et-• • - ige with electric^ bedrooms with hath off maslar. Large ta'' room with natural lireplace BIG-BIG-BIG Ta'*%ou"'’h.vi"“Jll Ihs onvenlencas tor E-Z llv- ________ ______________'I'umaceVtoVVly llvt minutes welk to FIshai Isrg# screened In sun porch, lake Body, ttitahie*'*'^'^'' privileges, full price 121,500, term* tortn* availsbie. " IG.I. SPECIAL LAKE FRONT |ju.i ii .......................... 'oiirder No. sivse iocafod irs CABIN TIME OnoKfA County is tha location i this Immacuiata Pafraat, If is conr plefaly pantlad Inalda ind Indudai stovor refrig.g drapaa and soma furnllurt. This Mtfla gam it ntsflad among pin# fraet and has a. trout straam running across rear of proparty. Prica Is only $6500, coma In and laa picturas, taattor . AAL8 5935' Highland Rd. (M-591 Ntxf to Franks Nuritry 674-3175 GAYLORD OFFERS MODEL OPEN }■» P.M. DAILY 493-2754 n, J ear garage, only Com* see the quality -----jship and look «t "i"- many building plan*. Wa w IRWIN WEST SIDE ‘3-badroom bungalow with carpeting and curtains Included. Has gas hast end Is only 2 yri. old. Can be bought to a monthly -- NEAR FISHER BODY FHA TERMS 3-badcoom bung 2i Aftar 6, call Jack .loll, 683 838?. JOHNSON 1704 S. Telagraph FE 4 RAY O'NEIL REALTY 'priced Inr quick tale at only $14,960, 33 DR 4 2222 Ml S 31,5-4404 lurnlihed tor *24,50 -T **be^ purchasari neer evorylhinq. rully --.k-.-. Including hodroomi and bath. Full dining room, full baaoment. Zero A.MMk''euA k. lanrf mnlracl terms Miller Bros. Realty 333-7156 333-7245 -....' J- A. Taylor Agency, Inc. LAUINGER , 7732 Highland Rd. (M-91 Dally DR 4-Om__Eves. EM 3-7544 „ ROtHESffft. 3 bedfooih, l'/ii-b*th,| “ trl-level on 1 acre. Swlrnmlng pool,' cebane, *34,900 tor quick 8*1*. 451-, 4212. ________ R-ocHifiTR“ clfTtr c.p^ bedroom, boiemont, V/t eor girage, tfoea, 451-335S._--1 SCENIC LAKE FRONT s■^vtt"ktor'ta'k..'•T..k^ basement. Attached 2 car garaoe. price $37,900. Call ' YORK norm sme. ruiiv ,, area and newly decorated, OR 4-0343 EAST SIDE SPECIAL ......... ..... Reoi noot and clean 2 bedroom tl, i Sumumor S?S’ SMS FHA. only .09 mo; O.u. texes. Al aDFriAi carMtad'^lIvlAg rottw> 13k34 faiyiliy %risi^pw with,tyii, RBAL Nice BUNGALOW Just starting out or retiring? See this real cute and coiv^o room bungatow with lull , basement tocalad In Pontiac Northern erea zero down FHA. i*2 month or land Nice * ,.,M, . ____ kiingalQW will j^y^l'pricil^ro dSwm MO LAL^NGER 074-0310 y Ava. hagstrom, realtor to'"' "“■'‘iStap. p.m.^gt^S "ESTABLISHED 1930" FAMILY PARADISE Most young familial draam ot this kind of home. Rambling brIcR ON SIGHT INSPECTION Clar Clarkslon H d and prica rads Andarsanvllla Road to on 2 acre loll, Pfiia pi hum oonitructton Rom lonetiai I 2 car ixwl syilam, 9 ttx to ikooo. Brie .... ,____j; 3 haoroomi, II atlachad oaraoas. LAKE OAKLAND Water Ironieg* "Honeymoon ettractiv# 2 bedroom bungol Daktand and Woodhuli Lakes, and easy land contract larmi. >pr.an?, .niM. 249 RUSSELL -uiata Is tha way to describa this 2-hadroom home on Hia^^eaif :aii our dttlca and lal us show you how to baeamt a homa- ... . --------- -------------- —» ...........- — .... roop* 1.1? DORRIS & S'ON REALTOR 2536 Dixit Hwy. MLS OR 4-0324 _____ ... . . ir small*ca^b tovaitmant.; 1500 to mwa to ami 3rd bedreom- basemant..... — '—‘ RAISED RANCH ON 2 ACRES Mature shade trees acetnl toll allz# the front axtorior. Over 2400 ft, of rooms, 2 tireplaeos. 1 In living room at extras. Ramemher. WE TRADE. Ask ti NOTHING DOWN, VA, NEAR ORION Extra clean 2 b prlvllagai on Lo KEEP COOL IN THE POOL 3 bedroom full brick trl-levei with 13x23 ft. temlly roon place. SItuoted on on* tea* covarad tc.ro, to tha blllt of Built-In ovan and rang*. Carpeting In living room, drapt RRICK ranch on FIVE ACRES 230x440 tl. located on pavad road, close to. MIo-r 2 other outbulldlngi. excaptlonally wall built Ihrouohoul. Carpatad llvlno room, dlnlno room, hZ bedrooms, handy kliehan plus pantry. Main balh fi Basement partlllcined with tJxJ4 recraellon roc y. REMEMBER, w* trad*. Aik DAVIS LAKE HIGPTIaNDS MODEL HOMES NOW. OPEN SATURDAY 1 TO 7 P.M. ■ Phone: 62^548 823 S. Lapeer Road Oxiord TED'S TRADING McCullough realty, inc. . VALU-VISION SHOW OF HOMES WATERFORD HILL COLONIAL IOVEI.Y, LOVELY - uunng i ruu oain, t neir oernx, li-lns, redwood balcony, flra-ice, family room, walk out lement, 2 cor eltached porao*. ............. drr.lH dPiv#* li find \Bk$ orlvll,.„ 147,900. TRAD! I FN7 HOA6E. NEW RANCH $2,290 DOWN il ranch homa otter* the llnail ol quality eralisi shlo This home can be slli nn_any lot ol your choice, BARGAIN DAZE This J hedrnom bl laval wa* an excauenr neign .L PRICB ONLY $.5,000 DOWN ON ACT TERMS. L-52, $28,950 WITH „„ LAND CONTRACT ROOM TO ROAM with this * aero 1 site taei a 4 bedtoom qu*d-li with full hath!, hrid hraeklast room. Mr* m'any'other ex- "GREEN GREEN GRASS OF HOME" Oasenbas the landscaping around this haaulllul larqa hrlckbem* "n a scenic taka taalurlnq a la* ladqarrx.k oatio, 4 b dlnlno room, 7 lull room, walkout basil ?paSe homes!*** ^ \674-223^- McCliLLOUGH Realty, Inc. ,^5^yi,GHL^ANDRa^M-^ 'll 1 I !* VON. ' OTEN 1| »CRRY PARK CIIR VISIT SCENIC ; A THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. JUNE 5, 1969 .Aermaam SA tal<-Acrali« M IikIumi OaBartmiMM > S9 KEATING SnooDv Savs- HAYDEN REALTY ;‘.rLUir «-« CLARK turning away _________ 'sSliS Beautiful Home ' ' *" *' ' “ " V ...^ <:niiTHFiFm BATEMAN r4V^?P«r;rr.‘vi*r..b..'?J;hiSnn: REALTY CO. BROOCK ' ■ haClmark .J i...‘*i:<»'»-.__.,_.,_ Webster-Curtis, oo., .ppr.x.m.,..y o,.» .p«.r.. . .. »' Oxfard-Orion j gj.S: ROYER REALTY, INC. fyTbutnJs. cf.^; ^ nL/WiViO 636-2211 2o?d.d msio hirm;""' K“rS.r"«d^k««‘*an“.^^^^^ BRAND NEW FURNITURE -4k - s'...- —~ r “ . -SS? .....JO J 63 ACRES ' 10 ACRES \ REALTY. 19" GE Portable TVi (2) IlSSfl'' Garden I ."^Sr^ Household Auction , ^r;;:ruKI‘/.rpl. WAINUT &tsi” Tsiis ■ :ffiSli-rSa£fe* For Wont Ads Diol 3344981 THE PONTIAC PRES3, THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 1969 forSoloMlicoltoiitwn 67 For |«|» mUscsIfciwoi,, HQMiNT SALg, IM Chi, OASOMkNT SALCt IM ChlBMWI kMd, himlur», tfolK, Eo*i, MdiprtMs, IlDOTs, ■ppllinc*i tnd SatMTdw'* *«jn* iS'7'b m * iAiii is.r&hg*'»8rTf?r,'r?,' »cr«wdrlvw, tl5. |ia-3»4. _* Fig, garage sale, ^faTcSwt Rd„ FrI., May «, t a.m. to $ p,m. BIG SAVINGS simplicity . 12 h.p. traetpr. Hydrostatic trani., poworllft, «" TSoughtJn^wer center, INC. 112 W. Unlvarslty Dr. 651-7010 ____DOWNTOWN ROCHESTER BASEMENy and Garago lala: Chtlhlng for all, housohold Hams and furnitura, gardr- ■—■- - baby clothaa and ...... misc. Juno 6, 7, 0-5. 220 Thalia, i Rochaslor. Bahind NorT-- — ping Cantar. _______________ BRIDES - BUY YOUR WEDDING announoamanta at diacoimt from, , Forbos. 4500 DIxIp. Drayton, OR S- mi. ___ COMMUNITV GARAGE SALT Groat valuoi. 25000 Maadowdalo, *^«ALE.; 044-lS............Arfaolos, •r-»r»A(5c”" ^AIbE Clarkaton. FrI. p.m, Sat. Juni noon. Mlae. INi GARAGE SALE" SjN«» Dr, Thurt.' and FrI., 0 to 4. RUMMAGE SALE, JUno 5, 6. 7. C n“3,~tWiG-u?l.-.- ow Garir I Pots4toiitit Pots 79 1 FUREBRED MINIATURE PSOdlfa, * • waoKi, no papora. 40B726I.___ ■ RABBITS-CALL AFTER a P.M. ___________UL 2-4353. _____ REGISTERED L A BR ADO R RB-tlevors, 1 mo. old, $75. 62S-I1W. 13 Travol TroHors WALKING HORSE colta. Ono 2 yoar ------------lllSi. a._------------ I. or phono 313-70}- RUMMAGE SALE; Juno 5, 4, 7, 0 4, 505 Stirling. RUMMAGE - • 7, 0 a.m'. to 12 irth. Juno 5, 4, 7, I, o4 __________0- Iroquois. GARAGE AND BASEMgRTsTLE": 2 dining room sots, oM kltchan cabipot, vanaor library tabla, odd K?. owio of •urnllora,^, 9il2 s^ll rr*n!lV *h*‘ *"*' antlquos. 'AJAOE SALE: Clothing, furnitura, slovo, potMurrI, FIrday and Sat., yarl? *' Af«“'o- Washington TaRAGE^ SALE: Thurs.-Sot., aiv flouM, balls, trunks, tablos, ehptrs, prliRTtlvo, dlshas, mIsc. 40 Dakota, acrooa from Huron St. Post Offico. Garago aalo, Art a . rlday and Saturda ind 7. 10 a.m.-5 p.r hrmy Church, 20 Bu^al RUMMAGE SALE — Lots miscallanaous Itams, Thurs. & Fn., JUno 5 A 4, 0-d. 37S3 Navarra, off Jackson Blvd., Whito Lakp. RAILROAD flES^ ow and usod._____________ SURPLUS OFFICE CHAIRS AND Othar misc. offlca furnitura. Pricod to soil. Hundrads of Ronawabla-lypo fuses. Fraction of Original cost. BOULEVARD SUPPLY 500 S. Blvd. E.____________ SUPER STUFF, aura nufi That's Blyo Lustra for claaning rugs and upholstary. Rant Elactric aham-pooor, 01. Hudson'a Hardware, 41 > GUNS. SCO NEW, USEB, modam and —“— “uy, soil or - I, I'A mlN 1 M-15. 431-; T. BERNARD. AKC. 7-mont/h famalo. Plus foncod-ln KannOI. 0250. Attar 5 p.tn. 343-7040. SPITZ PUPS, Males and tamalaa. Town tomalo. 473-0230.______________ BERNARD PUPS, ARC, X-rayad d pat quality, roas.. REGISTERED ANGLO Arabian, 2 fiNk“ AIRSTREAM FOR 1040 18 ft. to 31 ft. ON DISPLAY Also • used Airstreams WARNER TRAILER sXlES lOW W, HURON_______412-0030 :ar1fREE TENT-traltor, Good stock, show and p terms. 402-3104. SCUBA DIVERS wot suit with hood, gloves an usadtwlca, 025. 451-7004. --------------------------;----- swlMiw^ ®'$w wfh: oS^.** * soy shapa In ground ' ely Installed. fl,750 It____ _______________ jwlng, 34" conwnt ribbon,^' HIGHLAND lie and quiet « children. 405-2725. WHITE GELDING, tested. Experlenci gelding, very g rain, tlbarglas diving board, ladder, claaning equlp-underwator light. Inlot fIF II permits, all axcavating, m Pool Company, 7170 Iwy., Open Monday-Frlday 0 It. 10 to 4, Sun. 1 to 4, to- ................. tarriars, A Known as'wlSjt sUSto, fr^y'aiS ___________________________ wrapped before you. Give us a for price, qualltV and appointr to cut. Romeo, PL 2-2041. Opt s a week747140 Vy Dyke. COLEMAN CAMPERS Sun and Ski marina on Cau Lake 3001 Cass Ells. opOn Sundays, or” tm_________________________^ Compirtg Private Lake Safe beach, flush tollats and showers, 1140 M-15, Ortonvilla. Ortonvillc. McFoaloy Resort., 427-3020 week-ends or 045-5050 —.........to 3 p.m. 4ir "—— I, Michigan. TRAILER, living area ori-fflir4*p!s;.‘as!fe5r" ^ 111 CAR TOPPER TRAVEL TRAILtR. 130" X 42" X M......- — $300. FE 5-0015. DETROITER, - .. -__ - r,»05l?"*” DETROiTiR ^ AMERICAN ' SUNRISE PARK KROPF Double WIdos. Expande's Custom built to your order Free Delivery and Setup Within 3M Milos AT BOB HUTCHINSON MOBILE HOME SALES D-r-18 Motorcycle Sale Anderson Sales & Service S. TELEGRAPH - Taka M-50 to W. Highland, right to Hickory Ridga Rd. To Damodo Rd., left and follow aigns to DAWSON'S SALE^ TIPSICO LAKE. Phono, MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE ' • " ■ySi'-s"o'5.1&ENcy EXCAVATIONS CLARKSTON HOMES Garage-Porch Sale. Juno 4. 7, I, a.m.-4 p.m. Antlquea and qua reproductions. Couch, chi... cabinet, cherry daak, angle lamp, s Simplicity riding mower. M-15 to 3 traffic light then " - Washington.____________ __ COMMUNITY GARAGE SALE, 37 < Kimball, FrI. and Sat. S:3« to 4 ' p.m. Appllancas, dll' rings, mIsc., man's, . rhIMran's Clothes. IS to list. Turn oft Baldwin —■- ’iSiSiSti. . .. ’■'-’^-r'tk.'^R RED SHIELD STORE 111 W. LAWRENCE ST. fverythlns to moot your naads Clolhino, Furniture. Appllancas ■' TWO LAMP, 4 foot fluorascant Waterford Twps., has ylokk several thousand yds. of fill dl and clay. If you ara In need _ such, we shall dollvor tfils to you for the cost of hauling. OR 3M35, 4 a.m. to 11 p.m.. Sun. Inch 1-A BLACK DIRT, top se" ' II areas dallvorad. -real yard aalo. nolhing ov cents. FrI. 12 noon till f. Sat M5o Tubbs. CrascanI Lake m f fHERMOPANE WINDOW A N D ^ BLACK DIRT, top sc CRAF.TSMAN SIT-ON mower, good condition, new B « * ' h.p. Atler 5, 343-5444, CO-OP GARAGE sale, — and housohold Item.. ---------- relrigaralor, 170 Dacca off Tag-gerdlne. Thurs., FrI., Sat., 7 a.r to 7 p.m. _____________ fAR“TOP“CARRI.ER, $15. TV II ^l-FI components. FE 4-7923 att. I CHIPPED BATHROOM flxturas f< sola, G. A- Thnmoion A Son. 700 M-59 W. •Notrlc and butane hooters. Tar. rtllc values. Michigan Fluorescent, 373 Orchard Lk. FE A0442 — 14. HUMAN HAIR WIG HUGE GARAgB SALE: OriglhoToi USED EASY LIFT TRAILER hitch, gravel. 493M27.________ CLEAir>ILL DIRT Avallablo at J^yn and Beverly. Phone 353- $20. 401-0239, atler 5:30 ____ UTILITY TRAILER. New box*3Vix4' $75. 3944)015 attar 5:30 |Mn. _____ SED RAILROAD ties, ~ excellani condition, $3.50 oa. B52-2B72. _____ Used Office Furniture Warehouse Clearance house. $20. 391-1509._________ Pet SEppnet-jjBrvIce 79-A 1-A GROOMING Mr. Edwards' High Fashion I Salon, open 7 day weak. ^ 335-5259 y ____ StlK 424-3429. DO MARS Poodle Salon, 332 W. Huron Days 33541435________EvoF M’- POODLE CLIPPING 3420 Airport Rd. 473-4997 “fhopIf 'ftTir riant on DIXIE HWY. 673-1202, WANTED: BULTACO Lobno K or ■ Check our deal on - npAVTnN pi ainc ^ SWISS COLONY nBAYTON piaini: ----- ... ... LUXURY TRAILERS FROLIC . .. A I L E R S AND TRUCK CAMPERS. SKAMPER FOI^-DOWN CAMPERS 13 ft 20 on display at- Jacobson Trailer Sales s Lake Rd. OR 3-5901 "»eT2502^^- YAMAHA^KAWASAKI „JI 1949 Endure models In stock, excellant selection of street machines Including tha all new KawaaakI 500 , CC. Easy terms. Claw's Cycle Cantar, on M-2I ono mllo east of Lapsor 44A9241. E GROOMING Pontiac, FE 4-1 Big Discounts 740 Orchard Lake Ava. ENCLOSE YOUR SHOWER o: , aluminum frame, w Sled Swkn design. $20. rnipson, 7MI5 M-59 W. to 4 p.m. 3111 Airport Rd.' HOSPITAL., BED) used clothln men's work clothing, FE 4-10W. IRONITE, WORKS groat, $2i Magnavox HI-FI, radio consol., -050. PploroM and print copier, $15, '—nplota. Pair of trick water skis, " Wll gun rack, $2. Ping Pong 0, 010,00. 44F4450, aft. 4: f -9409, 447-4421. IRON fireman horizontal vriters, adding mac lographs, off sot las, ono 4' Hamlltoi I, 7 and 0' drafting t________ Is) 4 tlla cabinets, chock .....jrs FORBES PRINT"— * OFFICE SUPPLIES, 4500 .....V. SAND AND GRAVEL All gravel products, fill sand ar.. u'black*d*lrt. 'phorls"394-0042. A« AUCTION SALE — ANTIQUES, u aas delivered. - .... ............. “ SPECIAL — LIME sTono, IGA stoni oversized stone, road gravsl, am sand. 4335 Sashabaw, MA V2141. TOP SOIL, LOADED AND dsliverei ns Massay-I ird{ $1145. p>«» HuEtiEg Peg 79 1 YEAR OLD LABRADOR 'll? lEWELRY, ODD LOTS, for prizas, YARD SALE; RUMA4AGE and . Itquas, 10075 Graham Dr. M mllas N. of Davisburg Rd. of Dixie Hwy. Miracle water softener. 474-1919. --------------------------------------------------------------- "K S'Md'sX Hiad Ta^MErtlE^^^ SPECIAL Miracle Fish Products, 15 olt. Tropical Fish, pot __________ GROOMING. Uncle Charlies Pet m G.T. R.R. pot bally stove, .milk cans and many others. Furnllura,i I shoo tools, sports equipment. Ford and Ferguson tri Photographic d ova loping and hmwilfan ear, foS'pord pickup car parts for old and new, farnl squipmont and many other Items. Terms: CASH. Beniamin Scott, owner. Ray Ray To^, auctionaer. Phone Capac, 3954915. Louted IM miles No. of Imlay City at m No, at'"?'}? sharp'’** "" **'” ■^ri. B AUCTION '''^w%%W'??i;ELL-t'g5SE'‘-*^ 12 hp, with mows ison dozers :ount prices. KENMORE IRQNER Williams Lk. garag;e sal^e; and motor. Pun.,, j— - furnitura. china, dishes, -■— •-nam bottles, rum-Startlng Friday Ison, off 00 ? 2M I y. 473-27T2. GARBAGE DISPOSAL, W hors StjWoVs' Sstll'sinks, 32x21, S29.M PF Sable Launa Plywood, 4x1x1 $4.95 per sheat. TALBOTT LUMBER 1J25 Oakland^_____________Fl^4^ GOOD RAILROAD ties, all slzs free delivery. FE 5-9IM^________ OOSUNGS, thicklTngt and blk Dunded by 14 Baguette i In white gold. May bo wc_______ igement or cocktail ring. Cost KAR'S BOATS A MOTORS 493- rPOWER^ONCTfiTE^BUGGTES^^ * ..*J.PETtiAM 5JM0 Ford backhoa and loaders, exc. condition. 15'S" fiberglas boM dogs, well tralni RIAN Hju^, I Iralned-Xl loader sjaer ^Ika now. ** Dixie Hwy. ____ OR 3-3J "B 8. B AUCTION ^"fRL NIGHT, JUNE 6th 7 P.M. SHARP Nylon carpeting over rubber pad. TOWN 8. COUNTRY MOBILE HOMES, INC. Telegraph at Dixie Hwy. 334-6694 , Dally 'III I Sat. 4. Sun. 'til - 3771 >tlBhlaod (M-59)__«57MM RICHARDSdN )2'xfo', 1947, cilT474- ^ EXPLORER I 5504 or 453-3572._________ MOTOR HOME MIDLAND TRAILER SALES lhirc”alifj?’n»^ unit I QUALITY AT ANYBU OOBT STACHIER TRAILER SALES, INC. BicyclEt BOEtl-ACCEIIOriBI . J In motor homo' STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. IwXNtlb”^ and 3771 Highland (M-59) _ _ 412-9440 FACTORY CLOSl-OUT of all 24" pickup covtrs. WHOLESALE TO ALL. Ellsworth Trailer Sales 4577 Dixie Highway_____azs-as 'rankllna-Croaa Freo Dallvory within 300 mllu - at Yoar-and Pricas. Call aft. 4 p.m. 3: Tim-Ajuto-Truck FIVE 025-20 TRUCK, five 15" 4 holo wheels and tlras for Chevy Loo_____________197 S. Jgeni REPAIR, MOUNT, and balaiKq mag arkat Tlra Co. 2435 Orchard tor, used once, 1300. 473-5709. ALUMINUM Aarocraft. new liar, Marcury motor, oxc. con- - Ion, OR 4-34M._________________ W ALUMINUM BOATS ...Bill (Lllofimo guarantao) Trailers $120,15 canoes $149 Big Coho boats, 14' $309. 11' $319. Big fiberglas runabeuta .......$591 lOM lb. boat trallora il7» $2,295. Linden, 735-7537. LAVATORIES COMPLETE, $24.50 valua $14.95; also bathtubs, fallals, shower stalls. Irregulars, terrific values. Michigan Fluorescent, 39} Orchard Lk. FE 4-0442. - ' 10-12 YARD, PULL St.__. Low Boy $1000. Cataplllai hydraulic blade, $^. PI 5 ENGLISH bulldogs, 3 males, 2 lies, 3 nW„ $200. 424-1070. AKC bACHSHUNDS ede Kennels_______ 335-5741 14 MONTH OLD MALE Dachshund, with papers, AKC, $40. FE 2- Farm and Garden Tractora POWER LAWN MOWEI^ ' AND RIDERS / ROTOTILLERS / IS LARGE GARAGE and Bako -no baked goods), lurnll ling and misc. Items. Jun and 7th. IBS. $5 Scott I off Elizabeth Lake Rd. 9-5 ______ garage SALE: Furniture end vay ceorge and, oft 5, 4, 7, 9-4 p.m. 473-1959._____________ garage slab Thursday at day, June 5 and 4, 9 to 4. Ipe, $10.01 per 100. G. A. ______Ji $.;j5on, 7005 M-59 W. MOVING AWAY SALE: Antiques _ 1967 CASE 450 DOZER Diesel will iwing angle blade, with new pins uushlngs, and sprockets. L. C Bells, Excavating. 3l3-434-$l$$. « ARC WELDER, METAL weldlh table, vice and grinder. Best ollei 330-1531. ___ ______ V AIR compressors; lubrtcatlo equipment, hydraulic lacks, ste------------ welding ogulpmanL J cleanars. Welding a Pontlec Atoior ' UnIverVty Drive. S ARGB- KENNEDY never used, $50. 474-liD AKC GERMAN SHEPHERD pups, 2 .---lor watch- good with children. _____________, FE $-1593, _ . ALASKAN MALAMUTE PUPPLeS, ; - A.K.C. Registered from "TIgare ............-........... larp* dog 1 lonion. Tnest Truckloads of Fresh Vegetables and Watermelons 19 Dixie Hwy. _____ORJ-2717,” LARGE BSTAfE ' Antique A Household Auction SBD RIDING LAWN AND GARDEN TRACTORS WITH ATTACHMENTS, FROM 4 TO 10 H.P. PRICES AS LOW AS $195 KING BROS. ~Pontlac Rd. at Opdy'ke Travel Trailers _______________ __ J,9 1944 VBSPA^lSO CC motor scooter, a- fj talned 9x20 ewning. E 405-3549, Mlltord,_ _ LARGE TRAVEL trailer, Anderson. Makes exc. hx m’’anyTxt?A..“$i5«:^Ph5;w sSeSloS: ,!1«, MOST EVERYTHING In the way of parts and accessories foi the travel trailer. JOHNSON'S TRAVEL TRAILERS Valton at Joslyn___FB j4-5|S3 McCfelTan Travel~Tfdilers, 4620 Highland Road (M-59) Phone 674-3163 NOW FEATURING ,,l WHEEL CAMPER W, The Number 1 told down campai ^ MOVED - SUNBEAM self- 1 g^ler**^--'"*- GARAGilMirchlldrtm and^ulto Clothing, «l»k9»L. apt. stove, baby furnjiure, and misc. Orchard Lake Rd. to 1744 Woodland. ________________ gigantic GARAOB VIb f-propelt ti®.? M-14 MOVIE CAMERA and light, ---------- ---------- — LORRAINE FROrn E AKC BRITTANY, $20. . *y OR 34IM4 .. AiRlB%E COLLIE PUPP 33$-W12 MOVED-SUNBEAM self-pr •AW'naKWU'n-jyc! J«M-______________________, BUST SELL, 3 ami Chairs, rugs, ' table tamps, clothes sizes 10 to 12 and misc. Ml 7-0544 aft. 5. MAOtC chef gas stovT. *—"nr hitch, 4 trailer lacks. UL 2- projfclore very goi^ c< mort Information d73-3l 70 AKC COLLIE PUPPlis; $75 and ' 75 per cent down, 4^3157. n AKC ^ GERMAN Shepherd Pupp S lots ot misc. Items NiFGHBORHOOD RUMMAGE salei 4 J^K UP 315$ Sehoolhousa, oil Walton, 9-5 condition, $40. Cell 4744l$54. Thurs. and Frj.______■ :_______ BASE AMP. Near rtiw. Per'lac iw BERRY DOOR, 9x7, all dlllon. 451-47$2. irdwaro, 33B5493. „ p.m., 3474 Lavee, Oaklahi) Haights, off Walton, .. garage MLE, JUNE 5. 4 end 7 ]0lo5 pm., 200$ Motl off S«ll Lk. Rdfc Clothing, misc., plus flat tog CaJ Iran cook stove. ____ GAfiferSajOTM Colonial Way, olt Lahser, 1 block from Square Lk, Rd.'Also furniture, June 4, 7, GASiGE SATSTTLOffiTNOr^ ages, household dfanwood Rd. ‘-e'te Oriw.Prl. and Sat. June 4 and 7. 9 e.m.-4 p.m^_ June 5, 4, 7, and $.____ G^^GE sale. Clines, I eleelricel appllaiiMs, •‘'•fee-53 Union • ----Ilott; neighborhood Garage Jal9 = ' June 5, 4,^7, 'o.J* F.™"! foi^ rent tS™7iemsr"l230'coc’hoctw^ pianos, $$ , Eliz. off Oregon). Plus cartage. ------------------------ SMILEY BROS., MUSIC BUSINESS 119 N. SAGINAW 1l'“'‘Ffl. % EM 3-0342. PDbiTc AUCTION, sals. Ilea market. I to the bare k of exclualve B. TRBASURi I Lk. Rd. 1 Lake Rd., near C A-i Aicc POODLE STUD service, i -ojors, puppies, grooming. 4$ AMERICAN^MMlTPUPPrET AKTiHEmB^^DB,'MALBr~ '..' ^0*0^ Irjin, ■- Bank A Trust Co., Clerk Mary Palmer, Estate Robert Taylor, Executor Bud HIckmott. General Auctioneer, Oxford. 43M159_________ - Liquiciation Auction FRI., JUNE 6, 7 P.M. SAT., JUNE 7, 2 P.M. we ara ovaratockad qu'ldate on# conimlati BRAND NAME furnlshlngt. Living, bedroom, klfchon, oceoslt plecaSi Thii la, alt BRAND NE marchandlsa. Furnish your hon ot auction pricos.._ TYLER'S AUCTION "ON THE SPOT FINANCING 4959 Highland Rd. (M-59) 473-9514 , ___ SATURDAY, JUNE 7, 10 a.m. Clair Johnson Home sold. - ^WnS.rtts'! F.r*kr's«*vlc*:M H.; Swartz Crook__ SATURDAY 7 P. Itame, Friday June 4. altar 5 PM, Sat, after 9 a.m. I49 LaOranda.— 6aRAOE SACE-Jone 5, Antlauts. gtc. P§BCnf ClaVSitai, Oriili Rd. to Snowappla Itams. llshInB and boat equip., crock!, wins _preos, milk cans, many othara. Thurt.-Sat., 9-5 P.m^ williams Lk. Rd. _______1 ■ oardlm Rd. Off While Lake Rd. 97 PEARSON'S FURNITURE HAS NOW OVED t6 440 AUB-*" PONTIAC, FE 4-7001. awingi Baaufl.w. Ruillc Furn. Co, cilikatcn. 425-3322.___ PORCH SALE; Clrthat, nc#Tc TABLES - .OIH»r ----- novaltlaa. Liberal 3245 Dixie Hwy. Other Items. Jatfarwin, Pontiac, 5r~gw II Biri'i r. OR $■ ;mrTWWi iiv.................. |Avi, hT— ..... - BTU's, llga nav,^ , __ „ . OOL TAElI, 2 yaari old, llhe^-j-•,slate top. 130 Marqualli, FE 5- liWcrrAWTMOWEftS" V9 oringial eotl-l yr, gyaranlea ■rrada-Irtt, servicing . —..elTad, '334-0350 ..........jTiqbeck RO, nirmrr- n........ -■ ....RUMMAGE SALE e J.m“ W. June 7l Qpon frm It noon to S p.jn.) •jB'f'OT' ' Everything from loun fo mite. IT Bfidwin Avo,. Ponllqc, _... I rummage SALE: flS^wdOn, * - ter Fethor'i DOy ■* '"■reunl. JUNE INVENTORY CLEARANCE SALE PIANOS-ORGANS Floor Models, Studio used, trada-lns. Savinas up to $300. Shop oarly tor best lolectloni. GALLAGHER'S >^-«T.l.gragh^TIAC LOWRiY organ; Holldoy mode lltlon, 1450; Losllo ipoaki ..... jpoyi., .... ____ CartHICOlt, 1949 iicenw. Mil Or trade tor smell fwusedog. 473-7304^_ ____^___ CUSTOliTMAbE DOtTHOUSES. COLLIE MALE, 2 yoari good homo. $$77497.________ CmHUAHUA PUPPIES tor sale. 32f OACHSHUNDTsnyiari'TBr’famiia, AKC rag. $40. 33B-4355. _ 65gS trained airbrsads. Ygur hoina or ours. Hava your dog traintd while you ar# on vacation. Doga and cats boarded. Pupa for sale. 391-1444.________, ditlon, 9575. 401-1115. _ USED THOMAS ORGAN 25 padalA Frtnch provincial, new, $1000,00. MORRIS MUSIC uPRiOfir pianST^good condition, ------ff.^.m. 474-U73. USED ORGANS’ 'Mus TInd homo. Hsrrini ...-.5-0374. _______ elMALi WHITi Gorman $h$phard ------- —II j35^9»._______________ iNS, also grown mala Ortonvilla, $37-2032. GEI^M $HfPHERb puppier FE 2-2$04 eftor 4 p.m. ____ golden RETRllvER PUPS, 7 ..-C rablata— —. irmad, 0100 aa. 451-0004. SHEPHERD pups, soma iw^ntjc*. ■ouflhmsn GERA4AN SHORT ............ ......... AKC, axcallant Bun dega. Sis and Pulanackl. DR 1759$. SS"-75. Thurs, .thr$!»l!. *•* Normndulo, off SIIW I as now, $1100. oitrvw____ : SMPHiCAf ^ O-WHEBL DRIVE .. . TakiO you whore Iho action N. SS^n^'ISflr^^ BM -'MrER TRAILiR SALES, INC. fiT!_HI»fiijnd s»“Las Coronado rafrtg This la a sale yi ' 1940 OA4C M TON Cimptr Sp9Clal * and liyo WlnnabeBO Camper, both units specially aquippsg ter trip to AlaakaTAtl axtraa Incl. OR s-7411. Z 1940 PHOENIX hirdlop cimpar, alsapa 0, furnace, 7S lb. lea box, • ■ canopy, <2341249. T. frolic camper, 10 or real, offer. OR BONANZA WEST WIND -^WOOO LAKE. ‘have YOuTsbIN tHl ALrNtW OMEGA lijlotorhome Ith tha Chavy Chaista 35 MINI-BIKE. I hp. coat $irr SacrlMca $110. 334-7944._______ MoiorcytlBB 9i HONDA DREAM, 30S, txcillinl ^..idltlon, 1300. 474-2152,_____ 1044 4W TRIUMPH, cu$lefflll«l. ,Clll )NpA OrtamTi ________-tr $250. 343-1204. I94‘5- iis; ObLDFilicK, wrlnKrt ---- ■■•-.a new, axfras, U95. H--*- ___J, $195, 330-3177. _ T945 CUSTOM $50 CC„B^, Diyi 402-7094, EV9$. 33M7I0. 1944 XL-CH SPORTSTER,’axf condition, parlaci onglnOi^34|J_ 1944 HARLEY IPRINT. $300. Call 1 IOM99^all^._____________________ 1944 HARLEY-DAyiDSON Sprint 250 iS'pic.^otf iiiiiy SIOO'. »4-' 1S'~Mop3CT>7piywood runsbout—ll IrolUr^WSfBSn i5'“cbHO BOAT, motor, fralltr, all skiing aqulpmant, WOO, 4IH474. Ts" LONE STAR. 75 h.p. Johnsan, trailer. 47371)1, MIprj;______ f' olastIISn mIrcurV mo, s$ h.p., traitor, access. 41 mph plus„ Great lor skiing, bartliM frldl slalom, SI125. 3437I51._:____ ^'[HtOIY r5~'SKF~iTTAt, 35 b.p„' ’>'1 $: “Raaoiltr; fB h.^ • , cover, ikis. Exc. 14' ChrTs CrXpV and Iralftl’.HI' low ml„ must ii . Gniy at Holly Troval Coach, Inc. 15310 Holly Rd., Holly ME 4-4771 ShGa?^; T 14 FOOT travel trollor for n WUdwood or ParodiM Bo^ Dallvard. 040 weakly. $7370H ,i>' LITTLiliHAMP. sImps 4, condition, 0490. Call 794-3449^ I lOOUSE CAR FIRST again, im the new 19' lilF -ilalnad motor homo built £n V Chsvrolol chassis. Comowta ...........Laoaor City Hi on M-21, Goan 7 days, lafurt and Sundavt, til 4 p.m. ______ i FOOT TANDEM TRAVEL Trailer, Robinhood 1967, liaa thar 3.000 ml. Like new, Ful y eqyippei wim converter Power plent. Sleapi 4, cell 425-2391 eittr 4 p.m. _ _ - — Mff-9400 Igeretor llzt ges •5?Hni3r5!)n“», ,, „....rleen bPdroom eyiflla, ......a Auction, 705 W. Clarkaton Rd., Like Orion, 493-1071. Early Hall's Blaan-TriEf-Sliriibi, B1-A 50, LBI,.pF LAWN and V8Mt I Cou 1941 YELLOWSTONE, Ml/ conll 21 ft. Sl99Pa 4, FE 0-2414. .. 1945 APACHE EAGLE with eanop) and idd-a-reom, $475. 474-2447, _ Villagt Trailar Solas •■’"•”6$5-2217 SALE5-5ERVICE-RENTALS $1.79-52.79. All kll elants and fh^ri Marktt, 3250 DIxIa pranh. hybrid iris _______4115 clintonyilla Rd. MUM PLANTS, 30 for S1.« 1969 STARCRAFT TRAVEL TRAILERS C«»NC. '«rosE8r’ ‘ "■ NEW SPORT Trailer DELUXE HARDTOP CAMPER Sloops I, I149S Ellsworth Trailar Salts 4577 Dixja Hj5hway_ _ 035-4M pioneer camper SALEST CAMPERS - TRAVEL TRAILERS - TRUCK COVERS, ALL MAKES AND MODELS NEW AND USED. LARGE SELECTION! OPEN 9 TO 8 DAILY 3090 W. HURON ST. , 681-0720 TRUCK CAMPERS - TRAlLiRS r rantala. Oeedell Trallora. I79-071.J. THE EXCITING 1949 Show HU PLEASUREMATE Open ovOB. except Wad, Electric water system, slorada lO gslors, llphtar and low for 1 "" SEEING IS BELIEVING KAMPER VILLAGE 430 E, Walton Near Joslyn *"0^l_ ! Open Sun. 507' TEnTCAAAPER, 13257" call 473 3414. Tin miuranctii pivm* • b«twMn 9 and 1 p.m. ffiriWDTipWBrfiriirFi 5-4507, baforo 2 p.m. _ batwaan lo and 2 p.m »47 trIumPh tioT Vary good condition, Slanla^E 5-5944. _ 1947 HONDA 305 SCRAMBLER. Exc. condition. 1490. 451-03)3. 147 HOnBA SCRAMBLII,, flood ......... condition, low mllMSf, 9490. 4403 473 7112. ... 6rlon Rd., idlaon, Mich, ■HARLEY*XLTT^uir;;^iiid; «vJ miloa, Matamera, 47M4I9. fj)47 TRIUMPtnsO «r^ Good condition. 1110. MS-2104. I52-44T "^conMrtlbfo Many txira.................. irim'MPflSBilJ criilMr WlHi trailer, 111 h.p. Chrysler marina, inboard angina. Vaiy good een-1, 91400. For furlbir Info, toll Wiring, hgmtsa mlwmg. 1200. Wm HONO'a 30S lifambior, inis'. «t3-1l50. ______________ I9M SUZUKI X-5, EXMlIanO?": dlllon, 5,000 milts, S40S. 335-S054 -OMoff-Jg:"'-___-----------------n 434-4014. lorirM.' cruller angina, W ntWp V.TV biick. 2400 miltij m “■Rft-rRfTO'iWW'w^^ ir"'V'A(OTA“'l00r“frainA' IT paranniala. 334-4195. Apacht Camp Trailars Pickup Truck Campers it“.r«r;.’%«c.‘i‘'To modtls of ntw Apicht Irillpri on display In hasted shewreomt. Gvsr 10 diffsrsnt models of pickup 2 ARABIAN OELDINOO lor ssla, wall broke. Double D.C, Arabian Farm, 425-3550._____ WELSH PONY rneras. Oood wiih chlldten. 339-1944, ____ 4-YEAR^D YE/kR 6LD~™iorninb mori, m9rlcan saddle brad. Good color, raan broke, $750. 425-3550._ i-AWiSKnisJae Afitub, Arablin, fl ifTPOA, 51" (tor aalo). 417-3792. _ AME eicam AyiiSons^ whilt they pickup truck-------------- _____ Town Dtalcr, Bill C camping haadautrltra Vi Mllj of Laoeorjgi^ Limits on M-21. ANbERlfTT, iT . . aaif-cenfalnad, ............axtraa. TR 9-0042. AIR sfREAM 1941, M'Tntirnaflonal-twin, 9lr condlllgnad, large ratflg, other extras. Like new condition, will InMrast the dlscrlmlnallng Juijar^ownar^ 45173)5;___ Amtriga - Sthdonir I TRUCK CAMPERS Silvireagit — Vacatianairt TRAVEL TRAILERI Nimrad • CAIMFING TRAILERS Big coltictein end the F. E. HOWLAND SERVICE I ...5 qixto Hw^. __ OR 3-1494] ittlL frAmI picSkOP aiaaporsl and lops. Cob to campar boot. I WOLVERINE TRUCK < slaapars. Factory oulle parts, new and ui Jacks, Intercoms, bumptri, spare tlra c lllary oaaollna tanks LOWRY CAMPER SALES 315 $. Hospital Rd. Union Lake EM 3-3681 WiNNEBAGd 49 SUZUKI S’eWAMBLiR, 350 CC, 0900. 425-5499. __ __ ARIEL ibOARE fOUA, 1957, Cliisle road machlnt, complal raworkid, now only $995. Ml 3934, “ A GIGANTIC SALE’ 1969 T-305 SUZUKI SCRAMBLER SAlElK‘d.1. MG SUZUKI SALES 4447 DIxIt Hwy. , 471-4415 Drayton PJalns,,. A-1* MoforcVcie InsurancB FARMERS INSURANCE ........ .._'134-200CC HAS FOR SALE Banner, ilsopi 0, fully sad, $2395. EVAN'S EQUIPMENT 439-1711 Clarkaton 475-251$ — Dixit Hwy. Opon 9 t.m.-^ -"YdffriTiXiirpbR-SPORT TRAILER, OEM. AND CORSAIR ^ TRAVEL TRAILERS BRIDGESTONE 1947, 175 9CC, 5 spttd, 700 ml. Mki -naw. Adu" ownaJ: Call Norton 425-2419. ■■■ B4B AUCTION MOTORCYCLE AUCTION FRI. NIGHT, JUNE 6th 6i30 P.M. SHARP FINANCE COMPANY REPOSSESSIONS '49 modalB down, 290 ce to 90 i all lala models, light on .hand no for'lnspicllon. ' \ jr a »wa 1-313-432-7101^ ___________ i^BEDROOM laMAargn' eualom, 12X40JI4993. 224-1509, dir. 10X30, 'l-'BBbRbbM, now ga lurnaca, 01905.J34^M9, dir. ' lEDROOM. I've POId 03,«0 con tsava on lot. 229- ---A ---$"4 g i iir ■ r-AniSODERN"DECOR ' Early Amarlean, Madltarranaan, Rlehardion-* Ub»r] 'illabla Coloniol Mobile Homes FE 3-1457 ' 474-4444 ......... 049 Diki* ° ENbuTfoTTibliis 1944 Triumph 500 In a B5A Victor "laa Star trl-hull' Im br-u-iwr-.W&%WSS new, vary feiionabla. PI 5- irK,"Ui7, 5»Ti h.p. Bvlnruda wtor and Pamoo aVa*'M-99*lo*V “iTlghl^, Tlol'^ *• SALES, TIPSICO LAKE. Phone 429-2179. IbAt WELLS FOR r OHon. 493-2912. A»,UMfN}g?fi£" YOURIVINR. Morrington Boat \ I9#S. Talagraph___________ " F0R~THE BE?T DEAL ANYWHERE ON- llar Crall) Ola«tron; G. W. Invader boala. ‘"Sj/J?’ Crait ponloona. Scramhiar; Terra Cal and Trail Breaker trail bikaa. Come To * JIM HARRINGTON'S SPORT CRAFT Vi Mila E. OfjJjOJMJf CI'V LlmlH Goan 9 lo $ Mon-Frl. ___ 9 TO S SAT. * SUN.___" Glasspar 8; Duo Boats Grumman Conoes . Fiberglas Canoes Pontoons, Swim Rafti Alum. Fishing Boots Scorpion Sollboats Little Dude and Trail Cor Trdilers Skin Diving Equip. Johnson 8. Chrysler Mofort Dockage Available . POTATO ; YOUNG'S MARINA I HONDA SUPBR 9(£ q( 1900 acluti mllM,;aa) 4200. ^7370^ HONDA ""lOM, TCf ExcalUnt coridlHc afitr 4 p.m. Ml 4-7. I MusrSELL NOW ' Hodd9.......... Good! lor trsHi. 1CCAMBLrt,''"l'W. lltlon. Bait otter 4-7073. llaciCaM Sentry praytan Plains OR < owiMTimT- 24 ft., owoiioni,^: ditlon, in water Toady to go. $$,100 > Over 100 fd69 Boots NOW ON DISPLAY Glastron, Sso Star North Amiricon Alumo Craft, "Mlrro Sail-fish, Sun-fish Mercury 8i Merc Cruiser Cruise Out, Inc. - D—14 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. JUNE 5, 1969 PINTER'S fsiTs&um M Sat. f-i II-7S at Unlvaf»lty gxlt) #^EDBOAT. 35 h.a motor trallar. Call FB 4-Mtt aft. 5. ..J NOW CARRY THE "THOMPSON BOAT LINE" Ur to t«' THOMPSON FULL LINE OP MERCURYSCHRYSLERS OUTBOARD MOTORS Oakland and Oanataa Countlaa only CORRECT CRAFT DEALER CLIFF DRYER'S MARINE DIVISION imo Holly Rd,. Holly ME *-«771 1t4» FORD DUMP. Good T»5« DODGE W TON picki __________«SS-»7« _ IMO WILLY'S JEEP van, SfilTjOJ UU Miirnai Cf SUN AND SKI MARINA CENTURY RUNABOUT-INBOARD I 0-0 B TAHITI CALIF. SKI BOAT-JET-l/0, 0/B STEURY I/O, 0/B 274' Johnwn boat* and a"k7*w*".f» &C !SS-ca-i-.iTr,: LL fiborolau, 07' I. Inboard, orlolna lor 1450. «0»-n34. SO BOATS ON DISPLAY LAKE & SEA MARINE B. Blvd. at sanlnaw FE 4-t5ty UiBd Auto-Trvck Parts 102 Fortlgn Cars Pontiac tot angina, eamplataly ratKillt, 421 HO liaado; HO ^draulle and ram air cams, 33S- Nbw anil Iliad Tracks noads work, 07S. FE MtOO. TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 194J CHEVY Vi TON with 0 ft. flootsido, 4 cyl. Hick, ohltt, — owner. 44M. Over 75 other ca.. lelect trom. On US 10 at MIS, engine, *350. 473-9054. ______ U GMC W TON>lck-up ... 0950 i>42 FORD Vi TON PICKUP, oi 1944 FORD M ton pick up. A-1 ^'*'on, like new, new tirei, i mr.______ __ JEEP WAGONEER, / GW Invader iporti -- rtpair axp MARINE 402-3440 33 yaart ri >NY'S AAAf WantBd Cars-Trucks______IM EXTRA Dollars Paid ; FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Car ^'Chack tha tool, Wan gat Iho hoar Averill's "TOP DOLLAR PAID" GLENN'S 1?67 GMC pTCKUPj I STOP HERE LAST M&M MOTOR SALES Now at our now location Wa pay mora for aharp, lata tno 492-2041. _ 1943 BUICkTpECIAL V-4, 1 ‘“dor, 1200. 473-4795. BUICK skylark convorfibjo, ___d condjtlon; 625-3575. 1944 BUICK' ELECTRA '225 con. - erimio, good I condition, 4300. FE ~196'4'~PUICK Skylark t944 CHEVY EL CAMINO 1725. Also 1944 Dodge El__________ pickup, very good ahopo. 1400. Call 473-0459. _ 1947 chevy '/i TON pickup, V-0, 1945 BUICK RIVIERA, exi condition, power window Jbrajwj^ ownorcor, 447-277^ 1945 RIVIERA HARDTOP. .... power end air conditioned. $39 down, weekly poymontt I" ■" ” " price SI495. Coll Mr. Pot Manager at Ml 4-7500. tion of Turner Ford (15 Mile Rd.) Troy Moll SHELTON Pontiac-Buick 055 l;_Roche»t#r Rd. _______451-5500 1944 BlilCk ELECTRA, '4-door hardtop. 70,000 miles, full power, air conditioned. 41950. 473-0442. 744 BUICK Wildcat custom '4-door hardtop, with boautllul tu-tone finish, all the goodies, nothing like that Buick ride. Low---------- I, V-0, I, $495 Up! Terms ArrangedI John McAuliffa Ford 277 Wnt AtontCilm (Nr. Oakland) ...... _Lj_MW* GMC TRUCK CENTER 4:00 lo 5:00 Mon.-FrI. 0:00 to 12:00 Saturday 701 Oakland Avenue 335-9731 "“ HARiRY R. PETHICK USED TRUCK SALES Foreign Can 105 T942 VW"---------- Grimaldi Car Co. ^kland.Avo. FE 5-9421 1944 TRIUMPh“sPITFIR'E ) verllblo, 4 liras Ilka n o m«henlcolly fine, 1425, 052-5252. 1945 VW - SUNROOF. Radio and healer. No 4 down, weekly poymentl 44.53. Full price 4705. Coll Mr. Perks, credit managr Ml 4-7500. New location ol Turner Ford 100 Maple IIS Milo Rd.) Troy I milt tait of Vt^odward )944 Vw''sEb'AN.'4495. OOtr'Seyi- Lk. Rd. bolwaan Soshobow ond Baldwin, alter 9 e,m. 1944 VW KARMANN OHIA. IosS 402-2542 1966-1967-1968-19^^ VW Sguare Backs and Fast Backd Reedy lo go. Priced up from $1495 Bill Golling VW 1021 Maplelawri. Troy 642-6900 Roducod tor quick tola only 41100 full price, lust 100 down. P.* Wo'ra moving to opr now Incatli end all used cart must be soldi JOHN MCAuilFFE FORD -JO^akloi^ Ave, __ FE .5-4101 1947 vift R'Abio, ixlra"'mourTled anowllret, 14,000 ml. 41245. 332- n9irtrium^S^ One of the llnoit sport con In area. Candy apple roB ond r like a dream. Full price $1375 Bill Golling VW 1421 Moplolown, Troy 64M900 TlgKtir^ 1967 VWf radiOt ----V clean. 62b-igor. _ 1967 Opel Sports Coupa packego. Yellow with black t, Excallont condition. $1295 ’ BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 2100 Maple Rd. Troy -642-7000 t'WIVW " ' ’ ' /*' _____________________ Want Sometbmg bona Fast? Use Press Want Ads - DM Direct 3344981 Grimaldi Car Co. 1944 OPEL LS, 0 I. radio. 03,000 t. Under warranty, 42M905. I Vw/BLUE, outomofle, radio, __ MWO mlloi, $1595. «5^4a1S. 1940 VW, 2 lone point, root -need to sell, 41495, Grimaldi Car Co. W Oakland Avt;___________JEE^M43 CHEVY W/VGON, good running condition, 4»5. 402-SI45. 1943' CHEVY NOVA, excoiionl,' taps Id tech, coll ell. 3 p.m. FE 4 1944 'CORVAIR SPIDER. Loti ol t'963 CHEVY IMPALA, V-l 1943 CHEVY impala eonvorllbik radio, heater, power itoerlne, 1 “MILOSCH Chrysler-Plymouth 1947 Buick Skylark, door, hard eutomellc, power tiaar , tinted glass, red alls, blue with white vinyl _. ilerlor, 41995. 477 M-24, I Orion, 493-1341. 1967 BUICK Riverio Honey gold, with matching vinyl Interior, all power, sharp, full price only— $2595 _____ hoelor, whitowall lire Balance due 4274.57, weekly paymenis 42.33. 45.00 down. Coll Mr. Al (deolor) 447-2041. 1944 CHEVY carry" ALL. miles. FE 2-4477^ IMV'^CH'EVRO'LET Bel Air. Metallic green r --------- -- ' VB aul brakes, ...... ------- ------- V6 automatic, power steering anc GRIMALDI Buick-Opal Orchard Lk. Rd. PE 2-9145 1947 BUiCK Special Hardtop,''oulo, ---- -sdlo and hoelor, power powtr brakes. Beautiful ■qua with mslchlng Induced lor quick sale only price, lust 444 down. P S. ving lo our now location 1968 Buick Skylark 2 door hardtop. Silver blue will matching Interior. Automatic power tieerlng. Low mllaege. Ex celleni condlllon. Cell 442-J249. Aud0tte Pontiac r 1129$ 1957 CAblLLAC. 6 p.m 1944 CADILLAC Coupo DOVI lower, air conditioning, wnor, may bo toon S-| p.m. ol 147 Arrowoo^Drchird Like. 1965 Cadillac Calais Sedan Full powfir and air condition. $1695 Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Soles - ■ Mopl^o Rd.^Troy Ml 4-2! Air, full power, exc. co mlleegt. 14350.J3MH«._ 19W tADILLAC COUPE beVILLEl all power->tnd air, 15,000 miles. Blue with white. vinyl lop, like now^MOO or host oiler. U4-I03I. ■ CADILLAC' HSIdorodo nil- --------- — with bOaulllul motolllc plum, bjack leather Interior, block lop, taclory elr condlllonlno, full power, eprl--tlme special only 45311 lull prii bl| Irede- locetlon end ell ui price, to our now cart must be rmnu Al ALi. iimBa JEROME 1954 CHWY',' oxcollent condlllon, --■olnol oquip. 34,412 ml, 474-1 CORVETTE Convsrtlbls, sns of *■1 iporllatt cars on the road, sutllul blue with white top, yot. tS’SS FORD LTD . 194S IMPALA, In now condition loaded with txtros, 4,400 octua ^ miloe, 42475. 3424 Coleport._ I9M CHEV'eIle Mollbo V-I eulb. 11,000 ml. 442-3217. CHEVY 1968 Wdgon 9 pessonger with V4, r ‘ull power and tinted gl ------- ...... .u— c, I. Ml 7-1125. I ddwn. P S. We're a sharp. Low GMAC $$$ SAVE $$$ Absolutely no (4) down. Example: 1967 2 plus 2. V4 automatic. Pow« steering. $1599 Call Mr. Parks low Credit manager, Ml 4-7500. Nei location of Fox Chevy! Southern car. 41000. 3 3 4 - 4 4 4 I ^ -4 13600 Maola Rd. (15 Mila) Troy Mall balwaen 10-3 . 755 S. Rochaslar Rd. 451-7000 I mlla aast ol Wbodw—' ' car to appreciate. 41995, JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 430 Oakland Ave. FE 5-41011 lerlng, heavy duly brak ty suspension, TurIx radio, _______ transmission, ml., original owner dltlon. 4475. 444-MOO. 1954 CHRYSLER TNewporl, 41495/ 1945 Olds 94, Ilf-* -------- ------- 41150. FE 9-0211. FOR SAL Good ce ; 1942 ChrViler Newport. n. 4235 Cl I. 33MML 1965 Imperial Crown 4 door hardtop. Aztec gold . black vliiyl roof ond matching Interior. Full power ond te-*—■ $1695 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 2100 Moplt Rd. Troy 642-7000 MILOSCH ChryslBr-Plymouth 194 4 Chryslar Nawport, 4 di hardtop, VI, torque flllo, po 'Dwer broket, whitowi ...... __n with groon Inter.... priced lo tall at 41475, 477 M-24, Lako Orlon^49^434t. 1944 CHRYSLER 4 door Mdon, good cor, mechanically liound. 4)095. From 1:30 O.m. to k:|srColl 422-4700, Ext. 3419. AlttrlO/SO p.m. coll MW/SI. _ _ M i'944 CHRYSLER CONVERTlBLi, — iillul yellow wijh block In-ir, lull power. 413M. . ECONOMY CARS 2335 Dixie 334-2131 1966 Chrysler New Yorker >r hardtop. Midnight blue with hino Inlorlor. V-0 --- $1495 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 2)00 MAPLE RD. TROY, MICH. 642-7000 KESSLER'S DODGE CARS AND TRUCKS Silai and Sarvloo Oxford _ ___ OA 4-)i 1943 DbbGE POLARA, convbrllh VI, tiick, cloan, FE 4-IHI27 oiler 7: p,m._BoloroJ^IK),_FE M072. 1943 DODGE 3M, f loor'; OMS. Good Irshipprtatlon.JSI-IOOt. 1943 DODGE 'Pblnro co'nvortlbit. ------ .... ---- intsrlor.^Vjj oulomallc, bowor ttaoring brakae, radio, hooter, whhawai tiros, tolenco due 4395, wtokh poymonli 43.19, 45,00 down. Cel Mr. Al (Peeler) 412-2041. 1943 .ppOGB DART^ Md." down, weekly poymonli 47.45. Full! price 4141, call Mr. Parks, credit manogor at Ml 4-7500. New loca tionbi Turner Ford 1947 CAMARO Hgor hardtop, will 327 V-I. many ether geodlos, mot oeonomy and iportyl Won Runi good. Il». UL ^ 1965 DODGE ^'440" 4 door tilth radio, hootor, Vl, bowor ' iteorlng, drlYtt llko now. Has lomo bump ond icropoe other wise OOODI Full prlcb $595 TOWN 8. COUNTRY CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH ROCHESTER mi N. Main St. \ 451-4220 1944 DODOB 'DART. E«c. condition. OR 3-940?,..........., ___ RT' aivy duly I III S34-9443, 2 FAIRLANE, floor il 143 FORD Gblaxlo 4 cylin dard, l osmar, 43,006 n condition. FE 2^S9. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 430 Oeklotid Avo. FE S-4.,. >45 MUSTANG. 2 d«or _ylnyl top, A stick, exc, condition. Coll oftar S, 1945 MUSTANG 2 door_hardW, Vl ------- - - S4S0. PB 2-1779. poymentl 45.74. Full price saso! Cell Mf- Perkt, credit manager at Ml 4-7500. Now location ol Turner Ford 2400 Maple (IS Mile Rd.) Troy 1944 FORD FAIRl^E 500. V-I. -------stoorlng. 51W5. ECONOMY: CARS 2335 DIxlo _______________ 1964 Ford /' Vz Ton Pickup with VI, ttick. 19,000 mllos, rtd finiihr rtady to gol FLANNERY FORD spoed, : ndltlon, 4 _ CUSTOM 2 door, I_______ Special-only 4441 (ull price, no money down. P.S. Wo'ro moving *■ our now location and all usod ca must ba ioldi door hardtop. Be g vinyl Interior. F I, automatic, roi ' eteering and breli .£»" Mr. Al (doalor) 482-2041 r and Uied Cars 106 wagon, littla boo Country H l,onoln#, I Nbw and Uiwl Caw 1947 MUSTANG. eon lake fliat tong •c.‘fur...« 1947 FAlCOS FUTURA Club COUto Automatic, radio and haamr, whitawall tiros. $39 down, weakly payments 49.92. Full price 41199. Call Mik Parks. Crtolt tnone "I 4-7500. New location of 1967 ENGLISH FORD . Cortina, 4 speed Irens., radio and miles par oollon, mint Reduced (or quick sole full price, Igst 411 di 1944 FORD Galoxle 500 convertible, gr.Tf.«*k Kr,T engine, radio and hoator, out Irani., powar ataaring, pow brakts. Reduced for quick, eal only 41314 full price, |utt 444 dow P.S. Wo'ro moving to our n« lucallon and oil usOd cart muit I soldi JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 1966 FORD 1966 FAIRLANE OT, ------ PO«L Bett I ^GALAXIE 10-PMMno«r waaon, % $1500. OR >-5355, . ivartwlp 390a r. 363-4958. TRANSPORTATION Cart, < LUCKY AUTO 312 W. Montcalf ___________PE 4-5004_________ 1944 FORD Galaxio 500 hardtop. V-B angina, radio and hootf- •“ the goodies, mtlalllc -- - finish with (own Inlorlor. Reduced (or quick sale, only 4I1IS full price, lust ISS down. P.S. Wi moving lo our now location and used cars must bo told I JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 430 Oeklend Avo. FE 5-4101 . condition. 343- For Want Ads Diol 3344981 New and Utsd Cw> 106 1947 FORD country SEDAN rta- "mi Turner Ford ■ (IS Milo R(i ' Ti le oastof W nearly n 11675, 3 wetigvo Country «»Huii w, grtftows, a u t o on a 11 c transmission, r6dlo and -pr'«.Tr’*P.*M'*i monager at Ml 4-7500. No# MCI Turner Ford 2400 AAaolO (15 Mil* Rd.)' Tnw M 1 Mile east of Woodward b?:k.s, iSm JS|'V«Il*'orlc. of the day, only 4^ *“'• Big trodo allowance. .PS. Wo ro moving to our new Im?*'®" "H* used cars must be soldr JOHN McAULIFFE FORD IOjOakland_^^________ PE »y_in 944 Tem'past 4-dbor damo....Seva 967 Comoro hardtop coupo ....Sl^ ,965 Cotollno 2-door ....»]495 l?tl!ht5K2'-dW;;;;;:|’| Olds'HoHtoy coupo ■■■ -* *»* KEEGO PONTIAC SALES KEEGO HARBOR x«.sxaa ATTENTION! 1947 FAIBLANB 500 Hardtop, o trans., radio and heater, now., tieerlng, metallic silver blue with matching all vinyl Inter lor. ReducetTfOr quick sate only 51591 full price, lust 449 down. P.S. We're moving to our new location, ond ell used cars must to soldi JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 430 Oakland Avo._____ FE 5-4101 1947 FORD 4 DOOR. V-I, oulo. sacrifict, 4095. OL 1-2141 aft. pm._____________________________ 1947 10 PASSENGER Ford Country Squire, station wagon. Very i—^ condition, $1750. 424-400S. 1940 FORD BRONCO WAGON wheel drive, V-0, 0,000 ml., t 1968 Fairiant Torino GT llh console end Turner Ford ole <15 Mile Rd.) Troy MalT —-----It of ----* __ _____ „ _______ then drive .. home for only 41310 full price, just too down, P.S. We're moving lo dur now locotloh and all used cart must be soldi JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 430 Oakland Ave.______FE 5-4101 1944 MUSTANG Hardtop, V-I engine, radio and hootor, auto, trans. Boautllul metallic champagna with black vinyl top. Reduced for quick tale only 51300 (ull price, lust $01 down. P.S. We'ro moving to our new location and oil usod Cars must be sold. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 430 Oakland Avo._______FE 5-4 )947 FORD LTD, Moor hardtob, 3 lo“*'o, gold acCw.... ___—............. Ixcetlent condition. Call 643-3289. Audette Pontiac ^ I. Think L® W. WlV Rd. “MUSTANGS You Want 'Em? We Got 'Em I 1965 thru 1969 25 in Stock Fastbacks, Coupes, Convertibles full price, no lucky auto Demos : Chargers-Polaras ; Coronets - Dart* Demos SAVE ! Up To $1500 Hunter Docige 499 S. Hunter Birmingham 1949 MUSTANG FASTBACK, - -- Under werrartly. Many uet sell. 493.894b. lOGO USED CARS AT TROY MOTOR MALL Maple Road (15 Mile) Between Coolklgt and Crooks ONE STOP SHOPPING AT Audette Pontiof Birmingham Chrysler-Mercury BOB BORST Lincoln-Mercury Bill Golling VW Mike Sovoie Chevrolet New and Used Cart 106New ond Used Cars 106New and Used Cars 106New and Used Cart 106 REPOSSESSIONS W 1963 Olds Delta 88 4 door hardtop. Lavender with matching vinyl interior. V-8 automatic, power steering and brakes.*' .Radio, heater, whitewall tires. Balance due $347.12, weekly payments $3.07. 1965 Dodge Polara 4 door hardtop. Maroon with matching vinyl in-terior* VB, automatic, power steering ond brdkes. Rodio, heater, whitewalls. Balance due $569, weekly poyments $4.67. 1962 Ford XL Convertible Jet black with black vinyl interior. Black top. V-8 automatic, power steering and brakes. Radio, heoter, whitewalls. Bucket seats and console. Balance due $186.40, weekly payments $1,74. 1962 Cadillac DeVill'e, Coupe; 4 door hardtop. White with blue vinyl interior. V-8 automotic, power steering ond brakes, whitewalls, tinted glass. ExcAllsnt condition. $ave. 1962 'Pontiac Catalina 4 door hardtop. Mint green with matching vinyl interior. V-8, au|tomatic, power steering and brakes, rodio, heoter, whitewalls. Balance due $287.12, weekly payments $2.14. 1965* Mercury Parklane 4 door hardtop. Brown' with vinyl top. Matching vinyl interior. V-8 automatic, radio, heater, power steering and brakes. Whitewalls. Bolonce due $512.09, weekly poyments $4.06. 1964 Pontiac Grand Prix Midnight blue with matching vinyl interior. V-8 automatic, power steering and brakes, radio, heater, whitewall tires. Bucket seats. Balance due $487.36, weekly payments $3.41. 1963 Corvair Monza 2 door. Turquoise with matching vinyl interior. Automatic, bucket seats, radio, heotOr. Balance due $274.18, weekly payments $2.01. 1965 Ford Galaxie 50G 2 door. Silver blue with matching interior. V-8 automatic, power steering ond brakes, rodio, heater, whitOwoll tires. Balance due $512.09. Weekly payments $4.06. 1965, Pontiac Catalina Convertible' Midnight blue with light blue interior and white top. V8 automatic, power steering and brakes. Radio, heater, whitewalls. Balance due $546.03, weekly payments $4,71. 1964 Ford Galaxie 9 passenger station wagon. Metallic green with matching interior. Deluxe chrome rock, electric rear window. V-8 automatif, power steering and brakes. 1 Radio, heater, whitewalls. Balance due $287136, weekly payments $2.13. '62 Plymouth Belvedere 2 door. Olive green with matching interior. V-8 automatic, power steering and brakes. Rodio, heater, whitewalls. Balance due $127.14, weekly jwy-ments $1.24. 1963 Chevy Nova 11 2 door hardtop. Turquoise with matching interior. 6 cylirider, automatic, radio, heater, whitewall tirps. Balance due $326.14 weekly payments $3.14. 1962 Ford . Galaxie 9 possenger stotjon wagon. Sahara gold with matching vinyl intdrior. Deluxe chrome luggage rackl V-8 automatic, rq-dio, heater, power steering and brakes. White-woll tires. Balance diw $121.36, weekly payments $1.72. '63 Chevrolet Impala Wagon Dark blue with matching vinyl interior. V-8 automatic, power steering and brakes. Radio, heater, vvhitewall tires. Factory oir condition. Bajonce due $348.22, weekly payments $2.16. TRANSPDRTATIDN SPECIALS 1962 Ford .........$95 1963 Plymouth ______$95 1962 Ford Wogon 9 possehger ... $95 1963 Mercury........$95 1960 Mercury........$95 1962 Chevy.........$9fe Payments arranged to fit your budget. Immediote delivery. Over 100 cars to choose from, including monV convertibles. We accept trade-ins, hondle financing, even, if you hove been bankrupt, garnished, just turned 21 or divorced. ^ Wajk in—Drive put—Credit Okayed 3275 WEST HURON Corner M-59 and Elizabeth Lake Road 681-0800. 681-0800 ''r.lr-’ .\ THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. JUNE 6, 1969 D^15 tnfnIteioMI JOHN McAULIFFE FORD MILOSCH Chrysler-Plymout|i 1f6f Ford Muitanop Vt, automatic, radio, whitowolli. d,000 ictuol miles, blue wnh blut buekots. *77 M-24, I .b. n.iM isuui X ' I Cm 106 I7M COMET, < New ami IlMd Can 106 Ntw ond Uied Can Take Your Pick and , Save Plenty 1W7 MtacURY M 0 N T a R a Y Hardin Air, «ow*r, vbiyl roof Ml 4-71M. Now loaii^ «( Tumar Ford I miio tan of woodwaro MILOSCH Chrysl•^PIymQyth aSssric. Transportation SPECIALS 1N4 PLYMOUTH t paattnf ^xeblld, 1965 PONTIAC Bonneville ConverNble silver blue wllh matching all vinyl Interior whi top. V-i, automatic,, power steering end braki radio, hfater, whitewalls. 1966 MERCURY Monterey Broeieway sedan. A let black beaully with mate iKd, Interior. V-d, automatic, power staarhi radio, heater, whitewalls. A musl. 1966 FORD "LTD" Hardtop Turquolw In CDlor with custom pifated Inlerle Y4, automatic, powar tiaering, radio, heah whitewalls. Real luxury at real savings. 1966 PONTIAC Bonneville Convertible .SSS- '1L Cdter wllh matching all vinyl Interk rMdlX■^te:Mttew’a^ .................. 1967 MERCURY Monterey Custom Convertible Interlw. "370" V* HILLSIDE LINCOLN-MERCURY 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 (ot Dixie and Telegraph) I Con 106 CARNIVAL Vd, auto, ixeene^ IMS RENAULT CARAVEL 10,lim mllas 1747 _Ch^ r VI engine, automatic. VAN CAMP Chevrolet -On N. Milford Rd. YOUR VW CENTER 70 to Choose From -All Models--All Cblors-—All Reconditioned— Autobahn Motors Inc. Authorlied WV Dealer vy Mile North of Miracle Mila 5. Tolagraph PE 1-453 IMS COUGAR ditloning. Stereo standard 3 on tti 1000 USED CAI^ at’ TROY MOTOR MALL New end Used Cara 106 New and Used Cara 106 Mils) Bolwsen , .nd Crooks SHOPPING AT ONE SI Audette Pontiac 1968 Olds F85 Sport Coupe Economy Special........ 1968 Ford Torino Convert., V-8, automatic, power steering, gold, bik. top . siBmJBM mm :.$18' $^95 2395 $3195 $1795 $1495 1967 Olds 98. 4 door. Power steering. Factory Air........... 1969 Olds Cutlass 4 door hardtop. Power steering, factory air .. 1966 Buick Electra 225, 4 top. Power steering and bral I. Like new 1965 Rambler Cl6ssic/^70 convertible. V-8 automatic. Pow^ steering .. ... $795 .... .$2095 »' Deluxe coupe. Power (hOinC ■■ • ■ 1-. kpziyD ikes, seats. Elec windows.. 1966 ^vrolet SS 2-door hardtop. |^]_403 V-8 aoto. Power steering, brakes 1964 Buick Electra 225. Full ^ower. Factory Air________ 1969 Olds 98 Luxury 4 door hardtop. Loaded with all the extras............ $895 $aVe 1968 Olds Toronado Deluxe Coujie. Full power. Air, AM-FM stereo. Vinyl top.. 1968 Buick Skylark Convertible. Power (hr) /QC I, brakes. V-8 automatic................KPa^ft^vJ steering, MM 860 S. Woodward M I 7-5111 B'ham Birmingham Chrysler-Plyhiouth By Dick Tarner New and Used Cara 1964 Falcon CONVERTIBLE, VI, 4 tbsad 1964 ChevelN STATION WAGON, VI, euMmatle, beauttiul rgd finith. $695 . “If you don’t like the location, Pop, all you have to ih> is take over the franchise for five bucks and close up or do anything you want to!” New and Used Cars 106 1741 MONTBRBY, 4 door, very low New and Used Cora 106 », raaionabla, M7-7475. t7M MERCURY cyclone, 13)00. 425- 1757 OLDS n, 2 door hardtop, dou- ble power, axe. 335-7145. OLDS 2 DOORlwratop: 1150. ____________FE 4-2145 IM2 OLDS SUPER M. ^Illon, 3443 Mesdowtoigh oH Lk. 1743 OLDS DYNAMIC —•on, 1400. 33MI31._________ OLDS CUTLASS. Robin egg MERRY OLDSMOBILE 521 N. Main ROCHESTER, MICHIGAN New and Used Can $595 lt43 PONTIAC Stailon Wawn, 1744 PonHac Station Wagon, 1745 Ford| Station Wagon. All can b a purchaaed with i»-------- — $1395 TAYLOR CHEVY-OLDS Transportation Specials 1M2 OLDS WagdS 7:. ::^^:“: 1271 1743 chevy .Hardtop ......1275 1743 FORD Hardtop . ..... 5475 1743 BUICK 4 door /....... $373 1745 MERCURY Hardtop......5775 GRIMALDI Buick-Opel Orchard Lk. Rd. FE 27145 Executiva Cors Inc. GM FACTORY OFFICAL CAR ALSO FACTORY CARS Now Mock arriving dallyl Up to 44,000 Mlloa-Factory Warranty I avarhaad — Laroa volurr LARGE SAVINGS Main, Romto _______7i RUNtiER, t - *0 lllneti, taki ROAD Ilea, dua _____lanto, 473 ----------------------- 1741 BONNEVILLE convartlbla, - d Core 106 New • LUCKY AUTO 1740 W. WIdf Track 1004 or - PE 3-7BS4 TBMPEST SPORT COUPk, f good. $375. mim, dir. 1000 USED CARS AT , TROY MOTOR MALL Mapla Road (15 Milt) Balwtan --- Coalite ond Crooko ONE STOP SHOPPING AT Birminghoih Chrysler^Plymouth Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Bill Gelling VW Mike Savoie Chevrolet DIFFERENT!! CHECK OUR SNAPPER NEW COLOR-NEW TOP GIVE US A TRY BEFORE YOU BUY OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 72«hOakland FE 5-9436 ASK FOR FRANK RIDGE New and Used Cers 1U6 New end Used Cart 106 New and Used Can 106 motor, tri-pbdi Mick ihKI, bucket mtt, solid , llftori, 1275, good Ihopo, 3354)745. ' 1743 GRAND PRIX, I4S0. .........“^r 5 p m. PONTIAC CATALINA, ngor wagon, double powi V3,i very cloon. FE M4||5. ____ 144 PLVMGUtH VIP, doubto poet- or. Phono FE M123. _^___ 1744 PLYMOUTH FURY 2 doot. ---- —^ ^ I good shape. I r, 473-2127. 1966 VALIANT 4-Ooor cyl. angino, extra Motolllc bronie finlih, ( $1095 TOWN 8. COUNTRY CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH ROCHESTER II N. Main _____ 651 -4220 1000 USED CARS AT TROY MOTOR MALL ONE STOP SHOPPING AT Audette Pontiac Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth Bob Borst Lincolh-Mercury Bill Golling Vw Mike Savoie Chevrolet PRICE SELLS CARSl BUSINESS IS GOODI OUR USED CAR LOT IS LOADED WITH LOW MILEAGE, CLEAN BIRMINGHAM TRADES 1968 VW Radio, haatar. Red w Interior. A v—---------- DELTA "88" $3069.00 Best Olds 1965 ContinentarSedan Pull power. Only $1295 Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Sales ' 1750 W. Mopto Rd., Triy Ml 4 1967 Plymouth Sport Fury 3 door herdlop.' White with gob Bont molching vinyl Interior. v-l . , Mi'orTng™' Lincoln-Mtrcury $1795 ! Bill Golling VW BIRMINGHAMLJ^^S“voi^(w^^ cmtY-SLER PLYMOUTH I Mew and Used Cen 106 New and Used Cars HAHN TODAY'S SPECIAL . 1965 GTO Convertible ................,$1295 automatic, full power, wide ovals, ready to got 1967 CHRYSLER Wagon ................$2495 Town e. County, 7 poMongor, air eandjtloning, tull powar, luggoga rack, rtady tor vacation hinl 1967 PLYMOUTH Fury III . . .$1795 3.?Tm»>7r b^Wyt’T5R'r«» ciponi Now whitewalit._________ 1962 CHEVY 4 door........$395 1968 RAMBLER Rebel.......... . $1695 4 door Mdon, with automatic, power Miarlng, rtdio, heater, low at priced. New cer wer- 1964 TEMPEST 2 dottr .. ...$ 695 eutamatic, VI, runi and toaki Ilka iww. 1965 RAMBLER Sedan ...........$695 Amaricdw 2 deer, autemattd jtety aeonamlcdl. 1968 CHRYSLER Newport ....$2595 1968 DODGE Coronet................$2395 ' 2 door hordtop. with bright rod finhh, ( vinyl roof. Now car worronty. Mutt itp to ecletei Buckete, end ceniiw i"»i Chrysler-Plymouth-Rambler-Ieep Clarkston 6673 Dixie Hwy. MA 5-2635 I Used Cara 106 ___TROY, MICH. 642-7000 1741 Plymouth RotB SSSV-S.'^euhShetlc'! mltot, new cer war--enly. Low down poymont, SHELTON Pontiac-Buick 4-22M 15$ S. RochHter R New and Used Cars 106New and Used Cars 106 $1588 1965 (ord Fairlane 500 2-door hardtop. V-5, outoni'atlc. Radio, hooter, pewtr tiooring, lurqut'" — ------- -------- whltov $1795 1965 Dodge Von 4-cyllndor, Mindord Irenst.... Dark blue. Vary good llroo good condition throughout. 1968 Opel KaiJett Wagon r%.5sntii“rts?:"*oS?y‘''-,,r.ai $1595 1965 VW HUNTER DODGE 499 S. Hunter Birmingham Ml 7-0958 If end Used Cars 106 New and Used Can 106 New aod Used Cara ^ 1969 Demo Sale! ^ T ^ 12 Models to Choose frpm V 1968 & 1969 Sport Wogons $AVEI EASY TERMS ARRANGED 1968 Buitk Electra 2 door hardtops ■> OoM Wim Mck tap and white $3200 EASY .TERMS ARRAAIGED 1969 Skylark Convertible EASY TERMS ARRANGED 1966 Skylark hardlBP, V-B, wter. $]795 EASY TERMS ARRANGED 1967 Opel 1968 Pontiac Station Wagon Firebird White with rad blterter. t iW chpeea Item 400 Convertible * $W50 $2550 1. EASY TERMS ARRANGED EASY TERMS .^RRANGED 544 S Woodward, Birmingham 647-5600 .;-i. , : 'r;' I .■:t'l.. GRAND OPENING SALE! Standard Has a New Lot and -We re Celebratingl ★ HUNDREDS OF CARSl ★ HUGE SAVINGSl ★ 30 DAY GUARANTEE! CREDIT SPECIALIST ON PUTYI FULL PRICE 64 OLDS fiiiiTfiMn-****’ ' 64 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 2 door, hardtop, V-5, automatic, power etearlng, p heater, while with black vinyl too. 65 CHRYSLER $795 brakai, $795 tor, n 65 ClflEVY CONVERTIBLE Lika New, whIWwalli, radio, heater. 64 CORVAIR MONZA 2 door, hardtop, yellow, 4 ipdpd, re 64 FORD STATION WAGON v-i, ttick, radio, he 65 CHEVY 65 CORVAIR SPIDIR CONVERTIBLE 4 ipe^, radio, hatteri whitewalit, burgundy 62 RAMBLER WAGON Trtniparlatlen ipacltl, 4 cyllndar, autemttlc. 64 BUICK )te|j^> V4, automatic, powar itearlng, pi $995 $995 $395 $395 $795 $695 iterler. $195 $895 WE HAVE 64 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX V-S, can tote, full pewtr, Waek, wWi 64 BUICK SPECIAL $695 $795 Ask for Ray or A1 STANDARD AUTO SALES OF WATERFORD 1400 ghUWIi lolbi-td.-WI-0004 THE WARM WEATHER BUG! - ./ ■ .. /'^ V' ■■ - • , ' ' ■ . ' /' .1 New or Used—We Are Here to Serve $1995 $2095 1969 VW $1995 CDMtr, tanvartlbla,‘’autamatle, i $795 $1095 1968 CAMARO It eoupa, autorhatic, m, with pewtr, i $2295 1968 BUICK Skylark, cuitllm eodba, autemtili pewtr, new hree, red, wWi KM p warranty. $2295 1966 FORD $1095 $1895 1967 VOLVO 122-S, radio, automilte, 100 par c $1695 $1295 1967 CHEVY M Ian pickup, ftoM tMd, V4, b« $1495 mmMME M(Dmm TELEGRAPH ROAD ' lust North of Square Lake Road, and Next to Holiday Jnn ■ o, ' . -h iM 1>~16 THE PONTIi^G PRESS. THURSDAY. JUNE 5, 1969 ItoW aiidi UimI Cm 106Naw and Uud Con r and Uidd Cara im PONTIAC C*t«llu 4 « SPARTAN DEPENDABLE USED CARS '67 FORD Oaioxie 500, 2 door, hardtop ..$1195 I, beautllul ..$M95 C W $1795 '65 MALIBU SS. 2 dooD hprdtop ...............$1195 auTomaTK;, rac A7ith black buckets. '67 MONACO 500, 2 door, hardtop .................................. covert, maroon In . $1795 VI, automatic, | ___ vinyl lop, raOlo, ' craam in color wiin matching Interior. '65 TEMPEST, 2 door, hardtop ............................ radio, whitewalls, wheel covers, r $1155 '66 CORONET 500, 2 door, hardtop ........... .. $1644 V8, automatic, vinyl top, power, radio, whitewalls, wheel covers, pastel yellow In color, with black interior. '67 PLYMOUTH Fury II Station Wagon . . . $1595 VI, automatic, power, radio, whitewalls, air-conditioning, luggage rack. Ideal tor ygur vacation. '67 CORONET 440, 2 door, hardtop . . $1695 V8, aulomallf, power, air conditioning, radio, whitewalls, vinyl root, coppar In color with matching Interior. 1969 MODELS IN STOCK WITH AIR-$AVE THE GOOD GUYS SAY 'WE WON'T DODGE ANY DEAL" SPARTAN DODGE SELLS FOR LESS (TELL US IF WE'RE WRONG) 1444 tempest, 3M, speed, M2S. 335-30M._________ 444 BONNEVILLE HARDTOP, 1444 PONTIAC Gl.------.. - blue with matchlrig vinyl Interior. VI aulomallc, poviier 'steering ■ and brakes, radio, heater, whitewall tires. Balance due $479.13, weekly payments $4.11. $5.00 down. Call Mr. Al (deeler) $e2>306l. 1444 PONTIAC' CAT^LINArHardhOP, power, clean and In'axe. condition. ■ paymanis. 428-347J i brakes, *545. 411,0.143;_ l444“GTCr convertible, axccirent condition, 1900. Loaded. FE 4-1087. PONtTaC CATALINA,'1444, whit#, low mileage, air conditioned, good tires, 334-IM!;, 1445 GTO'CONVERTIBLEr excellent condition^ 3900. Loaded. FE 4-1037. . “ 1965 PONTIAC LeMaris ’ Convertible with 375 VI, automatic, power equipped, one owner, sharp, with Anderaon and ^eminarlNaw and Utwl Cara 106 1968 LeMons metcMnp ,. Nm and Used ^ara 1443 RAMBLER, Now and OsMi Cnra 106 New ond Uied Cnra 1Q6 'tray W Oakland Aye. 1444 FIREBIRD 330 1441 RAMBLER DPL Air conditioned enu p v w. equipped. 134 down, weekly pay-0. Full prict $1494. Call credit manager al Turner Ford la (15 Mile Rd.) ,Troy « ------»-0t Woodward 1 mile east^ot W 1969 PONTIAC Bonneville 3 door hardtop, with .jwwar equip-____________________ pad, vinyl top, lull balance of fac- 1441 JAVELIN SST. , ..Jrranty. St,.. 3345 cath. Only— $3195 $1195 “What on earth could have happened to that dish of dog food I had in here?! ” 1444 PONTIAC CATALINA 2 ddor hardtop. 2 to choose froma these are company demos. Complete solllno price. Starting at $3125. tUtI TIMJ D^waSUea DaalaaL. SHELTON Pontioc-Buick' 1000 USED, CARS AT TROY 1965 Pc»htiac New and Uied Cart 106New and Used Cart 106 GRIMALDI Buick-Opel * New and Used Cara 710 Orchard Lk. Rd._. FE 2-4IM- ' OVER 1,000 USED CARS AT TROY 01 motor MALL^ Mepit Road OS Mile) Betweeq 1965 GTO Convertible qNE STOrSHOPPING AT 106 New and Used Can m PQNTIAC BONNEVILLK 2-door, power antenna, -------- ----- “‘taring, condlti MOTOR MALL power trol. a wheal, many n Taka oMar car Maple Road (15 Mile) I aea d.Mn 1 Coolldge andeCrooR# ’ft.a“n"i ONE STOP SHOPPING AT Grand Prix with VI, automatic, doubla poi black vinyl root, burgundy ' 417 PONTII rtal chtfry _____ . mllaagi, starao, ntw ownar, 17,075. 4H-0144 Audette Pontioc . Wall maintalnad. Call I 1967 Cimaro hardtop coup#....11545 1967 Catalina 2^r............$1495 1965 Buick Wildcat .........$10951 1966 Chevy Bel Air 2-door .. $ 895 1965 Fury wagclh ............$895 1965 Olds Holiday coupe $ 695 KEE60 PONTIAC SALES KEEGO HARBOR_____________ 19^ RAMBLER SfATION WAGON, V-l, automatic, txcallant transporta- Birminghom Chrysler-Plymouth , Audette Pontioc SI5. 1447 Pohllac, ! Troy II llrts. 1139. Buy hart. larval Motors, 251 Oakland. FE l' Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Bill Coiling VW Mike Savoie Chevrolet MERRY OLDS INC; 528 N..Main St. Rochester OL 1-9761 ..$2194 ..$ 795 1969 CMC Vz ton pickup with long box, radio, V4 ongino, onli 1966 VW Panel . whitewalls, excallent condition. 1968 eVORVETTE Fostbock .......... With 427 engine, automatic, radio, power steering, ♦ower windows. Bteutiful sparkling red finish. 1968 OLDS 88 Hardtop . 1968 RENAULT 4 Door . ...$ 795 ..$ 995- finish. MERRY OLDS INC. 528 N. Main St. Rochester OL 1-9761 Cadillac Pre-Owned Beauties From The Birmingham-Bloomfield ' Area 1968 Cadillac Coupe DeVille Beroquo gold with black vinyl root. AM FM slarao radio, lull powa., cllmala control. Now 1967 'Cadilloc Coupe DeVille Summit gray fnalalMc black vinyl roof. Full powar, air con-dlllonad. 14,MM mllaa. Looki ' Ilka much la». Naw car condition. 1967 Cadillac Sedan DeVille Florldo car. Capa Ivory with vinyl roof. Pull powor, eruHo nnirni, cllmato control. Vary Iharo. 1966 Cadillac DeVille Sedan Full oowar, 4 way laaf, faclory air condlllonad.. Excallant con- 1967 Cadillac Fleetwood Brougham Tha vary flnail of all Cadillac!. Loidtd vDllh aoulpmanf and air condition. Sta Hill onal 1963 Cadillac Coupe DeVille Equlppad Including powar windows and 4-way itsf, Tha citan-aif oldar Cadillac wa hava had rtcanfiv. Don't mli> It. CADILLAC of Birmingham Ask for Rich Kroll 135D NORTH WOODWARD PHONE Ml 4-1930 1445 BONNEVILLE HARDTOP, maculate condition, Birminghom Chrysler-Plymouth 1 drafted. 425- r factory domallc, It a raal New and Used Cara 106New and Used Cars 106Mew and Used Care 106 New and Uied Cara 106 money oown. _ LUCKY AUTO FE 4 1440 W. Wldi Track FE^7554j "^ifol^^^s'MrjitTir: iVm PONTIAC grand J»RIX, ^ ^asi Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Bill Coiling VW Mike Savoie Chevrolet ‘(WU BONNEVILLE” 1441 FIREBIRD 400. Nassau _ with vinyl top. Auto, with doubit ! powar. Factory mags. 52443. 1000. ; actual ml. I ECONOMY CARS 2335 Dixie Hwy. 3M2131 »44 Ti^PEST cualom, ____________ 21,000 ml., good condition. BEST -r.. iik-i offer. 4iMayi after 5 f.m. vou paV' paL'*« 'CATALINA WAGON, "iufo., you pay. par brakes, stearlna, factory air, rack, ...... .. n - I I tlolleclor, tinlad glsit, vary clean. SHELTON Pontioc-Buick ’ axe. condifion.j13.0255. 155 S Rochoslar Rd. 451 5500 1947 CATALINA HARDTOP; ■ ■ aulomatic, vinyl roc" 1966 LEMANS condlllon. 139 ddwr., ■ Iirvei 5FAT5 BEAUTIFUL payments 515.92. Full pr _______ green finish. BLACK IN- Y.'L, manager at TERIOR. FOUR SPEED., 324 CU. IN ENGINE with ho. FOUR BARREL CARB. TINTED GLASS, WHITEWALLS, BLACK VINYL TOP. 11300 FIRM. CALL 474-0514. I944'>0NTIAC CATALINA 3 door IF YOU ARE OVER 21 AND WISH TO BUY A CAR ON CREDITI CALL '47 Models on Di -.................... .....!, 1941 PONTIAC GRAND PrIx. rulornatlc, vinyl ^ root. LIko now _474-2l43;_ tml .QXO metching interior I mile eett of Woodv . .- _____ _____ that# ora company demos. Complolt tolling price. Starting at 53135. SHELTON Pontioc-Buick 155 S. Rochastar . *51-5500 1944' TEMPEST LiiMant. 2 door hardlop, ayto.JITOO 343-5002. 1944 CATALINA HARDTOP. Pow^ Audette Pontiac Turner Ford 2400 Maple (15 Mila Rd.) Tr . i'll!. ...I »f UUnnHuta . VI automatic. TIWI PONTIAC Catalina 2-do miles. Excallent condlllon. Call 443- 1130 Troy „ Duen.. ....... - .e--- irantmittlon. Rally wheals. 32,000 aclual mliat. Excallent tires. Call 442-3304. , Audette Pontiac 1450 W. Mapit Rd. Troy .2*3T’' lhar aecattorlat, wnar and localty owned. SHELTON Pontiac-Buick 155 S. Rochaslar Rd.____J5I-5500 ' -------- 1465 TEMPEST, AdOor hardlop, 1967 Bonneville 'ati'i 771 2 door hardtop. Mtdium bluo with aqMmorIno linjth, S1450. 5I2-5071. malchlnfl vinyl trim. Automatic, )4m PONTIAC CATALINA Con-powar steering and brakes.. New vartibla, with powar, automatic, llTS.’- ‘^•'1 **>■ folks It's that time of ytar again. MW. Sava low down paymanll Audettiv Pontiac , SHELTON Pontioc-Buick Tfoy 155 S.^RoeliatUr_Rd. 451-5500 ---- 1440'LaMANS 3 i I condition. 52300 ATTENTION I 1947 Ponllac 4-door, pr--------------- UL 3-3133. 1940 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX, lull power, FM storoo, mony extras. •2444. call before 5 p.m. MY 3- 1,000 - j USED CARS AT TROY MOTOR MALL Maple Road (15 Mila) Between LUCKY AUTO" r. ”■ r 109 E. Bl,d. S. FE 8-4033 1967 Tempest LeMons Hardtop 11941 tempest, powtr tfMring, • cath. 625-V76. Audette Pontiac FLANNERY FORD (Formerly Beallle Ford) Og. Dixie Hwy., Watprlord 423-0400 1967 Catalina Wagon Birmingham' Chrysler-Plymouth New and Uied Cara 106New and Used Cart Bob Borst , Lincoln-Mercury , Bill Colling VW Mike Savoie Chevrolet 106NCW ond Used Car* 1^6 1000 USED CARS AT TROY MOTOR MALL $2195 Pontiac Retoil 43 Unlvorslly Dr. FE 3-7454 ---5 115 MIN) L... Coolldge and Crooks ONE STOP SHOPPING AT "Village Rambler" "The Rambler Scrambler Is Here!" In Stockl And Ready to Rolll ■ Th§ bniifed"'Production/ High Performance Beauty by American Motors Now Available for SPOT DELIVERY . 1967 Chevy Impolo Convertible Automatic, power steering and brakes $1495 1965 Ambassador 6 Passenger Wogon Automatic. Full power j $895 1965 Ambossodor 2 door hardtop. Motodor red. Block vinyl top, new tires $895 1966 Ambossodbr 4 door sedan. Automotic, full power. Like nbw $1099 1964 Plymouth Fury 2 door hardtop Automatic, power steering & brakes $788 1965 Rambler 880 Wagon. V-8. Povver steering ... $997 1969 Javelin SST 2 door hardtop. Console, outomatic, power steering brakes. Foctory air $2295 1964 Rambler 990 4 door sedan. V-8 autonidtic . , -L ■ • .. . 4.$58B 1965 Mustang Convertible. Automatic, console. Shafp 8i ready to go $1099 666 S. Wooc^ward, Birmingham MI ,6-3900 «GO! HAUPT PONTIAC Audette Pontiac Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Bill Golting VW Mike Savoie Chevrolet New and Uied Car* 106 New and Uied Can 106 JUNE SPECIALS Beot the hot season by getting in on these sharp core equipped with AIR CONDITIONING Act Now 1967 Plymouth VIP 4-rfnori hurrltop $1995 1965 Imperial 4dDor, hardlop $1595 1967 Plymouth 3-door, hardlop $1895 1966 .Chrysler* ' $1495 1967 Porltiac Indoor# hifdtopa FIrtbIrtf $1995 1968 Dodge Bus $2595 1967 Pontiac $1695 1968 6MC Pickup V'ls bviftirlvt# 1 Fta box , ■ $1995 1967 VW . $1495 1966 Chiville 3 door hardtop. 1967 Valiant 4 door iodih, ilk, •fleh $1395 „ $895 CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 724 Oakland FE 5-9436 YOU SAVE WHEN YOU DEAL WITH A WINNER! Winner of Pontiac's Record Breaker Contest!! Now We Give You a Chance to WIN A SET OF Redwood Lawn or Patio Furniture JUST STOP IN AND REGISTER - NO OBLIGATION - DRAWING SAT., JULY 19- 1969 PONTIAC HARDTOP CATALINA COUPE With hydramatic, push button radio, remote control mirror, wheel discs, power steering, ond a matodor red finish. Stock No. P-387. Only - ‘2986 1969 PONTIAC CUSTOM S 2 DOOR HARDTOP Custom Air Conditioning Complete decor group, automatic, power ’ steering, tinted gloss all windows, white-walls, 2 barrel V-8 engine, push button radio, power bfokes. ‘3125 ALL CARS USTED— IN STOCK-READY TO GO! 1 1965 PONTIAC Grand Prix $1295 1968 PONTIAC $1795 1963 PONTIAC Wagon with gewer itaarlnB, brakai, radio, I malic, healer-and ready (or (hat vaeat Only- $895 We Guarantee in Writing every one of our Quality Used Cars hoi actual m i I e s I (As Traded) WE DO NOT RESET ANY SPEEDOMETER FOR ^YOUR SAFETY AND SATISFACTION. Deol with people you con Trust I Where honesty is our Policyl At Russ Johnson's 1963 TEMPEST Wagon itom, with auton • finleh. Only $595 1967 PONTIAC Cotalirio $1895 1967 PONTIAC 4 door Calolino, with power |plaerli $1795 •Open Saiurdays Till 6 P.M. — WE WILL MEET OR BEAT ANY DEAL, WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD • PONTIAC-TEMPEST On M-24-Lake Orion MY 3-6266 '' *■! .Am THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUl'RSDAV, JUNE 5, 1969 D—IT “asr“' UPrkwKir aoindmM^uiiil 84RvmUuT — * coin Cvar.) IJSSSS?"** 22 Negnttvaifq^ S5 Utah, 23 Exclam«tkn« forinatr ofMtiirfKticn SSBritiah ^ S!£r^ »J»JM IMXUdio iSiSJ SSSttS*" «S3? ^ESSw. .iSirSL., hO.1 28 Hebrew month light fpeop/e in the News Keep those Colors Bright and Sassyl Your color TV imhm you happlmt whon all tha tinta art ]uat aa thay ahould bo. Color TV doiervaa prolaa-Blonal traalmant. Whan your n\ nooda aarvicins, oall in AIIMai»a,AIIMecl«lo STgMBKI 681-1515 EASY TERMS OpMFri.’till 1 ism Huron TV Features AUCTION ACTION, p.m. (58) ANIMAL WORLD, 7:30 p.m. (2) TOM JONES, 9 p.m. (7) NATIONAL ARTS CENTRE, 9 p.m. (9) SUMMER FOCUS, 10 p m. (7) • Pollution Study A group of acientlRts have 'begun cultivating oysters ip the waters of New York City’s Eimit River in the hopes that the waters there currentiy poiiuted wiii graduaiiy be reclaimed. -Television Programs- Pregroms furnishad by stations listed in this column are subject to change without notice! Chownela; 2-WJBK-TV, 4-WWJ-TV. 7-WXYZ-TV. 9-CKlW-TV. SO-WKBD-TV, S6-WTVS-TV, 62-WXON-TV By the Assotdated Press Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir says she hopes the next French president will lift the total arms embargo imposed on Israel by former French President Charles de Gaulle. In a question-and-answer session with students, she said the embargo had imposed a “terrible evil” on Israel. vl De Gaulle ordered the arm^ban earlier ^his year after Israel raided Bierut International Airport in retaliation for a guerrilla attack on one of its airliners. Former French Premier Georges Pompidou and interim President Alain Poher, heading into a June IS presidential runoff, have indicated they favor a relaxation of the embargo. 'Privileged White Students' Blamed for Disorder S. I. Hayakawa, acting president of San Francisco state College, blames “the privileged students of the white middle class” for campus disorders. Hayakawa, named acting president in the midst of campus turmoil, was In Sacramento yesterday to seek approval for some 119.2 million In state money to aid needy students at state colleges. Asked whether admission of needy Negro Students leads to campus troubles, Hayakawa HAYAKAWA difficulty are not the disadvantaged students. They are the privileged students of the white middle class.” R — Rerun tl — Coflir THURSDAY NIGHT 6:09 (2) (4) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports (9) RC-ISpy (50) R C-Flintstones (56) What’s New (62) R-Sea Hunt 6:39 (2) C -. News -Cronkite (4) C — N^s — Huntley, Brinkley (7) C - News -Reynolds, Smith (50) R — McHale’s Navy (56) TV High School (62) R — Highway Patrol 7:00 (2) C - Truth or Consequences (4) (7) C - News, ■ Weather, Sports (9) R - Movie: “The Return of j^tober” (1948) Glenn Ford, Terry Moore, James Gleason (50) R — I Love Lucy (56) Auction Action — Station is holding auction in which viewers may bid byphone- (62) R - I Led Three Lives 7:39 (2) C - Animal World — ^The Mexican grizzly, one of the most feared animals of North America, is studied. (4) R C — Daniel Boone-— A Wyandot chief’s trust in Daniel Roone is jeopardized by an ambitious army general who has orders to move Indians West. (7) R C - Flying Nun -Sister Bertrille persuades Capt. Fomento to launch a crusade to stamp out pilferage in Carlos’ casino. (50) R — Hazel (62) R — Ann Sothem 8:00 (2) R C - The Prisoner— The Prisoner’s cap-ters attempt t,o uncover . his innermost secrets by interrogating him under the influence of a drug which mentally transports him to situations that occurred before his abduc-hion. (71 R C - That Gilrl -Don Hollinger’s rich, titled bop lady, Margaret Weatherby, wants to make Don her seventh (50) C — Pay Cards (62) R - Ozzie and Harriet 8:30 (4) R C - Ironside A police dog, apparently the sole witness to a murder, helps Ironside find the killer. (7) R C — Bewitched — Samantha discovers that a little vanity can go a long way. (9) C — Telescope (60) C — Password (62) R ~ Movie: "Riot In Juvenile Prison” (1959) Dorothy Provine, Scott 9:00 (2) R - M 0 V1 e ; . “Shock Treatment” (1964) Stuart Whitman, l,^uren Bacall, Carol Lynley (7) R C — Tom Jones — Guests are Bobby Goldsboro, Donovan, Godfrey Cambridge, Lainie Kazan and Jo Anne (9) C - (Special) National Arts Centre—Highlights of official opening of Canadian Ckimp|ex at Ottawa. (50) R — Peny Masbn 9:29 (4) R C - Dragnet -Sgt. Friday and officer Gannon are assigned to work in the Emergency Control Center immediately after the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. 9:55 (62) Greatest Headlines 19:09(4) R C ~ Dean Martin — Guests are Dan Dailey, Gloria L 0 r I n g, Paul Lynde and Don Rice. (7) C (Si>cclaI)~Summer Focus, 19CT — Program focuses on controversial issue of abortion. (9) (50) C — News, Weather, Sports (62) R — Movie: “Sb'iptease Murder” (1961) John Hewer, Ann Lynn 10:30 (9) C - What’s My Line? (50) R-Alfred Hitchcock 11:69 (2) (4) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports (9) R r- Movie: “Take a Letter, Darling” (1942) Rosalind' Russell, Fred MacMurray (50) R - One Step Beyond 11:30 (4) C — Johnny Carson (7) C— Joey Bishop 11:35 (2) R C - Movies: 1 “Adventure in Capri” (1962) Elke Sommer; 2. “Mutiny of the Elsinore” (1937) Paul Lukas 12:30 (9) C — Perry’s Probe 1:09 (4) Beat the Champ (7)R —Texait-(4) (7) C - News, Weather 2:45 (2) C - News, Weather 2:50 (2) TV Chapel FRIDAY MORNING 5:59 (2) TV Chapel 5:55 (2) On the Farm Scene 6:00 (2) C—Black Heritage 6:30 (2) C — Woodrow the Woodsman (4) G _ TV High School 6:45 (7) C - Batfink 7:09 (4) C - Today (7) C — Morning Show 7:30 (2) C—News, Weather, Sports 7:59 (91 Warm-Up 7:55 (9) C - Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 8:09 (2) C - Captain Kangaroo (9) C — Bozo (56) Americans From Africa (4) C — Nfews, Weather, Sports (7) C — Let’s Make a Deal (9) R —Real McCoys (50) R - Movie: “Winter Meeting” (1948) Bette Davis, Janis Paige 12:45 (56) R - Spanish Lesson 1:09 (2) C—Divorce Court (4) C—Days of Our Lives (7) C -r- Newlywed Game (9) R — Movie: “As Current Books "TWO, THREE, MANY MORE” by Nicholas Von Hoffman. (Quadrangle, $5.95.) When the Students for a Democratic Society took over five buildings at Columbia' University a year ago, they took a paraphrase of a remark first made by Che Guevara about Vietnam and adopted it as one of their many slogans: “Create Two, ’Three, Many Columbias.” * * They meant that the best way 0 bring down the Establishment was to attack it from so many directions at once it would destroy Itself in the very process of trying to defend itself. . , ' Nicholas Von Hoffman, Washington Post reporter who a lot of time at Columbia, has written a novel about one of the many more. It is the best account so far of a student uprising, but it is not exactly a novel. I * * In “Two, Three” Von Hoff-| man displays a quirk of mind (7) Movie: “Make Mine present in his other books: He /D-UInU lORAi n^Aa* f ... .. . . Mink” (British, 1960) Ter rv Thomas 9:06 (2) R C—Lucille Ball (4) C — Ludden’s Gallery — Guests include Roger Smith, Jerri Granger and Jack DeLeon (9) Ontario Schools (56) Rhyme Time 9:19 (56) American Geography 9:39 (2) R C Beverly Hillbillies -9:35 (56) Sounds to Say 9:59 (56) vanish II 10:99 (2) R C - Andy Griffith (4) CPersonality (9) Pinocchip (56) Art Lesson 19:19 (56) Children’s Hour 19:39 (2) C-Merv Griffin - (4) C — Hollywood Squares (7) C - Galloping Gourmet (9) Friendly Giant (50) C-Herald of’Truth 19:49 (66) Interlude 19:45 (9) Chez Helene 19:55 (M) Spdllish Lesson 11:99 (4) C-It Takes Two — Guests Include Dead Jones, Jatk Albertson, Harvey Korman and their wives. (7) R — Bewitched (9) Mr. Dressup (50) C — Jack La Lanne 11:29 (56) Mlsterogers 11:25 (4) C-^arol Duvall (h C — News 11:30 (4) C—Concentration (7) C — Funny You Should Ask (9) Take Thirty (50) C — Klmba 11:59 (56) Mehio to Teachers FRIDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) c:—News, Weather, Sports (4) C —Jeopardy (7) C —Dream House (0) C — Bonnie Prudden (50) C - Alvin 12:29 (56) Friendly Giant 12:25 (2) C - Fashions 12:39 (2) C - As the World Turns . surprised by nothing, and dilutes our surprise by drawing startling parallels. In on*e brilliant passage a professor describes the university’s desperation in terms of the erratic actions of the Russian Czars before they fell in 1917. Powers (UPl) Young as You Feel’” (1951) Marilyn Monroe, David Wayne 1:05 (56) Rhyme Time 1:20 (56) U.S. G^graphy 1:30 (2) t — Guijding Light (4) C — Doctors (7) C — Dating Game 1:45 (56) R — Sounds to Say 2:00 (2) C — Secret Storm (4) C — Another World (7) C — General Hospital! 2:25 (56) R - Interlude 2:30 (2) C - Edge of Night (4) C — You Don’t Say — Guests include Janis Paige and Bob Crane, (7) C — One Life to Live (50) R — Make Room for Daddy 2:40 ( 56) Spanish Lesson 3:00 (2) C—Linkletter Show (4) C — Match Game (7) C — Dark Shadows (9) R — Dennis t h e Menace (50) R —Topper (56) R — Chicago Roundtable 3:25 (4) C - News • 3:30 (27’C- — Search for Tomorrow (4) C — Hidden Faces (7) C — Anniversary Game (9) C — Magic Shoppe (50) C — Captain Detroit (56) Weaving 4:00 (2) C — Love of Life (4) C — Steve Allen (7) R C — Movie: “Sip of the Pagan” (1955) Jeff Chandler, Jack Palance (9) C —Bozo (56) Investing in the kock Market ^39 (2) C — Mike Douglas (50) R — Little Rascals (56) 'TV Kindergarten (62) R—Star Performance 5:00 (4) C—George Pierrot — “Summer in Italy” (9) R C — Batman (50) R —Munsters (56) Mlsterogers (62) C — Bugs Bunny and Friends 5:36 (9) R - F ’Troop (.■iO) R C — Superman (56) C — Friendly Giant (62) R — Leave It to Beaver 5:45 (56) C — Davey and Goliath A Look at TV 'Music Hall' Pleasant CYNTHIA By CYNTHIA LOWRY Associated Press TV Writer NEW YORK—NBC’s Summer 'Music Hall” series from London is working out as a pleasantly low-key variety hour which is lighting up the over-cast television skies on W e dnesday nights. The most recent hour, with the great Ella Fitzgerald around to sing a couple of stylish songs, was typical of the Sandler-Young shows of the series. * * One mild complaint: ’There is a shortage of songs by cohosts Tony Sandler and Ralph Young. They are great when singing but I spend a lot of time at the bantering cMiverSations deslped to be comedy. Sandler has an easy sophisticated way with dialogue, but Young bludgeohs the light lines. 1 Norman Wisdom, a pint-sized funnyman from the British music halls, is a,,regular on the show, along with Judy Came. Without being given any inspired material. Wisdom comes close to-stealing the show. He even pulled off a sketch In which he was called on to substitute for a missing dog act. other ABIUTIES Miss Came, after two seasons of being drenched by buckets of water and dropped through .. on “Lahgh-ln,” is given an opportunity to demonstrate some , of her other abilities^ singing, dancing and acting in sketches. She even did a ballet number. Perhaps the hour seemed particularly soothing since it came shortly after the initial program of a revival of the old “Tarzan” series on CBS. The ape man will fill Glen Campbell’s hour for the rest of the summer. During the past month, Misi ' jsann has / appeared—and ; plugged-rbn Johnny Carson’s ; Merv Griffin’s show, , Mike Douglas’ show, Joan Rlv- : ers’ show, the “Today” show, 'Girl , Talk,” and “Personality,” and has taken a bow from the audience on an Ed Sullivan hour. She also has been on radio talk shows in the New York area. And she is going on local | television and radio talk shows ; across the country. * ★ * ,! Miss Susann’s book, “’The J Love Machine,” has catapaulted ! to near the top of best-seller : lists in less than a month. No one is sure such television appearances sell books, but the surprising thing is the willingness of all these shows to be a . party to the sales pitch. For Nixon Aide ALBION (AP) - Dr. Paul W. McCracken, chairman of President Nixon’s Council of Economic Advisors, will be one of six men awarded an honorary, degree by Albion College June 8. McCracken, who was a professor at the University of Michigan’s School of Businesl Administration before moving to the Nixon administration, will be -given a doctor, of laws de- OWN A PIANO? Phone 335-8227 TUNING and REPAIRING 2N state 6t„9onllao If it seems that Jacqueline Su-.| sann, the writer and former ac-I tress, seems to be springing up jail over television plugging her ktest novel, it is because she Is. LILLI ON GISH: TUB MOVIES, MR, GRIFFITH, AND ME, by Lillian Gish with Alin Plnchet. (Prentice-Hall, $7.95.) This is the autobiography of a great lady of the entertainment world who has been acting longer than most peopje live. Miss Gish began her career In the legitimate theater when she was 5 and the 20th century was even younger. She starred last year Broadway (‘T Never Sang for My Father”) and shared billing with Helen Hayes In a television version of “Arsenic and Old Lace*” rerun early this year. ♦ ★ * Miss Gish was sickly as child, but her apparent physical delicacy is as misleading as the apparent fragility of whalebone. For the purposes of her art, she has worked for days In sub-zero cold and in 13IMlegree African heat without flinching. “Ulllan Gish” is the story of a remarkable woman who has thrilled gpd enchanted millioiiB of people around the world. Deldg Andersen (DPI) TENUTA’S RESTAURANT Tender, Qolden Fried Fish Dinners YOU 04 4 A CM A I EAT “ 1 iJJ Friday carrySiut ■ ® n CORNER OF HURON and JOHNSON (Across From Pontioc General Hospital) PALACE AUTO WASH n.oo Wash • Wax • Ah^Dried 92 BALDWIN 108 N. Saginaw - FE 3-7114 OPEN FRI. 'til 9 p.m. - DAILY 'III 5.30 ^ive Your DAD or GRAD This SONS Combination Portable TV and RADIO — Radio Programs— wjiwydo) wxffliayw ckiw(9. iBOrta WWJ. Racalraek Wapvrt, WiS, aaaaanar Sapart, 1 la, Sunnythia I IRp SfMMfCOMa llSSori UiMh-WHf t, Tom coitman CKUVa icmt NMtfi Wjll, Newt, KeloklMCOpn lUfli-WJftr-------- iiiSSrri WJBK, NlfMtlint CKLW, Mlrh KKMrM paipAV aaoBNiMe ai(a-wji(. Mimic Han IT” Motorola ♦19“ n”Kox ♦a«“ 1T’’PortaMa •29** 21” Emorton ' $29*5 2f”Sylvanla ♦ar* IT” PortaMe $3401 21” RCA $39*» 21” Motorola $3990 21” Motorola $49«« 1S”Portabla $49#! aU-DATEXOHANQE PRIVILIQE ria-auf WALTON W tiu E. Walton Blvd. Comf r Joelyn / OpnnOteO THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. JUNE 5. 1969 Black Dem Leader Working to Improve Life of Negro (EDITOR’S NOTE-Both major political parties m Michigan have Negro second vice chairmen: In the third part of a four-part series on the Negro vote in Michigan, veteran Capitol reporter Jane Denison profiles Democratic Vice Chairman Kenneth N. Hg^on.) tury, and under n o definitely” Negroes who couldiman," Hylton says.‘‘Millilten Is was. If he can become well By JANE DENISON circumstances could I align jget elected with white supportjiiiso a very unusual man — he myself with that backward - and without being labeled Ijj, intelligent and articulate, and ” . u. . / donl think w^ One of his earliest political Negroes. , » h- allies was John Swainson, who, ..-j-hg Negro now realizes thei®®“"’®“ on to become lieutenant pniy t© improve his imagel * * * governor and governor and who!follow the example somej "He is very much a liberal is now a Circuit Court judge in whites hav^ done — like thejperhaps more t han Romney Detroit jrish and the Poles — in votingj CLOSE FRIENDS for their own,” Hylton says. j enough logown and f o 11 o w’s direction through where Romney began, there is no question in my mind that he will continue the trend.” Hylton, who Is married and has three sons, is equally cer- tain Negroes are “watching Negro voters. veiy carefully” to see what the N i X 0 n ad ministration will take ii meeting social problems particularly among minorities. But he’s sure as well that whatever Nixon does, it won’t erode the Democrats’ hdld on "Any -party that could want black participation," nominate a Goldwater and conduct a national campaign the way Nixon ^id by totally tgnor-the black community, and them follow through after the elections by not naming a black to the Cabinet, does not l^ylton ^fiys, firmly. “Molt Negroes are Democrats by commitment even though the Democratic party has been far f r o m perfect. It has offered programs and hope, and to some degree has delivered some fulfillment." “He is aware of his etHhlc The two men are close friends land were once law partners;, , u » Congressman John Dingell isiconsciousness. I hale to see still in the firm. ithis. but it is a fact of life. It Hylton is proud that n(iost|''^*ii disappear when a black ~ ■ but man can run for a major office DE'TROIT (UPI) - Kenneth j N. Hylton may or may not have personal political am-bitions-Uiut he does have some! for others who, like him, arej Hylton, 39, has a rnagniflcem ^ayor ©f Detroit or view of the Detroit River and perfect" in fulfilling black whatever and carry white ^ / , iprecinctsUi wim” ^ | downtown Detroit. But he sits,| * I „ But Hylton acknowledges! significantly, with his back to “It’s not by accident that allL unanimity has the wide windows. “ ^K‘^•^‘"'■•^.®"Wacked in recent ... .u .V. . ’ u® blames that partly on former He’s too Involved with the the result of the fact the^ ... Georce problems of his clients, h's Democratic party has accepted * iVkA MAnt*n in Sto ma/>lninArtf atiH ^ ' and the Democratic the Negro in its machinery i party to gaze at the .scenery. affairs. among nonwhites grew steadily " The reseryed and handsome "Though it’s not perfect, it Hylton is the secontl- vice has been the instrument chairman of the Mi chag an; through which Negroes have Democratic party—the party’s I achieved many of their goals.” No. 3 job and one by .1-year-old CHAIXENGE TO GOP tradition reserved for a Negro. | ©vercoming during his five years In offlck He's also respectful but wary of Romnev’s succes.sor, Gov. William G. Milliken. ‘VERY UNUSUAL’ "Romney is a very unusual FRANK ABOUT IT And Hylton quite frankly attributes his being in politics at all to the fact that he is black. “I was motivated toward politics by experiences I had! party loyalty, he adds quietly: ASSESSMENT SOLI. FOR THE Lot ?«, WMf LiKhilia, Stcllons 7, I. 17 S. IS. LOM M thru it, Wt«t LiKhdea No. 1. “I would like to see,the day the t Republican party can measure up to this.” I ■ Hylton’s party activities arej , , not as many and varied as while in college in Alabama.”|©thers who have grabbed off he says. "1 experienced certain p©w©rful positions, forms of segregation and ★ * ★ discrimination that were com- ».u hiohest Dost he held ■ .........................- pletely unacceptable. They left beaming a party vice me with the determination to was on the executive am si^nd the major jxirtion of my ^oard of the old 15th !5r,.SY;rd%«riKd"r.;;p"rov. life bringing about fundamental c © n g r e s s i o n a t District uf.r.7r7,S-"" s in the life of the Negro, organization. • cpi’V/.fE'J!?-.'’' ..•"’’I'.?:.''. .“*.5: IKK* nutlet that a Sptclal As ,0 prepared an(l Is the Township Clerk Ion. Said Special ronfidence of to do this. party'aS Inner circle and had % follows; 1100 ff . u,c pa. .J, ii.iie:! ...I VIC wiiM IIM.I ...u vrftendlng easterly para.— .- »h. Marlh Rnrn "‘‘I® trOUblc Winning the No. 3 M.''Ve»"'L«:h5leir' SuMIvUlon” and se the North. Born , . . , , tots m, «i, m, tx a and ts west, ’a Hvlinn went ™ tochelea Subdivision No. 2. All In >1 to the LITTLE, Clerk 5, T«f He also chose Ip Roanoke^Va., Hylton w^ Convention, i public schools there and b>i nvvrmKic Take tether notice that the Township Ifraduated from Talladega LOST 2 ELLCTTIONS iBo«rd win m«i ih* Township Hotr College in Talladega, Ala. He! gyen so, Hylton found In 1964 I'm.'I'^on^jwlV*"w earned his law degree from land 1966 that the voters weren’t’S?.”t “ioi'rMd'XoVinB Boston University and has a as ready for him as had been master’s In government from the party. He lost races for the Wayne State. . state Court of Appeals and then --- After an Army stint, winding f„r Detroit Recorder’s Court.' STATE OP MICHIGAN up With the rank of nrst,He thinks his color hurt him a.sii^Wsw? lieutenant, Hylton settled down „,uch a.s his unknown name. "7''; ^ to practice law in Detroit. don’t think I would have STUMPED FOR ADLAI any problem getting elected pouiion oi^eo_roid $irickror Ua nlsn DrnvUntad I n nOW, blit thOSC tWO CXpCrienCCS Stricklor. nTmocrat? poSu" was>®«ve me without any politic;al ......................... one of several Negro Lawyers |^*^^*^***”® time, s«ib«i, 6^^^^ who were recruited to stump Ivy-Styled Slacks Go Stretch for Summer! 677 Wrinkle-resistant Dacron® and Avril® rayon blended with Lycra® spandex for just enough "give” to permit free and easy move-iiieiit. Periiia - Presl®; Scotchgard® treated. Pop-iilar colors: 29-38. Full Cut, 34-44... .7.77 You Get Twice the Wear With a Keywate 2-Pant Suit In 2- or 3-Button Style Reg. ITS 5988 Look you^ best always with a Keywate 2-pant suit in plain, fancies, plaids, solids, checks in bright or light shades. 2- or 3-button. Sixes 36-46. Sears SUMMER SAT E - Tho Probolo Sale Ends Saturday, June 14 V », l»M, !F to chanf CERTIFICATE.. Tr»vla, RagUfor of lurl, dr *•— ....... . ' , - jd mo I fhoroof. k OONALO ADAMS, presidential campaign in 1956. Although Hylton admits there By then, he was already active aro some offices that appeal to „ii proboi. ... In local-level party afftirs. |him, he won’t say which ones. ; * * And he has so far resisted "At the time, I came to forU to draft him as the con- V, Michigan_____when 1 reached census black candidate for,wt my hand and ifiixoii tho soju oi ih§ \ maturity—the opportunity to do,mayor of Detroit this year. But a*:? what I wanted to do was there, Ihe thinks there are Negroes and the Democratic party was the only one open to me," he says. "The Republican party ' did not welcome Negroes .. . * * who should be I'Unning fot;^ public office and who can win. ' "The role for blacks in " bond______... politics now is to continue in & U path we have walked for the J;);”............. ” ............. '* pnui wc nave nameu ivi bondt lor paymant at Ih 'Second, In terms of last 10-12 years but to vMu#\J?*J«rii!r Pontiac Nerthorn High School - 7:00 P.M. $40.00 Fill AMERICANIZATION AND CITIZENSHIP - Fr.« - 7.30 - 9.30 p.m. Pontiac Control High School - Monday and Thursday ■ASIOBOOKKIEPINO SKILLS - Pontiac Control High School - 7i00 - 9i00 P.M. RHItTIRl eUtIRIRIHll OFFIRIdOOURTItYi OIIORIPTIONt FOR MORE INFORMATION SI242SS PenliM Omtral Nigh Sehool ■ INWMtHvronttrMt Now through Juno^l 7 ' , ; ' Juno 17 - INDlJuly 22 * PONTIAC MOTOR DIVISION ACCOUNTING DEPARTMINT NoFoo » Nen Crodit This clots would holp dovolop bosie beokkooping skills for tho small businots ownor. Tho doss dovolops record-kooping ohilitios that petohliol or. currant businessman should kWow. DFFICC fiNAM.-4iMP.M. HOURSi MoM-Fri. •iN P.M. ^ MBB-Thur. Sears! Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171 The Weather U. S. WMlMr MirMU ForcCKl Partly Cloudy, Coal THE PONTJAC PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 1969 VOL. 127 NO. 102 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ 3 Suspects Caught After PSH Holdup SHOTGUN GUARD — A bare-chested tank driver provides winphoio cover for a comrade crawling to safety in dense jungle about an M48 tank team of the 11th Armored Cavalry Regiment 40 miles northwest of Saigon after their tank was knocked out Shotguns are a favorite weapon of many soldiers in densely by armor-piercing rocket grenades. The soldiers were part of forested areas. Senate OK of Abortion Bill Seen ByJEANSAILE Pontiac police are holding three suspects in connection with the $25,400 armed robbery this morning of the Pontiac State Hospital Credit Union. It was the second robbery of the credit union in less than 18 months. Officers said they have not yet identified the three. Patrolmen Thomas Patch and Rexford Hagood, alerted by an alarm tripped by a cashier, were on the scene at 7:14 a.m. From Onr NeWs Wires LANSING -- Senate leaders speculated today that the emotion-charged issue of abortion law reform would win approval in the upper chapiber. port for a bill authorizing abortions under limited circumstances. reform bill, “Depending on what committee it’s sent to and if it’s reported Related Story, Page B-7 “I lielieve that some proposal has an extremely good chance to pass,” said Senate Majority Leader Emil Lockwood, Rr-St. Louis, who has pledged his sup- Minority Leader Sander Levin, D-Berkley, said “there’s a better than 50-50 chance” the Senate will pass a measure reforming the Michigan law that now allows termination of pregnancy only when the life of the mother is in danger. 79 on Jetliner Believed Dead DEBATE ON TUESDAY 'The senators voted to debate the issue next Tuesday. ^Chances of favorable action appeared dimmer In the lower chamber, wheil'e Speaker William Ry|h, D-Detroit, a Catholic, Opposes abOtiion law reform. MONTERREY, Mexico (AP) -Seventy-nine persons, including Mexico’s hope for the Davis Cup and a former president of the nation’s ruling party, are believed to have died in the crash of a Mexican jetliner on a mountain. House Minority Leader Robert Waldron, R-Grosse Polnte, said he felt the lower chamber “could pass” a Discussion of the abortion question came yesterday after Sen. John McCauley, D-Wyandotte, squeezed out the necessary 20 votes to order preliminary debate on a proposal that would remove criminal penalties against licensed doctors who perform abortions in licensed and accredited hospitals. if -k It Sen. Gilbert Bursley, R-Ann Arbor, sponsor of the more limited reform proposal, succeeded Tuesday In winning Senate votes to take his bill from the table. The vote was 21-9. Bursley’s bill r- which leaders believe has the best chance of passage — would allow abortions when the mental or physical health of the mother was endangered, when there was “significant risk” that the baby would be seriously deformed and in cases of rape or incest. T%o of the three are believed to he the men who held eight hospital employes at gunpoint while at 7:11 a.m., forcing Charles Dowling, the credit union manager, to unlock a vault and a safe inside the vault. Pontiac police say $20,000 in a Vault bag was overlooked, as was an unidentified sum in the cashier’s till. The robbers, armed with revolvers, reportedly entered the credit union offices shortly after it opened at 7 a.m. Today is payday at the hospital and the cr^it union, which normally opens at 8:30 a.m., was open early to accommodate those on the midnight shift. Patch said they met a black Mustang carrying three males as they entered the grounds. “It was traveling at a high rate of speed,” Patch said. “As soon as We found out what had happened, we put out a BOL (be on the lookout) for the car and the men.” BEING QUESTIONED Officer T. A. Lively heard the report and took into custody three males he stopped in a Cadillac, Patch said. They were being questioned this morning. Police theorize the robbers switched cars in their getaway bid. Only two men entered the office, according to Dowling. He said three credit union employes were at work, two ottwr staff people were present, and three customers were in the office to cash checks. One of the bandits reportedly held a gun to the head of one customer, identified only as Darwin Spaysky, while the second went behind the counter and held a gun to Dowling’s head. The remaining hospital empolyes were forced to lie on the floor while the robbers took $1,400 from the cashier’s section, and two cigar boxes containing $9,000 and a bag containing $15,000 flrom the vault. Another customer, John Midwinter, was hit on the side of the head and forced to enter the office as he came down the basement steps leading to the door. He reportedly was not seriously injured. Two of the suspects were described by hospital authorities as being between S feet, 7 inches and 5 feet, 10 inches in height and 25 to 30 years of age. At least one was reported as wearing a goatee. Both were Negro. The credit union was robbed of $60,000 on Feb. 1, 1968. That robbery has not solved. Related Story, Page C-7 A helicopter pilot who flew over the wreckage of the Mexicana de Aviacion plane reported debris was scattered across the side of the mountain 30 miles west of Monterrey and was burning hours after the crash yesterday. He said there was no chance anyone survived and no sign of life. On the passenger list were Rafael Osuna, Mexico’s top tennis player, who engineered his country’s upset victory over Australia in the Dqvis Cup interzone play last monthj and Carlos Madrazo, former president of the Institutional revolutionary party, and his wife. The chief of Mexico’s highway department, Raul Chapa Zarate; the president of the National Fiscal Court, Generoso Chapa; and their wives also were reported aboard. Church Rector Discusses Impact of Black Demand By NED ADAMSON Christ Church Cranbrook of Bloomfield Hills is — on the surface — a well-heeled institution. The spacious and sprawling Gothic edifice with an assessed {Mvperty value of $4.5 million with its towing caitillon reaching into the sky snuicks of wealth compassion, for continued hypocrisy, for the continual exploitation and oppression and profiteering.” And the manifesto’s concluding graph (Continued on Page A-4, Col. 2) GAdC Truck Adds Search parties were within eight miles of the scene when bad weather and rugged terrain halted them last night. Soldiers, police and volunteers would try to climb the mountain today. Two U.S. Coast Guard helicopters from New Orleans, La., and Corpus Christ!, Tex., and several helicopters sent by the Mexican government were to try to reach the scene today if there was a break in rainy, foggy weather. Last Sunday 20 representatives of the National Black Economic Development Conference peaceably entered the church during the 9 a.m. worship service and presented a black manifesto. A considerable amount of the language in the manifesto, which calls for reparations from white American churches totaling $500 million for alleged racial discrimination is strong and dictatorial. Presented by ex-editor John Watson former editor of the Wayne State University student newspaper, the South End, presented the manifestor. A sample of its rhetoric . . . “We call upon all white Bloomifled Hills Christians to awaken to the call of a civilized 20th century, Religion no longer can be used as a cloak for continual lack of to Record String President Clambers Onto Car To Make Speech In San Clemente, Calif. CMC Truck & Coach Division posted its eighth straight month of record Sales with 13,538 truck and coach deliveries in May, Martin J. Caserio, vice president of General Motors and divisional general manager, reported today. Monthly GMC sales last September have surpassed previous records set for comparable months, he said. The former May sales high was 13,443 set last year. Calendar year truck and coach deliveries through May totaled 64,313 units, a 7.4 per cent increase over the prior record of 59,861 for the same five months established last year, Caserio said. Critics of Military Up in Arms WASHINGTON (AP) - Schate critics of administration military policy, including at least one Republican, are taking strong Issue with what they see as President Nixon’s implications in his speech at the Air Force Academy that they are “the new isolationists.” Joining the barrage of Democratic dissent was Republican Sen. James B. Pearson of Kansas, who said he doesn’t know any fellow critics of highlevcl military spending who want unilateral U.S. withdrawal from Vietnam or to disarm alone. “I disagree with the President,” Pcanson, an ABM critic, said in an interview. “What we want to do is to prevent the start of a new nuclear arms race. And I don’t think it’s isolationism to oppose excessive military spending.” Sen. J. W. Fulbright, chairman of the foreign relations committee, accused Nixon of trying to make critics appegr unpatriotic. "Neither I nor this subeommittee is attackid'g the military forces of this country,” Fulbright said. “We are questioning the political judgments that led us Into this quagmire.” Another Democrat, Sen. Gaylord Nelson of Wisconsin, said it was unfortunate Nixon implied that “those who are vigorously opposing the ABM and In Today's Press Sex Education: Handle With Respect defense boondoggles are unilateral disarmers and new isolationists.’' Brandon Schools Millage vote Monday poses quandary for voters -- PAGE (EDITOR’S NOTE - This is the first of two articles on the sex education controversy in Oakland County schools.) Greyhound Racing state House sponsors scratch vote - page A-14. Looking Back Ghosts of past inhabit abandoned farm - PAGES C-16, OH. Area News .............. A-i Astrology ............... 012 Bridge ...................012 Crossword Pnzde ..... . .D-17 Comics ...................012 Food Section ....... B-14-B-16 .... ......C-16 •, ,014 .......c-it, on Sports...................Ol-OI Theaters ................ 013 TV and Radio Programs . D-17 Vielnam War News .........A-12 Wibott, Earl ..............012 Women’s Pages ByMARYSUNDSTROM “We want to teach that sex is a normal, healthy function of the human body to be treated with respect,” declares Jerry Strickler, sex education specialist for Pontiac Schools. Despite this seemingly noble objective, Srickler — along with a mushrooming number of schoolmen across the county, state and nation — is having to battle parental dissent on sex classes. * * * ■. Sex education has stirred parental wrath even more than taxes. Pontiac School District — thp largest in Oakland County — has felt relatively little heat from the controversy that has flared elsewhere. However, Pontiac’s program is not yet as extensive as wx educktlon Is elsewhere. Pontiac and Bloomfield Hills, where K-12 sex education is contemplated or already in the planning stages. * * * Sex education in most area school districts can be classified as the “grow-Ing-up” instruction concerned with specific body changes that begin to occur about the fifth and sixth grades. Area school districts with this type of instruction include Waterford, .Huron Valley, Troy, Farmington, Clarkston, Rochester, Holly and Romeo. “Growing up” involves films on menstruation for girls and physical maturation for boys. Current controversy appears to spring from what some parents think will be taught in expanded sex classes, although in at least one area district — Walled Lake — strong objections are being raised against what is now offered. growth and development. It Is designed to help children understand themselves and identify with their own sex. ‘IT’S A SUPPLEMENT’ What is being taught? For the most part, a full-scale sex education pro^am includes all ph'bses of “The schools are aiming to supplement what the children have learned at home and at church,” said Norman Quinn, director of health, physical education and athletics at Bloomfield HII|E|. (Continued on Page A-10, Col. 1) “It is not unilateral disarmament to urge that we get down Immediately to the business of arms control negotiations with the Soviet Union and, in the meantime, hold up the deployment of new weapons systems such as ABM which threaten to accelerate the deadly and costly arms race,” Nelson said, “And it Is not Isolationism or unilateral disarmcment to insist that the war In Vietnam be ended and our troops brought home.” | Center unty schools hovers over the programs in the Walled Lake iSchool dlshdct. / Human re|froductlve sex-educajlon pro^ams for fifth* and sixth-graders 4nd possible future programs for older Students |jwere attacked by some parents and supjjwrted by others at a iiecent public liearing on s^x education in the school district. The more than 300 parents attending the hearing were assured by Shpt. Dr. George Garver that no huthan reproductive sex»education would be given to anyone below the fifth-grade level. Garver, whose sprawling district Crs much of western Oakland County, told parents the administration Would work with staff, parents and clergy before presenting any future pro-grains. i (Continued on Page A-U, €bl. 1) It looks like Pontiac area residents will have a damp, cloudy weekeijd, according toihe weatherman. Partly cloudy and cool with a low of 52 to 58 is the forecast for tonight. Cloudy and mild with a chance of showers and a high of 68 to 74 is tomorrow’s prediction. Partly cloudy and continued cool is thg outlook for Saturday. Precipita^on^pbabilities in per cent are30 today arn»)tomorrow. The low in downtown Pontiac before 8 a m. was SO degrees. By 12:30 p,m. the thermometer had reached 66. ‘DEMAND FOR REALISM’ Sen. Alan Cranston, D-Cglii., said that no responsible American advocates that the United States lay down Its arms alone. “What is sweeping America is a demand that we readjust our priorities and our goals so that we tackle the Immense problems we face at home and abrbad with realism and not with rhetoric,” Cranston said. ' In a Cincinnati, Ohio, speech. Sen. George S. McGovern, D-S.D., took issue with Nixon’s criticism in a MadiSon, S.D., speech of the “self-righteous moral arrogance” of protesting college .students. “Whgt of the moral erosion involved In our senseless waste of blood and resources in V1 e t n a m?’* McGovern asked. / mmo im i) THE roxTiAc ntKss; 1111 itsPAV, JUNE s. : 'U.S. Nearly Quit at Omaha Beach' BAYEU?C, France (AP) — “What people dcm’t know is how really close the American^ on Omaha Beach were to turning around on D-Day. The truth is I didn't know when I wrote ‘The Longest Day ...” said Cornelius Ryan. together”—as he wrote about the invasion. But he said he learned about the near failure at Omaha B^acb only after . his book was out. Birmingham Cuts Detailed if Millage Vote Fails Related Story, Page^-7 For Ryan, the success of the invasion hinged on one hour of decision by Gen. Omar Bradley after virtually no progress had been made in six hours. BIRMINGHAM - Should the board of education’s 7.5-mill tax renewal request be defeated in Monday’s schdol election t)R. HARVEY BURDICK Candidate Hits School District on Information Rydn, whose book about the Normandy invasion has sold 10 million copies in 10 years, is among thoOe who have returned to the scene for the 25th anniversary of the landing on June 6, 1944. He said he had th« feeling that something was “missing— not quite put “There is a sheer lack of information given in and taken out in this school ' district — between the administration and the communi^Todministration and teadiers, and teachers and the community,” charges school board candidate Dr. Harvey Burdick, professor of psychology and chairman of the psychology department at Oakland University. Many people of Pontiac are growing suspicious of the school board, they feel that decisions affecting them are made before the whole issues are made public, when it is too late for the people to ask ; questions, Burdick said. ; “Concerned or angry people don’t ‘Often express their feelings in gentle : tones. But we should not confuse the ; style of ei^ssion with the content of ‘ the complaint,” he said. . “It appears that some people in the i district are disinterested or apathetic [about school affairs, but actually there ; are many obstacles and barriers for all '• people to speak. : Members must seek out the opinions of ail people in the district so that they • may give voice to them,” Burdick said. [ Another problem Burdick sees Is ; segregation. '' “A segregated school system works 1 against equality and quality of educa-.tion. The school board shouldn't hide behind Pontiac’s housing situation, which is segregated, to Justify a segregated , school sjitem,” he said. ‘ Burdick has been on sabbatical leave > |!rom OU since January. He' teaches a leourse at OU raquirsd of anyone going ;-lnto teaching and has been substitute g bis leave In a number of 3rd Latin Nation Cancels Rocky STATEMENT PREPARED 4 “Bradley will deny it to his last days, but around noon at Omaha, we were getting nowhere and thinking of pulling out,” Ryan said. Back in England, Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower already had prepared a one-sentence communique announcing failure, Ryan said. “Looking at what the consequence.<; would have been, the best thing you can see is another invasion, but one that would have taken 18 more months to prepare if the first one failed,” Ryan continued. budget cuts in exciess of |3 million would be necessary, Supt. Dr. John B. said today. Personnel who might be cut include qsdociate teachers in art. music and physical education, those teaching elerhentary foreign languages and those receiving supplemental pay!for coaching athletics and dramatics.! SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) - A third South American country— Chile—has shut the door to Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller’s mission, but the Nixon administration shows no sign of calling off the tour. President Eduardo Ffei’s government decided Rockefeller had better stay away after two days of clashes between police and students in the capital, yesterday a group of students stoned the U.S. Consulate and burned an American flag. “In that time, the Nazis might have sued for peace and we might have been forced to let them off on something ap-* preaching their terms. Or, then, if the invasion were delayed, we probably would have met the Russians at the French-German border.” Ryan sOid he had a “corny, unprofessional-sounding” explanation of what got the' Americans moving at Omaha around 12:30 p.m. There also would be an increase in class sizes and elimination of honors and accelerated courses and nonreimbursed special education. Other potential reductions include elementary school librarians and secondary school librarians and counselors. Others included are consultants, coordinators, directors and supervisors. OFFICE PERSONNEL A Foreign Ministry communique said: “The Chilean government has informed Gov. Rockefeller of the convenience of suspending his visit to our country.” The communique added that Foreign Minister Gabriel Valdes would be in Washington later ^his week and would call on President Nixon. Valdes also will get together with Rockefeller to discuss “the purposes and objectives” o f Rockefeller’s visit to (jhile, the com- Omaha around 12:30 p.m. and taking firm hold around an hour later. “Finally, guys started Just getting tired of being hit and not moving. A sergeant kicked, someone in the pants. Another man said he preferred getting killed going up the beach rather than sitting on it. Does that sound like junk to you? That’s the way it was, though. There’s no better explanation.” munique said. goodwill GESTURE? Many Latin Americans consider the tour primarily a good-will gesture. Rockefeller’s second swing last week was curtailed before it started when Peru said he wasn’t welcome because Washington had cut off military aid to Hopeful Urges 'Better Budgets' in Waterford .1 Burdick, 43, lives at 190 Ottawa with i flis wife, Dolores, and three children. He niat leg was trimmed some more when Venezuela over the weekend asked for postponement of the governor’s visit threatened dmonstra- 'jM-esenUy is vice president of the Board • of Family Services. In seven of the nine countries Rockefeller has visited, violence has marred his stays. J- The Weather I throw politics out the window i ..............................udenW in Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Today mostly cloudy with chance of showers this fmiBoon. Partly cloudy and warmer tills afternoon, high 73 to 78. Tonight partly ; cloudy and cool, low 52 to 57. Friday cloudy and mild with showers likely, high 58 ; to 74. iatnrday outlook: Partly cloudy and cool. Winds nortiiwesterly 8 to U miles : per hour today, variable under 10 miles per hour this evening, becoming soutiieaster-4y 5 to 15 tonight, shifting to northerly at 10 to 20 miles FYlday. Probabilities of pre-’ cfpitation: 30 ^r cent today, 50 per cent Friday. PONTIAC DIVISION EXECUTIVE Taoty In rtnilac Lowut lampirnturt prtetdinn I «.m At I n.im.: Wind v-"“----------■- DIrnetlont r*"*-' Sun MtS Thu HighnsI lampnrnturn . thuriday at l:U p. .... ,,.w* Friday at 4:SI a m Moan aala Thwaday at t0:» Moon rlwa Friday at »i45 a. eicanapa S3 Flint «4 C. Raplda 64 Houghlon st Houghton Lk. 9* 1 DUluth 1 Fort W Fulkerson, 42, of 2945 0 nag on, Waterford Township, is an assistant plant superintendent at Pontiac Motor Division. He served three years on the finance committee of the Waterford school board, was president of the Crary Junior High School I^A for two years and has been a Cub Scout leader for two years and is a little league football coach. 43 47 Omaha i? 9ft Phoanlx 63 44 pit—-63 91 St. Pittsburgh /} 41 I Tucson I Washington LAKE CONDITIONS: St. Clair — Small craft warnings In effect, southwesterly Winds 15 to 25 knots today, becoming variable 5 to 15 knots toni^t. Partjy cloudy through tonight. Huron — Small-craft warnings in effect, northwest winds 15 to 25 It knots today, becoming variable 5 to IS knots tonight. Partly cloudy through tonight, •j Erie, west half — Small-craft warnings Inf effect. Winds southwesterly IS to 25 knots today, becoming light and variable tonight. A past chancellor of the Knights of Pythias Lodge 277, Fulkerson is a member of the Elks, the Indian Guide Club of the YMCA and the Pontiac Chamber of Commerce. He is married and the father of six children. He feels his position at Pontiac Motor has given him .much experience in working with budgets and in the field of labor relations. Fulkerson said he felt that in Waterford all teachers will eventually have to belong to the union and feels his experience in labor relations makes him well qualified as a future board member to meet any situation that may arise regarding teacher contracts or negotiations. ,NATIOIii(AL WEATHER - Showers are expected tonight along the Gulf Coast irciti Texas through Florida and Georgia, iit the western Great Lakes area, fronu Ohio north titooilp Pennsylvania and New York, and parts of California, Nevada, Idijho and OMfon, Elsewhere sunny andf Warm weather wjill prevail. David l. fulkbrson Potential office personnel eliminations would include half of the elementary school clerk-secretaries, team clerks and building clerks. Custodial and maintenance service would also be reduced. Instructional supplies and administrative supplies and expenses generally would be reduced. The adult education, summer school and intramural sports programs also would be eliminated. Central administration personnel also would be reduced in addition to a curtailment of data processing and the recruitment program. The health services program Is listed as another potential cut. Transportation would be reduced to only that required by state law. Field trips also would be eliminated. “I feel that it is possible to gl^e Waterford students a better education without defleit spending by better hd< ministration,” said David L. Fulkei^n, one of five candidates running for a single seat on the Waterford School Board. He continued, “The solution to the problems facing Waterford as well as schools throughout the sjato hinges on the proposed state tax reform to relieve the burden of property owners.” “Waterford residents will continue to pressure their representative in an effort work for what Is best for students In the State of-Michigan,” Fulkerson said. “The equalization factor is something that needs to be changed immediately in order to provide relief to our school systems,” he added. CHARLES E. MEISSNER School Aspirant Raps Bcxird's Indecisiveness' Charles E. Meissner, one of seven candidates who will be vying for two seats on the Pontiac Board of Education Monday, says he feels that the board should have better communication with the community, should make positive decisions and should support teachers. “There is much dissatisfaction over the drift and indecistveness of past board policy. A community cannot be guided by policy decisions as obscure and as easily compromised as those of the past. “1 hope to help reunite Pontiac’s citizens befflntL'a board that will earn their respect by the wlsdon of its decisions,” said Meissner, 33, a sales engineer for Newark Detroit Electronics. Meissner said he feels an answer to the communication problem might be advisory groups made up of , teachers, students and special interest groups. ACTIVE PARTICTPATION ‘ “It is necessary for the school board to expand to an active participation of the community in board affairs through advisory positions,” he said. Meissner says he feels the Job of the school board is to educate, not to in- tegrate, the schools. “It is the Job of the ...................... ■ said. city to integrate the housing,” He said he would like to. see a reemphasis on programs of realism In Pontiac Schools, and an end io costly experimental glamor concepts in education. "I would strive for return of order, mutual respectj and valid educational process,” ho said. « Meissner lives at 476 Lynch with hbi wife and four children. He served for 12 / years with the Air Force, and is a member of the Greater Lansing Association for Retarded Children, the board of canvassers and the Herrington Hills Home Owners Association. ~ I It’s a 650cc twin carb.... ....VAROOOOM! Twin downswept chrome plated exhaust VAROQOMl Cadfiron clutch .............. VAROOOM! Telescopic.hydraulic forks.........VAROOOM! High performance 9:1 pistons... VAROOOM! Twin Wind Tone Horns . ..............VAROOM! Illuminated tachometer.............VAROOOM! Drive it away, tfwlay...............VAROOM! BOND PROPOSAL Smith explained that under the $3.7^ building bonds proposal. Groves andi' Seaholm high schools would receive adA' ditional general classroom areas, combination auditorj^m, increased; physical education facilities an^ rehabilitation of existing areas. B 1645 S. TELEGRAPH in PONTIAC » FE 3-7102 OPEN MONDAY-FRIDAY, 9 ’TIL SATURDAY ’TIL 5 5 HONDA.,* DUCATI • TRIUMPH • MATCHLESS NORTON • MONTES>J • BSA • MOTO GUZZI This Father’s Day make Dad the chairman! Our famous Stratoloungers turn a tired father into a h^py man. He just leans back, the footrest automatically cemaes out and Dad is glad. Covered in a choice of fabrics, leathers or naugahyde, this is one gift hell love. ♦79.50 ,$■ ARV^ FURNITUp: IDS Highland Rd. (MS9) Cm*r Ponliee Lok. Open. 9:30 till ft TiiMday and Sotwdav til OPEN Sundays IS ........Ill iiiUi .jiiWi'. JLM THE PONTIA€x^RESS, THURSDAY. JUNE 5, Bell Expansion Plan Is Within the Law, City Plan Board Says By ED BLUNDEN The Michigan Bell Telephone Co. has not violated the city ordinance on off>street parking in its $12.5-million expansion of its downtown facilities, the City Planning Commission ruled last The ruling Was announced after the planners went into a two-hour closed-door executive session. The secret meeting held after a public hearing on the issue. The planners also nounced they would be working on revising the ordinance to b^ certain the language included Bell’s facility without doubt. The company is adding to the south of its facilities at East n and Mill. The addition, for more electronic equipment, is expected to add about 200 workers to Bell’s work force. e Communications V downtown parking any more than other businesses downfown are required to, Russell said. In other business, the planners rejected a request for rezoning of a five-acre parcel east of Baldwin and south of Kennedy Jutfior High from single family to multiple family residential. The request was made by Hel-Win Construction, which seeks to build a 97-unit apartment house. In previous hearings, residents near the proposed project objected on the basis the area is plagued by flooding due to Inadequate storm sewers. A storm sewer which will connect the area with the Galloway Creek system is in the planning stages, it was explained. However this project still may be six years away. Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac SEE SIMMS MSCOIMT GINOE On A-6 and A-7 in Todiy’s Pontiac Press for Those Extra Wookend Discounts! PLUS Those Extras at SIMMS: FREE PMMNG downtown parking moll for 1 hogr vvith any purchase (except. beverages and tobaccos) at Simms. Just have ticket stamped at time of purchase. GIUM6E IT ■ ■ ■ get Instant Credit at Simms . . . use our 30-day, same as cash plan or your Midwest Bank Card or Free Layaway. Ask about the best plan for you. SIMMSll 98 NORTH SAQINAW ST. DOWNTOWN PONTIAC of America (CWA), through its lawyer, Jerome Mulligan, has been claiming the company is in violation of the city ordinance in that no additional parking spaces for the new workers were provided for in planning. BROKE OWN LAW’ Mulligan also charged the City Commissioh and Planning! Commission were in violation of: their own ordinance in issuing^ building permits. | However, after deliberating last night, the planners stated Bell was covered by the part of the ordinance which concerns downtown commercial buildings. This ordinance calls for the city to build parking lots. These lots are in turn paid for by parking-meter revenue. After the Planning Com-mission statement. Mulligan said he would persue the matter further, but did not elaborate. Mulligan repeated charges he made to the City Commission two weeks ago — that Michigan Bell had been allowed to go ahead with the building without provided additional parking. He said the “deal,” which allowed the company to buy t h city parking lot on the cor strucUon site by providing a smilar-sized lot across the street, was an ordinance violation. He also charged city commissioners and the planners had not cooperated with him in supplying information on project. FREE PARKING Mulligan’s efforts have been labeled an attempt to get free parking for the CWA employes. Mulligan said his objective was to get parking closer to the Bell buildlr building because of the alleged danger employes could be attacked in the downtown area. Many park at facilities three blocks away and many are women, he has explained. Last night the planners asked him what he thought should be done. Mulligan answered, “Buy the Slater place.” He referred to the Slater Apartments, south of East Huron facing Arcadia. Mulligan indicated a mutistoried parking structure could be built with a ramp connected to the Bell building. Mulligan said he understood the apartment, a three-story building about one-half block long, was for sale. Mulligan’s presentation to the, planners met with a rebuff. As he went over sections and subsections of the printed ordinance he was told by F. K, Hills, commission chairman, ‘We know the ordinance, we spent two years on it.” He continualll' told to get to the point. The Planning Commission gave the building department approval to issue wrhatever ■ uilding permits were needed to 0 m p I c t e construction, providing construction rules are adhered to. PARKING NEED SEEN Ity ( (Mcated the city has now reached a ’point where a parking structure will be needed in the downtown area,^. Eugene Russell, Bell district manager, pointed out at last night’s meeting that the firm’s lawyers had gone ovef the M'dinance thorou^y during stages f 0 r construction. "We would not have proceeded if we thought we were not correct,” he commented. It is not Bell’s responsibility to provide Now Prescriptions' COST LESS PRESCRIPTION aNmi SIMMS DISCOUNT ANNEX 144 N. Saginaw St 0|M Tonits *1119 p.ia.-Fri. 9 s.nL to 9:30 iLm.' 'sat. 9 0.IIL to 9 ii.is.-Mxt to tho White Tower Come, Shop, SAVE MORE in Simms Annex Store Test these discounts yourself ~ compare before you buy and you'll find out that the bigger diKOunts ore here. All specials for todoy, Friday and Saturday. ' Evetything for Pool, Beach & Yard Fun! MONKEY SWHN #3701. Ring -|M OfW ond rope. 8x1" ■ Seat ....... 1 IIL SURF BOARD 36"lbrfg,16" ‘■10 wide. Rein- ■ J, forced foam. ML GRAM SURF BOARD 48" long, 16" H OO wide. Foam ■ board.... JL SWMTRAIIKR for child I to 7 years. #vwvio... mWmW' WOOD PADDLE 30" long to *|| Q/j poddle dinghy. ■ #WPI30----' JL 5-RUNG lADDER #3709 rings 24"xl8"x5'/b''... Baby sitter seat lor the pool . . . 5-ft. Long. Tough poly. #VF160. SuDtr Pool Lounn-1-H, Moldod $aiU 48» Poolo . SWING RUKS 299 FLOATHIGSEAT 299 DINGHY BOAT 544 TUDDLERSWING 359 mONNHY 339 WATER BASKETBAU 399 Blfd'^60 inches long 4i20 l|P—50" long, alum, frame # 0i44 ino Box-32 Square Inch . • 2.18 .f. $2.89-6e»* Poolt e... lij #3710 holds baby safely ... 4lt. long. Formed from poly. #VFI48,., 1 or out of Irwin...... Supor Surfor Roaid^60 inches long 1/2 PRICE ON STEEL CABINETS •15” to >65” Sellers Heavy duty all steel cabinets in assortment of sizes and styles . . , sliding doors . . . double doors ... white or beige enamel finishes, etc—just too many styles to list each one— but pick from wardrobes, wall cabinets, base cabinets, utilities, office storage, etc. Slight irregulars of famous maker's cabinet production. compare the features and price! front handbrake on boys’ & girls’ 20" hi-ri$e sportsbike 9# charge it at Simm$ Model 420 boys or 421 girls bicycle with front handbrakes, sdfety coaster brake. Chrome fenders, white sidewall tires, chrome rims, chrome cholnguord, hi-rlse handlebar and saddle plus kickstand. CHARGE IT at SIAAAAS our 30-dcr^ soma or cash plan or your I Card. SIMMS DISCOUNT ANNEX 144 N, Saginaw St espH fdy Outco me on Millage School Election Poses Quandary for Brandon Voters By NED ADAMSON BRANDON TOWNSHIP - Voters in the Brandon Schdof District face a stiff test at the polls Monday. Ironically, voter rejection of the board of education’s five-year millage package -of 14.8 mills, which includes a 6.8-mill increase, could result in an even higher •school tax bill for residents. And Supt. of Schools Clyde Fisher has warned residents that the possibility is very strong that taxes would be considerably higher since the existing Brandon School District fcould be eliminated and annexed to surrounding districts if the millage package is defeated. “This is not an ultimatum or scare tactic — it is simply a fact,’’ Fisher said. DEFUNCT WITHOUT PASSAGE The .superintendent added that the Brandon District will be defunct and totally unable to operate next fall unless the 14.8 millage package is approved. Voters will also be a.sked to approve a $3,675,000 bond issue, the bulk of which would go for a new high .school. Most of the remaining bond issue proceeds would be used for additions and rennovations to existing elementary schools. divide the millage package into two propositions — one for renewal' and one for an increase -r- because the 14.8 mills is* now the strictly minimum and basic need. “Our present millage of 28.7 is the lowest millage operational rate among school districts in Oakland County.’’ “And even with the 6.8 millage rate increase the district would still be one bf the lowest in the county in terms of total millage,’’ Fisher said. He addled that the total millage and bond issue package would cost the property owner with a newly assessed property valuation of $12,500 about $39 extra in taxation the first year. The $39 is based on a rate of $3.14 per $1,000 of asses.sed valuation plus the equalization factor. ’ For a property owner in Groveland 'fownship with assessed property valuation of $5,000, the package would mean an increase of $17.70 in taxes the first year. In Brandon, the increase would be $19.62 for a property valuation of $5,000. The total bond issue millage pacl^age would cost an additional $2.66 per $1,000 of assessed valuation during the second through fifth year of the five-year program. Fisher pointed out that, under state law, if a school district goes defunct, that district is attached to bordering school districts, which in Brandon’s instance would mean Oxford, Clarkston and Holly. All of these districts, Fisher explained, have considerably higher operating millages than the Brandon District and would mean higher taxes for the resident now living in the Brandon District. Fisher said it is difficult to forecast an accurate barometer of public sentiment towards the upcoming election. In his presentations promoting the millage and bond-issue package, Fisher said he had seen perhaps .300 to 400 people. The turnouts, he .said, have been small but have indicated a favorable attitude. “We have 6,000 people out here. They have either made up their minds on how to vote or have an apathetic attitude. It is_ ju.st difficult to tell which,’’ the superintendent remarked. Fisher said the school board h^ no choice but to ask for the 6.8 millage increase on Monday despite the generally unfavorable voter attitude toward tax this year and the fact that . millage, we are simply defunct and that numerous bond issue and millage pro- is all there is to it.’’ pdsals have been sharply defeated , He noted the Brandon School District throughout the state. had not asked for a millage increase “If we cannot get the additional since 1966. > THE PONTIAC PRESS THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 1969 A—4 WARNING DEFINED Fisher said the school board could not In defining his warning that a millage defeat could re.sult in even higher taxes. QUESTIONNAIRE SENT Fisher did note that a questionnaire sent out to residents last winter revealed that a bond issue proposal could pass by a four-to-one vote based on the respondents reply. He added, however, the questionnaire results could not be held as fully representative of all residents in the district. Troy School Funds Report Satisfies 2 Board Factions TROY — Yesterday’s state attorney general’s report on financial mismanagement in this school district appears to have satisfied both distinct factions of the school board. Harold Janes, instigator of the state probe, is satisfied with the state's conclusions — and so is former Supt. Dr. Rex B. Smith, the frequent target of Janes’ criticism. Smith quit the system under fire last month. more severe: “Their (the attorney general’s staff) ruling is not exactly a token. 1 would call it more of a compromise.” Smith poined out yesterday that there is $162,000 available from two “appropriate funds” to cover the necessary transfer. “I am happy that the report upheld my judgment that the board and administration were guilty of financial mismanagement,” Janes told The Pontiac Press yesterday. He referred to the state report released . yesterday that found the board and a'dministration responsible for mismanaging some $100,000 of 1965 bond Issue funds over a period of years. The attorney general, however, did not recommend any criminal prosecution. CALtED COMPROMISE Janes claimed that the report indicated the need for more statutes governing boards of education and financial policy. The state’s report, however, noted that the board did not violate any statutes, explaining that the district's business practices and judgments were a matter of individual policy and not of law. UNINVOLVEI) “I never thought there was much to the allegations of mismanagement, and I h6pe this report clears the unfair accusations against former board members and the administration,” Smith said yesterday When contacted in Miami Beach, Fla. Janes said the report could have been Current board members completely uninvolved in the report and not board officials at the time of the technical mi.siise of funds are Janes, James McFarland and Leonard Lucas. Rev. Richard Snoad, president of the board of education, said, “The board of education members have been completely absolved of every allegation. Even the $105,414 of technically misu.sed money was described as properly spent for .school purposes. Further, the report noted that there had been no breach of the law by school board members,” Rev. Smad declared. Snoad announced that a press conference will be held tonight by present and former school board members. Janes estimated that the attorney general’s report should have “far-reaching effects” on all school districts throughout the state. ONLY SUGGESTION There were other differences in the report’s conclusions and Janes’ original allegations. Janes alleged three basic things; • That the administration and former board members mismanged $858,000 in bond issue receipts. (The state concluded that the district technically mismanaged a sun of $105,414.) • That an all-expense paid dinner trip to Canada and gifts of bun warmers to board members Influenced the board to contract exclusively to Port Huron architect Harry Harmon. (The state found no evidence of such influence.) • That land acquisitions rhade with cash from the bond issue were illegal becau^.e no independent appraisals of the land purchased were obtained in advance. Huge Machine Crushes Rubbish At Highland Township Landfill (The attorney general pointed out that there are no laws requiring independent appraisals. Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley and Smith noted that since the land was purchased, the value has risen by some $1 million, a savings of the same amount to the district.) The Jane.s-Smith ha.ssle has h«d two apparent effects: West Bloomfielid Police to Form Crime File Link Machine Hikes Work Volume All that the report suggested, however, . wa.s that the Troy School District transfer the $100,600 from a general operating (or other pppropriatc fund) back to the 1965 bond i.ssuc fund. • Smith has found it impossible to receive even a job interview in Michigan as a result of the report’s prcpublicity. Me has still not found a position and is interviewing with private indu.stry and schools in the Miami, Fla., area. • Snoad and Trustee Robert Dolmage refused to file for school board reelection June 9. WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — The township police will soon become the newest link in the Michigan Law Enforcement Information Network (LEIN), a computerized statewide criminal file, it was announced today. Headquarters, containing a file which allows local police agencies to check out suspects, is in the East Lansing State Police Post. who wants to check on a suspect has only to transmit certain information over the teletype to the computer. Uusually within seconds information on the person is returned, if available in the filie. The West Bloomfield police are waiting for their machine to arrive. ihaining school A police spokesman said that the HIGHLAND TQWNSHIP - A recently acquired 22-ton machine for compacting junk has increased by one-third the work volume at the L. E. Marlowe landfill operation off Pepper Road. Reputed to be the first in Michigan, the huge machine known as a trash-master has man-size wheels that can cut a 12-footV swath through piles of refuse. Teletypes, tie lavy enforcement agencies throughout the state into the Lansing-based computer system A local officer Black Demand Is Discussed REV. EDGAR KESLAKE Five-Day Smoking Withdrawal Clinic Set in Lake Orion LAKE ORION - A five-day smoking withdrawal clinic sponsored by the Michigan Cancer Foundation will be held at Blanche Simms School, starting Sunday from 7:30-9 p.jn. Speakers will include Chaplain Edgar Keslake, director of smoking education for Parkview Memorial Hospital, Maine; Rev. Earl Zager of the Seventh-day Adventist Church of Holly; Ih-s. William W. Oliphant, Percy Marsa, James Twing and John J, Marra, all of Lake Orioii; and Drs. Raymond Mayor and William Swatek, both of Pontiac. (Coritinued From Page One) ... "But to win our demands from the church and the United Slates government, we must not forget that it will ultimately be by force-fand power that we (the blacks) ’.’ill win,” which undoubtedly "stung” some of the congregation. i“Tlie mnnlfesto hit the congregation real iiard,” said Rev. Gerald O’Grady, the church's rector. “A lot of the points in that doctrine are quite correct and any responsible intelligent person will see It us such. DISUKES METHODS “But, 1 don’t like the methods they used. 'Phey will tend to alienate rather than enlist support. I guess 1 am u.sed to the white style of doing things — the pragmatic practical approach.” The rector said the black confrontation brings home the fact that the church, as well as the government and the private sec,tor, has Id a.s.sumc more responsibility towards solving social problems. Rev. O’Grady, who was forewarned that his church would be "hit,” had time to do some planning for the manifesto presentation well In advance of June 1. 2,400 represented a good cross section of ages. RK.SPON.se TO WAIT There wUI be no official response to the black demands until after the church vestry evaluates the feeling of the congregation. “People take one look at our church and they immediately think we are a lot of fat cats out here. It just isn’t sq,” the Reverend said. Rev. O’Grady .said that any contribution from ids church will have to come directly out of the pocket of thq parishioner. “We have a very small en-i dowment and it Is lied up in three trust funds, Our bmlgel for next fiscal year is fully committed.” According to the 1967 annual report, Christ Church had pledges of $.309,000 for the 1968 budget, which figures out to about $5 per family in the weekly offering based on the adult congregation of 2,400. There are no age limitations for (^inic attendance ,and' no registration fees. be diatrlbuted at each ■sfe He believes Christ Church in the first of several suburban churches in the D^etropoiitan area that will be confronted by the black demands. The three parish feedback sessions since the Sunday service have produced a broad spactrupa of thought, concerjhing the demand from the extreme right-wing view .to liberal, accoriling to Rev. 0.^rady. He said the turpOut of 480 pe^rsoiis out of an adult congregation of Smartly attired, In an olive-hued striped suit Rev. O’Grady reflected over his cluttered desk about the role of the church concerning today’s multlproblemed society. He agreed the black confrontation at the church was Initiated by frustration among the blacks and inattention to black problems through history by the private sector and government. “The/ govisrnment obviously has to Undertake a radical reexamination of its priorities end I am convinced that the internal questions take priority over the, moon and Asian politics. '('At the same time each clement o(tho'^ ■f IN' In ll:' J -il ■ f private sector must reexamine Its priorities, and that includes the churches. If we have not solved our internal problems we have nothing to sell on earth or beyond. QUESTIONS METHODS “I have questioned the methods of the black conference very seriously ~ but its goals deserve the most careful evaluation by everyone who calls himself an American, a Christian,” Rev. O’Grady said. , Asked to characterize,Ijis church. Rev. O’Grady said, based on comparison with other churches in the Bloomfleld-Birm-ingham area, “1 would say we were more toward’ the liberal end of the conservative-liberal pole.” "We had more John Birch and ex-tremei elements in the congregation a few years ago, but when we came out for civil rights from the pulpit in 1961 most of them left. “We have a lot of Intelligent, socially aware people in this congregation who arc dedicated to worthwhile causes,” he added. machine will come within 30 days and then a training school will be held for the local operators. “It will be a big help” commented the police sokesman. Other departments in the area using the machine include the state police; the Oakland County Sheriff’s Department, Bloomfield Township, Birmingham, and Farmington city and township. State Rep. William P. Hamptpn, fl-Bloomfield Hills, in announcing the new operation, commented, “with this system local law enforcement officials have almost immediate access to statewide and national criminal files and the records of the Secretary of State.” The steel wedges on the wheels push trash under the machine where sheer weight compacts it for easy packing in landfills. A wide screen in front pushes the flattened junk into the sanitary fills. The $80,000 machine handles work previously done by two large bulldozers. The landfill site is used by Rose, Highland, Commerce, White Lake, and Springfield townships, the Oakland County Road Commission, the County Parks and Recreation Department and private companies. The Trashmaster is handled by one person operating two levers and a pair of pedals. A no-slip transmission ensures compaction that wasn’t possible with bulldozers, company officials said. Milliken Breaks Deadlock on Clean-Water Bonds Issue LANSING (AP) - Intervention by Gov. William Milliken has broken a weeks-old deadlock In a joint legislative committee on distribution of $335 million in bonds for water pollution control and sewage treatment. ' ACTIVE IN MANY AREAS Rev. O’Grady mentioned that Christ Church sponsors Negro canons in inner city churches, runs d day care center in Pontiac, has parishioners working as teaching assistants in ghetto schools and was a. mover in founding the Blrm-Ihgham-Bloomfield Human Relations Council seven years ago. But he pointed out that his church and the church in general is only scratching The compromise on legislative control over distribution of the honda — $885 Aiilllon for pollution control and sewagis treatment projects, $50 million for outstate and suburban connecting sewers — should "breeze through” the upper house, according to one Senate leader., after holding out against Senate insistence on the more formal scheme for approving by passlgn a bill. "There won’t be any abuse or pork-barreling,” predicted Rep. Warren Goeniaere, D-Roseville, cochairman of the House CimservaUon Committee...... ★ ★ ★ ' vr-n The House substantially revised a Senate-Originated bill that called for the Legislature to award funds for local hreatment and construction projects. Fear of pork-barreling and a desire for a faster reviewing procedure prompted the changes. House ahd Senate conferees agreed yesterday on a two-stage legislative approval of projects recommended by the water resources commission. Appropriations committees of both chambers would conduct detailed reviews of the commission’s recom- Conservationiats and civil engineers say projects should be approved by early spring each year to take advantage of construction se)$sons and avoid soaring material and labor costs. Milliken reiterated those arguments, but clamor over procedure and Senate IJ the surface as far as social responsibility mendations, then a joint resolution would suspicion of a House plan for rebates to I commitments are concerned. “Of course glVi thflj final stamp W approval. phased-^t immunity treatment plants ^ we are not doing enough ho me has.” , Housd delegates'clalmeiJ a victory drowned out his vo ce for a Ume. a vj ma im THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 West Huron street Pontiac, Michigan 48056 THURSDAY, JUNE 5,1969 Voice of the PeopJe: Chairman of the Board H. PinctlAlD, II Preildant and Publisher RlCtlASD M. PmoEKALtl Treasurer and Finance orilcer Agency Shop a Poser The Pgntiac School District finds itself in the middle' Of a sticky legal dilemma that came to life with the recent dismissal, of eight teachers who refused to pay dues under the “agency shop” clause of the teachers’ labor contract with the school district. The clause prescribes that teachers who elect not to join the union must nonetheless pay dues or face termination of employment. The agency shop provision is being vigorously pushed by organized labor not only in the educational field hut in other areas of negotiation. In conflict is the question of whether tenure should take priority over a provision of a labor contract that in turn is implemented by another statutory requirement that school districts must recognize and bargain with representative teachers’ organizations. So far, the State Tenure Commission has ruled in two cases, and the Wayne County Circuit Court in one, in faj(or of agency shop precedence. But a sound case can be presented for the opposite viewpoint, and in our opinion the logical one. *Urge Rophe$ter Voters to Vcfte Yes for Schools’ The League of Wopien Voters of the Rochester area urges voters in the Rochester School District to vote in favor of the bond issue and millage proposals on June 9. We believe the Rochester Board of Education has fairly assessed the needs of the school district. If we are to maihtain the standards of good education which have been set here, we must accommodate the growing number of children and support the requests for funds for additional classrooms and for operation of the schools. MRS. DONALD C. HILDUM, PRES. LEAGUE OF WOMEN VOTERS OF THE ROCHESTER AREA Two Discuss Vole for Huroti Valley Schools But in the case of teachers’ contracts, the clause bumps head-on into the statutory status of teacher tenure, which is in effect a form of civil service security. Since the issue is almost certain to arise with increasing regularity, it should be resolved without delay by decision of the Michigan Supreme Court or by clarifying legislation. 'You're Not Exactly William Tell, Mac!' The young mothers of the Huron Valley School District are to be applauded for their door-to-door campaign in support of the school millage election June 9. Obviously these mothers know the score. The quality level of their .children's education is the issue at stake. I am confident that under the leadership of Governor Milliken relief from the present pattern of property taxes will come—hopefully for the school budget year of 1971. Until it does we must see it through on our own. Even then, from all present indications, relief will come only to those school districts that have done what we must do on June ft^ote sufficient support as to become eligible for increased state support. Any excess which we may have voted above minimum state requirements (yet to be established) Can rightfully be expected to be rescinded when such aid arrives. DavicJ Lawrence Soys: ROTC Opposition Unsound Curbs on Campus Strife Needed The 6-mill addition sought above ihe present 15 mills means $1.20 per week additional tor the owner of a $20,000 home state equalized at $10,000. Measured in terms of lifetime improvement opportunity for our 6,800 Huron Valley school children, who can tell us of a better buy? Vote yes June 9. WILLIAM L. MAINLAND OAKLAND ORCHARDS, MILFORD Those students who demonstrate against ROTC may have a valid point insofar as they protest the compulsory nature of the program on some campuses. But as in other areas that arouse their social concern, they all too easily jump from validity to vacuousness by demanding that ROTC be abolished entirely or thtit academic credits no longer be given for it. In the name of freedom or humanity, not only would they deprive other students of this particular educational or career option but would deny the officer ranks of the Country’s armed forces that desirable civilian “flavoring” which ROTC graduates have traditionally provided. ★ ' ★ ★ They would not by any means strike a crippling blow at militarism or the military, which could always produce all the officers it needs through officer candidate schools, but they could seriously lowei* the quality of leadership in the military. As Gen. William C. Westmoreland remarked recently, “It would be a disaster to liave our men led by ignoramuses. It is essential to' have the ROTC continue to turn out the type of educated officers we need.” The activist’s answer to all this, of course, is that war is evil and that anything that contributes to it or enhances the prestige or power of the military is likewise evil. WASHINGTON - President Nixon's speech Tuesday at Madison, S.D., was an elo-quent argu- LAWRENCE But until such time as this Nation and all nations can lay down their weapons and disband their armies^ il is difficult tp see what good cause is being served by an / antimilitarism that, carried to its / extreme, could result in an intellectually impoverished military establishment isolated from the mainstream of American life. ment against campus riots and disturbances. But it doesn’t tackle the main question that’s bothering the Amer ican people; Why aren't disorders o n the campus dealt with as promptly as riots and disruptions outside the university grounds? Are colleges sanctuaries? The basic Issue is who is going to enforce law and order. Again and again in their speeches, high officials in the administration have indicated that they think it is the job of the states and the cities. The Constitution places upon the federal government the obligation to put down any form of insurrection. It says specifically that the federal government must protect each state against “invasion” or “ d o m e s t i c violence.” States can request such aid. The big question is why punitive measures have not been taken against those , organizations which have been openly calling for insurrection in America. ^Certainly the time is long overdue for joint efforts of the federal and state governments to root out the instigators of “domestic violence.” (Copyriaht, mt, —.— ■ Syndlcil*) Bab Cans!(dine Says: It was my understanding that the raises in property taxes the last few years did not benefit the school districts. Because of this, many school districts have requested increases in millage to offset the higher cost of living. Huron Valley School District will vote for a continuance of IS mills and an additional 6 mills for operating expenses on June 6. After losing its bid for more millage last winter, why did not the Huron Valley School Board use its efforts and money in an attempt to persuade the State Legislature to change the methods of taxing for schools to a more equitable basis? It is becoming more difficult for people to own a decent home. 1 caq't imagine how those on pension. Social Security and heavily in debt can afford to continue to pay the increasing property taxes. VERY CONCERNED Viet Dissenters Punish Question and AiiHwer a relative disabled in another slate who could proba- l/fCC ff ruipy XJllVI somewhere IcouW write or call to « near him? 0 see if there are any facilities NEW YOHK - People . . , Places . . . One. unhappy aspect of the growing disgruntlement over the war in Vietnam is that USO contribu- Any suggestion that the Poles, Marx Poles Apart federal government might It is no news by now that the longer the followers of Marx try to make his theories work in practice, the more they demonstrate that there are a few basic points about human nature the mastet did not take into account. ' intervene has been rejected advance as the beginning of a police state. But the net result is inaction. springs eternal, even in the socialist breast, comes from Warsaw. One of the latter is the hope for personal gain as a motivator for individual economic activity, legal or otherwise, the latest evidence that it Five Poles have been convicted of counterfeiting for , using a state-owned printing plant to make a few bucks on the side— literally. Adding insult to injury, they were turning out not good, or bad, Polish zlotys but dollars —?50 and 120 U.S. bills. Colleges and universities are within the jurisdiction of cities and states, and if property is in any Way damaged by acts of riotous citizens, or if the operations of an institution are disrupted, the local police would be expected naturally to go to the campus and make arrests. AFRAID OF INTERVENTION But university authorities have been afraid of sqch intervention ..and sometimes have discouraged it. This is CONSIDINE the heart Of the problem. Annual Exodus Near in N. Carolina ■>'“« £.i'’TriH.S are being transgressed every The big farm equipment day- but the Department of makers are not interested at Justice has undertaken very By BRUCE BIOSSAT NEA Washington Correspondent RALEIGH, N.C, — In a few weeks, at high school graduating time, it will happen as it i has often before: Graduating young Negro boys will flock bus and train stations to head north from North I Carolina's tobacco lands and other BIOSSAT rural sectors. Sometime!)' in past years whole graduating classes of 40 or more have gone north the very day they received their diplomas. They head for the great ghettos with a suitcase of clothes, a few dollars, and the scribbled address of a friend or relative. Hits heavy exodus of the young male blacks Is not just North Carolina pKbnome- dustrial levels' pulled in offsetting numbers of newcopiers. OUTFLOW GOES ON But the outflow goes on. North Carolina Negroes once made the Inner cores of Washington, Baltimore and Philadelphia their great migration targets. Today, the migrants' impact is spread more widely to Include lesser cities in the seaboard region. this point. They need not only a vastly bigger domestic market than North, Carolina and other produce/8y)f Hue-cured tobacco dan provide, few prosecutions. All over the country campus disturbances have been in-Yet every charge, but a large foreign outlet as that "outside agitators” have been Influential in starting the trouble is rebuffed even by well. CHANGE WILL COME Economists studying the non. It is Southwide. Moreover, older blacks and poor The real news, however. Is that another huge northward movement may be in the making. The mechanization of tSbttcco harvesting is at last hi sighti, And that portends another minor revolution which, in perhaps the next six yWs, could wipe out some 150,000 farm jobs held piostly by Negroes. IN THE WORKS That total is the potential migration pool in the time, jus) ahead. North Carolina coastal plains do not think, though, that this reluctance will block impending change. They foresee inducing some smaller some high officials of the Nixon admintetration. What's calusing concern is the fact that the Department of JusUfce is not asking federal grand juries for •■■uMvsstg ovuic o III a j 1 c 1 ------- ” . • I tj I manufacturers to produce the dictments of those individuals harvesters which will revolu- who have been responsible for It is a human reaction of those who oppose this war. But it doesn't seem to have too much-to do with the fact that USO does a lot to lighten the burdens of those' who are fighting the war, does it? Not many of the 540,000 men now in Vietnam fought like tigers to get there. Their number came up and, like the good soldiers they are, they went. Simple ps that. LIFELINE TO STATES USO is their chief lifeline to the States. It provides places where they can scrape the muck of a dirty land off their bodies and uniforms; whether they can bite into a genuine hamburger or take a long cold drink of milkshake. USO means to them a place where they can write a letter home, catch a breather. USO brings them the kind of entertainment for which they hunger: Fun, laughter, stars. So why starve USO just because it's a lousy war? USO makes it less intolerable. The address is In your phone book, and your contribution is tax deductible. against both left and right-handed pitching. He had a lot of suggestions about how I would rotate my pitchers. He thought I should reverse my Jeft and right fielders. “I finally said to him, '•would you consider leaving the paper and joining the team as a coach?' The guy looked in.sulted. “ ‘How could I?' he said. ‘I don't know anything about baseball.' ” MRS. D. L. K. REPLY An office has been set up Specifically for that purpose. Write HELP, Box 1200, Washington, D.C. Question ami AiiHwer What do soldiers in Vietnam want besides pre-sweetened soft drink mixes and gum? What’s the best way to mall them. and what kind of packing Is needed? MRS. MARSHA MEIER Majestic Prince biles. Me has playfully chomped small filet mignons out of the calves 'and arms of his handlers. But they all seem to love him and say he’s just a big, playful kid who loves life. And filet mignon. The champion has a voracious appetite. Lots of Derby winners have threatened to boll or rear when the traditional Blanket of Roses was placed on their necks. Majestic Prince was delighted; He began eating the roses. He also tried to browse among the Black-Eyed-Susans which are bestowed on the winning critter in the Prcakne.ss. They turned out to be plastic, but that didn’t matter^ much. Majestic Prince likes plastic, too. REPIvY Send nothing scented, sUch as soaps, after shave lotion, etc. They can use handkerchiefs, socks, lightweight underwear and T-shirts, combs, razors and blades, lightweight plastic raincoats, see-through plastic briefcases, magazines, canned goods (especially meats), pre-packyed ready-to-pop popcorn, peanut butter, cookies and baked goods in cans well-sealed with masking or friction tape. Chocolate arid hard candies tend to melt and run together. Airmail is best because surface mail can take loo long. Packages under 5 lbs. can go SAM (space available) for surface rates they go airmail if space permits. To be sure it goes airmail, you can send any size package PAL (parcel air lift) for surface rates plus $1. Pack things the same as you would to keep them intact if you were^ sending it anywhere else. Service recruiting officers can answer other questions about what to send; the Post Office can give you other mailing information if you need it. Preservation Hall Band Plays Encore By DICK .SAUNDERS That magnificent thing is going to happen again right in our own backyard - and It’s only n lionize tobacco production. 'fh(E drive to mechanize seems inexorable. It is not haltod even by the threat of another long spell of net out-migration from the state. stimulating campus riots and have gone from state to state to carry out their objectives. Verbal Orchids job-seeking whites Join in flow, too. In North Carolina, the net outflow Used to be immense — adding up to about 330,000 peoide ip the IDSOs. Since then thejstateVi loss of population has,been slowed almost to a halt, as rising in- Right now no perfected harvesting machines are at work plucking the big tobacco leaves. North Carolina Stale University has built a reasonably w o r k a b 1 e prototype, and there are other experimental elforts, but commerpial production la yet to come: ' ' « While the technologists pour over machinery blueprints, manpower ex|>ert8 and general planners try to find ways to keep North Carolina’s potential migration pool from flooding north. If they fail it means thousands more people packed into northern inner cities. And diminished markets and labor resources here. Says fbrmer Gov. Terry ■: Sanford; "We just can't standi| |! the kind of migratioiT vie’ had-T-of our best young pie,.black and white." Mr. and Mrs. William J. Mansfield of 2630 Patrick Henry; 56th wedding anniversary^ Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Jacobs of New Haven: 51st wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. T. M. Nctoey of 8120 Gale; 57th Wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Frederick IL Schwartz of Holly; wed^fanrilversary. C^lflMi'irUscany of Mt.'Ci|nkeits; Mth birthday. Ted Williams was supposed to have been detained in a nut house by this date in the baseball season. That was the prediction. A man of his great past skills on the field and his renowned impatience wi t?h bad ballplayers, derisive fans and stupid baseball writers, could not conceivably keep his balance beyond the first of June. Well, he was cheerf ul, chipper and relaxed the other day at the luncheon in Washington that launched Washington Post sports editor Shirley Povich’s new book. "One of your rolleagucs aie up to me the other day gave me some advice,” the manager ^ of the Washington Senators said, looking at the dean o f WashingUfn baseballjlwtiteiis. "He said I was a sap not to play Epstein regular!jr, week and day away. I’m referring to the annual pilgrimage North of the Billie and DeDe „ Pipree Jazz Hend from Preservation Hall in New Orlean.s. I remember back in the early months of 1968 when I steadfastly Insisted to people at Oakland University that New Orleans jazz could not only he sold to area re., A«Mc(aM4 Frm h th* Fontlae Pr«M li ulalhitnil by !• $34.00 • yaari ah*. • ) \ THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 1969 to Idll mter weeds deadhead, dead! (Arrrrrgh!) How do you get rid of the weeds in your lawn when your lawn happens to be a lake? It couldn’t be easier. Pennsalt’s Aquathol® Plus makes weeding your lake a whole lot simpler than weeding your lawn. Aquathol Plus is a product of Pehnsalt, leaders In the development of aquatic weed control chemicals. It’s effective, economical and, easy to use. aneweasyw^ to kill uwatarMleeds dead, dead, dead. Aquathol Plus goes to work immediately. Initial weed kill takes place In from 3 to 7 days, with complete weed decomposition following. And when you use Aquathol Plus there is no harm to fish. As a f matter of fact, you’d have to use 20 times the maximum recommended dosage to kill most fish. ' If you have any questions about your particular weed problem, or need help in application, just ask the dealer nearest you in the list below. Act now...so your lake will be clean, weed free and ready for summer fun. Pennsalt Chemicals Corporation, Agricultural Chemicals Division, 111 Windsor Drive, Oak Brook, Illinois 60521 V (PENNSALT/ FLINT FONTIAC SWARRCmiK Pnt Control Supply Main Landscaping Stamford Oil Co. SmHh Obuglass Swartt Creak Elevator Producera Elevator ggg.2913 OM.IItM ie« r I ' I umk.. ala. 742-1434 334-1584 752-5136 A Lumber Go. 653-4215 655-2161 Standard OH ^antt: CUNKSTON FENTON EdRiemcko Jack Da Rosa Bob Jones Robert Pallas Nell Braun Dick Bur Olin Evans 644-5250 229-9822 625-3656 269-6071 349-1961 624-2131 JULIA ROGERS Today's Woman Painting Colors Her Life By JUNE ELERT A lifelong interest in arts and crafts has recently culminated in the flowering of a career for Julia Rogers of Birmingham. Widowed last year, Mrs. Rogers expresses great appreciation of her late husband’s encouragement and pride in her artistic efforts, believing that the contacts she has made through the years In art circles are responsible for her present occupation in the art field. , ■ w , ★ ★ Julia came to Birmingham with her family at age 5, and early displayed art talent which was encouraged by her teachers. Upon graduation from high school, she entered Eastern Michigan University, studying art for about two ydnrs, until the depression made it necjessary for her to earn a living. ★ ★ ★ ;Marriage to Carl Rogers two years later ended the college dream, though Julia continued to attend extension study classes and to exercise her talents at home. ★ * * A daughter, now married and living in Rochester, and a son, a senior at Olivet College, also contributed to keeping her busy during those years. WATERCOLORIST She joined the Pwitiac Society of Artists some 18 years ago. Describing herself as primarily a watercolorist, Julia also produces collages, mobiles and various crafts items . . , papier mache, decoupage, sand eastings, etc. ♦ ' i ★ A Interested in gardening also, Julia studied the art of dwarfing trees and has several specimens on her patio. Refinishing furniture is another of her slqlls. w ★ ★ Last fall, members of the women’s auxiliary of St. Joseph Mercy Hospital asked Julia if she would serve as advisor arid workshop chairman for their May fair. Though she had not been involved in this kind of activity before, she con-cented, and from October to May piled up 500 hours of volunteer help to produce articles which were sold by the auxiliary. ★ ★ ★ A couple of months ago, Robert Thom, well-krtown Michigan artist, with whom Julia had served on the board of the Bloomfieldr.ApWtssociation, Invited her to work, with him. * Mer job Involves transferring prints of original paintings to canvas by a reverse transfer process, coating the surface with a colorless gel and painting the highlights in the manner of the original painter. These “facsimiles,” as they are called. Continue Game With Guests Js Solution By ELIZABETH L. POST Of The Emily Post Institute Dear Mrs, Post: Recently we^ were playing cards with a couOle when some playing cards with a couple when some them to join us in the gamp but they refused. They continued to stay so we quit playing cards so we could entertain them, too. are (hen suitably framed and sold to persons who prefer something more like a painting than the flat prints they could otherwise afford. Of her new careei-, Julia says, “It is really exciting and I love it. I’m working with paint all day long. The ohly thing that disturbs me is fighting that traffic on the expressway.” ★ ★ * Another exciting development of the past year was when Mrs. Rogers was asked to teach a class at Pontiac Creative Arts Center, in 1968’s summer workshop program, and again in the fall 10-week course. She is there now every Wednesday afternoon. ★ * w She said, “I get a lot of women who think they can’t do things. They say, ‘Oh, I’ll never be able to do that.’ But, after they’re shown how, it becomes simple to them, and they’re so pleased with themselves that they didn’t give up. “I just face up to the challenge and try to overcome it.” * * * Mrs. Rogers has won several awards for her paintings over the years. Among them are a watercolor award from the Bloomfield Art Association in 1963; a blue ribbon from the Union Lake Women’s Club exhibit for a watercolor collage in 1966; a second for watercolor in another year at Union Lake plus a first in mixed media. Sex Equality Clothes YMCA Pool Scene DETROIT (UPI) - Discrimination because of sex is out, according to federal law, even in the men’s pool at the downtown Detroit YMCA where Lynne Weatherholt is the new lifeguard. The comely, 28-year-old brunette has a polite answer when asked by startled male swimmers about what she’s doing there. - WWW “There were not enough malps to go around. So I was hired,” she says. “Besides, you’ve heard about the law against discrimination because of sex haven’t you?” * ★ * The YMCA may be pioneering in a new field, but everything’s ail right — men and boys must now wear swim trunks at all times, a situation that left one member rather embarrassed when he forgot his swim togs and rushed into the pool. * * * “I turned the other way,” said Mrs. Weatherholt,; “He plunged into the pool.” This seemed unfair to the invited guests. Should this happen again, how can I handle the situation without hurting either party? — Betsy ★ * Dear Betsy: Your obligation is always to your invited guests — not to those who drop in unannounced. You should have offered the unexpected visitors some refreshments, and asked them to join you or “kibitz,” but you should have continued the game; ' ★ * ★ Even if the game had not started, but had been planned beforehand, you would sajl, “We were planning on a game of hearts — would you care to join us or watch for a while?” Only if the invited guests insisted on postponing the game should you ^ve it up. Weekend in Japan Joy of Giving Is Suffering Because of Ungrateful Ones By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: Every time my wife and I go to visit a friend or relative, my wife thinks she has to bring a little gift for the children. I think it’s a nice idea when the children are appreciative, but 1 put my foot down when it comes te a certain family. My wife’s sister married very well and she has three spoiled, selfish children, under ten years of age. No matter what we bring them (and my wife always - s. spends a little more on them just to make a good impression) it is received with, "Oh, is that ALL?” Or, “I have one just like It.” I told my wife that from now on, we'll bring those children nothing. She says she agrees, they don’t deserve anything, but it she came empty-handed her sister would look at her funny. What would you d^ TILLIE’S HUSBAND DEAR HUSBAND: I would let my sistW look at me any way she wished. Air Service Includes Abortion Run PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) - When women in Oregon want an abortion, they may check with travel agencies before worrying about a doctor. And by an almost, routine procedure they can be flown off to Japan with all medical arrangements made in advance. ’The situation was hinted at during the recent controversy in the state legislature over liberalizing Oregon’s abortion laws. One argument by proponents of changing the law was the contention that any woman with the price of a plane ticket could get a legal and medically sound abortion in Japan. * * ★ To test the assertion, a woman who was not pregnant made a random phone check of some travel agents. In a nervous, faltering voice, she told each agency she wanted to go to Japan "for medical reasons.” They got the idea. * * ★ But the first ageiicy, a large, nationally known outfit, told her, “We don’t handle that sort of thing. Sorry. Goodbye.” Another well known agency was more sympathetic but only referred her to the Japanese Consulate. She phoned there and was told that it had no medical connections but it would issue her a visa. “What you do in Japan is your own business,” she was told. VARIED RESPONSE The third agency call drew this response: "Is this for an abortion? Yes, we’ve handled it before. But it’s not the kind of thing you like to talk about on the phone. Why don’t you come in and see us? I’m sure we can help you.” From another travel agency: “Are you referring to an abortion? Yes, we can take care of everything for you. We work through someone in San Francisco who arranges Ijor the doctor and hospital. You can leave Portland Wednesday morning arrive in Tokyo Thursday, hgve your operation on Friday and be back home Sunday.” The total cost, said this agent, including about $700 air fare and $50 medical fees, would come to “well under $1,000.” Japanese law pillows abortions if continuation of pregnancy might affect the mother’s health from a physcial or economic viewpoint. Interpretation of the law is left to a licensed physician. ★ '* The Oregon Legilsature has enacted a new abortion law, which takes effect Aug. 23. It will ptomit abortions when there is a substantial risk that the pregnancy would greatly impair the physical or mental health of the mother, if the child would be born with serloys physicial or mental defect or If the pregnancy resulted from rape or incest. The present law permits abortions only wjicn the mother’s health is In peril beepuse of the pregnancy. ★ * + But there is ndttiMig illegal, according to Oregon authorities, about leaving the state to have an abortion performed in a 'foreign country. There are no estimates of how many women do. MOTHERLY APPROACH Another travel agent phoned gave this response: “Do you need an abortion, my dear?” a motherly voice asked the caller. “We can arrange everything.” She said it was not commonly known outside the travel industry but one airline handles a kind of abortion-service package plan for the agency. The agent said a representative of the airline meets the patient at the plane, escorts her to her hotel, contacts the doctor, arranges for an examination and for the operation, usually the following day. The agent said the doctor normally used “is very understanding of this kind of problem, my dear. One time 1 sent a young girl to him and she was so nervous he took her shopping in downtown Tokyo before the operation to calm her down.” and would discontinue bringing gifts to ungrateful children. * ★ A DEAR ABBY: What does a wife, who really loves her husband, do when he asks for “permission” to send one night with his old girl friend to find out if be has really gotten over her or not? Boyd and I have been married two years and have a small baby and I want this marriage to last. 1 am 23 and Boyd -is 24. I knew Boyd went steady with a girl all through high school, but I assumed that after we were married lie would forget about her. Now he tells me that she had an” unhappy marriage and is back in town again. Abby, I have my pride, I don’t wartt Boyd wondering whether hp still cares for his “first love.” I will say this for him, at least he was honest with me. He could have seen this girl again without telling life and I would have never known. What do you advise? HEARTACHES DEAR HEARTACHES: Don’t hang any medals on Boyd, for his “honesty.” It’s a maneuver. You are married to an immature 24-year-old who is looking for “mother’s appi'oval” to be a naughty boy. Let him know that you are not his mother, you’re the wife he took when he promised to forsake all others, and that’s what you expect him to do. w w ★ Everybody has a problem. What’s yours? For a personal reply write to Abby, in care of 'The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-eoe, P.Q. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056, and enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. it h it . ' Hate to write letters? Send $1 to Abby, In care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056, for Abby’s booklet, “How to Write Letters for All Occasions.” first ^Lt, Robert E. Keenan Jr. (left) leaves chapel at the U.S. Military Academy mth his bride, ceremony after Williams graduated from the dca-the former Lorretta J. Cassidy. At right 2nd. It. demy in West PoinL iV. ¥, Wednesday. Keenan. Stephen J. Williams leaves with his bride, the from Mountain Home, Idaho, graduated from the former Constance M. Cassidy. The sisters from academy two years agb. Williams is from Cincin-Highland Falls, N. iwere married in doubUf mth Ohio. We’ve jujst reduced the price of this famous Broyhill hy *100. And that’s just part of it! Sure, price is important and a •100 off price on lliiH b<;autifiil Broyhill set could .well be the hcsl buy you’ll ever make, but that’s only part of the story.,^^ Equally important is the quality of the set. You’ll fall in love with this massive, elaborate Spafrtsh set finished in a rich Bolero brown. Just visualize the lonj5 72” triple dresser, door chest with loads of drawer space, mirror and matching panel headboard ih your bedroom — then come to ours. R«gularly negui $549 •449 h Tim Salm Pritm Th» Bettar Bedroom People oti Tehigraph Road house of bedrooms 1716 S. Tilegraph Rd., Bloomflald, Batwaan Mirada Mila and Orchard Laka Rd. STORE HQURSi EVERY DAY 9 TO 9 * CALL 334-4593 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 1969 tmmnm C—11 This Was A Family's Pride—A Rich, Full Life Amid The Fertile Fields mi a]Ao WH ^ HE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 1969 MKEtOTEFF City Hardware Operator Is Dead at 39 Mike Toteff, co-owner and operator of Tom’s Hardware, died this morning. He was 3d. Service will be 11 a.nfi. Saturday in All Saints Episocpal Church with burial in Ottawa Park Cemetery, Independence Township. An Elks Lodge of Sorrow will be conducted! at A p.m. to row in Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Surviving are his wife, Jessie; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Peter Toteff of Pontiac; one child, Lynn, at home; and a brother. Tommy P. of Pontiac. , Toteff of 4061 Silver Birch, Waterford Township, wag member of All Saints Church and Pontiac Elks Lodge 810. He had been active in the State Hardware D e a I e . Association. Crash on M24 Mrs. August J. Cremer Service for Mrs. August J; (Helen L.) Cremer, 66, of 166 Charles Lane will be 1:30 p.m. Saturday in' Gloria Dei Lutheran Church with burial inj Perry Mount Park Cemetery by Voochees-Siple Funeral Home. Mrs. Cremer, a retired secretary at Community National Bank, died yesterday. She was a member of Gloria Dei Church, Bloomfield TownshoUse SO & Up Clid) and the Lutheran Church Women. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Donald Cam of Waterford Township; a son, Richard of Pontiac; seven grandchildren; and four brothers. Divisiop and a member of Pon-iMethodist Church, Or ion tiac Elks Lodge 810. ■ .^^'^iMasonic Lodge 46 F&AM and Surviving are his wife, Ruby, OES 340, Lake Orion, and two brothers. I Surviving are his wife, Ethel; one daughter, Mrs. Delbert Mrs. Roland Loqicks 'Casey of Oxford; three Mrs. Roland ( C o r d'fel i a ) Loucks, 83, of 91 Pine Grove S'-^n^children. John Kubinec of^ Holly; two Michael of Flint and William of Holly; three sisters; and seven grandchildren. 4 Are Mute at Hearing on Drug Charges Orion Township narcotics raid|Jackson, Lake Orion, andlsetfor June23. were, arraigned yesterday andThomas J. Lumbardo, 24, who Four police departments, depsed on $1,000 bail each. lived at the Beach address were including the Oakland County James Meyers, 24, and his charged with possession of Sheriff’s Department, raided wife, Mary, 23, of 1397 Beach marijuana. the Meyers’ lakeside cottage were charged with possession of They stood mute b e f o r e Tuesday night and seized what narcotics and stolen property. District Judge Robert Shipper they suspect is marijuana and Jerome,. Shaw, 24, of 209 E.'of Rochester. Examination was'drugs., died yesterday. Her body is at the Huntoon Puneral Home. She was a member of the First Church of the Nazarene. Surviving are seven children, Bruce E. Fry of Owosso, Melvin Skelton of California, Mrs. Edna Vore of Laos, Howard Loucks of Detroit and Mrs. Frances Cummings, Walter Skelton and Mable Loucks, all of Pontiac; three brothers, including Alex Bigger of Pontiac; a sister; six Mrs. Douglas Eckert RAY TOWNSHIP - Requiem mass for Mrs. Douglas (Virginia) Eckert, 38, of 20144 32 Mile will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at St. Clement’s Church, Romeo, \vith burial in West Berlin Cemetery, Allenton, by Roth’s Home for Funerals, Romeo. A Rosary will be said at 8 Mrs. H^ry A. Kampsen Servic/for Mrs. Henry A.|-(HelenxW) Kampsen, 77, of grandchiiaren. 661 E. First will be (0 a.m. Saturday in St. Michael Catholic Church with burial in Mount Hope Cemetery. The Rosary will be tecited at 8 p.m. tomorrow In the Huntoon Funeral Home. Mrs. Kampsen died this morning. She was a member of St. Michael Church, Mescola Guild, Daughters of Isabella, Learie of Catholic Women, Fifty & Up Club and the Altar Society. Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. James Greene of Bloomfield Hills and Mrs. Troyce Hudnell and Mrs. Leland Cotter, both of Pontiac; six sons. Herb J. of Kansas, Virgil of Kentucky, Raymond A- of Chicago and Alcuin, Leo F. and Cyril A.,, all of Pontiac; two sisters; fWo brothers; 21 grandchildren; and nine peat- grandchildren; 23 g r e a t - p m. todav at the funeral home, grandchildren; and two great- Mrs. Eckert died Tuesday. She was a member of St. Clement’s Church. Charles W. Spence i Surviving are her husband; Charles A. Spence, 75, of ngo three daughters Joyce, Mary Wide Track died this Corning. His body (is at Huntoon Funeral Home. Mr. Spence, a retired employe of Pontiac Motor Division, was member of the First Church of the Brethren. Surviving are his wife, Freda; son, Charles H. of Pontiac; two daughters, Mrs. Freda Smith of Murphysboro, 111., and Romeo. Mrs. Caroline Johnson of Chelsea; a brother Daniel 0. of Pontiac; 19 grandchildren; and< NORTH BRANCH - Service two great-grandchildren. Alfred E. Randall, 65, of John Lambeth Service for former Pontiac resident John Lambeth, 64, of Kills Father of 5 A Pontiac Township father of five was killed last night on M24 in Orion Township when his pickup truck slammed into the rear of a tractor trailer. Dead on arrival at Pontiac General Hospital was ~ mm M. Bishop, 45, of 2240 Dexter. Hfe was a security guard at day at the Larrison Funefai Home, Mio, with burial in the Luzerne Cemetery, Luzerne. Lambeth, who d yesterday, was an accountant for the GMC Truck and Coach Waterford Gl Killed in Viet Pontiac Motor Division. Truck driver Carl Montgomery, 56, of Hamtramck told Oakland County Sheriff’s deputies that he saw the smaller truck coming up behind him headed south at a high rate of speed on Lapeer Road near Silver Bell Road. Montgomery said he tried to get the tractor off the road but that it was struck in the rear. Montgomery was not hurt. Pvt. James W. Clay, 19, the son of Mrs. Charles, Councilor of 5950 Wellington, Waterford Township, was killed in action in Vietnam May 29. Services are pending at the Coats Funeral Home, Waterford Township. Clay attended W a t e r f o r Kettering High School before enlisting in the Army July 18, 1968. He was sent to Vietnam on May 15, 1969. He volunteered for ir the Vietnam assignment. He‘*is s ................. survived by his mother and father. Jack Clay of Allen, Ky., and two brothers, Roger and Jack, both of Waterford. lock-lt-to-Me' Drive in County Is Praised Oakland County’s “lock-lt-to-me” car safety-belt campaign is the^ost widespread ever cm-ducted at a local level in the nation, a traffic improvement group was told yesterday. Albert B, Kelley, vice president in charge o f communications for the Insurance InsUtute for Highway Safety in secretary; Stanford C. Stoddard, president of Michigan Bank, treasurer, and Sol D. Lomersm, chairman of the board of county road com-ihlssioners, member at large. Among directore elected to two-year term were Charles B. Edwards, Jr., chairman of Oakland County Board Washington, D.C., praised the Supervisors; George Fulkerson, campaign before more than lOO member of the Oakland Countj community leaders at the second annuaj \ meeting of - the tUy Board of Auditors; Willis M. Bewer, Sylvan Lake coun cilman; and Charles R DeVlieg, president of DeVIieg Machine Company. Traffic improvement Association (TIA) of Oakland County in Southfield. The promotion campaign to encourage motorists to, .w^r Directors elected to a one-seat belts is a demonstration year term to fill vacanciea project for other afeas of the resulting from a change, ip country. 'business or residential status In other action at the ^cre A, Robert Forster, dir^ ig,S Edwin 0, Gdorge, il^dent of Detroit Fxiison Co. lives at 352 Barden in Bloomfieid Hills, was elected president of HA by the board of directors. His term Is one year. gUOCaCBDSAVEltllX George succeeds Avirill,"' " Paul N. Others elected include: Charles B. Kass of Ethyl Corporation, iHce president; and liowell tlnuing education at Oakland UnWersity, a member at large of the executive committee., tor of the traffic and highway safety section of Genera' Motors Corp. and F. * J McDonald, general manager of Pontiac Motor DIoiaoit, Among those re-elected to two-year term as dtrectore were Marvin L. Kadce, vice {srcsident of manufacturing, Ford Motor Company; Edward R u s i n ■ - Hoy hfationa Bank; Loy Suth^nd, o Sutherland Oil Company Durward B. Varner, chancellor of Oakland University; Ekiund; George; Potter; and Mrs Willett. HomCr Case, B loom fielt Township supervisor, was re- TIA officers; .._j Mra,' 0. Howard Willett, I elected to a two-year term as Jr., vide president of BItrm-chairman of TIA’s Board «| ' jIarfk.lTrustees'; ,, .,,|j '.jH i 1 U ii and Pamela, all at home; 10 son$, Paul, Garry, Gerald, Anthony, Carl, William, Alan, Marty, Douglas Jr. and Darrell, all at home; her mother, Mrs. Anna Carson of Romeo; two brothers; including Emil of Armada; and five sisters including Mrs. Dolores Lecluyse and Mrs. Elenor Weeks, both of Alfred E. Randall Raymond M. Bishop PONTIAC TOWNSHIP Raymmd M. Bishop, 45, of 2240 Dexter died this morning. His body is at Voorhees — ' Funeral Home, Pontiac. Mr. Bishop was an employe of 7822 Mowatt will be 1 p.m. Saturday at C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor, with burial in North Farmington Cemetery, Farmington Township. Mr. Randall died yesterday. He was a retired dairy farmer. Pontiap Motor Division’s plant, j ^^e National protectiw department. He wasi^^^mers Organization and a mernber of American Legion ^^^^er of the Farm Bureau of Post 377 and Eagles Lodge 1230. Michigan. Surviving are his wife, Edith; Surviving are his wife, Muriel; two FE 1-0121 3SS 108 N. SAGINAW ST. - DOWNTOWN PONTIAC - FE 3-7114 OPEN FRI. 9.30 A M. to 9 P.M. - SAT. 9i30 A.M. to 5i30 P.M. FRlGlDRjRj iMiC FRIGIDAIRE Compact FOOD 'FREEZER Stores Up to 406 Lbs, • Just 30 inches wide • 6 Cu. Ft. size with 4 full width shelves • 3 refrigerated for fast freezing • 4 roomy door shelves • Free Delivery FRIGIDAIRE Jet Action aut6 washer Rug.$l^ SAVE $21 • 2-speed washer — regular plus delicate # Deep Action Agitator • 2 jet-Awoy rinses • Cold vwiter wash setting, too. BUDGET WAYS TO PAY 140 MONEY DOWN, 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH - UP TO 3 YEARS TO ?AY Frigidoire 14.6 Cu. Ft. REFRIGERATOR IS FROST-PROOF Reg. $309 SAVE $50 »259 • 14.6 Cu. Ft. family size refrigerator • Big 126-lb. top freezer • And you'll never defrost again — it's automatic • Door storage, too • Twin Hydrotors for produce. FRIGIDAIRE ELECTRI-CLEAN ELECTRIC RANGE *238 e Elacirl-Claon ov«n claoni more than Hielf — It •ven cleans ihe oven rocks ond surface on8 drip bowls e Cook Moiter oven control starts, slops cooking aulomoticolly. • Easy view lurfoce unit controls. PARK FREE IN WKC'S LOT at Rearypf Store or 1 Hr. in Downtown Mall -- Have Ticked Stamped at Cashier's Office ..II3; Sf7 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 1969 MAKE OVER i The following are top prices covering sales of lOcally grown produce by growers and sold by »them in wholesale package lots.j { Quotatimis are furnished by the| I Detroit Bureau of Markets a I Friday. Produce Possibility of a boost in prime lending rates continued to hang N. Viet Attacks Stock Mart Mixed at Opening Nixon at Paris Air Travel Soars in a Clhuded Sky NEW YORK (UPI) — Stocks UPI stock market indicator was in the aerospace group, and in up 0.01 per cent on 412 issues on|McDonnell-Douglas */4. ‘ the tape. Of these, 148 declinediQniig : and 145 advanced. j General Motors dipped lit but Chrysler and Ford both held ®*{opened mixed today moderately active trading. ! Radishes, Red, dz. beh........... M Radishes, White, dz. bch. ........ i Rhubarb, Outdoor, dz. bch. ! Tomatoes. Hothouse, t-lb. bskt. : Turnips, dz, bch.......... ’ LRI^TIICE AND OREEMS ’Cabbage, bu........... ’ Collard, bu...................... ; Lettuce, Bibb, pk. bskt......... * Lettuce, Boston, dz.......... i Lettuce, Leaf, pk. bskt. ....... over Wall Street and appeared to be the major obstacle to any big move on the upside. ■k k' it But hopes for a breakthrough n Vietnam amid renewed talk of possible U.S. troop withdrawals could act constructive influence, as was iisojthe case early yesterday. ‘ s.}* Shortly after the opening, the STEELS ARB UP Steels worked high, as did chemicals. Oils and electrics were mixed. Inlar^d Steel gained % with U.S. Steel up a similar amount. In the chemicals, Dow picked up '/4, while Eastman Kodak gained ’A. Penn Central rose V4 among Jthe rails, but Boeing dipped % unchanged. Atlantic Richfield climbed %, Ashland % and Occidental 2\ with Jersey Standard up V4. However, Cities Service dipped Vi. Mobil added %. In the electronics, Fairchild Camera fell a full point, IBM %. Burroughs and Westinghouse added % and % respectively. By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst NEW YORK-Above the clouds, were today’s big commercial aircraft cruise in tranquil, congestion-free atmos-He's Outdoing LBJ phere, the sun on Escalation—Hanoi] long, e V e n if dark storms PARIS (AP)':*^ North Viet- blow over the nam accused President Nixon landscape today of outdoing former Presi- ' dent Lyndon B. Johnson in intensifying the Vietnamese pursuit of “neo-colonialist aims.” South Vietnam at the 20th Sion of the expanded peace talks accused the North Vietnamese and Vietcong of trying to delay negotiations “because you ex- the big airliners that soon will tome into use precludes additional expenditures for improving the airports to serve them. Considerable support exists for raising funds. by taxing users of air facilities, but the ' dustry remains split within its]are sufficient. Or whether the ranks on how these taxes should federal government will have to be applied, and disagreements for raising revenues are bead taxes on persons using terminal buildings, increases in the taxes on aviatUm gasoline, an increase in the tax on ahline tickets, a tax on cargoes. Whether these possibilities industry. Among the suggestions made step in more heavily, remains to be seen. But unless the impasse-^ resolved, some stormy weath-lies ahead. ;» Sorral, bu. .......................*.» Spinuch, bu. ... ............... , '•"* | Turnlpt, bu........................ The New York Stock Exchange pect a military victory.” The situation is analagous to that faced by the nation’s air-|_____ ports. They CUNNIFF have tremendous pptential if they can rise above ttieir prob- CHICAGO (UPI) — The]who defy law must accept the lefns. If they can’t, they and the!p|.gg|(]g^{; gf {jjg American Bar consequences, economies they serve will live ] „ News in Capsule Form under a cloud. ; Poultry and Eggs f DITROIT POULTRY { . DETROIT (AP)-(USDA)-Prlc«» f per pound for No. I live poultry: ‘ Heavy type hens 3S-34; heavy type ‘ roasters 25-57; broilers and Iryers, whiles > 20-2); duckling 37. DETROIT EOGS NEW YORK (AP) - New York Stock Exchange selected morning prices: Salas Net (hds.) High Lew Last Chg. AbbtLab l.to 22 494i 494s 494s - 4 30V. 3)'/. .. ProcIGa 2.4 0 10 74V. 74 74V. 4- PubSCOI 1.04 2) 57VS 54Vs 57'/S 4- VS PSVCEG 1.44 24 13'/. 13'/S 13'/. 4- >/S Pubikind .751 20 3S4S 35'/. 354S 4- VS Pueb Sup .40 40 44'/. 43V. 44'/. + SS PugSPL 1.48 78 31'/. 30’S 30Ve Pullman 2.80 79 35'/s 34’/. 35'/. ! 10 19V. 19V. 19V. iOueslor .50 32 93V. 92'/a 93'/. .. 7 33'/. 33’/. 33'/. -14 49V. 4»'/j 49 V. 'The potential is this: “on college Tremendous increases in air:elsewhere” 2 51'/* 51 5114 + '. The Press Is unable to carry ’"jthc mutual listings today due g“9iheon so to mechanical difficulties. The Readini -R— The United States was more restrained, asking North Vietnam whether it was .prepared to withdraw its forces in a peace settlement. Ha Van Lau, North Veitnam’s deputy representative, devoted almost his entire speech to an attack on the Nixon administration. He sat in for chief negotiator Xuan Thuy, who is in Hanoi for consultation. operation. In addition, personal and commercial craft are ex- As^clatto y.xterd., c».| Q„i„es FHA d.ra„«l dl.g.1 adU or .»lanca: anarchy and a lawless society. President William T. Gossett of Bloomfield Hills said those travel are in prospect fpr the next few years. ’The Federal Aviation Agency forecasts doubling of passenger miles by------------------------ 1975 and a tripling by 1980. SOARING INDUS’TRY j p; . r • By the end of this year the’tnQf/n© CXpGrT Boeing 747, capable of seating leading t o William E. Proxmire, D-Wis., asked the Federal Housing Administration today when it will follow a Government Accounting Office reconunendation — '4 that it save $2.7 million a year by not buying title insurance. In a letter to William B. Ross, acting assistant secretary-commissioner of the FHA, Proxmire , said he is aware of FHA efforts overcome reluctance in the 5 !f' ir 5f'1‘TRYING TO WIN TIME’ and commercial craft are ex- mortgage industry to dropping ............... “Mr. Nixon is trying to Pro- StGOm Turbine ‘"durance. nearly 400 passengers, will be in Sw/fcfl/D^ fO long the American military occupation of South Vietnam to win time to consolidate the puppet administration and army of Saigon,” Lau asserted. “Has he calculated how much longer the American troops would have to remain in South Vietnam to achieve this aim? How many troops will it need to achieve the impossible, namely fort 1980. Traffic of this sort can bring, big economic advantages to an area, for whatever else travelers do, they spend money. Whether for business or pleasure, they almost always take along their checkbooks. RENO, Nev. (AP) - Industrialist William P. Lear, who says he has spent $4 million on development steam vehicle engine, said Wednesday he Is shelving conventional steam engines for But there are problems. steamturbines. ne imnossiDie nameiv tecliMlogy has far| »xVe’re shelving it temporar- mtatetratt™, that sick man at TS ^ the end of his strength?” Mediator Seeks Accord JACKSON (UPI) - A private mediator from Wayne State University tried again today to bring Consumers Power Co. and 5,200 striking members of the Michigan State Utility Workers Council to an agreement that could end the 59-day-old strike against the giant utility. Ronald W. Haughton, codirector of the Institute uIrniS! Zl Labor and Industrial Relations n Tirifnn !riH fu engines,” L 6 8 r at Wayne State University, met U.S. Ambassador Henry Cabot jjgppjgi * * * with both sides separately and v! Lodge, who leaves later in the day en route to Midway Island for the meeting of Nixon Sunday with President Nguyen Van Thieu of South Vietnam, asked a series of questions about the Vietcong’s 10-point peace plan. Defense May Rest Case in Mason Today MASON, Mich. UPI - Several character witnesses will be called by the defense today the trial of a suspended white policeman accused of murdering a Negro youth during Detroit’s 1967 riot. At least one surprise witness also is expected to testify. The defense is expected to rest its case today or Friday, with closing arguments coming early next week. k k k The defendant, Ronald August, 30, is charged with first-degree murder in the shotgun slaying of 19-year-old Auburey Pollard, one of three black teen-agers killed at the Algiers Motel on July 26,1967. Bodies of the three victims were left behind by police and National Guardsmen after they raided the motel in search for reported snipers. SELF-DEFENSE PLEA August, who is pleading self-defense, told the all-white jury of 13 women and one man this week that Pollard was killed in a struggle over the shotgun. He said he took Pollard into a motel room to save him from further beatings by the raiders, who had lined up several Negroes and two White girls against a wall ’In a first-floor hallway of the motel annex. ' ♦ . * k The suspended police officer and several other witnesses described how the motel occupants were struck by rifle butts and nightsticks as some of the raider attempted to find out who were the alleged .snipers. SOME PROBLEMS Among them; Suitable sites are difficult to find; the cry of suburbanites against airport noise is becoming shrill as a jet; the problem of ground transportation has not ' solved; money for improvements is lacking. Congestion at airports, complicated by a lack of controllers, was pointed up this week bv federal limitations placed on flights into and out of airports serving Chicago, Washington and I^w York metropolitan areas. * * ★ Delays already are costing the airline industry heavily. The cst of overtime, extra crews, fue’ and lost time is estimated by the industry to cost more than $100 million a year. 'This figure doesn’t include isses to regional economies resulting from poor service, and these losses can be enormous. Corporations, for example, are reluctant to establish branches not easily accessible. BIGGEST PROBLEM? Perhaps the biggest problem of all is to finance the Improvements needed in terminal facilities and runways, and in some areas, to relocate airports in less congested sites. ★ ★ I# Who should pay for these Im-provenwnts? ’Die local public’’ The federal government? Passengers? The airlines themselves? «. kkk Some airlines have argued that their heavy investment in “I’ve got three different companies working night and day to produce three versions of the turbine so we can get a good view of the efficiency and reli alulity and size of these tur-■ ines,” he said. Lear, who has advocated steam power to help solve smog problems, said his firm and two others are working on two separate automobile engines— and his firm expects to have one prototype finished within '60 days. 200 HORSEPOWER One engine, the main power unit of a car, would be 5 inches by 10 inches and develop 200 horsepower, he said, and the other would be an auxiliary power unit 6 inches by 5 and produce 100 horsepower. “I’ve got $4 million into this program to date, and I expect to have another $5 million in before I have anything io show,” Lear said. He said he also would develop steam gines for buses, trucks, boats and airplanes. ★ ★ * “The funny thing about turbines is that as you go up in power they become more efficient and relatively smaller,” Lear said. Turbine engines Imve fewer moving parts than conventional steam engines, are more efficient and are easier to lubricate. News in Brief Gunn, 28, of 11 Esther told Pontiac police that someone broke into his residence between yesterday afternoon and early today and stole clothing, a carriei'a and a rifle valued at $1,404. Corning Oil , AIHM TO sptrry Rat t'.7 77.01 NEW V(3ftK (Al*) - F .0 78.}|pMap« ............... 72.73' Rummage, Bake Sale, Flea Market, Sat. June 7, 11-5 Bethany Bible Camp, Elizabeth Lake Rd. west of Airport Rd, St. Andrew’s Thrift Shop, summer close-out Sale. Many ~Ady. Conpex gatlonal Church, 65 E. Huron. Frl. & Sat. June 6 & 7. 9-6 p.m. Easy spin dry washer, flnal clearance of all new and old Items. —Adv. Rummage, St. Paul’s Church, , 165 E. Sq. Lk. Rd., Bloomfield Hills, Sat., June 7. 7 a.m. *•" 1 p.m. Church Rummaga aai JMre Sale, Saturday, 9 to i. 07 N. Lynn, between Huron and BUza-beth Lake l^oad. —Adv. ' i' iMl together for almost 13 hours Wednesday in the first regular bargaining session since early May. Conferees Shift on School Aid LANSING (AP) — House and Senate leaders are regrouping and enlar^ng their negotiating teams which must try to setfle differences between the chambers over the $847.4-mlI]ion pub-Uc school aid bill. ’The two chambers have approved budgets for the coming school year that are some $4 million apart, but the S^ate refused to accept an ^erhouse compromise that cut out $1.4 million for the dissolving Wayne County Nankin Mills School District. Seeking fresh approaches. House Speaker William A. Ryan, D-Detroit, and Senate Majority Leader Emil Lockwood, R - St. Louis, are planning to increase their bargaining teams from three to seven members. Senate Education Committee Clhairman Anthmy Sbuhm, R-Kalamazoo, says only three of each team would vote on all proposals, while the other four are to participate in the talks. Suo llllli' It is in the area of con-8tn]|Ction that H. B. Fuller anticipates the greatest growth. Innovative building techniques utilizing Fuller adhesives, which save both time and money over convent ional construction methods, will help to solve the cnnhing problem of' low-cost housing. k k k Q—You have mentiMwd in the By ROGER E. SPEAR Q-Our son w from engineering college shortly and we would like to make him a gift of a growth stock. What stock would yon rec mend?-J. J. A—As an engineer, your probably will appreciate the potentials of H,B. Fuller Co. maker of over 4,000 adhesivi products. Although Incorporated In 1915, the cor . , public only a year ago. Since 1003, sales have more than doubled, while profits have been reported annually. Earnings last year at $1.10 a share showed a 35 per cent gain year td' year. Plrst-^rter results of $0 cents were double thoM a year earlier on a 16 per cent Bln in sale). Congiany’s adhesives coatings, and polymers hade numergus applications Including an epoxy bead used on all NHL uSSurw IX’X. «X"« Although 02 industries served, 37 per cent of sales are to the paper and paperboard P of fedenl estate taxes if owned by the decedent at the time of deafli. Please give me the exact of one yon would recommend. Woidd these be made oat ”to the bearer” or to a specific name? — A, X, \ A—Coupon bonds mad« out to tfie bearer” are more Immediately negotiable and Aerefore preferable If the bonds are to be kept In a vault. Although age at the time of industry, 18 per cent to wood products and construction and IS per cent to the pad^ng of Interest rates, the usual criterirm Is cost. Since the bonds are accepted at/pgr, the larger the discount the better. For that reason a 8VSi per cent 11-1S48 Treasury bond selling In the low 70s would he my choice.