77»# Weather
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VOL. 126
NO, 00
it ★ *
THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 21, 1968
-36 PAGES
ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
10c
WAYNE ST. (2-WAY)
TRAFFIC PLAN—Creation of a' downtown parking mall on North Saginaw between Huron and Lawrence necessitates, Touting traffic! off SaifotorTlftrliy-flj^^ ’•
stores are open. Southbound traffic can turn left, "but turns to the right are the most convenient for skirting the mall. The traffic pattern calls for southbound traffic to follow West Huron
to Wayne, south on Wayne to Lawrence and east on Lawrence to North Saginaw. Northbound traffic^must turn right on Law-renre—r nun-way onsthound street — then ran turn left on Ferry
and left on.East Huron to best get back to North Saginaw. Store hours will dictate the hours the mall is In operation.
AP WlrMlwt*
CRUISE SHIP AFIRE — The Norwegian liner Blenheim burns In the North Sea this morning as the British fireship
Pacific (left) and the Dutch supply vessel Smith Lloyd 1 stand by.
About 120 new houses have been constructed for low-income residents and 'the city is building another 102 units. There are plans for a high-rise development for senior citizens, Burton said.
INTEREST IN HOUSING Burton said he was especially interested in the Pontiac programs for construction of 221d3 housing (federally financed housing by a private developer limited to persons of low and medium income).
Burton said adequate financing for city programs is a definite problem even though Ypsilanti can levy up to 20 mills per thousand dollars of valuation against property (compared to the 10-mill levy
(Continued on Page A-2, Col. 4)
Norway Cruise Ship Afire
in North Sea;
LONDON (AP)—Fire aboard the 5,000-ton Norwegian cruise ship Blenheim today forced her 98 passengers and most of her crew of 80 to abandon ship in the middle of the Nprth Sea. One passenger was reported injured.
♦ * *
A skeleton crew stayed aboard to fight the fire. Tugs arrived to join in the effort.
★ ★ ★
Two Danish fishing trawlers relieved the Blenheim’s lifeboats of about 65 of the passengers and took them to the Danish port ofc Esbjerg.
The sea wag, calm as rescue ships, planes and helicopters converged 170 miles west off the Danish harbor of Tyboron. They were summoned from Britain, Scandinavia and the Netherlands. >
REPORT IN ERROR
Reports to the British Defense Ministry said the ship was sinking, but they prbvederroneous.
“Reports ~ffom the scene said there were 89 passengers and 78 crewmen aboard, but the ship’s owners, the Fred Olsen Line, raised these figures.
★ * *
The fire broke out in midmorning as the ship was halfway across the North
Rescue Made
Sea on a regular run from Newcastle to Oslo.
WWW
Cause of the fire was not known In London.
fS PICKED UP
The first rescue ship to arrive, the Danish trawler Gina Wulff, took 15 passengers from the lifeboats. Other craft hurried to pick up the rest, w. w w
Later the Smit Lloyd 3. a small Dutch supply vessel, reached the scene. Her owners said she would try to tow the Blenheim to a safe harbor with the help of two German tugs.
'U. S. Spread Too Thin'
SAN FRANCISCO (* - The United States is trying to do too much in too -rnany^ Tields-at-nnce,--and.~.should assign priorities to its many goals, the board chairman of American Motors, Roy D. Chapin Jr., told the National Association of Purchasing. Management Monday.
Waterford Will Appeal Ruling oniongerTerms
An Oakland County Circait Court rul-ing that declared a state law extending the terms of incumbent township officers as unconstitutional will be appealed by the Waterford Township Board.
The board approved the action In a 5 to I vole at its regular weekly meeting last night.
Township Attorney Calvin E. Patterson said he was ready to file an appeal later
Related Story, Pager C-TO
this week with the Michigan Court qf^ Appeals.
ir _ # Ar
Becausft'-'Srihe importance of the public^-question and the lack of time for candidates to file nominating petitions, Patterson said he also would request that the Supreme Court immediately consider the issue. June 18 is the deadline for filing nominating petitions.
STRUCK DOWN ACTION
Circuit Judge William J. Beer struck down the legislative action on May 8 after three Waterford Township residents filed suit against Township Cleric Arthur J. Salley for iwi accepting their nominating peitions.
Salley refused the petitions on the grounds that the Legislature, to extending the terms of those in office, had canceled any elections this year for township offices.
★ w ★
The state statute was designed to eliminate the lame duck period affecting township officers who were elected to November but do not assume office until the following April.
Under the provision of the law, township officers elected in 1966 would continue in office until Nov. 20, 1970, 18 months longer Than the terma to which they were elected.
Beer ruled that the law deprived persons from running for office and denied the right of voters to fill the offices with whom they wanted.
Township Supervisor Elmer R. Johnson said that if Judge Beer’s decision is affirmed, he and other members of the board affected by the ruling, will pay for the coat of the Ip-peal.
(Continued on Page A-2, Col. S)
Harriman Talks to French Leader
PARIS (AP) — Ambassador W. AveretiHarrhnan conferred with Charles dp Gaulle, today amid increasing speculation that other powers- may in- -
tervene with North Vietnam and the United States to assist Vietnamese peace negotiations.
Emerging from Elysee Palace, Harriman treated his visit purely as a courtesy call, saying he had thanked the French president for his hospitality to the American negotiating team. But U.S. officials believe that at some point de dautle may have an important role to play in encouraging accords to end the war.
★ ★ ★
North Vietnamese negotiator Xuan Thuy was scheduled to see de Gaulle later in the day.
A spokesman for Thuy slightly expanded Hanoi’s public statements on how the next phase of the negotiations may develop — if the present first phase succeeds.
RALPH T. NORVELL
PAUF Names
f
Dtvision Head
A Pontiac man, Ralph T. Norvell, president of the Austin-Norvell Insurance Agency, will head the commercial division of the 1968 Pontiac Area United Fund campaign.
Norvell’s appointment was announced today by Alger V. Conner, general campaign chairman.
The Commercial Division will require the services .of approximately 700 volunteers this year to cover government, education, the professions and business firms in the area.
Last year Daniel T- Murphy of the Oakland County Board of Auditors led the commercial division which raised
25.8 per cent of the $1,030,000 total used to support the 55 agencies within the PAUF.
CIVIC WORKER
Norvell, who has been active with PAUF for six years, was president of the Pontiac Jaycees in 1949 and present of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce in 1955.
Norvell of 70 W. Lawrence, was named Pontiac’s Outstanding Young Man of the Year in 1950 and Boss 6f the Year in 1968 by the American Business Women’s Association.
Police Force ^Sit-In End
NEW YORK (JPi — About 100 policemen forced their way into the Brooklyn College registrar’s office early today to remove 43 demonstrators who had staged a day-long sit-in to demand admission oLmnrft NagropB and Puerto Ricans to the school.
WOULD BE PREPARED
Nguyen Thanh Le told a news conference that if the United States ends the bombing and other attacks on North Vietnam his government would be, prepared to discuss a political'settlement for Vietnam based on the 1954 Geneva accords. .
- * * A
The talks were in recess again today. Harriman and Thuy meet tomorrow tor their fourth session. Their last previous -tatit-wag-Saturday. They have been here-almost two weeks and have spent about 10>A hours together. Harriman has said he thinks the talks are going about as expected.
British Foreign Secretary Michael Stewart will fly to Moscow tomorrow to confer with Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko. The two men are cochairmen of the Indochinese peace machinery created in 1954 and could be instrumental in arranging a peace conference Jf progress in the Paris talks ever warrants one.
Partial Cloudiness Forecast for Area
Partly cloudy skies are forecast for
tonight and tomorrow, but the
weatherman reports no showers are in sight.
Sunshine will dominate the Pontiac area Thursday with temperatures a little warmer.
+ * ★
The tow Is expected to dip near 38 to 44 tonight. The high will reach the mid-60s tomorrow.
A * *
Morning west-to-northwest winds at eight to 18 miles per hour will become five to 12 miles tonight.
LOW OF 44
There’s a 20 per cent chance of precipitation today.
Low reading in downtown Pontiac before 8 a m. was 44. the mercury had climbed to 65 at 2 p.m.
PERRY ST. (2-WAY)
Ponliic Pratt Photo
GREETINGS—Ypsilanti officials were greeted by Pontiac Mayor Pro Tem T. Warren Fowler Sr. (right) yesterday morning to begin Mayors Exchange Day. Exchanging greet-
ings and conversation are (from left) Ypsilanti Mayor Pro Tem Vaughn E. Filsinger, Ypsilanti Mayor John H. Burton, and Fowler.
Visiting Mayor Points to Parallel
Pontiac, YpsiProblems Alike
By BCfB WISLER
Two major problems which continue to plague Pontiac — housing and finances for city government — also are the bane of Ypsilanti, visiting Mayor John H. Burton revealed yesterday.
Burton and Ypsilanti Mayor Pro Tem Vaughn E. Filsinger toured Pontiac and exchanged information with city officials during Mayors Exchange Day, a regular feature of Michigan Week. The Ypsilanti officials were accompanied by their wives. -----
t *
The other part of the exchange — the visit of Pontiac Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. to Ypsilanti — was Put short by the sudden illness of Taylor’s mother-in-law.
Taylor, after being greeted to Ypsilanti and getting part-way through a tour of Eastern Michigan University, was informed of the illness about 11 a.m. He left immediately with his wife for Canada where her mother lives.
EVENTS CANCELED
The remainder of the scheduled activities in Ypsilanti were canceled by Ypsilanti officials.
★ ★ ★
Burton, one of Michigan's three Negro mayors (the others are at Flint and Saginaw), was elected mayor of his city by fellow councilmen this spring. He is entering his 20th year as either a city councilman or alderman for Ypsilanti and is the first Negro to serve as mayor of that city.
TICKET
ALL PARKING
REA
GATE
He said he was enthused by a number of steps being taken in Pontiac — creation of a downtown parking mall, construction of low-cost, housing, and attempts to renovate the downtown area through urban renewal.
★ ★ ★
Burton said the problems of Ypsilanti are similar to those of Pontiac and are typical of most urban communities in the United States.
Ypsilanti is a town of 25,000 residents, of which about 25 per cent are Negro. It is the site of a number of manufacturing plants and Eastern Michigan University, which this year has an enrollment of approximately 14,00ft'studenta,
* ★ ★
Burton said Ypsilanti has' had an urban-renewal program which has been marked by lack of'success and legal difficulties. Burton said the efty is oh the right track now.
Ypsilanti’s urban renewal project is one of residential housing development.
I In Today's
Press 1
It 1 H
Wrong Kennedy
I McCarthy comes within a I
I brother of one of his primary I -§ foes - PAGE B-HI. -
Ambulances
I Emergency cases are only I
I part of routine — PAGE B-9. I
I \ ' I
< • ,Indonesia
I Government reports that plot | I to kill president, 19 others has l I been foiled - PAGE B-5. I
Area News ......
Astrology ......
Bridge .........
Crossword Puzzle Comics
Editorials .....
Education Series
High School .....
Markets ........
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C-l, C-2 B-ll €-18-
Sports . .V— ;: ;T::*r,TB-T—R-3~-
Theaters ..................B-10
TV and Radio Programs . .C-ll
Vietnam War News ..........B-ll
Wilson, Earl*-.............B-10
Women’s Pages .......A-9—A-ll
N. SAGINAW ST. (1 BLOCK CLOSED)
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A—ft
THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY'. MAY' 21, 1968
Crisis Worsens; DeGaulle Waits
C. HUGH DOHANY
Southfield Man Seeks County Treasurer Post
Southfield City Treasurer C. Hugh Dohany announced today that he will be a Republican candidate for the office of Oakland County treasurer in the August ; primary election. jjjj
He is the third Republican to announce his candidacy for the post.
Dohany has been an elected official in Southfield since its incorporation more. ” than 10 years ago. He has served as ■charter commissioner, councilman, council president and city treasurer.
As a former member of the board of supervisors, his committee appointments included building and grounds, cooperative extension service, auditor "general-local taxes, veteran affairs and : ways and means.
•“UBKART BOARD MEMBER.
Presently he is a member of the county library board.
Dohany, 48, left his position two years ago as a field supervisor of the marketing division of Detroit Edison Co. after 26 years to devote full time to his duties as treasurer.
Dohahy said he would see that the county treasurer’s office would be “operated like a business, efficiently and economically.”
Under his direction, the Southfield treasurer’s office is the first in the state , to be fully computerized.
“Local and county government is far 'behind industry in automation and if it is 'to exist on present tax levels it must attract capable officials with know-how of modern business methods,” he added.
PARIS (AP) — France’s massive\ crisis worsened today, with more than one third of the nation’s workers on strike, but President Charles de Gaulle’s government still did nothing.
The Gaullist governing coalition expressed confidence it would survive a parliamentary vote on a censure motion tomorrow night, but—it-gave no in*
Related Story, Page C-12
dication what it would do about the workers’ revolt for higher pay, shorter hours and job security.
* * ★
Nearly 6 million of the nation’s 16 million workers were on strike, 250 factories were idle, and the movement was still growing. And unlike previous
LBJ Asks More for Viet, Korea
WASHINGTON (API—President Johnson asked Congress today for an additional $3.9 billion- ot support military operations in Vietnam ami South Korea. ■ ■■ 'The request for; a supplemental appropriation for the fiscal year that ends June 30 would boost estimated defense spending during the 12 months to $76.2 billion—up from a January forecast of $73.7 billion.
★ ★ ★
Of the $3.9 billion in supplemental requests, the bulk would be earmarked for Vietnam. But $230 billion would go to Korean operations and $300 million would be available to meet any now-unforeseen emergency needs that might arise in the next few weeks.
The figure of $3.9 billion is higher than the forecast $2.5 billion in actual spending in the current fiscal year because some of the appropriations sought would not actually be paid out until later.
LETTER TO.McCORMACK
In a letter to House Speaker John W. McCormack D-Mass., Johnson said his request was urgent and he called for “prompt and favorable consideration.”
In a second letter to McCormack, Johnson asked for supplemental appropriations of $791.6 million for the current bookkeeping year to foot the bill for civilian and military pay increases Congress voted in December.
French strikes of 24 to hours, no limit was put on these walkouts and sit-ins.
The strikes stopped trains, subways, buses, taxis and garbage collection In Paris and closed coal mines, airports and seaports. Some tourists were stranded. Lines formed at food and tobacco ships, banks and gasoline sta-tions,-------—-------<— ------------—-
FEW POLICEMEN ______________ ________
Amid a monstrous traffic jam in Parish made worse by cars that were abandoned after running out of gasoline, few policemen were in sight. Although not on strike, many apparently stayed home.
Facing the gravest threat yet posed to his 10-year-old Fifth Republic, de Gaulle has made no public statement since breaking off a visit to Romania Saturday and returning to the Elysee Palace. He is to address the nation on television Friday night, and there was no indication of what he planned for a situation strongly reminiscent of the turmoil that brought him back to power in 1958. Opposition political leaders conferred with trade union leaders yesterday in preparation for their attempt in the National Assembly to oust Premier Georges Pompidou and his Cabinet.
The French Communist party called for amend to the de Gaulle regime and the formation qf “a true republican regime opening the way to socialism.”
★ ★ ★
A successful censure motion i n Parliament would not oust de Gaulle, whose term runs until 1972, but would be a major setback to his policies.
SAME DEMANDS
__George Seguy. secretary-general of the
big Communist - backed General Com federation of Labor, said in a speech that /the striking workers will present their same demands to whatever government is in office until they obtain satisfaction.
The French crisis began with a revolt early this month of university students— demanding educational reforms. Despite a promise from Pompidou to meet these demands, the students launched round-the-clock sit-ins at most of France’s universities.
Force Lands as Haiti Bombed
' PORT AU PRINCE, Haiti (AP) — Unidentified planes dropped four, bombs on Port au Prince yesterday without causing any damage and also attacked the city of Cap Haitien with bombs and a landing of armed men, officials said.
Haiti’s ambassador in Washington blamed Haitian exiles and Cubans, and the Haitian consul in Miami, Fla., said, “More than 4,000 Haitian workers have been trained in Cuba for guerrilla warfare.”
In Port au Prince, one bomb exploded near the palace of President Francois Duvalier. He was not hurt. Three other bombs, including one which hit the military airfield, did not explode, said
Aubelin Jolicoeur of the newspaper Le Nouvelliste.
Ambassador Arthur Bonhomme said in Washington: “The planes which landed the armed men at Cap Haitien are on the ground, and the Haitian army believes it has surrounded the men who landed and has them under attack. We should know pretty soon who are the attackers.”
★ ★ ★
Consul Eugene Maximilien said in Miami that reports late Monday night indicated the "exile men” who landed at Cap Haitien, 85 miles north of Port au Prince, were under siege but still holding their positions. »
i
The Weather
Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report
PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Variable cloudiness today. Partly cloudy tonight and Wednesday. Not much change in temperatures. Highs 60 to 67. Lows tonight , 38 to 44. Winds west to northwest eight to 18 miles today and five to 12 miles tonight.. Thursday outlook: fair and a little warmer. Precipitation probabilities: 20 per cent today.
T*day in Pwtiac
Lowest temperature preceding 8 a.r At 8 a.m.: Wind Velocity 8 m.p.h.
Direction: West Sun sets Tuesday at 8:53 p.m.
Sun rises Wednesday at 6.06 a.m. Moon sets Tuesday at 3:34 p.m. Moon rises Wednesday at 3:53 a.m.
v Monday in Pontiac (as recorded downtown)
Highest temperature................ 64
Lowest temperature ................. 42
Mean temperature 53
Weather: Partly sunny, rain .25 Inches
4 a m.
7 p.m,
8 p.m.
9 p.m. 10 ,p.m.
Downtown Temperaturot
56
One Year Ago in Pontiac
Highest temperature .................60
Lowest temperature 40
-Moan tomperatufe _ SO
Weather' Sunny.....
Highest and Lowest Temperatures This Date in 94 Years In 1034 33 in 1883
Monday Alpena 62
Escanabp 60
Flint 60
JO—Raoids-----60
Houghton 54
Houghton Lk. 57
Jackson------5Y
Lansing 61
Marguette 57
Muskegon 57
Oscod. 58
Pellston 63
Traverse C. 66
Albuquerque 85
Boston 56
Cincinnati 67
Denver 60
Detroit 65
s Temperatures 37 Duluth 40 Fort Worth 42 Jacksonville -35 Kansas City
36 Los Angeles 39 Milwaukee
■41—New Orleans--#t~ 60—
37 New York 62 50 45 Omaha 45 Phoenix 45 Pittsburgh 36 St. Louis
61 41 7| 58 86 58 64 A0 78 60 57 47
37 Ta
58 37 102 66
59 43 66 49
ipa
71
Lake City 82 51 49 S. Francisco 64 55 43 S. Ste. Marie 58 37 41 Seattle 65 50
49 Washington 69 50
'Blue Flu' Ends for Bus Drivers
The Pontiac bus drivers’ version of the “blue flu” has apparently been cured today and all bus lines are reported operating normally.
Yesterday 12 out of 18 drivers failed to show up for work, reporting themselves sick, and three of the . city’s five lines were shut down.
A spokesman for Pontiac Transit Co. said today a disagreement between management and the men had been resolved. The spokesman didn't elaborate.
The bus line Is operated by a private firm with a franchise from the city.
New School Head in W. Bloomfield
The West Bloomfield school board of-, ficially hired a new superintendent last night to fill the vacancy of Dn Leif Hougen, whose contract expires June 30.
★ j ★ ★
Dr. Anthony P. Witham, 37, assistant superintendent of the Monroe School
District, assumes the West Bloomfield post July 1. The official hiring came with the board’s signing of Witham’s contract shortly after midnight today during a late board meeting.
★ ★ w •
Witham said he signed his contract before the meeting yesterday. He was chosen from’ at least ST-other can-
didates.
The West Bloomfield board had voted in early February not to extend the contract of Hougen, who had held the superintendent’s position ]6 years.
(Continued From Page One)
which Pontiac is limited to by the city charter).
* ★ *
He said he wanted to discuss further with Pontiac officials the implementation of a city income tax with the possibility this could be used by Ypsilanti to solve money woes. ,
★ * *
Burton said that although Ypsilanti’s urban renewal program has been in the walks longer than Pontiac’s, h e definitely feels that urban renewal can-accomplish much toward creating housing that is lacking for low and medium income, families.
GOOD RELATIONS
Burton said hi» city has good community relations at the moment and almost full employment. He said the city could experience problems if the large manufacturing plants have big layoffs.
To avert possible problems in this area
ARTHUR J. LAW
FORECAST
Figure* Shew law Temperature* Expected Until Wtdrmdey Merning JX- heieted Frecieitatien Net Indicated- Consult Local EorecdU
The amount of Witham’s annual salary is $22,000. Hougen had received $22,500 a year. Witham’s present Salary in Monroe is $18,000, he said. „
mwA
6 NATIONAL WEATHER - Showers are forecast for tonight for most of the Northwest, tke southern Plains and part of" the Southwest. Milder weather is due along the Mississippi River Valley.—-
DR. ANTHONY P. WITHAM
State Legi Will Run Again in 62 nd District
State Rep. Arthur J. Law of Pontiac announced today -he will seek reelection to a sixth term.
A Democrat, Law, 62, of 27 Miami (represents the 62nd'1 District which includes most pf the City of Pontiac.
★ * *
Elected to the House of Represent tatives in 1958, Law has served as a member of the House Appropriations UBrnTOitteeTSTtfi^lastTouryearsT'
A native of Poteau, Okla., Law has been a Pontiac resident since 1925.
ELECTED TO COMMISSION
After one unsuccessful bid for a seat on the City Commission in 1938 he was elected to the commission in 1942, retaining the position until 1954.
During his 12 years on the commission, Law served three terms as mayor.
The owner and operator of a supermarket for nearly 20 years in Pontiac, Law is now devoting full-time to his duties as a legislator.
it it it
A long-term supporter of a sports Complex at the Michigan State Fair Grounds, Law recently was heqrtened by the fact that the state approved a $200,000 expenditure to study 4iis plan for the recreation development. X
EX-LABOR LEADER
T?mp1dy"ed as a production worker at the Fisher Body Plant in Pontiac from 1925 to 1943, when he was named a labor representative ^for the War Production Board and the OPA, Law is a former president of Fisher Body Local 596 and is now an honorary member of the UAW.
' w
He is a member of the Roosevelt Lxfge, F&AM, and a 32nd degree Mason.
Mart Gets Probation in Death of His Wife
A 35-year-old Pontiac man was placed on two-year probation yesterday in the fatal shooting of his wife last September.
__The spjitenre was imposed nn Otto
Tyson, 296 Crystal Lake, by Oakland Cotinty Circuit Judge Farrell E. Roberts. ★ ★ ★ .
Tyson had pleaded guilty t o manslaughter April 9 in the death of his 32-year-old wife, Irma. He had been charged vith the more serious offence of second-degree murder.
it 6 ★ sit
The Sept. 2 shooting occurred in the Tyson’s home during an argument between the couple.
The Tyson’s 14-year-old daughter told polire that she saw her father aiming the revolver at her mother. She said that she attempted to grab her father’s arm but was unable to prevent the shooting.
Waterford to Appeal Ruling on Long Terms
(Continued From Page One)
“We would not want it said that public money had been spent to protect our jobs,” Johnson said.
He said, however, that if the law is declared constitutional, it should be considered a normal expenditure of the township.
Objecting to the township paying any* legal fees to appeal was Patrick K. Daly, one of the three residents who had-challenged the statute.
£
A woman identified as Marjorie L. Tipton, 40v of $$00 Oakknoll,, Waterford Township, was killed and three others injured in a two-car collision at Sasha-baw and Maybee, Independence Township, about 11:45 a.m. today, according to Oakland County sheriff’s deputies.
KEY EVENT—Pontiac Mayor William H. Taylor Jr, (center) receives the key to Ypsilanti yesterday from Ypsilanti City Manager John G. Cartwright during Mayors Exchange Day. Mrs. Taylor looks on. The Taylors’ visit was cut short when they left for Canada upon learning of the illness of Mrs. Taylor’s mother.
Pontiac, Ypsi Problems Alike, Says Visiting Mayor
several groups, including the Office of Economic Opportunity and the Ypsilanti Chamber of Commerce and the city are working on programs to hire youths during summer months.
★ ★ ★
Burton, 57. a native of St. Louis. Mo;. came to Ypsilanti in 1936 and was employed as a tool and die maker in the Ford Motor Co. plant.
He was active in union activities and shortly after his arrival became a fulltime worker for the United Auto Workers. He is an official in the political education division of the UAW Solidarity House.
ELECTED IN 1946
He was first elected to the city’s board of aldermen in 1946 and became a councilman in 1947 after the city changed its charter. He was a councilman until 1948, sat out ode term, and was reelected in 1950.
★ * *
He served continuously from then until 1966 when he did not seek reelection. He was reelected in 1967.
For the past three years he has been a member of the Washtenaw County Board of Supervisors.
Filsinger, 36, was elected to the Ypsilanti council in 1967 for a two-year term. He was elected mayor pro-tem in April.
INDUSTRIAL ARTS TEACHER
A 20-year resident of Ypsilanti, he is an industrial arts teacher at a junior high school in Ann Arbor.
The Mayors Day tour yesterday included visits to City Hall, Pontiac Motor Division and the Oakland County Service Center.
Mayor Pro Tem T. Warren Fowler Sr. hosted the guests and city officials at his home before the group left for a dinner at Kingsley Inn in Bloomfield Hills to conclude the exchange.
Birmingham
Talks Slated on Transfer of Rubbish
BIRMINGHAM - The fcity Commission last night set a formal date o June 10 for discussion of the Southeast Oakland County Incinerator Authority’s
r prbpdsedTutjbtsh transfer utatkm.
The commission received a report froriT the transfer station-study com,, mittee, but took no action because it had previously pledged to notify two home owners* associations prior to a decision.
* ★ ★
The two groups, the Sheffield Estates and Pembroke Manor civic associations, have objected to the sale of city-owned property on Coolidge north of 14 Mile in Troy for a site for the station.
The commission also approved the rezoning of four lots in the south Woodward area to the city’s new R-8 row or town-houSe classification.
REQUEST OKAYED Also okayed was a request from Charles Edwards Post No. 14 of the American Legion in the amount of $150 to defray costs of grave flags and a memorial wreath for the city’s Memorial Day observances.
In other business, the commission appointed members of the newly-formed Board of Building Trades, to hear appeals on permit regulations and problems.
★ ★ ★
The board was created a week ago on the recommendation of building official Harold C. Weber.
New members are IJred M. Hurley, architect ; Gordon E Hoyem^mechanical -engineer; Ross Pierce, electrical contractor; Gordon C. Johnston, plumbing contractor; Jack Sights, Keating contractor; and Donald Worsley, refrigeration contractor.
BLOOMFIELD HILLS — A forum of community leaders will close out the “Focus Summer Hope” series In the school auditorium of St. Hugo of the Hills Elementary School, 380 E. Hickory Grove.
The discussion, to begin at 8 p.m., will be entitled "What You Can Do” and will center around actions which individual citizens can take to help solve urban problems.
★ ★ ★
The panel will include Mrs. Richard V. Oxford, 727 Robinhood, Bloomfield Towpship; Harry Peterson, «55 N. Cran-brook, Birmingham; Ed Rivas, director of the Oakland County Commission on Equal Opportunity (OCCEO); Tom Rosenthal of Pontiac, Eastern Community school director; Mrs. Philip Goefzman of "Operation Head Start; Robert Sanchez, a Pontiac jjost-office employe who is tutoring underprivileged persons for civil service examinations in a government-sponsored program; and Rev. Sister Denise, who is presently working for open housing in Detroit.
The public may attend and participate in the general discussion.
BIRMINGHAM - “A New Look at the Metropolitan Region” Will be the topic discussed by William T. Patrick, executive director of the New Detroit Committee, at the annual meeting of the Birmingham-Bloomfield Council of Human Relations Sunday.
The meeting, to begin at 7 p.m., will be held at the First Baptist Church, of Birmingham, 300 Willits.
★ ★ ★
In addition to his work with the New Detroit Committee? Patrick is chairman of the Wayne County Planning Commission. He is on leave from his position a» assistant genprai attorney for the Michigan Bell Telephone Co. \
The talk will be informal and Will ie followed by a qUestion-and-answer period. The public may attend.
BLOOMFIELD HILLS - The board of education will not meet tonight hs reguarly scheduled. Instead, a meeting will be held Tuesday, May 28, at 8 p.m.
City to Consider Wording of Ballot
City commissioners tonight will consider a resolution approving the wording of the June 24 referendum ballot qn the city’s open housing ordinance. The meeting is set for 6 p.m. at City Hall.
The ordinance was adopted by the City Commission early, this year. It never went into effect because referendum petitions forced an election on the ordinance.
★ ★ a
The ballot likely will contain the designations, “for the ordinance” and “against the ordinance” with the voter being able to choose one.
J- . » dfr .„
In other business,/ the commission is scheduled to consider a proposal to sell a eity-ewne4-slte~ at- Featherstone and East-Boulevard for construction of a nursing home.
King Medals Proposed
WASHINGTON <*> - Sen. Hugh Scott, R-Pa., introduced today a bill to strike one million. “ commemorative bronze medals in memory of the slain Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
fi
' /
wm
M
THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 21, 1968
House NixesSenateCourt-Revamp Bill
LANSING (AP) - The House heartily BlapMd down the Senate’s quickly \d r a w n version of court reorganization Monday night, making likely a long spell of two - chamber negotiations on the complex issue.
* * *
A five - page Senate substitute for the 24 - page court bill passed earlier by the House was rejected by the parent chamber, 18-82. Needing a two-
thirds majority to pass, the
Senate bill drew a two-thlrds-plus majority against it.
* it it \
The procedural step, urged by Rep. Donald Holbrook, RrClare, the measure’s sponsor, sends the bill briefly back to the Senate, which will decide whether to withdraw the vast changes It made or to ask for a House-Senate conference.
* *" *
The House proposed to abol-Ish not only justice "courts and
circuit court commissioner — which are doomed at the end of the year anyway under'the State Constitution — but also municipal courts outside Detroit. 111-JUDGE PLAN Replacing them, under the House bill, would be a 181-judge district court system stretching across the state. The Senate ver sion leaves municipal courts intact and expands their powers to take on duties now handled
Inkster Schools Apply for Loan
said.
LANSING (UPI) — Thela requirement in order to keep Michigan Legislature Monday the Legislature “completely was asked to grant the Inkster versed on all the funding of school district a $4 (M),0 0 0, these districts." emergency loan s6 the-district’s1 i
teachers can be paid Friday. I “it’s something we didn’t The resolution requesting the [want to let out of hand,'’ he loan was submitted less than eight hours after it was announced that Gov. George Romney had signed into law the bill establishing a revolving loan fund of $1.5 million.
— ★ —★ —------------------
It was no surprise to Inkster, which earlier this year threatened to close its schools if emergency funds were not made available. It was the first district to apply under the new act.
Inkster previously met other requirements for securing the loan: a state audit revealed a deficit of $400,000 and the State Board of Education” and Romney have reviewed and approved the loan request.
IN INSTALLMENTS Under terms of the resolution Introduced by Rep. William Jowett, R-Port Huron, and Vincent J. Petitpren, D-Wayne, the loan will be disbursed by State Treasurer Allison Green “in such installments as he deems necessary.”
Jowett said legislative approval of such loans was made
If the Legislature approves the loan, Inkster will have 10 years in which to pay it back with statutory Interest. If a district defaults in repayment of the loan the State Board.of Education is ordered to dissolve, and reorganize it.
by the abolished judicial officers.
Before rejecting the. Senate substitute, the House beat back a third attempt to bring Detroit into the proposed district court system. It had beep left out by the House bill’s authors, who feared a fight over Detroit's courts would endanger the bill. | , * e ★ s
Rep. David Holmes, D-De-
troit, tried to include the city in the bill, warning that “Detroit has 28 votes in this House, and if you’re talking about a two-thirds majority (which the court bill requires) then you’d better find some way of getting* us back in the ball garni;.” w * *
Other Detroiters disagreed.
(Adv,rtl,«m,nt)
“He'd better count noses again,” said Rep. Michael Novak, D-Detroit.
AMENDMENT LOSES “Detroit doesn't want to come in on this,’’ added Detroit Republican Rep. J. Harold Stevens. Holmes' amendment was defeated, 38-61.
(Adyorlliament)
Twins Honored
RIVERSIDE, Calif. (AP) —j Donald and Wallace Brithinee, 19-year-old twins at the University of California at Riverside, have been elected to Phi Beta Kappa, the national academic honor society. They’ll graduate in June after three years. In 1965 thdy were co-valedictorians at nearby Fontana High School.
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What Happened Yesterday in State Capital
By T|ia Associated Press THE GOVERNOR
signed Into law a measure providing emergency state financial eld for Insolvat school districts.
Presented awards at the opera's opening night ceremonies in Detroit.
THE SECRETARY OF STATE Announced appointment of an 18-member . elections study committee, asked to recommend meaningful laws for reporting of election campaign expanses.
THE STATE SUPREME COURT Split 4-4 on the question of whether the State Court of Appeals has the authority to supply a one-man grand lurior to probe the State Highway Department.
THE SENATE
Moved several bills — Including a measure permitting sale of liquor on Sunday — into position for final vote.
____ THE HOUSE
Returned to committee HJR FF, Weber. Amend constitution to provide law challentad by referendum petitions remains in force until voted down.
Defeated HJR HH, Groat Amend constitution to outlaw "ability to pay" tutlon plans at state-supported colleges and universities.
Sent to the governor:
X—HB3425, Baker. Change hunting I seasons on deer (bow and arrow only), rabbits CUppar Paninsula omyj And ruf-fled groust.
and ordinance division to Circuit Court, rather than Appeals Court.
, X—HB 3382, Kok. Add 10 cents to cost
of under - 65 fishing license to be kept by persons issuing them.
X—HB3469, Destigter. Permit legislators to run for other state offices during their terms.
HB3686, Stacey. Change name of Caro State Hospital for Epileptics to Caro State Home and Training School.
X—-HB3808, Helhze. Authorize
-—temporary conflnement-of^-mentaMy III in hospital or home; delete requirement doctors sldning certificates of mental Illness must be Michigan residents.
X—HB3400, Geerlings. Raise permissible coverage In discretionary group life insurance policies from SKMWO-t© $25,000.
'X~HB5270, JF. Smith* t nc re a se penalty for possession of "minor" outlawed drugs from 90 days and 1100 to one year and $500; make it a felony to possess, any drug "possessing similar halluclqgenlc properties'' to LSu's.
X—HB3387, R. smith. Repeal Criminal Sexual Psychopath. Act; require person now committed as CSP to undergo parole at least two years without Incident before being discharged.
X—HB3813, L.D. Anderson. Require windshields of most motpr vehicles; iermit face shields dn cyclists instead of windshields.
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From Visiting Dearborn Mayor
Dearborn's Mayor Hubbard Addresses Troy Officials
Council to Review for Con?merce
6th Fire Truck Reading-Funds Application Authorized
Imlay Pay Dispute
IMLAY CITY — A lengthy discussion of the wage dispute which caused all municipal employes but one to submit their resignations last week is expected at tonight’s Village Council meeting at 7.
Village Manager Harvey Weatherwax, the only employe not to resign, said yesterday that the resignations, originally scheduled to be effective Monday, had been extended to Wednesday.
★ ★ ★
"They (the council) are going to meet . . . and we hope they’ll find some agreement on these two points,” Weatherwax added. He declined, however, to say what the points were.
Previously, employes had indicated
Fire Guts Home; Mother, Child Feared Victims
ALMONT — A fire which destroyed a home near the village early Sunday morning may have claimed the lives of a young mother and her son.
Lapeer County Sheriff Kenneth Parks
said Mrs. Winston Tisch, about 27. and Warren, about 6, have not been found since the fire swept their home at 7321 Bordman, about three miles south of Al-mont.
k k k
Earlier information had indicated they were visiting with friends near Romeo when the blaze was reported at 5 a.m. This report proved false, •
Bones and other remains were found in the ruins of the two-story frame house, the sheriff said, but “we have nothing definite yet.” The family dog also has not been found.
TO BE TESTED
The materials were .to be shipped to thastate Health Department Laboratory irt*Lansing this morning for examination.
The heat of the firie was so intense positive identification was impossible, Parks added. "The Whole house fell into the basement and everything burned up. It was so hot the (Almont fire) department had to dump a terrific amount of water in there yesterday (Sunday i afternoon.”
The sheriff said a state fire marshal Inspected the home yesterday morning, but that no cause had been determihed The building was a total loss, Parks said.
Walled Lake Council
to Eye Pool Ordinance
WALLED LAKE - A proposed ordinance to regulate swimming pools here is slated to come before the City Council at its meeting tonight at 8 In the City Hall.
The ordinance, in general, is to provide for the health, safety and welfare of pool owners and users, said a city spokesman.
Tea Set at Almont H for Retiring Teacher
that principal objections to the new budget centered around the elimination of a cost of living schedule, and the lack ^-pensioiijirpxisioiis______:.........
STRAIGHT INCREASES
In place of the schedule, which
amounted to $350 to $500 for each employe, the council approved straight wage increases.
Public Works Supt. Kenneth Harley, one of those resigning, said the council had agreed upon a proposed pension plan last year, but dropped it at the last moment.
...★- ★ ★
This year, Harley added, the council told him and Police, Chief Larry
Dougherty that their salaries were to be raised $500. Not unil later, he said, did the council inform them that the cost of living aUowgnce was to be taken away.
CounciMPresident John Folk said the raises were all the village could pay without raising the present 9-mill tax rate, and compared favorably with other villages of the same size.
★ * *
While calling the resignations "definite,” Harley conceded t h e possibility that the employes might reconsider if the council were to alter its position.
COMMERCE TOWNSHIP - The township’s sixth fire truck has been purchased for $28,313.
Delivery of the John Bean pumper on a Ford chassis is expected in four months.
In other recent Township Board action, Howard, Preston of Bloomfield Township
was htrfd' as the......architect- for- the
township’s third fire station to be located on Welch Road, a quarter mile north of Pontiac Trail.
. About nine residents attending a recent board meeting discussed the petition of Wolverine Lake Village proposing cityhood for itself and part of the township.
★ * ★
Several residents questioned the possibility of the township itself incorporating. Township Supervisor Robert Long informed that the township doesn’t fulfill the state law requiring 500 people per square mile for incorporation.
The West Bloomfield Board of Education authorized the admnnistration last night to apply for $15,898. in federal education funds for a remedial reading program at Roosevelt Elementary School this summer.
The program will run from June 24 to Aug. 2.
Board
No action was taken last night on the
hiring of a new superintendent. President Leonard Grossman said.
A vacancy In the top administration job for the next school year has existed since early February when the board voted not to extend the contract of Supt. Leif Hougen.
In Other action last night, the board passed a resolution declaring its support of the community school concept.
Pending June TO Vote
Avondale Hires 69 Teachers
While the June 10 vote for a 7.7-mill increase in operating funds will determine final hiring practices for next fall, the Avondale Board of Education nevertheless last night moved to-,offer second-year probation contracts to 47 teachers and tenure to another 22.
Supt. John W, Dickey said the probationary teachers will be informed that in the event salaries arg raised due to
School Board Quizzed on Contract
ROCHESTER — The board of education was quizzed last night on its decision to award the mechanical contract for the proposed Rochester Adams High School to the second low bidder.
James Morrissy of Sylvan Plumbing and Heating Co., Pontiac, noted his company had bid $970,000 on the job, but that the contract had been awarded to
John E. Green Plumbing and Heating Co. of Detroit for $987,000.
Architects and attorneys for the board contended that the low bidder had made no allowance for temporary heat while the building was under construction and that it did not, therefore conform with the base specifications required in the bids.
negotiations, their salaries will be raised accordingly.
He said the district is now staffed for next year should the millage fail. He noted that at least eight grades would have to put on half-day sessions and that the R. Grant Graham elementary school would not open unless additional funds are received.
Several labor policies were discussed by the board and a determination was made in view of an Avondale Education Association grievance that the board is no longer in a position to support its ancillary teaching program.
* ★ *
Foreign students attending classes at Avondale presented their views of America to the board.
A deed was received from the Michigan State Highway Department for 10 acres adjacent to the junior high school. The site is proposed for construction of a second senior high school.
Hope Not Abandoned for Ricky Thome
LAPEER (AP)—Ricky Thorne, a teenager abandoned by his mother "iat a Miami, Fla., airport in 1965, may never'' speak but he’s trying to learn to, a state hospital spokesman says.
His mother, Mrs. Victor Thorne, was quoted by newsmen about the time of abandonment as saying she wanted to focus attention on the boy with the hope that someone would know how to cure his retardation.
The Thornes, who lived in Troy, Mich., at the time Ricky was abandoned, have since sold their home there, Mr. and Mrs. Thome’s whereabouts are unknown.
I Last October, the 16-year-old boy was sent from Florida tq the Lapeer State Home and Training School.
director of community relations for the hospital. f
"Now, he has a real good smile,” Campbell said. “And he takes his time. at eating, like the other boys do.”
★ *
He said as far as institution supervisors know, Ricky has never talked. He communicates by nodding or shaking his head.
speak. “He really strained. He moved his lips into the words, ‘Thank you,’ after a teacher praised him for his work at stringing beads,” he said.
* ★ ★
After Ricky’s wandering around Miami International Airport led toApublicity, his father, Victor Thome, resigned his job as superintendent at a plant in Warren, a Detroit suburb. The parents sold their $35,000 house and moved;
‘HE COULDN’T SMILE’
"He couldn’t smile. He gulped his food,” recalls Frederick Campbell,
Doctors could find nothing organically wrong with his vocal cords, however, and do not know why he has never talked. One doctor at Lapeer said it may be the result of brain damage. The boy, bom a normal child, developed brain fever, probably from a vims, which caused retardation, Campbell said.
Campbell said the lad recently tried to
Charles Wagg, chief assistant director of the Michigan Department of Health, said the parents would be billed for Ricky’s confinement if, they could be
found.' .....--...-...M....
Ricky’s two sisters, both of whom are married and live in Michigan, have visited him at Lapeer.
“When one sister visited him recently,
Rickie recognized her. He jumped up, hugged her and gave her a kiss,” Campbell said.
After Ricky was found at the airport, Mrs. Thome identified him as her son. Florida officials took custody of the youth, according to Dr. John Preskey, Dade County, Fla., youth services director. Last August the Thornes said they would no longer pay the $220 a month to cover Ricky’s care, he said, and Preskey asked Michigan authorities to take Ricky.
k k Tr
The brown-haired Ricky has an intelligence quotient between 30 and 50, which puts him in a trainable level, Campbell said. Ricky attends half-day sessions in a school, where he is taught to work with coloring books and similar items. ,
ALMOST — A Tea honoring Miss Agnes Glover, who is retiring next month after 42 years of teaching, will be held May 26 from 3-5 p.m in the cafeteria of Almont High School, 431 Church.- •
, Miss Glover has taught the fifth grade In Almont Community Schools for the past 17 years.. The tea will be open to the -public----i-—--
The concept calls tor schools to be used for purposes other than education, explained Grossman.
A community school, he continued, Is open nights and weekends to serve all ages in the district through activities including sports, recreation, outdoor education, course, and arts and crafts.
A“ community school committee organized in Keego Harbor for the Roosevelt Elementary School has conducted a survey to determine interest in the community school concept In the city.
The results of tfie sUrVey are expected to be presented to the board within the next several weeks, said the committee. head, Donald Crothe.
Highland Sector Eyes Possibility of Incorporation
HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP - The possibility of a section of 350 homes in the northeast section of this township becoming a separate village is being investigated.
Brice L. Thompson, 3520 Woodland, -president—of the Beaumont, Seven Harbors, White and Duck Lake Subdivision Association, is seeking a legal opinion.
A meeting will be called soon to Inform association members of the legal opinion and possible action, said Thompson. - - ,
"The main and only reason tot becoming a village is to make the people pay their dues for the maintenance of the roads and beaches," said the president. Annual dues for most members are $15.
ROAD GRADER
Maintenance of roads will Include operation of a road grader, recently purchased for $3,500. Association members will be receiving a $10-bill to help pay for the grader.
The association is putting up tor sale its ..community center on the southeast corner of Duck Lake and Jackson roads.
★ ★ ★
The proceeds are to be used to renovate the clubhouse on White Lake.
The association dinner-dance is this Saturday from 8 p.m. to 2 a.m. at the VFW HailinMiltord. These proceeds are also earmarked for clubhouse renovation. I
Other officers of the association are vice president, James Fitzpatrick; secretary-treasurer Theodore Stoll i and chairman of the road jand beach committee, Raymond Nunnery. The board of trustees includes 14 members.
Keego Budget
Hearing Tonight
KEEGO HARBOR — The proposed 1968-69 budget — up an anticipated $18,000 over the current year — is slated for a public hearing tonight at 7; 30 at the City Hall, 2025 Beechmont.
As proposed, it totals $ 1 4 3,930 . -Revenuer reflect a $20,200 increase in property taxes.
Property reappraisal was a major factor m an increase in state equalized valuation from $4.8 million in 1967 to $5.2 million.
Another large increase is the $6,000 anticipated rebate from the state income
tax.
HIKES
increases in expenditures in the police, for roads (no clerical 100; and fund to total
AERIAL VIEW — The rural countryside is close to the center of Ortonville, as? "his view of town shovys. South Street, coming in from the upper right corner, and
\ V ' PtntMcPrwt Ph«to by ••wirdS.Nrtl*
-Mill .Street, running from lower right to upper left, form "the town’s main inter-^ aectioitt Ortonville is located, as the crow flies, about 18 miles ftorth of Pontiacr
’' "t ¥" 'll....... 1 j
$2,000. m~
Increases proposed include $200 in salary tor the city manager, for a total of $9,000 and $200 more for his mileage allowance for a total of $600. u The budget also Includes a $3,000 salary increase for police,"
Pontiac Prn» Photo
By TOM GRAY
TROY — Dearborn Mayor Orville Hubbard came to this city yesterday and departed last night, leaving in his wake some homespun advice on how to run a good city government.
Speaking at a noon luncheon at Big Beaver Methodist Church as part of the activities for Mayor’s Exchange Day of Michigan Week, Hubbard told Troy officials, “Public service is the best
politics.------
* k k.
"It .takes a long time to get smart in this business," Hubbard, who has been
in office since 1941, added, "but after a while you learn how to get along."
In Dearborn elections, Hubbard explained, "We run slates. We put it right on the line. We have slogans: ‘If you like things done the Hubbard way, vote the Hubbard slate on election day.*
SUNG IN SCHOOL
“The children sing them in school,” he chuckled.
More specifically, the visiting mayor advised his hosts to keen their fire
department volunteer and to think about enlarging the facilities tor their city government. * ’
Hubbard predicted that a volunteer fire department would save the city "millions,” because the power of the firemen’s lobby.
Troy’s new city hall is “too small," he said, because of the demands for space which will be placed upon it on the future.
CAN’T FINISH
“In government," Hubbard philosophized, "you should start something you can’t get finished. Then you can keep adding a tittle bit at a time, and you can get quite a bit done with It:’*----—---------—-----------------—
THE PONTIAC PRESS
TUESDAY', MA\r 21, 19(18
A—4
No citizen's complaint goes unanswered in Dearborn, he said, reflecting, "You get a certain satisfaction out of serving the people of the community. There’s a general feeling among people that politicians are dishonest. But people are smart. They eventually know if you’re square of if ou*re on the take."
* *
Dearborn department heads meet ev-ery morning at 7:49, "because it’s an odd-time," he explained. "If somebody's late, we take his (city) car away from him — we ground him. That means he doesn’t have a city car to ride around in. And if somebody else gives him a ride, we ground him too.” -’W™
The overriding motto for good government Hubbard concluded, is “Be Nice to People.”
* * *
.“It’s on every policeman’s hat. If yoti come to our town, ask a policeman to show you his hat. If he does't have it, call me and I’ll give you $10 — and we’ll
Homespun Advice
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Miriam Found Guilty on Four Tax Counts
AP Wiraphqfo
HOME AGAIN = Randell Wayne Bennett, 2. beams happily in the world of dirt and toy'trucks after spending months in. the world of hospital wards and,operating tables.
He was released Saturday after a complicated liver transplant operation.
Liver-Transplant Patient f Released From Hospital
DENVER, Colo. (AP) — Ran- Pueblo, Colo., and Eddie Miller, dell Wayne Bennett, 2, one of 44, of West Helena, Ark. four known survivors of liver! Julie received her new liver transplant operations, has been nearly 10 months ago, on July discharged from the University! 23, 1967 while Miller-is the most of Colorado Medical Center. recent addition to the group. He The curly haired son of Mrs. | had the operation April 14. Sandra Bennett of Mesquite,
Tex., is the first liver transplant patienfiopfogresseM be released.
* * ★
The youngster underwent surgery Feb. 9, after doctors found! he suffered from biliary atresia, the congenital malformation of bile ducts. The ailment often results in death by about the second birthday.
The transplant for Randy “was my only chance, so I decided to take it. There was no hope otherwise,” said Mrs. Bennett.
REGULAR CHECKUPS_________
Randy and his mother are remaining in Denver, and he still makes regular trips to the center for checkups and treatments.
Another of the patients, Terry Jean Kent, 16, went home to Hillsboro, Ore., for the weekend, and returned to the hospital Monday. She had her trans-' plant in March.
* ★ ★
j The other patients are Julie I Cherie Rodriguez, 2, daughter of i Mr. and Mrs. John Rodriguez of
DETROIT (AP) 7- Louis C.
Miriani, 73-yar-old city councilman and former Detroit mayor, faces possible imprisonment of 2D years and a fine of $40,000 after his U.S. District Court conviction Monday of Income tax evasion.
A Jury of eight women and four men convicted Miriani on four counts after deliberating 5 urs and 45 minutes.-Judge Charles G. Neese of Knoxville,
Tenn., who presided, said Miriani would be sentenced Aug. 10.
-Miriant's attorneys said the conviction will be appealed.
The government contended Miriani underestimated his income by $261,100 from 1959j earlier this month for additional through 1962. He was unseated idelay, ruling trial would not by-Jqrome P. Gavanagh forjendanger the former mayor’s mayor in 1961 but won reelectionihealth.
to the council in 1965. —-— --------—-----------~----
CONVERTED ‘GIFTS’
Miriani contended the money on which the government-claimed taxes came to him*as political campaign contributions and tax-free gifts, but the gov-ernment argued he had con-
verted it to his own use and it therefore was taxable.
The government presented evidence Which it said showed Miriani had 28 different bank accounts and that he had used approximately $226,000 of unreported income to purchase tax-free municipal bonds tor himself.
Internal Revenue Service agents esttmated Miriant owed $154,000 in taxes and penalties Miriani’s trial was delayed several months because of a circulatory ailment which con fined him to his home much of the time Judge Neese rejected a plea at the beginning of his trial
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ROCKY HILL, Conn. (AP) — A motel that reported the theft of four color television sets told police Monday a well-dressed man had reserved the four rooms from which they were stolen. The man, who did not pay for the rooms, told the motel he was reserving them for a party of friends.
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Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation With Deposits Insured to $13,000.00
THE PONTIAC PRESS
41 West Huron Street
John w. rmsiuu Executive Vic* Preeldent ud Xdltor
liur j. Rt»
M*n*glni Xdltor /
Pontiac, Michigan 48056
TUESDAY, MAY 21, 1968
John A. Hrirr 9 m Secretary end Advertlslnf Director
Richard M. FirccteAtn Treasurer and Finance Officer
Little Chance of Electoral College Shift
Nearly everyone who has written on the subject for the last 180 years or so has called for doing away with or drastically altering the Electoral College method of choosing the Nation’s president.
The criticism has been especially vigorous this year because of the possibility that the third-party candidacy of former Alabama Gov. George Wallace could throw the election into the House of Representatives. The wheeling and dealing that might accompany that eventuality gives some people nightmares.
★.... ★-----★
There are 538 electoral votes, which is the total of the representatives and senators of the 50 states, plus three for the District of Columbia.
When John Q. Public votes in November, he votes not for the presidential and vice presidential candidates of the party of his choice but for a slate of electors: The elected electors in turn meet in their respective state capitals in December and are morally—but not legally—bound to vote for the candidates they represented on the ballot.
The Constitution provides that when no candidate receives a majority 1270) of the electoral votes, the
House of Representatives must choose the president from the top three candidates, with each state’s delegation casting one vote. (Senators vote as individuals for. one of the top two vice presidential candidates.) ,
There are two main proposals for reform. One is to abolish the Electoral College outright and elect the president and vice president by direct vote, like every other elective Federal office. The other proposal is to retain the college, but make its votes proportional to the popular vote in each state instead of the winner-take-all of the electoral votes regardless of the margin (even a single vote) by which he won the popular vote. ~
But even if the president were elected by direct popular vote, there would still be the possibility, whenever there were, more than two candidates, of no one receiving a majority.
★ ★ ★
The Electoral College is not ideal by any means. Yet, except for two or three elections, it has probably reflected national sentiment and operated as effectively as any electoral process that could be devised.
SST Would Pack Great Economic Punch
The sale of just one American-made— ^supersonic—transport-WOultL offset the import of 20,000 Volks-wagens, eight million fifths of Scotch or 10 million Japanese transistor radios, according to Maj. Gen. J. C. Maxwell, director of SST development for the Federal Aviation Administration.
★ ★ ★
Not only that, each SST ex-
ported would balance out the money, spent abroad by 23,000 U.S. tourists in one month or pay the salaries of 800 Sophia Lorens for an entire year.
Despite the promising statistics, the future of the much-criticized SST remains in doubt. But 800 Sophia Lorens? There’s an idea that at least one-half the American taxpaying public will agree ought to be pursued.
Library Head Would Mix Drinking With Thinking
Barroom barristers and dramshop debaters in Chicago may soon be able to imbibe a little knowledge along with refreshments, reports *the National Observer.
“People are always calling the library and the newspapers to settle arguments,” says Ralph G. Newman, chairman of the city’s library board. “They want to know what Ty Cobb’s lifetime batting average was or what poet said what. So why not give them their own reference libraries in their favorite hangouts?”—
He suggests that reference works like the Bible, the World Almanac and Bartlett’s Quotations could settle a lot of the disputes that have been known to arise in such surroundings.
The public library has already'
placed books in neighborhood welfare offices. Newman would now like to stock not only taverns but police stations and other places where people gather.
“People spend hours and hours in these places,” he says. “Often they don’t have anything to do while they wait. I’d like to have them^fill that time by reading.”
★ ★ ★
It’s hard to fault the idea. Not only could it advance culture but it might very well help promote marital harmony.
What wife could complain if her husband called her and said, “I’ll be a little late tonight, dear,
I have to stop in the, uh, local reference library to look up something in the almanac.”
MOLEY
By RAYMOND MOLEY
PHOENIX - Arizona and California have measurably reappraised their long-dis-
..puled claims
to the water of the Colorado River. The result is a plan known as the Central Arizona Project,, "
The Colora-~ do is a hefty river but the needs of the states through which ii and ibS tributaries flow are prodigious. Back in the 1920s an allocation of the water was made between what is called the upper basin and the low--— er basin.
Under that interstate compact Arizona was to have the use of 2.8 million acre-feeT of the water, California 4.4 million acre-feet and Nevada 300,-000. But^when the Hoover Dam was built, the then sec-•j retary of the interior made _ contracts with water users in California-ior 5,362,000 acre-feet and that state built channels to carry the water from Lake Mead .........v.......
Since California insisted upon the more than 5 million acre-feet which had been as-
signed to it through earlier contracts, Arizona brought suit in the Supreme Court in 1952 to validate its claim for the 41.8 million acre-feet. After 11 years the court decided in Arizona’s favor.
TRANSPORT BURDEN
But there still remained the problem of getting the means for transporting the water. For crwhile Arizona was busy •designing a plan^ to carry the burden itself. Its plan was to build two lower dams above the Hoover Dam on the river and with the power thus generated carry the water to the needy counties.
But Sen. Carl Hayden and the Arizona House members decided to attempt to have Congress authorize a plan at federal expense. After mahy compromises the present plan was devised.
★ ★ ★
California was quieted by provisions that it should have prior claim to 4.4 million acre-feet and also that there, would be facilities,to augment the flow of the river by de-salinization.______
The dams would be elimi-nated and a big steam plant would be built and operated by a group of private and public agencies with, tome
Helpful Charlie!
David Lawrence Says:
Colorado River Project Reappraised
subsidy from the federal government. ,
In this reappraisal two hard facts are recognized. One is thaC electric power generated-by hydroelectric dams is cheaper than generation by coal and steam is a„myth. And the certain advent of nuclear energy may well make, the great power dams in not so many years monuments to political folly.
Another fact recognized in this plan is that as cities and industries grow in such arid areas as Ceneral Arizona, they must have priority over irrigation in the use of water. Back there in the controversies of the early 1950s it was shown that if the agricultural acreage were cut by 10 per cent there would be water for a city twice the size of Phoenix.
* 4 *
That growth has already been exceeded and the city has actually taken over much ~ of the crdtM’lising liana. And the water problem here is much less serious than it was
20 years agm-
That is a lesson which was recognized in the laws of Hammurabi 4,000 years ago. The “priorities; were * people first, then animals and, finally, the land.
l£egyrl*M 1MI, L« Angels* Timet)
WASHINGTON—The United States Senate has been considering a bill which would remove some of thelechni-calities in law - enforcement procedures that have permitted murderers and other criminals to escape punishment.
Sen. John L.
McClellan of.
Arkansas, one of the veteran members o f the Senate Judiciary LAWRENCE Committee, has issued a memorandum explaining the proposal that would permit a trail judge to decide whether a confession has been made voluntarily. It would leave it to the jury to determine how much weight shall be given to a confession.
★ ★ ★
This attempt to correct Supreme Court decisions has been denounced by other senators as an assault on the independence of the judiciary and on the Constitution itself.
But many of the critics either have not read the Constitution or have forgotten what it says about the power of Congress to limit the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court. Article III of the Constitution reads as follows:
“In all cases affecting ambassadors, other public ministers and consuls, and those in which a state shall be party, the Supreme Court shall have original jurisdiction. In all the other cases before mentioned, the Supreme Court shall have appellate jurisdiction, both as to law and fact, with such exceptions, and under such regulations as the Congress shall make.”
RARELY UTILIZED
Congress has rarely utilized this power, but the crime crisis in America has focused attention on the part the courts have u n w i 11 rn g 1 y played in giving freedom to criminals.
Sen. McClellan, in his latest memorandum, criticizes particularly three Supreme Court rulings — two of which were rendered by a five-to-four decision — and declares:
"These decisions have set free many dangerous criminals and are dally preventing the conviction of others who are guilty. How can the freeing of known, admitted, and confessed murderers,, robbers, and
Verbal Orchids
Fred Fish
Of 201 Seminole; 92nd birthday.
Miss Laura Carr of 1129 Boston; 85th birthday1. Mr. and Mrs. Zene M. knight of Imlay City, formerly of
________Pontiac;——,—-
51st wedding anniversary. Mr. end Mrs. Ernest Wardell of 48 Center; 91st wedding anniversary. 8
- Charles Miller * of Rochester: 88th birthday.
rapists by the courts, not on the basis of innocence, but rather on the pretext of some alleged, minor, or dubious technically be justified? . . .” ★ ★ ★
The most momentous opin-ion bv the Supreme Court was handed down on June 13, 1966, in what is known as the Miranda decision.
In that case, by a five-to-four ruling, the court said that no confession, even if wholly voluntary in the traditional sense, could be admitted in evidence over the
objection of a defendant in a state or federal proceeding unless the prosecution could show that certain warnings were given in advance.
The prosecution also was required to prove that the suspect had voluntarily and “intelligently11 waived bis rights.
★ ★ ★
Many members of the Senate are reflecting the views expressed by the minority of the Supreme Court itself. .
Bob Considine Says:
Lesotho Doesn’t Rate in U.S. Aid Giveaway
NEW YORK — What have we got againsl Le^ofho? our Agency for International Development has given Lesotho only $1.1 mil- ; lion. This is no time to alienate any coun-f try, not even Lesotho—i which has a I "population just I
under 1 mil-1 __________
lion, is com- CONSIDINE pletely surrounded by the Republic of South Africa and used to be known — but not very well — as Basutoland.
Lesotho is a stickout on the list of-mote than 100 countries we have spent about $125 billion on since the end of World War II. It has gotten just about the smallest share of the swag.
Our good friend Charles de Gaulle^ France — now as rocky as a rope ladder rescue —is No..l on the same list. The Afnerickn taxpayer,- willing or not, has shipped more than $10 billion to France since V-E day.
REVIVED OPPONENTS
We revived our three World War II opponents — Germany, Japan and Italy — to the extent of more than $15 billion, and all three are underselling us in world markets.
We have sunk more than $5 billion in Chiang Kai-Shek’s China, but won’t accept aid from Taiwan jn fighting the war in Vietnam.
* * ★
We blew the better part of a billion dollars on Sukarno's Indonesia, and, if effect,
underwrote his r o m a n t i c foravs through the world in search of new girls.
The two greatest beneficiaries of America’s open purse, so far as per
capita is concerned, are Israel and Jordan. Israel has received more than a bilfcon dollars for benefit of its
2,175,000 people; Jordan, population 1,725,000, had been granted about $600 million.
RIDER ATTACHED
There is nothing in any AID contract which insists that a country express and demonstrate gratitude for even a life-saving handout — such as the $7-billion gift to India. But is does bum Washington now and then when some country we saved from going down the drain chooses to thumb its nose at us.
Now, at long last, there is a rider attached to the 1968 ToreTgh aid bill which gives us the right to halt promised grants to any natioft whos# leaders appear to be playing fast and loose with our dough.
, ★ ★ ★
Peru is the first to feel those new teeth we’ve imbedded in our generosity.
Last December, the current bosses of Peru placed a $20-million order with France for 12 Mirages — supersonic fighter-bombers. r
TO SLASH GRANT
__The U.S., which has some
very nice fighter-bombers for sale, had by that time showered $700 million on Peru, and had earmarked another $37 million in aid for fiscal 1968.
Washington has now decided to slash a promised $37-million grant. If Peru wants those French planes badly enough, apparently to protect her Guano Islands, she’ll have to raise the dough herself. About $11 million in U.S. aid, largely food and technical services, jvill be Peru’s lot this year.
Still, that’s 10 times what Lesotho has gotten out of us, and Lesotho doesn't even want to buy spears.
Smiles
■ Playing politics is like Russian roulette: You never know for sure if the ballot has your name on it.____________^_______
The Aeeocleted Free* k entitled exclusively to ttie uee ter rapuMI-catlon of ell locol new* printed In ltd! newipaper at well ae all AP newt dispatches.
The Pontiac Prase Is delivered bv carrier for SO cants a week! where mailed In Oakland. Gena see, Livingston, Macomb, Lapoer and Washtenaw Counties It jf J10.00 e yeari elsewhere In Michigan end all other places In the United Stele* $26.00 a year. All mall subscriptions payable In advance. Postage hae been paid at the 2nd clan rate at Pontiac. Michigan. Member of ABC. -
Voice of the People:
‘Citizens Can Be Proud of State Senator
Recently I was privileged to attend an afternoon session of the Senate Commerce Cotrimlttee in Lansing. The chairman of this important committee is State Senator L. Harvey Lodge of the 17th Senatorial District.
Due to the fact that Mr. Lodge is a Republican and I am a lifetime Democrat, I was prepared to be unirn-, pressed by his efforts. However, I found myself overwhelmed by this elder statesman. He dpjponstrated by liTs manMi' llidt H6 Is a’ dedicated,'pa^ tient, hard working member of the Michigan Legislature striving to secure action in the public interest.
★ ★ ★
He often works late to be sure that everyone attending his hearings has ample opportunity to express his opinion on pending legislation. His ‘homey’ touch makes, otherwise dull testimony lively and interesting.
★ ★ ★
Naturally, I would prefer an equally talented Democrat in this key position, but I must say with sincerity and honesty that his constituents can be proud of his efforts on their behalf.
——WARREN B. ELLER--------
7120 EDINBOROUGH BIRMINGHAM
LODGE
Attack on Crime Bill Ill-Founded
Comments on Press Picture of Public Official
A picture of a former public official booked for embezzle-men and smiling—seems to me he considered jtanhonor, No wonder people are losing respect for our officials.
RUSSELL H. DANA 2541 RIDGE, HIGHLAND
Discusses Problems on^ke OiToiT^cfiooTs
After reading the Voice of the People I can understand why our entire Lake Orion school system has gotten in such a mess. Where did these people obtain information to be able to judge our group? One of our complaints is the students being judged before both sides are heard. Why are some people of this community afraid to openly voice their co¥h-plaints? Why are students being interrogated about what goes
on in our group meetings? __ ___________________
★ lr~
We have a lot of good teachers in the school system and we want theqt to stay. Why are some good teachers leaving? Why have some influential, professional and business people changed their minds about living here? We want a better school system and a community that we can be proud of. Should we be condemned for voicing our opinion?
MRS. MARGARET DELORE 774 VERNITA, LAKE ORION
‘Tire Grading Proposal Is Excellent Idea’
I think this tire grading proposal is an excellent idea. Sometimes people are misled on the quality of a tire. This should also reduce accidents from cheap tire gimmicks.
GEORGE E. SANDS JR.
2760 S. HICKORY RIDGE, MILFORD
Discusses Those Who Fight Against U.S.A.
My husband served in WW II, I have a son in Vietnam and another son just completed basic training after enlisting in the Air Force. I haven’t received my draft notice but I will pass judgment on those who fight against the U.S.A., Old Glory and everything this country stands for. Those who refuse to stand up for-the U.S. A. and what it represents ought to lose their citizenship rights and be deported.
My 17-year-old daughter feels women should be drafted, not to fight, but there are jobs such as communications and desk clerks which would release men for necessary needs.
K. S. HAWKINS 6457 SNOWAPPLE, CLARKSTON
‘Are Children Allowed to Keep Stolen Bike?’
The bike my eight-year-old son saved his money for was stolen and I wonder how parents can see their child riding a bike they know isn’t his.
R. GAUTHIER 661 ROBINWOOD
Reader Gives Views on Airport Proposal
The proposed Oakland-Orion airport is uneconomical, impractical and not in public interest. It would destroy much of the desirable character of adjacent areas. Bald Mountain Recreation, Camp Agawam (one of the State's finest Boy Scout camps), and Keatington development would suffer, as well as a multitude of long-established home owners.
★ # ★
Supervisors arbitrarily selected the site under pressure from manufacturers to provide easy air access for executives living in affluent areas of Bloomfield Hills and Birmingham without subjecting their tranquil acreages to disturbance. Protesting citizens’ committees have been denied information or bearings.
The proposed airport is self-debating for within five years labor and freight transport will glut ail present arteries of surface travel. The solution is to provide small plane and helicopter ports for taxi service. Lapeer County has considerable sub-marginal farmland that coujd more economically provide facilities and room for expansion.
MRS. K. M. BURCHARD 1348 BEACH, LAKE ORION
Recent Incident Proves Some People Care
I appreciate my neighbors and the police officer who came to my aid until an ambulance arrived during a recent illness. When we read of people standing by with no concern for another’s misfortune, it’s good to find people really care.
MRS. DELMAR WILMONT 84 W. FAIRMOUNT
Question and Answer
What k the proper care for Easter lilies?
mrs. w. e. Meyer
—----—-----190 S. AVERY
REPLY
Jacobsen’s Greenhouse tells us to cut it six inches above the dirt and plant it outside, using some bone meal when you plant. It should bloom every fait* *
A—T
THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 21, 10fi8
1
DOUBLE STAMPS [WED. ONLY
at
Thrifty-Cloonan Drug Stores
Gtf double Hofden Red Stamps—on Wednesday only at any Thrifty-Cloonan Drug Store with any pur-chaie.
1 ToSmm travel,, win.,
--iHf, Uqu.r iR.lurf.z
I
• 140 N. Saginaw St.
• Huron Street Corner of Telegraph
• 4895 Dixie Highway
Young Rebels Rock East, West
PARIS (AP) - Rebellious youth in East and West have declared war pn The Establishment.
In the East, the Establishment is the Communist party and its bureaucracy. In the West it is the bourgeoisie and its system.
high and mighty bureaucrats." to a bloodless revolution that is ago, and the ranks of eligibles
This'struggle is controlled and
SELF-D1SCIPIJNE The students In Czechoslovakia want more intellectual Tree-dom, but unlike those in France they displayed a large measure of self-discipline. Aware of the
directed by the followers of Mao Tse-tung. The target is the entrenched party bureaucracy, which after the Communist takeover in 1950 became huge and difficult for Mao to handle, a power instrument in the hands of others. Mao feared that the
The black flags of anarchismjparty would surrender its Influ-1 ^ „,
and the red flags of communism jence to the bureaucracy, the Woyyc Anolvsis flying over the stately old Sor- strong and authoritative Estab-I s
bonne in Paris signal the stu- lishment. | '
dents’ rebellion which hasf In The Soviet Union,"Ip.Com-.enormous pushed Charles de
still in progress.
are growing all the time. The facilities can no longer keep up with them. About a fifth of these students are reported directly involved in the rebellion.
• <, j
WIDE VARIETY In Paris, they include anarchists, nihilists. Trotskyists. | Castroists, Maoists, Guevarists |l—-anything but admirers of the ! French Establishment in which - the rebel students scornfully in-
,, , elude the orthodox. French Com-
pressureir-orr itreir munjst ty--------
lr, Bn j n„ drug Which Can IT13K6 Small
rs? to * unique creme died derma-soft. Slovakia, the intellectuals and ity. *
to is^ W-O7deir-T^orki«* formulation soften* students were in the vanguard; There are 600,000 university Dlooa vessels °Pen ana carry
1U ana dissolve* those hard to remove growth* ° * — —- J A
•o they treme *way painlessly, safely leaving of the reform movement which students in France, more than Diooa alter normal circulation
G« «»u°VruMUwi blossomed into something akin thr'ee'times the number 10 years has stopped.
Richie Says
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only must De Gaulle go, they In- j sist, but everything he stands' for. And with him must go those; the youths consider compromisers with the system, across the political spectrum from extreme right to the orthodox Communist left.
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You’ve probably talked new cars, and shopped tha low-priced names.
So it's mainly the fact that it's an Olds she’ll be reacting to, right? So ...
If she's the practical type, she’ll blow a gasket. Because she thinks an Olds is more car than you were planning to buy.
You’ll have to talk fast and make the point
that this Cutlass cost less than many of the low-priced "names” you looked at. (Even with the Tilt-Wheel you ordered just for her.) Now, if she’s the emotional
type, she won't care about details. She’ll take one look at Cutlass and kiss you. Then she'll look at that plush Cutlass interior* and kiss you again.
Either way, you'll be a hero by the hearth tonight.
MAY FEATURE
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- igi
A—8
THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JS1A,Y 21, 1968
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Snow's on the Roof and Fire's Out but He's Going to fight it Anyway
were the wives of visiting dignitaries from Ypsi-lanti, wives of Pontiac city officials and guests. The lull came during the day-long observance of Mayors Exchange Day with Pontiac Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. visiting Ypsilanti and Ypsilanti’s mayor visiting Pontiac. From left are Mrs. John H. Burton, wife
of Ypsilanti’s mayor; Phyllis Pope, Pontiac City Librarian; Beth Vershure, Pontiac’s Junior M\ss; Mrs. T. Warren Fowled, wife of Pontiac’s mayor pro tern; Mrs. Vaughn Filsinger, wife of Ypsilanti’s mayor pro tern; and Mrs. Joseph Warren, wife of the city manager.
Wmm
THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 21, 1968
Girl [Boy Make the Scene With Bach, Nature Center
By SIGNE KARLSTROM
Mr. and Mrs. William T. Gossett Jr., of Bancroft announce the birth of a daughter, Catherine Ann, born May 15. Mrs. Gossett is the former Mimi Coulter whose father is Bruce Coulter of Oxford. The paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. William T. Gossett of Bloomfield Hills.
Matthew Curtis Lang was born on May 2 to Mr. and Mrs. William Edward Lang of Troy. Mrs. Lang is'the former Susan Ann Woodhouse.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Richard Woodhouse of Indian River and Mr. and Mrs. Samuel J. Lang of Bloomfield Hills.
„ * A *
The Bach Festival's three performances which took place on Friday and Saturday of last week at Christ Church Cranbrook were sold to a capacity audience: In the program, special tribute was paid to L.. James Schneider who has-been thegeneral chairman since the formation of the Festival three years ago.
Some of those attending the Saturday afternoon concert were: Mr. and Mrs. Fredrick Weed who have just returned from her winter home at Delray Beach, Fla., Mrs. Roland Rasperzak who came from Toledo to attend the concert with Mr. and Mrs. Stephen L. Goodale Jr. and Mesdames: Draper Allen, Duncan Augustine, Elmer Sylvester, Whiting W. Raymond. ' ■ • ’
NATURE CENTER
Mr. and Mrs. Semon Knudsen entertained for dinner at Bloomfield Hills Country Club last week so that some friends»could hear about the Drayton Plains Nature Center.
This center, located in former facilities of the old State fish hatchery, is dedicated to conservation education and nature appreciation.
Mrs. Edmund L. Windeler, president of the organization, spoke briefly. Guest speaker was John Ripley Forbes of
tional Science for Youth
A A A
Among those at the dinner were Mr. and Mrs. James Beresford, Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Colombo Jr., Mr. ana Mrs. Roy Abernethy, Mr. and Mrs. William Burlingame, Mr. and Mrs. John Fitzgerald, Mr. and Mrs. Francis McMath, Mrs.
Annual Election
Pontiac Woman'sClub held their An-nual meeting and luncheon Monday in Bethany Baptist Church.,
Following the , meal, officers were elected for the coming year:
Mrs. Nellie M, Frye, president; Mrs. Fred Manes and Mrs.,. Fred L. Golnes, vice presidents; Mesdames G> A. Steeves, IrvTn Christie antTE. M. Role, secretaries and Jay Stephens, treasurer.
- Others serving will be Mesdames Herbert Watson, William Bedard, Duane Miller and Lee Hill.
a " A A •
Accepted into membership and to be honored at a picnic meeting on June 17,
George Edwards, Mr. and Mrs. Theodore
0. Yntema, John Bugas and Dr. Frank Lamberson.
Calendar
WEDNESDAY
Pontiac chapter No. 7, American Association of Retired Persons, noon, Pontiac Motor Union Hall. Cooperative dinner and social hour.
Orchard Lake Flower and Garden Club, 12:30 p.m., home of Mrs. Edward Finan of Doherty Drive, West Bloomfield Township. Mrs. Norman McClure on, “Corsage Making.”
Pontiac Memorial Day Parade Association, 7:30 p.m., American Legion, Cook-Nelson Post. Last minute instruction and elections.
Pontiac White Shrine No. 22, 7:30 p.m., Roosevelt Temple. Annual card party.
Parents Without Partners, Pontiac chapter, 8:15 p.m., Oakland County Supervisors’ Auditorium. Speaker from Synanon Foundation.
Paper Tissue Inside Napkin Is Good Idea
DEAR ABBY: My husband is well over the age of collecting social security, but would you believe he is so vain
because he doesn’t want||fiMj me, If he ever catches
up Mr hair for years! ^ otherwise it would be ABBY snow-white. Lately I have been telling him it is time he let his hair, go “natural,” for It is no crime for a man his age to have white hair, but h.C 8#ys» no, he still wants me to touch II up for him. if you were me, would you? ELSA DEAR ELSA: No. Tell him as long as there is no fire In the furnace, he may as wenifave lhe show on the roof.
A A A
DEAR ABBY: I will give you the facts, which are all true, as I am the girl’s mother:
Millie and Eton (made up names) were married two weeks after Don graduated from high school. TTiey had to get married as Millie was five months along.
After the baby came I baby-sat for Millie so she could go back to school and get her diploma.
The baby is a year old now and Eton says he wants a divorce. He says he doesn’t love Millie anymore and he wants to be “free.” He says he doesn’t want the responsibilities of marriage and
fatherhood. __
He won’t go to our priest, and he won’t see a marriage counselor. He says all he' wants is out. He went to a lawyer who says it will be difficult but not impossible for Eton to get a divorce without Millie’s cooperation because he has no grounds.( MiUieirasalLkmdsof grounds,-but she doesn’t want to file.)
Millie says she loves him and is willing to do anything to save her marriage. Can you help? MILLIE’S MOM
DEAR MOM: No one can “help” save a marriage unless both parties want to save it. Millie can make it tough for Don to get a divorce, but can’t force him to live with' her. Assuming she could “save” the marriage, a young husband who feels trapped would make a poor husband and a worse father.
By ELIZABETH L. POST
Dear Mrs. Post: It is not often I disagree with your comments. I refer to the hostess who tucked a paper tissue into her linen napkin. It appears that the guest and yourself felt that only the tissue and not the-napkin was to be used.
As a guest, I have often taken a tissue to the table to blot my lipstick, rather than smear a lovely linen napkin. I felt the hostess was most thoughtful in providing this tissue.
A A A
The tissue, I must assume, was tucked there for the excessive lipstick prior to the actual use of the linen. I feel this line of reasoning fits the situation more closely than the comments printed in your column! — Mrs. M.
★ A A
Dear Mrs. M.: I received a number of letters defending the use of a paper napkin with a linen one, most of them Teferring to the stains left by indelible lipstick. The original letter referred to a paper napkin — not a tissue.
a a a
I repeat that I consider the use of two napkins awkward and complicated, but I think providing a small tissue which, after use, may be tucked into a purse or a sleeve, is an excellent idea!
DEAR ABBY: In answer to the question recently asked of you, “Is the pill 100 per cent safe?” — may I reply?
Thinking this was the only safe way to avoid having a baby at my age (42), I asked my doctor for the pill. I used it for nearly two years, then . . . bang! I found I was pregnant. I had not forgotten to take my pill at any time, so at first I thought surely It was the menopause. (So did my Doctor.) It turned out to be a beautiful baby boy instead.'
* * a
Abby, J had two grandchildren^ m naturally I was about as “overjoyed” at the prosepcts of haVjng another baby as most women in their mid-forties would have been. But what seemed at first to be the end of the world turned out to be The most wonderful thing that ever-happened to me.
I hope that other women who find themselves in the same situation will "read tills and realize it is not a catastrophe — but God’s will. Only He could have known the joy this unexpected child was to give us. And now we know, too. BLESSED IN ZANESVILLE
DEA& ABBY; I have a “confidential” for my husband’s secretary who is also doubling as “the ether woman” in his life: I have offered my husband his freedom so he could marry her, but he said he doesn't want it. Another thing, we have been married for 29 years —
not 21. He also lied about his age. HIS WIFE
★ it it
CONFIDENTIAL to B- L. F.: When a woman marries John Jones, she becomes Mrs. John Jones . . . and remains Mrs. John Jones as long as she lives and is his legal wife. Should John die, she is Mrs. John Jones (not^Irs. Mary Jones) unless she marries another man.
However, tf Mrs. John Jones divorces John, she does not retain the name of “Mrs. John- Jones/-' she la Mrs. Smith (her maiden name) Jones. It makes sense to me because if John marries again, his wife becomes Mrs. John Jones, and if his former wife (and, heaven forbid, former wives) all retain the name of Mrs. John Jones, wouldn’t they have a time with their charge accounts, mail and identification?
.....~. ....it A__________—t——
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. 48056 and enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope.
a A A
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.”
Household Help Looks Forward to Upped Status
NEW YORK, N.Y. — If a suggestion put forward by one of America’s most prominent women bankers is accepted, future help wanted ads for housemaids may read like this:
“ASSOCIATE WANTED: Successful small business operation desires competent individual with experience in household management. Our plant is located in quiet residential area. Executive take-home pay. Free parking. Free food and private room with bath. Excellent fringe- benefits. Candidate-should have -diploma from home-counseling school or two years’ experience. Please submit resume, including recent snapshot. An equal-opportunity employer.”
★ ★ ★
Mrs. Mary G. Roebling, chairman of the board of the Trenton (N. J.) Trust Company, asserted in a signed editorial in the current issue "Of McCall’s that “the day of the master-servant relationship is gone, and the time of the competent, professional staff assistant in the home has come.”
a ■ a a
“We must recognize that household assistants are not a self-indulgent luxury and that the job of the competent household assistant is equally as attractive and socially acceptable as work in office or factory,” she said.
BROADENING FIELD
“Today there are 21 million families with annual incomes over $10,000. These families have enough money to be able to exercise very broad options in disposing of their income,” she said.
She added that' * the wise and judicious use” of such income “on competent help could be a tremendous factor in revitalizing family life by providing the wife with more leisure time to be with her 0 husband and her children.”
★ * A
Mrs. Roebling suggested that to attract trained household help, “we must offer benefits competitive with business — standardized pay, health insurance, regular work hours, normal fringe benefits.!’
AAA
—“The UJS, Department of Labor and the National Committee on Household Employment have been successfully sponsoring training centers throughout the nation, to develop household skills In unemployed or unskilled individuals. When they ‘graduate a student,’ he or she has a choice of high-paying jobs from which to select,” Mrs. Roebling wrote in McCall’s.
Pantlac Priii Phot!
Gov. George Romney and his wife, Lenore, arrive at Masonic Auditorium in Detroit Monday to attend the opening of the Grand Opera season. An estimated 2,500 attended the opening.
Sisters Will Seek New Image With Glamour Highlighted
By MARGARET CHARLTON Kalamazoo Gazette Writer
KALAMAZOO l*-- Many women spend an Itour and a half at their beauty parlor getting their hair done and think nothing of it.
But to most Roman Catholic nuns, the idea is a completely new one.
A A A
“I never dreamed the process would take so long!” exclaims Sister M. Clarice, a Nazareth nun of the Sisters of St. Joseph, who is enrolled in a course at a Kalamazoo beauty school. “When I first came here, I had no idea of the time involved, especially in bleaching and tinting.”
Sister Clarice says that It was difficult for her to enter a brand new field, but since Catholic nuns now expose their hair, it became necessary for a Sister of St. Joseph to learn hair care. “Whenever
a need arises in a community, sisters are trained in that particular field,” Sister Clarice explains.
LEARNED
Since her course at the beauty school began last September, she has learned a great deal about hair care, wig styling and facials.
“I’ve enjoyed my course very much,” Sister Clarice says, “Many of the sisters * have told me I was a godsend to go into this kind of work. But I was glad tb do it because it was necessary. There is a very large change taking place at a very rapid pace, and we must be ready for it.”
Sister Clarice says that for many of the sisters having their hair done is a fantastic transformation for them./
J: “They are so busy and never realized, 'as I didn’t, that they couldn’t just walk in and walk out again.” She also assists the other risters at Nazareth in the care and,styling ,of their hair and gives them beauty pointers.
Nuns now in contemporary dress are more than ever in the public eye, and they must be as well-groomed as any professional woman.
A ft A A
Recehtly a hair stylist did>15ister Clarice’s hair in a special style for a nun wearing a veil. “It's a little hard to adjust to, after going about in a habit for 20 years!” she laughs._____
Sister Clarice dr earns of one/ day opening a beauty shop for the sisters at " Nazareth.----
August Vows Planned for Sandfa Rachiele
At the anhual meeting of Pontiac Woman’s Club held Monday in Bethany Baptist Church, Mrs. Nellie M. Frye of West Huron Street (sitting) was elected president for the coming yearv Standing is in-Rowe, Lena Earls. George Brinkman,' coming second vice president, Mrs. Fred L. Goints of Wcst Rundell Floyd J. Zielinski and Lewis Swartz. Street.
Call for '63 Reunion
Waterford-Kettering High School class of '63 will hold a reunion on Aug. 17 in Airway Lanes. For further information, -contact Mrs. William Harding of-War> ringham Drive.
Britain's n,rineesjr~MWgwet smells the rose “Princess Mar-ga-ret of England” during her,-visit* to the opening of Vie ChelSea Flower Show in .London. Louis-ette Melland of Antibes, France,
Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin RfbWala of Keego Harbor announce the betrothal of their daughter, Sandra Rae, to David ■Dean Heipte. He i» the son of the John Heiples of Highland Hark. ;
The bride elect and her fiance each ho|d BS degrees; she from Western Michigan iTniversity, he from Wayne State University. An August wedding is
bred the rose.
planned.
A—10
THE PONTIAC PtfESSl TUESDAY, MAY 21, 1968
Rx RECORDS
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vide your physician with any Information
report of your prescription costs for ta purposes. Let us be your specialist for prescriptions and other health needs.
TODAY** PHESOMPTON IS TNK MMIST BAMAIN IN HISTORY
PLAZA PHARMACY
Your Family Pharmacy
Jarry ami Joanna DunaararO, RON 3564 Pontiac Ik- Rd., Pontiac, Mich.
Phono 873-1267 24 Houri A Day Sorvico1 FREE DELIVERY
Nanay Orders Itsetd t» • r.nturr Sander. Candy
Yaw May Pay Nil Utility Ullli at Plan PNarwaay .
Daughter Torn Between Mother, Dad
By MURIEL LAWRENCE DEAR MRS. LAWRENCE:
because she says I am a Judas igive up your life when she gives ithe fairy tale- served the Beast who's betrayed her by loving! up hers. I lb* the forest castle. His love
Oh, please help me. My mother m-v father^to° - ■ hasn’t spoken to me for months because she thinks I am a traitor for not hating, my father as she does. They are divorced..
ANSWER: And you do you think you are?
*
mother,
What
Are you
* ★ your
the
I love her dearly — but I love hating ex-wife of your father -my father, too, as he is gentle, 0r are you that different, person, kind and so nuderstanding that | their child? he keeps telling me how much * * *
This woman is tryihg to rid destroys the witch’s power to
my mother needs my affection. But ! am tortured with guilt-
Let’s not get trapped in any of this nonsense abotrt—‘‘guiU,-’’
herself of you, child, exactly as she rid herself of your father. She doesn’t want people. All she wants is agreement. So before she dies she’s going to find herself very lonely indeed.
At which point it brill he only humanly decent to Fally to her what comfort you can. But It won’t be effective. For people sieves
make us believe we’re a beast. Like Beauty, he restores our true shape to us. m
Gay Parties on Agenda
Bride elect Lorraine Sherey
„ .... ... ■ .Tike your mother are’ -- ----- ----------— ------
There is no guilt in Hus situa- jeak everythingyou and I has been honored with several Uon. All there * is gcttern^prenuptial events,
your confusion as to whether The prob|ein is that she’s just She was feted at a luncheon you re obliged tobe yoJ^ about convinced you that you're af»d shower recently at First mother or areentitM 0 ^Jnot yourself - but are she, your Federal Savings of Oakland by what you are- the child of your ' fur|ous ex.wifc
lather and of her. She's cast a spell on you just
asTalry iale witches cast spells op handsome young princes so Feet her feelings and assume powerful' they actually believe her life. But I’m warning you themselves to be frogs, that you can’t involve yourself, * * ★
in such craziness without great! This a powerful witch, your mj^eHaneous danger. For she’s going to dieimother. So I want you to '«<*jTayior home on Ottawa Drive, before ,you do. And when she for a psychiatrist until you find ! A kitchen shower and Sunday does, what then? You’ll have to one you like very much. For a,afternoon tea was hosted by die wifh her. Having assumed | psychiatrist we like very much ^rs ^ynn ^ Allen Jr. in her
HER LIFE
Want to be your mother?
OK.
friends and coworkers from First Federal. Hostesses were
Roberta Kaake- and......Mrs .
William Nelson.
■ ★ dr ' -k
Mrs. William H. Taylor Jr., assisted by Mrs. Paul Jolly, entertained, for her niece at a shower in the
Pentlec Prm PSete
her life, you’re going to have to |serves us exactly as Beauty in
Brides-To-Be Register Their China and Crystal
Patterns In Wiggs
Bridal Registery-
C J
Check It and Avoid Gift Duplication•
Black cats on the
Place Pigalle! It was
Parisian night at the
Birmingham Athletic Club Saturday with champagne | a French menu, Left Bank attire and dancing to French tunes. Mr. and Mrs.
Donald L. Richardson of Pine Hill Drive hosted the gala.
Wennonah Drive home The bride, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Shorey of Wenonah Drive, will wed Timothy J. Gordon in Long Beach, Calif. May 30.
.—...,Saturday- will.mark the golden wedding
anniversary for Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Scbolz, now of Milford, who resided in Pontiac for 40 years. They were married May 25, 1918 in St. Vincent de Paul Catholic Church. An open house in their Milford home hosted by their children and spouses will mark the occasion Sunddy from 1 to 5 p.m. Their children are Mrs. Glen (Evelyn) Dean of Bellflower, Calif., Mrs. Clifford (Ethel) Esler of Highland and Donald of Davis-burg. They have nine grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren.
Polly's Pointers
De-Electrify a Blanket
DEAR' T*OLLT“—"Tdo" hope" that Regina, who wants to remove the cords from an electric blanket, will read this. I took a razor blade and clipped all the threads that hold the
were—always -r t ppi ng -oh especially when one sat on chair.
★ ★ ★
The pads would slide, then th ties ripped off. I finally bough
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Simonds of Summerhill Street announce the engagement of their daughter, Donna Grace, to Dennis Bruce Dafoe. He is The son of the Bruce Dafoes of Visgar Street. The couple is planning to wed Aug. 10.
wires on the blanket. It took me narrow elastic, cut it in abou a few evenings to do this. | one-inch lengths, to make loops Afterward, I cut a hole where | sowed these elastic loops ont the plug-in was and put a patch ^be corners of the chair pad over it. I bought a two-pound rSJwi put ^e ties through th dacron batting, put it between e‘as*'c 1°°PS> arK* then tie the two sides of the blanket and' them to the chairs, have the warmest comforter I have ever owned.—C. C.
★ ★ ★
DEAR POLLY - I
Now no matter how a clot pad slides, the elastic stretche and there are no more annoyin torn-off ties.—ANNE.
Carry Diet Lund
am
delighted to be able to tell Regina how I removed the wires from an electric blanket so it would be just a plain one. jf y0U’re on a diet and you Unravel the thread from the scbooi cafeteria is geared fo bottom ribbon band, wind thenbe football team, take you thread and the ribbon on a own lunch. Remember whe spool to be ready for reuse. you count the calories to ad Turn the blanket inside out ajthe value of mustard, buttei
|little at a time, clip the threads!relish and catsup. You/ can bu
Couture Knit-Collection
You are invited to the only showing in Michigan of the
for fall 1968 by
FRANCESCA FOR DAMON
who designs, we believe, the most inimitable knits ...
coat ensembles, three-piece suits,
'and her distinguished one-piece dresses.
holding the wires and do this until you can get hold of the wire. Then cut the wire at the loop, pull ■ it from top to bottom, thus saving a lot of thread clipping. The wires on mine went up and around and down again. Or, you can keep turning the blanket inside out and just clip threads that hold wires until you reach the top. Clipping was easier for me.
Turn the blanket right side out again, replace the ribbon, using the same thread and you have a useful blanket.
I also put blanket protectors on all my blankets. This solves washing so often as only the
whole milk in school, but if yo need nonfat milk, bring it in thermos.
AUTHORIZED DEALER OF
Bigelow
Make Your Gift Selections From Wiggs Large And Varied Collections Of Fine China, Crystal and Accessories.
A- “Solitaire”, newest shape in fine china by Lenox. Branded with precious platinum, crafted in glowing, translucent china. Open-stock. 5-piece place setting 24.93.
B. WiggS Fostoria crystal offers you a large selection of the finest in refined stemware for formal and infor--mai- table—settings^- Shown are just -twQ-ef tho mony-pattcrgag Crjstil and Cift*..
IPI
THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAV 81, 1968
A—ll
I
THOMPSON-LEW IS
ADAMS-GULDA
Barbara J.LeWiz spake vows with George O. Thompson Saturday in St. Vincent de Paul's Catholic Church. The bride wore organza over taffeta with Venetian lace trim, complemented by a detachable train. She carried white carnations cascading v/rom o single orchid. Mrs. Betty Milton and Milas Griffin were honor attendants with Christine Bass, Mrs. Robert Powell, Mrs. Carl Tarpley, Al-phonso Pratt, Louis Shellman and "Garfield McBride. A reception in the Roosevelt Hotel preceded a honeymoon trip to Canada. Parents of the couple are Mrs. Helen Lewis of Central Street and J. C. Lewis of
Chicago and Mrs. Minnie \jGa.
Thompson of Savannah and iy late Mr. Thonipson.
- Pamela Lynn Guido, attired in an Empire gown with lace sleeves dnd chapel train, spoke noWs Saturday with David Vernon Adams in Stringham United Missionary Church. She carried-a cascade of cama-tions with a white orchid. The newlyweds and their parents, the Alfred Guldas of Elizabeth Lake Road and the Jack C. Adamses of Goldner Street, greeted guests at a reception in Mountain View Country Cltlb. Sandra Stevens and Gerald Mathews were' hbnor attendants with Debbey Lutz-kiw, Jacqueline Charter, Vicki Evjen, Kimberly Gulda, Dale and Jack Adams, Edward, Alfred and Steven Gulda and Timothy Coin. The couple is honeymooning in the South.
Couple Honored at Party
Gail Davison Is Bride of Mr, Gilmore
Gall Davison, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles' H. -A. Davison of Birmingham, was married recently to William Norman Gilmore Jr, in St. James Episcopal Church, Birmingham.
The bride chose a gown of ivory veiled organza for the rite with peau d’ange lace bordering the A-line skirt and detachable train.
Mrs. Charles Clippert, the bride’s sister, was matron of honor with Charles Hartner as best man.
Other attendants were Mrs. Eric Davison and Mrs. Mark Davison, Susan Gilmore, Carol Anne Raskopf, with Martha Clippert as flower girl.
Ushers " were Patrick McCormick, Eric and Mark Davison and Charles Clippert.
The newlyweds will reside in Rochester upon their return from a Canadian honeymoon.
Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. A. Davison of Birmingham and the William N. Gilmores of Beverly Hills.
Hold Drapes Up
Keep long draperies oil the floor while you clean by sewing a curtain tieback ring on the wrong side of the lower hem. ] Then hook this ring on a small tack hailed inconspiculously at the edge of the window frame or under sill. This will"keep draperies from becoming soiled and out of the way of dust mop and vacuum cleaner.
mmtmsmd Have You Saen tha §
DIPPY BIAS i
for Flowor Making? Many Oolora.
l«l« •( Other NSW NOSIIIS an* DRAFTS, TOO!
CLEO’S
HANDCRAFT
^INOP
366 Oakland Ave. | ......FE 8-3361......
Omega Mu Sigma sorority, New officers recently elected treasurer; Mrs. Leo Halfpenny members gathered Sunday in are Mrs. Ray Koskela, presi- and Mrs. Russell Gustavson, Ted’s Restaurant for the annual dent; Mrs. Irene Snyder, vice auditors. s
May breakfast. |president; Mrs. Alvin Wingus, * * *
and, Mrs. Elmer Lea; Major contributions this year secretaries; Mrs. Ray Peterson,) were sent to Camp Oakland.
Linda D. Rowan Exchanges Vows
In honor of their golden wedding anniversary, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond L. Williams o f Comith Street, Orion Township, were feted Saturday at a party at the Loyal Order of Moose on University Drive.
Attended by many fellow Moose members, the party was hosted by their daughter, Mrs.
Frances Williams of West Beverly Street, and friends, the Justin Hancocks of North Crooks.Road,.Pontlj9c.Township. ★ it h
Also among the guests were their son, Ryamond Jr. and daughter Mrs. John Kevorkian.
The c o u pie has 10 grandchildren.
Mr. and Mrs. Artie S. Rowan of Lincoln Street announce the recent wedding of their daughter, Linda’ Diane, to Jack Laurence Tennis. He is the son of Mrs. Laurence Tennis of Hillman and the lateMr..Tennis.__
Honor attendants for the candlelight vows in St, John Episcopal Church, Holly, were Katherine and Artie Rowan.
Hie newlyweds will make their home in Hillman.
Makeup Techniques Program
Every Woman an Artist in Illusion
The perfect oval Is the ideal lace shape, beauty experts say, but few women have it. Artful makeup techniques and hairstyling can be used, however, to make the face appear more
like the ideal.
★ ★ ★
Many women across the country have learned these techniques this past year in a program prepared for local women's clubs by Avon Products, Inc.
★ ★ ★
After learning how to identify their face shapes as generally oblong, round, square, heart or diamond shaped, clubwomen are given advice on how the artist’s touch in makeup and hairstyling . can produce flat-tering visual effects that help camouflage problems.
★ ★ ★
To assist women in identifying their face shapes, clubs are provided with a translucent plastic chart showing six basic face types in life size. Each member is given the opportunity to “try on*’ the face shapes to find the ohe closest to her own.
★ ★ ★
Following this demonstration, members are given detailed techniques for the application of blusher on each type of face.
Discussions, with diagrams, show women where to apply blushers on their cheeks so that their faces will appear to be closer to the attractive oval form.
CREATE ILLUSION One of the more usual face types is the oblong shape. It is noted for its length, with forehead, cheekbones and jawline of about equal width.
★ ★ ★
‘To tftatt the illusion of a more oval shape, the new program explains, blusher should be applied on the cheekbone I beneath the center of each eye 'and winged out and up, beyond the outer eye corner. This also appears to broaden the facial area across the cheekbones.
A hair-style, that has a side part and hair length ending at mid-cheek tends to shorten the long span of the oblong shaped face.
★ ★ ^
Similar analyses of the other face types, and suggestions as to how they may be made to appear more nearly oval, are explained in the new program, which is available free to local clubs through the Woman’s Club Service Bureau, Dept. N (605 Thfird Avenue, N. Y., N. Y.). ★ ★ ♦
A complete written commen tary details the presentation of this information. Another unit in the program is a color and | sound film that illustrates beau ty routines and makeup tech-Iniques for busy women.
Happy foces are m for the Francis Duane Anstett family, Kirkland, after daughter Dorothy (Didi) Anstett won the Miss USA contest Saturday in Miami Beach. The family got together fora pie-
AF Wfrwphoto
ture, left to right are Davidt\lS, Meg, 13, Dewey, father; Agnes, mother, Beth, 3, Fred, 12, Marie, 16, Terry, 23, Kathy, 10, and Mike, 44,--------—-------------
Omega Mu Sigma Holds Its Annual Breakfast
George M. Lavoie, son of the Hervey A. La-vqies of Home Street was graduated from Oakland University recent-ly uhth a BS degree. He attended OU on a Pon-tiac Press scholarship.
Go to Convention of BPW Clubs
A number of area women attended the recent Golden Anniversary convention of the Michigan Federation of Business and Professional Women's Clubs in Traverse City.
From the Pontiac group were Mesdames Lucinda Wyckoff, Andrew Mitchell and E. Cleo Wiley; also Helen Kinney, Mabel Smith and Rosamond Haeberle.
Mil <
Hears of Confab
\\l//
for those who like the unusual. Its beauty lies in the manner in which it combines the grace and glitter of a marquise with the fire of a round-cut. And it is at its best in a simple setting that emphasizes its lovely shaping.
69 NORTH SAGINAW
2 Doors North of West Huron , OPEN FRIDAY EVENINGS
FE 2-7257
Reports on the recent Continental Congress held i n Washington, D.C. were given at the May meeting of General Richardson chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution.
Alice Serrell, first vice regent, Sarah Van Hoosen Jones' and Mrs. E. G. Clark reported | to the members who gathered in the East Iroquois Road home of Mrs. Elbert M. and Margaret Wilmot.
★ ★ ★
The hostesses were assisted by Mrs. John Buchanan, Janice Antona, Dr. Mildred Travis, Iva J. Price, and Mesdames Louis Londick, Julius F e 1 d k a m p, William Kalwitz, Donald Adams and Bartlet Wage.
Heal Btf&r§SquoVzln§
Heat a lemon before squeezing and the juice yield is higher.
Fashionette Club of Pontiac, 7 p.m., Adah Shelly Library.
WEDNESDAY
Waterford Fashioii Your Figure Club, 7 p.m., Schoolcraft School. Open to any area woman wishing to lose weight.
THURSDAYS
Cal Cutters of Keego Harbor, 7 p.m., Trinity, Methodist Church.
Waterford TOPS Club, 7 ^mr,~^chbblcraft School.
Weight Watching Jills of TOPS, Inc., 7:30 , p.m„ Pontiac Unity Center.
Fashion Your Figure Club of Pontiac, 7:30 p.m., Adah Shelly Library.
Pontiac TOPS Club, 8 Pro.. Bethany Bap t il Church.
What Savings . • • on Seconds
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Accessaries, to Enhance You, . ._
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Color up tlio sun Ken* or stepping out-.
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. . Jtoilv 10 to 6 P.M. . ___ V Daily VX.M.16 5i30
Mon., lhur., Fri. till 9 P.M. frl. 9 to 9 P.M
v
the roNTlAe press, Tuesday, may 21, urns ^ ::
—------ - ■ ~ - \i
-* ;' . _ .................■..^ * • • . ^ 'x
DISCOVER r THE SWIM-TUNIC
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AMERICAN LEAGUE s _ Club v G AB R H Pet. rf Was 36 134 22 45 .336
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' From the
Press Box
■y BRUNO L. KIARNS Syertt (difor, Ponfiac Praia
McLain Learns by Watching, Wins 6th by Waiting
8 Amateur Golfers
Twins' Errors Hand Bengals 4-3 Triumph
Rumors from a very reliable source have reached this corner that Pontiac's long time dream of having an arena-auditorium complex is closer to reality. __If the rumors bear true that some announcement of this is due within a few days, it could be the most prolific venture to rejuvenate the city and its downtown ever undertaken in Pontiac.
★ ★ ★
Most notable story of what other cities have done to help themselves is the unbelievable success story of the city of Duluth, Minnesota.
A few years back, Duluth, similar In city size as that of Pontiac, but with a. metropolitan area one-fifth of that of north Oakland County, was considered the most depressed area In all of the midwest.
Its downtown was dying and its overall economy was near tragic proportions.
APPROVE CONSTRUCTION *
In February 1963, the city approved the construction of an arena-auditorium-convention hall complex.
On Aug. 6, 1966, after three years of Study, surveys of 150 similar structures in the country, Duluth inaugurated its magnificent facility.
★ ★ ★
One year later, Aug. 1967 these are the startling facts revealed by the Duluth Arena-Auditorium board:
1. There were 782 events held in the complex, This Is an average of more than two a day.
1. Total attendance in die complex in the first year was 782,500 people, or almost eight times the metropolitan area of Duluth,
3. A total of 120,000 convention delegates spent an average of $35 per person per day and local'expenditure •mounted to $10 per person a day.
4. This meant that $7 million was spent through all segments-in the city.
5. It also showed that payroll checks amounting to $272,000 in salaries were
distributed and that $250,000 changed hands in purchases with local, businesses.
6. In one year, $10 million In business building was begun in the area of arena and the projection called for $50 million in business construction within 10 years.
To go into detail on the structural part of the complex would take columns of words and adjectives, but to quote two famous personalities Bennet C e r f, “Duluth has joined the big leagues"; Paul Harvey, "Duluth has entered a new dimension in vitality.”
NEW FLINT ARENA In Michigan, the city of Flint has become the front-runner of cities in.the state which have placed their faith in such complexes which are directed at the social, recreational, physical and educational needs of their citizens.
★ Sr
Newest additions in Flint include the twin-winged ice arenas and a franchise in the International Hockey League, and the addition of an astro-turf football field, one of cnly three in the country, which will be tested this fall.
Any announcement which / may be forthcoming for Pontiac in the league of Michigan arena cities would be the most welcomed news in this city’s annals.
By FLETCHER SPEARS , . Birmingham and Tim Kilpelainen of Although the professionals were on Western Michigan. hand to pMr up the Monrs share of * Ujk *’
honors, It was, .nevertheless, a banner
day for the amateurs In the opening phase of the USGA Open qualifying yesterday.
— The pros plucked 16 of the 24 berths that were up for grabs in the 'local* qualifying round, and the 24 Who made the grade will now move on to ihe ‘sectional’ phase of the competition June 3 at Knollwood Country Club in Birmingham.
FINAL STOP
Survivors from the sectional tournament then move to Oak Hill Country Club in Rochester, N.Y., for the championship proper, June 13-16.
wee
Heading the pack in yesterday’s 36-hole grind over Forest Lake , and Indian wood country clubs was former state amateur champion Melvin (Bud) Stevens, who carded an even par 72-71 143 to lead the field of 113 by three shots.
TAKESSECOND
Robert Clark of. Mdrtroe^ a professional, grabbed the runner-up spot while the next three positions were taken by amateurs.
On the list at 147 were Jim St. Germain, a student at Eastern Michigan University, former amateur and juiinhigan Open champion Charles Kocsis of Red Run, and current Golf Association of Michigan champion Peter Green of Orchard Lake Country Club.
* * *
Rounding out the list of amateurs landing berths in the sectional were Tom Draper of Royal Oak, John U. Law of
U.S. OPEN LOCAL QUALIFYING
QUALIFIERS ■ ...
•Melvin (Bud) Sevens, Western ............IjfoS
Robert Clerk, Monroe j . ....... tiifZij?
•Jeme» St. Germain, Meadowbrook ^75-M7
•Charles Kocelt, Red Run ■ 7|72i,7
•Peter Green, Orchard Lake 73 75I148
Stan Brlon, Tam O'Shanter • 7I48
David M. Dunn, Holland, O............. 'S-73— «
Gene Bone, Bay Rotate John Delrymple, Sylvanla,
74-74—148
John Dalrympie, syiyama, v. .....v-....ycytiJo
Don Allred, Mount Clemens ............. 71.7a—140
•Tom Draper, Red Run .... iiljlilj
Casmere Jawor. Gj?” ...... 75.74—14*
Bobby Breen, Woodbrldoe, Ont................2!
Bob Panasluk, KnollWood ...............
•David Cameron, Oakland Hills ......... 74-74—150
Lbrry Tomasino, Barton Hills .......... 75-75—150
Phillip Ferranti.Toledo ................ 7£}tli«!
•John U. Ce* Birmingham ...............
Donald Lee White, Meadowbrook ......... 77'4—151
Tom Talklngtoji, Vpsllantl .....................^
11:1
ALTERNATES 7, i„
Bill Mattson, Shenamlooh ............ 74 7aZl5i
Leigh Tuohy, Bloomfield Hills ....... '4 78-152
•Glenn Johnson, Grosso lie .......... 74-7S—134
•Amateur*
NON-QUALIFIERS %
153—Vic Juhola, Stan Jawor; 154—Gerald Pries-korn, ‘James Funston, *Roy Palmer, Larry Wilkinson, “John, Grace; 155 — Howard Brow", ‘Charles Epps, Ted. Kroll, Duncan Clark.
C154—‘Leo, T. Daigle. Fred Ewald, ‘Torn Pend.le-
buryTWL|me Mosiey“"Harvey Woodard, Roy Beattie, Tom Deaton; 157—Mike Dennis, Eugene Bon), Ron
Fox, Tom Cosmos, Alan Jarrard, Davl«i C•*Vjofj' At D'Amato; t5t—Quontln Smith, Bob Ga|da, R ch VanAtter, Nick Berkllch, Robert Kunn, Mike
“Vnon White, Bob Ure, Jack Clark, *Ed Flowers, Ben Lute, ‘James Neumann, Lou Powers, *Ed Lauer; 161—‘Chuck Gulash, *Fred Behyner; 142— John Jakublak, Edard Powers, Steve Isakov, Bob
McGlllen, ‘Dr. Harry Schmidt. ____.
143—Salvatore Romania Jr.. David Samaritan], Tommy Shannon. Paul VanLooien, .Mark Day, Rob-art Bernstein; 144—‘James A. Stephenson, John
£aqham Requests Big 10 to Study Track Meet Film
CHICAGO W — The Big Ten Games Committee is planning a ~studjrof films of last Saturday’s outdoor track meet with the possibility that Michigan—not Minnesota—will be declared the winner.
Minnesota compiled 50 points to edge Michigan, with 49 points, and Wisconsin, with 48.
ASKS FILM STUDY However, Michigan Coach Don Can-ham hag asked “for a film study to determine if Minnesota’s Rich Simonsen or Michigan’s Sol Espie finished third in the 220-yard dash behind Minnesota's Hubie Bryant and Michigan’s Leon
Grundstein. —-------------------------
Simonsen was awarded"third place' but If there is a switch made giving Espie third place. Michigan will win the titla with Minnesota second.
Commissioner Bill Reed was not avail* able for comment but a Big Ten gpokes-man said still pictures from Video tapes will be studied by the committee composed of coaches Bob Wright of Illinois and Dave Rankin «f Purdue and a^JeeL sion should be reached in a couple of weeks.
'—★----4r
Three pros bunched at 148 were Stan Rrion of Tam O’Shanter, David M. Dunn of Holland, O., and Gene Bone of Bay Pointe Golf Club.
FOURTH MEDAL
For the 35-year-old Stevens, it was the fourth time he’s bagged medalist honors in the ‘Local’ phase of the qualifying.
At the sectional, Stevens will be trying for his fourth trip to the U. S. Open. He made it in 1961, ’65 and ’66. He failed by a couple of shots in the ‘local’ qualifying last year.
4. A I
Stevens’ steady round included four birdies and a quartet of bogies. He matched par-72 over Indianwood’s hilly 6,904 yards in the morning round and stayed at an even-par 71 over the 6,405-yard Forest Lake layout in the afternoon.
The cutoff came at 152 and seven players had to battle in a playoff for four spots.
ST. PAUL, MfNNEAPOLIS Of) - Denny McLain has been emulating Cuban curveballer Camijo Pascual,—and the -sturdy Detroit right-hander says It’s paying off for him.
★ A A
McLain threw a three-run home run pilch to Minnesota's Dick Reese Monday night, but hided his time and let the Twins give him his sixth victory against one defeat, 4-3 in 10 innings.
Three of the Tigers’ runs were unearned off loser Jim Merritt, and Detroit scored its winning run In the 10th without a base hit as the Twins committed their third and fourth errors.
WIN IN PLAYOFF
Picking up the berths with birdies on the first hole of the playoff were Dick Brook? ofOrchard Lake, Richard Doyon of Fenton, Dick Bury of Birmingham and Kilpelainen, a junior at WMU.
Bone, former Michigan Open and PGA champ, had his tee-to-green game working- but seven three-putt greens pushed him well off Stevens’ pace.
AF Wi rephoto
BOOTS BENGAL’S BOUNCER — Minnesota third sackefc Rich Rollins (left) circles back to pick up ground ball he dropped off the bat of Detroit Tiger hitter Willie Horton in the fourth inning last night at Bloomington, Minn. The error prolonged a rally, enabling the Tigers to cut a 3-1 Twin lead to 3-2. Shortstop Cesar Tovar backs up Rollins. Two more errors in the 10th inning handed the Tigers a 4-3 triumph.
THE PONTIAC PRESS
TUESDAY, MAY 21, 1968
B—1
mis
Central Announces New Cage Coaches
Pontiac Central’s varsity and junior varsity basketball candidates next fall shouldn’thave much trouble recognizing their “new” coaches.
ifc- ■
art Bernstein; 164—'‘James A. Stephenson, Jonn Jawor, Paul E. Thomas, Sal. Pomante Sr.. Ronald Yorlck, Curtis Reynolds, Walter Laskey; 165—Tom Kretzschmar; 144 —Jack Corbett; 147 —‘William
D|ckens.john chejftr. 170 _ william Peck, Weller Kerchenush, William Long; 171—Bill Tombros, James Dewllng; 172—Ronald Adkins, Keith Fox, Chuck Sturm; 173 —Robert 6. Phifer; 174 — Warren S. Bauer; 175 —Jerry Holmqulst, Donald McIntyre; 177—'’Charles Cameron; 184—‘Dick Warren Withdrew—Reggie Sauger, Warren Orllck, ‘William Newcomb, ‘Calvin Cooke, Earl Myers, Richard Fox, Ben Johnson. . .
No Card—Boh Mealy 85; Mark A. Atherhold 85; Thomas L. Oder 80; Ty Demon 78; Mel E. Mzhlck-teno 82; Paul R. Sinelll 84; E. Ben Davis, .‘Lloyd Syron 78, Alex Redmond 85, Reggie Myles Jr. 81.
Did Not Start—‘William Rembo, Tom Dolan, Max Evans, ‘Robert Neller, Joseph Thicker, Eldon Briggs, ‘Barry Solomon, Joseph Newton, ‘Ted Kuzma.
Hazel Park Monday 'Longshot Heaven'
Longshot players had a field day at Hazel Park track Monday. The largest daily double of the meeting was registered when Shiloh Spring won the second race to complete a pay-off of $277.80.
In addition the second biggest twin double, a $6,022.80, was collected by nine bettors.
■ V ttj, 4 J*,. e* ■*- -1\«- ■ A *"
PEyil • '"Je- Sr % i Ca. » - j r ?
> 4* _ ■* ’ JM
Principal Garth Errington Monday afternoon announced that 36-year-old Ralph Grubb and 32-year-old Earl McKee will be the PCH varsity and reserve coaches, respectively, next season.
Both will be familiar to the players / and rate their respect. Grubb guided the/ PCH sophomore squads for seven seasons, and has led the jayvees to a 63-15 mark in the past five seasons.
★ ★ ★
Oddly, the junior varsity had a 14-"K^ mark in his first season at the helm and its win total has decreased by one each season at the helm and its win total has decreased by one each season, down to 11-5 this past winter. *
EXPERIENCE
“We wanted someone who had had some years’ experience coaching (not necessarily varsity) Class A basketball,” Errington said of the search of the varsity coach.
Grutib has spent 13 years in the Pontiac school system since graduating fron Eastern Michigan University in 1953 after lettering for three seaspns in basketball.
RESERVE JOB
In all, about a dozen, applicants were interviewed for the two jobs.
McKee, a familiar figure to followers of the city recreation bdSketball, softball and haseban reagaes. has been theNoTT coach at Jefferson Junior High School for four years, with a 31-9 cage mark.
★ ★ ★
At Central, the Western Michigan University graduate will join the physical edueation staff in addition to his basketball and assistant track* coach duties.
On the PCH track staff he will replace Brian Castle who is becoming an elementary school principal.
RALPH GRUBB
Bruins Swap l(rake, Scour Trade Market
Player Club F.Howard' Wa» White NY W.Horton Det Monday Oak
Alvis Cle Yastrzemsk! Bsn Carew Min Freehan Del Kosco NY Fov Bsn
Horn* Run* “ Howard, Washington,
L; W Morton, Detroit, 10; Repoz, California, 9, Ktllebrew, Minnesota, 6; Ward, Chicago, 8; McMullen, Washington, 8.
Run* Batted In
F.Howard, Washington, 34. Powell. Baltimore, JA; W.Horton, Detroit, 73;
Repoz, California, a. 21;_________T.Horton,
Cleveland, 21. . ..... •• -• Y
Fans, Club Cheer Howard
WASHINGTON UP)— Frank Howard’s flrst game before the cheering hometown fans after his second homer binge wasn’t one he’s likely to long treasure — but he won't soon forget the treasury he look home afterward.
★ ★ ★
WATCHES PASCUAL
“The biggest thing,” said McLain, who leads the American League with six complete games, “is that I’ve been
watching Camilo Pascual, who l think
has the best curve I’ve ever seen.
* * *
“I was watching him Sunday, and he
reaches way back to throw his curve. I’ve been short-arming my curve, bringing my arm up close to my shoulder instead of reaching way hack. You might give a runner a little more chance that way, but that hitter still has to get a hit to score the run.”
Pinpoint Control also has returned for McLain. “Two years ago I had trouble with wildness and I had the same trouble last year. I couldn’t get my curve over.
NO WALKS GIVEN
McLain didn’t walk a man for the third time this season.
Reese hit his blast after Tony Oliva and Rich Rollins singled.
After that, the Twins didn’t get a man past second against McLain, now 8-1.
Willie Horton’s 10th home run, leading off the ninth, tied the game.
Twins’ Manager Cal Ermer had two late-inning defensive replacements blow up in his face. But Ermer steadfastly defended his moves of inserting Jackie Hernandez at shortstop and Ron dark atthird base.
★ ★ ★
BOSTON UP) — The Boston Bruins are in the trade market while looking ahead to the National Hockey League player draft June 9 imMontreal.
. “It’s safe io say ttiat we’re looking to talk trade with anyone” Boston General Manager Milt Schmidt said Monday night after the Bruins sent Skip Krake to the Los Angeles Kings for a player to be named later.
PAST CHANGES
If a switch is made because of the—-
Before some 9.000 Washington Senator *■"' '■ / A 4 f J FontiK Frit. rhoto< by Roll wintw fans who gave him a lusty, minute-long
„ PWU ______________ ______________ SANDY PROHLEM ^Melvln/Pud) ^levens of Hvwiia found a little trouble \ ovation ; wildly applauding his historic
films, it wfll not be the flrsLUi^e. Last on this sikth hole at Forest Lake yesterday In the ‘local’ phase of the U.S. Open feat of 10 home runs in six games ^
...» Mtnhiaan ninbari nn' nririitinnot qualifying. Stevens’blasted out, the ball scooting six feet past the pin, snd his putt Howard was hit by a pitch in ihe first
for a par-4 stopped six inches short. Despite this bogey, Stevens managed an eveij inning. The next three times at bat, the
par round and went on to lead the qualifying field with a 143 total. mammoth slugger fanned.
Hernandez’ throwing error with two out in the 10th let A1 Kaline reach second, then Clark let Bill Freehan’s grounder get away from him to allow Kaline to score the winning run.
DEFENDS MOVES
“This is the first time this year they’ve beaten us.” Ermer said of his defensive moves. “I know good and well the men I put in there are better defensively than the men I had in there for their hitting the first part of the game.
★ ★ ★
“I’d make that move again. I think you’ve got to make it in trying to protect a lead.”
DITROIT MINNESOTA
■b r h bl §b r h bl
Stanley lb 5 110 Uhlaandr cf 4 0 0 0 Northrup cf 5 0 1 0 Tovar is 4 0 0 0
Kalina rf 4 2 0 1 Caraw 2b 4 0 0 0
Freehan c 5 0 10 Klllebrew 1b 4 0 0 0 WHorton If 5 111 Oliva rf , 4 12 0
Wert 3b 4 0 11 Rol)lns 3b 3 110 MAuliffe 2b 4 0 1 0 Hernandz 10 1 0 O 0
Oyler is 3 0 0 0 Reese If 3 12 3
McLain P 4 0 0 0 RCIarfc 3b 10 0 0
KRg*et>oro c 4 0 10 MerrTtf P " 2 010 Worthgtn p 0 0 0 0
Altlion ph 10 0 0
Total 39 4 6 3 Total 35 3 7 3
Detroit .......000 100 001 1—4
Mlnnasota 010 000 000 0-3
E—Tovar, Rollins, Htrnandaz. R.Clark. DP—Detroit 1, Minnesota 1. LOB— Detroit 7, Minnesota 3. 2B—Olive. NR— Reese (2), w. Horton (10). S—Merritt.
H R ER BB SO McLain (W.6-1) ... 10 7 3 3 0 7
Merritt IL.3-4) . ♦ 2-3 6 4 t 2 4
Worthington . 1-3 0 0 0 0 0
T—2:21. A—10,007. \ tV
Ohioan Pacing All Star by 83
GARDEN CITY, N.Y. (AP) - Dennis Taylar.„„pf Cleveland followed up his openinground-1422...seEiesL..with-AJL26D. performance Monday and retained the men’s division lead in the 27th annual .National All-Star Bowling Championships.
* ★ ★
Taylor’s 12-game total of 2,732 put him 83 pins in front of Milwaukee’s Mark Kuglitsch, who rolled 1330 Monday for an over-all pf 2,649 pins.
Mike Samardzija Jr. of Pontiac slipped from seventh to eighth place despite adding 1276 pins to his 1307 of the opening day.
* * .. * .
The men bowl ?ix more games Tuesday before the field is cut to 72 for Wednesday’s semifinals.
points because of film results placed third ahead of Wisconsin,
But any disappointment the 6-fool-7, 270-pounder feit at his .performance—in the Senators’ 6-1 shellacking by the New York Yankees was quickly erased when "Tirreached the clubhouse at game’s end.
* “ 7t *—
Waiting for him with a new^contract was Washington "tieneral M a n a g e r George Selkirk. Although . its figures weren’t announced, it was believed the pact, raised Howard’s pay to abotit. $56,000 -* or about $7,000 more than the one he signed last spring after a two-
u/f*pk hnlrloilt
The Men's Division Leadtr*: Dennis Taylor, Clavaland ■ Mark Kugfltsch, Mllwaukaf, WIs.
Mark KuQilTSGn, MiiwauKw*, w Billy Hardwick, Louisville/ Ky.
Wayne Zahn, Atlanta • . > i Ralph Enaan, M6n%#y, N.Y. . .
Jerry Mctlary, Danver •
Bill Lillard, Dallas -
MIKE SAMARDZIJA, PONTIAC, MICH.
Dave Soutar, Detroit
Dick Mooring, Spokane. Wash. ..
Mick McMahon, Portland, Ore.
Jim Certain, Hurttsvttte, iAt»^
The Women's Division Leaders:
Alice IvHfcey, Cincinnati Mary Baker, Central Isllp, N.Y;
June Llewellyn, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. Donna Zimmerman, Long Beach, cat. Afiene -Kotu, Mbkena. ilL ,—__ DdrisVuoburn. Buffalo, n y.
• V. iw fitv. AAn
' jubv Cook\ K»n>«s CUV; Mo. Shirley G«rrm, Cb|c»go Phylll, Not»n>, Bulf.lo. N.Y. Judy Gottsch. V«ll»y, Nob.
1445
1443
1440'
1431
iat
140*
1609
ran Dykstra, Grand Rapids, Mich.
B—2
THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 21. 1968
^SCIBataed Field in Press Prep Golf
TOP-TOP' SPEEDSHAVER* 25
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (UPI) — Speculation mounted today that a new concerted effort, will be made soon to ban turbine-powered cars from the 500-mile Speedway auto race.
Pressure to that effect is being applied by a number of influential car owners to outlaw the controversial power plant in the Memorial Day classic on grounds it "doesn’t belong” in
racing.._____________
SENTIMENT APPARENT Antiturbine sentiment became apparent last year when Parnelli Jones nearly drove the first turbocar ever in the field into victory lane. Transmission trouble less than IQ miles from the finish wrecked that bid. , It was the only turbine machine in the race and it ran away from the field, leading 171 of the 200 laps and setting 17 records in the process.
. * ★ ★
This time at least three turbines are in the field — alii identical machines from the Andy Grantelli team —and two of them emerged as the top qualifiers at record speeds last Saturday driven by Joey
<500”
Leonard and former winner Graham Hill.
The third turbine, with Art Pollard at the wheel, qualified comfortably for the fourth of the 11 rows of cars that line up for the flying start of the race.
* * *
Nine turbine cars were en tered for the race but two have been wrecked.
Whether additional turbocars make the field in the final weekend of qualifications was uncertain.
NORTH AMERICAN PHILIPS COMPANY, INC. 100 East 42nd Street New York, N.Y. 10017
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Every week AAMCO setleflee more then 10,000 transmission problems.
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Every minute and a half, someone proves . . .
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transmission to AAMCOl
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Oakland and Baldwin DAILY 1-7, SAT. 8-2 334-4951
Skippers Blank Milford Netters '
Waterford ended a four-match skid with a sound 5-0 thrashing of Milford’s netmen Monday afternoon.
In upping their mark to 3-11, the Skippers lost three games in only two of the ten sets played. Milford is 2-11.
WATERFORD I. MILFORD t Slnana
Rodger Reed def. Beck, 6-1. 4-1; Deve Lindsay def. Horton, 4-1, 6-1; and Sary Dovre def. Beaman, 4-0, 4-0.
Doublet
Al Kefke-Cralg Lukos def. Reglln-Lee, 4-3, 4-1; end Tony Poulos-Plers McDonald, def. Simule-Snyder, 4-3. 4-1.
0. Park, Franklin Score Late Wins
Some late-inning scoring enabled Oak Park and Livonia Pranlin to record Northwest Suburban Association victories yesterday.
Oak Park pushed across three markers in the seventh and downed Birmingham Groves, 5-2, while Livonia Franklin picked up two in the bottom of the eighth to nip North Farmington, 6-5.
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----i—*----i, - A
Jay Hazelroth’s single brought home the lead run for North Farmington (4-5) in the top of the seventh, but three singles and a suicide squeeze play brought two runs and the victory for Franklin (5-3) in the last of the eighth.
Dave Ekelman tossed a three-hitter, striking out 11, and he drove in three runs to pace the Oak Park (4-5) attack.
Farmlngtee ...644 *43 31—5 11 l L. Franklin .... 143 414 43—4 11 1
McCOY (3-4) and Jsntz, Collins (7); Davies, MINER (7) and Hopkins.
Pontiac Press Photo
FALLEN CHAMPION — Waterford’s Butch Fenlon, winner of the'indoor Central Michigan University two-mile title earlier in the season, ran out of gas in the regional Saturday
at Waterford and finished well back in the pack in that event. Winning the race was Douglas Latter of Grand Blanc in 9:49.1.
Northville, Andover Winners
Oak Park ........ 244 444 3 — 5
B. Groves ....... 443 444 4 — 3
D. EKELMAN (4-2) and Zan{ HOLMES and Humtnny.
Police 9 Plans Junior Tryouts
Any boys not reaching their 14th birthday by Sept. 1 who want to play in the city junior baseball program’s Pontiac Police team are asked to contact Dick Erickson at 693-1332 for a tryout this week.
Candidates must provide their own playing shoes and gloves.
3 Games Played in City Softball
Pontiac’s Slowpitch m e n ” s recreation softball program began last night with three of the five games completed.
Local 594 romped past Oxford, 13-3, as Ken Spain singled three times and scored twice.
★ ★ ★
Captain Nemo’s pounded out 14 hits in thumping the Independents, 11-6, in a game marked by six circuit clouts.
Local 594 held Grubb’s Kennels to three hits in posting a 9-4 triumph.
Cougars Face Tornadoes in Home Contest
The Detroit Cougars meet the winless Dallas Tornadoes at Tiger Stadium tonight in a North American Soccer League match.
k k A
Half a dozen Cougars are sidelined by injuries, but Gus Moffatt, the 20-year-old Scottish forward who was the first player injured in early spring training, will be back in the lineup aifter recovering from a broken ankle.
•k k + ■
The Cougars hold ,third place Carpentry Engineering rolled!in the league’s Lakes Divisiop past Haggerty Lumber, 20-14,1 with a 3-4 record while Dallas and Penny Manufacturing!will have on show several new downed Liberty, 4-2, in Walled I players from Turkey, Britain Lake Industrial softball action and the Netherlands in an at-last night. tempt to boost its 0-8-1 record.
Waterford Kettering on
Kimball Doubles Up'
Royal Oak Kimball doubled its efforts after losing three of the four singles matches to Hazel Park Monday and posted a 4-3 victory by sweeping the doubles. The Knights are 10-4 and Hazel Park is 5-9.
RO KIMBALL 4, HAZEL PARK 3 SIlMlBS
Dave Fulton (HP) def. D. Richards, 4*1# 4-2; Nell Austin (K) def. Whitcroft, 4-1 4-4; Dave Tomczyk (HP) def. Vura, 6-4, 7-5/ and John Mayors (HP) def. Jatho, 7-5, 7-5.
Wes Rlchards-Bob Matter (K) def. Floch-Shirley, 6-1, 7-5; Ken Marks-M. Miller (K) def. Ayotte-Baker, 6-0, 3-6, 6-4; Larry Marks-Joe Uren (K) daf. Tar-kowski-Kropinack, 7-5, 6-0.
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---ISS Rochester Hd., RochMter—
(Vi Mila South of Rochester) 6,51 -5500
Waterford Township continued its sports domination of archrival Kettering this year by whipping the Captains, 70-48, in the annual track meet yesterday.
The losing Captains won eight events — including doubles by hurdler Bill Penoza and dashman Tim Donaldson—but the WTHS crew had sufficient depth to sweep three events.
The victory gives the Skippers 3 650-100 lead in the All-Sports
WATRRFORD 74, K1TTIRINO 44
TWO MILE RUN — Butch Fenlon (W) Moffat (W), Bond (W) time 10:24.2.
440 RELAY — Kettering, time 1:35.4:
MILE RUN Brian Schultz (W) Russell (W), Hooker (K), 4:44.5.
120 HIGH HURDLES — Bill Ptnoza (K), Willis (W). Lines (K), :14.4.
440 RUN — Kevin Beabe (K), Galloway (W). Loveless (W), 1:54.6.
440 DASH — Steve Gobler (K), Thomas (W). Daly (W), ;53.5.
100 DASH ----Tim Donaldson (K),
Horton (W), Pankner (K), : 10.5
ISO LOW HURDLES — Bill Penoza (K), Willis (W). Shaw (W), :21.6.
220 DASH — Tim Donaldson (K), Horton (W), Pankner (K), :24.9.
MILE RELAY — Waterford, time 3:33.7.
HIGH JUMP — Larry Biskner (W) Linas (K), Nixon (W), height *4.
LONG JUMP — Nell Blackmer (W) Biskner (W), Horoon (W), distance 21-5.
SHOT PUT — Gena Pankner (K) Kressboch (W), McPherson (K), distance 564.
POLE VAULT — Tim Martin (W), Biskner (W), Saffron (W), height 12-6.
Trophy. WKIIS’ lone points among the 900 came in basketball. Waterford has won the trophy now 5 of 7 years,
The meet was highlighted by Gene Pankner’s 56-6 heave in the shot put.
JffttHof '
ABR H HR RBI Avt.
Brown .............. 11 2 5 1 2
Horton ........... 106 17 33 10 23
Froehan .......... 129 18 36 4 20
Kalina ........... 124 22 33 3 15
Northrup ......... 114 20 30 4 15
Stanlay .......... 103 14 25 2 9
Wart ............. 129 12 30 3 11
McAutiffa ........ 124 20 25 5 15
Mafchik .......... 19 14 0 5
Oyler ............. 87 5 16 1 7
Matttews . ......... 21 2 4 1 3
Cash .............. 60 6 10 1 5
Price .............. 13 1 2 0 2
Tracawskl .......... 26 4 3 0 1
Aquinas Losing 'Red'
Southfield Blanks Kimball,Nears Crown in SEMA
Southfield’s Blue Jays moved step closer to the baseball championship in the Southeastern Michigan Association yesterday by blanking Royal Oak Kimball, 5-0.
The victory
W. Bloomfield Edges Milford
•- - ------- t —
Lakers Win in' 11 th; Clarkston Stumbles
Two of the winners Wayne-Oakland League baseball action yesterday traveled the come-from-behind route in bagging the decisions.
Down 2 -1, league-leading Northville (11-2) came on to hand Clarkston (7-6) a 6-2 setback, and Bloomfield Andover (6-6) spotted Holly (6-7) an early 1-0 lead and battled back to claim a 2-1 verdict.
Southfield’s loop mark to 9-3, leaving only Birmingham Seaholm standing in the way of a title for the Blue Jays. And they could remove that obstacle when the two tangle tomorrow.
In another SEMA game, Seaholm (8-5) downed Femdale (6-6-1), 7-2.
STARTS JAYS
Rocky Roe started Southfield on the way to victory in the first with a 400-foot home run. The Jays came up with four more in the fifth on a two-run single by Doug Digue, a wild pitch and a sacrifice fly.
Seaholm opened with three runs in the first and closed with three in the seventh to stop Femdale. George Metcalf paced the attack with three singles and five RBI.
WINS IN Uth
In a more conventional manner, West Bloomfield’s Lakers (5-8) picked up a run in the raised bottom of the 11th to hand
GRAND RAPIDS (UPI) -Dick (Red) Dorabos, athletic director add head basketball coach at Aquinas College, .
Monday announced he 1 s,Firntofir,m..jl"X; *** IJ? i-a.'i.! resigning.
Milford (7-6) its fourth loss in a row, 4-3.
k k k
RBI singles by Pat Cayley and Fred Holdsworth in the fourth enabled Northville to tie Clarkston at 2-2, and Barry Primeau put a little icing on the cake with a two-run single in the sixth.
A single, double and sacrifice fly produced the two runs in the first for Clarkston.
ERRORS DECISIVE
A throwing error enabled Mike Appleby to race home in the top of the seventh with the winning run for Andover. Appleby had singled and moved to second on one error and score on another. Mike Irving went the distance fOF Andover and posted seven strikeouts. He’s
RO klmktll j................... 1 . ?“?W-d °n,y tW° Carned ^ in
SouttiffsM .........1 444 4 4 x — 3 7 3 31% UinUlgS.
Clarksltn ......... 3444444 — 1 4 3
Northvlll* ........ 444311 X —6 11 I
JOHNSON, Ostrom (5) and Ktynr; HOLDSWORTH (6-1) snd Cayley.
17th Annual Event Slated at PCC Frid
This year's edition of the Pon-tiac Press Invitational Golf Tournament shapes up as the t balanced in the history of the event.
The 17th annual running of the tourney is slated for Friday over 18 holes at Pontiac Country Club.
Bloomfield Hills Andover has dominated the tournament for the past seven years, but it appears the Barons do not have the balance this season to challenge the favorites.
TEAM CHOICES
On that favorite's list are Walled Lake, Waterford, South-field and Pontiac Central. k k k
Defending champion Kettering has been rebuilding and it takes a big afternoon for the Captains to retain the field in the field of 25 teams,
WON TWICE
Walled Lake has won the title twice, the last time in 1963, and the Vikings fared better than Waterford in the regional play Friday. Walled Lake placed fourth and Waterford fifth.
★ ★ ★ •
Southfield has never won the event, but the Blue Jays served notice they’ll have to be reckoned with when they won a Class A regional at Farmington Thursday.
The 25, four-man teams will start teeing off at 9:30 a.m. An awards banquet is slated at the. club for 4 p.m. -
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Shrine Hands Detroit Foe 2-0 Setback
Royal Oak Shrine received a. big boost in its bid for a berth in the Detroit Catholic League playoffs while defeating Holy Redeemer, 2-0, yesterday afternoon.
Jim Chiesa’s two-hit hurling and 14 strikeouts stopped Holy Redeemer and boosted the Knights to 8-2 in the AA Section race, while Redford St. Mary upset Bishop Gallagher, 3-2, and dropped the losers to 7-2. k k k
Bishop Gallagher must beat Holy Redeemer Wednesday to force a sectional playoff with Shrine for the berth in the league elimination series.
An error enabled Bob Szost-kowskl to score the game’s first run for Shrine in the fifth in-ning.
k k k
In Sunday Catholic diamond action, Orchard Lake St. Mary, gained its second Northwest triumph, 6-0, over Femdale St. James as Tim Megge tossed a one-hitter and struck out 14.' Don Bywalec cracked a two-run double for OLSM.
Birmingham Brother Rice raised its record to 9-6 by walloping Salesian, 11-0. Bob Wbllenberg and Marv Dudek combined on a one-hitter. The Warriors are 4*3 in the Central Division circuit.
Hufy Redssmsr . 644 4(4 4 — 6 1 S’ RO Ihrllt# .... 446 611 X —1 3 S
DUNN and Garcia; CHIESA (7-3) and Szostkowfki.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, MAY 21, 1908
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Veterans Lead-Regional USGA Qualifying
ANGELIC NIGHT FOR FREG08I—Short-atop Jim Fregoai of the California Angela aljdea across the plate just before Boston catcher Elston Howard can make the tag in the third Inning of their game last night at
Anaheim. Fregoai tripled and came hAnie on a sacrifice fly- He homered in the first, doubled in the eighth and plated the winning run with an llth-lnning single in the 5-4 contest.
Bosox Rue Delays Strategy
Angels Gamer -Inning Win
Fregosi Completes
Cycle Ends Game Chicago White Sox 2-1 on six out single offloser Jack Fisher
- ' 5.14a Mnn^a.r naa.lt. «*ial,naf .A iris. A . in iUn lliia..} innin.f
By The Associated Press It isn’t as if the Boston Red Sox didn’t know any better; they can tell when a guy is on a hitting streak as well as anybody. It was just that they couldn’t push the winning run across before Jim Fregosi got up to bat again.
Fregosi was murdering the Red Sox all night Monday — a homer in the first inning, a triple in the third, a double in the eighth — and when Rico Petro-celli’s ninth-inning homer tied the score for Boston, the Sox desperately had to find a way to stop Fregosi.
INTENTIONAL PASS In the bottom of the ninth, they came up with an accepts ble method, giving him an intentional walk with two out and a man on second.
Neither team could score into the 11th and with two out and a runner at second again, the Sox took an awful chance. They pitched to Fregosi.
★ ★ ★
Moments later, the ball was bouncing off the left field wall, Fregosi had his cycle, the. An gels had their 5-4 victory and the Red Sox had their lesson for the evening.
Fregosi sewed three runs and drove in twoi as the Angels took a 3-0 lead that was shortened by solo homers from George Scott and Elston Howard. Petrocelli’s shot came with two out in the ninth.
BOSTON CALIFORNIA
ab r h bl ab r h bl
Andrews 2b 40 10 School 3b 0 0 T O Foy 3b 4 0 0 0 Fragosl sa 5 3 4 2 Ysfrmskl If 5 0 10 Repaz Cl 5 0 10 RSmlth cf 4 0 2 0 Mlnchar 1b 4 1 3 2 Horrelaon rf 5 11 0 Relchardt If 5 0 2 1 Scott lb 5 111 JHoll rf 2 0 0 0 Petroclli IS 5 12 2 Hinton rf 2 0 0 0 EHoward c 4 111 Rodgoro c 5 0 10 Santiago p 2 0 0 0 Brgmeler pr 01 00 Tartabull ph 1 0 0 0 Knoop 2b 3 0 10 Lyle p 0 0 0 0 Brunet p 2 0 0 0 DJones ph 10 10 Krkntrlek ph 1 0 o 0 WalawskT -----HI---
0 0 0 0 Ro|a. p
Morton ph Heffner p Wright p .$e_trl*n9.,ph.
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 00 0 0 0 0 0
Total 40 4104 Total 40 5 13 5 Two out when winning run scored
Boston ........0 0 0 0 1 0 102 00—4
California . 101 000 010 4 1— J
DP—Colifomlo 2. LOB—Boston 4,
Collfornlo 10. 2B—Rolchordt, Fregoai, .Mlnchor, 3B-Freooil. HR—Fregoai (1), E.Howard (2), Scon (1), Petrocflli (4). SB—Rolchordt, $—Morion, Andrews, Knoop. SF—Mlnchor,
Orioles Nip Chicago,-Yankees 6-1 Winners
BALTIMORE (AP) - Jim Hardin stopped the streaking
hits Monday night, riding to victory on a two-run Boog Powell homer that ended Baltimore’s three-game losing streak,
The loss ended Chicago’s four-game winning streak Powell connected for his sev-
Old Age Halts Table Net Ace
County7* Paul Collis Stars in Tournament
Age
Collis
week
caught up with Paul of Pleasant Ridge last in the Oakland County table tennis championships.
C511is, 61, had the senior men’s singles championship in sight until he ran out of gas.
Competing in men’s singles, one of the area’s top players a few years back, started by ousting Robert Tunnell, who is half of the Michigan State Recreation c h a m p i o n s h i p doubles team. Next, he downed Howard Heckmen, then John Whettlaufer, but he dropped a 21-17, 21-17, 21-18 decision to defending champion Robert Quinn of Madison Heights in the finals.
DOUBLES FINALS Moving to the senior men’s doubles, Collis teamed with Robert Holmes of Royal Oak and made it to the finals only to lose a 21-18, 20-22, 21-12 verdict to Perc Secord and Vic Corpron.
If ■ -W W '2 "
Santiago ........
Lylo .,,,§§§ . Waslewikl (L.2-5) Brunet ........
Then came the senior men’s singles. Collis advanced to the finals but he was exhausted after all the other activity and defaulted in the finale to Terry Fraser of Pontiac.
—OAKLAND COUNTY TABLE TENNIS 1051 Champion.
Men's Singles—Robert Quinn def -Paul Collis/ Woman'/ Singlet—Sylvia Hepier del Marlyn Feldman.
Boy*' Singlet s Bill Lettner def Jeff Smart; Junldr Singlet—Bill Lettner def Rick Thompton.
Girls' Singlet—Nancy Hayd dot Debbie Stuckut. ,
Women’* Doubt** — Marlyn Feldman-
_______ Sylvia Hepier dot Sue Otler-Barbr*
TP----H- IMtR BB SO smart. ,,
■1 4 3 3 2 10 j. Men's Doublet—Sid Brlltin-Bob Holmet
•• I • 4 1 1 T 2 def Howard Hackman-Tarry Fratar.
Senior Mtn'i Doubles— Pore Secord-VIc
r 4J.......... 14 1
• 2'“
Saving Grace . _ . „„ 3-,w
2nd—(1000 Claiming Pace; 1 Mllat Etha Pearl • » * 2 “
Johnnie W. Wilton » J0 J-*®
Tuesday 1.00
Dally Doubl*! (1-1) Paid (M.M 3rd—01000, Cond. Tret; 1 MU*:
Seattle KOthy 7.00 4.40 3.40
Greek Dancer J-J®
Pastime Mary Maray .............. 5.00
4th—(1000 Cend. Pace; 1 Mile:
j?T?i Linksmcm Holds Own Celebration
Frank Rodrigues celebrate^ two events Sunday. »
34 4 12 6_Total .s i i ij First, it was his 22nd wedding
J o i o o o'o ( oCffanniversary, and second, he carded hiS first hole-in-one at Rammler Golf Club in Detroit.
Rodrigues, 55, managed the ace oh the 170-yard 18th using a 6-iron. He carded a 77 for the round.
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Wind Spllttar Specmarc 5tlv—(3500 Stake Pice; Adios Nancy'
Jarvis Lyn Swinging Sister
7.40 4.60 3.40 7.40 4.40 6.M
Mil*
0.00 4.20 3.20 5.60 4.40 12-40.
5.40
Claiming Hdp. Tret; 1 Mile: ■ Beron Cel 22.80 6.20 4.40
Mona R. 3.00 3.40
Speedy Nibble PerMcta: (4-7) Paid *IM(
7th—si 300 Cend. Pace; 1 Mllat
Twilight Express 3.80 2.60 2.60
Soorster 3.00 3.40
Cheryl Fador \ 3.60
(th—832M Cend. Pace; 1 Milai
Spike R. L. 17.40 6.80 3.M
The Yankee Girl . „ 3.20 2.40
Tuscola King 3.00
tth—(1300 Cond. Pace; 1 Mila: .
Guv Reed 17.20 7.2o 3.00
Trefoil Kathy .. 0.20 3.00
Tar Duke 2.40
10th—(17M Claiming Hdp. Pact; 1 Mile: Renard 9.20 5.S0 3.40
Oliver Direct Dancer
Parfecta: (5-4) Paid (134.20
Hazel Park Entries
Agee.
WEDNESDAY'S ENTRIES 1st—42504 Mdn. Claiming; 5 Furlongs:
Sir Gerald 112 Whiskey Runner 112
Run for All log Shell's Delight
Pension Fund 112 Miss Supervlc
Tiger Feathers 112 Maid of Galileo 107
Taronno* 112
2nd—(ISM Claiming; 4V5 Furlongs:
Scythe 119 'Nother Side
Grey Pegasus 117 Teth Barr
Sun SWebp 115 Voter's. Choice
Lightheaded 117 Outflnlsh
Cool That . 112
3rd—(ISM Claiming; 4 Furlongs:
Time to Sing. 11S Cherion Lark e-Jen Beau 11( Common Joy b-Buzzer 118 Kaye's Ruler
Twisted Laurel 118 Crafty Bet c-T«lume 115 a-Gallant Gyre
c-Tex. to Kansas 11( b-Royal Sub
e-H. Wilson A D. Foley entry b-W. W. Lofton entry c-Mrs. N. Pelmermo-D. Biggs entry 41 h—S35M Claiming} 4 Furlongs:
Emerald Chief 117 Snap Pigeon S. 115 Top Display 110 Big Flakey LI'I Orph'n Andy 1T4 Sally Tee Golden Phantom 112 5th—(45M Claiming; 5 Furlongs:
Kura Count 107 Miss Sassy W. Patrick J. 115 Roaming Chris 114
Balance Sheet 115 Queen's Court 115 Johnny's Jury 110 Roman LaugM'r 115 Deviate ' .112
4th—(30M Allowance; iVt Furlongs: Hunkl* Sue 107 Epple's Luck
Country 'Match 112 Star Gage Glenrlck 107 Miss Miche
Countess Marian 107 Petare's Lass Sweet and Rich 112 Nan G.
7th—*4500 Claiming; 418 Furlongs: Dardanus 112 Crimson Beau 115
Papa W. 115 Extra Expensi
Burn 'Em Up 117 Gem's spy Ith—(35M Claiming; 1 Mila:
Taylor H. 115 Bagpipe Honey Biscuit 112 Pop Top Remit Please 116 Tan Bethal 9th—(25M Claiming; 1 Mile:
D'Iberville 119 Sword Lancer Saline River 115 Cameron G.
Ram's Horn 115 T*
—119 She's Be Lovely IIP
LOB—Pittsburgh l New York 0. 2B— Clendenon. 36—M.AIou. HR—Charles 2 (5). S—Kooeman.
IP HR ER BB SO
Veal* (L.2-4) .. ( 7 2 2 3 10
Koosman (W.4-2) .9 S 1 1 2 10
WP—Koosmen. T—2:41. A—12,221.
sanprancltc* ..ooi o ( i ooi— 5
Atlanta ......... 010 002 1(1 — 4
OP—Atlanta 2. LOB—San Francisco 7, Atlanta 7. 2B—Dietz, Tillman. 3B—Dlatz. HR—Hart (0), Torre (1). S—P.NIekro.
IP H R ER BB SO
Marlchal .......... 0 0
Llnzy (L,l-4) ...... 0 3
Thl* Is a little at—tha
- Im EltM Wag# oJuaJlalaa
ugar ia inv PW| iwVfnitinf
go KINO EDWARD
Amerlce't Largest Sailing Cigar
my (
Nwkrl
Raymond (W,24) ..1 3 11
HBP—Mancbal (C.Boyer). P.NIekro. Balk—Marlchal. T—2:54.
1 4,
0 0
Hazel Park Results
MONDAY'S RESULTS 1st—(25M Claiming; 4 Furlongs; Enlightment 6.00 5.M 3.M
Reign Princess 16.40 (.40
Jr.'s Plate 3.40
lnd—I25M Claiming; ( Furlongs:
Shiloh Spring 40.80 14.80 6.40
Added Money 5.20 3.40
Foot Hills 2.80
Dally Double: (4-4) Paid (277.80 3rd—52500 Mdn. Claiming; ( Furlongs: Crow Y'AII 5.M 4.M 3.20
Miss Medina 6.40 4.40
My Molly Brown 5.40
4lb—(27M Claiming; 4V5 Furlongs: Prominence 5.80 3.60 2.40
Ravel Wiggle 4.00 2.H
Royal Antigua 3.20
5th—SUM Claiming; 1 1/4 Mile:
Presto Feet ------------ 4.20 3.M 2.40
Lanore Pride 10.40 7.00
Summer Price* 4.40
4tl>—S35M Claiming; 4 Furlongs:
Michigan Miss 9.80 5.20 3.40
Kilty Kathy 7.M 5.M
Delturro 3.20
Opt. Twin Double: (4-5) Paid (10.20 7th—(4000 Allowance; ( Furlongs:
Board Marker 3.20 2.40 2.40
Take Silk ' 3.N 2.M
Maw Nipper 4.00
Ith—(MOO Claiming; 1 1/( Milo:
Arrc Flash 20.M 9.M 5.00
Don Fernando ” . 5.40 3.M
Summer ATIIanc* 5.20
9th—(JM0.Claiming, Ht Mile:
Saklbum ' 20.20 0.40 5.80
6.40 5.M Roteberry 3.40 3.40
3.40 Encantador 5.M
twin Double: (4-S-4-4) .Paid 54,022.80 (9)
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 21, 19f»8
Committee to Draft Campaign-Cost Bill
LANSING (AP)—Secretary of State James Hare has appointed an 18-member nonpartisan committee to recommend legislation for reporting political campaign expenses.
Present laws are “meaningless and a monstrosity/’ he said.
ft 4t k
“We should either have a good Taw or none at ait/’ added. Hare, chief state elections' officer.
Bills aimed at tightening the laws died in the Legislature, , ‘NO WITCH HUNT’
Hare said he is not interested In a*“witch-hunt” or “an investigation into past questioning practices."
Hare said Increasingly enormous sums of money are needed to run for public office. These sums are not being accounted for, he said.
•k k ★
“We’re all aware of the almost unlimited methods of
Damage Soars in City Blazes
Fire damage in Pontiac in the first third of 1968 is more than triple that of the same period last year — largely due to several major building blazes.
been caused by 491 fires this year, as compared to about $96,000 in damage in 229 fires through April 30,1967.
k k k
The 161 building fires in 1968 Include a $70,000 blaze April 8 at Herrington Hills Eementary School, a $35,000 fire in a commercial building at 695 Auburn Jan. 28 and a $13,000 fire in a grill at 49 N. Saginaw Jan. 30.
In the first third of 1967, 103 building fires occurred.
k k k
A second major increase is reflected in grass and brush fires, of which 221 have been extinguished in 1968 as opposed to 50 in the same perioid last year.
Two persons have died in fires this year, the same number as through April 30, 1967.
fund-raising that don’t violate the letter of the law, but they certainly bruise its spirit,” Hare said.
He said he also is concerned about the voter-registration law. ft requires citizens to vote every" two years or be taken off the voter list.
He predicted this would result In a "substantial” decrease in the number of voters -in- the next presidential election.
Hare said he is afraid many citizens, particularly those in; the core cities, are not aware of,
the new law-......
COMMITTEE MEMBERS
Named to cochair the committee were Mrs. Pat McNamara, widow of the U. S., senator from Detroit, and Raymond Plank, Ludington television executive.
Other members of the committee are:
El wood Bender of Muskegon Community College; Wayne
County Circuit Court Judge George Bowles; D. Hale Brake, former state treasurer and Detroit attorney; A^ern Cohn, Democratic party fund-raiser of Detroit; Tom Downs, Detroit attorney; the Rt. Rev. Richard S. Emtfch, Episcopal Bishop of Michigan; Mrs. Margaret
Foerch of the Michigan League of Women Voters; Douglas
Fraser, United Auto Workers, Detroit;
k k k
Morris Gleicher, Detroit adverttsingexeeutive;-Marcu& Gray, Calhoun County , Clerk Art Leutscher, Muskegon city clerk; Hudson Mead, Detroit attorney; Joseph Parisi of East Lansing, Michigan Townships Association; John Smith, De
troit elections director; and Steven Toth of Bay City, Bay County Clerk.
'Suharto, 19 Bigwigs Unharmed'
Jakarta Reports Plot Is Foiled
SENTENCE CHANGED -S. Edward Bloom, Chicago lawyer convicted of criminal’ contempt for allegedly filing a spurious will for probate, had his two-year prison term thrown out yesterday by the Illinois State Supreme Court.
JAKARTA (AP) - The Indonesian government foiled a plot two months ago to kill President Suharto and 19 of his generals and cabinet ministers and as they prayer at a mosque, officials at the presidential palace said Monday.
It was reported seven men had'key roles in the abortive assassination attempt. All have been arrested and will be tried by a military court, military sources said.
k k k
Officials said the plot was inspired'by the Communists but that some of these involved were still at large. Several alleged Communists serving in the army were arrested in Jakarta last week, but it was not
Ambulance BUlYoteNear
LANSING (UPI) - Counties wottld be able to contract with private ambulance services, according to a bill coming up for a final vote in the Senate.
The House-passed bill also would require ambulance drivers to pass the advanced Red Cross first aid course, be at least 21 years old, and obtain a special license costing $5 annually.
Policemen and firemen would be exempt from the requirements.
★
Ambulances would be licensed under the bill’s provisions at a $25 fee and would have to have a rear-door opening, a Bashing red light, a siren, oxygen equipment and first-aid equipment.
_______________
known how many in all would be implicated in the plot.
The mass assassination was to have been sprung while Suharto and his top officials knelt at the mosque on the grounds of the president's Merdeka Palace during a Moslem festival March 9, the palace officials said.
HAND GRENADE8
Officers said the plotters planned to hurl hand grenades into the small mosque while Suharto and his group were on their knees.
* * *
Security agents unearthed the plot several davs before, officials said, and arrested an army captain and several other soldiers. Several newsmen were also reportedly picked up. News of the plot was withheld to aid the investigation.
It was the first reported at-tempt against the life df the 47-year-old former army general since he took the reins of power from President Sflkarno early in 1966. Sukarno's ouster came after the collapse of a pro-Commu-nist coup attempt and a nationwide massacre of Communist party- members in retaliation for the favored position they held under Sukarno.
Sources said the 67-year-old former president is not believed to have had any part in the plot against his successor, Sukarno
lives in his old summer palace in Bogor and is closely guarded.
★ k k
Others reported marked for dejth in the plot included Gen Abdul Haris Nasution, chairman of Indonesia’s Congress, and Suharto’s close associate, and Foreign Minister Adam Malik, longtime opponent of Sukarno and the Communists.
Also on the list were the air force and army commanders the deputy army commander and the capital’s military com mander, sources added.
2,500 March,
Protest Odor
KALAMAZOO '(UPI) -Residents of this southwestern Michigan city are raising a stink over a pungent odor that’ hovers over the east side.
Some 2,500 marchers paraded two miles from their east side homes to the City Building Monday night. Spokesman met with the City Commission.
The commission unanimously endorsed a proposal, submitted by City Engineer Donald H. Swets, to clean up Lagoon No. 5 temporarily, and to have it covered entirely and cleaned up within three years.
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It's time for a study break. This young coed is turning to the * School News pages of The Pontiac Press. In The Press every Tuesday
and Friday the articles on these pages give full coverage to local school news. ——-----^ T
d - -- 1—i-|---J ||
Not only are students interested in these articles, but parents as well. They all want to know what todays youth is doing. Read -————-r——these up-to-date reports every Tuesday and Friday in The Pontiac
impress.
THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, MAY 21, 19fiB
Hg J :f ■
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H. Humphrey.
Espousing the politics of joy and happiness, Humphrey, has suggested equal time be given, to those who discuss the good
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WASHINGTON (AP) - President Johnson may have added a new phrase to the 1968 political lexicon: "Bad-mouthing our country.”
Johnson used the term twice in apparently extemporaneous asides while addressing a philanthropic banquet in New York Monday night.
WWW
He returned to Washington immediately after the speech. Johnson didn't accuse anyone L of. .‘ bad mouthing” and didn't relate it directly to the presidential campaign. But the entire context of his speech made it evident he looks with something less than full approval on much of the campaign oratory.
(Advtrtlitmtnt)
■i a a ■■ || m £ || FATAL SICKNESS JLTLXJ! ® Talking to affluent patrons of
you i*t r*iiti from throbbini toothach*Cpain*; tire Arthritis Foundation, John-Sra&J&TLSSosa-hl. l^ison said: “I simply refuse to ac-
anseSsm ^-r*,‘vicept the diagnosis of fatal sick-
____• » iMMkHptao.'ness in our society—and I refuse
OPH"J0I V-T^.^lto follow those who say that.”
1 The quote “refuse to follow”
LBJ Blasts Those Who 'Bad Mouth Our Country'
In the statement apparently sprang spontaneously from his lips.
* ★ *\ ,
He went on; "I refuse to accept the diagnosis of indifference in our society—and I say shame on you who point that out.”
Once again, the "shame on
you" remark seemingly was off the cuff.
The burden of the President's speech jwas that the nation can solve Its problems and is not sick, Indifferent or racist. TEARING DOWN
But he repeatedly returnedTb the thought that some individu-
als, unnamed, are tearing down rather than building up the country.
America's problems, he said, "will not be solved if we giye way to crippling dispair or to bad-mouthing our country all day long or all week long.”
Johnson said the problems “will be solved by the impati-
They re too much fuss and bother."
What’s your excuse?
ence of the American people— but not by pessimism and the bad-mouthing of the American people.”
Neither reference to “bad-mouthing’ was in his prepared text.
Presumably, the President was not alluding to one of the potential presidential candidates—Vice President Hubert
about the country in con-to those who find fault.
Johnson acknowledged the United States has its faults, and added in another extemporaneous statement that these are faults “of which we are constantly reminded.”
More specifically, he cited problems of poverty, racism, ignorance and Illness which “still plague us.”
But he cited his administration’s record io health, education and civil rights to argue "we are on the move” and that only despair, pessism and “bad-mouthing” can delay their solution.
Among those who greeted the President at the dinner were Edwin L. Weisi, New York’s Democratic national committee-man and long-time Johnson friend, and investment banker Sidney J. Weinberg, prominent financial backer of Humphrey.
Johnson said he attended the banquet only after receiving
iron-clad assurances no candidates would be present and that there would be no partisan speeches.
* A *
Declaring he was very relaxed and happy, the President said: “It’s a wonderful feeling being able to count the days instead of the votes."
a wise
bird
‘SHAME ON YOU’—Head up and then down, President Johnson speaks in New York last night saying “shame on you” to persons claiming America is a sick society. He said the country’s problems cannot be solved by “bad-mouthing our country all day long or all week long.”
Funeral Today
KALKASKA (AP) - Service | was scheduled today for Fred H. Tomkins, 87, former Kalkaska village president and a founder of the National Trout Festival. He died Friday at
who sees his lawyer before signing anything ..in regard to buying or building his dream home. In any real estate transaction, protect yourself with the competent legal advice that only a lawyer can give you. His fee is reasonable.
There should bo a lawyer in your life. It, you don't have one. call your local bar association or contact the State Bar of Michigan, Lansing 48914.
Published to save lives in cooperation with The Advertising Council, the National Safety Council, The international Newspaper Advertising Executives.
The Pontiac Press
2 Colleges Offer 'Panic •Clinics' for Exam Week
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) - At least two California state colleges will operate “panic clincs” to help students cope with the emotional pressures of final examination week starting May 31.
“If we can prevent one attempted suicide, the entire proj ect will be worth the effort.” said Dr. Suzanne A. Snivley of the Sacramento State College health clinic.
★ ★ 1 J5r
The college will provide special therapy^ with faculty, doe-tors and other students. A simi lar program is planned-at Ban Fernando State College.
“This is an experiment designed to help our students meet their emotional pressures at time when they are most fatigued and upset after a busy | year at school,” Dr. Snivley said.
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fcdward J MtVIcar, Dtfrolt, and Judith E. i nomas, orchard
Oitll Lima. Madison Haights, and Marie L. Mortbrd, iroy Albert R. Wyatt, 96 Mansfield and
Patricia O. tucker, 96 W. Manstltld Owen t, Pierce. Walled Lake
and
Robert C. Shepherd, Hai6l Park add Ruth K. bavalox. Birmingham Ronald T. Hedrick, Troy, and Dianne S. Probst, Troy
James R. O'Neil. Clarkston and
Charlotte K. Yerge, Miltbrd John F. Zobel. Troy and Mary L Langan, Troy
Carl, .A.-Ambvster_,_l B/Ioxl Miss, and
__________________ and
Lorame M. Montgomery, >43 Nevada Joseph E. Curelo, Lincoln Park and Sandra K. Kelsey, Walled Lake..
Richard C. Irwin, Oxford and Cathleen J. Gedert, Oxford
ROBIN MALONE
By Bob Lubbers
THE BERRYS
By Carl Gruberf
North wants to
Q—The bidding has been:
be in game but, N T does not have 1 the potential to try for the 11 tricks n e c e s -
South West North East Pass ?
You, North, hold:
4X2 ¥32 ♦ A J 8 7 6 5 4732 What do you do?
„mil„ .___. > A—Bid three no-trump. You
JACOBY sary to make a gon>t h*Ve any interest in try-minor suit game. ; iiac for an 11-trick game but
. There is ho reason to shilly- you do want to try for a no-shally and he jumps to three! trump game, no-trump. No guaranty of suc-| TODAY’S QUESTION cess goes with this bid but If Again your partner opens one you wait for guaranteed games no-trump. This time you hold: you will be a losing player. 4K32 ¥2 ♦AQJ865 4Q62 Winning players push for What do you do now? games. ! Answer Tomorrow
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. II): Day proves stimulating because you make numerous Contacts. Various views are expressed. Check past notes, opinions. One who is conservaliva, experienced Is on rTght irackrL-tsten.
PISCES (Feb. t»-March 20):
■y SYDNEY OMARR "The wise man controls his destiny ...
Astrology paints the way."
for Wednesday
ARIES (March 21-April If): Cycle con. tlnues high. Your natural desire to lead,
pioneer comes surging to forefront. You' , forthcomino If you
gain Inner knowledge. Someone comes to •JJJjJji assionment Get what's comina you with confession and compliment- You )0 y0(J jome may try t0 convince you to
TAURUS (April KMAey 20): Obtain hint ■«•£* up ,or your rlflh,i-
from ARIES message. Today you . find! P™"*' Possessions-
"ourself Involved with group activity.! |F WEDNESDAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY
rly. You decided to follow an ideal and you were independent enough to do so. Now you are ready to make changes at home,
igei
move, to bolster domestic ties.
★ ★ ★
GENERAL TENDENCIES: Cyclt high for ARIES, TAURUS, GEMINI. Special word to LIBRA: be aware of necessity for public relations.
Best to work behind the scenes. Be quiet, within and answers will be forthcoming., °1„y0VJI.2r"
Don't push.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Accent on how you attain goals. Analyze desires — find out whether you are hanging on to lost cause. Don't stubbornly insist on old patterns. A friend shows you how to break new ground.
CANCER (June 21~Jvly 22): Take notes.
What Is being dohe at the top could be Improved; know this. Be observant. Later today you may have opportunity to express own Ideas. Be reedy. Have facts at hand.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Enlarge view.
Broaden scope of activity. Let ethers know that you do have definite views.
Advertise. Write, publish, travel. Move about today. Shaka off lathargy. Gat going.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sapt. 22): Straighten out accounts. Be practical In financial affairs. Your thoughts could wander afar: to travel, to relatives at a distance. Catch up on correspondence. Begin saving money.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Lunar position emphasizes ways of dealing with opposition. Check details- If, observant, you could make valuable discovery. Mate, partner makes key suggestion. Follow through.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You tend to be Impulsive, but today practice restraint in dealing with neighbors, coworkers and relatives. Some may goad you — many want you to explode.
Surprise them by turning on charm.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Good lunar aspect today coincides with creative endeavors, romance. Activity connected with children also indicated. Bring forth hidden talents. Break through red tape.
Act.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 1 *) :
Individual connected with charitable organization could solicit your opinion or money. Help those willing to aid themselves. Emphasis today on home, property, real estate.
Daily
Almanac
By United Press International
Today is Tuesday, May 21, the 142nd day of 1968 with 224 to follow.
The moon is between its last quarter and new phase, ■'‘'it.......~W... *...----
.The morning stars are Mercury and Jupiter.
On this day in history:
In 1832 what is considered the first Democratic National Convention got underway, in
-Baltimore.-----------
★ ★ " ★
In 1881 Clara Barton organized the first American Red Cross in Washington.
In 1941 President Roosevelt proclaimed “an unlimited state of national emergency.’ , ■
In., J.962 the A m e r i ca n Medical Association labeled President Kennedy’s proposed Medicare legislation a “cruel hoax.”
The following is a list of recent Pontiac area,, births as recorded at the Oakland County Clefk’s Office (by name of father):
Donald M. Miller, *52 Ashburnham (Twins)
Ronald G. Ray, Keego Harbor -Robert J. Whitney, 388 E. Btvd (Twins)
William G. Amon, 7, E. Prlnreton Freddie R. Hasting. 5*01 Hanley Perry J. Le!tch,»Oxford Robert A. Mlze|ewskf, 915 Sheffield Ralph Hawkins, Walled Lake
—Joseph FrMar5hi1t, 42 Ctiartes--"~
Mlchael Meitner ttt, 1090'Voorheu H. Michael Clancy, 2449 Hempstead
Mitchell H. Griggs, 7* Mathews James R. Laing, Drayton Plains Larry S. Nanli, Walled Lake Albert T. Tomanek, 51 E. Sheffield Herald L. Yokley. ai s. aird. w.
THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 21, 1968
lr * .....~ j
B—9
Emergencies—Part of Ambulance Routine
Pontiac Pratt Photo*
Disfigurements and Death ^Commonplace to Drivers
(EDITOR’S NOTE — Following are inter- same. Their trade, it would appear, is exciting views with two ambulance drivers frdm and demanding, with more than a share of Pontiac. Though they work for two different danger J companies, their viewpoints are basically the
THE LATEST—This 1968 General Motors Ambulance is the pride of General Ambulance Service and cost $18,000 fully equipped. Showing the new vehicle is driver John Steinbach, of 218 Vernon. Paying for the ambulance is only part of the cost as the insurance rate is about $1,000 per year. An average one lasts about four years. This one is stationed and dispatched from the Riker Building in downtown Pontiac at Huron, and Wayne. i ;
By ED BLUNDEN
The ambulance business is more than just dashing across town with vsirerft screaming.
Kyle Roberts, manager of General Ambulance Service in Pontiac must sort of wince every time one heads out from the garage in the Riker Building. He realizes the ambulances cost $18,-000 fully equipped. The yearly insurance on one is $1,000.
★ ★ ★
Roberts says his firm is the largest in the Pontiac area with franchises from several local cities and townships. He employs 46 persons and has 21 ambulances stationed in the area.
• — ★ ★ ★
His newest ambulance, a General Motors model, can carry eight persons. This new model has all the latest innovations. For instance a color code flasher on the instrument panel operates from the rear of - the.ambulance. The attendant can flash if a patient’s condition suddenly turns more critical.
All the ambulances (carry a wide range of equipment such as oxygen, inhalators and resusci-tators.
General Ambulance carries out an average of 35 calls a day.
Charges are $25 for transfers, $30 for emergencies and $7 is added by municipal agencies if they place a call.
★ ★ ★
However, collecting the fees has become a major problem in the ambulance service business, mostly due to government regulations and complicated forms. Vir-ginia Deeg, treasurer and vice president of General Ambulance, demonstrated this by displaying a drawer full of unpaid bills.
It’s not that all those people are deadbeats, Miss Deeg explained, but there are some aspects of payment most people don’t realize, she said.
★ ★ ★
Miss Deeg pointed out the following:
• Most insurance companies do NOT pay ambulance fees,
• People on Medicaid and Medicare have to pay a percentage of the fees.
• Medicaid and Medicare patients must give the ambulance firm their number and sign the appropriate form.
• Welfare recipients must supply their number so that the firm can file the forth and get its fee.'
“It gets rough. You have to be devoted," Is how one ambulance driver in Pontiac described his job.
And John Steinbach of General Ambulance Service, 57 Wayne, is apparently the “devoted” type. Steinbach, 29, of 218 Vernon, has been in the business, off and on, since he was 16.
Seeing dead bodies is not so bad, he says. “You get sort of hardened to it.” A large part of ambulance duty is transporting dead bodies, he explained.
But the rough part is the children and seeing them mutilated in auto crashes or fires. STEINBACH “I’ll never get used to that,” Steinbach said. He has a 114-year-old son.
But there’s also a lot of personal satisfaction in the job, he said. “I remember I pulled a guy out of a burning car once, he wouldn’t have been alive today . . . Another time I ran into a burning building, picked up a kid and ran out.”
ALREADY ON SCENE
But most of the time the police and firemen are already on the scene when the ambulance arrives and the heroics are all over, Steinbach said.
What’s left is the gruesome job of loading the dead and injured and heading toward the hospital. 1
★ ★ ★
“I find myself going faster when I have a hurt child aboard,” tie said.
Among the drawbacks to ambulance driving is the hours — 24 hours on and 24 off — Steinbach said.
The ambulance driver of the near future will be piloting a helicopter, predicts Dick Rudloff, ambulance driver for Fleet Ambulance, . 79 E. Huron.
Rudloff, 23, of 140 E. Howard said plans are already being made for heliports at area hospitals and emergency cases will be carried by air from accident scenes more often in coming years.
Rudloff explains he is a cousin of the two brothers who own and operate Fleet,
Dan and Floyd Miles. “It’s RUDLOFF
sort of a family business,” he said. “I sort of grew up in it, starting when I was 16.”
★ , ★ ★
Like most experienced ambulance drivers, Rudloff has seen his share of horrible disfigurements and death. Tbe most severe case he recalls involved two bucks which collided head-on.
“It was about a year ago at Telegraph and Hickory Grove,” he said. “It was a gravel truck and a semi. One of the drivers must have gone asleep and crossed the center line. He must have had his arm out the window because when we tried to put the pieces back together it was missing. We had to go back and find it."
‘AN OLD HAND’
Rudloff is an old hand at delivering babies and said, “It’s simple." He’s delivered over 10, he figures. He said first-aid training is important, however, not only in the case of babies but for all emergencies.
Rudloff has taken several medical courses including a four-day session given in Chicago by the American College of Surgeons.
★ ★ ★
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He admits he once gave- it up to work at a local automobile plant. “But I came back. I enjoy it,” he said.
Steinbach said he is planning to add to his training by taking scuba-diving training. Divers are often used in recovering bodies of accident victims.
He said Fleet tries to obtain as much training as possible for its drivers.
With two children of his own, Rudloff, like most drivers, is most appalled by the number of children in accidents. “I try to be careful driving, but when there’s a kid on board, I drive fast,” he said.
For many years Nationwide has offered guaranteed renewal on Health and Life insurance. Now,effective May 1, we will offer an important new family-security first by adding both Auto insurance and Homeowners to our guaranteed renewal service.
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B—io
McCarthy Debates, but Wrong Kennedy
THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 21, 1008
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -(rival Robert F. Kennedy, has ^*Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy, who come within one brother of his has been pressing for a presi- target. He matched words with dential campaign debate with a Kennedy, but the wrong Ken-nedy.
The Minnesota Democrat headed his campaign back into Oregon today after his inconclusive encounter with Sen. Edward M. Kennedy of Massachu-setts, a stand-in for Robert at a San Francisco labor dinner.
* * *
The printed program for the AFL-CIO Committee on Political Education fund-raising dinner listed Robert Kennedy as the man who would share the platform with McCarthy. And McCarthy himself originally ac
cepted the invitation with the that course without mentioning
idea he would be face to face with Kennedy;
It didn’t work out that way. CAME PREPARED*
"I came prepared to offer the vice presidency to Sen. Kennedy,’’ McCarthy* told more than 400 people at the dinner Monday night—“of Massachusetts.”
much, we tyow that, but its the only one around.* ”
★ ★ *
“I have felt that 1 had to be prepared to take some chahce with my political future because I though the future of America was involved,” McCarthy said. “And so I call on you to take some chances with your own futures in the name of and in the interest of the future of America.”
★ ★ ★
National leaders of organized labor are backing the presiden tial campaign of Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey,
★ ★ *
Edward Kennedy questioned
2nd-on-Ticket Talk Is Rankling Reagan
Wednesday Only Special!
All You Can Eat!
Humphrey by name.
“Is it 'a time tor complaceh-cy?" he asked. “Is it a time for joy? Is it a time for the status quo? In the history of this country the call for complacency has never moved labor.” j
RIGHTEOUS CAUSE*
Kennedy said he is confident McCarthy and Kennedy of | union men will recognize the New York meet June 4 in Cali-j righteousness of Robert Kenne-fomia’s crucial, final presiden-j dy’s cause, “we shall continue tial primary. ; to look for the encouragement
★ ★ ★ land support of the union man.”
AP Wirtphoto
‘TELL BOBBY I SAID HI’ — Sen. Eugene McCarthy shakes hands with the wrong Kennedy, Sen. Edward, D-Mass., on the California campaign trail in San Francisco last night. Ted spoke for Robert at an AFL-CIO political banquet there.
But their next encounter is due May 28 in Oregon. Campaigning for that one, McCarthy planned to hunt votes today in
The Kennedy forces issued a six-page dossier of correspondence to explain why their candidate was riot there. He was
Klamath Falls, Coos Bay and! campaigning in southern Calj,-Corvallis. fornia
In San Francisco, he told the uniorfmen that he had long supported their cause in Congress, and that he was challenging President Johnson when no one else was in the field. McCarthy said when talk of his presidential candidacy began he was asked for the use of his name. “Some said it isn’t worth very
★ ★ ★
Robert Kenhedy wired organ! zers of the dinner that he had never accepted the invitation to speak there and regretted that “confusion apparently has de veloped as to which Sen. Kennedy will be present.”
He said other commitments kept him from attending.
Earl Spins a Wondrous Yarn About a New York Pigeon
By EARL WILSON -
New York — Now this is a true N.Y, story . . .
About 3 months ago, pretty Rica Dialina, a former Miss Greece, was feeding a pigeon which had flown to her hotel window in W. 57th St.
Suddenly the pigeon pecked at her necklace.
And swallowed a blue good luck charm which § superstitious Greeks consider an important § omen. I
“There went my good luck!” moaned Mca. ilK Hoping to recover the charm, Rica caught the! pigeon, caged it and kept it with her. She named 1 it “Walter.”
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i-Junior Editors Quiz on-
DAYS OF WEEK
§
By JACK wki.i. WASHINGTON (AP) - Call fornia Gov. Ronald Reagan has given congressional Republicans the clear Impression he is highly Irked at being tagged as a possible vice presidential nominee.
Some senators and House members who joined him at a private luncheon Monday at the Capitol reported he talked moil jjabout why..he-4sn’t—and not likely ever to be—available for second place on the GOP ticket. WWW
He was said to have minced few words in discussing his displeasure at New York Gov. Nel-;on A. Rockefeller’s frequent observations that It would be nice to have Reagan as second man on a ticket with him.
The informal conclusion ex-pressed by those Republicans was that Reagan is sighting broader horizons than the favor, ite-son role he has carved out for himself in California;
CONCLUSION SAME It’s doubtful that conclusion was weakened by Reagan’s Monday night appearance be fore a Fort Lauderdale, Fla. audience. When a man asked the governor if he would seek the presidency, Reagan replied “No, I don’t think any useful purpose would be served by saying so. But when the convention opens in Miami Beach next Au gust I will be nominated as a favorite son and very briefly will be a candidate.
PRESIDENCY FIRST “Then it will be up to the con vention which way they will go.”
He earlier told a Washington news conference he would rather finish his job as governor than retire to the relative seclusion of the vice presidency.
But asked if he would be willing to give up his job for the White House, he grinned and replied: “I’m not going to put the governorship of California
“Walter Pigeon,” she explained logically.
Rica got Walter X-rayed.
“The blue-eye is still in Walter Pigeon,” the report said.
Last week, while Rica was still waiting for Walter to surrender the charm, she let him out on the lawn of her husband’s country home at St. James, L.I., on a loose string.
Other pigeons joined Walter. Maybe they pecked at the!above the presidency of the string. Walter got free and flew away . . . his plastic name tag!United States.”
Walter” still on his leg. -—---------—--------------------—[^-Traveling with the kiod of en-
Through a community paper Rica offered a $100 reward tourage usually associated only which due to a typographical error came out $1,000. with “ announced presidential
, . . . a . mv » | candidates, Reagan explained
“Maybe he s a homing pigeon—and flew to NY,” somebody ....................................—
said. I
Rica phoned to insert an ad in N.Y. An ad-taker, skeptical about the big reward, advised her to inquire of police and the ASPCA.
he was only going abqut raising money for Republican congressional campaign chests.
In these And similar tours, he said, he hAd found Republicans generally “keeping their options open” and waiting for the convention to decide on their nominee. With California’s 86 convention Votes tucked under his arm and scattered support else where, the governor obviously was hoping this situation would endure.
He said he didn’t find it at all surprising, however, that a Cali fbrnla poll Indicated 56 per cent of the Republicans In . his own state preferred former Vice! President Richard M. Nixon as their nominee. Reagan got eight per cent backing in the same poll and Rockefeller 32 per cent. KEEP LOOSE
What he has been telling his own delegate candidates, he said, is to keep loose so they can have a hand in picking the nom-inee most likely to win in November.
If that should just happen to be Ronald Reagan, none of those who heard him thought there would be any reluctance on his part to qarry the GOP banner.
fflnBBgsp
“HOW TO IAVK
‘HOW _
A MARRIAGE” PLUS: “FATHOM”
Starts WEDNESDAY!
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PANAVISION CfjlgR umnpftll
PlUSi 2nd FEATURE
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SPECIAL
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HOLLY—Tonight 1:30 Spencer i Sidney i Katharine TRACY 1P0ITIER1 HEPBURN guess who's coming to dinner
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HURRY - ENDS TUESDAY
HURON
LAST TIMES TONITE “THE SAND PEBBLES” at 7:30
Ex-Defense Aides Getting Big Salaries
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Exofficials of the d e f e n s e
“I got my good luck charm back!” howled Rica.
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1 TO 5 P.M.
DOWNTOWN PONTIAC MAY 22—JOWE 2 Live Pony Given Away Free
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QUESTION:
names?
ANSWER: The days got their names because in ancient pagan times each day was sacred to some particular god or goddess. •
Sunday, first day of the week, meant “the day of the sun” for the old Teutonic peoples. To the Romans, Apollo was the god of the sun. Our picture shows him galloping across the heavens in his golden chariot.
The Anglo-Saxon word “monandaeg” meant goddess of the moon; from this, Monday got its name, Tuesday was Tyr’s day, Tyr being the god of war in ancient Norway.
Wednesday was sacred to Odin or Wodin, ruler over mythical Valhalla. His two ravens flew around the world every day and brought him the news. Odin’s famous son, Thor, god of thunder- and lightning, gave his name to Thor’s day or Thursday. Frigg, Odin’s wife, gave us Frigg’s day or Friday; she was considered so wise she knew everything.
Saturday, last day of the week, comes from the Roman god Saturn, god of the harvest. The Romans had a gay festival in honor of Saturn called a Saturnalia. It lasted seven days, begirmmg'Decr'l?:--------——-
(You can win $10 cash plus Afi’s handsome World Yearbook if your question, mailed on a postcard to Junior Editors in care of this newspaper, is selected for a prize.)
Within an hour, the ad-taker phoned: “We’ve found Walter!”
Mary Boylan, a writer of W. 58th St., had phoned in an ad a day earlier about finding a pigeon with a name tag ‘Walter” which she assumed was a pet.
“That’s my . Walter!” crowed (oops!) Rica. Miss Boylan, a co-auther of the off Broadway show, “Curley McDimple,” who feeds pigeons, had met Walter in her window—just a few
blocks from where Rica’d met him; . ,
| establishment are pulling down
Rica and Miss Boylan met at the Plaza Fountains where salaries of as much as $90,000 a Miss Boylan often goes to feed pigeons. Rica took Walter back year in research firms almost with her in a cage and gave the astonished Miss Boylan a | entirely supported by defense check for $1,000. ,contracts, according to con-|
i gressional testimony.
I Many of the well-paid THE MIDNIGHT EARL ... jresearchers, including G6n.
One of America’s most famous couples, socially and finan- ,f.xwe^ Taylor, are military dally, recently front-paged, will shock friends with a divorce °^lcers also drawing retirement . . . Greta Garbo in slacks, Jessica bragonette, Tilly LoschjP3^ according to testimony and others showed up at Earl Blackwell’s party for Gayelord presented the Senate Foreign Hauser who tipped us that the “new Riviera” will be Algarve, j Rations Committee May 9 and southern Portugal. | released yesterday.
REMEMBERED QUOTE: “You cannot escape the respon-L •* * *
sibility of tomorrow by evading it today.”—Abraham Lincoln. The salary scales were EARL’S PEARLS: Comic Bobby Ramsen says in the new-disclosed in the committee’s
+ it ir investigation of so-called
dances the couples don’t go near each other, and never touch: B°yernmen* “think tanks -“My wife and I have been doing that for years.” ;private research corporations
Jim Mulholland reports that one of his classmates was crea1e<* 1° satisfy the Defense expelled for cheating! “He copied another student’s picket I Department’s desire for insign.” . . That’s earl, brother. j dependent studies of complex
(PubiisiMr»-Haii syndicate) | problems involving U.S. securi-
.................. .......^7.. . - . ___1 ty.r
Education's Link to Politics Cited [T®?- j0!m s Foster •J-th?
- iPentagons research and NEW YORK (AP) — Me- sary dinner of Columbia Univer-j engineering director, testified George Bundy, presiden| of the sity’s Teachers College, Bundy that the best-paid research ex-Ford Foundation, says a “mar-1 said Monday night the new rela-, ecutive was the president of the riage” of politics and educationitionship of politics and educa- Aerospace Corp., Dr. I. A.
Starts WED. at 1: - 3: - 5: - 7: -9:
WINNER OF 5 ACADEMY AWARDS
"INTtE HEAT OF RE NIGHT «
BEST PICTURE §
including BEST ACTOR, Rod Steiger II
SIDNEY POmER ROD STEIGER
*THE NORMAN JEWISON WAITER MIRISCH PRODUCTION
IN RE tEOT OF RE NIGHT
(38B> COLOR by Dtluii United Artists
£|
has“made* it ne—(USDA)— Prices paid par pound far No. ljlve poultry;
Hana heavy type, 20-21; broilers and fryera whites, -.20V5; roasters heavy types, 25-17,
CHICAGO ROOf CHICAGO (AP)—Mercantile Exchange-Butter Steady; wholesale, buying pikas uricn»nm^ft-»ow^A4*; 91 A 43%; la rfe ear* 60 B 1454, Of CM.
Eggs steady; wholesale byytag prices unchangldt W per cant or bettor Grade a whites 27; mediums 23; standards 24.
CHICAGO POULTRY
_____JO (APMJIOA)
wholesale buying ericas unchanged; roast-
-Live poultry;
ers 25-2*Vi; special fad White Rock fryers 20-21 Vi.
Livestock
DETROIT LIVESTOCK . DETROIT CAP)—(USOA) -Cattle 400; represented slaughter cfassaa steady; choice slaughter i|eers unsold early.
siaughwr niars: mixed good and choice 26.25-27.0tl joed 24.50 - 26.25; slaughter heifers, saittarad lets good to low choice
750-950 Iba 23.00-25.00; utility COWS 20,00-
'hoo* 250; barrowp and gilts, U.S. 1-2 200-225 lbs 20.00-20.25; 1-3 220-240 lbs 19.00-20.00; 24 24M70+b§ 17.75-19.00; sows, 14 300-400 IbS 15.75-16.50; 2d 400400 lbs 14.50-
1!vlalar» I2S; high choke and Itrlmj 36.00-40.00; choice 34.00-3*.0O; good 29.00-
Sheep 5»t to# loti’ choice t3-110*lb shorn lambs with No. 1-2 pelts 21.90-29.50.
' CHICAGO LIVESTOCK -
CHICAGO (AP)—(USDA1— Hogs 4J00; 1-2 190-235 lb butchors 19.50-20.50; 1-3 220-240 Iba lt.M-19.7J; 1-3 300-400 lb 4SWS 16.25-16.75.
Cattle 1,200; high choice and prime
______ .yd. ________ .
1,175-1,2*0 lb ilaughtar steers 27.25; choice 950-1,27S Iba yWM WMM I ‘ I *
26.25-
27.oo; mlxtd high ■ R PRRRR ■ l.ioo lb tusMhiar holfars yield grto* * and 4 26.50-27.00; choice 150-1,0001b yield
grade 2 to 4 25.50-26.50.
Sheap 200; choice and prime 90-105 lb spring slaughter lambs 31.00.
American Stock Ex«h.
NEW YORK (AP) • American Stock Exchangt selected noon prices:
salts Not
(hda.) High Low Last Chg.
AarnUt .50. _____7 29% 2»% 2914 .....
Alax Me .10ft 7 4514 45% 45% +1%
Am Petr .32e 10 15 1714 1714 —W
ArkLGas 1.70 16 37V4 37 37% — Vi
Asamera Oil 30S 7 6V4 615-16+11-16
AssdOII A G ' ~
wt
9 3 Vs 3% 314
BrazllLtPw 1 47 16 1514 15%
Brit Pet .30a 6 5 9-161 7-16 I 7-16 — >4
Campbl Chib 267 10V4 10 10% + V4
Can So Pot „7 2 ,j.u j ,,.14 2 n.14_1;,4
Cdn Javolln ■ RRW Clnerema Creole 2.60a Data Cont Dixllyn Corp Dynatadrn EquityCp .331 Fargo Oils Fed Resrces Felmont Oil Frontier Air Gen Plywood Giant Yol .40 Goldfield Gt Baa Pat Gulf Am Cp GulfResrc Ch Husky O ,15a Hycon Mfg Hydrometl Isram Corp Kalso, Ind Magell Pat Mccrory wt Mich Sug .10 Midwest Fin Mohwk D Scl Molybden NewPark Mn Ormand Ind Pancoastal RIC Group Scurry Rain Signal Co ta Statham Inst Syntax Cp .40
Technical .40 _ --- .
Wn Nuclear 15 27% 27% 27% +1% Copyrighted by Tho Associated Press 196G
386 158% 14% 15% +1%
145 9'/4 9 9% + %
7 38% 38% 38%
15 19% 19W» 19% + %
52 33 32% 32'*
48 21 V% 20% 20%
4? 7% 7% 7% — %
81 6% 6 1-16 6 MS—MS
47 9% 98% »'* + %
46 24% 238% 238% —18%
7 16'/% 158% 14% + %
7 98% 9'/4 9% + VS
104 13% 13>/4 13% + %
90 10% 10 10 + %
1 sv% 5 S - '*
62 1?'/4 12'/% 12% — %
63 34Vi 34% 34% + %
17 27% 27 27 — %
6 14% 148% 14% + %
20 19% 19'/% 19% — VS
14 6% 6'/% 6% + %
81 20'/% 19’/% 20 + %
20 38% 3% 37* + VS
5 10% lO'/a 10% + %
10 9% 9'/% »%—%
21 5% 58% 5% — VI
27 186% IIS IIS —1
17 35% 35 35 +.%
added, even though there was no fresh impulse in the way of newt;-------------------------
In fact the turmoil in France and continued rise hi the price of gold bullion were disconcerting influences, but, for the moment, the street was learning to live with them.
AVERAGE 1JP
The Associated Press average of 60 stocks at noon was up .6 at 328.5, with industrials off .7, rails ip 1.5, and utilities up .4.
Due to weakness in some of its blue chip components, the Dow Jones industrial average at noon was down 1.04 at 893.15 Broader-based Indicators showed gains, and the number of advances outstripped declines by 160 or so issues on the New York Stock Exchange.
—it it * ---
Prices advanced on the Amer lean Stock Exchange in slightly more-active trading than on Monday.
The Jew York Stock Exchange
NEW YORK (AP) - Ntw York Stock Exchongo selected noon prices:
—A—
Salts Not
(ltd*.) High Low Lad Chi,
Abbott Lob 1 15 55% 55% 55% — V„
Abex Cp 1.60 19 33% 33V4 33% — 14
----- 7 47% 47% 47% ...
37 27% 26% 26% i- %
414 75% 74 74% 4-244
“ 20% 20% 20% + %
29% 29%
Poor to March to JFK Grave
Others Plan to Sit In at Congress Hearings
Forced Up by Tax Stall
Interest Rate Racists
ACF Ind 2.20 Ad Mllllt .20 Address 1.40 Admiral
AlrRodln 1.50 AkMtAlum 1 Allog Cp .10# AllogUid 2.40 Altag>w 1.30
AWO* 1.00 AMBAC .60 Amorada 3 AmAlnm .to AmBdcat 1.60
_tf
29%
Gen Fds 2.40 Gen Mills .10
a an Mot l.95o
i
Am Can 2.20 ACrvSug 1.40 AmCyan 1.25 AmilPw 1.52 Atnliika 14ft a Homa tar
Am Heap .66 Am Hoap wl Amlnvst 1.10
Am Motors AmNatQaa 2 Am Photocpy Am smalt 3 Am Std 1 Am TAT 2.40 Am Tob 1.90 AMK Cp ,30d AMP Inc .40 Ampax Cgrp Amphanol .70 Anocond 2.50 An Ran Cham ArchDan 1.60 Armco Stl 3 Armour 1.60 ArmCk 1.40a Ashld Oil 1.20 I DO 1.60 lllon 1.60 Atntlch 3.10 AtlM Ch JO Alloa Corp Avco Cp 1.20 Avnot Inc .50 Avon Pd 1 JO
GenPrac .10 OPubUt 1.56 iTolil 1.40 tn.Tln.M
„ ___ ______ n jenoaco 1 JO
35 21% 21% 21% — %i$»E5'«c'b 55 36% 26 26% 4-1*
21 50 49% 9%.....
29 33% 22% 22% .....
57 70% 69% 70% + %
21 56% 55% (6%.....
61 14% 92% 14% +2 332 24 25% 26 + %
' 61% 61% 61%
ft
50% 50% 50% §'
29% 29% 29% — %
75 25% 25% 25% 4- %
57 34% 34% 24% .. Nor Rtf 3
fi 46 46 46 — % W*** f kl
65 50%---------------*
M fllft Hl Hf
32 95% 95 95 —1%
44 32Vt J2 32%—%
26 20% 20 Sunf %
66 19% 11% 19 + %
57 47 46% 46% — %
226 1314 13% 13% — %
40 31% 36% 31% — %
*7 17 16% 16% 4- %
X 851 S’4 Halllburt 1.90
36 34% 36 36% — % Harris Int 1
*8 if* i }* Hacla M 1.26
S oL. SH t U HaclaMng wl 21 90% 19% 90% 4- 14 Hare Inc 50e 6 32% 32% 32% 4- % HawPack JO » »%»«!»?* t.l*|H?ft Ekclf” Koiwyinn JO
GtWnUn 1.80 GraanGnt js
Salas Nat
(hds.) High Law Last Chg.
——G—
74 21% 20% 31% 4-%! Phil) Pet 2.60 49 37% 37 37 — % PitneyB 1.30
231 50% 49% 50% + Hi Pitta Slaal
160 90 19% 59% ..... Polaroid .32
74 09 88 11% — % PPG Ind 2.60
9 4114 ,41 41 ... ProctrG 2.40
126 80% 79%,.00% 4- % PubSvcColo 1 II 41% 42% 43% +1 Publklnd .461 42 26% 26% 24% — % PuoSPlT 1.60 105 29% 39 ■ 29 — %' Pullman 2.10
23 73% 73% 73% .. RCA 1
9 27% 27% 27% — % RalstonP .60 30 94% 93 93 —1% Ranco Inc .92
16 57 56% 57 4- % Reythaon .10
“ 252 TO - 13% 14 + % loading Co 20 36% 36% 36% - 44 RelchCh ,0b 40 60% 59% 60% f 1% RepubStl 2.5ft 170 54% 54 54% 4-1 Ravion 1.4ft
35 36 35% 15% + % Roxoll .30b
19 20% 20% 20% — 94 RoynMot .90
9 42 41% 42 4- % RoynTob 2.20
16 27% 27% 27%...... RhaomM 1,40
6 52 51% 51% — % RoanSol Mo xlOO
38 11% IS% 11% -- % Rohr cp JO ~
14 77 —76% -76% 4- % RoyCCola .72
10 29% M% 39% - 14 Roy Dut .99r 51 20% 20% 20%.4- % RydarSys .10 30 32% 32% 22% 4- %
24 Jm 73% n% + % ...
20 22% 23 23% 4- '
93 49% 41% 49 —
WASHINGTON (AP) - The poor people of "Resurrection City, U.S.A.” plan their first demonstration today—a march to the grave of President John|faj|ure F. Kennedy.
The Rev. Ralph David Abernathy, campaign leader, called Kennedy a “friend of the poor" who "helped poor people" as he told a late Monday night rally he also wanted volunteers to fill all vacant seats in congressional hearings.
' ★ * ★
"Don’t worry about dressing up, just go the way you are,” the denim-clad Southern Chris-n«i tian Leadership Conference
By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst NEW YORK - Record high interest rates will be paid this week by cprporpte and municipal borrowers as a direct result of the decision by the House of Representatives to postpone gctlon on a tax Increase. __________
The high rates are caused by inflation and the
cent to 6% per cent. And several states now are in the process of lifting the celling on mortage . ates.
Salat ... _____________ _______________
(Mis) High Low La»t Chg. . ,, r , ,
phiia ei 1.64 41 29 28h 28% + v* president told a cheering crowd
PhllMorr 1.80 16 55V* 55 55 — % r
63 55% 55 55% + Vti
17 63 62% 63
24 16% 15% 15% — % 128 114% 111% 114'/4 +2%
12 70% 70% 70% f %
66 97% 95% 97% f %
76 21% 21% 21% 4* %
311 12% 11% 12 -%
33% J3% 33% — %
56 49% 41% 48% + Va
—R----------
106 49% 49% 49% — % 12 24% 2% 2416 — % 32 3216 3116 32 + <*
17 94% 9414 94% 4- %
—5 25% 25% 25% — %
30 1514 14% 15 — <*
19 4116 41% 4114 — %
24 J446 46% 10% 4- 16
1 2 32% 30 32 — %
52 40% 40 40 — 96
54 421* 41% 42%-4--%. 51% 51 51 . .
116 1% (14 4- %
72 23% 33 39% 4-1%
13 39 29 29 + %
50 4016 46% 46% 4- %
39 32% 32 3214 4- V4
45% 46% 4-1% 13 44% 44 44% — %
9 12% 12% 12%
1 56% 56% 56%
34 46% 46% 46% — % 44 42% 41% 42%
16 47% 67 67 — %
54 39% 36 39% 4- %
9 79% 79% 79% 4- % 557 35 34% 35 + %
31 111% 110% 111% — % 39 20% 20% 20% 4- % 70 5% 5% 5% — %
116 5154 50% 51% + 16 137 56' 15% ■S5%'4-»»4 30 135 -133% .135 4-2
■2 10% 10% 10%
11 i3 12% 12% ...
149 114 J% 3% — % 112 10 916 10 f %
274 34% 33% 34% +116
74 36% 3614 3616 + %
2 33 33 32 + V4
41 69% 68% 69% + %
22 27 2614 27
Stocks of Local Interest
Figures attar doclmol points grp eighths
OVER THE COUNTER STOCK! Quotation* frgm th# NASD art rapr#-tentative Intar-dealer prices of approximately 11 a. m. Inter-dealer markets change throughout the tfey. Prlcee da not Include retell markup, markdown or commission;
Btbck W 1.25 Balt GE 1.00 Beet Fds 1.65 Beckman .50 iaachAlrc lb Bail Hew .60 Bindlx 1.40 BtnefFIn 1.60 Benguet Beth Stl 1.60 Baaing 1.20 BolseCeac .25 Borden 1.20
Brunswick BucyEr 1.20 BUdd Co JO Bulova JOb Burl Ind 1,20 Burroughs 1
_ ip Soup 1 Canteen .10 CaroPLI 1.30 CaroTAT .76 Carrier Cp I CarterW .40a Casa Ji Cattle Cook l CatarTr 1.20
CelanasaCp 2 Canco Int .10 Cant SW 1.70 Cerro 1.60b Cert-teed JO CetsnaA t.40 CFI Stl .00 Chet Ohio 4 ChIMII SIPP ChIPneu 1.10 Chi Rl Pac ChrlsCraft la Chrytler 2 CITPth l.oo Cltlm Svc 2 Clark Eq 1.20 ClevElli! 1.92 CoeoCela 2,10 Coca Cola wl
—B—
22 44% 4114 43% — % 22 30% 30 v 30% 4- %
11 66% 66% 66% + % ■4 -64% 64% 54% + 14
6 53% 52% 52% — %
14 79% 78%, 71% + % 133 36% l*^3t% + %
34 36M 35% 3516 — 141 55 14% 14% 14% .
105 29% 29% 29% .
>3J 72% 71% 71% — % 2$'" 1294 52% 5214 + 14 40 32% 31% ft% + %
7 31% 31% 3114 —J4 40 74% 74% 74% -I- %
‘ 15% 14% 14% — %
15 24 23% 23% — %
20 50% 21% 21% - ~~ 7 31% 31% 31% + % 14 44% 44% 44% 4- 14
12 199% 192% 199% — %
149
-C—
10 5% $94 514 — %
47 42 4014 40% -
207 33% 33% 33% — %
0 26% 26% 26% .
5 3614 36% 3616 .
31 29 26% 29 + %
34 70 69% 69% - I
0 14% 14% 14% — %
23 1714 17% 17% - ‘
32 4016 40% 40% + %
40 40% 39% 39% —
01 60 59% 60 +
13 53% S3 53% + %
14 40 3914 40 . ...
15 41% 1 41 + %
26 27% 27 27% + 14
6 96 55% 56 + %
19 II 1714 17% .
5 63% 63% 63% + V4
22% 22% 22% 4- %
2 32% 32
109 64 63 63%— 14
372 35% 2414 35% — 14
54 47% 6714 47% + 14
Xll 20% 21% 2H4 .
7 36% 36% 36% + %
27 150 14916 150 + %
4 7514 75% 7514 4- %
21 47 46% 47 4-14
16 70% 77% 77%
6 46% 6144 46% + V4
34 5614 56 56% 4- %
21 27% 2714 27% 4- U
271 4116 4716 41% — 94
20 33% 33% 33% — %
35 42% 42% 4214 — %
47 60% 50% 60% +214
19 32% 32 32% — %
H — 39% ■
15 19%
39%
Detrax Chemical
Diamond Cryalol ...........
Kelly Sorvkoi ..........
North Central Airlines Unltt—.
Safran Printing ...........
ScrInto , C
Wyandotte Chemical*.........
MUTUAL PUNDS
Affiliated Fund ...........
Chemical Fund '.............
Dravtus .vVtn.
Keystone Income K-l ........
Keystone Growth K-2 . - .
Matt, [hvatfors Growth .....
InYOttPY ~fU»t ......
Putnam Growth ...........
Technolo
Technology ..........
‘Nominal Quotations
Bid Asked
• *-l M
.11.1 1»J
.11.0 1IJ___________
22.0 26,41 Cudahy Co .17.2 11.2 curtlas Wr 1 .22.0 22.4
42.0 43.0
5.6, 40
. 13.6 13.1 — 4.0 7.1.
.20.0 29.0
Bid Aokod 1.74 9.46
19.05 20.03 14.90 16.26 9.21 10.06 7.14 7.79 12.6113.72 16,42 10,01 13.30 14.56 10.12 11.03
Iratslnd 1,40 luPont ).25o “ JuqLt 1.66 DynaAm .40
22 25% 2116 21%
31 36% 36% 3414
13 2016 30% 3016 4- %
1*0 19% 19 1914 4- 16
43 51% 51 51% — %
X10 54% 54% 54% — 14
4 1194 15% 18%......
X21 44% 64 6414 + 06
116 )4M4 144% 146% + 14
1 49 69 69 — %
26 40% 40 40 + %
2 335% 235% 235% .
7 141*1614 14% — %
5 57% 57 57 + %
---2- 26% »% 20% + %
Jl JS4 5__34 —14
19 69% 66% 69 SH
—20 4616 46% 4616
22 4116 41% 41%
14 23% 22% 22% —94
47 26% 36% 26% + %
—D—____________________
26 24% 24% 24% ...I
I 31% 31 31% f %
17 56% 54 54% + %
4 31% 31% 31% -i- %
72 33% 32% 33%
66 19% 19% 1916
19 24% 3616 26%
33 20% 20% 20%
S W% 30% »%
10 52% 57% 57% — W
31 70 6116 6016 + %
~ 34 71% 77% ft- f 14
19 36 35% 35% + %
— w
H-%
1 + %
T -9
+ 14
1 + % + % %
Treasury Position
East Air .50 E Kodak 1.60a |Kodak wl EatonYa 1.25
„ _ ■ ... Ebatco Ind 2
WASHINGTON (AP)—Th* cash, position BGAG .10 et tho Treasury compared with corra- EWctSp 1.019 .nondlng^/ym .BOi^y J Jf|f
Balance—
7.32L722JUJ9
70U30,22tSl
DapoalAWffi^e
120402,165,*54.20 137,701
WlmBrBS!iSS,rT64,?4»,921J4IJ7
x-Total Debt—
Kft4.l29.76 220,000,109.920Jol
G°ld **10,*454,047+62.83 12,105,J2J,215.22
X-includes 1415.441,101.05 debt not tub-lact to statutory limit.
Tuoadoy'i lit Dividends Declared. .
* Po- *HloIRo*» Rato Hod Record able
INITIAL
. Woods Coro (tow .12 . (r 15-31 6-14
First Not Ik, Howell .05
Chylntarpr^yj ^S 1-31
J* Q
Holme Proda
erpr .12 RIGID
247 21% 20% 21% +1
—E------
341 31% 37% 30 + %
33 151% 150% 151% - % 74 75% 75% 75% — % 4 31% «% 31%-% 26 61% W% 4014 — %
m
■eta1
pllntkota 1 Pow 1.44
FoadFalr .90
FordMot 2.: ForMcK .73 | Sul 1.40 1.70
Frooptu
FruthCp
1% 74% +1%
%«V4 + %
1% 32% — %
11% + %
HI Hi in? + »
35 70% 71% 70% +1%
If »% 21% 32% + %
19 54% 54% M4 — %
23 27% (7% 37% - %
X44 26% 26% »% + %
4 42 41% 42
1 66 65% 66 + % „
91 2M4 39% 39% + % P
-41_5%-3l% 21V...+ +4 Pi 156 55% 54% 55 + J4 fi
Mt It «;«ik
134 J9% 31% *1% + %
1.30
10
Hollysug 1.: Homestke .1 Honeywl 1.10 Hook Ch 1.40 Houoe Fin 1
HoustLP 1.12 Howmot .70 HuntFds .50b
IdahoPw 1.50 Ideal jtoslc. 1 in Cinf 1.50 Imp Cp Am IngerRand 2 Inland Stl 2 InsNAm 2.40 IntarlkSt 1.10 IBM 5.20 IBM Wl IntHarv 1J0 Ini Miner 1 Int Nickel 3 Int Packert Int Pap 1.35 Int TAT .95 lowaPSv 1.21
JawatCo 1.30 JohnMan 2.20 JohnJhn .60a JonLogan. JO Jones L 5.76 Jostans .60 Joy Mfg 1.40
Kolatr Al 1 KonPwL 1.12 Koty Ind KoytorRo .60 Konnecott 2 Karr Me 1.50 KlmbClk 2 20 Koppars 1.40 Krasga .90 Kroger 1.30
Lear Slag JO LehPCem .60 Leh Val Ind Lohmn 1.06a LOFGIsa 2.00 Llbb AWN L LiggattAM 5 Lily Cup 1.20 L llon 2.65f Llvlngstn 0(1 LoddSA 2.20 LoaWtTh .20h LonaS Cam T LoneSGa 1.12 LonalsLt 1.24 Lorlllard 2.70 LTV 1.33 Lukent $11 1
Mocks Co .30 MacyRH .90 MadFd 3.21* MagmaC 3.60 Magnavox 1 Marathn 1.40 Mar Mid 1.S0 Marquar .301 MartlnMar 1 MayDStr 1J0 Maytag 1J0 McCall .40b
sm
Malv Shoe Merck l.60a MGM IJOb MMMUtti .12 MjnnMM i.4j MlnnPLt 1,10 Mob) IOII 2 Mohasco 1
saraway t.10 StJotLd 2.10
.H_____ StLSanF 2JO
“ StRegP 1.40b
50 77% 74% 77% ..... Sanders .30
11 61 60% 60% — % ichantay 1.30
* 77% 76% 77 .....1 Scherlng 1.20
7 38% 38% 38% — % Scientlf Data
16 30% 30% 30% + % SclenOata wi
26 *3% 12% 12% — % SCM Cp .60b
4 11% 11% 11% + % Scott Paper 1
29 02% 0t% 61% — H Sbd CatL 2.20
35 34% 33% 34% + % Searl GD 1.30
x5J 00 79 79% +1 I Soars Roe la
25 121% 120% 121% — % Seeburg ‘ Sharonst
136 49Ve 49% 49%
21 36% 36 36% — %
T 41% 40% 40% ......
14 46% 45% 46 .
18 55% 55% 55% — %
36 20% 20% 28% — %
14 16% 16% 16%....
9 64 64 64 —%
17 9% 9% 9% — %
20 44% 44% 44% — %
127 34 33% 33% ..
40 61% 61 61% + %
3 30% 30 30 — %
54 654 648% 654 *4-4%
7 327 326 327 -fi
47 32% 32% 32% — % 39 24% 24% 24% — %
57 J06 107 107% ....
ft 13% 13% 13%
137 31% 31% 31% + %
1.50
Shell Oil 2.30 ShellTrn .66a SherwnWm 2 Sinclair 2.80 SlngerCo 2.40 SmlthK 1.80a SouCalE 1.40 South Co 1.00 SouNGas 1.40 SoutPac 1.60 Spartan Ind SperryR .20a SquaraD .70a
ftBrand 1.40 td Kolia .12p StOIICal 2.70 SfOIIInd 2.10 StOIINJ l.TOe StOilOh 2.50b St Packaging StauHCh 1.80 Sterl Dri
37 31% 31% 31% + % Sterl Drug i
12 56% 55% 55% — % StevenaJ 2.25
4 22% 22 22% + % StudeWorth 1
T Sun Oil 1b
——J—. jSunrav 1.50
13 30% 30 31% + HswinCo ^JO 24 66% 64% 66% —%| wl” C# ' "
07% 17 17% + %
TampaEl ,73 Tektronix Teledyn 2.79t Tenneco 1.21 Texaco 2.80 TexETrn 1.20 TexGSul 1.20 TexGSul Wl Taxaalnst .80 TexPLd .40a Textron .70 Thlokol .40 TlmkRB 1.80 TranaWAIr 1 Transam lb
22 2S 27% 27% ....
6 45% 49% 45%.....
24 49 40% 49 4* %
41 32 31% 31% f %
136 50% 47% 50% 4-2% 14 48 47% 48 — %
5 69% 69 69% + %
67 149 145% 149 >+2
5 99% 99% 99% — % 82 44% 43% 44% 4 % 87 28% 27% 28% + % 32 47%—47%—47%
12 23 22% 22% 4 %
7 37% 37% 37% 4 %
12 66% 66% 66% — %
1 38% 38% 38% .
, 15 54 S3% 53% — %
1 27 79% 79% 79% 4 %
27 78% 78% 78% 4 %
36 49% 49% 49% 4 %
173 31% 31 31% ...
33 26 25% 25% 4 %
12 46% 46 46% — %
X379 33% 32% 33% 41%
95 23% 22% 23% 4 %
222 52% 51% 52% — %
137 20% 20 20%—%
11 44% 43% 43% ...
18 20% 20% 20% 4 %
72 62 61% 61% -» %
15 52% 52 52% 4 %
205 68 67% 67% .
19 61% 61% 61% — %
75 17% 17 17% 4 %
- 22 40% -40% 40% 4 14
44 52% 51% 52% 41%
41 62 61% 61% ..
80 61 59% 61 ...
2 65% 65% 65% — Va
255 44% 43% 44% 41Va
34 6% 6% 6% 4 %
90 27%, 26% 26% —1
—T—
of
CUNNIFF
of responsive residents. “We’ve been here a long time. It's time we do business."
As he stood on a rickety table outside the camp site’s still unfinished “city hall,” a day’s growth of beard showed on his dark brown face.
MARCH DELAY
Abernathy said he may postpone the massive march set for
policy to cool the overheated economic expansion. This puts the burden of economic restraint almost solely on money rates.
★ * *
Eventually, if not now, the record rates will affect every borrower, including the home buyer, the city seeking to build a new water system, the corporation with plans to expand and the U.S. government seeking to finance its operations.
The postponement of tax ac tion comes at a time when many of these potential borrow ers are actively seeking money In this week alone more than $500 million of new corporate and municipal bond issues will
reach the market. __....
RATES SOAR
Highest-grade cor p o rate bonds already are nearing 7 per cent, and in one instance a me-
of the needs of a domestic recession.
Another worry concerns the stability of the dollar, the value of which some economists fed If it is correct to say that fi-[is overstated and could lead to nancial men are worried about instability in the world's econo-the present high rates, then it is;my.
accurate to say that some are acutely anxious about the future.
Even higher rates seem likely, and Johnson’s warning of 10 per cent borrowing costs in the absence of a tax increase now seems more realistic than it did a couple of weeks ago. One of the dangers in such high rates is that they could precipitate a lion.
RECESSION HINT In r weekend speech, George McKinney Jr., senior economists of the Irving Trust Co., said Congress might give the nation an election day. present
Memorial Day in order to givedium grade issue was offered at
* 3 32% 32% 32% — %
0 32% 32% 32% + %
—K—
47 '43% 43 43% + %
21 20% 20% 20% + %
10 24% 24% 24% — %
7 33% 33% 33% — %
24 38% 30% 35%
7 133% 132% 123% + 1*
19 58% 57% 58% + %
2 34% 34% 34% — %
117 00% 00% 08% —2 _____.... ,
42 26% 20% 24% — % Trensltron f TrICont 2.30e
” TRW Inc 1.40
48 43% 42% 42% — % TRW Inc wl
13 15% 15% 15% — % Twen Cent l 03 14% 13% 14% + %
10 22% 22% 22% + %,
24 55% 55% 55% + %
21 14% 14%
4 70% 70%
14 37% 37 37%
140 44% 45% 44 — %
40 10% 0% 10 + %
53 55% 54% 54% — %
34 01% 01 01% — %
pare for it.
He asked everyone to gather today outside the camp site’s main gate, where buses would take some to Capitol Hill. The rest were to walk two miles to Arlington National Cemetary, where Kennedy is buried.
★ *— it
The^ camp site now houses £ [about 2,000 of the 3,000 persons ’ll S'* Si? ± ft SCLC planned to put in the ply-**“■ L " wood shanties that stretch down West Potomac Park.
The number of marchers waiting in Washington area churches dwindled considerably Monday as construction ol the plywood huts continued at a rapid pace.
SOME WAITED About 450 from the Southern caravan were waiting in Northern-Virginia,but most of the others who arrived over the weekend have been moved in, SCLC officials said.
About 700 persons on part of the Western caravan arrived in St. Louis for an overnight stop before proceeding to Louisville Ky.
★ ★ ★
Abernathy told his followers there is enough money to finish the camp. He later told newsmen the money isn’t all in, but he was sure the American people would come through with support. He gave no precise fig-
8 per cent. The federal govern-thc-ffar area wiH-fac-to-frper centr
ment is paying 6 per cent, and home mortgages now are above 7 per cent in some areas.
This month President Johnson signed a bill permitting increases in the rate of loans insured by the Federal Housing Administration and the Veterans Administration from 6 per
14% + %
78% — %
169 24 23% 239%
55 O 22% 23 — Va
49 25% 25 25 — 8%
20 49% 48% 49 + V%
460 122 121 122 +1'/%
• 33 32’/% 32’/% + V%
-M—
03 23% 23% 23% + %
3 41% 41% 41% —
45 31 30% 30% + %
3 43% 43% 43% — %
33 52% 52 SW .....
05 52% 51% a +1
7 37% 37% 37% — %
10 12% 12% 12% + %
115 22% 22% 22% + %
28 45 44% 44% ....
41 47% 44% 47 + %
2 35% 35% 35% + %
1232 54% 53% 5JH + %
I 41% 40% 41% + %
12 53 42% 8% + %
24 10 17% 14 + W
42 42 41% 42
. 22% 82W 22% ... ■ let 44% 43 43% + %
20 21% 27% 20 + %
122 42% 1% « — W I 31% 31% 31% — % 20% 27% 20% + %
NatAIrlln .30 Not Bloc 2.10 Nat Con .00 NatCash 1.20 N Dairy 1.40 Nat Dlst 1.10 Nat Fuel 1.40 Nat Ganl .20 NatGypo 2 NatLead .750 Nat Steal 2.S0 Nat Tea .KL Nevada >w i Newberry .00 NEngEi 1.40 Nlog MP 1.10 NerWkWst* NoAmRock 2 NoNGas 2.40
—a 0004 00% 22%-%
—N—
172 33% 32 32% + %
12 40% 47% 41% + % 21 42% 42% 42% + %] 2 130% 120% 130 + %
150 42 41% 41% — %
44 34% J4% 24% + W
2 27% 27% 27% — %
47 14% a% 24% +1%
24 54% .54% 54% — %
4 43% <1% 42% + %
X23 45% 44% 45 + W
7 15% 15% 15% + %
^-a . a«=Jg Ok;*. % 15 3514 34% 14% + %
I I 20% 20% 24% ..
51 10% 10% 10% — %
—14 04% 05% 04% f 1%
X58 34% 34% J«*
rU- 6 15
32 52% 51%
34% + % 54 + %
ft 4--W
■17%-.27% 20%
37% |H‘ 14% M 39% 4$
8 45 45 45
-o—
+1 + % %
OMnMat 1.20 OmMk 1.170 OHa tlav O'
§!fa,.n*i
HI H ..........
10% 10% + %
|4% 34% —%
I + %
mM w asJi S
UMC Ind .72 Un Carbide 2 .Un Elec 1.20 llnOIICal 1.40 Unonpaclf 2 Unlroyal 1.20 UnltAlrLIn 1 UnitAirc 1.60
US Ind .70 US Induit wl US Lint! .50p USPIyCh 1.50 US Smalt 1b US Stael 2.40 UnlvOPd 1,40 UniivOllPd Wl Upjohn 1.60
Varlan Asso Vendo Co .60 Va El Pw
23 46V» 46Va 46Va
106 UOVk 115 118 +m 88 2880 28 28H + %
75 76 7584 76 f Va
28 2514 25 25,4 +
59 12280 122 122Va ....
35 4184 4m 41 Mi..
7 100 99V0 9980 — 84
10 2584 2514 2584 .
34 5380 5314 53Va — 84
32 1980 1980 1984 — V4
9 38 3784 38 + 14
259 41V4 4014 4084 ..
52 56 55Mi 55V4 — %
45 1480 1484 1480 + V4
14 2980 2980 2984 — Va
56 10480 104 104 .... 1 5284 5284 5284 — 84
66 3484 34VO 3414 + V4
—U—
x46 22% 22 M% ....
115 3 42% 42% — %
27 21% 2) 21 — %
50 tl^ 40% 40%-1
240 50% 40% 50 + %
a 50% 40% 40% + %
742 42% 41% 41% + %
122 47% 45% 45%-2%
11 11% 11 11% ..
34 53% 52% 53% +1%
5 31% 30% 30% — %
10 01 00% 10% - %
31 42% 42% 42% + %
14 31% 31% 31% + %
1 44 44 44 — %
26 40% »% 50%-1%
30 42% 41% 41% —1W
120 30% 30% M% - %
00% 00% 00% + %
50%
1 45 23 51V0
—V—
258% 2584 — % 268% 268% — Mi 268% 27
—W—X—Y—Z—
WarnLamb 1 Was Wat 1.20
Wastn Air I_U
Wn Banc 1.20 WnUTol 1.40 WostgEI 1.M Weyerhr 1.40 Whirl Cp 1.40 White Mot 2b WlnnDIx 1.50 Woolworth 1 XeroxCp 1.40 VimtSht 1.10 iithR 1.20a
ft 47% 44% 44% — 14 5 »% S3 »% -W 401 37% 35% 37 +1
11 34% 35% 34% - % 440 47% 44% 47% + %
57 7305 71% 72% - % 10 45% 45% 44% + %
12 M% 50% «% + W 5 52% 51% 52%-%
21 32% 31% 31% — W IN 25 34% 24% - %
43 274 274% 275% +1W
52- 00%- 35 M% — W 43 57% 54% 57% + %
Cnovrlahtad by Tho Atooclotad Froao 10N
Solas tlgurH are unofficial.
Unless otherwise noted, rate, of dividends In the foregoing table are annual
extra dividends or payments not _designated as regular are Identified In the following footnotes.
e—Also extract extras, b—Annual rata plus stack dividend, c—Liquidating, dividend. d—Declared or paid In 1047 plus stock dividend, a—Declared or paid so tar this year, f—Payable In aleck during W»T, Ofttwiatad cash value on axAlvIdand or ex+flstrlbutlon data, g—Paid, last veer. . ----------j- ..I. — ‘^ llvIdiP
h—Declared or jtald after stock dlvWand or iMlt up. k—Otclarad or ppld tMs year, an accumulative Issue with dividends In
, Wfc
PanASul ..
Pan Am .40 Panh EP 1.40 ParkaDavIs 1 PennDIx .40b Ptnnoy 1.40a
Perfect FIMs 134 <0
■■■ . ... ■ 4l% 4i% — % 1040 Low .
PflierC 1,20a x4| 41% 41% 40% ...... 1047 High
PnalpsD 1.40 30 44% 44 44 ..... 1047 Low
arroars. n—New Issue. B— Paid this year, dividend emitted, deterred or no action taken at last dividend meeting, r—De-clarad or paid in 1040 plus stock dividend, t—Paid In stock during 1040T astlmalM cash value on ax-d
taken at last dividend meeting, r—Declared br paid in 1040 plus stock dividend, t—Paid Ih stack during 1040, estimated cash value on ax-dlvldahd or ex-dlstrlbu-
tlgn data.—-----------------———-■
s—Salas In full.
cld—Called, x—Ex dividend. y-Ex dividend and sales In full, x-dls—Ex distribution, xr—Ex rights, swo—Without war-fSitt. ws»u3iybh Worraids. sod—Whan distributed. wt—Whan Issued, nd—Next day datiywy,. . , ■
v|—in bankruptcy or roealyarshlp or being raorganitad under tho Bankruptcy Act, or socurlUes assumed by such companies. fn—Ferwgn , Issue sub tact to In-term- equalisation -tax.—-----------,_____
STOCK AVERAGES camelled by The Associated Frees.
Bell Workers' Return Urged
DETROIT (AP) — Union leaders urged some 2,600 Michigan Bell Telephone Co. operators, installers and repairmen to return to work today.
A walkout Monday, latest development in the on-and-off hassle between Bell and Com munications Workers of America locals around Detrbit, was called unauthorized by a CWA District 4 spokesman.
Service was affected in Metropolitan Detroit, Southfield, Roseville and Mount Clemens but not elsewhere in the state, a company representative said.
The independence of the locals made company and union officials leery of predicting when total resolution might be achieved.
—NewsinBrief
Michael Soloway' of 1400 N. Opdyke, Pontiac Township, told Pontiac police that he was robbed of $176 by an unidentified woman at a house in the
Appeals Court to Okay Probe?
N. Viet Guns
4 U. S. Headquarters . Slammed by Shelling
SAIGON (AP) — North Vietnamese forces slammed 500 rounds of mortar and 100-pound rockets into four vital U.S.
A widely held opinion in financial circles is that, once again, the Federal Reserve may raise the discount rate. This being the rate at fthieh-members banka may borrow, it generally, foreshadows increases in the cost of almost every other type of borrowing.
It is the responsibility of this central bank to expand or limit the money supply to keep the economy stable rather than inflated or depressed. Since inflation now grows worse by the day, analysts believe the Federal Reserve is compelled to slow economic activity by making borrowing more difficult.
A REFLECTION
Although rate changes generally are few and ar between, their frequency in the past Vh .ears illustrates the instability of the economy.
On Dec. 6, 1965, the rate was raised to 4% per cent from -4-and remained at that level until April 7, 1967, when it was lowered again to 4 per cent.
★ ★ ★
From that point on, however, there have been regular increases, to 4V4 per cent Nov. 20, 1967, to 5 per cent March 22, to 5Mi per cent April 18. If another increase is made, most likely it
LANSING (AP) - Judges of the State Appeals Court plan to decide for themselves early next month whether to grant the request of Gov. George Romney and supply a one-m&n grand juror to probe the State Highway Department.
That was the expected next step following Monday’s incon elusive ruling by the State Supreme Court, which split 4-4 over whether the appeals court has jurisdiction to act on the application by Romney and Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley.
★ it ★
The planned resignation of a Supreme Court justice suggested that the Appeals Court, al though inferior in the judicial hierarchy to the high tribunal, might get its way.
Romney and Kelley petitioned the Appeals Court for a grand jury lari October—Romney in* sistently and Kelley reluctantly. Kelley^ who conducted a six-month probe of the department last year, at first said a grand jury was pot needed.
Following the 4-4 decision on whether the Appeals Court has jurisdiction in the matter Judge T. John Lesinski, chief Appeals Court judge, said he would call his court together — perhaps June 6 or 7 — to decide what to do with the application. FREE REIN
Supreme Court Clerk Donald Winters said Monday he thought the 4-4 tie left the Appeals Court powerless to act, but Lesinski g«iH hp thought his court re-tained tree rein because of the pending resignation of Supreme Court Justice Theodore Souris.
Souris, one of the four on the high coprt to rule against appeals.court jurisdiction, has announced plans to retire July 1.
today in one of the heaviest coordinated sheUings of the war.
Enemy infantrymen also attacked one of the headquarters but were repulsed, the U.S Command said.
★ it it
The shellings followed a destructive rocket attack on a U.S. air cavalry division headquarters in the northern war zone Sunday. It too was attacked again today, but damage was far lighter.
At least eight U.S. soldiers and 21 enemy were reported killed in the attacks near Hue. Another 51 Americans were wounded. In all four cases, headquarters said, material damage was either negligible or light.
3 CAPITALS SHELLED
At the same time, Vietcong troops shelled three provincial capitals and two allied airfields —all but one in the Mekong Delta-inflicting at least 65 allied casualties
Gen. William C. Westmoreland, commander of UlS. forces in Vietnam, said, “The intensity of the war seems to be increasing.’’
★ ★ ★
Asked If he thought this was deliberately timed with the Paris peace talks as part of a Communist command “talk and fight” strategy, Westmoreland said “circumstantial evidence” would indicate this.
Westmoreland’s headquarters announced that thousands of American helicopter-borne fantrymen and paratroopers were on the move against North Vietnamese forces menacing Hue and Quang Tri City to the north in two newly announced operations to “seek out and de stray or capture enemy personnel, material and installations.’
Although the interest rates that are appropriate to an economy at a given time cannot always be compared, it is difficult to overlook the fact that in 1929 the discount rate was 6 per cent and that for the next 27 years it failed to reach even 4 per cent. At one point it actually fell to H of one per cent.
Area Mao Attends
Receptmn Set for Teacher
A reception, will be held Sun-
100 block of Jackson about 3:30[day for Mrs. Sally G. Johnson, p.m. yesterday.
Rummage Clearance. 10c or less. Congregational Church. 6-12 Friday, May. 24. —Adv,
MOM’S Rummage: Thursday, 9 to 12. Indihnwood and Baldwin. —Adv,
ft fi
321.2 BONDS 51.7 MfJlsf Band!
54.1 3)1.3 10 Hlghftr grads rail* 435.4 145.4 13J.1 200.1 10 Second grad* rolls
principal of Haviland School,
Waterford Township, who is retiring after serving as a teacher and ad-m inlitrator since 1922.
The public is
wi ll+J ^ receptionf frott) ^*- John®°n ,
3i7.o2+8.7i g to 5 p.m. at Haviland School, 74^4-o.ii'5305 Cass-Elizabeth. fsiSSl' Money is being collected for 1277—oilsa scholarship fund in her honor.
A Bloomfield Township man, Dr. Paul L. Connolly of 4347 Harden, attended the Sympqsi um on Visibility in the Driving Task in Texas last weekend.
The symposium was organ-1 zed by fee visibility c 6 m-mittee of the Highway Research Board
and the Illuminating Engineering Research Institute of the Illuminating Engineering Society. Connolly is a member of both of these organizations.
- *—^ if
He specializes in the study of sight in relationship to automo-tive design and safety.______
Novi Village Voters Okay Incorporation
BONO AVERAGES Compiled by Tin Associated Pros* 34 1* 18 1* II
Rolls
Not chongo —1 Noon Tuos. 44.2 Prov. Doy 64.3 Wook Ago 64.1 Month. Ago 44.7 Year Ago 72 0 1088 High .. *4.3 1068 Low "■. 64.0 1967 High .. 73.0
84 1 ZM 88.2
86.1 78.6 88.6
•7.6 79.0 88.6
86.8 71.1 *1.4
92.9 81,8 9V.9
*4.9—*0:7 89 4
86 3 /B.4 SB.)
95.6 84.V 92*5
86.1 71.0 89.1
Senate Revives Sunday Liquor
LANSING U(9 — Sale of liquor on Sunday—a proposal defeated earlier this session — emerged again last night as the Senate approved an amendment permitting countiesto decide the controversial question,----
Senate Majority Leader Emil Lockwood, R-St. Joseph, tacked the proposal on a bill requiring the Liquor Control Commission to notify county prosecutors of liquor violations by minors. The biil was advanced to final voting stage.
★ ★ ★
Lockwood’s amendment, defeated once this session, permits counties to conduct a referen-dum to decide whether to sell liquor on Sunday.
If approved by a majority of voters, liquor would be sold by establishments whose gross receipts from sale of food and other services exceed 50 per cent of their total business.
The third attempt to get voter approval for first-class cltyhood in Novi Village was successful yesterday.
Hie vote was 694 to 498 out of 2,257 registered voters.
★ ★ ★
Voters also elected nine of a field of 14 candidates for the charter commission.
To serve are Raymond Evans with 569 votes; Joseph Crupi, 516; William L. Duey, 533;
Denis Berry, 513; Russell Button, 507; William D. Brinker, 499; Edwin Presnell, 497; J. F. Buck, 479; and David S. Harri-son, 476.
OTHER VOTES |3j - The other candidates and votes received: Leo Harrawood, 465: Lavcrne DeWaard, 431;
Mrs. Dorothy Farrah, 395; James S. Cherfoli, 395; and Edward VahlbUsch, 388. :
By law, the commission must meet within 10 days and select a chairman. It has two years to present voters with a charter. ■ .........
...__ it- ■ * ■ *
L--Tho. election results liava been certified by the village clerk-and will be reviewed by ™ the village canvassing board "J tonight. jjfiE ^
*e[.3 Residents defeated first-class S>i cityhood in,. 1959, soon after the
79.o | village's incorporation, and
B—12
ONE COLOR
S . v \
THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, MAY 21, 19(58
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U.S. Education Benefits—8
Teacher Corps Beckons to Students
(EDITOR’S NOTE - his is the eighth article in a 15-part series on U.S. educational and training benefit* available to you.)
By RAY CROMLEY NEA Publications Among the opportunities for those students who intend to go Into IeachTng~Ts" the chance To participate In the National Teacher Corps.
* * *
Undec the corps, interns with bachelor degrees will teach in
low-income areas
guidance of an experienced universities are eligible for U.S.
teacher, a team leader.
Such training should normally lead to an advanced degree.
\ * * *
Teacher interns will be paid in training and while teaching.
For further information contact the Division of Education Personnel Training, Bureau of Elementary and Second ary Education, U.S. Office of Education, Washington, D.C. 20202.
Men and women beginning their careers in school ad-
under the 1 m inlstratlon in state
Apollo Crew Ready for Escape Testing
Office of Education fellowships.
Universities nominate their promising young men and women administrators. Successful candidates work from 10 months .to one year in the U.S. Office of Education as research, program and administrative assistants at the
Barry Goldwater, Claude Kirk, William Scranton,> Margaret Chase Smith, Winthrop Rockefeller, Strom Thurmond, 'John Tower, John Chafee, James Rhodes, and Everett Dirksen will run as favorite-son candidates.
CONVENTION HEADS Committee chairman for the convention are Larry McLean, permanent organization; Judy Hill, Credentials; Cindy , Shaver, rules; and Paul Wisniewski; platform.
Planks involving 18-year old voting, the draft, Vietnam, foreign aid, the United States and China, lew en- \ foroement, civil rights, welfare programs and monetary policies are being -drawn up, ____;; ,;y y!J
Week of Politicking Ends With Elections at Marian
PwllH Prttt Photo
Teacher Feted at Country Day
By SHARON BERRIDGE
Bloomfield Country Day School helped John Poppiestone (Mr. Pop) celebrate his “39th” birthday Friday. Mary Ann Brieker and Nancy Russ as a ruse took him him out for lunch.
When he returned for his last class the multipurpose room was decorated, and many of his former pupils waiting, as
was his wife. '
★ w ★
This is Mr. Pop’s last year. He has
watched the school grojv since 1956, when he and one* other teacher comprised the faculty. “ .tl - .... _*»! J«r-s*4 y
Burn in London, England, Mr Pop received his formal education in England. He was in the Canadian Air Force dur-ing both World Wars.
GRANDDAUGHTER
He married, his wife in Canada, and has a son and granddaughter who live in Ohio.
Mr- Pop teaches geometry, Spanish and French. Famous pupils he has tutored include “Bud” Guest, and “Bunkie" Knudsen.
★ ★ ★
The girls presented Mr. Pop with a tape deck so he can play his favorite classical music.
Other gifts included a ring from the faculty and a color television from the alumni.
★ ★ . ★
The seniors presented Mrs. Pop yvith a portrait of her husband.
TIGHT RACE — Seniors Patricia Cline (left) and Sue Savant campaigned vigorously for tjie recent class officer election at Marian High School. Fellow students gave the nod to Pat in the class rivalry.
By PATRICIA POLMEAR A week of hand shaking, friend-making and vote-getting ended Thursday when
Spring Sing Set by Milford Choir
By SALLIE QUEEN
The Milford High School Choir will present its annual spring concert, "Spring Sing," tomorrow and Thursday at 8 p.m. in the school’s Little Theater.
Opening numbers of this year’s concert will be a tribute to men in the service. A poem will be recited by Shelley Dahn and the choir will sing a collection of songs.
Excerpts from four Broadway musicals, “South Pacific,” “My Fair Lady,” “Sound of Music” and “Oklahoma,” also will be sung by the choir.
Specialty nutnbers include a dance by Linda Mack and piano solos by Pat Duffy and Howard Fowler. Among those performing vocal solos are Janine Han-dyside, Fat Lindgren, Tom Lewis, Sally Craig and Charles Compton.
* “Spring Sing” is under the direction of Mrs. Eleanor Beam of the faculty.
The Totem Pole, Milford’s yearbook, will be distributed June 3. To celebrate the occasion the staff is holding “Gone Wild,” 3 combination dance apd carnival that day.
Marian High School students went to the polls to elect the 1968-69 class officers.
★ * *
Pat Cline i» senior class presidentelect; Carol Condon, vice president; Ann - Eenet^-sem^apyr end Kathryn Gillooly, treasurer.
* * *
Junior class officers are, Marla Benson, president; Therese McLaughlin, vice president; Anne Larin, secretary; and Evelyn Jarvis, treasurer.
Leading the sophomore class are Kathy Soimer, president; Maryanne Berry, vice president; Heidi Halla, secretary ;and Michelle Fox; treasurer.—•
PRIOR TO ELECTIONS
Registering, filing for office, faculty screening and primaries preceded final elections.
* * *
“Previous experience,, energy, idealistic but practical outlook, and interest,” constitute Pat Cline’s, senior class president, qualifications.
* * *
A member of the National Honor Society. Pat hopdS to rontinup thu high standing position of the Class of ‘69 and to participate in unifying the school next year.
Additional School News Found on Page C-2
Kettering Sounds Modem Note
By DONNA FURLONG ,s
Neo-modern music will come to Water-ford-Kettering High Sunday as the symphonic band presents its spring concert at 3 p.m.
This is the first time neo-modern music has been performed by Kettering. “Spectrum,” as it is called, is performed with a tape of computer1 music. ★ ★ ★
“Introduction and Samba” and “Bal-’ lade” wilL be played by the band and
alto-saxophone player Jack Kripl, guest soloist.
A flute trio, Peggy Cahape, Laurie Jackson and Terri McCracken, will solo in the “Carnival of Venice."
NEW OFFICERS
Band members recently elected officers for next year. They are Doug Johnson, president; Bruce Smith, vice president; Laurie Jackson, secretary; Scott Parrot* treasurer; Wanda Corey, librarian; Sue Johns, assistant librarian; Peggy Cahape, historian; Duane Shapoe,
NFH 'Brigade' to Work for Scholarship Funds
By ANNE KILLEEN Comrades of- the “White Tornado Brigade” from North Farmington High
Event Exciting at Brother Rice
HAPPY BIRTHDAY — Helping John Poppiestone celebrate in a combination birthday and retirement party are (from left) Sharon Berridge and Janet Ivory) Poppiestone Is one of the two original faculty members who helped launch Bloom-field Country Day School in ft56. -..Ef
By GARY MILLER
Field Day ’68 at Brother Rice High School was as exciting and action-packed as Chairman Dave Lawson promised.
Final scores were -seniors, 80 points; juniors, 59 points; sophomores, 25 points; and freshmen, 13 points.
At the beginning of the day an assembly was held at which each class competed in dress, song, cheer and banner.
In the track and field events, the class of ’69 took the first event, the 440-yard run, with Mike Biallas the star.
DIFFERENT STORY
It was a different story in the 100-yard dash as senior Don Burns was the —first-io cross the finish line with junior upcoming Mike McGill finishing a close second.
In the 880-relay, the senior team composed of Bruce Mulkoff, Bill Rose, Dave Reardon and Don Burns added another .place to the senior score.
★ ★ ★
Confusion marred the mile relay as the Junior team who won the event were disqualified for running a varsity track member. The second-place senior team was named the winners of the event, r Thr lire^roil Tvas-woir by senior Paul ZelenUk.
SOFTBALL THROW
The softball throw results were Lynch) senior, first; Dave Mason, sophomore, second; and Bob Torzewski, senior third.
Then the junior surge began. The class of ’69 took a first and a third in the three-legged race.
The egg toss was won by a junior team made up of Mike McGill and Scott MacGuldwin with a senior team consisting of Joe Krajicek and Dave Fiebig winding up second and • sophomores third.
In the tug of war -event, considered to be the biggest event of the (fay. the junior team demolished the-seniors.
«It was the first time in two years th§t the class of ’68 has been defeated in this competition.
School will brighten residents’ window-panes and mow their lawns Saturday during the 1968 annual Workday.
Sponsored by the NFH Student Council, the drive will raise scholarship funds for the graduating members of the class of ’68.
Towels ’n’ rags galore are being collected all week in the main lobby. The Varsity Club will boost the “Towel Drive” gathering at Friday night’s dance by having admission include spongy-swabs.
Cleaning crews will man the rags, soapy buckets and water hoses in the mom-till-eve car wash at NF’s front drive Saturday. Charge for the auto bath is by donation only.
★ ★ ★
Telephone requests for household jobs will be taken from 8 a.m. until 4 p.m. at the high school and at subdivision headquarters. Sophomore, junior and senior proletarians will be assigned the jobs on an hourly slate.
Boondogglin’ teens will be engaged in house painting labor to garage ciean-out chores. The feminine helpers will assist mothers in homemaking duties.
Organization Is the backbone for iM date to starch and polish
manager ; and Rick Dale, assistant manger.
Tonight at the Sveden House “Moms’ Night” will be held by the W-K Girls Athletic Association and Letter Club. Chairman of the event is Pam Godo-shian.
★ ★ ★ .
The balance due on all Kismets (yearbooks) must be paid by Thursday. If not paid, the student will not receive the autograph section Friday.
Friday will be Honor Convocation Day, At that time the valedictorian and saiutatorian will be announced. New National Honor Society members will also be named.
JUNIORS VOTE
Junior class elections for next year's senior board will be tomorrow. Campaigning began yesterday.
TomorrowTsalso the last day any student wishing to run for a junior class office may sign up with either Mary Ann Feltzer or Vince Koehler.
★ ★ ★
Tickets for senior prom are now on sale at the bookstore during lunch hours. They must be purchased by May 24. No tickets will be sold at the door.
Kettering students interested in joining a summer theatre group are asked to contact Patty Looman of the faculty in room 302 before May 28.
Honor Seniors at Clarkston
By KATHY MATLOCK
New members were inducted into the National Honor Society at Clarkston Senior High School.
Seniors tapped were Pat Cummings, Rose Jenkins, Adrianne Maples, Joyce Myers, Shirley Mull, Marie Pope, Kathy Roberts Cherly Schadt and Linda Tower.
The new junior members are Kirk Beattie, Mark Cowen, Kathryn Crogan, Don Mayo, Lynn Race and Michael Yarbrough.
The guidance department has Invited all members of the junior class and their parents to a college information night tonight at 7:30 p.m.
—The-meetwg wtH be heW in the Little Theater.
The topics of discussion will be scholarships and financial statements. There will be a question-and-answer period.
The Clarkston Booster Club announced the winners of its athletic scholarships. Receiving $100 scholarships each are seniors Lynda Kizer, Kathy Matlock and Leslie Surre.
The Girls Athletic Association will hold its annual Mother-Daughter Banquet Thursday, at Howe's Banquet Room.
\
Pat
"North FarmTn^onites. Stud^t ‘C6uncir President Randy Harris acting as general coordinator for Work Day ’68.
Council members. John Wendling and Robin Murphy will supervise the labor forces.
PUBLICITY
Publicity posters and announcements are dressing NF hallways as well as community establishments to broadcast the snic ’n’ span forces. This extensive promotion is under the management pi Kathy Mason and Terry Fuelling.
★ ★ ★
Communication arrangements were mobilized by Mark McLean and Tony Garcia. Surrey, squads of super soapy-spongers are under assembly line chairmen Nancy Cosper and Jan Shipley.
Kmgswood
I By MARY STEWART — Bright yellows and oranges are being placed skillfully in a decoration scheme as the Kiqgswood Student Council undertakes th§ task »f .remodeling tjje. ieVel recreation arear—- v ~-
Under the direction of Kitty Koiberl, Student Council secretary-treasurer, students have been working everyday after school.
Pontloc Prttt Photo
^SPECIALTY DANCE —• Linda Mack, a student at Milford High School, rehearses her dance number for the choir’s annual spring concert, “Spring Slrfg” which will be held Wednesday and Thursday in the Little Theater at I pm,' M
V-4R '
C—2
THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 21, 1068
_y c-W+tf
SCHOOL NEWS ■GROUNDUP
Lapeer
By SHAR6N KIEHLER
Hiis year’s schedule for graduation at Lapeer Senior High School will be headed by “swingout” (a marching parada through the main street of downtown In which students grades seven through 12 participate) June 6 at 10 a.m.
★ - Jr *
Baccalaureate follows June 9, at 8 p.m. at the high school gym with the Reverend Father Goentges of Immaculate Conception Church in Lapeer offi-
ciating.
it it it
Commencement will be June 11 at 7 p.m. on the athletic field of Lapeer Senior High School (indoors if It rains).
This year's guest speaker will be John D. Wilson, assistant provost and director of undergraduate education at Michigan State University.
directed studies course at Cranbrook called Cinematography.
The three interested students, Mike Allen, Chip Letts, and Tim Barrett, are studying the art of movie making under the guidance of William Moran, English instructor. »
Sea holm
Mercy
By MARY ANNE MADDEN
Our Lady of Mercy Student Council officers for next year will be elected by students tomorrow. Girls vying for the four offices are juniors Clara Flores, Sue LaBelle, Tess Schafer, Gail Stoney, Nancy Weber and Julie Wright.
★ Hr it
Also to be elected are the Athletic Association officers. Candidates are juniors Janis Boettcher, Jackie Geeraert, Sue Grand and Dorian Soper, and sophomores Sally Mathers and Cathy Svo-boda. >
Eleven Mercy students were inducted yesterday into Quill and Scroll, the honorary society for high school journalists.
They are Janet Chorkey, Cindy West-phal, Jeanne Mathieu, Kathy Loftus. Marilyn Mazur, Donna Bonnici, Barb Steiner, Linda Klem, Carol Migliore, Anne Wynsberge and Peggy Campbell.
Cranbrook
By DAVID DYE
The combined Kingswood-Cranbrook Glee Clubs will sing Schubert’s Mass in G at their concert Sunday afternoon at 5. Preceded by a carillon recital, thus concert will be performed in Christ Church Cranbrook.
★ ★ ★ .
Student soloists will be Catherine Moore, Russ Ives and Matt Kimbrough in the “Benedictus,” Chalyce Brown and Tom Murphy in “Agnus Dei,’’ Carol Straith and Don Sweeny in “Gloria.*’ Chalyce Browij will also be the soloist in thfe Kyrie.” *
★ ★ ★
Three Cranbrook students will show their first experimental films at a special school assembly, tomorrow afternoon. These films are products of a new
. By JOHN CALVER
With less than three weeks of school left at Seaholm, seniors are busy with the early exam schedule, along with rehearsals for commencement and baccalaureate.
The Senior Dinner will be held at 6:30 P.M. May 28 in the gymnasium.
' ★ ★ • ★
At this time the students graduating Cum Laude will be revealed.
The names of mock election winners also will be announced.
SENIOR OUTING
Metropolitan Beach, June 3 will be the scene Of the senior outing, Senior Skip Day. The Class of 1968 will spend the day (from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.) at the park.
Tennis, softball, swimming and football are just a few of the many activities available. A box lunch prepared by Alban’s will be served.
Sacred Heart
By TERESA FIASHETTI
Hie first induction ceremony into the K.S. Wansboro chapter of the National Honor Society was held Monday at the Academy of the Sacred Heart.
Judy Pistilli, Mary Grace Altalo, Emily' Abbink, Pat Popp, Chris Oldani, Joanne Lorenz and Teresa Fiaschetti were awarded certificates of membership. Julie Kircher, Anne Reynolds, Sue Judge and Mary Riccardo received provisional membership.
it it it
Results of the Spring Provincial Contest were announced last week. Christine Millon received honorable mention for her magazine cover design.
Among the literary entries, the. following won honorable mention: Judy Pistilli, Jean Summerfield and Pat Popp, seniors; Teresa Fiaschetti and Christine Gerstenberg, juniors; Shelia Gray, Sue Judge and Anne Reynolds, sophomores; and Jan Galloway, Mary Henry and Pam Mikus, freshmen.
. College of Medical Arts as president of student affairs.
it h it
At the last band concert of the year. Dan M. Shultz, director, awarded the John Phillip Sousa Award to David J. Forsythe, first chair and concert master. Shultz is also leaving to teach in Nebraska.
★ ir it '
‘Frank Haynes who won the oratorical contest in Michigan, has been named president of the Temperance Society of Adelphian. Kay Caraway will hold the office of vice president.
Roy Schaffer was chosen as Student Association president and Sheri Wolf,
vice president.
St. Lawrence
By JANICE VAN DEN BROUCK Tomorrow, members of the clothing classes at St. Lawrence High School will present the annual fashion show entitled “La Boutique.”
The girls will model their own creation!!' Other models will be friends or relatives for whom the girls have made clothing. Fashions that will be shown range from pajamas to formats.
★ ★ ★
The home economics classes are under the direction of Sister Colombiere who is also helping the girls organize the show. Linda Henrich will narrate the program. The class will serve refreshments to their guests following the program. ----------
Lahser
Adelphian
By RENEE KEMPF Last Tuesday, students of Adelphian Academy learned that Principal R. W. Pratt will be leaving.
Pratt, who has been Adelphian’s principal for 17 years, will go to Kettering
By GRETCHEN HAAS
The story of Bessie Smith, famous jazz singer of the twenties will come to life when the Bloomfield Hills Lahser High School drama players present Edward Albee’s “The Death of Bessie Smith” Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m.
The play is one of four one-act plays and excerpts which will be included in the production at the Bloomfield Hills Andover High School Little Theater.
★ W it
Election results for Student Union representatives for next year are as follows: Barb Bammel, Denise Fullar-ton, Jo Hallack, Debbie Oberman, Harold Perry, Carol Pitt, Brad Shimp, Ilene Stewart, Eric Tirrell and Kathy Ziegler, seniors.
Juniors include Robin Dibner, Mark Feuer, Gretchen Haas, Ed Hershman, Joel Hipps, Teri Malwitz, Liz Read, Marc Tirrell, Dave Torbi and Doug Wagner.
★ ic it
Among the sophomores are Melissa Ennen, Terri Hubner, Pat Hieronymous, Fred Jeffers, Armen Keteyian, Karen McCue, Dave Ramsey, Marla Ray and Debbie Terry. ,
Physicist Explains Uneven Atom Split
By Science Service ibeen using says the nucleus! for thousands of experiments.iphysics is the assumption that COLLEGE PARK, Md. — For,should divide in two equal But ** has stuck in their!all matter has a wave motion almost.30 vears..nhvsicists have parts. and they behave as if1 theoretical craws. | within it, insignificant
been watching atoms s p 1 i tjthat were the case, even when
without understanding why they don’t split into equal parts. In fact, most scienticts have simply ipored the fact.
it it it
Hie simple theory they have
they know it isn’t.
The gap in theory has not kept them from using fission to produce bombs and power sta tions and to provide the stuff
FURRY FELINES — This curious cat in Bristol, Conn., hi attracted to pussy willows. Could be he’s wondering if his coat is as soft as the furry buds making their spring debut
theoretical craws. j within it, insignificant . in
A University of Maryland human-sized objects fatrt iro physicist, Dr. James J. Griffin, now come up with an ex-
planation. Building on the old theory, called the liquid drop model because it pictures a splitting atom like a pinched water drop — or balloon — he adds features that predict and explain the unequal split1 when heavy atoms, such as uranium, undergo fission.
★ ★ ★
The more detailed theory also explains why lighter atoms, when they undergo fission — almost any nucleus can be split if it is hit hard enough — do divide into equal parts, according to the simple model
uWormMass ~
The liquid-drop model treats the nucleus as a uniform mass with a "Uniformlydistributed charge. When the drop begins to divide, it forms a dumbbell shape: two blobs held together by surface tension and pushed apart by the electric charge.
When the neck of the dumbbellbecomes narrow enough, the surface attraction is less than electric repulsion, and Hie drop, or nucleus, separates.
This description is adequate for the early stages of fission, says Dr. Griffin. But at the instant of splitting, the fact that the nucleus is made up of particles — protons and neutrons rather than an even, lumpless mass — becomes important.—-------------------1
It is tht particl/nature of Jn the lifter elements, on the
nucleus that causes heaviero her h«nd- thenumbf of n-atoms to split into unequal f}"5 and n-rnmus nucleons at
fragments, and lighter ones to j 1™omentI ion 15 P™-cnijt evenlv tiCally equal. With no surplus,
spill evenly. the tendency is for half the
WAVE MOTION ' j nuclear particles to go into each
One cornerstone of modemtfragment,
portant at the subatomic level.
Working with the wave motion of nuclear particles, Dr. Griffin concludes that they can be divided into two types. He calls these n-plus and n-minus.
What distinguishes the two types, he believes, is that the wave motion of the n-minus nuclear particl es never . takes them through the center 6f the nuclear particles never takes fission takes {dace. The n-plus particles, on the other hand, do pass through the center.
h it it
At the moment of fission, ac cording to the new theory, there are in the heavy atoms more n-plus than n-minus particles.
IN THE CENTER
Because the n-plus particles are concentniteci fa The center the dumbbell-shape of the splitting nucleus means there is great pressure, to send the surplus n-plus particles to one side or the other.
This means that when the nucleus splits, the surplus n plus particles will he concentrated in one fragment, which will be heavier than the other.
Dr. Griffin says the surplus n-plus particles all go together in a single fragment because that takes less energy than to send half one way . and half the other. /
----rr---★----it---a-----. —
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FORA COMPLETE PHYSICIAN’S
SUPPLY SERVICE... SEE THRIFTY! (
♦ CRUTCHES * WHKL CHAIRS * WALKERS * 0ANES j-“ ~
♦ DRESSINGS * BI0L0QI0ALS * RUBBER SHEETING
♦ OOLOSTUMY AND ALLIED APPLIANCES ♦ FULL DIAIETIO NEEDS 81
3 THRIFTY-CLOONAN DRUG STORES to Serve You!
140 N. Saginaw near Sears * Corner of Huron and Telegraph Streets * 4895 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains
THK PONTIAC PHKSS, Tt'RSDAV, MAY 21* 19«H
Close Vote on Crime Bill Seen
Death Notices ! ln Ssssb*.
C—8
Personals
4-B
i 4 ^r!ghl lo rsmain silent or not ad madge, D-Ga., said their ap- admissible In evidence In fedcr-proposal. I. 1 !t£^wfatumf* * l*W!"r before P™»*'<«““ ,»me 6.1-al ,„d ,l»te crlmln.l Irl.l.
Court of'authority tp invalidate! *
confessions and restrict use of police lineups. these
Gen. Joseph P. Tydlngs, D-Md.,* scheduled to lead the attack against the proposals today, contends they represent "the most serious assault on the Supreme Court and the independence of thte judiciary" in the nation's history.
* *
But Sen. Sam
* *
President Johnson, opposing provisions and another one which would authorize court-supervised wiretapping by police to combat major crimes,
N.C.* urging their enactment, told the Senate Monday the Supreme Court has invented new, arbitrary and unrealistic rules fthat Impede police in bringing criminals to justice.
The proposals are part of a broad crime-control bill which has been before the Senate for three weeks.
MAY BE ADMISSIBLE
ance to our system of justice—a I bars the federal courts from re system which has become far*viewing the admission of such too weighted in favor of the I testimony In state trials, criminal. This is designed to overcome
Under the proposals, federal,a Supreme Court ruling last courts would be denied author!-1 year barring in-court identifica-.. , jj , ... t° reverse a ruling of any tjon 0f a defendant by an cye-
?■« o. e ..graVe C0nstltu' state court admitting a confer: wltness to a crje if fthe origi- j O'CONNOR
tlonal questions. js|on Jn evidence as voluntarilynal identification was made in a
‘SOME BALANCE’ given If this had been upheld by p^. |ineup wjthout a |awyer
The American Bar Associa-'^e highest court in the state. | for the suspect being present * tion's board of governors said it * *
J. Ervin D a^° opposes the proposals
S. McNiel Jr.; dear brother of Jatnes E. McNiel, Everett McNiel, and Mrs. Clara Pish- i er; also survived by three grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Wednesday,! May 22 at 2 p.m. at the Black-more & Tubbs Funeral Hqme, J Mayville. Michigan. Interment in West Burlington Cemetery,! Silverwood, Michigan.
Also, the bill provides that!
[JURISDICTION DISPUTE
Another provision wouIdjdpnyL federal courts jurisdiction in habeas corpus actions challenging the legality of the detention of persons convicted in state courts.
Ervin said this was designed to relieve overburdened federal i I courts from the growing prac-
ROME (AP) — The Christianicoalition parties 366 seats in thejtice of convicted persons using:
_ I Democrat and Communist par-; Chamber and 183 In the Senate habeas corpus procedures as a
■They provide that a confes-^eg scored major gains in j compared with 361 and 179 in! substitute for direct appeal, sion be admissible as evidence|jjajy>s elecionts for a hew Par- the previous Parliament. This! * * *
criminal case| liament. Final ' returns today ; gave the coalition a 102-seat ma-
But Sen. Herman G. Tal-jeyewitness testimony shall be
Reds Score Gains i in Italian Elections
in any federal
when the judge decides it wasj"^"^ CommunisTs their bi^Jjorlty in thFchamber andVsX^^ thTcreat 0WENS
voluntarily given. |gest vote in postwar history. seat majority in the Senate , linkable to suspend the great locl
A confession could not be
DOROTHY M., May 19, 1968 ; 684 Kenilworth Street; age J>3; beloved wife o f Francis R. O’Connor, beloved daughter of Fred1 Fulcher; dear mother of Mrs. Joan Lada; dear sister of Mrs. Edward Souden, Mrs.i George Fisher, Fred L Shd Eldon Fulcher; also survived by one grandchild. Funeral service will be held Wed-6 nesday, May 22, at ll a m. at { the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Interment in Ottawa j Park Cemetery. Mrs. O’Con- i nor will lie in state at the! funeral home. < Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to1 9.)
The Roman Catholic Christian! The astonishing Communist
writ of habeas corpus.” He said if it could be done for one class
ruled out just because of delay Democrats and their enemies,: vote totalled 8,555,131 in the I ,* it cmdd °hp°dnne *fnr
m arraignment after a suspect s|the communists, improved their Chamber balloting, compared1” 11 COUld De done 1011
arrest. Nor could it be invalidate j positions In both the Chamber ofj^fth 12,428,663 for the dominant1____________________;_____i
because a suspect had not I deputies and the Senate: The j ChrJstiaa Democrats. The Chris-l been advised by police of hisj^jpf josers was the Socialists,
'• which had hoped to recover
v Ua. ,.p T||rnc jfrom the defection of its leftist ■ ■ jelements. Instead they came out
poor third in the hnultiparty
to Question of
tian Democrats percentage of | the total was 39.1, compared to I 38.5 per cent in the last elections I in 1963.
HIGHEST VOTE YET
The Communist vote. 26 9 per
| n ., ,, *i*i ,,’ , cent of the total, was 1.6 per I T ! Despite the Socialist setback,
Longer terms ! Premier Aldo Moro’s center-left cen‘ higher than it had ever;
^ j coalition increased its majority polled before,
r .. in both the Senate and the The Red performance soundly £
LANfflNgfAEI—Hous^ftem-jchainber. . i-contradicted forecasts that the
bers had before them today a) coa]jtion comprises the [Vietnam peace talks in Paris, Christian Democrats, the small the upheaval in Czechoslovakia and unrest in neighboring France would weaken the party
proposal, to lengthen their term?
of office from two years to four, Republican party and the So. an issue that touched off a par- cialists.JThe first two gained tisan battle in the chamber mDre seats than the Socialists!at the polls.
Monday. 0 Host * * ★
Defeated, however, was an-[ M j in the Senate the Communists
other proposed constitutional (ran on the same ticket with the
amendment — one outlawing Nearly 32 million persons v°l-Moscow-oriented Proletarian Michigan State University's ed in the election for 315 sena- Socialist party and together sliding-scale tuition system. tors and 630 deputies. They will they captured 30 per cent of the
★ ★ * take their seats in a new Parlia- vote. The Proletarian Socialists
Sent to the governor were ment June 5. [were leftist defectors from the
bills to repeal the state’s Crimi- The fascists and the Monar- traditional Socialist party and nal Sexual Psychopath Law, re- chists also lost ground. ! the principle cause of the lat-
quiring windshields on most mo- Finals results' gave the threeIter's losses, tor vehicles, add 10 cents to the price of a fishing license and permit legislators to run for oth- j er offices during their terms.
Few representatives oppose i giving themselves four-year | terms, but politically they dis-' agree on whether they should; run in presidential election
Death Notices
EVANS, ANNIE; May 17, 1968; 522 Highland Avenue; age 75; dear sister of Lillie Belle' Morrisette, Charlie and
Webster Stephens. Funeral service will be held Thursday, May 23 at l p.m. at St. John’s C.M.EJ. Church. Interment in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Evans will lie in state at the Davis-Cobb Funeral Home after 3:30 p.m., Wednesday.
Saginaw Man Convicted of First-Degree Murder
ENGEL, FLORENCE JULIA;
May 20, 1968 ; 30 Cadillac; age 67; beloved wife of George Engel; dear mother of Mrs.
Harry (Edith) Crigger; dear sister of Mrs. Helen Cameron; also survived by four grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Thursday,
May 23 at 10 a.m. at the Coats Funeral Home, Drayton______ . _
Plains, interment in Lakeview ^^CNER, DELIA; May 20,
Cemetery. Mrs. Engel will lie ^or^1 Eddy, Walled
HARLAN B.; May 19, 1968 ; 3953 Percy King Drive, Waterford Township; age 55; beloved husband of Lillian; Owens; dear father of Mrs. Richard Nelson and Oliver E.: Owens; dear brother of Austin; P. Owens; also survived by[ two grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, May 22 at 1 p.m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral j Home. Interment in Christian Memorial Estate Cemetery.; Mr. Owens will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested1 visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 ;t
PICHOTTE, SALLY E.; Mayt 21, 1968; 10135 Nadine, Hun-| tington Woods; age 52; beloved wife of John F. Pichotte; dear mother of Mrs. Perry (Jacquelyn) Mattoon and Mrs. Rogert G. (Judith) Frechett; also survived by five grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Thursday, May 23 at 11 a.m. at the Vasu-Lynch Funeral Home, 4375 North Woodward, Royal Oak Interment in Woodlawh Cemetery.
jn state after 7 p.m. tonight at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 tp 9).
FORTIN, PHILOMENE; May
DETROIT (AP) — A 23-year- Fred J. Borchard set the date years, or in off-years with the °M man accused of slaying four f°r sentencing as May 31. The governor and the Senate. Sena-persons was convicted of first- *r'a* was moved to Detroit on tors now have four-year terms, i degree murder Monday in the nT » T
In the past two elections, ad- death of g Saginaw couple. . c publicity of the case mitted Rep. James Farnsworth. ’ ’ Saginaw.
R-Plainwell, "It just happens A jury of 10 men and two The Middeldorf bodies were that the Republicans did much women found W,1Iiam- Edding- found two days after the kiil-better when they ran with the ton Jr of Sa8inaw euilty »n the ings. Middeldorf, 63, was found
governor (in 1966) than when ™rder, oft ^ Carl tied UP in the bedroom of his ”unto°" Funeral Home
they ran with the president (in Mlddledorf Feh- 3- 1967’ home with a piece of plastic |..............................
1964). Now it’s just that . * * * over his head, several small
simple.” The jury deliberated more knife wounds, and an eight-inch
A Republican-sponsored pro- than four hours before deliver- butcher knife in his back. His posal for running in off-years in8 its verdict. Circuit Judge found the bathroom
failed 25-62, drawing only one Democratic vote. Final action
20, 1968; 1140 LaSalle Street; age 83; dear mother of Henry Fortin; dear sister of Mrs. Bennadette Rodgers and Mrs. Marie Tetu; also survived by seven grandchildren and 15 great - grandchildren. Recitation of the Rosary will be held: tonight at 8 p.m. at thei
Lake; age 87; dear mother of Mrs. Laura Profitt, Mrs.1 Stella Drake, Mrs. Elizabeth' Profitt, Mrs. Edna Kessler; j Tommie, Elijah, Ova, Courtney and Emery j Spencer; also survived by 46! grandchildren, 47 great-grandchildren and eight; great - great - grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Friday, May 24., at 1 p.m. at, the Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Walled Lake. Interment in South Lyon_ Cemetery. Mrs. Spencer will! lie in state at the funeral home.
Funeral service will be held Wednesday, May 22 at 11 a.m. at the St. Benedicts Catholic TICK, ALICE F.; May 20, 1968;
Church. Interment in Mount Hope Cemetery. Mrs. Fortin will lie in state at the funeral home.
then was put off.
NOTICE TO DEBTORS Debtors of Homer Hight Motors* Inc. lake notice: Monies due to Homer Hight Motors* Inc.* will be accepted at 160 S. Washington* Oxford and 97. Dennison St. until June 1st* 1968. After June 1st* 1968 ail accounts still unpaid and owing to \Homer Hiqht Motors, Inc. will be turned Wen "for legal action.
Homer Hight Motors* Inc.
HOMER HIGHT May 20 21, 22,1968
Board Excuses Teacher's Strip
where she was drowned.
ANOTHER TRIAL Eddington faces another trial GREENAWALT, HELEN MAY;
May 18, 1968; 1500 West
Lovers Lane, Arlington, Texas j (formerly of Pontiac); agej 61; dear mother of Bruce J.i and Richard G. McLintock; dear sister of Mrs. , William H.! Gorsline; also survived by sixj g r a n d c h i ldren. Private j
June 10 on charges of first-de-1 gree murder in the slayings of Dr. and Mrs. Archer A. Claytor of Saginaw, Feb. 1, 1967.
The trial is Scheduled for Ludington on another change of FLINT (AP) - The School venue.
.'H^oRTPR&RANi. lBoard in Burton Township has * * *
MicH^GAN^AEROfMUTics^oMMfssioN ^ pH . Ronald L. Johrtson, 24, of Sag-,
notice to contractors old sex education teacher who maw is also charged m the murH
the followlno*0prolecKs) wljl be letelv “J reportedly stripped before her ders of the Claytors. His trial ST Z u!SS1^ndAP^u!nS?icf.r,S0wn aN-Sb* class to emphasize a date has not been set. !
and will then «hd there be publicly noint
opened and need. F *. lf t , J1 1 Glaytor was found m his home!
«« „Th® aLeged^Ct'”" S'X beaten over the head, possibly
iirn'eeTiAwiAior“cI,pLi g° by the unidentified teacher with a hammer and then shot.;
S3 L«tsRts, ^ieh"B«nC «m upolr^lcaiscd-the^e-^-many-parents,,.^.^—_ 4
'1'l S Chr.fund^opssa'!who demanded her dismissal, I ®, ' not 10 aeatn; !
vue June I?s9 edition of 'stondarf along with that of junior high1 Qflytor was named Michi- Heffner LAVfNA J.; MAY
Specifications for Construction of Alr«i ■ < n . . . . ^ _ .. , ... non'c F'nrpmnQl Phvnipisn of fhn 7 ,
ports" as prepared by the Federal Avia- School Principal C.F. Heidtke. Ig<111 s t urc,nu81 rnywuail Ol me j lofig- 10201 Washbum,
lj0»nAeHeniiaT*ptiriUo/>**he*tonfroct! coi The Bentley School District year in 1959. He was the doctor ’Michigan; Age 77
ob?2r\r, ^’’^'."gov'e^ed'dr^r board, meeting in special sea '1",i------------w ---------- Mjk
funeral service was held Tuesday, May 21 at 11; a m at the Donelson-Johns Funeral; Home. Interment in; Greenwood Cemetery,
3550 Granger Road, Ortonville (formerly of Pontiac); age 83; dear mother of Mrs. Netanis Richards, Mrs. Wilma Lewis, Mrs. Marjorie Copeman, Mrs. Gladys Bron-dige, Donald and. Dale Tick; dear sister of Mrs. Nicy Gavette; also survived by 10 grandchildren and- s e v e n great-grandchildren. Funeral: service will be held Thursday,1 May 23 at 130 p.m. at the Huntoon Funeral Home. Interment in Perry Mount j Park Cemetery. Mrs. Tick will lie in state after 7 to-j night at the funeral home.
Vernon, Michigan. Fam i • Y WICE, WALTER; May 19, 1968;! suggests contributions to the f0rmer|y 0f pontfac; age 74; j Michigan Cancer Foundation , or donor's favorite charity.
f®« of three dollars and twenty-five cents oirtn MfindftV.iniohi._ponrludpd
<$3.25)* which fee if in -addition,Jo that 31un cunciuwru
charged tor plena. . there was insufficient evidence
Plans and documents may be examined1 * . ... .. . . - .•?*■ . ,
at the Michigan Aeronautics Commission to justify dismissal Of the teach-
'Or at the offices of the Consultant listed
with the aroposat. r er or the principal.
..-"Wefind-fthebabJfttentionain
< |“Vh !!? the best interests of 'her stu-
oosai. dents, said Gerald Felger,
who delivered Eddington and Johnson.
Ttie Michigan Aeronautics Commission , , , , .. , lir,* *
reserves the right to waive any informal-> SChOOl board president. ohe ! ity or to accept or reject any or all bids' u., 1
in the test Interests of the Sponsor and Erred in judgment by USing hef-j
self as a model, Thus her meth-
dear mother of Earl Heffner | Jr.;—dear sister- of- -Eulton,| Milton and Wilford Cooney.! Funeral service will be held | Wednesday, May 22 at 10 a.m. {
at.tte“HarveyA: Neely'
Funeral~Home, 16540 Meyers ■ Road, Detrpit; Interment In Grand Lawn Cemetery.
the people of the .State of Michigan -Out»of«State corsiorAtion* ^must comply __________
with the requirements of the Corpora- ods action and words WPrp mis- . . * « ...... .
lion Division, • Department of Treasury , ’ , , . . . legal aid program Will be heard
and all. applicable laws and regulations interpreted by Some of her StU- . “ ..
of tha state oi Michigan. .—. . j--------------------bv Ihe Oakland County Com*
The provisions of Part 151.54* Federal uentS, he added.
Aviation Regulation^ "Equal Employment Opportunity Requiremfhfs," shall eppty to Federal-aid Airport Projects *hd a.r* fully explained t in the fnstructions to Bidders and Paragraph ja,—Sectloa 90,,
Division I ot the Standard Specifications at published in Supplement No. 2.
sOAKLAND-PONTIAC AIRPORT* PONTIAC* MICHIGAN. V Bid Opening May 28* 1968 11:00 a.m.*
E.D.T.* at the offices of the Michigan Aeronautics Commission* In the Capital
OCCEO to Hear j Progress Report on Legal Aid Plan
dear father of Mrs. Gertrude) White, Mrs. Lina Cordell, Mrs. Jane Hughes, Robert C. Owen and Reid Wice; dean brother of Mrs. Margaret La | Ford, Mrs. Ann Rye, Mrs.! Willa Beckett. Harry. Joe and! Howard Wice. Also survived* by 25 grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Thursday. ...May .M, 1 • M p.lVl. at. thei
Florshee Funeral Home. Hale. Michigan. Interment at Glennie, Michigan.
IN LQVIflO MEMORY of our Him-bond and F other, Richard H. Rotlgors who passsd away May 71* 1966.
I havt only your mamory* dear Husband*
Tha love a haarl holds daar.
Pond mamorias linger every day Ramambranca keeps him near.
Sadly missed by wife* Louisa and chMcfran.
IN LOVING MEMORY of Lae R. Stinson who passed away May 21, 1966.
God saw you ware gelling weaker*
So ha did what ha thought bast. Ha came and stood beside you* and whispered come to rest.
You wished no one a latf
farewell* 1
Not even said good bye.
You ware gone before we knew It*
and Only God knows why.
Sadly missed by mother, and sister Eleanor.
IN LOVING MEMORY* of Alexender Joss, who passed away May 21, 1965. »
God saw you getting weaker.
So Ha did what He Thought best,
Ht came arid stood beside you.
“Amronty GTWTtrrowrwny11"
Sadly mivsed by hi* wife t wunie end family.
Announc«mefits 3
ACID INDIGESTION? PAINFUL gas? Gat new PH5 tablets. Fast as liquids. Only 98 cants. Slmm's Bros. Drugs.
A N T I O t) E FIRE TRUCK, 1922 model T Ford* available f o r parades, advertising, political campaigns, 624-0400 or 647-6999
HALL FOR "REN!, RECEP «*Ol4b; loages, chur'h OR 3-57G2, Ffc 2
im.
HALL FOR RENT. 37 W. Yale. FE 2 0072. Attar 6 P.M.* FE 5-0316
LOSE WEIGHT SAFELY with Dex A Diet Tablets. Only 98 cants at Simms Bros. Drugs.
NOTICE TO PUBLIC Proposal Number: B-9-418 - Con^
trol section 63043E Sale of buildings in Oakland County* Michigan.
Sealed bids will be received until 10:00 A.M. on .Tuesday, May 28, 1968, at tha Michigan Department of State Highways Office at 926 Featherstone Road, Pontiac* Michigan* at which time and place all bids will be publicly opened and read for tha removal of buildings owned by the Michigan Department ot State Highways and described as:
1) 475 Nawakwa Street, Rochester, Michigan. 1 story C.B.house on slab with attached C.B. garage,
2) 387 Nawakyya Street* Rochester, Michigan. 1 story C.B. house with attached 2 car C.B. oarage and 20'x26' C.B. studio building.
3) 3545 Hazelton, Rochester, Michigan. 1V» story frame house OO slab, 2 car C.B. garage and a T*vck body storage shed.
4 ) 200 Shortridge* Rochester* Michigan. 1 story frame house* 2 car frame garage, 1 story C.B. chicken coop, 1 story C.B. machine shop* and a 1 story frame storage
highways* in accordance with the provisions to- Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (78 Stef. 252) and the Regulations of the Department of Commerce (5 C.F.R. Part 8) Issued pursuant to such act* hereby notifies all Bid* ders that it will affirmitlvely insure that the contract entered into pursuant to this advertisement will be awarded to the lower responsible bidder without discrimination on the ground of race* color or national orgin.
To be considered, ail bids must be submitted on the prescribed bid proposal form.
Specifications and b i d proposal forms, may be obtained at District Office No. 9* 926 Featherstone Road* Pontiac* Michigan.
MICHIGAN STATE HIGHWAY COMMISSION Lansing* Michigan
OAKLAND COUNTY Singles Club 25 or over, write Pontiac Press Box C-50, Pontiac* Michigan.
WANTED — HANDMADE-Ttemson consignment. Call 623-0237.
BOX REPLIES
ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING
* 4 j*wwv tnmr. 8NPI pf
HIW tJRIorw ] p m Confidential
Lost and found 5
FOUND - SIAMESE CAT.
626-9143
LOST - DOLLY^Affitf pprl' of fee-tlonal sofa* Sashabaw Rd Fri. night, May 10. Reward. 693-6506.
LOST PUREBRED ble^'and tan Alrdale* 10 mot., vie. Baldwin • Kannett. Child's pet. Reward. 335-4507.
LOST: SMALL' SILVER French Poodle* Welled Lake area. Reward. 624-0491.
LOST: CHARCOAL GRAY’ Male , Poodle, vicinity Clerkston area, 625 5618
LOST: A ST. BERNARD in
Clerkston area Friday morning. MA 5-5480.
LOST - MAN'S BROWN Leather wallet, Set.* May 18, Kresge Store, Pontiac Mall. Cards ana papers very necessary. Reward tor ret nr if. 623-1135
LOST: HARMLESS WHITE German Shepherd. 9 moi: otd. mate Vicinity Hollerback's Auto. Supply. Reward. FE *66777
LOST TOY FEMALE collie In vie of ' “I'dwer 'STrttrrtraker-eM T 2636 -TOSTTSMALt MALE Beagle, vie of Bald Mountain Road. FE 5-0928
LOST: COLLIE, MALE 6 months Holly area Answers to "Buddy" 634 5791
Help Wanted Male 6
1 MAN KITCHEN. FLM L charpe, good pay. Days* nights, o~ splits available. Call Ml 7-2276 bet. 5-10 p.m.
1 MAN PART TIME
We need a dependable married man, over 71 to work morning* or eves. Call 674-0520, 4 P.M. 8 P.M.
3 WELL DRESSED men Up to $20 per evening. Car necessary. College students and high school seniors. 673-8766* 2 to 5 p.m. only.
ACCOUNTANT, SENIOR AND SEMI V senior, recent public experience, permanent staff, no travel or write-ups, exc. opportunity, 353-
1660.
At 10 a.m. today there , ^ were replies at The Press ?
; Office in the following |
■ fibres:'................... T
I C-14, C-15, C-21, C-24, j
[ C-29, C-34, C-35, C-44,
C-50, C-85.
Funeral Directors 4
COATS
00NEIS0N-JOHNS
_____FUNERAL HOME
Huntoon
FUNERAL HOME Serving Pontiac for 50 years 79 Oakland Ave. _FE 2-0189
SPA~'S-GRIFF!N
Voorhees-Siole
Theaters Shut
PARIS (AP) - Many of the
City Airport TeriniMl Building* Capital j D6St known thCfitcrs in PSHS, in-
eluding^ the Fojies Bergeres , am for the was started were shut by strikes Monday. Aifn Anril
an ndHifinnal
City Boulevard* Lansing* Michigan.
Proposal No. M 63-1-C 29. Fee for plans and proposal forms S5.00.
Consultant: Oakland County .Board of AudJtori~#lidHtfes Engineering Division. The work shell Include construction and
mission on Economic Opportunity (OCCEO) at its meeting tomorrow at 7:30 p.m.
The -group “wih meet-at the OCCEO centra) offjee, 1 W, Lafayette, in downtown Pontiac.!
..|___■ h - .&__________
An expanded, legal aid pro-!
—,-----—- lin April using an additional
...... . JapoEesman at the Folies Bar- 2 00o U.S. grant. ~
Four fulRirtie lawyers were, r .
iiac. iff Oakland Cogmy. Michigan and money when lus staff was re- .... „ 4_____„ Cemetery
^ duced because of the strike. afded to lhe alo"8 with , state afterJ. p.m.
oUier personnel, and the ex- da at the Fran^ Carndhm [ WILLIAMS.3ARVIN L.; MAY
. °P
UncldnlfM Excavation , (Lump Sum)
Aggragate Bata Court* a 10 C.Y.
Bftummout Surface Court* ttO Ton
Cabi* Trench YS0 L F*
Underground Cabl*—. - v I.400 4-.F. V
' ‘ ♦! L.F. \
9, 1968 ; 241 East Wilson
Street; age 46; beloved hus-band 67 Uuverta McGee; beloved son of Josephine McGee; dear.father of James - EL. RAbert Earl and Willie J. McGee Jr.: dear brother of D. L. and Harvey I,. McGee. Funeral service will be held! Thursday, May 23 at 1 p.m. at the Community Bible Bap-! tist Church with Rev. W. H [ tawrenee officiating. Inter-! ment in Perry Mount Parkj Mr. McGee will lje i
1968; formerly of Pontiac; age 72; dear mother of Mrs.;
Gertrude—White,___Mrs___Lina
Cordell,7 Mrs. Jane Hughes, Owen, Reid and Robert C. Wice; dear sister of Mrs. Artheal Barrager. Mrs. Ruth Tricker, Sidney and Jordon Owen; also survived by 25 g r a n d eh i ldren. Funeral service tyill be held Thursday, j May 23 at 1:30 p.m. at the Elorshee Funeral Home, Hale, i Interment in Glennie, Michigan.
Cemetery Lots 4-A
2 CRYPTS IN OAKLAND Hill* Cemetery, any choice* sacrifice $100 below cost. Southfield, 353-
8ljj-
AT WHITE CHAPEL. $95 e^ch.
Ml 2-3534._
Six choice lots in best location at White Chapel Cqmetery. Way below below market value. Call Don Bennett at Ml 6-3900.
Personals 4-B
ANYONE WITNESSING accident resulting in a death Thursday* May 9* 7:45 p.m. at Milford Rd. and Rose Center Rd., Rose Twp. Please Call Collect, 239-0560, Flint or 634*9460 Holly.
AVOID GA RNISHMENTS i Get out of debt with our plan
Debt Consultants
8|4 Pontiac State Bank Building
FE 8-0333
State Licensed—Bonded ____Open^Saturday_9-12 a.m.
EXCITING SPRING FUN for scout groups, ^church, clubs. Ride 1 through fields* woods, on horsedrawn hayrlde. Followed by TfBftWtooked-spaghettt—dirmer--See-newborn animals — lambs, piglets, calves, chicks. For reservations, 628-1611.
UPLAND HILLS FARM
PLANNED BUDGET PROGRAM
---YOU CAN AFFORD
TAILORED TO YOUR INCOME SEE
MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS 702 Pontiac State Bank Bldg.
FE 8-0456
HAND PATNT-E-D POR T* Am " - on ailk. Made from--your snapshots, —$14.80r 'FtH+~ guarantee. For information, send your name .and address to P. O. Box 472. , Rochester, Mich. 48067.
ON AND AFTER this date May 1968 i will not be responsible tor any debts contracted by any other than myself. BarryW. Adams, 171 W. Beverly, Pontiac^ Micbiqan.
WEDDING PhOldGRAPHY B Y *. ProTessiOnal cofor Brochure available. Call 338-9079. anytime . ~
WHAT DOES THE Bible say about my particular problem? Answers given with Bible text only. Address your questions to "Thus Salth The Lor0," Pontiac Press Box C*2o,. Pontiac, Michigan, . 48056. Please include a stamped self addressed envelope. Don Woiters, 682-7222. Personal Bible studies free on re-
ADVERTISING MAN FOR men's specialty store. At least 2 years exper.ence in newspaper, radio, TV and store promotion. ‘Capable of writing copy. Apply in owp handwriting to Pontiac Press Bjx C 41.
AMBITIOUS YOUtilG MAN FOR truck driving position, includes fringe benefits and retirement plan with advancement possibilities. 673-1246.
Arc Welders Spray Painters
Apply in person
REMKE, INC.
28100 Grosbeck Hwy.
Roseville (Detroit, Mich.)
ARCHITECTURAL DRAFTSMAN years minimum, experience, commercial and resdiential work ^call Mi 7-2022. - :...
ASSOCIATE PLANNER $10,000-$11,500
PLUS EXCELLENT FRINGE BENEFITS Requires a Bachelor's degree in planning, architecture, landscape architecture or public administration from an accredited college; or university and five years full time, paid professional urban planning experience, or a master's degree in one of the fields listed above and three years full time paid professional urban planning experience.
APPLY tch—7~
The Personnel Division
Oakland County Courthouse 1200 N. Telegraph Rd. Pontiac 48053
ATTENTION
Distributor for nationally-v-Known beverage, must be young and aggressive. Contact Mr. Kelly* Collect, KE 7-7100.
ATTENTION
OPPORTUNITY
Clark Oil and Refinery Corp. has
1. Must be 21 to 50.
2. Excellent opportunity for advancement in the management field.
3. Excellent beginning salary.
4. Experience not necessary.
5. No.auto maintenance involved.. We deal in gasoline sales only.
If interested call collect* Detroit* JO 4-6546 after 5 p.m.; Warren, 268-6557..
APPRAISER FOR POSITION of assessor. Experienced preferred. Will consider applicant with real estate experience. Contact West Bloomfield Township Assessor's office, 682-1200. Ext. 32.
ASPHALT RAKER, Experienced, _ Southfield. EL 7*1277* eve.
“ AUTO MECHANIC'S
Helpers and parts clerks. Must be" able to work any shift. KEEGO SALES & SERVICE, 3080 Orchard Lake Road, Keego Harbor* 682 3400._
BARBER, STEAD Y, established chair, good pay. Herb's Barber Shop. 3454 Pontiac Lake Rd.
BAB Y COM PA NY WANTS 2 representatives to train for management, no experience necessary* starting salary $600 monthly, insurance, hospitalization, ages 22-32. For information call personnel manager, EL 6-6721.
BRANCH — MANAGER TRAINEE
To Train for Career as Executive with Large National Company.
Ambitious young people with executive potential will receive planned training in preparation for a career as a branch manager with the nation's oldest and largest consumer financef company. If selected, you will earn full salary as you train, with frequent increases directly rotated to Your progress 'Promotions to positions of greater responsibility are from within the company. Stable employment, outstanding employe benefits, and rapid promotions provide for a secure future.- Age 21-28, some college dd^ireable* but not required.
HOUSEHOLD FINANCE COrV 3Va S. Saginaw, Pontiac BARBER, STEADY. REPLACE two retired men. Apprentice okay. Hills. 682-4840* 682-2774* FE 2-7271.
BENCH, TOOL AND FIXTURE BUILDER
For aerospace work. Must be experienced- Benefits include life insurance, Blue Cross, liberal vacation, pension plan and advancement.
McGREGOR MFG. CORP.
2785 W. Maple Rd., Troy
Ml 4-3540
Bridgeport Operators
Permanent positions with rapM'v expanding company, f r 4 n g e benefits; overtime, good working _ conditions, Clyde Corp., 1800 W.
- IWopTei Troy.
_BROlLER'MAM
quest-
Want Ads
wax fry about six weeksv
Dtlid 4 j( The only wild horse? on earth * * *
L.mina. Miehig.n ANDtEwt today are the larpatL found on Among -other reports to be AMiit.ni Direcior [the plains oHhe Altai Mountain'heard is one on a proposed Michigan amonAtics iregion . and extreme western, credit union for the county Jt»y I Mongoiia. \. poor.
Funeral Hume.
McNIEL, JOHN S:J MAY 19, 1968; 6139 Second Street,
Mayville, Michigan; Age 64; beloved husband of Dorothy j McNiel; dear father of John
Hannah (BedwellL Funeral from the Ted C Sullivan Funeral Home. 14230 \Ves( McNiehols Road. fTctcoit, Wednesday, 2 p.m. Interment in Industry, Illinois, Thursday >
FAMOUS-for Action Phone . 332-8181
COOKS
Dishwashers
Apply in persdft; Machus Red Fox, 6676 Telegraph, Birmingham. Top wages and benefits.
BUILDING
SUPEfUNTENDENT
Complete charge$>f maintenance in downtown office building. Appiy 406 Rlker Bldg
“bum'FAND FAlNt^ECIAXTSTTWr automobile dealership, top pay, with liberal working hours, cell 624 3192 for Interview CLERK Adult. Permanent position. No nlghts^-Every third Sun 42' * hr wk Good salary. Insurance Raid vacation.-Mills Pharmacy. Ml 4 5060
C O N ST P UCTJ ON 'SUPER IN TENbENT, experienced. For, structural concrete projects Can Schurrer Construction Company,
„ Pontiac,’-FE 5-9464.
Halp Wonttd Mol*
CIVIL iNOINiIRS
l«cur* *mplovm.nI. ImmMl.t* i>l.c*m*nf lor MlilIM.y gWM > EnglnMr* In ih* moil rapidly, fjp.ndlna *r*. In till UnMI Sl.ln. o.kl.nd County of for* Civil Inslnoort Mlorioi rortwna irom M.loo with no on-thaioB (xoorlonco, lo 113.(00 »tuo r*0l«lr*llon bonut lor I ho Civil Enolnoor III elmjiieotloii. ■*-Cfllnnt Irlngo b*n*flt> In .ddllMn to Mlorv. Including full Ntd
l. mlly Bluff Crop, Blue Shield, minimum of I wanks, maximum ot l weeks paid vacation, retirement program, tuition rMhv bursamant, life Insurance and others.
For additional Information, or lo
m. ka application, contact the:
PERSONNEL division
Oakland County Board of Auditors*
1200 N. Telegraph Rd.
Pontiac^ Mich. 48053 COLLEGE STUDENTS "’' Teachers and college students* special summer time frenchtsr available as a factory roproson-
tally
Tielpf e Rd
Investments, top money, ul. Apply JW7 Fli/abkih
College
Students
High school grads. III and over I weeks work for 11 sludants.
First come first serve.
Call before 2 p.m., 338-0350
COMBINATION BUMPER AND painter, plenty of work, plus fringe benefits, FE 3-7838.
CUSTODIAL WORKER II
Sefcure, steady employment, ex-cetlent- Trlnge benefits, including full paid family blue cross, blue shield, jlfe insurance, paid vaca tlon, retirement program and others,' in addition to a salary of $4,700 to $5,100 annually. In order to qualify, you must be a resident of Oakland County, have passed your 25th but not 60th birthday, have completed at least the 9th school grade, and have had at least 6 months continuous full-time paid custodial or related work experience within the past year.
APPLY NOW TO:
The Personnel Division
Oakland County Courthousa
1200 N. Telegraph Rd. Pontiac 48053
Dish MACHINE OPERATOR, days, *1.75 hourly, Sat. and Sun. off. Meals, uniforms, benefits. Blit’s Telegraph at Maple (15 Mila).
DISHWASHER, NIGHTS, Roman Gate Restaurant. 549-4141 Royal Oak. _
DRIVER SALESMAN, wholesale Ice cream detlvery. Capei ice cream, Mlltord. 8844885,
Drill Press Operators
Permanent position wtth rapid iy expanding company* f r J n g benefits* YWertlfne, good working conditions* Clyde Corp., 1800 W Maple* Troy._
DUE TO THE E X PA NS ION TnUheVe departments Sea Ray Boats has openings in assembly* plastics* repair and engine depts. Good TTiance tor advaTYcemeht aiong with complete fringe benefit program* Sea Ray Boats* 925 N. Lapeer Rd!* Oxford* Michigan.
EXPiWlENCED ASPHALT RAKE* __________273-7238
EXPERIENCED COOK FOR private club, seasonal, Birmingham area. Excellent pay and fringe benefits. For interview cell 626-8430.
EXPERIENCED SHORT lORWR cook* 21 or older* top wages. Blue Cross* and other benefits. Apply in person to Steak & Egg* 5395 Dixie Hwy. between 9-5 p.m.
E X P E R I E N C E D MECHANIC* prefer man with traefor dealership exp., exc. pay and fringe benefits* 625-2245 for appointment.
EXPERIENCED DO-ALL surface grinder for grinding carbide and carbide tipped tools, overtime. Champion Tool Co. 24060 Orchard Lk., Rd.* Farmington 474-6200.
EXPERIENCED MILL HAND In cutting tool shop. Experienced shipping and receiving. Trainees welcomed. All benefits* overtime. Equal Tool Company* 626-0626.
EXPERIENCED PORTER FOR private club. Apply 114 Orchard Lk. Pontiac.
EX PE RlENCED RESTAURANT manager* dining room* cocktail room, and function rooms. Good salary and incentives. Box 98, Lathrup Village Poet Office._
EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY FOR combination offset pressman and camera-man, experienced on Harris . or Meihle to run new offset department, now being formed in Plymouth, Michigan. Please send resume to P.O. Box 925 Plymouth, Michigan.
EX PERTENCE D~EAVEST RdUGHE R an<* t metal man. Ml 4-2511.
EXPERIENCED WAXER FO"R~~A janitor company, full time only, apply at Pontiac State Bank Building, Room 515, Tuesday through Friday between 7 and 9 p.m. or call 861-8655 in Detroit* between 3 and 5 p.m.
EXPERIENCED CHEF and assistant night cook. New large dining room and function rooms. Good salary and incentives. Box 98, Lathrup Village Post Office._
EX PERIENCED P"L A S T I C FINISHING foreman. Send Resume to Smith-Way Plastics Co., 5684? Grand River, New Hudson* Michigan. 48165.
FURNITURE MOVERS Experienced preferred* full or part time, references necessary, Apply in person only. Stevens Van Lines* —3565 Elizabeth-Lake Road.
FREEZER FOODS
Salesman* if ydu're not Making 2 bills a deal with leads furnished call Detroit 371-2232. a_
FACTORY WORKER
Reliable man over 30 for small manufacturing plant in Troy. Steady employment* starting wage $2.25 per hour. Call Mr. Lemanski, 689-2446* 9 to 11 a.m.
Factory
Workers
By day or week: Warehousemen; assemblers; machine operators; materiel handlers; common ~~laborers; ete Dally pay. Report -any time after 6 a.m.
Employers Temporary Service
Clawson 65 S. Main
Redford 26117 Grand River
Fcrndale ___________2320 Hilton Rd.
FLORAL DESIGNER* experienced* full or part time* see Mr. Coppersmith, Pearce Floral Company* 559 Orchard Lake, Pontiac FOREMAN: MATERIALS HANCF~ LING EQUIPMENT. Supervise shop and road mechanics. Fringe benefits* profit sharing* write Service Manager in care of Pon-' tipc Press Box C-10.___
General Accountant ,_________
Challenging position In hospital for accountants with experience In the preparation of financial statements, subsidiary schedules, etc. General accountant experience essential. Please forward resume with salary requiremenfs "to pefiofwwl--director.: —St^ -Joseph Mefcy Hospital, 900 Woodward Ave. Pdntiac. 48053.
GAS STATION ATTENDANT* SO0VL _ mechanical ability, Full or or part time. MAyfalr 6-9326. 2065 Walnut Lake Road at Inkster. Standard Gas Station.___
GAS STAT.ION ATTEND ENT, experienced, mechanically inclined* local refs.* full or part-time* Gulf* Telegraph and Maple._
GROUNDSKEEPER I $5,200-$6,400 /
, Plus excellent ' '
FRINGE BENEFITS Must have passed your 18th* but not have passed your 60th birthday, nave a valid Michigan operator's or , chauffeur's. license and have completed the 9th grade. It Is desirable that applicants have had some
—irnHmdakeeptng—or—lendsfeaptog---
experience.
APPLY NOW TO: „
The Personnel Division
Oakland County Courthouse 1200 N. Telegraph Rd. Pon{,iecc 48053
- GUARD X''~®
For Utica, ^Mt. Clemens end Detroit area. Top Union scale Paid Blue Cros$, Vacation and holiday benefits, -Cei4-;^s—Lot Ifttt—Bonded , Guard Services 441 E. Grand Blvl
Htlp WantBd Female 71 Htlp Wonted Female___________7
HOUSEWIVES ATTENTIONI PART LAUNDRY HELP, experience net time, tUII time, anytime, 9 hoot* n*c***.ry Pontiac Laundry, M0
MO. SU hour. tioo. Guaranteed. No | _SMlh^*l*gr»ph. ________
dtllvory. No collecting. No In- LIvt iN HOUSEKEEPER tor h«ppv vo.tmont- No convening. Coll Mr., family ol 6. Cooking, no laundry. 4 jjjjj days weak. tSOf Ww.
light" HdTJItRIIPTRS" aTID
baby sitter, llvt In or out, good wages, vacation with pay, call after 8 PM, 33*2888.
West, 335-1818
KELLY SERVICES
Its N. Seglnaw
Ilm. 642-9650
338-0338
Departments
portunlfiei
available for the ag-
Excellent employee benefits plus training program to Insure rr Imum earnings]
Apply in Person: Employment Office Basement
HUDSON'S
PONTIAC MALL
Work 3 hours per day, 5 or 6. days per week, top pay and fringes.
, Apply Yankee Dept. Store, 1131 N.
Perry. See Cliff Daugherty.
INSPECTOR FOR DRY cleaning plant downtown Birmingham, full time lob, applicants must be ex I perienced, Ml 6-8733.
K ITCHEN CLEANER, POT washer,' good wages, paid vacation, year roynd position, apply in person, MaN
Orchard Lake -Country -Club, 8000 and repair machines tor vending
West shore Dr. _____•___ Co., full time, steady. Apply at 960
j Featherstone or call 334-3512.
LAB TECHNICIAN 'MAN TO; WORK FULL time
Excellent opportunity for an ex perienced person who desjrc
We will train dependable men to run . lathes, mills and surface grinders. General shop experience preferred. Knowledge ' of blue prints, micrometers, very helpful.
Average of 53 hrs. per week.
Liberal fringe benefits including a Profit sparing program. Apply at 6 B*rbor Si .Pleasant Ridge (off. ..of..
10 Ml. Rd.)
MACHINE OPERATOR wanted to operate paper twister afternoons, we will train. Rate after 60 days ..............
$3.04 plus fringes. Apply In person 1200 N. Telegraph ’ Pontiac, 48053 at 2388 Cole, Birmingham, 9 to PRUDENTIAL INSURANCE CO JU now taking applications tor ex*
MACHINE REPAIR MEN and ecutive salesman in this area, machine repair welders press Salary, fringe benefits, complete repair work. 58-60 hrs. Days or training program. Phone Mr. Kl* nights. | ingbell, WO *3100.
U.S.I. Clearing RETAIL SALESMAN, a position with
a future. Must have some sales experience. 146 W. Huron. See
. ... . Gehan. ________
EXPERIENCED TO service RETIREE S FOR PA'rT TIME sales work In hardware dept., See Mrs
Used Car Porter
v Experienced only. Must have valid' drivers license, see:
Bob Martin ,
SUBURBAN MOTOR CO. | Ml 7-5111
165 'S'. Woodward Birmingham!
WANTED 1
......... Cleaners, »x-1 An BRWit opgoctwtlir jlt»lpy*f.- -.-.ti-.—nj—MmifftBlPiR »‘le'r
perienced orwlll Wejn.MA 6-7207, [ icifHEN HELP, FULL 11 m e , '^forly lady.FE 2-9002balor* II evening work, 5171 Dixie Hwy r
Drayton Plains,
Teds
LOCAL OFFICE OF national Insurance firm is looking for a dictaphone operator. Minimum of 49 w.p.m. required, along with good spelling end accuracy. Exc. benefits, paid vacation and good
Drayton Plains^ wOCCp'l _ _
KITCHEN HELFeR." APPLY In | person. Four Corners Resleurant,
j comer Walton end Perry. • _
ot Pontiac Mall has an1 KITCHEN HELPER. EVENING*, opening tor e cook on the day FE 5 8060
Shu’n-WlT.'r'Sl I |Ta\ 1° Klt^ElTHEL>7DAY"ANb EVE ho*pl1* Million, °IUe ImumiL "d *hZ.^‘PA»lv*e?n' P V*
sick pay benefits, apply In person c,,ron ®eUa5&RoV.
TCrj'C BIGBGYReSTAURANT loUNGE WAITRESS AND bar
I® J Dixie Hwy. 8. Silver Lake Rd._; |y|| anp par, time exp.
PONTIAC MALL KITCHEN HELP FOR Nursing preferred bul will train, cell 6-9
6AV"imf6tie*.rTiiii»r"dmi °S'5,,,,r#n*por'*'! W 4U;mt •L.i’StL&JSS0*-
end Country Club. 3J00 Union i»k»| Non. Union Lk.. EM 3-4HI._1 Airway Lanei, 482S Highland jtd._
Rd. ....."pmr ------*
Help Wonted Female 7
MAIDS - URGENTLY NEEDED _ tB" -
MATUrH WOMAN F6i« clerlcel el. lice work, wtio likes to work with figures. Typing required. Write giving age. education, family status, lob end pay oxwlence to Post-Office BoHp», Ponllec, Mich.
mature WOMEN it worit in
kitchen. Pleasant working con-
ditions. 604-60S5MI Word.
MAtOKl WOMAN IfoE' Interesting work In portrait studio. Will train.
SS-MM eftQrnoon. y______ _
MATURE WOMYN tor ’’nursot'
assistants. Choice of shifts -
ploasent working conditions. 604-MSS Milford
working conditions await the right j MATURE WOMA'N f0 HOSfl'SS
girl, tioo per mo. to start .with Increases equal to ability. Cell Mrs. Prell, 332-40/4 Ipr appointment. _
m
Detroit Service Center 1)430 Kaltz, Warren W. of Hoover 9-10 Ml.
at Simm's Bros., 98 N.
hardwar^ store, mechanical ability helpful, MA 6-2904.___
challenging "career with a dynamic ^AN TO WORK, MUST be ex-Ncompany In the electronics field, perienced as an Auto Parts Clerk. Must have at least 2 yrs. of col- Apply Hollerback Auto Parts, 273 lege or equivalent experience with Baldwin Ave. Call 338-4054^
chemistry backpround. Good MAN WANTED WITH Meehanica
TRUCK MECHANICS
Gas or Diesel. Liberal pay, insur-a n c e furnished, retirement " a n d fgll benefits. See Mr. Coe, 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday thru Friday.
GMG
Factory Branch Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485
DlSHWASHERf KITCHEN UTILITY
venlng h benefits.
LADY FOR SEWING aeparimem. NEEDED FOR mining home.
1 Df^LPo!iSSta cKoic. 0.
Good shills. Excollenl Milford.
Cloontrs, 719 w. Huron LsVERGNE'S HAIR FASHIONS and tho Huron St. Solon baa openings .ANTED APPLY In parson
444 A“bUrn
vm. Also tnsnlcurlsf. *—
Jim, 330-0317 or 332-5221
and supprvlso dining room. Musi have restaurant axparlanca, must be naat and hava good character. Good fringe benefits. Ago 21 to 45 preferred.
Elias Big Boy Family Restaurant
Ttltgrgph <• Huron St>.__
______1 , . MEDICAL ASSISTANT, doctor* ol-
wegot. 614-6835.1 flee, Utica-Rochester area, full or
Aftk
Avenue, Pontlec.
An equal opportunity employer
salary and fringe benefits. Send resume to: .personnel Dept Energy Conversion Devices, Inc. 1675 W. Maple fed., Troy Michigan. 48084. An Equal Op portunlty Employer.
Help Wanted Male
6Help Wanted Mala
WIXOM ASSEMBLY PLANT FORD MOTOR COMPANY
HAS IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR:
• Heavy Assemblers *
• Paint Sprayers
-----------O Metal Finishers-----------
• Arc Welders
Apply Hourly Employment Office Wixom Road—Grand River Expressway
WIXOM, MICHIGAN
8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Monday thru Friday Office open Saturday 7:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.
An Equal Opportunity Employer
CHRYSLER
CORPORATION
Eldon Avenue Axle Plant
Has immediate opportunities with excellent benefits, salaries and wages in the following areas.
Production Foreman
Machining and assembly gear and axel manufacturing- Must have high school education, with 2 years experience in machine shop and/or assembly operation.
—Skilled Tradesmen—
MACHINE REPAIRMEN ELECTRICIANS - TOOL MAKERS
Journeymen or equivalent experience
APPLY IN PERSON or BY MAIL TO
Eldon Avenue Axle Plant
6700 Lynch Road, Detroit, Michigan 48234
Monday thru Saturday, 8:00 A.M. to 4:00 P.M. EMPLOYMENT OFFICE WILL BE OPEN
or call
925-2000, Ext. 6475 or 6373 LONG DISTANCE CALLS- COLLECT AREA CODE 313-925-2000
An Equal Opportunity Employer
College Graduates!
WE'LL PAY YOU. WELL
to learn Dept. Store Management at the new J. C. Penney Co.! r
You don't need experience. Whether you are a graduating senior or a recent college graduate, we can start you at once in the fascinating, exciting, interesting field of modern retailing. Running a department store today is a billion-dollar business with us, with almost 1700 expanding stores over the nation. We invite you to take part in our giant step forward in retoiling. We can offer you a choice of management-training positions, start you at a good salary, and give you recognition and advancement “jOysf fast as you can handle it. Future pay and benefits are considerably greater than in most fields open to you! Rewards, and satisfactions at J. C. Penney are rivaled only by the opportunities in our fast expanding operation. Find out what we can offeV you today and in the future.
INTERVIEWS-will.be held in-Detroit, Michigan Ca|l: MY. John Healey (313) 642-6200 from 10 o.m. to 6:30 p.m. on Wednesday, May 2$ to arrange for an appointment. '
If unable to coll, please send your resume to Mr. John Healey
The L C. Penney Company
799 Costle Shannon Blvd. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
An equal opportunity employ?
ability for trainee installation and service. Experience in electrical, plumbing and welding preferred. Apply in per-non, at NU-PRODUCTS INDUSTRIES, 520 Woodward, Rochester, Mich.
MAN WITH SOME experience working with a painting contractor. 673-2872.
MAN FOR WORK in the Meat market and delivery. Must pave chauffeur's license, apply Tom’s Lake.
feed
Meat Market, 701 Orchard MAN TO CARE FOR and
•"• horses. 628*2821 r-—*— —
MAN WANTED BETWEEN ages 35-40 to assume service manager's position at, Automobile dealership with the ability to be able to do light mechanical work. This position offers work pay plan, plus pay for management supervision, plus percentage of profits, contact Mrs. Morgan Bet. 10-4 ortly at 624-3192. MANAGER NEEDED FOR Tocail dry cleaning plant, new business, will .Irain .qualified man who can grow with the business, salary, vacations, bonus, holidays, please call 332-1254, Mr. Bryant.___
MANAGER BODY SHOP
Excellent opportunity for experienced man, generous pay plan plus fringe benefits, contact R. S. West in person.
WILSON CRISSMAN-CADILLAC
1350 N. Woodward______Birmingham
MECHANIC,‘ MUST BE good all-around man, lots of work, good guarantee, fringe benefits, Kuvely Mercury: Ask for Jack Warner. OL 1.9142 or LM-4088. _
MECHANIC LAWN MOWER repairs, steady employment, top position for good man. Apply W.
• F. Miller Company, 1593 South Woodward, Birmingham. 647-7700, f
and ask for Carl Hewitt._
MEGHAN 1C FOR a u t o m o bile dealership, top pay, with liberal working hours. Call 624-3192 for interview.
Real Estate Salesmen *
Sail real estate at tha Mali. Ona ot the hottest locations in Oakland CO. Lots ot leads - lo*s oi
contacts - lots of business. Will __ __________ _________________
train. Can Von Rxalty, 6*<-5»00._WAn¥ecT¥xAeRIENCEO"'mechanic
equipment REGISTERED PHARMACIST or in- with tools. Apply Chucks Standard tern graduate. Opportunity with Service, 2411 Orchard Lake Rd.
real .future in expanding organiza- Salary guaranteed plus com-
tion. Must have ability to make mission.
$13,000 - $19,000 per year fringe benefit including company car. Outstate moving costs paid.
For confidential interview call Jack Robinson collect.
FE 8-0428 — EL 3-3385 Perry Pharmacy Inc., 4 Store* In Pontiac, Birmingham, Waterford,
Trov, Hlahlaflflfi La^ce Orion.
SPRAY PAINTER, utility man.
Starting *rate $2.70 per hour plus fringes. Mechanical Experience —herptuL—Htpiy to Pontiac ■■•Pea**-Box C-8.
SALES ENGINEER
AUTOMOTIVE O.E.M,
Will known, highly successful manufacturer of small components is seeking experienced sales engineer for its Detroit office
For evening hours, good weges and benefit*. Must have trattsportAtlon _:non reliable.
Apply In person only. Howard Johnson, Telegraph at Maple Rds.,
Birmingham. _
DEMONSTRATORS ,
Part time to demonstrate soft drinks or food products In super Markets Ih your area, no exp. necessary, call Marge KE 5-0777 Detroit. _
DRY CLEANING PLANT, no #*• perlence necessary, will train, pald' SS vacation, holidays, good working 3£ conditions, 647-3009.________ «
Elias Big Boy 1
Family Restaurant
Young ladles tor WAITRESSES,!
TELTRAY OPERATORS AND,
CAR HOPS. Must be neat ap-i pearing and of good character. No'
experience necessary. We train ~ I.Ten niADAUTCFn nrv
you. Company paid vacation, ALUMINUM SIDING, WINDOWS, 5PECI ALIZEDGUARANTEED. V health Insurance, life Insurence, roollna lnstalled by "Superior." wall, new and remodeL_FE_H4l9.
send Press Box, Michigan.
C-14, Pontiac,
AND 91
IPIHRPH
Aluminum Bldg. Hems
Drywall
WONDERFUL OPPORTUNITY lor ambitious man to earn exceptionally high Income. We have an established insurance debit open due to promotion. We wilt train aqd assist you to be successful. Previous sales experience helpful but not necessary. Call Jim Coomes, 363-7259.
Young men
___18-25_________j.
High School Graduate ;
lunch hour, meals. 5-6 days week.1 Day uhift and night shift. Ages r 35 preferred. Interviews 9 lo a.m. 2-4 and 8-9 p.m.
Telegraph and Huron Sts.
Dixie Hwy. and Silver Lake Rd.
Employment Counselor:
Do
roofing
\ Call FE 4-3177 anytime._“____
Antenna Service
I BIRCHETTS ANTENNA SERVICE ; __ 338-3274 or 332-3671
Asphalt Paving
ADLER AND BARKER aspl ,111 paving, seal coating, resurfaclng| parking lots, driveways.
Licnesed,
you have a very outgoing
personality with the desire tor an 7r~ee estimates. OR 3-6310.
background! 'public relations o?'.“ ^PHALTAND SEAL eoaflndrW&l enthusiastic attitude, will qualify estmrtaies. re 4-^oji^ illmlted
you for this terrific spot. Unlimited ASPHALT DISCOUNT PAVING Co.
earning>r-Ca*H-------------------Ifl yrs. of satisfied service. Free
NITA STUART AT 1 est. FE 5-74». .____________f.
SNELLING & SNELLING 334-2471
Drivers Training
[APPROVED AUTO DRIVING school. FE 1-9444. Free home
pickup.__________________
iaveitraughing
B & G SERVICE
Alum, gutters end Alcoa siding SPRING SPECIAl complete pries 85c per ft. for S!‘ white enameled heavy duty gutters and downspouts installed, free est. 674-3784.
M. & S. GUTTER CO.
Complete eavetroughing serv Free estimates. Licensed — b< ed. 673-6866.
aa. ... ■ __ jubLLii*iv* of otvcukii'iu 'ASPHALT,* SEAL coating, licensed,
M?tunmS Vaild ^ advancSment tor_________________334-2471____a_______\ insured. Free estimated: OR 4-0722
right man Iff local office of na- EXCELLENT OPPpRTUNITY to or 682-8377.____________________=«-------i -r .’iroYT» Tooftno Call anv
tional corporation. Good startlngj fjcjnt Extra benefits in ASPHALT PARKING LOTS AND Gutters, spou s, rooting, tail ay
salary. For interview, call 1 lJ“ “
ROCHESTER AREA
at 338-0359 . 9 a.m.-2 p.r
Technical background and ex- Help Wonted Female n*ri*ne* in seltina oroduct on Darts vwimmqw emuav
perience In selling production parts to automotive O.E.M. accounts are a must. Excellent opportunity. ~P1gasg~-sobmif reyome-Yo -Pontlae: Press Box C-35. _
SALES REPRESENTATIVES^
THE C. M. PAULA CO.
An international firm manufacturing stationery, greeting cards, and associated items, needs a man to cover Michigan and men for other areas In U.S. Call on established accounts, open new ones, ■ exc. opportunity for advancement. Must have late model car, salary , and-or commission discussed at interview. Only ambitious high quality men need apply. For appointment and interview phone William Klingensmith Detroit, WO 1-8034, Mon.-Thurs. May 20-23. 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m., 2 p.m.-8 p.m.
SCREEN PROCESS'APPRENTICE'; Good opportunity for advancement,* insurance, pension and vacation. Call TR 4-0442.
7
large volume salon. Bernard Ha.r Stylists. Calt Miss Pat, Ml 6-8383, Miss Kent 548-3585.
roadways. Same location since 1920. Also selling asphalt and sealer. Ann Arbor Construction Co. MApte 5-5891
time, 651-1794.
Excavating
A TALENTED HOUSEKEEPER
Work for professional family In! public life. Top salary and con-1 dltions. Live out. Mon-Fir. Reply, t Pontiac Press Box C-_43;
IACCOUNTS PAYABLE
EXPERIENCED BOOKKEEPER, DOMINO CONST. CO. through trial balance, dealership Asphat Paving. Free Quotes. 674-3955.
experiShc* pt,wgrr#arere7iyay <^ sECIalist, ~335^4?80,
free estimate
625-2245 for!
!PARKING LOTS, DRIVES, etc. Ask 1 about 2 years frae maintenance. I Fred's 338-3494. R. O. 547-7111,
BULLDOZING, BACKHOE, loading. trucking. 425-1756, 473-8793
BULLDOZING D-4. OR 3-1145 ener SiTO PW and weekends.
END LOADING AND backhoe, trucking, send gravel and fill, complete septic work, bulldozing, basement digging. 673-1972 887-5148.
vaca in w. uiuuimiinu, cAt. , m,,,.... ...nu.. T , While Lake, oo,-ji.o.__________
r’0e and work,n« condi-, *PPly 534 S Fr^ «hmat« 363-79W “ no END LOADING AND BACKHOE,
tions. 626-4700
S. Woodward, Birmingham,
EXPERIENCED COUNTER GIRL wanted. Apply In person at the Donut Center. 29 N. Saginaw.
ACCOUNTING CLERK ADVERTISING AGENCY
North Wopdward area. Will train EXPERIENCED
to* an interesting and diversified cfcretary rFcfiptions cAunen
”c VTp fny t -• » . .week. STEE^E^ALLS
benefits. ,Miy 6-1000 Personnel. An Accurate, toet" ‘jUBSWif. Cutler Contracting 681-0300
equal opportunity employer.
BEACH SERVICES BEACHES CLEANED
complete septic work a basement, dry wells. 391-3519.
Fencing
MECHANIC'S HELPER and bus garage. Full time position, liberal salary and fringe benefits. 887-4118,
Huron Valley Schools^___
MOTEL NIGHT CLERK, experience helpful but not necessary. Call Ml international fi
_6-1840__
NEED A GOOD MAN to work
SHARP YOUNG MEN
18-30
Tremendous Future No Experience Needed
AAA-1 Dunn and
day:
Accurate
bookkeeping. Must enjoy meeting the public. Excellent pay. Lynn ! Optical Co. 138 N. Saginaw. EXPERIENCED SECRETARY FOR Birmingham office, permanent * position with good pay. Blue Cross#
1 profit sharing, pension and other Tired of making less than $100 ai' fringe benefits# for loyal capable week? I have career opportunities | person# Reply Pontiac Press Box for 4 ladies in locqHMitside order j c-13# Pontiac# Michigan.
n ea ? ^ao oea ranee on v e rse* Sfn le 11F EXPERIENCED WOMAN. General
2en!lyaPPand fy ° /TIT') O 336 west Mapie __________________________ Birmingham
r A n V hnn SHOP HELPERS AND trainees
•“ XX t X X AiUi-Ji LKS naarloH tor huilHinn Af alt>r\*ir»\
BAR MAID, PART TIME# OR 4-1444,
BE A BEE-LINER
Specializing in broken concrete, retaining walls. Free estimates. J. H. Waltman. FE 8-8314.
EXC. OPPORTUNITY FOR THE RIGHT MAN TO EARN $100 MONTHLY
Working from 6 A.M. to 8 A.M.
DAILY*
MON. THRU FRI.
Light Administrative duties Call Mr. Davis for appt,
KELLY LABOR DIVISION of Kelly Services Inc.
Equal Opportunity Employer PART TI ME JANITORS, weekdays or weekends# apply at Pontiac State Bank Bldg., Room 515, bet. ■ 7-9 -P.M. Wcd -Fri.- -
PERSONNEL TEST ADMINISTRATOR
Apply Mon.-Frl., 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
DETROIT EDISON
Wlecwirm .
Detroitr Mich. 48226
needed for building of electrical control panel. Eicon Systems Inc.
84 Minnesota, Troy.__
STABLE HAND NEEDED# full time#1 good wages; 391-1704._
TO SELL IN D U ST IR AlT line of bronze and iron valves# casters, wheels, hand and platform trucks, cover Michigan# North part of Indiana, salary, incentive# expenses, company car, send fulk resume to Pontiac Press Box C-6, Pontiac, Michigan.
T O O LMAKER-JOURNEYMAN_“ or equivalent. Age 40-55. North EdSt Detroit 3rea Box 208 Bloomficid Hills, Mich. 48013/
TJ2UCK DRIVER"7aND stock man'. Must have good driving record. Reply P. O. box 148, Pontiac, Michigan.
~ TREE TRIMMER
MU 9-2700______________ Troy
U N I FORM part tir
BE A FULLERETTE Pick up and deliver orders for the Fuller Brush Co. $2.50 per hr. to start.
N. of M-59 — phone 334-6401 |
___S. of M-59—phone 477-9671 _'
BE A FASHION
FITTER
CARPENTRY AND PAINTING rrMPDai Appirc New and repair, FE 5-1331
with the public are essential.' Die- interior FINISH, kitchens panel jA*r's ?EPEmPa ..,!arWn ma.,n* taphone experience' or shorthand jng 40 years experience, FE 2* tfinance# cutting, fertilizing, spring
helpful. Interesting variety of ^35 clean up. 673-3992._____ _____J
hoS«°5: WANTED CABINET WORK “StTlI COMPLETE LANDSCAPING —HUHH In jfifljBOBe* HO,lrs kinds and repair work. OR 3-1402.
Trucking
A-l
portunitles tor increases. Hours 8t 4:30 Mon.-Fri. Please call 674-0451 for more information. Farm Bureau Claim Office# 5736 Williams Lk. Rd., Drayton Plains,
Carpet Cleaning
work guaranteed. Merlon Blue peat sod, delivered 42c yard. Stone all! types. We have a landscape architect If desired. Monroe Landscaping Co. FE 3-7438, FE 2-1 BUS. DIR. — CARPET CLEANING 4969.
EXCELLENT CARPET CLEANING COMPLETE LANDSCAPING ANO[
852-3007, alter 3:30.__________ gardening, II years experience, FE!LIGHT HAULING. REASONABLE
Carpet Installation i 8-9,52. Mccaii and stout.____________| _rate*. fe e-1266.
HAULING AND RUBBISH. NAME your prlc*. Any time. FE 8-0095.-
trail
0240.
GUARDS — FULL or Experienced or will! Marla Detective Agency. 268-
USED CAR PORTER
-.. C8IJ_624-3T92._
" USED CARS PORTER
Permanent ^dSittbn, good salary,
exceUenJ,„WorKing...„condi.ttDns.and
fringe benefits. Apply Mr. Bill Haas. «
HILLSIDE LINCOLN-MERCURY
1250 Oakland
If you have been sewing at home fdr your friends end neighbors] you probably have the skills we jneed to train you to be a fashion fitter in our store. You must enjoy a great deal of public contact.
Full or part time schedule available. \ Very complete programs of company benefits, Including; profit sharing and free life insurance.
good
Cement Work
COMPLETE LANDSCAPING. A-li Merlon and Kentucky Blue sod,1 laid and delivered. Seeding. (Re-,
■ I------- j ‘
48 and11673-1972.
'MARION—rfiLLIE PEAT SOD# 40 1 cents per yard. Delivered. 682-
Ple
apply directly to our
PQNIJACMALL
GENERAL CLEANING. 3 DAYS week. $13 day. Own transp. 626-
4117.__________________________
GENERAL,' 5 DAYS, no* nights, $45.
' 851-3327. __________________
GENERAL CLEANING SUNDAY j through Thursday. 5 qay week. $65 -j—per week. Cali .Miss. Hollis# 852-
i 1802.__________■
GENERAL OFFICE work' 11-A CONCRETE PATCHING#
evenings ®nd .S.und«j«# good pay#, sidewalks# iLriveways etc., free j pleasant working conditions. FE 2- Stifia
i 8323 for appointment.___
jGIRL FRIDAY NEEDED for busy;"Wanted. Free estimate# FE 5-8983,
interior decorahng stow ip,,fjr:ULQCk'’'^~D^¥M E nY"WORK.! X PERT SODDING, SEEDING AND mlngton area. Fascinating position ■los-R t b ** c rr *
for woman over 30. Must type and Pontiac, 39Ml73.__________________ .... .. _
have general office experience. CITY SIDEWALKS# Drives and So YARD GRADING# PL OWING,
I Call 424-0900, bqtwetn 9 and 5 for[ Forth, Phone Pontiac, 391-3516. DISKING
- appolntfrtent--------,______ .eueu. uiAdi, ac a, , I GR 3-1589
estimates. 335-3744_________^_,______________________________^
j BLOCK AND CEMENT work'VERN. CRANDALLS SOD laying, ! u/AntPH Fnp pctimiitp. ff 5-8983 mowing and garden care. 682-3084.
SODDING# S shrubs—682-1224.
GIRL FOR OFFICE work, 9-4:30, 5 days weekly, some bookkeeping and telephone, ask for Mr.
Campbell, 682-8880. _______
GOLF COURSE PRO SHOP Clerk,
Garage building. Room additions j and modernization. CUSTOM CONCRETE COMPANY. 625-2249.
Lawn Service
Help Wanted Male
6Help Wanted Male
WINKLEMANS
BEAUTY OPERATOR I
Cement work af *11 klndt. I laWn sprinkling pumps, pipe UL 2-4751 I and supplies. 4686 Dixie Hwy- OR
D0?1'" S’MENT \^DRK, GKftaGE ttoorsi 3-,w'
try Club, 2280 Union Lake Rd.
HOSTESS
patios, driveways, sidewalk basement floors and small an> dition. Sear wallv25 yrs., standing proof. 673-7548.__________________
LIGHT HAULING OF ANY KIND Odd lobs. FE 4-2347 LIGHT HAMLING# BASEMENTS# garages cleaned. 674-1242.
LIGHT AND! HEAVY TRUCKING# rubbish# fill dirt# grading and gray-_el and front-end loading. FE 2-0603. TRUCKING# FRONT-END LOADING AND BACKHOE. FE 2-0808. ,
Truck Rental
Trucks to Rent
16-Ton Pickups 116-Ton Stake
TRUCKS ^TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT Semi-Trailers
Pontiac Farm and
industrial Tractor Co
OFFICE CLERK RADIO OPERATOR
High School graduate. Potential shift work that could be rotated. Must be able to communicate orally with the public.
Salary commensurate with experience and references. Steady employment, paid hospitalization, life insurance, vacation, holidays plus other liberal benefits.
Apply between 9-11 a.m. or 1-3 p.m. Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday. Other hours by appointment.
CONSUMERS POWER CO.
103Q Featherstone Road Room 103
Pontiac
Consumers Power company
AN EQUAL
OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
—wfgsT Andre Beatify Salon, F E
9257, 11_N. Saginaw SL_______ i and up"from your home. Phone
BEAUTY OPERATOR, 55 to 60 pet. 363-7150 for personal Interview.
P art' time dr fulT flFne; Chi? ^-'HOUSEKEEPER — RE FTTflTT
CEMENT WORK. ALL KINDS.
332-1639_____...
COMMERCIAL# INDUSTRIAL
LAWN SPRAYING, FERTILIZER, __ card grass klllar and weed killers. 4-0461 Call for free estimate. 674-3945.
628-1552. C. t H. Spraying._
Lumbar
sizes for
$100 guaranteed, 5 deys# steady, HOUSEWIVES# OVER 21# mUrried# good hours, also operator to set prefer those with children, heving baby sttling problems. Eorn^
hr *nH tin from wmir hnmp PhOnP 8n« ffSlMfiflllft "IKK end C*mWI
work.
GUINN'S CONST. CO
............. 334*7677 or 391*2671 i txi baty i i
wom*nor “XP!* *? Im ULT J-XO 0-01/: PSfm I Glass s*ryfe*,vroocr^Sr aluminum.
driveways# sidewalks and floors. Building ana Hardware supplies *~ Licensed. Bonded. Ted Elwood ! 1025 Oakland FE 4-459)
682*3373.
RAILROAD TIES
Hardwood (umber, a general use, 626-7653
charge of motherless home con sisting of father and son 14. Own 2 room apartment. Salary, TV.
Complete maintenance. Exceptional----------------.. -----------------I
opportunity. Widow or retired cou- NOTHING TOO LARGE OR small# pie. Write background to Pontiac commercial or residential# special Press Box Number C-29. , spring price# 29 yr. experience. MAIL BOX POSTS INSTALLED —
Freeastlmates.623-1372.
DRIVES# G A R A G E S
feurs 626-1033. __________
BEAUTICIAN WANTED. 681-0551,
332-7983._
BEAiiftCiAN, BONNIE JEANS Hair Styllsjs# FE 2-9376.
BEAUTICIAN
- Guaranteed wage, Biu^ Cross-Btue--
Shield. Philips of Pontiac. 332-9279. HOUSEKEEPER TO LIVE in, MOrt-BLOOMFiELD CHURCH—NEEDS' ***)**/■ •*» cookinfl_r»quire Ftrndolo
lilt7 Grand River _____ Redlord
RECEPTIONIST, SWITCHBOARD, and typing, tome poyroll experience, work evenings, oft Mon-
Cell Mr.
RECEPTIONIST
Doctor's offlca. utlca-Tro y-Rochaster area. Exparienced or willing to learn. Send resume to Pontiac Prass Box C-24.
RN. AFTERNOON SHIFT. Excellent salary and working conditions. Mrs* Gates. Avon Center Hospital. 851-8311.
RECEPTIONIST TYPIST, W. Bloomfield, full time, experience necessary, own transportation, fringe benefits. 626^4700.
RESTAURANT HELP WANTED, apply In parson, Jan's Northslda Restaurant. 1011 Joslyn. tHAMPOOlST-HOUSE KEEPER, must ba licensed and have some beauty talon exp., Anthony's of Birmingham, phone for Intarvlaw 647-^445. SECRETARY, ASSISTANT — GOOD typist, good phone voice. No Saturdays, please call Batty at 823-0600 for Interview appointment.
SALESLADIES
Mutt b* thoroughly experienced In •ailing ladle* ready to wear In all departments. Excellent opportunity, abovt avorago salary, vacation with pay, other benefits. Opportunity at both location!. Call Mr. Levin, EL 7-0545 or JO 4-5611. Jacqueline Shop!. Telegraph at Maple, Birmingham or 13061 Coolldgo, Oak Pork.
SECRETARY
For office. Work » A.M. to 4:30 P.M,, 5 day, . weekly. Soma
bookkeeping and telephone. Salary commensurate with ability. Call 338-0425 or apply 16 Ivy St. cor. Parry, Joalyn I. Ivy. _______
SECRETARY RECEPTIONIST
For now Southfield offices. General office abilities. Sslarv com mensurete with ability. Call 7151 for Interview.
SPARE TIME TODAY?
MAKE IT PAY I Profitable Temporary Work All Types Offlca Work CALL MANPOWER 332-1306
TYPIST - RECEPTIONIST — 2 girl office. In Troy, well groomed, over 21, experience with dictaphone, good apollar, typo 60-70 WPM, handle phone. Call Mr. Gibbons 689-2445. ____
SHIRT PRESSER. Cleanert. 1253 S. 4-4620.______________
Summer's
Here
We're right into our Busiest Season
WE NEED
JR, AND SR. TYPISTS STEN0S-BOOKKEEPERS
Highest Rates
COME IN OR CALL KELLY SERVICES
125 N. Saginaw
642-9650 338-0338
An equal opportunity Employer
fYPIST, SKILLED, PREFERABLY experienced in operation o f Alphatypa phototype setting equipment. Accuracy and spelling essential. Phone FE 5-8738 for appointment. Pontiac Standard Prin-ting. <22 Woodward._________________
TYPISTS?
typewriter to practice on Store, 2 hrs. a day limit. Printing & Office Sug^f*
D lx ia,D ray ton, OR 3-9767,
of our In our Forbes is. 4500
WAITRESS FOR NIGHT shift. Apply In person Blue Star Restaurant Corner of Opdyke end Pontiac Rd
WAITRESS, FULL TIME, nights. Harbor Bar, Keago Harbor, 682-0320
WAITRESS, FULL AND PART Time Part time barmaid. Walled Lake area. EM 3-3967.
WAITRESS WANTED. APPLY person to Hillcrest Drive-In, Lake Orion. 693-?902. ,, i
"fTrTSay.
Apply Parsonnal COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK 30 N. Saginaw, Pontiac
____An equal opportunity employer
COUPLE OR WOMAN for housekeeping. Live In. Adult Bloomfield home. 1 block off Woodward. Large sitting badroom.
Tv. Good wages. 848-4131- ,_______
COUPLE TO LIVE IN, Birmingham home. Wife A-1 cleaner; must love children. Husband, ft a n d y m a n -gardner, may work olsewhoro days
or be retiree- 882-7755 _____ COUPLE TO LIVE WITH elderly
lady, free rant to keep housa, can care for herself, or lady to work with wages starting June 1st. Reply Pontiac Press Box Pontli
the Detroit area. Sales or retell merchandising experience quired. College preferred but not
mandatory. m ------MLb*
If you ere Interested In rapid ; INCOME .
advancement with salary plus (Typing, shorthand, accounting, math, commission Income, expense! business lew, business English, allowance, ma|or fringe benefits, write or cell for e confidential Interview.
MR. PATRICK
MET0 PRODUCTS DIVISION
DYMO INDUSTRIES, INC. $45 LIVERNOIS, FERNDALE
548-7474
Pontiac, Michigan.____________
CUSTODIAL WORKER I
Steady, secure employment, excellent fringe benefits Including full paid family blue cross, blue shield, paid vacations (minimum - 2 weeks) life Insurance, retirement progrpm and others, In addition ,to a salary of $4,000 to 84,600 annually. Applicants must have passed their 18th birthday but not have passed their 60th birthday, and be in good physical condition.
APPLY TO:
The Personnel Division
Oakland County Courthouse.
1200 N. Telegraph Rd. Po^ac 41053 EXPERIENCED COUPLE. Man for chauffeur and houseman, wife lor cooking. Refarancas. Own
transportation. MA 6-1185._____
FREE REAL ESTATE classes, earn while you learn, Tull or part time. Art Daniels Realty, 1230 N. Milford Rd. 685-1567 Or 7030 Dexter-
Pinckney Rd. 426-4696._________
FEEL UKt LIFE It passing you
Sales
Representative
Outstanding opportunity for professional real estate .sales rapresantatlvas. Full time positions now open. Only those with ex-
Berience need app'y* Call Mr. leaver for personal Interview efc
ROYER REALTY, INC. 628-2548
23 S. Lapeer Oxford
Holly Plaza Holly, Mich.
MiS Goodrich, Mich.
wilTtrain
An ambitious man for insurance
Day or evening classes
MICHIGAN SCHOOL OF BUSINESS
Huron 132*5898
Licensed by Mich. State __ Board of Education _
Work Wontod Male 11
16 E.
A 19 YEAR OLD STUDENT desires pert time work, 6 hrs. per day, must pay living wage, 383-4576.
HOUSE P A I N TING. Guaranteed work. FE 4-2887.
LIGHT LATH# WORK wanted,
Rant Hbusts, Furnithtd 391 Salt Houttt
49
LOVELY WEST SIDE brick horn*. 4 2 BEDROOM FRAME older horn*, bedrooms, IV) baths, full base* Partly ramodaied. Garage. Cash, mfnt, 2 car oarage, wall 57 PIngres, landscaped lot. References endij slTnsnhi^ uuitsi RAtsuiiuT security deposit. 1 year lease For BA3BMBNT,
m-------- " W8.
Information - 674 72:
Rant Houbbs, Unfurnished 40
l ak.
BEDROOMS, CARPETING,! DRAPES, stove, rafrlg. No pets. Refs. $135 a mo. Plus $135 security!
newly
garage.
area. $16,900, $1500 down.
4271.
T 3 AND' r BEDROOMS, .JRH , HL. a---------------------
decorated. $49 down, we buy •VRI* 2-cer
homes. Art Denials Realty, 1230 N. fdW*. Waterford Milford Rd 885-1567 or 7030 Dexter- subdivision^
dap 674 1361. Adult!. ' Flncknay ?<*• 926-46*6 BY OWNER, HERRINGTON HKhTJ
7BEDROOM, NEAR Pontl.c Couf,.;3 BED«OOM HOME. Ill Olanwood.j *d"*»"*' »"*
try Club, carpeted, fireplace.! Phoi'9.,or. *PPl 3J4-9I8I. | -iPR'JMIjk’ rB
garage,\ 1135 mo. ref«. 81(10 «ac.|3-BE6R66M ON SYLVAN .Lake, BY. pwNEtt. ABEDROOM, j bathl, dap. Rahly Pontiac Pros. Bqx C 5. | \U23 Lakavlaw. Sylvan VlllagA I bj lavel, bullUnt, carpatad, drapae, 3 BEDRbOM TOWNHOUSE tor Teata 3 BEDROOM BRICK. CLARKSTON
Sib Nona*
49
BY QWNBR - AVAILABLI mediately. Troy,
hr. Troy. 4 badroomi, paiamant, gal, 2W c r carpet, Jr, pa a,
Xk
batht,
aaraga ^
llraplacai, bullt-lni. Owner tnuit nil. Bait otfar over iM.Opo, 14 mllaa — Uvarnola are*.
OWNER.'' XBEDROOM. ''brick |H garaga, nip
garage, view
0890
4 BPOROOMi," C A R P E TED, available until Nov., possible option1 to buy. 8150 per mo., 8150 dep. Mixed neighborhood. 338-2254, bet. 5 30-8:30 prm. *
FREE RENTAL SERVICE ‘ to landlord, reliable tenants waiting. Art Daniels Realty, 1230 N. Milford
Rd. 685-1567 or 703o Dexter
Pinckney Rd. ^26 4696.
HOUSE* FOR RENT, near General Hospital Call at 144 Oneida.
near Elizabeth lake rd 2
bedrooms, adults,, no Quiet area. Dep, and i
quired. $160 per mo. 625-4416.
ITRQY BIRMINGHAM 3 bedroom
brick ranch, family room, large
golf
P^r.dT.’..m7n"t"ca%p;rro’liv“™i| X7gj*»^ iBVtm **
room, fVi car g*r#g.\ Larga J
garage. Large
3-BEDR00M RANCH
CANAL FRONT LOT, PANELING, STONE 10x36', 2 CAR GARAGE. •30,900.
COMMtRtt LAKE
FRONT 3 BEDROOMS. LARGE LIVING ROOM, FIREPLACE, 1 AROE LOT. 819,900.
CLARKSTON
FLATTLEYJIEALTY
animal!, L,so COMMERCE RD_____363,6981
a 3 BEDROOM BRICK'RANCH. Fully
peted
ON 117 ACRES
This 5 year old quad level home, boait$ of many flna faatures. Brick and aluminum siding, jplMttred walls, marbla,. sills, fhdrmopana windows. Ca/amlc flit. Has 3 bedrooms, 1 baths, paneled family room, laundry room, kitchen with built-in 'Stove and dishwasher. Extras include carpeting and drapes, 2 car attached garage. Horse bern and planned landscaping. All this for $35,000. Located at 7216 Parry Lake Rd. 1 ml. from downtown Clarkston.
lot.
$235
baths
garage. 15x30 in ground swimming 5856 pool Beautifully T
P.M. 1401 Shaw,
I Rent Lake Cottages
digging, • 70 6 9.
LIGHT HAULING, hand lawn work. Phone 6 8 2
Anytime.____________
SEPTIC .TANKS installed, backhoe
Share Living Quarters
CHEMUNG —— i available I furnished, sunporch, boat
GENTLEMAN TO SHARE Convenient service apt. $55 Includes utilities. Call FE 4-4026^12-6:30.
WORKING LADY WILL share home and expenses with same or married couple. References exchanged. 363-5769.______
YOUNG WOMAN to share home and expenses with same. Apply 43 Hill-^iae dr., Pontiac, efter_5. ______
YOUNG WOMAN TO share home with tame. Call after 5, FE 4-9240.
l.AKE FRONT home or June. ,/ bedroom, gas heat, Fireplace, $100 wk. or $300
mg. 517:546-9420.
......... U_..UT. . |FURNISHED, MAN AND wife only,
AU0URN HEIGHTS area. 3 rooms I references, OR 3-2673 or OR 3-7195.
Intronc'e H»t SSS&MS‘ P«r'X MODERN I ROOM FURNISHED. No mo dap OR 3-l>67 ” ' cooking. 682-1910, 682-2468, 682-2224.
DUPLEX. 3 . ROOM AND utility
Clarkston Real Estate
Su Main MA 5-5821
CAPE COD
Vacant 4 bedroom. 2 baths, aluminum elding, full basement, natural fireplace, 2 car garage, FHA approved. OWNERS AGENT, 338-699X
Newly furnished. Private trances. On Walton Hawthorne School. Inquire
N e
Oakland
LOVELY 1 BEDROOM, exceptional,
Work Wanted tamale
12
332-
BOOKKEEPING SERVICES 5691, after 6 p.m.
IRONINGS 'WANTED. EXCELLENT work. 335-4780.
IRONING IN MY home, $3 ■ bushel — 332-8028.
NEAT EFFICENT TYPING In m'y home. 334-7981.
ONE DAY IRONING SERVICE MRS. McCOWAN. FE 4^867
1 day
WASHINGS AND IRONTnDS. larvlca FE 5-4297,
Business Service
15
, OR 4-0363.
HUSBAND AND WIFE with to do Janitorial work. 332-9401
IS YOUR INCOME Adaquata? Call Mr. Foley, YORK REAL ESTATE. OR 4-0363.
JOB WITH A future. Call Mr. Folay.
YORK REAL ESTATE, OR 4-0343._ KITCHEN HELP WANTED! Days. Good working conditions. Fringe benefits. Terry's Country Squire Restaurant. 1476 W. Maple. Just
W. of Crooks Rd. Troy. 642-9190______
LABORATORY (MEDICAL) TECHNICIAN for 40 bed hospital. Plans tor completely new hospital starting In September. Friendly community near larger cities. In the center of summer and winter recreation area. Salary open. Contact Administrator, Gladwin Hospital, Gladwin, Michigan. 48624
Employment Agencies Airline Trainee
Wanted Real Estate
36
dap. UL 3,1657.
OXFORD, LARGE UPPER Employed couple, no children or pets. Reference. Security deposit 628-1600.
Fish and swim. 865-2297.
NORTH OF MIO, Perry Lake front modern cabin in 10 acres of woods, sleeps 8, $85 wk. $300 mo. OA 8-
2088. h
ORION LAKE FRONT 3 bedroom n,jjL"'■i_._ n i_____»_i___i ~iiaI home for June-August, $100 weekly.
Apartments, Unfurnished 38 [ $300 month, 693-7792. __
UNION Lake FRONT furnished. June, July, August, $500 per
HOMES LOTS ACREAGE PAR-1 tnrougnout, stove, refrigerator,! month. Also September Through rci «' cadaac business PROP. near Oakland Comm. College offl May at only $150 monthly. Screen-ERTIES AND LAND CONTRACTS! Coo,ey Lk. Rd. Call 682-4333 after 3j ed porches, sleeps 12, gas heat, all
WARREN STOUl, Realtor
1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-8165
Urgently need for Immediate Saleh
$44,950. After Walled Lake
41 3-BEDROOM RANCH HOME with exposed basement, I'v ceramic baths, 2 car garage, full wall, fireplace, built-ins, carpeting and drapes. Located on approx. I acre of land, near Oxford with lake privileges on Clear Lake. $29,500.
Call 628-1353.
BEDROOM RANCH, M baths,} paneled family room, 2 car:
?ar(age, Jet 160x150 ft. Across from! liver Lake, lake' privileges. 2516
MODERN COTTAGES WITH boat on! W. Walton Blvd. 673-5679. I CITY OF PONTIAC
IP nr' Btllalra. J.BEDROOM RANCH on^S kcr.s, IV, 3 todroom „nch, t(IM
a r — 72B-0848, Wayne. baths, fu basement, 2-car garage. aa, heat aarxaa r#ni rienn 7mrt%
800 MULL^TT' LAKE." LARGE 'cottagesJ .By owner, $26,500. 628-3522„ (^wn CALL ® '
Week, month, also summer home. 3 ROOMS AND BATH, on 3 lots, lake privileges. Will accept best offer over $3,000. 628-2912.
Cash For Your Equity
HACKETT
363-6703
3 Bedrooms
YORK
1 to 50
Pdntlac Dally 'til 8
MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE ALL CASH 10 MINUTES even if behind lh payments or un-der torclosure Mr. Alsip, 527-6400.
BEDROOM, CARPETED throughout, stove, refrigerator, near Oakland Comm. College offl Cooley Lk. Rd. Call 682-4333 after 31
modern ^conveniences. ON 3-7627.
~ 2-BEDROOM. NEW. NEAR MALL I WE E KL Y. Lake Orion lake front — Carpeted. Appliantes. Air and! cottages. 693-1076. sound conditioned, hfejed. Rec. WHITE FISH BAY.
9*
low down payment NO AAORTGAGE COSTS
MODEL OPEN
510 California
1:30 to 5 P.m. — 6-day weak
1 WE BUY FE 8 7176 1702 S. Telegraph
WE TRADE FE 8-7176 Pontiac
WEST0WN REALTY
j Crestbrook MODEL OPEN
u p p t
Up, up and' away with a major airline. Free travel, good salary. Looking tor gals and guys with a high school diploma. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 334-4871 ______
9 LET US REVIVE THE exqulsltt beauty of your rugs and carpeting. Von Schraeder method. Dry suds-I ing. Call for estimates. JAB Carpet Cleaning. MArket 4-3458.
16-A
ALL CASH
ARE YOU INTERESTED In bankers hours? A variety of duties In this spot, $300. Call Kathy King, 332-9157, Associates Parsonnal.
PERSONALITY
A CHARMING PERSONALITY will put you In thia receptionist spot, $200. Call Kathy King, 333-9157, Associates Personnel. __________________
Credit Advisors
END WORRIES
Let Us Help You
With A Payday Payment Let Debt-Aid, professional credlf counselors provide you with confidential money management service that has helped thousands solve their bill problems. Getting a bfg loan is nbt the answer. You can't borrow yourself out of debt I Get the help you've been looking for by taking all your bills and dlscussihg your problems with:
DEBT-AID, Inc.
504 Community Nat*l. Bnk., Bldg.
FE 2-0181
Licensed & Bonded
County. Money in 24 hours.
YORK
e0$?r?«o?U,,S' n6 pe,s- From 1140 I Peninsula. Large housekeeping
___________________Qcottages. All facilities. Linens. Safe
2 BEDROOM APARTMENT. Newly beach. $75 week. Farmington, GR decorated. Elec. r6nge,| 4-0948.
refrigerator. Fine neighborhood, j a*,„V jkanm «n
- $150 mo. See Manager, 2403 James' "OOms «*4t
K. Blvd. 682-9587. ------- ' " '
2 BEDROOMS IN A ROOM apt-1J SLEEPING ROOM for bachelor or ment, well behaved children, I nurse. V) block from Pontiac
welcome. Willow Rd., Union Lake!_______General Hospital. 335-9038.______
area, shown by appointment cnly^T LARGE CLEAN ROOM for
EM 3-9601. ______________________j bachelor, $18 weekly, kitchen
2~~ROOMS AND BATH near st. facilities, calf FE 5-9178.__________________
Benedict's includes stove and BUSINESS OR PROFESSIONAL
3 MODELS OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAY
Drive out M59 lust west of Ca$s| Lake Rd. to Candelstlck. Direct.*i behind the Dan Matt ing iv Business1 CenteV
OAN MATTINGLY
FE 5-9497 OL, 1-0222.
DAILY 12-8
3-bedroom, family room and 2-car garage, priced at only SI 7,490 plus lot. Located in new sub with paved streets, curb, gutter, tldtwalkt and city water. Drive out M58 to Crescent Lake Road, turn right to Qrastbrook Street ana mpdel.
DON
WE BUY OR 4-0363 4713 Dixie Hwy
Gardening
18
KEY PUNCH OPERATORS, wt need 100 experienced. Apply Dempsey's Key Punch Service, Grand Blanc, 4 miles S. of Flint. G-6434 S Dart Hwv. 313-694-7101 or 313494513).
LIMOUSINE DRIVERS, full or part time, good wages. Call FE 2-9145 or FE 2-9146.___
on your
'Not So Impossible" Mission
FEMALES
MACHINE OPERATORS. SOME shop experience required. New shop. exc. conditions. Good wages, Bernal Inc., 1450 Souter ni,"< Troy, Mich
Blvd.
MECHANICALLY INCLINED Sami-retired couple to assist manager \ of large apartment complex. Salary plus apartment. Charles Anderson, 334-7171.
Call
MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIST
For progressiva 60 bed accredited hospital, share responsibilities with other tech., starting salary $8400 to $9,000 depending an experience. Annual Increments. Unique fringe benefits, immediate opening, call Norman Sanders, Hubbard
Hospital, collect. 517-269-6444,_
MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIST and Technician. Modern expanding general Hospital needs full and part time Medical Technologists and Technicians. Both Summer and Permanent positions available. Top starting wage plus an employe benefit program that is hard to beat. Includes paid Blue Cross, Blue Shield, paid life Insurance, liberal sick leave Program, paid vacations, and holidays. Apply Personnel office Leila Hospital, 9 Emmlt St., Battle Creek, Michigan
MOTEL MANAGERS, mlddleaged. Furnished apt. plus salary. Call Ml
6-1848.________________________
NURSE ANESTHETIST for 300 bed, fully accredited acute general Hospital. Excellent starting salary, assured Increases, generous fringe benefits Including retirement plan. Contact Personnel Director, Saginaw General Hospit Saginaw, Michigan
753-3411
PART TIME MUSIC teacher for either vocal or I n s t r u m a n I s , capable of directing band'and or orchestra. For Fall, 1968. .Call Roeper City and Country School, Bloomfield Hills, Ml 4-6511. ._______
WAITRESSEi
v—, i xcaca—WANTED.—n.i. Sal. and sun, nights. UL 2-5333-
WAITRESS NEED A good sharp dining room waitress for afternoons and evenings. 4 N. Saginaw at Pike. Under tha "EAT" sign. No Sundays.
Waitress wanted. Night or day shift. No exp. necessary. Jack's Driva-ln. 22 W. Montcalm. .. ,
ur part TIME LIGHT delivery work.
WAITRESS-BARMAID, week, nights, Albet's Inn, Lake Orlom call mornings, 693-1701.
WANTED TO TRAIN for manag'-ement of local dry cleaning shop, good pay, vacation, holidays, ate., please call 332-1254, Mr. Bryan).
-WANTED MATURE LADY to care for Invalid lady, light housawork, live In, $27.50 par week. 626-2980.
WANTED — IMMEDIATE OPENING for responsible 332-5052.
Part Time Help Ages 16 to 60
Accounting Cltrks ......... $350 up
Bookkeepers - .............. $450 up
Gen. Office ....... .. $400 up
Girl Friday -........$400 up
Costemic Consultant..............$550
Car and expenses
Dletlan (Adm.) ... $850 up
Key Punch (exp.) .... .. $400 up
Secretaries................ 450 up
Statistical typist ...... . $400 up
Sfenos . ■ • ..............$425 up
Switchboard oper. ........$325 up
Most of the above positions are employer fee paid International Personnel
1880 S. Woodward, B'ham 642-8268
All Fee Paid
Landscaping
18-A
BEAUTIFUL SOD, AT reasonable prices. Delivery and Installation available, 338-3018, mornings only.
RICK'S LAWN SERVICE, no iob to small, lawn's and bed work, 682->7106.
Cash Now
No points, no waiting, no commission, no uncertainty, call Phil Phillips.
Norwood
255-1700
CASH
refrigerator, heat and water. Ideal
WE TRADEl for 1 adult, $50. Call 682-9333.______________
FE 8-7176 3 ROOMS FOR CLEAN couple, 1702 S. Telegraph) utilities. In Glngeilville. $100 deposit, $26 weekly. Pontiac 391-1173.
IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY
Coral Ridge Apts.
SECOND-WILCOX ROCHESTER 1 BEDROOM APTS.
$145 Mo.
Includes all utilities, except electric.
Office open daily 'III 7 p.m.
Ph.: 651-0042
woman,‘kitchen prlv., FE 8-0268, CLEAN SLEEPING ROOM, 30 Norton. F 5 2-9444.__
clean Sleeping room. Ntar
Pontiac Mall. Middle-aged lady preferred. 335-3194.
CLEAN, QUIET ROOMS for men, close in, parking, $12. 673-6539 or EM 3-2566.
4-H REAL ESTATE
GI-FHA — J-bedrooms, basement, new gas furnace, 1 car garage, paved street, near Lincoln High, price $10,500 plus costs. FHA only — Gl.
5844 DIXIE HWY.
AFTER 8 P.M.
OR 3-0455 673-8372 628-2678
GIROUX
■Hi, REAL ESTATE
$300 down | <311 Highland Road (M59) 473-7837
D0NEIS0N PARK
mortgage cost 423-1400
AMERICAN HERITAGE APARTMENTS NO VACANCIES
4-BEDROOM
Near Walled Lake. 10 rooms Bilevel home with fireplace. Ultra modern kitchen. 24' x 26' family room. 2 car garage. Clrcla Drive On large corner lot with paved streets. Only $33,900.
GENTLEAAAN ONLY, near Mall and - Hospital, Elizabeth Lk., Rd. call _before 4:30 p.m. 335-2237._
LIVE IN DOWNTOWN Pontiac's .
Waldron Hotel, completely. 3379 Orchard Lk. (at Commsrce Rdd • 2251 N. Opdyke furnished rooms, rates begin at $21.—.“oirnDnn»AC weekly. Contact Mr. Shields, 36 E 1 4 BEDROOMS
Pifce St. or call 332-6591, bet. 1 a.m.—5 p.m.
COSWAY REAL ESTATE 681-0760
Lovely 2,390 square foot carpeted home, 3 plus bedrooms, fenced acre lot, fireplace, finished recreation room — wet bar. $39,900. 682-9374. Owner.
DRAYTON PLAINS AREA 2-bedroom, 12'x19' living room, attractive kitchen, Tull basement, oil heat, 2 car garage. 96x240 ft. fenced lot.
TOM
REAGAN
REAL ESTATE
chools,
Buyers waiting — all cash sales. Call VAL-U^WAY REALTY for immediate free appraisal of your property.
____FE 4-3531
MAN ONLY, CLOSE TO downtown, private entrance. FE 2-7979 or 674-0517.
Now taking applications for new
building to be completed by June._________________________________________
children, pets. 3365 Watkins! MEN, DOUBLE, single, bed, private
Walled Lake features, $15,900 — $2400 down. CALL
Hockett
EMpire 3-7700
WHY SLAVE FROM DAWN to dark, let us mow your lawn or park, 363-5138.
Convalescent-Nursing 21
LPN'S FOR AFTERNOON or night sniff, -Immediate openings, -contact Mrs. Bartindale 545-0571.
HOUSE EXCHANGE
A great way to by-pass the problems and uncertainty of house buying end selling besides several attractive advantages. Call Phii Phillips.
Norwood
Moving ond Trucking 22
BASEMENTS AND GARAGES Cleaned, light hauling. OR 3-8067. LIGHT HAULING, moving Reasonable. 682-7516.
WANTED LONG AND SHORT light hauling, also trash. Own truck, 334-6941.
255-1700
INTERESTED IN BUYING lots or acreage. OP 3-8191.
I HAVE A PURCHASER WITH CASH FOR A START-ER HOME lir OAKLAND COUNTY. CALL AGENT AT 674-1698
LIST
Lake Rd. 673-5168 bet. 6:30-8 p.m.
4 YEARS NEW
Bedroom, 2 baths, full^ basement.
BLOOMFIELD ORCHARDS APARTMENTS
I deafly situated tn BloomttetdBii
mingham , area, luxury 2-bedroom apartments available for immediate possession from $160 per month 1 including carpeting, Hot-point air conditioning and appliances, large family kitchens, swimming pool and large sun deck
entrance, parking. 140 State. i- BUBTUBWS - ---■ SPSS**?
NICE ROOM, PRIVATE~.ntranc«, 1p*,io door5' E Z' T,rm* parking, call before 11 a.m. or
after 8:30 p.m. 682-8778._
OFF- OAKLAND. Gentleman only.
Pvt. clean home. No drinkers or
smokers. FE 5-0112.
YQRK
ROOM FOR WORKING woman, or,
- Uirl. FE 8-8284, call after 2 p.m. iwE BUY ROOMS FOR MEN — FE 2-5842, 53 OR, 4^,36:1 N. Johnson.
All utilities except electric. Lo- SAGAMORE MOTEL, SINGLE OC-cated on South Blvd. (20 Mile! cupancy, $30 per week. Maid serv-Rd.), between Opdyke and 1-75 ex- ice, TV, telephone! 789^ 5. WORT-pressway. Open daily 9 to 6_p.m.| ward.
Sunday, 12 to 6 p.m. Closed Thurs-io. eppmr.
H.u La, InlArmatinn. Mgr. 335- I l= r 1 ^ V
GRAND PRIX APTS.
1- bed room from $130, carpeted.
2- bedroom from $155, carpeted.
All utilities except electricity
Private pool and air cond.
ROOM, kitchen privileges. Negro home. 332-2741._____
SLEEPING ROOM NEAR Mall. 334-
2182. ;__________________________^
WOMEN. SHARE OWN living room,; KENNETH bath, cooking. 338-3800.
EVA
HOWARD
EAST SIDE LAND CONTRACT TERMS. 2 bedrooms, living room, dining room, kitchan, bath, full basmt., gas heat. Only $8,000 with $1,000 down on land contract or $250 down plus closing costs on FHA.
WE TRADE
1........ OR 4-0363
4713 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plaint 159 iSEWARD ST., — Large living room, bedroom, kitchen with din-j —Ing space, bathroom, and -enclosed] porch with heat suitable for 2nd bedroom, full basement, new gat urnace, hot water heater, laundry
2-FAMILY- INCOME^ Ant. No. 1 r 4 rooms and bath presently rented ef $35 per week. Apt. No. 2 — 2 rooms and bath, renting at $30 per week. Full basmt.< oil heat. Just $9,000 with $250 down plus closing cotta.
FI 2-6412
Miller Realty_______670 W. Huron
tubs, 1 car garage, $8,000 with $250 down plus ^closing cost,
FHA
Rooms with Beam
43
1. HEMPSTEAD REALTOR FE 4-6284—185 ELIZABETH LAKE RD.
----EXCELLENT ....
Opportunity
For right perfv. Very clean, 5 rooms, extra deep lot. Lots of possibilities. This may be purchased on land contract. Pleas# - call for appointmanf.
Check this one for Income Investment.
Painting and Decorating 23|With Columbia Valley Realty^and let 315 S. TELEGRAPH, PONTIAC I OR I GENTLEMEN. HomejA
LADIES DESIRE INTERIOR Weriran*| Call
■— ■- Waterford area, free your ,ree appraiser
estimates. OR 3-8304 i
us take the headaches out of selling ‘ ■ .. . . .. .
your home. Fast and efficient | See Mgr„ Apt. No. 1
IMMEDIATE
334-7171 i atmosphere. Fine food. FE 8-3255.
OR 3-2956
PAINTING AND PAPERING, free estimates, good work, R. W.
674-2297
Lister, 673-8528.
PAINTING AND PAPERING.] You're next. Orvel Gidcumb, 673-0496.
Upholstering
24-A
Transportation
I^raroritt4 S»v&*«rimkYowjElectroniCs Trainee
Right hand gal — $6600
General office work In beautiful surroundings, light typing,, good benefits.
Management Trainee
Top-flight training program with AAA company, fast promotions.
$7200 up plus commission plus car and expenses.
Secretaries to $7200
Must have typing and shorthand, soma experience preferred, plijsh surroundings.
Finance Trainee
Outstanding training program with large national corp., top management In 1-3 yrs. Salary to S6.000.
Jr. Secretary to-$55QQ-------
Typing a must — accuracy first, spaed second. National corp. Quick promotions.
Claims Adjustor trainee
National Company. $7200 plus ill benefits plus car, terrific chance to grow with company.
Typist CASH FOR FURNITURE AND AP.f
Should be able to type 45-60 wjun.l piece or houseful, |
and up, experience not necessary, salary to $450.
CVR
LISTINGS WANTED
CDDikl/* CAlCt Due to the quick sale of our used j carpets,
orKIlNb jALlj |homes, we are Irt need of rew mS
On fabrics and upholstery, jetter listings on good clean used homes than new at half the price. Call; Call now for your free appraisal.
the experts at 335-17M for FREE COLUMBIA VALLEY REALTY
estimate in your home. Comi.1 Upholstery Co._______________
ANDERSON .& GILFORD INC.
251 «Zl'3j4i we trade <74-2297
OCCUPANCY
OAKLAND
VALLEY
APARTMENTS
Brand new, near University and I-■ air conditioned luxury 1- and 2-bedroom apartments, including and drapes. Extra storage space, parking area, children accepted. From $143 per month. On Walton Rd. between Adams and
PRIVATE ROOM, shower baths, lovely home near -Tei-Huron. Goodi Southern cooking, gentleman, days.| FE 8-3338.
PRIVATE, ROOM COOKED meals,: close to plants, 335-1679.____________
46
MON STROSITY-BUT-wonderful living in Victorian era home, 4 or 5-bedrooms, 3Mr baths, new kitchan with .built-ins, wiring and heating systein redone; on L shaped 4^ acres. Has woods and stream. Fenced to keep ponies, dogs and children in or out. Commuiting distance to prospering village of
PRESTON
Rent Stores
330 W. HURON ST.
CORNER OF PRALL. Formerly a grocery, rent $125 P*r month, some fixtures, equipment and beer license available. Call Valuet, FE 4-3531._ ________
Almont. Low taxes. Walk! distance to stores and schools. By owner, $31,500. Eves, and weekends 1-798-8242.
Opdyke, east of 1-75. Model «Par_ -1 best LOCATION, AMPLE parking, ment open Friday and Monday, 4 toi reasonable, attractive, air conditioned, offices and/or stores at 1-75 and Rochester Rd. <89-2903 or Ml
AAA Allowance Seattle
California, all points.
BR—25777
16151 Grand-River. Detroit
DRIVE
LOTS WANTED
50 ft. or larger, any location. Cash Buyers.
YORK
674-0363
NEW CADILLACS to New York. Gas Allowance. 363-9590.
Texas.
INDIAN VILLAGE
1-bedroom apt. lust like new. Cop-' pertone refrigerator, and rqnge, tile
bath, wall to wall carpeting1! Walking distance to Pontiac Mall. Middleage working woman will only be considered as tenant. $28 per week, with
LEAVING FOR DALLAS,
Room for 1. Help drive and pay expenses. FE 2-9239, Room 139.
Wonted Household Goods 29
REALTY, 642-4220
owner. 338-6300.
NEWLY MARRIED COUPLE wants starter home In Pontiac. Has $1500 to put down. Agent 338-6993.
INDEPENDENCE GREEN APARTMENTS
<-2528.
Rent Office Space
47
AREA ROCHESTER Suburban — Cozy 3-bedroom bungalow. Garden spot. Trees. $11,500. Land contract. Nix Realtor, ,651-0221. 852-5375.
ATTRACTIVE 3 BEDROOM ranch with family room and fireplace, N. of Pontiac near Silver Lake, '2 car attached garage, full basement with extra room, new carpeting in living room, gis heat, nice lot with paved driveway. $27,500.
BILT-HOMES AND REALTY
<73-8811
RENTING
N. of Bay City, log exterior 3 bedroom home on 2 wooded lots, furnished, paved road, stores close by, lake privileges. $7500 — $2000 down.
$78 Mo.
Excluding taxes and Insurance
-lake -
ivi leges.
bedroom!
furnished home with exc. view of! lake, large kitchen, fireplace. $8000.
son's. FE 4-7881.
RAY
REAL ESTATE
Now has 7 offices to better serve your community. For best results
vo
far
Free
On your night oft. Apply In parson only, Blue Sky or.Waltrofrjl Drlva-In Theatra attar < p.m.
beautician.
WANTED, REWINDER, famala, ho experience necessary, we will
train. Afternoon or midnight shift base pay, 82.14 an hr., apply 9 to 4 at Frank D. Saylor and Son, 3388 Cole, Birmingham.
WANTED) EXPERIENCED grill girl-bari maid, nights. Wages S),75
ptr hr. to jtsrt. Jacks Bar B .Grill. 22 E. Kannalt. Inquire FE 3-7271
WANTED WOMAN, PART lima •vanlnga, appliance store, 5-9. Apply, Highland Appliance, Pontiac Mall
WITT—AMERICAN GIRL <42r3055 725 S. Adama B'ham.
WOMAN TO LIVE In or out, care for Invalid, no lifting. Soma housework, cook evening meal. Room and board, salary open. 332-
<293:____________________
VoUNG WOMAN FOR kitchan help. Must ba neat and of good character. No a x p a r l a n c a necessary. Wa train you Agaa 18 to 35. Oood fringe benefits. -
Elias^B^C
Family RntauranJ
/ T*l«gV*ph ll Huron Sts.
Must hove Al Thompson.
SHOULD YOU
Days. 332-7220. Ask
Make an employment change? NOW IS THE TIME
Michigan Bell
Phone : 393-2815
TELLERS
Full lime, Immediate openings for experienced bank tellers. Exc. opportunity, solary and benefits. Apply * — Blrmlngham-Bloomfield Bank, 1025 E. Maple Rd., Blrm ng-ham. An equal opportunity employ-
TELLERS
Part lime opening tor bank tellers 10 work from 3:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m., Mon.-Frl. weakly. We will train. Apply — Blrmlngham-eioofn-Tfeld Bank, 1025 E. Mapla “ K Birmingham. An equal opportunity employer.
Sales Help Male-Female 8-A REAL ESTATES SALES
IS
Experienced or Inexperienced man or woman. We train. We offer in-tegrity and reputation, f Jni Wprk-Ing eonditloni anc| the chan® id with a progressive company i personal Interview etk for
... Deaver at 628-2541. Roytr
Realty, Inc. Oxford, Mich.
BUILDER & REALTY
Has an opening for 1 full time, talesman with preferable^ txpirianM In new and used homes. Call 674-3141 or 674-2297.
COLUMBIA VALLEY REALTY ANDERSON & GILFORD INC.
Help WiofN M. of F. _ I
170 PER WEEK, SHORT hour!, managing concession stand at Teaple Laka. Collage students or ..tired couple. Call Lansing at IVanhoa 4-2117, _T
AftWlWni lAL LYr living? Or-Just existing? Call. Mr. Folay, YORK REALTESTATe <74-0343.
ApN A Rut? Call Mr.
. * Folay! YORK RlAL ESTATE. OR F4M*r~
«r-Y6u-RfAbrTw"RS fuiura? Call inr. Mar. YORK real ESTATE. OR 4-0M3.
Experienced Corrugated Salesman
AAA-1 -manufacturer, moved lo now and expanded f a c I I111 e s . Deslras Increased coverage and markal jsenetkitlon. All serv.lca* to you and your‘Tu»tomeri. Excellent opportunity fb grow with a rapidly expanding, multi-plant company* Territory, salary, andrpr commission! open. Sand resume or phone:
._U.WUHjDBIQM
Use your service training or e'lec;" tronlcs schooling for top trainee pay of $7200.
Medical Secretary , • • • • • $5000
Sales Rep. .. .......... • $9000 up
Programmer ......... — $l 2,000 up
Production Supervisor ....... $8400
Sales Order Desk . ........Hfi
Draftsmen ...................
Engineer, degreed ......... $12,000
Bookkeeper
$6,000
In addition, there are hundreds of open positions listed in our files. Let our trained staff help you to a brighter future.
INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL
1080 W. Huron Pontiac 334-4971
Let Us Help You
on your
"Not So Impossible'1 Mission
Males
810.000 up 8550 UP $575 .. $450 UP Salary open
Accountants ........
Adm. Trains*!
Claims Ad|uster, car
Draftsman, axp. ....
Elec. Tach. -------
Finance Trainee! ....... —$450 up
Financial Analyst ........... 11200
Management Trainees ........$500 up
Marketing Trainees ..........$<00 UP
Production Control'•• —......MOO up
Pr«d. Control Mgr, ... $i3-*l$v000 yr.
$1000 UP
pupnc n.ieimils ,/$550 up
Restaurant Mgr., ski lodge Opan Salesmen, cat, axpansts .. . $550 up
Most of the above positions are employer fee paid International Personnel
General Box Company ' Warren, Mich. 759-5000
1880 S. Woodward, B'ham 642-8268
WILL BUY OR SELL your furniture. Tyler's Auction, 7605 Highland Road. 673-9534.
in:
HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR good furniture and appliance!. Or what have you?
B & B AUCTION
5089 Dlxla Hwy. OR 3-2717
Wanted Miscellaneous 30
COPPER, BRASS) RADIATORS) starters and generetort, C. Dlx-son, OR 3-5849. __________
NEED GARAGE OR OTHER bldgs.
for material or cash. 391-1259. NEWSPAPER 85c PER 100 lbs, delivered. Royal Oak Waste Paper and Metal Co., 414 E. Hudson,
silver dollars $1.50. FE 5-<492._
5 0;
SILVER CERTIFICATES Royal Oak. LI 1-4020.
SELLING TRADING BUYING
Your real estate today, call
RAY
REAL ESTATE
689-0760
RAY
REAL ESTATE
731-0500
SPOT CASH
FOR YOUR EQUITY, Vm, FHA, OR OTHER. FOR QUICK ACTION CALL NOW. HAGSTROM REALTOR, OR 4-0358 01T~EVSmNGS"-FE 4-7005.
coupXe"
WITH
TRANSFERRED
$5000 down desires 3-bedroom home tn Waterford area. Agent. OR 4-1649.
Apartments, Furnished 37
THREE COMPARTMENT Stainless steel sink, NSF commercial, call
<73-049< after < p.m._________
WANTED TO BUY. Sections of
redwood fence. FE 2-5008. j___
WANTED — Handmade items on 1 ROOM — KITCHENETTE, single,
consignment, can <23-0237. ____i _Pvt. bath._FE 4-1482 _
WANTED: AN I" table saw, must 11 -BEDRO'OM MODERN, UTILITTFs ba reasonable and In good con-1 paid, adults. 10003 Dixie. <25-25M.
dltl6n.<73-«34. ---1 BEDROOM.
WANTED SILVER CERTiFICATES. I <3 Horton Ave
Beside an 18 hole golf course —■ included In rent — all for no /Charge, clubhouse, indoor pool, full use of golf course, washer ana dryer in every apartment, Duilt-in vacuum, carpet and drapes, airi1
conditioned, appliances, heat, water — 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments, 3 bedroom townhouses, some furnished apartments available —; from $155. In Farm-ington (Grand River at Halstead)
ends 476-7874 or 476-4111.
NtEW
DOLLY MADISON
APARTMENTS
FROM $140
14 Mile Rd. at 1-75 Near: J. L. Hudson's and Sears
OAKLAND MALL______
Includes:'
AIR CONDITIONING
ALTuWhTR----------
EXCEPT ELECTRICITY
Model Open 11 a.m.-8 p.m: 585-1125
ABLE SECRETARIES have new 10x14 offices ready with complete service: Xerox, conference room, carpels, diapes,—air conditioning. parking, swimming pool. 30233 Southfield. SaIHe Eckert, Ml 7-1322.
AVAILABLE NOW IN ONE OF Rochester's finest and newest of-1 fice and commercial center Medi-j T T TV.T IT10 \ A/fHiT} cal suites, general office suites and ^ X N JL^ Hjil VV 7
commercial spaces. Plenty of free •
parking. Phone 651-4576 or 731-8400. 8^65 DIXIE HWY BEST’ LOCATION, AMPLE~parking, [ reasonable,-..attractive, air condi-
tioned, offices and/or stores aFT-75 and Rochester Rd , 689-2903 or AAI (
6-2528. _______ ,_______1__
$10 Deposit
WITH APPLICATION 3-BEDROOM HOME
625-26151
MODERN DENTAL SUITE available. Highland Road (M59) at Airport Road- Operatortes, private office and waiting room, carpeting throughout, office and waiting room paneled. Fbr further in-
formatlon call 533-9080. Detroit.__
NEW BUILDING AVAILABLE, approximately August 1968. Vicinity of M59 west of Williams Lake Roa.d 356-3237._____I______
0FFJCE SPACE FOR RENT
-----800 Sq. Ft. Each______
Call FE 8-7161
---------Jade Ralph_____________
Rent Business Property 47-A
costs. Owners agent. 338-6952,
attention g.i.
Nice two bedroom home with basement on two wooded lots\ Closing costs move you Tn. privileges Huntoon Lake. $
Call Ron O'Neil, 625-5871.
%
EXCEPTIONALLY NICE 2-bedroom home with full basement, 2-car garage, fenced yard, nice neighborhood, only $12,500 with low down payment, B.F. Wolfe, Realty, 628-3135.
LARGE DINING AREA WILL ACCEPT ALL APPLICATIONS FROM ANY WORKERS, WIDOWS OR DIVORCEES.
PEOPLE WITH CREDIT PROBLEMS AND RETIREES ARE OKAY WITH US.
AUBURN GARDENS 'open daily and sat. and sun,
5 room ranch, full basement with) or come to
gas heat. NeW carpeting, large { 290 W Kennett
dining room, new furnace, con-j Near Baldwin
nectlng bath. F.H.A. approved.! REAL VALUE REALTY-------------
zero . About cl0Sln9, For Immediate Action Call FE 5-3676 642-4220
fiV
ots\
GAYLORD
A. J. RHODES, REALTOR
FE 8-230< 258 W. Walton FE 5-5712 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE
l-A 4000 SQ. FT., at 4541 Dixie Hwy., Drayton, g o o d for NOW LEASING_______ restaurant, beer garden or what
BLOOMFIELD MANOR ! have you. MA 5-2161._________________________
1 and 2 bedroom luxury apartments j 20' x 50' STORE, i
built-in Hot Point appliances, models any business or storage. FE 2-5219.
open dally 1 to 6 P.m. 222-2390!30 X 50* BUILDING WITH iott of
Woodrow Wilson phone UN 4-7405.___1 parking, West Huron. FE 3-7968.__
ORCHARD COURT APARTMENTS j 40(»~'SQUAPE FOOT <^>4+44
BARGAIN
3 bedroom rancher, fenced in yard,
—Jiv-icg. room_and. bedroom*
carpeted, auto, heat, delightful home for anyone, approx. $2400 down.
WRIGHT REALTY
382 Oakland Ave. FE 2-91411
3 BEDROOM HOME on Lakt Orion. Price $11,500. Reasonable down. Less lor cash. Call MY 2-2S21. FE 1-9593.
EXTRA SPECIAL HOMe. Loll and lots of extras. Natural stone fireplace and complete kitchan In - basement-------Large s ere in id
adjoins vacant property that will remain vacant. Call lo see today, MY 2-2821, FE 8-9593.
Birmingham-
Bloomfield
5 weeks left to redeem them. 'Op^Y BEDROOM. KITCHEN, “bMh715e^ , cash PrJ«. Write or call Refs rtqu|red. FE 2-5171, FE 2-NorthWood Coin Shop, 2 2 2! ggoo Sherman, Royal Oak, Mich. AanA"t 547-7910.
Wanted to Rent
32
2 ROOMS AND BATH. Working girl. References. Before 5, FE 2-5378. ROOMS AND BATH, utilities
—1 furnished, adults, 75 Clark.________________________________________
CHRISTIAN WOMAN, 4 ilftiM chi Hi LARGE ROOMS, $20, Older lady dren desperately need 3-bedrm. | preferred, no drinker*;-FE -5-5l8i unfurn. home in Troy or Royal1 njwa Oak. Call after 4 p
June 1, 1 child, near Pontiac West side or wlthltv 10 miles. 685-3053, Milford. •___________
FURNISHED 2 bedroom apartment, 3 In family, father and ton work-Ina. 332-1245
AMO-3 ROOM private bath and entrance utilities turn., 300 N. Saginaw._____
ROOMS, 130 WEEKLY, $75 deposit, no pels, <82-9191,
ROOM
PRIVATE entrance end bath. 118 University. FE 5-84M.
3 ROOMS UPSTAIRS.
M
EWL
L5575.
2 bedroom apartments Adults
” Manager-Apt. 6j=49 Salmer -
PRESIDENT MADISON
APARTMENTS
FROM $140
Between: 13 and 14 MU# Rd., on John ~R.
Includes:
..... ------t—Air Conditioning--
“Pool
— All Utilities Except — Electricity
Model Open 11 a.m.-8 p.m. 588-6300
Northweslern, Orchard Lake area,1 call after 6 fun., 851-3211.
> BEAUTIFUL STORE all paneled walls, can be used for any' business or office. Downtown Pon-
One of tha finest locations.
Scenic View Townhouse
2 bedroom with lovely country view, private entrance, fireplace, patio, batacony, /aflr-condltlonlng, washer-dryer. Hillvlew Village Williams and Elizabeth Lk. Rds. $185 Mo. EM 3-2061, or 335-5120
ROOMS NEWLY decorated.
Private entrance, a Froiin $60 dep.
- Pontlec_from^$30 wk. 674-1581.
HOUSE WITH ACCOMODATTOfT“f5f13 rSOMS AND HATH. $35 pw week ,—■ . ..
horse, prefer Union Lake Sree. A|i utilities turn. FE 4-5745. Rent HoUSCS. Furnished
C* . P'!T- $ BrtniMHI-afwi) BAII). .... .'l.'lUen, ' .... . ---—----»_sa:----
REPINEOELDERLY LADY desires: FE 3-7724. ■ l-REOROOM. UTILITIES tumithed,
0nnU ,hU. wh,^t 3 ROOMS. UTILITIES FURNISHED $40 wk 332-9336. ltd. Occuiwnc?! July 1. Cell 33B-. Eft# «nd. *n!r«nS.^ 3 ROOMS AND bath, newly
0574.
WALK TO SCHOOLS
3 bedroom contemporary ranch In good location. Full basement.
Breakfast area in large kitchen.
$27,900.
For rent or lease. Phone Ffj 3 7853 SAVE NOW
^Yes_' 5^7303.—. ' On this 4 bedroom trl-level In
A-1 40,000 SQ. FT., — warehouse or|- Franklin Fireplace In paneled
heavy manufacturer, -3200' air} fimtl/ room. Many plus features.i ^
—conditioned office building, suitable$44,900. • M 3*3Z08
for alt types of business. 4615 Dixie, Drayton. MA 5-2161.
GAYLORD INC.
2 W. Flint St., Lake Orion MY 2-2821_____ __ ___FE 8-9693
HAROLD R. FRANKS. Realty LAKE FRONT
WILL CONSIDER TRADE lake front bn Oxbow Lake. Lovely large fenced lot, pretty settlna. immaculate and well, built 2-bedroom home. Carpeted 26' 44vlng— room with fireplace, 12 x 15 dining room. Kitchen like new. Attached 2-car garage.- Full basement. $27,500.
Everett Cummings, Realtor
2583 UNION LAKE ROAD
363-7 111
NEW BUILDING, front on Oakland Ave. • between Montcalm and Telegraph, office space 1225 tq- ft. Warehouse or garage 4100 sq. ft., 12' x 10* overhead doors, Inquire 900 Oakland.
NEW
__ COMMERCIAL BUILDINGS, 25x60 or 50x60 or will build to suit,, air conditioned, plenty of pArking, located by 2530 Orchard l/c. Rd.,
SNYDER KINNEY & BENNETT
Sylvan Lake. <47-1743 before 585-3517 attar 7.
Vo1 R'ESTAW RANT—FULLY—equipped. Newly decorated. Downtown Pon--liac. For lease—Phone FE 3 785J,_ .Eye«. FE 5.7303 -.. __j;
HIGHLAND AREA,. 3 bedroom, J'-T baths, attached Ur car garage, full basement, by owner, 4327. Pom-., more. Evenings, Mljford 585-M40.
HOLLY AREA,' 11540 S. Dlxl* Hwy 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, fireplace. Kitchen built-in*. Larga roomi, many extras. Extra larga lot. Full price $15,000. Owner, 2*1-682$, Livonia._______________
HIITER
PrJyate bath and entranc#. Nea POntlac General Hospital. OR 3,1116 WSSSS. 5 —|SHP«r 673-0247---
T dei?lTsN?bedropm EcounlIy p’r^f^ APAPT^P^ -d -«'•
t,r—rrr»—k . _ 1^4 rooms and bath, Mt floor,
thart living Quartiri 331 Child welcome. $35 per wk., with $100 dep., Inquire at 273 Baldwin
2 MEN TO SHARE LIVING quarters . Jg" _____J
with same In Pinq? Kinob area. AIR CONDITIONED SMALL epart-Citt before 4:30 p.m. 335-2237. J ment, lady, $20 weekly, FE 2-4083.
decorated, utilities furnished, nea Pontiac Motor. Adults only, deposit required. FE 4-4625.
5 OR 6 SINGLE MEN or women to ” share\3 bedroom furnished home. Close \ to Pontiac General. TV, washer, dryer. $50 per mo. Ee. Refs, and Sec. dep. Ft 4-4300. -t _ | HOUSE NEAR PONTIAC GENERAL.
Florida Propertios. 48-A
Retirees—New Residents?
NEAR DRAYTON — till* nee) 3-bedroom rancher with iVi befh*,, full basement with rec. room_end fourth bedroom, alum, iidlng, Targe"W”W giVaye; ■ weed let. -$20,900, terms.
652 1260
Lovely 3 bedroom, 2 baths, to. or not to be, furnished home Fort Lauderdale, Available un December 15. Ideal location.
river with docks, ocean access $200 mo., Includes everything. I Pack suitcase, move in. -FE 4U88I54-atter 6 p.m.
Franklin Village « MA 6-9600 BY ~ OWNER. LOVELY BRICK'
■ ‘veneer- home,—4-bedrooms,—lit baths, nicely landscaped corner lot.
..Washington Park Subdivision, brick
■: ftfaptace inHying room... recroaflon i room in’ basement with bar. tn-1 etudes many extra*'. Shown by appointment only. 673 0700 or FE 2-0081
BY OWNER 3 BEDROOM home on 2 acres In Drayton Plains. $3800 to* existing mortgage, balance $11,000. $104 per month. 673-3473 BY OWN ER," 2 hdusei and 14 unit j apartment, leaving Michigan, good,
1- r°ndlllon' ™ m m ].
OVERLOOKING ELIZABETH l AKE this J bedroomi and
bath, 2 • c.f garage, large tel, $11,000 terms.
WHITTEMORE 5T. and bath, sunpprch, nlc* tel, $10,750, lermi. Call HI IT M REALTY, 3792 EllJ. Lak* *$»■
THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 21. 1008
49
Salt House*
li)i Hw«t _______________
HIGHLAND AREA
4 ROOMS, full bass mint. about l ter* on Hickory ft Ido* Rd.—M 5*. pull trie* »is,*00.
j bedrooms, living room, dining room, kitchen, full basement on largo lot In qulat area, nlca lor rttlr**, close to M-5f. *13,MO.
HOLLAWAY REALTY CO.
Ill Milford ftd. Highland
___________*14 2481________
Homeowners Insurance Anderson & Associates
1044 Joalyn ■ FB 4-3335
iiiisTJSpr p r b ft a e ft 16 a t e o:
vacation homo for y 0 u r lake or
resort lot. 1 bodroom, all paneled |_..._
walls, beamed calling, fireplace. OXFORD all electrical, plumbing and heating complat*. Storms, screens, range, refrigerator and a 11 furniture. Sliding door wall and 1x20 front sun deck. $6800. Call Mr. Clecl, KE 0*5350 or see model located at corner of W. Huron end Elliabeth Lake Rd.
49ISele Houses
49
ORION — 3 BEDROOM ranch with privileges on Long Lake. ^11.500.
1 acres — Spacious farm home features 5-bedrooms, gas heat and commercial lonino on ClffRSton Rd., $19,900.
GREEN ACRES
1469 S. Lapeer Rd. MY 36^62
OUR PROGRAM
It designed to save you thousands. We will design, plan and construe! your new home on your lot. Years of know-how will save you thousands. Write for Information
SWISS TYPE CHALET
3 bedroom, full basement, oes hcet, natural fireplace, formal dining room, plus garege. Needs some painting, 0 down to qualified
buyer Owners agent. 33M952.__
SYLVAN VILLAGE. lllFBovirly. 4 bedrooms, beach, boat docking prlvliages. West Bloomfield schools, ata 189$._
TUCKER REALTY CO.
903 PONTIACJJTATE BANK 334-1545
Union Lake Village
l arge 3 bedrooms, large living anc dining, kitchen with all the built
This 3-yr.-old brick and aluminum home on 9$f wide fenced site has 31* paneled and carpeted family room with fireplace* attached garege. Super deluxe surroundings. ONLY $31,900 QUICK POSSESSION.
C. Schuett
IRWIN
HEAR MIDDLEBELT I
J-ledroom ranch typa bungalow! with IV> baths, carport, carpeting, large utility room, nice kitchen, a beautiful. back yard with nice, shrubbery. Better look at this one.
WEST SUBURBAN
3-bedroom ranch type bungalow! with a nlca recreation room in full basement, attached 2-car garage and fenced lot. Has aluminum siding. Carpeted living room and, 1 “ jj ti HI Call
AIBEE HOMES
3513 Elisabeth Lake Rd.
Ponllac, or phone: 612-3150_
4 Bedroom Colonial, fVl Beths, 23' living room. Paneled 1st floor Study. Full basement and loads of closet space. Large 15'x200' lot with Lake Privilege, right across the street. $31,900.
Anderson & Associates
1044 Joslyn Ffj 4-35341 o 7100
After 4 P.M. FE 8-8939 or FE 2-4353 CM 3-/I 00
“ OXBOW LAK6 PRIVILEGES. 8800 Commerce Rd. Union Lake bedroom, 2 baths, family room. UArAKIT
dual fireplace, 4 level home, studio “ hv.mii i
ceiling, built-ins, 2 car garage, by MECHANIC ST. — 4 rooms and owner 343-0881. bath, all modtrn. tl.4*$0Q. Smith
pOTtHTItTPLUS 7
3000 sq. ft. new quad-level on 2l WILLIS M. BREWER
oiling acres with private road.
Sal* House*
49
Wideman
LOON LAKE FRONT
Large brick colonial featuring bedrooms, 24 ft. living room carpeted. 15x18 ft. family dining room carpeted, IV* batha* basement, recreation area, steam, heat, 2-car brick garage. 82x350 ft. lot* good beach. Immediate possession. CAi TODAY, $31,200.
i posses) TERMS.
Gl — 0 DOWN
GENERAL HOSPITAL AREA 3-bedroom home. 34 tt. living room with fireplace, large dining room, basement. Immediate possession.
emenl. LY If.1
950. CALL TOOAY.
L 0. WIDEMAN, REALTOR
412 W. HURON ST. 334-4524
EVE. CALL_______335-8449
IRWIN
Sola Houtsi
49
Brown
KENT
move Into. Payments less then rent with $1*500 down. Full price* 89500.
4 ROOMS AND BATH —
aluminum exterior. Lake privileges, deep lot. Nice trees. 84,500* cash.
Floyd Kent, Inc., Realtor
2200 Dixie Hwy. et Telegraph 2-0123 or FE 2-1984 LAKE ORION* 3 BEDROOM home', full basement, lake privileges, real good buy 84,000 down* take over payments* 428-2145.
LARGE BUNGALOW
Near everything. 3 spacious bedrooms* natural fireplace, dining room* full basement* gas heat and garage. Needs some flxln'. Owners Agent 674-1691.___________
Large woodeo lake lots
Private lake with no public access. Near Rifle River. Miles ot beautiful shoreline* Vhls property has never been offered for sale -before. Adlacent to the Ogemaw State Forest. Building sites never
write Columbia Realty* 2620 W. Maple Rd.* Troy* Mich., 48084. Or call Jack Stanton* 442-7200. *
living room 24 x 24', full wall stone fireplace, panel family room 22' x 16', carpeted kitchen 24' x 12'. all elec., built-lns* 3 bedrooms, master 24 x 14*, 2Va baths, needs some finishing. Real prestige home, Glarkston area. 831,500. — $8000 down, will handle. SHOWN BY APP'T., NO AGENTS. 425-4047. llill -L-
PRESTON
BILT-HOMES AND REALTY
473-8811
I POTTER'S LAKE. 7 miles west of Lapeer. By owner. Lake front. 7 rooms end bath. Fenced yard. Old shades* carpeting, drapes and many extras. Substantial down
| payment. 332-0069. ___
; ROMEO AREA — 4 bedroom house on 4 acres. 784-8292.
724 Rlker Bldg.
REAL ESTATE
FE 4 5181
RETIRING SPECIAL
Neat and clean ranch with full basement* new gas furnace* new carpeting, 2-car garage 15x22 living room 0 down, about 870 per month. Owner's agent. 674-1698.
RHODES
VACANT
4 bedroom Aluminum siding* Cape Cod, full basement, 2 car garage, 2 baths, natural fireplace, FHA approved. OWNERS AGENT. 674-1449._
WALTER'S LAKE AREA
CLARKSTON SCHOOL DISfRICT Early American ranch, barn red, *4 acre lot, 3 bedrooms, HA bath, natural fireplace, 2 car garage. $26,500.
ALL BRICK RANCH '4 acre lot, 3 large bedrooms, 1 Mi bath, natural fireplace, - paneled family room, with'.walk-out slider, | 829,000.
COLONIAL
2000 sq. ft. of vour wildest Imagination in California Com temporary plus 2 acres. 835,000.
All Immediate occupancy with excellent mortgage or land contract available. SYLVAN RLTY — 673-3488 or 682-2300.
WARDEN,
BIG VALUE - SMALL PRICE
Price reduced way* way down | ♦or fast sale, y attractive almost j new 3-bedroomer on paved street near Pontiac Northern. Has carpeted living room and bedrooms, all aluminum Florida1 room, gas heat, large covered! carport, paved drive. Just 813,900 if sold this week. Terms.
Reoltor
Luxurious 2-story colonial* 3 • bedroom*, 2 full baths, family room* loti of gingerbread. Call for details,
New 3-bedroom rench. natural fireplace* beamed ceilings, fully landscaped. Dqre you to can I
Neat 3-bedroom ranch, full basement. lots of extras. Priced to sell TODAYF
Northern High area. 2-bedroom bungalow* needs some repair, situated on generous siied lot. land contract. Terms available.
Newlyweds — Retlreesl Cute 1-1 bedroom home In nicely landscaped lot* IVS-car garage, located near beautiful Cass Lake. Within walking distance to Dodge Park. Immediate possession.
Growing pains? Naed more space? Let us build for you In the beautiful wooded Elizabeth Shores Subdivision. East |ldi. 5 rooms all on one Buyhw your present home? Let's floor, 2-bedrooms. -Nice llvingitrade. We're notorious for It.
Sal* Kansas
49
STRUBLE
WE TRADE
SHARPI SHARPI SHARPI
Be our guest to Inspect this 4 room brick family home In this tine W. side location. If has a new formica count • r top and dishwasher In kitchen* full dining room end large living room with natural fireplace* 3 large bedrooms and bath up and *4 oath on first floor. Full basemenf with lovely paneled rec. room wlfh plenty of storage cabinets. 2 car garage with large workshop area at rear, paved drive. Priced for quick 'sale at 826.509, term*. ,
Salt Houibi
49
MR. G.l
MILLER
AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR
3 BEDROOMS. FIREPLACE, new kltchan, large living roqm. Full batmt., gas Mat. All city con-vanlancai. Larga bedrooms plus fun room, juit II1.90O with WOO down. FHA.
WATKINS LAKE PRIVILEGES and surrounded by baaullful homa*. 4 rooms and bath, lull beam!., naw gas haat, 2 lota. Lovely vlaw ot lako and |uit 011.450 on lang contract. Paymanti ot 010 month. Maks your appointment now I
NORTH SIDE STARTER HOME In __.nlca repair. 9x15 living room, new DRAYTON WOODS bath, aluminum norms and screens. *Naw gas haat. Naw J-car garage. Under construction. If nes 43 5 a,.-a Of OW nn lanH rnntrjef!
living room, 25' kitchen end d«nlnp Jult %7f9X nolo
are*. IV* baths with master bath re 2-UZ6Z
ceramic tlla. Yes* It has a walkout 1470 W HURON OPEN 9 TO 9
basement and 2-car attached garege. 200' wooddd lot. Hurry to see this lovely home end pick your own colors and carpeting. Call for datalls or come In ana look at plant,
Salt Housgs
49
//
BUD
11
TIMES
room. Large kitchen. Full basement. Gas heat. Price 88,700 Gl or FHA Mtg.
HATCHERY ROAD:
3-bedroom ranch home. Good condition. Large lot. Carport. Fanced yard. Gl farms available.
BUYING OR SELLING CALL JOHN K. IRWIN & SONS
111 West Hruon — .Since >925 FE 5 9446 alter 5 pm. FE 5-1613
Les Brown, Realtor
509 Elizabeth Lake Rd. (Across from the Mall) FE 2-0552 ~ MLS
IVAN W. j TT
SCHRAMf Ullio
CHOICE LOTS
3 well located building lots, corner location. City sewer and water. Priced right.
BRICK RANCH
3-bedroom, full basement, fenced yard, city sewar and water, near
Lauinger
0 DOWN — on this wide brick rancher. 3-bedrooms. Family room. > 2 full baths. Built-In kitchen. Gas heat. Excellent lake privileges.
LAKEFRONT — Hard sandy beach. Many trees. 3-bedroom. 20x20 ft. garage. Aluminum siding. Full price $13,900. Hurry! WATERFRONT — 71 ft. on water.
---Cedar—Island—Lake.—Brick—^
bedroom. Walkout basement. Ledgestona fireplace. L a r g e covered porch. Exc. neighborhood. Deep lake. Trout fishing, fishing, 10 ” minutes to Pontiac. Full price 827*500.
HIGHLAND — 2-bedroom plus family room. I1/* car garage. On
___ 100x150 ft. fenced yard. Many
blooming shrubs. Large garden space. In excellent condition. Lake privileges.
IDEAL BUILDING SITES - As low as 8800. Waterfronts. Wooded. Lake privileges. Teems. WOLVERINE LAKE AREA — Large 3-bedroofYi. Large lot. Paneled’ features. 2 car garage garage. | Lake privileges. Just 83,500 down.
0 DOWN TO VETS — Larga 4-bedrooms. Full basement. Fireplace. 2 car garage. Near Pontiac Mall.
WALKED LAKE SCHOOLS — Spacious bl-level. Large family room, 3* possible 4 bedrooms, Built-in oven and range. Carpet. A lovely home. Full price 823,250.
BUILDING 3 BEDROOMS—starting as low as 815,950 Including lot. Let us sell your property while we buld.
■67*0319 VA-FHA 673-2168
1531 Williams Lake Rd. at M-59 _ | MACE DAY LAKE FRONTAGE — 694' on lake, beautiful 5 bedroom estate home on 4.73 acres of land. Grounds beautifully landscaped. Call for details. Many luxurious items. I Price $72,000* 830,000 down. 4-H REAL ESTATE, 623-1400 or OR 3-2321.
MILFORD CITY ~ Perfect starter or retirement. Cozy 3-bedroom home, fireplace* new carpeting, garage, fenced yard. Close to shopping and churches. Pleasant neighborhood. OC 4372.
HOWELL
Town & Country Inc.
Highland branch office
jj PHONE 313-685-1585_______(
MILTON WEAVER
LARGE 3 BEDROOM BRICKl RANCH, big family room with* fireplace* 1 Va. ceramic me baths, i full basement, big patio. Ideal location with paved drive ~ arret' street. $32,500, terms will be arranged. .. s- —-r M
MILTON WEAVER INC , Realtors In the Village of Rochester ! 118 W. University______651-8141 j
MODEL
HOME
OPEN SAT., SUN. 1-5 MON. THRU THURS. 5-8 |
$ bedroom brick tri-level with 2 car! attached garage, 1 Vi baths, fin-: Ished family room. From $19,400
liams Lake Rd Tplock north of Union Lake Village.
Also We Build
S bedroom tri-level with l’/a carl garege, '$13,600 plus lot.
3 bedroom ranch with 2 car garage,
BRICK RANCH HOME, 3-bedrooms, large living room with fireplace and wail-ro-watl carpet, tv? baths, full basement, oil heat, attached garage plus 10 acres of! land. $50,000.
HOMESITES. Indianwood. An area of extra nice homes, good restric-1 tions, lake privileges. Call today| for details.
A. J. RHODES, REALTORS lUNION LAKE PRIVILEGES
FE 8-2306 258 W. Walton FE 5-6712 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE
ROCHESTER
Charming 4 bedroom colonial with carpeting, fireplace, glassed in screened porch. Basement. 2 car garage. On large lot. $33,400. For quick possession call 651-8588.
Shepard Real Estate, Inc.
HOME AND BUSINESS
6 rooms — 3 bedroom home with conventional (fining room, full basement, gas heat* like new aluminum siding on this home. Also a garage on back of property for Income* property zoned commercial* call for more information.
OFF BALDWIN
"NTCl~CT8nr 3 bedroom hump bettor than new. Partly brick has shrubs* trees and landscaping all In* fenced back yard. FA furnace, good school district* a ___real buy. Cell today.___
REALTOR — MLS 5925 Highland Rd. IM-59I Next to Frank's Nursery
674-3JI75
Val-U-Way
NORTH SIDE
Extra sharp 3 bedroom home with full basement end a large 2 car garage. Features larga kitchen and dining area, hardwood floors, alum, storms and screens, fenced corner lot. Priced at $16,800 with $700 down plus costs.
OFF BALDWIN
2 bedroom, basement, alum, sided home with large kltchan and Dining area, comfortable living room, tile bath, gas heat, awning covered patio. Assume present owner's mortgage of- $12,600 with payments of $108 per month.
SOUTH SIDE
Large 3 bedroom older home with full basement. Featuring larga living and dining room, roomy kitchen with plenty of cupboards, gas—heat, enclosed front porch. 8450 moves you In on FHA terms.
FAMILY HOME
ROYER
TIPSIC0 LAKE
Year around lake front home. Large 100x125 ft. well landscaped lot. Nice beach. Dock included. Home features: walkout basement, 24'xll' living room* family room* cutstone fireplace, new built-in stove and refrigerator In kitchen. Washer 'and dryer. First time offered at $25,200.
HOLLY AREA
Beautiful 3-bedroom contemporary home. Deluxe features throughout including: natural brick fireplace* studio ceilings* water , softener, dishwasher, oven, range and hood. Disposal. Carpeting. 2 car garage with automatic openers. 1 Va ceramic baths. Wooded corner lot bordering flowing stream Golf course across road. No. 292 E.
A fine 3-bedroom rambler with large lot close to lake. Has .wood floors, paneled living room, carpeting, gas heat, attached garage, family room. Must be seen to appreciate It's value at just $19,000 with terms.
WARDEN REALTY
3434 W. Huron* Pontiac 612-3920
Waterford
ROOM TO ROAM
With a for a g
pension of this 2-bedroom home with part basement.. The living room *as fireplace jmd is modern throughout. Extras Include double garage, conveniently located near Kettering High.
SERVICE IS OUR BUSINESS
WATERFORD REALTY
4340 Dixie Hwy. 673-1371
Multiple Lilting Service
List With SCHRAM And Call the Van
OPEN EVES. AND SUN.
1111 JOSLYN AVE. FE 5-9471 231 Baldwin
REALTOR MLS Multiple Listing Service
Serving Pontiac area for 20 yrs
R. J. (DICK) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531
6 rooms with tutt basement, ^ 0r«n 0 7
ceramic tiled bath, hardwood ^P™lana*^_______
floors, plastered watts, tow down paymant on FHA.
Claude McGruder Realtor
CLARK
GILES
Excellent family home with fireplace, 2 full baths and basement* gas heat. aJ_u m l n u m storms and screens* fenced back yard and fruit trees. Priced at $14*750.
RENT RECEIPTS
Have no value* but the same amount paid on your home is like money in the bank* so let us show you this 3-bedroom ranch, built in 1960, near Davisburg.
----OrrTy^$TT,50(7 fuH price.---
WATERFORD TOWNSHIP
5 room ranch on 75' x 200* lot, ex . cellent starter home. Land Contract LIKE LARGE ROOMS?
This one has them. 7 rooms,
Terms. CALL
YORK
OXFORD oif vo363
60'x200' commercial frontage on M-14713 Dixie Hwy. 24 just south of Oxford. 24'x26'* 1 »/a ’ story ■ Cape Cod home. garag« could
business. $13,900. land contract.
WE TRADE OR 4-0363 Drayton Plains
COUNTRY ESTATE
5 acres on main blacktop road near Oxford. Like new 30'x56<‘ brick and stone ranch. Featuring: 3 large bedrooms, IV* ceramic baths, finished basement and
?arage. Built-ins In kitchen unken living room. Carpeted throughout. Make your appointment now and en|oy country living at its best. No. 256 E.
WE BUILD-TRADE ROYER REALTY, INC. PHONE 628-2548
MAIN OFFICE, 123 S. Lapeer Rd. Oxford
HOLLY BRANCH: Phone 634-8204 ___________Holly Plaza_______
SEMINOLE HILLS
Spacious 3-bedroom home on 2 lots features a full basement* gas heat, breakfast nook off the kitchen and 2-car garage. The fireplace In the living room even has an Italian marble mantel. A comfortable family house close to schools* churches and city conveniences. By appointment at $19,250. -----
2-FAMILY
Near Utica with 290' frontage on Auburn Road. Let the rental make the payments until you develop it for commercial use.
The Rolfe H. Smith Co.
Sheldon B. Smith, Realtor 244 S, TELEGRAPH RD.
&3«784a
SHINN -
WE NEED SALES HELP % Elizabeth Lake Estates: JUST a rip roaring good ONE. Clean in all respects. Only $9*950.00.
Auburn Heights; 2 Bed-rm PLUS NICE SUN ROOM, lots of shade. 810,250.00.
_______ LOTS FOR SALE
family room, formal and Informal * dining areas. Basement, 2 car: garage, 829,200 plus lot.
Let us dispose of your present home, and place you In a new one this J year.
J. C. HAYDEN,- Realtor
863 6604 10735 Highland Rd. TM-597
____Vj mile west of Okbow Lake
- MODEL OPEN DAILY 9-9 SUNDAY 2-8 P.M.
Tasteful luxury aniKcarefully pian-ned conveniences that add up to "elegance Zwithout extravagance": mean ynore in a "Frushour-Angell"1 built home. That's why you car. still have that new home of your dreams,
BIG CITY t-OT: Let Shinn Realty build you the home you want on this corner. Come see us today. Company financed, and Shinn Realty has color pictures of the finished homes. From 811,000.00.
383 ft. on Perry:
and Kennett: Shinn Realty Acres, Acres, and Acres in Emmett, Charlevoix, and Che y boygan Counties. We'lt keep aU appointments to show you these NORTHERN PARCELS.
WIN WITH SHINN 83 N. Telegraph
33ft 0343 9 til 9
’ Spacious New Homes by
ROSS
YOUNG-BILT HOMES
REALLY MEANS BETTER BIL7 Russell Young, 334-3830 53V* W. Huron St.
LAZENBY
LAKE FRONT
Act now and en|oy living this summer. Furnished 2 bedroom cottage on beautiful high lot In Independence Twp. Glassed in porch. All rooms tiled and paneled and in excellent condition. Only $13,500 with land contract terms.
$900 MOVES YOU IN
This 2-bedroom ranch with walkout basement on 2 lots. Very large living room with gleaming oak floors, separate dining room, ex. cellent starter home. Completely fenced yard. Easy terms. Priced at only $10,500 and take over mortgage.
R0YCE LAZENBY, Realtor
bedrooms and basement, a real bargain for only $11,500 and on a - paved street too.
:rj _ Claude McGruder Realtor
221 Baldwin FE 5-6175
MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE Open 9-9
HALL
CLARKSTON AREA — Large 3-bedroom ranch, large country kitchen with eating area, separate dining room, large Hying room, tiled bath with eetlng area* separate dining room, large living room, tiled bath with vanity, large fenced corner lot. $16,900 total price, 80 down to ex-GI plus closing costs will move you In.
+BEDROOM — brick lake front on Oakland Lake. Featuring 2 full tile baths, separate dining room, built-in kitchen, large carpeted living room with fireplace, clean and
1 neat basement, also 2-car garage. Home is extra sharp. Offered at 832,500 with terms to suit.
2 FAMILY — Income located In the Village of Clarkston. Each apt. features 2 large bedrooms, large living room with fireplace in main apt. Beauty parlor In main apt., at present. Call for more details.
CROSS
STARTER HOME
$900 will move you In thlf 2-
b e d r o o m _home with.
hardwood floors In Waterford Township on large lot. Full price, 813,500. Call for appointment.
$450 DOWN
Very clean 3-bedroom home In north Pontiac. Separate dinihg room and large enclosed_front_porch. Exp-
edient neighborhood i n Northern School district.
CROSS REALTY
AND INVESTMENT CO.
OR 4-3TQ5 MLS
'We pay cash for used homes
"OAKWOOD MANOR"
FE 5-6175 6-Room Brick Ranch with full base-Open 9-9 ment. Tennessee and Kentucky 1 marble fireplace* formal dining room, double closets in bedrooms, oak, floors, plastered wal|s, ceramic bath, 2-car attached garage, automatic door opener. Over 1 acre beautifully landscaped lot. Shown by appointment. Only 835,500. Mortgage Terms. Will consider trade.
ENJOY
your summer fun from these loti leading Into Cass Lake. There are • of them for this lovely ranch home setting having 2, possibly 3. bedrooms, aluminum siding, 8x25 enclosed sun room, 10x12 family room, fenced yard and bus servlet to the Pontiac Mall along with wall to wall carpeting and attached 2-car garage for only $16*950, land contract farms on the balance.
LIVING AND INCOME
Are probably the most accurate way to describe this 3-bedroom rench home with a 23x30 living room, basement, gas heat, aluminum siding plus a duplex apartment home renting tor $220 per month with separate utilities.
firing lake privileges on Ca&s Lake end access to property from 3 roads. This Is a brand new offering, so call early.
DRAYTON
Has this lovely ranch offering for your Inspection* having 5 rooms, full basement* plastered wells* 13x13 family room* 2-car at-"
KINZLER
Newer Home — 10 Acres
Just what many have been waiting for — a delightful large 3-bedroom home with paneled family room and attached 2-car garage. Carpeting and extras. New 24 X 25 building suitable for horses. 10 level acres and good soil. Variety of fruit trees. In lower tax area. An excellent value.
NEW HOME $17,950
Which Includes lot. 3-bedroom .all aluminum ranch home now under construction. 1042 square feet. Has l1/? baths* family size
UPPER STRAITS LAKE PRIVILEGES: 5 large rooms* fireplace, separate dining room, 2 bedrooms, p!u$ upstairs dormitory, garage. Mortgage Terms.
Gl SPECIAL — 812,800: Cuta 2-1 bedroom home. Lake privileges, large lot. Just closing costs down.
CLARK REAL ESTATE 1382 W. HURON ST. 682-88501
Multiple Listing Service
ANNETT
that can be assumed. Cell for yobr appointment. 1
LAKE FRONT
Deluxe and we ere speaking of the price only $14,000 with 12*5( down for this 6-room rench home with iv*-car attached garage, fenced lot and approximately 40' on the water. Call for your showing, almost Immediate possession.
WAIT 1 !
Don't look any further If you need a 3 possibly 4-bedroom home with finished recreation room, walk-out lower level formal dining room, colonial elevation ana early American decor, 2 full baths, 2-car teched garage and on the water brick, then call on this one* you will be happy you did.
ROCHESTER AREA
Two 11) highly ditlnbll horn* ■11*1 h**r now C r 111 * n t n n Hospital, approxlmataly >> «crt •ach, pavad road. Prlcad at U,500,00 «ach.
LAKE FRONT LOT
Tip-top home site, Judeh Lake* 75 ft. like frontage* 235 feet deep, get In street. Priced at 83*500.00.
UPPER LONG LAKE
West Bloomfield Township, canal front lot lust oft tha laka* breakwater and boetwell, 80'xl76' paved road. Priced at 81,800.00, terms.
NICH0LIE-HUDS0N Associates, Inc.
49 University Dr.
FE 5-1201
__after 6 p.m. FE 2-3370
JOHNSON
INDIAN VILLAGE
6-room, 2-story brick bungalow new listing with 3 bedrooms, with basement* 2 full baths* full basement with rec. room. Gas forced ■Ir heat, With air conditioning, wall to wall carpeting. Ilk# new* in all rooms. This home Is In immaculate condition. 2-car garage* with blacktop drlvaway. Nice landecaped lot. Let ut make an appointment and show you this home.
EAST SIDE
3-famlly 1 bedroom apartments* completely furnished, gross rental 1ft“1987 W*l“83;M8, futt price 89,500 with good down payment* land contract on balance, (.all us today after 6 p.m. Mr. Jack Joll* 682-0282.
JOHNSON
1705 S- Tqlqgrqph Rd. FE 4-2533
Sill HllUI
49
STOUTS
Best Buys Today
DON'T BE A "RENT SLAVE"
Harq It your chonca to own a tpacloui 1-bodroom rambling ranch homo on > easy terms with no mortgage! costs. Call for an appointment. |
^EYS-
Trading
LAKE ANGELUS
Golfview Estates. Lovely 3 • bedroom brick ranch home with full basement* lVa baths* attached 2V?-car garage, large carpeted living room with fireplace, refrigerator* oven and range included. An excellent buy at $32*500. Let's trade equities.
SEASONS GREETINGS "
The house buying season that Is, and this house has been reduced from $20*900 to $19*950 for this 4-bedroom home with lake privileges* 2 full baths* full basement, 2-car garage* $2,000 down or let's trade equities.
FOR THE MAN WHO HAS EVERYTHING
Here's the place to park It. Large family home with 8 rooms in-
cluding 4 bedrooms* 2 baths* 16x16 kitchen and 18x20 family room,
255' of lake frontage, over an acre In all. Attached 2-car garage* fireplace In living room* over 2*370 square feet. An excellent In-
vestment for summer end winter living at Its finest.
SHOW STOPPER
You'll be Impressed with this
home I 3-bedroom ranch home in the Walled Lake area. Full basement with recreation room* attached 2Vj-car garage* I a-r-g-e 100x560' lot, 12x15 breezeway. An excellent investment* owner will trade.
IF LINE BUSY • J
Keep trying because everyone will want to know about this 3-bedroom aluminum sided ranch* large carpeted living room with fireplace, futt~ price 513,900, FHA terms. Waterford.
TED'S CORNER
By eliminating the middleman you eliminate us, by eliminating us, you become the middleman, the man you wanted to eliminate in the first place. Why not cell your friendly middlemen at:
674-2236
Beneq?ct%'/J"'paved SAVE MORTGAGE COSTS
highway, 132 ft. on rear gravel street. Possible multiple dwelling site or other development. Includes good 5 room home. $57,500, terms. *
WE WILL TRADE
Realtors 28 E- Huron St.
Office Open Evenings & Sunday 1-4
338-0466
JOHN KINZLER, Realtor 1
521! Dixie Hwy. 623-0335:
LET'S TRADE ACROSS FROM PACKERS STORE
B. HALL REALTY, REALTOR ’Multiple Listing Service Open 9-8 6569 Dixie Hwy. 9-9 dally 625-41161----------------------:---------
VON
ARRe
JEASTHAMi
REALTOR
2 nsw ranch homes avail able soon.: 836,900 v 623-0670 '
built on your lot for only $18,400. t*4i Why don't you bring your family over to inspect our model at 1052 N.
Cass Lake Road today. Sales exclusively by
RAY O'NEIL REALTY
3520 Pontiac Lake Road
OR 4-2222 _____________MLS
NEAR LINCOLN JR. High, assume —existing 5V< per cent mortgage, a) bedrooms, 2 full baths, full basement, alum, sided home, price 813,900, no brokers please, 334^8576.
S. Telegraph Rd. FE 4-059 ;
This Poor Old Home III
NEEDS A HANDYMAN OWNER, who can pay a $1000 down and $60 per mo„ and fix it up to have a comfortable 2-bedroom home for his family. Part pasehtent, oil heat, garage, near Union Lake, $6950. Sold
Mattingly
CHRISTIAN HILLS (Rochester)
Truly a distinctive home, beautiful brick ranch has 3 large bedrooms* 21/x baths, attached 2’/a car garage, finished walk-out basement, family room, fireplace* carpeting, dra pe s , storms, screens, 93 trees on excellently landscaped lot. Full price $50,900.
COLONIAL
Handsome 2 story frame colonial. Has 3 spacious bedrooms, -full- bath ■up,...haif .^bath- -dowii,— brick fireplace in living room, full basement, enclosed rear porch, storms, screens. Clbse to schools. Full price, $15,900.
Bi - Level
Handsome brick and cedar bilevel Is located on Sylvan Lake Canal. 4 targe bedrooms, 2’/a -baths, attached 2 car garage, family room, balcony off dining room, built-in Intercom, TV ^antenna. Plenty of closet space.
A beauflfut home for 139,900.
DAN MATTINGLY AGENCY
682-9000 OR 4-3568 OL 1-0222
BRIAN'S
“BUYS
COZY IS THE WORD
i This t^bedroom home has 1-car | 'garage, hardwood floors, front porchi MR. Robin said to Mrs. Robin, *nd fenced back yard. Near schools. It's time to sel the nest, Arro and shopping. Just what yob nead.\ can sell most, anything they FHA or Gl on this one.
h^MMEDI^ATE^POSSESSION SPA£0^ER HOME J
Clean, 3-bedroom ranch with Vi; ffiL8
basement, located on nice, size tjome has, |ni.ce living
on this west side bungalow with! large carpeted living room and formal dining room. If features a full basement, a V/i car garage,]
total price is 814,200 and 82,100 will assume the present mortgage. It will move fast, so cdll today! ,
MORE INFLATION COMING?
It appears so and real estate will not be any cheaper. Here's your opportunity to still buy e two year old rancher Irf the moderate ■ price range. Situated on a large lot over looking Williams Lake and just the street from the lake privilege lot. Basement, two car garage and electric garage door opener. The stove and refrigerator are also Included,
McCullough realty
REALTORS
favorite spot for family fun and Informal entertaining. Prlma location, you are only a short distance from schools end a straight shot to shopping In highly restricted S. Bloomfield Highlands. Please call for an appointment to see all the extra Teat urea. Priced et $42*750. -Trade In considered. No. 9-27
95' LAKE FRONTAGE'
Beautiful '$hada trees, exquisite plantings* tons of rock terraces, steps to the sandy, safe beach. A lovely 3-bedroom ranch* almost new, very tastefully decorated and carpeted. Basement fully tiled. 2-car attached garage. You can be first to see It; you'll Be glad you did. No. I-n—-------
IF YOU BELIEVE THAT A DAY
In the country It worth a week In town, than you thould III ut thow you thli new country lilting. A practically new home wltn 3 bedrooms, a big wonderful kitchen, large living room, ceremlc bath and a Vy, 2-car attached garage. Gas F.A. heat. Locatad about flva miles Northwest ot Pontiac, prlc-e $23,950. No. 12-18
VERY VERY PRETTY
A pure white brick ranch homa featuring a low covered porch with a shocking pint front door. You'll love the big living room and full dlnlno room, richly carpeted In soft velvety green. Gas heat, community water. Oversize 2'A-car attached garage, paved drive and street. Commerce Lake privileges; you'll *ven be eligible for membership in the Bogie Lake Country Club! All this at $2t,500. Terms to suit I Possession on closing. No. 1-18
Save $ Price Reduced $1,000
Owner says "sell today" we're reedy to move Into our new home. So take advantage of reduced price at $19,000 for this exceptionally spotless 3-bedroom alum, sided family homa off Genessee. There's a nice base-. ment rumpus room, lot, nicely landscaped.
| your equity In your present home? No*
$13,900 IS THE LOW PRICE
For this 5-room lako privileged home. A big living room 21x16.3'
with fireplace. 2 bedrooms, full basement, located on 2 lots In the Union Lake area. Easy 1o purchase on G.l. terms. Don't miss this one. No. 7-27
West side g.t. terms
Nice 2-bedroom bungalow In good West side location. Larga living room, dining room, full basemenf with new gas furnace and one car garage. Full price *9,900. Zero down to Vet. No. 6-12
NEW MODELS AT
WESIRIDGE OR____WAT,ERF O RD,
PRICED FROM $25,950, INCL. LOT, North on Dixie (U.S. 10) to Our Ledy of Lakes Church, left on Ledgestona, left on Tipperary.
FOX BAY, PRICED FROM S26.990. 1NCL. LOT. West on Elizabeth Lake Road.
RANCH MODEL AT 1052 N. CASS LAKE ROAD. OPEN DAILY 9-9. WILL DUPLICATE ON YOUR LOT AT $11,400.
ALL MODELS SHOWN AT YOUR CONVENIENCE. CALL TOOAY FOR YOUR APPOINTMENT.
LIST WITH O'NEIL REALTY For 3 Good Reasons
We Think Our Sense of Values Our List of Good Prospects And Our Tireless Efforts Will Make You Glad You Called
RAY O'NEIL REALTY
----3320 PCtfttinrOIKi Road
OR 4-2222 MLS OR 3-2028
Sale House*
49Sale Houses
49
,or T attractive neighborhood i room, dining \room, Iarg4 kitchen, City water 'a^d 'sewer and ga5’ bedrooms, plus full basement and
lust included, tonight.
few rf the features | 'r°^' Porch. You can't go wrong at Buy today, move In | S7,95o.
Gl Speciol
Need more room? Here is the home you have been waiting for — 3 big bedrooms with space for another 1 or 2 upstairs. Fenced yard for the kids. IVa car garege. Aluminum a w n I n g s . Lake privileges on dne of the best beaches in Oakland Co. See it today — you'll be glad you did! Just 815,400.
.YOU SAY
*hif «ite~ 8 gotf course or water front home site proiect. $165,000.00 — additional 40 acres with lake front available with this package. Don't fust go there! Stand something. For appointment.
CALL
HACKETT EMpire 3-6703
77 ACRES, (PONTIAC), recreational area# near expressway. MU 9-0013. Weekdays after 5 p.m.__________________
BEAUTIFUL 1 ACRE LOT, ad|acent to Tam O'Shanter fairways# West Bloomfield Twp. 1 acre lot, Nash Acres Sub# West Bloomfield Twp.
Call owner, 338-2211. ..
CANAL LOT# PLEASANT Lake,
'CHEROKEE HILL"
Good building lot in a neighborhood of fine homes. Percolation list on record. Priced at $5,500. tLARK REAL ESTATE 1361 W. Huron St. 682-8850 Multiple Listing Service
COMMERCIAL LOT# 100x237 ft sewer# water, gas, lust W. ri Telegraph. Contact Leon Blachura. 674-3136.
MANISTEE LAKE, Kalkaska# Mich. Modern lake front# private beach and boat, sleeps four. Box 180-A, Rte. 1# Kalkaska# Mich. 49646.
TOWNSEND LAKE
Gqod 100 ft. lots. ISO ft. deep from *2,300. Land contract terms available.
WHITE LAKE 4-bedrooms, IVa baths, full basament, 2 car garage.
*22,000. — *8,000 down. 1-917-5244. ... , .nnn
371595 MA 64000
CRANBERRY LAKEFRONT — ex cellent home-site on .paved road. $10,000. .
WOODPECKER LAKE PRIVILEGES — lovely building site in prime area. $13,500.
FOREST LAKEFRONT — wooded lot# sloping to lake with Island that can be landscaped. Zoned residential. $30,000.
BRENDEL LAKEFRONT - Excellent building site near M*59 and Bogie Lake Rd. $10,500.
IVWA
BROOCK
INC.
4139 Orchard Lake Rd.
At Pontiac Trail
4444890
for someone needing depreciation for tax purposes. $12,000 down.
INDUSTRIAL BUILDING
9,600 sq. ft. masonry building Includes 700 sq. ft. of offices# 288 ft. of frontage on busy street# has loading dock# ten ton hoist# four 1Pxl2' doors# •Iso frontage on a canal to large lake. Rented for $700 per mo.
BATEMAN
I N V E S T M E N T-COMMERCIAL DEPT.
377 S. Telegraph Rd.
_____ 338,9641 ____J
After 5# Sat. and Sun. call 334-8109
WOLVERINE LAKE LOTS, $20 month. 15 min. Pontiac. Wooded or cleared. Nat. gas. pvt. beaches. Open Sun. Bloch Bros. 623-1333# FE 5660 Dixie Hwy., Waterford.
DARYTON PLAINS# 10 TO 50 acres# M-1 property suitable for warehouse and light manufacturing, access to railroad.
AL PAULY
4516 Dixie, rear
OR 3-3800 I Eves. 673-9272
NorthernProp»rty 51-A
4 LARGE ROOM CABIN, all paneled with deep well# also with small 1 room cabin# 11 acres of good wooded area plus trout stream on borderline# lust outside city limits of Mio# $7900 cash by owner. 338-3676.
I ROOM COTTAGE between Mlo-Rose City. Consider travel trailer -Ifo^-down-payment. 334-7634.___
_______________________________40 ACRES BETWEEN Kalkaska and
MILFORDi- INCOME—Oft—9-room-2}^-—Torch—Laka*--Short -distance—off, bath home# interior remodeled, Valley Rd. Near Rapid Rivet, exterior being painted, $5000 cash, Spring stream on property. Heavy balance $8500 on land contract. 684- wooded. Lots of timber# $4#000. 2395. I Owner. 349-0549# North>llle.
Business Opportunities 59 Business Opportunities 59
Dlxl
"TO
GOING TO BUILD?
We have a large variety. of ex cellent building sites In the West Suburban area. Both lake front llitf—prlvMeged lot»r For > further Information call — OR 4* 0306. J;
j. A. Taylor Agency, Inc.
7732 Highland Rd. (M59) OR 4-0306 Open dally 9-9# Sun 1-5
BE YOUR OWN BOSS
Would you like to own a party store/ -grocery sfera, or liquor carcy--4«>-4how...........you-Jho package, that flts you. bB&!....-
PONTIAC PARTY STORE
Enlbylngj a *176,000 groat — Only *1,000 down plut ttocX.' Ask for #14-S04*G-Z1 •
DRAYTON-AREA HOT SPOT
Property and business both available In a rapidly expanding neighborhood — Only $28,000 down will ttarf you here. Atk for a14-52560-Z1
ROCHESTER GROWTH LOCATION
*18,000 down plut itock will put you Into Ohio thriving grocery operation wlfff two biluTIful apartments and an additional rental
- -#>#«#-«,» —V- y.u. payment! far, you. Alk .lor a 14-49770-
“IS THE BIRD TO SEE''
PARTRIDGE REALTORS
-nBirw; Huron st.y Pontiac—r-(00-6 lit, I|I|8|U Xae* uedo)
HARRISON - 20 MlnUtaa, 20 lakes, furnished cottage, *5.000, Extra large tots. E-Z terms. CALL:
^ckeft EMpire 3-6703—
INVESTORS, DEVELO PER builders — 20 acres with house and buildings on one corner# close to golf course and shopping. $70,000.00 full price,
CALL'
HACKETT EMpire 3-6703
LEVEt BUILDING LOT, 110x181, very nice area. Phone 332-5584. LARGE WOODED LOT, Allenwood Estates, Clarkston. 605-1650._
Lott—Acreage
54
WATERFORD HILL MANOR
Lais from 14,280, te 112,000.
Just a taw choice lakofroht lets left.
SERVICE II OUR BUSINESS
WATERFORD REALTY |
4840 Dlxl* Hwy 473-1273
Multiple Listing Service
“ YOU NEED HOT BE A MILLIONAIRE -TO OWN A LARGE TRACT OF LAND
ito ACRES# Ortonvllle arte on blacktop# area of nice homes. $6950# $1,000 down.
15 AC Res on blacktop road with green meadow and trees and also pond site. $8,875# 20 par cant down.
10 ACRES, corner parcel with to mile of road frontage, good pond site# $8,875.
22 ACRES with Mapla# Hickory and Oak plus hill $12,950, 20 per cant down.
house, good condition Insulated, TUir basament and memories of those good old school days# south of Lapeer. $7#99S. Terms,
26 ACRES with extremely large hill, private and within 5 miles of I-75 expressway near Sashabaw. $10,000 cash.
80 ACRES, only $175 par acre# lurge barn# solid metal shad, 15 miles north of Lapeer. All good useable land and 10 acres of woods. $14,000# $8,000 down.
C. PANGUS, INC., Realtors i
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 630 M IS Ortonvllle
___ CALL COLLECT 627-2815
Sale Farms 56:
80 to 800 ACRES
In lower Michigan. Delry, grain beef or hogsl Name your term needs, we neve ft at ent ot "Michigan'." Perm Real Eitere ColdwoTsr, Michigan. Dale A. Dein Farm Broker and Auctioneer. Write or call 517-278-2377 — day. Headquarters — Dean Realty Cc* or 517-288-4127 — nights.
9 ACRES WITH buftdlogt, Lapeer Co.. 15 acre! of wood., 2 springs on property, could be Ideal for fish ponds or small lake, watt fenced for livestock or horses, 8300 per acre. 602-9215.
Oxford area. 391-
BY OWNER, 225 ACRES located In Tuscola County, Qoenlcesses. 3 homes end buildings Included, oil tilled, good crap tend, exc. condition. Inquire Mrs. Bernard Bremen, 1231 Neboblsh Rd., Essexvtfle, Michigan. _________________________
EXTRA SPECIAL
110 Acres — eitra. good land. 100 acras workable. Beautiful 11-room home# completely modern# large new barn and alio# ready for feeder cattle. Complete sat of good tools if desired. A good Investment, to mile from main hwy.# 10 miles from Lapeer. Great development location. Write or call collect. Plfer Realty# 615 s: Main St.# Lapeer. 664-3953.
# mi Sr MA. im TM. to*. UJ
"A guy In the next block left these records . . . said maybe you’d play something he likes occasionally!”
Business Opportunities 59
3 BAY QUARTER CAR wash. Busy location. Reasonable# must sell due to other business committments. 682-8920. Tad# from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m._________________
A BEAUTIFUL STORE all paneled walls# can be used for any business or office. Downtown Pontiac. One of tha finest locations. For rent or lease. Phone FE 3-7853# EveSv, FE 5-7303.
A RESTAURANT# SELL for cost of equipment# FE 8-7838# owner to 6 P.M.
A ONCE IN A LIFE TIME OPPORTUNITY going business, established
for
forty years. Same family ownership Owner has made It and is retiring This ii a 6 figure gross sales operation. If you are looking for a business that offers complete security for you and your family call today and we will gjve all Information to interested parties able to invest $15,000. Your terms on balance.
Call Al Graham or Earl Howard at O'Neil Realty OR 4-2222# FE 5-4619 or EM 3-0531.
BROOKS BEGG# REP. GEORGE PALMS# REALTOR A-C 313-886-4444
LEXINGTON - OVERLOOKING Lake Huron# 10 acres# high grounds, exc.# location. $450 down. Ed McNulty & Son# Laxlngton# 359-2321.
BUSY TAVERN
Good equipment and business# easy to operate. Includes large 2nd floor apartment. 15 miles from Pontiac. A good buy at $6,000 down.
HAMBURGERS
Prime location on the Dixie. 30 x 30 brl$k building# 100 x 365 lot. Ideal to expand Into A-1 drive in. Entire I package incl. all equipment for lust $10,000 down. Don't miss out on this.
WARDEN REALTY
3434 W. Huron# Pontiac 682-3920
Business Opportunities 59
RESTAURANT FULLY equipped. Newly decorated. Downtown Pontiac. For lease. Phone FE 3*7853, Eves. FE 5-7303._
RHODES
COMMERCIAL GARAGE# frontage on 3 streets# new gat heating unit, Only $47,000# terms.
LARGE COMMERCIAL BUILDING, 58x98 with full basement. This property has many possibilities Only $30,000. Terms.
A. J. RHODES, REALTOR
FE 8-2906 _ $ALS
fWgRN"-'“lN'~KI6Rf HEA5‘ “' Michigan. Includes 3- bedroom home. Couple can handle, shows good profit. Only $6,500 plus Inventory down, includes the real estate. Call Bruce Ramthan, Collect: LaNoble Realty, 1516 E. Michigan# Lansing. IV 2-1637 evenings, 489-1262.
THUMB AREA — BOAT, motor and- snowmobile business# well established# popular lines. Real money maker. Books to show It.
PIFER REALTY
RA 4-3595 Imlay City
Salt Household Goads AS
PIECE CHROME breakfast set, 120 39" site, rengt, *40. Bed,
chest of drawers, vanity, bench, night table, box spring and me}-tress In light maple, S50. Yardmen riding mower, snow blade, extra whecls. c.twins, 1125. 394-0355.
8 5 CUBIC FT. REFRIGERATOR.' F E 4-8569^ eft. 12.
9x12 Linoleum Rugs $3.89
Solid Vinyl Tile .. H rx
vinyl Asbestos tilt ..... 7c ee.
Inlaid Tilt, ,X9 7c 00.
Floor Shop- 2255 Elisabeth Lake
"Across From the (Wall"
" GAS RANGE. Excellent condition. 332-2277# after 5.
36""ELECTRIC ST09B7 622 Highland___________ .135 4063
•" ROUND MARBLe TOP coffee table, small 3 drawer chest, cherry wood. Honey maple school marm'i chair
ty nr
___ 3271.__
1967 DIAL-A-MAfiC]
Brand new sewing machine, left In
li
r>g
Originally
$119.50. Total balance due
lay a-way
•old
$13.33 or pay $1.25 per week anytime, Monarch Sawing#^334 3886. L— PLENTY Off ’use 6 washa/s stoves, refrigerators# and trade In furniture bargains. Little Joe's Trode-1n store# Baldwin at Walton Btvd. FE 2-6842. _
ADM IR AL 20" (&LO* TV# 2 Wkt old, warranty, $310. FE 4-1420. ALMOST NEW COMTEMPORARY furniture — living room# dining room, and mlsc. jtamr 673-2075.
APPLIANCES
UNCRATED
WASHERS, REFRIGERATORS AND RANGES made a terrific buy on al — i— jlemlshed at Whirlpool warehouse.
SoteHeuseheldGaadt AS
RANGE, REPRIORRATOR, AUTO, wishf- — —
W'_______________
Repossessed Merchandise
Wethere Dryers „ Ranges
Refrigeratory Freaks Color TVi
For Sale Miscellaneous At
Goodyear Service Store
1370 Wlda Track Dr.# Wtst Pontiac
Open FrIday Mil 9 p.m. SECTIONAL DAVENPORT# needs recovering. $100. 2207 $. Telegraph Rd. (Miracle Mila Shopping Canter.)____
SEWING MACHINE
'68 SINOER ZIG-ZAG .......
'67 SINGER ZIG-ZAG _______
'68 NECCHI ZIG ZAG ......
'68 WHITE ZIG ZAG '68 WHITE DIAL-A-PATTERN $120
PFAPF ZIG-ZAG ........... $40
No rtffcTto spend $200 or $300 for a machine. We have the lowest prices In town# end we sell whet we advert 1st. No Glfriffilcki.
HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE
445 Elisabeth Lk. Rd._____335-9283
SINGER DIAL-A-MATIC
Zlg Zag sewing machine — In modern walnut cabinet — makes designs# appliques# buttonholes# etc. Repossessed. Pay off:
$54 CASH
v.w vu "tout rn irrririt Duy on ait & *, .1 ••
uncreted end blemished appliances Or $6 per month payments .1 Whirinn„i GUARANTEED
wa ve no room in our warehouse1"' Universal Sewing Center
ADMIRAL WALNUT TV, XT' SCTMft, cabinet in new condition, 191. fttfligll «Wf/, CVtfSSter, Hydraulic equipment. . In SimMi new condition, |S9S. Lera* ten* sfrucllon wheelbarrow, its, Vt n.p. Jlej, motef. SlO ln good condition.
ADMIRAL
Preexer-n _______ .........
sole TV, like new. irouftHHt Ing Mechlne, heevy duty, goad cond. Secrlllce. tat., May 11, Oarepo teals, complete home turnlinlngi. Sacrifice. Men., May to, Tue*. May n. Leird eft Clarkston Rd. to 2710 Bucknor, Like Orton. 695-4471,
AMAilNG N|W 6U RAJ AN I CLEANS end DEODORlZSl bowl EVERY TIMt TOILET IS PLUSH-
lor
CALL PR 5-1152—FE 5-3191
ampro tap# rs foTrenc Brownie movlt camera and serpen, 1x5 child's playhouoe. 345-inoi.
ANCHOR FENCES
NO MONBY DOWN FR 1-9471 ATTENTION ELECTRICAL contractor s — rhw single conductor stranded copper wire. No. S, 6c e ft. No. 6. 10c a ft. end No. 00 44c e ft. By roll only In limited quenltles. 4*2-946*.
■...... ..-rehouse;
so we It sell «t unheard qf prices Easy, easy terms.
LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE Baldwin at Walton Blyd, FE. 2.6842 AUTOMATIC GAS RANGE. Rasldant siie. *50 334-9327, .
AUTOMATIC WASHER AND oiSctric i xJ condition. Not quite a
*175 . 481-0206. Bafora 3
2615 DIXJE HWY
TWtNs* 4 POSTER bad, complata.
BEAUTIFUL PURPLE POUF chair. Like new. Will sacrifice. FE 2-0821 anytime.
BEIGE AND BROWN couch, exc.
condition, 850. 33S-7942._
BOX SPRING AND Mattress lor single bed. 338-0659.
BRONZE OR CHROME DINETTE sale, BRAND NEW. Large and small slza (round, drop-leaf, rectangular! tab'es In 3-, S- and 7-pc. sets, S24.95 up.
MH PEARSON'S FURNITURE
t FE 4-T8S1
BUNK BEDS
Cholc* of 15 styles# trundle beds# triple trundle beds and bunk b*ds complete# $49.50 end up. Pearson's Furnlturt# 210 E. Pika.
CHAIR* REUPHOLSTEREO save with bolt end materials. 335-1700. Com!. Upholstery Co.
COIL SPRING AND mattress# FE 5-7805.
Salt Land Contracts
60
ORTONVILLE AREA. S acres with house and heated bam. Near M-15. $19,990# $5,000 down. Adiolning
acreage available.
Open Sun. Bloch Bros. 623-1333# FE 4509, 5660 Pixie Hwy.# Waterford.
ROCHESTER ROAD — 40 miles North of Detroit# 134 Acres# partly fenced and partly wooded# flowing spring and numerous lake potential, total road ffontage on 2 roads 221 (X. Good modern buildings# Will divide Into 2 parcels. $100Q per acre. Possession 30 days or less# by appointment only. BY OWNER — NO SUNDAYS. 628-1440.
Sola Busmess Property 57
8 ACRES LIGHT Industrial at M24 and 1-75 Interchange; $44,000 br owner# Phone 651-0296.
60 FEET OF COMMERCIAL property located on Montcalm, usuable buildings.
JOHN K. IRWIN & SONS
Days: FE 5-9446 NIGHTS; FE 5*8683
240
0 - ELIZABETH Lake Rd.# Waterford Twp. $25,000. 2-2144. L. Smith.
10' OF LEVEL DIXIE Highway frontage. Zoned commercial. 300' In depth. 8 miles north of 1-75. Full price $6,500 cash.
Clarkston Real Estate
5856 S. Main MA 5-5821
22950 WOODWARD AND 9 Mile Rds 20x60' .building, parking In rear. Excellent location and tonant. Owner leaving town. 626-6865.
ATTENTION INVESTORS
Ideal location for Pizza house# short order drive-in or professional business. Includes 122 ft. commercial frontage# building with 984 sq.s Jft. Near one of Waterford Twp's. busiest intersections. Full price# $25,000# terms to suit. For information call J. A. Taylor, Realtor# OR 4-0306.___________
FOR SALE OR RENT
3600 sq: ft. off Airport Road, west of Pontiac. Contact BEAUTY-RITE HOMES, 3538 Pontiac Lake Road, 674-3136. _________
FOR SALE OR LEASE Industrial 40'x80' new building, large lot, 4709 Highland Rd., FE 2-5065 or OR 3 1425.
INDUSTRIAL 67x290', *4,500. Near Auburn ‘ Rd. and Adams. 852-2304
M-59, TELEGRAPH AREA
100x241' vacant. Choice location, A& 59 and Telegraph area. Contact BEAUTY-RITE HOMES, 3538 Pontiac Lake Road, 674-3136.
REYNOLDS ALUMINUM building, 31'x)28'. Fully flberglas Insulated. Pre-fob. Easy to take dawn and mgwg re your site. Contractors, ‘ far^Ts, 6uTO«ffrien cTSTTTrrt; 684-2865.
ROCHESTER -CRITTENT0N HOSPITAL
Ideal location for small apartments or profession el building; 120 x 120 foot parcel on Llvemols Rd. about one mile south ol Crlttenton Hospital. ---Priced te -sell, *11.000 cash-er
S. SAGINAW ST.
Lot with 113 ft. frontage and 130 ft. deep, partly btacktopped. *23.100, farms. (
NEAR 1-75
Corner lot 181x120 ft. on good paved road near Pontiac and Fisher Body planter *15X100,
_________________________ farms.
LOT TOO X 205 FT. with basement,
trult .trees,., close .to . 1-75 and NEAR PONTIAC MALL
Lot 96x130 ft.# 5 room home# |ust
Baldwin. $4,000. FE 5-9187,
NEAR OAKLAND U
2 loti 80'x280* c-h* Caw ba bought or together. Nice f Has water hydrant
, separately or together. Nice high and dry. Has water hydrant In ' front. Sloping In back
______ JLOfiTHEKD I1.Z
40'x122'.
Silver Lake Privileges
Lot 80'xl20'.
Off Williams Lake Rd.
Nice high lot with frontage oh canal, oft Williams Lk. Full price $2*00.
GEORGE TRWTO, FEALTO*-------
MULTIPLE LISTING SERVIce 298 W. Walton__________FE3-7I83
Pleasures You'UJreasute
On 7this quiet residential ^ com* munity of tint homes# nastlad among the hills and valleys of Hl-HILL VILLAGE — Where lots are as low »s $3675.00 and only 10 per cent down.
Elizabeth Lake Rd.. fesl growing area. Potential comm'l. >30#OW| terrhs._, _____
TELEGRAPH-HURON AREA
— TOO ft. frentage -on- Huron, 240 tt-deep. Ideal spot for drlva-ln, root " beer stand, etc. 2 homes, office, 1 storage bldgs, and workshop. Lot mostly paved. Terms.
ANNETT INC. REALTORS 28 I. Huron St. 338-0466
Oftlco Open Evenings 8. Sunday T-4
LADD'S OF PONTIAC
3677 LAPEER Qp^tUftlNeiv S9
buildings.
HACKETT
CALL - HACKETT
EMpire 3-6703
iitlN10ft±AKE:4^1CRES
330' ON UNION LAKE RD. COMMERCIAL
AND 400' ON LAKE E-Z TERMS.
C.SCHUFn EM3-71S8
8800 Commerce Rd. _ Union Lake
ZONED MULTIPLE
3 Acres zoned multiple, close In. Water and sewer at street. Contact BEAUTY-ft ITE HOMES. 3538 PonttacLake ftoad, 674-3136.
1 TO JO
LAND CONTRACTS
Urgently needed. See us before you deal.
Warren Stout, Realtor
1450 N. Ordyke Rd. FE M16)
Open Eves, 'til 8 o.m
BAR IN IMLAY CITY. This one has everything. Shows big net profit. Terms open. Call Lansing (517) 489-5062# Stan Loomis & Assoc.
CONEY ISLAND
A real hot spot anct money maker. Only 2 years old. Best of equipment. Only $16,000 with terms.
STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE
2661 S. Lapeer Rd. Lake Orion
_____________391i2Q00__
ESTABLISHED Home service milk route for sale In Birmingham Area—Phone
Tl 6-5700 Ext. 35-40
FRANCHISE AVAILABLE for , sales ' and service In Pontiac area. Complete line of International Motor 1 rucks. Reply Pontiac Press# - Box C-30.------
L
MILLION
Dollars has been made available to us to purchase and assUma land contracts, mortgages or buy homes, lots or acreage outright. We will give you cash for your , equity. Our appraiser Is awaiting your call at_______
674-2236
McCullough ‘realty
5460 Highland Rd. (M-59) MLS Open 9-9 _____/ 674-2236
8 YEAR SEASONED CONTRACT, i per cent over SV* Gl mortgage, $3,000 equity with $30 spread. Will —discount 20 per cent. House located
FOR SALE: GAMBLE HARDWARE STORE. Upper Michigan county seat town — Large trade area with excellent economy — Profitable operation with volumn over $90,000. — Modern fixtures — Low overhead — Excellent‘hunting and fishing area — Terms to qualified buyer — Sickness of owner forces sale. For dffSnr* write: HBf Nehmer,. Box 230# Gladstone# Michigan.___________________________
HARDWARE STORE OUTSTANDING store located in central Michigan. Modern building and the best of fixtures. Gross over $295,000 and very profitable operation. Owners retiring. Only $35,000 down. For details. Write or call: Tyler# LaNoble Business Brokers# 1516 E. Michigan# Lansing. Mich, IV 2-1637# evenings# 372-1365.
INVESTORS WANTED. Minimum investment $2#500. 7 per cent on money. FE S-7569, 9:SO -- 5.
MOTEL — VERY DELUXE# 14 sharp units# nice 3-bedroom apartment and heated pool. Excellent highway location at popular smaller city- Rentals now over $29,000. For this and others# call Bruce Ramthun# collect: LaNoble Realty, 1516 E. Michigan# Lansing. IV 2-1637 evenings, 489-1262.
MOTEL 25 LUXURY UNITS, Nice living quarters. Located on U.S. 75 business route in good northern city. Brick and block construction. Fine business and excellent future# $45,000 down. For complete details# write or call Tyler# LaNoble Realty. 1516 E. Michigan. Lansino. Mich. IV 2-1637# evenings# 372-1365.
NEW OFFIce BUILDING for lease# in shopping center. 600 sq. ft. carpeted. Ideal for general office# need Attorney or Optometrist, In this fast growing area.
20 NEW APARTMENT rentals# 3 acres for expansion, excellent terms.
LAUNDRA-MAT 30 unit, excellent gross# adiolning frpntage zoned for automatic Auto Wash goes with Laundra-Mat. Sewer# water . Milford area — terms.
40 ACRES OR MORE near Walled Lake on Pontiac Trail. Ready for subdividing.
LUMBER YARD and hardware. Doing excellent volume. Owner retiring. West fo Pontiac. Terms.
ASK US ABOUt Northern Acreage. Lltttngt'Wanted.---------------------
Wanted Contracts-Mfg. 60-A 1 TO 50
LAND CONTRACTS
Urgently needed. See us before you deal. «*
Warren Stout, Realtor
1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 54165 Open Eves. *t1l 8 p.m.
CASH H. J.
OR 3-1355.
NEED LAND CONTRACTS. SMALL discounts. Earl Garrets. MA 4-54001 EMpire 3-4066.
QUICK CASH FOR lend contracts. Clark Real Estate. *FE 3-7888# res. FE 4-4813, Mr. Clark.
Money to Loan 61
(Licensed Money Lender)
LOANS
$25 TO $1,000 COMMUNITY LOAN CO.
30 E LAWRENCE FE 8-0421
L 0 A N S
$25 to $1,000 Insured Payment Plan BAXTER & LIVINGSTONE Finance Co.
401 Pontiac State Bank Building
FE 4-1538-9
Mortgage Loans
62
FOR THE PAST 42 YEARS
Voss 8< Buckner, Inc.
209 National Bldg.# Pontiac
have been loaning $1000 to $5000 to home owners on 1st and 2nf mortgages for repairing# remodel Ing# additions# consolidating bills, etc. Into one Small monthly payment. Before you borrow on your home see or phone us at:
334-3267
Swops
63
HUBBEL & ASSOCIATES 1102 W. MAPLE ROAD WALLED LAKE, MICH. 624-580Q.
Evenings or weekends call:
\^r. Adkins dr Mr. Hyatt
PARTY STOt?6v
624-5182 excellent oppor
tory. No. Royal Oak# ask for Norm Reltmeyer-—tl 7-6080.
RESTAURANTS# BUILDING# land and equipment for sale only. 2 locations 4tf Royal Oak and Northvilla# both open for business now. Call bet. 7:30 p.m. and VO p. mvT47=0549.'NO afliflTr-------
SPARE TIME INCOME
” collecting
ftfefilling oM " collecting money from NEW TYPE high-quality coin-operated dispensers In your area. No selling. To, qualify you must have car# references, $60U to $2,900 cast). Seven to twelve hours weakly can net excellent monthly Income. More full— time. For personal Interview write WINDSOR DISTRIBUTING COMPANY, 6 (D> N BALPH AYE., PITTSBURGH PA. 15202. include phone number.
HORSEPOWER ALLIS Chalmers riding mower# 32" cut# never used, $380 or trade In on camper trailer. MA 6-7173.
1963 FORD GALAX IE and cash tor newer modal car. FE 2-7732.
1964 CONSTRUCTION RlNG BACK! hoe and loader for land# small
14,000 BTU WINDOW air conditioner for pool table. 625-3020,
with
ENGLISH POINTER with papers, female 2 years old; Wolverine 12' wood boat, sell or trade for? 682-6176.
FENCING FOR CAMP trailer sleep 6. 681-0300._______________
HOUSE TRAILER SWAP AS down payment for house. 338-3018, or 674 3681.______
SMALL FOLDING CAMPER trailer 1350 for ? ? ? 363-0081, Dealer.
64
Sale Clothing
COMPLETE LIVING ROOM furniture# deep freeze# mltc. items, 27991 Greenwlllow Rd.# Ken-dallwood# Farmington# after 6 p.m. all week, all day Sunday.
good
CUSHIONS—CUSHIONS
Custom made for Danish, Colonial and Contemporary chairs and sofas. Spring sale on close-out fabrics. Call 335-1700. C o m I Upholstery Co.
DON'T
Threw—that old dinette away, Hava your chairs raupholstarad ir closa-out materials. Average chair, $8.75 plus material. Com'l Upholstery. 335-1700.__________
DRYER $35. DOORS $3 EACH. Apt, size refrigerator $35. Bunk beds. Misc.# G. Harris. FE 5-2766.
ELECTRIC stove# $35;
freezer# $49; Wringer washer, HHI -----------7766.
335-7942._
UNCLAIMED FREIGHT
Vinyl sofa and matching chair,
*10 BARGAIN SALE. 1114 St. oft Pontiac Lake Rd. All Day Wed., May 12. Variety of good duality clothe*. Everything mutt go ___
BLOND' BOORcasI7~headboard and footboard, tlda rail*, IIS; leathar club chair, *30; Walnut chaat of drawer* |3J; green couch, reverdble cu*h|pn*, *18; 3740 t, Rochester Rd., Rochetter.
BOLENS TRACTORS SIMPLICITY TRACTORS
40 ATTACHMENT* r BUY EARLY AND. SAVE t< HOUGHTEN'S POWER- CENTER 111 W. University 651-7010
Downtown Roches tar .
FE 40905 BRIDES - BUY YOUR wibblNO announcements at discount from, Forbes, 4500 Dlxla, Drayton, OR 3-97*7.
BROKEN SIDEWALK. 44 IN. power trowsj, Cone's FE 8-6642._
Regular $169# now $119 cash or terms. 3 way racllnar# regular $89, now $65. Household Appliance, 465 Elizabath Laka Rd.# 335-9283
USED TV's, $19.95 USED REFRIGERATORS# $39.95 SWEETS
RADIO AND APPLIANCE# INC. 422 W. Huron 334-5677
BROWNIES HARDWARE FLOOR SANDERS—POLISHERS WALLPAPER STEAMERS BLUE LUSTRE tHAMPOOERS $1 A DAY
952 Joslyn PE 4-6105
USED' PRICES
For new furniture. Unclaimed layaway# (choice of color). Sofa and matching chair. Sold for onh $189, unpaid Balance only $142 cisl or $8.25 monthly. 15 year guarantee. Household Appliance, 465 Elizabeth Lake Rd., 335-9283.
WAREHOU it DISC 6^ toT sale—(brand new) 2 pc, living room set $67.50 up# 4 pc. bedroom set $79.50 up, Sofa beds $49.50 up, 3 pc. living room sectional $139 up, reclining cnairs $39.50 up# 4 burner apt. qas range# $79.50# a burner elec, range $99.50# 2 step tables, 1 coffee table $14.95 for sat. Mattresses for most everything# bunk beds# roll away beds# hide away beds and ate. Loads of other furniture.
PEARSON'S FURNITURE
210 E. PIKE FE 4-7881
Open till 6 PM. Mon.# Frl.# till 9 PM
WAREHOUSE SALE: OPEN public# entire Inventory of naw top brand refrigerators# freezers and ranges etc.# must be sold. Every item discounted. Scratched items priced accordingly. No rtas. offer refused. Terms. Sale: today and tomorrow# 10-9# H I L F APPLIANCE# 2416 14 Mile Road, between Woodward and Crooks.
WASHER AND DRYER PARTS MICHIGAN APPLIANCE CO. 3282 Dixie Hwy._______673-8011
STOVE# $25; GAS Refrigerator with top Wringer washer, $40. Harris. FE 5-21
FLOOR MODEL CLEARANCE
1 Frlgidaire Frost-Proof freezer, $219.
1 Frlgidaire washer# 2-speeds# $189.
1 Frlgidaire refrigerator with ice maker# $259.
No Down Payment 90 days same as cash
—CRUMPELECTRIC
3465 Auburn FE 4-3573
WESTINGHOUSE 30" WHITE range axe. condition — clean $35. 363-6249 or 363-7955. ____________
Young Folks
Yes# we have furnltura that Is Ideal for the young couple.
Rose Beige sofa# chair
(Brand naw) floor sampta .$88
3 piece walnut bedrm. suite Double dresser# chest Bookcase bed# crate marred# naw $97
KAY FURNITURE
37 'S. Glenwood K-Mart Shopping Canter
FURNITURE SALE
china cabinet# $25; desk# $20; chest# $18; dresser# $20; end tables# $10; drop-leaf table# 4 chairs# $39; baby bed# $18; living room# $65; bedroom set# $45; dinette set# $19; stove# $20; refrigerator, $29; washer# $27. Misc. Items. M. C. LIPPARD# 115 N. Saginaw.
GOING OUT OF BUSINESS SALE
(Licensed)
COACH HOUSE Colonial Furniture 4405 Highland---Pontiac
HOUSEHOLD SPECIAL
*20 A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OF FURNITURE - Consist* of:
8-plece living room outfit with 2-pc living room suite# 2 step tables# 1 cocktail table# 2 table lamps and (1) 9#x12' rug included.
7-piece bedroom suite with double dresser# chest# full-size bed with Innersprlng mattress and matching box spring and 2 vanity lamps.
5-piece dinette set with 4 chrome chairs and table. All for $399. Your credit is good at Wyman's. ^
WYMAN
* FURNITURE CO.
17 E. HURON ____. FE 5-1501
WILL HAUL AWAY any attic#
WASHER#
KIRBY SWEEPER
EXCELLENT CONDITION - $50 FULL GUARANTEE
Kirby Service & Supply Co.
2617 QIXIE HWY._______ 674-2234
LINOLEUM RUGS# MOST SIZES# *3.49 up. Pearson's Furntfuro, 310 —&--Ptk»-St;r~F6-4-7881.
FLOOR LENGTH, SLEEVELESS WHITE and pink formal, size IS.
Worn twice, *20. 335-9474. ..
FLOOR LENGTH GOWN, size 10.
Worn lwka, $20. 335.9624. —.
WEDDING DRESS. *70, 3 downs, turns. Size 8 or to. OA 8-2259._
Sale Household Goods 65
Vi WHAT YOU'D EXPECT TO PAY
3 ROOMS
v BRAND NEW FURNITURE
Station tor Lease __
LAPEER (M-24) AND GOLDEN GATE
LAKE ORION' BUSIEST LOCATION *
EXC. BACK ROOM POTENTIAL Bf? your own boss earn what you are capable of earning -"^not whet someone tl%e Is willing to pay you.* > _ T-t ;
SUN GIL CO.
WEEKDAYS Ml 6 6674 Weekbnds Mr. J. Picoe 391-181?
$2 50 (>er week.
LITTLE JOB'S
BARGAIN HOUSE"
-146) Baldwin-af-Wafton. FE-2>6S43.
i BEO WiTH BEDROOM suite, 17" Portable TV. *85. 4S1.9272
JtROOM--------(Brand new furniture)
r $286, CasN. terms, layaway. Pearson's Furniture. 210 E. Pika —
LIVING ROOM SUITE
(Left In layaway) Your choice of colors.: Sofa and His and Hers chairs. Sold for only $249# unpaid balance $192 cash or only $10.50 monthly. 15 year guarantee Household Appliance# 465 Elizabeth
Lk. Rd. 335-9283. ________
MAHOGANY DROP LEAF table# 4 chairs,. RCA TV# double cast Iron sink, cabinet doors end drawers#
misc. After 6 p.m. FE 4-5657._
MATCHING BROWN Sofa and chair, good. $50. 332-56901
’ ' . MODEL HOMt
FURNITURE
Colonial and ranch style pieces from Interior Decorative lines — selling for a margin of replacement prices. Corner ef Mario and Vunden Dr.#“ Fox Bay Sub., B E L A IR E HQME BLDR.S-# CALL 363-0101.__ • ‘
NECCHI
DELUXE AUTOMATIC
Zlg zag t^ing machine •— cabinet model — embroiders# blind hems, buttonholes# etc 1966 model. Take ^ over payments of: .
$5.90 PER M0. for 9 Mos, OR $53 CASH BAL.
, GUARANTEED „ __
Univ^fsol Sewing Center' j
2813 Dixie HWY. _______FE_4-0965
NORGE GAS~DRYER and washer. 3 '~~year»-oM;-:lKK-4eF'-botli, Phone 6SU. —8923. : : -T : : _
CHAIRS UPHOLSTERED, aava with close-out fabrica. Call 335-17M. Coml, Upholstery Co._______
Commercial window wa I is"
Approximately 41" x 96", 825. S3V vented.
TALBOTT LUMBER
1025 Oakland_________PE 4-4595
CHOICE RAILROAD TIES, Bairn
■pi M Pm .ji *
9120. Frio delivery.
Direct Prices to All
Selling bankrupt daalars stock of I960. Model refrigerator* and freezers, lots No. 4 4 1 -456 . Kelvlnetor, RCA, Philco, GE, Hot point, Gibson, etc. IS cu. ft. Admiral Imperial with 16* lb. freezer *3 cu. ft. Vt refrlg. Reg. 5429 now S26S; other refrigs, and freezers *99, t2 down *2 wk.
ABC Warehouse end Storage Co. 40*25 VanDyke 1 Blk. S. 22 ml. Deity 1*9 Tue*. ‘ft! 6 739-1010
All
ELECTRIC LIGHT FIXTURES, unusual designs for all roome. Pull down, balloons, starlights. Irregular, ferritic values. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard Lk., FE 4-0462. — 23.
ENCLOSED 2 WHEEL TRAILER. 100 Lafayette.________________________
ENCLOSE YOUR SHOWER over the bathtub with a beautiful glass tub enclosure, aluminum frame, with Sand blasted Swan design $28.95. G. A. Thompson. 7005 M-59 W.
EXPERT U P H O L ST E R I N G , reasonable prices, free estimates. ABB Upholstering, FE 4-2147.
FANTASTIC GARAGE Sale: Lovely Items very cheap, lamps, desk, chest, patio furniture, picture frames, nice clothing and more. Wad. and Thur., 9:30, 700
Jamestown. Bloomfield Orchards.
FEDERS Window Air Conditioner, 025. Before 2 on Tuts, and Thurs., or after 5. 363-7566.
FURNITURE SUITABLE FOR a cabin, cottage. Table, chairs, oil tank, wing chair, lamps, 1 good bedroom set, odds and ends, 682-0796.
Antiques
65-A
A-1 ANTIQUES, estates, art glass Wanted. BLUE BIRD AUCTIONS, 334-0742 or 1-634-8031.
ANTIQUES-WILL BE'S-JUNQUE. Trash to treasures. Wed*/ 8:30 p.m. Buy this used and abused merchandise at your price; plus a large selection of iron art. Jim Beam bottles; ball and claw piano stool; secretary desk; beaded lampshade; commode; hanging lamp; glass bookcase; leaded china*- copper boiler; old foeker# Child's metal wire rocker; sleigh bells; copper teapot; old washstand; old Ames; camel hump trunk; wickler furniture; Merrigold toothpick holder; metal wheels end axle. Auction land# 1300 Crescent Lk. Rd.
CHERRY SECRETARY DESK# Ice cream chairs# wash stand# dolls. Y-Knot Antiques, In Davisburg# open 6 days# Closed Sun.
CUSTOM ANTIQUE REFINISHING Specializing In fine antique refinishfng# furniture repair of all types hand canelng# hand carving# custom matching colors. All work guaranteed. Harold Richardson# 363-9361. Mon.-Sat. 1285 Union Lk. Rd.# Union Lk.______________________
GREEN SHUTTERS ANTIQUES reopens. Under the ownership of 4h»--Jata__ Pori* B a I I a n 11 n e ' s daughter# Mar|orie. We shall strive to continue the same lint of general antiques. Visit our shop and barn at 7870 S. Eston Rd. Clarkston# Mich. 394-0121. Ap-polntment or chance._______________________
SWEET'S, 10101 EAGLE R D Davisburg 5 M.W. Dixie Hwy. 634-9656
Hi-Fi, TV S Rodim 66
8 TRACK STEREO H6ME UNIT. 2 speakers# 9 tapes Included. $135. FE 5-4006.
21" USED TV ...... $29.93
Walton TV# FE 2-2257 Open 9-6 515 E. Walton# corner of Joslyn
1968 MODEL COURIER CB radio# $125# and 1967 Model Wollensak Stereo tape recorder with tapes# $175, FE 5-6590.
1968 OLYMPIC
5Vfe' long# AM-FM radio# 6-speaker system with remote outlets. Floor modal# must sell. Was 8379# now only $200 cash or terms. Household Appliance# 335-9283.__________
COLOR TV BARGAINS# LITTLE Joe's Bargain House# FE 2-6841
MOTOROLA EARLY AMERICAN color combination# was $895# sell for $695# Bloomfield, Television# 626-9710
OAKLAND ANTENNA . SERVICE Company. Antenn^sHwTalTed In wide varieties. Also repairs made. Wo/k Is guaranteed. For estimate catt 642-5510. $>29.95 Installation #90 day warranty# 850.00 on all rotors.
RECORD PLAYER NEEDLES hard to find?
See us — We have most all kinds Johnson TV—FE 8-4569 45 W. Walton near Baldwin
SILVERTONE HI-FI stereo# 2 piece unit In mahogany. Includes matching record cabinet. $60. 623
0482.________._____________
WA REHOUSE “SALE: OPE N to public. Entire Inventory,, of new zenith# RCA and Motorola TV's color TV and Stareo's must be sold. Every Item discounted . Scratched sets priced accordingly. No Teas, offer refused# terms Sale: today and tomorrow# 10r9, HILF APPLIANCE# 2416 14 Mile Road between Woodward and .12' LINOLEUM RUGS. 83.95 EA.
Plastic well tile ....... . lc ee.
Ceiling tile z- wall paneling, cheap.. BBG Tile. FE 4-9957. I075.W. Huron 22'—&HL)FFLEBOARD, wT] nfle> washer, clothing new and u*ad size 3 (o 22. Bed clothing, lewtlry, and may other misc. Items. Continued 'til sold. 95 North Aster. 335-2655. 350' ANCHOR FENCE, *500. FB £ PHILCO REFRIGERATOR, 3 -yearsI. *3H-— -.1^-.: ~:
old *100; 3 mos. old oas range *75. 105.000 BTU NEW gas furnace, lev 330-9456. stelled with duct*. Average *595.
-------_ _ . , ------- A|S0 „|um|num siding Installed.
PIECE TURQUOISE SECTIONAL BBO Outlet__________ ■ J675 W. Huron * H- *«'«»• 6«-1S01. *25
681-0027. • "-r* • - * |! Pontiac Resale Shop - a new method of. eonnoeftng
Buy — Sell
Antiques# Furniture, GlaMWflri
*T'E 4-783T __________________________
i PIECE CHROME breakfast sat Fxt. condition, $20. F6 5-1394.
Misc. 80 Lafayatta, first street past Oakland on Wide Track. 335-6932 „ Open Wed.-Sat. 10-5 p.m.
cast Iron sewer pipe Is available by u&tng stainless .steel damps with lifetime rubber gaskets
GARAGE SALE# MAY 24 through May 26. 2268 Somerset. 338-2647. Boys good clothing. Picnic tabla set. Work bench. Draperies# ate. Garage rummage s«ie.
Furniture and clothing. May 22, 25 and 26. 9 until? 5413 Sunnyslde. Clarkston. Sashabaw to Maybee, to Oak Park. Left on Sunnyslde.
GARAGE SALE. MAY 2M2-23, 10 A.M.-? 24006 Inkster R d.,
Southfield. Recreation room furniture, refrigerator and misc. Items.
TO 3, Oft W.
GARAGE SALE Wednesday Only 9-1
3489 Whitfield Drive off Williams Lake Road Vb milt west of theatre. Lots of Misc.
GARAGE SALE: 39 Dakota Or: + A.M.-6 P.M., Thurs. and Frl. Furniture# clothing and misc.
GARAGE SALE — 2539 Crofthlll (Bloomfield Orchard Sub.)# May 21# 22 and 23. Time IQ a,m.-4 p.m. Furniture# clothing and misc. 335-0642.____________________________
GOING OUT OF BUSINESS SALE
(Llcensad)
COACH HOUSE Colonial Furniture 4405 Highland Pontiac
HANNAH'S HUSBAND HECTOR hates hard work so ha deans the rugs with Blue Lulstre. Rant electric shampooer, $1. Hudson'!
Hdwe.i 41 E. Walton._____________
HOUSEHOLD SALE: Furniture, dishes, water heater and lota of misc.. Wed., only 9—1 p.m. 3489 \
r. r* /llllam
“11a
of
pOT WATER HEATER, 30 gallon gas. Consumers approved $69.50 value. *39.95 and *49.95 marred. Also electric and bottled heaters, these era terrific vatuaa In quality heaters. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard Lk. FE 4-6462; —"**.-----------
JOHN DEERE H TRACTOR with some equipment, *250. Western saddle and bridle, *73. 628-3522.
KEEG0 RESALE
Quality Household goods and clothing 2965 Orchard Lk. Rd. 682-5*20
Mon. thru Sat. 10*4
KIRBY SANt-TRONIC with handy butler and cdmplet* attachments.
FE 8-9023. _________
LAVATORIES COMPLETE *24.50 value, *14.95, also bathtubs, toilets, shower stalls. Irregulars, terrific value. Michigan Fluorescent/ 393 Orchard Lk. FE 4-M62
LAWN SPRINKLING SUPPLIES.
4686 Dlxla Hwy. OR 3-2121.____
LAWN SPRINKLING system ■ available. Check our plastic Pipe prices.
44" *3.65 Per hundred 1" *5.61 per hundred *>/," *8.51 per hundred 11/, *10.01 per hundred
____G. A, Thompson, 7005 M-S9 W.
MOVING INTO t'RAILER, must sail. Furniture, appliances, household,
goods. 391-1259. ____ _____
MOVING TO APARTMENT. Slngle A'-poster bed with 2 year old Stearns and Foster mattress and In-nersprings with no we a r. Mahogany dresser. Window fair and other misc. Hems. 879-665*. MOWERS — USi6. Wa repair mowers and ell elr-cooled engines. Taylor Equipment Repair, 592 University Dr, Open Sunday.
NEW 12/ CHORD oro*n *54. Haw adding machine *50. Bicycle ex-ercl*or/*)5. FE 2-1205.
Newiji s pTdyMercfi a n d i jb~
Vi OFF
Kitchen cabinets, appliances, Iren railings, aluminum isrntsssi -formica tops, bath fixtures, vanities, door*/window*, electrical fixtures, washers end dryer*. 14270 w. 8 Mile Rd. Oek Park, Mich. Dally A Sat. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Great Lake* Construction Ce.
PICNIC TABLES. Lawn 1 swing* and childrens swings, made of cedar and pine for duraWtthrend beauty. Moon Valley Rustic Furniture Co,
and pine for dyrabHtty/and beauty. Moon Valley Rustic Furnltura Co,
Cast IrSn sewer pipe lO' for *18:95'' 6465—Dixie—Hwy,—Clarkston. 625, ~
3322.
C—8
THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 21, 1008
hr Safe Miscellaneous 67 Slor* Equipment
73
RANGE, P R Y E B . refrigerator, freezer, refrigerated sandwich unit. 674.0368. . ______„
ONI NEW PiRMA-PIT Ngrrolln* window with Kroon and itorm.
20x13, 1)0. On, llke-new 10-foot
Bladder, 10. One now bumper , 13.30. Two Chevy wheel,,
1 ooch. Ono Aluminum ottlc Sporting UOOOI ventilator. I3W it 1316. Vent Pino C3*»>, 3 el bowl, 2-2 It. length!, I
74
ftngth, 75 Cento. 6 pieces V$
Inch sfrep Iron 14 It. long. $4. UL
NEW 25 AUTOMATIC, $25 38
special, chrome, $43. New carbines and shotguns. FE 8 8145. Wm. Honaker, dr.._
JV GUNS. EVERYTHING for the
Pett-Hunting Dogi
79
a-1829. __
P65tTfA'SiLt~S. J Oslo Brunswick anniversary (Into, 3 — W, 1 —
5'kIO'. S&8429 Sotfron Billiard
Supply. _________ "________
ForTa ble CRIB-PLAYPEN.
Apartment tlio electric stove.
Wurlllier accordion 96 bass. 332-
7*33. after 4 p.m. ___________
“IlOMBING FIXTURES special S' bathtubs S39 93 16" Vanity. !9.93 Toilets reverse traps, 124.95 Toilets B. grade, *19.95 ____0. A. Thompson. 7003 M-59 W
ornaments! I Sond-Grovel-DIrt
SCOTTISH TERRIER PUPS, $71 each. Raglslerad. EE $-3221. SIAMESE ^ITtInS, fell* Point# Seal Pelntt, $ wks. 473-4431. • ■
ST. BERNARD. MALE. AR£n“~1
mos. $10°. 335-5425.__
TOY COLLIE (SHELTIE) adorable sable and while female. • wks. AKC rag., $40. Call 444-3444.
TOY SILVER MALE Poodles " pi Stud.332-8515.
shooter. 720 W. Huron St._
24' MUSK IN SWIMMING pool, a I extrss, $180. Liner needs repair
Wa»_ $530. 391-1454._
1967. 32 POUND o9" Bear ~Tam berlane line bow with case. Never
been used. flOO. 45M247.__X___
BOWS AND ARROWS—334-4349 GENE'S ARCHERY-714 W. HURON ELDORADO TENT 17x9', "like new, plus folding cots, $75. MA 5-1895
76
SWINGS, LAWN ORNAMENTS,
GIFTS, GAGS, JOKES—LIBERAL----------
BILL'S OUTPOST, 3265 DIXIE \ AAA TOPSOIL. Sand, gravel, end
HWY., OR 3-9474.__. _'__I___Slone and (III 425-2122. _
hLUMBINO BARGAINS. F R E 61 i AAA SAND AND gravel, standing toilet, 116.95) 30galloH|. heater, 149.95) 3-plece bath set*]
*59.931 feunorytray.tnm, *19:95,-: shower stalls ~ t*R» trim. 139.95; 2-bowl sink, $2.95) lavs., 12 95) tubs, *20 and up. Pipe cut and threaded. SAVE PLUMBING CO.,i
841 Baldwin. FE 4-1316._____j
RAILROAD TiES, NEW a'nd used, rallTence. OR 3-1972, REFRIGERATOR, TABLE end. chair, sew, vacuum, etc. Garage! Rummage: 10075 Cedar Shores Dr.j 363-0921, May 22-24.
II artas delivoird. 673-5516, Wafcrlord.
>-A BLACK DIRT
State tested; also topsoil, sand and gravel fill. Builders supplies. Bud Ballard, 623 1410; Lea Beardslee 623-1338._
if BULLDOZING, finished grade, gravel, top soil, M. Cook, 682-6145.
A 1 SCREENED TOP SOttr--srry PowH[ Trucking _['* 625-2175
A-l BLACK DIRT
Top soil, stone al^ kinds, 681-0422
Pit Supplies Service 79-A
GROOMING FOR ALL and up. 1-634-8040.____
Auction Solo*
80
1 LARGE AUCTION Wed., May 22, 8r30 p.m.
2 ESTATE CLEAN-UPS
Farm Equipment
TIZZY
By Kate Onann
HOMELITE CHAIN SAWS, JOHN Dear# and New Idee parts galore. Davis Machinery Co., Orlonvilie, 427-3292._____ __ _ _______________i ...
JOHN DEERE MODEL M Tractor, excellent condition, starter, hydraulic, plow, harrow, Cultivator, disc, snow blade. MY 2-0803 before I; 30.
MASSEY FERGUSON fi with 3 bottom plow $2195. Like new 3,000 Ford $2695. IQ used backhoe tractors. John Deere 4040 doiar $195. Case 3102. $2195 lo other used dozers, 2 4-wheel drive loaders. All kinds of others equipment, will trade for dump truck, travel trailer. Clark's Tractors and Equipment MA 9 9376.
SPECIAL
WHILE THEY LAST
MASSEY FERGUSON RIDING MOWERS 24-- STANDARD, $157. 24" DELUXE. $219.
USED
Maple poster bed, lk beds plus genuine Hlllbily syrup, the "Rea
McCoy," lawn mower, wheel bar-. r
2 pc. sofa, bedrm. set. Plus m^|SEY-FERQUSON 205 C Dnnlia, Tatmnatl WAISM) UUPVI TRACTOR WITH L O A I $2,595.
j FORD TRACTOR LOADER BACK HOE, $1495
1961 Pontiac Tempest wagon, very
nice. Garden and hand tools, box
AND
RIDING LAWNMOWER. 5’a horse BLACK DIRT AND broken concrete, power. Crank engine. 3 gang reels| reasonable. 682-9215.
*n ,r0nt' CUt' *|CHOlfcE DARK RICH day elume
642-7099.--_ Ttop soil, shredded. 6 yds, S1I
Rummage: .NORTH, PERRY to delivered. FE 4-4588.
- CHOICE SHREDDED BLACK, dlrfj RUMMAGE SALE: Antiques, topsoi|, a yds., $18 del. FE 4 furniture, dishes, books, mlsc. 90 6588
S._Mldland, P^«c^04-7353^ _ fill~6Trt, TOP SOIL, Gravel, 10-A
llAAPLCITY ELECTRIC start riding stone, black dirt, loader and bull-tractor, 4 h.P. 32" mower with doier work, 0R 3-5850. snow blower attachment. $595
firm- 451-7384.________________
(PRAYER (MIST-BLOWER) Truck.
Mounted for trees and mosquitos
top
Power saws, saddle tanks,
carrier, FE 5-3005. ^__________
IPRED-SATIN PAINTS. VQARWlCK Supply. 267$ Orchard Lake. 682-
28^____________________________
ITROLLER CHAiR, HIGHCHAIR.
$65. Call $52-3251.____________
THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE 118 W. LAWRENCE ST. Everything to meet your needs Clothing, Furniture, Appliances
Used and new office desks.
GOOD TOP SOIL AND peat moss 'for sale ' to qualified contractor Approx. 10,000 sq. yds. In vicinity of Square Lake — Adams Rd.., lust N. of Bloomfield Hills Oakland County, will sell all or any part, for further Information
call Mr. L-Ickly, 444-4024.______
LOADING FILL SAND dally. Mon-Frl. 7:vi0-4:30 beginning April 22 0 8< H Richman. 1095 Union Lk. Rd. 363-3110.
PONTIAC LAKE BUILDERS SUP* ply. $and gravel 4111 dirt. OR 3* ply. Sand gravel fill dirt.
OR 30 534.__________________
PROCESSED
BLACK DIRT. Fast
chalr& .labial, file*, typewriters,; delivery. UL 2-5442, 120 Opdyke at
adding machines, offset printing Aupprn. _ _________ _ '
presses, mimeograph, drettlngl boards end tables. Forbes, 4500 Dixie, Drayfon, OR 5-9747 or 7-2444.
SAND, GRAVEL AND DIRT.
i All kinds. Delivered._FE 2-1483
| SAND, GRAVEL, FILL,
UTILITY BOX FOR TRUCK. $25 4824894
WASHED WIPING RAGS, as low as .24 per lb. 25 lb. boxes to 300 lb. bales.
Used Office Furniture
_____ J ...... — desks,
"chairs, etc. Priced to sell.
New 5 hp, 3 phase air compressor, 8550.
New end used steel, angles, channel Beams, plate, pipe.
Used metal garage doors, ideal for signs, temp, sheds, etc.
BOULEVARD SUPPLY 800 S. Blvd. E. 333-7141
WRINGER WASHER, HAND lawn mower, blond dinette set, 2 small windows - 35" x 28" 9 panes, 29" x 24" 4 panes. FE 4-4195.
topsoil,
broken cohcrete, crushed limestone. Delivered. 425-1754, 673-8793.
S A W. SAND "AND GRAVEL all stone and sand products. Crushed limestone, all sizes. Tested topsoil, fill dirt, all areas del. 623-2563. After 5:30, 394-0042. ~
SLAG FOR YOUR driveway. If you want black dirt, why not get the -best, $3 per yard. FE 8-1339.
DOORS OPEN 8 P M.
AUCTI0NLAND
1300 Crescent Lake Rd. AUCTION SALE WED EVE. MAY 22. 1968 5 P.M.
Located 2'.a miles norjh of
MANY OTHER ITEMS.
SEE US ON HAY TOOLS SPECIALS. ASK FOR BOB I HILLMAN. a
Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co.
825 S. WOODWARD
Lapeer State Home In Lapeer totpE 4 0461 -------FE 4*1442
2265 Mtltiville Rd., CQnststirfg of 2! Open Daily Including Sunday riding horses; 2 4 month
Yorkshire pigs; 2 western saddles and bridles; 1968 Honda 305 Super Hawk Bike; Wage maker 17' speed boat; Mercury 45 h.p. boat motor; 1963 Chevy 20' stake truck w-wlnch; 2 case D.C. tractors; case 3 bottom eagle hitch plow; (new) Lincoln 225 electric welder; other farm equipment; Admiral 15' deep freeze (Upright); AE 17" TV; Rotary assorted lawn mowers (some near new) Garden tools (assorted); set torcher
USED
FARMALL
CUBS
Only $795 EACH
KING BROS.
Blcycltt
96
• IKCS. ALL USED, wm* abused. SpMd Savlll. IttJ Laps*r Road
Ind. heuse N. 0) 1-75.
SPRING SPiCIAL. 21-26" boys', Olrls' bikes. IIP UP- 681 0035.
Boots-Accessories 97
10 FT. HYDROPLANE AND • 16
h.p. motor. 1125. Cell 623-09S7._
lT ALUMINUM -IIMT - V 10 h.p, \ marc., o«rs, traitor. SSSO. 853-1313. Ss* RUN-ABOUT, IS h.p. Johnson, Trailer, 1300. Call alltr 6, 626-43S7
12' ALUMINUM boats ....... S10S
Traitors $120. IS' canoas 1169 Big Coho boats, 14'. S209> IS* *379, Big llbarglas runabout 1595
OMilrMlWTAtolUMOt
Lapeer County Bank 8$ Trust Cc clerk. Gena Monaar and Lowell Flndle, Lapeer, 6444261, Bud Hickmott,%G4naral Auctioneer, Ox-
ford, 628-2159._______________
AUCTION SALE, PUBLIC sale. Case D 450 Dozer with backhoe, crawler serial number 3027935, and tiger line triple axle trailer serial number 3645, at Clarkston equip. Co. Clarkston, Michigan. May 24, 1968. 11:00 a.m. to satisfy the Indebtedness of Charles Wheeler, by the 4. I. Case Credit Corps. Terms cash and as Is.
B & B AUCTION
EVERY FRIDAY ..... 7:00 P.M.
EVERY SATURDAY .... 7:00 P.M.
EVERY SUNDAY ... 2:00 P.M.
WE BUY — SELL — TRADE RETAIL 7 DAYS WEEKLY CONSIGNMENTS WELCOME CASH PRIZE EVERY AUCTION 5089 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-2717
SATURDAY MAY 25, 10 AM Wessendorf Home Sold 14003 Fenton Rd., Fenton Excellent appliances and Household Yard tractor and tools, much misc., Perkins Sate Service-Auctioneers PH., SWARTZ CREEK 635-9400
FE 4-1662 FE 4-0734 ___________________
Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke
USE D 4 HP WHE E L HORSE TR AC-jTrfl1fili Trailers TOR WITH ELECTRIC STARTl ,ru™
^ND MOWER. ONLY $495.
“I thought I might as well turn on the light and study — I kept dreaming I was!’1-
Sava $$$ at Buchanans
_ 9449 Highland Rd._____
I' RUN-ABOUT with llks n«w 25 H.P. Evlnrudt outboard with oloc. start, also now boat troltor. 4400. 432-2391.
12'-14' STEEL BOATS. 2-5W h.p.
motors. 45K Pontloc Lk.Rd if WHITE HOUSE FIBBRGLAS with 45 HP oloc. start Scott and Alloy Traitor. 4700, call 45I-77U attar 4 PM: ■ -
14' GLASSCRAFt 35 hori# Evlnruda motor and traitor. PE 1-1303,
? RUNABOUT WITH TRAILER AND MOTOR- S1S0. 2141 Willow
Boach, Kooao Harbor,__
If CURLYCRAPT WOOD run^aboui and—traltar 35 hp motor:—tully
equipped. 1750. 465.3215._
14' FiBERGLAS BOAT. Johnson electric 40 hp, alloy till traitor, mooring covtr and running lights.
1450, Call 423-5331.__________
14 FT. FIBERGLAS iTARCRAFT. 40 ’ horsa Evlnrude, electric start, convertlbla top, sldo curtains, boat cover, tilt trailer. 2 new 13 Inch tires, 1 spare. 1925. 423-9424. Attar 1 p.m., 424-2454.
loati-AccoisorlBi
97
88
EXPLORER CAMPER TRAILER USED WHEELHORSE 511 HP: with add-a-room, stoye and tanks. WITH ELECTRIC START AND,1 QR 3-2158 after 4:30 p.m.
MOWER. ONLY $395. j MOTOR HOME, YEAR Old, 20'
Cruisaire, $6,500. 363-2088.
USED FERGUSON TRACTOR! WITH 3 POINT HITCH, ONLY| $695.
KING BROS
RENT?
Yes, 1
Or
Pleasure Mates , Only $65 per week
“pontiac Rd. at opdyke | Holly Travel Coach, Inc. ,
----------——--------------------jTl 152H> Holly Rd., Holly ME 4-6771
Travel Trailers .w 881 Open Dally end Sundays
------—----------V.-* SHARP 1966 WAGON TRAIN camp
15' TOUR-A HOME. With Reese trailer, L. P. gas stove, sink, Ice-Hitch, lacks, awning and brake! box, spare tires. 363-7020. control. 674-1260.
196Q CORF AIR
L ___________| SPORTCRAFT MANUFACTURING
self-contained. Steel frame pickup sleepers and tops sleeps^. Call $25-1553.________|_____4160 Foley, Waterford, 623-0650
1963 CAB OVER 14' Nomad trailer!
Sleeps 6. 673-1020.______
1964 16' TROTWOOD. SELF CON
Sleeps 6. Extras. £e 4-
Hand Tool*—Machinary 68
AIR COMPRESSORS, L U B R I C A-tlon equipment, hydraulic lacks, steam cleaners. Welding equip-mant. Etc. Pontiac Motor Parts, 1014 University Drive. FE 24)104.
BLANCHARD GRINDER.
Wood-Coal-Coke-Fml 77 ALBERTA LUMBER MILLS
TYLER'S AUCTION
2405 Highland Rd. (M-59) 623-9534
WEDNESDAY, MAY 22, 10 A.M. Handcraft House Gift Shop 5775 Dixie Hwy., In Waterford Liquidation to the walls Glass, china, ceramics, metals. Custom* jewelry, kitchenware. Wrappings, household furnishings. Perkins Sale Service Auctioneers Ph. Swartz Creek 635-9400
3790 Lapeer Rd., (M-24) Hardwood lumber, new railroad ties, plain or creosoted. 334-0575 or 334-0576,
Planti-Trms-Shrubs 81-A
1968 Starcraft Campers
Inside display 1
CRUt5f~OUTr1N€:—
63 E. Walton Daljy 9-4 FE. M402
APACHE CAMP TRAILERS PICKUP TRUCK CAMPERS
A good selection of new 1962 Apache Camp traitors and pickup
........... |.......... QUANTITY OF BEACH and maple
35" table, brldgeport mill, 1945 42" logs. 391-3029.________________
table. Chrome ways, power feed,
Libby hand Screw with 2" Barfaed,
12201 Inkster, 425-4500.
BLISS TOLEDO NO. 5-A, 45 ton OBI, serial NO. 19494, 3" stroke. 51,300. Bliss No. 31, 35 ton OBI serial No. 53611. 3" stroke, $200. Bliss No. 21, 35 ton OBI serial No. 10554. no motor, $300. Motorized coil cradle. $250. Smith and Mills 16" scraper, $200, 330-211).
FOR RENT, 550 Adams grader with finish operator, on day sand or gravel. John P. Trlckoy. 405-1912. Garage equipment, tire
changer, battery charger, cash registerr greasing equip., wheal balancer, 2 *-cyllnd«r C h a v y motors. 39B-M22,
HUNTER FRONT-ENP alignment machine, completely reconditioned
cost $1350, will soil for 1425. 642-2124. __________
BEAUTIFUL JWUM PLANTS for sale. 20 plants for a 51. FE 4*4195. PERENNIALS, FIELD GROWN — Vegetables, flowers, geraniums.
Pets-Hunting Dogs
egetables,
indianwood Perennial Gardens, 79 3030 S. Lapeer Rd./ Lake Orion.
>/2 MOON PARROTS, special $22.95; Finches; Parakeets; American Eskimos; Black Miniature Schnau-zers; Pocket Poodles; Polish Rabbits, 3 Vi lbs. full grown; St. Bernards; 10 gallon tank, setup, $17.99; Tropical fish; GROOMING. Uncle Charlie Pet Shop, 696 W. Huron, Vi Mile E. of Telegraph, Pontiac, 332-8515. Open Sundays 1-6.
-A SIZE, COLOR BRED poodle pups, stud service, clipping. FE 4-6438.
PAVING EQUIPMENT, 2 dumps,'2 AKC REGISTERED pickup, tractor, tilt trailer, bull- Huskies. 252 Russell, dozer. 623-8929.
TD-9 DIESEL DOZER, with pony engine, has 4' high and 6'/j wide blade. 625-4606.____________________
2 SOUTH AMERICAN Macaw birds, f»asi male and female, blue and gold. 693-6480.
Tri-axle sozer
4555 Dixie Hwy..
Cameras—Service
70‘^ WEEKS. AKC Female Silver Poo-die. Call after 6, OR 3-2241.
tUPER S BELL 8- HOWELL movie 6 MONTHS OLD AKC registered camera, 3-1 zoom .earning case, male Pekingese. 335-2883. flood light, $125, 682-0336.____________:40 GALLON FURNITURE
Musical Goods
71
TYPE
completely equipped. Reas. Owner moving. 651-0936.
aquarium.
ADORABLE POODLE PUPPIES. - .. AKC, all colors. Show and pet
4 PIECE GOLD SPARKLE Starlight stock 550 up> Miniature and toy drum set with cymbal, $225. 625 SfUC| service, all colors and sizes. 5735.__________________________ Martha Schwartz, 673-8847.
120 BASS ACCORDION with case, AFGHAN HOUNDS, PERMANENT
like new condition. 623-1129.__| shots, champ sired, C.D. dam, 752-
9728.
ALL TYPES
BARGAINS , !_____________________________
guitars. Used Fenders, shopworn||A,RedALE TERRIERS, 3 MONTHS, and discontinued models. All AKC, permanent shots, excellent makes., blood lines and temperment,
MORRIS MUSIC ■ j champion sired. Also _p_rp
34 S. Telegraph Rd
females to sell or lease. 1-886-3585.
B1pL.TrN system! »'#Or^'AKC M,N. TOY poodto puppy block, cost $1800. MA 4-3458. I 6 wks. 681-0329. -
FENDER REVERB. Amplifier, exc.^AKC GERMAN SHORTHAIR Pointer, condition, OR 3-1920. f shots, ind. 2 yr. rabies female.
11 mos., champion stock, 398-9694.
*FCE VS*'00**- MU": **' ^RLENA'SPfPR,DESIRE. >^er
Livestock
83
Vk WELSH, Vk APPALOOSA, 2-yoar filly, good 4-H project. 651-8776.
»/2 ARABIAN FILLY, 1 year old, reg. $200. MY 3-6616, after 6.
grey
1, 3-YEAR-OLD BAY colt, 1 | . mare, 1 Welsh pony stallion, 673-2867.
prices, while they last. Open daily to 6 p.m.
BILL COLLER
Va mile E. of Lapeer City limits qn M-21
AIRSTREAM TRAVEL TRAILER Self-contained, tandem wheels, 26 ft.; also 1968 Pontiac, 3,000 miles, complete trailer package. Owner's death necessitates sale. Call Jim Taylor, OR 4-0306.
AIRSTREAM LIGHTWEIGHT TRAVEL TRAILERS Since 1932 Guaranteed for life. See them and. get a demonstration at Warner Trailer Sales, 3098 W. Huron (plan to loin one of Wally Byam's exciting caravans).
BRADLEY CAMPER, PICK-UP sleepers and' covers, spare tire, carriers, 3259 Seebaldt, Drayton Plains, 673-9528.
5-YEAR-OLD GELDING, PART quarter horse. Saddle, good
disposition, $250. 651-8768.
8-YEAR-OLD GELDING, ridden in competition. Call after 6 p.m., 887-5831.
CAMPERS FOR PICKUPS PHOENIX AND WINNEBAGO Trailers
REESE AND DRAW-TITE HITCHES Sold and installed HOWLAND TRAILER SALES AND RENTALS
3255 Dixie Hwy. Pontiac OR 3-1456
zy P.'- i •E WITH
Stud!
CENTURY
YELLOWSTONE
BROOD MARE WITH REGISTERED jockey club papers, can be seen at 4600 Allen Rd., in Howell or call 1-
517-546-^597, _______________
EXCELLENT CARE FOR your
TRAVEL TRAILERS Quality at any budget One IOV2' TRUCK CAMPER
field. Hunt course being made 13771 ready, club room and bar for| boarders use. Lessons available
Was $2845 NOW $2395
STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC.
Highland (M-59)
STARCRAFT CAMPERS
PINTER'S MARINE 1370 OPDYKE 1-75 at Oakland U. exit*
THE POPULAR
WAG-N-MASTER
UP AND DOWN CAMPER Ptaying~an ever Increaslngr part In
JOHNSON'S
TRAVEL TRAILERS
You dealer for — CORSAIR, GEM ROAMER AND TALLY-HO ALSO
Corsair and Gem pickup campers and Mackinaw pickup covers
Ellsworth Trailer Sales
6577 Dixie HW. 625-4400
Used Trailers
Closing out our rental fleet To replace with 1968 models**
13 to 20 ft,, 2 to 4 yrs, old. Some self-contained. From $645.
Jacobson Trailer Sales
5690 Williams Lake Rd. OR 3-5981 WAGON TRAIN CAMPER, ’ OR 3-7590. ___________
WAGON TRAIN, USED 2 years, cllnriefte, stove and sink, canopy will trade for Honda or Lite. MA 9-9376.
WOLVERINE TRUCK CAMPERS AND SLEEPERS. Factory outlet, repair and parts, new and used,, rentals. Jacks, .intercoms, tele-, scoping bumpers, spare tire carriers, auxilerating gasoline tanks. Lowry Camper Sales, 1325 S. Hospital Rd., Union Lake EM 3-3681.
Mobile Homes
89
1-A Beauties to Choose from
RICHARDSON DELTA
MONARCH HOMETTE
DUKE
IFE 2-1657
Box stalls, $50, large standing, $35. 6121 Greer Rd., West Bloomfield. 363-5547.
GELDING, TERRIFIC lumper, experienced rider only. Call any day but Sat. 887-5009.
HORSE TRAILERS Many models in- stock for Immediate delivery. Trades accepted. The Fairgrounds Riding School, Inc. Michigan State Fair Grounds 8 Mile entrance - 869-9733
HORSES BOARDED, Clarkston arear $35 and up. 625-2464 or 647-4279^ HORSES — GRAZING land for rent S. Lyon Area, call after 6 p.m. 851-3211.
HORSES FOR RENT OR SALE. 3085 S. Lapeer Rd., Pontiac. Bald
Mountain Riding Stable._____
JOE'SHQRSESHOE ING -625-5480
CAMPERS OFLTRAILERS GOODELL TRAILERS 125 OPDYKE
3200 S. Rochester Rd.____ 852-4550 Auburn Heights
682-94401 COLONIAL MOBILE HOMES
623-1310 5430 DIXIE of Waterforc
Check our deal on— SWISS COLONY
LUXURY TRAILERS
FROLIC
TRAILERS AND T R U C K| CAMPERS
SKAMPER
FOLD-DOWN CAMPERS 13- to 28 ft. on display at —
Jacobson Trailer Sales
5690 Williams Lake Rd. OB 3-5981
Camping Private Lake—
Safe beach, flush toilets and showers, 1140 M15, Ortonville.
McFeely Resort. 627-3820 weekends 01—965-5958 weekdays 9 to 3. 412 Empire Bldg., Detroit, 48226.
MARE, GENTLE FOR children, withlcox CAMPER, never used. Sleeps 6. isi..e«M pirst »loo —--------
1(PX55' NEW MOON, furnished, carpeted, galss enclosed porch, patio, basement, skirted, on lake,
adults only. FE 5-3047.__
12 X 60*, 3 BEDROOMS, like new, $495 down. Take over payment. 623-1310 or 332-1657.
1959 ELGAR 10x45, $1695. 1963 Vin-dala 10x54 expando, $3395. 334-1508 afternoons. r / ____________
1964 LIBERTY,/lOx'50*, air con-- dltloningr^hed skirted, got,- setup. 852-2442
1966 RICHARDSON 12'X5S', over payments. 3727 Joslyn.
take
hew speakers. 335-5936, FpNDER SUPER REVERB
condition. 626-4583.________j________________________Hi
FLATTOP GUITAR AND electric; AKC BEAGLE PUPS/ .1i1'2/eeks old' guitar and amplifier. Accordian. i with shots, $35. FE 4-2614,________________________
All like i
852-2607.
AKC BEAUTIFUL purebred collie pups, trl-colored and sables, xceptionally nice. 651-8768,
GRAND PIANOS
New and used, such famous makes yyjrsT HIGHLAND terrier and Collie pups. Purebred German Shorthalr ftmale. Best effar. 781-3371. Utica, after 5 PM._____________________________________
CHICKERING AND FISCHER USED BUSCH AND LANE $699 LARGE SELECTIONS OF USED SPINETS AND CONSOLES
Shop us before you buy TERMS TO SUIT YOU
GALLAGHER'S bassett puppies, wormed
1710 W Telegraph FE 4-0566 purebred, no papers. $45. 673-3168.
1/4 mile south off Orchard Lake Rd. BASSET TRI-COLORED female, -Dally 9:30-9 p.m. , t months, AKC reg.# $85, cal
. _______Sat. 9 to 5:30_________! Rochester, 651-4038.
GIBSON SOLID BODY guitar, 3 BEAGLE PUPPIES, pickup, electric, cost $500, exc.' FE 2-7784. cond. Best offer. i)L 2-4416.
Zombelle, 71471, Dam-Shanraven Lady B. Belwin, 2 year old sire, Grand Belwin, Dam, Marlena's Pride; Baby Belwin, 2 year old sire. Grand Belwin, Dam, Cal Victory; Mariana's Belwin, 1 year old Sire, Grand Belwin, Dam Marlena's Pride. Phone 517-FO 2-3933, Tawas City
651-3638.
MEMORIAL DAY SPECIAL
1966 PONTIAC CHIEF, SO'XIO', Improvements and skirted, good buy at $4,150, call after 6 p.m., 852-3083. J
1966 10'x50r, condition,
2 BEDROOM, excellent
m______| set-up at Village Green
Park, Brown Rd. Sea Manager.
NEW HAND TOOLED Western Sad-dle- 739-2591, Utlce.
PONIES FOR SALE, 2369 Joslyn, Antique Village,
rides.
Here Is one way to make camping vacation, hunting and flshina trips most luxurious. It's the all new Apache Ramada 8 sleeper, the biggest seller of the Apache Tribe. An easy-to-operate crank telescopes this compact camper into a full sifed trailer In a matter
weeks old,
^--------- BEAUTIFUL AKC POODLES, 6
GIBSON STEREO Guitar, excellent; weeks, 332-8971. condition. UL 2-4127
ilta
- BOSTON TERRIER, AKC, for stud r ' service, 1 Va yrs. 625-2175. jCOLL IE
Old,
GIBSON ELECTRIC
A1/5^25'289,5 ____ I COLLIE" PUPS, AKC, 6 wks
LESLIE ORGAN SPEAKER, model J aiSo stud service, 394-0140.
J1350 MltN®!0------ ENGUSH SETTER~~PUPS7 f.DS.B.
LOWREY HOLIDAY organ, 2 Wormed and shots. 1-765-5975.___________
>Tf&?’,TTENS T0 900d hom*-FE
MauSiTar SwE|tLhLi?.se.EAl» ?eh^G5up F; KlffENS'lD Bood home. 67^
PONY 1RIDES AND CART also ponies for sale. Stud, service.
OR 4-2996. -—•;
REGISTERED QUARTER yearling filly, real nice^ 3-yr.-old Morgan j thoroughbred cross. I 0 • y r . - o I d ( grade mare. Metamora, 797-44^5^ REG ISTEREDTC N N E SSEE walking! mare — 5 yc^TTirni .*t* I trained.! Arabians, police •■g - ? 11y |
Yearling stud—yearling Arabian. 42142 Garfield Mt. Clemens. 463-2820. ____________________ ** .
seconds. Want a camping trailer that really sleeps a gang? Then the Ramada Is for yob and It tows easily and economically at normal highway spaads. Cpmplete with dinette, waist high galley. Ice box, plastic windows; spare tlre wheel, bottle gee assembly, end heater. Bank terms available. $170 down and .36 months pn the bal.
RANGER, YUMA, DOMINGO, CIMARRON
BARGAIN PRICE
ALL NEW 1968’s DELIVERED
x 60 Elcar .........S4395
c 50 Academy 12 x 45 Academy
Hottsotroilors
89
Oxford Trailer Sales
MARLEtTES — SO to 63 long, wide, 20 wide. Early American, Conventional and modern decor Expando or tip-outs. Priced right, Built riaht. Phone MY 2-0721, ml. S. of Lake Orion on M24:____
WE NEED TRADE INS FOR OUR CUSTOMERS TO TAKE NORTH NOW LtT'STRADE
NOW
RUNABOUT. MARK SS electric, homemade trailer, IS or > 16 horse power outboard. OL 1-3015. IS' RUNABOUT. BOAT, meter and trailer. Exc. condition. Extras. jMS-ISZO.___
IS' FIBERGLAS Runabout, (2) 25 h.p. Johnson motors, tllt-treller,
equip. Included. 336-4555._____
16' FIBERGLAS, MOTOR and trailer, like new, FE 4-5351.
16' DURATECH ALUMINUM, 40 hp. Evlnrude, elec, starter and lop. 2, 6 gal. gas tanks complete. First
$950. FE 1-3560 before S p.m. _
16' SWITZER CRAFT, molded ply wood - hull, 75 horsepower Evlnrude, Atlas trailer, *1150. 674* 1294, after 5 p.m.
FULL TOF. AFT., tide curtains for %V Cljrlf Cjrfft. Ml.ltW. HOUSiBOAt. FACTORY BUILT, can be licensed to move over highway, Slates 4, refrigerator, stove with oven, marine toltol, TV, other extras. Price *3000. Cell 612-
3550. ____________________
JOHNSON 25, 100 Scot? Vi. BBS.
Others 5 lo 60. J370 Dixie Hwy. NBVBR BEEN~USBb 3Vi horse, boel motor SI00 or motorcycle trailer. *60. Cell FR 4-9269____
Tony's Marina Service
JOHNSON MOTORS Ganeva GW Invader, Shell Lake, Aerocreft alum, boat* and canoes. Also pontoons. Terrific discount! on ell 1967 motors end boats. 2695 Qrcherq Lake Wd.. Sylvan Lake._
TROJAN CRUISERS
24' lo 34'
SLICKCRAFT
l-O's end outboards
EVINRUDE
IS' Rogue. 14' Sportsman,
On Display Showroom MANY USED BOATS
LAKE & SEA MARINA
Saginaw at S. Blvd. Ftt 4-951?i
Ptlly Mr Sun, 12»6
” OMIargains
14* Century — 35 h.p. elec. Gale — lights, controls, battery, cover, $395 )J' White House-35 h.p. elec^
—Gate-------— ----^----------$89$ |
14' Fltetform-30 h.p. eiec. Johnson-alr buoy trailer $$95
15' Shell Lake — 35 h.p. elec.
Evlnrude— Pamco trailer $595
15', Moulded Modern- 35 elec
Johnson-trailer ..........$595
15' , Scottif Craft-40 h.p. elec.-
Johnson •
15* Borun-new top aft. slda curt a Ins-75 h.p. Johnson $?95
15' Lake 8$ Sea-35 elec. Johnson-Moody trailer . .. . $795
16' White House — 75 h.p. McCullouch................. $$95
CHRYSLER AND JOHNSON Boats and Motors OPEN DAILY 9 TO 6
MON. AND T*IURS. TILL 9
SUNDAYS 10-4
PAUL A. YOUNG, INC.
Nbw and Iliad Truck! 101
1954 dodge i tonality, best otttr,
cell ener *_p.ttl. MU...,
1961 FORD to-TbN pickup. Ooed
running order 651.5743. _____
1963,' V. TON FORD pickup. IlM
Rlchwood. FE 5to7*7.__ ..........
1964 OMC CUSTOM .1 . peuenger
164 UMl cv.ivm • ,
wagon, eulo. transmission, power brakes, rear haaltr, sharp. 335-4111
ext. 7554, I to 4:30 p.m
1965 CHEVY Vz-Ton
pickup, with long box. tlsflslde' share, one owner, with radio, heater. Stick shift.
$1195
BILL FOX CHEVROLET
Rochester__ ... Pi-. '
1965 CMC M TON pickup. 6 cvl. stick, clsen Inside end out. 11096. 631-7493.
1965 FORD
EC0N0-VAN
6 cylinder. Beige, Good running condition.
Specially Priced
$595
JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 277 West Montcalm
TE“'5-T10T ~~_____ _ L* 3'2030
1965 JEEP WAGONEER. 6 cylinder With eutomeflc transmission, power brakes and steering, sharp and priced lo sell. ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP, Union Lake. EM 3-4155.
1966 CHEVY, 12,000 miles, private
owner, $1650, FE 2-6935.______
f967 CHEVY vy-TON*pickup. 4-speed. Extres. Going In servlet. 651 ^918.
1967 CHEVY HEAVY duty Vi Ion
pickup V-8 with camper, $2200. 391* 1233. ____________u__ ' '
INTERNATIONAL '57. 16| reck, $593 International '51, II Vin 5550. 5370 Dixie.________________________
OCELOT DUNE BUGGIE, complete and licensed, many extras, SI.S50, Washington, 781-3426.____________
___OR 4-0411___
WANTED—12' ALUMINUM boat, al-
so_ motor. 626-2723.__________
WANTED?' AUXILIARY gas tank, 6 gallon, for late model Johnson, 623-0107 or 363-0121._______________
99
Airplaaei
I960 CESSNA 210. JUST rellcensed. Dual omni ADS. Full gyro panel.
$9.000. Ml 4-4626 eves.___________
1967 CESSNA, Super Skymaster, 190 hours, OR 44)336 or EL 6-0933
101
Wanted Cars-Trucki
SEE THE ALL NEW 60x12 DETROITER WITH SLIDE* A-ROOM PLUS MANY OTHERS
Free Delivery up to 300 ml-
See the New Detroiters
Bob
Hutchinsons
MOBILE
HOMES
4301 Dixie Hwy. (US-10) OR 3-1202
DRAYTON PLAINS
Open Dally ‘111 8 p.m. Saturday and Sunday 'til 3
WILL BUY USED MOBILE homes. SL 4-1894. Pontiac Mobil# Home Park. __________
Commercial Trailers 90-A
WHEEL HEAVY DUTY car transport trailer, new tires, $375, MA 4-3742 or EM 3-5214.
Auto Accessories
91
1966, 40 HORSEPOWER VW Engine, complete, like new. $200. 36
horsepower VW engine, complete. $100, MY 3-)652,
Clarkston Auto Parts
625-5171
North Main
OPEN 9 TO 9 New and rebuilt auto parts
Tires-Auto-Truck
92
17 ‘FOOT McBAY — Make me an
offer. FE 2-6392.________
17' STUERY WITH TRAILER, 50 h.p. Evlnrude, $975. MI 4-6880._
18 FT. CHRIStCRAFT, excellent condition, throughout. Has mooring cover and . trailer. Only 81095.
Merry Olds, OL 1-9761. __ .
l§"R5wEftTTFLAGSHiP~eabtir In- a LATE MODEL CAR wanted, With
aaSr- rl S3^Jgr.*,«Si
27' HOUSEBOAT, DIESEL powered, _ top pay for nice cars * — -•-**—i water and land.^g| r—r. j. ------
SALE
BUY NEW 1968 4 Wheel Drive FORD TRUCKS
AT WHOLESALE PRICES
12 to Choose From
1957 CRUISERS INC., 16', ««c. condition with Alex trailer, 35 H.P., elec, start, convertlbla, full power, $650. 776^761.___________________
1961 SEA RAY 18' 7S horsepower Johnson. Best offer. Coll after S p.m. 535-1005. Detroit.
1966 BUEHLER JET BOAT Bolero Boat real sharp ready to go. 426 V-8, turbo power, 3 stag# pump has mooring cover bucket seats. 30 gal. fuel tank, tack, amp meter gas oil and temp, gauge water speed Indicator, spotlight,
_ , running
nght end horns. *3475, 651-9761 or eJes. 673-8478. Jim Butcher, Merry
Olds.____________-_____________ _____
1967 CHRYSLER CHARGER. 16', 120 h.p. inboard-outboard, full cover, tilt trailer, used 1 mo., reas. 692-
5791 for demo ride.__________1
I960 — 17' SILVER LINE with 150 h.p. Chrysler - I.O., power tilt and
will
CADILLAC, LATE MODEL, take ovar payment. 625-2128.
EXTRA Dollars Paid
FOR THAT
EXTRA Sharp Car
Especially 4 speeds and corvettes "Check *— — •hen get the best" at
JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 277 West Montcalm
FE 5-4101 ________ LI 3-2030
Foreiga Cars
105
ret!
Averill's
:E 2-9878 2020 Dixie_FE 4-689
Mansfield
trailer. S3395 complete. Kars Boats & Motors. 693-1600.
AUTO SALES
300
ABC IT'S ASSEMBLEDI Unslnkabla plastic Stowboats can be carried on car carrier — Fold Into flat package 4'5288 after 5:30 p.m.
$399511966 YAMAHA BIG Bear Scrambler.
$37951 .. 2,000 ml., $450. 682-7929._
t •"' •,ww'l96'6 YAMAHA, 305. 2 sets of exhaust. "Your Evlnrude Dealer
COUNTRYSIDE LIVING pipes for street end scrambling. )8,9 s. Telegraph 332-8833
Call 673-6368 tor Immediate sale.- ----------------
1*967 HONDA SCRAMBLERTsOS $600 FE 2-7525. Call bet. 18-4.
CRISSMAN
WANTED
Late Model GM Cars TOP $ PAID FOR EXTRA CLEAN CARS
1084 Oakland____________ 334-1JM
Best Mobile Home Sales Open 'Daily 9 a.m.*8 p.m.
Marlette Champion
Royal Embassy Regent
Squire -Delta
SHEEP, 3 EWES, REGISTERED Shropshires, children's pets, 625-2760. ______________________
reverb amplifier and sure dynamic microphone and r,1and all in ex condition. Will sell seperateiy or ; a~ Set. 682-2378 anyt*me. -*">IANO AND ORGAN COMBINATION manufacturers
sample. This Is perfect for. small church or chapel. No special organ training to play. Will sacrifice — rather than reship -CALL MR. BAKER, FE 4 4731. ;
PROFESSIONAL STRING BASS,! original price — $450. first $95 takes it. OR 3-1834, after 7 p.m. SET OF WOLVERINE DRUMS/
SPIRITED OR GENTLE horses for sale. New and used tack. Double D
Ranch. 673-7657.________________
TENNESSEE WALKING HORSE, 16.2 hands, 7 year old gelding, pleasure and trail horse for adults. 4 year old registered Tennessee gelding, show prospect. Also, registered Cheviot sheep with lamb. Top breeding. Shown by ap-polntment. OLIve T0078, --------- —
Meats 83-A
FREE KITTENS TO GOOD home.
682-8727. _ ___ __________
: FRTET TafTENS TO GOOD home.
| 338-0566 ~ : 3............
v GERMAn “SHORTHAIR’ PQINTERS AKC, field champion sjred, female 2 years, excellent gun dog professionally trained,,, field Cham- ___________
; pionship points, best offer. Male L Hav-Graill-Feed
yr. tiousebroken, obedience trained.: ______________-
New lifter due about "May 31,! - . k
reservations accepted now. Von EXTRA GOOD HORSE and cow hay.
Thurber Kennels. 852-3271. Dual1 will deliver 627-3229._____j__^_____
- Champion sifed._ _ ______[GOOD HAY FOR SALE, will deliver,
complete. Exc. Like new. Red GERMAN SHEPHERD pubs, AKCi J&W-45WL __,7 .11 771:; .! .7.
sparkle. Best offer. 682-7525 after: Beauties, stud service. UL 2-1657. hay7 40c BALE. You pick up. 338-
_5^30._______________ _______ . GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIESj 4884^____________________________________________
&FMR+GHT PIANO/ $40r-H»—R, -Smith, Pijre white. AKC. OR 3 3583. ^ farm PrOdUCI 86
Landola
American Victor MARLETTE EXPANDOS ON DISPLAY
FREE DELIVERY AND SET UP WITHIN 200 MILES.
12 x 50* American 1968, $4995 ON DISPLAY AT:
Cranbferry Lake Mobile
iwest and finest travel Home Village
>n the market In these 9620 Highland Rd > (M-59) 2 miles models. Apache has the only ln-: West of Williams Lk. Rd
sulation that meets the exacting i 363-5296
standards necessary for the use In [WATCH FOR "OUR DISPLAY ~*i space vehicles or nuclear sub- THE WATERFORD HOME AND! marines. It is called Urethane, j BUILDERS SHOW This material is water proofed and
The
1967 t7rT5mPH TP,6l (L Excellent
rnnHifinn' Mutt cpII SI040 4$1-
HARRINGTON BOAT WORKSj SllblUrbcm Olds
"Your Evinrude Dealer JTelegraph_
PINTERS
ph txceiienT nnnriT tt t
Must sell. $1050. am*-• SPECIAL
1967 TRIUMPH TR-6R, 1500 miles, clean. 673-2906.
than 1500
New 1968 16' Thompson Fiberglas lapstrake with vinyl convertible top, side aft curtains. 65 h.p. Johnson with battery and box, 1200 lb. Little Dude trailer; plus electric horn, deck mounted mirror, fire extinguisher, 4 life preservers, paddle anchor and lifie. Regularly -$3109.50^-----— --------
BSA, TRIUMPH, HONDA | SPECIAL $2497
NORTON, OUCATI, AND MONTESAi VAM eAwr ,,.n rn
....... ANDERSON SALES 8. SERVICE YOU iAVt JO I i.DU
673-1191 j 1445 s. Telegraph FE 3-710211370 Obdvke 9-8 Set. 9-6
^ (1-75 at Oakland University Exit)
All 1968 Models
NOW HERE!!
i-burning. Perma-frame cabintry is exclusive with Apache travel! trailer regardless of price or_slze.j Wide, wide track suspension. A waping increase of 8 per cent over the trailer means safeter vaca-| tions, more stability from; crosswinds and when passing other trailers. 15 per cent down. 5 yrs. on bal., bank terms.
. _.tished—Delivered Ready to move in today I , $4,795.84
Includes Sales Tax—Insurance Plus Honeymoon Specials
SEE ALL OF THIS AT EVANS EQUIPMENT
84 —
' 6587 Dixie Hwy., Clarkston, Mtch.
Just N. of Waterford 625-1711 625-25)6
Store Hours: , -------— H ... _ .
Mon-Frl. 8 a.m.-9 p.m. PARKWQOD, 1967 60'xl2' 2 bedroom
Sat * 8 a.m.-5 p.m.; carpeted. In Chateau Estates ””
Drive Out—See—Only $79.07 Monthly PEERLESS MOBILE HOMES
13318 Dixie Hwy., Holly ---
6 miles S. of Grand Blanc___
MARLETTE 1967, ,12x50. Live In 3
months. Call after 5, 682-4531,__
LIKE NEW — WITH extras. 1*67 — 2 bedroom 12 < 50. already set up, ready to move into. Must sell, sacrifice. FE 5-6883.
ANNOUNCING THE NEW 1968 Hodako 100 cc
5-SPEED TRAIL BlXE.
The Bronco 50 cc
4'SPEED^BIKE.
•MG SALES
4667 Dixie Hwy., Drayton 673-6458 JUST~ARRIVED SUZUKI new 1968 50CC cycle.. 5 speed transmission. See it today. Other models to 500 __.CC. Rupp mini bikes from $144.50, cycle accessories. Take M-59 to w. Highland. Right to Hickory Ridge Rd. to Damode Rd. left and follow signs to DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSICO LAKE. Phone 629-2179.
SAILBOAT 19' FIBERGLAS, flying Scott No. 212, 647-0211 or 644-0391.
SEE OUR huge selection of the world's finest boats and motors. Choose from Grumman, Sllverllne, MFG, Glastron and Chrysler, Chrysler outboards and Marcrulser motors.
FIBERLACS CANOES as low as $169.
COHO FISHING Headquarters, everything you need Including boats, rods, reels, bait, etc.,. Now at one location.
BIRMINGHAM____
We would like to buy late model GM Cars or will accept trade-downs. Stop^-by todayl
FISCHER
BUICK
544 S. WOODWARD 647-5600
Juak Cart-Tracks
101-A
1, 10, too JUNK CARS — TRUCKS, free tow anytime. FE 2*2666.
HAY FOR SOME
ALWAYS BUYING JUNK CARS end scrap, we tow. FE 5-0201,.
COPPER - BRASS) RADIATORS^, starltrs end generators, C. Olx-son, OR 3-5849._____________
FREE TOWING, 24 hour road sarv Ice. 673-0623. Dave's Towing. WANTED
JUNK AND wrecked cars. Top prices. Free towing FE 5-9044.
Growing VW Dealer'
OFFERS
A FINE SELECTION OF 100 PER CENT WARRANTED USED CARS
BillGolling VW Inc.
1821 Maplelawn Blvd. Off Maple Road 05 Mile Rd.)
ACROSS FROM BERZ AIRPORT Just South df Pontiac Troy_____ i Ml 2-6900
TRIUMPH' 1968 MODEL "O T •« fastback coupe, red, sacrifice,
*2595. FE S-2864._______________
VW BUS, TRANSAXEL, and rear end,
$75. 628-3925,
YOUR
VW
CENTER
70 To Choose From -All Models— —All Colors—
—All Reconditioned-
Autobahn
anytime.
Motor* Inc.
Authorized VW Dealer V!) mile North of Miracle Mile 1765 S Telegraph FE $-4531
Closed Sun._
NOW ON DISPLAY
1289.
Van Lines 10 S. Jessie.________KITTENS, HIMALAYAN AND
USED ORGANS Siamese. Hand raised, quality
Choose from Hammond and otheri blood lines, innoculated. 1-863-1878. well known brands, price es low es'kTttENS FREE TO GOOD home!
i Call afters, f£_4-7989. _ IlaRGE MALE COLLIE* 4"years old, ' purebred. *25, call_afle^7, 673-1655. .. . . M.'NfAT UReXQUJE
27 So. Saginaw______ FE 3-7168 UL 2-2013.
hSund
GRINNELLS
Music U5S60S
I NORWEGIAN ELK HOUNP pups, j ^ nrontos-old, AKC^r^hJistered, $80.
WURLITZER AND THOMAS ORGANS AND PIANOS INSTRUCTIONS AND INSTRUMENTS,
JACK HAGAN MUSIC \
4fi9_EJlzebeth Lake Rd. 332-05011
8192 Xooley Lake Rd.____363 5500'
litei^kjEuTiiyPa. 887M2 54 PAMPERED POODLE grooming 651-9729. Appointment only. POODLE CLIPPING, stud " service
FE 8-363L _ _ _____
POODLES — "APRICOT corbing 3 yrs. AKG Reas , Owne , -m©vintg4o apt. 651-0936
CERTIFIED SEET5 POTATOES. Boros Country Market, 2250 Dixie Hwy,, just N. of Telegraph. POTATOES, EATING end eeed. 335
_west_si,v«?^e|i Refine* RIPE TOMATOES 4 lbs. per th.00. ^AH kinds of flower# and
LESbONS. PUPPIES,
plants. 2001 PonTTac Road___
SPV APPLES AT Orchard 'Apple Vitlty, 3060 Hummer Lk. Rd.,
-mi. E. of Ortonville. .627-3691._;
SEED POTATOES, early and late. MY 2-1711.______
8 N FORD with side distributor and balde, FE 5-6408 males, AC -‘TRACTOR, BLADE, cultivator.
mower, A-l.-$695^ or trade for :5 yd. dump, pay difference. 887-5207
Travelmate
10 ft. Double Bed, Dlnnatte $1395 12 ft. Double Bed, Dlnnette . .*1493
Pledsure Mate
America's Custom Hardtop —-f-----.—only *1385 / >----
Holly Travel Coach, Inc.
1521 n Holly Rd., Holly* ME 4-67/71 Open Daily end Sundays —-—
OAKLAND CAMPER
BEELINE ' TOUR-A-HOME
1 COVERS
Parts end accessories
V
3360, Utica ROLL SWAY 8x40, 2 BEDROO
G-o o d condUton. $995, 437-62 South Lyon. _
SPRING SPECIALS
FOR-EXAMf»tE-T«ESE 1968't 12'x60* 3 bedroom, $4795 12'X50' at $3850 12’x44' at $3550
Also the Danish King, luxury for less, featuring exterior storage. Large savings on everything In f stock. Free delivery end set uc within 300 miles. 24' Duo, 14' Owen's. 15' Empire, 15' Steury, All fiberglass. 17’ Winner; ^16':, Dumpily In wqpd
14' Aqua Swan In aluminum.
•"d BOLENS 8 H.P. ELECTRIC Start
B a Id win at Colgate 335-0634
Office IqaipoieNt
_______ | _ cultivator, | -PIONEER CAMPER-SALES
-a PUREBRED SIAMESE KITTENS, 7 sweeper, caa snow blade and Trailer*: Jubilee, Globe Star
* ■ wks. old. PR -4-0518. • • *____| -chajr^ ^.3®5. _Phone 852-1484. | Barth ,
IO G i S T E R E D D O BERMAN BUY A JWHEEL HORSE TRACTOR; Campers:^Swlnger> Maclnaw
tFrfell._
1951 DODGE: STAKE truck, reasonable, S50. Cell 689-1154. After
and1 * F-fn- . ...—.—
i 1952 FORD 809, cab and chassis, I runs good, *125. 673-OWV •
v a d s r > 1*54 FORD PICKUP,—trattor arid Locke Mower. S700, leaving tor service, FE 8-9452
Credit
Problems?
SEE US-WE CAN FINANCE Bankrupt—Receivership ” Jusf 2T^Years of Age Been Divorced or Had a Repossession?
Coll Mr. Wyatt
— -STANDARD AUTO.----
1384 Baldwin - FE 1-432!
Need a Car?
New in the area? Repossessed?-Garnish>ed?
to DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPS ICO
LAKE. Phoqe 629-2)79._____,
VESPA 1965, 90CC 1M5 EXf-CONDITION. Asking 1158. *93-8264,
eitsr 6 p.m.
__________ It
1954 CHEVY PICKUP. ft fcnT runi good. 651-4518.
Been Bankrupt?—Divorced? Got a Problem?
Take M-59 to W. Highland. Right
to Hickory Rldga Rd to Demode.____________ _
Rd. Left and follow signs to 1955 INTERNATIONAL dump, DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSICO 5-yard box, ^ood tires, LAKE, 629)2179. I angina. S350. 628-3925.
Call Mr. White
At King
-0802
681
m \*-
m.\
'MWK j,
m
d
an
I . //
New and Used Can 106
NEW FINANCE PLAN. IF PROBLEMS, BANKRUPT, OR GARNISHEED WAGES, WE CAN GET YOUR CREDIT REESTABLISHED AGAIN. WE HAVE OVER 80 CARS THAT CAN BE PURCHASED. WITH NO DOWN PAYMENT. COME IN AND SEE CREDIT MGR. MR. IRV.
LUCKYAUTCT
1140 W wide Track FE 4*1004 or____r I-7M4
ECONOMY CARS
4 Pontlaci '54,— '44 445 up
5 Chtvyi '40 — '42 .. 174 up
7 Fords ‘41 — '44 ...4195 up
1945 Ford 4947
194] Chovy
Many othari and truck*
am OlXlj____________FE 4-2131
WE HAV* A VERY GOOD selection of transportation can, prlcad from 475 and upyrfth nd monay down
THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 21, 1968
Ntw and Uud Can 106 New and Uud Car*
C—9
106
first reasonable offer. 194:
Chrvrol**! Impala Burgundy, goor. Call Huron Optical. FB J
W'dd’A 2Mon 'Thur* Star Auto
We Arrange Financing
144] CHEVY STATION WAOON I
$395
YOUR PAYMENTS 44 40 PER WEEK!
FE 8-9661 |
'4.,..0*kl»n Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold I Turner Pord, Birmingham.
1944 PLYMOUTH FURY' tl.WT 539 down, payment! 414.9] week. Call! Mr. Fanil, Ml 4-7500. Harold I
^Turner JJorA Blrmjngham._
RONEY'S
COMPACT CARS
GO!
HAUPT
PONTIAC
And Save $ $ $
' ^ t AR K S T ON 425-5500
11*44 4 DOOR BONNEVILLE. FE 4-
Autoinotics
Sticks
GOOD VARIETY
8 stick shift, radio, new tires, good
buy "If* give It a treat
1964 CHEVY IMPALA STATION WAGON
LUCKY AUTO! Power alaarlng^oww^prakti, V4,
623-1T43—
payments 44.45 Weak. Call ..........
...................— -- - Parka, Ml 4-7500. Harold Tumor
mileaga. clenn one owner, )4] 9495,| KocMg^J!' 1435 Orchard Lake] Ford, Birmingham.____________________ |4J5 s. 5. Woodward ' Ml 7-5111
BIRMINGHAM
1-door
power
PLUSH.
$845
AUDETTE
PONTIAC
i S50 W. Maple Rd.
1943 BUICK SPECIAL mileage. SSOO. Altar 7, FE
lego.
MUSTANGS — 30 T6 CHOOSE FROM. Call Mr. parka. Ml 4-7500.
Herold Turner Ford, Birmingham.
1957 FORD 3 DOOR hardtop, iram Florida, last, Sl]5. UL 3-1494 after 3 p.m.
1959 FORD H.T. Runs good, aulo.
1944 CHEVELLE CLUB Coupe, 4795 V-4- Flral 1100 lakes. 474-5373.
"0" down, payments 54.44 waek! 1940 FORD STATION wagon, stan-Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold dard 4. $125. 332-0790.
. 1940 FORD WAGON. Good
44 CHEVY IMPALA HARDTOP. V- transportation, 4100. 473-7915.
8, Aulo. Double power. Reas. MAl ift&o FORD~t. STICK!—Good !-,! -Tjrnisrvs—nrm—transportation. 490. 425-4174, altar 1944 CHEVELLE 4-DOOR, 1795. "0" 5-
Mr""' Parkr*n,MI »94> ANGRIA FORD." GOOD 'running
TVrnar^FordV JSUtoEi ** &T"0"' «"* ln,erte'' 444‘
**&alirNMI9Sf'*® " ” *4#® Sil FALCON *TATIpN 'WAGfJHT
*...._.... real nice. Save Aulo. FE 5-3271.
-I, 1964 CHEVY IMPALA, 6xc.,foA| FALCON 2«door §994 so down
door LOW : payments$3 88^ww^'ct|l ^!’’t6 FORD ^HARDTOP, $795
qq9 A-kSf CHEVY, 327, 4 speed, AM-FM, Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turner down, payrhants $6.&_week. Call
rhrnrrsaat Dian IK bbbi ' S * “*
1962 BUICK Electro 225
yj •utomallC'S ,944 CHEVY IMPALA HARDTO'P. V iiitrinfl ano d r a k e s .| g. Auto. Dmihi* iMwar Daai aaa 6*2772
Ml 2-8600
1965 MUSTANG AUTOMATIC. I) 195 FOR SALE BY Ildarly couple. 1965 Phone 335-9779 Anytime. Olds Custom Delta 88. Lika brand
1945- T-BIRD LANDAU speclal In- n?w. Low mlleaga. Power bralHtk, larlor, and dash, laclory In- 4™ •••erlnB. ra^lo, haalar. lTnled sletlatlon lor aulo show, ,full Vork
power, spring special only 41844 St, Off Baldwin. FE 4-8434,__
lull price. Just 4144 down, 4nd 1945 OLDS CONVERTIBLE, 442 S6I.41 per month, 5 year or 50,000 engine, 4-speed, loaded, looks and mile new car warranty, available. ........
JOHN McAULIFFE FORD
630 Oakland . ’ FE 5-4101
1965 FORD STATION wagon, 11295!
839 down, payments 810.92 week.
Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold
runs like new, 81500. 626*4383 _
1965 OLDS
Della 88 4-door hardtop, power steering, power brakes, like new.
$1695
Turner Ford, Birmlnghem! !r-i l 1 /-\i i |I!» PLYMOUTH FURY tedan, ueal*.r._______________________________
1?44"1F0RD~FA|RLANE GT~W~i i'll ] hi 1 THCiri C nc *189,5 ,3(! down' payments 414,92 1945 TEMPEST LeMANS,
tL^ rSd. new nref .V* Sl584! ° UU UI 1 S:^ldSSum^r FnPr5rkB■,r^lnnh^0■ - OrlSln,,l OWn,r^-*<)*-0-0J^
Dealer—338-7548- BIRMINGHAM H«roJd Tln;ner_Ford, mrm[ng^ 11945 TEMPEST STATION wagon,
365 S. Woodward Ml 7-511111967 BARRACUDA 2-DOOR hardtop, double power, top carrier, snow
. , —a-----■- --- ---------------- best offer. FE 24737,
6601
11964 CATALINA, STICK SHIFT. Low mileage. Ex\t. condition. 682-4137. j j 1964 PONTIAC STATION WAGON.' i 81044. 80 down, payments 89.821 j week. Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500.
I Harold Turner Ford, Birmingham.
j Star Auto •
We Arrange Financing
1944 PONTIAC CONVERTIBl E
$595
2-door herotop,' factory elr Y(3UR PAYMENTS 54J8 PER WEEK dltloned, plus all other equipment. , »t o-tQ0 I
$2395 962 Oakland 943 Oakland
Sea this aulo af our new location, 44 CATALINA, 4-DOOR hardtop, on Maple Rd (15 Mile) IVj mllesl *XC- condition, OR 3-2247.
East ol Woodward. i 1965 CATALINA CONVERTIBLE, rad
BIRMINGHAM , JJld9.whl"' *««"•"' condition, nt-
Chrysler-Plymouth ,1*45 pontiac catalina
1967 PLYMOUTH FURY sedan, | P««te _33»«3B._
syncro,
1*47 BONNIVILLa, FACTORY AIR.
Many antra*. 624-1289.
1947 PONTIAC aCAN6“«T5r»£. lory olr, power windows, brakes steering, AM-PM radio. Cell ell. 4
p.m. Lrvonla, 26J;1103._
1*47 PONTIAC CATALINA, one . owner, best oiler over 12200. FE 4-1427. _
1967 4 DOOR CATALINA sedan. Lf.
blue^7,008 ml. FB 4-3445.__
LAST CHANGE. Just received 6, 1967 Pontiac municipal cars, all power steering and brake*. AM priced to sell lest. Can be purchased with no money down.
LUCKY AUTO
106 N«w and Uu4 Cara MS
I RONEY'S
j TGI Baldwin FE 4-4909
1967 PLYMOUTH fury 1tt
moo
NEW 1968
AMERICANS
FROM
$1853
AT
Village
Rambler
666 S. Woodward Birmingham 646-3900
1958 RAMBLER 4»b6dft, boby gxtra good, 8150, FB 4-8713.
1961 RAMBLER,"NEfbl VAjLVB lob, ott^rwls# good. $100. 336-8724 1961 RAmBL $95. gm,
payment*, 81.56 wfdk. Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4*7500. Harold Tumor Ford, Birmingham-1965 RAMBLER CLASSIC ' t-door with 6 cylinder angina, auto* me tie transmission, power steering,v radio sharp end priced to sell. ROSE RAMBLER,
Lake. EM 3-4JJ5.
STATION!
Star Auto
We Arrange Financing
1963 BUICK SPECIAL
$595
4200
YOUR PAYMENTS 14.40 PER WEEK' 1965 CORVAIR MONZA 4-door FE 8*9661 4 I hardtop, automatic, extra sharp.
qao n-k.jinH <>kJ«"d Ay*.__________ JFE 34101
Ol only — $1,750. I 682-2413. __ J 11967 CATALINA 2-DOOR hardtop,
I double power. Sharp. Low mileage. 1965 BONNEVILLE 4-DODR hardtop.; Assume payments. FE 5-7798, bet. Power brakes and steering. One 2 30 Dm owner beauty 1 Only $1,495. MY 2- '
1966 PONTIAC^
Catalina
2door hardtop, full power, factory warranty.
Bargain Priced Aft
$1795
* Village Rambler
666 S. Woodward Birmingham 646-3900
1947 PONTIAC CATALINA harHop. with V8 automatic, radio, heater, power steering, brakes, beautiful silver blue with matching Interior, and black vinyl roof, spring special
®c!y._*23M price 8i88 down,|ah Models Power Equipped
Union
Factory
Official
CARS
Oakland
1841
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH
724 Oakland Ave. FE 39434 \V’A f***"n» 4 door sedan
• ---- — -------—-- — (1965 Ventura Convertible
1967 PLYMOUTH, GTX, automatic, j 1965 Bonneville 4 dr. liardtop ^—-a$• $^_ $2,195. 1966 Bulck 4 door '
11965 Chevy 9 pass, wagon j 1964 Catalina 4 dr. hardtop
VANDEPUTTE
BUICK-OPEL
10:30 p.m,
1965 CHlVY IMPALA SS, seats, 4-speed, best offer 8080 before 5.
11965 CHEVROLET, 11095. $39 down, 1943, F0|*P kFr Convertible, fTZpren
FE , radio,,new whitewalls. 4425. After 630 Oakland Ave FE 34101 conditioning, bucket seats, plus '’“ PONTIAC, 3 SPEED standard
4 6 P.m call AAA 6-2109 sjo oaKiano Ave.------- Pt i-aioi other extras, after 4 p.m. 682-1724. sh *’- 589 cu In. motor, solid
-jyiLL”7• ioaa coon rnuucorini c aicoc t. -----...----— -------1——v $ lifters. No. II cam, electric fuel
coupe. Power steering and brakes 9f$l FORD SEDAN, $444. 80 down, $1295. Must tell due to army com-; P^mants $4.42 week. Call mitment. 651*5106. bet. 6 p.m. and
1964 Bulck
I payments $9.88 week. Call Mr. Pe8,®r 338-9238, — | Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turner TT6T
$500
^Ford, Birmingham 11965 CORVAIR, 8795. 839 down, i . , . . ^ payments 86.65 week. Call Mr.
Special 4-Door Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turner*
with 6 cyl. stick, power steering, - Ford' Blrmln9hanl brakes, now only
FORD GALAX IE 500 con-! vcrtible, full power, exc. condition,! must be seen to appreciate. 363-5571.
$745
Beattie Ford
ADKINS AUTO SALES
firnnriZM OAKLAND AVE. FE 2-62301
1963 Galaxie 500, 8 auto. .. 8595!
1962 Galaxie 500, 2-dr. hardtop $395 ...................... $295
11965 CHEVROLET BEL-AIR, 4-door, 1962 Falrlane 500, 8 auto, power steering, ..whitewalls, exc. 1962 Tempest wgn. auto.
: 1959 Chevy 6 auto. First
condition. $1150. 338-1285.
11965 CHEVY IMPALA super sport convertible, V-8, automatic, 651-, 7693,___________________________!
AL HANOUTE
Chevrolet Bulck
On M24 in Lake Orion
1944 BUICK VISTA Wagon, 4T295T 439 MY 2-2411
down, payments 110.92 week. Call —-------t------------------
Mr. Parks, Ml 4*7500^ Harold SAVE MONEY AT MIKE SAVOIE ■ Turner Ford, Birmingham. t CHEVY. 1900 W. Maple, Ml 4-2753. I
623-0900
1964 BUICK ELECTRA 2-door hardtop. Exc. condition. Full I
powar. 36,000 actual ml. FE 4-4373. 245 Nil son.
1944 BUICK WILDCAT 4-door, full power, air conditioning, loaded with extras. Ml 35489.
1945 BUICK WILDCAT!! 2-ToTr hardtop, air conditioning, power steering and brakes, exc. condition.; 41595. 4432551, Milford.
1965 BUICK Special
4 door sedan, with V8, automatic, this is a beautfiul low mileage car. Only
$1444
VANDEPUTTE
BUICK-OPEL i
1966 Chevrolet Impala Sport Coupe, V-8 engine, standard transmission, beautiful maroon finish. $1595.
TAYLOR
CHevy-Olds
1963 FORD Fairlane Station Wagon
Two to choose from starting at
$595
See these autos at our new location on Maple Rd. (15 Mile) IVa miles East of Woodward.
BIRMINGHAM
Chrysler-Plymouth
11943 FORD FAI RLAt7E' WAGON!’ 8 I Passenger. 8550. 682-8690._
! Standard Auto.
WALLED LAKE_____
TOM RADEMACHER
chevy-olds
1966 CHEVELLE 24oor, V-8 automatic, radio, heater whitewalls, ideal family car, very
1964 CHEVY like new, 6 cyl. automatic power steering, only 8695 109 East Blvd. (S.)
FE 84033
11966 FORD CONVERTIBLE, $1595. $39 down, payments $14.44 weelJ Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harof _Turner Ford, Birmlngham.
1966 Ford
Galaxie 500 Hardtop
2 door with V8, automatic, power steering, only —
$1895
Beattie Ford
"Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" i ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD j
623-0900
1964" FORD 2-DOOR, 41088. 439 down, I payments 49.44 week. Cell Mr.| Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turner; Ford, Birmingham.
1966 FORD Galaxie 500
2-door hardtop, bronze with; matching interior, equipped as you; like it for lust:
$1695
See this auto at our new location on Maple Rd. (15 Mile) I’/a miles East of Woodward.
BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth
1948 PLYMOUTH Satellle hardtop, ’”
V8, automatic, radio, heater, powbr 944
steering, brakes, 6,000 miles, i o0rdc YLa®on , ■ ■ ?.5?f
beautiful metallic gold with *943 ®u*ck Spec. 9 pass
matching Interior, save at teastl ...... . r t“
$1,000 on this one, Spring special! KEEG0 PONTIAC
0n|nus|88»»ll»P|rN!rrr ronn IkEEGO HARBOR 482-3400
JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 1944 pontiac catalina, good
FE 5-4101 condition, take over payments of 3uv it let • mo- 2006 Klnmount, off Joslyn.
1968 PONTIAC 4-DOOR EXECUTIVE j 3,000 miles, all power, air, trailer $1695 package. Also 26 ft. Airstream $1695] travel trailer, self-contained, $1695 tandem wheels; Owner's death S1550J necessitates sale. Call Jim Taylor, $ 995! OR 4 0306.
* (968 TEMPEST! 350 DOUBLE power!
« tot AM-FM. New car warranty. Prl-L va,« 626 7717
-Many with Air-Priced From $1895
V illage Rambler
666 S. Woodward Birmingham 646-3908
OLDSMOBILE 1967. Cutlass custom supreme. 4-door hardtop. Power steering, brakes. Alt’. Cruise control. Radio. Ivory, black vinyl top. Gold Interior. Best offer. 644-3767.
— PRE-SUMMER OLDSMOBILE SPECIALS
1967 Convertible Cutlassr supreme —
1967 OLDS Luxury Sedan ,1966 OLDS 98 Holiday Coupe 1966 OLDS 4-door hardtop . •
1965 OLDS 4-door eif. cond.
punp, fri-power. $250. Inquire 1160 Boston. Off Telegraph. i960 PONTIAC BONNE VILLE door, runs good . . . $165 Auto. FE 5-3278. _
1960 PONTIAC STATION wagon. 1967 RED I Transportation special $129. Full VERTIBLE. price. Buy Here—Pay Here! at I 7889.
Marvel Motors, 251 Oakland Ave.!
FE 8-4079.
SHELTON
PONTIAC-BUICK
. 855 S. ROCHESTER RD.
__651.5500 s
Save! WAGON, 1966 C ATA LI NAT auto., t power, low mileage. 682-8255.
$2595 j I960 PONTIAC, DOUBLE power,
DOWNEY
I6W miles, light blue with matching 1963 FORD HARDTOP, $695. SOI
......... * ----- * -- down, payments 86.92 week. Call
Mr. Parks,- Ml 4-7500. Harold Turner Ford, Birmingham.
40,000
_____ K
1965 BUICK GRAN SPORT, $1495.1 $39 down, payments $12.88 week. Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turner Ford, Birmingham.
1967 LeSABRE, POWER equipped.' 626-5065.
JEROME
CADILLAC CO:
1980 Wide Track Dr. FE
1963 FORD FAIRLANE 500 station —wagon* bdautlful robins egg $>iue,t matching atl vinyl interior, V8,| automatic, radio, heater, wonderful i second car, spring special only' 8688 full price, just S88 down,, $31.52 per month.
JOHN McAULIFFE FORD
630 Oakland Ave.______F$E 5-4101
1963 FALCON WAGON, $595. "0"! down, payments $5.44 week. Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4:7500. Harold Turner ;Ford, Birmingham.__
Star Auto
WE ARRANGE FINANCING
1964 FALCON $795
11966 CHEVY CAPRICE, 2 door, I YOUR PAYMENTS $7.18 PER WEEK auto., double power, air. Gray with pp A-QAA1
black vinyl top, pvt.,‘1 owner, best _ .. . s ° 7UU 1
offer over $1800. 673-3225 after y|*62 Oakland i P-m.
1966 Chevy
Impala 2-Door Hardtop
With V8, automatic, power steer-; ing, brakes, vinyl roof, radio,] heater, only
$1995
Beattie Ford
"Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD
623-0900
—Oldsmobile, Inc.
550 Oakland Avenue
FE 2-8101
1967 OLDS
98 Luxury sedan, full power, factory air conditioning, vinyl sgp, low mileage. >-
$3395
Suburban Olds
BIRMINGHAM
635 S. Woodward_Ml 7-511
SURE BEATS WALKING!
Good Cars — Low Prices
Drive to work in Our Safety Checked Cars
$23951 miles. MILOSCH CHRYSLER-$1995 PLYMOUTH. 677 M-24, Lake
8139SI -Orion- .My 2-2041__
1961 PONTIAC. EXCELLENT con-
ditlon, 8495. 674-2071._
A 1961 PONTIAC STATION WAGON, Beautiful mutton yellow, whitewalls, radio, auto., luggage rack. This car is like new in and out. Buy at your own price at1 public auction. Wed. 8:30 p.m.; Auction land.
1962 TEMPEST WAGON, $2957 F E 2-
1962 PONTIAC HARDTOP, blue wlthjpp 5-5OQ0 matching interior, runs good only,' **
$295-85. down, qnd only $3 weekly
Mansfield Auto Sales
1104 BALDWIN AVE.
FE 8-8825
1966 FORD LTD
2-door hardtop, V8, full $ factory warranty.
Bargain Priced At:
$1795
Village Rambler
666 S. Woodward Birmingham 646-3900
1944 MUSTANG, 3-speed, 4-cylinder, j J943 lr.9SY.A!Rr?aIdl 1724 0ak,and *****
900 Oakland Ave. . FE 5*9421
CADILLAC 1968 ELDORADO,, loaded with extras, 6,000 ml., will. accept trade, 646-7945.
When you buy It leti ’ MARKET TIRE give II a tree safety check. 2435 Orchard Lake Rd. Keego.
1968 CHEVY Caprice
2nldor hardtop, with full power, air conditioning, black vinyl car, white finish, factory official car, discounted
$1000
BILL FOX CHEVROLET
FORD GALAXIE V-8, Call FE 8-8505 after 4 p
TOM RADEMACHER
CHEVY-OLDS
1964 FORD Galaxie 500 XL convertible, V-8, automatic, power steering, brakes, radio, heater, whitewalls, maroon withj a black top.' White bucket seats, only $1,195. On U.S.-10 at M-15, Clarkston, MA 5-5071.
1964 FORD COUNT-J&—Sq-iM-f— f Wagon, beautiful candy apple red. All vinyl interior, V8, automatic, radio, heater.- - power steering, sharp as a tack. ~~ Spring Special only $1288 full price, lust $188 down, and $48.65 per month. One year warranty.
JOHN McAULIFFE FORD
63(P Oakland Ave._____FE 5-4101
1964 T-BIRD CONVERTIBLE Beautiful Arctic white with black top, and interior, iuil power, and factory air conditioning, Spring Special only $1688. Full price, lust $188 down, .and $66.33 per month. 5 year or 50,000 mile new car warranty.
JOHN McAULIFFE FORD
630 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101
_______ - 1967 MUSTANG, LIKE NEW, private
convertible,; party. 41,885. 335-9630._
1947 FORD FASTBACK, $2188. $39 j down, payments 416,94 week. Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turner Ford, Birmingham. ~
1967 MUSTANG "GT" lastback.l with V8, 4 speed radio, heater,
whitewalls, emerald green finish,
MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES i
631 Oakland Ave. _ F E 4-4547 •
1964 PLYMOUTH
2-door hardtop, 426 Wedge which develops 500 horsepower, 4-speed transmission* mechanically perfect. !
$495 _______
See this; auto at our new location on Maple—R1188. Just $88 down, $48.65 per month._
JOHN McAULIFFE FORD
630 Oakland Ave._ _ FE 5 4101
1964 MERCURY SEDAN, $795. "0// down, payments $5.88 week
, paymi Turner Ford,
Ml
Harol
LOOK
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1962 CHEVY II 4-dr 4595. SS r.
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beautiful metallic lurquolse with * , _/ ... ' . .
black vinyl top 15,000 miles, vaTead Press Want Ads.
automatic, radio, heater, powe steering, brakes, mint Condition ;
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332-8181
'Mr.
CHBVY, 1900 W. Maple, Ml 4-2753.
FE 5 410
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MIRCURY COLONY. Park, $2195.' $39 down, payments $16.88 Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-75WTt
GOODWILL USED-CARS-
1967 PONTIAC 3-Septer WdQon
With power steering, power brakes, cruise control, luggage rack, gold and black finish. Come see this one-
42795—
1967 PONTIAC Bonneville
4 Door Hardtop, red with black cordova Top, power antenna, AM-FM radio, stereo tape, alum, wheels and hubs. Tilt wheel, EZ * glass, power steering, brakes, potaer seat and power windows.
___$3195 ___________z:
1967 PONTIAC
This unit Is lust about the same if Bonn#-ville next to this listing, except It has automatic, temp, control and air conditioning.
$3395
1966 TEMPEST Hardtop
LeMans with V9, automatic, power steering, brakes, buckets and console.
$1895
1966 GMC 1-Ton
Stake truck, good at only1 —
$1495
1965 CHEVY Hardtop
$1395
1965 TEMPEST Wagon
Automatic* sharp and Is a gas, saver. Only — 4 T
$1295
1968 PONTIAC Hardtop \
$2995
1964 PONTIAC Convert.
-Bonneville, red with black top. Automatic, power steering, brakes,
$1195
1964 PONTIAC Coup*
$1195
1964 PONTIAC Hardtop
BcmnsvIMs 4-door, V4, automatic, power steering, brakes.
$1095
igAA OtB/YLCm-uair..... ......... $ 95
1964 CHEVY Wagon ........................$395
1959 PLYMOUTH Sedan . . . ...............$195-
1964 FORD Sedan...... . .$ 595
1962 PONTIAC fcBoor ____________________$495
1968 PONTIAC Hardtop ...................$2995
4-door, power low mileage.
ON M24 LAKE' ORION
PONtlAC-RAMBlER Ask for SfOb Graves, Jim Bamowsky.
MY
3-6266
OPEN 9 TO 9
C—10
THE PONTIAC PRESS. TP ESI) A Y. MAY 21, ItHiR
. mm
Deaths in Pontiac,Nearby Areas
Bmeismprwwx!iwwKwrw*
Mrs. George Engel
Mrs. Delia Spencer
| shee Funeral Home In Hale i with burial Glennie.
Service for Mrs. George! Mrs. Wice died this morn- WALLED LAKE — Service (Florence J.) Engel, 67, of 30 ing. *' for Mrs, Delia Spencer, 87, of
Cadillac will be ip a m. Thurs- Surviving are three daugh* 1190 N. Eddie will be 1 p.m. day at Coats Funeral Home, ters, Mrs. Gertrude White of (Friday at Richardson - H i r d Waterford Township, w i t h [Pontiac, Mrs. Lina Cordell of Funeral Home with burial in burial in Lakeview Cemetery,!Rose City and Mrs. Jane South Lyon Cemetery, Lyon Clarkston. .Hughes of Oregon; three sons, I Township.
Mr* Fncol died vesterdav 0wen of clarkston’ Robert C. of j Mrs. Spencer died yesterday.
Mrs Engel d.ed yesterday. ipontjac flnd Reid with the Air! Survjvi are four daughters
Surviving are her husband; a p0rce in England; 25 Mrs Laura Profilt of Lyon daughter, Mrs. Hefty Cngger grandchildren; two sisters, Mrs. TownshiD Mrs Elizabeth of Waterford Township; four Artheal Barrager and Mrs Ruth p f|tt P, wixo Mrs Steila grandchildren; two great - Trlcker, both of POntiac; and Drake of Lvon T0wnship and grandchildren; and a sister. itwo- brothers, including Sidney Mrs. Edna Kess]” of [)etroit;
l of Pontiac.
! five sons, Tommie of Ohio; Elijah o f L,ake, Ova of Walled
, „„„ .. . ... . , OAKLAND TOWNSHIP - Lake, Courtney of Imoklee,
75, of 522 ftghland will be 1^.^ fQr Mrs Mabe, G Fla., and Emery of Wixom; 46
Mrs. Annie Evans
Service for Mrs. Annie Evans,
Mrs. Mabel G. Diliman
p.m. Thursday at St. John’s
Methodist Church with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery by the Davis-Cobb Funeral Home.
Mrs. Evans,
Diliman, 56. of 6000
N . grandchildren; 47 g r e a t - j Rochester will be 11 a m. •grandchildren; and eight great-Thursday at William R. Potere great-grandchildren.
Funeral Home, Rochester.!
a former Burial will be in Grand Lawn rirrett Tntl«rb employe ofCMC Truck & Coach Cemetery .Detroit, . Vjrren IOTIOCK
Division, died Friday. She was, Mrs. Dillman, formerly an BIRMINGHAM — Service for a member of the St. John s executive secretary with Orrett Tatlock, 83, of 444 Church. IGeneral Motors Corp., died Baldwin will be 10 a m. tomor-
Arms Curb Evedl RocRyGets ^ ^an ^eports
. D #. .. I Little Hair-ied 1 Home Is Looted
by Broomfield
U. N.
Toward Mideast Pact
GAINESVILLE. Fla. (API -1 items valued at more than A long-haired member of the $500 were stolen from a Pontiac D 1 ' c 1 . audience stood to attract the at-; man’s home, it was reported to
Parley oougnt tention of New York Gov. Nel-! city police yesterday.
son A. Rockefeller at a ques- Robert Golfer of 4 Rosshlre tton-and-answer session Monday told officers three air-con-at the University of Florida. ditioners, a bicycle and a wagon U S. Rep. William S Broom-! “That young lady over there,’’!were taken from a storage area field, R-18th District, today!Rockefeller said. The crowdlunder the front porch of his proposed that a United Nations-[looked and roared. ihome.
sponsored conference be con- HP sorry. Let’s start this; Investigatois vened to draft a nOn-over That young gentleman | no evidence of forcible entry to
proliferation treaty on con- over there. Rockefeller said. the area, weapons shipped
said there was
to:
Surviving are a sister, Lillie yesterday.
Belle Morrisette of Pontiac, and Surviving are two sisters, two brothers.
Mrs. Helen Greenawalt
Private service for former Pontiac resident Mrs, Helen M. Greenawalt, 61, of Arlington, Tex., was to have been this morning a t Donelson-Johns Funeral Home with burial in Greenwood Cemetery at Vernon.
Mrs. Greenawalt died Satur-
Conference on Planning Expects 400
row at St. James Episcopal Church. Burial will follow at Forest Hill Cemetery, Ann Arbor, by Manley Bailey Funeral Home.
Mr. Tatlock, a professor of chemistry at Wayne State University until his retirement' in 1955, died yesterday, He was a member of the Birmingham Senior Men’s Club.
Surviving are his wife, Alice; a daughter, Mrs. John W.
AP Wtrephofo
LITTLE SOLDIER—Too young to realize the seriousness of the occasion, 4-year-old -Frank Buysse of Worthington, Minn., with toy helmet and rifle, stands behind members of the Worthington'' Army Reserve's 452nd Support Company. The company went bn active duty last week and will report to Ft. Riley, Kan.
Site Rezoned | Deputy Foils Plot, to Okay Travel Finds Dope in Tube fTrailer Sales
pectedto^tendS*fanning Thomas of Sdh Lorenzo. Calif.; / /*G//6r 0Q/6S I HAMILTON, Ohio (API - A for Pnonip” pnnfprpnpp nf tho and three grandchildren. butler County deputy foiled
day. She was a member rf the 0akland Countv Planning Com. -------------------------- The rezoning of a parcel of ^ .Mond^ to "!** ■ ^
Pontiac and St. A1 b i n s Thursday3* 0akland Universlty Mi’S. David Thomas property on M-59 at Forest to ja^lsoner: er°ln ° 8
Episcopal Church in Arlington. | Some 50 experts in fields of AVON TOWNSHIP - Mrs. alIow the sal* ! Deputy Larry Costator
Surviving are two sons, Bruce [planning, goverment, 1 a w , David (Leota V.) Thomas, 1119 apP'?V®(1 as,\ °Hy e squeezed a tube of toothpaste
J. McLintock of Huntington housing and natural resources Harding, died this morning. Her , JLf °r, ®wns P a • and felt something inside. He Beach, Calif., and Richard G. will take part in presentations body is at Pixley Memorial .e. sie. ormer y a cut it open with a razor blade
ventional the Middle East
★ ★ it
Broomfield, a delegate from Congress to the United Nations, said in a House resolution that the conference would apply to all nations supplying arms to that area and would lirpit their military services.
★ * ★
“Increased shipments o f Soviet arms to the Arab states in recent weeks has cheated a regrettable imbalance in weaponry in the Middle EasrT” Broomfield said.
★ * ★
“We can t afford to sit back and watch this explosive situation deteriorate into another shooting war.”
FOLLOWS REPORT The resolution follows trp a report to the House Foreign Affairs Committee last year. In the report, Broomfield, who went to the Middle East as a special representative of the committee, recommended that * the administration take steps to | limit the arms buildup in the Middle East.
★ ★ ★ \
U S. Sen. Robert P. Griffin, R-Mich., was to introduce a similar resolution in the Senate today.
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Sofas • Chairs • Divan Beds Recliners* Chests • Dressers * Odd Beds • Box Springs Mattresses • Dinette Sets
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fill
£, AM.SALES
Mrs. Alice F. Tick
McLintock of New Orleans, La.; land seminars. Chapel, Rochester
six grandchildren; and a sister,! The conference is the fourth Mrs. William H. Gorsline of biennial meeting sponsored by Waterford Township. the planning commission in
[cooperation with OU’s Division BRANDON TOWNSHIP ________________
Willie J McGee of Continuing Education. Service for Mrs. Alice F. Tick,
j Registration will be at 8:30 33 of 3550 Granger wi„ be 1:30
Service for Willie J, .McGee, 31? Startiqgat 10 a.m., con- p m Thursday at Huntoon . 46, of 241 E. Wilson will be l current workshops will be held Funeral Home, Pontiac, with10 p.m. Thursday at Community !°".vari0“s fields of interest with b iai jn perry Mount Park Bible Baptist Church with others begmnmg at 1:30 P m Cemetery, Pontiac, burial in Perry Mount Park l30 pfmiU. 4_ . Mrs. Tick, formerly a
Cemetery by the Frank Car-ruthers Funeral Home.
Some of the subjects to be
covered are: metropolitan! member 0 f Congregational transportation system; new plat [Church of Pontiac, died ybster-Mr. McGee, an employe of iaWg- solid waste disposal; | day.
Pontiac Motor Division, died.UI-ban renewal; zoning laws;j Surviving are four daughters, May 9. [and preservation of natural I Mrs. Netanis Richards of
Surviving are his w i f e .[resources. i Waterford Township, Mrs.
Luverta; his mother of Hat-i Reservations and information Wilma Lewis of Tuscon, Ariz., tisburg, Miss.; three sons, on the conference can be ob- Mrs. Marjorie Copeman - of James E. of Detroit and Willie tained at the conference Fowlerville and Mrs. Gladys J. Jr. and Robert E., both of department at OU. Brondige of Pontiac; two sons
Pontiac; and two brothers.
used by a dairy products firm. !and found the needle in a baby * ★ ★ J nipple and heroin in wax paper.
The reclassification of the John Warford. 25, of Hamil-property was requested by Jack ton, wa? charged with posses-
Waterford Township. dermic needle.
The transfer of a liquoF ----------------——-------tj
license-from Felicity J. Wyrick far .
EdwartT Mcrntyre of 2564 heart Recipient
Premont, Pontiac, for t h e — .
operation of the Five Spot Bar.;_r-lOyS OOCCGT
at 2585 Dixie, also was approved by the board.
Counterfeiting increased 13 per cent in the last year, with more than $10 m i 11 i 0 n in | counterfeit money recovered. _
SERVICE
OPEN MONDAY ft FRIDAY EVENINGS Til, 9 P.M.
Reatonabl* 2fl I i i,
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• BLACK ft WHITE
ANTENNA INSTALLATIONS UHF • VHF
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RADIO ft APPLIANCE
SWEET’S 422 Wait Huron FE 4-5677
CAPE TOWN, South Africa (UPI) —v Dr. Philip Blaiberg tossed a soccer ball around yesterday, less than five months after he was given a new heart in the world’s first successful heart transplant "This it the finest morning of The Waterford Township mv sa*^ Blaiberg. Blai-
Police Department now i s ber8’ with members
Waterford Police Get Breathalyzer
7 T equipped with a breathalyzer f Cape Town’s rugby football Donald of Waterford Township tegt whether drivers team, the Lions.
Vinyl is Final
■■■
period
(it belongs on your house!)
Mrs. Walter Wice
I.) Wice, 72, of Glennie will be instead of the origina 1:30 p.m. Thursday at the Flor- scheduled June. 4.
Four sergeants have com-
With the help of computers, scientists and linguists expect
pleted training and are able to tQ haye (he ancjent Mayan lan
Sign-Up Is Reset and Date oLOrtonville: a s1Ster^ are drunk Mrs. Nicy Gavette of Waterford Pontiac’s Irving School will Township; 10 grandchildren;
Service for former Pontiac hold its kindergarten roundup and seven great-grandchildren. , . . . .. . . Th
resident Mrs. Walter (Martha from 1 to 3 p.m. next Tuesday ----------------- Ra™ Wilhelm Alton Dowd 8ua§e deciphered by 1972
A . . i,,i Richard Finkbeiner and Robert
Area Junior High Reynolds.
. . The breathalyzer was in-
Scheaules Coreer Stalled yesterday.
People in the News I DayforTomorrovv
By The Associated Press
Actor Elliot Gould, the husband of singer Barbra Streisand, was fined $795 for 63 unpaid parking tickets in New York traffic court yesterday.
He was accused of haying 98 unpaid tickets after his car was found illegally parked outside his home last month. However, he said in his court appearance that he had paid 35 of them.
Heart Surgeon Named Baylor Veep
Dr. Michael DeBakey, Internationally known heart surgeon, is (be new vice president for medical affairs at Baylor University College of Medicine, Houston, Tex.
DeBakey, elected yesterday by the college’s board of trustees, also was named chief executive officer of the college of medicine.
The 60-year-old cardiovascular surgeon will remain chairman of the department of surgery, a position he has held since 1948.
DeBakey’s election was unanimously approved by a 70-member faculty academic council. •
Critics, Editors Honor Helen Hayes
The New York Drama Desk’s first award for the best performance by a player in a repertory company has gone to Helen Hayes, who is appearing in the APA-Phoenix Repertory revival of "The Show-Off.”
The Drama Desk, composed Of more
than—tOd drama erities and editors,___am
nounced vesterdav a number of awards for "outstanding achievement in the Off-Broadway theater” for the -1967-68 season.
Tomorrow will be no ordinary day at Jefferson Junior High 'School. Students will take a look at their futures.
It’s the school’s second annual career day, held this year in conjunction I with M i>c h i g a n ~WeelL
it it It
A score of professional people will be on hand to answer questions and to exhibit displays.
They include a nurse, occupational therapist, insurance consultant, social worker,; mortician. X-ray specialist, doctor, police officer, lawyer, bank teller and designer.
t Viet Injury Fatal
Marine Pfc. Leslie G. Aputen recently died of wounds suffered in combat in Vietnam. He is the son of Mrs. Ruth N. Aputen of 471 Going
Police Action
Pontiac police officers and Oakland County sheriff’s deputies investigated 86 reported incidents and made six arrests the past 24 hours.
A breakdown of causes for police action: Vandalisms—9 Burglaries—10 Larcenies—12 Auto thefts—2 Bicycle thefts—2 Disorderly persons—3 Assaults—3 Shopliftings—1 Armed robberies—1 Obscene phone calls—2 Indecent exposures—1 Traffic offenses—22 Property damage accidents—12
Injury accidents—6
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Prime Minister Stoned in Belfast
A jeering crowd- ^f demonstrators hurled eggg, gUmes^
and bags of flour at Northern Ireland’s Prime Minister Terence O’Neill during an appearance lakt night in Belfast.
O’Neill was unhurt. He had been speaking before a Conservative party meeting in a strongly Protestant district of the Northern Ireland capital.
— Carrying placards saying “O’Neill Must Go;”.the dem-’ onstrators surrounded the prime minister’s car and battled with police protecting him.
Anti-Catholics have denounced O’Neill for his efforts to rcepneile differences with Dublin by exchanging visits with the republic's prime minister, Jack Lynch. ,...... -
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The cost of funerals is hot o matter of concern to some but for mqny it ts. We otways have avotf^ able for selection different services, in a wide range of prices.
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PRINT NAME
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY1, MAY 21,*10fl8
Damages Won After 14 Years in Mental Hospital
NEW YORK (AP) - A man who spent 14 years at Mattea-wan State Hospital for the Criminally Insane has been awarded $300,000 In damagse for being subjected to what the Judge called "brutal and callous" treatment at the hospital.
In a 28-page opinion delivered Monday, Judge Henry W. Leng-yel also asserted that Victor J. - Whitree, 69, did not receive "meaningful psychiatric care" during his incarceration.
★ * *
Lengyel said Whitree spent 11 years more in the hospital than the maximum sentence for his crime.
Whitree, a former chef, plead-ed guilty of second-degree assault in a 1945 stabbing and was given a suspended sentence. He was later arrested for parole violation and ordered to Mattea-wan in May 1947, as a paranoid and chronic alcoholic. The maximum sentence for assault is three years.
* * *
He filed the claim against the state after his release from Matteawan in September 1961. Wbitree’s lawyer said the award Was the highest ever made in such a case.
PONTIAC’S
F-l-R-S-T
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Across From Kroger Super Market____________
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OLD WINDOWS With Solid
INSULATED VINYL WINDOWS WEEDON’S 334-2697
, —Television Programs—
Programs furnished by stations listed In this column aro subject to change without notice
C~11
Chonnoln 2-WJSK-TV, 4-WWJ-TV, 7-WXYZ-TV, 9-CKLW-TV. flO-WKSD-TV. 8A-WTVS
TUESDAY NIGHT
•:00 (2) (4) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports
(9) R — Dennis the Menace
(50) R C — Flints tones (56) Friendly Giant •:15 (56) Sing Hi—Sing Lo 8:30 (2) C — News—Cron-kite
(4) C = News — Huntley, Brinkley
(9) R - F Troop (50) R — McHale’s Navy (56) R - What’s New 7:00 (2) C — Truth or Consequences (4) C — News, Weather, Sports
(7) C — News — Young (9) R — Movie: “Lord of the Flies” (1963) Story of deterioration of group of English schoolboys stranded on uninhabited island. James Aubrey, Tom Chapin.
(50) R — Munsters (56) Spectrum — A Japanese report on lung cancer
7:30 (2) R C — Daktari -Judy digs up fugitive’s stolen loot and, as a consequence, implicates Wameru staff.
(4) R C — I Dream of Jeannie — Astronauts try to keep Dr. Bellows from X-raying Jeannie’s head. (7) R C — Garrison’s. Gorillas — The gorillas must puli two rescues.
(50) R — I Love Lucy 8:00 (4) R C - Jerry Lewis
- — Guests are Connie Stevens and Dick Shawn. (50) R - Hazel
(56) Book Beat 8:30 (2) R C — Good Morning, World — DJs relive first days on job.
(7) R C — It Takes a Thief — Mundy attempts to get bugged art forgery into headquarters of Latin dictator. Fernando Lamas guests.
(50) R — Honeymooners (58) Face of Sweden — “The Organized Society” 8:85 (9) C — News 9:89 (2) C — Baseball:
- Detroit at Minnesota
(4) R — Movie: “Pressure Point” (1962) Psy-chiatist is assigned to help an American Nazi imprisoned during World War II for his subversive work with the German-American Bund. Sidney Poitier, Bobby Darin, Peter Falk.
(9) C — (Special) Survival — Kenya wildlife preserve is explored.
(50) R — Perry Mason (56) Dog’s Life 9:30 (7) R C — N.Y.P.D. -TV newcaster thwarts police and risks life to get interview with fugitive murderer.
(9) (Special) Jazz 625 — Cannonball Adderly and his sextet perform.
(56) R — A Winter’s Tale 10:00 (7) R C — Invaders — David tries to convince defense expert that his wife may be an alien.
(9) Newsmagazine (50) C — Les Crane 10:30 (9) Public Eye (56) Young American Musicians
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TV Features
BASEBALL, 9 p.m. (2) SURVIVAL, 9 p.m. (9) JAZZ 828, 9:36 p.m. (9)
11:00 (4) (7) (9) C - News, Weather Sports (50) R C - Movie: “Planet of Blood" (1966) Space crew searches for e x traterritorial beings. John Saxon, Basil Rathbone.
11:30 (2) C-News, Weather, Sports
(4) C — Johnny Carson (7) C — Joey Bishop (9) R — Movie: “Seven Days to Noon” (1950) Physicist threatens t o destroy London unless government stops pro-duction o f superbomb. Barry Jones.
12:00 (2) R C - Movie: “Buchenan Rides Alone” (1958) Texas advienturer tries to prevent hanging of Mexican boy. Randolph Scott, Craig Stevens 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) News
(9) Window on the World 1:30 (2) C — Capture (4) C — PDQ
2:80 (2) R - Highway
Patrol
2:30 (2) C - News,
FINEST LOCAL CONTRACTOR
Weather
WEDNESDAY MORNING
5:45 (2) On the Farm Scene 5:50 (2) C - News 6:00 (2) C — Summer Semester (4) Classroom
8:30 (2) C — Woodrow the Woodsman (4) C- Ed Allen 7:80 (4) C-Today (7) € — Morning Show 7:39(2) C - Captain Kangaroo
7:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round
8:00 (9) R-Upside Town 8:30 (2) R- Mister Ed (7) R - Movie: “In Old Chicago," Part 2.
(9) C — Bonnie Prudden 9:00 (2) C — Merv Griffin (4) C-Steve Alien 8:05 (56) All Aboard f o r Reading
9:25 (56) Of Cabbages and JKingg
9:50 (58) Art Lesson 10:00 (56) C—Snap Judgment (7) C — Virginia Graham (9) Mr. Dressup 10:05 (56) Reason and Read 10:20 (56) Science Is Discovery
10:25 (4) C-News 10:30 (2) R C - Beverly Hillbillies
(4) C — Concentration (7) C - Dick Cavett (9) Friendly Giant (50) C — Jack La Lanne 16:35 (56) Children’s Hour 10:45 (9) R-Hawkeye 10:50 (56) Spanish Lesson 11:00 (2) R . J- Andy of Maybgrry
(4) C — Personality (50) C-Kimba 11:11 (9) Canadian; Schools 11:301(2) R - Dick Van Dyke
(4) C — Ho 11 y wood Squares
(50) R — Little Rascals 11:45 (9) Chez Helene 11:50 (56) Modem Math for Parents
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON
12:00 (2) (4) C - News, Weather, Sports (7) R - Bewitched (9) Take 30
12:25 (2) C - Fashions
12:30 (2) C - Search for Tomorrow (4) C — Eye Guess (7) C — Treasure Isle
(9) R — Movie: “Man With a Million” (English, \ 1954) Gregory Peck (50) R - Movie: “Affectionately Yours” (1941) Merle Oberon, Dennis Morgan
(58) Spanish Lesson 12:45 (2) C-Guiding Light 12:50 (58) All Aboard for Reading
12:55 (4) C — News 1:00 (2) C - Love of Life (4) C — Match Game (7) C — Dream House 1:10 (56) Children's Hour 1:25 (2) C-News (4) C — Carol Duvall (56) Reason and Read 1:30 (2) C - As the World Turns
(4) C — Let's Make a Deal
(7) C — Wedding Party 1:40 (56) Art Lesson 1:55 (56) Of Cabbages and Kings J
2:00 (2) C - Love Is A Many Splendored Thing (4) C — Days of Our Lives
(7) e “- Newlywed Game 2:30 (2) C - House Party (4) C — Doctors (7) C — Baby Game (50) R — Make Room for Daddy
(58) Interlude
2:55 (7) C — Children’s Doctor
3:08 (2) C — Divorce Court (4) C — Another World (7) C — General Hospital (9) C — Pat Boone (50) R C - To Tell the Truth
(56) Consultation 3:25 (50) C-News 3:30 (2) C - Edge of Night (4) C —You Don’t Say (7) C — Dark Shadows (50) C — Captain Detroit (56) Memo to Teachers 4:00 (2) C— Secret Storm (4) C — Woody Woodbury (7) C—DatingGame (9) C — Swingin’ Time (56) Management 4:30 (2) C - Mike Douglas (7) R - Movie: “My Favorite Spy” (1951) Bob Hope, Hedy Lamarr (50) Three Stooges (56) What’s New 5(80 (9) C-Bozo (50) R — Little Rascals (56) Misterogers 5:30 (4) C — George Pierrot
(9) C — Fun House (50) R — Superman (56) TV Kindergarten
Olio
Amuof to FrovtoM Punk
ACROSS 1 Coffee ——
5 Help
8 Potty quarrel
12 Sea flyer
13 Depot (ab.)
14 Story
hr
Pork prong 10 Doctrine
17 Modem Peril*1
18 Full-grown 20 Given to
wandering 22 Rigid 24 Furious storm
28 Select part, as of society
33 Greek theaters
34 Above.
89 Deep holes
36 Hindu queen
37 Lets it stand 30 Items added 42 Bashful
(dial1.) -44 Conductor 48 Breakfast
item
S3 Poker stake
94 Consume food I j
66 Too
97 Pace
58 Blood money
60 Drinks In small quantities
60 Dispatched
61 Pitch
62 Essential being
DOWN
1 Wagers
2 Iroquoian Indian
3 British princess
4 Require
5 Stage whispers
6 Possessive pronoun
7 Knights’ wives
* Mix
8 Brazilian state
wweirai
10 Wolfhound
11 Canvas shelter
10 Summer >*-WWJ, Top ay In *#• view, Emphnu III*—WWJ, New., Sport.Une wpon, New., Jehu irons WJBK, Nawi, Tom Doon WCAR, NOwi, Rick Stewart MfeW, Tom Stteonon
TjH-WKYI, News, Obvg
____Luttthin ____________-
WJR, Rootonor ROporl, Fan*
‘ fart
Till—WJR, Choral Cavalcade 7:15 WJR, It'a Sport* Tima
„ —.....jfniOR
tiM—WHFI, Tom Colomon CKLW, Mark Richard. WJR, Ntwa, Dlmtnalon— •its—WJR, Panorama •'JJ-W-jS. Campolon -it 4»M—WJR, Ponoromo •t «l-wj R, fgjor Boot lljf-Wjtf Tloor BOMMII ISiM-WWJ. World Nowo lOiAl—WWJ,—SportaL Ino Iltie-WWJ, Nawi, Sport.
WJR, Nawi, Sportt ]titt-WWJ, SPOrttLIno ltiM-wWj, Death Notice. Ilitt-WJR, Score. - J|j Util—WWJ, Overnight WJR, Mutlc Til Dawn lltM-WJlK, Nighttime - WXVt, -Nowti Johnny Ron-doll
CKLW, Frink Brodlo WCAR, Newt, Woyno Phillip.
WKDNHDAY MORNINO AllO—WJR, Musk Hill WWJ. NOWO
WCAR. NOWO. Sill Oa-lloll WXYZ, Now Martin Si Howard
Nom, Artiono Walton
AiSO—WWJ. Morris Carl.on TtW-WHPi, Oorv Puraca WPON, Nowo, Am King ItM WIR, Now., Sunnyaldf It SO—WJR, Nowo, MuilC Hill tiM-WJR, Nawa, Jack Har-rte——
CKLW, Gory Mitchell whfi, uncto Jay v , WWJ, Nawa, A.k Yaw1
WJBK, Nowo, Conrad Patrick
WJR, Nowo, Mutlc WCAR, Rod Millar WPON, Now*, Jerry whitman
ttiOS^WJUj—Nawa,—Keteldo-
WPNBODAY APfRUOetr-13:00—WJR, Nawa, Farm WWJ, NOWO, Review CKLW, Jim Edwarda tfiSO-WWJ, Marty McNealay ItM-WJR, Nawi, Arthur Oodfray
ItM—WPON, Nawa, Pat Appolaen
WHFI, BUI Lynth WXYZ, Nowo, GOV* Frlnca WJR, Nawa, Dimension
VtlS—WJR. Muilc Hall----
ItM—WCAR, Now., Ron Raaa CKLW, Mika River.
WJBK, Hank O'Nall
rupees. A miracle has been worked. With no money we have produced 10 wells.’.’
Father Ferrer has helped his parishioners in many other j ways. And so has another: Jesuit, Father Hugh Costigan, a very impressive 54-year-old ex-New Yorker who has spent 20 years serving people’s needs in Micronesia, in the South Pacific.
DOWN-TO-EARTH . A down-to-earth fellow, Father Costigan’s chief efforts were to give his parishioners a sense of dignity, usefulness and community cooperation. And ■the way—he—succeeded was graphically chronicled in the exceptionally fine opening sequence about the emergence of Micronesia into more modern ways. His closeness to the people illustrated the program’s point with impact.
* * *
The sequence of Father Ferrer and Father Costigan were the most impressive of the three sections in the hour.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 21, 1968
French Student-Labor Crisis Explained
BUY, SELL, TRADE - - - USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! | being prepared for careers in
Associated PressWriter PARIS (AP) - Here in question and answer form is an explanation of the French student-worker crisis, a period of turmoil Parisians are calling ‘The Days in May.”
Q. When and how did it all start?
A. Student agitation on a small scale has been common in France since World War II. In recent years complaints have centered on jammed lecture rooms and lack of teachers. ! 4
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Located on Golf Drive — Next to the Golf Course
Grant for Center
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Department of Housing and Urban Development Monday granted an additional $38,899 for the Arthur Lesow Community Center in Monroe. The total award now is $221,680.
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The Weather
U. a. WMttMf BurlHI firitut
Partly Cloudy
IDtlalU Pit* I)
VOL. 120 — NO. 00
Waterford Will Appeal Ruling onLongerTerms
An Oakland County Circuit Court ruling that declared a state law extending the terms of incumbent township officers as unconstitutional will be appealed by the Waterford Township Board.
The board approved the action in a 5 to 1 vote at its regular weekly meeting last night.
Township Attorney Calvin E. Patterson said he was ready to file an appeal later
Related Story, Page C-10
this week with the Michigan Court of Appeals.
* ★ *
Because of the importance of the public question and the lack of time for candidates to file nominating petitions, Patterson said he also would request that the Supreme Court immediately consider the issue. June 18 is the-deadline for filing nominating petitions.
THE
PONTIAC PRji
THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 21, 1008
-30 PAGES ■ UNIT,»m>M*i
Harriman Talks to French Leader
PARIS (AP) — Ambassador W. Averell Harriman conferred with Charles de Gaulle today amid increasing speculation that other powers may intervene with North Vietnam and the United States to assist Vietnamese peace negotiations.
Emerging from Elysee Palace, Harriman trated his visit purely as a courtesy call, saying he had thanked the French president for his hospitality to the American negotiating team. But U.S. officials believe that at some point de Gaulle may have an important role to play in encouraging accords to end the war.
★ w ★
North Vietnamese negotiator Xuan Thuy was scheduled to see de Gaulle later in the day.
A spokesman for Thuy slightly expanded Hanoi’s public statements on how the next phase of the negotiat'ons may
develop —if the preseqt first phase succeeds.
WOULD BE PREPARED Nguyen Thanh Le told a news conference that if the United States ends the bombing and other attacks on North Vietnam his government would be prepared to discuss a political settlement for Vietnam based on the 1954 Geneva accords. Those accords ended the French-Indochina war and set up the division of Vietnam.
★ ★ ★
In the past the North Vietnamese position has been expressed as readiness to talk on problems of concern to the United States and North Vietnam once the U.S. attacks ended. Today he said they could discuss “questions relative to a political settlement of the Vietnamese problem, on the basis of the 1954 Geneva accords.
* ★ ★
STRUCK DOWN ACTION
Circuit Judge William J. Beer struck' down the legislative action on May 6 after three Waterford Township residents filed suit against Township Clerk Arthur J. Salley for not accepting their nominating peitions.
Salley refused the petitions on the grounds that the Legislature, in extending the terms of those in office, had canceled any elections this year for township offices.
★ * *
The state statute was designed to eliminate the lame duck period affecting township officers who were elected in November but do not assume office until the following April.
Under the provision of the law, township officers elected in 1966 would continue in office until Nov. 20, 1970, 18 months longer than the terms to which they were elected.
Beer ruled that the law deprived persons from running for office and denied the right of voters to fill the offices with whom they wanted.
Township Supervisor Elmer R. Johnson said that if Judge Beer’s decision is affirmed, he and other members of the board affected by the ruling, will pay for the cost of the appeal.
(Continued on Page A-2, Col. 5)
Pontiic Priu Plwti
GREETINGS—Ypsilanti officials were Mayor Pro Tern T. Warren Fowler Sr. morning to begin Mayors Exchange Day.
greeted by Pontiac ings and conversation are (from left) Ypsilanti Mayor Pro
(right) yesterday Tern Vaughn E. Filsinger, Ypsilanti Mayor John H. Burton,
Exchanging greet- and Fowler.
In Today's Press
! Wrong Kennedy McCarthy comes a brother away from one of his primary | foes - PAGE B-10.
I* - Ambulances
Emergency case are only part of routine — PAGE B-9.
Indonesia
j Government reports that plot
i to kill president, 19 others has been foiled — PAGE B-5.
* Area News .................A-4
| Astrology .................B-8
| Bridge .................. B-8
| Crossword Puzzle ........ C-ll
| Comics'................... B-8
Editorials ..............A-6
Education Series .......B-12
High School...........C-l, C-2
Markets ................B-ll
Obituaries .............C-10
Sports ..........f..... B-l-r-B-?
Theaters ..........;.B-lt#g
TV and Radio Programs . C-ll | Vietnam War News .... .,. B-ll I
Wilson, Earl .......... B*tt 1
Women's Pages . . . .. .A-l—A-ll 1
Visiting Mayor Points to Parallel
Pontiac, Ypsi Problems Alike
By BOB WISLER
Two major problems which continue to plague Pontiac — housing and finances for city government — also are the bane of Ypsilanti, visiting Mayor John H. Burton revealed yesterday.
Burton and Ypsilanti Mayor Pro Tem Vaughn E. Filsinger toured Pontiac and exchanged information with city officials during Mayors Exchange Day, a regular feature of Michigan Week. The Ypsilanti officials were accompanied by their wives.
★ ★ ★
The other part of the exchange — The visit of Pontiac Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. to Ypsilanti)— was cut short by the sudden illness of Baylor’s mother-in-law.
Taylor, alter being greeted in Ypsilanti and getting! part-way through a tour of
Sunday Liquor Bill Revived in Senate
LANSING (AP)—Sale of liquor on. Sunday — a proposal defeated earlier this session — emerged again last night as the Senate approved an amendment permitting counties to decide the controversial question.
Senate Majority Leader ,,Em i I Lockwood, R-St. Louis, tacked the proposal on a bill requiring the Liquor Control Commission to notify county prosecutors of liquor violations' by minors. The bill was advanced to final voting stage.
★ ★ ★
Lockwood’s amendment, defeated once this session, permits counties to conduct a referendum to decide whether to sell liquor on Sunday.
If approved by a majority of voters, liquor would be sold‘by establishments whose gross receipts from sale of food and other services exceed 50 per cent of their total business.
RALPH T. NORVELL
PAUF Names Division Head
Eastern Michigan University, was informed of the illness about 11 a.m. He left immediately with his wife for Canada where her mother lives.
EVENTS CANCELED
The remainder of the scheduled activities in Ypsilanti were canceled by Ypsilanti officials.
Burton, one of Michigan’s three Negro mayors (the others are at FUnt and Saginaw), was elected mayor of his city by fellow councilmen this spring. He is entering his 20th year as either a city councilman or alderman for Ypsilanti and is the first Negro to serve as mayor of thaLcity. ... ^
W ★ ★»
He said he was enthused by a number of steps being taken in Pontiac — crea-
A Pontiac man, Ralph T. Norvell, president of the Austin-Norvell Insurance Agency, will ‘ head the commercial division of the 1968 Pontiac Area United Fund campaign.
Norvell’s appointment was announced today by Alger V. Conner, general campaign chairman.
WWW
The Commercial Division will require the 1 services of approximately 700 volunteers this year to cover government, education, the professions and business firms in the area.
Last year Daniel T. Murphy of the Oakland County Board of Auditors led the commercial division which raised
25.8 per cent of the $1,030,000 total used to support the 55 agencies within the PAUF.
CIVIC WORKER
Norvell, who has been active with PA!UF for six years, was president of the Pontiac Jaycees ip 1949 and president of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce in 1955. /
H« is vice president of Boys’ Club of Pontlaic, treasurer of Independent Insurance Agents of Michigan, and a charter member lay advisory board of St Joseph Mercy Hospital.
★ * * \ 5
.Norvell of 70 W. Lawrence, was named Pbntiace Outstanding Young Man of the Yehr in 1950 and Boss of the Year in 1968 by the American Business Women's Association.
U
Novi Cityhood OK'd by Voters
The third attempt to get voter approval for first-class cityhood in Novi Village was successful yesterday.'
The vote was 694 to 498 out of 2,257 registered voters.
Voters also elected nine of a field of 14 candidates for the charter commission.
To serve are Raymond Evans with 569 votes; Joseph Crupi, 516; William L. Duey, 533; Denis Berry, 513; Russell Button, 507; William D. Brinker, 499; Edwin Presnell, 497; J. F. Buck, 479; and David S. Harrison, 476.
OTHER VOTES
The other candidates and votes received: Leo Harrawood, 465; Laveme DeWaard, 431; Mrs. Dorothy Farrah, 395; James S. Cherfoli, 395; and Edward Vahlbusch, 388.
By law, the commission must meet within 10 days and select a chairman. It has two years to present voters with a charter.
★ * ★
The election results have been certified by the village clerk and will be reviewed by the village convassing board tonight.
Residents defeated first-class cityhood in 1959, soon after the village’s incorporation, and again in 1962.
Partial Cloudiness Forecast for Area
Partly cloudy skies are forecast for tonight and tomorrow, but the weatherman reports no showers are in sight.
Sunshine will dominate the Pontiac area Thursday with temperatures a little warmer.
Low reading In dpwntqwn Pontiac / The Iqw is expected to dip near 38 to 44 tonight, the high will reach the mid-60s tomorrow.
★ ★ *
Morning west-to-northwest winds at eight to 18 miles per hour will become five to 12 miles tonight.
LOW OF 44
There’s a 20 per cent cliance of precipitation today.
Low reading In downtown Pontiac before 8 a.m. was 44, the mercury had climbed to 63 at 12:30 p.m. '
tion of a downtown parking mall, construction of low-cost housing, and attempts to renovate the downtown area through urban renewal.
Burton said the problems of Ypsilanti are similar to those of Pontiac and are typical of most urban communities in the United States.
Ypsilanti is a town of 25,000 residents, of which about 25 per cent are Negro. It is the site of a number of manufacturing plants and Eastern Michigan University, which this year has an enrollment of approximately 14,000 students.
Burton said Ypsilanti has had an urban-renewal program which has been marked by lack of success and legal difficulties. Burton said the city is on the right track now;.
w ★ ♦
Ypsilanti’s urban renewal project is one of residential housing development.
About 120 new houses have been constructed for low-income residents and the city is building another 102 units. There are plans for a high-rise development for senior citizens, Burton said.
INTEREST IN HOUSING
Burton said he was especially interested in the Pontiac programs for construction of 221d3 housing (federally financed housing by a private developer limited to persons of low and medium income).
Burton said adequate financing for city programs is a definite problem even though Ypsilanti can levy up to 20 mills per thousand dollars of valuation against property (compared to the 10-mill levy (Continued on- Page A-2, Col. 4)
98 Passengers Flee Ship Fire
LONDOND
wler Sr. hosted the guests and city officfials at his home before the group left for a dinner at Kingsley Inn in Bloomfield Hills to conclude the exchange.
Mart Gets Probation 9 in Death of His Wife
A 35-year-old Pontiac man was placed on two-year probation yesterday in the fatal shooting of his wife last September
The sentence was imposed on Otto Tyson, 296 Crystal Lake, by Oakland County Circuit Judge Farrell E. Roberts. * * *
Tyson had pleaded guilty; to manslaughter April 9 in the death of his 32-yjar-old wife, Irma. He had been charged *vith the more serious offense of second-degree murder.
The Sept. 2 shooting occurred tin the Tyson’s home during an argument between the couple.
it it it
The Tyson’s 14-year-old daughter told police that she sawjierfather aiming the revolver at her motherTShe said-lhaLahe_ attempted to grab her father’s arm but was unable to prevent the shooting.
Waterford to Appeal Ruling on Long Terms
(Continued From Page One) *
“We would not want it said that public money had been spent to protect our jobs,” Johnson said.
He said, however, that if the law is declared constitutional, it should be considered a normal expenditure of the township.
Objecting to the township paying any legal fees to appeal was Patrick K. Daly, one of the three . residents who - had challenged the statute.
6
Birmingham
Talks Slated on Transfer of Robbish
BIRMINGHAM — The City Commission last night set a formal date of June 10 for discussion of the Southeast Oakland County Incinerator Authority’s proposed rubbish transfer.
The commission received a report from the transfer station study committee, but took no action because it had previously pledged to notify two home owners’ associations prior to a decision.
* * *
The two groups, the Sheffield Estates and Pembroke Manor civic associations, have objected to the sale of city-owned property on Collidge north of 14 Mile in Troy for a site for the station.
The commission also approved the rezonlng of four lots in the south Woodward area to the city’s new R-8 row or town-house classification.
REQUEST OKAYED°
Also okayed was a request from Charles Edwards Post No. 14 of the . American Legion in the amount of $150 to defray costs of grave flags and a memorial wreath for the city’s Memorial Day observances.
In other business, the commission appointed members of the newly-formed Board of Building Trades, to hear ap-. peals on permit regulations and problems.
★ ★ ★
The board was created a week ago on the recommendation of building official Harold C. Weber.
New members are Fred M. Harley, architect; Gordon E. Hoyem, mechanical engineer; Ross Pierce, electrical contractor; Gordon C. Johnston, plumbing contractor; Jack Sights, heating contractor; and Donald Worsley, refrigeration contractor.
BLOOMFIELD HILLS — A forum of community leaders will close out the “Focus Summer Hope” series In the school auditorium of St. Hugo of the Hills Elementary School, 380 E. Hickory Grove.
The discussion, to begin at 8 p.m., will be entitled “What You Can Do” and will center around actions which individual citizens can take to help solve urban problems.
★ ★ ★
The panel will include Mrs. Richard V. Oxford, 727 Robinhood, B 1 o o m f i e 1 d Township; Harry Peterson, 655 N. Cran-brook, Birmingham; Ed Rivas, director of the Oakland County Commission on Equal Opportunity (OCCEO); Tom Rosenthal of Pontiac, Eastern Community school director; Mrs. Philip Goetzman of Operation Head Start; Robert Sanchez, a Pontiac post-office employe who is tutoring underprivileged persons for civil service examinations in a government-sponsored program; and Rev. Sister Denise, who is presently working for open housing in Detroit.
The public may attend and participate in the general discussion.
. BIRMINGHAM - “A New Look at the Metropolitan Region” will be the topic discussed by William T. Patrick, executive director of the New Detroit Committee, at the annual meeting of the Birmingham-Bloomfield Council of Human Relations Sunday.
The meeting, to begin at 7 p.m., will be held at the First Baptist Church of Birmingham, 300 Willits.
★ ♦ ■ ★
In addition to his work with the New Detroit Committee, Patrick is chairman of the Wayne County Planning Commission. He is on leave from his position as assistant general attorney for the Michigan Bell Telephone Co.
The talk will be informal and will be followed by a question-and-answer period. The public may attend.
BLOOMFIELD HILLS — The board of education will not meet tonight as reguarly scheduled. Instead, a meeting will be held Tuesday, May 28, at 8 p.m.
City to Consider Wording of Ballot
City commissioners tonight will consider a resolution approving the wording of the June 24 referendum ballot on the city’s open housing ordinance. The meeting is set for 6 p.m. at City Hall.
The ordinance was adopted by the City Commission early this year. It never went into effect because referendum pe-tltions-Jorced an election on the ordinance. ~ *' ,
---— """ ....it. it
The ballot Tikety—wHJ contain the designations, “for the ordinance” and “against the ordinance” with the voter being able to choose one.
In other business, the commission is scheduled to consider a proposal to sell a city-owned site at Featherstone and East Boulevard for construction of a nursing home.
'U.S. Spread Too Thin'
SAN FRANCISCO Bernstein; 164—* James A. Stephenson, John Jawor, Paul- E. Thomas, Sal Pomante Sr., Ronald Yorick, Curtis Reynolds, Walter Laskey; 165—Tom Kretzschmar; 166 —Jack Corbett; 167 —•William Dickens.
.169 — John Chester; 170 —William Peck, Walter Kerchenush, William Long; 171—Bill Tombros, James Dewling; 172—Ronald Adkins, Keith Fox, •Chuck Sturm; 173 —Robert E. Phifer; 174 —Warren S. Bauer; 175 —Jerry Holmqulst, Donald McIntyre; 177—•Charles Cameronr 186—•Dick Warren.
Withdrew—Reggie Sauger, Warren Orlick, •William Newcomb, •Calvin Cooke, Earl Myers, •Richard Fox, Ben Johnson.
No Card—Bob Healy 85; Mark A. Atherhold 85; Thomas L. Odor 8Q; Ty Damon 78; Mel E. Mzhick-teno 82; Paut R. Sinelll 84; E. Ben Davis, •Lloyd Syron 78, Alex Redmond 85, Reggie Myles Jr, 81.
Did Not Start—•William Rambo, Tom Dolan, Max Evans, ‘Robert Nailer, Joseph Thacker, Eldon Briggs, ‘Barry Solomon, Joseph Newton, *Ted Kuzma.
Birmingham and Tim Kilpelainen of Western Michigan.
k k k
Three pros bunched at 148 were Stan Brlon of Tam O’Shanter, David M. Dunn of Holland, O., and Gene Bone of Bay Polnte Golf Club.
FOURTH MEDAL'
For the 35-year-old Stevens, it was the fourth time he’s bagged medalist honors In the ‘Local’ phase of the qualifying.
At the sectional, Stevens will be trying for his fourth trip to the U. S. Open. He made it in 1961, ’65 and ’66. He failed by i a couple of shots in the ‘local’ qualifying last year.
k k k
Stevens’ steady round included four birdies and a quartet of bogies. He matched par-72 over Indianwood’s hilly 6,904 yards in the morning round and stayed at an even-par 71 over the 6,405-yard Forest Lake layout in the afternoon. !
The cutoff came at 152 and seven players had to battle in a playoff for four spots.
WIN IN PLAYOFF
Picking Up the berths with birdies on the first hole of the playoff were Dick Brooks of Orchard Lake, Richard Doyon of Fenton, Dick Bury of Birmingham and Kilpelainen, a junior at WMU.
Bone, former Michigan Open and PGA champ, had his tee-to-green game working but seven three-putt greens pushed him well off Stevens’ pace.
BOOIS BENGAL’S BOUNCER — Minnesota third sacker Rich Rollins (left) circles back to pick up ground ball he dropped off the bat of Detroit Tiger hitter Willie Horton in the fourth inning last night at Bloomington, Minn. The error prolonged a rally, enabling the Tigers to cut a 3-1 Twin lead to 3-2. Shortstop Cesar Tovar backs up Rollins. Two more errors in the 10th inning handed the Tigers a 4-3 triumph.
THE PONTIAC PRESS
TUESDAY. MAY 21, 19«8 B—I
mis
Central Announces New Cage Coaches
Pontiac Central’s varsity and junior varsity basketball candidates next fall shouldn’t have much trouble recognizing their “new” coaches.
Hazel Park Monday 'Longshot Heaven'
Longshot players had a field day at Hazel Park track Monday. The largest daily double of the meeting was registered when Shiloh Spring won the second race to complete a pay-off of $277.80.
In addition the second biggest twin double, a $6,022.80, was collected by nine bettors.
Principal Garth Errington Monday afternoon announced that 36-year-old Ralph Grubb and 32-year-old Earl McKee will be the PCH varsity and reserve coaches, respectively, next season.
Both will be familiar to the players and rate their respect. Grubb guided the PCH sophomore squads for seven seasons* and has led the jayvees to a 63-15 mark in the past five seasons.
★ ★ ★
Odijly, the junior varsity had a 14-1 mark in his first season at the helm and its Win total has decreased by one each season at the helni and its win total has decreased by one season, down to 11-5 this past winter.
EXPERIENCE
“We wanted someone who had had some years’ experience coaching (nbt ■necessarily varsity) Class A basketball,” Errington said of the search of the varsity coach.
r- Grubb has spent 13 years in the Pontiac school system since graduating fron Eastern Michigan University in 1953 after lettering for three seasons in basketball.
RESERVE JOB
In, all, about a dozen applicants were interviewed for the two jobs.
McKee, a familiar figure to followers of the city recreation basketball, softball and baseball leagues, has been the No. 1 coach at Jefferson Junior High School for four years, with a 31-9 cage mark. k k k
At Central, the Western Michigan University graduate will join t h e physical education staff in addition to his basketball and assistant track coach duties.
On the PCH track staff he will replace Brian Castle who is becoming an elementary school principal.
RALPH GRUBB
Bruins Swap Krake, Scour Trade Market
BOSTON (tf) — The Boston Bruins are in the trade market while looking ahead to the National Hockey League player draft June 9 in Montreal.
“It’s safe io say tnat we’re looking to talk trade with anyone” Bpston General Manager Milt Schmidt said Monday night after the Bruins sent Skip Krake to the Los Angeles Kings. , **.
BASEBALL'S TOP TEN By The Associated Frets Based on 50 at bats. AMERICAN LEAGUE
GAB R H Pet. 36 134 22 45 .336, 36 124 21 38 .306
29 108 17 33 .306
30 95 12 29 .305
35 1 27 1 3 38 . 299 35 121 16 36 .298
33 132 18 39 .295
34 129 18 38 .295
28 86 11 25 .291
31 108 17 31 .287
Homo Runs
F. Howard. Washington, 17; W. Horton, Detroit, 10; Repoz, California, 9;
KiHebrew, Minnesota, 8; Ward, Chicago, 8; McMullen, Washington, 8.
Runs Batted In
F.Howard, Washington, 34; Powell, Baltimore, 26; W.Horton, Detroit, 23;
Repoz. California, 21; T.Horton, Cleveland, 21.
Player Club F.Howard Was White NY W.Horton Det Monday Oak Alvis Cle Yastrzemski Bsn Carew Min t-reehan Det Kosco NY Foy Bsn
Fans, Club Cheer Howard
SANDY PROBLEM — Melvin (Bud\ Stevens of Livonia found a little trouble on this sixth hole at Forest Lake yeste: qualifying. SteveM blasted out,-the ball scooting six feet past the pin, and his putt for a par-4 stopped six inches short. Despite this bogey, Elevens managed an even par round and went on to lead the qualifying field with a 143 total
L WASHINGTON i/Tl- Frank Howard’s first game before the cheering hometown fans after his second homer binge wasn’t one he’s likely to long treasure — but he won’t soon forget the treasury he took home afterward.
★ * ★
Before some 9,000 Washington Senator fans who gave him a lusty, minute-long ovation — wildly applauding his historic yjn_ tjte ‘local’ phase of the U.S. Open feat of 10 Ijpme runs in six games -fm m 1‘* m Howard was hit by a pitch in the first
Pontiac Prut Photo, by. Rolf Winter
inning. The next three times at bat, the mammoth slugger fanned.
5*^ ....i, ... -
But any disappointment the 6-fool-7, 270-pounder felt at his performance in the Senators’ 6-1 shellacking by the New York Yankees was quickly erased when he reached the clubhouse at game’s end.
it ★ dr
Waiting for him with a new contract was Washington General Manager George Selkirk, Although its figures weren’t announced, it was believed the pdet raised Howard’s pa/ to about $56,000 — or about $7,000 more than the one he signed last, spring after a two-week holdout.
Twins' Errors Hand Benzols 4-3 Triumph
ST. PAUL, MINNEAPOLIS (JR - Denny McLain has been emulating Cuban curveballer Camilo Pascual, and the sturdy Detroit right-hander says it’s paying off for him.
* * *
McLain threw a three-run home run pitch to Minnesota’s Dick Reese Monday night, but bided his time and let the Twins give him his sixth victory against one defeat, 4-3 in 10 innings.
Three of the Tigers’ runs were
unearned off loser Jim Merritt, and Detroit scored its winning run in the 10th without a base hit as the Twins committed their third and fourth errors.
WATCHES PASCUAL
“The biggest thing;” said McLain, who leads the American League with six complete games, “is that I’ve been
watching Camilo Pascual, who I think
has the best curve I’ve ever seen.
k k k
“I was watching him Sunday, and he reaches way back to throw his curve. I’ve been short-arming my curve, bringing my arm up close to my shoulder instead of reaching way back. You might give a runner a little more chance that way, but that hitter still has to get a hit to score the run.”
Pinpoint control also has returned for McLain. “Two years ago I had trouble with wildness and I had the same trouble last year. I couldn’t get my curve over.
NO WALKS GIVEN
McLain didn’t walk a man for the third time this season.
Reese hit hiS blast after Tony Oliva and Rich Rollins singled.
After that, the Twins didn’t get a man past second against McLain, now 6-1.
Willie Horton’s 10th home run, leading off the ninth, tied the game.
Twins’ Manager Cal Ermer had two late-inning defensive replacements blow up in his face. But Ermer steadfastly defended his moves of inserting Jackie Hernandez at shortstop and Ron Clark at third base.
★ k k
Hernandez’ throwing error with two out in the 10th let Al Kaline reach second, then Clark let Bill Freehan’s grounder get away from him to allow Kaline to sepre the winning run.
DEFENDS MOVES
"This is the first time this year they’ve beaten us.” Ermer said of his defensive moves. “I know good and well the men I put in there are better defensively than the men I had in there for their hitting the first part of the game.
★ ★ ★
“I’d make that move again. I think you’ve got to make it in trying to protect a lead.” I
DETROIT
a
Stanley lb Northrup cf Kalina rf Freehan c WHortort If Wert 3b MAullffe 2b Oyler ss McLain p
MINNESOTA
i r h bl ab r h bl
lio utilaandr cf 4 0 0 0 10 10 Tovar at 4 0 0 0
2 0 1 Caraw 2b 4 0 0 0
10 10 Klllabraw lb 4 0 0 0 l 1 1 Oliva rf 4 12 0 0 1 1 Rollins 3b 3 110 0 1 0 Harnandz tl 1 0 0 0 ■ 0 0 0 Reese If 3173 0 0 0 RCIark 3b 10 0 0 Roseboro c Merritt p Worthptn p
Allison ph
4 0 10 2 0 10 0 0 0 0 10 0 0
Total 3» 4 4 3 Total 35 3 7 3
Detroit ...... 000 200 001 1—4
Mlnnoaota ...030 000 000 0—3
E—Tovar, Rollins, Hernandez, R.Clark. DP—Detroit 1, Minnesota 1. LOB— Detroit 7, Mlnnoaota 3. 2B—Oliva. HR— Reoat (2), W. Horton (10). 3—Merritt.
IP H REROBSO McLain (W.6-1) ....10 7 3 3 0 7
Merritt (L.3-4) ... 7 2-3 6 41 2 4
Worthington ....... 14 0 0 0 0 0
T—2:21. A—10,007.
Ohioan Pacing All Star by 83
GARDEN CITY, N.Y. (AP) - Dennis Taylor of Cleveland followed up his opening round 1472 series with a 1260 performance Monday and retained the men’s division lead in the 27th annual National All-Star Bowling Championships.
k k k
Taylor’s 12-game total of 2,732 put him 83 pins in front of Milwaukee’s Mark Kugiitsch, who rolled 1330 Monday for an over-all of 2,649 pins.
Mike Samardzija Jr. of Pontiac slipped from'seventh to eighth place despite adding 1276 pins to his 1307 of the opening day.
★ * ,*
The men bowl six more games Tuesday before the field is cut to 72 for Wednesday's semifinals.
/ /
The Men's Division Leaders:
Dennis Taylor, Cleveland ................ 2732
Mark Kugiitsch, Milwaukaa, WIs.... ........ 1147
Billy Hardwick, Loulsvllla. Ky. ......... 2444
Wayna Zahn, Atlanta ............. ....... 2440
Ralph Engan, Monsey. N.Y.................. 2427
Jerry McClary, Denver .................... 240]
Bill Lillard, Dellas ..................... 2344
MIKE SAMARDZIJA. PONTIAC. MICH.............2441
pave Soutar, Oatrolt ..................... 2410
Dick Hoering, Spokane, Wash............... 2471
Mick McMahon. Portland, Ora............... 2474
Jim Cartaln, Huntsvllla, Ala.............. 2441
Tha Woman's Division Loadars:
Alica oilkey, Cincinnati ................ 1410
Mary Baker, Central lallp, N.Y. ............. 1444
June Llewellyn, Ft. Lauderdale, Pie........ 1441
Donna Zimmerman, Long Beach, Cal, 1441
Arlene KoMI. Mokent, 111.............. , 143)
Doris Coburn, Suffolcb N.Y....>............ jSl
Judy Cow, Kansas city. Me. .... .......1407
Shirley Germs, Chicago .............. .....1407
PhyllisNoteno, Buffalo) N.Y. .............. ill
Judy Gottach, Verity, Nab................ 1471
Fran Dykstra. Grand Rapids, Mich. ....... 1473
Bobble Keitwny, Chicago ............. 1472
/< /’
ran
THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 21, 1968
Anti-Turbine Speculation Mounts at '50
Balanced Field id Press Prep Golf Tourney
TUP-TOP' SPEEDSHAVER* 25
INDIANAPOLIS, Iiu|. (UPI) ■ Speculation mounted today that a new concerted effort will be made soon 'to ban turbbie-powered cars from the 900-mile Speedway auto race..
Pressure to that effect is being applied by a number of influential car owners to outlaw the controversial power plant in the Memorial Day classic on grounds it “doesn’t belong" in racing.
SENTIMENT APPARENT Antiturbine sentiment became apparent last year when Parnelli Jones nearly drove the first turbocar ever in the field into victory lane. Transmission trouble less than 10 miles from the finish wrecked that bid.
It was the only turbine machine in the race and it ran away from the field, leading 171 of the 200 laps and setting 17 records in the process.
★ ★ w
This time at least three turbines are in the field — all identical machines from the Andy Grantelli team —and two of them emerged as the top qualifiers at record speeds last Saturday driven by Joey
Leonard and former “900" winner Graham Hill.
Hie third turbine, with Art Pollard at the wheel, qualified comfortably for the fourth of the 11 rows of ears that line up for the flying start of the race.
★ * *
Nine turbine cars were entered for the race but two have been wrecked.
Whether additional turbocars make the field in the final weekend of qualifications was uncertain.
0. Park, Franklin Score Late Wins
NORTH AMERICAN PHILIPS COMPANY, INC. 100 East 42nd Street New York, N.Y. 10017
Skippers Blank Milford Netiers
Some late-inning scoring enabled Oak Park and Livonia Franlin to record Northwest Suburban Association victories yesterday Oak Park pushed across three markers in the seventh and downed Birmingham Groves, 5-2, while Livonia Franklin picked up two in the bottom of the eighth to nip North Farmington, 9-5.
★ A A
Jay Hazelroth’s single brought home the lead run for North Farmington (4-5) in the top of the seventh, but three singles and a suicide squeeze play brought two runs and the victory for Franklin (5-3) in the last of the eighth.
Dave Ekelman tossed a three-hitter, striking out 11, and he
Pontiac ProN Photo
FALLEN CHAMPION — Waterford’s Butch Fenlon, winner of the indoor Central Michigan University two-mile title earlier in the season, ran out of gas in the regional Saturday
at Waterford and finished well back in the pack in that event. Winning the race was Douglas Latter of Grand Blanc in 9:49.1.
Northville, Andover Winners
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Waterford ended a four-match skid with a sound 5-0 thrashing of Milford’s netmen Monday afternoon. .
In upping their mark to 3-11,I™!58 *° Pace the Skippers lost three games I attack.
only two of the ten sets ft Efgflg1- •• *»!»»}»»-*« played. Milford is 2-11.
3 Games Played in City Softball
WATERFORD 5, MILFORD 0 Slants
Rodger Reed def. Beck, 6-1, 6-1; Dave Lindsay def. Horfon, 6-1, 6-1; and Gary Dovre def. Beeman, 6-0, 6-0.
Doubles
Al Kafke-Cralg Lukos def. Raglin-Lee, 6-3, 6-1; and Tony Poulos-Plers McDonald, def. Simula-Snyder, 6-3, 6-1.
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Police 9 Plans Junior Tryouts
Any boys not reaching their 14th birthday by Sept. 1 who want to play in the city junior baseball program’s Pontiac Police team are asked to contact Dick Erickson at 693-1332 for a tryout this week.
Candidates must provide their own playing shoes and gloves.
Kimball 'Doubles Up'
Royal Oak Kimball doubled its efforts after losing three of the four singles matches to Hazel Park Monday and posted a 4-3 victory by sweeping the doubles. The Knights are 10-4 and Hazel Park is 5-9.
RO KIMBALL 4, HAZEL PARK 3 Slnglos
Davt Fulton (HP) daf. D. Richaftffr 6-1, 6-2; Nail Austin (K) def. Whitcroft, 6-2, 6-4; Dave Tomczyk (HP) def. Vur*a, 6-4, 7-5; and John Mayers (HP) def. Jatho, 7-5, 7-5.
Doubles
Wes Rlchards-8ob Matter (K) def. Floch-Shirley, 6-1, 7-5; Ken Marks-M. Miller (K) def. Ayotte-Baker, 6-0, 3-6, 6-4; Larry Marks-Joe Uren (K) def. Tar-kowski-Kropinack, 7-5, 6-0.
I# Get The
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Softball Winners
Carpentry Engineering rolled past Haggerty Lumber, 20-14, and Penny Manufacturing downed Liberty, 4-2, in Walled Lake Industrial softball action last night.
Pontiac’s Slowpitch m e n ” s recreation softball program began last night with three of the five games completed.
Local 594. romped past Oxford, 13-3, as Ken Spain singled three times and scored twice.
* ★ ★
Captain Nemo’s pounded out 14 hits in thumping the Independents, 11-6, in a game marked by six circuit clouts.
Local 594 held Grubb’s Kennels to three hits in posting a 9-4 triumph.
Waterford Runs Oyer Kettering on Cinders
Cougars Face Tornadoes in Home Contest
The Detroit Cougars meet the winless Dallas Tornadoes at Tiger Stadium tonight in a North American Soccer League match.
★ ★ ★
Half a dozen Cougars are sidelined by injuries, but Gus Moffatt, the 20-year-old Scottish forward who was the first player injured in early spring training, will be back in the lineup after recovering from a broken ankle.
★ ★ ★
The Cougars hold third place in the league’s Lakes Division with a 3-4 record while Dallas will have on show several new players from Turkey, Britain and the Netherlands in an attempt to boost its 0-8-1 record.
Waterford Township continued its sports domination of archrival Kettering this year by whipping the Captains, 70-48, in the annual track meet yesterday.
The losing Captains won eight events — including doubles by hurdler Bill Penoza and dashman Tim Donaldson—but the WTHS crew had sufficient depth to sweep three events.
The victory gives the Skippers a 650-100 lead in the All-Sports
WATERFORD 70, KETTERING 41 TWO MILE RUN — Butch Fenlon (W) Moffat (W). Bond (W) time 10:24.2.
880 RELAY — Kettering, time 1:35.6. MILE RUN — Brian Schultz (W) Russell (W), Hooker (K), 4:44.5.
120 HIGH HURDLES — Bill Penoza (K), Willis (W), Lines (K), :16.4.
880 RUN — Kevin Beabe (K), Galloway (W), Loveless (W), 1:58.6.
440 DASH — Steve Gobler (K), Thomas (W), Daly (W), :53.5.
100 DASH — Tim Donaldson
Trophy. WKIIS’ lone points among the 900 came in basketball. Waterford has won the trophy now 5 of 7 years.
The meet was highlighted by Gene Pankner’s 56-6 heave in the shot put.
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Willis (W), Shaw (W), :21.6.
220 DASH — Tim Donaldson Horton (W), Pankner (K), :24.9.
MILE RELAY — Waterford, time 3:33.7.
HIGH JUMP — Larry Blskner (W) Lines (K), Nixon (W), height 5-8.
LONG JUMP — Neil Blackmer (W) Blskner (W), Horoon (W), distance 21-5.
SHOT PUT — Gene Pankner (K). Kressbach (W), McPherson (K), distance 56-6.
POLE VAULT — Tim Martin (W), Biskner (W), Saffron (W), height 12-6.
Tiger Averages
Brown Batting AB R H HR RBI Ave. 11 2 5 1 2 .455
Horton 108 17 33 10 23 .306
Freehan ... 129 18 38 6 20 .294
Kaline 124 22 33 3 13 .262
Northrup 116 20 30 6 15 .259
Stanley 103 16 25 2 9 .243
Wert 129 12 30 3 11 .232
McAuliffe 124 20 25 5 15 .202
Matchik ... 19 1 4 0 5 .211
Oyler 87 5 16 1 7 .184
Mathews .. 21 2 4 1 3 .190
Cash 60 6 10 1 5 .167
Price 13 1 2 0 2 .154
Tracewski 26 4 3 0 1 .115
Aquinas Losing 'Red'
GRAND RAPIDS (UPI) -Dick (Bed) Dombos, athletic director and head basketball coach at Aquinas College, Monday announced be 1 s resigning.
Southfield Blanks Kimball, Nears Crown in SEMA
Southfield’s Blue Jays moved a step closer to the baseball championship in the Southeastern Michigan Association yesterday by blanking Royal Oak Kimball, 5-0.
The victory raised Southfield’s loop mark to 9-3, leaving only Birmingham Seaholm standing in the way of a title for the Blue Jays. And they could remove that obstacle when the two tangle tomorrow.
In another SEMA game, Seaholm (8-5) downed Femdale (6-6-1), 7-2.
STARTS JAYS Rocky Roe started Southfield l the way to victory in the rst with a 400-foot home run. he Jays came up with four
Seaholm opened with three uns in the first and closed with iree in the seventh to stop Femdale. George Metcalf paced the attack with three singles and five RBI.
W. Bloomfield Edges Milford
Sophomores' Homers Trigger Laker Win
17thAnnual Event Slated at PCC Friday
This year’s edition of the Pontiac Press Invitational Golf Tournament shapes up as the, most balanced in the history of the event.
The 17th annual running of the tourney is slated for Friday over 18 holes at Pontiac Country Club.
Bloomfield Hills Andover has dominated the tournament for the past seven years, but it appears the Barons do not have the balance this season to challenge the favorites.
TEAM CHOICES On that favorite’s list are Walled Lake, Waterford, South-field and Pontihc Central ★ * *
Defending champion Kettering has been rebuilding and it takes big afternoon for the Captains to retain the field in the field of 25 teams.
WON TWICE
Walled Lake has won the title twice, the last time in 1963, and the Vikings fared better thdii Waterford in the regional play Friddy. Called Lake placed fourth and Waterford fifth.
★ ★ ★
Southfield has never won the event, but the Blue Jays served notice they’ll have to be reckoned with when they won a Class A regional at Farmington Thursday.
The 25, founman teams will start teeing off at 9:30 a.m. An awards banquet is slated at the club for 4 p.m.
RO Kimball ......aaaaeaa—a
South Held ...... 1 00 640 x — 5
PRIEBE, Krleilnikl (6) and Roaming; MUITER and Daniels.
R. See helm ..... 310 0001 — 7 12 2
Ferodalo ........ 100001 0—2 2 2
/Mayo, BRATTON (2) and Fill; MCMULLEN, Fairbanks (2) and Screwa.
Two of the winners Wayne-Oakland League baseball action yesterday traveled the come-Northville (11-2) came on to from-behind route in bagging the decisions.
Down 2 -1, league-leading hand Clarkston (7-6) a 6-2 setback, and Bloomfield Andover (6-6) spotted Holly (6-7) an early 1-0 lead and battled back to claim a 2-1 verdict.
WINS IN 11th
In a more conventional man ner, West Bloomfield’s Lakers (5-8) picked up a run in the bottom of the 11th to hand Milford (7-6) its fourth loss in a row, 4-3. - '
★
RBI singles by Pat Cayley and Fred Holdsworth in the fourth enabled Northville to tie Clarkston at 2-2, and Barry Primeau put a little icing on the cake with a two-run single in the sixth.
A single, double and sacrifice fly produced the two runs in the first for Clarkston.
ERRORS DECISIVE A throwing error enabled Mike Appleby to race home in the, top of the seventh with the winning run for Andover. Appleby had singled and moved to second on one error and score on another. Mike Irving went the distance for Andover and posted seven strikeouts. He’s . allowed only two earned runs in ' 31% innings.
Shrine Hands Detroit Foe 2-6 Setback
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Royal Oak Shrine received a big boost in its bid for a berth jin the Detroit Catholic League playoffs while defeating Holy Redeemer, 2-0, yesterday afternoon.
Jim Chiesa’s two-hit hurling and 14 strikeouts stopped Holy Redeemer and boosted the Knights to 8-2 in the AA Section race, while Redford St. Mary upset Bishop Gallagher, 3-2, and dropped the losers to 7-2.
★ ★ ★
Bishop Gallagher must beat Holy Redeemer Wednesday to force a sectional playoff with Shrine for the berth in the league elimination series.
An error enabled Bob Szost-kowski to score the game’s first run for Shrine in the fifth in-" ning. c
★ ★ ★
In Sunday Catholic diamond action, Orchard Lake St. Mary gained its second Northwest triumph, 6-0, oVer Femdale St. James as Tim Megge tossed a one-hitter and struck out 14. Don Bywalec cracked a two-run ~ double for OLSM.
Birmingham Brother Rice raised its record to 9-6 by walloping Salesian, 11-0. Bob Wollenberg and Marv Dudek combined on a one-hitter. The Warriors are 4-3 in the Central Division circuit. ,
Holy Radaamar . 000 0 0 0 0 — 0 2 3 RO Shrlno .... 000 01 1 x —2 2 3
DUNN ond Garcia; CHIESA (7-2) and Szostkowski.
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Committee to Draft Cqmpaign-Cost Bill
Z3 . I
LANSING (AP)—Secretary of State James Hare has appointed an 18-member nonpartisan committee to recommend legislation for reporting political campaign expenses.
Present laws are “meaningless and a monstrosity," he said.
★ itf ★
“We should either have a good law or none at all," added Hare, chief state elections officer.
Bills aimed at tightening the laws died in the Legislature.
‘NO WITCH HUNT’
Hare said he is not interested in a “witch-hunt” or “an investigation into ‘ past questioning practices.”
Hare said increasingly enormous sums of money are needed to run for public office. These sums are not being accounted for, he said.
★ ★ ★
“We’re all aware of the almost unlimited methods of
1
Damage Soars in City Blazes
Fire damage in Pontiac in the first third of 1968 is more than triple that of the same period last year — largely due to several major building blazes.
Some $327,000 in damage has been caused by 491 fires this year, compared to about $96,000 in damage in 229 fires through April 30,1967.
★ * *
The 161 building fires in 1968 include a $70,000 blaze April 8 at Herrington Hills Eementary School, a $35,000 fire in a commercial building at 695 Auburn Jan. 28 and a $13,000 fire in a grill at 49 N. Saginaw Jan. 30.
In the first third of 1967, 103 building fires occurred.
★ * *
A second major increase is reflected in grass and brush fires, of which 221 have been extinguished in 1968 as opposed to 50 in the same period last year.
Two persons have died in fires this year, the same number as through April 30, 1967.
fund-raising that don’t violate the letter of the law, but they certainly bruise its spirit," Hare said.
He said he also is concerned a b o u t * t h e voter-registration law. It requires citizens to vote every two years or be taken off the voter list.
He predicted this would result in a “substantial" decrease in the number of voters in the next presidential election.
Hare said he is afraid many citizens, particularly those in the core cities, are not aware of the new law.
COMMITTEE MEMBERS Named to cochair the com mittee were Mrs. Pat McNa mara,* widow of the U. S. sen ator from Detroit, and Raymond Plank, Ludington television executive.
Other members of the com mittee are:
Elwood Bender of Muskegon Community College; Wayne County Circuit Court Judge George Bowles; D. Hale Brake former state treasurer and De troit attorney; Avern Cohn, Democratic party fund-raiser of Detroit; Tom Downs, Detroit attorney; the Rt. Rev. Richard S. Emrich, Episcopal Bishop of Michigan; Mrs. Margaret Foerch of the Michigan League of Women Voters; Douglas Fraser, United Auto Workers, Detroit;
* * *
Morris Gleicher, Detroit advertising executive; Marcus Gray, Calhoun County Clerk; Art Leutscher, Muskegon city clerk; Hudson Mead, Detroit attorney; Joseph Parisi of East Lansing, Michigan Townships Association; John Smith, Detroit elections director; and Steven Toth of Bay City, Say County Clerk.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, MAY 21, ioijs
'Suharto, 19 Bigwigs Unharmed'
Jakarta Reports Plot Is Foiled
AP Wirephoto
SENTENCE CHANGED -S. Edward Bloom, Chicago lawyer convicted of criminal contempt for allegedly filing a spurious will for probate, had his two-year prison term thrown out yesterday by the Illinois State Supreme Court.
pAKARTA, (AP) - The In donesian government foiled a plot two months ago to kill -Pres jdent Suharto and 19 of his gen erals and cabinet ministers and as they "prayer at a mosque officials at the presidential palace said Monday
It \yas reported seven men had key roles in the abortive assassination attempt. All have been arrested and will be tried by a military court, military sources said.
•k ★ ★
Officials said the plot was in spired by the Communists but that sdme of these involved were still at large. Several al leged Communists, serving in the army were arrested in Jakarta last week, but it was not
Ambulance Bill Vote Near
LANSING (UPI) - Counties would be able to contract with private ambulance services, according to a bill coming up for a final vote in the Senate.
The House-passed bill also would require ambulance drivers to pass the advanced Red Cross first aid course, be at least 21 years old, and obtain a special license costing $5 annually.
Policemen and firemen would be exempt from the requirements.
★ *■ *
Ambulances would be licensed under the bill’s provisions at a $25 fee and would have to have a rear-door opening, a flashing red light, a siren, oxygen equipment and first-aid equipment.
known how many in all would bte implicated in the pl6t.
The mass assassination was to have bpeii sprung while Suharto and his top officials knelt at the mosque on the grounds of the president's Merdeka Palace during a Moslem festival March 9, the palace officials said HAND GRENADES
Officers said the plotters planned to hurl hand grenades into the small mosque whil&Jsu-harto and his group wdre on their knees.
* ★ ★
Security agents unearthed the plot several days before, officials said, and arrested an army captain and several other soldiers. Several newsmen were also reportedly picked up. News of the plot Was withheld to aid the investigation.
It was the first reported attempt against the life of the 47-year-old former army general since he took the reins of power from President Sukarno early in 1966. Sukarno’s ouster came after the collapse of a pro-Commu-nist coup attempt and a nationwide massacre of Communist party members in retaliation for the favored position they held under Sukarno.
Sources said the 67-year-old former president is not believed to have had any part in the plot against his successor. Sukarno
lives in his old summer palace in Bbgor and is closely guarded. ★ * *
Others reported marked for death in the plot Included Gen. Abdul Haris Nasutlon, chairman of Indonesia’s Congress, and Suharto's close associate, and Foreign Minister Adam Malik, a longtime opponent of Sukarno and the Communists.
Also on the list were the air force and army commanders, the deputy army commander and the capital’s military commander, sources added.
2,500 March, Protest Odor
KALAMAZOO (UPI) -Residents of this southwestern Michigan city are raising a stink over a pungent odor that hovers over the east side.
Some 2,500 marchers paraded two miles from their east side homes to the City Building Monday night. Spokesman met with the City Commission.
The commission unanimously endorsed a proposal, submitted by City Engineer Donald H. Swets, to clean up Lagoon No. 5 temporarily, and to have it covered entirely and cleaned up within three years.
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Declaring he was very relaxed and happy, the President said: “It’s a wonderful feeling being able to count the days instead of the votes.”
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AP Wirephoto
‘SHAME ON YOU’—Heatup and then down, President Johnson speaks in New York last night saying “shame on you” to persons claiming America is a sick society. He said the country’s problems cannot be solved by “bad-mouthing our country all day long or all week long."
KALKASKA (AP) - Service was scheduled today for Fred H. Tomkins, 87, former Kalkaska village president and a founder of the National Trout Festival. He died Friday at Grand Rapids.
There should be a lawyer in your life. If you don't have one, call your local bar association or contact the iState Bar of Michigan, Lansing 48914.
2 Colleges Offer 'Panic Clinics' for Exam Week
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — At least two California state colleges will operate “panic clincs” to help students cope with the emotional pressures of final examination week starting May 31.
“If we can prevent one at tempted suicide, the entire proj ect will be worth the effort,’ said Dr. Suzanne A. Snivley of the Sacramento State College health clinic.
★ ★ ★
The college will provide spe cial therapy with faculty, doctors and other students. A simi lar program is planned at San Fernando State College.
“This is an experiment designed to help our students meet their emotional pressures at a time when they are most fatigued and upset after a busy year at school,” Dr. Snivley said.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 21, 1008
B—11
MARKETS
The following are top pricea covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Friday.
Produce
FRUITS
Apples, Rtd Delicious, bu..........85.50
Apples, Jonathon, bu. 3-/5
Apples, Jonelhen, C. A., bu.........6.50
Apples, McIntosh, bu................4.00
Apples, McIntosh, C.A...............7.55
Apples, Northern Spy, bu.......... 4.75
Apbles, Northern Spy# C.A., bu......6.50
Apples, Steele Red, bu..............3.75
Apples, Steele Re£ C.A., bu.........6.00
VeOETARl.es
Mixed Pattern Shown
Market Firms After Declines
NEW YORK (AP)-The stock market firmed a bit after a series of declines and displayed a mixed pattern early today. Trading was active.
Gains outnumbered losses by nearly 100 fssues on the New York Stock Exchange, but weakness in some key industrials put down the Dow Jones Industrial Average between 2 and 3 points. The-broader-based New
3.75 York Stock Exchange index rose
■■M bch........................2.oo „ . °
Onions, Dry, 50ilb. bag ....... 5.75 Slightly.
ontons,^rian,’ldi.bbchs! 3.MI Dome Mines spurted another
SmSSoS; solb! teg . 1W as gold - mining shares con-
Radishes, White, at. bchs...... 1.50
tinued responding to the rising price of gold bullion in free world markets.
Another gold stock, American-South African, gained about a point. Some of the others showed little change or were slow in opening.
UNSETTLING FACTORS Amphenol climbed more than 2 points, Penn Central and Goodrich a point or so.
Control Data and Westing-house Electric lost more than a point each.
The rise in gold prices and the turmoil in France were unsettling factors, but analysts said the stock market had technical reasons for a rally despite the lack of any outstanding bullish news#
WWW
Bethlehem opened at 29l/4, unchanged on 5,100 shares.
Monday, the Associated Press Average of 60 Stocks fell .2 to 327.9.
Prices were generally higher on the American Stock Exchange.
Rhubarb# hothouse, di. bch.........1.75
Tomatoes# Hot House# 9-lb. bskt. ... 3.25 GREENS
Mustard Greens# bu........ ..........2.50
Spinach# bu..........................2.50
Sorrel# bu...........................2.50
Turnips# bu..........................2.50
Poultry and Eggs
DETROIT EOOS DETROIT (AR — (USDAI—Egg prices paid per dozen by first receivers (Including US. I:
Large Grade A Jumbo, 27-34; extra large. 27-27; large, 55-27; medium, ll%-23; small, 16-11.
DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (AP)—(USDA)— Prices paid for llva poultry by first receivers (Including U.S.):
Hans Heavy type# 20-21; roasters heavy type, 25-27; broilers end fryers, white# 17-20; ducklings 33-34.
, CHICAGO BOOS " CHICAGO (AR) — Chicago Mercantile xchange—Butter steady;^ wholesale^ buy-
, _ „.*» *7 C 60%;
70 B 6414; 27 C 62.
Eggs steady; wholesale buying prices unchanged; M per cent or better Grade A whites 27; - mediums 26; standards 24,
CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO (AP) — (USDA) — Live poultry; wholesale buying pricea unchanged; roasters 25-26%; special Fed White Rock fryere 20-21 vs.
The New York Stock Exchange
-A—
Abbott Lab I A hex Cp 1.60 ACF Ind 2.20 Ad Mlllls .20 Admiral AlrRtdtn 1.50 AkanAlum i AliegCp .lOe AllegLud 2.0 AllogPw 1.20 AlHedCh 1.70
■PI 55% 55%
15 33% 33V. 33V# — V. I 4TVS 47'A 47V.
Livestock
DITROIT LIVESTOCK . DETROIT (AF) — (USDA) — Cattla 2,100; trading on slaughter (tears actlvs, steady; slaughter halfars active, steady to strong; cows strong to 50 cents higher. Slaughter steers; choice 750-1,200 lbs
27.00- 2100; mixed good and choice 26.25-27.00; good 24.50-26.25; slaughter halters, choice (00-1,000 lbs 24.75 - 26.00; one load 24.25; Wtod 23.00-24.75; utility cows 20.00t.21.00. ^
Hogs 450; barrow# and gilts# U.S. 1 200-250 lbs 17.75-20.25; 1-2 220-240 lbs 17.00-17.75; 24 240470 lbs 17.75 - 17.00; sows, 1-3 XfHOO lbs 15.75 - 16.50; 24 400-400 lbs )4.SO-l$-75. . . _
Vealars 200; high choice and prime
36.00- 40.09; choice 34.0040.00; good 27.00-
34.00.
Sheep 1.000; choice end prims 05-110 lb shorn iambs with No. 1-2 polts 20.50-
27.50..
'> CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (W) - (USDA) — Hogi 4,000; 1-2 170-230 lb butchers 1740-20.25. around 200 head sorted 200-220 lbs 20.7S-21.00; 14 220-240 lbs 10.75-10.50; 14 330-400 lb sows 15.75-16.50.
Cattle 3.500; prime 1,200-1,300 lb slauah ter eteere yield grade 3 and 4 27.50; mixed high choice and prime 1,150-1,425 lbs 27.50-20.75; choice 750-1,350 lbs yield grads 2 to 4 26.50-27.75; high choice and prime 1.050 lb slaughter heifers 27.25 choice 150-1,050 lbs yield grade 2 to . 25.75-26.50.
Shaap 200; choice and prime 102 lb spring slaughter lambs 31.00.
American Stock Exch.
NEW YORK (API - American Stock Exchange selected noon prices:
Salts Net
(lids.) High Low Last Chg. 4 30$ 30 30 +U
7 42Va 42 2% 4-1
14 1814 17% 10 . ... X22 38V4 3714 37% + 14 6Va 6 3-16 6 3-16
Aerolet .50a A|ax Ma .log Am Pair -32a ArkLGas 1.70 Asamera Oil AssdOil A G AtiasCorp wt Barnes Eng BrazilLJPw, 1
Cdn Javelin Cinerama Creole 2.60a Data Cont Dlxljyn Corp Dynalectrn EquItyCp -33T Fargo Oils. Fed Resrces Felmont Oil Frontier Air Gen Plywood Giant Yel .40 Goldfield Gt Bas Pat Gulf Am Cp GulfResrc Ch HoernerW .02 Husky O .lSe Hycon Mlg Hydrometl Isram Corp Kaiser Ind
MohwkO Set MolybdSn NewPark Mb Ormand Ind Pancoastal RIC Group Scurry Rain Signal Co la Statham Inst Syntax Cp .40 Technlcol .40 Wn Nuclear
175 Oh 7h I
25
... 314
31 30% 30% — 14
1614 15% 15%
---- 7% + %
2%
13% 1314 13% + 14 56 6% 014 0% 4- %
x8 36% 38'4 38 V# — 14 17 17% 10% 17% + % 27 31% 31% 31% + % 64 21% 20% 20%
SI 7% -e/VY ,7% + % 44 4'4 614 614-1-16
126 10 V# 7% 7% — %
75 24% 24% 24%+% - 5 16% 15% 15% — % ■' 5 7%
116 13% 13% 13% + % 155 10% 10% 10% + % 101 5% 4% 5
53 12% 12% 12%
05 34% 34 34 — %
6 18% 10% 10% — %
75 20% 27 27 —1%
3 14% 14% 14% + % 80 17% 10% 17% — %
5 6% 6% 6% — >4
70 20% 20 20 — %
00 4 3% 3% .....
6 10 7% 10 + %
20 7% 7% 7% .....
46 5% 5% 5% — %
20 102 100% 101 —2% 23 35% 36% 34% — % 05 10% 10% 10% + % 23 11%. 13% 11%
150 3% .3% .3%....
147 7% 7% 7% + %
38 33% 33% 33% — % 73- 36% 36% 36% + % 6 33% 33% 33% — % 126 68% 67 67% —2%
31 27 26% 26% — %
8 27% 27% 27% — % Copyrighted by The Associated Press 1760
Amerada 3 Am Alrlln .80 AmBdwt i.6o Am Can 2.20 ACrySug 1.40 Amcyan 1.25 AmCIPw 1.52 A Home 1.20 Am Hotp .66 Am Hoap wl Amlnvtt mo AmMFdy .70 AMat cl 1.70 Am Motors AmNatGae 2 Am Photgcpy Am Smutty 3 Am Std 1\ Am T0.T 2.40 Am Tob 1.70 AMKCp ,30d AMP Inc .40 Ampex Corp Amphenol .70 Anacond 2.50 Ankan Cham ArdiDan 1.60 Armco Stl 3 Armour 1.60 ArmCk l.40a AshldOII 1.20 AtidDG 1.60 Atl Rich 3.10 Atlaa Ch .00 Atlas Coro Avco Cp 1.20 Avnet Inc .50 AvohPd 1.60
M% 20% 20%
16 27% 27% 27%
27 12% 22% 12%
70 16% 16% 16% + %
4 64% 64% 64%
27 21% 21% 21%
SI MM 16 36% + %
5 50 67% 47% — %
20 32% 12% 32% + %
8 70 70 ft + %
17 56% 55% 56% .. .
43 >6 12% (4 +1%
55 25% 25% 25% + %
5 61% 41% <1% + % 14 50% 50% 50% + % 1 27% 27% 27% — % 32 25% 25% 25% + % 46 14% 14% 34% — % 35 58% 58% 50%-S' U 9544 9544 9544 —I 23 32V* 22V* 32Vj + Va
9 20 20
99
39 1914 19 + «A
14 47 4944 4944
130 1344 13’/#* 1394 + V4
6 38% 38% 38% + %
18 17 16% 17 + %
9 70% 70 70 — %
16 36% 36 36% — %
472 49% 49 49% + %
16 32% 32% 32% — %
5 90 89% 90 + %
1 32% 32% 32% 4- %
26 30% 30% 30% %
166 48 45% 47% -f 1%
42 44% 44 44% — %
2 12% 12% 12% + % 1 56% 56% 56%
7 46% 46% 46% + %
24 42 41% 41% — %
10 67% 67% 67% ... f 31 31. 31 — %
9 79% 79% 79% 4- %
15 110% 110% llO’/a —1%
31 20% 20% 20% + % 47 5% 5% 5% — %
60 51% 50% 51% 4*1% 95 56 55% 55% 4* %
6 134% 133% 134% 4-1%
—B—
BabckW 1.36 Binge 1.60
Beckman JO
Bendlx 1.40 BanefFin 1.60 Banguat Beth Stl 1.60 Boeing 1.20 BoiseCasc .25 Bordan 1.20 I iWar 1.25 IMyar la Brunswick Budd Co .00 Bulova ,80b Burt Ind 1.20 Burroughs 1
( 44% 4414 4414 -
4 30 30 SO —14
1 Mb Mb Mb + 14
4 53Vb 5284 S2% .
11 77V4 7084 7T + W1
20 301b SOW 381b + 8b
15 341b 36 , 361b + Vb
266 141b 14% 14% + Vb
62 278b 2714 27V4 .
31 728b 7214 72% + %
II Mb 528b 528b 4- 8b
14 319b 319b 319b — lb
7 31% 31% 31% — %
17 74% 74% 74% + %
74 15% 14% 15% + %
14 21% 20% 2f% — %
3 31% 31% 31% .
4 4414 4414 4414 .
6 177% 17714 177% — %
Stocks of Local Interest
Figures-attar decimal points are eighths
OVER THE COUNTER PRICRS Quotations from tha NASD art representative inter-dealer prices of approximately II a.m. Inter-dealer markets change throughout tha day. Prices do not Include retail markup, markdown or commission.
•M Asked S.2 5.5
11.0 11.4
18.0 10.0
26.0 26.4
17.4 10.4 a|.4 23.0 A* 63.4
34.0 35.0
5.4 6.0 lit 13.4
nsMwna i tuck ...
Braun Engineering .....
Citizens Utilities Class A
Diamond
Kelly Sorvicot .............
Mohawk Rubber Co............
North Central Airlines Units
Safran Prfemng .............
Scrlpto ..................... 6.6 f.1
Wyandotte Chemical
MUTUAL FUNDS
20.4 27.4
Affiliated Fund ......
Chemical Fund ........
Commonwealth Stack ..
Dreyfus ..............
Keystone income K-l ..
Keystone Growth K-2 ,,
Mast. Inveitors Growth ■■ ■■ Massachusetts Invastors Trust 16.50 10.12 Putnam Growth
BM Asked
0.70 Too
17.12 20.70 10.11 11.81 1540 14.37
III 10.10
7.15 7.01 12.6) 13J6
13.41 1446
Wellington' Pun*...............jlfi^uj
Windsor Fund._________________ 17.26 soil
‘Nominal Quotations
Slack Ayaragas
Cemptied By The Aisadatad Proa#
Prev. bdy Weak Ago Month Ago Year Ago 1760 High 1760 Lew 1767 High 1747 LOW
Cal Finanl CampRL .45a Camp Soup 1 Canteen .00 CaroTliT .74 Carrier CP t CarterW .40a Case Jl Castle Cook l CaterTr 1.20 CelaneseCp % Cenco Ins .30 Cent SW 1.70 Cerrg 1.60b Cert-teed .00 CeianaA 1.40 CFI Stl .00 Chet Ohio 4 hIMII SIP P hIPneu 1.00 ChrleCraft la Chrysler 2 CITFIn 1.00
Cities Svc 2 Clark Eq 1.20 ClevEIII? 1.72 CecaCola 2.10 CojgPal 1.10 olUnRad .00 BS 1.40b ComICra 1.00 ComSolv 1.20 ComwEd 2.20 Comsat Conjdis 1.00 ConElecInd 1 ConFood 1.50 ConNatG 1.70 ConsPwr 1.70 'ontalnr 1.40 lontAIrL .50 Cont Can 2 Cont Ins 3.20 Cont Met J Cont Oil 2.00 Control Data Cooperln 1.20 Corn- Pd 1.70 Cowles .50 oxBecai .50 rouspHInd 1 Crow Coll Crown Cork CrownZe 2.20 Cruc Stl 1.20 Cudahy Co Curtiss Wr 1
Dan Rlv 1.20 Day PL 1.52 Dears Co 2 DelMnte 1.10 DeltaAIr .40
DanRGW 1.10 DatEdis 1.40 Dot Steal .60 DlaSham 1.40 Disney .30b DomoMin .00 DowChm 2.40 Drasalnd 1.40 duPonf i.25o
DuqLt 1-66
Dyne Am .40
Bast Air .50 (Kodak 140a ■Kodak wl Eaton Ya 1.25 Ebasco Ind 2 EG8.G .10
ElectSp l.oit EIPasoNG 1
filtra Corp 1 more 1.60
nd Johnson ethyl Cp .60 EvsniP 60b Evarsharp
PalrCam .50g FalrHIII .lie Fanstsei Inc Pad Mob 1.00 Ftddars cp 1 FedDStr 1.70 piiiftr i.4s FlrMtrta 1.40 PMCnrt 1.247 Fllntkote J > Fla Pow 1.44 .05 .70
5 59b 584 59b
27 -42 41% 41% + %
134 33% ',33% 33% — %
2 26% 26% 26% — %
7 20% 28% 20%
0 70 67% 67%
7 14% 14% 14%
4 17% 17% 17%
21 40% 40% 40% + %
25 40% 40 40% + %
15 57% 57% 97% 4- %
5 53% 53% 53% 4- %
0 37% 37% 37% — %
11 41% 41 41% + %
0 27 27 27 4- %
3 55% 55% 55% — %
13 17% 17% 179b 2 63% 63% 63% + % 2 47% 47% 47% — %
5 37% 37% 37% + %
1 32% 32% 32% 4- %
121 64 63% 43% — %
14 359b 35% 35% ....
14 47% 47% 47% 4- %
Xl6 20% 20% 20% + %
6 36% 36% 36% 4- %
12 150 147% 150 + %
5 46% 469b 449b 4- %
13 78% 70 » 4-16
15 56% 56% 56% 4- %
115 4686 48% 40%
10 33% 33% 33% — %
7 42% 42% 42% ...
35 57 51% 50% +1
54 32% 32 32% — %
7 37% 37% 37% — %
16 4 64 0 + %
10 20% 20% 20%
16 36% 36% 36% + % 7 30% 30% 30% — %
11 »% « 17 + %
14 51% 51% 51% — % x3 04% S4% 84% — %
2 10% 10% 10% — %
X21 64% 64 64% + Vb
67 145% 146% 145 —1%
1 47
> %
13 40% 40 40 + %
6 14% 14% 14% — %
3 57 57 57 + %
2 21% 21% 21% + %
16 34% 34% 34%?..
7 67 60% 67 + %
14 46% 44% 46% + % 13 41% 41% 41% + %
2 9% 23 23 ...
33 26% 26% 26% — %
—D—
1 24% 24% 24% — %
2 11% 31% 31%
4 54% 54% 54%
1 *31% 01% 31%
20 33 32% 32%
35 17% 17% 17%
10 24% 249b 24%
10 20% 20% 20% — % 27 30% 30% 30%
I 50% 51 50
17 70 ft 70 +1%
22 77% 77% 77% ....
11 16 34 36 + %
10 156 155% 155%
I — v# I + lb 1 + % 1 + % T % 1 + %
Geneses 1.40 Ga Pacific lb Gerber 1.10 GettyOII .72a Gillstta 1.20 Gian Aid .I7p Goodrich 2.40 Goodyr 1.35 Gracicp 1.40 OranltCI 1.40 Grant 1J0 Of ARP 1.30a
OlWnUh 1.00
GreenGnt .18 Greyhound 1 GrumnAlrc 1 Gulf Oil 2.60 GulfStaUt .10 GulfWIn .30b'
Hslllburt 1.70 Harris int 1
Nacla m 1.20 Hare Inc .50a HswPack .20 Hoff KKctm Holldylnn .30
HllySug '1.20 Homeflke .00 Honaywi 1.10 Hook Ch 1.40 House Fin 1 HoustLP 1.12 Howmet .70 HuntFds .50b
IdahoPw 1.50 Ideal Basic 1 III Cant 1.50 IngerRand 2 Inland Stl 2 InaNAm 2.0 InterlkSt 1.00
IBM 5.20 IBM wT Int Harv 1.00 Int Miner 1 jnt Nickel 3 Int Packers Int Pap 1,35 Int TAT .05 IowaPSv 1.20
Jewel Co 1.30 JohnMtn 2.20 JohnJhn .60a Jones L 2.70 Joy Mlg 1.40
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Poor to March to JFK Grave
Others Plan to Sit In at Congress Hearings
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22 22 — % 42% 42% — % 21 21 — %
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7 11 11 11 — %
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25% 25% — % 26% 26% — % '26% 27
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Copyrighted by Tha Associated Press 1740
Salas figures are unofficial.
Uniats otherwise noted, ratoa of dividends In tha foregoing table ore annual disbursements based on the Iasi quarterly or saml-annual declaration. Special o extra dividends or payments not designated at regular are Idantlftod In ‘ tallowing footnotes.
a—Also extra or extra*, b—Annual rata plus stock dtvldond. c—Liquidating dlvh dend. d—Declared or paid In 1767 plus stock dividend, a—Declared or paid so tar Hilt year, f—Payable In stock during
h—Declared or psW ittV stock' dividend
or •xHflstrtbutlen data, g—Paid last year,
or spilt up. k—Declared or paid this year, an accumulative Itiu* with dividends In arrears, n—Now Issue, p—Paid this year, dividend omitted, danrred or no action taken at tail dividend meeting, r—Declared or paid In 1761 plus stock dividend, f—Paid In ttodk during 17M, estimated cash value on ax-d ~ taken at last dlvldtnd meeting, r—Oe-clered or paid In 1761 plus Stack dlvldtnd. t—Paid In stack during 1761, estimated cash value on *x-dlvldand or tk-dlstrlbu-tion data.
x—Salat in full.
eld—Called, x—Ex dividend, y—Ex dlvl--tad and salds In full, x-dia-—Ex dlttrlbu tlon. xr—Ex rights, xw—wjtbaut warranto. ww—With warrOMt. wd—Whsn distributed. wl—When Issued, nd—Next day dalivarv.
v|—In bankruptcy or recalvarthlp or Mng reorganized Under the Bankruptcy Act, or sacurHIot assumed by such companies. fn—Foreign Issue sublect to In-forest aquollzotnq t»x.
Treasury Position
WASHINGTON (AP)-Tht cash position ' tha Treasury compared with corresponding data a year ago: _
Moy 15,1761 May 1|, 1767
Balance—
I 7,100,016,714.54 S 7,502,714,744.86 I Fiscal Yo»r July 1—
, ,131172,544^04.6* 137,337J2t,77l.f7
Withdrawals Plsctf Year—
162,775,366,077.74 146,117,777,411.71
-Tefal Debt-
152,287,853.616.43
lect to ontutory
128,161237,144.10 13,107,816,745.87
A lightweight plgstic armor lia|i been developed that hu better resistance than' steel of twice the weight, It Is being used in helicopters.
WASHINGTON (AP) - The poor people of “Resurrection City, U.S.A.” plan their first demonstration today—a march to the grave of President John F. Kennedy.
The Rev. Ralph David Abernathy, campaign leader, called Kennedy a “friend of the poor who “helped poor people” as he told a late Monday night rally he also wanted volunteers to fill all vacant seats in congressional hearings.
dr dr ft
“Don’t worry about dressing up, just go the way you are,” the denim-dad Southern Christian Leadership Conference president told a cheering crowd of responsive residents. “We’ve been here a long time. It’s time we do business.”
As he stood on a rickety table outside the camp site’s still unfinished “city hall,” a day's growth of beard showed on his dark brown face.
MARCH DELAY
Abernathy said he may post pone the massive march set for Memorial Day in order to give organizers more time to prepare for it.
He asked everyone to gather today outside the camp site’s main gate, where buses would take some to Capitol Hill. The rest were to walk two miles to Arlington National Cemetary where Kennedy is buried.
★ dr ★
The camp site now houses about 2,000 of the 3,000 persons SCLC planned to put in the ply wood shanties that stretch down West Potomac Park.
The number of marchers waiting in Washington area churches dwindled considerably Monday as construction of the plywood huts continued at rapid pace.
SOME WAITED
About 450 from the Southern caravan were waiting in North em Virginia, but most of the others who arrived over the weekend have been moved in SCLC officials said.
About 700 persons on part of the Western caravan arrived in St. Louis for an overnight stop before proceeding to Louisville: Ky.
★ ★ ★
Abernathy told his followers there is enough money to finish the camp. He later told newsmen the money isn’t all in, but he was sure the American people would come through with support. He gave no precise fig-
Barrel-Making Steady Work
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Lucius Porter has been making whisky barrels for 52 years and he says that as long as it is necessary for bourbon to be aged in oak he will have a job.
Porter, 72, has been with a barrel firm since 1916, but with only three barrel makers left in Los Angeles the trade is fading fast.
★ w ★
“The craft has been dying for 40 years and some day someone will come up with a cheaper substitute for wooden barrels and that will be the end of it,” Porter said Monday.
Forced Up by
Interest Rate Rockets
CUNNIFF
By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst NEW YORK — Record high interest rates will be paid this week by corporate and municipal borrowers as a direct result of the de^ cision by the1 House of ReP* resents lives to postpone action a tax increase.
The high rates are caused by inflation and the failure of tax policy to cool the overheated economic expansion. This puts the burden of economic restraint almost solely on money rates.
it it
Eventually, if not now, the record rates will affect every borrower, including the home buyer, the city seeking to build a new water system, the corporation with plans to expand and the U.S. government seeking to finance its operations.
The postponement of tax action comes at a time when many of these potential borrowers are actively seeking money. In this week alone more than 6500 million of new corporate and municipal bond issues will reach the market RATES SOAR Highest-grade corporate bonds already are nearing 7 per cent, and in- one instance a me dium grade issue was offered at 8 per cent. The federal government is paying O'per cent, and home mortgages now are above 7 per cent in some areas.
Ibis month President Johnson signed a bill permitting increases in the rate of loans insured by the Federal Housing Administration and the Veterans Administration from 6 per
cent to 6% per cent. And several states now are in the process of lifting the ceiling on mortage ates.
★ * ★,
If it is correct to say that financial men are worried about the present high rates, then it is accurate to say that some are acutely anxious about the future.
Even higher rates seem likely, and Johnson’s warning of 10 per cent borrowing costs in the absence of a tax increase now seems more realistic than it did
Appeals Court to Okay Probe?
News in Brief
Michael Soloway of 1408 N. Opdyke, Pontiac Township, told Pontiac police that he was robbed of 8176 by an unidentified woman at a house in the 100 block of Jackson about 3:30 i.m. yesterday.
Rummage Clearance. 10c or less. Congregational Church. 8-12 Friday, May 24. —Adv.
MOM’S Rummage: Thursday, to 12. Indianwood and Baldwin. -Adv.
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LANSING (AP) — Judges of the State Appeal* Court plan to decide for themselves early next month whether to grant the request of Gov. George Romney and supply a one-man grand juror to probe the State Highway Department.
That was the expected next step following Monday’s inconclusive ruling by the State Supreme Court, which split 4-4 over whether the appeals court has jurisdiction to act on the application by Romney and Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley.
★ *r ★
The planned resignation of a Supreme Court justice suggested that the Appeals Court, although inferior in the judicial hierarchy to the high tribunal might get its way.
Romney and Kelley petitioned the Appeals Court for a grand jury last October — Romney insistently and Kelley reluctantly. Kelley, who conducted a six-month probe of the department last year, at first said a grand jury was not needed.
Following the 4-4 decision on whether the Appeals Court has jurisdiction in the matter Judge T. John Leslnski, chief Appeals. Court judge, said he would call his court together — perhaps June 6 or 7 — to decide what to do with tiie application FREE REIN
Supreme Court Clerk Donald Winters said Monday he thought the 4-4 tie left the Appeals Court powerless to act, but Lesinski said he thought his court retained free rein because of the pending resignation of Supreme Court Justice Theodore Souris.
Souris, one of the four on the high court to rule against ap peals court jurisdiction, has announced plans to retire July 1
N. Viet Guns Rip Hue Area
4 U.S. Headquarters Slammed by Shelling
SAIGON (AP) - North Viet namese forces slammed 500 rounds of mortar and 100-pound rockets into four vital U.S headquarters in the Hue area today in one of the heaviest coordinated shellings of the war..
Enemy infantrymen also attacked one of the headquarters but were repulsed, the U.S. Command said.
★ ★ ★
The shellings followed a de structive rocket attack on a U.S. air cavalry division headquarters in the northern war zone Sunday. It too was attacked again today, but damage was far lighter.
At least eight U.S. soldiers and 21 enemy were reported killed in the attacks near Hue. Another 51 Americans were wounded. In all four cases, headquarters said, material damage was either negligible or light.
3 CAPITALS SHELLED
At the same time, Vietcong troops shelled three provincial capitals and two allied airfields —all but one in the Mekong Delta-inflicting at least 65 allied casualties.
'Gen. William C. Westmoreland, commander of U.S. forces in Vietnam, said, “The intensity of the war seems to be increasing.”
* A +
Asked if he thought this was deliberately timed with the Paris peace talks as part of a Communist command “talk and fight” strategy, Westmoreland said “circumstiuitlal evidence” would indicate this.
Westmoreland’s headquarters announced that thousands of American belicopter-bome infantrymen and paratroopers were on the move against North Vietnamese forces menacing Hue and Quang Tri City to the
a couple of weeks ago, One of the dangers in such high rates is that they could precipitate a recession.
RECESSION HINT
In n weekend speech, George McKinney Jr., senior economists qf the Irving Trust Co., said Congress might give the nation an election day present of the needs of '« domestic recession.
Another worry concern! the stability of the dollar, the value of which some economists feel is overstated and could lead to instability in the world’s economy.
★ ★ ★
A widely held opinion in financial circles is that, once again, the Federal Reserve may raise the discount rate: This being the rate at which members banks may borrow, it generally foreshadows increases in the cost of almost every other type of borrowing.
It is the responsibility of this central bank to expand or limit the money supply to keep the economy stable rather than inflated or depressed. Since inflation now grows worse by the day, analysts believe the Federal Reserve is compelled to slow economic activity by making borrowing more difficult.
A REFLECTION
Although rate changes generally are few and ar between, their frequency in the past 2Mz . ears illustrates the instability of the economy.
On Dec. 6, 1965, the rate was raised to 4 Vi per cent from 4 and remained at that level until April 7, 1967, when it was lowered again to 4 per cent.
★ ★ ★
From that point on, however, there have been regular increases, to 4Mi per cent Nov. 20, 1967, to 5 per cent March 22, to 5% per cent April 18. If another increase is made, most likely it will be to 6 per cent.
Although the interest rates that are appropriate to an economy at a given time cannot always be compared, it is difficult to overlook the fact that in 1929 the discount rate was 6 per cent and that for the next 27 years it failed to reach even 4 per cent. At one point it actually fell to % of one per cent.
Area Man Attends Visibility Meeting
A Bloomfield Township man, Dr. Paul L. Connolly of 4347 Harden, attended the Symposi-i on Visi-i bility in thel Driving Task ini Texas last! weekend.
The symposi-1
urn was organ-
north in two newly announced j' .z^ ^ ^ _ operations to “seek out and de-
stroy or capture enemy personnel, material and installations.”
BOND AVERAGES CtmplM by Th» Associated Pross
20 19
19
Net Change Noon Fri. . 64.2 Prev. Day . 64.2 Week Ago . 64.1 Month Ago 64.7 Year Ago . 72.0 1969 High . 66.3 1999 Low .. 64.0 1997 High .. 73 0 1997 Low .. 94.9
Rails Ind. Util. Fgn. L. Yd.
+.1
78.9 78.5
79.1 78 8
82.4
80.2
78.5
84.9 78.0
88 5
88.9
88.9 88.8
91.9
89.4
88.1
92.5 89.1.
visibility committee of the|
Highway Research Bqard and the Illuminating Engineering Research Institute of the Illuminating Engineering Society. Connolly is a member of both of these organizations.
He specializes in the study of sight in relationship to automotive design and safety.
Mj
(Maks chsekt payable to “Education Benefits.”
Allow ) weeks for delivery.) 8
a
DETROIT COUNTRY DRY CAMP
of Qotroit Country Day School
June 24 - July 19 June 24 - August 2
Swimming, camping overnight, arte, crafts, painting, nature lore, archery, riding, cookouts, games and sports.
Co-ed 6-12
Detroit Country Day COmp is located on 36 wood-ringed acres and playing fields of Detroit Country Day School, in the lovely Beverly Hills district of suburban Birmingham.
The campus includes numerous springs, the Rouge River at its source, tree shaded hills, wooded nature walks and a swimming pool and instructional program staffed by certified personnel. The co-educatianal Day Camp is on* of this college preparatory school's summer programs and is directed by members of the regular winter Lower School faculty. The Camp combines cultural, creative and physical activities for ages 6-12 into a living experience in an environment of sun and fun.
The hours of the Camp are 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. The school kitchen will serve a well-balanced lunch. Indoor facilities are available for rainy days. Private bus transportation is available. Interested parents are encouraged to write for free brochures. Admission is by interview only.
For information call 646-771 7. 1
Detroit Country Day School, 22305 W. 13 Mile Rd., Birmingham, Mich. 48010 Phone 646-7717
A Great Place to Meet With Friends
L
In the Heart of Downtown Pontiac 83 N.- Saginaw
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 21, 19(18
Close Vote on Crime Bill Seen
WASHINGTON M 69-1 < 29. Fee for plans and proposal forms $5.00.
Consultant: Oakland County Board of Audltors-~Facllitles Engineering Division.
The.work shall Include construction and lighting of E-W runway cross-ovtr exit at the Oak land-Pont lac Airport, near Pontiac, in Oakland County, Michigan and consist of the following ma|or Items: 1,050 C.Y.
„ .._ I........ . 620 C.Y.
iinoos Surface Course 470 Ton
Cahle Trench 950 L.F.
Underground Cable ■. 1,400 l.p.
7 Underground Dutt ...... 95 L.F.*
Dated MO? 4, 1968
Lansing, Michigan
T L, C. ANDREMft
' > V , Assistant Director k
■ -ENGINEERING MICHIGAN AEiONAUTICS COMMISSION May 14, May 21, 1968 . . f
Board Excuses Teacher's Strip
FORTIN, PHILOMENE; May 20, 1968; 1140 LaSalle Street; age 83; dear mother of Henry Fortin; dear sister of Mrs. Bennadette Rodgers and Mrs. Marie Tetu; also survived by seven grandchildren and 15 great-grandchildren. Recitation of the Rosary will be held tonight at 8 p.m. at the Huntoon Funeral Home. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, May 22 at 11 a.m. at the St. Benedicts Catholic Church. Interment in Mount Hope Cemetery. Mrs. Fortin will lie in state at the funeral home.
ANOTHER TRIAL
| Eddington faces another trial j GREENAWALT, HELEN MAY;
I June 10 on charges of first-de-jgree murder in the slayings of |Dr. and Mrs. Archer A. Claytor | of Saginaw, Feb. 1, 1967.
The trial is scheduled for Ludington on another change of venue.
★ ★ ★
Ronald L. Johnson, 24, of Saginaw is also charged in the mur-derg of. the CTaytors. His trial all-girl class to ertiphasize a!date has not been set.
P°i7' „ j * 7 . ' Claytor was found in his home
The alleged action six weeks jbeaten over the head ib, ago by the unidentified teacher with a hammer and then ho[ raised the ire of many parents, | ffis wife
was shot to death.
who demanded her dismissal,
FLINT (AP) - The School Board in Burton Township has ruled against firing a 24-year-old sex education teacher who reportedly stripped before her
along with that of junior high school Principal C.F. Heidtke.
The Bentley School District board, meeting in special session Monday night, concluded there was insufficient evidence to justify dismissal of the teacher or the principal.
“We find she had intentions in the best interests of her stu-
May 18, 1968; 1500 West
Lovers Lane, Arlington, Texas (Formerly of Pontiac); age 61; dear mother of Bruce J. and Richard G. McLintock; dear sister of Mrs. William H. Gorsline; also survived by six g r a n d c h i ldren. Private funeral service was held Tuesday, May 21 at 11 a.m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Interment in Greenwood C emetery, Vernon, Michigan. Family suggests contributions, to 'the Michigan Cancer Foundation or donor’s favorite charity.
Claytor was named Michigan’s Foremost Physician of the year in 1959. He was the doctor who delivered Eddington , and Johnson.
OCCEO to Hear Progress Report
dents,” said Gerald Felger, , I a *_l nl school board president. “She j 017 LeQOl AlO rlOtl erred in judgment by using herself as a model. Thus her meth-| A rt on tbe progress 0f jts McGEE, WILLIE JAMES; May
HEFFNER, LAVINA J.; MAY 19, 1968; 12201 Washburn,
Detroit, Michigan; Age 77; dear mother of Earl Heffner Jr.; dear sister of Fulton, Milton and Wilford Cooney. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, May 22 at 10 a.m. at th§ Harvey >A. Neely Funeral Home, 16540 Meyers Road, Detroit; Interment in Grand Lawn Cemetery.
ods, action and words were mis-j,egal aid program m heard
interpreted by some of her stu dents,” he added.
by the Oakland County Commission on Economic Opportunity (OCCEO) at its meeting tomorrow at 7:30 p.m.
The group will meet at the OCCEO central office, 1 W. Lafayette, in downtown Pontiac. V* * *
An ..expanded legal aid pro-
■8 T ™!,cs “cT,CA ;gram for the poor was stated shut by strikes ^Monday. A AM, using an additional
spokesman at the ™ff.^$82,000 US. grant, geres said he refunded ticke ! full.time ,awyers were
monj when his sta was re- along with
duced because of the strike. ^ th*e ex.
panded program has been under way for about six weeks.
Theaters Shut
PARIS (AP) - Many of the best known theaters in Paris, in-j eluding the Folies Bergeres, were
i__
said he refunded ticket
The otily wild horses on earth today are the\tarpan found on the plains of the Altai Mountain region and extreme western Mongolia, v
pip . * .*•< -"a \. ■ }$
Among other reports to be heard is one on a proposed credit union for the county poor.
9, 1968; 241 East Wilson Street; age 46; beloved husband of Luverta McGee; beloved son of Josephine McGee; dear father of James E., Robert Earl and Willie J. McGee Jr.; dear brother of D. L. and Harvey L. McGee. Funeral service will be held Thursday, May 23 at 1 p m. at the .Community Bible Baptist Church with Rev. W. H. Lawrence officiating. Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. McGee will lie in state after 7 p.m. Wednesday at the Frank Carruthers Funeral Home.
McNIELTjOHN S.;" MAY 19, 1968 ; 6139 Second Street, Mayville, Michigan; Age 64; beloved husband of Dorothy McNiel; dear father of John
SPECNER, DELIA; May 20, 1968; 1190 North Eddy, Walled Lake; age 87; dear mother of Mrs. Laura Profitt, Mrs. Stella Drake, Mrs. Elizabeth Profitt, Mrs. Edna Kessler; Tommie, Elijah, Ova, Courtney and Emery Spencer; also survived by 46 grandchildren, 47 great-grandchildren and eight g r e a t -great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Friday, May 24, at 1 p.m. at the Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Walled Lake.. Interment in South Lyon Cemetery. Mrs. Spencer willl lie in state at the funeral) home.
TICK, ALICE F.; May 20, 1968; 3550 Granger Road, Ortonville j (formerly of Pontiac); age] 83; dear mother of Mrs. Netanis Richards, Mrs. Wilma Lewis, Mrs. Marjorie Copeman, Mrs. Gladys Bron-dige, Donald and Dale Tick; dear sister of Mrs. Nicy Gavette; also survived by 10 grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Thursday, May 23 at 1:30 p.m. at the Huntoon Funeral H (fm e. Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mrs. Tick will lie in state after 7 tonight at the funeral home.
WICE, WALTER; May 19, 1968; formerly of Pontiac; age 74; dear father of Mrs. Gertrude White, Mrs. Liria Cordell, Mrs. Jane Hughes, Robert C. Owen and Reid Wice; dear brother of Mrs. Margaret La Ford, Mrs. Ann Rye, Mrs. Willa Beckett, Harry, Joe and Howard Wice. Also survived by 25 grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Thursday, May 23, at 1:30 p.m. at the Florshee Funeral Home, Hale, Michigan. Interment at Glennie, Michigan.
WICe7“MARTHA l T May 21, 1968; formerly of Pontiac; age 72; dear mother of Mrs. Gertrude White, Mrs. Lina Cordell, Mrs. Jane Hughes, Owen, Reid and Robert C. Wice; dear sister of Mrs. Artheal Barrager, Mrs. Ruth Tricker, Sidney and Jordon Owen; also survived by 25 grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Thursday, May 23 at 1:30 p.m. at the Florshee Funeral Home, Hale. Interment in Glennie, Michigan.
WILUAMS’ MARVIN L ; MAY 19, 1968; Beloved husband of Hannah (Bedwell). Funeral from -the Ted C. Sullivan Funeral Hohie, 14230 West
yMcNichols Road, D e t r o i t, Wednesday, 2 p.m. Interment in Industry, Illinois, Thursday
IN LQVINO MEMORY of our Hus-bond and Father, Richard H. Rodgers who passed sway May 21,
l hoyo Only your memory, door Husband,
The love o heart holds dear,
Sadly missed by wife, Louis# and children. \
IN LdviN^' MlffiOiV oTTie ft Stinson who passed away May 21, 1966.
God sow you ware getting
So ha did whot ha thought bast. He cam# and stood basTdf you, and whispered coma to rest.
You wished no ‘one a last fere wall,
Not aven said good bye.
You ware gone before wa knew It,
and Only God knows why.
Sadly missed by mother, and sitter Eleanor.
He cam# end stood beside you,
And whispered come to rest.
You wished no ona a last farewell,
Not even to say goodbye,
You had gone before wa knew It,
And only God knows why.
Sadly missed by hit wife Fannie and family._____
Announcements 3
ACID INDIGESTION? PAINFUL
fiat? Get new PH5 tablets. Fast Os (quids. Only 98 cents. Slmm's pros. Drugs.
ANTIQUE FIRE TRUCK, 1922 modal-1 Ford, available for
parades, advertising, political
campaigns, 634-0400 or 647-6999.__
HALL FOR RENT, RECEPTIONS, lodges, church. OR 2-5202, PE 2
ledge:
HALL FOR RENT. 37 W. Yale. FE 2-0072. After 6 P.M., FE 5-0316.
LOSE WEIGHT SAFELY with Dex A Diet Tablets. Only 98 cents at Simms Bros. Drugs.
NOTICE fO PUBLi Egg, 5395 Dixie Hwy. between 9*5 p.m.
EXPERIENCED MECHANIC, prefer man with tractor dealership exp., exc. pay and fring# benefits, 625-2245 for appointment.
EXPERIENCED DO-ALL surface grinder for grinding carbide and carbide tipped tools, overtime. Champion Tool Co. 24060 Orchard Lk„ Rd„ Farmington 476-6200. EXPERIENCED MILL HAND in cutting tool shop. Experienced shipping arid receiving. Trainees welcomed. All benefits, overtime. Equal Tool Company, 626-0626. EXPERIENCED PORTER F O R private club. Apply 114 Orchard
Lk. Pontiac._________
E X P E R IENCED RESTAURANT manager, dining room, cocktail room, and function rooms. Good salary and incentives. Box 98, Lathrup Village Post Office. EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY FOR combination offset pressman and camera-man, experienced on Harris or Melhle to run new offset department, now being formed in Plymouth, Michigan. Please send resume to P.O. Box 925 Plymouth, Michigan.___________________
EXPERIENCED WAXER FOR A ianitor company, full time only, apply at Pontiac State Bank Building, Room 515, Tuesday through Friday between 7 and 9 p.m. or call 861-8655 in Detroit,
between 3 and 5 p.m. ______
EXPERIENCED CHEF and assistant night cook. New large dining room and function rooms. Good salary and incentives. Box 98, Lathrup Village Post Office. EXPERIENCED PLASTIC FINISHING foreman. Send Resume to Smith-Way Plastics Co., 5684? Grand River, New Hudson, Michigan. 48165.
FURNITURE MOVERS Experienced preferred, full or part time, references necessary. Apply in person only. Stevens Van Lines, 3565(Elizabeth Lbke Rood.
FREEZER FOODS
Salesman, if you're not making 2 bills a deal with leads furnished call Detroit 371-2232. _____
FACTORY WORKER
Reliable man over 30 for small manufacturing plant In Troy. Steady employment, starting wage 12.25 per hour. Call Mr. Lemanski, 689-2446, 9 to 11 a.m.
Factory
Workers
By day or week: Warehousemen; assemblers; machine operators; material handlers; common laborers; etc. Daily poy. Report any time after 6 a.m.
Employers Temporary Service
Clawson 65 S. Main
Redford 26117 Grand River
Ferndale_______ 2320 Hilton Rd,
FLORAL DESIGtflR. experienced, lull or part time, see Mr. Coppersmith, Pearce Floral Company, 559 Orchard Lake, Ponllac. . FOREMAN: MATERIALS HANDLING EQUIPMENT. Supervise shop and road mechanics. Fringe benefits, profit sharing, write Service Manager In care of Pon-' flac Press Box C-10.
General Accounfant
Challenging position In hospital for accountants with experience In the preparation of financial statements, subsidiary schedules, etc, General accountant experience essential. Please forward resume with salary requirements to personnel director.
St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, 900 Woodward Ave, Pontiac. 10.15 . 7.20 7.86
.12.78 13.97 16.72 18.27 13.51 14.77
10.22 11.14
13.22 14.37
pan Riv 1.20 Day PL 1.52 Deere Co 2 Del Mnfr 1.10 DeltaAir .40 DenRGW 1.10 DetEdis 1.40 io 9a mm Det Steel .60 19.26 20.931 Olasnam 1>4g
i —----- j Disney .30b
Slack Averages DowChmV'o
Coma(l«* ay Th. Associated Prase J 140
* _ J§ JI .. *• Duke Pw 1.20
lads Ralls Util Stock duPont i 25#
change (Ta coma) DuqLt 1.66
Dyne Am .40
Man. (Ta coma) Prav. Day Week Ago Month Ago Year Ago 1968 High 1968 Low 1967 High 1967 Low
470.491 3.2 142.1 328.1:
476.8 191.7 142.6 330.0|
.4W .Jfi* MM »I.|-Ent Air
.50
iS i 12-? JS-f E Kodak 1.60a
481.8 193.2 154.1 Ml .3 E Kodak wi 435.6 165.6 135.1 299.1 Eaton Ye 1.25
493.2 209.6 159.1 342.6 Ebasco Ind 2
413.4 159^1 .136.5 292J EGAG 10
------------------ , EIPasoNG 1
IE Itra Corp 1
BOND AVERAGES i Emer El 1.68
Compiled by The Asseciated Press Ethyl Cp .60
....................... EvansP
Net Change Noon Pri. . 64.2 Prev. Day . 64.2
Rails Ind. Util. Fgn. L.Yd. Eversharp
Month Ago Year Ago I960 High
—.5
16.9 87.4
87.2
86.9 93J
88.9
86.3 95.6 86.1
+ .1 78.6 78.5 79.1 78 8
82.4
•0.2
78.5 84.9 78.0
81 6 88.6 88.6 88.8 91.9 89.4
-.1 80.2
80.3 FairCatn .50g
Friday's 1st Oivldends Declared
Pa* Stk. ef Pay-. Rata riad Record abla INITIAL '4
US Indus! new . .10 .. 6-1 A15
EXTRA
^ JP
INCREASED Foremost-McK .1875
REGULAR
Allegh Ludlum .. .60 Q Century Indust . . .06 Q Financial General .10' Q Union Investment .175 Q
7*1
7-11
Fed Mog 1.80 FeddersCp i FadDStr 1.70 Flltrwi 1.40 FstOirt 1.241 Flintkote 1 Fie Row 1.44 FlaPwLt 1.76 FMC Cp JI5 Food Fair .90 FerdMpt 2.40 ForMCK .44# FreepSui 1.40
GAF Corp .40 Gam Ska 1.30 GAccept 1.40
. .... 46% — %
16 78% 78% 78% — %
6 46% 46% 46%
Xll 56% 56% 56% + %
20 27% 27% 27% + %
188 49% 48% 49 —1%
18 33% 33% 33% — %
23 43% 43 43 + %
33 59% 58% 38% —1%
42 32% 32 32% .. <..
4 40% 40% 40% + %
1 «% 62% 62% — % ..|.....I
22 29 28% 29 — %'MlnnPLt 1.10
27 36% 36% ? 36% — % j MobilOil 2
7 30% 30*/a 30% — Ve Mohasco 1
xl2 19% 19% 19% ...... Monsan 1.60b
10 51% 51% 51% — % MontDUt 1.60
23 85% 84% 84%—11/4 Mont Pw 1.56
2 18% 18% 18% — % MontWard 1 15 64% 64% 6% + %. Motorola 1
155 141 139 139V4-2 ! Mt St TT 1.24
8 49% 49% 49% — %,
17 40’/4 40 40*/s — %
J Ifjj lf% 14% .....j NatAirlin .30
1 28% 28% M% Nat Bisc 2.10
37 35% 33% 33%-^1% Nat Can .60
8 68% 68% 68% . .. I NatCash 1.20
5 46% 46% 46% — Va N Dairy 1.60
29 413/4 41% 41% — %| Nat DiSt 1.80
5 23% 23 23% + % Nit Fuel 1.68
65 27% 27% 27% — % Nat Gtnl .20
_________ Nat Gyps 2
u NatLead .75e
7 24 24 24 — % Nat Steel 2.50
5 303/4 30% 30% + % I Nat Tea .80
10 54% 54% 54% — % Nevada Pw i
1 31 Va 31% 31% — % Newberry .80
15 32% 32>/4 32% — % NEngEt 1.48
16 183/4 18% 18% + %NiagMP 1.10
15 24% 24% 24% — % NbrfolkWst 6
6 20% 20% 20% — %| NoAmRock 2
33 30% 30% 30% — % NoNGas 2.60
2 58% 58% 58% .... Nor Pac 2.60
49 70 673/4 69'/4 +2% NaStaPw 1.60
22 77% 77% 77% — % Northrop 1
5 353/4 , 35% 35% •*— %, NwstAirf .00
xl 36% 36% 36% — % Norton 1.50
15 155% 155 155% + % Norwich .75
2 29% 29% 29%.......i
31 20% 20% 20% — %
—E—
39 37% 37% 37% — %
11 152% 152% 152% + %
13 76% 76% 76% + %_ „
19 31% 31% 31% — % omark I.ITf
8 61% 603/4 61% + % Otis Elev 31 61% 60% 603/4 —1% Out!
14 11% 10% 18% — %
4 36% 36% 36% — %
2 99% 99 99 —1
13 30% 30% 30% — %
3 28% 28% 28% + %
11 18% live 18% .....
—F—
67 73% 72% 72% + %
9 18% 18% 18% .....
27 41 41 41 ....
3 32% 32% 32% —
7 60% 60 60% + %
1 77% 77% 77% + %
20 31% 31 31 — %
12 20% 28% 28% — %
4 26% 26% 26% ......
1 41% 41% 41% + %
US Indust wl US Linas .50p USPIyCh 1.50 V s smalt 1b US Steal 2.40 UniyOPd 1.40 UPlbtin 1.60*
52 24% 24Vs 24% + %
5 41% 41% 41% — %
X46 30% 30% 30% + %
2 63 63 63 + %
49 51% 51 51% + %
4 37% 37% 37% — %
6 12% 12% 12% .....
109 22% 22% 22% — %
6 45% 45% 45% + %
1 46% 46% 46% ...
3 36% 36% 36% — %
516 52Ve 51 52 , +1%
7 42% - 42% 42% — %
2 52% 52% 52% — %
31 88% 88 88 + V4
36 41% 41% 41% ......
34 22% 72% 22% — %
Xl6 108% 108 108 — V4
6 22% 22% 22% — %J
54 44% 43% 44 — % wamLamb 1
26 27% 27% 27% — % Was Wat 1.20
94 42% 42% 42% — % Westn AirL 1
4 31% 31% 31% . WnBenc 1.20
16 28 27% 28 — % WnUTel 1.40
66 32% 32% 32% — % WestgEI 1.00
RCA 1 RatstonP .60 Renco Inc .92 Raytheon .10 Reading Co RalchCh .40b RapubStl 3.50 Revlon 1.40 Rexel I .30b Reyn Met .90 ReynTob 2.20
Sales Net
(hds.) Nigh Lew Last Chg.
—R—
74 4*to * 4tto —lto
17 llto 25to J5to -j-1
4 31 to llto llto — to
15 Mto M *5 ...
I 25to 25to Mto + to
12 15to 15H llto - to
11 42 4)44 41to-
17 Mto *5X4 fill 1] Mto MX* + to
4 40X4 40X4 4044 —
45 41to 41 to 41to + to
51X4 51to 51V. -
M
lto f
RoyCCola .71 Roy Out .tor RydarSyj .10 Sataway 1.10
StJosLd 2.00 StRagP 1.40b Sandara JO Schenlay 1.30 Scharlng 1.30 SelontW Oat a ScleoOata wl SCM Cp .40b Scott Paper l SbdCstL 2.10 SaarIGD 1.30 SaaraRo* la Saaburg .40 Sharon stl 1 Shell Oil 2.10 SharwnWm 3 Sinclair 2.00 SlngerCo 2.40 _ ilthK 1.00a SouCalE 1.40 South Co 1.00 SouNGai 1.40 SoutPac 1.40 South Ry 3.00 Spartan Ind SpdrryR .20a SquareD .70a Staley 1JS StBrand 1.40 SldKollt .lip StOIICal 2.70 SlOIIInd 2.10 SIOIINJ 1.70a StOllOh 2.50b St Packoglng StauffCh lit Start Drug 1 StavansJ 2.25 StudaWorth i
Sun Oil lb Sunray 1.50 SurvyFd .54* Swift Co 1.20
TimpaEI .72 Tektronix Tdladyn 2.7ft Tennaco 1.21 Texaco 2.00 TexETrn 1.20 Tex GSul 1.20 TexGSul wi Texaslnst .00 TexPLd .40* Textron .70 Thlokol .40 TlmkRB 1.00 TramWAIr i Transam lb Transition TriCont 2.30* TRW Inc 1.40 TRW Inc wl Twan Cant l
UMC Ind .72 Un Carbide 2 Un Elec 1.20 UnOIICel 1.40 UnlonPacif 2 Uniroyal 1.20 UnltAIrLIn 1 UnltAirc 1.40 Unit CP .40* Un Fruit 1.40 Unit MM 1.20 US Borax la
■ 31X4 Slto llto — to 15 31X4 Mto Mto — to I) 4444 44to 44to — to 14 Mto M M — to 22 27to 27X4 37X4 — to
By The Associated Press
Michigan Bell Telephone Co., ____. .
workers were expected back on * 0 dependent the Job throughout Michigan to-iuP°n workday after Communications ®r w‘10 c*n "J*®*
Workers of America members die paper with ratified a contract with the speed and acuracy under con-company. I8tant PreMure and whi,e work'
The vote announced Sunday.*0® *on® k*ours by CWA officials was 7,111-5,-
CUNNIFF
208.
Walter R. Schaar, CWA District 4 president, said the result clearly demonstrated “that the members want to and will vote if given a sensible opportunity and that they will vote their true convictions in the privacy of their homes."
The vote was conducted by mail.
REBELS IN DETROIT In Detroit, though, where some rebellious locals had refused an earlier CWA order to return to work pending the ratification vote, a union official remained unsatisfied with the contract The ratification, said Norman G. Mackay, president of CWA Local 4000 in Detroit, “does not in any way indicate our satisfaction with the contract."
★ ★ ★
The local has 5,000 members,
★ ★ ★
Continued high volume and the slowness of the industry to computerize some operations are generally regarded as the reasons for the big demand for clerks.
Reflecting the shortage, a partner of one nationwide brokerage house complained that no sooner had his firm
Price of Gold of London Top; Pound Rallies
trained novices than they were hired away for more money e> experienced workers.
TUITION HELP
High school graduetei without experience can begin as high as $100 a week, end In some -instances help ia provided with day or night school tuition.
One firm In the past week offered “rank; biginners” $5,000 a year and agreed to train them tor jobs as margin clerks paying $0,000 a year, plus quarterly and annual bonuses, e a *
To say that clerka and administrative and supervisory personnel are urgently needed would be an understatement, They are needed desperately, for the growth and income of more than a few firms is
'Poor' Camp Doubles Size
WASHINGTON (AP) - Eager volunteers working late into the night helped the Poor People’s Campaign more than double the size of its “Resurrection City, U.S.A." over the weekend, setting the stage for possible major demonstrations early this week.
With more than half the projected 3,000 residents now LONDON (AP) — The price housed In their West Potomac
more than 25 per cent of the total 18,000 CWA members in Michigan. It and two other locals, 4015 in Plymouth and 4016 in Royal Oak, Detroit suburbs, remained on strike after the first CWA order to return to work.
“People are concentrating on the French franc,” one dealer said. “The troubles there have taken the heat off us."
* * *
The price of gold was fixed as
$42 an ounce, up 50 cents from __________________________________
Mackay .aid th^. to. I> ggg** >1 4000 would return to work . VJ. .njloHau agenda.
xf 4514 45 45to 12) llto llto 11X4
12 47to 4714 4714 — to 11 4Sto 4*to Mto + to
1 HXt Wk IM-to 70 14314 142 142to + to
4 M *4X4 I
79 44to 4414 4414 — «
MM 27X4 2714 ..........
14 47 44X4 47 -I- to
24 4m 44X4 44X4 4) 40X4 47X4 41 — to
•0 2114 Mto 3214 —1
13 3714 37V4 37X4 — 14
13 Mto MV4 Mto — to 21 34to 54X4 5414 -1- to 44 7* 7* 7* — to
21 7*14 78V4 71% — to
x55 4*14 4*14 4*14 It llto 11X4 llto 35 24 25X4 24 — to
It Mto 45X4 45X4 — 14 M 32X4 llto Mto + to
• 5214 5214 5114 —to 54 2414 23to 24V5 -I- to
130 51 52*4 52X4 — 14
M 2014 2014 2014 — to
4 33 Mto 33
13 4414 44 44
27 Mto 20X4 20to 47 4214 4214 42to — to
10 5214 5214 5214 + to 125 4*14 Mto 40to + to
11 41to 41X4 41X4 —to 51 17X4 14X4 14X4 — X4
3 4014 4014 4014 .
51 5114 Slto 51% + 14
32 43 43to 43 — to
30 41X4 4314 4314 — to
5 45to 45to Mto + to
47 4314 42X4 42% — to 44 4X4 4X4 4X4 + 14
13 2714 2714 27X4 .
—T—
* 2514 2514 2514 — to
13 47to 47 47to — to
52 11414 113X4 113X4 —lto
*71 2* 27X4 27X4 - to
53 77X4 74X4 74to — to
44 25 2*to 25 + to
4* 122X4 12014 121 to — to 41 4114 4014 4114 + to
» 100 91% »» —lto
4 2414 2414 2414
5* 54 5314 53X4 — to
27 2014 19X4 l*to — to
1 37X4 27X4 37X4 — to
41 41 to 41 4114 + to
3* 55X4 5514 55to - to
7* 14X4 1414 1414 ..
34 30 2*to 29X4 — to
20 10314 103 103 —1
2 Mto Mto 5214 .
34 33X4 Mto Mto + to
—u—
*7 22X4 22 22 + to
65 Mto 42X4 4314 + to
17 2114 21 31 .... I
45 4*to 47X4 4»to + to BOSTON (AP) - Dr. Benja-90 4?to 4i 14 4ito + to min Spock and four others go
X*1 Mto *7X4 Mto — tol m - • ■ •
of gold hit a new high on the London free market today, byt the British pound recovered slightly from Friday’s record low
cal this time.
‘WONT BE PUSHED’
We view the stand taken by our membership with heartfelt gratitude," he added, however We are determined that we never will be pushed around again.”
Mackay said, though, that Local 4000 members would not cross Western Electric Co. picket lines. Western Electric is the arm of Michigan Bell
time last Wednesday.
The pound rebounded from Friday’s all-time low of $2.3854. At one point after the foreign exchange market reopened today, it had climbed 22 points to $2.3876, then settled around $2.3872.
The franc dropped 1.25 to a rate of 11.7975 francs to the British pound.
HIGHEST SINCE APRIL 1
The $42 price for gold was the
~ .- highest since the London free is talking about poverty as nev
sufteTf contract ratification "““Y °^ned APril 1 “nd*r11||“ *r M°n " vote by Western Electric work-|ne^ two-tier system for selling
ers has not been tabulated yet. f0,d- .. ,
___________________ It was believed here that speculators bought substantial C_____- -. amounts of gold in Zurich at the
OOOCKf turners peak Of the March gold rush at about $43 an ounce, and the Fi-
Go on Trial in Draft Case
South Africa would again real a*to 47X4 Mto - toi ■ . | J _. . . . sume sales of its huge gold
is iito iito iito + w.on trial today ta U.S. District'hoard and steady the market. 37 3ox4 Mto 30X4 — to.Court on charges of conspiring pimmcm! Times said there ft* *o* +>!*° counse* young men to evade js ->a sjrong impression that
nancial Times said selling pres-1 General Motors Corp. has re-
sure may enter and check the * S,lver A"viI awfr«±r rise when the free market price ‘anding public retatlons Mai-tiM ta* The award was given by the
reaches $43. = jPubllc Re,ations Society
a. ^ “ayss
★ h ★
41 62 61 to 61 to -itoif),- draft
1J 31X4 30X4 30X4 — X4 *ne U, aU-
The defendants, in addition to
12 31X4 30X4 30X4
3 44to 44 44 —
7 *3to 63to *3to — . .... ■ _ ,
31 ££ S + % Spock, are William Sloane Cof-
6 Mto u Mto - to fin Jr., 43, Yale University
II 51 “50X4 50X4 — X4 , , __. J
___y____ chaplain; Michael Ferber, 23,
24 24X4 2*to 26to - X4 second-year graduate student at
Varlan Asso Vande Co .40 Va El Pw
w—X—Y
24 g% 47% 47%-%'and teacher; and Marcus Ras-
|Goodman, 44, New York author
-N—
99 31% 31% 31% + % .13 48% 47% 48% 4- % 8 42% 42% 42% — % 47 130 128% 130 +1%
veyerr vtilric vim* i
Mot 2b WlnnOIx 1.50 Woolwortb 1 XaroxCp 1.40 YngatSM 1.M ZanittiR 1.20o
26 34X4 35X4 35to — to
6 34X4 34to 34% — to
161 45to 44V, 45 + to
3* 73to 72to 72to — to
6 45to 4Sto 45to — to
x43 5*X4 Mto 5*% — to
7 51% 51X4 51X4 + to
11 32X4 Mto 32% + to
40 25 24X4 25 + to
15 277to 276V, 274V4 —lto 53 3*to 39 Mto — to 34 57to 5714 57to — to
Copyrighted by The Associated Presi !*M
41X4 4114 41X4
27 34V. 35% Mto— .
2 27% 27% 27% ... Salas figures are unofficial. . m ,
3) 32X4 32X4 32% — to Unlass otherwise noted, rotas of dlvl-
4 5514 55 55 — to donds In the foregoing table are annual
22 62to 62 4214 — X. disbursements based on the last quarterly
19 4414 44X4 Mto + lto or Mnil-onnual denlaratlon. Special ;o
7 1514 1514 1514 . extra dividends or payments not deslg-
14 42 41to 42 + X4 nated as regular art Idontlfled In tho
• 34to 34 34to — tol following footnotes.
24 25% 2Sto 25X4 + tol a—Also extra or extras, b—Annual rate
43 19to l*to 19X4
N 94V, 93X4 93X4
51 34X4 34 3*to . __________________ JR—.--------P PPPIP
5 54 55X4 55X4 + to tar this year, f—Payable In stock during
9 51 to 51X4 Slto + to 1947, ostlmaled cash value on ox-divIdOM
22 27to 27to 27V, .... or ex-dlstrlbutlon dale, g—Paid last jraar.
+ tol a—Also extra or extras, b—Annual roie 1 — to plus stock dividend, c—Liquidating dlvl-, — x. dend. d—Declared or paid In 19*7 plus 1 + to | slock dividend. e-Decl*red or paid .so
37X4 37X4 — to h—Declared or paid offer stock dlvf<
PennCen 2.40 PoPwLt 1.5* PennzUn 1.40 PepsiCo .90 14 4514 Mto Mto — to Perfect Film
Occident 40b OhloEdis 1.42 OklaGE 1.04 OklaNGi 1.12 OlinMet 1.20
Pac G El 1.40 PacLtg 1.40 Pac Pet .)5g PecPwL 1.» PecTBT -1.20 PanASui 1.50 Pen Am .40 Penh EP 1.40 ParkeDavIs 1 PennDIx ,40b Penney -).Ma
12 40 7 464, 44
—0— 299 41
44to — to arrears, n—New Issue, p—Paid this year, dividend omitted, deferred or no action taken at last dividend meeting, r—O*
dared or paid in 19M plus stock dlyldond. t—Paid In stock during 19M, estimated cash value on ex-dividend or ax-distribution date.
z—Salas In lull,
dd—Called, x—Ex dividend, v—Ex dividend end sales In full, xxfls—Ex distribution. xr—Ex rights, xw—Without war-rents. ww—With warrants, wd—When distributed. wi—When Issued, nd—Next dey delivery.
vj— In bankruptcy or rectlvorshlp or l»lng reorganized under th* Bankruptcy Act, or securities assumed bv such com Ptnles. fn—Foreign Issue subject ta In terest equalization tax.
24 S4to 5414 54X4
7 25% v 25X4 25% + to
20 55to 5514 5514 — to
7 Mto 30X4 Mto ..
—G—
40 21% 21 21 , - % Proctr G 2.40
3 28% 28% 28% — %;PubSvcCotO 1
x8 35% 35% 35% + % Fubtkihd .46f
18 50% 50% 50% — %|PugSPL 1.68
48 V0% 90% 90% — % I Pullman 2.80
Phil* El 1.64 PIUIMorr 1.80 PimovB 1.20 Pita Stool Polaroid .32 PPG ind 2.68
40% 40% — %
20 36 25% 25% — %.
63 21% 21 21 ....
8 19% 19% 19% ..
38 34% 34% 34% .
. 8 28% 28% 28% + %
37 45% 44% 44% ... .
43 32 31% 31% — %
12 54% 54% 54% — %
—P—
40 32 31% 32
22 27 26% 26% — %
39 17% 17% 17% + %
16 22 22 22 ..
. 55 23% 23 23 — %
84 33% 33 33 — %
40 20% 20% 20% — %
60 34% 33% 33% -r %
74 30% 29% 29% «- %
11 24 23% 23% ~ %
13 00 79% 79% —2
52 77% 77% 77% — %
12134X4 I35to 1MX4 + to WASHINGTON (AP)-Tha eash poslllon 111 M 45to 45X4 + 14 of the Treasury compared wtth corre*
41 72 Mto Mto —2toI spondlng dele * year^ego:
24 *9to 4* Mto L . W t*M May II, 19*2
7 Mto Mto Mto - to Balance— DOW-JONB5 AVERAGES
1* 2lto 2»to Mto + *4 L » 7,tOOJl*,9»4.54 * 7,542,914,944.14 stacks -
1 54to 54to S4to — to paposits fismI Year July 1- „ M Indust .......................... M4.50-7.22
SIM 42X4 Mto + to'.,,' 124,193 J44,404.41 137,227,225.991.99 20 Rails . ..... 244.11-0.24
16X4 I5to iito ...|Withdrawals Fiscal Year— ________II utils ............... ....... 122.94+0.24
214 115V. into llSto—2X4' 142,97*JM,099.94 144,1W,7*9J2*.>5 *5 Slocks .......... . 315.43-1.29
x5 70V. 70to 7014 — to X—Total Debt— . “ I BONDS
0 97X4 *7X4 97X4 - 44 252,2*9452+*4.42 329,1*2,237,244.20 40 Bondi ............ 75.02-0.01
27 ttto' 20X4 21 to + to Gold Assets— 110 Hlih*r grad* rails .. .. 42 71-O.01
312 llto 11 llto, + to 10,404447+40.00 ---------------7 —*—.......... .................
Treasury Position
kin, 33, codirector of the Institute for Political Studies in Washington.
★ ★ ★
At 66, Spock, the noted baby doctor, as well as the other defendants, could face up to five years in prison and a $10,000 fine. They were indicted Jan. 5.
The indictment lists 11 acts which the governihent said were part of a nationwide program of resistance to the operations of the U.S. Selective Service System. The government charged that the acts were a violation of the Universal Military Training and Service Act, a pre-World War I law.
South Africa will not be holding Ujnnwr jn New York, off further supplies for very long.”
A heavy demand was reported today. Dealers reported some sellers were willing to unload at $42 an ounce, but demand was so great that higher prices were being quoted in later dealings.
threatened by their inability tc handle backroom or “cage’' operations.
During the past weak tha In- j vestment community was surprised if not shocked to learn that Lehman Brothers, one ot the world’s moat prestigious investment bankers, was one of the firms caught in a clerical bind.
ONLY PART
Lehman could produce the volume without great problems. It could share ta the increased trading of institutional investors. It could handle the purchases tot its large customers. But the sale is only part of the transaction.
The problem for Lehman, and many houses, Is that its clerical operation is temporarily unable to keep up with the volume1 ot business. The strain apparently caused clerical errors and delays which tied up funds.
* ★ *
As a result, Lehman Brothers reportedly has told the New York Stock Exchange that it will refrain from expanding its brokerage business until it can resolve clerical difficulties.
This is not an exceptional case. Other firms also are suffering backroom problems, partly because they have emphasized sales and somethimes ignored the need for more clerks to handle these increased sales.
BACK-UP PERSONNEL Some of these firms have been ordered by the New York Stock Exchange to restrict their growth until they can hire and train more backup personnel. Others have received, an advisory letter on the need for more workers.
“A failure to match production capacity with operations capacity may very Well result in' future problems and could bring exchange restrictions on growth of a firm’s business," the letter warned.
★ ★ #, .
The problems, however, are no more peculiar to the1 future than they are to the past and present. Twice the back office load has forced the Big Board to shorten trading hours in the past year so brokers could catch up on paperwork.
Still, the heavy volume in recent weeks has resulted in a continuation of errors i n customer accounts, in delays in delivering stock certificates and other failures to transact business property.
'MORE ERRORS
GM Gets Award W*18*1 app®rently worries the
stock exchange as much as
fnr PR Prnnrnmc anythin8 is that continued high ror ri\ rrograms volume result merely in
a continued high volume of errors unless the ratio o f salesmen to backroom workers changes.
The advisory letter suggested of that brokerage houses should aim to recruit and train two operational, administrative or supervisoury persons for each salesman hired.
★ ★ *
As for clerks, that’s as bullish as any recent news from Wall Street.
Park quarters, the Southern Christian Leadership Conference has for the first time a sizable nucleus of demonstrators on which to draw.
The Rev. Ralph David Abernathy, SCLC president, is to huddle with his staff today for a strategy meeting that could well last until nightfall. Exactly when and where to demonstrate
Only sudden rain squalls prevented organiation of a previously unannounced march around the Capitol Sunday afternoon, said the Rev. Andrew Young, executive vice president of SCLC.
+ ★ ★
The 36-year-old minister told newsmen he felt the week-old campaign is doing “extremely well” so far, “stirring the conscience of America ... America
S. Edmund Steeves, director of field operations section, General Motors public relations staff, accepted the award at a
Agents Will Strike Metropolitan Life
„ vW'-*4F/*% • >% —M—
Successfuhlnvesting
# % '4*
mm
m
By ROGER E. SPEAR Q — My husband once bought five stocks on your advice. Now he is gone and I tarn to you again. I have $20,100 to invest for safety, yield and a hedge against inflation. I’d Uko to help seven grandchildren ta WASHINGTON (AP) - The become teachers like theta
parents. I’d appreciate your advice. — M.D.
A— Your husband’s earlier
News in Brief
Rock-throwing vandals smashed windows valued at a total of $90 at 192 S. East Blvd., and 25 S. Anderson, it was reported to Pontiac police late yesterday.
Rummage Sale — May 21 — 9 a.m. 37 W. Yale. Met. Club.
—Adv.
12 Mto 33to 33to -
AFL-CIO Insurance Workers international Union said Saturday its 11,000 member-agents
will go on strike today against pUrcha8es'should be held, (ta the Metropolitan Life Insurance y T
Co'.
The Pontiac area office at 1007 W. Huron, Waterford Township, was reported being picketed this morning.
★ * *
A spokesman said the strike was called after it became clear the agents rejected a three-year contract that would have‘provided a $13 weekly salary increase.
Incomplete tabulation /Of votes, he said, shows the proposal will be rejected by several hundred votes.
* *
‘‘Our Metropolitan membership has given us a Clear mandate' to get them more money than has been offered,’’
IWIU President William A.
Gillen said in a statement. “Wo will wage a nationwide strike geared toward adding another
* 40X4 40V, 4lto ..... I jeef to itatutory limit
Xf-tncludes *415,441,201.55 debt not Sub-10 Public utijltlM ................. 79.42
your $20,000 investment I believe you’ll have to sacrifice some income to gain the growth needed to offset inflation. Time is fortunately in your fanror since your grandchildren are all under 10 years.
Because bank stocks have been laggards and are priced attractively, I’m recommending Chemical Bank N.Y. Trust for its pattern of rising earnings and 4 per cent yield+I tike Gulf Oil, tbird-Iargest crude producer, because 1968’s estimated earnings produce a reasonable price-earnings ratio of 12. My third choice, Stewart-Warner, is somewhat cyclical but should do well for longterm holders.
One hundred shares each of the first two and 200 of the third will add' $70 to your M.ioZd.04' $10 per week to the $13 of-1 monthly income and the growth
110 Industrials
83.00+0.041
[that I expect in these issues
over the years should help with educational expenses.
★ * * v Q — While discussing tax-exempt bonds with a neighbor, he said that some utility dividends are exempt from federal income tax. Which companies, may I ask? — S.G.
A — A few utilities and an occasional industrial stock pay dividends that are partially tax-exempt. Accounting practices within the corporations and federal tax laws applying thereto create this advantage because dividends in part represent a return of capital. Deduction percentages are subject to change year by year as is the fist of companies offering the tab benefit The 1967 list includes among Others; Arizona P.S., Con. Edison, Ei Paso Natural Gas, Idaho Power, Long Island Lighting, N.E. Electric, Niagara Mohawk, Potomac Electric, Puget Sound to, Ten-neco, Texas Oil 6 Oat and Transamerica. * * '
, (Reger Speer’s 4S-pege Guide te Successful Investing (now In its 8th printing) Is available to all readers ef this column. For your copy, scad $1 with your name and address to Roger E. Spear, care ef H* Pontile Press, Bek till, Grand Central Station, Now York; N.Y. 1M17).
(Copyright, INI)
The Weather
, II. I. WMIIwr iuraiu MfMM
Partly Cloudy
lOaMOt P*«a ||
Vol, iafi — no. 00
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
Waterford Will Appeal Ruling i on Longer Terms
Related Story, Page C-70
this week with the Michigan Court of Appeals.
* * * *
Because of the importance of the public question and the lack of time for candidates to file nominating petitions, Patterson said he also would request that the Supreme Court immediately consider the issue. June 18 is the-deadline for filing nominating petitions.
STRUCK DOWN ACTION
Circuit Judge William J. Beer struck' down the legislative action on May 6 after three Waterford Township residents filed suit against Township Clerk Arthur J. Salley for not accepting their nominating peitions.
Salley refused the petitions on the grounds that the Legislature, in extending the terms of those in office, had canceled any elections this year for township offices.
★ ★ ♦
The state statute was designed to eliminate the lame duck period affecting township officers who were elected in November but do not assume office until the following April.
Under the provision of the law, township officers elected in 1966 would continue in office until Nov. 20, 1970, 18 months longer than the terms to which they were' elected.
Beer ruled that the law deprived persons from running for office and denied the right of voters to fill the offices with whom they wanted.
Township. Supervisor Elmer R. Johnson said that If Judge Beer’s decision is affirmed, he and other members of the board affected by the ruling, will pay for the cost of the appeal.
(Continued on Page A-2, Col. 5)
Sunday Liquor Bill Revived in Senate
LANSING (AP)—Sale of liquor on. Sunday — a proposal defeated earlier this session — emerged again last night as the Senate approved an amendment permitting counties to decide the controversial question. sj
Senate Majority Leader Emil Lockwood, R-St. Louis, tacked the proposal on a bill requiring the Liquor Control Commission to notify county prosecutors of liquor violations by minors. The bill was advanced to final voting stage.
★ * ★
Lockwood’s amendment, defeated once this session, permits counties to conduct a referendum to decide whether to sell liquor on Sunday.
If approved by a majority of voters, liquor would be sold'by establishments whose gross receipts from sale of food an — Fire aboard the 5,000-ton Norwegian cruise ship Blenheim today forced her 98 passengers and most of her crew of 80 to abandon ship in the middle of the North Sea. Qne passenger was reported injured.
A skeleton crew stayed aboard to fight, the fire. Tugs arrived to join in the effort.
A * ★
Two Danish fishing trawlers relieved the Blenheim’s lifeboats of about 65 of the passengers and took them to the Danish port of Esbjerg.
The sea was calm as rescue ships, planes and helicopters converged 170 miles west off the Danish harbor of Tyboron. They were summoned from Britain, Scandinavia and the Netherlands.
REPORT IN ERROR
Reports to the British Defense Ministry said the ship was sinking, but they proved erroneous.
Reports from the scene said there were 89 passengers and 78 crewmen aboard, ,but the ship’s owners, the Fred Olsen Line, raised these figures.
* * *
The fire broke out in midmorning as the ship was halfway across the North Sea on a regular run from Newcastle to Oslo.
Cause of the fire was not known in London.
WOULD BE PREPARED Nguyen Thanh Le told a news conference that if the United States ends the bombing and other attacks on North Vietnam his government would be prepared to discuss a political settlement for Vietnam based on the 1954 Geneva accords. Those accords ended the French-lndochina war and set up the division Of Vietnam.
★ * *
In the past the North Vietnamese position has been expressed as readiness to talk on problems of concern to the United States and North Vietnam once the U.S. attacks ended. Today he said they could discuss “questions relative to a political settlement of the Vietnamese problem, on the basis of the 1964 Geneva accords.
* *• -k
Both Harriman and Le said they saw no reason for moving the talks from Paris because of the strikes which have virtually paralyzed the nation’s economic life and confronted de Gaulle with a massive political crisis.
TALKS IN RECESS The talks were in recess again today. Harrimap and Thuy meet tomorrow for (heir fourth session. Their last previous talk was Saturday. They have been here almost two weeks and have spent about 10^ hours together. Harriman has said he thinks the talks are going about as expected.
U.S. officials expect Britain, France and the Soviet Union to play some part in carrying the talks forward.
★ ★ ★
British Foreign Secretary Michael Stewart will fly to Moscow tomorrow to confer with Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko. The two men are cochairmen of the Indochinese peace machinery created in 1954 and could be instrumental in arranging a peace conference if progress in the Paris talks ever warrants one.
★ ★ ★
Even more important, in the view of diplomats here, is the Soviet government’s influence on Hanot This ia Believed to have grown in the post year or so at the expense of Red China. As Peking’s policy has fallen into the paralyzing grip of internal crisis, Vietnamese reliance on the Soviets is believed to have increased.
U.S. authorities welcomed Stewart’s decision to go to Moscow, and Harriman sent him a report yesterday on the Paris discussions so for. /
15 PICKED UP
The first rescue ship to arrive, the Danish trawler Gina Wulff, took 15 passengers from the lifeboats. Other craft hurried to pickup the rest.
Later the Smit Lloyd 3, a small Dutch supply vessel, reached the scene. Her owners said she would try to tow the Blenheim to a safe harbor with the help of two German tugs.
Police Force Sit-In End
NEW YORK UP) — About 100 policemen forced their way into the Brooklyn College registrar's office early today to remove 43 demonstrators who had staged a day-long sit-in to demand admission of more Negroes and Puerto Ricans to the school.
_J I
PEPPY ST. 02-WAY)
PAUF Names Division Head
A Pontiac, man, Ralph T. Norvell, president of the Austiii-Norvell Insurance Agendy, will head the commercial division of the 1968 Pontiac Area United Fund campaign.
Norvell’s appointment was announced today by Alger V. Conner, general campaign: chairman.
The Commercial Division will require the ' services of approximately 700 volunteers this year to cover government, education, the professions and business firms in the area.
Last year Daniel T. Murphy of the Oakland County Board of Auditors led the commercial division which raised
25.8 per cent of the $1,030,000 total used to support the 55 agencies within the PAtJF.
OTHER VOTES
The other candidates and votes received: Leo Harrawood, 465; Laverne DeWaard, 431; Mrs. Dorothy Farrah, 395; James S. Cherfoli, 395; and Edward Vahlbusch, 388.
By law, the commission must meet within 10 days and select a chairman. It has two years to present voters with a charter.
★ * *
The election results have been certified by the village clerk and will be reviewed by the village convassing board tonight.
Residents defeated first-class cityhood in 1959, soon after the villagers incorporation, and again in 1968.
Partial Cloudiness Forecast for Area
CIVIC WORKER
Norvell, who has been active with ' sPAlUF forsix years, was president of the ' Pontiac Jaycees in 1949 and president of the Pontiac Area Chamber^ Commerce in 1055. /
Hie is vice president of Boys’ Club of Pontiac, treasurer of Independent Insurance Agents of Michigan, and a charter member lay advisory board of St; Joseph Mercy Hospital.
1 .V *• # *
.Norvell of 70 W. Lawrence, was named Pontiac's Outstanding Young Man of the vYear In 1950 fend Boss of the Year in 1968 by tiie American Business Women’s Association.
Partly cloudy skies are forecast for tonight and tomorrow, but the weatherman reports no showers are in sight.
Sunshine will dominate the Pontiac area Thursday with temperatures a little warmer.
j Low reading In downtown Pontiac
The low is expected to dip near 38 to 44 tonight. The high will reach the mid-60s tomorrow.
w a a
Morning west-to-northwest winds at eight to 18 miles per hour will become five to 12 miles tonight.
WAYNE ST. (2-WAY)
LOW OF a
There's a 20 per cent chance of precipitation today.*
Low redding in downtown Pontiac before 8 a.m. was 44, the mercury had climbed to 63 at 12:30 p.m. ' - »
TRAFFIC PLAN—Creation of a downtown parking mall on North Saginaw between Huron and Lawrence necessitates routing traffic off Saginaw during the hours the downtown stores are open. Southbound traffic can turn, left, but turps to the right are the most convenient for skirting the mall. The traffic pattern calls for southbound traffic to follow West Huron
to Wayne, south on Wayne to Lawrence and east on La^ljtooa to North Saginaw. Northbound traffic must turn right aslAcfb rencer—a one-way eastbound street—then cap turn left on Fifty and left on Eak Huron to best get back to North 8agtoauf* hours will dictate the hours the mall ia in operation.
A
Vs
.«
<1
)
- - 8$
llJ IIf Mil BE JIT i
THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, MAY 21, 10«8
IA|
nsis Worsens,-DeGaulle Waits
PARIS (AP) — France’s massive crisis worsened today, \ylth more than One third of the nation’s workers on strike, but President Charles de Gaulle’s government still did nothing.
The Gaullist governing coalition expressed confidence it would survive a parliamentary vote on a censure motion tomorrow night, but It gave no in-
C. HUGH DOHANY
Related Story, Page C-72
Southfield Man Seeks County Treasurer Post
dication what it would do about the workers’ revolt for higher pay, shorter hours and job security.
Nearly 6 million of the nation's 16 million workers were on strike, 250 factories were idle, and the movement was still growing. And unlike previous French strikes of 24 to 48 hours, no limit was put on these walkouts and sit-ins.
Southfield City Treasurer C. Hugh Dohany announced today that he will be a Republican candidate for the office of Oakland County treasurer in the August primary election.
•{ He is the third Republican to announce -his candidacy for the post.
* Dohany has been an elected official in ^Southfield since its incorporation more ^than 10 years ago. He has served as charter commissioner, councilman, •council president and city treasurer.
| As a former member of the board of ^supervisors, his committee appointments included building and grounds, ^cooperative extension service, auditor ^general-local taxes, veteran affairs and •ways and means.
Library board member *
■* Presently he is a member of the bounty library board.
I Dohany, 48, left his position two years «go as a field supervisor of the marketing division of Detroit Edison Co. latter 26 years to devote full time to his duties as treasurer.
' Dohany said he would see that the ■county treasurer’s office would be ^‘operated like a business, efficiently and ^economically.”
; Under his direction, the Southfield •treasurer’s office is the first in the state lo be fully computerized.
1. “Loggj county government is far Jaehind industry in automation and if it is io exist on present tax levels it must attract capable officials with know-how of jmodern business methods,” he added.
Court Extends Jury Trial Rule
WASHINGTON (AP) — Defendants in all but "petty” criminal cases are entitled to the chance to be tried by juries, a precedent-shattering Supreme Court has ruled.
The ruling, one of several expanding 'the rights of criminal defendants, made the jury trial guarantee of the sixth amendment to the U. S. Constitution binding on the states.
★ ★ ★
At the same time, also by a 7r2 vote, the court erased the distinction between criminal contempt and other crimes and put “serious” opntempt cases under the jury-trial rule.
In two other decisions, meanwhile, the court junked longstanding decisions. It said a man cannot be tried fairly if the jury hears a codefendant’s confession incriminating him. And it said prisoners do not have to complete their sentences before testing additional sentences that await them.
★ * ★
Along with the criminal law decisions, the court opened shopping centers to mass picketing, gave^i 11 e g i t i m a t e children equal treatment under the law and set the stage foe consideration next fall of the speeded induction of, Vietnam war protesters.
iForce Lands as Haiti Bombed
*J PORT AU PRINCE, Haiti (AP) — -Unidentified planes dropped four bombs 'on Port au Prince yesterday without ^causing any damage and also attacked ;the city of Cap Haitien with bombs and a -landing of armed men, officials said.
• Haiti’s ambassador in Washington 3>lamed'Haitian exiles and Cubans, and 'the Haitian consul in Miami, Fla,, said, -“More than 4,000 Haitian workers have -been trained in Cuba for guerrilla ^warfare.”
- In Port au Prince, one bomb exploded -near the palace of President Francois -Duvalier. He was not hurt. Three other ‘Jbombs, including one which hit the Jnilitary airfield, did not explode, said
Aubelin Jolicoeur of the newspaper Le Nouvelliste.
Ambassador Arthur Bonhomme said in Washington: “The planes which landed the armed men at Cap Haitien are on the ground, and the Haitian army believes it has surrounded the men who landed and has them under attack. We should know pretty soon who are the attackers.”
★ * *
Consul Eugene Maximilien said in Miami that reports late Monday night indicated the “exile men” who landed at Cap Haitien, 85 miles north of Port au Prince, were under siege but still holding their positions.
The Weather
'man.* m n<. -*j
Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report
rj PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Variable cloudiness1 today. Partly cloudy tonight -pad Wednesday. Not much change in temperatures. Highs 60 to 67. Lows tonight -88 to 44. Winds west to northwest eight to 18 miles today ^ind five to 12 miles tonight. /Thursday outlook: fair and a little warmer. Precipitation probabilities: 20 per cent ■today.
,p.h.
Today in Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding 8 At $ a.m.: Wind Velocity 8 Direction: West Sun sets Tuesday at 8:53 p.m. Sun rises Wednesday at 6:06 a.rr Moon sets Tuesday at 3:34 p.m. Moon rises Wednesday at 3:53 a
Monday in Pontiac (as recorded downtown)
, Highest temperature .........
Lowest temperature Mean temperature . ,
Weather: Partly sunny, rain .25 inches
64
42
53
Monday's Temperatures
Downtown Temperatures
7 p.m.
8 p.m.
9 p.m.
10 4>.m.
56
One Year Ago in Pontiac
Highest temperature ........
Lowest temperature..............
Mean temperature^ .. _
Weather: Sunny
This Date in 96 Years
Alpena 62 37 Duluth 61
Escanaba 60 40 Fort Worth 78
Flint 60 42 Jacksonville 86
59 G. Rapids 60 35 Kansas City 64
60 Houghton 54 36 Los Angeles 78
63 Houghton Lk. 57 39 Milwaukee 57
Jackson 59 41 New Orleans 81
Lansing ^ 61 37 New York 62
Marquette 57 45 Omaha 58
Muskegon 571 i 45 Phoenix 102
60 Oscodc 58 45 Pittsburgh 59
40 Pellston 63 36 St. Louis 66
*50 Traversee C. 66 37 Tampa 89
Albuquerque 85 50 S. Lake City 82
Boston 56 49 S. Francisco 64
res Cincinnati 67 43 S. Ste. Marie 58
Denver 60 41 Seattle 65
In 1883 Detroit 65 49 Washington 69
Dota From U S. WEATHER BUREAU - ESSA
FORECAST
Figure* Show low Tomporoturo* Expected Until Wednesday Morning
Hoi" IM
Showers li[Mfl snow flurries >1
liefated Precipitation Not Indicated— Comult local fortcatf
AP Wirephoto
r , NATIONAL WEATHER — Showers are forecast for tonight for tnost of the •Northwest, the southern Plains and part of the Southwest. Milder weather is due ,atoog the Mississippi River Valley.
1 M
The strikes stopped trains, subways, buses, taxis and garbage collection In Paris and closed coal mines, airports and seaports. Some tourists were stranded. Lines formed at food and tobacco ships, banks and gasoline stations.
FEW POLICEMEN
Amid a monstrous traffic jam in Paris, made worse by cars that were abandoned after running out of gasoline, few policemen were in sight. Although not on strike, many apparently stayed home.
Facing the gravest threat yet posed to his 10-year-old Fifth Republic, De Gaulle has made no public statement since breaking off a visit to Romania Saturday and returning to the Elysee Palace. He is to address the nation on television Friday night, and there was no indication of what he planned for a situation strongly reminiscent of the turmoil that brought him back to power in 1958. Opposition political leaders conferred with trade union leaders yesterday in preparation for their attempt in the National Assembly to oust Premier Georges Pompidou and his Cabinet.
* k k
The French Communist party called
for an end to the De Gaulle regime and the formation of “a true republican regime opening the way to socialism.”
★ ★ ★
A successful censure motion i n Parliament would not oust De Gaulle, whose term runs until 1972, but would be a major setback to his policies.
SAME DEMANDS
George Seguy, secretary-general of the big Communist - backed General Confederation , of Labor; said in a speech that the striking workers will present their same demands to whatever government is in office until they obtain satisfaction.
* * ★
The French crisis began with a revolt early this month of university students demanding educational reforms. Despite a promise from Pompidou to meet these demands, the students launched round-the-clock sit-ins at most of France’s universities.
TS . *”-2J
'Blue Flu' Ends > for Bus Drivers
The Pontiac bus drivers’ version of the “blue flu” has apparently been cured today and fell bus lines are reported operating normally.
Yesterday' 12 out of 18 drivers failed to show up for work, reporting themselves sick, and two of the city’s five lines were shut down.
★ * *
A spokesman for Pontiac Transit Co. said today a disagreement between management and the men had been resolved. The spokesman didn’t elaborate.
The bus line Is operated by a private firm with a franchise from the city.
New School Head in W. Bloomfield
The West Bloomfield school board officially hired a new .superintendent last night to fill the vacancy of Dr. Leif Hougen, whose contract expires June 30.
★ ★ Jt
Anthony P. Witham, 37, assistant superintendent of the Monroe School
District, assumes the West Bloomfield ,
post July 1. The official hiring came with the board’s signing of Witham’s contract shortly after midnight today during a late board meeting.
★ ★ ★
Witham said he signed his contract before the meeting yesterday. He was chosen from at least 60 other candidates.
The West Bloomfield board had voted in early February not to extend the contract of Hougen, who had held the superintendent’s position 16 years.
The basic amoifht of Witham’s annual salary is $22,000. Hougen had received $22,5000 a year. Witham’s present salary in Monroe is $18,000, he said.
ANTHONY P. WITHAM
KEY EVENT—Pontiac Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. (center) receives the key to Ypsilanti yesterday from Ypsilanti City Manager John G. Cartwright during Mayors Exchange Day. Mrs. Taylor looks on. Hie Taylors’ visit was cut short when they left for Canada upon learning of the illness of Mrs. Taylor's mother. /
Pontiac, Ypsi Problems Alike, Says Visiting Mayor
(Continued From Page One)
which Pontiac is limited to by the city charter).
He said he wanted to discuss further with Pontiac officials the implementation of a city income tax with the possibility this could be used by Ypsilanti to solve money woes.
★ ★ ★
Burton said that although Ypsilantl's urban renewal program has been in the works longer than Pontiac’s, h e definitely feels that urban renewal can accomplish much toward creating hous-
ARTHUR J. LAW
State Legislator Will Run Again in 62nd District
State Rep. Arthur J. Law of Pontiac announced today he will seek reelection to a sixth term.
A Democrat, Law, 62, of 27 Miami represents the 62nd District which includes most of the City of Pontiac.
★ ' ★ ★<*.
Elected to the House of Representatives in 1958, Law has served as a member of the House Appropriations Committee for the last foru years.
A native of Poteau, Okla., Law has been a Pontiac resident since 1925/
ELECTED TO COMMISSION
ing that is lacking for low and medium income families.
GOOD RELATIONS '
Burton said his city has good community relations at the moment and almost full employment. He said the city could experience problems if the large manufacturing plants have big layoffs.
To avert possible problems in this area several groups, including the Office of Economic Opportunity and the Ypsilanti Chamber of Commerce and the city are working on programs to hire youths during summer months.
* ★
Burton, 57, wler Sr. hosted the guests and city officfials at his home before the group left for a dinner at Kingsley Inn in Bloomfield Hills to conclude the exchange.
Man Gets Probation in Death of His Wife
After one unsuccesful bid for a seat on the City Commission in 1938 he was elected to the commission in 1942, retaining the position until 1954.
During his 12 years on the commission, Law served three terms as mayor.
The owner and operator of a supermarket for nearly 20 years in Pontiac, Law is now devoting full-time to. his duties as a legislator.
★ ★ ★
A long-term supporter of a sports complex at the Michigan State Fair Grounds, Law recently Was heartened by the fact that the state approved a $200,000 expenditure to study his plan for the recreation development.
X-LABOR LEADER
Employed as a production worker at the Fisher Body Plant in Pontiac from 1925 to 1943, when he was named a labor representative for the War Production Board and the QPA, Law is a former president of Fisher Body Local 596 and is now an honorary member of the UAW. ★ ★ ★
He is a member of the Roosevelt .Lodge, F&AM, and a 32nd degree Mason.
A 35-year-old Pontiac man was placed on two-year probation yesterday in the iatal shooting of bis wife last September.
The sentence was Imposed on Otto Tyson, 296 Crystal Lake, by Oakland County Circuit Judge Farrell E. Roberts. ★ * ★
Tyson had pleaded guilty t o manslaughter April 9 in the death of his 32-year-old wife, Irma. He had been charged -vith the more serious offense of second-degree murder.
The Sept. 2 shooting occurred fin the Tyson’s home during an argument between the couple.
★
The Tyson’s 14-year-old daughter told police that she saw her father aiming the revolver at her mother. She said that she attempted to grab her father’s arm but was unable to prevent the shooting.
Waterford to Appeal Ruling on Long Terms
King Medals Proposed
WASHINGTON (JO — Sen. Hugh Scott, R-Pa., introduced today a bill to strike one million commemorative bronze medals in memory of the Slain Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
Birmingham
Talks Slated on Transfer of Rubbish
BIRMINGHAM - The City Commission last night set a formal date of June 10 for discussion of the Southeast Oakland County Incinerator Authority's proposed rubbish transfer.
The commission received a report from the transfer station study committee, but took no action because It had previously pledged to notify two home owners' associations prior to a decision. k kk
The two groups, the Sheffield Estates and Pembroke Manor civic associations, have objected to the sale of city-owned property on Coilidge north of 14 Mile in Troy for a site for the station.
The commission also approved the rezoning of four lots in the south Woodward area to the city's new R-8 row or town-house classification.
REQUEST OKAYED
Also okayed was a request from Charles Edwards Post No. 14 of the American Legion in the amount of $150 to defray costs of grave flags and a memorial wreath tor the city’s Memorial Day observances.
In other business, the commission appointed members of the newly-formed Board of Building Trades, to hear appeals on permit regulations and problems.
k k k
The board was created a week ago on the recommendation of building official Harold C. Weber.
New members are Fred M. Harley, architect; Gordon E. Hoyem, mechanical engineer; Ross Pierce, electrical contractor; Gordon C. Johnston, plumbing contractor; Jack Sights, heating contractor; and Donald Worsley, refrigeration contractor.
BLOOMFIELD HILLS - A forum of community leaders will close out the “Focus Summer Hope” series in the school auditorium of St. Hugo of the Hills Elementary School, 380 E. Hickory Grove.
The discussion, to begin at 8 p.m., will be entitled “What You Can Do” and will centef around actions which individual citizens can take to help solve urban problems.
k k k
The panel will include Mrs. Richard V. Oxford, 727 Robinhood, Bloomfield Township; Harry Peterson, 655 N. Cran-brook, Birmingham; Ed Rivas, director of the Oakland County Commission on Equal Opportunity (OCCEO); Tom Rosenthal of Pontiac, Eastern Community school director; Mrs. Philip Goetzinan of Operation Head Start; Robert Sanchez, a Pontiac post-office employe who is tutoring underprivileged persons for civil service examinations in a government-sponsored program; and Rev. Sister Denise, who is presently working for open housing in Detroit.
The public may attend and participate in the general discussion.
. BIRMINGHAM - “A New Look at the Metropolitan Region” will be the topic discussed by William T. Patrick, executive director of the New Detroit Committee, at the annual meeting of the Birmingham-Bloomfield Council of Human Relations Sunday.
The meeting, to begin at 7 p.m., will be held at the First Baptist Church of Birmingham, 300 Willits.
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In addition to his work with the New Detroit Committee, Patrick is chairman of the Wayne County Planning Commission. He is on leave from his position as assistant general attorney for the Michigan Bell Telephone Co.
The talk will be informal and will be followed by a question-and-ahswer period. The public may attend.
BLOOMFIELD HILLS - The board of education will not meet tonight as reguarly scheduled. Instead, a meeting will be held Tuesday, May 28, at 8 p.m.
City to Consider Wording of Ballot
(Continued From Page One)
“We would not want it said that public money had. been spent to protect, our jobs,” Johnson said.
He said, however, that if the law Is declared constitutional, it should be considered a normal expenditure of the township.
Objecting to the township paying any legal fees to appeal was Patrick K. Daly, one of the three residents who had challenged the statute.
City commissioners tonight will consider a resolution approving the wording of the June 24 referendum ballot on the city’s open housing ordinance. The meeting is set for 8 p.m. at City Hall.
The ordinance was adopted by the City Commission early this year. It never went Into effect because referendum petitions forced an election on the ordinance.
★ ★
The ballot likely will contain the designations, “for the ordinance” and “against , the ordinance’’ with the voter being able to choose one.
In other business, the commission is scheduled to consider a proposal to sell a city-owned site at Featherstone and East Boulevard for construction of a nursing home.
U$. Spread Too Thin'
SAN FRANCISCO MB — The United States is trying to do too much in too many fields all at once, and should assign priorities to its Inany goals, the board chairman of American Motors, Roy D. Chapin Jr., told the National Association of Purchasing Management Monday.
tv
1; \,
From the
Press Box
By BRUNO L. KBARNS Sports Bditor, Pontiac Praia
Rumors from a very reliable source have reached this corner that Pontiac's long time dream of having an arena-auditorium complex is closer to reality.
If the rumors bear true that aome announcement of this is due within a few days, it could be the most prolific venture to rejuvenate the city and its downtown ever undertaken in Pontiac.
* * *
Most notable story of what other cities have done to help themselves is the unbelievable success story of the city of Duluth, Minnesota.
A few years back, Duluth, similar In city size as that of Pontiac, but with a metropolitan area one-fifth of that of north Oakland County, was considered the most depressed area in all of the midwest.,
Its downtown was dying and its overall economy was near tragic proportions. APPROVE CONSTRUCTION
In February 1963, the city approved the construction of an arena-auditorium-convention hall complex.
On Aug. 6, 1966, after three years of study, surveys of 150 similar structures in the country, Duluth inaugurated its magnificent facility.
★ R ★
One year later, Aug. 1967 these are the startling facts revealed by the Duluth Arena-Auditorium board:
1. There were 782 events held in the complex. This Is an average of more than two a day.
2. Total attendance in the complex In the first year was 782,500 people, or almost eight times the metropolitan
' area of Duluth.
3. A total of 120,000 convention delegates spent an average of $35 per person per day and local expenditure
* amounted to $10 per person a day.
| 4. This meant that $7 million was
i spent through all segments in the city. i 5. It also showed that payroll checks } amounting to $272,000 in salaries were distributed and that $250,000 changed hands in purchases with local ; businesses. - ;
i 6. In one year, $10 million lit 1 business building was begun in the ( area of arena and the projection called for $50 million In business construction ' within 10 years.
To go into detail on the structural part of the complex would take columns of words and adjectives, but to quote two famous personalities Bennet C e r f,
> “Duluth has joined the big leagues”; Paul Harvey, “Duluth has entered a new dimension in vitality.”
V NEW FLINT ARENA
In Michigan, the city of Flint has become the front-runner of cities in the state which have placed their faith in such complexes which are directed at the social, recreational, physical and educational needs of their citizens.
★ ★ A
Newest additions in Flint .include the twin-winged ice arenas and a franchise in the International Hockey League, and the addition of an astro-turf football field, one of only three in the country, which will be tested this fall.
• Any announcement which may be forthcoming for Pontiac in the league of Michigan arena cities would be the most welcomed news in this city’s annals.
8 Amateur Golfers
\ \
in USGA Section
By FLETCHER SPEARS Although the professionals were on hand to pick up the lion’s share of honors, it was, nevertheless, a banner day for the amateurs in the opening phase of the USGA Open qualifying yesterday.
The pros plucked 16 of the 24 berths that were , up for grabs in the ’local’ qualifying round, Slid the 24 who made the grade will now move on to the ‘sectional’ phase of the competition June 3 at Knoll wood Country Club in Birmingham.
Birmingham and Tim Kilpelainen of Western Michigan.
R ★
Three pros bunched at 148 were Stan Brlon of Tam O’Shanter, David M. Dunn of Holland, 6., and Gene Bone of Bay Fointe Golf Club. *
FOURTH MEDAL
For the 35-year-old Stevens, it was the fourth time he’s bagged medalist honors in the ‘Local’ phase of the qualifying.
At the sectional, Stevens will be trying FINAL STOP ^or hi* fourth trip to, the U. S. Open. He
made it In 1961, ’65 and ’66. He failed by Survivors from the sectional touma- >. a couple of shots in the ‘local’ qualifying ment then move to Oak Hill Country last year.
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Stevens’ steady round included four birdies and a quartet of bogies. He matched par-72 over Indianwood’s hilly 6,904 yards in the morning round and stayed at an even-par 71 over the 6,405-yard Forest Lake layout in the afternoon.
The cutoff came at 152 and seven players had to battle in a playoff for four spots.
Club in Rochester, N.Y., for the championship proper, June 13-16,
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Heading the pack in yesterday’s 36-hole grind over Forest Lake and In-dianwood country clubs was former state amateur champion Melvin (Bud) Stevens, who carded an even par 72-71 — 143 to lead the field of 113 by three shots.
TAKES SECOND ,
Robert Clark of Monroe, a professional, grabbed the runner-up spot while the next three positions were taken by amateurs.
On the list at 147 were Jim St. Germain, a student at Eastern Michigan University, former amateur and Michigan Open champion Charles Kocsis of Red Run, and current Golf Association of Michigan champion Peter Green of Orchard Lake Country Club.
★ * R
Rounding out the list of amateurs landing berths in the sectional were Tom Draper of Royal Oak, John U. Law of
U.S. OPEN LOCAL QUALIFYING QUALIFIERS
•Melvin (Bud) Stevens, Western ....... 72-71—143
Robert Clark, Monroe ......... 74-72—146
-James St. Germain, Meadowbrook ____,. 76-71—147
-Charles Kocsis. Red Run ............. 72-75—147
-Peter Green, Orchard Lake ........... 75-72—147
Stan Brlon, Tam 6‘Shanler ............ 73-75—148
David M. Dunn, Holland, 0............. 75-73—148
Gene Bone, Bay Polnte ................ 74-74—148
John Dalrvmpla, Sylvanla, O......,.... 73-76—149
Don Allred, Mount Clemens ............ 75-74—149
-Tom Draper, Red Run ........»........ 71-78—149
Casmera jawor, Glen Oaks . ........... 75-74—149
Bobby Breen, Woodbrldge, Ont......... 75-74—149
Bob Panasluk, Knollwood .............. 72-77—149
-David Cameron, Oakland Hills ....... 77-73—150
Larry Tomaslno, Barton Hills ......... 74-76—150
Phillip Ferranti, Toledo ............. 75-75—150
-John U. Law, Birmingham ............. 75-75—150
Donald Lea White. Meadowbrook ........ 77-74—151
Tom TalkInaMh, Ypsllantl ............. 77-74—151
Dick Brinks, Orchard Lake ............ 75-77-152
Richard Deyon, Ponton ............... 78-74—152
nirrw Kltpewinpv Western Mich........ 77-75—152
DICK Bury, Birmingham ................ 76-76—152
ALTERNATES
Bill Mattson. Shenandoah ............ 78-74-152-
Leigh Tuolty, Bloomfield Hills ....... 74-78—152
-Glenn Johnson, Grossa lie............-7678—152
-Amateurs
NON-QUALIFIERS
153—Vic Juhola, Stan Jawor; 154—Gerald Prles-korn, -James Funston, -Rav Palmer, Larry Wilkinson, -John Grace; 155 — Howard Brown, -Charles Epps, Ted Kroll. Duncan Clark.
156—-Leo T. Daigle, Fred Ewald, -Tom Pendle-bury, Willie Mosley, Harvey. Woodard, Roy Beattie, Tom Deaton; 157—Mike Dennis, Eugene Bonl, Ron Fox, Tom Cosmos, Alan Jarrard, David Clayton, Al D'Amato; 158—Quentin Smith, Bob Galda, Rich VanAtter, Nick Berkllch, Robert Kunn, -Mike Murphy.
159—Don White,.Bob Ure, Jack Clark, -Ed Flowers, Ben Lula, -James Neumann, Lou Powers, -Ed Lauer; 161—-Chuck Gulash, -Fred Behyner; 162— John Jakubiak, Edard Powers, Steve Isakov, Bob McGlllen, -Dr. Harry Schmidt.
_ 163—Salvatore Ppmahte Jr., David Samaritonl, Tommy Shannon, PiuT VanLoozen, -Mark Day, Robert Bernstein; 164—-James A. Stephenson, John Jawor, Paul- E. Thomas, Sal Pomante Sr., Ronald Yorick, Curtis Reynolds, Walter Laskey; 165—Tom Kretzschmar; 166 —Jack Corbett; 167 —-William Dickens. j
169 —John Chestirj 170 —William Peck, Walter Kerchenush, William Long; 171—Bill Tombros, James Dewllng; 172—Ronald Adkins, Keith Fox, -Chuck Sturm; 173 —Robert E. Phifer; 174 —Warren S. Bauer; 175 —Jerry Holmqulst, Donald McIntyre; 177—-Charles Cameronr 184—-Dick warren.
Withdrew—Reggie Sauger, Warren Orllck, -William Newcomb, -Calvin Cooke, Earl Myers, -Richard
WIN IN PLAYOFF
Picking up the berths with birdies on the first hole of the playoff were Dick Brooks of Orchard Lake, Richard Doyon of Fenton, Dick Bury of Birmingham and Kilpelainen, a junior at WMU.
Bone, former Michigan Open and PGA champ, had his tee-to-green game working but seven three-putt greens pushed him wfell off Stevens’ pace.
AP Wlraphato
BOOTS BENGAL’S BOUNCER — Minnesota third sacker Rich Rollins (left) back to pick up ground ball he dropped off the bat of Detroit Tiger hitter Willie Horton in the fourth inning last night at Bloomington, Minn. The error pro-longed a rally, enabling the Tigers to cut a 3-1 Twin lead to 3-2. Shortstop Cesar Tovar backs up Rollins. Two more errors in the 10th inning handed the Tigers a 4-3 triumph.
THE PONTIAC PRESS
TUESDAY, MAY 21, 1968 B—i
SPORTS
Central Announces New Cage Coaches
Pontiac Central’s varsity and junior varsity basketball candidates next fall shouldn’t have much trouble recognizing their “new” coaches.
Hazel Park Monday 'Longshot Heaven'
Fox, Bon Johnson.
No Card—Bob Healy 85; Mark Thornes-L. Oder 80; Ty Damon 78 teno 82; Paul R. Sinelll 84; E. Ben Davis, -Lloyd Syron 78, Alex Redi-----1 " -------
■ ....... Atherhold 85;
Damon 78; Mel E. Mzhick
iron 78, Alex Redmond 85, Reggie Myles Jr, 81. _Oid Not Start—-William Rambo, Tom Dolan, Max Evans, -Robert Neller, Joseph Thacker, Eldon Briggs, -Barry Solomon, Joseph Newton, -Ted Kuzma.
Longshot players had a field day at' Hazel Park track Monday. The largest daily double of the meeting was registered when Shiloh Spring won the second race to complete a pay-off of $277.80.
In addition the second biggest twin double, a $6,022.80, was collected by nine bettors.
Principal Garth Errington Monday afternoon announced that 36-year-old Ralph Grubb and 32-year-old Earl McKee will be the PCH varsity and reserve coaches, respectively, next season.
Both will be familiar to the players and rate their respect. Grubb guided the PCH sophomore squads for seven seasons* and has led the jayvees to a 63-15 mart in the past five seasons.
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Oddly, the junior varsity had a 14-1 mark in his first season at the helm and its win total has decreased by one each season at the helm and its win total has decreased by one each season, down to 11-5 this past winter.
wmm*
« - * -WV' v
Can ham Requests Big 10 to Study Track Meet Film
CHICAGO UP — The Big Ten Games Committee is planning a study of films of last Saturday's outdoor track meet with the possibility that Michigan—not Minnesota—will be declared the winner.
Minnesota compiled 50 points to edge Michigan, with 49 points, and Wisconsin, with 48.
ASKS FILM STUDY
However, Michigan Coach Don Can-ham has asked for a filth study to determine if Minnesota’s Rich Simonsen or Michigan’s Sol Espie finished third in the 220-yard dash behind Minnesota's Hubie Bryant and Michigan’s Leon Grundstein.
Simonsen was awarded third place but if there is a switch made giving Espie third place, Michigan will , win the title with Minnesota second.
Commissioner Bill Reed was not available for comment but a Big Ten spokesman said still pictures from video tapes will be studied By the committee composed of coaches Bob Wright of Illinois and Dave Rankin of Purdue and a decision should be reached in a couple of . weeks,
PAST CHANGES
If a switch is made because of the films, it will not be the first time. Last year ^Michigan picked up additional points because of film results and placed third ahead of Wisconsin.
EXPERIENCE
“We wanted someone who had had Some years’ experience coaching (not 'necessarily varsity) Class A basketball,” Errington said of the search of the varsity coach.
Grubb has spent 13 years in the Pontiac school system since graduating fron Eastern Michigan University in 1953 after lettering for three seasons in basketball.
RESERVE JOB
In all, about a dozen applicants were interviewed for the two jobs.
McKee, a familiar figure to followers of the city recreation basketball, softball and baseball leagues, has been the No. 1 coach at Jefferson Junior High School for four years, with a 31-9 cage mark.
* * ★
At Central, the Western Michigan University graduate will join the physical education staff in addition to his basketball and assistant track coach duties.
On the PCH track staff he will replace Brian Castle who is becoming an elementary school principal. .
RALPH GRUBB
Bruins Swap Krake, Scour Trade Market
BOSTON (41 — The Boston Bruins are* in the trade market while looking ahead to the National Hockey League player draft June 9 in Montreal.
“It's safe to say that we’re looking to talk trade with anyone” Bpston General Manager Milt Schmidt said Monday night after the Bruins sent Skip Krake to the Los Angeles Kings.
BASEBALL'S TOP TEN By Tht • Associated Press Based on 50 at bats. AMERICAN LEAGUE
Player Club F. Howard Was White NY W.Horton Det Monday Oak Alvis Cle Yastrzemski Bsn Carew Min Freehan Det Kosco NY Foy Bsn
Noma Runs F. Howard. Washington, 17; W. Horton, Detroit, 10; Repoz, California, 9; KI Hebrew, Minnesota, 8; Ward, Chicago, 8; McMullen, Washington* 8.
_ Runs Batted In
F. Howard, Washington, 34; Powell, Baltimore, 26; W.Horton, Detroit. 23; Reppz. California, 21; T.Horton,
Cleveland, 21.
Q AB 36 134 22 45 .336
36 124 21 38 .506'
29 108 17 33 .306
30 95 12 29 .305
35 127 13 38 .299
35 121 16 36 .298
33 132 18 39 .295
34 129 18 38 .295
28 86 11 25 .291
31 108 17 31 .287
Fans, Club Cheer Howard
\S* ■ ", Ponllsc Press Photo; by Roll Winter
SANDY PROBLEM — Melvin (Bud) Stevens of Livohia found a little trouble on this sixth hole at Forest Lake yesterday In the ‘local’ phfcse of the U.S; Open qualifylng. Stevens blasted out, the bay scooting six feet past the pin, and his putt for a par-4' stopped six inches short. Despitq this bogey, Stevens managed an even par round and went on to lead the qualifying field with a 143 total;
WASHINGTON MV- Frank Howard’s first game before the^heering hometown fans after his second homer binge wasn't one he’s likely to long treasure y but he won’t soon forget the treasury he took hftme afterward. •
■ * * *
Before some 9,000 Washington Senator fans who gave him a lusty, minute-long ovation — wildly applauding his historic feat pf 10 Ijpme ruhsvifl kix games — Howard was hit by a pitch in the first inning. The next three times at bat, the mammoth slugger fanned.
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But any disappointment the 6-footr7, 270-pounder felt at his performance in the Senators’ 6-1 shellacking by the New York Yankees was quickly erased when he reached the clubhouse at game’s end.
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Waiting for him with a new contract was Washington General Manager George Selkirk. Although its figures weren’t announced, it was believed the pact raised Howard’s pay to about $56,000 — or about $7,000 more than the one he signed last spring after a two-week holdout.
Twins' Errors Hand Bengals 4-3 Triumph
ST, PAUL, MINNEAPOLIS UP — Denny McLain has been emulating Cuban curveballer Camilo Pascual, and the sturdy Detroit right-hander says it’s paying off for him.
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McLain threw a three-run home run pitch to Minnesota’s Dick Reese Monday night, but bided his time and let the Twins give him his sixth victory against one defeat, 4-3 in 10 innings.
Three of the Tigers’ runs were
unearned off loser Jim Merritt, and Detroit scored its winning run In the 10th without a base hit as the Twins committed their third and fourth errors.
WATCHES PASCUAL
“The biggest thing,” said McLain, who ' leads the American League with six complete games, “is that I’ve been
watching Camilo Pascual, who I think
has the best curve I’ve ever seen.
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“I was watching him Sunday, and he reaches way back to throw his curve. I’ve been short-arming my curve, bringing my arm up close to my shoulder Instead of reaching way back. You might give a runner a little more chance that way, but that hitter still has to get a hit to score the run.”
Pinpoint control also has returned for McLain. “Two years ago I had trouble with wildness and I had the same trouble last year. I couldn't get my curve over.
NO WALKS GIVEN
McLain didn’t walk a man for the third time this season.
Reese hit his blast after Tony Oliva and Rich Rollins singled.
After that, the Twins didn't get a man past second against McLain, now 6-1.
Willie Horton’s 10th home run, leading off the ninth, tied the game.
Twins’ Manager Cal Ermer had two late-inning defensive replacements blow up in his face. But Ermer steadfastly defended his moves of inserting Jackie Hernandez at shortstop and Ron Clark at third base.
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Hernandez’ throwing error with two out in the lotto let Al Kaline reach second, then dark let Bill Freehan’s grounder get away from him to allow Kaline to score the winning run.
DEFENDS MOVES
“This is the first time this year they’ve beaten us.” Ermer said of his defensive moves. “I know good and well the men I put in there are better defensively than the men I had in there for their hitting the first part of the game.
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“I’d make that move again. I think you’ve got to make it in trying to protect a lead.”
DETROIT
ab r h bl Stanley lb 5 110 Northrup cf 5 0 1 0 Kalin* rf 4 2 0 1 Freehan c 5 0 10 WHorton If 5 111 Wert 3b 4 0 11 MAuliffe 2b 4 0 10 Oyltr u 3 0 0 0 McLain p 4 0 0 0
MINNESOTA
ab r h bl Uhlaendr cf 4 o 0 o Tovar si 4 0 0 0 Cirew 2b 4 0 0 0 Klllabrew lb 4 0 0 0 Oliva rf 4 12 0 Rollins 3b 3 110 Hamandz u 1100 Rsate If 3 12 3 RCIark 3b 10 0 0 Rosa boro c 4 0 10 Merritt p 2 0 10 . Worthigtn p 0 0 0 0 Allison ph 10 0 0
Total 39 4 6 3 . Total 35 3 7 3
Detroit ........000 200 001 1—4
Minnaiata ...030 010 000 0—3
Toyor. Rollins, Hernandez. R.CIark. DP—Detroit 1, Minnesota 1, LOB— Detroit 7, Minnesota 3. 2B—Oliva. HR— Ra*M (2), W. Horton (10). 3—Merritt.
IP ...H R ER BB SO
McLain (W.6-1) ....10 7 3 3 0 7
Merritt (L.3-4) .... 9 2-3 6 4 1 2 6
1-3 0 0 0 0 •
Worthington T—2:21. A—10,007.
Ohioan Pacing All Star by 83
GARDEN CITY, N.Y. (AP) - Dennis Taylor of Cleveland followed up his opening round 1472 series with a 1260 performance Monday and retained the men’s division lead in the 27th annual National All-Star Bowling Championships.
R R R
Taylor’s 12-game total of 2,732 put him
83 pins in front of Milwaukee’s Mark Kuglitsch, who rolled 1330 Monday for an over-all of 2,649 pins.
Mike Samardzija Jr. of Pontiac slipped from seventh to eighth place despite adding 1276 pins to his 1307 of the opening day.
R R R
The men bowl six more games Tues-
day before the field is cut to 72 for Wednesday’s semifinals.
Tht Men's Division Leaders;
Mark Kugfitsch, Milwaukee. Wis...........
Billy Hardwick, Louisville, ky...........
Wayne Zehn, Atlanta .....................
Ralph Engln, Monsay, N.Y. ...............
Jerry McClary, Denver ...................
Bill Llllard, Dallas ............. ......
MIKE SAMARDZIJA, PONTIAC, MICH. Devs Soutar, Detroit
Jim Certain, Huntsville, Al*.
The Women's Division Leedsrs: Alice Gllkey, Cincinnati
Mery Baker, Central Itllp, N.Y. ..
June Llewellyn, Ft, Leudsrdele, Fit. ... Donne Zimmerman, Long Beach, C8L\,..
Arlena Kotil, Mokene, III, ..........
Doris Coburn, Buffalo, N.Y.. Judy Cook, Kansas City, Md.
Shirley Germs, Chicago .. ....
Phyllis Nofaro, Buffow7 N.V. ..............
Judy GottsCh, Valley, NEB.
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Some late-inning scoring enabled Oak Park and Livonia Franiin to record Northwest Suburban Association victories yesterday.
Oak Park pushed across three markers in the seventh and downed Birmingham Groves, 5 2, while Livonia Franklin picked up two in the bottom of the eighth ta nip North Farmington, 6-5.
★ ★ ★
Jay Hazelroth’s single brought home the lead run for North Farmington (4-5) in the top of the seventh, but three singles and a suicide squeeze play brougKTTwb runs and the victory for Frankhn,1(5-3) in the last ofihe eighth, c *****
Dave Ekelman tossed a three-hitter, striking out 11, and he drove in thqee runs to pace the Oak Park (4-5) attack.
Pontiac Fran Theta
FALLEN CHAMPION - Waterford’s Butch Fenlon, winner of the indoor Central Michigan University two-mile title earlier in the season, ran out of gas in the regional Saturday
at Waterford and finished well back in the pack in that event. Winning the race was Douglas Latter of Grand Blanc in 9:49.1.
Northville, Andover Winners
in City Softball
N. Farmington .... 000 002 3 1—5 11 J
L. Franklin ....... 1 02 01 0 0 2-4 1! i
McCOY (3-4) and Jsntz, Collins {7)i Davies# MINER (7) and Hopkins.
Police 9 Plans Junior Tryouts
Any boys not reaching their 14th birthday by Sept. 1 who want to play in the city junior baseball program’s Pontiac Police team are asked to contact Dick Erickson at 693-1332 for a tryout this week.
Candidates must provide their own playing shoes and gloves.
Kimball Rubles Up'
Royal Oak Kimball doubled its efforts after losing three of the four singles matches to Hazel Park Monday and posted a 4-3 victory by sweeping the doubles. The Knights are 10-4 and Hazel Park is 5-9.
R0 KIMBALL 4, HAZEL PARK 3 Singles
Davs Fulton (HP; daf. D. Richards# 4-1# 6-2; Nail Austin (K) def. Whitcroft# 6-2# 6-4; Dave Tomczyk (HP) daf. Vura# 6-4# 7-5; and John Mayers (HP) def. Jatho# 7-5# 7-5. ...
Doubles .
Wes Rlchards-Bob Matter (Ik) def. Floch-Shlrley# 4-1# 7-5; Ken Marks-M. Miller (K) def. Ayotte-Baker# 6-0, 3-4# 6-4; Larry Marks-Joe Uren (K) def. Tar-kowskl-Kropinack# 7-5# 6-0.
Softball Winners
Carpentry Engineering rolled past Haggerty Lumber, 20-14, and Penny Manufacturing downed Liberty, 4-2, in Walled Lake Industrial softball action last night.
Pontiac’s Slowpitch men”s recreation softball program began last night with three of the five games completed.
Local 594. romped past Oxford, 13-3, as Ken Spain singled three times and scored twice. * ★ ★
Captain Nemo’s pounded out 14 hits in thumping the Independents, 11-6, in a game marked by six circuit clouts.
Local 594 held Grubb’s Kennels to three hits in posting a 9-4 triumph.
Waterford Runs Over Kettering on Cinders
Cougars Face Tornadoes in Home Contest
Waterford Township continued its sports domination of arch-rival Kettering this year by whipping the Captains, 70-48, in the annual track meet yesterday.
The losing Captains won eight events — including doubles by hurdler Bill Penoza and dashman Tim Donaldson—-but the WTHS crew had sufficient depth to sweep three events.
The victory gives the Skippers a 650-100 lead in the All-Sports
The Detroit Cougars meet the winless Dallas Tornadoes at Tiger Stadium tonight in a North American Soccer League match.
★ * ★
Half a dozen Cougars are sidelined by injuries, but Gus Moffatt, the 20-year-old Scottish forward who was the first player injured in early spring training, will be back in the lineup after recovering from a broken ankle.
★ ★ ★
The Cougars hold third place
in the league’s Lakes Division with a 34 record while Dallas will have on show several new players from Turkey,. Britain
and the Netherlands in an attempt to boost its 0-8-1 record.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, MAY 21, lf)«8
Committee to Draft
Campaign-Cost Bi
LANSING (AP)—Secretary o( State James Hare has appointed an 18-member nonpartisan com* mittee to recommend legislation for reporting political campaign expenses.
Present laws ,pre “meaningless and a monstrosity," he said.
* *' *
“We should either have a good law or none at all," added Hare, chief state elections officer.
Bills aimed at tightening the laws died in the Legislature. ‘NO WITCH HUNT’
Hare said he is not interested in a "witch-hunt" or “an inves tigatlon into past questioning practices."
Hare said increasingly enor mous sums of money are needed to run for public office These sums are not being accounted for, he said.
★ * *
“We’re all aware of the almost unlimited methods of
Damage Soars in City Blazes
Fire damage in Pontiac in the first third of 1968 is more than triple that of the same period last year — largely due to several major building blazes.
Some $327,000 in damage has been caused by 491 fires this year, as compared to about $96,000 in damage in 229 fires through April 30,1967.
★ ★ *
The 161 building fires in 1968 include a $70,000 blaze April 8 at Herrington Hills Eementary School, a $35,000 fire in a commercial building at 695 Auburn Jan. 28 and a $13,000 fire in a grill at 49 N. Saginaw Jan. 30.
In the first third of 1967, 103 building fires occurred.
★ ★ ★
A second major increase is reflected in grass and brush fires, bf which 221 have been extinguished in 1968 as opposed to 50 in the same perioid last year.
Two persons have died in fires this year, the same number as through April 30, 1967.
fund-raising that don’t violate the letter of the law, but they certainly bruise list spirit," Hare said. ' : 1
He said he also is concerned a b o u 111 h e voter-registration law. It requires citizens to vote every two years or be taken off the Voter list.
He predicted this would result in a “substantial” decrease In the number of voters in the next presidential election.
Hare said he is afraid many citizens, particularly those in the core cities, are not aware of the new law.
COMMITTEE MEMBERS Named to - cochair the committee were Mrs. Pat McNamara, widow of the U. S. senator from Detroit, and Raymond Plank, Ludington television executive.
Other members of the committee are:
Elwood Bender of Muskegon Community College; Wayne County Circuit Court Judge George Bowles; D. Hale Brake, former state treasurer and De troit attorney; Avern Cohn, Democratic party fund-raiser of Detroit; Tom Downs, Detroit attorney; the Rt. Rev. Richard S. Emrich, Episcopal Bishop of Michigan; Mrs. Margaret Foerch of the Miichigan League of Women Voters; Douglas Fraser, United Auto Workers, Detroit;
★ ★ ★
Morris Gleicher, Detroit advertising executive; Marcus Gray, Calhoun County Clerk; Art Leutscher, Muskegon city clerk; Hudson Mead, Detroit attorney; Joseph Paris! Of East Lansing, Michigan Townships Association; John Smith, Detroit elections director; and Steven Toth of Bqy City, Bay County Clerk.
AP Wlreehete
SENTENCE CHANGED -S. Edward Bloom, Chicago lawyer convicted of criminal contempt for allegedly filing a spurious will for probate, had his two-year prison term thrown out yesterday by the Illinois State Supreme Court.
'Suharto, 19 Bigwigs Unharmed'
Jakarta Reports Plot Is Foiled
JAKARTA (AP) - The Indonesian government foiled a plot two months ago to kill President Suharto and 19 of his generals and cabinet ministers and as they prayer at a mosque, officials at the presidential palace said Monday.
It tyas reported seven meri had key roles in the abortive assassination attempt. All have been arrested and will be tried by a military court, military sources said.
WWW
Officials said the plot was in Spired by the Communists but that sdme of these involved were still at large. Several alleged Communists, serving An the army were arrested in Jak arta last week, but it was not
known how many in all would lives in his old summer palace
Ambulance Bill Vote Near
LANSING (UPI) - Counties would be able to contract with private ambulance services, according to a bill coming up for a final vote in the Senate.
The ' House-passed bill also would require ambulance drivers to pass the advanced Red Cross first aid course, be at least 21 years old, and obtain a special license costing $5 annually.
Policemen and firemen would be exempt from the requirements.
★ ★ ★
Ambulances would be licensed under the bill’s provisions at a $25 fee and would have to have a rear-door opening, a flashing red light, a siren, oxygen equipment and first-aid equipment.
be Implicated in the plot The mass assassination was to haye been sprung while Suharto and his top officials knelt at the mosque on the grounds of the president’s Merdeka Palace during a Moslem festival March 9, the palace officials said.
HAND GRENADES Officers said the plotters planned to hurl hand grenades into the small mosque while Suharto and his group were on their knees.
WWW
Security agents unearthed the plot several days before, officials said, and arrested an army captain and several other soldiers. Several newsmen were also reportedly picked up. News of the plot Was withheld to aid the investigation. 1 It was the first reported attempt against the life of the 47-year-old former “‘army general since he took the reins of power from President Sukarno early in 1966. Sukarno’s ouster came after the collapse of a pro-Commu-nist coup attempt and a nation wide massacre 6f Communist party members in retaliation for the favored position they held under Sukarno Sources said the 67-vear-old former president is not believed to have had any part in the plot
in Bogor and is closely guarded W W w Others reported marked for death in the' plot Included Gen Abdul Haris Nasution, chairman of Indonesia’s Congress, and Su harto’s close associate, and For eign Minister Adam Malik, £ longtime opponent of Sukarno and the Communists.
Also on the list were the air force and army commanders the deputy army commander and the capital’s military commander, sources added.
2,500 March, Protest Odor
KALAMAZOO (UPI) Residents of this southwestern Michigan city are raising stink over a pungent odor that hovers over th#east side.
Some 2,500 marchers paraded two miles from their east side homes to the City Building Monday night. Spokesman met with the City Commission
The commission unanimously endorsed a proposal, submitted by City Engineer Donald H Swets, to clean up Lagoon No. 5 temporarily, and to have it
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Let the Profile Bread Plan help prolong your Slender Years.
LBJ Blasts Those Who Bad Mouth Our Country'
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WASHINGTpN (AP) - Presl dent Johnson may have added a new phrase to the 1968 political lexicon: “Bad-mouthing our country."
Johnson used the term twice in apparently extemporaneous asides while addressing a philanthropic banquet in New York Monday night.
★ * ★
He returned to Washington immediately after the speech.
Johnson didn’t accuse anyone of “bad-mouthing" and didn’t relate it directly to the presidential campaign. But the entire context of his speech made it evident he looks with something less than full approval on much of the campaign oratory.
FATAL SICKNESS
Talking to affluent patrons of jthe Arthritis Foundation, Johnson said: “I simply refuse to accept the diagnosis of fatal sick-Iness in our society—and I refuse to follow those who say that."
The quote “refuse to follow”
In . the statement apparently sprang spontaneously from his lips. .
★ *
He werit on: "I refuse to, accept the diagnosis of indifference in our society—and I say shame on you who point that out."
Once again, the “shame on
you" remark seemingly was off the cuff.
The burden of the President’s speech was that the nation can solve its problems end is not sjck, indifferent or racist, v ' 1 TEARING DOWN
But he repeatedly returned to the thought that some individu-
als, unnamed, are tearing down rather than building up the country.
America's problems, he said, "will not be solved if we give way to \crippling dispalr or to bad-mouthing our country all day long or all week long."
Johnson said the problems “will be solved by the impati-
“They re too much fuss and bother."
What’s vour excuse?
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The Pontiac Press
ence of the American people but not by pessimism and the bad-mouthing of the American people.” *
Neither reference to “bpA mouthing* was in his prepared text.
Presumably, the President was not alluding to one of the potential presidential candl dates—Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey.
Espousing the politics of joy and happiness, Humphrey has suggested equal time be given to those who discuss the good things about the country in con trast to those who find fault.
Johnson acknowledged the United States has its faults, and added in another extemporaneous statement that these are faults “of which we are constantly reminded.”
More specifically, he cited problems of poverty, racism, ignorance and illness which "still plague uj.”
But he cited his administration’s record in health, educa: tion and civil rights to argue “we are on the move” and that only despair, pessism and “bad-mouthing” can delay their solution.
Among those who greeted the President at the dinner were Edwin L. Weisl, New York's Democratic national committeeman and long-time Johnson friend, and investment banker Sidney J. Weinberg, prominent financial backer of Humphrey.
Johnson said he attended the banquet only after receiving
Iron-clad assurances no candidates would be present and that there would be no partisan speeches.
* ★* ★ , Declaring he was very' relaxed and happy, the President said: “It'a a wonderful feeling being able to count the days instead of the votes."
‘SHAME ON YOU’—Heat} up and then down, President Johnson speaks in New York last night saying “shame on you” to persons claiming America is a sick society. He said the country's problems cannot be solved by “bad-mouthing our country all day long or all week long.”
2 Colleges Offer ‘Panic Clinics' for Exam Week
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — At least two California state colleges will operate “panic clincs” to help students cope with the emotional pressures of final examination week starting May 31.
“If we can prevent one attempted suicide, the entire project will be worth the effort,” said Dr. Suzanne A. Snivley of the Sacramento State College health clinic.
★ ★ ★
The college will provide special therapy with faculty, doctors and other students. A similar program is planned at San Fernando State College.
“This is an experiment designed to help our students meet their emotional pressures at a time when they are most fatigued and upset after a busy year at school,” Dr. Snivley said.
Funeral Today
KALKASKA (AP) — Service was scheduled today for Fred H. Tomkins, 87, former Kalkaska village president and a founder of the National Trout Festival. He died Friday at Grand Rapids.
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B—11
MARKETS
The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Friday.
Produce
FRUITS
Apples, Red Delicious, bu..........15.50
Applet# Jonathan# bu. 3.75
Applet# Jonathan# c. A., bu..........6.50
Applet# McIntosh# bu.................4.00
Applet# McIntosh# C.A. ............. 7.25
Apbles# Northern Spy# Mi............4.75
Apples* Northern Spy* C.A.# bu......6.50
Applet# Steele Red# bu...... ........3.75
Applet# Steele Red# C.A.# bu.........6.00
VRQKTABL.es
Asparagus# dl. bch. .. *.............2.75
Chives# dz. bch......................2.00
Onlont# Dry# SO-lb. bag .............2.75
Onion sett# 32-lb. bag ............ 3.75
Onlont# green, di. bchs................15
Potatoes. 204b. bag .......**,. 1.00
Potatoes# 50-lb. bag 2.10
Radishes# White# dz. bchs........... 1.50
Rhubarb, hothouse# dz. bch............K2S
Tomatoes# Hot House# 8-lb. bskt. ... 3.25 GREENS
Mustard Greens# bu................ 2.50
Spinach# bu. ....................... 2.50
Sorrel# bu. .........................2.50
Turnips# bu..........................2.50
Mixed Pattern Shown
Market Firms After Declines
NEW YORK (AP)—The stock market firmed a bit after a aeries of declines and displayed a mixed pattern early today. Trading was active.
Gains outnumbered losses by nearly 100 issues on the New York Stock Exchange, but weak, ness in some key industrials put down the Dow Jones Industrial Average between 2 and 3 points. The-broader-based New York Stock Exchange Index rose slightly.
Dome Mines spurted another l¥t as gold - mining shares con-
tinued responding to the rising price of gold bullion in free world markets.
Another gold stock, American-South African, gained about a point. Some of the others showed little change or were slow In opening.
unsettling factors Amphenol climbed more than 2 points, Penn Central and Goodrich a point or so.
Control Data and Westing-house Electric lost more than a point each.
The rise in gold prices and the turmoil In France were unsettling factors, but analysts said the stock market had tech nical reasons for a rally despite the lack of any outstanding bullish news.
★ ★ ★
Bethlehem opened at 29'/«, unchanged on 6,100 shares.
Monday, the Associated Press Average of 60 Stocks fell .2 to 327.9.
Prides were generally higher on the American Stock Ex change.
Poultry and Eggs
DETROIT EOOS DETROIT (AP — fUSDAI—Egg prices paid per dozen by first receivers (including U.S.):
Large Grade A lumbo, 29-34; extra large, 27-29; large, 25-27; medium, 18Vi 23; small, 15-11. a
DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (API—(USDA1— Prices paid for live poultry by tint receivers (Including U.S.li
Hens heavy type, 20-21; roasters heavy type, 25-27; broilers end fryers, white, 19-20; ducklings 93-34.
CHICAGO EGGS '' CHICAGO (AP) — Chicago Mercantile Exchange—Butter eteedy; wholesale buying prices unchanged; 93 score AA 44; 92 A 44; 90 a 43V5; 19 C 40V4; cere 90 B 44'/,; 19 C 42.
Eggs sltedy; wholesale buying prices unchanged; M per cent or better Grade A whites 27;-mediums 21; standards 24,
CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO (AP) — (USDA) — Live poultry: whoMiele buying prlcta unchanged; roasters 25-24Vi; special Fed While Rock fryers 20-21'*.
The New York Stock Exchange
Livestock
DRTROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (AP) — (USDA) — Celtle 2,100; trading on slaughter steers active, steady; slaughter heifers active, steady to strong; cows strong to 50 cents higher. Slaughter steers; choice 950-1,200 lbs
27.00- 21.00; mixed good and choice 24.25-27.00; good 24.50-24.25; slaughter heifers, choice Mt-1,000 lbs 24.75 - 24.00; one load 24.25; good 23.00-24.75; utility cows
20.00- 21.00. \ ' ** .. .... '
Hogs 450; barrows and gilts,, U.S. 1-2
200-220 lbs 19.75-20.25; 1-2 220-240 lbs 19.00-19.75; 24 240-270 lbs 17.75 - 19.00; sows, 1-3 RkMOO lbs 15.75 - 14.50; 24 400-600 lbs 14.50-15.75. _
Veelers 200; high choice end prime 38.00-40.00; Choice 94.00-30.00; good 29.00-34.00.
Sheep 1,000; choice and prime 85-110 lb shorn lambs with No. 1-2 pelts 20.50-29.50.
-ii. CHICAOO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AW — (USDA) — Hogs 6.000; 1-2 190-230 lb butchers 19.50-20.25; around 200 head sorted 200-220 lbs 20.75-21.00; 1-3 220-240 lbs 18.75-19.50; 14 310400 lb sows 15.75-14.50.
Cattle 3,500; prime 1,200-1,300 lb slaughter steers yield grade 3 end 4 29.50; mixed high choice and prime 1,150-1,425 lbs 27.50-20.75; choice 950-1,350 lbs yield grade 2 to 4 24.50-27.75; high choice end prime 1,050 lb slaughter nailers 27.25; choice 8501,050 lbs yield grade 2 to 4
25.75-26.50. . ______
Sheep 200; choice and prime 102 lb spring slaughter lambs 31.00.
American Stock Exch.
NEW YORK (AP) - American Stock Exchange selected noon prices:
solos Not
(hds.) High Low Lest Che. Aerolet .50a 4 30W 30 30 +,«
A|ax Me .log 7 42V4 42 21* +1
Am Petr .32# 14 l*Vk 1714 18 ...
ArkLGas 1.70 X22 38VS 37(4 37Vi + W
Asamera Oil 141 M* 6 3-16 6 3-16
AssdOil 8, G 195 *V* 7% 8
j 25 3Vk 31* 3 Vi — Vi
4 31 SOW 3014 16Vi 1514 1514
AMasCorp wt Barnes Eng
BrazllLtPw 1 ---
Campbl Chib 272» 15-16 914 914 + 04.
82 2 15-16 2 13-16 2%
80 13% 13% 13% + %
58 8% 8% 8% %
38% 38 «/4 38 Va V4
19 19% 18% 19% + %
79 31% 31% 31% + %
64 21% 30H 20%
51 7% /% 7% + %
44 6Va 6% 6%—1 -16
178 10»/4 V% 9% %
75 24% 24% 24% + %
5 16% 15** 15% %
5 9% 9% 9%
116 13% 13% 13% + %
155 10% 10% 10% + %
101 5% 4% 5
53 12% 12% 12% %
85 34% 34 34 %
6 18% 18% 18% %
’5 28% 71 27 %
3 14% 14% 14% + %
80 19% 18% 19% %
s 6% 6% 6% %
70 20% 20 20 %
88 4 3% 3%
6 10 9% 10 + 4*
20 9% 9% 9%
46 5% 5% 5% %
28 182 180% in —2V4
23 35% 34% 34% %
85 10% 10% 10% + 1*
73 13% 13% 13%
150 3% 3% 3%
149 9% 9% 9% + %
38 33% 33% 131* %
93 36% 36% 36% + %
6 33% 33 Va 334* %
178 68% 67 *7V* —2%
31 27 26 % 26% %
8 27** 27% 27% — %
Cdn Javelin Cinerama Creole 2.40a Data Cont DixlWn Corp Dynalectrn EquItyCp .331 Fargo Oils -Fed Resrces Felmont Oil Frontier Air Gen Plywood Giant Yel .40 Goldfield Gt Bas Pet Gulf Am Cp GulfResrc Ch HoernerW .82 Husky O .15e Hycon Mfg Hydrometi Isram Corp Kaiser Ind Magell Pet Mccrory wt Mich Sug .10 Midwest Fin Motiwk D Set Molybden NewPark Mn Ormand Ind Pancoastal RIC Group
Technlcol .40 wn Nuclear Copyrighted by The Associated Press 1940
Stocks of Local Interest
. Figures -after decimal point*, ere eighths
OViR THE COUNTER PRICES Quotations from tho NASD are representative inter-dealer prices of approximately 11 a.m. Inter-dealer markets change throughout tho day. Prices do not Include retell markup, markdown or commission.
. ., Bid Asked
AMT Corp. .................... 5.3 5.5
Associated Truck .............. 11.0 11.4
Braun Engineering .......... 18.0 It.*
Citizens -Utilities Class A ... 24.0 24.4
Detrex Chemical ............. 17.4 10.4
Diamond Crystal ............... 22.4 23.6
Kelly Servlets ................ 42.4 43.4
Mohawk Rubber Co............... 34.0 31.0
North Central Airlines Units . 5.4 4-0
Safran Printing ............. 13.2 11.6
ScNpto ...................... 6.6 7.1
Wyandotlt Chemical............. 31.4 29.4
MUTUAL FUNDS
BM Asked
Affiliated Fund ........... 8.78 9.50
Chemical Fund 19.12 20.90
Commonwealth Stock ......... 10.11 11.(1
Dreyfus ,.................... 15.00 16.37
Keystone Income K-i ........ 9.24 10.10
Keystone Growth K-2 -------- 7.15 7.(1
Mass, invootari Growth . , ,12.48 13.44
Massachuitttt Investors Trust 14.5( 11.12
Putnam Growth .............. 13.41 1444
Technology ............. ... 10.15 11.04
Wellington' Fund .............13.14 14.28
Windsor Fund................ 19.24 20.01
'Nominal Quotations
Slock Avtrogos
Compiles By Tho Aoeodatod Press
M IS IS . M
tads Ralls Utn Sleek Net cheese (to come)'' StfsEM Men. (To come)
Prev. bey 470.491 3.2 142,1 SM-i
Week- Ago 476.0 191,7 1424 330.0
Month Ago 449.1 1JU JUffi. Year Ago 455.5 1194 152.4 (21.4
1948 High 4 - 411 j 199.2 IM.T
1941 Low 4354 165.4 135.1 89.1
1947 High 491.2 2094 iB.i MM
1947 LOW 413,4 119.4 114.1 2924
Abbott Lob 1 Abex Cp 1.40 ACF Ind 2.20 Ad Mlllls JO Admiral AlrRedln 1.50 AlcenAlum l AllegCp ,10e AllegLud 2.0 AHeg Pw 1.20 AllladCh 1.90 AllledStr 1.40 Allle Chat t Alcoa 140 AMBAC 40 Amerada 3 Am Alrlln .10 AmBdcat 1.40 Am Can 2.20 ACryfug 1.40 AmCyan 1.25 AmEIPw 1.52 A Home 1.20 Am' Hosp .46 Am Hoip wi Amlnvst 1.10 AmMFdy .90 AMat Cl 1.90 Am Motors AmNotGes 2 Am Photocpy Am Smalt 3 Am Std 1 Am T&T 2.40 Am Tob 1.90 AMKCp ,30d AMP Inc .40 Ampex Corp Amphenol .70 Anacond 2.50 Ankon Cham ArchDan 1.60 Armco Stl 3 Armour 1.40 ArmCk 1.40a AshldOII 1.20 Assd DG 1.40 Atl Rich 3.10 Atlas Ch .80 Atlas Corp Avco Cp 1.20 Avnet Inc .50 Avon Pd 1.40
(hds.) High Low Last Chg. I 5SV4 55V, 55V, — V, 15 33V4 33V* 3310 — 14 4714 4714 4714
4 2014 20V4 2014
14 8V4 814 814
27 2244 2214 22% .......
90 1414 1444 1444 + 14
4 4444 4444 4444 .....
29 2114 2114 2114 .....
11 1414 34 1414 + 14
5 SO 4944 4944 — 14
20 3214 9214 3214 + 14
30 70 70 70 + 14
19 5414 5544 5414 .. .
43 04 1244 04 +114
55 25% 25% 25% + %
5 4144 41V, 4114 + 14
14 5044 50% 5(44 + 14
1 2944 2944 2944 — 14
32 2514 2514 2544 + 44
44 3414 34% 34% — %
35 5414 51% 5(44 —,14
16 9544 9544 9544 —1
23 32% 32% 32% + 14
9 20 20 8 .
ISO 11% 13V, 1344 + %
70% 70 14 34% 34 472 4944 49
70 — %
34% — % 49% + %
1 32% 32% 32% + % 24 3044 30% 30% + % 144 40 4544 47% +114
42 44% 44
7 44% 44% 44% + %
24 42 41% 41% — 44
10 67% 67% 67%
IS 110% 110% 110% —1% 31 20% 20% 20% + % 47 5% 5% 5% — %
40 51% 5014 51% +1% 95 54 55% 55% + %
6 134% 13344 134% +1%
—B—
BabckW 1.34 Balt GE 1.40 Beckmen .50 BsectsaJiy lb Bell Ho* .40 Bendtt Lit BenefFIn 1.40 Benguat Beth Stl 1.40 Boeing 1.20 BolstCesc .25 Borden 1.20 BorgWar 1.25 BrletMyer la Brunswick Budd Co .90 Bulova .SOB Burl Ind 1.20 Burroughs 1
Cal Flnanl CampRL .45a Camp Soup 1 Canteen JS0 CeroTAT .74 Carrier Cp I CarterW ,40a Case Jl Castle Cook 1 CaterTr 1.20 ColaneseCp 2 Cenco Ins .30 Cent SW 1.70 Cerro 1.40b Cert-teed .80 CesanaA 1.40 CFI Stl .SO Ches Ohio 4 ChIMII StP P ChIPneu 1.S0 ChrlsCraft la Chrysler 2 CITFIn 1.00 Cities Svc 2 Clark Eg 1.20 ClevEIIlT 1.92 CoceCola 2.10 ColgPal 1.10 CollinRad .80 CBS 1.40b ComICre 1.S0 ComSolv 1.20 ComwEd 2.20 Comsat Con Edls 1.80 ConEladnd 1 Con Food 1,50 ConNatG 1.70 ConsPwr 1.90 Contalnr 1.40 ContAIrL .50 Cont Can 2 Cont Ins 3.20 Cont Mot .40 Cont Oil 2.90 Control Data Cooper In 1.20 Corp Pd 1.70 Cowles .50 CoxBdcas .50 CrouseHInd 1 Crow Coll Crown Cork CrownZe 2.20* Crue Stl 1.20 Cudahy Co Curtiss Wr 1
Dsn Rlv 1.20 Pay PL 1.52 Deer# Co 2 Del Mnte 1.10 DoltaAIr M PenRGW 1.10 DetEdll 1.40 Dot Steel .40 DleSham 1.40 Disney .30b, PomeMln .80 DowChm 2.40 Drattlnd 1.40 duPont 1.2SO DUq Lt 144 Dyne Am .40
79 +%
91% t* 44 94% + %
0 44% 44% 44%
4 90 30 (0 —%
1 5444 5444 5444 + %
4 53% 5244 Mi
11 7914 7144----
29 8% 30%
IS 34% 34 HP ,
244 14% 1444 14% + %
42 2944 29% 29%........
31 7244 72% 72% + %
11 52% 5244 5244 + %
14 3114 3114 31% — %
7 31% 31% 3144 — 44
19 74% 74% 74% + 44
74 15% 14% 1514 + %
14 2(%, 20% 2944
3 31% 3144 31%
4 44% 44% 44%
6 199% 199% 199% — %
5 5% 544 5%
27 42 41%
134 3344 .33%
2 24% 2644 7 28% 20%
1 70 49%
7 14% 14% 6 1744 17%
21 4044 40% 25 40% 40 15 5944 59%
5 53% 53%
8 3944 3944
11 41% 41
8 27 27
3 55% 55%
13 17% 17%
2 43% 43%
2 47% 47%
5 3744 3744
1 32% 32%
121 44 43%
14 35% 35%
14 47% 4744 Xl6 2814 2144
6 34% 34%
12 150 14944
5 44% 44%
13 70% 70
15 54% 54% 115 4844 4044
18 33% 33%
9 42% 4244
35 59 59%
54 32% 32
9 39% 3944
16 4 64
10 21% 2144
16 34% 34%
7 30% 30%
11 19% 19
14 51% 51(4 x3 04% 04%
2 18% 10% XSI 44% 44
49 145% 144%
1 49 49
13 40% 40.
6 14% 14%
3 57 57
2 20% 21% 16 34% 3444
7 69 40%
16 44% 44% 13 41% 41%
2 23% 23 33 26% 24%
—D—
1 24% 24%
2 11% 31%
4 54% 54%
3 31% 31%
38 33 32%
35 19% 19%
10 24% 24% 10 20% 20% 27 30% 30%
8 5844 58
19 8 ■ 2*
22 77% 77%
It 36 36
11 154 155%
1 29 8
41% + % 33% — % 2444 — % 20% — % 49% — % 14% — % 17% — % 40% + % 40% + 44 59% + 44 53% + % 39% — % 41% + 44 27 + %
5544 — %
17% ....
43% + % 47% — % 3744 + % 32% + % 6344 — %
3514....
47% + % 28% + % 34% + % 15# + %
4414 + % 70 + % 5*14 + 1* 44% — % 33% — ' 42% ... 5944 +1 32% — % 39% — % 6 +.% 28%
Ml* + % 30% — % .19 + %
51% — % 14%-,% 11% — W 04% + % 145 —1% 8
40 + %
14% — % 57 + %
28% + % 34% ... . 49 + %
4444 + Vi 41% 4; %
24% + % 20% — % 30% ...
70 +1%
77% ...
34 + 44 155% — %
54 31 30% 20% + %
-E—
East Air .50
t Kodak 1.40a Kodak wl EatonYa 1.15 Ebescolnd 2
EGS.G
ElectSp
.10
Emer El 1.40 End Johnson Ethyl Cp .40 EvantP ,40b Evetsherp
42 37% 37% 22 151% 150%
40 75% 75%
1 31% 3144 6 41% 41
33 44% 4244 16 MM 34% 31 11% 1(%
10 34% 35%
2 98% 98% 1 35% 35%
14 30V* 29% 5 21% 20%
3 17% 17%
.
1 74% 71%
* 111 if
15 04 41% 100 12% 32%
2 41 61
19 71% 711* 5 32 12
* |4% S4V4
16 8% 8% Xl6 2444 Ml*
I S
43 3944 19%
11 H% 21%
41 54% (4%
37% + 44 151 — % 75% — %
31% — %
41
42% —2% 34% — 14
10%....
3514 + 44
ft% %
35% -, 14
S%--%
2S% + % 17% — %
71% + % 19
41% + % 33V, — 14
fl vi: 78% +144 « +44
54% — 14 27% — 1* 24% + 44
m
« .if "* Wl 49% 50 f Wt
4144 41% + % 79% 79%*% 42% 8% +44 24% (444 — %
g% g%...
Genesco 1.40 Go Pacific lb Gerber 1.10 GettyOII ,72a Gillette 1.20 Glen Aid .)7p Goodrich 2.40 Goodyr 1.35 OraciCo 1.40 Granites 1.40 Grant 1.30 Gt AM* 1.30*
at Nor Rv 3 I West Finl GtWnUn 1.IO QroonOttl .10 Greyhound 1 GrumnAlrc 1 Gulf Oil 2.40 GulfStaUt .80 GuHWIn .30b
Hatllburt 1.90
Harris tat 1
Heel# M 1.30 Hire Inc .50t HewPack .20 Hoff Electro Holldylnn .30 Hllyeug 1.20 Homelike .00 Honeywt 1.10 Hook Ch 1.40 rtouw Fin I HoustLP 1.12 Howmet .70 HuntFds .50b
Sale* Net
(hds.) High Lew Last Chg.
6 39% 39% 39% — V,
7 71% 73V, 73% + % 1 27% 17% 27% ...
II 94% 94 94 — %
9 54% 54% 54% ..... 121 13% 13% 13% .......
24 40% 59% 60 +1
49 54% 54 54% + %
13 34 3514 $4 + H
7 20% 20% 20% — %
1 41% 41% 4144 + %
11 27% 27% fit* + %
4 52 n% 51% — %
25 11% 1(% 10% — %
9 77 77 77 +1
2 (9% 39% 39% _______
22 20% 2044 2044 .....
12 32% 8% 33% .....
If 73% 71% n% .
15 23 23 n .
' 20 49 41% 41% — 44
----H—
31 74% 74%
9 41 40%
5 74% 74%
4 38% 31%
11 13% (244
1 11% 11%
25 42% 42 1 3314 33%
X26 80 10
9 12114 121%
57 49% 49%
1 34% M%
4 41% 41
10 44% 44 0 55% 55%
76% — % 60% — % 7444 — % 34% — % 13 + %
11% + % 42% ... 33% + %
40 +1% 12194 — %
49% — % 34% — 44
41 + %
44. ....
55% .....
IdehoPw 1.50 Ideal Basic 1 III Cent 1.50 IngerRand 2 Inland Stl 2 InjNAm 2.0 InterlkSt 1.80 IBM 5J0 IBM wT IntHarv 1.10 Inf Miner 1 int Nickel 3 Ini Packers
Jewel Co 1.30 JehnMan 2.20 JohnJhn .60s Jones L 270 Joy Mfg 1.40
Kelser At 1 KsnPwL 1.12 Kaiy Ind KayserRo .40 Kennecott 2 Kerr Me 170 KlmbClk 2.20 Keepers 1.40 Kresge .90 Kroger 1.30
Lett val Ind Lehmn 1.06* LOFGIss 2.00 Ubb McN L Llggett&M 5 Lily Cup 7>30 Litton 2.451 Llvlngstn Oil LockndA 2.20 LoewsTh .20h LoneS Cam 1 LoneSGa 1.12 LonglsLt 1.24 Lorlllard 2.70
Med Pd 3.2lf MagmaC 3.40 Megnavox I * Marethn 1.40 Mar Mid 1.50 Marquar .301 MartlnMar 1 MayDStr 1.40
Maytag i.oo
McOonnD .40 MeadCp 1.90 Melv Shoe Merck 1.60a MGM 1.8b MldSoUtll .02 MlnnMM 1.45 MlnnPLt 1.10 MoMIOII 2 Mohasco 1 Monsen 1.40b MomDUt 1.40 MontPw 1.50 AtontWard 1 Motorola 1 mTStt 1J4
2 44% 44%
40 34 33%
35 61 41
1 10 30
10 450% 450
2 116 324
19 32% 32%
24 24% 2% 16 104 107%
3 13% 13% 33 31% 31%
41 54% 54 1 22% 22
1 38% 17 64%
2 07% 111 77%
2 32%
—K—
17 43Vb 10 20* 15 24% 5 33% 11 38%
3 132% 2 57%
34%
28% — % 16% .
64 — %
44% -f %
Poor to March to JFK Grave
Others Plan to Sit In at Congress Hearings
Forced Up by
Interest Rate Rockets
By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Buolneii Analyot NEW YORK - Record high Interest rates will be paid this week by corporate and municipal borrowers as a direct result of the de-1 dsion by the House of Rep* rcsen tat Ives to postpone action
WASHINGTON (AP) - TheJr"a^ t#X poor people of “Resurrection tl#. hi0h mine CltLu.S.A” plan their firstarTcaiSd S demonstration today-a march infiaUon and the
islet Net
(hds.) High Lew Last Chg. ReynTob 2 20 35 42% 41U 43 + %
RheemM 1.0 1 51% 51 5t .
RoanSel .49* x40 1% IH «% + %
Rohr Cp .80 47 33% 33 31% 4-1%
RoyCCoia .72 11 39 19 19 + %
Roy Out ,99r 41 44% 44% 44% + %
RydorSys .10 33 32% 32 32% + %
cent to 6% per cent. And several states now are In the process of lifting the ceiling on mortage ates.
★ ★ it
If it is correct to say that financial men are worried about the present high rates, then it is accurate to say that some are acutely anxious about'the future.
Even higher rates seem likely, and Johnson's warning of 10 per cent borrowing costs in the absence of a tax increa& now seems more realistic than it did
326 32% — % 24% — % 107% + % 13% — % 31% + % 56 v...
22% -f %
f %
i 4* %
47 87 26 26%
43 43% + %
20% 20% — % 24% 24% — % 33% 33% — % 30% 30% ... 132% 132% — 57% 57% ... 34% 34% — 1 89% 00% —2 26% 26% — %
25 43% 43 20 14 14
17 22% 22%
5 55% 55% 7 16% 16%
3 70% 78% 9 37^% 27% 57 66% 66%
7 7% 7%
6 55% 55 17 71% 71%
111 23% 23% 33 23 22%
13 25% 25% 2 48% 48% 460 122 121
6 32% 32%
—M—
33 23% 23% 1 41% 41%
13 30% 30%
1 63% 63%
14 52% 52
72 52 51%
2 37% 37% ~ 4 12% 12%
60 22% 22%
11 44% 44%
27 47 46%
261 53% 53%
4 40% 40% 10 S3 52%
12 87% 17% ~ 41% 41%
43% + % 14 4- % 22% -f % 55% f %
16% 4 %
78% + % 37% — 46% — % 7% — % 55 - ‘
91% .
23% -23 -25% — % 41% .
122 -f1% 32% + %
23% + % 41%
30% + % 63%
52
•%
4 22 22 22
52 +1 37% + % 12%
22% + % 44% .
47 + %
53% + % 40% . ...
53 +1% 07% — % 41% — %
10 108% 107% 7 22% 22%
38 43% 43
14 27% 27% 21 42% 41
1 31% 31%
15 28% 27%
28 32% 32% 25 137% 137
1 22% 22%
—:n—
137 33% 32
6 48 47%
25 42% 42% 12 130% 130% 23 42 41%
23 36% 36% 46 34%.33%
16 54% ^54% 35 63% 12%
X16 45% 45 5 15% 15% 4 41% 41%
11 35% 34% 10 21% 28%
29 17% 19% Jl 76% 75% x37 36% 36%
21 56 56 ,
12 52 tt%
, 7 27% 27%
7 37% 37% 18 U 84%
4 37% 37%
%
108% +1 22% — % 43%
27%
42
-%
31% — %
IL •••£:
32% 4* 1/4
IlL +1H. 22% — %
Ponnov lioo P«hnCtn 2.40
fgfoq Film Pflzerc 1.30# PhelpsD 3.40 FhllaEI 1.84 PhllMorr 1.80 Phltl Pet 3.80
Polaroid ,13.
PubmlndTot PugSPL uo
iV 33% 331* 151 31% if 10 mi 31Vh 49 3944 39 7 311* 22%
it fm.it
190 00% 71%
• i t in
f 137W1MW1 M 0 451*
18 49 481*
X34 81'* 811* 21 441* 84 ill 8, 2844
’lit 8*
4 83 839*
13 14% 181* 70 1131* 1119k 1
Safeway 1.10 (tJOSLd 2.00 StLSenF 2.30 itRogP 1.40b jOBBOri .30 (chentay 1.10 sobering 1,30 ielenttf Data MgnOata wi
SCM CP .Mb (cott Pager i SbdCstL 3.30 Seerl GO 1.30 Seers Roe is Seeburg ,40 (horonit I.J0 Shell Oil 2.30 ShellTrn .88* SherwnWm 2 Sinclair 2.M SlngerCo 2.0 SmlthK 1.10* (ouCelE 1.40 South Co 1.01 OouNOes 1.40 SoutPec 1.40 Spartan Ind SoerryR JO* SquereD ,70a StBrand 1.40 Std Kails .)2p StOHCnl 2.70 Stplllnd 2.10 StOIINJ l.TOt StOllOh 2.50b St Packaging StautfCh 1.00 Start Drug t StevensJ 2.25 StudeWorth l Sun Oil lb SOnrev 1.50 SurvyFd .54* Swift Co 1.20
» NET* RBTX G9T1 .....
3 40% 40% 40% + %
33 319* 31% 319* + V*
83 409* 471* 40% +1
10 41 40 48 — 1*
3 09 49 49 — 1*
M 147 1%% 141% —11*
1 9948 9948 9944 — 14
15 434* 43% 434* — 1*
71 20 174* 274* .....
22 474* 2% 474* .....
25 47 401* 4814 — 4*
SO 89V* 079* M +1
11 33 239* 239* + V,
3 174* 37'* 374* + 14
( 404* 001* 001* — 1*
1 314* 304* 304*......
10 499* 491* 499* . ■
73 314* (1 111* — 1*
10 359* 204* 154* — V*
j 4014 3 401* — 1*
X173 3244 321* 334* + 44
54 331* 2244 229* — 4k
150 53V* m 51 —4*
139 WiS (O' 30'* —1*
0 441* 4Mh 4414+4*
12 20% 301* 30% + 1*
01 02 0194 01% — 4*
14 531* 53 52
134 479* 074* 079*
7 0194 0iV* 0194
14 1714 17 17'* + V*
13 0V* O'* 401* + '* 29 52'* 5194 52'* + 9*
19 02 019* 01 + '*
57 009* 5994 80 —1
2 051* 0(4* 85V* m V,
197 444* 434* 44'* +1
32 494 09* 094 + 1*
42 271* 2494 2094 — 1*
—T-
TampeEl .72 Tektronix Teledyn 2.791 Tenneco 1.24 Texaco 2.80 TexETm 1.20 TexGSul 1.20 TexOSul 'wi Tekaalnst .80 TexPLd .40* Twctran .70 Thlokol .40 TlmkRB 1.10 TransWAIr 1 Transam lb Tranettron TrICont 2.30* TRW Inc 1,40 TRW Inc wl Twan Cant 1
10 259* 151* 259* + 1*
20 40V* 4014 40'* + V,
48 1104* 115 1M — 14 09 304* 21 »'* + 4k
39 70 7594 7594
20 25
21 4194 41V* 4194
5 100 991* 999*
10 35% 251* 2594
30 539* 5314 5314 — 44
21 194* 19*4 191*
9 30 3794 31 + '*
105 4094 401* 401* — 14
24 50 5594 5594 — 14
31 149* 1494 144* + 1*
11 399* 29% 2994 — V*
52 1041* 104
1 524* 524* 5244 — 4*
37 1444 34'* 341* + 4k
—u-
UMC Ind .72 Uncarbld* 2 Un Elec 1.20 UnOIICal 1.40 unlenPacif 2
Unlroyal 1.20 UnltAlrUn i UnltAlrc 1.00 Unit Cp *0* Un Fruit 1.40 Unit MM 1.20 USGypsm 3a US Ind .70 US Indutt wl US Lines ,50p USPIyCh 1.50 US Smelt lb US Steel 2.40 UnlvOPd 1.40 UnlvOUPd wl Upjohn l.oo
X37 22V* 99 43 21 21 10 41
22 22 — 1* 424* 4244 — *4 31 21 — V*
01 01—1* 179 501* 4944 504* + % 15 49V* 49V* 491* + 1* 040 41% 411* 41% + 44 49 074* 00'* 00V*—1% 7 11 11 11 — 4b
22 511* $31* S3'* +11* 4 314* 309* 3094 — 94 9 II 1044 1044 — 94 20 029* 02V* 021* + V* 12 314* 311* 311*
1 44
44
1*
10 401* 5994 59% — 9* 15 019* 014* 014* — % 77 391* 3044 3094 — '*
7 09 19 99 ____
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9 5114 5094 511* + 1*
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Varlan Asso Vendo Co .60 Va El Pw
13 26 25% 25% — %
4 27 26% 26% — %
295 27 '26% 27 .
to the drave of President John F. Kennedy.
The/Rev. Ralph David Abernathy^ campaign leader, called Kennedy a “friend of the poor” who “helped poor people” as he told a late Monday night rally he also wanted volunteers to fill all vacant seats In congressional hearings.
★ ★ t*
“Don’t worry about dressing up, just go the way you are,” the denim-clad Southern Christian Leadership Conference president told a cheering crowd of responsive residents. “We’ve been here a long time. It’s time we do business."
As he stood on a rickety table outside the camp site’s still unfinished “city hall,” a day’s growth of beard showed on his dark brown face.
MARCH DELAY
Abernathy said he may postpone the massive march set for Memorial Day in order to give organizers more time to prepare for it.
He asked everyone to gather today outside the camp site’s main gate, where buses would take some to Capitol Hill. The rest were to walk two miles to Arlington National Cemetary, where Kennedy is buried.
w ★ *
The camp site now houses about 2,000 of the 3,000 persons SCLC planned to put in the plywood shanties that stretch down West Potomac Park.
The number of marchers waiting in Washington area churches dwindled considerably Monday as construction of the plywood huts continued at rapid pace.
SOME WAITED
About 450 from the Southern caravan were waiting in Northern Virginia, but most of the others who arrived over the weekend have been moved in SCLC officials said.
About 700 persons on part of the Western caravan arrived in St. Louis for an overnight stop before proceeding to Louisville, Ky.
★ ★ ★
Abernathy told his followers there is enough money to finish the camp. He later told newsmen the money isn’t all in, but he was sure the American people would come through with support. He gave no precise figures.
CUNNIFF
_w—X—Y—Z—
WarnLamb 1 29 47V* 47 47 — 1*
Was Wat 1J0 4 22 22 22 — 1*
WatnAb-L 1 45 38% 3594 38'* + V*
Wn Banc 1.30 8 18V* MV* 381* .
WnUTel 1.40 409 47'* 481* 481* .
WastgEI 1.00 33 73 719* 719k -
Weymr 1.80 14 481* 459* 4594 — 1*
Whirl Cp 1.80 . 10 511* 511* 511* + 9*
White Mot 2b 4 529* 521* 521* .- ■
WinnDIx 1.50 5 3X1* 319* 319* -
WoOlworttl 1 II 25 349* J44* — 94
XeroxCp 1.40 10 275 2749* 275 +11*
YngstSht 1.10 27 Ml* 30 359*
ZanHtiR 1.20a 12 571* 589* 57 + 14
copyrighted by Th* Associated Press 1980
Sates figures ere unofficial.
unless otherwise noted, rates of dlvl dends In tho foregoing tablo ar* annual disbursements based on tho last quarterly or semi-annual declaration, Special « extra dividends or payments not doslg-nalsd at rsgular art Idtntlflad In tn* following footnote!.
•—Alto extra or extras, b—Annual rate glut stock dividend, c—Liquidating, dlvl dend. d—Declared or bold In 19*7 glut Stack dividend, e—Declared or geld to tar this year, f—Payable In stock during 1987, estimated cosh value on ex-dividend or ex-dlitrlbutlon data, g—Paid last year. It—Declared or paid after stock dividend or soft up. k—Declared or geld this ytgr, an accumulative Issue with dividends In arrears, n—Ntw Issue, p—Feld this year, dividend emitted, deferred or no action taken at last dividend matting, r—Declared or Palo In 19*1 glut stack dividend, t—Paid In stock during 19*17 mtlmatad cash vslus on «cd
taken at last dlvktond matting, r—Declared or paid In 1981 glut stock dividend^ t—Paid In stock during 19*1, estimated cash value on tx-dlvldtnd or tx-dlstrlbu tlon data,
z—Salts In full.
dd—called, x—Ex dividend, y—Ex dividend and tale* In full. X-dlt—Ex distribution. xr—Ex rights, xw—^Without war rents, ww—With warrants, wd—Whan distributed. wl—When Issued. nd-Naxt day deMyery. -
^ v|—in bankruptcy or ractlyerthlp or being reorganized under tho Bankruptcy Act, or aecurttloi assumed by such companies. m—Foreign Issue suptact to In-terast equalization tax.
Treasury Position
WASHINGTON (AP)—Tho cash position Of the Treasury compared with corresponding data a year ago; _
May ti, 1981 May 15,1987
Deposits Fiscal Year July 1—,.
138,195,588,404.81 1J7,337,335,991.90 ' col Year—
1«*T7US *“
X—Total Debt—
352,309,053,808.43 321,182,137,144.30
Gold Asaota—
10,484,047.400.00 13,1074)L9«3J7
. X—Includes 8415,441,301.15 debt not tub. loct to atatiitoryllmltr
A lightweight pleitic Armor has been developed that has better resistance than steel of twice the weight. It is being used in helicopters.
failure of tax policy to cool the overheated economic expansion. This puts the burden of economic re strain! almost solely on money rates.
* ★ ★
Eventually, if not now, the record rat« will affect every borrower, including the home buyer, the city seeking to build a new water system, the corporation with plans to expand and the U.S. government seeking to finance its operations.
The postponement of tax ac tion comes at a time when many of these potential borrowers are actively seeking money In this week alone more than 1500 million of new corporate and municipal bond issues will reach the market.
RATES SOAR Highest-grade corporate bonds already are nearing 7 per cent, and in-one instance a me dium grade issue was offered at S per cent. The federal govern ment is paying O'per cent, and home mortgages now are above 7 per cent fan some areas.
This month President Johnson gned (y bill permitting increases in the rate of loans insured by the Federal Housing Administration and the Veterans Administration from 0 per
Barrel-Making Steady Work
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Lucius Porter has been making whisky barrels for 52 years and he says that as long as it is necessary for bourbon to be aged in oak he will have a job.
Porter, 72, has been with a barrel firm since 1916, but with oily three barrel makers left in Los Angeles the trade is fading fast.
* ★ ★
The craft has been dying for 40 years and some day someone will come up with a cheaper substitute for wooden barrels and that will be the end of it,” Porter said Monday.
News in Brief
Michael Soloway of 1400 N. Opdyke, Pontiac Township, told Pontiac police that he was robbed of $176 by an unidenti fled woman at a house in the 100 block of Jackson about 3:30 p.m. yesterday.
Rummage Clearance. 10c or less. Congregational Church. 8-12 Friday, May 24. -Adv.
MOM’S Rummage: Thursday! 0 to 12. Indianwood and Baldwin. -Adv
montfay't lit T.rSUES**.
RaM rtoG Mart MN IRREGULAR _
Nat ttcurOrwttiFd .08 Nattacur-lnc *Pd_ M INITIAL
Ot Southwait Cp .50 ..
EXTRA
Laraan Co..... - .30 -
INCREASED
Atcq Standard ... .15 ..
iMta VdMua RiafLAR
ErtaAPItta RR .....875 Q
Laraan ca ........ .35 Q
US Realty - Inv...22 Q
Appeals Court to Okay Probe?
N. Viet Guns Rip Hue Area.
4 U. S. Headquarters Slammed by Shelling
LANSING (AP) - Judges of the State Appeals. Court plan to decide for themselves early next month whether to grant the request of Gov. George Romney and supply a one-man grand juror to probe the State Highway Department.
That was the expected next step following Monday’s inconclusive ruling by the State Supreme Court, which split 4-4 over whether the appeals court has jurisdiction to act on the application by Romney and Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley.
it it it
The planned resignation of a Supreme Court justice suggested that the Appeals Court, although inferior in the judicial hierarchy to the high tribunal, might get its way.
Romney and Kelley petitioned the Appeals Court for a grand Jury last October — Romney insistently and Kelley reluctantly. Kelley, who conducted a six-month probe of the department last year, at first said a grand jury was not needed.
Following the 4-4 decision on whether the Appeals, Court has jurisdiction in the matter Judge T. John Lesinski, chief Appeals Court judge, said he yfould call his court together — perhaps June 6 or 7 — to decide what to do with the application.
FREE REIN
Supreme Court Clerk Donald Winters said Monday he thought the 4-4 tie left the'Appeals Court powerless to act, but Lesinski said he, thought his court retained free rein because of the pending resignation of Supreme Court Justice Theodore Souris.
Souris, one of the four on the high court to rule against appeals court jurisdiction, has announced plans to retire July 1
SAIGON (AP) - No#h Vietnamese forces slammed 500 rounds of mortar and 100-pound rockets into four vital U.S. headquarters in the Hue area today in one of the heaviest coordinated shellings of the war..
Enemy infantrymen also attacked one of the headquarters but were repulsed, the U.S. Command said.
★ ★ ★
The shellings followed a destructive rocket attack on a U.S. air cavalry division headquarters in the northern war zone Sunday. It too was attacked again today, but damage was far lighter.
At least eight U.S. soldiers and 21 enemy were reported killed in the attacks near Hue. Another 51 Americans were wounded In all four cases; headquarters said, material damage was either negligible or light.
3 CAPITALS SHELLED
At the same time, Vietcong troops shelled three provincial capitals and two allied airfields —all but one in the Mekong Delta—inflicting at least 65 allied casualties.
Gen. William C. Westmoreland, commander of U.S. forces in Vietnam, said, “The intensity of the war seems to be increasing.”
★ ★ ★
Asked if he thought this was deliberately timed with the Paris peace talks as part of a Communist command “talk and fight” strategy, Westmoreland said “circumstiuitial evidence” would indicate this.
Westmoreland’s headquarters announced that thousands of American helicopter-borne infantrymen and paratroopers were on the move against North Vietnamese forces menacing Hue and Quang Tri City to the north in two newly t announced operations to “seek out and destroy or capture enemy personnel, material and installations.”
a couple of weeks ago. One of the dangers In such high rates is that they could precipitate a recession.
RECESSION HINT
In p weekend speech, George McKinney Jr., senior economists of the Irving Trust Co., said Congress might give the nation an election day present of the needs of a domestic recession.
Another worry concerns the stability of the dollar, the value of which some economists feel is overstated and could lead to instability in the world’s economy.
♦ * 8r
A widely held opinion in financial circles is that, once again, the Federal Reserve may raise the discount rate. This being the rate at which members banks may borrow, it generally foreshadows increases in the cost of almost every other type of borrowing.
It is the responsibility of this central bank to expand or limit the money supply to keep the economy stable rather than inflated or depressed. Since inflation now grows worse by the day, analysts believe the Federal Reserve is compelled to slow economic activity by making borrowing more difficult.
A REFLECTION
Although rate changes generally are few and ar between, their frequency in the past Vh .ears illustrates the instability of the economy.
On Dec. 6, 1965, the rate was raised to 4 Vi per cent from 4 and remained at that level until April 7, 1967, when it was lowered again to 4 per cent.
★ ★ ★
From that point on, however, there have been regular increases, to 4V» per cent Nov. 20, 1967, to 5 per cent March 22, to 5% per cent April 18. If another increase is made, most likely it will be to 6 per cent. .
Although the interest rates that are appropriate to an economy at a given time cannot al-
Reception Set for Teacher
A reception will be held Sunday for Mrs. Sally G. Johnson, principal of Haviland School,
Waterford Township, who is re-tiring after serving as a teacher and ad-ministrator since 1922.
The public is
JESM
2 to 5 p.m. at Haviland School, 5305 Cass-Elizabeth.
Money is being collected for a scholarship fund in her honor.
ways be compared, it is difficult to overlook the fact that in 1929 the discount rate was 6 per cent and that for the next 27 years it failed to reach even 4 per cent. At one point it actually fell to Vo ot one per cent.
EONO AVERAGES Compiltd by Th* Associated Prtss
Net Change Noon Fri. . 64.2 Prev. Day . 64.2 Week Ago . 64.1 Month Ago 64.7 Year Ago . 72.0 I960 High . 66.3 I960 Low .. 64.0 1967 High .. 73 0 1967 Low .. 64.6
Rails Ind. Util. Pgn. L. Yd.
86.9 87.4
87.2
86.9
93.8
88.9
86.3 95.6 86.1
88 6 88.6 88.6 88.8 91.9
89.4 88.1
92.5 89.1
—.1
80.2
80.3 •0.3 80.0 86.0 81.7 79.0
89.4
78.4
Area Man Attends Visibility Meeting
A Bloomfield Township man, Dr. Paul L. Connolly of 4347 Karden, attended the Symposium on Visi-a bility in the]
Driving Task in]
Texas last! weekend. (k>
The symposi-| um was organ-1 ized by the! visibility committee of the |
High way Research Board and the Illuminating Engineering Researdi Institute of the Illuminating' Engineering Society. Connolly is a member of both of these organizations.
★ ★ ★
He specializes in the study of sight in relationship to automotive design and safety.
—EhUtaJ * «’?•>
f Successful investing
■
m
By ROGER E. SPEAR
Q — From my first venture into the stock market I own Dynamics Corp. of America, Vendo Co. and U.S. Surgical. Am I holding good stocks for near-future growth? — A. R.
A — A possible upturn in the price of your stocks could appear from a broad market rise. Each has characteristics which persuade me to say hold for the present and watch closely. For near-future growth Vendo is probably the best one.
U.S. Surgical will be more difficult to follow than the other two as it is a small, relatively new enterprise trading over-the-counter. Few progress reports are available. It was first/ offered in units of one $500 subordinated convertible 6W1 per cent debenture plus 100 shares of common. Its offering value of
$3 a share has meanwhilq,security of a high-quality
moved'up to a 1968 trading range of 15-22Mi bid. Current bids are *ftported around 15. Earnings comparisons on U.S. Surgical are not readily available and my judgment is to move that portion of your capital into a listed security in
the hospital supply industry — American Hospital Supply after it splits.
Your other two stocks have slbwed down this year because of Dynamics Corp.’s rather heavy dependence on military contracts and Vendo’s lowered earnings due to softness in the economy and lessened demand for its machines.
* * ★ ★
Q — I own some Ohio Edison $4.40 pfd. stock. After reading about expansion plans in the annual report I’d like to change over to the cojnmon. Would you advise this and do yon think it will split again? — C. B.
A — Your participation as a common stockholder in Ohio Edison’s future growth should prove rewarding and I’d go ahead with your proposed switch if you don’t need the
preferred. The cofhpany hit more than doubled cash payouts on the common over the put decade and current yield is over 5 per cent. I would not look for a split, however, until common shares trade much higher.
(Copyright, 1911
ONE cm
THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, MAY 21. 19fi8
■«Sg' P^? / ., v ; •• £p||?M M
r yowl How about giving you the widest choice of personal
YoeVo never mn savings Ilk* this on ■ $
WCft^le»mChrn^m^0o/L:<
U.S. Education Benefits—8
Teacher Corps Beckons to Students
(EDITOR’S NOTE — This is the eighth article in a 15 part series -on U.S. educational and training benefits available to you.)
By RAY CROMLEY NEA Publications Among the opportunities for those students who intend to go into teaching is the chance tp participate in the National Teacher Corps.
★ w ★
Under the corps, interns with bachelor degrees will teach in
guidance of an experienced teacher, a team leader.
Such training should normally lead to an advanced degree.
★ ★ *
Teacher interns will be paid in training and while teaching.
For further information con tact the Division of Education Personnel Training, Bureau of Elementary and Secondary Education, U.S. Office o f Education, Washington, D.C. 20202.
Mem and women beginning their careers in school ad-
low-income areas under the|m i n i s t r a t i o n
state
Apollo Crew Ready for Escape Testing
CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -51 The Apollo 1 astronauts pass-The first thing a s t r o na u tsjed a similar test in their Walter Schirra, Dqnn Eisele■ capsule using a pure oxygen and Walter Cunningham will do atmosphere under pressure —
when they get in their new Apollo 7 spaceship at the moon port next month will be to see how fast they can get out.
A rehearsal of emergency escape procedures is the first order of business for the spacemen after their capsule has been readied for the manned portion of the J ground
testing leading up to launch in September.
* ★ *
Astronauts Virgil ( G u s ) Grissom, Edward White and Roger Chaffee had no similar practice before they died in their flaming Apollo 1 craft
during a ground test last year.
They were trapped by a slow operating hatch that swung the wrong way, and they were overcome before rescue workers could reach them.
QUICK-OPENING The Apollo 7 capsule is
equipped with a quick-opening hatch. Many of its systems have been improved and strengthened, the cabin interior has been virtually fireproofed, and the cabin atmosphere during ground tests and launch will be a mixture of oxygen and nitrogen instead of pure oxygen which fed the Apollo holocaust.
+ + *
Moon-port test procedures also have been i m proved. Spacecraft test conductor C. A. Chauvin, who held a similar position for Apollo 1, said in an interview that the 'entire test
program has been examined
and revised to eliminate all unnecessary hazards and to plan for a great variety of potential emergancies.
★ ★ ★
“The planning involved (for Apollo 1) was not nearly what we have now,” he said. “We’re going down to minute details now.”
* * *
The Apollo 7 spacecraft and crew will go through the same launch pad test that ended in disaster for Grissom, White and Chaffee Jan. 27, 1967. But there will be one big difference — the Apollo 7 hatch will be open with the cabin filled with ordinary air.
SAFER AIR
By that time, however, Schirra and crew will have tested their spacecraft in a giant vacuum chamber. The pilots will be wearing spacesuits pressurized with oxygen and the hatch will be closed, but the cabin will be filled with the safer nitrogen-oxygen mixture.
conditions identical to those that led to the fatal launch pad fire.
universities are eligible for U.S Office of Education fellowships.
Universities nominate their promising young men and women administrators. Sue cessful candidates work from 10 months to one year in the U.S Office of Education as research program and administrative assistants at the Civil Service level of GS-11.
INFORMATION
For further information write the Division of State Agency Cooperation, Bureau of Elementary and Secondary Education, U.S. Office o f Education, Washington, D.C.
120202.
Teachers of science o r mathematics in grades kindergarten through high school and principals concerned with science and mathematics are eligible for National Science ! Foundation grants to attend in-I service institutes operated by I participating colleges.
★ ★ ★
Consult the National Science Foundation for the names of participating colleges and universities in your area.
Graduate students, selected by their institutions, are eligible for fellowships in programs of library and Information science.
PRKMUTY GIVEN Priotity is given to men and women intending to become instructors for schools of library and information science.
For information, write the Division of Library Services and Educational Facilities, Bureau of Adult and Vocational Education, U.S. Office o f
Education, Washington, D.C. 20202. /
* * *
For teachers in the humanities there is a profusion of chances for help i n fellowships. For information, write the National Endowment on the Humanities of the National Foundation on the Arts and Humanities, 1800 G Street N.W., Washington, D.C. 20506.
(Next: For those in the healing arts.)
; ________ ■
Education Benefits I
I c/o The Pontiac Press I
* mmsm Dept. 4$o ■
1 VaSHMiRpp<0t Box 489 i <
I WjiyniyM Ra(jjo Qjfy Station I 1
I New York, N.Y. 10019 | j
! Please send.......copy (copies) of "What You've !
. Cot Coming in U.S. Education Benefits" at $1 each !
■ to:
NAME.............. ........................ }
I ADDRESS..................................... |
j CITY...................STATE....ZIP......... >
(Make cheeks payable to “Education Benefits.”
Allow 3 weeks for delivery.) I
DETROIT COUNTRY DAY CAMP
of Datroit Country Day Sohool
June 24 - July 19 June 24 - August 2
Swimming, camping overnight, arts, crafts, painting, nature lore, archery, riding, cookouts, games and sports.
Co-ed 6-12
Detroit Country Day Cdmp is located on 36 wood-ringed acres and playing fields of Detroit Country Day School, in the lovely Beverly Hills district of suburban Birmingham.
The campus includes numerous springs, the Rouge River at its source, tree shaded hills, wooded nature walks and a swimming pool and instructional program statted by certitierd personnel. The co-educational'Day Camp is one of this college preparatory school's summer programs and is directed by members of the regular winter Lower School faculty. The Camp combines cultural, creative and physical activities for ages 6-1 2 into a living experience in an environment of sun and fun.
The hours of the Camp are 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. The school kitchen will serve a well-balanced lunch. Indoor facilities are available for rainy days. Private bus transportation is available. Interested parents are encouraged to write for free brochures. Admission is by interview only.
For information call 646-771 7.
Detroit Country Day School, 22305 W. 13 Mile Rd., Birmingham, Mich. 48010 Phone 646-7717
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HI
THE PONTIAC PilESS, TUESDAY, MAY 21, 1968
\'m t
Close Vote on Crime Bill Seen
WASHINGTON (AP) - A close Senate vote Is expected on proposals to strip the Supreme Court of authority to Invalidate confessions and restrict use of police lineups.
. Gen. Joseph D. Tydings, D-Md., scheduled to lead the attack against the proposals today, contends they represent “the most serious assault on the Supreme Court and the independence of the judiciary" in the nation’s history.
* ★ ★
right to remain silent or not ad-i madge, D-Ga., said their ap.
vised to get a lawyer before questioning.
* * *
President Johnson, opposing these provisions and another one which would - authorize court-supervised wiretapping by police to combat major cripnes, said they raise “grave constitutional questions."
‘SOME BALANCE’
The American Bar Association’s board of governors said it
But Sen. Sam J. Ervin, D-l*1*'W?ses ftTal N.C, urging their enactment,!. But.Sen~ Herman .GlJLal: told the Senate Monday the Supreme Court has invented new, arbitrary and unrealistic rules that impede police in bringing criminals to justice.
The proposals are part of a broad crime-control bill which has been before the Senate for three weeks.
MAY BE ADMISSIBLE They provide that a confession be admissible as evidence in any federal criminal case
proval would “restore some balance to our system of justice—a system which has become far too Weighted in favor of the criminal." 1
Under the proposals, federal courts would be denied authority to reverse a ruling of any state court admitting a confession in evidence as voluntarily given if this had been upheld by the highest court in the state.
* ★ ★
Also, the bill provides that
admissible In evidence in federal and state criminal trials and bars the federal courts from reviewing the admission of such testimony in state trials.
This is designed to overcome a Supreme Court rilling last year barring in-court identification of a defendant by an eyewitness to a crle if the original identification was made in a police lineup without a lawyer for the suspect being present. JURISDICTION DISPUTE
Another provision would deny
when the judge decides it was voluntarily given.
A confession could not be ruled out just because of delay in arraignment after a suspect’s arrest. Nor could it be invalidated because a suspect had not been advised by police of his
Reds Score Gains in Italian Elections
gmgljM. Mlnrnyrt.il_be ^ )urisdMon {■
beas corpus actions challenging
House Turns to Question of Longer Terms
LANSING (AP)—House members had before them today a proposal to lengthen their terms of office from two years to four, an issue that touched off a partisan battle in the chamber Monday.
Defeated, however, was another proposed constitutional amendment — one outlawing Michigan State University’s sliding-scale tuition system.
* * *
Sent to the governor were bills to repeal the state’s Criminal Sexual Psychopath Law, requiring windshields on most motor vehicles, add, 10 cents to the price of a fishing license and permit legislators to run for other offices during their terms.
Few representatives oppose giving themselves four-year terms, but politically, they disagree on whether they should run in presidential election years, or in off-years with the governor and the Senate. Sena-
ROME (AP) — The Christian Democrat and Communist parties scored major gains in Italy’s elecionts for a new Parliament. Final returns today gave the Communists their biggest vote in postwar history.
The Roman Catholic Christian Democrats and their enemies, the Communists, improved their positions in both the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate. The chief losers was the Socialists, which had hoped to recover from the defection of its leftist elements. Instead they came out a poor third in the multiparty race.
* * ★
coalition parties 366 seats in the Chamber and 183 in the Senate compared with 361 and 179 in the previous Parliament. This gave the coalition a 102-seat majority in the Chamber and a 51 seat majority in the Senate.
The astonishing Communist vote totalled 8,555,131 in the Chamber balloting, compared with 12,428,663 for the dominant Christian Democrats. The Christian Democrats percentage of the total was 39.1, compared to 38.5 per cent in the last elections in 1963.
HIGHEST VOTE YET
The Communist vote, 26.9 per cent of the total, was 1.6 per
the legality of the detention of persons convicted in state! courts.
Ervin&aid this was designed; to relupre overburdened federal courts from the growing prac-! tice of convicted persons using habeas corpus procedures as a substitute for direct appeal. I
it it it
Death Notices
S. McNeil Jr.; dear brother of James E. McNeil, Everett McNeli and Mrs. Clara Fisher; also survived by three grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, May 22 at 2 p.m. at the Black-more & Tubbs Funeral Home, Mayville, Michigan. Interment in West Burlington Cemetery, Silverwood, Michigan.
O’CONNOR, DOROTHY M M May 19, 1968 ; 684 Kenilworth Street; age 53; beloved wife of Francis R. O'Connor,! beloved daughter of Fred I Fulcher; dear mother of Mrs. | Joan Lada; dear sister of Mrs. Edward Souden, Mrs. George Fisher, Fred L. and! Eldon Fulcher; also survived j by one grandchild. Funeral service will be held Wed-1 nesday, May 22, at 11 a.m. at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Interment in Ottawa Park Cemetery. Mrs. O’Connor will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to; 9.)
In Msmerlcuit
band and (■titer. Richard n. Rodgers who petted away May 21, IMS.
I have only your memory, dear Huftband,
Tha love a heart holdi dear,
Fond memoriae linger every day RtmamiriMr nmm him near.
Sadly mined toy wile, Louise and children.
IN LOVINO MEMORY ol Lae R. St in ton who poitfd away May 21# 1966
God taw you wara gotting waakofr
and whlaparad coma to rait.
You wished \no ona a lost , f art? wall.
Not oven tald good bya.
You wara gona bafora wa know
19# 1
and Only God knowi why.
Sadly miitad by mothar. and slitar Eleanor
IN LOVING MEMORYof A lex and# r Joit, who pattad away May 21# 1945.
God taw you gotting waaker,
So Ha did what Ha thought bait#
Ha camt and stood bet Ida you#
And whltparad coma to rail.
You wlahad no ona a last farewell,
Not avan to aay ooodbyo#
You had gona bafora wa know It#
And only God knows why.
Sadly mIliad by hit wifa Fannla and family. _
Announcements 3
ACID INDIGESTION? PAINFUL gat? Gat haw PH5 tablets. Fast as liquids. Only 98 cants. Slmm'a Bros. Drugs.
ANTIQUE! FIRE TRUCK# 1922 model-T Ford# available for parades, advertising, political campaigns# 624-0600 or 647-6919.
HALL ~FOR RENT, RECEP1 *ONS, gas. church. OR 1-5202# FE 2
ledge1
Buf Tydings said it was un'| OWENS HARLAN B ■ Mav 19 thinkable “to suspend the great Mf.y. ’
writ of habeas corpus.” He said! Percy King Drive,
if it could be done for one class of citizens, it could be done for
others.
Despite the Socialist setback, ■ I ,
Premier Aldo Moro’s center-left;cen^ higher than it had ever coalition increased its majority j polled before.
both the Senate and the The Red performance soundly Chamber. contradicted iprecasts that the
The coalition comprises the Vietnam peace talks in Paris, Christian Democrats, the small the upheaval in Czechoslovakia
Republican party and the Socialists. The first two gained more seats than the Socialists lost.
32 MILLION VOTE
Nearly 32 million persons voted in the election for 315 senators and 630 deputies. T^hey will take their seats in a new Parliament June 5.
The fascists and the Monarchists also lost ground.
Finals results gave the three
and unrest in neighboring France would weaken the party at the polls.
★ ★ ★
In the Senate the Communists ran on the same ticket with the Moscow-oriented Proletarian Socialist party and together they captured 30 per cent of the vote. The Proletarian Socialists were leftist defectors from the traditional Socialist party and the principle cause of the latter’s losses
i--------—
Death Notices
EVANS, ANNIE; May 17, 1968; 522 Highland Avenue; age 75; dear sister of Lillie Belle Morrisette, Charlie and Webster Stephens. Funeral service will be held Thursday, May 23 at 1 p.m. at St. John’s C.M.E. Church. Interment in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Evans will lie in state at the Davis-Cobb Funeral Home after 3:30 p.m., Wednesday.
Waterford Township; age 55; beloved husband of Lillian Owens; dear father of Mrs. Richard Nelson and Oliver E. Owens; dear brother of Austin P. Owens; also survived by two grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, May 22 at 1 p.m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Interment in Christian Memorial Estate Cemetery. Mr. Owens will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3.to 5 and 7 to 9.)
persons was convicted of first-tors now have four-year terms. | degree murder Monday in the In the past two elections, ad-jdeadl 0f a Saginaw couple, mitted Rep. James Farnsworth.
R-Plainwell, “It just happens that the Republicans did much better when they ran with the governor (in 1966) than when they ran with the president (in 1964). Now • it’s just that simple.”
Saginaw Man Convicted of First-Degree Murder
DETROIT (AP) — A 23-year-1 Fred J. Borchard set the date old man accused of slaying four ]f°r sentencing as May 31. The trial was moved to Detroit on
ENGEL, FLORENCE JULIA;
May 20, 1968 ; 30 Cadillac; age 67; beloved wife of George Engel; dear mother of Mrs.
Harry (Edith) Crigger; dear sister of Mrs. Helen Cameron; also survived by four grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Thursday,
May 23 at 10 a.m. at the
Coats Funeral Home, Drayton |_____...... . I
Plains, interment in Lakeview DELIA;
Cemetery. Mrs. Engel will lie' in state after 7 p.m. tonight at the funeral home. (Suggested! visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to]
9).
PICHOTTE, SALLY E.; May 21, 1968; 10135 Nadine, Huntingdon Woods; age 52; belovCd wife of John F. Pichotte; dear mother of Mrs. Perry (Jacquelyn) Mattoon and Mrs. Rogert G. (Judith) Frechett; also survived by five grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Thursday, May 23 at 11 a.m. at the Vasu-Lynch Funeral Home, 4375 North Woodward, Royal Oak. Interment in Woodlawn Cemetery.
a change of venue due to extensive publicity of the case in Saginaw.
A jury of 10 men and two I The Middeldorf bodies were women found William Edding- found two days after the kill-ton Jr. of Saginaw guilty in the ings. Middeldorf, 63, was found murder of Mr. and Mrs. Carl tied up in the bedroom of his Middledorf Feb. 3, 1967. j home with a piece of plastic
★ * * j over his head, several small
The jury deliberated more knife wounds, and an eight-inch
A Rpnuhlican sDonsored nro-lthan four hours before deliver-!butcher knife in his back. His A Republican sponsored pro- verdict Circuit Judgelwife was {ound in the bathroom,
posal for running in off-years !in« verdlct' urcult Juage whf,rp she
was drowned.
failed 25-62, drawing only onei
1 ANOTHER TRIAL
Eddington faces another trial [June 10 on charges of first-de-igree murder in the slayings of ;Dr. and Mrs. Archer A. Claytor of Saginaw, Feb. 1, 1967.
The trial is scheduled for Ludington ofi another change of venue.
★ ★ . ★
FORTIN, PHILOMENE; May 20, 1968; 1140 LaSalle Street; age 83; dear mother of Henry Foci in; dear sister of Mrs. Bennadette Rodgers and Mrs. Marie Tetu; also Survived by seven grandchildren and 15 great-grandchildren. Recitation of the Rosary will be held tonight at 8 p.m. at the Huntoon Funeral Home. Funeral service will be held
May 20, j
1968; 1190 North Eddy, Walled j Lake; age 87; dear mother of Mrs. Laura Profitt, Mrs. Stella Drake, Mrs. Elizabeth Profitt, Mrs. Edna Kessler; Tommie, Elijah, Ova, Courtney and Emery Spencer; also survived by 46 grandchildren, 47 great-grandchildren and eight g r e a t -great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Friday, May 24, at 1 p.m. at the Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Walled Lake. Interment in South Lyon Cemetery. Mrs. Spencer will lie in state at the funeral home.
HALL FOR RENT, 37 W. Yale. FE 2-00??. Alter 6 P.M., FE 5-0316. _
LOSE WEIGHT SAFELY with Dex-A Diet Tablets. Only 98 cents at Simms Bros. Drugs.
NOffci TO PUBLIC . Proposal Number: 6^9-418 — Control section 63043E Sal# o f buildings In Oakland County# Michigan.
Sealed bids will be received until 10:00 A.M.
all bids will ba publicly opened and read for the removal of buildings owned by the Michigan Department of State Highw8ys and described as:
1) 475 Nawakwa Street. Rochester, Michigan. 1 story C.B.house on slab with attached C.B. garage.
2 ) 387 Nawakwa Street, Rochester. Michigan, i story C.B. house with attached 2 car C.B. garage and
. 20'x26' C.B. studio building.
3) 3545 Hazelton# Rochester. Michigan. IMi story frame house on slab# 2 car C.B. garage and a truck body storage shed.
4) 200 Shortrldge# Rochester# Michigan, 1 slory frame house# 2 car frame garage, 1 story C.B. chicken coop# I story C.B. machine shop# and a 1 story frame storage shed.
The Michigan department of state highways# in accordance with the provisions to Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 ( 78 Staf. 252) and the Regulations of the Department of Commerce (5 C.F.R. Part 8) issued pursuant to such act# hereby notifies all bidders that It will affirmitively insure that the contract entered into pursuant to this advertisement will be awarded to the tower responsible bidder without discrimination on the ground of race# color or national orgin.
To be considered# all bids must be submitted on the prescribed bid proposal form.
Specifications and b I d proposal forms, may be obtained at District Office No. 9# 926 Featherstone Road# Pontiac# Michigan.
MICHIGAN STATE HIGHWAY COMMISSION Lansing# Michigan
OAKLAND COUNTY Singles Club 25 or over, write Pontiac Press Box C-50, Pontiac# Michigan.__________
WANTED — HANDMADE Items on consignment. Call 623-0237.
Democratic vote, then was put off.
Final action!
NOTICE TO DEBTORS Debtors of Homer High! Motors. Inc. take notice: Monies due to Homer Hight Motors, Inc., will b£ accepted at 160 S. Washington, Oxford and 97 Dennison St. until Juno 1st, 1960. Attar June 1st, 1968 all accounts still unpaid and owing to Homer High! Motors. Inc. will be turned over for legal action.
Homer Hight Motors, Inc.
HOMER HIGHT May 20. 21, 22, 1968
AIRPORT PROGRAM DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE MICHIGAN AERONAUTICS COMMISSION NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
Board Excuses Teacher's Strip
Wednesday, May 22 at 11 a.m. at the St. Benedicts Catholic!TICK, ALICE F.; May 20, 1968; Church- Interment in Mount 3550 Granger Road, Ortonville
BOX REPLIES
At 10 a.m. today there were replies at The Press Office in the following boxes:
C-14, C-15, C-21, C-Z4, C-29, C-34, C-35, C-44, C-50, C-65.
Funeral Directors COATS
FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS
DONELSON-JQHNS
FUNERAL HOME
Huntoon
FLI^T (AP) — The School Board in Burton Township has ruled against firing a 24-year-old sex education teacher who
Ronald L. Johnson, 24, of Saginaw is also charged in the mur-e*»XS3?‘^ reportedly stripped before herjders of the Clayfors. His trial
by the Michigan Aeronautics commission all-girl class to emphasize a date has not been set. at the time and place Indicated below, . ° r ■ ,
opened llend,t?ead.and there be publlcly P°int ! Claytor was found in his home
plans, proposal forms and supplemental j The alleged action six weeks beaten over the head, possibly oMh?eMichig*n Aeronautics commission, ago by the unidentified teacher with a hammer and then shot. wrV^tfensIngpMk'hlgen^eSwS1, upon pay- raised the ire of many parents,| j|js wjfe was shot to death, ment of tha foe listed with the proposal wh0 demanded her dismissal, _ . , , ...
-..... ......... Claytor was named Michi-
gan’s Foremost Physician of the year in 1959. He was the doctor who delivered Eddington and Johnson.
number. No foes will be refunded. , ... .. , . , . , . ,
The June 1959 edition of "Standard along with that Of junior high
Specifications tor Construction of Air-__._.p UaMtlra
ports" as prepared by the Federal Avia-! School Principal C.t*. HeidtKe. tion Agency, with Supplement No. 2, 1966, i T. Rontlnv Srhnnl District
Is an essential part of the contract. Con-1 me Bentley ocnoot uisuu-l
tractors not possessing this edition mey;y,nnri# mpplinu in SDPCial ses-
obtain same, at the above address, tor a DoarQ> meeting in spend! sea
fee ol three dollars and twenty-five cents cion Monday night, concluded (53.25), which fee Is in addition, to that • ?. .,
charged for plans. there was insufficient evidence
at^he* Michigan0 Aeronautics ^Commission! tO justify dismissal Of the teach-with'the* proposal0' **. Con,u,,•n, ,er or the principal.
a certified or ^ashler's check _ in the j “\ye find she had intentions in amount of not less then ten per cent! ,
(10%) ol the aggregate amount of the the best interests Of her StU-
b,dash.l. eccompeny eech pr.^ , ^ p^I i.g.i______________
r^«M»W.n»ischool board president. "She| OP Legal Aid Plan i'ny & 'besMnforest^^ttw” Sponsor »i«md in judgment by using her- f
•he p*pp]« ?f fie state. of Mjchtgan. jseif as a model..Thus her meth-1 A rt on the progress of its McGEE, WILLIE JAMES; May
__mil air) nrnpram will be heard---------4, 1968; 244 East
interpreted by some of her stu
OCCEO to Hear Progress Report
Hope Cemetery. Mrs. Fortin will lie in state at the funeral home.
._______________;_______I
GREENAWALT, HELEN MAY; May 18, 1968; 1500 West
Lovers Lane, Arlington, Texas (Formerly of Pontiac); age 61; dear mother of Bruce J. and Richard G. McLintock; dear sister of Mrs. William H. Gorsline; also survived by six g r a n d c h i IdPettr Private funeral service was held Tuesday, May 21 at 11 a.m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Interment in Greenwood Cemetery, Vernon, Michigan. Family suggests contributions to the Michigan Cancer Foundation or donor’? favorite charity.
HEFFNER, LA VINA jj MAY 19, 1968; 12201 Washburn, Detroit, Michigan; Age 77; dear mother of Earl Heffner Jr.; dear sister of Fulton, Milton and Wilford Cooney. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, May 22 at 10 a.m. at the Harvey >A. Neely Funeral Home, 16540 Meyers Road, Detroit; Interment in Grand Lawn Cemetery.
Out-Pf-State corporation* mu»t comply ____,-------„— ■
r Di;itlonq.U'rDwanrlm.0p' 7 &SS& **’ 8Ct °" •«* WOr(,S M ^ l*'***
----------------------- --------- --------ItoO by some of her stu- . th Qakland Cwft
dents,” te added J -
and alt applicable lawi and regulation
Aviation Regulations. "Equal Employment Opportunity Requirements," shall apply to Ftdtraf-aid Airport Protects and are fully explained In the Instructions to Bidders and Paragraph 16, (action 90,: Division I of tha Standard (pacifications | as published in Supplement No. 2.
OAKLAND-PONTIAC AIRPORT, PON-1 TIAC, MICHIGAN.
Bid Opening. May 2B, 1961. it too a.m., j E.D.T., at the offices of the Michigan • ■ M 'ipTti-
Theaters Shut
mission on Economic Opportunity (OCCEO) at its meeting tomorrow at 7:30 p.m.
The group will meet at the OCCEO central office, 1 W. , ' 1 Lafayette, in downtown Pontiac.
______ r. . .. . ^ T, ,, PARIS (AP) - Many of the • + ★ ★
cfty°nA°rportCTerSina° Bunding, capital!best known theaters in Paris, in-j Aa expanded legal aid pro-c proposa*v*No! Mn,^l'-cMi29!i8,Fea forlciuduig the Fplies Bergeres, gram jor the poor was started
Board o.lwere shut by strikes Monday. Alin Aprl, usjng an additio^al
I ul 882,°°0 U.B. grant,
lighting of fe-W runway crost-over exit ceres Said he refunded licxeiI - fiill.fitnp lawyers were aftho^oakiahd-POntiae Airport, near Pan- uje 0,_rr ™nS( r«.r four iq 11 lime lawyers were
"*c,lmoney when ", ,lvas re iadded to the staff, along with consist of .the l0,,°*jl,yonma,or) ^J"J;*Y iduced because of the strike.
UndaMlfltd Excavation (Lump Sum)
AggrogMt Bom Course iRumiiwUi Surface course
Catola Trench . ......
Underground Cable
dWTi^'
Michigan.
ii
1,050 C.Y.
620 C.V, 470 Ton 950 L.F. 1,400 UP. 95 L.FJ
Lansing,
it, C. ANDREW* Assistant Olrecfor -ENGINEERING Michigan aeronautics - commission
May 14, MOV 21. I960-
The only wild horses on earth today are the tarpan found on the plains of the Altai Mountain region and extreme western Mongolia.
| other personnel, and the ex-:panded program has been undef j way for about six weeks.
. it w ' ★
Among other reports to be heard is one on a proposed credit union for the county poor.
Wilson
Street; age 46; beloved husband of Luverta McGee; beloved son of Josephine McGee; dear father of James E., Robert Earl and Willie J. McGee Jr.; dear brother of D. L. and Harvey L. McGee. Funeral service will be held Thursday, May 23 at 1 pm. at the Community Bible Baptist Church with Rev. W. H. Lawrence officiating. Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. McGee will lie in state after 7 p.m. Wednesday at the Frank Carruthers Funeral Home.
McNIEL, JOHN S.; MAY 19, 1968; 6139 Second Street,
Mayville, Michigan; Age 64; beloved husband of Dorothy McNiel; dear father of John
(formerly of Pontiac); age 83; dear mother of Mrs. Netanis Richards, Mrs. Wilma Lewis, Mrs. Marjorie Copeman, Mrs. Gladys Bron-dige, Donald and Dale Tick; dear sister of Mrs. Nicy Gavette; also survived by 10 grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren. . Funeral service will be held Thursday, May 23 at 1:30 p.m. at the Huntoon Funeral Home. Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mrs. Tick will lie in state after 7 tonight at t*he funeral home.
WICe7wALTER; May 19, 1968; formerly of Pontiac; age 74; dear father of Mrs. Gertrude White, Mrs. Lina Cordell, Mrs. Jane Hughes, Robert C. Owen and Reid Wice; dear brother of Mrs. Margaret La Ford, Mrs. Ann Rye, Mrs. Willa Beckett, Harry, Joe and Howard Wice. Also survived by 25 grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Thursday, May 23, at J:30 p.m. at the Florshee Funeral Home, Hale, Miphigan, Interment at Glennie, Michigan.
WICE, MARTHA l| May 21,
^ 1968; formerly of Pontiac; age 72; dear mother of Mrs. Gertrude White, Mrs. Lina Cordell, Mrs. Jane Hughes, Owen, Reid .and Robert C. Wice; dear sister of Mrs. Artheal Barrager, Mrs. Ruth Tricker, Sidney and Jordon Owen; also survived by 25 j g r a n d c h i ldren. Funeral service will be held Thursday, May 23 at 1:30 p.m. at the Florshee Funeral Home, Hale. Interment1 In Glennie,! Michigan.
WILLIAMS, MARVIN L.; MAY! 19, 1968; Beloved husband of Hannah (Bedwell). Funeral! from the Ted C. Sullivan j Funerpl Home, 14230 West: McNichols Road, Detroit, Wednesday, 2 p.in. Interment! in Industry, Illinois, Thursday ]
FUNERAL HOME
79 Oakland Ava.
Cemetery Lets
Personals
r-V-
» SPArcS-GRIFFIN
FUNERAL HOME
"Thoughtful Servlet**_FE 8-9288
Voorhees-Siple
4-A
1 CRYPTS IN OAKLAND Hill* Cemetery, any choice# sacrifice $100 below cost. Southfield# 353-8121. . \________________________________
Six choice lots In best \locatlon at White Chapel Cemetery. Way below below market v^tue. Call Don Bennett at Ml 6-3900.
4-B
ANYONE WITNESSING accident resulting In a death Thursday, May 9, 7:45 p.m. at Milford Rd. and Rose Center Rd., Rose\ Twp. Please Call Collect, 239-0560,\Flint or 634-9460 Holly.
AVOID GARNISHMENTS Gat out of debt with our planV
Debt Consultqnts
814 Pontiac State Bank Building
FE 8-0333
State Licensed—Bonded
t__.Open Saturday 9-12 a.m.
EXCITING SPRING FUN for scout Qroups# church# clubs. Ride through fields, woods# on hor!sedrawn hayrlde. Followed by homecooked spaghetti dinner. See newborn animals — lambs# piglets, calves# chicks. For reservations, 628-1611.
_UPLAND HILLS FARM
"GET OUT OF DEBT ON A PLANNED BUDGET PROGRAM YOU CAN AFFORD TAILORED TO YOUR INCOME SEE
MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS 702 Pontiac State Bank Bldg.
FE 8-0456________
HAND PAINTED PORTRAITS on silk. Made from your snapshots. 8"x10" $14.80. Full guarantee^ For Information, send your name and address to P. O. Box 472. Rochester# Mich. 48067,
ON AND AFTER this date May ff. 1968 I will not be responsible for any debts contracted by any other than myself. Barry W. Adams# 121 W. Beverly, Pontiac, Michigan. WEDDING ’ PHOTOGRAPHY B Y Professional color. Brochure avail* able. Call 338-9079# anytime. WHAT DOESTHE Bible sav about my particular problem? Answers given with Bible text only. Address your questions to "Thus Salth The Lord," Pontiac' Press Box C-26# Pontiac# Michigan, 48056. Please include 4 stamped self addressed envelope. Don Wolters, 682-7222. Personal Bible studies free on re-^ quest.
Want Ads ARE
FAMOUS for Action Phone 332-8181 v .
Last and Found
POUND - SIAMESE CAT. 6263)43
lost' - bOLLV‘XRjTgirrgf'Me-
Hotel sot*. SasiiaMW Rd. Frl, night, May 10. Reward. 693-6586.
LOST“'>t/RiBRW'bi«ci7n3"i»n Atrdala# io mot.# vie. Baldwin • Kennett. Child's pet. Rewerd. 335 4507^
LOST: SMALL SILVER PreheH Poodle# Walled Lake area. Reward. 624*0491.
LOST: CHARCOAL ORAY’~Malt Poodle, vicinity Clarkston area, 625-8618,
LOST: A ST. bErnARIT I n Clarkston araa Friday morning. MA 5-5480.
LOST.- MAN'S BROWN“Leather wallet. Sat., May 18, Kresge Store, Pontiac Mall. Cards ana papers very necessary. Reward for return. 623-1135.
LOST: HARMLESS WHITE German Shepherd, 9 mos. old# male. Vicinity Hollerback's Auto. Supply. Reward. FE 8-6677.
LOST TOY FEMALE collie In*vie of Lower Straits Lake. EM 3-2636
LOST: COLLIE. MALE. 6 months. Holly area. Answers to "Buddy" 1 634-5791.__
Help Wonted Mole 6
1 MAN KITCHEN. FULL charge, good pay. Days# nights, o- splits available. Call Ml 7-W6 bet. 5-10
imanparttiMe
We need a dependable married iman# over 21 to work mornings or eves. Call 674-0520# 4 P.M -8 P.M.
3 WELL DRESSED men. Up 10*120 per evening. Car n e ce s s a r y . College students and high school seniors. 673-8766, 2 to 5 p.m. only. ACCOUNTANT, SENIOR AND SEMI senior, recent public experience# permanent staff# no travel or write-ups# exc. opportunity# 353-1660_
ADVERTISING MAN FOR men's specialty store. Af least 2 years experience in newspaper, radio, TV and store promotion. Capable of writing copy. Apply In own handwriting to Pontiac Press Box _C14L_______
AMBITIOUS YOUNG MAN FOR truck driving position# includes fringe benefits and retirement plan with advancement possibilities. 673-1246.
Arc Welders Spray Painters
Apply in person
REMKE, INC.
28100 Grosbeck Hwy.
Roseville _ (Detrolt,__Mich.)
ARCH IT ECT U R AL DR AFTSMAN 3 years minimum# experience# commercial and resdiential work call Ml 7,-2022.
ASSOCIATE PLANNER $10,000 -$11,500
PLUS EXCELLENT FRINGE BENEFITS Requires a Bachelor's degree In planning# architecture# landscape architecture or public ad-*° ministration from an accredited college or university and five years full time# paid professional urban planning experience# or a master's degree in one of the fields listed above and three years full time paid professional urban planning experience.
APPLY TO:
The Personnel Division
Oakland County Courthouse ,1200 N. Telegraph Rd. Pontiac 48053
ATTENTION
Distributor for nationally known beverage# must be young and aggressive. Contact Mr. Kelly# Collect, KE 7-7100.__________
ATTENTION
OPPORTUNITY
Clark Oil and Refinery Corp. has available In the Pontiac area a station management position.
1. Must be 21 to 50.
2. Excellent opportunity for advancement in the management field#
3.,Excellent beginning salary.
.4. Experience not necessary.
5. No auto maintenance involved. We deal in gasoline sales only.
If interested call collect# Detroit# JO 4-6546 after 5 p.m.; Warren# 268-6557.
APPRAISER FOR POSITION of assessor. Experienced preferred. Will consider applicant with real estate experience. Contact West Bloomfield Township Assessor's office, 682-1200. Ext. 32.
AUTO MECHANIC'S
Helpers and parts clerks.-Must be able to work any shift. KEEGO SALES & SERVICE, 3080 Orchard Lake Road# Keego Harbor# 682-3400.___________
BARBER# STEADY# established chair, good pay. Herb's Barber Shop. 3454 Pontiac Lake Rd.
BABY COMPANY WANTS 2 representatives to train for management, no experience necessary# starting salary $600 monthly, insurance# hospitalization# ages 22-32. For information call personnel manager# EL 6-6721.
BRANCH
MANAGER
TRAINEE
To Train for Career os Executive with Large National Company.
Ambitious young people with executive potential will receive planned training in preparation for a career as a branch manager with the nation's oldest ^and largest consumer finance company. If selected, you will, earn full salary as you train# wUh frequent increases directly related to your progress Promotions to positions of greater responsibility are from within the company. Stable employment, outstanding employe benefits, and rapid promitions provide for a secure future. Age 21-28# some college desireable, but not required.
HOUSEHOLD FINANCE CORP.
3^2 S. Saginaw# Pontiac BARBER, STEADY. REPLACE two retired men. Apprentice okay. Hills. 682-4840, 682-2774# FE 2-7271.
BENCH, TOOL AND FIXTURE BUILDER
For aerospace work. Must be experienced. Benefits include life insurance, Blue Cross# liberal vaca-* tion, pension plan and advancement.
McGregor mfg. corp,
2785 W. Maple Rd.# Troy
________Ml 4-3540
Bridgeport Operators
Permanent positions with rapM'v expanding company, fringe benefits# overtime# good working conditions# Clyde Corp., 1800 W. Maple, Troy.
BROILER M AN COOKS Dishwashers
Apply In person, Machus Red Fox, 6676 Telegraph, Birmingham. Tpp wages and benefits.
BUILDING
SUPERINTENDENT
Complete charge of maintenance in downtown office building. Apply 406 Riker Bldg.8 , ;
B UMP ANO^PXINT "SPEClAUST tOf automobile dealership# top pay# with liberal working hours# call 624-3192 for Interview. _
ClllRK. Adult. Permanent position. No niohts. Every third Sun. 42Vi hr. wk. Good salary, insurance. Paid vacation. Mills Pharmacy. Ml 4-5060.
C O NS'f R U C TT 6 N SUPERiN-TENDENT# expfrlencejf. For structural concrete projects. Call hurrqf • Construction Company# iniiac# f
CIVIL INQINfiBS
S.curt cmployitent. Immsdfofo placmrant for qwMIM Civil EnsInMrs In ite most rapidly, •xpatelnq art* In tha UitlNM Stat.i. Oakland County effofo
’twin *aim wiin nw ‘PDnmpp
BKparlanca, (» SIXMO p lua registration tonus tor tht Civil
,lo salary. Includiiii tliR pdld family Blue Cron. Blue Shield, minimum of t weeks, maximum of 4 waeks paid vocation, rotlre-mtnt program, tuition rolm- . bursament, lit# Insurant# and otnara. \
For additional Information, or IB maka application, contact the:
PERSONNEL DIVISION
Oakland County Board of Auditors#
1200 N. Telegraph Rd.
______Pontiac, Mfjh. 48053
COLriSfrfUDWfl Teachers end college students# special summer time franchise available at a factory repreeen-
College
Students
High school grads# 18 and ovar 12 weeks work for 12 students.
First come first serve.
Call before 2 p.m., 338-0350 COMBINAtlONT BUMPER A NO painfer, plenty of work# plus fringe benelltt# FE 3-7836.
" CUSTODIAL WORKER'II
Secure# steady employment, excellent fringe benefits# including full paid family blue cross# blue shield, life insurance, paid vacation, retirement program and others, in addition to a salary of $4,700 to $5#I00 annually. In order to qualify, you must be a resident of Oakland County# have passed your 25th but not 60th birthday, have completed at least ^ the 9th school grade# and have had at least 6 months continuous full-time paid custodial or related work experience within the past year.
APPLY NOW TO:
The Personnel Division
Oakland County Courthouse 1200 N. Telegraph Rd. Pontloc 4(053 DISH machine OPERATOR, days, 51.75 hourly. Sat. and Sun. off. Meals, uniforms, benefits. Bill's Telegraph at Maple 05 Mllg). dishwasher; NIGHTS. Roman Gate Restaurant. 549-4141 Royal Oak. __
DRIVER SALESMAN, wholesale ice cream delivery. Capes Ice Cream, Milford, 4644805.
Drill Press Operators
Permanent position with rapidly expanding company# f r in g t benefits# overtime# good working conditions# Clyde Corp.# 1800 W. Maple, Troy.
DUE TO THE EXPANSION ih these departments Sea Ray Boats has openings In assembly# plastics# repair and engine depts. Goad chance for advancement along with complete fringe benefit program# Sea Ray Boats# 925 N. Lapeer Rd.# Oxford, Michigan. _______
EXPERIENCED COOK FOR private club# seasonal# Birmingham area. Excellent bay and fringe benefits. For interview call 626-8-430. EXPERIENCED SHORT ORDER cook# 21 or older, top wages# Blue
EXPERIENCED MECHANIC# prefer man with tractor dealership exp., exc. pay and fringa benefits# 625-2245 for appointment.
EXPERIENCED DO-ALL surface grinder for grinding carbide end carbide tipped tools# overtime. Champion Tool Co. 24060 Orchard Lk„ Rd., Farmington 474-6200.
ship. _ I --------
All benefits# overtime. Equal Tool Company, 626-0626.
EXPERIENCED PORTER FOR private club. Apply 114 Orchard Lk. Pontiac._____________________.
E X P E R IENCED RESTAURANT manager# dining room# cocktail room# and function rooms. Good salary and incentives. Box 98# Lathrup Village Post Office. Excellent opportunity for,
combination offset predsman and camera-man# experienced on Harris or Meihle to run new offset department# now being formed in Plymouth# Michigan. Please send resume to P.O. Box 925 Plymouth, Michigan. ____________________
EXPERIENCED WAXER FOR A janitor company# full time only# apply at Pontiac State Bank Building# Room 515# Tuesday through Friday between 7 and
EXPERIENCED CHEF and assistant night cook. New large dining room and function rooms. Good salary and incentives. Box 98# Lathrup
Village Post Office.______
EXPERIENCED PLASTiC FINISHING foreman. Send Resume to Smith-Way Plastics Co.# 5684? Grand River# New Hudson#
Michigan. 48165.___________
FURNITURE MOVERS Experienced preferred# full or part time# references necessary. Apply in person only. Stevens Van Lines# 3565 Elizabeth Lake Road;
FREEZER FOODS
Salesman# If you're not making 2
FACTORY WORKER
Reliable man over 30 for small manufacturing plant In Troy. Steady employment# starting wage $2.25- per hour. Call Mr. Lemanski# 689-2446, 9 to 11 a.m._______
Factory
Workers
By day or week: Warehousemen; assemblers; machine operators; material handlers; common laborers; etc. Dally pay. Report any time after 6 a.m.
Employers Temporary Service
Clawson 65 S, Main
Radford 26117 Grand River
Ferndale________ 2320 Hilton Rd. •
FLORAL DESIGNER, experienced, full or part time, see Mr. Coppersmith, Pearce Floral Company,
559 Orchard Lake, Pontiac.
FOREMAN: MATERIALS HANDLING EQUIPMENT, supervise , shop and road mechanics. Fringe benefits, profit sharing, write Service Manager In care of Pon-tiac Press Box C-Ut._____~
General Accountant
Challenging position in hospital fbr accountants with experience In the preparation of financial stattRionts# subsidiary schedules# etc. General accountant experience essential. Please forward resume with salary requirements to personnel director.
St. Joseph Mercy HOkRfffl# 900 Woodward Ave. Pontiac. 41083. GARDENER FOR EStAt! hear Union Lake, suitable for retired man, 363-4119. _ _ _
gas 'station ATTENDANT# wm mechanical ability# Fullor or part time. MAyfalr 6-9326. 2065 Wtinut Lake Road at Inkster# Standard
Gas Station- - ._r.-
GAS STATION attendentL**' perienced# mechanically Indlnad# local refs.# full or part-time# Gulf# Telegraph and Maple._________&
“GROUNDSKEEPER I $5,200 -$6,400
, PLUS EXCELLENT FRINGE BENEFITS _
Must have passed your lath, but not have passed your 60tn birth- ■ day, have a valid Michigan operator's or choutfour'a license and have completed the 9th - grade. It Is desirable that applicants hava tied 'so m a grouhdskeeplhg or lendacaplng experience. . , . -APPLY NOW TO:
The Personnel Division
Oakland County CourthouiO .
1200 N. Telegraph Rd. Fonllec, 4S053
GUARD
For Utica, Mt. CMmena ted Detroit free. Top Union SCOW Paid Blue Croat, Vacation end IwthMy benefits. Celt in collect. Bonded
Pontiac, PE 5-944],
, LO t-4150.
■T9
THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, MAY 21, 1PB8
wm
Deaths in Pontiac, Nearby Areas
Wirrnr(nv;if;n nimi rir» - nr '• t- •-* i -t—yi——■ ~ • t --
Mrs. George Engel
Service for Mrs. George (Florence J.) Engel, 67, of 30 Cadillac will be 10 a.m. Thursday at Coats Funeral Home, Waterford Township, with burial in Lakeview Cemetery, Charleston.
Mrs. Engel died yesterday.
Surviving are her husband; a daughter, Mrs. Harry Crigger of Waterford Township; four grandchildren; two great grandchildren; and a sister.
Mrs. Annie Evans
shee Funeral Home in Hale with burial in Gennie.
Mrs. Wice died this morning.
Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. Gertrude White of Pontiac,; Mrs.’Lina Cordell of Rose City and Mrs. Jane Hughes of Oregon; three sons, Owen of Clarkston, Robert C. of Pontiac and Reid with the Air Force in England; 25 grandchildren; two sisters, Mrs Artheal Barrager and Mrs iRuth Tricker, both of Pontiac; and two brothers, including Sidney of Pontiac.
Mrs. Mabel G. Dillman
Service for Mrs. Annie Evans,
75, of 522 Highland will be 1 p.m. Thursday at St. John’s Methodist Church with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery by the Davis-Cobb Funeral Home.
Mrs. Evans, a former employe of GMC Truck & Coach DlWsion, died Friday. She was a member of the St. John’s Church.
Surviving are a sister, Lillie {yesterday Belle Morrisette of Pontiac, and i Surviving are two sisters two brothers.
Mrs. Delia Spencer
WALLED LAKE - Service for Mrs. Delia Spencer, 87, of 1190 N. Eddie will be 1 p.m. Frida at Richardson-Bird Funeral Home with burial South Lyon Cemetery, L Township.
Mrs. Spencer died yesterday.
Surviving are four daughters, Mrs. Laura Profitt of Lyon Township, Mrs. Elizabeth Profitt of Wixorn, Mrs. Stella Drake of Lyon Towrtship and Mrs. Edna Kessler of Detroit; five sons, Tommie of Middletown, Ohio; Elijah o f Walled Lake, Ova of Walled Lake, Courtney of Imoklee, Fla., and Emery of Wixorn; 46 grandchildren; 47 greatgrandchildren; and eight great-great-grandchildren.
Mrs. Helen Greenawalt
Private service for former ontiac reenav
Order of Eastern Star 228 of Pontiac and St. A1 b i n s Episcopal Church in Arlington.
Surviving are two sons, Bruce J. McLintock of Huntington Beach, Calif., and Richard G. McLintock of New Orleans, La.; six grandchildren; and a sister, Mrs. William H. Gorsline of Waterford Township.
Willie J. McGee
OAKLAND TOWNSHIP -Service for Mrs. Mabel G.
Dillman, 56, of 6000 N .
Rochester will be 11 a.m.
Thursday at William R. Potere Funeral Home, Rochester.
Burial will be in Grand Lawn! Orrett Tatlock Cemetery, Detroit.
Mrs. Dillman, formerly an j BIRMINGHAM — Service for executive secretary with Orrett Tatlock, 83, of 444 General Motors Corp., died (Baldwin will be 10 a.m. tomorrow at St. James Episcopal Church. Burial will follow at IForest Rill Cemetery, Ann Arbor, by Manley Bailey Funeral Home.
Mr. Tatlock, a professor of chemistry at Wayne State University until his retirement in 1955, died yesterday. He was a member of the Birmingham Senior Men’s Club.
Surviving are his wife, Alice;
About 400 persons are ex- a dau«ht,er’ ™rs Joh" pected to attend the “Planning of San Lorenzo, Calif.;
Arms Curb Eyed RockyGets ■
l n mj Little Hair-ied
by Broomfield
U. N. Parley Sought Toward,Mideast Pact
Conference on Planning Expects 400
. Ponjiac resident Mrs. Helen: M.
Greenawalt, 61, of Arlington,
Tex., was to have been this morning a t Donelson-Johns Funeral Home with burial in Greenwood Cemetery at Vernon. i
Mrs Greenawalt died Satur- f07vpe0pie”’inference 'ofthe |and three grandchildren day. She was a member of the Oakland County Planning Com mission at Oakland University Thursday
Some 50 experts in fields of planning, goverment, 1 a w housing and natural resources will take part in presentations and seminars.
The conference is the fourth biennial meeting sponsored by the planning commission in cooperation with OU’s Division of Continuing Education.
Registration will be at 8:30 Service for Willie J. McGee,|a n1. Starting at 10 a.m., con-46, of 241 E. Wilson will be 1 current workshops will be held p.m. Thursday at Community I °".vario,us fie.,ds of '4ntf0e„st wlth Bible Baptist Church with!01^ beginning at 1.30 p.m. burial in Perry Mount Park30”^™ Pfm(
Cemetery by the Frank Car-ruthers Funeral Home.
Site Rezoned
\
to Okay Travel Trailer Sales
Some of the subjects to be | covered are: metropolitan (transportation system; new plat Mr. McGee, an employe of. |a ws • solid waste disposal; Pontiac Motor Division, died urban renewal; zoning laws; May 9. * | and preservation of natural
Surviving are his wife, Luverta; his mother of Hat-tisburg, Miss.; three sons, James E. of Detroit and Willie J. Jr. and Robert E., both of Pontiac; and two brothers.
Mrs. Walter Wice
resources.^
Reservations and information on the conference can be obtained at the conference department at OU.
Service for resident Mrs.
former Pontiac Walter (Martha
Sign-Up Is Reset
Mrs. David Thomas
AVON . TOWNSHIP - Mrs. David (Leota V.) Thomas, 1119 Harding, died this morning. Her body is at Pixley Memorial Chapel, Rochester. «■
Mrs. Alice F. Tick
U.S. Rep. William S. Broomfield, R-18th District, today proposed that a United Nations-sponsored conference be convened to draft a non proliferation treaty on con ventional weapons shipped to the Middle East.
* * *
Broomfield, a delegate from Congress to the United Nations, said in a House resolution that the conference would apply to all nations supplying arms to that area and would limit their 1( military services.
* * *
“Increased shipments o f Soviet arms to the Arab states in recent weeks has created a regrettable imbalance in weaponry in the Middle Easr,” Broomfield said.
★ ★ *
“We can’t afford to sit back and watch this explosive situation deteriorate into another shooting war.”
FOLLOWS REPORT The resolution follows up a report to the House Foreign Affairs Committee last year. In the report, Broomfield, who
went to the Middle East as a
special representative of the committee, recommended that! * the administration take steps to f limit the arms buildup in the HAMILTON, Ohio (AP) — A Middle East, butler County deputy foiled a * * *
' | plan Monday to sneak a hypo- U.S. Sen. Robert P. Griffin,
parcel ot dermic needle and heroin to a R-Mich., was to introduce a jail prisoner. | similar resolution in the Senate
AP Wirephoto
LITTLE SOLDIER—Too young to realize the seriousness of the occasion, 4-year-old Frank Buysse of Worthington, Minn., with toy helmet and rifle, stands behind members of the Worthington Army Reserve’s 452nd Support Company. The company went on active duty last week tlncf will report to Ft. Riley, Kan.
Deputy Foils Plot, Finds Dope in Tube
GAINESVILLEmFIa. (AP) -A long-haired member of the audience stood to attract the attention of New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller at a ques-tion-find-answer session Monday at the University of Florida.
“That young lady over there,” Rockefeller said. The crowd looked and roared.
“I’m.sorry. Let’s start this over. ,That young gentleman over there,” Rockefeller said.
City Man Reports Home Is Looted
Items valued at more than 5500 were stolen from a Pontiac man’s home. It was reported to city police yesterday.
Robert Colfer of 4 Roashjre told officers three\ air - conditioners, a bicycle and a wagon were taken from a storage area under the front porch of his home.
Investigators said there was no evidence of forcible entry to the area.
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Deputy Larry Costator: today, squeezed a tube of toothpaste and felt something inside. He!
BRANDON TOWNSHIP -Service for Mrs. Alice F. Tick, 83, of 3550 Granger will be 1:30 p.m. Thursday at Huntoon Funeral Home, Pontiac, with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery, Pontiac.
Mrs. Tick, formerly member o f Congregational Church of Pontiac, died yesterday.
Surviving are four daughters, Mrs. Netanis Richards o f Waterford Township, Mrs. Wilma Lewis of Tuscon, Ariz., Mrs. Marjorie Copeman of Fowlerville and Mrs. Gladys
The rezoning of (property on M-59 at Forest to allow the sale of travel trailers was approved last night by the Waterford Township Board.
The site formerly had been
used by a dairy products firm. and found the needle in a baby * * * nipple and heroin in wax paper
The reclassification of the) John Warford, 25, of Hamil-property was requested by Jack ton, was charged with posses-McClellan of 2329 Briggs, sion of narcotics and a hypo-Waterford Township. ! dermic needle.
The transfer of a liquor
SERVICE
OPEN MONDAY 0 FRIDAY EVENINQS TIL 9 P.M.
Reasonable • •• Efficient
COLOR • BUCK & WHITE
RH ... ... i Counterfeiting increased 15 •
cut it open with a razor blade per cenj jn jj,e jasj year) W|th | *
more than $10 million in counterfeit money recovered.
ANTENNA INSTALLATIONS UHF • VHF
COMBINATION • ROTORS
SWEETS
RADIO & APPLIANCE
422 West Huron FE 44677 I
license from Felicity J. Wyrick to Edward McIntyre of 2564 Premont, Pontiac, for the operation of the Five Spot Bar | at 2585 Dixie, also was ap-a proved by the board.
Heart Recipient Plays Soccer
Waterford Police Get Breathalyzer
CAPE TOWN, South Africa (UPI) — Dr. Philip Blaiberg: tossed a soccer ball around: yesterday, less than five months j after he was given a new heart! in th§ world’s first successful! heart transplant.
“This it the finest morning of! The Waterford Township^ life-” Blaiberg. Blai-
Police
■■■ neDartment now i s | berg, 58, played with members Brondige of Pontiac; two sons.i , ... g . Cape Town’s rugby football
Do“, -I**-*
and Dale of Ortonville; a sister, ( , , ---------------
Mrs. Nicy Gavette of Waterford)^Four”1 sergeants have com-' With the helP of computers,
Vinyl is Final
...period
f/t belongs on your house!)
Pontiac’s Irving School will Township; 10 grandchildren;
scientists and linguists expect
hold its kindergarten roundup j and seven great-grandchildren. I fr5.»ar'rv,«!>/eor°|t0 have the ancient Mayan lan-
from 1 to 3 p.m. next Tuesday
I.) Wice, 72, of Gennie will be!instead of the originally 1:30 p.m. Thursday at the Flor- scheduled June. 4.
________________ i administer the tests They are | M ^ m2
iRay Wilhelm, Alton Dowd, !L___________________________
a , . . .. • Richard Finkbeiner and Robert I
Area Junior High (Reynolds.
... The breathalyzer was in-1
Schedules Career!Stalled yesterday.
People in the News|jDayforromorrow
I
By The Associated Press
Actor Elliot Gould, the husband of singer Barbra Streisand, was fined $795 for 63 unpaid parking tickets in New York traffic court yesterday.
He was accused of having 98 unpaid tickets after his car was found illegally parked outside his home last month. However, he said in his court appearance that he had paid 35 of them.
Heart Surgeon Named Baylor Veep
Dr. Michael DeBakey, internationally known heart surgeon, is the new vice president for medical affairs at Baylor University College of Medicine, Houston, Tex.
DeBakey, elected yesterday by the college’s board of trustees, also was named chief executive officer of the college of medicine.
The 60-year-old cardiovascular surgeon will remain chainnan of die department of surgery, a position he has held since 1948.
DeBakey’s election was unanimously approved by a 70-member faculty academic council.
Tomorrow will be no ordinary day at Jefferson Junior High School. Students will take a look at their futures.
| It’s the school’s second annual I career day, held tliis year in;:
!conjunction with Michigan! "hVeek.
* ★ ★
A score of professional people will be on hand to answer1 questions and to e x h i b i t J I displays..
j They include a nurse, occu-| pational therapist, insurance consultant, social worker, mortician, X-ray specialist, doctor, police officer, lawyer, bank teller and designer.
Critics, Editors Honor Helen Hayes
The New York Drama Desk’s first award for the best performance by a player in a repertory company has gone to Helen Hayes, who is appearing in the APA-Phoenix Repertory revival of “The Show-Off.”
The Drama Desk, composed of more than 100 drama critics and editors, announced yesterday a number of awards for “outstanding achievement in the Off-Broad-way theater” for the 1967-68 season.
Viet Injury Fatal
Marine Pfc. Leslie ,G. Aputen recently died of wounds suffered in combat in Vietnam. He is the son of Mrs. Ruth N. Aputen of 471 Going.
Police Action
Pontiac police officers and Oakland County sheriff’s deputies investigated 86 reported incidents and made six arrests the past 24 hours.
A breakdown of causes for police action: Vandalisms—9 Burglaries—10 Larcenies—12 Auto thefts—2 Bicycle thefts—2 Disorderly persons—3 Assaults—3 Shopliftings—1 Armed robberies—1 Obscene phone calls—2 Indecent exposures—1 Traffic offenses—22 Property damage accidents—12
Ihjury accidents—6
9mUud Adits Voice Atom
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Prime Minister/ Stoned in Belfast
l&ijj A jeering crowd of demonstrators hurled eggs, stones and bags of flour at Northern Ireland’s Prime Minister Ter-ence O’Neill during an appearance last night in Belfast.
O’Neill was unhurt. He had been speaking before a Conservative party melting in a strongly Protestant district of the Northern Ireland capital.
Carrying placards saying “O’Neill Must Go,*’ the demonstrate!* surrounded the prime minisiter’s car and battled 3plh police protecting him.
•, Anti-Catholics have denounced O’Neill for Ms efforts to NMMfle differences with Dublin by exchanging visits with Mo rapriilie’s prime minister, Jack Lynch.
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