Th» Weather UJ. WutiMr Butm* FWVCMt Showers Maybe THE PONTIAC VOL. 124 — NO. 100 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC. MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, JUNE 3. I960 ASSOCIATED P Astronauts Speed to Rendezvous Draft Blamed in Shortage of State Doctors Agencies Say Nearly 1.000 More Medicos Are Urgently Needed* LANSING (fli — The draft is seriously aggravating Michigan’s physician shortage problem, health officials say. The Michigan Public Health Department and the Michigan Health Council say there is an urgent need for nearly 1,000 more physicians in the state. The state currently has 471 physicians in military service, compared with 277 in 1962, said John Doherty, executive director of the Health Council. He expects the number to reach 600 in 1967. Doherty said more than 80 Michigan physicians were drafted in January alone, many 6f them who had been established in practice for up to eight years. COULD CAUSE RUSH Meanwhile, said Dr. John Is-bester of the Health Department, Medicare may produce a rush to doctors’ offices among persons who had been putting off treatment because of lack oL funds. “There was a shortage before the Viet Nam war,“ said Doherty, “and the c u r r e n t military needs are accentuating it.” Michigan has been running full page ads in physicians’ magazines, he said. Dr. Isbester saW there was no statistical basis for projecting the iny>act of Medicare, which goes into effect July 1, on the recognized shortage of physicians. The state health official said that it is only logical that there will be an increased demand on physicians and the need for more physicians. In Today's Press Waterford Schools Parents argue for overpass — PAGE A-8. Scranton Pullout Morton eyes GOP candidates after withdrawal — PAGE B-3. Dominicans Violence-weary nation picks Balaguer — PAGE A-3. Area News ..........A-4 Astrology ..........C-6 Bridge ..............C4 Crossword Puzzle .. .D-11 Comics .............C-6 Editorials..........A-6 Farm & Garden Of, C-9 High School .....V B-1 Markets .......... D-1 Obituaries ..........D4 Sports ......... ’liieaters .........D-2 TV-Radio Programs D-11 Wilson, Earl ......D-11 Women’s Pages B-8—B-ll Blastoff Ends M Gemini 9 Jinx ^ CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. — The Gemini 9 astronauts — shattering a 17-day jinx—rode a mighty Titan 2 rocket into orbit today and sped at 17,500 miles an hour toward a rendezvous with a target satellite. After two heartbreaking scrubs, astronauts Thomas P. Stafford and Eugene A. Cernan finally got going on a vital, three-day flight that could bring the United States its second space triumph of a busy week. “For the third time. Wives Rejoice Over Launch LUCKY STICK-Gemini 9 astronaut Thomas P. Stafford, twice-frustrated in his effwts to get his spacecraft off the pad at Cape Kennedy, carries a large mock match before he enters the space- AP Wirtphoto craft with Eugene A. Cernan. The match, labeled “Plus Count Initiator,” was topped wKh a red and white bulb which lighted up. Surveyor 1 Radios Back More Photos PASADENA, Calif. (AP) -Surveyor 1, triumphant U. S. spacecraft with feet planted firmly on the moon, radioed its second long stream of pictures early today — photos of itself and lunar terrain, containing no surprises. Some of the second series were out of focus, hurriedly taken to speed the camera on a (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) Free School Bibles Nixed Waterford Board Cites Law in Offer Waterford Township Board of Education members last night said that distribution of Bibles to classrooms in the school district would be in violation of a recent Supreme Court ruling. ★ ★ ★ Based on an opinion of the school attorney, the board’s decision followed a request of the Gideons to give Testaments to fifth graders in the township. According to an opinion handed down by Michigan Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley last year, the Supreme Court ruling prohibits prayer, Bible reading as part of a religious exercise and other devotional activities in public schools. A spokesman for the Gideons, Charles Marion of 580 N. Cass Lake, Waterford Township, noted that the group has distributed 64 million Testaments throughout the world, including several Oakland County schools, since the ruling was made. ★ ★ ★ The Gideons distributed Bibles in Waterford Township schools prior to the ruling, according to Marion. NO CHOICE Board members emphasized they were in favor of the work being done by the Gideons, but had no choice. Said Treasurer Donald Porter: “We feel that since we are a publicly elected body that we must abide by the law of the land.” ★ ★ I* Porter remarked, however, that it might be legal for the group to pass out Bibles outside the school after classes are dismissed. After accepting the board’s decision, Marion said his group would approach township church leaders next. Suicide, Statements City Planners Threaten Viet Truce Revise Voting SAIGON, South Viet Nam (iP)—The fire suicide of a Buddhist nun and pronouncements by two hierarchic leaders darkened prospects for South Viet Nam’s precarious political truce today, Buddha’s birthday. The nun, 26, burned herself to death in the courtyard of a small pagoda in Da Nang. She was the sixth Buddhist to die in this fashion since Sunday in a wave of antigovemment fanaticism. Thich Tri Quang, the most outspoken and militant of the Buddhist leaders fighting Premier Nguyen Cao Ky’s military regime, announced at a news 5 Said Killed in Explosion at Ohio Firm MCARTHUR, Ohio (AP)-At least five persons were reported to have been killed today in an explosion at the Austin Powder Co. plant on Ohio 677, a few miles east of this Vinton County seat. ★ ★ ★ Both the Ohio Hi^way Patrol headquarters and sheriff’s rep-uties said the first reports they received were that five persons had been killed. The plant employs about 200 persons. Details of the blast were not immediately available, but it was reported to have taken place in an isolated building of the plant situated among a series oft^ills. Teachers Go on Strike in Fifth Suburb DETROIT (AP)—Teachers in a fifth suburban Detroit school district struck today and those in a sixth scheduled a walkout for Monday. More money in new contracts is the goal. ★ ★ ★ In addition, 55 schools in Flint remained shut a second day as teachers there continued a demonstration fo' higher pay. More than 82,666 pupils are enrolled in the affected Detroit suburban and Flint schools. Year-end closings are scheduled from next Friday through June 22. The Ecorse AFL-CIO Federation of Teachers broke off negotiations with the board of education in that downriver suburb at 1:30 a.m. Its members began picketing at 7 a.m. ★ ♦ ★ This walkout jumped to 61 schools and 38,830 pupils the number idled in suburban Detroit. Flint’s 55 schools have 44,000 pupils. VOTE TO STRIKE The Fitzgerald Education Association in suburban Warren voted to strike Monday and picket the Fitzgerald district’s six schools. * ★ ★ At Fitzgerald, as in Flint and in the Detroit suburban Crest-wood District, teachers are represented by affiliates of the independent Michigan Education Association (MEA). They choose to term their demonstrations “Professional Day Protests.” But William Gayde, Fitzgerald association president, said “we’re through calling a spade a club” and would strike and man picket posts. Related Story, Page B-6 conference in Hue that he will order Buddhists to boycott any elections held by the government this year. He larded the threat with bitter attacks on the government and on President Johnson for supporting it. Election of a constituent assembly is due Sept. 11 In Saigon, the moderate head of the Buddhist Institute, Thich Tam Chau, submitted his resignation, saying “I have failed.” This imperiled the compromise formula agreed upon Wednesday for addition of 10 civilians to the ruling military directorate, for Chau was the chief Buddhist negotiator. LETTER TO JOHNSON Monks said the nun, Thich Nu Dieu Dinh, left behind a letter for President Johnson charging that “Vietnamese Buddhists were annihilated by your policies in Viet Nam.” The suicide indicated the strong opposition among ex-(Ckvntinued on Page 2, Col. 6) Procedure on Ballot Is Now Semisecret A semisecret ballot procedure has been inaugurated for voting on city planning measures to come before the nine-member City Planning Commission. if * * Instead of the previous public roll call vote, members of the planning commission now merely write their vote on a piece of paper. The votes are then tallied and the total vote is announced, but only the planning commission secretary knows how the individual members voted. Composed of seven citizen members and City Commission representatives. Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. and District 4 Commissioner Leslie H. Hudson, the planning commission is an advisory body only. ★ ★ ★ Recommendations are passed along to the City Commission on property rezonings, alley vacations and related planning mat-terse* * ★ ★ The change in voting procedure was unanimously approved Wednesday. The motion was made by Taylor and supported by Daniel R. Veasey, planning commission vice chairman. ★ ★ ★ All votes at Wednesday’s meeting were unanimous. Quake Shakes Tokyo TOKYO OP) - A light earthquake jogged Toyko just before midnight tonight. Go!” Stafford quipped as he sat in the spacecraft poised for the launch. Just 31 hours after the Surveyor moonship landed softly on the lunar surface and sent back dramatic pictures of possible manned landing sites, the Titan-propelled Gemini 9 blasted aloft on a vital, three-day rendezvous and space walk mission. The Titan, with the rays of a bright sun glistening on its side, rose slowly from its launch pad and sped out over the Atlantic Ocean, followed by a big white tail of vapor. “We’re right down the middle,” Eugene Kranz, flight director, shouted. “Good! Excellent!” if it * “Everything,” he told Stafford, “is green and go.” ON OUR WAY’ “We’re on our way!” Stafford yelled exultantly. “It’s fantastic.’ ’ To make today’s launch possible, Stafford faced and overcame the same communications probiem that forced Wednesday’s shutdown 1(W seconds before firing. ★ ★ ★ A radio guidance command that would have given the spacecraft precise steering directions failed to get through to its computer. 'This time, the decision was made to go ahead. MAKES CORRECTIONS Shortly after the Gemini separated from its booster rocket, Stafford fired his jet thrusters to make necessary corrections in the orbit and plane of the spaceship and put it on the desired path of pursuit. Before returning to earth, the astronauts were to perform many of the maneuvers Apollo spacemen will make on round-trip journeys to the moon. A year and a day after Eld-ward H. White II became the first American to walk in space, Cernan was to climb out of the spaceship Saturday and for 2 Ms hours hurtle through the skies as a human satellite. ★ * ★ A barrel-shaped target satellite — fired into orbit Wednesday before a communications failure forced the second scrub of the Gemini launch — fla; hed across the Cape as the * m roared to life. SECOND ■OME It was the second time Stafford had needed three tries before going into orbit. His Gemini (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) LI'L ONES “Mom’s kinda sneaky with her eppking. She makes things I don’t like taste gqod.” 'Know Gene and Tom Are in Heaven Now' SEABROOK, Tex. (UPI) -The wives of astronauts Thomas Stafford and Eugene Cernan rejoiced today over Gemini 9’s successful leap into space on the third try. “Would you believe it?” Mrs. Stafford said. “It really went off. They really went flying this morning.” “It was just wonderful,” Mrs. Cernan said. “I know Gene and Tom are just in heaven now.” The wives of other astronauts were with Mrs. Stafford and Mrs. Cernan during the critical blastoff. Mrs. Stafford said that her first words after Gemini 9 got off were: “Tom said he thought he’d leave town this weekend.” She said she would feel a lot better Monday after they get down. HOME FOR CATS? “Now,” Mrs. Stafford asked, “where are the volunteers for the cats?” She had told reporters that if she came out to talk to them, they would have to take four kittens. A woman reporter said she would take one. Mrs. Stafford disclosed that another had been “promised,” leaving two. Mrs. Cernan said she talked to her husband by telephone briefly at 4:15 a.m. She said he said: “I love you. We’re ready to go. ” CONFUSION Mrs. Cernan disclosed that her 3-year-old daughter Tracy had confused her father’s space work with her swimming lessons. “Daddy’s going to walk in space and carry a float,” Mrs. Cernan quoted her daughter. Tracy is using a float in her swimming lessons. The Stafford girls, Dionne, 11, and Karin, 8, understand more. But they had watched hopefully twice as previous countdowns at Cape Kennedy, Fla., started, only to be cancelled because something went wrong. Their mother, Faye Stafford, had visits by other astronauts’ wives. It was all part of the ritual. She had been through a successful space flight vigil before. The wives gather to wait and console and watch the television set. )' HUDSON EXPANSION—Construction workers go about their chores in erecting a new $2.4-million addition to the J. L. Hudson Co. store at the Pontiac Mall. Abou* 200,OCy square feet of floor space will be added to the present facilitjj^, making it a full-line department store. Completion of the ex>Y»ns s earmarked’ for 1967. Party Cloudy, Brief Showers for Weekend tie U.S. Weather Bureau forecasts partly cloudy with brief showers for the weekend. Temperatures are expected to register lows of 54 and highs near 80, according to the bureau. The daily breakdown looks like this: FRIDAY — Cloudy, warmer with chance of showers with southwesterly winds at 10 to 20 miles per hour. Lows will fall to 54 to 60 tonight. SA'nJRDAY — Increasing cloudiness, little change in temperatures, highs 76 to 83. Chance of showers by evening. / SUNDAY Showers, not much .change in temper|itures. awd M3A0 M THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, JUNE 3, 1966 Decision Due Later on Trial of Cheyz Detroit Police Deny List Link The preliminary court exami- off anyone was because you nation of White Lake Township «as for past /avors?” Supervisor Edward Cheyz on Grand Jury charges ended yes- Assistant Prosecutor Ja me si Claim Ignorance of 'Black Book' Numbers DETROIT (AP)—Top-ranking Urd.ybut.d»*lnnonwtoher'j;;^*^^J5''^^^^ police omciale denied he Will be bound over for Circuitghouls forCircuitIfknowledge today of why . ♦ • 1 ’1 maHp until their telephone numbers report- Court b-ial won t be made until be decided by ajury.^ I ^,y g^i^ jn 3 , . . j „ i grand jury raid on a restaurant The postponement was granted Louisell withdrew the question.,^ to allow Cheyz’attorney. Joseph I before Hempstead ruled, Louisell of Detroit, to prepare a | noted that Cheyz had never re-legal memorandum and time fpriceived any money from Hanson. headquarters. Waterford Township Justice ofj MADE CONCLUSION the Peace Kenneth H. Hemp-' Earlier, Hanson testified that stead to study it. !be had never made a “bargain” Cheyz is charged with con- with Cheyz when he offered to spiracy, bribery and extortion I direct Mrs. Dawson to Hanson in an alleged deal whereby he I “but the conversaUon led me to would use his influence tw the conclusion that he wvmld have a parcel of property if j vote in favor of the rezoning.” the township rezoned from a^ , •■Had Cheyz ever said ‘I ricultural to multiple dwell- | would vote in favor of this ings. 1 project if you give me mon- The rezoning was never ap-1 fy’’” Louisell questioned proved by the township board. Hanson. Costas (Gus) Colacasides, owner of the Grecian Gardens restaurant, and Peter Vitale, night manager, are under indictment for alleged bribery and conspiracy to bribe. The documents containing the telephone numbers consist of a little black book, a Christmas list and an address book. Scrawled on some of the pages are figures ranging from “25” to “500”. The only witness to testify; “No. not in that many words,” today was Richard H. Hanson, a friend of Cheyz and a public relations man with the Waterford Township consulting engineering firm of Johnson & Anderson. said Hanson. “In substance he told me to collect $1,500 and the master plan (for the proposed project) and that he would get the property rezoned.” They were offered as evidence by Ronald Greenberg, a special assistant attorney general assigned to the case, at the pretrial hearing Wednesday for Colacasides and Vitale. Vitale once was named as a Detroit Mafia Hanson sa!d Cheyz implied] leader in U.S. Senate testimony. son he got the impression that UP IN SMOKE - Flames climb the walls of a storage building at the Pontiac State Hospital as Pontiac firemen battle the blaze. Three engines, a ladder truck and an aerial unit responded to the fire late yester- day, which nearly destroyed the barn-like structure in the northwest comer of the hospital grounds at 140 Elizabeth Lake. Hospital officials said the value of property damaged in the blaze was negligible. BLOOMFIELD HlfJLS - Dr. William E. Stirton, vice president of the University of Michigan, will be the featured speaker at Roeper City and Country School Sunday in a program celebrating the school’s 25th anniversary. The school began in 1941 with nine students when Mr. and Mrs. George A. Roeper, after several years of teaching and school administration experience, to Detroit and took over the Editha Sterba Nursery School. A small grade school was added, called Roeper School. In 1946, the enrollment totaled 90 students when the school moved to a 12-acre site at 2190 N. Woodward, and was renamed City and Country School of Bloomfield Hills. Hanson. 34, of 2771 North]that “if he (Cheyz) didn’t get 1 PAGE ADMITTED Lake, Waterford Township, was] the money he could see that the! Recorder’s Judge Vincent the only person to testify at thejproFct was turned down.” [Brennan admitted into the case hearing, w h i c h had been con-CAN’T REMEMBER T ? j 1 black book. It contained the tinned from May 24. Louisell wanted to know on HAD TESTIFIED | what other occasion that Hanson He admitted upon questioning (fom Louisell that he had testified before the Grand Jury being conducted now by Circuit 'Detroit Water Users Have to Pay Prices' . » 1 .. !• ; — ouuvsiwa 111 name o the key witness poli«^,^ich residents drink Detroit Sgt. Billy Starks, who testified swallow its LANSING (AP) - Suburbs in Although it would have affected many larger cities or com- w®. ^Jllprices, the House decided Thurs- Vitale after Starks had received]^ all she was interested in was the rezoning of the property and not in an advertising campaign. He could not recall ever telling Cheyz that Mrs. Dawson was not concerned with advertising. More Photos Judge Philip Pratt, and that he had been granted immunity from any charges stemming from the case against Cheyz, Hanson was named in the warrant against Cheyz as a co-conspirator, but was not charged with any criminal offense. Cheyz, 39, of 1900 Ridge. White Lake, is accused of extorting] $3,000 from Mrs. Willard Daw-j p i i son. a White Lake township rrO/T) iVxOOn businesswoman, and then ac-l cepting $1,500. | Hanson was arrested in early February by grand jury investigators, State Police Trooper John Aird and Detective Edward Seath as Mrs. Dawson turned over the $500 and a $l,000‘^st-dated check to Hanson during a meeting in a restaurant at the Pontiac Mall. TELLS OF DEAL Hanson said that in December Chqyz suggested that he work for Mrs. Dawson to promote the proposed apartment development on the site. According to Hanson he accepted the job and said he would charge $3,000, of which he would give Cheyz $1,000 because he felt indebted to him. He said that he never told Mrs. Dawson that he was going to pay the money to Cheyz. “And the reason that you denied that you were paying bases his conclusion, but Hanson was unable to recall any specific conversations. Hanson said that right from; ^ the first meeting with Mrs. Daw-j 3^ g„ day. Pontiac is one of the suburban communities that buys its water cover agent with the knowledge; from Detroit. of top officials, supplying information which led to the raid on the restaurant. Greenberg allowed newsmen to examine the lists, which contained the telephone numbers of Deputy Police Supt. Paul Sheri-day, No. 2 man in the Department; Inspector Henry Majeski, boss of the police liquor license bureau; Sgt. Alfred Elliot, for-imer vice bureau officer; Dis-!trict Inspector John O’Neill, former head of the vice bureau; munities with particularly ample water supplies, sponsors and opponents made it clear that it was primarily a water fight between Detroit and its suburbs. The city sells water to more than 60 other communities. In preliminary debate, the House defeated a move that would have established Public Service Commission control over the rates .charged by a city supplying water to other communities. (Continued From Page One) the moon’s equator. ;Cavanagh^ ^ ^ Others of the series were ; All five officers expressed puz-remarkably detailed, some jzlement over how their teleshowing items as small as [phone numbers wound up on one-eighth of an inch. [the lists, but Darnell said he Scientists, after studying re-1 once had asked Colacasides for suits of the full-circle sweep, [ tickets to a hockey playoff | plan later to turn the camera'ganie. back to snap interesting areas.' The 620-pound spacecraft settled gently on its three shockabsorbing legs early Thursday after a spectaculady successful] 63-hour voyage over a quarter] of a million miles. YEAR AHEAD I t ^ * * O Scientists said the accom-: Ot / plishment put the Surveyor pro-! The House, however, did not immediately take action on the committee-of-the-whole vote — leaving the question in a state of suspended animation until Friday’s session. Higher Food Prices Loom Blastoff Ends Long Jinx WASHINGTON (^Pi-Secretary of Agriculture Orville L. Freeman today raised the specter of higher food costs in the future if the nation fails to assure farmers fair and adequate [prices. The House Public Utilities Committee, headed by suburbanite Hal Clark, D-Warren, added such water-selling municipalities to a Senate-approved bill to regulate private water companies. The amendment was defeated nation: 33-19 in the preliminary vote. The defeat could be confirmed by a simple voice vote, or the amendment could be reinstated] with 56 yes votes. Buddhist Acts Threaten Truce (Continued From Page One) tremist Buddhists to a truce oegotiated by Buddhist moderates with Premier Nguyen Cao Ky’s military regime. Another development that imperiled that agreement was the resignation today of the moderate head of the Buddhist Institute, Thich (venerable) Tam Chau, the chief ,Buddhist negotiator with the government. Apparently acting under pressure from the militants in the unified Buddhist church, Tam Chau said in his letter of resig-I have tried to solve the present situation but I have failed.” WILL TAKE TIME A special council will be con-jvoked to decide whether to OPERATES MONOPOLY | accept the resignation, “Detroit operates a monopoly Buddhist sources said this in the most complete sense of mig|>t take two or three days, that word,” objected Rep. John! Wie Buddhist Institute is the Bennett, D-Redford Township. ] secular arm of the church. “In 1959, our water rates went! Tam Chau’s announcement up 63 per cent. You can’t justify]came as the nation’s Buddhists the charging of rates to the observed the 2,510th birthday of suburbs that are higher than the [ the founder of their faith. Bud-charges to Detroit residents. dha. Calm settled over Saigon “Soon the city will be building a new sewage disposal system and it will look to the sub- after the Buddhist Institute urged its followers to commemorate the anniversary at home gram — an effort involving plans for a total of seven surveyor shots at a cost of $725 million — ahead by one year. The Weather (Continued From Page One) 6 flight last year was postponed twice before finally getting away. The 11-foot-long target satellite, a tiny dot in the vastness of space, was entering its 30th revolution of the earth He called a news conference to attempt, he said, to spike i contentions that food prices are 'too high. “Today, even with recent increases, American people spend less of their take-home pay for food than ever before,” Freeman said. “On the average, Americans urbs to play Santa Claus,” he with prayers for the dead in the added. [weeks of Buddhist agitation for “Detroit is not overcharging,”]civilian rule. Troops hauled said Rep. Josephine Hunsinger,] down roadblocks outside the D-Detroit. institute compound. | Birmingham Area News Roeper School Marking Its 25fh Anniversary It was also recently announced that a tenth grade class will begin next fall as the school develops a high school program. The school reorganizaed in 1956 as a school for gifted children. In 1961, a nationwide televi-on show was produced about the school’s Gifted Child Project entitled “Minerva’s Children.” Several magazine articles have also been written about the school. The school organized and sponsored a quasi - national symposium in 1965 on the subject of “Planning Tomorrow’s Nursery School Structures” to overcome the lag in this spe-cial fieid of architecture. In this 25th anniversary year, the trustees and advisory board have changed the school’s name to Roeper City and Country School in recognition of the founders. BIRMINGHAM - Police Chief Ralph W. Moxley will act as official auctioneer at the 17th annual police bicycle sale at 9 a.m. tomorrow at the police ga-)ge, 151 Martin. Moxley said 75 to 80 items will be up for sale, including bicycles, tires, hulx:aps and radios. Many of the items were stolen or turned in to the police department. The department keeps them for six months, storing them at the dog pound. All proceeds from the auction will go to the city general fund, reducing taxes by that amount. Approximately $500 was netted at the last auction and Moxley expects the same amount this time. N-Test in Nevada Second Straight Day WASHINGTON (AP) - For the second day in a row, the Atomic Energy Commission set off a weapons-related underground nuclear test today at its Nevada test site. Like the one yesterday, today’s blast was of low-intermediate yield, equivalent to between 20,000 and 200,000 tons of TNT. It is the 23rd weapons-related test announced this year. In addition, one test has been made of use of nuclear power for peaceful purposes. Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Mostly cloudy and warmer today with chance of showers, highs 75 to 82. Partly cloudy tonight, lows 54 to 60. Saturday increasing cloudiness, littie change in temperatures, highs 76 to 83. Winds southwesteriy increasing to 10 to 20 miles this afternoon and tonight. Sunday’s outlook: Showers, not much change in temperature. as Stanford and Cernan began about 18.3 per cent of their hot pursuit. !with 26 per cent in 1947-49. They planned to close in on; farm income, he said, is the quary after a four-hour Ijgggjpg chase covering 7S.00O miles. ‘The American farmer — Electronics- TRANSISTOR Oept. Not until they were within eyesight of the satellite would the astronauts know whether a shroud protecting it from the whose income is only two-thirds that of the urban worker — has long been subsidizing his wealth- 71 60 53 Fort Worth t6 66 55 Jacksonville 78 57 heat and pressures of blastoff ier city cousin, fell away when the target sepa-; ,3^^^^ does not re- rated from its Atlas booster. 1 3 ,3;^ jf WOULD CANCEL PLANS 1 forced to give up farming, and If it had not, they would have; our abundant food supplies to cancel plans for a linkup of decline, consumers then wiii the two orbiting vehicles, for the I have to pay much higher shroud covers the docking collar | prices down the road — in the on the satellite. They would,] future,” Freeman said, however, be able to practice a[ measure “ senes of rendezvous maneu- the cost of food, he said, is to determine how much an hour’s pay will purchase. On this basis, he said, food costs are perhaps in the chase just seconds after 3j point of record. thA rlomini wAnf /\rhif Ha Stafford made his first movelt the Gemini went into orbit. He; fired his jet thrusters to adjust ^ the high point of the space] ship’s orbital path to about 1721 miles. i Wrong Methoed Used Fixing a Bad Check City Druggist Club Officer A Pontiac pharmacist has been elected treasurer of the COLUMBIA, Mo. UP) — A 26- Michigan Area Council of the year-old man needed someone]Boys Clubs of America, to sign his bond when he was Today and SAT. at SIMMS Borgains Reaitone JADE' 6-Transistor Pocket Radio Simms Price 319 Powerful l^allone Jade transistor radio for reception of all local area stations. With and battery. Limit 2. •V Transistor Battery ported hi-power most transistor 10 per person. battery radios. 12' ‘Mylar’ Recording Tape J 200 Ft. r*Reel 09 $?.9S value' 4 'tienuinie 'Mylar' sound .recorduig arrested here on t charge. bad check He signed the name of “John Howard Dell, owner of the Baldwin Pharmacy at 219 Baldwin, was chosen at a recent meeting of state Boys Club NA'nONAL WEATHER-Tonight’s weather will be rainy in the Great Lakes, northern Appalachians and New England, parts of the Mississippi Valley and the Plains and northern Rockies. Warmer weather is expected in the eastern half of the nation, while cooler temperatures are slated for the northern Rockles.and Plains. , ,■;» V •' Schafer” on a check to get the!councils from across the counmoney to rent a car to drive try. himself to a neighboring town to get his mother to sign his Dell has served the past year bond. Now he is under arrest as president of the Pontiac Boys on a charge of forgery along Club. He is scheduled to step wit^ the original bad check down from that positibn next charge. 'week. . ■ ' ■ ^ • A T i-TR. FM-AM Radios 11“ $17.95 Value 'Highwave' fronsistor radio for FM-AM broadcasts. Complete with earphone and battery. $ 1 holds, in free layaway. SIMMSil. I-Main Floor Valuis I Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. pS Whatever Your ‘Fun’ in the Sun-Get Your Needs at SIMMS 2nd FLOOR SPECIALS f Sunbeam Twin-Blade Electric Lawn Mower I (5) Simms Price 5988 eK Propelled Power Mower 9488 ^ 3'/2 H.P. 4-cycle self-propelled power mower with recoil starter, Briggs ' & Stratton engine. Safely blade adapter. 14 gauge steel deck. Garbage Can Tote Carts IV As shown — Holds two 20-gol. or 30-gal. I cons in eosy rolling tote cart. Roll your garbage cons out to the curb without I heavy strain on yourself. For plastic or metal cans. Garbage cans extra. Blue Coral Auto Finish Kit • Protects • Beautifies 251 12” Sidewalk Tricycle Stmm. Price 048 Single bockbono frame. Ingle all wheel. Largo semi-pneumotic tires. Adjustable handle bar and saddle. Plastic pedals and handle bar grips. SIMMS..?* iHardware -2nd Floor A \7 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, JUNE 3. 1966 NikKi: u vLifi'HjHiS TRAIN ON FIRE - Units of a Burlington Railroad freight train burned out of con-trol ycstcrdsy on s bridge which crosses the Mississippi River near Burlington, Iowa. The fire resulted in the closing of the doubletrack span for an indefinite period. Foreign News Commentary Israeli Influence Grows in Black Africa Sub Visits Ocean Rowers NORFOLK, Va. m - Two English journalists are apparently making some headway in their efforts to row across the Atlantic in a 15-foot rowboat. ★ ★ ★ David Johnstone, 34, and John Hoare, 29, were paid an unexpected visit yesterday and found out they had advanced 98 miles toward England since departing Virginia Beach May 21. ,,:nie radar of the submarine Cutlass spotted the rowboat named Puffin at a distance of about nine miles, prompting Lt. Commander Lewis B, Sykes to order his men to maneuver the sub to the rowboat’s side. Asked if they needed assistance, Hoare and Johnstone replied they were doing fine and had every intention of continuing with their venture. ★ ★ ★ Sykes told the pair they were 98 miles east-southeast of Cape Henry — a progress of 64 miles since they were last seen Saturday night. CAPE CHARLES At that time, the freighter American Tide reported the two were 32 miles east-northeast of Cape Charles. Sykes explained that a brisk northeast wind was responsible fw pushing the Puffin southward from her last reported position. Johnstone indicated he was undisturbed by the southward drift. ★ ★ ★ The two had hoped to make the journey to St. Ives, England, in 50 days by averaging 60 miles per day. Adverse winds during the early part of the trip has kept their average down to eight miles a day. Over the past days, however, Hoare and Johnstone had uppied their average to better than 14 miles per day. By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News Analyst Relatively unnoticed in the West but a source of annoyance to Moscow and Cairo 'is the growing influence of Israel in black Africa. Capitalizing on this carefully constructed popularity, Israeli Premier Levi Eshkol currently is on a three-: week tour dur-l which he^ will visit seven of the 27 Afri-j can nations receiving Israeli aid. Israeli diplo-l matic relations exist with 30 African nations. Unimpressed by the charges drummed at them by the Moscow and Cairo radios, these nations have come to rely more and more upon Israel for technical aid for a number of reasons: • Israel, a small state herself, represents no threat to African states such as might; come from the former colonial powers. • Israeli aid has been without strings. • In a comparatively few years, Israel has overcome many of the same problems now facing the African states. Primarily, the Israeli campaign is economic. It also ' has political advantages. By leap-frogging the ring of hostile Arab states surrpunding her and pressing to expand friendships among both African and Asian states, she naturally also hopes for their support against the Arab boycott of Israeli goods and against Egypt’s denial of the Suez Canal to Israeli use. An indication of supcess the increasing refusal of black African nations to support anti-Israeli resolutions sponsored by the Arabs. 1,200 TRAINEES And an indication of the extent of Israeli activities is evident in the fact that from April 1965 to April 1966, 1,200 African trainees arrived in Israel for study. In that same period, Israel sent 450 technical experts to Africa. Included in Eshkol's present tour are Senegal, The Ivory Coast, Liberia, The Malgasy Republic, Uganda, Kenya and The Congo (Leopoldville), ★ ★ ★ It is noteworthy that Congolese President Joseph D. Mo- butu received his paratroop training in Israel. Primarily, Israeli efforts have been directed toward formation of youth organizations and education, the latter including modern methods in agriculture and assistance to local governments in setting up such services as health. But they also have included setting up a shipping line for Ghana and organization of a state lottery in Sierra Leone. Israel’s breakthrough in Africa came in Ghana in 1958. Together, they set up the Black Star Shipping Line. An Israeli colonel and a staff of eight Israeli commissioned and noncommissioned officer: trained Ghanaian fliers. A jointly owned construction company completed $10 million worth of construction in two years. A nautical academy trained deck and engine room officers. THE ’TOP LINK — Lisbon’s new bridge over the Taf River will open in August. The 3,323-foot long structure v be the longest suspension bridge in Europe. TRADING BOATS IS EASY V PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. JUS' Si NOYO HORIZONTAL WEAVE FENCE Here is the all-time, top selling favorite . . . true custom design in solid, economical Redwood. Superbly constructed at the factory for a lifetime of hard wear, tear and Smartly styled panels are completely pre-assemb'H and fit coordinated pregrooyed with no effort. Horizontal woven weave slats create striking shadow patterns while l( gentle air circulate. Choose from 8* wide panels, 4', 5* or 6' high. Three divider strips per panel for extra duty strength and added distinctive appearance. Complete privacy, identical appearance on both sides for good neighbor relations. The Noyoweave Horizontal Fence by Union Lumber Company, will prove itself over the years to be a sound investment for any home. Stockade Fencing also in stock. PATIOS-WIND-BREAKS-BOATHOUSES-BATH HOUSES 1' $3.98 Ea. - 26"x10' $4.22 Ea. 26"xl2' $5.07 Ea. Available ee Colors, White, Green, Yellow and Clear. You save money at jme time you'll be treating your family to the best in all-year Tops for Decks CALIFORNIA I uodJ FLOAT YOUR DOCK ON STYROFOAM... BUOYANCE BILLETS ♦7’^’YlOe”....’12" For Outdoor Living Room ___________________ 10”x20”x108”> ... ’19” CALIFORNIA Clear Dock Boanis, 1x6.. ..... 9’ ft i^REDWOOD BURKE Lumber 4495 Dixie Hwy. 3R 3-1211- HOURS- ORN WCEKOATS NOINMY flin FRIBAY UTUbAYS fiMi • Ul. li 4 FJI. DuPONT DU PONT 501 •XT NYLON SALE NOTHING DOWN 36 MONTHS to PAY SAVE ’3.00 a yard! OR 3-21M OR 3-3311 4528 Dixie Huy. ■ I Al ine» eON. and FBI. - 10 to 9 HOURS ™H3Ayi^ THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, JUNE 8, 1966 Enroll NOW! Enrollmonts Taken Daily at Your Convenience POMTIAC BEAUTY COLLEGE 16'A E. Huron Phono FE 4-1854 Study the latest techniques and hair fashions. Coll Mii$ Wilson for further information Droyton Wig Distributors Authorized Marshall Imports Distrihutors Um Your Michllin B«nk*r« Htra 4666 West Walton Blvd.. Drayton Plains, Mieh. 48020 673-3408 673-0712 • FREE BALLOONS • FREE PRIZES ★★★★★★★★ Special Group Sportswear all Vs off Includes items for infants, toddlers, girls and boys. Reg. 2.98. • TOPS‘SHORTS • SHIRTS •INFANT SETS We Carry FAMOUS BRANDS Such as e CARTERS e BUSTER BROWN e BILLY THE KID e JANTZEN and Many, Many others. An open house Sunday in their home from 1 to 6 p. rn., will mark the 50th wedding anniversary of the William Barretts of Highland. Their children who will host the party, arit Mrs. John Partrick of Airport Road, Clarence of Or-tonville and Mrs. Richard Douglas, Francis and Donald, all of Highland. The couple, wed in Flint, has 13 grandchildren. vm Old? iJ0S£PHfN£ loiMMAAi Shower Summer Brides With Gifts, Good Will Brenda Joyce Greer, fiancee of FYederick William Garchow Jr. was honored at a recent shower in the home of Mrs. Jack Echlin on Whipple Shore Drive, Independence Township. Nadine and Darlene Garchow assisted the hostess. Mrs. Gerald White and Mrs. Donald E. Burger also honored Miss Greer at a shower Our voice i« our most usual means of communication. No cracks, please! No doubt some of us sometimes use it more often and for longer time than is always best. However, it is the mode we use constantly to get in touch widi others, and it is essential that we communicate with others, and it is essential that we communicate with those we know, really communicate. It is important that others get from what we say what we mean. However, the tone of voice can make all the dif-f e r e n c J. A miW criticism, when given in a pleasant mold tone, will be accepted while the same thing said in an irritated or tense way will be rejected. Tender words can even be misunderstood if said with the wrong tone and with the wrong emphasis. Try saying, “Oh. it’s you,” when you mean it and then when you are being sarcastic, and see what I mean. Seriously, our human relationships with our family, our friends and those with whom we work are definitely affected by the way our voice sounds. Businesses have long recognized this, and the smart ones see to it that the “front men”, employees who first meet the public, have pleasant voices. ★ * * There is no doubt that a lovely voice is one of the most potent parts of a woman’s charm. How often have you met a woman who seemed charming until she opened her mouth. It wasn’t what she said, but it was a surprise to hear the grating or high pitched or montonous sound which came from such a lovely vision. VOICE IMPROVEMENT It is too bad because any woman can improve her voice without taking lessons from an expert, although these are always helpful. The trick is to hear yourself like others hear you. We never sound like we think we do. There are several ways to find out how we really sound to others. If you can go off by yourself and get an objective viewpoint, pretending that you are listening to someone else while you read out loud, this is a big help. If you have access to a tape recorder, that is better. You will be surprised! SHALLOW BREATHING You will probably find that your voice is too high or is scratchy or doesn’t have any warmth or life in it. You may discover that you mumble or speak in a monotone. Shallow breathing is some-the reason for an unattractive voice. Try this out for improved sound. Breathe in deeply, (through your nose) filling your lungs as completely with air as possible. Now exhale in 0-0-0-0’s, pushing the air out vigorously through the mouth with each 0. If you would like to have my deep breathing exercises send a stamped, self-addressed envelope with your request for the leaflet “The Fountain of Youth.” Address to Josephine Lowman in care of The Pontiac Press. See All Sides When Using Face Powder Many women are guilty of a common makeup error simply because they do not see the sides of their faces as other people see them. According to beauty authority Max Factor, if you look at the front of your face only, during a makeup application session, there is always a chance of your beauty requisites being unevenly applied. To eliminate the unkempt appearance this practice creates, study the sides of your face in the mirror as each requisite is used. For instance, when you blend make-up on your skin, turn your head to the side and smooth the color along the crevices of your nose, across your jawline, over the ear tips if they are to be exposed, and down the sides of your neck until a lovely, even-toned complexion beauty is created. Teen Rules Change in New Area By ELIZABETH L. POST Dear Mrs. Post; My husband and I and our two children, 13 and 14, moved to this city six months ago. Things are quite different here from the community where we lived before. Boys and girls are allowed to do all sorts of things of which we do not approve. Our children naturally want to join in. When we tell them they can’t, we’re told, “Well, everyone else does it, why can’t we?” We don’t want our children to be considered odd-balls, bu neither do we feel we let them do certain things just because everyone else does. Are we being unfair to them?—Mrs. Sandra K. Dear Mrs. K.: “Everyone else does it” is probably the most overworked phrase in the teenager’s language, and the most difficult to answer. You are certainly right in not wishing to lower yoiu standards or compromise your convictions. But in view of your recent move, you should be willing to reconsider some of the situations in the light of your surroundings. Don’t give in on really important issues, such as unchaperoned parties. ’The basic issue too important. On the matter of hours, you might well give a little. If the other children survive the later time limit, yours probably will, too. Above all, you must convince your children that there are some things that are wrong no matter who does them, and that your willingness to allow them some more liberties now is not; because of what others do, but because you trust them and think them capable of handling the new situations with respon-i sibility. 1555 Union Lake Rd. Open Sunday 10:30-2:30 PONTIAC CONSUAAERS CO-OP OPTICAL Complete Optical Service for the Family pwp rVABBC • Cwitoet L*n*«i C T fc C AAfVlb • Industrial Sofoty Giotsat Safety Tempered dosses for Children PONTIAC CONSUMERS CO-OP OPTICAL 1717 South Tolocraph Phono SSI-7171 AffUiated With Pomtiae Co-Op Federal Credit Union in the latter’s home on Elizabeth Lake Road. Parents of the couple who will wed on July 11 are Mrs. John E. Greer of Melrose Avenue, the late Mr. Greer, and the senior Garchows of First Avenue. Theresa B. Reynolds Theresa Barbara Reynolds who will become Mrs. Thomas George Hampton on June 25 was hoiKH-ed at a recent shower in the home of Mrs. Richard Reynolds on East Run-dell Street. Cohostesses were Mrs. Thomas Thomberry and Mrs. Michael Clever. Miss Reynolds is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Reynolds of Addie Street and her fiance’s parents are the Wayne Hamptons of South Bend, Ind. Cheryl L Ashton Four generations were represented when June bride-elect, Cheryl L. Ashton, opened shower gifts recently in the home of Mrs. Adolph E. Walter on Suffolk Street. Mrs. Wesley Ashton of Lake Lane Drive, White Lake Township, mother of the hon-oree was present, also Mrs. Elmer Cover, grandmother, Baby Dawn Here A daughter. Dawn Marie, was bom May 25 to Mr. and Mrs. Allen Famer of Clawson. Grandparents are the Lyle D. Crowleys of Cresthaven Street and the Troy Faraers of LeGrande Street. WE HAVE AAOVED PONTIAC TRAVEL I SERVICE I TO 108 PONTIAC MALL OFFICE BUILDING N«at t» Cammvnify Nottonol tank PHONE 682-4600 Everything for do-it-yourself home decoration. Point, wallpaper, dropes, blinds. DECOR BY ASHTON 5488 Dixie Highway Waterford 674-2293 DRAWER CHEST plus 4 EXTRAS with your purchasa of I IKIKI.OOM* sri'.ui,iN(; l>y Oneida SllrarMnitha All the sterling you'll need to serve beautifully now/ Buy eight 4 pc. place settings for as low as $272—and get the extras as our gift to you. Chest and service pieces together are valued at $73! Choose from our | large selection of beautiful mnauxiM STEauNO pauems, including the newest— First Frost. Coma in andtaathamal Credit May Bo Ammged and Mrs. Thomas Hooper, great-grandmother. The future bridegroom is Dennis Len Cahow of Merry Road. Brooksiders Tour Garden A wild flower tour through the gardens of Mrs. Hana Schjolin’s home on Stoney-brook Lane opened the June meeting for Brookside branch. Woman’s National Farm and Garden Association. Luncheon and a business meeting follovrad in the Orchard Lake home of Mrs. John R. Slavsky. Mrs. Clifford Dick and Mrs. Fred Fuller assisted witii arrangements. Guests included Mrs. Peter Hoogerhyde, Mrs. Carl L. Slavsky, Mrs. John R. Slavsky Jr. and daughter and Mary Jo. Mrs. Robert Bratton of Lane Lake Road will be hostess for a picnic in July. PERFORMANCE-PROVED mvicm MwFfsal COLOR TV • RCA Solid Coppar Circuito • Glaro-proof RCA Hi-Lm Tube • Supar-powarful 25,000-volt chaasls • RCA Automatic Color Puriflar a UHra-aanaitiva VHF/UHF tunara a Ona>Sat VHF fina tuning "Aftsr tha Salt it's tha Sanrka That Ctairts" STEFANSKl ELECTRONICS 1157 W. HURON FE 2*6967 URBAN RENEWAL SALE! 50% SAVINGS FURIMITURE MM«V It ATMCMAM lAli AVI. ••WM VONTIAr AND MORE! Many more floor samples, listed and not listed, ore now on sole. Many one-of-o-kinds, some slightly soiled, yet all this fine furniture is o give-owoy ot these huge savings. 2-Pc. Contemporary SOFA and CHAIR Coordinated soto ond choir with foom reversible cushions, exposed walnut frame along base. Foam padded. Delicote tufted bock. •348 3-Piece Traditional Living Room Group a 100' length sofa with 4 quilted back cushions ond 3 quilted seat cushions a Coordinoted chair in rust lone cover a Small brown borrel bock button tufted ■r;,r ‘635“ Troditionol loose cushion sofo-quilted ane side of cushions. Deep olive 00050 fabric in strowberry print. Reg. 377.........................................iLx/ Smoll tub choir upholstered in red. Exposed wood frame. Regular 133, now.................................................... 106^“ iiwHTmNmu KwarittgJiWMUiatf llWctlNeree aill.Tetol^ n i4tM rit-mi tiMFri.'nil •leefteeleii'flll Group of Mediterroneon Higher Styled Sofas 30% SAVINGS GROUP OF DANISH MODERN CHAIRS Wolnot Trims—Foom Cushions 20% to 30% OFF I 3-piece Itolion Provincial toble group with cherry tops l^O^O I coffee toble, 2 lamp tobies with white painted base. Reg. 238.50........... I “7 3-piece Wolnul Table group with rosewood frame. $01^00 End table, lamp table ond cocktoil toble. Reg. 267.50........................ ^ I Miscellaneous Items . . . Drastically Reduced • SNACK TABLES • RECLINER CHAIRS • ODD OCCASIONAL CHAIRS • ODD LAMPS • OCCASIONAL TABLES • MANY MORE! 5-PC. CONTEMPORARY BEDROOM with tasteful, dromotic accent touches e 9.drower triple dresser Reg. $399 e Fromed mirror O 4-drower chest e Night Table 4-PC. WALNUT BEDROOM in Danish Modern Styling a Triple Dresser O Matching Chest Reg. $299 $229 Budget Terms, of Course Plenty of Free Parking puf^NITUREL fcuemevr L NI-MH Decorators ot Your Service Open Friday Evening THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. JUNE 3. 1966 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 Tuesday. Produce NEW YORK (AP)-The stock mariiet pursued an unevoi course in moderate trading early today. FRUITS Apples, Delicious, Golden, bu. Apples, Delicious, Red, bu. Apples, Jonathan, bu. Apples, Jonathan, C.A., bu. Apples, /Macintosh, C.A., bu. Apples, Northern Spy, bu. ..............n Spy, C.A., t Apples, Steel ---- — Apples, Steel Red, C.A., bu.........3J VEOETABLRS Asparagus, di. bch..................M.3 Beets, topped, bu.................. 3.3 Chives, di. bch................... 2.e Onion, dry, 50-lb. bap ........... 3.t Onion, green, di. bch.................S Onions, set, 33-lb. bag .......... 5.0 Potatoes, 50 lbs.................. 3.0 Potatoes, ■■ ■■ u Red, I dz. I: Rhubarb, hothouse, 5-lb. box ... Rhrubarb, hothouse, dz. bchs. .. Rhubarb, outdoor, dz. bch. . Tomatoes, hothouse, 8-lb. bskt. . GREENS Collard, greens, bu................ Spinach, Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (AP)-Prlces paid p for No. I live poultry: Heavy I 22; roasters heavy t'j’pe 27-27Vj; cks'’23'/s-2V'' “ 20VJ-22; barred Early Trading Moderate Mart Follows Uneven Course Some fairly sharp dampened the list, Douglas Aircraft losing more than 2 and IBM over a point. Eastman Kodak, however, was up a full point. General Motors was steady and Standard Oil (New Jersey) rose fractionally. or no change. Analysts said they were awaiting some development which might excite interest in stock buying, but the success of the Surveyor moon spacecraft and the apparent success of the Gemini 9 did not supply the spark. OPENING BLOCKS Many key stocks showed little Douglas Aircraft, off 1% at 81 on 6,000. Opening blocks included: Lykes Brothers Steamship Co. off % at 22^ on 10,000 shares; Teledyne, up 2'/4 at 124 on 4,000; American Telephone, unchanged at 5414 on 6,500; and Thursday the Associated Press Average of 60 Stocks dipp^ .1 to 319.4. Prices were irregular on the American Stock Exchange. Gains of a point or more were made by Scurry Rainbow Oil and Oak Electronetics. Up fractionally were Westec, Brazilian Traction and Zapata Off-Shore. Small losers included Ogden, Louisiana Land and Arkansas-Louisiana Gas. Governors Eye Auto Safety Meet U. S. Officials on Setting Standards By Some Industries Summer Lull Is Felt The New York Stock Exchange ; large 31 Vi- i; mediums DETROIT EGGS DETROIT (API-Egg prices pa dozen by first receivers (Including CHICAGO BUTTER, EGGS CHICAGO (API - Chicago /Men Exchange: Butler firm; wholesale prices 'z higher; 93 score AA iS'/i, .. .. 45'j; 90 B azz,/ 89 C 43'/z; cars 90 B 45'z; 89 C 64Vi. Eggs about steady; wholesale buying NEW YORK (API-Following Is a _ ' selected stock transactions on the York Stock Exchange with noon pr —A— Sales (hds.) High Low Last Cha. 1 12 38fe 38>/T 38'/4 - % 80 12 25 24',^ 2444 — .20 18 48Vz 48W 48'/i -I- Ad/Minis 40a I 13Vj l3'/i 13'/j ... • to 18 47'4 44% 47'/4 -|- 147 102'/j 98'4 99 -i 73 51'T 49% 50 -I quoled; checks 2 Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (API - (USDAl: ' receipts. Cattle 50, calves 10, Ik Cattle compar Slaughter steers closed slow, steady to „ _________________ heifers steady; steady to 50 cents higher; bulls steady. High choice and prime 1000-1200 lb. steers 27.25-27.50; load Tuesday at 27.75; choice 950-1200 lb. steers 24.00-27.25; mixed good and choice steers 25.50-24.00. Good 23.75-25.50; standar ' ; not t Low to average chi 00 lb. 2^00 - 25.25; ( Gen CIg 1.20 —iDynam 1 ...I Elec 2.40 Gen Fds 2.20 GenMills 1.40 GenMot 2.20e GenPrec 1.20 GPubSvc .42e GPubUt 1.40 GTel El 1.12 GaPaciflc l 19 30H 30'4 30% 22 84 8344 8344 54 82'4 81% 81’/i 22 44'A 45% (" i 25% 25Vz 25% - ' Can 2.20 AmCrySug 1 AmCyan 1.25 AmEIPw 1.32 ■ Enka 1.10a 18 39% 39% 39% — ' 19 37% 34% 37 ... 8 39% 39% 39% - ' 14 74% 74% 7444 + ' Gult/MO 2.20a Gulf on 2 GulfStaUt .80 AmNGas 1.80 • ''ntic 1.25b Photoepy ____lelt 2.40a Am Std 1 I 17 1444 14% - % i 52% 52% 52% + '■ I 8% 8% 8% - I 40% 4044 40% ... I 50% 50 50% -F HewPack .20 Hobart 1.40a Hoff Electron Inn .40 Sugar 2 Vealers compared last week. /Moder-ilely active, steady; high choice and /rime 37.00 - --- - - “" “ ■ 31.00-37.01 ___________ standard 20.00-24.00. j compared last week. Slaughti prime 95-10 lb. spring lambs 28.00-29.66; choice and prime 90115 lb. shorn old crop lambs 24.00-25.50; good and choice shorn lambs 22.00-24.00; cul' - —" slaughter ewes 4.50-9.50. AtICLine 3a AtIRIch 2.40 Atlas Cp ‘ “ "roE' Avon Pd 1.20 /letters 25 to 75 lower; 1-2 190-% lb 24.7^27.00; 50 head at 27.25; mixed 1-3 190-230 lbs 24.00-24.75 ; 2-3------------ 23.50-24.25; mixed 1-3 350-400 20.00-20.50. Cattle 400; calves none; slaughter BabcokW 1.25 / lots choice 9 lb 25.50-26.25 24.75-25.50; load choice 975 lb slauf heifers 25.00; few lots good to low cl B^seJas' BorgWar 2.20 Brist/My 1.20a Brunswick Bucy Er 1.40 Treasury Position May 27, ms $ 10x900,797,185.46 July 1-110,227,962,970.39 American Stock Exch. 13 3r/e 31^ 31^4 5 16'/i I6V4 16^i • 2 20 20 20 - 2 18 18 18 - 27 41 + 39 643/4 63^ 63^ - Caiif Pack 1 Calum Hec 1 CampRL .45a Camp Soup 1 Can Dry 1 CdnPac 1.50a Canteen .80 CaroPU 1.28 Carrier 1.60 CarterW .40a I 243/4 243^ 243^4 . t 56’'4 56 56U + I 27H 27V4 27^ + ) 46 46 46 - 3 78’/^ 7l'/i 7V/2 . 5 I6V4 16 16 . 4 24% 24«/a 24'/^ .. Chi Pneu Chi Rl F If seiected stock lrania’ctiOT/'on >h?i?[;fif5’’ ican Stock Exchange with noonj^u'pin Sales Nrf (hds.) High Lew Last enp ct .50a 2 27% 27% 27% + z 12 20% 19% 19% - 47 41% 41'T 41% + 5 29% 28% 29 -I- 24% 24'/2 IS sj'/s 52Vs 53 29 105% 104% 104% 3 72% 73 72'^ 4 57% 57 57% - % 103 49% 48% 49 -I- ' 43 45% 45 45% - ' 3 22% 22% 22% 34 29 24% 29 - ' 10 55% 55 55 - ' 21 19'/. 18% 18% —H— 4 44% 44% 44% - % 2 54% 54% 54% - ' 24 51% 50 50 —1' 10 38 37% 37% - ' 4 42'/. 42% 42V. — ' 11 45% 45% 45% .. 43% 43% — % RCA .1 Rayonier 1.40 '■lytheon .80 ...•IchCh 20a RepubSteel 2 Revlon 130 Rexall 30b 7 57% 57'4 —R— 244 52% 51 I 42% 42'/j 42SS - ' 18 34% 34% ; Reyn Tob 2 1 20 WASfflNGTON (AP) - Seven governors meet with federal officials here today to seek a role for the states in the setting and enforcing of auto safety standards. Gov. Clifford P. Hansen of Wyoming, head of the delegation, said the purpose of the meeting was “to see how the states can most effectively cooperate with the federal government in cutting fatalities on the nation’s highways. Other governors expected to attend today’s meetings include George Romney of Michigan, Orval Faubus of Arkansas, Richard J. Hughes of New Jersey, Hulett Smith of Wset Virginia, Mills E. Godwin Jr. of Virginia and John A. Volpe of Massachusetts. “Regardless of what legislation is enacted,” Hansen said in an interview, “the states are going to be called upon to play major role in enforcement. You By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK - Summer is coming early to some sectors of industry. Auto production is tapering of ffast before the shutdown for changeover to odels. New orders for some other durable goods are dropping well ahead of hot weather. Steel mills look for a slowdown for this month and next, but still' count on Viet DAWSON off fast before the shutdown for some business lost as the auto production lines cool off. Other factory managers are and in some plants they may be longer this summer than last. But the traditional summer lull is far from universal in U.S. industry this time. Outside a few affected manufacturing ar-hot weather activity may top last year’s, when the economy was brisker than usual. ROLLING SLOWDOWN least 7 per cent below last year and the July pnaspects are for possibly a 25 per cent trailing of the July 1965 output. The slowdown in the car production lines is due to a decline in sales of new cars that started in April, with May figures even farther below the year ago level. ing many companies shows that any economic slowdown may well be of the rolling variety. That is, if autos slip into low gear for a time, other industries will continue to boom for a while longer. studying vacation schedules, schedules indicate a drop of at! RoyCCola i Roy^Dut *' !”%”%- '.ican legislate what might go into ' 18% 18% +’'Ti^ new car. but state inspectors 8 37% 37% 37% - 15 33% 33% 33% -f 9 39V. 39'/. 39V. - 54 34'/i 35Vj 34% -t- are necessary to see that stand-» ards are maintained.” 1 7% 7% 7% + 73 74% 75 75V. — 10 31% 31% 31% . 2 42% 42% i.r/% — 4 51'/(. 51 51 - 141 58% 57% 58 + 22 21'/. 20% 21 EXPERIENCE Hansen also said “the states have had a good deal of experience that ought to be useful” in establishment of safety stand- SharonStl .80 ) 31% 3 7% . 31% - Sherwm 1.90 Sinclair 2.40 SlngerCo 2.20 1 anji I 607'! 60'/a The delegation meets in separate sessions with Commerce department officials in the morning and four congressional %j committee chairmen in the aft-'■ ernoon. seasonal, tied in with customary plant shutdowns for summer vacations. But the cutbacks in orders frv>m its big customer, the auto industry, are now being lelt, with better business from some users not enough to offset it. And steel inventories in cus-The auto figures ar'e the most|“>™^; hands disturbing at the moment, probably because of May production was 5 per centr^Y T’’-JL' h ?• lowl^han a year ago. June!Cjrta^ n en o Member of China’s [file Stripped of Posf in Purge of steel could be a threat to steel mill activity in the future, if the Viet Nam war took a turn toward solution. ORDERS DROP Orders for durable goods in general dropped 2 per cent in April from March, the Commerce Department reported this week. New orders for nondurable goods slipped only slightly. Factory shipments also were i lower in April than in March. TOKYO (AP) - Peng Chen.lment indicated a shake-up in ^^,(5 ,hat the backlog of long a member of Red China’s the party in the Red capital, orders at all factories at the elite, today was stripped of his'for a number of other changcs|start of May was up $442 million I/, SouthPac 1. . i^South Ry 2. . a,|Sperr 1 37'/, 34% 34% Rand 55 21' IdahoPw 1.30 Ideal Cem 1 IMCenInd 2.40 Imp Cp Am "igerRand 2 tland StI 2 ..isurNoAm 2 InterlkSt 1.80 IntBusM 4.40 12 5% 5% 5% 33 347 345 345 lOwaPSv LTO 2 25% J5% 25% 16 57% 57% i 2 37V. 37 3 —K— 11 44% 45% t Korvetle Kresge 1.40 Kroger 1.30 Between the two meetings,' 23% 23% 73’. - % the governors are expected to * have lunch with President John-,/son. Hansen heads the delegation as chairman of the governors conference subcommittee on highway safety. post in the Peking Communist party secretariat apparently in the purge of antiparty elements now sweeping the country. A member of the Politburo, the party’s secretariat, and mayor of Peking, Peng was replaced as first secretary of the party’s Peking Central Committee, said a Chinese-language broadcast. There was no indication, however, that Peng, whose associates have been caught up in a wave of denunciation, had been relieved of his more important Politburo and secretariat jobs. The tenor of the announce- were announced. » seasonally adjusted $71.9- billion. That kept most factories REPLACEMENT humming in May, and should Peng was replaced as secre- continue to do so this month and tary of the Peking Central Com- next, mittee by Li Hsueh-feng. Li alsoi ★ * ★ is a member of the secretariat^ Just as closely studied for and is first secretary of the Communist party’s North China Bureau. The announcement of the change did not name Peng, who has not been reported public for two months. There have been numerous reports that he was marked for the purge. 10 22'/. 22'k 41 72'/j 72'/» 24 7V/9 21H 44 1154 113 Business Notes ^Suo^ssifuf B signs of what’s ahead are the figures on inventories. For all factories the total rose $625 million from March to hit $70.2 billion at the end of April. This could mean either that purchasing agents were laying in stocks in fear of future price rises, or that factories had a big pile on hand if the economy should turn down — and thus The purge apparently has en- would be inclined to live off the tered a new phase, with the par-,stockpiles rather than place new ty leadership intensifying its crackdown and admitting the ^ Invmting ^ t'::/ 27 58% 57% 58 TransWAIr 1 “ransam .90b ranjltron .ri Conf .20e TwentCen lb ’ 25% 25'. 25'/. - VI LOFGIS 2.00a LibbAAcN .27t LiggettB/M 5 LivIngsO .43f LockhdA 2.20 LoneSCem 1 LomSGa 1.12 Longl>L9 1.00 LorHIard 2.50 LuckySt 1,40b Lukans StI 1 US Borax I USGypsm 3; US Ind 25e USPlywd 1.4 21% - %j Glenn E. Robinson, 2775 Som--- erset, Troy, has been appointed manager of thel Pontiac sales and service of] Pitney - Bowes, I n c., 354 N. East Blvd. Robinson has been assistant to the Detroit branch man- ROBINSON ager since 1964. 3 75% 75% 75% —V— 17 31% 31 Vi 31% + Magnavox .80 289 j > 44% 4 23 3 11-14 3% 3 11-14-1-1-14 .Jig Pal .9 CoinnRad CBS t.20b Col Gas 1.3 12 3% 3% 3% 1% 1 35% 35 EquityCp .181 13 4% 4 4 Fargo Oils 12 3 5-16 3' . 3 5-16 Ffimt Oil .15g 2 8% 8% 8% Fly Tiger 1.24f 47 40'/. 39% 39% Gen Devel 14 6% 4% 4% Gen Plwyd It 8 14% 14% 16% Giant Yel ,40a 102 13% 13% 13% — % Goldfield 33 2% 2% 2% Gt Bas Pet 18 4% 4% 4% Gulf Am Ld 23 10% ContOH 2.40e Control Data Corn Pd 1.60 CorngGWk 2a ii 25% : Imp Oil 1.8( Kaiser Ind Mackey Air 4 12% 12% 12% Mead John .48 15 25% 25% 25% Mich Sugar ,10e 2 3% 3% 3% Molybden 4 44% 44% 44% New PkMng 16 6% 6% 6'k Pancsf Pet 14 1'. 1% I'/k RIC Group 12 2 2 3 25% 25'-5 25% — % CrowCol ---- Crown Cork Crown Zell 2 Cruc StI 1.20 Cudahy Co curry F -bd W A... Signal Oil / Sperry R w1 31% 31% 31% 8% + Syntex Cp .40 228 84% 83 84% +1 Technicol .75 3 14 13% 14 Un Control .20 6 4% 4'j 4V. — Copyrighted by The Associated Press It ijnUag""! -omeMn at Stocks of Local Interest Figures after decimal points art alghths OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Quotations from the NASD are repi sentative inter-dealer prices o' change throughout the day. Prices do not incli^ retail marfiup, markdown or Braun Engineering ........... Citizens Utilities Class A . Monrot Auto Egril Diamond Crystal . Detrex Chemical . Pioneer Finance . Safran Printing .. Scrlpto Vernor's Ginger Ale .......... North Central Alrlints Units Wyandotte Chemical MUTUAL FUNDS Commonwealth Stock Keystone Inoome K-1 Keystone Growth K-2 Mass. Investors Growth Mess. Investors Trust .. Putnam Growth ......... Television Electronics . . 63% MertinMar 1 MayDStr 1.40 McDonAIr .80 McKess 1.70 -Cp 1.70 ____ Sh 1.25 AAerck 1.20a Merritt Chap MCM 2 MMSoUtll .48 MlnerCh 1.20 MInnMM 1.20 5 16% 14'/. 16'/. ... 13 64'/» 46% 64% -I- '/ 52 30% 30% 30'/j - '/I 12 44% 44'.k 44% + V 9 295 295 295 -F2 3 40% 40% 40% -I- V 11 57% 57% 57% - V 8 47 44% 44% — '/ 2 24 24 24 -F V I 20% .2 r/i —D— 2 32% 32% 32%-% 7 23% 23% 23% — % 29 70'/i 49% 69% - % 13 108% 108'/(i 108'/. ^ •' I 4 20 19% 20 NCashR 1.20b ■ - liry n1.40 Dlst 1.40 Dow Chem 2 I 3 14% 14% 14% ' 21 39'/i 39 39',S — ' 1 51% 51% 51% -F ' 12 31'/i 30'/i 31'A -F = 7 44% 44% 44% -f ' 182 81'/. 80'/. 81 —V EastAIrL .15e EastGF 3 '“ EKodMl 1. EatonYe I EGBG .20 18 193'.T 192 197% -F 12 29% 29% 29%-3 12'/S 12',k 12'/S -F -_E— EIPatoNG 1 Enter El 1.32 End John ErieLack RR EthylCorp .40 EvtnsPd .40b 4 38% 38'A 38% ... 25 19 11% 19 -F ' 6 40% 40 40 - 15 ^% ”% *9%-' r 24% 2 FaIrCam ,j0g Fair Hill .15e Fansteel Met —F— 54 153% in 112 - Vk 4 14% 14% 14% ' - 9 29% 20% 20%. 3 13% 13% 13% -F % 1 63% 43% 43%-" 2 Wk 21% 20% ... FMC Cp n.75 FoOdFair .00 FordMot 2.40 ForeDair .50 Freept Sul l FruehCp 1.70 74 41 40% 13 12% 12/. 33% - % 4 11 10% 11 t 25 40 40 40 -i- '/k 2 33% 33'/k 33% 19 55% 54% 54% , 58'* 58'* 3 21 20% 14 it% 23 .'‘iRsarnd® 77 134% 135% 135'.* + 7 44Vk 44 44% -F ' 22 m 7<| 7%... T. E. M. Wheat has joined the Detroit architectural and engineering firm of Eberle Smith Associates, Inc., ai /J technical consultant for design * _ project administrator. By ROGER E. SPEAR Q. ‘T have bought stocks in life insurance companies and they have all since gone down in price. It appears to me that life insurance stocks are longterm growth issues and that their prices move in cycles. Is this true?” D.B. opposition is “still very powerful.” Editorials in the official Peking People’s Daily and other published statements this week show that the cleanup is not having smooth sailing. Peng Chen, now 67, reportedly ranked ninth among Red China’s leaders and once was regarded as a possible successor to Mao Tze-tung. He has not been openly accused, but there have been hints that he was involved with three men charged with wanting “to overthrow the leadership of the Chinese Communist party.” A. You have made a very intelligent analysis of life stocks, which I would find difficult to improve upon. These shares— as I have repeatedly here — should never be bought unless the investor is willing to forego current income and hold for a period of at least five-ten years. Over the past 20 years, these issues have shown remarkable These three, whom Peking repeatedly has accused of being traitors, are Wu Han, the vice mayor of Peking; Liao Mo-sha, a member of the Peking party central committee, and Teng To, former editor of the Peking People’s Daily. Wheat, 4910 Malibu, Bloom-i growth which has usually been field Township, directed t h e,accompanied by stock dividends 34% 34t/i — '/. structural design of the Howard “ Baldwin Meadowbrook Pavilion at Oakland University. 45 23'/, 23% 2 ,OT 1 34% 34% 3 -X-Y-Z— otherwise noted, rates of dlvl-ttie foregoing t»be ere annual tents baMd on the last quarttrly annual SP;''*' dividends or PWnwnt* "9» " rogular are idantifled in the a—AIM mtra or extras, o—Annual ,siijs-3ad'5«vST.“ia ------ dlvldand. e-Oeelared or ---. »—K,, -fcwu n stock dur- ils year, t—Payi estimated cosh--------_ ex-dlstrlbutlon date. g-Fald 'SSd oVSr«'^l?!^“a?MfK.‘ tar, an accumulative issue with t.... mds In arrears, n—New issue. P-fald ils year, dividend omitted, deferred or ) action taken at last dividend meeting. -Declared or paid In 1944 plus stock Ividend. V-Pald in stock during itimated cash value on exI Elsie Mihalek collected for . off for I provided by law: Transfer of Funds Inasmuch as the bonds School District ' “ *' ______ ______ by fhe ______ ________ .. the City of Pontiac, Oakland County, Michigan, — 1, 1963, have tuny paid tor more man two years, the Board of Education be ai'“— to transfer to the Building _ _ - Fond all moneys (approximately $57,200) now remaining In the - tiremenf funds for said bonds ■■ moneys hereafter collected ir six (I Board of Trustees~Bf Oakland Community College two each for terms of tw-- IS), and six (6) years with named as follows: For Two (2) Year Terms C. Ray Ballard Thomas P. Czubiak James W. Gell David W. Hackett Gordon C. Henderson Donald W. Nick For Four (4) Year Terms Earl M. Anderson Thomas W. Fowler, Jr. Harold J. Robinson Ralph F. Tyndall For Six (6) Year Terms Lila R. Johnson George R. Mosher _____ ________ other •y materials for conducting the election I be provided at the following precinct locations: A—Bagley School, 320 Bagley B—Webster School, 640 W. Huron C-Central Senior High, 250 W. Huron D-Close St. Station, Close St. E-Lincoln Junior High, 131 Hillside F—Owen School, 43 E. Columbia G—LeBaron School, 595 E. Beverly " -Emerson School, 859 Emerson . -Baldwin School, 40 E. Howard J—Longfellow School, 31 N. After K—Wilson School, 511 S. Sanford L-McConnell School, 245 S. Paddock M—Eastern Junior High, 25 S. Sanford N—Central School, 101 E. Pike 0—Hawthorne School, 1400 N. Telegraph P-Jefferson Junior High, 600 7*-*- - ..... School, 1834 Opdyke Ao I Board of Education NOTICE OF HEARING ESTABLISHING NORMAL HEIGHT AND LEVEL OF WATER IN BIG LAKE IN SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP OAKLAND COUNTY, MICHIGAN TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN, PARTICULARLY, All Owners of Property Fronting on. Abutting or Having Access to Rights In ... . -I.. Interests In . Lake, ivmg F' ,lghr.i X. ___________________________ Being Loufod Tn ^Im 28 and 2f of Springfield Township, Oakland County, ^Ammonia Fumes Fell Several in North Carolina YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED ..... Ihe Oakland County Board of Supervlaort has caused to be filed In this Coor^ Complaint praying ter the establlthmant by this Court of the normal height and .—. .. .|g uM uKe being ir- .vctlons 28 and 29 of Sprlngflaf Township, Oakland County, Michigan; YOU ARE FURTHER NOTIFIED that _ hearing on the matter will be haW In the Circuit Court for the County of Oak-! Oakland County Court Home ) North Telegraph Road, Pon-gan on Friday, the 24th day k.D., 1966, at the opening of .hat day at 9:00 A.M., before the Honorable Frederick C. ZIem, Circuit GOLDSBORO, N.C. (AP) -Several motorists and occupants To maintain U.S. forces at! of a nearby motel were over- their present strength, and perhaps prepare for eventual reductions and withdrawal. Officials feel this would mean giving the initiative to the enemy. Tq continue to meet whatever requests for forces are received from the field, and to prove to the Communists that they cannot win in South Viet Nam. Yet the Agust draft call issued Thursday was a boost of 6,000 above the 26,500-man quote for July and was more than double the 15,000 inductions scheduled for this month. , _ , w i- .u * u u The officials believe that half LIKELY TO CONtjNUE tj,e U.S. population supports the Shortly after the draft call last alternative as the best iwas announced, officilas indicat available and as the one most ed the buildup was likely to con-likely tot lead to a negotiated - [tinue, regardless of previous {settlement of the war. come Thursday night by ammonia gas fumes escaping from a fertilizer plant. One motorist, Chief Warrant Officer James K. Welch of Seymour Johnson Air Force Base, was kept at Wayne Memorial Hospital overnight for further treatment. About 30 persons were treated at area hospitals and released. Families evacuated from the area were allowed to return to their homes and traffic, rerouted from U.S. 70 and UJ5.13, once again moved through thd section.. YOU ARE FURTHER NOTIFIED that n said date the Complainant Intends .Ir ihi. Court to establish r----‘~ NOTICE of INTENTION to CONSTRUCT r ASPHALTIC CONCRETE SURFACE ON LINDA VISTA DRIVE Interested. I. 8167 OLGA BARKELEY City Oerk Junt 3, t«6 „. .... ...V Commission to con-" Asphaltic Concrete Surface s Spruce Street fi— "— d ... ____ ____of Spruce Stroet Clemens Street to BIgham Street (lots to be assessed; 1 and X A. P. .... - 22, 23 and 6X A. P. #1«) NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN OLGA BARKELEY City Clerk June 3, 1966 NOTICE of INTENTION to CONSTRUCT ASPHALTIC PAVEMENT ON COTTAGE STREET You a e Commission of 1 e City of Pontiac, Michigan held May 31, 1966 resolution It was declared to bo the ntlon of the Citv Commission to construct 2" Asphaltic Concrete Surface Course on Cottaoe Street frohs East Boulevard to Clifford at an estimated of $4,730.00, and that the plan, pro- pruTiir and ^Imate, i,..v ..... ..— ---• thereof shall be defrayed by special assessment r-----*- *— fronting upon i a parcels of land _____ side of Cottage _____ ______ East Boolevard to Cllffwc street. (Lots to be 2’; 72. 123, 124, 165, 166, 217, 218, 259 and 260. East Side Park Subdivision) shall trict to d NOTICE IS ,HME^ 92Y®rnv M That the Commlsskm of the City Pontiac, Michigan will moot In fh« mission Chamber on June 16, 1966 « 8 CE of INTENTION to CONSTRUCT 2" asphaltic pavement ON MADISON AVENUE Intention of the City strucl 2" Asphaltic Course Asphaltic Concrete Surface profile and estimate of said li -----.11. h. ivibllc InspectH construrt » Improvement In profile and esi thereof shall I accordance profile and J^at the thereof shall assessment accordlno to fronta^ that all of the lots and.parcejs fronting ,nuv ..V... Emerson Avenue to Ketter-Avenue (Lots to te a»»^; » ^ Newton Estates Si*, end 657 awl m Perry Park Sub.) s^M soecial assessment district to defray $So.54 of the esilmatrt ^st ex- =teW •SVSS^n be paid from the Capital Improvemen Fund. NOTICE IS HEREBY G^EN That the CommI--'- *' Pontiac, Michigan ------ Chamber City of r in ihe Com- P.m"’to h»a;Tug^^« objections th** ^ Interested. Dated f I. 8163 y 31, 1 OLGA BARKELEY City Oerk ON UNIVERSITY AVENUE You are hereby notified rrSSij; '"“"SsrSisvLt estimated cost Ct'Ts,:;,1.le*t"’Slfblfolnspe< further intended to ewst^ profile a Avenue (Lots h district to defray cost and expenses th*'“' that 1743.82 S *IheH”be%eM”hom tti Capital im- !5,r^‘7ugMS *and oWectlons ttit may be m!Sr*Sy"pef"9* Interested. W. O. 8166 Dated May 31, BARKELEY ON ARLENE AVENUE 1016.70 feet —y tuch_______ ------ I Court seems fitting and prop-leuld net be granted to Com- l"*'S. JEROME BRONSON Oakland County, MIchIgsn BY) ROBERT P. ALLEN Corporation Counsel i HAYWARD WHITLOCK ai ARMAND P. DEATRICK Ass't. Corp. Counsel for Oakland County, Mlchlpan By: ROBERT P. ALLEN ONIca Address: Oakland County Court House 1100 North Telegraph Read Pontiac Mlchlpan Phene: 330-4751 , May 6, IX la 27* and SSton 'I'ifVtd' constitute the special eiiseenient, stricl NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN Commission of the City of ... —. Pontiac, Michigan will meet In the mlulen Chamber on June 14. 1986 . j-ars-ffi ■,i\'