ATLANTA, Ga, (AP) —. Gov. George support It,*’ said Romney, who did Romney of Michigan said today a third not mention Wallace by name, party move in the 1968 presidential ‘1 think it will tent the Democrats election would be both tragic and futile, more than it will hurt the Republicans,” Romney was asked his reaction to the cordial meeting of Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey and Gov. Lester G. Maddox of Georgia recently. He spoke in little Rock, Ark., Saturday, then came here but observed a day of rest in keeping with his Mormon beliefs. ' His speech was prepared for delivers to a gathering at Morehouse College/* predominantly Negro school. '‘Today, many are saying that the civil rights movement is hi tumble, that its leadership is splintered, that the white majority is stiffening its resistance to further progress,” Romney said. "I Share this concern but I am also convinced, as Emerson said, that “revolutions never go backward.’ ” Romney said, “We need to take full advantage of the new leverage provided by advances in civil rights laws.” ‘STRANGE BEDFELLOWS’ ^ t * * NOT PRIMARY NEED “I don’t think the states of the South Romney said federal legislation was should hook themselves to fallen star,” not the primary need in civil rights. Romney said a third party cam- or whether he supports the principle, paign, which former Gov. George C. But he said legislation had created “ft’s interesting to see what strange bedfellows develop in politics and I think — ” he paused. “Well, that’s all.” Later Romney sain he shares the concern of others that the civil rights move- movement still can go forward if public officials demonstrate their willingness to implement rights guarantees. Romney, who admits to a “hot courtship” with the idea of seeking the Republican nomination for president in 1968, is making his first trip into the Deep South. ST ofthe Uk midentand Romn«y said efforts in this area nDde"tand Should be concentrated on state, local what is involved. and ?rivate Ievel3 rather than trying “Once they see that this effort is to solve the problem by one approach futile and self-defeating, they will not such as federal law. TRAGEDY SITE — A 10-year-old Clawson boy suffocated yesterday afternoon when he either jumped or fell into this gravel bin in Troy. Killed was Robert Lovett of 738 Dreon. Inspecting the bin (now filled) in which the boy died is Earl R. Geyer, 3935 Rochester, ’Dray, an employe of Barrett Asphalt Go., 2040 Barrett Clawson Boy Buried in Troy Gravel Bin 1 O U Gift University receives portrait of Supreme Court Justice Charles Evans rfughes — PAGE C-8. Capital Punishment Death penalty always controversial in Michigan — PAGE A-12.' Police-Prejudice Race bias not uncommon among officers, says report — PAGEA-6. Are* News ............ ..A-4 Astrology .......... V....C4 Bridge ................ C-8 Crawward Puzzle.........C-15 Comics ...................04 Editorials ...............A-T Markets .................C-8 Obitaaries ..............C-# Sparta...............B-l-B-4 Theaters r. B-5 Showers Predicted Through Tonight Raincoats and umbrellas are the order °f the day as the weatherman predicta showers and thunderstprms through tonight. Tonight’s low temperature reading is expected to fall In the 80s with tomorrow’s highs expected to plunge into thin 40b as the thunderstorm anflvtty brtqp in less humid and cooler air. He cpn be a relative, a friend or an AU three glrls felt they had seen their acquaintance, but quite often he’s a assailant before they haven’t seen him stranger. He can be interested in hoys since. Neither have dty police. ®r*ir,a> TG FIND A DOG " HE'S A MENACE last summer, a dark-haired man wear- A sex deviate, he can be capable of tag sunglasses Hired a 9-yeamld Com-a far more serious crime tiap mniwaHiig merce Township girl into a, wooded area Ait whether he’s guilty of Indecent ex- under the pretense he needed help to posure, molesting, rape or warder, he’s find a dog. a menace to the community. After molesting her, the man fled Often difficult to detect, difficult to wh*n the girl's 8-year-old companion Identity*, difllealt to capture and difficult started screaming. ■“-y - ” •SST MicMjtal State Police and other tew turns chances other criminals wouldn t. enforcement agencies are quick to tail, far TKWMpIti ihrnt young caatam naranta uni guardians about the girls were chased by * molester o* a dangers of child molestation, well-populated street in central Pontiac, (Continued on Page A-4* Col. 3) Child Molester (Silhouetted) Spells Danger A 10-year-old boy from Clawson died when he was buried alive in a gravel bin *t an asphalt firm in Troy at 5:50 :lMnir;yeiterday. :. •" > ■ ★ w ■ ★ Dead Is Robert Lovett, son of Mr. and Mrs. Marvin W. Lovett, 738 Dreon. The Lovett borne is about one-half mile south of tiie Troy tragedy site, Barrett Asphalt, 2040 Barrett at Maple and Crooks. Troy police said the victim and two children from his neighborhood had been playing in the adjacent fields prior to the accident. Police said Mark McKay, 13, and his brother, Scott, 9, of 756 Dreon told them the trto was crossing the plant area when they lost sight of Robert. “Then they heard him screaming,” police said. The boys were unable to help Robert who had fallen or jumped into tan pit and they ran to call police on a phone, officers said. Neighbors and officers hurried to the scene and dug the boy out but he was pronounced dead at the site by a coroner, police said. Robert had fallen into a metal pit ' about eight feet square. Gravel of varying density ig poured info six different grits in tie asphalt operation. Each bin is about 12 feet deep; holds 35 tons and is drained from the bottom. A chute takes the substance from below ground level up into tie plant for processing. ★ ★ ★ A company spokesman at the site today said children are a continual problem. The Barrett firm shares tie area with About four other firms in a small Industrial complex. AutoCrockup 12 Are Ki by Leaves 2 Dead and 3rd Critical Two men were killed and a 20-year-old youth was seriously injured yesterday when a car went out of control and left the road on Oakland Highway Toll in ’67 29 “IPs impossibS to fence tie area, and we have to chase kids away tall the time,” the spokesman said. Track west of Oakland. Killed were Robert R. Brown, 24, of 7711 "M, Waterford Township, WASECA, Minn. (JV-Searchers probe through splintered rubble of homes smashed by tornadoes at Waseca and Albert Lea today grimly . looking for more bodies in the. aftermath of a night of stum terror which left a dozen dead, over 100 injured and property damage in the miHions at eight communities and numerous farms. A band of possibly a half-dozen tornadoes smashed across a 50-mile wide area of southern Minnesota around the dinner hour Sunday night. “It was horrible!” exclaimed Mrs. Archie Drahebn of Waseca. “We were sitting at the Amur table eating when ■ - my hns- driver of tie-ear, the picture wfrKw m and John T. Spring- idR*#**?*** Waterford Land-Fill Ruling Put Off, May Go A decision by the Waterford Township Board on a land-fill permit was scheduled tonight but will not be made, according to Township Supervisor Elmar R. Johnson. In fact, a legal technicality stemming from tie township zoning ordinance may give tiie authority for ruling on the permit for * 50-acre land-fill operation near Ward’* gravel pit to tiie Township Planning Commission. Johnson, who took office three weeks ago, said that an interpretation of zoning ordinance provisions indicates that tie LIT. ONES 1K5 “Most of the watercolor drawings look better now than they did before the rain.’* In Today's Press planning commission, not tie township board* has jurisdiction over the penult. He cited a letter from former Township Attorney Paul Mandel dried last Jan. 17 and addressed to Vernon Wiggins, director of planning for the township. Mandel expressed tie opinion in the letter that tiie planning commission should decide on tiie permit.’ Johnson added that the township’s present attorneys, Booth and Patterson, have verbally concurred with Mandel’s Opinion. The attorneys are expected to issue a written opinion to the board tonight outlining how the permit application from Donald Freeman and David Ward. should be handled. er, 22, of 2 Neome. In critical condition at Pontiac General Hospital Is Floyd R. Ervin of 88 ty. Mansfield* Hospital officials said ho to ta tie intensive care unit. They gif' not reveal tie attire of his injuries. Both Springer and Ervin were passengers in the car which- police said was traveling west on Wide ’Dade about 2:15 p.m. whenthe accident occurred. The car went out of control on a curve, slammed into a dltch on tie south side of the road and stopped in* Pontiac Creek, according to police. STUDENT IN FLINT Springer was a student at Flint Junior College and Brown was a veteran of the Vietnam war. The two deaths brought the Oakland County traffic fatality count to five for tie weekend — tie county’s worst weekend toll tils year. A Davison man was killed on Orton-ville Road and a man and woman from Rochester were killed in Troy early Saturday. In addition, two county women were killed in an accident on 1-75 near Monroe late Friday. “There was no warning. There was this terrible rain falling and all of a sudden I was diving along the floor with glass all anxm f She and her husband Were treated for cuts at a hospital and released. ; * * * : Countless others were similarly taken by surprise, even though a tornado watch had been issued by tie Weather Bureau for the area. • . ^ The tornadoes roared np on them in tie midst of heavy rains and nearing dusk/which apparently prevented them from watching tie skies closely. Witnesses said tie Waseca warning siren began blaring, a couple of minutes after tie tordado had passed. ★ , ★ ★ One of tie first on the scene at Waseca was Arthur Kost, otiose ambulance sendee in Mankato took two ambulances to tie stricken town of 6,100 some 25 miles to tie east PICKED UP 2 VICTIMS • “t picked up two dead people, one of whom was almost decapitated,” said Kost. “I saw several cars that had been knocked around like balls. At first, the hospital was a mass of confusion. Fqp-. pie were sitting on chairs arid lying on stretchers.” - Waseca had five deaths confirmed tost night, and Sheriff Donald Etutice said, “I wouldn’t be surprised if we found several more bodies.” More than 60 persons were treated for injuries ranging from minor to critical. Forty-two were hospitalized. ★ ★ * About 20 Waseca homes were destroyed and 50 damaged as tie twister cut a path two blocks wide and eight blocks long — touching, down in tie southeast part of tie town, then skipping over a lake only to begin smashing homes again on tie other side. WIDER AREA DAMAGED Albert Lea had 4 wider area of destruction, but tie known death toll there was two — Mr. and Mrs* Elmer Manuel of Albert Lea. _______ Tea persons were hospitalized at Albert Lei. Twenty others were treated and released. The tornado hit Albert Lea’s west side, then slid around tie north edge of the city ef 19,000. R cut a pati about 20 feet toide for 2% miles, dam ' destroying nearly 109 homes. * ' * _ ta / •' - Victims Identified at Waseca were Mr. and Mrs, JohmRipple, Gfeprge Wil-loek and Mr. and Mrs. Art Rux. Suspect in Sex Killings Can't Be Tried DETROIT W — A 14-year^old boy with a glue-sniffing babit Was held without bond in tie Wayne County Youth Home today, charged with tie rape-murder of, two little sisters as they walked from school. The two girls — Deborah Louise Crowther, 8, and her sister, Kimberly, 6 — were assaulted and strangled as they walked across a field from school Friday toward their home ta the Detroit suburb of Westland.. Authorities said tie 14-year-old suspect, whose name was withheld, had sniffed M»e only a couple of hours before the double slaying. Prosecutor William Cahalan said that because of . his age tie boy could not be tried as an adult for any crime, including murder. ★ ★ ★ Under Michigan law, a juvenile must be 15 or older before authorities can petition courts to allow an. adult trial. For Child, Danger Lurks in Shadows Children seldom complain about tie warmer weather. To them it’s a sign of vacation and good tines ahead. But parents realize, or they should, that stringent safety measures are retired to protect their children during long hours of outdoors play in the spring and summer months. Eta1 impending danger lurks in the shadows. Om of these hazards Is in file very realistic form of tie eMd molester who GAVE CHASE Is attracted to tie out-of-doors by the mere presence of Ms wonM-be victims. captured and driven to tie dty outskirts where one of them was raped while tie other two watched in horror from tie backseat. ★ ★ a This happened on a Sunday morning as tie girls, aged 7, 8 and 9, were waiting for a bus to take them to church. The intruder — a heavily-built white man of medium stature — offered them a ride in his convertible. The fresh tubes of airplane,gjue and about three dozen empty tubes were found in tie brush near the scene of the brutal slayings. Glue sniffing reportedly has become a fad among some teen-aged youngsters in recent years, and medical specialists say It brings on tie —w> kind of feeling that to caused by drinking alcoholic beverages. r Investigator* discovered that the 14-year-old boy, with two other boys and one girl, had sniffed glue Friday shortly before the murders. ★V I "k. . ta Dr. Edward Demine of the University of MichigSn Medical School, said that under tie influence of glue “a person’s inhibitions are released, and he is apt to do~thtags he normally would not do if he were in control of himself.” FIRST MAJOR Westland Police Chief Garrison Gay-ton said discovery of the glue kits gave police their first major lead ta the case. He said the two buys and a girl who were at the glue-sniffing party had given evidence printing to the 14-year-old. * Police said the suspect had run away from his home three weeks ago and had been booked at tie Juvenile Home .as a runaway. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY l, 1967 Birmingham Area News Recommendations Due on Street Seal-Cooting According to Form MOSCOW (AP) - Marshal Andrei A. Grechko, the new So* viet defense minister, opened May Day ceremonies in Red Square today with standard Soviet attacks on the United States, West Germany and Red China. No new weapons were among the 330 that rumbled through the square in the annual parade. Observers believe the armed forces are saving up surprise weapons for a splash display on Nov. 7, the 50th anniversary of the Bolshevik revolution. Workers throughout the Eastern Hemisphere and in parts of Latin America celebrated labor's traditional day. Although Labor Day is celebrated in September in the United States, American groups held loyalty marches Saturday in cities from Newport, Ore., to New York. The Moscow parade displayed antiaircraft rockets of the kind used in North Vietnam against American planes, antiballistic missiles and 110-foot intercontinental ballistic missiles. Among those on the reviewing stand were Communist party Secretary General Leonid I. Brezhnev and Premier Alexei N, Kosygin. Grechko made a milder speech than usually came from his predecessor, the late Marshal Rodion Y. Malinovsky. In his six-xminute speech, he charged that the “monopolistic bourgeoisie” in the United States are responsible for the Vietnamese war. “The end of the imperialist aggressors’ gamble .in Vietnam would approach much quicker if CAMPER SHOW — £ collapsible tent through Saturday at the Camper Show in the trailer with a top that can be folded and Pontiac Mall. The fourth annual show is de- stored during the day is only one of the 40- signed to demonstrate a type of traveling odd travel vehicles being' shown .today which is ewnomical and enjoyable: ' Second N-Detector Is Moved Into Orbit CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) *** The second of two Sentry satellites orbited last Friday was successfully maneuvered into its final station today — poised to begin policing the nuclear test ban treaty. Air Force spokesmen said a spacecraft motor aboard the VELA nuclear-detection satellite kicked the payload into a circular orbit 70,000 miles above earth, very close to the path originally planned. A similar maneuver Saturday “Statloned the first of the two Velas. They are positioned on opposite sides of earth from each other. The two VELAs,^along with three scientific satellites to measure space radiation and friction characteristics of ifaet-were successfully placed Friday in a long elliptical orbit by an Air Force Titan 3 rocket from Cape Kennedy. The three scientific satellites remain in the elliptical path. IMPROVED VERSIONS The VELAs are improved versions of six similar nuclear-detection satellites orbited previously to watch for violations of the 1963 treaty. f The treaty forbids nuclear tests in the atmosphere, Truck Holding $2.1 Million in Gold Hijacked - LONDON (UPD — Ammonia-hiirling bandits today hijhcked a truck carrying 140 gold bars valued at |2.1 million, Scotland Yfird said. The gang threw ammonia at the driver and two guards and beat up ope of them. All three were taken to hospitals after I they were found tied up in file back of tfie abandoned van.. He bandits overpowered file three men In the London district of Islington. They drove off with the truck and damped it after removing the bullion. Passersby found the van after hearing noises from Inside. Two of the crew suffered eye injuries, and one had head and chest injuries, ★ ★. ★ The gold belonged to a merchant bank, N. M. Rothschild ___and Sons. The bank confirmed the value of the bullion was 7S( pounds ($2.1 million). space or underwater but allows underground detonations. It was signed by the United States, the 'Soviet Union and more than 100 other nations. Red China and France did not-sign-the pact. ★ ★ it The new VELAs are scheduled to officially be placed in operation this month. Quite In Greece Kills 5, Injures 30 In Saigon, students scuffled with police following a May Day rally at the Saigon Zoo. The rally was among four held by labor unions in the city. Some students and labor union members unfurled banners calling for an end to the war. When police moved in to seize the banners, the scuffling began. Orderly rallies were held in 10 Japanese cities and towns by an estimated six million Japanese. Socialist party Chairman Kozo Sasaki set the tone for a Tokyo rally by declaring that ‘American imperialism in Vietnam poses a dire threat to world peace.” The president of the North Vietnam Federation of Trade Unions told a May Day gathering in Hanoi that the Vietnamese people “would never negotiate tinder file threat of bombs.” The Communist {Vietnam News Agency reported that the atmosphere in Hanoi .was “seething with fighting spirit.” IOANNINA, Greece (AP) *- A sharp earthquake struck this northwestern agricultural region of Greece today, killing at least five persons and injuring more than 30. Police reported rescue teams were searching through the debris of nine villages leveled the heavily guarded Greek-Albanian border. Most of the crumbled houses were two-story farm dwellings. The quake’s 20 miles north of Ioannina. ★ Health Minister Efstratios Poulantzas ordered aid sent to the area immediately. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Mostly cloudy with showers and thunderstorms likely today and tonight. Not much change in temperatures today and tonight. Highs today 67 to 75. Lows tonight in the 50s. Tomorrow mostly cloudy, windy and much cooler. Winds south to southwest 15 to 25 miles today, becoming southwesterly tonight. Wednesday outlook: — ■ Partly Steady and cool--------------------— Highest temperature ..........56 Lowest temperature ....... ... 48 Mean temperature ______________52 Weather, Saturday: Variable ;.< nessi Sunday: Partly cloudy, 1“— Aubuquerque 56 30 Pittsburgh BtimarcK , 34 a Tampa there were unify of action of all Socialist countries including China, in rendering help to the fraternal Vietnamese people,” Grechko said. CHINESE WALK OUT Chinese Charge d’ Affaires An Chih-yuan and an aide walked oufTnprofesTagainst the mem tion o£ China. k 1 The 63-year-old defense minister also accused some dements in West Germany of increasing their activity to change European frontiers and get nuclear Camper Show Opens at Mall The Camper Show, an exhibit of camper trailers, truck campers and travel trailers, opened at the Pontiac Mall today. ★ ★ ★ The fourth annual show, which runs through Saturday, includes some 40 different vehicles which can be attached to the back of a car or truck. The 10 participating dealers have set up several self-contained trailers ranging from 17 to 26 feet which sleep from four to si* people. “The show was originally started to show people the enjoyment of the different types of traveling,” said Orin Gooch, Camper Show chairman. J ★ * ,★ “Traveling by trailer or truck camper is very satisfying. You get to sleep in your beds at night, enjoy the convenience of self-containment in . your own unit, and travel ler a long time, yet have a more inexpensive WASHINGTON (AP) - Confess is expected to pass with time to spare legislation aimed at preventing a nationwide railroad strike Wednesday. Democratic leader Mike Mansfield asked Senate passage today of President Johnson’s request for another 47-day ‘coding- off1—period to the dispute between the major railroads and six shopcraft unions. For Child, Danger Lurks in Shadows (Continued From Page One)' Incidents of child molestation or circumstances indicating the possibility of this danger should be reported promptly to police for investigation, said Sgt. Raymond Hoopengarner of the was ubeot|Pontiac..Stute Police post. GIVES OPPORTUNITY Reluctance to report these offenses gives molesters the opportunity to continue their criminal activities, State Police stress. Names of minors and parents in molesting incidents are not made public unless abduction or murder is involved. State Police offer the following protective guidelines to parents: Instruct youngsters to reject any stranger’s offer of candy, money or gifts as a lure' go for walks or rides. DON’T LEAVE ALONE Insist that youngsters be in the company at all times of other children where there is adult supervision. A child alone on a playground, exploring a vacant building or loitering in an Alley may too easily become a molester’s victim. Use protective discretion when having children run errands in the daytime. Never send a child alone on an errand at night. • Be concerned as much for the safety of all children as are for your own. Cooperate wjth other parents in your neighborhood in safeguarding the welfare of youngsters. • Demand that your children keep you informed of (heir whereabouts when at play. See that they have your permission first for any unusual trips. REPORT QUESTIONS i Urge your youngsters to report any questions regarding their, safety to you, their teachers or the police. No matter what the parent’s approach is to cautioning his child against the molester or how hard he drums across the idea, problems still can arise. Dr. Leon Hall, -director of psychological services for. Oakland Schools, says the child can become confused. Parents teach children to be kind and respect-full to adults but, on the other to fear plained. A child’s ability to recognize strange behavior -in adults is the key, Hall believes, rather than to cast a suspicious shadow on all strangers. you a AP Wlrepheto NATIONAL WEATHER - Snow is forecast tonight in the Borthiyn Plains, while showers are expected from the Texas -Gulf Coast to tite central Appalachians. The Midwest will fb colder and the East and West warmer. Charity Drive Gets $135,600 in County The 1967 March of Dimes campaign netted a $10,000 increase over last year’s increase, an Oakland Gounfy campaign spokesman reported. County citizens donated $135,-600 as of today. The Pontiac division received $11,159.12, the Waterford Township division $6,-750.74 and the Aubufn Heights division $897.66. Money goes toward medical research and patient services. Nationwide Rail Strike In requesting .the near ban, Johnson promised to send up legislation “within a few days." ★ * ' ★ v Proposals by a special presidential mediation panel for settlement of the rail dispute rejected. House leaders similarly speedy committee and floor action in the emergency White House proposal. This should send the brief bill to the President for signature well ahead of the 12:01. a.m., Wednesday deadline. That is when a prior no strike -no lockout emergency law pushed through Congress early last month will expire,' NO AGREEMENT That 20-day cooling-off period was expected to produce a settlement, in the lengthy rail dispute but Congress was told by the President, the secretary of labor and all parties that no agreement had been readied. The earlier measure was approved 81 to 1 in the Senate andi 16 to 8 in the House April ll. Republicans get another chance to chide the President abount not keeping his campaign pledges to. propose legislation for settlement of major strikes. They also are urging Congress to step up with its own propos- STANFORD, Calif. (UPI) — A Stanford University historian says American authorities know 12 cosmonauts have been lost hi: Russian space flight mishaps — although only one has been announced, i ; - fjjs / I The first announced Soviet space missionfetality was Yladi-mis Komarov, killed on his return to earth"April 24. “It’» merely thehiatorical truth,” Julius Epstein said yesterday, claiming he has reams of evidence, including names of Soviet cosmonauts who were launched into space * and never heard from again. Spanish Riot Police Rout Demonstrators SAN SEBASTIAN, Spain (UPI) Spanish riot police opened fire’ against -May Day demonstrators in this northern city today. One teen-ager was reported severely wounded when police fired on students hurling stones at them. ★ ★ ★ Citywide riots simultaneously as tors went into action first in one forces strategic point, were unable to concentrate one place. A number of demonstrators were arrested. All Kinds of Weather April Tried to Please How do you like your weather — hot, cold or in the middle? Whichever one you vote for, April was kind enough to serve at least one helping. A high of 78 was talked up April 2 with the low of 22 April 12. Mean temperature for the month averaged 47*75 as compared to last year’s mean of 44.1. See, you only thought tills year was colder than the usual Michigan spring.' Actually, it was die warmest. April in two yean. The mean for April 1965 was 43.7. For variety, Lady Spring seasoned the month with snow, tornado watches, showers and sunshine. The snow flurries occurred April 2$. Rainfall for the month totaled 3.70 inches, 1.66 inches moke than last year. ' 4» ■ ' M ★ Rain clouds brought snowers apd downpours on 11 days through the month. And how the wind did blow — on April 17 winds were measured at 30 to 50 miles. x BIRMINGHAM - Recommendations on the seal-coating of 25 city streets will be heard by the City Commission at tonight’s meeting at 5, at City Hall. T1 C. Brien, superintendent of public works, reports many City streets “came through” in good shape from the winter far as seal-coats are concerned and his proposal is for a smaller program than last year. A seal-coat it the process of applying two alternate coats of asphaltic oil and slag chips to roadways. Brien explained. It keeps water rat of the base and prevents mud and dust, he reports. His recommendation is for a {deeper coating this year and [[that the assessments be raised i 27 cents to 28 cents-per -I front foot. ROYAL OAK PLEA The commission will ceive a plea from the City of ‘Royal Oak on backing for its stand on reapportionment of the County Board of Supervisors. ‘ Royal Oak points out the county apportionment commission is considering a 25-man county board of supervisors. Royal Oak conunis- result in contagion of supervisor districts.” An alternate plan with a 35-. man board is favored by Royal Oak and support by Birmingham Is asked. ’ ★ ★ it '• Also to be considered -is the request for a liquor carry-out license for a store at 563 S. Eton. request was made by Gloria J. Troy throutfLthe Liquor Control Commission, which asks opinion by the commission. Also on the dgenda is a report by Commissioner Robert A. Bogan, chairman of file city’s Michigan Week (May 20-27) celebration. A request of $1206 to carry on activities is included. Soviet Space Toll Stands at 12-Yank TOKYO (AP) - Chairman Mao Tse-tung made his first May Day appearance in five years before hundreds of thousands of cheering backers in Pekuigs’ Gate of Heavenly Peace Square, Peking radio reported today. ar ★ - The broadcast said Mao was . ... m P .. J flanked by his heir apparent, sioners insist the plan “would Minister lamPh^in an open car which slowly passed through the May Day crowds. Mao smiled broadfy and waved to the cheering crowd. Thousands raised their hands clutching Mail’s red book of quotations, ■it ★ ★ The broadcast said Premier Chou En-lai, purged chief Chen Po-ta, Politburo member Kang Sheng, Vice Premiers ll Fu-chun and Hsieh Fu-chih, Mao’s wife Chiang Chin and othejr high Red Chinese officials followed Mao’s ear in other automobiles. NOTSIG1 | I a research associate at the Hoover Institution on War, Revolution and Peace. it it it “Now is the time for the government to make the deaths public for the sake of accurate history,” he said. U.S. POLICY U.S. policy not to disclose Soviet space disasters which the Russians do not announce themselves is based on the State Department’s desire “not to embarrass the Russians,” Epstein said. The Central Intelligence Agency has reported Russian space accidents to President Johnson, according to Epstein, and some of the “hushed up” mishaps were known to European and American publications. Epstein cited a space mystery which involved an* announcement by former Soviet-Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev that a cosmonaut would send greetings from space to the United Nations General Assembly at its 1960 meeting. ★ ★ “It didn’t happen,” Epstein said: Hie cosmonaut, believed to be Piotr Dolgow “was shot into space Oct. U, 1960 and not heard from after 30 minutes,” he raid. The fhpan Broadcasting Corp.’s Peking correspondent said President Liu Shao-chi and party secretary Teng {Hsiao Ping, Mao’s archrivals in China’s power struggle, were not sighted among the dignitaries making May Day "appearances in Peking. RESTORATION FUND — Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. . (center) posts a proclamation announcing Creative Arts Month during May on the rid city library designated to be restored as the Pontiac Creative Arts Center. Watching Taylor are James Peterson (left) project chairman,-and David Ogg, publicity chairman, representatives -for the Pontiac Area Junior Chamber of Commerce, which is spearheading a drive to raise an additional $25,000 to remodel toe building. Some $66,000 has already been donated for the center’ which will house exhibits and instructional classes in creative arts mediums. SIGHTED ffipaiL Attacker. Dog Killed; Victim Is Doing Fine Young. John Wheaton, victim of a savage mauling by a dog 11 days ago, is reported doing “remarkably well” in recovery from extensive surgery on his head and face. if it ■4 His attacker, a 70-pound German shepherd who had bitten another child earlier last month, was electrocuted this morning at the Oakland County Animal shelter. < The dog, Prince, had been quarantined at the shelter the night of April 2L only'boors after breaking his chain and running into an adjoining yard attack toe Wheaton boy. Prince was put away at the ueat of his ownerr Raymond Fonville of 510 Union Lake, White Lake Township, ★ John, son of Mr. and Mrs. Leiand Wheaton of 651 Province-town, Pontiac Township, was hospitalized with facial wounds which took doctors several hundred stitches to close. ‘CANT BELIEVE TP “We just can’t believe he’s doing so well,” said the victim’s ■ grandmother, Mts. John Rato-, ka, who may have raved John’s life whra she fought'off the dog and pulled the froy Into her The mauling occurred at the front of toe Ratoka home at 1143t Cripple Greek, White Lain Township. ’t even sure at first dors could save ’ Mrs. Rafiika said. - ..............-.' “But his progress has been remarkable — some of file scars have already healed to toe print where it's hard to see them, I think even the doctors nave been surprised.” ■. The attack followed by less than two months the fl«r-fftal iling of , 7-year-old l£ter Kohnen lH of Independence Township. / THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY* MAY 1, 1967 Film Maker Offers Oscar Plan scrutinizing the anrnfal ritual in the homeland. One interested viewer was Richard Brooks, a nominee for his direction ot “The Professionals.” Not because he lost to the favorite, Fred Zinnemann, but because he is naturally combative, Brooks afterward put forth his own plan for making the awards the greatest By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-Television Writer HOLLYWOOD — Oscar is still Hie talk of the town—any town. Three weeks later, folks are still discussing the pros and cons — mostly cons — about dzjRRHK#: the 39th Acad-emy Awards. 'H And not only Hollywood. Ac-|^H cording to television daws in history. During a recent visit to the Midwest, I heard such questions and comments as: .. t..... “Why did Julie Christie wear that awful outfit?” “Wasn’t it disgraceful that Elizabeth Taylor didn’t make an appearance to accept her Oscar?” “Why was no tribute paid to the memory of Walt Disney?” “The results would be fed into a computer mid flashed immediately on the screen. Imagine the suspense, the excitement!” But would such mass, instantaneous voting produce fair results? MOMENT OF TRUTH “Absolutely,” assured Brooks. “Each voter would be faced with the moment of troth, when he must make his choice' according to his conscience. He would be much mbre fair than in the present system, when he might vote on the kitchen table at 2 A.M., subject to the pressures of ads or his wife’s opih- “In the first place,” he propounded, “there would be no telecast to home seta. The entire show would be put on closed-circuit television and made avaiteble to any theater that Nowhere was the Oscarcasl more thoroughly discussed thaiz among the Hollywood film makers in Kansas for “to, £old Blood.” They huddled around television sets in motel rooms, 65 million peOn pie saw the Os-carcast, making tt one of the most - viewed Summer dusters end lacy lingerie “Tipis indead of having the nation’s theaters empty on awards night, they would be filled. And the customers could stay and see the regular film attraction, if they cared to.” REVOLUTIONARY The proposal of theater television has been made and rejected before. It is the second part of the Brooks Plan that is revo- lutionary: ...... v"1' “I Would do away with the Abercombie and Fitch boys (he means the Price, Waterhouse accountants who tally, the votes). The entire voting would take place at the Very moment the audience was watching. “Here’s how it would work: all 2,500 members of the acad- Heart Diagnosis Aided Patio shifts, loungers, fancy slips, gowns, pi's meat to the end of the catheter located in the heart, a blood vessel or a lung vesseL When the light enters the blood it is scattered by the red blood cells, ifiuminatin&an arCa about three millimeters la diameter around the catheter tip. By Science Service NEW YORK — Heart specialists can now get quick and accurate information on oxygen saturation of blood by usihg a kind of light pipe. Tbe tnfoima-tion- is needed in diagnosing heart defects. Fiber optics are incorporated in standard cardiac catheters and in special tubing to form a device called the. oximeter-densitometer. One bundle of 50 fibers transmits light from a light source located in the instru- “Why do you think they lock up juries when a decision can’t be reached in an important trial? And that’s why on-the-spot voting for the Oscar would A portion of the light, after it is absorbed' and scattered by the red cells, returns to the tip of the catheter, thus supplying sufficient information for determination of the oxygen saturation of the blood. Lacy looks a lady loves, carefree, nd-ifon fashions. Save on shadow panel slips, full slips, petticoats, baby doll pj's, shift gowns. Nylon tricot, cotton batiste, cotton broadcloth. 32-40, 42-52, S-M-l. Fresh, prettily trimmed robes . . . 10-18, 38-48, S-M-L. produce more sensible results. The Brooks Plan is so logical and showmanly that it is certain not to be adopted. Brooks is the first to admit it. STEREOS INCLUDED PORTABLE DISHWASHER Apartmant e Magic-Mix Lint Filter e Large capacity tub PRE-SEASON JUR-COM. SALE! GET PRE-SEASON AIR OONDHIONING SAVINGS r-—- Westinghouse ffglg ^^ggS0 SLIDING WINDOW I1™ AIR CONDITIONER UgiV Can be installed in sliding H winJ°ws or casement type mpB (Kill windows. Eliminates ne'ed for ■ costly custom installation. \UESTINGH Just plu9s to regular 115 * v°ltoutlet. ... V IN two DiDDD ter djfferant cooltng M,,s wn ^1 iofc WOO BTU> or «A0O »TUV ONLY 59 peu* Aitmiingly quirt, 2-sp*ad fan ha. window iiuta PRE-SEASON PRICED , jff" A * ■ NOW AT FNETTEItS 1 2SK 15 SALE! Reg. $5 and *6 woven straw handbags, now %99 Run-resistant seamless mesh stockings with run-stop tops, toes,. fitted heel. Yanbeige,. town taupe, cinnamon. 9-11,1 medium. Stock up today! Fashion array of dressy and casual straw handbag! in white, black and natural. Zippemd interiors, wipe-, clean coatings. Pick one for every aceosient ■#C DOWNTOWN AMD , s DRAYTON PLAINS :V ADMIRAL Deluxe Fruitwosd Console Steree. % • teeaker ell solid state AM/FM and Multi-plex radio. 5-ft. long Now $189.99 EMERSON Air CondHionor, AMI B.T.U. Floor model, complete wilts instant mount kit ........... ZENITH TV, new bet out of carton. Walnut :j:j console, 282 sq. inches, 1 only..... $188 H0TP0INT M” Electric Range, Hi-Speed Called humors, deluxe chrome side pend mounts. Beautiful coppsrtene. Wow! $129 R 9-TRANSISTOR FM/AM RADIO Shirt pwckot tiiw icicl. £ 0|( Solid-State B OE HOOVER Vacuum Olscoar SE PHONO 4-SpMd . Tape Recorder ImmI play, rewind an i-trAns. radio Shiithclnt 1 “"T* *40" *12" "mV Ifl t dpi - ace Question TUE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MAY 1, 1967 m Death Penalty: Yes or No? LANSING (AP) — Michigan ( prohibition at the next general has a statute on its law books (election, describing how the death penal-! Sen- Stanley Rozycki, D-De- ty shall be carried out, but fori‘roit- e*PFessin8 alaFm ov®r “ \ j* . increasing crime rate said he all practical purposes capital | introduced ^ resolution be-punishment was abolished in the) cause “there is a strong de-atate 120 yeaia ago.——r,: jlnand for some 'constructive ef- In 1847 Michigan voters ap-|fort to alleviate the tremendous proved legislative action which {increase in abominable killings substituted life imprisonment {of people by thugs.” as a penalty for first-degree murder rather than execution. From 1847 until 1963 the only State Corrections Commission records show there have been only two executions of white capital offensive remaining was me” in Michigan although sev-the unlikely crime of treason eral hyhans were executed in against the state of Michigan territorial and early statehood and this was amended by the ®ays-Legislature in 1963 to provide Stephen G. Simmons was hung for a penalty of lift imprison- at a public execution in Detroit ment." “ tin 1830 for murdering his wife The state’s new Constitution, while under the influence of adopted in 1964, specifically!liquor, prohibits a death penalty. FEDERAL EXECUTION Iioweyer, attempts to restore Tony Chebatoris was hung un- ?!-dea^.pe!!aUy J* ,e£faSC )•)$* html* 'or fnt, liif from pain. Makes denture* fortable... soothes ton ^ £ your pharmacist tor ^ “It’s been an expensive but rewarding challenge,” she said. “Every step my little jprl takes is another reward.” USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS BUY, SELL, TRADE “She didn’t walk until she was nearly t. I think that waa because we had a tendency to cart ry her all the time because of her baby size. “We seemed to keep her more to herself, because of 'her problem. We were qfraid to let her play with other children because of her size. “Then we were told we should expose her to other children and let her do more or less as she pleased. It wasn’t long before she was walking and playing just like any other child her age,” her mother said. Mrs. Proctor said she has gotten used to the stares her little goes, “at first it bothered me, but then I realized people were SPECIAL PURCHASE SAVE $1 REG. $3.09 Smoked Picnic Pork Roost <1 lb. $4)09 Cambodia Premier Quite; Health Cited PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) — Premier Lon Nol has resigned because, of ill health, and Prince Norodom Sihanouk, the chief of' state, has taken over the premiership until he appoints a new man later this MICH. GRADE 1 OSCAR MAYER OR SKINLESS MICH. GRADE 1 2-lb.. A Skinless Pranks 9 MICH. GRADE 1 BEER OR COOKED SALMAMI Peschke Lunch Moots 5 Lon Nol said in his letter of resignation that he had not recovered from injuries suffered in an auto accident. ^GARDEN FRESH CRISP™ Pascal Celery SAVE 10c |Ac STALK OR Jr ' , Sihanouk for years has been the principal governing force in Cambodia, and his. cabinets have a secondary role. Wasps, such as hornets and yellow jackets are the original papermakers, chewing leaves or wood fiber into pulp from which they' build their nests. NEW CROP FRESH FLORIDA Green Cucumbers GARDEN FRESH CRISP GARDEN FRESH CRISP turquoise. COUPON Lautjer’s has been a greattasting Scotctrsince 1834. Now . . . Lauder's is a GREATER SCOTCH BUY at the NEW REDUCED PRICE. Same 86 proof.. • Same High Quality . . . nothing changed (except the price). Q COUPON lAUDER* Don't Miss Volume No* 7 lOOJt BLENDED BY dOODERHAM • WINSLOW, Ariz. (AP) - For Dianne Procter, the around her is giant — too tall to reach and too high to climb. Dianne ia 3, but she weighs no more than an ordinary 2-month-old child. There’s little hope Tier 28-inch frame will grow any taller. , ★ ★ ★ Dianne’s story would be sad If it wton’f for her happiness. Despite her handicap, she’s still a lucky tittle girl. Abandoned by , ha* mother, she’s lived most of her life with her adopted parents, Mr. and Mrs. David F. Proctor. At birth, she weighed a little Over 2. pounds. In less than a week she dropped to 1 pound, 13 ounces, and doctors in this small town offered little hope she would Uve. FIRST AILMENT Weeks in an incubator turned into months, and when she was a year old, she tipped the scale at 7 pounds, 14 ounces. She now weighs 10 pounds, 4 ounces. Her first two years involved a little more than going from doctor to doctor, about 24 in all. Her first major aflment was a kidney infection. Then came the flu and a number of colds. ' Ijw,> ★ , ★ “Every doctor gave a different diagnosis. It wasn’t until she was 2 years old that we found out exactly what was wrong with her,” Mrs. Proctor said, jf ★ ■ * w. “We had taken her to Albuquerque to be examined when we met Dr. Charles Wolf. A short time later he mtived to the Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit, and asked that we bring Dianne there,” to added. ODD-SHAPED CHROMOSOME In Detroit, Wolf, by examin-ing Dianne’s blood, learned there ‘was an odd-shaped chromosome in her blood cells. He said that all but one of the chromosomes in her blood cells were straight, or normal. But, he said, one was rpund-shaped. As with other cases of strange genetic circumstance, there not much to do. WHAT A RECORD — The orangepeeling champ of Europe is London restaurateur Jose TUrpin Madrid. Using only a knife and fork and without touching the fruit by hand, he can peel an orange in 12.5 seconds. “Other mothers would ask me exactly tot was wrong with Dianne, and after we found out told them. Hie people we know in Winslow, are pulling for her, just as much as we are.” She said the only real worry is that other children can’t believe Dianne Is more than a little baby. “They all want to pick her up, and that can be dangerous, since to brUises very easily” ■v Mdti/p Sam Sharako says: “My Scotch is LAUDER’S’’ Your Scotch Dollar Buys More LAUDER'S Wrigley is MY Store! XT ben a special occasion calls fat elegance and flairt of course} you’ll want your special meal to be "just perfectP It’s comforting to know that your meat course will be luscious and tender, your vege- tables will have a spring freshness stud your dessert will have compliment insurance. Of course. You're a Wrigley shopper. You won’t have to worry about a thing. Just relax and enjoy your guests. Elegance ... the key word for luscious, tender boneless park from Wrigleyl Boneless Pork Tenderloin Eleffaiit! SAVE 40c lb. Frmcbed Tenderloin lb. 79c For Freezing convenience and savings, for that special dinner party ....... BLUE RIBBON WITH COUPON BELOW HI VALUE ENRICHED A White Bread 2 SSI* 48* VELVET BRAND lea Creaai tS1 'St* COUNTRY KITCHEN Fresh Milk £ 86' PURE OR GRANULATED m Pioneer Sugar 9 & 49c REGULAR OR DRIP COFFEE Chase & Sanborn £■ £9< STRONGHEART BRAND Deg Feed Mb. UOkm con 1W*’ CAMPBELL’S FAMOUS Tomato Seep ¥% H' TANGY SPAGHETTI France American ££ 13* WHOLE OR CREAM STYLE Del Monte Cora ’£ lt« GREEN GIANT Sweet:'.Pens SUNSVEET BRAND Prune Juice £ 39* CARNATION OH PET Evaporated Milk 16* MBADOVDALE BRAND Shortening £ 89* MBADOVDALE ALL FLAVORS Cake Mixes ,J^SS' [Mi iw THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY I, 1867 ' 11 ; If; P% lopng cSs^Ml Wmwmm MARKETS The Mowing are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by tHm in wholesale package lots Quotat; ns are furnished by the Detroit bureau of Markets as of Monday. * Produce fruits Applet. Delicious, Golden, bu. ......*3.75 Aortas.-Delicious. Golden, C.A., — ‘ “ Applet. DeHclous, Red, bu..... Apples, Mildew. Red, C-A-, bu Apples. Mclnte*h> bu. ........ Apples, McIntosh, C.A., bu. .... bu. . Applet. Northern Spy, bu, . Applet, Northern Spy, CA Applet, Steele Red, bu..... .. 4.25 VEGETABLES Beets, topped, bu, .............. Cabbage, Red, bu. ............. ... Cabbage, Standard, bu..............ISO Carrots, topped. bu. .............. *“ Celery, Root, dz. ............... Horseradish, pk. bsk. ........... Leeks, dz. bch....... ........... Potatoes, 20 lbs. ............. Radishes, black, % bu.......... Rhubarb, hothouse, dz. bch. . Rhubarb, hnthniKP. t.lh hnv Tumlpa. Topped . Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (Ap)—Prices paid | for NB. 1 live poultry: — ""''Ibrafiori*',h*t.vy rf*'*20. type 20-28; DETROIT BOOS DETROIT (AP)-Egg --------- dozen by flratvacelvera frlUlfA Jumbo SMS; extra ' 27-29Vi; medium 21- I prioat paid per ■■RREL,,.,.. __t (Including U.S.): White# firddlF large 2941%; Ji 2216; small 77. CHKAOO RUTTER, BOOS CHICAGO (AP) - Chicago Morel *““i" ft—wholesale hds.) High Lew Lett Chg. Abbott Lab 1 I 46% 444b 4Mb + ABC Con .00 104 UVt 24 24% + _ . - - 3 3*Vi 32% + % 4 50V» 50'/s 50% + % 16 ,34 33% 34 — *' 14 .» 27% 20 ---- 10 85% 05% 05% + % 2 43 43 43 + % ...... 3 it if. AllegLu 2.40b 23 4»%r 00% ■.......... 21 S. 41% 41% — % 10 32% 32% 32% + V* 31 23% 24% 24% + % 10 M% 89% 09% — 23 91% 91% *1% + % - 93% 93% 93% ACF Ind 2.20 AdMIllls .40b Admiral .50 Air Raduc 3 “’Rowel wt Cp .20o 90 E 4 ....i Can 2... AmCrySu^ 1 CHICAGO (AP)—(USDA) — Live poultry: wholesale buying prices unch---d to % lower; rooster* 24-20; gd iMFdjr ^.90 I Motors . iNGas 1.90 Am Photocpy Livestock • DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (AP)—(USDA)—Cottle 200; . load at high choice around 1100 pound steers 25.50; a few leedt choice 1000-1150 pound stoera 24.50-25.25; good 22.85-24.00. Hogs 125; not enough sole* at 11 * “ - to provide tail and market. and prim# 37-41; choice 22-37; a few Sheep 500; ..couple tots choice prime 90-110 pound slaughter lambs 25-24; cull to good slaughter ewes 6-10, CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP)—(USDA)—Hogs 6,000; butchers moderately active, steady* -— uneven, under 500 Ibo fully steady, .... 500 Ibo steady to weak. Instances 25 tower; most 1-2 200-225 lb butchers 19.00-19J0; around 100 hood at 19.50; mixed 1-3 350400 lb tows 15.75-16.25) boars 14.00-14.7ST7^ Cattle 2J00; calves none; elau steers fairly active. Steady to 21 Ml helfera active, fully 25 higher; cows erotalY active, stoMr to SO lower, decline on commsKtal) bulls at steady) tew loads prime 1,200-145 slaughter steers 2S.7M6.00; high d and prime 1450-1400 lbs 25.00-5 high dhelci and prima tso-uoo lb ill ter hotfira 24.50-25.00; utility and com dal caws I6.00-ia.00; connort and cu 14.25-17.00; utility ind commercial -s 20.00-23.50. American Stock Exch. AeroletG ,50a • AiaxMeg .10* AmPetro .35a ArkLGas 1.60 Asamera Oil Ah# A G AttaaCorp wt Barnes Eng • selected noon prices: ' Sslss . ■ (hds.) High Low Lost 6 33% 33% P 3 33% 33% 33% 1 13% 13% 13% 9 42% 42% 42% 77 4 313-16 3% 51 3% 3 3 17 2% 2% 2% 6 36 35% 36 . .. 36 11% 11% 11% f % 1 9% 9 2-16 9% + % 34 61-16 515-16 61-16 + % 22115-16 1% 1%—1-16 71 10% 10% WT *“ 27 7% 7% 71 28 2% 2% 2V 20 34% 34 34V 22 14%, 13% 14 76 3 7-16 3 3-16 3 7-16+1-16 6 11 10% 10% 99 34% 35% 36 i % « 9% t Am cp 17 tj% n% ino + \ —i % % » . 42 11% 14% 15% + % 32 4% 4% 4% + % 90 11% 11% 11% + % *% 5% m Isram Corp Kaiser Ind McCrary wt MeadJehn .40 MlchSug .ldg I 32% 31% 31% —a ' Mortog I NewPark Pancoa ' RICG sfgnaToilA 1 24 28% Sperry R wt/ StiMMl Inst Syntax Cp .40 Techntcof .40 UnControl .20 .. ... - Copyrighted by The Associated Press 1947 1% + % 4 40% 40% 40% + % 42 105 103% 103% ■’ 99 21% 20% 20% Changes Mostly Fractional Market Dips in Active Trade NEW YORK (AP)—The stock] earnings from a year earlier. market dipped in active trading The other motors also were today. Changes of key issues , were mostly fractional. Brokers said escalation of the Vietnam war may prove stumbling block for farther market advance. But they noted that home appliance price increases and a risk in U.S. gold stocks were bullish developments. Ford Motor lost about half a point following its report, of a 43 per cent decline in first quarter weak with General Motors testing more than a point, American Motors off about half a point and Chrysler down by a lesser fraction. BOOSTED BY LBJ Boeing rose more points following President Johnson’s authorization of development of the supersonic transport, for which Boeing is the prime contractor. Opening blocks included Lib- by-Owens-Ford, unchanged at 49% on 7,800 shares; Sperry Hand, unchanged at 31% on 6,100 shares and Bethlehem Steel, up % at 36% on 2,400 shares. Friday The Associated Press 60-stock average advanced .8 to 327.3. Prices advanced on the American Stock Exchange. Gains of about half a point were posted by Aerojet, Edo and Saxon Paper. Losses in the same range were taken by Kawecki and Microdot. v\ iBliiiiiiBiiii Stand on Dodd Lonely for Long Offhand Observations Hit a Political Nerve The New York Stock Exchange I Chat 1 h .40 ) 41% 4 10 107 104 106% . .. 12 56 56 54 + % 3 61% 61% 61%...... 52 19% 19 19% + % 40% 41 + % TBT 2.20 103 58% 58% 58% — % _Tob,_ 1 JO - -IT. 34% 34% 34%“+”% > lilt n ? 74 73% 73% — % 32 30% 3V 30% ‘ Ampex core Amphenol .70 Anacnd 235g Anken Chem Armeo Stl 3* Armour 1.60 Amid Oil 1.20 17 JTO wn T - Atchison 1.60 30 29% 29 29 .... All Rich 2.80 11 90 09% 19% + 4 Avco Cp 1.20 32 42% 42% 42% + * Avnat ,50b 58 34% 34 34% + 4 Avon Pd 1.40 9 104% 104 106% +11 52 57% 57% 57% + % S 35% 35% M»,+ **- JohnMon 2.20 JohnsnJ 1.40a JonLogan r Beckman .50 34 57% 57% 57% 33 34% 34% 34%____ 5 a* 53 53 — % 3 14% 14% 14% 15 61% #»- 6V — ... 26 39% 39% 39% + % 16 72% 72 72 — % 6 42% 42% 42% — % Ilf 3% 3% 3% + % 33 34% 84% 34%—JI W 98% 97% 97% +2 11 34% 34% 34% ... - W 'SHr 33% 85% + 14 14% 14% 14% . 9 27% 27% 27% . 4 23% 23% 23%- LoiHSGa 1.12 LongtsLt 1.16 Lorlllard 2.50 LuckyStr .00b Lukins Stl 1 2 27% 27% 27% . 3-34% 34% 34% -t 2 18% 18% 18% 4 12 28% 21 20 M 32 25% 25% 25%............. 24 42% 42 42 + % Mack Trl.gt —8 15% 15—rl57'7.T“ MacyRH. 1.60 20 17% 17% 17% — % Matf Pd * 47 49% 41% 49% ..... I 57% 57% W% +1% ■ 2 43% .4... , 7 37 34% Save 4 18% 11% 1Mb . _ 47 43% 43% -OH +1% 33 18% 11% 18% + % 3 67% 47% • 24 49 48%, 48%,, ....5 35% 35% 35% .... 1 1f% 19% 19% — % 5 33% 33 ml -6..% X97 43%,43% 4|%— % 31 31 30% 30% 25 47% 44% 3 39% 39% -39% I ... 2 113% 113% 113% + % 17 32%,33% 32% ... 7 82'/z 82% 82% + - “ " 9 70% 70% 70% 4 14% 14. 14% M Mb 20% 20% ..... JI 39% 38% 39%+1% % Marsthn 2.40 Mar .25a Mar f MayDStr 1.40 Ntigaji UOa MetM+S> 1 MaadCp 1.90 J Malv Sh 1.40 MerckC 1.40a MarrChap la ■ 27% 47% + % • 30% r- , .. .^% — % 5 52% 52% 52% + % 35 68% 67% 47% —V 50 35% 35% 35% — 23 SHfc tt 52 ... . 22 50% 50% 50% + S 29% »%' 29% + 2 48% 48 40% ... 13 » 32% g 8 98 I — 1 S3 3 17 71% .78% 78% Ml 2.40 5 76% 74% 74% —-% 1 4 data 52 80% 80 80 -1% 1 rln 1.20 9 29% 29* 29%+ % Pd 1.70 16 4Mh 48 ^45% + “ !V“ }1Si^S«+. JSS.fr.Tv, ol lJ7t 30 »% 53% L H Treasury Position ' WASHINGTON tAP>-Tha cash position ° of the treasury compared with corras- x ponding dot* a year ego. . 2 April U. 1967 Apt* 26, 1944 £ Balance . n S 8,346,088,244.80 5,757,29196860 Deposits Fiscal Year July 1 127J09J06.526.44 103,343,775,794.00 WIEMnwals Fiscal Year 135,374,974,867.20 11S,15«,3MJ48.48 X-Totel Debt 328,118,202,579.93 321,580,64,289.35 „„ Mlr ^ Gold Assets ilodak i SS 1 13,109,095,832.14 13,431,021,010.84 , CD—includes $246.060,841.53 debt not Ir,8.r, 20 subject to statutory limit. ElBondS (.72 ;f* ......- ' Electron Sp wM t, ■ , , . . . : EIPasoNG 1 Stocks or Local interest ifjjj1" 3 31% 31% .31% + 3 118% 118% 118% . 4 31% 31% 31% + 2 15 14% 15 10 36% 34% 36% — % 5 39% 39% 39% — % 14 80% 80% 80% + % 1 30% 30% 30% 2 33 33 33 17 144% 144% 164% 5 31% 31% 31% 46 16% 16% 16% —E— 4, 36% 35% 36% + ■ 30 27% 24% 27% + 1 16 18% 18% 18% — ' EthylCorp .6 *%ahsPd JO /ersharp Figures after dectmal points aro eight , I OVER the COUNTER stocks I Quotations from the NASD aro ragra-i sentattve inter dealer prices of opproxt- FtlrCom ,75e masoly ..It o.m. Inter-dealer morkets Felr HMI I 45% 45 45% + % Bid Askdfe F ' a 6^) + Engineering . S Utlllttee Clesi MoMfRt ^ Worm*Central Airlines L FMC Cp .75 FoodFalr .90 Mr*:S 21 39% 39% 39% 4 15% 15% 15% .. 40 54% 54% S4%-25 8 25^ 21 v. 4 55% 55% 55% .. Wt MUTUAL FUNDS "23J GsmSko 1.30 ••a! SIg Accept 1.30 JI.’GanAnllF M • *ff GenDynam 1 • , Gen Elec 2.40 9J0 GenPr 10.40 GPubS m GTe|UbEl' l'.28 Gen Tire JO . SOMMab ti im; Omm . ...12J2 1601 ...17.18 18J4 v..1347 *"* m n%.... i:jR-a=8 iao 12 27% 27% 9 GrantWT 1... GtA&p 140a Gt Nor Ry 3 *.....Plnl (hds.) High Low ; '-£-6 30 44% 44 44% + 1 27% 27% 27% + —H— 20 44 45% 44 + 28 .51% 50% 50% . . Hoff Ehctron Holid Inn JO HollySug 1.20 5 tni 67% . .. 69 31% 31% 31% + ■% 5 42% 42% 42% — % 9 77% 77% 77% + U 4' 43% 43% 43% + 2 28% 25% 25% ... Sandora .30 Sdianlsy JL40 Schsrlng 1.20 IcM^Cp .40b Scott Paper 1 Saab AL 1.50 SaarlGD 1.30 Saar* Roa la Seeburg .40 Shall Tm Jig SherwrtWm 2 Sinclair ^.40 TlogerCo 2.20 imlthK 1.80a SoPRSUB .520 SouCalE 1.25 South Co TM SouNGos 140 -lUthPac 1.50 Kith Ry 2 JO IdahoPw 1.40 7 4% 4% 4% - —I— 1 3S% 3S% 35% + % 2 17% 17% 17% 30% -i 1 36% 34% 34% - .. 28 31% 31% 31%-% 24 49% 49% 49%-% ,._v fi 21% 21 " Sperry Rond 143 32 Square D .70 * *“ lgerRar lland S InterlkSt 1.80 Int Nick 2.10 % + % If + % _______A 1.40 SM Kolia JO StOIICal 2.50b StdOlltnd 1.90 SfONJ IJOg StdOllOh pi UauffCh 1J0 SterlDrug .90 StsvenJP 2.25 StUdSMk .25g Sun Oil lb Sunray 1.40 5 40 59% 59% 3 32% 32% 32% —K— 45 54 53% 54 J 29% «% 29% 11 MW M 7 59% 59* ,59% 12 116% 116% 114% ..... 11 Tt* 71* 71% + % 3 34% 34* 84% 11 W% 57% 17 23% 23 23% Tampa El .40 Taiadyna ^inc 1 12* 12* 12* 1 73% 73% 73% + % 50 100 107% 107% 20 61%. 61 61% . - 5 '51% 51% 51% + % 8 17* 17% 17% S 20% 20% 20% + % 2 39% 39* 39* + % —M— ", ' 35 40% 41_M + % UnltAlrc 1.60 Unit Cp -5ta Unit Fruit 1 UGasCp 1.70 Unit MM 1.20 US Borax la USGypsm 3a US Ind .70—-US Lines.2b USPIyCh 1.50 _____eel 2.40 UnWijaln Jlf UnivOPd 1.40 Uplolm 1.60 SO 38* 38% 38% + MWSoUtll .76 MlnarQi 1.30 MIMhA i jo MoMIOII 1.10 Mohasco l ■ NatCash 1.20 NatDairy 1.40 Nat Diet 1.80, Nat Fuel 1. 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IS 19 17% 18 48 55* 54* 541 10 25% 21% 25% + % 24 54* 54 44* 21 SM 39* 39* - R 2 48 67* 47*-* 1$ MM 42% 42* + '/J 53 84% 82% 84% +1 21 96* *M% 96% — 8 10% 10* 10*.-41 39* 39% 39%-* 18 64% 44% 64% — % 10 23% 23% 23% .. 8 26% 26% 26%-18 77% 76% 74% -40 22--21* 21% + 17* 17* + % WarnPIc .50a WarnLamb 1 WashWat 1.16 WastnAirL 1 WnBanc 1.10 WnUnTel 1.40 WestgjEl 1J0 ••/aysrhr 1.40 IhfrICp 1.60 Jhlte M 1.80 WllsonCo 1.70 45 45% *3 9* 90% «” + % 2) 40* 60 60* +r —V— - 12 39% 39% 39* ... 47 31% 31* 31* + 33 39% 39% 39% — 6 47% 47% 47% + —w— 29 23% 23% 23% ... 27 51% 51% «% + 6 22% 22% 22% + 66 48* 48 48% + M 90% -M 30 + 21 40% W* 39*-37 57 56% 56Va — % 2 43* 43* 43* 93 45* 44* 45 . .. 27 47% 47% 41* + % 11 76% »% 74% 15 29* 28* 29* .80 7 32% 32% 32%- W The A»OClM’£Sl9V Sales flguras ora unoHlelat, ' Unless otherwise noted, rates of d SAIGON (AP) U. S. pilots shot down three moire Communist MlGs over North Vietnam today while just south of the demilitarized zone U.S. Marines suffered and inflicted heavy casualties battling North Vietnamese soldiers for a strategic hill. A Marine spokesman said 49 Marines were killed and 156 wounded as they fought foot by M ■ ragutsr1 era''identTfl8d' In" following footnotes. ^ . . a—Aim extra or extra*, b—Am.— rate plus stock dfvtddM. c-LIquIdatlng dividend, d—Declared or paid In 1967 plus stock dlvtdond. o—Paid last yes f — Payable In stock during 1947, til —■ —■- — ex-dividend or e eclared or paid i .....| __________arsd or pild otk.. stock dlyldond or spltt up. k—Declared yrtM..:-..: Mpi J2K: fiSSflS .S'lStJS!: WASHINGTON (AP) - The consensus around the Senate that in opposing the censure cl Sen, Thomas J. Dodd, Sen. Russell B. Long is following a lonely road with dangerous poltical crossings ahead. No other senator, Democrat , r Republican, has stepped up yet to say that Dodd, DConn., should not be censured for misconduct as recommended unanimously by a special ethics committee of six. ★ ★ * In his Spartan stand for his beleaguered colleague, Long, D-La., has slashed out with broad sword at members whose support he is likely to need in the future in his varied and ten complicated enterprises as the Senate’s assistant Democratic leader and chairman of its finance committee. Long’s offhand observation that Half the, senators couldn’t stand the kind of inquiry that was made of Dodd was generally regarded as an example of how to make' political enemies without even hying. LEFT unidentified He left unidentified the half he was indicting add the half he was absolving, thus clouding every indiyidual member except pibly'nimself. He explained it his daddy, the late Huey Long, had left him enough money so he didn’t have to worry about outside financial monk-eyshines. He could afford, he said, to take the Senate in stride as “my favorite charity.” ★ ★ ★ Long said the six special committee members were afraid that if they didn’t bring out a censure resolution against Dodd they would be subject to “the same kind of calumny and smear” to which he said columnists had subjected the Cornier ticut senator. ★ ★ ★ Members of the committee, headed by Sen. John Stennis, D-are regarded around the Senate as men of more than ordinary patience and forebear dnee. They -include also Sens. Wallace Bennett, R-Utah; Eugene J. McCarthy, D-Minn. ; A. S. Mike Monroney, D-Okla.; John Sherman Cooper, RrKy., and James B: Pearson, R-Kan. POLITICAL NERVE Ltag’s thundering charge that the practice of which Dodd is accused—appropriating testi- dinner and campaign funds to personal usC—is 11 too prevalent” in the Senate touched a highly sensitive political nerve. Members’ mail shows that the public is inclined to think the worst of poiiacians, no matter how dean their hands may be. His colleagues therefore are not likely to overflow with good will toward the Louisiana senator for volunteering some substance for that viewpoint ★ ★ ★ Nobody faults Long for standing up for a friend—it’s just toe manna* in which he has done it so far. k"uWbSk*M( P Salas In full. cld—Called, x—Ex d.—M dand and aalaa In fulL x-dis-__ tlon. xr-Ex right*, xw—Without wt rants, ww—With warrant*, wd—Whan d .ZK.-Z. . —instead. nJ --------- J Idond. V—Ex dl :-dls—Ex diatrll r the Bankruptcy it equalization t Safe, TV Set, Cash Stolen 49 GIs Die in . Hill Fight 3 More MIGs Downed Over N. Viet toot Sunday up toe' slopes of twtopeaked,, Hill 881. The Martees have had 88 men killed and 240 wounded In toe past weds in th&area. The spokesman said toe Marines killed 180 Communists. - Elements of two Marine battalions dung to their positions overnight and moved forward today in a new attempt to take the summit for use as adout- Detroit's First 'Love-In' Ends on a Rocky Note DETROIT (AP) —The honeymoon of hippies, motorcyclists, police and hangers-on at Detroit’s first “tove-in” lasted oily seven hours. Then toe marriage went on the rocks, with nine persons injured by flying rocks or bottles and two persons arrested for assault and indting to riot. Police said it was more than a lovers’ quarrel when a crowd estimated at upwards of 2,000 swore at, taunted aid hurled bricks and bottle at officers last night. '• The violence erupted at toe end of the tove-in on Belle Isle in the Detroit' River. HIPPY COMMUNITY The gathering, sponsored by Detroit’s hippy or beatnik community to demonstrate good will and brotherhood among mankind, was lovely at first:’Ah estimated 5,000 turned out. Young folkjs wearing the hippy trademarks of baubles, bangles, beads and unkempt clothes mingled with those astride motorcycles and wearing Made leather jackets. ★ * ★ For some seven hours, hippies walked about or lounged in their Sunday finery — painted faces, ’ i, feathers, Indian blankets, sandals, peace buttons, beards and shoulder-length hair. Hippies passed out bananas and'bread, “because it’s so good for you,” and balloons with .the word “love”, printed on them. PELTING OFFICERS ’ But near sundown, police said, a motorcyclist was arrested for reckless driving and young pieo-ple began pelting officers with objects off toe ground. Mounted police and others closed off all entrance to toe is* land and began ■ nudging toe crowds down & bridge toward the mainland. ★ ★ ★ At the bridge entrance, officers said an estimated 1,000 to 2,000 persons milled around, taunting police, throwing bottles and rocb and fighting. Mounted division police, suj^-ported by riot-trained Tactical Mobile' Unit officers and the riot squad, brandished shotguns they dispersed toe crowd within about 30 minutes. Some 200 Officers were on duty. BROKEN GLASS Left in the wake of the disturbance was an intersection literally paved with broken glass. Windows or plate glass doors were shattered at a drug store, a bar and a vacant store. - post for -checking North Vietnamese movements. There Are reported to be 35,000 North Vietnamese regulars in and around the demilitarized zone, possibly poised for a major assault. As the Marines halted their advance late Sunday, tactical bombers and B52s dumped tons of explosives on the'North Vietnamese positions. The air war flared to a new intensity with 133 missions over North Vietnam and a record 577 strikes ova the south. At toe Marine and Army artillery outpost at Gio Unh to toe east and near the coast, an undetermined number of 82mm mortar and 105mm artillery rounds Were received. One Marine was reported killed. Vietnamese spokesman said, however, that some of the rounds fell into a nearby village, killing or wounding 30 d- ' vtoans, -J- Ford Reports Slump in 1st Quarter Profits DETROIT (AP) — The nation’s automotive'Big Three had made it unanimous — profits for toe first quarter of this year plunged sharply. Ford Motor Co. added its gloomy report Sunday to finan-cial statements issued earlier by General Motors and Chrysler, all of which showed that eam-were hard hit by a slump in auto sales in, toe opening three months of 1967. American Motors, fourth largest domestic auto company but fifth in sales, is scheduled to release its financial report at a board of directors meeting today. The company is expected to show a loss of about $30 million for the six months period ending March 30. AMC is the only U.S. auto firm on a fiscal year rather than a calendar year. , NEWS LEAK A Fad spokesman s aid toe firm took toe unusual step of releasing its report on Sunday because news already had leaked out that its profits had nosedived. First quarter earnings were some 43 per ceht below the profits reported for . toe opening three months of 1968. This placed Ford losses in the middle of the Big Three, with Chrysler having reported a 71 per cet plunge and GM a 34 per cent drop. DOW-JONES AVERAGES STOCKS -Ran* IS Utils ............... 45 Stock* .............. BONDI grade rails i grad* rails .... A safe valued at 3200 and _ telwision set valued at $50 were stolen from the Matthews-Har-greaves Chevrolet dealership, 631 Oakland, it was reported Saturday. ■I A company spokesman told i39.M+o'7o( Pontiac police the safe con-gjjjHf' ‘ talned some $80. The burglars, who also faced open a vending machine, entered toe building through a bo er room window, police said. Birmingham.Man Appointed by GM Ford’s net income of $120. million for toe first quarter wa down about 43 per cent from the $210.2 million of toe first three months last yea. Earnings were $1.10 per toae, compared with the $1.89 of a year ago. SALES FALL _ totaled $2.87 billion, about 10 per cent below toe $3.18 billion of toe opening three months of 1966. Henry Ford II, board chairman, said toe drop-off “reflected primarily toe industry - wide decline in ca sales in North America.” ★ ★ ‘Factory sales of cars by Ford U.S. and Ford of Canada were 548,412 units in the first quarter of 1987, down 24 pa cent from toe first quarter of 1988,” Ford said. “The other factor chiefly responsible for Iowa North American profits was toe increased-cost of labor and purchased materials.” Worldwide, Ford sold 1,021,815 cas and trucks, compared with the 1,238,191 sold in the same period a yea ago. 2 Promoted at GMC Track Two area men have been promoted at GMC Truck and A Birmingham man, John C. Bates Jr. of 1391 Westwood, has bon appointed assistant director of toe General Motors Service Section. Bates was formaly IFontiac Motor Division parts and service director. _ • • He joined Pontiac Motor Division in 1941 as a parts representative. First of OCC Series WilF Feature Comic Dick Gregory, civil rights figure and nightclub comedian, will be presented to the first Oakland ^Community College feature of toe 1967 lecture series at 8 p.m. May 16 in Bloomfield Hills High School. Admission will be free to the performance at 4200 Andover. Tickets may be GREGORY obtained by sending a stamped, self-addressed envelope to Community Services Division, 2480 Opdyke, Bloomfield Hills, 48013. Typical of Gregory’s remaks is' his contention that he was fired from a job in a Chicago post office because “whenever I encountered a letter from MiRfiissippi, I put it jn toe foreign sack.” M ____ :-ai M #4 ...i - |j.j j— .........WJ 3234 M 1947 High ... 447.5 1(5-7 159.1 324.! jiv, LoS..... 413.4 159.4 151.5 292.1 1966 High ... 537.9 J13.9 • 170.5 369.1 1944 LOW .... 388.0 143.9 130J 269.4 BOND AVERAGES M by The Associated Press 20 10 10 18 18 Rail* Ind. UtIL Fgn. L. Yd 72.6 94.8 S3J Ago 72.7 95.0 84.1 92.2 I Ago 72.9 94.3 83.7 91.9 I _____Ago 77,0 94J 83.0 92.9 I 1767-Hlgh 73.0 954 S4.fi 924 i “" Low 70.1 91 J; 01 J* 90J j High 79J 401.4 84.1 93.1 I $270 Is Stolen at Gas Station Business Notes Lone Olsen of 1136 Asha, Walled Lake, has beep elected to the board of directors and the executive board of the! C oop ers-v i 11 e State Bank, Coopera-vine. Olsen is also a director of the National Bank of Royal Oak and a partner in Coay and Olsen, a certified public accounting firm in Birmingham. Coach Division, accordint to W. W. Edwards, director of purchasing and production control. Gerald E. McNeive of 3999 Cambrook, Waterford Township, has been appointed to the newly OLSEN More than $270 in cash was| Frank E. Rocassi of 3226 An-stolen from a safe at the Tulsa jgelus, Waterford Township,- re-service station, 701 S. Saginaw, cently received the Top Hatter city police were told yesterday. Award from Ford Division, Ford Motor Co. . Rocassi, a retail salesman fa J. McAuliffe Fad, Inc., was selected as one of the nation's The money was contained in six envelopes, according to police. Investigators said the thief appartntly used a length of wire to fi$b toe money from the safe’ night drop slot. News in Brief Roosevelt Bass, 58, of 328 Prospect told Pontiao police Saturday that four radios, a television set and a camera with a total value of more than $430 were stolen from ids home. Officers said entry was made by breaking through a door window. Some $75 in change and mhre than $300- worth of cigarettes were stolen from Jim’s Market, 406 Ordumf Lake, Pontiac police were told Saturday. Investigators said entry was made by forcing open the store's front door. 1 George Jerdon of Mt Schools house, Waterford Township, told police yesterday that $25 in cash and a radio valued at $30 were stolen from his house. Rummage sale. First Presbyterian Church, Birmingham. [Jr, previously assistant man-i™*: ager of material control tor”!1®'' ****" 5' MJ®' Chevrolet Motor Division, Detroit Lamb of 1027 Brenthaven, Bloomfield Township, joined man during 1966. created position of director of material handling and traffic. Succeeding McNeive as director of production and material control will be John H. Lamb cu uuu |V| mw iwuvu o *wwin*aw Gwwiiwyy juuivu leading Ford dealership sales- General oMtora in 1949. McNeive joined the company In 1936. Friday's M I ■ Had Recant able ImJTSTo THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 1, 1967 IS! ¥ Deaths in Pontiac, Nearby Robert R. Brown Service for Robert R. Brown, M, of ?7U ^tU, Waterford Town-ship, will be, 11 a.m. Wednesday at the Donaldson-Johns Funeral Home with burial in Prescent Hills Cemetery. Mr. Brown, an employe of Jerry J. Masters Co., died yesterday in an automobile accide in Pontiac. He had served in the armed forces in Vietnam. Surviving are his grand pari ents, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Merrill of Alma, and four sisters and two brothers, including Mrs. Jack L. Brauher Of Pontiac. Mrs. Joseph Golan Service for Mrs. Joseph (Anna) Galan, 75, of 141 Prall will be 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home, with burial in Oak HUl Cemetery. lite^-Galan--died - yesterday, She was a member of Bethany Baptist Church. Surviving are two sons, Julian of Union Lake and Felix of Ft. Lauderdale, FfeT; Ofiier , four grandchildren; and one great-. grandchild. Mrs. Juan Gonzales Service for Mrs. Juan (Fran-ciaca E.) Gonzales, 92, of 383 Central will be 10 a.m. tomorrow at St. Vincent de Paul Catholic Church With burial at ML Hope Cemetery. Rosary will be said at 8 p.m. at Melvin A. Schutt Funeral Home....... Mrs. Gonzales, a member of St. Vincent’s Church, died yesterday. Surviving are seven children, Clemencia Gilla, Concha Gonzales, Angel Gonzales, Alfonso Gonzales and .Carmela Gonzales all of Pontiac, Ynes Gonzales of Holland and Atanacio of Texas; 31 grandchildren; 69 greatgrandchildren; and six great-great-grandchildren. Griffin Funeral Home, with burial in Oakland Hills Cemetery. Mr. Humphrey died yesterday in Fort Meyers, Fla. ' A retired employe of the Fisher Body plant, he was a life member of the Pontiac Moose Lodge. Surviving are three sisters, including Mrs. George Endsley and Mrs. Grant Chapel, both of Pontiac, and two brothers. William J. McLain Service for former Pontiac resident William J. McLain, 51, of Canoga Park, Caljf., was held there Saturday. Mr. McLain died Wednesday. Survivors include Ms wife, Leona; a daughter, Wendy at home; and his mother, Mrs. Frank McLain; and a sister. Mrs. J. C. Norton Service for former Pontiac resident Mrs. J. C. (Cornelia) Norton, 83, of Algonac will be p.m. Wednesday at the Gilbert Funeral Rome, Algonac, with burial in Oaklawn Cemetery. ' I Jifrs. Norton died yesterday. She is survived-b5^ her hus-and and two sisters. John T. Spring^) Service for John T. Spring! 22, of 2 Neome will be 1:30}. p.m. Wednesday at the Donel-son-Johns Funeral Home, with burial in White Ch&pel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr, Springer died-yesterday in an auto accident. A student at Flint Junior College, he was a member of the Emmanuel Baptist Church. Surviving are his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John 0. Springer; a sister; and his grandmother, Mrs. Albert Hudson of Pontiac. Jacob A. Dean BLOOMFIELD HILLS-Serv-ice for former Birmingham resident Jacob A. Dean, 89, of 1996 Baby Boy Hedglen Lone Pine will be 2 p.m. to-Service for the baby boy of!1™"™ * the Manley Bailey Mr. and Mrs. John Ml Hedglen of 1186 Airport, Waterford Town-sMp, will be 9 a.m. tomorrow at the Huntoon Funeral Home, with burial in Mount Hope Cemetery. Survivors Include the parents; one brother, Fred Green at faomie; and four sisters, Cindy and Christine at home, Mrs. Sharon Lace of Keego Harbor and Mrs. Dawn Tasca of Pontiac. Luther Humphrey Service for Luther Humphrey, 67, of 405 Second will be 1:30 p.m. Thursday at the Sparks- Funeral HomO, Birmingham. Burial will be in Greenwood Cemetery, Birmingham. Mr. Dean died yesterday. He was a mason contractor. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Rose Mary Willis of Birmingham and 'Mrs. Raymond Nixon of Walnut Lake; three grandchildren; three greatgrandchildren; and one sister. Frank W. DiCea * OAKLAND TOWNSHIP -Service for Frank W. DiCea, 58, of 840 W. Clarkston will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home, Pontiac. Garl OK (Donthon (Donald 3t. Johns A Chapel That Reflects Dignity ... Whether it be a small service for only the immediate family, or the very /largest, facilities of the Donel-son-Jones Funeral Home are perfect. Outstanding is the Chapel, large enough to seat hundreds, but aglow with soft dignity and friendliness. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy; Mr. DiCea,' an employe of the City of Pontiac, died Sathnday. Surviving ace his wife, Marion; two daughters, lbs. Charles McKeller of Pontiac and Mrs. Hollis Letson of Lake Orion; a son, RidiartfVL: of Pontiac; a brother, Louis DiQfa of Pontidb; four sisters, includ- \ ing Mrs. Margaret Jenkins aqd MTS- Baylis Hoyt, both of Pontiac; and eight grandchildren. Mrs. Dorothy D. Hull ROCHESTER — Prayer service for Mrs. Dorothy D. Hull, 31, of 327 Oak will be 7 p.m. tonight at Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home, PonttecJHEer body will be taken to the Earl Jones Funeral Home, Equality, Hi., for services there Wednesday. Burial will be in Undale Memorial Cemetery, Harrisburg, IQ. Mrs. Hull, owner of Dorothy’s Casual Beauty Salon, was killed In an auto accident Friday in Troy. Sundving- are '. her -parents, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Oxford; a daughter, Gloria L. Hull' at home; and three brothers.* ; Tommy N. Hutchison ROCHESTER — Service for Tommy N. Hutchison, 48; of 500 Elizabeth will be Wednesday at Gregg Funeral Home, Jones-boro, Ark. Burial will be in S h a r p Cemetery, Lawrence County, Ark. L o c a 1 arrange-are^by the D. E. Purs-leyFuneral Honfe, Pontiac. Mr. Hutchison died Friday in an automobile accident. He was an employe of Jet Products Co. Surviving are his mother, Lena, of Walnut Ridge, Ark.; two daughters, Mrs. Shirley Gooder of Seattle, Wash., arid Sonya of Pontiac; a son, Robert S. of Pontiac; and one sister.- Mrs. John O'Neil LAKE ORION - Service for Ms John (Alice) O’Neil 86, of of 43 Slater will be 3:30 p.m. Wednesday at the | Griffin Funeral Home, Pontiac. Burial will be in Perry Mount Park Cemetery, Pontiac. Mrs. O’Neil died yesterday. She was a member of Central Christian'Church. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Harold Applegate of Lake Orion and Mrs. William Murphy of St. Petersburg. Fla.; two sons, Frank S. nod John A., both of Pontiac; seven grandchildren; 14 great-grandchildren; three great-great-grand-children; and one sister.' Tammy Lynn Taylor WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP - Tammy Lynn Taylor, 7-month-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William D. Taylor Jr,, 1551 Petrola, died today. Her body at tiie Elton Black Funeral Home, Union Lake. Surivivihg besides her parents are grandparents Mr. and Mrs, Paul E. White of W. Bloomfield Township, Mrs. Cecil O. GuiH of Saugus, Calif., and William D. Taylor of Pontiac, Death Notices mcsa. vauw; w.i Apru w. iw) 840 West Clarkston Road, Lake Orion; age 58; beloved husband of Marlon Dlcea; dear father of Mrs. Charles MeKslltr, Mrs. Hollis Let-son and Richard L. Dlrae; dear brother of Mrs. Marjaraf JjnJ-Ins, Mrs. aam Hit Mre. Vincent Greco, Mrs. Anthony Ofeee . and Louis- Dlcea;.. also survived ; tw . eight ■! grandchildren. Funeral rimim ww. toteMnentta While Chapel Cemetery. Mr. Dlcea . will- lie: In state at the funeral GALANV ANtfo: April 30, 1967; Ml Prall Street) age 75; beloved wife of Joseph Galon; dear mother of I jdMen and Felix Galan; dear alt- * greet-grondenlld.- Fwnbrpl MM _____.__________ ApcH 303 Central; age 92; <--momer of Clemencia Gilla, Atana-So, Ynes. Concha, Ansel, Alfonso, aid Carmella Gonzales; also sur- Rosary, wIB be tt meivln A. Schutt Fuinfw Funeral service srlll ha held Tuesday. May 1 at It a.m. at the St. Vincent be Paul Catholic Church. Interment In Mount Hope Cemetery. Mrs. Gonzales win lie In Stott at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and boro Hedglen; door brother of Mrs. Sharon Loco, Mrs. Dawn Tosco, Prod Groan, Cindy and Christina Hedglen. Funeral service will be FEDERAL 4-45T1 *JPadcinq On Our (Premues =m| fit! ^f 855 WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC HOLTZ, EDNA; April 38, 1967; 108 West Rutgers; age St; dear mother of Kenneth Kufcuk; dear sister of Mary Frawtey, Clara Roberts, Al-bert and Edwin Kukuk; also survived by fl Chaps) Comotory. Mrs. Holtz will lit in stale at the funeral home — 1 p.m. Sunday. HULL, DORTHY D.; April 21. IML 327 Oak Street, Rochester; ago 31; beloved daughter of Mr. and Mft. Raymond Oxford; door mother of : Gloria L. Hull; dear slslar of William. Charles and Lowell Oxford. Prayer service will be . held tonight, May V at 7 P.m. at the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Hama after . which -Mrs. Hull will be token to the Earl Jones Funeral Home In Equality; Illinois tor service and . burial mart, interment In LIAdato Memorial Cemetery, Harrisburg. -----Sr.u ,.. („ at me I visiting mterv, I Ito In i I tours 3 to s'andT HUMPHREY. LUTHER; April 30, 1967; 405 Second Street; age 47; dear brother of Mrs. Odom Endsley, Mrs. Grant Chapel, Mrs. Eula Paterson, Thomas and Morris Humphrey. Funeral sirvtce will bo held Thursday, May 4 of 1:30 p.m. at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Interment In Oakland Hills Cemetery. Mr. Humphrey will lie n state after 7 p d f to t ristt- HUTCHtSON, TOMMY N,; April 28, 1967; $00 Elizabeth Atom*. Rochester; age 48; dear tether of Mrs. Arnold (Shirley) Gooder, Miss Sonya Hutchison and Robert Scott Hutchinson; dear brother of Miss Norma HUteMson. Funeral service will be Mid Wednesday, May 3, at Gregg Funeral Home, ‘— Sfate Man Dies in Boat Mishap ALGONAC (AP) - David Ta-mulewlc, 23, of Algonac suffocated Sunday alien he was trapped beneath an overturned boat which ran onto Squirrel Island in the St, Clair River. A companion,^ James Stone, 3, of Algonac, was trapped along with Tamulewicz when the boat flipped over in a marshy area near the island, Stone told police he managed to free himself. Stone, pideed up eight hours after the accident, was listed in good condition at a St. Clair hospital. Barre Guild Monuments. 'See us todav. I \ H8RRRRHMIi ■ OPEN EVENINGS TIL 8—SUNDAYS 1-4 : Memorials jor Over 73 Years - INCH MEMORIALS, INC. 864 n* Parry FE 5-6931 e* Mow Cwehnf Prices Sharpe Cemetery. Arrangements by ate K a. Fortify Funeral Home. McLAIN, WILLIAM J.; Apr 11 26, 1967; CanegapeHL California, (Formerly ef Fontlac>;*gw SU- te--Ipvsd husband of Loon* MdLoln; Mloved ton of Mrs. Frenk McLain; „ dear fethor of Wendy McLain; deer brother of Mrs. David (Enid) Millar. Funeral oorvlco wo* hold -Saturday, April tt, at 11 a.m. at the McKinley Minion Hills Fo-neral Homo, San Fernando Valiev. Intormont In CaUtomla. NORTON, CORNELIA; April 30, 1M7; 141 Venetian Way, Algonac, (Formerly of Fontloc); ago 53; to-loved wife of K. C. Norton; door sister of Mrs: Esrl Beaman and Janie Norton. Funeral oorvlco will bo MM Wadneadey, May 3. at 2 p.m. at tM GilOert Funeral Homo. 1432 Michigan Avenue, AMonac. Interment In Oaklawn Cemetery. Mr*. Norton will lie in state et O'NEIL. ALICE; April 30, 1967; 43 Slater ttraet; Lika Orton; age •*; dear mother of Mrs. Harold Apple-gate. Mrs. wuiwm Murphy, Frank S. and John A. O'Neil; door slstar of Mrs. William Anderson; also a^l'^eto'pran^hl&'ra^Veol-great grandchildren. Funeral service win be held Wadneadey, May 3, at 3:30 p.m. at tM Sparks-Griffin funeral home. Interment In Parry Mount Park Cemetery. Mrs. O'Neil will lie In state at the funeral home. (Suggested vlaltlng SPRINGER, JOHN T.t April 1967; J Neeme' Drive; ate loved ton of Mr. and O. Springer; beloved /gran Mrs. Albert Hudson; door wuiw of Mrs. Tarry Wilkins. Funeral service will M hold Wednesday, May' 3, at 1:30 p.m. at tM Don-elson-Johns Funeral Homo. Intor-m White Chapel Cemgtory. --------------------! Tjabt H ir. Springer will • funeral Itoma. g hours 3 to 5 Man Dies at 107 MONROE (AP) -r Former slave Louis Ypung, who would have been 108 May 17, died Saturday, in Monroe Convalescent Home, A native , of Pittayi-vania County, Va., he came to Monroe in 1161. to work in paper ftills and stone quarries. On his 100th Mrttiday, Young said he had ooffivedhfe five trothoro and six sisters. t Aid, Inc. to eon nmunity. of oceT - t Death Notices Roy Moirlfi; dear brother of Mrs. ~ Jam L. Brauher, Mrs. Fred Niche on, Mrs. Roger JMeqn, Miss Der-othy Ferns and Charles T. Brown. Funeral Pllpce Will M held wadnaaduy, Mm X et 11 a.m. at fie nMMri-Jnfins Funeral Home. Interment In CnNeanl Hills Cemetery. Mr, Broom will lie In ototo of IM Mtaeal home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to S end 7M 9.) COATS ORAYTO^aiftHOM,W cTTgodhardt puniralhS Kongo Harbor. Ph. 682-0201).; ’.^jiWrotsoHoofhw tAyloA TAMMY LYNti; May T, 19*7; 1551 Patrol a. West Bloom-field Township, Mlaved Infant dMMdttor of WlUiom O. and Cheryl U Trey for, Jr., beloved Infant granddaughter of. Mr. and Mrs. Paul E. White, Mr. WWIdm D, Taylor Sr. and Mra, cadi O. Guilt. Funeral arrangements art peodtog at IM Elton Black Funeral ; Horn*, 1233 Union Lake Road, Union Lake. Baby Taylor Will Ito In state af IM funeral Bfokim lt tM family circle_____ Our deer ono is passed away ' Passed from Earth and Earthly darkness Into a bright and perfect day. Sadly misted by win Gertrud* and chMfcam. Huntoon FUNERAL HOME n0SS£g,&?'**'*Vr™m Voorhees-Siple --FUNERAL H0ME. 332-I37t istebllehed Over 40 Years CB—ttry LpipB ACID INDIGESTION? PAINFUL Gee? Get new FH5 Tablet*. Fat? *« liquids. Only It cento. Sbnme Bra*. Drugs. n.. ANNOUNCING ANOTHER" DEBT AID INC. OMCU, 711 ROwr Building, branch of Oatraltto wall - AVOID GARHIIHMKNTS, ■ BANKRUPTCY, REPOSSEMIOIIS, BAD CREDIT AND HARASSMENT. ]Mf raitiS "you can't borrow YOURSE^ OUT^ OP DEBT/' ^^ ^ Ihru to-* «*• ** 3E[Tan‘d*LI< HALL FOR I1 BOX REPLIES At 19 a.m. today there were replies at The Press Office in the folio wing boxes: I, 4, 5, 6, 14, 15, 2A 28, 31, 36, 37, 4«, 45, 51, •MV* IK f , a Mon you can afford, DEBT CONSULTANTS OF PONTIAC, INC. B14 Pontiac Stoto Bank Bldg. STATE UCEnSmONDED (frown hayride. Followed by home cooked SpagMItl dinner. See newborn .animals — .Lambs, piglets, calves; chicks. For rosorvattons, iHMWL • UPLAND HILLS F------- notice to Driver of blue truck Involved In hit-run oeddont, April 15. If cMitods us wilt not gaai«to, ,fr . Malta to o* eought Inland to bring crlmlnla charges. OR 4-IOT. ON AlhS Ari'iR fHIS date mAy 1, 1967, I will net M responsible tor any dobto contracted by' any ether man myself. Fred K. Sags Sr., 3962 Noaring Rd., Rochester, ELECT A S50 SPRING WAkO-rob* tor only til by bohm * Queen's-Way lleifioa. FOP Inform*- WIGS 100 PER CENT Mir SS9.9S and "A a Wipe FE S4214, GET OUT OF DEBT ON A PLANNED BUDGET PROGRAM YOU CAN'AFFORD TAILORED TO YOUR INCOME SEE . - MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS 7H Fontloc State Bonk Bldg. FE 3-0656 LOST: FEMALE CALICO CAT IN vicinity of Ronolt St. and Cot- foot. Reward. 335-0303.__________ LOST: GRAYISH BROWN POODLE REWARD. 3tt MONTH OLD MIN I A-him Poodle, undipped blade mile whit* chln ena throat, name's ■' ons puppy, vicinity Oakland Pork. FE "Papa", of Oliver the 19*4 civil ribhts :vlaw prohibits, with ;:; CERTAIN EXCEPTIONS. X; EsOtSCRIMINATIOIt BE- :•> K CAUSE ON SEX. SINCE :$ X; SOME OCCUPATIONS AM ;X X CONSIDERED MORE AT- -y. TRACTIVE TO PERSMN % ---------------- iV rcmMLE vwbvmni nm v* :::: CONVENIENCE OF RBAO-% § ERS. SUCM LIITTIMI ARE » SNOT INTENDED TO EX»;X X CLUOE PERSONS Pr & EITHER SEX -X Halp Wonted Male Help Wanted Male Rd., 349-3600. Coll tor eppolnt-i .xor, apply In por- Needed at Once . Horry RPMP sodetos, Inc.; 407 Fort Straat, Pori Huron, Mtehtoon — Phono 909523. EXPERIENCED AAECHANlC, OBBB •' guoranto*, ^plenty Af 'r~L Cross benefits. OL 1-914/ Mercury. 4M Mein, Rod-- EXPERIENCED BARTENDER, Ing. Chorbo Inn, coll <24-3949 el - 5 p.m. f ini, tom npnUSW'iKVTO slst truck dispatcher and otto clerical duties, wrlto Pontiac Press Box <3 giving dotoll* oa to experience, draft status, marital sto-tus, salary etc. FOREAAAN — SCASW MACHINE eon to Chicago Motor I Corp., 3936 Auburn Avo» Heights, M*-*~ FULL-TIME BUILDING CUSTODIAN with dwelling quartan tor family provided On pramleot. Largo local church. Please repl)r in Own handwriting to Pontiac Prase Box No. GAS STATION ATTENbANT. EX-perlenced. Mechanically , Inclined. Local —----------------- GA6 STATION ATTENOANt, FULL time. Airport MoMIU Service, 5995 Highland Rd„ Pontiac. GOLF COURSE WORKERS NEED- Hlll Country Club, Clarkston. A si for George. '(Skill men — ixiWitEkcib - 4 WELL DRESSED MEN TO DE-llver advertising material. $15 par evening. Cor necessary. 625-2648. cellent salary and working conditions. Sherman Perscriptiont. Maple at Letuer, Birmtodiom. —i45& - TRAINEE DRAFTSMAN 11-35, high ochod or college draft- 'TSternational PERSONNEL 1130 S. Woodward BTiem 642-8368 $550 PLUS CAR SALES TRAINEE 21-30, Some Cotlooe International Panonnel— 10M W. Huron 33*4?71 $600 MONTHLY SALARY International corporation will train i, men, ages 11-26, to comoleto office etoff. Musf I $6,000 FEE PAID COLLEGE DROPOUTS $15,000 A YEAR It minimum Income potontlol with leading maintenance produd manufacturer. Featuring new Uquld Metallic Siding, and .THREE YEAR guaranteed blacktop easier used by Nation's biggest hotels management companies, ment. Liberal commit:. ■ vanetd weekly. Open account plan. Exparlance not required. Box No. 5035 Kansas City, <4131 ____________ 1-1 MECHANIC ’frOwRvMT ____ ____ ... Kemp, Lloyd Bridges Dodge, WOL k TRUCli’ MfeCHANIC, OWN TOOLS good wagos. 554 Franklin Rd. mmmmstm—— ATTENTldk $50 WEEKLY-PART TIME Four evenings, 4-10 p.i men, age 21-35, .to i benefits. Onto making good Prefer experienced 900 Oakland----- ...r. ______ fringe Ihote interested m mnnev n—rt apply. train. Night shift, good wages, paid lunch hour, meals, hospitalization and other benefits. Apply Big Boy Res-touront Tolegrapn-Huran. GUARDS \ Full and part time, Immediate city and suburban lob openings^ Atount Clemens. Utica end Blrmlng- , Mm Included. BomM Guard Serv-Ices, 441 E. Grand Boutovard, De-trait. LO 0-4153,1»4 pjn. INSPECTION — PART-TIME- 13 INSTANT MONEY We need 10 men to fill unskilled and semiskilled factory and warehouse lobs. Machine operators, as- Offtce Open < p.m. .VOPHIil NO FEE Employers Temporary Service 27320 GRAND RIVER, REDFORD 2320 Hilton Rd., 'Femdale 65 South Main, Clawson PAID OA1LY ------- Insurance Organization Just entering Michigan, exceptional earnings tor self starter who likes people end ties evenings Free — No Salary 9— But can be part time to start. Advancement possible, depending on your own efforts. Call FE 4-9012 for Initial Interview — Our Executive Vice President will be In Pontiac on May 5 A *, 1947 for final BARBER, MASTER OR' AMMWN-flee. Family Barber Shop, Sylvan VniOflO. 40344IS or <734495. , BARTENPfck, < .NIGHTS PER CARPiNtElClN tourneymen^ u ONLY T? crows. ___as. CoH frORMfc. &■ semMklltod, steady work. Ovsr-tlme. Ideal worklno conditions. All fringe benefits, profit sharing. Ap-ply Circle Precision Grinding Co. 1700 E. 14 Mile Rd., Madison Heights, between Dsqulndre-Jehn R COLLECTION MAN. TRAINEE OR expirtohesd. Freflt sltorlng. *4,000' plus commission. Lou Wilson. 334-1 2471. SnoHing A SnoUtog- COLLEGE STUDENTS . Prepare for your summer employment NOW. intomatfenal Corpora- jewSer wanted TO_.W6Rk IN appolntmer....... MALE PRODUCTION HELP WANT- Apply SEA-Ray boats. 1 Mai! to wash cars, pump gas, general clean-up In service station, foil time only. Must to married, over 25 yrs. of at I Long Lake Rd., Bloomfield MAN, FOR GENERAL OUTSIDE work. Fontloc Mobil* Pork. FE 5-9902. /MANAGER TRAIliEE FOR RETAIL tobric rioro. Exportonce desired BW W lWOBSonf. HWl sritog MANAGER TRAINEES ees end refreshment stand men-agers. Apply or call totwoon 4 p.m. and midnight of MlroelO Mila Drtvp-ln Theatre, Fontloc. Drive-,ln Ttootre. Blye Sky Drive In Ttooko and WaterMed Drive-In Theatre. OR 4-1801. FOR GENERAL, helpful, full or parti MECHANK;, FULL TIME OtiLY. Mult to top notch, ootor and over 25 yrs. of age. xxto how working but hang*, tote to bottor •II Ytittoiv MEN WANTED ■ t sk overtime, immedi- ate h Wo train you to teech driving and provide you with a completely dual - controlled training car and also the customers. Requirements: Over 24 — married good driving record — excellent character — high school ’grad- M^TEL^OESK^i^^i^'- N^T^ ANO MdTOR ROUTE DRIVER, DETROIT Fret Press, i | South! • fob, ^1 MOTORCYCLE MECHANIC,'EXPO-rioncad only, yoar-around work, g||d pay, hospltsllzitlon. 333-1102. Ho(i Wo itod Male 6 $200 per mo.— PART TIME HELP y accounts on l. Approx. 10 ___ ,_________...nl 'nave cer and bo bondOble. Coll Mr, Gollnae, 941-0147,. Detroit.__________ PHARMACISTS * Looking tor management with top tanefifi. Ownership. Exc. salary. Several openings in West side location. Phono Sid Barbas, Dsndy Drugs. 502-8233, Dearborn. PORTER FULL TIME, EVENING - shift; uniforms. furnished, jrner Beef Maple Rd. SALES CiERK Full time, retail store, pleasant working conditions, fringe tone-fits. A. L. Dammsn Co., Bloomfield Plaza, Ttlegraph jsod Mople. "14-3010. mission pMIC ar<7>13>7. SERVICE MANAGER lance tor HOMER PKPI. l*ONTiA~ BUICK CHEVY. Apply —person to Everett firm Manager. OA 0-3S2I. :hanlc woi... hove local rwf. iB- SttLVtti STATION ATTENDANT. - ■ Days. Good pay. Eonoftlo. Paid holidays. Apply at Eton* Stoll terries, 2005 14 Milo Rd. it Eton SER®-STATION ATTENDANT — $125 per week, experience; pert time $1.70 per hr. Stoll Station of Telegraph — Long Lake. SHORT ORDER OR GRILL MAN. 12 noon to 9 p.m. Moray's Golf ■ 3. Country Chib. 2210 Union Lotto soon. Bass salary pit Earnings and fringe hours, excsllenf " Birmingham. <24-4767. » Manager tor . . Rodomochor Owyy Olda, Inc.—..... Clarkston. Apply In parson only— QUALITY CONTROL. EXCELLENT personallly. Auto and soft goods experience helpful, *12,000. Fee paid. Call Lou Wilson, 334-2471,. Snelllng A Snolllng. RAILROAD WORKERS Immediate openings tor switch men and yard darks. Outdoor work, various Shifts and root days, minimum hslght Is V6“, vision 20-20. Apply In person 9 a.m. Monday May 1st at Yard Office, Johnson Ave. at railroad, Pontiac. GRAND TRUNK WESTERN RAILROAD \ ‘ An equal, opportunity employer \ REGISTERED PtijJtMAcYst 13,000 ANNUAL SALARY. ™ ...UR WORK WEEK. ALTER- natingkshift. paid holidays AND VACATION. MAJOR MEDICAL /AND. HOSPITALIZATION PLAN. LIBERAL EMPLOYEE DI SCOUNTSi-PROFlT' SHARING, RETIREMENT PLAN. FOR INTERVIEW, CALL MR. NEWHART, 232-2121. WALGREEN'S FLINT, MICHIGAN. RESPONSIBLE MAN VTQ TRAIN tor supervlaory—|ob — Machine shop background preferable but not essential. Year-eround steady work. Apply In person to Ohleaon Motor Products Cori — Ave., AabuHcJ.... OVER 13, 40 HOUR TOOL DESIGN. WILL CONSIDER a sharp man able to follow blueprints. *9,100. Fee Paid. Lou Wilson. 334-2471. SnaHtng & Snelllng. TOOL ROOM MACHINIST FOR ALL around tool, fixture, - model making, ehd general tool maintenance. Steady employment, light work. Call A. Dolecek, 628-2588. Syncra Crop^ Oxford, Mich. -~~TURRiT-|jWHi|-^ET(JP-MAN Turret lathe operators -Day shift and right shift. Shop foreman nights. Experience with turret IWIiSs and milling __essential. Apply Holly Tool and machine Incorporated, 111, Rosette, Holly, MlchBbiL • TV SERVICE^ MAN, EXPEftl- USED CAR SALESMEN expep.::nced new and WANTED MEN WHO OWN A PICK- EL 7-2490 or after Salesmen We have full tim« openings for experienced men in the following departments: -Men's -Clothing Appliances Plumbing <5j Heating TRAINEE Monument Sales Furniture Excellent earnings, m a n y company benefits. Apply 2nd floor personnel ' department daily between 10 a.m. and 9:00 p.m^ \ , Montgomery Ward PONTIAC MALL WANTED: GARDENER. FULL-time salary. Must have own transportation. Coll 682-1214 otter 4 p.m. WILL TRAIN Hydraulic, pneumatic, electric, if you ore handy with tools — .see Mr. Brondyke, Jod Products, 1404 E. Avis Or. Madison Heights. 14 Mile A Deaulndre area._____ Wanted: New Car Salesman Wo need two aggressive salesmen to round out our soles force. General Motors sxpsrl-ence preferred, however any Apply in Person Downey Oldsmobile 550 Oakland FE 2-8101 $325-$400 GENERAL OFFICE paid. Mrs. Pllana. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1880 S. Woodward B'hom 4424243 $240 PLUS GENERAL OFFICE s Filing, Mgring, light typing INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL $350-$450 STENOS AND SCRETARIES BIRMINGHAM AREA typing 5*45, shorthand, 10. Fto paid. Mrs, Ptland. INTERNATIONAL personnel 1*10/ S. Woodwand B'hsm 44224341 $350* $500 “ SECRETARIES - Good skills, no ago limit international personnel 18S0 S. Woodward B'hom. 442-8268 AAA-1 CORPORATION Wo toad 4 young woman to complete our staff to Pontiac office. Must to lt-34, single tM high school graduate. - Salary Trt S150 per write P.O, Box 91/ Dreytonf Plains, evening — _________________________I. Julie's Restaurant, 930 ML Clemens. Ap-'n person only. FORD MOTOR COMPANY UTICA PUNT —------HBOS —- ELECTRICIANS TOOLMAKERS PIPEFITTERS MILLWRIGHTS Hourly Personnel Office 23 Mile at Mound > General Machinists |sjs| Lathe & Grinder Operators Day and Afternoon Shifts Avnllable APPLY IN PERSON 8 A.M. TO 4 PJM. MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY Missile and Space Division - LTV-Aerospace Corporation EMPLOYMENT OFFia-NORTH GATE ■ Van Dyke at 16i Mile Road) Warren, Mich* ■ Sign of Healthy Mental Attitude Self-Esteem: Learning Factor to allow students to follow a pattern of school failure and then attempt' Id rectify the error through elaborate emergency programs. Hie banding of selfesteem . in pupils should start early jand be a major goal ait every grade level. Prevention of low self-esteetn is easier than its correction after a pcjriod of years. ; A pupils knowledge of bis success automatically develops high self-esteem. To attain this success he must be working at a level at which he can show results. tor in eapmh^. ft is a Sijpi of the healthy mental attitude necessary to learning readiness. " i Lack of sdf- | e s h'e e m is a > danger sighal H-jA any level jjtf schooling from kindergarten to g school. It Is an emotional' load which will auto-HHB matically ye* i DR. NASON duce a student’s tibiltty to learn. chief and becomes a behavior A common trait among school dropouts is their lack of self-esteem, which presents the greatest single hurdle in the salvage of these teen-agers at job training centers. * 'j * The attitude is so thoroughly rooted in these students’ thinking that it is difficult for them to even make mi attempt to isw£ ceed. : * It is difficult and expensive In (hit present day classrooms, some children in the 4 th-grade class cannot Succeed at 4th-grade work. These pupils should be learning to read and write and manipulate numbers at the 2nd or 3rd-grade level! Others in the same classroomj need to be challenged with woVk above their grade lev^l if they are to attain the mental lift P PARATROOPERS toe pro-Soviet Chinese * cduldn’t handle it they'd drop ! paratroopers. Russia has three times as many as America, all ^~tjralned in free-falling, excellent raidlnz.” I asked another diplomat: P L “What would trigger such dras-■Knttc intervention?” i “Self-protection,” he re» ^.^ Jplled, “Brezhnev and Kosygin ""^seriously question Mao’s sta- Teachers who can give children sympathetic understanding, who can communicate their subjects in a manner that allows students to have day by day success^ and who instill in their students feelings of self confidence and pride, are worth their weight in gold. m0tS even minor battles commenced toe Soviets couldn't be A smaller version, weighing only 2,800 pounds. can dear half an acre an how. Both blades are made commercially by the THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 1, Ip67 Antiambush fool Tested for Viet By Science Service FT. BELVOIR, Va. — A tractor Made that can clear away trees and foliage that could bide ainbushers in Vietnam was tested here by the U. S. Army. Wei g h 1 n g more than 4,600 pounds, the Made can dear an acre of ground i^i an hour. It also carries a “stinger,” a sharp projection nsed to split large trees so they can be sheared at ground leveL The same Made can be used to pile cut material in even rows and to construct drainage Men’s 30*42 Briefs..... b. . i...... 3 Prs. $22r Men’s S-M-L-XLT-Shirts.........,3 for 922r Men’s 30-42 Boxer Shorts • n...... 3 Prs. $2S7 Men’s Athletic Shirts..............3 for $157 Beys’ 8-16 Briefs................ 3 Prs. *17? Boy S’ 8-16 T-Shirts, ..........., ,.3 for $lyy ^ ] ; “Charge It” at Kresge’s nr ea YOUR TICKET TO TRAVEL FUN The 1967Apache Mesa At A Camper Show; Special - *1095“ , Include, three bumw Move, dinette, rtwk, ice bex, bottle gas end carrier. Also see the now crank-tip Ramada eight sleeper. And another show special - the falcon model at S0T5J0 EVANS EQUIPMENT 6507 Dixie Hwy., Clarkston, 625-1711 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 1, 1967 NINE Bart* your toes in sunny sandals. Thread your toes witli skinny thongs. Circle your toes with hai'efh rings. Show your toes (but cover theirest) in surfsiders. Wrap your toes (up to your knees) m leather-lueed orgy scandals. All the fun of sun-shoeing is more fun with QjualiCraft Casualets, the shoes with a new-right-now yoting spirit. Surfsider-tie with tan suede Q /"\/"V ff A A 4.99. The collection, O toVl.VjH upper.