Reds Need Not Register, High Court Says 1 WASHINGTON OB - The Supreme Ck)urt today declared unconstitutional a requirement that members of the Communist party must register with the government. The requirement is contained in a section of the 1950 Subversive Activities Controi Act. JusUce William J. Brennan delivered the 8-0 decision. The decision held that the act’s requirement conflicts .................. tvision that nohody can he compelled to give evidence against himself in any criminal case. The Communist party itself now is on trial in Federal District Court here on charges of failure to register as a representative of the Soviet Union. There was no immediate indication just how today’s Supreme Court decision-based upon registration of individuals j- may eventually apply to the case against the party. However, Justice Department officials said this trial will continue while government lawyers study the high tribunal’s opinion. Specifically involved in to* day’s decision were William Albertson of Brooklyn, N.Y., and Roscoe Quincy Proctor of Oakland, Calif. The Subversive Activities Control Board in 1982-ordered Al-bertsoh to register. A similar order to Proctor was issued in 1963. The Justice Department said Proctor was a member of the Communist party's national committee and was on the New York jState governing board. The Communist party of New York expelled Albertson on July 7, 1964, calling him a “police agent." He asked, however, that the Supreme Court rule in his case as well as that of Proctor. Albertson and Proctor appealed to the high tribunal after the U.8. Court of Appeals uph^ the board orders. They ebntended the individual registration requirement violates the Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination and impinges on First Amendment rights of freedom of belief and association. Justice Brennan said the risks of self-incrimination involved in individual registration “are obvious.” The Supreme Court was told that outcome of the case would affect board orders against 34 other persons and seven similar cases pending at the board level. The requirement to fill out and file a specified form, he declared, “is inconsistent with the protection of the self-incrimination clause" of the Constitution. Th% Weather THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition VOL. 123 NO. 241 ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. MONDAY. NOVKMHKR i»(;.'> -.52 PAGE.S 84 Lost in Sea Skipper to Tell of Disaster Suspend Prof for Hypnosis Dearborn Coed Was in Trance 16 Hours DEARBORN (AP) - Henrjr Ford Community College yesterday suspended a part-time psychology instructor for placing a coed. under a hypnotic trance Friday. The instructor, Gerald G. Griffin, 32, of Nankin Township, said it was an experiment and scientific in purpose. ^ CyalUa WeUmaa, IS, •( lak-ster, was brought oat of the trance Saturday, If hoars after it w$s induced, by psychla-tristo at Wayae Coaaty Oen-cral Hospital. Dr. Brace L. Danto, hospital psychiatrist said he was nncertaia what after effects, if any, might re- CYNHOA WELLMAN “Griffin is suspended pending the outcome of an investigation,’’ said Ray Howe, dean of in-. Btniction at the college. Griffin, fiHiner educat psycholo^t for Oakland County Schods, is scheduled to take oral examlnatiom Thursday for his doctoral degree in counseling psychology. HIRED IN FALL He was employed this fall as a part-time instructor by the college. Howe said he had learned that Griffin, an araatenr hypnotist, bad hypnotized seven students in his introdnctory psychology coarse. Griffin said he had no formal training la hypnosis. “I met with him and told him this had no place in the course he was teaching and that It should absolutely cease,’’ i Howe. “He admitted he been hypnotizing students for experimental purposes.” Griffin said he was attempting to teach his class how hypnotism could be used to accelerate leandng ability by removing mental blocks. Griffin said he decided to (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) LANSING (AP)-GoV: George Romney will make a complete report tomorrow on his trip to South Viet Nam, he announced today as he retumpd to his desk for the first time in nearly four weeks. Steering clear of specifics of the Oriental trip, he told news conference “by all odds the most interesting aspect was what was seen in South Viet Nam. Tb make tlie In Today's Press Defense Systems McNamara orders recheck in wake of blackout > PAGE B-10. Hawaii Residents hope for end to torrential rains—PAGE B-7. Congo Vote Future looks bright for Tshombe - PAGE A-7. Area News .......A-4 Astrology - C-8 Bridge...........C4 Cross word Pusile ...D-U .... C4 ......A-l ......C4 ......C4. Sports .......D-I-IM limaters .'... TV-Radlo Pregrams D-11 Wllsoa, Bari D*ll Wenen’s Pages B-l-B-l Gov. Romney to Report oh S. Viet Trip Ingfui report, I will have two means of reporting...” He then annonoced a Tuesday afternoon news conference and a 7 p.m. broadcast and televised talk from the University of Detroit. Romney said it was "good to be back..I come back with a greatly increased knowledge of conditions in the Orient, ciaily Southeast Asia.” He said he had met at least 400 of the estimated 4,0004,000 Michigan men stationed in South Viet Nam. He said his two weeks in Japan showed liim “one of the great economic miracles of the (Continued on Page 2, Col. Blackout Laid to Ontario Site WASHINGTON (;P) — The massive power failure that blacked out most of the northeast last Tuesday was attributed to a broken relay at Sir Adam Beck Plant No. 2 at Queenston, Ont., a part of the Ontario hydro-generating system on the Niagara'tliver. This was reported by United States and Canadian officials after nearly a week of inquiry into the cause of the failure that rolled^ ' over New York City, much of New York State and New England. In Toronto, Hydro chairman Ross Strike was most specific: He said the failure was caused by a broken relay at the Sir Adam BecK Plant No. 2 al Queenstoh, Ont. Strike toM a news conference Hydre was importing a total of LI million kilowatts in power on the six lines going into the plant and the relay ln«ak caused all other relays to go out. The 1.6 million kilowatts were thrown onto the U. S. distribution facilities, causing a very rapid increase in frequency. Strike added. He said this tripped, safety but all of it work and the northeastern states and New York City were most badly hit by this surge of NIAGARA RIVER Chairman Joseph C. Swidler of the Federal Power Commission said today that beginning of the power failure “seems to have occurred in the Ontario hydro-generating plants on the Niagara Rlvbr.” He said this “resulted in a major inrush of power into the upstate Nqw York sys- 'There followed a series of trip-outs of transmission lines and generating plants of these systems,” Swidler added. Crime Forum Apathy Is Hit Citizens Unit Leader Cites Small Turnout Oakland Citizens Leagtie President Dale A. Winnie, disappointed in the small turnout Saturday at a law enforcement forum, today scolded public officials and citizens for their apathy toward crime. “Everyone complains about crime and wants to know what is being done to prevent it,” said Winnie, “yet they do little or nothing about it." Winnie’s remarks came after only 60 persons showed up for League-sponsored public conference on crime and punishment at Oakland University. Winnie, this morning, released an open letter he is mailing to all city commis-s 10 n 8, village councils and township boards in the conn- ly- “I charge each and evqry member . . . with a serious dereliction of duty and bit neglect of responsibility, elected representatives of the people, in not attending or sending representation to the for-m,” wrote Winnie. “Two separate panels and a distinquished luncheon speaker (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) LAW ENFORCERS — Threa exports crimu and pwrishment get together during a ' “ ■ ■ ■ *......... ilty.Thsy forum Saturday at Oakland University. «ra (from left),'PonUac Police Chief WiUlam K. Hangar, Michigan Suprenw Court Justice Theodore Souris, and Oakland County Prosecutor S. Jerome Bronson, the conference was sponsored by the Oakland County C^tl- Coast Guard to Probe Loss of Cruise Ship Will Seek Cause of Fire in Tragedy on the Yarmouth Castle MIAMI, Fla. (vR — The Greek captain of the Yarmouth Castle came out of seclusion today to tell the Coast Guard hisystory of the mystery fire that destroyed the cruise ship. Eighty-four crewmen and passengers are dead or missing. But Capt. Byron Voutsinas, on the advice of an attorney for Yarmouth Cruise Lines, Inc., refused to answer questions of newsmen when he emerged from a Coast Guard office. He declined even to tell his age. Voutsinas was closeted for an hour and 10 minutes with a preliminary inquiry board headed by Cmdr. George ’Treffs, assistant chief of the 7th Coast Guard District’s Merchant Marine Safety Division. TENDER CARE—One of the more badly burned survivors of the Yarmouth Castle sea disaster is given tender care as she is AP PlwWax lifted to an ambulance for a ride to a Miami hospital. Arthur Berk, the attorney who kept Voutsinas away from newsmen, said the company might issue a statement or make the captain available for interviews. OAK PARK OB - Fred R. Franc was a stubborn man when he wanted something. After the Yarmouth Castle went down in flames Saturday morning, Voutsinas filed a brief report to the vessel’s own then vanished in Nassau newsmen and authorities sought to talk to him. He showed up suddenly in Miami today. The list of missing and presumed dead in the deadly fire at sea rose to 84 today, including one known dead and 83 lissing and presumed lost. Yarmouth Cruises, Inc., added two more names to its roster of those who evidently failed to survive the tragedy — stewardess Phyllis Hall of Jamaica and the ship’s doctor, Lisardo Diaz Torrenz of Miami. Nineteen burned survivors remained in hospitals in Nassau aiuf Miami. Of five persons airlifted to Miami, three were reported in critical condition and the others “very 111.” The 14 still at Nasau’s Princess Margaret Hospital were in serious condition but a spokesman said he had “every hope” that they would survive. The cruise ship plung^ 1,700 feet to the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean in the Bahamas Saturday morning after fire swept her so suddenly no distress call was heard. LOOKED BACK ( "We looked back,” said Mar- Sret Farrell of Fort Lauder-le, Fla., who. was in a lifeboat. “There was a mass of red flames, then gray smoke, then nothing.” The U.S, Coast Guard sent two officers to Nassau, Bahamas, to see if they could learn' He wanted his wife, Estelle, to enjoy an ocean cruise Saturday and kept tiying for tickets until he got them. The Oak Park couple was among 83 persons listed as missing from the Yarmouth Castle, which burned and sank off the Florida coast Saturday. “Mom and Dad were in Miami for a convention and when it ended last Thursday, he decided to take a few days’ vacation,” said the couple’s daughter, Doreen, 19. aboard the vessel that left Miami Friday night for Nas-(Contlnued on Page 2, Col. 3) 'His Heart Was Set on Cruise' the plan until next March. But, the announcement said, ‘they decided that the immediate inactivation of these units, which are not required by contingency war plans, is essential.” Thus, the dissolution will go ahead as scheduled. She and her brother Kenneth, 13, are waiting for a sign of hope that their parents survived. SOUGHT RESERVATIONS “They had tried to get reservations on the Yarmouth Castle, but the shipping line said it was booked up for three weeks,” said Doreen. “Dad just kept calling and calling the shipping company. He’s like that. He doesn’t give Franc, 43, is district manager for a bottling company- He was attending (he national convention of the American Bottlers of Canned Beverages at Miami, Fla., last week. Four other Oakland (bounty persons were among those rescued from the stricken ship. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence C. Peterson of 24935 Lakeland, Farmington Township, were not listed among those missing and are apparently safe. Mrs. Bernard M. Schimmel of 73 Amherst, Pleasant Ridge, and Edna M. Nswman of 3180 Merrill, Royal Oak, reported relatives that they escaped without injury. Despite Opposition Cutback of Reserves On WASHINGTON (UPI) — Defense (Secretary Robert S. McNamara, flying in the face of a strong congressional protest, is pushing ahead with plans for immediate dissolution of 751 Army Reserve units containing 55,000 men. A Defense Department announcement during the weekend said the Pentagon chief and his top aides had ‘‘carefully considered” a Senate Armed Services Committee resolution ask-^^ ' ing him to defer action on The step will leave the Army Reserves without any organizations of division size. It will accomplish one of the major purposes of McNamara’s proposed merger of the Reserves and the National Guard, which Congress refused to approve. In another weekend statement, almost as controversial, the Pentagon said McNamara had ap- Take Umbrella, Earmuffs and Be Weather-Ready Keep your earmuffs and umbrellas handy. According to the weatherman’s predictions, you’ll need both. Occasional showers accompanied by higher temperatures are expected this evening and tomorrow. Tonight’s low will range from 35 to 40 with tomorrow’s high 46 to 52. The warming trend will be short-lived, however, as plum- proved a trial run of his “totaltemperatures and snow package” plan for ship construe- n„„ies are forecast for Wednes- tion. ’The plan will be applied to construction and purchasing of a new fast vessel now on the drawing board. It is known as the “FDL” (Fast Deployment Logistics), which will 1^ signed to carry helicopters and handle cargo at record speed. Rear Adm. William A. Brocket!, chief of the Navy’s Bureau of Ships, and Rear Adm. (Charles A. Curtze, his deputy, requested retirement recently in protest against this new procedure. The new plan involves “a single contract for the design, construction and certain sup-petrt functions of a number of ships of the same type,” the Pentagon said. Thus, instead of bidding on construction of tha ship only, as is currently the procedure, shipyards will be asked to submit proposals “covering an appropriate p o r t i o n of the total lUe; cycle” of the vessel. day. Lowest thermometer reading I downtown Pontiac before 8 a.m. was 30. By 2 p.m. the mercury climbed to 43. 49 Persons Were Disappointed . . . "50 calls from our Want Ad overwhelmed us. It was a quick sale,” slys Mrs. G.M. RED AMD aUACK SOO WOOL *RESS WANT ADS are read by many thou- sands every day-ito wonder they produM. Dial 3324181 for action A—2 THE POI^TIAC PRasS, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 19651 Two Yank Battalions Helped by 652s in Battle With N. Viets IN DRANG VALLEY. South hours of at times savage Viet Nam (AP) — B52 bombers I fighting, pounded rear positions of a! *. * * North Vietnamese regiment to-|, At least 129 enemy bodies day as two American infantry were counted and as many as battalions continued to slug it 150 more were believed to litter out with the Communist enemy the battlefield in front of the in heavy fighting near the Cam-iAmerican lines, bodian border. American casualties \ Two battalions of 1st Cavalry, termed moderate, but it Airmobile Division’s 7th Regi- quired more than a dozen heli-ment—the original outfit fol- copters to take out the Ameri-lowed Gen. George Custer into can wounded. Most of the dead the Battle of the Little Big Horn were still in the battle zone. It —held their own through 36 was too dangerous for helicop-~ ■ ters to fly except on urgent mis- Suspend Prof for Hypnosis (Continued FYom Page One) car A’ on the experiments off-campus when some of his students. including Cynthia, asked him to continue. Griffin said he met Cynthia in the parking lot near the college Friday evening and placed her in a trance while they sat in a car. When Griffin tried to waken her, “she did not respond all,” he said. “So I w through the technique from the beginning. When she didn’t respond I got panicky.” He said he spent several hours trying to bring her out of the triince and then took her to his home where he and his wife put her to rest on a couch. DIDN’T RESPOND “I thought if I let her sleep she would come out of it naturally,” he said. “But she didn’t.” Cynthia was then taken to the hospital. Dr. Danto said he used the drug sodium amytal (truth serum) to hplp bring Cynthia out of the trance. Then Griffin, using the power of suggestion, helped transfer his control over the girl to Dr. Danto, who was able to reawaken Cynthia by midmorning. “It was just one of those rare things,” said Griffin. “I don' think anybody is more upset than I. I never use hypnosis at a party or for sensational purposes. I'm a scientist.” NO CHARGES sions. MAIN ELEMENT The American troops captured from 60 to 70 automatic weapons of every kind during three major assaults by bers of the North Vietnamese 304th Division which infiltrated into South Viet Nam earlier this year. ★ ★ * The B52s hammered area of the more than two square miles where a ment of the North Vietnamese force was believed located. The American Cavalrymen pulled back before the air attack. ★ ★ ♦ In earlier air action. North Vietnamese gunners blasted one American AIE Skyraider out of the sky, a U.S. military spokesman reported. The pilot was killed when the plane exploded near the battleground 200 miles north of Saigon In the central highlands. Most of the U.S. force was inside a narrow, heavily wooded valley while North Vietnamese units held the high ground. INTENSE FIRE Sniper fire was intense during the lulls between North Viet-attacks. American caauaities mounted by the hour. Three North Vietnamese battalions—about 2,000 men—#ere engaging the American troops and it was possible that others were waiting farther back. NEVER LOST HOPE—Swedish engineer Kjell Nilsson waves after he was rescued yesterday from a flooded tunnel below the streets in Stockholm where he and another worker had been trapped for five days after AP Ptwtetax a landslide last Tuesday. Both men appeared in good condition but were rushed to a hospital for a checkup. Nilsson said, “We never lost hope.” Hospital Land Sale Is Opposed Dr. DopaW W. Martin, med- Swedes, Canadian Saved in Underground Rescues Birmingham Area News Start Open Occupancy Drive The Birmingham - Bloomfield Committee on Open Occupancy last night launched its campaign for Integrated housing in the rea. Its initial appeal for mobilization of sytnpathetic forces was made at an organizational meeting at the Birmingham Unitarian Church, attended by some 250 persons. Organizers of the group indicated they were pleased at the turnout. Their aim is twofold, they said: to form a committee which will meet with local realtors and to enlist persons who will “appeal to the conscience’ of their neighbors. Members reported there now are about 20 Negro families actively seeking homes in the Bloomfield Hills area, none having any luck. RANGING RESULTS They said that at least eight Negro families have moved into homes here, with results ranging from continual harassment to warm welcomes.. Mrs. Robert Grove, 19481 Beverly, Beverly Hills, is one of the committee members who have been ,working on the problem through the Bfarming-ham-Bloomfield Human Relations Council. STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) - Two Swedes and a Canadian . . . , , *• Sirl were saved in underground ical superintendent of PonUac Britain State Hospital, today voiced op-|over the weekend, while three position to the proposed sale Italians fell to their death in a of state hospital phoperty on'eave. Telegraph. I The two Swedes — electrician * ♦ * jSoeren Jansson, 26, and engi- Dr. Martin based his objec- neer Kjell Nilsson, 30 — were in tion on the possibility that the good condition when they Telegraph frontage will be re-emerged from a flooded tunnel quired in the hospital’s future in which they spent more than „pa™.npu„,. ‘ pri..t. d...l.p*. «orkpr, tad iBCh by iPCh. Tta tr.pp«l mta sang and played cards as they been trapped by water and mud last Tuesday, but “we never 1 ape,” Nillson told newsmen. Rescue workers drilled a hole to them and used it tq send food and conununicate. The first note from the men said: erything all right but send us some grub.” FROGMEN HELP While the nation followed the Heading the list Is the sales person’s telling the Negro that the price of the house is much higher than it really is, she said. “One was told there were no more lots in the subdivision when there were,” she related.. Others have been toM a house is temporarily off the market or that a home owner has decided not to sell. "People have requested that their homes be sold on the open market and the realtors have flatly refused,” Mrs. Grove said. * -k -k It was noted that the real estate firms do not want to be pioneers at the risk of losing their businesses. ORGANIZERS Committee members, therefore, said they would attempt to get the realtors to act in unison. i WWW All of those who organized the group are residents of Birmingham, Bloomfield Hills, Beverly Hills or Bloomfield Township. “There are all sorts of rationalizations about why there really isn’t a problem here,” Stanley Ovshinsky, 2700 Sqninel, Bloomfield Township, said. “But the Negroes aren’t ‘You hear talk of how realtors discriminate, but you don’t really know until you’ve seen somdone turned down in front of you,” she said. She listed several techniques udbd in the “ring - around - the-rosy game” between Negroes and real estate salesmen. reportedly are interested the 2,(N feet of frontage north from Elizabeth Lake Road and Upland County has acquired legislative rights to buy a ??j crew of 174. d6 36 $. Fl________ M 37 i St. M«rl* M If M Timp« M tij The Coast Guard investigators! j, ,j interested in learning what steps were taken to fight the fire and preserve life. Only Castro few NATIONAL WEATHER - Rain is forecast tonight for an area extending from California into the Great Basin. Snow flurries are expected over the northern Plains and plateau region into the uGreaL Lakes region. Mild temperatures will extend from the southern Plains eastward to thie south Atlantic states with little change, in temperature elsewhere. four of her lifeboats werei minutes before the attack near launched and some passengers'Dorticos’ residence, the other complained of inadequate safetyjboat strafed Maletxin Drive measures. ^near the downtown area, firing The Bahama, government apartment-buildings ... behind Maceo Park, the fate of the whlt^hullerf Granma said the attackers l:^ta “T thousand, of vacathmer, to ^ the picturesque island capi- ^ main target and the other at- tack was a diversionary action. It was to Nassau that rescue Granma added, vessels brought survivors, some * ♦ ♦ blanket-wrapped and bandaged, Castro called the attack “a Saturday after breaking off a work of desperation” by "our vigil 60 miles at sea for other enemies who are suffering desurvivors. Daylight showed only feat after defeat in every field.” empty boats and debris. | He said one such defeat was * * * ihis announcement opening the "Negative sightings,” a Coastidoors to anyone who wanted to Guard cutter reported finally onjleave Cuba for the United Sunday. {States. i ■ 1_____ Romney to Tell ofS. Viet Trip (Continued From Page One) ist few years...it showe the economical principles which transformed the United States and Europe can work in Asia. Romacy said be also learned “there Is no permanence to this cenntry’s scientific and technological leadership. Japan is excelling ns in some areas. We have to keep on our toes the future states, such as Iowa and nols already have taken steps to cement economic relationship in this area. k k The governor' said the trip had not exerted any influence on his forthcoming decision of whether to run for governor or U. S. Senator In 1966. He said he hoped to announce which office he will not seek by the first of the year. He said “mings (are) in process that will be helpful in ihaJt-ing that decision.” everyone of yon sshy? Where t yon? What was more to move In here by Ovshinsky referred f the 'fear in this community.” “What we should be afraid of is becoming part of the apathetic throng,” he said. “All of us have permitted ourselves to become party to immoral, unethical and illegal actions.” ‘NOT VERBUGE’, Ovshinsky said the group should seek a “verifiable program of change, and not verbiage.” “We should end up with a mobilizing process that won’t stop,” he said. Birmingham City Commissioner Carl F. Ingraham said he saw nothing wrong with formation of a committee but that he felt a more effective way of handling the problem would be through specific cases taken to the, State Civil Rights Commission. ★ ★ ★ Others urged the group to enlist the support of the “white power structure” before going to realtors. One of the organizers commented that “a small and practical list of demands” would be prepared for the initial meeting with realtors. Winnie said that he expects replies to his letter from all communities. i k k k One suggestion enthusiastically endorsed at the six-hour conference was made by Rt. Rev. Clement H. Kern, pastor of Holy Trinity Church, Detroit. MORE MEETINGS He proposed that similar conferences be held in areas where the crime rate is higl^est. In Pontiac, for example, he said, panelists c o a 1 d discuss the problem with leaders la the Negro commnnity. PonUac Police Chief William i. Hanger said that arrangements are now being made for] a program, where police offi-| cers could meet informally with^ Negro leaders so they can get to know each other on a “first- Winnie said that he will atp impt to have the Oakland Qtizens League arrange for conferences - in other areas throughout the county to discuss the crime problem. SIAAAAS Bros., 98 N.Saginaw St. Downtown Pontiac Is Now * Taking Applications For Christmas Jobs HouMwivei, raliran. ttudenit who wish employment during the Chritlmoi season should moke application now. Soles, ond stock help will be needed soon. Full or port-time jobs. See Mrs. Bidelmon — Employment 2nd Floor.__ Nlltnk SIMMS"* SIMMS Discount Annex 144 N. Scsvjinaw St. Downtown Pontiac -Noxf to Sears Shop SIAAAAS new store tonite 'til 9 P.AA. or Tues. & Wed. 9 A.AA. to 6 P.AA. for Simms Super Specials free 45-rpm record with any LP mono or stereo record Court to Rule on Sheppard WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Supreme Court agreed today to review the 1954 convlctioo of Dr. Samuel H. Sheppard, Cleveland oiteopath found guilty at a aenaational trial of having bludgeoned his wife to death. Federal Diatrict Judge Carl Weinman of Dayton ordered from the He said Asian markets will (Hilo Penitentiary oh July IS, be important to Michigan in 1964. But the 5th U.8. (^t Court of Appeals in Cincinnati overruled Weinman on May S, 1965, and ordered him back to jail. Meantime the 41-year-old doc-ir has been free on bond. He lives in the Cleveland suburb of Rocky River with his second, wife, the former Arianna Teb-benjohanns, with whom he corresponded while in Jail. Numerous efiorts to free Shep-. ird have been made lince hla sentence began. 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NO DENIALS “We’re not denying that we had people involved but we werent the only ones,’ smd retrain the youths so Eldon Kramer, a public rela-| that they may find suitable em-i tions man for the Job Corps, pjoyment. Classes are held dur-We had % corpsmen in Kala- ing the week and recreation out-i mazoo, only 30 of them at the ingg, usually to Kalamazoo, are I held on weekends. There were about 150 kids in- ^---- - - volved altogether in the incident they couldn’t have been all ours,” he added. The riot broke out at the dance in an argument about a stolen coat and erupted again after corpsmen left and were walking in the street outside. There was damage at about 20 BUENOS AIRES (UPI)-Sec-retary of State Dean Rusk was due here today to continue preliminary talks with South American government leaders prior to a hemisohere foreign ministers’ meeting in Rio de Janeiro on Wednesday. Rusk conferred for three hours in Caracas yesterday with Venezuelan President Raul Leoni, who is not sending a delegation to the 19-nation conference. Two police officers and two! corpsmen were injured. i SHRIVER TALK ‘ The disturbance came only! hours after R. Sargent Shriver.l Kalamazoo Mayor Raymond ®f f*’® Office of Eco-; FiMTurte/IMmni Look Below ToSee-ITtbu Won nomic Opportunity, which ministers the Job Corps, had formally dedicated the Fort Custer center. The center opened last June, and has an enrollment of about i 700 youths, ages 16 to 21, who are either high school dropouts or youngsters out of work. The Job Corps program is de- I MRS. GEO. H. REISMAN K $. Tasmania - Pontiac MARTIN C. DOOLEY 3915 Oatroit Btvd. - Walltd Lk. EDWIN JEFFERY 251 W. Fairmont - Pontiac BEULAH MASTALSKI 2531 $. Blvd. - Troy EDWIN L. WELCH 1T53 Welch Rd. - Walled Lk. FRANK ARNOLD IT! Ncltcn - Pontiac VIRGINIA JANKE 1519 Lincoln - Birmingham MRS. W. Gaddes 349 Baldwin - Pontiac H. E. WALL 1191 Pcmbrehc - Birmingham M. 1. HALFPENNY 4119 Athens - Oraytan Pins. Hurry to Simms - still 40 Turkeys to be given away . and no purehoic nocciiary, just otk lor free turkey tiekato anywhere in Simmt. Drawing* hold daily 'til 50 turkey* given owoy. SIMMS Open Tonite ’til 10 P.M., Tues. & Wed. 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. Venezuelan Chief Talks With Rusk Leoii is boycotting the meeting to protest what his government charges is a dictatorship in Brazii. The Rusk-Leoni meeting centered on Venezuelan complaints concerning U.S. restrictions on oil imports. A Venezuelan spdcesmancalledthe talks y fruitful.” Venezuela, the world’s largest exporter of oil and chief supplier to the United States, has long opposed import restrictions imposed by the administration. NIGHT IN RIO Rusk spent the night in Rio before his journey to B u e n o s Aires. He was returning to the Brazilian capital tomorrow. The major topic to be considered by the hemisphere foreign ministers is the creation of a permanent inter-American iteacekeeping force. The United States backs the idea, which was formally proposed by the inter-American defense board—military coordinating wing of the Organization of American States (OAS). Venezuelan authorities mounted a heavy security guard while Rusk was in Caracas yesterday. The pro-western government has been carrying out a massive cleanup operation against pro-Castro Communist terrorists in recent months. halt TRAFnC 'Traffic into the airport was halted and only the official welcoming party, headed by Foreign Minster Ignecio Iriberren Borges, was allowed on the apron to greet the American delegation. In an airport statement. Rusk declared that Venezuela’s decision to boycott the Rio conference was its own affair. The Rio conference will be held at the plush Hotel Cloria, and 11-story structure overlooking Sugar Loaf Hill at the entrance of the harbor. Deer Season Dpens Nov. 2Dth-Get I Your License and Hunting Needs Here SHDP SIMMS SPDRTS DEPT. Deer Rifle Shells 4” $6.98 value — Waterproof rubber boots with insulation, rugged soles and teel orch. All first quality. Sizes 7 to 12 in green color. Sale of Sweatshirts Crew Neck 1 59 Clwlc* *1 7 imort uUn. I Sliai S.M-I.XL..... ■ Thermal Lined Hood lit quolity iwaoishlrt 4 00 with IhtriTial hood. All | Zipper & Hood ZIppor front wHh 50 doubi* thick hood............ ■■ Check Simms price on iweolshirts for men, youth*, and boys. A-4 THE PONTIAC PRESS MONDAY, NOVEMBER Ig, 19M To Eye Zoning for Apartment Units on Stilts FARMINGTON - Rezoning for a proposed apartment complex on stilts in the Rouge River Valley will be considered at a public hearing toidght. The session will be held at the Municipal Building at 7:30 p.m., priw to the regular City Council meeting. The city pianning commis- tbe cenicil approve the ing change requested by Omar Sandersoa of Sanderson Real Estate Co. Under consideration is a 6.1-acre parcel of property north of Grand River and west of Lakeway. Teachers Due to Vote Jan. 11 on Bargainers A vote to determine a sole bargaining agent to represent teachers in the Avondale school district will be hdd Jan. 11. ★ ★ ★ An agreement setting forth tehns of the vote was drawn up following a meeting between the State Labor Mediation Board, the Avondale Board of Education, the Avondale Education Association and the Avondale Federation of Teachers. * * ★ Balloting will be held from 2:30 to 6 p.m. at Jthe high school. Both the AEA and the AFT are seeking the right to act as exclusive representative of the teachers in all negotiations with the board of education. It now Is zoned for commercial and singlerfamily residential development. 91 APARTMENTS The proposed con\plex of 91 apartments in seven buildings has been designed by Detroit architect Leonard Siegal, who made use of a new construction concept to protect the buildings against the possibility of flooding. The units would he built on nine-foot colunus so the foundations would not rest on the flood plain of the river. Two-story structures would be atop the columns, with the area underneath utilized for parking. ♦ ♦ -a Chances of the area being flooded are slight, according to Sanderson. * ★ a City planners have placed a six-month limitation on their favorabie recommendation. If construction is not started within that period, the reconunen-dation will be invalidated. DeMolay Will Assist Needy ROCHESTER — The Rochester Chapter of the International, Order (rf DeMolay for Boys will collect food and money, starting tomorrow for food baskets to be distributed to needy families in and around the Rochester area. The donations will be collected only on Tuesday evenings until Dec. 22. As an introduction, the boys win carry cards bearing the DeMolay code. i i'z' CIVIC CENTER COMPLEX—Architect’s drawings of the Oxford Township hall (left), the Oxford Library (center) and the Oxford Village offices are now being studied by representatives of the three units. The complex is to be located at 16 and 22 W. Burdick. The project is expected to cost about 6170,0N, although specific methods of financing have not been detcnnined. AU fliree units must approve the plan, which was drawn up by Harry M. Denyes Jr. Asso- By United Press lateraationl ttque, was killed early yestcr-Two double fataUty accidents day in Maniitoue Township boosted Michigan’s weekend when his car miased a curve traffic toll to 11 for the 54-hour and rolled over on US-1 Biiod. I a * ★ Joyce A. Stillwell, 21, Milling- a second aocldant in Manis-ton and Johnny Mack Adams, tique during tha weekend killed 23, Caro, were killed SaturdayjNeal Htpaing, 36, Flint. He died in a tW(H»r collision on M-24satuiday night when he was two miles south of Caro. thrown bom his car under the * * * wheels of a semitractor truck 'hie driver of the other car, after his auto went off a road Albert Donovan, 28, also of and sthick a culvert. Caro, was seriously Injured in Koschtial, 28, Dfarbom, the collision. Three passengers kuied Friday night in a in the Adams car, including two . ^ar collision near Orton-of his brothers, Richard andy^g ^ Robert, and Alice B»wit, all of ---------------—------- Caro, also were seriously in- dates, Inc., and Bruce Lafer, Pontiac architects. Seminar Scheduled on 'Family Living' ROCHESTER - Mrs. Margarita Davis, Oakland County marriage counselor, will conduct a series of five sessions on “Family Living’’ starting at 7:30 p.m. Wedn^ay in the Municipal Building, 400 E. Sixth. The purpose of the seminar is to provide an opportunity for parents to gain a better understanding of their children and of their influences on the child. The program is sponsored by the Protective Service Commit tees of Rochester, Lake Orion and Oxford. LAKE ORION - The board of education has applied for a Secondary - Elementary Education Act to set up a remedial reading program. Title I provies funds to set up a program in language arts for educationally depriv^ diil-dren in the school district ’Ihe amaant granted ta.each district is based on the raii-ber of children detemdaed ta be edncatianally and cnUaml-ly deprived, these from famir lies with an annnal income of Vocal Director to Talk COMMERCE TOWNSHIP -Eugene Guettler, vocal musk director at Clifford H. Smart Junior High School, will be among the speakers at the annual conference of the Indiana Music Educators Association Nov. 19-20 in Indianapolis. Under this formula. Lake Orion school district will receive about $39,000, based on 166 chil-ren. With the money, the district auainan la m aiST SUL la Tiwa an stMC sao SI TwuKsaivnN ainani Tsau (Mny, Miy i iwtity vmi ■ ^roiwM •< prtM itan Ow feMi priM ywi girt, VM100 stl f »•. W MIm Frt*. Btitn* ChMl Fratm $161.00 $160.00 $278.00 BMrHwnmtFMM n«iM Fratnr aM*11SIS«.iii«fl|[lMl FMtary artlM. $140.00 21” PORT. TV • AM as OiMiwI Tunif • Nmt OimmI MMtor • SiMMii MiiiofiI» Anti • FdwInS IhM Cw. Fratlsr's Uw 9.1. Prim ’159” NOWtOSTINO DUniX REFRIGERATOR FREEZER SIW Il.tv Cu. FI. ‘ tiM ZM-a. FtMUf • Only 33^ InchM Wldti Fill in Old ll.lrig«r.tM S«K. Hurry In fw frrttw's SmMtiMi.1 Uw, low 9.1. Prkss On ThsM R08 VICTOR COLOR TV • Rig 21* Scrssn • All OMnn.1 Ulff • 75JOOO Volt Celgr chassis • Auto. Color Purifier WT PRITTirg LOW, SAll ORICI autinaniiBn Goisolo Slorio FM/AM, FM-mSiO SAOIO Bnwtlful nwtchinf train.. fInMi aw*Mr. tlldlnf OiMl CIwmmI StwM Ampllflw Fm. itMkw lyittm FrwItiMi fof Wdinf raa.l rawkwi toPrise**' ‘"$209« PLU9 ran TURKEY m PORTABLE TV UHF-VHP TUNER • StWitm ttn, Cwmtct 13 • AWt. Frlntt Uck CkcuH • Frani SM. SMn. e sawf* IF AmNWw *99“ R^HWLPOOl HI au. ft. 24r. REFRIGERATOR • Twto CrIWM • Slf MS*. te». city • Ffwwr • ClId.Oul„lli.lyw • SttHw md In SFws|* • PLU9 PRn TURKEY ■’209^ PONTIAC WAREHOUSE TELiORAPH no. ^ MIU S. ORCHARD LAKIRO. IMIUlforAafUIrmeUMIU Open Daily lO-9-Opwn Sunday 11-6 -> H 3-7051 H MmiV RMB-IP n II MOinM Tl PAY Board Seeks Grant for Reading Classes will set up a remedial readiiM program for pupils of all levels. Starting today, three teachers will attoid an eight-week woric- tbe Oakland County Schools office ta train for a remedial reading program. Offidais hope to have the program in operation by Feb. 5, ac cording to SupL Lesris Mundy. $3,000 Blaze at Area Home WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN-HIP — A bird’s nest in the eaves of a West Bioomfield Township home provided the kindling for a $2,000 fire Satr urday night, acconUng to flra-men. WWW Damage to Mrs. Louise C. Roby’s home at 6005 Dandison was estimated at 82A00 and to the contents at $500. Firemea said a dry bird’s nest in tba eaves was ignited by a aborted eledric wire. Pour engines from the West Bloomfield Township Fire De» partment responded to the 10:18 p.m. call. Confined to the porch lie badroom, the fire was extinguished by midnight. State Wedtend Road Toll John Mohrhardt II, 24, Traverse CSty, and Donald Haynor, 22, Grasse Pointe, were killed ear^ Yesterday when their car missed a curve on M-47 in St Charles Township, Saginaw County, and slaiiuned into utility pole. HURLED THROUGH WALL Police said the impact threw the two young men from the car and hurled them through a wall of a steel prefabricated Thomas Potts, 42, Hazel Park, was killed in a two-car ccdlision in Warren last night w * ★ George Cook, 63, Detroit, a taxi driver, was killed yesterday when his cab slammed into the rear of another auto in Detroit. James H. Makklski, 10, Aim Arbor, was killed yesterday when he was struck by a car in Pittsfield Township near 1-94 in Waahtenae County. HIT GUARD RAH, Clifford Bartels, 43, Roosevelt Park, died early yesterday when his ear went off 1-96 near Nor-lip in Muskegon County, bit a guard-rail and then smashed i^ a concrete viaduct. Gerald Vickery, 8, Youth Free on Bond in Barn Fire Case HOLLY-An 16-year-old youth is free on 8.500 bond after demanding examination at arraignment Friday on a charge of burning real property other than a dwelling. Holly Township Justice George V. DeLand set examination of Warren Mendez for Dec. 6. Meades 0(117 N.Coibii was arrested by Oakland Osmty Sberlff’i deputies after be walked Into the eMnty Jail Deputies said the youth told lem he was responsibk for a series of recent barn Ores in the Holly area. * * * Conviction on the charge can bring a sentence of 10 years imprisonment. Volunteer firemen said Mendez has been seen at several recent fires in the-township and in some cases has assisted fire-in putting out the blazes. Specialist or Jack-of-aU Trades? More and more onr gradiiate fiehools are preparing young men and women for the ”Age of Specialization.” Scientiata who will apecialize in a «in^e segment of one part of the complex world of science. Lawyers who devote themselves exclnsivdy to one branch of the law. Accountants who pursue the special problems of tax IcgUlation. The jack-of-all trades can no longer give satisfactory service if he tries to cope with all of die problems in 4ny particular field. Specialization has become most mandatory as the horizons of knowledge continue to expand. We, too, are specialists. WE SPECIALIZE IN TWO FIELDS . . . SAVINGS AND HOME LOANS. Today, savings and loan associations provide the facili* ties where 37 million people save their money with safety and profit Today, savings and loan associations make more home loans than all-other financial ina'titutions combined. First Federal Savings of Oakland is the largest mortgage lending institution in Oakland Co^ty. THIS SPECIALIZATION PROVIDES BETTER SERVICES FOR YOU AND THE PEOPLE IN THIS COMMUNITY. 761W. HURON ST. Downtown Pontiae , WoHedLeke-— Drayton Aiins UIm Orion - Clarlutoa THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, XOVEMBER 15, 1963 7he Wives Who Wait' Know That Viet Nam Is a Real War By JAY BOWLES FT. CAMPBELL, Ky. (AP) -They call themselves “The Wives Who Walt." For some of them the waiting is over. The husbands they waited for will never come back from the fighting in Viet Nam. They have died in action with the 101st Airborne Division, whose home base is Ft. Camp-bell.1, ' ★ ★ ★ For others the waiting goes on. They meet over coffee from time to time to help keep up each other’s nforale. At a recent meeting, movies of the 101st Airborne in action, pieced together from television film and newsreels, wwe shown teThe Wives Who Wait. Some members of dience rushed out in tears when they saw pictures of their husbands flash across the screen. Some of the husbands were still alive, some were dead. Three had been killed in the preceding four days. About 8,000 of the U.S. troops committed in Southeast Asia have been dispatched from this sprawling base on the^Tennes-see-Kentucky border since July. ★ * ★ Many of the wives remamed here bi^ause this is home toi the career soldiers and their families. Many own homes off the base of the “Screaming Eagles,” as the division calls itself. That’s one reason why iClarksville, Tenn., the nearest large Tennessee city, appears frequently in the casualty lists. The mutual Interest group formed by the wives has done much to help them face the By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News Analyst The victory of Senate Praai-dent Ferdiniind E. Marcoa in the Philippine |»mideptial elections wili not Going out for Thanksgiving dinner? Bent a Ford from us. (WfoVa Jest a few aUavtaa away.) Need an astra ear for the holiday weekend? Just give oa a oall and well turn you.out in a Muatang, Falcon or Ford with all the trinunings. We’ll have it ready for you to pick up whenever you eay. Pricee? Renuukably low. (Law for a Falcon than a Thunder-bird, of oouree.) Insurance is included in the price. So let’s talk turicey. We can put you in ttat extra car you need for leas than you tboo^t poaaible. Rent a Ford ftom oa now, and go to the foaat _ in style. MOff-A^gui JOHN MeAULIFFE FORD^ INC. 630 Oakland Avenue FE 5-4101 Pantiac, Michigan result from war. A REAL WAR “These are things we have to talk about because ire know it’s Foreign News Commentary change foreign policy. Marcos served notice even before the election that, should he win, the Philippines would remain NEWSOM staunchly anticommunist and on the side of the Western camp. Although he was accused his rival, incumbent President Diosdado Macapagal, of being lukewarm toward friendship with the U. S. and of dragging his feet on the proposed dispatch of Filipino troops to Viet Nam, Marcos has now slated publicly that this is not the case. He affirmed agreement with President Johnson’s views that the free world should continue sdmetimes tragic problems that'a real war, even though we’re Rawls, was raked by machine sitting in a nice room in pretty gu" fire and killed as he took dresses.’’ says Joan Rawls. Chadie Company. 1st Bri- Mrs. RawU no longer waits. “P « Her husband, Capt Robert Upon the advice of the chaplain, the pert, blonde mother of six continued as a member of the group. ‘‘We don’t have any officers or dues.’’ Mrs. Rawls e.'cplains. “We just have each other — to help each other.’’ SEVERAL RACES Suh suggested it and Yun ve- The group includes women of toed it. Even if a new party!several races, young and old. finally does emerge, it is notiSome of their husbands are pri-given much chance against I vates, others are officers. Park’s powerful, army-backed' “Operation Cookiebake” was group. I one way the group found to pass the time. More than 6,500 dozen cookies were baked through the Philippines to Keep Same Policies to use its military muscle in Viet Nam without ruling out a political solution there. NATO WITHOUT DE GAUIi£: Allied diplomats in London believe French withdrawal from NATO is becoming inevitable. Reluctantly they are readying for this emergency on the firm assumption that NATO can and must go on, even without France if heed be. Plans already advanced include a transfer of NATO’s military and political headquarters from Paris to Germany or possibly to Britain. It is a situation that no one in the alliance wants but, say high-level diplomats, de Gaulle seems determined to whittle down his participation in the defense alliance to the p< where it will be nonexistent. FRANCE VS. MOROCCO: French-Moroccan relations, excellent in recent years, could Prof Will lecture at Long Distance VANCOUVER, B.C. (AP) - A lecturer will draw on a blackboard here Tuesday, and students at the University of Washington in Seattle, 143 miles away, will watch the drawings and listen to the lecture. Victor Doray, director of illustrations in the University of British Columbia Medical Faculty, will speak on plans for a communications center at the new UBC health sciences complex. I His remarks will be transmitted by telephone to a seminar at the University of Washington. An electronic blackboard will transmit his drawings as they are made onto a 10-foot screen in the Seattle classroom. Conservation Gifts Termed Deductible efforts of the wives themselves, area churches, scout troops, civic groups and home 'demonstration clubs. 'They were pack-'aged by the wives and sent tp , i Stewart Air Force Base at near-WASHINGTON (AP) — In- by Smyrna, Tenn., for transport come tax deductions may be to Viet Nam. m*adc for some contributions ★ * * designed to help conserve the “The importance of this mu-nation’s natural beauty. tual bonding system is really Commissioner of Internal seen in critical situations, w'hen Revenue Sheldon S. Cohen em- someone is killed,” said Capt. phasized today that to be deduc- Bobby Bell of Meridian, Idaho, tible, the gifts — either land or a base chaplain, money — must go either to gov-, “They’ve gained strength ernmental agencies or qualified private organizations. Iti addition to outright gifts of land, Cohen said, deductions are permitted for the value of scenic easements given to federal state or local governments. from one another,” said Maj. Gen. Beverley E. Powell, commanding general at Ft. Campbell. “They know they’re not in this thing alone. Suddenly they find they’ve got real friends all over the place.” be seriously strain^ by the recent kidnaping and disappearance in France of former Moroccan leftist opposition leader Mehdi Ben Barka. The French are convinced that the whole thing was engineered by the Moroccan interior ministry to prevent a deal by which King Hassan II would permit Ben Barka to return from exile to Morocco President de Gaulle is said to be boiling that the kidnaping took place on French territory. KOREAN POLITICS; Factional disputes among Korean opposition politicians are delaying formation of a united front | against President Park Chung i Hee’s ruling Democratic Repub-' lican party. The new body was to have been formed last week but ex-. President Posun Yun and ential ideologist Suh Min-hoj tangled in a dispute over whether the party should subscribe to| socialist ideas. QUSTAVE' ^..... ' Ik GIFT WRAP HER IN GUSTAVES! ayeii vibaU*'® • / let svJppo^ ’ coP'* (toft you ■\0 * Cl«rfct »| iLi introduces a cosmetic “modeling” kit: new Face Shaders Face 3hiden i« (he pn>(e»»ional way you can shade-in highlights...shadow-out facial flaws. Use the “Dark” shade for structure; the “Light” shade for pure flattery. The pretty tortoise-like compact slips into your purse so you can rntnlel and marvel your lace wherever you go. Peach Light and Dark, Pink Light and Dark, Tawny Light and Dark. $5.00. I Shop Mon., Thurs., Fri. and Sat. Nites 'Til 9 Misses' Corduroy t DUSTERS and FLANNEL SLEEPWEAR Reg. 4.00 and 5.00 each / Pinwalo corduroy pletely washable, 5 lovely colors. Flannel sleepwear in gowns, pojamas and sleepshirts. Assorted colors. S-M-L Loungewear . .. Jecond Floor Boys' 3 to 7 SKI PARKA 8.9^9 Reversible, hooded, 3 slosh pockets. Completely woshoble. Red to block, blue to block. Children's... Second Floor Girls' Colton Twill BENCHWARMER ,5, F10°« Quilt lined for warmth. Hooded and saddle stitched In white. Navy, Burgundy, Ton. S-M-l. G'rls'... Second Hoor Boys' Long Sleeve SPORT SHIRTS Reg- 2.99 $2 00 choose from solids, plaids ond checks. Wash and wear for easy core. Convertible and buttondown styles. 5lzes 6 to 16. 100% cotton. Just Say Charge It. Boys' Wear. . . Second Floor 85% Rayon, 15% Acrylic Belleair VALMOR BLANKET Reg. 6.99 *4.80 Large 72xV0-inch blankets twilh Naploc and extra Ipft for more pufi and pile-reiiskint. Choose from 6 lovely colors. Chprge Yours. _____________________Blankets ■ . . Fourth Floor THE PONTIAC PRESS • West Huron street MONDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1965 HAROLD A. meOKRALD Bowui B. rirnnuu n Encutiv* VlM Pntldent and Builnau Manacer Suit J. Rna Uanattni Editor VIca Pretidaat and Editor Pontiac, Michigan John A. Riut Sceratary and AdTartlaIng Ol O. MaatBALi JoaaMi ^al Advartlaint It Seems to Me___ Voters Asserting a Greater Independence in Late Issues Political repercussions and interpretations of current elections still echo around the Nation. There are as many opinions as there are voluble citizens who can hook a foot over one edge of the dais. ★ ★ ★ One very definite fact seems to stand out: voters are more apt to disregard parly lines. This suggests a healthy independence of thought. Party bosses and big group leaders are discovering to their dismay that “the faithful” aren’t as subservient to whispered commands from inner sanctums as they were once. Some think this is due to greater mass education. These pundits believe more voters feel qualified to pass judgment themselves and are perceptibly less inclined to lean on the “word from above”, or the dictates of local and regional bosses. Professionals will not greet this with enthusiasm but they may have to face it as a part of “this changing world.’’ Some civil rights groups interpret the Lindsay vote in New York as a sign that the old line, rock-ribbed Democrats can’t bank blindly on an obedient Negro vote as they have for many years. Lindsay drew 40% of thf Negro ballots. In Alabama, Senator John Sparkman has always predicated his own election on a blanket Negro vote while he openly flaunted their causes. The Alabaman will have to hasten into the hustings and shatter tradition by doing something in CcHigress for the Negroes. Some OOP prognosticators assert their nomination lies between John Lindsay and Michigan’s George Romney, but this ignores a w h o 1 e host of hurdles that still lie patently in the paths of each man. The Chicago Tribune wonders whether the Lindsay victory in New York presages “two parties to the left with aliriost no difference between them.” This wquld be a misfortune for all concerned. ★ ★ ★ ■ The current returns seem to show a disenchantment with party bosses. The GOP victory Ih Philadelphia was a distinct surprise. And further, a Negro Democrat in Cleveland ran as an independent and almost unseated the Democratic mayor of the Ohio metropolis. Voters aren’t as predictable. Their ways are more devious. GOP leaders should stop worrying about Goldwater and others anjl awaken to the new challenge and the current attitude of more independents who are currently mouthing Missouri’s “show me.” Independence is awakening. At least, voters “look around.” Perhaps the Safest conclusion from the most recent elections lies in the idea that things are changing —and.po one knows just how, why or where at the moment. Hard Fighter — Unhappily for the taxpayers. Senator harry F. Byrd has resigned. Poor health dictated this step and the good people of the United States lose their staunchest and most vig-orods champion in the fight against excessive expenditures. ★ ★ ★ The Virginian was an unremitting foe of Congressional waate. He championed the cause of economy in government and gave his own party and the GOP fits and starts throughout his long and honorable term in Washingtim. ★ ★ ★ However, national cheering can reverberate again. His son, Harry F. Byrd Jr., has been named in his place. I hasten to endorse this nomination with hearty and vociferous enthusiasm. He echoes his father’s unremitting fight in behalf of .financial solvency and he is an exceptionally capable, conscientious and hardheaded individual in his own right on all other matters. The public still possesses an outspoken champion. Long may the Byrds wave. While'They Stand.... “Hello Dolly,” U. S. stage hit, has appeared in many places and under our “cultural exchange agreement” with Russia, it was scheduled for Moscow. Then Russian authorities arbitrarily said “no.” A Roger Wagner Chorale was substituted and now they’ve tunked on that. Why continue? ★ ★ ★ The United States should suddenly display at least a modicum of international backbone and call off the whole deal. Why should we struggle to be “friendly” with ruthless and high-handed nincompoops who delight in seeing us rejected and embaimssed just to flaunt their own powers. Russia isn’t worth it. Give ’em the pitch. And in Conclusion.... Jottings from the well-thumbed notebook of your peripatetic reporter: They propose buttons for cars: push one and you go 35 miles an hour, another 45, etc. Different colored lights flash on the back to'show your speed. How’d you ever talk a traffic officer out 45 iriiles in a 35 mile zone?............Americans averaged 243 bottles of soft drinks apiece last year. Personally I was 1.45 over the average........... Antl-Viet Nam students on campuses are less than one p>er cent but they make enough noise for 25%. ★ ★ ★ Golf Digest nominates Laura Mac-Ivor, Florida, as the most attractive girl golfer of the year......... . . . Cocoa inventories have arisen to the __ point one big LAURA candy company increases the nickel bar to a full dunce and the dime attraction from 1 ^ ounces to two...............Gotham garment district bookies were 340,000 short in paying election bets and blithely skipped out. ★ ★ ★ George Jessel says the greatest after dinner speech of all time is only five words long: “Give the check to me.”.............Sandy Koufax wUl net more than half a million dollars from commercial endorsements in the next two years. ............Carl Barton has the finest African pictures I eVer^saw. ...........Michigan Out-of-Dpors says well over half a million hunters are In Michigan w o o d s .and they’ll bag 75,000 bucks and 63,000 antlerless deer........ . . . Dept. of Cheers and Jeers: the C’s—the Harry F. Byrds (Senior and Jun^ ior); the J’s—Bobby Kennedy for announcing he’s willing to give blood to the Communist enemy in Viei Nam. —Harold A. Fitzgerald An Inside Job! David Lawrence Says: Sen. Byrd’s Lesson Will Endure Voice of the People: Jitycees Declare Support ofV.S. Viet Nam PoUey At their November general meeting, the Waterford Jaycees declared their unanimous support of the Administration’s Viet Nam policy. ThCiWaterford Jaycee organization is made up of 80 young men from nearly every wallc of life, and therefore probably represents the general feeling of the entire Waterford area. ^ WHIT CARNAHAN, PRESIDENT WATERFORD JAYCEES Reader Comments on Recent Press Editorial Your editorial “Decline of Good Taste Leaves Own Bad Taste” surprised me very much in that if\mlssed the whole value of the recent Town Meeting of the World television program. I personally think the program did an excellent job in showing millions of viewers the type of characters who claim to be the spokesmen for the “liberals” in our colleges. ★ ★ ★ The program should certainly have provided enough Incentive for clear-thinking conservatives to make themselves heard. In this way viewers would have a chance to compare — and the conclusion would come through loud and clear. GEORGE STOLZE, 3558 HI LURE DRIVE ^Change of Spelling Is Just a Passing Phase’ In your “And In Conclusion” section of Monday’s editorial page you state that no one but Luci Johnson would change the normal “y” to an “1” and that you were surprised that she didn’t capitalize the “1”. Only a man could make such a statement. A woman would remember the time when she was young and took the harmless Uberty of altering the spelling of her name. ★ ★ ★ The only harm I can see in this practice is that some girls marry and bear children before they have outgrown this spelling change phase. Therefore, some children are si^dled permanently with such names as Terri, Kathi and the like. LOUISE HECK 101 S WASHINGTON - Harry F. Byrd of Virginia is gone from the Senate of the United States, but the lesson which his ca-r e e r teaches has an enduring significance. For he has manifested courage and integrity amid the hypocrisies! of political life I There are all LAWRENCE sorts of definitions of “conserv-atiw” being publicized nowa-da]«, but most of them do not fit Harry Byrd. Nor can he be described by many of the other “isms” and phrases uiikh are being cnr-’ rently used to describe persons who Jo not believe in misapplying other people’s money to gain even temporarily the voting support of selfish groups. Simply stated, the outgoing senator has been unequivocally the champion of common honesty in government and of a public servant’s obligation to spend taxpayers’ money and borrowea funds with the same frugality as If it were his own private income. Byrd came to the United States Senate from the governor’s mansion on March 4,1933 —the dismal day when all the banks throughout the country were ordered closed indefinitely. SUPPORTED PLEDGE He had supported Franklin D. Roosevelt b^ause of the pledge in the Democratic party’s 1932 platform that federal expenses would be cut at least 25 per cent. It was over this issae that he later had differences with the administration, but he al-vways felt he was one of the original “New Dealers” and Out it was not he but others who had strayed from the party platform. Above all, Harry Byrd fol-'lowed the commands of an everpresent conscience, irrespe^ve of the temptations of politics. He never voted on any bill that could affect his own property. He didn’t accept a cent of federal money for his fanning operations and once had a technical amendment inserted in a Bob Gonsidine Soys: Humanitarian Overcame ^ - Bigotry of His Early Life law that would disqualify him from benefiting from a measure affecting certain types of securities he held. w * ★ He regarded public office as a sacred responsibility— a trusteeship which required an unswerving fidelity to the cause of fiscal as well ss social responsibility. Sen. Byrd thought of public funds in the same way, because he never forgot that individual citizens struggling fora livelihood paid out their hard-earned money in taxes every year with a blM faith that the governmental authorities would deal honestly with the citizens’ earnings. WWW Harry Byrd was brought up In the school of practical experience—not just theory. He has always had the ideals of a progressive but the common sense of a conservative who knows that, .hpwever honestly a man may operate his business, he is no less a bankrupt if he fails to pay back what he owes. The same concept was applied by Sen. Byrd to the fundamentals of government fi-nance. The speeches of Sen. Byrd will long be remembered as a series M warnings on the big- American people today—how to keep the government from going “bafikrupt.” N«w Ytm Insurance Canceled for Soldier in Viet Nam A soldier fights, although he does not like fighting. He would prefer to be home but he win go where he is needed. He is capable of killing and loving, being mean and being gentle. Most of all, he knows when to.fight and when to be a gentleman. ★ ★ ★ Soldiering is not a skin-deep occupation. Its practitioaers must be round-the-clock professional Individnals, keenly aware of their mission and the public trust which they must bear. It it no small responsibility. IronknDy, what seem to be insignificant instances of nei^ecting that responsibility— short momenta of forgetfnlneu - often lead to the sharpest critfelsm and downgrading of the soldier’s image. ★ ★ ★ Today 1 received a letter from Life of Virginia canceling my policy after my paying two months premhims in advance. I now have a wife and four children residing in Pontiac with a minimum of insurance. I hope that the Life of Virginia and the college demonstrations do not represent the City of Pontiac. I’m writing this letter by candlelight, waiting for the Viet Cong, but I’ll be back soon and I won’t be looking for insurance. SFC CHARLES DUBRE The Better Half “I wish you hadn’t wakened nM-aow I’ll aever kaew if that levely native girl aad I ever saved you from the canaibars pot, or for that matter, if we even TRIED.” NEW YORK-’There was little in the early life of Dr. Sterling Wade Brown to hint that on Sunday, Nov. 14, 1966, some of the nation’s foremost burn a nitarians would give him a standing ovation in a New York Hilton banquet room on the occasion of his installa- CONSIDINE tion as president of the National Conference of Christians and Jews. “1 was a sophomore at Texas Christian University before I ever heard it seriously proposed that Negroes were anything but Inftfior persons,’’ the new chief executive of the vigorous brotherhood organization told us yesterday. “I was stunned when a professor suggested to the class that Negroes were as good as we and asked for comment,” the slender educator, minister and government consultant anid with a reminiscent chuckle. “I stood up in rebuttal and found myself t^ing desperately to remember some passage In the Bible that would destroy this heretic. “He walled patiently for me while I blustered and then coolly asked me on whnt I based my statement that Negroes were, indeed, iaferior. “After a long Urns I said, ‘My mother told mC.' it h It “From that day, I beeaime convinced that I had been intellectually and morally wrong about this all my life, and I set out to make amends in such a way that I soon was being called ‘nigger lover.’ “Believe me, it wasn’t an easy matter to change the habits a^ bigotries you could pick up^m those days in a town the siu’of Cookville in east Texas. There were only two Catholic families in town, and one Jewish storekeeper. The rest was Protestant like myself, and what we called the niggers. “Several years after the Incident at TCU, and Jnst after e n t e r i n g the Uaiversity of Chicago, I rode the elevated down to the Loop one day to see the sights. A Negro woman, a fine-looking woman, got on at one of the stops and sat down next to me. “I can’t tell you what an effect that had on me. All I wanted to do was to get off as quickly as I could. ♦ ★ ★ “I knew then that a commitment to brotherly respect was not e n 0 u g h. Hisre must bs emotional change. .1 found it Anally at what we uasd 'to cill a ‘mix’ at Chicago; a gat-together of studonts from all over the country, and the world, for that matter. “At one of them, my partner turned out to be a Negro girl taking postgraduate work at the university. She was a wonderful dancer. "I never met i priest until reaching Chicago and then I was amazed to discover that he, too, was in school I had never related priests with postgraduate work!” Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Watch Yourself... The Manchotter Union We often hear the warning given to drivers: Always look out lor the other fellow, w ★ w As important as this.is, a new study by the Hghway Research Board indicates that most of the time the driver of a disaster-bound antomobile evidently had his eye on the wrong culprit: More than half the fatalities last year (over 20,000) didn’t invqlve the “other fellow.” They were single car accidents. . Jobs Lost Th0 CMeago Tribum Wbsn a staal manufacturer talka about the effect of rising wages on prices and profits, the ■todwoiter is too likely to shrug this off as somebody else’s worry, not his. President Roger M. Bloug^ of the United States Steel corporation put matters in plainer terms when he pointed out that If the 10 million tons of steel bnportod this year were produced in the United States instead, it would provide jobs for 70JXIQ more steelworkers. Why are «ra ImiMrilBi se muah whan wa asad to be tbs wwM’s Ian anppHirr CItofly, aa Mr. Btagh saM, becaaaa •f the grant aad growing i|s- and abroad. “When a ton of American 8te«l with a $36-a-day employment cost,” he said, “meets In the market place a ton of foreign steel produced at an esti-mated $14-a-day . employment cost, or a much lower cost in Japan, something is bound to happen. And that something is not to the advantage of American steelworkers. . . . There is little to be gained fay being the highest hourly-paid but the most unemployed steelworker in the world.” ★ ★ ★ Decliniai membership has been a reearriag problem in the steelworkers’ untou. Since • US3 koorly coployinent hi atcM has aever come near the Bgnre of Mjm that waa hm hao prelerrad to blama tho loos oa aatomatioB. Sevoa* years ago Mr. Abel, now pret-ideat of the mton, made the Ttw SmkMM WMIM It Mt Mt itr rtpuMt-CMIM ¥ tH Itetl Mwt prtniM ki **'U"5SJ3S!t».** N NMIac erttt h dtflvtrtd by Itr Mr M mMi S wMki wtNrt • OtMtMt qtwtn» MtMMk ItMtr MiS * CountlM lib IIMI t hnek tho iobo they had In INI. At the time he spoke, hourly employment was barely 4M,-•to and prodnctkm was mn-afaig at a rate of less than IN mililoB tons a year. * * ★ Last year’s production was i record 127 million tons and, do spite automation, hourly em ployment has risen to abou 475,000. If it hadn’t been for th( loss of sales and Jobs to forelgi countries, there would be mon jobs in the steel industry toda' than ever, even though the proc ess of automation and modem Ization has continued. Automation would have per mitted substantial increases ii wages and benefits without fore tog prices up sharply. Had th( union been willing to confine iti appetite to tocreesea thus eamei to productivity, prices migh have remained stable aad 70, MO more man might be at worl to the steel mills today. I clH^pe instead to demand tttei ^e tocraaaaa. thua fattaaini the payehecka of those whi were lucky enough to keep thei: Jobs. ■ , ★ w As fer the thoafeands af afters whose jobs are forfeited as foreiga cempetitioa albMti away at the Americaa markat, ttsy are toU it’s dto laaH St utomatioa. Uaion aggresslve-a«H gets the crefttfor pay blame *«vHi|,iujriiiviii, wbsa la fact tbe reverse may be closer to the truth. '< i;l- lOS i i.U I ul.s.s. MOXUAV. XOVEMBER 15. I96.3 Vse Colleges on Urban Ills MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (AP)iof 97 public institutions gathered — University research, with thejhere for the annual meeting of results virtually hand-delivered the National Association of to the nation’s farmers, hasl State Universities and Land-1 made American agriculture the Grant CoUeges. envy of the world. | The state universities and And, says a panel of promi- land-grant colleges are expected nent educators, there’s no rea jto play the major role in trans-! son why the same techniques lating into action the “urban' can’t solve the pyramiding community services’’ legislation problems of the big ciUes. passed by the last session of “University extension has Congress. , { worked wonders for agriculture ★ * * i to to past 100 years,’’ said -The program was suggested President Mason W. Gross of by president Johnson last year Rutgers University. b, , gp^h at to Irvine cam- Urbm extension agentsipu, tbe University of Califor-should be as effective as toirjnia. The legislation, part of to coun^te ta the rural areasi Higher Education Act of 1965, - although to problems are provides federal funds ' lantr mAi*A Anmnlav Aliit ~ vastly more complex and diffi-cult in the cities.’’ ' ANNUAL MEETING Gross spoke at a news conference Sunday as representatives pending university extension work into urban areas. C. Bruce Ratchford, vicie CMU Prexy to Take Stand BLIND VOLUNTEER-Raymond Keith, 25, a blind man president for extension at the from Washington, DC., has completed a 12-week Peace University of Missouri, told to^ Corps course at the University of Arizona in Tucson and will soon go to Panama to teach the blind there. He said, “I have learned to live as a blind person, not just a person who can’t see.” Kasavubu's Premier Is Out; Future Looks Bright for Tshombe New Way Found To Stop Hair Loss, Grow More Hair HOUSTON, Te.xa.s -- If i.s impo.ssible to help everyone, you don’t suffer from male But, if you are not already paliern baldness, you can slick bald, how can you be sure now stop V our hair loss . . . what is actually causing your arubkrow more hair. hair Even if baldness es .. t* may seem to “run In your fam- LEOPOLDVILLE, the Congo It is not yet certain that Sly.” this is certainly no proof (AP» — Moise Tshombe’s Tshombe will be a candidate, couldn t ^ done But now a YOUR hair loss, chances of ousting Congo Presi-He toid his Conaco party last.fir™ °f laboratoiY consultants conditions can (cause den* Jnsenh Kasavuhu next month he would run, but recent-! has developed a treatment that matter which one year were on the rise today aft-1- th-^r® has b“en speculation he '* stopipng hair loss causing your hair loss, if you er Parliament overthrew the would put up Jean BoUkango. If ■ “Ut is really growing hair! bald premier Kasavubu named to Bolikanen was elected. Tshom- They don’t even ask you to and your hair roots ar6 dead, replace Tshombe. be would become premier again, take their word for it. If they you are beyond help. So. if you The month-old government of ★ * ♦ believe that to treatment will still have any hair on top of Premier Evariste Kimba was The Tshombe-Kasavubu split help you, they invite you to try your head, and would like to declared dismissed Sunday aft- stems from the president’s ap- it for 32 days, at their risk, and stop your hair loss and grow er Tshombe’s forces defeated a pointment of Victor Nendaka see for yourself. ' more hair . . . now is the time confidence motion during a joint last July as interior minister in fjgmrally they would not of- t® do something about it before session of the Senate and the Tshomte^s Cabinet, despite ^^is no-risk trial unless the! it’s too late jChamber of Deputies. ’The vote Tshombe s objections. treatment worked. However, iti Loesch Laboratory Consult- Iwas 121 for Kimba, 134 against' * * w ’ _ants, Inc., will supply you with 'and 7 abstentions. Nendaka soon broke from The great 4Tia.iority of treatment for 32 days, at their I ★ * * Tshombe’s party, helped form caaes of e>:ce«.sive hair fall risk, if they believe the treat- AP eiwtotox I -K a s a V u b u kicked out the “Congolese - Democratic and baldne.as are the begin- ment will help you. Just send Tshombe Oct. 13 after 15 months froni.” claimed that Tshombe's|ning and mo'e fully devel- them the information listed be- premier and replaced him Cabinet was undemocratic and oped stage.s of male put- low. All inouiries are answered .......................... i»-’tern baldne a and cannot confidentially, by MOUNT PLEASANT (AP) Central Michigan Univenite President Judson Foust wiu give a Senate committee his answers Tuesday to charges of poor administration raised by some faculty members. He b expected to be on the stand most of to day for what investigating committee chairman Sen. Edward Robinson, D-Dearbom, said would be a chap-ter-and-verse exploration of all charges. Three days of testimony earlier this month brought forth both pro- and anti-administration views from faculty members. Supporters said Foust had allowed a full measure of aca-democ freedom. At a hearing session last week, Robinson presented Foust with a Ibt of specific questiofls to be answered Tuesday. Robinson declined to make the contents of tbe Ibt public. 'Each of our institutions has a faculty lyhich covers every area of human concern. For years we have been involved in solving to problems of agriculture, and now we are becoming; involved in the problems of the great urban areas. | “We’ve been doing a great job with few resources. Now there’ real assistance coming from the federal government, and we fulty expect to do even better.’ King Talks at Powell's Church;; NEW YORK (AP) - Thej King -said Howell, a Demo-, “We can’t do to job alone,” Ratchford said. “But what to universities are uniquely quali-,Abyssinian Baptist church. Dur-jean members of the United Na- fied to do is help the people who have to do the job. We can upgrade the performance of the officials in to big cities. Research carried out at to uni- versities can be channeled di-l of Harlem” during his Northern economic sanctions against the|J^^j present a Cabinet to Par- five days later with Kimba. f®*" ‘‘s dismissal In Sunday’s vote the biggest surprise came from the senators, who voted aeainst Kimba 58-49 with 5 abstentions. Six weeks a"o the Senate elected a pro-Kimba president, 57-54. ■OST STOENGTH Tshombe’s supporters carried the Chamber of Deputies 76-72, off somewhat from their earlier without obligation. mail and Adv. Arrest Suspect in State Killing nnwHM » KALAMAZOO (AP) - Police nuwcii’ a ucmo-igtrength of 85-79 six weeks ago with drawn mins surrounded a Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.featjas a L «nH Vllin president. and arrested a paroled convict Harlem church of Rep. Adam ™ * comnutment. , Kasavubu had been scheduled sought in the slaying of a pri- Clayton Powell. I After the service they told a * * ebSe^,^S‘^r4^oes‘‘l;pr^, S^^^^^ - aP-P*- at Arrested at tbe bom® of Hi- i-,Abvssinian Bantist church. Dur-'mn memhnrs of th«* IlnilMl Na. „ ‘ o-nour ing the service, Powell em- tions in their call for a complete days inside braced King. meeting. ’The mo- mother in nearb” Schoolcraft tion for approval came only was Charles E. Eaton. 32. of Powell reportedly had advised King last summer to “keep out! 30-day Kalamazoo. Eaton had been legal limit. formally charged with shooting * * * 37-vear-old Jack McMullen Nov. j Kasavubu now must name a a They said th^ also favor^„g„ premier-designate who * * * I cutoff of commerce .and communications with Rhodesia. iborsiory C< Box 66001. 3311 Wwt Main St. Houston. Texas 77006 I am submitting the following information with the understanding that it will be kept strictly conAdential and that I am under no obligation whatsoever. I now have or have had the following conditions: Do you have dandruff?______Is it dry?____or oily?_________ Does your scalp have pimples or other irritations?-------- Docs your forehead become oily or greasy?_____l_---------- Does your scalp itch?----^--------When?------------------- How long hu your hair been thinning?---------------------- Do you still have hair?___or fuzz?__on lop of your head. How long is it?________Is it dry?_______Is it oily?_______ Attach any other information you feel may be helpful. NAME______________________________________________________ ADDRESS---------------^----------------------------------- CITY________________—STATE-------------------------------- rectly to state and local agen- civil rights crusades, cies.” Sunday he denied that he had Dean D. Mack Easton of to ever told King to stay away, extension division. University of “’That’s just the press,” Powell DON T WAIT Colorado, noted that “community problems are complex. City planning involves engineerhig, sociology, education, law, and told his parishioners. “Who am I to tell anyone to stay out of Harlem?” King, Nobel Peace prize white "minoritv aovernment * "** McMullen, fether of six. was ' «S dSLed ... b«lleve(ltoli.vc,been..hot»h«ll YOU CAN IN JOY MTTES HEAITH tHIS WHITES cy open Friday. Kasavubu al- . ^ yo« o-Jii*wa i» from \2 pw. U. : Kalamazoo lumberyard at which ........................... pain klllart asua to aiaek today; attoa with aawoatod tida oftacH. Mlllioai bovt atad O-JIB-WA BITTIRS with froat tac-cait at it attoa brlayt raaalta whara othar traatwaata aad aitdicinot hava tailad. Yaa caa't haat Mathar Natarot harbt! FEATURED AT ALL DRUG STORK ence from Great Britain. King repeated his call for a Heokred he will seek ,^® negotiated settlement in Viet,Jje? five-ywr term, which Eaton, on parole from a Southern Michigan Prison burglary sentence, offered no resistance to the eight officers who aided in the arrest. He was lumberyard at which another five-year term, which' would begin ^rch 21. |TWO ISSUES so forth. The dropout problem in winner and head of the Southern j Obstacles are those things The election, to be held be- to schools may turn out to be,Christian Leadership Confer-'you see when you take your tween Jan. 20 and Feb. 19. will ------------------------------- _ educational, social, ethnic,'ence, was referred to by Powell eyes off the goal. — Hannah include voting for the nationallheld without bond following ar-bealth, nutritional, or all pf as “the greatest living Ameri-More, 18th century English wift-parliament and provincial as-1 raignment. Examination was set, these combined, plus others, ican, black or white.” er. semblies. I for Nov. 24. ; IlitWIlHifP Beautiful Mersman Fruitwood Finish Tables for holiday entertaining-Specially Priced! Favour immediate delivery 4 handsome styles all specially pricedi This is Thomas Furniture's newest, most exciting collection of Italian tables. Very stylish, very beautiful, very specially priced in time for the holidaysl The excellent construction and fine craftsmanship is evident on every piece. Finished in sun-warmed tone distressed fruitwood with cherry veneer tops and shelves.' The delicate design and fine woods ore yours to cherish for many years to come. CONVENIENT CREDIT PONTIAC 361 S. SAGINAW • 3-7901 OPEN MONDAY AND FRIDAY 'TIL 9 . DRAYTON 4945 DIXIE HWY • OR 4-0321 OPEN MONDAY, THURSDAY. FRIDAY ‘TIL r X A—8 THg PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1965 Winning Hand for Las Vegas Nevada Redistricting Deals Control to City LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) -America’s gambling capital, the place where you can either shoot craps, or get a shoeshine, or buy a can of prunes at 4 a.m., finds itself a political heavyweight today. For, if present population trends continue, by 1970 the booming southern Nevada city will completely dominate both houses of the legislature. The door to domination was opened this weekend when legislators, in special session, agreed on a reapportionment plan they say meets the requirements oif the Supreme Court’s “one-man, one-vote” decision. As it stands. Las Vegas will gain nearly half the legislative seats right away. A LONG HAUL It was a long haul for the gleaming new city in the harsh brown southern Nevada desert. The political maturity of Las Vegas compares with the saga of Los Angeles and Southern California: They were second fiddlers to Reno and San Francisco, but have hung on to lead the band. Reno grew up early, playing gal Friday to the railroad and the fabulous gold and silver mines of nearby Virginia City’s “Big Bonanza.” Las Vegas was a quiet Mormon farming community which got its first break serving as a watering hole for the Union Pacific’s thirsty steam locomotives. MSEKEBVIG BIG SAVINGS ... if you twy now! BUY NOW! ENJOY NOW! PAY LATER ... on Our Easiest Terms Ever Biggest Selection of... 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Alto the ipeat Pnu *N a drawer, and cleans from lorn Burner with brain, elecB, timer, drawer storage, eta. Conw Frigidaire REFRIG ORATOR FRE’iZER IS-Ft. D< axe 2-Door •229 NO MONfeY DOWN PAY $8.00 MONTH Has 105-ponnd separata Irno frigeraior ssetlon. Bailer keep, er, egg rack, magnelie door, ST0PHi!!l!!I!!0MfTS K».yCr.dil!NOMONE¥DOmi3YE4RSTOPAY!90DayiS the Dental Hygienist." Pontiac Suburbanite extension study group, 8 p.m., home of Mrs. Duane Hooper, Hatchery Road. Mrs. James | Johnson and Mrs. Irvin Thompson on “Storage in the 9 Home.” ^ i\ WEDNESDAY Woman’s World Scries, 10 a.m., Pontiac Mall com- : munity room. Mrs. Jackie Crampton on “Hi-Fashion Winter Wear and the Woman That Goes With It.” Veterans of Foreign Wars Auxiliary No. 1006, 1 p.m., American Legion Hall on Auburn Road. > American Association of Retired Persons, 5:45 p.m., | CAI Building. Fifth anniversery dinner. ? - Waterford Fashion Your Figure Club, 7:30 p.m.. School- 9 craft School. Christmas home decoration workshop. North Oakland Association for Retarded Children, 8 f p.m.. Community Services Building. John Dumas on “Psy- 9 chological Testing.” To Analyze Handwriting of Husbands Husbands whose wives attend the Wednesday luncheon of Oakland Hills Country Club at I pjn. will have a right to feel apprehensive. The wives may well learn some of the character traits hubby has managed to conceal all these years. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Richard A. Bruce of Battle Creek, an authority on handwriting analysis, will deliver a report to the women on what handwriting reveals about character. * W Mrs. Patrick J. Andres is cjiairman of the day and her assisting committee includes Mrs. George Billinger Jr., Mrs. George M. Caruana, Mrs. Karl R. Crawford, Mrs. William J. DcVault and Mrs. Harvey W. Ewald. ★ * ★ Others are Mrs. Charles S. Garretson, Mrs. Marvin Katke, Mrs. Herbert H. Kietzer, Mrs. Robert L. Morrison and Mrs. A. Russell Waters. ♦ Mrs. John L. Denman is the social chairman. TILE Your KITCHEN Tho Finoit Installation By Our Ex-t* port MochanictI 'oliday elegance SOLID VINYL "“191 • Colors I W Ea. VINYL RUBBER VINyi ASBESTOS TILE Qanuino Sandran Vinyl FLOOR COVERING Genuine CERAMIC TILE 351 MICA go rafts and ■■QC i-r ZSfS- I eonutno Oriontal LINOLEUM RUGS I mosaic tile $d|Qi( I spooial! I 55«ft ACROSS from ,K.WU1! AT 2255 ELIZABETH IK. RD. FE 4-6216 apMillonnTlwr,,Prl.ltot *\Tiiot,,Wod„8at.9tol B—2 IHE POyi^IAC PRESS. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1965 Tree Tpkes a Little Yarn, Lots of Imagination By ATADELEINE DOEREN Shell macaroni, egg cartons, even empty detergent bottles come out of the kitchen to be made into attractive holiday table decorations at very little cost. ^ '' We ‘thought we had seen them all until Mrs. Howard Stanley of Wenonah Drive, a former craft teacher, showed us her table trees made of white rug yarn. ★ * ★ The Stanleys came to Pontiac from Cleveland a little over a year ago. Mrs. Stanley majored in music at Kent State University in Ohio and taught crafts in Kent for five years. Together with her sister, who is associate professor of art at the University of Akron, Mrs. Stanley has worked out a simple method for the yarn trees. They last for many years if carefully stored. SUPPLIES The materials' needed are wall paper paste, white rug yam, a dowel, material for base, Oaktag or heavy paper, waxed paper, and small tree ornaments. ♦ ■ w ★ "No special talent is needed” says Mrs. Stanley. "The design seems to develop as you work. It is surprising what some Cub Scout and Girl Scout troops have done with this project.” Here are her instructions: mix wall paper paste in warm water to the i consistency of thirl cream. Add water as you work to maintain the density for easy handling. PAPER CONE Form a cone of the heavy paper the size of the finished smart-look smart BUY. SELL, TRADE. USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS, “Whatimll this one be?” says Mrs. Howard Stanley oj Wenonah Drive, a former crafts teacher who enjoys her hobby of making table trees for Christmas. She saturates the white rug yarn with wallpaper paste and creates her own design bn the paper cone, as she works. •j.'T.T. .wpnr 'HE HOUSE I K 4 I2.U Frl. UU 9 Decorator Is on Program Friends of the Franklin Library will present Milka Iconomoff, manager of the J. L. Hudson Co. interior decorating studio, as speaker for Wednesday’s Franklin Forum meeting. Outstanding features of design will be covered in her talk “Why-Interior Designing.” * * ★ Franklin Forum programs are at 1:15 p.m. in Franklin Community Church. Coffee will be served following the lecture. Admission is by season’s ticket or by individual program price payable at the door. Stamp Savers Abound in U.S. NEW YORK (UPI) - Trading stamps are saved by more than four out of five homemakers. The Trading Stamp Institute of America says stamps are saved by 88 per cent of families with five or more members and decrease to 80 per cent with families of one or two persons. Leading stamp savers include Americans whose income is $5,000 or more per year, persons having at least a high school education, sales personnel, and city dwellers. Thomas Carlyle, sayist. tree, allowing an inch or more on the lower edg«. Fasten with pins, staples or paper clips. Then cover the cone completely with wax paper. Cut convenient lengths of yam (15 to 25 inches). Dip one length into paste mixture saturating it well. Remove excess paste to prevent dripping. ★ ★ * Begin the design by placing one end over the top of the cone and work the pattern on the cone. The design may be simple or involved. More pattern is added as yqu progress. After one length is used, join another, pressing ends together as firmly and neatly as possible. Let a few strands run from top to bottom, leave a fairly solid border at the base. ♦ ★ * Some lines should cross to add stability. Press all intersections firmly together. Let dry thoroughly and then gently remove from cone. ^ BASE In the meantime, prepare ‘ the base and trunk. Place a dowel painted white into the base using wood styrofoam, an inverted flower-pot or anything that will hold the dowel upright. Paint or decorate as desired. ■ w ♦ ★ Mrs. Stanley makes a "kissing ball” by using an inflated bwoon for a foundation on which to work. No wax paper is needed. ‘‘When dry, puncture the bailoon to remove,” she says. "Then, gently insert a small sprig of mistletoe and suspend in an arch or doorway, using white ribbon.” The Stanleys have 10 grandchildren, six girls and four boys. Mrs. Stanley has been active in women’s church work and Sunday School, for many years. Mr. and Mrs. R. Dale Dodd of Ortonville Road, Independence Township, announce the engagement of their daughter Barbara Ann to Airman 3.C. William Nienstedt, son of the Gerald Nienstedts of South Johnson Avenue. Her fiance is presently stationed in Anchorage, Alaska. I LB. WASHEIS 20< 12 LB. WASHEBS 25< 20 LB. WASHEBS 3S< ECON-O-WASH McLeod Carpet Sale FE 3-7087 I Meet Friends for ' BREAKFAST and LUNCH Always Bood Coffee RIKER FOUNTAIN lllktf BlSf. - loety White rug yam fashions the unique table trees in the foreground and the round sections of egg cartons, hold tiny tree lights for the petal tree in the background. Gold ribbon trims robes made of Oaktag for one of the Magi made from, a tall detergent bottle wrapped in newspapers and given a coat of poster paint. His head is a small inverted light bulb. Make the Most of Design Elegant embroidered cottons are now available in a wide range of beautiful designs and colors in piece goods departments. LiKje ail cottons, these stylish fabrics are easy to sew. However, in order to make the most of an embroidered design, you should consider its placement when cutting out the fabric. The National Cotton Council suggests that you lay out The grand cure for all mala- pattern pieces c a r e f ul 1 y, dies of mankind is work. — making sure the embroider^ . If it does, you might START CHRISTMAS WITH THE SOUND OF BEAUTIFUL MUSIC! LOWREY * ORCAN Yes, music ha* a dramatic new sound Ihi* year. Lowray't Automatic Orchestra Control. You can hear It onfy on the Lowrey Organ. A-O'C makes the beginner sound like a professional. With only on* finger. See, hear and try the amazing new A'O-C at your Lowrey Organ dealer’s todayl Nw Money Down . . No Payment* *til Februaiy ’66 Free Leeeon* Free Delivery You Will Knjoy Shopping at remove the embroidery by ripping out threads. If the embroidered fabric has an evenly repeated motif, make sure it’s centered on bodice and skirt, both in front and back. Fancy Flowers? Before starting to arrange a . bouquet of cut flowers in container, anchor a needlepoint holder in the container with melted paraffin wax, then fill the container with water. Ji your horns ready for the holiday! let US reupholster KASYBUDGET . TER.MS OH 90 DAYS CASH WILLIAM WRIGHf Furniture Makers and Upholsterers 270 Orchard Lake FE 4-0558 .Serving Oakland County Over 34 Years! Get a New Viewpoint about CONTAa LENSES AAiracles in plastic that can mean a new concept in a naturdi, becoming appeafttnee. If Is possibl* tfiQt you may ftifoy a now frtadom from glassos. A bMomlng, natural appoaranca and tho oHior advantO^os that minutaly-sisod Contact lonsos can fivo. If ydu think yd«'would Ilka to waar contact lonsos, your lllll©i E. STEINMAN, O.D. Dolly 9i20 A.M>feSi30F.M. Friday «i30 A.M. te Ii30 F.M. FE 2-2895 109 N. SAG^INAW ST. DIVIDED PAYMENTS, AVAIUHE I. THE roXTlAL i iti .\0> EMBER 15, 19<>5 MRS. H. E. WESTON II Married 58 Years Mr. and Mrs. Richard Creek of Bulwer Street, Keego Harbor celebrated their 58th wedding anniversary Saturday. The couple’s son-in-law and daughter Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Mactaggart came from Sarasota, Fla. for the occasion. Friends of the Creeks, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Welsh and Mr. and Mrs. Harold Kreider, joined therh in the e v e n i n g, along wit|j ‘ other neighbors and friends. Historical Note The Wyoming Territory was the first to grant women suffrage in 1869. Miss Torr Says Vows at Nuptials Martha Margaret Torr became Mrs. Harold Etnire Wds-ton II, Saturday evening, in the Oarkston Methodist Church. * * ★ A church reception followed the ceremony performed by Rev. Lewis C. Sutton. Parents of the Florida-bound couple are the Charles E. Torrs and Mr. and Mrs. Harold E. Weston I, all of Clarks-ton. LACE AND PEARLS Alencon lace, touched with pearls, accented the portrait neckline and bouffant skirt of the bride’s gown of white silk organza over satin. * ★ * She donned a veil of illusion with teardrop crystal piara and carried white Fuji chrysanthemums. ★ ♦ ★ With Mrs. Albert Poole, her sister’s honor matron, were the bridesmaids, Mrs. Jeremy Hickman, Leslie Hursfali and Susan Haskins. Russell Poole escorted Lynn Johnston who was flower girl. * ♦ w Roland G. Wilson was best man. Ushers included Jerry Hickman, Christopher Torr, Kelly Burnette, Jerry and William Powell. Anderson-Turner Vows Spoken on Saturday Reception in the Village Woman’s Club followed the ntmiage of Carol Lee ’Turner to^nald Chester Anderson, Saturday^in the Bethany Baptist Church. ) i Dr. Emil Kontz officiatec^at; the double-ring candlelight cere-| monv for the couple whose parents are the junior Jack J. Turners, Telegraph Road, and the Chester A. Andersons, Brown Road, Orion Township. EMPIRE GOWN Re-embroidered Alencon lace fashioned the bodice and chapel train for the bride’s Empire gown of white delustered satin. A petal cap held her French illusion veil. A white orchid centered her cascade bouquet of white chrysanthemums, carnations, i v y and Stephanotis. With Mrs. Donald L. Lingo, her sister’s honor mation, were bridesmaids Paula Marcom, Jonesboro, Ark., Mrs. Edgar Amsdill and Mrs. Richard Mar-shali. * . ♦ ★ Rodger D. Anderson was best man for his brother. Ushering! were Thomas Turner, Tom Sura,i James Ward, David Austerman and Herbert Larsen. ’The couple left on an eastern honeymoon. MRS. K. L. RIGGS JR. FREE Ared-Wide DELIVERY SERVICE PHUHIACY, INC. ■ SSOWOODWARD-MediealBuihliiiK : "lUmyHoipitaf'’ FE 2-8383 FE 4-9915 t ALL PERMANENTS $^95 K NONE HIGHER ► 1—New Lustre Shampoo USS 2-^FIottering Haircut * r~ 3—Lanolin Neutralizing 1 4—Smart Style Setting HOUYWOOD BEAUTY Open Mornlngf at 1 A.BL 78 N. Sagteaw Over Bazley MkL y 833-N99 MRS. R. C. ANDERSON Couple Goes on Northern Honeymoon The Robert Frank McArthurs (Karen Louise Saunders) left for a trip to Upper Michigan after their vows and reception, Saturday, in the Ortonville Baptist Church. Their parents are Mr. and # I Mrs. Elwyn C. Saunders of Or- < tonville and the Robert P. Me- 1 Arthurs of Stanton Road, Bran- I,,.,, don Township. PEARL CORONET t\1RS. R. F. McARTHUR A pearl coronet holding her^ lusion veil, complemented the: bride’s bouffant gown of white! nylon taffeta styled with Chantilly lace bodice. * * * For the candlelight rite performed by Rev. Roy Botruff, she held a white Bible topped with white roses, ivy and Stephanotis. I UN Wants Nuptial Age Ban Passed With Sharon Joy Saunders, her NEW YORK — ’The United .sister’s maid of honor, were the| Nations is hopine to establish [bridesmaids, Mrs. M i c h a e 1! a worldwide minimum age at Moore, Janice Guisbert and Je-. which couples ma- marrv, I dine Fuff. ! The Insider’s Newsletter re- * * * I centl)- reported. Jennifer and Elwyn Saunders EXCEPTIONS [were flower girl and ring-bearer ,, m (n. As a start. tn“ u.N. has ^ ' ir it I asked its 117 member nations Gerald McArthur was his i® persons under 15 brother's best man. Ushering J®*" marring, with excep-were Leslie Saunders, Joseph “®"'‘ Bainard and Michael Moore. Work Tho CROSSWORD PUZZLE AND WIN PRIZES 1st Prize H Ysw Con Work This Funis —You can WinI 111 Brand New $199.50 Drottmaksr Sewing Machine $190.00OIH CerfiBtatei XVIQ I riZOS feed toward the purchoiu of the $199.50 Drosemakor Sowing Machine O 01J AC $ 129.00 Gift Cortiflcatoc OlQ ■ riiCS good toward the purchaio of the $199.50 Droetmakor Sowing Machine ACIOII M. W«r II. On, Easy to Make Holiday Aprons Looking for an inexpensive Christmas gift you can make yourself that people love to receive? Virginia White, fashion consultant for a starch company, suggests making colorful hostess aprons quickly and easily. * , e * Use festive holiday reds and greens. Simply take a half yard of cloth for each, hem the bottom, gather the t<^, and sew it to a matching or contrasting waistband made of two yards of two-inch gros-grain ribbon. A whisk of spray on starch and a touch of the iron is the flnishing touch to make the apron gift-perfect! tions granted only for “serious reasons.’’ ’The General Assembly did not specify what reasons. In a resolution passed unan-imoush’ by the 95 members who voted, marriage by proxy was also attached, although a move,to ban such marriages altogether was defeated. ★ ★ ★ The members are to report back in 18 months the steps taken by their governments to implement the resolution. According to The Newsletter, the purpose of the minimum mdlriageable age proposal is to strengthen the family group as the basic unit of speietv b'' permitting onh men and women of “full age’’ to enter into matrimony. We judge ourselves by what we feel capable of doing, while others judge us by what we have already done. — Henry Wads-worth Longfellow, American poet. _ It*. •» •Mw. •■»!•»••• •* SlU WM W-Vm CWMT •>* Ml •litiw* I* MW. ^Ilir CIOMI MIW Nov. 22, I96t UNITID SIW-VAC CINTIR La Dolce Vila! with Cnrissimn by Enny of Italy \ «cr ■ . relaxed for daytime activitiee-romantic for evenini fntivitiei .. . , achieved by expert ehauina after one of our penonalixed jold wavei for adiied AUTUMN SPECIALS Zotot Alive and I^ively Cold Wave _ a„.»o.oo $11.% Beauty Lane Cold Wave.Rejr. i 7.SO a»lk Wtik Cal 'a' Xfi $8.45 NEISNER’S -,=? 42 N. Saginaw, 2nd Floor FE B-134 Seeing Red To provide a colorful entry way for your Christmas entertaining, why not try a brilliant red damask wall covering? * ★ ♦ The United Wallpaper Company suggests a new vinyl-coated paper will transform the dullest foyer and will be as practical as it is beautiful since it is completely washable. Reception After Vows A reception in the Davisburg land C. Young and Ralph Masonic Temple followed the Ruelle. marriage of Brenda Mae Dex- * * * -r !•■ Ke ” jih ^erov Riggs Jr., The couple left for a brief Saturday, in the First Baptist honeymoon in Port Huron. Church of Davisburg. --------------- Their parents are the Alva Straight Tolk G. Dexters of Andersonville „ , , . Road, and Mr. and Mrs. Ken- Squares of one-fourth inch neth L. Riggs of Cherry wood ™bber sponges dued to the Drive, also of Springfield Town- '"wer corners of the backs of gjjip. a picture frame where it i, h h touches the wall will keep the Alencon lace, touched with straight, seed pearls, enhanced the bride's chapel-length gown of white peau taffeta styled with modified sheath skirt. An imported illusion veil and '^bouquet of white carnations and yellow roses completed her ensemble. Mrs. Franklin D. R. Ruelle attended her sister as honor matron with bridesmaids Mrs. ;Roland C. Young and Janet Burt. ; With Carl Hardy, best man, were the ushers, Terrance C. Hawke. Danny Ray Riggs, Ro- Keep Rollin' Along The number of women drivers will exceed men within five years. (O MATERNITY F.ASHIONS MATERNITIES • UNIFORMS MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER ______ OPEN EVENINGS UNTIl NINE BUY, SELL. TRADE. USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS. STAFF'S . . . The Shoe Store Where Trained Folks Give Personal Fit . * ANNOUNCE OUR * Change of Location We have about completed a beautiful new store building at 931 W. Huron Street into which we will be moving soon. So we are putting on this bargain-filled sale of our regular stock shoe in the Downtown Store in preparation of that move. These are wonderful, nationally famous shoes for which we have built a reputation during the 18 years we have been in the Downtown area. You know, then, the value we offer! STARTS TOMORROW TUESDAY 9:30 a.m. Downtown Store Only, 28 E. Lowerence St. Baby Shoes! Children's Shoes! Boys' and Girls' Shoes! and more! lOOs of PAIRS OF QUALITY SHOES at UNHEARD of SAVINGS! Dress shoes. Party shoes. Casual shoes. Oxfords. Straps. All included in this sole. All soles ore of course final. Sorry we must refuse exchanges and refunds on sole shoes. CHILDRENS' Look! Values to *8” Girls' fleece-line smartly styled leather snow bools on sole at . . . Be here EARLY Tuesday I Because these values come from our regular nationally famous stocks quantities in all sizes . ore limited, but we are sure 70U will find values to fit every child. CHILDRENS' WOW! »6” Beiys' After Ski Boots. Wafer-proof, worm lined, rubber soled, *> styled. CHILDRENS SHOES TENNIS SHOES LOAFERS 2.9,9 3.99 4.99 5.99 Baby Gift Items A whole section of shoes, booties, ond other items on sole at.... S499 $299 $]00 STAPP'S DOWNTOWN STORE-28 E. LAWRENCE ST., PONTIAC THE POWTIAC FKKSS. MONDAY, NOVEMBEB 15, 1965 1 “3“'^ ‘ / ss-™"“—*s —“=1 “.3="^ s.'isix^!!rs \ . F sj"”-—""'S “““'“‘s r~” srr «*““» aS™—. B~« KiiaS'-S 5r~£«?» HufhM Hatcher SaHrin 682-2200 i09 N. Talagroph fenfiac, Mich. City........................ Zona ..... State................. □ chaifa □check □money order Sorry, No C.O.D.'i or» Mono|r*mm«d Item*. Allow 3 Week* ter Monogremming. i "% %«se (A) III (C) ID) (El euenmy r 1^' SKR . -r- ■s» out PONTMC MAU ITOli OfIN IVRY IVDIiNt TO t PJL M OfIN IMONOAY TO ftS8 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. NOVEMBER 15. 1965 B-5 Drift Widened] Go/cfberg Strong in U.N.—Reds Resent It by JFK Death? WASHINOTON m — Indonesian Ptesident Sukarno says his country and the United States "might not have drifted so far apart" if the late John F. Kenne^ had not been assassinated. Sukarno, in ^ autobiography published today, said Kennedy “was a man with a progressive mind. When I discussed my ak) problems with him, he understood. He agreed.” w * ★ In "Sukarno; An Autobiography, as ToM to Cindy Adams," the contibverslal Asian leader said that his relations with the United States are at “an all-time low’.’ and he must bear some of the blame because he "began the name-calling.” However, the basic problem, according to Sukarno, is that the United States refuses to have anything to do with Asian countries unless they will meekly agree to follow Washington’) policy line. Indonesians Ask Abolition of Red Party SINGAPORE OIPD - The Indonesian Peoples Parliament today passed a resolution demanding abolition of the Indonesian Communist party (PKI) and its affiliates. Radio Jakarta reported. A broadcast from the Indoesi-an capital heard here said the action was taken as the second plenary session of the Parliament opened after a one-month recess. The opening speaker was Chairman Amdji Kartawina-ta. He was quoted at saying that the Communist-backed coup attempt of Oct. 1 “hat fomttd a black page which could not be erased from the history of the Indonesian rev-\rtutlon.” resolution asked Presi-denKSukamo to act quickly againat\the PKI “in accordance with theNkmamis of the Indo- ijm ARRESTED \ • Some 5,000 Communists have been taken prisoner since the coup attempt in the army mop-up of central and western Java, according to the official news agency Antara. • Information Minister Ach-madi said 7,000 more rebels were still at large throughout the country. • Officials of President Sukarno’s inner cabinet raided the parliamentary office of a top Indonesian Communist and discovered a Jungle uniform and a weapon. Role of Church Is Up for Vote VATICAN CITY (UPI)-Cath-olic bishops formulating new doctrines at the Ecumenical Council faced a series of votes today on a key document charting the role of the church in the modem, changing world. ' ’The most controversial vote concerned a revised statement indirectly denouncing communism as an atheistic Ideology. ♦ w w The statement Is only one part of the lengthy nwdem world decree, one of four the council is polishing into flnal form* in the closing weeks of the session. Two other decrees, on the role of laymen in the church and the question df divine revelation, will be promulgated by Pope Paul VI on Thursday. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. — U.S. Ambassador Arthur <1. Goldberg is reported to have thie Russians worried. The former Supreme Court Justice and Secretary of Labor juouvc OIW ocucuiijr vi uauw - making a name for himself the U,N., and weU-infermed dip-tomahc soucres say the Soviets don’t like it. l / there may be a feeling engen-| dered among diplomats that; when Goldberg speaks, be speaks for a majority of the members of the Security Observers here have noted advantage of every opportnn-Ity to undercut Goldberg’s re- to bait him into a personality ^YINGHARD The difriofnatic sources say the Russians are doing all they can to dispel this notion. Leading the attack for Moscow is Soviet Ambassador Nikolai T. Fedorenko. Although it was the coincidence of alphabetical rotatton that put Goldberg in charge of Those diplomats keeping an the Security Council in Septem- eye on the situation say the So-V i e t attacks on Goldberg are above and beyond'the usual East-West polemics. Mindful of a somewhat remarkable record set by Goldberg during his month as president of the Security Council, the Soviet diplomats are fearful that ber, the council did manajge to pass-four resolutions on Kashmir — ail «f them unaniinous-' approved by the big powers. 'The action won GohlbCTg new esteem and prestige. ★ it Despite some pretty harsh words said about him in public recently by Fedorenko, Gold-i berg has avoided engaging in personality battles. LOUD TALKING At one time, Fedorenko accused Goldberg In the Security Council of “talking too loud." And on another occasion in front of the same body Fedorenko practically called Goldberg a liar. However, Fedorenko used diplomatic language, saying that some of Goldb^’s remarks had been at “variance with the truth." But Fedorenko carried out another bitter personal attack on< Goldberg even before the 117-1 member General Assembly. | ♦ ★ ★ I During the debate on seating Communist China, Goldberg devoted the major part of his re-m a r k s to the long-h e 1 d U.S. positions on why the Peking I regime should not be admitted to the world organization. i PERSONAL REMARKS I Fedorenko followed Goldberg to the rostrum that day and devoted a great deal of this time in berating Goldberg’s logic and personal speaking habits rather than hitting back at the U.S. stand. The Soviet diplomat, speaking slowly, quietly and without gestures — in sharp contrast to Goldberg’s explosive delivery and finger pointing — dismissed Goldberg’s remarks as ^ a “choleric” outburst and a “polemical monologue.” He also charged that Gold-j berg’s argument for denying. Communist China a seat was “deprived of any element of common sense.” Whether Fedorenko is succeeding in doing what he set out to do is a moot question. Ideal Facilities and Location! PROFESSIONAL CENTER Thi* modem building, conveniently located for to and from travel (with plenty of convenient paved parking area)— is now available for immediate occupancy. Professional and Business Men should see these quarters today. 1800 square feet of area for addition —we will build to lease sprcifications. 2 miles 'tt'est of Telegraph on M-59. — Across the street from Methodist Church. IMMEDIATELY AVAIIABLE WEINBERGER HOMES 3901 Highland Road, Pontiac—Phone 332-9121 What’s new in tiger country? What did you have in mind? This is our iuxury tiger. Count If Dtad at 72 VIENNA, Austria (AP), Count Degenhard von Wurm-I brand, 72, former Hollywood socialite and prominent lennis player, has died of a lung ail-' ment. His family said Saturday death occurred Thursday.^ > This is our economy tiger. There are 38 more tigers in between-ail Wide-Tracks, all Pontiacs/’66. Do you want a no-apologlea luxury car? A 360-hp sports car with a back seat? A long-wheelbase family car that doesn't cost an arm and a leg? A sleek town car? An economy car with a 6 you’ll swear Is an 8 until you .^ountcytlndera? porpp tQ b^er country. You name It, we’ve got It. As usual. ‘ V ^ I^IIYTHING’S new in tiger country, your PONTIAC DEALERS-A good puce to buy used CARS. too. .PORTIA^MpTOr^jVISION JACK W. HAUPT KEEGO SALES and SERVICE, INC. PONTIAC SALES, INC. 3010 orchard lake rd. N. MAIN STRUT, CLARKSTON, MICH. KIIGO HARROR. MICH. Special safety note: All 1966 Pontiacs Include front and tear seat belts, dual-speed windshield wipers, windshield washers, outside rearview mirror, padded dash and padded sun visors, and backup lights fdr better visibility vvhen backing up at night. Be sure to use them. RETAIL STORE OINIRAL MOTORS CORPORATlbN <5 MT. CLIMINS, RONTIAC IS, MICH. RUSS JOHNSON MOTOR SALES S9 IM-24) LAKE ORION. MICH. HOMER HIOHT MOTORS, INC. IdO S. WASHINGTON. OXFORD. MICH. SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICK, INC. •55 S. ROCHESTER RD.. ROCHESTER. MICH. b—« THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 13. 1905 Red Eyes Can Mean Danger Let Specialist Treat Uveitis, Glaucoma Wants to Dim Damag^ 7mage' Usoge j| By Science Service NEW YORK-H you wake up some mcming with red eyes, don't ignore than: they may not go away. Red eyes can often be safely treated by the . family doctor, but he must be sure of the diagnosis, an ophthalmologist warns. Red eyes could mask dangerous glaucoma or acute uveitis, which means inliam-mation of the uvea, the part of the eye containing the iris and blood vessels. Conjunctivitis, an inflammation of the eye’s covering membrane, probably can be treated by the practicing physician, but both uveitis and glaucoma cases should be treated by an eve specialist. ★ ★ ★ Whether or not a person should be referred to an ophthalmologist is a decision requiring great care by the family doctor. CAUSE INFECTION A doctor should not put a patch on the eye of a patient found to have acute conjunctivitis, as the patch will make the bacteria flourish more and can cause infection in the cornea (membrane on the front of the eyeball in which the pupil is centered). Dark glasses, however, may be bom after drops or « ment are use as treatment An antibiotic that is not ordinarily used “systemically" is advised, such as neomycin, bacitracin and polymixin B, after a bacteriological study first made. Dr. Ellis Gruber, clinical instructor in ophthalmology. University of Rochester. Rochester, N.Y., reports details of diagnosis an dtreatment of various eye diseases that can be hidden by red eye symptoms. MOST ALARMING “Subconjunctival hemorrhages are one of the commonest . causes of red eyes,” he ' plains, adding that although they are often the most alaim-ing to a patient, they usually clear up in about two weeks without special treatment. CoM compresses may be applied at first to further bleeding, followed by hot compresses afh days to help the blood be absorbed. i These harmless hemorrhages often follow sneezing, coughing, rubbing the eyes, or they may occur spontaneously in a person who has hardening of the arteries. * * * Keratitis, which means inflammation of the cornea, often causes a red eye by producing a secondary conjunctivitis. The normal clear corneal surface may look irregular in the area, and the li^t reflexes from it are irregular. By DICK WEST WASfflNGTON (UPI) - The word “image," which started out as a synonym for “likeness,” has in recent years taken on anoth-j er meaning. As the term generally is used today, doesn’t ne sarily mean what you like, but whatj people think you are like. This change was largely brought about by public relations consultants,! They have made the whole i words in our current vema-world imageKwnsckHis. Some cular,” it is' sponsoring a con-public figures now change | test .to find a substitute, bnages almost as often as they gp S(Xm:H change underwear. It’s getting . . ^ , images. WF.ST Image-makers also are active in advertising. Often, a prodnct’s image is more important than what’s inside the can. offered as a prize for the person who comes up with the best term conveying the meaning now associated with image. My faith in the sincerity of the campaign was shaken a bit by the fact that one of Considering their vested in-| *kis fh-m’s clients is a cer-terest in this field, I was tain brand of Scotch. It could somewhat surprised to learn be that the whole thing is that one public relations firm! aimed primarily at improv-has undertaken a campaign to ing the client’s image, stamp out images. Nevertheless, I hope the anti-; image campaign succeeds. For! who make their living creating! Boldly asserting that “image”iif it does, it may bring about, ' images for persons, place:has become “one of the mostjthe devaluation of tigers. ! I overused, abused and misused i To say that I am tired ofi Is understating my| conditim considerably. I aip sick or them nigh unto death. 'HGERS EVERYWHERE Tigers in the gas tank. Tigers in the hair cream. Tigers in the tire treads. To mention just a few that regularly show up on myr television set. What is so great abont tig- ‘ ers anyway. Nothing much, reallv. And one that’s unfair to other animals. Put a tiger in your tank and you break a lion’s heart. If there must be images in advertising, let’s at least have !a little variety. I personally .would welcome an aardvark in !my tank. Anything to get rid of i tigers. Develop Poise, Confidence, Ability to Deal With People DJUCJUINiGIE COURSE ill EFFEOnVE SKUWt • HUMAN RCLATIONt MEMORY TRAININQ 10 WAYS the Dale Camegia Oeursa Will Help Man and Woman • N«w mmi IMm • Spaak Effactlvaly • S*H V^naH anS Va«r Idam • la Yaw laat WMi An, Oroap a Kamamhar Namat • Think and Saaak an Yaar laat a Kamamhar Namat —_____• Think and Spaak an Yaar laa» yiainO" • c„rttal laar and Wany ataASattarCanvariaHanalM • Pavalap Yaar Hiddan AMif iaa a Win That tallar Jab, Main Inca i CARNEGIE COURSES i by Loodorahip Training instituto • Call Collect 863-SI 00 Conner Hits Sen. Hart Bill on Packaging ST. SIMONS ISLAND, Gn. (AP) — A National Canners Association official said today packaging and labeling iegisla- ' tion likely to be considered by Congress next year could place; ’, shopping decisions in the hands of a few officials. The warning was issued by ’ Milan D. Smith, executive vice president of the association, in i his prepared remarks at the 2Sth annual convention of the Georgia Canners Association. * * * Smith said he was referring . to the so - called “fair packaging and labeling” bill introduced this year by Sen. Philip A. Hart, ' D-Mich. The measure had not been reported out of the Senate i Commerce Committee when Congress adjourned last month. Smith said he believes the average housewife would resent government control of her shop- < ping decisions, saying her protection is adequately assured under present law. * * . * Referring, to assertions by * some persons that consumer complaints are increasing in ( volume. Smith said he could not find these persons. “They were not apparent, to any signi- ^ ficant extent, when consumer 'conferences were held in four ( important itreas .of the country in 1983 and 196«,” be said. Old-Line Soviet Officials ) Said Hindering Farm Plan THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, yOVKMHKK 15. B-T MOSCX)W (AP) — The new Soviet leaders more than a year igo ordered a change ddtdgned to give fanners a break and to put more food on the tables of Russian homes. That decision is still being sabotaged by old-line local dfi-dais, tte magazine Kommunist Nikita Khrushchev’s successors ordered that fanners once more be allowed to work their own small private plots of land after finishing their chores the state’s large collective farms. The idea was to encourage the farmer to produce more food on his own to add to that raised on the state’s farms. The more the farmer could raise and sell from his private plot, the more be would profit. FILTERS DOWN The Kommunist article shewed how difficult it has been to put this little bit of private enterprise across.. It also showed how long it can take for an order from top Soviet leaders to filter down to everyday prac-. tice. The magazine cited these examples of “gross violations" of party and government orders: Farmers who legally sell produce from their private plots have been denounced in local papers as economic speculators. WWW Local officials have illegally restricted farmers from obtaining the fodder they need for livestock raised on their private plots. Local officials have illegally forced farmers to sell products from their private plots according to a plan of fixed sales targets. TOP-LEVEL CONCERN Publication of the article in Kommunist indicated official concern at the highest level with these practices. The magazine is the journal of the Central Committee of the Soviet Communist party. Kommunist said it based Us article on numerous complaints from farmers, w Peasant resistance to Stalin’s forced collectivization of agriculture originally won famim the right to work private plots in 1939. The private plots produced more fo^ per acre the collective wms, a result embarrassing to Communist officials who praise the merits of socialist apiculture. RESTRICTIONS IMPOSED Although the Soviet ecohoidy badly needed the food produced on private plots, Khrushchev impo^ restrictions on such ■ «id. Farmers were not permitted to buy fodder for livestock they owned. There were cases of desperate farmers buying bread and grains milled for human consumption /ind feeding it to animals. Farmers were given quotas to fill from their private plots. Although they could not feed their cows fodder, for example, they still had to deliver so much butter to the state. AH this was supposed to be changed by the order of the new Kremlin leaders last October. SAony Streets Flooded Hawaiians Hope for End to 5-Day Rain HONOLULU (UPI) — Flood-land continued through Friday' The resort hotels in Waikiki weary residents held cautious I with gale-force winds which sandbags to keep the hope today for relief from a {caused school officials to haltllj”®'*’"'®**” surging torrential storm which drenched classes for the day tnrougn lobbies. Hawaii with nearly 12 inches' of rain since Thursday and RAINING forced more than 200 families! As the downpour persisted to flee their homes. through Sunday, overworked storm drains and canals began to back up and the streets started to flood. It was not uncommon to see dozens of cars stranded on a single street, abandoned by drivers who waded to higher ground. SHE SURVIVED-Nurses help Mrs. Wil-helmina Apuzzo as she looks down to make sure of her footing following her arrival yesterday in Miami by plane from Nassau, The Bahamas. She and her husband, from Coral Gables, Fla., were among survivors of the burning and sinking of the cruise ship Yarmouth Castle in the Atlantic early Saturday. The Weather Bureau predicted that the five-day storm would ease later today. “That’s what it said yesterday, too," one resident said, “and the rain's still coming down in bucketsful.” The rain created flood situations throughout the island ofi-Oahu and its principal city, j Honolulu. Muddy water surged through the streets at depths as high as three feet, causing land-■■ ■ s, which stranded residents, and grounding out telephone and power lines. GEHING UP NIGHTS SifST" EiSn«r 01 ir ond m OlMp M •ud> lrrltotlon,'’cy8T«X ■ rtlaxinf comtert bp (AOViaTIIIMINT) There were no reports of death or serious injury, but officials said damage was expected to run into the hundreds of thousands of dollars. FAMILIES FLEE The Red Cross reported that about 200 families had sought MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - Survi- Herman. “Some didn’t pay anyi "We were wearing our night- slielter in six emergency cen-vors of the Yarmouth Castle are attention to us, but one pointed | gowns. Some people jumped in set up in schools through-coping with problems of replac- to a companionway leading up without clothes,’’ Miss Eliseun-'®*^! Oahu. F Memories of Sinking Still Vivid^ Dont Read This IF YOU ARE MAKINIi EN0U8H MONEY IN YOUR PRESENT JOB COMPUTER PROGRAMMING USING IBM EQUIPMENT cttrrt M»n im Wofnm, high school grads (17 fo 41) with no prtvious oxparlence lha chanca U earn u.WXt-SIO.OOO vaarly, Mathamallcal training NOT raqulrad. ghar starting salarlts. Elactronic Computer Prograi ____ Programmer our FREE NATION- WIDE PLACEMENT ASSISTANCE SERVICE will assist you In seeking ;lasses. ECPI I coast-to-coest I IBM machines. wait? Start Immediately prepbring «lt tor higher paying lobs ottering al future. Write today tor FREE BOOKLET AND FREE APTITUDE TEST ■ " The Pontiac Press, Pontiac, ing money, keys, personal Briefings Will Cover New Education Acts to the deck.” He said theyison said. “It was awful -tumbled into a boat along withijust can’t imagine.’’ MILUNG CROWD so others. FULL OF SMOKE Terry Eliseunson, 22, St. that went down with the cruise ship. TTiey also tell vivid stories of their escape. “I was lucky. I never got wet," said Teiry Wise of Mark- WASHINGTON (UPI) ~ The P^^^'ridor so fuU of smoke that they ys. o^ci Educta h hold-" »<«''7- “I smashed the porthole with! you Paul, Minn., secretary, said she and a girlfriend opened their Police and firemen drove high-wheeled tracks into the hardest hit areas to rescue families unable to drive their cars through the flooded streets. Three Iowa vacationers recall eeing “some pretty bad sights." They said they had to pick their way through milling As workmen attempted to fellow passengers —some in-clear 15 feet of mud and boul-jured — and scramble aboard a ders which crashed onto Pali lifeboat to escape the inferno. [Pass, the principal link between Honolulu and suburban ing regional briefings on the nCw g ^.6 billlm Education Act * * * ♦ Simons, 56, Cedar windward Oahu, another land- this week am next in nine cities, j ■ j member said we might as well Rapids, said, “We had to step slide nearly trapped a man in The nw law provides for col-! An East Cleveland, Ohio, cou-gjve up hope and die because over a badly burned man who his earth-removal truck. He l^e scholarships and loans, li-pie, wro lost their eyeglasMs ns that was it.” apparently had been brought escaped with minor injuries, brary assistance, the beginnings the. ship sank, said finding a They slid down a line into the j from elsewhere on the ship and' * ★ ★ of a “National Teacher Corps," lifeboat wasn’t that easy. iwater and remained about 45 placed on the main deck.” ' The storm struck Thursday college construction and develop- “We asked several passing minutes before being picked up j----------------------------------------------------------------------------- ment and community service crewmen, who wore lifejackets, by a lifeboat from the Bahama! programs. ‘where is a lifeboat,’ ’’ said Dale Star. NEW! lATdndLPSE ^ UP TO 6 LBS. A WEEK CAPSULES! Easier to take and more effective than the powdered and liquid food supplement, and costs less including Capsules suited to you INDIVIDUALLY by Lie. Physician, M.D No Gastritis or irregularity with Medic-Way caps. DON'T DIET —JUSr EAT! As thousands have done, you can lose 5, 50 or 100 lbs. and KEEP 11 OFF! MEDIC-WAY MEDIC-WAY 335-9205 r omen IR OtklanB «nB Wiynt CtunlMi - Ong In Mlriclt Mil* .... emliody the responsibility of ideals One of die UcMingi of your AmericM liberty is your, right so chogst your oevn fuwre< Yost can provide and pfoteet tbe Apture yoa want for younelf and your family through Modern Woodmen i(l fnr '/,• th.it (jrico NO TRADE IN NEEDED Prked et shewn at Fireelene Uerei; lempetilively prl^ at Firestone Dealers end el ell service etotlens dlsploylng the Firestone sign. 146 WEST HURON Opan Mm. and PH. 'HI f P.M. FIRESTONE HO I. SAMUV Ormi Mmi., Tlwn., f H. 9 |« f THE PONTIAC PKESS. MONDAV, NOVEMBER 15, 1965 B—9 FLANKED BY VIET VETERANS -President Johnson eats breakfast from a tray at the LBJ Ranch yesterday, flanked by two Viet Nam veterans — Sgt. l.G. Robert S. Vandiver (ieft) of Shreveport, La., and Spec. 5 Robert G. Sullivan of Norwich, Conn. The two Army men, both honor soldiers of the Fourth Army, were the President’s guats. LBJ Back at White House, Not Yet Feeling Up to Par WASHINGTON (AP) - President Johnson, kxddng well after a recuperative stay of more than three weeks at his Texas ranch, is back at the White House today and plans to stay there at least until Thursaay. But despite a favorable medi-eai report over the weekend, Johnson has told friends he sUil doesn’t feel as well as he did before his Oct. 8 gallbladder-kidney stone operation and has aome pain from the operation. ♦ ★ * In tha final day of hia Texas stay Sunday, Johnson was vUit-ed at the Ranch near Johnson City by two Army enlisted men, both veterans of Viet Nam. They accepted Johnson’s 1 invitation to accompany the first family to church services in St. Barnabas Episcopal Church in Fredericksburg. ••Come on, we’ve got a lot to pray for — particularly for our men in Viet Nam,” Johnson told Sgt. l.C. Robert S. Vandiver of New Orleans and Spec. 5 Robert G. Sullivan of San Antonio, Tex. MADE KNOWN > va^ttvep and Sullivan stmidd up at the ranch at 8 a m. and 01 Families May Record To bring home closer to servicemen away at Christmas, the American Red Cross will enter the recording business for the fifth consecutive year. Families of servicemen may cut a record at Red Cross regional headquarters, 118 Franklin, from Nov. 39 to Dee. 11. Abe ellglUe to re-eord are families of Peace Corps members Tha 13%-minttte record will be sent anywhere in tha world fraa of charge. nti may be made by calling “Voices from Home” at tlw Red 1>oss headquarters, according to project chairman Mrs. Paul Crider of 400 N. Cranbrook, Bloom- Johnson made commitment to see them, but had coffee ready when they arrived. Vandiver and Sullivan told the President about their experiences in Viet Nam. ♦ * ★ Next he drove them .5 miles to communion services at Barnabas. The car was jampacked. In Idithm to Johnson there was his wife and daughter Lynda Bird, Vandiver and Sullivan, Sullivan’s wife, Maryellen, Vandiver’s wife, Patricia and the two Vandiver daughters, Cynthia Ann, 7, and Kathleen,! PRAYER FOR SOLfilERS They heard a prayer by the rector, the Rev. Jack Lani^ord, for all veterans and particularly those in Viet Nam. ♦' ★ After the services, Johnson again piled all kinfolk and guests into a white station wagon for the trip back to the ranch. Trailing newsmen and photographers were invited in for coffee 9i|d cookies. johdion's White House schedule includes a reception tonight for John A, Gronouski, former postmaster general who is leaving soon to take up his new poet as ambassador to Poland. intearation. Since May, the interracial motorcades have called on mayors, civic leaders and citizens in 80 of Illinois’ lOl counties under the banner of the Citizens Committee for Freedom of Residence. Dozens of white Chicago suburbs have received the cara-' vans. The founder of the group is Donald S. Frey, 50. an Evanston attorney. Frey says he dedicated hiinself to what he calls “equal opportunity housing” lO years ago because of an incident in Evanston. “A Negro family was unjustly refused a permit to install a bathroom,” he said. “Since then, I just got involved.” 30,880 SIGNATURES In Illinois, his 5-year-old committee has signatures of 30,000 persons willing, to have as a next-door neighbor someone of another race or color, Frey said. The motorcade calls on mayors and public officials in a community, and on builders, bankers and real estate men, Frey said. The question asked city officials is: “What are you doing to achieve 100 per cent equal opportunity housing?” I “Most say they’re not doing one thing,” Frey said. RESULTS VARY Caravans Aid j in Rights Fight; Housing Bias Target Associated Press t III* • * J Yevgeny Yevtushenko, fiery young Russian poet whose Ot Illinois Motorcades Wuntness concerning Soviet life has gotten him in trouble, has blasted Soviet youth leaders in a new poem, informed sources EVANSON, 111. (AP) - Mo- „y Moscow, torcades are making Sundavi afternoon calls on Illinois townsi P“** ‘«»Tify us,” he ^ villages to prornote housing wrote. The reported new poem c Vesjenin.” 58 lines is titled “Letter to made their wish to see the Pres- her husband, the Earl of Snow-ident’s home place. Johnson still has made no announcement on where he will meet Dec. 7-8 with West German Chancellor Ludwig Erhard — whether it will be in the White House, the LBJ Ranch or elsewhere. 'Russian-U.S. N-War Is Out' Prince Charles Has 17th Birthday Charles, Prince of Wales and heir to the British throne, observed his 17th birthday yesterday at Gonrdonstoun School in Scotland. Flags flew on public bnildings in the British capital and other cities but it was beeansce of Remembrance Snnday, marking the annual observance of the World War I armistice and tribute to the dead of two world wars. Screen Guild Pays Tribute to Bob Hope Bob Hope, who never has won an acting Oscar, got an Oscar of sorts yesterday in Hollywood from actors. President Charlton Heston of the Screen Actors Guild presented the comic with the guild’s first annual award “for outstanding achievement in fostering the finest ideals of the acting profession.” ’The award is an onyx arid bronze version of the ancient Grecian masks of comedy and tragedy. Meanwhile, military officials in Bangkok said Hope will visit Thailand and Viet Nam next month to entertain U. S. troops during Christmas. 8-SPEAKER STEREO SOUND! 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Wednesday night the Johnsons ai give a dinner dance forJJL'TTvrr Britain’s Princess Margaret and|**“ ‘ * 2-Cor Collision in East Texas Kills 6 Persons Kennedy, believes the prospect of nuclear war between AmeE 0^ wTi^vei^wS ’*“*1 over-aU reaction borders owasitnever wastefm. |gomewhere between coUective,i wrensen attributed the pres-iguarded acceptance to hostilel ent state of affairs to Kennedy’s ^indifference,” Mrs. Moore said, handling of the 1962 Cuba mls-|»-n,ig issu* of a minority race' site crisis. jin ti,oir communities is some-i He said Kennedy “combined |ihh)g they don’t want rammed jnit the right anMunt of de- ihetr throats.” fense pud diplomacy and dia- w * * togno to persuade the Soviets But, she said, nnost officials that aadear War would be sal- showed an awareness of a need cidal and nudear blackmail to change status quo residential would be fatal.” patterns in their towns. Th. ••u-i I , several occasions, town' “^‘cials who said they would turning point in the cold war so . caravan wer/ nnt on between «»« UniW St^ and opg HUnoi, town, Waukegan, onn* J ^ vlrtua^ refusod to extend an invlta-g^ nw as it newer was Waukegan *" * ‘•‘•■Mayor Robert Sabojian. who weexeno. jjyjg |u mixed nel^borhood, says he would rather Waukegan to^ care of its own integrating I Rat Poison Kills Tot process. MOTOROLA 21" PORTABLE SOLID STATE TV WITH CART! Solid Statu UHF Tuner, tubeless, heatless and trouble-free! Lighted UHF-VHF channel indicator! Built-in telescoping antenna system! You get all this in a compact portable TV with big 21“ screen. And there's an earphone for private listening, as well as a sturdy nickel-finish cart with wood shelf. COMBINATION OFFER! !?"•!' Dixie Walker Die, , Walker, 2, died in Children’s Hospital in Detroit yesterday af- BIRMINGHAM, AU. (AP) -I JACKSONVILLE, Tex. ^ crackers spread with Ewart (Dixie) Walker, father of broadside collision at an east Ms home here. The Pittsburgh Pirates’ Manager Texas intersection killed six Mr- «nd Mrs. Michael Harry Walker, died in a subur- persons last night iWalker, said the poison was ban hospital here Sunday. He The Texas Highway Patrolfor the house. _ was 77. _ ______________, said the accident occurred at' the junction of Texas 110 and F r 204, eight miles southeast of Jacksonville. ALL FOR 169 95 No down poym«nt rtquirtd. Use your CHARGE, 4-PAY PLAN (90 days same as cash) or BUDGET PLAN. GRINNELL'S, Pontiac Moll, 682-0422—Downtown, 27 S. Soginaw St., FE 3-7168 Dead in one car were Johnny Lee Dobbs, 27; his wife. Shannon, 22, and their two daughters, aged 10 months and 2 years, all of the Dallas suburb of Irving. Laverne Callender, 53, and his wife, Marguerite, 51, died in the second car. They lived in Troupe, Tex. its class to rsaoh 1,000,000 in saios! naiks irnWha, from the mg, naw-gaoaiwtkm Comet rm mr«t Cofmt's success? Simple: $^t 4lth lots of driven, then mve a good thing in front of them. See one exemple, bekm, chosen from the 13 big, new-generation '66 Comets. They're Wider, up to 8 inches longer than ever. Longer on luxury, too. And action: ranging up to a big, new Cyclone GT 390 VS. '' Option minded? Comet offers )ots. So why not drive the cer In a minion? It's at your Mercury dealer’s now. -AieiiCa/ufCQliUT' the hig, heeatiful gerfemenee chmgtea innnfifilvf iimf HAN9EN TIIAVBL AOSNCY HAWAII 10 DAYS ... INCLUDING: Je4 air fore, heteL lei greeting, transfers, aloha breakfbst, Peori Horfaer cruise, native luau, Hene-luiu*Mt. Tantalus tour and Kodak hula shew. »517»’ ACAPULCO 7DAYSoiid?HIGKTS ot^liie Acapulco Hilton, incluidUng $0*7^00 four end let oir fore.' Ami \M ONM MIMY nm. 9 - ALL MV lATVMAT NEVER ANY SERVICE CHARGE / BLOOMFIILD MIMOLI MILI 099 0410 ittT !TMagrairti (Aroadt) MAnMiO 1250 OAKUND AVI. LLOYD MOTORS LINCOLN ~ MERCURY — COMET 333-7863 LINCOLN-MERCUBY DIVISION B—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 15. 1963 JUDY GARLAND MARRIES - Actor Mark Herron, 35, gazes fondly at his new bride, singer Judy Garland, 43, after their marriage yesterday in Las Vegas. After the ceremony, the couple and eight friends held a brief reception at a luxury hotel. It is the first marriage for Herron and the fourth for Miss Garland. Sen. Harry Byrd Jr. to Follow Father's Conservatism tor until the Senate meets in > January, but he already Is on payroll under Senate cus- WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen.fhe regards himaetf as a tor- there’s an attitude of let’s waiticlear he shares with his father and see what kind of job he oniosition to tax cuts when the government is operating with Defense Systems Recheck Is Ordered Alter Blackout ward-looking conservative in tune with the changing times and conditions. Byrd will be running in the Virginia primary next July not only on the Byrd name but on the record he hopes to make in six months as a senator. “My father luu made his •cord; now I must make mine,’’ he said. CONTINUOUS LOOK “I feel that legislators, like businessmen and individual citizens, must continuously look forward — as times and conditions change. I would like to consider myself as a {ffogres-sive in the sense that it is important to ccmtinue to look forward in order to serve the best interests of all the people. There are certain fundamentals that don’t change — the constitutional concepts of government, and I feel that true progress can only be made through fiscal responsibility.’’ In other weekend political developments: ‘ _ _ _____________ -^n. Ru^ell B. I^ng of would vote for a pro- Louisiana said he had heard p^ged constitutional amendment __________ - ,“?thing of any move to force to permit state voters to appor- day at Rosemont, the family him to give up his post as as-tjo„ one house of their legisla-home in Berryville, Va., has sistant Senate DemocraUc lead- ture on other than a populaUon gone down the line in opposiUon er when he succeeds the 61der gg jhe Supreme Court has to practically all of the social j Byrd as Senate Finance Com-welfare legislation Johnson has mittee chairman in January. He ‘ Harry F. Byrd Jr. is demanding the same kind of fiscal responsibility his father advocated as the prim of cooperation with President Johnson- Congratulating the 50-year-old VirgiiUa Democrat on his appointment to fill the seat Sen. Harry F. Byrd, 78, resigned last ’Thur^ay, Johnson said in telegram he wants to wc closely with the new senator. On this score, Byrd made it plain he will apply as his father lid before him the yardstick of liow much Johnson’s programs will cost and how they will be paid for. ’The younger Byrd said Johnson has his support in the course the President is pursuing in the Viet Nam war. But on the domestic front, the new senator said he will examine each White House legislative proposal on its merits but will not beconunit-ted in advance to blanket opposition to the “Great Society’’ programs. OPPOSITION ’The elder Byrd, who sat beaming as his senatorial successor son was interviewed Sun-, mayor*! race is causing anyiordw and I hope that a atartlwill erode the purchasing power' great fiiror in the Republican can be made toward bringing!of the wage earner’s dollar.'' party. The 1964 GOP presiden- the budget into balance.’* ; * it * tlal nominee added, “I think The younger Byrd made it Byrd, who becanne a senator FULL STUDY —A spokesman for the Republican National Committee saidj Republicans will soon start a full study of national nominating conventions that could lead to revamping the 1968 session. Formo- President Dwight D. Eisenhower had proposed such a move aimed at cutting down I convention confusion and noise. In his interview, Byrd aired his views on a number of issues that seem likely to come before the Senate in the session beginning in January. He said he does not believe any additional civil rights legislation is needed. It would be al mistake, he said, for Congress to repeal a section of the Taft-I Hartley Act which permits states to ban the union shop. ’The new senator said he fa- deficit financing. He said the creation of additional deficits with his appointment Friday by Virginia’s Gov. Albertis S. Ha^ rison Jr., mcpects to complete the formalities of his appoint- 1U.UMUUW VI aHpvu>i ment in file next day or two. He Imi i H«lps Ypv Ovpreoni* FALSE TEETH LooitRtsi aid Worry No lonsw b# uuievod or lino (non-ooM) powdor, oi»»lnltloOI^ four pUtM bold! tlm ivicauuij VI auuiuviiai uviu»iio iiiciis ui uic HvAi uaj OT iwu. nc eSiuiisd by looss plBt*. OdS may lead to “inflation which'cannot be sworn in as a sens- paotsitb »t m sms oountor.____________ WASHINGTON (AP) - Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara has ordered a meticulous rechenk of all the military communications and power systems to make certain they cannot be knocked out by the kind FPC Asks Power Firms: What Now? WASHINGTON (UPI) - Fed- sponsored. The junior Syrd made it clear that while he expects to follow the course hewed out by his fa- said he sees little prospect for a BUDGET tax cut in the next year or so. I On budget balancing, the new —Barry (joMwater said he senator said, “1 feel that sooner doesn’t think John V. Lindsay’sW later we’ll need to put our ther in 32 years in the Senate,!victory in the New York City'fiscal house in a little better of power breakdown which darkened much of the U.S. Northeast last week. 1 The military communications and power setup operated! smoothly during that unprece-l dented blackout. ★ ★ * However, sources said McNamara and other defense officials had felt it advisable to recheck the systems worldwide to be sure they are as invulnerable to interruption as they are supposed to be. In the affected Northeast area, all U.S. Air, Navy and^ Army installations switch^ automatically to back-up power I er^riJ^CT tavratjators ;Mtj‘‘«rt,. major Eastern power compan- community went dark ies to supply them with “com- H fteir commercial sources plete and specific information!’^™ o™**" on what steps have been — and will be — taken to prevent another big blackout in the North- WORKED EFFECTIVELY ’Die Strategic Air Command | and the North American Airi defense Command both found that their auxiliary systems I worked effectively. In fact, military installations were in position to offer heip to the civilian Since the McNamara administration took over in the Pentagon nearly five years ago, there! has been great emphasis on as-|< suring uninterrupM communi-| cations which are essential in the atomic-nuclear age to affective defense and quick com- Federal Power Commission Chairman Joseph C. Swidler, named by President Johnson to head the inquiry into the massive Northeast power failure, dispatched telegrams to all utilities serving the area during the weekend. Swidler and ether FPC ia-vesdgators worked throagh the weekend attempting to piece together the reasons why the power failed. Yesterday they examined reaction, photographs of electrical dis- * * ^ *^ ^ ! turbances, called oscillograms. A system of redundancy has | 1,1, 1,, been built in everywhere. ’This ■ In the telegrams to the utili-i">«“s ] ties, the federal experts .Iso | ' asked for any recommenda-'®" * tions the companies may have Eveiything has at least , to avoid a repeat of last Tues- alternate day’s disaster. arrangements. y®®" t** Defense ! STUDIES SOUGHT Department is sp^g about Aiso sought were all techinical S700 million on improving the ! computer and control board intricate communications net-studies and internal memoranda work system. ; Officials are reluctant to go ; ' WWW ion record as saying with com- Human error has not. been Plete assurance that the hot line ruled out as the cause of the between Washington and Mos-power failure, and Swidler cow can never be knocked out.' asked the companies to provide They have claimed such invul-investigatcrs with the standing nerability to interruptions, but instructions issued to power dis-1 the Northeast blackout has patchers for severance of tiesin'ade them more cautious, al-with other utilities when dis- though they say they have no turbances occur. reason to believe there are any ------------------ weak links in the line. The hot line has one terminus I T y* 1 fL National Military Com- Ldfin lour Lilt Miorti'"®™* center in the Pentagon !and the other in the Kremlin. It kif DaImUm !*• for use in dire emer- Dy bOlQlOn Koyulty Iscncles by the U.S. president I and Soviet leaders to confer by BRUSSELS (An -- BecauM adent or misunderstanding, of the health of 89-year-old . . ()ueen Elisabeth who suffered a heart attack II days ago. King Baudouin and Queen Fabiola are returning from Latin America Tuesday, three days ahead of schedule, the royM palace announced today. OPEN your 1966 Christnos Hub NOW 99« The Belgian royal couple leave Rio de Janblro today after a five-day official visit to Brazil. ’They have been in Latin America almost a month, visiting Mexico, Chile, Argentina and Brazil. WWW ’The last medical bulletin on Thursday, said she was improving but needed a long rest. Bau-doufai’s brolber, Prince Albert, and his wife Prtaicess Paola, are| flyiqg bade from Peru today. In last week’s massive blackout the hot line was unaffected. It is composed basically of two circuits, a land-cable connection and a radio circuit used only to replace the land line in service emergencies. The cable connection goes from Washington, London, Copenhagen, Stockholm, Helsinki and on into Moscow. WWW The radio circuit traces from Washington througli Tangier in j north Africa and on to Moscow. i This bsMitiful China SiWTA cues BANK (2.50 Value) Yours for only WHEN YOU OPEN YOUR CHRISTMAS CLUB WITH USlj I SEND YOUR CHILD... a letterv^Sontfl Send your child a FREE letter from Santa Claus! How? Pick one up at any of our offices. Simply address it... stamp it... and drop it in our special mailbox. It will be mailed from Santa Claus, Indiana. DONT DELAY-DO IT TODAY! Bank with the **Bank on the Grow** 9 CONVENIENT OFFICES ■>OSaTI AC PONTIAC Bockcott PAINT STOBE ROCKCOTE PAINTS WALLPAPERS 2 SmHi Cm 192-4641 * Saginaw at Lawrsnes a AIMURN NllWm • lALOWIN at YALE a DRAYTON PUINS a OPOYKE-WALTON (Nsxt ta Rlua Sky Thaatra a M-M Flau a KAST HIOHUND (M-69 and Ouak Laka fid.) a Miraala Mila-Talagrapk Rd. a 9TR W. LONO UKK RO. Member Fuderal Deiault huurance Carp. LADIES.!. GET RID OF UNWANTED FAT! Your Waistline Is Your Ufelina! Doni Lot Your Ufe *d Graip negative * w p -wi y bacteria, including steams of H influenzae isolated from q>inal fluid. Gram negative is k term applied to bacteria decolorized by Gram’s solution. For penicillin-G-resistant staphylococcal meningitis, the d^ roethicillin is preferred. "Michigan is pretty well up Ml what ite probl^s are, they've -b«Bi| .m^p^'^prove-ments and an 'poioution-con-scious,” he said. "But we’d like to see it 100 per cent.” The report showed that of 61 in .the I only’ two fai^|> pra^e a quate, polhitioh contedb. Tlieae said to provide protection.” These were Identified as Ceiotex Corp., L'Ans Manistiqne Pulp 1 Paper Co.; Ehst OanjaM,Canning Co.,, and Lea ChenAnx ' Antoinatlc Laundry, CedarvOle. Studies are under way and pbms being prepared for the Ceiotex and Manistique planto, it was sadd. Need for antipollution controls has not bpra established at two plants-Bancroft Dairy, Inc;, Marquette, and the John Zeller automatic laundry, Germ-fask, the rqwrt said. It listed 39 indnsteies as having adequate coittrois, ahd another 14 at which the ade-. of detennined. C(Hnmunltihs Vlhere Was said sewage treatment facllikea should be expanded by idw were CONTROL DEVICIE Clevenger, who te hopeful ^ more industries W be attracted to his district, saM madm control devices can protect the purity of the area’s water. doesn’t have < to wihrte,” be said. The HEW report also inventoried the municipal sewage collection and treatment systems of 65 communities. Four were area,ji|^ to ua I akM Oarievolx, Qha^, a»( tSrystal Fall Which now has no such works. MpTREATHiiiNT Oh the basis M the 1660 eiti- voix Bnv«; PItv and WsSfleld**^’ Showed 40,0^ by no sewage treatment plant, Ul,060 hy primary treatment pleaie, 60,066 by the more ade-quate aecxmdary treatment works, and none by the sophisticated "tertiary” facilities. 14 New Schools Will Be Ready by 70 By Science, Service CHICAGO— An era of "miajor expansion” will bring 14 new medical schools to compl^on by 1970, making a total at 101 in the United Stetes. ' Sonte v67 .hWereyting eqsnlments in medical education are expedted, tiys the 60th at|hual report on medical edueg,-tion ity the Aperican roedlcal Association’s Council on Eduba-tion. . AlAoiilt the new sehouls wUl be competing hr faculty ‘ 7 philters With existing schools, they wUl open up new ap- porilniitiee for leadership to young, vigorous scientists, the report laid. Plrom 000 to 1,000 new poeitkms will be available to qualified applicanta. w ★ ♦ Besides the 14 schools, at least 10 other Institutions probably will follDW through with other.new medical schools. Eight of the 14 planned will provide full four-year programs toadhig to the M.D. degre^. • A The other six are expected to he two-year sdradls covering basic medical sciences, several of which may ultiii»tely become four-year institutions when thieiy have beoonM estaMMwd. Aecardht ^ *6 five- cost 62.1 Ts piuvide _____eouumud^ hi the 21- cMmty hrea, and U mlllidp for the terd^ variety. ' /Oq the basis of the basis of tee naUonal aVerage increioe about 7 per cent in such costs, tee figurm now would total |2.2 miBion and 16.4 million. HEW records showed 19 ^qts totaling 62,^478 made to seW-Ige tt-eatment works projects in tee area, ranging froip. H,39l to Cheiwygan to $500,000 to the Portage Lake Sewage Auteorhy and deluding 11,160,000 for te-eiJides still under Mjpsteuction, Traffic Row L^s to Fatal Shikiting DETROIT (APHAn unidentified motorist stibt' and killed another motorist at a dty street intersection Saturday ni^t in a traffic argument. .Police are seeking him. Robert B. Barnes, 83, of Carle-ton in Monroe County was the ctlm. Police said witnesses reported e other driver shot l^mes and drove away aftq- BdSmes came to his car wite a tire wrMich in his hand. Barnes accused the other driver of blodc-hig the intersection, tee wit-St said. ' THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. ypVEMBER 15. 1965 TWO COLORS C—l If9 A Pleasure To Shop and Sam At FOOD TOWN SUPER MARKETS * I ’**• | n»CeoltyLikilU.| H» shn^.. i|..< | |M4tMWilUainiUli«U. I C»«»f C«liHiiki« I Unim UU ViHat* I Ca«Iif MaJJai^ SUNDAYS I OWN SUNDAYS | o«N SUNDAYS I OfSN SUNDAYS PEOPLE'S FOOD MARKETS 2U AUlURN I MS E. PIKE ST. | 7MAUWIMST. t 0... a W..K ■ Ofw > A.M. kl t r.M. ■ ,xm , u »AM.-fc|»f.M. ■ «OayiaW..k ■ I goSIO SUNDAYS § OWN SUNDAY lU OMNAU LAKE AVL OfMf AAL'MtPJA. I AOAYSAWItK Doj^t Miss These Outstanding Food Totm-^People^s Exciting Bargain buys! f 1965 6 EXCITING WEEKS OF GOLD BELL VALUES GALORE-BUY NOW AND SAVE! We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities . . . None Sold to Dealert or Minort HART TOMATO JUICE 1 QT. 14-OZ. MEADOWDALE APPLE SAUCE MEADOWDALE PORK and BEANS CAN POUND CM K)« Round C—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, NOVEMBEIl 15, 1965 'Increase US. Rights Agents' Federal Unit Reports on Low in the South WASraNGTON m - Tt» U. S. Civil Rights Commission wants President Johnson to assign more FBI agents and federal marshals to racially tense areas with power to make spot arrests in case of trouble. The recommendation was one of three major proposals included in the commission's 188-page report to the President and Congress on law enforcement in the South. The report was made public during the weekend. It would involve a major change of policy on the part of the government. At present, federal officers are used to curb racial violence only in situations involving a federal court order. In addition, the commission urged that federal courts in given power to take over in cases ot racial violence where local prejudice makes a fair trial unlikely in state courts. ♦ ★ The commission also called for enactment of a broad new law, baaed on Congress' power to reguldte interstate commerce, making it a federal crime to threateil, intimidate, or puniph civil rights workers. JURISMCnON Under the proposed law, federal courts could assume jurisdiction in cases already tried or pending in state courts ahd incidents which have resulted in no state prosecution. The commission that a three-jndgi dera prooecutioa. Federi fiition would be in order ! the failure of local of 0 act, or the iKtheir action constitute 1 of equal protection in thi /Administration of justice or e it is determined that Jus-e is administered in the community involved in a manner so as to deny equal protection of die laws," the commission said. William L. Taylor, director of the commission’s staff, saM such a law would have permitted federal prosecution of Thomas L. Coleman, who was acquttted at Hayneville, Ala. in tte shotgun slaying pf Jonathan Daniels, h Keene, N. H., civil rights worker. ★ aw The commission took issue with the Justice D^rtmcnt's “reluctance" to protect Civil lights workers against violence. It disputed the department's view that increasing federal protection would raise serious constitutional questions. Radio Figure Dead ST. LOUIS, Mo. (AP) - Gil Newsome, 48, nationallv known radio announcer during IMOs, died Saturday after a Ibng illness. Newsome was announcer for the “Chesterfield Supper Club” show which featured the Seismograph Records 'Fairly Strong' Quake NEW YORK (ift - A "fairly ---- - ® strong” earthquake 4,400 miles band of the late Glen Miller and from here — probably in north- 'Heredity^ BigFc [NGTON (UPI) — Prize - winning scientist today be believes hered/i^ rather than environment may be a .mi^ factor in such problems ps crime, delinquency and pubUC relief. Dr. William Shockley of Stanford University; a co-wiimer the Nobel Prize for physics 1956, urged an immediate and thorough inquiry into the problem. In . a copyrighted interview in “UJS. News, A World Report" magazine, Shockley colliding with another plane. Graham was killed. The other plane made a safe landing in a nearby field. Brilain Se^OK Today isia Legislation LONDON /AP) ■ Britain' Labor govCniment planned to push it^mergency Rhodesian ' ' fon through Parliament Meanwhile, the British of the rebellious cen-African colony rejected Rhodesian Prime Minister Ian Smith’s demand that he get out of Government House. The legislation to pave the way for stronger economic sanctions ' against Rhodesia's white minority government was expected to rushed through Parliament without a formal vote. Such Conservative diehards as the Marquess of Salisbury in Program Is Offered on Land-Use laws the House of Lords and Patrick Wall and Robert Turton in the House of Commons were opposed to sanctions. But party leader Edward Heath, Re^nald Maudling and other members of the opposition party's dominant government's action so far. The chief actions taken apinst the Rhodesian re^me are a ban on import of Rhodesii tobacco, which usdhlly amounts to about $70 million a year, and various financial restrictions. TOLD TO VACATE The Rhodesian government after is declaration of inde-Thursday relieved Governor Sir Humphrey Gibbs of Ms office and told him catc Government House, hiS official residence and office. In a statement addressed An all -day program featuring diacasskn on Michigan zoning and public control of land use is scheduled at 9 a.m. tomorrow at the Oakland County Court house Auditorium. The program is sponsored by tlic Institute of Continuing Legal Education of the University of Michigan Law School, Wayne State University Law School and the State Bar of Michigan. WWW Two University of Michigan Law School professors and an Ann Arbor attorney will conduct the program. Similar programs are scheduled in eight other state locations during Zoning Week in Michigan, Nov. 15-20. the "Coca-Cola Bands” show. Spotlight NOTICE or MORTOAOE SALE em Chile — was recorded today on the Fordham University seismograph. TTie Rev. Joseph Lynch, direc-T^”Arre.' .’MichT loT of the University's seismic — —. .. ...- -Kordedwas picked up at 6:29 a.m., EST., and the second at 6;38. The distance was certain but IMS, and ___________thd oHIc* pl lh« RdBli- tar At Oa«H for the County ot 0»kl—■ and Stato tH Mlcnioan, In-Libor « “ —, Oakland County Rocordt, Marcti M. IMS, ki eaoa I wblSi I wrtoag# tl owing at Twanty-dx Thoutand Thraa Hundrad and Nmaty-alglit and SI/IW Dollar, in«.-M.SU; and no toll or procaading r -or ki aquity bavlne boon Jtad or Inal to raoovar ttia dabt aacurad by mortgaga or any part tbaraot: the Rhodesian people gsunday, the Rhodesian people Sunday, Gibbs replied that Smith’s government was illegal and that the pvemor was the only “lawftilly constituted authority in Rhodesia.” ★ ♦ * "I hold my office at the pleasure of Her Majesty the <^een and I will only resign if asked by Her Majesty to do so," Gibbs said. “Her Majesty has asked me to continue in office and therefore remain your loyal governor and the lawfully constituted authority in Rhodesia.' stitited authority in Rhodesia. Smith made no immediate move to eject Gibbs from Government House but in a statement said the governor “is representing not the queen but the British prime minister thus aiding and abetting him in his obvious endeavor to create a division aipong the people of Rhodesia.” FEAR GIBBS IN DANGER Prime Minister Wilson’s office said it feared Gibbs is in danger from Smith’s government and that anyone who ordered or carried out his forcible expulsion commits an “act of treason." Few Rhodesians knew of the governor's statement. Government censorship kept it out of the local papers and off the Rhodesian radio. the direction not, he reported. $50,000 Fire Destroys Indian Lake Restaurant TOWAGIAC (UPD— Timber-line Inn restaurant and lounge was destroyed by fire early today at Indian Lake, causing Voters Keep Government in Ryukyus NAHA, Okinawa fUPI) • Ryukyuan chief executive Seiho Matsuoka’s Democratic party today held its 32-man majority in the Ryukyuan Legislature by winning 19 seats in yesterday’ election. The election assured that 59-year-old Matsuoka would be reappointed high commissioner when his term expires this month. Despite Sunday’s day-long dewnponrs, 84 per cent of the eligible voters turned onl ia 2S districts throughont the Ryukyus. Seven unopposed The Socialist Masses and Socialist party bloc maintained the major opposition status, claiming nine districts, with three in-reflecting varying sympathies, taking three seats. ★ ★ ’The Communist Ok,inawa But the congregation, at Salisbury’s Anglican Cathedral heard Bishop Cecil W. Alderson declare that the seizure of inde-pendfeoce was wrong and Illegal. He said Christians should disobey laws enacted by Smith’s regime to “subvert the "spirit of the displaced con8titution,”| which Smith threw out after his yoshi Frugen, waa reelected to the party’s single seat from Naha City district. CANDIDATE BARRED Two Communists, Including party leader Makejiro Senaga, onetime impeached Naha mayor, were disbarred from candidacy by the government election committee minutes before the balloting started. Also barred were the Socialist Masses and Nationalist party candidates. All had previous felony convictions. $5,000 Blaze Hits Home in Waterford “My great wqrry is that, adequate research along this line were carried out, we might find that there M a strong genetic factor at work, and that heredity very much limits, the ' improvement we can expect in jch cases______ “We may find that a dismal possibility turns out to be a fact: Many of the large improvident families, with social problems simply have constitutional deficiencies in those parts of the brain which enable a person to plan and carry out plana. “And 1 also suggest that this characteristic, especially if found in both parents, can be passed from one generation to another.” ADAM BECKER . Service f«- Adam Backer, fs, of .137 W. New Yortt, ’will be 1:30 p.m. Wednesday ii the Hun-toon Funeral Home ^wHh burial in Perry Mount Park CemetSty. Mr. Becker died today foDow-Jdg a long illness. He was iwtired employe of thd Fisher Body Division. Surviving are one daughter, Mrs. Warner Irwin of Pontiac, ^[and three sisters. GEORGE DICKIE George Dickie, 87, of 932 Boston, Waterford Township, died yesterday. His body is at the Donelson-dohns Funeral Home." He was retired fQjtn ihe maintenance department of GMC Truck and Coach Division and member of First Christian Church. Surviving are his stepmother, Mrs. John Dickie ef Brantford, Ont.; two daughters, Mrs. Melvin Maurer of Marshfield. Wis. and Mrs. Douglas McCormick of Brantford, Out.; two sisters; and fqMT grandchildren. Veep loo fast With Answer? Said Russia, China Traded Border Shots A fire at the home of Anthony Oliver, 3720 Chenlot, Waterford Township, yesterday damages estimated .at $5,000, according to Waterford Township firemen. The blaze was caused by lighted cigarette and started a sofa.fai the living room of the one-story frame and brick dwelling, according to firemen. No one was home at the time. Fire fighters listed damage at $3,000 to the building and $2,000 to the contents. They battled the fire — reported at 1:15 for approximately 45 minutes. “T* •.* Ijidamage estimated at about $50,- “''ation of independence. ........................... . Poo 0“ Ooklano County, Mklilgon ilhot ..... «ntr»nce .. 0 the City of Poo- 000 /, Mklilgon (thol e-- j . o_ t e ft* Circuit Court Fu^c departments from In-IS r..r^rSK''rii;S*'‘'ir«il.‘ ,s:?;.,s:i Mkhl-j^Corperotlon ot SInnInghom, Mlchl^, ”**CLAReNCl I. CLDRIOOE JR. Attornoy tor Mortgogot IW Pin* NillOMI CJMiit Ami Arbor, MicMgob Novtmbor «, H,^Tm3 », MU om Oocombor 4, U li ' “ - T SS Modal. r imon Islands in which John F. Kennedy served as an officer. Calvert’s owork on the staff of Gen. Douglas MacArthur during thi battle for Guadalcanal Woo him the Disfinguished Service drive which ends Friday. A total of eight candidates seek the Utle. The queen will be crowned at tba ’’Oaktond a-GoGo" d a n c e Saturday night sponaored by the Student Activities Board. CHICAGO (UPI) - Aides to Vice President Hubert Humphrey yesterday said Humphrey did not mean to imply in an interview that Soviets and Red Chinese had exchanged gunfire across their common boundary.' The controversy stemmed from an unfinish^ question and a quick answer. Hamphrey, wbO gave the quick answer, did not mean to make that implicatina, his aides said. Television interviewer Irv Kupdnet, who didn't get to finish his question, said that’s what be thought the vice meant. A tape of the show ypsterday. revealed this exchange: ‘T don’t think Americans know that China today, in preparing maps for its schoolchildren, claims an area in the Soviet Union that’s half the size of the United States,” Humphrey said. Knpeinet asked: “Aad is it not true, aitkongh not pub-liihcd, that there’s beea some firing between the Red Chinese on the border.. Humphrey broke in with an answer before Kupdnet com-|8eted his question: “Oh, yes, on the border, a fact which ia quite common Deaths in Pontiac, Neighboring Aretas BCALLACE E. FINNIGAN Service for Wallace E- Fihni-gan, infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Finnigan, 158 Green, was to be today at the Donel-son-Johns Funeral Home, with burial at Monnt Hope Cemetery. The 19day-old baby died Friday. Surviving besides his parents are two sisters, Joyce and Charlotte, and four brothers, James, Thomas, Rodney and. John, all at home. ALFRED L. HARDING Service for Alfred L. Harding, 74, of 495 Scott Uke, Waterford Township, wUl be Wednesday at 3 p.m. at the Donelson-Johns Fuiieral Home, with burial at Cresent Hilla Cemetary, Waterford Township. Mr. Hardint died yesterday after a long illness. He retired insurance agent and member of F 8{ A.M. in Illinois. Surviving besides his wife, Pauline, is a daughter, Pauline at home, MRS HOMER HENRY Service for Mrs. Homer (Lora .) Henry, 84, of 4733 Dixie, Waterford Township, will be 2 ,i.m. totoorrow^n Sharpe-Goyet-te Funeral Home, (^kston, with burial in Ottawa Park Cemetery, Independence Township. Mrs. Henry died yesterday following a long illness. She was a member of the First Presbyterian Church. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Ferris Holcomb of darks-ton and Mrs. John Kent of Elk a p i d s, three grandchildren, and one great-grandchild. BURT H. HOBEY reddent Burt Hi Mobey, 76, of Settowatog will be II ajn. to-morrodr. at the sdbuhz Funeral Home, &bewaing, dtth burial at 3:38 p.m. in White C2iapel Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Hobey died Saturday after a leng illness. A caretaker for Bay Shores Park Asaodation in Sebewaing, he formerly owned a service 'station here for 30 ■' ' Surviving besides his wife. Lois A., are a stepdaughter, Mrs. Faye Larrange of Keego Harbor; a sister, two brothers; and a stepgrandchild. MRS. CHARLES D. JENNINGS Service for Mr?. Charles D. (Ida L.) Jennings, 84, of 62 Gladstone, was 1 p.m. today at the Vorhees Siple Funeral Home Home with burial in Ottawa Park Cemetery. Mrs. Jennings died Saturday after a long illness. She is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Abel R. Borey of Pontiac, a sister, two granddaughters and eight great-grandchildren. HOLUS J. LEE Service for former Pontiac resident Hollis J. Lee, 61, of Santa Anna, Calif., will be p.m. Thursday at the Harold R. Davis Funeral Home, with burial in’White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Lee, a retired tool maker at Fish Body Division, diiil Saturday after an illness of several months. He was a past president of le Body drafters Federal Credit Union. Surviving are his wife Vera; three daughters, Mrs. Jean Warren of Pontiac, Mrs. Edna Schooltz of (California, Mrs. Donna Hand of Lake City; two sons. Max of Agbum Heights and Kenneth of California; a brother and 16 ^raty|children. KE^TH G. SHUART Service for Kenneth G. Shuaft,^ 21, pf 56 E. Iroquois will be 11 a.m. Wednesday in Huntoon Funeral Hofne with biolal in White Chapel Memorial Cemetary. Shuart died unexpectedly Friday. He was a member of the Bad Axe Presbyterian Church. Surviving are his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ger^d Shuart of Pontiac; two brothers, *rhomas and William, and.a.plater, Peggy, all of Pontiac; maternal grandmother, Mrs. Jdaiiette Reinke of Pontiac and paternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. James Shuart of Bad Axe. GRACE A. RICHERT Graveside service'for Grace A. Richert, IH-month-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lee C. Richert, 74 Thorpe, was held to- p.m. tomorrow at ,Tod C. Sullivan Funeral Hohie^ Detroit. Mrs. Brewer died Saturday after a long illness.' She was head of the gifts and rare books division of the Detroit Public ^irary.’. Surviving besjlks husband is a sister. (Contributions can be made to the Friends of the Detrdlt Library, Inc. EDWARD S. CIBMINGS BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Service for Edward S. Cumings, 71, of 57 S. Berkshire will be 1 p.m. Wednesday at the First Presbyterjan Cburch, Pontiac. Burial will be in Elm Lawn Cemetery, Bay City, by Donelson-Johns Funeral Home, Pontiac. Mr. Cumings died yesterday after a long illness, He was a retired farmer. Surviving are his Wife, Carmen; his mother, htrs. William Cumings of Flint; a sister, and a brother. SUZANNE HASTINGS ROCHESTER-Suzanne Hast-igs, 18-year-old daughter of Mr. id Mrs. Nor,man Hastings, 827 N. Main, died today after a long illness. Her body is at the William R. Potere Funeral Home. Scheduling Delays Return of Actress Humphrey’s vice presidrot meant to imply that the Soviets and Red Chinm are massing troops on the bottler in an area that has beea claimed by both countries. The aide was asked by United Press International if the Vice President then had on kaowledgeofany gunfire acroM the Sino-Soviet border. ‘The vice president didn’l comment on that,” the aide said. “Such a question falls in areas which may or may not be for public consumption.” W V ★ Kupdnet, a newspaper columnist and moderator of the television show which was taped Saturday for viewing yesterday, said yesterday he felt Humphr^ understood the question. He said he had not restated or rephrased me question because he felt Humphrey had re-' plied to the question, which Kupdnet said was prompted by repeated rumors of trouble on the ShioGoviet border. TOKYO (fl - The Ikeya-Seki comet has split into two parts, the Tokyo Astronomical Observatory reported today. Apparently the comet split after its close approach to the suft recently, but the dbservatory did not say this. A spokesman said the comet was photographed Saturday at the Kodaira Observatory itatlbn 30 miles north of Tokyo snd tite split was discovered. The comet, found by two Japanese amateur Students at Evangel Cojl^e will astronomers, is now some Tolbegin distributing aiitofBobile million miles away from the sunibumper stiokers Tuesday which 'Bw relationship of home and the observatory added. |read: “We back our boys In Viet In the education of al I Nam/’ youngster will be discussed by ' Student Sticker Sale to Bock 'Boyi in Viet' SPRINCnELO, Mo. (AP) S e r V i c e for former Pontiac Baby Richert died Friday. Surviving besides her parents are three brother! and sisters. MRS. ROBERT V. RYNER80N Service for Mrs. Robert V. (Helen C.) Ryndrson, 88, of 5445 Brunswick, Waterford Township, win be 10:30 a.m. Wednesday in the D.E. Pufsley Funeral Home. Burial will be in Oakwood Cemetery, Mooticello, Iowa. She died yesterday flawing a lengthy illness. Surviving are her husband, a brother, two sisters and a grandchild. MRS. GEORGE E. F. BREWER NOVI — Requiem Mass for Mrs. George E. F. (Frances J.) Brewer, 42, of 28610 Meadow-brook will be 10 a.m. Wednesday at Preciousf Blood Church, Detroit. Burial'will be in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery, Southfield. Rosary will be recited at 8 HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - Actress Dorothy Malone, 40, did not return to work in the “Peyton Place” hilevision series today as planned because of a change in the filming schedule. ’’I ’Was upset at first to learn ides said the ^ wouldn’t be going back to • ■ work uitil Friday, but with the rainy weather. I’m just as happy now’’ she laid. Miss Malone, who Won an Aca-emy Award as the best supporting actress for her performance in “Written on the Wind” in 1956, underwent 10 hours of airgery last Sept. 24 to ronove blood clots from her lungs. She said she now is feeling well. Public Health Figure Planning to Retire WASHINGTON (UPI) CaBls H. Atkins, assistant suigeon general !nd chief engineer of the U.S. Pdbllc Health Service, is retiring from the service, effective jan. '16. It was announced todey. Atkins, who has been chief engineer since 1982, will become director of the dvision of environmental health for the World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland. He wilt be succeded In the Public Health Service by Albert H. Stevenson, currently sanitary engineer director in the service’s Indian Health servicei tUviskn. Schpi^ Sop«rjntoiM|«ft to Talk Jn Wallod Lok« COMMERCE ’TOWNSHIP - MRS. WILLIAM H. SHERWOOD ORION TOWNSHIP -M r s. William H. (Eley) Sherwood, 82, i036 McClellan died Saturday. Her body is at the Groves Funeral Home, Flint. Mrs. Sherwood was a member of the West Flint Church, of God. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. N. J. Greer of Flint and Mrs. Vernon Stickler of 0 r i o n Townsjiip; a brother; nine grandchildren: and 10 great-grandchildren. MRS. ORA E. SHUMAN WALLED LAKE-Scrvice for Mrs. Ora E. (Maude) Shuman, 89, of 1207 Wabasco will be 2 p.m. Wednesday from the Shoup Funeral Home, Howe, Ind. Burial will be in Wolcottville, Ind., Cemetery. Arrangements were by the Richardson-Bird Funeral Home. Mrs. Shuman died yesterday after a long illness. Surviving are three sons, Thurlow of Walled Lake, Thur-maif of Howe, Ind., and Theron of Phoenix, Ariz.; a brother; five grandchildren; and 10 great-grandchildren. MRS. MARLYN STROVEN PONTIAC TOWNSHIP - Service for Mrs. Marlyn (Imogene) Stroyen, 25, of 3710 Havens Lane w|ll be 2 p.m. Wednesday at S^rks-Griffin Funeral Home, Pontiac. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mrs. Stroven died Saturday after a short illness. She was a member of Auburn Heights United Presbyterian Church. Surviving besides her husband are two sons, Jeffrey and Jon, both at home; her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Boyd of Newaygo; six brothers; Ond two sisters. fritz g, wooton MILFORD—Service for former resident Fritz G. Wooton, 75, of Sarasota, Fla., will be 1 p.m. Wednesdfy at Richardson-Bird Funeral Home. Burial will be in OakgroVe Cemetery. Mr. Wooton died Saturday! Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Norwood Caswell of Milford and Mrs. Thomas Barthel of Greenville: two sons, William of Milford and Jack 5f Sarasota, Fla.; 19 grandchildren; and ei^t great-grandchildren. ea}l or. (D.ncL 3t. ^tlim Dart to be wise, jjegin. He who postpones the hour of living riglitty is like the rustic who waits for the river to run ont before he crosses. — Homos, poet of ancient Rome. John Shows, pi^ident of the Called Lake Schools Supt. 600-member student body, said Gews* Carver aj Olfngaty El-the students wiH eeU the stldi- «n>«>t«ry School tooLiht. ere and the prece^ will go to, Ggrver will speak at tkn I support orphans in South VM meeting of tl)^ There Are Definite ' Profeiaional Requirements . . . Th# kunaril Dirtetor and Embalmg/ mu»t paif rlsid tifamlnatlona and bt licanttd to prKtica. Apprgnticathto ‘ and a coUaga aducatlon art raquirgd. ; ‘ .Thu* txparlenc* •* will pi profeuion-al knoMflodia ara a part of training. Our profMiion I* firmly aatabllihed dafinitt itandardi, larving tha THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. NOVEMBER 15. 1965 0-8 Weather Is Wintry in Europe LONDON (UPI> - wintry weather swept across much of Europe today. Heavy snow fell in many areas. ture of two degrees below aero, the lowest for this time of year in four decades. An inch of snow fell on the fttviet capital, More than two feet of snow fen OB the sonthem Danish island of Lolland, and road salvage teams struggling thnmgh deep drifts gave up attempts to clear rural roads. Below-zero temoperatnres and icy roads afflicted most of Rivers began freezing in Norway. Cheerful ski enthusiasts queued up overnight in Osl to buy tickets for the world ski championships to be held in February. Snow blanketed Lapldtad, and in Switzerland skiers appeared on the slopes as heavy snows closed down some mountain passes for the winter. MOUNTAIN SNOW Vienna reported temperatures at the freezing point, with below zero registered in the Austrian Alps. In Italy, snow fell steadily on peaks of the Apennines and on Sicily’s Etna volcano. temperatnres abound the feeea-iug point. Rome was coM but not freezing, with Intermittent rain. Dutch newspapers ran frontpage photographs of people skating in a blanket of snow in the southeast of the country. Both West and East Germany reported snow, icof and fog. PARIS CLOUDY The Paris area was cold with temperatures a r o u n d the freezing mark. A light snow fell in the Jura Mountain area near the Swiss border. Scattered rain was reported in tbe northeast.' Forty-seven counties in Britain were reported affected by snow, ice or fog. Heart Attacks Kill 5 Hunters NaGun Deaths in 1st , U.P. Season Weekend By United Press International I^e elderly hunters suffered fatal heart attacks during t h e first weekend of the Upper Peninsula hunting season. No s h 0 01 i n g fatalities had been reported but there have been several Injuries from rifle shots. State Police said. )anice Edmark, 12. Wakefield, was shot in both legs by a banter aud was reported In sisckms conditioB. The girl was riding in a sleigh with hw brother when she stood up and the hunter, Allra Wip-bum, 20, West Allis, Wis., fired at what he thought was a deer. ♦ w ★ The bullet entered her upper light leg and pierced her upper left leg. PUSH SEARCH George Lukka, 46, Bergland, was reported missing, and State Police and volunteers today still were searching' for him in woods around Marinesco Township in Gogebic County. nose suffering fatal heart attacks while hunting In the U.P. inclnded: Raymond Hermanson, il, Mass, last night in Greenland Township, Ontonagon County. * * w Milford Steele, S7, Waters-meet, Saturday in McMillan Township, Ontonagon County. Oare Foster, 58, Lansing, Sat-ur^y in Newton Township, Mackinac County. WWW Lyle Farrow, 68, Farwell, Saturday in Baraga Township, Baraga County. Wendell Gamble, fS, rural Hart, Saturday in Bates Township, Iron County. Hr Now AvailabU ir OFFICE SPM it air-conditionocl it 600 tq. ft., hooted, elevator,., janitor Mivico, privote parking, convenient porking for Cdltoineri, lorge window. 75 W. HURON $T. •t Wide Track Drive Cail33l7127 "Super-Right" Cut from Mature Corn-Fed Beef "Super-Right" Quality SPARE RIBS 2 tp 3 lb. Sizea 49 Ready M Eot—Bontltsa. UNNED HAMS 6 & 4” Ik Center Cut Round 89 Cube or Sirloin CHIP OR I TINDIR, JUICY T-BONE.............1®* < PORTERHOUSE... « 1‘* "SUPER-RIGHT" QUALITY Rump oT Rotisserie Roust» 99^ nUMB-RiaHT** BLAOl CUT a AC ‘’tUMR-RIOHr* BLADI CUT H Chuck Roost.... u 49* ChucA Steok.... ^> 59* nUPIR RI#HT« BONILBtl ■■ PBRLRD A DIVRI,RD A OWAa Stewing Beef... 79 Med. Shrimp .. 3 >'• 3** ✓ nupm RieNT*® eoNiLiti flSO cap'n iouNt pantail a €70 strip Steak.........» 1” Breaded Shrimp 2 F* Mushrooms 4H89* "SUPER-RIGHT" QUALITY AU BEEF HAMBURGER QuontitiM ^9 Lb. Pkg. C 149* R# ” 4 V® No Coupons, No Gjmniicks, No Limits... Just Quality Merchandise at Low Prices! Firm, Crisp Heod lETTUCE 2^29* For School Lunches a*p-«u« finest ouahty m A Ac BAN An As * * * ^ 2 2 Cc Hi-C Drink 3 89 Ai swansdown-3 varieties e% MB. VAr DOMINO 10-X SUGAR -1S‘ ROBINHOOD Blixes . #7 FLOUR 5«^49< iiS.ls..p 4^49* ANN PAGE PRESERVES Apricot - Peach - Pineapple 3‘69- AHN PAQI _ Grope ulom 3 jar 69 MEDIUM-SHARP Munduriu Ornnges 4 c>;^s 89 rilAllIVCIimU 111 a&f all green-cut M het WT. AAc CHEESE Aspurngus Spenrs KQ* Crushed Piaraiiple 4 99 C?;^ Cheese...; -29* fumily flour 0 39 Did you know that • ‘’soffbnead isn’t necessarily fresh bread? Tiu^ Jane Parker yea4 is dated duty ..irt YQUR OUARAflTIC OP FREaHMEBt* JANI PABKIR INRICHED wmn BRUD Save 16*-enlone Parker Apple Pie 39H DETERGENT ~ 10c OFF LABEL MB. 8-OZ. SIZE Jane Parker Golden loaf Cake 2k^49‘ €■ IN PKG. ^ M Rinso Blue .. r°l' 59 . V4.6AL. 77c Ammoniu ... i.rr. ^Ac Detergent... ATIANTIC a PACIFIC TtA COMPANY ' AMUICA $ DlPENDABll tOOO MtRCHANT SINCE 1859 Meet BWemlve TWtMh Tnee. Nov. f« C—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1965 CAKE SPECIAL-The Food and Culinary Arts Show at the Lightguard Armory in Detroit yesterday feati^ this seven-foot cake (left). All types of fancy breads, cakes, pies and foods were presented. The huge cake was made at the Detroit Athletic Club, and tl|e cake replica d the Ambassador Bridge (right) was baked by the Sacred Heart Seminary. Storm Signals Raised Again on Cyprus FAMAGUSTA. Cyprus (P -Storm signals are again flying over the eastern Mediterranean land. The Turkish army has been alerted once more amid talk of a possible invasion if there is renewed blood-letting between the Turkish and Greek Cypriots. The newest war scare was triggered by recent ootbnrsts of violence between the island’s Greeks and Tnrks living in this ancient, walled suid moated city. One T u r k i 8 h Cypriot was killed and a half-dozen others from both sides were wounded. The U. N. Security Council urged all parties to refrain from further provocations. TENSE SITUATION The situation in Famagusta is tense, with both sides glaring across mountains of sandbags. The United Natioos peacekeepers are desperately trying to defuse the bomb by F-A-S-T Mimeographing Churches—Schools Groups CHRISTIAN LITERATURE SALES 55 Oakland Ave. FE 4-9591 SPECIAL FOR WOMEN IrrtiuUr or MMty mtoiM any »• from porloeic phyilcal dlitroM wttb thli S«Dtlt boncopathlc prepknOon. Aik your druffiit for HUMPHRITS "11". sides to demilitnrize new fortifications — the same fortifl-catioBS that led to the latest shooting incidents. If Famagusta or any other island city explodes again, it could prod Turkey and Greece into open war. This is something their NATO partners fear the most. Trouble erupted between the two communities at Christmas^ time 1963 because of the island’s constitution. LARGE CONTROL President Archbishop Makar-ios said it gave too much control to Cyprus’ 100,000 ’Turkish Cypriots. The 'Turks replied that the conatitution was a legal document established to protect them fron the half-million Greek majority. As the fighting escalated, Turkey threatened to land troops on the bland to protect the Turkish community. Thb right of intervention b claimed aader treaties setting np the bland repobUc in 1900. The Turkbh army never came. In August 1964, however, ’Turkish jet filter bombers strafed and bombed Greek Cypriot locations hi northern and western CyiMus. * * * War was barely averted. * * ★ The solution to Cyprus’ anguish appears as far away today as it did two yean ago. MAJORITY RULE Makarios wants unfettered independence, with majority rule. The Turkish Cypriots say the Greek Cypriots really want to join the island to Greece. The Turks seek separate but equal rule under some kind of I federal or cantonal system. j As the "Cyprus problem”' drags on, there is growing dis-satbfaction here with both ’Turkey and Greece. - ★ ★ * Many Greek Cypriots feel Athens is too preoccupied with its own politics and b not giving Makarios enough support. GREEK BACKING Or. the w h 01 e, they backed former Greek Premier George Papandreou rather than Ms successor Stephan Stephanopi in the recant government erbb in Athens. They respited King Constantine’s actions in ousting Papandreou, calling it interference. Turkbh Cypriots had hoped that Turkey’s new prime minb-ter, Suleyman Demirel, would implement his “dynamic Cy-puiT. policy” aa promised prior to Ms election. ★ w ★ But the Famagusta shooting prompted Turkey to appeal to the United Nations. No TUrkbh troops tended on the bland, although they were place on alert. TURKISH PAPER One ’Turkish Cypriot newspaper commented: “Judging from previous experience, it’s a foregone conclusion that the Greeks will never heed the Security Council recianmeii-dationa. “It b therefore difflcalt to understand Tqrkey’a attitnde.’’ And in Famagusta, a Turkbh Cypriot throws a rock at a Greek C^ot policeman standing under one of the ancient walls. A Greek Cypriot screams an epithet at a Turk entrenched behind bags of sand. U. N. forces move in to soothe edgy tempers. Fresh violence is| averted by only the thinness of a bayonet blade. I# SPECML VINYL ASBESTOS TILE 1t< QUALITY Sxf I BOX OF 54 Nh FUSTIC COATED Tumble PANELING I niKCliiiHT h'Ai.i; ^AMPCO CEILING TILE 3 Elegant Patterns to Choote From! Check These Features Ceramic Wall Tile 4V4”x4V4” Wo Loan Tools ' MAC-O-LAC Wonder Paint of The Century SOLID VINYL TILE-9x9xVt" Were 60c NOW 12* •• ROYAL BOND PAINT • um • DUMIL, UL eOLOn 19*. PANELING LUAN MAHOGANY I 4'x8» PLASTIC WALL TILE 2V47N0W1 CERAMIC TILE For Fbor, WaN 111 CiystsNao 59 le In. 1075 W Huron St. Phone . 334-99S7 If You Don’t Buy From Us, We Both Lose Money! TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! ptfHTY ^ PONTIAC'S LARGEST TILE CENTER - OF FREE Our Own Installation Work Done by Experts ^ PARKINQ 0|MnM»n.Aii4Fri.‘tMliNF.N.TiiBC.,W«4.,Tk«r»,,t«t.1M IF.M. ESTIRIATES I THE BQNTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. NOVEMBER 15. 1965 Hql Jk)yle's Mailbag Speaks: Accidents Are Co^ly to Americans; 50 Million Hurt in '64 NEW « USED WHEEL CMIRS FOR SRLE OR RENT By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK (AP) Thinss a columnlft might never know if he didn’t open bit mail: Accidenta now coit America over flS billion a year. Last year, accidents kijlcd 104,000 people, hurt about 90 million. — roughly one| out of every four persons in the nation. Kids are getting bigger. In the last four decades, 15-year-old boys have gained four inches in height and 20 pounds BOYLE in weight, girls two inches and 10 pounds. Tell your wife not to hurry through a supermarket. A University of Missouri survey found that 15 extra minutes comparative food -could result in saving 5 per cem on a $20 purchase. STAMPS, COINS Did you know that no living person is portrayed on any U.S. stamp or coin? Odd legislation; In 1660, the General Court of Massachusetts passed a law making the observance of Christmas a penal offense. * * e Barbering is one of the New Discovenr Now Makes It Possible to ShriRk And Heal Hemonlioids Without Surgeiy V. Slops Itch—Relieves Pain In Minutes N*w York, N. Y. (SpoeUI)i A world-famous institute has dis> covored a nsw substenca which hM the astonishing ability to shrink hemorrhoids without surgery. The sufferer first notices almost unbelieTsblo relief in mitutUt from itching, burning and pain. Then this substance speeds up healing erf the injured tissues all wbiie it guiekly reduces painful swelling. Tests conducted under s doctor’s obaerrstionB proved thi# eo - even in esses of 10 to 20 yesrs’ standing. The secret is the new healing aubstance (Bio-Dyne*) - now offered in J both ointment or suppository form called Preparation H*. In addition to actually shrinking piles-Preparation,!! lubricates and makes bowd movements less painful, it helps to prevent infection (a principal cause of hemorrhoids). Only Preparation H eontsina this magie new subetance which quickly helps heal injured cells back to normal and stimulatas regrowth of healthy tissue again. Juat ask for Preparation H Ointment or Preparation H Suppoaitories (easier to uke world’s oldest occupations. Egyptian relics indicate the nobility and priesthood patronised barbers 6,000 years ago. There are more than 20 mentions of barbeping in the Bible. (Quotable notables: “If you practice an art, be proud of it and make it proud of you. It nuy break your heart, but it will flil your heart before it breaks it; it will make you a person in youi* own right’’ — Maxwell Anderson. TURN TO CUP Women are turning more often to the cop that cheers. Six| out of 10 women now indulge at least occasionally in alcoholic bev«-ages omnpared with eight out of 10 men. But the bad news is that one out of every 13 so-called social drinkers in America is an alcoholic. History iesson: The custom of holding egg rollings at Easter on the White House lawn began during the administration of Andrew Jackson, who lo children but was childless himself. Five other presidents had no children. They were George Washington, James Madison, James Knox Polk, Warren G. Harding, and, of course, our only bachelor president — James Buchanan. * ♦ ★ ' A leaflet prepared by the U.$. T^iblic Health Service gives this warning: “The risk of death from all causes is 70 per cent ligher for cigarette smokers than for nonsmokers." It pays to take a business prosp^ to ,lunch. One firm those who took po-,soon will die. It will spoil your X rays of his hand and wrist tential buyers to lunch three orjhick if you kill a spider. When ajbones. A |10,000 Investment in a four days a week averaged 3721,-sick person stretches, that’s a “'**** education pays off the .im K... ..Hin. ..II V.. — graduate with $140,000 L* ^ '•‘er The get rid of a sty on your eyelid,carrion crow-and the cockatoo by touching it with the tail of a;are the only birds known to AUTO OWNERS Prosperity note: Better than three out of every four American families own automobiles; nure than eight million families have two or more cars. Folklore; U a bini flies into _ house, someone who lives there Conmleto Lino of Homo (faro Equipmont cat. blaqjt (iuickies: Most laundry at the Vatican still is done by hand. Doctors now can pr^ict a child’s future height by studying have lived over 100 years. It was actress Judith Anderson who observed, "There is nothing enduring in life for a woman except what she builds in a man’s heart.’’ 334-2529 AMERICAN ORTHOPEDIC 1006 WEST HURON STREET-PONTIAC BUY, SELL, TRADE. USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS. away from home). 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Speciol Label - All Purpose VEGHABU SHORIENING upuesRi ioRoui #%ii rur^uBU CRISCO SHORTENING 3-59 iC Sava 20c ^ With Jhis Coupon . efter the aerelieM el IMS er mere. Ceueen eaaire tWS. Limit ene eeuyee per cuttemer. Meifaer - nicn HALT & HALF 29 iC Sava 20e ^ With This Coupon THE PONTIAC PRgSS, MONDAY; NOVEMBER 15, 1965 Veferinarians No Longer Just Army Horse Doctors WASHINGTON (AP) — Thef The increasing use of the Vet-Army has new tasks for itsjerinary Corps resulted in a horse doctors of World War more vets. It was ex- cavalry days. The vets now Ljained then that the doctors research (practice) preventive would be used chiefly for food medicine and look after thou- inspection, long a traditional sands of monkeys, rats and duty for the division. mice. “The emphasis has switched from horses to monkeys, mice and rats.” Lt. Col. H. G, Brown, chief of . the programming branch of the Veterinarians’ Division, said today in an interview. The animals are used in laboratory experiments by the Army Medical Corps, which of- 25 PER CENT In fact. Brown said, only about 25 per cent of the 550-man Veterinarians’ Division is concerned with food inspection. Besides taking care of the approximate^ 50 horses left in the Army, the Veterinary Corps does extensive research in zoonotic diseases — those which ten calls on the litite-publicized are communicated from ani-vets for aid in research mals to man. projects. I WWW ----- ------------------------- “About 106 diseases can be transferred from animals to man,” Brown said, “but not all by eating food.” For example, he said, there is rabies which has been the subject of many lArmy research projects. I “Right now. we’re trying to immunize soldiers in Viet Nam from letto stirofis, a debilitating disease in Southeast Asia can be transmitted from any kind of animal to man,” the colonel said. VACCINE WORK "LOVE WITH THE PtOPER STRANOEir The vets also have been working with the Army Medical Corps, he said, to develop a vaccine to immunize soldiers from pdsonous snake bites. “We’re right on the doorstep of perfecting a vaccine,” Brown said. Although it is considered the least glamorous job. Brown said, the value of food inspection is immense. The Army now 100 vets on the job in 24 countries, with noore expected to go overseas as the military buildup increases in Viet Nam. — -----PLUS" “By the time you buy something in this country and it goes through three or four shippings, gets Unloaded and sits in refrigerators before going into mess " , pathological conditions could exist,” Brown said. And unless you’ve got healthy soldier, you can’t do much fighting,” he added. HAS SUPPORT The latest Army draft call for veterinarians has the support of the 16,500 - member .American Veterinary Medical Association. “We do not feel that they are overdemanding on our i^es-skm,” says Dr. Harry E. King-man Jr., Chicago, executive secretary of the organization. By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-Televishm Writer HOLLYWOOD ~ Press agents being press agents, Alfred Hitchcock posed on tiptoes as he placed a script atop a stack of 50, representing the 50 films be has directed in his distinguished career. Hitch, being Hitch, went] along with the nse, duti-l fully laying the! ne marked! “Tom Curtain” ■ on all the others, photographer took shot after shot, I contemplated what a diverse and iipaginative quotient of bhills the director has afforded movie-goers. THE QUEEN REMEMBERS-Queen Elizabeth II lays her wreath at the Cenotaph in Whitehall, London, yesterday during Remembrance Day service in homage to the dead of two World Wars. Another random Hitchcock loves single-word ti-Among them: “Black- mail,” “Murder,” “Sabotage,” ‘Suspicion,” “Spellbound,” ‘Saboteur,” “Notorious," Rope,” “Psycho.” They read almost like a post office bulletin Winds, Rain Lash Coast of California By The Associated Press ’The first major storm of the rainy season hit California with gale-lashed winds, and inclement weather swept down the Pacific Coast. Gale warnings were posted for the California coast from Fort Bragg northward and small craft warnings were in effect on the rest of the California coast to Mexico. had .94 inch in a 24-hour period and Red Bluff 1.09. Los Angeles had 1.37 inches for the. same period. "Hie guy who’s pulled out of practice for two years isn’t too happy, but we think they’ve got a pretty good job,” Kinffnan said. “You can’t tie the vet corps to animals any more — it makes a contribution to the total public health team.” 2 Small Quakes Hit in Area Near Denver LTkimottj iflcndiUs] tight * DENVER (UPI) - Two smaU earthquakes caused mild tremors in the Debby-Conunerce iCity area northeast of here yesterday, adding to the total of more than 1,000 quakes around < this mile-high city during thel-past three years. j Frank Hadsell of the geo-| physics department at the Colo- Scores of accidents snarled traffic on southern California streets and freeways Sunday as the winds whipped heavy rains. Many athletic events were postponed. Power failures blacked out parts of West Los Angeles and Bloomington. Streetlights failed in San Bernardino from short circuits. The Coast Guard reported an unidentified yachtsman drowned in heavy Pacific seas south of Monterey Saturday night in a collision of his sail-brat and a California state research vessel, the Alaska. FIVE RESCUED Five men were rescued Saturday as their cabin cnii^ smashed at the base of sheer ocean cliffs at Point Reyes north of San Francisco. Two other men abandoned a sailboat in heavy seas off San Simeon Sunday and were rescued. ’Three San Francisco teen-agers died Saturday night when their car smashed into a freeway abutment during heavy rains. At Point Piedras Blancas, 1.17 inch fell in six hours. OFF COAST The wind and rain were the offspring of a large, intense storm ofi the central Pacific Coast. Rain, with snow in the tains, extended inland to the intermountain region and the northern Rockies. Up to 2 inches of rain over the weekend were reported in many communities. San Francisco “It’s quite a pile,” Hitchcock remarked puckishly as he stepped away from the lights and appraised the titles. SPY CHASE Script No. SO returns the old master to the genre he invented: the spy chase. It is a field that has bm exploited recently by James Bond and his various imitators in filnu and television. But the others can’t carry it off quite as well as Hitch, because they portray outlandish events ouUandishly. ’That’s not the Hitchcock style. oM for things “The device is simply this: I place the normal hero in a perfectly outrageous situation and then let Mm try to get out of it. When 1 first came ti> this Strong winds whistled through the mountain passes of the West. Rawlings in south central Wyoming reported wind gusts up to 62 miles per hour. A storm packing winds up to 92 miles per hour lashed the shore of Norton Sound in western Alaska Sunday and forced the evacuation of the Eskimo village of Unalakleet, 400 miles northwest of Anchorage. HEAVY RAIN The southeastern Florida Coast also experienced heavy rain Sunday. More than an inch fell at West Palm Beach during Some light showers fell in the Tennessee Valley and light rain mixed with snow dampened areas across the northern Plains. Cold weather continued spreading eastward today. Temperatures in the Northeast had fallen into the teens by morning. Temperatures ranged from 18 at Philipsburg, Pa., to 78 at Vero Beach, Fla. WED, and THURS. NOV. 17-18 rado School of Mines said the quakes occurred at 12:16 and 1:45 p.m. EST. The first registered a 1.9 on the Richter Scale and the second fisted a 2.5.. Neither quake caused any reported damage. In New Spy Film Hitchcock Up to Old Tricks country, I had trofiUe American writers who kept tellr ing me: 'But that isn’t kigicall’ METHOD SCHOOL 'It’s the same now when 1 dhect an actor like Paul Newman, who is schooled in the Stra^rg style of method acting. He will asfi me, ‘What is my motivation?’ I tell him to forget the asoUvpition and get (» with it. As long as the audience is held, that’s all that matters.” Method actor Newmtti is In this film I am using my formula of shomng ill^cal happening in a normal " be explained. withtnying an Anterican nuclear physicist who defects to East Germany. He is followed by his fiancee, Julie Andrews, also a scientist and daughter of a U.S. Julie Andrews, daughter of U.S. senator? 'Let us not look for too much logic in the casting of films, either,” Hitchcock cautioned. “Where box office value is concerned, we must make conces-in casting.’’ por-sions Top U.S. Science Team Circling Earth in 1st Pole-to-Pole Flight HONOLULU (UPI) - A jetliner carrying some of the nation’s top scientific taleid was speeding around the w o r 1 d today, attempting history’s first pole-to-pole circular trip. While the primary goal of the flight was scientific exploration, the flight crew hoped to circle the world in 52 hours. ’That would be a new speed record. The big Boeing 797-82IC Jet was set to cruise at a sp^ of Sil miles an honr with alti-tnde ranging from 31,Ml to 41,980 feet over the poles. The plane with its crew of 10 and complement of scientists, explorers, f 1 i c r s and industri-aliists left Honolulu yesterday at 7:15 t>.m. Hawaii time 12:15 a.m. EST today). If the flight succeeds in sticking to schedule, it will arrive back here at 4 p.m. Hawaii time Wednesday. Capt. Fred Austin and Capt. Harrison Pinch, pfiots for Trans World Airlines, head the crew. Flying Tiger Lines owns the plane. Among the notables aboard were Dr. Donald Goedeke, chief scientists for Douglas Sri- and NOW SHOWINGI HURON VIVIEN LEIGH SIMONE SIGNORET ELIZABETH ASHLEY JOSE FERRER LEE MARVIN ence Division; Dr. Serge Korff, world-rebgnized physicist and authority on coamle ray research; Col. William F. Rockwell, chairman of the board of Rockwell-Standard, sponsor Of the flight; Lowell Thomas Jr., son of the veteran newscaster and writer; Bemt Balchen, pioneer polar flyer and explorer, and Robert Prescott, president of the Flying ’Tiger Line. “We expect to develop new information on the jet stream, at precise altitwies, take air . ssmplings for spores and mi-crometeorltes, accomplish laser determinatioH of air density and photograph clondi to fnmish correlations of the meteorological sateilitcs now in orbit,” Capt. Austin said. In addition to ihe flight over the poles, the plane hopes to go to London, Buenos Aires, Christchurch, N.Z., and back to Hono-lulp. Although the crew and scientific observers were picked up in Burbank, Calif., all calculations are based on its takeoff YOUR NEWS QUIZ PART I. NATIONAL AND IN^RNATIONAL Give youTBulf 10 points for eseh oorrset 1 The Brltiah Parliament began a new aeaaloB. Parliament la to England what «... la to the United Stotea. 2 Which of the following quotations la the best lesson ooncemlng the power failure in the Northeast last week? a-A chalnis only as strong as Its weakest link. b-Walt for the day Quit maketh all things clear, o-^verjrthlng happens to everybodiy sooner or 3 One fact revealed by the power failure nosntloned above Is that..... a-electrlcity la very unreliable b-modem Individuals can't supply all their o-our electric-pystema are old and out-of-^te 4 President Johnson slgnsdabUlwhlchwlllprovide more federal aid next year to higher education. The federal share of the eduoatlbn dollar has risen from 10 cents In 1956 to.cents In 1965. a-12 b-15 c-20 6 One reason Americana were Interested In the Philippines' election was that the republic used to be a Commonwealth of the United States. True or False? PART II. WORDS IN THE NEWS Take 4 points for each word that you can match with its correct meaning. .partisan artake back, cancel .function b-examine carefully .analyze o-not take part In avote .revoke d-purpose, usa .abetain e-one-aldod PART III . NAMES IN THE NEWS Take 6 points for names^ that you can correctly match with the clues. 1...Antony Armstrong- a-opeped new aessipnof Jones British Parlbunent 2.. w..Oardner Ackley 3.. ...Queen Elizabeth 4.. ...Leater Pearson 6.;...Walter P. ReutheY b-remalns as Canada's Prime Minister c-Presldent, United Auto Workers d-Earl of Stoowdon e-eoonomio advisor to Vel. XV, No. 10 ® VEO Ine., Madlierv Wl«. The Pontiac Press Moadar. Nevembar IS, 1965 Match word cluea with their correepond-ing pictures or symbols. 10 points for each correct answer. aet a land speed record of 576 nq>h Secretary UdsU toured several statae 3..... showed new rockets in anniversary parade GREEN' MOi^ER o'U.a air raids 6___ price of this product Turklsh-Qreek dispute rridndled Western Hemisphere organization D CYPRIir defends right to pro-< teat, but cautions orltlca 9____ antique national symbol hold SAM 10..... famous alumnus of Southwest Texaa State CoUege HOW DO YOU RATE t (Seem fteh SMs ef Quia Saperalely) fllsIOOpoInb-TOfSCORB •I to 90 pelnh - bwallant. 71 to lOiwInh-Oeodi 61 to 70 pelMi - Fair. 60erUMhr??7,.H'am! Thh Qirfa h part of Ilia EdueaHsiwI Ftopwa wMah TMi Naemspar tomldiA to Sehoeli Inthb area to SHawlato IhtamS In NatloMi and \torid ANhln ai an aid to Dsviltpinp Goad ailzainltlp. Save Thli taeffee Exemiiwtloft! STUDENTS Valuable Reference Matorlel For Exerm. ANSWERS ra TnDAY’s news qui/ I fH fO*l (p-l HIH lo-I fR-l iZHIh lOSNAt •*•!«!»*t Vum md ^ isrir Iq-i ip-i ie-i i|| xjni eMiw4ex. |||R S'*?!!!' A* Ae VeM Hwe Nh»i4e», A! Veld •• Kwew Hhv Ntwi4et, Nw. », ■ V«i4 ei Kngw Dwt SMMiay, Nm. 97,1 M b» m mm a m ^ rnZ!m^mmm mm mm >■ « JL m ■■ am m! L ■■ sm JSL J •maSi SB6'*3S4 WITH THIS COUPON ON C—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1963 Robla Moor* THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1965 Finance ♦ ■A The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wlndesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Wednesday. Produce 'Science Issues Lead Market NEW YORK (AP) — Aero-ioils were down rather sharply,. Studebaker spurted 2 or more, space issues, electronics and others showed scant change. General Motors rose 1, du Pont ApplM, DcIIcIom, GoMen, b Cabbag*. C Cab^ r Other “science” issues were at the forefront as'the stock market advanced early this after- MXl. Motors, chemicals and nonfer-rous metals joined in the rise. ■* * * The performance of many other major groups was spotty, so the advance on average was limited. Steels were unchanged to a little lower. Rails, utilitie;; and drugs were mixed. Some key changed. Onloni, graan, di bchi............ Partlay, Curly, di. bcha......... Parilay, root, di. belts......... Parsnips, Callo Pak, di.......... Potatoas, M lbs................... Polatoas, 25 lbs.......................... Radlsbas, Mack, '/■ bu................2.0 OPTIMISTIC FEELING Nankin Youth Jailed in Threat Not in Connection With Assault Coses By ADREN COOPER WASHINGTON (AP) - Segregation has provided a "protective tariff" beneficial to most Negro professionals and businessmen, and the process of! desegregation “is already af-j Prices advanced in active! The general feeling was optl-trading on the American Stock! nF-moiT lAP) _ Wavne mistic in *WaU Street but some Exchange. National Video and „ ° investment advisers recom-} National Casket were up nearly bounty sheriff s detectives said mended caution because of the 2 each. Up a point or better they would seek a warrant to-duratiqn of the advance. Lere a wide range of issues,,day charging a youth with Hie Dow Jones industrial av-|including Northeast Airlines, threatening a woman erage at noon was up 2.3 atj^l^National, Syntex, wmianis|gyj,yr|jg„ Nankin Township 958.63. The Associated Press average of 60 stocks at noon was up .4 at 355.6 with industrials up l.r rails off .2 and utilities ui Brothers, Automatic Radio, Conductron, Electro-Voice, Es-'P®'’*'*"? quire and GCA Corp. Corporate bonds were mostly unchanged. U.S. Treasury bonds advanced. The New York Stock Exchange The arrest was made Sunday, but detectives emphasized that the youth was not involved in a string of seven assaults on women which have left the community In panic for the past month. These kids have been mak- Desegregation Hurts Negro Businessmen professions serving only the Negro community - teachers, ministers, etc. concrete example of the effect of desegregation on Negro “Rather, I do want to empha-i size that — while it may be em-' barrassing to view our own image in the mirror of change — we should look critically at ourselves and be instructed by | professionals is the dismissal of |Whatwesee.” some Negro teachers after a fecting adversely some of the! Brimmer said Negro busi-community’s schools have been key segments of the Negro mid-1«ho have been most:integrated. Brimmer said this die class" |successful provide services!trend has been reported in Tex- , . . . . _____„'which, because of segregation, as, North Carolina, Georgia, This statement is su^rising readily available to the Virginia, Florida and Oklaho- because It comes from Dr. An- m ma For the Negro businessman. Brimmer recommends joint ventures with white-dominated corporations. The Commerce Department has developed a sizable list of companies which are willing to grant franchises for sale of their products with- NMi .....L»w Lail Cg ! 120 5IH 5I»I 5»'/i + PhiM Pel 2.20 42 »'/, !♦'.* + V, Pi»n«y Bow 1 17 57W <7 .. iPItPlate 2.M IS 31 Vi 31% 31H . Pit Steel g, Poliroid .20 •—ProetBG 1.15 4 U 33W 34 ... Pubikind .3«f 22 22% + Vk I Pullman 2.40 295 SOM 40% 50% -flW 49 117 115% 115%-OGI RCA .40a 13 15% 05% - M RalstonPur 1 12 40% 50% 40%-%,Rayette .40 W 107% 1^ 107% +1 Rayonler 1.40 « "••‘"'to Co 25 34% 34% 34'/, ... ReichCh ~‘- 42 44% 44% 44% -I- % - ■ - 42 24% 24 24% -f % 14 41% 41 41% - % 1 42% 43% 43% - % 154 31 37% 31 -f % 123 40% 39% 40% -f % 17 11% 12% 12% ... 29 57% 24% 57% -t- % 21 44% 45% 45% - % 24 54% 54% 54% -f % 17 24% 24% 24% ... 24 35% 25 25% - % 12 57% 57% 57% ... .............. - %. Sales kU.I High Low ClOM 24 59% 59% 59J 3 47% 47V, 47' 27 74 73% 73' II 50 57% 51 —B— 452 49% 40 49’ 7 41% 41 21 24'% 24'/, 24', 93 34% 33% 34 129 41 40% 41 Revlon 1.30 Rexall JOb Reyn Met .75 Reyn Tob 2 . „ „ . ,, . Negro consumer in the commu- ma. drew Brimmer, a Negro and:„n ^3 ^ ^^ole. Examples are! top-ranking economis in the ^egro-owned restaurants, bar-Commerce Department. . ber shops, hotels and mor-Dr. Brimmer, whose title assistant secretary for econom-j * * a ic affairs, offers statistics which Negro businessmen. Brimmer indicate that Negro business-^,3^^ ^,3^^ ^,^3^. men may have to work harder, ^g ^d compete or business from ^3^g ,^gg 3ggg^3 both the whi e and nonwhitejretail outlets - departmentjout regard to Vace! communities in order to sur-_,g^g3 hardware, furnishings. I The Small Busine.ss Adminis-"Obviouslv I am bv no means! Negro-owned (ration has , made numerous cnanovVin? ihn* Iho manufacturing.lloans to Negroes under a new SaSioJ capitalipropram especially designed for iiicse MUS nave uccii * j j ff Outlays and broad markets. busine.ssmen with very limited ing telephone calls, threatening I >n order to lessen the ef-. ; ^ women and lauchinc over the f®cts on the Negro middle FARED BETTER vapnci. phone as a joke," explained aBrimmer sdid in a re-! The statistics showed that Ne-SUCCESSFUL BANK Idetective. "It’s hurting our in-!^^®"* speech. groes fared far better in the As an example of a successful ■' ! joint venture, Brimmer cited the Freedom National Bank of . , j., Q| I Harlem, which was organized AAClyamara Olomea |by Negroes and whites and has seven Negroes on its 10-man board of directors. The Negro middle class must spearhead the drive for econom-and social development, Brimmer said. vestigation and causing great ii^,^+iJj; harm to women already in a 70 ■ • 1% 5% v % state of fear. ,'jS 15 25% 24% ________ „ 17 75 74% 74% -l-IW 220 37% 35% 27% +1% 7 22% 22% 22% ' ‘ RyMrSy .1 StJoiLd 23 25% 22% 7 44” 44 44 ... 75 50% 49% 49% - % KMCorp .809 4 zr/t 27% 27% -I- % Scott Popor 1 20 41% 41% 41% - % Sopb AL 1.M 54 50 49% M -I- % SMrl GD 1.30 34 37% 37% 37% +1%,S€»r» Roc U 53 14% 15% 14 -1-1 SMburg .40 34 29'/, 29% 29% - ,%'sorvol 2 30% 30% 30% - % Shell Oil 1.70 "2 f7% f7% f7.%t:^ |S?2’r ’t t li'sSpRW 1g* JJ ’IS “4S “ii 27 4% 4% 4V* + W souNGli 1.20 __I_— SouthPac 1.50 35 19% 19'% 19% - % 2JW ^ 1*1 Ailh AiM A4H — vh 5p*rry Rand i2o4 13 44% 44% 44% ^ - Ailk 4. Vh Stniay 1.35 ^ ^ MBranita 9 JA St 1 39 33Vd 33% 33 “We finally caught one Of them and we plan to make an example of him.” NAME NOT GIVEN The detective declined to name the youth pending « conference with the Wayne County prosecutor’s office today. They said he was arrested in a supermarket parking lot after he jokingly threatened a woman as a prank. ^ Meanwhile, detectives contin-'3 4M 44% «% - >4|ued to check out more than 260 24 3^ 35 35^^ _ Vk tips received since a series of ” 00% 7^ 8% three attacks within two 'days «2 5^ 49% 49% +i%r®®‘ OfBcers said 150 per- 25 37% M% M%I %|sons have been checked but no arrests made. 24 54% 54<% 54'% -I- ' ^7 •»% 224k 22% i L The knife-wielding attacker, described as a giggling blond 37 74% M% M% 1 %:male is his late twenties, has no' ” 2?'% 19% 19%^/']made an attack since las 11 70% 70'k 70% + % Thursday. 22 33% 33% 33% + 15 44% 44% 44% ,■ I 54'/, - 15 7^ 74% tS I 44 m « 40%-|-1 SJSt J? J? + w rp'j $1011 CpI StOIIInd i./v StO NJ 3.150 ----Ill Ohio 2 '•ckaging War 1.50 17% 10 la II 00 10% -1- 5 41% 4' 41% -«■ 5 75% 75 75% -1- % 101 25% 24 '1 4T'% i?%i a dKv* » ’*S ’tills ^jir&ii.'’*' Pehn? on .150 4 1% •% IW . ply Tiger 1.2^ if 25% 24% 25 - "3 1^ il?S iltfS 43 9%. 9% 9%-k% - ,»+% 4% ■■■ •' Is.. III III 35 70% 70% 70'/, - '. 51 52% 52% 52% - ' 13 15% 15% 15% + 1 10 19% 191/4 19'/4 + '. ....... 41% 42% -1- % 39 70% 70 70 . “ “ li4%125’'“'^ 93 HVk 21% 21% -I- % 14 29% 29% 29%-% 29 57% 14% 47<4i -f " •2 9% 9% 9% -f %>»K tig I.M 54 «% 41% 41% - % >K Relrel 21 H% 23% 22% -h % RKTir 1.20 RSb;? fSo I 15 )5;Sk.wi;’ ’:i .................I.W 24% 24% - % g* 42 42% -I- % ElJf.", U IS ^ ".WiMe 1I* UI 74% 74S 74% + viR!l*S? 2’iM 14 99% 99% 99% 2 49% 49% 45% M 10, 9% 9% ....... ______ _____ 9 Mtk 24% M% ............ Rn Am i| 112 41% 41 41 nh SR rS) 1 29% 29% 29% - % “--------- - 11 44% 49 44% -1-1% 17 20% 30 M% - %| '10 -40% 40 40% -h %i 7 12% 12% 13% I jlS SS t,'* 9*y 22 29 29»k 29 u int M% N% -i'/4 Methodist Church, 3882 MS9. . 14 21'/4 21'/k 21'/4 '•9177'* IIS'!? 175% +’% Pontiac police are investigat-26 m" ^ 90 4 % ing the weekend theft of $106 ’m 54^ n% 53% + % nnd miscellaneous belongings 12 w u i % ii''® occupants of the Wal- « S’* aa ^ „.l 7'/k 7'/k 7% - .50 47 17'/4 14% 17 + .90 24 40% 40 40% -I- . .00 29 39% 39% 39% -1- '/k .10 20 35% 34% 34% - '/k 1.40 1 41% 41V4 41% + 1/4 1.40 47 47'/4 44% 47'/4 -t- % ■« 137 90 57% SI -I- " II 40% 40'/, 40% -f ' —' 37'/4 37'/4 - 7 30'/4 31 , 40'/k 4»',k -I- 24 43 42'y»lng yardago ^M1 ^ »a$set Intarcaplad by o 3-20 To add to the drama, the Vikings held the Colts to a minus four yards in six offensive plays the first two times Baltimore had the bail. At the same time, Minnesota was controlling the ball for 30 plays and accumulated 145 yards. For all of that, however, toe Vikings had scored only once. (Mkhaalt kick) I * 'J # Attandanca 47,434. MILWAUKEE, Wis. (AP) LiiHiel Aldridge recovered a Bill Munson fumble on toe Los Angeles 20 with less than three minutes to go and set the stage for a seven-yard Don Chandler field goal that gave the punchless Green Bay Packers a 6-3 victory. Chandler winning boot came with only 37 seconds left in the game after tho I>ckers i|Mi drivm to toe six-teck'dne. Tackle Ron Kostelnik forced the fatal fumble, belting Munson as he faded to pass and jarring toe ball loose. The victory snapped a two-game Packer losing streak and kept them within range of toe minutes to go and set the stage first-place Baltimre Colts. The Colts were one game ahead of Green Bay going into Sunday’s game with toe Minnesota Vikings. PACKER MAKES RREAK - Green Bay Packer Ron Kostelnik (77) forces quarterback Bill Munson (10) of Los Angeles to futnble late in Sunday’s game at Milwaukee. By pulling Munson away from loose ball. Kostelnik enabled teammnte Lionel Aldridge ' to recover it at Rams’ 20-yard line. Packers’ Don Chandler then kicked field goal for 6-3 National Football League win. Jim Brown Boosts NFL Records CLEVELAND (iB-Jim Brown scored three touchdowns and boosted his National Football Leagus rushing records Sunday as the Cleveland Browns rolled to a 34-21 victory over the New York Giants. Brown powered for short scores from the three and four-yard lines and raced 17 yards for another. His 156 yards rushing put him over the 1,000-yard mark for the seventh time in his nine-year career. Jim Taylor of the Green Bay Packers is next ith five 1,008-yard seasons. Brown also added to his NFL scoring and career mhing ■ds. ^ Giants’ quarterback Earl Morrall fired three toudidown passes — 21 yards to Aaron Thomas, 79 to Homer Jones and a two-yarder to Bob Oespino. Hie pass to Thomas was set up when Lou Slaby dropped on top of Ernie Koy’s punt at the Qeveland 47 after it hit Charley Scales of the Browns. DALLAS, Tex. UR - The Dallas pass defense carried the Cowboys to a 24-17 victory over the Pittsburgh Steelers Sunday, with Don Meredith’s 28-yard tortm to Bob Hayes with two miimtes to go putting Dallas over in the Nattonal Football League game. Hm Cowboys intercepted five of the last nine passes the S ero tried, winding up with an interception by Warren Livings- ton that stopped the final Pittsburgh possession. A crowd of 57,293 that boosted toe Dallas home attendance to 274,162 - an aU-time high -watched the game in the sun-sprayed Cotton Bowl. PHILADELPHIA UR - A 78-yard pass from quarterback Norm Snead to end Pete Retzlaff set up toe winning touchdown Sunday as the Philadelphia Eagles snapped a four-game losing streak with a 21-14 victory over toe Washington Hw play carried to the Washington seven where defensive halfback Paul Krause tarlly halted a score tackle from behind. But with fourth and a foot, Earl Gros dove acrou and Sam Baker kicked his third extra point to break a 14-14 tie. '*ffll*|»giiw t run SMMi — kkk) Balt-FG Mlchtcli 17 Balt-Orr 41 pan Irw haalt kick) Balt—Orr 33 pau Irw in Cuoizo (Ml-n Cuouo P.MJ. B.l.rcNrtnl W ^!S?'%n5iSn, OB=fSS OB-FO C CHICAGO LaF) - Rudy Buk-ich and Gale Sayers capped long touchdown drives in the third and fourth periods Sunday to break open a close game and lead toe Chicago Bears to a 34-13 fi^t-punctuated victory over the St. Louis Cardinals. Hie loss left the Cards with 5-4 record to Cleveland’s 7-2 and jolted their Eastern Conference title hopes. The Bears now are 54 in the Western bracket. In a wild fourth quarter in which the Bears scored 17 point a series of four fights broke out among players. One melee emptied the benches of players and coaches as well. They jamiped the center of the field, but order was quickly re-Ittored with the only rMult being the eviction of the Bears’ Larry Morris. The Cards grabbed a 7-0 lead in the opening minutes of toe game when Luke Owens captured Sayers’ bobble on the St. Louis 37. On the first play, Charley Johnson hit Sonny Randle for toeTD. is r.* ,.2} Fumbln k»l 0 2 11 run LtcMrt kick “0 LPcNre 14 0 iakk TACKLED TOO LATE - San Francisco 49fer end Dave Parks (81) sits in Detroit end zone following tackle by Lions’ Dick LeBeau (44) who was too late to prevent touchdown that gave visitors 280 first half lead yesterday at Tiger Stadium. Wayne Rasmussen (47) of Lions and 49ers’ Bernie Casey follow the action. the third, and only seven in the final quarter for 59. I Irom SttvroH St. James 11 Wins Catholic League Title Ferndale St. James wrapped up an unbeaten season yesterday and captured its second straight Catholic League second division championship with a 7-6 victory over Detroit Sf. Phillip. Quarterback John Kozlowski sneaked six yards for a second quarter touchdown and halfback Pierre La Prairie ran the extra point to spark SI. James (9-8I. Joe Provenzano plunged one yard for St. Phillip’s score.' North Farniington’s Raiders put the lid on a successful campaign Saturday by blanking city rival Farmington 14-0. The victory was the ninth without a loss this season for the Raiders who also captured the Northwest Suburban League championship. Quarterback Bill Oldershaw scored on a three-yard keeper and Larry August tallied on a 31- yard run for the Raider s. Bengt Hanson booted both extra points. in other games Saturday, Livonia Franklin (83) dumped Wayne, 14-0, South Lake topped L’Anse Creuse (82), 38<), and Clintondale romped past Fraser, 32- 12. Wings Tie Montreal 2-2 ★ ★ ★ Rangers Check Hull, Down Chicago, 4-2 By The Associated Press New York stalled Bobby Hull, but Toronto couldn’t put anything over on Bernie Parent. Parent, rapidly aging beyond his 20 years, toe goalie of Boston’s lowly Bruins, blanked Toronto 2-0 Sunday night for his first National Hockey League shptout. 1 It's for Real! J Someone Got j Navy's Goat ANNAPOLIS, Md. tfl -Officials at the U.S. Naval Academy confirmed Sunday that the Navy’s mascot, Bill XV, has been kidnaped. Cadets at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point are suspected of I making off with toe goat. The successfol goat caper was reportedly the first in about 10 years. The series of kidnapings have been occurring and recurring since the turn of the century. NFl Standings While the last-place Bruins rallied around their rookie goal-tender, New York checked Hull’s scoring, spree and whipped Chicago 4-2. The Bruins broke a scoreless deadlock against the Leafs in the third period when Forbes Kennedy and defenseman A| Langlois beat Toronto goalie Johnny Bower, who played his first pro grame the year Parent was born. The Boston rookie stopped 32 shots en route to his —and the Bruins’—second victory of the season. PROMOTED Parent was promoted from Oklahcnna City of the Central League two weeks ago after injuries shelved Boston goalies Ed Johnston and Gerry Cheev-ers. He had beaten Montreal 3-1 and held both Chicago and New York to 2-2 stand-offs in five previous starts. Sunday’s shutout lowered his goals-against average to three per game. Hull, who had scored 12 goals in (toicago’s first eight failed to connect against the Rangers, who built a 81 first period edge and held on to protect their third place standing. Jean Ratelle, Red Selling and Rod 'Gilbert drilled first period goals and rookie Garry Peters stole the puck from Hull and broke away for an insurance tally in the middle period. Red Hay and Fred Stanfield were the Hawk scorers. In Saturday night action the Canadiens snapped Chicago’i seven-game unbeaten skein 82 and Toronto ended New York’s string of six games without a loss by drubbing the Rangers 82. AFL Standings N»w York Boolon New York M. Bolton 20 Danvor 31, Houilan 31 Konaa* City 31, Ion Olofo Ullman Sparks Detroit Attack Norm Scores Twice; Howe Misses 600th hlc4ga »w York oronto wiroll otlon MontrMi 5, ChicoM 2 Toronto 3, Ngw Vyrk 2 Monirtti 2,*oS!rolf f** Bolton 2, Toronto 0 Now York ^ CMcago 2 1 ? i i? Ji 8 DETROIT (AP)-Gordie Howe didn’t get his 600th goal Sunday night but Norm Ullman picked up a couple to enable the Detroit Red Wings^ salvage a 2-2 tie with the league-leading Montreal Canadiens. w ★ * Ullman, who scored 10 of his league-leading 42 goals against the Canadiens last season, connected twtee in the second period. The» markers offset Montreal powei*-play goals in the first period by Jacques Laperriere and Bobby Rousseau, the later’s seventh of the season. ★ * w For Ullman, the goals were his fourth and fifth of the season. But the effort didn’t help the sagging. Red Wings much in the standings. The Red Wings now are In fifth place, a shade behind Toronto. They have won only once in 10 games and have failed to post a victory in their last four games. * * ♦ The only bright spot was the showing of rookies Bert Marshall and Gary Doak, playing their first NHL game. Both young defensemen started slowly but appeared to gain poise as the game progressed. Marshall, a southpaw shooter, had a near miss as Canadien goalie Gump Worsley made a great stop on him late in the game. ‘it it * Howe, who has 599 career goals, had only one good shot at Worsley and was stopped. NHL Standings No g*moi ichoduM. THE PON JIAC PRESS, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1965 Northwestern Rips Michigan Defense Cats Hand Wolverines 34-22 Loss ANN ARBOR (API - Northwestern showed Michigan Saturday what a lot of determination —’and taking advantage of the elements — can do for a football team. The Wildcats, one of three [ other teams tied for fifth place | ^ in the Big Ten with the Wolver- I / ines entering the game, played § havoc with the Michigan defense and romped to a 34-22 victory. Northwestern scored a 55-24 victory the last time Michigan visited Dyche Stadium, so Wolverine officials must be just happy not to have to send their gridders back for another three ' years. “We were just out-hit,” Michigan coach Bump Elliott said. "They didn’t do anything we didn’t expect. They just did it better.” UNPREPARED Wolverine defenders, who turned in a fine job in containing Illinois’ Jim Grabowski two weeks ago, appeared unprepared for the running of Wildcats fullback Bob McKelvey. * ★ ★ Michigan, which held eight previous opponents to an average of 136 yards gained on the ground, surrendered 244 to Northwestern. McKelvey picked up 136 yards of it in a school record-tying 35 rushes. He also scored twice on two-yard plunges as the Wildcats completely dominated play' after spotting Michigan 7-6 and late going Sunday to win the 10-7 leads. “We felt we had to make Michigan bend in the middle if we were to win,” Northwestern coach Alex Agase said. Michigan marched 88 yards the first time it had the ball-following a fumble recovery by Rocky Rosema — with Wally ' Gabler gofaig in for the touchdown from three yards out. Rick Sygar’s 21-yard field goal was the only other scoring by Michigan in the first half. Elliott said he expected no trouble in getting the Wolverines ready for theii> seasonending encounter with Ohio State Saturday. The Wolverines must win that one to finish at 5-5 for the sea- BONNEVILLE SALT FLATS, lArfons’ mark of 576.353 m.p.h. Utah (AP) — Craig Breedlove that Craig exceeded today, cracked the 600 mile per hour The battle between Br^love barrier today and set a world I and Arfons Jus been going on land speed record on the west-j two years, with Arfons holding ern Utah salt flats, the Utah'the record three times and FOUR MORE YARliS - Jim Brown (32) of Cleveland follows guards Gene Hickerson (66) for four yards Sunday before Bilf Swain (52) of the New York Giants makes tackle. Brown rushed for 156 yards in 34-21 win, giving him seven seasons in nine years with 1,000 yards or more. Highway Patrol reported. His two-way average was 600.6 miles per hour. The California speedster was clocked at 593.178 m.p.h. on his first run through the measured mile, and '608.201 m.p.h. on his second. The average speed is computed from these times plus wind and track conditions. FIFTH TIME Breedlove had held the record for jet cars four times before. He broke it only two weeks ago but lost it five days later to Art Arfons of Akron, Ohio. It was Bowling Kings Survive Foes' Strong Finishes Ann Setlock of Detroit and Gordy Slauter of Grand Rapids each weathered trouble in the prizes in the first State Invitational Singles championships at Huron Bowl. George Howard, Detroit, made late rush at Slauter that fell just one mark shy in their final head-to-head match for men’s title. SlaQter won, 3958. Australian Golfer Wins in Melbourne MELBOURNE, AustrafiS Australian Bruce Devlin died three of the last four holes ded a strike in the 10th frame but his solid hit left the 10-pin sUnding. Slauter had 11 victories in the two - day, II head - to - head matches among the male qualifiers. Howard, whose 3458 pinfall actual was the weekend’ won one less game and thus had 50 fewer bonus pins. Pontiac'S Pat Sweeney slipped Scrambling Pro Marlene Hagge Alamo Champ SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP) -A scramblitig one-over par 73 brought Marlene Hagge her second Ladies PGA golf tournament in a row and the third championship in four weeks Sunday as she won the Alamo Women’s Open with a par 216 total for 54 holes. ★ w. * There was a charge by defending champion Kathy Whit- into the top five by beating Bob Calvin in his final match, 225-178. Other Pontiac bowlers in the top 10 w e r e Joe F 0 (eighth) and Dwight Pugh (tenth). EARLY LEAD Mrs. Setlock had a comfortable lead in the women’s division after an outstanding start Saturday. Her first seven games resulted in six vrins (300 bonus pins) and a 219-plus actual average. But teammate Pat Peel (Huron Bowl team la D^K Ladies’ Major aasslc) whipped her in the 15th round Sunday, leaving Mrs. Setlock with only a 23-pin lead on Pat McBride. ’The champion responded with a 193-183 position round the Utle; and Cora Fiebig of Warren beat Mrs. Peel (Livonia) 194-180, to take second place from Mrs. McBride, Grand Rapids. * ★ ★ Mrs. Setlock won $200 and trophy while Slauter took $180 and a trophy home. The tournament was open to the state’ leading bowlers from last year, based on their league average. MICHIOAN STATS mUMMl SinflM ChamM Mtn'i Flul Standlntt Clly Tatal Frln ____Slauter, Grand Rapidi 3««S (1*0 Oeoroe Howard, Detroit • “ Ed Rower, Canting Dave Getchen, Detroit Pot Sweeney, Pontiac Bob Calvin, Hlllidale Mike Langton, Jackson Joe Foster, Pontiac and won the Dunlop Interna- worth, who was only one stroke lional Golf Tournament Sun-'off the Pecan Valley Golf (^ub day after American Doug San-j course record for women with a ders blew a lead in the final 169, but nobody was ever closer round. 'than two shots to Mrs. Hagge, Devlin, a regular on the U, S. jthe leader from opening day. pro tour, played the 6,634-yard, | Rounds of 71-72-73 on the 6.600 par 73 Yarra Yarra course in'yard, par 36-36—72 course 71 and 70 for the final two I brought Mrs. Hagge $1,500 of rounds and an aggregate score i the total $10,000 purse, of 285. British Open champion Peter Thomson of Australia c*roi finished one stroke behind with|Gta?K Ar'tJ^iron^isTi 71-74-71-70-286. j Si*H"v"nis* 1571 Devlin collected $2,240, Thom-'sJ,*,'iiy“El.si.h«“n, 1370 son $1,120. M^irM^Cs' ‘(MO 7J74.;j-ai* Breedlove Surpasses 600 M.P.H. Barrier Breedlove — with today’s effort - five times. Breedlove’s sponsor, the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co., indicated Breedlove would make no further efforts, at least this week. “Whether he will be back,” a spokesman said, “depends what Arfons does.” RICKEY STRICKEN-Branch Rickey, 84, a leader in the baseball world through two generations, collapsed of a heart attack Saturday night at Columbia, Mo., while accepting a plaque making him a member of the Missouri Sports Hall of Fame. ’The presentation was made by Harry Caray (right), St. Louis baseball Cardinals announcer. Rickey’s condition was listed as critical this Arrows Edge MFL Stars in Finale, 7-6 Viking Boss Quits Team After Defeat MINNEAPOLIS - ST. PAUL (AP) — Cpach Norm Van Brocklin of the Minnesota Vikings resigned today. A Viking ' said he understood the resignation was effective ately. KC Defender Stars as Chiefs Roll^ 3h7 By The Associated Press Kansas City’s Johnny Robinson, who started his pro football career by signing with two There was no" imm"ediate da-has develop one theo- rification of the sudden move by the Dutchman, who had become a legendary quarterback with National Football League teams in Los Angeles and Philadelphia before taking over the fledgling Vikings in their initial NFL season in 1961. Last year Van Brocklin piloted the Vikings to a second-place tie with Green Bay in the Western Division. ★ ★ His move came less than 24 hours after the Vikings lost a 41-21 decision to the lea^e-leading Baltimore Colts in Minnesota. The Vikings are in a three-way tie for third place in the Western Division with Detroit Chicago, all, with records. The Vikings compiled a 23-39- ry that would shock most players. Robinson thinks playing offense is a waste of time. An offensive player turned comer back, Robinson wasted no time Sunday by intercepting two passes in crucial first-half situations as the defense-minded Chiefs rolied to a 31-7 American Football League victory over Western Division leading Sank*^*"®*-” the Detroit Lions of the National League. He eventually was awarded to the AFL but found his path to a first-string job blocked by Abner Haynes and Jack Spikes. Facing that situation, Robinson was made into a defensive back but he admits he did not like the idea. However, he since has changed his mind and now pointedly says: “Ball players waste their time playing offense. ’There’s more satisfaction — more of a feeling of accomplishment — playing Diego. ♦ » * It was another typical performance for the 26'year-oki former Louisiana State star who started his career on the wrong foot and then had to learn how to run backward instead of forward. A running mate of Billy Cannon’s at LSU, Robinson became 3 won-lost record in the NFL in a double slgnee by winding up the 4% seasons under him. 'with two contracts Robinson certainly got that feeling against the, Chargers. His first interception, at the two-yard line, halted a 96-yard San Diego drive and protected Kansas City’s 104) lead. Then, after the Chargers cloaed to 10-7, he stole another John Hadl . ss at midfield and set up a Kansas City touchdown by returning 14 yards. Besides stealing the two pass-les, Robinson made seven tack- Anlti Canlalliw, Datrolt Rita Modieltwikl, WyaiKlotta Dorli KnacMgat, Datrolt Sptcisl Awardt les — an unusually high number * a defensive back —and blocked one pass as the Chiefs moved into a tie for second place in the West with a M-1 record to San Diego’s 6-^2. Buffalo, meanwhile, moved to within one victory of clinching the Eastern Division title by edging Oakland 17-14 on Billy Joe’s one-yard smash with sev-seconds to go, Denver whipped Houston 31-21 and New York defeated Boston 30-20. The Chleft completely muffled Hadl, stealing four passes from the league’s No. 1 passer. Fred Williamson also intercepted two passes for Kansas City while linebacker Bobby Bell and tackle Buck Buchanan each made 10 tackles. Len Dawson was the key to the offense, hitting for three touchdown passes — 20 yards to Chris Burford, seven to Curt Mc-Clintpn and eight to Mack Hill. Gem Daniels scored on a 41-yard run and a 25-yard pass from Dick Wood as the Raiders, tied with Kansas Gty, built a 14-7 lead in the fourth quarter. But Pete Gogolak’s 38-yard field goal and a 62-yard closing drive engineered by Jack Kemp and climaxed by Joe pulled it out for the Bills, now 8-2. Abner Haynes pulled Denver Into a 14-14 tie with Houston in the third period by racing three yards for a touchdown, then put the Broncos ahead to stay in the fourth quarter by returning a punt 57 yards for another touch- CHIEF STRIKES BACK - Kansas City defensive halfback Johnny Robinson (42)— former Detroit Lion draft choice — returns intercepted pass to San Diego 35-yard-line to Midwestern Baptist Five Falls in League Opener Michigan Christian Junior] Martin 26, Ray Hudson 25 and , College romped and Midwstern Wes Taphin 21. Over-all, they Baptist Seminary weakened in! are 1-1. their state Christian College' Midwestern was outshot, 112-Athletic Association basketball ^y Grand Rapids from the league opener over the weekend although the losers had the Midwestern Baptist was host percentage, 45- to title contender Grand Rapids |ed by nine at’ DiK1a( an/l Miioirt Cq8_ . ... Sisler Heads Minor League ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP) Tommy Richardson has resigned as president of the Inter-j national Baseball League and ^George Sisler, general manager {of the league’s Rbchester team, has been elected to succeed] him, it was announced Sunday.' Richardson submitted his res-| ignation Saturday night duringr*""«y P'*™ the annual meeting in Rochester football team to of tjie league’s board of direc-|the Rose Bowl Jan. I. tors. Sisler was ^hen elected. * * * The action was taken in| The governor, just returned clos^-dwr sessions and not nearly a month in the Or-duclosed until Sunda^y. congratulated the Big Ten Richardson has headed the “j** ***. Triple-A league for the past fivel years. Prior to that, he had «“™’ ‘“J'*"? "" Dtwion Brooktr set up touchdown in 31-7 win by Chiefs. Robinson eludes tackle by Sam Grunelsen (65) of the Chargers and gets blocking help from E. J. Holub (55). Gov. Romney in Bowl Date LANSING (AP)-Gov, George -----...— jTie Visitors leU Dy nine atiycars. rnur lu iiiai, ne IWUI- . _ o„.„T School of Bible and ^sic Sat-intermission and quickly spurt-Wn president for 25 years of ™y »PP<>rtunlty last urday night and dropped a 119- 3 commanding second-;‘he Eastern Baseball League. ^ ^ 90 decision as the visitors pulled I half advantage. i ------------------------ I * * * away in the final half. Brothers Jerry and Terry Pricei Fv.Snortc Fditor Diw< ' The Spartans defeated Indiana Michigan Christian JC took ad-ihaj 29 and 19 respectively (or sports caiTOr UlbS ,27.13 Saturday, virtually cllnch-vantage of a weak Great Lakes (j,isbm; and six of the winners' INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (AP) -l‘"« * invitation. Bible Collep at Lansmg Fridayin jnuble figures. The Fal-iRobert W. Stranah'an, 58, form-1 * * * night for a lopsided 163-42 win. cons were paced by Fraser VMer sports editor of the Indi-| The University of Michigan The Warriors scored 96 pond, 24. Raiph Wingate, 22,ianapolis Star, died Sunday in played in Pasadena last Jan. 1 points in the second half. Sev- and Doug Vipond; 16. Methodist Hospital. 'but Romney had to stay in Micb- . rn players were in double fig- Midwestern is now 1-3 on the He headed the Star’s sports Jgan for his second term inau-ures. Bud Pfessley bad 32, Jim i season. idepartment from 1948-53. Iguration. Two Pros Reach Scoring Plateau in NBA Action RnMi InttrciplrO by Iu« ■ NV-M»ynirO H pNi from N*math Turnar kick Bo»-.FG Ctpptlltni 30 u'rntr^kkik"*'’*' ^ ^*"“'** I'llSTirSlck*** ‘ LOS ANGELES (AP) - The Los Angeles Lakers emerged in first place In the Western Division after a weekend of National Basketball Association play in which two more players joined the ranks of those who have scored 10,000 points in their career. The Lakers did it by beating the Baltimore Bullets 129-114 S' nday in the only league action of the day. ★ * * Bailey Howell became the 25th man to crack the 10,000-point mark. He dropped ip a field goal for the Bullets’ first score of the game when the Lakers were leading 24k Baltimore had come to Los Angeles straight from a 135-132 loss to the Royals in Cincinnati Shturday. In other NBA action Saturday, the Celtics downed the Detroit Pistons in Boston, 12243, the Hawks outacored the San Francisco Warriors 138-113 tiV St. Louis, and in New York the Knickerbockers bowed to Philadelphia 76ers, 127-119. i 5.11| « Ur$'d'r 13-3 S RimmII 4' M3 17 .... I«*3«’t !Si! Fiw'itis I M 3 Tlwm'i'll 4 M I OrMfl 1 1-3 4 fsltf I, Van Ari4ala. Baf- V'Af'la *jSmII g2T To»*l( 34 *3-31 *3 Trtaii FovIM out—DatreH, swj'riis »3 l2i Punti PumWat loal Yardi panalliad lanvar Hou-C. Frailar 37 p Hou-Bvri llanda kick D*n-T( Cronar kli Oan-Hi Dan-PO KFonar 34 Hou-C. Frailar IS p •'C-SUmlal* 17 1 SllSwrytreaga Paaalng var4a«a _____________ , , iuVa'l. Pontiac Team Ends Season Sweetan's Conversion Margin of Victory By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press ’The initial season for Pontiac’s entry in the Midwest Football League ended on a successful but blizzardy note Saturday night when the MFL champion Arrows, eked out a 74l win over the beefy MFL All-Stars. * * ★ A frozen orowd of 1,200 sat in strong winds and snow at Wisner Stadium to watch the Arrows score early in the second quarter and then stave qff the All-Stars until the opening minute of the 4th quarter. The missed placement by George Hobbs, Milan kicker who had missed only two placements all season, was the margin of victory. The All-Stars scored on a break. In the final seconds of the third qnarter Ron Ell-Bton of Lansing punted from his own 49. The bail bonneed on 18 then hit a Pontiac" player in the back of the foot and the Stars recovered on the 12. Two plays later starting the 4th quarter, Jim Overman, Dayton fullback, went four yards to score. START MARCH The Arrows started to march om their own 39 in the first quarter and after threi plays of the second period, quarterback Karl Sweetan went to his right on a bootleg play and eluded tacklers along the way as he scampered to the one yard line. 77 ★ From here, former Hillsdale fullback Willie Jones went over and Sweetan added the impor-' mt point. On the first play after the ensuing kickoff, Pete Mikolajew-ski’s pass was intercepted Irv Radivitz on the Pontiac 34. Sweetan hit big end Frank Goldberg with a 37 yard aerial to the Stars’ 24, but when three plays failed, Sweetan’s try for a 38 yard field goal fell short. Another All-Star drive was stopped when Gene Luppino intercepted a pass and the AT-rows took over at midfield. Sweetan passed 24 yards (6 Bill Leonard, and after anothSt-pass was dropped in the 'en(i zone, the MFL Stars took over on the 27. ★ ♦ ★ A play later, Flint’s Jir^ Long playing for the Ali-8tar|i was hit hard by comer lino-backer Walt Kowalczyk ani when he fumbled Steve Szabb recovered and the Arrows again had another chance on the Stars’ 28. ii tt virdl llll IWl 1 151 II 34) 103 I-40.S 3-34,1 W ytrdi 3-IS l-l| KoajNa i»LAY* ; ■JMWi. 1 yani (l«HMan kick). . 'L-Qv*rman, 4 yard rim (kidi id''!uiXia( i« THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1965 D—3 POTBAU SCORES' S tlO TIN IMU V, IndlWM 13 WorthwMtcm 34, MIchIgtn a IHInolt SI, WiKoniln 0 lurdu* 3S, Mlniwsot* 0 Ohio SIM* 31. lowi 0 JIJCMIIAM COtLiljr (COAMOARO ISSSSAZS. SS5.«„ 35, ShliMnibwra (P».) r Narttiwoed 31, Taylor (ind.) j 14 'Ortiz Shows Kayo'Mercy' Ismael Laguna Loses Unanimous Verdict tyrocuo 41, Wtil Vlriimo It Army 13, Wyoming t PrInctlon 31, Yolo 4 Oortmoulli », Comoll 0 Rutgora R Hoif Crou 0 BooIm Collogo N, Wlllom A Mory 17 BuHalo a, Colgolo 0 OavModn U uloyotto It Dclowart SO. Boftim U. 7 BucknoN 41, LoMgh 0 Moosodwtotti 40, Now HompiMro 0 Hofilro a, wmonborg 14 Amhorit 43, Wllllomill WoiMnj|ta . A JoHoroon II, Comogl By Atsociated Pren A titanic battle between Michigan State and Notre Dame with the nationai championship probably at stake and games at Los Angeles and Fayetteviiie, Ark., to decide major bowl placements bring the college football amStmV Ooorglo T^' Mholir'--' ” Carolino 14 rodi 41, Virginia It ->l 14, Tannauto 13 Malt 37, Mlwixaxd Stato a. Nor ActiSSlo* X Florida ttalo 0 Auburn II, Georgia It Virginia Tach II, Vlllanova It Miami, Fla. M. Vandarbm 14 Mliiourl 3X Oklaiioma 0 WkbHa II, Utah »alo It Iowa Stale M, Kanwt SlaM 4 Miami, Ohio tt, Dayton 0 Xavlar, Ohio 14, ToM 7 Kent State 3X Marihall 13 -----------Th 17, Ohio U. 7 South Dako- * Drake 17 SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) ~ Carlos Ortiz, once again the world lightweight champion, says he passed up three opportunities to knock out Ismael La-gpna of Panama Saturday night. it* jtj t4 . A . t ivxat wnnirian 29* itxi *1 didn t want to take a: tmm aam r aict u chance,” he said in his dressing New^Jieo*siaN'3x noJ^^ ... .. J Southern Calltornla'ixVmeburgh ‘‘I knew by the seventh round Waihinglon as, Oregon Slelell I was gomg to win easy and 1| ucla x, stemord 13 didn’t want to open myself upi cStoVa^*ilf'ilci?w *u ” for a damaging blow. But I could | have floored him,” he added. The 22-year-old Laguna’s legs started to buckle in the eighth, 12th and 13th rounds of his 1&-round title fight at Hiram Bi-thron Stadium. But Ortiz, going for the crown he had lost to Laguna in Panama last April 10, did not follow up his advantage. He won by a unanimous deci-' sion. ig Green 17 natl 41, M Louiwlllo 3X Dra... .. CaM Tech 13, Western Resarve 13 Blutfton 30, Ohio Northern 0 SOUTNWRST Houston 30. Kentucky 31 Texas Tach 34, Baylor 23 I California 34, Oregon o 'I Coloraho State U. 34, grigham Young 33 -■iho IX Idaho State 7 s Jota State ,35, Montana State 7 tsno State 20, U. of Pacific 0 MICHISAN PRSP FOOTBALL Kalamaioo HackaH 23 ihn 44, SI. Mary ‘ ------ Janby 3S, Radford 0 Farmln^on North Farmington 14, Farm- OTia Franklin 44, Wayne 0 unt Clemens Cllnlondale 33, Fi Several Teams Accept Bids Bowl Lineups Taking Shape I Color TV for NHL Tilt •" ^"'**** ****** Nov. 27, when the New York NEW YORK (UPI) - A p,ay Chicago tional Hockey League game will Black Hawks at Madison Square W televised in color for the first {Garden. season to a dramatic climax this week. * w * To this fancy bill of fare is added the East’s piece de resistance — an Ivy League championship test between Princeton and Dartmouth, two of the re- Lions Donate 27-21 Victory maining five major unbeateni Michigan State, Nebraska, and united elevens. | Missouri and Georgia Tech ’The bowl line-up is beginningilanded in bowls Saturday, pos-. to take definite shape, with four ing this prospective pairing for teams set and others virtually the main postseason attractions, set. Whatever holes are left! ROSE BOWL — Michigan should be filled by next Satur-lstate, 9-0, vs. Southern Califor-day. Inia, 6-1-1, or UCLA, 6-1-1. ; SUGAR BOWl^Missouri, 6-1-2, VS Florida, 6-2. I COTTON BOWL - Arkansas, '9-0 or Texas Tech, 8-1, vs Ala-Ibama, 7-1-1. I ORANGE BOWL - Nebraska, j 8-0, vs Arkansas, 9-0 or Texas punts to help the Lions’ field then closed up. He was hit and fumbled and 245 pound Milleri g^’tor boWL - Georgia took the ball on a first bounce.g-M. vs. Tulsa. 6-2. The stadium vibrated as hei _. i i.i. headed for the goal line 75 yards, ‘"fi ® awav with Lions’ tackle Ted **®’ **-**’’**'8 17 points in the, Ka^as, 255, in pursuit. Miller never looked back and j^^pt pressure cooker alive after ^ crossed the goal line.he,,the big game at South Bend! panted slowly from the field ggturday. The Irish have a 7-1 ■"ith the 49ers ahead 27-14. record, having lost to Purdue Watkins again put the Lions ^3,, ^^e in good field position with a Al- f^^^h-rated nationally, took a handoff from Brodie and.yard return and from the Frisco passed toward Casey. Bruce Ma-|48 another march started. A 22- GAME DUE her intercepted and with the,yard interference penalty put' Michigan State’s opponent in grace of an adagio dancer, he {the ball on the nine and with the Rose Bowl will be deter-zigged and zagged and had the [five minutes left, Pietrasante mined in the game tetween crowd on its feet as he gainedjdove one-yard for the TD. It was Southern California, with the 32 yards forward and at least 27-21 with the point. country’s top running back in a 100 laterally. 1 * * * Mike Garrett, and UCLA, with * * ♦ ! The Detroit defense gave the its gifted quarterback Gary Be- The ball was on the Frisco 48ioffense another c h a n c e to re- ban, at Los Angeles, and the Lions were in great deem itself when Dick LeBeaul The Cotton Bowl host team position for the go-ahOad touch- intercepted a Brodie pass, re'{will be determined in the game down. {turning it 20 yards to the Frisco at Fayetteville between Arkan- Marsh and Nick Pietrosante 31. sas, riding a 21-game winning picked up good yardage and the! But, with a first down on the,streak, and Texas Tech, 8-1, Lions had a third down on the 117 and 2:00 minutes left. Plum’s with its explosive Denny Ander-', 49ers’nine yard line. Plum, then!four pass attempts fell harm-son. I went back to pass. He searched I lessly and with 43 seconds left,! The winner plays at Dallas and searched and searched for San Francisco took possession, and the loser will go to another jpas^. But Detroit’s defense held a receiver. thankful for the Lions' holiday m a j 0 r bowl, possibly the {tight and twice Watkins retumedi The open field ahead of him spirit of giving. iOrange. (Continned from Page D-1) with five minutes left in the half. Plum started calling the signals on his own 22 and eight plays later, aided by an exchange of 15 yard penalties, the Lions had to punt from the same 22 yard line. Brodie had 1:24 left in the half and he managed seven plays, for 64 yards, one a beautiful 33-yard aerial to Bemie Casey and the other a seven-yard touchdown pass to Dave Parks with 27 seconds remaining to make the score read 2041 at halftime. On the opening series of second half, the Lions marched 64 yards in 3:20 of the clock and six plays. An interference penalty on the 49ers at the seven yard line was the big break. Amos Marsh went Hve yards for the touchdown and with Wayne Walker’s point it was 20-7. A|ter Dave missed a 39-yard try for a field goal the' Uons lost the ball in two 'plays when Jim Johnson intercepted Plum’s position. Just before the third quarter ended he circled forward and reverse to get the ball to the Detroit 46. From this point the Lions started marching and Studstill closed the gap by making a great leaping catch of Plum’s pass for a 32-yard touchdown. Everthing then looked brighter for the Lions. Two plays after the ensuing kickoff, Willard CARTER'S Mr. Tuffy Is No Fair-Weather Friend! Each plu* exchange 370 South Saginaw M South l^it of WidB Track Drive PONTIAC FE 5-6136 Cranes Close Soccer Slate Cranbrook’s soccer team closed the season Saturday by retaining the Houston Cup with a 5-1 decision over Chatham Kent. Mark Packard’s three goals sparked the winner’s offense. He had third-period help from Larry Olson and Rick Bosley as the Cranes broke a 1-1 tie with three This was the 10th straight time Cranbrook had beaten (Chatham Kent in the annual battle for the cup. Cranbrook finished with a 7-3 over-all mark, all the losses coming in Inter-State Prep League play. Warren came from behind in the final five minutes of the game last night to down Pontiac, 4-3, in a Southeastern Michigan Hockey Association opener at Warren. Chuck Graham, Bruce Strom and Bryan Strom scored goals for the losers. LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) -Hap Sharp won the 65-lap |4S,-000 Stardust Grand Prix Sunday after his teammate, Jim Hall, had led for 53 laps before running out of gas. Both drove Cha-I jiarrals. I , Sharp’s average speed on thej three-mile course was 106.68 { miles per hour. SiUiheJJ HUhJ XuHehePHJ Our Specialty Wed. 8 Oz. Steak 11.50 Thurs. Tip Staak 11.25 Fri. Fiah Dinner 11.00 Waterford HID COUNTRY aUB 6623 Dixie Hwy. lO-MN Pontiac Mall TELEGRAPH ROAD CORNER ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD TELEPHONE 682-4940 niK 11 ; laiKSS. aiOXDAV, NOVKMBER 15, 1905 f^FOOTBALl STANDINCS COLLMC FOOTMLL STANDINOI ______ AN Onncs <^^11 WLTPHOF WLTW»ON urLA -‘OMIM »«0 300 I1 0 )M M 4 1 I m U PACIFIC ATHUn’IC CONPIRINCI ' CaRiriNW anQmum WLTPtlOP WLTPHOP . 4 « 0 IW It 3 0 Q 114 40 3 0 0 37 15 3 3 0 lit ir Unbeaten List I Dwindles to 21^ 411 in 103 7 I 0 130 n By IV AsMciated Preti Top-ranked Michigan State, ij! Aiicansas, Nebraska, Princeton 1 110 124 531 t St. 0 4 0 It X lOUTHWtST CONFIftINCI w"?wSop w*t^WTop Arkanut 4 0 0 17* 34 * 0 0 2*3MO Otrtnwolh Ttx«j T*cll 5 1 0 141 ** 0 1 0 233 14* _ SMU 3 3 0 05 70 4 3 1 104 137 TCU 3 2 0 74 03 4 4 0 *7 133 £“7*" ? <"» !?f H 5 >’9!« . 3 0 M M 1311351« and DartnHNith were anmng 31 0 4 0 41 *3 4 4 1 i“ 147college footbaH teams which ----- remained unbeaten, untied after iY_r.y'*««« _______ igames of Nov. 13. Of the teams on the list, 11 ) 74 1C 3 4 0 3 5 0 II Ttxat ASM 1 SOUTHiAtTtRN CONFtReNCe T Ftt OF W L T Fta OF Kantucky Ml>i. . .> ,1 <». ,, Gaergla 3 3 0 104 ** Ttfmetsee lit 57 37 LSU t 3 0 It lot MIts. St. 1 4 0 71 100 TuImv 1 4 0 37 130 4 0 37 104 0 37 130 '2 7 0 7 NIGHT RACING Caalaraac* ANOamai WLTPttOF WLTFtoOF 4 0 0 200 44 0 0 0 367 73 400 140 45 000 343 57 3 3 0 70 105 3 5 0 14 125 3 3 3 57 55 4 3 2 107 43 3 3 1 105 110 3 3 3 154 123 3 3 1 04 137 4 3 1 133 — 1 5 0 54 157 2 i 0 76 bave completed its season. ATUNTIC CONFSaaNCl Cmfomct AHOmiim WLTmtOP WLTPtlOP •on 4 3 0 13 5? 5 4 0 )01120 :oronn* 3 2 0 M 63 4 5 0 13M52 •rollni 3 3 0 07 61 4 5 0 134 151 3 9 B S3 53 5 4 0 113 130 60 63 4 4 0 to 102 07 62 5 4 0 104 to 4t N 3 4 0 117 163 57 137 t 7 0 67 1M Sti Statt MorylanO N. C. Stti Vlrplnla Porost MltKAMimCAN CONPtPINCI ConftTMlCt All Oomti WLTPtlOP WLTPtlOV Miami 5 1 0 154 63 6 3 0 tio 13 Bowl. Gram 5 1 0 t3 73 7 t 0 133 10 Wtst. Mkh. 3 2 1 73 17 6 t 1 111 12 Kent Statt 3 3 1 103 60 4 4 1 137 10 Toltdo 3405161 4S0I3O Marshall 140 54 M 450 130 IS Central Connecticut Sports Survey Is Made 9 Races Nightly Rain or Shine through November 77 JACKSON HARNESS RACEWAY H Mexico St. ___th. Mlu. Oeorpia Tech SyrKuie West Texas St. Virginia Tech . Colgate Texas Western . ofI CHICAGO (UPI) - A survey 5 347 61 by Ibe Athletics Institute dis-» {“jclosed today that there were I I4S 43'13,306 boys’ baseball leagues! 3 m IS'with 83,162 teams in action dur- 6 144 in.ing the 1965 season. The insti-n'tute estimated that 2,860,888 i I in 6kn _ 1 , ^ If W*Mr«M« TgwwklF Rook/eGoffer^^j-““—j ^ Blancas Wins ^ i s mSSSSn pamaosinouitihal H.44SS5 Mexico Vo. Darts. NNT1MTIIMTNMNMP.N. inil.Ta6MrHklM.Mki ! MEXICO CITY (AP) - —— maxH a spectacular rookie year in pro golf Sunday by win-nine the Seagram Cup, hia Brat professional prize, and the Mexican Open with a par 72 and • 284 total. Grabbing a one-stroke lead In the third round Saturday, the 27-vear-o'd University of Houston product broke away from the international field to post a four-stroke victory over lee Trevino, a Dallas newcomer playing in his second pro tournament. Blaicns' triiimnh meant |S,-000. IQs total earnings Since turning pro last April is now over ^,000. His next appearance will be in the Caracas • ’I'n. vhich tees off next Thursday as part of the newly-created Latin American tour. UNDERSTUDY - Gary Cuozzo (15), understudy to Balti-...ore Colts’ great quarterback Johnny Unltas, gets ready to uncork a pass against the Minnesota Vikings yesterday in the third quarter at Bloomington, Minn., while Unitas (bot- , _________ . . , tom), out of action with a back Injury, talks with a teammate [ '{J boy^ participated in the youth! on the sideline. Cuozzo filled in well as he passed for five • 3 2 iis 71'program. touchdowns in the Colts 41-21 victory. In Small College Tilts I Nutgtrt ! PIMiburgh I Holy Crou Doylon . VlllMIOVO U. of Ftcific 3 5 1 177 133 State Elevens Post 4-5 Mark LKARArel PBA Keg Prizei Up AKRON, Ohio (UPI) - Pro-ifessional Bowlers Association' ifounder Eddie Elias reported today that prize money for the PBA’s 1966 13K;ity tour will top i H0WT0QETAN1 ADULT EDUCATION FINISH HIGH SCHOOL AT HOME lUSINESt d AUTOMOTIVf □ HISNIOHOOL □. Lew MentMy PaimiMls liwMa Seeks _ - . .... ...A. j ron » luw A«r\;ssj wui wim iw By TV Associated Press i With Detroit Liona coach touchdown came on a W»-y«roithe 1700 600-mark for the first ................................ -................................ e 8-wMk boginn.r cours* e Loom Self D.font. e Stortt Thurtday, Nov. 18 # 7:30 P.M. - SI 5.00 5 South Saginaw Warren - 185-IS21 4 • I The weekend witnessed a 4-5 Harry Gilmer watching him drive American Jumpers record mr Michigan’* sm.ll col.,„„ the stands, quarterback Dave Neilson threw three touch- Display Top Form * ^SJUtCpton IfitowISS AciteiuVtting L ’touchdowns, TORONTO (AP) - Mary ,^tional conquest of the Uni- ‘ * Chapot of Wallpack, N.J., post-,versity of Montona. Dale Lived her third victory in threejingaton’s 21-yard third quarter days as the American equestri- fleld goal provided the winning UliriOMI SOHOOL Phono DU 2-7MV P.O. lox N-63, Alton Pork, Mkh. $Mid m. your froo SS-iMgo High School looMot . .Zono DOUR BSth YEAR! SNO-CAPS 4 FULL PLY |2'-’1S 00* . an team continued to dominate margin as the Broncos closed the international jumping com-their season with a 6-M record, petition Sunday at the Royal! iQlladale beat Shippensburg I Agricultural Winter Fair. |of Pennsylvania 35-14, Alma * * * Itrounced Anderson of Indiana , Mrs. Chapot, who had won the *wl Northwood drubbed Welcome Stakes Friday and Taylor of Indiana 31-7 in Inter-I finished first in the Intematkm-,***!* Pl*y-— _____________ - - J •' Team Class event Saturday, | STATE LOSERS o< FREE MOUMTINQ ” **'k-.^*ok****^ * Dn the other hand. Northern 1= “®P'*‘«‘|Michigait fen to Parsons of Iowa 7 7®® «*" * * *“:'l»-7, Kalamazoo lost to Prank- ^for If ■ onds with a maxunum score of „„ 7^ Grand Rapids ^ JC bowed to Defiance of Ohio * * * 16-14, Eastern Michigan was de- Tom Gayford and Jim Eider feated by Baldwin-Wallace of of the Canadian team were sec- Ohio 28-14, and Olivet was nosed ond and third, respectively. Gail out by Prindpla of Illinois 20-18. Ross of Canada was fourth and Albion downed Wayne State Carol Hoffman of North Branch, 30-14 and Central Michigan N.J., fifth. swamped Ferris State 37-0. Ferris in snow flurries. Alma came from behind a 144 deficit Bruce McLemma closed his in defeating Anderson largely great season for Hillsdale by, on quarterback Dave Gierhart’s racing for two touchdowns passing, against Shippensburg. Defiance scored a touchdown fourth quarter, 80-yard drive in coming from behind toi So .|.*«,.-Wk.H«4k„...k.«.| 7 HM TAX ■ OPEN DAILY t.9-SAT. 9-6 ■ UNITED TIRE SERVICE INI BaWwto a»«. Olivet failed on thm straight two-poiiit conversion attempts In jlosing to Prindpia. Ben Benja-defeal Grand Rapids JC. A one-1 min and Bill Simmons scoi^ vard sneak by freshman Johnitwo touchdowns each in North-Buerger gave FrankUn the wood’s defeat of Taylor, touchdown that beat Kalama-' ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ”• * * * p^SSwgSF-^ Parsons kept its bond in for '* ** -owl game with its victory over wmo_f©Tiviiirton' Northern Michigan. Northern’s ” Tomorrow May Be TOO LATE! i ‘ ‘ AUTO : INSURANCE FOR : ANYONE! : DON i NICHOLIE I Complete Jnturance ServiceM ■ 53Vi West Huron pontiac FE 5-8183 § ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■ FROM GENERAL MOTORS... MORE VALUE IN 3 BIG WAYS! GOOD/^EAR service SPECIAL SAVE YOUR CAR FROM RUST! HERE’S WHAT WE DO ... 1 Intida doors and track oroo 2. Floor pons - Hoodllght shioldi 3 Undorsido of rockor ponolt 4. Fondor whool woll* 5 Grovol splosh pans 6. Gas tank 7 Prossuro appliod for comploto ponotratk ovon through original undorcoating .4»h nhout our eompiru rutiproofine rervlro. Cl anti tafriy applied to any car. nete or old, ky trainod Protsst jeer iv agakwt lET OUR RUITPR00FIN6 SPECIAL NOW I coodAear This week...WINTER TUNE-UP SPECIAL YOUR CAR’S PERFORMANCE CHANGES WITH THE SEASONS . SO BRING YOUR CAR WHERE THE EXPERTS ARE.. FOR THIS •w MmS tsssrt* (kNk MS t*r*lM ... SMTk FMf* • Nhrt* • StMtuMf • e«rS«rtt*r • Thainf • fMI SMrt MS FIMr • IMrIMtr C*F MS WFUil • FM lA • lf*KlM WkM • SWrttr • ViltiM SMiMw MS Vorttor Mtsrt • CyHaSW Cmvtm-IlM •Utmu • tutmitlt OmSS • S4<1trj EASY TERMS-PAY AS YOU RIDE THE STYUNG IS STRIKING! STANDARD! Get Ready For Winter Now ^\Li FRONT END ALIGNMENT TAKE VOUR CAR TO THE EXPERT THE SERVICE IS SATISFYIN6! Talk about valuel You never tiad It 80 good until budget thsn regular dsalsr ssrvicsl Periodic you’ve owned one of these beautifully crafted 1966 protective services are plafnned for you by experts GM cars. They are easier on the pocketbook, and to help prevent problems before they start. You all come complete wKh additional safeguards as get lots more value with a General M^s car or standard equipment. And nothing is aaaiar on a truck. Visit your GM dealer soon. GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE OPEN DAILY 8:30 TO 6. FRI. TIL 7<30, SAT. TIL 2>30 WIDE TRACK at UWRENCE PI Ml28 SEE VOUR Si DEALEN FOR QUALITY SfiRVICi ' Guardian maintenance I CHEVROin • PONTIAC • OLD8DOBIIE • BUICK • OPEL KADEH .• CADILLAC • 6HC THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1965 Sen. Mansfield Has Chat With iFrench Minister PARIS (AP) - Sen. Mike| Mansfield and four of his Senate; (leagues called on French For-^gn Minister Maurice Couve de Murville today. Mansfield said after the meeting they had a “pleasant talk,” but declined to go into detail. ' MansOeld, Senate nujority leader from Montana, was ao ctunpanied by Sen. George D. ^Bkaii, R-Vt., Daniel K. Inouye, ^awaH, J. Caleb Boggs, R-Dcl., and Edmund S. Muskie, D-Igaine. ^ Thdy are on a survey trip of trouble spots in Europe and! Southeast Asie. with President Jiohnson's^pproval. ; Mansfield said in answer to a Kwsman’s'question that no proposal is being made for a meetp ihg between Johnson and President Charles, de Gaulle. D—5 State Road Toll 1,765 EAST Ian SING (UPD-Roadway accidents have claimed 1,765 lives in Michigan so-far this year compared to 1,-W on' this date last year, ac-wding to provisional State Polite statistics today. Dial 332-8181 Pontiac Press Want Ads POa FAST ACTION NOTICa TO . ADViaTitaas ABS AcIIVBD IY I OJA WILL aa puiLisNaD TNa Death Notices BECKER, NOVEMBER IS, IS6S, ADAM, 117 W. N«w VWm M 7I| bck>v(d (•Itwr of Mfi, wSrnor (Edno) Irwin; door brolfMr of Mri. MoiitM Eborllno, Mrt, Mario Klinc, and Mri. Frada Martini. Funaral MrvMa will ba hold Wadnaoday, Novwtiby 17, at^:]0 , Irt_ . Park Camatary. Ila In itata at ttw iim.,., n.,,,.. CUMINOS, NOVaMBhR U IMS, EDWARD S,, S7 S. Barluhira, Hunloon ' Funa ant In Parry Moi y. Mr. Backar * LORA K., tm Di^on ^ and Mri', Johi/t^^aiae 'tur^ad graaMrandohlld. Funaral larvlea will bi IwM Tuaiday, Novambar U. at 2 p.m. at tha Sharpa-Ooyatta Fu-naral Homo, Clarkaton. Intarmant In Ottawa Park Cai—' -pandanca Townrtip. will Ila In Itata a< ■ ftaf"*, RT£T?r vatnbar IS, tehvlti Firm... --- MIchiM, wHIi Rav. Ai Mi:* p.m; Air. Hobay wlHlla In if -at tha funaral homa. Death Notices JENNINGS, NOVEMBER II, IHS, IDA L., S2 Oladalona; ago M; ba> lovad inolhar of Mr«.'Abal R. Borayi daar ilitar of Mra. Ada Covay; alto mrvlvad by two granddaughfari and aIsM graal-.orandchlldran. Funaral larvica will ba hold Monday, Novambar IS, at I p.m. at the Voorhaaa-SIpla Chapal wfiti Rav. Edmond I. Watkini of-• mani In Ottawa Park in. Jannlnps will Ila., « Voorhaaa-SIpla Fu- _ .. . ...... at tha Har- ..., .... Davli Funaral Homa, Auburn HaWtlt. Intarmant In Whita Chapal Camiatary. Mr. Laa will Ha inCHERT, NOV8MB8R _ BABY GRACE ANN. T4 Thorpe alio lurvlvad b ra by tha D. E. Puril^ F ncLBri I.., S44S Bruntwick Driva, Watarford Townihip; aga SS; ba-lovad wifa of Robart V. Rynarion; .daar ilitar of Mri. Joa HaHrlch, child. Funaral larvic held Wadnaiday, Novar 10:30 a.m. at tha 0. .. ---------- Funaral Homa, with Or. Milton Bank officiating. Ir---------- Oakwoad CoPWary, p.m. today. (Suggastad vlilting houri 0:30 a.m. to 0:30 p.m.) SHUART, NOVEMBER 12, 1005, KENNETH G., SO E. Iroquoli; ago 21; balovad ion of Mr. and Mn. Garald Shuart; balovad grandion of Mn. Jaanatta Rainka and Mr. and Mn. Jamas Shuart; dear brothar of Paggy, Thomai, and William Shuart. Funaral larvice will ba hold Wadnaiday, Novambar 17, at II a.m. at tha Huntoon Funaral Homa with Rav. Galan Her-shay officiating. Intarmant In Whita Chapel Ctmtttry. Mr. Shu-arl will Ila In itata at lha funaral homa. .___________;______________ SHUMAN, NOVEMBER 10, lOOS, ^UOE B„ 1207 Wabaico, Waited Lake; aoa SO; balo^ mother of Tharon A., Thuclow J„ and Thurman L. Shuman; dear liifar of Arnia AlbrIghI; alio lurvIvad by five vandchlldran and tan graat- ean^lldran. Funaral lervlca will held Wadnaiday, Novambar 17, at 2 p.m. at tha Shoup Funaral Home, Howa, Indiana. Intarmant hi Wollcottvilla Camatary, Indiana. Arrangamanti ware by the Rlch-ardion-BIrd Funaral Homa, Walled f Marlyn Strovan; beloved ■r of Mr. and Mn. Dallai daar mother of Jatfray anti roven; daar ilitar of Mn. ia Baanatt, Peggy, Max, Ed- at 2 p.m. at tha Sparki Chapel. Interment In While Cemetery Mn. Stroven \ In itate at the Sparki-Grlt AliRCEnceRaBRts 3 =OR CHURCHES, CLUBS, n"vaMlla**riy Me'” al^afflj«f"var Watklni pepper. Call 332-30 to II a.m. and o to s p.m, COINS. BUV-SiLL-TRAOTrAFtER GET OUT OF DEBT ON A PLAN" Vou Can Afford MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS BOX REPLIES At II a.m. today therej were replies at The} Press Office ia the fol-| lowiag boxes; 6, U, IS, II, 18, 32, n, I 43, 44, 41, N, Si, 13. N. 99, 168. COATS FUNERAL HOMS DRAYTON PLAINS _____«4-MI C. J. GOOHARDT FUNiRATfiOMe Kaage Harbor. Ph. OBSJtWB D. E. Pursley FUNERAL HOME ________FE 4-1211____ ■BIWBLACK FUNlRALliSSSr UNION LAKE _________I&-7IM Huntoon FUNERAL HOME Serving PonllK for 10 yaart 70 Oakland Ava. FE iOlSO “ BONFLtSN-'jOHHS Runtr«l Horn# **Dttlgh»d Hy EwhtftH** iSPAliKS-fiRIFFIN vhJtln^ Mn Thomai Barthal, Jack, and I William Wooton; alio lurvlved by I 10 graMchlldren and eight great-grandchlldran. Funaral lervlce will be teld Wadnaiday, Novambar |7, ! at I p.m. at tha RIchardionfBIrg Funeral Home, Milford. Intarmeiil S .Camatary, MIHord. Mr. Wooton will Ila In itata Tuei- in MsRioriam 2 IN LOVING MEMORY OF PHEBE Henderion Tlnion who wai lo naadlaiily killed In a car craih MO river, ^re In*a*l“tKt briSjht 'l^7Jer, ~lon 'bretiSri LIVING AABMORY OF SOPhTa We mill you m ^ronbarg and'''EirubatfT'FraKrv '"-■gePy-EP AgMgMBRAlfCE o9 ny mother, Annette H, Antona, u^lcPaMMl away Nmi. IS. ,040. “ThoughNul Sarvka" ■ ■n; MODERN WOODMEN *LUe lawmuKS WMongBct CEnffltBsloa Vim M. I. DANIILS, Olstricl Rgpr«MnT«tlvB Ml wm mm n t-7ni MODERN WOODMEN or AiunicA Hwe* Offtee - Rock bknd. BL Voorhees-Siple EltatM, Rochaitar. 343-S457. ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDiNG a friendly advliar. phone FE 2-5122 before i p.m - - • -E 2C73 M734. Conlldentlal. ON AND AFTER THIS D 12, I04S I will not ba other Sian n troop or pack. HayrWe, maal, farm tour, cluohwie, all Included. Call UPLAND hills 'FARM 420-1411 WOULD GREATLY APPRECIATE If anyone who latv the accident Nov. 4 at Pontiac Flihar Body, 4:00 a.m. at Kannat and Baldwin Schnappa I MA F7003 1 man'i bench—Flihar Body. A LITTLE GIRL'S VERY FRIEND-ly ruit-colorad cat, LongLaka-SquIr-rel Rd. area, Bloomfield. Long hair, icrawny tall, uiually iticki itralght up. Reward. _MI_ 7-2174. LOST: BLACK GERMAN SHEP- hard. Male, 2 yean, large, Irlend-ly, reward If returned. EM 3-7431. LOST: LONG BLACK REAL ES- -. book, batwaan Barkley and »-row Re-lty, WX'TO or 482-2211. DO YOU KNOW OF ANYONE WHO has acquired a full grown male Brittany ilnca Oct. 347 A call to OR I-IOII may be worth SSO to YOU._________________________________ LOST - POODLE, WHITE WITH dark aari, vicinity of Auburn ihop-plng canter. Reward, FE 5-S771. •XTHi 1044 CIVIL I--- LAW PROHIBITS, WITH C ■ R T A I N RXCRPTIONS, X; DISCRIMINATION BE-X-CAUSE OF SBX. SINCE SOME OCCUPATIONS ARE -X CONSIDRRRD MORE AT- X; X TRACTIVE TO PERSONS X: ft; OF ONE SEX TflAN THE X-OTHER, ADVERTISE- ;X .V MINTS ARE PLACED ft: ;ft UNDER THE MALE OR -X X FEMALE COLUMNS FOR X; ft: CONVENIENCE OF READ-ft ERS. SUCH LISTINGS ARE ft: NOT INTENDED TO EX- X :ft CLUDE PERSONS OF :ft EITHBR SEX. Hjlp Wontid MeIb 2 MEN NOW Due 10 expanalon - large electric “—pony new'------- -SSflO-a-m ACCOUNTANT Opening tor kanlor graduate only. Prafar man with public or Indus- BUSTffli'SITffl’: Lansing, Mich. Equal Opportunity Emptoyar ALL SALESMEN ATTENTION Do you want unlimited Income potential and security too? We have an opaning In our sales force tor ONE man, aga 35 to 45 to S-E-L-L SEE FRANK SCHUCK AT ■ JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 430 Oakland Aye. Pontlaf BENEFICIAL FINANCE OFFERS A -------------------“1 good slart- fltad, rapid 2f-M,"~hlgh" quired. For Career Opportunity NCR WILL TRAIN MEN WITH THE FOLLOWING OUALIFICATIONS: 1. Age 22 *0 35 2. Presently employed, but looking *■' ‘ —“Ion that offers betfer a posltlc ortunity an TO BE REPRESENTATIVES IN THE PONTIAC AND MT. CLEMENS AREA FOR THE SALE , AND INSTALLATION OF CASH REGISTER AND ACCOUNTING training. 2. Salary 3. Complete hosplt'allutlon and EVENING AND SATURDAY INTERVIEWS MAY BE ARRANGED. CALL FOR APPOINTMENT OR SEND RESUME TO: R. G. Ball 334-72(13 P.O. Box 48 Pontiac, Mich. (Equal opportunity amployarl Coughlin Construction Co. 474-38S8 _________________rTr^Tew; CALL 451-1434 TUESDAY MORNING ONLY PROM 7:30 A M. TO 10:30 A M. 3 YOUNG MEN 20-45 For local factory branch that Is expanding, steady, year - acound work. Excellent fringe benefits. Phone 474-2233 Tuesday 10-12 noon. 1480 PER MONTH 10 BOYS. Wb ntad 10 boys to work in our moiling room Wednesday and Thursday aftern o o n s, November 17 and 18, from 12:15 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. Must be 16 years of age. Apply in person on Monday or Tuesday tO: BERT FALKNER CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT THE PONTIAC PRESS 14-YEAR-OLO BoV WILLING TO work Irom 7:30 o.m. to 3iM p.m. 4 (toys 0 wook. 42 W. Montcalm. AEROSOL PLANT GROWTH COM- --------“-mlly Id grow with us, optnlngs In our ship- rocolving dsp t Rochoslor 4 AUTO SALESMAN PoiT-llmt. Msn with oulsido con-tocts. Top monoy. Contoct Ooorgo Mlint btiwNn 7 o.m. and 1 p.m. and 4 p.m, lo 7 p.m.. Ml 4-TMO, A TRUCK MECHANIC, GOOD woaoa, good working conditions. 554 Franklin Rood. AUTO PARTS COUNTER MAN. Ford txporlonct nocosstry, txc. solory, all Irlmo banoflls. Contoct Howord Folerson ol John Mc-Aulllla Ford, 430 Oakland Ave„ Pontiac, Mich. FE 5-4101. AUTOMATIC SCREW MACHINE MEN - Top-notch men only for RA 4, Oavonporls, Conos I, and Brown and Shorpos. Storting rota S345 par hr. Plonfy of ovortlme, ■ all Insuranca and other fringe be:)e-flfs. Contact Joy Shlroy, Fuller-Ion MIg. Co., South Lyon. snd now building, all I ioylpinont, and rk. lornlngs-unllmltod. ■*pSR^(!fgg»lE" spartan 455 Ooklono wve._____ AFTER iPM. n lo work 4 hours ptr ovening. now. Call lor appointment, anight, at OR 4-2233. __1200 PER MONTH________ AGRICULTURAL SERVICE DEPT. unity tor young man to or procosslng and corro-Collogo dogrot or oqulv- ogrtarthiroi lochnicti ongliwing tftM rsqulrod. loma IrowpFdl ••nllal for odvancomdm Important. JWhf John Boon Division, 1305 S. Codor, Lansing, Mich. ' ATTENTION STUDENTS We hove some openings for high school pr college STitdents to work each ofternoon approxi-mdtely 5 hours starting at 12i'30 p,m. Must be U to 19 yean of age. Apply In parson tp BERT FALKNER CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT THE PONTIAC PRESS I through field testing general KITCHEN AND CLEAN up help, young or older gentleman, evening work, PM Piper ----------1, «Jg Highland Rd. FE GRILL MEN and evening Ihifts. At > weekend work. Top silver taka Rd. HElPERS-WELDERS Paid vacations'end holldevs Paid health and life Insuronco Paragon Bridge & Steel Co. 44000 Grand RIver-NovI HELP WANTED, FULL OR PART-lime tor window cMning, exporl-enced or will train. FE 5-0445. HUSKY BOY TO WORK ON SCRAP truck, 3540 . Frankson, Brooklyn sub., Rochostor, Mich. l-tSMtII. INSURANCE SALESMEN INSPECTOR ..., ... ----- .0 do bench In- ictkan ol mochined parts. Must to basic precision Inslrumonts I rood blueprints wall. Apply in Bean Division, 1305 S. Cedsr, Reply to Pontiac JANITOR ROOM AND BOARD AND wages. Apply In person otter 10 a.m. 370 S. Saginaw. LOCAL AUTO SUPPLY HAS OPEN-Ing for e routt salesman and de-sleady ^ work, goi^ pa^. Machine and Fixture DESIGNERS t Associated De- General machine shop work, ove time, fringe benefits. Apply In pe son. Sahlln Supply Co., 750 V weak. Establlshad '^loS-Ck': DAVENPORT AUTOMATIC SCifEW machine oporotors lor day and night shifts. 50 hours e week. Apply In person. Chicago Motor Products Corp., 3734 Auburn Rd., Au-bum Haights, Michigan.________ DISTRIBUTOR TRAINEE Man to train to take over wtiole-“‘e distributorship f- DATA PROCESSING Mochine operator suburbin Community College. High School grodu- year of euerlonce operating the ^iS^L“W14.SSi!''S 2l; YIiJsonnel office OAKLAND community COLLEGE experienced used car SALES-man tor Chevrolat doalor. Pontiac oroo. (rood pay, plus many fringe ENGINEER a Opportunity In product enginoaring with manvfocturar of outomotlvo aervice oqulpmant tor young experienced mochanicol englrMerlng grodudto. Aaslgnmtnl requires ability to lay out and davtiop new mechanical products snd bo re------- ------------ niuuJ - T Michigan, i carter ob|-EquolC ENGINEERS HYDRAULIC, MECHANICAL ENGINEERS Design and dovtiopmant anginaors raquirtd to astumo rtsponslblllty lor Novel hydrauHc-machonlcal oil-voncad stal»df-lha-art. Computars portunity lor original contribution and appllcallon rifort on now dt-vlcos having great data processing potential. BSME prilorrtd with 3-5 **pr*67ecTengineers MAN TO WORK IN AUTO PARTS store, must be experienced as auto ports clerk, Hollorbsck Auto Ports. Phono: 334-4051 ■ _ MEN (3) to assist manager In sales snd delivering. Average S12S per week. Also port-lime men or women, overage 143.50 per week. Apply 8-10 a.m. or 4-4 p.m. 163 Oakland. Machine Shop TOOL LATHE HAND MILL operator HONE operator inspectors OVERTIME. FRINGES. DAYS. M. C. MFG. CO. Ill indionwood Rd., Lake Orion An Equal Oi - - ■ Savaral openings, permanent p tlons. Some previous milling, lai surface or 00 grinding experle people and poton-^ - - BSME or BSEE —Ih 2-5 years skporlence. PRODUCT ENGINEERS System oriented engineers with electroanochonicol copabllltlos to specify oiW propose on oloctro- mechonlcal men— ----------- memory systems, proposal through sijCMSIul background In systoms Apply'In person or stnd rasumt to: E. B. RIockholl, Bryant Compultr Products, 150 Ladd Rood, Wollod Lake MA 4-5571 An Equal Opportunity Employer EXPERIENCE^CABINEfMAKie ____________473-1174 EXPliRliNCBD~g0UNTER” MAN loll or part-tlmo. Janitor, work M not nocooMry. Coll Ml 1 advoneomont.' Calf'*Mr?'^^rain «^LI 7-5406, Aswclalta Dlacovnl '‘«^er, ilM^xpwlancd pratarrad. JO 44144, ht. 3. NIGHT CLERK, WEEK-ENDS, PilE-fer exp., seml-ratlred, 334-4041. OFFICE MACHINE MECHANIC. Young mon 2I to 35 with good mechanical ability. Will train. Call Mr. Thomas, 434-1934.__________ O'NEIL NEEOr SALESMAN. 66 Whore the Action is I ply in pars....____ 1710 W& Track Dr. W. OPTORTliNITY FOR COLLISIOif shop monogor or toremon to hove complele control of shop with sx-eellonf working conditions, oil nec-essary tonis .snd financial backing. Are willing to make a profit-sharing agraoment. Reply to Pontiac OPENING NOW AVAILABLE TO loin aggraulve established resi es-tafe office. Member Pontlic Multl-ple Listing Service. Inquire Warren OPENINGS FOR ARC, MIG., C02 welders, Musi rood prints, under stand weld symbols and hove soma Division, IW S. Codor, Lansing, Michigan. An Equal Opportunity Employer PART-TiME hll"r. *4 %’S,. it" pT'S PORTER OR BUSBOY Full-time nights. Apply at Big Boy PURCHASING' department pponing tor rocont BA groduola In Business Administration oriented toward pdrehasing or material man-agamant or BS oogret In englnoar-toward mechonical or mttollurglctl. wilt consider msn with 5 ytars axperlenca In pur-"'"*•'■'■1 management field with at toast 2 years os buyer, or speclaMiod trainfng In toundry (toerotlon or costing buying Awily Lansing, Michigan. Equal Opportunity Emplovar RECEIVING CLERK l!H? ••••"l••l• exceltont working ditlons and fringe benefits. OooS right men. Plant ilngham district. Rs- rar weekend ottica claanlng. $a ™»«ma to Pontloc P.o. *x h tip vou m'^wL Salesmen WMtorn Auto now accepting appll-cottons tor sotosoeoplo. Thoresre openings tor mature moo to soil oppllonces and tetovlslon, also tor nw to soil tires and a large virl-ety of morchandlsa. Good Mlory-i^mlsslon plan and working coo-dll^s. Many compony bonollfi. Ap- SCHOOL L„ . tor port-tlmo v._ t par day. 444-1400. SCREW MACHINE OPERATORS to sot up and of nunlpto spindle Help Wanted Molt 6 SALESMAN FOR ELECTRIC Appliances and wafer softeners. Good toads, ample floor lime. Drew end commission. Must have cor and Mme selling experience. Crump Electric. Inc. Cell FE 4-3573 for appointment. __ SERVICE MAN FOR CONSTRUd- FE 1-4001, ^s.^E I-03M.________ SHOE MAN Experienced part time, men's end boys' shoes, good salary, Sherman's Shoes. 115 W Maple, Birmingham. IT AT ION A11ENOANT 35 OR ever. 537 East Walton Blvd. !'-3«S5‘no metal labrlcatlon departmont. E> operations Important. College bad ground desirable. Apply John Bee Division. 1305 5. Cedar. Lensini Mich. Equal OpwrlunJ^ Employer____ TIME STUDY ENGINEER Op^rtunity^ for young men wit Equal Opportunity Employer TRAINEE - (JRILL MAN 182 neat, willing, apply In oerso Elios Bros Big Boy Drive In 20 S. TelegrepF — 24, Ponlloc Press. ALIGNMENT MECHANICS TRANSMISSION MECHANICS GASOLINE ATTENDANTS CAR WASHERS 1 fringe b ' • “ coll BIrm UPHOLSTERS I in Platos. UPHOLSTERERS AND TRIMMERS Value Anal'yst Excellent _ pending tocntlon ol a ma|or wide corporetlon In a ri function of value enalysis. position affords a line ~ tor professional and growth for an Individual axperlenca In design and or manufacturing operations plus tome knowledge of cost analysis. De-' gree in Engineering or Industrial Management required. Please write Incluifing salary requirements to G. L. McKiernaa. American- Standard Controls Division Enginaering, Inc., 2501 Williams Dr„ Pontiac._______________________ WOOL PRESSER FOR DRY CLEAN-Ing plant. Lockman Cleaners. 1211 -----------—" Rd„ Royal r ' WORK TOMORROW Learn res- 3 EVES. WEEKLY 4-7 p.m. will earn you as much as 4100 week. Car necessary, 71-yeer-old company. Salat and management positions. Call belora 12 fwon. EM 3*0780^______ 50 FREE BICYCLES beautifui nw'*Wh«flnn''blcvcler*tor your children for Chrlstmat? All you have to do is sell 45 bottles of A NEW PROGRAM Of opportonity with lltxlbto hours parr-fime Fuller Brush dealers. wt»bllshed customers in a prpfected territory. Profits avar-_age $3 per hr. Call 6r 3-8565. ALERT LADY For a part lima position that It l^oyoble and Intorasting. No ax-' PWldxco ntadad. No door to door soiling. Earnings 42.50 and up per F®»*»''4.„ Write Tupporware, aMTni^rator ="-----modern nuriing home < ATTENTION RN'$ and LPN's "aero ' TWA HOSTESS 1. Only TWA snd to world »a. TWA pro- tor Internotlonal servlet. po?r^fj7 **" '• *’*”• ®‘* APPLY IN PERSON TO; Mrs. Jacqueline Anderson TWA Tick#! Counlor Willow Run Airport Ypsitonti, Michigan »;00 i.m. to 1:00 p.m. EVERY SATURDAY OR WRITE TO; Hostoss RKrultlng 10 Richards Rooif Halp Wantad Ftmal# Apply In person. 2244 N. Wood- _**r?L®?TSl^ok.____________ BABY SITTER IN MY HOME. 3M-3702. After 4 o.m BABY Si¥f E R~F OR NIGHTS,' CA R E Perry^wj-all'MA'Ju^^^ BABY SITTER TO LIVE IN, OR will provide trensp. union Lake vlclnlty._343-4777 __ _ BABYSITTER, CHRISfiAN HCiME. prlvelr room. TV, 2 children. IIS a 1^1^ »mi07_ BABY SITTER TO LIVE iNT CaTl BABY SITTER, BAKER BEAUTY (3PERATOR, MUST BE etticleni, good hours. UL 2-2010. BEAUTY OPERATOR, EXPERI enced. Donnell's Pontiac Mall. BAR . MaTO - WAITRESS, EX SHORT ORDER COOK, EXPERI-ance unnacessanr, S nIgMt. Apply before 12 nopn. EM 3-0341._ TH'>EE WOMEN - THREE Exclusive territories now ovollable to sell Avon's beautiful Chrislmai gilts line. Cell FE 4-4500 to tee It they are near VOU, or write P.O. Box 71, Droylen Plaint, Mlchigan._ WAITRESSES Dining Room and Curb Full or port-time. Paid vacatlont. Hospitllliatlon. Lunch hour and WAITRESS FOR SMALL RESTAU-ranl in Ponlica 5 . .m. to 2 p.m. Call 474-2714.______________________________ Star |Jjj''7a In, Opdyke an Wifrk, FE 4-5740. ____ INSURANCE OFFICE WANTS TYP- INSURANCE OFFICE HAS IMME-dlate opening for efficient woman with recent bookkee-'lnd experlenre :. Commensurate « week. Alto 1(1 ladles who 435 and UP aVeraga par wi spare time. Apply 4-10 a.rr p.m. 143 Oaklend.__________ LADIES (5) Pleasanf" sales *'work**wllh*' average Income. No exp* necessary. Phone 332-3053, 7 LOUNGE WAITRESSES. NO E RIENCE NECESSARY. Cl after 4 p.m. 474-0424.___ MANICURIST WANTED, 70 P Salon. 132-7277. _____________ MATURE WOMAN, AGE 23 AND up, abillfy *- • portant and train tor NURSES AIDE OVER 21 OFFICE WORK, TYPING, MUST BE good in arithmetic. Phone FE 3-3444 tor Interview, ask tor Mr. Gibson.. Office Girl-Coshier Experienced, lull time, lor month of Dec. Bloomfield Fashion Stwp, Re floor polishing machine, work In Pontiac arta 5:30 .p.m. to 2 a.m., must havt own Iransporfatlan. Ap. KITCHEN helper. 4 DAYI G060 wages. Harvey's Colonial House, 5IM Dixit Hwy. OR 34040 alltr 5 p.m. LADY OR MAN FOR BOWLING counlor work, exparlanca not nac-tisary. writo giving complala aual-llkallans, salary axgoefad and to forth to Penllac Press Box 12, LOCAL RAWlIiOH BUtINtSS avallaMt In north Oakland CWily or dlstrlcl In Panllac. Start Im-madlaftly. SolHng axBarlanct halp-tul but net nacasaary, Wrilt tf W wrMa Ea^lgh Oggl. MCK IN D—« THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1965 fImM NL tr F. WHAT DO YOU WANT ? ? ? t Wwk Umlhi Fwwte H CLEANING AND iNAU WASHING. ----LxJeT*' r >, t3,4U; low~ iwn, |i.i34, 70 «nd have som* public contact or sales experlenr- ---■ ■“ —'• Immediately. Shelton at I Motet, tm lo 5:30 p.m P.S. We have openings lor -------- district managers with stror^ suc-■|l sales background. Present Medical Technologist REQUIRED IMMEDIATELY FOR clinical laboratories. A.S.C.P., A.M.T.r or others qualify. Day and afternoon shifts. Maxlmonn start-Ing salary 1547 per month plus probable overtime at time and a half. Call or write Personnel Dept. AK.a---aa-,_ ..._*sa-.^ Block Co. 30 E. t SYSTEMS ASSISTANT gree required, sho familiarity with _ ___________________ operations. Salary open. Apply — PERSONNEL OFFICE WANTED AT ONCE. DEALER FOR Ironings, i OAYsfcRvicb. IRONINGS IN MY HOME. SrtMlii| Senfke-jhnySti 13 repair. Free estimates, ________________ Rawleigh Dept. MC KMOJM, Free-'INTERIOR, EXTERIOR REDECO-—‘ •" —'ng. FE S-sm Ask tor Wayne. Suits HeI|i, Male-ftiiialE 8-A REAL ESTATE SALESMEN WANT- International Personnel Service, Inc. Instructiom-Sdioob IF YOU'RE GOING TO CALIFOR-nia, deliver a late model car for AU.M Motors, 2SI7 Dixie Hwy., OR PIANO LESSONS FOR BEGINNERS ---- 1 year- "— ' -...on-Dra... If i lee. t74-2071. DEER PROCESSING. MOOSE AND BEAR. FE 2-A1S5. 2466 SNELLBROOK. Wuutetl qilUrtu to Iuur4 M cAlp care, licensed home. Wanted Ntmuhold Goods 29 HEAR OUR PRICE BEFORE YOU take so little ter tun----------- or appliances and what have t We'll auction It or buy R. B & B Auction sow Dixie________________OR S-2717 WANTED Uprlghl, grand, spinet and c_ pianos. It you have a piano to GRINNELL'S FE 3-7166 Wonted Miscellonoows 30 AUCTIONEERS; BERRY AND Spak; FE 4-0742 or FE 5-707e. CASH FOR PIANOS, FURNITURE. CASH 46 HOURS I CONTRACTS - HOMES WRIGHT 312 Oakland Ave,_Ft Itidl CASH PAID FOR YOUR USED COPPER. 3Sc; BRASS' RAOIATdRS, S3; batteries. Si .2$. C. DIxson. DESKS. FILES, OFFICE FURNI hire, portable and office typewriters, adding machines, drafting tables, etc. Forbes, OR 3-V747. We WoKted to Rent 2 CHILDREN. BARN OR BUILDING FOR year aro Box SS. I. Write Pontiac P home. Phone collect MAA4IS. WORKING COUPLE Clerkston-Drayton area. Reasona- COMPLETE DEER PROCESSING.! S5 E. Princeton. FE 4-3134 or FEl I-4W2. .... TO RENT OR BUY - building or church lo have church services lull time, Pontiac area Call CE e-5501, Flint. Work Wanted Mob EXPERIENCED JANITOR A DEER PROCESSING HESTER'S MARKET S444 COOLEY LAKD ROAD YOUNG COUPLE DESIRES 2- OR '■“droom -------- — ----------- 4-1414. 1 Pontiac oroo. marked. OR PLACE A PiLESS WANT AD-SEE THINGS HAPPbNI l-A ALUMINUM SIDING-STORMS ( FE S-*S4$. Joe ValNIy, OL l-««23 KAISER, ALCOA ALUMINUM SID- ji ing. Comb aluminum storm wln- . BILLS SR., NEW AND or^de-lt- experience. 332-M71. NEW HOUSE AND REMODELING ~ Plans drawn. 343-4SM._____| AspboH Poving DRIVEWAY SPECIALIST. FE ______FREE estimates LEONARD'S FLOOR SERVICE Old Hoors made Ilka new 25 yrs. experience. 427-3775. I G SN.^ER, FLOOR LAYING ------------ "--"'-g. fE MI5W. Floor TiHH Fornoce Ropoir : BROKEN CONCRETE AND TOP ' *0*^' Pg 4-3371 ■LOCK ^laying and cement I FIRgpu^E'^oTsNOw" PLOW- work. FE 40521._________ Ing, sodding, end loader. FE 1-2205. MERION BLUE SOD. PICK UP OR: .. ..- PAPER STEAMERS RUG CLEANER - POWER SAWS « i-i™ ----- FE 44105 WALLPAPER STEAMER ELDERLY PERSON TO SHARE Hat, gsed references, FE------- 343-«eSr^ LADY DESIRES TO SHARE Wontod Root Eitoto 1 TO 50 EAQB I INESS PI CONTRA HOMES, LOTS* CELS, FARMS, Bl ERTlks, AND LAI SERVICE $100,000 For land contracls and equitlee IMMEDIATE ACTION -CALL TODAY A. JOHNSON & SON REAL ESTATE A INSURANCE HAVE BUYERS WAITING IN LINE ... ------------------ -ODEN REAL- ALL KINDS OF i-ur. BEST PRICES A„_ SALES. CALL HAGSTHOM, I--- TOR, OR 44)351 OR EVENINGS HAVE BUYERS FOR ANY KINO Of property tor quick lalo. Call: Paul Jonei Realty - FE 4-S550. NEEDNOWIII 3 BEDROOM WEST, 512,000 to 515,000. Alw ^ er 3-bedroom norm i» to 113,000. Cue. hxnert waiting. Call Gilbert Long. FE 2-4339. Ray O'Neil Realtor 3530 Pontiac Lake Road OR 4-2222 or FE 2-4239 NOTICEI If you have acreage parcels for •ale — small or larga - we ----- me huyers, call us today I UST^ PRIVATE PARTY WISHES TO BUY •mall home in Huron Go ' area, FE 2-0021. i BUY, SELL, TRADE SlIST CLARK REAL ESTATE 3101 W. HURON FE 3-7000 RES. Ft 4-4013_________ TED: A 3-BEDROOM H0M£, sment and garage wim 5 Kres more In Independence i------ >. Will pay 5304)00 - 025,000 Elsele FE 4-1704 or OR 4-; Ray O'Neil Realtor OR 4-2222 or FE 4-1704 CARNIVAL By Dick Turner tJHS N104. he TJL 0* BA RA SO “I wish Pop would make up his mind! He gives me SPENDING money, then he tells me to SA\^ it!" loot^eo Space___________47 NEW MODERN OFFICES, AND I,-300 sq. ft. stora building, alr.condl-tioned, 4511 W. Huron, 47341331, 343-7474. OFFICE 14x14' 4 oirni' 3 2 SA4ALL OF- M. J. Van..... R 3-1355. _ OFFICE FOR RENT small shopping center. Call Tom Bitomen or Jock Ralph el FE Rent Business Property 47-A Sob Hootei^^ DRAYTON PLAINS 3-bedroom brick on large Ges heel. Cerpaled. Near schc and shopping area. By owner. i McCullough REALTY «Th'rL*iSnrb5Sc ra^.J^ scaped 75 by 130 Idot M, In WM-klns HIHs. Call lor dstolli ond Nl us shew you the txtraa. Here today but may bt gona tomorrow. Will considtr Abtdr^ hama In any locatlen at trada In. TED MCCULLOUGH, JR. Mixeci Neighborhood MODEL OPEN AFtcpnoONS M AND SUNDAY WESTOWN REALTY S4S Bloatnfldld Ndtr Lullwr E S I703 aftarndons. LI 1-4477 EVtt. PIRST IN VALUE Tucktr Rddlty NICHOLIE ^at. Only 17,950. Tarms. SOUTHEAST SIDE ■ ---------- "ungalow. Living and kitchdn, lull bast- buMalow. Living od mng area. ullf. Italic HA haat, va- lly Evat. call MR. ALTON FE 4-5134 model locilod at Lu nei a.Hi nIOOmfitId. BELAIR. .;'' VIE BUiLJzRS 545 Bloomflald Ndtr Lutlwr FE 1-2743 1:30 TO 5 P M M# Nmw;____W RHODES VACAIJT-BY OWNER VILLAGE OF OXFORD WILLIAMS LAKE SwWtSdmn: DON GIROUX 5.1 473-7037 WEAVER houst. 524,900, MILTON WEAVER INC., REALTOR In ma Vtllagt ol Rochtsler 111 W. Unlverslly_______________451-0141 Only 15,. ACrSV'wisI Clorkslon Rd. with 34x54 building, geraat dqulpmtnl, hydraulic lift and air comprtssor. BMUtVf'u*L ■ Ve>*PENTIAL LOT near Rochaatw, bord|^ Pahtl IN^TllSwOO? SHORES NdT 3. An IdMl location for your family, large lotA gas rt tjriet, axcsllwit schools. Call tor dttalls. ALBERT J. RHODES, Broker FE 0-3304_2M VI KENT 17 TEELIN, OBFORD I scapad. Ptrttct baach. Substantial!, n down payment. Elwood Realty 4IM035 40A3410 X NO MONEY DOWN I t 74con- Tuckar Realty PE 4-lft4S WEST SIDE - 3-badroom homt larga lol. Gas hast. Garago. rich soil lor gardsn. 57,950 51.450 down. TRADE - Moving to Florlda7 Owner will trade 3-bodroom modern water front homo In SI. Patersburg for like property In Michigan. Also will sail outright at 514,500-Terms. Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor 2300 Dixie Hwy at Telegraph FE 2-0123 er FE MW4 Want Listings Will Travel — Taylor OR 4-0306 WANTED LISTINGS Sab Hooses 49 1-BEOROOM, NEWLY DECORAT-ad, gas heat, $5300, terms. 053 Stanley, PonWac. OR 3-2427. ^BEDROOM LAKE FRONT HOME. ■ t, Mrtlally furnlshad. 5150 ________FE 0-1427 after 3. 3-BEDROOM, FULL BASEMENT, 2 lots, privileges of 2 lakes, $3,000 cash, or 51,000 down end lake over payments, Rowe Lake, MIHord, cell 405-1404._______________ 2-BEDROOM HOME Nice shaded lot, lOO'xIlS', 3-cir garage, loko privilogts, good beach. 59,55« with 10 per coot down. 3 BEDROOMS PossIbN 3 with basement, lot ISO's 150' on blacktop, needs soms work. 14,000 with 51.500 down. FLATTLEY REALTY 420 Commerce We Need Listings CLARENCE RIDGEWAY 3-FAMILY, ORION. 53,0 Ally, 473-9701. 3-kEDROOM COLONIAL BRICK, IN SemlnoN HIHs, tireploce, besoms -- 2-cer gereqe. FE 4-5707. 3-BEDR06m, basement, G; in Lskt Orion. OA 0-3013. , •5, rep- H. Wilson, 3 BEDROOMS, CARPETED LIVING WRIGHT REALTY 333 Oakland Ave. FE 2-9141 Eves, after 7:30 PE 5-1591 , WE NEED LISTINGS 4-H REAL ESTATE rtarH _ s-room ranch — 1 acre parcel — close WHAT HAVE YOU In, Auburn Heights or east of city I Client has cash for nice 3- or 3-| bedroom home with dining room » besemont end garage. ^ W. H. BASS dliiDROOM COLON REALTOR FE 3-7210 Apartoieiiti, FaraiiligATN>TNG“ANb DECORAflNG fTK qna MiCfnent r^rMtkKi inttriof and Mltrlor. frM Mik ooms my ipecislly. Slate II-1 males UL 2-3557 i '^'TERlAKES PAINTING AND DEC me£^° ■■»**'■ orellng. Al work OR 43091. estimates. 335 9H1 : PAINTING. PAPERING, CAUt k i — -V rales Tom. 143-4440 O) n, 349 0021, INTERIOR FINISH, KITCHENS.! penelirn. 40 years experience ^ FE l ife. Cement Work Cement and Block Work Guinn's Censiructlon Co. FE 4-7477 Evti FE 5-0123 PATIOS? ORIVESr OARAGE SLABS 40r ^ " PE 4M76. Days ___________ GENERAL TRUCKING AND EXCA-vetlng, top soil, till dirt, sand — grayef, backhot work, samI Ir for hira. No fuss, no muu, call us. OA b-1147.__________ HAULING AND RUBBISH. NAMB your prlca. Any tlma, FE l-fldOS LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING, rubbish, fill dirt, griding and grav-_sl and trontandjs^lng_FE 3^. LIGHT HAULING. GARAGES AND --------------sad 474-1142 or FE TRUCK HAULING. LAWN cltswlftg. m truck Reotal Pioue Tuniug PIANO TUNING AND REPAIRING Trucks to Rent " ’-«L» vs-Ton pickup. TRUCK TV. ALL UTILITIES. While Lake front, adults only,i p,„har an references. 535 per weak. M7-4035. I foUSs fill „ „ ROOMS AND BATH, CHILD WBl-l f'^LLY INIULATEoVoel MM Hr-ran*, tsi — ..gg , ishsd csbinets. No money down. " YOUNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER-BILT RUSSELL YOUNG, SJVt W. HURON west side, W block prettr single perK working couple IN pi erences. Write Pontiac my 3-1447. I turnl. Ing. couple oi ilshed, 5115 lORTH SUB. — 5 rooms and b wHh plastared walls, gas haat, basamant, alum, siding, ntw « and saptic, larga lot. Orion ictw 510,501, terms. WEST SUB. — 3-bsdroom and b< nawly tlnWiad Insida, oas h.________ nict lot overloakind lakt. IS.OOO. Tarms. ^ACRE LOT - 3-badroom ranchar, 1 full baths, larga kltchar — dining with bulHins, family ________ 2-way firtplaca, full btsamant, 2V>-car garage; else ■ 3-room apt. See inis one teday. CALL B. C. HIITER, REALTOR, 3792 Ellldbdth Lake Road. FE 3-0179 attar 0 p.m. MA 4-3195. in with, giant brti o coverad porch w '•T •?. BIRMINGHAM WALK TO OUARTON KHOOL and Holy Namt - —------- •acond doc.—, ... ... Ideal tor ontertalnlng. Idtol chUdron. WEIR, MANUEL, SNYDER & RANKE 190 S. Woodward, BIrmInghai.. 144-4100 PHONES J44-33M 1 ROOMS AND BATH, CHILD WEL-wne, util ond gis stove turn., 530 per week, wtih 175 deposit, In-O^^et 273 BoMwIn Ave., call GOLF VIEW APARWenTS 2-BSI6-MODERN, 1 BEDROOM ON PON- OUIET, CARPETED apt. 5135 per month no pets. Fe j-mh Rent Houses, Fernliked 39 UNTIL JULY, 4-ROOM, GAS HfAT, By Owner - W. Iroquois immediate Occupancy Sl44plng Porch-Many Large Closets - 3-Cer Gerege - Reesonebhr Priced. Call 9:3(55:30. FE 3-7393, atler 7, MA 4-3049. BY OWNER -4 BEPROOM Ranch, all naw carpeting, drapes, gas furnaca, garage and sewtrs, ^an Manor SuMIvIslon. 114,500. EM 3-7111 attar 4 p.m. Call 411- 5115. ______ 3WNER' iTrEDlRjbM BRICk, yMy, tencad, mixed area. FE COMBAKE wlTHOTHERr' BRICK RANCH Occbpency soon. Brand n I 1095 Crescent Lake Road, Vy r SchmidI WIEGANO I______________ ^yters In Ponflee, FE 2 4^_ Plestoriag Servict I ~ deposit. 474-1139. Bump Trucks - Ssmi-Treiiei Pontioc Farm ond , . * ' plastering, expert patch Industrial Troetor Co Ceramic Thins : work. 20 yur, txo. mnu. ' " A I PLASTERING a¥0 REPAIR. .. , ami * "^°°°*** yR S liM NEW A^ WORK-! LS4. FE 17923 0^ Deity Including Sutidpy _......- ______________ _______ _____ -- - __________IJFE 1 7923 ‘ plastering, free estimatus, - Marble. 402-5590._____________D. Mayers, 3419595, 47A1440 irMVJT' beino sccepterf Cnnteri nevigenl Meneper 544 E, Blvd. St Vtlsncls wksT iLOOMlniLB ■rwPrri-lfS- room brick, I " ----------------- raoe, 0150 pe< quTrod. WH979. Iicovatiug RETAIL PLUMBING AND HEATING SUPPLY Rspsir Parts and Rag----- 19 OtkiAnd Ava. BLOOMFIELD WALL Wills end windows. . taction Buerentsdd. PU 41-A Cf^TAOe AT LAKE CITY, MICH- Igen !■*“ * — ---- trailer 1*^4^* a-INCH WELL DRILLING, WBLL ^ 7........... ^ BIG lOY DBlVe ■ IN, Dixie At DRAYTON FENCE CO. I silver Leke-Teiegrppti el Hur«n. ' jSMWI 5 439.95 TO UOO, HAIRPieCBS . LEWISTON, MICHIGAN M.OO par day: Includes sistp-Ing tnd breektssl. Phons 4744NS4 Elizabeth Lake Estates l>/>-slory with 1 bedrooms, lull ceramic tile beth, large lemlly kitchen end smell den. I'/Kor geroM, fenced yard, short wtiking dis-, ten^to good beech. Full price | Sislock & Kent, Inc. IIW Pantldc Slate Bank BM. 1BW394_______________ MM295 HANDYMAN'S SPECIAL Zoned Commercial Idaally located near shool — tram portatlon — 2-lamlly income -terms on lend contract. IMMEDIATE CASH FOR HOUSES, FARMS, ACREAGE ■--------------5, EQUITIES ry jjoji gerli^. 'w'alinng'FlsIericrto' sCwol ^VhoPPlno. Asking S1S,0M. ms evelleble. Call now. i AL MARTIN, Reoltor I 504 S. Broadway, Orion 49342231 LAND CONTRACTS, t HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty l-ROOM HOME -* ---- Cass Lake month Tneoma). 3-car garaga. Bargain, g9,0M. Everett Cummings, Realtor 3513 UNION LAKE ROAD HIITER PIONEER HIGHLANDS 3-badroom custom built house, fire-. Piece, well-lo-wall carpeting, finished recreation room. auto. gMl ( heat, screened porch, 2-cer je- ," rage. 517,50b. By owner. FE UlSI . "PARTRIDGE IS THE BIRD TO SEE" LAKE FRONT This S^edraom home is on o--- the larpesl and most beiutllul tree-shaded lets on Watkins Lake Laka. At tha and ol lha strsM, tor privacy and safely el your children and pats. Large living room has baaulllul vlaw of lake. Two ftreplacas. IVk bolhs, double garage, peiiy room, scraanw' —■ windowed porch, welk-out --- 'mom. Value galore tor your lem-^ happiness Investment at 522,- UTICA AREA It you're looking tor e her this eroa. see this one. O lul fireplace. Carpels and dreoi Include In the 529,900 pr ee. PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE SMITH 6c WIDEMAN ALTORS FE 445! 412 W. HURON $T. KINZLER 4-BEDROOM BRICK Newer ranch with ettiched 1-cai lerege, I spacious rooms and walk out recreaflon room. Has 2 fireplaces and 2 bolhs phis sons bath and exarcisa room, Cyclont fenced lot 150x350. Fr^ berriet end gar ________bath plus____________ Krsanad borch aKti. Gas furnacts. 4-car garagt. I apartrnam r vacant. A good homa and Invi mam. 05,000 down on land contri Don't dtlay. NEW RANCH HOMES Rambling and claan extarlor II typHylng luxurious comfort In I design. Expanslvt Hying ind i log room, kitchan wllh bulll-l 3 airy btdrooms, m baths i lull basament, gas haat. P r I. . 515.450 Including W. 10 par cant and diniiig r Only 00,450 ca. „ , J. J. JOLL, Reolty FE 2-3400 402<203 Ml 4 ....'ll? U XIL, aat, garaga. On 4 lols. 513,500. :or omills pliona 451-0503. Frank Shepard, Realtor | 419 Main Rochatlar SHARP 3->tP*00**.pK*^.PjiI GILES ■iqint ■rw, tuii iqrqQtd tpKlout totp IllalOO, MO CLOl AL PAULY, REALTY 4514 Olxk, Roar____ t 3-3000_____ Evt. OR 1-7393 agt, 24'x30', full prlca I 00 down. Balance 553 per rr HUMPHRIES REALTY I ROCHESTER, 3-BEOROOM brick. M-level, living roorr room, fireplace, I'/k baths, basement, attached garei.. .. S, 032.500. OL i-xna^m 5 p. Lake Orion-Oxford Area •cenic land, t’lve^aSd "Tn'^xcalisnt condition, must saa to apprOclatt, 024.500- C. A. Weluter, Realtor MY 2-2191 LOVELY KITCHEN III landKapad larga lol, I oulslanding patio. All oxcMIonall lol, Includln NICE ROOMS IN PRIVATfl Mviriv, # wr ■, mvn working alter, noons or midnights, Bsrklay arsa, LI O'STIT. furnished ROOM CONVlNliNf Iransp., Blonm|iel43M4b4 14751 Hlehland Rd. IMWt LAZENBY $1,000 DOWN bafT*'^ Mvlng 'klIchem'"^M5 ROY LAZENBY, Reqltor ®'ium ________ RENTING $59 Mo. Ewludlne ••kdi and biturdnct ONLV $10 Deposit WITH APPLICATION LAROiOlNINO ARIA WILL ACCePT ALL APPLICA- WIDOWS be DivoecBii. OKAY WITH US. OPEN DAILV and sat. and |Ub REAL VALUf REALTY For Immodiotf Action Cdll FE 5-3676 626-9575 SMITH CLARKSTON 3-alory oMtr. trama homa sK..... In a wilel ntlghboiliood on a nka-ly landacapad M -with Ironje- «" ifit Mill fond. Pli^ floor li ROCHESTER AREA. N homt. Family slitd dl 3 large bedroems, i vanM Idrint. ROLFE H. SMITH, Realtor FE 3-7141^ *■ FE 3-73*2 THINKING MAN? need 3 bedrooms and Mg Hvlng room, you w§m o kitehm Mg enough lo tal In, gat bulH-lns lor your convenience, a Mg “* *" god^^C— '— sMIng m ______________ .III. Price 99*. Oreytan Plains araa. HAGSTROM REALTOR 4940 W. HURON OR 4435* gVENtNOi IBM435 NEW CUSTOM HOMES "UNDER CONSTRUCTION" Vd^^’I'.WnIW’iTe' 14,540 INCLUDING LOT -Thr** - Badreom olvmlnym sM** randwr, 1W carfmk Ilia Mlit, in, oak fltoring, fully Inaulalad, xSaC-vFa*'*® GLAMOR RANCHER -PAMILY EOpM -Wllh 0**9flM sHijta marM* Hr*- jjwjjpy rjam HOLLY LAKE PEONT -> Am*ng^ till oiiio - wtiHt rock riociwr wH^wdHi-avt KAMPSEN ■4x12-11. dIniM ro ----- ,.)l biMment. iTncIc t porcbe ont^ar oarapt. R iblf ttrmi or will triS^, NOtTHtAST Of CITY. 4-room bun- kitchan. Elacirk bulH-liwr mam, nkaly llnishtd brttzt--- aHachad garaga. Prlca *9,275, I. racmatlon ri and. Prlca 513 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE Waterford DRAYTON PLAINS 2 - bMiroom bungalow with full btsttnam, kcatod m 2 lolt. In tha heart of Drayton Plains, upstairs can bt finish^ Into anollw lama tatdroom. Only 59,500 with 4144 down, FHA tarms. WEST SIDE INCOME All brick 4 family apartrnam, completely furnished end ren^tad, mediate seta, will trad*. TWIN LAKES Exacutlve 3-btdroom brick ranch, 2-car attached oarege, lull Iliad basarntm, pinetad l*mlly ram wllh fireplace, I'/i baths, baautitui WATERFORD REALTY Bryson, ReaHor OR WITI 14 Dlxta Hwy. van Watt Eldg. ARRO WE BUILD-WE TRADE 4-RODM HOME, 4 bwlrooms, wall-to-wall carpeting In Hying room, dining room and hall, loads of cupboards In kitchan, lull basa-ment, gas hast, Kar garaga. Ideal lor largo family or Incomt. Only 19,954. firms. TWO-STORY ALUMINUM SIDING Incomt, I* rooms, lull baserntm, gas haat, pavtd streat, last 2 years has brourti over *504 Income per month. Furniture Included. 519,544, terms. DOLL HOUSE, Cozy l-btdroom ranch, well-lo-wall carptting, plastared walls, entrenea elosat, gat haat and yard light, tlormt and tertant. attachad garage, paved drive, beautiful yard with Redwood tonce. 511,954. PHONE 682-2211 Ted McCullough Sr., Realtor MOLT?PLVL^s"MG*’seXl?ICe OPEN DAILY 9 TO 9 "BUD" .... ............ . . - *4 n. Cass Like Csnel f—‘ "— 3-bedroom 1 '■ ' " car garage ei way; leaturev . --------------- lure windows, lots of closet and shade trees. ■ trade tor Water Front Me lake . Canal *" 1 level ...,j end eh. features 2 Hr .... aindowt, lots c.---- .... storage space, 2 beths. tpic end •pen kitchen and r“-'— electric hoi water, paved drive, lovely Owner will conside smaller home. Lake Front Lot lend cemract. "Bud" Nicholie, Realtor 49 Ml. Ctamans St. FE 5-1201 6 P M. FE 4-8773_ DOHRfS^ LAKE OAKLAND HEIGHTS - om of tho neetesi tnd ctaeneel hornet in this poguler area wllh savara custom I e s t u r • s and parsonal touchts lhal maka this 4btdroom ranch homo an oulslanding buy. Brick conslruetlon wllh larga cov-trtd front porch, solid Macklog drivt, I'/k-ctr dsluxa garage, plush carpeting Ihroughoul over o « k floors, sparkling kitchen Vvilh eating space, ges heel, and btau-tlAilly landacapad lot. WEST WALTON - cl men brick ranch he-------------- Sliver Lake Oelf Caurst. 1 extra large bedrooms. l3'/kk19 carpetad living room ovtr oak Hoors, qusF lly kitchm wllh handy utility room connacted, btauHlul pantlad family room and attKhed garaga. 41*r 954 on reasonablt forms. quiet of the the U' - RURAL BEAUTY - It this peckege affords. 1-bed-71 bungelow In top condition M end out. Oek floors, plss-d wells, 11x14 Hvlng room, sep- ment ind stlschad | LAND CONTRACT - price. Pull basement wlHi get ne*l, garage tnd nice shaded m. DORRIS A SON, REALTORI 534 Dixit Hwy. 4744M4 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE O'NEIL TRADE LAKEHIONT •"S TNIwood rench, only 4 yeerS young. Hat_ Hoors, I'/i baths, Fsmily roim wllh Hroptaca. Larga living rgotn, new carptllng, llrMlece. 1 large bedroems, marble windew sHh, toll ol cupboards, Formlcs eounfer taps. Gas liMl. 145 MM gf Laki iremaga, goad bSKh. nkt landKapad yard trflfi Iriss. Blacktop •Iraal, cemmunHy waltr. 41,754 down, plus cdsis. WANTED-AN ELIGIBLE Gl FOR 1. gas haat m Mr a a wall landKapad. Only 1144 do will trad#. 3-BEDROOM RANCH A 3-btdrgwn brkk ranch, lai room, vary larga bidrooms. I landscaped ytrd. 11,454 down $ HIGHLAND ESTATES whart praperh, ^ wlwti h*fita*i Ihit living h nM .To;.£rtar'TSni3^ ?»!I MODELS OPEN DAILY 2 to 8 WESTRID6E OF WATERFORD AN INVITATION II EXTENDED TO SThS STtaciud- rather nM*"walT Jny M 'tad f* Hidv sat, comglti^ Ignd- !?»/rAoblle Heme Park, AatE AccesseHes we need 300 tharp Cadlllact, PoiP Itacs, Olds and Buickt lor out-o0> state nurket. Top dollar paid. MANSFIELD AUTO SALES 1104 Baktsvln Ave. ). FE 54W0______________FBJ PREMIUM PRICES PAID FOR LOW-MILEAGE USED CARS. VAN'S AUTO SALES 0 DIXIE HWY. OR 3-1355 r-wis s-s-cnis'- uaEW s-Aisa GLENN'S CHEVY STEP-VAN, CONVERTED i to camper, $400, 2S7B Orchard Lake -Road.____________________ CLOSE-OUT SALE 1965 NIMROD CAMPERS CRUISE OUT, INC. 53 East Walton, dally 0-5, FE 04402 DEER HUNTER SPECIAL, CUS-‘ -nade 10' camper, $50r 007-5275.________________ DEER HUNTERS Ford pickup and 'I T, 01,495; also '54 Gl-- ■ • camper, 13,095. OR 31455. H ;c DACHSHUND PUPPIES Fall Cleoroncei CENTURY-TRAVELMASTER SAGE-GARWAY metallic rad, $300. 5514151, K&WCYCLE YAMAHA Two locations to serve you. — Auburn, Utice end 7515 Highland Road, Pontiac._____ NEW! 1966 HONDAS NEW! 305 CC SCRAMBLER NEW! TRAIL BIKES $295 SPECIAL!! CLOSE-OUT On ALL 1965 TRIUMPHS LOW DOWN PAYMENTS TOP DOLLAR PAID FOR SHARP CARSI Gale McAnnally's NATIONWIDE AUTO SALES I Baldwin__________UM WE NEED CARSI TOP DOLLAR FOR GOOD CLEAN CARS Motthews-Hargreoves 531 OAKLAND AVENUE :HEW-FOII»m.YNipUTH--------- piableane? .k. will flnanM. TIC Cerp. Mr. Inew. Ml S4SI0. 1953 CLEAN BUICK, ELECTRA m -------*•'••• eharp, SS75. OR 24924. 1960 CHEVROLET S2SSi.M*i!rr:S! ISI CADIILAC COUPE DeVILLE, solid Mack, full power, the rnhf kind of car. SI,^JEROi9re FORD, Rochester FORD Dr—- iiry. run wrmM — $2597 Call Mr. Dan FE tMi\, )\\di Auto W. MONTCALM j| Mnl Af OaklMid rgav. taj». «— « ™ Junk Can-Trucks ^Ntw and Und Trucb 103 SPECIALS . 1955 FORD T400 tandem SJOO-gallon AKC COLLIE PUPPIES, --------- merle, rare and beautiful. S52-4740. AKC MINIATURE DACHSHUNDS. make Ideal pets. 5S24259. AKC DACHSHUND PUPPIES, STUD SOMETHING NEW Robin' Hood ' it's quality, eye-appeal and , 2 years old, $50. 524-2151. AKC CHIHUAHUA PUPPIES, STUD 35,, ^ Service. IMATODD'S. 332-7139. BEAUTIFUL ENGLISH .SETTER female puppies. No papers. rlO. 493- 1901.________________________ BLACK female poodle, AKC, S50. FE S439S._______________ BOSTON, AKC, BEAUTIFUL MALE, 7 months, $100. 334419S.___ CANINE COUNTRY CLUB vafd!*?lod!eiler ■ ^leali. *conrtc abler convenient* bottiingr groo • fociliti TOM STACHLER AUTO and MOBILE SALES SUZUKI CYCLES 5XC-250CC. RUPP "'-Ibikes as low as $129.95. Take to W. Highland. Right on ___________ _ ;ory Ridge Rd. to Demode Rd.,CHEVY Left and follow signs to DAW- 4.cyl., ----S SALES AT TfPSICO LAKE.I can in se MAIn 9-2179.________ JUNK CARS-FREE TOWS TOP SSS-CALL FE 54142 SAM ALLEN A SONS. INC. Uwd Auto-Truck Parts 102 WHEEL AND TIRES S2 UP-FE 445S9 G E R 5 dally. 152-4740. 5514000. POODLES PERSONAUZED GROOMING toy ItuD SERVICE RIVER BEND^OLES WATERFORD-OR 34920 PEKINGESE MALE PUPPIES, 7 weeks. FE 44559. ___ POODLE CLIPPING AND GROOM POODLES Tiny toy »*W, SS?*'' FRANKLIN Truck Campers 10'/ix7'4 with hot water hes and are completely seH-contaIr Holly Travel Coach 15210 Holly Rd., Holly ME 44771 --Open Dally and Sundays- FOR RENT: 2 Wolverine >0-lt. campers « '55 GMC pickups. tlOO week an “scon r'^al service 195 W. Walton _________FE 1414 -NOW ON DISPLAY- 22' Monator Self Contained with Shock Absorbers 20' Monator Self Contained Twin Lunger 23' Fan with rounded corners, Internationsi heater, 12V, 110 blowr- ■ — brakes. Shock ebsorbe SUSUKI 1 yr. - 12.000 ml. Warranty SUZUKI HUSTLER 250 CC - 4 speed NOW ON DISPLAY TUKO SALES, INC. E. Auburn Rochesier UL 2-5153 SUZUKI Kowosoki-White Big Bod Bultoco Van Teck-Dort Lil' Indian Mini Bikes CUSTOM COLOR - D-COMET-FALCON ectory rebuilt motors. $99 tail. Terms. Other makes sd. 537-HI7.________^ New and Usod Trucks 103 1951 FORD PICKUP, NEW BAT- • I, new tires, 33S4353.__ l'.VTON CHEVY WRECKER, 1955 FORD S-YAkD DUMP, A-l 9 UP. BOYS' - 1953 FALCON /RANCHERO PICK-up. e nice jmlt—ready to go at SS95. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1104, ........... “ FOR NO MONEY DOWN 1955 FORD W-ton 1951 CHEVY V5-ton, l-ft. bad. 1951 FORD -ton 1955 JEEP, 4-wheel drive. Superior Rambler IMF John McAullfte Ford I960 Cadillac Sedan DeVille with full power, beautiful Wad finish, one-owner. Only $45 down Finance Balance of Only- $1395 30 OAKLAND AVE. FE 5 41 JOHN MCAULIFFE FORD Repossession 1952 CADILLAC DeVille hardtop. Any “^old car taken In trade. No n and saw por « e and errana* al CcEppa 31^. N /d”' ****; 1961 CORVAIR Coup# with •irtgmatlc, e sparkling whi Hi red Interior. $695 HASKINS CHIVY mi CHEVROLET IMPALA 1-DOOR hardtop, eutometlc tranimleslon, SI47 full price. SS down. CREDIT NO PROBLEM, WE FIN,----- BANK RATES. LUCKY AUTO 1940 W. Wide Track . 1941 CHEVY 2-OOOR HARDTOP, WE FINANCE King Auto 327S W. Huron Sf. 1961 CH(EVY 6 CYLINOERr 4 OOOR4 Oaklond Chrysltr-Plymouth Auto Sales ..."rspiSTkiaifi r. 14.000 iTillas. $1,495. SPECIAL 1954 Chavy impala Sport CoOpe. 4 on tha floor, full power, 1^ end reedy to got A steel at $1,095. ROSE , RAMBLER 1145 COMMERCE ROAD UNION LAKE____ 1944 CHEVY SUPER SPORT, 300 dltlon, warranty. $2995, EM 3-4517. Mansfield Auto Sales 1955 Chevy Malibu convertible,. I eulo.. Nocturne blue with whne top. GM warranty. 7,000 mllet. S3,-195. 1104 Baldwin Avt. FE 5-5900 _______FEJ4S25 1955 CHEVY II NOVA SUPER Sport, small Vt. stick, low mileagt. Still under warranty, many extrae. ".950. 524-3590 after 3:** - - CREDIT NO PROBLEM led e Car We FInen Absolutely SO Down "Drive Home Today" FE 54101 AMlIcatlon By Phone Immediate Delivery—MCAUIItle IS CORVAIR SPORT COUPE. RA-- iier, excellent condition. 9,-s. Sl,5«0. 521-2715.____________________ Repossession BOB BORST -2 topt, red, 327 i h-p., 4-spaed ----------‘ OR 3-0033. Mansfield Auto Soles Mansfield Auto Sales 1952 CORVAIR MONZA, AOUAMA rina, automatic, like new, B995. warranty. $2,295. 1104 Baldw FE 35900 EVERY FR|6ay EVERY SATURDAY EVERY SUNDAY Sss*'p"?i^s;^"aI?rs Buy-Sell-Tradc. Retail 7 dei Consignments Welcome EBB AUCTION PERKINS SALE SERVICE Auctloneeri Swerti Creek. Ptants-Trees-Skrabi t1-A NURSERY CLEARANCE: greens, shade trees and Dig your own McNeils I 5574 Dixie Hwy. at Meyt Phone 52HS15. BUNNS BOARDING STABLES, BOX etalle and standing, whola tKlll-tles, outdoor HghM ring, rates reasonable. 1544 W. Hamlin, Recheiter. 551-3522._______________ FOR SALE OR TRADE. 1 WEST-ern pleasure horse, exper'—— rider; 1 Hackney pony. Both IL 2-5251, Oiler ~ r, S350 best otter oi _______ M 4-2735.__________________—--------------- * 1952 Rl^CHERO »ICKUP, 44:YL-' MUtO-MailHB iMtHraRCB Inder/ engine, automatic trensmle, &5^TER’(;i:rE f%V*rT^i auto insurance filer FORD Dea|^pi^1:f7U,__ AVAILABLE . BUICK Electro "225" hardtop, lust FE 5942V released for public sale. Low pey- -ments end any old car taken in trade. Call Mr. Cash al 335-4521 Spartan.______________________ _____________ 15' CLYDE MOLDED PLYWOOD/ with 40 h.p. See King motor, exif. condition. $500. FE 1-3252, eHei ' FIBERGLAS SPEED BOAT, n.p. Evinrude. Trailer and all a cessories. By now and save Sll Holly Travel Coach """ Oelly^^SJ - 20' MFG - ^TOR NOW ON DISPLAY FROLIC - YUKON DELTA- 34-FOOT DAY CRUISER, 155 I berg engine end controls, 2 to ductlon gser ' *• “ 1953 WILLVS lEEP DISPATCHER, trellar for tha hunting season or i fell vacation. JACOBSON TRAILER MLES I. RENTALS S590 williams Lake Rd. gear, head, S1.79S ddllvara %ke ki Oakland County. ______Ken Johnson, 593-5255. 195S TRAVELER ATLAS AND — las. Do H ........................ ir 3345 Auburn Rd. Sat.-Sun. in to 5 p.m. 551-3357 anytime. ms JOHNSON MOTORS AND 5AO ter storage at Tony't SAerIno. ATTENTION - FREE STORAGE With complete reflnlsh |ob. Custom wood work end flberglas sr~ PIONEER CAMPER SALES Pickup coinpere by Travel Ouean, Overland. OWanca. Concard trail, ars, Marti tlbarglass truck r WOLVERINE TRU slaapan. New Also rentals. J BIGI BIGI SAVINGS! UP TO 30% OFF ON 196S MODELS NOW IN STOCK! PONTIAC'S ONLY MERCURY MERCRUISER DEALER FOX SNOWMOBILES NIMROD CAMP TRAILERS Marine end Sporting Goode CRUISE OUT, INC. - - - PE ,.440, BOAT STORAGE. KARS B Motors. Lake Orion. MY 3- FE 4-0734. STOP IN TODAY Anderson & Associates ; FE 4-3S3S 1044 Joslyn 153 FORD F-350 STAKE, WITH 5 cyl. (new engine) 4-spead transmission, radio, heater, like newl JEROME FORD. Rochester FORD 153 CHEVY PICKUP, STEPSIDE, only $1095. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1KM S. Woodward * " 1953 FORD '/r-TON PICKUP, dawn, payments ol M754 m. Oakland Chrysler-Plymooth 134 Oakland Ave. 333-9”« 1963 Dodge ’/a-Ton Pickup, with 5 cyl. engine, etai erd trenemiesion, only- $119S 1964 Chevy '/z-Ton Pickup, with the tieetside bodyl $149S Auto Insurance for Anyone Don Nicholie 53’/3 W. Huron St. FE 5-8183 HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 454 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM_Ml 57! KEEGO PONTIAC sales a SERVICE 682-3400 1954 CADILLAC COUPE DEVILLE, full factory equipment, white wir white Landau top, Immaculah Only $3,495. BOB BORST lincoln-mercurv - tires, A-r cond. S795. Cell OR 3-3B44.____________________ DRAFTED, MUST SELL 1952 .. pale 2-door hardtop, power steering and brakes, ggod condition. TsK' over payments. F| 2-7029 after 1953 CORVAIR WITH AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND HEATER AND WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Repossession ow monthly payniOT ;er taken In trade. Ci St 33A452I Spartan. cuetom cab many more «fres-Ford show truck, save' JEROME ford, Rochoeter FORD Dealer, (iHEVROLETS Selected Used Cars 1959 CHEVY impale converflWe, Powergllde and —rer *|Mrln^, Vt, radio, heeler, 1961 CHEVROLETS . Blsceyne 24loor sedan,- 5-cyllnder ■'“1 slanderd transmlsilon, com- Impale Sports Coupe, power steering, Powergllde. radio, heeler, Whltewatle. SI.09S. 1952 CHEVROLETS Impale convertible, with a VI gine, Powergllde. power sjee 1957 C . ._ . ______ work, tSB, UL 2-2571. , 19Sf CliCVRdLff-StL Aik, *4- , COMPLETELY " niing ndltlm - ........ MOI lol. Couple or I' Cell FE 2-5295. Iiyxse' ALMA, 3-I aluminum, elr c I- 111 3.bedroom, bulll-ln oven aM range, _____ ' ■ toceled In nice trailer peM:, E 1000 C R A T E S old! Pa“l 'jONES*REA?r . Joelyn. No Sundy teles. ________ good apples. CHEAP. 3099 Gregory Rd., Gingellvllle _ POTATOES, 335 W. SILVERBELL. out Perry. Bring containers.______ FanaJ|j|aj|iiiieiit 17 i HORSEPOWER SIMPLICITY mowtr ofwiw hlMte. 6 f d $525. FE FAMILY XMAS IDEAS EVINRUDE 3 horse loldup motor SKEETER snowmobile. HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS "Your Evinrude Dealer" ------ Telegraph Rd. 333-5033 ; 352 Item cab 10,500 mtlos, 03,400 sh. EM 2-4030, 9405 S. Commerce FORD DELUXE S4-TON CAMP- - - , _______________________________ >1 'HARD TO FIND, BUT .EASY TO' deal with" RInkker, Steury, Chero-I kee boats; Kayot pontoons, Evinrude motors, Pemcotrallors. Taktl IWJ9 to W. Highland, right on Hickory Ridge Road to Dtmode Road,, len and tollow signs to DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSICO LAKE, phone MAIn 9-2179. Furniture > box, excel le or MV 3-5.,.. . Rd., Lake Orton. 27x1 PALACE, 1951 H9S. CALL ler 5. 574-3550.________ 29' tRaiLEA, KEAL bargain 1050. 3204 W. Long Lekt Rd. chard Lake. 502 5011.________ »59 GREAT LAKES, FAIR CONDI- tlon, 01.500. Can be------- Rtynotd» Rd. Of ill W-MIX. Inside Boot Storoge MOTOR REPAIR BOAT REFINISHING-REPAIR Ask tor EARL or DALE Wide Trock Auto Craft ..JO W. wide Track FB 5-1211 OUR NEW INSIDE SHOWROOM IS NOW COMPLETE - All '05 models ere now In stock - LONE STAR, MFG and GLASSTRON BOATS, j We are dealing now - up to 13ol Attention Hunters 1940 GMC 12 ft. walk-in van, » 1953 ECONOLINE Van, only « 1943 JEEP C170 pickup, 4-wheel di *• -iJ. Aik for Truck Dept. FE 5-4101 John McAulHto Ford (atl Montcalm FE 5-i ;k E. of g I, 10x45, ys before flrst payments. If you s looking tor WINTER PRICES AVAILABLE —Brand NsW— 1966 GMC E T T E 10x55. i _____________ .n stock. Da\ chinary Co. Ortenville. NA 7 USED FORD TRACTOR Detroller^ produds B r X 20' TRAILER, COMPLETELY modern. Ideal for hunting end 4; camping, excellenf condition -priced low. 334<7I5. , Ico-box and marine ii,jr5. Also 0'5", 01,005. T I. R CAMPER MFG. CO 1100 Auburn Rd. 052-3334 T05S 0-f6OT CA^iR, CABOVER 1907 FORD Pickup, eufomellc, da 4uxo cab, OH for 01495. JEROM FORD, Rochaetat FORD Doeltr. OL 1-9711.______________________________ BOB HUTCHINSON SALES II DIxIt Hwy, OR 13-1203 ____Drayton Plaint f- “OPEN 7 DAYS-y to 9 SEE THE NEW 1945 MODELS AM*m^le'homet on a discount ipeclol Low down payment PRfE OISL?Vi8^-?y^E* SETUP WE GUARANTEE A PARKING SPACE. L«rQf i«l«ctlon of ir wMM. HOLtY PARK; champion ARK WOOD AND PARK ESTAfCS Low ovorhood - Mvt rtol monoy MIDLAND TRAILED SALES "17 Dixie Hwy. 3314772 one blork north of Telegraph Oxford Trailer Soles . .4 MODELS, 15 to 50 It., O-IGIM. wida-and 2 story. Marlettes. Staw- arts, Balvadere and tha Ir---- llghtwalght Thormoiianel Win go traval units. Alto ^ -\ stop In now - w# havt b te«\ '55 Mercuryt, 1.9 rag. S3I3. NOV^ONLY S1J9.95. Stop In el CIIN yreyer AAerIno Dly. 15310 Holly Rd., Holly, cell Ml 44771 tor any help you may needi W-ton PICKUP With tM r box* btfrofttrig oil fllttr# wotbtrt* MOt btftt* and bockup lights. $184: —Prices Are Born Here--And Raised Elsewhere- OLD)^A»L'ErGMC ROCHESTER Ol 1-9741 530 N. AAoln St. WINTER STORAGE "Don't leave your boat out In tha snow — bring It In here end atora ATTENTION! HUNTERS Sptclel allowance and discount tor We ere your authorized dealer tor Starch, - Thompson,^^^n- you sportsman on our compitle stock ot 4-titoool drive Jeeps. 10 unlls^reed|j^r Im^lelt dellmy. ** pinterT (Oakland County's Boottond). 1170 Opdyke 94 PC 44924 V5 vnivirul. enoT aave! Superior Wanted Cart-TrEckt 101 Rambler EXTRA EXTRA Dollars Poid 510 Ookland Ave, PE M421 MY 2-2779! FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Cor 1955 CHIVY PICK-UP ^-TON OV-erlefto camper, excellent canditlan, 01,300 UL 2t50S. "Chfck toe reel, then gel toe beet" at DiER hunters Averill 1 '53 Ford pickup tnd '54 Dura ctmpor, 01495; oho '54 OA5C ond '55 Wtivortno camptr. S149S. OR AUTO SALES 2I5S5. Howland. _________P. Mr. Snow, Ml aSSOO. Fereifa Con 10S 1957 VOLKSWAGEN, S U N R O 0 I nice condttkHi. Only S479. BOB BORST LINCOLN-MERCURY arrange all financing, Celt A Dan at: FE 84071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM ditlenfyE*4^.'_________ 1953" VW S To A N, excellent •econd car. 1925. OR 3-5113. *GRAY, ^ IMMACULATE, dio end heater, a nica car, S1,095. Impala Sport Coupe, Powergllde, radio end heater, whttawells, 11,195. 1963 CHEVROLETS BiKeyne Moor, VS, stendi transmistion, radio and heater, I 295. Impale Sport Coupe, VS, Powergllde, power steering, radi* *-'■ heeler, whitewalls, reedy 11,595. I6.M. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. 1952 CHEVROLET STATION WAGON 54yllnder stick, 0797 full price, 05 down. CREDIT NO PROBLEM, WE FINANCE BANK RATES. LUCKY AUTO Superior Rambler It only Sll ARVEL BARGAIN AUTO, ............. 1959 CHEVY STATION WAGON, ■ ■ ond brel 1952 CHEVY CONVERTIBLE, VO 724 Oakland Ave. 1 MONEY DOWN-We FINANCB CREDIT AUTO SALES ' 125 Oakland at WMa Track _________FE ^92^4_______ CHEVROLET H55 SUPER SPORT, 300, 4-spaed, 025SO or best offer. FE 0-1312._________ , 55 CHEVY IMPALA 2 - DOOR hardtop, double power, radio, 10,-000 miles, red, 1st 12,150 cash, 330-2150._____________ KESSLER'S DODGE CARS AND TRUCKS Salae and Service ilerd OA S-ISOI 1963 CHRYSLER Beautiful blue wllb matching In-lerlor, power steering end brakes, an exceptionally nice car, one owner, Birmingham trade. $1695 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 4 S. Woodward___Ml 74215 1953 CHRYSLER NEW'V6RKERS, 2 to chooea from, reel hiniry cars, tlOO down, $59.90 ptr month. Ookland Chrysler-Plymouth WHITEWALL MISSION, RADTo HEATER, ......... TIRES, aesume weeniy pay-PAYMENTS OF OtJO. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD. Ml 4-7500. IM2 CHEVY IMPAL tsurssL' ir stforlng end brek tmtad gleM all tl an excellent Bid c MARVEL________211 Oakl El Cantina ' CHEVROLET with •- 1953 CHEVY 3-OOOR, 5-CYLIMDER, BOB BORST LINCOLN-MERCURY $497 NOW OPEN 855 Oakland Ave. (Outdooc Showroom) 1 (juft >5 mile north of Ceee Ave. Spartan Dodge Mansfield Auto Solei 1953 Chevy impala, 4-door hard-> top, I auto., power, wT.........'■- red Interior. tl,29S. 1104 Baldwin Avt. . E t-5000 FE t-tnS 1953 CHEVY tdt AlB nvfRY Tef-Huron Auto 1963 IMPERIAL r conditioning, 54oor hardi I rad leather Interior, lull I ry power Including 5-wey a usl see to appreciate. Bank re w monthly i^n^ts. . BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH Oakland Chrysler-Plymouth tU Oakland Ave MiMISe 1964 ClfRYSLERS $1995 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 14 S. Woodward___Ml 7-3214 PATTERSON • ROCHKTER Chrysler-Plymouth Imperiol-Valiont Ml N. Mein_______OL 1-5S1B SPECIALS 1953 Chevrolet Neve II, 1-doer hardtop, automatic, fully aqulppisd, 195 down. 1951 Olds FIS stick, rtd ind rsody, 195 down. 1954 Ford Cdlixlo, Mylindor, FB B4P71 «l«5. power steering, r radio, hooter. 954 AUSTIN HEALY SPRITE, Sl,-200, cell MA 5-3741._ Mansfield Auto Soles Volkswagen Center 1055 vw ttdan. Se# blue tin -- --- (4) ind beige, i at SI.395. Bel Air Oitostanoer stolton ... VI engine, Powergllde transmission, txlra ctoen end is her" •-find. Only t1,S0S. 1964 CHEVROLETS Impale sports coupos, V-t an Powcrplldes and standard missiona, tome power equipp.-Real nice eutonnobllee. tram SI495. IMF John McAuWto Ford I960 Chevy 2-Door ixtrt cloon, TvHllght turquoleo tl eh. No money down. Full Prii 530 OAKLAND AVI. FI 14101 •OHN McAULIFFI FORD 1963 CHEVY II Fdoor todtn with stick shin mission, radio otid hooto;. .... arico only 0797, no monoy down, woekly peymonts. Wo bandit and arrenga all Itnanclng, call Mr. Dan at: FE 84C71 Capitol Auto 312 W. MO^ITCALM ______Just east of Oeklend 1953 CORVETTE STINGRAY WITH ?”u«R<55r*Rr-‘ ir FORD Oealsr, OL 1 toil CORvefFe, R BO~ioon spetd, $3,750, 235 Richard. 1954 CHIVY BISCAYNE, BIO, V4, stondtrd shW. 51,510. 335-3015. 1954 COkVITtE CONVERTIBLE, spoad, radio and hoator, whI.. walls, rail sharp, for only 0319S. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1104 S. Wo^Ord Avo„ ——“ horn. Ml 4.2hl.____ 1964 CHEVY A glooming lurquolta Impoli hardtop, with too 303 cu. In. VO, powor ILL OF THESE ARE 0NE4)WNB|| MAN;&**Tj"cf|ggrFRDM Village Rambler e. Mfpio al LIvornolo TROY_______ SM-7S44 1955 CHRYSLBTIiBWPOOW, 9-PAi-Mngtr slallon wagon, 13^^ Ookland Chrysler-Plymouth 724 Oakland Avo. _____lll-9l]t nbw V6rkVr, ». Oakland Chrysler-Plymouth ftown or your trodo (mmi nat im 1945 NBW YOR^FtoWN SIDAN, Ookland Chrysler-Plymouth buying SHARP ln,'3 btocks N. at Walton Colifornio Buyers ’“'jT^mmoVoi h«v« no Qimmicki.' Jutf I of oood m«rch«ndf»mig a tvnd«y rOR SALES /oygr- old You Know? VILLAGE RAMBLER 0 mart tor ANY make uoad car. „ » Coll tor Aoproisal. 555 B. Woodward Ml 5-2NI GMC FACTORY BRANCH Now ond Uiod Truck! FE 54401_____m_Pl._ HUNfiRS SRiCIAL - 10501«1‘. nouH Vonotto, 0250. Pi 5-54S1. kep UNIVCRSAL, £S!...... n wagon, 2-sool. Tur-wMto finish, fully 01495 Autobahn Motors, Inc. AUTHORIZED VW DIALER music. Ekompto IMJ CHEVY Bl coyns 4-door sodan, V0, powi stotring, PoworglWo, radio, hoati Only 02495. CORVAIRS 1951 Monia 4-spaad, radio and hat er, a good buy al M9S. 1954 Monio Coups, PowerglM rsdto, hoator, svhltowoMs. 11,395. 1955 Corvtirt, Idoor tnd 44o( htrdtope, with vorlout squipmtn Prices etert at only 01.195. CHEVY II 1952 Nova 2-dqor hordtop; otinder transmission, radio end heetei --------- - .... Sport, Sdoc DON'S USID CARS SMALL AD-^BIG LOT so OARS TO CHOOSe PROM $1897 NOW OPEN 855 Odkloiul Ave. (Outdoor ShoWroomI (Juot to milt north of Cato A'.. Spartan Dodge lOM Pontiac Iw, doubk 1903 Ford 4-1 1952 Ford 5^ l9jU BuICk I haeter, whltawoMs, 01,195. PATTERSON CHEVROLET ^jujnvtrllW, jsvMtHlIle (IN Sdtor hard-dark grain. lamatic i. Sdoor, automat , ra^ haatar, s stSIm wagon, lowtr. Turgueiso, reul^ LoSobra Moor hardtog, utomotic doubM potver, dark biua. I Bonnavllla converfiut, 2------ »war, whljo, rad Inforlor. I Catalina 1-deor hardtop, i Mitic, deuMo power, red. 677 S. LAPEER RD. •tike Orlen MY 2-2041 MA H404 r if4M, 4151 0^ •■“to.__ mitoe, — ... guarsntH, Mutt tell. 57^2257. 1964 IMPALT Cenvtrtlbto. II49S. 1964 IMPALA Sdoer hardtop. fl.B9S. 19M IMPALA ^ hordita, VB, dtoibto I ThtM art all ono-ownar can vary low mritago, VAN CAMP CHEVY MILFORD MU FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY DODGE ^ —15SI tlSMimSM with rtd Inttrlor, Bon't miti ot I1I0I. Oakland Chrysler-Plymouth 724 Oakl runniM condltlon^wlgi ----------------- Nfw mi IM Can 11IK PONTIAC PHKSS. MONDAY, NOV^EMBER 15, 1965 kipossksiion-ihi to»o wao- HIATCH and WMITiWALL Mv ^cS»r.*tru,s? » cST»*mS'« “m’?; rwao> lew mllMM leeally low t1.»l JtROWr?OIID, Ro^ FORD Deelof. OL l-fril. oown and llljl per week. l'*^IL HAROLD TURNER Naw mi IM Can m\Haw mi Cm*______________________Ht|Naw ati Usad Can 1M »H3 _PORO WA^, Va. aNOINB.llH5 M U IT A N 0, _1_AW MILgS. IH3 MBRCURV MBTBOR >DP0R SAVE ON 10WNRR M61 FORD, t-1 . ... laedard tranwnla- landltlen. MI-7in iri 57*7, no money d paymenit only 57.0t. ------ and ^rran^ all financing. Call “Te 84071 1961 Ford . Convartibla HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml A75M FORD, INC. 454 S. WOODWARD A»E. BIRMINGHAM_________Ml 4-75B0 Mil»T DftPOSi 6F IHJ't'fcilie;: ^ i IgaSTEttArt; Capitol Auto IHJ FORtTwAGOM, agooii'M 312 W. MONTCALM I or’itawi!L*'lS!!lkia*!!!7"l^^ _Ju«* twt »* Ooklond_| iffi ».»*{»■ rvisl 1964 Falcon ' JEROME FORD, Rodmtar FOB*! i V-UV,^lwfll $695 BEATTIE 9N DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD >Heim of service after me Salt" OR 3-1291 IHI FORD GALAXIE 500 CONVERT-IMe. va automatic, power Ing, whilewallt, radio and a nice car, only I"" SON CHEVROLET Woodw - ■ - 4-I73S. y SUM. PATTER- r FORDI XL Convarfiblt mia IMS FORD oonvartiblo, h a iparkling champagne wl... matching buckets, SSI angina, and Crulse-O-Matic, power and a larrF """$i49f $1495 I BEATTIE i ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORo! "Your FORD DEALER Since ItSO" OR 3-1291 MUST biSPOSE OF tM4 FORD TIME IS NEAR! WAIT AND SEE Pontiac Retail Store Spartan Dodge REPOSSESSION FOrt07^N^ 1t63 FORD 2DOOR WITH AUTOMATIC TRANSMIS-SIONe RADIO AND HEAT* ERe WHITEWALt TIRESr ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Atium« weekly pay-menu of S9J7. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Perks et HAROLD TURNER. FORD. Ml 1965 MUSTANGS 5 to Choose From HAROTOPS - CONVERTIBLES Some have power and Automatic tranamlulen As Low OS $59 Down As Low os $59 Mo. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 4«4 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM_^ 4 75M SEE us FIRST j BOBBORST LINCOLN-MIRCURY »0 S Wbodwern BIrmlnohen. MI 6-4538 C U R V MARAUDER 4- _ dtoo, powar itaaring. ?*_ r condition, factory o«ac ITS* HwE BiNl UiBd Cire/ miMBw and Us«d Cars 1504 OLDS STARFIRE, ^DOOR ...... ----- .—, SS455. MA 15S7 PLYMOUTH I5S5 Chavrolat, 2-dr. hardtop S 1*55 Plymouth 5-piM. I Plenty of othari. A law trucki ECONOMY CARS OSS DIXIE HV COW- N AND TEST DRIVE THE "HOr- *4.1 lEROME OLDS-CADILLAC KyMOUTH I, AUTOMATIC, I body, now tiectrical. (----- , S35-I7I0. 1964 VALIANT signal “m" V-l automatic, SO.-000 mile warranty In force, mit it Iht nlcttl one you'll find, beautiful red with rad Interior and! bucket teals, this cor It leodad, vary kw mileage, one owner, Blr-mlngham trade $1695 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLVMOUTH ♦II S. Woodward______Ml 7-M14 15*4 PLYMOUTH WAGON, 4-OOOR, Balvadara, wile', or. iika new. I 11750. 33I-56M. D-9 MbW Bud liBBd CWB Hi WILL ACCEPT GUNS, BOATS, MOTORS Sunshine from a Baanary Echo from a tioamtoal whbtio VALIANT 1-DOOR WITH 6-dYL.. RlPOSSErtip^l*5~6iB^6eiLt 15*0 PLYMOUTH, 4-OOOR, 666d| CO.. UM s!^ V^Sword Avo.r*Bir n, paymenli ol M.I7 t**4 T-BIRD LANDAU PULL POW- JEROME FORD Rochettor FORD Doolor. OL 1-571I.______________ MUST DISPOSE OF 15*5 MUSTANG OSE OF 15*5 MUS down, poymonit a waakly. Coll Mr. Mun I Mrtuirtto.___________ IMF John McAulIHe Ford 1965 Ford ; Foirlone ”500" | ^n, BuutItuI coPiwr mist finish, I i wtokiy. Coll Mr. « S4ICI. AkcAulItta,_______ 1*43 OLDS CONVERTIBLE, DYNAM-| Ic "IS" VI angino, aulomallc, power tlaorlng, brakat, radio, hooter, I 4,000 actual mllat. ^Ektra tharpi Saval JEROME FORD, Rochat-tar FOBb Doalar. OL 14711. Repossession ' ...... le of e IMS OLDS, win bring cer fo your II noodedi ' m Spertan. 8. RED AND If 1275. FE M3M. after » I VALIANT I >AN WITH / --.ANSMISSION. AND HEATER A WALL TIRES, AoeuLUi LY NO MONEY OOWN. i aume weekly gevments of |L92. call credit MOR. Mr. Parks et HAROLD TURNER. FORD. Ml 4-7S00. Use Press Wont Ads Press Wont Ads Worlr AS PART DOWN PAYMENT ON ANV NEW OR USED CAR! BILL SPENCE lx, 53U5 6673 Dixie Hi i Chrytlar-! . Rt CLARKSTON 1964 OLDS 0" convertible, powar Faarir d brakes, automatic, whitewall war windows and antenna, AS I, 2-door hardtop, an a captienally, nice car. $2095 “*'■ BIRMINGHAM 1963 PLYMOUTH Fury Idoer hardloo, beautiful beige with all rad vinyl Interior, power steering and brakat, one owner. Birmingham trade. f $1495 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH '14 S. Woodward____Ml 7-3214 1963 PLYMOUTH 5-natsangar wagon, boautitui rod wim matching rad Interior, V-l 1963 Ford Foirlane 4-Door with 0 VI angino, radio, haitt Only- $1195 BEATTIE FREE HIGHWAY EMERGENCY Kir TODAY'S fONTIAC BONNEVILLE t SPECIAL $2295 7H4 PONTIAC CATALINA CONVERTIBLE. Power sMorIng and brakat, Hydramatic, ms PONTIAC CATALINA F 1*11 BUICK WILDCAT 4door *””**”* JynSiB'jLf rtdlel"*h**r^ t*«l PONTIAC CATALINA 4 15*4 PONTIAC CATALINA 4-Daor ms PONTIAC STAR ( and syhittwallt. Blue « l**S BUICK ELECTRA "225" 15*3 FALCON PUTURA 2-Door Hardtop. Standard trontmittlen with 760 v-s angina, maroon with Mock leathar huckot saata. A rati doll S1I5S 1*S* PONTIAC STAR CHIEF, itaaring and brakts, Hy-:, radio, haator, whlta- 15*4 FORD GALAXIE "5 rar steering, ai radio, hooter i 11,000 guarant 1*44 TEMPEST Guaranteed 12,000 i tlS>5 3 TEMPEST CUSTOM 2-Door. 1**2 PONTAC ^P■ta*no•r Wagon with rock on tog. Powtr staorlng and brakek, Hydramatic, radio, hootor, whltowalla. Owned by 1*44 PONTIAC CATALINA 4dC hardtop. Posatr itaaring a brakes, hydramatic, radio, ho tr, whilewallt. Black with r IMF JOHN MCAULIPFE FORD 1964 Ford Galaxie “500" 4-Door %^Un with a V-i angina, a matic, powtr staarlng, skyblue Ith. This unit was told - serviced Iw usM S4S down, pirtnra Bolonco w Only— $1595 )«» OAKLAND AVE. PE 5-4101 JOHN McAULIPPE FORD IMF $1795 *30 OAKLAND AVE. F-E S4I JOHN McAULIFFE FORD IMF 500, 4-DOOR, rice S5 _____ ... __LE- ■■ NANCE BANK RATES. LUCKY AUTO 1240 W. WIda Track \ CruMmatic and factory $2197 FullPrlc# Coll 330-4520 CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH $1595 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSELR-PLYMOUTH n^^irso A*nBVT nw o*aaua | Mansfiel'd Auto Soles 15*5 Olds Cutlass, 2-door hordtop power, buckols, GM warranty, bkn with whtta top. $2.42S. 1104 Baldwin Ayt. NORTHViTOH' AUTO OUTin CREDIT NO PROBLEM , TAKE OVER PAYMENTS NO APPLICATIONS REJECTED 1*62 PONTIAC t**7 56 47 wk 1*62 MONZA 57*7 54 47 wk 1*5* FORD, wagon. 519* 11.47 wk! 1*60 FORD, wogm *2*7 12,57 wk. 1*62 PONTIAC 59*7 56.47 wk. 1*62 MONZA 5797 54.47 wk. FORD, wagon 51** 51.47 wk. FORD, wagon 52*7 52.97 vrk. 1*50 PONTIAC 51*7 51 47 wk. IT'S NEW WAIT AND SEE Pontiac Retail Store AT WIDE TRACK DIAL: FE 3-7954 ‘*3 ... FORD, GalaxI* ,1*«0 CHEVY. 2-door ---- FORD, wagon 1*64 FORD COUNTRY SltOAN, < BOB BORST MANY OTHERS TO CHOOSE FROM 2023 Dixie Highway la north M Cass Aye.) i F£ 8-9239 FE 8-9230 Spartan Dodge' . stick 1797 S8.S5 WC HANDLE AND ARRANGE Capitol Auto 1**4 FORD V4 CUSTOM 4-DOOR, auto., axe. condition, pvt. Owner. 33S-37W.____________________ i**TTM5'T7uRULNrT5ooC~fr cvl stick, radio. 14.000 mitaa* 01.-m. JEROME FO^ Rochester FORD Dealer. OL 1-5711. 1965 FORDS 31 to choose tram, soma hove .... powtr, and automatic transmission, oil hove radio and heater whitewall tires as low os Sl.3*l As low os S4* down and S10.I HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC- 4*4 S. WOODWARD AVI. BIRMINGHAM_Ml_4-H0e Mansfield FUTU R At 2-OOOR FINANCE BANK RATES. LUCKY AUTO 1*40 W. Wide Track FE 4.I0M or FE 3-7lS4 1*65 MUSTANG, VI, 3-SPEBD STICK bolonco S1,*00, EM 1*41 PONTIAC CATALINA 4-Ooor .JM«i. Beautiful maroon flnlih with mofchlng Interior. 1-ownor tnd anil olmeal Ilka new lifts 1**s TEMPEST J-Doof. Automatic, V-g, radio, hootor, white-walla. Sava on thli on# with the now car factory warranty 12015 1*45 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE IMI CHEVROLET IMPALA. ^ Dear hardtop. Automoik, radio, hootor, whHawallt. Boiutlful Maroon tkif^ BottdR) hurry St*S WM P 0 N T 1 A C BONNEVILLE Cougo- Power ataorkig and brakat, Hydramatic, radio, hootor, whno-wtlla. Boountul rich branio lln-Wi wllh matching loolhor Intorlor sa*$ CONVERTIBLE. Factory air conditioning, oil power and loodod with poodlta. Mr. Sholton'i por-aonal ear lava 1*44 OTO. V-d, Hydramatic with contolo, radio, haator, whiltwolli. Moroon with white top and Mack toother bucket aaoti. Fait and booullful 121*3 1*«4 PONTIAC CATALINA 2-Door Hardtop. Standard Iranwnlialon, 1*44 PONTtAC BONNEVILLE Cgupo, Factory InatilM 4-ipood Ironimlitlon on the floor with ful rad flnlili. No alhtr' one likt H, bettor hurry . silts briitot* radio, hootoTaM «MlV walla I225S mi MERCURY MONTEREY 7- Mhlng, l*«S TEMPEST LOMANI 2-Ooor. Hydramatic, V-l omiho, radio, 1*ts BUICK WILDCAT %Door l**4 PONTIAC CATALINA HiS?J 'WITH THIS AO AND THE PURCHASE OP A SHELTON USED CAR Compltttly PovBd Used Cor Lot — New Cor Worronty (Ask for Detoils) PONTIAC-BUICK 651-9911 855 ROCHESTER ROAD 390 4-Speed 1965 Ford Custom 2-Door 1965 Ford Foirlan* 2-Door WHAT IS IT? WAIT AND SEE Pontiac Retail Store $2095 BEATTIE ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD "Your ford DEALER SInca 1*30-"Homo of Sorvic* otter the Solo" OR 3-1291 $1795 BEATTIE 'ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORO Your FORD DEALER Since 1*30" l**5 FORD FALCON 4-DOOR, 4 CONTINENTALS wide choice of colors, aquippad with factory air e-- ing. All A-l condition. Choice Blr mlngham, r-------- *---- WE FINANCE BANK RATES. LUCKY AUTO BOB BORST LINCOLN-MKRCURY 1957 MERCURY. Autobahn Specials *4S Mulling with "KT' angino. It, Mmllos, ntnwcor warranty, thovi 1*45 OTO ..... _____________ .. jvlth^ block Interior, Rodllno cortltlid mlios !Y' S2,»'s Falcon custom I-door. Automat- Autobahn Motors, Inc. 1*41 COMET DELUXE, 3-OOOR, RA- ownorli?*?.****'^' Ooklond Chrysler-Plymouth 724 Ooklond Avo.________ ET ^DOOR OELiTx. BOB BORST LINCOLN-MERCURY « S. Woodward “II 4-4531 — 1965 DEMOS - 196S ELECTRA Convertibli $OVi 1 1965 WILDCAT 44)oor Hordtop Borgoin 196S $PECIAL 4-Door Ssdon . Shorp 1965 WILDCAT Convertibli Nice — LATE MODEL TRADES - 1965 LeSABRE Convartibla $2888 1957 PONTIAC Storchief Coupe $ 388 1964 RIVIERA, Sohoro Gold $2788 1963 ELECTRA 4-Door Sedan $1888 1962 LeSABRE Coupe, Shorpl $1488 1964 LeSABRE 4>Door Hordtop $1688 1963 F-85 4-Door Sedon . $1488 1965 ELECTRA ”225" Coupe $3188 1964 WILDCAT 4-Door Hardtop $1988 1965 ELECTRA ”225" ConvErtible $3288 - DOUBLE CHECKED USED CARS - 554 S, WOODWARD 1963 MERCURY __J*a stntlon wagon with lull powtr, outomntlc Irinsmlsilon. V-l angino, radio and hooter and whitewall tiraa, *4* or old car down, waokly poymonts 5H.*2. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 4*4 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINOHAM___Ml 4-75M Mansfield Auto Soles Deer Hunting Specials 1*45 BUICK 4-paiaangor wagon, pow-Of, bubble top, OM worranly 134*5 1*44 CHEVY IMPALA *-poiianeir; wagon, Nocturne Wuo, c^---------- rack power, VI auto., OM raniy 1*44 PONTIAC l^TA^NA RtorJor*^M'’worronty " 1*44 TBMPtST, cot..... ----------- wjii^, chro|n* rack, powder 1*43 OLDS M 4-pataangar wage powar, real sharp lie 1*«^HBVY 4-pttaongor wagon^ \ YEAR-END CLEARANCE SALEl 100% Written Guarantee out of buying Uiad CartI 1962 PONTIAC Bonneville 4-Door Hardtop, Power Steering, Brakes, Windows. Only 31,000 Miles .....................T"... $1495 1963 OLDS ”98" 4-Door with Power. A Real Buy at ................................... $1995 1963 OLDS “88" 4-Door, Power Steering and Brakes ....................................$1495 1964 OLDS ”98" Convertible, Full Power........$2095 1964 OLDS Cutlass 2-Door Hardtop, Full Power, Like New ..................................$1895 1964 FORD Galaxie ”500!' Convertible, Power Steering, Brakes, V-8, Like New ...........$1595 1965 OLDS Vista Cruiser 9-Possenger Station Wagon .....................................$2795 1962 BUICK Invicto Convertible, Automatic, Power Steering, Brakes, priced to sell at $129S 1965 OLDS Cutloss Coupe, Power Steering, V-8, Automatic, Only ^800 Miles................ $2395 1965 PONTIAC Bonneville Hardtop, Powtr Steering, Brakes, Air Conditioning ........$2995 ORIGINATOR OF 2-YEAR WARRANTY 635 S. Woodward Ave. Birmingham 647-5111 , HUNTERS! There s Big Game At Homer Right's TAKE CAR NORTH 1961 Chevy Impolo 4-Door Hardtop. 4-cyllndor, •tandard tronamiulon, radio 1963 Pontiac Cototino 2-Ooor Hordtop. Radio, hootor. 1963 Chevy Biscoyne 4-Door. Radio and hootor, iut> 1964 Buick Electro ADoor Hardtop. Powtr itaar- and haator. Shorpl $845 automatic, powar itoerlng tnd ”"■"“$1695 mafic, 4-cyllndar. $1195 Ing and broktt, air conditioning, ””$2595 1962 Rambler 2-Door Good tranaportatlon. You'd have 1962 Chevy Convertible Super Sport. Rod with whllo top. 1964 Chevy Convertible 1962 Pontiac 2-Door to toe thli one to apprKlatt Ita low price at $495 t-cylindar, automatic, radio and $1495 Impale, l-cyllndar. radio, hootor and tutomallc. $1995 Radio ond hooter, automatic, power Itaaring and brokoa. $1195 1962 Buick LfSobre 1965 Buick LeSobre Convartibla. Radio and hdalor. 1957 Chevy Station Wogon 1961 Chevy Bel Air 4-Deer. Aulomallc, powir itoor-Ing and brtkdi, now llrN. $1395 automatic, powtr atoorlng and brokoa, ilivtr Mud with ■ whllo . “ $2845 ♦■PttMngar, Acylindar, radio tnd hatter, black ond whlto. $295 station Wagon. Acylindtr, automatic, radio and hootor, power itoorlng and brakat. $995 PONTIA(3—BUICK—CHEVROLET OXFORD, MICHIGAN on M24 OA 8-2528 D—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1965 ntm Mi liti Cm W Wm Mi Owi Cm IH Wwr Mi Hwi Ct W Miwr Mi Hwi Cm JOt N nM^'nUmS^ « MITOWATIC AP- *■ iia^BSrw^BirrESjPi . otilt* wHIi Mack Mk ______ uvi NIL SMITH USED CARS CttW. ktfTY St. Ft «<4 m» IWniAC CATALINA, GOOD mi kONTIAC lAkANI ^.STATION C^°MrArMni. Estate Storage m I. twt »ivd.______sn-mi INI PONTIAC LMMANS. f«00R hardtop, 4-apMd. r- " wMlfwalh, fMl cl- _ TEkSON CMEVNOLBT C WNJIJWTIAC 1M1 PONTIAC No Momy Down We Finance FULL PRICE $697 Tel-A-Huron AUTO SALES 60 S. Telegraph . FE 8-9661 ll^^KwiAC' 4-DOOR CATALINA, power elicring and brakn, tharp. *' wE TRADE-BANK BATES MA2UREK motor SALES loodward at S. Blvd. FE 4-151? 1M3 PONTIAC CATALINA AOOOR sedan, BurgMndy, ~“" Hydramatic, > radio, iW-WVV, MOWI BiltpboUl yyXYJ, U M#r#on WCAB, Boyb Corooaof WJBK, MMk, A. Th«fr Wii, NOWI, Ibofti, Atoite WFOW, N#w», Johnny Iron WHFl, CMrtofcl TWIO filf-WXYZ. LM Alon, Muilc WWJ, Fhm Opinion 7i»-WJB, Nowi, Muole SiW-WHFI, Norn, MonlOBO CKLW. Tom Ihoonon OiW-WWJ, NOWI. Sperto ' WJB. Nowi, Mink *ilS-WWJ, Vovr Unitod Foundolkn Murphy, Mutk WFON, NOWI, Johnny Irono itjiKWJarNfwirw lll•s!^R,''1ltSwl, Mink II.U luyo LoronSPr CKLW, Form, Byo OpOnor OiM-WJR. Muok Hoii mw, S^Oponor, Dovlpo •ioo-Wjl«T?Iow»,-e WHFl. NOWI, Alnnanoc l5^*WJlFwiIc hph »iW-WJR, NOWI WCAR, Nowo. SonRprS jpt Von n, HPM ...... ih Nolphbor WXYZ, SrooMoit CMb HyiSwf, hkoNu iSn !)oKnoon -WJI WWJ, Nowi, Mink weON, Nowi, Bon Jol CKLW, Nowt, Jo# Vi WXYZ. More Avory , WJIK, Nowt. Odor ■»■•^-WJR, Focin »jrNi.T1n lonor CKLW, Nowi, Dpvp Sholor liW-^WR, NOWI,- Billon WHFl, " WFON, CKLW, .... WXYZ, Di« Lioness' Stroll Fatal; Killed by Policeman FREMONT, Calif. (AP) What Started as a policemaij’s response to a routine leash-lkw violation report ended with^ the death of a pregnant 2^ lioness. / Sandra Hayes, 25/had been keeping the lioneas/named Dolly, in the garag^of her subu-ban home here ¥s a favor for a friend vdio owpiM it. ■*/ w- ★ Doily hpud the noises of the city, dii^’t like them and broke away./ officer Oscar Breiling 'ed on the scene at neigh-’ requests Miss Hayes asked him not to shoot the lion. She said a veterinarian was on the way with a tranquilizing drug. FRIGHTENS DOLLY A second officer drove up and frightened away Dolly, who had been standing for five minutes rubbing agaiiut Breiling’s leg in nearby field. ★ W;, ♦ Breiling moved off into the field after Dolly, but lost 8lght of,her. Then someone called, ‘Look out behind you.” ARISTOCRACY r" r 3 r- r- r" 8 r 10 Il 12“ b" h” w W- TT 1 w 1 5 24 ~u 25“ 27 28 5o1 _j sr 55“ 35^ UK 37 55“ R- b Fn n 44” 46 ■ m 48 49 50 51“ 52^ u 5T 54 1 56" n 57“ 58" 5 American painter (1856-1025) 7 Ordinary 1 Curves 2 Italian (comb, form) 3 Hen product 4 Copper center of Venezuela 5 Chemical salts 8 Eras 9 Departed 0 Finale 2 English river 4 Rebel (coll.) Answer to Previous Puzzle It takes less time to do a thing right than to explain why you-did it wrong.—Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, American poet. QRAND OLE OPRY Pontiac Armory Sot. Docombor 4, 1965 3 Big Shows 3-6-9 P.M. Storrino ferlITTRusky and Nis Hush Puppy Band Tkkoli at thosa locotieni 06 ME MUSIC 4111 Disio Mwy„ Drayton errao boulevard service S4Z R. Parry TEX’S STANDARD SERVICE 2411 Orehard Lk. Rd. UXELAND RECORD SHOP 4SIS Dixie Hwy. Drayton I Lowranking npbleman 6 European earl II Her — ^ajesty 12 Spanish chrd games 14 Wild d^ey icate (2 words) 16 Obliterate 17 ^imal doctor (coll.) 19^wildered M Closest 23 Vegetables 26 Self-esteem 27 River barrier 30 Nautical term 31 Marry 32 The gums (anat.) 33 Knight’s title 34 Tree 36 West African seaport 38 Building addition 39 Oriental porgy 40 ’Turn inside out 41 Automobile body 43 Comfort 46 Obtain 47 Raving fury 51 Spanish nobleman 53 Spanish province 55 Aureate 56 Shield inscription 57 Resource 58 Corpulent DOWN 1 Wild hog of New Guinea 2 Asiatic lake 3 Persons acting in king’s place '4 Individual 5 Roman emperor (96-98) | 6 Retinue I 7 Shouider (comb, form) ' 8 Worid War I menace i 9 Profits 10 Faithful 11 Sward 13 Watering place 18 Some time ago (archaic) 21 Landed property 22 Soaked through 23 Low-minded 24 Bad 25 English count 27 High-ranking nobleman 28 Winged 29 Trading center Virus Cancels! Official's Talk Busy Doctor's Robust at 99 I MARION, Ohio (84 - Dr. Ed- NEW YORK (UPI) - U.N. Ambassador Arthur Goldberg canceled a speaking engagement! „ at the 80th anniversary of the'*®'’'* ^ ^ager is “up every day Jewish ’Theological Seminary last night because of a virus. Goldberg has confined himself to his' Waldorf Towers suite for the last several days while recuperating from the illness. A * W James A. Roosevelt, U.S. ambassador to the U.N. Economic Social Council, spoke In Goldberg’s place. Things Didn't Break Egg-sacfly as Planned SLOT RACING **Buy Them Where You Race Them" OPEN 11 A.M. to 10 P.M. ye 2 Hours FREE Track Time on Our H.0/ Commercial' TRACK WITH PURCHASE OF EACH H.O. CAR We carry all the latent in home raring $et$ including. • REVELL • AURORA • MONOGRAM and H.O. HOME SETS We have 15 different kits and build-up car models that can be used on your present Home Racing Sat. Name Brands from $4.95 OR 3-9991 STAPLETON’S 2 Miles West of Tel-Huron on M-59 IMPROVE YOUR HOME DEAL DIRECT FREE PLANS and ESTIMATES-NO CHARGE LOS ANGELES 184-El Camino College’s homecoming football game has come and gone. And so have students’ hopes that an ostrich egg, tenderly cradled and lovingly warmed, would provide them with a mascot. The egg’s 41-day inenbation period ended Friday, the day before the game wltt Long Beach State College. Stalwart itndenta, who had brooded over the egg for two weeks, fetched np brave smiles and voiced^ as one man, tlieir con-fhtence that the stork would arrive with the oolrich. A little late, perhapo, but la time. They even named the ostrich Willie. They recalled, as they waited, how they had sacrificed: 86 to buy the egg; many hours as male students took turns setting on Willie, electrical bills for the hair dryer that kept Willie warm nights, and grave physical danger in thwarting a kidnap attempt last week by four mysterious miscreants. THEY WAIT They waited, growing broodier with each passing hour. By game timO Saturday, they came to the sad conclusion that the egg had had a miscarriage. Worse yet, so did their team, El Camino lost, 23-6. WeU,” smirked a Long Beach opponent, “they sure hatched a goose egg.” NY Police Watch for Sell-Burnings NEW. YORK (UPI) - The New York City police department has taken prucautionary steps to cope with any further protest immolations at the Unit-edNatioitt. ^ Fire extinguishers and blankets have been installed at a police booth acroM the street from the U.N. headquarters and a police emergency truck has poet in front of the building. The precautionary stAps were initated after pacifist Roger La-Porte set himself on fire last Tueaday In front of the United N a 110 n a as a protest against war. LaPorte died Wednesday at Bellevue Hoq>ital. I, Ron KnlflM .....j, Oovo Skmm t, Dovt Frinco NOW UHF ANTENNA Instollod $29.95 swtEri ■ ,«N?a at 5 a.m. and ready for business until 8 o’clock at night. He walks at least a mile every nice morning before breakfast. He’s just turned 99 and he’s still a practicing physician. “’They say I’m the oldest general practitioner still active in the United States,” Sager remarked after a check with the American Medical Association. ★ ★ ★ Dr. Sager observed his birthday Saturday and said he has no plans to retire. HOUSE CALLS making house calls. Dr. Sager says he doesn’t turn any down. “I use a cab in town and have a man who drives me on the country calls,” he explains * ★ ★ In those horse and buggy days,” he recalls, “I got 50 cents for a house call, deUvered babies for 83 and charged $5 for setting a broken leg. “Sometimes I’d get anything from nothing on up." CABINETS 5-Ft. Kitchen $OCC COMPLETE £09 T-Ft. Kitchen $Onr COMPLETE £09 INCLUDES: Upper a CALL FE 841173 Open Daily and Sun. ADDITIONS FAMILY ROOMS ALUMINUM SIDING REC. ROOMS ROOFING—SIDING WOODFIELO CONSTRUCTION WILL COME TO YOU WITH FREE ESTIMATE AND PLANS—NO CHARGE 15 W. UWRENCE CALL FE 8-8173 16 AAonths Boforo I First Poymont | ONE CONTRACTOR FOR EVERTTHING Aden Bomb Hurts Four ADEN (UPI) - A hand grenade exploded last night in shopping area of this tense British colony, wounding four persons. The injured were identified as two Arabs and tw( dian girls. Last month, Britain suspended the constitution of the colony after a series of terrorist slayings. D—12 THE PONTIAC PREi^S MONDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1965 > MonirM. C«m- 3 kMt wl.cH.in pim GENEUl ELECTRIC koiid pwtabl. in lwn*«M "«W" ilw. iMt., »hi|H, miw.. J- fMI (44i bwHonl Unnnt. WiA .^mJ....................... O ■TW^bag* *10** *8” ^0«M4n^w.HMoyRu^. MAN ^iWiy.ARwcHwa *8" . .*7” *6" SHwaS’iS" *10". *19" »i” ””*12" mUUlHO ^pPUM*CE C^- TOP BRAND II CU. WESTINOHOUSE FT. REFRIOERATOR II CU. FT. Rtfrig. 1| CU. FT. t Cmft mmttm Immmm mmmm m SpMl.1 p.rcliM.. Ch—nc C.nwiHiK .pHghI •klw Al. *--At- ------------------ ----- n .______.. -« 12eH.tt.2-Dr.RIFRIA WITH BOTTOA I NnaraMdcMMilnH. OM14 Ri Ih fSnsShiLw-. — *183 S NOMI 1t% 00. FT. TOP MANB II FTr l |0A WNIRLPOOL •“I*?!!®"" Km i-oAmionATOo «uFntT*m Mrrwifntliini* i-oyolidrtir oiMWAtNER IS S'iSi’arsc «;!*■?■!;■■ Ta-i: artttrtst -IsSinTj; - srSSyi*-!.** riSfiasr- sjteisas a-fa-ss ' "■ *108 S *129 r- -.jii lUMTRMiruM nJoTRn mHJviL luoniolumi Top Brands! Big SoloctionsI “ •• Exp^Senictf! Easier Tarms! f linmediate Mhrery! ” _____ BSSSS .Bsass =«=»S bSz^ % = MM a -.fg, a “ill'a in cratM or cartons. Sem* floor modoli, ■onto in limitod quantitios. Fow ono^-«> kind. Somo ttomt net at oil storos. Wo ro-■onro Hio right to limit quontMoa. AAorchon-A(o subioct to prior aolo. Price* F.O.O. on- / i.O.^ kppl\m*cec^ NO MONEY DOWN • 3-YEARS TO PAY MAi Lafco IWw OAmor T«l«fraph .N**l Oeer to J. L. Hiiriion Co. SALE BEGINS ^ TODAY OPEN DAILY 9 A.AA. P.AA. SUPfUMINT TO THI PQNTIAC PRESS Mondoy, Nov. IS, IMS TWO COLORS ONE COLOR StNSATIONM. YMUB CORDUROY JUMPERS th«y grel The fum|>> •r» yeu wont fer nqw right tn through the whi* ♦•r. All ot Spartan fout ingtl Pinwoltil WMt Wfleil Zipper, bvtttn trentf. lo«t tn^ V*nec|i styles. Peciffts and tab sides. Fashion colors. Miss* •f'si^flltf II Ung sIm wondpn In fobulpwi yiwal and mohair blen^ or Orlen* o'Rtuij£aMWi = VUUi Ivyvrloos sorootors at fporton savinaol Wool •nd iieholr Monde. 100% Orion* a^lc link sWdi itylcs. Brushod loOk, panel fronts in the froup. Assoitod colors. Small, Medium, Lorpe BOYS'SIZES 6 TO 11 PILE-LINED SKI JACKETS Hoeded nylen sU lockels, fully linod orith OrienO acidic pile. Pull cut for comfort and loop woorinp porformuncs. MIN'S COAT STYLI FUNNKL PjyJUNAS lore and fmnlil SIsoi A, i, C, 0. im ION turn WUI O WEM FUNNEL SPORT SHIRTS MEN'S PUICI4INI0 VINYL mvis fcnsationol vniMl Ny., lon>royon sldo-wplt sllp.on stylel Vinyl shall, myen floosn Hn> Ing. Block, browp, pod | |B«ri' Warm BOOYS lU Niwr I MOTf ^••ortBil idaJ'toKl faMlL JRRdilllll MIN'S PIN! HEVER*PRESS SUCKS * Ma iMalmal Sm^^ Oa* aa vasiwir''** MAN SIZED VALUES FOR MEN w BOYS! TWO COLORS SPARTAN VALUES FOR THRIFT-MINDED HOMEMAKERS! MCM S9TOW tire; ^liE;: mrjmmJKRiur Huasmaama HOtmmOfAUABIKKMmi GUARAimiD TOJUDEfOR 24 MONTHS <7IMS 775ii» nne-Tm mack »uttnus rm BBT m ¥juu mnwMi • Fjmoos lUKEr NHiH TENAinTY 100^ NYLM • ALL BRAND KW, FACTORY FRESH • E)mMWIDE-EnRA DEEP TREAD EXTRA RU6GED-ECTRA QUIET RIDE rme SMJHAN IXTRAS! • IROMCIAO GUARAMni • HILL SELECTION • COURTEOUS, COAAKTENT SALB STAPH INSTANT CREDIT NO MONEY DOWN A SMALL DEPOSIT WILL HOLD YOUR SNOW TIRES Until you need them Don t wait order now TUBE-TYPE BUCK' TUBELESS BUCK TUBELESS BUCK 470x15 9.99 750x14 12.99 670x15 12.99 nSx15 9.99 775x14 12.99 775x15 12.99 710x15 11.99 850x14 16.99 710x15 14.99 B15x15 11.99 855x14 16.99 815x15 14.99 760x15 13.99 760x15 16.99 B45x15 13.99 845x15 16.99 100% DUPONTHKHTmOTY NYLONmUlARSA Ekn tax. WHITEWALLS AT SUMILAR UVMOS. NO ntMNK HBOBH mm Km mm mKANm fOR 24 MOtm ONE COLOR SPORWG GIFT VALUES FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY! TWO COLORS The Weather U. S. WMtlwr lurMu Ftrauit (Dttalli an Paga 2) THE PONTIAC PRE E OVER P/U VOL. 123 NO. 241 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. MONDAY, NOVEMllKR 1.5. 19H.5-52 PAGES AP Photafax ALL SMILES — Former President Eisenhower’s son, John, (left) and brother Milton are all smiles as they head for home yesterday after spending the last five days at Ike's bedside at Ft. Gordon hospital where he suffered a heart attack. They said Ike appeared in excellent condition and would be transferred to Walter Reed Hospital soon where they hope to have Thanksgiving dinner with him. Probe of Ship Fire Starts Reds Win Case in High Court WASHINGTON iff) — The Supreme Court today declared unconstitutional a requirement that members of the Communist party must register with the government. The requirement is contained in a section of the 1950 Subversive Activities I r\ r Control Act. Suspend Prof for Hypnosis Dearborn Coed Was in Trance 16 Hours McNamara Speeds on Reserve Cutback DEARBORN (AP) - Henry Ford Community College yesterday suspended a part-time psychology instructor for placing coed under a hypnotic trance Friday. The instructor, Gerald G. Griffin, 32, of Nankin Township, Justice William J. Brennan delivered the 8-0 decision. Specifically involved in today’s decision were William Albertson of Brooklyn, N.Y., and Roscoe Quincy Proctor of Oakland, Calif. The Subversive Activities Control Board in 1962 ordered Albertson to register. A similar order to Proctor was issued in ld63. The Justice Department said Proctor was a member of the Communist party’s national committee and was on the Ne\ York State governing board. The Communist party of New York expelled Albertson on July 7, 1964, calling him a “police scientific in purpose. Cynthia Wellman, 18, of Ink- ster, was brought out of the trance Saturday, 16 hours after it was induced, by psychiatrists at Wayne County Gen- WASHINGTON (UPI) — Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara, flying in the face of a strong congressional protest, is pushing ahead with plans for immediate dissolution of 751 Army Reserve units containing 55,000 men. A Defense Department announcement during the; erai Hospital. Dr. Bruce l. weekend said the Pentagon chief and his top aides had “carefully considered” a Senate armed services commit|pe resolution asking himltp defer action on the plalNiintil next March. But, the ^nouncement said, “they decideinthat the immodi-ate inactivation of these , uniti, which are not required by contingency war pans, to essential.” Thus, the dissolution will go ahead as scheduled. said it was an experiment and ggent.- He asked, however, that the Supreme Court rule in his case as well as that of Proctor. Romney to Tell ofS. Viet Trip LANSING fAP)-Gov. George Romney will make a complete report tomorrow on his trip to South Viet Nam, he announced today as he returned to his desk for the first time ki nearly four weeks. Steering clear of specifics of the Oriental trip, he told a news conference "by all odds the most interesting aspect was what was seen in South Viet Nam. To make the most meaningful report, I will have two means of reporting...’’ He then announced a Tuesday afternoon news conference and a 7 p.m. broadcast 'hnd televised talk from the University of Detroit. Romney said it was “good to be back...l come back with greatly increased knowledge of conditions in the Orient, especially Southeast .Asia.’’ ★ ★ ? ★ He said he had met at least 400 of the estimated 4,000-5,000 Michigan men stationed in South Viet Nam. ECONOMIC MIRACLE He said his two weeks in Japan showed him “one of the great economic miracles of the (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) In Today's Press Defense Systems McNamara orders recheck in wake of blackout - PAGE B-10. Hawaii Residents hope for end to torrential rains—PAGE B-7. Congo Vote Future Wks bright for Tshombe - PAGE A-7. Area News .........A-4 i Astrology .........C-8 Bridge '............C4 : Crotiword Pnule ...D-11 Comici ............C-8 Editorials..........A4 ! Markets ............C4 : Obltnaries ........C-t i Sports .......D-l—D-4 Theiters ..........C-f TV-RadIo Programs D-11 Wilson, Earl......D-U Women’s Pages B-1—B-3 The step will leave the Army Reserves without any organizations of divisioin size. It will accomplish one of the major purposes of McNamara’s proposed merger of the Reserves and the National Guard, which Congress refused to approve. In another weekend statement, almost as controversial, the Pentagon said McNamara had approved a trial run of his “total package” plan for ship construction. The plan will be applied to construction and purchasing of fast vessel now on the drawing board. It is I the “FDL” (Fast Deployment Logistics), which will be designed to carry helicopters and handle cargo at record speed. Rear Adm. William A. Brocket!, chief of the Navy’s Bureau of Ships, and Rear Adm. Charles A. Curtze, his deputy, requested retirement recently In protest against this new procedure. The new plan involves “a single contract for the design, construction and certain support functions of a number of ships of the same type,” the Pentagon said. Thus, instead of bidding on construction of the ship only, is currently the procedure, shipyards will be asked to subndt proposals "covering an approprl-Iate portion of the total life cycle” of the vessel. said he was uncertain what after effects, if any, might result. “Griffin is suspended pending the outcome of an investigation," said Ray Howe, dean of ii struction at the college. ★ ★ * Griffin, former oducatiosisd psgrchologtot for Oakland CMiii-ty Schools, to scheduled to take oral examinations Thursday for doctoral degree in counseling psychology. HIRED IN FALL He was employed this fall as a part-time instructor by the college. Howe said he had learned that Griffin, an amateur hypnotist, had hypnotized seven students in his introductory psychology course. Griffin said he had no formal training in hypnosis. “I met with him and told him this had no place in the course he was teaching and that it should absolutely cease,’’ said Howe. “He admitted he had been hypnotizing students for experimental purposes.” ★ ★ ★ Griffin said he was attempting to teach his class how hypnotism could be used to accelerate learning ability by removing mental blocks. STUDENTS ASKED Griffin said he decided to carry on the experiments off-campus when some of his stu-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) Take Umbrella, Earmuffs and Be Weather-Ready Keep your earmuffs and umbrellas handy. According to the weatherman's predictions, you’ll need Occasional showers accompanied by higher temperatures are expected this evening and tomorrow. Tonight’s low will range from 35 to 40 with tomorrow’s highUtoSS. The warming trend will be short-lived, however, as meting temperatures and mow flurries are forecast for Wednesday. Lowest thermometer reading in downtown Pontiac before 8 a.m. was 30. By 1 p.m. the mer- cury climbed to 42. Albertson and Proctor appealed to the high tribunal after the U.S. Court of Appeals upheld the board orders. They contended the individual registration requirement vio-' lates the Fifth Amendment priy- j ilege against self-incrimination and impinges on First Amend-] ment rights of freedom of belief and association. The Supreme Court was that outcome of the caae would •fowl board onton againat M other persons and seven simitor cases pending at the board level. Justice Brennan said the risks of self-incrimination involved in individual registration “are obvious." The requirement to fill out and file a specified form, he declared, “is inconsistent with the protection of the self-incrimination clause” of the TENDER CARE—One of the more badly burned survivors of the Yarmouth Castle sea disaster is given tender care as she is Turnout Small AP PhQtofax ambulance for a ride to a Miami 'His Heart Oakland Citizens League President Dale A. Winnie, disappointed in the small turnout Saturday at a law enforcement forum, today scolded public officials andj citizens for their apathy toward crime. know what is being done to prevent it,” said Winnie,|to enjoy an ocean cruise Satur-| day and kept trying for tickets until he got them. ing about it.” C/7mefofum4pd//?KH/f.'^f5^^'; on Cruise' List of Victims Grows to 84 in Sea Disaster Coast Guard Seeking Cause of Tragedy on the Yarmouth Castle MIAMI, Fla. IT*'—Coast Guard investigators probed today into the deadly firp at sea that sent the cruise ship Yarmouth Castle to the bottom while the list of missing and presumed dead soared to 83. One person died of burns in a Nassau hospital bringing the toll of the disaster to 84. Yarmouth Cruises. Inc., added two more names to its roster of those who evidently failed to survive the tragedy — stewardess Phyllis Hall of Jamaica and the ship’s doctor, Lisardo Diaz Torrenz of Miami. Nineteen burned survivors remained in hospitals in Nassau and Miami. Of five persons airlifted to Miami, three were reported in critical condition and the others “very ill.” The 14 still at Nasau’s Princess Margaret Hospital were in I serious condition but a spokesman said he had “every hope” that they would survive, j The cruise ship plunged 1,700 {feet to the bottom of the Atlan-j tic Ocean in the Bahamas Saturday morning after On amept I>OOKED BACK “We looked back,” said Mar-Igaret Farrell of Fort Lauder- OAK PARK iiP — Fred R.idale, Fla., who was in a life- / Franc was a stubborn- man!boat. “There was a mass of red when he wanted .something. | flames, then gray smoke, then Everyone complains about crime and wants toj He wanted his wife, Estelle,]nothing.” ‘yet they do little or noth-^ Winnie’s remarks came after only 60 persons showed up for a League-sponsored public conference on crime and punishment at Oakland University. Winnie, this morning, released an open letter he is mailing to all city commis-s i 0 n s, village councils and township boards in the county- “I charge each and every member . . . with a serious deriliction of duty and blatant neglect of responsibility, as elected representatives of t h e people, in not attending or sending representation to the forum,” wrote Winnie. '7'Theodore Souris . . . presented Brennan said the claims of the two individuals specifically involved in today’s case “are not asserted in an essentially noncriminal and regulatory area of inquiry, but against an inquiry in an area permeated with criminal statutes, where response to any of the form’s questions in context might involve the petitioners In the admission of a crucial element of a Crime.” Justice Tom Clark wrote a concurring opinion noting that when he was U.S. attorney general, and the laVv was in preparation, he told Congress it might be held “to compel self-j ★ * incrimination.” j "Two separate panels and a Justice Byron R. White tookjdistinquished luncheon speaker| no part in the case. State Supreme Court Justice a revealing cross section of views and offered to answer any and ail questions from the floor, but while many were invited few chose to attend.” “Pointedly, I ask each and everyone of you why? Where were you? What was more important?” Winnie said that he expects The Oak Park couple was among 83 persons listed as missing from the Yarmouth Castle, which burned and sank off the Florida coast Saturday. “Mom and Dad were in Miami for a convention and when it ended last Thursday, he decided to take a few days’ vacation,” said the couple’s daughter, Doreen, 19. replies to his letter from alii, ^he and her brother Kenneth, ... ; 13, are waiting for a sign of hope communities. ^ ^ ithat their parents survived. one suggestion enthusiastical-'SOUGHT RESERVATIONS . . .. LAW ENFORCERS — Three experts oh crime and punishment get together during a forum Saturday at Oakland University. They are (from left), Pontiac Police Chief William K. Hanger, Michigan Supreme Court Justice Theodore Souris, and Oakland County Prosecutor S. Jerome Bronson. The conference was sponsored )>y the Oakland (bounty Citizens League. I ly endorsed at the six-hour conference was made by Rt. Rev. Clement H. Kern, pastor of Holy Trinity Church, Detroit. MORE MEETINGS He proposed that similar con-Iference be held in areas where the crime rate is highest. In Pontiac, for example, he said, panelists c o u I d discuss the problem with leaders in the Negro community. Pontiac Police Chief William K. Hanger said that arrangements are now being made for a program, where police officers could meet informally .with Negro leaders so they can get to know each other on a “first-name basis." * * * Winnie said that he will attempt to have the Oakland Citizens League arranged for conferences in other areas throughout the county to discuss the crime problem. CONSOLIDATION During his talk on recent cour decisions and their effect on law enforcement. Justice Souris proposed that officials give eration to cbnsolidating police department in the metro|^litan area to combat crime. ★ ★ ★ . I “Would it not be possible to achieve better police protection at a lower cost if police tions were based on a countywide structure or, better yet, on a metropolitanwide structure which would transcend county lines. ' ‘They had tried to get reservations on the Yarmouth Castle, but the shipping line said it Was booked up for three Weeks,’ said Doreen. “Dad just kept calling and calling the shipping company. He’s like that. He doesn’t give . up.” I Franc, 43, is district manager] for a bottling company. He was attending the national convention of the American Bottlers of Canned Beverages at Miami, Fla., last week. * * ★ Four other Oakland County persons were among those res-1 cued from the stricken ship. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence C. Peterson of 24935 Lakeland, Farmington Township, were not listed among those missing and are apparently safe. Mrs. Bernard M. Schimmel of 73 Amherst, Pleasant Ridge, and Edna M. Newman of 3180 Merrill, Royal Oak, re- I ported to relatives that they | escaped without injury.^ A Highland Park couple, hon-j eymooning aboard the Bahama < Star, which picked up survivors,] witnessed the tragedy. | “It was a terrible thing to see the flames everywhere,” said Mrs. John Gallagher. She talked] with relatives in the Detroit suburb Saturday. “We saw people trying to get into lifeboats that were already burning.” Mrs. Gallagher, the former] Judy Garver, was accompanied^ by her husband, a collections| supervisor at Highland Park Hospital. The U.S. Coast Guard sent two officers to Nasau, Bahamas, to see if they could learn what caused the holocaust aboard the vessel that left Miami Friday night for Nassau with 376 passengers and a crew of 174. The Coast Guard investigators aleo ae interested in learning what steps were taken to fight the fire and preserve life. Only four of her lifeboats were launched and some passengers complained of inadequate safety measures. The Bahamas government also was considering probing the fate of the white-hulled steamer that had brought thousands of vacationers to the picturesque island capital. It was to Nassau that rescue vessels brought survivors, some (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) School District Vote in Farmington Today In a special election today, Farmington School District will decide three ballot prop-posales: a $6.I-million building program and two millage propositions! One of the operating fund requests is for renewal of a three-mill levy due to expire next year and the other is for a new four-mill levy. Both would be in effect for 10 years. 49 Persons Were Disappointed . . . “50 calls from our Want Ad overwhelmed us. It was a quick sale," says Mrs. G.M. RED AND BLACK $00 WOOL hunllng^tult, ItrBt. *«C. ConOI- PRESS WANT ADS are read by many thousands every day—no wonder they produce. Dial 332^181 for action Helped by 652s in Battle With N. Viets outbviet Nam (AP) BS2 bomb hours of at times savage pounded rear positions of a fighting. North Vietnamese regiment to- * * * day as two American infantry At least 129 enemy bodies battalions continued to slug itiwere counted and as many as out with the Communist enemy 150 more were believed to litter in heavy fighting near the Cam- the battlefield in front of the bodian border. American iines. * * * American casualties Two battaUons of 1st Cavalry, termed moderate, but it Airmobile Division’s 7th Regi- quired more than a dozen heli-ment--the original outfit fol-; copters to take out the Ameri-lowed Gen. George Custer into can wounded. Most of the dead the Battle of the Little Big Horn sm] jn the battle zone. It —held their own through 36 ^ras too dangerous for helicopters to fly except on urgent missions. MAIN ELEMENT The American troops captured from 60 to 7 Oautor weapons of every kind during three major assaults by members of the North Vietnamese 304th Division which infiltrated into South Viet Nam earlier this year. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1.5, 1965 NEVER LOST HOPE-Swedish engineer Kjeil Nilsson waves after he was rescued yesterday from a flooded tunnel below the streets in Stockholm where he and another worker had been trapped for five days after Suspend Prof for Hypnosis (Continued From Page One) dents, including Cynthia, asked him to continue. -Thg B52s hammered at an Griffin said he met Cynthia area of the more than two] in the parking lot near the square miles where a main ele-college Friday evening and ment of the North Vietnames] placed her in a trance while force was believed located. The they sat in a car. American Cavalrymen pulled] «n. ^ . 1 before the air attack. When Griffin tried to waken w * w her, “she did not respond at . .. „ i all." he said. “So 1 went ,,.*" actmn. North, through the technique from the Vietnamese gunners bitted one beginning. When she didn’t re- f^k^" killed zhen the plane exploded i AP Photofax a landslide last Tuesday. Both men appeared in good conditioh but were rushed to a hospital for a checkup. Nilsson said, “We never lost hope.’’ I Hospital I Land Sale Is Opposed Swedes, Canadian Saved in Underground Rescues Birmingham Area News Start Open Occupancy Drive j Telegraph. ^ Dr. Martin based his objec-^jtion on the possibility that the “ITelegraph frontage will be required in the hospital’s future] expansion plans. Donald W. Martin, med- spond I got panicky iRuiiiLRu iiiR uiiiK ""jgjgjp Hospital, today voiced op- IVIIICU iillCII Ulc picuie CAUIUUCai ... ___, He said he spent several near the oattleground 2()0 miles^®** ®" hours trying to bring her out of north of Saigon in the central . hospital property on the trance and then took her to highlands, his home where he and his wife Most of the U.S. force was] put her to rest on a couch, inside a narrow, heavily wooded] DIDN’T RESPOND valley while North Vietnamese “I thought if I let her sleep 8™“"“ she would come out of it na-intense FIRE Several private developers Vny hou7s m feeY below „ turally, he said. “But she Sniper fire was intense duringi interested !■ 'Stockholm street the lulls between North Viet-j the 2.600 feet of frontagavnorth | The construction workers had^inch by inch. The trapped men^ -........................................................- ■ isang and played cards as they I STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) ]— Two Swedes and a Canadian .jgirl were saved in underground rescues in Sweden and Britain over the weekend, while three Italians fell to their death in a cave. The two Swedes —electrician Soeren Jansson, 26, and engineer Kjeil Nilsson, 30 — were in good condition when they :emereed from a flooded tunnel ,. , , . • • in which they spent more than story over radio and television 'i07 hours 142 feet below a busv:""'^y by powerfu : The Birmingham - Btoomfield Committee on Open Occupancy last night launch^ its campaign for integrated housing in the area. Its initial appeal for mobilization of sympathetic forces was made at an organizational meeting at the Birmingham Unitarian Church, attended by some 250 persons. . Organizers of the group indicated they were pleased at the turnout. Their aim is twofold, they said; to form a committee which will meet with local realtors and to enlist persons who will “appeal to the conscience” of their neighbors. Members reported there now are about 20 Neg^o families actively seeking homes in the Bloomfield Hills area, none having any luck. RANGING RESULTS They said that at least eight Negro families have moved into homes here, with results ranging from cintinual harassment to warm welcomes. Mrs. Robert Grove, 19481 Beverly, Beverly Hills, is one of the committee members who have been working on the problem through the Birming-ham-Bloomfield Human Relations Council. “You hear talk of how realtor,- discriminate, but you don' been trapped by water and mud really know until you’ve seen last Tuesday, but “we never lost someone turned down in front oft hope,’’Nillson told newsmen, jyou,” she said. | Rescue workers drilled a hole She listed several techniques to them and used it to send food used in the “ring - around - the-and communicate. The first rosy game” between Negroes note from the men said; “Ev-and real estate salesmen, erything all right but send us some grub.” FROGMEN HELP While the nation followed the Heading the list is the sales person’s telling the Negro that the price of the house is much higher than it really is, she said. “One was told there were no more lots in the subdivision when there were,” she related. Others have been told a house is temporarily off tiu;.. market or that a home ownef has decided not to sell. “People have requested that their homes be sold on the open market and the realtors have flatly refused,” Mrs. Grove said. ★ w ★ It was noted that the real estate firms do not want to be pioneers at the risk of losing their businesses. ORGANIZERS Committee members, therefore, said they would attempt to get the realtors to act in unison. w ★ ★ All of those who organized the group are residents of Birmingham, Bloomfield Hills, Beverly Hills or Bloomfield Township. “There are all sorts of rationalizations about why there really isn’t a problem here,” Stanley Ovshinsky, 2700 Squinel, Bloomfield Township, said. “But the Negroes aren’t going to move in here by themselves.” Ovshinsky referred to the ‘fear in this community.” “What we should be afraid of is becoming part of the apathetic throng,” he said. “All of us have permitted ourseives to become party to immoral, unethical and illegal actions.” NOT VERBIAGE’ Ovshinsky said the group should seek a “verifiable program of change and not verbiage.” “We should end up with a mobilizing process that won’t stop,” he said. Birmingham City Commissioner Carl F. Ingraham said he saw nothing wrong with formation of a committee but that he felt a more effective way of handling the problem would be through specific cases taken to the State Civil Rights Commission. ★ w w Others urged the group to enlist the support of the ’‘white power structure” before going to realtors. One of the organizers commented that “a small and practical list of demands” would be prepared for the initial meeting with realtors. didn’t.” High Court Will Rule on Sheppard Cynthia was then Uken to attacks^ American j Elizabeth Uke and Oak- _ the hospiUl. casualties mounted by the hour. county has acquired leg- waited. Using a microphone TV K "^^ree North V^namese bat- b ^ lowered to them, Jansson spoke WASHINGTON (UPl) - The .^1, ^'laUons-about 2,000 men-were t^is to C.* J^/ C to his wife and Nilsson to his Supreme Court agreed today to 1^1061: U. O. girlfriend. review the 1954 conviction of to Blame •M to rawabn OMito Iv iJ^ m Onlrr; 7m Il««lne« •*" , . * Rnnt l?r/irl I P''* *'»"»'• B»tand. wdSS! ^ mldmoming. 'was lifted in for an assault. An- * * * » we^^ oi uayion ordered * ♦ * other bettalion was thrown into An 80-bed children’s center al- ^na Carr^^ “It was just one of those rare the battle today. ready is planned for the hospi- J'*"” ^ ?" ‘*“'3' *5; things” said Griffin “1 don’t One battalion commander, Lt.tal complex and a strong pos-, HAVANA. Cuba (AP) — saturdav nieht while exDlorine'rnnrf think anybody is more upsetiCol. Hal Moore of Bardstown, sibility exists that this wjU be Prime Minister Fidel Castro has]^ ^ ® *" San LTn^eruse h^norat Ky .^^s^^ “We re ex^t.ng|«larged later Dr. Martin said. blam^ 2o‘S™^^ ord rThS bS to a party or for sensational pur-anything tomght. We definitely MENTAL HEALTH CENTER 'hit-and-run attack by two boats weather,;]^’ poses. I’m a scientist.” hurt them today. But if you go^ ^ community mental health " residential of fhe carrying the semiconscious stu- -------------. minute around eenter on the hospital site is in waterfront. One NO CHARGES ) sleep for one r " dent more than a mile strappeci Meantime the 41 . year - old poses.' here, you lose men.” preliminary p 1 a n n i n g to a stretcher. They sloogedi ha* been free on bond. Mster police question^ Grif- a a a , stages according ta Dr. Mar hega" a'through water and mud in! “'>'7*Ihe Cleveland sub- fin at length but did not prefer One American company tookijin® ® sea lift of refugees from Matan-i winding passageways’ “’’h ®I *^hy River with his charges. very heavy casualties when it] zas, Cuba. The chartered excur-'hack to the ng attack early Sunday. Cuban|and reasonably cheerful,” saidLgpgrs accessible land on the hospital exile sources in Miami said itiDr. Hugh Kidd, who led the res- ’ a a a site. was the work of RECE, the Cu- cue operation and attended her.' ^hg ^ * * * ban Representation in Exile,; a a a he committed the crime He told Last Friday, the Foundation and that the two boats returned! Near Trieste, three amateur |jgg jj perpetrated bv a ■ for Mentally 111 Children Inc. safely to their base “somewhere cave explorers fell 150 feet to^“bushy-haired intrader ” with' of Southfield, a countywide or- in^e Caribbean.” their deaths while climbing out grappled in his home' ganization, went on record as The Communist paper Gran-.of a grotto. jgjjgp j,g . opposing sale of any of the nia said Rosa Reyes Almaguer Police said Virgilio Erlisti, 28,] {f,g ^ Telegraph frontage. was hit in the left foot by a 50- Bruno Boschi, 23, and Valentino; jury oMwicted SheonarH of The group’s basis of objection caliber machine gun bulletiBrangle, 23, were thrown offiggpoLf^j^ . was essentially the same as Dr. while she was asleep in her balance and fell when one side] The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY-Occasional light rain will follow this morning’s cloudiness. Warmer today and tonight. High today 42 to 48. Low tonight 35 to 40. Tomorrow cloudy and warmer with chance of light rain. High 46 to 52. South winds increasing to 10 to 20 miles this afternoon and tonight. Wednesday outlook, colder with snow flurries. 'Martin’s. apartment building. No other of their rope ladder apparently, casualties were reported, came apart. I sentenced to life imprisonment. His petition to the Supreme D*wnt»wr> Ttmp«rftturtt 0 24 J«ch»onvilli INTENDED TARGET Castro, in a nationally televised speech, said gunfire from one of the boats was intended to] hit the waterfront residence of President Osvaldo Dorticos but] hit the nearby National Aquarium instead. The paper said Dor-(Ckmtinued From Page One) iticos was at home at the time. Ship Disaster Probe Starts On* Year Aga In aaiMiac Romney to Tell ofS, Viet Trip ^ blanket-wrapped and bandaged. arms, Castro said; ^Continued From Page One) e”?"’ « Saturday after breaking off a years...it showed u 2 vigil 60 miles at sea for other stupidities except the economical principles which ' _ .... fKzZ 0nV/Ot*nm£knf lTa«a6MtoJ 40 30 Phoanix 41 33 Pitltburg 40 3* Salt LaXi NA'nONAL WEATHER - Rain is forecast tonight for an area extending from California into the Great Basin Snow flurries are expected over the northern Plains and plateau region into the Great Lakes region. Mild temperatures will extend from the southern Plains eastward to the south Atlantic states with little change in temperature elsewhere L . ' s - -f." “ survivors. Daylight showed only government of the United S « empty boats and debris. States whom can we blame ex- M '♦ AAA oopl Ibe CIA which has spon- •S,‘j ‘ Negative sightings, ” a Coast Guard cutter reported finally on ^Samst this country ^ Castro said that a few PRESUMED LOST minutes before the attack near g all Die missing persons are Dorticos’ residence, the other presumed lost - drowned, boat strafed Malecon Drive burned or trapfied on the ship near the downtown area, firing when she went down, ” said Lt. briefly into apartment buildings William Wilson, Coast Guard, behind Maceo Park, search and rescue coordinator Granma said the attackers in Miami used 20mm cannon and a auto- Tbe steamer Yarmouth sis- “* 50ands flash across th« screen. For sonoe of them the waiting Some of the husbands were stUl is over. The husbands they wait- sUve, some were dead. Three ed for wiil never come back Imd been killed in the preceding from the fighting in Viet Nam. four days. They have died in action with About 8,000 (rf the U.S. troops the lOlst Airborne Division, committed in Southeast Asia whose home base is Ft. Camp- have been dispatched from this hell. sprawling base on the Tennes- ★ * ★ sec-Kentucky border since July. For others the waiting goes w * ★ on. They meet over coffee from Many of the wives remained time to time to help keep up here b^use this is home to the each other’s morale. career soldiers and their fami- At a recent meeting, movies lies. Many own homes off the of the lOlst Airborne in action, base of the “Screaming Ea-pieced together from television gles,” as the division calls it-film and newsreels, were shown self. That’s one reason why to The Wives Who Wait. Iciarkoville, Tenn., the nearest large TsBpaMei city, appears frMMMIy in the casualty lisu. m mutual interes fonaed by the wives has done much to help them face the sometimes tragic problems that result from war. “These are things we have to talk about because we know it’slHer a rul war, even though we’re sitting in a nice room in pretty says Joan Rawls. Mrs. Rawls no longer waits. “ - (jgpl -- Foreign News Commentary Going out for Thanksgiving dinner? Bentafbrd from us. tWRetoJisaeafiiva givo ns a oaR and well tom you out in a Mnalnai, Falcon or Fctd with aU the t»h»miii>gi Wall have it imdy te you to pldi up ulmmm yon aay. PlieaS? Ranaadmlibrlow. (Lass fora Faleon than a Hsaaidar-Usd.orooasaa)I latTa talk toduy. We c you tfaooidit poadble. Resit a FM from os now. and go to tiw test inaliyla. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD, INC. 630 Oakland Avamie FI 5-4101 NEW LOW • 1-YEAR nCTURETUBE PRICE WARRANTY! • 90 DAYS FREE SERVICE! *129“ 121 N. SAQINAW-FE Hill yiwr Appltnuca SptMlUu OPIN MONDAY and PRIDAY MIHTt UNTHIM. Philippines to Keep Same Policies BY PHIL NEWSOM UPIFaraifn News Analyst Tha victory of Senate President Ferdinand E. Marcos in the PhiUppine presided thms wiU mean any i tic dia^i PhiUppine for eign policy. Marc served even befa election should he the would staunchly anticommunist and on the side of the Western camp. Although he was accused by his rival, incumbent President Diosdado Macapagal, of being lukewarm toward friendship with the U. S. and of dragging his feet on the proposed dispatch of Filipino troops to Viet Nam, Marcos has now slated pubUcly that this is not the case. He affirmed agreement with President Johnson’s views that the free world should continue to use its military muacle in Viet Nam without ruling out a poUtical solution there. NATO WITHOUT DE GAUULE: Allied diplomats in London beUeve French withdrawal from NATO is becoming Inevitable. Reluctantly they are readying for this amergency on the firm assumption that NATO can and must go on, aven without France if need be. Plans already advanced in-elide a trauafar of NATO’s ■iUtary sad pMitical head-gaarters firaui Paris to Germany er pM*IUy to Brttata. It is a situation that no one in the aUiance wants but, uy high-Iavel diplomats, de Gaulle etermined to whittle down hit participation in the defense alliance to the point where it will be nonexistent. FRANCE V8. MOROCCtf: Frendi-Moroccan relations, excellent in recent years, could be seriously strained by the re- Prof Will lecture at Long Distance VANCOUVER, B.C. (AP) - A lecturer wUI draw on a blackboard hare 'nieaday, and students at the University of Washington in Seattle, 143 miles away, will watch the drawbigs and listen to the lecture. Victor Doray, director of illustrations in the University of British Columbia Medical Faculty, win speak on plans for a Gommunicationa center at the new UBC bcaltb actonoea II be tfwumit' ance in FrAnce of former Moroccan leftist oppooition loader Mehdi Ben Barks. The FYench are convinced that the whole thing was engineered by the Moroccan interior ministry to prevent a deal by which King Hassan II would permit Ben Barks to return from exile to Morocco President de GauUe is said to be boiling that the kidnaping took place on French territory. Suh suggested it and Yun vetoed it. Even if a new party finally does emerge, it is not given much chance against Park’s powerful, army-backed Conservation Gifts Termed Nuctible WASHINGTON (AP) - Income tax deductions may be made for some contributions designed to help conserve the nation’s natural beauty. Cenunissioner of Internal Revenue Sheldon S. Ckihen emphasized today that to be deductible, the gifts » either land or m(Aey — must go either to governmental agencies or qualUied private organizations. Iti addition to outright gifts of land, Cohen said, deductions are permitted for the value of scenic easements given to federal Rawls, wat raked by machine gun fire and killed as he took hik Charlif Chnq>any, 1st Brigade, 101st Airborne, up a hiil near An Ninh Sept. 18. ♦ ♦ ♦ , Upon the advice of the chaplain, the pert, blonde mother of six continued as a member of the group. | “We don’t have any officers! or dues.” Mrs. Rawls explains. “We just have each other — to help each other.*’ SEVERAL RACES ^ The group includes women of several races, young and oM. SonM of their husbands are privates, others are officers. “Operation Cooklebake” was one way the group found to pass the time. More than 0,SM dozen cookies were baked through the efforts of the wives themselves, area churches, scout troops, civic groups and home demonstration clubs. They were packaged by the wives and sent to Stewart Air Force Base at nearby Smyrna, Tenn., for transport to Viet Nam. a * e “The importance of this mutual bonding system is really seen in critical situations, when someone is killed,” said Capt. Bobby Bell of Meridian, Idaho, a base chaplain. ‘"Iliey’ve gained strength from one another,” said Maj. Gen. Beverley E. Powell, commanding general at Ft. Campbell. “They know they’re not in this thing alone. Suddenly they find they’ve got real friends all over the place.” KOREAN POLITICS: Factional disputes among Korean opposition politicians are delaying formation of a united front against Prasidant Park Chung Hae’a ruling Dwnooratic Repub- t to hm tod by telaphona to a aemlnar at the Unlveriity of Waihington. -------- ------' • An electronic blackboard will transmit his drawings as they are made onto a 10-foot acreen in the Setttle classroom. Sntisl idedogist Suh Min-ho tangled in a dispute over whether te party should subscribe to socialist ideas. QUSTAVF GIFT WRAP HER IN GUSTAVES! Ol«rf«v *1 fL« introduces u cosmetic ‘‘modeling*’ kit: new Face Shaders Face ShaJen is the profeasivnal way yOa can shad«-i» highli|htt...shadow-«Ht facial laws. Uae te^Oark” akade far Mnwtore; te “Light” abade far pare Hai-tary. The pratty tartaise-Hke canpact aKpa iota year purse BO you cm aMdel and iNarvel year face whar-aaor you 10, Poaeh Ligkt and Dark, Pink Light and’ Dark, Teeny Light and Dark. $5.00. RAZLEV L/ CASH MARKF.T i 78 NORTH SAGINAW STREET SPECIAL TUESDAY \ WEDNESDAY Downtown Pontiac Store Only! BONELESS PORK CHOPS 4f.r8|00 jcHiK' BOLOGNA 39u. MUTTON LEG . ROASTS Lean, Ta.ty 29*b. s/l Lean, Tasty MUnON CHOPS 39i i Boys' 3 to 7 SKI PARKA 8*99 Rsvsrsibls, hoedtd, 3 slash packets. CemplatsI/ washoble. Rtd te black, blue to block. ■ Children's ... Second floor Girls' Cotton Twill BENCHWARMER Quilt lined for warmth. Hooded ond saddle stitched In while. Nov/, Burgundy, Ton. S-M-L Girls'... Second floor Boys' Long Sleeve SPORT SHIRTS Reg. 2.99 $2 00 Choose from solids, ptoids and chocks. Wosh and wear for 40s/ coro. Con-vortibla ond butfondown styles. Sizes 6 to 16. 100% cotton. Just Soy Chorga It. Boys* Weor... Second Floor 85% Rayon, 15% Acrylic Belleoir VALMOR BLANKET Large 72x90Jnch blankets -with p x oo Naploc and extra loft for more puff *9' and pila-rasistont. Choose from t >1 Q ^ lovely colors. Charge Yours. , . O W Blonkats^... Fourth Floor m 83A0 im C-2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 13. 1965 'Increase U.S. Rights Agents' Federal Unit Reports on Law in the South WASHINGTON (lipn - Tlie U. S. Civil Rights Commission wants President Johnson to assign more FBI agents and federal marshals to racially tense areas with power to make spot arrests in case of trouble. The recommendation was one of three major proposals included in the commission's 188-page report to the President and Congress on law enforcement in the South. The report was made public during the weekend It would involve a major change of polkrv on the part of the govemmm. Atv present, federal officers are used to curb racial violence only in ■ '“"™' near hiss for house - A sm.ll I plane piloted by James L. Graham, 56, of In addition, the commission Dayton, Ohio, crashed and burned in a New urged that federal courts in' Carlisle. Ohio, front yard yesterday after given power to take over in| cases of racial vi colliding with another plane. Graham was killed. The other plane made a safe landing in a nearby field. 'Heredity Big Factor in Social Ills' Deaths, in Pontiac, Neighboring Areas WASHINGTON (UPI) - A Nobel Prize - winning scientist said today he believes heredity rather than environment may be a major factor in such problems as crime, delinquency and public relief. Dr. William Shockley of Stanford University, a co-winner of the Nobel Prize for physics in 1956, urged an immediate and thorough inquiry into the problem. In a copyrighted interview in “U.S, News & World Report” magazine, Shockley said: ADAM BECKER Service for Adam Becker, 75, of 137 W. New York, wlU be ;30 p.m. Wednesday at the Hun-toon Funeral Home with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Becker died today following a long illness. He was a retired employe of the Fisher Body Division. Surviving are one daughter, Mrs. Warner Irwin of Pontiac, and three sisters. My great worry is adequate research along this line were carried out, we might ■findrthat there is a strong genetic factor at work, and that heredity very much limits the improvement we can expect in such cases.... local prejudice makes trial unlikely in sUte courts. fair The commission also called for enactment of a broad new law, based on Congress’ power to regulate interstate com-! merce, making it a federal i crime to threaten, intimidate, or punish civil rights workers. JURISDICTION Britain Seeks OK Today of Rhodesia legislation Voters Keep Government in Ryukyus “We may find that a dismal possibility turns out to be a fact: Many of the large improvident families with social problems simply have constitutional deficiencies in those parts of the brain which enable a person to plan and carry out plans. ‘And I also suggest that this characteristic, especially if foun GEORGE DICKIE George Dickie, 67, of 932 Boston, Waterford Township, died yesterday. His body is at (he Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. He was retired from the maintenance department of GMG Truck and Coach Division and a member of First Christian Church. Surviving are his stepmother, Mrs. John Dickie of Brantford, Ont.; two daughters, Mrs. Melvin Maurer of Marshfield, Wis., and Mrs. Douglas McCormick of Brantford, Ont.; two sisters; and four grandchildren. WALLACE E. HNNIGAN Service for Wallace E. Finni-gan, infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Finnigan, 158 Green, was to be today at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home, with burial at Mount Hope Cemetery. The 19day-old baby died Friday. Surviving besides his parents resident Burt H. Hobey, 76, Sebewaipg will be 11 tomorrow at the Schultz Euneral Home, Sebewaing, with burial at ' :30 p.m. in White Chapel Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Hobey died Saturday after long illness. A caretaker for Bay Shores Park Association in Sebewaing, he formerly owned service station here for 30 years. Surviving b e s i d e s his wife, Lois A., are a stepdaughter, Mrs. Faye Larrange of Keego Harbor; a sister, two brothers; and a stepgrandchild. in both parents, can be passed sisters, Joyce and Char- from one generation to another. LONDON (API Britain’s I the House of Lords and Patrick! NAHA, Okinawa (UPI) —| Ifie Ryukyuan chief executive Seiho| U^er IRa “ISi ............-......... jral court, could ajMiue jurj^ j diction in cases already tried .i,„ n«.i.h or pending in state courts and incidents which have resulted in no state prosecution. The commission suggested that a three-judge federal matters warrant federal today. Meanwhile, the British gogernor of the rebellious central African colony rejected Rhodesian Prime Minister Ian Smith’s demand that he get out of Government House. The legislation to pave the sanctions against Rhodesia's way for stronger economic white minority government was exlected to be rusted through vote. leader Edward Heath, Reginald "* -/i Maudhng and other members of|“g 19 seals in yesterdays the opposition party’s dominant | election. Federal prosecution would be in order “where the failure of local officials to act, or the nature of their action constitute j Such Conservative diehards a denial of equal protection injas the Marquess of Salisbury in the administration of justice or where it is determined that justice is administered in the community involved in a manner so as to deny equal protection of the Jaws,” the commissjon Veep Too Fast lotte, and four brothers, James, Thomas, Rodney and John, all at home. ALFRED L. HARDING Service for Alfred L. Harding, government’s action so far. . The chief actions take against the Rtodesian regime are a ban on import of Rhodesian tobacco, which usually amounts to about 370 million a year, and various financial strictions. The election assured that 59-yev-old Matsuoka would be reappointed high commissioner when his term expires this month. Despite Sunday’s day-long downpours, 84 per cent of the eligible voters turned out in \A/!iU t74. of 495 Scott LAKE, Water- Wlln Answer? Tiiwnship, wm be hew TGLD TO VACATE after is declaration of independence Thursday relieved Govenor Sir Humphrey Gibbs of his office and told him to va- Rynkyus. Seven unopposed districts were awarded last p.m, tomorrow at Ted C. Sullivan Funeral Home, Detroit. Mrs. Brewer died Saturday after a long illness. She was head of the gifts and rare books division of the Detroit Public Library. ^ Surviving besides her husband is a sister. Contributions can be made to the Friends of the Detroit Library, Inc. MRS. CHARLES D. JENNINGS Service for Mrs. Charles D. (Ida L.) Jennings, 84, of 62 Gladstone, was 1 p.m. today at the Vorhees Siple Funeral Home Home with burial in Ottawa Park Cemetery. Mrs. Jennings died Saturday after alongillness. She is survived by a daughte Mrs. Abel R. Borey of Pontiac, a sister, two granddaughters and eight great-grandchildren. HOLLIS J. LEE Service for former Pontiac resident Hollis J. Lee, 61, of Santa Anna, Calif., will p.m. Thursday at the Harold R. Davis Funeral Home, with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Davis, a retired tool maker at Fish Body Division, diei Saturday after an illness of several months. ■|iy oits EDWARD S. CUMINGS BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -Service for Edward S. Cumings, 71, of 57 S. Berkshire will be 1 p.m. Wednesday at the First Presbyterian Church, Pontiac. Burial will be in Elm Lawn Cemetery, Bay City, by Donel-son-Johns Funeral Home, Pontiac. Mr. Cumings died yesterday after a long illness. He was a retired farmer. Surviving are his wife. Carmen; his mother, Mrs. William Cumings of Flint; a sister, and a brother. SUZANNE HASTINGS" ROCHESTER—Suzanne Hastings, 18-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Norman Hastings, 827 N. Main, died today after a long illness. Her body is at the William R. Potere Funeral Home. MRS. WILLIAM H. SHERWOOD ORION TOWNSHIP -M r s. William H, (Eley) Sherwood, 82, of 1036 McClellan died Saturday, u Her body is at the Groves Fu- He was a past president of i Mrs. Sherwood was a member of the West Flint Church of God. Wednesday at 3 p.m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home, Said Russia, China'with burial at Cresent Hills 'Cemetary, Waterford Township. Traded Border Shots! Mr. Harding died yesterday after a long illness. He was a retired insurance agent and CHICAGO (UPI) — Aides to g member of F & A.M. in Illi-Vice President Hubert Hum- nojg phrey yesterday said Humphrey Surviving besides his wife, did not mean to imply in an pauline, is a daughter, Pauline! interview that Soviets and Red at home, week. Chinese had exchanged gunfire The Socialist Masses and Soc-1 common boundary MRS HOMER HENRY cat7 Governmem House, his'ialist party bloc maintained the!, The controversy stemmed Service for Mrs Homer (Lora Pronram k flffpreH ""*' “pposui™ »uub. r'";!’'’’’”™ I rOyrGin is UllCrcCli in a statement addressed tojing nine districts, with three in- ^tl“‘ck answer. the Rhodesian people gsunday,Jdependents, reflecting varying on Ldnd Use Laws lemnient was illegal and that thef The Communist Okinawa An all -day program featuring (governor was the only “lawfully j Peoples party incumbent, Sane-discussion on Michigan zoning constituted authority in Rho- yoshi Frugen, was reelected to and public control of land useidos'3 ” j4be party’s single seat from is scheduled at 9 a.m. tomor-! * * . * ;Naha City district, row at the Oakland County Co I hold my office at the pte CANDIDATE BARRED the Body Crafters Federal Credit Union. Surviving are his wife Vera; three daughters. Mrs. Jean Warren of Pontiac, Mrs. Edna Schooltz of California, Mrs. Donna Hand of Lake City; two sons. Max of Auburn Heights and Kenneth of California; a brother and 16 grandchildren. KENNETH G. STUART Service for Kenneth G. Stuart, 21, of 58 E. Iroquois will be 11 a.m. Wednesday in Huntoon Funeral Home with burial in Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. N. J. Greer of Flint and Mrs. Vernon Stickler of 0 r i o n Township; a brother; nine grandchildren; and 10 great-grandchildren. MRS. ORA E. SHUMAN WALLED LAKE-Service for Mrs. Ora E. (Maude) Shuman, 89, of 1207 Wabasco will be 2 p.m. Wednesday from the Shoup Funeral Home, Howe, Ind. Bur- Humphrey, who gave t h e inick aoswer, did mM mean o make (bat implicatian, his house Audittorium. Television interviewer I r v Kupcinet, who didn’t get to finish his question, said tlu ' he thought the vice president meant. TWo Communists, Including. William L. Taylor, director of the commission’s staff, said such a law would have permitted federal prosecution of Thomas L. Coleman, who was acquitted at Hayneville, Ala., in the shotgun slaying of Jonathan Daniels, a Keene, N. H., „„uvuic w ...w----- - . « .. u civil righte worker. Igal EducaUon of the University by Her Majesty to do so.” Gibbs onetime >mpeached Naha may- * * * I of Michigan Uw School. Wayne said. ‘ Her Majesty has asked or. were disbarred from can- L^ ^ . preparing The commission took issue i state UrSversity Law School and me to continue in office and !j'd«cy by ‘Je government elec-1 t^«tCh,n^^ w.th the Justice Department’s!the state Bar o?Michigan. therefore jur loya^ t o" ^ an" afea tTtvli “reluctance ” to protect evil. * * * „. I Also Sd we^Mhe Socialist'Union that’s half the size of the rights workers against violence. Two University of Michigan in RhnHp.in “Masses aid N^naLt^artt United States,’’Humphrey saW It disputed the department’s!Law School professors and an'stitited authority in Rhode.sia Masses and Nationalist partyj \ ^ I, , u view that increasing federal i Ann Arbor attorney will conduct Smith made no immediete candidates. All had previous Kupcinet asked; “And is It Waterford Township, will be 2 .m. tomorrow in Sharpe-Goyet-te Funeral Home, Clarkston, with burial in Ottawa Park Cemetery, Independence Township. Mrs. Henry died yesterday following a long illness. She was a member of the First Presbyterian Church. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Ferris Holcomb of Clarks-1 White Chapel Memorial Ceme- ial will be in Wolcottville, Ind , tary. iCemetery. Arrangements were Shuart died unexpectedly Frl-jby the Richardson-Bird Funeral day. He was a member of the Home. Bad Axe Presbyterian Church. Mrs. Shuman died yesterday Surviving are his parents, Mr. ®^ter a long illness- The program is sponsored by ure of Her (^jesty Ibe Qu^ . rri" wl'j:;;; A tape of the show yesterday the InsUtute of ConUnuing Le-and 1 will only resign if asked Party leader Makejlro Senaga, ^ uic iiiauiuic VII v^iiuiiuug onetime imneacheH Naha mav- ™''«aled tnis exchange. “I don’t think Americans know Surviving are three sons, Thurlow of Walled Lake, Thurman of Howe, Ind., and Theron of Phoenix, Ariz.; a brother; five grandchildren; and 10 and Mrs. Gerald Shuart of Pontiac; two brothers, Thomas and William, and a sister, Peggy, all of Pontiac; maternal grandmother, Mrs. Jeanette Reinke of Pontiac and paternal grand- Srcal-grandchildren U'i ■’*"'**' marlvn stboven StaWol BrfAx.. j PONTOC TOWNSHIP-Ser,. GRACE A. RICHERT ice for Mrs. Marlyn (Imogene) BURT H. HOBEY S e r V i c e (or former Pontiac “ protection would raise serious.the program. move to eject Gibbs from Gov-;telony convicUons. _______ mnutitutional Questions ^ Similar programs are sched- erment House butin a state- constitutional quest ^ ^ , tions during Zoning Week in resenting not the queen but thei mn K 070 H |r Radio Figure Dead Michigan. Nov. 15-20 pr f-r,wwv i/iutv IIIU ________.________. me .minister, thus ' ST. LOUIS, Mo. (API — Gil , aiding and abetting him in his' Newsome. 48. nationally known $eismOQraph Records obvious endeavor to create a radio announcer during the division among the people of Kupcinet not true, although not published, that there’s been some firing between the Red Chinese on the border.. Humphrey broke in with 1 Home in Waterford ^ pleted his question ; , . j ^ “Oh, yes, on the border, a fact'*^®y as planned because of a 1940s, died Saturday after a long 'Fairly Strong' Quake Rhodesia.A fire at the home of Anthony,.‘j®® iUness. Newsome was announ- ^ » kfar pirrc im hampfr iOliver, 3720 Chenlot, Waterford, . ' . * cer for the “Chesterfield Supper new YORK - A fairly ‘^^AR GIBBS IN DANGER yesterday caused' s a 1 d e s said the Club” show which featured the strong’’ earthquake 4.400 miles! P''™® ^mister Wilson’s office damages estimated at $5,000, band of the late Glen Miller and from here - probably in north-!said it feared Gibbs is in dangerto Waterford Townshio' ■ ..... - was recorded today from Smith’s government and|fi-eme„ the Bands” show. “Coca-Cola Spotlight em Chile — was recorded today b on the Fordham University seis- that anyone who ordered or car- caused by a “ vice president meant to imply "ithat the Soviets and Red Chinese '' are massing troops on the border ton and Mrs. John Kent of Elk| Graveside service for Grace Stroven, 25, of 3710 Havens Lane Rapids, three grandchildren, I A. Richert, l‘/i-month-olddaugh-| will be 2 p.m. Wednesday at and one great-grandchild. jter of Mr and Mrs Lee c Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Richert, 74 Thorpe, was held UvlPontiac. Burial will be in White - 'day at Oak Hill Cemetery. Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Baby Richert died Friday. jTroy. Surviving besides her parents Mrs. Stroven died Saturday are three brothers and sisters, 'after a short illness. She was a MRK RORRRTV „vNFR«!nN Unit- MRS. ROBERT V. RYNERSON Presbyterian Church. Service for Mrs. ^bert V | surviving besides her husband (Helen C.) Rynerson, M, of M45jare two sons, Jeffrey and Jon, at home; her parents, Mr. a.m. Wednesday inja^j ^rs. Dallas Boyd of Neway-b^»U’ers; and two sis- Burial will be in Oak wood Cem-etery, Monticello, Iowa. She died yesterday following; FRITZ G. WOOTON a lengthy illness. MILFORD-Service for form- Surviving are her husband, a resident Fritz G. Wooton, 75, brother, two sisters and a grandchild. Scheduling Delays Return of Actress HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - Actress Dorothy Malone, 40, did not return to work in the “Peyton Place” television series to- in an area that has been claimed • Michigan Corporation, .OT.CE or MORTGAGE SAVE nograph out his forcible expuls^ by both countries. ohm,., having D«n in th. cKu The Rev Joscph Lynch. direc- commits an act of treason. ^ aide was asked by Unit- oi^^'A^rev* a^ic^i’' toT of the university’s seismic Pew Rhodesians knew of ‘h^one-story frame and brick dwell- ed Press International if the corporation, to GuardianJ^gw observatory, said the first shock:gove^ statennent. Goverr^j^ President then had no was picked up at 6 29 a. m , ment censorship kept it out of, a ★ * ar th. c«in,y 0. EST.. and the second at « 38. Je local ^ and off the^ n„ one was home at the time, or Michigan, in Liber 47^ The distance was certain but Rhodesian redio, I fi„hu.rs list«l damaoe at ,Sa•rrh.r".r^ci^;5Sl^^’o S me direction not, he reported I But the congregation at ving at the date ot ihia notice ^ (bury’s Anglican Cathedral . 'T , nuiwing and ^,000 •,'«S«“SS SUVJi heard Bishop Cecil W. .Aldersool ° .^ .Stays'“5, $50,000 Fire Destroys Pege NInefy-elohl > debt Mcured I Now, Iherelore, by vl pendence was wrong and illegal. ^ Indian Lake Restaurant He said Christians should diso-. . hey laws enacted by Smith’s; puraoent "to**lhe"iJetuie*ot the State o« DOWAGIAC (UPII — Timber- regime to “subvert the spirit of f"" resUurant and lounge the displaced constitution.” wedn^Bday. the jnd day of Fe^wy.jwas destroyed by fire early to- which Sm th threw out after his T?m?, u^d^mortow will be day at Indian Laak6, cairsing declaration of independence. ^ t^*'wgr«Br''bidd‘er* eV {h?"wir‘eiKe’ t^ damage estimated at about $50.- the County Building, In the City of Pon- QOO. I oehiend County, Michigen Oh.. departments from in- GrOUDS at OCC dian Lake and Sister Lakes bat-at.» m.y be I^easery tied the flames but Were un-ith‘'wirMi*J?'thJ'prin"'able to prevent destruction of “■ the building The origin of the; fire was not immediately dc-^‘pew termined lkeya-5eki Comet Splits Into 2 Parts k n 0 w I e d g e of any ^ across the Slno-Sovlet border. “The vice president didn’t comment on that,” the aide said.! “Such a question falls in areas! which may or may not be for' public consumption. ” j that I wouldn’t be going back to work until Friday, but with the rainy weather. I’m just as happy now,” she said. Miss Malone, who won an Academy Award as the best sup-(porting actress for her performance in “Written on the Wind” in 1956, underwent 10 hours of surgery last Sept. 24 to remove blood clots from her lungs. She said she now is feeling well. Public Health Figure Planning to Retire Kupcinet, a newspaper columnist and moderator of the television show which was taped Saturday for viewing yesterday, said yesterday he felt Humphrey understood the question. He said he had not restated or rephrased the question because he felt Humphrey had replied to the question, which Kupcinet said was prompted by repeated rumors of trouble on the Slno-Soviet border. Ex-Commander Dies tfwSir OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) Allen Philip Calvert, 64. a tired rear ^tniral whose record ^ chosen on *•"<>» ’ during World War II won him ‘he basis of the greatest amount t. .52 disUnctkm, died Saturday At coHectedby a spon- lone time, he commanded the soring organization during the flotilla of’ PT-boats in the Solo- drive which ends Friday, imon Islands in which John F., * * * js'tw'Kennedy served as an officer.! A total of eight candidates **"'Calvert’s work on the staff of seek the title jGen. Douglas MacArthiir during The queen will be crowned at the battle for Guadalcanal won the “Oakland a-G»Go” dance TOKYO (iP - The Ikeya-Seki ^ comet has split into two parts, Lounch Q t/n/feO **’® Tokyo Astronomical Observatory reported today. Fund Camoaian Apparently the comet split aft-Itpu y ler its close approach to the sun ' recently, but the observatory did| Clubs and student organiza-|not say this. 1 ---------------- tions at Oakland Community Co! A spokesman said the cometl Student Sticker Sale lege launched a United Fund was photographed Saturday at| _lDrive today which will result Jn reJthe selection of a campus queen. MRS. GEORGE E. F. BREWER NOVI — Requiem Mass for Mrs. George E. F. (Frances J.) Brewer, 42, of 28610 Meadow-brook will be 10 a.m. Wednesday at Precious Blood Church, Detroit. Burial will be in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery, Southfield. Rosary will be recited at 8 Sarasota, Fla., will be 1 p.m. Wednesday at Rlchardson-Bird Funeral Home. Burial will be in Oakgrove Cemetery. Mr. Wooton Died Saturday. .Surviving arc two daughters, Mrs. Norwood Caswell of Milford and Mrs. Thomas Barthel of Greenville; two sons, William of Milford and Jack of Sarasota, Fla.; 19 grandchildren; and eight great-grandchildren. Csrl Oy. %n WASHINGTON (UPI) Callis H. Atkins, assistant surgeon general and chief engineer of the U.S. Public Health Service, is retiring from the service, effective Jan. 16, it was announced today. Atkins, who has been chief engineer since 1962, will become director of the division of environmental health for the World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland. He will be succeded in the Public Health .Service by Albert H. Stevenson, currently sanitary engineer director in the service’s Indian Health services division. - 3i. ^ohm apiiki^u B7«iiuiudy mii the Kodaira Observatory sutiod fo Back 'Bovi in Vief School Suptrintendent 90 miles north of Tokyo and the ; I split was discovered. The comet,I SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (AP) -1 to Talk in Walled Lake found by two Japanese amateur. Students at Evangel College will astronomers, is now some TOlbegln distributing automobile| COMMERCE TOWNSHIP — million miles away from the sonibumper stickers Tuesday which(Tbe relationship of home and the observatory added. .read; “We back our bio's in Vlet'*®bool in the education of a ________________ jNam.” (youngster will be discussed by Dare to be wise, begin. He! John Shows, president of thejWalled ^ke Schools Supt. There Are Definite Professional Requirements . . . The Funeral Director and Embalmer must pass rigid examinations and be licensed to practice. Apprenticeship and a college education are required. Thus experience es well as professiwt-al knowledge ere e pert ot training. Our profession is firmly established on definite standards, serving the public well. federal 4*4511 l?a^kinq On Our m»ane|him the Distinguished Service I Saturday night sponsored by (he! jT 1*?!!! Medal ............. " ■ I Student Activities Board who postpones the hour of liv-i 600-member student body, saidK^eorge Carver at Glengary El-ing rightly is like the rustic who'the students will sell the Stlck-I®"’*'’^**’)' School tonight, waits for the river to run outlerg and the proceeds will go tol Carver will speak at the 8| before he crosses. - Horace, support orphans in South Vlet p.m. meeting of the ichool'sj poet of ancient Rome. |Nam IPTA. I J)omLson-, ioL ns 858 WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. NOVEMBER 13. 19H> DeJSSWW Negro Businessmen " Bifiifes^and Finance iiliii MARKETS The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown I produce by growers and sold by ' them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Wednesday. Produce PRUITt Apples, Delicious, Golden, bu. Apples, Delicious, Red, bu. . Apples, Mecintosh, eerly, bu. Apples, Northern Spy, bu. Apples, cider, 4-gel. case , Peart, bosc, bu.......... VSGITARLII Cabbege Sprouts, bv. Cabbage, Std., bu. . Carrots, cello pak Carrots, topped, bu. Cauliflower, dr Celery, Root, d/. Horseradish, pk. bskt. Kohlrabi, dz. bchs. . ,1 eeks, dz. bchs..... Onions, dry, 50-lb. ba , Dellclout, bu. . Cabbage, I Collard, bi End of Line for Sanford Brown New Treasury Dept. Created LANSING (AP)-Gov. George Romney signaled the end of Sjmford Brown’s career as ; treasurer today by signing the executive order creating the State Treasury Department. It marked the beginning of a new career for acting Aud. Gen. and former House Speaker Allison Green. Romney announced several months ago Green would head the State Treasury Department. Brown, a Democrat who has held the treasurer’s post since 1954, has been mentioned as a possible director of the State Labor Department. Romney said he had not talked to Brown. Asked whe- ther he was considering Brown for another job, he said, “I haven’t stoppeid considering it.” IITH DEPARTMENT The Treasury Department, which becomes effective Nov. 28. is the 11th of the 19 established by the Executive Reorganization Act of 1965. The new department, Romney said, is essentially a combination of part of the Auditor General Dtpartment, the Treasury Department, the Department of Revenue, the Corporation Franchise Fee Appeal Board, the Municipal Finance Commission and the State Board of Tax Appeals. The department will employ some 940 workers. Brown had been on borrowed time since Jan. 1, when his statutory term as elected treasurer expired. But Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley ruled he was entitled to continue on the job until the new department, with an appointed head, was established bv the legislature. DEFENDS VETO In a news conference Romney defended Lt. Gov. William Milliken’s veto of three money bills during Romney’s trip to the orient. “This was sound action— particularly in light of the state’s financial picture,” he said. DETROIT (AP) - Wayne County sheriff’s detectives said they would seek a warrant today charging a youth with threatening a woman suburban Nankin Township parking lot. The arrest was made Sun- The New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK (AP)-FollOwli., .. _ . of selected stock transactions on the New ---- Slock Exchange with 10:30 prices: —A— Sales Ntl (lids.) High Law Last Chg. I Lab I 21 41'x 41’/» 4IVi -I- t* 5 24'/k 24’^ ACF Ind I GenMot 5.25g Gen Free 1.20 GPubSvc .5lg ‘ PubUt 1.40 -Tal El 1.12 GenTIre M I 14^4 1 I 14^ Lettuce, Leal, bu. 2 00!Alleg Cp .20e 3 I solAwlegh Lud 2 It ’■'“lAme"dC*IMb 47 l ?5 Allied Sirs 3 2 2;MjAlllsChal .75 155 Poultry and Eggs heavy type 24-25; broilers and Iryer: lbs. Whites 1t-20. ^ DITRQIT lOOS DETROIT (API—Egg prices paid dozen by first receivers (Including U Whiles Grade A lumbos 42-47; i large 41-44; large 4r " —--------- ’ smalls 25J0; Brown. 41; mediums 34-34''i; AmAirlln 1.25 S5H 85. 151% 32’ i 32'/4 32'.4 -I- .. r>H 2»1« 2»1% - 22 494% 691/4 6914 -I- 13 73»% 73Vj ............ 67 1071% 107 )07'/4 + 21 371/4 371% 3714 -t- 2 4’/s 6’/t 61/s -t- 6 36'/4 3614 36>/4 37 441% 441% 461% -F I 37'/4 37'/% 37'/% - Reyn Tob 2 RheemM 1.20 RIchlOII 1.80 Rohr Corp 1 RoyCCola .52 RoyDut 1.85g RyderSy .60g Granites 1.40 GtABP 1.20t Gt Nor Ry 3 'rt West Finl JtWSug 1.40a Grayhnd .90 14 351% 35 35'/4 1 57'/i 57',% 57'/% 9 11'/4 ll'/i 11’% 6 41'% 41'% 41'% 15 22'/4 22V% 22'/4 .. 43 4214 411/4 4214 -H'% 15 5914 5914 --------- " 5 284% 281% —H— SL SanF 1.50 ' leoP 1.40b __1 D Imper Schenley la Sphering 1.80 -:hlck I /- :MCorp .881 278 50' IS Grade A large 39. AHome 1.80a .. Motors .50 'AmNGas 1 70 ’.2T? 3 561. 561. 56><. -f 1 10 87'/% 87'% 87'% -H 11 44'% 44'/. 44'% - 1 16 38'/4 38'4 38'/4 - 1 - --'i 18’% 18'% - 1 CHICAGO EGGS, BUTTER CHICAGO (AP) - Chicago Mer Exchange — Butter steady; buying prices unchanged; 93 62'); 92 A 42’/); 90 B 6I'%I r*ri 40 B 42'x; 89 C 62 llrm: wholesale buying | higher; 70 per cent or A Whites 41; mixed 41; n Ktards 36; dimes unquoted; CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO (AP)-(USOA)— Live poul- T;i.tars!ti4;'t2uris?,tSJ^ fryers t81%-19'%; heetw hens lt‘18'%; Mw young hen turkeys 27. lAmZinc 1.41 10 I8V4 18)^ 044 44*4 8 40H 40*^4 i 50>4i 50 HewPack .20 _ - Hoff Electron 13 1SH HollySug 1.10 Homeitk 1.40 iMCenInd 2 4( ln?o?NoAm : InterlkSt 1.6C IntBusAAch 4 12 41^ 30 37’/l 27V* 37H + 13 15H 15’i 15Vi + 24 24 V, 2?V, W/9 1 38^/» .. X3 4V/» 4V/% 47T/. .. 8 1A^/7 74Vi 74‘/i + 25 -I- '% 75 -Hiii I 36V. -H' Nankin Youth Jailed in Threat Not in Connection With Assault Coses Rather, I do want to empha-;profession.s serving only the Ne-size that — while it may be em-;gro community — teachers, barrassing to view our own im-1 ministers, etc. age in the mirror of change — ^ A concrete example of the we should look critically at our- effect of desegregation on Negro selves and be instructed by professionals is the dismissal of what we sec” some Negro teachers after a Brimmer said Negro busi-| community’s schools have been nessmen who have been most;integrated. Brimmer said this successful provide services trend has been reported in Tex- which. because of segregation, as. North Carolina. Georgia. . , . are not readily available to the Virginia, Florida and Oklaho- because it comes from Dr. An-1Negro consumer in the commu- ma. drew F Brimmer, a Negro and 33 3 ^hole. Examples are * * ♦ Negro-owncd restaurants, bar-i For the Negro businessman. Commerce Department. ^er shops, hotels and mor- Brimmer recUmends joint Dr Brimmer, whose title is t„3rjes. ventures with white-dominated assi tant secretary for econom- * * * corporations. The Commerce day. but detectives emphasized Negro businessmen Brimmer Department has developed a that the youth was not involved mermav have to L list of companies which I assaults on I!1T «ay in those fields where Negro are willing to grant franchises By ADREN COOPER WASHINGTON (AP) - Segregation has provided a “protective tariff” beneficial to most i Negro professionals and businessmen, and the process of desegregation "is already affecting adversely some of the key segments of the Negro middle class.” This statement is surprising in a string of seven assaults on onf. pomnptp for husinpss . - women which have left t h e S Z white S free aceijss tii for sale of their products with- . .. ___looui me wniie ana nonwniie . m.i p*B — denartment nni rconi-ri i,> community in panic for the past communities month. retail outlets — department out regard to race order^ to sur-3j3^gg |^3^j^gpg fy^3j3|^j3g3 j The Small Business Adminis-i Negro-owned tralion has made numerous Obvipusly-I ambynomeansL^jg jggg manufacturing, loans to Negroes under i 00PstinfT thflf thp nrnr*pcc nf . . . i ^ . ^Th6sc kids h3vc b66n lYisk^icnoapstin? thst thp Droces^i of' ■ t *1 businessmen with very limited phone as a joke,” explained ajfecti on^ The ^Negro middle'f'ARED BETTER jcapital. detective. “It’s hurting our in-jdass ” Brimmer said in a re-1 The statistics showed that Ne-|SUCCESSFUL BANK vestigation and causing great:cent speech, groes fared far better in the As an example of a successful harm to women already in a-state of fear. J “We finally caught one of them and we plan to make an I McNaiVara Blamed example of him.” | ________________________________ NAME NOT GIVEN | The detective declined to __ name the youth pending a con- 33 32n 33 + ’)iference with the Wayne County 44’4 46il 461* - u prosccutor’s office today. They 35’) 35’J 35'% + ;)isaid he was arrested in a super'll i^gl*y threa^tMed*”a wo™^ ' Sro middle class who, if they prank. '' Shell Oil 1.70 Sinclair 2.20 SIngtrCo 2.20 SmIthK 1.60a Socony 2.10a SoPRSug 1g SouCalE 1.25 SouttmCo 1.92 SouNGas 1.20 SouthPac 1.50 South Ry 2.80 Squared 1.60 4J 3.150 . _ I Ohio 2 St Packaging StanWar 1.50 ^ Meanwhile, detectives contin-!®^ having said Secretary of De-'• ued to check out more than 260| fense Robert S. McNamara A tips received since a series of twice opposed proposals by 1 62** 411? 611? + 1?; three attacks within two days I 74'% 74'% 74'% - week. Officers said 150 per-I 201? »'/? 20% + 1%h®"® checked but no ' % +, arrests made. ) ^ ^ The knife-wielding attacker, “?? _ i jdescribed as a giggling blond joint venture. Brimmer cited the Freedom National Bank of Harlem, which was organized jby Negroes and whites and has seven Negroes on its 10-man board of directors. The Negro’ middle class must spearhead the drive for economic and social development, Brimmer said I ★ ★ ★ WASHINGTON liP) - The lathed that this attempt be post-| "it is the members of this Nc-Jnited Nations Ambassador Ad-i poned until after the presiden-|gro middle class who, if they lai Stevenson was quoted todayltial election. When the election; would only assume the burden, 'Viel Truce Nixed-Adlai' I 539 539 539 I 40'/4 40 40 . ! 631% 63>% 631% -- 1% StudebAker Sun Oil Ih Sunray 1,4 Livestock DITROIT LIVltTOCK DETROIT (AP)-(USOA)- Ca,... - choict 900-1100 lb. staars 25.25 - 37.00t E Oood steers 22.75-24.75. [ Hogi 200; U S, I & 7 200-300 lb. barrel j and gllli 24.75-25.25; 1, 2 8. 3 %o»*t under j 400 lb». 20.75-22.00 ^ | vealerj 75; choice 31-36; go«) JMI.I Sheep 500; loed choice end prlw clipped lemb* No. I pelH 104 lbs. 25.40;’ couple loedj choice 90-105 lb. No. 2 pelts { 23 50-24.50; cull to good sleughter ewes j 5 8 00. |j CHICAGO LIVE8TOCK K CHICAGO (API-IUSDAI- Hoos 7,1 1 2 190-225 lb butchers 25.25 25 50; ml Azchlson 1.60 All Rc« 2.60 aIISTcwS J8 Avon Rrod 1 BabcokW MO 1$ zSJ 261% 2416 + 1% mLooen . ly Mfg 2 , g‘i«r 5 661% 689% 7 73'% 73'% —K— 17 36 36 17 3716 37V4 6 124'/e 1241% Texasintim I TexPLd .3Sg i Bullard .■50-i2.00; >'”7,000; nine loads prime 1,225-1 Burroughs 1 ), sleughter steers 28,00-28.25; nu- to 27'-) 27'% 27'% -f Sd wool^%l s 2500-i American Stocks NOON AMIRICAN NEW YORK (AP) — Following I: list of selected slock Irensectlons on American Stock Exchange with n jCen Dry Ches Oh 4 ChiMII SIP ChPneu 1.61 ChRIPec .2 ChrlsCrft .( Chrysler 2 ClllesSvc 1'. CItvEIIII I. CoceCola I. C0I9 P CnlllnR Creole P 2.6 Dale Coni Equity Cp .1 Fargo Oils Meckay Air McCrorv wt Mead John .48 Molybden New Pk Mng Pancst Pet RIC Group Scurry Rein Signal OIIA 1 Sbd W Air Sparry R wl Syntax Cp 50g Technicol .75 ■ n control 20 8 13-16 8 13-I6 + 1-16 '/) l4'/i 14': ■-'/) 6 3.)4 4' ; ) 2%% 21% . I 8',) 8'% I 24'/s 25 + CopyrWIed b? Thi Astoclated Press 1945 Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AP)—The cash position ot the Treasury compared “-"h '■nrr.-spoodTng d.|e^^.,y..;j.«o 4,311,041,218 18 8 5,086,4)9,825,52 °*'”*'%».Tr5%7’'‘''X5.»’7-3, '”'’“'**49"S34fe,5"4S*" "•^*'",?8!«7T4524,5.28 sublict to sttfulory III " 73,387,8401 '46,369,970,831.1 116,308,991,924.; 5 51’/4 51'% 5114 - ' 2 17'% 17'/% 17'% 9 22'% 22 22'% -I- eer sie|) M .ehman 1.92g OFGIs 2.804 .IbbMcN .551 .IggettSiM 5 :!rin"??2t .IvMigsO ,43t .ockhdAlrc 2 .otws Theat .oneSCcm I .oneSGa M2 iorfflard 2.50 MacyRH 1.40 MadFd 1.85g MagmaC 2.60 ) 20 20'% -I- 1% I 441% 44'% irquar .Ua ...jrtinMar 1 MayDStr 1.30 McD^ ,60b "att 1.70 dCp 1.70 .....ek la MGM 1.50 Mid $Ut 1.26 MlnarChem 1 iMM 1.10 Kan Tax ’ 28'% 2>'% : ) 461% 46'% 4 6 361% 361t 361% - ' 25 54’% 54'% 54'-t - 38 41'% 41 41'/4 - ! 65 43'% 43'6 43'% .. 8 34'% 36'% 36'% -F,' 4 73’% 73’% 73’% -F ' 7 58'% 381% 381% - ' 22 421% 42 421% -F ' ) 72'% 72'% 72Vj - 1% I 43V4 431% 43H -F H- 1 2*5^2 tv ) 52 52 53 - ' Sv DetEdls I.: 15 S'/4 511? 5?^^ 1 43 43 43 13 242’4 242 24216 + DynamCp .40 154 1 EatonMt 2.20 EdgeGG 20g ElBondS 1.55 4 5’% 5’% 5’t 14 33'% 33'% 33'% 10 35’/i 55'/% 55'% 2 131% 13H 13H , .- 4 741% 741% 74H + 1% 2 55'% 55'% 55'% + 143 821% 82'6 82'% -F 16 58 57’/» 58 -F lit Cp .35g ^r?c“51'7^ USGyptm 3a US fndust US Rub 2.20 US Steal 2 UnMalch. 50 UnIvOPd 1.20 Uplohn 1.20 Vendo Co '* VaEIPw ' % ill? Walworth Co i 491» 491% - : I 331% 53'% -F 1 MorrtllCo 1b XTr i.,2 Nat Alsl 1.20 Nat Alrlln wl NatBiK 1.80 NatCan NCashR 1^ NatDalry 2.60 Nat DIst 1.40 Nat OanI .30 NatOyps 2b Tea .80 I'Sla . 25'% 25 5 32 831% 83'% 8 '5 Mi? MU i 30 160 138'% It 3 24'% 24'% 5 —N— 9 117 114'/% n 4 58’% 587% 1 nu Nlag M NorUk I 20 701% 70'% 70'% -F 8 27 27 27 - 3 125 135 125 .. 6 58'/4 58'% 58'% 4 4 58%% 5816 5816 . Norton 1.40a Norwch 1.20a OccldentP .40 - • Edit 1.04 Aath 1.40 Elav 3 Mar .80 Owanslll 1.35 51 28'% 28'% 28'% 4 II 29'% 29'% 29'% - 17 47'% 57 57'% 4 6 551% 55H 551% - 14 18’% 1B%% 18’% II 5916 598% 591) 4 llW. Milt Util. IIMI KMr ij4.o 3I ; 1945 Hl^ ..................... a\:i % W.I SI iS>S;FS: FaIrCam .50e Fairch Hiller Fthsieel Mat F9d&8tr*T40 FarroCorp 1 Plllrol Cp 2 Plrislne 1.30 FsfChrl 1.171 Fllnikole 1 Fla PL 1.40 FoodFaIr .90 FMC Cp 1.20 - IMof 2.40 . ..jDilr .50 ,’.i? Gtfll^nam i OanElac 2.60 Gan Fds 2.20 16 56'% 56'% 56'% 4 ' 1 241) 24’% 241) 4 5 3716 37%% 371) 18 207% 20%% 20’% 4 ”, r igi 21 42H 42'% 42'% - 1% 14 231% 23'% ' ■' —F— 132 130 128 129’% 43’% 19 13'% 13%% 13%% -F '% 1 161% ItH 168% 4 W 1 i8’/t i|i% 188% -F y% 17 7 16 7116 7116 -F '/% b Coal^ 1^ P*nn*'l»R’la Pannioll MO PepsiCo 1.60 PfUerCha el PhelpD 3.40a Phlla El 1.48 —lIRdg 1.20 ilMor 3.60 III Pet 2.20 I 301% 30'% 301% 4 I? Jinu 23'% 23'% - 21 21 4 %% 7316 731) 4 31’% 217% - %% 7616 7616 4 MH 581% 5t'% 4 |9<% 1t'% 19<% 4 11 6 '% 67 47'% 4 .. 8 3I'% 31'% 31'% 4 V% 2 22'% 22 22'% 4 Id 2t16 291% 2916 4 81 49'% 49'% 49'% 4 26 117 116'/6 116H - 5 85'% 857% tP/e ... was over, U Thant again pur-jean provide the stimulus of ris-sued the matter: Hanoi was ing expectations and the invest-still willing to send its man. iment in time and effort so nee-i United Nations Secretary Gen- But Defense Secretary Rob-|essary to equip the less advan-- eral U Thant for negotiating a ert McNamara, Adlai went on, faged members among us to I cease-fire in Viet Nam, 1 flatly opposed the attempt. He compete for the expanding op- This account was written by i said the South Vietnamese 8°^-economy as a , Eric Sevareid, radio and TV j ernment would have to be in-1 •____________ ___ „ I news commentator, for Looklfbrmed and that this would j I 75 55’'^ ?: male is his late twenties, has not| magazine. have a demoralizing effect oni 1? ???’ 1 macie an attack since last _ .. . „ ithem; that government was ^ X'%? iSU i :? Thursday. . ^ l®haky enough as it was. 27 83j^ 83Va 83^7 - ^_____________j talk Hc had with Stevenson o \ ‘%L* ‘9%? - ’'*1 I shQftiy before the ambassa- “Stevenson told me that U ! dor died suddenly in London. ' Thant was furious over this j ' failure of his patient efforts, Sevareid writes that during; his talk with Stevenson, the am- j News in Brief ....................................... but said nothing publicly. » Mr. toaldix. ;are investigating theft of a $225 521% 4 i%; banjo from , a car owned by «'/, lU Mrs. Robert Butts of Detroit. ly* IiUiThe car was parked at the ' ISandbar, 3270 M59. send an emissary to talk with cease-fire, with a truce line to 5 t’-'i t’% t’% 9 251% 35H 35H . 12 351% 35'% 35'% - 1%I --------------- 8 291% 29'6 291% 4 ')| 1 30’% 30’/. 30'% 4 '61 w-w»x. . , '4 171? 17!% 17?? 7?? OCC Official • 491% 491. 491% ' ' I 36’,. 3 32 49’/. 491) 4 15 181. 18') 1 I 36". 4 1.20 It 49%) \491. 49 _W-X-Y-Z— WUnTal 1.40 WestgEI 1.40 Weyarhr 1.20 Whirl Cp 1.20 WhItaM 1.40 Wllion Co 2 WInnDIx 1.32 Woolworth 1 ::.:.’r.7’o Xerox Cp .70 "ngstSht 1.80 truth 1.40 Salei figures II 176%) 17616 1761) + 14 10 39’) 39'% 39') \ 50 114 115'% 115'/. 4TH e unofficial (oregoing leble are ______ '---' on the’ last quarterly ileratlon. Special or payments not deslg- _____ regular are IdenIKIed In the following footnotes. - extra or extras, b—Annual ___ _____ slock dividend, c—Liquidating dividend. d-Declared or paid in 1965 plus slock dividend, e—Paid last ....... I—Payable In stock during 1965, astir CB.h value on ex-divld --....... non date, g—Dtclarad .. ,— — .......... year b—Declared or paid alter slock divl ------------ - k—Declared or paid thli ------ ----- Texas v?j to Explain Data System 7?! James W. Hobson, vice president-business, Oakland Com- 1% munity Col-, lege, will discuss the OCC process-1 ing system tonight at the annual convention of the Texas Association of I Educatio n a 1 Data Systems. | Hobson’s ad- ______ dress in Arling- , HOBSON ton, Tex,, will feature details of the establishment of an integrated data processing system at OCC’s new multicampus facility. an American emissary, in Rangoon, Burma. Someone In Washington insist- Romney Hit on Hospital Conditions ex-dlstrlbu- year, iendl m arrears, n hl( year, dividend to acflon taken at I ’—Declared or peli dividend. I—Paid li estlmeted cash value dletrlbutlon date. * Issue, p—Paid lilted, deferred or dividend meeting, n 1964 plus sloA stock during 1"“ I ex-dlvIdend or dand and sales In flon, xr—Ex rig v|—In bankruptcy o being reorganized unde, me di Act, or securities assumed by si penles. fn—Foreign Issue suble Business Notes A former assistant to the president of Community National Bank of Pontiac, James 1 701* 4 '/6 1 Rayetle .48 —R— 13 20 178 4IU 13 24',' * 4 ^ i6 4 V) 42 34'/) 33’/i 34'/) . .- 79 40'% 40'/) 40'% -Fl'/li 2 M'% 20'% 20'% -F 'k 43 14'% 141% 14'% 4 " «'/) 4716 , 45V% 44'/% ■ Stocks of Local Interest Figures alter decimal points are eiohihs OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS NASD are repre-.. .trices of approxl- _____ .. _... Inler-dealer_ rriarkets change throughout not Include re‘-“ ' commission. AMT Corp................. Associated Truck Braun Engineering Citizens Utilities Class A Monroe Auto Equipment Diamond Crystal Kelly Girl Mohawk Rubber Co........ Detrex Chemical Pioneer Finance Safran Printing Scripto Ginger Ale .... _jrp. Wyandotte Chemical merkup, markdown Bid Asked MUTUAL FUNDS 16.56 18.10 10.00 10.^' 9.92 10. Mass. Investors Grolh Mass. Investors Trust Putnam Growth Windsor Fund Friday's tit DIvIdands Dacitrad Ft- 8lk. at PI Rata Had Rtcard a REGULAR Andrea Radio .125 0 12-1 1! Overhead Door .125 Q 12-15 i: DETROIT (AP) - Following jOV. George Romney’s return 'rom Viet Nam. the Michigan ociety for Emotionally Disturbed Children charged today le has failed to keep promises to help i^ild inmates of North-'illc State Hospital. Samuel L. Davis, executive director, said a statement signed by 2,000 persons, includ-ng parents of the 150 children at Northville, is being sent Romney complaining over “deplorable” conditions at the institution. Romney and Dr. Robert A. Kimmich, director of the State Department of Mental Health, are accused of failing to keep promises made at a meeting in Lansing Oct. 15, Davis said. Neither Romney nor Dr. Kimmich was immediately available for comment. VIETNAMESE CHILD Davis said Romney was photographed in Viet Nam holding a Vietnamese child and that the association statement refers to this, saying: “We feel deeply that it is time Ao offer di-red help not only to the children of Viet Nam but to the children of Michigan.” Davis said Romney and Dr. Kimmich are charged with failing to make good on promises to remodel the children’ building at Northville and t secure appropriations for more personnel. He said Romney and Kimmich had pledged an immediate solution to these and other problems. be drawn across not only Viet Nam but neighboring Laos. U Thanat then made a remarkable suggestion: United States officials could write the terms of the cease-fire order, exactly as they saw fit, and he. U Thant, would announce it exactly in those words. “Again, so Stevenson said to me, McNamara turned this down and from Secretary (of State) Rusk there was no re-to Stevenson’s knowledge.” HUMILIATIONS Stevenson felt that he had been undergoing some personal humiliations even though they were not intended, Sevareid wrote. When President Johnson was getting ready to make an address in San Francisco on the 20th anniversary of the United Nations founding, Stevenson was asked to write a first draft. He did so, but because of publication of a newspaper story predicting what Johnson would say, the President had the speech rewritten, Sevareid said. 20 Rell% ■ . : *751 Apple Hill,t‘j DICKERSON Avon Township, Uo Bono> is a graduate of the University !o s?cond grod? roil? IK Public unilllts .... of Michigan. |io industrials 336.1241.22 88 24-0.01 . 81.73 90.70-0.05 BOND AVERAOES Id by Tht Assacliltd Press 20 It 10 10 It Ralls Hid. Util. Fgn. L. Net cbenge ^ . r Noon Fri. lO.OPlOl.l 87.8 93.2 9 Prev. Oey 80.91 tOI.1 87.0 93.2 9 Week Ago 81.01101.4 87.7 93.0 9 Month Ago 80.9 102.3 87.5 92.8 9 Year Ago 82.7 102.1 18.6 91.7 1 1945 High 83.7 102.5 88.9 95.0 • 1965 Low BO.t 100.8 87.0 91.5 1944 High 82.9 103.5 ** ' 1964 Low 80.5 100.8 $ » » * $ r Successful i ' Investing * By ROGER B. SPEAR Q1 “I own m shsns st Bliss A LamhUs IndMtrles. I am retired and depend on dividends from this stock and others, plus Social Security. I should not hold so much of this issue, perhaps not any. I am completely alone and have no one to help me. I would appreciate any suggestions.” P.M. A) Bliiss & Laughlin is quite i good company. Its steel business is not integrated, which means that it processes but does manufacture the metal. Through a careful program of diversification, steel operations now account for only about one-half of profits. This is a cyclical rather than a growth situation, and I believe you should hold no more than 100 shares for the apparently well-secured five per cent income. I would switch the balance into Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe, selling at about the same price and offering the same yield, and 100 United Gas Corp., also selling around the same level and yielding five per cent. These are also income producers rather than growth issues, but they would lessen your dependence on Bliss & Laughlin. Q) “I have held Eastman Kodak, Standard Brands, Commonwealth Edison, Southern Co., and United Air Lines for many years. I’m thinking of disposing of these and actively speculating with the proceeds. What is your opinion of this?” L.A. A1 Your list as it now stands is a splendid one for future profits through growth. To sell in order to speculate, you would have to pay capital gains taxes. Erhard's Visit Is Moved Up WASHINGTON (UPl) - The White House announced t oears latcr the Pirates won their a double signce by Winding up * * * first pennant in 33 years with I with two contracts — one Mrs. Setlock won $200 and a ------------------------------ trophy while Slauter took $180 and a trophy home. The tournament was open to the state's leading bowlers from last year, based on their league aberages. MICHIGAN STATE Scrambling Pro Marlene Hagge Alamo Champ the Detroit Lions of the National League. He eventually was awarded to the AFL but found his path to a first-string job blocked by Abner Haynes and Jack Spikes. Facing that situation, Robinson was made into a defensive back but he admits he did not like the idea. However, he since has changed his mind and now pointedly says; “Ball players waste their time playing offense. There’s more satis/^tion — more of a feeling of accomplishment — playing defense.” Robinson certainly got that feeling against the Chargers. His first interception, at tbe two-yard line, halted a M-yard San Diego drive and protected Kansas City’s KM) lead. Then, after the Cturgers closed to 10-7, he stole another John HadI pass at midfield and set up a Kansas City touchdown by returning 14 yards. Besides stealing the two passes, Robinson made seven tack- Australian Golfer Pugh, Sowthlieif rt Sptiock. Detroit SAN ANTONIO. Tex. (AP) -.................... A scfambling one-over par 73 OorOy Sl»uf»r, Grand Rapldj brought Marlene Hagge her sec-ond Ladies PGA golf tourna-ment in a row and the. third Bob caivin, Hiiisdaia , ij II championship in four weeks ’if“"poii’Vc”'' Win^ in MP boiirnp Sunday as she won the Alamo ..............CIUUUIIIC Women s Open with a par 216 total for 54 holes. MELBOURNE, Australia h", Australian Bruce Devlin bir- There was a charge by died three of the last four holes fending champion Kathy and won the Dunlop Interna- worth, who was only one strokewya •tonal Golf Tournament Sun- off the Pecan Valley Golf Club'o»”« day after American Doug San- course record for women with a'j ders blew a lead in the final 69. but nobody was ever closer Tournament am, - round than two shots to Mrs Hagge,'"’-' caivin^jw^____ Devlin, a regular on the U. S the leader from opening day. firo tour, played the 6,634-yard. Rounds of 71-72-73 on the 6.60b; par 73 Yarra Yarra course in yard, par 36-36^72 coursej 71 and 70 for the final two brought Mrs Hagge $1,500 of rounds and an aggregate score i the total $10,000 purse of 285. British Open champion Ka*'hrwhi?”rth”»noc 'etlaJ-liei Peter Thomson of Australia caroi^M^ann^v.w / finished one stroke behind with Gk>ri» Arm»irong, 71-74-71-7(1-286. 'Rutn j«wn. « Devlin collected $2,240, son $1,120. Sisler Heads Minor League les — an unusually high number for a defensive back —and blocked one pass as the Chiefs moved into a tie for second place in the West with a 5-4-1 record to San Diego’s 6-2-2. Buffalo, meanwhile, moved to within one victory of clinching the Eastern Division title by edging Oakland 17-14 on Billy Joe’s one-yard smash with sev-seconds to go, Denver whipped Houston 31-21 and York defeated Boston 30-20. The Chiefs completely muffled HadI, stealing four passes from the league’s No. 1 passer. Fred Williamson also intercepted two passes for Kansas City while linebacker Bobby Bell and tackle Buck Buchanan ich made 10 tackles. Len Dawson was the key to the offense, hitting for three touchdown passes — 20 yards to Chris Burford, seven to Curt Mc-Clinton and eight to Mack Hill. Gem Daniels scored on a 41-yard run and a 25-yard pass from Dick Wood as the Raiders, tied with Kansas City, built a 14-, 7 lead in the fourth quarter. But Pete Gogolak’s 38-yard Held goal and a 62-yard closing drive engineered by Jack Kemp and climaxed by Joe pulled it out for the Bills, now 8-2. Abner Haynes pulled Denver Into a 14*14 tie with Houston in the third period by racing three yards for a touchdown, then put the Broncos ahead to stay in the fourth quarter by returning a punt 57 yards for another touchdown.. , Mary MiMt, n-n-ii-ru' ROCHESTER, N Y. (AP) -^'J5j7*"!Tommy Richardson has re-[ 7174;7-j» signed as president of the Inter-, national Baseball League and tieorge Sisler, general manager: CHIEF STRIKES BACK - Kansas City defensive halfback Johnny Robinson (42)— former Detroit Lion draft choice — returns intercepted pass to San Diego 35-yard-line to set up touchdown in 31-7 win by Chiefs. Robinson eludes tackle by Sam Gruneisen (65) of the Chargers arid gets blocking help from E. J. Holub (55). Big 10 Chief Midwestern Baptist five Falls in League Opener Michigan Christian Junior Martin 26, Ray Hudson 25 College romped and Midwstern Wes Taphin 21. Over-all. they Baptist Seminary weakened CHICAGO (UPI) - Big Ten Richardson submitted his res- Commissioner Bill Reed has or-ignation Saturday night during jered member schools not to the annual meeting in Rochester,cooperate with the American of 'he league’s board of direc-lpootball League’s plan for an ..... .........7-"-early jraft of college players. s then elected. tors, .Sisler The action was taken in; dosed-do<7r sessions and not) pridnv the AFL their state Christian College Midwestern was outshot. 112-disclosed until ,Sunday. ' Athletic Association basketball,g4 jjy Rapids from the * * * . iment when it announced last league opener over the weekend, fioid gnjjough the losers had the Richardson has headed thel . . nlavers Midwstern Baptist was h(«t beter shrxiting percentage, 4-5 Triple-A league for the past five to title contender Grand Rapids 40 -pbe visitors led by nine at years Prior to that, he had'Jw. “ ^ School of Bible and Music Sat-g^jj q^.c^iy spurt-been president for years ^ urday night and dropped a 119-,^^^ g commanding second- 'he Eastern Baseball I^eague. ^ the league 90 decision as the visitors puBed: half advantage ------------------ [would hold to the date in face away in the final half ' Brother Jerry and Terry Price Fx Snorts Editor DIm | of Big Ten members’pressure. Michigan Christian JC took ad-bad 29 and 19, respectively, for Dies , * ♦ ★ vanUge of a weak Great Lakes grsbM: and six of the winners INDIANAPOLIS Ind (AP) - 'f’be Big Ten has no power to Bible College at Lansing Friday,^ double figures The Fal- Robert W SIranahan, 58 form-1 Prevent the AFL or Its repre-night for a lopsided 163-42 win. cons were paced by Fraser Vi-er sports editor of the Indi-jsentativesfromcontactingplay-Tbe Warriors scored 96 pond. 24, Ralph Wingate, 22, anapolis Star, died Sunday ini ers, he said, but by refusing to points in the secoed half. Sev- and Doug Vipond, 16 Methodist-Hospital. Icooperate the AFL would be en players were in double fig- Midwestern is now 1-3 on the He headed the Star’s .sports'denied any opinions from ures. Bud Pressley had 32, Jim season. department from 1948-53. 1 coaches or coaching staffs. Iwo Pros Rea(Ji taring Plateau in NBA Action LOS ANGELES (AP) - The Los Angeles Lakers emerged in first place in the Weslenl Division after a weekend of National Basketball Association play in which two more players joined the ranks of those who have scored 10,000 points in their career. The Lakers did it by beating the Baltimore Bullets 129-114 Sunday in the only league action of the day. * ♦ ♦ Bailey Howell became the 25th man to crack the 10,000-point mark. He dropped in a field goal for the Bullets’ first score of the game when the Lakers were leading 24). . Baltimore had come to Los [Angeles straight from a 135-132 loss to the Royals in Cincinnati Saturday. In other NBA action Saturday, the Celtics downed the Detroit Pistons in Boston, 122-93, the Hawks outscored the San Francisco Warriors 136113 in Louis, and in New York the Knickerbockers, bowed to the Philadelphia 76ers, 127-119. 4 44 11 NfuMi 7 • 5 J-3 II Stndtrt 4 7. .. 1 3-3 3 RuimM 4 M3 17 2 (Ml 4 S. JOMI 2 t-t 10 S 3-4 13 lUgfr'O 3 1* ' 2 34 . ------ 3 44 10 Kolli S 2-3 12 Counit RmO I 04 3 Thom'i Totoll 43 34-43 122 22 14 22 2T " M il II a Fir,.down. TW,... OlUr. pass was < pUm,® 5-M if!o on the 27. P..W. .n,.rc.p..O by ^^^4 J ^ Voi4i*'p4n4HzoO 35' 47 A play Pontiac Team Ends Season Sweetan's Conversion Margin of Victory By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press The initial'season for Pontiac’s entry in the Midwest Football League ended on a successful but blizzardy note Saturday night when the MFL champion Arrows eked out a 7-6 win over the beefy MFL All-Stars. p ♦ * A frozen crowd of 1.200 sat in strong winds and snow at Wisner Stadium to watch the Arrows score early in the second quarter and then stave off the All-Stars until the opening minute of the 4th quarter. The missed placement by Glen Hobbs, Dayton kicker who had missed only two placements all season, was the margin of victory. The All-Stars scored on a break. In the final seconds of the third quarter Ron Ell-Bton of Lansing punted from bis own 49. The ball bounced on 10 then hit a Pontiac player in the back of the foot and the Stars recovered on the 12. Two plays later starting the 4th quarter. Jim Overman. Dayton fullback, went four yards to score. START MARCH The Arrows started to march from their own 39 in the first quarter and after three plays of the second period, quarterback Karl Sweetan went to bis right on a bootleg play and eluded tacklers along the way he scampered to the one yard line. ★ p * From here, former Hillsdale fullback Willie Jones went over and Sweetan added the Important point. On the first play after the ensuing kickoff, Pete Mikolajew-ski’s pass was intercepted by Irv Radivitz on the Pontiac 34. Sweetan hit big end Frank Goldberg with a 37 yard aerial to the Stars’ 24, but when three plays failed, Sweetan’s try for a 36 yard field goal fell short. Another All-Star drive was stopped when Gene Luppino intercepted a pass and the Ar-iver at midfield, jed 24 yards to and after another IS dropped in the end the MFL Stars took over 11 vJ play later, Flint’s JItp Long playing for the All-Stqrs was hit hard by corner linebacker Walt Kowaiczyk and when he fumbled Steve Szabo recovered and the Arrows ag^iji had another chance on ^ Stars’ 28. iHtto 0 7 on