ONE COLOR Thu Pontiac Prott Monday, August 11, 1969 MONDAY Seeger and the Hudson River Sloop Singers guest. Also a discussion on sex education is scheduled. (7) C — Morning Show Hillbillies (9) Friendly Giant 9:45 (9) Chez Helene R — Rerun C — Color MONDAY MORNING 5:50 (2) TV Chapel 5:55 (2) C-On the Farm Scene 6:00 (2) C—Black Heritage —Life of the black community from 1945 -1954 (Part 1) 6:30 (2) C — Woodrow the Wbodsman (4) Classroom — ‘‘Many Worlds of India: The Nonmelting Pot” 6:45 (7) C—Batfink* 7:30 (2) C—News, Weather, Sports 8:00 (2)C — Captain Kangaroo 8:15 (9) Warm-Up 8:25 (9) C — Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 8:30 (7) R — Movie: ‘‘The Fuller Brush Girl” T1950) Lucille Ball, Eddie Albert (9) C — Bozo 9:00 (2) RC- Lucy Show (4) R C — Here Come the Stars — Steve Allen and Morey Amsterdam join in a a salute to guest of honor George Jessel. 10:00 (2) R C—Andy Griffith (4) C if Personality — Week’s guests: Rocky Graziano, Tom Kennedy and Rita Moreno (9) R—Mr. Dressup 10:25 (9) Pick of the Week 10:30 (2) C — Merv Griffin (4) C—Hollywcjod Squares — Jacqueline S u s a n n, Shirley Jones, Jack Cassidy, Pat Henry and Vincent Price guest this week. (7) C — Galloping Gourmet 10:55 (9) C —News 11:00 (4) C — It Takes Two (7) R—Bewitched (9) Luncheon Date I (50) C — Jack LaLanne 7:00 (4) C - Today - Pete 9:30 (2) R C-Beverly nM c_Carol Duvall Get All the Money You Need in One Convenient Loan Borrow Up to I $5000 With Our Corifidential HOMEOWNER’S LOAN PLAN! Low Convenient Payments to Suit Your Budget No Closing Costs No Application Fees COMPLETE INSURANCE LOAN PROTECTION ; Call ln Your Application Today! FAMILY ACCEPTANCE CORPORATION 107 Pontiac State re e aim Bank Bid*. re i"Mel : 11:30 (4) C — Concentration (7) R C - That Girl (9) R — Take Thirty — Alice Roosevelt Long-worth (daughter of Teddy Roosevelt) talks about her friends in Washington. (50) C — Kimba MONDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) C—News, Weather, ^Sports (4) C —Jeopardy (7) C — Dream House (9) Luncheon Date II (50) C —Underdog 12:25 (2) C —Fashions 12:30 (2) C - As the World Turns (A) C — News, Weather, Sports (7) C—Let’s Make a Deal (9) R*—. Real McCoys (50) R w Moviei “The first great “talkie.” A1 Jolson, Warner Oland 1:00 (2) C—Divorce Court (4) C—Days of Our Lives \ • (7) C — Newlywed Game (9) R — Movie: “Safe at Home” (1962) Roger Maris, Mickey Mantle, Whitey Ford, William Frawley, Patricia Barry 1:30 (2) C — Guiding Light (4) C — Doctors (7) C — Dating Game 2:00 (2) C — Secret Storm (4) C — Another World (7) C — General Hospital 2:30 (2) C - Edge of Night (4) C —You Don’t Say — June Lockhart and John Forsythe are guest panelists this week. (7) C — One Life to Live (50) R — Make Room for Daddy 3:00 (2) C—Linkletter Show (4) C—Match Game—Dr. Joyce Brothers and Bob Crane guest for week. (7) C — Dark Shadows (9) R — Dennis the Menace (50) R —Topper 3:25 (4) C —News 3:30 (2) C — Search for Tomorrow (4) C — You’re Putting Me On — William Shatner, Vivian Vance, E. J. Peaker, Peggy Cass/ Bill Cullen and Larry Blyden guest this week. (7) c — Anniversary Game (9) C — Magic Shoppe (50) C — Captain Detroit 4:00 (2) C — Love of Life (4) C — Steve Allen — Phil Silvers, Allan Drake and Curtis Mayfield and the Impressions guest. (7) R - Movie: “Affair in Trinidad” (1952) Glenn Ford, Rita Hayworth (9) C — Bozo 4:25 (2) C — News 4:30 (2) C-Mike Douglas-Guests include Abbey Lin* coin, Rex Reed, Hans Conrad, and Jackie and Roy. (50) R - Little Rascals (62) C — Bugs Bunny and Friends 5:00 (4) C—George Pierrot —“Kabul to Samarkand/' a journey in the Near East (9) R C — Batman (50) R — Munsters 5:15 (56) R—Friendly Giant 5:30 (9) R — F Troop (50) R —Superman (56) R — Misterogers — Fear of the dark is todays topic. ► * (62) Leave It to Beaver IVtfONDAY NIGHT 6:00 (2) (4) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports . (9) R C — I Spy A. Kelly learns that the woman he loves is linked to an exiled dictator. (50) R C — Flintstones (56) What's New — Life on earth during the Cambrian, Ordovician and Silurian periods is examined. Also a visit to the Chicago Natural History Museum (Part 1) (62) R —Sea Hunt 6:30 (2) C - News -Cronkite (4) C — News — Huntley, Brinkley (7) C — News — Reynolds, Smith (50) ft.— McHale’s Navy 7:00 (2) R C — Truth or Consequences (4) C — (Special) Baseball: Oakland at Baltimore (7) C — News, Weather, Sports (9) R — Movie: “Rangers of Fortune" (1940) Three men fleeing from Mexican firing squad help a small town newspaper editor. Patricia Morison, Fred MacMurray, Albert (50) R — I Love Lucy — Lucy is crushed when she is not included in Life magazine's “Celebrity at Home" pic|ure of Ricky. (56) C - World Press Tht Portjiac Press Monday, August 11,196( (62) C — Swingintime 7:30 (2) R C — Gunsmoke — Matt is wounded by bounty hunters. (7) R C — Avengers — Emma is kidnaped to be cast in a bizarre film about her death. (50) R-Hazel 8:00 ( 50) C - Pay Cards -Charlie Manna guests. (56) C - NET Journal -Report focuses on snarled airports and hazard-ridden skies. (62) R — Ozzie and Harriet 8:30 (2) R C - Here's Lucy — Jack Benny guests as a celebrity depositor whom the bank solicits. (7) R C - Guns of Wilf Sonnett — Woman sets James Sonnett in a trap for a man after revenge. (50) C — Password — Carol Burnett and Peter Lawford guest. (62) R—Movie: “Rebel in Town" (1956) Ex-Confed-erate soldier accidentally kills a small boy, and later the boy's father saves the soldier’s life. John Payne, Ruth Roman 9:00 (2) R C — Mayberry R.F.D. — Sam i s pressured into letting Mike have a dog. (7) R C — Outcasts — Earl and Jemal help defend the few remaining citizens of a small town from a gang of outlaws. Ruth Roman guest-stars. (9) R — Danger Man (50) R «g| Perry Mason (56) R — Spectrum Studies are conducted the Pacific’s floor scientists from Scrimps Institution Oceanography. 0:30 (2) R C - Family Affair — Uncle Bill plans --to man^" «nd^ 4he twb»" are sure it means a breakup of the family. (9) Five Years in the Life — The Anderson family of Peace River, B.C., is profiled. (56) Bridge Wit Cox J e a 9:55 (62) lines Greatest Head- 10:00 (2) C — Jimmie Rodgers — Roger Williams and S c o e y Mitchelll guest. (4) R C — Spotlight on the Stars — Tom Jones, Fran Jeffries and Jack Carter *guest. (7) Dick Cavett — Harrison Salisbury, assistant managing editor of the New York Times, guests. (9) (50) C — News, Weather, Sports (56) Smart Sewing — A quick and easy method of applying a zipper i s shown. (62) R C — Movie: “Alligator Named Daisy” (British, 1955) Wayward alligator disrupts its owner’s plans for marriage. Diana Dors, Jean-nie Carson 10:30 (9) C - What’s My Line? (50) R—Alfred Hitchcock (56) Folk Guitar 11:00 (2) (4) (7) C — News, Weather, Sports (9) R — Movie: “Mr. Denning Drives North” (British, 1953) Murder is committed, but no one can find the corpse to prove it. John Mills:, Phyllis Calvert (50) R — One Step Beyond COLOR MONDAY — George Burns, Milton Berle, Judy Came and Don Knotts guest. (7) Joey Bishop — Guy Marks, Frank Gorshin and former Miss America Mary Ann Mobley guest. (50) R — Movie: ‘‘Ho llywood Canteen" C1M4I An all-star cast entertains soldiers at the Hollywood Canteen with some backstage romances. Bette Davis, Jack Carson 11:35 (2) R C — Movie: “My Brother Joshua" (German; 1959) An unjust accusation of murder provokes the ostracization of an innocent man in Germany, Ingrid Andree 12:24 (9) Viewpoint 12:30 (9) C — Perry’s Probe — ‘‘The Master Aetherius" 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) R — Texan 1:30 (2) R- Naked City (4) (7) C — News, Weather 2 : 30 ( 2 ) C Weather News, 11:30 (4) C —Johnny Carson 2:35 (2) TV Chapel UNITED TIRE SERVICE 1007 BALDWIN AVE. 3 Min. From Downtown Pontiac t pressures appeared to be more on the Belgian franc than on the In Brussels, the Belgian currency sd to its lowest permitted /level — to die dollar — and forward The pound dropped just over half a cent in London. But it remained Well above the official floor and comfortably above the level at which the Bank of England intervenes with, support buying. The mark was strohger in Zurich, and Other currencies were under pressure. France devalued the franrby 12.5 per cent Friday. D'Estaing said it was the only way. He said France otherwise would have run out of gold and foreign currency reserves by the end of the * year. *** • ' *• * * Before devaluation a franc was worth 20 cods. It now is worth 17% cents. For foreign ' tourists in France, it was good. A meal of melon, pepper steak; asparagus . in hoUandaise sauce, raspberry tart, coffee and two kinds of-wine cost $7 instead of 00. The International Herald tribune cost 17 cents rather than 20 cehts. Area News ...... Astrology -....... Bridge ....... Crossword Puzzle, Comics .......— Editorials ....... Markets .......... Obituaries ....... Sports ........... Theaters ... ..... ON THE WAY HOME - Apollo 11 astronauts Edwin E. Aldrin, Michael Collins and Neil Armstrong (front to back) walk past crowds of spectators on hand to welcome them as they left the lunar receiving laboratory at the Manned Space- craft Center, Houston, Tex., last night, left the scene of their confinement homes, where their families were wa FOUR OF FIVE MASS-MURDER VICTIMS These are • four of the five victims of the mass murder that took place and Jay Sebring, hairdresser. Also slain was Voyteck Fry-at the Bel Air, Calif., home of Roman Polanski, Polish film kowski, Polish' Screen producer and writer and friend of Po- director. The four are (from left) Stephen Earl Parent; Sharon lanski. Parent, 18, Is apparently a friend of William E. Garret- Tate, Polanski’s actress-wife; Abigail Folger, coffee heiress; son, 19, who was booked on suspicion of murder in the case. Bizarre LA Killings Similar, Say Police LOS ANGELES MP) - Police pushed a manhunt today for a suspect in the bizarre killings of actress Sharon Tate and four others five miles from where a couple was found slain later in a similar style. “There is a similarity, but whether it’s the same suspect or a copycat, we just don’t know,” said Police Sgt. Bryce Houchin. . The man and woman were many times in their Hollywood home, HoUchin said, the man’s head wrapped in a sheet, the woman’s: in a nightgown. 'In. the slayings at Miss Tate’s home Saturday, one victim’s, head was covered with a cloth. The latest victims were identified as : Leno A. LaBianca, 44, reportedly Owner of a small local supermarket chain, and . his wife, Rosemary, 38. Police said their bodies were discovered in nightclothes, last night. THROATS WERE SLIT Houchin said the two were “stabbed; numerous times and their throats were slit.” McCauley said the word “death” was written in an undisclosed substance on . the living room wall. Other officers earlier said the words “death to pigs” were scrawled in blood on a refrigerator door. ★ ★ ★ At Miss Tate’s plush Bel Air home, the word “pig” was written in blood on the frontdoor. ' * Earlier, police said they were seeking a man whose name “came up in conversation” with a 19-year-old caretaker arrested in a guest cottage behind Miss Tate’s $200,000 home when the bodies were found. BOOKED IN CASE Slim, tousle-haired William Garretson was booked on suspicion of murder, but Detective Lt. Robert Helder said physical evidence to. link him to the crime had not been found. Garretson was given a lie detector test yesterday. Sgt. Jesae Buckles said homicide detectives were “not entirely i” with his answers. An autopsy showed that Miss' Tate, 26, honey-blonde wife of film director Roman Polanski, died of multiple stab wounds of the back and chest. She was l eight months pregnant. Also killed vert: • Jay Sebring, 26, hair stylist and former boyfriend of Miss Tate, dead of stab wounds in the body. A rope tied around his neck was linked to Miss Tate’s neck, but did not contribute to the death of either. . • Abigail Folger, 26, brunette socialite of the Folger coffee family of San Francisco. She was dead of stab wounds in the chest. • Voyteck Frykowski, 37, Polish screen producer and writer, a friend of Polanski, dead of stab wounds in the body and extremities and a gunshot wound in the back. „ - • Steven Parent, 18, of suburban' El Monte, apparently a friend of Garretson, dead of multiple gunshot wounds in the chest. The bodies, strewn-about the estate in fashionable Benedict Canyon, were found by a maid. Mercury Will Fall Info 50s Tonight The weatherman calls for mostly sunny skies today and warm temperatures cooling off considerably tonight. Today’s high will be slightly warmer than yesterday, reaching 80 to 85 degrees, and tonight the mercury will wdip*down tothemiddle50s. it* -Or Tomorrow’s weather will be partly cloudy with a high of 82 to 87 and there is little change for Wednesday’s outlook, Winds today are light and variable. Precipitation probabilities in per cent are: today 10, tonight and tomorrow 20. The low reading in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a m. today was 57. I ' I I In Today's Press State Champion Waterford Legion wins baseball crown — PAGE F-l. Shattered Sunday Detroit man goes berserk, wounds six In shotgun spree — PAGE A-8. Ohio Disaster Rhodes to seek aid foi hit by tornado — Jj WILLIAM GARRETSON French Freeze Prices, Profits in Devafuation From Our News Wires PARfS — Devaluation of the franc took effect today and the French government froze prices and profits to give the beleaguered currency what Finance Minister Valery Giscard d’Es-taing called “breathing space.” Meanwhile, speculators bought West German marks and sold Belgian francs and British pounds today after Europe’s money markets opened -for the first time since the devaluation was announced. But there were no wild fluctuations and trading volume was J™ First 1....| l c i City Fire Chief Seeks Reversal Pontiac Fire Chief Charles D. Marion has gone into Oakland County Circuit Court to seek a reversal of a ruling by the Civil Service Commission which ordered reinstatement with back pay of two suspended black firemen. A show-cause hearing has been set for 9 a.m. Wednesday before Judge William H. Beer. * * * The two were suspended by the chief for noncompliance to a personal-appearance code, in having t o o -1 o n g The Weather II. *. WutMtr lurMU POTKMt Cooler (Dttalll Pl|l 1) THE ■ Home Edition PONTIAC PRESS ■ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. MONDAY. AUGUST 11, 1969 VOL.'127 - NO. 139 *★**. effijjg&aSafoc -80 PAGES 10c Basic-Income Plan Is Sent to Congress The commission ordered the men returned to duty and full payment restored after a hearing Aug. 1. Fireman Frederick Milton is owed $780 and Daniel Sowell $585. SEEKS REVERSAL However, Chief Marion is seeking to have the order reversed. ★ ★ ★ Deputy City Attorney Alger Strom said back pay to the men will be stayed during the court proceedings. In his suit, Marion has charge^ the commission with improper procedure. He said the city was not allowed to complete its case. *• * ★ During the civil service hearings, fire fighters Milton and Sowell claimed* Marion suspended them because of an earlier dispute over an “Impeach Judge ; Crockett” petition that had been signed by the fire chief. * ★ ★ ' Attorneys for Milton and Sowell contended Marion had no legal right to enforce a unilateral policy such as his grooming code because he had not con-• ferred first with the fire fighters’ union. Milton and Sowell are the only two black firemen on the 147-man force. SAN CLEMENTE, Calif. (UPI) -President Nixon, asking e x tensive reform in the federal welfare system, today proposed to Congress,government provision of "a basic income” (at least $1,600 a year) for poor American families in all states. His proposals already have provoked differences of opinion within his own administration and his proposed radical overhaul of the entire federal welfare system was certain to set off bitter word battles in Congress. ★ * * Earlier in the day, Nixon issued a statement op reorganization of the Office of Economic Opportunity -(OEO), which until recently had been the government’s chief operating arm in the war on pdverty. Early in his administration, Nixon began to transfer operating duties from OEO to other departments. Today, continuing what he regards as a badly deeded repair job on the machinery of federal government, he made it clear that henceforth OEO would be largely a laboratory organization in the field of social sciences, testing new programs to be transferred to other departments if they prove feasible. His OEO statement and his welfare message were, in the main, expansions of ideas he first put forth in an address to the nation Friday night. There will be messages later on manpower -training and sharing of federal, income with the states. Nixon proposed several basic steps which would cost an added $4 billion annually: V • A basic income “to those American families who cannot care for themselves in whichever state they live.” • Incentive for such families “to go to work by making the first $60 a month they earn completely their own, with no deductions from their benefits.” • An addition to the incomes of the working pSOP “to encourage them to go on working and to eliminate the possi- bility of making more from welfare than from wages.” ' ' • Uniform federal payment minimums for the present three categories of welfare aid to adults—the aged, the blind and tiie disabled. For a family of four with less than $1,000 income a year, the guaranteed payment would mean additional $1,600 a year. For a family of four with $2,000 income, the supplemental income payment would amount to $960 a year. Of the estimated $4 billion in the first year of the program, included would be $600 million for job-training and daycare centers. r STATES’ ROLE The states would be required to maintain their current level of benefits, but no state woiiuld be forced to spend more than 90 per cent of its present welfare cost. Thus the federal government would provide a welfare ’“floor,” as well as assuming about 10 per cent of the tab now being paid by states. Attacks May Presage End of Lull N. Viet Troops Kill 38 Yanks It Didn't Pay to Go Away . CHICAGO (UPI) - Spencer Webster returned from vacation and noticed his two-car brick garage was missing. He found thieves had made off with the furniture, plumbing and electrical fixtures, mailbox and even the kitchen sink in his three-story apartment. ..: His neighbors said three men pulled up -in a truck and began removing the contents of the apartments and taking down the brick garage. They worked from 8 a.m. until twilight for three days. " ; m. . .★... Because the area is an urban renewal tract the neighbors figured the workmen SAIGON (AP) Thirty-eight Americans were killed and 144 wounded in fierce attacks that North Vietnamese troops launched against U.S. forces along the Cambodian, Laotian and demilitarized zone frontiers yesterday, military spokesmen said today. The toll of American war dead was the largest reported during any 24-hour period since a lull began in the fighting June 18. * * * U.S. military analysts indicated that the stepped-up attacks could presage the fall campaign that American officers -expect. * * * There was new apprehension -along the demilitarized zone with the disclosure that North Vietnamese troops fighting the U.S. Marines there over the past four days were from a fresh regiment. FALL CAMPAIGN “The intelligence we have received from all four corps tactical zones indicates the enemy is preparing for a fall campaign to he conducted during August and September,” one analyst said. “Although there is some variation in the timing for the campaign, the enemy holidays of Aug. 18, Sept. 2 and Sept._23 have been, mentioned by defectors and documents.” Fighting was reported near the Cambodian border northwest of Saigon,'just below the central sector of the demilitarized zone* on two sides of Hamburger Hill beside the Laotian border, and in the populous coastal lowlands south of D&Napg, Three more Ameririm helicopters were shot down, two during a fight 28 miles southeast of Da Nang and the third 50 miles west of Da Nang. Two crewmen were killed and two were wounded. The losses raised to 2,895 the number of American helicopters reported lost in the war. * * * U.S. headquarters also reported* 15 enemy rocket and mortar attacks from 8 a.m. yesterday to 8 a.m. today, 11 of them against U S. troops or bases. Seven Americans were killed and 36 wounded. Out of Isolation, Astronauts Relax Before Celebrations School. Section Today Fashion wear for the classroom or campus scene, 1969, is just one of the subjects presented in 15th annual Pontiac Press Back-to-School edition, starting on page B-l. SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) -Freed from three weeks of isolation, the Apollo 11 astronauts relaxed with ’their families "today before plunging into a hectic round of celebrations of their historic moop-landing. ★ ★ * Neil A. Armstrong, Edwin E. Aldrin Jr. and Michael Collins sped straight to _tbeir -homes,- last -night-when- released from quarantine quarters. Only hours before, doctors had said they could find no evidence of alien, germs or infection from the astronauts’ lunar contact. ★ * * A* waiting world was ready to heap the pioneers with honors in the weeks ahead. The whirlwind schedule starts tomorrow when Armstrong, Aldrin and Collins hold a news conferepce here to report on their daring mission. That afternoon, a downtown Houston luncheon will be attended by nearly 700 space workers. TICKER TAPE PARADE On Wednesday, the astronauts and their families fly to New York for a ticker tape parade and an appearance at the United Nations, followed in the afternoon by another parade in Chicago. The day . winds up in Los Angeles at a gala„state dinner with President Nixon as host. On Saturday, they will be honored by a Houston parade followed by a Texas-sized party in the Astrodome. In the weeks that follow, they’ll be ..welcomed in many cities in the United States and will appear before Congress. There also is'talk of a world tour. The moon men got a preview of what lies ahead when they were cheered and mobbed by ahout 300 space, workers as they emerged from quarantine last night. Witnesses Barred at Barbara Trial Three persons were barred from taking the witness stand this morning to testify in the extortion trial of Joseph M. Barbara Jr.Jn Oakland County Circuit Court. At least one of the potential witnesses later raised a minor ruckus over the matter. Albert Spadafore, owner of the Community Super Market, 3286 Auburn, Pontiac Township, was told by Circuit Judge Frederick C. Ziem he could not testify because he had not been properly endorsed as a witness before today. ★ ★ About an hour after- special prosecutor Jack Bain was told he Could not call Spadafore to the stand, the grocer entered the courtroom and confronted Barbara, reputed Mafia member. Barbara is accused by Mrs. Peter - astronauts quickly Lazaros, 2410 Dalesford, Troy, of • ex-_ _ headed for their tarting $4,000 and a diamond ring from waiting for them. (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 1) THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1969 Chief Justice Urges Prison Reform WARREN E. BURGER DALLAS (AP) - Chief Justice Warren E. Burger called today for broad reform of America’s prison system. Burger urged tin American Bar Association to lead a re-examination of prisons, parole and probation systems and the education and training of prisoners. ★ h 6 "We must explore more fully a limited confinement and work release,” he said, in a prepared speech at the 92nd annual meeting of tin ABA.' "We must explore teaching methods adapted to the abnormal psychology of the habitual offender. We must search for new incentive programs to permit reduction of sentences for those who will educate and train themselves in skills which give a man pride and identity." ‘A BETTER WAY’ Burger said he had not settled on any particular program of* reform. “Ail I * have,” he said, "is the profound conviction, which I believe most judges of this country share, that there must be a better way to do It." More than 5,000 lawyers and judges are attending the ABA’s annual meeting. Among the major topics to be considered in sessions through Thursday are lawyer ethid, the system of compensating auto accident victims and strikes in the transportation industry. William T. Gossett, 420 GoodEtue, Bloomfield Hills, the ABA president, opened the meeting with the warning that the rule of law may face “graver; and more pervasive danger” now than gt any time since the Civil War. "The repetitious clamor for law and order is not egpugh,” he said to Ml prepared ‘ ipeechr%l^‘^^'f... * j*jg ‘OBJECT IS JUSTICE’ "The object of both law and order is justice. Justice presupposes the right of ■ all men freely to achieve the best and ’ most within them, subject only to the same right of others. • "H that simple trutii ever is forgotten or trampled upon or significantly diminished, the rule of law becomes merely a device, barren of meaning, worthy of no respect and incapable of [ survival. “The law should be an avenue of progress and not a fence of restraint.” Gossett scored extremists on both ends of the political spectrum. He said they were, advocating .insurrection or repression in the name of free govern- Senate OKs Tight Lid on Gas Arms WASHINGTON (DPI) — The Senate, with Pentagon backing, approved today the toughest set of restrictions on gas and germ warfare weapons ever written by Congress. It passed an amendment to the $20-billion defense procurement bill setting up strict standards for transporting, storaging and testing of chemical and biological warfare (CBW) agents. ★ ★ ★ Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird gave his full approval to the effort, mean-. ing likely approval by the House too, when it considers the bill. The amendment was worked out late last week between Pentagon research officials and a half-dozen Senate CBW critics. Before Senate passage, the measure was strengthened by adding a new section designed to prevent the Defense Department from using "back-door” methods to finance germ warfare testing. The new section, conceived by Sen. Vance Hartke, D-lnd., would ban any CBW weapons research and development — even on nonlethal defoliatipn devices like those used in Vietnam — with any funds other than the $17.7 billion earmarked for CBW testing in the procurement bill. Hartke said the official Defense Department expenditures for CBW devices were "suspiciously low.” He said he had heard estimates that the total, yearly cost of the program was more than $600 million. Sen. Thomas J. McIntyre, D-N.H., floor manager of the amendment, praised Laird for backing the proposal. McIntyre pledged continued Surveillance of the CBW program by his Armed Services Subcommittee on Defense Research. He also suggested that Congress take a closer look at nondefense agencies that handle and ship lethal chemicals and germs to make sure they comply with public health requirements. Besides the testing restrictions, the amendments • Prohibits storage of lethal CBW materials outside the United States without notification to the country involved and without specific approval from the Secretary of State in wilting to Congress. • Bars transportation of lethal CBW agents to or from military installations In the United States without permission from the Surgeon,General. Except dur-ing a declared war, written notice to Congress would be required before lethal ’CBW agents arc moved. • Prohibits entirely procurement of germ warfare delivery systems. Nixon Pal, SB A omLoan Witnesses Barred Immediate Repayment Urged at Barbara Trial (Continued From Page One) her while her husband wag in jail in ' 1968. Only a handful of observers were on hand to watch the 350-pound Barbara jump out of his chair when ‘Spadafore approached him. The court was recessed at the time of the confrontation. A few angry words were exchanged, and • state policeman broke up the pair. The policeman (hen escorted Spadafore out of the rbom. Bain had intended to use Spadafore to establish that Barbara had been to the Lazaros home when Lazar os was at Southern Michigan State Prison in Jack-son on a fraud conviction, informed sources said. Acnording to Lazaros, Spadafore was asm to deliver groceries to Mrs. Laiaros while he was in jail. Judge Ziem ruled Spadafore could not testify because the defense should be given advance notice of any prosecution witnesses. The same reason was given for not allowing testimony by Johnny Lazaros, the Lazaros* 9-year-old son. Peter's mother, Mrs. Nicholas Lazaros, was not allowed to take the stand because she had been excused earlier by attorneys for both sides, Ziem ruled. M JOHN DE CARLO CMU Official Gets OU Post WASHINGTON (UPI) - C ha r lew (Bebe) Rebozo, confidant and traveling companion of President Nixon, has received special favors ] from thi government and should bf made to return. an $89,000 government loaif House Banking' Committee chairman Wright PStman said today. "From 1962 through the present, Mr. Rebozo has been a preferred customer of the Small Business Administration,”, the Texas Democrat said in remarks prepared for a House speech. ★ ★ ★ "Time , and time again, the Miami, milltenairo has received special favpra from the agency even though SBA staff members strongly questioned the concessions being msidg to Rebozo.” - The lows Patman said should be canceled iSss made in 1962. Patman said Rebozo iised the money to purchase the Land Title Go., a rival firm to his Monroe Abstract and Title Co. ‘NO JUSTIFICATION’ "There can be no justification for SBA lending money to an individual under the guise of a small businessman who then turns around and’opens a bank,” Patman said. “Small businessmen write to me complaining they can’t even get in to see a banker; yet in the Rebozo case, SBA is financing ,a. banker and an investor while shutting out thousands of legitimate small businessmen.” Patman released a memo from His staff Of investigators which said the circumstances surrounding the $80,000 loan were “strange.” The memo said || M (are filled with1 a vast majority of reasons why Mr. Rebozo should not have been given the loan in the first place...” * : ) The memo also, said that Thomas A. Butler, regional director in SBA’s Miami office, "is a stockholder in the bank owned by Rebozo, and has also participated ir. other Rebozo ventures.” [ It added, “The Foie that Mr. Butler has played in the Rebozo Joan appears on the surface to be more than that of a disinterested SBA employe.” The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Today mostly sunny and a little warmer, high 80 to 85. Tonight partly cloudy, lows 55 to 00. Tuesday partly cloudy, highs 80 to 85. Outlook for Wednesday: fair and cloudy, little temperature change. Vjflnds light variable becoming southwest to south 8 to 14 mph Tuesday. Probabilities of precipitation: 10 per cent today, 20 per cent tonight and 20 per cent Tuesday. Special Meeting for School Board A special meeting of the Pontiac Board of Education has been called for 7:15 p.m. tomorrow at the board offices, 350 Wide Track. W A- dr The purpose of the meeting is to consider plans for the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) Title I programs for 1969-70 and to consider recommendations for employment of elementary principals for Whittier and Wispier Schools for. 1960-70. ESEA Title I programs are those designed to meet the needs of. such children in attendance areas with high concentrations of low-inoome families, such as Project 100 (community schools programs). Kennedy Case Request Near NEW BEDFORD, Mass. (AP) - ftift. Atty. Edmund Dinis says tie will ask this week for, exhumation of the body of Mary Jo Kopechne so that an autopsy can be performed. Dinis’ request to authorities i n Pennsylvania, where Miss Kopechne is buried, will require a court ruling. Miss Kopechne, 28, drowned July 18 When a car driven by tSen. Edward M. Kennedy went off a bridge and plunged into a tidal pond on Chappaquiddick Island off Martha’s Vineyard. Kennedy, who did not report the accident until several hours after it happened, pleaded guilty to a charge of leaving the scene of an accident and received a suspended sentence of two months in jail. Birmingham ' A vice president at Central Michigan University has been named to the new post of assistant chancellor for professional performing arts at Oakland University, it was anounced today. John De Carlo, 42, vice president for public service at CMU, is expected to take his neW post Sept. 15. ' • jk * it The Michigan State University Board of Trustees, which governs OU, approved the appointment at a special meeting Aug. 1. Neither OU or MSU authorities would disclose De. Carlo’s new salary as a matter of policy. h OU Chancellor Durward B. Varner said there is a need for ,q person to coordinate the management of the university’s continuing and growing ventures in the performing arts. PRIMARY DUTIES De Carlo will primarily be working with the university’s Meadow Brook Music’Festival and the Meadow Brook Theatre. De Carlo bps been vice president of CMU since 1966 and previously was an executive'with Chrysler Corp. for the last i2 years, the last five as manager of Chrysler’s Community Affhire Department. ■ ', ★ ★ *: The Meadow Brook Festival, which started five years ago, now draws more than 100,000 persons per s&Son. It features the Detroit Symphony Orchestra and outstanding guest artists. The theater, established under the direction of-John Femald in 1966, also has grown rapidly.. Advance ticket sales for the 1969-70 season are already approaching 10,060. City Students, Are Urged to Register Earty BIRMINGHAM — Students enrolling in the Birmingham Public Schools for .the first time are urged to register at their respective schools as soon as possible, a spokesman for the Birmingham Board of Education aaid. w* Hours for registration in all eteiii^n-tary and secondary schools are 8:30 am. to 3:30 p.m. daily. ★ ★ * Students enrolling in the junior and senior high schools will complete tests and work out a schedule of courses with the assistance of counselors who are now on duty at each school. Letters indicating registration dates and times have been mailed to all students returning to the Birmingham Public Schools. Students may contact, their respective schools for further information. AREA SCHOOL Parents whose children will be -attending a Birmingham elementary school for the first time should contact the elementary school in their area. Kindergarten children must be five years old before Dec. 1, 1969. All incoming seyenth grade students at Barnum, Berkshire, Covington, Derby and West Maple junior high schools, and all 10th grade students at Groves and Seaholm high schools, are required to have a physical examination before participating in physical education activities. Students are urged to pick up their physical education forms at their respective schools, prior to the opening of school Sept. 3. Mrs. Grace Nash, nationally known authority mid clinician on the Kodaly and Orff techniques in elementary vocal music, will direct a two-day workshop for elementary Vocal teachers Sept. 12-13 at Seaholm High School. Vocal musife teachers in the Birmingham area are invited to participate. George V. Cripps, music coordinator for the Birmingham district, can be contacted for details and reservations. m FRANKLIN - The Franklin Village Band, directed by Dr. C. R. 'Lam, will present a concert at 3 p.m. at the Lourdes Nursing Home, 2300 Watkins Lake, Waterford Township, this Sunday at 3 p.m. Upcoming appearances scheduled for the band include a 6:30 p.m.'date Aug. 25 with A1 Hirt at the Michigan State Fair and th& annual Village Round-up parade at noon and a 1:30 p.m. concert on Labor-Day. Plan Doesn't Fall Flat HONG.KONG, (UPI) - They are in love but she cannot swim, So he tied her to a bicycle fire. Two ..refugees, a 25-year-old farmer and his girlfriend, 20, escaped from Communist China by swimming across a bay today. Moon Probe Returning JODRELL BANK, England UR — Zond 7, the Soviet Union’s latest unmanned moon probe, swung around the back of the moon today and headed bach, toward earth, Jodrell Bank Observatory repotted. Sunday In Pontiac At l «.tn.: wind Vntodty 10 m.p.h. - Direction: Southerly Sun soft Monday at 7:40 p.m. Sun rise* Tuaaday at 5:37 mr, Moon lilt Monday at 7:1S p.m. Flint G. Rapids Houghton . Houghton Lk. 73 49 Donvtr tl 57 Dotrolt 77 Duluth 74 52 Houston Collins Is Linked to Another Slain Girl 71 SI Jacksonville 71 74 One Year Ape In Pent lac Mistiest temperature ...... . .... Lowest temperature .... .......... -Mean temperature . ......... .... Weather: Pertly sunny This Date in 17 Years 71 S3 Miami leech ll 50 New Orleans 4» ss New York 77 S3 Omaha . - ____________ 73 4# Phoenix 1 Pension ' 71 41 Pittsburgh S. ste. Merle » 45 it. Louis Travtrse C. 77 51 S. Lake City . Albuquerque IS 47 $. Francisco Atlsme it 44 Seem* Boston 77 41 Spokane Chlemaa 74 tt l&aM .... 71 S7 Washington t s LAKE CONDITIONS: St. Clair - West to northwest winds, 0 to 12 knots today, I to 10 knots tonight. Fair. Huron — Variable winds 0 to 12 knots today, becoming southerly, 6 to 15 knots tonight. Fair. Erie — Small-craft warnings in effect. Winds northwest 10 to 15 knots today, becoming light and variable. Partly dondy tonight. YPSILANTI (UPI) ~ John Norman Collins, who remains under maximum security in the Washtenaw County Jail after being charged with the brutal slaying of the seventh girl in the string of coed murders, was reportedly linked to yet another of the earlier victims. A newspaper report published yesterday said the 22-yearold Collins was a frequent visitin' at an apartment building that housed the fourth victim of the murder chain.. * ★ ★ Collins, whose handsome, square-jawed looks give him a clean-eut collegiate image, often made appearances at an apartment just across the hall from the one in which Maratynn Skelton lived ~ ■2* ..All is« .. rqftk , Press want ads iH? '*$•1 go a long way to sqlve your" want” or f‘don't want” needs fast and without, fuss. Cost very little, too. Dial--.. 3344981 , or 332-8181 T11K royt lAi: KKKSS, >1()X1)AV, Al'(a ST 1], A—8 Newlywed Former Bishop 'to Stay in Catholic Church' Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. OPEN TOWTE’tHHa Tuesday and Wednesday 9 am to 5:30 pm HE HUFFED AND HE PUFFED — World champion pipe smoker Nelson Hall, a 53-year-old Washington, Mo., schoolteacher, accepts a victory kiss from Ann Bruck-erhpff of Hermahn, Mo., after he puffed AP Wiraphoto for, 86 minutes, 3 seconds, Saturday to beat a field of 45 competitors. Hall , said his secret is “getting the tobacco tamped just right and getting the right amount of air.” 'Alleged Green Beret Slaying Was Assigned,'Victim a VC SANTE FE, N.M. (AP) -| James P. Shannon, former Ro-j man Catholic auxiliary bishop! of Minneapolis-St. Paul, is expected to teach his regular class today at St. John’s College here, said Sunday he would re-n in the church despite his marriage, but a former col-' _ said the nuptials automatically excommunicated him. ★ * ‘ * Shannon, 48, and his bride, the former Ruth Church Wilkinson, 50, a Protestant who was previously married three times, returned here Saturday night, according to Richard W e 1 g 1 e ,1 president of the college.- * ★ * • | The couple was married Aug. 2 in Endicott, N.Y., by a Protestant minister, the Rochester (N.Y.) Democrat and Chronicle reported Sunday. Shannon then issued a statement to the N< York Times acknowledging the marriage. “I do not intend to leave the Catholic Church. It is my spiritual home, I love it dearly and have wilted to the best of my ; ability as one of its priests for 23 years,” he said] ‘EXCOMMUNICATED’ But the Most. Rev. Leonard P. Cowley, auxiliary archbishop of the Minneapolls-St. Paul diocese, said in Minneapolis: “By marrying, he incurred ex-communication. There’s no need for a declaration of it.” In New Yorlf, experts in church law said Shannon’s marriage violated Canon 2388 of the official code: “Clerics in major orders and all persons who presume to contract marriage with those clerics automatically in-; cur excommunication.” ★ ,* * Bishop Cowley said Shannon could still issue sacraments val-idly but that such action wasj against the law of the church. He said the marriage could! SAIGON CAP) - The Vietnamese man whom eight Green j Beret soldiers' are accused of murdering was a Vietcong agent! . and his slaying was an as-1 signed “military mission,” informed sources said today. The sources also said that the arrest of the eight men, including, the colonel commanding all Green Berets in Vietnam at the time, possibly was the outcome of a vendetta by Army officers jealous of the elite Special jjfcrces. One source who was in a i tion to know said speculation that the wrong man had been killed by mistake was erroneous. “He was a iVetcong agent and it obviously was a military mission,” the source said. NO DETAILS DIVULGED U.S. military officials have divulged no details of the case beyond saying that the slaying occurred June 20 near the Speoial Forces headquarters at Nha Trang and naming . the eight Americans accused of conspiracy and premeditated murder. The civilian attorney for one of the eight men conferred for three hours today with his client and said he Was confident of his innocence. * * * ' George Gregory of Cheraw, S.C., said he had obtained most of the facts in the mysterious case but did not feel at liberty to disclose them yet. He hinted that the Army was pressuring him to maintain the information blackout it-has thrown over the case. “There are a lot of things I’ve got to think about... They are keeping tabs on everybody including me, and they’re right sensitive about this,” he told newsmen. ‘RIGHTS VIOLATED’ ■ Gregory is the attorney for Maj. Thomas ,C. Middleton Jr., 30, of Jefferson, S.C. He said when he arrived in Saigon Sun-- day-, that Middleton’s rights were being Violated by his detention before trial. . “I intend to take whatever steps are necessary to get him released from confinement so that he can properly assist in the preparation of his own defense,” Gregory said. ★ * ★ Gregory, a former state sena-tor who spent three years in the Army’s legal corps, also Said on Sunday that he would, fight to keep the Army’s blacKout from extending to the trial. “A man is entitled to a public trial,” he said. “They will want to try him in a vacuum, but I am not going to let them do that.” Meanwhile, the U.S. Navy apparently gave up an almost monthlong search for the body of the murdered man. Hie U.S. minesweeper Woodpecker docked at Cua Da, near the coastal city of Nha Trang, Sun-! day. The vessel’s commander,! Lt, Victor G. Reiling of Dayton, Ohio, refused'to comment on the Woodpecker’s mission but said it would not be resumed today. “We didn’t find the body,” one of tiie minesweeper’s crew said. .. ★ The Woodpecker and two other Navy vessels have been searching off Nha Trang since about July 14. Hie eight men accused of pre-! meditated murder and conspiracy in the mysterious case are! all members of the Army’s Spe- J cial Forces. They include Col. | Robert B. Rheault of Vineyard Haven, Mass., who commanded all Green Berets in Vietnain un-j til ,the charges were brought against him last month. BEING HELD They are being held at the Army’s Long Binh headquarters 15 miles north of Saigon, pending the outcome of an investigation to determine whether they will face a court-martial on the charges. Three other civilian attorneys were reported engaged by members of the accused group. ★ ★ Ar ‘ i Military officials have disclosed only that the alleged murder occurred on June 20 near Nha Trang, headquarters of the 5th Special Forces in Vietnam, and that the victim was a Vietnamese man. There had been speculation that the victim Was a double agent. PRESCRIPTIONS AT MY COST PLUS A MAX. 1.50 PROFESSIONAL FEE DELL'Shmb PRESCRIPTION CENTER 219 Baldwin FE 4-2620 WEEKLY GARAGE SPECIAL Gable Front 20'x20' GARAGE Delivered Cash Price 00 Pies Tax ‘487! Garay* Door and Cement Ni pooledickie Lumber—Hardware Building Supplies 1.-151-165 ' 2495 > Oakland Ave., Orchard Lake Pontiac Keego Harbor Ph. 334-1594 Ph. 612-1600 have been legal within the church if Shannon had “re-, ceived the dispensation to marry beforehand and married a person who was free to marry.” Mrs. Shannon was divorced from her third husband,-who has since died. REGARDED HIGHLY Bishop Cowley said, “I wish he hadn’t done what he did because of the shock in it,, but I still regard him highly as a person. A lot of Catholics are terribly shocked because they know the personal commitment he made.” Shannon, in his statement, said, “It is a source of sadness and regret for both of us now that because of our marriage it will no longer be possible for me to serve the people of God as a priest or as a bishop.” ^ Let Your Scissors Do the 1 SAVINGS at SIMMS ... ! CAMERA , COUPON i CLIPPERS i Because thasa prices am co low wo must limit tho J couoont to todav. Tuesday and Wednesday. And 1 BEAT THE HEATHS CONVERT YOUR BASEMENT INTO A SUMMER RETREAT A REC. ROOM (N YOUR BASEMENT 24x40 *2,095 COMPLETELY FINISHED CWeetlon ffonshruriion (To. 681-2500 BATHROOMS REC ROOMS • ATTICS • KITCHENS DORMERS • GARAGES FAMILY ROOMS a ROOFING Member Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce in Pontiac Since 1931 Everything in Modernization Financing Available 1032 WEST HURON F „ PONTIAC GIs' Big Plans End in Vietnam RIVER ROUGE (AP)-Army Pfc. Dwight McKeathon wrote recently to his mother in River Rouge, “I’m not afraid to die— but I have big plana for my-aelf.” His family has beat notified he was killed Aug. 2 in fighting In Vietnam. He was 20. HAY FEVER Sufferers a&sMjr WJ2JI SYHA-CUAi »»•»« horn pain and pranart ol con-■SOWS. Altana you to braathe usily - stops SbPJOfJ* nw nosa. Yon can lay sSMflpn"* SIMMS 91 N. Saginaw SIMMS-Salesman’s Samples NATHHULLY ADVERTISED Children's Wear • Creepers • Pram Suits • Snow Suits • Jackets. • Co-ordinated Outfits • Pants Off Regular Price Tag Price Tags Sheer *1.19 to *25.98-You Take l/3 Off Again Simms purchased the complete stock of salesman's samples of famous brand children's wear. All first qualify and American made, and you'll recognize the famous names when you see them. Sizes 18 months, 3-4-8 in. co-ordinates, 18 months 3-6-10 in. outerwear. Childrnn's Wear—Main Floor SIMMS*! ■Downtown ] 1 Pontiac ‘SYLVANIA’ FLASHCUBES PACK of 3 Clip Zhis Coupon SAWYER or KODAK CAROUSEL ROTO SLIDE TRAYS $2.25 value — pack of 3 | cubes gives 12 flash shots. Limit 2 packs. I 1 HOUR RECORDING TIME CASSETTE RECORDING TAPE C-60 Cassette mode in Holland for cassette tape recorders, gives you 1 full hour of recording and playback time. Fits all standard cassette tape recorders. Limit 2 per coupon. Clip Zhis Coupon Jam-proof roto-trays in choice I of 80-slide Kodak or 100 slide Sawyer trays. Limit 5. I 214-Power Folding Glasses 99* Unique, compact folding ^ glasses for sport, theater, etc Pj Fully coatedlens, center _ JJ focus, pops up, sn^ips shut. I SIMMS"? THE PONTIAC PRESS MONDAY. AUGUSt ll,10fi» A—4 ArnNws Probers Today Hear Township Patrolman FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP - A township patrolman Is expected to ap> pear at the Oakland County prosecutor's office today to explain his version of arrests Involving allegations of brutality, according to informed sources. John Hedrick also is likely to be the first man questioned by the civilian review board expected to be appointed at tonight’s Township Board meeting. If approved as expected, the civilian board will have the authority to Investigate citizen complaints and recommend discipline to the trustees. The Federal Bureau of Investigation and township police have completed Investigation of the alleged brutality. Remits of the FBI investigation were sent to the U.S. Justice Department, and the township police results went to the prosecutor's office, ASKED TO TELL- Last week Hedrick was asked to tell the prosecutor's office his version of the incidents. At that time Ron Covault, chief assistant prosecutor, explained, "The decision to prosecute or not prosecute has not yet been made. Hedrick has been given an opportunity to contribute to our Investigation of the allegations. If he contributes, then the investigation will have additional factors." Under discussion are five counts of alleged brutality: Walter Vetowich of Farmington Township claims Hedrick choked him after arresting him for a' traffic violation. VetoWich has filed a (750,000 suit against Hedrick, Supervisor Curtis Hall (also police commissioner) and Police Chief Irving Yakes. a John VonSouers of Plymouth reportedly suffered a punctured eardrum from an alleged blackjack beating by Hedrick. When asked about the incident by 1110 Pontiac Press, VonSouers, 21, said that he "didn’t remember it too well." He said he had not pursued the Incident further, although he admitted that the FBI and the township police had asked him for statements on the incident. NEVER MENTIONED The brutality, which allegedly occurred when VonSouers was arrested on a charge of unlawfully "taking and using an automobile," was never mentioned during his trial. VonSouers pleaded guilty to the charge. • John Early of Southfield, an escapee from Southern Michigan Prison at Jackson, claims Hedrick shot him in the back when Hedrick went, to Early's home last year to arrest him for failure to show up at court for sentencing. Early Weekend Road Toll Is 8; Two Die in Cycle Crashes By The Associated Press A motorcycle ride ended in death for two sisters-in-law yesterday when a pair of cycles driven by their husbands slammed Into the side of a Penn Central freight train at a crossing on East Jackfon Drive in Calhoun County's Tekonsha Township. Dead were 34-year-okl Phyllis Osborn of Homer and 31-year-old Dianne Marie Osborn of Quincy. ★ * \ The deaths raised to-eight the death toll on Michigan roads over the weekend. The Associated Press count began at 6 p.m. Friday vand ended last midnight. ★ ★★ n State Police said the motorcycle on, which Phyllis Osborn was riding struck the train first, followed by the other five seconds later. HUSBANDS HOSPITALIZED The husbands, Dale Osborn of Homer and Kenneth Osborn of Quincy, were hospitalized at Coldwater Community Hospital. Police said both have pelvic Police Plane, Cruisers Team Up for 51 Arrests -NEW-BUFFALO (UP*)—-Good communications between a State Police spotter plane and State Police cruisers resulted in the arrests yesterday of 51 motorists on 1*94, including two brothers who were allegedly racing each other. • ★ • ★ * Hie arrests were made in the Chickaming Township area. Two brothers, Willie Shannon, 19, and Sylvester Shannon, 22, both of Benton Harbor, were allegedly traveling at speeds of up to 100 miles an hour. Southfield Rabbi Will AirMideast Conflicf " A Southfield rabbi will discuss the explosive Middle East conflict before the Oakland County Young Republicans in Royal Oak tomorrow. ... * , * */ Rabbi Irwin Groner of Congregation Shaarey Zedek will speak on “The Crisis in the Middle East" at 8 p.m. at Hie Belanger House, 12 Mile and Main. The meeting is open to the public. reportedly escaped from prison last Wednesday while on a work detail. • Foster Maler of Farmington Township alleges that he was whipped with handcuffs at the police station by Hedrick and Patrolman Peter Larion. ★ ★ ★ a Christopher Fears of Farmington Township claims he suffered head injuries from a Hedrick beating behind the police station. ★ % * The complaints were lodged against Hedrick during a trial board hearing for Detective Sgt. Earl TeepleS, a township policeman who , was suspended for talking to the prosecutor’s office about the Maier case. Teeples eventually was reinstated by an appeal board, a subcommittee of the Township Board. CODE PASSED LATER Teeples had been charged with violating several counts of a police code of conduct created several months after the Maier case. Since his 'clearance, Teeples has been voted out of membership in the Farmington Police Officers Association (FPOA) for allegedly violating those same rules. 4 ★ - it ■ 1c Hedrick is president of the FPOA. separations and multiple bruises qnd abrasions. : The other victims: Marian Lambry, 43, of Chicago, a passenger in a car which collided with an auto yesterday two miles south of Cassopolis on M62. . '. * * * John A. Rhode, 56, of Mancelona, when his car ran off a road, struck an abutment and rolled over yesterday in Kalkaska .County. Earl Franklin, 23, of Huntsville, Ala., when he stepped into the path of a car while hitchhiking Saturday night on 1-75 hear Monroe. PASSENGER DIES Anna Moore, 66, of Wyandotte, who was a passenger in a car which collided with an auto Saturday at the intersection of MSS and M46 near Marlette. Earl Woolever, 19, of Vassar, a passenger in a vehicle which struck a pole Saturday night along a road In Tuscola County. ★ '' * * Maxine Elaine Evilsizer, 39, of Manchester, in a three-car pile-up Friday on U.S. 23 in Lenawee County. 'Stop Stressing Race in Matters of Intellect' ANN ARBOR (AP) - Racial and ethnic considerations should T>e eliminated as foundations for decisions on “all matters related to intellectual characteristics," a 1958 Nobel Prize winner told University of . Michigan summer graduates Sunday, About 2,500 graduate and undergraduate degrees were conferred after the speech by Dr. George W. Beadle, a framer president of the University jjf/Chicago and now director of the>Arrferican Medical Association’s Institute for Biomedical Research. "With regard to all matters related to intellectual characteristics — education patterns, job training, occupational opportunities and others of comparable nature — we should think and act in terms of individuals, not of racial or ethnic groups," Dr. Beadle said. "To me it seems crystal clear that we should assign our highest priority to giving every individual of our species the best possible opportunity to develop and use his or her. potential—genetic or other—In ways that will maximize the well : Control — Self-leveling Rear Feet Plus. Heavy-Duty -Vi-HtP. General Rlctric Motor. ONLY BENT — The cross atop the St. Gertrude church in suburban .Madeira, Ohio, is bent, but not broken, after a tornado hit Saturday night. In right foreground are the remains of a tent which was blown down on top of about 100 persons. Italian Leader Wins a Confidence Vote ROME (AP) - Premier Mariano Rumor’s minority government went before the Italian Senate today after winning a vote of confidence in the- Chamber of Deputies. The upper chamber was expected to give the all-Christian Democrat government a vote of confidence Wednesday. ★ ★ The Chamber of Deputies voted 346-245 Sunday to let Rumor’s government serve until a majority coalition can be knitted together. The premier pledged that the new government would Stay in power to preserve order until Italy’s divided Socialists can be brought back into a &nter-left coalition. The two Socialist parties, whose split in July brought the collapse of Rumor’s previous coalition government, supported the premier in the confidence vote. The Communists, Proletarian Socialists, Liberals, Monarchists and Fascists opposed him. During the debate, Rumor pledged that terrorists who planted bombs aboard seven trains Saturday \would be ‘sought out by every means and punished with maximum severity.” Eleven persons were injured in the explosions. Police first speculated that the pocket-size time bombs had been planted by German-speaking nationalists from the Tyrol. But today they said there were indications that the bombings were the work of extreme leftists usually referred to as “the Chinese” because they are more militant than the Communists. The police noted that the explosives were less powerful than those attributed to Alto Adige terrorists in the past and said the watches used to trigger the [bombs were made in East Germany. A ' similar watch was used in a bomb that exploded at the Palace of Justice in Milan July 25, police said. That bombing was blamed on “Chinese” leftists. THANKS, DOC—William Lourie (left) thanks Dr. Michael J. Donovan Saturday for saving his life after he was presumed dead on arrival at” Carney Hospital in Boston when he was overcome by smoke in a fire at his home»Tues-day. On detecting a brief respiratory effort, Dr. Donovan performed an emergency tracheotomy and had Lourie breathing on’ his own in an hour. TUESDAY-WEDNESDAY-THURSDAY ONLY! T^GOOD HOUSEKEEPING OF PONTIA'C 51 W. HURON FE 4.1555 , FREE PARKING ’ OPEN MON.. THURS. and FRI. TILE 8:80 ‘GAMBLERS SPECIAL’ FOUND — Wreckage of the long-sought Gamblers' Special, a DC3 which disappeared in a snowstorm Feb. 18, lies on the slopes of California’s Mt. Whitney where It was discovered Friday. Thirty-five persons were killed when the plane hit a sheer cliff and slid down through the snow. It was en route from Hawthorne, Nev., to the California cities of Burbank and Long Beach with persons who had spent the previous night at a gambling casino. Officials say it may take days to remove the bodies ! from the wreckage. TWister Hits Cincinnati Suburbs Rhodes Vows to Seek U.S. Disaster Aid ; LONG EASY TERMS -90 DAYS IS SAME AS CASH j Looking for Budget Buys? Whirlpool Automatic Washer *148®° Fully automatic! porcelain tub — yiant rapacity - ' heavy . duty ptimp — plu* many fine G.E. feature*. , 2-Speed 2-Cycle Washer *158 80 Automatically fill*. wa*he», rinaei and emptiet. Porcelain Tub — exrlutive 9 Rime* -Biy CAPACITY. THE PONTIAC PRESS U West Huron Street * Pontiac, Michigan 48056 MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1969 Rtwt* A, Fwwwmlc Chairmen of the Bo* Rich*** M. hmnui It Seems to Me... State’s Auto-Building Cities Have Stake in Road Safety One of the most constructive lessons that Michigan's automotive cities can drive home lies in greater safety on the highways. The number unnecessarily killed is simply tragic and casts sorry reflections upon too many of the millions who use our fine highways. They ignore extra protective methods, many of which are merely “safety first” To quote an ancient truism: “The Cemetery Is Full of People Who Had the Right-of-Way.” This is too, too true. Implications are tragic. ★ ★ , Ar The light turns green and a driver who pever had an accident in his career, starts rapidly across the highway. The Right-of-Way is his. Barreling in on his right is a speedster who figured to beat the red but failed. In his last frensted effort to clear the crossing he jams the accelerator to the floor and crashes broadside into the innocent, 'law-abiding driver. ★ r ★— . A ' ■ In the “good car” two are killed outright and two more spend weeks in the hospital. The dastardly culprit for unknown reasons escapes with “minor injuries.” His trial is delayed two years by “smart” but misguided legal talent that gets him off of the main and rightful charge. ★ ★ . ★ You’re driving too close to the car ahead at a rather brisk speed and suddenly the driver applies the brakes vigorously because of necessities. You.ram the back of his car. You’re guilty of “tailgating.” Perhaps you obey traffic laws assiduously but just now you’ve been guilty of a driving defect ★ ★ . ★ ,■ You’re on your own side) of the road, observing the speed laws carefully. Suddenly a car that’s driving 20 miles an hour above the speed limit on the opposite side of .the highway tries unsuccessfully to pass the_sar ahead of it. The thing crashes into you almost head on. ★ ★ ★ Deaths can easily result. * You’re innocent, personally. But remember, the Cemetery Is Full of People Who Had the Right-of-Way. Your only defense here is especially alert driving at all times, just so that you can half defend yourself as much as possible fn a case like this. Perhaps a lightning turn of your wheel at the first split second would have carried you just clear of the oncoming bullhead or have softened the blow. ★ ★ It all resolves into something as' simple as this: at all times be aware that the other driver can be a complete nincompoop without judgment or ordinary intelligence. Remember, “The cemetery is . . g ........./. etc.” 'Why Don't You Put One On The Other Foot, Too?' David Lawrence Says: Welfare Plan ‘Humanistic’ ‘Go Republican’ . . . Reports from Washington and Virginia suggest that Senator Harry Byrd Jr., is roundly urged to “go. Republican” by a host of people in both parties. In the recent Virginian election, the conservative candidate which Byrd supported was soundly ' trounced. T ★ -* ★ Harry F. Byrd Jr., is one of the most astute and hardheaded members of the U.S. Senate. He has been exposed to the political scene for more than a quarter of a century and learned under that unremitting task master, Harry Byrd Sr., his father, who stood forth prominently as the leading member of the Senate in espousing the cause of econo- my and money saving. He was the taxpayers’ greatest and most loyal friend. He stands so marked in history. His son follows closely. ★ A The GOP ranks should ring with loud applause if the younger Byrd elects to cast his lot there. In these days of extravagance, profligacy and wanton waste, the current Harry Byrd is a shining beacon in his unremitting war against waste. ... ★ A A iVe'known him for two decades and^ would unhesitatingly back him for any office to which he aspired—including the Presidency, And in Conclusion Jottings from the well-thumbed notebook of your peripatetic reporter: Next season Philadelphia will try a 7:30 starting time for theatrical shows as most of the people want to be “off the streets” earlier. Boston will do the Same. New York is debating a 6:15 starting hour five days a week. . . . . ...... Overheard: “There’s a new movie rating: ‘Z.’ • That means you must be 35 and accompanied by a registered nurse.” .......... New York’s Metropolitan Opera with a new $15 top lost $3,5 million last season. (Mebbethey need popcorn machines in the lobby.) A A ★ Nomination for one of the most attractive young ladies: Miss Universe. . . . Note to motorists: chewing gum will mend a leaky fuel line. ............ With the new academic year approaching, more than 200 American colleges and m universities are looking for new Presidents. .......... With Teddy Kennedy out, Edmund Muskie currently rates the Number One spot-in the Democratic battle for a Presidential candidate. .★ A A A Great Big Round of Hearty Applause for Cora Curry—one of WASHINGTON - President Nixon has recommended to Congress a program of legislation which he calls the New- Federal-- ism, but it may be more aptly described as a new humanism in gov- I ernment. For what I is recognized LAWRENCE and realistically dealt with is this simple truth — that there are millions of poor people who work but do not make enough to take care of their families, and there are many millions who can’t find jobs and would need more income even if they got work. ★ A * The American people have always had a humanitarian instinct. A consciousness of widespread poverty and lack of opportunity began to be apparent 35 years ago when the “New Deal” of President Franklin D. Roosevelt was launched in the midst of a grave depression. Since then, as economic conditions have improved, a residue of welfare projects have to some extent continued the “relief’ and “Works Progress Administration” agencies of the 1930s. * A ' h Mr. Nixon realizes that the situation capnot be allowed to drift haphazardly and that a new approach is needed. So he urges that aim 11 y .assistance” programs b e started which will insure a —basic annual income, to., the* poverty-stricken. The poor who do work also will he given federal help up to a point.- WILL SHARE REVENUES To administer these numerous cases, all of which require individual attention, the federal government will share revenues with the states. Estimates vary, but it is calcaulated that more than 22 million persons - could b e directly benefited by the policy. of the money earned will provide additional tax receipts. A * A •• . • Mothers who want to work are to be assisted, under the new plan, by the setting up of day-care centers which will offer “more than custodial -care” for young children. ’ All t h e s e humanitarian projects will need the cooperative help of volunteers in the local communities. A , 4 A A The greatest need will be efficiency in operation and a system of information distribution which will tell the low-income groups how they can be helped and also how t h e y c an best help themselves/ Bob Considine Says: LBJ’sOld Pakistani Pal i Now an Anti-American NEW YORK—Whatever became of Ahmed Bashir, the Pakistani camel driver Lyndon Johnson befriended and brought to the Upited States in 1962? Glad you asked that, to run an American television company cat off the Toad when it pulled up abreast for an interview. After living the life of Aiuned Riley on the income from that truck, he’s real sore having to do menial labor again. He’ll never forgive LBJ, or the United States. Voice of the People: Commends Volunteefs f or Assistance at Fair I appreciate the Oakland County Sheriff’s Posse (mounted division), auxiliary police and the Cross-Country React Alert Team for their lielp and cooperation at the Oakland County 4-H Fair. My son’s horse became seriously ill and with the help of these volunteer workers the colt pulled through. 'A AA A These same volunteers patrolled the grounds 34 hours a day while the Fair was in progress to ensure that our children and their exhibits, as well as Visitors, were kept safe-, ■ jack h. whitlow lake ORION ‘Litter From Shopping Center Is Appalling’ Along with many other residents of this section of Pontiac, I have been appalled by the filthy condition of one street adjacent to one of our shopping centers. For several months the same mud, paper, bottles, .cans and other trash have remained beside and on the sidewalk. The grass has not been cut for several weeks and the1 weeds are now about three feet high. The litter extends for a block down the street. The shopping center itself and the main street adjacent to the center are filthy and littered. AAA Heretofore we have been prond of our attractive center and felt it compared favorably with The Mall. This is no longer trne and the residents of this area feel that the merchants in the center should protest against this condition and try to attract, rather than repel, prospective customers. A. SCOTT T0PP 2 ROSSHIRE COURT Question and Answer Last fall on the Mod Squad TV series a quotation was used by the young Mod policeman. It went approximately: “I wonder about things and I ask. I dream about... and wonder why.” b this an actual quote? If so, by whom? We have names from Lincoln to King, but no proof. ASKING AND WONDERING REPLY ABC in Hollywood says the quote is: “Some men see things as they are and say why. 1 dream things that never were and say why hot.*’ It was used by Sen. Edward Kennedy in the eulogy for his brother, Sen. Robert Kennedy, who had used the quotation during his political career, It was ; originally written by George Bernard Shaw for his play, “Back to Metfyyselah.” Question and Answer I cannot cope with my problem any longer. I have a skunk under my house and don’t know how to get rid of it. Hava you any suggestions? HAZEL WRIGHT OXFORD REPLY Mr. Hartwig at Michigan Conservation gave these suggestions: find out where: it’s getting in under your house, and put a lot of flour near the entrance. This way you’ll be able to see tracks when it leaves. Have something ready so that once it leaves, the house, you can plug up the hole, and it will Have to go elsewhere. If your house is built so there are a number of possible entrances which can’t be plugged, you can call the Conservation office, 674-2261, for a permit to trap it, or shoot it, if you’re in an area that allows shooting. The bum has become the most outspoken anti-American in Landl^i, the suburb of Karachi where he lives. What bugs him is that the crazy Americans switched presidents.. While LBJ was in office, Bashir had it made. The U.S. Embassy in Karachi rented his Ford pickup truck for $170 a month. The truck was part of the loot he received during his stay in IT O UT*tm innAMAA earn, ' a* - Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Pentagon Study result in a lessening of public confidence. The important Youngstown (Ohio) Vindicator thing is that an objective appraisal is absolutely vital to . In response to a request for an opinion about alleged Pentagon cost overruns on major weapons systems, Gilbert Fitzhugh, named by President Nixon to head a study of Pentagon operations, said: “Somebody ougit to the UA His income as, a- Jook into it and it looks like-camel jockey before that had it’s ghing.to be me. put charges and countercharges in perspective. The puhlic deserves to know not only “what’s right” with the Pentagon, but “what’s wrong” as well. '' The remedies won’t be found in partisan > pondering, but in cold*6yechobjectivity.. goes that is bound to interest people. It has been said that the prince was his favorite for the succession because there was no credible rival. But thhre are rivals, including Juan Carlos’s father, Don Juan, who, his Haim disallowed, appears to have resigned himself to bitter exile. The Carlist pretender, Carlos Hugo, also has his partisans. ' * You’re worth 40 p e r cent more than you were 30 years ago. All the chemicals in your body assess at $3.50— MU8 UNIVERSE « rise of 98 cents, says Northwestern University- ...... It is surprising that, as unemployment has decreased in recent years, welfare lists have risen. But how will progress be made? First, Confess has to pads laws authorizing the ap-n . ... propriation of the necessary Pontiac s finest citizens.------... funds. It ^ but on Do you know that you can drive a a long-range basis the U.S. golf ball between eight and ten miles on the moon? ______________ Aviation circles are ga-ga over a six seat jet to be marketed this fall for $350,000. Previously, jets ran a million minimum. .............New York had 13 MnsecuUve days wittrains vaiying vktnm „.r. In from “Ught" to cloud bursts..........Drocortim,. win . . v . If skunks bother your cabin, camping site or what-not, use moth balls. Drop a handful in the mouth of their den and they’ll leave for the nfoon............ Dept, of Cheers and Jeers; the C’s*—Oakland County 4-H F&ir; the J’s—careless drivers. —Harold A. Fitzgerald been about $100 a year, if that. OFF FREELOAD LIST Well, he was dtimped off the freqload list -when Mr. Johnson left the White House. But he’s angrier at his -benefactor, LBJ, than the White House incumbent. Because LBJ abdicated, if that’s the word, Ahmed has been forced to go back to work. ... His pickup is now used to carry freight and passengers, when available. And he must do the. driving. Since he can’t get a license to drive, he must pay the police a part of,his ' at he can stay “Somebody ought into it” pretty well public reaction to the many official and unofficial disclosures of outright goqfs, bad guesses and mismanagement for which the Defense Department is blamed. That a man of Mr. Fitzhugh’s caliber has been selected to implement the public’s, oft-expressed desire gives some assurance that the year long, $500,000 appraisal will produce results. gl0J* Uncertain Throne The Vancouver (Can.) Sun Thus the monarchist party is definitely split in the face of considerable opposition to a Romantics in many lands restoration of the throne. The may be thrilled by the idea of fascist Falange, on whose government can collect much of the money needed. ■ MORE PRODUCTIVE Second, the tax system is bring overhauled and eventually will be more productive of revenue than ever before. . Mr. Fitzhugh, chairman and executive officer of ‘the Metropolitan Life Insurance Co., will head an outside panel which will make recomm e ndations about Defense Deaprtment organization, procurement and research practices. £ While the panel will be vr t i /v *ii concerned chiefly with the Verbal Orchids mechanics of Pentagon operations and not with Ahmed has turned out to be a wild pickup, driver who tried i present proportions, will not last much longer and some of those billions will become available for domestic use. Also, there is an incentive to be provided the citizen to encourage his search for employment. In the end some Mrs. Viletta Brown of Clarkston; 90th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Schremp of Davisburg; .59th wedding anniversary. Mrs. Catharine Joyce of 247 W. Rutgers; 85th birthday. Mr. aad Mrs. Pierre Shaver of 185 Mohawk; . 54th wedding, anniversary. Herman Gerds of 1111 Airport; 82nd birthday. Ito Utica Seated entering its 94th year of publication. . it will shed important light on how efficiently those policies are formulated and how effectively they are carried out. ' In essenqe, it is a massive time, ~*ost and quality study that should Havh been made long ago. However, Defense Secretary Laird’s statement that the aim of the examination is to ’ ‘ r e s t o r e public confidence and public credibility” could be called only cn assumption on his part.' -‘-A' ? The study could conceivably Spain becoming a monarchy again after a generation’s lapse. The election of Juan Carlos by the Spanish Cortes — at the behest of dictator Francisco Franco — does not, however, guarantee a happy or a secure future for that prince or his country. He will inherit the fruits of 30 years of oppression, years that have done little to improve the conditions .which brought about the fall of the1' monarchy and of 'the republic that followed —- in the ’30s. - A A A / It Is obvious that Franco does not intend to surrender office and power in the immediate future. He is going to keep Juan Carlos beside him so that he may learn the. business of bring ruler. But it if what happens after Franco The Associated toss Is aaMM ' lively «a. Die use far republi-i-af oH heal news printed in weefa shew mailed Ce sulfas • fa ahem in Michigan and all other pin in Iba United Stafae *36.00 a yt All aMM aafascdpHaas payable fa j vonce. Postage fan been paid; MtfaToa at “-1 Member sd ABC - V- shoulders Franco' • power 30-odd years ago' has been estranged from the dictator for several years on the ground ^that he has “sold out” to liberalism. Franco has made minor gestures to students and workers, it is true; but he has taken back with one hand what he appeared to give with the other. He has alienated big business and the church. A The latter generally opposes huh on a number of social questions. Some say that only his pfestige has kept the lid on in Spain, but other observers point to the loyalty of the army as the Teal stay of the Franco regime. ★ A a Thus it would appear R»ft Juan Carlos would have to rdy on that army to maint«|tn himself. The horrors of the civil "war have remained in the memory of the older generation; they have no influence on the younger element today. „ , * " ft uf \ ■ It is from these that trouble may be expected and if it comes, Juan Carlos, like Constantine of Greece, may have to choose between exile er becoming the prisoner of the generals. .■ THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST > ‘ ■ . 1V*** y< -!$§£ 'V :■ §&*.!»*' &• • ' * n&fflaQ,! :)‘? *■' ',k :i :4WSfeM- PBK*g$i tmSsSmkiaBBmsi ledjtoiHfae iut mfjr^ey.pr ouystandiniL «**3>/$«« ^^^oe^mmK-'shoVt bbftl'aJfea lamb coat* • ?£, -black dyed P '* rtost, Longfellow, McConnell«• '» sfid Wilson elementary schools,^"^Houhl^take ls ...... . ... city buses. The double-take Is addition to Ms duties pretty Mrs. Ceclle Arbique, 15 1(ki Hasten ^According to Sgt. Carl Colan-dff of the Juvenile Crime Prevention Bureau, the primary responsibility of the • police-counselor is “to serve as i resource person to schoo personnel in preventing juvenile delinquency.” “He serves as a member of the bus company’s first woman driver. Mrs. Arbique, a 26-year-old mother of five children, is the only woman among 65 male drivers. Armel Lecavalier, bus company superintendent of operations, says she handles the bus as well as foe men. SMOOTH RIDING - For highway or campus routes, fois 350 Honda Scrambler from Anderson Sales and Service, 1645 S. Telegraph, .will take you in style. Model includes electric starter, five-speed transmission and rubber-mounted in-struments. NEW 7-FT. VACUUM CLEANER HKE Braided Cloth, Ml Rubber Ru-Uie- $095 Regular T.50 Com* in or Frte Delivery t PARTS and SERVICE 1 ON ALL CLEANERS Diepoul Bags. Hoeee. Bruehee. Belts, Attachment!, Etc. “Rebuilt by Cnrt'e Appliance. leinii.Our Own Parte | Complete with CURT'S APPLIANCE Factory Authorised White Dealer 1414 WUXiAMI UKB ROAD OB 4-1101 Wash Hair Easier It is easier to shampoo your hair if you tup a portable spray which Is attached to your faucet. A “Y" fitting ia available to blend hot and cold water from a two-faucet sink. PRE GRAND OPENING SALE AUGUST 7 THRU AUGUST 22 OF OUR WATERFORD STORE, 3950 W. WALTON WITH THIS AD 15% OFF ON ALL DRAPES AND HOUSEHOLD GOODS! CASH and CARRY ONLY!’ We-Take Pride in The Perfection Of Our Drycleaning. Our Long Experience And Modern Drycleaning Methods Keep Your Drapes And Household Goods looking Their Best 10% OFF ON CUSTOM DRAPERIES TAILORED TO YOUR OWN MEASUREMENTS Choose from a Wide and Complete Selection! 80S OAKUND AVE. 1980 W. WALTON BLVO. FE 4-2879 For Pontiac Catholic , Calender Set ■ CATHOLIC' Aug. 28-29—Teacher orientation. Sept. 3-Student orientation. Nov. ID-Second quarter begins Nov. 26—Thanksgiving vacation Dec. 1—Classes resume. Dec. 8-Holy Day-no classes. N Dec. lB-Christmas vacation. Jan. 5-Claasqs resume. Jan. 22-End of second quarter (42 days). J«n. 22-Semester holiday. Jan. 28—Third quarter begins. ■ March 26—Easter vacation and end of third quarter April 6—Classes resume ’ May 7—Ascension Thursday (no classes). May 29—Memorial Day weekend June 8-10—Final exams. June 11—Records day June 12—Reporting day, Honors day _________ 4 New Schools Set to Open in Uticaf ■Hie! Utica School District wff oped three new etementarj| buildings in September including the Crissman Scbo# in Shelby Tbwnshlp, WalsM Elementary in Sterling Height* and an unnamed building vm. Grand Haven in Sterling Heights. ’ si The $3,275,000 Davis Juniori High School building will alsd5 open In September. ' ★ * .it ★ ;*€ The elementary buildings cos| about $1.1 million each. In addition, there is a $325,00$ remodeling program under way-at Utica High School. A new, $3.2-million junior Mgh building,, under construction at Mild Road and Mound, will be ready for occupancy in the 1970-7L' school term. , | igmaROFF southfield, BUICKrOPEL MICHIGAN 1969 BUKK CUSfOIIT SUE! fmhistk mis h si new mas ADDITIONAL SAVINGS ALL DEMOS SO ON SALE TODAY LET'S NUIEA DEAL! 41 OLOOMHBJ TWK. _ Telegraph Rd. lust south of 12 Mile OPEN across from the Tal-TWalvs Mall. MON. PHO— 353-1300 £ Every purchase cutured T1LL complete aatiafoction at Tamaroff Buick-Opel * F*"* TRADES ARE WORTH MORE AT TAMAROFF SIRMINSHAM t> MM SO. 1 8 M ' * It Milt OP. Id TAMAIOM 1* IN Mlli OP. I| « 0 Mill ID. p A L inoir 1 college education... saving cortt|wqft4iMl,apNf-' paid quarterly. $2,808 SAVINGS CERTIFICATES' lam interest when held for a period of six month*. $8,999 SAVINGS CERTIFICATES 64m 5% interest whin held fare pe-riod of nine months. $10,000 SAVINGS CERTIFICATES Earn 514% interest when held for a period of 12 months. 761 W. HURON St. Downtown Pontiac — Drayton Plains — Rochester — Clarinton — Milford — Walled Lake — lake Orion — Waterford — Union Lake — E. Blvd. Branch ’ r w' ,r THJS PONTIAC PllKSS. MONDAY, AUGUST Jll, lQpp Miss* TOMORROW! V/UIKEE BARRICADES THE DOORS! WIDE PMMNM FOR Odd GRAND RE-OPENING 12:00 NQON, WEDNESDAY AUGUST 13 "(STORES CLOSED ALL DAY TUESDAY, AUGvl2) * /■ YANKEE’S 27 BIG ^ STORES DECLARE WAR ON HIGH PRICES! WATCH FOR OUR EIGHT-PAGE BLAST OF REVOLUTIONARY DISCOUNTS TOMORROW!! SEE YpUR NEWSPAPER! WATCH YOUR MAIL!...., BUT, BE THERE AT KOON WEDNESDAY! THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 11, lg69 PPP| tj ALL TOGETHER NOW - Wearing f«ll fashions from downtown stores (from, left) Lynda Garbutt, David B. Brown and Andrea Lingle comprise a stunning trip. Lynda’s crisp cotton dress in plum plaid with smocked yoke, bright white collar -ahd three-quarter length sleeves, is from Kresge’s. Federal’s, also in Drayton Plains dresses David in Junior Edition sweater and slacks. His beige and navy check bell bottoms have power knee for long'wear. Completing his outfit is an orlon rib knit sweater And felt fedora. A Linda Lo fashion from Arthur’s Young Folks Shop is Andrea’s choice. This machine washable knit is a perfect blend of orlon pcrylie bonded to acetate tricot. Linda and David attend Lutes and McVittieEle* mentaiy School in Waterford Township and Andrea goes to Auburn Heights Elementary School, Avondale. , AND A ONE, TWO — Richards Boys and Girls Wear, Tel-Hnron, and Mont-gomery Ward, the Pontiac Mall, ready Michael Burrill and JacUe Munson for school. Michael sports a pair of Maim, nodron, red plaid slacks and a Healtbtex red velour all cotton pullover with rib neck. The burgundy of Jackie's pleated skirt is repeated in her sweater vest and in the stripes of her long sleeve pullover. All washable, this acelate-orlon acrylic garment needs little ironing. Jackie attends Mark Twain Elementary School. Michael goes to Monteith Elementary SchooL Clarkston, is striking in his Towncraft grey and blue plan slacks of polyester and cotton from J. C. Penney at Miracle neck is complemented by. a machine washable virgin acryl DASHING DUO - First paden at Central and Webster Elementary Schools. ganny Stein (left) andI Tupothy Coodwjn model the latest fa.hi™.WKmi£ Clenwood Plaaa, sad Spartan Atlantic, Dixie Highway. Danny’s cotton and fortrri THE PONTIAC PltESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 11. 1909 B-r US Education " f-h ; h . ' Is Big Business Or *?or*than 80 m,,lion Americana are fatt’time today in some phase of the U. S. educa-tionat enterprise, according to figures supplied by the U. S. Ofnpe of Education and the National Education Association. . ,I!L^!ti0!'’ 8om® Americans are devoting a great deai of their time to education as an avocation in the form of local school trustees of colleges and universities. v • , ' ' • ★ *. J'677'000 teachers at work in the United States, Iricludlhg university professors and instructors in nonpublic educational institutions. H»ey are charged with awesome responsibility of educating 57.600.000 students enrolled from the kindergarten level through college, and university. LARGEST NUMBER Most of these students are in the nation’s elementary schools, which, public and nonpublic, register 36,700,000 learners. Some 17,159,000 students are enrolled in secondary Schools and 6,911,748 are enrolled in institutions of higher education. it *★ ★ i The figures establish the fact that education is one of the most populous of all U. S. enterprises - and it is still growing. 1....- In 1946; it Is estimated by U-.8. Office of Education analysts titat som 2,078,065 U. S. students were enrolled in institutions of higher education. For the same year, there were sorts 1,060,033 high school graduates and a total enrollment of less than 21 million in the nation’s elementary SChOOlS. .. CONTINUED INCREASE The/enrollment of all students in public and nonpublic elementary and secondary schools, and in all degree-credit courses in institutions of higher education is. expected to increase to more than 62 million by 1976, ' This drill include an expected enrollment of 45.7 .million youngsters it elementary and secondary schools. Statistician^ expect that the major increases in school enrollment bver the next decade will be principally at the high school level because ill the children who will be moving through high school In these years were born in the high birthrate years between 1946 and 1961. ★ ★ h Enrollment in kindergarten and elementary grades will decline; reflecting the lower birthrates of the 1966b. Enrollment in high schools went from 9.5 million in 1956 to 15# million in 1966. By 1976, it is expected to jump to 20.6 million, < DOCTOR# DEGREES In graduate education, the number of doctor’s degrees Issued in 1956-57 was 8,800. The figure* jumped to 18,800 in 1966-67 and Is expected to be 38,700 by 1976-77. U. S, Office of Education analysts expect the demand for full-time instruction staffs in institutes of higher education to continued to increase over the next decade. In higher education alone the demand for instructors is expected to total 234.000 between 1972and 1976. ■■ ■ j$ ★ ★ ★' • t Emphasizing the major increase in the value of the U. S. educational plant over the past decade is the fact that expenditures for public and nonpublic education in this country rose from 1164 billion in 1956 to $52.2 billion in 1968. The figure is expected to keep climbing to reach a total of more than |70.2 billion in 1976. CAprrft outlay . Capital outlay by public elementary and secondary schools, including expenditures of state and local school building authorities, was $17.8 billion for the five-year period 1957-58 to 1961-62, according to U. S.' Office of Education statistics. It rose to 18.4 billion in the following five-year period and is expected to hit $19 billion by 1972. Kindergartners Moms Advised Her’s some advice I mothers about to send junior off to kindergarten. Be certain that’ your child knows his or her name and address, and guard against a memory lapse by pinning a tag that shows both on his clothing. Junior should be able to go to the toilet by himself, and know how to take off and put on any outer garments, such as coats, rubbers, gloves and scarves. ★ ★ ★ All immunization requirements must be met stated in the Michigan School Codes “All children enrolling in any public, private, parochial or nondenohiinational school Michigan for the first time shall submit (1) either a statement signed by a physician that such pupil has been immunized or protected against smallpox, diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis, measles and poliomyelitis, and tuberculin tested to determine the presence Of infection : tuberculosis, or (2) a statement signed by a parent or guardian to the effect that the child has not been immunized and tuberculin tested because of religious convictions or other objections to immunization, or (3) a request signed by a parent or guardian that the local health department give the needed protective injections and diagnostic tests.” In addition, the child must undergo a thorough physical examination to determine any other possible physical, defi- Finally, the child must meet the age requirements. To enter kindergarten in September, junior must be 5 no later than the following Dec. 1. Dropout Teachers Due for Inner City COLUMBUS, Ohio 6ft — High school dropouts may eventually become teachers under an Ohio State University experiment in teacher education called New Dimedsipns. In a special two-year curriculum, men who are inner-city residents, 21 to 30 years old and high schpol dropouts, will work toward acquiring certification as instructional specialists. When they complete t h turses, the instructors will return to inner-city schools to help bridge the cultural gap which often develops between an inner-city child and the educational experiences, offi cials said. Pontiac PuMic Schools Registration Information and Reporting Dates Registration for oil {unior high school students will teiks placa at the appropriate junior high school between the hours of 9t00 A.M. and 3:00 p.m. on August 19, 20, 21 and 22. Students should report op the basis of lost (Rm^lWfotlawfs A through E - Tuesday, August 19 F through 1C Wednesday, August 20 |f ' L through R Thursday, August 21 S through Z Friday, August 22 Registration for all senior high school students will take place at the appropriate senior high school between 9JX) AM and 3:00 PM from August 21 through August 29, on the basis of the following schedule 1 Oth Grade: All students with a last name beginning with: A through L will report on Thursday, August 21 M through 2.will report on Fridby; August 22 • 11th Grade: All students with a last name beginning with: A ihrough l will report on Tuesday, August 26 M through Z will report on Wednesday, August 27 12th Grade: All students with a last name beginning with: * - *through L will report on Thursday, August 28 * ** . M through Z wfllt^ FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL Ths school ealsndar is being negotiated as port of our teacher'* contract. The schedule listed below Is tentative and subject 10 modification as contract negotiations proceed: ACTION WEAR — Even during a study break, Gregg Adsit looks his casual best in his three-buttoned, brown checked jacket with autumn gold Banlon turtleneck and dark brown wool slacks. Hie Western Michigan University freshman’s outfit comes from Kmart, Glenwood Plaza. Sleeping Bags Are Washable Comfortable cotton sleeping bags Will be enjoyed by the whole family for ramping or big houseparties. Styles’ come with water-repellent cotton covers and warm liners of cotton flannelette. The sleeping bags are treated to resist mildew, and are machine-washable. FOR ECONOMICS BLRSS! Ever sat in the back seat of a luxury car like the Lincoln Continental? The Austin America has even more legroom ••• and for a lot less money. Austin America Pontiac Sports Car 467 Auburn Avu. PHONES 335-1511—335-1138 BUYISELLI TRADE!.., USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS Klndwyqiten children report Tuesday, September 9. Kindergarten children who have net been previously enrolled, should be enrolled by parents on Friday, September 5 or Monday, September 8. I Gradual through 0 report for regular classes for a morning session an Monday, September 8. Grade* 1 through 6 will have a foil day of school an Tuesday, September 9.- 7th Gradd studante 8»30 AM Monday; Spj All [unior high school report to the appropriate junior high school for a full day will report for a full day of school on Tuesday, September 9. 10th Grade student* MO AM Monday, All senior high sch should report to the appropriate junior high school for o foil day report for a full day of school on Tuesday, September 9. Miss J cruises the campus with mensvyear mixers by Garland for sportswear success, joining wool/nylon plaids With color-cued sweaters, sizes 36-40 A. Turtleneck tunic ribbed- at waist; wine, greed. gold or navy wool. 15.00 Tabbed kilt innavy/red or green/gold glen plaid: 5-13 sizes. 16.00 8. Cable-knit vest in wine, gold, navy, white or brass wool. 14.00 Belted pant-skirt with side buttons; Wine/green/gold or brass/navy/red . plaid. 7-15 sizes. 13.00 C. Plaid tunic vest in •/ wine/green/gold or brass/navy/red. 5-13 sizes. 18.00 Matching panel pleated skirt. 5-15 si?es. 13.00 Turtleneck rag Ian sweater in gold, green, navy, wine,ibrass, red or white Orion* acrylic. 8.00 JacobSonS .4*06 336 West Maple Birmingham . Thursday and Friday to 9 J=*L THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, AUGUST 11, i960 ■ I -1J p * | if | 4* i 0 ) M aRL .. §b i ii #1 V/,, Wt 7h rS Pontiac Pratt Phot* SETTING THE PACE-Twins Ronald alftl Donald Wilson will lead their eighth-grade class at Clarkston Junior High School in fashions this fall. Ron (left) wears instant-wear, no-iron bell bottoms by Billy the Kid. His Jantzen pullover1 sweater of Shetland woojl is gray stripe on grey. Don’s moss green sleeveless sweater of lamb's wool and polyester accents his Van Heuseh shirt. His dacron and rayon VttnSpress slacks are by. Keman. These outfits are from the Lion Store, Miracle Mile. Phonetic Alphabet Is Boon to Learner By the Associated Press The initial teaching alphabet, (ITA), a 44-character phonetic alphabet designed to lighten the burden of spelling inconsistencv and confusion for the beginning reader, is effective both in Soviet Education -Is Westernized By JOHN WEYLAND MOSCOW CAB) - The Soviet child of today faces more years of school, more natural sciences and less vocational training than his father. The educational system here is changing to produce additional specialists and, technocrats for an Industrial society, with little of the old emphasis on doing manual labor or learning a trade in keeping with proletarian tradition. ★ w a The government, responding to the needs of the modern world, has beat making the schools increasingly like those in the West, except that the humanities are shortened as relatively useless to the state. Nikita Khrushchev opposed the trend, insisting that high school students work part time in factories and requiring a few years on the job before entry into a university. UNKNOWING ELITE He feared that otherwise the country would be taken over by an elite that knew nothing about the life of working men. The present Kremlin leadership has backed straight academic education, denying H will tend to produce a separate upper class. < Education Minister Mikhail Prokofiev attacked the Khrushchev curriculum as a “vulgarized conception of the ties between school and life.'*. Changes ordered by the government include: Two years are to be added to high school education throughout the .country by 1971, so that all children stay in school until the age of 17. Under the old program many finished their education at 19, after only eight years in the classroom. Khrushchev’s combination of work experience with school has been dropped. So has his rule giving preferential treatment to university applicants who had held regular Jobs. , Introductory biology, chemistry and physics are mandatory in the fourth grade starting this year. * * - High schools have been set Up to concentrate on specialities like mathematics,' computing techniques, physics, electronics, chemistry and geology. And there are boarding schools in Moscow, Leningrad, Kiev and Novosibirsk deviated exclusively to teaching the brightest students in the . country physics and mathematics. HOMEWORK LOAD The homework load in all Soviet schools is heavy after the primary grades. High school students attend classes at least five hours a day six days a week, and often study an equal amount of time at home. Physical education is allotted only two' hours a week. Sports atctivities take place at special clubs, which boys and girls join only if they want to. • ★ Health Minister Boris Petrivsky has complained that health suffers from intensive study, but there is no sign of a letup, since there are six applicants for Avery opening at a university. * ★ . + . The university student — there are about four million of them in this country of 235 million — is narrowly specialized by Western standards, in line with the policy of using education to turn out high-level /‘skilled workers.” The alphabet was invented by I James Pitman and introduced in this country five years' a major new addition to the *80, i Clarkston School District this ONLY ONE SOUND | fall will be the Sashabaw Junior clarkston to Add Construction Near Finish New Junior High Each of the 44 characters in the ITA has one sound and one teaching children to read and in 80Und only, as opposed to the eliminating the need for remedial reading classes, two research studies released recently show. traditional alphabet in which for instance, the long vowel represented by the letter “i” can be spelled differently in aisle, height, choir, eye, pie cry, sigh, buy, guide, island. Once the child learns the ITA characters and their sounds, he can read any word thus printed. ★ w Hr1' Transition to the traditional alphabet is almost imperceptible, educators say. For one P . . . . , .'thing, the child has this alpha- me psychoogy department at m ar6und h|m _ on 8trW| Hofstrs.University, Hempstead, 'ign9 on te]evi8lon, in newspa-N.Y., has completed the first anj magazines at home- ITA classes exist now in every state and every Canadian province, and an estimated 19 per cent of all U.S. school systems have at least one first grade using the system. * ★ * Dr. J. R. Block, chairman of High School set to open on schedule in September., Construction Is also under way on a board of education office and administration facility. This building will not be open until fall 1970. Nearly $1 million in construction projects WU1 be finished in the Romeo School District by September or later in the year. « New cafeteria and ad- ministrative’office facilities in the high school are expected to be ready by the school opening in September. Hie junior high school building will have four new classrooms completed in comprehensive analysis of the effectiveness of the program Four in Family Rank as Eagles HAMBURG, N.Y. UR — James Altherr, 15,’son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry. Altherr, has become the ‘ fourth member of his family to attain the. Boy Scout Eagle rank. * ; * * He follows In the footsteps of brothers Thomas, 20, a junior at the State University College at “TTediffltff,--NrrrDwgixsri ~ /sophomore of State University ’ of Buffalo, and Paul, 16, a junior at Hamburg Senior High School. James is a freshman at Hamburg High. Formal transition depends somewhat on the fluency level of the child, but usually occun toward the end of first grade Teachers have found that, to I great extent, the children themselyea simply make the transition. PAST RESEARCH Clearly ITA is past the stage of research and evaluation” as far as comparing it with the traditional alphabet, Dr. Block has concluded after studying over 50 pieces of research. First of all, he found, children learn to read better and easily ^Wflft-ITA. Two^ thirds of the 50 'studies show that “ITA children read at a higher level than children taught with the traditional orthography." time for September occupancy. Additional office space and an instructional materials center is expected to be ready for use by the beginning of the second semester gt Croswell Elementary School. .An industrial arts classroom-shop complex is expected to be completed at the high, school in the spring. For students planning a semester abroad, Continuing Education courses in French, German, Italian, Spanish and Swedish are being offered at Oakland University. Smart stadeats let FgX worry about their wardrobes! Call Today for , Convenient Pickup and Delivery! With the many complications and | _____________ in a return to campus, busy students could easily overlook their wardrobes. At Fox, we specialise in keeping all garments looking fresh and new with advanced professional drycleaning services. Look your carefree best all the time, everywhere you go and see why Fox is the "Choice of Pontiac" ... call today! COMPLETE SHIRT SERVICE HANDSOME TRIO — The narrow-width shoe with gently walled sides is stepping into the fashion limelight. Three versions of the same theme from Todd's Shoe Store, downtown, are the (from left) “George Boot,” in antiqued olive brown grain with brass buckle trim; “The Roast Beef” (middle), a traditional moccasin in antiqued bourbon brown, and “George the Great” in bourbon boot leather. for only par month training to ploy th* piano is s happy hobby that lasts a wholo tit* through, (t brings fun, popu-' larity, satisfaction —and looming is oasiost in tho tondar yoart. In •aty to provido your child this won-dsrful musical advantage whon you can buy a fin* LOWREY Piano so insxponsivoly. Coma in or phono for tho facts. No obligation. BANK TERMS ' 1710 S. TELEGRAPH » !4 Mil* South of Orchard Lako Ave. ^ Lots of Fee* Parking F6 4-0566 Daily 'til 5:30"—Mon. and Frit ’til 9 Of School Events Waterford Calendar The 1989-70 school calendar for the Waterford Township .School District, as approved so far by the board of education, coneists of 180 attendance days. The schedule through October is as follows: Aug. 21-26 - High school registration Aug. 22-26 — Junior high school registration Aug. 25-Sept. 4 — Elerileiitary school registration (check with your area school) ; ■ SOpt. 2-3 — Teacher workshop Sept. 4 — Kindergarten-through-seventh-grade and lQth-grade students report to Classes Sept. 5 — Students in grades eight, nine, 11 and 12 report to Oct. 24 — Teachers’ Institute (tentative) Oct. 27-28 — Thanksgiving vacation Youthful Jjlyfcr 'Up in dowels' CENTRAL ISUP.vN.Y. -Michael Bugda is really up in the clouds these day*, now that he's finally realizing Wa lifelong ambition of learning to fly. / 'Sr. ; ■ • The 16-year-old Central Islip High School studOnt is financing his lessons with IBM' earned from odd jobs. He has wanted to fly since he was • toddler and his family lived near an airport in Hershey, Pa. “I would watch the pitted*,” h recalls, “and dream.** ■ His dream almost didn’t come true because he is color blind and wears glasses, a combination frowned on by the Federal Aviation Agency. Put Poster on the for a Switch By Associated Press Decorating a dorm room; to the college student long on ingenuity and short on tends, ofaten is a most for the least. Building Projects Started Additions and alterations are under way at 12 elementary schools in the Birmingham School District. The building improvement program includes Adams, Beverly, Bloomfield Village, Franklih, Greenfield, Harlan, Midvale, Quartern, Pembroke, matter of getting the ^£’"T6rry and Westchester This year, the year of the pop poster, dorm walls will have a message with a wide variety of themes. * :/ Still, in cramped quarters even the latest poster can become a drag if you look at it long enough. . S 'Now there's a method for turning posters on or off. Flatten.your favorite poster so that it won’t roll up. Then glue it to a tightly closed Venetian blind. EASY TO REMOVE Apply the Scotch contact ce* meat only to the paper so that it will be easy to remove when desired. Once the glue is dry — about five minutes should do the trick — use a razor knife to cut the poster along each covered slat of the Venetian blind. Take care to make each cut perfectly straight along the edge of the slat. The result is a jposter which disappears when the blind is open and reappears when it is closed. The alterations and additions will provide-each school with a multi-instructional cento:, small group' instruction ureas, facilities for speech correction, remedial reading and improved art, music and health facilities. The projects are financed under the district’s 1966 bond proposal. Low bids for the construction totaled 11450,695. • ♦ ★ ■ it Other building alterations are under way at Baldwin, Evergreen, Meadow Lake and Valley Woods schools. BACK TO SCHOOL SPECIAL Express Yourself* TC-120 Cat Sura footed dual-purpoM Trail bike. Climbs 40* grade, automatic transmission, 12 month/12,000 Ragulsr $495 SPECIAL $449 r tax and llcanta Suzuki’69 M G SUZUKI SALES 4667 Dixie Highway Drayton Plains 673-6458 Good Health and Good Grades Go Together School Lunches, Snacks Dinner Ideas . Lunch Meats, Ice Cream Bars, 24/*rf Milk 49* Archway Cookies, Banana Split & 79* Cottage Cheese w. 29* Lay Potato Chips SSSSL Sundae 35‘ Cherries Jubilee &99‘ Kiddi Pak 6/59* Bread 5/99* When You Think of Him Remember Our Message 10 LOCATIONS OOaOMflO Clarkston 535 Commerce Rd. 2468 Orchard Lake Rd., Sylvan Lake 1414 Huron at Eliz. LakeRd. 10 High ----- 4142 01 7350 Highland M-59 Plaza 4342 Dixie Hwy., D 4100 Baldwin Ave., Pontiac lixia Hwy., Drayton Plains .. Baldwin Ave.f Pontia 1101 Joslyn Ave., Pontiac 954 Pontiac Trait, Wallad Lake 500 South Lapeer Rd., Laka Orion B—9 THE PONTIAC HtKSS, MONDAY, AUGUST II, I960 Geography Is Learned in a Plane t PORTLAND, -Ore.(AP) - A young Oregon geographer, . . frustrated by the confines of the teach astronauts to orbit the through 10, the students are classroom, teaches his regional|earth and airline pilots to fly an £>ven the. facts they need to geography course In a six-seat, aircraft without. leaving the1 take action in the emergency, single-engine airplane. | ground "have been incorporated They 'earn the physiological David L. Smith, 30, an assis- into a preventive educationiar,d psychological' effects of tant professor at Portland State program aimed at leading drug use, the nature Simulation Aids Drug Training By the Associated Press | In the preventive education The same techniques,, used to program, devised for grades six| University, decided two years ago to use his knowledge of flying.in teaching geography. I was frustrated at not being able to let students view the earth from a satellite,” he says, young people into personal decisions against drug abuse. narcotics traffic and the probable results of the options open to them. These facts are communicated to the students by a sound and color, motion picture! .Pontiac Pro«« Photo TWO VERSIONS — The shag cut, worn straight or Curly is the look that will turn heads tills fall.' Modeling the straight version by La Vergne of La Vergne’s Huron Street Salon, 1062 W. Huron, Waterford Township, is brunette Cathy Reed. Shiriey Geiger shows the curly shag. Both are students at Pontiac Northern High School. Called "Drug Decision,” the B 15-hour, three-week course, B developed bv Lockheed F | MSBRI . . ... e says, tj0n Systems under the direction sound and color r but then I decided we could of Dr Hudolph Flothow pro-ln combination with student “ gram manager, is based « the manuals- accomplish the same purpose. iaer0 ace technique of Simula- j Teachers and parents are _ * * * „Jtion - the engineered creation!given an overview of the pro-| , began work on, realistic haDoenine 0r1 gram in special multimediaj'"■ mr.i1 establishing the course late in'event )presentations in which color. 1966. Despite j numerous ■ I slides and film segments arei r-. • l n l i i L I k. i i roadblocks, such as insurance) . |shown on three screens Danish Parade Marshals Named and the cost of airplane rental, i But instead of using Simula- simui»ane()usiv ...........nn to nrpHiot how snare'* " '■ I * * * i GREENVILLE (AP) - Offi-'director of the Danes Worldwide |tual conditions," says DrTj “Drug Decision doesn’t1 dais of the Danish Festival, to Archives in Aalborg, Denmark. Tho rioca mvsfc a nnrtinn nf Fl°thow> “we’re using a!Preach, it doesn’t lecture and it be held Aug. 23 in Greenville, Fredericks, who lives in Detroit, me class covers a portion oi narcotics crisis so'avoids an emotional approach , .. , . _ l , . , . the Pacific Northwest, usuallyi!™““"‘ ‘ Lf: to the drug-abuse problem •• announced that two Danes nave is expected to bring greetings SWINGING SET—Mary Poole swings with matching opaque hose and chunky [half of Oregon, Idaho, . . . . .. . wnHH!savsDr Flothow "That kind of been named grand marshals for;from the Danish royal family, into tiie Total Look for 1969 wearing fash- Pacesetter brogues. For color contrast, the [Washington or ^ritish (b.c.) we can^3$|S predict tlat approach may alienate more the festival parade. They are Also named as a marshal was Winkelman s, the Pontiac Mall and University of Michigan junior totes an ivory (Columbia, in each of the five heii nerfhrm the riuht wav. students than it helps. We let The Honorable Marshal Fred- Vlggo Mikkelsen of Rochester, students evaluate the facts and ericks, Danish consul for Mich- (past president of the Danish he put a class into the air in the | tion to predict how space'" spring of 1967. systems will perform under ac-l COVERS PORTIONS Pontiac Press Photo Tel-Huron Center. Mary’s forest green junior petite coat dress in bonded wool is worn university of Michigan junior totes an ivory Columbia, in' each of the five . ;. fn £ wav shoulder bag, matching ivory racing gloves j all-day flights during the three- ™ * * ** ^ and giant floppy felt hat; Fpdt Trouble Causes Grief Computers Match College Roommates month course. , . „ Each if the five students Is I “The idea is to give each responsible fof a specialty of student a role as a . narcotics , the landscape, such as forestry, j officer in an imaginary com-/ industry, agriculture and munity. Then comes the crisis: ike their own decisions. others. Smith, who won state permission to pilot the flying classroom after si two-year sudden, mysterious upsurge i illegal narcotics traffic stagger the Community.”»• 'tv&wmPm w,,wf Vh.uneue i\uumrnures I struggle, determines the route; during the flight. The National Science Foun-| __ dation awarded Smith a $63,000 /% , p , /% . j grant to develop further the UGllfCr UGlS UTSm course as a model for other; u .. . | .. _ freedoih — the great adventure Christopher’s answer, along ^ universities. By the Associated Press '0f living away from home. No with other students, were fed MAJOR PROBLEM Feet .are often overlooked more nagging parents. No more into a big IBM 350-60 computer,! The cost of renting when teachers try to figure put $ loppy brothers find sisters. and when the punch cards, airplane is a major problem, methods of controlling air, wa- what npay be bothering a) Then what happens? The emerged, 80 per cent of those but Smith argues that the aerial ter and land pollution plus ex- Proper Fit of Shoes______________ I RIVERSIDE, CMif. (AP) - Palms, Calif. “I never thought Important to Children Thousands of itudents head for I’d find a duplicate me. ■ ' college, each year anticipating have.” lEnvIronmental Study j GRAND RAPIDS (AP) - A coordinated program to work on WITH youngster. |. ^ (neat, quiet freshman gets Yet foot trouble can cause [roommate who’s a slob and who poor posture, bring on piay8 the radio until 2 a.m. d Freedom becomes a nightmare. headaches, backaches and general crankiness or apathy. An active child who develops a painful toe or callus will alter His posture to favor the painful who applied had been given!course -® no more expensive roommates. \ ’ [than electronic equipment used in the physical sciences. Smith has a commercial Alas, 20 per cent were un-matchable. They received their roommates by the old random method. At last, the problem dormitory incompatibility being tackled; at the University________________ of California at Riverside THINGS Tf) LIKE they’re matching roommates by But they all figured they had computed. been matched by the computer, This semester the campus h$s | says Better, so they looked for licence and qualifies as an instrument flight instructor. Since children’s feet grow SSL'S rSbn ««r Sin co^umt^.jttiogs to llkn nbnut each other. ADDITIONAL INTEREST |this A ®“rvey .ls ujjde»j ing.g,ory-”. T°° m“c^. ®.unllgh|can be solved,” Wege said. i_ . . . rs______way to determine whether makes hair dry, brittle and Dean of Students Norman[ des are up. Better says he streaked, requiring frequent Better, 34, says other colleges «hinks ^ $ | shampoos and rinses i anything is the matter Here’s a chart (supplied by the Dr. I Posnei* Shoe Co.).indicating how quickly children oUtgrpW shoes: Duo Functions A fashionable beach hat Sen a useful as well as decorative1 amination of excessive noise gets under way here Nov. 1. A $145,000 grant to the Center for Environmental Study here was made Friday by the W.K. Kellogg Foundation of Battle Creek. Peter Wege, president of the center, said the grant will be for studies, surveys and function. ” It will help shield eo|ucation programs. “We will; vour eves from bright sunlight, have ^ prove to the skeptics and also protect.your crown-^ environmental problems Age I to 6 1 6 to 10 l0 to 12 12 to 15 15 and over , Size Changes Every jare expressing interest. 4 fo 8 weeks 8 to 12 weeks 12 to 18 weeks 10 to 20 weeks 6 months and up In families with several children, there is a temptation , to pa$s along shoes from one | child to another. This can be a ; false: economy beepuse even if a | size 'seams right,, no two pSirs ; df feet |re exactly alike. [ CONFORM TO FOOT I ; A good leather shoe, when mw$.(wfli conform to a child’s i foot Mter being worn for a week So many of our students were unhappy with their room-mates,” he recalls, “that 25 asked to be transferred Iasi year. Then we had the psychological problem of the student left without a roommate Everyone .in -the dormitory knew he had been rejected;” The idea of using a computer popped up after the college sponsored a computer dance. Girls and boys received dates after filling out questionnaires listing their likes and dislikes, The dance Was a success. -"We realized that the rela- | ji fosujre healthy feet fw j/our children: \..< • Wa^i frequently. After bathing, dry. feet thoroughly and use talcum powder between the ; .#«*• says mar- r riages have been arranged by i computer too. So. the administrators who had previously matched room-1 • cnnki mates at random sat down and often It is not advisable 8 questionnaire ta be I wear tiie same pair of shoes ^ out by incoming students. y after day. marriage in many v Better. And, j sure a child has the ____t size shoe and sock, half n inch, longer than the longest » Keep feet dry- Don’t let Ithem stiy wet from perspira-tion. • Cut toenails straight across I and not shorter than the flesh. I /CxamiQe: your child’s feet fre-; quently 'to guard against ailments. If feet need attention, ponsuK your doctor. Of the 31 million individual returns filed early With internal Revenue Service last ■Wear, one out of every 50 had We tried to identify the tilings that irritated people tiie most,” says Better. Tidiness ,v_ at the top of (he list followed by the method of studying — With or Without music. (Hher things which seemed to make life easier in a 180-square-foot room were similar eating 1 and smoking habits, dating frequency, speed ’ in dressing, musical tastes, addiction to late-night talk sessibns, clothes-bor-rowing habits, attitude towards fresh air for sleeping, readiness to arise when the alarm goes off, and preference for long hair and beards. “This has been a really groovy lde8,” says Christopher Flanagan, 19, of Twenty-Nine Back to School Blues? ChmUp! Weve got the econotay car that's ciite-to-boot! Top Blood Donor NEW YORK

- Aaro Morah, 57, regarded as one of the top blood donors in the country, has given his 90th pint of A-positive blood. The blood donation was for the wife of a brother Pythian. NewToyota Corolla Now you can cut down on automobile expense and look good at the same time. Check the shape and statistics of Toyota Corolla and you’ll see why. • 30 mites to the gallon • 4-on-the-floor all • Lifetime lubrication synchromesh *60 horses transmission •Bucket seats •Nylon carpeting / • Hits 87 mphwhen • And it’s cute ytiutepnt See and test drive Ibyota Corolla.. .the new one to ,/ teat performance-wise and styling-wise today at TOYOTA of PONTIAC and Hoiger J. Bladt, | Brotherhood in America. Value-priced RCA AC/DC Cassette Recorder/Player The sound you want—when you want it. Operates on AC house current or four "C” batteries. Just snap in a cassette and you're ready to record or play back. No reels to thread. Has start/stop control on the mike. Automatic level control. Lever-operated controls. Comas with microphone, earphone, batteries, cassette and AC cord. . SWEET’S RADIO & APPLIANCE ALWAYS 30 DAYS DISCOUNT SAME PRICES AS CASH 422 West Huron FE 4-5677 Open Monday and Friday Evening* ’til 9 P Jf. 6417 Highland Rd. 873-5811 Bsasoisi Japan’s No. 1 Automobile Manufacturer STUDENTS ATTENTION! Back-To-School Car Bargains Almost Too Good To Believe! We’ve got to move them out at year-end Clearance prices and trades. New wide-track Catalinas, Pontiacs, GTO’s, Tempests and LeMans PLUS a wide selection of Goodwill Used Cars. Drive the short way over here and cash-in on the long ' discount we’ll grte you at. • • ~ RUSS JOHNSON MOTOR SALES 89 M-24, Lake Orion 693-6266 Student-Run College Expert Warns of Gimmicks School s Woes Ease necessitated cutting $115,000 from the 1900-70 budget. It was the third time the question had been defeated. Programs cut back due to the millage defeat include specialised elementary art and music and remedial reading. WI..WI VI.n, ui.iuti nuu ami ivy A. How*. 190 Sarnot* Clayton J. Bertrand, 5424 Mlktwood and Ruaatll from Barbara I, Habart Coral L. from Joal O. Pack Caryl R. from John M. Saanor. Mary JV'from Lynn A. Gervals Joan M. .from Howard A. Wrlabt Janlca M. from Harry Madaira Elian L. from Bobble S. Payne Howard j. from Patricia J. Hughes Barbara J. from Douglos E. Rowo Lillian J. from Ellis"5. Bates Agnos L. from Bronfe. Cassidy Diana M. from MWMM O. Fayna Daniel J. from Joyce Lincoln. Elizabeth from Gary J. Goshay Virginia from Bonnie Selfmen J. Gaylord from Dorothy H. LOhma Valeria from Paul Webb . Shirley J. from Dale L. Goss Jacqueline p. from Michael D Tayl Elsie M. from Donald s Lemond Eleanor V. from William J. Purtall. Mildred G. from James H. Carr jamas C.‘ from Martin J. Bowers llfzabefh A. from Oliver C. O'Dell Marlorle-E. from Henry c. Keaton Robert R. from Carol Bunnell Karan L. from Gerald W. Haley Jon L from Baity K. Fruytlar Lavern J. from Mlhoko cols Cheryl L. from Cerolos L. Ortiz Savvy stripes and solids coming on strong layer by layer, press and pants ' 100%'wooi , doubleknit, Edwardian Shirt. All in ’> coordinating colors. Sizes 8-18. CLYDE E. HORNUNG'S INDEPENDENCE COMMONS WATERFORD, MICHIGAN SPALDING TEEN-AGE SHOES GERBERICH BOYS'SHOES RIDERS CUSTOM GIRLS'SHOES B. F. GOODRICH CANVAS SHOES AND BOOTS 30 $276( SPECIAL LOGOFF COUPON OFFER ON ANY PAIR OF SHOES Purchased from Aug. 11 to Aufl. 31 OO $2.00 of Pontiac, Rochester, Oakland Mali 623-9638 OPEN FRIDAY EVENINGS BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-0011 THE PONTIAC PRESS,(MONDAY, AUGUST By The Associated Prees An abundance of new teaching techniques, machines and trends greets die student this fail in schools and colleges across the land, while at least one expert sounds s warning against "gimmicks." There are the now familiar audiovisual aids, headphones, film strips, projectors, language master overhead projectors, . controlled reading machines, record players Bnd tape recorders which have become standard equipment in many * U.S. schools, largely qrith help from Uncle Sam. * * * r And there are leas familiar items such as polyurethane sleeping pads for kindergarten rest periods, sand-water play troughs and prepackaged workshops to stress lesson ideas in composition, social studies, health and art. In elementary schools there is even a kit which alerts youngsters to the danger of enticement by strangers,. RESEARCH PROJECTS ... Farther along the line there art research projects involv- • Ing children who formerly would not expect to come across such exercises until the end of secondary school. There are pass-fail systems, new approaches to reading , for underprivileged children and talk of extended school years. It all adds up to a glittering array and signifies change In a traditionally conservative profession. But what is it Worth in terms of forwarding the cause of education? Mortimer Smith, widely respected executive director of the Council for Basic Education and an expert in the field, thinks that, over-eU, any innovation which comes into die classroom should ha welcomed . But Smith warns that much of the '‘innovation" is gimmicky. REAL BREAKTHROUGH In the mucb-discussed and all-important field .of reading instruction, Smith says, we are seeing a real breakthrough. Smith praises the new math, the new physics, Bruneian theories of learning and language laboratories as valuable developments when they are presented as helpful aids and not as infallible dogmas. ★ ★ ★ Before Innovation is accepted as puch, Smith says, it has to represent genuine change. Sometimes, he points out “the siren song of innovation turns out to be an old refrain." In an interview, Smith said: “We do have healthier atmosphere in education now, . because schoolmen know there is pressure for change for the sake of change, but we're not in a rut as we were 10 years ago,” In the vital area of education for the disadvantaged, Smith warns against those who look on schools not as ' educational but as social welfare institutions. . * * ★ One Innovation that proved successful in blending new teaching techniques with the necessity for basic instruction was the Amidon School in Washington, D. C. Arhldon included children from slum areas as well as middle-class youngsters. MOBILIZED FORCES ■ - “By mobilising all its forces In the interests of academic achievement, Amidon was soon highly successful," Smith aays. “Test scores showed that 98 per cent of the pupils exceeded national norms In all subject fields, and the school led all District of Columbia schools in reading and spelling “The accomplishment did a great deal to build up morale among pupils, teachers and parents and many observers believed that the program was what the doctor ordered for big-city .schools. “Although there were other factors involved, certainly one of the most important in Amidan’s decline was that its success offended those Influential elements in the city who look on schools as social welfare institutions.” INTERNATIONAL FLAVOR - Far the Individualist on campus this fall, the sporty Toyota Corona from Toyota of Pontiac, 6497 Highland, Waterford Township, provides an economical form of transportation that is easy to park and easy to look at. Lake Orion to Use Portable Classrooms Junior and senior high school)day sessions In the fall of 1970, students in the Lake Orion J according to school officials. School District will be using A request for thrte additional ^LaSf.Cl!?.8r00ms f°r th* nr8t mms for operating turned down by votersr June 9 this year time this fall Four portable classroom units will be added in an effort to relieve overcrowding, ★ ★ # An estimated 2,200 students are expected in secondary grades this fall. The total enrollment expected for the entire district is 5,400 students, an increase of Shout 300 over last year. Students at the Blanche Simms Elementary School will use six portable classrooms for the second year in a row. All five elementary schools in the District are operating ) a t capacity. For two consecutive years voters have rejected a bond issue to, finance construction of new schools and additions S | * ★ ■ ★ ■ The defeat of a $5.5-million bond proposal on April 19 reportedly will necessitate halfday sessions for students next year. Even If the latest bonding proposal had passed, new construction could not have been completed in. time to avoid half- Divorces State Man, Beaten by Prisoners, Dies SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP)-Police authorities said Sunday that Michael B. Perkins of Paw-) nee, Mich., died in a San Anton-1 io hospital after' he was beaten i by fellow prisoners. The' officers said the 24-year- j old Perkins, held in the Bexar County Jail on a forgerycharge since May 5, was “subjected to indignities" and beaten with1 shoes and boots. * # ★ , J The report from the sheriff’s department on the Saturday incident was signed by criminal African Girl Dies of Heart Ills After U. S. Operation investigator Charles Clack Jr.: and Lt. Alfred Caireon. The re-j port said that four prisoners would be chaffed With murder in connection with Perkins’ death. They were not named. I Mather weather on the campus Marriage Licenses LATEST EDITIONS — The Book Node at the Pontiac Mall carries the latest editions of Roget’s Thesaurus of Words and Phrases, Ulysses by James Joyce and Webster’s Seventh New Collegiate Dictionary. In footwear, Beckers Shoes, also at the Pontiac. Mall, features the popular chunk heel chain moccasin (left) by Moxees, the casual snub-toe walker by Lady Dexter and the buckle-banded put-ons by Hush Puppies. By ROSEMARY SPIERS Canadian Press Writer TORONTO (AP) - Almost iyone at the University of Toronto can tell Horror stories about Rochdale College. They call it an 18-story haven for haffy dropout s, acid-heads, filthy hippies and smart alecks who like to drop eggs on the heads of passersby. , * The funny thing is that no one is faster to admit the problems surrounding the student-built, student-run free college on the edge of the university campus than Us 850 residents. down over a coffee with bearded Rick Waem, 25, president of the college’s governing councU,’ and he’ll soon tell you about the visiting high school student who recently “freaked out",’ on LSD, fought with residents and smashed a top-story window. But he’ll also insist “all sorts of interesting people are doing exciting things here." And along with other Rochdalers he thinks the cooperative college has begun to beat the problems created by drugs arid juvenile “crashers” during the first four months of its existence. — St. Cl.lr, ftrmln'gton .^RESOURCE PERSONS Butty ML Kul«r, union Lake I ... .... - _ 771Corwin court and "I think we’re going to find; our feet,” says Dennis Lee, 28, one of a dozen “resource persons" there to arrange seminars and tutorials or just talk with students who set their own curruciila, write no exams and receive no grades. Rochdale actually began ten-tatfve operation in 1967 as an outgrowth of Campus Cooperative Residences Inc., student-run co-op providing cheap accommodation that grew In a decade from four to 30 houses under management of Howard Adelman, 30. ★ ★ ★ In a way Rochdale is an outgrowth of student power, an attempt to start another freer, perhaps more creative way of learning alongside the traditional university Structure. Although the college’s future is still dubious and its educational experiment has yet target into any discernible, form, the concept behind it is spreading. SECOND COLLEGE Co-op College Residences, a non - profit development corporation Headed by Adelman, now & lecturer at York University in suburban Toronto, has already started building Tartu College across from Rochdale. Tartu, named for an Estonian town after Canadian Estonians pilt up $200,019 to help finance it, will house free-thinking professors from the University of Toronto and elsewhere, and graduate students interested in research programs with more structure to them than Rochdaie offers. Recently Co-op College was assured two more loans totaling about $1$ million from the housing corporation to be used to build a new free college called Pestolozzi College near the University of, Ottawa and a residential college at Toronto’s Ryerson Polytechnics! Institute. Anyone, resident or not, who pays his $25 fee can be a member of Rochdale. But of the 850 residents, only about 200 are full-time Rochdale students, and the rest use it as a home while studying elsewhere, mainly at | the University of Toronto. jprices range Jrom $92 n month for room and board te a furnished double roorti to 1250 | for a large suite. Pressures from both inside and outside at first caused so many difficulties that academic learning often had to take second place to solving the problems of young people suddenly responsible for running both their own educations and the largest co-op student residence in North America. Rochdale, completed by residents hired as construction workers, was unfinished until-last fall. There was a constant , shifting of rooms, outsiders wandered into doorless seminar rooms, garbage and con-, struction materials made the halls filthy. WISE INVESTMENT - Maria Petrucci of Silver Lake ■ Elementary School, Waterford Township, shakes out every : last penny in her piggy1 bank as she opens her first savings -account with the: help of James A. Cunningham of Capitol Savings and Loan, 75 Wi-Huron. SHOES FROM CRADLE COLLEGE MILWAUKEE, Wis. (AP) -A young African girl brought to the United States for heart surgery at St. Luke’s Hospital died: Sunday night, five days after her operation. * * * Anna Lucas, 10, of Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania, had been making good progress, a hospital; spokesman said, and was' moved from an intensive care! unit to a regular room on Friday. But she went into cardiac] arrest Sunday night, according! to the spokesman, and efforts to! revive her failed. ' fr Jfc“- ’* - I Anna and her father, Natha-nial Lucas, administrative see-' rotary of , the Uzaramo-Uluguru Synod of. the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Tanzania, arrived in Milwaukee June 15. MACH III Kawasaki , This is the fastest moving, fastest accelerating two-wheeled stock motorcycle. Big three cylinder design with 500 cc’s that out-performs the 7$0*s. A foil 60v horses with a top speed of 124 MPH. Blasts through the % mile at an unbeatable 12.4 seconds, and ail this is stock. GOT IT? GIT IT at ROBBINS SPORT CYCLE The heart surgery was postponed until this month after an examination disclosed the need! for another operation to repair] an intestinal defect. , * 1 QUICK SERVICE ON MOST M0OEI4 2211 Auburn Read Near Croaks Road Phana 852-4551 £1 THE NUMBER 1 MPOHTED SPOUTS C AH We’ve got it! Outsells all other imported sports cars in America, For several good reasons: • Competition-proved 1798cc engine with twin carbs.. Purrs along at highway speeds with a safe margin for acceleration.; , • Fully-synchronized four-speed gearbox with short* ' throw stick shift. '• • Responsive rack-and-pinion steering and heavy-duty suspension. • Dual braking system with big fade-free disc brakes ‘. up front. . • English-leather bucket seats, wind-up windows, big lockable luggage compartment, snug folding top, efficient heater/detrosttef t. 2-speed wipers. Pontiac Sports Car 467 Auburn Ave. Phones 335-1138, 335-1511 Qidnt Ear to Tune In to far Reaches of Space National Park Livens History tote .teibte images on . WASHINGTON-Not all space screen resembling a television travelers ride rockets ont of this'set, 0r changed into squiS worid- Some stay at home and traced on graph paper. ** explore space by listening to it. F H They tune in giant electronic ears, or radio-telescopes, and eavesdrop on the eerie whispers of the universe. * The astronomers record radio waves emitted by stars and other cosmic bodies and try to decipher signals from so far out in space that It would take untold generations of astronauts to rocket there. ★ i Within a few years these space-age astronomers may be able to hear more — and farther —than ever. Plans are being made to build the world’s gest steerable radio-telescope somewhere on a sky-clear desert plateau of the American Southwest. giant golf ball Hie bid radio-telescope will resemble Ta 550-foot-high golf ball, only % feet shorter than the WashfogtonMonurnient. JVlthin the giant geodesic dome of steel ribs and paper-thin plastic akin will be mounted the saucer-shoped antenna 440 feet across, tdth a receiver-amplifier suspended above its center. jj'★ ★ * Astronomers will be able to swing it around to pinpoint any corner of the sky. POWERFUL EAR m giant ear will be powerful enough to beam signals the remotest heavens or map the topographic features of plan-eta; It will be sensitive enough to pick up radio “voices" from galaxies deep inside the verse.iv Astronomers are not sure what th$: are hearing, but they certain no signals come outeNpnce creatures tryii communicate. 1 " « * ■ * So far, methodical scanning of the sky has failed to find any such electronic clue that suggests this, although one astronomer admits: “If there is one out-there, we don’t what he’d be saying or he’d be, trying to say it." Hie radio signals are to be associated with changes of outer-space bodies, clouds of gases, and strange starlike masses called quasars or pulsars. SPACE VOICE AUTOGRAPH The distant signals are amplified, changed waves, and focused acoustical lens, sounds are Even a simple radio-telescope may be so powerful it can detect a hungry man four miles away by the rumbling of his stomach. Now, using two or more radio-telescopes separated by thousands of miles, astronomers zero in with amazing precision., ★ in * For example, the world’s biggest optical telescope, the 200-inch mirror on Mt. Palomar in southern California, could pick out a post office building as far away as New York City. But using big radio-telescopes, ‘focusing” through a technique called interferometry, scientists could define a postage stamp stuck onto the pest office window. FREDONIA, ARIZ. (UPI) -History is alive and well at Pipe Spring National Monument. The nearly unknown national monument — a mere symbol on a detailed map — is one of the first American historical areas to be fully restored with the introduction of livestock and wildlife originally found in the area. Pipe Spring also is one of the few areas in the world to take such an ecological step backward. Cattle were branded this year in the stake corral next to Pipe Spring fort for the first time 1923, when the area was designated a national monument and placed under the administration of the National Park Service. The branding of cattle from nearby ranches in this sparsely populated, semi - desert area marked the end of a park service campaign to re-establish indigenous wildlife to the historic site. Pontiac Pm Photo STUDY DATE — Dressed in a brown plaid hip-belted jumper by Woolmark and matching brown shirt-blouse and opaqub hose from Lane Bryant of the Pontiac Mall, Barbara Schultz heads for the library with Rick Ahern. Rick’s all-weather trench coat with tan belt from Bird’s, also at the Pontiac Mall, is worn over blue tapered slacks and button-down shirt. Barbara attends Grand Valley College. Rick is a student at West Bloomfield High School. PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST II, : B—11 Priricefori Official Quizzed College President’s Job Changes The Maria Remember: Although Fashion is a very inportant aspect of the back to school scene, don't sacrifice quality or corret fit to get it. Shop at Stapp'% and get both! / - v;‘: Hours Please Call 681-2121 (EDITOR’S NOTE - A playwright who also conducts a drama workshop at Princeton, Mr, McCleery formerly was an editor of The Associated Press J, of Life, PM and Ladies’ Home Journal. This article is con-: deensed from a Princeton peri-1 odical, University, which he edits.) Special to The Press PRINCETON —Today’s stu-deftt activists in colleges and universities, whatever they may be pressing for at a given time, and institution, a 1 m o s t Invariably put their main] pressure on the president. How does this affect the col-1 lege president’s attitude toward" his position? How has the position itself been altered by the steady din ! of student demands — some of them eminently reasonable and; worth considering — some accompanied by threats of student march-ons, sit-ins, bust-ups, and burn-downs? Seeking answers to these questions we called on Princeton University's experienced, hut at 49 still youthful looking, President Robert Francis Goheen. When we were seated in a relatively quiet corner of the Student Center, he said, “Yes, the job of presiding over a university had indeed changed, and a lot — though not all — of the change was due tb efforts of student activists to. “help run the place." “And I don’t mean that t to oversimplify — not to sarcastically. I think some I distrust all of their motives. Soup-Sandwich Menus Star as Student Lunch Favorites PEANUT BUTTER HEROES 1 cup peanut butter % cup cheese spread y« cup pickle relish sliced tomatoes CHUCK WAGON OPENWICHES 4 slices (4 ounces) bologna, cut in strips 1 tablespoon butter o r margarine 1 can (16 ounces) barbecue beans 1 tablespoon pickle relish 2 hamburger buns, split and toasted Sliced stuffed olives In saucepan, brown bologna in butter. Add beans and relish. Heat,; stir now and then. Spoon on buns. Garnish with olives. Makes 4 open-face sandwiches. By JANET omen. Food Editor, The Pontiac Press Does your child come home from school for lunch every day? If he does, you have to! 4 hero buns plan a simple, but adequate! Cut buns in half. Spread lunch for him. You have more peanut butter on one half, opportunity to vary, the menu {Combine cheese spread and than if you’re sending lunch in jpickle relish and spread on the a lunchbox. j other half. Top with sliced Many mothers fall into a tomatoes. Makes 4 servings, of sandwich, soup or] For a sandwich that’s just a nd fruit. This is a good;bit different, serve an open and one that cap be ajbaked-bean sandwich. The little different each. day. . sauce to spoon over toasted •* * ★ * [hamburger buns is heated. Cater to youngsters’ love of butter, but give It to n a hero sandwich. With and tomato, it’s a whopper. Accompany this with thick green soup garnished with popcorn. LUNCHTIME SOUPER SPECIAL 1 can (10V2 ounces) condensed green pea soup 1 can (10% ounces) condensed cream of asparagus soup 2 soup cans milk y« cup green pepper, finely chopped % cup celery, finely chopped Popcorn In a saucepan, stir soups until smooth. Gradually blend in milk, green pepper and celery. »• Heat, stirring occasionally, but LUNCH AT HOME — The soup is a combintation of do not boil. Simmer for a few green pea and asparagus. The peanut butter hero sandwich minutes. To serve, top with pop includes cheese spread, pickle relish, and tomatoes; many Corn. Makes 4 to 6 servings. other combinations are possible. students really do want to help make this a better university and have some good ideas about how to do it, too. » - ★ * * “Sure, there is a handful, even here, of students who are clearly anarchistic and nihilistic in intent, and very skillful in identifying and nursing student grievances, finding ways to set students and faculty against the administration. ★ ★ / ★ 'There is evidence that the SDS (Students for a Democratic Society) picks its targets almost nationwide basis; that there are some semipro agitators who move from campus to campus spreading the word on how to invite police interference on campus, how to provoke police brutality, and so even among S-D S members there is — or has been so far — considerable difference of opinion as to ob- Would greater faculty jectives, and how far to go in participation of the setting of the direction of disrupting the university policy — as ad-university." vocated by student activists — MOST NOT INVOLVED ! lighten the load on the president There is a large majority of and other administrators? students — about 80 per cent on j IRONIC TRUTH campus like this — who are! “No. The truth is, ironically, primarily and busily concerned that as the faculty and students with completing the process of take more interest in how the growing up and gettingjuniversity is run, the ad-educated. ministration’s burden grows These students are often j heavier, not lighter, called‘apathetic,’but it doesn’t '★ ' ■ ★ ■ ★ * seem to me that they are,] “If they’re to take on new really, just because they’re not administrative responsibilities all fired up about politics and the administration has to help reforming the university at this {them do it." stage of their lives. I This did not mean, he said, ‘These students may get that he was opposed to more some pleasure out of seeing faculty and student involvement adulthood gei kicked in the ta university administration, shins, but they don’t carry we must not go too far ta the other direction, either, and lose sight of the fact that some of these radicals are real political provocateurs. * ★ * After an SDS-led demonstration here in the spring of 1968, Goheen issued a statement describing in some detail what steps the administration would take on the event of a sit-in, and it was generally felt that his clarity and firmness had prevented disruptive student action. Hfcdn’t all this taken up a good deal of his time? “It sure did. All last spring we — the provost, dean of the college, dean of students, dean of toe graduate school and myself — spent large portions of our time — even a majority of it in April and May—on these concerns precipitated by students. much, initiative for campus action. In fact, they are very much opposed to certain things the radical students want to do. k -k k “gome of uS — including some in the faculty, and including myself, in the past — have been a bit naive about the actual role of the extreme radical left. Even now I think we want to be very careful not Indeed, he felt a responsibility as president to try to engage more faculty meraberi and students in the general affairs of the university — “because a real danger in the present situation is that a relatively tiny minority of faculty and students can exert an extraordinarily disproportionate amount o f influence while the majority is not paying attention." taking up back to school shoes news sports? let this one take you up! The Back to School footwear fashion set is shopping at Stapp's. Haro are just two reasons why. Available in Bumf Beech Modtique coipr, this Strap Loafer is really in style. In sizes 1214 to 3, Widths C-D-E at....$13.00 In sizes 3,V4 to 6, Widths C-EE.'s at..$14.00 The Buccaneer Thil High Rid* Loafer U available In th* following to 12, Widths C-D-E in z*s 12% to 3, Widths y Brown and Black at i 5-9, Widths AA-C's in Brown and Block at leadership, and someone to care. pr “The schools art trying their m best but thay can only promote . and expand on ideal. Social ae standards are learned In the M home," said Mbs LeRoux, 1780 Mackintosh, Broomfield Township. an “Therefore, If you’re going to ,y teach sex you’re going to need objectivity.” LACKS TRAINING ''At the moment I know I’m I not adequately trained to handle 1 such an emotional course as sex 1 education objectively without 1 first going back' to school I myself," she continued. “But that is time I could be 1 putting to use working on areas ■ more pertinent to the I classroom. “Current issues, for example, is an area that's impossible to skirt because of television," she B added. “Any book is outdated as soon-as it’s published," said.j^H Bertrand. “Not to mention the fact that lying in day-today events with class material kills a lesson* plan after two years," noted H Miss LeRoux. , THIRD FACTOR Community feeling was a third factor to consider in . DRILL SESSION—Sixth graders review reaching a standard approach math lesson under the direction of Jim Bert* to the topic. rend. Jim is one of 24 teachers from Michi- Available Tn this •bet 7 to 14. 1 B. IT TOKOS O smaiT »uo-Toen to qpproaw •••» “■■■ accompanied by an easy-caro odea pullover in gold. SuMaan siaos 8 to 14. SWBittr $6.50 Kilt $11 C. Your junior high giH will love fhte "Tu^ right*’ brool Wond plaid skirt with kick pleats. Team it with this smart 100% orlon mack turtle sweater. Gills' sites 7 to 14. Sweater $8 Skirt $9 Bloomfield Miracle Mile Bloomfield Miracle Mile Shopping Center ___________ lHlNTIAO PRESS. MONDAY, AUGUST II, IMP " ■ " ' -------- — —n Cite Family Structute Gap * ; e * fell 2 Teachers Discuss Need for Sex Education TAPE LESSONS — Jean LeRoux assists students taping reading lesson to improve vowel pronunciation during summer class at Lincoln Elementary School, 181 Hillside. Johnny's image is changing. Today he wants to know more] and more about himself and the world around him. Learning about the three Rs of education is just scratching the surface. Johnny wants to understand the racial conflict, the scientific formula that puts a man on the moon and guidelines for dating. “Teaching at my level and higher is no longer limited to! subject material importance,” mused a. young teacher recently. “More and more! teachers are filling the family j structure gap and becoming less of a figure head and more of a friend and counselor.", , , SEX EDUCATION Adding to the problems already confronting the educational arena is the drive for sex education. For the most part, the community and educators appear j divided on justifying the need for such a program. ‘.it it it However, Jim Bertrand and Ing," said Bertrand of Pontiac Lake, White Lake Township, He blamed parents who put priorities on money and social status rather than establishing a good, healthy parent-child relationship. “Our parents went through a depression and they know what it's like to have nothing," added Bertrand. “It’s only natural that they want to give their children everything they couldn’t afford, such as a college education, clothes and a car. EMPHASIS ON MONEY “But there seems tq be so much emphasis on making money that gratitude often turns into resentment," he said. To both teachers it’s clear that kids want d 1 s c i p 1.1 n e, More Pupils for Avondale College Off Campus Jean LeRoux, teachers at Lin- NEW YORK to - In a pro-1 A one-week seminar will be co,n Elementary School * this gram aimed 'primarily at pro-j held there annually before the summer, have no doubt there is viding a means for bright adults! school year starts and a two- 8 ne®<* ‘°J’ sex education, but to obtain a bachelor's degree | week session at its end. question the move to bring it without on-campus \residence j a student giving all necessary into the c,a“room-and even without prev 1 oua;attention to the program The two back the program formal education, M#n sa|tajjorK| for m, needg can ex. because of what they see as a College will begin operation in Lect to earn his degree in three :8rowln* communication gap September. \ I to five years, according to Herb1 between parent and child. Ike new educational concept j Ahrend, chairman of the North! FAMILY FAILING la a project of Mensa, an in- j American Mensa Committee “People are looking to the ternetional organization whose|knd chancellor of the new whools for all their answers members are hi the top l per : institution. because the family unit is fail- cent of the general population in \ + * * ! f intelligence. | Members of Mensa or in- < * * ■ dlviduals of Mensa caliber, col- Registration is open Vo foge, oMlcla|g teel( have the members or those able to capacity to pursue a course of echjeve the require^score on a directed, independent study. Measa-aupervised IQ test. The The students'contact with the faculty^ has also been drawn school during the year will be from this group. by correspondence, plus regular The oollege takes the form of weekly sessions with, their An estimated 8,870 students an extension-type, degree-grant-!assigned “docent" — a Mensa 8r* **P*cted to answer the lag - institution requiring only with minimum of a B.A. degree, |*cho«1 hell as classes open in part-time residence of three who will work with no more!September for the Avondale weeks a year on the Joint caftir] than two students in his area as (School District, pus of Mensa College and j tutor, adviser, library guide and Supt. John W. Dickey reports Kirkland Hall College atlprovlder of moral support. 'the enrollment for the district’s Bjitea, Md, ______________ TWO DEGREE PROGRAMS flv* elementary schools, junior There are two degree pr«L(hlgh end senior high is up Just rams: the first, without VW? over 1,rt year * ,’7M Specific major, requires work i students, each level in the four areas of i \ ■ humanities, social science,! * V°*8' in teachers will be science and mathematics for a bn the district’s payroll, an in-B.A. In liberal studies. !crease «1»« over last year. In the second program! Under construction in the graduates will earn a B.A. in a (district is a new high School, specified major. expected to be complete in time ★ i h for the opening of fall classes in Applicants, who need not have 1970. ja high school diploma to] An enrollment of 1,10 0 qualify, ckn write for in-|students is expected in the ST LOUIS (AP) — with I formation to Sam Weissman.l Avondale Junior High School for students facing an ever-growing iMensa Colle«« Provost, Mensa grades 7-9. More than 900 are ti^tavertmenf^n^e^uca* 42nd St’ New expected in the high school this tional process. St. Louis York,N.Y. 100i7. IfaH. | University has launched a pilot program aimed at putting 80 seventh grade students in graduate or professional school j two years ahead of schedule. ] Tie “MM4" program,, outlined by St. Louis University President Paul Reinert, S.J., eliminates two “repetitious"! years of schooling, — the last year of elementary school and -ihe first year of college. * % . - :e; -it- 4* ■' - - • ] The two years She repetitious, Father Reinert says, because | (he elementary, secondary and1 college -systems were each! originally intended as terminal j experiences. * * * The program's first initiates! have skipped their final year of elementary training and are now in their first year of high school. * * * The four years of secondary training remain intact “so that students move through the program with the same peer group during the years in which peer group identity is most important for personality, development," Father Reinert j says, Bloomfield Hills Adds 2 Schools The Bloomfield Hills School District will be opening two new elementary schools this fall* ~ Fox Hills and Lone Pine. Each building cost about 8900,000 and both schools have a capacity for 600 students. Track and tennis athletic facilities at Andover and Lahser high schools are also being remodeled. i itself to Waterford or Pontiac, said Miss LeRoux. For this reason, Bertrand felt (the best alternative would be ifor the churches to take on the | responsibility rather than the {schools. j I’PARENTS TIE HANDS’ l "Parents have tied our hands .because they object to PtoTf*) counseling, saying ■# JPR I conflict with their beliefs, he. j 88“This is where rejig loti Si leaders can step in and provide, moral guidelines favorable to each parent while meeting the needs of the child," Bertrand concluded. ' gan State University participating in con- -tinuing summer education program^, '« Pilot Program Cuts 2 Grades College Head Calls 8th, 13, Repetitious Tax-Consultant Classes Are Set | The H It R Block tax-con-! auttant school, now in its second year, in tills area, opens Sept. I 15. Classes for beginner and ad-1 vanced students are scheduled! each Monday and Wednesday] afternoon and evening for 12] weeks. 1 it it .♦ ' 4 The school is located at 2538 Orchard Lake,.Sylvan Lake. ■ From 1888 to 1988, average monthly wages for hospital workers rose from >327 to 8475. la the samf period the average i monthly wage of production: workers rose from 8443 to $552. I What’s Happening in Boys* Shoes for Fall Rugged, just right looks for play time, party time, school time or anytime. Handsome styling new ae tomorrow plus quality craftsmanship... at a price parents approve. Reg. »7” Sizgt 814-3 lG/\ School Scene 2/*75° Girls' 100% Acrylic Dresses In 'High-Fashion' Colors ; Sizes 7-14, Reg. $5.66 and $5.99 ■ Gilt Edge b/, . in ■ _ • GOLDIN NUGGET i an4 1 • BROWN MADRON A A A guaranteed ^ bide (Ship marked by Its slightly rounded silhouette. With a healthy investment in • hand-rubbed leathers and earthy colors. And for -.extra .dividends: trims to brighten your ' entire fashion future. MISSES' PENNY-SADDLE SLIP-ONS Michigan's Largest Florsheim Dealer MIRACLE MILE ONLY! TV Is Gaining School Tool NEW YORK (AP) - Closed-circuit television may have only tapped Its possibilities for . educational use. Harry Lefkowltz, president of the GBC OC TV company, the country's largest closed-circuit distributor, aisserts: “The only limiting factor lies in the Individual's imagination. I estimate there sire at least 450 educational purposes for which closed circuit TV can be utl- THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST U, 1060 At the moment, s ays Lefkowltz, closed-circuit TV is used'for the most part to supply large numbers of students with the best lectures that may be obtained on certain subjects. fV doesn’t downgrade the teacher, fays the G BC president: f. “She’s still needed, to control the over-all’plan and to answer questions ttd to schedule the tapes, hut she is spared the boring vouttne of’ writing up the same lesson year after year.’’ MEDICAL SCHOOLS Closed circuit TV has come into its own in science classes and medical schools. Medical students Can now watch a surgeon perform an operation and see all the details and the.,same alternatives that cohfrflnt Ute surgeon himself »-in color, of course. And the surgeon, ' by watching the monitor, can see better what he’s doing. C, . * ★ ★ If, unfortunately, he makes a mistake, he can play over the tape to determine what he did wrong. High school, junior high and college laboratory science classes are finding closed-circuit TV a boon t microscopic studies. The doors to Walled Lake School District’s Western High School, a new $7 %-million facility, will open to 1,700 studente this wall. The school’s administration regards the high school as three special centers under a single roof. ★ ★ ★ • Facilities in the first section will be used primarily by Western students taking the traditional high school courses. Special vocational areas, designed to offer knowledge to students wishing to enter the working world directly after college, are located in the central part of the building. These areas will be used by Another Term LANSING (AP) - Dr. Wilma T- Donahue has been relected chairman of the Michigan Commission on Aging. Dr. Donahue is the codirector of the University of Michigan-Wayne State University’s Institute of,„$erop-tology. Walled Lake Western High Opens Its Doors This Fall Western and Central Hlghjroom is equipped with a public School. Among the new courses,(address system and a projection not taught at Central, are booth, for movies, lectures, welding, auto mechanics, carpentry aiid graphics. Community wing testing, panels, plays and guest speakers. The’library will have more The right wing of the school ™lu™a alon* wlth .. . 'T.. . ... 40 in/linlilital etiinir narrolc an contains the auditorium — with an orchestra pit and full loft — the gymnasium, the pool and the cafeteria, all of which are considered community facilities. These facilities will b e available to students of all ages, parents, senior citizens and groups in the community. * * ★ Special teaching room will include a large group instruction are where 135 'students some 700 students from both' could be seated at once. The school. 42 individual study carrels on the upper level. A library classroom is located next door for tail classes wanting access to the library. OPERATING COSTS Approximately three of the five additional mills hi the new school tax recently approved by voters will be used to operate Western. A bond issue was approved by voters in 1966 to construct the Expert Cites Importance Caring for Child's Eyes By the Associated Press Eighty per cent of what a child learns in his lifetime enters'through his eyes. ’ And the chances are that ’once a child enters school any visual defect that he has will not be corrected,” says Dr. Alden N. Haffner, advisory board chairman for the Society of Virual bane. ★ • ★ * Dr. Haffner claims that the Snellen Chart the centufy-old vision testing chart commonly used for school aminations — does not detect a wide range of visual deficiencies. • . w if ■ w ' The Snellen Chart, he plains “when properly used by eye-care specialis useful adjunct to A thorough visual examination. But in the hands of nonprofessionals this chart, devised in 1862, is not a, reliable barometer as to child’s visual condition.” CHART’S UMrrATIONS For instance, he says, file chart won’t show up these conditions: . ’ ★ *) .-*1? - !§ j Inability of the two eyes to work a$ a team — they must for efficient learning and reading; the ability to see laterally —. essential for car driving; color deficiency; depth perception; farsightedness; or astigmatism lack of point of focus. Opening of the new building will seriously reduce overcrowding at Central, Smart Junior High and . Walled Lake Junior High. Next year’s enrollment will be around 3,000, in grades 9-12/' Central is built to house 1,30(1 while Western can house up to 2,000. STUDENTS MOVED Plans call for moving ninth graders from the junior high ( schools and placing them with grades 10 through 12 at the senior high schools. Come fall, there will be some room for student expansion at all of. the schools. Hi STUDY BREAK - Robert Aldrich and Muriel Evans find it hard to study With blue skies overhead. Robert’s sweater is by Jant-zen, his Tartan flair pants by Farah. The Oakland Community College sophomore completes his outfit with an antelope corduroy coat by Casualcraft from Monarch Men’s Wear, Miracle Mile. Alvin's of Pontiac dresses Muriel in a busy brick-patterned ensemble by Evan Picone. The Ferris State College junior picks Evan Picone again for her matching buf f blouse. Hair Fashion! By the Associated Press Be in the campus hair fashfon limelight this fall with a glowing cap of hair with feathery Wisps. Direct from the young super set in London, this set Is wispy and short on the sides, long and straight in the back. The spb gives short summer hair : a preview of what’s new for fall. Best yet, styling is simple. : •; ★ ★ * , Start with a good cut. Hah; just covers the ears, but reaches down half the nape of the neck. Short bangs for ,‘the forehead — complement the hair cut in wisps all oyer. The set is easy. For this coed Coif, all you need is Scotch bah’ set tape especially designed to style hair. Place the tape over your bangs to hold them straight. Comb hair forward on sides, separate to form wisps, and tape. COMB FORWARD Blow your set dry with a hair dryer. Before you’re finished, wisps are forming.,. Once dry, comb all hair forward, sweep bangs to the right and make feathery wisps by separating your hair on the sides. „ The look can be simple or. smashing — ready for class or extracurricular activities. Microbes to Man and. principles of heredity are the focus of a fall Continuing Education course at Oakland University, Dr. Haffoer urges that children’s eyes be examined before entering school, perhaps as early as three years Of age, and that annual or biannual vision examinations by eye-care specialists be required by state legislation. ' '* * * a ’Since vision can deteriorate at any time — and without notice of pain,” Dr. Haffoer Stresses that a wise parent should become cancerned when a child complains of smarting eyes, nausea, fatigue after close Werk or red-rimmed eyes. Conferences Close Gap for Generations / NEWEST GLAMOUR STOCK AFOOT f FROM r small objects, blinking more than usual when doing dose work, holding books too close to eyes, rubbing eyes, double vision and inability to see. distant things clearly are other danger signals. ing,” says Dr. Lee. Among the ideas is one from a sixth grader who suggested that pupils be allowed to select >me new library books. ★ ★ ★ Another plan put into effect was setting aside an area in the courtyard for snowball throwing. The average supermarket has makes It taste as good as it over. 8,000 different items on its looks. I shelves. Delicious Brown If you want your fried chicken to take on that deep brown delidous look, add a dash of paprika to the flour you roll it in. A few tablespoons of sour cream dribbled over the top when it is steaming in the BALDWIN, N Y. (AP) — There has been n o communications gap between students and officials at the Harbor Elementary school here since the institution of a student-conference program by the principal, Dr. Thomas Lee. Realizing he had little opportunity for any real conversation with pupils, Dr. Lee started holding 15 minute sessions, during which the kids can sound off or ask questions. Game Boosts Bus Safely TRENTON, N.J. (AP) — It’s hoods and the game brings! a game to the children, but the home to the children the fact' serious purpose behind the new that from headlight to type of hide-and-seek N e w headlight, anyone shorter than j Jersey teachers are playing the hood is invisible to the with their pupils is to save driver. Time-for-action “Sea Hunter” lives. W *i * [ In eight years, eight state schoolchildren were killed by buses — all in avoidable accidents — and prevention of such tragedies is the aim of the fun-cloaked exercise being promoted by a special statewide committee interested fo teaching kids school-bus safety. The game is played during recess on a school bus. While “I’m pleasantly surprised at the children cover their eyes, how well tiie program is work-the teacher hides a schoolmate outside, but quite close. The try to locate him without leaving the bus, but they can’t, although he is directly in front of the vehicle. ★ ★ e From the inside the children! In addition to the safety -lesson thus taught, New Jersey school buses now have mirrors on the front fenders that give the driver some vision into the blind spot. The state pioneered the use of amber lights to warn motorists that a moving school bus is stopping. ★ m ★ In another recent innovation, the traditionally yeUow school bus is getting some dark! patches. “Drivers have complained to us about glare from yellow hood, and we are conducting experiments painting the hoods a flat black,”: reports Dr. Orville G Parrish,! director of the bureau ofj transportation in the s t a t e can see the rear and sides of, dep^tmcnt of education, whoi. the bus but, even from the organized the safety committee. I driver’s seat, they cannot see in front. ] PROTRUDING HOODS School buses have protruding. watch FREE RING SIZING WHILE YOU WAIT MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER the back-to-schoolbeat is found at Monarch’s automatic machines. Smart Saddle Shoulders. Guaranteed mothproof. Magnificent colors. S-M-L-XL *15 BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER They sihop together in minutes by phone. Penneys Catalog is a family affair. Think how much more time you have to spend together when you shop from this big department store in your own home. Oyer 100,000 things at your fingertips ■— for you, your family, your home, your car, your vacations and family .activities. V s Fall is such a busy time. This year, let Penneys Catalog help you plan ahead. It’s agreat organizer. Malcealisty order as it suits you, by phone. Our friendly order staff answers your questions, speed* your order electronically an give you fast, effidene service. All you doit pick it up at your &talog Center. Sages time and money (check our famous low prices). Makes shopping all fun and no work. Get your free Catalog today and see. Of course, use your Penneys Charge Card' Get your FREE Fall-Winter Catalog : now at your convenient Catalog Center. $'v Phone 33&9161 MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER, TELEGRAPH & LAKE KDj KID-PROOF SHOES BYTKcmvMjpAtv GIRLS' KILTE, 6.99 GIRLS’ ONE-STRAP, 650 Br—M THE PONTIAC FltESS. MONDAY, AUGUST 11, I960 NOW SOUND — Take four eager-to-learn musicians, add instruments from Grlnnell’s of tha Pontiac Mall, and stir for a swinging night. From felt, on trombone, Michael McDonald of Madison Junior High School; on trumpet, Terry Hollins of Washington Junior High School; on guitar, Kenny Burch of Cro-foot Elementary School; and on drums, Hatold Howard of Washington Junior High School. But Student Employes Can Have Fun National Parks Offers Few Easy Jobs GLACIER NATIONAL PARK, learn to operate four hotels, system of another was washed Mont. (AF) — Opening the na-jthree motels, ' three cam pi away.’11 tion's national parks is like readying a ship for a three-month cruise in 10 days with 23 permanent officers and 800 new At Glacier National Park, the officers are year-round park employ** While the new hands art college students from throughout the U.S., selected from over 12,000 applicants. stores, six gift shops, the laundry, transportation company mid warehouse." ft'* not unusual here to theology students scrubbing floors, potential K trucks and hopeful aerospace * engineers loading trays with J dirty dishes. jMEET EMERGENCIES I “They have to' show their “jin a period of 10 days,” mid mettle quickly,” Donau added, the park’s general manager, Alj’Tn 1964, floods washed out 200 Donau, “our young people must [bridges, one park hotel had 1V4 completely clean; provision and feet of water and the kitchen Hypersensitivity to Alcohol Often Diagnosed Incorrectly In 1960, student employes, who had been on the Job less week, welcomed and' entertained the first National Governor’s Conference held in Some people can’t take alcor hoi even in small amounts without experiencing a crying Jag. Dr. Marshall Mandell, assist-' ant professor of allergy at the New York Medical College, reports one 42-year-old woman patient who became extremely tired and wept pathetically after | a single drink. memory, with mood swings from sillipess and restlessness to a state of withdrawal. Dr. Mandell says hypersensitivity to inhalants, foods and environ-j mental chemicals are frequently misdiagnosed as psychiatric disorders. He says “ecologic mental illness often goes unrecognized because emotional factors - - ■ j are generally believed to be the i Another patient’s reaction to [causes of mental and behavioral alcohol was complete loss ofisymptoms.” Each summer employe is sent a contract stating exactly what he or she will be doing. In this way, students hopingg to "glamor jobs,” like waiting on tables or driving a tour bus, are not disillusioned. 'When they arrive, they already know they will be pushing heavy boxes or running sheets through a mangle, Donau added. “We have little griping or absenteeism.” PLAYS, FOOTBALL Each of the park’s four hotels -’ Glacier Park Lodge, Many Glacier Hotel, Lake MacDonald Lodge and the Canadian Prince of Wales Hotel— puts on a play and each has a football team. . “At the end of the summer,’” Donau concluded, “our students are no longer green deckhands, [but able-bodied workers with calloused hands.” And well they, should be. It’s not easy to maintain a one-I million-acre “summer place.” | Learning Used With Books , RICHMOND, Va, (AP)-Computers, starfish, archaeological diggings and radio circuits are more than just diagrams, pictures‘or textbook phrases to hundreds of students and teachers in this area. , These artifacts of learning in science and mathematics are props in programs offered by the regional Mathematics and Science Center here> * " 4. * ■!#"/«*-' y One word dominates explanations of the program’s administrators and teachers on what it doea. The word is “experience.” ’ , “ “Like any school, we’re interested In learning,” says Robert C. Haynes, center director. “But we try to present experiences to complement the concepts offered by regular school programs.” SIX SPONSORS Drawing on-facilities of the six sponsoring public school districts, scheduling laboratory and field sessions outside school hours and using working specialists and teachers from across Virginia and neighboring states, file center often activities none of the districts could manage alone. “We break ground,” Haynes says in explaining how the center favors futuristic topics, “We’re aware that man’s technology seems to be outrunning him. We have to do, something to narrow the gap.” Haynes’ intellectual ground-breaking experiences have included a presentation by . representatives 0f the Nations! Aeronautics and Space-Administration and a field trip By students to the space research center at Wallops Island off Virginia’s Eastern Shore. The center, begun In 1966, received $648,000 in federal education funds during its initial three-year “exploratory” period. FUTURE PLANS Beginning the 1960-70 school year, the center will have no further federal operating assistance. Each participating school district will help fond the operation. During a typical year, ti^e canter provides educational experience of some sort for about 400 teachers. About 400 studnts, grades five through 12, participate hi the Saturday morning study programs. The same number take summer lessons. 1 $ ■ * * ★ Other courses stress computer use and operations. Students have watched computers at work in Hndustrial plants, government offices, banks and utility plants. Elementary students get their first experience with oceanography in a class where they taste seawater and handle some of the sea creatures that live in refrigerated aquaria at the denter . STUDY ISOLATION An anthropology class has visited Tangier Island In Chesapeake Bay to study effects of isolation on a small social group. * Programs run by the center, with its 16-member administrative and teaching staff, reach not Mly students. Teachers and the public also have chances to absorb some of the educational experiences. ■ it ★ ★ Goals are defined as enrichment, which refers to the programs that complement school activities, in-service training for teachers, general education fof* the public and information coordination involving all the programs. Like the students, the teachers spend much of their time in the field or working with some of the $70,000 worth of equipment the center owns. Apparatus includes phkse miscroscopes, an astronomical .telescope, a spectophotometer and a gas chromatograph — piece of equipment few school systems could provide for either students or teachers. Programs for the public' have included lectures and discussiens by Dr. George Wald of Harvard, 1967 Nobel Prize winner in biology, and J. Adam Hynek of Northwestern-University, consultant to the U.S. Air Force on unidentified flying objects. * -v ^ « Besides UFO’s and life'processes, discussions sponsored by the center have centered on advances in organ transplants, supernova 1 exploding stars, and brain chemistry and the learning process. Texas District Has Unusual 'Curriculum' CORPUS CHHISTI, Tex. (AF) —Hie Flour Bluff Independent School District is independent in action as well as in name. * , '★ > ft*. Under . the direction of Supt. E. J. Wranosky it operates on the principle that children should be active physically, know how to use their hands as well as their Heads and learn in school much more than is in their-textbooks. \ * ★ * ............... Regularly each month pupils are taken to a camp for a week that includes such projects as learning to cut a tree and figure its .age, studying the stars and planets, taking nature trails and finding art subjects at every turn. The school offers a travel program,.^ with students having a choice of a Texas history tour, a trip to the State Fair in DaNns, thd Astrodome in Houston^ or Washington, D.C. or Colorado during their high school years. WEALTHY DISTRICT The small, school district, one. of the wealthiest in the state, draws many of its students from Naval Air Station at Bee-!, Tex., as families move into recently completed base housing. , ★ ★ Sixty-one per cent are the children of military or civil service personnel. Briefhand, a simple system for the abreviation of longhand with recording rates of 120 words a minute, will be offered this fall by Oakland University’s Division of Continuing Education. " 'I;,., ■ Caurttrp&oufet from our newest collection or men's outer wear comes . fur-like coats fay Astra icq, Ltd., of England w. *7950 BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE I otuunit ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY m It’s here now! Ibuf FREEPenneys FaUAVinter Catalog! Hurry, get yours today! THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1969 College Deans Offer Advice to Freshmen reasoning la that meeting and getting to really know one mote person Is an Invaluable ex* perience. He said hia most Important bit of advice for freshmen If he was admitted to a college he has the ability to succeed if he puts forth enough effort. . ^nte students educate one I Students also seem to worry another/’ ht said. 'They come about their ftiture roommates, fo campus with different [Smith said. fnd We“- Should they take a chance JewtV and forelgnl rooming with someone they Smith personally favors assigning rooms at random. His Oakland University, Fred W. Smith explains,“The freshman year is an exploratory year. A student should reexamine his objectives, to become aware of the career possibilities. Also important is to established good relationships With the faculty lege studies is the amount, not the kind of study. ★ *i • ★ • Ned Brodbeck, dean of students at the Highland Lakes Campus of Oakland Community College, says the average stu* dent needs to study about two hours for every hour spent hi class. NOT HARD TO ADJUST He feel# that it is not hard to adjust to College as long as the student remftnbers that the faculty doesn’t put pressure bh the students; that they (the students) are on their own, and must be willing to accept responsibility. ★ tq i ■' “They can’t take it easy,” he says. “Just because OCC has an open-door policy doesn’t mean it’s not college-level work, They’ve got to put time into it to do justice to a course.” ■ ■ ★ ★ “Many students study until they understand, and stop there. They should study until it grasps them, and can explain it.” advises Smith. “Unfortunately their objectives are to study to remember and meet ex* pectattons rather than learn. Education is what you take with yettr ideas and impressions. Students often strive for facts only.” • ★ ★) ★ He feels it is better to overatudy because it will give the student confidence, and he can enjoy college more that way. College isn’t just a place full, of bookworms, and administrators are happy to see THROUGH SATURDAY SAVE 2.11 A PAIR OH THESE STYLES The Oakland University dean, feels strongly that satisfaction with environment is important to success academically. “A lack of activity is as bad as an excessive amount.” LIKE HIGHI SCHOOL He said commuter students often treat college as an ax* tention of high school. “They sometimes come here because* it’s close or else because it’s cheaper to com* SAVE 2.111 Boys' Chukkaboots. Comfortable leisure look for boys. 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CHARGE HI lAa e 7 MILE A MACK • 12 AAIl| A VAN DYKE ip Gtmm Peinte Woods Tech Plow Shopping Center r FOR THE BEST BACK-TO-SCHOOL LOOK, ATTEND COLOR B—16 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1960 - NEXT WEEK - Fashion Show ana Musical Entertainment Friday Saturday Aug. 22 Aug. 23 WATCH FOR FURTHER DETAILS Kv*’ OOV acr.-' ,&ov- ft® K° ^0V> 0V * o«3lS0 a* *o'6® 0 WI.* skC*-/1 0*^0 9^’’’ - - » s «°*v :*«**> T U8*0 ^ . <4 « ©Mr.* -T* • •» »0«* ,_ov ^ ^ **■ »a** - ^ <*■1 ^ ' wP *.«°v, . ft<^0°v iTy »®* 10 * , *E IS E c^. ■:>*' T **£#■*■! » r®*-<. t*** 3JT »a 110, ■S° - ac*°°v. _ .58SP „„ -JO *' »OOV ' .ij|P ' W>" ‘ ^ ,c* %0^ «jO • ^ &$&* « 5^'tcP **T^ ’ 'O^00 ***** * «0 • ‘oO^*0*P°v ^ *S0 " •so $$jr ^ ^ 2^2lidR?:^ ® - . to ”0'f‘°0V ?kC£ *° “' *° ., «* *‘CV -fiftOO'- „obV 8 «C*CP -.to*0 .„.,o*0* *° ^%oi «►' »*v .*<** .uCiCA* •to w .►'’*• . ts}P «$> «»•“' - to 9Stf'oV « 4#:« WW%> - *«*. «j0; MIRACLE MIL THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1969 ONE COLOR C—1 HPW t§ h P ** Wm ■fcgL'fr.. .FORIf^- SCHOOL Hr>$. Yes, It’s BACK - TO 1 SCHOOL Shopping Shop in Air-Conditioned Comfort! Parking for 7,000. cars all around the Center is free and coiivenient. The Center is open from 9:30 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. daily with some stores open on Sunday 12 noon to 5 p.m. TELEGRAPH at ELIZABETH LAKE ROADS "Be&ultfuA Endo&fflt PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTER.. To Scho Time A ff'f C—t , I ' IB L^ja ■ 7 ,, R THE PONTIAC PftKSS, MONDAY. AUGUST 11, Study Method Is Key As Don't Come Easy You, too, can get all A’a, Ten easy lessons In the Leam-a-Lot study course can put YOU at the top of your class by midsemester exam time. Sound Incredible? It is. There no such easy way to good study habits and top grades, according to Jerome Breen, who is conducting a summer study course at Oakland University. * * * It’s a developing process to study effectively,. and a basic part is acquiring an efficient method and tailor it to the different types of courses, he said. Breen teaches students with study problems the SQ3B method: Survey, Question, Read, Recite and Review. goals to be reached by reading the material, Breen said. ‘\You learn more easily if you answer basic questions about the study area." ♦ h ★. While reading the chapter, the student should make an outline — jotting down essential points and in particular the answers to he had previously formulated, Breen said. He should then recite what he remembers about the material, and just before an examination, a passing review over the subject matter should reinforce the learning that has already taken place. PREVIEWING STAGE In larger works, such [reading i ________ entire book, Breen I QUICK SURVEY (teaches an essential previewing A quick survey should be {stage. The reader should read HAPPY LQSER — Who can keep score when Western Michigan University freshman Sandy Jeffers turns on the charm for Jerry Richart of the University of Detroit. Sandy is dressed in a crepe blouse by Mardl Modes with Garland's torso vest and kilt from Hadley’s at the Pontiac Mail. Jerry's Charter Club sport coat is worn with an Oleg Cassini shirt and Continental tie. Bell-bottom trousers by Esquire complete his outfit from Hughes-Hatcher-Suffrin, also at,.the Pontiac Mall. made through a section or chapter of the material, noting the boldface type, headings, and pictures to derive questions about the material and become | familiar with the topics of discussion. •> The questions are used to set Students Can Borrow . By the Associated Press {subsidize under the Higher With no security but his Education Act of 1965 if the ad-determination to help himself I justed family income is under Pilot Program Is Added to OCC Class Schedule The 9,440 students enrolled at the Auburn Hills, Highland Lakes and Orchard Ridge campuses of Oakland Com- It In future years, according tp OCC officials. The program will concentrate on the idea of meaning as the munity College will find a new key to the problem of obtaining program on their schedule a good general education. In sheets when they return to this context, educational pro- school this fall. A pilot program called Foundational Studies will be added this year for those students working for an associate degree. It will be opened t number of students this year, but if It proves successful, all Incoming associate degree students will be required to take cesses will be guided by major classifications o f meanings. Hiese classifications being in the realm of communications, natural and life aclences, behavioral and social sciences and humanities. Students will be placed in three groups, each placement depending on tests that will determine how each student best learns. carefully the title and pertinent information on the cover and note the author to see if he is familiar with him, he said. Then the prefare or foreword, table of contents and other information prior to Chapter I should be read to become as and a promising academic record, a would-be college student dan borrow money to finance his schooling, thanks to United Student Aid Funds Inc. Launched in 1960 to make )w-intereat bank loans available to every needy and deserving college student, USA Funds guarantees payment of principal and interest of all loans that it endorses. $15,000. Once such a student graduates he assumes the interest burden. . The maximum annual loan Is $1,500 and maximum total loan for undergraduates and graduate students is $7,500. Repayment begins nine months alter graduation and may extend ovCr a period of 10 years. familiar as possible with the maternd to follow. \ '■ ■■ Then, Breen suggests a rapid glance at the first chapter, 8-10 pages in the middle of the book and the last chapter. This Is done, he says, become acquainted with general structure and content and to evaluate the background the student has in the subject to he can relate the new material. POOR VOCABULARY Breen blames a poor vocabulary as the biggas* impediment to efficient an valuable studying because of the difficulty encountered in trying to zero in on emphatic points. Persons with a limited vocabulary must become interested in words to accelerate their learning process, he said. They must ask what the words mean and learn the multiple meanings of the words. ★ * ★ If you're going to learn words, you’ve got to hear them, write them and speak them," Breen continued. And he suggested that It is nearly eslentlal to take an active part in learning; to consciously draw on experience for concrete referent. To assist the student’s power of concentration, Breen said a m of about an hour should be spent in uninterrupted studying, followed by a' minute break. And he emphasized that the methods and Skills acquire for good study habits and improved — but not necessarily all-around superior — learning power must be developed by continued use. USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT AfS The nonprofit organization, only agency to guarantee loans Since its inception it has!Tiati0nwlde--0Perates ln.,U. 50 guaranteed over 325, totaling in excess of $200 million to more than 200,000 students. Both undergraduate and graduate students are eligible for such loans for the purpose of attending any accredited institution approved for the guaranteed loan program by the U.S Office of Educatiqn. INTEREST SUBSIDY The loans are made at simple interest rate of 7 per cent, which the government will states, the District of Columbia, loans ____ . ,, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. To qualify for a USA Funds loan the studeht must: attend an institution participating in the i program -or be a resident of a state where USA Funds operates the student-aid program; be enrolled as a foil or halt-time student; be making satisfactory . _ graduation; show good credit history with the college; and be approved by the college. Bernhard Ah does bis king in -fourteen of the season’s most sought after sjfades, Shades of light blue, navy, midnight blue, grey, gold, camel, dark brown, medium brown, harvest, moss green, light grefis^ green, red and tan. All shading a pure imported Scotch Umbswool sweater, full-fashioned and machine wash-and-dryahle, yours in sizel 38 to 46 for $17> I p OUR PONTIAC MALI STORE IS OPEN TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY TO 5:30, MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY A SATURDAY TO 9 PM. TELEGRAPH AT ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD HOW Through August 23rd MOTOR SPORTS SPECTACULAR AN EXOITINQ EXHIBIT OF SPORTR VEHICLES Plus live family anter-tainment in The South Mall for your shopping enjoyment! Today thru Saturday Aug. 11-16 ROAD RACING — Monday thru Saturday Aug. 18-23 . IMPORT CARS and • CARS Displayed ini The Mall MOTORCYCLES Displayed in The Mall Aug. 18 through 23rd YOU MAY WIN A “Honda Mini-Trail,” Boys’ Racing Biko, Girls’Racing Biko! LIVE ENTERTAINMENT IN THE SOUTH MALL BURNS’ PERFORMING BIRRS Now thru Aug. 16th at l:OOr 3:00, 5:00, 7:00 P.M. An amazing eet of trained, performing birds. Each tropioal bird an individual personality 1UE PONTUC mu SHOPPING CENTER Telegraph at Elisabeth Lake Roads . SHOP IN AIR-tONOITigNEp COMFORT Open daily 9:30 e.m. to 9.-00 p.m. Sente stores open Sunday 12:00 to 5:00 p.m. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1969 Career Compatible With C—8 *£* VIEW FROM THE BRIDGE - Vinyl * top, rally sport wheels and a limelight green t finish makes this Pontiac Catalina from t Pontltt Prut Photo Pontiac Retail Store, Wide Track at University, an easy eye-catcher on any campus. New Road Map Affords an Astronaut's Eye View Girls Urged to Enter Optometry Today’s teen-age girls who look forward to marrying and yet are interested in pursuing professional career, would do well to consider the unique com-patability of marriage and a ireer as an optometrist. Optometry is the profession and science of vision care, and the prime function of the optometrist is to enable men, women and children to see not only clearly, but also efficiently and comfortably. * ,★ * The American Optometric Association defines an optometrist, Doctor of Optometry, (O.D.), as "specifically educated, trained and state licensed to examine the eyes and related structures to determine the presence of vision problems, eye disease or other abnormalities. “The optometrist prescribes and adapts lenses or other op- J tical aids and may use visual training when indicated to pre-| serve or restore maximum efficiency of vision.’’ FEW WOMEN According to the AOA, only three per cent of today’s 17,000 practicing optometrists are | women. With q projected need :for an alditional 13,500 optometrists by 1970 to provide professional vision care services for an increasing population, the I AOA is urging young women to consider optometry as a career. * * * I There is much in; optometry to attract women who want careers that are in harmony with family life. Because of the flexible time schedule, a woman op-1 tometrist can work the years that seem best suited for herj take leave to have children, and I return to the profession when I 'she wishes. The practice of op-! tometry is not physically strenuous and the hours do not generally interfere with personal activities. The woman optometrist may! wish to specialize in any one lor several of the profession’s services: children’s vision, visual training, contact lenses, aids [for the partially sighted, to men-tion a few. * * * | The vision care of children and the natural opportunity for association with educational and child welfare groups provide an advantage particularly suitable for women in optometry. , There are 10 schools and colleges of optometry in the United States. All require a six-year curriculum leading to a Doctor iof Optometry degree. Two years of preoptometry college education are required prior to admission to a college of optometry. Basic required subjqpts in preoptometry in-I elude mathematics, physics, [chemistry, English and biology. Watch sales will reach more than $1 billion this year in the United States, it is predicted, with more than 46 million units to be sold. Lwrinnei^ i : s Fisher® fm am stereo home music center ** WASHINGTON-A new space-age road map gives drivers an IGstronaut’s-eye view of highways and provides back-seat navigators with 5,500 square miles of alternate routes. The United States Geological Survey map is based on photographs taken from 100 miles up during the August 1965 Gemini V mission. It vividly depicts the Tucsofl, Ariz., vicinity. * * * Urban areas, cultivated fields, mountain ranges, valleys, rivers, and main highways appear in striking detail. Route numbers are superimposed on the roads. The photo-map is not designed* to replace the familiar road map, but to' provide an extra dimension for travelers who want the big picture of the countryside. PRIMITIVE MAPS Modern travelers take good maps for granted, but in the early days of motoring road were, as primitive as the Horseless carriage, The first automobile guidebooks, published early in the century, carried small maps supplemented by detailed instructions that left nothing to chance. For example: / “Mile 21.5. At the end of the road turn right (schoolhouse on. the right, jchurch on the left). 23—Turn off to the left with wires (old sign board on the right). 24.7—Turn right with wires, passing* on the left, after turn, large red barn marked James White.**1 A HIT OF THE N.Y. ELECTRONICS SHOW! Designed in the fine tradition of famous Fisher ousMty is this new 3-oiece FM-AM stereo radio-Dho-not»raoh with two now°rfi il soealter systems Comflc»iri« the functions of a tuner nnrmljfier in one rhaccic »e AM rarpiv^r with Cfprpo Rod <-r>n and hi jflt-fn farri+o snfenna On nf the /e- reivar r**tc d criood h irntshle 9> ,rUi ,f and Cue Control le^e! Walnut finish. 329 i95 Immediate Delivery! Grinnell's 8.5 billion cigars are sold an-j nually in the United States. 1 Use Our 4-Pay Plan (90 days same as cash) or Budget Plan The Pontiac Mall, 682-0422, Open Every Evening 'til 9 Downtown, 27 S. Saginaw, Monday and Friday to 9, FE 3-7168 Pontiac Prati Photo MUSIC, MUSIC, JWUSIC — Wherever she goes, Cathy Chase of Pontiac Northern High School can hear the top 10 sounds with the pocket size 7-transistor, antenna-equipped AM-FM Panasonic radio from Simms Bros., downtown Pon-* tiac. Cathy’s two-pjece belted ensemble by Glenora Juniors and black see-through blouse are from Arthur’s, also downtown. reg. 6.99 cross strapper 5“ rp 8TVLcroe 9 Days Only! Multiply your fashion with a climbing ladder of open straps! Add a broad toe, flippy heel. Like this one in black leather-look manmade. Super Special savings! Curl„up with a good look Neat one-piece bunny sleepers of cotton flannelette keep you cute and comfy as you wind up your studying or midnight snacking. These long-sleeved machine-washable sleepers feature lasting, non-skid soles. Sleep tight! See them in Hudsonjs Moderately Priced lingerie, Pontiac, l, or branches. A. Feminine prints with drawstring neck and ruffled sleeves. Lynn Neagle, Ferri* State junior. think* the dean, fresh, pelhhed $( M, l, $7. B, Jungle print sleeper buttons down with gold- Burts : THE PONTIAC MALL Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake Rds. m THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1969 -f- : k m Events Listed FALL SEMESTER | Sept. 8-5—Registration. , \ Sept. 8—Classes begin; ; 1 • Nov. 27*30—Thanksgiving recess, v T Dec. 1—Classes resume! , Dec, 13—Classes end. Dec. 13—Final examinations begin. * Dec. 10—Final examinations end. WINTER SEMESTER ! Jan. 5-0—Registration, Jan, 7—Classes begin. * March 5-0— Winter recess, jj March 0—Classes resume. . April 14—Classes end. j April 10—Final examinations begin. * April 21—Final examinations end. April 25—Commencement. SPRING SESSION April 20—Registration. , April 30—Classes begin. May 29—Holiday. June 18—Classes end. June 10-20—Final examinations. SUMMER SESSION June 22—Registration. * t June 25—Classes begin, f July 3—Holiday. . Aug. 11—Classes end. Aug. 12-15—Final examinations. Divorces A He* F. from Rotwrt I. FollH Corel from Richard Tatro Halan from Harold Cslfhnah Btvsrlv Y, from jgMM M. Hsyst Greet R. from CharIM L Calkins Thaoaora O. from Jaromo T, Paruskl Sharon S- from Clann A. BlOnchlnl Boksoon (ram David J. Fralm -■ Daiorls j, from Pan V. Hinas Joyce W. from Paul A. Rochna Keith 0. from Marita E, Hack Herbfrt 0. from Winifred B. Dean Mary L. from Lewis W. Olors Role M. from Irvin A. Vollrath Angelo M, from Michael C. Mitchell Pamela K. from OOry L. Bandy Sally R, from Robert W. Twelter Denton L. from Jo Anno Adams Catharine frim Harvey Schneider John H. from Julia Ray" Karen from Clarence Bess Laurie J. from John A. Ruth Christina from Jamts L. dasom Myra K, from Michael J.>lccalo .— . .— Barry n Sue R. from Martin Wilton (annulmai Robert S. from Mary J. Davis Janla L. from Bobby K. Belcher viralnia (ram Eugene M. Parry Raymond H. Jones t Robert c. Mott I. Ran Gonlwlrha , Catharine from Alfred P. Frerenuoruu Unde J. from terry c. teflon Hotel from Booker T. Spells .Jenlce H. from Allen L. satow Florence M. from Fred E. Sloppy .Karon from William T. Oliver Mory M. from'Roy Jonas Jr. Allcfo A. from John t. Dorr Jeanette from Phenlx .Aaron Nancy J. from Gaylord R. Houck William from Beatrice M. Colley Mory J. from James B. Springer vere c. from Richard Eerie Judith X. from Charles A. Kuphal Jr, Juno E. from Ralph 0. Spencer Ethel I. from Robert L Hemming Kathleen A. Irom Thornes R. Coombi Dictionaries Roget's Thesaurus Classics Politics Sociology Mathematics Historical Novels Poetry Drama - European Language History Psychology Educational Reading College Outline Series Golden Nature Guides Contemporary Literature 682-5920 If We Don't Have It We'll Get It for You! By the Associated Press Indian and Mexlcan-American schoolchildren, two groups often thought to be unresponsive to education, are finding a glimmer of hope in a new program called Project Catch-Up. The. program was Instituted at Western Washington State College in Bellingham several summers ago with the help of Rockefeller Foundation money. ★ ★ Collectively the s t u dents TRADITIONAL FAVORITES - Jumper and blouse combinations are basics for any school wardrobe as Ann L. Sanford of Crary Junior High School, Waterford Township, well knows. Ann’s window-pane check jumper' is worn with ruffled-front blouse of permanent press nylon. To complete her outfit from Kresge’s, the Pontiac Mall, she’s chosen brown high-rise penny loafers. Test Nerves Are Soothed MENOMONIE, Wls, (AP) -Prof.'Robert Hoyt, the onetime host of a late-night music and talk radio show, puts his velvety voice to use helping Stout State University students overcome examination anxiety. Hoyt, a member, of the university’s counseling center staff, conducts a series of each semester for students who are “up-tight” about tests. He suggests they envision themselves floating on billowy clouds. Once in this frame of mind, .the students are asked to imagine they are taking a test during which a professor announces, there are only 10 minutes left. At the beginning of the series, Hoyt .asks each student to rank' his test-taking1 problems in of severity. After the problems are listed and discussed, they are worked on separately, using a process known as Systematic desensitization. The procedure is coming into widespread use not only in counseling but in the treatment of heart patients. Hoyt calls first for tension in the body, then a complete relaxation in which tension drains slowly from every part of the body. Next comes the cloud-floating, a procedure*' which is repeated often enough to condition the student to relax when confronted with the stimulus of test-taking. Montreal has had a downward trend in births since 1958. Program Offers Hope to 2 Groups averages following a summer wit* Catch-Up did not change from that of a control group. Yet as Sterling Brand, project coordinator, explains: “Hie students are nominated by teachers, counselors and administrators in their, schools, by clergymen, social service workers and Indian agents. LOW ACHIEVEMENT This is done oh the basis of academic potential with low achievement, evidence of socioeconomic deprivation and absence of serious emotional disorder.” / The program concentrates on language arts, general sciences, art and quantitative skills, and the work is tailored to the abilities of the BAUvldual. Personal projects, selected by the students under teacher guidance range from w H d flower arranging |Q Jewelry making. Rayon and Acetate SCOTCH TWIST Woven PUids MATCHING SOLIDS The magic of moors and mist and bagpipes woven into a sturdy fall fabric : Perfect weight for dresses ,t . suits and sepprates SAVE $1 YARD-REGULAR $2.98 YARD 54" wide Hand washable 9:00 p.riL THE PONTIAC MALL - TELEGRAPH at ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD PONTIAC MALL STORE ONLY! Little Wardrobe-Stretchers Sleeveless Shells Ovr fttgvtw 7.96 66 Minn' snippy solid color or striped scrylic shell shirts that go casual or dressy. Sires S-M-L. r Carefree Corduroy Wrangler Typo Styling SLACKS SQS9 ;i 2 front and 2 back 5 pockets. Belt loops, 6 •i Fall Fashion Colors ■j to select from. Six* 8-18 100% Wash and Wear Cotton Gabardine Twill SUCKS $3! | Contoured waistband ... college style tail->:• oritig... latest colors :V and leg styles! I Size 8-18 $ DuPont Dacron Pplyester Knit SLACKS 3 Days Only— Teens' Reg. 1.97 Penny Sadde Slip-Ons 148 '}■ Tailored with easy-fit- j sting elastic waistband. :j Doable knit dacron poly* | ester in exciting fall j: colors. ' / j Size 8-18 OPEN SUNDAY 12 to 5 P.M. KRES6E’S-TNE PONTIAC MALL TELEGRAPH at ELIZABETH LAKE HD. Nowdays there's a whole new way to travel... in handsome new sports shoes with heavier heels, THE PONTIAC MALL new trims.’Greet with gear like flippy skirts, skinny , ., Telegraph at Elizabeth Lak* Rds. sweaters, long vests. A. Cut Higher, the tongue crossed with a pleated self tab. In Pecan, Briar, Tan or Black smooth uppers "$13.99. B. Longer tongue,' Navy OrBrown i——|V||—^fj**^* Al Men in Sfc VFNTEf N i-i smooth, Brass *uede or Brown glove $13.99. C—5 * THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. AUGUST UV 19<>9 Horticulture School Grows , By JODY HEADLEE # Pontiac Press ^ Garden Editor Like the physician who is told Ije must cure himself, the seed and, grower industry kneW that something had to be done to insure the flow of new talent Mto its industry. ceptance of foreign students and is also approved for GI education. Only 20 students maly be accepted each year so the competition for entrance is keen.' feel? They are most enthusias-, echoed by 20-year-old ttc- Redder of Butler, Ohio. “The Older growers and seedsmen ceptance. “I spent two years at the University of Pennsylvania,” said/ 21-year-old Kerry Petusky of Harrjsburg, Pa., “and didn’t i A personal interview with get near a greenhouse. This1 _ Director Jahn frequently is the gives me the opportunity of ac- “But,” he paused, idetermining factor for ac-tually working with the plants|know, I’d like to learn more job opportunities are terrific. I am interviewing now and some thei positions available start at M000 per year. \ were reaching the retirement age and who was to take over. * * * --With the dilemma growing, G. Carl Ball, son of the founder of the internationally known seed company, George J. Ball Inc., advanced the idea of forming a school patterned after European method o f prenticesbip. Instructor Malcolm Graham said, “The young people chosen are dedicated. They know what they want to do and aren’t about to waste time. This makes it easy on me as a teacher.” Graham is a graduate of Michigan State University. the COST OF PROGRAM wvi King mui wic piama | iuiuw, i a uite iu learn more themselves and learning what about the field of horticultural they can do. I therapeutics. It would seem to ALL IN FAVOR me that helping someone “I’m a second-year student be especiaiiy gratifying ” and I’m all for the program. I1 W three y°“n* men-guess I Just love to watch things one’ Jay; ca™e a family grow. I’m not just exactly sure an«a«eJ,n felat^ Phasfs °f j yet which phase of the opera- horticultural and agricultural tion I will follow but I do know f e “8. *P" The cost for the one-year behind I don’t think I’d like being stuck The other two, Kerry Phil, found their' niches in - '* * ★ |i ttrouah AubTis about u?'ua ,n horticulture from an earnest Ibis way, he reasoned, young $2,660. Sis is broken down into gflstening Vs^ blw ^sligMly deSire to grow things when people would have practical $1,000 for tuition; $600, room; moist 8,ightly were teen-agers, experience as well as asm hoard- srn tmn«r^ptafinn * * * theoretical training. . ihnd S^ Lual’ S ff Jay Fetters’ 20’ This is* good, according to And so, the DuPag\; n„ J ual field triP- second-year student in the prd-'jahn, who seeks to interest a Horticultufar School was born'L^" gram’. ech“d K.e.rry’s sen-higher percentage of non - “"-'^Siciple of the operation, however, Houaedat the facilities of BalHu ie .’ i is a separate entity without Logt burd Th t direct connection to the firm. It three £ fejf*fi , a!narno.nprofit classroom study and three to educational corporation-, four wecks of k chartered and approved by the assignments. State of Ulmois. „ . . 1U , , How do the young people who IN THE BEGINNING have been picked as students! When the school was started( in 1963, under the direction of! William 0. Jahn Jr., it concentrated on a one-year program. However, this year, a! second year was added as an1 option to students seeking morel training. It is expected that by 1971 the] two-year study program will1 become mandatory. To be eligible for admission to the school, an applicant must be at least 17 years of age and have a high school diploma or its equivalent: Preference will be given to those who have maintained a C average or bet-, ter. .. | ' In additon, each prospective student must have had some; practical experience in the1 horticultural or agricultural! fields and must submit' satisfactory evidence of his interest and proficiency through verified experience, training or hobby, plus letters of reference from one or more persons actively engaged in a commercial horticultural enterprise. Hie school is approved by the State Department for the ao echoed timents, adding, “I want to family-oriented students in the eventually , have my own opera- program to get new blood in the tion. trade. *TU have to start small and Further information with the interest rates and the regarding the school’s requisites availability of money being and admission may be obtained what ‘they are, it won’t be easy, by contacting Office of the But I’ll make it.” Director, DuPage Horticultural Confidence in the growing in- School, Inc. Box No. 342, West dustry and its future was Chicago, III., 60185. Pontiac Pres, Phots ,, GOOD JOB, WELL DONE — Malcolm Graham (left) and Phillip Reeder admire the cascade petunias filling the base of a bonsai at the recent George J. Ball Field Day International. Both are active in the DuPage Horticultural School in West Chicago. III. Graham is an instructor, and Reeder a second-year student. sale GLOSSY LEATHER BROGUES -OUR OWN PACESETTERS 10.97 regularly 15.00 In rich antiqued leathers with gleaming hardware trim, they're hard to beat for good looks and comfort. Top: shoe with metal bar and extension sole. In brown only. Below: buckled strap shoe with stacked heel, Comes in reddish brown. Cm$ PONTIAC MALL HEAD BACK TO SCHOOL IN STYLE—WITH THE GREAT NEW LOOKS FROM WINKELMAN’S We've separates BY GARLAND that make the 'layered-look' look its best. Dresses in all the up-to-the-minute stylings. And coats you're sure to warm up to.. A. Newsy crocheted wool vest in berry, 36-40! 12.00. Tucked-sleeve shirt, gold polyester/rayon, 30-36, 10.00. Green pleated wool skirt, 7-13, 13.00. Leather bag, 10.00. B. Long-torso wool dress with pleated skirt, matching scarf. Black with beige/blpck plaid,',5-13, 24.00. C. Cozy coat of blue or gold polyester/cotton. Trim and lining of fluffy white abrylic'pile; misses',-42.00. D. Long cardigan sweater, berry wool knit, 30-36, 12.00. Pleated wool plaid skirt, berry/green/gold, 7-13, 13.00. MORE AND MORE MEN ARE CHOOSING BOND CLOTHES FOR BACK TO SCHOOL No Charge for , Alterations! Just Say -“Charge If* 1 - THE PONTIAC MALL, shop mon., thurs., fri. and sat. to 9 TEL-HURON, shop every evening to 9 CJD C_D Cm< THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1989 SERVED EVERY WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY NIGHTS PONTIAC MALL CAFETERIA ONLY - 4:30 lo 8 p.m. 12 u> A. BOBBIE BROOKS bag it find wool tunic and skirt in navy, brown $12 says ‘rah’ for As wool chenille long tunic. Slinky, belted rib knit in berry, black, gold, white. 3640, $16 SUMMIT of Boston, wool skirt in grey, beige, With Federal Aid 'New' Driver Ed Enters 2nd Yecf PLEATS ,$g60 3 DAY SPECIAL! ROQ. 6.99 Moc is fresh with double-chsin trim of antiqued brass. Waxhide upper, brown and white atitehine on handaewn vamp. Save now on a great young campus look! THE PONTIAC MALL Telegraph of Elizabeth Lake Rd*. includes classroom Instruction, simulated driving, practice on a driving range, and actual driving on the roads in and around Pontiac. There are more than 30 hours of classroom instruction, with studies including legal and financial responsibilities, natural laws and driving, physical fitness of the driver, attitudes of the driver, how an automobile works, controls, and safety equipment. •k ★ ★ The driving simulator is a relatively new teaching method. Pontiac is the first to use it in Oakland County. Housed in a portable trailer behind Northern High School, \he simulator is a mechanical device where 16 students sit in what appear to be driver seats, watch a film, and operate the controls as situations on the screen warrant. RANGE MANEUVERS The driving range is the hext stop for students. Nine cars are on the range at once, practicing such maneuvers as starting and stopping, driving around corners, obeying traffic signs and signals, backing up, parking, and driving in the traffic created by other students on the range. ★ Each student spends 16 hours on the driving range, eight as. a driver and eight as a copilot. While working as a copilot, the student operates an extra brake if the driver makes a mistake or if an accident is imminent. * * ★ The final phase of the^ program is driving on the road, accompanied by a driving instructor. The average amount of time spent on this phase is four hours for each student. ★ * According to Wilson, ' the unusual aspect of this training is found in the use of the driving simulator. PONTIAC CENTRAL The program at Pontiac Cen- tral is a three-phase pro Including all' of the a mentioned above, minus -we portable simulator trailer. 35 ★ ,*i A* ‘Ss In order to test 4he . Effectiveness of thS simulator system, the final performances pf students at Northern jfflj|Th are being compared with tne6e taking the three-phase coursfAt Central. ★ Although the final evaluations are'yet to W completed, it.Ap-pears that the students with experience in the simulator better drivers in relation to those without such training./ ,. Razor Blade Cut When you are working with a heavy fabric and want To make a straight cut for a buttonhole, use a razor blade to slit the cloth ^placed over a bar of soap. This makes a clean neat cut that will look good after it' i$ worked. For Relaxed Dining While Back-to-School Shopping in THE PONTIAC MALL Invites You and Your Family Wad. t Thurs. Evsnings 4iI0 to.I P.M. Enjoy Tender, Golden, Deep-Fried COMPLETE CHICKEN DINNERS CHOICE OF POTATOES OR Vi(j»ETAtLE DINNER SALAD OR DESSERT Rolls and butter COFFEE, TEA OR MILK 20 Children Under 10 IS THE LOOK YOU WANT FOB. CAMPUS *09! TUNICS $112,575 by enlarging the existing program of high school driver education to include emphasis on special education students, students with low. reading ability, ’and the physically handicapped. In addition, the program now encompassed adult driver education, driver improvement classes for perennially bad drivers,'training and testing of school bus drivers, testing and evaluation of the new four-phase program, in comparison with the old three-phase program, and an elementary school and junior high school traffic safety program. PHASES OF PROGRAM The four-phase program Driver Training Expands Horizons With the expansion of the I current driver education curriculum, study director Dean | Wilson, and his aides have ] initiated a program applicable I to special education; of men- j tally handicapped, students participating in regular classes with the other students. In addition to receiving extra class time from special education teachers, these students! practice in the new driver j simulator. ★ ww Although these effects have been relatively successful so far, Wilson says that more training is needed if these j students are to become-good drivers and “useful citizens inj our automobile-oriented society." Mrs. Joy Connors is in charge of the remedial reading program, in which the students' with low reading ability are! taught not only the art of reading, but an understanding! of the material fljey read. ESSENTIAL TRAINING This training la essential if the slow reader is to understand thoroughly the meaning of all traffic signs, and thereby reduce danger to himself and / others. Mrs. Connors was also instrumental in the revision of the handbook for new drivers that is published by the secretary of states's office. ★ * * The purpose of the revision was to simplify words and phrases to the point that the reading level-would be reduced from that of a 12th-grade student to that of a ninth grader. REWARDING CHALLENGE The plight of the physically handicapped la a particularly rewarding challenge to Wilsonlpleted the course at Northern. Igood safety attitudes,! • Develop a continuing safe-and his group. /Each student in This more than doubled the I knowledge and habits.” ty consciousness which will this category receives simulator [number for the same period theg.pQ|^j PROGRAM carry, over into their education and driving range training in aprevious year. 1 . ,I as responsible drivers and users hand-controlled car before he | xEST SESSION ■ Ji Lefl°Dulofour streets and highways. attempts to conquer the j An experimental session with for students to: MB - , - highways and streets of P°"-Oakland County hus drivers was • Maintain and build good kindergarten through second llflC. • .it .. ..i fit. . . .... . ... ... crrnna Plfivqoq shiHir (ha safest deal with eight areas and call In the elementary Schools, tiac. the Tef?'of lntheUdSeteSrillgndwhed j an hour and a half in, pedestrian, bicycle and traffic that is attached by bars to the th® drlver flmulator8' . , saf«% brake and accelerator in such a More test8 are needed for an way that if the student pushes W*6 evaluation of the ef-down, the vehicle acceleratesjfectlveness of such a program, and if he pushes forward, it,^ those who participated brakes. thought that it would be valuable as a refresher course. One of the most significant aspects of the entire project is the traffic safety program in others, the elementary and junior high • Gain a feeling of !° Three physically handicapped schools of Pontiac. The purpose I responsibility/ to the school and student Sved^ < J* ***“. *{**2in £1=2 to hel> reduce 8C* (education certificates lastW0Ml written by {semester. 'The remark made by one A knob attached to the steer-, ing wheel that revolves on bail (bearings allows the student, to steer with one hand, leaving the jother free to work the handle. {held in March, with a test group'attitudes dealing with • Eliminate unnecessary loss of human life and property. Gain knowledge recognize, understand and cope with safety hazards. Gain an appreciation of the benefits derived from traffic safety for the individual, And boy is heartwarming," says i Wilson. “His comment to the instructor was ‘I had never leven entertained the thought that I would ever be able drive a car.' " SAFETY SCHOOL The driver aafety 'school at Northern is part of a program in Oakland County to reteach drivers with bad habits and records. District courts and the secretary of state’s office refer such people to these schools for eight hours of corrective instruction covering a three-week period. Adult driver education classes have also become part of the |Pontiac program, and use df the driver simulator has made this job much easier for both instructors and students. In the period covering September 1968 to July 1969, 161 adults com- D a v 1 dicidents. Stimac, Wilson's, safety con- e I^evelop respect and Isultant, reads as follows: (understanding of our local, * * * | state, and national traffic safety 'The. general purpose is to [laws and regulations, help youth develop a strong • See the need for good sense of personal and social traffic laws and gain responsibility for the cdmmon responsibility for following the good through the Acquisition of dictates of those laws. grade classes study the safest route to school, and. kindergarten through sixth grade! classes take part in programs dealing with safety on the school bus, safety around railroad tracks, and signs and signals, such as traffic lights aild stop signs. Bicycle safety will also be studied this fall, with discussions, posters, pamphlets and! * tests complementing a! planned bicycle rodeo, complete! with prizes. • * ★ ★ In the junior high schools, eighth-grade classes study the development of the automobile and how it has affected our lives, dealing primarily with the growth of Pontiac as the result of automobile plant development. Driver Education critics have haji good reason to scoff In recent years, because young drivers, despite general good health, physical coordination and minds, have notorious driving habits and records. But the Pontiac School District has taken steps to silence the scoffers by instituting, with the aid of a federal grant, a Demonstration Four-Phase’ Driver Education Program at Northern High School and expanded traffic aafety programs in other schools. ★ w ★ The program, entering its second year under the tutelage of Dean Wilson, the study director, utilized a- first-year grant of 4 DATE TIME OR ANYTIME - This Camaro Z 28 from Matthews-Hargreaves Chevy-Land, 631 Oakland, would prompt al- Pontlac Pmi MraM most any coed to be on time for a date or even just a ride to sociology class. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST II, I96p C—7 Dependence of Education on Federal Aid Is Stressed ... Pontiac Prm Photo DRESS FORMULA — To Accent his dapper brown plaid, double-breasted sport coat by Leonardo, Pontiac Northern High School senior Mike Say closes a subtle gold shirt and - ’ tie set by Toni. His matching gold handkerchief is also by Toni. The entire outfit is from Conn’s Clothes, downtown. 'Teens Need Time to Think' ; INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Slow down! is a veteran high school teacher’s advice to teen - agers 'and their parents. * “We’re all spread too thin these days. Teen-agers particularly need time, peace and quiet to do their own thinking,” affirms Dr. R. Ruth Richards, long-time biology teacher qi Shortridge High School. * ★ * Parents’ ambition, she thinks,, too often imposes status symbols, pushes children into ex- tracurricular activitieSyp r e s-sures them to be socially popular. ★ it ★ She would/riot eliminate nonacadepiic activities. She believes the decision should be up to thfe teen-ager—“I think they have pretty good judgment.” 1' ★ ★ ★ " Boys at the high school level sne finds are generally more serious pupils than girls, par- ticularly more aware of the scientific explosion. WASHINGTON (AP) - As the U.S. education establishment grows, so do the demands for more financial help from Uncle Sam.. Almost without exception, educatorsbave stressed that the future of America^ education, now at its most explosive stage in history, virtually depends on the federal government. | ★ • * . ★ The prospect of ever-growing federal responsibility in the fields of elementary, secondary and higher education poses in many minds the threat of ultimate federal control. ★ * ★ It’s an old, almost traditional bugaboo. Year after year, successive U.S. commissioners of education take pains tq a: against any f e d e r a 1 croachment in the sacrosanct areas of curricuhim, tenure textbookeejeetion. FEDERAL PRESENCE The /one field where the federal presence is obvious is in the field of school desegregation. * * * '• Within the past three years, the government—specifically the Department of H.e a 11 h ’Education and Welfare’s Department of Civil Rights — has vigorously sought to enforce those provisions of the Elementary a n d Secondary Education Act pertaining to integration. Undqf terms of the act, the government has the right to withhold federal funds from school districts which do liot comply with U.S. guidelines on school Tbe budget sent to Congress an outlay of $5.03 billion for last January by outgoing higher education alone. President Lyndon B. Johnson This total included $1.9 billion proposed an over-ali federal for student support from all outlay of $9.8 billion — A $759-'agencies. | {million increase over the fiscal * ★ ★ year ending in 1969. | The current U.S. Office1 of I ENORMOUS EXPANSION {Education budget calls for $3.5 The figures tell the story of™" "ew appropriations for the enormous expansion of fiscal 197°, “ about ft “ft federal responsibility in educa-!level as *as year’ but wth I tmn ; more emphasis on programs for + h i the disadvantaged. , And now under consideration: The budget which the outgo-|are a variety of proposals in- ing j 0 h n s 0 n administration 'eluding one by the prestigious |su6bmitted to Congress last Carnegie Commission on Higher, January re£lected the growing Education calling for a larger concern lnslde the federal federa rolei in-supporting government to provide for! students in college and'every chnd) regardless of his I universities. {famfiy income, race or place of residence, an opportunity for all ■"V mmm MOD WORLD—You’ll k^eep in step with the fashion pace for 1969 wearing Fanfare’s beige and black strapped shoe witR perforated trim and side buckle. Tempo has the Pontiac Pres* Photo inside track with its brassy bold look and double slip-on high tongue. Both styles from Albert's Shoes-at The Pontiac Mall. Specifically, the Carnegie Commission report called for a new GI Bill, involving direct financial assistance to students who could not otherwise afford to go to college. Almost every conferenpe of the education he wants and can absorb. IMPROVE QUALITY It also underlines the tention of the government to improve the quality of education through experimentation specialists in higher education ™tbJ\ew materials and new innlnriufi o now Qiioopctinn fnr HietHOQS. includes a new suggestion for some new federal role in .. . . . furthering higher education in M.No matter what changes the this country. Nixon administration makes m ■ the years to come in the budget, BUDGET OUTLAY i these goals are likely to remain The budget submitted last paramount in the field - of January included a proposal fori education. Regal Tree Now Feeds the Birds NEW YORK - The giant white spruce that served as Rockefeller Center’s Christmas tree this past winter is serving another purpose1 this summer for the Camp Fire Grils. The 55-foot tree from Holland; Vt., was presented to the organization, which is using its logs for constructing b i r d -feeding stations. It has been a tradition for the Center to donate each season's i Logs are being shared among tree to various youth groups or Councils of Nassau, Queens^ children’s hofries, where it Westchester and Staten Island, usually stars in a gala bonfire land groups in Brooklyn and the sing. iBronx. 1 This year conservation-mind-! After being transformed for ed Camp Fire Girls requested their new duty in craft shops the wood be seasoned and cut this summer, the remnants of into 18 to 24-inch lengths in ac-the famed tree will find a cbrdance with the Audubon welcome in more than a.hun-; Society’s design for b i r d - dred gardens and parks in the feeeders. . area. Richards Early Bird Back-To-School Savings BOYS' and GIRLS' WINTER COATS A. Station Wagon SET ' Smart double breasted corduroy coat. Leatherette string do belt, adjustable cuffs, attached -shawl hood, acrylic pile lined. B. FURRY-BEAR able 22 to 23 ounce Orion* acrylic pile coat. Patch pockets, belted back, knit wristlets, quilt lining, matching hat. Beige, Brown-or Navy. fSW. *25.90 D. THE HEAVY WEIGHT Hockmeyer heavy weight wide wale corduroy parka. Heavy weight Acrilan pile lined body .and attached split hood,. Completely machine washable. Monsanto wear dated guarantee (of 1. year. Cinnamon,/ Cactus Green, Navy- *19.90 Ret*IMS Silts Its 14 S24.9Q $27.90 E. THE SUBURBAN All wool melton suburbbtt coot. ’ Double breasted, dynel shawl collar, fully lined orlon pile body. Open bottom construe*, tion. British Oliva, Vicuna. , C. FASHION FUR Imported cotton suede Pony finish shaped coat. 23 ounce Orion* acrylic pilollnsd, acrylic -326.90 $31.90 -quilted nylon parka. Du-it Dacron* 88% filled, toll dr, Wide loot her draw-ng waist; zip-off pilo hood. MB ^ goysmCifo THE PONTIAC MALL NORTH HILL PLAZA ROCHEStSfe v LAYAWAY NOW! $1Q99 All the shoes, for all the kids, all at once! Bring them all to Kinney—and in one fell swoop, choose the newest trends in back-to-school shoes. Educator Royals for the grade school seU “With all thetatest lines. . .blunted’ toes, perforated designs,* straps, buckles and junior up-front styling. Flings for fashion conscious teens sTepout in stunning multi-straps, and up-fronts witiuantiqued buckles, square toes and kicky heels. And Raleigh Squares or Stuart Holmes for young men hit new heights with ankle-high boots; handsomely strapped and buckled brogues, dust a sampling of the hundreds of swing ing young styles...all at Kinney... where your family is fitted by experts. Don’t forget: Gym Shoes! Kinney has ’am...hi and tow cut Jot Lapchiks for boys $3.99. Kapers for girls in whits or colors, $2.99 THERE'S MORE TO GO TO Daily 9:30 a.m. to 9;00 p.m. The Pontiac Mall Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake Rd. * Sunday 12 noon to 5:00 p.n c- LlIK PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST U, IMP Curtain going up on a dramatic fall collection of coordinated campus casuals, All available in sizes 8 to 16. ORGANIZATION VEST ••• CLASSIC SUIT • The curved vert over a front pleated swing-skirt. White shirt. Coachman blue Or cron-‘ berry. P - . Veit SUrt Shirt 25. 20. 20. J Use Your Personal, Security Midwest or Michigan-Bankard Computer-Teacher Eyed for Future Use CLOVIS, N. M (API-High school students of the future win pick up • computerised dess schedule and follow individual learning programs assigned each day by computer if a pilot program at Clovis High School meets its designer's expectations. Teaching will be "humanised'' and the textbook will change, too, according to Dr. Herbert Humbert, head of a federally supported program beginning its third year. * ♦. ♦ Core of the program Is a computer that asks questions and then grades the answers. Students sit at typewriters and type answers to questions from the computer. If an answer is correct, the* computer asks the next question. If the Answer is wrong, the correct answer with additional information is typed out by the computer. LEARNING BREAKTHROUGH “If the project meets our expectations, this could provide a breakthrough that will individualize learning for each student," Dr. Humbert says, Clovis 10th grade English students were divided into experimental and control groups. The experimental group used the computer and automated learning devices in addition to regular English classes. The control group followed the usual class curriculum. * * * ■ Students were assigned to the experimental and control groups by the computer after information had been fed it on each student's past grades, intelligence, sex, race, standardized tests and his neighborhood. Each student in the experimental group was matched with a student in the control group with a similar background. i *' ■ SHOW IMPROVEMENT After one semester, Dr. Humbert said that students in the experimental group all showed improvement. Some of ‘.hem raised , their scores on standardized tests more than 20 per cent. Students in the control group, following the usual class routine, actually declifted in some of their tests. - * »* ' *•. "What this means is the computer allows the teacher to individualize learning,” Humbert says. “The computer can tell a teacher in seconds all she needs to know about a student—his likes, dislikes and areas where additional teaching should be concentrated." Recene Ashton, a retired faculty member at Western New Mexico University, teaching the Clovis students' using the computer, administered carefully devised tests which the computer graded and stored with the other information on each student. TEST NOT USED ALONE Rather than basing her. appraisal of a student’s performance on the test albne, she could draw on a wealth of information which takes the student’s background into account. The role of textbooks in education will also change, Humbert notes. An early change will come when students answer computer questions Incorrectly and are told, by the computer, to refer to a page in a textbook. "But I see more far reaching changes than this," Humbert said. A concept called "learning programs” is the center of any automated learning situation. The learning program is the means by which material is presented to the student. The learning program used in the Clovis project is a tape and photographic slide presentation. Each tape-slide program covers a single topic. Many learning programs follow other formats, but each deals with a specific idea, much like the chapters in a textbook. “A series of learning programs on single subjects can be developed to cover the same material a textbook might,” Humbert says. ON STAGE—Ann Marie Traynor is a real show-stopper in her wine color, laminated nrlnn dress with patterned silk tie from the Bobette Shop, downtown. The Pontiac aCtholic High School senior uses OCC’s Orchard Ridge amphitheater to rehearse for speech class with the portable Sony Stereo Cassette Corder from Edward’s, also downtown. The attractive recorder, which comes with'its own carrying case, includes stereo speakers, microphone and Cassette. Teens Turn to Zodiac for Hairstyles Teen-agers are turning to the Student Thesis Brings Action Can the little guy make the I He mailed the thesis to law work for him?. Well, in federal officials, who In-Oregon a law student who Ivestigated’ and brought charges against the Oregon Restaurant and Beverage Association two of its officers. '50s Quip: Stay Cool couldn’t buy a keg of beer broke a tavern boycott with the Sherman Antitrust Act. Harry T. Evans, a University ★ ★ ★ .zodiac as inspiration for new of Oregon law student, wrote a' they were convicted hairstyles. {thesis after distributers iji unreasonable restraint of trade A well known hairstylist, En- Eugene, Ore., told him he had and commerce for campaigning jrico Caruso, has looked to the to jjUy a $5 one-day license to to boycott beer distributors who stars in charting hairdos with purcnase a keg. - sold kegs to the public. Ian astrological aura, creating a.... . . ____ _______!!.... dozen styles that stress the, traits supposed to characterize girls born under the various signs. For the Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) he advocates a breezy shaggy the suggestion of a lioness mane with a Napoleonic look. Soft and gracefully feline, the Leo is generous, a lover of the best clothes and possesses leadership charisma sufh as that of the little Corporal, who was born under that sign. HOW TO DO IT To style the Shaggy Napolean for Leos, make a short part on right-hand side. Set bangs in three curls curved toward part and hold with hair-set tape. Set crown hair with one-inch rollers. Set even row of tape curls on the right side, away from part ft. Set back hair in clip and tape the nape. NEW YORK — The life style, teen-agers in the ’50s was dramatically different from today’s "now" generation — which is illustrated by the jargon of the last decade, asserts Howard Junker in this month’s issue of Esquire. The Esquire article reminds us that, a riot in 1050 was really hinny. A ghetto was where the Jews had escaped from. Race referred to arms. A bust was | used to describe a particular portion of a woman’s antomy. A joint was maybe a bar. * * * The problem of youth was in getting served — do you have proof (an ID)? If you psyched a test, you had it made. However, there was always that outside chance of being faked out. And if you were, you probably took "What, me worry?" attitude. Above all, says Esquire, the mode of the day was an-tifrantlc. Stay cool. Hang loose. No sweat. Under control. Big deal. SLOW BURN The antithesis Was ■ the slow burn, indicated by touching the index finger to the tongue, exending it towards the unfortunate victim and • announcing “psss,” as if touching hot stove. It wasn’t uncommon to find yourself up the creek if your cookie crumbled. Sick jokes finally mentioned other unmentionables, and with “Lady Chatterly’s Lover’ (1959) the unprintable became available ip drugstores-and local supermarkets. Crpising for d’ bruising. Don’t give me any grief. You want a knuckle sandwich? Get bent. Blast off. Wise. up. Don’t bug me. Drop dead. DDT. Finally 1 gonna shut you down. Dump aH, over you. How does that grab you? Forty lashes with a wet noodle. Such quips as antlers in the tree top, or who) goosed-the moose?, w like a pregnant pole vauilter with a broken stick. The - J.D.’s emerged. The hood. The rock. Switchblades and zip gun lor stompping^ mixing it up, rumbles. J^etf / pants and greasy D.^'- |Sp! . \ *:"1' y % 1 or: butch, crewcut, flat top, ' Charcoal gray flannel, belt in: the back, paisley, Shetland, Madras, bermudas. tweedy and preppy, recalls Junker in Esquire. For 1969-70 J OCC Schedule Set Schedule of events for 1969-70 school year at Oakland Community College: FALL SESSION Sept- 2,3, and 4—Registration. Sept. 8—InsTruction begins. Nov. 27 and 28 — Thanksgiving recess. Dec. 12—Instruction ends. Dec. 15-18—Final examinations. Dec. 19—Grades. , WINTER SESSION Dec. 1-Completion of admission requirements. Jan. 2,5, and 6-Registration. Jan, 7—Instruction begins, Mar, 29r~Easter recess. : Apr. 14—Instruction ends. Apr. 20-23—Final examinations. Apr. 23—Commencement. SPRING SESSION Apr. 1—Completion of admissions requirement. Apr. 27-28—Registration. Apr, 29—Instruction begins. May 30—Memorial Day recess. June 9—Instruction ends. June 1042—Final examinations. June 15—Grades. , SUMMER SESSION June 25-26—Registration. June 29—Instruction begins. July 4—Independence Day recess. Aug. 18—Instruction ends. Aug. 24-26—Final examinations. Aug. 27—Grades. THE high* wide n handsome For dashing to class or making the date scene. A sampling of our fpbu* bus .Back-To-School Collection from... pss onderful 13” to 15” SHOES MICHIGAN BANKARD THE PONTIAC MALL SECURITY CHARGE MIDWEST BANK CARD PONTIAC MALL PERFECTION IN A PANT SUIT Long belted , jacket and perfectly proportioned pants. Nayy or Cranberry. Multi-stripe blouse. Jacket Pants Blouse 36. 20. 18. RIBS TAKE ON THE LOOK OF STRIPES The skirt and jacket In New Brown with striped RIB KNIT TUNIC OVER FLAIR PANTS . Belted tunic over pants lopped by 0 flip-tie blouse THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1989 C—9 She Cuts Clothes, Prices Young Seamstress Thrifty Angela Webb loves to shop. What female doesn’t? ■/ A spendthrift she is not. however, so don’t bother looking for her in the junior miss department. She bypassed that long ago for the yard goods corner. * ★ * In fact, 15-year-old Angela, 783 E. Beverly, has refined her talents to the point that she limited her store-bought ensembles to only two purchases last year. This summer she even avoided the bathing suit racks and tried her hand, successfully, at making her own bikinies. THOUGHTS ON SCHOOL Just for- the record, however, she has admitted to a pretrial launch in the tub before colliding with any waves. With bikini feather on the way out, the Pontiac Northern High School junior will turn her thoughts toward school what’s new in fashion wear. Angela found that the pattern I camera, true to her word, she I with tie would be an Instructions confused her more was ready for modeling. alternative, than helped her. daddoiiic ru*™ To ,ooJc her sporty best, she Not discouraged, she marched H,mKUWS uiain . need only replace the blouse to the nearby department and F°r that professional touch, wm, yellow turtleneck and studied the merchandise on Angela borrowed a simple gold change opaque hose and chunky display. When she returned to chain from last year's shoulder low heeled shoes for knee sox her sewing machine, she simply bag and looped it across the land loafers. “played it by ear.” vest. j Budgetwise, the outfit comes However, to play down the j to a perfect fit, too. busy plaid theme, she trimmed Compared to a similar store-the vest in plain round navy bought ensemble, the three-blue buttons. piece outfit would have cost For school time she chose a j about $30, according to Angela, popularly' styled long-sleevedi However, by nftking it cotton blouse with ruffles downjherself, the price of material* the front to accent the V cut of thread, zipper, buttons, etc., the vest. The shirt blouse wom ’came to $18. Being the lope seamstress in t the family, she has alsot resorted' to hemming everything I: by the mirror rather than ruler. By the following Monday f when we showed up with Lawyers Brief Kids on Ways of Law Pontiac Prmo Phntoa by Sdward R. Nobia SCORES HIGH — Looking her fashionable best, Angela Webb should score high in any class wearing her new matching vest and skirt. The attractive seamstress’ outfit is' in dark green with’navy blue, yellow and red stripes. Student's Dictionary Must Be Up-to-Date ORANGE, Conn. — Students in the seventh grade at Amity I Junior High School here have Heen briefed by a panel of four local attorneys on the state law; as it pertains to youth, in a As a starter, Angela did some ProSram designed to convey the prefall shopping for The Press importance of knowing and and whipped up her first back- |°beying the law. to-school outfit between morn- * * *' * ing driving lessons and af-j Each student received a book-ternoons at the beach. From Sofro Fabrics at the Pontiac Mali she decided on a vested ensemble pattern with A-line skirt and coordinating bermudas. , BONDED MATERIALS For the vest and skirt she picked a bonded wool plaid with deep green background and yellow, navy blue and red stripes. Angela favored bonded let entitled “Connecticut YoutlL and the Law” in a project sponsored by the Connecticut State Federation of Women’s Clubs, the Connecticut Bar Association and the Hartford insurance groups. Confrontation. Moon shot. Heart transplant. Words such as these are the hallmarks of a changing world, and Students returning to school this fall will be learning to live with this new world. ★ ★ ★ As the world changes, language changes with it. Developments in s c i eh c e, medicine, space travel — all aspects of our lives — have expanded the language considerably. Spurred on by the rapid advances in communication, new. words and phrases take hold much faster than ever before. IMPORTANT TOOL || . r\ . picked a bonded wool plaid with niTopics tocluded the I In deep green background and P*^08* * tba law- b°w il « Up-|U“L/QT6 yellow navy blue and red enforfed> ,the “abiht*e8 °fj * stripes. Angela favored bonded!* <:rimina reTL8Cw°? ! materials because they require !te"dance- incorrigiblei behavior come across it while studying no lining and hold their shape and the u8e of automobl,es- I geography. These dictionaries are made available to students through the schools as part of their regular reading programs. When a school system buys a series such as American Book Company’s “Our Language To-* “ it also would buy at least one dictionary for every two students. The reading series contains information on how to use a dictionary, and the dictionary itself has introductory material on its use. Dictionaries for schools also have sections on spelling, pro- able for the expanded language as additional information the dictionary. Certainly, then, one of the most important tools a student will be taking back to school will be an up-to-date dictionary. Traditionally, dictionaries are passed on from generation to generation like the Bible. But unlike the Bible, the dictionary changes. v * ★ There are some 20,000 new| words and meanings in Mer-; riam-Webster’s Seventh „Newj Collegiate dictionary, and more than 100,000 new words and meanings in the unabridged. | Merrlam-WebSter lexicograph-H ers search for new words in L | everything from restaurant | menus and ticket stubs to stu- | denWnewspapers and scientific % journals. * ‘ / AUDIO EQUIPMENT Experts with complex audio | equipment record English | speech from all over the world J to learn how people pronounce g words. They produce several diction- |j aries, each geared to a different | level. How then do you deter- | mine which dictionary is right [Jj for the student returning to school? MOST POPULAR . A desk dictionary,- such, as the Seventh New Collegiate, is probably die most useful, and it’s the most popular, selling more than one million copies a year- -'V . Jj It would be appropriate for the college student returning to campus because it Is not bulky and it contains a wide range of information besides the standard definitions, spelling and pronunciation. These are geographical and biographical tions, a list of colleges universities, a periodic table of - the >elements, a table of die planets — even a table of Indo-European 'languages. ★ * ■ ★ * I High school, elementary and intermediate school students, however, need dictionaries tailored to their level. They con-> tain simplified definitions and •are easier for the beginner reader to work with. Also they are developed in conjunction with the curriculum. For example, the word "archipelago”—which means a . group of islands — is included in Mer-riam-Webster’s New Elementary Dictionary because students will U.S. presidents, U.S. population, even a history of the dictionary. Educators agree that a good command of the language is essential for a student to become a good reader. well......... A yard and a half of navy] During the week-long series of, blue wool for bermudas was j sessions the students asked selected to make up a Second questions of the attorneys and Vested ensemble suitable for participated in discussions, after school activities. The schedule for the remainder of the week ran as follows: first night, pin pattern to material, cut out, pin darts and transfer all markings oil pattern to fabric; second night, sew vest and skirt pieces together; third night, start hemming; fourth night, tackle odds and ends, such as buttonholes, Which were left for last since Angela has never attempted them before. Being self-taught, the lady relies on her ingenuity rather than the book. CONFUSED When tackling her first zip-pered outfit, for example, POOLSIDE — A sewing-machine can be a girl’s best friend all year long according to Angela. Her green checked bikini with yellow flowers is one of two she made this summer at the cost of 50 cents each. Guide Eases Reading Work By the Associated Press Some students have always tried to get by without reading books assigned,by- teachers. For the modem student, evading “outside reading” is easier than ever before. A new tool condenses the plot, analyzes the characters, discusses the themes, and comments on the structure and style of famous books commonly studied in the English classroom. ★ it * Called the literary study guide, it has become a best seller among high school and college students. In an earlier day, students had only references like “Plot Outlines of 100 Best Novels” to help them avoid outside reading. These bare story condensations were of some help in superficial book reports but could not adequately arm the student for a literary discussion of a work being studied in class. BETTER ASSIST After World War II, television provided a better assist, especially for book reports. When “Wuthering Heights” appeared mi the Late Show, “Wuthering Heights” showed up on a large number of student papers, the plot generally following the scenario rather than the original novel. Next came “Classic Comics.” In under 30 minutes readers could get through the comic-book version of a great piece of literature. WWW In thfe heat of a classroom discussion, students who bragged that they had read “Moby Dick” at the one sitting sometimes made slips like "... and the next picture shows . Now we have the study guide.- When these first appeared, they occupied one obscure rack in the rear of the bookstore. Today, they often cover an entire wall and are conspicuously displayed in the store window. On anonymous questionnaires, high school students have admitted they use study guides widely. “It’s easier and you get just the important parts without having to do a tot of piddly reading,” one student wrote. Another relied on the guides “when the wording is over my head or I have difficulty understanding the symbolism.”' He added: “These guides are down to my level.”* Students openly carry their study guides in hand and refer to them in class, reports Dr. Arnold L. Goldsmith, associate professor at Wayne State University. Some have even begun listing the guides as references in term papers, papers. Study guide authors are often competent and qualified. Many are new Ph.D.s or experienced teachers earning extra income. Thus, they can give the student insights and fresh interpretations of character and development in the plot- But study guides should supplement — not replace — a reading of the actual work. IT’S BACK TO SCHOOL AGAIN -YOU AND YOUR FABULOUS "GREAT IMPOSTER’9 V.' * You’re sure to wow The Campus Set They won’t Relieve it! . 2500 This charmer “lie*” from the moment you put it on. Every natural feature—from its real* looking part to the straight* tailored full look —-which can be fluffed up if you’re in that mood—to the sleek natural tapered back•>. every detail seems to say it’s your owg hair. You’ll like the new snug-fitting stretch cap. The “Imposter” is washable, ready-to-wear and > . available in all natural colors. Packs in its own tote* too. THE PONTIAC MALI* Telegraph at Elisabeth Lake Rd. FASHION NOTEBOOK ’69 Garland’s the greatest! What's in a name? Special things. Like color, excitement, news. If the name on your sportswear reads Garland! Come to Hadley's and see what we mean. There's a whole fall collection of great' mix-and-matchables you can live with- — and in. All in bottle green, bordeaux, brown or navy. Sweaters, 36*40. Bottoms, 5 to 15. Left: Long v-neck pullover, $10. Over a 6-button plaid ! „ kilt, $16. A body stocking that's a turtlerfeck top and Stocking all in one, $9. Center: A maxi crew-neck pullover^' $11. A new flip skirt, completely Stitched down, $14. For leg wear: knee sox that make a good match, $2. Right: Marine mock-turtle pullover, $8. Beneath a long v-neck cardigan, $18. Great with plaid pants that ring out at the bottom, $16. • t- IT'S EASY TO GET READY FOR A NEW SEASON WITH A HADLEY'S MULTI-CHARGE! Thun., Fri., Sot. till 9 P.M. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 11, q |0 , /• rUJI1-1AL J-xtiLoS, AlUJiUAii 4,uin;oA Hi ivov- --——<—-—- Reporter Tells What It's Like to Be a Substitute Teacher " , jfcL; & i - . £&& ! ■ ' gL. H - •' S $ % . S .. “T Ann hp if VOU £6 (EDITOR’S NOTE—Have youi Yet when I read the lesson •oer thought of being a sub- plans, which called \ for a uHfwfw teacher? Then you’ll be [discussion of several poems, I interested in this occount o/j nearly panicked, how it really isj I studied poetry in college, _____ but consider myself far from an By LEWIS A. MORRISSEY {expert on the subject. As It FLINT (Jfl — Hard candy, turned out; I fought off the shattered against the teacher’s; -desk In f McKinley Junior High School English class. The, substitute teacher stood and demanded, “Who threw that? ’ Only silence. "Oops, I’m playing Into their hands by i ‘getting mad," the sub thought, and sat down. Then he laughed: to himself. ★ * ★ .1 A poem is like a puzzle andj It's fun to try to uncover the real meaning, the same sub told] a class at Northwestern High, his arms flailing in emphasis. Boredom crossed the faces of some of the students, but he managed to get a look of interest from others. BEWILDERED In bewilderment, the substitute watched as the kids entered Mrs. Ilze A. Bailey’s science class at Cook Elementary, hung up their coats and immediately gathered around a glass case where a boy fed what looked like fish food to a pet frog. Meanwhile, a little angel with braces tugged at the sub’s sleeve and pleaded, "Mista Mawthee, can I go to the bathroom?" These are a few of the memories of this rqwrter who •recently spent three days as * substitute teacher. Oddly enough, I didn’t experience as serious a case of butterflies as I had expected. Perhaps it was because I kept telling myself to show these kids who was boss.. KEYS, SCHEDULE "Good morning," someone said as I entered the main office at McKinley. I mumbled something about substituting and before I knew It someone had placed a set of room keys in one hand and a class schedule In the other. I was told I would be subbing for four English classes and one In Latin and that I would be stationed in room 1W for the day. I was happy with the English classes. But Latin? Blanksville. ★ * ★' At 8:20 a.m. the bell rang and in they came. I felt like criminal in a police lineup. "Be firm from the start," 1 thought. I really wanted to appear friendly, but I was told that would be the biggest mistake I could make. So I tough. Nevertheless, they tested me. GET NAMES RIGHT! This class was homeroom and met only long enough for the teacher to call roll and for a few announcements. I called roll, all right. After mispronouncing about f 1 v names, I realized that I should have had one of the students do it. Kids just love to pounce on a sub who mispronounces names. * ★ ; ★ After roll, maintaining that . nn-nnnuMise look of the old college prof; I got things qujeted down. Then came the requests that all subs have to learn to deal with — for permission to go to the bathroom, get a drink of water or do something that Mrs. X “always lets us do." * Having survived homeroom, I felt the Initial shock was over. Once a sub feels that way, kids, you’re failing in your efforts to crack him. JUST DISCIPLINARIAN I started out following the lesson plans to the letter, I was merely a disciplinarian. But as time wore on I realized an important thing about subbing -» you can either be a glorified baby sitter or you can use your ingenuity to make the class sessions worthwhile. ■ i ♦ * * I began having the students in English put their books down and holding a discussion on anything they wanted to talk about. It was generally successful, but it would have been better if l had suggested a topic.. * *' '* , V | did ask one group of students what they thought of substitute teachers. Several expressed scorn for the gullible «ib. As for the candy, I never found out who threw it, although I suspect three male] villains who maintained a j chorus of hisses, coughs and; panic and was soon thoroughly | engrossed in the assignment. After a, few days rest, I taught at Cook in place of Mrs. Bailey, a science teacher for the fourth, fifth and sixth grades. | My first class consisted of. fifth graders. My first problem Involved a \Jad who suddenly serfeamed, "My lip is bleedirig.” His lip wasn’t bleeding, just dry and cracked and a little red, I told him to put some salve on when he got home, and that satisfied him. Meanwhile, the other youngsters had broken into loud chatter, I had looked confused over the lip-bleeding incident, and confusion on the part of a substitute In an elementary class means trouble. 1 The pupils were to read silently and then discuss a]so raise your hands if ypuve chapter in their science book oh j already read this chapter, oceanography. "We already read that," some of the kids chortled. "OkBy,” I said sternly, "hold it down. Now I want the truth.1 A few hands went up, but I stared them back down. "Are you a mean teacher?” one little boy asked me before the start of the class. "It depends on you,” I answered. “I can be If you get out of hand.” t * - * The things elementary-age kids say are surprising. One fifth grade girl came up to me and asked if I was a "sub." “Groovy” was her response. Bright ’h lively shape-up for the Fall term CAMPUS AND CAREER STYLE-SETTERS IN ONE-AND-TWOPIECE ACRYLICS JUNIOR SIZES Navy's coming "top-side” on the junior fashion scene in dresses with a fresh dash and flair that's new as tomorrow. See them, wear them now! Here, twain bonded Orion* acrylic;.7-15s ® | Red-white-blue check tunic; navy pleat skirt. ® Zingy nautical blouson style in red or navy; gold-toned buttons and white rayon fie; —big look on campus this fall... THE PANT SUIT crisply tailored, and with new lust-barely-flared log styling Wonderful way. to dress in town or on campus... the new pant-suits lengthen their jacket?, slim down their legs, for that new tailored-to-a-tee look! ® Ail-acrylic plaid, acetate tricot bonded... brass-tone buttons and link chain closing. Misses' sizes 8 to 16. (D Solid color rayon-acetate/bonded to acetate tricot for shape-holding. Brown or medium grey, sizes 8 to 16. NEARLY PANICKED ^ The opportunity to teach came the next day at Northwestern, where I subbed for «n Ehi^irfi teacher. Pontiac Mai OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10:00 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M. SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 5 P.M. * 682-4940 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 11, Study Disputes Theory; Athletes Not All Brawn, No Brain By Ike Associated Press The popular stereotype of, the hulking, muscle-bound high school athlete who has difficulty remembering his ABCs has 'been hard to discredit mainly ■ause there has been so little research on the effect of high school athletics on scholarship. Now comes a study by Walter E. Schafer and »J. Michael Armer which shows that not only does participation In a sport generally seem to have little or no effect on a student!* scholarship but that participation in sports actually helps certain students academically — especially those from the poor and disadvantaged groups (that usually have the most trouble in school, professors examined the complete high school records of 585 boys who in 1961 had been attending 10th grade classes in two Midwestern senior high schools. Death Had Light Touch in 1917 Paper MERILLAN, Wis. (UP1) — The Grim Reaper must have had a belly laugh here in 1917. A story resurrected from the Wisconsin Leader, published here until 1929, quoted from death certificates signed by physicians who proved to be masters of malapropisms. ★ ★ ★ ■ Among the causes of death written by doctors for the chief statistician of the state board of health were: “A mother died in .infancy.” “Deceased had never been fatally sick.” “Died suddenly, nothing serious.” “Died suddenly at the age of 108.” “Went to bed felling well, but woke up dead.” > “Kicked by horse shod on left kidney.” ;*r * “pu lmonary hemorrhage, sudden death. Duration four years.” .< . “Deceased died from blood poison, caused by a broken ankle, which is remarkable, as the automobile struck him between the lamp and the radiator.” . Of the 585 boys, 164 were classed as athletes because they had completed at least one full ion in an interscholastic sport. The two University of Oregon A comparison Of the grade point averages of the and nonathletes revealed that without doubt the athletes obtained better grades. On the average, they got C while the nonathletes averaged less than Did amount of participation in sports have any effect on scholarships? v ★ ★ ★ When the athletes were divided into two groups — those who had completed one or two seasons and those who had i I n t e r e s tin g 1 y , athletic i The finding that four times as completed three or more, it was participation appeared to have many nonathletes as athletes found that the greater the its greatest positive effect on | dropped out'of school before participation in sports, the [the academic performance of i graduation led the authors to greater the gap between the!boys from b 1 ue^co 11 a r!postulate that "athletics exerts athletes’ grades and those ofibackgrounds in the noncollege-!a holding Influence on the matched nonathletes. {preparatory programs. {students.” Teacher Boom Expected by 75 By The Associated Press The U.S. Office of Education reports that the shortage of teachers — that perennial problem facing school systems across the country — not only will ease in the future but will entirely disappear by 1975. The reason the shortage of about one-half million teachers will decline, the office says, is the post World War II baby boom. ★ ★ ★ As the effect of the baby boom declines, say USOE analysts, so will the teacher shortage. In a national study of educational manpower, USOE predicts that there will be 2.2 million teachers on hand to fill 1.6 million positions by 1975, if current trends continue. SPECIAL -TEACHERS ; The study warns, however, that the need for specialized instructors to teach disadvantaged youngsters and those with physical and mental handicaps . will remain critical. College graduates who now enter the field of teaching in many cases lack the training which is essential to meet the needs of the nation’s deprived and handicapped children. ★ ★ ★ -Of the total one-half million teachers required to fill current positions, USOE says, more than 2&.000 are needed for the instruction of handicapped children, including the mentally re tarded. In 1967, UStyE says, only 6,000' teachers earned degrees which would qualify them to teach In this field. PRESCHOOL CLASSES USOE also estimates that some 22,000 teachers will be re quired to handle even a'mod-est increase in enrollment of 8-to 5-year-olds in nursery Schools and kindergarten. Enrollments of deprived youngsters lag behind that of middle-class children in these preschool classes which educators are finding more and more vital in the learning process. ★ ★ W' , The demand for vocational educators also Is expected fb climb hi the next decade by the end of which -some 316,000 rl*k' structors qualified tin teach' ijl this Reid will be required, according to USOff estimates. AAONTC.O/VXERY turn Award-winning canvas jeans 3 fob $10 REGULARLY $3.91 Save now on the hip-look boys want. In hefty 11 Vi-bz. polyester-cotton canvas that never needs ironing. Fabrilock® knees give 4 times the wear of ordinary knees. Slim or regular style in choice of top colors. Sixes 4 to 7. 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TO 9sO0 PJH. . SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9 P.M. SUNDAY U NOON TO 5 P M. * 682-4940 fc-s-M TIIR rONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. AUGUST II. I9fi9 Short ridge Plan Mixes Races INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — They the best education at this time took a high school ih an area that we feel is possible. Most of rapidly fuming black injected',. u are prestigiousi academicfandanis, UhusiaAtic about the program, and called it the Shortridge Ln(, l woU)d be happy t0 8ee , ... I other schools attempt this." The result: a racially! stabilised neighborhood, inte-1 TRENl> REVERSED gration in other'4 city schoolsj Real estate people say the and some of the most gifted :trend toward an a 11-Negro] graduates in the nation. This is the picture a t Short ridge High School in Indianapolis. Three years ago, the near j north side neighborhood was rapidly becoming all-Negro, and the school's ertrollment was more than 90 per cent Negro. THREEFOLD PLAN Then in September, 1906, the j school board decided to convert * Shortridge to an academic! school. The plan was three-fold: | • Any qualified eighth-grade1 pupil in the city could attend. Admission was to be based on IQ, achievement tests, and principal-teacher ratings. • Shortridge. with a climate of academic superiority, was, the bait to lure whites back into ] the area. • Any pupil in the district not eligible to attend Shortridge '■ could choose any of the other 10! high schools in Indianapolis. * * * Says Mrs. A. Ebner Blatt, who has two children — one a senior at Shortridge and the other a Shortridge graduate at-i tending Harvard: "There is criticism that the] plan has displaced some people! in the neighborhood. But ac-l tuatty it is helping the' whole], school system by integrating all ; schools and keeping people in ' the city.” FILED SUIT Indianapolis has one all-Negro high school, Crispus Attucks. ami the Justice Department has filed suit charging racial discrimination in assignment of pupils and teachers. City school officials have not j resorted to busing pupils to - insure racial balance and they! hope the Shortridge experiment will provide a solution. neighborhood and school has: Principal Robert J. Schultz been reversed. They credit the j said the school has produced Shortridge academic plan with I more Ph. D.s and more stabilizing the neighborhood add Woodrow Wilson fellows than keeping property prices steady, any other high school in In-. National ratings have placed diana. Shortridge, which conducted its. * * * 1.00th commencement last June,' The 438 June graduates won in the top 25 high schools in the $310,000 in competitive country. scholarships. State Man Killed Enrollment Hike of 300 Students Expected in Troy [study time under the modular system while 10th graders will I return to the conventional [classroom scheduling. A total of 294 teachers are I assigned to classrooms at the 'district’s 12 schools this fail. This is an increase of 14 over [last year,, PERU, Ind. (AP) — James W. Smith, 47, of Berrien Center, ] Mich., was killed Sunday in a ] collision of two cars on Indiana 21 half a mile south of Peru. Five other persons were injured, none critically. I Antibiotics may be used to prevent and cure a serious | plant disease, known as aster yellows. Aq Increase of some 300 students is expected when doors open this fall in the Troy School District, Acting Supt. John P. Diefen-backer estimates total enrollment will hit 5,821 for all grades, up from 5,513 at the close of the 1968-69 school year. almost scrapped this year by Is the board of education, WiU|s continue this fall. Only junior and senior class students will be included in the j s modular scheduling, liowever, d since 10th graders will be ex- " eluded for the first time. Modular scheduling, the con-j troversial high school program Juniors and seniors will be] allowed to regulate their own Lebanese> spent $46.6 million on tobacco in 1968. Another Shortridge mother. Mrs. William L. Lleber, a leader in parent-teacher activities, says: "We are trying to take the average or slightly above 1 1 j average youngster and give him! / Environment Helps! $4 Brain to Develop Animals raised in a varied environment show great brain' development—both in size of the brain and in its activity. Drs. Edward L. Bennett and! Mark Rosenzwdig of the Uni-! versity of California in Berkeley: have been subjecting animals to! different environments designed to require varying degrees of activity from the animal.' I Gerbils lived either in isola-j tion (the impoverished condition) or in groups of 12 in a large cage provided with nu- < merious objects to offer varied stimulation (the enriched con- .dituuiJw Following periods of exposure to their environment, the ani- [ mals were killed and their brains subjected to quantitative! measurements and chemical j analysis. •' _ * * V Gerbils from the enriched con- j dition exceeded those from the impoverished condition in weight of cerebral cortexes. Chemical ! analysis shbwed the animals of the enriched condition to have a greater amount of enzyme related to synaptic functioning, a good indication of higher rate of brain activity. Marriage Licenses Michael G. Stevenson. Birr parol J. House. Farmington Billy J. Buchanan, iNalle Faye O. Crawtord^nryjSn,^ Ruby”"f.^COCK, *47UNort« O. Turner, SIO Cam---- ' Richard T. Has and Mary E. Lund Richard I Roberta G. Michael j K. Kayga, l Richard h J. Maddock, Donald T Theresa A. Clarence London. Bln '10, JS01- Pine antz. Milton and Sandra arid Felicia Z199 Kichwood i Gary G. Sherry l. Caksackkar „ Stephen L, Freder.cks, a< Katherine A. Young,. Roehe?t Charles H. Briggs, 84 None D. Model, 84 Norton Sherman W. Nelst-.i. Muskegon. Michigan and Kathleen H. Doyle, Sirov! ingham s j . _ David L. Caspars, Dover Delware and; GIRLS' COMBED COTTON KNIT PANTIES WITH ELASTIC LEG Pack of 3 Soft absorbent cotton. Nylon stitched. Double back. Stock up for comfort, long wiar. 7-14. - ~ ---------- s. Avery. I ] Cecil R. ward, M Valencia end Rhon-| I da k. Vendeeer, 785 First J. Vinton McCall. Cargo Florida and | Stella (, Deoyo, Birmingham | J Charles F. Darling, Devlsburg and! 1 Joyce A. Ballard Devlsburg r ! I Billy R. Wright, utlco and Loretta F.J J Spencer Lake Orion F Ronald ,P. Oye. 14 Mechanic and Grace! I iA, Valentine. 87 Forest i * Pontiac Mall OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10:00 A.VI. TO 9;00 P.M. SATURDAY 9:3U A.M. TO 9 p.M SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 5 P.M. * 682-19 to THE PQNTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, AUGUST II, 1969 C—13 Shortage of Skilled Technicians Spells Big Job Opportunities The drastic national shortage of skilled technicians — espcially in the auto industry — is creating fabulous career opportunities that any non-college-bound high, school senior or graduate ought to look into. The shortgage is a subject which has the a u t o m o 11 v service industry ‘‘up a tree.” ★ ★ ★ Just imagine the size of the waiting line at the local fix-it shop if what Detroit powers are predicting comes true. According to a Chrysler-Plymouth general manager, by 1978 America’s 100 million cars and trucks will need 500,000 more mechanics. by next year By next year the country will be 50,000 mechanics short of having what it should have to keep America’s autos and trucks in good order. (tee of the reasons for the shortage is the snobbish attitudes of too many parents and guidance counselors. They want college for their J o h n n y whether his grades call for it or not. And whether he’s really Interested in college or not. ★ A * It’s the ‘I-don’t-want-my-son-to-get-his-hands-dirty” attitude. And that is the reason for the mechanic ‘image’ problem. The truth of the matter Is, however, that the mechanic is no longer ‘a grease monkey.' He’s becoming a diagnostician, and his joh is anything hut easy. He needs thorough training and even when he has been through extensive training by a good school, he must keep up with the steady array of new developments in the auto industry. He must read his trade publications, and occasionally he must go back to school for refresher courses. But it’s a field in which an awful lot of non-college-bound youngsters have a natural interest. And with good training behind them they’ll take home a payroll that's infinitely better than the one they’d land in a mediocre white-collar job. J, Warren Davies, head of Lincoln Technical Institute, national chain of technical schools, explains that while the number of vehicles «in the country has increased 45 per cent in the last 15 years, the number of technicians to maintain them has only increased byj 4 per cent. He adds that the demands for auto mechanics are also increased because of the growing number of cars being equipped with such features as air-conditioning, power brakes and steering - all of which increase maintenance requirements. “So jobs go begging," says Nation's 1st Centennial Is Recalled By the National Geographic Society WASHINGTON •— The biggest birthday party of the century is approaching, and no one yet knows where it will be held. A giant bicentennial fair is expected to mark the 200th anniversary of the United States in 1976. Philadelphia, Boston, been suggested as appropriate sites. Whichever city is Selected will be hard-pressed to produce the equal of an earlier affair — the Centennial Exposition of 1876. Few expositions have left so many lasting mementos as the Centennial, the nation's first successful world’s fair. Despite post-Civil War depression and an unusually hot summer, 9-milliort admissions cl i c k e d through the busy turnstiles at Philadelphia’s Fairmount Park. MACHINE AGE For six wondrous months the (U-million fair showed off an! amazing world of arts and sciences. It awakened many visitors to the excitement and promise of the Machine Age. Some 30,000 exhibitors, from around the world displayed wares. Thirty-seven foreign nations and 26 states built their own pavilions. . if:: For a single dime, famished faiegoers could taste a new delight — -a / tinfoil-wrapped, South American oddity called the banana. Culture seekers w a n d e r e d thrbugh an acre and a half of space devoted to such artists as Thomas Gainsborough an d Wjnsiofc Humer r- * obscure Whgon decorate* Archibald hf., Willard. Willard’s dramatic portrayal of twn drummers and a fifer, entitled “Spirit of ’76," drew high prefsd from most wto saw it. Tne critics ignored it. Davies. “And' that’s really a shame. If only people realized that the skilled mechanic can count on a weekly salary from 8125 to $175 - plus benefits -in his first job . . . The auto industry has to pay good wages to. get proper help. It’s that simple.'" And as far as the image bit is concerned, Davies suggests that the parent wanting his or her son tb get a white collar job for the ‘brains’ image to try dismantling a 2,000-parts transmission, and' putting it, back together. . . in p e r f e c t| operating condition. Davies adds that creasing manpower shortage ini most technological fields is likely to make the technician an executive faster than would a bachelor's degree in business administration.” * ★ ★ Schools such -as Lincoln Tech! | have both day and evening i courses for. prospective auto mechanics as well as specialized courses in auto air conditioning, automatic transmissions, tune-up, diesel engines, foreign cars, etc. Courses are, of course, approved for veterans, but ad- ditionally Lincoln helps students ] get part time jobs while they're studying, and free placement service upon graduation is part of the agreement. ★ ★ ★ ^ Davies also says that there are equal manpower shortages j ,in other technical fields: air : condi tioning, refrigeration, heating, computers, etc. Free literature on courses in automotive, air coditloning heating and' refrigeration technology, is available by writing Lincoln Technical Institute, 472 Market St., Newark, N.J. 07105. aaontgoa/ierY LTiVAlH IT’S WHAT’S HAPPENING! Glen plaids Wared bot Dress Ivy lines SAVE ON BOYS’ NEW-NOW JEANS! PERMANENTLY CREASED ...NEVER NEED IRONING! Jin6s Jkkz, C Pontiac Mall OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10:00 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M. . SATURDAY 9:30 A M, TO 9 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 5 P.M. • 682-1940 G—-14 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1969 Parochiaid Appeals Renew Church-State Debate Artificial Lake stitutions. FRESH BURDENS As a result, not only have | many religious schools closed i but fresh burdens have descended on taxpayers as! newcomers enter already overcrowded public schools. | A survey by the National"! Catholic Educational Assertion of 122 of the 147 Catholic dioceses in the country reveals a decline of 2.5 per cent in the) number of elementary schools ! during the 1968-69 school year! and a decline of 4.6 per cent in I the number of high schools. * * * These 122 dioceses have reported a decline of 5.8 per cent in enrollment on the elementary level (3,321,522 in By The Associated Press With the nation’s Catholic schools in financial trouble, appeals for government aid are renewing the old debate over separation of church and state. Some opponents argue that separation would be compromised by use of public money to support church-sponsored schools. ewe A shortage of teachers from religious orders has forced the hiring of lay teachers at salaries more nearly comparable with the public school system. This has necessitated tuition Increases and consequent drops in enrollment for Catholic in-1 1968-69 as against 3,525,441 in!year against the previous | the previous school year). j4,458,866). I There has been a drop of 1.7 The chief problems in New j per cent on the secondary level (York State, pointed out by Dr. (917.823 in the 1968-69 year as j Virginia Kendall, director of the ! against 933425 in 1967-68). The j Institute for Catholic Education, | over-all enrollment decline is | are reflected all over the coun-4.9 per cent (4,239,345 this past try. "but the rapidly increasing costs are so monumental that It imperative to seek other sources of aid.” Some of the solutions tried' or proposed as alternatives closings: elimination of a few federal aid and the continuing I are able,” Dr. Kendall says, grades at one end or the other, They include rapidly increasing operating costs, declining number of the religious available for teaching, rising lay salaries, Inadequate parish funds, insufficient ban on state aid to nonpublic " schools. "The Catholic population, i when they know the value of the : schools and the problems fgeing them will, I think, respond to p the crisis needs insofar as they c mergers or centralization, consolidations, sharing facilities or staffs, increasing tuition rates, individual parish fund-raising projects. “One of our future goals,” Dr Kendall adds, "is to find somej plan to promote central finan- cing for the schools so that needy parishes can receive more help.” Meanwhile Catholic educators „re urging expansion of the .(school services available under • the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965. MONTGOMERY -Sr* Boom in Nation By National Geographic Society WASHINGTON - Man is trying to outdo nature in the creation of lakes. A boom in man-made lakes is sweeping the' United States. Some are built by government agencies, others by private de-• velopers. ★ ★ * Even Minnesota, with 15,000 natural lakes, and Michigan, ( with more than 5,000, have not escaped the deluge. The trend is to bring a lake-shore within a short drive of most households. The result, whether intentional or incidental, satisfies the yearning of millions of landlocked people for a convenient place for swimming, boating, fishing, sailing, or water-skiing. VARY IN SIZE Man-made lakes vary in size from fewer than 10 acres to ' many thousands of acres. Some of the larger ones have been created by such agencies at the Corps of Engineers and the j Tennessee Valley Authority as a ( by-product of dam obstruction. Big lakes naturally steal the! -headlines, but countless smaller i man-made lakes make a greater overall impact. More than 5,000 watershed lakes and reservoirs have been built by local ■ communities with the help of; the United States Department of j Agriculture’s Soil Conservation Service in the past 15 years. Several hundred n^g, ones are filled each year. ★ * w .■ ★ While the basic purpose of; man-made bodies of water is ' flood prevention and soil conservation, almost all are used| for outdoor fun as well. Under the Watershed Protec-1 *tion and Flood Prevention Act of 1962, the federal government pays up to half the cost of public recreation facilities1 such as marinas, picnic grounds, and| campsites. Increasing numbers, of Communities. ask for such! aid. , . FORM PARK NUCLEUS Some of the lakes form the! nucleus of new or enlarged pub- i lie parks. Many provide communities with their first site; for water sports. Collectively, ! they provide tens of millions of j user-days of water-based rec-! reation annually. I A secondary but fast-growing j source of man-made lakes is real estate development. 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Smoothfitting links stitch knit jn vibrant Fall tones: gold, brown, green or blue. Men's S-M-L-XL. REG. $9 B. Here's the over-popular crew neck in npw guise. It'S 100% soft wool with the popular fleecy look. Pick 'em in gold, brown or green heather-tones, navy or zingy claret. Men’s S-M-L-XL. 12“ I. $15 , C. When only „y©ur handsomest Will ., do! Soft, buttery suede-front set in a rich, wa rm aery I ic knit. See if in soft -color combos’ of gold, brown or green. -Men's sizes S-M-L-XL. Tough oxford-weave blend of rayon-acetdte-nylon is permanently pressed, needs no ironing! Slim-cut-model in popular" new colors. Sizes 29-36. 2 FOR ORLON MOCK TURTLE PULLOVER ■.atm Smooth, trim-fit knit in a soft orion acrylic. Takes to washing without losing fit or color. Lett of new shades. S-M-L-XL i Men's Dress Slacks Dacron® and Wool 100 MEN'S AWARD-WINNING BLAZER NOW PRICE-CUT A BIG 7.12 v Year-round Dacron® polyester- RIO. 50.00 wool worsted in navy, French 42“ Pontiac Mai • • Our better quality dress slacks make a fine gift • They never need pressing..: keep a neat look • Dry clean or wash in your machine Try these for size-and size them up for extra features! Note the trim look of the self doth belt. The smooth look of the Ban-Roli waistband, French fly tab, Dacron® polyester-worsted. Popular colors. Man's 30-42. OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10:00 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M. SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9 P.M SUNDAY 12 NOON TO S P.M. e 682-4940 THE PONTIAC Pit ESS. MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1969 C—13 Audiovisual Aids Make Teacher's Job Much Easier REQ. 7.99 Do the highland fling to school in slip-ons with a Scottish braguel The kiltie tassSl and tongue add charm to sleek bootmaker finished .leather uppers of brown. Man made soles, heels. B 5-70., OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10:00 A'.M. {TO 9:00 P.M, . SATURDAY 9:30 AM, TO 9 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO S P.M. • 682-4940 Reg. 8.99, Mg boys’ D*Vk-7..... 8.99 Pontiac Mall Afany teacher will tell you, mechanical aids to education — much in evidence as the new school year starts — make the job of instruction infinitely easier. As one North Carolina teacher in an integrated school put it: “If there were no audiovisual aids to education, we would have no, way to really get across soma basic ideas of science. 1 % '"A ★ It’s the same with the printed word. Overhead projectors and reading machines flash filmed wprds on screens children can more easily grasp how they are pronounced and what they mean. This year, a.new flock, of teaching aids from manufacturers and publishers makes its debut. Matching the current interest i restoring the Negro to merican history are color filmstrips with accompanying phonograph records that tell the "* of the American Negro slavery to the present. story i from s The material, developed by Folkways Scholastic Records, is designed for preschool and elementary reading levels. In adult education, tfye Addison Wesley Publishing Co. has available reading /development comprehension skills. For use In elementary schools, Borg-Warner offers a programmed educational system consisting of subject kits containing lessons and tests. ★ * ★ Overhead transparenices manufactured b y Technifax visually teach appreciation of a range of subjects from short story construction to solid fuel rockets. WWW There’s a new, 20-volume American history collection, “The Annals of America,'1 which provide a year-by-year documented record of American life, action and thought from 1493 to 1968. The Athletic Institute has released a series of educational sports films for training purposes covering, Initially, power volleyball and -women’s gymnastics. AUDIO-VISUAL ° In the audiovisual field, BausCh and Lomh has come up with a helium-neon gas laser, used in classrooms to demonstrate optical principles. R e s p onsive Environments Corp. has developed a “Talking Page,” wn i c h synchronizes audio and visual information conveyed by records and 8x10’ inch printed sheets. The student can operate the mechanism at his own pace. Save on shoes made for the school scene TEENS’ SCHOOL DAY SLIP-ONS PROVE INVALUABLE Some will prove invaluable. Others will be dropped by the wayside as ineffective. Electronics BUCKLE DOWN TO STYLE REGULARLY T.99 . CHARGE IT AT WARDS He Takes Care of Future Voters By Ibe Associated Press Lansing Mayor Gerald. W. Graves is taking care of constituents who won’t be voting far some time. He launched programs of free Saturday movies for children aged 6 to 11, with free popcorn and soda pop.’For high school and grade school boys and girls he instituted free bowling^ instruction. . The mayor also is behind a free youth employment service for those in the 1(28 age bracket. Products Are Groovy Whether yoa’re relaxing in the dorm, groovin’ at a fall frat party or hitting the bodes under a shady tree, today's personal electronics products are designed to turn you on. Lightweight, low cost personal electronics products will go ‘‘where the action is.” Portability is the key. WWW * Whatever your bag, there’s a portable stereo, tape player, radio or TV set made especially for you. Take a nine-inch diagonal solid-state black and white portable TV set with built-in handle. ' It weighs only 13 pounds, light enough for the most- petite coed, yet strong enough to absorb the normal wear and tear of people on the go. This mini-portable TV will operate in the dorm on AC current or. outdoors with optional battery pack. POPULARITY SOARING The cassette recorder-player Is another “tote me” communicator that is soaring in popularity on campus. The cassette has both entertainment and educational applications. . Swinging sounds packaged in a standard tape cassette can be played for as long as two hours before inserting another selection. By employing the recorder device, students are able to tape lectures and prepare for oral presentations. In the midst of today’s soul and psychedelic music explosion, what collegian can afford to be without a portable stereo phonograph? VARIETY OF COLORS This fall, solid state portable stereos will come in a variety of colors with swing-down turntable and detachable speakerjadngs. ’* A portable phonograph with a built-in eigut-track tape cartridge player is one of the groovy hew items on the persona] electronics list, w : if This compatible combination player Is really two systems in one. You can play your favorite discs or snap in a stereo eight tape cartridge (the same cartridge that is purchased for auto sound systems) for your listening pleasure. The portable AM-FM radio with a built-in telescopic antenna, will enable one to run the musical sound gamete — from Blood, Sweat and Tears to Beethoven. w w w Wherever you go this fall, It will be easier to do your own thing with -the personal touch offered by today’s personal electronics. 6" REGULARLY 7.50 U99- REGULARLY 12.99 REQ. 8.99 TEENS’ CLASSIC LOUNGER Spurred with tassel A. Tackle teen-age footwear problems with this latest variation on the casual shoe theme. A groovy antique buckle perks up the subdued charm of smart, supple brown glove leather uppers. Composition sole and heel; new extended tele and squared off heel. B 5H to 10. LITTLE GIRLS’ INSERT SHOES CHANGE COLORS SO EASILY B. Put fashion fun at her feet with insert feat wear... and she'll have shoes to match every school outfit! 7 pairs of color tabs free with shoes. With black or brown leather uppers, the , flexible rubber non-skid soles for long term wearing. Sins B 127k to 4; C, D 87k to 4. MEN’S AND BOYS’ HORSEBITS FOR SCHOOL AND CAMPUS C. Handsome horsebits are big and bold on campus grounds.. With brassy hardware on rustic brown leather uppers with composition sole, robber heels and square toe. D 77k-i 1,12. Little boys’, rag. 7.99,018 to 3...6.99 Big boys’, rag. 8.99, D 17k to 7.......... 7.99 BIO VALUES ON LITTLE BOYS’ LEATHER WIND OXFORDS JUST RIGHT FOR GIRLS! WAXHIDE OXFORDS REG. 6.99 CHARGE IT AT WARDS It's a smart step to school in leather oxfords with composition lasts and composition soles. Sturdy for long semester wear. Sizes C 10 to 4. } C—18 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, AUGUST 11, I960 THE POffTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1939 mcoim D—r DOWNTOWN PONTIAC WE ARE BRINGING BACK THE GOOD OLD-FASHIONED DAYS! • Join us for 8 days of good old-fashioned values did old-fa shiondd family fun! You will have the time of your life and a laugh-a-minute |vith free old fashioned movies at the Olde Tyme Nickelodeon Theatre. (Pick up you* free tickets flam any downtown merchant.) • See the rare collection of antique dotfs • automafic nickelodeon • old-time posters • peanut roaster a hot pretzel machina l shop at our old-time candy store. • Thrill to the music and the huidy gurdy.' • See Doc Gregory make old-fashioned music and fiin with his musical vacuum cleaner, musical Isaw and other musical, delights! • Join in the fun of the frog jumping contest! a See me turtle derby! • Come play hopscotch with us on the city streetsl a And when was tholast time you had a good slug of ted pop? • Many more surprises! Come on downtown and join the fun D-a THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1969 2. School Schedules Changed Waterford Parents Must Adjust When schools reopen In the. • Serious overcrowded junior About 65 foWer teachers will| fall, U’s usually the kids who!high schools. be on hand this fall to teach have to readjust their dally sc-l • Larger classes with fewer some 200 more students than tivities. Most of their free time teachers than last year. last fall. An estimated 700 is out. It’s back to the five-day- • More millage and bond teachers are expected for about • • 1 18,439 students. Moving into a new 94-1 Teacher cutbacks and tbej million high school. {reduction of the secondary e The selection of a new school day by one hour actually school superintendent. {began a year ago because of Many of the school district’s j previous mUlage defeats, financial woes came as the \ * * * result of the voters’ defeating a 9-mill tax increase and $10.1 million bond issue last a-week grind of going to school, iproposals. But parents of some 10,000 Waterford Township elementary pupils will find that they too will have to make some adjustments in their schedules. Their children will only be going to school for half a day. HieyTl need some type of adult supervision for the rest of the!{Member, day. ! Cutbacks in the elementary | school program and in the|di4rk{jT| three large Junior high School officials look for another bond issue' this fall because a fourth junior high school is badly needed. It is estimated that {commented. "I should think there would be another vote on {operating millage before the school year Is out unless there hi state reform." The opening of the Mott High School — its cons true t ion delayed by millage defeats — should take care of enrollment needs for 12 to 15 years. It'S, capacity is about 1,500 students. The district’s third senior high school, Mott will feature "the most advanced computer "I don't think some parents number of teachers then came. ]schoolg ^^300 students over realize the adjustment they 111 * * * capacity this fall and 600 to 700 have to make, says acting Elementary pupils will just over by , Supt. Dr. John Pagen. “It will get a basic education, according ’ be quite an adjustment for school officials. That includes FINANCING NOT SO BRIGHT some.” reading, writing and arithmetic| A new junior high school As the opening of school and little science, social studies take care of the enrollment . nears, parents and students of or language arts, jneeds for 10 to 15 years, of- this financially plagued school' Grades one through three will|ficials predicted, district face: I go half days the first semester “Financing for day-to-day • Continuation of a shortened|and grades four through six half operating costs is not so secondary school day, {days the second semester. {bright," a district spokesman Instruction center in the count try’’ and a flexible arrangement of classroom clusters. About $1 million of hardware for the district’s f e d e r a 1 IN-DICOM project — computer-individual instruction Will be installed in the school's 'media center. The project’s 32 teletype terminals have been connected to a RCA computer system in Palo Alto, Calif., for the past year. STUDY MATE - Mike Alonzi’s portable RCA tape recorder is the next best thing to having his own tutor’ The handsome recorder is from tyKCInc., downtown. Mike is a 10th grader at Waterford Mott High School. New School System Eyed TORONTO (AP) - There’s a drive on for an Ontario education system that is child-centered and open to everyone according to his needs. 'Cet’s shoot for the stars and hope for' the horizon,” says Lloyd Dennis, cochairman of a commission that proposed a whole new system of revolutionary proportions. to accommodate the differeht needs of students by offering a wide variety of courses. Other the whole field of educational techniques and methods, as well as educational administration. But the majority'of recommendations are aimed at teachers and administrators at the local level. The commission made 258 r e c 0 m m endations in all, designed to support these fundamental concepts: e The right of every individual to have equal access to the learning experiences best suited to his needs. The responsibility of every school authority to provide a child-centered system that invites learning by individual discovery and Inquiry. LOCK-STEP SYSTEM Many of the reforms are already in effect in Totonto schools. But Ontario education has a long way to go. At one $4-high school Dennis visited, all the students in each classroom snapped to attention when the principal entered. Schools are still operated like battleships instead of places of discovery. The report said there should be a minimum of kindergarten and 12 additional years of school “eliminating lock-step systems of organizing pupils, such as grades stream, programs, etc.” f Divisions of pupils such as elementary, secondary, acadbmic, vocational and commercial also w 0 u 1 d eliminated. (letting the recommendations implemented is something else again. The report recommends competitive salaries, merit pay, professional development courses and travel programs for teachers. Emphasis on the primary years would be on communications, such as speaking, listening, reading and writing. Senior years would be designed 1 just 12 weeks, HlR Block, America’s Largest Income Tax Service, will teach you how I to prepare income tax returns . m n make extra money a ■ consultant. An ideal < students, retired people—-anyone wanting t b EXTRA MONEY. No required. Enrollment open to anyone. JHK ENROLL HOW! America'* L Largest Tax Service SEPTEMBER 15 ) CUSSES START b 2536 Orchard Lake Ave., Sylvan Lk. 28 Watt Huron St- Pleese send me a re*i«retton to Basic Income Tex Course. This 1 under no obK(aUon to enroll. NAME DtMXSCT- , Pontiac Phene 334-8 •932’ k R Stock piecee me .1 Is e request for information only and i COY . 1 . , via IBBglHff :: ttlflli:-. i Hi P CODE TELEPHONE N w ■ 1. . j AndreV Back to School Special* HUMAN HAIR ft" at and Styled W i-VTO W 100% AH Cut and Styled ALL SHADES ONE PRICE, NONE HIGHER Reg. 889.00 Hand Tied Wigs ALL m% HUMAN Hilt FALLS »»»!## ALL lOUff Hl'MAX HAIR CASCADES .. mm* All 10091 Human Heir.. Reg. $39.00 SPECIAL ON PERMANENT* 100% Hl’MAN fi $099 | hair Wiglets v P ^ Phone FE 5-9257 Beauty Salon I I X.‘Saginaw, Between Lawrence and Pike St*. First Kresge's Than Back-to-School! SPBCIALS, THIS WBIK ONLY! Girls' Sizes 3*6x and 7-14 2/*750 Girls' lOOS Acrylic Dresses . In 'High-Fashion' Colors X, Sizes 7-14/ Reg. $5.66 and $5.99 $427 MISSES1 PENNY-SADDLE SPECIAL! Reg. $1.99 NOTEBOOK PAPER, 500 SHEETS ONLY THIS WEEK ONLY! 68* KRESGE’S MIRACLE MILE ONLY! eiflmoa SAVINGS BONANZA AT CONN’S MEM a levs’WEIR Apache Shirt A: Tie Sets *9- Slacks *8" And Up *7”.. *1895 Ml Weather Styles JACKET SALE! Man t Bays' Knit Shirts H>## * MS00 *395 Shirt & Tie Sets a . . 4 *6“ CLOTHES :-p.«ce Mated Sweater Sets »!«“«.'IS" Suits & Sportcoats v3off Sweaters *7" u *H" THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 11 f D—3 Institution Proposed to Study Pollution, Disposal Problems By Science Service CHICAGO - The air is dirty. The water is dirty. The trash piles up in heaps. And the garbage. We know how to end most such problems—but getting the political machinery together with the scientists’ knowledge has been difficult. • * * it 'Now, after a conference of more than 300 worried men here, a group of scientists is drafting plans to set up a new institution to bring knowledge and power, together — and de- velop new knowledge as well. Following the three-day meeting, the decision was made to propose an ' institution which would serve as a link between the universities, with their knowledge, and the politicians, with their power. FACILITY’S GOALS Such a facility would try to educate both the public and state and federal politicians by providing a comprehensive analysis and presentation of man’s interaction with his environment. Dr. Philip N. Powers, president of the Argonne Universities Association, said that the I first draft of the prqppsal would I be submitted to the member I universities (which operate the I Argonne National Laboratory I Jof the federal* government) f within a few months. Although the details of paying for such an institution will have to be worked out later, Dr. Powers said that no source would be overlooked, including federal and state governments, industry and foundations. j Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downfown Pontiac OPEN TONITE ’til 9 p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Start Yaar ‘SchaaNa’ at SIMMS Where You’ll Save on Your Clothing Needs HEP HIPPIE — Connie McKnight of Western Michigan University does her own fashion thing wearing fall’s latest — the cable-knit pant suit from Jacobson’s Miss J Shop, Birmingham. Bangled bracelets, beads and chain belts accent her Bordeaux ensemble of 100 per cent wobl by Alberoy. Computers Pick Colleges which neither the student liar guidance axuiselor had heard of or considered, and that it' helped simplify the decisions faced by studehts applying for college. The program will now be used for high school juniors. I HARTFORD, Cram. (JB—East Hartford High School claims to be the first school in the nation to use a specialized computer system to help its graduating seniors select colleges that match their specifications and qualifications. The students are using computers located in Hartford at a computerized information center designed strictly for consumer use. The computers contain detailed information on all colleges >— scholarship aid available, estimated tuition and related expenses, tests required for admission, ratio of applicants accepted, percentage of dropouts, student-faculty ratio, size of school library, and student travel and exchange programs: Center executives instructed 25 East Hartford seniors on how the center works. The seniors, who had not yet selected their college, programmed their Scholastic Aptitude Test scores and the type and size of school they would like on IBM cards. PRINT-OUT The cards were then matched with colleges that fit the students’ individual specifications, and the students each received a print-out containing information on all colleges that; reflected their interests and at which they would probably be accepted. Hie initial results showed that the computer suggested schools Top JO Projects * of 4-H'ers Reflect Varied Interests By the Associated Press Heading the list of the top 10 projects undertaken by the nation’s three million 4-H youths are animal science, clothing, foods and plant science. Recent figures released by the Cooperative Extension Service show that youngsters »l«n are very much interested in health and physical fitness. In addition to animal and plant sciences, the application of scientific principles is a part of nearly alll 4-H projects, says file Extension Service. Recreation, engineering and safety are three more areas in which large numbers of 4-H members excelL HIGH ENROLLMENT Projects Involving management " and furnishings for the home show high enrollment, as does conservation. Community service and f, personal development/ are a prime concern of today’s 4-H’ers as well, judging frOm the more than 300,000 participating. Most 4-H boys and girls spend ; their time on more than one piroject, as the survey shows. Boys may be involved in plant and animal sciences and engineering projects. A girl may study plant science to. make her horticultural project m or meaningful, or food science to get the most from her foods and . nutrition projects. m ... I’M WEARING CONTACT LENSES N0W!\ “I sever believed it was psssibli ti be at aetiva... We have heard tbit statement tiaa and again. Ss many have discovered tbe wonders that Contact Lnnsss can do tor your appearance ... and year personality. n Thorough, Promotional Eya Examination m Contact Lantat Scientifically Fitted Dr. H. Markowitz, Registered Optometrist •JisioH CEHTERS ojst Selection to1k ' fo« ‘ ***** 'blits ,ncv knit 1 Ck r"nr*>. aJr con,. 98 H. SAGINAW $T. SIMMS"? nm Superb stereo tape system « full frequency duol speaker systems | complete with two Sony f-45 Cordi-•oid Dynamic mikes. Not exactly as I .shown. Charge it. RECORDERS-Main! fifes ihh _ 98 North I Saginaw St. SIMMS!* The Friendly THE rONTlAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1969 „ - (' V\ \ .tat «o«A ^ if 1 xd&afcs&l-i Pontiac Prut Photo FANCY BUCKLES — Take a step in the right fashion direction with the buckled look by Stride Rite, available at Stapp’s Shoes, downtown. The strappy Doubletalk (front left) in smooth Italian leather Is perfect for class with Maria (far right) in black, glowing leather for evening wear. Boys like the popular rugged-looking rawhide boot in wild cherry. Mother Decries Viet 1 M An Inch of Rain Really Adds Up Japan’s 100 million population will increase to about 120 million by 1985, but the average' family size will decrease from 4.08 persona in 1965 to 3.38 in 11985. WARNER ROBINS, Ga. (UPI) -A mother embittered by her ion’s death in Vietnam and frustrated by cold response to her letters to Washington has sent the American flag from her son’s coffin to Presilent Nixon. . ■ ■ * # * I hate the flag for’ what it stands for in Vietnam — th murder of oth* young men, said Mrs. Miles Stewart, prominent, .businesswoman In this east Georgia town. “But ‘ love it for what it is supposed to stand for.” ★ * * Pvt. Wayne Stewart, 22, was killed in combat last April. Mrs. ! Stewart said she has sent letters to senators, congressmen and military authorities asking "what this war is about.” She said she has written the President but there was no answer. • * * * “I don’t think I could live with myself if I didn’t try to [ help stop this killing,” said Mrs. Stewart. * * * Along with the flag, she sent! a photo of the young private and a letter which said, in part, "I do not want a flag which | represents a country which is| sacrificing her young men as this oge is dding.” She requested “everyone down the line’’ to retract their condolences. "I want no part of such hypocrisy.” The mother said her son was studying to be an attorney. 'Can you imaginei the agony of, packing up his youthful camp-1 ing equipment, ins clothes, his1 toothbrush?” she wrote. 'As it now stands, the loss 'of respect for my country is surpassed only by the grief over ;his murder,” she said. Mrs. Stewart, who runs a Welcome Wagon service in Warner Robins, said she would have proud to give her son for a good cause. The world pays about fl billion a year for weather forecasting services estimated at being worth $20 billion. WASHINGTON (UPI )-When I the weatherman says "an inch] of rain fell today” it doesn’t Sound like much water, does it? Believe it, it IS a lot of-water! An inch of rain falling evenly on one acre of ground is equiv- l alent to about 27,154 gallons bf| water, according to hydrologists of the U.S. Geological Survey, Here’s how it's determined; One inch of rain falling evenly over one acre (43,650 square feet), of gropnd would amount to a total of 6,272,640 cubic Inches of water. This is equivalent to 3,630 cubic feet of water. A cubic foot of water weighs about 62.4 pounds. Therefore, the weight of a uniform fall of one inch of rain over one acre would be about 226,615 pounds, or. 11344 short tons. 87,154 GALLONS Hie weight of one U.S. gallon of pure water is about 8.3 pounds. Consequently, a rainfall of one Inch over one acre would mean about 27,154 gallons of water, “Simple multiplication,” notes the survey, “reveals how much water would fall over a given city, if it fell evenly. For example, an even inch of rain over the District of Columbia (44,000 acres) would amount to about 1.2 billion gallons of water.” ★ * * What happens to the water after it reaches the ground de-pepds upon mahy factors Such as rate of rainfall, topography, soil condition, humidity, density , of vegetation, extent of urbanization. etc. Of the total amount of water, about 25 per -cent would run off immediately; about 15 per cent would be evaporated; about 40 per cent would be taken up by surface soil;.and about 20 per cent would filter down into subsurface, water-bearing rocks (aquifers). - A,™ * *, “ttsse^reefirate figflresT’ survey hydrologists explain, “can vary considerably. For example, the direct runoff in a ‘ highly urbanized area is increased so'mewhat because of the high density of pavements and roofs. BACK TO SCHOOL WITH A TAPE RECORDER OR CASSETTE RECORDER Sony Tap* Recorders Are In A Class By Thomsolvea COME IN FOR A FREE DEMONSTRATION MANY MODELS Tb CHOOSE FROM PRICED Frora'$34.95 Cduard* 6 N. Saginaw DOWNTOWN 90NTIA0 Closed Wed. During Aug. S PREPARE YOURSELF A FOR A FUTURE IN V'M,K cosiwietoloc¥ "GEORGE THEGREj by You’ll go anywhere,.. do anything with George the Great .. . and with a flair for fashion. How about that V . swingin’ brass buckle? Just right fOr the "now" crowd! Enroll this fall for TRAINING IN .A CAREER in professional hair care. One of the best paid professions for well trained operators. N A good hair drawer b always in demand. Enjoy nationwide job opportunity* advantageous working hours, and pleasant working conditions through a trade that is interesting and limitless in a future for you. * FOR REQUIREMENTS nnd INFORMATION j Patamount Beauty School § FE 4-2352 26 W. Huron St. Pontiac, Mich. Real George ... that’s the George Boot. Soft and comfortable . . . like old shoe.1 How about that brass bucklal By George, buy George today WANT TO SELL LAWNMOWERS, POWER MOWERS, ROLLER SKATES, WAGONS, BICYCLES? USE A LOW COST PONTIAC . PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 332-8181. for "pennies 8 day' you can "BEAT the HEAT" ...select AFCO Comfortmaker j Air Conditioning . For Cooling alone or Complete year around Air Conditioning I — play it smart and invest your money in equipment that Wiji last longer — provide more Comfort. NOW! it your AFCO Quiff i ZILKA HEATING Pontiac. Michigan 682-1210 Your Avthorliotf SINGER AFCO Dtalar If You Let Junior Take the Family Car Back to School, Remember You Can “Clean -Up” Oil Financing Too! Finance Your Next Car At Pontiac State The Bank That Gives You the Best Possible Peal in the Pontiac Area Pontiac State Bank Before you male* any deal on those 1969 closeout models, compare the- financing charges at' Pontiac State Bank .. . You may save up to $100 or more, and that could buy a lot more car. . .So after you've picked out the model you \yont, come in and arrange your LOW-COST Auto Loan at any of our 12’complete banking offices . . . Got the best possible deal in the Pontiac Area. Thm Bank on The grow \ Member Federal Deposit Insurance Dorp. With Deposits Insured to $1B,OM.OO Jobs, Classroom Instruction Combined THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 11. 1069 d—a They Earn, Learn at Walled Lake V^onally oriented students ttonal training to the school -isemester under another In Walled Lake have a unique opportunity to combi classrdom instruction with tual on-the-job experience under the sponsorship of the Walled Lake consolidated s c h o o 1 district’s “Vocational Cooperative Training Program.” Working under the motto Trade and Industrial [instructor, the co-op students r. Young men took courses and will prepare food, serve, and; Jobs in welding, woodworking, manage the Walled Lake Room,! service station work, and other!a dining room for the ad-< industrial vocations; Wayne Bell I ministration and guests at the! was the coordinator for this [new Walled Lake Western High! segment of the program. . | School/ Nurse Mrs. John Ashby wa?ELIGIBILITY I ■ ,........ - put in charge of the 1966 fall I _ . . 4U will prepare tnyself, and some-nurse aide and orderly pro-! To be eli*ible for the C°-°P! day my chance will come ,”[gram. Before beginning work in Pro8ram> ® senior needs a; students spend five hours per nursing homes, the students satisfactory school record, good, day in school, and at least 15 were taught all of the pro-attendance and Punctuality,1 spent with his coordinator, one credit for his work time. hours per week on the job. Many of the students have stuck with their training jobs after graduation, choosing to cedures in a four-bed schoolfaVorable recommendations,1 clinic, designed specifically for parent approval> and his ow“ that purpose. j transportation. _ I _________________ „ With the success of these four L Students meet with theiri make that particular field their programs, school o f f i c i a 1 s instructor one hour a day> andi lifetime career. thought it logical to embark on are , also graded by their j Credit for the co-op program!a new phase of the Co-op pro- emPl°yer- If all work is goes to Lester G. Carlson Jrjgram. satisfactory, the student who introduced the plan at; Beginning this fall the pro- recdves one credit for the hour; Walled Lake upon learning that I gram will include a Food] only 50-per cent of the school’s [Service division. Students will graduates go on to colleges or'spend their first semester under! one instructor. j Beginning - the . second More important than their actual work, Carlson feels, is that the “students learn how to; get along in the adult world, to take orders from someone other than their mother, father pr! teacher. It gives them a feeling of being needed, which adds to I their dependability,” Asked whether working hurts a student’s academic standing! he replied: “Attendance has even improved in some classes. One rule of the Co-op program! is that no one absent from school is allowed to work that] day. Coordinators and employers are in close con-| tact.” | lere are a few. problems involved. Sadly, Carlton said that those who needed \ the Co-op (program the most were the |one8 unable to provide their own transportation. However, plans are being made to enable students living near each other to form a car pool. To ease the problem surrounding school events, employers are given a Calendar of school events each month, Carlson said. ★ . * “The senior prom IS more important to a girl than her job, and at that time in her life, she’s right. We do all we can to see that everything works out! satisfactorily.” RIDING IN STYLE-Any student-or professor, for that matter—would appreciate touring the campus in a stylish Mercury I Pontiac Pratt Photo Marquis convertible from Sheehans Hillside Lincoln-Mercury, 1250 Oakland. • BUY! SELL! TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! universities. WORK-BOUND STUDENTS “Enough wasn’t being done for the other 50 per cent, the work-bound students,” Carlson said. Under the heading of Office Occupation Training, the program was initiated in 1963.' Its goal was to train young girls to Sex Attractant for Weevils Set The chemical creation of fill positions as quallf iedfe* h®1*weevH^x attractant • _ is nearly complete; full-scale ’ testing is planned for this sum- secretaries, typists, Receptionists, dental a s s i s t a n t s, telephone and key punch operators. “Distributive Education” broadened the scope of the program in the fall of 1964. Under the direction of Charles Beall, students found employment in drug, clothing, shoe, furniture, hardware and^Three oVthe compounds have department stores. been synthesized and the i The 1965 school year brought synthesis of the fourth is In still another category of voca-l progress. met. The attractant is composed of four chemical compounds obtained from male boll weevils, reports J. H; Tumlinson of the U.S. Department of Agriculture’sBoll Weevil Research Laboratory at State University. COW POWER — Before, during or after school, Richardson Farm Dairy; with 10 locations' throughout the area, has nutritious' energy food for every kind of taste bud at lunchtime. ( School ADaysdare MereBAgain! • ISO Sheet Filler PAPER • Plastic All 3 Only *1 oo Sea Our Complete Supply of BACK-TO-SCH0OL SUPPLIES General Printing & Office Supply 17 West Lawrence “SR8? FB 8-BI61 School^Daysaare hHere©Again! Get your back-to-school clothes at Osmuift. Stores for men and young men open evenings 'til 9 in the Tel-Twelve Mall (Telegraph and 12 Mile in Southfield), Tech-Plaza Center (12 Mile and Van Dyke in Warren), and Tel Huron Center (Telegraph and Huron in Pontiac). Our downtown Pontiac store is open Friday evenings ’til 9. Osmun’s and Security Chargecards, Michigan or Midwest Bankards. THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1969 D—4 t<»™ anil country. Jacket of I Hiv< Wool tweed. Siaea 8 to 18. Panin of olive wool Iweed. ■^^/CAPITOl SAVINGS ~_UMN ASSOCIATION -_f"""T|W>|lll.|IWOT«p 18*0 • LANSIN8. MICHI8AN 75 W. Huron Pontiac ■Hi 338-7127 In New York City Students Chief Victims of Teacher Strike $30°° Fashion’t Leading Looka make the rampu* areite in the awinyirat clothe. around. Do you* college thinyin wide bell, lony tunica and aweatere. Mix and multiply for your own look. Our : aportawear department ia ready for thr big •22°° KDRATRDin •22°° BOBETTE SHOP 16 N. SAGINAW Robert*- Chart* Account* FE 2-6921 Michi/tam Bankard ^jjf Teaching little people to save ik a most important aspect of their early training. Start your children's accounts now ana let them make their own deposits! They'll take pride in watching the account GROW! Current Rate On Passbook Savings 1/0/ Current Rate Savings $5,000 6 months, minimum Orchard Ridge Expands j Business Curriculum Management development and j The completion of. this pro-technical secretary are two gram gives the students ah new programs to be offered this associate degree in applied fall to Oakland Community science and they can move on College students at the Orchard to a four-year program at a Ridge C am pus, Farmington four-year college. Township. ; Faitel said this is the first Students in the management program of its type at 00C. development curriculum will During the second year of the receive on-the-job training program, students will take related to the classroom work, part in a weekly seminar according to John R. Faitel,'directed by I960 THREE COLORS But before you go back to # Wiiikelman’s w S.S.Kresge Camera Mart . # Griswold Sporting Goods ’ # Shoe Box - # Bill "Petrusha and Sons 9 CMldren’s Shop W Sally Brent Cleaners Wrigley’s m Osmun’s Town and Country • BB Shop . t Jayson Jewelers Bedcwith Evans ll Sender’s • Golden Thimble • Cttnninghairis Drug Store live In dormitories or small i a housemother or family as children Are taught tp help 5 the family, meals and take cafe .other. .. '*r>’.V ■ .'V ourse, living with children who constant supervision, or at least CamphiU. She is anxi first Will .stop off il Pennsylvania to vis Ctimphill sites, before assignment inlrejaiid. Finally, just b nearly exhausted neighbor spotted stored in the cori Opened the door son! He was blue but -with the he] r ELIZABETH L. POST the Emily Post Institute rs. Post: Recentlywe were in-i private wedding for a preg-. Afterwards her parents had a On another occasion I receiving announcement for another be who expects, her baby, in (I hava girls of my inly do not believe in se having all this far* ■ old-fashioned? — Mrs. wedding a be an JULIUS RUDEL Tiwy twKajm Model displays newest thing in eye make-up, petal-like lashes made With artificial flower petals intermingled with real hair. They are hand made by Eylure and to burst into bloom, it takes two pairs,! one for above and one for underneath. MICHAEL, RABIN Horn# From Ireland finds Reward in Helping Handicapped IA/a vwi /> w A ^ n/it* a w By LINDA CABRAL This trip to Pontiac three years’after a wary eye, can try the nerves of even a W 1A ' 1 IB ■ 1 M 111 W\M AAA I J rhere must be something quite ex- she joined the staff in Aug. 19(6, isjbst practiced baby-sitter. But Kathy does not w V#wWV w By UNDA CABRAL There most be something quite extraordinary going on In the mind of a mentally retarded adult when he can say "l am proud of my handicap." Individuals associated With t h e CamphiU school for mentally handicapped persons really are “special” people. Just ask Katharine Widdifield, The daughter of the Rev. and Mrs. C. George Widdifield of (Ottawa Drive has recently returned from the CamphiU project in Glencraig, Northern Ireland where she has been Uving and working. "They are the most wonderful people," she smUes. "These individuals have dignity, warmth and uprigb'—*- ma| always found in “normal” i because of having to' live i handicaps,” she explains. A graduate of Pontiac Central High School, Katharine attended DePauw University, Greencastfe, Ind. for two years before realizing that she wanted to obtain a different perspective and to live in a different country. Word of the CamphiU project interested her because of the opportunity to Uve and work with natives of a foreign country. , "It had an exciting aspect, with, everyone working together, without a salary, to help out,” she said. ACCEPTED An appUcation to be a co-worker was accepted by the administrators of the school, so Katharine was off. She planned to stay just for a few months, as the expectation of working with mentally retarded individuals “didn’t seem Uke my cup of tea,” she relates. Skip Elaborate Wedding for Pregnant Bride Will ____...... vited to a private v... nant bride. Afterwards 1 reception. three months own) but I < cases such as the fare. Am I too M. C. 1 ■; ★ , a atos, Dear Mrs. C.: I agree that i “after the fact” should ‘ no elaborate spectacle. The pich,., ___, obviously pregnant bride in virginal white is ludicrous. : However, I do feel that these girls still have the right to make their weddings memorable and happy occasions. If they keep all arrangements simple, dress appropriately (no white gown and veil) and restrict their list to closest friends and famUy, they may well have a dignified ceremony and a reception with the t r aditional accompaniments—wedding “breakfast,” cake, toasts, etc, . Wedding announcements, whether the bride was pregnant at the time or not, make sense. Especially if the ceremony was very smaU, or secret, they serve to announce the marriage to all friends. By indicating the parents’ acceptance of the marriage, they also help the young cou-' pie to overcome what may have been a very trawnatic experience. Farm and Garden Unit (tomes New Officers Mrs. Ned Trissell has been elected president of Brookside branch, Woman’s National Farm and Garden Association. The recent meeting was held in the ■Bloomfield Hills home of Mrs. J. J. Turner. Mrs. TrisseU will be assisted in her duties by Mesdames: Sherwood Nye, vice president; H. J. HoUywood and Clifford F. Dick, secretaries and Harold A. Cousins, treasurer. This trip to Pontiac three years' after she joined the staff in Aug. 1966, is just her first trip back to her family home. Katharine Is obviously very impressed with the workings of the CkmphiU school. The program emphasises a warm, human interaction, .with “normal” adults living with, aa well as teaching, their mentally ‘handicapped students. • Youngsters are accepted hr the school which has facilities for children from 5 to 16 years of age. Their tuition'fee ^covers room and board and daily instruction. Children houses with the supervii The children are t Lor; i ' a wary eye, can try the nerves of even a practiced baby-sitter. But Kathy does not let their handicaps present a problem. s "After living with them 24 hours each , dqy, you, tend 'to forget that they are handicapped,” she observes. ,r'’ 1 V ". W 'W W After completing the CamphiU .three year course for teachers, Katharine.has her own. classes mid is especially* Interested in being able to share her interest in music with the children. ; Drama and music are both emphasized as valuable therapeutic, devices in the schpol. They give the children a feeling of accomplishment and also t h e of working together, Kathy i after a relaxing stay at home, *■*1 is right now overdue at "*■ riS anxious to return, but p off in New York and i visit the American. V returning to her KATHARINE WIDDIFIELD Famed N.Yi City Opera Director to Lead Meadow Brook Concerts Julius Rudel, distinguish# director of the New York City Opera,, will guest conduct the Detroit Symphohy Orchestra’s concerts at the Meadow Brook Festival Thursday,’Friday and Saturday, at 8:30-p.m., and Sunday a( 6:30 p.m. . ;..... W- W-.. .....W.,;T. Violinist Michael Rabin wilt be his soloist for the four performances. He will , play the Beethoven Concerto in. D Major Thursday, Friday, on a program, which includes Barber’s ^Overture to “The School for Scandal” and Schubert’s Symphony No. 9 in C Major (“The Great”). On Saturday, Sunday, the* all Tchaikovsky program will include the Violin Concerto in D Major' and the Senior Citizen$ Hear of Role in County “Oakland County and its Senior Citizens” will be the topic Wednesday when the Pontiac chapter No. 7 of the American Association of Retired. Persons meets at 1:30 p.m. at Community Services .Building on Franklin Boulevard. * W W W ■ George Grba and Carl O’Brien, Oakland County Supervisors, will be the guest speakers. Salad Smorgasbord Sponsored by League A salad smorgasbord and card party, sponsored by tile League of Catholic Women, will be held at First Federal Savings ’of Oakland on Atig. 20 at 12:90 p.m. . ft* Mrs. Joseph PoDina it . g eneral >; chairman.. ’ | J #1 *. ^ tk.l 1|wi§ yiv<'; ■■ Other cochairmen art Mrs. Gue Webster and Mrs: Albert SdKMMqtann and Mrs. Maurice.Fbmegan. Tickets will be availawe at the door. Freezers Could Become Tombs of Young Children By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: They say, “If you want to get the word around, tell a woman.” I agree, especially if that woman is Dear Abby'. ; Yesterday our four-year-old son disappeared suddenly. One minute he Was beside me in the kitchen and the next minute he was gone. I nearly went crazy looking for him in the yard, in and neighbor’s houses, searching ' with tears in my eyes and a ty throat. W lefore sundown I was and . hysterical when a I an old refrigerator mer of our .garage. He and out tumbled mv and practically lifeless^ dp of a quick-thinking neighbor aqd the fire department, the boy was revived, and thank God, now he is all right.' Abby, please tell: parents to keep discarded refrigerators LOCKED or turned toward, the wall so kids .can’t ofieti them. If anything had happened to that child Pd never have forgiven myhelfl . • ' » FOOLISH BUT LUCKY DEM FOOLISH BUT1 LUCKY: (And you certainly were!) I’ll run your letter at-the top of< my column with the suggestion that all parents REMOVE the .doors!! from stored ice boxes, refrigerators, Cabinets or other potential /’drills” for curious and adventuresome C “• w w * 'DEAR ABBY: Yesterday a neighbor of mine came over here with a collection of ciutiidvsnapshots he had taken over the mtintbs. I was shocked to see one of my hdsband — sound asleep in his lawn chair Witir his mouth wide open. It’s a terrible picture, Abby, and I ft see anything “funny” about it, but everyone who sees it thinks it is •hilarious. My husband had no knowledge that his picture was being taken since he was sleeping jt the time. Don’t yiu think this neighbor should surrender the picture and the negative to us? My husband is a lawyer. Do you think a letter on his. .business stationery would do the trick? ED’S WIFE , DEAR WIFE: R«n’t hurt. ftijujf W W DEAR ABBY). Some close friends of ours gave a “pot luck” dinner (meaning each couple a different dish for the whole gang|§lis their own bottle.) When all tijb.*‘ guests (also close friends) were seated to eat, the hostess came around to collect $1.50 from each couple to cover the cost of the roast beef, which was HER only contribution to the dinner. My husband and I were insulted at being “charged” $1.50 to eat at a friends’ home. We paid the $1.50, did not eat, and left early. We were later accused of having “bad manners.” WHO would you say had the bad manners? SUN VALLEY WWW DEAR SUN: The hostess. (P.S. I hope you gave her your “beef.”) " W "* w w For AUby’s booklet, “How to Have a Lovely Wedding,” send $1 to Abby, care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P. O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056. Carla Ann Augst, 24, of Edina, Minn., is engaged to marry Harold (Hap) LeVander, South St. Paul attorney and son of Minnesota Gov. Harold LeVander on Nov. 15. Miss Augst, a former Queen of the SnoWs of the St. Paul Winter Carnival, is the daughter of Rev. and Mrs. Norbert Augst of Rochester, Mijm. Symphony Nb. 6 in B minor (“Patiieti-que”)\ , Festival grounds will open two. hours before performance times for picnics and bpffetvserVic?. Tickets are available . at the Festival bdx^ffice.on.the grounds! ' at Hudson’s and Grinnell’s. AUj-'PimpMe, Carpeting INDOOR-OUTDOOR This is the outdoor carpet you can't tell from indoor carpet. Made of strong man-made fibers. Use it on patio or terrace ... in your family room . . kitchen . . . around the pbol . . Use it tmywhere that you * need * carefree beauty. Brought to. you. in six vibrating tweed, fade-: resistant colors. Yd. PRICED at The FLOOR SHOP r OZITE ^ INDOOR-OUTDOOR CARPETING $2t8l ^ OZITE 1 CARPETING foam back—T colors Cash and .Carry *38 CARPET TILE W Sq. Yd 6 Ft. Widths l2”x12” NO MONEY DOWN Up To Three YocrcTo Pay COMMERCIAL anti RESIDENTIAL CARPET! Installation by qualified mechanics! Phone 682-4421 FRONT DOOR PARKING Open Monday and Friday 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.; Tues., Wed., Thurs. A Sat. 9 A.M. to 8 P.M. Harmful Element Salt, chlorine and various mineral elements in the water can prove irritating to the eyes. To lessen possibilities of lr*l ritation or infection, avoid swimming under water with your eyes open. A new decongestant eye solution . will rapidly whiten eyes redded by swimming. Tins roMiAc myju, Monday, august n, m NR Mm s’-i. -. 4B “problem” perspiration solved ««i.r thousands will psrspin heavily An anttoeirapirant that really workat Solves underarm problems for many who had despaired of affoctlva help. Mliohum An t i-Perspi r an t keeps underarm* absolutely dry for thousands of grateful users, with complete sentiences to aormel sklA ana clothing. It will keep you drier then any ■nti-wetnese agent ever put in nn aerosol spray can! By any* body. This unusual formula from n trustworthy 66-year-old laboratory .is guaranteed to ■attsfy or dealer will refund Antl-Porspirant, liquid or MRS. C. B. BAILEY . MRS. 3. ANDERSON MRS. G. C. TRAYNOR MRS. C. L. WATTERS MRS. 3. 0. HARGRAVES MRS. R. O. ANDERSON , MRS. T. M. JOHNSON Area Brides Choose August Wedding MRS. J. D. KAMPSEN far that special dinner party, servo a combination of vanilla Ice cream and orange sherbet; pass an orange-flavored liqueur. a happy plaid In a bright brick color. The younger set will look abpHWd fresh in this pormaaent press Fortralfr PE 5-9955 /<7 Use Your Sacurity Chnrg* .Qpy or Michigan tankard St. Mary’s in the Hills Episcopal Church was chosen by Mary Ann Schleicher for her wedding to Charles Edward Bailey. .Their Saturday, afternoon ceremony was followed by i reception In the chiirch parlors. Joining them as they greeted guests were their parents,. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald 0. Schleicher of Milwaukee, Wis. and Mr. and Mrs. George H. Bailey of Private Street. ★ * *. Gowned In organza with reembroidered Alencon lace over taffeta, the bride was attended by her maid of honor, Deborah Dalton. * | * * On the esquire side, Thomas Bailey performed the duties of best man for the bridegroom. The couple are honeymooning in New York City. Anderson-Byers Deborah Gentgea and David Nutt led a bridal party of 10 for the marriage of Suzanne Kay Byers and Anderson. Pamela Mutter and Adam Gentges were flower girl and ring bearer, respectively, for the candlelight ceremony in Auburn Heights United Presbyterian Church. * * * The bride, gowned in Rochelle lace, carried roses. She Is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jack P. Byers-of Oakmont Street, Pontiac Township, Parents of the bridegroom are the Herbert Andersons of Stuart, Va. Following a reception in the Auburn Heights Boy'* Club, tho newlyweds departed for a northern Michigan honeymoon. Traynor-La Fontaine : A reception in Pine Knob Resort followed the evening wedding of Renee T. La Fo-taine and Gerald C. Traynor. The bride chose a gown of Rochelle lace on organza and carried a bouquet of roses and lily of the valley. Polly's Pointers Mirror Can Be Window Linda La Fontaine was maid of honor for her sister. They are the daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Roland La Fontaine of Monti-cello Street. - • ★ !k A Lawrence Traynor served his brother as best man for the ceremony Saturday in S t. Michael’s Catholic Church. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Gerald A. Traynor of North Johnson Avenue. The newlyweds are honeymooning in northern Michigan.] Watters-Perria Susan Kay Perrin carried n Bible with roses for her wedding Saturday to Carl Leo Watters. Their afternoon ceremony in Sunnyvale Chapel'' wit followed by • reception, also in the Chqw. Marcia Jane Perria attended her sister as maid of honor. Douglas Helzerman performed the duties of best man in the bridal party of 11. • ,*'★ ★ . ★ j The new Mrs. Watters chose a gown of peau de sole with Chantilly lace appliques. Seed Pearls accented the bodice and front panel of the#dress. Parents of the newlyweds are Mrs. Mary S. Perris of Airport road and Mr.and Mrs. LeRoy C. Watters of Webberville. Hargraves-Baker The bride chose a gown of silk organza with lace and seed pearl accents. She carried a bouquet of Stephanotis, roses and pompoms. ★ it it The bride’s sister, Debra Lynn Olsen attended her as maid of honor, Jan D, Anderson performed the duties of best The couple is honeymooning in Virginia. Johnson-Wyzgoski St. Benedict’s Catholic Church was the setting Saturday evening for the exchange of vows and Thomas Michael Johnson. by Mrs. Gilbert Martinez, the daughter of Mb and Mrs. Frank Wyzgoski of Smith Drive chose a slipper satin gown with Alencon lace inset. Daisies and Stephanotis Drive wore a fitted A-line dress with rose point lace accents. She carried roses. ■ ★ it it * The bride’s sister, Marsee and niece, Heather Irish, were flower girls. On tiie .esquire side, Robert VonBargen assisted as best urn. The son of Mrs, Keith Rosewell of Pleasant Drive and Kampsen of Walton Boulevard, and his bride, received guests at Jayson’s. Daly-Murphy An exchange of vows in a candlelight ceremony Saturday at St. Luke’s United Methodist Church, Rochester, united.Gail Ellen Murphy and Dennis Stanford Daly. Honor attendants, Sheila L. Murphy and Robert Hayward joined the newlyweds for a MRS. D. S. DALY with ivy comprised her bouquet, reception in Airway Lanes. DEAR POLLY - I always said I would never buy a house that did not have 6 window over the kitchen sink but, of course, that is what we did. One cannot ave everything and so many other things were desirable that I settled for it. I put a large mirror, about 23 inches in diameter, over the sink. It reflects the kitchen, dining area and, as it happens-, a window directly opposite so it almost seems like there is a window there. With the exception of having to look at myself, tills mirror really breaks the monotdny of dishwashing. —• MRS1. L.E.T. where they make such a mess? — HELEN DEAR POLLY -making or even Just putting on new slip covers, cut a piece of foam rubber sheeting (%- to Clinch thick) to fit the bottom of the chair or Sofa seat. Cut generously and push iqto all the crevices before fitting or putting oni the covers. This keeps them from clipping. Any remaining pieces of foam also are better than rolled material to keep the covers in place.-ANGELA DEAR POLLY - I want to tell Mrs. R. G. H. whose stair POLLY’S PROBLEM carpet is frayed along the PEAR POLLY — I hung a that she can coat* these edges beau tlful hand-embroidered white wool sweater to dry on an umbrella-type clothesline and it became stained in several places. Soaps for woolens have not cleaned It. What can I do? Also, bow can we keep spiders from nesting, in Aluminum window frames Let a* reupholster your furniture while you're away on va- SUMMER SALE! SAVE 35% to 45% on Reupholetering AU Workmmuhip Guaranteed 5 Yean EASY BUDGET TERMS or 90 DAYS CASH WILLIAM WRIGHT Furniture Makers and UphoUterert 270 Orchard lake * FE 4-0558 with mucilage. It lasts well, makes a neat edge and can be renewed when it wears off and the raveling^ start to show again.-rA~ DEAR READERS — I know those who have satisfactorily coated the baric edges or cut or frayed carpet with that popular all-purpose milky white glue and were most pleased with the results. - POLLY Double Feature at US AF Hospital HOLLOMAN AIR FORCE BASE, N.M. (AF) — It was an unusual day at' the. Holloman I hospital for Capt. Peter Cran-* * * 1 Wh. ttr ML -physician who. delivered Gilbert Martinez was best man L,™ ,an(L^?: their father’s birthday. young stewardess helped inflate escape chute and push passengers down it to safety. ' * ft. ‘4 Many of the 121 passengers rho escaped said they owned their lives to the grit, dark-haired hostess. When- only four passengers were left In the aircraft, Miss Harrison went.to help an elderly crippled woman and died beside her in the flames. The Londaon Gazette, the official Buckingham Palace bulletin, described her it "a very brave young lady who gave her Ufo in her utter devotion to duty.” PRE-INVENTORY WALLPAPER SALE ROOM LOTS ODD ROLLS IP Personal Service Always Custom Point Mixing ACME PAINT 3 N. Saginaw FE 2-3308 AGE SPOTS’ FADE THEM OUT leathered brown "Weathered b spots on ft» s ■ . . « your hands and face: tell the mac?- «vvrihij^owajriOLWri&sa«p ALL PERMANENTS 395 te 5?5 1— New Lustre Shampoo 2— Flattering Hair Cnt 3— Lanolin Neutralising 4— Smart Style Setting NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY HOLLYWOOD BEA1M - Open Morniage at 8 AJL ' .YEN. Saginaw Over Bapley Mkt. 338-7660 5905 DIXIE HIGHWAY THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, AUGUST II, I960 . f^en,es Gop of Generations E—-8 », :N.Y. « -Diana Fairchild and her mother, Mra. M. Lannl Ricardi, are both freshmen students in Monroe Community College this year* *'I put it of! for a long time, but one day I decided it was time to start" says Mrs. Ricardi.- “My five children are grown now and I want to have something absorbing to do. I'd like to be a teacher,” ,• St; ft . i, 18, also wants to be a teacher, but she draws the fine ' “ rgarten. “I ‘ the patience. I'd like to teach older children," she sayt; Wrap linens that you do not use frequently in either blue tissue or blue plastic to keep them from turning yellow. nylons Mr mod wear.. litnfereed heels end toes. , I MICRO / nude heel f 2 PAIRS $1.50 tissue sheers MIRACLE NOBIND TOPS, 0 dress sheers Wim a. .. and heel reinforcements. w>*iy JNvumode tKosierjf. Shops 82 N, .Saginaw, Linda Kay Carpenter and Kerry F. Horton trill wed in May, 1970. Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. David Carpenter of Lakeville Road and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Horton of Seymour Lake Road, both Oxford Township. NEW YORK (UP1) - Parts did it. New York did it. Designers in bothdcapitals dipped into nostalgia for their new fall and winter collections, many of the big p a m e i hearkening back to the 1930’s, some even further back. Why .such a sharp reversal in fashion in the space age when man has walked on the moon and is shooting doseup pictures of Mars? Shouldn’t women’s clothes reflect instead of looking back to old ones? jk * ★ One of the several bright young designers in the field figures there are seVeral reasons, but .the major one is that the feminine World is aching for some elegance, for luxury. And the late 1930’s of Teaches School Jor 8 Decades STERLING, Neb. (AP) * Mrs. Rosa Clark, 95 years old, has taught Sunday school for 80 years, most recently at the Sterling Methodist Church where she teaches older women. She started when she was 15 at her parents’ urging. “I was afraid to try," she recalls, “but I began and once you start.it gets easier." ★ ★ Hr She never quit, continuing through her marriage to Knox County abstractor Phil Clark, and after becoming the mother of four children and later a grandmother. Give that new dustpan a coating of • wax and see how easily the dust slides off when emptying. Fashions Capture Nostalgia and Style fashion were full of both, says the designer, Prestem Smith. “We’ve already had the futuristic, the modern," said Smith, whb comes - from Memphis, Tenn. “Courreges and Ungaro, both highly successful style leaders in Paris, Married in South Susan Elaine Heatherly became the bride of Spec. 4 Derryl J. Payne at a recent ceremony in Fayetteville, N. C. Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. George T. Heatherly of Simpson Drive, Avon Township, Mrs. Richard C. Dodd, also of Simpson Drive, and Vernon A. Payne of Warren. gave them to women. But a lot of women can’t wear that type of tough, hard clothes.” Smith feels that people want the contrast between elegance and the “streamlined” way of today’s living, You’ll see us doing the same in a new interest in the arts and literature of another day,” he says. In fashion, the throwback is to a whole look of softness, of figure flattering fashions, of the cardigans in sweaters and . of fabrics like pannC velvet. ★ ★ ★ Smith, who studied at the Parsons School of Design, New York, is chief of design for PAB Ltd., which manufacture the whole range of women’s ready-to-wear at moderate prices. “It’s much more fun to design for this market," he said in an | interview, "to give women style 1 at a price. Pen Provides Out for Violator CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. (AP} - As Patrolman Bernard Gloster prepared to write a speeding ticket for Mrs. Matha Davis, his pen went dry and he had to borrow one from Mrs. Davis. Mrs. Davis appeared before Judge Riley Graham. When the judge heard that Gloster had to borrow Mrs. Davis’ pen to write the ticket, he dismissed the speeding charge. Duplicate Bridge TUESDAYS YMCA Bridge Club, 1 7:30 p.m., in YMCA. All § bridge players may at- 1 tend. Bonneville Junior DupU- | cate Bridge Club, 7:45 1 p.m., The Pontiac Mall. | All beginners and inter-. | mediate players may at- 1 tend. ' • I SATURDAYS 8 Bonneville Duplicate 1 Bridge Club, 8 p.m., The § Pontiac Mall. All bridge j players may attend. 1 Not only do Comfy’s handsome new Hollywood bed covers have the top decorator look of leather, but smudges from pets and children wipe off with just a damp sponge. A hidden virtue is the nonskid foam lining which means that once on, the cover stays put. Designed to blend with all your furnishings; the fresh color combinations include avocado with lime, sky with officer blue and gold with brown. The attractive vinyl cover, 36 in. by 75 in., is at your favorite store. 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AVAILABLE IN 30 BEAUTIFUL NATURAL SHADES AAADE OF THE FINEST MODACRYUC FIBRE, PERAAALON, IT LASTS FOREVER ... / ONE MONTH LATER - B--4 TilB PONTIAC PRKSS, MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1969 parlors. ‘ ■ ' ■ . jfe* sj: The daughter of Mr. and 'Mr^iAJbtylSfk Krueger of Bald Mountain Road, Pontiac Township was gowned In satin a^li&.''tpiia carried carnations, roses and 8Uphty*tyitf’! The son of Mr. and Mrs. C«&vMinr«f West Columbia Street and his bride are honey-mooning in northern Michigan. nothing to do when the biggest SAVED MONEY The Huppis, he’s 31, die’s 25, say they'll use the money they saved, approximately $3)5, toward their tuition at Portland Community College this fall. The couple also made news last spring. They were both enrolled at the college and, brought their year-and-a-balf-old son Tom, to school with them because they couldn't afford a babysitter, MRS, RICHARD C. MILLS MRS. MICHAEL W. MINCHER Preceded by maid of honor Shelley Smith, Linda Kay Carpenter was escorted to the altar of St. Trinity Lutheran Church for her marriage to Daniel Walter Creger. Twins Margaret and Michael Gabert were flower girl and ring bearer, respectively, in the candlelight ceremony. William SayleS attended the eon of the J. V. Cregers of Howell Street as best man. ★ ★ ★ Carrying a cascade of carnations and rosebuds with ivy, the daughter of the John Carpenters of Clayburn Street wore a Chantilly lace gown. The newlyweds were feted with a reception at White Lake Inn, Jackson. In a gown of organza with peau d’ange lace accents Linda Ann Leonard was married to John Gunther Hoagland. The afternoon ceremony in Saint Vincent de Paul Catholic Church was followed by a reception in Elks Lodge of Pontiac No. 810. '< it it it The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John F. Leonard of North Edith Street chose Mrs. Larry Hansen as her matron of honor. The son of Mr..and Idrss Edwin H. Hoag-land of Glengarry Circle, Bhwmfleld Township, asked his father to assist him as best MRS. JOHN G: HOAGLAND MRS. DANIEL W. CREGER Woman Takes Negative Outlook About Problem Meanwhile, she should continue her church, social and recreational activities, both involving her children and also the age group to which she herself belongs. .Florida so we could start out i still unmarried, io she is al-inotion of what would happen ifirole in meeting eligible women anew* v ready ahead of them. she should obtain a divorce, above the middle-age bracket. * ★ ★ And among the married, tens She thinks she would quickly in this loose moral age/they I "I keep busy in the church Lf thousands of wives brood and [And a congenial mate andjfind it so easy to be led both, activities big still find many'cry bemuse they have never then resume a happy wedded gastric as well as erotic cal- I lonely hours, even with my had any children. life. 'ories, without needing to buy a daughters at home. I Yet Donna has three daugh- ★ ★ * 'wedding ring, that they lose “When they grow up and jters ^ whom she can be proud J Not so, for the Odds are very much of their motivation for leave me, then I know I . shall Shci is thus better off on those great that she’d never find a re-marriage, be much more lonely. 'two countsthan at least 10,000,- second husband! ’ j ★ ★ ★ * * j* 000 other adult women, who In our Scientific Marriage r Donna were enmeshed in So should. I get a divorce? I probably Jump at the Foundation, after women pass a torrid romance With a suit* am like Shakespeare s Haiwet chance to be in her shoes this the age of 40, we find three or able man who was pressing her for I waver in Mile indecision very minute! . four times as many female to marry him, then her situa- as to whether I should get a * * * registrants as we have men. tion would be radically differ- divorce or not file suit for one. Regarding divorce, insanity That doesn’t mean women ent. PSYCHOLOGY is usually considered a valid outnumber men in those upper QUt no such m»n is yet on her Donna is taking the negative ground for an annulment among age brackets by that great a social horizon. Therefore, she outlook about her problem. Catholics or a divorce among figure, has plenty of time to consider So I told her to reverse her Protestants. No; it indicates that men are a divorce when she really finds viewpoint and count her many But Donna has a mistaken sluggish about taking an active a need for it. not protrude. Safety habit! DOLLY NiWBINKS, Mgr. A dream come true... a perfect hairdo just a minute away* In one minute, put DD your imracle fiber wig and with a flick of the briish ©r.corobt fashion it into one Df many stunning sty lees. Permanentlycurjed, never requifOsset-ting, tapered back on perfect-fitting stretch cap. Cashable in shampoo and water., Available in 27 shades. | P f BEAUTY SHOP FE 8-1343 42 Saginaw St. No Appointment. Necessary AAOMTCiOAAERVi WARD Mamma Has Baby While Dad Assists PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) - A Portland tree surgeon and his wife delivered their baby at home recently to avoid “the hospital assembly line.” Warren and Susan Huppi read all the obstetrics books they could find. Then, as fin day approached, they scrubbed and sterilised the bedroom of their log home. ♦ .★ e Little Melissa Huppi was bom five days ago in the four-poster bed Susan had carved with her wood sculpting chain saw. “We had no problems during labor and delivery,” said Warren. “Except, I got awfully nervous.” “Having a baby is a wonderful thmg,” said Susan. “Warm and I didn’t want to go through the hospital assembly Warren and Susan Huppi still use a dresser drawer as a crib for four-day-old Melissa, whom they delivered themselves in their log home in Portland, Ore. He is a tree surgeon, she is a wood sculptress. Pennsylvania Gets Lead Out in Safety Step HARRISBURG, PA. (UPI) -Pennsylvania has taken steps to reduce the possibility of lead poisoning in children — a hazard which threatens the young nationally. Since most lead poisoning occurs as a result of eating chipped paint, standards of the state health department now provide that “when interior painted surfaces are readily accessible to children, paints shall contain less than on#>per cent lead by weight. it it it !,. Previously, the standards specified only the use of “non-toxic” material. Wesley E. Gilbertson, deputy state health secretary for environmental protection, said a study of lead poisoning in children conducted over a lb-year period by the Philadelphia Public Health Department showed a total of 889 cases in the city that resulted deaths, predominately in the pre-school age group. Gilbertson pointed out that many of the children who survived were subject to complications, including mental retardation resulting from brain damage. Past Lives On With Music PIPESTEM, W.Va. - (AP) “The mountain culture is slowly slipping away. The old fiddlers and banjo players will die and is nobody to replace them.” David Morris, at 25, sees the encroachment of modern America as stealing something irrepinceable. • ’111 35 or 40 year there probably will be no real mountain musicians left,” he said. So Morris, with last weekend’s Appalachian South Folk Festival, is trying reverse the process. * it .it More than 400 people came to hear authentic old time mountain music from the fiddles, .banjoes, guitars and dulcimers of 30 mountainmen from five ‘When you’ve lost you culture, you’ve lost something you can never replace,” Morris, a medic in Vietnam last year and master-of-ceremonles and chief organizer of Hie festival fids year. By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE J-564: Donna J., aged 42, is distraught. Dr. Crane,” she began, “I need some advice quickly. ’Though not divorced, 1 am the same as a widow! “During our years of marriage, my husband has been in a mcn-al institution Rr. CRANE for the past 10 consecutive years. My 3 daughters barely remember their father and the psychiatrists tell me his case is hopeless. 4 ‘My family doctor has advised that I get a divorce. My clergyman urged us to move to Grey cloth is cotton cloth in a rough, unfinished state. Sharp Cushion Cover a new steel wo scouring pad with a scrap of velvet or satin and you have a wonderful pincushion. The steel wool keeps painty from rusting. FOR BEAUTIFUL RESULTS YOU SHOULD TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR SUMMER SPECIAL PERMANENTS ‘So should I get a divorce? 1 am like Shakespeare’s Hamlet for I waver in futile indecision as to whether I should get a divorce or not file suit for one.” PSYCHOLOGY Donna is taking the negative outlook about her problem. I told her to reverse her viewpoint and count her many blessings. ’ * - * it For example, nearly 5,000,000 women above the age of 21 are Tope Cut Pattern Often the right and wrong sides of a- material will look almost alike. To save time when sewing, put a tiny piece of transparent tape on the wrong side of each pattern piece after you have cut it from tile doth. kPtetr imisfu **1 $ BEAUTY SALON PRESENTS ... a unique summer revival kit fromLaMaur The summer did great things for you, but not for your hair. La Maur conies to the rescue with its new conditioner and body, wave .. . TEXTRA. For added body, greater manageability, and improved texture, take advantage of the Textra ensemble today.' Textra Ensemble • TEXTRA PERMANENT WAVE • TEXTRA CONDITIONER • COMPLETE WITH CUT s12so THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST li, 1969 In an CC135 C Jst strato-tanker: part of a comploto, airborno _____________________command ayatam. intricate communications network covers the world, including B52s in Vietnam. Command system extends to bomb preparation ' OMAHA, Neb. (AP)—Fifty feet under ground or 50,000 feet above, somebody is always minding the store at Strategic Air Command Hdqtrs. at Offutt AFB just south of here. In SAC’s famed command post, three floors below ground, is virtual city exists under a concrete roof thick enough to protect it against all but a direct hit by a nuclear bomb. Within this underground city is the nerve center controlling 80 to 90 per cent of the free world’s striking power. In time of war it could be sealed off against airborne contamination and occupants could safely live and work for weeks. n ; In the evexst’tfaus.^liltn^^'in>^'v^ ft named only Reps. I the 1979elections. Clark MacGregor of Minnesota* * * * and William V. Roth of. They also know s a f e Delaware, however. Republican congressional But in Republican circles the I districts may become highly names pf other GOP House I competitive and potential losses members heard as possible to the Democrats result when senate candidates include : an incumbent retires or decides,Reps. william C. Cramer, of to seek another office. 'Florida, F. Bradford Morse of TOUGHER JOB Massachusetts, Donald W. On paper, Republican cam- Rea*Ie Michigan, Peter H. B. paign managers face t h e Frelinghuysen of New Jersey, tougher job in trying to pick up °f 1 M<3tiC2’ 30 more seats to win control of Andrews or Thomas S. the House than to gain seven in gW» ^ North Dakota Taft Jr. of Ohio, William E. * At iTt WTAKF BT0Ck 0f Tenne8See- Ge0r8e , allai siAKc, Bush of Texas, Laurence J.1 All 43$ of the House seats are Burton of Utah, John Wold of at stake next year. Thirty-four Wyoming, and Thomas J . of the 100 senate seats will be Meskm of Connecticut. h°! WIDE MARGINS Democrats Most of these Republicans] House members are elected were elected last year by 60 peri .___:________ ' cent or more of the vote to their | districts. Roth, Brock, Foreman Mansfield Eye? ^ Resignations by / incumbents! Nixon-Like Trip already have caused trouble fori , the GOP this year. In special to Southeast Asia elections, Democrats took over; the seats won last November by WASHINGTON (AP)-Senate Secretary of Defense Kelvin R Democratic Leader Mike Mans-I^- who had polled 64 per field of Montana said Saturday of «« vote in ius Wisconsin he is considering a trip to South- ®str,cL and by James F. Bat-east Asia during the congres- t*n> who resigned to become a sional recess scheduled to start federal judge after collecting 68; Wednesday. per cent of the vote in his But Mansfield told a reporter Montana district, he probably won’t decide until* The GOP is now worried! Wednesday whether to make the about losing another special trip. election Sept. 30 to fill the i * * * j vacancy caused by the death of Asked if he .would follow thejRep. William H. Bates, R-Mass. route taken by President Nixon (Bates was reelected with 66 per] recently, toe senator replied cent of the vote in November “yes and no,” but he declined to While President Nixon polled give details pending his final de-only 37 per cent to that con-1 cision. gressional district. Nixon visited the Philippines, So the GOP campaign Thailand, Indonesia, Vietnam, stragetists are working hard on India and Pakistan before stop-j plans to not only hold what is ping off to Romania on the way {already owned by. Republicans, back to the United States. i but to increase the total. SAVE MONEY ON USED . . AUTO PARTS Now The Health Spas designed with you. in m,indl The finest Spas available ANYWHERE! ENJOY ENTIRE CUE FACILITIES - AT NO EXTRA COST mM&i FAC,LITIES F0R MEN AND W0MEN ’0PEN10110 TRIM « SLIIVS (J OVER 350 LOCATIONS COAST TO COAST AND WORLD WIDE E»—7 THE PONTtAC PRESS, MONDAY. AUGUST II, lflflfp ( By JAMES PHILLIPS / LANSING (AP) - With funds assured to complete plans and begin construction of a new! state capitol, Gov. William | Milliken can expect another heated round of debate on what titutes architectural cellence. Plans that were unveiled earlier this year for the proposed capitol were greeted with much derision by legislators U S. Is Considering MIRV Moratorium WASHINGTON (AP) - The United States plans to sound out the Soviets on the possibility of suspending development of the most advehoed type of multi-pie-warhead nuclear missiles in an effort' to arrest the arms rafee. Discussion of a moratorium deployment of such weapons on both sides could be prevented it would be a major step toward getting a permanent arms limitation. Deployment of multiple warhead missiles is already a fact, pt least on the American side, and represents an advance in on MIRVs—multiple independ- the arms race beyond the ear-emly targeted reentry vehicles Her development of antiballistic —is high on the U. S. agenda for j missiles which the Russians ret prospective arms-control talks jportedly began installing sever-between the United States and,al years ago. Russia, officials said Saturday. ^ United States now has 28 \ * * * I Polaris submarines each They consider it a matter of equipped with 16 AS missiles loaded with three warheads per missile. These are known as MRVs, multiple re e n try vehicles. They are designed to hit a target area in a cluster. According to Defense Department informants, .when the Soviets reportedly began Work on antiballistic missile powerful enough to destroy a cluster of w a r h e a d s approaching a target, this, country came up with the idea of independently targeted warheads to get away from the cluster pattern. attitude toward the I atmosphere of the arms-control moratorium and the general j talks. Heated Debate Expected M/ain Over Proposed New Capitol News Analysis such as Sen. Harvey Lodge, R-Waterford, who said the proposed structure looked like “oil tanks at Gary.” CALLED eyesore Others were equally adamant that the proposed capitol was no group of' persons to countedi Partialjy/ because of t h ei however, was\that former Gov. balance the criticism w i t h criticism,' a 21-member com- George Romney had a select ecstatic notices. »’ mittee will review plans in an | group of persons also review _— effort to ensure that the pro- pians of the architects, posal new capitol would live uP thumbs to expectations. - r ' . . A. . . * *__ They turned thumbs down on The committee will consist of several desl8ns before the mos‘ Milliken, hoover, defended the proposed design and said he like it because “form followed function.” * ★ + Millikan's endorsement, however, could not1 be called a rave review — and that precisely was what was wrong with the original plans. Black Manifesto Called an Echo of Marx's Theory DETROIT (AP) - A Baptist leader has characterized the Black Manifesto — which demands $500 million in reparations from white churches — as merely an echo of the Communist manifesto of Karl Marx. Dr. Joseph Jackson of Chicago, president of the National Baptist Convention, made the comparison in Detroit where he addressed the Wolverine Station Missionary Baptist Convention. * * • Jackson s a If the 6 million-member organization he heads is seeking “to achieve first-class citizenship through working as one big family through the framework of the Constitution." The Black Manifesto was drawn up by the National Black Economic Development Conference. There are- 10,000 Catholic elementary schools educating some 4,082,027 pupils U.S. the governor, five members of each house and ten persons appointed by Milliken. The governor expects' to name the members shortly. * * * “The purpose of this committee is to recommend a plan for the state capitol to the legislature to assure “esthetic appearance and artistic excellence,” Milliken said as he signed the bill Friday. What he failed to point out, recent proposal was made public. Some consider the important question to be whether the 21-member committee will have the power to hire a new architect to design the structure if It feels it is warranted. it ★' A The new building, of course, will not please everybody . But hopefully the committee will have selected a design that has ecstatic backers to temper the expected criticism. "YOUR HEALTH" SEVEN DANGER SIGNALS , 1. Recurring headache* j. Nervous tendon and/ 2. Neck pain or ‘'crick" or distiness 3. Grating and popping 6. General body muscle noise when fuming tension h#ad 7. Pain between ' 4. Backache or leg pain thoulder blades WARNING If any of these symptoms persist CALL YOUR CHIROPRACTOR Dr. H. H. Alexander 1028?ori^Ave!^E?01U urgency because successful deployment of MIRVa-and the consequent escalation of toe arms mce—is estimated to be less than a year away. A major problem now is that tho Soviet government still has ndt agreed to a time and place to start toe discussions, known ad Strategic Arms Limitation EARLY AUGUST President Nixon sent word to Moscow through Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin two months ' ago that his administration— which had been reviewing its global military and related weapons policies—would be ready for the talks by toe end of August. By the end of July he suggested they open between then and Aug. 15. i,T' ' w dr U. S. officials expected a reply by late July but none has been received. Until a few days ago Dobrynin was understood to be planning to return to Washington by Aug. 10 but the latest word is that be will not be bade until late next week or perhaps the following week. . t Soviet Foreign Minister An-drei Gromyko made clear in a speech last month that the So-Wet Union intends to go into the talks, andU- S. officials are baffled by toe delay in agreeing to a date and indicating a preference. tor. the place. Geneva, Vienna, and Helsinki have been mentioned as possibilities. Thfre has also been some speculation that the Soviets might like to hold the initial round in Moscow. * ! J : ★ .★ • ■ the formal aim of toe talks, U S, offidals say, would be to try to negotiate in agreement to end toe nuclear anna race by freezing nuclear weapons systems at their present levd, since each Of the great powers has the ability to impose devastating destruction on toe other. Beyond that, U. S. officials express hope it would be possible to go on to some reduction in the; strategic nudear weapons stockpiles.. Hw moratorium Ml MIRVs would be a temporary arrangement as conceived by policymakers here, It jrould mean eadi side would take some risk thit the otiter might find some way tp I* ahead with research and development undetected since each'would he dependent cuon miu „ we naa “PS&yte””"” L. My tested JrZ, 11 PTnprt« would be«possible for each would he small since the mora-[^ !“°’" tL* — torium&ld be temporary and moratonum was b *.? - I of Girls Curfew says it has re- ing bid in arms reduction talks, | Guy Edwards of 595 Arthur. the Yellowstone Park ’A A. I manager of the Pic' way .. ... T. Mansfield said he is satisfied Shoestore, 746 N. Perry, told|Co-to aboltah the,1 a m- tomorrow at the. Mother “I’m disappointed at the de- SISTER ROSALIE OMANS „ 5? I lay,” Mansfield said. “I hope it House in Monroe with isn’t a stall on the part of he die grounds / at St. Mtfyslg^ UnIon „ Cemeteryand^abible vigil will and ^ John ^ be held 7.15 tonight. man Coop)er both prominent in the fight against President Nix* Surviving are his w 1 f e , two grandchildren, Margaret; two sons, Thomas great-grandchild, and James, both of Pontiac;! .. _ , .. u two daughters, Verna and! Mrs. Frank YanHorn Carol, both of Pontiac; his mother, Mrs. Maggie B. Crump; five brothers, Including James of Pontiac; and four sisters. Benjamin H. Prunty Service for former, Pontiac resident Benjamin H. Prunty, 69, of Dearborn will be 1 p.m. , Wednesday at Lesney Funeral Army Plans to Deactivate 9th Division WASHINGTON (AP) — The ■ 9th Infantry Division, reactivated for Vietnam service and Service for Mrs. Frank Mary Elizabeth VanHorn, 66, of 6500 Prairie Lawn, Waterford Township, will be 1 p.m. Wednesday at Coats Funeral Home, Waterford Township, with burial in Perry Mount, Park Cemetery. Mrs. VanHorn died today. Surviving are her husband Man Sought in Murder Try Pontiac police today are nnri nn* searching for a gunman who seriously wounded a city youth late last night. Listed in fair condition Pontiac General Hospital today Ronald Ramlg, 18, of 720 Melrose. Ramlg was shot once in his side about 11:30 p.m. in the parking lot of the Keg Canteen, 84 Auburn. Surviving are her mother, Mrs. Hazel Omans of Pontiac; five brothers, including Joseph, Donald, Russell and Edward, bll of Pontiac; and two sisters, Mrs. Joseph Taunt and Mrs. Ruth Gouveia, both of Pontiac. In her last post she was provincial superior of the northeast province of the Sisters, Servants of the Immaculate Heart of tj,e negotiations begin. He was unable to talk to officers last night, but police i believe the gunman was waiting two sons, Morris F. of Daggett-in the back seat of Ramig’s car and Marvin L. of Pontiac; two land shot him When he returned daughters, Mrs. Roy Bone and!to the car. Mrs. Gordon Dean, both | -------...... Waterford Township; two .. ... , _... ,. ...,•> sisters, Mrs. Lee King of Pop- MlSS Bikini Will tiac Township and Mrs. Martha - Tambo of Pontiac; ioi Groce Princeton grandchildren; and five great-; grandchildren. , LONG BRANCH, N.J. (AP) _. , .. June Fletcher, 18, one of the 90 Mn. Charles Mann Igirls who will be Princeton Uni- ROMEO - Service tor Mrs.|^£sjJjMgJj; Charles (Lydia) Mann, 75, 0f 15“the city s title of Miss hH Fletcher, a Long Beach T resident, won a $500 prize and tor Funerals with burial in t^y ta ^ Sunday contest part of the city’s summer festi- ^am^n of some of the war’s; Romea cemetery, toughest fighting, is being dis- Mrs. Mann died yesterday. ,| Surviving are her huBband; five daughters, Mrs. Bernice Bennett, Mrs. Marceline Hicks and "Mrs. Beulah Burns, all of Flint, Mrs. Genevieve Hudson df Jackson and Mrs. Ruby Payne of Romeo; one sister, Mrs. Etta Atwell of Lapeer; four brothers; 18 grandchildren; and 22 great-grandchildren. Henry A. Neidig CLARKSTON — Service tor former resident Henry A Neidig, 62, of Stone Park, 111. will be 2 p.m. Wednesday at Prignano Funeral Home Melrose Park, 111., with burial in Mount Emblem Cemetery, Elmhurst, 111. Mr; Neidig died yesterday. He was a construction worker. Surviving are his wife, Margaret; two daughters, Mrs. Russel Fox of Clarkston and Miss Leona Neidig of Illinois; two' sons, John of Illinois and Paul of Arkansas; and nine grandchildren. Mrs. George A. Sutton BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP Service for Mrs. George A. (Hazel) Sutton, 76, of 2450 Emerson will be 11 a.m. -tomorrow at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home, Pontiac, with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery, Pontiac.. Mrs. Sutton died Saturday. She was a membr of the First Congregational Church at its Colonial Group, the Pontiac About 1.5 million of Peru’s 121 Jury Club and the Tuesday Musical group. Surviving are one son, Max of Bloomfield Hills, and t w o grandchildren. The Army has announced plans tor the immediate deactivation of the 9th, many of whose troops already are returning from Vietnam. ♦ . ♦ The Pentagon said the action follows budget cuts ordered by the Nixon administration. Savings of $40.4 million were estimated for the fiscal year which began July 1. The division’s 2nd Brigade, recently returned from Vietnam, is being deactivated at Ft. Lewis, Wash. The 1st Brigade, originally scheduled for pullback to Hawaii, will be eliminated instead. WILL STAY Troops of the remaining 3rd Brigade will stay in Vietnam but under a new, as yet un-I determined, unit designation. - The Pentagon said the net ef-‘ feet will be a drop of about 6,000 “ men in over-all Army strength, t in addition to a previously esti-| mated 13,000-man reduction as 1 part of the cutback in Vietnam. Loss of the 9th will leave the Army with the equivalent of 19 active divisions. it it ★ The 9th Infantry, nicknamed the ‘Did Reliable,” was .reactivated in February 1966 and has been operating mainly in Vietnam’s Mekong Delta. The division was credited with killing about 2,000 enemy troops during the February 1968 Tet offensive. val program. I’s Safeguard missile defense plan, said in interviews mat negotiations should begin.* soon to forestall any new cycle in arms competition. Cooper said he did not think Safeguard approval would interfere with the opening of talks with the Russians,, but that ft could complicate matters -once with the administration’s position on the projected arms talks. ‘The only fault I’d find is that it has taken an awfully long time.” The Montana senator noted that Soviet Ambassador Anatoly F. Dobrynin had been expected back in Washington in mid-July, but his return has been delayed by illness. * ★ * Nixon sent word two nionths go that his administration would be ready for negotiations by the end Of August. He later suggested they open by Aug. 15.' Mary at Monroe. BORN IN PONTIAC Sister Rosalie was born ’and raised in Pontiac and graduated St. Frederick’s High School. She entered the Immaculate Heart of Mary order in 1931. In her 38 years as a member of the order she taught at St. Mary of Redford, Saint Mary of Akron; Epiphany and St. Matthew in Detroit; Sacred Heart of Dearborn; St. Stephen of Port Huron; Immaculata of Detroit; Sacred Heart of Roseville; and t; Martin of Detroit. ★ ★ f From 1964 until 1968 Sister Rosalie served as teacher and principal of Holy Cross School in Marine City. A Sister Rosalie Scholarship Fund is being formed to which memorial tributes may be sent. As of 1965, the U.S. was using an average of about 310 billion gallons of water a day for each person, an increase of abottt 15 per cent since 1960. 1 understand the ] United States is urging the commencement of talks,” Mid the Kentucky Republican. “We’ve had no response from the Russians as to the dates when they would begin.” “Somebody’s got to speak up, somebody’s got to act,” said Mansfield. “I look to the President to redouble hiS efforts to see if we can get, these talks started." Mansfield expressed concern about development of new mis- les with multiple warheads. U.S. officials My ' they are planningtto sound out the Soviet Union on the possibility of a moratorium.on development of that weapoh, called MIRV-muitiple independently-targeted re-entry vehicles. “My great worry is that we might develop an act-react pattern which would further build this mad momentum,’* Mansfield said. Former, Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey made a similar statement yesterday in A police two men entered the'for «U female employes, store about 9 p.m. One man, wielding a pistol, fold Edwards to empty his pockets and empty the store’s cash register, according to police. Moments later, another gunman carrying a sawed-off double-barrel shotgun fold other store workers to empty their pockets. . - The group was formed from among'the. company’s 1,975 seasonal workers, mostly college students. ‘We are adults having attained the age of 18 years or alfove,” said the petition to thp company, which operates hotels and other concessions within the The two holdup men fledipark. The company -said the together, Edwards told police. Iipatter was under study. Wine-Drinking Contest Results in Death of Gl GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) -Authorities Mid a soldier who in Greensboro to attend a wedding died Sunday several hours after a drinking contest in which he consumed three bottles of wine. A medical examiner said Pvt.' Joseph E. Gallardo, 21, of York City was killed by the volume of alcohol in his body, h ★ . ★ Gallardo and five other Midlers stationed at Ft. Bragg, N.C., had weekend passes to attend a wedding. - At a postwedding party, the victim and another soldier decided to see who could drink the most wine. Police said Gallardo reportedly drank more than three bottles of wine and then went to a bedroom to sleep. Others inthepaf-ty discovered the body about five hours later. ENDURING MEMORIAL We are specialist* in fully , guaranteed monuments sculptured from Select Barre Granite. Monument* .. • • -from $195 Marker*....* • . .Itow W® Monuments INCH MEMORIALS, INC. 864 N. Perry 355*6931 fEARING AID CENTER FIDELITY. SAU LEAm mTRMEm \ • CRSTOM MESS WE YOUR Ml Lilt TO IIM8VE YOUR UN0ERSTAN0INC. n* eve suss mbs ?/ • HOSPITAL a CLINIC • MESCRIHIORS flTTEI • BATTERIES £ ACCESSORIES A CIST0S SOLOS TH0S.B. APPLETON - 332-3052 CERTIFIED BY SOCIETY OF > million inhabitants, or more than 12, per cent, are han-’ dicapped by poor physical, or mental health. Insurance Claims A part of every Donelson-Johns serv- ' ice is to assist the family to complete the necessary forms for submission to insurance companies to obtain life , insurance settlements." iIPk&nt Federal 4-4511 «Pmlcinq ^ On Our ‘Pnmiutt S||||||5g 996 WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC BILL PETRUSHA & SON'S OFFICIAL RCA COLOR CLEARANCE More Than 200 Color TV Sets to Choose From 2 YEARS PICTURE TUBE WARRANTY 1 YEAR PARTS WARRANTY • Plus FREE Home Trial OUR OWN 90-DAY SERVICE AT NO EXTRA CHARGE -\ NOW—At an All-Time Low Price! Big Scrasa 23” 60L8R for th* Entire Family Giant 23" Diagonal, 295 Square Inoh Picture Automatic Chroma Control Stablllzaa Color Intanalty Solid State UHF Tunar • New VlataVHFTunar Official Clearance Prlca. SPECIAL CLEARANCE PRICE QQQ09* ’ Rollabout Stand . wSBF SB WBMr Optional, Ben* OTHER COLOR TV MODELS PRICED', FROM *2S9. EASY TERAAS BIG 23” COLOR TV C0HS0LE SPECIAL ClEAUi^E PRICE RCA BIG 16” Compare Compare the Price! SPECUL MM8 CLEARANCE PRICE **** JL POBTULE! Other Models from 7L9S PLENTY OF FREE PARKIN TEL-ilURON SHOPPING CENTER — H . 1550 Union Lake Road, Union Lakp 303-6286 36 MONTHS TO PAY The ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL \ Model AZ-ObO mm' OPEN 1§£RY NIGHT WJ ^ THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1968 E—9 «• hum Mm Right 'A, CHUNK BOLOGNA.......... .TT^9e HYGRADEJUMRO m. RING BOLOGNA..................lb 69° READY FOR GRILL_ MU- SPLIT BROILERS............ "> 49 PHILADELPHIA CREAM CHEESE ilO* 10‘ BOX OUR FAVORITE PEAS.. a 10° Mb. l-oz. ■ V NEWPORT WAX BEARS ........ W/ioz. can IV OUR FAVORITE OREEN DEANS ... 10e 15'/2-oz. can • “ LIBBY CUT BEETS............ Iflc 16 oz. can Bw BOOK MATCHES.............. 1flC 50 cnt. 1 If CAMPBELLS TUMATO SUUP lOVfeoz. can 10 NORTH AMERICAN NUSHN00M SAUCE.......... IflC 5% oz. can 1 V MEADOWDALE FROZEN STRAWBERRIES 10-oz. 19' PASCAL CELERY..... 30 IQc SIZE 13 CARROTS ,......... 1-Lb 1 Re CELLO 1 V PILLSBURY—18 oz. Pkg. % PORK LOIN CAKE MIXES With Coupon Below 9/11 MIXED CHOPS 79 0 CHOCOLATE, YELLOW WHITE CAKE MIXES Coupon 3 packages 57c ■* PACKAGES PER CUSTOMER GOOD THRU AUG. IT, 1909 E—IO _ %iik iatvyuv.j[R. hvv -i% iNuo Things look It Must Be By DICK WEST razor*, back scratches and egg WASHINGTON (UPlj - Per- timers, baps you have been wondering Admitted, It would be * why parte of the Eastern Sea- hardship to file fingernails, slice board hove^^—^^^ turkeys, open caps, brush teeth, been beset shave, scratch backs and time power s h o r t- eggs by hand. But that would ages recently. sure, beat getting stuck ^ in an elevator during a power failure. Rationing would conserve electricity so there would always be a supply in reserve. Then, the next time that summer strikes unexpectedly, the power companies would be able to cope. FAIR WARNING — Mrs. Peter Lovesque of Fairfield, Maine, stops to take a second look at this sign beside a road in Benton, Maine. Someone, apparently unhappy, with the condition of the road, erected this sign which warns of the untold dangers that lie ahead for those people with dentures. The pavement ends at this .point and the unpaved portion continues to the next town line where the road is again paved. Earth Is Off Balance—Naturally i JOHANNESBURG (UPI) -The world is off balance — and we're not talking now about wars, poverty, overpopulation or anything of tile like. The fact is earth’s tansy condition probably was caused eons before mankind began to interfere. According to Dr. Warren Hamilton of Denver, Colo., the vlnce over a 10,000 square mile area when the earth was shifted off its axis. • dr ★ dr f The American geologist told a Geological Society Congress here that the bushveld complex which spans the Transvaal from north of Potgietersrus to Pretoria was possibly the pro- bump that set the world awry [duct of impacts formed When a occurred In South Africa’s seat-huge missile split in four and 100,000 miles an hour, Hamilton suggests. AXIS SHIFT The explosion was on such a scale, he theorizes, that it probably shifted thO earth on ite axis. "The impact would have been felt all over the earth's surface,” Hamilton said. “It was . an enormous catastrophe. the same size again hit the earth, — and- he foresees no such eventuality for the next 100,000 yean at least — it would most probably strike the sea, as about two thirds of the earth is under water.' ★ ★ dt “Such an explosion would send waves over every coastal If so, you have come to the right place. The problem was caused by a strange natural phenomenon that occasional- WEST1 ________________ ly occurs along the Eastern Sea- { board. It is called summer, , . ,, . Many trid things happen in N^iphDOrhOOCl Alfl6S summer. For one thing, the r ■ SpiSTSt ,or Pollce Proposed behaving in a weird manner. For one thing, they tarn on the air-conditioners that the power companies are constantly urging people to buy. POWER SHORTAGE This extra drainage of current naturally creates a power shortage, causing blackcuts, brown- v .. ... ... outs and other shades of outs. I '**«** 8aid th« FW i If the power companies knew ?in?“ar‘°°"eabouttobe,tesed that summer was coming, they in New York City, would tavolve could, of course, prepare for it neighborhood residen s trained by stepping up the voltage, or!8"*! equipped by the city. Haifa whatever it is that power com- watchman s Salary would be panies do to make more elec-P8!* by,foe, city and half by SEATTLE (AP) -- A system of neighborhood watchmen, to serve as an auxiliary to the Police Department, was proposed Monday for Seattle by Secretary of State Lud Kramer, a candidate for mayor here. tricity. But power companies are always as surmised a s everyone else by me sudden appearance of summer. Thus ..... they have to deal with it on an police and fire departments.’’ emergency basis. :.g ,f "" It has been reported that neighborhood anticrime councils, he said. The men would not be armed, Kramer added, but would have “speedy communication -with of government, Pretoria, many struck the earth, causing an ®ven tbe largest m e gat on destroy those cities,” he said. —»«"— * _* ’______ ..i——... . I nuclear explosives today do not I city around the ocean in which'scientists ir California may the explosion occurred . and soon be able to predict when millions of years ago. He enormous explosion. j°9 (theorizes that'the big” bump The four pieces struck' the (happened in the Transvaal pro- surface of the earth, possibly within 15 seconds of each other at a speed of at least 20,000 miles an hour and perhaps energy released in the explosion when the pieces of the comet struck the earth's surface.” , ■ Hamilton said if "a missile of WILSON Earl Lets Barbara Stanwyck Talk Him Oat of His Scoop By EARL WILSON NEW YORK—Barbara Stanwyck’s got a big mouth. Columnists love to brag about their scoops and how alert they were -. . . well, here’s confession of how alert I wasn’t. I had Jackie Gleason’s plans to marry Beverly McKittrick in my fingers and played them down instead of up. One night over a week ago, I was in Dave Chasen’s restaurant in Hollywood. Gleason wasl|j|| the phone—probably for half an hour—telling Chasen, George Burns, several others, and me,1 about his plans to marry. 'When?” I asked him . . . "As soon as I can!” he said. It would have been midnight in Florida then.) Hollywood loves Gleason for his conviviality; ThOy figured he was celebratingr they hoped he didn’t have to work too early next day. "I wouldn’t print it,” Barbara Stanwyck told We discussed a couple of wrongful items that had hurt her long ago. ■ ■ ★ . dr ★ How I was impressed by what she said. I wrote Just a sen-, tence about what Jackie said instead of a full story. In fact, due to Barbara’s words of caution, I almost felt I shouldn't use it at all. I felt protective about The Great One. Four days later, Herb Kelly of the Miami News, reading the M^ columhT'spotted the itenr, checked it with Jackie—and Jackie boomed out that it was true. ★ ■' Of , Sr It turns out now that Miss McKittrick was already a close special friend of Jackie’s July 7 when Jackie played golf with President Nixon. She was in the group that sat with the Presi-j dent in Jackie’s “pool room.” Secret Service checked her out. I ★ * THE MIDNIGHT EARL . Former Postmaster-Gen. Larry O’Brien, who advocates that the Post Office Dept, become a business corporation, says “We’re going to see it happen. And It’ll even be good politically. For every postmaster appointee, the Congressional member-adviser makes 50 enemies and one ingrate—the postmaster appointed” . . . It’s just seven years ago that Marilyn Monroe left us. Alec McCowen of “Hadrian VII is being wooed to play Neel Coward’s role in a Broadway show Coward left because of illness .. . Michele Mercier, 25, wife of a rich French industrialist, makes love with Tony Curtis in “The Dubious Patriots” being1 filmed in Turkey. * * a j’ TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Astrodome boss Judge Hofheinz is a Texas booster. "Just last year," he says, “one city put up jail with so many conveniences you got to have references to get in!” , -. „.«J REMEMBERED QUOTE: W. C Fields said it: “What temptible scoundrel stole the cork from my lunch?" it ■ a a EARL’S PEARLS: “I’m reading a book titled ’Easy Salesmanship,’ ” writes Danny Klayman, “—but I don’t know what to do with the other 20 copies the salesman talked me info buying.” -.. That’s earl, brother. - and where an earthquake is going to occur. This has given * u . [rise to hopes that some day so far Hamilton has been j scientists may also be able to predict when summer is going to happen. LIKELY PERIOD IT. || „„ H Statistical data accumulated if his theory 1* thus far indicate that summer is most likely to occur between May and October. Further research will proceed from there.- Since it appears that we easterners are going to have,:to SPECULATION only speculating, on the basis of information available. He saiduf careful study of the central uplifts of the Bushveld coniplex should show evidence of an ex- correct. “If there is no evidence of an explosion, then the idea must be rejected,” he concurred. “But If evidence of an ... _____, • „ *•“.» found, tden lte im- }™ llOllEiy AMileiiltr auofam pact theory is strong substantiated. The present available knowledge from the rock uplift is, however, inadequate to test the idea to arrive at an absolute conclusion either for or against.”. Smog-alyzer Test should adopt an orderly system of rationing. It would work something like this: On alternate Mondays, women whose last names begin with A-through-M would refrain from using their electric manicure sets. On alternate Tuesday, the N’s-through-Z’s would forego the use, of electric carving knives. Under Way in NY; Other days would be set aside j for the nonoperation of electric NEW YORK (AP) — Re-can openers, toothbrushes,! searchers begin today asking pedestrians to blow into rubber bags and answer questions in a study aimed at finding much odorless, invisible, poisonous carbon monoxide gas the average New Yorker breathes walking beside heavy traffic. ★ / 'ik ■ it “Operation Life and Breath” is sponsored by the New York Tuberculosis tuid Health Association "and'uRT 'city's Department of Air Resources. ★MNTIAC* 20 AUfi PONTIAC MALL WORLDS LARGEST 18-ItIPHANTl.ii CLYDE BEATTY'S WILD ANIMALS PRESENTED BY CAPT. DAVE HOOVER TWICE DAILY 2 A • P.N. Bgft jrg POPULAR PRICES RESERVEDjj}[{Pcf£t{J§S$2H J1PKETS iSDAY AT " SMILEY sues. MUSIC 00. IIS N. SAGINAW IT. You can Cat like a boss at. 1 ’ Bonanza Sirloin Pit'f Every'Tuesday “Little Job Special’1 Ribeye Alle STEAK ¥o Wednesday lake Si if PERCH All You Can Eat MONDAY Is f roe Beverage Bay m mmm KMART GLENWO0D PLAZA North Sorry, Corner Bltnwood Carry-Out Availoblo 338.9433 Ooon T Days a Wook “ Sunday thru Thursday 114:11 ML Friday and Saturday 1H t F.M. NOW APPEARING Denny O’Day FEATURING JOY KENDAL 4825 W. Huron (M-59) 674-0426 12 NORTH SAOINAW IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Open 1 ltd aar Wad. thru Sat. and lift pm Sun., Moth, Tues. Continuous All Day 1144411 OISE IIS' OR FAST TA KE4WT »' ,MUBe„vtT 93 N. TELEGRAPH Tie N. PENNY ST. PONTIAC — 335-9483 "Ui-UH- Yeu Must Be II - Proof is Required - Ends Tuesday u.mmi =ROM CANVAS TO BEDSHEETS IN COLON - ALSO “POWN and BIBTT“ T&E PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST II, 1969 E—11 Quarantine Curbs Spread of Deadly Hog Cholera AP Wlrtphoto COMBACK THREAT — A year ago, 5-year-old Jimmy GrupdLof New I^ondon, Minn., was suffering from, a liver defict that would have been fatal. But on July 20, 1968, the ' |ot received a liver transplant at the University of Colorado Medical Center, This picture reports his progress. Jimmy £iiow healthy and swings a bat like the baseball players Idolizes and hopes to emulate in the future. After smashing one, Jimmy hollered: “Get it before it goes in the road." as Pope Paul Approves New Latin ! VATICAN CITY (JR - Pope Paul VI has approved a new points where St. Jerome Latin text for the Book of Psalms—the first step in planned revision of the official Latin translation of the whole Bible by the Roman Catholic Church, the .Vatican announced commission to correct those mistranslated the Bible and reexamine others in the light of modern research . and discoveries. The Vatican had released an alternative text of the Psalms LANSING (AP) - Michigan’s $42 million a year swine industry-operating for weeks under the threat of hog cholera—can look toward brighter days. Spread of the highly cent ous disease appears halted In the state and swine producers are checking into the newest and post modern methods of continuing their work. The State Agriculture Depart- ment, while keeping close tabs on farms in Southwest Michigan where cholera caused slaughter of more than 2,300 swine in the past month, is optimistic. ★ *1 * “It looks quite promising right now.’VDr. John Trumble, assistant state veterinarian, said late week. “We’ve got this thing stopped—we hope.’” STILL QUARANTINED The department has not, how- ever, decided when to lift a quarantine slapped on farms neighboring the Jones area farm where cholera broke out in mid-Juljr. Some Olfhogs, imported from Missouri, reportedly contaminated the entire herd on that farm. Nearly 1,800 animals were given overdoses of anesthetic and buried. State officials clamped tight restrictions on swine movement were slaughtered on a nearby farm after officials blamed’ at exchange of men and equipment between the two farmers — be-, . , fore the first outbreak was diag- and put nearby farms on close. The security failed to avert a nosed-for the second tragic hog surveillance. I second outbreak. Some 503 hogs'loss. urday. The new psalter was; in 1945. That translation met released for sale Saturday. (with the disapproval of many ! Pope Paul set tip a special because it replace^ the early commission of experts in 1964 to Christian Latin used by St. Jerome with classic literary Latin. correct and update the Vulgate translation of the 150 Psalms that St. Jerome did in 387-388. This had. been asked by the Vatican Ecumenical Council in its “constitution on the liturgy.” ■ ★ ’ * ” #, | In 1965, Pope Paul set up' a The new revised texts will be used in Church rites in Latin and serve as official tots of reference for translation into modern languages, new enlarged commission, with Saturday’s announcement saidi the wider task of revising the Latin Vulgate text of all the books of toe Old and toe New Testament. He instructed toe toe revised Latin texts of the Gospels were expected to he published before toe end of the year. $ I BA-ZLfiY ‘.v EARLY BIRD SPECIALS 3 MARKETS OPEN TO SERVE YOU DOWNTOWN - 1220 PERRY - DRAYTON MIXED PORK CHOPS 69ca. LOIN, RIB OR BLADE MEATY SPARE- RIBS FOR BAR-B-Q 55b. TENDER JUICY RIB STEAK 89S GRADE 1 CHUNK - BOLOGNA lbs. $-|00 CHUNK 2 OR SLICED FRYING CHICKEN QUARTERS LEGS OR BREASTS 39c ib. 3 STORES OPEN TO SERVE YOU DOWNTOWN - 1220 PERRY - DRAYTON MirrmsuF SPECIALS Kitchen Carpet OPEN MONDAY-FRIDAY TIL • P.M. FORMICA CABINETS *39®* 24” wRh Sink and Rim PANELING CERAMIC TILE 4Vix4V4 , 39° VIMYL 12”x12” ASBESTOS TILE ij S * < o 52 ss »5« CARPET TILE ..c49c PORCH A DECK ENAMEL "T.'.r Gallon $205 4x8 ihHt, baked on Melamine finish resists scratching. Sealed back side keeps out moisture. WOOD PANELING CAMPER SPECIAL *2 Karen'* have over TOO •mall piitce* of quality carpeting under 9 feet long. Ideal for campers, trailers .and— home. SQUARE YARD AND UP RUBBER BACK INDOOR-OUTDOOR CARPET OZITE INDOOR-OUTDOOR CARPET Here i* the ideal carpet for patiae, porches, ter- t arpund the pool. Won't mildew, ret or fade. The color is made In it, not on it! REMNANTS, ROLL-ENDS and ODDS ‘N’ENDS CHECK ON THESE GIGANTIC SAVINGS REMNANTS ROOM SIZED REMNANTS I ALMOST EVERY COLOR All Remnants Are Subject to Prior Sale COMMERCIAL CARPET Rubber-backed Fabrics for Do-It-Yourselfers IN 3 COLORS ONLY SIZE COLOR RES0RIPTI0N AREA SALE SIZE COLOR DESCRIPTION AREA SALE t Zxl-I" Snndgold Adrem H 58.00 12x12-0” Moss AR-15 14 15.00 12x8’>" Sandstone Confetti G-0 79.00 12x12-0” Mt. Hue Haveford E-4 95.00 12x9-9” Jade * Phalanx G-2 19.00 12x12*8” Red Flair . E-0 00.00 12x9-10- Moss Lakewood 0-0 66.00 12x12-11” Gold Pebble Beach D-2 101.00 12x10-0” Moss Tiros F-l 69.00 12x13-0” Copper Pebble Beach 0-3 108.00 12x10-0” Nutmeg Motro Shag F-5 69.00 12x13-0” Royal Glue Forte D-6 100.00 12x10-0” Bronzetone Lustertons F-2 89.00 12x13-2” Golden Haverford D-3 ' 101.00 12x10-0” Roman Coin Royalton F-2 60.00 12x13-3'- Burnt Orange Cannonade D-6 92.00 12x10-1” Gold KLM F-10 11.00 12x13-6” Surf Green Pebble Reach D-4 112.00 12x10-4” Moss AR-15 r-i 01.00 12x13-9” Moss Lakewood 0-5 108.00 12x10-0” Jads Phalanx F-3 06.00 12x14*3” Jungle Wand Ratehurst C-2 110.00 12x10-0” Croon Oman Oaks F-4 14.00 12x14-3” Maize Pebble Beach D-6 110.00 12x10-0” Olivo Gold Phalanx F-1 80.00 12x14-6” Surf Orson Brute C-2 120.00 12x10-0” Groan Parma Turf F-2 08.00 12x14-0*- Honey Gold Qatehurst C-1 120.00 12x11-0” Most AR-16 F-B 61.00 12x14-0” Caledon AR-t6 C-3 93.00 12x11-4-' Rural Orange Haveford E-3 11.00 12x16-0” Mots Adrem C-6 104.00 !1*t"Xl1'4” Gold Royalton E-2 02.00 11'9"x16-l” Moss AR-15 C-4 94.00 12x11-4” Jada Phalanx E-3 92.00 12x10-4” Jade Phalanx B-1 '146.00 11-0-X.11-0" Cactus Orssn Qatehurst E-2 01.00 12x10-4” Gold La Bomba B-2 151.00 12x11-1* Driftwood Phalanx P-T out 12x16-0” Gold Adrem B-2 115.00 12x11-0” Cold Adram E-2 73.00 12x16-0” Jade Phalanx B-1 1S0.00 12x11-9” Rust Adrem B-1 13.06 12x11-0- Limestone Lustartone B-6 164.00 12x11-9” Ftm Green Rnissola E-1 00.00 3750 DIXIE HWY., DRAYTON PLAINS PHONE OR 3-3311 OR 3-2100 FN 2-2234 HIGHWAY OPEN Mon. and Fri. 10-9 Tues., Wed,, Thurs., Sat. 10:00 - 5:30 ★ PARKING FOR OVER 40 CARS ★ CREDIT TERMS AVAILABLE THREE DAY INSTALLATION ON ANY INSTOCK SELECTION * inuutij criticism is the unique location pf San Francisco—a relatively •spall 46.6 square miles with lame 40 hills, surrounded by "views of water cm three sides. 3k * * The high-rises, said University of California architectural MHe Allan Temko,, "cause the Mils to lose their impact and Si^i interfere with the view of $M bay.” t)UTRAGEOUS’ 3 "There is no question about i ft," said Theodore Osmundsen, (resident of the American, Society of Landscape, Architects, the city Is being, tlsaulted by “Manhafc, . Sutter Building 24, end the , Aetna Life Building 38. , Domenlc J. Palno, office building specialist with Coldwell Banker Co , California’s largest property management firm, : said: | “The new high-rise buildings i in downtown San Francisco are ! infinitely superior to the older [ buildings they replaced. The old buildings covered entire lots, blocking out sun and air. 1 CITY ‘FORTUNATE’ 1 "Compare that with the Bank | of America, which has an exciting grand plaza; the Crocker ‘building with its plaza ori 1 Market Street, the C row n Zellerbach building which floats in a garden, and the Alcoa building in its open landscaped plaza with fountains, sculpture and greenery. "San Francisco is very fortunate to haye zoning laws , which encourage .the concentration of business rather than to have it spread horizontally across the land. The zoning code now protects the city’s views with special heights districts such as Telegraph Hill, North Beach, north waterfroht, and Unioh /Square, among other* '* ■ ... i SUMMER DAZE N SEWING MACHINE CLEARANCE! , Channel. w w w 4 the boy was accompanied by $u> British boat Invlcta. The sea Was calm and the weather good, lie was being coached by Rosemary George, a British woman Who has made the swim several Psino is leasing supervisor for the Embarcaderb Center, just starting development of four new high-rise office buildings scheduled to open in 1975. Until recently' plans were in the works for a 1,000-foot-tall tapering' pyramid by T r a n s a m e r i c a Carp. on Montgomery Street near Columbus Avenue near Telegraph Hill. But height and design criticism, including that of City Planning Director Allan B. Jacobs, I Erikson, a Chicago schoolboy, inode an attempt hist year but (a$e up four miles from the jngllsh coast. ■ / Famous SINGER' / sewingmachines and1 ' cabinets usedas ■H •FLOOR MODELS W •DEMONSTRATORS and DISCONTINUED MODEI Priced to sell-so come in t _ PPI I I c o u r a' g e d a reconsideration, and the design was revised downward to 840 felt. The commission wUTVBV review the plans. The city, Jacobs said, is not going to ignore the esthetic question “despite f a n t a st lc financial pressures.” It Gets at Markdown* off Mod.™ Swivel Mm 00 Ireyhill Colonial ... „ Choice of colon.... $44.88 Wing.d Swivel Rocker ... $99,88 french Frovinclal o.oA no Fulorian Swivel Chain __ Pull-up Choi,..... $49.88 in ptuch volvot....... $$9.88 Sorts Extra firm oji, o« ' Walnut Bedroom — Droller i, Mom..., Twin or Full- $43.00 Chest ond BK Bod.........., $99.88 Z4*aco Dinette Sat pen on Colonial Rd. pining rttasxM nn Intension table, washable.. $69.88 Room Table * 4 Chain ... $ |.Q9c88 Sorts Mattress B Bos Spring, pg, »« Medit.rron.on 5 Pc. p, Button-Free, firm set. $00*00 Dinette — Pedestal Base... $ | 14*88 I-Pie ce Colonial Bound g._„ m _ ' Large V-Pc. Dinette .... _ _ 1 fabla 4itd 4 chain. $78.88 Table and S Chain..$110.88 1 R.clincr by Strotolounge, p-g __ BunV Beds with 2 J washable naugahyde. $79*88 Rev.nibleBunksl.rs.$119*88 | Mid County. (trade-ins, that it) BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP » NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, thgt • Public Hearing will ba held by thg PIBnnlni Commission of thg Township of ftaomflaM, Oakland County, Michl«gn, bn uosdsy. BiBfimbbr & iw, at tiW o'clock p.m., at tha Township Hall, 4JB0 fMnpi RNE. In ssld Township for And Singer has a Credit Plan to fit your budget. $289.88 ....$449.88 ****** $329.88 t1^^0^:.^ $449.88 Air Conditioned $349.88 taSSSSSi*.:.^ $449.88 Easy Torms $399.88 Dining Rear*. B Fee. $449.88 Freo DdljvOry $899.88 $619.88 Free Parking r AND FRIDAY I A.M.-IP.M. - OPEN DAILY |A.M. - 5:3# PM. NtohoFE 841144 FURNITURE COMPANY 184 ORCHARD LAKE AVENUE e PONTIAC Where development it exclusively of M . « * • . o twefemUr reeidentlel type structure, The instant Temlte is applied. souere feet of grots let eree for each water steins lUrt jo disappear. No unH (or 12*00 square feet per two*; more houre of tedious rubbing; in WhllirM’W • mulflpl. -family •**’'<**' «*irt •|'dfdul,"«S, V*"ish rasidsntial structure may 6t increased and your grimiest metals |et an *o four U) ftorios whan each tiruefure enduring, lustrous gleam. That’S wbv msintenance men tn Hotels, that Me density pormirtod In the R M, Hospitals, Banks, factorial, public hflBpa Family RapMentlal District.! hulldints use Tamil*, under footnote (g) of this SECTION ou,,u,nS» mm m’ohall In no way ba Mcraatad. . . BESTMEt SRIBNUL LOSTBI Width of any yard Sbl/tting a ___________...111.11 mnmu .whom Hm*' Rgaldentlal District Stall • WH T*iWtWiaitlw*MT FI"OR PONTIAC MALL, 482-0350 BUY! SELL! TRADE!... USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS FLOOR SAMPLES SACRIFICED WHERE BARGAINS REIGN SUPREME! B—11 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1989 Critics Sore as High-Rises Soar SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Skyscrapers arc soaring Into this city’s famed hilly akyllm despite attacks by critics on what they call "Manhat-. tanization.” * * a For four years they have watched with anxiety as 17 office buildings soared hi tha Montgomery Street district of “Wall Street West." a w a Most boxes of metal and glass, thay dominate the traditional prominences of Colt TOwar on Telegraph Hill and the Fairmont and Mark Hopkins hotels on Npb Hill. n Nob Hill. One of those most skeptical ■bout the hgih-rise buildings is Gerald P. Cauthen, president of the Telegraph HiU Dwellers Association. JEALOUS OF VIEWS t an 1 z a 11 on — at) solutely e outrageous.” Along a half-mile stretch, 10 M high-rises now etch the skyline s where before the bay view east Ha and his followers are jealous of the views from the crazy-quilt mishmash of cliff-‘ hangers on their famous lertheist lookout over the city. *’.*■■* ; "Some financiers think growth is everything,” he said. vNew York City is the epitome toward peded. Oakland was unlm- Form north to south they are the Alcoa Building, 27 stories; of that thinking and most of It! Wells Fargo Annex 20; Hartford k not fit to live In." jBuitdlng S3; International * * * Building 22; Bank of America - The basis of his and other & CHANGING VIEW — Four years ago, visitors to the top of the Mark Hopkins Hotel atop Nob Hill had an unobstructed view on San Francisco Bay (top). In the meantime, 17 high-rise bulldinp have been built, dramatically changing the city’s sky- line, as a recent picture from the same window indicates (bottom). The East Bay, visible in the top picture (background), was blotted out by fog when the new picture was made. By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK (AP) - A home should be a home and not a sod. But at present I’m running probably the only two-bathroom menagerie in town, and what I need most is in assistant tame animal trainer. The job is gearing me own. M y predica-ment came about in this Two-Bathroom Menagerie Turns a Home Into a Zoo 'Whore ore yeu going to put| her?” I asked. Back in 1958 my late wife BOYLE Frances adopted a black-and-white alley kitten named Lady Dottle on the grounds that our 5-year-old daughter Tracy needed a pet as a companion in order to avoid stunting her emotional growth. PRIVACY ENDED Lady Dottie’s gravel box was promptly installed in the front bathroom of our apartment, the one place in the world where until then I could enjoy some privacy. "Why?” I whined. “Where else could we put her box?” demanded Frances practically. *. So for 11 years I’ve been getting to work late because I can not get into the bathroom until the cat finishes her morning ablutions, so to speak. This year, when school let out Jon June, Tracy came home lugging a box containing a giant, red-eyed, white rabbit named Aphrodite. BACK BATHROOM "The biology teacher said that if one of the students didn’t keep1 Aphrodite over the summer she’d have to be put to sleep forever,” explained Tracy. "I couldn't stand for that to hap- •room waste basket-bar breakfast signal. 'In our back bathroom.” •Why?” I whined, as I had llj years before. j "Because Lady Dottle bas the! front bathroom," explained Tra- J cy, as If she were speaking to a retarded Adult. “Everyone knows that cats and rabbits don’t like to share the same bathroom.” LETT ON OWN Soon after Aphrodite was installed, Tracy blithely took off on a vacation trip to Rome, leaving me the task of providing fojM and maintaining law and! order in our two-bathroom me-] Inagerie. It Is quite a chore, and I am getting red-eyed myself taking 'care 5 a red-eyed rabbit and ' green-eyed cpt. Aphrodite seems to be in love with Lady Dottle, but Lady Dot-tie is jealous and hates the very floor the rabbit hops upon. By day she is also somewhat afraid of the big white rabbit, but at night she paws endlessly at the closed bathroom door sheltering Aphrodite. At first I was haunted by fears that Aphrodite might be in a family way and I’d have to an impromptu midwife rabbit Fortunately, she turned out to be a chaste maiden, and so I haven’t had to tell her to go and never darken toy bathroom door again. RABBIT ROUNDUP ~ - Once a week I take Aphrodite for a stroll on the apartment lawn below. When it’s time to return, whooping neighborhood kids help me recapture her in Manhattan’s only regular on4-rabbit roundup. My vegetable bill has tripled.] Each morning at 5 o’clock Aphrodite gets hungry and starts thumping on the tin bath-l I The other evening tha neighbor beneath us rapped at my door. "If you must practice on your bongo drum In the bathroom ” he sold politely, "couldii’t you do It a bit later in the day?” "That’s not a bongo drum,’M replied, embarrassed. “That's just Aphrodite, our rod-eyed white rabbit.” l/ooking at me oddly as he began backing away, the neighbor said: "Well, old chap, I’m afraid if you start keeping pink elephants in your bathrooto, we’ll have to move.” ] And I’m afraid that if Tracy 'doesn't come home soon hei* ] welcome home dish, when she does return, will be a big steaming plate (ft hasenpfeffer, once known as Aphrodite. Necber NedktfcrwHk _ Hoator and Vibrator , || | S«88 Hide-Away Bedt f Nylon Fdfcrk $179.88 Calenlel Sa4roea* Bulla, g.A. Dratsur, chast and bad • • • • $139.88 Traditional Safe and Chair $179.88 Johnson Career Colonial g, _ _ Sofe. 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Table A 4 Chain...... $249.88 THE PONTIAC PRKSS, MONDAY, AUGUST \1, 1969 E—ISf Cook CbOhfy Sheriff— Controversial but Professional CHICAGO (AP) — He aome-i Prior to the summer of IMS, times leads raids on gambling Woods tried to organize a 1,000-houses wearing a hand-me-down man dviUan force for riot con-tuwdo from President Nixon1 trol after his request for the hir-«>d holding a pistol in his right ing of 200-300 additional police- smile comes easily and often .business—then the Better 'Cjov-| and he appears relaxed and con- eminent Association, of Chicago fident j asked me to come here for am The history of Woods is a interview. hand. He has tried—and failed—to form a posse of 1,000 volunteers to back, up his small police force, •He has threatened to shoot and kill any person intentionally starting a rid. He is Sheriff Joseph I. Woods of Cook County, 954 square miles of flamboyance and controversy. SECOND LARGEST Code County, the second largest county in the nation, is filled with challenges, problems and tension for the mdn who is responsible ‘ for enforcing the rules. But the S3-year-old Woods appears to be a match for it. * ★ o This is the man who sometimes attends a fancy reception wearing a tuxedo, and leaves eafly to lead a raid—without cimtging Clothing. His sister, Rose Mgry. is President Nixon’s private48ecretary, and Woods has been the recipient for years djf Nixon's suits. -He still wears themf, replete with the initials ‘BMN” on the lining. men for his force was turned down, BEATEN DOWN His pint for the half-white, half-Negro posse was beaten down by critics including civil rights leaders and politicians who labeled the proposed group "the vigilantes." Woods was back in the news again recently when some 250 bailiffs and process servers employed by his department to bolster his approximately 250 regulars formed a volunteer riot-control force. *• They outfitted themselves in khaki uniforms with black berets, scarves and paratroOp-type boots and nicknamed themselves the “Black Berets. The men are being professionally trained and, according to Woods, would only be used as a last resort. BOOMING VOICE Woods stands a trim 6 feet and has a deep booming voice, insistent eyes and military bear-ing. His face is lined and the thinning hair is graying a bit but his Ubiquitous Trout Swims in Sierras study in contrasts. Bom and reared in Sebring, Ohio, Woods finished high school and spent 10 years studying for tiie Roman Catholic priesthood. With only three or four months to go Woods said he decided the priesthood was not for him. LEFT SEMINARY Shortly after he left the seminary, Woods joined the Marines and spent four years in the service. . Then, Woods decided to go into the business of law enforcement. ‘In December' of 1991 I had never seen Cook County before,” he said. "In December of 1966 I was elected sheriff. Since then I’ve on occasion been con-troversial hut always professional.” Iment I’m pretty well dedicated Woods is in an elected position jin which he cannot succeed him- TULARE, Calif. (UPI) The to trying to get some answers to—he's a Republican in a strong-1 self. What is his next objective? original habitat of the golden 'some questions” Woods said, iy Democratic county—and one | ★ * * trout, the official state fish of "I haven’t the vaguest idea California, was the upper yet. I’ve got a little over two reaches of the Kern River in years as sheriff. A lot of people the Sierra Nevada range, have asked me what I’m going! Now lt ls foUnd !n many to run for next,” he remarked. sierra streams and- has been "I didn’t ask to run before.[planted in other states. They now tell me they want mej to run. I don’t know yet.” He fielded the question, ‘What made you run for sheriff of Cook County?” with a smile. ‘I didn’t want to,” he commented. "The various factions of the Republican party came to me and, in effect, said: ‘You’ve been giving speeches telling the citizens if you’re not satisfied with the school board don’t sit 'A friend of mine who was an|on the sidelines and criticize, for it and change it.’ Now FBI agent suggested I apply there,” Woods said in an interview. “I applied in 1951 and was accepted. I had no law degree and no accounting degree but I had studied canon law in the seminary. The rules of evidence are roughly the same, so I took the FBI legal test and passed. "I resigned from the FBI In 1961 for 13 reasohs—my wife, myself and the 11 children the Good Lord blessed us with,” he said. they wanted to know am going to put my reputation where my mouth was. They asked me to run for sheriff of Cook County.” He says he has never regretted his decision. TIME CONSUMING “It is a time-consuming job that, the way I work, takes me away from my children and I family too much, I worked, as an ‘I started my own business in (FBI) agent the same way, so I Washington—the investigating would say that in law enforce- Tire Values From Sears Joseph I. Woods, Tough-Minded Lawman LOOKING TO GOVERNORSHIP? However, there are indications that Woods is attempting to take the same route that boosted another Republican, Richard B. Ogilvie, into the Illinois governor’s office. y" Recent newspaper stories indicate that Woods is rounding up support' for the Republican nomination for president of the! Cook County Board of Cominis-j sioners. Ogilvie started his political career as Cook County sheriff, then moved on to president of the" board 'before winning the governorship. The number of labor strikes-in the Phillippines has been-reduced by 65 per cent in the last three years. Clock Repair Antique Clock 1 Specialist! • Sales At Service 0tmr#I?np 151 S. 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With AfC >-■ m—°~l (auto, fine tun “9 vHF/UHF tuner oil in “ &S wffiinhH cabinet en locking swivel hate. *499 FREE! 14 DAY HOME TRIAL OFFER! No nood to worry when you buy Color TV, take advantage of Our FrOO Homo Trial offor. Remember Fretter guarantees your complete sotisfoc- CLEARANCE! AIR CONDITIONERS - REFRIGERATORS Admiral. BIG FAMILY SIZE REFRIGERATOR OR FREEZER WHIRLPOOL 2-SPEED 2-CYCIE WASHER 1 wash, rime water temperatures. Magic-Mix lint WESTINGHOUSE Heavy Doty WASHER * 2 water tempi., heavy ' duly tram., pre-wash $158 $16T $209 $99 $159 1 r7[ SUNRAY 30" DELUXE JJ OAS RANGE n lift-up divided top. Lift off deer. j! $129 . timer, lighted back panel. $198 Pushbutton* g cycle* $169 i %TJifc THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, AUGUST II, 1969 Famous CONVERSED STAR1 Black or white, high cut or oxford 4 Days-Reg. 14.67! Solid State GE Automatic Clock Radio SPOTBILT FOOTBALL SHOES Foil leather uppers, new pro style poly cleat, high cut or oxford. Sizes 3 to 1C. il” SWEAT SHIRT. Our Reg. 2.89 Ladies’DENIM CAPRIS Woehable ceprfe that SiZO 8*18 & PANTS COMBINATION LOOKING THROUGH PEEPHOLE - These two youngsters are peeking through an opening in the Berlin Wall, The wail was erected eight years ago by the East German regime to prevent escapes from East Berlin. Golden Gat Watch for Suicides SAN FRANCISqo urf - The famed Golden Gate Bndge'has a suicide watch. Two years ago — after more than 300 suiddes in the bridge’s then 30-year "history —1 television cameras were Installed on each of the bridge’s twin 746-foot-tall towers. ★ •* The cameras, one facing north ahd the other south but which can be swung hi any direction, are manned round-the-clock. Bridge guards are on the lookout for potential suicides, as well as for accidents, traffic snarls or other; problems. Bridge Captain Ed Moore, who started as a toll taker in 1939, estimates that the cameras have prevented about 50 suicides. Moors says many persons, mostly pedestrians, have been stopped along the railings, and that many of these admitted they had Intended to -Jump the 220 to 236 feet to the San Francisco Bay. NOT FOOL-PROOF But effective as the cameras have been they are not suicide-proof. About once a month, says Moore, someone still goes over the rail. In tiie bridge’s 32 years there have been 362 Suicides, the first before the bridge’s formal opening on May 27, 1937. a . * a Two would-be suicides [survived. Cornelia van Ireland, suffered multiple fractures Jin her leap on Sept. 4, 1941. Thomas, Paul Tawzer, 16, broke ribs and his collarbone, but was not knocked out in his plunge on Jan. 11, 1965. A construction worker, Oscar Osberg, survived a fall from a scaffolding Feb. 17, 1937, before the bridge was completed. REMEDIES SUGGESTED Today, the guard who monitors the television cameras has a direct telephone line to the highway patrol, a a a Various remedies have been suggested to prevent further suicides, Including nets and retaining fences' beside the walkways. a a a . “But,” says Moore, “if they are determined to jump, they’ll jump.” . a a a “Our vary first suicide was from a safety net before the bridge was completed. The guy-scrambled to the edge of the net and dropped.” a a a Fencing has been ruled out because it would add to wind resistance and cause the bridge to sway dangerously. Even how, 100-mile-an-hour winds can sway the roadway up to 15 feet. Colleges Today * Using Facilities to Foil Advantage? By LESLIE J. NASON, ED. D. Colleges are under.increasing pressure these days to mlt more students. With high schools turning out better qualified students in each succeeding year, the flood of college applications rises. ' The classified help wanted ads in newspapers indicate tiiat more college graduates could be absorbed in business and industry provided the colleges could produce them. The colleges demand more buildings, moi last but not least, more budget for public college: the request reduce the Taxpayer have been generous. BUILDINGS IDLE My questions are: How efficiently are the buildings being used? Do buildings and classrooms lay vacant during months, or often weeks during the year? What is the occupancy rate during the days that school is in session? Assuming that students of college age should be willing to take courses at any hour from 6 A.M. to 10 P.M. the number of vacant classrooms and offices during this period should be counted., • The count in one college which had a campaign for additional' buildings showed 35 per cent occupancy based on an even shorter day. Although in this college they were using their facilities only one-third of the time, they felt the need of more buildings if'they were to accept more students. No .business could be successfully operated in this manner. ★ ★ ★ What about the efficient use of faculties? A retired university professor mentioned rather casually in a newspaper article that for some years before his retirement he taught a single class. Thta is not an isolated incident. Sometime ago, I attended a higher education conference in which two college professors were- given citations as the Teachers of the Year. One taught a graduate seminar and the other a course that met three hours a week. This evidently is the ultimate toward which some college professors strive—to teach fewer hours and fewer students! FORMER TEACHER ° I taught for years in a junior college. Up to the day of my retirement, I taught a full 15 hours per week. This, together with the necessary preparations, student counseling, and faculty committee assignments, was a reasonable work load. « The cost of educating college students in the junior college is often less than half the cost of conducting the same course at a university. Whatever the universities do with the other half of The monies they receive could well be the place to cut when the belt tightening is needed. I am sure the taxpayers are willing to pay the cost of - education of as many young people as can qualify. Perhaps the rest of the program should be funded from other sources, or curtailed. Only Congress Can Ad ROTC’s on college campukes were started 100 years ago when Congress passed the Morrell Act. The colleges of that day were mainly Liberal Arts. Colleges were founded under the Morrell Act to offer courses more relevant to the needs of the nation — courses in agriculture, home economics and mechanical, arts. In addition, they were to set up Agricultural Experiment Stations. The protesting youngsters of today foil to recognize tiiat we could not feed our present population, nor the increased population of the future, except for the advances made by the landgrant colleges and their Experiment Stations. Only Congress can change the charters and eliminate the ROTC in these 69 colleges and universities. Protesting to college presidents is futile. Program to Help Students For many students, high school is not sufficient college preparation. Some need further work before they can gain college admission. Others lack the ability to study independently, to absorb work from lectures, to organize new knowledge and to take tests successfully. The 10-week course at Mt. St. Mary's College, Calif., will -not attempt to build success in specific academic subjects, but to create basic reorientation to learning. Academic credit to transfer to other institutions will not be given. The students are there to learn to learn. Many more such programs should be offered. It has been estimated that approximately 400,000 students leave college each year for reasons related to academic performance. Toll Hikes Hurt Canadian Soo SAULT STE. MARIE, Mich, i ride, Is apparently dissuading (UPI) — Tourist business is [summer visitors from crossing booming here at the Iinto Canada, northeastern tip of Michigan’s An attendance record was set Upper Peninsula, but Canadian I Wednesday on the Michigan officials just a mile away are (side of the Soo locks, as 13,000 singing the toll-bridge blues. Lower tolls on the Mackinac Bridge linking Michigan’s two peninsulas, the 10th anniversary celebration of the St. Lawrence Seaway and a brand-new ship lock have combined to lure tourists to the Michigan Soo in record numbers this summer. persons poured, through the 2 gates to look at the four ship > locks that link upper Lake pr Huron with Lake Superior. » 60,909 MORE -It brought this year’s tourist t total to 429,107, almost ,60,000 1 visitors more than last year at this time. But a hike in"tolls "across the , the 5^-y ear-old International Bridge to Sault If,temjltionai Brid?!’ h?wever-Ste. Marie, Ont., a one-mile i”18 ^ y"1- Chamber of :—.— -----------------------Commerce is predicting a $1- million loss in tourist business this year to $3 for a round-trip ticket from $1.80. * ' * The $3 ticket makes the one-mile ride across the St. Mary’s River just as expensive as a round-trip jaunt across the spectacular five-niHe span across the Straights of Maokinac. And it makes the Soo International Bridge the most Some Pop Groups Called Drug Cause SYDNEY, Australia y/LAP) -Some pop groups are to blame for (he use of drugs among young people, American singer - Bobby Veesaid today, i f ..a,.. ^ VOd, 26, arrived in Sydney for! ex*tensive cr08sin« P°mt a nightclub performance. He three *Pan» linking Michigan said be believes the drug situa- an'■; rate in Oakland County was W!w. Only One quarter of the national local community where incidents of antisocial behavior occur, preventiqn of these incidents can be effective if citizens are motivated by a sense of community responsibility,” Judge Moore said. The county’s protective I services program is sponsored by the ^bounty juvenile court, local municipalities and local j boards of education.' Each program is developed on a school district or municipal-geographic level. A social worker paid with court funds is supplT6a"*eat:h committee. However, Judge Moore pointed out participation by citizens on the various committees is responsible for much of the success of the program. I On the committee are1 volunteers from such groups as the PTA and YMCA, churches, [Boy Scouts, service clubs' as well! as government officials. This1 gives a representation of many; interests, ages and professions. Judge Moore said, “Each committee has a twofold function. It deals with youth problems on a general level throughout the community to create a proper environment to keep youngsters out of trouble. It also deals with Individual predelinquent cases on an individual basis.” TYPE OP PROGRAMS The committee sponsors such programs as family life .education, youth codes, school dropout and truancy prevention seminars, religious Involvement, shoplifting prevention, recreation and job training. In individnal cases, referrals re obtained from schools, police or private citizens on juveniles with behaviorial pro- blems or tendencies. Volunteers cut in Oakland County,” ha! than work with the individual in said, an effort to change the behavior “This precourt delinquency pattern. The committee has [prevention program has an lb access to help from psychiatric,'per cent success as compared legal, religious aqd social to Only about 30 per cent suo-agencies. .cess in most state prisons. The * * * local community, With the help There are 4,000 volunteer j of volunteers, is where the prob-| workers in the county’s 26-lem must be met,” he said, committee setup, Judge Moore | Judge Moore pointed out the revealed. [program cost is placed at $50 “The record shows £h a t per year, per case, as opposed delinquent and n e g 1 e c t e d 1 to the $8,000 per year required behavior has been drastically ltd house a state prison inmate. 19 Yimks Killed in Viet Fighting WASHINGTON (AP) ~ The Defense Department has announced the names of 19 men killed hi action jn Vietnam. liicluded Were four men from the Midwest, lulled lb action: liJijtojMtW. A. Landrum, .tMwBwSbte william j. Karat, MINNESOTA—Spec. 4 Larry L. I Prior Laka. . OHIO—Sot. LC. Eugene M. Rot Warran, - Died not as a result of tile action: WISCONSItf^anca C CpT* Dannl Harter, Wabari. Missing as a result of hostile action: ARMY Capt. Dannli p.Neal; Sptc. 4 Michael p. aura*. AIR FORCR Col. George s. Dorman; lit Lt. Soy D. average. Key .to the program i s prevention rather than postcrime rehabilitation, h e said. This is accoqipllshed in aj local - community involvement basis. , MUCH COPIED Working in 26 Oakland. County communities are 26 Protective Sendee Committees which accomplish a preventative program that is being much copied h{ other municipalities, Judge Moore said. In stressing the importance, Judge Moore said, “Prevention has to deal with children, youth, | families and communities. Only! if crime is attacked here and prevented before occurring may national crime be reduced 'Youth behavior is the result of home, school and community training. Urns, these factors must be directed t o w a r d Area Service Personnel Lackland AFB, Tex., where he took his basic training. A Yale High School graduate, he is a former Pontiac Motor Division employe. ★ * '* His wife Merlyn resides at 2494 Liter, Orion Township. YOUNG If o r ■ “ p r o f e s s i o n a I performance, military behavior a n p appearance, leadership qualities and adaptability," Navjr Technician 2.C. Charles O. '[Young has been selected honqrman of the quarter at the Personnel Accounting^ Machine Installation, Bainbridge, Md. Young attended Emmanuel Christian School and worked in data processing at Pontiac Motor Division. His wife,; Jeanette, resides with him in Bainbridge. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Young of 1444 Rosedale, Sylvan Lake- Following a three-week leave, Seaman Clayton L. Hinsberger Jr. has returned to the Princeton, stationed at Long Beach, Calif. He has Completed a tour of duty in Vietnam and was a member of the Apollo 10 pickup crew. We will return for a sec-ond tour of duty hr Vietnam hr November. A former Pontiac Press carrier, he is a graduate of Pontiac Northern High School. BOS parents are Mr. and Mrs. CljByton L. Hinsberger Sr. of 552 Grwoada. stationed in Quang Tri, Vietnam, is Spec.. 4 Michael J. Harrington. Previous assignments include Fort Knox, Ky. and Fort Riley, Kan. A graduate of Waterford Kettering High School, he . attended Oakland Community College. * * His wife, Karen J„ resides with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Harrington of 3536 Floret-ta, Waterford Township. HINSBERGER WIDEMAN PO 2.C. Brian D. Wideman, son of Mr. and Mrs- Howard Wideman of 2249 Avondale, Sylvan Lake is serving aboard the dffitrqyer USS Nicholas, With the U.S. Seventh Fleet in the western Pacific, A graduate of Pontiac Central High School and 0 a k 1 sfti tT University, he took basic training at Great Lakes, HI. Airman Michael J. Nye, son .' Mr. and Mrs. J. Lee Nye of 384 N. Paddock, has completed basic training at Lackland AFB, Tex, He has been assigned to Sheppard APB, Tex. . (Advertisement) FALSETEETH That Looms Noad Not Embarrass aKHREBBs longer, ltokw eating oaHet. tt> not KmMtt!at 5?ar/eSentlal tdl 1th. Bug your dentlat regularly. ; FASTEETH At all drug counters J Scnnton Woman Better Next Day.>. Pain Of Piles Relieved SreainiflDtXxm^BdiSYBB PalnrlfeMiglaTfost Cases had our som\gpth ■ Smith, not surprisingly, had another version. ' SI understand that Sain complained that none of his suggestions were followed,” Smith 'said after Sunday’s game. ‘‘Well, I don’t know to'whom he was making these suggestions. They certainly weren’t made to me. ‘‘Sain just never wanted to appear as being against one of his pitchers,” Smith added. “It would come time to make a squad cut or choose between several pitchers for a place on the staff and John just wouldn’t make a choice. Then when someone got cut or didn’t make the team, it would all appear as Mayo’s doing.” *. * * Disappointment was the general reaction among the pitchers. Lolich said he hasn't been able to throw his curve ball in his last four starts. He lost three. “Sain said he spotted something and that he’d let me know whaVit was after I pitched today,” Lolich said. ‘'Big deal now.” Veteran Earl Wilson said, all the younger pitchers believed in Sain. “And he did fair by me,” Wilson said. “That’s all that counts as far as I’m concerned.” The Tigers oyer the weekend sold reliever Don McMahon to the San Fran-ciso Giants and called up Fred Scherman from their Toledo farm club. By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press KANSAS CITY, Mo. - All crepe hangers step to the rear. Head coach Joe Schmidt pf the Detroit Lions isn’t ready to bury the Lions despite the 38-13 loss to the Kansas City Chiefs Saturday night. * ★ •* “We expected a tough game, but they even impressed me more as the team which could win the AFL,” said Schmidt. “We made a lot of mistakes 'on defense, but Tm not unhappy with our offense. We moved the ball well, and I’ll take 400 yards on offense anytime. It will win a lot of games.” The Lions won the battle of the statistics with 22 first downs ‘and 397 total yards, but the Chiefs came up with the big plays aind showed some tricky formations and shifts which kept the Lions’ defense off-balance most of the game. PLENTY OF SPEED The Chiefs, favored to be the strong contenders in the AFL, boast six players among runners and receivers who are supposed to be 9.4 to 9.8 sprinters, and they gave a display of their speed against the Lions. ★ * * Frank Pitts, the five year wide receiver who is nicknamed the “Rid-dler,” riddled through the secondary with his speed for two touchdowns and 39 and 32 yards. v *• * ■ The Chiefs scored the first four times they had the ball in the first half, needing only five plays after the opening kickoff to go 70 yards, with Pitts taking his first TD pass from Len Dawson after only 2:34 of the game. - The Chiefs shocked the Lions by going into running formation for the two points after the touchdown. The Liorts Were offside and Bobby Garrett then ran the two-point play over. FAST COMEBACK . j Immediately afterward, the Lions marched 80 yards for a touchdown With Mel Farr doing most of the ground work and a key pass of 34 yards from Bill Munson to Earl McCullouch as the big gainer. ■ *' * ★ Munson went over for the score and the pressure was on the Lions to go for two. An attempted pass to Bill Malinchak for the two points failed as ex-Lion Jim Kearney gave Malinchak an elbow in the back, unnoticed by the end zqpe. official. (Continued on Page F-3, Col. 1) , Lions Chiefs Total First Downs DETROIT (•> CHICAGO (2) 5 0 1 2 W. Williams rl 5 0 2 0 Aparldo ss 4 2 3 0 Hopkins lb 3 0 0 0 Hold 0 0 0 0 Cash. _3B—Fraahari, Matchick. HR-Cash (Iff), Pav-IP H R ER BB SO WP—Lolich, T—2:33. j Another double. winner emerged yesterday as the curtain. fell on the often-rain-interrupted 10th annual Oakland County Tennis Tournament. Lynn Katz, 17, of Southfield, who earlier teamed with Mike Kauffman to Defending Champ Set for Tam's Club Event Defending champiop Elliott Spoon is reedy to take on challengers in the annuli Tam O’Shanter Country Club men’s tournament. : The field of eight was filled in a qualifying round with Blair Kamin setting the pace among seven qualifiers with a 151. ? ■ * ! ★ * + The other six qualifiers are Gary Schwartz (153), Steve Fishman (154), Bob Scheuer (155), Irv Korens (156), -Bruce Carnick (169) and Ron Topper (188). Topper defeated Clem Hopp Jr. in a playoff lor the final spot.'’ .j I (Gu led the champions with 11 hits and five walks in 21 trips to the plate. He was voted the Kiki Cuyler Award as the Most Valuable Player. Now it is on to Bowling Green, Ohio, next week for the eight-team, doubler elimination Great Lakes regionals. The Michigan entry, will play Minnesota at 9:30 a.m. Wednesday Aug. 20. * * ★ Yesterday’s win saw two double plays pulled left-hander Mike Harkey out of jams in the first two innings. Harkey, who went seven innings Saturday in the * victory over Grand Rapids, settled down over the last six innings to blank Manistee on six hits and 11 strikeouts. STARTS SCORING Ballard singled to lead off the second, moved up on an error and came in on Harkey’s infield single for the game’s first run. Waterford broke open the contest with three more markers in the fifth. Walks to Terry Crawford and Mike Sheldon preceded Steve Goit’s booming three-bagger, and he trotted home on Ballard’s second hit of the game. Singles by Larry Hemmerly and Pete Taylor sandwiched around an error produced the final run. The champs, after receiving their victory spoils at an afternoon dinner, caravaned home with the Waterford Township Police Escorting them the last few miles to a big celebration at the sponsoring Pontiac Legion Post No. 377 hall. EARLIER WINS Saturday’s victories — the team is now 26-6 for the entire season — featured a decisive run-scoring single by Harkey, three hits by Bob Earl and shutout relief hurling by Goit in the Grand Rapids contest; and a fatal seven-run seventh inning against Hamtramck that backed the four-hit hurling of Dennis Wooster and Goit. Waterford bunched six of its 13 hits against Hamtramck in the One big inning. , In each of its victories, Waterford eliminated its rival from the tourney. MOST VALUABLE - Frank Ballard used the momentum of a late-season surge to propel himself to the Kiki Cuyler Award as the outstanding player this weekend in the Slate American Legion Baseball championships at Midland. The Waterford cleanup hitter reached base 16 of 21 trips to the plate, hitting .689. TIMELY TRIPLE - Third-baseman Steve Goit ripped a timely three-base-hit Sunday morning, driving in two runs, and scored on a single by Frank Ballard to spark Waterford’s state title clinching 5-0 victory over Mahistee at Midland. . I it Down! Rushing .... First Downs Passing ..... , First Downs Penalty Total Offensive Yardage . Total No. Offensive Plays . Net Rushing Yardage ...... Net Passing Yardage ..... Times Thrown and Yards Li Attempting to Pass Punts and Average ........ 397 338 Sklera Papes e Thomas cf-lf Winlzewskl 2b Budzyaski ss Schimpile lb .35-21-2 12-9-0 Waterford ... 4-41 2 505 TRIPLE--JPmPK __________... mPPPOi 0 0 1-0 Key, Ballard, Curry. WINNER—Harkey. LOSER- Sprint Wins in Sweden KARLSKRONA, Sweden (AP)^Ed' Hart and Elbert Stinson of the United Stated won the 100 and 400 meters respectively at an international track and field meet in this southeast Swedish town Sunday night. Hart’s time was 10.5 seconds and Stinson’s 47.4. Gaylord 9 Wins Sectional Title ? BURN, Ind. (AP) - Gaylord, Mich., posted a 4-3 win over Hammond-Hesseville Saturday to win the sectional title in national Little League baseball . compeitition. The Michigan team had to come from behind. Gaylord scored three runs in the final inning to overtake the Indiana team. Die team now advances to Ottumwa, Iowa, for regional championships. By winning two playoffs in Oowa, Gaylord would advance to the Little League World Series in Williamsport, Pa. Southfield Netter Makes Sweep of County Doubles win the junior doubles, came back yesterday to claim the junior singles championship by winning three matches on the Oakland University courts. With the singles victory, Katz, who’s heading for University of Michigan this fall, joined C. Reid Rundell as the two double winners in the popular event which drew a record 231 entries. Rundell captured the senior men’s singles and teamed with Jim Tobin, also of Birmingham, in taking the men’s doubles. Rain delayed play on three occasions, forcing numerous Changes in the schedule including yesterday’s junior windup at OU. / : Katz captured the title with a 6-4, 10-8 triumph over Todd Reel, 16, a member of the Birmingham Seaholm team, after a morning 6-3/6-3 victory over 15-year-old Hob Co win, another member of the Seaholm team. . Katz’ first win of the day was a default decision over Rick Schneider o f Southfield. Die wrapup of 'the 'junior event had been delayed a week at Schnider’s request to permit him to play in a tournament hi West Virginia. 1969 Grand Prix and Convertible CLEAN-UP 1969 P0NTMCS, TEMPESTS and FIREBIRDS OUT THEY GO! WIDE SELECTION! OVER 500 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM AND A FANTASTIC SELECTION OF COLORS. GET ON THE BANDWAGON AND SAVE, TODAY! SEE ONE OF OUR 16 SALESMEN! Poidtat Retail fitorfc Wide Track at University Dr. A Member of the 11 Greater Detroit Area Pontiae Dealers Adv. Assoc. OPKN Mon., Tues.f and Thurs,, 0:30 A.M. til 0 P.M. Wed, and Fri., 0:30 A.M. 'til 6 P.M. 0ut-of-State buyers on bond to guarantee you the highest # dollar allowance for your trade! F—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. * MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1969 CONGESTION - A trio of White Sox players try in vain to reach a short fly bail off the bat of Willie Horton in the game yesterday in Chicago. The ball falls at the feet of second baseman Rich Morales (right) AP Wlrsphot. after left fielder Bob Christian (falling to ground) collided with centerfielder Ken Berry (16). Horton wound up on second base and the Tigers won an 8-2 contest/' Sutton Beats Cubs First Time Dodgers' Hurler Out of 'Rut' By flic Associated Press y Don Sutton was in jut. but finally climbed out after only four years of trying. That means there’s still hope for the Atlanta Braves and Philadelphia Phillies, who are on distressing treadmillsof their own. Sutton, the Los Angeles Dodger righthander who had lost 13 consecutive decisions to Chicago, beat the Cubs for the first time in his big league career Sunday, with reliever Pete Mikkelsen nailing down a 4-2 decision. . : * * * it The Braves, battling to stay In the thick of the five-team National League West Division race, dropped a 3-0 decision to New' York—their sixth loss in the last seven starts against the Mets in Ins then two weeks. The Phillies; battling to finish Deaf Tanker Wins for U. S. BLEGRADE (AP) - Fred Savinsky of the United States I won the gold medal in world record time of'50.4 seconds for deaf athletes in the 100-meter freestyle swimming competition during the World Games of the Deaf Sunday. The record for the event was broken three times during the day, first by the Soviet Union’s Vladimir Lokharov in 1:00.7 and minutes later by Savinsky in 1:00.0 * * ★ Arthur Trumble of the United States took the bronze medal in the 200-meter breaststroke in which he was third in 2:53.8. The gold medal was won fay Yuri Seleznov , of the Soviet Union, clocked in 2:53.3. Josephs Muszinsky Of the United States won the 200-rneter breast stroke for women in 3:06.2, followed by Canada’) Lark Johnson in 3:30.5 And Sandra Tuft of the United States in 3:20.5. out the season in the National I League East Division, absorbed! another thumping from Clncin- ■ nati, losing 10-0. Those are the same Reds who beat Philadelphia 12-5 on Friday and 19-17 a week ago Sunday. For the season, the Phillie log reads two games won and nine lost against Cincinnati. OTHER ACTION In other National League games Sunday, St. Louis clipped San Francisco 7-4, Pittsburgh took a doubleheader from San Diego 7-5 and 8-6 and Houston' defeated Montreal 3-1. ★ * fc Sutton was leading 2-1 when, he was lifted for a pinch hitter in the eighth. The Dodgers rallied for two runs in that inning and needed the jushion when the Cubs came back to score a run and load the bases against Jim Brewer. ★ ★ ★ Then Mikkelsen came in and pitched out of the jam by getting the next two batters in ground balls. Tommie Agee cracked three hits, Including his 19th homer, and Nolan Ryan, Don Cardwell and Tug McGraw combined for the five-hitter as the Mets blanked the Braves. we* Agee’s homer was the only run of the game until he started a two-run rally with a double in the ninth. The loss shoved the Braves 2% games off Cincinnati’s pace in the West. The Reds got a three-hitter from Gary Nolan, who hurled six perfect innings before Larry Hisle opened the seventh with a single. BEACH SHINES Johnny Bench drove in four runs with a single and a three-run homer as the heavy-hitting Reds won their fourth straight and 12th in the last 14 starts. Mike Shannon hammered a home run in the ninth inning, tying the game for St. Louis, and then the Cards scored three more runs to beat the Giants. JUST ARRIVED! THE ALL NEW INTERNATIONAL PICKUP GRIMALDI UR COMPANY 335-9421 Plum. Hollow' Crowns Champ Mrs. Lyle Robinson posted a 264 (87-90417) to win the ladles championship at Plum Hollow Country Club.. * * ★ Mrs. Joe Osplack, defending champion, was second at 267, sharing that spot with Mrs. Jack Hutton. Lancers Pierce, Firebirds, 24-6 rum « i soumwMt mi. NitnHt # I Grand Rapid! ' LAST SATURDAY'S RISULTS Lackawanna 14, Pontiac 4 DaylowdtL Southweit Michigan 4 OranBttthglda 14, flint 12 ---- i r—-a Lansing at Detrol at F._ ■ Lackawanna at louthwsst Michigan! Dayton at Grand Rapldt LACKAWANNA - The list of unbeatans has dwindled in the Midwest Football League with the Pontiac firebirds taking a 24-6 setback at the hands of powerful Lackawanna. other MFL games Satur- Teamsters Pull Playoff Upset Picmann Pitches Over Miscues of Mates AP Wlraphata COACH FIRED — Pitching coach John Sain of the Detroit Tigers was fired by General Manager Jim Campbell yesterday after Sain criticized the handling of Tiger pitchers by manager Mayo Smith. Sain came to the Tigers in 1967 and was considered in Major League ranks as a top flight pitching coach. Don Pickmann weathered the jams created by his defense to hurl the Teamsters surprising 5-2 triumph over i-long leader M.G. Collision in the opening game of the Gass A city playoffs last night at Jaycee Park. ★ • ★ ★ The Teamsters bunched all their runs in the third inning to drop the M.G. squad into the losers’ bracket of the doubleelimination tourney. They will play eWdnesday the winner of tonight. Halbott’s Lumber-R. T. Clippers’ game. The losers will clash tomorrow under the lights at Jaycee | Park. Picmann scattered six hits and walked four. His mates added six errors to the M.G. cause, but the veteran, husky southpaw had the right pitches in the clutch. LL. (» TRAMSTRR*(5) AB R H . AB R H Harkgy ef 4 0 0 DLWosa 3b 4 1 J McDrtald If 4 « 1 RstalO » * } 1 Trudeau fb 4 • 1 Mlfcalfa rf 4 1 O Brtkwak 3b 4 0 0 Flsssr 1b <11 day night, Dayton defeated Southwest Michigan, 27-6 Grand Rapids edged Flint, 14-and Lansing won over Detroit, 7-0. WWW Lansing and the Firebirds are dw tied with 1-1 records in the Central Division, and they meet Saturday night at Wiener Stadium. Lackawanna and Dayton are 24) in the Lakes Division and they have road encounters this week to Benton Harbor and Grand Rapids respectively. STRONG DEFENSE Pontiac’s offensive attack never could master the dogged defense of the Lancers on a wind-swept field here Saturday. The Firebirds’ only toudhdown came in the third quarter on a 10 yard pass from quarterback Doug Holcomb to end Craig Hanson. An aerial attempt at the two-point conversion went incomplete. *' W . W’ After receiving the opening kick-off, the Lancers marched 80 yards in 12 plays to pay dirt. Their first six points came on a 25 yard pass from quarterback Bernie VanRemmen to halfback Pete Mills. The kick for the extra point was no good. Lackawanna tallied two more points early in the second quarter when a bad snap from center Bill Powell on a fourth down punting situation sailed into the Firebirds’ end zone for After receiving Pontiac’s kick-off, the Lancers scored again, this time on a three yard run by 6-1 fullback Paul Dubiel. from Van Remmen to split end Jack McHale added two more points, making the score 164) at the half. _ ass interception by Lackawanna’s Zellie Dow late in the third quarter proved costly to the Firebirds, as the 6-2 defensive back barreled his way 18 yards into the end zone for a Lancer touchdown. Dubiel added two more, making the score 24-6. Newest Golf Winner Aims for Ryder Cup MILWAUKEE, Wis. (AP) -Ken Still, a talkative, personable veteran and long-time nonwinner, now has two victories this year, but the greatest thrill of his golfing life is yet to come. ‘‘It’s the Ryder Cup,” the lean 35-year-old said Sunday after his twestroke victory in the $100,009' Greater Milwaukee Open. “There’s no greater thriU than that—it’s got to be the greatest of my career. * * ★ ”1 didn’t expect to make it, and I just can’t believe that I have. To represent our country in an international match has to be the greatest thing in my I life." Still shot a remarkable seven under par on the 7,075-yard, par '72 North Shore Country Club course, and finished with a 277, two strokes ahead of South African Gary Player. ’ ft Still’s victory^—he made the Gtrus Open in March the first title of his nine-year tour career —boosted him into 10th place on the list from which 12 players will be chosen to play against Great Britain Southport, England, in September. .. 74-71 <47-43—277 .. 73-70-71-45—279 How does Hat doit for theprice?! 83-WAYS NEW! Fiat 850 Spider $2,105 4*., 900 Ooktoad (US-10) itoMOfl, t) iHRl _____M Coody, -v. ....... ..__... Ltbron Harris, 42044 .... 75-74-73-71—253 -irry Winters. 4244 ...,. 71^W-7B-JM Rod Fonsath. 42M Don Parson, 4200 ________ .... ■- — -- Jim Langlay. 4204 ....... 77-72-74-72-255 Jtrry Edward. 4200 ...... 74-73-75-71-255 Billy lS5SlTg8.......... ■ 75-74-74-70—245 Bate Hlskoy 4200 ....... 73-75-71-77—244 Carl Unis, If7.. 7;-73-J*-71—244 Bobby Lockett. 4200 ......76-71-73-77-207 Nat Starks, 42M ......... 73-74-74-72-247 Rocky Thompson, 4244 .... 72-71-W-7Z-M0 Glbby Gllbart, 4204 .. .... 71-75-44-75-340 Dick LOtz. 4200 ... 75-73-7»-73-300 I John Sdtroadar. 4100 ... 75-74*2-70-301 1900 Oakland Ave. (US-10) ' FE 5-9421 taELST**’ i 74^r7'n“*M Despite strong running halfbacks Marty Malatin Bobby Brown, the rushing attack was consistently held to small gains, and Holcomb was dropped for big losses several tiines. The better fa totaled 140 ne did have bis stiff breeze, former Purdi nected on only SOLID DEFENSE Led by linebackers John Izer and Steve Szabo, defensive squad game, had si pace with the footed receivers First Downs Rushinj Flrit Oown* Passing First Downs Penaltli Total First Downs . Nat Yards Passing Hurler Nurses Tired Arm, Softball Title Dick Shell has a weary right arm today. The fast-balling Shell pitched 31 innings of ball Friday through Sunday in leading Milbur Industry to the championship in the lower bracket playoffs in Waterford Township. After a 3-2 win over Tru-Bilt Redi Mix on Friday night, Shell came back with a 4-0 win Saturday over Midget Bar and then whipped Lighthouse Lanes twice yesterday, 4-3 and 2-1. Along with his pitching. Shell scored the winning run on a triple by John Long in the bottom of the seventh inning in yesterday’s first win over Lighthouse. In the second game, Milbur scored twice in the bottom of the sixth to wipe out a 1-0 Lighhouse lead. Hie upper bracket championship was taken by Spencer Floor in a 3-T decision over Day’s Sanitary. Jerry Carlton’s two-run single highlighted a two-run third inning by Spencer. WRAPPED UP-The pro football world Is breathing a sigh of relief today with the knowledge that O. J. Simpson will be playing football this fall with the Buffalo Bills. O. J., winner of the Heisman Trophy for his outstanding play at University of Southern California, waves to a neighbor in San Francisco after signing his four-year contract reportedly worth some $350,000. On, Off Field Twins Strike Again By the Associated Press Cesar Tover has struck again —and so has Billy Martin. Tover, making a season of breaking up no-hitters in the ninth inning by Baltimore pitchers, did it again Sunday with a line hit opening the ninth against Mike Cuellar, although the Orioles still beat the Minne-ota Twins 24. * * ★ But the hit couldn’t have been as painful to Cuellar as those Twins’ manager Billy Martin laid on Dave Boswell, one of his Martin disclosed after the de- feat that he had knocked out! Boswell in a fight in Detroit| Wednesday after Boswell had socked and kicked Twins’ outfielder Bob Allison. LOT OF STITCHES The 20 stiches Boswell suffered in the fight might well hurt the Twins as much because the right-hander, with a 12-9 record, was told by Martin not to report to the park in Baltimore so as not to embarrass him because of the condition of his face. Despite the defeat, the Twins maintained their 1%-game lead in the Weri Division of file IAJ0R LEAGUE standings LW TT 3ft •“ 44 40 .571 1414 60 53 J31 19 ....... W 57 .509 21% .ST *7 J00 2214 41 40 .414 3214 West Division 41 44 .576 - 65 44 .584 1W 44 45 .414 2014 t 45 47 .402 22 ......... 43- 44 3D 2214 43 70 J01 2414 Saturday's Rosulta i Chicago 4 ’ National Lssgu* Rost Division . won Lost Pet. OB Chicago 71 43 .*23 - Now York 42 40 .444 7 St. LteTs 43 51 .533 f Pittsburgh !» 54 .510 12 PhHOtfMnhia ...... 44 67 .396 25% Montreal 35 7* . .307 34 Was! Division Cincinnati 41 45 .575 - Atlanta .... 44 53 .547 214 Los Angola* 41 51 .545 3 San Francisco 41 52 J40 314 Houston 60 53 .531 414 San Diego 35 79 .307 30 Saturday's Rosults Kansas City 10. Cleveland o New York 2, Oakland 1 Baltimore £ Minnesota 1 Seattle 4, Washington 4 Sunday's Rtsults Detroit 4, Chicago 2 California f, Boston 1 Cleveland I, Kansas City 1 New York £ Oakland 1. 2, Minnesota o _____Jty (Rooker 2-4) at W (Bosman 7-5), night. / . cmy e-^BSV*. Beaten at ChioMo, night California at Detroit, night Seattle n aMViNR. Oakland at Batttmere, nigh Kansas City at Washington, n ...------...... York, nloh Los Angelos 4, Chicago 2 Houston 3, Montreal 1 New York 3. Atlanta o Cincinnati 10, Philadelphia 0 Pittsburgh 7-0, San Dlago 3-4 St. Louis 7, San Francisco 4 ........_... ....so WM at (Arrigo 2-2 or Mtrrltt/ll-4), nig Now York (McAndrow 3-4) at N (Griffin 7-5, night st. Louis (Carlton 13*1 at Lot A (Osteen 154) Only games schsdulsd New York at tfotetoOrlniit Chicago at San. Diego, night St, Louis at Los Angelos. night *“““—f “* 'in Francisco American League over Oakland as the New York Yankees laced | into the A’s with four homers for a 5-1 victory. V. * * ★ They were’nt the only AL clubs hitting Sunday as Detroit clobbered the Chicago White sox 8-2, California bombarded Boston 9-1, Cleveland hammered Kansas City 8-1 and Washington outlasted Seattle 7-5. * ★ ★ Tovar, like Martin, has delivered those painful blows before. Back on May 15, Dave McNally of the Orioles bad a no-hitter one out in the ninth when Tovar broke it up with a single. FIFTH STRAIGHT This time, his shot into left field on an 9-1 pitch went over the outstretched glove of shortstop Mark Belanger- Cueliar, 15-9, then closed out the game for his fifth consecutive victory and Baltimore’s sixth in a row. Jim Perry, 13-5, had a personal eight-game winning streak ended, althought he gave oqly four hits in seven innings. But two of them were Boog Powell’s 31st hofner in the* fourth inning and Elrod Hendricks’ eighty, in the seventh. Martin, a scapper in his playing days' who broke pitcher Jim Brewer’s jaw—a hit that result ed id a court suit—explained that he was coming to the rescue of Allison outside a restaurant. Allison had been trying to calm down Boswell, who w?s angry oyer coach Art Fowler’s report that Boswell had not run his normal l8-to-20 laps before Wednesday night’s game in Detroit. The Yankees, meanwhile, unloaded against Oakland while A’s slugger Reggie Jackson stretched his homerless string to 47 at bats, bis longest barren stretch of the season. Of After Roy White broke a .,1-1 deadlock with a homer in the fifth for New York, Bobby Miir-irman Munson and Gqne hit successive homprs in the sixth on five pitches. Fritz Peterson, 12-12, yielded six hits for the victory, the eighty in nine games for the Yankees. ★ h ★ , The A’s also tost Rick Monday for from four to six weeks when he suffered a fractured bgnd when hit by a pitch. * -»*-Bill Voss had three hits and drove in four runs as California jumped on Jim Lodborg,, 7-5.' Tom Murphy, 7-11, MUd Ken Tatum stopped the Red Sox; Duke Sims, Tony H6rton,JCen Harrelson and Jose Cantonal belted homers for Cleveland, making it easy for Sam McDowell, 13-10, who ffida’t give a hit untfi the sixty inning and fin-three-hitter, rim- Riverside THE,PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST II, 1969 F—3 %oup Assured|5;f0te Open in Qualifying WDGA's Match Play * Event Opens Today . The champion’s now a pro so the door is open to a number of 0|her hopefuls in the Women’s District Golf Association match pay tournament which opened today at Tam O’Shanter Country Club near Orchard Lake. Joyce Kazmierski of Grosse lie Won the title last year but has since turned professional. Another top name 18-yeaiM>ld Bonnie Lauer Berkley, winner of this year’s medal play championship, who is in Texas this week for the U.S.G.A. Women’s Amateur. Heading the list of favorites are Susan Barle of Indianwood, runner-up in the medal play this year, and Emily Gail of Grosse After today’s qualifying round, 16 of the top shooters wil be paired in the championship flight for match play beginning tomorrow and continuing through Friday. A field of 132 players will be| battling for 56 spots in the 1969 Michigan Open in an 18-holej qualifying test tomorrow Gowanie Country Club near| Mount Clemens. The 56 survivors then move on to the 72-hole Michigan Open, which drew a record en-tfy of 302 and which is to be !in 1965 played at Bedford Valley near I to Molenda and he’s expected to| University of Houston; Randy i Battle Creek Aug, 22-24. I go after another title this year. jErskine of Battle Creek, a! Defending champion in the] The list of exempt players! member of the University of I |event is John Molenda, 30, an included 20 amateurs and 931Michigan team who won the! |assistant at Knollwood, whojprofessionals. Included on thej 1969 Michigan Medal Play; and! won the championship with a j amateur list are ex-sta tel Dayton Shanahan of Novl,| I card of 72-72-73-70—287 a t amateur titlists Lloyd Syron of I former state publlnx champion. Spring Meadows last year. [Pontiac and Lynn Janson of The tournament was Pontiac’s Gene Bone, second East Lansing; Grosse Pointe’s originally slated for Spring ' 1966, was runner-up I John Grace, a senior atlMeadows but that club backed i was hurriedly switched to Bed-[ford Valley. Current state PGA champion Glenn Stuart operates the 7,020-yard Bedford layout on which he holds the record at 68. Battle Creek was the site of the Open back in 1947 when O’Neal (Buck) White won on his [home course —'Battle Creek | Country Club. A Soul Dodge Fever Reliever Is Here in fontiae Com* in end lea how Soul roliovot YOUR Dodge Fever. Motor City Dodge hat the cart, and LEN WATTS hat the dealt. MOTOR CITY DODGE 855 Oakland Ave. 338-9222 WANT TO SELL LAWNMOWERS, POWER MOWERS, ROLLER SKATES, WAGONS, BICYCLES? USE A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. TO PLACE-YOURS, CALL 332-8181. KC's Chiefs Romp Past Lions, 38-13 (Continued From Page F-l) The lions’ poor kicks and poor coverage on kick returns allowed the speedy Chiefs to set themselves up in good field position. Jan Stenerud made it 11-6 with a 38-yard field goal and before the quarter ended the Lions had another march going. A 15-yard penalty for holding .nullified a pass to McCullough to the Kansas City 23 and before the series was over the Lions were punting from mid-field. SCORING PASS Starting from his own 17, Dawson again found Pitts on the 10th play of the series for a 32-yard TD and Stenerud made -it 186. A minute later, a Munson pass intended for Phil Odle was intercepted'by Emmett Thomas who went 41 yards for the touchdown, and -a 256 lead . Another pass interception set up Stenerud’s 27-yard field goal just before the half ended, 286. ★ * ★ Greg Landry . started a^ quarterback in the second half without any scoring, even though the Lions trying for six inches on two running plays failed as Bill Triplett was stopped at the KC 40. The Chiefs moved the ball to the Detroit three and as the fourth period started QB Mike Livingston his the line from one fotot and scored. It was 356. Again, the Lions marched from the 20 to the KC 20 and a 28-yard field goal attempt by Errol Mann failed. The Chiefs added a 3-pointer as reserve kicker Bob Stein booted a 14-yarder. PENALTY:J1URT —The Lions moved to the KC 34 _ and again a holding penalty thwarted the threat, but in the final minutes Landry started his fourth march of the half from the 20 and the lions scored on a 23-yard pass to McCullouch. A 45-yard aerial to Odle set up the tally Only three of the 58 players on theJions’ travel squad failed to play, and the pass receiving of Charley Sanders and Odle were toe bright spots of the passing attack. The Lions will now prepare for a home exhibition Friday night against the Buggalo Bills who are prepared to unveil O' J. siftipsnn after his contract (signing Saturday. SCORING SUMMARY RIVERSIDE’ ST-107 /YAONTGOA/IER WARD MORE WILL BUY YOUR 2ND 6.00-13 ST-107 TUBELESS BLACKWALL WHEN) YOU BUY THE 1ST AT OUR LOW REG. PRICE PLUS 1.59 F.E.T. EACH AND TRADE-IN TIRES OFF YOUR CAR Built for today's average driver, Wards ST-107 gives good mileage under all road conditions. Continental rolled tread design .delivers you with better traction, more stability, and' greater steering response. 4-ply nylon cord. 27-month guarantee against tread wear-out. Lifetime quality and road-hazard guarantee. Buy now and save at-Wards! FAST, FREE MOUNTING Riverside GUARANTEED AGAINST FAILURE du. I. rood bar Of d» (..apt repaired,!* punt. him) Of from dafoct, In malariala nr work mar-hip for th. M. of th. original hood. In COM of failur., Ward, wlH ox-diang. Nr. far a now ana, charging only that portion of' th. currant prk. (pke , Fad*rol ExciM To.) .quivaknt to th. pwcint of trtod und. GUARANTEED AGAINST TREAD WEAROUT for month, ipodtjod or for milt, ipocifiod. In com trodd wtcri out. Word, wlU txchongo tiro for a now ora, charging only tho difforanca b.twain th. currant prlc. (plu, F.d.rol Exclto Tox) and a ipraific dollar ollowanc. (Trtod woor guarantee do.1 not apply to fim trad commercially.) B— 1 LA5T 9 DATS! TUBELESS BLACKWALL SIZES 1ST TIRE 2ND TIRE ONLY FiU$ FAT. EACH 6.00-13 $13 $«* 1.S9 6.50-13 $16 $7- 1.79 7.00-13 6.95-14 $18 $9* 1.94 1.9A 7.35- 14 7.35- 15 $19 $10* 2.07 2.08 7.75- 14 7.75- 15 $21 $12* 2.20 2.21 8.25-14 8.15-15 $24 $15* 2.36 2.38 8.55-14 8.45-15 $27 $18* 2.57 2.57 8.85- 14 8.85- 15 $29 $20* 2.86 v 2.79 ‘With trade-in tire off your car. Whitewalb $3 rr •ltt» li ...» a » T-1| ... 11 IT « is—ss Dawson (Oar- aunson i nnww. - f«.SM3from D.wwn (St.n.-n (Sit- INSTALLED FREE 50-mo. XHD battery regular exchange '25 SAVE 12-vol» $8 mm exchange Riverside* Extra Heavy Duty . . y, more power than most national heavy-duty brands. Powerline construction for fast starts in any weather. Save! HKOHs Jkkju LOoaJa- : 55; TOWN & COUNTRY'S-3 WAYS BETTER THAN OTHER SHOCKS INSTALLATION AVAILABLE mmM Pontiac Mall Peak level performance aver life of the shock is maintained because anti-foaming baffle coil increases shock efficiency. Fluid loss, the number once cause of shock failure, is virtually eliminated due to multilip rod seal with 8 wiping edges. Passengers, vital -car parts (steering, coil t springs) are protected from sudden bounces by means of progressive valving action. 4.99 Riverside® Deluxe shocks — Equal most . new-car shock absorbers ............ 3.99 EACH OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10:60 A M. TO 9.00 P.M. SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 5 P.M. • 682-4940 • F—-4 THE PONTIAC PKKSSr MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1968 can’t do it lid British tngela Bar- The sister combination of Nell Truman and Mrs. Christine Truman Janes had just salvaged a come-from-behind doubles'victory over Mrs. Mary Ann Eisei Curtis and Valeria Ziegenfuss Sunday 1-6, 6-3, 6-4. Their triumph followed an 8-6, 641 win by.86-year-old Peaches Bartkowicz over 28-yeatvold which gave the Tj.S. a seemingly insurmountable 3-0 edge. Saturday, America’s Julie Held-man beat Virginia Wade and Nancy Richey downed Winnie Shaw of Great Britain. The Truman-Janes team brought Britain its seventh win in the 41-year-old tournament When they won the deciding match in a 4-3 defeat of the U.S. last year at Wimbledon in London. Af Wirephoto Mary Ann Curtis. Miss Truman and (her* sister, Christine Truman Janes, whipped the U,S. pair, 1-6, 6-3, 6-4. The Americans lea ] 331 loaded walk sent two more runs -jri . *.'Y- -|A^| across in the sixth with just one Clark Graebner of New York’ being recor(je<|( and a single ’rSin . r 1 fSl’ flU three-base misplay closed SpSSSfS! CAUp tfamma‘! Job Lu‘z!the scoring in the seventh. 77 ?s 7*-jm of Los Angeles, seeded second, tt . .... m u; 6-2, 6-4 to win the Meadow U A W’ M °“thi‘ lts ®on' t? ^74-jn Club g12 ooo invitation Grass querors> H- but gave ~ Court Tennis Tournament Sun-;fev4e" unearned r“ns 0 Hilton 3b 4 1 By the Associated Press The rest of pro football, par-to the'race and had to visit the i ticularly the world champion Infield '.ospital for treatment an New York Jets, “had double rea-hour before the start. son today to pause and ponder over the Buffalo Bills, who won only a single game last season. The Bills came up with two big accomplishments over the weekend. They stunned the Vince Lombardi-coached Washington 'Redskins 21-17 Friday night. First Call for Harriers All runners interested in trying for spots on the Orchard Ridge campus cross country team this fail are invited tq meet with new coach Don Kern tomorrow at 11 a.m. in Rdbm 114 of Building B on the campus. , The Chicago Cubs have finished third in the National League for two straight years. BACK - SCHOOL Thi. ye«r, pet oa the tram— ihr Mambsr One Team With • Number One Deni from BILL FOX CHEVROLET And what belter way to get back to class than in a new .Chevrolet. This is the best time 'you’ll ever g£t to buy one, too, because right now we’re right, in - the middle of the year-end Smart Buying Season. The deals have never been better, and the cars can’t last. $o why not.come in and find out what it’s like to be first. At BILL FOX, putting you first keeps us first; and that includes After-the-Sale Service. CHEVRO Twenty-four hours later, the Bills signed O.J. Simpson, the prize catch from the 1988 college ranks, If the Bills can beat the Redskins without Simpson, What will they be able to do with the former: Southern California All-America flash rumdog in their backfield? With simpmh, do the Bills pose as a serious threat to the Jets’ supremacy in the American League? It’s only the exhibition season, of course, and only time will provide the answers to these questions. >- The Jets provided the other major surprise of the weekend exhibition action. Hiey bowed to the St. Louis Cardinals in Louis Saturday night 13-6, and for the second straight game Joe Namath failed to complete a touchdown pass. Two games were played Sunday. The Boston Patriots beat the Cincinnati Bengals at Bowling Green, Ohio, 21-13, and the Cleveland Browns outscored the San Francisco 49ers at Seattle 24-19. * ★ * Other Saturday night exhibitions saw Baltimore stop the Oakland Raiders 34-30, San Diego edge the New Orleans-Saints 10-7, Atlanta whip Philadelphia 13-7, Kansas City clobber Detroit 38-13, Chicago down Miami 16-10, Green Bay pip the New York Giants 22-21 and the Minnesota Vikings romp over-Denver 26-6. In addition to Buffalo’s upset of the Redskins, the Rams tripped the Dallas Cowboys in Los Angeles Friday night 24-17. Brown* 49or* First downs ............. n 41 Rushing ysrdag* ......... M 105 Passing yardago ......... U 208 British Cite Golden Rule in NE Play CLEVELAND (AP) J There’s sort of a fractured Golden Rule governing Britain’s play in today's finadr matches of the 41st Wightman Cup tennis tournament. It goes something like this: ‘Let’s try to dp unto them what they did unto us.” ♦ jw * And although Great Britain’schances of overcoming the United States’ 3-1 advantage in the first four matches slim, hope was mustere' looking back to the 1966 < That was when the U.S. came the same 'deficit to .. the best-Of-7 competition 4-3. "We once had it don’t see why w. against them,” si team captain r'~~ rett. : FIRST VICTORY The sister < ” First Downs .................. 15 Rustling yardage ....... .„.„I54 Passing yardags .........-.,.141 n yardage ............ 52 Boston—Frailer I pass ti Cincinnati Cto-iQ Boston—I (Cappellltl kick). Bos—Banks 21 pass from Tallaferra (Cappsllallltl kick) Cln-FG Clemons IS Bos-Nanct l run (Cappalllttl kick) Cine—Robinson 1 run (Shotmskar kick) , pp-^CaiHarni* .. — Boston I. IB—Voss. Andrews, IS—Voss. HR—Spancar (4), 0 0 0 V Kelly 3b , 5M?/ 4 0 I 1 G»»On Cf 3 ] 1 1 3 0 0 1 Canntaro C 4 0 0 0 Hrtonston-P 10 10 Klrbyp >10 0 0 Gibbon P i! Hrinlak ph O* i Baldschn p OOM RPena Ph tiff: Sisk p OOO If ,7 , 9 S Total Will 6 ,3 3 3 000 — f B0f 90’r* l Patek, Murrell. DP— San Dlago -E-Pagan, I Pittsburgh J. 3^Murrall?*HR^tommto”'iHT, I (5), O.Brown (13), |p H r E R B B SO - I ^ Blass (W.ll-7) .........» * * * J: R ER BB SO 1 Haiianstaln ....9 ! J 5.5 114 3' Gibbon ................ 5 ; J j J IP. 0- o 0 l.KI*MUi-l»........j- .} J * i. 5 2 2 2 0 Bildschun ....... ] ‘ j « » | 1 I ,0 i { HBP-by - D Rohjrt*. ‘A-gSw>-(Schofield). WP— | Cannluaro. T—1:31. A—10.073. < r MONTRIAL rhbl H0USTqM*rhbl ... ” I ti; -»•"> fiji" 0 1 1 Afrrshall If 4 0 0 0 Bailey lb 3 0 10 Wvnn cf 3 0 10 1 1 0 Hunt lb 4 1 1 o! Laboy 3b 3 0 0 0 NMljler rf 40 11 09 2 'Bonds Cf V 1 0(Herrera If 0 0 2 0 Minka is 411 -------- - 3 1 o o Phillips cf 4 0 2 0 Blafary lb 2 o l l 4 0 0 0 Bateman c 4 0 2 0 Rader j 522 0 DJohnson tt------- Joseph 3b MRVan c Watkins c Firman p RStone ph Palmer p Farrell p Briggs ph Total . hiladel. Cincinnati Icaao .. ESqi I —- 5. 2B—Back! DF-_ I Hi '’reb'b'I'so HOItzman (L.13-4) . 7 4 2 2 2 ' » (w,mn”vl2J VS ’ KSSyit-J i:*3 0 0 0 0 -AAlkkelsen. T-2:2fr. A-27,595. Skeet Champ orvWheels RUSH, N Y! (AP) - William Ellis of Mount Clemens, Mich., won the wheelchair title in the National Skeet Shodt Association’s world championships Saturday, He totaled 248 in his class. I R ER BB SO 1 5 5 2 3 1 5 5 3 0 1 0 0 0 2 Nolan (W.3-3) ..... t 3 0 0 0 5 WP—Fryman. PB—M.Ryan. T—2:12. A—15,519. PHILADELPHIA CINCINNATI ’ ab r h bl abrhbl 4tio Rosa rf 5 o. 1 l „ 4 0 0 0 Tolan cf soil RAllan ib 4 0 10 AJohnson » 4 2 2 0 Calllson rf 3 0 0 0 Peroi Jb 5 2 2 0 DJohnson It 3 .0 0 0 tMav lb 5 12 2 Joseph 3b ’-Tt 0 0 0 Ranch e - 5 2 2 4 MRyan c 2 0 0 0 Woodwrd ss 12 11 Wotidns e 1 0 0 0 Ruli 2b - - • * Money ss 3 0 10 Nolen p . Frymoh p UU i '-V I t THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, AUGUST II, 1969 F—3 LOOKING fit 'YOUR' SWING eun flaws DEVELOP in the best op HuGi?m™kJF N0T SICKLY DETECTED^ CfiN MULTIPLY INTO fi SERIOUS PROBLEM. NATURALLY* fi TEACHING, PROFESSIONAL WILL NOTE THESE SLIGHT ERRORS BEST, BUT A GOOD SELF-CHECKING METHOD IS TO PRACTICE SWING BEFORE A MIRROR. THIS WILL OFTEN REVEAL A HITCH YOU'VE BEEN UNAWARE OF, AND ENABLE YOU TO CORRECT IT BEFORE It AMPLIFIES. (THE MIRROR TEST IS ESPECIALLY EFFECTIVE FOR THE TOP-P^-THE* SWING CHECK) Horse Race Results Conn’s Clothes o! Pontiac tightened its bolt defensively and put on its hitting suit for two decisive innings Sunday in reaching the finals of the Michigan Recreation Association slowpitch sqftball district tournament at Detroit. Conn's knocked Harper Woods into the loser’s bracket, 12-6, then qualified for the finals by surprising a , good Michael’s of Detroit team, S-2. Conn’s will bid for a berth in the state finals at 5 p.m. Sunday against either the Detroit Highland Park teams. If Conn’s loses that outing, it will play again at 6:30 for the state jerth. FAST START Larry Douglas’ two-run triple started Conn’s off to opening inning edge against Harper Woods, and a six-run third sewed up the win. Two key errors plus clutch run-producing singles by DOn McConner, Larry Peet and Bob Smith featured the outburst. Back-to-back home DRC Results SATURDAY'S RESULTS :• Countess ___mss cur Enlightenment 12.20 6.20 4.00 5.00 3.40 2.00 -----ached Wedge Ahead Battle Rich • Corel 5.80 340 t (44) Paid $39.00 5.00 3.20 2.4 5.20 3.1 3.60 2.00 Stoney 4th—03700 Cl Don Hullo 5SKT5.« Sm-SMOO ' Gal lamer Hazen Point Gramiss optional Twin: (t-6) Paid $9.40 Ath—$5000 Allowance; 4 Furlongs: Pilomar 7.00 4.20 2.00. - Fair Landing 0.00 4.20 Zuko't Bad Boy 3.oo m-ptfOOO Alio—— i ------------ Metric Mile Stormy Will Hark tha Herald Baa's Little Man 'ogee Froi Jhfilar DHL. Queen O' Light 6 Furlo Bee's LOT Crimson B Super W. Victor's Best Claiming! 4 Furlongs: -- w-. "(t Brass Gal I ______ Sculptor Boy Make It Platinum Prlncoss Jo Jo King Jeff a-Fathar Zakoor Jumping Sailor a-Gold Column a-Holland-Sanak entry I's Music Primrose Princess Synergism Rocketflre Better Bee' _ ' Princess Tamari i; 1 1/14 Mils-Lost Claim Thla Trick Grand Me Al'f Jo Jo Cecil Acrlllco Hazel Park Results Twill Double: (24-3-*) Paid M35.4a . ♦It!—SI5000 Handicap; I Mila 74 Itt-fIM* cend. Pace; Royal Cop " "> 'UbM ~— SATURDAY'S RESULTS ■ ■ — ■ ■.^ |...—. i .JO Cond; ™ | 1 .*i1—- „1L4# 6.40 3.00 The Grumbler : (4-2) Paid 5177.40 Attndanca 11.044; I DRC Entries TUBSDAY'S ENTRIES Feme Sole Artistation Ever polled Red Rapture Suzy -Hays 21.20 3.1 2 1/14 Miles: 6.20 4.00 $RIV|BV1 11,60 6 60 Directr 5 00 North aTBTe ..-..J D«"Y <«> *»«• 11.414.175 ]rtf_s12M cond. Trot! Mucho Pride Frivolout BOy Fairlane Hanover 4th—S12H Cend. * Sassafrass •y Gold Coutin Cataaux Janidawn _________Clalml..,. ____________ Shamrock Sue "Tally Give 'Em tho Axo Courting Sam Slogan Jammrac Steplnonadregm Running Rafnt Kentucky Brook Flying Tarquii Bel Allan ■H -•“* 'laimlng! l Milt 74 Yai p Run Easy Big Sing Pride and T Tonga Bast Bio Doga Tudor Monarch Junior Hurlers Post Shutouts Shutout hurling by Dave Clancy and Roger Holland gave SnacK and Rack and the Pontiac Police Officers Association triumphs i« ' the city junior baseball CldSs D~p layoffs Saturday. A triple by Jerry Reddeman and an error on the same play in the second inning gave Holland, who had doubled to lead off the inning, two runs and that was more than enough as . P.P.O.A. downed Elmer’s Ashland, 4-0, in the National Division. r ft ft' * Snack and Rack wrapped up f’ fe American laurels by nipping' ranbrook, 1-0, in a 'game called by rain after five innings. Clancy scattered four hits, ★ #. ★ ' First, sacker Craig Medlen and second baseman Larry H^tsiey made two key defensive plays to thwart scoring opportunities by the losers, and ..shortstop Gary Mazza singled home Tom Setter With tho gamq’s lone rtih in the third inking. 5U00 Cond. Pact! ) Mila . —ar Eddie 4.M Kahla's Grattan Baron Duane Parfacta: (1-7) Paid I73.M 7th—5S0M Preferred Pace! 1 A Record Tima 7.4( ------ Relco id To- ......iOO Cl Star John ->atch Pride General Knox th—$3204 Cond. Paco! 1 imely Goost liar Jim Ar$14N Cond. Pact! 1 Kenny Craad Duchess Exprtss 1st—51200 Cond Flying/Tima Racay Blaia 5.20 3A0 2.40 ! 1 Mila: 0.20 4.00 3.00 i: (4-1) Paid 5I24.M Conn's Enters Finals of Softball Tourney runs by Felix Brpqks and Hank Thomas wrqpped up the scoring. In the seond game, consecutive singles by Louis Seay, Smith, winning pitcher Walt King, Brooks and Thomas plus Cy Gren’s sacrifice fly produced four runs in the third inning. A triple by McConner and Peet’s safety made it 5-0 and Detroit couldn’t catch up. * * The city divisional playoffs schedule: TONIGHT'S GAMES BEAUDETTE PARK - Ducky's Bar .s. Bob A Kan's Bar, 7 p.m.; Paterson's Beauty Salon vs. Pontiac Piston, 0:30 NORTHSIDE ' PARK — Tlmberlanes Lounge vs. Tha Congregation. 7 p.m.; Reliable Transmission vs. Grubb's Ken-nali. 0:30 p.m. TUESDAY MORNINO BEAU0BTTE — Parry Drugs ** Green Dragona, 9 a.m.; Tha Hornets ‘rt ALU's Bis NORTHSIDE Tho L.J.'S, » a.m Filthy Pew.. 10:30 Art^A LJI'S.BaS' 10:30 a.I .; Tho Relacts vs'. Tho Water softener owners: end rusty water problems WIDE OVALS 22 4-ply nylonl Safer, smoother riding; better traction; stops quicker; corners easier! plus F.I.T. Whitewalls and redwalls $3 morel SIZE PRICE F.l.T. SIZE PRICE F.E.T. D70-14 22.88 2.28 G70-15 26.88 2.78 F70-14 24.88 2.58 H70-14 28.88 2.85 G70-14 26.88 2.73 H70*l 5 28.88 2.97 Waterford Sets Golf Tourney for Juniors It’s tournament time for Waterford Township’s junior golfers . and the competition opened this morning. On tap today was action for the girls in a par-3 outing at Waterford Hills, while the same course will serve as the site for the younger boys on Wednes-' ly. ' On Thursday, boys in the nine-hole division will play at j Twin Lakes and another par-3 boys division outing Friday at Waterford Hills wraps up the event. WATERFORD TOWNSHIP JUNIOR GOLF Lut Week's Results BOYS 9-HOLE :-_Earnler Bragg (44), Bruce Brissette (46), Dave Haggard (46), Kim Rosier (46), Kim Pedersen (46). BOYS PAR-3: Mika Ballard (33), Allan Fisher (34), Eric Smith (35). GIRLS PAR-3( Terri Thompson (38). 1 \auraan Burns (39), Mary Hotchkiss! PREMIUM tires 88 4-ply nylon , coral Wide profile with wraparound shoulder. Cushion •smooth ride. 20 600/700/13 plus F.l.T. Texas Net Pro Wins Top Prize TORONTO MV-Cliff Richey, a hard - h i 11 i n g independent pro from San Angelo, Tex., defeated touring pro Butch Buch-olz 6-4, 6-4, 5-7, 641 Sunday to win the men’s singles title at the Canadian Open Tennis Championships. Rickey’s -victory was good for $2,000. In the women's singles, Faye. Urban of Windsor, Ont., took the title and a $200 first prize with a UP _ crushing 6-2, 6-0 victory over 4Mj second-seed Vicki Berner of 55*4,444 Vancouver: | RED-OUT®is available from many retailers selling water conditioning salt. For more information and a list of dealers near you,.write: Diamond Crystal Salt Company | Dept. R-45 St. Clair, Michigan 48079 UNITED TIRE SERVICE SIZE PRICE F.E.T. SIZE PRICE F.E.T. 650/700/13 20.88 2.02 695/735/14 23.88 2.06 670/775/15 23.88 2.06 750/775/14 23.88 2.19 815/025/15 25.88 2.36 800/825/14 25.88 2.36 845/055/15 27.88 2.54 850/855/14 27.88 2.54 900/15 29.88 2.85 885/900/14 29.88 2.85 885/915/15 29.88 2.85 s Hazel Park Entries MONDAY'S ENTRIES ■ M Tr#t! I Milo: Mighty Monarch Sudan's Special Daddy Gent J. S. Rad Eagle Goodie Girl Miss Johnnie Ray ““ ----Claiming Jorch Bi mine Pace. 1 Mila: Cholcemar Worldly Callle Frosty Craad Shammie Tantar Clam's Tornado Miss Bertha Creed FroSty AM 4tti-tl1N Claim Vera's Boy Nasty Nan Bobby Freeman Spindeltop Joan ItB-SHOO Cond. Porter Tone Roman Empire Right Season Terrific 4th—5)400 Cond. Peachtree Parader Lord Roger L. Pride's Rusty Pace. 1 Mila: Master Key Justly Keyed •Sound Track All Pep -PPCp! I sth—52700 Claiming Pace. 1 Justly Scottish Kendelwood Bel Alshire's Abbs BID G. . Tret. 1 Mila: Speedy Nibble - Caleb's Daughter • Jean Dally Phantom Colby By Tha Associated Press BUENOS AIRES-^Carlqa Monion, 140. rgentina, outpintod Tom Bathea, Now BENONI, South Africa—Ftoddle Littla, Las Vagas. Nsv., T55W. stopped Joe Ngi- y aimm'inrmY i n $ iratTrrrrrrrx : May We Serve DANIELS 563 Witt Huron FE 3-71 IKy .1S4S(lt4Stl4tMlttff«>5»»»«y INSURANCE AGENCY SHHHHHHHHHHHH! in our own quiet way we are having a mode! Close-Out All 1969 BUICKS - OPELS GIGANTIC SAYINGS Grimaldi BUICK-OPEL 210 Orchard Lk. Pontia NU-TREADS ™10S MOST ANY SIZE MAG WHEELS ET 2-14x4, 15x6 Including hardware SIZE PRICE F.l.T. 690x13 10.01 57* 700x1$ 10.00 37* 775x14 10.00 45* 775x15 10.01 45* •25x14 10.00 45* •15x15 10.00 45* 045x15 12.SS 54* >55»14 12.08 54* 900x14 12.00 55* 900x15 nm 55* Non-detergent oil 29< Winch*stBr motor oil. 10, 20, 30 wt. Save! Transmission fluid 37.‘ . For automatic transmissions, power steering. WANTED NON-FERROUS METALS No. 1 COPPER 50* No. 2 COPPER ,k-45* BRASS... ‘25‘ RADIATORS 25c ALUMINUM '>-8« Pontiac Scrap Co. 136 Branch Entrance eit Hess St. 332-0200 S.T.P. treatment m 77< [aia.i1 OU treatment prolongs engine IhumiM life. Shop now! i -.....-.i...\ Sealed beams V7 . 4001-4002 headlamps only. Buy now and savel Standard shocks 2-7.88 Installation is available. New Champion, AC, Autolite |§ spark plugs 684 Ail new, all first ^1 y a I i ty—spO , k plugs. Dependable. Save now! Reconditioned spark plugs... sets «of 8 only I5i Fully reconditioned sure-fit* spark plugs ir sets of eight. Front-end alignment 688 Most cars I Set caster, camber, steering! Air condition $3 more. STOllRft Ventilated cushions H 88< Makes summer »• toTeTlTmt 181 The Dow Jones Industrial av* icet seemed to be taking the de-i an Effect might prove tempo-, tatjons on {arm Bubsidy pay. Iso prage at noon was off . 2.65 at valuation news “in pretty good rary in nature. I ments this year. 1 “|821.81. stride.” They said the trading; ■* * * j jn fact, Reps. Paul Findley of 1.»l. Declines led advances by,activity indicated investors! The Associated Press 60-stock jj|iinois and Silvio 0. Conte of loo about 270 issues. Were cautious and On the side*; average at noon was off 1.0 at I Massachusetts carry around First-hour volume of 2.08 mil-!lines while “waiting to see what 1291.2, with industrials off 1.3, printed motions to be ready for gallon shares on the New York 'direction the market will take.’* trails off .2, and utilities off .4. | prompt action when the now i — ‘ deadlocked issue arises again. France Faces by Devaluing Franc i, Treniparent. bu.. Derrlee, 12-pt. brat* errla», 12-pt.Cth. vlocuaut 0 Pak, dl. bags 2.751 Ihe New York Stock Exchange (liGTelEI 1,52 176 34% 34% 344k — 1, Root. dl. bch. Paas, Green, bu. Pappars. Cayenne, pk. bikl Potatoes. 204b. bag Redlehei, Rad. di. bch. Redlehei, White, di. bch. Rhubarb, dt. bch.......... i 13% 9.00 AatnaLlf I 40 5.5WA)rRgdn ,95g 2.00; AtcanAlu 1.10 .90 Alleg Co .log 1-50l AllegLud 7 46 . 1.30 AllegPw 1.30 . 1.50 AllladCh 1.90 -Tomatoes. 14-lb. bskt. . 31 15% 15 OS 34Ss 35 x90 104S 1014, 70 11 25% 11 14% 144k 7 42’, 49'k S3 list 31 'k 114 17Sk 27% 91 34 33', 10 24 25% *43 it’i 40% 13 17% 141k • Goodrich 1.73 139 39'« 30V, 39. .. k I Goodyear .05 023 27% 24% 2444 • GraceCo 1.50 55 31% 30% 31% + k OranlteC Stl 16 15*4 15% 15% — BPIl 41 (SrantW 1 40 11 43% 43% 43% -41 R*VlOf 39 28% 20*k 204k I1 . . —C)~ ® Questor .50 17 19% 19 RalstonP .40 15 23% ia Ranco Inc .92 , 4 28% l Raytheon .50 25 34 Ih Low Laet Chg. 1 UCR AND ORKiNS Gt AS. P 1,30 Gt Nor Ry 3 Gt West Flnl GtWhUnll .90 Orden»nl .94 Greyhound l Am Cen 2.20 It was last May 27 when the House, by a 224-142 margin, voted to limit individual subsidy payments under the farm pro-Nyjgram to $20,000. But the Senate rejected this k when completing action on its version of the Agriculture De-, I apartment money bill'in early i IV* _ *7 July. There the mater rests. i7% Z % | There has been n6 move in 2/ w 13% 14 ( + 4k; the House to name conferees to '7 8% 054» 85% -%| try to icon out differences in the i m _ J} 1 R*ynTob' $0 iM Mik 3p% versions of the appfopria- i 3444 L «& s™ a.5* +*% &■» meastire for the curftnt ImM 2,A.....ywr. ..... %! But when this step is attempt- __ cd, Findley and Conte want to 37 ‘34% 24 j4Vk__have the House instruct its con- 134 3744 By JOHN CUNNIFF , AP Business Analyst NEW YORK — France’? devaluation -of the franc was! recognition of a reality, a bowing to the course of events, something that much of the world thought was lacking in] the days of Charles Gaulle. The reality was, that despite the official value of thei.______________ franc as stated CUNNIFF by the French government, speculators and currency traders already had devalued French money. They weren’t willing to pay 20 cents for a franc. ★ * ★ The weakness in the French financial situation was evident as long ago as May 1968, when workers and students rioted and; the workers won big pay increases, something they had been denied for years previously. were being cashed in was be- little more than a year before coming unbearable. \ j*gainst the austerity of the De I Gaulle government, would riol make further It was “common sense,” said President Pompidou, to bring the franc into line with the rate to which It had already dropped in foreign trade transactions. The -official statement declared: “To try to overcome this handicap would be to choose a policy of brutal deflation which would impose unbearable sacrifices and massive I unemployment on the country.” NO MORE SACRIFICES In other words, the populace of the nation, which had rioted a immediate sacrifices in the name of austerity. • Austerity was often the policy of De Gaulle. Austerity was thd policy renounced, for the ihoj ment at least, by the Pompidou government, althbugh some sort of wage-price controls still cotild face the French. The devaluation also was a closing chapter in the public life of a great Frenchman. It Wai the renunciation Of a policy fought for proudly by De GauUec Moynihan Concedes That Welfare Plan Will Aid South Most* Many experts predicted then that France couldn’t absorb WASHINGTON (AP) - A such increases in the costs of its Njxon administration spokes- rVAAfto_iViof inAtrUakltr ToVnnnh . r . .. Endive. Bleached. bu. Eocarele. bu. E«c4rol«, Bi««chtd. bu. LdnuAMRS Muittrd, bu.' Sorrel, bu, ... H§ Z SlSovccjfi ''54 21 "9% TV ur lOVh — % RoyDut 1.03g 111 444k 44 iT 244k 25% 250k + % RyderSyo .50 49 35 35% 35 345 34% 30 344k ... • 74 23% 23% 23% — 14 21V2 II 21% -% gftwiy 1.10 IJosLd 1.50 ILSenR 2440 .... - IH tiwiiiflft IT n. -L. fwa •» :s. —n— f-iWWf SiP'rit-3'! f vlhKlaMng .70 t43 23% 21H 31% +1%; !Ho«L'.« 19% ~ HSW"’ ’jj0 45 10% jWk lOVS + % Poultry and Eggs DETROIT (AP) — (VISDA1—Egg p paid per dozer Thursday by urti receivers. (Including u.S l: Grade A (umbo 41-52, axlra large 44-471 large 43-45, {medium 35-39%, small 20-21. CHICAGO (AP)-(IJSDA)—Butler Thursday: wholesale selling prlcts unchanged, 93 score AA 47.444 , 92 A 47.444, 90 B • lowaPSv 1.32 , *5gi: To i i :r!»x i/ “s livestock dosing livestock: Hogs 200, U.S. 1-3 200-225 lbs. barraws Br and gills 27.25-27.50; 2-3 220-240 fie ~ la' .... PI ..... HHPPHn H .... §. BucySr 1.20 27.25, 5-4 240270 lbs. 24-27; U.S. 1-5 300- Budd Co .00 400 lbs. sows 23.50-24.25; I# 400-400 1fe. Bulova_n.40 21.75-23.50. o..-1. yu Cattle 20..______________ steers 30.5041.50, mixed g 40 157% 155 155*4 —B— 47 23*4 23*4 23% 27 31 }2M |244 21 34 33*4 34 17 41% 41 45% - -. 12 21% 21% 21% —*4, 10 59% 59 59 —'% Jewel Co 1.5n 18 40*4 40% 40*4 — % JohnMan 1.20 29 45% 45% 45% — % JohnJhn .80a 455 22% ». 22% + JkljonLogan .80 45 31% 5t% »t% - %UoneLeu 1.35 111 li% 31% 31% + % | Jot tent .40 125 44 44 45% —1 joy Mlg 1.40 13 44*4 43% 44 —r, 75 27*4 ,27 27*4 -h *4 , 35 24*4 86' "" *34 59% 59V. -r P 232 17% 14*4 14*4-p % x9 21% 21% 21% 4- % 21 11% 11% 15% — 1 49 32% 31% 31*4 ... 20 10% 10*4 10*4 - 41 20% 19% 19% - . tOMNJ 2 70g" 215 - .... ;; a ,< ■. -1 idouoh 2.70 K100103 101% io2Vs SB fc fettffGBH I »% ao% 3S^S3»/4 31% 325/4 -t- V41 steriDrug .70 53 35% 35H §6Vj 1 '¥ C 4 +5V; H •» 5 25% 25% H IS 43% 42% .43% « «% 42 42% - ^ limitation during sessions with 37 m> 27% 27% + v. | the Senate counterparts. PH«< ‘‘That way they can’t come '|2 a?** me ao% Z % [ back with anything else,” Fin-.! jitf W Tg-ic * dley said in an interview. “I’m M% 30% - % carrying this (motion): around .. .. inside my billfold.” IH* m *4 j- % Tj,e House appr0ved a $20,000 «% 45% payment limitation under the I 3*% + 5*gifarm program last year, too, 122 j4% 24v. _ % ^ but it was quickly dumped by so 32% 32% 32% “ the wayside in a conference I with the Senate. •, Findley recalled that a parliamentary move at that_time prevented a vote on instructing the House conferees. With only an up-or-d6wn vote on the compromise* bill which by that time had been stripped of the payment limitation. “I learned my lesson once,” Findley said. goods—that inevitably French goods would become too expensive to compete in world markets. Especially when Germany was so competitive. HARDY ECONOMY Adjoining France, Germany man concedes that financially southern states will benefit most from President Nixon's new welfare proposals—a criticism raised^ by northern leaders. But, added presidential assistant Daniel P. Moynihan {yester- was enjoying a hardy economy, day, “I think you will find that So strong was It in fact’that most of the poor are in the many currency investors be-'South.” lieved the mark to be one of the! * * * safest currencies around. Theyi Mayor John Lindsay of New *18 to urban affairs, and the only Democrat to hold a high advisory position at the White House, was a chief architect W the welfare reform proposals. ★ ★ * Another comment came from former Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey who said Qie; ideas are “largely progressive” but include “nothing new, noth*! ing startling.” It will be'essential for all of —T— 37 M% 231 3 54% 54*miMi 124 33% 32% M% — 55 24% 25% *■' 440 33% 33 --- 46 25% 25% 25% -V X178- 23% 22*4 22*4 -76 122% 120% 121 - * 18% -*7 24% 24. - 43 IS . 14% 1 180 25% 27% 8 o 30% 30%“- The existing farm* program, • started .by Congress in 1965, has ; made possible annual payments • of more than $3 billion to farm • operators to control production ! of wheat, feed grains and cot-’ ton. It also applies to wool. -In 1967 there were five pay-i ments of more than $1 million ’ and 15 between $500,000 and $1. million each. Secretary of Agriculture Clif-1 ford Hardin has opposed a pay-1 ment limitation on the existing • program but there *have been > rumors he mhy recommend 1 some type of limitation as part 1 of a new program to be an-i nounced this fall. ■ felt it was undervalued. l York Cityhadissued astate-If the mark was indeed under-; ment earlier saying the pro-valued-then it'would make a gram outlined by Nixon Friday good investment. It would mean;nig^ “fajis completely to cor-alMi that German goods would ;rect the present inequities in the enje^ a price advantage i" I distribution of federal welfare eign markets, / which included I assistance „ France- ^ I New York Gov. Nelson A. The matter came to a head in November, when the tremen- lhe Pr°Posals contain /‘needed, dous reserves of gold and cur- "ew^ c°ncePts ’ bu‘ do" ‘ do rencies that had accumulated I"“ch4(0vN!W*X°rk a"d °ther under the austere economy 0f,ndustr,al,zed states earlier years began to drain;‘SOUND CONCEPTS’ from France. Francs were sold! there is, Time what follow-through Humphrey said in a interview. Pan Am Pact Voting May End Walkout NEW YORK (AP) - Ground employes of Pan American RH , I World Airways complete voting While supporting the sound today on a tentative contract as overpriced, marks were concepts which the President!aKreement to end the strike that bought as underpriced. jhas set forth, I will work to ex-S;fg1SF?May. _ * * SCJ . ■ I lend their application so New About 8,000 members of the The money was sent from y0rk and other industrial states Teamsters Union were sched France to Germany by specula- can receive more equitable uled to vote. Union officials de-^;..L ,Vn1t0k,v tr?«trn6nt-” Rockefeller said in dined to discuss the pact until terprises and by purchasers of a statement. the vote was dunnlefe German cars and other prod- Moynihan said welfare rolls in ★ * ★ l^^Peared S° attraC‘the North wUl reduced “over Pan Am has officially shut lively pneea. a reas0nable period of time-ldown, but plans to resume full URGED TO DEVALUE and I would say that is a dec- service at midnight if the pact De Gaulle was urged to de- *>de”—by the administration’s is approved, value in order once again to plans to improve job - training! Despite the strike, 11 Pan Am make francs attractive and to| and employment programs. [planes arrived at Kennedy In make French goods more coin- * * * (temational Airport Sunday and petitively priced abroad. And in He appeared on NBC’s radiojtwo departed, fact tie was fully expected to and television program “Meet! ★, ★ * make such an announcement, the Press.” ' i A spokesman said one incom- * * * j One administration aim, Moy- ing flight was from Bermuda, At the same time,, many ~ • - * * ' - French economists, government officials and financial men argued that Germany should help out by revalue or raising the price of the mark to make it less attractive. Germany declined to do so; nihan said, is to eliminate disparity between welfare payments in different states, ranging from $263 per month to a family under the Aid to Dependent Children program in New Jersey to $39 in Mississippi. . Well, so did De Gqulle refuse. | He stood before-an astonished; world in Tale November and de- L/** lared that the value of the franc * would be'maintained. How? BylMl a return to austerity. .French workers would be asked to work'H harder. one from Trinidad and nine from Europe. Overseas employes are not on strike. Of ttye two outgoing flights, one was a charter flight and the other an emergency flight to Santo Domingo, Dominican Republican, Moynihan, a special adviser which is served exclusively by ^ to the. President on welfare and,Pan Am, he said. SuccessfuhlnvestfhgS* #:,V I*? It was a courageous stance, bftt it didn’t work. Frenchmen had, seemingly, too much of austerity, and now De Gaulle was ordering budget cuts and wage-price freeze. They were tiring, of the old man, and by springtime De Gaulle has resigned over an unrelated issue. UNREALISTIC STANCE In the view of many observers of international monetary affairs, De Gaulle’s stance had! been unrealistic.' Although he, himself, might have had an iron will to endure a severe life in quest of a goal, other Frenchmen were not. - ■ * ,★ ■ h'<\ In making the devaluation announcement, the French government in effect conceded that these realitfes would have to be faced': ★ *V ./.-W First,-that the franc already was being traded at a discount below its official value; second, that the fight to maintain the frahe’s strength w tie n francs By ROGER E. SP/AR Q —I am down about 20 per cent in all my stock holdings. Should I sell? -S.D, A — While further market deterioration may be in store, to some extent could add support td the market. In a sharply falling market, mob psychology frequently rules and the decline feeds on itself. If you hold high-qiiaHty stocks with sales and eamtitgs wholesale dumping of sh°win8 satisfactory growth, I .Worthwhile growth issues would!see no reason 10 se^- v j be foolhardy. Exerting downside! ^or R°8er Spear’s 48-page 11 x , 1t Guide to Successful Investing SE ^ ^rrry aSSfcffAS C c e l iT^t e d t x Tn T,,e PoBtiac Box Ms, n,iii!-.1 u o r a 111»1Grand Central Station, Nfew Administration s n a r d * 11 n 6, bj innin \ policy against inflation. m1UU17' Declines reported in second-quarter profits for two major industries — autos and steels — are also a negative influence. Further fuel for market weakness will, no doubt, be forthcoming as the tax-reform bill moves through Congress. AIR, SCULPTURE — As part bf a basic design class at Ohio’s Koit State University, Donna Baers made tin8 aih structure from balloons-and plastic bags. At, least it’s easy to catiy. v News fthiirief A-spokesman for the Hnbbanl Spring Co., 217 Central, told dity police this wedeend someone - broke into the firm’s offices late Friday»or early Saturday and stoletourtypewritws. / Stocks4 of1 Local Interest Quotations from tho NASD ar* repre-sentatlve Interdealer prices. Interdeeler markdown or oomml AMT Corn......... Associated Truck ... Citizens Utilities A .. Citizens Utnitlw B .. ... 11,4’.170 .. 24X'25.2 ---24.4 '25.4 ....11.4.92.4 -... 24J-2A0 22.0'ltt.0 .'.. .14.8,,.15.2 .... 4J e.AO But underlying the market is the as yet unmeasured influence pf tiie institutional investor. MohewtTi Value of NYSE listed stock held ‘g*** Pl by,, .financial institutiotlS in- ' creased over J00 per cent toj total $136 biition in the decade; stock averami 7 through 1967. In t^he mutual comutwt b> Tee as-c^p^ fund industry alone, cash flow (money availably for investment) during May totaled $165 million. The demand from these sources for new investments is ever present and growing and . —1.3 HR BHl 432.1 152.4 • 138 J 291.2 OJ vdD 139.2 -W* a 433.2 jffij 140^ 2 445.1 154.0 142.5 1 4WS . 191.7 145.0 -5 515.5 WTJ 159/1 feu.e 4*0 .141.0 124.9 fit 531.1 ?tM 435.4 145.4 WTKl -428.7 mw THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1969 namapam Q—The bidding baa been; West North East South ^ 1* Pms 14 Pass 34 Pass ? NORTH 11 4A63 VK95 ♦ 10873 4A42 WEST EAST 4Q874 4 J52 ¥Q8d3 V J42 4AJ962 *J853 497 SOUTH (D) 4K109 VA107 ♦ K54 4KQ108 _ Both vulnerable- West North East South 1 A Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—♦ Q W.VJSPW,?C,.W.V>>>KwK*Kv.V.W;W.VW#V.V.:.:»NV*NNV.V.%V.V.V.V.V.V.V.V.V Bridge Tricks From Jacobys \ # \ T are going to a slam il your played perfectly, I ask him, comment?” ******* ** *“‘ ■ ‘Bow much did you lose?...J Oswald: “He pointed out that m lat?AuIfrt M*y h°,dHflH*nd’ South had made » mistake and| by bidd£« live hearU. What do S!! Ml^ai^cu!^|could never be a perfect player d° »™7 CAMPUS CLATTER . By Larry Lewis . By OSWALD AND JAMES JACOBY Oswald: “They used to talk about the perfect bridge player who never made a mistake, have seen players who never admit making a mistake. The essence of winning at bridge or a W37 ^arUcie that from ^n on! today’s hand. I hap-__________________ this covered today’s hand. I happened to be West and according to all rules to govern perfect bridge playersshouldhave opened my four of spades, the fourth best of my strongest suit.” it '™L ♦ Jim: “That lead would have given—declarer three spade tricks. He would also have no trouble collecting two hearts, a diamond and three clubs and his game bonus. I see that a heart or club lead would also have given South his ninth trick.” Oswald: “No one could have r criticized me for opening I spade or heart and there would r be very little criticism if 1 had e Opened a club but I decided to. r lead my singleton queen of a diamonds. My partner dropped wiflingness'to take chances. The the six. South took his king and, so-called perfect player must j led back the four. My partner wind up a loser against chance- ran off four quick diamond taking experts.” ! tricks and since I hung on to all * * my .clubs, we wound up col- Jim: “I agree to the extent I lecting a penalty.” that if someone tells me he just’ Jim: “What was Morehead’s aqy other game must include a wifli - By IYONIY OMARR For Tuesday NEW MOON 1od«y coincide! with . creative activity; brings chi1**" ,h* news. Large spending prc. snag. Financial .experts raise hi budget, preach Is ■MOT— - -— continues high; you attract h sex. Pleasure pursuits could bi ______■ (Oct. 23-Nov. -............... quire legal green light. Don't attempt by-pass rules, regulations. Stick with trted-and-true. Means leave get-rleh-quick schemes to others. Depend --persons '“■'TTfl planning is cons: rush. Patience is your grei Accent on lo'ng-dlstance, o and avoid being di GEAAIlJiy (May 21*Jun« 20): You mav hear many rumors..Key is to hayeself-discipline. Moans act on what you know, not on what you hoar. Short Journey could be postponed without loss. Be con- Cancer (June n • Juw, *«"• -a »■—• ■■■"* who battle today could be allies tomorrow. Dsnjjjf|j lIo (July'^-Aug. 22): Your Ideas be'oSaldeSh ter-Srt by Mftr liyv^ No real need to be discouraged. Cycle continues high. You will get whet you1 want But ti sure you know whet it is. Virgo (Aug. 23-sept. 22): Light ioucij wins the day. Means avoid any tendency to appear overbearing. Remain Ir ESffiirfbU WRotSStA Spor V°UBlSd ffiL 2MCLM): spendlnj sw-iiiSy. B*?t 's'™?, sags new friend coould PQipt w,ey to exciting discourage >nd chance. -----b. IB): ________ ____ ________________.. public "relations. Gat point across in best possible manner, '--terete publicity from notoriety. . ,'ISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Efforts may be spread In too many directions. Key Is effort to concentrate. —ngth, energy. Opportur'*-t. Be ready — recognize Daily . Almanac By United Press International Today is Monday, Aug. 11, the 223rd day of 1969 with 142 to follow. The moon is between its last quarter and new phase. The morning stars are Venus and Saturn. -The evening stars are Mercury, Mars and Jupiter. * On this day in history : I "" In ’lWS flie 'Hrst radio .“SOS” whs received when the *liner, Araphoe, messaged for Help off Cape Hatteras, N.C; In 1954 the formal peace announcement in Indochina ended the seven-year war between the victorious Viet-uijnh forces and the government of France. ★ * * In 1962 a Soviet astronaut was launched into space on a 4-day trip. ~ jn 1965 Negroes began rioting in the Watte section of Los Angeles. During the six days of violence that followed, ,$4 persons were killed and 8561 injured. :iafriage Licenses Wildsmtr F. Anderson, South Pokots %£ •n IS THE ME A N GROCERY DOLLAR STORE IW TUMBLEWEEDS By Tom Ryan mil, HERE WE ARE, EPIC—STILL LOST IN TNIS CRUEL PESERT...NO FOOt?, UTILE WATER...ITK-ALMOST (Wgik ft) ENOUSHT YEMbfN / ’ MAKE A 6UV fiSw&y J 6!VE DONALD DUCK By Walt Disney F~* THE PONTIAC PftESS, MONDAY, AUGUST U, 1989 For Wont Ads Dial 3344981 5,000 Show They Care About Detroit Girl Missing Since Jan. 29 Found Dead in Car Trunk SANDQWN, N.H. (UPI) — car off an isolated logging road DETROIT (AP) — A crowd nude, decomposed body of |in a heavily wooded area about esUmated ht 5,000 jammed the! 1.1*year'0,d Debra ^ Horn’ |20 "»Hm southeast of central Detroit business district missing form her AUenstown, Allenstown. Sunday to show they care . . N. H. home since Jan. 20 has * ★ * shotu Detroit. Some $600 worth i b*en . ou"" ‘n tbe trun*{ an! Identification was made early of buttons proclaiming, “I Care; abandoned car. 2 I today by the parents through an About Detroit," were sold. | Three vacationing teen-agers 0p8j r|ng and gold earring fnnnn mea hnrfv voctorHnv h > . n. . . ° . .. ? The celebration featured a popular rock ’n' roll band — j Smokey Robinson and the Miracles; autumn - like feather, and a diversified flea market. A youthful rush at the stage where Smokey was performing forced police to cancel the show after only 10 minutes. , in makeshift stands in the Kennedy Square area of Wood-; ward Avenue, a person could Zoning Bids Up in Waterford found on the body and through found the body yesterday in a dental charts supplied by the girl’s dentist. Norman D'amores, an assistant attorney general, disclosed that Dr- George Katsas, who made the p r e I i m I n a r y examination, said the girl might have died by a blow to the back of the head. “No definite I l decision has been made as to , - - -- - - , i ■ -| The Waterford To wnsh iptbe, cause °f ^ath," D’amores buy turtles ($1.02 each), frogs, JBoard ls expected to take action added- brownies, lemonade, scarves, tonight on a request to remove * * * necklaces and other items. a iarge quantity of sand and The car in which the body. "I’ve never seen anything HR* graVel next to a gravel pit now was f°und was owned by Duane this except when the Tigers won j in operation i Steinhoff, who lives nearby, the pennant," said Judy Rose, a j item o{ business Is Steinhoff told police he aban- slstant promotion director for among SPVerai zonjnB change! doned the car there seven years j the Central Business District rt.que8tg which domiBnale ^ ago. Association, (he sponsor. j board’s agenda. The proposed! Debbie Horn was last seen the 'gravel pit Is on Hatchery Road idlorn*n8 ^an ^9 wben sbe » • d / . . near Bender | was allowed to stay home from Being Physician i + + * |school because she had fallen jl • i i w/ .i. I Among other items scheduled on a pBtch of ice. She was abne! Aided Wrestling [to come before the board is ab?cau®e her parents Mr. and .... _ .£ . recommendation from the fire ^rs K*nneth Horn’ both were Win—Dr. Sam chief that land be purchased, ’ .. . . . on Silver Lake Road at Oxley ^1* ™°.tber, l®tu^ned *or Drive for a proposed fire sta-, *unch and found he breezeway tion. door qjar but no sign of the girl. The meeting is set for 7:30 Death .Notices , PRUNTY, BENJAMIN H. August 10, 1060; 7475 Metier Road, Dearborn (Formerly of Pontiac); age 69; beloved husband of Bessie Prunty; dear father of Rose A. Kostiuk, and Josephine Krause; dear brother of Ruth| Cook, John H., Andrew H.J and Donald F. Prunty.. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, August 13, at l! pm., at Lesney Funeral Home, 13210 W. Warren, Dearborn. Interment in Ottawa Hill Cemetery. Mr. Prunty will lie in state at the funeral home after 6 tonight. SARGENT, FLOYD C.; August 8, 1969; Brideport, Alabama, (formerly of Pontiac) age 67; beloved husband of Clara R. Sargent; dear father o f LeRoy, Cecil and Floyd, Sargent; dear brother of Mrs. Etta Leonard; also survived by 13 grandchildren and one great-grandchild. Funeral service and interment will be, held today at Stephenson, Alabama. WAVERLY, Ohio (AP) - Dr. Samuel H. Sheppard says being 'P-m <>t Waterford Township cer Society benefit wrestling |Hlgh ^hool, 1415 Crescent ms ten. j Sheppard, the former Cleve- ’ _________■' land-area osteopath who attract-1 ed widespread attention during his 10-year legal fight to clear himself of his first wife’s murder, defeated Wild Bill Scholl Saturday night with a hold called the ’’hook. D. G. Monument Stairs Closed RUB-A-DUB-DUB — This man in a tub didn’t get very far. Robert Moore bet he could cross a mile and a half of water from-Hong Kong to Kowloon Peninsula in a bathtub supported by a float of- oil cans and wooden poles. It was no soap, however, and1 all Moore’s efforts Went down the drain when the tub sank shortly after this photo was shot. Firemen Answer Hot Emergency Bloodmobile I Washington (upd - The decision that confronts most EAST PROVIDENCE, at Y Next Week I tourists at the base of the (AP) — Realizing that -naturej Washington Monument — was moving faster than his car, Charles P. Francis of Warren Gary Strike Over, Trials Due Firemen STOCKWELL, ADA; August 10, 1969; 120 Ottawa Drive; age 89; dear mother of Mrs. John Q. Waddell; dear! grandmother of Mrs. Roland F. Wacker and Robert G. Waddell; dear great-! grandmother of - John F. Wacker. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, August 13, at 1:30 p.m., at Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home, Inter-i ment in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Stockwell will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours are 3 to 5 and 7 to 9). GARY, Ind. (AP) - City fire- whether to wait, in line for an There will de a bloodmdbile elevator or hike up the 898 steps , . , . ... Sheppard, who weighed 195, at the YMCA, 131 University, _ WOn’t exist for the next two stopped at an East Providence I men have ended a six-day said his medical training was Aug. 18 from 2 p.m. to 8 p.m. weeks. fire station Sunday where two]stri^ but 79 tbem‘ace tr*a‘s handy because the “hook" is ap- It was incorrectly reported in The parks service has closed firemen helped his wife give sta,rutin-? today ll?at ckould result plied by putting pressure on a The Press that the bloodmobile the stairs so it can repair elec-hirtu t0 a -j-i in tiie loss of their jobs. * stationed at the trical wiring damaged by recent j * * jaw nerve. The 285-pound Scholl would be stationed said the hold was illegal. i YMCA today. | heavy rains. The stairs, used by. Sheppard, now practicing In For further information con-1 relatively few visitors because I Mrs. Virginia Francis, 25, and suburban Columbus, had en-jtact the American Red Cross [of the exhausting climb in-the baby were reported in good gaged in wrestling competitionI Oakland Regional Office, 118 volved, should be ready again condition at Lying In Hospital in while In prison. i Franklin Blvd. in about two weeks. I Providence. YOUR NEWS QUIZ PART I - NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL Give youraelf 10 points for each correct Answer. 1 The Mariner planet..... a-Venus b-Mars spacecraft photographed the c-Jupiter 2 Israeli leaders said their nation would keep parts of the territories captured during the 1967 war. True or False? 3 Name the Arab nations that lost land to Israel in 1967; 4 France celebrates the ..... anniversary of the birth'of Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte this week. a-lOOth b-200th c-25 Oth 5 The French emperor wag born on the island of...;. \a-Sclly hr.Sardinia —-*c-Coraica;^_r PART II - WORDS IN THE NEWS Take 4 points for each word that you can match with its correct meaning. 1... 2.., 3... 4... 5... a-plan for spending b-make unfriendly c-income d-electronic machine that solves number problems e-hldden suppl les PART III - NAMES IN THE NEWS Take 6 points for names that you can correctly match with the clues. 1...Anatoly Kuznetsov 2.....Everett Dirksen 3.....Ludvik'Svoboda 4....Warren Magnuson 5.....Nikolai Fodgorny a-Senator from Wash* lngton b-Soviet writer defected to the West - ' c-Presidept, Soviet Union % .. > d-Senate Minority Leader e-President, Czechoslovakia • VIC, Inc., Madison. Wisconsin The Pontiac Press Monday, August 11, 1969 Tfem'Piayuim Match word clues with their corresponding pictures or symbols. 10 points for each correct answer. A " West German Chancel-lor Kurt Klesinger visited the U.S, Congress extended the income tax surcharge new clashes between Protestants and Catholics broke out here 10% Nationalist' Chinese President Chiang Kai-shek some companies raised prices for this product 6... federal government filed school desegregation suit against this state French President Georges Pompidou! 8..... war against Japan ended August 14,1945 v.j: day ...... widespread uiirest re* ported Iji this ° Latin “ S American nation { n 10..... ( M 7 Norodom Sihanouk \ agreed to stay on as a Cambodian Chief Of f State HOW DO YOU RATS? (Score Etch Sid* of Quiz Separately) 71 to 80 points - Good. 91 to 100 point* - TOP SCORE! 61 to 70 point* - Fair. 81 to 90 point* - Excellent. 60 or Uhdor???- HW FAMILY DISCUSSION QUESTION What are the major domestic problems faolqg President Nixon? * >., ’ ,Vf‘ THIS WEEK’S CHALLENGE! no.cc Name tbe two Japanese cities on which ournation dropped atomic bombs la August, 1945. rT|Sava This Practice Examination.1 alyDINlS Valuable Reference Material For Exam*. 8-61 lf*8 IH*8 hH *1-9 id-9 IHifl-f *8*8 *1*1 *|M9 1011115 fa-9 fa-g (p-g Tq*| ;m iWM Igaialtg pue BuiiqsojjH ilONITIVHO q-g fa-» ia-g fo-g <9-1 HI UVd o-9 fq-y laapjop fauA$ !jdA3j jo ‘3/iqndsy q*jy p«||un*f ‘aiux-g fq-l i| lHVd SUTTON, HAZEL A.; August 9, 1969; 2459 Emerson Drive,! Bloomfield Hills; age 76; dear mother of Max Sutton; dear| grandmother of Mrs. Joseph i Kherkher and June Ellen Sutton. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, August 12, at 11 a.m., at Sparks - Griffin :i Q m HR Funeral Home. Interment in The 79 firemen — of a force! ®ll Cemetery. Mrs. Sut-of 278 — were suspended with- *on WH1 jjj 1° s*a*e a* *be out pay last week for participating in the strike. conference that more sions could follow. Virtually alL the firemen took part in thej walkout called by their union in I ! a dispute over wages. , | i Union officials gave a back-to-work order aftyr the union’s lawyer, Adam Benjamin, met Sunday night/With Hatcher and the ( Gary^/Board of Public Works. The decision was made despite the city officials’ rejection of a request for amnesty for suspended firemen. Prairieilawn, Drayton Plains; age 66; beloved wife of Frank VanHom; dear mother of Mrs. Roy (Helen) Bone, Mrs. Gordon (Shirley) Dean, Morris F. and Marvin L. Van Horn; dear sister of Mrs. Lee (Tillie) King and Mrs. Martha Tambo; also survived by ten grandchildren and five greatgrandchildren. Funeral service wil be held Wednesday, August 13, at 1 p.m., at Coats Funeral Home, Drayton Plains. Interment in Meyerbeer’s opera, “The Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Huguenots,” is rarely performed Mrs. VanHom will lie in state because it requires such a large cast. Deat^Notices_ BARRETT, CHARLES J.; August 10, 1969; 20 Mohawke Drive; age 81; beloved husband of Gdrtrude Barrett. Funeral arrangements are pending at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral .Home. v at the funeral home after 7 tonight. (Suggested visiting hours are 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) CLARE, PEARL A.; August 8, 1969 ; 4884 Hillcrest, Independence" Township; age 63; Hse-loved wife of Raymond J. Clare; dear mother of Mrs. Donald Bauman, Mrs. La-Verne Donaldson and Donald Clare; also survived by two brothers, eight sisters and 14 grandchildren. Recitation of i the Rosary will be tonight at | 8 p.m. at the Lewis E. Wjnti Funeral Home, Clarkston. Funeral service will be held' Tuesday, August 12, at 10 ■ a.m. at the Our Lady of the Lakes Catholic Church. '* Interment in Lakeview Cemetery; CRUMP, HENRY W.; August 9,' 1969 ; 220 E. Wilson; age 62; i beloved husband of Mb's. Margaret Cnimp; beloved son of Mrs. Maggie B. Crump; ' dear father of Thomas, James, Verna and Carol Crump; also survived by five brothers including Mr. Janies Crump and four sisters. Funeral service will be held I Wednesday, August 13, at 2 p.m., at Davls-Cobb Funeral Home. Interment in dak Hill Cemetery. Mr. Crump will lie: in state at the fimo-al home after 3:30 Tuesday., " ) | Dial 334-4981 (Mon. thru Fri. *-S) (Sot. I to 2 .30) or 332-8181 (Mart, thro Fri.) From 8 A M. TO S P.M. (Sot.* to S) Pontidc Press Want Add FOR FAST ACTION NOTICE TO . ADVERTISERS AQS RECEIVED *V S P.M. -losing tint# for ofjvortiio lining tygg sizes larger ogulor agate typo ip ) 2 o'clock $2.00 $ 2.57 $ .ft. 2.00 9,76 3.91 2.11 ' 4.90 7.32 2.82 5.70 9.12 3.64 10.26 16.42 The Pontiac Press M R AM.J* 5:30 MA BOX REPLIES * ’ At 10 O.RI. tedey thert were replies at He Prsss Office n tbei following KALWITZ, WILLIAM F. ; August 9, 1969; 112 Osceola Drive; age 76; beloved hus-l band of Genevera Kalwitz; dear brother vof Ewa Id, I Herman and Fred Kalwitz. j Funeral service will be held! Tuesday, August 12, at 1 p.m.. ^ at Sparks-Griffin Funeral. Home. Interment in White. Chapel Cemetery. Mr. Kalwitz will lie In state at the funeral: home. (Suggested vis i t i n g! hours are 3 to 5 and 7 to 9). j 08, C-15, C-19, 043, C-27, C-30, C44, C-35, C-38, C-39, C-48, C-42, C-53 and C-55. In Memoriem 2 IN LOVING MEMORY‘orttur door August 11, 1ISR. TRnR gait on wit Sorrow, smiles m M passing of ttia yortrs. . IN LOVINO MEMORY of CUniR i. You collod har, J Jtorry c---- Thonk-you Lord for our wondarful Thera's an empty chair’ In our Por har* on aarth 'you no long or roami Wo hop* to moot again tomadty. In that baautlful land df andlass wipad aw It lova yi it. — Sadly n ir chlldran at _______ ANNOUNCEMENTS 3 OPEN AIR ART show, Sit. And Sun. Aug. It and 17, IS 1,111. to 4 p.m. Loctl Artists Display Original oil p*lnti, water colors, docoupoga, pottery, plagues, soma antiques, consignments welcome. Coma to parking lot In front of This 'N That Shqpp*, i»07 S. Blyd. at Crooks, Troy, Michigan, 152-2244. IN LOVING MEMORY of Ella Jantar, beloved mother, who passed away August 11, 1MR. We miss you now, our hearts are sore. As time goes by, wa miss you Your loving smile, your gontlt DON GILCHRIST FORMERLY at *35 Orchard Lk. Ava. new barbtr-Thurs.. Frl„ Sol. ot * W. HAPPY BIRTHDAY M.S. I love you J. E. LOSE WEIGHT safely wltit Dax-A. Diet Tap lets. Only *R cants, Slrnm's Bros. Drugs. COATS PUNERAL HOME f RAYTON PLAINS ___ *2444*1 C. J. GODHAROT FUNERAL HOME Kaoflo Horbor, PH. **2-0200. D0NELS0N-J0HNS _______FUNERAL HOME______ SPARKS-GRIFFIN , FUNERAL HOME ' Thoughtful Service" FE MM* Hu&toon I* Oakland Ay*.____g VoorheejsSiple FUNERAL HOME. 1324371 Iwtabl Ishatt Over 45 Yaara Cemetery lets 4-A funeral home. (Suggested; visiting hours are 3 to 5 and 7 to 9). ■ * Miyor Richard G. Hatcher VAN HORN, MARY ELIZA-! said in a Sunday night news! BETH; August 11, 1969, 65001 SELL ALL 4 Of 2 It • time. Iri Garden of Brotherhood. 3Y4-Q109. Personals - * 4*5 BILL PROBLEMSI-CALL DEBT CONSULTANTS 33R-BM3 Mr. and Mrs. Homeowner Do you need financial odvlc* on repairs, ramodallng, paying Real Estate Taxis, grouping Mils, etc.? It you do, cell Mr. Voss ot 334-32*7, *-i dally oxcopt Sot._ READ THIS having trouble each month? do you run out of money omur, you r(tn out of Mils? Hava vou found out you can'; borrow yourself out ot deM? THEN LET: "DEBT AID INC." HELP YOU WITH THESE _______Serving Ooklend County WIG PARTIES, wigs oy Caldoron. I. FE 5-2*53 or *74-4423. WIG CLEARANCE SUMMER STOCK Up to SO per cant oft, Wadntsday through Saturday. Wig I and Suburban, 43*2 Dlxla Highway, Wlglond, Miracle Ml|a Arcade. . LOST: 4 month o LOST: Block billfold, Saturday night, Mt. Clemens and E. Blvd. Contains valuable papers. 125 reward. FE I- 172*. '______________________________ LOST: IN THE vicinity of Carroll Lake Rd., blue photo album, Reward. FE 5-*574.__________________________ 1 SURFACE GRINDER, some experience, also 1 general machinist. Paid holidays. Blue Cross and benefits. 2*27 Williams Dr., OR 3-*5*0, Ora*ar‘Punch a Die. 2 MEN PART TIME . 3 MEN STEADY WORK pension for right man. 5750 month 8 MEN Full or part tint* to work with newly opened office In Union Lake. Calf Tuesday, 10 a.m. to 12 noon, .3*3-77*1 for Interflow. AUTO MECHANIC. Experienced with tools only, *200 per waak, •>> right man excel'— ——— AFTERNOON BROILER men, ho Sunday* or holiday, work, paid MW Blaomflaid ABVAF4CEMENT TO STORE managers In our fast growing multl-stat* chain have created new -----‘ nines for talas specialists Plana organ, radio, “ music inslrumants television, Depts. Higner ...........■ . creative gogetter, many company henatlt*. Contact: Mr, MSnlar «t . OiktBMpS, Pontiac Mall. must bt i original l( , MtatoO' titlM id fiT ty •rams; salact, scale, and fit type; knowledge of art’ rapreducNon methods; dove lope programs from concept stage la flnith art. Call D. O, Smith at Gansral Motors Ptietagraphie. 5M-13M. An equal ........................... Assistant Manager Shipping-Receiving Deportment supervisory experience In ratated worth Many company benefits Including profit sharing. Montgomery Word PONTIAC MAIL APPLIANCE DEALER n man te handle r*dlo benafltt. Pull firm EL EXPERIENCED Maintenance Men AFTERNOON SHIFT outlining your past phone numboo to Box C-S). EXPERIENCED BUTCMAR, apply short note —-u end Press, EXPERIENCED horizontal boring mill Operator, for aircraft end tool work on -Luce Modal 41-B. LATHE AND MitL operator, benefits Include Ilf* Insurant*, Blue Cress; Liberal vacation, pension plan end advancement, An Equal Opportunity Employer _ McGregor, Manufacturing Corporation, 27*5 W. Mapl* Rd., Tray, Michigan 45004, *44-3540, ' EXPERIENCED WRECKER driver EX F E R | BN CEO mlseeiieneous machine operators. Crescent Machine Co. Inc., 2501 Wllllimo Dr., Fontlac. ,. ' control dork*. Apply in poraon »h*r. *_P-m. Welker's Cue Club 1*62 S. Telegraph. FURNACE MAN, INSTALLER end ■ervlc* man, experienced only, must have tools end own wiSta?1HntTng erff^upply w. cierkston RdT. Leke Orlon. . full time GAS pumgers, ddys, lS5d*?d, °MspMPf*lf BlrmlnPlwRn. "yirtoS/X-'tWTIEER OAS^STATiOh tiiendent. *x-p#rlanced, machenlcelly Incllnad, local references, full or part tipi*. Gulf Talagraait and MenleT ^ OTOPWIdANDS axpjlMi|ira-lS form tool grinding. Steady SO hour waok, all fringes. 334-452*. HAND SCREW MACHINE SET UP OPERATOR , Experienced or trainee, plonty Pf overtime, exc. wages and -drlng* benefits including Mly paid RKro Crass. Days and afternoons. Ap-ply a* Benton Dlytiloh AMBAC Industries, 2*70 Industrial Raw, Tray, between l* and 15 JMtle Rd., An tSi5^&ppw?unlty Enalgyar ’ HUSKY YOUNG MAN to terVle* .exchange type water softeners. Rwutsr route, Needy yr. around Nbrtt. Apply ;ln parson at, Pontiac Softwst»r Service Co; 34 Cham- iv For Wont Ads Diaj 334-4981 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. AUGUST 11, I960 F—9 HANDYMAN NEAT, sober, middle-aa*d nr i u.*.* . HARDINGE CHUCKER Experienced or trainee, plenty of exc. wages and fringe benefit*. Including fully Mid Blue Cross. Days and afternoons. Apply .NEEDED AT ONCE Collision Men, f?_ m our staff, iam H| * * bigger Matthews- Troy, between M and is Mila iff off Coolldga Hwy. An Bgual Opportunity Employer. HANDYMAN OVER 40. Mobile home Heja'ltonV at' ' available as living quarters steady ' ■ work, thadir tone Mobile Homes Rstetes. J7o» Capitol warren vs Harareavpc! JAftlTOR SAR cleemnirApply * eUVeS betwee^%*and'Xjo !m' **” °*IT5T.. . . afternoon Shift, no experience necessary, older men preferred. Apply eftiw 3:30 PM. Systemetlon Inc., 25464 Novi Rd., Novi, Mich. MACHINE OPERATORS Olid troinees for .LATHES • MILLS •GRINDERS Lynd Gear Inc, Phone 651-4377 361 South Street Rochester, Michigan An equal Opportunity employer MAN TO TRAIN for retell manage- over, to work on horse ir live In. 628-1lo?. ___________________Pontiac OFFICE BOY Over II, no experience necessery , r 1H UW k-t______ 1)03 per 332-3639, before 3 OFFICE BOYS ADVERTISING AGENCY N. Woodward eree. immediate openings for full time office boys. Fine opportunities for advancement. A good driving record required. Ml 6^000 PersoS— *-equal opportunity employer. SERVICE Station Attendant, experienced. Putt or pert time. Waled Lake area. Call after 6. 624-_3044.._ Salesmen Men's Clothing v Furniture TV-Stereo Building. Materials r high ■rear positions In sales. Op-anting* Is ex- cellent. Many company i Including profit sharing. APPLY PERSONNEL DEPT. Secpnd Floor Montgomery / "Ward WE NEED EXPERIENCEB: Secretaries Stenos and Dictaphone Oprs. Typists — Jr., Sr., Stet. Teletype Oprs. 'Comptometer Oprs. Bookkeepers Clerks (10 key Adding Mach.) Keypunch Oprs. And other office skills Phone 642-3055 ACCOUNTING CLERK ADVERTISING AGENCY Light blllim XRAJQkM WORK WITH a! FUTURE. Good wages and fringe benefits. Have need tor limited] P??.5Sr=S'.EXpER,.ENCED tree CLIMBERS, experienced to do prlvete end public tree cere. *4.00 to S4.«5’ per. hour. Also could accept 2 qualified new men for training, IS years minimum age,'I K,t* -refer ve*“---- — -------- * high ict ackgrour » S p.m CLEANING LADIES, ALSO housekeepers, Birmingham, jeer ellowence. 642.7900. ____ COOKS KITCHEN UTILITY Full end pert time openings available on both dey and evening shifts. Good wages end benefits , must have transportation, apply in person only. HOWARD JOHNSONS TELEGRAPH AT MAPLE RD. I____ BIRMINGHAM | BrAPERY OIRL TO GO hand work j In custom shop. Good pay and fringe benefits. Wlelands Interiors. Birmingham, Ml 7-7354. DENTIST RECEPfiONTST,~f uTT a--- ---■ Aug, <|| 68241980. j Fewete 71 Help WoiHb4 Female , 7 Help Wanted M. er F. _ I LADY TO cere tor WOOL PRESSSR FOR PULL time THE HURON VALLEY kelweli are child and da hauuwnrx I nn.lllnn l„ ...........’I ---S of bu. drwjri twTifOrth PauihiiTh, A, , =*p. omy. in neeo oi ous drivers tor tbe>1orth 55888? qr'daft wk with] *Sn T*"Sr,ph ** SSajPtt ^"countrv^arVa01113 ml* {M WANfff'intMk P6R 1 Ponffic V lu«f*wM»5 JPciJr'ifiirM I &V* •Harnoons, live in or MMorSf3omH,flh SCh°° AATURE WOMAN," II OR Steady full-time, ■ n I g h 11 n 111 available Ip our snack bar, Good wages for the women who must work nights. Apply In person. Mon- beck ground doatraL.., — ..... train lor an Interesting and diversified poeltlon with International tlrm. Cell A\l 4-1000 Personnel. An equal opportunity employer. SALES MANAGER One of the worlds oldest, and fastest growing co. Is Interested man to assume management re-1 sponsibilities, this position offers1 II excellent opportunity tor ad- ----- , earnlngs salary, ind all company I ATTENTION HOUSEWIVES Sail toys, gifts', now for “SANDRA PARTIES" —Ovar 70 par cent American made toyt ‘ —20 Mr cent Commission plus -No a: r Rd., Troy. JO 4-4007 or better, are career The Davey Tree Expei Rochester ”•* Xian 1 (AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY you to direct Mople, contact L_________EMPLOYER) I office for an Interview. PART TIME GAS pumpers, 20 to 25 SINGER COMPANY .............. ,0 101602-0350______________________Mr. Chris IM2-5377 ___or_____ POT~WASHEir—ifTlrW—7SE37 !SHEETMETAL INSTALLERS Ipng A MATURE LADY FOR -l.j”.®”. . WfCnW CWantr,! farm amnlnuffiAnt MilJIaU.I I tlrm u##**!# twtaia* 11 Ira la gfl. *f»*H.»Tl"Ba«..nlt|ht work.) parlance, premia person, Orchard Lk.| Blake 353-11)60. ! SALESMAN ' NEEDED door sales, —Supplies furnished -Delivery by United Parcel. —Bagi Included with orders. —Hostess, up tp IS per ednt plue SHOP AND COMPARE I CALL BETH WEBER 612-1774 empldyment, residential ox- flee work, muit like to —k Bowl, 106 S. Cass Lk. Rd. MlWLEAGBCf WOMEN/ TO ‘ children, I WAITRESS FOR EVENINGS, apply in person. Avon Bar. 2902 Auburn Rd. near Adams Rd. 7 WAITRESSES EVENINGS-MlDNIGHTS I tslons provided. Apply MUk605-1531. 0 A.M.-a:jo r.w. Valley Admlnistrallva of-90 S. Milford ltd., MMtord... tip Male-Female 8 A SALES REP. E xcti lant opportunity for young MI-1 too SCRBTAPY-BookkMpar, 1 girl of. tic#, branch oftlca of . . .. i Mrogrem, hours 9 to 5, company Calling All Salsspiopltl!! wvs agency fee. Accuracy YORK is on the look for Personnel. 449.3050. and 13, t II Tues. and W Decorator MOLLS INC. 1M* $. Talagraph Pontiac, Michigan 4M53 FE 4-0516 EXPERIENlfitr GIRL ' for laundry! Work end Ironing Network. Speedy Laundry, 334-16M. _______i IldIRLY-BABY SITTER, school season, vie, of Keego Harbor, 611-0725, lime, daye. Excellent e lor that' extra Miimm mothers whose cPh%, - Excellent position at a leading lv* In family type restaurant. Ight OUR GIRLS AVERAGE OVER 6175i PER. WEEK. r, lull Apply In person, Tho Egg end l, •unity 2620 N. Woodward. Royal Oak, bet. - 12 end 13 Mile Rds. 1 tit-starters | SECRETARY Blrmingnam nalltlas. II I right hand gal to office WANTED!!! steady. end Intereitlr it S. Cess Lk. Rd. e3#VS Waitresses MANAGER • MANAGER TRAINEE Thursday ELIAS BROS. Ip phene cells. EXPERIENCED Medical assistant, doctor’s office, Beaumont Medical Bldg. Typing and knowledgd of ell -------------------------------- Insurance forms required. Call MOTEL. MAID, OVER 21. depend- before 6 p.m. S52-3271.__________able end honest, 331-4061. NAME YOUR OWN hours. Phan* I our cllentole end make llgh* deliveries. 662-2159. _______ NURSES AIDE, experience prefei red, cell between 9 a.m. end P.m. FE 5-6096._______ NURSES, R.N. and L.PX, needeL ■ ------- —might shills. . ____eflTs, fringe Jrslng Director. FE HUDSON'S PONTIAC ROOM Has- full time openings wit Experience Is not n we will train you tb earn , rewarding career. John the action learn at YORK REAL ESTATE Call Mr. Polay at *74-0343_ JCan You Sell? '’Ill so, we hove Immediate opening lor two reel estate sales people. Interested In making money. Ex- Employment Office Hudson's Pontiac Mall 1 eree. Be ... .» v...ve manager. , Flush new offices, short hand and Typing. Salary 5525, comMny pays agency fee. Accuracy Personnel, I 642-3050. SECRETARY"~BLOOMFIELD Hills. Work for executive of thle top firm, email office. Pluth eur- | roundlnsg, excellent position, 5550. ComMny pays agency tee, Accuracy Personnel, 642-3050. SNELLING & SNELLING 1102 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. 334-2471 OAL FRIAY; Every day la different lor Ihe gel who on|oys people and figures. Are you going to Mss It up? 0412. ARE YOU WHAT THE DOCTOR ORDEREP? Prescription: Cheery gal to administer smiles to patients. A dash of know-how.. *147. Cell Lynn Anderi. physically id In telling. TYPIST: L’oti of Mrsonallty, good typing It lull the start of a carter working with top professionals. Hurry, S32S. CHI Lynn Anders. PRODUCT DESIGN ENGINEER , Seeking an Individual with s years exMrlence In product design. Ex-> —j-------- !_ ....---..... 'Ing ’ complete In sales, work evenings, high . "" Ilsslon. Call 332-3639 before 3 A LA,DY,' ** perienced In automotive a Excellent fi...w. opportunity or ad-I with a rapidly growing . . day s.. school graduate a ■nation. or over, swltchboari Must be high. ! legibly end rapidly. I Spring Division o < and Bearing Co. 404 'Ian, Michigan 4922),' FACTORY WORKERS NEEDED Punch Pras» Operator* Drill Prats. Milling Machine DAILY PAY. Report Reatfy for Work, . 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. EMPLOYERS Temporary Service, Inc. mm— ....« ri Rlvi far afternoon and n / Please FERndale Logan 3t JMPaRPtRiai •0 the attention of the Reletlons --- 26617 Grai 65 5561 E. 10 A nduslrlal TURRET LATHE OPERATOR MILL OPERATOR I caff p'fe OBi r'" r— rIdford fast-growing, middle-sized „ ACCOUNTS HcflVABLE i ^AWSON . Jny. Top rales, all fringes.! Experienced clerk typist to process cejTER L NE .teady, non-seagonal employment.: customer payments. Will follow up] ePl Apply in person Pyles industries, delinquent accounts will also priw not an Em .___________________; 25990 Wlxom Rd., Wlxom; An equal cess freight bills for payment. GIRL OVER 21 fbr spl PORTER WANTED fop ' i »n.! opportunity emplpyer. | Immediate op an Inga with 556 Oakland Aye., Spcrt-o-reme. Bryant Mere, good salary end TRUCK DRIVERS, MUST BE ex-lMNlIHlIlMIIIMaalMlHiMHBi liberal fringe benefits, apply in] perienced for short double asphalt Person Lane Bryant, Pontiac Mall, hauls or aggregate trainees. Bald 379 N. Telegraph, Pontiac, Mountain Area. Contact Smllay, • PLANT ATTENDANT - To oparafa and maintain high! . mg work in banefits. Call N I 5-9M5._________________ I • '"OFFICE HELP WANTED Musi bt accurate typist Speed Not Essential i Car billing experience helpful 12 lo 5 p.m. S Day Week! Call MY 3-6266 1 ______Aek ler Ken Johnson I I One* In A Lifetime OPPORTUNITY INTERNATIONAL CORPORATION • — is now oMnlng Its doors ' single women beiwaen ages 15 ] 26 In Its promollonai and sa 1 advertising Dept. We will train > II Oil Service Center, flO N “trmIngham. W. •neflts; 1. paid ledge of accounts recelveb GENERAL OFFICE: jerllsing, . ervlewlng. i promotion 4 : ex- DT?;r°Ji*,uM*"u»«; OIRL FRIDAY - BloomtleldTillls iphaH ^y- Allketeti; 341:g2l| eree, experieced In typing end Bald g®" Detroit Envelope Co. 14700 bookkeeping, shorthand or dlc- pressure boilers ___ .... general maintenance. Must ____, Detroit boiler operator license. Salary .depends on qualifications1 and experlenca. Excellent fringe ,JMRIIPmiPailP4PmillPMV “ Contact Personnel Dept. I structlons. Working schedule' end conditions, all ahlfts, --------------n Northland Hwy, pearance,' and ablt to follow in- BEELINE STYLIST asms profit plus will ba ex- __ _ _drlc, yaar aroi Good pay, and ban "" Saginaw. FE 4-9555. Mechanics Need Part Time Work? We have afternoon and evening" 211, Trso trelnk.. strong prottselJPmMVV,. .... D.D. Smith at General Motors Phplographic. 556-1336.. An equal opportunity employer. PROGRAMMERS — 2 years experience with 360 DOS system. Call P. O. Mitchell at General Molar* Photographic 556-1336. An equal -aportunlty employer. _ "physical facilities ! CRAFTSMAN Call Mr. Labeff, I Qualifications: 1-HiBh School Grad. 2>N*at Appearing ^-Intelligent '—Willing io work hr GRILL lie out x—xvtiimp ro worn nail, moo to starting. Salary at $110 -/srotir--t-v—rr^rr- Dhty those who can «•*'• <» ■-C°?.Kriy ehlf^ExMrlenc* J i ... »-.in .--I- ..._ can wr. helpful, but will train. Apply after 11 *.m. EM 3-06)1, 1 HOUSEKEEPER WANTED, live-ln.l Truck DRIVER BE WITH THE BUSY ONE Needed NOW for profitable tarn-! Your porary assignments: I STENOS — SECRETARIES TYPISTS — KEYPUNCHERS Homemakers r. Vinton el 335-4552 OFFICE GIRL Neel end attractive, some typing, > 5 days. 214 W. Walton. I OFFICE GIRL NEEDED, lull time position, open for good tvni<« In growing business, Clark . Pontiac-Rochester-Bloom- _____ Income tor you. ... ... rasently accepting applications tor ir part time selling schedules. If iu are available days or evenings TIRE MOUNTERS Good compensation end man company banefits — Including ID mediate discount privileges. APPLY PERSONNEL DEPT. Secnnd Floor Montgomery Ward PONTIAC MALL MACHINE Sfet ijp Splendid opportunity for mtn goad mechanical skills to trained on our type of mach..._______ Good wages and benefits. Phone Mr. Zlzkefety 341-2221, Wolf Detroit Envelope Co. 14700 Dexter, Detroit. In carpentry. 5 in. actual w.... H trad*. Excellent salary and fringe Programmers^ For reel time business end medical application on Burroughs B2500-350P using-r!1-- -— MCP, Cobol and A challenging Automotive parts store. APPLY: 9' a.m. • I) a.m. n Equal .Opportunity Emplo) THE AUTOMOBILE EQUIPMENT CO. Itl ’65 B- Plk* 3>- * • Pontiac Industrial rates, axcellant frln benefits, w* work 32 weeks p,. year. Jared Products, 1520 Tmple WANT TO MAKE A MILLION WHO DOESN'T W* offer you the opportunity MAINTENANCE SUPT. Enclosed shopping center I n suburban area. Applicant must have mechanical end lanitorlal experience, good working condition* and excellent eatery Excellent suburban location. Long term career opportunity. Salary commensurate with experience. Submit resume and salary required to Pentlec Prate Box 0.11,___ PORTER NEW OR USED CAR fust be 15 years or older, and hay rivers license, experience prefei fringe benefits. 642-1266, 564-53)9. MECHANIC for Brunswick! . v Automatic, 14 lanes, - full tlmei___ ..c - days, top pay. Apply In person 224 Oakland____________FE 5-9436 - — ■ ||----d Lanas, 3121 RETIRED PERSON P5S steady work managing Car wash, 335-3422. Altar 6 call, 533-0043. ' REAL ESTATE SALES MGR. MAINTENANCE MECHANIC Immediate openings for men v machine shop background on lath* MAN N)R iUILOING maintenance, full time days, mutt be good handy man. Wrlta Bqx c-60, Pontiac MAN TO LEARN amublanca Work, mutt be vyil’lno t® learn first aid, will train. Apply In parson at S7 MODERNIZATION SALESMAN Journeyman with 5 years building experience. Daw Construction Co. 33S-219S, 335-3529. MULTILITH OPERATOR experience necessa.,, .......... excellent pay and benefits. 4 equal opportunity employer. FE UPHOLSTERERS full time to do fin* custom work, good i— ---- benefits. Wlelands I Ingham. Ml 7-73S4. . _____y M Override. 200 PERU... dollars In listings. Publishers of the "Michigan Business Guide." Replies held strictly confidential. “ talk only to ward E. ISM W. Huron St., RESTAURANT MANAGERS EARN MO,eOO-S12,MO Tremendous expansion Is creating openings for ambitious man. Train now to manage one of Nickerson Perms high volume Interstate locations. Writ* N I C K E R SO N FARMS, 110 South Oakt Eldon, Mo. __________________ high achool PURM good manual daxttrlty. Preview experience operating m U 11J1111 printing machine preferred. 9:30 tc 4 p.m. shift, S days a wk. Salary dtptnds on qualifications and experience. Liberal fringe benefits. Sf^Stock,M?n UNSKILLED MEN NEEDED DAILY PAY Report Ready lor work EMPLOYERS Temporary Service, Inc. FERNDALE 2330 Hiltpn Rd Radford 26617 Grand River CLAWSON 65 S. Main CENTER LINE , 8561 E. 10 Mil* An Equal Opportunity Employer , Not an Employment Agency MANAGER, \ HOLLY AREA, MECHANICS BRUNSWICK AUTOMATIC Full time and part time, n...... Top pay, medical Insurance. Apply In person after 6 p.m. A1—• ’ Needed ; Immediately! Men to fill eur islet staff to tall the all new Pontlaes, Tempests end "GOODWILL** used caret Fringe benefits. Demo furnished. Right man can earn from 010:000 to *17,000 par year. Must have 2 years experience or 2 veers qf Cdllege. See Ken Johnson at .Russ JOHNSON, Pentlec, Lake Orion Pull time. openings for men te] work In etock or on our loading dock. APPLY PERSONNEL DEPT. Second Floor Montgomery Ward ADULT- CARRIER BUSINESS SECTION OF PONTIAC APPLY: Pontiac Press CIRCULATION' DEFT. end up. Paid vacation, ' Sundays or evenings, Ndfthwest Area. 626-2050 or 626-3857. securitT^uards Full time rotating shift work for suburban shopping center. Uniforms furnished, experience desired. Excellent s r I a r y with fringe benefit*. 642-5266, 564-5319, SURVEYOR ’PARTY'CHIEF" for field Work for the City of Birmingham Engineering Department. M*y do torn* engineering drafting. Two years of college In Civil Engineering er good field dxparlwKa “ 4m struetion. Salary rang. 19,500. An equal opportunity am-ptouar. iBk partment, 151 Martin Birmingham, Michigan. Help Wonted Mala 6Help Wanted I ..RAILROAD SWITCHMEN Outdoor work — various shifts and rest days. Expsri-ence not necoSsary — will train. Rate $3.55 per hour. Company benefits include free medical, surgical and hospital benefits, .plus life insurance, paid holidays 7 and vacation. Good retirement program. Apply in per-son ati ' ’•/ EMPLOYMENT OFFICE ________ BRUSH STREET DEPOT rtnm 400 E ATWATER DETROIT, MiCHIOAN ■MmwmiUk 8:30 A.M. to 3100 P.M. OR CALL 962-2260 GRAND TRUNK WESTERN RAILROAD An Equal Opportunity Employer . WANTED: RETIREE or paneiefiar for ianltbr work In apartment building. Wayne Unlv. area. Salary furnished. Rat. raq. Manage 1532 er aft.7 P.m. 626-1699. WANTED Truck mechanics Gas or diesel: Liberal pay, insurance- furnished, retirement and full benefits. See, Mr. Coe, 8.a.m, to 4:30 p.m. Monday thru Friday. GMC Truck Center Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 Call MANPOWER 332-8356 position with BABY SITTER, dependable lady ipf over 40. 2 girls 8 and 2Vz, 5 days p.m. *25. Own transportation, Webstar school. Call after 7 BABY SITTER TO LIVE In. car* for t-. . i , 3 children, 3, «, ami 7. Also light Pol'mCTr' Mm! RETTT housework, more tor horn*.than iVJ.LJ.il housawq Employment Oltlc* . Hudson's sell Steinway, Knabe, Kimball a Grinneli pianos In this an Higher income for the creati gogetter. Contact: Mr. Brenlter : Grlnnell's Pontiac Mall.__.____ RECEPTIONIST WITH SOME beekeeping experience for dental office.682-8500. RECEPTIONIST — PERSONNEL office, personable person with In-* lerest in public contact, some typ- afh* Ptinl7caili^"r7^, HOUSEWIFE: Dignified sales poai-; tlon,30 per cent commission, cash! ___________ parson for general office work* light typing# filing# help running addressing machine. Experience not necessary# call Mrs. O'Mai lay 642-3600. bonuses# no collecting, no deliver' 8:15 __________ WOMAN F OR housewpek. ,335-1679. EyABL^ WOMAN WANTED 9 month old child fron — ...... our home. Transporta m provided if necessary. Avoi d Old Pech area. H. H. Jenkins il 12, Ovar 21. 335-6821. okay# livt-ln# new home# 363-5928. ! Housewives | Do you need money to help buy those little extras? oet i Are Your Afternoons FREE? , vacation; 2. employ* savings plan;! 3. hospitalization.,- 4. excellent bonus plan: 5. advancement op portunity. Equal opportunity 1 employer. j MATURE SALES PERSONNEL' Experience required In telling. W* | will train you In the department. > Salary plus commission plus fringe ! benefits. Apply in person W.K.C.#! ! INC # 108 N. Saginaw, j REAL ESTATE SALESMAN Experienced to work on terms, Oakland and Macomb Counties.j, Salary or drawing account available. Commensurate On ability, PENN. LI (-1900.. ENJOY EXTRA MONEY? SALESMEN PULL TIME - part time, experience preferred not t necessary. Many employe benefits. 1 Apply In person at Robert Hell, 1 Clothes, 6460 Dixie Hwy., Clarkston.! Adult carrier wanted for Large Trailer Park Just North of Pontiac Apply in Person R. T. Peck Clrculattn Dept. The Pontiac Free* SALESMAN This Is your opportunity to get In on the ground floor. GMC Reel Estate have openings for 3, will train beginner*. Terrific pay plan, hospitalization, monthly bonuses, ample floor , time and parking, draw fo qualify. Call Mr. Kliu cannom for Interview. 681-0370. SALESMEN WANTED To establish own Cradlt Brokaraga business. No Investment. To help you get started, w* guarantee $156 weekly to men meeting our requirements. Age no handicap. Writ* Manager, Drawer 437, Mentor, Ohio 44060. : AUTUMN OPPORTUNITY | National concern now hirlno 8 sharp college students to work on j a full time basis to the beginning of the school term. Full time and part time available this fall. For those who continue during the school term will lead to management. Apply regardless of draft status. Call Mr. Ltwis# 335-8385 before 2 p.m.. BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED . All RH Positive 87.50 All RH Net#, with positive i factors ' $7 50 A-n«g.« B neg.# AB-neg. $10 O-neg. $12 MICHIGAN COMMUNITY BLOOD CENTER In Pontiac FE 4-9947 1342 Wide Track Dr.# W. Mon.# Fri. 9-4 Tues.# Wed.# Thurs. 10-5 1 BUS DRIVERS for private schools. Var around job. Ml 4-6S11. THE OAKLAND COUNTY MERIT SYSTEM ANNOUNCES THE FOLLOWING CLOSING DATE j EXAMINATIONS: CIVIL ENGINEER III ! $13,500-$15,500 > Registered# Experienced Englnaar with Degree AIRPORT j MAINTENANCE MAN II 1 $7200-$8100 1 Experienced in Airport Operations ALL APPLICATIONS MUST BE SUBMITTED OR POSTMARKED NO LATER THAN 5:00 PM MON., AUGUST IB# 1949. FOR FURTHER information AND ap- 1 PLICATIONS CONTACT: THE PERSONNEL DIV. COURTHOUSE 1200 N. TELEGRAPH RD. ! PONTIAC# MICH. 48053 1 f, OR CALL 338-4751 EXT. 495 A, MERIT SYSTEM AND EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER now, 1375. Coll Mery Will train completely.' 1303. time selling |ob? II you c considered a pa: ___________JE X p- E R I E R E C E PTIONI&T# DICTAPHONE salesperson# TYPIST# light bookkeeping# 30-36 j Irving Kay hrs. wk.# pleasant medical ojSjfis 1 experlenca desired# FE 8-0327. REGISTERED NURSE for Mi“ ‘" tween 1-1880. cook Wanted ter night........____________________________... 1 "me and/or part time salespeople, . ________■ shoes and men's w*4~ I---------w ..I«rv .mi,1 person. See Mr. Smitt Oi?iiiiMt* Y'ii- PPir ”ld'* Stor*' Boch,tt,r-., Btrrn MMI pert Call Jo Wilcox. lice gall 5433. Cali Je Wilcox. SECRETARY: Prefer shorthand. ..... —.— ,t over for a train young High School grad tor OFFICE TRAINEE: No experience needed to train for management In this money-oriented business. Mutt be outgoing Individual. Fee paid. *6,000. Call Beb Scott. ADJUSTOR TRAINEE: A very thorough training program molds you Into a professional. Prestige tlrm. Pee paid. Car and expenses. - *7.200. Cell Bob Seen. OPEN MON. 'TILL 7 P.M. _____334-2471 ______ SECRETARY Wanted, experienced, iklll* typing and shorthand, excellent salary and working conditions. Must be mature. Cell: INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 6*1-1100________ 1000 W. Huron STENOS - SECRETARIES BIRMINGHAM AREA $400-$650 Typing 50-55 w.p.m„ shorthand 10-100 w.p.m. Fee paid. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1000 S. Woodward. B’ham 642-0260 TYPIST, 55-40 WPM. Light shorthand, 0350. Cell Jerry Legge, 079- WE HAVE OPPORTUNITIES tor full I 332-9157, Associates time and/or part time salespeople TVDICTC-----earn IID ! In shoes and men’s wear. Apply In, TYPISTS — *350 UP office call between lo a. and 12 r. Apply I pany banefits in train you now for season. Many corn-including immediate 5 Guananti Z8> 3 n. saginaw • Phone 330-7660. BEAUTICIAN Beauty operator for managing beauty salon with managing ax- parlance or 2 ^--- -----1---- -- operator. Call BEAUTICIAN, 50, 55, BOOKKEEPER NEEDED, meet the public, Interesting varied work, good salary, regular Increases based on merit, paid vacations, other employe benefits. General Finance Loan Comp. 750 Baldwin, Fbntiac, 334-0986. Aik fr-Stancxak, BIRMINGHAM PHYSICIAN . to..384 Hamilton Av*., Birmingham, CURB HOSTESSES Night shift. Full tinri* or part tl Good wages, hospitalization other benefits. Apply: ELIAS BROS BIG BOY RESTAURANT Telegraph t 'Huron CAFETERIA SERVER Meturc lady for cafeteria eorvlce. Blue cross, life Insurance end sick paid- benefits. No , Sundays or Holiday*. Apply In person between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. TED'S Pontiac Mall MATURE RELIABLE woman for! *’uL1** H'L"0* SS car* of children and light nl!C,i„ ouL '0 P0 _Box 91, Drayton Plains. • CLERK TYPIST , For general ottle* work. Bi keeping and etonographle perience helpful. Salary c Mr. Thomas Niche... " ’- -------- Pyles ...... .id., ■ . 1 Equal oppo 28990 Wlxom WELDER • MECHANIC, Ex mmm Jw», biu* Croie, Apph at Michigan Transport Trailers _ m St years old for porter work. Day and evening shifts. Apply attar 4 P.m. Big Boy' RattauranL 2490 Dlxl* Hwy. WOOL1 PRESSER FOR full time position In dry cleaners. Exp. only. MA 6-7207. 6570 Telegraph at , CLERK TYPIST ADVERTISING AGENCY , N. Woodward area. Interesting_ rt,|/ diversjfied position. ^Accurate^typ^ 1-1-2 GOI1I Up UP and Away With PLAYHOUSE TOY CO. : Climb aboard, hou* ‘ Party plan — # FREE — Demo su Excellent Cemmltskm and Bonus finances or cradlt work, 5 day weak, good working conditions, benefits. Pay sublact to qualifications end ability. Phone Mr. Vog*. 315-4636 for particulars. Interesting diversified work. Good opportunity for caTMT in municipal SapL^sS? w Troy. 6*9-4900. CASHIER" WAITRESSES TELETRAY OPERATORS Mature dependable person foi restaurant-dining room. Full oi part time. Good w a g a s Hospitalization and ether banefits Apply: KLIA3 BROS. BIG BOY RESTAURANT Talagraph i, Huron 249P Dixie Hwy. Montgomery Ward medlcaT offtei# | woodward'Ave. ' FRY COOK# SHORT* perienced# 7 a.m. to Blue Cross and othai weeks vacation after 1 . in person ONLY between l|V SALESLADIES I ffsta»r.nra93°D.xyaHwyt XL1!!*. •.iPLrl*nc?- EMPLOYMENT AVAILABLE - ep-i ceiicni Mams bw. rtm p.io. , 8-‘.'«aa.ri I ft'1 S.4'r:K™i^r»aS5S: Sat. Preetige Sal Mlfzel- Light typing. North si ! lee eald. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL ^ 18*0 S. Woodward. B’ham 642-8261 Instroctions-Schools 10 332-9157, Associates Parson-I FULL CHARGE PRIVATE ,WIM . LESSONS. HimiCteK 673-7368. Associates P 647-5445. STOCKMARKER Bloomfield Fashion Shop KITCHEN HELP APPLY In pars Four Corners Restaurant, corner Walton end P— KEYPUNCH OPERATORS Temp. Assignments, *11 Shills Call Jean Johnston 442-3055 LANE BRYANT Hes opening for sales ladies, experience helpful but net necessary, salary and liberal fringe benefits, apply In- parson, Lana Bryant i Pontiac ?*-" “ Pontiac. I 379 N. Ttlograph,. ____ .• holiday ____ Ions, apply Bloomfield Canopy, 15' Ails end Orchard Lk. Rd., contact ■ Mr, Ford 626-1587,_ STOCK” CONTROL CLERKS Excellent opportunity for wome with clerical aptitude. Must hav good penmanship and be able 1 run a 10 key adding machine. APPLY PERSONNEL DEPT. Second .Floor Montgomery - Ward. • FREE CLASSES j3 Men or women wanted. Earn while} Associates Personnel. you learn. Wo have 8 offices, 200 5 TYPISTS, Accuracy salespeople who can't be «urnn« r .!..#: %.Tf- ■—.. rV Cell today. MILLER BROS. REALTY 333-71_56___^ PHYSICAL THERAPIST Director of Physical Therapy for 285-bed progressive patient cere 9M 57, 332-9157. Associates Personnel. INTING CLERK~Blrmlngh— Excellent opportunity for gal ¥ wun some office er—-like figure --- ' REGISTER K___ Fall term starts Sept. I fallowing courses being offered ACCOUNTING-CLERK TYPIST BUS. ADM.-RECEPTIONIST SECRETARIAL EXEC LEGAL AND MEDICAL taxation-court reporting STENOGRAPH (MACH. SH.) Also. Refresher Courses Accounflng-Buslneie Math ShorthSnd-Steneogreph Taxation-Typing DAY AND EVENING CLASSES Licensed by Mich. State Board of Education MICHIGAN SCHOQL OF BUSINESS hospital, located smell town, community in mto-i aoenev Mich. Excellent recreational 642-3858. clfies of Ann Ar^r*and°Lanslnt|Ur*1 "CaTlTheT6F"D0CV0RS TODAY MuTtS! llcenYrt to" Mfrh 9bp.-352-3Q0Q, CHOATE A CHOATE v portunity to provide inpatient# out- COMPTROLLER* — to 815,000. Ex-pa t lent# home care and cellent opportunity for young man ^^|M|M^^||^^bpaneral j with 3 fo Sj years expert"'-- Extended Cart LADY Experience helpful but unnecessary1 3 aoulv John f *o represent Perente' Institute '-1 ' qualifications. Send resume or letter outlining experience and salary history, or call Oenald C. Fletcher director of personnel. MCPHERSON COMMUNITY HEALTH CENTER HOWELL.^AICH, 517-546-1410 LUNCH COUNTER MANAGERS i and agency J ____ call Miss Pi racy Personnel, - 642-3050 " COMPANY REP j $650 UP. ! Wonderful opportunities with top | companies, new car furnished yearly plus expenses. Guaranteed : ... — ------------,----------- Oakland County whll * Rd., Union Lake. train, pleasant:, person to answer of new born | income. Write background to N SECRETARY — EXPERIENCED for -----etor. 2223 ■' ' ....... . i-75.6i»^o».aRaiM opportunity employer.___ y I SHORT ,OP CASH? AVON PRO-, DUCTS has territory opening' which can give you Ihe cash you , end supplement i Excellent advancement op-; idams & adamt portunitles. Good starting salary *-!------- Paid vacations. Free uniforms and] _________ 647-4150 ELECTRONICS TECH Skills learned school? Employers are looking for you. Good pay and location. Ca"' INTERNATIONAL PERSONNE 481-1100________1088 W. Hi Clarkston area. 625- mlscellanaous work, FE 2-2717. NEEDED AT ONCE Several Young Women Telephone Sales Staff of the PONTIAC PRESS . CLASSIFIED DEPT. dltions, paid vacations Mr. Ellfott Henry 332-8181 SALAD GIRL Day shift. No Sundays or Holidays. Apply in person. Fortlno’t Steak House. 1250 Wide Track West.____ SWITCHBOARD AND general office work In private country club. Must be experienced. Cali 612-1380 ’or steady ---------aerator. . 238 between I the Oakland County Merit Systm Re-*nnounces the following Closing date examination: Custodial Worker I $2.20 hr.# to $2.49 hr. Plus: 25 cents hr., afternoon shit differential. Excellent County benefits. y0U """'APPLY To: S. S. Kresge Co. Monday, Aug. ... at the Holiday Inr claims, casuaity, any experienci this kind is all you need to get 1 nice position. Salary to *550 _____ „JPRPP charge to applicant. Accuracy — ... Eastern Michi-I Personnel, 642-3058. 'iwirWM Contact Mr. Robert LEGAL SECRETARY — -... " ' ' " secretary Rd, I part time positions available. Ful company training program offered Financial Programs. Inc, _____ Medical Technologists MCOM Is now recruitfhg mm technologists end biologist challanglng r----- ------- ------eh. C« -*p. from Denver Ingham. Top law firn. „ Friday, Aug. 15 needed for senior pertni.. _. " *...T*!®9raPh cellent working candltloni, mu have legal experiences. Salary I *558, tlrm pay* agency tee, A curacy Personnel, 4 Pontiac, 334-2448, daytlma --------- aceeptad. Full oai 8)35. MANAGER TRAINEE 21 and up. No experience necessary. W^tostarL^Call: bioiogfsls "for “a! .ii'.noo Jr opportunity Ini--..10?1 ___________ intact br. Kabara# 335- MANPOWER DEVELOPMENT A-1 CARPENTER WORK cabinets, garages, elding, rooting, cement, etc. Large or small lobs. ----- ----------UTION CO. FE 8- 'ENTER work, ramotMUng, ... lent and addition*. 69341311 ■ HANDYMAN AND CARPENTRY fireplaces, stone and brick facings. MALL ADDITIONS, Repair work, odd lobs. Exc: workmanship. Free estlmata*. 682-6524. - Work Wanted fnrali 12 LIGHT HOUSEWORK or ting, vicinity of 3fd, or baby i 332-0055. MATURE LADY WISHES Pros* Box C-18, Pentlec. Reply Pontiac Work Wontml Couples 12A Building Sarvict»-Supplia> 13 ^ trusses, heavy 18 tc 8 years of a; Good physical condition Applications must be sub postmarktd no later th_ Aug. 22, 1969, S.00 p.m. in order to be considered. For. further Ir formation and application* contact: THE PERSONNEL DIV. Oakland County Court House 1200 N. Telegraph Rd. Pontiac, Mich. 48053 Or Call 338-4751, Ext. 495 TEACHER IN Rochester area neer babysitter with own transport*!!: in September. Call 6J1-5684. TOYS AND GiP'T'PARTY PLAN* “ 'till Chrtitma*. High •. Call er Wrtfr ., 'Avon, Com (183) Ira-3455. WAITRESSES, Full or part tlma, no experience necessary, paid ----- TRAINEE *650 plus car. Excellent potential for young man with collage degrees. Fa* paid. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL IMP s, woodward, B’ham 642-826* desired for exceptionally busy NEED A RAISE? IHIfijllfllHIn'^pMftKjmt. Tcp Opportunity knocks for the gl “ --- --------------------- -----skill PORTERS DISHWASHERS HOUSEKEEPERS a conscientious men or v Full or part time shifts ava Apply In person or cell. MACHUS RED,FOX Telegraph *t Maple Call: QUALIFIED S P rectioner usic. Contact: Clyde Fits RECEPTIONIST-TROY office. Lovely piece to work 4 gal office accurate _ _ _ c M , n„ typlit, mature gal, S42S fee paid elefnentary VKii Accur*cy p#r,#n*1' Clvde Fischer. MZ-JUW._____,___._____________ WAITRESS WANTED FOR full time employmant. Apply In person only, Frank’s Restaurant. Keego Harbbr,' Michigan. Supt. of Schools Ortonvllle, Mich., 427-3838, tram 9-3:30 PM. SHORT ORDER COOK, Saturday, Sunday and holldayt. Private club. Pleasant surroundings, 412-1730. SHORT ORDER COOK, good” working condition*, 391-0771. WAITRESSES BUS BQYS 1 COUNTER GIRLS | . Pull end pert time BWinaM SanricB ' IS AVON-TROY CARPET WAREHOUSE Carpeting Installed cleaned. 17,000 tq. yds. carpet in stock. Rochester______________ *52-2444 Moving and Trucking 22 LIGHT HAULING, ANYTHING of enyklnd. 363-1072, perky Ortwin#. LIGHT HAULING e< any kind. Painting and DacorqHiig 23 EXPERT PAINTING ai and 10 PM. 338-1224 bet. 5:30 RECEPTIONISTS , $425 UP •nioy an exciting career wonting■ ■. j .t.---.--■■■ Jith the public.'Some typing re- LAOIES DESmE INTERIcSjSjM-qujred. Nerth Suburben area. Fee |3imefoL OnS&lBiW^* MW6. PAINTING And P APt RING, I. 33541378, ,..J some typing, neat am. _ tractive young gel preferred. No agency fee. Accuracy Personnel. 642-3838,___________________________ TO WORK days, off Fin* earn I ge. Hospitalization. Must oe mature In- Purchei* discount. Lit* Insurance.i- . ,oht tvnino , valca ,nd dividual. Benefits Included. Pled Liberal vacatloh policy. \Pald Mrton*IIW9n*L^ for dlwslfied 673JM96. Wanted Housthpld Goads 29 Piper Resfourent, 411-8940. ■. _ WOMAN TO CARE FOR ---------- chlldrtn, live In. 61 holidays. Many other benefits. !wXlfRESS #XMTED, VulL time,, i good working conditions. 391-0771. i MATURE WOMAN FOR general of- WOOL PRESSER badly needed. ■ flea work with light bookkeeping, steady—benefits, cell new, LI S-experienc*. Call mPesT* ' HUDSON'S ____ and appliances. ,< MMft HRHI .........I *v* r& B AUCTION __________mswB“L.A,LL Jg* tJTpSSC "M .......... MVt agency fo*. Accuracy [WANTED NICE CLEAN furniture of Into the legal field. Personnel, 6GJB50. all kinds. 693-1171. F—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1660 For Want Ads Dial 334-4981 CEMENT BLOCK building te t M« down itr^ materiel*. .pa i COPPER, IIIAII, A BETTER CASH DEAL All cash for homas. Pontiac .... Drayton Plaint aroa. cash In 41 hours. Call noma par chasing wonted te Rem COUPLE TO RENT 32 YORK • I-T1T4_OR 4 03i 1 TO 50 WENtfd tool IsHltE CALL AQtNT TODAY *14-144) I Will Buy Your Houso Anywhtra, any condition, n points, no commission. CASH NOW MOVE LATER Miller Bros. Realty 53V* w. Horen 333-7156 I HOMES, LOTS, ACREAGE ..ni parcels, farms, business rumisnso aj».> nail $ept. I to PROPERTIES, AND LAND CON* 1 No*. 1. W-fflt or 43S4S0S. _ TRACT. EXECUTIVE NEEDS >• 3-bedroom WARREN STOUT, Realtor house tar Aug. ». 5 chiwrsn. age, 114M N Opdyka FE 5-1145 T and It. <74-3783 ah. S:00._ | Urgently need tor Immadlato salel Want To I»Int basemInt or Pontiac _ other for S30 a month, or tree rant Dally *tll I for light duties, must be within] MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE walking distance ot Pontiac , aiy rACU Motors. Reply Pontiac Praia Bex ■ UAT LAitl C-58. ! FOR YOUR HOUSE OR LOT WORI< SHOF NBEDlb. S.OOOtq. ft'. NO CMJ TO SELL minimum. » tt. calling min. Must . FAST FRIENDLY SERVICE * running wataa and 3 Aaron Mtfl. & Invest. Co. rlc. currant. On. first 113.1144 t. calling PMHIMI . .nnlng wa phase electric currant. .... floor. Inquire Mr. Britton at EM-1 — nil, out, j|<4.________ Sham living Quarters i GIRLS OR women » my MS-1144 APPRAISALS FREE GUARANTEED SALE 30 DAY LISTING We guarantee the tale of your to ahara home I I g tor 3 ‘ LAUINGER homt, IIS fi wtfik, 681-0984. ¥cId young OR mlddie-aoed lady *- — -— "i tkchongo tar im-agod girls white, nights, Lako Orion,! *74-0)19 _____ 473 3161 orao. *41-5151.________________BY PRIVATE PARTY, 1 temll) housa or incoma. *3* *37?._____ Wonted R*el IsTott 36, (ASH * POR YOUR HOME. PROMPT, COURTEOUS SERVICE BflINO TRANSFERRED EED TO SELL IMMEDIATELY' FOR CASH IN 41 HOURS CALL AGENT — 474-1131 __ iLfilRLY COUPLE NEEDS horn* CASH NOW ivo later. No points, no t tslon, got our prlco FIRST. MARK REAL ESTATE COMPANY 1301 S, Ttltgroph ____133-0134 COUPLE wifM $5,000 down desires 3-bedroom home In Water!--* orao. Agent OR 4-1449. 339-499). 66 YOU Nile CAlH for your home? Financing a problem? Why not leave Iha troublesome wc " ‘ of what to do with your lion ua? Wo have an ansrgetlc force to toll your homo one ability to work out tho tint details, or wo can buy your I_ outright for cosh. Remember, from the time you call, to tho tlmo you hav# your monoy, If will nol ax-cood *0 days, no gimmicks. Wo con dollvor » call' now tor your perioral appointment. Times Realty M90 DIXIE HIGHWAY 633 0600 REALTOR Open 9? Dally OFFICE OPEN SUNDAY l-S DELINQUENT PAYMENTS -Trough! up to data and your credit avad. Can work out ronle1 u leaded. Agent, 661-0374._ Divorce—Foreclosure? Don't lost your homo —Coll ua for free appraisal. HALLMARK WE BUY HOMES 4131 Highland Rd. TRANSFERRED? -house (Mi Isasa, Agent, 441-0374. 1 ROOMS AND RATH, couplo only WANTED LISTINOS: clients for Incotna l— PERI dwelling homae. Wa will be glbd to appraise your property. It you art thinking of selling, coll uel JOHNSON *34-4133 (M-5?) Next INVESTORS - 474-0(19 BRIAN REALTY WO Sold Your Neighbor's Hoi Multiple Listing Service HANDYMAN ,-Pontiac and aurrounotng Will pay all cash. Agent, 4 HOUSE WITH 4 OR more ro 473-3164 Apartments, Famished IIBEDROOM ■ Lake, utiiniaa ran pala, *140 par mo. M|W| *73-0079. POR YOUR EQUITY TODAY CALL AGENT. *74-287* I HAVE A PURCHASER WITH CASH FOR A STARTBR HOME IN OAKLAND COUNTY. CALL AGENT. *74-1*91 or 339-4993.______ LOOKING FOR 3 OR 4 b*drc homo with basomont tnd garage, will pay up to 135.000, cIom to Pontiac Mall, Phono *01 -1197. LOVELAND LISTINGS WANTED Leona Loveland, Realtor 2100 Cost Lake Rd. 402-1205 LOW' — WANtKD IN PONTIAC Immediate closing. REAL VALUE REALTY* 442-4220, SPOT CASH DUR EQUITY, JBR, POR QUIC.. _____ 9N99 NOW, J HAOS T R O £ REALTOR; OR 44358 or EVE TRANSFEREE - Looking for • *Kt ^ur0 mor,0*oa. Coil my PATTERSON & SONS Alum, and roofing apaclalltte 1H typos w or-— —^ — Swings, a« 335-7844 vnlngs, gutti Homo Skirt! lings. 588-3724 SIDING ALUM. VINYL AND ASBESTOS AWNINfc-PATIOS SCREENED-IN OR .L\SS _ ENCLOSED EAVES TR0UGHING Continued Seamless aavastroughlng. . wa Bring Factory to You. FAST SERVICE — QUALITY WORK — TERMS CALL, NOW - DAY .OR , NIGHT—411-3500-TERMS DEALER-ASK PBK ROE Off REP Antenna Service BIRCHETT ANTENNA SERVICE Also repair. 3M-3374. ____ BLOCK AND CEMENT work. Pontiac. (91-1173. Basement and brick work, "— Tt, commercial and In* repair, *13-1143, *73-3351. himnrYS, porch** *nd < work, FE 5-09S3,__________ CEMENT WORK, drlVM, ----hot, ate. Licensed and b Ponllac, (9I4S1*. CHIMNEY REftlfc, SI M4-7S77 or 391-1*71 DRIVEWAYS, basamants and- ... ored polios. General Cement Con? tractors, 33S-99UL patios, bttvCs, G A R A 0 E r, SLABS, 40 cant* tq, ft. PE 4-3176, ASPHALT DISCOUNT is >pflng ^l*1 * *" ‘ PB~ 4-9375 A. JAY ASPHALT DRIVEWAY SPECIALISTS, FREE ESTIMATES, FE S-498Q. A. G. Kosiba Asphalt Now driveways, parking li —--toeing, worn out cement, hit. License, bonded, and f Construction Equipment DOZERS, BACKHOE, LOADER Soles & Rentals Used Bobcat Loaders Burton Equipment Co. 3774 E. Auburn Rd. S53- ir Construction Co. AADC0 ASCMALT Pawing Co., Hconswand Iniui... Praa aathnatlon •______ 333-4*31 DOMINO CONST. CO. 674-3955 SPECIAL ASFHAlt patching and sealing work, drive-ways, parking lots. Reliable Asphalt Contr. 338-1314, (3LS733. BEACHES CLEANED SANDED, DOCKS INSTALLED. STEEL SEA WALLS Cutler Contracting , 411-031 Dressmoking, Tailoring I-A ALTERATIONS, SUITS, COATS, drassas, 335-4307. Mrs. Sebaskt. Iterations, all types, km drassas, leather costs. 493-7533. SUNK IN THE WEEDS about II boat? Call us tor 7 day raflnlshli and ' other repairs, flMrglat wood. 411-0001 r*SI-050l>. Bookkeeping Service________ BOOKKEEPER accountant, pari A-1 Building Results coowuttrr — Sura.wa'v* eat m.it dll adds up to results -Hsckett Pit you to a new hon EM 3-6703 SKIT'. * I HOME IMPROVEMENT. HOME REPAIR AND cablnats. FB.S4M9. MODERNIZATION • _________ - Add It too ill types. Cement work. 635-551 Carpentry M INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR -Family reams, rough er tint-'—I dormers, porehas, rtcrtll______ rooms, kitchens, bathreamt. Stats licensed. Rasa. Call attar I p.m. 1A CARPENTRY and rooting, estlmataa. 334-2479, *74-3944._ ADDITIONS AND alterations^ "porch repair, pi MOT. Driver's Training M & S GUTTER CO. LICENSED-BONDED ■nplQte eavestroughlng servlc* Frta tit, 673-6866, 673-S&62 Electrical Services ADRIAN'S PROMPT tlactrlcal ttrvlct* rtasonabla ratal. 473*2712. ASTRO ELECTRICAL •arvtca'T residential, Industrial, commercial. ~ MCCORMICK ELECTRIC Residential wlring-SarvIca is? e FE 4-1191 Excavating A-1 BULLDOZING. Finish Grading, Backhoe. Basamants. *74-3*39. FE l-1»l. A-1 COMPLETE LANDtCAPING# specializing In ratalning walla. Free astlmatas. J. H. Wellman Landscaping, 33M314. A-1 aAerION BLUB SOD, an Peat, 43 canta par yd. delivered, 412- 1904.______ '_______________ A US LAWN MAINTENANCE, Spring and fall clean Tupt. Cutting, fertilizing and spraying. <73-3992. COMPLETE LANDSCAPING Sodding, leading, shrubs. __Ucamad Nursery Man. 482-7l5AINTrNGT~^ntorioT~or-----------—----- jradlng. *82-3042, FE 2- exterior. Commercial will:? anytime, *81-57*3. 27 yrs, exp. call _____________3-11*5. CLARKSTON Excavating Company •padallzlng In gradhig, land clearing, stump removal, driveways and septic tank field*. Free dll. Work guaranteed. *25- ....-a...........-r^---- (750._________ ________________ QUALITY WORK ASSURED) I DOZING. BACKHOE, BASEMENTS | Wa" Wa! trucking and aaptlc tank. *35-3735.! PONDS, LAKES ANb CANALS, A-1 UGHt TRUCKING of any Kind 5-82S6. ;■. ' „ [a - ^ .lig GEORGE FRERICKS Interior and exterior painting. HAULING RUBBAGE 853-2940___ SPRAY PAINTING _____________leaned, *3*-4530 Fencing A-1 CHAIN LINK fence Installed or h-A PLASTERING, NEW WORK oi repaired. 1 wk. serv. Fret ast. 338- patching, fra* astlmatas. 3*3-5*07. 0”1 Of *?*•**?•______,________1_ I pl aster REPAIRS, fra* sstlmsli CHAIN LINK and wood tone*. | call any tint*. 332-2513. 2 wk. service _____338-371* -------!------------------------- Plastering Service CHAIN LINK FENCING InstallsG1 repaired. Quality work, tail aerv-Ica. ask ter Ren. *03-49*4. i EXPERT FENCE irist*li*tlen or rapdrs, any type, 25 year* experience, free eat. Howard Acker, *25 Cedarlawn, Pontiac, <82-5482. INSTALLATION AND repairs, CONDRA PLUMBING A HEATING raas. rata*. (41-1(47, Sr. Floor Sanding «•<,of L - HOUSE PLANS Drai HAULING AND RUBBISH. your prlca. Anytime. FE B-4_ LIGHT HAULTSgT-REASONABLE price, FE 4-1392. LIGHT HAULING AND MOVING ---- WwTt* LIGHT HAULING. BASEMENTS garagaa cleaned. 474-1242. LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING rubbish, Oil dirt, .(KOdKemiM gravel and front-end loading. I ...» FLOOR SANDING AND FINISHING..BIG BOY DRIVE-1 cparlanca, FE 2-1235. I New and old, SS yrs. experience, i Silver Laka Telegraph ,nq—cEifriNT-^k 1 ______3»M?;—-iSKSiW Fleer Tiling CUST0V( FLOOR CO CARPENTRY-AND ClMtNT-***! WHY bO IT YOURSELF when Allen • Construction can do HI Fre« estimates for new construction and Cement Werk ALL TYPES OF CEMENT WORK , formica. Ilia. Can I, 442-150), 474-434*. insect Centro) / , WASPS, HORNETS exter- mlnatod. *25-3514, I-A MERION BLUE SOD, pickup er dal. 4*43 Sherwood. *38-3008. Rend Qjfiiig — Pickup Up OILING pickup, *73-1593. , Track Rental Trucks to Rent ta-Ton Pickups m-Ton Stake TRUCKS - TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT Sami Trallera Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. (35 S. WOODWARD _ Fb 4-04*1 FE 4-1441 ___Open dally Intludlns Sundai Upholstering ; SOFAS AND chairs raas.. quality wqrk. COMMERCIAL UPHOLSTERY 1 ■ 3351700. II UPHOLSTERING BY RICHARD 24 hra. Hot tar, shlnglea, repairs. We will hot be undersold R, DUTTON FB 4-1721 AA ROOFS INSTALLED. Hot tar Call L. J. Mm afi| ■right. 332-103*. ALEXANDER ROOFING, spalclallz-Ing In hot tar, and shlngla roofing. Call for law bid batara deciding. types art ax- BLOOMFIELD WALL. CLEANERS, Walla cleaned. Raas, Satlsfer**--guarantoad. Inaurad. FE 2-1*31. ATCHISON'S WELDING 2 BEDROOM HOME, Lak* I WATERFORD 1 B E D R OO 6 laka front available Sept, to Jum *44 USA Bent Houses. Untarnished 40 1 AND t BEDROOMS, Sltt to I1S0 month, applications taken at Lea's Lawn and Gordon Cantor, 923 Sole Hgosee^ BUNGALOW u 2 MODELS Open Daily 5-7 except Fri. -Sat. and Sun. 2-6 Priced from BEDROOM, bdsement and 2‘car garage, r sis.100. Zara . 2 SMALL hEDROOMS,' iulk basa" wafxiAs i mant and 2-car garaOa, davtsbur hm, -J.rn. Ad «r»*. »*C. dap, required, 425-5394. Security deposit S BEDROOMS, BATH and V*., He children or drinkers. 13HH2. '37?2°d r0ad1' atC' ANGELUf- ROOMS. SM bEPOSIT, weak, 474-(049. _ ROOMS and prlvaia b ROOMS and BATH, Inquire at 2 ROOMS, UTILITIES, security deposit. 473-MS7.____________________ ROOMS, NEWLY DECANAtiD, new furnllura, private entrance, bain, sound proof, washing facilities, mutt sag to appreciate. ias. Ideal f< E 2-3444. 3 ROOMS AND BATH, nice, utilities dap, rat, rag. *83-3304. 3 ROOMS AND BATH, and pr M 2*2 Auburn. Ppntlac. 3 ROOMS, BABY \_____ R WaslaMa, 79 Norton, Bat. 5-10 P.r ROOMS AND BATH: welcome, S37.S0 par weak, *100 dap. Inquire at 273 Baldwin Ava. Ponllac. call *"* ‘ 1 ROOMS, CLEAN, only. No children. No drinkers. 32 weeks, *25 deposit, IQS Norton. S ROOMS WITH private bath and ------ carpeted Iratlw— llltles, artvite ....... furnished, child walcoma. AND BATH, SS Wllllan FE **4M. No drinkers or pate. private, n Short St. . dap. allow 2 children. th option ti ., 402-5800, 131,000 Including lot. . HAVE YOUR OWN LOT? Choose from aaveral homt designs priced tram 117.100. Excellent financing available HAYDEN REALTY 343-4404 10753 Highland Rd. (M-S9) vs mile west at Oxbow Lair GMC BACKUS tAKB area, eta* to 1-75, nun, an water, sharp 3-bsdroom, basement, fireplace, large lot, S17S per month, 398-5432-2 COMMIRCB TWP. AREA S badroom homes a VK 11 a I Children era OK. Fast Reasonable. I4»**f0. FREE RENTAL’' SERVICE for landlords, goad tenants waiting, Art Dantoi* R*glty. *85-15*7. Phone FE 4-8284 LARGE DUPLEX apartment, work Ing couple. 1 child, lak* privileges , tec. VERY COZY 2 BDRM. brick bung, off W. Huron on a quiet it. Carpeting, 2 fireplaces. 1 In rae. room. 1 car attached gar., rat. and else, range. 8215.00 per mo, 2 mo. In' advance. ' Ward or Gary Partrldg*, 1050 W. Huron $1., ph. *81-2111. _____________ ■ - Rent lake Cottages 41 NICE, SANDY BEACH. Ideal tot small children, sleep! (, 190 per weak. *82-5403.___________(_________ 3 ROOMS POR MARRIED COU4 930 waiikly. 133 E. Howard. 4 ROOMS, MEN OR COUpl*. Pontli 052-4959. CLEAN ROOMS f weak, Pontic- — EM 3-25**. . OR 3-6539 or CLiAN SLEEPING ROOM,^ tor GENTLEMAN, CLEAN SLfeBPING —m near General Hospital, FE 5- PRIVATE ROOM, FOR middle-aged gentleman^ontod' * —“ FE 2-1127. ROOM FOR RENT. TO 4 BEDROOM, IVi baths, walk out bastmant. Colonial Estate*. 334-7954. ________________. . J 3 - BEDROOM BRICK FRONT RANCH, large kitchen, gal forced air hast. S1*,50O FHA. Zero dawn. 4S1-0370. GMC BY OWNER. 3 bedroom ranch, 2 JP attached garage. 1W baths, fln-Ishad rae. roem, fully carnatcd, 129,700. In Lak* Orion area. 493- BRAND NEW carpet . badroom horn* with 12x30 kltchan, full basement, 1H car garagt an" ML |n excellent condition, *14,700. bedroom RANCH horn* with 2 fireplaces, full base------- IQ baths, 2 car garage or land contract, reason______ ______ payment, 1-75, US-10, Clirkston CALL RAY TODAY 3 BEDROOM RANCH, baautHully decorated, lak* privileges, quick possession, 53500 down on Lend Contract. *734503._________________ 3-Bedroom Economy Rancher* on your lot for only 120*941 E. J. Dunlap Custom Builder 2717 Silverslone, corner Walton 330-1198________or_________338*497 5 ROOM HOUSE ON lake. Wnfsall on Land Contract, substantial down payment. OR- 3-39*1.____ breezeway, 2 car garage, i. mile* from Pontiac. Only 5 Where can you bast It. MILLS Offices In Auburn Heights Area 3 bedroom aluminum home on two large lots with plenty of shade trees. Pull basement* gas heat. 2 and many more extras. Call ba purchased on I terms. BACKUS REALTY 332-1323 ___________388-1*95 BY OWNER, GOOD 2 badroom, doss to town, FE 5-0734 attar * BY OWNER 6n land contract. bedrooms, 3 loti. FE 4-7093, BY OWNER. 3-bedroom, 2 ti batha, ranch brick on lab*. Clarl —---------i. 130.000. *25-32*0. RAY Mi How, end hall# vanity In hafhv. lw JHK young* large ^fanci down ano taka paymant of 1111 m GMC FOR SALE BY OWNER a CUIltraFl 4 bedroom, IVb bath brick hema, 2'/V car garage, full basement. flreplaca In Ijvlng room and paneled rumpus room. Larga cornered lot ahadad by old American Elms. Many extras plus reasonabla terms. Phona FE 5-0075. HOME WITH ELEGANCE' Large colonial on IS aeras. 4 larga carpeted bedrooms and 24x3* family room with tlraplac*. This comforlabl* home has a 5 zona hot water heating ayatam, 2Vk baths, basement and garage. Plus many other extra*, auch aa Intercom throughout. 149,500. c. PANGUS INC., Realtor OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK *30 M-15 Ortonvlll* m CALL COLLECT *27-2015 hard TO FIND? Not really because w* have an tx-ceptlonal 3-btdroom ram* with lull finished basement and attached m car garage on a lovaly 100x132 toot ' i. The separate dining room Is .jautlfully carpeted along with the living room. . YORK BY OWNER, DRAYTON Plains. . badroom ranch. Fully carpeted, ivs bath’s. 2 fireplaces. All formica OR 4-0343,_____FE 0-717* kltchon. Finished recreation room uoikp in Davlsbura, 2 bedroom# ss. ss in* as eras 3s—"' — independence township' HR ranch, 3-bedroom aluminum and brick bullt-ln oven, ranch, aluminum storms and o i------------- . ,[,* approximately II *73-9*17 for appointment. BY OWNER. carpeted HvimHWIRWBNPiraraateWHI^^ range, tlraplac* and basement, 2 screens, car garage, ahada trees, and extra 150x150. Too many features H tat. *23-1,153.______________ describe. Gl 4V4 per cent mortg*ge COLONIAL, 4 BEDROOMS, Drayton may be assumed. Call today for ap-area, lake privileges. IVa bath, palntment. custom - carpeting, drapes. Famllyr- — .... fireplace, formal dining MUST SEE TO AP-, COLONIAL, 3-BEDROOM, living room, dining room and kltchan, gas heat, 1 car garage. Take over mortgage bal. of $11,100 total payments 191 mo. — $2400 down. 4B1-037O. GMC YORK IMLAY CITY "Spacious Early American Type Hama," 3 bedrooms, family room, dining room, etc. Shop area and garage. Real nice Inside and out. S21.S00. Terms, immediate possession. G. W. Turn-ar (M21) Realtor, 724-5413. JOSEPH SINGLETON REALTOR 429 ORCHARD LK. RD. S3il-0114 "KINGSBERRY HOMES" Chops* your quality dream horn* •ram ISO plans, all sizes and styles North and fatlory. 693-8371 . 664-4305 ____6 ROOMS ON ASTOR In Pontiac,! Call | 88,980, 51000 dawn, phone 693-6677, 0 — to 11 a.m. 7 p.m. to ll p.m. _______ MEN. —."i-. r— -.t-t:_____j_____| aarara a p.m. FE 2-8209. _ R?S^.Apa,?!nanL..“*'ll,i!!' ROOMS FOR WOMEN IN com- 7 ROOM RANCH; ■ tertabla haul* -------- --—*----------------- *-•■* — Rochester. Ava..— 070475 per month. 2147. Ask tor Jan. CLARKSTON SCHOOL AREA WALTER'S LAKE PRIVILEGES WE BUILD from your salactlon ot our 1970 portfolio of U.S. Steal homes plans or Kingsbury Horn* plans. Several choice view loti to choose from, several Ranch- —„u«, — =e'£*Ms"’ Colonial-Split foyer models under Evenings 682-8039 or FE 2-4353 construction. Priced from S2*,900 to j LAKE FRONT, sparkling, 3-bedroom 834,000 complete. Builder on lob ranch with 2M car hooted garage, J_"y, look for red Jeep, located 5 carpet throughout Including kitchen ■MMtagr and family room, pantlod family taSlly, lot..______________ — blocks North of Clarkston „ Orion Rd., 4 blocks West of t Eston Rd.,1 "'“ " mi parties, 473-PARTIALLY FURNISHED 3 ROOMS smokers, dep. req„ 33 SAGAMORE MOTEL. ■ir mi, 789 S. SLEEPING ROOMS, required. ROOMS AND BATH. Near St. Benedict. Includes heat, stove and refrigerator. S11S per month. Call Mr. Haas. *424333.____________________ entrance, I or 2 adults, 515 mo., avail. Aug. 11, FE 4-5973. 4 ROOMS, 8120 par month, all utilities Incl., adults only. 474-1132. $109 PER MONTH WALTON PARK MANOR U n p rece families t townshouses, adlacent to 1-75, 35 min. to downtown Detroit, i dally and Sunday 12 to S p.m NICE, CLEAN ROOMS and home- cooktd meals, 335-1*79,__ OOM ANb BOAR D *OR Rant Office Space AMERICAN HERITAGE APARTMENTS 1 and 2 bedroom, all conveniences, alr-conditloned, all utilities Included In rant. No pots. Adults BLOOMFIELD MANOR WEST td luxury i t electric luxury apartments, ... electric appliances Carpeting and drapos AVAILABLE NOW IN ONE OF Rochester's finest and newest office and commercial cantors. Medical suites, general office suites and commercial spaces. Plenty of free parking. Phono *51- Included.^ Model open dally 10 IMMEDIATE1 OCCUPANCY Orchard Lak* A Mlddlebalt Rbad 2308 Woodrow Wllson-*82-38S2 COLONIAL VILLAGE Spacious 1- and 2-bedrooms, $155 and $175. No pots or children. Call Mrs. Schultz, *7*434? l to S p.m. only. NOW LISflftO 2 ta and rafrlgerat—. ___________ carpeting, newly decorated, ... children or pats, Good reference. Security deposit. Call before 12 noon. 3M-SS4S.__________________ OAKLAND VALLEY APARTMENTS. .----.... occupancy. *177. Social 100. Rochester arej UPPER 3 ROOMS and I downtown —I------ deposit oi |>P*45. !A. . _____________ clhldren, freshly *51-4883. close to roger I kfter 5 p. UPSTAIRS FLAT. CLEAN, carpeted (new) 1 bedroom. only. STS deposit, 530 we____ ... utilities furnished. 537 Judson Court. VALLEY PUCE APTS. In th* Center of Rochester 2 Bedrooms, 2 beths, SIS* OPEN EVERY DAY CALLs 651-4200 Rent Heuses, Furnished 39 FREE RENTAL Want Ads For Action !• August . 338.7211 Jeep# locetec m..k«*.. "ina and fanr,„r (yw, built-in - - ■ -rs —r HH....................v..a9V..e# dishwasner ana to on.1 new *73-34*9______Sylvan *42-2300 Landscape urge lot. 887-9705. ju«t'"i5 «nishrt,''w*f*r'tord.' cait _FE"2-4993] DUCK LAKE FRONJ 1Nlfiyi1h.50 has 2 full baths, 2 ckr age, Built-In oven,and rang* NICE 4 BEDROOM HbME HAS FRUIT TREES, and 2 acres ot land with Union Lak* privileges. This al» IKraaSi dining ream, 1 lull bath, 2Vk baths and tw car garage. Available on Hew mortgage. *27468. CROSS REALTY taxes are li attractive 3 oeoroom ra.._.. . beautifully landscaped lot and safe sandy beach. Has carpeted living room with fireplace, family room bullt-ln range and dishwasher, at tached 2 car garage, Mllforc Schools. A good buy at S2*,?D8 will farms. WARDEN Call 682-3920 NEW 3 BEDROOM Aluminum ranch* |1[ water heat* fast occupancy. >00 moves you In. Frank Marotta Assoc. 3195 Union Lk. Rd. 363- ,,J1. ____________. • NEAR AIRPORT I M M E D I A T I POSITION, far sal* by owner * bedroom home, carpeted, bullt-lns IVa bath, attached garage, down pmt. to mortgage of * per cant, cell attar 5:30 p.m. *73-5318. , If no answer call 3*3-8*40 DRAYTON PLAINS BRAND NEW’3 beroom, IVa bath, full basement, nice lot with shade trees, walking distance from schools and shopping. DON E. MCDONALD LICENSED BUILDER OR 3-2837 DRAYTON PLAINS Vary attractive 3 bedroom rancher, completely furnished. Including 2 room air conditioners. Beautiful IS OXFORD AREA — 7 large rooms, with bullt-lns, carpeted living room, full basement, aft, 2V, car garage, large lot. Agent. *02-902*. acre landscaped yard. P a 11 a.. Braazaway and axtra storage building. $10,200 full prica. Terms available. OPEN RAY dining all. 2nd floor In knotty pin*. Full basement, gas heat, 2 car garage, nlca deep lot. Lake jirlvlteges. 819,500. FE 5-2*85 FARM HOME Let ua show you this hard to find older 3-bedroom home and barn located an XOCxOl?' ot High Class Neighborhood. Modernized large kltehen. dinlnq room and-3-car garage. Only-427408 on land contract. . GIROUX REAL ESTATE 5338 HIGHLAND ROAD ' <73-7837 MMB ................. with basement. New eai. ......... Ing room, dining room and hallway, 1V4 car garage, *8x20 ft. lot. 814.350 FHA terms. condition. Features 3 bedrooms, full baths, carpeted throughou.. Basement finished Into a beautiful rec. room with carpeting ■ 2 car attached oarage. Al. ... a one acre lot. Prlcad below market value ter a' quick sale. Make an appointment"'to Imped this today. Selling price, $34,500. Near Northern High 3 bedroom ranch with 1W baths. Recreation room In basement FARRELL REALTY 2405 N. Opdyka Rd. Pontiac 332-1'"- conTemporary. 3 bedro on 2479 or 447-08 FIELDSTONE RANCH, In Clarkston, •aV-ooms, base-55000 down Ray Today, 100x790 lot,- 2 'bedrooms, base-•“ 2 ear gar-— -*— act. P-59. I FIRST IN VALUES RENTING WE ARE NOW TAKING . APPLICATIONS FOR HOMES finished* lovely large * — - — Ea Hlgl ________919! _k. Rd. ract. 623-8202 aft. 6. land con- heat* full prica 817*900. FHA or VA. 9 A.M. TO 8 P.M. 2294 WILLIAMS LAKE .RD. Hr: Driv* west on M-59, tur — ......—" Lk. Rd. • '"filly roonr 474-4221 large living room with natural firaplace and rad carpeting, full basement, 3 bedrooms, l'/? car at-tachsd garage and much mor*. Only *980 town, FHA. I OR FHA SPECIAL — Casa Lake, brick bugs low with toll basement, US car garage, huga lot. Prlcad to •all quick. S14.900 with 88 down. MARK REAL ESTATE COMPANY 1702 S. Telegraph______ 332-0124 pioneer-higHlands 3 bedroom brick ranch hem* In excellent condition. Has full basement, garage, fenced yard, and Mach privileges on Sylvan Laka. Call FE 2-79*0.__________■ - ■ RANCH WITH I ULL UUBI—P — ■* $15,995. Mortgage Frank Marotta- 8. assoc. * - ~d. 34*7001. 3195 Union Lk. Rd. J ROCHESTER AREA — Country at- ' mosphere with this 4 badroom ranch. 2 baths. Family kltchan, Quick possession. 025400. Trad*., NIX REALTOR, 052-5375. 1 ROCHESTER AREA — Immadlato possession. Moving to Arizona. * rrtract. *Vi cent. 039,900. Owner. S RENT'BEATERS, 2-bedroom full basement, gas heat. FHA approved at $11,500. Zero down. *81-0370. GMC RETIREMENT HAVEN 111 Remodeled 2-badrm., with beamed ceilings, flreplaca, farm kltchan, garage, lota at garden space among th* trass North at Troy location. ONLY $19,900 $5,000 DOWN LADD'S OF PONTIAC 391-3300 RETIREE SPECIAL Jroom. 1 porch, teal al NICE-N-CLEAN >m, sun room, niop garden, ias heat* garage* lot 100'xlSQ'. rorifit, 8l7*fn. .... .. FUTTLEY REALTY *20 Commerce 3«ii90t SMALL FARMS, ROOM FOR horsat and kid*. „ ART D A N I ELS REALTY,. *0*-15», Dm*--Garden City 421-7080. SEMINOLE HILLS ■ricx ranch with 200T area, state floor 1 , plash -1BW —ri tor a. 1. This taciudes 2 extra -k C. SCHUETT EM 3-7188 BRIAN REALTY ICtorkSMn. Saoudad location,. OR DIVORCEES. PEOPLE WITH CREDIT PROBLEMS AND R ET I R-- ARC OKAY #tTM,i». w OPEN DAILY ANO SAT. SHORT ON CASH a two clean r " " ‘ s with full b ^ YORK IREAL VALUE REALTY For Imediate Action Call FE 5-3676 - 642-4220 ■■■K.CMMM, 2 W rpatlng, drape*, family fc.SW.M'jrftachadnaraua. 2W J- 4 For Wont Ads Dial 334-4981* THE PONTIAC PKKSS, MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1909 F—ll -SPACIOUS AND GRACIOUS DMcrllM* thta clean older homo near Pontiac Oanorfl- Hapiltol. Include! 4 I----—— wllh formal dining 1 kitchen. Priced at YORK OR 4-MU TO YOU, Sal* Houses LAPEER FE >-7174 BUYER: ... . ir a package that .•I ty you. Would In a 3 bedroom homo ___-...-.it. Inground swimming h»». and a lot with paved (treat? •Complete package tor 133,030. ' 11 vperhela **•'”•*— 1— ——a 1, lnc.425-2474. largo living room with fireplace, formel dining room, haiomont, 2V? car garage, all on S acres with lots of trees, and shelter for horses, $21,-300. PHA, P-73. RAY CALL RAY TODAY I SNYDER, KINNEY & BENNETT IN ROCHESTER 134 W. University (2nd Floor) 431-4100 or 334-3100 TUCKER REALTY REALTOR f03 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. 334-1345 _________ Vri-LEVEL,$14,4M on your lot. Art Daniels Realty, 445-1547, Dexter 434-4444. Garden City, 431-7000. VACANT,* NEWLY DECORATED 3- . room, PHA at 'i’st* WE'LL BUILD any Style house on your lot and aavo you a lot of money! Terms, DEW Construction Co.. PE 3-3143 or PE 0-3534. WEST BLOOMFIELD LARGE 3 BEDROOM RANCH In a country setting, only 20 min., from Pontiac. Containing leparate dining area with walk-ln utility room from the car-port. All sitting on a large lot. FHA TERMS AVAILABLE. WATERFORD LIKE NEW ALUM., SIDED . overlooking Williams CROSS REALTY 674-3105 RAY CALL RAY TODAY I *47 WISNER AND LINCOLN Jr. High district, 5-room semi-bungalow, tile Bath, lull. basement, garage, exc. condition, $15,000 substantial down payment, X L. TEMPLETON, Realtor 3334 ORCHARD l<. rd. 442-0400 HIITER 2 ACRES — Beautiful 4 bedroom home, family room with fireplace, basement with rec room, attached > car garage, lake privileges. Call WARREN, MICH. -possession on this 3 b, ranch, family 1. 442-4453. OPEN SUNDAY 3 KING-PHIPPS I FAMILY DUPLEX - containing 2 bedrooms each, gas heat and basement, privileges on Cass Lake. Asking *14,730 terms. tHARP 2 BEDROOM .RANCH, carpeted living room, . . full basement. Only 122,400. A assume 5V« per Cent mortgage. LEACH WILLIAMS LAKE ROAD 2 bedroom utility room, finished braazr. garage, *14,450, FHA terms. SYLVAN-SHORE SUB. 2-flMMPi car garage, finished basement, and 2 fireplaces. $25,400. ROHR ROAD Unde? construction, 3 bedrooms, lW baths, 2-car gar full basement, S24.J50. CRESCENT LAKE ESTATE, FINANCING AVAILABLE 5925 HIGHLAND RD. (M-59) 134-4014 474-2141 471-4444 Salt Housas Nothing Down rating, a steady |ob, and you can own this modern 2 family dwelling located on Bast slda of Pontiac. Rant from upstairs epertment will almost make mortgage payment. Includes 2 — and bath A. TAYLOR, Realtor. 0 FE 5-8183 EAST SIDE • Six room two story home wltt three bedrooms and bath on tlx second floor. Full dining room full baaament with gas heat. CLOSING COSTS DOWN ON PHA TERMS. VACANT. RANCH Three bedrooms with bath and “* — heat, ... NORTH END Three bedroom ranch, gas heat, TERM*?’”' VACANT. COMMERCIAL 240 feat of prime frontage on Auburn Ava. Corner location. Investors, look Into this. Terms or trade. Eves. Call Mr. Casteli FE 2-7273 Nicnolia-Hdrgar Co. FE 5-8183 ROYER OXFORD OFFICE Sal* Houses 49 ROYER OXFORD OFFICE * Residential-Commercial Located on prtmo M24 frontage. Renovated. 100 yur old homo with Ovory modern convenience. Would mako Ideal colonial restaurant. Situated on*250 x 33o lot. Air conditioned. Fully carpeted kitchen with fireplace end an abundance o' cupboards. Cathedral ceilings li 1 -----Mft fireplace SlacktOL -.......... Underground sprinkling sys ----------- “1 X 310 If. drive Also additional 5 for 111 B 333 S. Loptor Rd. COSWAY Wolverini Lake Privileges lot paved streets, only $$ BASS LAKE PRIVILEGES Ideal for retirement, built 1958. 5-room rendh on largo lot, 2-car garage, only $21*000. FHA or VA forms. LOON LAKE PRIVILEGES 3-bedroom ranch, recreation room and full bosomont, 2V? car garage, only SII.SOO, UNION LAKE FRONT 2-bodroom cottage, ivy cor gorogo, only 821,900. 4 BEDROOMS With toko privileges, dose In, built 1443, full basement, 3 car garage, only 024,400. rood. 3 bi garage, run finished. 5 aci horse barn a Ask for 112 E. i brick homo. 2 cai bosomont. half s. 4 stall hip-roofed d storage building. Sale Heueee 49 Sale Housei 491 Safe Homes 491 Sale Houses 491 Sale Houses OPEN miller eastham A&G ^X ' AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR i_ ^ TRI-LEVEL MODELS AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR ;^ KmQm e ELIZABETH LAKB ESTATES1 On 190x160 foot lot.' Carpeting, BRICK home In A-t condition, platter walls, family r------------ if......- ----m*--------------e, I built*’- IW baths, LC4^4'«1 living siV eie.eeo”*"'.11?. .................... ......... odd up to kitchen with new gracious city living. Good *■ .........bedrooms, location end available on FH mile to modal. W'&'TImVU W JSS» LARGE IR eko Rood, right Va 1 bescfes th, are# M3,900 with; |WS Anders colonials as lot GIROUX REAL ESTATE 5331 HIGHLAND ROAD 473-7137_____473-0200 AVON’ Immediate p OXFORD AREA, 1-B.BDROOmI «2.20b price RANCH with lake privileges tor" those Of city dwilltrs. Family room, bullt-lns. dinette, full basmt., gas heat, 2V? car garage. Large lot plus lots more. 127.500. IHEARTHSIDE REALTY ; Lake privileges on goc In. 155,000. LAKE PRIVILEGES COUNTRY HOME ROOM FOR 10 HORSES I QUIP ANDERSON. & GILFORD oodtrn' Building and Realty 'Rdme 39,1 HigKtfi5d\89^(M^)lY“ 442.400 plastered wells, nerowooa _____ full basm‘1., ges heat, fenced EASTHAM yard, paved drive plus lots more. REALTORS Just down the street from Northern ; jojo Highland Rd. (M-3t) MLS High. *17,500, FHA. [674-3126 335-7900 . NORTH SHIRELY, built in 1447 end I UNION LAKE BRANCH I —.... J like new. 5 rooms end bath, carpetpd TAT-RTOT filfil fnmmorrp ..... heating syattm, with hot living room, dlnlng-ell, ges h4at plus,»OJ-OOUO oioi Lommerce water base heat, utility room, i lots more. Just *17,751 lull price on Vacant, land contract farms. |usl FHA. ; ________________............... 115,001. 1 HOMES BY WEINBERGER 1530 CROOKS RD. __________OL 1-1222 O'NEIL jARRO "BUD" LAKE FRONT Lovaly 3 bedroom ranch style homo with attached 2 car garage, In Twin Lakes Village 3ubdlv|-,-- ■—* ~ ----/Islon, lust west of Pontiac, brick and aluminum axMrior, 103 ft. frontage -- * • i the iakt and 2 ceramic tile baths, < cupboards. Large_________.... throughout. Full bath, tiled. Extra stall shower downstairs. Flattered walla. Separate dining area. Living room Mid all 4 bedrooms carpeted. Only 520.410. Ask tor 255 B. GAYLORD OFFERS FHA TERMS Will got you In this spotless 3-j bedroom ranch homo in Orion. Township. This homo feoturot a largd kitchen and dining area combination. Utility room, e largo fenced tO'xl25‘ lot. All ttila for only *14,450. Hurry I STOUTS Best Buys Today 4 BEDR00MS- G. I. Terms ire available on this . Immaculate 4 bedroom home which It lust ideal for the larger family, includes living room, dining room, sowing room and kitchen on the mein floor wlhh 4 bedrooms up. Full basemint with HURON GARDENS- Netural stone bungalow which, Includes 3 bedrooms and full basement. Excellent location. New carpeting end other extras. May we show you? MR. FIXIT— 3 bedroom leketront, good beach end wide boat dock. Solid structure still needs work, but Ideal to raise a family. Priced at 413,400 on land contract. LITTLE FARM- Close In and very convenient this ---- ---J-- attractive 4 . _________________> Including room. 2Vb car garage. ——-----------— £.01/00 r Ortonvllle. Ex- TIMES n end bath home v Land Contract 49Salg Houses $109 MONTHLY* Includes utilities, gardening, except electricity ' 1-2-3 bedroom Townhouse* WALTON PARK MANOR Co-operative Parquet floors,, range and refrigerator, hesement. FURNISHED MODEL AT CHERRYLAWN & HOPKINS Coll ... 335-6171 NO MORTGAGE COSTS OR PREPAID* {*) and up beautiful beach, fenced yard, complete and ready lor tho fun loving family. Not to mention i homo that has room and comfort, lor that same loving Tomlly. 5 bedrooms, 2 fireplaces and family room, dining room, breakfast room, t room for everybody and room for everything. Aluminum storms and screens, gas forced air This one has everything and to toi It off, you can purchase on Lam Contract, if you are looking for th. homo that Is special, call on this one. INVESTMENT 4 bedroom ranch built aluminum storms and screens, fenced yard, oak floors. If you are a handyman and want to make a good Investment this Is v—* looking at. Also has lake privl _ to add to tho investment. Existing land contract payments of *55 per month allows money loft over tor the tlxup materials. There are not many of these chances to mako a profit those days. So cell early this one. BEAUTIFUL LAKE FRONT RANCH You can move In within 30 days and *11 you will --1 || a — ■TED'S TRADING.. McCullodgh*Reolty, IncL \ Volu-Vision Show of Homos MODEL OPEN DAILY 2 TO 6 .waikoutbaeement, b<_--- baths, dining room, sating bar It ■■■ closets, attached 2V?-c*Ma*rage, paved drive and large,sc« -------” w-54 (Highland Road) to loft at Twin L THINKING OF BUILDING? Than think of McCullough Ro*ltv homos w basement, alum, siding, from $17,900. MODEL OPEN DAILY BY APPOINTMENT BRENDEL LAKE FRONT This lovely 3 bedroom brick ranch bps an etteched aarege, finished bosomont, bar, paved drive, an underground sprinkling systam. HARP, 4 BEDROOM RANCH, $25,500 /? bath, brick exterior, dining room, fenced yard. Hurry on this ELIZABETH LAKE AREA Extra sharp rancher with fireplace, bu»»-lns, garage, carpeting, family room, patio *nd lake privileges. TRADE IN YOUR PRES- LARGE SCENIC LOT • bedrooms, dining room, basement and garage. LAND CONTRACT TERMS. .LAKE ANGELUS COLONIAL ilonlal, family room, fireplace, don, fi air conditioning. *04,400. ng. IV? baths. Only 4 years o . LETS TRADE! McCullough Realty, Inc. 674-2236 5460 HIGHLAND ROAD (M-59) PONTIAC WALLED LAKE 624-2400 1350 WEST MAPLE ROAD . MLS Raaltor Times Realty Office open Sunday 1-5 SCHRAM 3 BEDROOMS 14' x II' living room, separate dining room, full tiled bosomont with recreation room, gas forced ’ tlr heat. Price reduced to 114,100. ' available on PHA farms. List With SCHRAM and Call the Van' OPEN EVES. AND SUN. lift Joslyn Ave. FE 5-4471 REALTOR . - MLS Serving Pontiac area for 20 years 4 BEDROOM POSSIBLE, lake privileges, full basement, *35,000. For forms coll EM 3-4703. BRICK RANCHER, attached garago, pool, 2 flroploces, patio, barbtque, *54,510. For appointment cell EM 3-7700. 3 BEDROOMS, lake front, now condition, land contract. EM 3-5477. GOLPLCOURSE SITE, 343-7700. SHOPPING CENTER SITE, 343-4477. BUY A*N APARTMENT building—will build to order—343-7034. IRWIN «• SONS NORTH SIDE* 3 bedroom home In tho bast north (Ida location. One bedroom down and 2 bedrooms up. Nov carpet In living room and dlnlni room. Full basement, forced al heat. Rec. room, brick and. alum siding. Sm this today- BUSINESS AND HOME Nearly 2 acres, located on For. tiac Road between Opdyke and Perry. 4 rooms, IV? baths, alum, siding. Price *24,400.00. Land contract terms possible. BUYING OR SELLING JOHN K. IRWIN & SONS 313 W. Huron—Since 1425 FE 5-4444 Attar 5 PM FE 5-4*44 HIGHLAND AREA, 2 b lake front, gas hoot, *Mi EM 2-7134. COOLEY LAKE FRONT, wooded lot, patio, alt ached gorogo, gas hoot, carpatad, 343-7700. LAKE PRIVILEGES, Welled Lake schools, aero lot, outdoor barbeque, large bedrooms, family room, gorogo, carpet only *25,001. 343-5477. 3 BEDROOM BRICK and alum, ranch, fancad yard, vanity, 343- 3 BEDROOMS, lake front, basement, gas, garage, land contract. EM 3-7710. WATERFORD SCHOOLS,' 3 bedrooms, full basement, 2 cor garage, EM 3-5477. t. 511,100. 343-4703. BIG HOUSE, Commerce Lake privileges, new carpet, sun deck, glassed-in porch, real fine for 131,sop- Land Contract. 343-77*. 5 BEDROOMS, Union Loko privileges, 2 car garage, dan and fireplace, 343-7024. MILFORD AREA, excellent oil around, price. EM 3-4703. ’basement, 114 both. terms EM 3-5477. SO Cooley LOk* Rd. I Sola Housas mmsm WE WILL GUARANTEE THE SALE OF YOUR HOME a private Would m.....h boat house. t only *31,000. SEE IT TODAY! n a friendly neighborhood? See this 3 bed- OP YOUR OWN on' one of Oakland County's most beautiful lakes. Enlov vear-round living In TWO aluminum-sided .ranch home. Includes carpeting, fireplace, paneled TV room,, electric^ heat end attached garajpi. Gorgeous view fi LOOKING FOR room* 3W* tforyHtwme? In" iirra^th' Leky'iVtetw. Full basemen a den for Dad, 2V* car garage and 3 landscaped lots. Plenty pf trees and lake Privileges, *24,450. CALL TODAYI FHA TERMS TWO-STORY HOME In spotless condition. 3 bedrooms, dining room, bHomont, and garage. All city conveniences ere Included as well »s the calpetlng, storms.and screens, gas heat and fenced back yard. Excellent homo for th# growing family. CALL NOWI MILFORD AREA CUSTOM BUILT 4 bedroom trl-lcvol In "Ilk# now" condition. Load* of extra features arc Included, juth as: Atl-fOrmlca kitchen, carpeting throughout, and finished 2% cor garage, family mom, atm a blacktop drive. Locatad on /landscaped Tot with loko privileges. CALL TODAYI ROCHESTER AREA ENTERTAIN MUCH? Hero's a custom-built 3 bedroom brick rancher featuring a large family reoM with,built-in bar, an enticing swimming pool and ether extras, locatad on one and a tolrd jwe* cf land. U7/m with land contract farms, If deslrad. CACL NOW! CLARKSTON AREA ADJUST TO A BETTER way OF LIFE In this splttrock rancher located on a.klng-olM mealy landscaped lot..,* bedrooms,; IW beths, high-celling basement, and 114'car attached garage. Only 024,500. CALL NOWI YOU CAN OWN THIS 1 BEtfROOM______—--------— of closet (Met, 114 Bams, modem step-saving kitchsn. dry basement, pickled mahogany frlmwerk, Alumna-Vue windows throughout and attached garage. ''Plus a big fenced yard to koop your loved ones safe when playing outdoors. SEE IT TODAYI FIVE NEW -MODELS OPEN SAT, I, SUN. 2-5 pm or by appointment . , COLONIAL AND MID-LEVEL: West Huron ot Vaorhtft Rd. KEYLON RANCHER AND TRI-LEVEL: Hiller Rd. at Kaylon Drive AVON RANCHER: Avon Rd, lust-east at Crooks Rd. PONTIAC CLARKSTON ROCHESTER UNION LAKE 338-7161 625-2441 651-8518 3634171 stairway to lower level .. room with sliding glass door 1 patio overlooking the lake, cat Dating and drapes, laundry am furnace room, gas heat, wst« softansr. sprinkling system, we landscaped grounds. Priced i *43,5*. by appolntmsnt only. NICHOUE-HUDSON Associates, Inc. 'U681-1770S' After 6 p.m. FE 4-8773 Val-U-Way SOUTH SIDE Sharp 3 bedroom ranch homo with nearly new wall to well carpeting. Large famllyslzsd kitchen. Gas heat. Tiled bath. New l>4 — garage. Aluminum storms screens. Only *4* needed to In on FHA terms. Hurry on IRWIN- “YES WE TRADE!" CLARKSTON " A Surprise I Have you over opened?! a package and v— Bm “ WHY NOT TRADE? LARGE FAMILY? SHORT OF BEDROOMS? LINE UP FOR BATH? Then you should see this lovsl bedroom custom trl-levei with u 100x150 lot In a top residential a disposal, nice WE HAVE LOTS OF LOTS itlng fireplace plus tile baths, 2'4 car KEEGO HARBOR Sharp 2 bedroom, 114 Story tomlly home with new gas furnace. Wall to wall carpeting In large living room. Aluminum storms and screens. Full basement. Complete price only SM.500. Fast possession. EAST SIDE Val-U-Way Realty and Building Co. FE 4-3531 345 Oakland Ave. Open 4 to 4 .. priced right at *35,9*. We v take that old house end trade. JESSIE ST. Is where this 3 bedi... home is located; 100x100' 111 Union Lake i carpeted living room, la {room, 2 car attached gan this 3 bedroom older f3U900. Will * J 100x10. M ~ /enipnees. Can be ugm on Lana Contract, r - * only 910.250 with $2,000 do* DRAMATIC AND BREATHTAKING OFF AUBURN lent and gas** beat. 1 $11,600. E-Z FHA term* MARGARET McCULLOUGH, Realtor $143 Cass-Elizabeth Road 682-2211 MLS Sun. 2-S: GILES iSYLVAN MANOR n by appointment c LAZENBY IMMEDIATE POSSESSION kitchen with dining space. Full basement. Located on ■ nice lot in a good onto. Close to schools and shopping. Priced to soil quick — only SI5.350 o FHA termsl reasonably priced at 524,500. IT'S GOING UP FAST ^,uin *£ jjfijf*' your Everything but the price, on a new, I —-------------- basem.n't. WALL TO WALL PERFECTION hardwood fiobr/'ineled gloss windows with screens, marble sills, ceramic both, and yet the price Is MU »YPur».l.?!v 8-P beauty, charm and spaciousness of tho throe levels. Richly carpeted, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, glass door to outsldo patio, cyclone fenced yard, '--ge lot, attached garage, much tro. Price *25,9*. No. 4-35. •*;»iSM|LE! SMILE! SMILE! Webster-Curtis Oxford-Orion ' FALL CLEARANCE TWIN BEACH COUNTRY CLUB AREA 1 bedroom ranch 0 with lot 150x110. Ful Les Brown With this spacious 4 room alum. rancher,' 3. bedrooms, attached garage, lots of flowers and trees Mrly P°SS»M on a large lot. Trade In the equity Move rift ir on your present home or we will {“'O guarantee sales In writing. Only new roo( *20,4*. FHA terms. ; fishing and. . __________.. R0YCE LAZENBY, Realtor KekSs. ownVr tr»nsf*r?iS!r ,.°R?.n..?*llv ..... Iwe also Squaw Lake ^ 4626 w. Walton - OR 4-0301 HALL " OA 0-2515 a real Doll house - s bedroom bungalow *u p s t a I r s bedroom oil paneled and carpeted, . .. . living room, hill and bath CLARKStON AREA r 3 bedroom carpeted. Bath has tub enclosure.! r»™h with full finished basement. This home is spotless and the 2'4 car attached ^mge. IVa batljs. FHA OR VA TERMS -[AVAILABLE Gannett and Still build a the future, so w This cute 2 bee 22x24 garage, ga VnM t, full basement, gas heat, si end 2#4-4 LAKE OAKLAND SHORES Gl BEAUTIFUL 4-BEDROOM COLONIAL — in an excellent loca-i lake privileges on Lake land contract terms. Full price $38,950. NORTH PONTIAC 3-BEDROOM RANCH, carpeted In both living room and 2 bedrooms, heated 2-car garage, with work-shop, completely fenced back yard.-Available on I excellent condition on .............. lighting bum ibrary* This home Is In an reliant neighborhood and price< >nly $20,550. F.H.A. terms. CLARK k split- PONTIAC EAST SIDE - Good credit plus *50 will movt you ‘Ha. this 2 bedroom bugalow with basement, large * ft. lot. Col more information. WILL BUILD — 3 bedroom a Call for more Information. 425-4114 Set. 9-4 loy fht privet* lovely patio on the I lake. The kltcheh has built Ins end' ceramic tiled floors. It hat, ai paneled family room with lodgorock fireplace. 3 full baths, hot wafer baseboard heat. Here Is real year round lake living. Let us PRIVATE BEACH ON WATKINS LAKE GOES WITH THI5 DELIGHTFUL NEW RAMBLING BRICK RANCH. Quiet friendly neighborhood ewey from city traffic. 3 roomy i carpeted living room it down payments o down payments. May ws show you. X' Clork, Coll Clark. CLARK REAL ESTATE 1342 W. HURON ST. 4S2-S850 OPEN 4-4 ML* ___________ -Jtures,t ■ HAPPY FAMILY LIVING.' ramie bath, Ml | ‘ d 2 car garai idroom home, lull basemen) gas heat, lot 50x1(3. 2-ca garage. *11,*0, liberal terms. ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES Elizabeth Lake privileges an convenient to Burt School. ZERO DOWN to a qualified veteran. This .... „. _______ -__________ style home has been newly Available on FHA term) decorated. New carpeting th living ' fei Pprke I CROSS REALTY 674-3105 SI 2,5*. No. 20-44. W_______________fen^n; NEW MODELS yard. Finished basement Lake Angelus Lekevlew Estates, COTTAGE COMPLETELY Furnish-ily $19,500, terms. ! West on Walton to Cllntonvllla Road ®d. B»0 PfshLaW, J25^mllas from ** | “■'» Angelus Road. Pontiac, 14,500. 682-0630. dining ______st nook a.._ .. Irst floor. 3 bedroom; kitchen, breakfast nook and n Meadows 1-75, i M-15, (Behind Our Lady i | Wi I Harr features. Full bas< sn?, z fireplaces, I a r g reened-in patio apd 2-car brick ;0R ' rage. Widow must sell on ac-l jnf of health. $29,500, terms. ! _ traoe Sole Houses Fridge of Water* jrford (BeUaji | » Church. i, Eliz. Lake Road & | KELLER PRICED AT $12,500 FOR QUICK SALE: 2 family newly painted outside. New gas heat and hot water heater. 4 rooms and bath 8, presently rented >ment, WE WILL Realtors 28 E. Huron St.! AN EASY. WALK 338-0466 TO SCHOOLS ANO SWIMMING — . at Cedar Island I t, gleaming oak floors. $21.5*. Marotta Wideman ANOTHER BIG HOME •aturing 15 BEDROOMS, living jom and dlnvng room cicpttsd.’ Full basement, gas FA haat. Newly painted exterior, fenced yard. Large shade trees, TERMS. POINTMENT. kitchen end dining area, ample ci boards, epadous living --- carpeted, nice lot with abund--------P •hade trees. Call today, wa have the HAGSTR0M, REALTOR * W Huron OR 4-0358 UNION LAKE — House and grounds MLS Attar 4'p.m. FE 4-7MS. era perfect. 3 lovely bodraams, -----------------------------: I lama, living room, newly; , finished basement, 1 'i; — low taxes. $22,5* down, FHA, im- i CITY EAST Semi-bungalow with expansion attic far extra hM-----* ,k'te Spacious living kitchen ___ . ill basemant, FA tcraaned patio, I---- _____ .... .xxl landscape. Call.for appointment. I. 0. WIDEMAN, REALTOR 412 W. HURON ST 334-4524 EVE. CALL 335-B6691 STRUBLE MODEL 1200 WHITTIER OPEN DAILY 2-6 M59 Across From.4irpDfJ , PRICE REDUCED On this 3 bedroom brick terrace, real easy to hast. It hss living room, full size dining ream and kitchen down, 3 bedrooms and bath up, gas heat. Beat the rent on this property at *12,500, best of tarr- loveiy garden spot. It is cles* to shopping el all kinds. Drapes and carpeting are Included. Prided at *24,OM, terms. ... . tealtor MLS . 5425 Highland Rd. (M-S4) Next to Frank's Nursery 674-3175 bullt-lns, tin! St’h'TO mediate occu TNOVl - New 3- Sals House* 49 Sola Houses occupancy. plelely carpeted, your choice basement, 45 days to l . approximately FRANK MAROTTA 8, ASSOCIATES "IT'S TRADING TIME" INCOME!)! Three apartr Total Income LAKE FRONT ON WATERFORD HILL Title very special home naatted In the hillside Is • must for th* discriminating buyer . . . large split rock rancher with exposed basement with recreation room, lovely P#.tlo overlooking the lake. Family room with fireplace. Beautifully landscaped yanl end nice eendy beech with boat dock. Call for en appointment. FOX BAY ESTATES ' PERFECTION; describes this lovely split, rock rancNer. Th# lawn Is completely tedded end there Is a nice patio. This house I* completely/ carpeted with three large bedrooms, country style kitchen, family roam, IV* bathe, bullt-lns and completely finished basement. Attached /garage with electric door opener. Priced FHA SPECIAL You couldn't find a nicer horn* than this cozy seven room completely carpeted ranch with clean, quiet electric heat. In the Northern school district. Priced at lust $15,951.'Make this a must on your lt*t of hamas fo see. Call for an appointment to sea our modal* In Lake Angelus Lektvlew Estatssl WHO'S THE BUILDER? it unusually attractive and well b area recently, chance* are It'* a KAMPSEN built . versified building program Is deslgned to suit every every pocketbook—W* have Plans, prints—and the s. Our diversified know how that eomae from years of .1071 W. HURON ST. MLS 681-1000 KINZLER CLARKSTON AREA Lake front with boating and fishing on 4 connecting lakes. Nice 2 tone aluminum ranch with 4 delightful rooms and attached 2 car garage, 2 lots and nice shad*. FHA, Gl or,, Convantlonal Bank financing. Priced te sell or will duplicate. INDEPENDENCE TWP. A well maintained seven room ranch with breezeway and two car garage. All extra large rooms and all carpatad. Nearly ana acre and all anchor fenced. Prompt posses- ELIZABETH LAKE AREA New split rock 3 bedroom, IV? bath ranch. Stairway to heated attic for two more bedrooms. Carpeted living room with fireplace. Ges heat and township water. Bank or FHA financing. ,Don't fall to set this tint home soon. WHAT HAS 10 LEGS? full basement, 21, car -s family room with fireplace, spacleue car —, -tom, first floor laundry ream, loads of outstanding sales lea-to. sea to appreciate. Call today. INDIAN-VILLAGE CORNER BRICK Two Story quality brfck home with 3 h ■ porchljiijd. gari OWNER MOVING Willing to sail on easy terms, decorated 3 bedroom story t decorated living end dining roo ment, gas hear and beautiful HATE TO PAINT? NO NEED TO, DORRIS & SON REALTOR 2536 Dixie Hwy. MLS JOHN KINZLER, Realtor 5219 Dixie Hwyt 423-0335 Multiple Lletlng Service Open 9-9 VON Federal Exchange Rural Atmosphere This specious 1 story ranch Is Ih the lovely location of Bloomfield. Twp. 3 bedrooms with petto In the back. Tiled basement with shut-fleboar.d and recreation roorrl. In .clpsa- to schools and shopping, ‘ must be seen to appreciate. Thie will not last long, S24.9W, Highland Estates ’ Erlloy the luxury ot city living In! suburbia. Community wafer. Paved streets.' sidewalks — all go with this 3 bedroom brick ranch with 2V? car garage. Iteme Included In sale are: Frigldsire, dishwasher, electric built-'ns, ■ awnings and many other pleasant surprises. Only $25.5*. Assume a. 5V* LISTING - SELLING - APPRAISING r BUILDING BEAUTIFUL TREES-FRIENDLY NEIGHBORS and a spacious ranch style home with a full basement, 3 large bedrooms, 2 baths, carpeted living room, with a fireplace. Modern kitchen, IV? car attached garage. Also made Into a guest ham*. This to * ~ “ $37,5*. n Drayton Plains IV? baths, 3 car SUSK large lot.-Call today for On appointment. $24,9*. REMEMBI uminum ranch, 3 bedrooms, I1? baths, ■ carpatad basemant, attached 2 car garage, stove, refrigerator and drapes. Immediate possession. $24,950. Why- Not Take Advantage of Our TERRIFIC TRADING PROGRAM FRUSHOUR REALTY 1 REALTORS - . MLS 674-2245 5730 Williams Lake Rd. 6744161 Try Us on 4114713, If ne answer dh othpr phan# numbara F—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1969 For Wont Ads Dial 334-4981 M lets—Acreage II UNUtniCTID acres, i hour, FUTURE HOMKITR tram Mnft, low down, nr mo.,! rviUKE nUBIOIIO «r>mttshoH, agent,m-iw is * ii* oxbow iok* cono'i ii.000 CLARKSTON AREA tokos ovor I por ront lond con OF Eft LAKE - 4 woodod lots, o trad, *81-10*1, ocro Mch, lokt prlvitoi -------------------------- 00.000 to 111,100. Lakt Property SI hadley and oakhill no. - 7 3 ocro Orchard lots. 700x630. (6130 HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty * <*>«"• M'xlM’ LAKE .MONT PERRY LAKE RD, _ W ocro lot on CROSS LK. NR. UNION LK. hill with beautiful vlow. 13.000 Lovtlv nolurol setting. year oround gash. > 0 room aluminum stood remodeled t^.omCor'i PLEASANT LAKE AREA 1 family. Ownors going north. Ad- 1 LOTS dttlctt 40’ ovolloblo. *30.100. ; *••••£ burnished college with ftrimlaca,! good hooch, Cdolcy Lotto, *11,500. Evtrstt Cummings, Realtor i 73*3 UNION LAKE ROAD......1 EM 3-3201 _____ 3M-JJSJ Lake Front Development Booutltut SO* ocro toko, sandy . , boochos. dnd iconic surroundings. * Southwest ol Lapeer. Lord* lots,: tstso. terms ovolloblo. C. PANGUS INC., REALTOR : OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK | 130 M-1S SuIb lerin—e ft'Bpirty S3 ...A Goldmine LOCdtOtf Hi th* growing oroo Ol Kongo Horbor Is this* yoor pit rostouront. * Owner soys SELL, TRAOE OR. EXCHANGE this ox collont husband and wit* operation, i Coll Omo Fulroll, or Bob Bertleteugh ol McCullough pity..; Commercial Exchange Dept., 674 lutiMii Opportunities M|CARNIVAL THREE CHEFS INC. By Dick Turtles management and consider byy In - Lok* Woods, MOSO. xchengo Dept., 674 C_______—--------------1 M-59 FRONTAGE ■y boildlna I BOB WHITE REAL ESTATE MM t. Main. Clarkston _625*5821_ __ Land Wanted LARGE ACREAGE or FARMS j. u. o.iiy"cS! em ~h\ OAKLAND COUNTY AREA Rici front. lake privilEgeo’ CALL 546-1290 I Mt’suSSSTf? Lakes. Fowler, SSS-1LOTI^AI*S>*t_ROT*** 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needed. Sc* us botoi you dool. Warren Stout, Realtor ronea HR ror sow or ..... , >«• OjdvklI Rd. „ FB SSI, Owner will tlnonc*. Ask tor Mr.,. Open Eves. Ill *p,m. Heyden *t Hayden Really, MS-7131.1 CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS sih*p c|tuca rnny i „ DIkIi Hwy.t — OH 3*1355 I W%iSmi m. 1 contiinlnfl TMIS tONTRA^orlBlnlijly wld'lor 13.315 sq. t». Sewer A water. ggWlJiffr «{|| SS.SD0, terms. | dlIcoun( „,05J g£,r Uwj COfl. BALDWIN AVE troctl evsllable el good discounts. Brick front" cement block bWg.j c*" ind •*k ,or Chroles Pongus. C. PANGUS INC., Realtor OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK -'* Ortonvlllf 40x70 W floor, tour 3 room and bt up. Full bo somoni, now water, furnace. Small houso with M0 M.fj' fl- lBt ** r,,r ,or F*rk,"« : _ CALL COLLECTJ27-3IJ3 WELL SECURED'land controct tor M 51 A 6322, MS-1404, 3*3-3665. ~M6ST“BEAUTIFUL ONE acre silo • Panoramic vlow ol Upper Long Lk. 125' on water, SJI0 per ft., terms. 1-051-QMS, otter 4 p.m. ROYER REALTY GOODRICH OFFICE Ortonyille-2. family income PHONE 626-2211 RIFLE RIVER . . zoning, 100x241 ft. In fi developing area, 4 lant hw close to KhoolSi shopping a theater. Ideal location for tfrl _ In, 25,00 car count par 24 hours. SO FT. LOT Overlooking Rlltsbeth! Less then SS por sq. ft. Terms*** Lsss-tlljobst Rd. S* S*. oihsr Commercial Properties EL WOOD REALTY 462-2410 „„ -An"«tt ^ A J m, t-,—,, T 28 E. Huron St. 338-0466 I he Knrth S l Offlc# Opon Evtnlngt A Sunday 1-4 I 1 I OR ION, iSTON buoy M-24, zoned ganaral business, building on prop-! I ertv. '.4 acre, 221,900. ■ . | GREEN AVAILABLE, fTaT ROLLING OR i 1461 S. Lepoer Rd. MY 3-62621 WOODED. I Dow Construction Co. FE 1-3116, FE 1-3321. ________ Wanted Contracts-Mtg. 60 A rrlooking H 1 MILLION PLEASANT LARGK. PARCELS OF LANDI •ilJoo. 1 SMITH LAKE HURON Large woodod Idle lor mo homes or cottages. From SI,111 SI,115. For further Inform, please call Pengus collect. C. PANGUS, INC. OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK ' , 10 ACRES - Wide r g Lapeer an*. *5,iso. n to Choosi from., 5 ACRES - Northeast , 30* will on properly, ACRES - Overl *30 M-ll _ Orlonvlll*| meadows CALL COLLECT *27 2*15 TAKI OVSI PAYMENTS. MUST |klr Dr Al Tnp lancTLitom spring fed C’ fA0K OAV|CA WiLL tiLt Oft Lease to feefer or gag£&£--m>?JL-... «.rts—, ar’jMAf-.ws.* flees, l general office, 1-car perking garage, paved parking lot. venlngs FE 1-4333 Anderion A Associates, Inc. 59 rerlooKing^si i )nt7mf333: Northern Property * AND 10 ACRES, else 14' camper, self contained on 3 wooded acres, [ west of Clare, good deer country at KelkaskO 1 and surrounding! ih of Davidson, *3,130 | CALL COLLECT *17-3*13 " TS,“«crs — r around or: Dollort has boon mad* ovolloblo to us to purchasa and ossum* land contracts, mortgages or buy homts, lots or oersag* outright. W* Will glv* you cosh for your oquity. Our appralsor Is awaiting your egli at: 674-2236 McCULLOUGH REALTY Household Goods |S4*0 Highland Rd. (M-Sl) MLS ' Open 1-1 _ _ 674-2236 * I 1 to 50 ~ , CLARKSTON AREA I LAND CONTRACTS / I Prim# DIxIOHIghway location with Urgently neodod. So* us belors 11,000 car traffic count. 2,000 you deal. wyy - M Warren Sout, Realtor 1430 .N. Opdyke Rd. PE 3 (165 Open Eves.^tll * p.m. LARGE OR SMALL lend contracts,! The Rolfe H. Smith Co, Sheldon B. Smith, Realtor EM 3-40*6.______________‘__ ANTIQUE LOVE SEAT. Chin* cab-Inal, othar Items. UL 2-41*3. CHERRY BOOKCASE, p I * I f o r it -"Tar and large ash wood china board.*24-i*4i. CUSTOM ANTIQUE REPINISHINO, Spaclallzlng In funiltur* raflnlshlng and rapalrt of all typai. 3631361, SCHOOLMASTERS DESK and chair: * ‘■eort-shaped ice cream c--’— not Antiques. Davisbur* ■ Closed Sundays. « HW t, MIL he. T.M. !,«. UI. ,w. I 'My aim Is to build something Pop can take over when he retires!” Suit Household Seed* 65 ITyounq MARRIEDS Nsad furniture? UMar *11 W* can Mt you credit without co-slnnert. Household Appliance, Mi-Mo._ Hi-Fi, TV and J rv .... ..jlton, cc Walton TV, Fg jj ____ . / BARMINS, LITTLE Joafr Biroaln Howt. FE 24142. COLOrt TV. SERVICE Johnson's TV. PB MNt 45 e. Walton war Baldwin_ MAN UPACTURiR'ILCLoW^OUf” STEREO WALNUT OR MAPLE * CONSOLE Diamond Naadlas BSR 4-speed changer $89 Or *5 pgr month UNIVERSAL 1*1$ Dixie Hwy. FE *-0*05 Dally 10:13-1 Tub*., Sat. 10:IS* NEW COLOR TV's priced from *2*1. Doran's Appliance Warehouse, E, Wallen, 333-1724, RCA VISTA Cblpr TV, low ...—■* ——1 1 vr. and 4 . Good condl Fur Sole MiictlleMous 67 RIDING UWNMOWlP RUMMAGE SALE SUMP PUMPS, 1010, ranrja rapolrad. Cone's, FB *-**41. SPRED-SATIN FAINTS, WARWICK Supply, 2*7* Orchard Laka. MI- STALL SHOWERS COMPLETE With faucBfs and curtalni 1*1-5* vnlua, $34.50. Lavatorial complsls with faucet*, 316.13. Tollats, *1.15 Michigan Flugrtscant, 3*3 Orchard Lakt. FB 4-8462 - 37. W# |GS|fit Credit Cards. STEREO TAPE racordar real nice, *100. *74-2771,________________■■ SURPLUS OFFICE CHAIRS AND Othgr mrsc. Time* furnltu— Priced to sail. Hundreds - Renewable-type fuses. Fraction of Original coil BOULEVARD SUPPLY MB 8. Blvd. B, ___________333-71*1 THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE US W. LAWRENCE ST. Everything to meet your needs Clothing, Furniture, Appliances WE ARE* MOVING Vs off or mpra on boxed Christmas .cards. 30 par cant off ort Artists1 oils, canvases and brushes. 10 per cant off main brand paint sets, portable typewriters, adding machines. 10 per cent off Elton’s boxed stationery. Also many used desks, chairs, files, tables, blue print cabinets, drafting tables, mimeographs, off-sat presses. Addressograph and cabinet, adding m a c h I n * s typewriters, Forbes PRINTING l> OFFICE SUPPLIES, 4300 end 5433 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-17*7 or Ml 7-2444. WE ALSO BUY wringer Washer, sso. sump pump, $35. 33- mm camera, flesh attachment end tripod, 135. 334- 65 j Sal* Household Goods 1969 REFRIGERATORS \HgQJVSLM. •f rigeraiors and discontinue idaTs and ~-T-g^jgfjjj||ig|ig| 65 Water Softeners *3°- CULLIGAN MARK S water softener{ '(For Sale Miscellaneous 67 . ersconirnuea 'iS’We ONei. year closeouts ELECTRIC STOVE, S25) Gas Stove.! and pump. M2-3125. S9H in a Inn 2 rir jtuin , *35; Refrigerator with top fraazar,1 s* units, $131, some scratched, *£< Wringerjuasher, *40. G. Her d accordingly. ABC WAREHOUSE ii25Tv°^?k7 | BSB1! I ... . FRIGIDAIRE k. s. of 32 Mila . 035; Refrigoretor $41; Wringer Vf" _rls, FE 3-2766.__________ ‘ELECTRIC STOVE, AUTOMATIC washer, refrigerator. All very good Condition. 271 Reltmen Cl. Behind ^ INCH COPPER WATER "'“Shopping Conte V “"r* * | Mg “ ..... CHAIR, FURNACE, In- I dnerntor, 15' deep freeze, exc. condition, mlsc. Items, FE 5-310*. | YARD SALE. 525* Mary Sue. Clarkston, OR 3-0011.__________ Christmas Trass 67-A CHRISTMAS TREES Stand of 20,000 prime Christmas Sjwtlng Goods fl BOWS AND ARROWS. 334-0341 Gun^Sho *UIv4*rnl.*U."of Otlsvllle on M-15V Phon# *81-2111. Opin 7 REMINGTON 30.0*, automatic. With TRAIL BOSS IS HERE Made by th* manufacturer, of the famous Apache camp trailer. This 6-whetl drive, all terrain vehicle, hss mors to attar the family •portsman. Check these features. B Duel transmissions - " h.p. engine e Elect, start B Full reverse with steering ONLY SI<415 JIM HARRINGTON'S SPORT CRAFT " Apathe Factory Home Town Dealer Vi ml. E. of Lapeer on M-21 * OPEN SUNDAYS 6*61412 Sond-Grovel-DIrt t SERIES OF EXCAVATIONS thrsughou 2 . Whit* Lakt, I'ndependonce, Waterford T w p., of fill girt, clay, gravel: If you are In need of ouch, we shall deliver this to you for tho cost ot hauling. OR 3-013S, 6 a.m.-ll p.m.. Sun. Iricl. r i nshes WORK, Ml. 003- EXCELLENT TOP SOIL, block dll and fill loaded and delivered *i leveled. 620-3150 eft. « p.m. Pets-Huntlng Dogs and 3/, Inch' copper! ~ Terms av*ll.332-07W 11 *KC 2 YEAR old mils Gorman --------------------- Shephrd. Obedience and house trained. Shots and Means*. Must sell. 3100. Call Rick before 3 p.m. 61 Dally 10-1 ^ 739-1010* BOOM AIR CONDITIONERS iff”/as , ii: a.ooo btu Slid# wine- Used 2 months , Kalkaska. Mich. 41646. LOVELY 2 oVhkdSM renremeni or lokt homo. Coder Lake, Oscoda. Sol* Forms i Halt, ex-1 j of met roul Estate. 633-1400 or OR 3-0453 g OR 3-2311-_____ 7iNS LAKE AREA. 2 bulldln i, lake privileges. OR 4-1110. . j Business Oppurtunitiei A BUSINESS OF YOUR OWN 1715 cosh Investment will brlni excellent return Servicing ■ routi LOANS S25 to ll.DOO Insured P*ymiM PL.., BAXTER - LIVINGSTONE Finance Co. Tuts.. Set. Mil 6 7S5-1010 j 1969 USED SINGER GOLDEN TOUCH AND SEW MOiilllobME. «T*TO bedroom,: In Mt* Bt OoeXe. *3,100. 338-6966. | NICE COTTAGE ON AuGres RiveL BAR I acres, 12 milt i, class C Means I _______ __________. business,! facilities, dance floor. - only 3 pel, inter- 10 TO 800 ACRES irwer Michigan. Dairy, grain, or hagsl Nome your term b^^t^shgdl, 47^7126 "Mkhlqa'n's h*Br'm %e*al E*s*ele f SCHUETT EM 3-7188 * tRAVIS RANCH AND ikl-doo Headquarters,220 N. Michigan *» 1 ' , recreation, 170 acres, connecting to; avo„ Coldwolor, Mich., Ph.: 517- 8100 CommerceJ!d. Lak? ?'•!*. *.'?• ^------------ | MOTEL AND RESORTS | NORTH OF LAPEER — No. 61470. 401 Pontiac State Bank Building _____FI 4-1538-9 _ STOP YOUR'HOUSE FORECLOSURE Slog tho bill collector — stop all your credit problems — wo have millions of dollars for mortgages — widows, divorcees, and people with bad crefttf are O.K. with us, Anx-Risk Mortgage Co. ■ 398-7904 1 .— lor a confidential 16,000 BTU Floor ... Automatic buttonhole nTa k e r ,1 CRUMP ELECTRIC pushbutton bobbins, fancy designs, 3435 AUBURN rd. FE 4-3573 monograms. Comas with console, eA'i'aipIfe’* ...fnii'ATir full price SI4B.15. Call Midwest F5J« S?is» AUT0MATIC w,,h,r-Appliance, 1-1 dally, 334-3312. »»• *«-«»71- , —T6T6 7Tr~¥An--------------- GAS REFRIGERATOR 030. lVOY ZIG-ZAG 1064 Crescent Lk. OR 3-2477._ Cabinet modal.. Saws on buttons, GE WASHER AND DRYkR. Sell 1 or both. M2-5352, atlaSmenlV^l ve'ar iG0LD TWEED RU«, S65, year old [■WCTTOgl1' syear! washer, $170. Hamilton drvar. mao 1 Room divider, *40. Warehouse, 5*7 AIR COMPRESSOR, GOOD running condition* runs ont Jack hammar <500, Call 334-7577. AIR COMPRESSORS* lubrication t brush. Sao G. A. 11 end Indoor A™”*; *ry*lel clear 1 NOgTH 0F LAPEER -.No. 61470. trout straam and trout pond. Ac- ,* Mrrm Graiim A dAirv count lor racraational davalopmant Thidroom home S25.0M 1 fund, futura ootantia uni m tad. i U p p e fund* futur Ownar will optr vacata. 1150.000 ( Phoni naw listing •1560, tvanings 724-8270. No. 69109. I oo fast Cali NORTH OF LAPEER ..... l. ceil Adams! *JJiMrt pmmt Realty 1-616-146-3110 or evenings > '*■.r”*.' csll Tsd Andrus 1-6U-147-4101._ o“l^ I mile _ Loti—ACTBOgS 54 evelleble. _ 33300. Phone 664-0560, M ACRE WOODED, Sloping lot, I subdivision, $6,000, 620-4060. r 'ACRE High Ground. V> ml. I 75 end Baldwin. *3000. 311-2153. f ACRE ON CASS Lk. Rd. north of paved road. P mgs 625-4163. EAST OF LAPEER - Paninsula and l and UP. Call for mure imuimmiun STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE 391-2000_^_______'£££______363-348 MAJOR CfiSTcompany has ssven National Pok-O-Golf BE YOUR OWN BOSS 'ii*,, it.}* leant NEED UP TO $5,000? remodel your pr our money for meterieis. VVhafe’ver $42.30 TAX INCL. Will take *4.23 down and 1 monthly payments ot *4.23 with no Interest.! Cell Capitol Credit Mgr. 1 a.m. to, 1 p.m. If toll, call collect. _____729-4610 1969 TOUCH-A-MATIC I New sawing machines* does fancy stitching, makes buttonholi 1AM ARGUS MOVII used only 3 times, *“ Hi -_______ .766 FORD 2 DOOR HR GOOD USED REFRIGERATOR aTrd1 ^to.* power steering, low mileage, •«—|ght ” *vr rnnditinn Pirk-nn rsmner. chine. _______. FE 2-3909. __; Goodyear Service Store $30. 22 cedar railroad ties. $30. 335- Protector, xo8-4336. inyl top, V-l, IB., low Pick-up *330 to *300. Blac____... washer*—automatic and 62 Soid'lor’iliAJOrtwIanee oniy SMiM Dry*r*- E,c- ! ?r_P.*y Y"k-. Cf11 d»Y dr 1370 wide Track br. lie TV’s ____ _____........ ... electric rellrg. 1160 Ford Ranger 310, V-0, auto, auxilary tank, heavy duty, must sell, 625-5234. ANCHOR FENCES I NO MONEY DOWN FE 5-74711 ALUMINUM Siding id Tools—Machinery 68 1967 CASE LOADER backhoe. Exc. condition. Alto 1164 Oliver crawler Pontiac Motor Parts, $215; Lathe, ....................some repair,___________________________ (403; Radial drill, 3' 6", No. 4 MT,'3 BRITTANY SPANIEL Puppies. OR $305; Nlbbltr lor sheet metal, 34" 3-1170. "roat, *2V5; DC GBneralorr volts 6 COLLIE PUPPIES, 1 waakt old, | — ’* ' *“ ’0425 male, AKC, Vet guarantees exc! adorable. Chemplbn ! 1-A FLUFFY KITTENS . Free_________ ' <02-6*33 1-A DACHSHUND PUPS, AKC, ESTELHEIM KENNELS, 31l-l**l 3 MONTHS OLD AIRDALE, male, no papers, must sell, S25 or oiler. 674-2731. 230, amps 12, KW 3, .... Highland Rd., (M-31), 10 Ml. Pontiac, 363-1114, UNIT 614 BACKHOE, $2200 OR 3-3222 neaun, ail are aaoraoie. cnam bloodlines, S75 or $100. 644-4106. IB-MONTH-OLD PEKINGESE, XfCC _________________________________ rag. sable brown, used for. stud. WANTED - USED 5 FT. Ford Flail *60, 624-3160. , . mower, any useable or ranairabla condition. 602-1 Lake with gi -------- ------ ------ 338-4966, ' MOWER! Itwf'oW^ 330-2544“, Imperial wipe iracx JT~ poniiac Dealer- ___________________ catcher. 674-2959. ■■Pi prBNfY OF usED witnars. HOUSEHOLD SPECIALS ! ,u,,n9'over ,#0 Cameras - Service . '.wag cheaply stoves# refrigerators# and trade-in ijcA vnuo ropniT nuv» «i -J.”- "TyJf”!*1.**?------/ -... I ms# repair ori furniture bargains., Littla Joe's ROOMS OF FURNITURE Con- i SALE INCLUDINO nt home by! Bargain House* Baldwin at Wal-, Sets of• corH wide refrigerator freezer* wi k and using ton Blvd. FE 2-6842.____________ 8-piece living room outfit with 2-dc ,im' •’•texacisor* toys* boys cU •Is. Whatever j ANTIQUE OAK TABLE* 42" Sq. Old; living room suite* 2 step tables* i 8kl b9°N*>ab>td 647-2321 • I liomm* like' new ;other misc dark r,------------ oak disk,*60'', all raflnished. 052- CKkfall table, 2 table lamp* and BARN WOOD, Railroad ties, ell roorn and studio eou'pmMt, °634- .. 2 « ■ . ■ 1657. * ______ _________(1) l x 12' rug Included. sins. Free delivery. 335-1120. ztss hoiiv squipmen., en- y?-ss- B.uckn.*r<. fo- ; A HOUSEHOLD BARGAIN tSii-tize "Wwith iB *3 $ 'movi’e camer-a^ju.'sUi dB- • ------------------'“•* guy £S£^1^STWtSll£blnel •SSSSmTuT z IhaHa .at U.uk' d -u-I____I olrSO. Womans Club* Roval O; EL IREDALE PUPS, AKC, E> I||k| with children and family ■ dog. 330-3241, 70 AKC REGISTERED IRISH guard male. After 6jp.ni „ ROLLI WITH CASE; 35mm |^ ’ AKC DACHSHUNDS m I Pen tax H3V with accessories like “on_Uide__________ 385-5741 e?*a.!2iy* AKC GERMAN SHEPHERD pupa. Swaps 63 M-59. 831 #SC n 10 ecrei I own business. NATIONAL POK-O- M I GOLF announces 18 acres. 81.000 an acre, with stream LAPEER -and 2600 ft. ro*d frontage. with gari__ .... _ FLATTLEY REALTY ,ro~ ,cho°- p-- *20 COMMERCE RD. _ 3*3 6*61 jji'Jmt. 2Vk ACRE'S N. OF Clarkston, corner, parcel with nearly 009 road Iron- to ACRE FARM tage, gently rolling land with many grad* A dairy »i up, IffiMIT nice trees, good restrictions — included. $44,000. Phone 664-0360, S3,700 — Land Conlrecl available. evenings 713-6146. Office^ 625J5ENZ,ESev.s: 625-2151 > JOHN A. ROWLING, Inc. 70x2(0 LOT on Cedar Lsk#, excellent ... „..J?K^.LT0* Phone 664-0310 evenings Lrus0nr. '» FORD CONVERTIBLE, *125 Ire* This trade. 401 East Sheffield._ Is a fantastic opportunity lor 3941 CHEVY 44 TON, 4 speed, ul unlimited money-making poetntlal tv, lor utility trailer, cash or c with our goll putting machine. We! 335-0141. I!*1 STUrtSLEF HSir ’ EQUITY “OF “ I960 Leman. Toln OMrlli ^bowling moLorcYcle or older car, 335-1033. machine. Our corhpany will set upj FENdNG FOR STEREO, BAKN W a hoiTsehold bXrgain “nr“m *u,“ ---------------------------l _!!2tJ 3 pc. living rm. group (sofa, chairs, 3 beautiful tables, 2 lamps); 0 pc. .—„jlT,,!-M bedroom (double dresser. Chest, bed, s'difdfr, d,?S,{*h,“,AIYl«”r SFBH mattress, springs, lamps); 6 piece SDiKf bunk bed, - 5 piece dinette. | cr«m Is good et Wymsn's. Any Item Sold Separately WYMAN All for $398 — $10 Monthly ciidmitiibe <*a I KAY FURNITURE I, ulWTURE C0- Next to K Mart in Glenwood Center ., .EE _5-1S01 AIR-CONDITIONERS Aleg cto^gflan gil floor sample Ijtgjh ! Warehouse sale of Name Brand e-zW temSh Mttb^ IMM air-conditioners* new direct ship- Baldwin. FE 9.A842 Gibson, ‘chrvs.f'AI^TWIP^pfS!™: 1 KENMORE “ WASHEji WITH suds | V'. X. '.3m r* saver. al rnnnart nnx. t T X rv.Di 032-1612. blanks, GMC V-6 motor, kilo filler, corn binder. Ford tractor and front end loader, 624- BftiDES - BUY YOUR WEDDING announcements at discount from, Forbes, 4300 Dlxla. Drayton, OR 3- buv for |7M land c—..—.... p-21. Call Ray todayl *74-4*01. I>. ACRES, Highland! Milford are 300x330' rolling, ond wooded. M at S6S mo. SHELDON, 625-5537. f-To ACRE RIVER aA||' i and! r 0322,1-60 363-3665._____ 5 ACRES HARDWOOD forest, lake privileges, IS miles west of Pon- < tlec. *1,500 only. AL PAULY i *73-3000, _ Eves 673*272 4B X lOOT LOT,' Clarkston ere*, with Walter's Lake privileges. 333-6203 121 W. GENESEE ________LAPEER NORTHERN DUDE RANCH Can be your very own private beef : or horse term. Ill acres near Rosa I City In scenic Ogemaw Co. A 3 I bedroom remodeled term home ! that Is exclllhgly furnished. The I big Red Bern ha* sliblts, bar end i great - a ____________ . u may wai a .parfeet summer piece i< - 'cad tor the orof tmedlat* r tact sumn . Priced t n's ImmadlL . . with 016,300 down. PUBLICLY OWNED CO. I If accepted, you will share In profits of on* of th* fastest gri Ing, most aggressive companies its type which has diversified I othar fields. NO FRANCHISE FEE! minimum Investment ot»*41 through *1*30. I 25% DOWN ![, Leasing avallabls with approved ; credit. II AVERAGE EARNING1 POTENTIAL , electrlc'Vnow bio fl OF *1.500 A MONTHI [ 2-1614. * I WRITE US TODAY. Please include, , neme, address and lelephona Sale Clothing ■ number. Full description in*r«»ur«l, heater and misc. sen. j ' GERMAN SHORT HAIR* male; J shots and licensed: Will sell for $50 or swap for ? OR 4-0306 eve. :\ EM 3-7546. S6e ad under Pets M No. 79. . , . HOMEMADE PICK UP finished Mdfi difiSS d | UL 2-2777. . LARGE WOODED~ LOT s James (near Ha^M j restricted, $1500 10 or trad* for Houghton Lake) w ABC WAREHOUSE & STORAGE 48825 Van Dyke 1 blk. S. of 22 Mile |H io Mile __755-9090; compl 739-1010 CHEST TYPEi J —• 16 3 0 __ M 1 Kirby sweeper EXCELLENT CONDITION—S*5 ___ 601-0300 GAS FURNACE, GAS range, elec! —■1 “ n swap or golly -___________________ VirLt^GUARANTEE1 Including lovely wh for all. Formica labia and 41 2*17 DIXIE HWY. 674-22U chairs,',S2S, *440*7*.al-------KECvNIATOR REFRIGERATOR ALL WILLETT CHERRY bed,I working condition, *35, *13-1121. '*bl* *nd “ns0,a| KENMORE AUTOMATIC WASHER. table, *24-1441._______ — | s months old, $125. 12 Parakeet BUNKBED. ADJUSTABLE clean: Hill, 335-1*11-________• hospital bedI with hand rail*,.EJjnlno kenmo'RE GAS CLOTHES dtyar, ,V i !?bw.lmf|hhnu;nnmliui't I J30' M»W»# rin?«r type. washer, Wee wr.iour h.Hroom suit has stainless steal tub, 135. Both in _ good condition. 12*4 N. Hospital Singer sewing machine1 fid., OR 3-3*43. ri«trlcnereVfyrlg.rU.mr with ,r.?zer: LINOLEUM .RUGS, MOST ..SIZES. Roper 36 In gas range. Maytag .stainless steel, S63 each. TALBOTT LUMBER 1025 Oakland __________FE. 4-4595 with 5 dra\ . Pearson's Furniture* < or, cash or ? UL n Plains. One m near 1-75 83100 call 338-1348. fo ACRES* between Detroit Flint. FE 2-2144. P.O. Box ----------- ----s. 48013. 238, 120 ACRES — 3 bee American frame horr fenced. I ________ Yard well Garden Is producing. sprlng-f buildings. Yard well landscaped. XXIIPq......... ....her ex- I eellent building sites avi CROSS REALTY , BEAUfIFUL' *LOf N Bloomfield out buUdinqs. Hills, 110x300'. water and sewagr. 681*1155. &ClPOItfc IA OWNER wishes to sell 5 lots near Cass Lake 4 wooded. <2000 for ell 5. Write 1111 N. R ichman# Fu>terton,*Cailf. 92632. ; CHEBOYGAN — 40 acres "wooded land* 3 mi. South of Mullett Lk. Terms. Call Mr. Sranaback, 682 d Frl. 9:30 to 4 P.m Special features galore! $85,900. BROOCK 4139 Orchari P " DISTRESS SALE MA - 6'A00° EXCELLENT HUNTING— RSHING-, RDVBr et Little Beer Lake near Gaylord National Pok-0-Golf BOX 714 10407 Liberty SI. Louis, Missouri 63132 314-423-1100 ASK FOR MR. DENTON “OAKUNDCOUNTY “~ fiAR-RESTAURANT TOP ALLOCATION on melri Stele, highway. Presently reporting ep-f • onowappie. pros* 0130,000 sales' per veer.' , ■■, Potential for tremendous growth. J HI? ^business ’"Slide HBuseheld Goods 65 separate. Substantial down. You* must qualify financially to obtain ^ WHAT YOU'D EXPECT TO PAY information on this. No phone info.; JCC^ 3 ROOMS Walton Blvd. BUNK BEDS Choice ot IS ityles, tru triple trundle beds end complete, $41.50 end Auburn Ave^FE 4-7MI. it of LIVING ROOMS, BRAND new of VS price. Little Joe's, 14*1 B I FE 2-6042, • thru Set., 1 e.m. to * p.m._ CHIPPED BATHROOM fixtures for sale, G. A. Thompson A Son, 7003 71 BASS GUITAR AND AMP. Must soil, $70, FE 4-7706. BLACK SPINET PIANO, *500 c AKC CHIHUAHUA Puppla*. Alio stud service. FE 2-14*7. AKC AIREDALE puppies, champion aired, exc. blood ling*. «*MW4. AKC POODLE PUPPIES, Silver stud strvlce and grooming. **2-1137. guitar. 33S-4117. AKC DARK APRICOT MlnMoy old. Will aall for 1600. Attar 6 P.m. 335-1 S((. I# YOUR CHILD CAN lay her abe's, then It's time she leaned her do. Re, Ml's. Plano rentals. 332 0567. MORRIS MUSIC i Rd., across from n, FE 2-0367 Lowrey Spinel Organs, used only in our studios, large savings on this select group. Bank Terms. SHOP AT GALLAGHER'S 1710. Telegraph FE '4-056* tllt-a-door - Summer Store Hour* $100. 3*" black metal free standino *:3d to P-,J“ fireplace, 0100. *02-46*0. fjfpfeRT UPHOLSTERING, reasonabl* prices, free estimates, your fabric or. ours, FE 4-2706. ENCLOSE YOUR SHOWER over the II 1 P.m t. Smith : BRING YOUR Fall and Winter Clothing, clean and In good condition to the Opportunity Shop, St. I James Church, 253 W. Maple,i « •v'-s.bljt* i"y’l" . Birmingham. OpeiT Aug. 12 for I BRONZE OR CHROME DINETTE dryers, USm onl«. Tu«„ Thurs ‘ ------- |------------------11 —------- PEARSON'S FURNITURE HAS idle beds, NOW MOVED TO 640 AUBURN, bunk beds PONTIAC, FE 4-7001 . PIP pregiroMi's i........ Auburn, FE 4-7081. REFRIGERATORS, DISHWASHERS, condition, lust out-grown. —— "•'V-oH]’« pill'*f**' Clarkston, c WARDEN REALTY 6*2-3120 io answer call 363-0660 ■h A-Frai . , Ron Newmen McCullough Realty Inc. 674-2236 EXCELLENT GROWTH POTENTIAL ' • AVON TOWNSHIP Adams Road north of Walton, 29 -•eras* 1480 ft. front aga on two roads. $20*000 down. BATEMAN INVESTMENT & COMMERCIAL CO.' . 377 S. Telegraph Rd. 338-9641 After 5 p.m. and' Sunday Country Farmhouse bedroom older home. Nice -y setting on l ecre ol lend) Itchan. New carpating and cludas washer, dryar, dishw id drapes. ^ $18,900 full PHONE 636-2211 ondition. Attacl — i H.9U per weex [Sunoco! $297 e. HURON AND WILLIAMS (NEAR WIDE TRACK Beautiful 3 bay Colonial Service! ' station. Cell for Information: Sun Oil Co. Weekdays Ml 6-6674 LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE . 1461 Baldwin af Walton FE 2-6642 Acres of Fra* Parking Evas, 'til ii Set. 7tll «■ E-Z farms f' Nfew* SCRATCHED reTrlgsratoT. Alto dinette sets, new spring and *29.151 CSL, TOM BUNKBEDS: SAVE PLENTYI Little j —toe's,-1461 Baldwin, FE —• 1 CARPETING, KARASTAN eery Ion, new, light-preien, , yds, Sicrltlce. 647-21Ofr • • A CARPETING- DuPont 301 Nylon, must sacrifice 100's of yards of better carpeting, large selection of colors, regular $8.15 value, sal* priced at only MOB sq. yd„ fra* estimates. Household Appliance*. 601-2303. DRYER7 $35rREFRIGERATbR *25: 21" TV, *35; bunn—*nl stove, *35; mlsc. 5-276*. DINETTE SET CLOW-OUT FURNITURE NEW, UNCLAIMED Modern sofa *“■ 1 jg| CURT'S APPLIANCE 4 WILLIAMS LAKE RP.'*74-110T SINGER -AtJTOMATt€"W"Z^-twing machln*.—Saws slng|*Lju4 nuble needle, designs, overcasts.: Jttonholes, ate. — Mod* household Items, toys and mlsc. Frl., til11> 9 to 5. Walton to Phillips to 2506 Genes nsar Opdyke._____________________ G A RAGE SALE—HOUSEHOLD. Items, dishes, prints, frames, 2 power mowers. FE *4663. 2475 Emerson,' Bloomfield, off Square Lk. Rd., $7 per month for 8 mos. , or $56 Cash Balance Still Under Guaranies . UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER 2615 Dixie Hwy, FE 4-010: SUMMER SALE yard* of material, .. $4 a ygrd. Let us reupholsfer your furniture now — guaranteed workmanship. COMMERCIAL UPHOLSTERING 335-ITdfc EVES. OR SAT., 625-4565. SttlVE FtHOIMIRB *6” gMctrlc, hand decorated, davenport, chairs Cash. Terms. Lay-away n new in 1153. Small wooded Ic i pond site,. Located nee jley on good blacktop roac nlc view with nice trees. Fire e offered, may be bought oi PHONE 636-2211 wMH 3 b > system; garage end ^toraj s froi City* $6*500. ) ACRES: No building; $6,500 -down payment, ilTobo. 12 ACRES: < mile ° National Business — FE 3-7841 TAKE-OUT FOOD tai/c urf»E*c^noAciTC | *f7!'LlttT*~'j**'i *argain House, TAKE-HOME PROFITS 14«t Baldwin, FE 24M2.__________________ Own e successful reitiurinll; BURNER KENMORE Ges range, franchise without the headaches ot| good condition. S32-3IB6. gormer^eUty mtake1wm,'f r$*7d 9x12 Linoleum Rugs $4.95 chicken and seafood treats with solid Vinyl TIM ..... 7c *a. 'Vinyl Asbestos «l* ' Te a*. Inlaid Tile, 1x9 unusually high repeat salat. Kwlk-Kook, with scores of unlit already In operation nationally, gives you' ■ proven operation on a modest ~ | ' vestment of only 313,730. phone for full Inform*- ■art# „«*W4I : / Itljii 384-2128 E* KWlk-KOOk TAKE-OUt bookcase bad. Regular 11*1 value, unclaimed (aimed balance 1173. SACRIFICE 100 ner cent continuous fllanr_ for living , choice of .,.___ ... yd., free Household Appliances, SINGER DELUXE MODEL- PORTABLE Zig zagger in sturdy carrying case! Repossessed. Pay Off: $38 CASH or Paymants of $5 por mo. 3 Year Guarantee UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER 2*15 Dixie Hwy, FE 4-0105 LAVATORIES COMPLETE, S2450 ralue, 114.15: alto bathtubs, toilets, stalls. Irregulars, terrific "—»(#*« FWoraa—* *" ___________FE 4-3442j- ... , MEDICINE CABINETS lar«#_ W‘ “arred *3.15; __________________________334-3*77 WAfcUHOUSE SALE open to public, entire Inventory of new top brand titrii*t«ltdt*> ranges, «v a t h • r * ate., must be (Old. Every Han. dieeontinved. no raaaeniabta otter LOT 100 X 107', sev and fenced. End .Perfect lor move thousand feat to *3,233 with *1000 do Large v? acre" i Holbrook, n. A few ..iliac Mail.; i* 673-7440. 10 ACRES Very neat in a Ranch typa. home with fu tacKfed. 1 HORSE •. BARN down payment — Orton Twp. WRIGHT REALTY poultry ■II. Cast City iw bargains set# call er write to; .6. A/Celka, Reel tor [ 63061 WJ Mailt St,# Can City, with no Interest charge. HfMHSB HP® $63.80 Tax Inc.l. Huron/*PwilleS £»''Capitol Credit Mgr. Nil 1 p.m. I tor free home demo. ——--------“I 729-4610 No obligation. If Toll, call! oOttact.; “ 1969 USro~SlNGER I.Pontiap Press Want Ads r For Action ■6 fancy designs. .... _______ steady state features for each touch button pparaNon Deluxe modal comas complete Modern sofa and ms zlppered reversible < Regular |1«t value balance $1)5. Modem Hlde-A-Bed Poly mattre**, zlpp cushions. R#gul*r «,.» .unclaimed balance till. Colonial sole end matching chair self-decked; ilMief ------------- cushions. BetUWf. price 342.77. Cell MMMiOt ' AP plience 1-1 dally, 334-33*2. Payments as low ss *10 per month. HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE Full 461 EH*. Lk. Rd. 601-2303 "^PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ,ADS FOR "ACTION'' 334-4981 - GARAGE SALE: August 1-16, elec-- trie hot water heater, oil stove, cabinets, bookcases, clothes, odds and ends. 410 Scot) Lakajld.__ GIFTS-GAGS, JOKES, novelties. Lay-a-ways. Liberal Bill's Oulpost, 3263 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-9474, HUGE SALE, GLASSlurnltufe, IBM typewriter, small appliance, r’” 1123 Dover, oft Orchard Lk. * KIRBY VACCUM. 2 months Must sacrifice. 602-3421. LAWN SPRINKLING PUMPS, 1 hp to 2 tip., priced from *62.50. G. A. Thompson and Son, 7005 M-31 W. LAWN SPRINKLING SViNms, M Inch plastic pipe. S3.*5 par 100, 1" plastic plastic pi *6.51 I • .100, m I 100. G. t 3 M-30 W, values. Michtoan f 313 Orchard Lk. MOVING-GARAGC SAL*. ^4*7 Marina, oft watklns Lake “ Tues. and Wad. l-O. Rafrigeri misc. 1 MOWER SERVICING Englnt rebuilding, i tali rOBuutdMBMH trade mt. 334-0250, . call Bruce Campbell, OIL FURNACE, 125,000 BTU,-—’-well with screen, 6' deor-wi cut screen, *73-3*42. well-known brands. Prices as as $209. GRINNELL'S DOWNTOWN STORE 27 5, Saginaw FE 3-7160 USED HAMMON6 Spinet Organ 0X6. condition, >400. 634-4325. Holly. family Pali. Utlce, 73M«7l/ ALL PET SHOP, S3 V AKC BASSETT PUPPIES, 7 weeks, champion line. *51^501._ AKC REGISTERED ItT beagle PUPS, AKC registered, 11 wk. old, $25. 651-0114 aftor 4 p.m. BOXiR PUPS, AKC. Fawn, 6 wks. old. OR 3-7671. COLLIE-BOXER weeks, shots, _____ gentle, $10, y 1-4133. COCKER PUPPIES, ALL colors. Stud strVIce, DORJI KENNELS. 2l50 W. Werdlow, Highland, Mich., Used Orgon Specials Baldwin Concert Organ, exc. condition (1415. Baldwin spinet Organ 2 Veers eld. like naw, percussion. Leslie Walnut finish .. .51115 Baldwin ^Spinet, percussion and reverb, mahogany *310. Baldwin Spinet organ, external Leslie with percussion, exc. for smell chiirch *37$. _ • Large savings on new Studio model, j •- Bigaiil) Used Chlckerlng: Canine ----------- Ideal for serious musicians, save *500. Bank terms. Summer Store Hours 1:30 to 5:30 p.m. ' __ Open Mon, end Fr|; tll 1 p.i VOX'CONTINENTAl ORGAN, single keyboard, portable, excellent condition. IT* j GUITAR AMPS. New, ACCORDION GUITAR, Sales-service. Also pi Pulaneckl, OR 3-5516. LESSONS* OfficB Iquipraeirt72 LARGE OFFICE DESK. 00.00 FE 4* 6465. .PORTABLE' CONSOLE typewriter, I 1 condition, *45, 402-1517, eft. DOBERMAN PUPPIES,; AKC, 0 Pointer, Collie . pups 1. VHPXRIPVE , *' males, 2 femalts, 425- I, 602-0171. >0 Ascot. 1161 Lekewlnd GERMAN SHORT,, HAjR.^malW L EM 3-75 No. 63. DS, all I GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES, AKC. 007-14*2. ______ GERMAN SHEPHERD pups, AKC, some pure black, $35 to 350. 007- GER6AAN SHEPERp PUPS, I wfc*. -d, phone FE 4-2W*. GERMAN MINIATURE Schnauier/ AKC, 1 weeks old, shots, 752-1070, 1*7 Turner, Romeo. GERMAN SHEPHERD puppies, AK£ beauties^ Stud aarvict. jul 2-1*57. IRISH SETTER PUtJPIES, AKC realstarad. exceptional Uttar. ghland, *07-1311. AKC Stars Equipment all formica, front-end top. 332-1545, COMMERCIAL U N I V E R S A dishwasher with booste leg garbage disposal, spray u stainless steel table. St< Sporting Goods NEW PONTIAC, FE 4-7111. RILE IS soft end lefty PLUMBING BARGAINS, FREE .........M *21.15; 30gaHen hreeded.A 4 i »aWwi Mira PLUMBING CO, 2*4 hp. used electric ^.„„..nblles and 2 used 1* electric start snowmobiles, prices above range from $200 to 1700- 4 wheel all trained vehicle, STOP. *02-0134, ' ' 'x«* FAMILY TINT, exterior aluminum frame, plus 2 fr'”— cots SHXL OR 4-0125. after 3._ $ 410 BROWNING, OVER AND under v! skeet and skOet, 21" barrels. Mac. ! 600—410 press. Both tor 0330 "" 3141. ... 070 TB TRAP; 100 TB Trap, f Carle stock (bath new in be Fox 12 ga. Mod. end Full *A,,ji)rtt*150. 264- LABRADOR RETWlvifis/ 10 ’ woolly old, 2*3-239*._ MANX “fHOROtlGHBREO Cats. Ceil anytime, UL 2-2*1*. , MIXED PUPPIES“ WANTEcT—~WS buy complete litters far pucsmsnt In good homes, (51-<*72. MUST SACRI PICE I KX)DLf hl-T* week old, mother 3 year* eld. 130 ». gr ell 3 tor *1SB, AKC, 401-1337. “ POODLE GROOMiNB Foodie puppies end stud service, FE 5-6321 or FE 2-5631. ' pilsian KitTiXinis, ''Mr- PEKEPO PUPHES “ Males, Io weeks old. Also female klHen declawed, free 'to- aped home. FE 4-2747 or FE 49114, PytT“NIPPIES, Shaggy,Hungiriin Jheep dogs, 2644720. EA!MgfS fqjjt SALETciTitTm pies, 603-147*. SIAMESE kTttEUI. 'Y Iwkd I »1» be. *344*3*.' ROYAL PORTABLE .'Typewriter Mid SPECIAL 10 GALLON rctes. Call todsy ... _ RHODES POOLS FE B-23B* 231 W- Walton CLOSED THIS'WEXK FOR VMCa-will bt optn on Call 314*1754. $12.99 Akc„j!'uppj«. Tropical fish, pet gM .GROOMING. Uncle Cnarlits Pat Shoo, 696 w uiimL 332-8515. Oom Shnin!? W* SPr^NGE« an akc i For Wont Ads Dial 334-4981 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1969 F—13 SupiMtoSwylM 79-A 1-A GROOMING OdwirW Hleh_F«hloii Poodle W wT MM 7 dey wee‘- b».5h 335-5259 APACh£ camprr trailer POODLE GROOMING Fourth, Pontiac, Pi 43712 WANTtb Us4d u gallon to loo gallon aquarium tank. 152-3047 Between 0 a.m. to « p.m. B & B AUCTION EVERY PRIDAY .....7:00 P.M. EVERY lATURDAY ... 7:00 F.M. EVERY SUNDAY ....10:00 P.M. ■ E BUY - SELL - TRADE CASH PRIZE EVERY AUCTION SOOt Wxlo HWV.- -——Or 3 2717 PERKINS SALE SERVICE AUCTIONEER PH. Swartz creak____435-9400 Plnnts-Trooi-Shrub* S1-A WALNUT TREES FOR tala, cutting and hauling. Call 420-2110. 2 PALAMINOS, wltlta manat, quartar horta, athar Vi-Arablar 42S-2I4S. t HORSES FOR. 4-H projact, gent la , raasanabla. 473-5450 or 3 ARABIAN STUD u ARABIAN GELDING, 5 years 14.3 . bands: 5-year-old Tannt___ walking horta, gelding. Double D. C. Arabian Farm, 4~ — HOLStilN COW, 2 yaart old, frath 1 wk. hand milk, mi -------- 425-5539. MUST SELL, Pinto gelding, gentle, excellent riding, bait oflar, phone ' 404-4305. ' ♦ COACHMEN O’ pickup camper, •If contained, over-*1' ■*—* a 01-2440 attar .4 p.m. , APACHE APACHE Sava over 1300 on new 1949 camping trailers; alto a tow now 1941 models left at used trailer prices. Hurry, they won't lost long, PICKUP CAMPERS DEL REY FLEETWING . TOUR-A-HOME Save over 1508 on new 1949 units. 0 and 10 ft. models for Vi ton pickups In stock From 5795. PICKUP COVERS — STUT*— FLEETWING MOBILE TRAVELER From 3239 JIM HARRINGTON'S SPORT CRAFT Apache Factory Homo Town Dealer Vj mi. E. of Lapeer on M-21 OPEN SUNDAYS, 444-9412___ 1-A MODERN DECOR ___Early American. Mediterranean. ' 'Richardson-------- Llbirfy Monarch Dana Park space — Immediately available Colonial Mobile Homes FB 2-1457 474-4444 25 Opdyke Rd. 2733 Dlxlp Hwy. * ■'-- pontloc READY AT YOUR CAMP SITE IN 5 MIN., JUST THE THING FOR THAT LATE SUMMER OR FALL VACATION. Many used camping trailers, reas. EVAN'S EQUIPMENT 425-1711 Clarkston 425-251 4507 Dixie Hwy. in 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. AIRSTREAM 1949 18 ft. to 31 ft. ON DISPLAY Also Used Airstreoms WARNER ’ TRAILER SALES 3093 W. Huron ____452-8130 NEW TACK STORE now open -selling at wholesale. Open 7 days wk. I to I. Horsts for sale. Double D. Ranch, 4990 Cllntonville, Pontiac. 473-7457. OWN A STYLISH pleasure horse, 5 gaited American Saddle brad, gentle, responsive, 3 year old Gelding, 4 white socks. 'Grand Wane, 494-3249._________________ CENTURY YELLOWSTONE . travel trailers QUALITY AT ANYBU OGET STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. 71 Highland (M-59) ---- REGISTERED quarter horse. ROMEO MEAT CENTER — Home days a* weak74714P Van Dyke. BOOTH CAMPER PICkup covers and camps custom built. 4247 Lafor Waterford. 474-3513. COX 210 CAMPER, fiberglass, and drive 1 drives It he 1W vr. old. Must * First 45 Check our deal on — SWISS COLONY LUXURY TRAILERS FROLIC TRAILERS AND TRUCK CAMPERS. SKAMPER FOLD-DOWN CAMPERS 13 to 28 on display at - Jacobson Trailer Sales 5490 Williams Lake Rd. OR 3-5981 BLUEBERRIES PICK YOUR own, or picked, MA 4-2734, MA 4-2485. 702 Oakley Park Rd._______ BLUEBERRIES, 30 cents per quart. Pick your own, bring containers. YOUR DEALER FOR - SPORT TRAILER, GEM AND CORSAIR TRAVEL TRAILERS Corsair and Gam pickup camper Ellsworth Trailer Sales 4577 Dixie Hwy. 425-4400 Travel Trailers 18 TRAILERS 12 to 22’, Pick up campers and covers. Goodell's, 852- 1 New From Holly Park Balcony, kitchen and dining ro____ Your Authorliad dealer for Holly Pork, Oxford. Parkwood, U Danish King. Froa Delivery w...„ 300 Miles. Will trade for most anything of value. Open 9-9 P.M. MIDLAND TRAILER SALES 2257 Dixie Hwy. . 330-0772 l” DAMAGED BARONESS, brand now, 12x40 at Is, reduced for quick sale! Countryside living, 1084 Oaklamt 334-1509, Motorcycles 91 AUGUST Special Sale OCC TITAN .......... $09 Kc REBEL ............$49 ..OCC SAVAGE ....... $49 200CC INVADER ....... $49 125CC STINGER ....... $44 120GC TRAIL KAT ....7\.. $44 100CC WOLFE ......"...$37 30CC MAVERICK ........$27 Plui tax and license U months or 12.000 ml. warranty MG SUZUKI SALES 4447 Dixie Hwy. 473-4450 Drayton Plains 5 USED MOBILE HOMES HI StOck! **■'*- *”■1 1 with or without now w down paymonts. Living Inc., 1014 Oakland, 334-1509. : 50 CHAMPION, 2 I ndry, tool idltlonlng. 3 12x40 3-BEDROOM 1940 Parkwood. On lot, Grovelind Mobile Manor. $54 per month. $5500 Cash or $3,000, down and assume payments. 425- furnace, best offer over $1,300, 547- Anderson's Super Summer Sale New! 441 cc BSA ...$ 895 New) 500 cc Triumph $ 995 Newl 650'Triumph . .$1195 New! CB 350 Honda .$ 695 Newl 450 cc Honda ..$995 Newl 90 cc Honda .. .$ 339 New! 50 cc Honda Mini Trail .......$268 Newl 250 cc Ducati .. $ '495 MANY MANY MOREIi 300 BIKES IN STOCK LOW DOWN PAYMENT EZ TERMS I ■ I (All prices Plus Tax) I - ANDERSON SALES & SERVICE i 1445 S. Telegreph_FE 3-7102i kitchen, 2 bedrooms $3950. 332-0417. BIG SAVINGS 1967 PARKWOOD/ 12' x 56', 2 bedroom, Early American decora-- ......?32-2651. 1967 RICHARDSON STRATHFORD. m bathe. 12x33. 652-1124. 175 CC Bridgestone trail $479 i 175 CC Bridgestone ----- 350 CC Bridgestone . .. Perry Lawn & Sport Equip. 7405 Highland Rd. (M-59) 473-4234 1949 12x40 HARTFORD, furnished. ASSUME MY, EQUITY Immediate occupancy, 1947 Parkwood, 12 x 52, furniehad. In Village Greon Mobile ADD-A-ROOMS tor ' home I Order now trytlde Living,-Inc. l -case and you pick. EM 2-4072, 350 Rd., Commerce.___________ August 7. You pick. S5 bushel. Bring own contalnere. Open dally 1-7, Sunday 12-7. French Orchard!, 1290 Stita .Road, South tide of Fenton. iWEET CORN PICKED morning, all kinds of Michigan product. Boros Markoff)2250 Dixie Hwy. |UOt N. of Telegraph. STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. 3771 Highland (M-39)_402-9440 FINAL CLOSEOUT PLEASURE MATE CLEARANCE SALE on all new. and used garden tractors - agricultural and industrial tractors. Also good buys on new and used dozers; trenchers, loaders, rakes, plows, etc, Pontiac Forty and Industrial Tractor CO. 825 S. WOODWARD FE 44)441 FE 4-1442 Open Pally Including Sunday 1969 STARCRAFT TRAVEL TRAILERS INSIDE DISPLAY CRUISE-OUT, INC. 43 E. Walton Dally 9-4 FE *4403 CLOSED SUNDAYS Orchard Lk. Ave. FE 5-2424._ “GRAVELY TRACTOR WITH attachments. 425-3707. XoRn DEERE tractor Modal B. $150. OL 1-4305,,_______________ Frenkllni-Crees . Fono-Stroamllne Skamper-Pleasuro Mat Truck Campars 4 used traval trailers and campers MUST GO — at Yaar-and Prices. Holly Travel Coach, Inc. [15210 Holly, Holly ME 4-4771 HAVE Y6u SEEN THE ALL NEW NEW, USED and Rebuilt Mo\ rakeo and hay condlflonars, D, machinery; ORTONVILLE, 7-3292. Your "Homellta Chain Saw "Dealer/' John Dears J ■ Idea Parts galore. HAYDEN CAMPER SALES On M-59, Vi Ml. W. of Oxbow Lk. 343-4404 SALE-SALE-SALE Wo'rt Making Deals) Now Is Ths . Tima To Toko That New Trailer Or £lckup Camper Home Prices Slashed SUMMER CLEARANCE USED LAWN AND GARDEN TRACTORS W|ITH MOWERS -CUB CADETS — WHEEL HORSE - BOLENS — SIMPLICITY AVAILABLE. KING BROS. FB 4-1442 , . _ FE 40734 Pontloc Rd. at Opdyke VICTOR ALLIS Chalmers mode WC with many Implements. Cel) OL 1-4542 after « p - McCLELLAN TRAVEL TRAILERS 4020 Highland Road (M59) Phone 4743143 -JULY SALE- 5 Trailers Reducad..tbr£q.$t. I 23 foot WOst Wind. Supr 1 22 foot Bonanza > Do.-— 2 19 foot West Winds Clippers 1 13 foot West Wind Clipper WHEEL CAMPERS The bast In told down compare, now Travel Trailer* socrHIco, >358. 343-731 15' ‘ALUMINUM., TRAVEL trailer. 17' NOMAD. SLEEPS S >7' MADRID, SELF, contained, own *--, lack.mlrrors Incl., oxc. con L| —0, 3224851. Ing, |ac dlflon, S 28' HOLLY TRAVEL trailer v 943 HAWTHORNE’TENT Trailer, 3 cots, 8188 or boot otter. 451-2141 1941 OAIMAy 13’ aluminum, i 1942 TRAVEL TRAILER, 13' sloops 4*84M. E 45437. 1944 VW CAMPER, oxcollont eon- WjW6|6 1 TON PJCKU^ttOOW 'duly 4 speed, 4,000 ml. IMS auto, equipped. OR 4HB.MPW 1947 WAGONMASTER TENT trailer. lfU LITTLt JOE sir eight, l EXPLORER MOTOR HOME 21', 23', 25’ MODELS DETROITER AMERICAN SUNRISE PARK, KR0PF Doubts Wldes, Expends Custom built to your order Free Delivery and Setup Within 380 Milos AT BOB HUTCHINSON MOBILE HOME SALES 4301 DIXIE HWY. 673-1202 DRAYTON PLAINS Open Dolly 'til 8 p.m. Saturday and Sunday 'til 4 SUZUKI MOTORCYCLES, 50CC. to 500 cc., oil Inlectlon, 12 months or 12,000 miles warranty. Cycle accessories, Rupp's Mlnl-blkes. AKE M-59 to W. Highland, right to Hickory Ridge Rd. to Demode Rd., left and follow signs to DAWSON'S SALES, TIPSICO LAKE. Phone Bicycles______________________^96 A OK. REPAIRED bicycles, oil Boats-Accessories zi-, zr, or muueci See this California bullt-whlch Is No * i" "“4-•alts. Prices rt at 19,995, u FROM $1150 Electric Water system. Inside, outside . range and .table, lighter, and lowtr lor trallerlng, storage spoca galore, deluxe hard'— design. KAMPER VILLAGE 430 E. Walton near Joslyn ..... , Open S'- *— " ROYAL—OR—REGAL ACTIVE 30-Gal. gas hot watar hi “•'Ion carpeting over rubb TOWN & COUNTRY MOBILE HOMES, INC. Telegraph at Dixie Hwy. 334-6694 Dolly 'til « Sot, 8, Sun, 'til 4 PRIVATE TRAILER SPACE tot TANDEM AXLE BULLDOZER, used once 81,080. Cell 4733459.1 TRI-AXLE TRAILER, 01 a c • r i c brakes, 20'xO' or will build to your specifications. AAA Wfldlng In-dustrles, 554 Franklin Rd.______________ Tir«-Auto»Truck REPAIR. MOUNT, ■ ^Icks'.'Markm V$rV*Co. 2435 Orchard ----Rd. Keego. Motorcycle* ’LITTLE DEN" pickup ■ campers, covers custom built. Gull Service, 4800 Hetchory, Drayton, 4734473. THEY'RE HERE HI-LO TELESCOPING TRAILER UP FOR LIVING bOWN FOR TRAVEL VILLAGE TRAILER SALES 4470 PIXIp HW^2217 CLARKST0N SALES-SERvicE-RENTALS STEEL FRAME PICKUP iMOPth and tops. Cob to camper boot. Sportcraft 4,*° ' * 01 *T TROTWOODS Big m safety Comfort JOHNSON'S Walton at Joilyn FB ♦’SPSS TRUCK CAMPERS *li' SCHOONER . 10V»' weldsd aluminum frama, foam Ihaulatlpn, loads of closet space, any V$ ton can carry. AMERIGO Flbergias top, fltxlglaao windshield, beautiful sleslgft, lovely Interior, sloopo * , Oliver Eagle Nimrod Travof Tralloro Coming Trailers Treanor's Trailers « 2012 Pontiac Djriva . Bin. NW Tel, bnd Orch. Lk, Rd, centals W _____Cab to camper-boots.. 10WRY CAMPER SALES 1325 S:-Hospital Rd. Union Lake EM $3681 WINNEBAGO Motor Homes—Trailers ' Campar Coaches ■ Room and Oraw-Tlta. Hitches sold and Instollad „mi F. E. HOWLAND SERVICE 1255 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-145* PRICE REDUCED. 1940 Holly Park, 12x60, furnishad, 2 bedrooms. Village Green Mobile Estates. Days, 334-4902. Eves. 332-4533. Pontiac Mobile Park. FE 8-9902 r Space • mag J used 1944 TRIUMPH 450CC, good con-dltlan 8500. FE 40312. 1944 CH SPORTiTER, good condl- 0 TRIUMPH, $700. FE 1944 YAMAHA twin 100, $140, 427- Sf47 HARLEY SPRINT, 250 CC, CRS 1947 TRIUMPH 550, ihorp, mult si 3348977, botoro 3 P.m. 1947 HONDA 305 SCRAMBLER, < 1947 YAMAHA, CLEAN, extras, loss than 3,000 miles, 4514071. 1947 HONDA SCRAMBLER, 140 CC, with special festures for aeram-bling. Includes holmot, tool kit, chain and lock, extra parts. 454- 4 CUSTOM, a 5-2345, Stt. 5 p 1940 HONDA 140, 2400 miles. Only Oftf - — - •“ -w. $475 «r 5:30 p.m/ 949 TRIUMPH TR 4C. Used for transportation back and forth to work'OBIy. 3.000 ml. 473-1540. After By Kate Osann Foreign Car* 1054 MQA, SHARP blue, ri wheals, >350, 662-9681. 1957 VW $300. Call 631*2151.. >61 VW EXCELLENT rebuilt anglnai .......... “Fred wants to go to college, get his master’s degree and marry . % but not necessarily in that order I’1 Boats-Accessories 971 Junk Cars-Trucks 101-A BOAT, MOTOR AND condition. Take o $955. Must tall. 289 State St. FE $ 50 CC Benelli minicycle 125 ec Benelli CYCLE MOTORS NOW AT PINTER'S BOSTON WHALERS Thompson, Starcraft, M F G , Johnson bopti ' I SaL 9-5 ____>lty Exit) CENTURY INBOARD 15' ski Va-1-2 JUNK CARS, frae tow anytime, „FE 5-7793 2-3 JUNK CARS - TRUCKS, tree tow anytime. FE 2-2666.______ llj_JUNK CARS. PAY FOR SOME,| ' dlHoni’$J59J.’caff67159V4'.' ■jlf E..^ — 1968 OPEL WAGON. One owner lYS BUYING JUNK CAOC -.r ... up. we tow. FE 5*20 . H___________ ATTENTION: Inc., 513 Woodi Junk Cars and Trucjc*!i968 VW VAN, UNIQUE^ ____iPlate-removed free. 268-3524 | paneled, carpeted inter COPPER — BRASS, RADIATORS —I *xc" condition, 673-8222. COMPLETE LINE OF KAWASAKI AND ENDORO MODELS IN STOCK CLAYT'S CYCLE CENTER On M-21. i mite oast of Lapeer 664-9261 MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE LOW RATES S. K. JOHNSON AGENCY FE 42533 4. electric start motor, Irallt DRASTIC DISCOUNTS On all remaining new GLASSPAR and DUO BOATS and JOHNSON and CHRYSLER motors. USED BARGAINS 15' Sea Ray, 40 h.ft. Evinrude....$69! 15' Star Craft, 40 h.p. Johnson .trailer . ..............$79! 14' Glass ’Craft, top and cover trailer ........................$12! YOUNG'S MARINA Open dally 9*'til 6 Sunday 10 to 4 4030 Dixie Hwy. on Loon Lake Drayton Plains OR 4-0411 Used Auto-Truck Parts 102 FOR THE BEST DEAL ANYWHERE 0N- Ster Craft) Glastron) 6. Invader boats. Johnson motoi.. Crest pontoons. Scrambler; Terra Cat and Trail Breaker trail bikes. Come To JIM HARRINGTON'S SPORT CRAFT V% Mila E. of Lapeer City Limits On M-21 Open 9 to 8 Mon-Frl. 9 TO 5 SAT. & SUN. New gel Heed Trucks 103 ■GMcmJcK CENTER 335*9922,____ 1964 SIMCA 1000 $395. —828*1663 —- TRIUMPH TR-4, _____Ifully 674*0121. 1964 ................................. beautifully, front new tires, $750, 1965 ......GOOD condition. $650. 11615 Halsey Rd., Holly, 634-3621. 1965 VW, $025 _____________335*0756 ______ John McAuliffe Ford 1944 V„W 2-door, with radio, heater, 4-speed transmission, clearance special of only $70$ full price. P.S. We've Moved! Vi Mile N. of Miracle Mile l«45 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 5-4101 1967 VW Beautiful blue with tan Interior, i "r» shorp Inside and out. Priced $1295 OAKLAND 1947 OPEL CAOET Station Wagoi red with luggage rack, very goc HgUjUp payments - New and Used Care 106 1*44 BUICK wildcat custom 4-door hardtop, with beautiful tu-tono flnlih, oil the goodtoe, nothing I Ih that Bulck ride. So Cleon, even engine smells swaetl SHELTON Pontiac-Buick 855 5. ROCHESTER RD. ' 451-5500 1944 BUICK 4680R hardtop. Pkt new condition. Power, eutor'-*1-redla end heeler. Full price -Bank terms available here, mediate delivery. Cell Mr. 1 credit manager, tor payi schedule at Ml 47500. Now 1 Milo oast ot Woodward John McAuliffe Ford 1966 BUICK Wildcat hardtop -fcrtl nnw^r, and" all th«“Tjot clearance special $1288 full price. P.S. We've Moved! V$ Mile N. ot Mlroclo Mile 1845 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 5-4101 1944 BUICK LeSABRE . . .81195 - Opdyke Hardware__________FE 8-4484 1947 BUICK HARDTOP. Like new. conditioned. Low mileage 1947 RIVIERA HARDTOP. C owner Birmingham trade. F power, olr condition, radio a heeler. New car warranty. Ji $2995 full price. Fischer Buick Ir 515 Woodward. Ml 7-5400, 1967 Buick LeSabre 400 Custofn Coupe. Vinyl root, custom vinyl Interior. Factory olr conditioning. Extra shorp.. Wilson Crissman Cadillac 1350 N, Woodward Ml 4-1930 1948 BUICK SKYLARK, 2 door hardtop, V8, automatic, power steering, brakes, vinyl top, look] like newl Priced to sell I GRIMALDI Buick-Opel 210 Orchard Lk. Rd._____FE 2-9145 I speed, excelled top. Full-price 81418. Plscl matching con‘ 1948 BUICK SKYLARK ____ herdtop. Light blue with exe- bucket seets. 4 cylinder, automatic: ick on power steering. 15,000 actual miles, Buick 1 Ideal ladles car. Cell 442:3289. f. ,i Audette Pontiac H™™ 1.850 W. Maple Rd. Troy New and Uoed Car* - 106/ 4 Speed 1965 CHEVY Convertible Super Sport, cherry r«d finish, new white vinyl top, radio, iheoter, whn. gm —' mm accessories, BILL FOX CHEVY ».■ Rochester Rd. 451-7000 1966 CHEVY Caprice door hdrdtop, 394 aroint, tomatlc radio, boater, factory conditioning, whitewalls, and Special $1595 1966 CHEVY Wagon heyelle Mellbu with V8, heeler, power BILL FOX CHEVY 755 S. Rochester Rd._451-7000 1966 CHEVY WAGON Chevelle 300 deluxe, with medium blue finish, blue Interior, V-0, stick, radio, heater, whitewalls, excellent cendltlan. Special $1195 Bill Fox Chevy 755 5. Rochester Rd. 451-7000 4 IMPALA SUPER Sport herdtop. 'InyI roof, power, ---*!- nd heater. Full p arms available M lelivery. Call Mr. rerxs credit neneger, ter payment! schedule et 41 47500. New locatlen of TURNER FORD 0 Maple (15 Mila Rd.) Troy Mall ____1 mile eett of Woodward 1944 CHEVELLE 4 door, 213, call 682-8888, altar 4 starters and generators, C. Dlxso... , _______ 1969 VW Automatic, low milaaga OR 3-5849. JUNK i, 2/3, JUNK CARST _________ FREE TOW ANYTIME. FE 4-1478 $1895. WANTED: GRIMALDI CAR CO. 1940 FALCON ENGINE carburators for a BSA, SUM. '59 English Angelli with '44 Pontiac engine, 383-4 ipaad, $50. 343-0905. 1943 FAIRLANE, 2 door I 1944 VW CAMPER, accident—front FORD GALAX IE parts, 1942 to 1944) 1957 pickup. 451-9377 5 to 10 p.~ ITEMS: 1944 PONTIAC 389 vac. trl-power, complete, $55 289 Mustang angina $150 1945 Mercury 390 angina $150 1945 Ford 352 angina $135 Ford 4 cylinder 223 cu. $50 1944 Pontiac 309 angina $125 Other body and. mechanical parts PORSCHE, 1945, 354 C. excellent condition, 343-8)57. VW 1942, RED, fine runner, solid body, $375, 451-0494,_____________- Volkswagens WW-Ws Several to choose from. Automata tansmisslons and sticks. Radio anc heaters. Priced to toll. Example: 1967 VW Convertible $588 Turner Ford New and Used Cars STANDARD AUTO r 1968 Buick LeSabre Hardtop 2 door wltti automatic, r steering, brakes, radio, he John McAuliffe Ford 1967 CHEVY 9, passenger, station wagon with -V6, radio heater, automatic, power steering, beautiful metallic turquoiso with matching all vinyl Interior. Sum* mer special only $1668, full prlca. ; P.S. We've Moved! V> Mile N. of Mirada Mila 1845 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 5-4101 AL HANOUTE » Chevrolet Buick On M24 in Lake Orton 693-8344 $2495 with $100 down. LUCKY AUTO i960 W. Wide Track 1969 BUICK SKYLARK Demo. 4 “•“or; with j V8, automatic, pc— taring, radio, whitewalls, w vers, save on tbi> onet GRIMALDI Buick-Opel 210 Orchard Lk. Rd. FE 2-9145 3400 Elizabeth Lk. 12' BOAT AND MOTOR, 075. FE 4-2747 ’ ALUMINUM BOATS ...... 111! Big Coho boats, 14' S2S9. 15' $389. -■ j flbergias runabouts .....$5 Save $$ at Buchanan's 94*9 Highland Rd. 12' ALUMINUM WITH DECK I Ing wheel, new boat cover, Tt-- Trailer, with new spare, $325. 34 N. Lynn, 681-15114______ 13' FIBERGLASS SAILBOAT, Glenn L 13 kit, nearly completed, 673* 7678._____________ 14' SAILFISH, $175. 15* ft. I aluminum canoe, $169. aluminum rowboat. Ilka new, $ Pamco boat tratlar, $100. 6 wl Jigger, Ilka new, $675. Pon -----Motel, 8230 Hf— Over 100 1969 Boats NOW ON DISPLAY Glastron, Sea, Star North American Aluma Craft, Mirro Sail-fish, Sun-fish Mercury & Merc Cruiser Cruise Out, Inc, 43 E. Walton Closed Sun. FE 8-440! Open 9-8, A4on.-Frl„ 9-5 Sat lyFIBERGLAS .BOAT, ti 50 .fjj» 14' SILVERLINE, 1-0 120 hp, I top Shaba, $2350. 3192 Loon Shores, Drayton Plains.__ trailer, skill, Exc. condition. $800. SACRIFICE 23' Cruijer, 5543. SELL OR TRADfe. 14-F+. FIBERGLAS BOAT WITH 70 Mark Mercury, Call 343-7924. 14' LYMAN Lapatraka 3* Johnson electric. Gator tra„»i, $400, 14' Flbergias Steury 33 h.p. Johnson alactrlc, trailer, S42S, 887- TERRIFIC DICOUNTS On all boats, pontoons and canoes. AT TONY'S MARINE Johnson motors — 33 years repair experience.' 3495 Orchard Lk. Rd. Sylvan Lake V CHRISCRAFT, 220 H.P. Excel-lent condition. 402-8792. '■ CRIS CRAFT INBOARD, new prop and shaft, for pickup, motorcycle or tell, 481-1443. 17' SEA RAY Tri-Hull, 120 1-6 with brakes, both ■MPERPOIw, must sacrifice S3500. EM 3-4571._________ 19' CENTURY RESORTER, 225 HP Gray Marina engine, dltlon, 332-3578, ' H____r„ motor,«sini lies 4 ranty, Call 425-3185._____ 25 HP MOTOR, 14' aluminum closed deck, and trailer, 427-3«,.. 1941 14' CENTURY 200 hp, has been reflnlshed each year, new cover, 1947 203 Chevy engine, best offer, 40241452. ___________ . JntarastBOtt^ll- 335,-4823 or 338-7848. . 1945 FORD Heavy Duty equipment. 230 hr. since malor 1250 total time. LI 7-7942 or 428- Complate top tonneau cover, built gae tank, ski mirror, tiro ax 1949 85 H.P. Evlnrude motor. ---- 1800 lb. capacity Alloy Trailer, . _-JV to go for *2795. Tak# M-59 to W. HIghland, right to Boats Are^Arrivinq! Must Move Our Stock! Chrysler 23' With head ATTEk Tha Oo-Anywhara Fun Vahlela . For Outdoor Sports . . . Use It for Winter too . . . A versatile amphibious Drive Your Attax right Into with aasa. FULL LINE OF MERCURYS-CHRYSLER OUTBOARD MOTORS CUFF DREYER'S MARINE DIVISION 15210 Hally Rd„ Holly ME 4-6771 BRAND NEW 1M7 „ _ -20' /Sllvarllna DaVllla, 140 Marcufy Cruiser, /top si be and curt-*--tandem axle. Trallcar trailer brakes. S4995. KAR'S BOATS Ir MOTORS 493-1400 BOAT, MOTOR AND traitor, S250. Mark 30 angina,' 13' Chris Craft kit, 335-8277, BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER. Starcraft, Sllvarllna Flbergias an aluminum boats. Marc, outboard < *tarn dr. . , 1245 s. woodward at Adams Wgni Xds; . For Action* 336-7052. SUMMER CLEARANCE! BOATS-MOTORS TRAILERS 8$$$-SAVE-$$$$ Harrington Boat Works s. Telegraph | ----- USED BOATS CLEARANCE Outbbards, l-O's, Speedboats nboard Cruisers, Outboard Motors Many to Choose From LAKE & SEA AAARINE New and Used Trucks 103 Consider trade. 343-0081, dir. 1952 CHEVY US TON, steel bed, 21, 000 ml., fine condition, 0450. 852- 10 GMC TRUCK TRACTOR WITH FE 4-1442. 1940 CHEVY 55 TON pickup, gooC condition, 8150. FE 2-1779._____ 1942 CHEVY Vj Ton pickup, folks this -is a southern truck with no rustl Solid man, solid. Extra, extra nice throughout! SHELTON Pontiac-Buick 855 S. Rochester Rd-________451-5500 962 Oakland Ave. 1945 CHEVY Vi TON VAN John McAuliffe Ford -DUMPS- yd. dump, excellent alee. BIG VANS lerfect, 8100, 682*0798. 1364 BUICK VISTADOME wagon, power, new rubber, good ir, original ownar, body and -lor above average. $750. Call _ >900, Mr. McClary, Mon.-Thurs. BUICK RIVIERA 1964, Silver, $500 radial tires, no rust, eplid motor and transmission, ready to go, _ >1000- 879-0608. Frf night or Sat. 1965 BUICK SEDAN. Ona owner ------lingham trade. Clean as a pin 1966 FORD F-700 With, 14 ft. body, roll up rear do> A-1 Mechanically. 1965 GMC 14 m Wanted Cars-Trucks 101 $$—CASH—$$ FOR CLEAN CARS HUNTER DODGE 499 S. Hunter Birmingham .Ml 7-0058 ATTENTION GM Factory Officials WE NEED All sharp cars we can buy For our western market — we Fey top dollar for your Car — bring your car and title For cash to EXECUTIVE ’ CARS INC. EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Car "Check the net, men get the best" Averill's FE 2-9878 2020 Dixie .^E 4-489 Mansfield AUTO, SALES 300 Sharp Cadillacs. Pontiac, Olds and Bulcke tor out-ot-etete market. Top dotter paid. MANSFIELD AUTO SALES FE 900 1104 Bl FE 0-8825 “TOP DOLLAR PAID" GLENN'S John McAuliffe Ford 1966 BUICK Wildcat Hardtop, beautiful royal < blua finish, r heater, automatic, full pc....., clearance special only — $1188 full price. P.S. We've Moved! Vj Mlle.N. of Miracle Mila 1845 5. Telegraph Rd. I " 1965 FORE -^1964?,FORC 3RD HOavy-Oufy nomuuw wan, .new paint, wi maka nice campar. STAKES 1945 FORD F-350 One ton, dual wheels, nice I 1945 CHEVY 2 Ton TRACTORS 1964 CHEVY "60" Series, air, 2 speed, fully equipped. PICKUPS e have a good selection of new id used pickups, reduced end ady to go nowl Close-Out Deals, On All 1969 Models John McAuliffe Ford We Moved . VS Mile N. of Miracle Mile 1845 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 5-4101 New and Used Truck* 103 1945 CHEVY V4-TON pickup. 4 cylinder, radio, heater, 4 ply tires, air shocks and traitor hitch, 8795. 425-21)2. * 1945 CHEVY Vt ton, V-8, $550- or best offer, 549-9075 eftir t p.m. ’<• 1944 CHEVY V-8, M pickup, auto, 'per special. 343-OQO), dir. 1947 GMC HANDY VAN IN GOOD CONDITION. KINO BROS. INC. FE 4-0734 OR FB 4-1442. 1942 GMC V» TON PICKUPS, new, immediate delivery. Sava. KEEGO PON II AC. 482-3400. JEEPS Special -Airchata. One 3000 un pickup $2897. CJ-5 with full top ar. plow 02809. Jeepeter convertible $2040. j GRIMALDI IMPORTS 1900 Oakland FE 54421 481-00 John McAuliffe Ford 1949 BUICK Wildcat har______i beautiful metallic green with light green cordova top, full power, clearance epeclel at only—$3118, full price. 1 P.S. We've Moved! VS Mile N. of Mlracla Mila 11845 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 5-4101 i black vinyl top. I »»■ ■ package. V-8, automain., power steering, console, radio. Brand new tires. (White walls) 28,000 actual miles, immaculate. Call 442-3289. Audette Pontiac 1850 W. Maple Rd. Troy WE BELIEVE DODGE-CHRYSLER—PLYMOUTH OVER 50 SHARP CARS LARGEST MOPAR INVENTORY PONTIAC AREA DICK CANAANS Motor City Dodge 855 Oakland Ave.__338-452 1962 BUICK 2 door hardtoop. Clean $375. FE 4-0727. Fischer Buick Inc. 515 Woodwar CADILLAC DeVILLE, 1964, air conditioning, - . -......Ing, 1 white lei upholstery, $1680. 626-7260. i RIVIERA COUPE. One owner 1966 CADILLAC, . _ condition. 338-9639. Woodward. Ml 7-5600. New tires/full PM HP One year warranty. Fischer Buick ■~c. 515 Woodward. Ml 7-5600. 1966 BUICK LESABRE _ hardtop, with automatic, power steering, brakes, gold finish and priced to sell! GRIMALDI Buick-Opel 210 Orchard Lk. Rd. ___-FE 2-9145 1944 ELECTRA 225 hardtop. One ----- Birmingham trade. Full —" Just 81944 full Woodv price. Fischer I 1966 Riviera Sport Coupe with automatic, - power steering, brakes, black vinyl roof, platinum ”$2295 trade. Full price 31299. Flscl 1,000 USED CARS AT TROY MOTOR MALL Maple Road (15 Mile) Batwaan . Coolloge .and Crooks ONE STOP SHOPPING AT Audette Pontiac Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Bill 'Golfing V\Y. Mike Savoie Chevrolet GRIMALDI Buick-Opel 210 Orchard Lk. Rd.______FE 2-9165 1964 CADILLAC SEDAN DeVilla. Air condition, full power. Paint Ilka rf*w. Full price $1168. Bank |- available, immediate deliver Mr. Perks, credit manage payment schedule et Ml New location of TURNER FORD 2400 Maple (15 Mile Rd.) Tro) 1 Mile east ol Woodward 1,000 USED CARS AT TROY MOTOR MALL biB wKDulti vej"itniiiht " '£ • gM* • "'<* •tick, pood running condition, SIM c,riS^5?l.’LJ*'!! . - , or boot ottor, *nmi. GRIMALDI Buick-Opel 1941 FORD 0, GOOD transportation. I Jto Orchard Lk. Rd. FE 2-1145 U---, IMS OAIaXII, 39* AUTOMATIC LEAVlNllFOR SiRV I Cl, rr US] Falrlani, I, cylinder mint condition, f tlrfi, t m 1967 CHRYSLER 300 mu- harritnn this ball ilnyl top, I buckets, ye, It Is a little sharpy and I - $2395 1 I''OAKLAND I jvu au lumniit., _____ M75* call 117-4996 afttr A p.in, ■ » i John McAuliffe-Ford ll'aoj'FORD StAfION wagon con be MM T-IIRO CONVERTIBLE, FE 5-94)6 soon ol Protocon Supply, Sheldon baautlful arctic MB.......... MaM Rd, Rachatlar. 8150. 8*3-8038. | top, automatic, ism fO'rd oAlaxVe; hardtop, automatic tranmltslon, good condition, 8175, *73-2340 tsaj'FORb v-l. i door Galaxy •ctlc whit* with black b John McAuliffe Ford ISM THIRD Landau with nnwer. and new tlras, runs II... summar special at only and I prleP.S. We've Moved I M Mila N. of Mirada Mll< 1145 S. Talagraph Rd. FI 1967. FOfco LTD 4 I l rtl . I I *™ ntH PFlCa. Chrysler-Plymouth | p.s. We've Movedl P4J^*™L_____________PiJ*4M , W Mila N. a» Mirada Mila i i»43 3. Talaqraph___FE 3-4101 MILOSCH Chrysler-Plymouth >in«i ran, Mara I, a«via and rtaul I '**» Town A Country Chryslor. SHELTON Pontioc-Buick £X\UV,5'XUrB^do^r!uS’ S. Roaster Rd.---M.-SM01 srxrtfi ISM CHRYSLER NEWPORT hard-‘in(| and brakts 1967 CHBVELLE SS 396. 375 hi 1965 MUSTANG 2+2 trdlop, vinyl top, with automal drive, soo this ono tor only $895 OAKLAND condition. Call 643-3219. Audette Pontiac 1150 W. Map la Rd. hotter. “ Full price S13M. terms available hr" ‘— delivery. Call ,Mr. manager lor paym.... ... Ml 4 7500. Now location ot TURNER FORD M0 Maple (15 Milo Rd.) Troy Now end Used Care 106 Automatic,“Fedla, hooter. whlteSrlli' fifijiK’H MILOSCH itnt schedule at I delivery. Coll Mr. manager (Or paymoi Ml 4-7S08. New MCatnm •< TURNER FORD ISM Maple OS Mila Rd.) Tray M I Mila east ot Woodward It 1C A Y N E j S449S. 077 Chrysler-Plymouth John McAuliffe Ford 734 Oakland FE J-S434 1947 FALCON 4 door, will 1965 mWFaNG, ' V-S, stick, no hooulltul silver blue money down matching T T T/-STF1 r W T Tm./'-V SMBl “"'I °* ,0,a ,r°m ' LUCKY AUTO d'Lrter Jpsr* FE oiom”40"' orld* Tr*V3.7854 Pr'Cp.S. We've Moved! 1965 CHEVY 3-DOOR, SS for part*, «^^MHa N. of^MiracIa MMa. eater, whitewall a ligate wlndov .nilat. Warranty 11195. Cali 642-32-. Audette Pontiac 1413(1 W. Moplt Rd. 1968 CAMAR0 vs, 3 speed on tht floor, rod collent condition. $1895 1969 IMPALA 4 door, hardtop, full power, ol> $3195 VAN CAMP CHEVROLET On N. Milford Rd. MIHard 6I4-108S VS6l 'CHE”VY Impale convertible with 437, power, automatic, this Is o real (black beauty. Something for the young at hoertl SHELTON Pontioc-Buick I5i S. Rochester Rd. 451-5500 intprioi Chrysler-Plymouth 1S6I imperial LoBarron. 4 hardtop air. conditioning, power dows, powtr steering, power br power *eat*, all leather Ini leather too. varv low niliewwe,i iy03 mew i-uvajk, «« • u. 8*».•»»i ... BBHH-------- 693-8341.1 327 auto. Call 628-3254. * 1845 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 5-4101 19U MUSTANG- Convertible; sharp. 1987 T-BIRD LANDAU. AIr eon-V-8 auto W* finance no money dltloned, power equipped, rodlc , down, priced S6S5. Call FE 5-SS3S. | ‘..... fi...... CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH ~ ] 965 FORD Galaxie Chryiltr Newport Custom, 4 500 with V8, automatic, power , hardtop, power steering, power steerina, brakes, vacation special as, tinted glass,, vinyl roof, | oniv - demo, Sava $1,100. 677« . . $795 “I’ve been told it would help my career ft; Immensely if I could get past you!” £ New and Used Cars 1061 New and Used Cars 106 MILOSCH 1S6S GALAXIE 500, POWER stl Inp, outo., V-l. 363-2046. __ 1969 MUSTANG FASTBACK, .. stick. AM-FM radio. 13,500. 131- r area. private, 701-3056. 1964 PONTIAC, DOUBLE POWER, -----,Tn with. Mack v'-“‘ tgA or FE 2-9783. 1SS4 PONtiAd. ---“tlC, pOWtr em> in, radio, hooter, S3S5. WE FINANCE NORTHWEST AUTO SALES 3033 Dixie Hwy. I New god Uwd Car» 106 New and Ustd Cars 106 RUSS -JOHNSON PONTIAC-TEMPESf On M-34 Lake Orion . MY 3-6266 BY OWNER — Sharp 1**7 Tempest 1 door hardtop, double .po—'1 ....... ,VXs. 1464 PONTIAC, Bonnayillo, 2 door ——— toctorv air. 6S3-S1S4. 1464 GRAND PRIX, S647. Full Prlao. LUCKY AUTO1 1467 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE, power steering, brokos end windows, elr-condltlonlng, private owner. 331- John McAuliffe Ford 1465 PONTIAC Bonneville station wagon, with baautlful t - - “ metallic burgundy with mo all vinyl Intioror, turn P.S. We've Moved! ,/Sr Milo N. of Miracle Milo H45 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 5-41 1967 Tempest LeMons Convertible Double power. Rod with w $1695 PONTIAC RETAIL 65 University Dr.__FB 3-7454 1465 PONTIAC 2 d healer Full price 12443. B on, 643-8341. Mali V- KESSLER'S DODGE L----CAFE AND 1 BUCKS 1 Salas and Sarvic* 1 Oxford._vj _ O A 8 1408 DODOE—CHRYSLER—PLYMOUTH : OVER 50 SHARP CARS wARDEST MOPAR INVENTORY PONTIAC AREA DICK CANAANS Motor City Dodge TOWN & COUNTRY CHRYStER-PLYMOUTH ROCHESTER Aain $L___j—_ ...JST ANG HARDT. d, haalar. Whitawail fl 196$ DART SLANT 6 coupe. 8185. 1968 CAMAR0 T^ownar, 329 stick, gray with black vinyl top Immaculata. 82100, GRIMALDI CAR CO. 4M Ooklond Avt. FE 5-4411 1440 CHRYSLER. HARDTOP, runs 1 pood............... .4135 Bava Auto______________Ft 5-3371 1964 IMPERIAL 2 door hardtop. Powder bluo with; whlta vinyl noot and matchlnp bluo I v-b automatic, --------- broke! 1 condition. J CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 121M Maple Rd. Troy, Ml BIRMINGHA|fe^ $695 $695 r powder bluo, 4150. 344-1075. MUSTANGS ,'65 -'66 -.'47 Several to choose from. BUY NOW AND SAVE! ; BOB BORST ; Lincoln-MercMry Sales 1 1950 W. Maple Rd., Troy Ml 6-2200 1966“FORD.' 289 stick. Reasonable, i 673-1888.__ _ 1966 MUSTANG " <;GTJr^ 2 "door | hardtop, with 289 ““ “ power, beautiful loothor bucket o finish, i lucky auto 642-7000 Ifij dHRYiLER Newport 4 door,; with automatic, power, baautlful •quo flnlah. ono owntr. bonk; ratal. SHELTON Pontioc-Buick 455 s. Rochester Rd.____ssi ssoo John McAuliffe Ford 3465 CHRYSLER Imptrlol 1 door hardtop, with |tt black flnlah, with p block cordova top, full power, special only—ItSnTtoft” price. 1,1 P.S. We've Moved! Vi mile N. of Mirada Milo 1445 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 5-4101 SHELTON Pontioc-Buick 855 S. Rochester Rd. _ 631-5500, OVER ~50 SHARP CARS LARGEST MOPAR INVENTORY . toe PONTIAC r- ■ DICK CANAANS HMMHPFuII price terms available hero. delivery. Coll Mr. Parks _ manager for payment schedule "ot - mi 4-7500. Now location ol 1 TURNER FORD 2600 Maple (15 Mile Rd.) 1 I 1 MMe east of Woodward 1967 FORD FAIRLANE 500 XL j vertible, yellow, black top, j cel lent, cell after 6 p.m. FE 2-! 1967 FORD, EXCELLENT cond $1400. Call after 6 p.m. 693-8137. !ONVERTiBLE7 4 lean, leaving foi er takes. 363-2034. OVER" 1,000 ! USED CARS AT ! TROY MOTOR MALL Maple Road (15 Milo) Between . Coolidge and Crooks ONE STOP SHOPPING AT i Audette Pontiac Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Bill Golling VW Mike Savoie Chevrolet John McAuliffe Ford 1467 MUSTANG hardtop with 340 engine, 4 speed, radio, heater, ......... ...... STATION WAGONS 764 OLDS 443 Block Beauty with, whlta Interior, 4-speed, double, power and wide ovals. Adult; 10 or best otter. 624-3473. DODGE—CHRYSLER—PLYMOUTH OVER 50 SHARP CARS LARGEST MOPAR INVENTORY PONTIAC AREA DICK CANAANS Motor City Dodge if e 450 Oakland Ave. Marvel Motors, 251 Oakland, FE 8-1 I DEALER 331-9234 $AVE BOB BORST 4300. Need! minor repairs. 635 Fieldstor Rochester. _ ^ _ 1966 VALIANT V-200 door sedan, V8, engine, torque fll a sharp inside,and out and has i nie goodies including power sfeerir 1969 Mach "II, §P§ 4 speed. Cobre Jdt Engine. Radio, OAKLAND heater. Save over $1,000 from list CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH A Se* ,hl’ b“U,y #t Turn*rl 734 Odkland FE 5-4. ' ■' Call Mr. Parks | m?., bar^uda. good cSmiti. Credit manager, for payment 74S1 schedule at Ml 4-7500. Bank term*1—^— available, Immediate delivery. New location of Turner Ford 2600 Maple Rd.7 05 Mile) Ti wagon, double l!,,» 33U *,r' X. power, air, vl 43774. 676-3465. 1969 PONTIAC FIREBIRD 2 door, hardtop, VI, engine, 4 speed, transmission, chromed road wheels, ” actual milts, thoy, don’t eomo newer, hurry only. $2795 OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 724 Oakland • Fl 5-4436 969 PONTIAC Factory Official Rental and Company cart. Low --------- *—idl models tp choose from. Priced rlaht. Many with A CONDITIONING. Coll 643-3284. Audette Pontiac ew wmiowoii nres. i.... ",_... _ . MHRIHL car trad* In. Coll 11850 w- M*P|( Rd- 642-3289. I,-,-----=----j-------— Audette Pontiac 1Mg grand prix miitaee « 1850 W. Maple Rd. Troy to choose from. Fully equlpp i ------------J,*'inlng. Prl« ...ding a.. —...__ sell. Call 642-3289. Audette Pontiac 167 LeMANS 2 DOOR hardtop. ____ Sport 6 engine with 3 speed floor DH shift. Tyrorbluo with whlta bucket 1 *50 vy. Maple Rd. seats. Low mileage. Factory war-___________ , . ... -------- ranty. Excellent condltlan. Call 842- 1969 TEMPEST Custom 4 door, with 3214. . 350 V-B, automatic, power, bronze Anrlpttp Pontiac finish, big savings on thla demo. ,.50 w. Mapit Rd. Troy’ SHELTON Pontioc-Buick S. Rochester Rd._______853-5580 1967 PONTIAC Catalina 4 hardtop double power, tinted ows, factory air condition, 26.000 mile cor on four new tiros, apjAAg the highest oNor. CROWN MOTORS 131 Baldwin Avo._______FE 4-5056 vtagon, 11465 PONTIAC STARCHIEF, *' J DEALER ...... .......... " 33B4H6[li___ .. ____________________ I uu> MONEY AT MIKE SAVOIB 1967 PONTIAC CATALINA 4 door 11-----------------1 —..... 4 CHEVY, 1900 W. Maple, Ml 4-2735. sedan, with power, automatic, 5 1965 Fury Wagon . ~^"pofTn4x"T"cAtAlTNA con- j ■»■«*«• »« •* KEEGO PONTIAC SALES . .. ----- KEEGO HARBOR_________________________________________________________682-3400 vertible, full ■mission. 8625. 636, “"'I only »hk« Y*"’' Pr,CWi ’° PE S-4229 only 81895. —L SHELTON Pontioc-Buick 1985 PONTIAC 421 Conyertlble. MagllSS S. Rochester Rd, 451-5500 ................. ~ ““ OOOR B O Mall; John McAuliffe Ford i 1966 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL! beautiful metallic gold with factory only—82180, lull priceP P.S. We' 1966 PLYMOUTH IT 4 DOOR SEDAN i With V-t, automatic, extra nl 1 ’dp and out. Priced at only — $1095 OAKLAND Moved! ’/? Mile N .of Miracle Mile I ; 1845 S^Telegreph____;___FEJ-5101, ! 1964 MBRCU R Y CON VERTIBLE, | trade for pick • up truck. Chrysler-Plyinouth 724 Oakland_________* FE 5-9436! SAVE MONEY AT MIKB SAVOlb CHEVY, 1900 W. Maple. Ml 4-2735 1969 GRAND PRIX DEMO ... 0AVE .... ...811095 transmission, m inyert .............. ."list. 4995"’Ponfioc Lake Motel, 2230 Highland Rd. 1965 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE, 4 new. tires, good condition, M50 or boat otter, FE 2-8611, brakes,‘air conditioning. AM-FM. Power antenna. Rear window dotaggor. Price 81150, M54l3ie.r 1966 TEMPEST CUSTOM 2 door. NEW FINANCE PLAN working? Need a car? We arrange for almoit anybody w 1 | 196* PONTIAC TEMPEST 2 door. Rod witli black vinyl Interior. V0, automatic, power stoorlng and brakes. Now wide oval tires. All decor moldings. Excellent condition. Priced fo sell. Call 642-3214. Audette Pontiac 850 W. Maple Rd. Troy Troy 196* LeMANS .2 DOOR hardtop. Black (Ot seats steering 1964 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CM* ' i”im."lc, power smer.n, . SB®'*£?***“1 “nswrrssc*'- m******™* PPM SHELTON Pontiac-Buick '150 w. mm»io Rd. t PLYMOUTH VIP, private ---- ■ ■8a?^!8P I98O GRAND PRIX, full power, PM I rhruclar Plumnuth owner, vary oharp. 81445. 0S2-3224. ; . -I Stereo, loaded, call anytlma, 42200, (.nrySier-riymuUTn ------saiT ntr.-«..*'k------ 1966 CATALINA 2 door .hardtop. MY 3-6070. 1966 VW COUPE, 4745, 477 M-24, 1967 Plymouth I silver mist with black vinyl top.! _ ___________" r.r.-.. Lake Orion, 643-8341. VID Automatic, power steering, and 1968 pnsinac rmi mi 7.H™, -------!—-— - .l.r. LOUpe brakes, AM PM radio. Low! hardt( Vinyl roof, power windows, climate 1 mileage. Very good condition. Coll other control. Very clean. 1 642-3289. ! owner Wilson Crissman Audette Pontiac Cadillac I1838 w- “•p'* Rd- ! 1964 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX, with> 1967 PLYMOUTH Sport | booutltul maroon finish, black FIREBIRD 2 door hardtop. _• I virtvl tnn I af*e an first class, like Cnrint MatM. 1 inaaal floor sh|ft# i,"Bd,o! eta from. - Dealer. 1965 AMERICAN 2 door. Stick shift. Radio. $685 VILLAGE RAMBLER 666 S. Woodward Ml 4-3900 1967 REBEL. Special. _ 81095. RjbSE o price $1895. ROSE RAMBLER-■P, UNION LAKE, EM 3-6155 MILOSCH 1940 W. Wide Track FE 4-1006 or FIJtl .....I965 D00GE Ton bickup. this It a real to work horse* priced at only . $895 OAKLAND- Chrysler-Plymouth | "hit*' topM‘FM r,<"0, red wl,hi _____________ff 5-M3‘ GRIMALDI CAR CO. ou«„ , 900. Oak land Aye. FE 5-94311 P.S. We've Moved! "k yr^i^u. /'Nil , vy Milo N. of Miracle Milo MOtOr L/lty I l»45J^Telegraph RU. FE 5-4101 • !ibm chon bai rnsi. .'hJbmii»i#iiI. Dodge 1,000 USED CARS AT TROY MOTOR MALL 11968 FORD FALCON* i 11,000 miles* 620-2865._ 1968 FORD , / TORINO >GT* 2 door* hardtop* this little r r’beauty is sharp insida and out* dri ; this one away at only T $2295 OAKLAND Chrysler-Plymouth , $795 r OAKLAND Chrysler-PlymDuth | 724 Oakland ■ - FE 5-44361 John McAuliffe Ford | 1966 COMET Calient* sport coupe,-; | beautiful bronze metallic with 1 ! matching Interior, V8, radio, heater, power steering, black Cordova top, summer special at only — 81,882 —1— I locally owned. Young Fury 2 . . _____ ________ roof, looks and runs Ilk* ndW! Vacation special only. $1695 TOWN & COUNTRY CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH ROCHESTER vinyl top. Lat’e go first class, like! Sprint ingL... new. What can you pay per custom trim, rally wheels, red nm month? No speed, on this tradel . tires. Bright red with matchln) I SHELTON Pontioc-Buick «*»»*"♦ “ndl,,or '855 S. Rochester Rd. 451-5580 haalftltfii I™ 1*61 VW CONVERTIBLE..Dark blue beautiful one! wlfh bt,„ ltstl lnd to*, am 8, FM radio, excellent whitewall tires. New spire PiyUftra enow tires. 16,008 letudTlmas. One owner. Priced right. Cell 442-3289. Audette Pontiac 1850 W. Meple Rd. Trey Maple Road (15 Mila) Batwaan $1495 OAKLAND ■■■■ Chrysler-Plymouth " CooM9t 4nd CraoK* 'EJfi3* ONE STOP SHOPPING AT Audette Pontiac Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Bill Golling VW Mike Savoie Chevrolet STATION WAGONS LUCKY AUTO, 724 Oakland' ? FE 5-94341 1440 w Wide Track 1968 MUSTANG. BLUE.' Automatic. FE 4 1006 or FE 3-78541 Power steering. White sidewalls. John McAuliffe Ford. itry Squire Wagon, P.S. We've Moved! j \ Mt Mila N. of Mirada Mile i 11845 S.JTalegraph Rd._ 11967 MERCURY COUGAR GT. 390. 3 ! speed. Heavy duty. Auto. Beautiful red Superb condition. $1900. 332-3328.______ MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH > ROADRUNNER, 2 door, dtop, black With black vinyl top. teen, posi-tractlon, JilTkii,' _________ condition, 81700 or ”™------------ best olfer, 626-5735. 1969 PLYMOUTH (SAVE MONEY AT MIKE. SAVOIE — ..................................... red. ’ •arance specials fror Pre-owned! beauties ( From The Birminghom-Bloomfield Area Cadillacs | 1968 Coupe DeVilie Only 6,700 miles. Full power, vinyl ^^MgtaMgjMlr . centrol. Absolutely! 81588 full P.S. We've Movedl 1845 S. Telegraph Rd. FE S-41 1966 FORD ■ CUSTOM 500 2 door, V8, automal Ic, beautiful ti $895 DEMO TAYiOR CHEVY-OLDS _______ __________ leautifui midnight blue finish with i cordova top, 9 —■ $2,188 full I__ P.S. W*'ve Moved! ' special i Raasonabla. 682-8203. _ __ I »v~ wod w.' Maoie.'Ml>27M.~ John McAuliffe Ford i'wwjs wsta cruiotr.. Roiwr.ljg 1968 TORNIO "GT” with V-8, |0W as $499. Bank terme available ** heater, power ..steerjng.f here immediate delivery .Call Mr. re 1, credit manager lor!" BMRsnta schedule et^MI 4-7500. « New location of TURNER FORD | 2600 Meple (15 Mile Rd.l Troy Mall 1045 S. TeTegeeph ___''fE_Y418|1JH I960.(MUSTANG, 2 plu, 2, 4 speed,' 673-2912. ..I8? c I',312-7*08_■_........! OLDSMOBILE 1*66, John McAuliffe Ford r h»rdt°P' lun power, FORD Gelexle 500 4 door,; 1966 Olds ViStO i ITr*steering,'bribes| Cruiser Wagon 1 stll under warranty j Fui| power, air conditioned, AM-srance special only j fm radio. Sharp! i ~ Wilson Crissman mmpmiiHipiK 1845 S* Telegraph Rd';~".*FE 5-4181 1350 N Woodward__ Ml 4-1930 1949 MUSTANG V-8,' stick shift,! ~1 11,000 miles, like-new, 82095 also! 1968 VW radio and heater, 19,000 miles, excellent condition, $1295. FURY III , sedan,-V8, engine, orqe flite ssion, radio, and heater, whlta power steering, electric clock, ranty, buy of fht day! Only $2788 OAKLAND _ Woodward 1965 cutlass good condition. $595. Chrysler-Plymouth ____________ 724 Oakland ____FE 5-9436 9$, 4 door------------ 642-5953.__ COOL OFF Beat The Heat In One Of Thas# AIR CONDITIONED BEAUTIES 642-3289. I Audette Pontiac 11850 W. Maple Rd. GO! HAUPT PONTIAC •ssenaer i tomatic, steering and brakes, radio, heeler, whitewalls. „ AIR CONDITIONED—$2995 1968 Pontiac Bonneville Vista ^VaHHP roof, full fewer, factory air. 1966 THUNDERBIRD Landau. Two| New car v~ Wiison Crissman wMr*’ ™ --------------Cadillac AIR CONDITIONED—$1995V 1350 N. Woodward ' Ml 4-19301 OVER 1,000 USED CARS AT TROY MOTOR MALL Mapla Read (II Mila) Batwaan Coolidge end Crooks ONE STOP SHOPPING AT Audette Pontiac Bin*inghdm Chrysler-Plymouth Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Bill Golling VW Mike Savoie Chevrolet 106 New and Used Cars 106 1968 Sedan DeVilla .JXJBXlannf. paster,.dner In**,, tl telescope wheel, 6 way seat, conditioned', premium' fires. . meculste condition. 1966 Coupe DeVilla Only 25.880 actual miles. One Huntington Wood, owner. Climate! control, 6 way seat, toft ray glass. | Very sharp. 1965 Sedan A Bloomflatd Hill* car with 23*000 actual miles. Air conditioned* full power. Like new throughout. ■ Wilson Crissman CADILLAC 1350 N. Woodward Ml 4-1930 ______j 4-4501 | | All mokes end models.' Ford's, 1966 MUSTANG convertible, excellent ■ ■ | rjhey'1^., Som* ---------— “** endltlen. 8950, M5-4668. New and Used Cars Priced to sen. For our clean-out c new car trades. Call Mr. Parks Credit manager* for paymer schedule at Ml 4-7500. Bank term available* immediate delivery. Naw location of Turner Ford i 2600 MapirRd.* (15 Mila) Troy Mai OOq______1 mile east of Woodward _ 1967 Dodge Polara Coupe . White. finish* black vinyl roo Burgundy interior. Power steerim j Cadillac j Wilson Crissman i 1350JL_Woodwerd_______Ml 4-193 1966 DODGE CORONET 440, 2 aai» ; V-8* auto.* power steering* •> cel lent 8995. Almont, 798-8025. 106New and Used Cars -Attention! - Need a car? Been turned down ’ by car dealers? t New iri the area? If so, then call KING AUTO 681-0802 i A J ( 1966 FORD ! IQ passengti. mm *o. iwuiu. heater, full powtr, chrome luggage rack* clearance special at only $1*588, fuM price, o P.S. We've Moved! - :-j » mil* N. ol Miracle Mil* •I 1145 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 5-4181 106New and Used Cars 106 HAHN / TODAY'S SPECIAL 1966 TEMPEST 2 Door Sedan ...... . $795 Automatic, economy .6 cyl. engine, A-l condition throughout I 1968 CHEVY Wagon ....... $2695 9 > passenger; with full power, luggage rack, brwrt red with a black vinyl interior. Must seel 1965 FORD Wagon . $129!) 1967 PLYMOUTH Wagon ... $1695 Belvedere it 9 passenger, with VI, . full power, new car warranty. 1967 CHRYSLER Newport ..... $2095 2 door hardtop, full power, factory air conditioning. vlhyyl roof, one owner trade in! 1967 RAMBLER Rebel ........ .$1395 "77tf" 4-door sedan, v-8, aufembtlc, power, steering, new at- aM| ae r. Two to choose from. Suburban 1 r Olds "■ ! 1967 Olds 88 2-door Hardtop. 8, automatic— $1695 ' 1965 Olds 88 - Automatic, power steeriig). $1695 1965 Buick Skylark Hardtop, automatic, power. $1095 1964 Olds Jet Star 88 Hardtop, power, console. $795'- . 1966 Toronqdo Air conditioned. . $2295 1968 Olds Cutlass Coupe , Automatic, power. $2495 •1968 Olds Luxury Sedan, full power/'factory dirt YOUR VW ’CENTER 70 to Choose From -rAII Models— -All Colors-—All Reconditioned- Autobahn 1,000 USED CARS AT TROY '.MOTOR MALL Maple Road (15. Mile) Between Coolidge and Crooks ONE STOP SHOPPING AT . -Amjetterfontioc ^ - Birmingham - Chrysler-Plymouth Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Bill Golling VW Mike Savoie Chevrolet door locks, AM-FM stereo. Heater, S whitewalls. j AIR CONDITIONED-$3895 1961 PONTIAC Bonneville herdtop. Automatic, power steering and brakes, power windows, radio, heater, whitewalls. AIR CONDITIONED—$2995 1968 MERCURY 10 passenger Colony 1967 OLDSMOBILE TORONADO, 31,000 miles, air conditioning, FM. all pgwer-. Best offer, 334-M02. Automatic, console. Special pi Call 642-3289. Audette Pontiac- 1850 W. Mapla Rd. 1968 JEEP Wagoneers . $ave 1968 PLYMOUTH Fury U! ....$2295 3 door hardtop, with, v$, automatic, power Oiry sler-PIymouth-Rambler- J eep Clarkston 6673 Dixie Hwy. MA 5-2635 n OLDS, 1947, LUXURY SederTlull power, air condrtlonlne, exc. con-dltlop, 82,500. 335-1056. $ave 1967 Cutlass 2-door, Hardtop, Power steering and brakes. $1995 Suburban Olds 860 Woodward Birmingham" Ml 7-5111 CLOSE OUT PRICES ON ALL REMAINING 1969 OLDSMOBILES Now in stock! Best Olds VI, steering, brakes, 6,0(10 miles,.can', be tola from hawl Clearance special at only 82381, full prlc P.S. We've Moyed! 1845 j. 1 FE S-4101 ir-wt ______"FjA N . mechanically sham, upholstery perfect. Owner, UL 2-1289, 1957 PONTIAC 4 DOOR, go itaaring and 'braktlu AM-F?M redid, '"•tiiffM.-whltataSII*; AIR .CONDITIONED—$1395 1967 CONTINENTAL' convertible. Four door modpl. Full power, a u t o m a t l.c, radio, heater, whitewalls. # AIR CONDITIONED—$3395 j 965 PONTIAC Catalina convertible.' Automatic, full power, radio withi AIRCONDlTIOkfeD--<139S 768 CONTINE! power, vinyl ti AM-FM radio, ...JNMMMP AIR CONDITIONED—$4495 Lorry Sheehan's HILLSIDE Lincoln-Mercury l 1250 Oakland 333-7863 REDUCED!!. ’ The Boss SEZ Sell! So We Have Reduced Prices on Many Models . Give Us A Try! Before You Buy! OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH: .724 Oakland FE 5-9434 Ask for Bob Reynolds 969 OLDSMOBILE, 2 0 full power, air, By < call »4-wip. 1963 GRAND PRIX. Good condition, —- or best offer. 682-8412 after 7 ; 1963 BONNEVILLE. FACTORY _______ I___ brakes, vinyl tag. 82395. GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 Oakland Ave ■ ■ FE 5-9421 83995 MERRY OLDS • N. Main St. Rochester 651-9761 TtOOGE-CHRYSLER—PLYMOUTH OVER 50 SHARP CARS LARGEST MOPAR INVENTORY PONTIAC AREA DICK CANAANS Motor City Dodge 855 Oakland Ay. brakes, steer Rem<— 1 0142. control mirror, I 1964 PONTIAC ) , CONVERTIBLE Maroon with black top and matching Interior. V-8 automatic, , radio, heater, power steering. Full! prlct . $495 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 3100 Maple Rd. Troy, Mich. 642-7000 1944 PONTIAC CATALINA Ventura 2 door hardtop. Rose oalor ertth black vinyl interior. Automartlc, power steering and brakes. Whitewall tires. Extra sharp. Call 642- ^ ^ar^xuRYi^!, ■ W Audette Pontiac doer, loaded, MISS, 474-3171. 6732 1850 W. Mapla Rd. HlgManoRd.near Airport. I New and Used Cars 106New and Used Cars 106New and Ustd Cars 106 ■'Jk TOM RAE ® CHEV’ ALL cars available w Easy GMAC’ 1966 CHEVY Lmpala ....... $1295 door hardtop, with V$, automatic, power steering, whitewalls, radio, heater, excellent can-dition. )EMACHER M 5T-OLDS ITH LOW DOWN PAYMENT! rerms Available! m 1966 CHEVY Convertibla .$1295 WT** h“Mr' » 1963 RAMBLER 2 (Joor .$195 with 6 cyl. standard "shift, red finish, real economy Car throughout! 1964 OLDS Cutlass . .$895 2_do°r hsrdtop, with VI, automatic, power steer-flip, brakes, whitewalls, bucket Hate/ - - 1966 CORVAIR 2 door ......... $$95 standard, ahlft, radio, heater, yellow finish. . 1964 OLDS "88" *, $895 i T ’’SSI®1’' «lth automatic, power stagring, JjNJIteS' WMtswaUs, radio, haeler, allyer blue 1964 RAMBLER Wagon A...'.. .$495 Witt) A cyl. standard shift, for economy. Ready to god 1968 VW Sunroof ! .$1595 with radio, whitewalls, beautiful blue finish;: 1963 CHEVY Wagon 7. . . .$495 9 passenger, with Bd»*r stew-lng. brakes, r%Uo. . fleeter, Meal second car,; tor the large.family. 1965 FORD Custom ........... .$695 ci|- autwnatlc, radio, white ttnlaiw. rad vinyl trim. Real nice car. 1964 CHEVY Wagon 4 Door ... $795 with VI. automatic, power stepring, brakes, radio, whitewalls, axtrsmaly shprpl On USIO Rose WJBK, K. O. BaVley 4:45—WWJ, Newstime 5:11—WPON, turn *n‘ Abne 5:20—WPON, Don Mllham (9) Luncheon Date I (50) C — Jack LaLanne 11:25 (4) C-Card Duvall 11:30 (4) C — Concentration (7) R C - That Girl (9) R - Take Thirty (50) C — Kimba TUESDAY AFTERNOON 12:90 (2) C-News, Weather, Sports (4) C — Jeopardy (7) C — Dream House (9) Luncheon Date II (50) C — Underdog 12:25 (2) C — Fashions 12:39 (2) C-As the World Turns ,. (4) C - News, Weather, Sports ' (7) C - Let’s Make a Deal (9) R — Real McCoys (50) ft Movie:- “Navy Blues” (1941) Ann Sheridan, aMrtha Raye, Jack Oakie 1:09 (2) C—Divorce Court (4) C — Days of Our Lives (7) C — Newlywed Game I 9) ^ M o vJ e : “Breakfast in Bed’’ (German, 1963) Lex ' Barker, Lilo Pulver 1:39 (2) C—Guiding Light (4) C — Doctors . (7) C'— Dating Game 2:00 (2) C—Secret Storm (4) C - Another World (7) C — General Hospital 2:39 (2) C-Edge of Night (4) C — You Don’t Say . (7) C-One Life to Live (50) R — Make Room for Daddy 3:00 (2) C—Linkletter Show (4) C — Match Game (7) M— Dark Shadows (9) R — Dennis the Menace (50) R — Topper 3:25 (4) C-News 3:3Q (2) C— Search for Tomorrow (4) C — You’re Putting Me On (7) C — Anniversary Game (9) C — Magic Shoppe (50) C — Captain Detroit 4:90 (2) C—Love of Life (4) RC- Steve Allen -•Jack Benny, composer Lalo Schifrin and Shari Lewis guest. (7) R C — Movie: “Red Garters" (1954) Rosemary Clooney, Jack Carson (9) C— Bozo 4:25 (2) C-News 4:39 (2) C — Mike Douglas — Hedy Lamarr, Tiny T*im, Rex Reed and Frankie Valli guest. (50) R — Little Rascals (62) C — Bugs Bunny and Friends 5:09 (4) C—George Pierrot “Budapest to Sofia” (9) R C — Batman (50) R — Munsters 5:15 (56) Friendly Giant 5:30 (9) R C — F Troop (50) R —Superman (56) Misterogers „ (62) R — Leave ; It to Beaver AP Wlrephots CHANCELLOR’S VIEWS-Kurt Georg Keis-inger, chancellor of West Germany, gives his views, on American-German relations and defense as he is interviewed on ABC’s 2 Teens Slain in Gangland Style in Florida MELBOURNE, Fla. (UPI) -The son of a pilot for the late President John, F. Kennedy was found shot to death in gangland fashion last night and the body of a young girl was floating in a nearby creek. Police said George Perry Martin Jr., 19, was on the floorboard of a convertible parked in a lovers’ lane on the Indian River. He had been shot through the head and his hands and feet were bound behind him in a manner similar to gangster executions. « ★ * * The body of a girl, Connie Ruth Ballard, 17, was found about 40 yards away, floating face down in Mullet Creek. Officers said she apparently had been dragged from the car into the creek. She had been shot in “Issues and Answers." The program, broadcast yesterday from Washington, was taped the chest. Saturday during Keisinger’s visit to the Both bodies were fully cloth-capital. A Look at TV CBS Boosting Tennis By ROBERT MUSEL NEW YORK (UPI) — A Hollywood producer who lost a fortune making a feature film about baseball coined the box office epitaph: “When athletes play, women stay away.” The same holds true for television but that doesn’t stop the networks from .trying — again and again. Almost everyone has played tennis at some time. It’s a fast-moving game and really worth watching. ★ #. ★ “We’re giving it an hour on Aug. 30 and two hours each on Sept. 6 and 7. That’s five hours and I don’t think'it’s ever had thaf kind of coverage here before. Now CBS has announced a plunge into major coverage of the $125,000 U.S. Open Tennis Championships at Forest Hills, N.Y. This time Bill MacPhail, the able, refreshingly frank vice president of CBS Sports, may ‘have done better than he expected. For tennis is not only a big time sport in Britain, stays among the high-rated TV shows for the entire two weeks of the Wimbledon tennis championships. NOT OPTIMISTIC ‘I’m not optimistic that the British experience will apply here,” said MacPhail over lunch at the Forum. “The last time we carried Forest Hills we reached 2.5 million homes against 16 million homes for our I NFL football games. But the championships have been going begging and we felt as we did for soccer and hockey that it’s worth doing, at least giving the public a chance to see and decide. ‘Ten years ago most people wouldn’t have known the name of a ranked tennis player. Now they do — just as they’ve learned the names of star golfers. GOOD COMMENTATORS Edsel Owners Get Together ed. Poolice ruled out robbery or seX as the murder motive. PROFESSIONAL JOB? “It looks like professional killings,” a police spokesman said. j The couple last was seen | around 11:30 a.m. EDT yester-jday. Their bodies were | discovered by three men look-ling for empty bottles along the secluded creek bank and the river which flows between the mainland and a dense strip of beach front. Diver began a search of the murky creek and river for a murder weapon. TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) 'Remember the Edsel? “ Oldsmobile sucking a lemon?” “The car built for Harold1 Stassen’s inaugural?” The Ford Motor Co', fathered n almost as many bad jokes as 11 cars during 1958-1960, when it * * * turned loose 110,000 Edsels and Both of the youngsters were a modem American legend. |from Satellite Beach, where ★ * ★ Miss Ballard attended high But since the' e x p e n s 1 v e[school. The parents of the youth , * I 1 J VI UUI' MIC C A ^ v ll O l V C,»VMVVi. ~--------* We ve got knowledgeable mistake went out of production, land girl identified their bodies. mmoniblnrc in RuH Pnllinc1 .. . . 2_ . - V _ _ .. . • ..._ • _ I_a*-. commentators in Bud Collins1 and Jack Kramer, we’ll use all' the technical aids — slow-motion, stop-action and so on, We’ve got the tournament for five years and perhaps in that time we can build an audience of both sexes as we are doing finally — in football.” * it it MacPhail said there was no logic to national reactions to sports. Baseball caught tremendously in Japan yet failed miserably in tlaly. In Britain — wh'ere it started in the game called a “rounders” — it is played only as softball. * ★ ★ CBS, It will be remembered, tried and missed with soccer here though this is played the slurp-snouted Edsel hasj Martin’s father is a retired become a collector’s item. Fifty around the world by more peo-11 belong in It.” Edsel owners gathered here ester day to compare specimens, tiow worth $200 to $4,000 each. “When you got something you can’t even give away, you gotta keep it,” said a philosophical Lloyd Proctor, who bought his 1959 model new. ‘I BELONG* One man’s lemon is another man’s hobby,’,’ shrugged club President Jean Leonard. Everette Wirgau of Lansing, who owns four of them, stoutly proclaimed “It's a beautiful car, it’s different and its value increases every year. Sure, I get razzed a lot. But I feel Air Force colonel, George Perry Martin Sr., who piloted the presidential jet Air Force One during the Kennedy administration. pie than any other sport. “We were premature,” MacPhail said. “We tried to-go big league with soccer too soon, and small crowds in big stadiums do not generate the excitement we saw on satellite relays of the great World Cup matches. i Ty Triplett, Pointe Farms, won second place in the best-condition competition with his 1958 black Citation, which he isn’t old enough to drive. “It’s like a brother to me, said Triplett. Indians, Sheriffs 40 Speechmake *42 Be indebted for,.,, 4 “Wild— Hickok” 8 “Sitting---* 12 Stir 13 Turkish regiment 14 Ox of Indonesia 15 Apache dSLongsfor _» 45 Moral offense 47 Entrance conduit 49 Piano adjusters 52 Chew of 17 Unless (Latin) Unemployed S |p£(««ffl*)lJ£5b?ic.nt i£«U SSKffi 20Sutlve 25 Fastener of DOWN 23 Abstract being 44 Bitomb steel plates 24 Regret 46 Indiana (ab.) 29 Greek letter lFury 26 Little island 48 Shield (vafj 30 Snow vehicle 2 Paradise ' (var.) 49Highin 31 Groom (India) ® Church sewing 27 Ban stature 34 Month (ab.) , 28 German river 50 Foray _ ^ ^ 37 Great Barrier dFlags 32 Female 51 Prune (Scot) Island (N J5.) 5 Pelvic bones ruminant 54JapanesB 39Preposition 6Flee (slang) 33Mariner’s . herb, 7“ 2~ >3 4 5 6 7 T“ 9 i° m 12 13~ 14" W 16 i— vf~ TT | W r 20 pL. 2f i r 22" L mmu mmmmu 29 2 ■ sr 32 33 34 35 36 ■ 37 38 ■ 1 jT . : -! So” 41 42 43j 44 1 ■ ■ 46 46 1 4fj 49 50 51 j 52~ 53*^ 54 5ST 56 sT 58“ 5$ ' r- j sr U I People in the News! By The Associated Press - The-Jnemefy-ef-Mary Jo Kopechne, the secretary killed in.jn auto accident involving Sen. Edward M. Kennedy of Massachusetts, will be perpetuated by a scholarship fund at Caldwell College for. Women, Caldwell, N.J. A spokesman for the college said the fund has been established by a group of Boston area businessmen who were “Impressed by the idealism manifested by Mary Jo.” . Miss Kopechne was graduated from the college in 1962. The accident in which she was killed July 18 occurred near Chappaquaddick -Island, Mass. Her parents are residents of Berkeley Heights, N.J. Husband of British Princess Becomes III Angus Ogilvy, 44-year-old husband of Princess Alexandra of Britain, became ill during a church service yesterday in Singapore. His wife, who is a cousin of Queen Elizabeth II, said Ogilvy had an attack of stomach cramps. He left the service, but the princess stayed to the ehd. The couple came to Singapore for celebrations of the republic’s 150th anhiversary. Pope Cautions Italians and Tourists Pope Paul VI says tourists and Italians should tone down nudity at the beaches, drive more carefully and quit taking reckless chances when climbing the Alps. At a.blessing yesterday of visitors to'his summer palace at Castel Gandolfo, the pontiff cautioned against “exaggerations such as the unbridled worldly amusements which seem to have become the fashion these days.” CBS Accepts Early Ban on Cigarette Ads NEW YORK (AP) - The Columbia Broadcasting System says it will go along with a to-^bacco ‘ industry plan to end if i broadcast cigarette advertising [by Dec. 31 if Congress approves. * But network president Frank 15, of Grosse Stanton said Sunday the plan Was unfair to networks because it would allow the tobacco in-. dustry to switch its advertising money to print. ! ' A CBS spokesman said cigarette ads account for about 10 per cent of the network’s revenues. According to Broadcasting magazine’s 1969 yearbook, the top five tobacco advertisers spent $1.6-billion on network TV ads in 1967, and another 14-million on network radio. Stanton announced the CBS decision in si letter to Sen. Frank E.-Moss, D-Utah, who approached the networks about the Tobacco Institute plan two weeks ago. The plan would need c sional ’ approval to circumvent antitrust laws and allow the tobacco companies to act in concert. It would also require the networks to release the advertisers ' from current contracts, most of which run until next-September. The American Broadcasting Co. rejected the plan last Thursday. The National Broadcasting Co. has not ersponded publicly. Humphrey 'Not. Decided' . Are there ^ political plans in Hubert Humphrey’s future? “I like public, life and I may very wjell want to return to it. I just have not decided,” the former vice president said yesterday on the CBS program “Face the Nation.” HUMPHREY Color TV RCA-ZENITH LOWEST PRICES BEST SERVICES CONDON'S TV Sole* and Service 730 W. Huron FE 4-9736 ^SERVICE SPECIALISTS HOD’S tv FE 5-6112 710 ORCHARD LAKE AVE. & COLOR THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1009 1969 W>J* Vndttan*' heated * ***”[ urn *'9na h»aW' , soot V »i »«rn' usta* uan*- 6a%]n' trim. ilono'** MATTHEWS Hargreaves tthRED TAG DAYS! Again... i, i Iftii Annual Event STARTS MON. Aug. 11th THIS IS WHAT YOU GET WHEN YOU BUY HOW! 1. LOWER DOWN PAY.-MENT because of the bigger trade-in value*, or increased discounts. 2. MUCH LARGER TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE on your present car so that we may build pp our stock. 3. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY within the same day on most cars because of our readiness to handle a fast flow of cars at this time with extra help on our sales staff and extra me-chanics in our garage for service. Michigan's Largest Volume Chevrolet Dealer rr r'r'HriV rrrr,rl rlrTm ^[rUrdrlT1. Lr r p pem'! wimt Irw v rTrrtr.j!.r:r' DEMONSTRATORS AND MILEAGE CARS AT HUGE DISCOUNT PRICES! 631 Oakland at Cass, Pontiac Phone FE 5-4161 of Meanwhile, speculators bought West German marks and sold Belgian francs and British pounds today after Europe’s money markets opened for tjie first time since the devaluation was announced. But there were no wild fluctuations and trading volume was low. . .\jk * L * First pressures speared to be more heavy oh the Belgian franc than on the pound. In Brussels, the Belgian currency dropped to its lowest permitted level — 50.375 tir the dollar — and forward trading was suspended. The pound dropped just over half a cent in London. But it remained well' above the official floor and comfortably above the level at which the Bank of England intervenes with support buying* The mark was stronger in Zurich, and other currencies were under pressure. , France devalued the franc by 12.5 per cent Friday.D’Estaing said it was the onl/ way. He said France otherwise would have run out of gold and foreign currency reserves by the end of the year. . i1#; ; Before devaluation a franc wM.«0Gb 20 cents. It now is worth 17% cents. . For foreign tourists in Frahce, it was good. A meal of melon, {topper steak, asparagus in hollandaise s a u c e, raspberry tart, coffee and two kinds of wine cost* |7 instead of f8. The -Ihtema-Byial Herald' Tribune - cost 17 cents ratljgr than 20 cents, A State Champion Waterford Legion wins baseball crown — PAGE F-l. Shattered Sunday Detroit man goes berserk, wounds six in shotgun spree — PAGE A*8. Ohio Disaster Rhodes tp seek aid for area hit by tornado — PAGiE A-5. Area News ...............A-4 Astrology ...............P*7 Bridge.......F-7 Crossword Puzzle .......F-15 Comics ..................F«7 Editorials ...........:...A4 ON THE WAY HOME — Apollo 11 astronauts Edwin E-Aldrin, Michael Collins and Neil Armstrong -(front to back) walk past crowds of spectators 'on hand to welcome them as (they left the lunar receiving laboratory at die Manned Space- craft Center, Houston, Tex., last night. The astronauts quickly left the scene Of. their confinement and headed for their homes, where their families were waiting for them. , u JMjfE OVER PACES Cooler I f*| fl A (Details Paga t) - M - ■ m M M PONTIAC PRESS r t PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1969 ^ VOL. 127 - NO. 159 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ' uniTED^piiess*International “80 PAGES IQc FOUR OF FIVE MASS-MUBDER VICTIMS - These are ____ _ _ --------- four of the five victims of the mass murder that took place and Jay Sebring, hairdresser. Also slain was Voyteck Fry- at the Bel Air, Calif., home of Roman Polanski, Polish film kowski, Polish screen producer and writer and friend of Po- director. The four are (from left) Stephen Earl Parent; Sharon, lanski. Parent, 18, is apparently a friend of William E. Garret-Tate, Polanski’s actress-wife; Abigail Folgef, coffee heiress; son, 19, who was booked on suspicion of murder in the case. Bizarre LA Killings Similar, Say Police City Fire Chief Seeks Reversal Poverty- War Brunt Shifted From OEO LOS ANGELES (At - Police pushed a manhunt today for . a suspect in the bizarre killings of actress Sharon Tate and four others five miles from where a couple was found slain later in a similar style. “There is a similarity, but whether it’s the sgme suspect or a copycat, we just don’t know,” said Police Sgt. Bryce Houcbin." . (it ★ * * -c, The man and woman were stabbed many times in their Hollywood home, Houchin said, the man’s head.wrapepd in a sheet, the woman’s in a nightgown. In the slayings at Miss Tate’s home Saturday, one victim’s head was covered with a cloth. The latest victims were identified as Leno A. LaBianca, 44, reportedly owner of a small local supermarket chain, and his wife, Rosemary, 38. Police said their bodies were discovered in nightclothes last night. THROATS WERE SLIT Houchin said the two were “stabbed numerous times and their throats were slit.” McCauley said the word “death” was written hi an undisclosed substance on the living room wall. Other officers earlier said the words “death to pigs” were scrawled in blood on a refrigerator door. ★ ★ ★ At Miss Tate’s'plush Bel Air home, the word “pig” was written in blood on the frontdoor. Earlier, police said they were seeking a man whose name “came up in conversation” with a 19-year-old caretaker arrested in a guest cottage behind Miss Tate’s $200,000 home when the bodies were found. BOOKED IN CASE Slim, tousle-haired William Garretson was booked on suspicion of murder, but Detective ' Lt. Robert Helder said physical - evidence to link him to the crime had not been found. Garretson was given a lie detector test yesterday. Sgt. Jesse Buckles said homicide detectives were “not entirely satisfied” with his answers. ★ ★ An autopsy showed that Miss Tate, 26, honey-blonde wife of film director Roman Polanski, died of multiple stab -wounds of the back and chest. She was eight months pregnant. Also killed were: • Jay Sebring, 26, hair stylist and former boyfriend 'of Miss Tate, dead of stab wounds in the. body. A rope tied around his neck was linked to Miss Tate’s neck, put did not contribute to the death of either. . • Abigail Folger, 26, brunette socialite of the Folgej coffee family, of San Francisco. She was dead of stab wounds in the chest. • Voyteck Frykowski, 37, ^Polish screen producer and writer, a friend of Polanski, dead of-stab wounds in the body and extremities and a gunshot wound in the back. f Steveti Parent, 18, of suburban El Monte, apparently a friend of Garretson, dead of multiple gunshot wounds in the chest. The bodies, strewn about the estate in fashionable Benedict Canyon, were found by a maid- Pontiac Fire Chief Charles D. Marion has gone into Oakland CouijtyCircuit Court to seek a reversal of a ruling'by the Civil Service Commission, which ordered reinstatement with back pay of two suspended black firemen. A show-cause hearing has been set for 9 a.m. Wednesday before Judge William H. Beer. Mercury Will Fall Into 50s Tonight The weatherman calls lor mostly sunny spies today and warm temperatures codling off considerably tonight. Today’s higb»will be slightly warmer than yesterday, reaching 8ft to 85 degrees, and tonight the mercury will dip down to the middle 50s. W ★ ★' Tomorrow’s weather will be partly cloudy with a high of 82 to 87 and there is little change for Wednesday’s outlook. Winds.today are light and variable. Precipitation probabilities Jn per cent are: today 10, tonight and tomorrow 20. The low reading in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. today was 57. The two were suspended by the chief for noncompliance to a personal appearance code, in having too-long moustaches. * * * The commission ordered the men returned to duty and full payment restored after a hearing Aug. 1. Fireman Frederick Milton is owed $780 and Daniel Sowell $585. SEEKS REVERSAL However, Chief Marion Is seeking to have the order reversed. ifc ★ • ★ Deputy City Attorney Alger Strom said back pay to the men will be stayed during tlft court proceedings. In his suit, Marion has charged the commission with improper procedure. He said the city was not allowed to complete its case. ★ ★ ’ ★ During the civil service hearings, fire fighters Milton and Sowell claimed Marion suspended them because of an earlier dispute over an “Impeach Judge Crockett” petition that had been signed by the fire chief. ★ ★ * Attorneys for Milton and Sowell con-, tended Marion had no legal right to enforce a unilateral policy such as his grooming code because he had not conferred first with the fire fighters’ union. Milton and Sowell are the only two black firemen on the 147-man force. SAN CLEMENTE, Calif. (UPI) -President Nixon, continuing what he regarded as a badly needed repair job on the machinery of federal government, today shifted much of the operating responsibility for the War on Poverty away from the Office of Economic Op* portunity (OEO). Ostensibly the President was not attempting to downgrade OEO and its new director, Donald Rumsfeld. Nixon made it quite dear, however, that henceforth OEO is to be an “innovative agency” with most of its operating responsibilities transferred to other departments. ★ ★ ★ Rumsfeld was here today at the Summer White House. He planned to add his public comments to the Nixon statement during the day, No conflict between the two men was anticipated since Rumsfeld, a former Illinois Republican congressman, took the OEO job knowing of the President’s intentions. Later today the President was to send WILLIAM GARRETSON French Freeze Prices, Profits in Devaluation From Our News Wires PARIS — Devaulation of the franc took, effect today * and the French government froze prices and profits to give the beleaguered currency "what Finance Minister Valery Giscard d’Es-taine called “breathing space.”' Congress a special message detailing his program for sweeping reforms in the federal welfare program. He also scheduled high-level foreign policy disciissions. * * '* Nixon’s changes in the structure of OEO were laid out in a public statement instead of a Congressional message since the altertations did not require HbuSe and Senate approval.. Specifically, the chief executive announced, concerning OEO: • Creation of a new Office of Program Development. • Revamping end strengthening the Office of Planning, Research and Evaluation. • Strengthening and upgrading the Office of Health Services and the Office of Legal Services. • Creation of a new Office of Program Operations to improve the administration of activities in the field. What-* this adds up to is Niton’s determination that OEO be more of a laboratory in the field of social sciences than an operating, administrative agency . in the war against poverty, As he explained: “Following the belief that the Office of Economic Opportunity should be an Innovative agency, this administration has already moved the Job corps to the Department of Labor and the Head Start program to the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. In addition, I am suggesting in my manpower training proposals (to be sent Congress tomorrow) that several OEO-funded manpower programs which have been administered by the Department of Labor be transferred (permanently) to that department, These are ongoing programs which have passed the trial state and should now be ,* seen as parts'of our established manpower strategy.” ★ ★ . w Nixon envisions the trimmed-down OEO as a vehicle for “pioneering” in social sciences, turning over programs proven successful to other departments. Attacks May Presage End of Lull ms N. Viet Troops Kill 38 Yanks it Didn't Pay to Go Away CHICAGO (UPI) — Spencer Webster returned from vacation and noticed his two-car brick garage was missing. He found thieves had made off with, the furniture, plumbing and electrical fixtures, mailbox and even the kitchen sink in his three-story apartment. * ★ His neighbors said three men pulled up in a truck'and began removing the contents of the apartments and taking down the brick garage; They worked from 8 a.m. until twilight for three days. it * ★ * Because the area is an urban renewal tract the neighbors figured the wofkinen were from the city. SAIGON (AP) — Thirty-eight •Americans were killed and 144 wounded in fierce attacks that North Vietnamese troops launched against U.S. forces along the Cambodian, Laotian and demilitarized zone frontiers yesterday, military spokesmen said today. The toll of American war dead was the largest reported during any 24-hour period since a lull began in the fighting June 18. ★ ★ ★ U.S. military analysts indicated that the stepped-up attacks could presage the fall campaign that American officers expect. There was new apprehension along the demilitarized zone with the disclosure that North Vietnamese troops fighting the UJS. Marines there over the past four days were from a fresh regiment. FALL CAMPAIGN “The intelligence we have received from all four,corps tactical zones indicates the enemy is preparing for a fall rampaign to be conducted during August and September,” one analyst Said. “Although there is some variation in the timing for the campaign, the enemy holidays of Aug. 18, Sept. 2 and Sept. 23 have been mentioned by defectors and ■ documents.” * ★ * Fighting yras reported near the Cambodian border northwest of Saigon, just below the central sector of the demilitarized zone, on two sides of Hamburger Hill beside tlfir Laotian border, and in the populous coastal lowlands south of Da Nang. Three more American helicopters were h ignt 2 shot down, two during a fight 28 miles southeast of Da Nang and the third 50 miles west of Da Nang. Two crewmen were killed and two were wounded. The losses raised to 2,895 the number of American helicopters reported lost in the war. * * * U.S. headquarters also reported 15 enemy rocket and mortar attacks from 8 a.m. yesterday to 8 a.m. today, 11 of them against U.S. troops or bases. Seven Americans were killed and 36 wounded. The number of rocket and mortar attacks were nearly double the daily average of eight two weeks ago and was up by five from the daily average of 10 last week. Communiques reported that American forces had killed at least 152 North Vietnamese and Vietcong in a dozen fights classed as significant by the U.S. Command. Out of Isolation, Astronauts Relax Before Celebrations SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) -Freed from three weeks of isolation; the Apollo 11 astronauts relaxed with their families today before plunging into a hectic round, of celebrations of their historic moon-landing. ★ ★ * Neil A. Armstrong, Edwin E. Aldrin Jr. and Michael Collins sped straight to their homes last night when released from quarantine quarters. Only hours before, doctors' had said they could find no evidence of alien germs or infection from the astronauts’ lunar contact. * * * A waiting world was ready to heap the pioneers with honors in the weeks ahead. The whirlwind schedule statrs tomorrow when Armstrong, Aldrin and Collins hold a news conference “here to report on their daring mission. That afternoon, a downtown Houston luncheon will be attended by nearly 700 space workers. TICKER TAPE PARADE On Wednesday, the astronauts and -their families fly to New York for a ticker tape parade and an appearance at the United Nations, followed in , the afternoon by another parade in Chicago. The day winds up in Los Angeles at a gala state dinner with President Nixon as host, On Saturday, they will be honored by a Houston parade followed by a Texas-sized party in the Astrodome. In the weeks that follow, they’ll be welcomed in many cities in the United States and will appear before Congress. There also isialk of a world tour. The. moon men got a preview of what lies ahead when they were cheered a * mobbed by about 300 space workers a they emerged from quarantine night. * ,, Mars Can Wait-Space Unit Head WASHINGTON (AP) - The chairman of the House Space Committee said today the Uhited States should not commit itself at this time to a landing on Mars. Rep. George P. Miller, D-Calif., said a decision about a manned trip to Mars should be delayed for 5 to 10 years while new technology is developed' and more experience is gained in space flight. V-,' ♦ A ★ But that time, he said, there is a chance Russia will join the United States in making a Mars flight an international expedition. “It is worthy waiting a few years to see if this will he possible,” said Miller in a speech prepared for House delivery. . • * A ★ Coming from the chairman of the committee that will have to authorise *'funds for any space program, Miller’s words should carry great weight with administrating planners. ,\ mi mo ■» THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1969 Chief Justice Urges Prison Reform §1*40 WARREN E. BURGER DALLAS (API - Chief Justice Warren E. Burger called today for broad reform of America's prison system. Burger urged the American Bar Association to lead a re-examination of prisons, parole and probation systems and the education and training of prisoners. ★ ★ * "We must explore more fully a limited confinement and work release," he said, in a prepared speech at the 92nd annual meeting of the ABA. "We must explore teaching methods adapted to the abnormal psychology of the habitual offender. We must search for new incentive programs to permit reduction of sentences for those who will educate and train themselvek in skills which give a man pride and identity.” ‘A BETTER WAY' Burger said he had not settled on any particular program of reform. "AU I have,” he said, “is the profound conviction, which I believe most judges of this country share, that there must be a better way to do it.” More than 5,000 lawyers and judges are attending the ABA’s annual meeting. Among*the major topics to be considered ii\. sessions through Thursday are lawyer ^tilled, the system of compensating auto accident victims and strikes in the transportation industry. William T. Gossett, 420 Goodhue, Bloomfield Hills, the ABA president, opened the meeting with the warning that the rule of law may face "graver and more pervasive danger” now than at any time since the Ovil War. "The repetitious clamor for law and order is not enough,” he said fit his prepared speech. 'OBJECT IS JUSTICE’ “The object of both law and order is justice. Justice presupposes the right of all men freely to achieve the best and most within them,' subject only to the same right of others. "If that simple truth ever la forgotten or trampled upon or significantly diminished, the rule of law becomes merely a device, barren of meanihg, worthy of no respect and incapable of survival. "The law should be an avenue of progress and not a fence of restraint.” Gossett scored extremists on both ends of the political spectrum. He said they were advocating insurrection or repression in the name of free government. Senate to OK Gas-Arms Curbs WASHINGTON (DPI) — The Senate, with backing from the Pentagon, was expected to give quick approval today to the toughest set of restrictions on gas and germ warfare weapons ever written by Congress. Members planned to vote at 11 a.m. (Pontiac time) today on an amendment to the $20-billion defense procurement bill. The amendment sets up strict standards for the .transportation, storage and testing of deadly chemical and biological warfare (CBW) devices. The amendment was hammered out Friday by Pentagon officials and a half-dozen Senate CBW critics. Its passage was expected to hasten final Senate passage of the military hardware measure, containing funds for President Nixon’s Safeguard antiballistic missile system. Hie key provision of the amendment would prohibit open-air testing of lethal CBW agents if the Surgeon General determines it would be a public health hazard. CRITICS’CLAIMS CBW critics claim open-air testing killed 6,400 sheep in Utah when wind carried nerve gas away from the test range at Dugway. They also have cited the hospitalization of 24 U.S. military personnel in Okinawa recently after a CBW accident. Besides the testing restrictions, the amendment would: • Prohibit storage of lethal CBW materials outside the United States without notification to the country involved and without specific approval from the Secretary of State in writing to Congress. • Bar transportation of lethal CBW agents to or from military installations in the United States without permission from the Surgeon General. Except during a declared war, written notice to Congress would be required before lethal CBW agents are moved. • Prohibit entirely procurement of germ warfare delivery systems.' ★ ik ★ ' The CBW controversy has been a peripheral issue in the current fight over defense spending, and some members were surprised at the Pentagon’s readiness to accept the restrictions* It was believed last Wednesday’s near-rejection of the Safeguard antimissile plan hastened the Defense I)epartment’s readiness to compromise to prevent an all-out floor fight Over a sensitive diplomatic issue. Kennedy Case Request Near NEW BEDFORD, Mass. (AP) - Dist. Immediate Repayment Urged Nixon Pal, SB A Hit on Loan Atty. Edmund Dinis says he will ask this week for exhumation of the. body of Mary Jo Kopechne so that an autopsy can be performed. Dinis’ request to authorities i n Pennsylvania, where bliss Kopechne is buried, will {equine a court ruling. Miss Kopechne, 28, drowned July 18 when a car driven by Sen. Edward M. Kennedy went off a bridge and plunged into a tidal pond on Chappaquiddick Island off Martha's Vineyard. Kennedy, who did not report the accident until several hours after it happened, pleaded guilty to a charge of leaving the scene of an accident and received A suspended sentence of two months in jail. ★ * * • Dinis later ordered an inquest into Miss Kopechne’s death. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kopechne,. the dead girl’s parents, have been strongly opposed to exhumation of her body. Dinis said Sunday he had not spoken with the couple about the inquest and possible autopsy. WASHINGTON (UPI) - Charles (Bebe) Rebozo, confidant and traveling companion of President Nixon, has received special favors from the government and should be made to return an $80,000 government loan, House Banking Committee chairman Wright Patman said today. “From 1962 through the present, Mr. Rebozo has been a preferred customer of the Small Business Administration,” the Texas Democrat said in remarks prepared for a House speech. if it ★ "Time and time again, the Miami millionaire has received special favors from the agency even though SBA staff members strongly questioned the concessions bfeng made to Rebozo.” The loan Patman said should be canceled was made in 1962. Patman said Rebozo used .the money to purchase the Land Title Co., a rival firm to his Monroe Abstract and Title Co. ‘NO JUSTIFICATION’ "There can be no justification for SBA lending money to an individual under the The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Today mostly sunny and a little warmer, high 80 to 85. Tonight partly cloudy, lows 55 to 60. Tuesday partly cloudy, highs 80 to 85. Outlook for Wednesday: fair and cloudy, little temperature change. Winds light variable becoming southwest to south 8 to 14 mph Tuesday. Probabilities of precipitation: 10 per cent today, 20 per cent tonight and 20 per cent Tuesday. guise of a small businessman who then turns around and opens a bank,” Patman said. "Small Businessmen write to me complaining they can’t even get in to see . a banker; yet in the Rebozo chse, SBA is financing a banker an(l an investor while shutting out thousands of legitimate small businessmen.” Patman released a memo from his staff of investigators which said the circumstances surrounding the $80,000 loan were "strange.” The memo sa(d ''the files are filled with a vast majority Special Meeting for School Board A special meeting of the Pontiac Board of Education has been called for 7:15 p.m. tomorrow at fee board offices, 350 Wide Track. ★ W The purpose of the meeting is to consider plans for the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) Title I programs for 1969-70; .and to consider recommendations for employment of elementary principals for Whittier and Wisner schools for 1969-70. ★ ★ ESEA Title I programs are those designed to meet the needs of such children in attendance areas with high concentrations of low-income families, such as Project 100 (community schools programs). ofreasons why Mr. Rebozo should not have been given the loan in the first plqce...” i The memo also said that Thomas A. Butler, regional director in SBA’s Miami office^ “is a stockholder in the bank owned by Rebozo, and has also participated ir. other Rebozo ventures.” §9 It added "The roll that Mr. Butler has, played in the Rebozo loan appears on the surface to be morel than that of a disinterested SBA employe.” Israelis Claim Lebanon Raids TEL AVIV (AP) — Israeli jets pounded Arab guerrilla concentrations in the foothills of Mt. Hermon in Lebanon today, the army announced. The 30-minute attack followed a spate of 21 sabotage incidents in July linked to guerrillas encamped in Lebanon, a spokesman said. The warplanes struck at seven camps believed to belong to the A1 Fatah and A1 Saika guerrilla organizations, he said. It was Israel’s second air attack on Lebanese territory in two weeks. Israeli jets hit Arab bases in the same area July 30. 6 Children Die in Fire RUSSELLVILLE, Ark. UR - Six children died in a fire which destroyed a two-bedroom, frame house three miles south of here yesterday. JOHN DE CARLO CMU Official Gets OU Post A vice president at Central Michigan University has been named to the new post of assistant chancellor for professional performing arts at Oakland Univesity, it was announced today. John De Carlo, 42, vice president for public service at CMU, is expected to take his hew post Sept. 15. ★ ★ * , The Michigan State University Board of Trustees, which governs OU, approved the appointment at a special meeting Aug. 1. Neither OU or MSU authorities would disclose‘ De Carlo’s new salary as a matter of policy. . OU Chancellor Durward B. Varner said there is a need for a person to coordinate the management of the university’s continuing, and growing ventures in the performing arts. PRIMARY DUTIES “ De Carlo will primarily be working with the university’s Meadow Brook Music Festival and the Meadow , Brook Theatre. De Carlo has been vice president of CMU since 1966 and previously was an executive with Chrysler Corp. for the last 12 years, the last five as manager of Chrysler’s Community Affairs Department. * * * The Meadow Brook Festival, '''which started five years ago, now draws more than 100,000 persons per season. It features the Detroit Symphony Orchestra and outstanding guest artists. The theater, established under the direction of John Femald in 1966, alsot has grown rapidly. Advance ticket sales for the 1969-70 season are already approaching 10,000. Birmingham City Students Are Urged to Register Early BIRMINGHAM — Students enrolling in the Birmingham Public Schools for the first time are urged to register at their respective schools as soon as possible, a spokesman for the Birmingham Board of Education said. Hours for registration'in all elementary and secondary schools are 8:30 am. to 3:30 p.pi. daily. h it it Students enrolling in the junior and senior high schools will complete tests and work out a schedule of courses with the assistance of counselors who are now on duty at each school. Letters indicating registration dates and times have been mailed to all students returning to the Birmingham Public Schools. Students may contact thefr respective schools for further information. AREA SCHOOL " Parents whose children will be attending a Birmingham elementary school for the first time should contact the elementary school in their area. Kindergarten children must be five years old before Dec. 1,1969. All incoming seventh grade students at Barnum, Berkshire, Covington, Derby and West Maple junior high schools, and all 10th grade students at Groves and Seaholm high schools, are required, to have a physical examination .before participating in physical education activities. Students are urged to pick up their physical -education forms at their respective schools, prior to the opening of school Sept. 3. Mrs. Grace Nash, nationally known authority and clinician on the Kodaly and Orff techniques in elementary vocal music, will direct a two-day workshop for elementary vocal teachers Sept. 12-13 at Seaholm High School. Vocal music teachers in the Birmingham area .are invited to, participate. George V. Cripps, music coordinator for the Birmingham district, can be contacted for details and reservations. FRANKLIN - The Franklin Village Band,, directed by Dr. C. R. Lam, will present a concert at 3 p.m. at the LobrdeS Nursing Home, 2300 Watkins Lake, Waterford Township, this Sunday at 3 p.m. Upcoming appearances scheduled for the band include a 6:30 p.m. date Aug. 25 with, A1 Hirt at the Michigan State Fair and the annual Village Round-up parade at noon and a 1:30 p.m. concert on Labor Day. Plan Doesn't Fall Flat hong KONG (UPI) — They are in love but she cannot swim. So he tied her to a bicycle tire. Two refugees, a 25-year-old farmer and his girlfriend, 20, escaped from Communist China by swimming across a bay today. Moon Probe Returning JODRELL BANK, England ® — Zond 7, the,Soviet Union’s latest unmanned moon probe, swung around the back of the moon today and headed back toward earth, Jodrell Bank Observatory reported. W.l Wind Velocity 10 n Direction: Southerly Sun Outs Mondiy it 7:40 n,m. Sun rlMH Tuesday at 5:37%m. Moon sets Monday at 7:tS p.m. Moon rises Tuesday at 4:44 0.70. Downtown Temperatures tas recorded downtown) Highest temper etui. . Lowest temperature Mean temperature Weather: Mostly sunn; Sunday's Temperatures 73 49 Denver *1 57 Detroit LAKE CONDITIONS: St. Clair - West to 5 to 10 knots tonight. Fair. Huron — Variable . southerly, 8 to 15 knots tonight. Fair. Eifc northwest 10 to 15 knots today, becoming light .. „ .—,e City *0 7* (, 74 41 Lot Angeles 92 70 79 53 Mltmi Beach 89 79 01 50 NiW QrlMM 94 70 49 50 New York 04 47 PVSSHI 77 08 Omaha 08 47 Oscoda 73 49 Phoenix T06.88 Pension , 72 41 Pittsburgh 77 54 S. Sfe. Marie 49 45 St. Louis 84 43 Traverse C. 77 m t S. Lake City 99 77 Albuquerque 95 47 S, Francisco 75 .53 Atlanta * • 00 44 Seattle 49 59 Boston 77 05 Spokane 00 55 Chicago 74 05 Tucson ... 101 74 Cincinnati 79/57 Washington 04 44 northwest winds, 6 to 12 knots today, winds 6 to 12 knots, today, becoming Small-craft warnings in effect. Winds and variable. Partly cloudy tonight. Collins Is Linked to Another Slain Girl YPSILANTI (UPI) — John Norman Collins, who remains under maximum security in the7Washtenaw County Jail sifter being charged with the brutal slaying of the seventh girl in the string of coed murders, was reportedly linked to yet another of the earlier victims. A newspaper report published yesterday said the 22-year-old Collins was a frequent visitor at an apartment building that housed the fourth victim of ihe murder chain. * ★' 0 -.‘r-’' Collins, whose handsome, square-jawed looks give him a clean-cut collegiate image, often made appearances at an apartment just across the hall, from the , one in which Maralynn Skelton lived In an apartment- Complex between the university towns of Ypsilanti and Ann Arbor, the Detroit Free Press said. Police, however, said they would make no comment on the story. They also have refused to comment on reports that Collins was linked with two of . the other victims. A senior at Eastern Michigan University here, Collins was accused of first-degree murder in the strangulation death of Karen Sue Beineman, 18, a freshman at the same school. Miss Beineman’s nude, body, beaten so badly about the face she was unrecognizable, was found July 26 in a gully outside of Ann Arbor, home ot the sprawling University of Michigan. ” W ~ #» If1» Since his arrest, Collins, has also been linked with the strangling death of a girl in California. In a move Saturday to protect Collins’ Veteran Civic Servant Is Dead at 76 NATIONAL WEATHER — Showers are due tonight over parts of Kansas, New Mexico, Texas, Oklahoma, Nevada* Florida, the Great Lakes regions and the northwest corner of the country. A cool front is swooping down from Canada through Montana and North Dakota into the northern parts of Kansas and Missouri. ’ ■ WILLIAM F. KALWITZ William F. Kalwitz, one of the .most active volunteer civic servants to serve in Pontiao, died Saturday, He was 76. Service will be 1 p.m. .tomorrow at Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. ■ * ★ it .... ■ Surviving arc his wife, Genevera, and . three brothers. Named outstanding citizen in 1955 tor his many activities, Kalwitz of 112 Osceola retired as an official at GMC Truck and Coach Division in 1956. ____ ' member, 1953-1962. LONGEST STINT His longest stint of public service was nine years as a planning commission . Kalwitz came to Pontiac when General Motors set up the new plant in 1928. During World War II and the Korean war be was administrator up government controls when the plant turned out military trucks and amphibious vehicles. The post he held till his retirement. ' *1 ★ f , 1 , , Prominent in Chamber at Commerce safety programs, he helped found Pontiac Central High School’s first drivertraining class. * Kalwitz was active in school.affairs' and ran unsuccessfully for. the school board in 1940. He was* president of the Oakland County Citizens League, a.group which demanded and got a grand jury . investigation of gambling in the mid 1940s. During World War II, he was on the . citizens committee for Navy recruitment, commanded -the civil defense . council and seryed on the drift advisory board. ' \He was a member of the First Presbyterian Church pnd was part ex-> ecutive jjhrector of dvfe research. right to. a fair trial while protecting the public’s right to be informed about the slayings, Michigan. Supreme Court Chief Justice Thomas Brennan a p p o i n t e d Michael Devine, chief administrative officer* of the Supreme Court, to act as liaison between tht^ Washtenaw County courts and tiie press during Collins’s preliminary ' examination and possible triad. ' , f . *|, . * Brennan, w h o was attending the American Bar Association,national convention ibis weekend in Dallas, said Devine would be assigned to the courts and the communications media “to make sure there is an adequate dissemination of the news.” Some legal scholars had raised the fear feat pretrial publicity could result in any verdict being overturned on constitutional grounds. Sold A Van Load of Household Goods “Our Press Want Ad did a fine'job for us. Sold’everything to the first caller”. Mrs. F. C. PRESS WANT ADS go a long way to solve your “wart” or “don’t .want” needs fast and without fuss. Cost very little, too. Dial 3344981 or 332-8181 j 11—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1969 Black Studies Are Expanded g&ANCING BOOKS — It’s not quite what their accounting professor had in mind, but these three girls (from left) Debra Longstaff, Suzanne Teague and Mary Muse are “using their heads” for balancing their bodes. Debra of Clarfcston High School wears a graphic plaid ensemble from Albert’s by Ellen Tracy. . Her blouse, with exaggerated sleeves and collar, is in forest green. Suzanne’s cuffed wool shorts are topped with a white turtleneck and gray flannel vest. A bouncy beret tops the pert Waterford Kettering Pontiac Pxssi Photo junior’s outfit from Montgomery Ward. Then comes Central Michigan University coed Mary in a navy pant suit. Mary’s double-breasted jacket and gentlyflaired pants, worn with shell sweater-blouse, are from Peggy*a>Bloomfield Fashion Shop. All stores are at the Pontiac Mall. The girls are posing at the entrance fountain to Oakland Community College’s Orchard Ridge campus, the background for several Back-to-School fashion pictures. Pontiac School District secondary students can look forward to revamped, expanded soda! studies courses this fall, especially in the areas of black history and black culture. In seventh-grade geography, a git on Africa has been expanded from last year’s unit to Include up to three or four weeks study on African geography, according to Wesley i, director of secondary education for Pontiac Schools. * •* ★ The anthropology unit written last year for seventh-grade geography in Pontiac Schools has been expanded and rewritten this summer, in order to put b greater emphasis on the “commonplogy” of man, Maas said. / For eighth-grade Michigan history, three additional units written by school district teachers will be incorporated into the material for study. DEALS WITH POVERTY The first unit will deal with poverty and will include a of both economic and soda] conditions in poverty areas, as well as a study of tire concepts [of poverty and affluence. Another unit will concentrate on cities, including the study of urban power, urbanization, housing and crime in the streets. ditions that caused the riots,” Maas said. V; Ninth-grade U.S. hlatory will be different, hopefully tills fall, too, though perhaps not as noticeable as in other courses. Teachers will be given materials for use and incorporation of information in the regular dasiwork, such as the problems of being black, black experiences, slave trade, abolitionists, etc. This material will not be taught as a separate unit or course, nor will students have access to the ‘‘teacher material,” other than what the teacher presents In class. ★ * ★ High school civics courses in Pontiac secondary schools will also include a unit in Asian this fall. Included in this unit is a study of the influence of Gandhi’s philosophy of nonviolence, and his effect Martin Luther King Jr., Maas said. The only new course to be offered this fall i n Pontiac Schools is an elective black literature course for any high school student. It will include literature both by and about black people. The books have been ordered for the Course, Maas said. OCC Course Curly or Straight by La> Vewps Only with scissors can you get the proper angle cut for the SHAG or any good hair cut. We at La Vergne’s scissor cut. 0Ctt lJerque d yJ*luroil Street Safon. 1062 West Huron Phone 681-1330 Located only 2 blocks from Pontiac Mall, ° n^xt to China City Restaurant the hot new 350 Scrambler • TOO MPH *5 SPEED Honda 450 Super Sport 25 North Saginaw Street Telephone 332*2501 AND SERVICE FE 3-7102 ANDERSON SALES 1645 S. TELEGRAPH ROAD PONTIAC 2 New Schools About to Open in Lapeer District Two new schools will open this fall to students for the first time hi, the Lapeer School District. The new Clover Elementary School on Lake Nepessing Road will house 250 of the district’s estimated 3,400 elementary school pupils. ★ ★ ★ Some 300 students will attend the new junior high school on Oregon. A total of 918 students is expected at the two .Junior highs this fall. The district’s total enrollment is expected to be more than 6,000, up from 5,700 at the close of the 1968-69 school year. Supt. Clyde Schickler reports 220 teachers will report for assignments- at the district’s 13 schools. Ancient Aid Makes Math Fun PITTSBURGH (AP) - An ancient Oriental instrument has made learning mathematics easier, faster and more fun for ome grade school children. It’srfne abacus, a calculating device made up of a board with wire rods on which colored beads slide back and forth. ★ ‘ - -‘they love them,” says Patricia Rupert, a fourth grade teacher. “TTiey love the colors and the noises it makes. Click, dick, click. Like a baby rat-tie,”. ' •'•r ;■'■■■ ... The simple device is used in teaching new mathematics at the Glade View School in suburban Lower Burrell. The school’s 400 children use 60 abacuses, made at home by one child’s father. The children are between 6 and 9. The abacus is .used also in a number of other schools around the country. Principal Lawrence Murphy says the abacus is particularly helpful in teaching children learn by feeling.- ★ ★ * ‘Some of them leSm from seeing. Some learn -from reading. Others leatn by manipulation,” he says. 'When you have children who learn by touch, you .c a n g e t than to learn much easier with the abacus,” he continues. PLACE VALUE Murphy' says the abacus, which dates back to medieval times in the Western world, is also useful in teaching children the concept of “place valute.’’ Place value, part of the vocabulary of modern mathematics which seems “ baffle the older generation, refers to the differences in the 10s, 100s, 1,000s, 10,000s and so “If you give them an abacus,” Murphy says, “they can count 10 beads, one at a time. After they are told it’s 10, they take one bead of a different color and substitute it for the 10 beads.” Abacuses build mathematical peed, too, says Murphy. 'Working a paper becomes boring for a whole group of youngsters,” he" says. “In the classroom they calculate a problem and when they are done they hold their abacuses up in the air.” . The United States minted 2-cent coins from 1864 to 1873 and 3-cent coins from 1865 to 1889. HONDA makes the school scene! SEE OVER 200 M0Y0RCYCIES ON DISPLAY! We want the students to know about the complexity and numbers of problems in the cities. Cities should be the best place to live because of the variety of opportunities and experiences available, yet there is a flight from the city,' and young people should know why,” Maas said. The third unit in this coming year’s eighth-grade Michigan history will deal exclusively with the 1967 Detroit riot. The course material draws heavily (Hi the report of the National Advisory dommission on Civil Disorders. During the study of this unit, youngsters will discuss concepts * revolution, black power and racism. ■We want to give the students the tools to understand what happened in Detroit and what can be done to alleviate con- for Practical Nurses Slated Lovemdking Glass 'Tops' Short - Course Stress Is on Responsibility COLUMBIA UP) — When a ‘short course” on lovemaking began at the University of South Carolina, students.flocked to the lectures out of curiosity. What they found was an gynecologist, Dr. W. M. Bryan Jr., who was determined to teach them “responsibility in sex as well as how to enjoy it.” ■. ★ ★ ':r The lovemaking course was the most popular of over 100 unusual courses offered to the students for the first time last semester. More than 200 students attended the lectures. Other courses offered were bartending, witchcraft; alchemy and the influence of the Baptist Church on state legislation. Students get no credit for them ' instructors receive up pay. SAME BASIC MORALS. Dr. Bryan feels that today’s youth have the same basic morals as his own generation but like to think they are the first of the “orgasm-oriented” society. ’If people want to. have intercourse, I tell the students ” want thtem UP be responsible, and I insist on dove. I want to put a little sensem sex.” Students Learn Indian Language, Break Barrier GALLUP, N. M. OB — Navaho chants apo staccatic Navaho conversation in Gallup high school are beginning to break the sound barrier that has long inhibited closer contact between the white and" Indian populations in this area. ft is believed this is the only high school in the natibn to offer Nl bourse in a dative American Indian language. A key factor in the program is the use of 12 Nayaho-speak-ing students as partners for 10 non-speaking meipbers enrolled in the course. A practical-nurse program will again be offered b y Oakland Community College in September. Funded under the provisions of the Manpower Development and Training Act (MDTA), the one-year program seeks to develop practical-nursing skills for both male and female unemployed and underemployed persons. ★ ;*■ * Students completing the-program are eligible to be licensed as practical nurses in Michigan. Those interested in obtaining further information a b o u qualifications for admittance may contact the Pontiac, office of the Michigan Employment Security Commission (MESC) or the Royal Oak MESC office. DO YOU KNOW Terry We do! Tony wondorod in ths other day, and trial That's hit pictur*. That big 750 ee biko « sura footed, and smooth at silk. Ask Tarryl PfiPPY’ corn. Sweat, s-dt. bag Cucumbers, pill Site, vy bu.......... Cucumbers. (Heart, bu. . Cucumbart, Pickle Slit. Vj bu. ■ Dill, dt. bch............... . .. Eggplant, bu......................... Eggplant, long type, pk. bikt...... kohlrabi, dt. bch....... Onions, Green, dt. bch............... Ontona, Dry, SO-lb. bag ............. Pari lay, Curly, dt.bch. ............ I, dt. bch. . Pepper*, Sweet, bu. Potatoes. SO-lb. bag . Radishes. Rad, dt. bch. ... Radishes, While, dt. bch. . Rhubarb, dt. bch............ Squash, Atom, bu........... AlrRedr. ■ AlcenAlu l.i AllagLud 2.1 AllegPw •' AilladCh 1.21 AllledStr 1.41 Allis Chaim Alcoa 1.80 kin 68% 4 AMBAC ,S0 Amer Hall . Cabba m LIlfUCK AND ORKINS ---IP RRR - IM4 BMh 33^— H Am Alrlln .00 . xtt 27 27 27 * tZ ■x 22 33% 33% 33% 3 50 50 .$0 7 47% 47Vd 47% + V* 47 27% 27%’ 27V* — % 26 30% 30% 30% + % 1 29% ■ 29% 20% l» 2 1.M Am Con 2.20 liSJ? Eicarola, tH Escarole, B AmNatGas I AmPhot A Smalt I Am Std 1 Lettuce, Head, bu. .... Lettuce, Head, dt. .... Lettuce, Romalna, bu, . Mvttgtd. bb. ...... ... Sorrel, bu......... Archban 1.60 ArmeoSt l.'«0 1? 38% lift *1% • Poultry and Eggs DETROIT (AP) —JUSDAL-Egg price! paid per dozen Thursday by tlrii receiver*. (Including U.S.): Grade A lumbo 48-52 ,■ extra large 44-471 Etlei Chem ^ Altai ,Corp *“6 1.20 Avnat mc .40 26 .14% 14% 14% + BabckW 1 36 day: wholesale selling prices unchange t] score AA 67.444: 92 A 47.444: 90 unquoted. Eggs: prices paid delivered to Chicago % to 9 tower: so per cent or *-**“-grade A whiles 39-42; 37-38; itenoards Beckman .50 i medium * Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (AP) - (USOA)—Wednesday closing llypitock: Hogs 200: U.S. 1-3 IDO-219 lbs. borrows J gjlls 27.25-27. " — ___iCas .25b BolseCasc wl Borden 1.20 ■irgW— •” 1st M 400 tbs. sows 23.50-24.25: 2-9 4 21.7523.50. ___________________tixed good a; 30-30.50. . -.. - , Sheep 200; cholct and prime 90-100 lbs, spring slaughter lambs 20.50-30.S0: cull to good slaughter ewos 7-11. DETROIT (AP)—(USDA)-Egg prices paid per dotan Wednesday by first receivers (Including U.S.): Grade A lumbo ----------------------- largo 43-40; 51-53%; < medium 39-40; s CHICAGO LIVESTOCK ----- -Jeady. Instances 25 higher; talrly active; 1-2 109-229 lb butchers 27.75-20.00; 39 head sorted around 210 lbs at 28.25; 1-1 200-240 lbs 27.25-27.50; 2-3 100-290 lbs 26.79-27.29; wolghts over 290 lbs very scarce; tew lots 3-4 310-325 lbs 25.00; sows steady; telrly active; 1-3 330 lbs 24.25-25.00; 1-3 400-490 lbs 29.75-24.50; 2-3 450-500 tbs 21.00-23.73; 2-3 500-550 lbs 22.50-23.25; 2-3 550-600 lbs 21.75-22.75. Cattle 200; calves none; slaughter fleers and halters scarce, supply largely slaughter cows active/mostly 50 higher; lew loads Steady; pert load standard and tow good 1,200 lb Holstein 21.00; utility and commercial cows 21.00-22.50; tew high dressing utility 22<75-23.00; canrtars and cuttara i2.00-21.S0; utility and com-marclsl bulls 25.00-27.50. Sheep 100; small supply spring slaugh-" ter lambs 50 higher; few lots choice and prime 100-110 ib spring slaughter lambs 30.50; smell lot good and choice 80100 lbs 24.50-22.00. 244 15% 13% 13% - ArkLGes 1.70 AtlasCorp wt Barnes Eng BrascenLt la , Brit Pet 34g 38 17' 8/5-16 0 15-14—1-14 HoernerW .02 20 8. 27% - Husky Oil .30 134 14% 15% 16% 4 kaiser In .40f 102 20%, 12% 20 shares at 34%, off %; and Pan, American World Airways* 4,900 shared at 16Vi, unchanged. Opening prices included: The New York Stock Exchange Farm-Subsidy Limit Pushed Won't Bow to Senate This Time, Two Insist ' ' ^ WASHINGTON (AP) - Two House Republicans remain adamant in their drive to get limitations on farm subsidy payments this year. . In fact, Reps. Paul Findley of Illinois, and Silvio O- Conte of Massachusetts carry around printed motions to be ready for prompt action when the now deadlocked issue arises again. Seles' ‘ .... (hds.) High Lew Lest Chg. —A— 10 52 68 41 60% Addrei Adml 30 36% 34% 34% — < XU. 12% 12% 12% - 24 26 25% 25% - .28 10 26 24 i1 68% 4 I 17% 17% 17% s 1.41 ’ 15 56% Si% 56% — i 24 37% 37% 64 47^ 453/4 45% —2* , -_J) $2 V6 52 Vo 17 23 Vo 2234 22^4 — •] 31 4444 44% 44% — 1 7 30% 30% 30% ... H 21,4 1, r » 41% -f ' 60 110% 109% 110% 1 26 26 26% — 1 I 25 25% 25% — \ 25 155% 155 155% - Gulf Oil 1.50 138 36* Stiff L; Nit I (hd».) High Low Lalt Chg. I 128 36V4 361 36 — % 4 23% 23% 23% — % 35 21%r 21 21>/4 — Vi —n— 4 58% 50% 50% 41 23V * “ 23 +3 34% 34% 34% - 1 3 10% 10% 10% + —1% Honeywl 1.30 I 34% 34% 34% + 9 27% 27% 27% + Ideal Basic 1 111 ‘Can* 1.50 Imp Cp Am (NA Cp 1.40 IngerRend 2 Inland stl 2 10 §i% 31% 31% * % ,5 13% 13% 13% SouNGas 1.40 Sou Pec 1.10 Sou Ry 2.80a X3 47% 47% 47% + % SperryR ,35g 178 43% 42% 43% 4 Squared .80 17 20% 10% 10% — % St Brand 1.50 fltTkollsman StOII I nd 2.30 StQIINJ 2.70g StdOllOh 2.70 $1 Packaging StauffCh 1.00 SterlDrug .70 StevgnsJ 2.40 StudeWprth I Sun Oil 1b SurvyFd .80o Swift CO .40 * 59% 59% 99% — I 71% 70% 71 X53.102% 101% 102% 4 4 11% 11% 11% . 7 38% 38% 38% - 19 36% 34% 34% . 17 45 44% - 1 »%.j®% 30% . 51 330% 330 330 —3’, IntNIck 1.20a 30 19% 29 45 14% 14% .... 13 34% 34% 34% 4 p 1.50 10 30% 30% 30%-9 inn TAT .95 41 40% , 35% 35% 35% -1 20% 20% 20% -I 52%, 51% 52% .. Kelier Al l Kan GE 1.36 KanPwL 1.11 U .so 3 32% 32% 32% 4 % 10 124% 124 124% 43 x7 23% 23% 23% ~ % 1 29 29 29 2 28% 21% 201 —K— 15 33 28 - % I 23% 23% 23% - % 3 -20% 20% 20% - 12 15% 15% 15% 41 2 29% 29% ,29% - 1 ' 3 40% 40% 40% 4 1 7 19% 09% 89% - < 7 67V — 7 34% 34 0 41 .75 3 21% 21% 21% 6 45% 45% 45% — Is” My 1.20 .-unswk ,07g BucyEr 1.20 Rudd Co .80 15 44% 43% 43% 5 27 2? 27 ... 2 24% 24% 24g ~ % x4 21% 21% 21% -v% 12 10% 18% t0% -» % I 32 32 32 7 10% 10% 10% ■ 6 33% 33% 33% — % 27 130% 137% 137% 4- % Ctl Flnenl ----PSP 1.10 CHIPS Bd. CaroPLi 1.42. .arrlerCp .40 CastltCke .60 20 25 * 24% 25 — % 9 29% 29% 29% — % 29 40 47% 47% Cent SW 1.00 7 34% 34% 34% - 6 40 40 40 - 14 23% 23% 23% . 14 9 9n- 1 26% 24% 24% .. ChIPneuT 2 Chris Ctt .40 cfiTIn'l.OO Cities Sve 2 I 13 12% 12% — ClevEIII CocaCol CoIgPr1 CololnisL 1.60 9 37% 13 - 23 26'A Con Edit l so , UfH 43 ContMot .V6p 2 20J loot Qll 1.50 ♦ fti m 4m 4734 29 29/f , ■ r ^ 2 33% 33% 33% 7 44% 44% 44% | " 41% 41% — -- . 20% 20% — % 20 3ft ■ Control Data 'orGW 2.50a /oxBdces 50 CPC Inti 1.70 CrpwCPI 1.511 Crown Cork “’wnCork wl I 33%. 33% 33% + Curflss-Wrt l Den Rlv 1.20 Dart Ind ,30b DaycoCp 1.14 DaytnPL 160 3 13% 13% 13% + 2 19 19 «9 — —D— , 5 17% 17% .17% + ' ,5 23% - )iaSham 1 Disney -30t DowChm 2 “ esslnd l. duPont 2.50g >uq Lt 1.66 )yna Am .40 39 124% 123% 124% — % I 37 37 39., +. m Irfl&s Mohwk Oaf* 28 32% 31% 31% -1, NewPark Mn 13 8 72 34% , 3 4 33 3 20 52% ! Technico .40b 4 1* 17% It Wn Nuclear » 12 11% 11% Copyrighted by Tbe'Associated Prei I 47% *7% Ml, + % Treasury Position Ford Mot 2-40 I ForMcK" .75 I FrMp$dl 1-60 j FruehCp 170 5 EVi 26Vf 26m - ■ [ 1909 compared to Aug. 6, I960' (in collars): *™nC* 4,810,*399,372.26 YJte^94,121 A3 14,404,430,41(1.4? Withdrawal* fiscal year 21,388A80.359.41 Total dabt I 21,012,789,011.37 357424,473,925.88 351-887,066,391.62 *“mJ67J09A4J.M 10,364,394,759/4 . J(-lnclude* 435.412,19 “ Jecl to statutory limit. Noon N»W York _ . 26% — W 9% 35% 35% + ! —G— ' ** , 28 51% 50% 51% ■ / • • | 18% lt% %% . -)i snC^ltc'12.60 ■n Mills .08 54 83% 03% I 29 30% 30% , ! 102 73% B Gene sCo 1,40 ettyOII .38g 5 57H 34 34% 34% — % 24 19% 10% 10% - “■ 2 32 32 32 M 39 47% 47% 4734 — % 5 3{% 3lf L “-' SSSSSr ' J3 35 17%' » |f% + 21% 31 si* ■:+ % 7 15% 15% 1»% • I 45% .45% *% —% SwnOnit .90 GmenGnt .94 ffimeund 1 '79 27% 27 27% 23 10% 18% 11% ■ AS.2$%"22%. 25% — %l 16 48% 47% 2 34% .34% r-L— - 10 19»A 19 10 SAW 866 4 4766 47 V» Tt1 5 9 4, 35Va 35«/4 351 U »fy/6 33’/a *F Va Un Pac Cp 1 UnlonPaclr 3 Unlroyal .70 UnltAlrc 1.00 Unit Cp .70g Un Fruit 1.40 .. Unit MM 1.30 »/l^5SGypsm 3a US Indust .45 USPIpa 1.20 •*- ->Tych v84 51 42W 42V6 42’/6 + Uvingstn OH 17 966 966- lM>lrMA 1 on v6t 9U/i 9S ... LoneSGa 1.12 18 19V4 6 1466 1666 1666 - —M— 1 3 15% 15% 15% 15 28% > 4% 45% — % Mar Mid MartinM MavDStr McDonnD ill 14 20% M% j I 23% 23% 23% —. MobllOII 2.20 Mohasco 1.10 Monsan 1.30 ----tDUt 1.68 19% 19% 19% . 2 31% 31% 31% - Nat Bite 2.20 Na*® it Fual l 16 *28 28 M, V4 81 ty 2866 2866 —N— 8 48Va 48’6 48V6 x3 69V» 69V6 69’/6 26 132,/> 131V. 13116 -l7/4 36 v|| b-b- Nat Genl .20 26 —'Vk NatGyps 1 Natlnd .46. NatLead .85h -. Nat Steel 2.50 Nat Tea .80 Netomai .25 NEngEl 1.48 Newmnt 1.04 NlagMP 1,10 ;. 28 Va - 6 32 3 -S » 3 45% 451 X3 14 ,131- - 90 10 70% 80 13 25 if 16 W 45%,- 1J%°-I 28% 28% 17 18% 18 11 88% 3 30% 20% 20% - 6 34% 34% 34% + | .45 72 25V* 24H 25 — 6 43 42% 42% + 243 34% 34% 349 22 25% 25%- 25V. 16 21% 20% 20% — % 8 20 20 20 11 27% 27% -/27% 12 24% 24V. 24% 14 44 43% 43% Xl4 36% 36% 34% 1* 7L- 72 72 —P— 14 34% 35% 35% - 16 W% 27% 27% - 43 27%' 27% 27% — 5 21% 21 21% 3 20% 20% 20% -1- 49 15% 15% 15% — 116 15% 15% 15% + 23 27% 27% 27% ... 28 32% 32% 32% ... 6 21% 21% 21% Panniun .80 . PtpsICo 1 Perfect Film I 45% 45% I 17% 17% 17% •• ‘ •>■"•11% PhtlpsO 1.90 Phlle El 1.84 Philip Morr I Phlii Pet 1.30 “ itneyBw .88 14 11% 01' 21 41% 41 •>» t: 16 27% 24% 24% — 1 2 24% 24% 26% + 49 21% 28% |}% - 10 32% 32% 32% — 130 134% 121. 124 +11 J ft* ----------- I 20% 20% 92% 92% - 42 29% 28% 29% + 4 9%" 9% 9% - 6 22% 22% 22% - RalstonP .40 Raytheon JO RCA 1 8 19% 19% 19%-% —R— .8 23%. 23% 23% ReynTob, 2.20 Rohr Cd .80 RoyCCola .54 RoyOut 1.03a RyderSys .50 52 34% 35% 3* 2 20 27% 21 + ' 34% 34% + % Safeway 1.10 StJosLd 1,50 StLSanF 2.0 SIReglsP 1.40 Scnerlng JO ' IbctinfTl saari^*1 1' Searsi inj rtR 1.20a' xTI 47% tor * - -)........ 17 24V. 24 24% 11 30% 30% 30% 5 42'. 42V. 42% 20 '42'/. 42% 42V. 13,25% 25% 25% 20 -27% 27% 27% ...... tt 44% 44%, 44% — % 1 24% 24% 24% ' JO 49% 41% 49 S 31, 30% '30% T" 17% 17% 17% 28 29% 29 29 — % SignalCo 1.20 pmrG iM Smith KF 2 9 40% S9%, 40% + % 4 52V. 52 ■* % i7 p&vM%.a|WWi M 44'. 65% 45%’+ % .8 TampaEl -.72 Tektronix Tenneco 1.20 tox|cp nl.40 TexETrn t.40 TexGSul ,60 ToxaiTnat .10 ToxPLd .45g Textron ,90 6 34V. 36% 34% — % 2 57% 57% 57% 27 7 6% 6% 30 25% 25% 25% —T~- • 15 24% 23% 23% — % >2 54 54 H — - 76 33% 32% 33Va - 21 26% 26 " 187 33% 33% 33% - | 25% 25% TlmesMIr .50 5 1.80 RHMIIP ,50p Transmr .50b Trpnaltron TrjCqnt 2.90g Twen Cent 1 X71 P! „ 85 122% 120% 122% — 5 10% 10% 18% — .. 40 34% 24 26% — % 24 l( 14% 14% — % 4 44% 43% £% —1" 7 33% 32% 33% — 2 34% 34% 34% ... 10 24V. 24% 24% ... 95 27% 27% 27% — 3 1% JVS 8% + 13 39% 30% 30*4 — 30 U% 33% 32% + 178 20% 20 8% — -tJ—f .J Inc 1 x21 29VES2I% 28% — % ..... Ind ,72 6 15% 75% 15% — % un Carbide J 154 42% 42% 42% 23 52% 52 52 8 43% 43% 42% - 31 24% 24% 24% — % 11 11% 11% 11% — V. 2 43% 43% 43'/a + ' 34% 36% — % US Smelt lb 34 30 29% »% — ’ Verlan Asso —Vw- 30 26% 26% 8% + I 3 18% 18% 10% — % 17 8% 24% 24% — -% It was last May 27 when toe House, by a 224-142 margin, voted to limit, individual subsidy payments under1 the farm pro-1 gram to $20,000. But the Senate rejected this when completing action oh its, version of the Agriculture Department money bill in early July. There the mater rests. There has been ho move in the House to name conferees to try to iron out differences in toe two versions of the appropriations measure for the current fiscal year. , But'when this step is attempted, Findley and Conte Want to have toe House instruct its conferees to insist on the payment limitation during, sessions with the Senate counterparts. “That way they can’t come back with anything else,” Findley said in an interview. “Pm carrying this (motion) around inside my billfold;” The House approved a $20,000 payment limitation under toe farm program last year, too, but it was quickly dumped by the wayside in a conference with the Senate. ) Findley recalled that a parliamentary move at that time prevented a. vote on instructing the House conferees with only an up-or-down vote on toe compromise bill which by that time had been stripped of the payment limitation. m learned my lesson once,’] Findley said. —W—X—Y—Z— WnAIr L .500 Wn Bene 1.20 WnUTel t JF WestgEI 1.80 Wovorhsr .80 WblrlCp 1.60 I 22%' 22% 22% - J 37% 9M4 37% - 42 48% 47% 40% + 13 $3% + <40 B% l7% 30% + 45 54 ^% 54 I 38% 38% 8% + % 21% 21% 21% X9 33% 33% 33% + 1 88 351. .. 187' 95% 93% 9S% + % Zole Corp .44 23 46Vs 45% 44 . + % ZsnlfhR 1.40 14 39% 39%' 39% — % Copyrighted by The Associated Press 1969 Stocks of Local Interest Figures after decimal points OVER-THE-COUNTER S lentotive Interdealer pfices. Interdealer markets change throughout tht J— Prices do not Include retail mo markdown or commission. ■P^Truck::: Citizens Utilities A .. Citizens Utilities B .. I rax Chemical .. • ■ Crystal ... ....MA 5 ...’/24.6 5 Kelly Services . Wyandotte Chemical .' Compiled By Tht Ante la tod Prats . Ralls Util. Stks Month ago . Year ago 196 9hlgh ... .. 433.4 152.0 139.2 82.. . 433.2 154J 140.5 203.7 . 445.8 ip UU 299.7 .. 449.5 191.7 148.0 38.7 . 513.5 217.7 1S9J 340.9 . 422.3 141.0 134.9 84.1 .. 435.6 145.6 1U.I Francs Faces Facts S by Devaluing Front By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business'Analyst NEW YORK — (France's devaluation of the franc was recognition of a reality, a bowing to toe course of eyents, something that much of toe world thought! was lacking it) the days Chafles de Gaulle. The reality! aa, that , da-] Spite the official value of the! franc as stated by the French government, speculators and currency traders already had devalued French money. They weren’ willing to pay 20 cents for a franc. CUNNIFF to which it had already dropped In foreign trade transactions, * The official statement declared: “To try to overcome this handicap would be chobse a policy of brutardefla-tion which would Impose unbearable sacrifices and massive unemployment on the country.” NO MORE SACRIFICES In other words, the populace of the nation, which had rioted a The -weakness in the French financial situation was evident as long ago as May 1968, when workers and students rioted and the workers won big pay increases, something they had been denied for years previously. _ '• .. - - Many experts predicted then that France couldn’t absorb such increases in the costs of its goods—that inevitably French goods would become too expensive to compete in world markets. Especially when Germany was so competitive. HARDY ECONOMY Adjoiniiig France, Germany was enjoying a hardy economy. So strong was it In fact that many currency investors believed the mark to be one of the ' currencies around. They felt it was undervalued^ If the mark was indeed undervalued then it would make a good investment. It would mean also-that German goods would enjoy a price advantage in too eign markets, which included France. The existing farm- program, started by Congress in 1965, has made possible annual payments of more than $3. billion to farm operators to control production of wheat, feed grains and cotton. It also applies to wool. In 1967 there were fivq payments of more than, $1 million and 15 between $500,000 and $1 million each. Secretary of Agriculture Clifford Hardin has opposed a payment limitation on the existing program but there have been rumors he may recommend some type of limitation as part of a new program to be announced this fall. 279.41+0/8 .. 72/4+0,07 BOND AVTRAOE8 Id By The Associated Priss 20 IB It 18 It Rails Ind. UtU. Fgn. L. Yd. Noon Fri. 41.0 82.5 78.0 91.3 76. Prev. day 61.0 82.4 78.0 91.3 76. 61/ 11.7 78.2 91.3 76. 14.3 87.0 79.3 91.4 1948 high 44.3 61.0 81.5 - 77.3 AIR SCULPTURE — As part of £ basic design class at Ohio’s Kent State University,' Donna Beers made this air structure from balloons and plastic bags. At least it’s easy to carry. - " WASHINGTON (AP) — A Nixon administration spokes- The matter came to a head in November, when the tremen* dous reserves of gold and currencies that had accumulated under the austere economy of earlier years began to drain from France. Francs were sold as overpriced; .marks Were bought as underpriced. The money was sent from France to Germany by speculators, by investors in German enterprises and by purchasers of German cars and other products that appeared so attractively priced. URGED TO DEVALUE De Gaulle was urged to devalue in order once again to make francs attractive and to make French goods more competitively priced abroad. And in fact he was fully expected to make such an announcement. At the same time, many French economists, government officials and financial men argued that Germany should help out by revalue or raising the price of the mark to make it attractive. Germany dined to do so. •Well, so did De Gaulle refuse. He stood before an astonished world in late November and de-lared that toe value of the franc would be maintained. How? By return to austerity. French workers would be asked to work harder. It was a courageous Stance, but it didn’t work, Frenchmen had, seemingly, too much of were being cashed in was be-1 little more than a year before coming unbearable. against the austerity of the Qe 'Gaulle government, would not be ' asked to make further It was “common s said President Pompidou, to bring the franc into line with the rate immediate sacrifices in ttye name of austerity. Austerity was pften toe policy of De Gaulle. Austerity was^the policy renounced^ tor the3mb-ment at least, by toe Pompidou % government, although some*sort still could of wage-price controls face toe French. The devaluation plso was Ja closing chapter in the publig life of a great Frenchman. It was toe renunciation of a polity fought for proudly by De Gdlifys. Moynihan Concedes That Welfare Plan : Aid South Most man concedes that financially southern states will benefit most fr6m President Nixon’s new welfare , proposals—a criticism raised by northern leaders. But, added presidential assistant Daniel P. Moynihan yesterday, “I think you will find that most of the poor are in the South.” urban affairs, and toe only Democrat to hpld a high advisory position at- toe White House, was a chief architect of the welfare reform, proposals. Mayor John Lindsay of New York City had issued' a stater ment earlier saying toe program outlined by Nixon Friday night “fails completely to correct the present inequities in the distribution of federal welfare assistance.” -New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller said yesterday that the proposals contain “needed new concepts” but don’t do much tor New York and other industrialized states. ‘SOUND CONCEPTS’ Another comment cattle from former Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey who said +, By ROGER E. SPEAR —I am down about 20 per cent in all my stock holdings. Should I aeB? -S.D. Administration’s hard-line policy ag against, inflation Declines reported in second-quarter profits for two major industries — autos and steels — are also a negative influence. Further fuel for m a rket weakness will, no doubt; be forthcoming as the tax-reform hill moves through Congress. But- underlying the market is the As yet unmeasured influence the institutional investor. Value of NXSE listed stock held hy financial institutions crease)} over 300 per cent to total $136 billion in toe decade through 1967. to the mutual fund industry aloie, cash flow (money, available for investment) diiriig May totaled $165 million. The demand from these sources for new investments is ever present and growing 'and to some extent could add sup Friday or early Saturday mdiport to the market, stole four typewriters. . : f In a sharply falling market, mob psychology frequently rules, and toe decline feeds- on itself: If you hold high-quality ''' stocks with sales and earnings showing satisfactory growth, I See no reason to sell. Q — Can you give me information on American Tobacco? It hasn’t been quoted for several weeks. — J.G. A — Now trading under. A Jew title, American Braodsv ypur company has reported satisfactory results for the six months. Including operations of ifthlly owned Duffy-Mott and partially held Gallagher Ltd., Bales - for the half-year were $1.3 hiiifon. Net income rose 6 per cera te equal $1.59 a share. Tobacco -products still account for 62 per ceiit of sales, but acquisition in v other areas will probably pip-tinue to cut this percentage. The name change is symbolic; of other changes American Brands expects to achieve in its corporate structure and image. While shares arc suitable . for income accounts, cigarette advertising restrictions limittoe appeal for investors seeking growth. - . (For Roger Spear’s 4R#f|ge Guide to Successful Investing (recently revised and in its fith printing), send fl with nbtfie and address to Roger E. Spear, The Pontiac Press, Bog MIS, Grand Central Station, Now York,N.Y.|M17.) -- mmmm SS p t