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VOL. 123 NO. 239	★ ★ ★ ★
PONTIAC, MICHIGAN FRIDAY. NcfVEMBKR 12. 19(5.5-56 PAGES	.onai
40 Die as Jet Bursts Into Rames on Landing
50 Survivors in Utah Disaster
SALT LAKE CITY, Utah (AP) - A Boeing 727 jet airliner with 90 persons aboard burst into flames on landing at the City Airfwrt last night, burning 40 passengers to death in the fire-swept fuselage.
Another SO, including the entire crew of six, dived through windows and emergency hatches seconds before the fire raged forward from the three jet engines in the tail all the way back to the flight deck.
Of the survivors, 36 were hospitalized. The dead were in the blackened fuselage.
A spokesman for United Air Lines, owner of the plane, blamed the disaster on the collapse of a nose wheel as the aircraft touched down.
meir, 48, of Denver, was among the hospitalized survivors. Hospital officials said he kept repeating “Terrible, terrible.’’
It was the third 777 involved in fatal accidents since August and the second this
The three rear-mounted engines of the 727 are fed by fuel lines leading back from tanks in the wings.
The flight originated in New York and reached Salt Lake City after stops in Cleveland, Ohio; Chicago and Denver, Colo. Its scheduled destination was San Francisco.
The pilot, Capt. Gail C. Keh-
The first plunged into Lake Michigan off Lake Forest, 111., Aug. 16, killing all 30 aboard. The second hit a hill while approaching Cincinnati Monday night, and 58 of the 62 persons aboard died.
’The Civil Aeronautics Board
in Washington dispatche^l2 into seek the ceuse of
vestigators the crash.
The CAB said in Washington said that the flight recorder tape had been recovered and was being flown to Washington for study.
NO RELATIONSHIP A spokesman for the Federal Aviation Agency said in response to questions, “At this point we can see no relationship between
YanksRepelSharpAttack; 100 Viet Cong Are Killed
SAIGON, South Viet Nam MV-A detachment of the U.S. Army’s 1st Infantry Division fought off a a sharp Viet Cong assault today in an all-day battle 40 miles north of Saigon. A spokesman said 100 of the enemy were killed and the toll probably would go higher.
American casualties were described as light at dusk as fighting that raged fof	^
“People were thrown all over the place. It was horrible. The heat was terrible.”
Nesbitt said he dived through an open window to a wing and then dropped to safety through a sheet of flame.
CHARCOAL BLACK
12 hours tapered off into a spordic exchange of small arms fire.
striking with recoillem rifles and mortars, a Viet Cong battalion of 500 troops, launched the attack against about 700 men of the division’s 3rd Brigade. Reports from the scene said the Americans came under fire without warning. Planes and artillery helped turn back the guerrillas.
The troops were on an operation to secure Highway IS oa the edge of Zone D, which has
Bince the end of World Warn.
In recent months, B52 bombers from Guam have pounded the Jungled zone and U.S. troops have pressed major offensives in the area In an effort to deny the Viet Cong a sanctuary from which to operate.
U.S. flghter-bombers hit at the Viet Cong without letup during today’s engagement. Pilots
40 missions
against the enemy during the height of the clash.
YANKS DEPLOYED The Americans had deployed along the highway when the Viet Cong attacked. The road is flanked on both sides by rubbei plantations.
The Amerieaus fired 105mm howitzers at the enemy at close range, and U. S. planes hammered the Viet Cong.
Today, Capt. Wallace Hitchcock, the fort’s information officer, reported that further electrocardiogram tests had shown Eisenhower, in truth, suflered a genuine heart attack.
The spokesman said several U.S. armored personnel carriers were damaged.
The Viet Cong assault was the second Comihunist attack in five days against a major U.S. combat unit. On Monday, a battalion from the 173rd Airborne Brigade fought the paratrocq)-ers’ toughest battle of the war against a Viet Cong battaliop in D Zone, 90 miles north bf the
HEAVY LOSSES The paratroopers reported more than 400 Viet Cong were killed by ground and air action. American casualties were reported moderate.
A combined farce of U. S. IMarises and VIetliamese
Ir swejp
IM miles north of Salgoa aeaT^ the Chu Lai beachhead hat atiil BO siplficant contact was
Two Viet Cong have bean ra* ported killed and to auipecto dataloed In the alteration, now in ita third day.
Ike's Ailment Diagnosed as Heart Attack
FT. GORDON, Ga. (AP) -Former President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s illness was diagnosed today as a true heart attack.
Revising their first estimate that the 75-year-old five-star general had suffered only heart Insufficiency, the medical team issued a new report on the basis of late tests.
Eisenhower, vacationing at his cottage on the Augusta National Golf Club coarse, suffered chest pains Monday night and was taken to the nearby Army Ft. Gordon Hos-
the three accidents and we have
no plans for grounding 727 jets.” A similar view was expressed by Pader Hogue, chief flight safety engineer for Boeing. “I think it’s a fine airplane and recent unfortunate experiences are in my opinion unrelated,*’,he declared.
The survival of the pilot and other crew members provided opportunity for investigators to obtain firsthand expert opinion on the cause.
Mrs. Lyndon R. Day of Arlington, Va., a passenger who escaped, said; “I heard a loud thud. I knew we had made a crash landing.
ON BOTH SIDES
‘There were flaines on the outside of the plane on both sides. I scrambled through a door on to a wing and dived to the ground.”
Another passenger, Ralph 8. Nesbitt of Santa Monica, Calif., told interviewers; “We had a hard bump, started swerving from side to side and flames broke out from the
Searchers Probe Charred Remains Of United Airliner Which Exi
iplodeck^n
Landing Last Night
’The interior of the 72-ton jetliner was burned charcoal black.
Warren M. Weggeland, deputy county coroner, said the main distinguishable remains of the trapped dead were an arm or leg.
Dr. Hilmon Castle, a mudick examiner for the Federal Aviation Agency, said he found
bodies “strewn along the aisle, some of them piled on top of of each other.”
One of the passengers listed by the airline as among the dead was. Bill Linderman, who had earned more than $439,000 in rodeo competitions when he retired six years ago.
Mercury io Hover in 30s Tomorrow
Better button up your overcoat and put antifreeze in the car for a cold wave is on the way.
The weatherman pr^cts chance of showers tonight with lows in the 30s, and snow flurries tomorrow.
Temperatures will stay quite steady in.the 30s tomorrow. Mostly fair and cold is Sunday’s forecast.
Morning southeasterly winds at 6 to 12 miles per hour will increase to 12 to 22 miles by late afternoon.
Thirty-seven was the low reading prior to 8 a.m. in downtown Pontiac. The thermometer registered 54 at 2 p.m.
Soviets Launch Venus Probe
Cuts Rhodesia Ties
Should Reach Planet at End of February
MOSCOW (AP) - The Soviet Union launched an unmanned space station toward Venus today and said it should reach the planet around the end of Febru-
ary.
It was the second announced Venus probe by the Soviets and about 50 per cent heavier than Venus 1, which missed the planet by more than 100,000 miles in February 1961.
Tass, the official Soviet
the launch, said Venus 2 is moving on a course “close to the prescribed one.”
Tass said that by 4 a.m. EST| the space probe was nearly 34,-800 miles from the earth.
Tass said equipment aboard the space station was functioning normally.
SECOND A’TTEMPT The satellite named Venus 2, is the second and possibly the third Soviet attempt to probe Venus.
Venus 1 missed the planet by 111,000 miles in February 1001, but the Soviets said it collected valuable scientific data. U.S. scientists said the Soviet spacecraft Zond 1, launched April 2, apparently was intended to be a Venus probe although it was never announced as such. The Americans said Zond 1 ap-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 3)
The United Stotes said today it had ordered a comprehensive embargo on all arms shipments to Rhodesia and taken other at^ to support Britain's .efforts to suppress the independence move of, Rhodesia’s white minority govermnent.
U.S. Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg made his announcement at an urgent session of the U.N. Security Council, where British Foreign Secretary Michael Stewart declared earlier that Britain had ruled out the use of force to punish the gov-emntent of Ian Smith.
U. S. Embargoes Arms
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (A-1 Stewart was the o p e n 1 n g
speaker in a council session demanded by the general assembly in the wake of yesterday’s Rhodesian declaration of independence.
African nations were expected to. press demands for economic aiid dipiomatic penalties by the entire U. N. membership against Rhodesia’s white government.
Taking note of charges by
Goldberg urged all countries to Join in tough economic re-stricttous to back Britain. He said the United States had closed its consulate in Salisbury and had decided to bar the importation of sugar from Rhodesia in 1166.
Quaison-Sackey said the African states were prepared to give all possible assistance to i Rhodesia’s four million blacks, I including force.
He quoted Kwame Nkrumah, Ghana’s president, as saying African countries must make military plans to counter creation of a state in the heart of Africa not based on majority rule.
STAR VISITS YOUNGSTERS ~ Haytey Mills brightened the lives of youngsters at Camp Oakland yesterday when she visited the Oxford Township fadiity for under privL leged children ’mid wards of thr court and stayed for cHoper. The 19-year-old Hdly* wood 6t«	■“
wiR ippoaT In person to-
night at Ford Auditorium for the world premier of Walt Disney’s “That Darn Cat” in which she has the featured role. The performance is.-a lienefit for Camp Oakland, according to Mrs. i^ D. Mills, chairman of the camp’s women's committee.
Other measures taken by the United States, he said, included suspension of action on application for loans and credit from Rhodesia, and warning of all potential investors of the grave risk involved in Rhodesian investments.
Goldberg said also the U.S. government was taking steps to discourage all American travel to Rhodesia.
RAPS BRITAIN Ghana’s foreign minister Alex Quaison-Sackey, the first African speaker in the council, was strongly critical of Britain’s reluctance to use force in sup-' the “rebellion."
“We are not here to endorse half - hearted measures,” he
African nations that Britain exercised too much patience in dealing with Smith’s regime, the British foreign secretary dared:
“This illegal declaration independence and the measures which Britain' is taking mean inevitable distress and suffering Rhodesia, including many Rhodesians of all races who detest the Illegal actions and are wholly innocent of it.
★ ★
Britain Tells Rebel Chiels Treason Penally Is Death
DETROIT (AP)-A wave of fear mounted in suburban Nankin Township today as a mother of seven report^ a narrow escape from a knife-wielding attacker who left a six-inch slash in the screen door at her home.
The attack came last night as Wayne County sheriff’s detectives intensifi^ their search for a man believed responsible for a half-dozen attacks on women/ within a month.	//'
LONDON — The British government warned Prime Minister Ian Smith and his Rhodesian regime today their defiance of British authority is treason. The penalty is death.
Atty. Gen. Sir Elwyn Jones issued the warning in the House of Commons as the government sought emergency powers to re-
I screamed and slammed the door in his face,” she said.
store Britain’s authority over the breakaway, white-run colony in cem tral Africa.
Jones warned Britons inside and outside Rhodesia that actions furthering the aims ol Smith’s would be treasonable.
The bill giving the British government massive powers of retaliation against Rhodesia
In Today's Press
FAVOR NEEDED Stewart told the council that if British measures against the Sipith government are to succeed they must have the good will of the entire international community.
“We do not believe that the use of m 1111 a r y force can solve Uiese problems” he added. “I invite those who ask for military force to look around the world today and see how many places violence and armed conflict rage.”
His remarks were .addressed obviously to A f r 1 c a n nations which have been pressing Britain to use military force«to subdue the rebellion by Rhodesia against Britain,
Horsewoman
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training at the track-PAGE C-4.
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Experts gather to hunt (or answers—PAGE B-4.
Area News ......... A-4"
Astrology ..........C-12
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Woneh’s Pages B-19-%13
sped toward adoption in House.
Quick passage was urged by Prime Minister Harold Wilson, who last night accused Smith’s
See Related Stories, Pages B-9, C-1
regime of taking police state measures and assuming “the sickeningly familiar attitudes of authoritarian rule.”
Jones introduced the bill asking for these special powers: An order invalidating any laws passed or business transacted by Rhodesian Prime Minister Ian Smith’s regime after its unilateral declaration of independence;
Authority for the British government to exercise executive control and to make laws in Rhodesia;
An amendment to British legislation to make it easier for “loyal Rhodesian citizens” to obtain citizenship of the United Kingdom and the colonies, and
An order enabling the British- immigration authorities to confiscate passport documents issued or renewed by the Rhodesian regime.
Jones pointed out that other actions by Britain—such as the
ban on import of Rhodesian tobacco'
fco' and sugbr — had already been carried out under existing statutory powers.
The bill proclaimed, that the Rhodesian government’s declaration of independenct and all acts that flowed from It were illegal.
Fear Increased by New Attack
Knifer Slashes Door at Home in Nankin
Mrs. Barbara McCarthy, 36, told police a man posing as a Bible salesman jerked a knife from his pocket as she talked to him through the screen
She said she then called the sheriff. Officers arrived within minutex but did not catch the man.
GIGGLING MAN Officers said Mrs. McCarthy's description of the man was similar to that given by other victims of a “giggling” man, with psychopathic tendencies who has criss-crossed the township in a reign of terror.
Mrs. McCarthy was home with her 12-year-old daughter and six sons. Her husband was at work as a bakery driver-salesman.	^
Meanwhile, policq freed nine suspects and set out anew in efforts to track down the man believed responsible for the wave of attacks.
The suspects. Including two described as “prime”,- were released Thursday afternoon after victims of some of the attacks failed to make positive identifications, said Det. Sgt. Frank Van Wulfen.
Van Wulfen, who is In charge of the investigation, said shortly (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1)
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A—2
THE PONTIAC PRKSS. FRIDAV. NOVEMUKIt 1ft IftBJt
Debate Ends Today on Seat in U.N. for Communist China
UNITED NATIONS, N. (UPU GeneNil Assembly debate I on seating Communist China^ the United Nations concludes today. The vote is.expect-ed Monday.
★ ♦ *
Fifteen delegations, including Australia, were listed to speak. After the general debate. Nationalist China, the United States and possibly others were ex-
pected to reply to arguments raised by Red China’s supporters.
The iiaal stage win be a dia-assion of the resohition ar
Fear Increased by New Attack
(Continued From Page One) before the of the victims, Mrs. Dorothy Villemonte. 28, reported receiving a strange telephone call.
“It was )nst breathing; no conversation,'’ said Van Wul-fen.
He said 30 arrests were made Thursday and nine of the men were held for a lineup.
* ★ *
“We had a lot of look-alikes but nothing definite,” he said. BIGGER PATROL Van Wulfen said his Road Patrol in the Nankin Township area was beefed up to 40 men last night, up 10 from the night before when Mrs. Villemonte reported her daylight attack.
There were other reports of obaccne telephone calls during the day.
Detectives continued to "'run down hundreds of tips, Nankin area residents lined up at the Wayne County Road Patrol headquarters for pistol permits.
* ★ *
Mrs. Villemonte and Mrs. Helen Varner were attacked Wednesday in their homes, both near Wayne County General Hospital.
FACIAL CUTS Mrs. Villemonte suffered multiple facial cuts. She said they were inflicted by a young, blond man who slashed her with a knife. Mrs. Varner reported being slugged by a man wht demanded money.
Mrs. Villemonte reported re-
be submitted.
The strategy of Albania, Cam-bodia and other cosponsors appeared to be to hold up the proposal to seat (^mmunist (%ina until the last possible moment in the debate. When it is finally submitted, it is expected to have Peking’s approval.
TTie tentative draft, shown to some delegates, states that the Assembly “decides that the seat of China in the United Nations and all its organs, illegally occupied by the representatives of Chiang Kai-shek, should be restored to the government of the were freed, one People’s Republic of China." DEFEA’TED MOVE The China resolution defeated in 1963 resolved that “The rep-mentatives of Chiang Kal-sh^, who are illegally occuf^ng China’s place in the organization, shall be immediately removed from all United Nations
lag telephne calls prior to the attack. She uid her assailant laughed during the incident.
Because Mrs. Varner’s assailant only demanded money and did not appear to have psychopathic tendencies, police said they were not certain if the two attacks were connected.
ers said the two versions, al-though different in wording, came to the same thing. They could not see how the new wording would persuade anyone to change his vote.
So far in the debate 27 delegates have spoken in favor of membership for Red China, and 11 have supported Nationalist China.
luci Stalling j Engagement?
Report She Yielded to Father on Delay
J.OHNSON CITY, Tex. .(/JP)-The White House shed no light today on a report that 18-year-oid Led Baines Johnson has yielded to a request from her father that she postpone her engagement to Patrick J. Nugent,
'I just don’t know anything about it,” Joseph Laitin, assistant press secretary, said.
* ★ ★
Comment similarly was lacking when it was reported about two weeks ago that Loci and Nugent were seeking the consent of President and Mrs. Johnson to marry. Luci and Nugent spent the weekend at the LBJ ranch during the height of these reports.
Luci and Nugent both declined to answer reporters’ questions, the ground that it was a private matter.
LATEST REPORT
The latest report of a postponement of her engagement was attributed to friends of the White House. It was to the effect the President had talked his youngest daughter into delaying her engagement.
Nugent, of Waukegan, lU., was graduated from Marquette University last June. He has been her steady escort in recent
U. S. WAR DEAD IN VIET NAM
745
Nugent is expected to enter military service shortly, but both he and Luci have-refused to say which branch. The current report is that he will serve a six-month active duty hitch in the Air Force Reserves.
Luci is in her first year at the Georgetown U n i v e r s i t y
^	*	I School of Nursing
The remaining speakers ap-'ington. peared to be about two to one in favor of the nationalists.
Both sides have tried to influence new members in their voting. The newest members are Singapore, Gambia and the Mai-dive Islands.
* * ★
Diplomatic sources predicted that Gambia would vote for Communist China but that Singapore and the Maldives would abstain from the vote.
in Wash-
Disputed Pact OK'd in Japan
ConsdrvativR Tactics Lead to Wild Fight
TOKYO (UPI) - A wlM flat fight erupted in the lower house of the Japanese parliament early today when (k)naervative deputies broke a Socialist filibuster and rammed through a controversial treaty establishing normal relations with South Korea.
* A W
House Speaker Naka Funada, 70, center of the stormy session, collapsed after it was over and was hospitalized with high blood pressure and a heart
1961	1962	1963 1964	1965
DEATH TOLL GROWS - The growing toll of U.S. battle deaths in the Viet Nam conflict climbs sharply on the chart. With Tuesday’s total, the figure passed the 1,000 mark.
and South Korea since World Warn.
The Socialists turned the debate into a filibuster by introducing a series of motions of no confidence against Conservative cabinet ministers in an effort to ^ f	.	^	II	I eat up the time left in the cur-
to Surface in Two Hours™*””’"'’"”""™'
Chlorine Barge Rqised
servative strategy hi die third day of a general debate on the treaty, which also fettles
Birmingham Area News
Open Occupancy Group Sets 1$t Meeting Sunday
A group being organized to .uah for integrated housing in the Birmingham - Bloomfield area will test its support Sunday night.
Several residents of Birmingham, Bloomfield Hills, Beverly Hills and Bloomfield Township have formed the Birmingham-Bloomfield Committee on Open Occupancy.
John C. Palms, 788 E. Squake Lake, Bloomfield Township, has been named of the
Detroit Doctor Named to Medicare Council
JOHNSON aTY, Tex. (AP)-President Johnson has pointed a 16-member advisory council that will help set up administrative procedures for the Medicare program. Among them is Dr. Caldwell B. Essel-styn, executive director of the Community Health Association in Detroit and past board chairman of the Group Health Association of America.
BATWf ROUGE, U. (AP) -A giant, floating derrick pulled a sunken chlorine bar_ the muddy bottom of the Mississippi River today in less than two hours.
The blue handrailing of the barge broke surface shortly before 10 a.m., following a 60-foot lift.
★ A *
Helmeted crewmen aboard the derrick quickly hosed down the four tanks, containing 602 tons of deadly liquid chlorine, to wash away silt.
Scientists then went aboard to check the tanks for leaks or safety hazards.
APPEARED BROWNISH The tanks, normally white, appeared brownish due to the accumulated during two months beneath the surface.
The barge and its cargo slipped to the bottom during Hurricane Betsy Sept. 9-10 just offshore from the Louisiana State University campus.
River traffic on the busy Mi» sissippi was halted during the lift operation. Air traffic was dta-ected away from the scene.
A haze hung low over the river, reducing visibility.
STEEL CABLES Twin booms reachbig out from the towering derrick lifted the barge by means of steel cables that cradled it.
There was a danger, not
back to earth and Mariner sped, great, officials said, that the
liquid chlorine could leak out of the tanks and turn into a dead-
Soviets Launch Venus Probe
(Continued From Page One) parently missed its mark in July 1164.
The U.S. Mariner n pai Venus Dec. 14, 1962, at a distance of 21,648 miles after gathering data continuously during its 180 million mile journey.
AAA
During the 42 minutes it flew past the planet it collected data on the si^ace and atmospheric temperatures and cloud structure of Venus. This was relayed
The Weather
Full U. S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY Cloudy and U with rain or showers likely and chance of scattered thundershowers also later today or tonight. Highs today 56 to SI. Lows tonight in 26s. Saturday partly cloudy, windy and colder with chance of snow flurries. Steady or slowly falling temperatures highs in 36s. Southeast winds 6 to 12 miles this morning Increasing to 12 to 22 miles by afternoon. Sunday; Fair, cold.
LornuH tampwfturt prKtdInt I (.m.: V
At I •.m.; Wind Vtlocifv 4 fnp.h, Dlractloni toulhMit Swn Mti Ft1d*y at SMS p m.
Sun rittt Iflurdw »t • m.
It Saturday at II.Ms p.m.
■at Friday at l:»S ^.m.
Oaa Vaar Apa hi Panttaa
Hlphatl tamparatura ...............
Lowatt tamparatura
Mtan tamparatura...................
Waathar: Sunny
Thunday'i Tamparatura Chan Alpana	4) 37 Jackionvilla 44 42
C.r Ranld* 44 41 Kantat City 40 S4 37	32	Lm Anpalat	71	SS
47	34	Miami Baach	13	74
34	37	Mllwaukaa	44	4S!
4S	41	Naw Orlaant	77	44;
34	34	Naw York	44	4S
a C. 4S	41	Omaha	SI	43
45	35	PhoanH	74	44'
43	33	FItttburah	S3	31
43	31	SI Loult	44	S3
44	43	Salt Laka C.	S3	41
the river townrd Baton Rouge. Two huge wind machines were held in readiness on barges to be used to dissipate any gas or fumes that ndgbt escape.
Offidais said there was only a “one million to one” chance that the chlorine might leak out.
LSU and public schools within a five-mile critical area were cloaed for the day.
Two Army hospital trains, laises and ambulances evacuated about 600 aged and invalid persons from the area to state facilities at Pfaieville, 100 miles way.
Two of the evacuees died Thursday of what doctors called heart arrest after their evacuation. They were Idella Davis, 70, and Bena Giigsby, 78.
The engineers awarded a $400,-000 contract to J. Ray McDermott Co. of New Orleans to raise the barge; which was en , route from the Pittsburgh Plate Glass
At one minute after midnight Funada mounted the speaker’s rostrum, gaveled the meeting to order and announced an immediate vote on the treaty. LEAPED TO FEET Conservative deputies leaped to their feet and Funada declared the treaty approved.
Pandemonium broke loose. Conservatives formed a human barricade around Funada as deputies from both sides of the aisle converged on the speaker’s chair.
A general fist fight erupted, with Conservative and opposition Socialists taking wild swings' at each other.
A A A
Parliament security guards moved to break up the fight and escort Funada from the house. Several of the guards were injured in quelling the fisticuffs. DENOUNCE TACnCS Th^ Socialists denounced the at Lake Charles toConoervativn t*ctics and
The committee has sent letters to some 500 other residents urging them to attend its first formal meeting, sc^uled for 9 p.m. Sunday at me Birmingham Unitarian Church, at Lone Pine and Woodward in Bloomfield Hills.
AAA
Committee members sent the letters to friends and neighbors who had expressed an interest I In civil rights, Mrs. Palms said, but she emphasized that the meeting Sunday would be open to the public.
MAJOR PROBLEM The letter cited open occupancy as a “major problem now affecting ourBirmingham-Bloomfield area.”
"As yM know, no real action has yet been taken officially
other races, who are financially capable of doing ao, to buy homes in our community - just as we have been permitted to do.”
AAA
The independent committee now plans to start developing approaches to real estate groups, according to the letter.
BEVERLY HILLS — A series of five faculty lectures will be held every weekday morning next week at Detroit’ Country Day ^hool, 22306 W. 13 Mile.
Designed for parents and tho public at large, the programs will be held from 9 to 11 a.m. in the n^ain building of tho school.
Speakers in order of their a|^ pearance will be John P. Cam|^ bell, history department chairs man: John E. Gilbert, languafti department chairman; John M. Poplawski, lower school director; Phillip L. Dillman, dean of and Richard A. Schle-gel, assistant headmaster.
Assessed Valuation Is Cut for Utility Firm
ing problem,” it uid. “It is time to end the procrastination in this vital matter that
KALAMAZOO (AP)-A $3.2 million cut in assessed valuation from $7.5 million to $4.3 million was announced Thursday for the Consumers Power Co. plant in suburban (ksmstock Township.
The facility supplies only peak power needs. Action by the state tax commission on an appeal by the utility firm means an .r™ — —	increase in December tax bills
‘It is time to permit those of for township property owners.
Co. 1
Calvert City, Ky., hurricane tore it loose from its mooring at Baton Rouge.
charged the action could lead to an end to parliamcnta^ democracy in Japan.
Was Charter Member
on toward the sun.
Tass Mid Venus 2 would continue on its course toward Venus for about three and a
Tass said a multistage rocket launched Venus 2. The last stage was first put into a parking orbit and then it launched the station toward Venus. This is the method the Soviets have used in their nnoon probes.
The weight of Venus 2 was given as 963 kilograms — 2,123 pounds. Tass said power is being supplied it by chemical and solar batteries.
The agency said the station was moving over “a trajectory close to the prescribed one.” Tass said a special measuring complex on Soviet territory is keeping track of the Venus 2 flight.
Huge fans, the type used in the movies to create hurricane scenes, stood by for use in an emergency. They would be used to blow fumes away from the workmen and scientists should a leak develop.
The official time for the lift was one hour and 47 minutes.
Residents la the Immediate area of the lift for the most part cleared oat. Traffic in this capital cHy was light this morning. Businesses were closed, as were schools and slate offices.
The initial tightening of the cables holding the barge began at 8 a.m. (CST).
I A southwest wind blew across
Quits County School Board
Fred J. Beckman, a charter member of the Oakland Schools Board of Education formed in 1940, resigned yesterday afternoon because of failing health.
After accepting Beckman’s resignation, the board promptly named George Coombe, presl-doit of the Birmingham Board of Education, to fill the vacancy on the five-member body.
A farmer, Beckman, 61, of
active in the Grange, Farm
ganized the Oakland County chapter of the Michigan MOk Producers’ AHOciation.
He is a 1914 graduate of Pontiac High School and attended Michigan State University., AAA
When Beckman became member of the Oakland Schools
Board of Education, 191 schooll districts existed. Now. there are only 30.	j
ONLEGAL8TAFF	I
Coomhe, 40, of 4412 Parklane, Bloomfield Township, is a member of the legal staff at Gmieral Motors Corp.
A graduate of Harvard Law Sebool, he is a member of the Oakland County School Boards Association and b on the board of directors of the Mich-gaa School Boards Association.
He wUl fill Beckman’s unex pired term until next June.
A A A,
In other business yesterday, the board accepted the resignation of Dr. Gerald Griffin, a psychologist at Oakland Schools since September.
Dr. Griffin has accepted a position with the Lockhe^ Mis^ Corp. in California.
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96^
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By Foundation
Sale of Hospital Land Is Opposed
NAHONAL WEATHER - Rain wiU fall tonight in the Pacific Northwest, northern California, western Nevada, lower Gnat Lakes, Ohio and Tennessee valleys and along the Gulf Coast. Snow showers will extend from the northern and osntrai	eastward to the northern Plains and
By JOE MULLEN 3 ■ 371 The Foundation for Mentally 111 Children, Inc., of Southfield has ' gone on record as opposing the sale of state hospital property on Telegraph until certain mental hTaTTinepliements are firmly established.
Specifically, the foundation seeks to prevent any land trana-action until the development of the children's program at Pontiac State Hospital is completed and plans for a community mental health center are developed.
The parcel caaceraing the foundation has 2,SSS feet of frontage on the east side ef Telegraph north from Eliza-belb Lake and is 7SS feet deep, adjoining the Pontiac State Hoopital plant.
The ^rcel was approved by the statk legislature for sale to the city of Pontiac thred years ago as the site of a proi Internal Revemie facility.
right to buy the land when the Internal Revenue location was designated elsewhere.
HAS RIGHTS Now, Oakland County has legislative rights to buy the north 600 feet of frontage and private interests have expressed interest in the 2,000 feet of frontage which includes the northeast corner of the intersection.
State Rep. Arthur J. Law, D-Poatlac, said today he wMdd like la see the larger piece of property saM and developed immediately la it would benefit the city’s tax
? .
r Gpat :
It Lakes regions.
Pontiac, however, waived .!
Law
they >ould develop i Law added.
sgkMtiat several private | Hospital officials have made are mterested in the no public statement on the pro-Tele^aph frontage with manylpos^ sale of Telepaph frontage the poasibiHty of a motelibut they reported^ are strongly on the site. opposed to it.
Among thooe latorested ia _ - „ * . t tha site, aoesfdlug to Uw, are	^
the owners ef the Peuttac ^ved permiaBion of the legia-Mww	lature to buy a lt.4-aere parcel
^ ^	... state^nmed property go the
The Pontiac Mall people. 1^ gtate Hoqsital grou^.
HOUSING USE Located on ..Eligaheth Laka east of the entrance road to the the property is pro^ pos^ for use^bp Pontisc General Hospital for int^ and resident housing.
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Lav said be feels that an ad- ** equate children’s unit could be F d^eloped on the state property f iWithout infringing on the front- "
H. Ih.t It	ot|*»
, fuiKl. would b«>N to buy'the' would introduce - legislation in The State Hospital received a January for sale of the land. -----------.
Pontiac .General hospital
It would probably be June 1 before H could clear the legislature, be appraised and presented for sale in public auc-
$2S0JI0e federal grant In September to supplement state funds,	nrj^rt« m-a.
tor tito B.n.l]lto. ohildrto.'. 4.fy'pjXl?^;r,SiWcJ3: ty and city ara expected to be compieted by , the state later this month, ftus sstabikdilng purchase priceii.
Ladies’ Nylon Hose;!
w Firat Quality SaamUst ’ na Price
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THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 12> 1965
-	v
Big Week for Making Cars
tuUed out compared
DETROIT (AP)-U.S. weekly auto production hit a IMS high of an estimated 220,M4 cars this week according to figures compiled by Automotive News, a trade publication.
★	★ w
The output compared with the 219,333 cars built last week and 178,464 in the year-ago week. For the calendar year to date, output reached 7,9M,941 units
versus 6,528,829 for the spending period a year ago. w	w	*
Truck completions this week numbered 36,331 vehicles compared with 35,432 last week and 30,M1 in the year-ago week. The calendar year tally climbed to 1,537,830 compared with 1,348,-373 at this ilme last )iar.
^ ♦	w	t
In Canada, auto makers
d out 16,366 cars this week with 17,453 last week and 12,339 in the year-ago week. The calendar 1965 count rose to 592,690 compared with 495,749 at this point a year ago.
' ♦ ♦ ★
Canadian truck makers built 3,368 vehicles this weel
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I The Japanese are sinking | bags that can be deflated 1 ships to protect them whenever 1 sink the vessel to the sea floor | a typhoon threatens. The ships j when a storm arises and air|
I are a system of steel containers 1 can be pumped back into the i I propelled by tugs. Each of the I bags to float it to the surface 1^ last week’s 3,120 and the	has a number of air I after the storm passes,
jyear ago week’s 2,299. The year-, ‘ to-date total reached 117,382i . compared with 96,592 for the! f same span a year earlier.
There are more than 2,0001 I species of snakes known in the
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THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBEB 12, 1965
But Supervisor Gets Go-Ahead
Assessment Formula Attacked
AVON TOWNSHIP-The manner in which road-paving as-nents wiil be made in Rochdale subdivision met with objections from residents at a public hearing last night.
In’ spite of the objections, Township Supervisor Miller was instructed to prepare special assessment rolls.
Under the assessment plan, all property owners will share the additional costs which would normally be incnrred by owners of comer lots.
To cover the costs of the cor-
ner lots, an extra assesan will be added to each parcel of land on the assessment rolls.
Miller said that several persons had withdrawn their names from the original petition. He said the attorney ruled, how-
certified by the clerk and are stUl valid.
PROJECTED COST The projected cost of the proj-
156,867, based on the low bid of Cooke Construction Co.
A hearing will be held at a

later date oh the assessment
Miller will meet with residents of the Winkler Mill bridge area this weekend in an attempt to straighten out a problem that has been dragging on for several weeks.
The bridge has been closed sinch it was damaged in an accident last August. Road authorities and residents have been unable to reach agreennent on what type of structure to put in its place.
RUSTIC LOOK Residents want the look retained and are opposed to the Oakland County Road Conunission’s plans to replace it with a wider concrete bridge.
for a whUe hy lack ef a jw-tice of the peaec, is once again under way.
He said activity slacked off when Samuel Hewlett resigned his position as justice.
MiUer said the deaimp campaign in the township, stymied
At the time Hewlett said that several cleanup ordinances would require more time than he was able to devote to them.
Miller said that junked cars started to become a iwoblem again during this period in spite of a recently adopted ordinance prohibiting their storage on residential property. _____________
I
Residents
Say Thanks With Plaque
SANTA’S HELPERS — Members of Commerce Chapter No. 301, Order of the Eastern Star, will hold a bazaar tomorrow featuring Christmas decorations and gifts along with baked goods and a snack bar. Checking items for the 10 a.m.-9 p.m. event are Mrs.
Ralph Frederick (left), 1520 Rose Bower, Commerce Township, worthy matron <rf the chapter, and Mrs. Hancel Boatright, 9645 Crayview, White Lake Township, chairman of the bazaar to be held at the Commerce Masonic Temple.
Suspect Youth in Barn Fires
HOLLY—An 18-year-old youth, under investigation in connection with a recent rash of bam tires in the Holly area, was to make a statement today in the county prosecutor’s oftice.
The arson suspect was in custody of sheriff’s deputies prior to being released yesterday afternoon.
Five bams in the area, have burned, three in the past two weeks, causing farmers to sns-pect arson and take precau-
Ughts or removed equipment from their bams.
“Our farmers are up in ms,” said Springfield Township Supervisor John L. Carey. ORGANIZE GUARD It has been suggested by some farmers that a group of citizens be organized to guard larger bams in the area.
The Holly police and tire departments have assisted sheriff’s deputies in their efforts to curb the activities of the suspected arsonist.
Some farmers reportedly have sat in their bams'armed with loaded shotguns. Others have installed mercury vapor flood
Rochester Church
Schedules Series
ROCHESTER - The Rochester Church of Christ will conduct a Training for Service aeries from 7:30 to 9 p.'m. M<^ay through Thursday.
“The (Kristian’s Daily Walk With CKrist” is the theme of the series.
CKarles R. Brewer of Nashville, Tenn., an educator and author, and J. Harold Thomas of Groton, Conn., former president of Northeastern (Kristian (Kllege in Villanova, Pa., will be guest speakers.
PONTIAC TOWNSHIP - Subdivision builders often hear nothing but complaints abou their work, but developers o Bloomfield Orchards were given plaque of appreciation this week by the residents.
The plaque was given to Bur and Share, Inc., Oak Park
Area School Sets Fund Drive for Exchange Plan
for their “service .to the nity” and continued interest in the project after it was completed.
ORCHARD LAKE - The American Field Service Oub of West Bloomfield High School will conduct its annual fund-raising drive tomorrow at the school.
The drive, to be held from 10 .m. to noon, is aimed at raising scholarship funds to bring a foreign exchange student here and to send a local abroad.
This year’s foreign exchange student is 17-year-old Edwardo Alberto Klurfan of Buenos Aires, Argentina. His American family hosts are the L. D. Burts, 3556 Orchard Lake, Keego Harbor, and their five children.
Located at South Boulevard and Opdyke Road, the subdivi sion consists of about 500 single family residences.
REELECTED -r Mrs. William Scramlin, 8894 Jossman, Groveland Township, yesterday was named to her second two-year term as diairman of Michigan Farm Bureau Worn-
Emplopent Service to Assist Students at Walled Lake High
WALLED LAKE — A new em-dent looking for after-school ptoyment service aimed at find-
ing part-time jobs for students hiss been set up at Walled Lake High School.
Operated by the vocational education department, the service will assist any high school stu-
Supervisor Selected
They are looking for work In jobs ranging ht>m yard work, sales, constmetion and custodial dishwashers, short-order cooks, clerks and nurses’ aidea.
Meat-Check Law Implemented
A supervisor within the Michigan Department of Agriculture has been selected and a regulation drawn up to implement the state meat inspection law which will become effective next Jan. 1.
Under the act, all Michigan meat intended for sale that is not federally inspected must have inspection under the state agricultural department.
There are 328 known slanghter plants In the state that supply ahont 48 per cent of
most have federal taspection under U. S. law.
In the past, no state law required antemortem and, post-ntortem inspection of animals slaughtered in Michigan.
Several municipalities had inspection by local health u Plans call for continuation of such programs, if approved, under department supervision. UCENSES VARY The licenses of slaughter plants in the state will vary from $100 to $1,000 a year, depending on the number of animals slaughtered. Licenses must be obtained before Dec.
31 of each year from the Michigan Department of Agriculture.
Heading the meat inspection spetion of the deps livestock disease control division will be Dr. R Beebe.
He joined the department in 1955 after having been a private veterinary practitioner in the Traverse (Sty area for 16 years. During this time, he did meat inspection work for local packing plants.
registared with the piacenoBt service, acconUag to Alice J. Newcomer, coopmtive ednea-
The service, which is offered without charge, will list all types of employment, with the exception of baby sitting and house-
(XINTACT BUSINESSMEN
Some 125 area businessmen have been contacted and a i ber of students already placed in jobs.
Miss Newcomer said the school will assist busineskes in obtaining permits from toe Department of Labor allowing them to hire students.
Anyone with work suitable for high school students can contact the placement office from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. weekdays by telephoning the high school.
Agricultural Outlook
Farm Editors: High Income to Continue
The nation's farmers, who will take in more money this year than ever before in history, can be expected to repeat that performance in 1966, according to predictions made by the editors of Farm Journal, national farm! magazine.
They look for high cash receipts from continued ' strong livestock prices and another good crop year, backed up by high government payments under the new 1965 ftirm law.
At their semiaBnnal Agricultural Outlook Conference, Farm Jonmal’s field' and departmental editors who write for over 3 mlT made these observations:
compared with $14,506 lart year.
(Kntribnting to the record income this year are favorable weather in most parts of the connUy, excellent harvests, strong demand for food and fiber, higher livestock prices, Apanding exports, heavier applications of fertiliser, ho-, creased used of farm ma-
Neither is the 1965 record Income figure an isolated phenom-
controling insects, disease and
Farmers in some areas suffered from drought or excessive rainfall, but their misfortune was offset by excellent crop conditions elsewhere.
Gross farm income from all sources — farm and nonfarm —I in 1965 will reach the record- > breaking total of $51 billion.
Hie record crop output this year is no flash in the pan. It
In the last 10 years, total cash Income from farming has' increased at the rate of 2.99 per cent a year.
GROSS INCOME '
Average gross income on an ^yidual farm basis has in-, creasi^ at a rate of 6.38. per. cent annually.	|
The 1816 farm law will have < an over-all stabilizing effect on the farm income level for several years.
It establishes programs f o^r feed grains, wheat, dairy, rice and wool for a period of four years — compared with One-year and two-year programs «
Out of this fanners will spend some $30 billion for production equipment and supplies. AVERAGE INCOME Average income per farm from all aouroee will set a roo-ord of more than $15,000 in 1866,
has been increasing at a rate of the past 2 per cent a year since 1950. B will maintain farm income CORN YIELDS	returns near present levels for
Average com yields now are f*®<* grains and rice and twice What they were 15 years increase returns for wheat and wool. -
Steadily advaacing technology c o n p I e d wftb improving farm maaagemCat ability has made farmiag leas aad leas
BEEF CATTLE	!
Beef cattle prices are ex-' pected to remain strong for 1086, with hog prices holding at high levels at least for the first half.'
Clerk Resigns in Springfield After 10 Years
SPRINGflELD TOWNSHIP-Oscar R. Walz, Springfield Township clerk for 10 years, has resigned from crffice and been replaced by Township Trustee David ^eU.
TODY - The board of education has started condemnation proceddings against two proper-owners south of Niles Ele-rnentary School on West Square Lake Road to obtain land for a playground.
Walz submitted his resignation for health reasons.
Field, 6651 Ormond, has been a member of the Township Beard for two years.
Buel Starr was appointed to succeed Field on the board.
The new trustee, who lives at Holly, recently retired as
works manager of Pontiac Motor Division.
All three men are Republi-
Ihe remaining years in the two unexpired terms are undetermined, because the legislature has not yet set township election dates under the new State Constitution.
Condemnation Action Is Taken to Obtain Land for Playground
Smith said the rooms are taking up the present playground and that the additional land is needed for a new ^ area and athletic tield.
A condemnation petition as filed in Oakland (Kunty Circuit Court this week against the owners who between them own four acres of land, three vacant and one containing a house.
Schools Supt. Rex B. Smith said negotiations have jtoen going on for several months bnt to no avail.
He said the matter may still be negotiated, but that it will more likely go to court.
The petition orders the property owners to appear in court Dec. /30 to show cause why the petition should not be grantMl.
Eight rooms are being added to the school with money from a recently approved $4-million bond issue.
Seton Guild Mass Slated
WOOD CREEK FARMS -The annual Mass for deceased members of the Seton Guild will be said Nov. 15 in the chapel of St. Vincent and Sarah Fisher Home for (Kildren, 12 Mile and Inkster roads.
The 10 a.m. Mass will be fol-)wed by a breakfast in Labours Hall.
Reservations can be made with Mrs. Joseph Wolskl, 4145 Orchard Way, Bloomfield Town-
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SALE SUNDAY 11 A.M. lo 6 P.M. PONTIAC WAREHOUSE Telegraph Rd. ' i Mile South of Orchard Lake Rd.
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THK PONTMC l*KhaS. FKIDAV, \OVEMBKR 12, 1»«5
WASHINGTON (AP) - 'Hiere is strong speculation around the Senate that the Harry Byrd e may not be missing from the 1966 ron call lists despite Sen. Harry F. Byrd’s resignation.
The 7#-year-old Virginia Democrat quit the Senate Thursday with a formal resignation sub^ mitted to and accepted by Gov. Albertis S. Harrison ,Jr.
Byrd said he was stepping down because of his health. He has been suffering from arthri-
KANSAS GOVERNOR ARRIVES - Gov. William H. Avery of Kansas and his wife arrived at International Airport in Mexico City yesterday. The governor is a member of a goodwill tour of Mexico that begins at Acapulco today.
\
Amish in Iowa Dispute May Move to Wisconsin
INDEPENDENCE, Iowa (AP) —Five of the 16 Amish families involved in a school dispute are believed planning to move to Wisconsin, Buchanan County authorities said Thursday.
Four of the Amish men have gone to Wisconsin several times recently, saying they were going to attend Ainerals. But authorities said they believe the Amish have been looking at farms they may buy.
One member of the group, Aden Tutzey, already has announced he has purchased a farm in Wisconsin and will move there after the first of the year. He is one of three Amish men who has had part of his property attached to satisfy fines levied for refusal to send his children to schools with MdtMaMiaad teachers.
Another of the group, Enos Mullett, has said he plans to move to Indiana.
Members of the Amish group were taken to court in Hazleton and fined again Wednesday.
Mullett told authorities he definitely is considering sending
his children to school in Indiana who-e he said they can attend a school of their own choice.
★ ★ ♦
County attorney Harlan Lemon said papers to attadi property of ‘three more Amish men are ready to be served.
An attachment was served Wednesday on William Bont-rager for 350 bushels of his com to satisfy five fines and costs I totaling $169.25.
Awrey Bakeries Pact Ratified by Teamsters
DETROIT (AP)-A strike by 65 Teamsters Union members at Awrey Bakeries was settled nmrsday when Bakery Drivers Local 51 ratified a three-year
The walkout began Oct. 31 and idled 1,300 employes and 120 contract route drivers at Awreys. The bakery firm, which operates 228 retail outlets, said full-scale operations would re^ sume Monday.
Pern s Refirement May Not End Byrd Reign
tis.
Harrison is expected to act!
speedily to name a successor to fill Byrd’s seat until next No-vembw’s election. Virginia will
See Related Story, Page A-14
elect two senators at that time, with Sen. A. WiUis Robertson, 78, seeking a new six-year term.
At the top -i- or near it — the Harrison’s lists of prospective appointees is the name of Harry F. Byrd Jr., 51, son of the retiring senator and a Virginia state senator since 1947. The younger
Byrd is publisher of the Winchester Evening Star and the Harrisonburg Daily Record in his state.
Harrison has had close association with the Byrds since he managed the retiring senator's 1952 campaign. He benefited when the younger Byrd decided not to seek the Democratic nomination for governor in 1961.
'There was some speculation that Harrison might nam^an interim appointee and seeirthe office himself. The name of Rep. William M. Tuck, former governor, had been mentioned
as a possible appointee. But he said he had called the governor, told him he did not want the appointment, and recommended the younger Byrd for the post.
Byrd’s departure from the Senate will deliver the chairmanship of the powerful Senate's Finance Committee into the hands of Sen. Russell B. Long, D-La. Long, bow 47, carried much of the committee this year when Byrd was physically handicapped by painful arthritis in a knee.
Long said Thursday in Baton Rouge, La., he would like to
serve both as assistant Senate, Democratic leader and chair-! man of the finance committee “if the Democrats would let me.|
“Of course, if the Democrats! want me to choose between as-| sistant leader and chairman, L prefer being Senate finance chairman."
He pointed out that when Lyndon B. Johnson was.. Senate Democratic leader he also served as chairman of the Senate’s Space Committee and filled an active roll as an ap-propriations subcommittee chairman.
In Phoenix, Ariz., Sen. Carl Hayden, D-Ariz., Senate presi-Ident pro tempore, said Long is likely to become finance committee chairman with Sen. John 0. Pastore, D-R.I., probably becoming assistant Democratic leader.
Byrd’s retirement casts some doubt on the future of the Senate House Committee on Reduction of Nonessential Federal Expenditures, which keeps tabs on the rise and fall of federal pay rolls and is supposed to point out where government economies can be made.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1965 Harold a. rmonuLD
1 nuor
FDOtiic, Michigan
•tenUry *i A4vtrtl({n(
O. IbMn t^l Ai
Blackout Spotlights Need for 'Readiness’
If a reminder were needed of how dependent is modem civilization on one of nature’s prime elements — electricity — it was dramatically and frighteningly proyed by the massive power failure that affected 30 million people in eight of the Nation’s northeastern states.’
A significant and reassuring sidelight on the disruption of the service that mankind has come to take so much for granted was the absence of. panic or lawlessness among the millions trapped in environments both unsuitable and ill-prepared to cope with the emergency. ★ ★ ★
The emergency factor of the short-lived catastrophe points up on a large scale a lesson that ■ eyery household and institution fdtould profit by on a small one.
It is the need to provide standby illumination in the event of cessation, infrequent as it is, of the vital current that turns our nights into days.
We suggest that today is the time for every householder and institution administrator to sed that a plentiful supply of tested flashlights, candles and modem lanterns are available and strategically placed as precaution against blackout of any description.
★ ★ ★
When our Heavenly Father ordained that “there be light,” he left it to man to protect himself against failure of the artificial illumination created by his own ingenuity.
is much talk about them—but so far, no correction.
One of the wM*st inequities is double taxation of dividend income. First, the corporation is taxed on its profits ai the high going rate. Then dividends paid to the corporation’s stockholder-owners are taxed again at the individual income tax rates.
The government gave some recognition to this injustice 10 years ago when a law was passed that stockholders could deduct 4 per cent from taxes due on dividends received. But even this token relief was subsequently withdrawn.
★ ★ ★
Double taxation of dividends is no small matter these days. More than 20 million Americans, the majority in the middle income brackets, own stocks and most of them receive dividends.
★ ★
Thera is neither rhyme, reason or Justice in a tax policy that singles out one group of earners for punitive treatment. The elimination of double taxation would be an excellent starting point for tax reform in generai.
Double Dip Dividend Tax Is Indefensible
Tajc reduction and tax reform are prime matters of domestic discussion. We hav^ had reductions in income tax rajes and elimination of some Federal excise taxes.
Tax reform is another matter. It Involves the elimination of inequities in tile Federal tax system. There
Canada Voters Reach No-Decision Verdict
An exercise in futility on a national scale was presented by the general election recently held in Canada.
The fifth such election in eight years, it was called by Liberal Prime Minister L«8ter B. Piarson in the hope of boosting his party’s representation in the 265-seat House to a -majority.
Pre-election soundings indicated that the 68-year-old leader could do it too—but the electorate north of the border is about as unpredictable as voters in the U.S.A.
★ ★ ★
When the election smoke had cleared away, John Diefenbaker, 70-year-old leader of the Conservative Party whom Pearson had ousted as Prime Minister in an election 30 months ago, was neck and neck with the incumbent.
DiErENRAKiR’s party actually was the winner, since it gained seven seats to up its total to 99 — short of course Of parliament majority.
Pearson’s Liberals captured 129 seats-^the same number it held before the election. Still four seats short of a majority, the prime minister will have to continue his reign by means of a shaky coalition with three minority parties.
★ ★ ★
The election, which cost the Dominion $10 million, was viewed with disfavor by a considerable number of Canadians and by influeptial metropolitan newspapers. They seemed to think that another election was one thing Canada didn’t need..^
MARLOW
Verbal Ordiids to- <
Mrs. Sarah Bowman of West Bloomfield Township;
83rd birthday.
Mrs. Anna B. Dailey of 21 Lexington; 92nd birthday.
Bert Hilton
of Rochester; 99th birthday.
Janies Lewis Hill
of Waterford Township; 87tb birthday.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles A; Harnes of 1038 LaSalle; 61st wedding anniversary.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul J. Wlema of 561 Lowell; 58th wedding anniversary.
Vo»c« of the People:

Divided—Like Gaul—Into Three Parts!
David Lawrence Says:
Did LBJ Err on Aluminum Slap?
Foreign Affairs Lucky for LBJ
By JAMES MARLOW Associated Press Newa Analyst WASHINGTON - Under the law of averages, President Johnson’s luck in foreign affairs won’t last.
In the first year of his full term fordgn crises have been relatively few at a time when he was anxious to concentrate on domestic problems and getting his programs through Congress.
Yesterday he arranged a full-scale review of foreign policy with top-level Cabinet dficers at his Texas raifch, the first of its kind since his gallbladder operation Oct. 8. He had held such meetings regularly before that.
Nothing indicated this one would he unnsnal, which Is a reminder that except for the Dominfcaa Repahlk revolt and the conthining war in Viet Nam, Johnson has been fairly free of overseas dilemmas, at least critical ones. There hAs been a basic difference between the way Johnson and President John F. Kennedy-tackled foreign polity; From# the very first Kennedy plunged head-first into it, and personally.
★ ★ ★
In less than three years he made an excellent impression abroad. But Johnson has played foreign policy in a much lower key. One example: In his first year Kennedy made a. trip abroad; Johnson has stayed home.
FORCEFUL ACTION But in the biggest and most critical problems that confronted them in their first five months Johnson took far more forceful and positive action than Kennedy.
By the time Johnson began his own first fuU term,' South Viet Nam was dwindling into c h a o s. He poured in American troops, began bombing North Viet Nam and stopped the Viet Cong tide.
But elsewhere for Johnson the world has fc«en relatively quiet. Another lucky ^int for him is that he hasn’t had to cope with anyone so unpredictable or pushy as Kennedy encountered; Russian Premier Khrushchev,
★ ★ ★
Since Johnson’s predecessors all the way back to President Franklin D. Roosevelt got engulfed in one crisis after another, this year for Johnson is apt to look like no' n)ore than a co/fee break tefore be moves out of the White House.
Sooner or later he will' have to get deeper into foreign affairs, if only to give the Western world a far more vital leadership than it has now. Without siKh leadership the Western alliance, under de Gaulle’s heckling, may crumble.
WASHINGTON-P resident Johnson may have made in the last few days a political mistake of far-reaching importance by placing the Democratic party in the unenviable position of being completely re-1 sponsible hereafter for the economic wellbeing of Indus- LAWRENCE try, of agriculture and of the individual citizen throughout the country.
By asserting as a right of the government the power to fix the price at which aluminum can be sold, the administration has taken control of the metal market and, by implicatipn, has assumed a mastery of all the businesses of the country which produce or use the various commodities in the government’s stockpile or are dependent on federal contracts involving tens of billions of dollars.
The administrathw has already been exerting pretsnre on the Federal Reserve Board
fair return oe of capital.
How can investors expect satisfactory dividends to flew from the initiative and ingenuity of business management where there is a veto power exercised against business operations by the President of the United States?
How long will it be now before the prices of securities will be seriously affected, and will citizens be inclined to put their savings into companies that are limited in what they can pay in dividends?
NO SANCTIONS America has entered Into an era of govemmeat dictatorship on the economic scene without any specific sanction by Congress.
All this inevitably will have a far-reaching inflnence on fn-
iSs are good or bad has always been a factor with many voters in either supporting or rejecting a i>arty in power. Now there will be a greater awareness of this issue, and it could be decisive.
* A *
The administration hereafter will find itself even more the recipient of blame or praise for every important change in wages or prices or in the purchasing power of the dollar. It’s an awesome responsibility for any administration to assume.
In the next presidential election three years hence, the Dem-ocrqto will bavs to bet on the preralence of a booming prosperity, or else face the consequences of a recession or deep depression that they themselves nuy have unwittingly wrought by that time.
even as bank loans are today at an unprecedentedly high level.
But not ut^l the President stepped in to order the Defense Department to sell 300,000 tons of aluminum in the government stockpile did it become crystal clear that the role of government as an adviser and counselor of buaineas had been expanded to the role of disclplinar-
Whether it be called an economic dictatorship or an unwarranted extension of executive power without any specific authorization by Ck>ngress to fix either wages or prices, the net effect of the latest interference in the natural operation of the laws of supply and demand is the same.
WAS PRIVATE For today the chief executive of the Unit^ States government has become the chief executive of what has hitherto been regarded as a private-business system in America.
It hai tome as a shock to
Bob Considine Says:
Behavwr in Blackout Surprised Newscasters
NEW YORK see what comes yqur eggs in
The radio boys who kept us i n f 0 r m ed about the progress (or lack of progress) of ’The Great Blackout did a fine job.
’The scope of the crisis—Toronto to Harrisburg — occasioik voices, as well it
Well, now you from putting all
I
CONSIDINE ed awe in their should have.
in the Broqz bp light earmarked for St. Jude.
Throughout the siege I found myself worrying abwt what would happen if a meteor shower (one is due soon) would fan acrou the skies, or we were hit by a thunderstorm, or if a frisky military pilot spread a carpet of sofiic booms up and down the stricken area, as one did last Saturday about the same time as Tuesday’s power colUpse.
My wife’s thoughts were for people trapped in elevators, ill persons unable to come down from their lofty apartments, doctors unable to get up to them, women about to bear cbildren.
was sympathetic with the
what he did fai Ihreateniag and thea dabbing' the ahuniRam eompenies into the reseiadiag ef price rises they had felt were necessary to achieve a
.Smiles
Ufe can be empfy unless you put something into it.
It doesn’t take long for some folks’ bills to become collector’s items,
A *	*
We’d like to have plumber’s privileges on that drab all the taxpayer!’ money ig going down.
If hr
If you neglect^ to wrt on •now liret, be prepared to pet your sboalder td the wheel.
Bat they seemed to marvel mose over the fact that New Yoiiers and the other 15 mil-liooi blaaheted by the break-dowB acted like cKillied ha-man beings.
“There is little or no looting, think of that!” one treasured larynx informed us through our transistor. "When^you think of all the opportuniues. . V’ His voice trailed off wistfully, as if he wished he had been among the shoppers at Tiffany’s, Car-tjer’s, Van Cleef L Aiptls and the bottled goods department at the supermarket when the power stuttered once or twice and went blooey.
*..*'*■
From the first reports in. wa all conducted ourselves pi^ much as we would have if the lights bad stayed on, though there was a better spirit of friendliness and nelghborlbiess afoot.
FREE FOOD
Free food was passed down into stranded subway cars, and here and there in the stygian blackness below the ground, stranded commuters sang.
la the Bronx, a priest •peaed the doer of his coadlo-Ht church, not only to aU who wished to eater bat to disirib- «veramMit ka.
SXIpItagthellUsMsta.
h^befor«.apolroa salats gets throagh liberal ideas.”
fbe Mlaister of Jastice is Many a meal was cooked quoied as haviag referred to
Mother Expresses View ot Fighting in Vkt Nam
Are we goir^g to continue to sit idiy ^ly^nd watch dUr Boys being slaughtered in Viet Nam just foV political gains, as Supreme Court Justice William Doug-lag says? How many of our politicians have someone detj^ to them in service? Probably not too many. They have the mondy and means to send their boys to college.
★ ★
If it were an all-out war and our own coimtry’a future and aecurity were at stake we ahould all be willing to figlil aide by side. Mothers of America, let’s be heard In protest and either have m all-out war whert everyone has to fight or let a get our boys back home.
★ ★ ★
Write your Congressman today. They are making us hate and after aU the kilUng is over we are to forgive and forget. I have a son in service and have just buried my oldest boy. There is no greater sorrow and there is no forgetting.
A WORRIED MOTHER
In reply to the “whitewashed’’ letter	{f"'
rlson’s suicide over “the agony we namese," this is a bit of mockery. He could have ^ concern for humanity by going to Viet Nam and defending our American freedom.
The letter mentions "negotiations’t as the only aoluUon to the Vietnamese problem. I disagree. What do you do with a bunch of Red “butchers” who brag on ruling the	"
who have refused our offers to negotiate in Viet Nam? Flgnting is the only thing they rnpect.
PROUD TO BE AN AMERICAN
*Qtizens Resent Uninsured Driver Law’
Many resent the discriminating law recently enacted by ^ Romney to the effect that ail nwtoriata who have no liabiiw insurance must pay $35 to the State of Michigan. I have swallowed a lot of pills in my lifetime but this one won’t go down. Who ia going to benefit? Surely it will ^ W State aWrf money and the only ones I can see who will benefit will ba tba insurance companies.
DISCOURAGED
‘Show Those Who Served We’re United’
Veterans’ Day offered a lesson from our Nation’s pa.st and sounds a challenge for her future. This day emphasized that freedom and peace with honor come at a high but worthy price. ★ ★	★
The logie by thMe ladnlgiai in teaching and placard earryiag, advocating oar witiitowal from Sonth Viet Naps aad from our cotnasitmom to Irtadoni’o eaaso, ahoald bett close examination. If the toterlty of oar Cooalry faObK dangers will mount fast.	f x
★	★	★	■
Our greatest honor to men and women who served their n#* tion in time of crisis is our firm resolve that their efforts and sacrlficts were not in vain. It's our obligation to show the worid that we are flnnly united in the lofty princb>lM of liberty and justice for all mankind.
WnUAM F. TUNNINGLEY ^ CLARKSTON
Gives Suggestion* lor Naming Qty Streets
Now that we have become reconciled to the name “Wide Track Drive,” we have possibly opened grand new vistu in the naming of Pontiac streete. A fqyr “attrhektive” suggestions: Sidetrack, HaH Track, Backtrack, Railroad Track, Racetrack, or Sound Track. For something really "spectrackular,” maybe we can even have a “New Economy Size Track.” Let’s show ’em that we don’t have a one-trhek mind in “Pontrack.”
JOHN W. QUI'TMEYER ' ,	ROCHESTER
Comments on ‘Youth Appreciation Week’
Since this is Youth Appreciation Week, I would like to show my appreciation for my sons who are without a father. My 13-year-old son has helped many people, often domg hard physical labor because he likes helping people. He has been saving money from odd jobs to buy a pair of hunting boots, but his little brother needed a winter coat. Witl^t a wd from me, be took his money and bought his brother a jacket. On Halloween night ha gave up a dance to take his brother trick-or-treating. When they returned my supply of candy was gone and my three-year-oid gave out his candy.
•k -k f
My boys are not angds-they get mto mischief like moat normal boys do-but they are on the right track and I think they will stay that way.
CHIP’S MOTHER
Reviewing Other Editorial Pages
Vote on Chance
The CoUtmbuB Dispatch
A voting machine is somewhat remMecent of the slot machine.
When you putt the lever you don’t know whether you’re going to get plums or lemons.
this
wbh 16i66 members as,
Intrusion —
The Dothan Eagle
Here Is something that seems to be contemptible,, pffeneive and an exhibition of very bad
Wd refer te the iRMmced 'areeptiRfe by Sewlsr Reberf F. Keimedy (DN.Y.) ef an invilRtioe to go to IMtii Africa next May to address the an-anal meetiag of the Nattoaal Uaiea of Seuth AfHcaa Ma-deirts, described la an wtide tai The New York Times as a moltiracial ergaaizatis* that
An address by Robert Kennedy could inflinne such students andrenderagreat disservice to the government of South Africa, one of our conspicuously staunch Allies during World War II and to this date. ' IJiis thing has been brewing for sbme time. Presldhnt Johnson and the State Department reportedly take s dim view ot the affair and hoped Kennedy would not accept the invitation. The South African government is ffring contlderation to refusing KemMMb! a visa if and whan he requests one. We hope they do^th^. Iheir friends would applaud such action. Their enemies couldn’t treat them much wu r s e than they have beep doing for nM^ yMrs.
♦	A V
leaetor Kenaedy mist blwq that hit coatemt^tod qetisa
The only pbosibls reason for his doing this is that he hopes to gain some benefit for bfanself and deem’t care hew mock be borte elbers. Ibis may not surprise those who know him wra hot it mast bo shocking and disappointing to many others who hhd hitler hopes for him.
Good Humor!
The Chicago Sun-Times
Sen. Robert Kennedy gotytT' laugh when he etarted a speech with “Ladiee and gentlemen, honored gueete — and Francis X. Morrieiejf, whereder you aref
naweicome ialrtislon ip United States fenifn affairs and or iBsait	Africa.

t	tiMr tfld
----- h eemZ
THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1965
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THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, yoVEMBSH 12. 1905
SILENT AGREEMENT - A McDonnell Aircraft Corp. employe relays by sign language the proceedings of a mass meeting of striking machinists to some of his deaf-mute co-workers in St. .Charles, Mo., yesterday. About 10,000 members of the Interna-
tional Association of Machinists agreed by Voice vote to return to work, ending a four-day unauthorized walkout at the Gemini space capsule and Phantom jet fighter plant.
2 Spaceships Groomed for Big Tests
World News Roundup
Knew Secrets
Pair Gone for Months, i Presumed Deserted
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Army is investigating the dis-aK>earance of two how who had access to secret information.
A spokesman identified one as CWO Spencer Q. Harris Jr., who disappeared in-September after delivering secret material to a depot in New York State.
The other was identifled as Sgt. 1C Glen Roy Rohrer, 44, who served witt a military intelligence nnit in Germany. He has been missing since An-gnst.
Both men were declared deserters after being absent without leave for 30 days.
The spokesman said that Harris was assigned to the Ordnance Company at Pirmas-ens, West Germany, and disappeared after a courier mission in September to deliver classi-
LONDW UP) - Prime Minister Harold Wilson’s majorily in the House of Cipnnoos was back to two votes today. Labor pai' candidate James Wellbelov won a special election in the Erith Disfrict last night.
The district is considered a safe Labor constituency. Well-beloved got 21,835 votes, Con-ser\’ative David Madel got 11,763 and Liberal Stanley VinM traile with 2,823.
CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) Engineers working a half mile apart yesterday groomed two of America’s finest spaceships for different but important steps in the nation’s long climb to the moon.
On launch pad 19, the Gemini 7 capsule was hooked up electrically for the first time to the Titan 2 rocket that is to shoot astnmauts Frank Borman and James Lovell into orbit Dec. 4 in the opening of a twin-launch Gemini spectacular.
Technicians on an adjacent complex were readying the
middle section of an Apollo moonship for a 15-second firing tomorrow that will send it nowhere, but will move it closer to the first unmanned flight of the Apollo in early
The Apollo ground test had been set for today, but was put off a day because of lagging preparations.
It will be the first firing here of the unit that in three years is to return three moon explorers to earth.
For its debut in January, the 81-foot three-section Apollo ship
will be rocketed 280 miles high by a new Saturn IB superbooster and then rammed back toward a south Atlantic recovery force.
If it and a second suborbital^ test are successful, the first thres-man shot could come late next year.
“Although no astronauts will be aboard for the first launch, the spacecraft contains almost all of the systems necessary for a 14-day manned space missioiy Apollo Program Chief Joseph Shea has said.
fied material to the Senec Army Depot at Romulus, N.Y.
After his mission, the army said, Harris took official leave. But at the eU of September, when he was 'scheduled to return to Gemuny, he was absent without leave.
could not be confirmed that he was a unclear technician, was reported in Enrope.
Rohrer, who served in the 513th Military Intelligence Group Heidelberg, Gemiany, has been missing since Aug. 16.
Laborife Victory Boosts Morgin to Two
held the seat for Labor since World War H, died in August There is one more vacancy in the 630-seat Commons, the seat for Hull North. Its Lat)or member, Henry Stdonums, died 8^ day. The election has not bm scheduled yet
UNITED NATIONS, N. U. » -The U.N. Children’s,Fund (UNICEF) will use its $51,788 Nobel Prize money for a scholarship or fellowship in memory of its first executive director, the late Maurice Pate, informed sources said today.
Pate’s successor, Henry La-bouisse of the United States; his deputy, Mrs. Adelaide Sinclair of Canada; and the chairman of UNICEF’s Executive Board, Mrs. Zena Harman of
Inel, will go to Oslo Dec. Id to deceive the prise,; the
Pate, a former American nancler, nerved as UNICEF’s chief for 17 yehrs until his death of a heart attack Jan. 19.
AVIGNON, France (AP) -Paul and Madeleine Barrier decided to give romance another try today. They were remarried In city hall less than a year after they got a divorce.
★ # ★
The bride aiid groom had a little trouble hearing during the civil ceremony. He is 85. %e is 78.
MOSCOW (JR- Soviet President Anastas Mikoyan and Premier Alexei Kosygin sent a message to Prince ^rodom Sihanouk of Cambodia congratulating him on Cambodia’s independence day, Pravda said today.
It was the ftat repivt of a contact between top iMders of the tw6 countries since Sihan-
ian chief of state “expressed grhtitude for the congratulations’’ from Mikt^an and Kbiy-gin.
Formosa (*)—Presl-dsnt Chiang Kai-shek of Nationalist China said the defecthm yesterday of tlu«e Communist Chinese ainnen “demonstratm how eagerly the, people on the nutinland are expecting us to fight back.”
Chiang spoke at a big rally celebrating the 160th anniversary of tte birth of Sun Yat-sen, founder of the Chinese
the Russians had snubbed him by asking him to postpone a visit scheduled for November. Pravda said that the Cambod-
bomber that the three defectors - Lee up-
at the rally and i with loud cheers.
GuesU at the rrily included Goy. Otto Keroer of Illinois.
Dr. Sun Was bom in 1867 but the Oiinese figure age on the Shorter lunar year. He died in 125.
Before his speech, Cliiang met with Lee Hsien-ping, 28, the pilot of the Soviet-built Ilyushin 28 jet
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THE PONTIAC PRjBSS \DAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1965
foreign News View
GermanfVexinglolBJ?
By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign Newi Analyst When West German Chancellor Ludwig Erhard pledged West Germany’s continued devotion to	the,
^United States,
She also toi tUng-sized . ilem directly *to the lap ofj 'president John-]
•iwn-
7: The pledgi ^came in	the]
'peacefully pro-j 'vinclal air of newSOM Bonn where, before Parliament, Erhard outlined his	new	government’s'
program for the next four years and demanded a greater voice for West Germany in nuclear plana for NATO.
■ Erhard	pians	to	visit	the
United States soon and his
is one he will place di-
•	It is a demand almost as explosive as the bomb itself and ^so intertwined as to be inseparable frmn world disarmament, the hiture of NATO and Western Europe and the course of the United States’ own relations with the Soviet Union.
'Die problem dates from West German’s 1966 entry into NATO and stems from an almost pathological fear, not only in the Soviet Union but among allies as well, of a resurgent nationalistic and ambitious Germany.
BOTH HAVE CASE . If opportunism can be linked with logic, then both sides have a case.
NATO was conceived as a defensive force apinst expanding Soviet eommnnism. Its greatest contrflMtors have been West Germany and the United States.
Erhard declared that NATO must ' accommodate itself to hew political and military situations.
*	*‘In particular," he said, "wh ^ust solve the problems which
derive from the fact that some members of the alliance have nuclear weapons while others do not."
PRESTIGE POINT Complicating the picture Is the fact that possession of the nuclear weapon is a matter of prestige.
When Red China snccessfnl-ly exploded its first nuclear device, it boasted that this was a weapon constmcted entirely by Asians.
It is probable that President de Gaulle insisted upon an independent French nuclear program less for the defense of France than as a means to force his way into the councils of world powers.
A further difficulty is that few of the powers involved are willing to say exactly what they mean.
DEMANDS VOICE Erhard demands « voice in nuclear planning. He thus expresses West German national pride and negates West Germany’s professed confidence in the nuclear umbrella provided by the United States.
Re also ignores the boilt-in fears of former victims of German aggression to whom a voice in nuclear affairs Is only a short step from actnal
De Gaulle signs a treaty of cooperation with West Germany only to have it disclosed later that his real objective is to force West Germany permanently into the role of a secondary power.
’The United States proposed a multilateral nuclear naval force for NATO. It is designed to appease both Germany and France.
But it is a plan without substance because it is a plan that leaves the U. S. finger on the nuclear trigger.
In short, ii is a problem confused by international double-talk. Yet the future of disarmament, of l^opean cpo| tion and of East-West relatioiia depend upon its solution.
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THt PONTIAC PRES3, FHIDAY, yOVEMBEB 18. 19M
Negroes Call for Marches in Two Alabama Counties
EUTAW, Ala. (AP) - Negro leaders called for demonstrations today in two Aiabama counties in a drive to dramatize demands for federai laws ivo-tecting civil rights workers.
About 150 marchers walked to the courthouse in Butler County, mme than 100 miles southeast of Eutaw, in a demonstration Thursday after an earlier incident in this west Alabama town where the campaign started Wednesday,
‘‘We’re going to march to the courthouse again,” said the Rev. Samuel Wells of Albany, Ga., one of a cwps of workers for the Southern Christian Leadership Conference which is mounting a campaign of demonstrations for new legislation. Wells is the leader in the Butler County project.
A march in Greenville at dusk
was the second of a planned stt^ ies in an Alabama campaign for congressional action following four civil ri^ts slayings in this state during 1965. There have been no convictions. Greenville is the county seat of Butler County.
NOT ON SCENE
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., the president of SCLG, cut short a European trip in order to launch demonstrations here, but he has not participated in the marches.
City and county police ofQ-cers, aided by auxiliary police, sealed off intersections directed traffic for the orderly march to the curthouse at Greenville. Demonstrators, singing and chanting, carried
signs whidi read; “Equal Jus-
tice”;
tice.”
M ONTGOMERY
WARD
'Abolish all white Jus-
The march in Greenville, a dty of about 7,000, was uneventful. Only a few white spectators watched during the rally at the courthouse.
Negro leaders scheduled march in Eutaw after about 70 pupils returned to their sdipol Thursday.
STRIKES YOirra
Sheriff W. E. Lee struck one of the demonstrators, identified as Joseph Allen, 17, adien group of the Negroes refused to leave the school grounds. They were told by the principal that after leaving classes they must be accompanied by their parents in order to reenter the
The youth said he was not hurt.
After a brief delay, the pupils were allowed to return to the school. They had cut classes to attend a mass meeting at nearby church.
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BOSTON (AP) / Frances Troiano unwrapped about $5,000 in new $5 bills when she opened ■-covered bundle ibe de/ her
found outside/
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She noticjM that all the bills
LOS ANGEILES (AP) - If you knew you could prolong the youth ^ your cUld^ by keeping thiem cold and would you?
Play^ it cool and cutting caloriee nuy be Just the thing for staying young longer.
Two Baltimare scientists say it has worked^ in their experi-
Yeah, rotifers, you know, tiny
GLASSY LOOK — Eugen Lundberg, president of the Swedish Glass ,&port Association, inspects a serving tray from the JaAes Stanley Berglund collection of Swedish glass at t^ American Swedish Institute in Minneapolis, Minn., recently. Lundberg, a member of a visiting Swedish
delegatiph, spoke at a dinner for glass buyers at the institute/
ut^
Role Explained by Griffin
ALLEGAN (AP) — “Respon- have been advanced in Coo-
had the s^e serial number.
Bostph Police Lt. Albert L. Flattct^ and a Secret Service agent confirmed her suspicions that they were counterfeit.
Police said they believe the bills found ThurAay may be part of the same counterfeit money that has been circulating in New England, mostly in $10 and $20 bills, since June.
sible support for the President «4ien hb actions warranted it, coupled with responsiUe criticism of his errors,” was described Thursday night as the role of Republicans in the S9th Congress.
The comment was contained in an address by Rep. Robert P. Griffin, R-Mich., as guest speaker at $10-per-plate Allegan County Republican Committee fund-raising dinner here.
by Republican for
been drowned out by the thun- \ der of the “Great Stampede,’ bd said.
'Too often,” he said, “irre ■ fbr human
Prominent in the field of labor legislation, Griffin is a Traverse City resident who represents Michigan’s 9th Congressional District.
“Responsible programs to free men from the poverty-ignorance-unemployment cycle
dignity has become the law of the land.”
Griffin said it was the Republican party’s challenge to re mind Anomcans “... that trading the tyrannies of ignorance, poverty and prejudices for the tyranny of government control is not—and never has been— the American way.”
He was Introduced to the audience by 4th District Congressman Edward Hutchinson of Fennville.
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Cold, Hunger to Stay Young?
“We regard this as an taut finding because it means we may be able to do something bioiogicaUy that wiU influence the period of old age,” said Or.
Dr. Barrows said that feeding rats one-third less than normal anwunts extended their lifeman by SO per cent.
MO PER CENT The Ufa of a rotifer
Why not people?
Well, for one thing, said the scientists, Drs. Charles H. Bar-rows and Nathan W. Shock, if you can read this, you’re too late to start the treatment.
“These experiments indicate that what happens to a person very earjy in Ufe influences p-eatly what happens to him later in life,” explained Dr. Shock.
The answer then, no doubt, is to run to the cradle and snatch away that bottle and blanket. Right?
Well, Dr. Barrows isn’t too optimistic that it would work. VERY difficult
It would be very difficult to get anough children whose parents would eUow them to be fed only half of what all the other children are getting," he said. “They probabfy woAd be smaU-er, and the practical problems would be great.”
Drs. Shock and Barrow told newsmen Thursday that their rats and rotifers, who had no dnice but to cooperate, had lived up to twice as long as weU-fed rats and warm rotifers. And they reported, they lengthened certain stages of the creatures’ Uves, including the reproductive period and old age.
impor-lengthened
___„______ JM per cent by either cutting down on the food or by reducing the tempo’atiire df the water in which they live. ^ Dr. Shock is chief of me gerontology branch of the National Heart Institute, Baltimore City Hofldtals. Dr. Barrow* heads the institute’s apetioa ol nutritional biochemistry. They’re in Los Angeles for a meeting of 4he gerontological society.

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THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1963
A-11
Phone Rate Probe Could Drag On
WASHINGTON (UPI) Ped-•nl investigators are preparing to take a hard look at your iel^hone bill.
C3iief aim of the unprece-slented study by the Fedoid Communications Commission
(FCC) is to^^elgh the fairness of intersta^ rates charged by American Telephone & Telegraph fATAT)^ and decide whether new rates should be prescribed.
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OR4DIU____________________OPEN SUM. 10-1
AHheiwh the FCC’s anther-Hy is limited to interstate rates, the impossibility of isolating them from other ATAT charges means the investigation will cover the entire fi-nancial stmetare of Alexander Graham BelTs most famou invention. It could drag on for years.
ATAT charges that the whole hing is a waste of time and nooney and claims its rates already are subject to sufficient federal scrutiny.
★ ★ ★
After all, the company) says, its rates have fallen 22 per cent since 1940, reducing the average individuars monthly telephone biU to I5.62.
AVERAGE COSTS
The latest government figures, from the Labor Department’s cost-of-living suhrey, cover 1961. They show the average phone bill then was 17-24 a month in urban areas, $5.08 in rural nonfarm areas and $2.94 in rural farm areas.
They break down this way: local service-urban $5.77, rural nonfarm $3.14, rural farm |2.14; long distance-urban $1.47, rural nonfarm $1J4, mral farm M cents.
Rural residents pay less because they use the telephone less and their rates are usually Heavy concentrations of telephones, unlike utilities such as gas and water, increase the cost providing service.
"We have the cheapest rates in the world in terms of the consumers’ ability to pay,” proclaims ATAT. It says the aver; age American earns enough in two hours and 17 minutes to pay his monthly bill. This compares with ATAT figures of five hours and 59 minutes, in London, and 16 hours and 36 minutes in Paris.
NOT YET
Nobody at the FCC is prepared at this time to call the ATAT rates too high.
“nothing has been found wrong with the rate structure, but there ore enough qnes-tiotts about It to warrant an
But a hint irf government sus-
picion that a reduction is In. order was contained in the announcement of the investigation. |
*	*	*	I
The FCC said a financial report submitted by ATAT showed
significant” and wide variations in earnings for various services.
LOW RATES
’The report further suggested that ATArs money-making telephone operations might be subsidizing unreasonably low rates for services which have competition, such as private telegrapli lines.
’The report was followed by an FCC staff suggestioa that Western Union be given a monopoly on all telegraphic services.
ATAT has a monopoly on interstate phone service. Competition in the field proved Impractical in the early 1900s when people needed as many as fiv^ telephones from different companies to maintain contact with everybody else.
*	w ★
’Through its 18 subsidiary Bell systems, ATAT also furnishes most of the nation’s intrastate service. ’This gives the company exclusive operation of 75 million of the 89 million phones in the country.
DO BUSINESS
The other 14 million are operated by independent companies who must do business with ATAT to connect their customers with the rest of the world. The rates charged by these firms thus could also be affected by the investigation.
’The number independents has decreased from 5,983 to 2,535 since the end of World War II as the most powerful have swallowed op smaller firms.
Most serve sparsely populated rural areas although a few hold; forth in urban centers, such as Rochester, N. Y. ’The largest, ^ General Telephone System, is in areas all over the nation.
*	★ ★
But the independents are dwarfed by ATAT. ’Dieir com-1 bined 1964 revenue of $1.5 billion compared with ATAT’s $10.5' billion.	i
ATAT is big business—the biggest.' It has more than 760,000 employes and 2.5 million stockholders who realized dividends of $2 a share last year.
For years, it has been the nation’s inost profitable company in terms of dollars and cents. Its profit for the year ended Ang. 31 was $1J billion, of which about 25 per cent was attribnted to interstate operations.
Liberal congressmen have often charged that the FCC wasn’t keeping close enough watch over the company. Some have hinted that the nation best could be served by a government-owned system.
★ * * ■
The FCC has never used its authority to set rates for most ATAT operations, but it has negotiated various rate structures in closed sessions with company officiais.
'Lorpfaf Bricks Smash Birchite Store Windows!
MinoiT (AP) - Bricks wrapped in paper bearing the| inscription “lorpfat,” were tossed thrdugh windows at the! American Opinion Library Book Store near the Wayne State University campus Thursday. Police said the store specializes in John Birch Society literature. Police were trying to determine what “lorpfat” meant.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBgB I«, 19M
As reflected by the number of building permits issued, building activity last month slowed down in Pontiac.
There were 131 permits issued for construction valued at |255,-397. This compared to 144 permits for construction worth $2,-100,876 in September.	j
According to Carl F. Ait, city bnilding inspector, seven permits were issued for new family dwellings last month for constmction worth |71,N0. This compared to nine new family dwelling permits Issued in Septem^r for construction worth $49,500.
AWARD WINNERS - The Pontiac ^timist Club yester-presented plaques to four organizations in recognition of outstanding work in behalf of youth. Holding plaques (from left) are Richard Fitzgerald, representing the Pontiac Press; Sgt. Carl Collando of the Pontiac Police Department; Marvin Hughes, Big Brothers of America; and Cressy Larson, Pon-
tiac Boys’ Club. Admiring the awards (b^m left) are Pontiac Police Chief William Hanger, Optimist Club President Glenn Whitcroft and James Bamowsky, chairman of Youth Appreciation Week luncheon at the Pontiac Elks Club. Pontiac Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. was the featured speaker.
CAMP DIRECTORS ^ Pictured at the annual board of directors meeting for the YMCA’s Camp Mahn-Go-Tah-See are (from left) Wallace Cripps, camp director, and board members H. Delos NicboUe, Adolph H. Magnus. Dean Beier, Leslie Doughty and George Newton. The YMCA camp, located
just outside of Hale, operated at nearly 100 per cent capacity during the last camping season. New camp officers elected at the annual meeting include Bruce Randall, president; Ralph Dawson, vice president; Ralph Eastridge, secretary;
Fewer Permits hr Building Asked in City
October’s permits brought the total for the year to 1,283 for construction valued at $8,219,-
Rep. Broomfield in Tokyo for Talks
Rep. William S. Broomfleld, R-Royal Oak, and eight other congressmen were in Tokyo today to begin a four-day round of talks with Japanese and American officials on foreign affairs.
The group, headed by Rep. Clement J. Zablocki, D-VTis., was briefed by the U.S. Embassy before they began meeting with members of the Japanese governing body.
’The mission is slated also to visit South Korea, the Philippines, Taiwan, ’Thailand, South Viet Nam, India, Pakistan, Okinawa and Hong Kong.
Vote Today on Pact
COLDWATER (AP) - Members of the International Moulders and Allied Workers of America vote today on a new contract with the International Aluminum Co. here. The 225 union members struck the firm; Monday over wages and fringe benefits. Tentative settlement' was reached Thursday.
SERVICE AWARD - Fish^ Body employe James E. Pittman Jr. (left), 1104 Boston, receives a service recognition award from his foreman, Thomas A. Cuthrell (center), 6415 Crest, Waterford Township. Alger V. Conner, director of industrial relations.
looks on. The award, a tie tack featuring tl Fisher Body coach and three rubies, denotes 5 to 10 years of service. The division has recognized over 3,100 employes in the last eight
weeks.
College Enrollment Rises 17 Per Cent in Michigan
KALAMAZOO-Michigan colleges are experiencing a dra-nnatic enrollment surge for the second successive year, a University of Michigan registration official revealed.
A total of 256,930 students are enrolled in Michigan’s 78 colleges and universities — representing a 17 per cent increase over last year’s record-breaking enrollment of 210,525.
There are 68,824 freshmen, compared with 54,097 freshmen enrolled in 1964. In each case, the freshmen increase was 27 per cent above the previons year.
These are some of the findings contained in a report prepared by Harris D. Olson of the University of Michigan Office of the Registrar. Olson presented the report to the Michl-.gan Association of Collegiate 'Registrars and Admissions Officers’ annual meeting at West-
ern Michigan University. He is 1 of the association’s committee on statistical infor-nution and research.
“This is the sbcond year of the long - predicated enrollmeiit rise in higher education,” Olson commented. “This year’s 17 per cent and last year’s 15 per cent increase are in sharp contrast to the annual increases of former years of up to seven per cent.”
74.3 PER CENT Another illustration is that lichigan colleges and universities have 74.3 per cent more students enrolled now than they did in 1959.
“Hie sharp Increase of freshmen (27 pw cent) ae*. emmts for 39.3 per cent of this year’s total increase, “Olsoa pointed oat. “In addithm, in. creases were noted hi tte graduate and graduate profes-
Of the 256,839 students this year, 218,630 are undergraduates (an increase of 17.7 per cent over last year); 31,338 are grad-_ uate students (an increase of 15.3 per cent over 19(14) and 6,-971 are graduate professional students (an iiurease of 6.1 per cent). Of the 31,338 graduate students, 25,265'(an increase of 15.9 per cent) are in master’s programs and 6,073 are in Ph. D; programs (an increase of 12.9 percent).
'There are 161,778 men and 96,161 women enrolled in the Michigan colleges and universities. Enrollment at these institutions ranges from 36,000 to less than 50.
Latin-American population in-efease is now 3 per cent, with a total of 600 million people expected in 35 years, eomparedto, the U.S. rate of 1.6 per cent i-' year.
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IHE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12. 1965
Young Actor Spins Wheels Stalking Movie Big Wheel
By EARL WIUON
NEW TORE — About 10 yean a^ when he «ai a hustling young New York actor» James Eotnack boarded his money and flew to Hoflywood to Jack Warner the idea that he’d te tlie l^ect Wally Ronkin in the movie “Marj(^’'
_ . said Jimmy Komack the **I sent Warner a wire telling him I I was tfK guy, and did he want me?
“He didn’t answer, so I flew oat, figar-ing that Carolya Jones, a friend of mine, could get me an interview with him, bat she conhin’t. They said to me, *The thing to do Is to see the author Herman Wonk, in New York.’
“I came back and got Ridiard Adler to » see Woofc.
"Wonk said ‘I have nothing to do with the casting. The thing for you to do is get hold of Jack Warner.’ ’’
Komack never got the audience with Warner—but today he runs a small empire at Warners, with a couple of sound stages, 150 peo|de, and a 3-way contract as writer, director and producer of TV shows, especially the “Mr. Roberts” series starring Roger Smith, the boy friend of Amv-Margret.
“Warner is using youag guys like me as prodneers,’’ Komack said. “I’m «... fai New York, that is. In Cali-foniia. I’m 35.
“When you’re an actor, you reduce your age. As a producer, you raise it.”
★ ★ ★
TODAYW BEST LAUGHj They’re talking about a dome for Shea Stadium. How about a team?
WOE ID SAID THAT: The women of today aii have the same way of getting a large wardrobe. AH they need to start is a wedding gown.
REMEMBERED QUOTE: “You’ll never get Indigestion from swallowing your pride occasionally.”—Anon.
EARL’S PEARLS: Definition of a henpecked hnsband: One who has more aprons than his wife.
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A—18
THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 18Qg
As reflected by the number of building ptiffliits issued, building activity last month slowed down in Pontiac.
AWARD WINNERS — The Pontiac Optimist Qub yester-presented plaques to four organizations in recognition of outstanding work in behalf of youth. Holding plaques (from left) are Richard Fitzgerald, representing the Pontiac Press; Sgt. Carl Collandn of the Pontiac Police Department: Marvin Hughes, Big Brothers of America; and Cressy Larson, Pon-
tiac Boys’ Club. Admiring the awards (from left) are Pontiac Police Chief William Hapger, Optimist Club President Glenn Whitcroft and James Bamowsky, chairman of Youth Appreciation Week luncheon at the Pontiac Elks Club. Pontiac Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. was the featured speaker.
Fewer Permits for Building Asked in City
There were 131 permits Issued for construction valued at $255,-397. This compared to 144 permits for construction worth $2,-100,876 in September.
According to Carl F. Alt, city building inspector, seven
family dwellings last month for construction worth |71,M0.
This compared to nine new family dwelling permits issued in September for construction h $49,500.
October’s permits brought the total for the year to 1,283 for construction valued at $8,219,-
Rep. Broomfield in Tokyo for Talks
Rep. William S. Broomfield, R-Royal Oak, and eight other congressmen were in Tokyo today to begin a four-day round talks with
American officials on foreign affairs.
The group, headed by Rep. Clement J. Zablqcki, D-Ws., was briefed by the U.S. Embassy before they began meeting with members of the Japanese governing body.
CAMP DIRECTORS - Pictured at the annual board of directors meeting for the YMCA’s Camp Mahn-Go-Tah-See are (from left) Wallace Cripps, camp director, and board members H. Delos Nicholie, Adolph H. Magnus, Dean Beier, Leslie Doughty and George Newton. The YMCA camp, located
Just outside of Hale, (grated at nearly 100 per cent capacity during the last camping season. New camp officers elected at the annual meeting include Bruce Randall, president; Ralph Dawson, vice president; Ralph Eastridge, secretary; and Magnus, treasurer.
The mission is slated also to
SERVICE AWARD — Fisher Body employe James E. Pittman Jr. (left), 1104 Boston, receives a service recognition award from his fweman, Thomas A, Cuthrell (center), 6415 Crest, Waterford Township. Alger V. Conner, director of industrial relations.
looks on. ’The award, a tie tack featuring the Fisher Body coach and three rubies, denotes 5 to 10 years of service. The division has recognized over 3,100 employes in the last eight weeks.
College Enrollment Rises 17 Per Cent in Michigan
KALAMAZOO-Mlchigan colleges are experiencing a dramatic enrollment surge for the second successive year, a University of Michigan registration official revealed.
A total of 256,939 students are enrolled in Michigan’s 76 cOl-ieges and universities — representing a 17 per cent increase
visit South Korea, the Phiiip-iover last year’s record-breaking pines, Taiwan, Thailand, South enrollment of 219,525.
Viet Nam, India, Pakistan, Okinawa and Hong Kong.
Vote Today on Pact
There are 68,824 freshmen, compared with 54,097 freshmen enrolled in 1964. In each case, the freshmen increase was 27 per cent above the previous year.
These are some of the findings contained in a report prepared by Harris D. Olson of the University of Michigan Office
COLDWATER (AP) - Members of the International Moulders and Allied Workers of America vote today on contract with the International Aluminum Co. here. The 225 of the Registrar. Olson preunion members struck the firm sented the report to the Michi-Monday over wages and fringe gan Association of Collegiate benefits. Tentative settlement'Registrars and Admissions Of-was reached Thursday.	fleers’ annual meeting at West-
ern Michigan University. He is chairman^ of the association’s committee t>n statistical information and research.
"This is the second year of the long - predicateci enroltineitt rise in higher education,’’ Olson commented. ‘‘This year’s 17 per cent and last year’s 15 per cent increase are in sharp contrast to'the annual increases of former years of up to seven per cent.”
74 J PER CENT
Another illustration is that Michigan colleges and universities have 74.3 per cent more students enrolled now than they did in 1959.
Of the 256,939 students this year, 218,630 are undergraduates (an increase of 17.7 per cent over last year); 31,338 are graduate students (an increase of 15.3 per cent over 1064) and 6,-971 are graduate professional students (an increase of 6.1 per cent). Of the 31,338 graduate students, 25,265 (an increase of 15.9 per cent) are in master’s programs and 6,073 are in Ph. D.-programs (an increase of 12.9 per cent).
“The sharp increase ef freshmen (27 per cent) ae*. counts for 39.3 per ceat of this year’s total increase, “Olson pointed out. “In addition, Increases were noted hi the graduate and graduate profes-
There are 161,778 men and 95,161 women enrolled in the Michigan colleges and universities. Enrollment at these institutions ranges from 38,000 to less than 50.
Latin-Amerlcan population increase is now 3 per cent, with a total of 600 million people expected in 35 years, eompaiod to, the U.S. rate of 1.6 per cent t-year.
(^uaiitr^ . . . detection . . . ^nieg.rii^
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IHE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1965
WILSON
Young Actor Spins Wheels Stalking Movie Big Wheel
By EARL WHBON
NEW TORE — About 10 years a^ when he was a husUiiig young New York actor, Janes Koma^ hoarded his money and flew to Hoflywood to sd Jack Warner the idea that he’d te ttie perfect Wally Ronkin bi the movie "Marjwie idnptar, “First, though,” said Jimmy Komack the I other day, sent Warner a wb« telling him I ns the guy, and did he want me?
“Re didn’t answer, so I flew oat, flgv* Ing that CarolyB Jones, a friend of ndiie, couW get me an interview with him, bat she conidn’t. They said to me, 'The thing to do is to see the aathor Herman Wook, in New York.’
"I came back and got Ridiard Adler to arrange for me to see Woak.
"Woak said ‘I have nothing to do with the casting. The thing for you to do is get hold of Jack Warner.’ ”
Komack never got the audience with Warner—but today he runs a small empire at Warners, with a couple of sound stages, 150 people,- and a 3-way contract as writer, director and producer of TV shows, especially the ‘‘Mr. Roberts” scries starring Roger Smith, the boy friend of Amv-Margret.
“Warner Is using young guys like me as predncers,” Komack said. “I’m M ... In New York, that is. In CaH-fo^a. I’m 35.
“When you’re an actor, you reduce your age. As a producer, you raise it.”
★ ★ ★
TODAYW BEST LAUGH: They’re talking about a dome for Shea Stadium. How about a team?
WISH I’D SAD) THAT: The women of today all have the same way of getting a large wardrobe. All they need to start is a wedding gown.
REMEMBERED QUOTE: "You’ll never get indigestion from Swallowing your pride occasionally.”—Anon.
EARL’S PEARLS: Definition of a henpecked husband: One who has more aprons than his wife.
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A—U
Byrd Leaves
Word Power to Success—29
THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, IggS
mjsm
Altered Senate Dictionary Can Be an Important Tool—if You Read It With a Purpose
AAmvIW	%r/vrc*. e*ki* Jm mM aWma	HM kaw* fbimI Im fka	afu A fVin*S lAAtia 4ka ■wmmI iinSlI avamala* aS*aii Mia MAtiM mm mA. Vaa   ■	ml ^aaIUma
Many Changes Seen Since 1933 Beginning
WASHINGTON (AP) - Hairy Flood Byrd, who stepped down from the Senate yesterday at 78, served for nearly a third of a century in which he saw his world turned upside down.
He came to the senate in 1933, the first year of President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal, as an advocate of reduced government spending, w ★
He leaves with the federal budget scraping the $100 billion mark, 25 times what it was in 1933.
He came to Washington a strong proponent of the principle of states rights and powers, with minimal interference from the federal government EXTENDED PROGRAMS But. after the Depression, World War II, and U.S. emergence as the leading world power after the war, he leaves with federal authority and programs extending into fields ined 32 years ago.
★ *	*
Even though his views on Issues often put him in a minority in the Senate, Byrd kept the good will and friendship of members ranging all the way from conservative to liberal.
★ ★	★
Byrd has been chairman of the powerful finance conunittee for 10 years and has used that post to try to moderate tax and Social Security legislation with which he did not agree.
But, as Senate Democratic leaders	including	Lyndon	B.
Johnson	often	have	pointed out,
Byrd did not use his power as chairman to bottle up such legislation.
OTHER HANDS Never a man who worked intimately with the details of the major bills handled by his committee, Byrd in recent years has let the reins of power fall into other hands.
First the late Sen. Robert S. Kerr of Oklahoma and then the succeeding No. 2 Democrat, Sen. Russell B. Long of Louisiana. took over the job (tf handling much of the committee'! work on the Senate floor.
WWW
Byrd has suffered severe pain from a knee ailment in the last year or so and doctors often used sedation to enable him to continue with' his duties.
In recent years, Byrd has turned his attention more and more to the outdoors and particularly the national parks. RECREATION TIME Most of his recreatelon time was spent in the Shenandoah National Park near his Berry-villt, Va.. home — a park which hr helped to bring into being as governor of Virginia and senator.
For many years he annually climbed Old Rag Mountain, one of the toughest in the park, w	w	w
He donated	the	funds to	build
four overnight shelters	in the
Shenandoah.
On his latest birthday, his 78th on June 10, he presented the fourth of the shelters — Byrd’ Nest No. 4.
TOOK THE HKE Although	he	had	been
bothered by an arthritic condition in one knee, Byrd hiked up to the shelter for the dedication ceremonies on June 12, the Saturday nearest his birthday. That shelter was at 2300 feet up Neighbor Mountain ridge on the west side of the Skyline Drive at Mile “'
And, with National Park officials, he made visits to beauty spots in many parts of the country, including Mt. McKinley in Alaska and Yosemite in Callfor-
For about 15 years, Byrd has given a series of parties each spring at his Berryville home, Rosemont, situated in his apple orchards and with a sweeping view of die Blue Ridge Mountains in Shenandoah Park.
Presidents, vice presidents. Cabinet officers, all of the leading Senate and House members, and many of his old friendJ were among the guests.
WWW
One of his Senate colleagues commented that, “When you get' Invited to one of Harry's par-' ties, you know that you’ve final-1 ly been made a member of thet club."
(EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the 29th in a 30-part series en-“titled "Word Power Way to Success." The series is designed to help improve speU-grammar and vocabulary.)
By The Reading Laboratary, Inc.
Written lor NEA Special Swvices
To be really sure a word endures.
Use it thrice, and then it’s yours.
In the past three articles on increasing your vocabulary, the dictionary has been mentioned once only.
Does that mean The Reading Laboratory, Inc., is opposed to dictionaries? Certainly not. First of all, no matter which
of the three systenu we have snggested for increasing vocabulary yon may nse, always — bat always — check what yon derive against the dis-thmary.
Secondly, there are a multitude of words which you will learn in no other way than from the dictionary, w
The Reading Laboratory does feel, however, that not everyone who makes use of a dictionary does it in the proper way. RULES TO USE The following rules are followed by all students who come to us to learn advanced reading and study skills.
Read these rules and ree how many you have been practicing yourself.
a When you approach a
word in the dictionary, approach it with the firm Int^ tion of remembering what you discover. You know from your own experience that if som» whm in the back of your head is the idea that you want only immediate use of the meaning, it will leave you, as you intended it should.
•	When you ai^roach a word in the dictionary, have two purposes: not only a M meaning, but a precise meaning. After you have read what you feel is enough to All both requirements, don’t leave until you have brought back at least one synonym with which you are very familiar.
* ♦ ♦ .
•	Read what is in the parentheses following the word. That is the pronounciatioh. Learn it and avoid looking foolish when you use the word.
• Don’t leave the word you have met all its cousins related words. If you are consulting the dictionary idr a noun, don’t leave till you have read the material ghrw for the verb, the adjective, etc.
e Read what is ^ven within the brackets after the parei^ -theses. If the brackets are not given afto* the word you are consulting, look after tlie related words. In this way you will learn how the wor^ has been constructed, what its prefix, root and suffix are. This will help recall the word, too, and it adds to your knowledge from which you will someday derive other new words.
★	* w
e Find all the examples you can to .see how the word is used by masters. If you are not happy with the examples given after the verb, look for
examples after the n jective,
★	★	w
• Most inqiortant of all, the word wiU probably disappear from your memory, afttf all this trouble, unless you make an effort to use that at least three times. This makes it your property now, not merely the dictionary’s.
♦	w ★	■
To anyone who wants a rich vocabulary both for understanding and comjnunicating, the following sentence is the least-original in this entire newspapw: There can be no reading without vocabulary, and vocabulai^ comes only from reading. ONE-TRACK INTEREST Obvious as this may be, there are some people who read voraciously, but with a one-track interest.
Tea flMwsaiid beaks a year on bowling will give yon the limited vocabulary of bowting: a million books a year on cal-enhM or stitching gives yon a very narrow window from which to observe the world. How much you read does matter; how much you read in how many areas of human int-vest and concern matters more.
★ ★ ★
This is the 29th article which The Reading Laboratory has written for your newspaper’s readers. *
VOCABULARY QUIZ Our next — an interesting vocabulary quiz — concludes our series.
The reason your newspaper carried this series is that it was eager to show that the
most difficnlt areas of spelling need not be so; that thme is
despite the propheto of gloom to English speOing.
It further was eager that the clear and simple sense of English grammar be made available to all its readers. And now these past few articlea'on vo-cabulaiY- And that, when you think of it, is aU there is to the English language.
★	*	*
Illiteracy—except,in the hope- -lessly depressed areas — and school dropouts for reason of poor school performance are unnecessary evHs, and they are simply overcome.
★	*	a
Read, read widely, read with variety, read with a dictionary, and read with purpose.
(NIXTi A VkMl axMl.)
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Or maybe you’d like to pick a new black-grilled SS 896 Coupe or Convertible. (Standard engine is a Tarbo-Jet 396 V8 thatjdcvel-ops 825 hp. And thmo’s a|360>hp version you can specify^ Now you’ve got yourself the nlMt.
Which .’M Chevelle fw you? The answer to that covdrs a lot more ground than we qiut here. And that’s where your Clievrolet dealo* comes in. I
Ntw Standard Safety wid Convenience Feetiireaj * Seat belie, front rear • Padded instniment ponf and eun eiaors • Outeide reareiku mirror (always lus it before Vfueing) • ShtUter-reeidUmt ineida rearview mirror • Windehdeld fwasiure • Two-epeed eledrie wiptrefor better vieibility in keoep rafne er mow • Batk-ap lighit '
'Oe Chmllt Malibu Sport Coupe (foreground) and new i-door Malibu Sport Sedan. Backup lighie—standard on all '68 Chevrolrt-built ears—are among many new safely aseisti.
See the new ’66 Chevrolet Chevelle, Chevy n, Corvair and Corvette at your dealer^s
P6NHAC MALL OPTICAL CEMTEB
sh« imiAti is tiw m-ini
MATTHEWS-IUWeREAVES, MC.
631 OAKLAND of CXiS
POMTUC MICHIGAN
21-6912
j PI S-4161
THE PONTIAC PRESS
Turn to this Page Fridays for Sonior High School Nows
PONTIAC. MICHKiAN FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12. 1965
□
B-1
At Waterford High
Variely of Topics Set for Parenfs Nighf
By BARBARA STOCK Parents of seniors at Water-Ibrd Township High School are invited to a parents’ meeting In the schooi cafeteria Monday at 8 p.m.
Senior activities such as bm-ors convocation, commencement and baccalaureate will be discussed and explained by Donald Arsen, senior class adviW.
the educational trip for senipn this spring. Questions on graduation requirements will be answered by Helen Bulla, assistant principal. Richard Powell, counselor, will discuss military service.
★	★ w
Bryon Merritt, assistant principal, will suggest postgraduate plans and will inform parents of ways to set up appointments to discuss the potential of the individual student. VOLLEYBALL NEAR Girls’ AthleUc AssociaUon. sponsored by Sue Ricbert, physical education teacher, will soon be playing volleyball in the school gymnasium from 2:30 to 3:30.
Far girls interested la Joining Uie GAA interschool bae-kctban team, practiee is held from 8:31 to 4:31 after school in the gym.
Swim Ciub, also sponsored by Miss Ricbert, will offer fun and recreation at the Oaidand University pool for one hour every Saturday.
. w w Art Qub meets every Monday evening from 7 to 9. Painting, drawing, and sculpturing are among the activities enjoyed.
Students h a v 1 n g art classes during the school day are permitted to wm-k on their arj |woJ-ects and are guided by sponsor John Banick, art teachw.
Waterferd’s have canceled thehr original play, Arthur Miller’s “Ibe Crucible.”
WTHS’s Pep Qub firm bund school spirit ^ making posters for toni^t’s Waterford Tow ship — Waterford Kettering football game.
*
"Viet Nam” and "Should Our
Boys Be There?” are tc^lcs under discussion in John Simmer’s 4th and 5th hour senior government classes.
PANEL DISCUSSIONS Panels will discuss guerrilla warfare and student demonstrations, and a tape recording on Viet Nam history and public opinion on U.S. policy there will be played.
A truck motor was donated by Frank German,
Kettering Play Opens Tomorrow
senior, to Waterford’s auto ■hop. It wfll be used for shidy.
The course gives students a chance to work on their own cars.
National Honor Society members from WT^S are now offering tutoring services to students.
Permission forms are available in the office and must be filled out. Instructors of the course in which students are seeking help must give their permission.
National Honor Society members must maintain a 3-point average and are selected as tutors in areas they are academically strongest.
Students Get
By JAMIE SCHUTT Waterford Kettering Stage-masters will open the 1965^ season with the presentation “Green Pastures,” tonoorr night at 8 In t^‘|ymngijuy&|i p.
■Ihe Broad^riw c onierf^^^^ •. < »	' ^	,
Mare Connemm th^ PuUtrer 1^, laWr.T
WLHS'Slates Student vs. Faculty Game
By RON MOORHEAD Next Friday Walled UkeHigh School’s annual student-faculty basketball game will be played.
Every year preceding the reg-nlar basketball season, thh game is featured.
Net only do the victors get the prestige of winning, but ,lhey also get possession of the "’little krm Jug.”
In the past, faculty members have dominated the games. This year the students wiO be out to break the faculty winning
made into a bSdc i|nd JQd^.
PortrayingHiglM citorao. . wOl be R«aoy Reitiha^ Lord; Steph^ Peterson, No^t and Hiomas^; Reinhardt, Gf^ briel. f*	^
Other main ^^acterk will he played by Andrew HoBphi^, Moses; Carof?kfethner, Zebu; Ellen Kaul, Nbah’s wife; ^ Hike, Mr. Deibefi; John Bm^, i Flatfoot; amt ’Riomae J<mf, Shem.	'
Patty Loonitn, faculty mqip-ber, is dlrectii qf ""Grae^ Pap.
The students will pit wit and resourcefulness against the ex-perienoe and know-how of the older, but wiser faculty members.
Unfortunately, only one team can win, but huihor and determination on both sides will com-
jat^Frederick's
By ERIlBStlNE MOORE .TStiiilaiMs Frederick High f ini ‘Ifeat’
rilm last Ttiesday. ttcamtun the form of a white rqmrt'C^ issued by the Arch-of Detroit.
'Macbefh' Readied for PNH Production
By ALICE TURNER Attention at Pontiac Northern centered around final details for the coming production of "Macbeth.”
The Shakespearean drama will open with a matinee Wednesday for PN students only.
The hard work and effort of numerous students and faculty, members should make it one of the best plays produced by
Northern.
Duncan. However, once this i play were made by Aloma is accomplished he finds he Julian, a student at PN. can hide this first crime only Ticket sales are directed by by murdering all who suspect ! Bonnie Pintamo with further
s guilt.
Macbeth even has the family of one of his most loyal .friends, Macduff, slain.
The rage of his people and his wife’s suicide leave him alone and friendless to fall to the vengeance of his once friend, Macduff.
O.U ,	.	. OTHERS IN CAST
The play is under the du'ection	^
of AntLv Chiarilli.	!,	^
"Macbeth” takes place	^mith; Lady Macbeth.
nth century Scotland.	T n 7'"*’
.	*	Mark Dickerson; Macduff,)
Macbeth, a gallant general inlJ^iPh Duncan’s army, finds that hei^“»	*^Clute.
efforts from the entire English staff at PN.
Roger Bartles and Mark Dickerson are in charge of lighting.
Scenery was completed by PN’s Stagecraft Club under Pauline Woodin and tickets were printed by PN’s print shop under Roy Woods.
Evening performances will be held next Thursday and Satur-at 8:30. Matinee performances will be Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday at 1:30.
PLOT THICKENS — Lady Macbeth (Nancy Blevins of 192 W. Kennett) and Lord Macbeth (Larry Smith of 91 W. Brooklyn) scheme to seize Scotland’s throne during rehearsal for Pontiac Northern High School’s current production, “Macbeth.” Matinee performances will be Tuesday, Wednesday .and Friday at 1:30. Evening performances are scheduled for Thursday and Saturday at 8.
I army, has become a popular hero.
3 WITCHES
Confronted by three witches who predict he will become king, Macbeth becomes obsessed with the desire to gain the throne. His wife plots with him in his evil plan to seize the throne.
Macbeth has no choice but to kill the reigning King
Sft Mark Brasch, John Carry, KariyiJDunmer, Marsha Khi-ytoi, M^ Lon Maaion, Ernes-
Ipribaft Shore, aad Mary
are Gerald Harring-B Hamilton, and Peter
class hon-’ia Bora, Bonnie
GUHt, EHiiPeth Garland, Carol HMfM, Jbdy Peoples, Kathy MgUnsU^ Noreen Spanski, Mark Pimwica, Kathleen Steven-
wfll he admli^t Kettering’s
tended a dehp aaaembly thlf|„________	________
week fnesentai repreaenta- te, Barbara Tewksbury, tives of two unishrsities. J KhtyJMargaret Zaha. e i ♦	♦
Resolved: that law enforcement agencies ahould have more freedom to apprehend criminals.
UNIVERSITIES DEBATE The University of Vermont debated on the affirmative, and Saint John’s College took the negative side of the issue.
Members of the Future Teachers Club met this w e e k, and were lectured by faculty members Phylis Nuerstel, Gilbert Claeys, and Vince Koehler.
Homeroom teadiers turned In lists of students making either the “A”, or the “A and B’* honor role to the Studsot Coua-cilthis
____recognition
are Mary Bard, Judy Cany, Charles Gallagher, James La-Londe, Janet Spanski, June Staskiewicz, Joanne Stier, CaMf, Taylor, David Wehr, and Jamei Willis.
ENTITLED TO TRIP The 33 now are entilted to forthcoming trip on school ttaM. Sophomores are presentii^ Ehides’ Night Out” in flto parish hall from 8-11 tonight.
Practice Sessions at SCHS Starts Basketball Team
Rochester
By KATHY MORGAN Conservation Club presents the “Sadie Hawkins Dance,' 20-year tradition at Rochester IDgh School, next Friday in the cafeteria from 7:30 to 11:30 p. m.
Atmosphere is "Dog Patch, in decorations and costumes. In Daisy Mae and Li’I Abner style, girls invite the boys.
Under the iefaainnanship of Irene Leymaa, the decerations committee plans tin cans, weeds aad barinp bags.
Any girl or boy not dressed in costume must pay a fine.
Clarkston
By CATHY RICHARDSON Today, at the final pep assembly of Clarkston High School’s football season, senior tnembers of the varsity team were honored.
They included Rod Allen, Rick 9Hmka, Jerry Dark, Larry FYanklin, Wayne Goins, Michael Golembeske, Greg Gordon and Marshall Gratz.
Others were Paul H o x s i e, Mike Madison, Ralph May, Dave Osgood, Dennis Pine, Kurt Priebc, Dan Riggs, King Robinson, Dan Williams and the manager, John White.
Clarioton’s Y-Tecna go on a bottle hunt tomorrow
By LINDA WRIGHT itMI sqaqpn is ovio' Ngt Uie fqps at Ehcaunuel Qiristlia
Plans for selling Christinas tieea again this year are takto shape far the senior class and the National Honor Society. > Officers for the Honor Soci^ tills year me Elgin Green, president,* Gall Kpnno, vice preei-dent; Liodf Bfri^ secretary: and Patrlciaf Gldcumb, trea-
PRACnCB SESSION - Studento at WaOed Uke High " 1, determined to emerge victors in the annual student-
Avondale
By CHERYL BECKER The Junior class at Avondale High School is pUmning Hs annual Sadie Hawkins dance.
Ihe glrl-aak-boy affair will be Bid on Nov. 24 in the high school torm. The dance wiij be from 8 to 11 p.m.
Nov. 29 is the date set for
faculty basketball same, are spending all their free time College Career Night. CoUege-
edicing. Pictured above are Bruce Uermei (left raar) of Farrant, Commerce Township; Fred Fergiiaon (left front) of 1189 Wfamm, Wlkom; and Mk^ Matteoon of 2801 Warnw, West BIooi(ifleld Township.
boqnd studsots will have the opportunity to dlsouss their collie plana with a repfeoentatlve from the college of their choice.
Items at Other Area Schools
percentile will take ; test in December.
Tomorrow, WBHS will hold its annual American Field Service drive. Students will gather in assigned areas to begin the collection. A luncheon will follow in the gymnasium.
Preparations are being made for the annual athletic banquet to be held Tuesday evening.
second annual cooperative dinner tonight.
The High School Athletic De-p^tment and the Holly Boosters Club have scheduled their an-ipal fall sports banquet for Wednesday.
Banquo will be played by Chris Skillman; Malcomb, Bruce Kilmer; Donalbain, Greg Butler; Lennox, Gary Shorland and Ross by Jerry Davis.
Other parts are held by Allan Benson, Dianne Coin, Boyd Cryer, Patty Guy, Mari Ham-partzoomian, Pat H a m p a r t-zoomian, Jim Hester, Bob John-)n and Jim Maher.
★ *
Still others include Ted McConnell^ Pat Perry. Bonnie Pin-tamo, Don Tinson, Bruce Tip-pen, Olivia Sims, Marsha Webb, George Wren, Toni W y r i c k, Pedro Martinez and Tim Phipps. STUDENT DIRECTOR Chris Bexell is student director (or the play. Nancy Blevins and Mary DeClute are her
Lake Orion
To raise money for their Christmas project, the club will collect bottles from neighboring arqas and turn them in for cash.
tuteday, members'^ the varsity and junior yarsity footi^ll te^^and the cross twuntry 4 uad will receive trophies.
>U’9 I
I foil
Troy
l>MkiBtball is	letters ait Clarks-
Practice begMi 'Mfoadaf for tiiw 19l»^ haslwifriii 8eaM».
m fw.arswtioipatfoii for. ItiwikAg muon kfof Wfrfoua Vfifcet e^nU> llto court.	'
ttf JfrriiirLelass Is leUimT hriftmas bai^ to beept thefr uMis toward their geal M ■priBg Jmlorr.
By EieK SHAVER JLinda BaJoM and Vince Cor-netilo' received recognition aMfrds from the Madiaqii-Troy (^tiiist duh, .
The sward is granted for the students’ contribution to school and cQlUimunity.
Hey went boa are d last Thesdi^ at a iiiachem keld Itt tile Troy-Clawson Elks
LInda''fii tiifr edUor-in-chief of the "Gladiatori” the sdiool’s yearbook.
Vince participated in crosscountry and also is a member of the debate team.
Hie "Gladiator,” sponsored by C. Ray BaUard, English teacher, pictured undprclase-men and clubs.
The junior class, sponsored by Kay Williams, history teacher, bolding a magazine sale to raise money fpr Its senior trip.
West Bloomfield
ByMARGITMISANGYI The national prize competition math test was given at West BkMmfield High Sohool Thursday.
Studmts rating in tha t<4> four
Lady of Lakes
By CECELIA PARKER Highlighting the past week at Our Lady of the Lakes High School was the presentation of the annual Optimist Award by the Optimist Club of Waterford.
Recipients of the award, in conjunction with Youth Appreciation Week, were sophomores Diane Greene and David Miller.
First quarter report cards were given out the beginning of this week by Reverend F. J. Delaney.
Students quaiifing for the; honor roll are Suzanne uvingstow, Carl Matzelle, John Shaughnes-sy. Storm Slavfai, Sandra Smith and Randolph Wise, ail seniors. Juniws are Catherino Chad, George Lee, Ckmstance May-worm and Caesar Weston.
* ★ ★
Others earning honors are Dennis Day and Rosemary Day, sophomores; and Christine Gin-Timothy Hagan, Diane Moultrup, Patricia Seeterlin and Kevin Shaughnessy, freshmen.
By NADINE WH.LIAMS
To display spirit for Lake Orion High Shoot’s f o o t b a 1' team in the ba-ttle for the "Bronze Boot,” the S t u d e n (founcil authorized a Green and White Day today.
In addition, the pep assembly led by the cheerleaders and the pep band was held outside.
A committee of student council members and cheerleaders constructed a bonfire on the athletic field.
An Oxford "wildcpt” was .001^ Tnto the b^(pt a symbol of Orion's lh4^W ’9fo-tory over thpif opponents.
A newly organized club, 'the Service Buttons, have elected Officers. They a^e Kathy Down-
ey, presidoit; l^uise Dodge, vice president; Mary Jane Thorp, secretary and Penny Iser, treasurer. This club works on projects aiding community and school.
MrtforiJ
By RICHARD WUfOM With q great sho^ of opti-ilsm, the junior girls of MiJ-ford High School hOVe / ctuil^ lenged their senior sHifors fo a p(wder pqff footbOUfli^.
The two squads will little <m Milford’s Memorial Field next Thursday. .
' Jnnlor ooachei Jerry Reis and Charles Schroeder and senior trainers Charles Japke and Clifford Wellman,'80 four MHS ilMnictors, are conditioning their charges for the contest.
Yesterday, S9 Milford qjudents competed ril) the eighth annual Michigan' mathematics prize
Parents of high school students followed an abbreviated version of their son’s or daughter’s daily schedule last evening at Milford High’s open house.
Holly
B> LINDA LONGSTRETH Future Teachers of Holly High School have set up a long range activity plan. *
On Dec. 4, there will be a bus trip to the University of Michigan and Eastern Michigan Uni-veriity.
Later in the school year, there will be trips to other universities.
On Dec. 8, there will be a cMperative dinner for the memiMTs of the chib.
Langunge Qub will hold Its
Most of the costumes for the
Limelight Shines on the Juniors at Dominican
PCH Skiers Plan Future Activities
By DEBBIE VAN NAlirER Juniors are presently in . the limelight at Dominican Academy. Besides being the victors in the yearbook ad drive, they have received their class rings.
Seniors, too, have scored success at Dominican.
The Debate Club, under the direction of Sister Thomas, competed in a district debate edntesi and earned second
Two gl^rs, -Aileen O’Connor and Catwrihn Shmson, debated against three schools and made three consecutive victories.
Catherine Samson also was awarded a certificate for outstanding speech in debating.
A By HELEN COLLIAS With cold weather just a snowflake away, the Ski Club at Pontiac Central High School is planning winter activities.
Although no buses will be chartered for the weekly trips Mt. Holly, designated days will be arranged so that carloads of students will be able tc go skiing together.
Highlighting the ski season will be the many weekend ski trips. Students travel to northern Michigan and stay at ski lodges for two days of fun and exercise.
Most of the weekends ar^ held at Nub’s Nob and Boyne Highlands. In the discussion stage full week trip to be taken during spring vacation.
★ ★ ★
Faculty member John Zim-merle, sponsor of the club, has opened the Wolverine Ski Camp to accommodate high school skiers on weekends.
HOUSE STUDENTS Able to hous^, one to two schools at a time, the students sleep in dorm-type buildings and are served cafeteria style hot meals.
Bus transportation is provided to and from the camp and to the various ski resorts near by.
The all boy ski team, under cocaptains Ted Fisher and Rich-arti Isgrigg, has scheduled seven meets at Mt. Holly.
Enthusiasm will reach Its peak tonight as Pontiac Central plays Bay City in one'’of the most important games of the season.
Go Abroad in June
3 Oxford Seniors Will Tour Europe
By ANN ASHLEY Through hard work and de-tfri|inatipn, three students of 'Ixfoiad Mcai, Community foi»l))A^Mfottt,--8eJecte^ to tour ’EureiiB	.
VoudhliltoTal&t^'	H
Imane	and. Rick
ler win; repNtoiit .4^ aiuT will |)e under’^ dfraqjfotij''; of Lestor McCoy, niu^al direc-foCoIMVl.
Robert Zerwick will fenre;^, mt OHS band,. wiwklng Wimqnr. the director di frstisuibiitor’* ma^,JaokBittll!.
Beginning their European tour in June, the three seniors will visit Scotland, England, Walesi and West Germany.	,
* w ★
MYI is a goodwill tour group, consisting of combined band and h 0 r u s students from high schools in Michigan as well as neighboring states and the province of Ontario, Canada.
ANNUAL EVENT School-spirited voices filled the brisk air last night as OHS cheerleaders led students in the annual snake dance and bonfire.
Following tradition, a dragon was tossed into the blazing bonfire signifying Lake Orion's defeat at the hands of OHS Wildcats.
Graduation announcements were selected by senior class
PLANNING AHEAD — Oxford Area (Community ^ I g h School students believe in being prepared. Selecting luggage for their European tour are (from lefW Rick Laidler of 125
5—T'—	r..........— ^ Drahner and Diane Schalau of 2248 Baldwin, both of
offlceri who are Rick Fox, presl- Oxford Township, and Robert Zerwick of 4484 Rochester, dent; Richard Valentine, vice Oakland Township. The three young people have been lelect-retary, and Mike Schlusler, ed to travel with Musical Youth IntemaUoiud, i etudent ti’****’*’!''-	goodwill tour group, beginning in June.
B-2
the PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 196g
Macapagal Refuses to Concede Philippine Election/Although Far Behind in Tdll)§
s I i
MANILA (AP) - Senate President Ferdinand E. Marcos appeared today to have almost *"won the Philippine presidency but President Diosdado Macapagal. seeking a second term, refused to concede.
Unofficial returns compiled by the Philippine News Service gave Marcos a 614.095-vote lead in Tuesday’s election, still an almost unbeatable margin although smaller than it was earlier.
★ ★ ★
The unofficial tally from about 70 per cent of the estimat-
ed 8.S million votes gave Marcos 3,015,271 votes to Macapa-gal’s 2,401,176.
Driver License Invalid? It Belongs to Sheriff
NEWTON. Kan. (AP) - A Newton policeman was checking licenses of drivers recently. After looking at one license he handed it back and said:
"Sir, if you’ll sign this license, it will be valid.” The flabbergasted driver was Vern Miller, the sheriff of Sedgwick County.
Fernando Lopez, running for vice president with Marcos, led Gerardo Roxas, son of a former president, by 114,376 votes — 2,-770,099 to 2,655,723.
LEAD TALLY
In official returns from less than half of the country’s 45,234 precincts, Marcos was leading by 340,277 votes. The official tally from 28,110 precincts was Marcos 2,299,306, Macapagal 1,-959,029.
Marcos, 48, a war hero from the Nacionalista party, was confident of victory. He said he
could lose only through “massive and unthinkable fraud."
★ ★ ★
But Macapagal, 55, considers the election still undecided and won’t concede until official returns are completed, a source close to the Liberal party president said.
The president’s press office said returns from pro-Macapa-gal precincts on the islands of Luzon and Mindanao will put him ahead in the official tally. Early returns from Mindanao showed Marcos running strongly in urban areas. Macapagal
claims strength in the country-' side.
Marcos told newsmen that as
Pastor Nafned Proxy
ARTESIA, N.M. (AP) - Dr. Roger Wells Youngs, senior minister of the First Presbyterian Church of Wichita, Kan., has been named president of the new Whitson College of Artesia. Whitson is to be a four-year liberal arts college and expects to open in September 1966.
End adv. for Fri. PMS Nov.
12.
the Philippines’ sixth president he would send troops to Viet Nam if he considered it necessary.
If elected, the NaUonaUsta leader would begin his term Jan. 1 facing a Liberal-dominated 104-member House of Representatives and at best a precariously balanced 24-member Senate.
Marcos began his career by passihg the nationwide bar exam with the highest grades ever made. During World War II he became the nation’s most decorated hero. After the war
he was elected to Congress and won every time he was upi for reelection. In the Senate face six years ago, he topped the list, marking him as presidential timber.
Gets Grant for Study SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) -’The Museum of New Mexico has been awarded a $57,000 grant for a three-year study of the Ixil Indians of Guatemala. The project is backed by the National Science Foundation.


4	¥
THE PONTIAC PRKSS. FRIUAY, NOVEM^BER 12.
B—8

CONTEMPLATION - 'Twas a vestlesa Interest Sen. Everett K. Dirksen (left) of lU-inois displayed while shopping for a suit in Chicago yesterday. Shop proprietor Ben Gin-
giss advises tlw minority leader on matters of whole cloth nad, with the Republican leader won over, Joe Altmark tailors the decision where it seems slightly out of line.
No Power to Oust Bircher--GOP Aide
iveni
“But, as far as we’re concerned, he doesn’t represent
LANSING (AP)—State eleo-|who was elected by district del-tion laws do not give Michi |«««tes to the party’s sUte con gan’s Republican party thel''®”^*®" “ January, power to remove Gerald A Spencer of Flint from the GOP State Central Committee, the State Elections Office said Thursday.
Spencer has said he is member of the John Birch Society. The 7th District (Genesee and Lapeer counties)
GOP Conunittee told him Wed nesday night to resign or have his p^ declared vacant.
★	★ w
Paul V. Gadola Jr., 7th District GOP chairman' conceded Thuraday the district has no authority to rennove Spencer,
the district any more,’’ Gadola'P^ty added. “All we’ve really done,'* attempted to bar him from
Is demand he resign and thrown'state , central committee meet-
“We could adopt a resolution repudiating Spencer and even! appoint a new central commit-' tee member to represent the 7th District, but I think the
the ball to the state central committee.’’
AUTHORITY LACKING A spokesman at Republican
uigs.
Gov. George Romney tried in 1963 to amend the state election law to include removal provisions for “unfit” political state headquarters in Lansing party officers., said he doubts the party’sj The bill was killed in executive committee, when it [Michigan Senate by a biparti-meets Dec. 3, will have the san coalition' which warned authority to bar Spencer from against opening the door to a state central committee meet-'“system of political purges” ings.	I within the state’s two major
The (K)P spokesman added: political parties.
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People/n ffre News'
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By The Associated Press
“C^pt. Harry of Battery D” received a Veterans Day visit from one of the Salvation Army lassies who served doughnuts and hot chocolate to doughboys overseas in World Wart.
He’s now Cl-year-old former President Harry Truman and she’s Brig. Gen. Isabella Bonger, 74-year-old Salvation Army veteran from Wichita, Kan.
She arrived at Truman’s office, in Independence, Mo., yesterday carrying a bag of doughnuts. She offered one to Truman, a field artillery captain in France.
“It’s too soon after breakfast,” said Truman with thanks.
Dirksen Buys Suits—Ifs Wife's Idea Sen. Everett M. Dirksen, R-Ill., bought some new clothes from g Chicago tailor yesterday.
The senator, whose rumpled wardrobe and tousled hair are a tradition, explained to newsmen:
“Mrs. Dirksen said It’s about time I get some new suits—that I look like a bag of rags.”
Katzenbach Warns of Distorted Fear of Crime
Atty. Gen. Nicholas Katzenbach says the National Crime Commission will develop a broader picture of criminal activity to help ward off any exaggerated and uninformed national fear of crime.
Katzenbach also told the American Jewish Committee in New York last night:
“It is hot crime so much that we should fear. It is not so much fear itself. It is, rather, fear based on fancy rather than facts. For by succumbing to such fear, we surrender both freedom and rationality.”
II Burned Wife 'Despondent'
Viet Protest Doubted in Self-Immolation
SOUTH BEND. Ind. (UPIi -South Bend police said today they believed a woman who set herself ablaze in front of her home was despondent over the accidental death of her 3-month-old daughter.
★ ♦ ♦
Reports that Mrs. Coline Jan-! kowski, 24, tried to immolate herself as a protest against the| Viet Nam War were discounted.!
Mrs. Jankowski was report- ' ed in fair condition today at | South Bend Memorial Hospital | with burns on her arms, abdomen, chest and back.
The incident occurred Wednesday night. A neighbor, Henry Eozniak, said he ran outside and I wrapped his coat around Mrs. Jankowski to put out the fire.
I	*	*	*
I The Jankowskis have two other children, 3 and 2 years old. Their infant daughter Michelle iwas found suffocated Oct. 28 in a crib.
★ ★ *
A police spokesman said he doubted the Viet Nam protest reports “very much. When the, baby suffocated, this woman i had been despondent everl since."	1
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, itfM
Call Doctors Under 35 for Armed Forces
WASHINGTON (AP) - Doctors under 35, some of them fathers, are being ordered into the armed forces in January.
The Selective Service orders are going out to fili a Defense Department call for 1,529 physicians, 350 dentists and 100 veterinarians to go on duty eariy! next year.
A 1963 presidential order, which provided deferment for fathers under the general draft specifically exempted physicians, dentists and veterinarians.
The exception is based, at least in part, on the theory that these specialists are offered commissions, not called in at the lowest pay grades, and thus are better able to care for dependents.
A Selective Service spoKcs-man said it is understood there are few physicians under 26 with unfilled draft obligations! and, therefore, local draft! ' boards were requested to re-| view the status of all physicians under 35 in certain categories. !
ADMITTED CX)MMUN1ST-Bettina Aptheker, a leader of the Free Speech Movement that disrupted the University of California at Berkeley in December, has admitted in a letter to the student newspaper she is a member of the Communist party.
Exchange of Information
Experts Gather in Attempt to Fill Gap on Cause of Blackout
Area Chapter Board of Red Cross to Meet
Royal Couple Takes a Break
Enjoys Relaxing Day in Arizona Sunshine
WASHINGTON (AP) - Government and industry power experts study today the pattern Tuesday night’s massive blackout in which a power failure surged through city after city in the Northeast.
Chairman Joseph C. Swidler of the Federal Power i"
Sion, who heads the ii tion directed by President Johnson, said the panel was to meet today to find out “how the cas-cadi^ process worked” also what “reverse action” was taken to restore service-WWW Coming suddenly during the evening rush hour, the blackout its peak enveloped 80,000 square miles in an eight-state area and affected up to 30 million persons. Power in New York City was off for more than ‘ hours, with hundreds of thousands of persons stranded in subways and elevators.
During a break in the long session Thursday night, Swidler said: “There is no easy answer to this. We are just plowing ahead.”
GAPS REMAIN After the session, he added: ‘We have exchanged a great
deal of information on what took place, but there are still some Bps.”
Swidler indicated he had some doubts as to whether he would have a preliminary report to President Johnson ready by this weekend as he first had ho^.
♦	★ w
'I did not intend to fix a deadline for myself,” he said.
After meeting for 14 hours Thursday, Swidler said the problem still was one of finding where the failure occurred.
NOT TRACEABLE
‘The breakdown is not traceable to any unit,” he 'The systems went back into service with the same equipment. The {HDblem of tracing is a complex one.”
★	★ w
The power commission, a panel of government power experts and officials of the private power companies affect^, and several others are taking part in the discussions aimed at preventing any similar power blackout in the future.
WWW
The companies and groups! invoived inciuded the Pennsyi-vania-Jersey-Maryland Inter-I
change Pool, Rochester Gas & Electric, Ontario Hydro-Electric Commission, the Power Authority of the State of New York, Nlagara-Mohawk, and the New York State Elec^ and Gas.
WWW
In a news conference Hiurs-day, Secretary ot the Interior Stewart L. Udall said he agreed with those government and private experts who believe that stronger interties between electrical power systems would have made Tuesday’s power blackout less severe and might have averted it.
Udan said there had been ra-ports that some private'pqifer
with many (d the top jpswer ex-officials had saM the mimihj'a ports in government ^ private power loss was due in part ^ the present intertie system, necUng various power companies across the Northeast.
fi<i»n said he had conferred stronger biterties between thesa
_____________ it to the, very
strong consensus of all of them thal had there been larger and
syrtmns they could probably haVe weathered the difficulty and certainly the failure would have been as serious as It
’Ihe power actually is an ar> gument for more, not less, tying together of generating systems, UdaU said. He added he felt these critics were trying to use the blackout to prevent still more extensive intertie systems.
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The executive board of the Southeastern Michigan Chapter of the American Red Cross willi	..	..p,
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The new southeastern chapter	j	husband,
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The Snowdons sunned them-I selves Thursday around the pool . at the home of their host, form-• ler ambassador to Great Britain .and Mrs. Lewis Douglas.
’Thev dropped plans to visit nearby mission and astronomy observatory to rest up nearly a week’s hectic tour of San Francisco and Los Angeles.
Relaxing with them were actor Roddy McDowall, Mrs. Danny Kaye «nd actress Hope Lange and her husband, director Alan Pakula.
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pair’s guide for their U.S. tour.
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THE	1	FKllMV, iXOVEMilEK 12. 1»«5
Commanders in Viet Nam Get Troop Buildup Power
SEEK SNIPER — Two U. S. paratroopers squat in high elephant grass and look intently toward an iarea where a sniper's fire was heard during a recent landing operation in the D Zone, north of Saigon. The helicopters
that landed them move low and fast as they leave the jungle clearing. The sniper fire ceased after a few minutes, and the 173rd Airborne Brigade unit moved on into the jungle to search out the enemy.
Air Force Modifying B52 Jets
Army Widow 'Sees Red’; Rips Signs From Pickets
The
'WASHINGTON (AP)
Air Force is modifying some of its long-range BS2 Jets so they win be able to drop up to 21,750 more pounds of bombs on the Communist forces in South Viet Nam.
The Air Force said changes it is making in the bomb bays of a portion of its BS2 force will increase the ' Irjj^ of each plane from pfiisent 38,250 pounds to iniich as 10,000 pounds.
PORT DEVENS, Mass. (UPI) - The attractive widow of an Army sergeant placards from seven demonstrators protesting U.S. involvement in Viet Nam yesterday. She ripped up the signs before
jS82s, originally built for mi-cl&ir ^
- warfare, have been used since last June to dump loads of ekjplosives on areas in South Viet Nam which have been Communist Viet Cong strong-
“I just couldn’t stand it any more,” said Mrs. Eva Romas-kiswia, 87, of Ayer, Mass. Her hoiband. Staff Sgt. Edmund Romaskiewicz, was killed in an auto accident in Germany last April.
Oak of yesterday’s demoa-itrators was a soldier wearing chrfliaa cMhes and carrying a sign reading *T refuse to fight la Viet Nam.”
becoming a soldier.”
Pfc. Steven Underwood, 18, of Fremont, Calif., said be wa picketing the bistallatkm Im cause “It’s what I believe in. say have harried the didn’t have all the facts when
So far, there have been more than 80 such B63 bombing missions, mos^y from Guam where the United States has stationed sdine 30 of the eight-jet giants. Ata PLEASED JjWicials have fwid they are
dfell .
Cglnmuni^ and strived Rnds of the security of previously impenetrable strongholds.
At present, B52s can carry a totel of 51 bombs weighing 750 pqimds apiece. Twenty-seven of the bombs are carried in the bomb bays, and 24 more are mounted on the wings.
Under the modification, the bomb bays will be altered so th|y can handle up to 84 bombs
He was seized by two military intelligence agents and lodged bi the Fort Devens stock-
ade on a charge of “conduct mi- “verai m<« signs beofre m.p.’s
.	r. ..	..	wdhr* mhU tn mtnn Kap
wdjghing 500 pounds apiece or 4^ bomb'
'^bombs' each weighing 750
There will be no change in the «(|mal racks carrying 24 bombs of 750 pounds each.
The Air Force stressed that
thfe B52s will still be able to convey rapidly back to carrying nuclear weapons.
Estimated cost of the Work is $28.5 mUlkm.
4/1 QUART
uuDErsymi FUU. 86 PROOF SAME HIGH QUAUTY
can flag,” the German-bom woman said.
She handed her purse to the man next to her, asked him to watch her children, ran across the street and charged screaming into the picket line.
WENT BLANK “At first I just wanted to get the American flag but when * got there I went blank. I think ' thought about my husband dying and others dying so these people could live — these silly boys,” she said.
Mrs. Romaskiewicz tore the flag and placard sway from
NOTTOMORROW Underwood told newsmen, 'Tm a private flrst class today but I probably won’t be one to-
Mrs. RomasUewics was s t a a d I a g across the street
children •
7, 8, asid 4
______iRVeterdas
Day demonstrators picket ^ main pte when she "saw red.”
“I saw a woman carrying a sign that said ‘No war in Viet Nam’ in one hand and In the other hand she had an Ameri-
JOHNSON CITY, Tex. (AP) House said Johnson talked to,South Viemarnesc, with Ameri-— President Johnson has given them about plans already ap-can help, “have blunted and American field commanders in proved for reorganizing the defeated that Viet Cong offen-Viet Nam broad authority to management of Gardner's de-isive, and the Viet Cong have call for — and get — additional partment, which now is second; paid a very heavy price indeed fighting men to step up the war only to the Pentagon in totarfor their monsoon activities.” against the Communist Viet annual spending.	i	*	* it
^"8-	McNamara, In talking about He said Viet Cong casualties
Secretary of Defense Robert Johnson's orders for more were 100 per cent higher than S. McNamara told newsmen, troops to Viet Nam, mentioned during the comparable period after a day-long policy confer-! no qualifications. If the com- last year while South Vietna-ence Thursday at the LBJ manders bn the scene ask forjmese casualties were 40-45 per Ranch, that Johnson had “in-additional Jorces, he said, the cent higher, structed me to meet the re- men will be dispatched.	However he said Viet Ck>ng
quests from our military,	w *	*	forces continue to grow in num-
commanders for additional i:^r- jq meet these troop needs» bers, despite casualties, “and sonnel as they are received." McNamara said there is no plan therefore we believe it will be *	♦	*	“at this time” to mobilize any necessary to add further to the
Some requests for more men National Guard or Reserve strength of the U.S. combat already have been received. Me- units or to extend duty tours. He! forces presently deployed in Namara said, and troops will said the draft and voluntary South'Viet Nam.” move “as they become avails-enlistments should cover fbe I
ble for that purpose." \	situation.	i	. u . m
The defense chief said 160,000 The December draft call, he , situaUw in Saigon rephed* uniformij^ Americans already ,said, total ab t
we stationed m South Viet. men. And he added, I don’t	^^e present
Nam. He wouldnt specuUte on, anticipate that it will be neces- government to get on with this how many more would be sent sary at any time in the near ?.	.	the same time to
because “we don’t wish to give future for draft calls to rise ^ J
Miitrort In tl» future."	n He aiid American ^llcymak-
MncimivrT	'	McNamara and Rusk ers see “signs of resilience and
SECOND SUBJECT	took a rather optimistic view of growing confidence and opti-
Secretary of State Dean Rusk,.the current situation in South mism among men in the coun-who joined McNamara and oth- Viet Nam.	tryside.”
policy advisers for the McNamara said the Viet Cong-------------------------------
marathon session with Johnson, I	attempted during thej Free tours for the public are
said Viet Nam actually tookjgu„„„er monsoon season to split offered by hundreds of factories i second place In the discussions country “in two at its nar- and plants across the United! to “the unilateral action of the|j.Q^ waist, and to dismember'States. Several firnrts provide white minority government In jaud maul the military forces of free baby-sitting while parents Rhodesia In illegally seizing nation.” But he said the tour the premises, power, an action which the|-
■everal placards away from other pickets and hnried them to the ground before four m.p.’s grabbed her.
She broke away and tore up
United States government deplores.”	I
Promising a further Rhodesia policy statement today from| United Nations Ambassador, Arthur J. Goldberg, Rusk said Johnson had ordered the recall of American diplomats in the African country — headed by Consul General Roswell B. Mc-i Clelland — and the shutdown of activities there by the United States Information Agency. i
were able to stop her.
'Tm not sorry 1 did it,” she laid later. “If it wasn’t for the Army there would be no peace. She was escorted inside the post 'and waa later released.
The incident climaxed a day which law several oti
tors and about 300 antipicketa.
maader H a Conaecticat Amerkaa Legiaa peat, was attacked by a spectator who ripped battle ribboas from his aaiform aad threw them to
Robert E. Hollis, 38, of Jewett City, Conn., commander of Legion post IS, said he served du^ the Korean War and has an a^pted son in the Marines in Viet Nam.
“The United "States govern-lent,” said Rusk, “in no way! recognizes the rebel regime, and continues strongly to sup-j port a solution in Rhodesia that will be just and acceptable to' the population as a whole” —' black as well as white.	'
McNamara and Rusk reported to newsmen at Bergstrom Air Force Base near Austin, 65 miles east of the Johnson ranch, while waiting for a plane to take thbm back to Washington. Other participants in the ranch session includ^ Undersecretary of State George W. Ball, Assistant I Secretary of State Walt W. Ros-tow and McGeorge Bundy,\the president’s special assistant for national secl^rity affairs. VISITORS
RANCH Secretary of Welfare John W. Gardner and Chairman John W. Macy of the Civil Service Commission also flew to the ranch for the day. The Texas White
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THE PONTIAC PRESS FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 12, 1965
New Way Studied to Give Drivers 'th^ Word'
WASHINGTON (AP) - One of these days, highway signs may talk to drivers, instead of just advising them via the printed word.
Findings ^re due next year; from studies at Georgia Tech on; the value of traffic messagesj presented by radio. The Ford Philco pimple have developed a way to deliver them.
These new wrinkles were discussed in an interview by Burton Stevens, a psychologist with U.S. .Bureau of Public ! Roads.
No one is sure what those messages should contain, nor jeven sure whether it is a good idea,” Stevens said. “One question is how many times present the message, how
ahead of an Intersection for example.”
‘TRANSMISSION PROBLEMS There are transmission problems. Messages are sent from a transmitter by the side of the road, and picked up by the passing driver with special receiving equipment inside the car :. They could come in on a
beam to Which the car rddio indicated ft is not speed as such, (for highway problems get
combed.
Motor Trend magazine ports the case of a
Get The Message, Buddy?
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could be set. Conceivably the messages could be broadcast loudly from the roadside. But what if the radio was not turned on? Or the car windows were rolled up and the driver couldn’t hear what was being loud-speakered? e
It may come as a surprise to some that the Bureau of Public Roads has psychologists working for it. But they’ve been there from the behavioral sciences for almost six years, working with a great variety of problems created by drivers, vehicles and highways.	,
STUDYING UMITATIONS
‘‘For one thing, we’re studying the limitations and capabili-. ties of the driver,” Stevens said.
For example, there is a lot of; controversy over how much signi information a driver can absorb and act on when he comes to a big traffic interchange.
A ★	★
People differ in their skills, naturally, even in their ability to read. Some drivers may be sleepy, or under the influence of alcohol.
“We hope to develop a system that can be used efficiently by a variety of people with a wide! variety of conditions,” Stevens said
“Our approach is not restiic-j tive. We have not attempted to suggest stricter licensing. We' recognize the importance of transportation in economic and social life.”
One of the most popular de-Velepnients in recent years has| been the “yield” sigh, often in: place of a stop sign, where a| less-busy road enters a main' highway.
MAKE EVALUATIONS
“These yield signs fotr^people make an evaluatimaor them-j iselves: should thpy pull into the I highway, or wait a while? They! I recognize toe decision is theirs j I suspect they normally iface up to the situation,” Stev-toid.
vens is interested as a /j^river and as a scientist in the problem of speed.
* * ★
“The notion has been knock-I ing around a long time that I and high horsepower tendl to be associated with high acci-j 'dent rates. A report a year ago:
3 Suspects Arrested in Heroin Smuggling
PARIS (UPI) - French police have arrested three men believed involved In smuggling 22 pounds of heroin worth 1100, 000 from France to the United States, it was disclosed today.
Police said two men were arrested Wednesday on board the Dutch cargo vessel Loersum in Le Havre. Police picked up the third man last night.
but rather differences speeds,” he said.
“rhe safe driver is not the slow drivtf, but toe fellow who maintains the average speed of the traffic he’s in.”
GET DISCOURAGED
oiHpurpoae _ in St. Louis County, Mo„ to fli out how peopls react to signs.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1963
Punishment Wont Solve Grade Problem
HEAVY IX)AD — People took a second look this week when they saw these men carrying an elephant into the Los Angeles County Museum of History and Science. The
animal was one of four killed in Africa for the museum, stuffed in Hudson, N.Y., and shipped to Los Angeles by van.
ichool Art: Academic, Cultural Value
By DAVID NYDICK » UPI Education Specialist *Art is and should be a part of the total educational program.
It has often been criticized as an unnecessary extra or frill. Actually, it has a cultural as well as an academic value.
Art is ■
its
with the
!!^adeniie program.
^^is approach helps indivld-Mb to understand and appre-^te art as an important part of . their daily activitiea.
♦ w *,
The school program provides students with an opportunity to think and work creatively at their own level of ability and understanding.
^. They can use a great variety r ^ materiab. They should be T allowed to develop their —
hv Uwir nam atefwlBf
It provides the children with satisfying experiences of emotional and academic value. These experiences encourage creative work and develop greater meaning in the academic areas.
TYPICAL LESSON Let’s take a look at a typical lower grade lesson. The students are using cloth scraps, yam, assorted papers, paste, and scissors to devebp a picture of winter games. Thb project grew out of a study of
■ by tl ^..Artlsavl
be read aad uaderiteod by eUldrw.
A good art program b much more than a check list of activities to do throughout the classroom situation.
Ferndale Man Dies
in Korean Hospital
^OUL, Korea (AP) - Donald Patterson, 67, of Pemdale, Mich., died of a heart attack at a Seoul civilian hospital, the U.S. Army here announced today.
He was a Department of Army civilian employe working for a U.S. army engineer unit in Seoul. He died Wecbiesday.
Patterson b survived by hb widow, Vivian.
The class wasstndying clouds, temperature, and the formation of snow. The snow was used to develop bterest in the picture which was called “Warm Cbthes for Winter Snows.”
A unit of thb nature b an excellent example of a total program. The basic subject involved was science.
# ★ *
Arithmetic was involved with the temperature. Language arts and reading were involved in research.
GIVES MEANING The art project was used to give meaning to what had been learned. The studente, in using the art materiab, were developing motor skilb cutting, color sense, etc. Thb inclusion of many subjecb b called correb-tkm.
Thb type of program leads to a real aKvecbtion of art. The begin to maUaa that through art they can expraas
They begin to recognize that art can bring feeling and interest to their ri^ar activities.
By LESUE J.*NASON, ED. D.
Dear Dr. Nason: My U-year-old son barely passed the seventh grade. And there are signs that the same thing may happo) this year. His teachers complain about hb httitude, which appears to be that he b doing the teacher a favor just by sitting in the classroom.
When he takes an examination
Is goal b to pass — nothing more. I want him to raise the standards of hb work, but I abo want to be fair and not humiliate him.	I
*	*	* 'I
We have tried punishment—j no TV, no school sporb, noi bicycle, no trips. Should I re-| quest that the child repeat a grade? Is this the real lesson he needs? Or should I allow him to go ahead and graduate with hb class?
J. F.W., Scarsdate, N. Y.
♦	*	★
Punbhmenb and restrictions will not produce the drive your son lacks. Allow him to continue with hb cbss and engage in a reasonable numbbr of sporb. Give him back hb bicycle. Along with these things, give him the responsibility of suceeding in school.	.
♦	♦	★
Discuss the problem with his school counselor or principal, requesting that your son be given special help In getting into the habit of learning in class. He may decide to make a greater effort when someone helps him plan hb approach to schoolwork in enough debil so that he can substitute efficient procedures for hb present unsatbfactory habib of behavior.
Dear Dr. Nason: My daughter
now in the second grade. Her reading was a source of bewilderment to me all during her first year. She still can’t remember simple words like should, well, things, could, would, etc. During the first grade, her teacher sent home lisb of words. We went over them with her, had her write them over and over, yet failed to remember
them.
★	★	*
She does well In arithmetic and spelling, but still can’t read the words when she geb home.
What do you suggest?
Mrs. N. L., Tipp City, 0, *	*	w
Whether your daughter’s difficulty b In perception or memory — or in some other mental process essential to reading — can be determined only through
ly has a b u r ie a u that places teachers at all levels, including college. This officer would be !your best source of inforn]|ation
a careful diagnosb by an expert. Dear Dr. Nason: In a previous| Please advise me how I may IsudTa^iUOT!^’Theyalso
Reading is so essential to suc-Hoess both in and out of school that you should not delay in getting the diagnosb of thb type of difficulty, you should write to the head of you county medical assocbtion for Information.
column, you sbted that more junior colleges. At present 1 teach accounting in high school. I am, however, interested in teaching at the college level. I have my M.A, plus 20 additional credits.
receive information about, and'advise you regarding any furth-applications for, teaching in jun-Lr preparation you might need.
lor colleges of four-year colleges.!	_______
F. L., Astoria, N. Y.| (you can write to Prof. Nason *	*	*	jin care of The Pontiac Press.
The college from which youjQuestions of general interest will received jour degree undoubted^jbe answered in hb column.)
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1965
Protests Said StretchingWar
Gl Cites Viet Gains on Return to State
EAST LANSING (AP) -American officer back from one year in Viet Nam says demonstrations against U.S. policy in Southeast Asia probably are prolonging the war by leading North Viet Nam to false conclusions.
Maj. Ralph C. Waara also told interviewers that despite the war. the South Vietnamese are making slow but steady progress in education, agriculture, commerce and social reform.
“The peasant wants, more thar. anything else, an education for his children,” Waara I said.
In ceremonies Wednesday, Waara received the Air Medal and Bronze Star for “outstanding meritorious service" in more than 25 missions over hostile territory in helicopters and observation aircraft.
Waara called the South Vietnamese “some of the best fighters in the world” and estimated less than 15 per cent of the people are sympathetic to the Communist cause.
He also reported seeing signs of increased political maturity among the South Vietnamese. He said the people are realizing they will gain no benefit from further government changes in Saigon and noted a greater degree of politicai stability in the country.
Waara, who received hi Army commission in 1952 upon graduation from Michigan State University, is back at MSU to study for a master' degree in business and distributive location.
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'Aluminum-Sparked Inflation Feared'
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Commerce Secretary John T. Connor says President Johnson wanted the aluminum industry to back down on Its price increase because they could “ignite the fireworks of inflation and blow our steady growth sky-high.” Connor discussed the administration’s action in forcing three of the nation’s four top aluminunf producers to rescind their recently announced increases in a speech yesterday before the Northwestern Univo'-sity School of Business in Chicago.
’The text of the speech was made available in Washington.
Connor made Us comments
the involvement df hundreds of thousands of our young people in wartime activities, the President is deeply concerned
about dramatic, s,ymb,^lic' events that could ignite' the firewwks of inflation and blow our steady growth skyhlgh.”
FUNNY FACE - Children have loads of fun with these papier-mache heads of comic characters made by George Smith, 4040 Lakewood, Waterford Township. Pictured are four of Smith’s children and a cousin. Posing a who’s who puzzle are (from left) Jeffrey, 4; George Green, 0, son of
Infamous Boston Strangler Moy Never Come to Trial
BOSTON (AP) - The Boston trial and that there is no indica-strangler may never come to	***
lri.1,
And n»>M pollen Mliclolo now, agree there may never be a Wan June 14. 1962, with the guilty verdict or explanation of	^nna E. Slessers, 55, a
11 stranglings of women in the seamstress strangled with
Greater Boston area.
★ w ★
Atty. Gen. Edward W. Brooke's office says a .prime suspect has been placed in an
cord of her housecoat in her Boston apartment.
ELDERLY WOMEN
_______ _____ _____ of the deaths that fol-
institution, that he is believed flowed were of women in their mentally incompetent to stand! late 50s, 60s, and 70s. And a
after Kaiser Ahunianm and Chemical Corp. Jelaed the Alamtamm Ce. ef America (ALCOA) and the ReynoMt Metal Ce. in backing down on increases of one-half cent a pound in ingot aluminum.
Olin Mathieson Chemical Corp., the first producer to announce increases, is expected toj follow suit.	I
Connor’s speech also came as' aluminum industry executives and business observers expressed puzzlement that despite I the furor over aluminum prices, the copper industry has pushetl through bigger price increases in the last few weeks without visible White House concern. ;
An the major copper producers except one boosted the price of electrolytic copper by 2 cents a pound recently, making the second substantial copper price increase in six months.	;
In his speech, Coanor said I that “these who condema the | JAKARTA (UPI) - Defense ■ctions of the admialstra^ , cord, bra, nylon stocking or pil-Minister Abdul Haris NasuUoni J" JJ*
low slip was wrapped tightly p^i-gonally a d v i s e d Pres-1 a .	. ,.ai____ j *1,,
around their necks. Mwt of the Sukarno on how Indonesia pre»|deat during the dock
thought to have gained entrance karta said today.	With a growing military ^
on some such pretext as being a	*	*	*	commitment in Viet Nam and,
delivery or repairman.	| Nasution, who has emerged as
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Green, 2965 Barkman, Waterford Township; Terri, 6; Diana, 11; and Colleen, 9. Smith shows hiis works to schoolchildren and to patients in hospital pediatric wards.
Sukarno Hears Defense Chief
Big Rig, Tiny Woman
Grandma Is a Truck Driver
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The most recent in the series was the strangling of Miss Mary Ellen Sullivan on Jan. 4,1964, in her apartment in Boston's exclusive Back Bay.
Some months later, the prime suspect in the case was picked up on a lesser crime of violence.
Meanwhile, army units con-| Other victims which Brooke tinned to scour the jungles of said were probably killed by the central Java in a massive 1 same person included Miss Hel- search for an Indonesian Com-!en E. Blake, 65, of Lynn, a reg- munist party leader who dis-41-year-old grand- How do the other truck driv-i^tered nurse; Nina Nichols, 68; appeared after the coup attempt, ers accept her?	|ida Irga. 75, a widow; and Miss*
BALTIMORE, Md. (AP) - we own the rig,” said Mrs. Miff-New Jersey State Police were'phy. “If we didn’t then I would nonplussed recently when they be taking a man’s job ’ stopped a huge, steel-laden trac- don’t think that’s right.”
! tor-trailer truck and down stepped mother.
further clarify the unity be- j tween the leadenhip of Prct- | ident Sukarno with the leadership of the armed forces, and how it could be carried out | at Ita beat,” the radio report- | ed.	,
To The free (^mstrong Ceiling and Floor Tile "Do It Yoursetf" Clinic at The Kmart Lumber Department
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I^na Muiphy, who stands	gawk,” she Jane Sullivan, 67, a practicall Reports from Jogjakarta said
barely over five feet in her cow-igg|j jj,gy	I’m nurse. The means by which troops captured a Communist
CLARKSTON
APPLIANCE
t N. MN.	U5.27N
Oa«ii 9 'Til 9 Mon. rimi Sat.
!boy boots, said she was stopped the first three times she drove I the truck on the New Jers^ j Turnpike. Each time I produced the necessary license and was waved on.
* ♦ ★
Mrs. Murphy, whose husband, Charles, 41, owns the rig, has been driving for two years. She and her husband drive four-hour shifts.
“I wouldn’t be driving except
tough enough to drive, they'll golMiss Sullivan was choked was courier as he was boarding a along with me.”	Inever disclosed.	1 train for the capital last t
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THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1965
B-9
Two Views on Future of Rhodesia
LONDON (AP) - British dais and those from other white nations of the Commonwealth uy Rhodesia’s rebellious white settlers will soon find fhem-selves isolated, friendless, bankrupt and on their knees.
Diplomats from Asian Commonwealth countries predict that Rhodesian Prlnte Minister Ian Smith will get away with it — for the time being.
The Asians see it thii
Smith’s UDI - United Declaration of Independence — will be a nine days’ wonder in a world preoccupied with bigger things.
IMPOTENT TO ACT Resolutions will be passed by such groups as the Organization of African SUtes but. lacking real power in the air or on the ground, they are impotent to
act.
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TbeU.N. Security Council will condemn UDI but won’t agree on an effecUve method of intervention. In time many nations wili get used to dealing with the Rhodesiah government even if, at the outset, they refuse to recognize It as they refused to recognize Red Chinn.
Many African diplomats in London agree to some extent.
In private they concede that talk about aimies of liberation mailing on Rhodesia to heip their fellow Africans is unrealistic. ’They say the real salvation 11
Prime Minister Harold Wilsonijoes ^th Africa. If, as may
be expected, these countries lay benevolence toward Smith’s action, then he can count on getting a lot of the goods and materials he needs from or through them. Similarly he can count on marketing a iot of his products through them, if he can find anybody to buy
and his Cabinet believe that the Smith regime can be brought to its knees by a variety of economic pressures. They include political, trading and fiscal sanctions beginning with a ban on the import of Rhodesian tobacco, worth |70 million a year.
Wilson’s government is sure Britain’s friends will rally indef-
big thing Asian. Afri-
tlne Rhodesia.	^
DEPEND ON NEIGHBORS i agree.
British officials concede their	*	*	*
forecasts of disaster for Smith’s! The Rhodesian crisis packs tor RhSesia’s“4 m»Hoi7brac'ks|venture may well hinge on the, the ex^lve capacity of an lies with the blacks themselves.'positions taken by Portugal and!atomic bomb in its racial impli-I!,.1 South Africa. The Portuguese;cations.
•’TOUGH STRUGGLE	i territory of Mozambique bor-| If the 225,000 whites slide into
They will have to settle thejders landlocked Rhodesia and | combat with the African majori-
differences dividing them, organize a resistance movement and go through the ordeal of blood, fire and suffering if they are to prove themselves worthy of power.
One London representative of _ji African Commonwealth country commented: “It will be a tough struggle because we must expect Smith bit by bit to resort to the police state methods used by his South African neighbors. But do not be surprised to see a phase of violence as Rhodesia’s Africans learn to master the mechanics of insurrection."
Vote Set on Joining
-Ity, in time it could suck I outside powers, even a U.N. interventionist force. This could affect race relations throughout Traverse City District |the world.
! A British Cabinet minister, TRAVERSE CI’TY (AP) — speaking privately, offered this Voters In the Sabin School Dis-'view: “Historically and in ra-trict near here vote Dec. 28 on cial terms this situation could whether to annex to Traverse be compared with the detona-City School District.	tion of the first atomic bomb. It
Sabin has 159 students in the could get out of control. Whites kindergarten through eighth throughout Africa could become grades. The Traverse City,the target of African anger and School Board already has ap-ifrustration. This could spread, proved the plan, and the State j Mr. Smith truly is carrying a Board of location has indi-^torch that might set all Africa cated it would grant approval, alight.”

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‘AN IAN SMI 'H {;iKI.’ — Lesley Bunting, 22-year-old Miss Rhodesia, arrives at Ixindon Airport la.st night to compete in the Miss World beauty pageant next week. Pageant organizers said the^' would have to check the rules to see if Rhodesian political crisis will have any effect on her candidacy. A graduate of Salisbury University, Miss Bunting says she’s “an Ian Smith girl all the way."

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B—10
the PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 12, 19M
Success Is Spelled Out at Ingathering
Nearly 5,000 garmenta and $574 in cash were collected at the annual Ingathering of the Needlework Guild of America, Inc. on Thursday.
All morning, women brought in their contributions and stayed for a cup of coffee or tea and some of the pastries made by the Queen Mary section.
Women of the First Presby-vligrian Church where the Ingathering is held assisted with the coffee hour.
★ ★ ★
At noon, the group had its annual meeting. Re-elected to office were Mrs. William Brace, president; Mrs. Forest Wood,
vice president; Mrs. James AW- ' rich, secretary and Mrs. Philip Francis, treasurer.
WWW'
Participation in this organization is open to any woman hi the area. The only requirement is that she contribute two new garments for the Ingathering — “One to wear and one to wash.”
It it *
One of the interesting contributions this year consisted of four polished cotton dresses, two with hand embroidery.
Mrs. Leora Stevens of Williams Street had attended the 1964 Ingathering and was so impressed that she worked on her
1965 contribution all during the tion; St. Josqih Mercy and Pon-Uac General hospitals; The Salvation Army; Oakland County Society for Crippled Children and Adults Inc. and Michigan
After the busineas meeting, of-flcers of the branch and their assistants prepared the garments for distribution. Any recognized social agency is eligible to receive these garments.
There are never enough for all the requests, especially requests for layettes.
Joining the group of agencies who were given garments on Thursday (distribuUon is made the same day as the Ingathering) is the St. Vincent de Paul Society.
Other agencies benefiting are Pontiac Visiting Nurses Associa-
Women started arriving at the annual Ingathering of the Pontiac branch. Needlework Guild of America, Inc., about 8:30 a. m. Thursday. Bringing in their contributions are Mrs. Walter Kinsler, Preston Street (left), and Mrs. L. Z. Monroe, Hathon Street. They are members of Alpha chapter. Beta Theta Phi sorority.
Dinner Parties Precede Camp Oakland Benefit
Mrs. James Howlett, East Iroquois Road (left) and Mrs. Charles DeClerck, Frankwill Street, Independence Tovmship, sort articles
contributed for boys. The lower hall of the First Presbyterian Church was full of long tables piled high with garments.
Youthful movie star, Hayley Mills, here for the benefit premiere tonight of Walt Disney’s “That Dam Cat” will be entertained at a pre-show dinner at the Detroit Athletic Club t>y the Carl 0. Barfoot Bfamingbam.
it	*	h
Barton is president of the board of Camp Oakland, the benefit’s recipient.
it	It	*
J. P. McCarthy, Detroit radio personality, will be the master of ceremonies at Ford Audito-
He will be a guest, along with John Conner of the Disney Studio, at the Barton dinner party. WILL PARTY
Committee members planning to attend the before-the-show gala include Mr. and Mrs. Ben
D. Mills, Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Chambers, Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Keys, the William B. Calhouns, the George Hacketts, Mrs. Parbury Schmidt, the William R. Candlers and the Robert J. Coughlins.
w	*	★
Another dinner party at the DAC, in honor of tte event, will be the one hosted by the U. S. Brattons.
*	♦	★
Mrs. Walter Gehrke will entertain before the film at the Detroit Club.
★	*	★
The Samuel J. Langs will also host at the Detroit Club for a number of friends.
★	★	*
The Thomas L. Lowerys and Mr. and Mrs. John B. Gates have chosen the new Pontchar-train Hotel as the setting for a dinner party before showtime.
Protect Him and Others
Guard Father’s Smoking
DEAR ABBY; My father makes his home with us. He is $2 and gettiim senil^.
He can i^Wmber what happened 75 years-ago, but he for-l gets what youi told him five| minutes ago. Hel always
Max Richardson, host of Pine^ Lake Country Club helps two members of St. Joseph Mercy Hospital’s Boosters Club decide on seating arrangements for the club’s benefit dinner dance scheduled for Nov.
* .
27. Dr. Clare G. Johnson of Lake Angelas Center, and Mrs. James M: Hannan of Bloomfield Village, are two members toorking on the event.
ing to ask him to give it up. But here’s the problem:
He has burnt about a dozen boles in the carpet beside bis bed. He has also burnt about 40 holes in the night stand table.
He has set the mattress on fire twice and there are cigarette holes in all his pajamas and his bathrobe, too. He will be tbe death of me yet. What can I do? I can’t stand and watch him all day.
WORRIED SICK
DEAR WORRIED: He could not only be the death of you— he could be the death of himself and everyone in the house.
Someone must keep control of the cigarettes and matches and stay with him while he smokes. Otherwise, the ashes he leaves could be his own.
★ * ★
DEAR ABBY: I am the friend of a girl who baby sits for a family that is quite large. When she gets there she puts the kids to bed and then she does the dishes and straightois* up the house.
I say she’s getting paid to baby sit, not to do housework, and if she cleans the house she should get paid extra. She says she cleans the house because she likes to, nobody asks her to. '
She says she is trying to take a load off the mother’s back. Now, she’s a sweet kid for wanting to help, but don’t you think that mothier should feel tike a
Plan Dance at Pine Lake for Boosters
The St. Joseph Mercy Hospital’s Boosters Club is planning its annual dinner dance on Nov. 27 at Pine Lake Country Club.
Music will be supplied by the Glenif Smith Orchestra for the fund raising event.
Clare G. Johnson, M. D. is heading the affair and will be assisted by Mrs. John Petrakis, Dr. John Pridmore, Dr. Eugene Keeffe, Dr. Raymond Gag-liardi. Dr. James Hendersoh and Dr. James Quinn.
Others are Dr. Thomaa San-sone. Di'. Norman F. Gehringer, Dr. Clayton H. Gordon, Mrs. James Hannan and Mrs. Meyer
Tickets may be purchased from any of the above or at the nursing offlca of the hoqiital.
J the list are Oakland County Juvenile Court boarding homes; Oakland Coun-
ty Child Care Center; Catholic Social Services; American Red Cross; Family Service of Oakland County imd Camp Oakland.
★ A ★
The money is kept as a fund to supplement the material donations and is used tbroutfiout tbe year.
big slob for leaving a messy house for a sitter to clean?
HATES TO CLEAN
DEAR HATES: I don’t know the^ condition of the mother’s bouse, her health or her conscience. But if your friend cleans the house because she wants to take a load off the mother’s back, she is a sweet kid. Now what’s your (voblem?
WWW
CONFIDENTIAL TO “GOLDILOCKS”: Your mistake was in giving too much. There’s an old' saying, “When baiting a mousetrap with cheese, always leave a little room for the mouse.”-Reflect on it.
WWW
Troubled? Write to Abby, in care of The Pontiac Press. For a personal reply, enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope.
w w w
For Abby’s booklet. “How To Have A Lovely Wedding,” send 50 cents to Abby, in care of The Pontiac Press.
Musical Will Run Again
An additional performance of Cole Porter’s musical, “Anything Goes,” has been scheduled by the Village Players for Nov. 21 at 8 p.m. in the playhouse, Birmingham.
The show is open to the public and tickets are availabla at Grinnell’s in Birmingham, or by calling Mrs. Fred Plumb.
There are still a few seats left for the Saturday and Nov. 19 and 20th performances.
WWW
Those working on the production end of things include John Mitchell, Lee Madden, Dee Dwelley, Woody Henry, Margaret Remindino, Ed Miller, Carol McMillan, Don Nagd, Dave Zeese, Bill Seeback and Joan Schmidt.
Mrs. Clifton Tibbals, Miami Road, (seated) and Mrs. E. L. Page, Illinois Avenue, assisted tvith the coffee hour at the Needlework Ingathering. Most of the enticing pastries were made by the Queen Mary section whose members have taken on this task for many years.
Calendar
TODAY
Gloria Dei Lutheran Charch, Ruth Naomi group, 5 to 7 p.m., in the church. Annual-“Penny” dinner. Open to the public.
SATURDAY
84. Michael’s Altar society* B p m. in tbe church. Fall card party. Proceeds to tbe school equipment fund. Open to the public.
Women’s Associatioa,
College, 11 a.BL, bazaar in the college on West Avon Road. Dinner will be served from 3 to 6 p.m.
Sings at Church Recital
Constance Barron, University of Michigan senior voka major, wiU'lie featured in a recital at B this evonbig in the Bloomfield HiUs Baptist Church.
tribute to a fund for Lea Moachi, a young Jewish girl preparing for nursing instruction missionary work in Venezuela under the Evangelical

The^pnef it
cbarae. ay obo-
The church is located on Telegraph Road, north of Long
Yule Fair Is Slated by Group
The Women’s Auxiliary to tho Oakland County DentaL-Soclety plans its annual Christmas Hobby Fair Wednesday.
Mrs. Ronald Jenkins will open her Pilgrim Avenue home in BirminghaBi for the event, beginning at 12:30 p.m.
WWW
Mrs. Hariow Bates of Franklin again will, be auctioneer. Gifts and many of the sale articles have been made by members of the auxUlarv.
Mrs. George Marin of Birmingham, Mrs. Jenkins, Mrs. Harlow. Bates and Mrs. Robert Vedder head the list of dental wives contributing to the sale.
Mrs. Paul Taylor of Bloomfield Hills will assist the hostess. Chairman is Mrs. Robert Vedder, Bloomfield Hills.
WWW
Auxiliary members are antlci-paUng December when the 25th. anniversary of Oie auxiliary will be celebrated at a Christmas . dinner-dance in Kingsley Inn, The dental society is cosponsoring tbe affair. Dance chairmen are Dr. Jack Coates and Dr. Leo Wasaorberger.
THB PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, im
B-n
BURR SHOES
Foimariy of
Birmingham
NORTM HIU PLAZA
Phono «51-1022
_____ y
Area Youth Are Active on Campus
Two Pontiac itudents are among charter members of Michigan State University’s new Justin MorriU CoUege.
Gary Rosenthal, son of the James Rosenthals of Carlson Court, Orchard Lake, and George Melnik, son of Ivan Melnik, Summit Avenue, are en-
rolled as freshmen in the university’s new liberal arts college made up of 400 freshmen who and ' attend classes in a
The school emphasizes ideas and philosophies of the sciences and the foreign language area.
9:00 A.M. TO
12 NOON
A delightful wmy to evj&y Sunday Breakfast!
Bloomfield HiUst WOODWARD AT SQUARE LAKE RD.
nSTFTED*SATTHEM4LL
MANHATTANVILLE Among students
with a normal three-year course being taught ili one.
Graduates are eligible for pos-.| sible college level teaching or work in foreign relations. BETHEL COLLEGE Student teaching has beeni completed by two area senior coeds at Bethel College, Misha-1 waka, Ind.	j
Slated to graduate in June with B. S. Degrees in elementary education are Bonnie Shcp-hei4, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Shepherd, Verona Drive, West Bloomfield Township, and Linda Sherk, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ira Sherk, Osceola Drive.
Wednesday’s annual bridge-tea and fashion show at ManhatUn-ville College'of the Sacred Heart, Purchase, N.Y. was Jus-tena Mary Stein, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Don J. Stein, Bir-
The party benefited the students’ service program for children In Harlem, for Latin American exiles, community projects and the home missions of the Catholic church in the south.
U OP D
Betty Crawford, Stanley Avenue, was one of nine students chosen by the University of Detroit’s journalism department head Rev. James Magmer, S.J., to teach in Buffalo, N.Y. last weekend.
Miss Crawford taught picture editing and copyreading at the journalism “trainshop.” The group toured Niagara Falls on the trip.
|NMU
Clarence M. Novess HI of| Plains Street and Paul Walker, iClarkston Road, Garkston, have I been cast in major roles for Northern Michigan University’s Nov. 17-20 production “A Man for All Seasons.”
Spot Remover
NEWYORK(UPI)-Tore-, move spots caused by white shoe dressing, first sponge the area with co<d water and I then with suds. Sponge or I wash paste dressing stains ; thoroughly. If a dye stain I remains, treat it with .a di-
launder as usual. '
BRAND
OPENING
COME see Stein’s fashions! SAVE on opening specials!
HAND KNIT woot-mohoir sweaters imported from Italy. Heathers, solids, S-M-L-XL.
WOOL SKIRTS, rpany fully IlnedI Slim, A-lines, pleats. Vor-iety of colors. 6 to 18.
STRETCH PANTS, rayon-nyloh in proportioned sizes 8 to 18. BELL BOTTOMS, bonded wool in solids, novelties. ^ to 16.
SKI PARKAS, reversible nylon quilted to worm ocetate filler. Florals, solids. S-M-L.
*4
*4
*6
BENCHWARMERS of wool
melton, acrylic pile lining (cotton ^	^
backed). Hood, zip front, zipt|p I
pockets. XS-S-M-L.
LAST RAY!
Register tomorrowl YOU may
WOT A *100 PAID CHARGE ACCOUNT!
No purchase necessary
C/a« Your SECVRtTY CHARGE Prooly at Stein’s!
RCA VICTOR ALL-CHANNEL SPORTABOUT TV with ROLLABOUT STAND
fFe Service What We Sell
STEFANSKI
ELECTROmCS
1157 W. HURON
FE 2-6967
BUY, SELL, TRADE.
USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS.
CLOSE-OUT SALE OF FINE DINNERWARE Discontinued Patterns
4ithoice cf Over 300 Patterns
16-Piece Sets. Service for 4
from #2.95
45-Piece Seta. Service for 8
from #9.95
53-Piece Sets. As Low as
#12.95
Service for 12. As Low os
#19.95
DIXIE POTTERY
5281 Dixie Highway OR 3-1894
We’ve Gathered Treae^ nrec Worid-Wide to Make Yonr Chrietmaa Shopping a Oise-Stop DeUght at Wigget
A* Terry cloth, snatched kllchaa aeaeeearlMi Sev-' enl patterns. Apron 2.00. Towel 1.00. Toaster Cover 1.25. Hot Pada 2/1.25. Mitts 89e«
B. A large collection of brass and pewter candle Bticka and candlelabra. Shosni: 3 unit content-
6.00.
C. Old-fashioned kerosene lantp. Decorated — bnms scented oil 4.95. Bajdsorry or pi||^ oil, por bottle 1.50.
D. Frasei* stainless steeL Just 2 pieces shown from onr eztonsivo eollection. Roll tray 5.95. Covered vegetable dish 8.95.
E. Log lighter, kettle set Choice of many in brass or black with brass, priced from 6.00.
F. Colonial “Jobnny” teat in fruitwood with eagle medallion. 10.00.
G. Coffee and hot chocolate mugs. Contemporary and Colonial patterns. SeU of 4, from 3.00.
Bloomfield Hilk 4080 Telegraph Rd. At long Ukt Rd. 444-7370 Monday, Thurtday and Friday ’til 9 PJf.
Pontiac, 24 West Huron St Doumtowm Pontiac FB 4-1234 Monday and Friday ’til 9 PM.
■1
B—1»
THE PONTIAC PRBSa FIUDAY, NQVKI^BBB 12, 1863
PONTIAC
BUSINESS
INSTITUTE
18 W. LAWRENCE FEderal 3-7028
^eumode
SALEI
"FIBERLOCr
SUN-LESS SEAMLESS
82 N. Soginow St.
KINNEY'S SHOES
For tht Whole Family !
PONTIAC MALL	I
MIRACLE MILE	I
Speaker Is Optimistic
By HOWARD HELDENBRAND
Drew Pearson; the see-know-and-tell specialist, yesterday morning kept a Birmingham Town Hall audience at a high pitch of interest as he unfolded a chronological dissertation on events related to the issue uppermost in all minds - the danger of a major war.
★ ★ ★
Drawing on a wealth of intimacy with U.S. presidents and leaders of foreign powers, the commentator trac^ t h e recent course of growing rap-proachment between Russia and the United States until it nose-dived with the inception of American air strikes against North Viet Nam. CHILLED RELATIONS
The American bombing raids on North Viet Nam ensued strained Russian-U.S. relations because they provided grist for China’s mill of vituperation against Russia for not becoming embroiled on the side of a Communist country under attack.
But the freeze between Washington and Moscow is thawing, and the speaker sees the two countries, despite continuing economic and social differences, drawing closer together.
♦ * ♦
Meanwhile Red China influence has taken a beating in Indonesia, Pakistan, India and Africa.
Even North Viet Nam Wants no part of Chinese Communists., They have, you might say, just about run themselves out of buddies, and are pretty much out in the cold in the cold war.
“Major wars seem to break out at 20-year intervals,"
Pearson elucidated, "and by such reckoning anotho’ might
KNOW PRICE
“But because the two major world powers Russia and the United States ^ well know the price of a world hfdocaust and want peade and progress for their peoples, the odds are that a prolonged if tenuous peace will endure,” predicted the expert on world affairs.
In a glimpse behind the scenes, Pearson said that this week a conference of paramount importance took place at the LBJ ranch In Texas.
Sitting in were top military figures and the President’s civilian council on defense. The military wanted to extend the scope of U.S. bombing to Hanoi, c a p i t a 1 of North Viet Nam, and the nearby seaport, Haiphong, crowded with Russian shipping.
The civilian group firmly opposed such action, seeing it
as a fuse Igniting a conflict of major proportions; and urged continuation of our present policy of limited offensive while all resources to promote a climate conducive to peace negotiations.
PEACE NEAR
Crawling out a prophetic limb, Pearson has Johnson going along with the civilian program, and he himself believes that a peace of sorts in Viet Nam is not far off.
WWW
Following the prepared address at Birmfaigham Theater, Pearson appeared at a celebrity luncheon at Bloomfield Open Hunt Club for a ques-tion-and-answer session.
WWW
The 68-year-old cosmopolite radiated a warm, composed personality, his conversation seasoned idth anecdote and dry
humon
e even^^ a 1 f(»-Harry Tniman.
Carol L. Turnerj Is Feted
thlbii
A recent luncheon in the Village Woman's Chib honored Saturday bride-elect Carol Lee Turner, daughter (rf Mr. and Mrs. Jack J. Turner of Telegraph Road. Mrs. Eugene Hess of Tarry Lane Drive was hostess.
Entertaining at recent showers were Mrs. Richard Marshall, East Boulevard North with Mrs. Herbert Larsen, cohostess; also Mrs. Willard Thompson, Baldwin Road, Orion Township.
MNNER PARTY
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Harris of Elmy Drive, Orion Township, gave a dinner-party
for thd bride-elect and her fiance, Ronald Chester Anderson, son of the Chester A. Andersons of Brown Road, Orion Township.
★	★	★
The Herbert Larsens Midland Drive will host the rehearsal dinner for her brother and his bride-to-be.
■k	h	it
The wedding will be in the Bethany Baptist Church.
To arrive at your goals, one asset is patience. Patience is bitter, but its fruit is sweet. — Jean Jacques Rousseau, French
Announcing
our
do-it-yourself
^mstrong
CEILING and FLOOR TILE CLINIC
We’t* having a special one session instruction course on how to install beautiful new Armstrong ceilings and floors. You'll learn everything you need to know 'to install your ceiling or floor tile. No obligation to buy, dress casually.
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13 10 AJR ta 6 P.M.

maitl
CLfNWOOD PLAZA Nertli Perry St. at Ctaiiweod Open Daily 10 te 10 Sundays 12 te «
Today’s answer to the old-fashioned kitchen is seen here. Two pull-up bunch tables with foam cushions are used for eating at the counter, right-angled to the fireplace. A third bunch table is at the
right. Upholstery on the solid cherry chair and draperies to match are by Waverly. Furniture is by Heywood-Wakefield. Line available locally.
neweeeBaldwin Acrosonic
Early Amarlean The i
of oareeaatry’t
first furaitare boiMers eomes alive again ia this graoefnl Eariy American Acrosonic, Style 992. Otoice Appalachian cherry seoeert have been skillfully finished and distreaaed to empha-•ire its rich, sunny personality. Superior musical craftsmanship is equally traditional in the Baldwin Aooaonie, a piano long knosm for ita brilliant lone and uniqne Full-Blow Action.
Happiness is music in the home.
Open Friday A Monday Evoninpi Til 9 p.m.
CALBI MUSIC CO.
119 North Saginaw	FE 5-8222
CUSTOMER PARKING ^AR OF STORE
For the appropriate business gift, send
’^GlFFo'FffllF
Businessmen now find that GIFT-O-FRUIT strikes just the correct note to express appreciation and gratitude to associates, valued customers and key employees—any time of the year. GIFT-O-FRUIT is always in good taste. And it’s so convenient-just order by phone. Delivered orchard-fresh, naturally.
(GIFT-O-FRUIT can now be sent by wire to many cities.)
JACOBSEN’S
FLOWERS
Downtown Stero 101 N. Soginow $9. Pontiac
Phono FE 3-7165
Loko Orion Phono MY 2-2681
RENT, LEASE, SELL. BUY HOMES, PROPERTY, COTTAGES, CARS, GOLF CLUBS - - - VM Pontiac Press Clasaified Ads. To place yours, cUI S3M181.	,
Medical Unit Slates Talk
T1» number of U.S. temOlw with Incomes of less tfaui IUN» has decUnpd from 11.77 mjBkin in 1M7 to 8.8 milUoa today.
A 12 noon luncheon and meeting will be held Tuesday at the David TYhitney Houm, Detroit for the Southeastern Michigan Association of Hoe-pitai Auxiliaries.
A *	*
Mrs. Herbert E. Norris will qieak on “Guidelines to successful auxiliary meetings.” She is the immediate past president of the Michigan Association of Hospital Auxili-
Crozy for Color
A recent survey shows that men do, after all, like color In their clothing, especially in sportswear. Ihe newest slacks come In lighter, brighter shades such as sky blue, corn yellow, even bride red. Coordinating sport coats might be in patterns. Sport shirts often combine two or
Enroll
NOW!
Enrollm«nt8 Tak»n Doily of Your Convonionco
POIVOAC
BEAUnOOLLEQE
161^ L Huron Phono FE 4-1854
Study the latest techniques and hair fashions.
Coll Miss Wilson for further infonmatien
Mrs. M. G. Tammen, Troy (left) is chairman and Mrs. H. E. Hollas, Interlaken Road, West Bloomfield Toumship, a committee member for thi Nov. 22 benefit sponsored by the Birmingham Musicale. The club is taking over the opening night of “Kismet” at the Fisher Theater to raise scholarship funds. Other committee members are Mrs. H. S. McFarland, tickets; Mrs. D. P. Else and Mrs. Duncan Augustine. The affair is open to the public and tickets are available from any of the above.
Banquet Honors Pastors
Several former Pontiac pastors will be honored with a banquet at 6:30 p.m Saturday at Liberty Baptist Church, 252
Dr. J. Allen Parker, Rev. WUliam H. BeU the Dr. Richard H. Dixon Jr. and Rev. J.
W. Moore, will be the honored guests.
Sponsoring the affair are Women’s Fellowships of several churches. Mrs. Joseph Wheat of Newman AME Church and Mrs. Jesse C. Brown of Liberty Church are cochairmen.
k'
. QUALITY
mmm
In Home Decorating Service
CUSTOM
DRAPES
Heavy DUPONT 501
NYLON
CARPET JSSsIra.
O Flnl Qaaiily Only • NslIeonSly Known Brnai LOW OVERHEAD SAVES YOU MONEY Wto rw M*r... OJI Fer Aonamiwel
J4ea%n^ 9loo% Covetin^i
ANNOUNCING
Lake Orion's lew C & C Egg Factory
Small • Modium • Larg*
• Extra Larg* and JUMBO Eggs •
Strictfy Fresh Daily
1796 S. Lapeer Rd. 693-6360
the hostess with the mostest!
Charm ... Grace ,.. and Carpet on the Floor!
s m(
pet or
She provides the human warmth ... the carpet lends warmth to the setting. All in all, a pleasant way to be entertained. Of course, carpet enhances any gathering ... large or small. The fine styling, luxurious pile, glorious colors ... can be counted on to "make" a room ... help make the hostess feel serene. We hear it makes her the talk of the town, too ... in the nicest way, of course.

from
m.
Ctwese from Amoriea's finest mills, James, Lees, Cobin Croft, Wundo W*ve. Iveiythlng your hoort at a prico your purs# con monogo.
Bioolow,
rtdoslros
INCLUDING INSTALUTION AND 6UALITY UNDERPADDINO
Free Parking
Budget Terms
aHBB-z
Down Puts Carpet Down
FURNIXURB
MMWNMT A WtoCMAU U«l MTI. ,ni-NH	rONTIM
Open fridoy Evenings
THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 12, 1965
B—18
What to do iabout t • •
atuffir tMttmnmRt emad ky
•f urinary ar tacal cantral? Naw,	,7 ,/
wdically appravad PIlMdNT, a r . t»ry, watarpraaf laraaat far aita.[i '''' wamaa, and cklldran givat camplata'V
ka____I__

BEBEEDla mda if pnakla, dirabla, finyt
plaitic linad with aatt, lanfarliad llannal. It M
eamfartabla anap-in pads Itt propar absorptian. PbO-PANT todayl Aaailabla at.
A. J. Stark Pharnacy
m I. WMUwaiW, Acrata Iram at. Jan. Haapnal
FI 5-9454

1 KINGSLEY INN
rrrrrmTO,
Feast
on Thanksgiving
“TURKEY IS KING FORTHEDAr*
OUR MENU
Traditionally Thankagiriiiit, howarer, to Untaliie the palate of each and everyone, we can offer you a choice of Menu-cooked 19 a Gourmet’a Taste, with Goodiea and TreaU for Festive Dining!
During the Dinner Hour
you*ll he eiUertained by a ,,
Sjnphoq' of 6^^ Violios
EARLY RESERVATIONS WILL BE APPRECIATED MI 4-1400 and 564-5143
^^nninntnitltiijtttinimiaiaitesy
M/HiSg
/ntm^ Sibi€

Entire Selecticjn of KUPPENHEIMER and MADISON
Suits
Regular to ^145.00
*79 ,o *126
Sport Coats
Regular to ^85.00
*44»*78
Topcoats
- Regular to ^145.00
*76»*126
Outerwear
Regular to. ^100.00
*31-»*89
Guest at Parties
Bride-Elect Is Busy
Mary Jo Hodga of Bloomfield Hills and her bridal attendants will be guests of her grandmother, Mrs. Paul P. Colombo of Detroit, at a luncheon, Saturday, in the Detroit Boat Club.
She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Hodge and will wed William Joseph McGraii Jr., son of the senior McGrails of Birmingham, Nov. 20 in the Holy Name Church.
Hosting recent dinner parties for the pair were the Arvid Johnsons of Birmingham and the Victor C. HiUe-brands of Detroit.
The Frank J. Bradys, the Edward V. Otti, the Don J. Steins and the John E. Steiners were hosts at a recent champagne brunch in the Detroit Boat Club.
TEA SHOWER
Mrk WUiiam J. Oldani and Mrs.' Edward J. ShunMker gave a tea and personal shower in the latter’s Orosse Points home. Mrs. Leo J. McCauley of Royal Oak and daughter, Mary Kay, hosted a ’round-the<dock shower and mother-daughter tea.
Mrs. George R. Cheadle and daughter Mrs. Alan R. lObbert entertained at a luncheon shower in the Hibbert home in Soutl^fieid.
A jlirunch and ‘gag’ shower in the Detroit Golf Club had as h^ts, the Robert W. Ulriches 6f Detroit.
Mrs. Dohatd H. Goldsmith
of Birminghain and Mrs. Russell BrockmilW
at a recent dinner and recipe shower for the bride-elect.
LINEN SHOWER
Honoring their niece at a linen shower and dinner were Mrs. Paul D. Colombo, Beverly Hills, and Mrs. Walter B. Drolet.
Mrs. George A. Cooney was hostess ataluncheon and bathroom shower in the Detroit Golf Club.
The John 8. Mahonys of Birmingham honored the couple
at a brunch In the Oakland Hilhs Country Club.
Patricia and Marueen McGraii honored their future sister-in-law at a barbecue supper and kitchep shower.
Mrs. L. Peter Martin and her daughter Mrs. Phinip J. Monaghan Jr. will give the spinster dinner, Wednesday, in the Martin home on Pine Lake. Thomas McGraii will host the bachelor dinner for his brother this Saturday.
OnThursday, members of the bridal party will gather in Kingsley Inn for the rehearsal dimer to be given by the senior McGrails.
Napkins Make Unusual Aprons for Youngster
RENT, LEASE, SELL. BUY HOMES. PROPERTY, COTTAGES, CARS, GOLF CLUBS - - - use Pontiac Press Classified Ads. To place yours, call 332-8181.
A novel idea for traveling with youngsters or one that could be used as a party gimmick for lobster or spaghetti dinner, or barbecue, is this fine apron and bib combination.
Wonderful solid colors and gay printed paper napkins that are so available now can be put to this use.
For bib, place a paper napkin <m a piece of waxed paper and Continue this process until you have about ei^t layers of each. Cut a neck curve 4H inches wide and IVb inches deep for a child, or wider for an adult. Cut 32 inch length of wide bias tape. Bind curve leaving 12 inch tie strings at each side. Stitch the strings and curve ail in one row of stitching.
To make the apron, use napkins and waxed paper about one-half inch deep for waistline. Bind waist with two yards of wide bias tape, leaving ecpial tie strings. Stitch tie strings and curve all in one row of stitching.

Trunk Showing
Tonight and Tomorrow
EMBA
MINKS
John Ross Originals
STOLES
•CAPES
JACKETS
COATS

HELEN LOUISE RACINE

Am .»l.tiT«
(tjlin^. Sopliiitieatail, eliarniin^ly Jiffarant. A aomplamant to tka loTaliait kanJ.
f The Store Where Quality Counts
FPELN^CUde CO.
Pontinc^s Oldest Jewelry Store
28 West Huron	FE 2-7257
1-^
*399 ■ *3,999
Come in and see the internationally
known collection of exclusive furs ... created for the woman who insists
on the ultimate in fur fashion.
MEET JtOSE RANDELL-
Mlu Rondell will be at Alvin's tonight and tomorrew with the Jphn Ron Original collection of fine mink creotionii She Is fashion stylist and consultant for DoVinci and John Ross and will bring her knowledge of worldwide fur foshions to you.
See the entire John Rees collection in Alvin's Centinentel Room

*1M EMBA MwtoHon Mink
HURON at TELE6rAPH
TV"'’- 'V'ii
' Open Tonight Until 9

ms
SAL€^
ENDS SATURDAY 6 P.M.
Sportswear'
SKIRTS and TOPS
regular to $18.00
799 » ]Q99
Fur Trim Coats
/ regular to ^225
4^9 „ $199
Untrimmed Coats
regular to ^110
$4-4	^89
swoz
iALE
De Liso Debs................. r.9. 21.00 14’°
Caressa—Mr. Easton . . . . . . Reg. 17.00 12’°
Town & Country Dress '. V................ .9’°
Italian Loafers-Skiitimers ....... 6’°
Plus Savings on Many Other Items Througlilstut the Store
HURON ot TELEGRAPH
B—14
) ■ ■ ■ ;
THE PONTIAC PKESS, FltH)AY. NOVEMBER 12, 196fl

Winds Curb Quake Finding
By Scleoce Servfce
ST. LOUIS, Mo. — Noisy winds are interfering with the low fiequency sounds caused by voicanoes and earthquakes that can be detected by sensitive instruments, Howard S. Bowman of the National Bureau of Standards, Washington, told the Acoustical Society of America here. These sounds are below the range audible to ordinary ears.
By comparing local wind velocities with infrasonic noise levels in the atmosphere, he found that whenever peak wind were recorded, there was a corresponding rise in wind noise. ★ ★ ★
As a result. Bowman said, future recording stations of these unusual noises will need to be installed in places where there is little likelihood of high winds.
Three Common Phrases Can Be Dangeri^e ^
Numerous Warning^Signs Signal the Onset of a Mental Illness
(EDITOR’S NOTE: This is one of a series of artktes sup-plied try the Oakiand County Medical Society in observance of third annual Community HeaUh Week, Nov. 7-13.;
“You noed a vacation."
“You need a pill."
“Don’t worry, nothing’s wrong. It’s all in your head."
These three phrases are probably heard hundreds bf times a day, in offices and homes across the country. X
y-'it	*
They might be addressed to a friend, an associate, or a member of the family. They can be dangerous.
DANGER OCCURS
The danger occurs when the well-meaning advice is given to an individual who is emotional-
ly or mentally ill - an ual who has lost his ability to cope with the situations, es and strains of his life.
Mental illness, like pHysi-cal illness, can occur at any time and in any place. There is nothing shameful a b o a t emotional disorders nor shonld they be equated with a “weakness in character.”
The mind as well as the body can react symptomatically to a disturbance in function.
★ * ★
There are many warning signs signalling the onset of a mental illness.
SUDDEN Onset can be sudden or gradual and include: Recurring headaches or s t o m a c h pains general depression; a withdrawal from reality; fatigue; an
I
indhU-overconiumption o
. of alcohol; oat-bursts of temper or general h’-ritabillty; in^ity to coocen-trate; hallucinations and delu-
Of conn “the biaes, a| headache, or gets angry. Most people, however, get over these things relatively quickly.
WWW
Trouble may be brewing when changes in behavior or attitude persist and occur without apparent cause.
EARLY DIAGNOSIS In cases of mental illness, as with any other disease, early diagnosis and prompt treatment are important. Ihittlng off seeking professional help will only aggravate the underlying disorder.
When the “nke, quiet youitg
act of vMeace, newspaper accounts express shock and sar prise.
Generally, however, warning signs have been present for months or years before the tragic incident, but perhaps nobody noticed or cared.
WWW However, only a small fraction of the mentally ill commit a violent act.
TREATING ILLNESS Contrary lo popular image, treating mental illness usually doesn’t Involve years on a psychiatrist’s couch or long stays in a mental Institution. New drugs and new knowledge have given medicine the tools to treat most forms of psychiatric illness within the community and
within a relatively short period of time.
Very often, a few visits to the famUy p^ian or, if he deems it appropriate, to a psychiatrist will be sufficient.
If the condition warrants more intensive treatment, the doctor may recommend short-term hospitalization in the local general hospital just as he would for an appendectomy or pneumonia.
WWW
Comparatively few forms of mental illness will require prolonged stays in a more specialized institution.
COMMUNITY UNDERSTANDING
According to the American Medical Association’s Council on Mental Health, conununity understanding of the nature of mental illni»8 is one of the keys|
to the numagement and prevention of this disease.
WWW
The mentally ill patient needs the same undstahdlng and synmathy given to the physically mpatient.
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THE^PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, l&flfl
Private College State Aid Aired
Master Plan Given to Michigan Official
LANSING (AP) — Represen-Utives of all sectors of Michigan higher education suggested Thursday night that state education planners should design appropriate financial aid for private colleges.
Suggestions for a state higher education master plan wer presented /to Thomas Brennan, president of the State Board of Education, at the third annual conference on higher education. More than 360 people attended. ★ ★ *
Sister Mary Emil, president of MarygTove College, told Brennan the signifkaht about the suggestions is they were presented in one report by public and private educators t^ether.
The report, prepared by the Michigan Association of Colleges and Universities, said “appropriate financial tance should be designed to enable ail institutions, public and private, to reach their planned enrollments.
RESPONSIBILITY “State scholarship and/loan progranu are presently/operative through the Michi^ Iflgh-er Education
thority," it added./“FaciUUes support from fedew ■cholar inceotive/progranu of other states provide additional examples.'*
“This rei^ recognizes measure of^ponsibility on the part of tM state board toward private /alleges," the
esident said. “It says It differentials may dom of choiM for sti
/ The report suggests to master ^ planners that “no qualified student should be prohibited from attending the type of institution of his choice by reason of excessive coats.’’
Other suggestions for a master plan were:
—Provisions for a vastly Increased earollment at all levels of higher education is the pri-
—The period ef chief concern should be 1966 to IIB.
—All qualified students should be provided an opportunity for education beyond Ugh school.
—Schools should not attempt to handle expanded enrollment by reducing quality standards.
—The state boafd should commit itself to supporting the financial requests of tax-sup-ported institutions.
REAL REASON
Dr. Rexford G. Moon Jr., consultant to the Pennsylvania Master Plan for Higher Education, told the conference “the real reason for faculty shortages is that nobody has been in charge.
“We can't solve faculty shortages any more by stealing from each other or from secondary
He said the job of master planners is to decide the things to be done “and tag somebody to do them.’’
A recent study has shown that German soldiers have a higher' suicide rate than their British counterparts.
HEARI'SEEI
PONTIAC
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Anti-Communist
RALLY
Featuring
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“CASTRO'S WEB OF SUBVERSION IN U4A''
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Can't Take It Past Store Lot
Cart /Brakes' Man's Spirit
DETROIT (UPD—A tall, heavy-set man walked away from an East Side market pushing a cart loaded with two bags of groceries when his cart suddenly became Immobile close to the edge of the market’s ]Murk-ing lot.
He kicked it, shoved it and cursed loudly and freqnently. was one of hundreds of
groceries into the second cart.
He got no further than one stride when his reserve cart was rendered immobile.
This time he swore first, then shoved and kicked. His kicking became more ferocious as a store employe approached.
The man was led away.
area markets nearly a halfmillion dollars in stolen carts. But the man was persistent. He went back into the store, took another cart, retiumed to his first vehicle and loaded the
sorefooted.
Store officials explained they had installed a new cart invented by a suburban Oak Park industrial dIsigner, Irving Stoll-lan.
The cart is equipped wit special magnetic front wheel which connects with magnets
placed below the ground in strategic slots surrounding the market.
Top Officials of Ford Visit Mexico President
MEXICO CITY (UPI) - Hen ry Ford II and top Ford officials now meeting in Mexico talked with Mexican President Gustavo Diaz Ordaz yesterday.
Ford said it was jfrimarlly a courtesy call, that he remembered the president from the dedication last year of a new Ford factory here, and just wanted to “drop by and shake his hand.’’
---------^---
2nd Day of Independence
c-i
Rhodesia Girds for Reprisals
SALISBURY, Rhodesia (AP) - Rhodesia’s jubilant white settlers prepared today to tighten theip belts to meet Britain’s economic reprisals against their government’s independence declaration.
’The country remained calm, and there were no signs of unrest "in the African townships surrounding Salisbury.
Prime Minister Ian Smith’s
and other countries were effective.
Holiday allowances are to be
reduced two thirds —■ from $840 to $280 per person per year. The automatic allocation of up to $56 a day for 21 days for businessmen wili end.
’The post office will discontinue sales of money orders for payment outside Rhodesia.
In determining the allocation of currency for payment of im-
L. (Lem) Johns, has been named chief of the Secret Service’s White House detail. He succeeds Rufus Youngblood.
Finance Minister John Wra-thall announced that foreign Exchange dealings had been suspended temporarily.
HRST PRIORITY The first priority was to secure the balance of payments and so maintain international solvency, Wrathall said. The	.	.
second Whs to tackle internal ports, Rudland said first priori-
.....- .....—.	_______problems which resulted, to sus-ty would be given to essential
white government was in con-|tain internal demand and toJoodstuffs like wheat, medical trol of the situation as Rhodesia Ideal with "urgent budgetary and veterinary supplies, gaso-entered its second day of fulllmatters ”	line, oil and lubricants, and ed-
independence. But Commercej Control over imports and ex-jucation and religious requisites, and Industry Minister Georgejports would be intensified and ’Then would come supplies Rudland warned that rationing allocation.s of foreign currency essential for agricultural, min-would be ordered if economic!for imports would be cut, be ing and manufacturing indus-sanctions threatened by Britain'said.	itries, he said.
these dining room groups ail have mar-proof plastic tops that help you entertain ^
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60” BUFFET........................$139.95
ITALIAN CLASSIC—Mediterranean spirit omd elegance xaled to the needs of the modern American home. Completely compatible with any size dining area... traditional or contemporary. Finished to the peak of beauty In rich Moidena brown. A collection designed for living, luxury and enjoyment. Protocted wHlf Plastic Tops.
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r
c—*
THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1965
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 12, 1965
C—8
State Convention Ends
I
Farm Bureau to Set Up Its Own Labor Service
EAST LANSING (AP) - The Michigan Farm Bureau convention decided Thursday the bureau should try to set up its own statewide j^ervice next year to help farmers find the laborers they need.
“After this season’s experience, delegates came to the conclusion we have to do something we can depend on ourselves,” laid Dan Reed, legislative counsel for the 67,000-member farm group.
U. S. Labor Secretary Willard Wirtz has been a constant target for criticism during the three-day convention, which ended Thursday.
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Ch§rles Shuman, ixesident of the American Farm Bureau Federation, told delegates Wirtz “has stubbornly refused to admit there was a shortage of labor to harvest fruit and vegetable crops following the termination of the law permitting the importation of foreign labor.’* 'ALLOWED NONE’
Wirtz had the power to admit some foreign farm workers to enter the country but allowed none for Michigan.
Reed said losses to growers, mainly because of labor problems, were estimated at |5 million for pickling cucumbers and $2 million to $3 million for apples.
AW*
The more than 600 voting delegates earlier passed a resolution urging Congresa to allow hiring of needed foreign farm hands. They said experience this year “proved Michigan employers cannot totally rely on U. S. citizens to harvest stoop labor crops such as pickling cucumbers."
The delegates gave approval Thursday to a measure calling for the bureau tio try to set up migrant farm labor reception in Michigan. A reference to possible acquisition of federal funds for the project was deleted.
PROBLEM OF SOCIETY The measure also said, migrapt labor problem is a problem of the entire society, due to unskilled labor, uneducated health habits, employer earnings, and Is not entirely the problem of the
It was adopted.
ADVERSE WEATHER The 31 counties reported \ ther conditions cut feed grain
Another resolution urged property tax exemptions for housing us^ only for seasonal workers.
it it *
A resolution introduced late in the convention urged Orville
U. S; secretary of agriculture, to reconsider his recent denial of Michigan’s request for emergency aid for 31
Teen Gets Life in Dixie Rape
Conviction of a White 1 St of Kind in Memory
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HATTIESBURG, Miss. (UPI)
■ A white youth was convicted yesterday of the rape of a Negro teen-ager, the first such conviction in the memory of state legal sources.
TTie jury, which deliberated almost six hours, turned down the death penalty and set punishment for lanky Norman Cannon, 19, at life in the state penitentiary.
Cannon’s attorneys said they wonid file for a new trial, and failing this, would appeal to the State Supreme Court.
A 15-year-old Negro girl, the state’s final witness, testified that on July 13 Cannon deceived her into believing he needed a baby sitter, then drove into the woods where he held a knife against her neck and raped her. ★ ★ ★
Cannon claimed he had met her several days earlier and made a date to pick her up at her home. The girl testified, however, that Cannon was a stranger to her until the morning of the attack.
MET AGAIN
The white jury received the case Wednesday afternoon and deliberated several hours before being locked up.
They met again beUnd closed doors yesterday for an hoar and one half before an-iciag they had reached the
crops to about half normal size. They asked for a government program allowing eligible farm-to buy government-stored grain at 75 per cent of the support price.
Farm Bureau delegates said Freeman’s decision was based on currently good pasture condi-in the affected counties. But, they said, feed is needed for winter months when the pastures are covered with snow. * * ★
Other resolutions:
Asked for a study of the feasibility of taxing industry on statewide basis for school purposes and dividing up the money between school districts on a per-capita basis. Delegates said districts which have large industries to tax now are better off than other districts.
—Urged passage of tion to refinance the Mackinac Bridge and lower tolls.
The jurors had a choice of imposing the death penalty or life in prison.
it it h
Court sources here and at the state capitol in Jackson said this was apparently the first time since Reconstruction that a white man had been convicted for raping a Negro. It was known if there were similar convictions during Reconstruction. LONG COMPLAINT Civil rights leaders in Mississippi have long complained that juries are zealous to convict Negroes for rape of white women, but that there had never been such a conviction as Cannon’s.
Cannon, a welder by trade, told the court the girl told him she “loved to go out with white boys,” and when he drove into the woods she did not resist his efforts.
A defense attorney asked Cannon why he decided to have sex-relations with a Negro girl and Cannon replied “I saw it on TV.”
★	♦ w
He said later he meant programs which showed Negroes and whites who “went out together.”
Draft Cardi Honored
EL PASO, Tex. (AP) - A float in El Paso’s Veterans Da^ parade Thursday had a placard which said: “We honor draft cards.”
—Urged reconsideration of the coverage of farm workers under the Workmen’s Compensation Act.
—Called for state funds to build a pesticide research center at Michigan State Univer-sity.
—Directed bureau officials to give top priority to marketing programs.
-Reaffirmed a stand calling for legislation which would prohibit sales of dairy products at prices below cost.
w ★	★
Delegates also elected three new members to the bureau's state board of directors and reelected six current members.
New directors are Francis Finch, Mattawan; Clayton Ford, Cornell, and Robert Zeeb, Bath (elected at-large). Reelected were Donald Ruhlig, Dexter; David Morris, Grand Ledge; Kenneth Bull, Bailey;
Eugene Roberts, Lake City; Raymond Kicharek, Gaylord, chairman of the Young Peoples Committee.	i
Wasn't Safe j —to Do That I
HUNTSVILLE, Ala. (AP) -'Police said one of five men who robbed a service station attendant of |ir0 decided to crack open what he thought was a safe and began beating it with a stick. Meanwhile, police happened to drive ,in Thursday.
*	★	w
’The men fled but were captured after a short chase.
*	*	★
The safe turned out to be an adding machine.
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c—•

THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 12, 1965
OU BEAUTY QUEENS - Oakland University boasts two of the Miss Michigan finalists on its student roster. Enjoying a classroom break in the November sunshine are (from left) Kathleen A. Sullivan, 18, Miss Oak Park, and Sharon S. Snyder, 20, Miss
Oakland University. Sharon was selected as first runner-up to Miss Michigan, Kathy third runner-up. Both won firsts in preliminary competitoin, Sharon in talent and Kathy in bathing Suit.
OU Beauty Queens Alike: Pretty, Poised, Personable
By JODY HEADLEE Heme Editor, The Pontiac Press Winning honors as the most attractive of Oakland Ujniver-sity's many attractions are beauty queens Sharon Sue Snyder a^ Kathleen Aim Sullivan.
^laron, 20, te OU Snow Queen, Miss Oakland University and flrst runner-up in this year’s Miss Middgan contest, is the only child of Mr. and Mrs. Louis W. Snyder of 8725 Wood-bank, BkMRnfield Township.
Eighteen - year - old Kathy is the oldest of five dangb-ters in the Leo SnlUvaa family of Oak Park.
She is Miss Oak Park and kDss Michigan Sweetheart and was third runner-up in the Mias Michigan contest.
★ * *
Both girls won firsts in flie Miss Michigan preliminary competitions; Sharon in talent, Kathy in bathing suit competition.
POISED, PERSONABLE Both are pretty, poised and personable.
DU’S ‘queens’ are Interested in becoming teachers—Sharon in kindergarten and Kathy, secondary English literature. ’They condemn levis and sloppy sweat shirts as campus uniforms for coeds.
years and that one award made it all worthwhile.
‘Tes,” she paused, her eyes sparkling ns she briefly relived flie pomp and ceremony of the pageant, “if I had the chance to do it ail over again,
I certainly would.
“I went with the idea, win or lose, I would enjoy every minute and 1 did.’’
* * *.
“I didn’t enjoy it,’’ declared Kathy frankly.
“I met new people. They were nice, but I doubt if any close friendships will develop. COLLEGE MONEY
‘I entered because I needed money for college and a beauty contest was the quickest and easiest way to earn it.
“You see, I don’t feel my parents owe me a eoUege education. They would and could help me but I think it’s up to me to earn my own way if I possibly caa.”
Kathy hesitatod, her brosrn eyes thoughtful As she unconsciously twisted a cheek curl in her dark bair.
It *	*
Being a beauty queen,’’ she said emphatically, “isn’t all the| glamour you might think it is.
• HARD WORK
“It’s hard work. And the girls who win are not just the pret-„Uest. They are the ones with the strongest constitutions.
“tt’B fun to play celebrity for awhile but you can’t live that way. Why, the first night I was on campus, I don’t know how many Im^s called just because I’d been h the pageant. “1 prefer being liked and re-j e specM as a person rather than a showpiece.	'
“I was thrilled when my class-; Sharon would be willing and mates at Oak Park JHi|Ji je-eager to go through the whole
“Girls should wear skirts and blouses or sweaters to said Sharon.
FEMININE LOOK “The feminine look is very important," Kathy agreed.
Each felt the Michigan contest was an exciting, though exhausting, adventure.
Both were pleased to be among the top finalists.
pageant compeUtion again, I tentih^ge in the social work don’t know.” Kathy shook her ~ head slowly.
"I’d really have to think about that,” she concluded.
/
“Would I go through it all gain? I honestly don’t know.
“I would be pleased to rep-
wonld be like homecoming queen: my friends and classmates would do the choosing. “But whether I would join the
Poverty Unit to Serve 2,500
Canter Will Dispense Q Variety cf Services
An estimated 2,500 person will be served throu^ the anti-p 0 V is r t y program’s proposed Pontiac Action Center, according tq Carl F. Ingraham, chairman qftheOakland County Commission on Economic 0^ portunity (OEO).
To be located at Saginaw and Lawrence, the center will dispense a variety of services.
However, antipoverty officials say there will be no financial handouts normally usociated with such federally-supported programs.
The City Commission voted Tuesday night to pay the rent for six months for the project action center here, one of two slated in Oakland County.
One of the major roles planned for the action center is to provide counseling or referral service.
DIRECT POOR Counselor aides, half of whom are to come from the poverty area, are to direct the poor to the center and refer them to the appropriate existing service agency.
For example, a penon needing legal counsd might be referred to the Legal Aid Society. Some services are to be located in the action center itself. These will include family counseling, consumers service, ical aiid dental services, and vocational guidance and placement.
Explaining plans for the action center Ingraham said program is still being formulated.
MODIFICA'nONS “We’ll modify and change the program to meet the demands of the poor,” he explained.
Ingraham said the difference the ant^nnre fort had with other grams was that OEi
..............to
pie.’
Nonprofessional aides are ' ' with the . eourse is Mng land Communi^ Collie.
James M. M^eely, OEO ex-ecudve direq^, said the aides would be supervised by a professionalporker on a 3-1 basis.
The mm’ program is expected to ^Ip ease some of the cur-
/Antipoverty officials hope to the Pontiac Action Center by Dec. 1.
Big Job for Young Area Horsewoman : ^
Gets Training at the Track
ByJERECRAIO Judith Frances Johnson of Avon Township is a personal friend of George Washington.
So close is their relationship, in fact, that Judy and George can be found working together almost any morning exercUng their leadership and influence. , No, their work is not poUfl-eal; but it could be deemed royal since they are directly connected with the “sport of kinp” — horse racing.
Their “business associates” include Sandy’s Friend, Music IMrector and Good Business.
it -k it
They are racing horses, and George Washington is f lead pony.
AVETERAN At nine years of age, he Is a veteran of stables, exercise rings and race tracks.
Miss Johnson, 24, still is a youngster in the eyes of the Mkhigaa State Racing Corn-
son is comparatively inexperienced as a “baCt^.si^” re^ar Detroit Race,Course and Hazel Park Race Track.
(Back side personnel are those who remain at the track after the bettors have gone—
The trim lirunette (5d and 110 pounds) has a man-sized job, however, running the stable of six thoroughbreds at Meadow-brook Farms, 480 S. Adams..
. ★	★ ■ it
Her partners include Mrs. Alfred G. Wilson, her grandmother; Richard S. Wilson of Bloomfield Hills, her uncle; and Detroit attorney Donald D. Mac-Farlane.
NEW ROLE Though she has been around horses all her life. Miss John-
workers.)
Officially, Miss Johnson is cfensed as an assistant trainer by the state commission.
it k it
She doesn’t have enough experience to rate her trainer’s certification, yet, and she prefers being an assistant trainer to being classified as an owner. UCENSE DUE If results will serve as a recommendation, her trainer’s license should come soon.
Working closely with trainer John Foggiane, 3529 Warring-ham, Waterford Township,
I, another two-year-old, and two yearlings now are included amoi% the assets. AUMINTRAININO GeiM'ge Washington was pui> chased from Mrs. VanLennep to aid in the training of the Meadowbrook horses.
Mildred, a goat, also is an
the Sensitive thoroughbreds.
Tiie soft-spoken Miss Johnson appreciates the value of good stable help.
WWW You’re only as good as the people helping you,” she says, “and you really appreciate responsible help.”
hat the state’s seven-cing season has dosed, she will devote her time to the care and feeding of the horses, plus her outside interests.
Foremost of the latter is abstract art.
She paints and, as an undergraduate, exhibiM some of her work along with that of other students.
k k k
A former student at Vaughn School in Bloomfield Hills she also enjoys skiing at local winter resorts.
Most of all, however, she looks forward to training her Music Director and preparing Good BusInsM with Georgd WasUng-
Bys Patronage ih October Gains /by Over WfiOO
Passengers on Pontiac lyanslt Corp. buses last month topped September by more than 10,000 riders, according to bus company officials.
There were 82,830 riders ig October' emnpared with only 52,115
six mounts win at least once and finish this summer’s season in good health.
Mrs. Wilson’s personal pick. Good Business, won the Michigan Futurity recently at DRC. k k k
The two-year-old—bought at a RedBob Farms yearling sale at the Bloomfield Open Hunt—has already won more than 10 times its purchase price.
RAISED IN KENTUCKY A University ofKentucky graduate with a degree in fine arts. Miss Johnson was raised by her mother, Mrs. Fred VanLennep, on .Castieton Farms at Lexington, Ky.
After gradnatiag la 1081, she moved to Meadow Brook to help her grandmother. In addition, she brought a colt. Musk Director, with her.
He developed so well that she decided to race him last year in the East, and was rewarded with success. But even more im-p 0 r t a n t. Miss Johnson found great satisfaction in working with the colt.
Thus, Miisic Director’s stepsister, Sandy’s Friend,
« 50,724 hi
$15,000, compared with $13J140 in September and $14,187 In October 1904.
★ ★ ★
Total patrokiage this year Is 824,723 through October, compared with 654,951 for the same period last year, while last year it totaled $149,007 for the first 10 months of the year.
TRAIN.THOROUGHBREDfi-Judy Jotiiwon of Meadow-brook Farms has help from George Washington fai training the six thoroughbred members of the n^y developing racing stables. George a lead pony, is accustomed to accompanying the racehorses in their workouts. Mias Johnson
added to the stable. Goad Busi- is one of the bright new faces in Michigan horse racing.
Labor to Ask Selection Reason
By JIM LONG
Labor leiulers, angered that h
more cmisideration for the county treasurer’s post, will an explanation from the three
OU Burstii

Seams
Dorm to Ease Housing
lected me as the 1964 homecoming queen. They chose me because they knew me and liked me as a person.
experience again whUe Kathy is not so certain.
NEW FRIENDS “I met many new friends, said Sharon. “Friehds that I feel will become closer as the years pass.
“I alsa enjoyed the experience of working in competition for one goal.
“•niough each of us wanted toi««‘	^’
baoomeMiss Michigan, there	®" “•«
was Jbe feeling whoever won, we^	Improvement
aU would be happy for her. proJ«c‘
^	^	I The firm submitted d bid of
“And, for me, the most graU-
tying moment of all,” conttouedl^-’	“ighway and
Detroit Firm Bido Low
on Square Lake Project
The Michigan State Highway Department announced today
Sharon, “was my talent award. WORTHWHILE “I’vn been dancing for 17
highway and tiiree bridges from Teiegraph east to I-7S. The project is scheduled for completion by July 1967.
/A $4.34nilIlon dormitoiy-food /service building under , construe-^ tion at Oakland University will be completed just in time to help the six-year-old state institution meet the pressure of Sharpiy mounting enroilments.
SiaM for occupancy next fall, the twin-towered, seven-story structure will provide rooms for 572 students and food service for some 1,600.
Enrollment at the nnivdksity has moved qnlckly from 179 when it opened Ks doors in 1959 to 2,458 this faU.
University official’s predictions, which have already been revised upward several times in OU’s brief history, indicate the number will exceed 7,000 by the fall of 1970.
Primarily a commuter school when it opened, OU is faced not only with more students an-nualiy, but with a larger proportion of s t u d e n t s living on campus.
At present, one-third are resi-
the remainder commuting mainiy from' the three - county area including Wayne, Macomb and Oakland counties.
With more and more sto-dents from other areas •(
rolling at the nnivefsity, the proportiott of derm stndents is expected to increase.
The new dorm will relieve the present housing pinch, which necessitates some tripliim of students in rooms designed for double occupancy.
Another dorm is already being planned for the following year.
The combination dormitory-food service building will provide a spacious central lounge, seminar rooms, recreational and office areas on the first level SECOND LEVEL
‘Die kitchen and dining room area will be located m the sec-
ond level with the twin towers housing student rooms.
The new stmeture is located adjacent to the existing six residence halls, just north of of the academk complex.
Landscaping plans call for a ■mall lake to be formed in the natural depresaion in front of the building and supported by natural runoff.
♦	★	★
A curve4, concrete footbridge will connect the new dorm with walks leading to the Oakland Center.
According to James R. Apple-ton, dean of men and housing director at OU^ the dorm Is planned as a coeducational res-
k	k	k
“Thia new building will include many features that will enable us to do a better job of integrating the student living situation with the educational p^eae at Oakland,” Appleton

Coeducational Residence To Ease Housing Pinch At Oakland Universify
county officials who made the qipointment.
Specifically, they have questioned why Mrs. Lucille Marshall of Pontiac, an active union member who campaigned the late
CSiarles A. Sparks to the 1964	treaenrer’i loh told
election, was not among the top|	that AdJis had
stated to him that Mrs. Mar-
t they are not objecting to the final choice, but do want to know why labor was shuffled the background, liarold JuMmi, UAW citizen-■hip representative and a candidate himseH for the $16,998
contenders for the job.
She lest to Sparks by less thaaldltvstes.
Letters demanding an answer will be sent to each of the men. Probate Judge Donald Adams, Clerk-Register of Deeds John D. Muqihy and Prosecutor S. Jerome Bronson. k k
The protest action was voted s this week by the Oakland County AFL-aO Council. AIMED AT ADAMS Most of the criticism voiced by delegates at their monthly meeting was aimed at Adams, who had received strong support from the organization during his election campaign.
Adam’s choke and longtime friend, James E. Seeter-lin, Waterford TbwniUp sn-pervisor, was appointed to the post by a M vote last week. Adams, as the senior probak judge, and the other two county officers had the job, under a state statute, of selecting a new irksdM.
had
treasurer after Sparks d
Sparks, a Republican, been treasurer for dented 33 years.
ALL DEMOCRAT Adams, Murphy and Bronson all are DeoMicrats and, for the first tlma in Oakland County po-litkal history, the party had an opportamlty to gain control ot' three of the five county elective
1W offices filled by partisan electioa are clerk, prese-cator, freasarer, sheriff and
There was no doubt thM a Democrat would be named to the treasurer’s job. Ihe question wu who, ^ speeulation as to who would be appointed ran high the three met informally among themselves and-.,with some of the candidates.
It was reported that the \nmtA of aMemd 29 candidalao
eoffc
(ered.
Ml
ilegatei emphasised lodk, ttoityriiirw.
■hal wasa’t in the running be-canoe they didn’t want a woman filling the posHioB.
Mrs. MarehaU, 89 N. Sanford, is a former teacher and pre» enUy employed at Pontiac Motor Division.
A ♦ W
Julian, who is a vice chairman of the county Democratic executive committee, entered the race, he said, only after learning of the -opposition to Mrs. Marshall. HAOBACKING He said that he had the backing of Bronson, labor and the party, but that Adams contended Julian would use the treasurer’s office to organize county employes.
Bronson, like Adams, had beea supported by organized labor in his campaip last year.
Murphy, the first Democraf ever to become county clerk, owes no special allegiance to labor since he did not receive its official endorsement during his election campaign.
* * *.
According to Julian, Murphy pointed this out when hCi was approwshed by represenUUvos of labor seeking his important vote.
REELECnON
While he didn’t receive support, Murphy wasn’t actively opposed by labor, but delegatee indicated the atory may be dlL fwent In his case as well as in that of Adams when they coma up for reelection.
. k k k Several delegates paid they would take a long, hard look at the pair when endorsements are considered nqxtiime.
Eight snowy owls, rare visitors to Britoin, which were brought from Amsterdam, have been released in the natifre reserve at Riber Castle In Mat-
SHKHR
S(
THE P0NTIA(!^.PRESS. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 12, 1965
C—5


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C—7
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Alii!. AUi\ lA-tiv. A Avi^jo. FAtiuAi, AUVJliMiiiiiK 12, 1965
Orb 'Moves Mountain'
WASHINGTON (UPl) - The ■pace agency said today its 83g> pound Nimbus satellite moved a 10,000-foot mountain 45 miles. Nimbus, designed ds a weath-
Art Council Head Exhorts Music Criticf
FTJNT (AP)— The chairman of the National Council of the Arts Thursday urged music critics to “go out and excite people about the performing arts.’’
Rogers L. Stevens, also Broadway producer and board chairman of the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, spoke at a dinner meeting of the Music Critics Association. The dinner was sponsored by the Flint Journal.
“Theaters and music will never be any better than the critic,” Stevens told the group of U.S. and Canadian critics.
“As art grows, so wiU the demand for more critics,” he ■aid. “Nothing could itelp the council more than your constructive criticism.”
The number of farm laborens who worked 250 or more days a year declined nearly a third be- WKl tween the late 1940s and the 1960s.
Wildwooa Inn
FRI.^AT. KITES Bob Laww Qiai. Dining Hours Wookdoys 5-9 P.M. Sundoy . . 2-9 P.M.
Wt Ctftr MvM* nrtMt
OKDIR A Watariiis
PIZZA
aOSIOMOMDAYS
WmtehM/mrSp0cimt$
er observer, was launched into polar orbit oo Aug. 20,1904, and took 27,000 daytinie and night-time photographs before it supped working because of power failure.
tica provided the U.8. Geological Snrvey with precise new information which caased it to make a namher of changes on maps of the great soathers
One of the changes Involved Idount Siple, a landmark whidi had been us^ by airplane pilots as an aid to navigation. As a result of Nimbus’ photographs, it will appear 45 miles further west on new maps.
, ♦	* w
Thanks also to Nimbus, two antarctic mountain groups in two different locations havs been resolved into one group in one location.
DIFFERENT POSITIONS TIW mountains had been sighted by separate land expedition which had calculated different positions for them.
Nirabos also gave tope-ip-a|diic eagiaeers better definition of the coBtov and extent of the ice sbetf hi several antaretie coast areas. Engineers at the Goddard Space Flight Center (Greenbelt, Md.) of the National Aeronautics Space Administratloq (NASA) meant Nimbus only to be an advanced weather satellite, capable of foking pictures by night as well as by day.
But it I
to Goddard geologist Paul Low-man, that Nimbus spacecraft m serve more than one seised.
Some experts believe photographs taken at night with infrared (heat) radiation instead of ordinary light can help in forecasting such things as volcanic eruptions and floods.
*	★ a
In any case. Dr. Lowman said. Photos from a satellite like Nimbus can be used in geologic reconnaissance, topographic mapping, forestry, ice pack reconnaissance, hydrology, 'and oceanography.”
NASA plans to launch another Nimbus next year.
Sympathy is a thing to be encouraged apart from humane oonsideratiott, because it supplies us with the materials for wisdom —Robert Louis Steven-
Game of 'Panic Suitable for D.C.
By DICK WEST United Press International WASHINGTON - There is a new game on the market called Panic!” It this;
son’s name isn’t mentioned.
He hits the panic button. | President Johnson draws a panic card reporting that Bobby i something like l Baker has written a book dedicated to him.
*	★	★	I My friends haven’t been ablei
The main equipment is a set to devise a solution card for that; of “panic cards,” a matching yet, but I am confident that set of “solution cards” and a Johnson could think of some-“panic box” with six buttons. thing.
Each player j draws a "panic card” that puts ihim
UKE •’issa"
BottiInCelw
THE BEATLES '^HELr
SCENE OP MI8IIAP—Fourteen-year-old William Hawkins and his 11-year-old sister, Dorothy, look over the spot near Xenia, Ohio, where the latter was trapped by an upset
some
sort of desper-: ate situation.
The object is to I find the right;
“solution card”)
I before hitting’ the "panic but-' ton.”
For example, card” shows a bather who has *e ptwtcfM lost his swimsuit. The solution tractor before William raised it enough for !,c®*'d shows an empty barrel her to escape. She escaped with minor in- floating to shore.
juries. Later. William found he could not budge the tractor.
Want Good Films at Sea
Sailors Become Caustic Movie Crilb
By HUGH A. MULUGAN WITH 7TH FLEET OFF VIET NAM (AP)-“Movies are better than nothing,” they say cynically In the Navy, but they really aren’t sure.
Hardly a man alive can boast of having seen Warner Baxter recently in “Prisoner of Shark Island” or Don Ameche and Andrea Leeds in “Swapee River,’’ except the 4,500 men aboard the carrier Independence. ’The pictures have been shown a half dozen times.
*	w *
'We’ve got movies on th'is
ship that I saw back in Korea,” said Lt. Cmdr. Dale Schuster of Beattie, Wash., executive officer of the refrigerator ship Vega as he fingered a platter of warm popcorn and suffered through ’11m Lion and the Horse,'' horse Opera.
"For all I know, they may have even shown some of them at Antietam.”
MOVIE CRITICS The long empty days at sea turn most sailors into astute and caustic movie critics. In trading cans Of film to other ships, the projectionists usually append little flyers of prose, scrawled in laundry marking pencil, deriding the contents. As befitting the muggy, torrid climate in the South China Sea, these encomiums can be both‘salty and sizzling.
Thus “no skin” means that the enclosed offering is singularly lacking in feminine acting talent.
★	♦ *
“Only the projectionist was
around for the last reel,” speaks for itself.
“All symbolism, no sex’ this over a turgid Swedish number that some censor had managed to get his scissors on. IMPROVE BRIDGE 'Movies of this caliber tend to prove the quality of our bridge games,” was the way the boys in the wardroom on the destroyer escort Kretchmer torpedoed “Gidget Goes to Rome.” According to Vice Adm. B. J.
Semmes Jr., chief of naval personnel, the Navy spends $4 million a year on new movies, but Hollywood’s output these days is so slim and the 7th Fleet’s appetite so voracious that Loretta Young is making a whole new generation of fans with showings at sea of “The Crusades.” It shouldn’t be any time at all before Mae Busch is named 'Queen of the Fleet” and Vietnamese bar girls begin affecting the bee-stung-lip look.
Whenever ships meet at sea or pass in the night, they try to
Finance Chief Resigns Post in Canada
OTTAWA W—Canadian Trade Minister Mitchell Sharp, 54, is expected to be Prime Minister L^ter B. Pearson’s choice for his new finance minister.
Walter Gordon, the Liberal party’s national campaign chair-resigned the post yesterday.
He said he had given Pearson “bad advice” in nrglng him to call last Monday’s general election. The Liberals retained their hold on the government but failed to win the parliamentary majority they songht.
Pearson absolved Gordon of responsibility for the decision to hold the election, saying: “The sole responsibility . . . remains
If Sharp becomes finance minister, his portfolio as trade minister is expected to be filled by Robert H. Winters, a 55-year-legislator and former Cabinet member.
In Monday’s election the Liberals won 129 seats, four short of a majority in the House of Commons. The Conservatives won 99 seats.
BENSON lilMSEff CO.
trade off movies by letting the other ship know by blinker light or semaphore since most qf the fleet is under radio silence, what they have to offer. The idea of course is to get a “Tom Jones” for a “Son of Samson” How to Murder Your Wife” for Vincent Price in “’The Raven.” It doesn’t always work out that way.
"Every ship Wants to unload its dogs and get 'Lord Jim’ ( ‘Irma la Douce’ in return, sighed Ensign Charlie Vollmer of Philadelphia, movie officer on the Kretchmer. “I’m still catching hell for trading off Bye, Bye Birdie’ for ‘Fall of the Roman Empire’.”
RIOTOUS LAUGHTER One garlic opera brought an explMhpi of riotous laughter to the crowded hangar deck of the helicopter carrier Iwo '‘Jima, when the master of a Grecian slave galleon ordered his mates to shove off by shouting, “Untie the ropes!”
“Hey,” said Capt. l^avid Scott, commander of the Iwo Jima, “I think I’ll give that order next time we leave San Die-go.”
Refrigerator and general stores ships have the worst of it. Since they are in the supply business and carry mqvies for distribution to the fleet, they are required to list what they have on a big blackboard on the! bridge and take whatever is given in return.
“We start out from Subic Bay in the Philippines with a hatch full of Academy Award winners and end up with a turkey farm,” commented Lt. Cmdr. Donald Beals of Salem, Ore., supply officer on the Vega.
A common complaint of all the ships at sea is that picking the movies is left to the ship’s engineers, since they have do-, minion over the projector, rath-' er than leaving it to the intellec-' tual side of the ship, namely, | the bridge.	I
“The trouble is,” sighed Lt.' ,.g. Charles N. Granville III, a Yale man aboard the Kretchmer, “there’s really no room in the wardroom at movie time for the young intellectual at sea., The senior officers want Westerns, the ensigns want ‘Beach Blan'icet Bingo’ and the crew wants skin.”
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For obvious reasons, a game like this is particularly well suited to Washington. In fact, some friends of mine have worked out a variation especially designed for the Capital.
They drew up special sets of panic cards and solution cards that could be used by certain players in the White House. Congress and other high places.
* * *
A game of “Washington Panic ” would proceed along these lines:	|
WEEK END SPECIALS
at
BORDINE’S FLORIST SHOP
LARGE 6” POTTED
MUMS
with foil trim
179
Attractive	Beautiful Fall
Fresh Flowers	CORSAGES
in vase	Our Own Design
99'	75'
Florinl Shop—Cxrden Slorr-Greenhouae-Nunirry 1835 S. Rochrxtrr Rd., One Mile North of Auburn Rd.
give the ^ jewelers’ quality watch with the m look!
Agriculture Secretary Orville L. Freeman draws a panic card reporting that Billie Sol Estes is back in the grain storage business.
SOLUTION CARD
His solution card is letter of resignation.
Sen. Edward M. (Ted) Kennedy, D-Mass., draws a panic card announcing that Francis X. Morrissey is forming a “Teddy Kennedy for President” Committee.
His solution card announces, that Francis X. Morrissey is forming a “Bobby. Kennedy fori President” Committee.
A ★	★
Princess Margaret 'and t h e Earl of Snowden draw panic cards reporting that President Johnson plans to give a Texas-style barbecue in their honor.
SOLUTION CARD
Their solution cards are certificates of membership in the International Society of Vegetarians.
Rep. John V. Lindsay, R-N.Y., draws a panic card reporting that he has been elected mayor of New York.
His solution card is a one-way ticket to Chicago.
★ ★ *
Vice President Hubert H.|
Humphrey draws a panic card RENT, LEASE, SELL. BUY HOMES. PROPERTY. COTTAGES, that puts him on the front pages CARS, GOLF (XUBS - - - use Pontiac Press Classified Ads. To one day when President John-'place yours, call 332-8181.
Mother Sends Gifts
to Dead Son's Buddies
BOULDER, Colo. (AP) -Shirley Platt planned to sand two Christmas parcels to heri son in Viet Nam. Instead she is sending them to survivors of his squad. She has received word I that Sgt. Gary W. Platt, 22, i Nederland, had been killed while leading a squad in a search and destroy mission in the An Khe area.
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without eblixation. ire and talk with Mr. Merle Vou or .Mr. Bucknrr. who hive hern loinins monry to hiindredi of people in Pontiic during the put 40 yein. .All borrower* will tritify to receiving fair, honeit. and courteou* irralmenu (Do not take a chance dealing with itrangera or fly-by-night Icndcn-i
■^ hen you deal here, you receive the full amount of your loan in eiah at onrr. No papert to *ign until the loan ia eloiod. No rharge for iniprrlion. appraiaal or aurvry. No charge for abaUroet. title aearrh or title ineurihce.
Borrow from n* to eonaolidate your debla. to pHy off the balanee yon owe on yonr eon-tract, to pay taxen, to make home repaira or improvrmeniM. or for any other good pnr-po*e. See na today.
SPECIAL
Froo Parking on county let comer N. Saginaw and W. Huron Stt. each time you bring to our office a full monthly payment.
Free Parking whonovor you apply for on approved lean or renewal.
Bring ui your parking ticket to bo alompod.

VOSS and BUCKNER
t09 NATIONAL BUILDING ~ FE 4-4729
C—10
THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12. 1965
I HELD-OYER!
rOjb.	"An Abielul* I
EXCLUSIVE 1st MIN
By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-TV Writer ' HOLLYWOOD - Do American or European men make better husbands?
Jerry
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US. or Europe Men Best? Virna and Elke Disagree
The island of Jcva is one of tte most tUoUjr pbpuliiM^ in the World. It contMns about 55 on persdns and ite area is about the Aamd aslhe state of
ian builder THOMAS FYance Pesci.
If you were Elke Sommer, ice-blonde with Germanic good looks, you would advocate the American man. Quite naturally, since she is wed to American journalist Joe Hyams.
The two stellar imports were given separate but equal opportunities to argue their beliefs one November day. They were working a block apart — Elke at Producers’ Studio with Bob Hope in “Boy, Did I Get a Wrong Number!" and Vima at Paramount with Frank Sinatra in “Assault on a Queen.
Said Virna; “What happens between a man and a wooib when they, falf in love is something beautiful. That is why they get married. But in America the relationship can change after marriage. If the woman tries to take over the husband's role, they are no longer lovers.
“American men are more patient with Jheir wives and more affectionate," Elke observed. “They are very glad when you let them be the boss, because they aren’t used to that. In rope, the husband is always the
I the latter score, Vima agreed. She added: ‘‘Italian men are very possessive. In Italy it is difficult for a wife to work, or even to go shopping. Her husband wants to know where she is at all times.
' BETTER SYSTEM ; “Naturally the system is bet-jter for the man. But women in I Italy don’t think anything about it. They have always lived that I way, and in some respects it is
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good lor them. They remain feminine. And It is very tant for a woman to be a woman and not try to be the man.’'
Elke concluded: “It is when a woman tries to dominate the man. Men like foninin-ity. In Europe there is more femininity."
Antarctica Wj Odd Pebbk ;
By Science KANSAS CITY/lilo. - Strange waves of pebbljils, one foot high and about fjVe feet between crests, hav^ been discovered on ice-free land of Antarctica, Dr. H. T. U. Smith of the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, told the three^lay meeting of the Geological Society of America.
The atmosphere of that cold barren continent is heavier and denser than air in temperate climates, so winds are able to blow pebbles into these strange formations, said Dr. Smith,
Many pebbles are one-half inch long, and some are more than one inch. The waves of pebbles were found within a radhis of 125 mUes of the U.S. research station nt McMurdo Sound on Victoria Land. Participants at the 78th annual geologists and other scien-conferring on current dis-
coveries and developments, and new concepts and techniques in geology and related sciences.
Associated societies at the conference are the Mineralogical I Society of America, the paleontological Society, the Society of Economic Geologists, the Geochemical Society and the National Association of Geology Tep'’hers.
Itey become like brother and sistar. That is bad.”
Elke admitted that is bad, apd she has a formula to avoid It : ^‘A woman should be first a mistress toiler husband, then a wife and-mother, and fbwlly, a bousekeepM'. If he wanted a woman arho was only a homo-keeper, he could gb out and hire
A BIG DI&AL “A wife/ should please her husband fA much a; possible -make hm think it’s a big^ deal len be comes home at night, '"reat’s the way to hold him. Wljeh a man cheats on his wife, ■sually does it with an exotic lie, one who fulfills the role of mistress."
Vima doesn’t hold that woman’s place is entirely in the home. She admits to being ‘‘not the kitchen type" and enjoys her independence as an actress.
“But when 1 am home, my husband is the boss," she added. “An Italian man will have it no other way, and I think that is right.”
GROWING TREND
Despite this monolithic attitude of Italian and'other European husbands, there may be changes in store. Reported Elke: “In Germany, wives are beginning to feel the need for more independence. They are no longer content to rer ’ merely the hausfrau." E pean men, beware!
Elke Sommer Struck by Hit-Run Driver
HOLLYW(X)D (UPI) - Police are looking for a hit-run driver! who backed into actress Elke Sommer yesterday near a Hollywood intersection.
The German-bom blonde actress said she was standing in the street, directing her mc^r into a parking zone when another motorist tried to back into the same space but hit her.
Miss Sommer, 25, the wife of Hollywood writer Joe Hyams, said she suffered bruises on her legs, arms and back but waa not hospitalized. She told police the driver quickly left the scene.
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TH£ PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NQVIi;MBER 12, 1965
C—II
SUNDAY
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Troops Check Morocco Strike
BARRY PACKS ’EM IN ^ Fortner GOP presidential candidate Barry Goldwater told members of the Yale Young Republican Club yesterday that if he were president he would
-be doing the same thing Johnson is doing. “But I would be catching the devil for it,” he added. Goldwater spoke at the Yale Law School.
Warning Is Out
Union Ogre: Time Study Man
WASHINGTON (AP) - The AFL-CIO is warning its 13 million working members: Watch out for the man with the stop watch.
★ * ★
The man with the stop watch is hired by management to time a worker’s motions on the job, usually in an effort to speed up production and efficiency.
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"Time study. . . b a else tool and lends itself to easy abuse,” said Bertram Gottlieb, an industrial engineer in the AFL-CIO’s research department.
Time studies that clock every move a worker makes on the assembly line or in other industrial operations are sharply increasing grievances, Gottlieb
said in a special report in the big labor organization's magazine, the American Federation-ist.
CONCEDES ERRORS In fact, he said, even the So-l ciety for the Advancement of Management (SAM), the largest national organization of in-, dustrial engineers and supervi-' concedes errors as large]
Science Quiz
By BOB BROWN
PROBLEM: A test for vitamin C.
NEEDED: Cornstarch, water, tincture of iodine, orange or lemon juice, a heat source and containers.
DO THIS: Boil a teaspoon of cornstarch in a cup of water. This dissolves some of the starch. Put 10 drops of this mixture and one drop of tincture of iodine into half a glass of water. Add food containing vitamin C, such as orange or lemon juice, drop by drop, until the blue color disap^rs.
IVy fresh orange juice, then test some that has teen boiled for five minutes. This will show that cooking destroys the vita-C.
WHAT HAPPENS: Starch and free iodine unite to form a substance of unknown compraitlon called starch-iodide. This delicate blue-purple color ia removed by heating or adding enough fruit juices containing vitamin Cv
A *	*
Boiling citrus -fruit destroys vitanniin C, at least in part.
(Suggested by the State of Illinois, Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction.)
NEXT WEEK: Sound Conduction.
A collection of the “Science For You” experiments is in book form and sold in tetter bookstores. It is called Science Circus.
PMlnm Corg.)
as 22 per cent among some experienced time study men.
independent university study showed SAM’s definition of “normal” would require workers to labor more than twice the physiological permissible work speed and overstrain the heart, he added.
★	★ A
'In one of these operations, one man working at SAM’s ‘normal’ work pace is required to and move 11,560 cartons weighing 40 pounds each during an eight-hour work day,” Gottlieb wrote.
“This adds up to 440,000 pounds, or 220 tons,” he said. BIG TROUBLE
But the biggest trouble with time studies men, Gottlieb said, is that they often don’t even pay any attention to what their own stop watch tells them.
'They go into a plant preconceived notion of an average employe working at a normal pace with typical skill.
★	★ *
But, he added, “if the worker
observed does not meet these specifications, then the observed time must be adjusted to make it conform to the ‘normal’ time,” Gottlieb said.
To meet what they consider the threat of the time-study man and his stop watch, labor unions are increasingly demanding that such studies be made a' part of collective bargaining.
RABAT, Morocco Uh-Troops were called out today to keep order in Casablanca and Rabat as a 24-hour strike began in protest against Morocco’s official attitude toward the kidnaping of opposition leader Mehdi Ben Barka.
A cold rain fell in Morocco’s two main cities, dampening the ardor of the strikers. Effects of the strike' call by the Moroccan labor union were not immediately apparent.
There was no lign itf early trouble.
Union leader Mahjub Ben Seddick called the strike to protest what he termed “police methods of repression” following Ben Barka’s kidnaping from a Paris street Oct. 29. There has been no word of Ben Bar-|:>: ka’s fate since he disappeared.]:':;: France has reportedly pres-j;:; sured Moroccan King Hassan II i;-to fire his interior minister, I;:;: Gen. Mohamed Oufkir. Aj;:;: French police report submitted!;:;: to Hassan claimed that Oufkir i-:-: came personally to France to supervise the kidnaping.	:$
The king refused the demand.
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management frequently insists the time studies are none of the union’s busu thus leading to friction and grievances in the plant, Gottlieb said.
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c—la
THE PONTIAC P11ESS> FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12,
Jacoby on Bridge |
By JACOBY & SON
Michael Vincent of Constable-ville, N Y., writes, “What .do you think of my partner’s four spade bid and my jump six? The result was excellent, since there was no problem at all in the play.
Of course, 1 gambled t h a t| my partner! would have second-round control in spades.’
The answer to Mr. Vincent’s! question is that the North hand is a "book’’ four-spade bid. Al-| most every bridge book today explains that the jump to four of partner’s major suit opening shows 13 or more points in sup-j port of partner s suit and notj nu>re than 10 points in highi cards.
North held exactly 10 high i card points and the addition ! of three points for the single- j ton produced the magic num-
ber of 13. Incidentally, when you play limit major raises, the jump to four is not changed a bit.
As for Mr. Vincent’s jump to six spades, he went right out of the book. All books explain carefully that in order to move to a slam after your partner jumps four, you need a lot of high
V987
NORTH AKJ973 VKJ52 ♦ 10
♦	Q32 EAST A Void VAQ10643
♦ AKJ84 a96 «J95 A 108764 SOUTH (D)
AAQ 10864 Y Void
♦	Q7532 AAK
East and West vulnerable South West North East 1 A Pass 4 A Pass 6 A Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—A K.
cards and first or second round control of all suits.
Michael’s 15 high card points don’t meet the first requirement and he has two quick potential losing diamoid tricks.
Therefore the six spade call was not a “book” bid but it was a mighty good one.
No guarantee went with the slam bid until dummy hit the table, but Michael had a lot going for him. He had very good trumps, no losers at all in
and clubs, and there was a really good dianoe that North would show up with either a singleton diamcmd, the aee or the king.

Q—The bidding has boon: North East Ssutt	West
2 A Pass 3 W	Pass
4W Pass T You, South, hold:
A7 WKtMSe AS4 «A«1094 What do you do now?
A—Forget sboat the wwth-lees dooMetsa fn diamonds aad take eeatrel with a Black weed fear ae-tnusp.
TODAY’S QUESTION Your partner shows thrse aces by bidding live spades. Wbat do you do now?
TALES OF THB GREEN
By Bobla Moor#
BEN CASEY
* Astrological Forecast
Sy SYDNEY OMARS Far SaturSey "Tha wiM man canlral^ M> S«>t)ny . . . Astralagy saint- — —- "
ARIES (Mar. 21 • trale on pursuits as sacurlty. Avoid ru task at a time. Be eware ol llmllalions If you build on solid base, reslrlctlooi will be removed.
TAURUS (Apr. 20
laetures creet(ve re(ai----
ol recent pressure removed. You i v(slt, entertein. Be especially kind
_____ ..tare tastes, ---------
CANCER (June 21 ■ July ! remains high Highlight
LEO (July 23 . Aug. 22) tor working privately—and lor refi Try tor an emotional "breather." up. decide upon goals. Fine lor with one confined . . . catching up
to highest principles.
social planning, attend.... ---------
LIBRA (Sept. 23 - Oct. 22): Cooperate In special community activity. Be ready for opportunity which enhances preatlge.
Avoid wlUilul thinking .	-------------
reality. Taka POSITIVE slaps
*SCORPIO (Oct. 23 • Nov. 21): you do not appear too distant permit people to see end kn JourrOey Indicated. Add to you adge. Be observant. Piece togattiar WH
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 - Dot Jt); Now you can sl» up matters and draw conclusions. Bettor for completing rattiar
CAPRICORN (Dac. 12 - Jan. 1ft: pact some epposHion tram male or .... .-ner. Doal with It by expratsing Ideas, possible alternatives. Highlight charm, public ralationa. BE FLEXIBLE AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 Fab. )•):	“*
tending social affair.
The following is a list of recent Pontiac area births as recorded at the Oakland County Clerk’s Office (by name of father):
Bobby Tumor, 1510 Param
212 Hlllcroft,
Elmar Swansey, 26 S Merrimae, Pon-Danlals 1117
keago Mamor.
Paul Goralick, 000 E Boulevard, Poo-tlBC-
Henry KreuM. 1421 Beverly,
Lake.
John Stiller. 6073 Saline. Waterford. James Stringer, 303 Kenyon. Troy. Robert Alexander. 16 Newton. Pontiac. Leon Perry. 7S0 W. Hemline Rochester. Frederick Devil, 3750 Rohr. Pontiac. Terry Klouse. 614 Wilcox. Rochester
iCdwin Miller. 541 C-------- ------
Charles Potvin, 17$
Louis Goderit Jr
By Howie Schneider
■X,.,
THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1965
C—18
Dup^ Yank Is CPng Yictin]
LmI into Trap by Pair Pofing as His Friends
SAIGON, South Viet (AP) — Two apparent iWet Cong agents who posed as his friend led « young American ' «|d eni|llojre to his death today , h» a Viet Cmt amboih, li£. officials^.
The victim was Hunting, M. flf Okiahoma Oty, OMa. He was shot through (te head five times white driving in the Mekong Rivfr delta south of Saigon, a spokesman said.
★ * * ,.
TVfo Vietnamese who ' wttb Himtii« were apparency nnhanaed and were believed to ^ve >daed the Viet Gong.
Hnitiai was a regional ei. vieor {er the lotematioBal Vel-ontary Service-IVS. BULLET-RIDDLED Hunting’s civilian vehicle peppered with bullets. Members of a military convoy that he bad passed five minutes earlier said they found his bullet-riddled body on the ground.
After shooting Hunting through the head, the Viet Cong fired 10 more bullets into his body, they said.
★ ★ *
Hunting had departed with the two Vietnamese fnxn the detta dty^of Vinh Long. They were on their way to Can Hw, M miles away and about 100 miies south of Saigon.
Earlier reports had said that he was killed when a mine exploded under the vehicle, but this was erroneous, the spokes^ man aaid.
★ ♦ *
The guerrillas opened fire op the convoy, but quickly taroke oontact when the troope turned the fire.
Cries for Help Are Ignored
DETROIT (AP) - A 5®-year old woman, critically beaten oy
peous Thursday afto* acreams for help were ignored by residents in e near east side neighborhood.
Police said " biveMigation showed persons in the neighborhood beard the acreams of Mrs. Mery Neal of Detroit, but no one called police.
* ,w w
Mrs. Neal, unable to talk with police, was taken to a hospital after Leonard Nash, 21, found her when he left his apartment building for v She suifrred a braken jaw, various head injuries, police
been able to question Mrs. Neal.
JOHNSON CITY, Tex. (AP) - President Johnson, proclaiming Thuraday. Nov. 25. Thanks-gi^Day, called upon all per-to give thanks for “the ' It have been be-upon our nation during the past 12 months.*'
8HT MARINE - Three-year-oU Teiv McNees, son of Marine St. Lmmy McNees, who is stationed in Viet Nam, held an American flag in front of his face during a Veterans Day parade yesterday in Frankfort, Ky. The
boy carried a eign on his back which read: “OK, LBJ, my daddy is working in Viet Nam. Can you get him home for Xmas this year, please. Tony.’’
Informant in Two Killings Tells of 3rd Girl's Dealh
TUCSON, Ariz. (ff) - Authorities say a It-year-old infomant who led them to the bodies of two missing sisters claims to knew cd the killing of a thini girl, wto vanished a year earlier than the others.
Authorities take the yputh day to the desert area Oast of Tucson where he says Alleen Rowe, a 15-year-old high school sophomore, was killed by two men who beat her on the head with rocks, Sheriff Waldon Burr laid.
The skeletons of Gretchen Fritz, 17, and her sister, Wendy, 13, were found yesterday covered partly by sand in a spot where the youth had told officers the girls were killed. A short time later, Charles Howard Sdunid, 23, was in the deaths of the
two daughters of Dr. and Mrs. James Fritz.
The girls disappeared Aug. 16 after going to a drive-in movie, w w w
Police Chief Bernard Garmlre said last night there were indications that Schmid, a former Arizona High School gymnastic champion, also knew the Rowe girl, missing from her Tucson home since May 31, 1964. NEVER IN HOME
Dr. Fritz, a prominent Theaoo surgeon, saiki Schmid bad never
Name Mayor of Jerusalem Israeli Sector
JERUSALEM, leraeli Sector Iff) — Teddy Kollek, the moving spirit behind Israel’s new na-
of the Israeli sector of Jerusalem today.
Kollek, 54, a candidate of for-Polloe said they have not"" Pren^*; BerhOuri-
■ .	.	Maim Daft 1akyve> «%at4vr «VA#
Family Has Nov. 7 Date With Destiny
CHICAGO (AP) - H tL. George B. Childress family has a fixation for the date Nov. 7, there are several good reasons for it.
On Nov. 7, 1945, Mr. and Mrs. Childress celebrated the birth of their first child, Joanne.
On Nov. 7, IMI, daughter, Gayle, wu bom.
. On Nov. 7, 1993, Joanne -now Mrs. Edward Andreaen of suburban Oak Forest — celebrated her birthday by giving birth to a girl, RcbeMa.
And on Nov. 7,1985, Gayle • now Gayle Spaojevlch — gave birth to a daughter on her birth-
Childress daughter, Louise Kladis of Chicago, gave birth to a son, Anthony WUIiam, Nov. IlUeyear-the flret wedding laniMrsary ot his nunt Gayle.
on’s New Rafi labor party, got the poet after the Rafi succeeded in forming a coaUtion with the right-wing Gahai ooaUtion and the nationaliet religfoua par-'ies.
Kollek Mneet the same number of votes In the Nov. 2 elections as ontgoing Mayor Mordechai Isb-Shalom.
Bat ItIvShalom's Socialist Me-arach group was unable to find coalition partners.
* ♦
The new mayor served as mi»-ler plenipotentiary at the Israeli Embassy in Washington in 1961-2 and tor some time headed Israel’s iomist corporation.
He leaves today for New York on a promotion'trip for the Israeli museum.
Ex-Lotin Chi«f Dies
GUATEMALA (AP) - L Arturo GonuM Lopes, 66, former president of Quetemali, died Thursday of cancer. He was president of the legislative assemblv when President Carlos Castillo Armas was sinated July 26, 1957. He took over the presidency the next day and served until October of the aame year when a militory coup overnraw
Night and Day... Only Zoo
PHILADELPHIA (ff) - A surprlae awaitB Philadelphia : Zoo aoimele which usually sleep di^ the day and prowl at night
A Hfw MNJIOO bouse the am is building for more than 100 emaE numimels will feature a “topsy-turvy room.” Zoo offi-dels plan to reverse the thne o( day for the nocturnal aidnude. Tile officials feel H will work.
a a a
So that visitors will be able to watch the nocturnal animals without having to hang around until dark, the special room will be lighted brightly at night. During the day it will be Hhanlnated with reddiih lights.
The reddish light. Zoo officials say, ere dim enough fo make ^ aninali oilnk It’a night, but briiiht onough for people to see them.
Offer Okayed by Protestant Unit in Detroit
DETROIT AP) - The Detroit (Council of Churches, an organization of 850 Protestant Churches, voted unanimously Thursday to accept a Roman Catholic invitation for a joint race relations program.
The decision came after debate by the coundl’s 150-member board of directors.
* * *
The joint program would concern itself primarily with the hiring‘iwactices of firms dealing with churches and with other economic sanctions to promote fair employment practices.
he knew where the badiea were.” Sehadi’s mother, Mrs. KMherine Schmid, sMi her sen “wm turned in byhisbestfrieed.” Authoritic* believe the Fritz girls were strangled.
* ' w
Although the informant lives in Tucson, he wee seat to Columbus, Ohio, to live with an of disciplinary probiems. lie tefepboned TUcaon
The Jewish Community Council and the Detroit Council of Eastern Orthodox (lurches are expected to follow suit, a sc said.
turned by an officer.
MAKES STATEMENT The youth did not implicate hfantelf in his statement about the Rdwe girl, Sheriff Burr said.
Schmid and the hifermant were questioned by police and released when the Frits sisters vanished.
Following his arrest on the murder charges, Schmid also was qufBstioned about the dieap-pearanoe of the Rowe girl and another TUcaon girt, Sandra Hughes, 16, last seen Sept. 10.
A ♦ a
The bodies of the Fritz girls were found about 10 miles from the general location given by the informant for the Rowe girl’i death.
Area Man Named GOP Coordinator
The appotatment of John F. Cartwright of WeM Bkwmfield Township at GOP organization coordinator for the 19th Ckm-gressional Dtatrict ' nounced todfqr by county Republican OMinnan Dale A.' Feet.
*	A	*
Cartwright, 7119 N. Tratham, is Employed ai a tax attorney in the general counsel office Ford Motor (3o.
, A	A	A
He has served as prednet captain, and as represmtatlve to the state centre) committee from the 19th District. He is a member of the 19th district executive committee awi the executive committee of Oakland County.
LBJ Proclaims! ^
Thanksgiving | Monitor Keeps Tab on Patient
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) - A, Drs John D. Michenfelder|I«l Rochester, Minn., since system which televises sudden colin S. MacCarty of the!‘«‘May changes in a patient s condition	electronic!	MIchenfelder, of fee M a y o
while undergoing a neurosurgi-	electronic	anesthesloloev denart-
cal operation was described to-	system has been ini	system not oely
/la.. (...	f:..t ti—	operation at St. Mary’s Hospi-! -	...
day for the first time.
Deaths in Pontiac Area
Enumerating accomplishments of the last year, he said:
‘We have guaranteed the right to vote to ail our citizens. We n
have pledged dignity to our eld-i	‘	♦ ii
erly - even in sickness. We MRS. wnUAM H. BA8KETTE 2 p.m. Sunday at the Muir neuro^rgery, oeueve it wm
alerts physiciant physiological chaages ia a patient’s coaditioB but stores fee informatioD for later computer analysis.
He said he and MacCarty, head of the clinic’s department
have added new dimensions to the educaUon of our youth. We have broadened the horizons of opportunity for our poor, have enjoyed the greatest prosperity in history.”
A A
And be called in the procla-latioo iswed Thursday for prayers that “the forcea of violence, indlfferefice and intolerance may soon vanish from the face of the earth. "
Service for former Pontiac Brothers Funeral Home. Burial m^^ar^cation ^providing resldol Mr.. WlUlm. H. (Qiro- »UI b. » May To.™,l,lp	^
taUT. rtU b. : ,.m. lomar.; ----------- revie.«i .1 .ill 'I. wide. .1,.
-------
_______ the Sowers Funeral after a short illness.* He was ai	... anesthesi-
Home, Brandon, with burial in;member of the Greek Orthodox Myrtle Hill Cemetery, Tampa,,Church of Phoneix.	^
pjg	Surviving are his wife, Pau:
lin Baskette died vesterdav i*me; two daughters, Mrs. Mary Michenfelder told the 18th an-
Stirvivinn are her husband- a McDonald of St. Clair Shores nual conference on engeineering Haiiffhter Mrs Walter B Gren-®f Bazel Park; three sons, Wil-'in medicine and biology here ne! of BocT Raton ^	- and bam and Samuel of Waterloo.ithe system has been a key fac-
ferL erSiiSen	'	and R i c h a r d of Imlay tor in helping surgical teams
threegranacmioren.	stepchildren:	35 keep patients alive during criti-
IRA EDWARDS	grandchildren; and 49 great- cal neurosurgery procedures by
Service for Ira Edwards. 70, grandchildren.	providing more complete and
of 523 Highland, will be 1 p.m. rjchard BOCHOFF ST/bitT Chl?h wUh^buri^fo'S	TOWNSHIP-Serv- %he system was conceived by
L thP	Mayo physicians and life-sci-
SHuntal Som^	^	P	International
^^.'EdwaTdt aTtired em-
scope of experience of residents
Output Is Told
HONG KONG (ff) - Red China is reported producing 2,500 tons of uranium ore daily from three new mines in southern China and shipping it to Czechoslovakia for processing on a 50-50 basis.
ploye of GMC Truck & Coach
Pieta Arrives Back in Italy
NAPLES, Italy (ffl - Michel-angelo’s Pieta reached Naples from New York today and was trucked on to St. Peter'a Basili-pa after what Pope Paul VI has ruled vdll be its last trip.
AAA
New Vatican rules approved by the Pope Sept. 9 ban any future lease, loan or sh^mient of such great Vattoan art works as the Pieta.
Michela^gefe’s 496-year-oId masterpiece was shipped to New York en April 6,19M, for sbmriag in fee Vaticaa pavilion of fee New York World’s Fair.
It returned on the Italian liner Cristoforo Colombo, the same ship which took it to New York.
A A ' A
Aiibther crate held the 4th century statue of the Good Shepherd, by an unknown sculptor, which the Vatican alao loaned torahowingatthefair.
LABEL ON SIDE
A label on the side of the Pieta’s steel crate said:
“To his holiness Pope Paul VI, with gratitude from Cardinal Spelhnan (of New York) and Bishop B. J. McEntegart (of Brooklyn).”
biv'ision died Thursday after a r"	Park has been used during surgery on
Division, died inursday atier a	^	more than 250 neurosurgical pa-
The Chinese newspaper Sing Tao said the report came from recently de-
Funeral Home, Pontiac. Buriali Michenfelder said the system
three-week illness. He was a member of St. John Church.
Surviving are his wife Lonie; three children, Eddie of Fresno, Calif., Mrs. Francis Wiley and Freddy Edwards, both of Pontiac; a brother and two sisters.
MRS. OSCAR RAMSEY Service for former Pontiac resident Mrs. Oscar (Ruth H.)
A retired employe of the Pontiac water department, Mr. Bo choff died yesterday after i long illness.
A sister survives.
MRS. RALPH E. CONVERSE
AVON TOWNSHIP - Service for Mrs. Ralph E. (Leota) A.
a uxiuucuui wno retenuy oe-^™--	"']wiii ne 10 a.m. wionaay ai-j ™ious
fected from the Peking Insti- B^msey, 62, of Detroit, will be	Funeral Home, intensive
tute ofdiemical Industry. P *"- tomorrow in the Huntoon	Burjal will be in Breth- General Hi
I Industry.
A A A	It. •
, L • • Forest Lawn
The paper said the technician	Ramsey died Thursday,
reported the crude ore is partially processed at Chu Ctwu, iq Hunan Province, and then shipped to Czechoslovakia, which completes processing of the atomic fuel and keeps half of it for its work.
Injured Motorists Reported Serious
Two men, injured in separate .. single car accidents last night Converse, 52, of 24M Harrison	^„rning. were report-
be 10 a.m. Monday at j,, gepioug condition today in care unit at Pon-
’The defector reportedly said two of the mines — the Mao Shan and the Chu Shan — an located in Kiangsi Province’i Chuan Nan Cmi^y, and the third — the Hsia Chuang — in Kwangtung Province’s Weng Yuan County.
tprv DotroU	They are Robert P. Coley. 30,
May “	^	Graham. Waterford
,ey died Thursday. ^	Township, and Darrell V. Thy-
WILLIAMROE j Mrs. Converse died yesterday bauR, 29. of 2384 Snellbrook, Service for William Roe, 86, of a long illness.	I poptiac Township.
Surviving are her mother,'
Mrs. Lena Wilson of Rochester;! C®tey lost control of his car two daughters, Mrs. Nancy Bak-| ®“ “	Union Lake
er and Alice, both of Rochester;! Boad near Meridan in Com-
4360 Richalva, Waterford Township, will be 11 a m. tomorrow in Coats Funeral Home.
Mr. Roe died yesterday after a long illness.
Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Vivian Foote of Pontiac; and a son, Wilbur Steele of Mount Clemens.
DANBALABON
IMLAY CITY - Service for former resident Dan Balabon, 85, of Phoenix, Anz., will be
Robber Meets Match in Bridal Store Clerk
FORT WAYNE, Ind. Iff! - A coed jumped on an armed robber 'Ihursday, knocked him a plate-glass window and (gabbed back the purse he had taken.
The incident began when lan entered a Fort Wayne bridal shop and handed Diane Scheiber, 19, a note' saying, “This is a holdup. Give me all your money.”
AAA Police said the man, identified as Mike Johnson, 38, Saginaw, Mich., then pulled a knife and tried to attack the pretty clerk.
The store manager, Bea Scott, stepped from an alteration room and startled the man. He grabbed Mrs. Scott’s purse and ran down a flight of nine steps leading to the store's foyer. FROM TOP STEP Diane, a sophomore at Francis College in Fort Wayne, leaped from the top step and caught the robber at the bottom, knocking him through the win-|aow. She dashed out the door.
Man Robbed Beside Home
A Pontiac man was robbed of $75 at knifepoint early tbis morning in front of his ‘ at 258 Auburn.
Lee Bowen, 20, toM P police he wqs approached by a man, who held a knife ^fetet bis back demanding his money.
life men fled on foot after n-
ceiVlng the money. •
Washington Scene
Michigan in Year 'N
beat him and wrestled (he purse from his grasp as money flew into the street.
The man fled but was seized a few blocks away by a policeman.
A A
‘Let’s just say it got her Irish up,” Diane’s mother, Mrs. Richard Scheiber, said later, just an average girl, about 5 feet 7, and weighing 125 pounds.”
Johnson is about 5 feet 8, of medium build and wiry. He was jailed on preliminary charges of armed robbery and attempted criminal assault.
AAA
Diane is majoring In psychology. She has worked at the bridal shop six weeks.
three sons, Donald Wilson and! Dean Converse, both of Rochester, and LaVem Converse of Detroit; three sisters, Mrs. Thelma Woodard of Lapeer, Mrs. Genevieve Robertson of New Hudson and Mrs. Arlene Year-gan of Rochester; and seven grandchildren.
MRS. HAROLD B. DICKS4B4
TROY—Service for Mrs. Harold (Sarah) Dickson, 60, of 2910 John R will be 3 p.m. tomorrow at Price Funeral Home. Burial will be in Oakview Cemetery, Royal Oak.
Mrs. Dickson died yesterday after a long illness.
Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. Oscar Price of Troy and Mrs. Alex Mel and Mrs. William Rexroad, both of Mount Clem-
Reelect Mayor in New Orleans
By Esther Van Wagoner Tnfty
1975 compared to the present 194 milUon.
Over half of the total population win live In thraq metropolitan areas; San Fri^isco-L o s Angelee in California; Chlcago-Detroit-Buffalo; and the Boeton to Washington complex; already contain over 41 million people.
MORE PROBLEMS
TL, Offfekl IIM P«.nsua nve Continuing and increasing win
WASHINGTON - What wiU Michigan be like in 1675?
ibe Untted States Bureau of the Census has ways of looking ahead to project the future char-acteriftlcs of the population and the Bureau predicts Michigan will be more crowded with 810,-
NEW ORLEANS, U. (AP)-Mayor Victor Schiro — returned to office by 514 votes — will begin his second four-year term In May.
Councilman Jairjes Fltzmorris Jr., Schiro’s major opponent in the race, concedeid defeat Thursday after the Orleans Parish Democratic Executive (3om-mittee sad the official count of last Saturday’s Democratic primary sbow^ Schiro the win-
census 8,119,9M.
Big cltiet will get bigger. Of those 810,000 new Michigan resi-donts by 1675, some 530,000 will live in the Detroit nMtropoUtan aroa. The U. 8. populaUan la pected to exceed 218 million in
sanitation, police protection, air lUd water pollution.
The changing make-up of cities from large middle<la8s populations to high Income and low income populations (mostly low) ii already plnguing city administrations.
The count showed a runoff for mayor would not be necessary tfatM Schiro had a 514 vote majority and 8,319 better than run-nerup Fltzmorris.
The official count: Schiro 81, 973, Fitzmorris 78,654; A. Roswell Thompeon- 2,121; Joseph Held 4SB; and Doris Perkins;
Killed in 2-Car Crash
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) -Frank Leo Yantz, 71, of Bedford town-iMp, Mich., waa kUIed Tlmn-day in a two<ar crash in To-
merce Township late last night.
The car rammed into a icnce and utility pole, according to sheriffs deputies.
Thybault’s vehicle struck a tree on Pontiac Road near Walnut in Pontiac Township early this morning, sheriffs" deputies reported.
Leading Briton Dies
LONDON (AP) - Sir Patrick Renison, 54, one of Britain’s leading colonial administrators, died Thursday after an operation. He had served in (feylon and in ’Trinidad and Tobago, and as governor and commander in chief in British Honduras, British Guiana and Kenya.
ens; a son, Thomas J. Vennard of Utica; two brothers; and 15 grandchildren.
JAY C. DINTAMAN UNION LAKE - Service for former resident Jay C. Dinta-man, 69, of Kalamazoo was yesterday in Kalamazoo. Burial to Mount Everest Memorial Park, Kalamazoo.
Mr. Dintaman died Tuesday after a long illness. He was a retired builder.
Surviving are his wife, Ada; two sons, Richard of Kalamazoo and Robvt of Alexendria, Va.; a brother; and nine grandchildren.
MRS. UTE POWERS TROY — Service for former resident Mrs. Ute (Ulah) Powers, 71, of Silverwood will be p.m. tomorrow at Price Funeral Home. Burial will be to White Chapel Memorial Cemetery.
Mrs. Powers died yesterday after a long illness.
Surviving besides her husband re two daughters, Mrs. Dewain Allen of Troy and Mrs. Elmer Smith of Silverwood; a son Vance of Waterford Township: a sister, Mrs. Frank Datsko of West Bloomfield Township; two brothers; and 11 grandchildren.
DEBRA SEVERANCE ORION TOWNSHIP-Service for Debra Severance. 6-month-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Severance, 3707 Minton, will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at Pix-ley Memorial Chapel, Rochester. Burial will be to Cadillac Memorial Gardens East, Mount Clemens.
The baby died yesterday after a long illness.
Surviving besides her parents are a brother, Joe, and a sister. Paula, both at home, and grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Erdman of Romeo and Mrs. Velma Shafley of Mount Clemens.
Memorial tributes may be made to the First Presbyterian Church of Pontiac.
1 of sanitary S_ -	.
_ of Tatagraafi Road ti feat South Eait of VIchlgan Aim road fa Orchard LaKe Avenue -------------office fe
NOTICE OF SPECIAL ASSESSMENT SANITARY SEWER OH SOOTH WEST SIDE OF TELEGRAPH ROAD
OLGA SARKELEY City Clerk —r 12, IMS
NOTICE OF HEARING )N ESTASLISHING NORMAL HEIGHT AND LEVEL OF WATER IN WHITE LAKE IN HIGHLAND AND WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIPS OAKLAND COUNTY, MICHIGAN
PARTICULARLY
a to rights In White
of IMI, ei emended, said lake I
d Sections 7 and II at
12 and 13 of Highland Town-
-----------ctlons 7 and II ol White Leke
Township, Oe'iland County, Michigan;
You Are Further Nolllled thai a haar-Ing oh the matter will ba held In the Circuit Court lor tho County of Oakland at the Oakland County Court Houeo Tower, 1200 North Tolegraph Road, Pon-‘ Michigan, en Tueeday, the 7th of OacamiMr, A.O. IMS, at the opan-ot Court on th|t day at t a.m., ba-. J the Hanorabdi William Jahn Rmt. Circull Judge, ar es e Counsel can ba heard.
Iha Complainant Inlande to ask tl t to establish the normal halght a ..................11.10	Mat abo
fitting and i It ba granted to Contitaln. .. I. JEROME BRONSON Prasacutlng Attemay, Oakland County, Mtchlfa By: ROBERT P. ALLEN Corporatlan CawMtl HAYWARD WHITLOCK
d County lor Oakland C
------ Address.
Cdurt House Toww. tm N, Ttlagraph RaB* Pontiac, Michigan Phene:	Ext.
C—14
THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1963
JWfl mils
c
Junior Editors Quiz on-
MOLECULES
QUESTION: How many molecules make up an atom?
•k it it
ANSWER; — The question should be, how many atoms In a molecule? A molecule is made up of atoms and not the other way around.
Break down substances as far as you can go, and you get elements, or basic substances. The smallest bit of an elemenf is an atom, like an extremely minute solar sys-..Lem.
There is a nucleus in the center, like the sun, with one or more smaller electrons, circling around, like the planets, only at inconceivable speed..
We show an atom of hydrogen; the single electron dashes around the central nucleus at such furious speeds that its paths make a kind of shell.
Atoms of different elements may combine with each other, such a combination being a molecule.
As atoms may be different, so the combinations making molecules may be different. Each kind of substance we see is composed of a great many of its own special molecules, like the water molecule we show, which has one atom of oxygen and two of hydrogen.
Many of these molecules together make up water. Since different kinds of molecules may have different numbers of atoms, it is impossible to give a general answer to this question.
★ ★ ★
FOR YOU TO DO: Gain a rough idea of the size of a molecule by holding up the tip of your finger and looking at it. Think of all the molecules going across it and imagine each is as large as a gain of sand. How wide would your finger then be? About a mile across.
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ITiUR. 11:N a.m. 10:00 p.m.
COCKTAIL LOUNGE OPENS 11:00 a.m.
For RESERVATIONS Dial FE 8-9623
1801 S. Telegraph Rood
THANKSCIVINC DAY OPEN 7 A.M. - CLOSING 2 P.M. Woodward Ave. and 14Vk Mile Rd. BIRMINGHAM
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CATHOLIC GRACE
Bless us oh Lord ond these Thy gifts, vdikh we ore about to receive from Thy bounty through Christ our Lord. Ar
PROTESTANT GRACE
God is great, God it good And we thank Him for our food By the bond must we be fed Give us Lord, our doily bread.
JEWISH GRACE
Blessed art Thou, Oh Lord our God, King of the universe, who bringeth forth breod from the earth.
Enjoy the hospitality of
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THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1965
Pontiac Central has been able to lower the boom on Elmer En-gloooached'Bayxaty Central football teanu qm once in the ^14 yean,
a^at victory waa posted in, » aM^eoit tb» Wolves de«rly li tbw%il for a state cham-
RECEIVERS - l>oi1riac’l Arrows will take on Ae Midwestern Fooball League All-Starjs tomorrow night at Wis-ner Stadium‘ftnd coictfLyle Wells'will be counting bh ends Bill Uonard (left) and Frank Goldberg to give the offense a boost. Leonard has caught 25 passes for 326 yar^ and four touchdowns this season. Goidberg, in three games, has picked off eight for 93 yards and one TD.
Scouts Eying Arrows, Stars
The dream of every minor leaguer is that after a game, any game, a fellow will walk over, tell him what a swell game he played and then ask him if be would like to try with a major league squad.
* ★ ♦
That could happen to a few football idayera foUowing the Pontiac Arrow! game wiA the Midwestern Football All-Stars Saturday night at Wis-ner Stadium.
Pontiac woo the MFL tide with a U record and will MW try to knock off the All-Stars, the top players from
^Among the mpected 4,000 fvis will be a few major leajpM aleduta. Several officials from Aw Detroit Lions will be
Inmates lose 'Outside' Trip
Halfback Kwpt Going After Final Gun
WALLA WALLA, Wash. »-The college faimatef beat the frisoB faunatea S»-U Thoriday hi the seaaoa’a first football
The
tratlary Steelera weren’t atieky - fingered enongh. Too many potential ecoring peases dipped through Aeir hands awd the Eastern Washington State College Jayveei won the aecond annnal Wheat Bow'
It’f the one . for the inmate giidden aach yMT. None e< them tried to ran for illegal yardage and Ituy didn’t comptein about pmidtlet for Hlenl motion; they’re accnatemed to stVfer owee.
The meet exciting dame whea the Steel halfbeck kept nuiniiig after the fiaal gan, bat the wardea wasn’t alarmed. The halfbeck was eq a 00-ydrd tonchdown flay as time ran oat.
★ ★ ★
A Ugh school band played, «T! I HmI The Wbgs of an (Fte Prison WaBs I
NonadhL
hand. The Chicago Bears will be represented, along with scouts from the San Diego Chargers and Oakland Raiders.
The scouts are looking for some major league talent and they are expected to look closely when the weighty proa start tiieir head knocking on the Wia-ner turf.
UONS TO WATCH
The Arrows quarterback, Karl Sweetan. a S-1, 195-pounder, is Ae chief candidate for job wiA a major club. He’s Ae prinury reason the Lions will be watching Ae encounter.
Saginaw Valley Championship Game
D—1
Upset-Minded Chiefs Tackle Wolves Tonight
The 1965 Chiefs are much strongm* than the PCH team
that Anted Ae trick six years ago. On Ae other hand, many observers say that the Bay City Central^team Aat will invade WjWier Stadj^ loqight is the best A Engle’s highly successful reign as head coach of the Wolves.
The Saginaw Valley championship will be on Ae line when Ae two teams line up
for the 8 p.m. kickoff before a predicted crowd of more Aan I,UN.
Bay City Central will carry a 7-0 league ■aecord into Ae contest and needs a vjctofy tie to clinch Ae crown. The Chiefs, 6-0-1, can take all the marbles by winning.
championship. PCH, hampered by the one tie, is out of contention for this honor.
Prior to the 12-7 upset in 1950, PCH’s last victory over th Wolves, was posted in 1950 by a 46-6 score.
WINNING STREAKS
The series between the tw
The Wolves have the added, schools has been marked by incentive of a possible s t a t el winning streaks. Bay City
MSU After First Outright Title
Dayton Skaters Rally to Beat Port Huron
lOAYTON, Ohio (AP)-Dayton afotted Port Huron
rfirA period but rebounded a S|8 victory in an Inter-
MdionaL Hbckey League------
’Inundey night.
a a ★
Cliff Briatow acored two aoala for the Geme. The Genu hive a 4-1 record, compared to Port Huron’s S-4-1.
A goal hy Bob Bailey at 7:N ci Ae final period put Diyton •head to atay at 44-
Aat already had three ether qoarterbacks — Earl Morrell, MUt Phem aad Tom My-era.
Mforall la gone, of coiiriR. Plum has been less than aatis-factory and Myers stays on the b^h. A trade brought former Notre Dame star George Izo to Ae Lions.
WiA the Arrows in eight league games, the rifle-armed Sweetan has completed 89 of “ passes, good for 1,132 yards and 12 teuchdowns.
★ * ★
Two oAer membera of the Arrowa who’ll draw some attention are offensive end Frank
rwrg, a 6-2, 235-pounder, played wiA the Philadelphia Bulldogs before joining the Arrows Ais season, and defensive halAack Jesse Parrish, a little on the small aide at 54 and 175 pounds, but one of the league’s top ball haeics.
The Ail-Stars are loaded with talent, particularly along the defensive line which will average 280 pounds.
Ancho^ the line will be tackles Mike Cunningham, 275-pounder who played briefly at Kansas State, Jim Richen-a 278-pounder starred at HlUadaie, Bill Sea-ley, 245 pounds, from Alabama A A M and end Dennis Spencer, a 260-pounder who played two years wiA the Toledo Tornadoes in the now defunct United Football League.
A couple of defensive halfbacks in Ae All-Star lineup are expected to attract some attention.
Indiana Last Big id Foe for Spartans
EAST LANSING (AP)-This is win-all weekend for Michigan State with only Indiana, next to bottom team in Ae Big Ten, standing in Ae way of a clean sweep of the Western (inference.
The Spartan steamroller is undefeat^ and untied in eight games this season, ranked No.
nationally and is alone on top of the conference with a 6 ‘ record.
* ★ ★
Only the victory over the Hoosiers Saturday is needed to eliminate Minnesota and Ohio State, tied as Ae only Spartan challengers wiA Aeir 4-1 records in league play.
TTiis would be the first undisputed conference title for MSU. The best they ever managed before was a tie with Illinoia in 1953.
(toach Duffy Daugherty wants it that way: “We don’t want to back into Ae title,’’ he has insisted.
ROSE BOWL BID
Slapping down Indiana also would tie up Ae Rose Bowl bid. State made Ae trip in 1953 and also in 1955, WiA Daugherty the pilot that time 10 years ago.
MSU aAletic officials already are being pestered for Rose Bowl tickets. This could be one of the largest migrations to California ikce the (lays of the Dust Bowl.
The Spartans lead Ae nation in rushing defense with 50.4 yards permitted a game. Iowa was allowed only one yard net rushing in its 354 defeat and NorAwestem, throttled 49 - 7, was held to minus seven yards on the ground.
The MSU attack has been producing 365 yards and nearly 27 points a game.
LEADING RUSHER
Right half CSint Jones, leading rusher wiA 368 yards, also is hy Big Ten scorer wiA his 68 points. Bob Apisa, Ae aopho-more fullback from Hawaii, is pushing Jones wiA his 56 points and 614 yards rushing.
DETROIT (AP) - So-called experts who tabbed the Detroit Red Wings’ power-play combination as perhaps the best in National Hockey League history may be having second Aoughts on the matter now.
In Gordie Howe, Andy BaA-gate and Alex Delvecchio, Ae Red Wing^ have Aree of the top four career goal scorers still active in Ae league.
Celtics Back in 1st Place
One Is Roy Kronaeaberg, a 175-poniider from Dayton, who lends Ae league In interceptions with nine. <Thc other Is Ron Martines, 1-10 and m, iHio has picked off six passes playlag with Milan.
A couple of Arrows who hold down starting assignments on offense will also be trying to impress the scouts.
★	★ w
The two are split end Btll Leonard and halfback Jim
It will be the last home appearance for the seniors, led by quarterback Steve Juday. (»>-servers -already are pushing Juday for All-America, based on his asAte signal-calling and 72 pass completions for 952 yards.
w ♦	★
Indiana, 1-4 in Ae Big Ten and 2-0 over-all has shown spurts of strengA. The Hoosieri beat Iowa 21 -17 and led Ohio State 10-7 at Ae half before giving in 17-10.
HalAack John Ginter Is the lain Indiana acoring threat, on his record of four touchdowns in Big Ten games.
The Spartans will have dded incentive because of Aeir 27 - 20 humiliation by the Hoosiers last year. A home crowd of about 68,000 is expected for the 1:30 p.m. (EST) kickoff.
Leonard ^as snared 26 passes Ala sea^ for 326 yards and foun toucinowna, while Johnson leads the team in rushing -wiA 261 yards on 85 attempts. The 185-pound Joimson picked off eight
•cored four TDa. two on pesaea. an.
Lions to See Injured 49er
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Middle linebacker Mike Dowdle can play for the San Francisco Iflers Sunday In Detroit after a monA’s absence because of a shoulder separation.
★ aw The 40ers reactivated Dowdle Thursday and placed veteran National FooAali League linebacker Bob Harriaoe on wahr-
By United Press International
The Boston Oltics are back in Aeir accustomed role—kingpins of Ae National Basketball Association’s Eastern Division.
The (Celtics have won Ae Eastern crown eight consecutive years but started this cam-paign by dropping Aree of their first five games.
But 'Boston moved into first place Thnrsday, dumping St. Lonis 87-83 to give tte Celts a 74 season mark.
Sam Jones was Ae big gun for Boston, scoring 30 points and combining wiA Larry Sieg&ied to break 76-76 tie midway in Ae final quarter.
Wilt Chamberlain paced Philadelphia to a 109-101 triumph over San Francisco in Ae only other NBA action scheduled.
Wings'^wer Trio Finds Scoring Tough
But Ae defending regular .season champions have had their problems in Ae goal department and have but three to show for 43 power-plays their first nine games.
They had 55 such goals in 316 chances last year.
599THGOAL
Howe scored one — Ae 599A regular season Ally of career — Thursday night as Ae Red Wings and New York Rangers battled to a 3-3 tie in the only game played.
But failing to click with Ae man advantage has been but one of the frustrations for Ae Red Wings. They haven’t been scoring enough under normal conditions -- despite bolding on edge in shots on goal.
★ * *
They out-shot Chicago, 27-22, in a 5-2 loss Wednesday night and peppered New York goalie Ed Giacomin with 42 shots Thursday.
“Imagine out-shooting a team 42-20 and coming out of game thankful to get a tie,” Manager-(toach Sid Abel said. “It’s the same old thing, Ae puck just won’t bounce for u?.’’
HIT POST
The Red Wings missed a scoring opportunity in the first minute of play when Norm Ull-man!s shot bounced off the left ost.
New York raced down the ice and Bob Nevjn scored at 1:04. Harry Howell put the Rangers two goals up later in Ae p^od when his shot from the point slipped out of Detrdt goalie
Roger Crozler’s glove bounced into the net.
* ★ *
Paul Henderson tallied for Detroit wiA two minutes remaining in Ae first period but Don Marshall padded the New York lead again early in Ae second period.
Howe deflected BaAgate’s shot into Ae Ranger net in Ae final minute of play in Ae second period and Bruce MacGregor got the equalizer at 8:09 of Ae final period.
New York, making its best start in years, stretched its unbeaten streak to six games — three victories and three ties — and solidified its ^Id on third place.
Golf Pro Retires
Friends Honor 'Brownie'
from 1938 through 1940. Then the CAiefs took over to win nine of 10 with the non-victory being Ae only tie m the series Aat dates back toT914.
*	it *
Bay City has dominated the last 14 years — with the one exception - and leads in the series 18-13-1.
In fact, the Chiefs haven’t been able to score on the Wolves the last four years.
This could change tonight. PCH’s offense has functioned very well in its last two out-The blocking has been sharp and the passing of quarterback Jerry Murphy has kept the opposition from stacking the defenses against the r u n n i n g game like in former seasons.
Murphy’s No. 1 targeUis halfback Don Lavalais who Has a knack of breaking into the open although the opposing teams keep close'tabs on him. Ends Herb Mullen and Jim Shorters are capable receivers.
★	♦ *
Coach Paul Dellerba has a
bevy of top-flight ball carriers he shuttles in and out of the game. This keeps the backfield fresh and the pressure on the opposing linemen.
Fullback Ken Seay is the bread-and-butter player. He is called on to get the necessary yardage for first downs and is difficult to bring down.
He alternates with Bruce Turpin who had his biggest game against Flint Central last week when he rushed for 104 yards.
Willie Horton, Karl Williams, Lavalais and Art Wiggins are Ae outside threats. Guard Sylvester Robinson is fast enough to stay in front of Ae ball carriers and is an exceptional down-field blocker.
The Chiefs have not run up
impressive winning scores like the Wolves, but this is because PCJH uses ball control instead of a wide open attack.
POTENT ATTACK
The Wolves play a standard brand of football — neither conservative or wide open. But Bay City has bombed five foes by or more points. For those who like to compare scores against common opponente here is the SVC rundown for both teams:
Bay City Central — Southwestern, 39-0; Flint Central, 32-19; Arthur Hill, 404; Midland, 20-7; Flint NorAern. 40-0; Handy, 47-0; and SagAaw 40-0.
PCH - Arthur Hill, 33-7; Midland. 19-0; Flint Northern, 21-Handy, 6-6; Saginaw, 6-0; Southwestern, 20-0; Flint Central, 204.
* * *
Bay City will have a definite weight advantage along the line but the Chiefs hope to overcome this with superior speed. A wet field would benefit the Wolves.
Bay City Caalral Ptnilac Cantral
J. Murphy (1751 rt Wigglnl(IM) ■enSeay (|—
O. Lavalalt (IM)
A half century of service is deserving of a salute in any book.
For this reason, Ae friends and golf contemporaries of C. B. “Brownie” Meyer will gath-SaArday at Twin Beach Country Qub on Glascott Road honor Brownie for faithful and loyal service to golf and to
Meyer has announced his retirement from the sport in which he started as an assistant pro in ()uincy. 111., in 1916.
He came to Michigan in 1927 as head pro of Eastwood
Hills CooBtry anb in Troy which now is Ae site of a cemetery, and for the past 25 years he has been nt Twin Bench CC.
In lengA of over-all service Meyers was Ae dean of Oakland County golf pros. He, along with A1 Watrous and Frank Sy-ron have been in the game for more than 45 years.
Watrous holds the longest term at one club, this being his 36th at Oakland Hills CC. LOCAL PROS
Many local golf pros, golfers and sporting goods salesmen will attend the retirement dinner for Brownie, including Watrous, Warren Orllck, TSm O’Shantcr pro, Tom Shannon, Orchard Lake pro and Bill .Gra-ham, Bloomfield Hills pro, all ^ outstanding veterans of the .* game.
★ ★ *
Roy Iceberg, president of the Michigan Public Golf Association will represent the MPGA along with Bob Howell, president of Golf Mart, Inc.; Bof) McLaren of A. G. Spaulding Co.; Tom Droogan, Walter Hagen (to.; Maurice Harris, the Titlist Golf Bail Co.; and Don Glover of Wilson SportAg Goods.
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D—a
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By JERE CRAIG Anyone need a substitute this week with a 197 average? One is available almost any night except I Monday until Dec. 20.
I Young Ed Austreng is biding his time until report-:ing for basic training with the United States Marine ; Corps at San Diego, Calif, the week before Christmas.
The 19-year-old Waterford Township High School graduate has one of the bright futures in local bowling. Due to his pending tour of military duty, he limited his bowling this fall to substituting in various leagues.
However, as a result of such a fill-in role two months ago, he now is one of the leading newcomers in the tough West Side Lanes Classic Monday nights.
Ed’s friends needed a fifth lan one night when a teammate was ailing so he filled in. His first game among some of the area’s finest keglers was a 235 He didn’t stop there. Staying in the groove, he posted his first 700 with two more games of 243 and 237 (totaling 715), and became a regular.
“Thai 70# really gave me a irill,” be commented this
NIGHT SPORTS PHONES FE Mils-24104
A 1262 last Saturday morning and 1223 that Afternoon in the first Michigan Stbte Invitational Singles Championships at Huron Bowl also were big moments for Ed.
This put him in the running for a berth in the finals week. However, a 136 game the next morning set him back and he missed qualifying by 16 pins after 24 games.
But his 196-plus bowling did make him the No. 1 alternate and he could sUp in tomorrow and Sunday in the head-to-head competition.
An Oakland County Road Commission surveying team employe, Ed began his league bowling in the Lakewood Lanes ~unior High School pr(^m.
He credits Bill Bull of that establishment with helping him,
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particularly in cutting down on his backswing and delivery speed. He averaged 187 in last year’s Lakewood “A” League.
While in the Marines he hopes to compete in service bowling. Ironically, a brother, Dick, is a base champ in the Air Force and another brother, Don, is bowling in the Army.
SPARE PINS Tournament organizer Joe Bonfiglio is gratified by the local support for the state singles invitational at Hui^on, noting that most of the area entrants did very well against some of the state’s best men and women keglers.
Cooley Lanes is beginning a “Beat the Pro” and free instruction clinic with George (Chico) Chicovsky Sunday afternoon.
“Chico” will compete gainst Larry Angott in a special exhibition at 1:30 p. m., then offer instructions to all clinic members beginning at 2:30 p. m. Those participatii^ need only pay for their bowling.
★	* w
Beginning next week, a weekly challenger will be chosen to bowl against Chicovsky. The entry fee is 50 cents. Men will receive a 70 per cent handicap and women 80.
'The Cooley league bowler with the highest total then will meet C3iico.” 'The winner of that match will receive $50 and the loser $25. The clinic will follow each Sunday afternoon match.
The challenger may not compete two straight weekends, is eligible to reenter after a new one has been named.
*	* ★
The Pontiac Women’s Bowling
Association will have an open meeting at 2 p.m. Sunday in the Elks Temple on Orchard Lake Ave.
Free instructions are . also available at 300 Bowl today, Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday in the afternoon from two of professional' bowling finer representatives: Billy Golembiew-ski and Monroe Moore.
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Christian, Midwest Open League Play
The two local Michigan Christian College Athletic Association basketbail teams tip off their league seasons this weekend
4	*	★
The Michigan Christian College Junior Warriors open the jseason tonight at Lansing against Grekt Lakes Bible College.
A team that came on strong to make the playoffs last season, the Warriors are expected to contend again this winter. They have an ambitious 19-game schedule that includes trips to 'Ohio, Indiana and West Virginia. * * *
Midwestern Baptist Seminary already has three games behind lit and will start loop action tomorrow in a 7;20 p.m. home| contest against Grand Rapids’ School of Bible and Music.
The Falcons defeated their jalumni but lost twice in their {invitational tournament last {Weekend. League champions two years ago, they missed the jplayoffs by one game last season.
lop Prizes in
2 Sites Host Pontiac Open
Entries Are Available at Huron, 300 Bowl
pitsCDc Contfder Dom#
Clild$GO (in- A ‘dome on ancient Comiskey Park at a cost ' $8 to 18 mllioo is being nned by Chicago White Sox owoer Arthur Allyn.
A guaranteed first prize of $800 followed by prizes of $500, $300, $200 and $150, plus prizes total of 10 per cent of ail entries await men bowlers competing in the 1965 Pontiac City Men’s Open Bowling Championship which begins in just two weeks.
Sanctioned by the American Bowling Congress and sponsored by the city recreation department, the tournament will be held at Huron Bowl and 300 Bowl with qualifying slated for Sundays Nov. 28 and December 5th.
* * *
The finals will be held Sunday December 12th.
'hie tournament based on 70 per cent handicap of- 200 scratch, is open to all sanctioned male bowlers who live or bowl in Oakland County. The final deadline for entries Thursday December 2nd.
Bowlers ^ould use their highest league average as of the end of the 196445 season. If no such average is available, the high 18 game average of the current season must be presented.
The ABC requires that the 10 in rule be in effect, whereas bowlers with averages of 10 pins higher than the final 1964-average, then the current average must be used.
Entries should be left or delivered to either of the two qualifying houses.
A feature part of the tournament will be the Actual’s Invitational which will bring together the top average and top qualifying bowlers.
All entries for the first qualifying day Sunday Nov. 28th must be in by midnight Thursday Nov. 25th.
NHL Standings
5 1 X 17 M 24
7 5 2	4 14 ;
TkonftV'l RMOlt N«w York 3, Dcfrolt 3, lit Tm^'i Oaimt
Atontrttl tl Chicago Naw YerK at Toronto
The Moose Lodge has shot in front of the Huron Bowl Classic thanks to an eight-point sweep of Himmelspach’s Dining last Friday night The Lodge No. 182 men now lead by 10 points over Hazel-ton’s Bowlingwear. Individually last week, the 14 series in the 600s were topped by Fred Collier’s 670.
* * ★
Bob Betson had a 659 that included a 278 game, Jerry Har-nack scored a 257 and (ta Jewett a 255.
Huron Bowl’s lead in the Monday West SMe Lanes Qas-sic is only two points, SI to Calbi Mnsic’i 48. The league had 16 “I6#s” this week. George Kim was No. 1 with hU 243-221-468.
Dick Beamer’s 258 and John Williams’ 256 were the best games. Lloyd Peai^ll had a 244-148-659 combination. The Leaguerleaders assumed their position by sweeping eight points.
* ♦ ★
In Sunday’s Prep Teoi Classic action at Thunderbird Lanes, Dave Szabo of Pontiac hit 223— 582 for the best series and Bir-mingbsm’s Dave Stewart had a 224. Led by Szabo the Cherokees had the team highs, 721—1997.
AIRWAY LANBI
HMi Oamoi W0ti torlM—Owry Mggro,
221-714-454 (145 4VW4g4). To*------
Ingt-A ent w Real Botr. 1j Vi ^ Shoo. 2| 2M Bawl, 3; Tarry
ToaaSay SN Baarttn A Sarlaa—TharaH Puartai, Drtwry'i
ORCHARD LANS3
Taam Painta-Anllart, Vi Tlnhanii, 22i Raindaar, 20i. Spikahornt, 17.
MONTCAUM ROWLINO CSNTRi
Gag*, If*. Plau MIxid
____ Stri*>—Barbara Pipper, 2l5-5»
(wamen's high far the year).
------Den Ogg, 214: HtraM Ha
PrMay KWgt
loh Sarlat-Frin A______ _	.	.
h Ganwa-Laran Guarin, Mi HareM iquiat, 2Q1.
WIST tIDI LANSS
High Cam*! t _ ________
Brawn, 220-247-457 (170 avaraga). SYLVAN LANSS Tw«4ay Mlia* Laotw High Scarar—Gaarga Heward, S34-IS4-455 (high lor Mason).
IManday Pint MafliadM CMrck
____ _____ r, 3)4-01-433
sigh lor taaian).
Monday tuparlar Marchantt Claw A ' Gamaa-BIII Easlick, 257; Ed
Sugar Ray Quits long Ring Career
ItUft 0 !• Khadulad.
NEW YORK (AP) - Sugar Ray Robinson finally has decided to hang up the gloves at the age of 45 after 199 fights in a brilliant career that is sure to lead to boxing’s Hall of Fame.
* * ♦
The fierce pride of a man who has bMn acclaimed the fighter pound-for-pound in recent ring hist(H7 kept him going long after his contemporaries had quit. It took a decisNe beating by young Joey Archer (Wednesday night in Pittsburgh I to end Ray’s dreams of another I championship flght.
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855 S. Roohesfor Rd, 661-9911

f
A.
TliK yownkc PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1963
Seeks 3rd Straight Win
’Af' Faces Wildcats
RED WINGS COLUdtoRATE - Paul Henderson (19) of the Detroit Red Wings converts pass from te^mate Billy Harris for jal against Ne^ork Rangers’ goaltender E Giacomin (H. Bruce MacGregor (not in
picture) stole the puck to spring the two Red Wings free in front of the nets. The score started the Wings back from a 2-9 deficit last night to a 3-3 tie at Olympia Stadium.
EVANSTON, lU. (AP) -Michigan and Northwestern, Big Ten football rivals since 1892, collide Saturday with a' first division spot in the conference at stake.
Each is 2-3 in Big Ten action and share fifth place. The Wolverines, however, showed marked improvement in the last several weeks with an offense that jelled around the running-passing of quarterback Wally Gable, his target. Jack Clancy, and the speed of Carl Ward.
In their last two games, the Wolverines crushed Wisconsin 50-14 and Illinois 23-3. Northwestern has beaten Indiana and Iowa but lost to Michigan State 49-7 and Minnesota 27-22 in its last two starts.
Michigan is 4-4 over-all this season and the Wildcats 3-5. BACK IN ACTION Northwestern's first string halfbacks. Woody CKAMP AN halfbacks. Woody Campbell and
Stic Snow to Get Trial
Test Run Scheduled at Silverbell
^ Silverbell Village Ski Resort Midals are hoping for pleas-|int,	sunny	weather	Sunday
-vriien	they’ll	try out	the	new
snow	next to	the rope	tow.
★	★ ★
. The snow is made of the recently developed Holley plastic Hakes. One test run was made on the artificial snow in New Elngland, but this will be the first public tryout.
Members of the Central Di-vUion, United States Ski Association wiil ski on the flakes at 2 p.m., then the pnhlic will be offered an op-
In addition, contributions will taken for the 19654W U. S. ski team.
The snow was developed by Don Holley, owner of a plastics manufacturing firm in Detroit. Silverbell is located on Bald Mountain Road, just east of M24.
V«t«rans' Day Winner
JACKSON (AP) - Glenn Frlmrose won the featured Vei-prans’ Day Pace at the Jackwn Harness Raceway by half a length Thursday paying $5.20, j|3.80 and $2.80.
; Aussie Golf Meet Tied
! MELBOURNE, Australia m~ Doug Sanders of ()jai, Calif., and Bob Swinbourne of Australia shared the first round lead in the $8,950 Dunlop International G(rif Tournament today with scores of four-under-par 69.
Gajda Two Strokes Behind
Long Shots Lead in Mexico
Tam O’Shanter golf pro Warren Orlick, long standing member of the National Professional Golfers Association rules committee, has been elected treas-urt(r of the PGA for 1966.
* ★ ★
Orlick, a golf pro for 33 years, has been at Tam for 13
MEXICO CITY (UPI) - Billy|runner-up this year, one of the
Maxwell of Dallas, Tex., and four par-busting long shots moved into the second round of the $16,000 Mexican Open Golf Tournament today sharing one-stroke lead and a hunch that the breaks are going to decide the winner.
Maxwell, Dudley Wysong of McKinney, Tex., Larry Zeidler of St. Louis and Mexicans Antonio Cerda and Guadalupe Perez shot two - under - par 70s Thursday over the rurg^ Bella-vista Golf Gub course.
* ★ ★
Behind Maxwell and company came a six-man tie for sixth place at 71.
Heading this pack was Gene Littler of La Jolla, Calif., fourth-highest all-time money winn^^ followed by Ernie Vosslei/of Oklahoma .City and Migqel Angel of Spain. Mexican prbs Juan Neri, Ramon Cruz and Oswaldo de Vincenzo rounded out the {roup.
Tied at 72 were Homero Blancas of Houston, Bob Gajda of BIpSmfleld Hitts, Witt Homenvttt of Winnipeg, Can., RanuM Sofa Pedrena of Spain, Lee 'lYevino of DnIIas and Ra^ili Jonstone of New York.
Defending champ Art Wall of Honesdale, Pa., slumped to ' er than 40th place with a 38 77, five over par.
w ★ w
Blancas, the son of a Mexican but now operating out of Spain and Texas, is the home crowd favorite. He won $10,060 in his first five appearances after joining the U.S. pro tour last April and was named '‘Rookie of the Year."
CHIEF VICTIM
Bad luck was the keynote of the opening round with Alvie Thompson, the Canadian PGA
chief victims.
The 6-foot 3-inch Canadian was sailing along at the 15th hole, three under par and obviously taking the measure of the rugged, short-drive Bellavis-ta Golf CKLUB COURSE.
Then he fired off a chip pJiot for the par-four 15th. IW bail ricocheted off a moui^, came whipping back like j boomerang and ran up hiytrm.
“That’s it,’’/muttered Thompson, who sajrs he has a “Mexican jink" that has always dogged nim in this tourney.
He shot again -- and the ball hit the same mound, bounced back again and hit him in the eye.
★ ★ ★
By the time Thompson got off the 15th he was seven strokes over for the hole and the lead had gone that-a-way.
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County Scoring Race Going Down to Wire
What looked like a runaway in the Oakland (bounty scoring column has turned out to be two-man race.
Holly’s Mark Phalen leads the way with 99 points, with Milford’s Mike Yeager second at 84, but Yeager will have a golden opportunity to catch up tonight when he and his teanunates take on South Lyon.
Sooth Lyoo bu won only once in eight starts and should be easy pickings for the speedy Yeagcr.
Phalen, on the other hand.
faces Fenton, the 10th ranked team in the state’s (Hass B poll. Fenton has won seven and lost but once and owns one of the top defensive crews in the area.
★ * ★ bi the Saginaw Valley Conference scoring race. Bay City Central runners continue to dominate the standings.
DOMINATE SVC BCC players occupy five of the top rungs on the scoring ladder with Lon Miller setting the pace with 82 points. Miller and his teanunates will be trying to add to their total this evening when they take on Pontiac Central at Wisner Stadium.
the area race, Chris Hawkins (73) of Clarenceville holds a slim lead over Steve Skelton (67) of L’Anse Creuse.
is.*;.
SAOINAW VALLSV CONriMNCI
0 TO SAT re liter. Bay city CntrK 7	"
—/ City Cl-------
I, Bay eny Cant'l I I, bC Cantral I
_____j, Midland I
Wlrgowikl, BC Cantral I
McCuan, BC Handy
LaPoInta, Roaavllla I Kltchanmaatar, Drydan I Frabott. e. Datrolt I Harvay, Mevnt Ctemani I Roland, Anttior Bay .. I
Hoftnar, AHnont ......I
Laa, Romao ........... I.
NBA Standings

CIncInnatt Plill^lBlila Ntte Verity _
$an PranelKB koa AiiMMt ...
i!? -
TMwwImy'i Rtimitt Phllmtftlphlm tOPy Iwi frmnclKo 1( I7y
ioilon m
»lftla“'arNaw YorA Balllmara at Cincinnati Ban Frantlyo fi SI. J._ouli
Balllmara at Laa
PMlL^DJtLPMIA^ Ba. - Jaa Prailar,
Orli(J( Picked PGA Officer
Tarn O'Shanter GC Pro Is Elected
among the officers elected were Max Elbin of Burning Tree CC, in Bethesda, Md. president, succeeding Warren Cantell of San Antonio, Tex.
Leo Fraser of Atlantic City, N. J., Country Club was elected secretary.
Vice presidents include Wendell Ross, Pequot (Country Club, Stonington, Conn.; Marty Lyons, Llanerch Country Club, Havertown, Pa.; Jim Rudolph, National Cash Register Country Gub, Dayton, Ohio; and Clarke, HiHendale Country Club, Phoenix, Md.
★ ★ ★
Cantrell was named honorary president and Bobby Jones Jr.
Atlanta, Ga., and Walter Hagen of Traverse City, Mich., were made honorary vice presidents.
The PGA Tournament Committee announced that another approved tournament player training and qualifying program will be held next October. The first program, held last month, qualified 17 players for PGA tournament competition.
Ron Rector, were sidelined by injury against MSU bi^t returned against Minnesota last week and helped the Wildcats nearly to register an upset.
For the season, Campbell has
4.33 rushing average to 4.31 for Rector and 3.3 for fullback McKelvey. So far the Wildcats have scored only once by passing.
“Michigan has developed Into one of the strongest teams in the country and now is operating at peak output,” saj's Northwestern Coach Alex Agase. ‘,‘Gabler has become an outstanding quarterback who can move the club and keep it going. Ward is so great he does things, you can’t coach.”
★ ♦
Michigan wlll be making its first appearance in Dyche Stadium since absorbing a 55-24 loss in 1958. The Wolverines have won the last three meetings for a 25-10 edge in the I series. Two games were tied. WEAK SPOT
The Wildcats have shown a weakness in pass defense, lowing their opponents yards through the air on 74 completions in 146 attempts.
This weakness could be exploited by the Wolverine*
have Clancy and Steve Smith the prime receivers for Gabler.
Clancy, who sets a school record with each reception and yard gained, and Smith have accounted for all but 18 of the 76 pass catches by the Wolverines this year.
Gabler, who continues to climb among the leaders in the Big Ten, has thrown 94 times and completed 44 passes for 653 yards and three touchdowns. Only two of his passe.s have been intercepted.
Don Carter Sidelined
AKRON, Ohio Wl —Don (barter is suffering from prteumonia and will miss the Professional Bowlers Association $65,000 National Championship in Detroit Nov. 21-27, the PBA announced today. .
PONTIAC TABLI TINNIS ITANDINOt
Club n ■•ncli FuM
Smoiwi Manufacturing .
Paptl-Cola Kannerly Sarvict Buettnar's Claanari * * "' Root Bear
Trophies Taken by Pontiac Men at 'Rod' Show
Two	Pontiac	men	brought
back trophies this week from the International Rod and Chis-tom Show in Chicago’s McCormick Place.
*	★	*
Ron Finch, who runs a custom paint business, won the show’s top award for the best paint job among the motorcycles entered.
*	♦	w
City main	post office	employe
Louis Zoch had the most unique road machine and was second in the historical restored class with his German Zundapp. This is a World War II vintage machine that was driven by General Rommel in the African campaign.
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REMINGTON 742, 30-06 ..... $149.50
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Wednesdey .■I...III Huron Oowl
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BOOTS
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Red Coveralle			$6.95
Deer Skin Glovee			2.89
Bandanas			250
Red Suspenders			1.26
Hunting Knives			1.00
Red Hooded Sweatshirts,		4.96
Red Plastic Ponchos			2.96
Slugs, 16-20-410			ino
SPORTING/600DS
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u -♦
THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER M, 1»M
tOPENMWUNGi
tHI • P.M. ------wMT.
EvMtacs, Sim. SM4
T ALL STAR LANES V ^11 H. Nny FC
Waterford Favored to Defeat Ketterhlg 11 Tonighf
Kettering’s Captains, despite points, 129 to SSriMit Waterford
a better record, enter tonight’s game against Waterford’s Sidp-pers a one-touchdown underdog.
The Captains have the better record, 3-3-2 to the Skippers 2-6, and they have scored more
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owns the better defense and therein lies the reason for the Skippers’ slight edge.
Waterford has given up Itt p 0 i n t s in eight outings and Kettering only IN, bnt the Skippers have played a tongh-
Defenseively, the Waterford eleven will have to halt the passing of Kettering’s Dick Miceli.
* ★ *
Miceli, a junior, has a good arm and U^notch receivers in ends Bob VonBargen and Vince Griffin.
Waterford has been vulner-
able fb the forward pass on occasions this season, and coach Jtdin Moffat has had his charges working on pass defense all week.
The Skippers also use the forward pass and they have a pair of good throwers in the back-Held — quarterback Dave Roe-m e n s k y and halfback Rick SSem, who was moved to halfback three weeks ago by Moffat in an effort to give the offense a boost.
Kickoff for the tut at the WTHS field is 8 o’clock.
In other games on Umight’s schedule, Clarkston visits
Rochester, Lake Orion entertains Oxford, Monroe Jefferson plays at Avi^ale, Birminl[ham Brother Rice invades Birmingham Groves and Romeo {days at Utica.
Avondale’s Yellow Jackets are much better than their 1-5-2 record would indicate. ’The team’s last two outings ended in Ues — 13-13 with Rochester and 13-12 with Troy.
LACK SPEED
The Jackets.ladi speed In their defensive backfield and Jefferson has the squad to take advantage of the lapse. Tlie Monroe team defeated Ypsilanti
last week, 47-«, to take the Lake-shore Conference titie.
At Lake Orion, Oxfoid wiU be trying to increase its edge in the series with the Dragons. The
Wildcats hold a lead of 17-12-5. .the two batUed to a 6-6 tie. . jciass A prep poU and will be UUca wUl. he A key contest (in tomorrow’s bidding for its fourth win in five he Little Brown schedule will find North Far-lmeetlngs with the Falcons.
College Teams Ending Seasons
Possible Title Share for CMU
Jag, iridch Is aow‘ resting in imlngton gunning for its ninth the Utica trophy case.	win of the season in a scrap
The Chieftains grabbed the with city rival Farmington.
Jug in 1963 with a 284 victory <nie North Farmingtim eleven and retained it last year whenMs ranked ninth In the state’s
By The Associated Press Central Michigan could join Michigan State, Michigan Tech and Albion as football league champions before its takes on Ferris State Saturday night.
CMU clinched a second place finish with a victory in its IIAC finale last week and could gain a share of the title should Western Illinois upset league-leading Northern Illinois Saturday after-
’The Central Michigan - Ferris State clash is one of seven
m
mrmE
FHim
PUTBAOKTHETASTE
OTHEBSTAKEAWAY
TRY NEW LUCKY STRIKE FILTERS
games in the state on the final weekend for all but three of the state’s 17 teams.
Michigan, MSU and Northern Michigan close out their regular seasons next week.
Montana is at Western Michigan, Albion at Wayne State, Principia at Olivet, Taylor at Northwood and Anderson Alma in the other games in the state.
Kalamazoo is at Franklin, Eastern Michigan at Baldwin-Wallace, Northern Michigan at Paraons, Iowa, and Hillsdale at Shippensburg in the others. WINNING STREAK
CMU will take a three-game winning streak into the game with Ferris. ’The Bulldogs, meanwhile, will be looking for their first victory in two years. They played two ties last season.
Western Michigan, also a i winner its last three times out and unbeaten in its last four, tries, again will have quarter-! back Ron Siefert directing the attack in the game with Montana.
A *	★
Montana is 3-5, compared with WMU’s 5-2-1 mark and, third place finish in the Mid-i American Conference. Siefert' closed out the Mid - Am campaign as the top passer in the iteague.
Northern Michigan, third in, this week’s NAIA poU, is one (rf'
several teams in contention for the NAIA playoffs which lead to the Champion Bowl in Atlanta, Dec. 11.
BOWL BIDS
Parsons (5-2) has received! feelers from at least two smaU-, college bowl committees but ia| not a member of the NAIA.
The Albion-Wayne State contest could attract one of the largest crowds to watch the| Tartars in action in recent, years.
Albion claims to have a|K>ut| 3,000 alumni in the Detroit area. ^ numy will be getting their first look at the Britons since graduating.	!
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Each	2x6	.73	.91	1^4	136	1.95	221	2.46
Each	2x8	1.14	1^	1.94	226	238	3jQ5	329
Each	2x10	131	138	2A6	237	328	337	420
Each	2x12	2.10	232	3.14	337	4.19	4.72	524
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THE PONTIAC 1*KK8S, FRIDAV, NOVExMBER 12, 19B5
D—5

The foUowing are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Wednesday.
Produce
saoiTs
Applu, Dallcloui, GoMtn, bu.
Awm. Dcliclout, Rid, bu.
Appin, Jentthan, bu.	 ].;s
Applat. Macintoth, aarly, bu.
Applai, Northarn Spy, bu..
Applat, cMar, Agal. can ...
Rtari, bote, bu.
VSeSTAILIt
Stall, dz. bcht. .............
Baati, toppad, bu..... ........ 2.«
Cab^, ^Iv, bu.................. I JO
C^oa, rad, bu................. 1.30
1.23
Carroll, loppad, t Caullflowar, di Celery, r ■ “
KobIrabI, di. bcbi.................... IJO
I aaki, dz. bdia.............
Onkmi, dry, SO-lb. bao ........
Onloni, graan, dz iehi.........
Partlay, Curly, dz. bchi.......
Parilay, rael, dz. Debt........
Parinipi, Ctllo Pak, dz........
Market Advances Vigorously on NCA Flights
NEW YORK (AP) - Aluminums fell but cut their losses following the aluminum price rollback, while the over-all stock market staged a vigorous advance.
Amid protests from business and industrial leaders about rescinding the aluminum price hike under government pressure, the aluminums were hit by further selling in early trading. They pared their losses to trifles later on.
★ * ★ Meanwhile American Telephone, up nearly a point, again showed active leadership. Gen-
eral Motors climbed back more than a point in a rising auto section.
Coppers were jlimulated by the strength in the copper futures market due to the Rhodesian situation.'
AEROSPACE STOCKS
Despite such casualties Boeing and United Air Lines due to air crash news, aerospace stocks were up well on balance. Electronics, especially the color television stocks, showed a new burst of strength.
The Associated Press average of 60 atocks advanced 1.1 to
3M.S with Industrials up 1.7, rails up .9 and utilities unchanged.
October Total Foils Short of September
North Central Airlines (NCAl
The New York Stock Exchange
The Dow Jones industrial average at noon was up 2.56 at' nights at Pontiac Municipal Air-! 955.84.	port last month .fell short of the I
*	*	*	passenger total for September. |
Prices were generally higher, a total of 15 passengers were; on the American Stock Ex-!carried on outbound flights in change. Trading was heavy. Up october, compared to 26 in Sep-| about 2 were such stocks as Kir-|tember and 25 carried in Octo-I by Petroleum, National Video; 1964.	'
(ex dividend) and Pyle-Nation-1
Inbound flight^	had	17 pas- j
Corporate bonds were mostly	'
unchanged. U S. Treasury bonds	^
advanced.
patronage for the year jumped to 230 outbound and 229 inbound patrons for	1965.	:
A ★	★	i'
Departing NCA flights carried more air mail in October than I in September. There were 1,350'
NEW OPEL KADETT - This four-door Opel Kadett deluxe sedan is one of . five new models introduced today by Buick
Motor Division. The Kadett, built in West Germany, goes on sale locally Nov. 18 at Oliver Motor Sales, 210 Orchard Lake.
In Face of Chef Shortage
Restaurants Get Boxy
By SALLY RYAN AP Business News Writer
I “The old notion of the chef 40 per cent less kitchen space wanting to keep his finger in the Ihan normal.
i.) High Low Cloic chg: I‘
II 59’/.	5»k4 - Ml pared to only
' ‘	47H 4711 I r .
72'/i 72'/j - % tember.
INBOUND FLIGHTS
.^•• pounds carried last month, com-« 8>ving a new i In onlv Qfi9. pounds in Sep-'**’® restaurant business
NEW YORK - A .shortage of pie is dissipating.” he said. jChefs is giving a new twist to; Whitley said the institutional
“This was possible because of
acro,°:marke. had becom. the faM [ha use ol prepared convenieare ,he Unl,«l SUdea.	gr„.i„6 aegmen. .1 Ihe K-bd- J,VaSg
lion annual Iror.a lood bu.alneaa, "T"-*	”''£r
The pancakes you have for "«n annual irozen moa ousmess. •	vears aeo Stouffer
breakfast in a restaurant, thenow amounted to nearly ..	. considered use
Meantime, inbound flights shrimpburger lunch, the cock-one-third of all frozen food	prepared foods in its
carried only 648 pounds last'tail party hors d’oeuvres, and sales.	own restaurants ”
month, compared to 710 poundsjthe beef stroganoff dinner prob-j,esS SPACE	Now it is. and it is planning to
ably come out of a box.	Stc^ffer Food Corp. opened convert some of its existing res-
*	*	*	'three restaurants this year with taurants.
Restaurants, faced with a labor shortage, limiM space and mounting costs, are turning to , .	.	. , ..packaged mixes and frozen,
_ ^ Inbound express regis^ ^	hospitals, schools,!
I .^ne pound compared to 13i	3^^ ships	I
^ ^[pounds in September^	| One major restaurant school
Mz-Azi- J	I had 3,000 more job offers than it
32	graduates last year.
” -^ 2,337 pounds of air freight in *
October, down from the 3,384'CITE INCREASE	j
pounds in September.	' The number of restaurants!
Inbound air freight totaled I has been increasing. There arej
- 'ir 4«. ■	.	?	378,460 commercial restaurants:	ministers'review of the Moscow talks and
r + v.!5-'»96 ^unds of freight wereHn the country„6,170 more	” Z two ‘he Eastern European situation
last year. The biggest gam has! conferred for more than ‘wO; been in quick-service facilities.!hours today about Germany,!*
At a recent frozen food show! Eastern Europe and the recenL QUESTIONED in New York, the emphasis wasj French-Soviet talks' in Moscow. Asked whether the Common on institution-size packages, for' But they left until tomorrow, Market crisis was mentioned at restaurants and others.	a review of the four-month-old all, Schroder said, “it obvious-
There were breaded and 1 European Common Market ly jg impossible to avoid all glazed ready-to-cook “gourmetjcrisis.	'discussion of Europe when
filets,” shrirnp, scallops, 10-	Minister j talking about the subjects I
September.
Outbound air express totaled only 230 pounds last month, compared to 337 pounds reported in September.
«v, ^	scMcorp .w 223 48'7. fji	3.542 pounds last month, while 378,460 commercial restaurants!
3 27H 27W
”	*1.. t	i •»	« «v. « S ^ 1 jAibrought in in September.
2-Day Talks Under Way for France, West Germany
PARIS (UPII — French and within the framework of their
News in Brief
. 33H 334. 33W + /.
• ”5*	X ;2jton reported to Pontiac police
yesterday theft of a $250 diamond ring from a downtown jewelry store.
Rummage Sale: Sat., Nov. 13, K. of C. Hall, from 8 a.m. to 1
's 3<2 3«V4 saw — 'A p.m.
iw toy sale, slightly above wholesale prices. Fri. and Nov. 12, 13, 9 to 5. House of Good Church. At Auburn Heights Fire Hall.	—adv.
Bazaar and Bake Sale: Saturday, Nov. 13, 11 a.m.-6 p.m. Michigan Christian College, 800 W. Avon Rd., Rochester. Door prizes on quarter hour. Ham dinner, 3-6 p.m. Tickets, $1.50 - 75c.
—adv.
;, and pastry
pound bags of dough..
“The biggest obstacle in selling frozen entres to the institutional trade is the matter of the chef’s ego,” said a spokesman for a restaurant chain.
CHEF’S DELIGHT He suggested that chefs who like to tend their own sauces might look more favorably on something that required partial preparation in their own kitch-is.
But Davis V. Whitley of. Chicago, newly elected president of the Nationai Association of Food Packers, has found no such resistance.
Maurice Couve de Murville i mentioned.” and West German Foreign	1'^ added that it will be
Minister Gerhard Schroeder I reviewed in greater detail to-met at the Qua! d’Orsay. | morrow. Their second and final formal meeting was scheduled tomorrow morning.
M rhi 27*1. 27** I	Rummage Sale: Duck
<1 M’/i 32** 52** - M Lake School, Sat., Nov. 13, 11-4.
J M	” 2 miles north of M59. Clothes,
-“ --	70M +i'w!misc. and furniture. —adv.
u 35*(. 33M 35** i Rummagc Sale: Saturday, 9-3 # 29*4 »v*	+ wip m. Unity Church, corner of j
As they left for lunch at the West German embassy, Schroe-der told newsmen their discus-centered around the German problem. Eastern Europe and Couve de Murville’s recent Moscow meeting with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko.	!
* * *
Schroeder refused further de-j tails for the moment, swering a question.
of Germany
Dixie Talk Canceled by
used further de-:	^ I
oment But, an	hOrCl
lion, he said the! *

orner oi i^:: iGenesee and W. Huron, by Al-[“ w!pha Chapter of Beta Theta Phi: ”;Sorority.	—adv.
h| Rummage: Baldwin EUB .,*lChurch, 210 Baldwin, Sat., 8-12 ’''"Ip.m.	—adv.
2«'/4 24'A _ >*i Mexican Plate Dinner $1 31** 31** 3?*» ~ ’'‘iPlate- Also take-out orders. Sun-saw w*4 4*’/, _ >/* day, Nov. 14, 12 noon to 7 p.m. 4 7'* nT 7M - .,*!carmen’s Restaurant, 846 Jos-M 1M4 1*	>M* + jtllyn Ave. FE ,3-9686. Sponsored by
^ ^ ^ I the North Side American GI ..... 	?*I Forum.	-adv,
13 MV* 57% 3t, I
Rummage Sale: 336 Marion, if 41% 4»>A uv. - IjiEriday and Saturday. -adv,
^ STS S’"
......... +
Stocks of Local Interest
art (Ighthi
Position
WAIMINOTON (AR)-Th# cath PMitlon
tX'aSwS' ““
**"~r'4,3»1,0»U1I.U I 3,M4.*1»J23.32 ” ****'.2li/S7r432J1I.M	JU,2m,»»1,M4.771 |r
IX) - InUiMitl I2I1,33*.2A.M dtbt not BvanilV .<M	11 39*4 39	39*4 -f *4
bloet to itoMary limit.	Ivtrthorp T 11 23% 23V* 231*
JiUc,-
m. Rtiit uni. iNctnirad mog i.io
KL'Vr ...; m !«:? Uf!
■— ijv* uw -j- w
23 279* 279* 27**
ij iss r ca fi,*8 ta Wr,s nsasa"...........
' UV, 2*“
rtgular i
—..... toolnolH.
a—Alto axtr* o. rata alua ateck dividtnd. c—Uquldatltn dlvWand. d-Daclartd or paid In tw Plut ttoek dividtnd. a-Pald Ir ■
I—PaytWa In itock during t*M, i,....
cath valut on tx-dlvMtnd or ax-dlitrlbu-ilon doto. g-OocItrad or pold ao tar thli ^^lartd^or^d ^ar atKk divl-
Ot^'t In
thla yoor,
T^STru
dlvkMnd. 7-
STit&n".
1—Salt* In ;M-Ct1ltd.
-Sfx"
Inter-daalar markat* markdown or
and omiltod, doforrad or
.. ....at M dividond matting.
irtd or told In IN4 ptut 1. f-PaM in Itock during ai, ox-dividond
Datrax Chamical Plonitr PInanca Satran Printing
and. y-Ix OIvt-dta-lx diatribu- ai f—Without war- ri I. wd-Whan dli- r
MUTUAL PUNOI

4
PACGII
tl.....
PaPwLt'uJ .
P»,!l SrUTSiTt,
Pap*& 14*	2 77*4 nv* 77H- .
“ ^	...........n
TISSSSnSiStTS
IT UV* ?S* ,I2**I m - -- gjg-v*
-T I
■JSSSSSi
Frl.	10.9	101.1	|7.l	«3.2	92.1! 20 nail*
r.	i8i;i	h	».?	;iiur*k.
Month Hi	00.9	102.3	07.3	92.0	92.0 dOTIIM
Yoar Ago 12.7 1«.1 ................... '
<!» Lg S’.: ;s:j
.........
18:i r, U.T
.0140 Bond*
94.3110 HIghar grid# rail*
n:j|l?j!!SK?u1TIBl:a'*"V
By ROGER E. SPEAR
Q) “We sold 300 shares of General Telephone at 25 and purchased Long Island Lighting at 34. We now own 500 shares of Long Island Lighting, ^ which hasn’t done too much since our purchase. We are interested in buying back General Telephone and Electronics-even though it has moved up considerably—and selling some Lilco. What do you suggest?”	H. F.
A) Many investors are curious and disappointed at the inability of the utilities to make much price progress in 1965. The answer lies in the nature of the stocks themselves. They are so secure as to dividends and have in general so consistent a trend of rising payouts that they have alwayk been institutional favorites. As such, they are subject to selling when money tightens and can be used to better advantage elsewhere by many institutions. Both your stocks are excellent for long term growth.
At the present relatively high levels for General Telephone and cheap ones for Lilco, I would switch no more than 300 shares.
* * *
Q) “The growth rate in my portfolio has been cloRe to 10 per cent annually and dividends only about 2.5 per cent on the current price. In planning retirement, isn’t there a rule of thumb where a man can spend a certain per cent of his capital to supplement dividend income?”
A. B.
- I NATCHEZ, Miss. (UPn - Rep.
j Gerald Ford, R-Mich., has can-v.:j!celed plans to speak at a Re-.'=P I publican fund-raising dinner !|||here next week because of the Ig; j racial situation, it was an-JPiOounced today.
I State GOP leaders announced __.,m Jackson that Rep. Prentiss ticular rule of thumb. It	R-Miss., would substi-
however, common practice that|‘“‘®	luncheon
part of profits in a steadily scheduled Monday.
Successfuhlnvesting
A) I cannot give you any p
growing portfolio may be accepted in order to supplement dividend income. Many strong stocks have risen in value 100 per cent and, in some instances, much more over the past decade.
It seems entirely reasonable to me that perhaps one-half of such gains can be taken out on
A party spokesman said, “Due to a continued boycott of Natchez merchants and tension there as a result of race relations, it was felt that Ford’s appearance at this time would not be in the party’s best interest.’’
Civil rights leaders
had
year-to-year basis, leaving thej threatened to picket the appear-balance for capital enhance-iance by the House Republican ment and as a reserve against| leader on grounds that Negroes
possible future declines. (Copyright, 1965)
Business Notes
! being excluded from the ! luncheon.
* ■ * ★
A Republican spokesman said all tickets were sold for the luncheon before any Negroes u - u	J .	» attempted to buy them.
Walter Forbes, president of Forbes Printing and Office Sup- SCENE OF UNREST ply, 4500 Dixie, Waterford Town-i Natchez has been the scene ship, today named Robert E.'of racial unrest for several Bauer store manager.	weeks.
Bauer, of 4030 Letart, Water- .	,	.
ford Township, was formerly ek- ^	"f J*"' '
ecutive director of Community	launched In
Activities, Inc., from June 1960 August following the I September of this year, when	* Negro leader •
he	■
A group of businessmen proposed last week that merchant.* join in a wholesale firing of Negro employes, including domestic help, unless the boycott was called off.
Children With Matche$
Pontiac firemen listed chil-1 ren playing with matehes i the cause of a $600 garage fire v yesterday morning at 815 Rob-inwood.	i The proposal was submitted
Owner of the frame'garage tejto the local Chamber of Com-Kenncth H. Stinson.	; merce but no formal action has
--------------- been taken on the matter.
in wvwnn.	1	scheduled to
BBouLAB^ ***** *“*1 speak at the University of Mla-h«5*DS<,r 'iiS ®o 'li'is ’’n’lsissippi Monday night.
THE PONTIAC 1*RKSS. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 12, 1065
Army Tests Rough on Drivers
Voting Error Could Cost Council Seat
By Scieice Service | But chances of eliminating 25 WASHINGTON - If the tough per cent of the driving public driving tests given to Army are pretty slim, thinks the HRB.
personnel and truck driversThe “sereams of rejected ap-]	_	..p.
were applied to average citi-plicants would be heard in every' LOUISVILLE, Ry. iRf) sens. 23 miUion drivers would state capital.”	|Ray Ward failed to votejor
be yanked off the road, the Consequently, the board is re-in the race tor
Highway Research Board said examining accidents with an	‘	k,
here.	eye to developing new principles! He «|d^U|«it ‘"»dv®rtjmti^^^
The public licensing process for engineering traffic, vehicles'ha<?
is geared to eliminate only the and roads, most obvious misfits, charges the HRB in Research Record No. 84, a book of reports devoted to driver characteristics.
For example, in a large sample of open road driving, it was found that a quarter of the drivers ignored the beginning of nopassing zones;
Woman Gives Birth to 20th Child in Florida
citizen's
DEVELOPMENT COMPANY ADD.
FORT MYERS, Fla. (AP) -Another new baby around the house will be nothing new to Elenora Gavin, 44. The new-[comer is No. 20.
! Mrs. Gavin gave birth to the 7-pound, 14-ounce boy Thursday at Lee Memorial Hospital. Sev-^ enteen of her children are living > in addition to the newborn. Ten with her and her Sdmund, a grounds-their modest cottage Island.
ended up in a tie vote for a council seat.
Robert J. Pfalzer, an Incumbent, ntanaged his party’s campaign but was the only olie on the ticket who faUed to win election.
A recount Thursday showed Pfalzer and Ward were tied with 650 votes in last week’s election. The winner will be decided by lot next Monday.
AN ORDINANCE TO AMEND THE BUILDING ZONE MAP OF ORDINANCE NO. *44, KNOWN AS "THE BUILDING ZONE ORDINANCE"
THE CITY OF PONTIAC ORDaiNS:
*^h*"Buildlng Zoo* M»p of to* Builu... ... -- - r -
Zoo* Ordln*nc» It heretoy •m«nd*d to lnip«ct*<( *t *bov* (ddrcts.
provid* th»t th» land In *h* deKrlpIkr	-...—— ••
h*r*ln»«»r Mt forth b* claisifled i
‘s Davalopmant Com-
1 Commiulon and
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE tic* It haratiy givan by th* undar-Id that on Monday. Novecnbar IS. at 10:(» •Jn. at 3UI Watt MapI* I. Birmingham. Oakland County.
____jigan public tala o( a 19*4 Marcury
Montaray baaring motor No. 4W57H SOI-“■	■'or cash to th* hl^
of itorag* It SMI Watt
Birmingham. Oakland County, t public tala at a 1f*S Buick motor No. U 107 S1SS will "
Detroit March Seen by 5,000
DETROIT (AP) - Some 5,one Detroiters, tightly bundled and blanketed against a chill November wind, Thursday night watched an hour-long downtown parade that marked Veterans Day.
Some 4,000 men from armed forces, armored hides, tanks, plus detachments from service and veterans’ organizations took park in the two-mile march.
There were no anti-Vlet Nam war protests.
In the reviewing stand were Police Commissioner Ray Gir-ardin—standing in for Mayor Jerome Cavanagh who was out of town—Rep. Lucien N. Nedzi, D-Mich., Grand Marshal imir Zabak, and former Gov. John Swainson.
The parade general chairman, Col. Alfred 0. Knock, in a brief speech emphasized “the suppwt of the ove^elming number of men and women of this country] for our action in Viet Nam and' our servicemen there.”
Death Notices
tOWARfiS. NOVIAAtBR 'lA )NI, Tea. m HIgMand Avdmiai alt 7Bi balayad huiband af Mra. L^a Edwards; dsar lalbar af Mr*. Francis Alma WIlay, Eddia, and Fradtfy Edwards; daar brottisr of Mr*. MannI* Tala, Mrs. Lavonis
Edwards
Honw aftar I
OLIVER, NOVEMBER iS 1*5,
NELLIE P- 1» S. --------——
Straat, Oklard; ag*
Altentloii:
Mature Life Underwriters
INVESTMENT SECURITIES
I 4 SATOilDAY A.III. SESSIOwTI Start Nov. 20th Cost $25
TO REGISTER-PHONE MI4-9185
Fidueianr Pfamnins Ine.
BimHNQNAM, MICHIQAN
Delegate Stricken
EAST LANSING (AP) Marshall E. Wyatt, 76, of Traverse City, a delegate to 11, i*« !the Michigan Farm Bureau i Convention, died Thursday at a I Lansing hospital. Wyatt was j hospitalized after complaining |he did not feel well.
DETROIT EDISON
SHmEHOLDEIS IKFOIIMUIONU MEETIIIC
2:00 p,m. Monday Novombor 15, 1965 ol Mm
Honry and Idsol Ford Aodllorium DotroH, Miclii«aa
TUe meeting provideo an opportimity for Detroit Ediaon Bhareholdera to become acquainted with numagement people and to receive up-to-date reports on the affairs of the company.
All flharehojdera are cordially invited to be present at this 14th annual meeting.
Dial 332-8181 Pontiac Press Wont Ads
TCR FAST ACTION
ADS RECEIVED BY I ML WILL BE PUBLISHED VME POLLOWINO DAY.
].44	4.M AM
M* t.Tl 15.12
Death Notices
BLACK, PLOYD W., i
PLANT NOW FOR CHRISTAAAS DECORATING
UVING
CHRISTMAS TREES
Mak« your snUction tarly from many varitioE of Pina, Fir and Sprue# — Either plant Now or Rasarv# for Later Delivery.
Lindseape Oaiign Qarden Information Plont torvico
Nursery and Landscape
3820 W. Auburn Rd., 2 blocks East of Adams Pontloc	852-2310
nic* Spancar, Mrs. Jaan Young. Milt Myri Slack,- Garden and Burton Black. Funaral urvlc* will b* held Saturday, Ndvambar II. at to a.m. at th* D. B. Purslay Funaral Hama, i
BOCHOPF. NOVEMBER II. IN£ RICHARD, *7 Churchill Road, Auburn Halghli; tg* a»; lurvlvad by on* tistar. Fuharal aarvlc* will b* h*ld Saturday, Novambar II, at
Sherman Funeral 155 South iunt. Ortonvnia, EONVERSI. NOVEMBER Tl, l*5l, L«OTA A.. 2455 HarriMn, Avon Tewnthlgi ag* 52; haldvad daughter of Mri, Lana Wilson; daar melhar at Mri. Nancy Baker, Dan-
thra* grandchlldran and tw* graat-granddilldran. Funeral Mrylc*
Frtd Clark oHIcIsttng. InMrmsnt In RIdgalswn Ctmsftry, Oxford. Mrs. Olivtr will llo In ststo ot
ttio tunorsi homo, _________________
RAMSEY, NOVEMBER It, IMI RUTH HAZEU 5M7 Shortdon, Dt-trott, tormorly of Pontloc; ogo 52;
bat) Fotfor, and John Kllman. FuMTsI ttrvico will bo hold Sst-urdsy, Novombor 13, at 1 p.m. at th* Hbntoon Funaral Hotna, with R*v. PhUHp Samart oNIclat-Ing. Intarfnant In Foratl Lawn Camatary, Oatrolt. Mra. Ramsay will II* In slat* at Ih* funeral hom*.
ROE, NOVEMBER II. 1*55, WIL-LIAM, 4350 RIehalva, Drayton Plaint; tg* M; bslovtd fathar of Mr. Vivian Poof* and wilhur Puntral ttrvics .... ---------------------
Funsrsi
ROMINE, NOVEMBER 10, 1*55, PAUL W„ 1555 Rustic Lana, Kaego Harbor; ag* 55; belovad husband of Mrs. Katharine A. Ra-
John (Joyco A.) Mofodlth, Mary Lou and Jaffldt P. Romlna; dear brother ot Mrs. Harman Taylor,
Orvlllo Wooster. Funeral aarvlc* WIN b* held Saturday, Novambar IX at 2:30 p.m. at th* C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Keage h Rev. Forraat Flare*
funeral home.
or Wotkint vi Watkins pspi
ARE DEBTS
WORRYING
YOU?
Oaf aut of debt an a Flan ym can afford:
—Employar not contactad
MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS
702 Pontiac Slat* Bank Bldg.
-Mlthlgan Al________
Credit Countalart -American Aiaoclatte Credit Counaalen
"AVON CALLING"-POR SERVICl
COINS, buy-sell-trade. after
5:30 pjn.. 502-2235.
FOR'NlitVlLlfrFb
RUMMAGE AND BAKE SALE
Springtiald I Eatf Blvd.
I, Rochatlsr. 353-5457.
Huntoon
FUNERAL HOMS
7*oaCTrr"*"“Bf%e
DONil'SON JOHNS Fungrsl Hom*
"Dealgtied ter Funarela"
SPARKS-GRIFFIN
FUNERAL HOME
"ThoughNul Sorvlca"_Fi 0*200
Voorhees-Siple
funeral home. Ft 2-0370 Batabllahod Ovor M Yoort
WINTlTWTr^^
"Trto^. Unwonfod hoir romovod. . <0* FIdreo cornor Mapit. U>-
enjoYTamTlV PUN With a re-
laxlng horio-drawn hayrid* through our flalda end weed*. Return la th* term lor a leur el anlmala; new baby Ptgs- 5** 0*** and caw mlEidd. kvaryon* can milk Molly ttio Cow. 5*0 giant furkity, ducki, gaaa*. Oulnaa hant, chickant. fhatp. rabbfta and athara. Sunday It *.m.-5 p.m. Farm four and sdmittien 25 cdnft tar Parian. Maalt and tn*^ at farm kitchan. Taka Walton Eait -
WlOii	{fuij|!i''Sili*
■rlvalTihm%o.*eanFB' S5215 from 4 p.m. tp * p.m. Haua* of
WOULD greatly APPRECIATE
NmTTIi Pontiac' FItUr'body! S:0b a.m. at KtiWMt a^ Baldwiii contact Paul Schnappa by Sat.* Nov. 20a at MA him or «Mrk-mon'8 banch-FIsher body.
_5
A LITTLE OIRL'S VERY FRIEND-ly ruat-celorcd eat, LmLaka-Sgulr-ral Rd. area, SlaamnaM. Long heir, Kroymy tall, usually illckt atralght up. Reward. Ml 7-2174.
CHARM BRACELET: PLEASE RE-tum to 220 S. Crthbrook Creaa, BIrmInghom. _____________ '
FOUND: BRITTANY NEAR DRAY-ton vicinlly. OR X1*7I.
FOUND-FEMALE BEAGLE, NO-yembor 2. Owner plotM Wantlfy
. . FB 54125.
____: APR COT FRENCH POODLt
nimod PIpl. R^ARD. FE 5-3451.
DO YOU KNOW OF ANYONE WH6
mal5, loat In vklnlty ol W. C lumbla. Reward. 333-3MI.
Co5f) LITTLE BLACK KitTE
Lake. 353-5354 al
l6ST - POODLE, WHITE WITH dark eari, vicinity ol Auburn ih^ ping cantor. Reward. FE 5-5771. LOST: LARGE, LIVER MALE, GER
........ Com Lake. White marks
on ehaal and chin. OR 34272.
small black and white oOO,
the iM4 civil BiaHTt -:-l :< LAW FROHIBin, WITH % i:-; C B R T A I N EXCEPTIONS.
i;:;:discrimination be-;-;-
CAUSE OF SEX. SINCE;:;:
some occupations abb
CONSIDERED MORE AT-TRACTIVE TO PERSONS % ■fiOP ONE SEX THAN THE C:;:OTHER, ADVERTISE-::;! >:;MENTS ARE PLACED ;¥ UNDER THE RULE OR -K
;;;: ERs. SUCH LisTiNos ARE :::= NOT MTENDBO TO EX-:;:;CLUDE PBRSONE OF EITHER SEX.
I well dressed men, 515
evanlng. Car nacattary. 525-2545, Id-12 *jn or 5- Ip-m.________
6 YOUNG MEN 2045
Local factory broneh It hiring. Staady. No layefft. Fulurt Is secure II occaptod by cempony. Call 574-2233 Friday 10-12 noon.
$480 PER MONTH 12 MEN
HIRING PART-TIME
Naw laelary branch It taking tp-pncatlona lor Immodlota tvaning work, mutt Da 21 to 45 years of ap* and have a alatdy fglMlm* day lob. Hours 5:50 to M:2L OlMr. ontaM tPlory plus thoro ¥ pratItA torn 550 to SlOO srntkly. Coll bo-
twotn 4-7 p.m. 551-5424.___
AEROSOL PLANT GROWTH COM-
ping and rocolving dipt. Apply ]S porton It Rochodar Atroaol, 507
BOX REPLIED At 18 B.m, today there were replies at The Press Office hi the following boxes:
8,1. IS, 18,18, », 37, 42, 48, 49, SI, S7, N, 98, 199.
fNneral Wr^on COATS
FUNERAL HOME -------1 ptAINt
D. E. Pursley
FUNERAL HOME
_______PE 51211	^__ 1
~ELt(5N SLACKnruNlSiiriMMf I
UNION LAKE ________Wj12l
AFTER 6 P.M.
Incroaao In factory production. Need 4 man to work 4 hours per avonkig. Start Monday. Coll for ■ppointmant 2-7 tonight. 5752223.
$200 PER MONTH AGRICULTURAL SERVICE DEPT.
h«WN ardor procoasKTS-'^rJ spondane*. Colltg* dagrt* tr tquiv slant In salaa and txptrltnet In agricultural lachr' titid rtgulrtd. Sor
AUTO SALESMAN
Part-time. Man with auttldo ean-tacta. Tap manay. Contact Ooarga
’ than nmiaH. Prod Summtrt Jr., SM Orlanda, Fantiab Mkh.
AUTO
SERVICE
Our expontion program colls for the Auto Service Unit to double in size. We hove many excellent opportunities for experienced men in the following clossifi-cotions:
MECHANICS
BRAKE AND ALIGNMENT PROFESSIONAL SEATCOVER INSTALLERS
MONTHLY EARNINGS FROM $500 TO $650
P 0 r t -1 i m e evening schedules ore available. Immediate discount privileges. Apply personnel department be-9;% a.m. ond
ALL
SALESMEN
ATTENTION
Do yau want unllmittd Incoma potontlol ond, socurlty too7 Wo hava an oMlnf In
is;n“.Sr25X“5,Rfe
Ihd lobulau-	*—
and Thunda
Hob Wwrted Mih
AMBITIOUS MAN
•rw pefinemenf. Am SHI. •ducbHon	Mint I
SkS^A^------------

A
Prestige Job in Selling
Oyam of aaHiM |abt art atfarsd but faw hava th* axcaptlaiMl ad-wa attar. Trtt It t e Wnilw Dellar Company In a grow-^ Indutfry. BKktd by MIIHoH campaign. TLook, TV taMa, Ut. Evankg P^, air.). To thd rightman wtllTng to frgvdl tom* In mit art* ot ittto, w* dftar guarantotd ttartlng tolary, phit llbaral bonut. Agot from n-e. Ydu will b* Iralnad frto as a
warding, llfatlmi open chwKWi^*
day iim AAotai', mir sTfalagr In Pontiac, Mkh. Monday, IX 1*55 from 12:30 to 7 p.m.
A TRUCK MECHANIC, GOOD wages, good working conditions. 554 Franklin Road. ___________________
JfDrci partI counYer maH. Ford exBorlmct nocataary, axt. salary, all fringe hanafltt. Contact Howard Patorian at John Me-Autiffa Fard, 530 Oakland Ava., Fontlac, Mkh. FE 541W.
AUTOAAATIC SCREW MACHINE chief inspoefor roquirad for high production, porta, lop wagot. fringe bonaflt*. tina ratuma k Pontiac ------------No. 52.
AUTOMATIC SCR Iw MACMiNB MEN — Top4io1eh men only lor RA 5, Davdniierti. Conot I. and Brown and Sharpoi. Starting- rata 33-55 par hr. FMnty ot ovortimo, all Iniurance and other frlng* bana-flta. Contact Jay Shirty, Fullar-— -"T Co., South I —
AUTO MECHANIC NEbOlb Brand naw building, all now mod-arn aqylpmont, and loaded wllh work. Etminaa unlimited.
SEE DICK MOSER SPARTAN DODGE
_________555 Oakland Av*._____
AUfO MEldHANICS AND MBCHAti
RATHBURN CHEVY SALES
AUtd PARTS OEPARTMEN HELPER. This ll an appertunlV for an aggraaslv* young man le
laam parts Dapl. Mani-------------
Mutt have chaufMr'i Ikeni SEE MR. PAUL NEWM SPARTAN DODGE
> YOUNG MAN TO PUMP GAS
BAKERS
, jd k caka ba eaeklM, pIm, tic., "<aj|Jx un
Ing salary and unlimlSd^ advanoamanl for right man.
21-3$. high lOiool tduc^lsn r*-quirad. for kllhar datalk phona FE 2-f2d*, »-5 r
BUMPERS
EXPERIENCED ON If you would INca to m SIXOOO to SI5,sn par y all daalsrthip banaflti, Rainka, LI 5II00._
Career
Opportunity
NCR
WILL TRAIN MEN WITH THE
FOLLOWING GUALIFICATIONI;
1.	Ag* 32 to 25
2.	Praaanfly amployod, but tooklng tor a pooHlon thot effort bsNar opportunity and Incomo.
2. Dagrod In butlnett praforrod but dxpertanca In direct or ratall talat will ba (tangly oontidarad.
TO BE REPRESENTATIVES IN THE PONTIAC AND MT. CLEMENS AREA FOR THE SALE AND INSTALLATION OF CASH REGISTER AND ACCOUNTING
^3. Salary and llbaral bonut b
EVENING AND MTUROAY INTBR-
P.O. Box 51 Pontloc, Mkh. (Equal opportunity amployor) CARPENTERS WANTED, I^GH and tinlah. Phon* 573-5571 attar 5.
CARPENtERS
S-571S, attar 5:20 p.
CARPiHTERI AND HELPER*
___________332-5S7* attar 5___
SntPfNTfRS, UNION, JOUInIV man and appranficai. Fantlae arap Coughlin Conalructien Co. 5752SSS
tAkPET i>VlR, 5 YEARS 8)<-
52SG5I5._____________
CAR WASHER! DRYBRX telY-Of*. Pull and part tlmd. I# w.
CASE WOfckiRS
-----------y 2onlrol Program
I m m a d 11 f a vacancMo. lalarlaa rangt from 5X575 to 55,03* annually, dapanding on aducotlon and ax-
Safes'«

SEE FRANK KHUCK AT
JOHN
McAULIFFE
tHRIStMAS MONfcY n‘^5;.-NNnTlL.X^irtot?li
CULLIGAN
WATER CONDITIONING
'. OFjFOHTIAC
NEEDS MEN IMMEDIATEY
FULL- « FART-TIM*
521 Orchard uSid'’RMd-FB 5fS45
i^Vin•^'rln^*boM^
A5ptotogKy,.r*«nd^rr---
EXCEtLO CORP.
Lidd Rd. kiTMuai (
iWiF.
DELIVERY ■ STOCKMAN, ___
INARY SUPPLY FIRM IN DRAYTON PLAINS HAS EXC., OPPORTUNITY FOR QUALIFIED APPLICANT. PERMANENT, POSITION. 5V* DAY WEEK, 5252f»1 FOR AP-POINTMENT.________ ■
DISTRIBUTOR TRAINEE
laN dlitrlbutorihip for largt w*ll-
&.“!5RS''in«4l“VrS
of 5)0,000 par year and up. CtN 33X3053 I to 10 a.m. or 4 to I p.m. DISH MACHINE AND KITCHEN
DISHWASHER-BY MACHINE. CHI-na Clly Raataurant, 1070 W. Huron.
wafTM
hattind, ver I drafting t
design for
bulldingt. L.....	------------
bit. Phona or write: Willi Hoytm, Boito ond Adams, Consulting Engl-nters, 155 ForttI, Birmingham. Ml
5-7710.__________________________
DRIVER AND MAN TOJTORK IN
DRIVER SALESMAN FOR SSrAt llshed route, must bo at Mast » years of ago, axcellant opportunity hr right man. Apply to Pontloc Uundry, 540 S. Telogriph.
iSiiSiTi:
InPTeer
product onglnaor-
....— -* aukimo-
r young pglnear-
and bo raspon-
_____ .„ ______________ spaeilkatioiit.
Salary open. Writ* P.O. Box *4*0. John Boon Division, Lansing, Wkh-
EX^IRIBltCEO CABINETAAAkER
____________57I-1I5S
EXPERIENCED GAS STATION AT-
hot mop, FE S85545. EXFIRIEHCEO JANITOR, UkDIft
--------Tivoto school Ir ---
Coll Ml 44511.
CxpIkiiKtEO stkvitr An 6
,----- oxporMnci
Box 44, Pen-
FULL-TIME GENERAL ASSE/ worker, machint thop txptrian pralarrad. JO ^15X	5.
FULL TIME SALES PERSpN, FC quality sportliM goods st^ sor knowMdga, sklmg, hunllnp *M III Ing required. Ml X14I5.	\
■ULL TliM# RIAL ESTATE MLf man. Phon* tor appt. OR 44X Ray O'Nall Raattor mo Ponllac Ld. Rd.
OR 4-2222
OA5 station^attendaht. al» ■an‘t"Gmgik' Sli'l ^oKtoatoni
O^itAL KITCHEN AN6 ClkAli up help, young or oMar gtntto-man. tvaning work. Fled Flpir Rastwranl, Szs. HIgMand Rd. Ft
“GSHTipr
parson tatiwatn 3 and 5 p.m. at
HELPERS-1|/ELDER$
¥9<»tton% and MMayt' Paid haaltti and lift Iniuranct
Paragon Bridga & StMl Co.
44000 Grand RIver-NoVl HtLF WaMtEO, full OR FAkT-for window ctoantoa, txparl-Of will iroln. FE 3*155.
HUSKY BOY TO WOEK ON Sd*AF truck, 2540 Frankaen, Brooklyn sub., Rechoator, Mkh. 1-052-1*1 L_
inspector
Opening tor man to do bench Inspection al macMiitd ports. Musi htvt bosk prtcislon Instrumonts and road Wuaprinis wall. Awly John Boon Division, 13S5 5. Ctur, Lsnsing, MIchlgon. Equal (3pportu-nlly Ennployor.
JANITOR ROOM AN6 BOARD AND
---- I^P'T	~	'*
local auto supply has open-
Ing lor a routo tgldsman ond do-lIvoiY, slajdy utorti, good pay. Rsply to Fontlac Proa tax 57.
Machint and Fixture
OEIIGNER5
OBTAILER5
CHECKERS
High ratos, ovartim* and hanaltN, can Mr. Taytor al Asiaeiatad Da-slgnars, 1510 5. WoodsMrd nMr It^MIM. Ml 4G*2S days, Oi-tN*
~ MACHINE OPERATORS
Openings for < or young moi hay# oifltudo
WultlpM dr isk tooli tn Dlvlslo
I rtguira lion, (305
Machine Shop
TOOL LATHE HAND MILL OPERATOR HONE OPERATOR INSPECTORS
OVERTIME, PRINOBI. DAYS

MEN (2)
cor, ayoragt 1135-1171 par Batibllthad routo, rapool ntr aarvlta, *t-yr.-old com-
rrS lGkX^ik A_oW
r^^fKlSSrAJB
MlN (3)
— - - ■
t'srs:.

WEb WeUdUMi
WANTED EOR lN|TALUtl&5l 50201*1.	________ -
NEED PART-TIME WORK?
SUES
If you hove a nice personality, neat q^ar-once, we will from you for part-time i a I # i work.
STOCKMEN
Day and tvaning schtdultt
Apply personnel deport-ment between 9:30 a.m. and 9i00 p.m. daily.
Montgomery ' Warci
PONTIAC MALL
______eaml-rotlra
OPENING NOW A\.__
eaxraarajTLs
ssj.'isJraiirsaffB:
- lac. FE X1I55.
-n Grisham, Ml 4-1*20.
PART-TIME
PART TIME
Deoulndro, naar I* Mil*.
Pizza h8lp8H, MUtt II 11 8«!„,,
;, Tbtoek* W. af van-
PURCHASINli
DEPARTMENT
toward purchaiing or mortal managamont or ti dogroo tn oi»-glndorlng orlentad toward mtchanb cal or matallurgkal. Will cansMdr-man with 5 ytars axparlanct M . purchasing or matorlal managa-. mant fMW wHh at Matt 2 VMrs a* buytr, or tpoclolind Iratolnii to foundry operation or uMIng ^W-Ing. Apply John Boon Dhrlthm. I3A5 ■	Mkhlgon. An „
Employar. 3
RECEIVING CLERK
SSS2S*in’'Blnnlnoh*m dIRidrS
ply to Pontiac Freti Bex 5X ; RETIREE WH6 wishes TO	-
Rel^red
Executive
Full or Port-Hm*

:i*^r:58ii
RETRAIN NOW
I can hdip you to ratrahv In a ^ trada offtrina eppertunity af SfS 5200, 5300 «AIM frtlnlng. Far to- , „ farvlaw call FE 5-5115.
ROOFERS, SHINOLBkS. gKEIAl-tnead only, by ih* aguara, top p*yA52-145S.
SALESMEN
lor talatpaopM. a tor mptufd n MS and ittovitM
aty at marchandM*. CdtnmIttMn plan and
oddd***r«r
'SRfTr •
Salesmen
We have well-poying permanent oositions for experienced salesmen in . the following depart-
SHOE'
TV-STEREO
FURNITURE
TIRES AND ACCESSORIES VACUUMS AND SEWING MACHINES
Apply personnel depart-ment between 9i30 a.m. and 9:00 p.m. daily.
Montgomery
Warci

or call 557-5205 oST 1541 or I&52. I
.............-COMPLY
THE PONTIAC PUESS, FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 12, 1965
IMp	tllripWawmillUilt
D-7
STUDENTS
17.wM war Mrn aictr. ^ „ ,1 ».m.
WOOL aUSSER ROR DRY CLRAN-
-1 piMt. Lockii—-----—
CwnpbPM Rd,___________
7
SUPERVISOR
grtWKP InjMniM and ptacan year chlWrm lor Chrlifmai? AM imoortart. Callaot bKk- yo«.ha»a to do It tall 45 bottlat of
Mich. &MOl Oi--------- —
il OpporhiaTty Empleyor.
SEARS
Roebuck C3nd Co.
Now hiring for Christmos looson. Port-tinw jobs ovoil-obla for:
. . . SALES . . . STOCK . . . SERVICE STATION
Port-tim* omploymont may lood to full-time coreer in retail field. Discount privilege immediotely available to part-time employes.
APPLY PERSONNEL DEPT.
ALTERAtlON UDY, kXPERl-tncod. PwlMIma'or B>rt4lin« ak.
ADMINISTRATOR
Por now modam nuning homo i Florida oaN coatl. top talar EM S4I21.
AMBltlOUS ' WlAMAN - W 11 A good car to raorotant an old r Dthad roal attato company li lord and Orion. Prafer ona
TIME-STUDY ENGINEER
Opportwilly tor young man i oolloM training or aqulvolont . -----------
ssa&.-Si'isa'w--!?' E»«n.asr,
tion. Commorca araa. 3575 S. Com-marca Rd. EM 3-3071. fRUCK DRIVER TANDEM DUMP
torvlco wrlanoo d
WANTkO: 3 WELDlNO tl lor automatic wiro toad _____________
-iRI, EXPERIENCED, MUST
paot Navy tatt, —' ----- ----
Engtaaorlng, li Or., Pontiac.
West bloompield township.
will accapi appllcationt until Nov. 12, tar full tima rogular llraman. Appllcanti mutt bo balwcan 21-30 yoart of ago, normal wolgT halght and mutt hava high
Help Wmted PeiNb 7 Help Wrnted Nmele
50 FREE BICYCLES
Ilia and 45 cant ol pappar li ■ Irlondt and ralativi^ Cal
ply oWnun't,
mo'or Mrt-tin 51 N. Sogliwn
^ISTRATOR
I ri^t woman. Strictly commi nvn work but oxcollant ooming
L. H. BROWN, Realtor
AMBITIOUS WOMAN
If you hava baan activt in club and church work or hava a good aducatlon and plaatlng partonallly, and II you hava a raatonabia amount ol tIma avallabla lor part-llma or lull lima amploymani — than parhapt you could qualify lor a local aatlgnmant with a highly reputabla National Organization and laadar In lit Hold. Thlt It not a travallno nor utual can-vattTng potitlon. Raf. raquirad.-For local Intorvlaw phono Mr. Galnat, 447-4473, Sal., Nov. U ba*--
MOTHER'S HELPER, LIVE IN, 4I*A74
APPLICATIONS FOR BOX OFFICE and concattlon tiand caihlart ara
now balng accaptad i.......
acia Mila Drlva-ln Thai ^m. 21»3 S. Talagraph._____
attention RN's and LPN'i
....Educational banaiMt.
Salarlat compatniva with araa hot-pitalt. Call 3M-7154, Ext. 3.____
37S2. Attar 4 p.m.
ABY SITTER, CAN LIVE
mutt Ilka chlldron, OL 1-7374. _
BABY SITTER, OVER 21. OWN
trantportatlon. 474-4042. i______
ABY SITTER FOR NIGHTS, CARE
chlldran ...... ___ ...
_______ _.l MA 5-1474.
BABY SITTER TO LIVE IN, OR
BABY SITTER JO LOVE IN. CALL DAYS, REFER
babysittIr
---------FOR 3 GIRLS, DAYS,
n trantportatlon. 130 waak. OR
BAR MAID AND WAITRESSES. SporWama*Loungo* ifSklSy*'
CHILDREN'S SHOE SALES
CHRISTMAS
SALES
We ore hiring and training our Christmas sales help now. If you can work days or evenings, hove 0 pleasant personality and business - like oppeoronce, we can train you for our busy Christmas season. Immediote discount privilegik. Apply personnel deportment between 9:30 o.m. and 9:00 p.m. doily.
Montgomery
Ward
PONTIAC MALL
CLERK TYPIST FOR THE VIOLA-llont bureau of lha City of "
ham. Municipal Court. A,.,_
mutt hava axpOrianca dealing with the public and patt a
tatt at 40 WPM. Hourt I a.
5 p.m. Mon. through FrI. Salary 5317 par month, plut axtantiva fringe banelllt. Apply balwaan 7 a.m. and noon, parionnal ofllco. Municipal Building. 151 Martin SI.,
FULL TIME FOUNTAIN HELP,
------- Drug, Rochattar, OL
4-7241.
GENERAL DRUG CLERK. PART-
HAROWORKER WITH S^NSE OF -nor and raft., help a tired mofh-wlth big houte, big family, 2 rt a wan. Woodward-Long Laka
HOUSEKEEPER TO CARE FOR and 2 chlldran, write Mr. r, 10 Orchard Lane, Bloom-Hlllr or call Ml 4-1355 attar 4.
HOUSEKEEPER TO LIVE IN.
" y waak, good talary, pvt. room, Ih and TV. Mutt Ilka country Ing and children. 332-10M or
4 5-2237.__________________
HOUSEWIVES NEAR FISHER Body for itand ^ part-tima waitress work, FE 4-5740.
INSURANCE OFFICE HAS IMME-
Apply In 2740 Wood
parton, Crockar Candy,
CURB GIRL TO WORK DAYS. 11
Rd. FE 5-4741.______________
DEPENDABLE HOUSEKEEPER for 3 aduitt and 1 school ago child.
Live In. Good _________ ______ ,____
wages. Mutt hava ralerancat. Colt ---- •— ' — 10 only. Ml 4-2113.
DEPENDABLE . .........
housework, 5 days. Mutt
dran. 752-3547.	____________
DEPENDABLE WOMAN FOR DAY
trant., Utica
DINING ROOM WAITRESSES
BAKER
Ted't of Bloomliald HIlit I Immadlata opening lor a lu baker. Experience prelarra wages, paid vacation. Ins benafitt, apply In parton.
WOODWARD A^MUARE LAKE jP^S -Sj-^ fL.SiSgP
s?h.TLai??d%ia“c:'*'
- Ilclant, good hourt. UL 2-2010. nsns—afh ~rnBiadTir—ri Rpx A U T Y OPERATOR, EXPERT i®luVl®or part ti^\utt' %wtry --------- - .	I Onigg, aggg	Laka Rd.
time, paid vacations, insurance.
I H?!?enfielo's restaurant 725 S. Hunter—Birmingham
AhwiliwM Will. Now
JOHN TAYLOR, RlOOR LAYING. Sanding and flnlehlng. 25 yaarr
axparlanca. 3I2-4075._______________
LEONARD'S FLOOR SERVICE Old lloort mada Ilka new " axparlanca. 427-3775.

Iieweirt Watorproofliig
FwiMce Re|Mir
OIL AND GAS SERVICE. FURNACE REPAIR. MOREY'S-452-1510.____

*"».ra	AND TOP
FIREPLACE WO
Ing, lodding, anc_
MERION BLUE SOD.
1-STOP BUILDING MRVICE, FREE planning, tiato Ifcantad, mambar Ttonttoc^^Chambar al Cammarca.
BtAR GARAGOS. 20'x30', 5175. WR build any tin. Cam^ s—'■
Krofe
Praa Etllmatoa _____OR 4-1
ADDITIONS, ATYICS ANb RtCI._ atlon raoma- Call Tom at OL 1-3774
Interior pInish, KiTciiBNS. ------------------------------
Cement and Block Work
««!»*"”*»%*» HI.
brownies hardware
FLOOR MNOERS - POLISHERS WALL PAPER STEAMERS RUG CLEANER - POWER SAWS B Jotlyn Opan Sun. FE 4-0105
WALLPAPER STEAMER
I. G. SNtOER, FLOOR LAYInG	V£“|
sanding and tinithing. FE 5^^ 434 Orchard^An
NEW ROOFS, REPAIRS, INSURED and guaranteed. Call Tom, 4T
ROBERT PRICE ROOFII4G, BUILT-UP roofing. Free Eit. PE 4-1024. ROOFING
guaranteed, 20 years axparltfin. D. Cushing, FE 5-4401, day or
TALBOn LUMBER
I, REPAIR SEaITo'OTTiTG, COMPLETELY
.---^	-I,
Tree Trimming Service
^Mevieg eiHi Sterege
SMITH MOVING CO. __________FE 4-4044________
j^iibiitii^^
A PAIN tarlor
A-l PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING
___PR 4-1344
EXTElTbR
orating. Al work. OR j-wn. PAINTING, PAPERING^ CAULK -	‘1. Tom. 343-4440 or
EXPERIENCED PANTRY AND —— -man, apply ‘ p.m. OM M
Hejp Wanted 1
EXPERIENCED SILK FINISHER,
KTiSoi
kxPERi^NCED Waitress, is or
over, OL ^375^.__________
EXPERIENCED NURSES AIDES-’ - “.-3 p.m. alto 11 p.m.-7 a.m.
Fox Dry Claanaft.___________
WOMAN FOR general HOUSE-work, Mon. Wad., FrI., 530. Mutt hava own trantp. and rat. 4244224
FOUNTAIN HELP WANTED, Excellent hours. Apply In parton. Sav-On Drugs, 4510 Talegraph, cor.
I TO CARE FOR
____llvo In. FE 2-0707._____
WOMAN TO CARE FOR CHILD IN
WOMAN OVER 30, FOR GENERAL
WOMAN FOR KITCHEN. APPLY
Big Boy Drhra In, 2470 -------
Hwy., balwaan 2-5 p.m.____
n. 424-7157.
____________ lor efficient . .
with recant bookkaaplng axparlanca 5-day weak. Commensurate talary and fringe benafitt for •*“ —' who wants a permanent
>. Call
t mition FE^2-7224
LADIES
with cotmatic axperl-- .. ----
age salat force, average 5125 par weak. Alto 10 ladles w—
535 and up average per spare tima. AMly 5-10
LADY TO LIVE IN AND DO COOK-
LOUISE WAITRESSES. NO E14PE-
A4ANICURIST,
_______ FULL OR PART
...i. Guarantee 512 par day plus
commission. Materlalt furnitliad.
Bloomliald araa. Ml 4-5344.____
MATURE WOA4AN, AGE 23 AND
Pontiac Pratt Box 13.
MOTHERS' HELPER, LIVE IN.
PERMANEN able f Apply
Mlliall-—___________
PRESSERS FOR DRY CLEANER, ■ ' work, 31 Glanwood. aFE
7 Work Wonted Male
WOMEN
ARE YOU AVAILABLE TO SELL DURING THE
CHRISTMAS
SEASON?
APPLY IN PERSON EMPLOYMENT OFFICE
Hudson's
PONTIAC MALL
cleaning and wall
marking dapartmantt. ttoady work, good pai. .... ply In parton. Fox Dry Claanart, 717 W.-------
COMPLETE DRY WALL SERVICE, thaatrocking, finishing, texturing, platter repair. Free atllmalH, (4 years exp. 332-1237,
Wented M. or f. I
ACCOUNTANTS TO PREPARE IN--- Idual ■---*— ——	-
k;!,
AUNT FANNY'S
Bus boys and bus girls, 15 ovar, part lime. Apply In par 2244 N. Woodward, Royal Oak.
AUNT FANNY'S
Cook, cooks helper, lull or ..... time. Apply In parton. 244 N. Woodward. Royal Oak.______
AUTOMOTIVE ACCOUNTANT FOR
BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED
57.00, 510.00 - I*
11
Oarpenter work.
330-2175________
iXPERIENCED JANITOR AVAIL-
HAVE buyers for any KIND Of property lor quick salt. Call: Paul Jones Realty - FE *<550. HAVE BUYERS WAITING IN LINE FOR all kinds of PROPERTY. BET------------------------
Beiidiwg Servke-SeppiiBi 13
rvica. FE 55124 7
J5
METAL, CLEANING,
..........-w and used lurne--"
Immediate Installation. 334^1445.
ELECTRIC MOTOR SERVICE RE-ga^liW^and rewinding 215 E. Pika.
Drtitmeidiig I Teilerieg 17
ORESSA4AKING. TAILORING AND alterations. Mrs. Bodali FE 4-7053.
laundry Service	20
WANTED LAUNDRYS, SPIC AND '— ■ - indry, 4 days a we ' a.m.-4 pjn. 4474 Dl lyton Plaint. OR 50451.
FOR SALE TOR, , 402-0435.
1ST PRICES AND SUDDEN
------------- REAL-
ININGS
WST,
51MIOO to 515,000. Alto 5 badroom north up to 513,000. cuv tomart waiting. Call Gllbart Long. FE 2-4237.
Ray O'Neil Realtor 3520 Pontiac Lake Road OR 4-2222 or FE 2-4237 ___________
NOTICE!
you hava acreage parcels for ila — small or	—
a ‘luyari, call
RenMiMm^	42
NICE ROOM ON LAKE OAKLAND
ROOM AND OR BOARD. I35W OAK.
Rent Office Space_______
AVAILABLE SOON FOR LEASE
we have) New 'op quality office i
NEED art A Wv
QUICK CASH
FOR YOU HOME OR EQUITY WE BUY, SELL, TRADE AND LIST CLARK REAL ESTATE 3101 W. HURON. FE 3-7555
______ RES. FE 4-4513
TO LIST, SELL, TRaOE OR BUY Call Clark Real Estate-FE 3-7800 .... .... pay_cash_lor_good^"
Office units have hot water panel heat, and are fully air conditioned. Up to 6M square feat of space
end Is wall lighted « I lighling. Up to 3, !t of space available.
VACANT LOTS’ and HOUSES WANTED
It Pontiac Ol Waterford. Immadl-
--------- yai.:---------------
5. Mr. Davis.
Want Listings
Will Travel - Taylor
OR 4-0306
Moving and Trucking	22, mw*
WANTED LISTINGS Dorothy Snyder Lavender totr___________335-7534
We Need Listings
CLARENCE RIDGEWAY
m UPe
ttrvlcfs
sentatives or dlstril>utors.
CALL DETROIT VA 2-9466
7FFICE 14x14' AND 2 SMALL OF tices upper, 155. H. J. VanWelt-4540 Dixie Hwy.-OR 2-1355. IFFICESPAr near Tel Hi
Rent Busintss Property 47-A 375 AUBURN AVE.
2 attractlva stores, tree park reasonable.
BREWER REAL ESTATE
WM. B. Milchell, Sales Mgr.
74 E. Huron,	FE 4-5151
COMPARE WITH OTHERS BRICK RANCH
Occupancy ebon. Brand new split rock exterior. 3 badroonlt, full basomont, 2-car aHachad garage, 75' wMa tot, city water, paved streets. See any day 1 le 7 p.m. at 1575 Craacant Laka Road, '/S mile north of M57. E-Z TERMS ON FHA OR TRADE YOUR HOME.
C. SCHUETT
Ml 4-a50e or FE 3-7057
DAILY
$50 DOWN
Movtf veteran Into this 3'badroom masonry constructed norm, lake privlleoes on beautiful Sugden Lake, large Me excellent location. Only 110,CALL TODAY. .
Elizabeth Lake Estates
I'l-story with 3 bedrooms, lull ceramic tile bath, large lamlly kitchen end small den. 1'/>-car gerege, fenced yard, short walking distance to good beoch. Full price 113,7m.
Sislock & Kent, Inc.
130t Pontlpc State Bank Bldg. 3a-9Jf4	33i»»»5
Gl $100 TO m6vE in tif PER mo. 3-bedroom ranch, basement. 357 Jordon, cor. <
Call VE 7-4207 w, land Const. Co.
AA MOVING
Cartiul. onclosad vans, low ratta, frta mtimeta 2-3777 or 425-3S15.
BOB'S VAN SERVICE
MOVING AND STORAGE FREE ESTIMATES ROBERT TOMPKINS EM 3-1
tor small contractor, 550. FE 22W. BUILDING, SUITABLE FOR
■vlacluring .....— ----- — -
______	FE 5-54ti
j SniB Noumi
n N. Opdyko	332 0154'------------------------------
l-BEOROOM, NEWLY OECORAT-i cd, gas heal, 15200, terms. 1431 Stanley, Ponllac. OR 3-2427.	'
HAROLD R. FRANKS, Reaffy
LARGE.FAMILY HOME Commerce Twp., toll price. 55,5M. SI.OM down, 575 a month lend contract, 3 bedrooms, living room, dining room, expansion attk, needs rarehouse, ges decorating.
Everett Cummings, Realtor
--	2553 UNION LAKE ROAD
49 EM 3-32M_______ 343-7151
ApnrtniEnti, Farnidied 37 '
KEN'S KARTAGE Atovo I to 7 Items Ken Tompfclnt, 452-1331.
DETROIT BLOOD SERVICE Pontiac	FE 47747
1342 WMa Track Dr., W. on. thru FrL 7 ajn.-4 p.m.
_______Wod. 1 p.m.-7 p.m.__
CHEFS HELPER PART OR FUL TIME DAYS, MUST BE EXPEI. lENCED, CHATEAU-GAY 15
MILE AND STEVENSON ........
457-0141.______________
DISHWASHER
For night ahitt. Must be II. Apply In parson only. Bluo Star Drivt In. Opdyke
BOYS AND GIRLS
ad al once to handio Chrlet-...„ wreath ordare. FE 5^005. DISHWASHER, FULL TIME, 6AYS,
Painting t Decemting 23
INTERIOR, EXTERIOR REDECO-rallog. FE 5-375? Aik tor Wayne.
PAINTING AND PJVPERING. YOU ara next, Orvel Gldcumb, 4734)474. PAINTING, PAPERING ________Tuppar. OR 1-7041_______
2-BEDROOM HOME, ALUMINUM
2 ROOMS, PRIVATE ENTRANCE,!_____________________________________
gas heat, elderly or middla-agod 2-STORY, 3-BEOROOM, BASEMENT, lady preferred, cios* to hu*. ie:	ti9 caa *941 unu-rM** riMrwweiMk
Garner. PE 4-$460.
HIITER ■
OVERLOOKING ELIZABETH LAKE -large 2-bedroom home, 22-tl. living room with tiroploce ecrou one end, covered polio, 1'/>-cer go-rege, nice shady lol. All lor 512,-5M, terms.
2 ROOMS AND BATH, PRIVATE entrance, north end, (lor I adult woman only). Call aller 4 p.— ------
2 ROOMS AND BATH, CHILD WEL-come, 525 per week with 575 deposit. Inquire it 271 Baldwin Ave„
3 ROOMS, S25 A WEEK, 515 OEP. COUPLE. 471-5512.
3 ROOMS AND BATH, DOWNTOWN
Ponllac, 525 e ---------------
MY 3-2777.
ih basement, lot ISO's
3 ROOMS AND BATH, PRIVATE entrance, utilities quiet coupli children. 1144 W. Huron.
2-BFDROOM HOME
Nice shaded lot, lOO'xlU', 1-car garage, lake privileges, good beech. 57,55u with 10 r" —‘ down.
3 BEDROOMS Possible 3 with I
ISO' on blacktop. ______
14,000 with 51,500 down.
FIATTLEY REALTY
ao Commerce______ _____343-5701
3-FAMILY. ORION. ONLY 517,
Ally, 473-7701._____________
3-BEDR06M COLONIAL BRICK, IN Seminole Hills, fireplace, basement - 2-cir garage. FE 45707. __
-------AS EM ENT, GA-
Orion. OA 0-2013. A.
Sanders, rep. H. Wilson.____
4BEDROOM COLONIAL, AT-garage, I'h baths, bsse-______ 2 yesrs old. Only 514,770.
_________075 doposit, OR 40121.	Northern High district - 3 bed
'COMPLETELY FURNISHED, ro'ms - I'/h story — separeti
i YOU'RE GOING TO CALIFOR-
ROOMS. TV, ALL UTILITIES,
„u...	. -o-	.—.	--un,
107-4035.
List your home with members ol MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE Over 150 salespeople at your service
finished in knotty pIno, at-garage, 3 shady lots with lake privileges. Can be soM on land contract. CALL B. C. HIITER, REALTOR, 3772 Ellz. Lake Rd. FE 20177, alter 7 p.m. 402-4453.
HAYDEN 3 Bedroom Tri-Level
Gas Heat m Baths Ovar 1e350 m
- full t
THE ECON-O-TRI
DEER PROCESSING. MOOSE AND
Registered
Nurse
ST’DIxtoH^': OR"“S5!i » bH«^CMI^1^
rapped endl HILLBILLY BOY LIKE TO RENT I S rooms on Pike SI. to some GM employes with 1 or 3 small children. Coal heat. S25 a week. -- FE 5-1541.
wall-to-wall carpeting — 2-car
garage - excellent nelghobrhood 3 Bedroomi	loi mciuoeo
- excellent condition - excellent	at • 11 Qftn
price - 1)4,300 - 10 per cent	' »II,UUU
down - call lor details.	Family Room Altochad Gorago
LADY OR MAN FOR BOWLING, counter work, txporMneo not noc-eiatry. WrIM giving complato quoF HIcatloni, salary axpactod and ae.
Michigan. Excellent fringe banal and working conditlont. Aogly:
OAKLAND COUNTY PERSONNEL OFFICE
1200 N. Talagrapn Rd., Pontldc !6SPOl4SIBLE PERSON NEEDL. •o live In or baby sit 5 days a waak, 4 children. Woodward-Square Laka Rd. area, 332-7515.
Medical Technologist |a-i care ev day or week.
REQUIRED IMMEDIATELY FOR, LIcanaad ham*. FE 0-1041.
clinical laboratorlat. AJX.P.,----------------------------
A.M.T.,	‘
'•»rnot . -.-
) salary SS47 per r
c, Michigan. 320-7271.
RN'S AND LPN'S
new, modern nursing home
. lorlda'x M««». *----------■—
EM 3-4121.
PIANO PLAYER, PONTIAC LAKEjj^-
A R T TIMi,; or''app“ancei'%nd'what”hav*' , ..Kama t« rw wa'II auction If or buy It.
m- .11. »• B & B Auction
SALESWOMEN - SOME EXPERI —	■ " llmo and oart time.
ChlMran't
Canier.
Sal^Htlp^M^Bnial^M
APPLICATIONS NOW BEING TAK-— for Christmas help. Expert-
S. Talagraph, Miracle Mila Shop-
SECRETARY
Opening tor oxparloncad tacrata-rles. Must be gotid typist. Shorthand and dictaphona nacaatary. Apply John Bean DIvltlon, 1305 S. Cedar, Lansing, Mich. An r
Opportunity Emptoyar._______
secretary to DIRECTOR _ Public Ralalkma, 000-0104 typing assanllal, shorthand prafarrad, starting Dec •
Press Bex 4.
BIG SALES $$$
__ OAKLAND COUNTY AREAS Your desire and activity with Ih right training program conduct* by a man with 50 years ax parlance Is lha aneww to you financial success. Be lha rapr4 lantativa In. your aroi. Phorta Mr. Napp at Ml 44“» pointmant at your lx
SHORT ORDER COOK, EXPERI ---- -------S^nyt*. Apply
Lakes Tree Co., Trimming
Treckini
GENERAL TRUCKING AND EXCA-vatlng, tog soil, llll dirt, sand and graval, backhoa work, soml truck tor hire. No lust, no mutt, lust call ui. OA 0-II47.
Spiegel's
Growing With Pontiac
Due to growth i Splogolt will be iwo alog salat office In In Ponllac. If you
HAULING AND RUBBISH. NAME your prko. Any llmo. FE 0-0071.
LIGHT AND HEAVV TBUCKINO, rubblah, fill dirt, groding and gray-al and front and loading. FE 24403.
LIOHT HAULING. OARAOBI AND
.. ,—	_____ In growth
potantlal Ihia couM bo the fob for you. For Inlorvlew contact
Spiegel's
PIANO TUNINO AND RePAIRINO Trucks to Rent
*ir Schmidt _ __ PE 2-S217 .. —	*
WliOANblpiASrfUNlNO------f«u??s
10 yaart In Pontiac. >1 2-4724	AND EOOiPMi ..
Dump Trucks - taml TralMra
Pontiac Farm and
A-i PLASTERING, EXPERT PATCH! Industriol Troctor Co.
WAITRESSES
Dining Room and Curb
Full or part-time. Paid vacatloni. HospItllliaNon. Lunch hour and food allowanco. Apply In parton.
BIG BOY RESTAURANT
Ttlograph B Huron or
St Jotoi Ev 07. l-day strYlca. oft-SlM.
i LUXURY l-BEDROOM FURNISHED -
_ e Hwy.
Alter 5, FE 4-0741, OR 3-2371
Will dupllcoto Ol OFFICE OPEN 7 to 5:30
aTwrtment on boautllul private lakd 5-ROOM HOUSE, GOOD FOR CABIN	, . uAvrxcsi
I| - Watt of Pontiac, 5li0. 4442510* on two left, 53,000. Call 473-3047|	J. C. HAYDEN, RSOltOr
Wanted CMMrentelenrdM
15.
ApnrtinEnIs, Pnferniihij 3S
BEDROOM, UTILITIES FUR Ithed, InquIr* 2315 Dixie Hwy. AVON APARTMENTS, MODERN 3-room and bath on bue line chlldron. Phono FE 2-1004.
Block Co. 20 E. I
EXECUTIVE SALESMAN PLASTICS
We are looking lor an tggratsi young oxocutivi salotman to r< reseS us In Ih* Gr**tor Ponfl tradtito area. Thlt It • pr^ oswirtonlty with a Natlon*l r
_____ by a national rnr arouiv
advertlaing program. Bate salary commission end bonus progrer coupled wHh Inlensiva training at turet succatt for lha proven appll cant. For confidtnflol Inlarvlov
children, 425-2001.
WILL BUY ANTIQUES, FURNI-lurt and tatatM. BluaWrd Auction. OR 3-5103. ME 7-1171.
______	BEDROOM, STOVE,
retrigarator, air conditioning, balcony ——
WANTED
Upright, grand, spinet and coi_
pianos. If you havt a piano to
GRINNELL'S
FP 3-7168___
Wanted MMcelleneeei 30 Heasei, Ferniibed
NEW DELUXE 1 AND 2-BEDROOM liao-IISOe stover refrloeratore heatr carp^lrio Includady air cond. adulttp $51-024 after 5.
CARPETED l-BEDROOM ■' — month, no chlldran
ASK OUR "SELLERS" WE'VE SOLD THEIRSI It's our "privoto tlnance plan" with low, low down paymani That's sold nearly all our llslingt. Want yours sold? Call
W. H. BASS
"Specializing In Trades" REALTOR FE 3-7210 BUILDE

COPPER, ISc; BRASS RADIATORS,
DESKS, FILES, OFFICE FURNI-hire, portabto and oflica typewrit-art, adding machinat, drafting tablet, etc. Forbae. OR 34747. Wa
LAND CONtRACfsr'EQUltlES
WRIGHT REALTY
332 Oakland Ave.
FE 2-7141 Evas, altar 7:30 FE 5-157I
BIRMINGHAM
SNOW BLADE FOR PICKUP OR '	, alio old van trillars hr ‘
FE 5-7077 or FE 40742.
UNTIL JULY, 4ROOM, GAS HEAT,
...................
WANTED SLyB^POOL TABLE.
Wented te Rent 33
3-BEDROOM HOUSE, 4 SCHOOL-agod chlldran, iwwdwi hv ■“ ret., m-Ciia.
I WANT A PARTICULAR MAN ' OR WOMAN
To start training as soon as sibla In a field that Is ona ol fastasl growing, highest pold, tige' businostoi In lha Ui Stalls. I want somaona to
APARTMENT OR SMALL HOUSE In Watertord-Orayton aria tor youm couple with 1-yaar-oW child. 473-7717 attar 5 p.m.
COUPLE DESIRES FOUR-BED------- ^----- .. ^
nd paro-ut el^lon
Gas hnted swimming pool, sprinkling syttom. Quick Sion. 547,500.
WEIR, MANUEL,
SNYDER & RANKE
270 5. Woodward, Birmingham ....~0 PHONES 5^2323
home, 2 baths, partially furnished. Couple preferred. Exc. rate, rr quirad, S150 par month plue « .....	.....'1, FE 1-1427, altar
PIjma Mr. RaynaWs. Ml	HO^t. GAS HEAtrON
” ’’	Dixie, near 1-75. Rasponslbla adults.
S7S par month. First and latl montha' In advnea, OR 3-7144. WEST BLOOMFIELD TWP., 3-BEO-
I Northaait Detroit suburbs or
FHA Repossession
1391 ATHLONE, OXFORD
RED BARN SUB - 3-badroom r______
" llh basement and bullt-lns, newly icondlllonad. S13,350, $450 down
NORTH POINT REALTY
I $. Miln	Clirkilon
... S-2341_________MA 5-1503
fDr SALE:
north of AA57. upon I to f dally. You need 5450 down lor a new 3-badroom
brick and stone rar*" ------------
sized 3-car garaga, selectloh of coloi Solid driva, 75' wl
HURON GARDENS
Oxwiar leaving town, will sail home, turnitura and all, neat llttla 5-iieom bungalow, carpeted living room, and dining room, both, gas heat. Only 54,450 caah-complata.
J. J. JOIL, Realty
FE ^341l	4t2-<BI2 Ml 44573
- vacant and raady to move Ir
sment. Waterford HIM, 510,000.
OPEN
SAT.-SUN. 2-5 AL PAULY, Realtor
4514 Dixie. Rear
OR 3-3000______ EVES. OR 3-7273
IN CAPAC NORTH ON MS3, BEAU-
"“hUMPHRIES REALTY
Oxtord, Mkh.__________OA 0-2417
LAKE-FRONT 2-BEDROOM HOME.
By Owner - W. Iroquois ImmAdiotE Occupancy
Clote te Khoolt and ihopplng-
lull dining r - 2 baths
aom with flra^aci 1 — large klfchar - newly dacoritad-ht, 40x111 - staaplng ty large cloaett - 3-~ Raaaonably price' I. FE 1-7371, altar
to»4404 10751 Highland Rd. (M571
HELP—HELP-HELP!
Business It exceptionally good. Wo need houias. Incomes, commercial
-----"■	vacant properly to
---- ou know to
Immediute Possession
LAST CHANCE AAA Homes Pleasant Lake Shores
DNerlng for Immodlati occupancy: 3 modal homai. Canal-front his end occese to 1.100' of landy baoch. This Is Ih* tatt offering, raising price of houses, 51,000 Nov. 15. Ahodel open from 3-4 p.m. From 521,000 - 124,000. 4024410.
McCullough realty^
NEED WE SAY MORE Three bedroom brick ranch, l'>y. car attached garage, with full bos4 menl. Situated on beautifully tand-icapml 75 by 150 tool lot. In Watkins Him. Call tor details and lal us show you the extras. Hera today but may bt gatw tomorrow. Will considtr 3-bodroom homo In ony location as trade In.
TED MCCULLOUGH, JR.
Broker
___________FE 5-7550________
Mixed
Neighborhood
MODEL OPEN AFT*pnOON5 M AND SUNDAY
WESTOWN realty
543 Btoomttold Near LuNitr 'E 0-1742 attarnooni. LI S4477 Evaa. FIRST IN VALUE
LEWIS REALTY - FE 0-M44.
NEW ELIZABETH LAKE FRONT' Baiutllul klng-tlMd 7-room. IVt btiht, 1-car Baraea. Nkaty land-Kiptd. Perfect beech, lubatanllal down poyment.
Elwcod Roelty 4021111 4eH4lt
Llil your homo with mtmbori of MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE > Over ISO ta--------- -......—
NO PAVMdNt THE 1ST MONTH Tern' ry model locatod el L» iiler end Btootnltoid.
belaire h7^e builders
SOS BtodtnttoM Near LuNier I 0-1741	1:21 T6 5 PM
D—8
THB PONTIAC PRESS. FKIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, IMS
NORTH OR WtST OF FONTIAC I	CMh	tvyir Nr AMroon..
tfining rmm, bntnwnt. wrwi. in
OH SO NICE
il'M MV whM V®U *M « droom ranch that has full
klfchw, I
strsr.
NIMGS OR ua.
OXFORD
rooint. 3 btdrooms. vrry good 9c*tlon, mw gu fum«c*. 2<»r •rage, walking diitance to school nd"heppina. Asking IIS,000, •rms available. Call now.
AL MARTIN, Realtor
504 $. Broadway, Orion 4aM233 I ROOMS, 2<AR
QUICK SALE garage, need so |6,»50 with $45 *h or $2,000 10 at $50
contract. MGIC i mortgage. Tubbs Twp. Victor Mine ♦5 E. Maple, Tr
, $$5 I
'.2,s£:
Frank
isphone 4514503.'
Shepard, Realtor
SURE YOU ARE -you need 3 bedroo room, you want
$14,900. Dr*y-
HAGSTROM REALTOR
» W. HURON _____OR 44350
List your home with members el
multiple listing service
Over 150 saldspcopN at your larvici
Vacant, 5 " Aooms with fuLil
srris't'sriuSrrififwX
VACAHT-BY OWNER
3-bedroom brk* ranch, eaaotttont. 2^^r^. E*c._eond»lon. Call
VACANT. KEEGO HARBOR S-BEO-room home, basement, gas $7500 E-Z terms. Write Bos
Osterd, Michigan.________________
WHITE LAKE - YEAR AROUND coHage. 2 bedrooms. Imme^te
s'Tr*jSo '■^un?r*7 n\TPy:
3354511.	________________
156 ALLEN UKE RD.
ELIZABETH LK.-WILLIAAAS UK. Rl Very nka S- or 44odreom homo, family rooms. ZVh baths, baaemoi
WE 5 20*5 - CITIZENS - WE 3-S333
FIRST IN VALUE
RENTING
$59 Mo.
Excluding taxas and Insuranca ONLY
$10 Deposit
WITH APPLICATION
3 BEDROOM HOME GAS HEAT
LARGE DINING AREA
WILL ACCEPT ALL APPLICATIONS FROM ANY WORKERS. WIDOWS OR DIVORCEES.
PEOPLE WITH CREDIT PROBLEMS AND RETIREES ARE OKAY WITH US.
OPEN DAILv and SAT. and sun. OR COME TO 200 KENNETT NEAR BALDWIN REAL VALUE REALTY
For Immediate Action Call FE 5-3676 626-9575
NICHOLIE
SOUTH SIDE
"--t bedrooms all on one flot decorated. Tlla bath, ell he vacant. Closing costs mo In. Payments lest than rant,
EAST SIDE
Three-bedroom brick, outomal heat, tile bath, decbratad. Nl lot, vacant. Call to seel THREE-BEDROOM
CLARK
REDUCED PRICE. Otaner moving
----	--------- — 2-car u.
tachad garage, approximately M-acre lot - Near Clarkston. Can't " " ....... ‘ Terms.
3-BEDROOM TRILEVEL - Separate
----------—y
baths — family •etaway and ga-- Price, S32,Me
WATERFORD TOWNSHIP _ 3-be
----brick ranch - full basemei
racraallon room - bullt-- also workroom — brar carpeting — 2-car garage
SCOTT LAKE PRIVILEGES
Ranch home, 22' carpeted living room, loroo kitchen, Formica top 10'xl4''j' ----------------
storms and screens, 2<ar garage, large let. lS5'x340'. Shade and frutf traos. Prkad at *•* “ Terms. CALL TOOAYI
40 ACRES
Largo farmhouse, bam __
some fruH, goad tall. CALL FOR APP0INTMO4tT
SMITH 6c WIDEMAN
MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE
RHODES
SMALL 4ROOM HOME, full I
WILLIAMS LAKE
A deluxe 3-bcdroom lake a
l2?crT'??.s'^!!Sl.y'^hl^;'’5ott^e
could be wkiNrlnd for not — much money; has large room with tirtplace. dining
sr!Tfu»jF^;.ra
$13,450. CALL FOR APPOINT-DON
GIROUX
. balance on land o
SMALL FARM. 40 acres at Bolding, 4-room home, flowing -stroam, Vi mile to town, on blacktop highway. Only U.500 cash, $0,500 terms.
NICE LARGE RESIDENTIAL LOT —"-—1 of Rochester, borders
4511 Highland l^ciad (M59) 473-7037
WEAVER
AT HOCHESTES
OVER 4 acres a
A.rmim rmttrh hanw.^Kni.,mo- Ycor
MILTON WEAVER INC., REALTOR In the Village of Rachaalcr HI W. Univertity_______________4SI414I
flowing stream, fartlla toll. Only $53,500. Terms
INDIANWOOD SHORES NO. 3. An Meat location lor your family. Mr^ vacation. Call today far da
10 ACRES an 25 Mile Rd. near Utica
A*LBERrI.*'r*H0DES. Brokir
FE 0-2304 210 W. Walton FE 54711 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE
NEW
CUSTOM
HOMES
"UNDER CONSTRUCTION"
TRADE-IN YOUR OLD HOME FOR A BRAND NEW HOME
II4.SM INCLUDING LOT -
lOHNSON
NEW LISTINS largo butinpw do AIrgart at Hatchary U., pMfOly modOm bulMIng, ]
Open House 1 to.6 RM. Sunday, Nov. 14
SMrgom houMp tuUy «lr egn-dttloAfda 3 fIrcgIdcMf famity room, locatdd on Soginow Roodp MO fMl •ff Grand Blanc axif off 1*75 tx-
"TverVone is invited
Call Mr. Mancarip callact ^13•^4^ 9537 or Mr. Barmans caltacts
Fancad laf - iia.950.
MILLER
NORTH SIDE 5-room homo In oxo condttkin. Newly decoreled. Cl 1 living room, full basomet Toom, 10' wide lot 01 19,300 on land contract.
3-BEOROOM RANCH homo In III
m, largo utility yard. Clot-utt 110,500

schools a 171
y room with firaploce woiidorluT valua. 32,-
JOHN kInZLER, Realtor
* pixit Hwy.	474-2233
Across from Fackort Store Multiple Listing Sarvico Open 04
northern^HI 'area - 5
CarpeM llvlng''*7oom'“and*
ummmo	i Jadfwmt^'FuIi
jaso^f. gat heat, large garage
•" “'v
AARON BAUGHEY, Realtor FE 2-0262
_	470 W. HURON OPEN t to e
o'Nei
TRADE
cabin"
n attractive ceWn that dm
cations on Cost on this one.
UTICA SCHOOLS
rogo, fancod yard, real nice neigh-bwhert, ni« utility room with
eXom WhViSus.%^, sii.o?v:;tr.ct':x;.
JUST WHAT YOU WANTEOI
mt yard, good Watt oMo i blKklop slroot and i IS. Pricad at SII.7S0, 10 par ^down plus claalnB coats. Why
MACEOAY LAKE FRONT
Specs enough ter a < 'Toby Grondt." Tsso t gorogot, two mastor gadn a spare. Full prica n,1 34,000 dawn wIlfgH you I
r^kSlut
or tradi*
“Of course you think Dad is a good provider! You get first crack at himl”
Val-U-Way
Government Rtprasentotivt BUDGET SPECIAL
3-^r^ home clom to adwolt, blown-ln Insulation for aooy heat-Ing with got furnaco, spacious carpeted llvinp room with dining ell. Con bo your homo for 04SO down. OTu^jtonfh tncludlng foxoTand
VIEW OF THE LAKE
This homo foafurot a mpii living room with brick fira complofaly IntuMfod, hot
hopt, tiled both, on l-pcra M,_
Clarkston. Full prico, tlANE with tonra to m Hw budsot.
QUICK POSSESSION
This 34sdratm homo foatun baoomant, gas hoot, bultf-ln rango and oven, tamlly-olia kitclion. fully Insulotod, on largo fancod lof. B- -out the owner's aquity and y con move In quickly. No cMil costs or crodit reports. Full prk SI2.4S0 with 32.4M town, OtS ,
Salt Hautaa_________49
STOUTS
Best Buys To(day
Corner Lot
with lots of baaufitui ihido traos Included wMi ^thls nsat ^bl-
oSr*dl^'*iwrL® k'^nSitn
utility aras, gat heat, ki__
porch, IVb-cpr garage, convonlont to Gonaral Motors Truck. Only II3,5M with aasy forms.
Waterford High
groM Ificomtp tgpgraft intranca baaamant ell fercad air haat, ii cludai ell furnIsMrtgs. Pricad i only 110,950 wlltt tarmi.
Mixed Area
Over I1.500.0M Mhf t<
List Hirt-AII Cash for Your Home I
R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR	FE 4-3531
M Oeklend Ave........p3*2eaee
TIMES
UKE PRIVILEGES
On Wllllimt Lako. Cufa,
bungotow sot smeno to*.........
trsoi, on tpoclouo lei, tOaturlng 1 bodrsemt, 3cer gsraga. Only 33,730; ZERO down to Cl, only dosing coils. Nice starter r —
LAKE FRONT
On fobuloui Twin Lakas. 1______
ranch with txpooad baaotyiant Un-WiOd oft to parfoctlon. 3 largo
SCHRAM
Now Doing Custom Building On Availoble Building Sitisl Your Plans or Ours
cor golf living
Trodo-ln accepisd. (
Altr commercial frontsgt le Htvy.. near Rsbort Hal Ing store.
I AFTER 4 CAL^ C^ROLL IRAID
A. Johnson & Son, Realtors 1704 S. Telegraph FE 4 2533
GAYLORD
FAMILY with G
Place (I__________....__________
V-thapo kitchtn. Formica caWnalt and countar loat, bulH-ln i ■
Orion. IVb a< Will build ta K
BEAUTIFUL, n
HOLLY LAKE FRONT -Among the toll ooki -i^k^ roKher with wo
while’ Formica *kllcha bullMn anillancas, wht Inserts MursO In c
floorira. Get hcet and aeter, *x3r cHeched 90' It lot. Holly - Cell Bernice n, ME 7 2542
MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE
OPEN 3 Models
• 2 TO 1 PJ«. DAILY TRI-LEVEL-RANCH-COLONIAL Pricad from 4I3,4M plus lot Features In thets brick end alumi num 3-bsdroqm homos ore lamlly room, 2-cor garigt, gas hoot, mar-bla sills. 2V5 bsihs, ceramic and good workmanship. Thty can ba ta^ht (or only 10 par cant down. Drive out MS9 to Willlamt Loka Read, turn right one mile to Cator-
GIROUX
PONTIAC toko, no tot. <40$
i'?,
WALTERS LAKE OFFERS nolca hill iltaa tor ranchaa tri-tovols 5 tots, S2.47S total. 2-trentaga. DIractlont;	Ctorkihn-
Orion RC. to Eston Rd., 5 btocks north to ms Mohawk Orivt.
4t^230*	SYLVAN 42511
It no ant. 33442B
Brown
ESTABLISHED SINCE 1*2* LAKE FRONT - Cloon and wi conttructod htobtdroom bungak oltuatad on IW'xllO' let. Oil AC fu naco, storms and icrtons, tir pisca. bulIMn rango. Truly, a n$ place to live and ploy. Most of ti _ turniturs Includad. Pricsd at only *14.330. With 13,110 Sown.
lEts-ArroEgE
of Oxt-...	-______ ______ _____
cantor of town. IP store building with two apartmonis above, isl floor rontod to soma lonont tor 11 yoari. inesmo, 414* month lot tioer and two opartmonts lor 440 each. Fricod at only 01 snd only 20 psr cant down, to 0 rool security tor your old i
LIST with US - WO naad goto tnodom homos tor solo. Over 17 years of dspcndibto Rtal Sstato Sorvico. -• - “	"
10 ACRfel - LEVEL, woodsy	-
10 psr
LARGE 04,200
LAKE FRONT -Irooa-to Of
L. H. BROWN, Realtor
509 Ellubtih Lfko Roto Pti: FE 44544 er FE 2-4010
Bostmtnl ond 2<sr	Only
MODELS
Open Doily 2 to 8 WESTRIDGE OF WATERFORD
AN INVITIATION 10 EXTENDED TO ALL OF YOU to Inspoct our
T SMALL ACREAGE? Ws hovo'rs
IMS tor 040 par Is tor only 417^00.
oil with Immodlslo occupancy. Trade I Udy ol Likes, toll to AMMs.
I RAY O'NEIL, Rioltor
13530 PONTIAC LK. RD. OPEN *-t
Call MYM0I1 or FE 044*3.
LAWRENCE W. GAYLORD
Brosdwoy and Flint Lako Orton
MY 53021 or FE 040*3
GILES
In 1*41, 14 ft. Uvlng room, with ix* It. dIniM apace. BulH In gas range, oak flaors, baaamaM, aluminum alarms, camant drlva, Nartharn achaoi araa, only $12,-aOO. full prica.
OFF BALDWIN. 5raam bungalow, north St Flahor Body. 2-bto>oom, Irmiiy dining room, oak lloort. .piostarto walls, bath, walk-out
wJrsldtog.*OMv^ftVi!r^
NEAk ST. MIKE'S Largo 4-room 2-•lory homo. Beoullful carpeting n living room, latrllv tiled din bedrooms, oak
:ious homo wllh a irk2S’^kllch-i m, I2‘x25' dining roam, 14'x24’l omily room, 24'x24' living I lirtpiscoi, 2 baths, 3 ooms, ovar 130 square foot m 0 non-lhoraughtaro rood.
WHEN YOU 3EEK OUR SERVICE YOU
"JOIN THE MARCH OF TIMES"
Times Realty
I Handyman Special
’ gms, tC-xir soch, riving, Ing orao, irxIP, 1'^or
ARRO
we EUILD-WE TRAOe CONVENIENCE PLUS SPACE,
-SiniS
lISFoaol snd ptorp I, oxtra both in aonatod family
000
WATKINI LAKE —
Jtrga lot. 04,300,
I ACRE BUILOINO SITES On An-dtrionvilia Rd. 02,100, $250 dour
Undtrwpod Real Estate
-------1 Hwy., “	•
lllOl-li
Vacant Lots
Two 30'xl20' toft, two 4r X 144' •M, aida by akto. Wt will build tor you.
List With Schrom and Call the Von
, REALTOR-MLI I 1—1— »—	FE 5*471
DORRIS
LUXUEIOUS LAKE FRONT - 100 ' -*	Irontag# on Sylvan I
■ sotting f----
bling b hut, ol
mo, long. M , got firad St livlof ret I ond Iho pi
I (irxiin » of 02*,-id drapes.
LAKE-FRONT INCOME. 4 - I Inftollon htdgo. T» I skttd 2-tomlly In IfstM ond opp—-I Iho timts.
Commercial Corner
"BUD"
lot One, But Two
flropiocos In this ipvoly cucto built ranch homo naar Wotorfi Hill wllh 2 Mg hodroems i ipocloui don, a largo living roe corpotlng, coromic Ilia bath w vanity ond Stoll ahewor, tots cloMf and starogo apaca, covoi r ottochod garage, « grounds, Cyck
TAYLOR Il’S MODEL
"Bud" Nicholie, Realtor
49 Ml. Clamons Ot.
FE 5-1201
^FTER 6 P.M. FE 2-3370
!ANNETTi
BATEMAN
EQUITY IS CASH trade YOORO Says
BUZZ BATEMAN
5 BEDROOMS
O^EL»N PARK: built In 11
•" bJS^jLiSiiui^ot
--lor. Wondirful low to Ot. Bsnodlct's, wHh tiot-watar hoot, clr-■ont drivo ond nictly It >. A B^Hul hamt wHh c onstruefton throughout. 17, glut OMit and pricad to i It 030,000. CALL NOW
NO DOWN PAYMENT
TO OUM.IPIEO O. I. Extra I
rogo. Thit li. _ __________
oftrj^’TioiriM.d'ri
"ytood yard and Mock i Pricad at only $13,500 «
Burled oil tank. 313,400 torma.
682-2211 Ted McCullough Sr„ Realtor
Waterford
WILLIAMS LAKE
Towering ntoi mm
I. Omollor hai I, couM bo ui
I Itwoo 1 to 115x105
---- .... ...largo btoreoim, I-
ss ssTaJISs {rto^tris:
Lake, 021,340 torm.
LAKE FRONT-TWIN LAKES
Say CoprI ranch, foolurot 2 ton
wlfh'XtoliSI^booMlful'^torm! kttchon with all bulH-ln ipplipneo l',b btffit, lull baaomanf; largo cpr ottochod Borago - hero .. a Itomo that nai cuttom esrpot-Ing and drtaat, and ttit vary botl ot avarythlng. Pricad rlgM al 437,-
'nomU 25 ACRES
tor gantto-ratvntoilp _
call, t today.
bt dlvktoo kilo smaltor por-Frlctd at 1504 aOr pera. Call
GILES REALTY CO.
Ill Baldwin 1TINC SERVI
SEE THIS
OUTSTANDING VALUE
7*29 Highland Rato 5 Mltos W. at city Airport
3-BEDROOM TRI-LEVEL
ALSO 3-BEDROOM, PULL BAIE-MENT, RANCH PLANS.
PRICED FROM $11,700
OPEN DAILY 6 to 9 SAT. and SUN. 1 to 6
Anytime by oppeiMmont NOW It THE TIME TO TRADE
VACANT LAKE PROPERTY
uiXliPKto 9BPIVICK I	-
KAMPSENR’'ushour Struble
Wtst SidE-Clos#-ln
I mtnt, goa haat. Gtraga. Wgrattd IN'-"'—'—‘ "
haw	i-argn cornar lot, ipacwus 4spg
I fn- **"»<«»»«* »nd prkad al 323.3M ==
WATERFORD REALTY
O. e^ton, RatHtr OR 51173 Olxia Hwy. Van Watt-------
"■! i
ir Nalghbtr Ti___
wny Don't Yaut
Newly Decorated
Battar aaat akto tocotk alory trama htma. 10 room, loporato dlnliw kitchen, witn oatkig i
SHADY-SECLUDED
A TBRRIFIC BUY on ttili
ctout tomlly homo, all root_
one floor, atono tlrapltca In living room, IS' kllchon, 3rxir tomlly room and whol o booutltul 3017
3-Fomily-Woterford cioM to ot.
Church and lettool aittn Schtal dlatrlc It raoma ato 3 bt .. _ - . incama at OHS par month, BoioiftoMi BOO htol. tlfdtt
OM, got hoot, on 0 nico c I. Prkto ol 04400 with
iwn on land coMract.	lol for _	^
East Side	^
Hhin wtlklna distance wnfown, iporiMt sIx fooiT
......... «■ ■ ‘'1
,i»n. Met kllciian, nwotor bedroom «yMi caramle horn, odlolnlng nwroa '	*
zurjr
,*ss;
2 bottit, doubto llroplaci walla, full btiafflenf wn door and l',>«dr.tirog«. puii p 011,440. Ttrms.
LOTUS UKE FRONT
Includtt ntw corpotlng i
Northern School District o7$l(» wHl^ndlt.'rrtoo SOUTH EDITH

parch, boiemoni, two lor Frkto al 112,500 —•• •
'$uSldS
i REAL FINE VALUB-Thtra
■'jI Thinking of Stlling?
w WANT CASH? Wa will gel II lor you, ly -give ue e try. Coll Loo Kama ion, Rachel Lovely, Emory Bui ler, Ltt Karr. Oava Bradiav.
!|*Viii!5p
JACK FRUSHOUR MILO STRUBLE
Id In baiimant. niy 114,410 - T
V	I
Cuttom Brick Ronch
Cloit to Our Lady pf Hit LpkPi Church and Schoal. ' ipric btorpemi, famUy rpp wllh firaplaep, llvinp rpom wllh Mdgprocfc tlrpplaca, modarn kitchan, ***
iKhad soraga. O.. ------- .
well landicapto lata. Only
FE 8-0466
ONE'of a kind
VEST SIDE; 3-bad room olumir
klhto bSSr,iSf -iSTm!!!'
bar and rofrlg.l 2 firtplacoi, diin room, carpotkiB thrauf^ and at-
NEW MODELS
YOUE CHOICe OP I model
»=3“3BSs;;t"»5rr ■
train II3JD0 to ttlAIO alui JoT I
5M7-r"lg!rr
UKE ORION HIOHUNDI: Open
ft?:
Orion RtT Approx. ..
ULTRA HOMES SUE. Open OAT. •nd lUN. 2-0 pjn. Mil to Whitttor
■.AKlP"oAKLAlrO *'olto!iSI
Jolly 44 P4n., SAT. ond I a.m. Olyto ftwy. to iMhabi to Walton, right to Batimi lift to Medela. '
It you thouW daalrt ' any at IlMta modal I —1 build, tbpy -- -bulMIng na« exactly what
art tar Ml y maOM. ’ you ary bt
jTOR ROCI
mo. ftiagriph tJ!' 7W I. Rochlfltr Rd.
GEORGE
IRWIN
WHITTEMORI ST.
LOW DOWN PAYMENT
dUr5 —4m55
BIG TRI-LEVEL
h waikdut to r#or yard, MR-
trudly a to coniimtn.

LARGE FAMILY
5raim 5btdrtam brkR, In

placa, rati Itrgt rtttnt ____________
gaa haat, canvtnianlly todptod Hr
i
MVL^AVLYorili
IN W. Walton
lua. 344o7torma. Can ... .
HOUSEMAN-SPITZLEY •	WO 54014
! MINUTES, PRIVATE
BATEMAN
COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT I. TeliarMh
Sole Betieeu Preperty 57
B apaca. It can ba u
dipt., Btoch Bros. OR 51245.
42.514 to lS,*jg, I ACRES - I MILE FROM I
rallkig i rta. SS.N
LOT an Wtikint Lakt
3 Airport Rood Lott
Camar OMMIttn - davatopniant,
igrtSrwts.
BREWER REAL ESTATE
Wm. B. I 4 B. Huron
4153135
ACREAGE BONANZA
IV5ACEE FARCBL, 01 Jit, 0200 dS 5ACRE PARCELS, 03,500, $500 do 5ACRB PARCELS, 03.300, 1410 dl 5ACRB PARCELS, 05*05 0400 dl TW-ACRE FAECBL, 04,200, 0750 Ot I5ACRB PARCEL, t3,*00. Tarmi. 15ACRB PARCEL, 04.500, 0*00 d*wn PARCEU t«,*75 0700 dawn
C. PANGUS, Realtor
MIS	Ortanv
Call Caitort NA T-iOii
UNAL LOTS
JACK LOVELAND 2110 *<•
•"•CHXWljr a”?if»TiiUII
Ckriillon HUM, toto 110x1*0;
*ral to chtata from. ttJtt to 04,-500, torma, 30 par cant dawn. Tht Mtckatv Co., 07*4000, cfN tor
Clarkston Estates
12 Lott
Idtal tor tmall bulMtr or largo homttito, ctotd In Fa Twp. tocatlan. Only 04,400 tor
Silver Loke Front
iftHul tioelng let wHh
Ir cenvtniMtTy locMtdp I
WaSon l]^''Prle*d ai'’iii^!'**lli leolti
Qpdyka Rd. Ph, Fi j
^RKStON
5ACRE PARCILI - I
WARREN STOUT, Reoltor
._ ..	.	. . —	..	— jgy
silver lako Const. Co.
KENT
WATeRFORD ARBA lit tor you hama. I —I down, 134 pdr
HATCHIRY

WKent lnc„ Rioltor
Halt H«yy. at TtMaraph FE 24122 or PE 5W
BEAUTY SHOO
Two food oporoton, m d. Itwwbto feed Pt^j.l
____ intormotlon by i
Coll Mr. Ldwta. 005mi
Ray O'Natl Rasl.,.
32MI ^tlac Lake Rood OR 51222 or EM *
LIQUOR BAR
WARDEN REALtY
W. Huron, Pontiqc 22571*7
McCullough realty
PRICE REDUCED, tickim hat toretd ewntr to rtduca hit prica
r. rissiiti.™
avarythlng, property, mtourant with all oquipmont and ttoek, and
LSIsSwsS?
-----'irLOyGH, JR.
ACRES, 5BEDROOM HOME, 1-ear goroga, tforo $2x54, of 123,100 074-1733. __________
120 ACRES
Norlhwotl of LooOor, now u cuttivotlon, a branch of RIvar crotios property, gooi
Country Rtotty. 335-1511.
FARM
40 acrot, Davltburg area, good l5reom houM and barn, rolling land wllh trontogo on a toko.^ Will nchongo oquTty for i
2339 Orchaid Lako >
, tonine d, M.M0
Centrol Business District
2-stery tolld maionry lalot ond Mrvico bulMlng-21,4M sq. ft. Improtilvo mIo* dli-play room with vaultod calling. Prooontly loatad to Juno 1, 1*44. Prkod at axoclly 335,400 - only (ligMIy ovtr land value I Oftbrod oxchnlvo-17 by
Leslie R. Tripp Realtor-Appraiser
71 Woof Huron llrool PI 50141
Gcxjst-To-Coast
TRADES
Tom Bateman
FE 8-7161
Realtor
Exchanqor
Elizabeth lake Rood
tq. ft. ot land, Vary roi able ot tllOM tormi.
Auburn Near Opdyke

15 Acres-Joslyn Rd!
Next to 1-75 Inlorchongo, hi
Annett Inc. Realtors
E. Huron St.	FE 04444
Open Bvonlngi ond Sundoyi J-4 coob ESTABLISHED BUSlYfESSr
ZONED COMMERCIAL
'.y-i£'S“'lY5*iTi' 'JSkSr
#09ins9PUio» oftfipno
aterago, Union H...
Lake Road location, city ot Koago.
CHURCH and AOIVITY HALL
city Location
Activity hall cantltttng of 1704 oq. ft. Church conalfttog N 2.401 tq. ft. Both bulMIngi art ot brkk ond btock eanolructlen. Torma
bit. Fricod tor boMw roprt--------
cool. Rontol Income from Activity Hall will make your ptymonto. r— full Intonnotlon. coll FE 54414 OR 52221. Aik lor NkK Ba
Ray O'Ntll Ratllor 3310 Pontiac Ltka Road OR 51111 or FE 54404
BeiioMs OgfertMiiiltiM S9 BAR-A-GO-GO
f'yi! iinThfi
buay CloM "B.'' Ona of tha.maat popular ban north ot Eldht V"-Bd. Hot rontol ukiti le M to y Income. You ihould not mart t your 135400 down the tint yi
^JLIQUOR^CARRY-OUT
In pttri ^ Mw
EtowSf’cify'r Of-
A & W DRIVE-IN
Aiwka'i n^^ apcetotto.
£’rrto^£7ouffi ^^xS^JBir'Ln'ryr.'t
SEND FOR FBEE CATALOO
Coast-ToCoast
TRADES
Tom Bateman
FE 1-7161
Realtor
Exchongor
lif LOCATION AVAILXiLft new Standard Sorvico Stottae II bo tvolloblo on Dactmbar 1.
pileants who are Intoroalod In op, orating a Mrvko ttallon In a prime location in the Pontiac ai— Company olton financial "
NORTHERN BAR
ottaring, itralght bar, claia I SOM. Stating capacity IN I of parking. Only 147,300.
K."l. 'tEMPLETON, Reoltor
SMALL GOLD MINE
Party tlort In up and coming community el Ortonvillo, proiantly ■howine 0 ytorly grou ot ouor 140,000. 13' ot butinou trontogo.
Approximotoly 315400 to handlo. Cantidor homo In trade. -
DORRIS^*, SON, REALT<»I^
MULTIPLeTisTINO OERVICe
Woodworking Company
Cojintt M
MICHIGAN
Business Sales, Inc.
JOHN LANDMESSER. BROKER 173 $. Tatogroph FE 5IIII
1 TO 50
LAND CONTRACTS
AaiON
ssairiii-xt.W'P^TSi^^
WeMed CeMracti4lllH. 6B-A T TO 50
LAND CONTRAaS
OR 513IS.
"CASH ^
For ytur aqutty ar land canlrtcti, Don't toot that heme, imtIM POMiblo ditcounto. Coll 4S5IHI. AtotorTqdMctgtttju,^!,.
EMpIra 54M4^____________
SEASONED LA HO COtTriAgf* ■—-td. Gat our dial hiilf-CAPITOL UVIN6I B
(Lleanaad qtony Landari
LOANS
COM«^NrpY*LOAN CO.
E. UWRBHCE	54
BsixTfrrmro^irH.
401 PonttaTst^'Eank Build
______FE 4-1538-9
LOAHrtO^
$1,000
UtuaHyw tlrat vlalt. Buldi, triand-
“ fE 2-9026
OkKUND^QAlSa,... .
NEED CASH
POR
"BACK TO-SCHOOL" eXPBNSES AND BILL CONSOLIOATIONT
BORROW UP TO $1,000
34 manttii to pay cradit lilt knurtnea tvalltbla
BUCKNER
FINANCE COMPANY
OrHICBI NBAR YOU
LOANi TO $1,000
-----Idala bllM Into ana montt*-
payment. Qukk torvico witti caurtaout oxeorltncod couniytora. Crodit Ufa Inturonco avtilabto — Slop In or Phono FI 54121.
HOME & AUTO LOAN CO.
N. Parry M.	PB I4I1I
* to I dolly, ist.» to 12

WILL
ACCEPT
GUNS, BOATS, MOTORS

rmtt.
AS PART DOWN PAYMENT ON ANY NEW OR USED URI
BILL SPENICE
- 6673 OlKif Hwy.
Clirytly-Ptoniiiie».vailsiit
CLARKSTON*"*^* MA 344N
!>
THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 12, 1965
»4« FALCON FICKUF, »LL OR
ISSJ. OR «SS.
a. 000b OttR hIfU FOk TA^
—«N«- •«K»-
Will swap a itn ruick with
gRTAj?*'
Sdo Clrtfcli	*4
> FORAAALS, SIZR 14, 1 YELLOW, 1 ItwlM, >15 WId WO, 4W-1414.
Il6 VALUK IN WINTER CLOTH-
Soli HoMohoM Goods 65
44-tlZE FOLD^A-BED, SIMMONS — --------------------
1 Bi^ Boots 'EM All Annivorsory Spociol
58 PIECES
■RAND NEW FURNITURE
$297.00
NO /MONEY DOWN SZ7S A WEEK
roomy chnl. Soria box iprlng and !^r«, J beuMr lom^, — -
ichlM chair I ■ml tablao, e
laovoo and 4 malchInE chalro. a by 11 rug, and ».placa tat a( dlthat.
7,000 sa FT.
FURNITURE, STOyiS, REFRIGERATORS, TV'«, »*''INOS.
Optn*Evt«**'l!l t* ^*s'l"*'l r~FULL SIZE MAFLE BEO-COM-aMa, 1 kllchan loblo, 4 chalro, 1 chOiti. OR 3-SI5I.
OEM, DRESSERS, HICHCHAIR, crib, cbairt, mlic., OR S0444.
BUNK BEDS ^
OMlca a( IS tivlai, Irundia b IrlaM Irundia badr	“ '
------“ --1.» ai
» E. I
) I N I N 0 ROOM AND ANTIQUE whila French arovlnelal, drop leal labia 1 hoot chairt, 4 iWo chain.
dunCan phyfe tasle mahog. any $30, China cabinet $», 4 —' arn kllchan chairt. tn-tm.
SPECIAL
H gu
].plKa living room ..... I cacklall loiiiv	* i«i
I'dioca' badraam oulla with do draaaar, chaot, luH ilia bad < Innenpring mallraao and t tprlng la match with 1 va
Splaca dinette lal, 4 chroma du
----» lap taMa, I bookcaM
rug included. All lor $»t.
WYMAN FURNITURE CO.
II R. HURON	FE	4-
IIW. FIKB	FE 1-	_
V SET, SIS, ReKAIGERATOR, $34, gat tiova, ns, electric ttova, $3S, Kl* badt, mbc. FE 5-044.
UPRIGHT FREE'ZER, LIKE NEW,
USED FURNITURE
Grand P|ano> $315i drop-leal table, 4 naadlOpalnt chairt, d-'—
$110; rafrigarator, $33; ---
chair, $34; waihar, $14; dinana tat, $14; mapla	—
Farr^.' '
I. Gat ttova, $33. I
GOOD AUTOMATIC WASHER, $14; alactric clalhet dryer, $14. FE 1-4147.
HIOE-A-BEO, $14; 1 CHAIRS, ! floor lamp, play pan, umper » mitc., 474<644.
HIOE-A-BEP, DESK AND CHAIR,
■*---— table, and ether pieces,
n. FE 4-4300.___________
HOME FREEZER
$1 down	$1 per --
FRBTTER'S WAREHOUSE OUTIET 1440 S. Tal^rapb	FE 1-7001
KENMOHE	^WASHER,
KIRBY VACUUMS
Now - Uaad - Repossessed -Save 10 to M par ient. Call 441-
Chair. FE 4M0B4.______________
LEAVING STAfEr’l-bbO* RE-•tlgwotor, 1-yaar-old; oat dryer; 3-plara llvlrn raem tulfa, miK. 00$
BlaMa, FE 4A443.________
LIVING ROOM COUCN AND CHAIR,
LIVING ROO/M FURNITURE, DnT Irlgwalort, playpen, --furnnura. OR 3^1,
1^ HggiilnlJ	AS
SINGER
nantt at 04A0 m^ly or h. 0-yaar mrantaa. Call anagar, RIchman Brat.
For Sdo Wllicoilwwow A? TIZZY
DRAFTING TABLES. 4100 DIXII Hiry. Ferbat Frintine B Ottlea Supplies. OR 30747.	_________
EARLY record collection,
'
ELECTRIC RANGE,~OOOD CONDI-t|||m, $14; l».gallon all tank. 473-
FACTORY CLOSE storage thed *“
and $$, shelvli. ... ........
clasura $11, pixie glass, corragatad
and plain alumln— -■—- -------
other Items, ever
reduced, Stor-AII__________
Dixie Highway, 474-1400 or nights 414-4$$$. Open F-l. end Sal, only.
fL^t and walling deep well
D-9
W or bait atter. 33$-144$.
I 4-7$31. 43$
$3$.t
Sweat't Radio B _____________
W. Huron________________
whirlpool automatic WASH-ar, $44; Whirlpool gat dryar, $34, goiad condition, 414-1014.
‘'^Itl
WYMAN'S
USED BARGAIN STORE At Our IS W. Pika Stare Only
ea Halo Datk ........Sit es
c. Hvlng room suite . Sl$.$*
'. I lac. refrlWrator '. elec, washer Your Credit It Good at
WASHER $15. C trigeralor w|l
$m!*V. Harris.
$34.$$ $3$ .$4 $3$.$4 $4$,$4 $4$;$5 ...'man’s FE 1-1140
S STOVE, $34. RE-
By Kate Osann
For the Finest in Top-Ouality Merchondisi Shop
MONTGOMERY WARD
PONTIAC MALL
#OR SALE; HOUSEHOLD FURN-Jthl^tji'^ toon 4e4-H03, Millard. ENCYCLOfTOIAS 1$44 10 ' cost $100 tall $35. 443-3414.
FOR DUSTY CONCRETE FLOORS Use Liquid Floor Hardener Simple Inaxpantive Aopllcatlo.. leica Bulldert Supply FE 4A1S4
GARAGE DOORS
steal one place, lectlanal, sro ana flbargtas. FactWy ralacts
GARAGE SALE: SPINNING WHEEL
chairs, rugs, glider, silver-----
trunks. Cognac keg, lamps, estal wash bowl, wood pi tools, mItc. 743 Hanna, BIr
ir II, Sat. II, Sun. 14, n
GARAGE SALE, FRIDAY NOWEM-
.................. in to 4
housa-iings, rummage, 44 E. Washlng-
ton, Clarkslon.
GAS HEATING UNIT, 3 EXHAUST
ERT'S A GAY GIRL - READY tor a whirl after cleaning carpe*-wlth Blue Lustre. Rent electr thampooar, $1. Hudsan't Hardwar
NUMBER 3 DINNER BELL, BEST
_______JER BELl
- r, $40. FE 4-e$44,
DESK; PINE CRADLE;
ALL NEW 13" COLORED fV'S, —^-livery. Alto used ‘ ind calared TV’s, FE 4A001, 14$ L
1 MORE ItME
BRAND NEW FURNITURE
3-ROOM OUTFITS $278 (Good) $2.50 Weekly $378 (Better) $3.00 Weekly $478 (Best) KOO V. :ekly
M LIVHW ^
i-placa llvbig^raam'
tablas. matchins a........
dacaralar lamps, all tar $10$. Only $1.30 ai^jy.
. NEtyBEDROOM BARGAINS
sss'SfsirifiSKrbi.««
chait, box tprInB and kmaiwrlna maltraia, twa vanity lamps. All far Silt. $1 JO weakly.
_ PEARSON'S FURNITURE no E. Flfca	FE 4-Tttl
Bahaaan Paddock and City Han Open Man, and FrI. »tll $ p.m.
1 3-PIECE BEDRbOM, SSt; ELEC-Irlc and gas tiavat, 014 to $7$, ra-
irlitrilor---- - ---------
TV (excel
AkAGIC CHEF GAS RANGE, clean, $40. FE 1-71«.
MAPLE BUFFET WITH CHIfiA top. Ilka new. $l5l. OR 3^1. M^TRESS, NEVER USED, SACRT-------''i.S3t OL 1-0740.
Mlllllams Lake. 474-3130.__________
MEDICINE CABINETS LARGE, 10-mirror slightly marred, '**' salactlon of cabinets '
-It nghtt. sliding dr-- buys. Michigan FI 373 Orchard Lake. FE 4
SOFT WATER .	Salas-Sarvica-Rant
ICWck't_________________FE 4-3S30
WATER softener, GOOD CON-dltlan, raatanabla. FE 4-377$.
WATER SOFTENER, REYNOLDS
- ---------------$34 or bnt a
334-3304 suaafcands or aWar 4. NOVEMBER BARGAINO
For Solo MitcoRoNoooi 67
TV (axcallant) SSt, living r <14, 7-placa dining mam tuHa. 4-placa dinatta sal, $14, wr
washer, $37, add badt, dra-------
and chastt. Everything at bargain
KIcas. LlltM Jaa’t Bargain Dept., 10 Baldwin at WaBen. ^E_l-4041. i CUSHION davenpo'rt, ddOD
Utad ralrl^ratori
CRUMP ELECTRIC, INC.
3445 Auburn Rd._____FE 4-3373
NEW DOUBLE ALUMINUm LAUN-
______1, $43. FE 4-4440.
S MAHOGaMy ITEP end TABLii raund, 1 leng colfaa table, $4	-
Tpiece sectional toast and beige nylon, foam ru‘‘-“	—■■
condlllwi,J«-lt35._____________
r - PIECE NYLON SECTIONAL, platlorm rocker, chair, 401-0140. fpTici SECTIONAL, MANOUi,
odd living room chairs, ---------*
dlthat. FE l-tMO.________________
irpTECE LIVING ROOM SECTION-■I. Vary pood condition, $41; 34" blond banch with cuthlon, $11. M-
03U;_____________________________
BYEAR SIZE /MAPLE CRIB AND loam mattrass, 1 years old. $X. call 47B4743.	_______
5-ROOM HEATER FUEL OIL-$25
Super Dahixa Flame CALL FE 4-1141
t-PIECE METALAAASTER ream tat, Danish chairs an
rw*a".5iarrvyEri!ti«;"t
NECCHI, 1965
s Included. Call
lancy slltchas. Utad. ... paymanti. (Mly^tM.U cash or $S,M
tree t^lng lesioi...
credit manager, RIchmi Sawl^Cmler, USJISI.
pair" of upholstered 'host
and hoslats chairs, excellent condition, $$3. Chandflltr. Early Amar-kan design, $11.30. Ml 4-t177. REFRIGERATOR, $17.30, RAN G t $13, dryar venting parts. Michigan --------- Co. MSI Dixie Hwy.
9x12 Linoleum Rugs $3.89
Calling tlla	  7Mc	tl.
VHiyl Atboaloi flip ....... 7c	aa.
Inlaid tHaM"	4c	aa.
Floor Shop - BS5 Elltsbalh Lake
"Across From the Moll"
1l' iCOLblPOf RjtFRIGEkATOk,
good itiapa. $34, FI 5-1707. _
IrXM' RUG, OTHER itEMS, MAKE new attars, FE 4-S741.__________
Iboallon irecTRic wate*
A>r Appliancts "teriJiT***"' •" ''“ts^li'ioTorriLLER;
—.........■-ar, da-1 righi --- ‘
RICHMAN BROTHERS
SEWING CENTER FOR THE WORLD FAMOUS
NECCHI
SEWING /MACHINE SI HOLDS 'TIL CHRISTMAS 441 Elliabalh Lake Rd. FE B$isi
Head Ouaan wringir wathtrt $41,110 40" alactric rangat, ranastad $40.00 ALL OUARANTEBD ALL IfRVICeO BY Ui THf GOOD HOUSeKIEPING SHOP OF PONTIAC 11 W. Huron tt. FE 4-ISSJ	iAtniFkt k p«R ciNt OPF FOR QUICK SALE Furnltura In modal hama, 144S Middle Ball Rd., Just north 'of ^uara^Loka Rd. Optn Sal .-Sun., 'eeLAIRI HOMB BUILDERS
	SINGER LIGHTWEIGHT
AiTi^^diiTidNil Proilic raducllon an all	FORTABLI SEWING MACHIsUl ZIt taooor, buttanhelar, all al-
oir cot^lonara In stock	Taka over paymonlt of S4 par inonth lor 7 monNit or M coih Btlanca. Univarul Co., Ft 4470S. SINGER PORTABLB, Stt.30. ZlG- rfL1»r‘«xr, »«.««.
*bto®4 cfiol G"Sf"lBB7«lll"0 TA-	
	SINGER AUTOMATIC ZIG ZAO SEWING MACHINI OeLUXI CABINET liBloi, tmbrelMrs, Pay atl oo> tewil In t monlht ol M gor month
i».»,'ssr«jr?s maltross, MOi atodrlc rang#, $10/ irmi madklna cabinet, $0; coronal and cofd, Ilka now, llOi mitc. lltmt. Smith Mwlng Co„ S7I B. k^““za on c noiijie oinerr »	
	So7a, CdLONIAL pattern, I yoy eM. j-)****- SIMMONS HlOe-A-ltD, OOOb condlllon, OR BOSSI.
	SINGER DIAL-A-STITCH AUTOMATIC IN CABINET Twin noedia medal with Ironl-laad-IM bobbin. Dial control tor button-holat, hama, fancy datignt, ale. Prq-anwwd. Muit cpltocl 132.77 cash r.^r3r'"Lfer/«ii Brot. Sowj^ CantwTMlLOlli. •6U6 AkTioui rBO bn6 orFsC Of. FB i-SUS.
	•■SSSaKVIXf* It
$3; Sun tachomatar, SM. FE 4-1311. IRTlU STEAMER, BACK BAR, cooler, compratsart, 414-4301
GUNS, 7.34 MM AND SHELLS, $11.
Vacuum claanar, S:
D-MADE GIFTS - OR SELL
LIKE NEW SONY STEREO TAPE recorder, bast otter. 334-4411.
Z'ENITII used TVs, lt,1T»TNCH, portables, cantolet, remote con-Irolet. SSt up. Guaranteed. Terms avallabM. Hod's TV, 770 Orchard Lk. FE B4111._____________ I

I BEFORE YOU DECIDE -
OFFICE DESKS (1 ARE AN-llque desks), 4 sacretarlal chairs, 10 straight chairs (oak) go^ condition. to lowing chairt. MA 4-1433. Bill Spence, Inc., Chrytler-Plym-
OIL SPACE HEATER '
S-ROOM OIL SPACE HEATER, , ' satlc control and bloxitar, i gal, all tank. Call altar 4 p
.... , drawers and large .
, ■ tlxll all wool rug. 413-1414.
plNtRON Tape' rIcoroer, am-pllllart and mika an $•••»< e«i enlarger. Cheap. 447-mi.
PLUMBING BARGAINS. F R E I Standing tollat, $14.tS. SBgallor heater. $47.t5; Sglaca bath sett S57.$3. Laundry tray, trim, Sit.tl; shower tiallt with trim $34.tSi Bbewl sink, $1.73; Lavs., $l.t3; tubs, $10 and up. Pipe cut one Ihraadad. SAVE PLU/MBING CO-141 Baldwin. FE 4-1S14._
PLYWOOD
art from SIS. Elactrk lypaxyrlter. from $30. Portabla typawrllart Irom $3t.40. Adding machines from $43. Check protectors from $13. Cash registers Irom $73. Wa repair. Bavartys, 773$ Auburn Rd., Utka, 731-4440.	_______________
BASEMENT SALE, GLASSWARE,
BATHROOM, SINK, TOILET SET, picture window drapes and add tliet. sat 3 and tables, "
iATHPOOM FIXTURES. OIL AND
— lurnacat and bo'.............
ir heatart, hard ■I tuppllat. Croc
IIOHTS SUPPLY
_:_Rd._	____l•■_0■3«1
Beoroo/m suiteTTpiece WAL-- ‘	Laiy-bpy chair, swivels,
Clines, tfh «xer cycle, de-Sal, ttSS. MA 4-l$t3, attar
Bottle Gas Installation
TivFs OUTLEYTWwToCATf D AT 1301 DIXIE HWY., 1 DOORS SOUTH OF PONTIAC DRIVE-lN New shipments are on display: Toys, houtahold lltmt, books (hlgh-

:iinsr*air
olt. Sl,500 casi Id applIanCTt. 0
motlalt, Kool Seal roof paint. 34t-
7</i HORSEPOWER, 3 gang mower, good ay be adapted to snow

) H tfoori imJO
Mahdoany .
WrgMgS 'diiir »».»3 ■— '■—b. praAung door S 17.SS n. combination door Sll.tS
itamani lack pasts	___
I"x3'0" Alum. tlWIng window $14.t5 I"x4'0" Alum. tlWIng window Sll.tS r'x4'0" Alum, sliding window S37.t*
Burmeister's
I deliver	EM 3-417
lan 4 dayt a tyeak S a.m. to S p.n
POOL TABLE, $30;	1 BUCKET
seaH, $40. 401-4171 attar 4 p.m. POOL tables; poker ANO ^ING-Pong. POOL TOWN. 33B1144.
PORTABLE ALEMITE
alignment aqui-----
UL 1-4003 alter 7	______
rummage': IO-S P.m. SATURDAY
Chairt, anilqua beds, dri mode, Encyclopadia Wi wardrobe truck. It
AND handcraft sale, canning, houtahoW, lays, Mkat, tine handcraft gift Hams, 34 cants-$4, wad. Nov. 17, CAI BulW-Ing, Williams Uka Rd., t-1 only. lUMMAOi SALE: GOOD OUALi-
ty man's, woman't —^ --------
clathlngi fumHurt, hold Hams. At Ci
CLEARANCE OF USED OFFICE
---" - -Td machlnaa, Fp^
Hwy. OR Bf747.
Cd/^PTETE“$f()Ck OF pipjf' fittings. Custom threading. Imr ate service. Montcalm Supply.
W. Montcalm, FE 3-4711.
s'SffirSwr'! ■	Laki ■*;
yoFj;
--------■ ■	|{;f3a S». r
__________wixiii iumk«
BiSCOUNT_pF If Pii»..CfcNT ^ TO „
pan. all llmad table, 4 chaiMt
—nt on part---------
mat cafdt. ForiM Graatlng Cord Shop - 4tt0 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plaint, OR M747;______
bOG HOOnft, iNICOTfD
Most sites. 741 Orchard Lake Ava.
WW-------------------------
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13 “xhanic's tools; ( ^hjals^^rdan i
Mlle'Rd"!
HOBO MANFACTURING SALES Ca
--------^ ^
Do it yourtalf. SttS. *• Sat.-Sun.
AKC CHIHUAHUA PUPPIES, STUD Sarvica. IMATODD'S. 131-7137. j BEAUTIFUL ENGLISH JETtTrI
Ptaatt-Traes-Shnibs
NURSERY CLEARANCE: greens, shade trees anc Dig your own McNeils 4474 Dixie Hwy. at Ma' Phone 413-5334._____
ll-A
EVER-
1110 Auburn Rd.
BLACK AND TAN COON HOUND
__	FE 1^74
BLACK FEMALE POODLi, "AKC,
$30. FE t-OlH.	_____
BLUE TICK PUPS. REGISTERED,
I SHftTLAND STALLION. WESTERN
horse saddle. 473-$m._____
BUNNS BOARDING STABLES, BOX
standing, wl Kir llghtad r 1444 W. I
BOSTON. I
d Bear FOR SALE OR TRADE, >lM8urc hors*, exi 1 Hackney pony. Bo’
PIONEER CAMPER SALES
_by Travtl^Ou^ 'as truck Mt07.
----- -	.—CK (fAMPeSS
J>L<!^5S:..H*w and used $374
Pickup canmrs b. _______ „
Overland. Cl'vanca, Concord h..^ ars. Merit flbarglass truck covert. ‘
1340 W Huron. FE ^----
WOLVERINE
. !WE PROUDLY INTRODUCE FOR first f— •- “■	-
CANINE
COUNTRY CLUB
Profatalonal care. 323 E. S.__
.	"	comfort-
ALFALFA HAY. 3700 GUNN RD.
_____________________________
CORN FOR WLE, 33 CENTS crate while picking. OA 1-113). _ FOR SALE 1000 CRATES OLD ----- Ctll OL 1-3371,at— ' - -
JACOBSON
TRAILER SALES A RENTALS 4470 Williams Laka Rd.
OR 3-4t$1_______
Poultry
FREE kittens; ___________
FREE KITTENS TO GOOD HOME.
GERMAN SHEPHERD. 1 YEARS ■•idly and likes children.
lean 12 noon 5 p m. 33$ j Form ProdUCB
**; **tl'on ’^1^0-4$^'''	CONOI-
iBEAUTIFUL LIVE R I N G N E C	'W< MOBILl H0M6 ON
PHEASANTS^ OR 3-7$01^____ W C^JB or Single parson. 13J30.
iPRIME'GRADE TURKEYS. FRESH	'-“M------------------
killed tor Thanksgiving Toms 50c	10x46' ALMA
Ih Hen. 55C. Ridgewood Farm, $4*	-	mlitih
R<J. Oxford.
83670.
‘I don’t want a thing, Father—noC even an advance o my allowance, even though I could use it!’
4 SHEPHERD PUPPIESi
Fbt Salt MitcBHuHtom 67
WEDDING RING SET, MARQUISE
WILLIAMSON OIL FURNACE, WO • ■	S30. Can bt seen
________ ja» camp stove, u. ii>
gaga cheap. FE 4-4»y5.
ChristMatJraat 67-A
SELECT A FRESH CHRISTMAS
tree now, cut later. Os-------
branched, beautifully shaped, celicnt color. Short naadlad Scotch pine. Sllngerland's, 3101	' ' *
Ge^t Rd. OL 1J110 an<
WRECKERS AND EQUIPMENT. M-lan Chevy 1754, S-ton winch, F400 1755 Ford, 30 Ion winch, tnofeh blocki, chains, dolllat and extra cable, CM 3-7031 after 4. $1,300 Ibr -•
1730 FERGUSON T-35, FRONT END loodtr and back bladP. FE MOM. PORTABLE ALEMITE WHEEL AL-Ignmonf aoulnmant. comolato UL 3-4003 aftoi
StoTB E^ulpwawt_________n
r SELF-SERVE DAIRY COOLER,
POODLES
Sporting Goods
5 DEER RIFLES, MAKE OFFErI
APPLES -SWEET CIDER
>. 2103 East Commarci
k' nica't'ana*" k ''lllso
-----: full price, Immadlafa possession.
,,,	-lONES REALTY
J6!«31_W. Huron  _________?? >»44«
HOUSETRAILCR, F U L'l Y
• HOUSE TRAILi'R, SELF CON-talned, nice and clean, FE 4-5034. x8 PALACE, 1753, $l7i,“cALirA'F-
APPlES AND^C'ipER, MAHAN	*Loiw	^
_Lake._4«-M),
PERSONALIZED GROOMING SUPPLIES
TOY STUD SERVICE 70 RIVER BEND POODLES
5110 DIXIE HIGHWAY WATERFORD-OR 3-1710
COLLIES $50 UP,
:. Walton, 1 -"y^tales. _
= ON SMALL C
M50. 3114 W. _Lqng Lake'Rd;; Or-
GENEr'al~ HOnOfSE^fFA'lL-
3173.
300 SAVAGE DEER RIFLE
BOWS, ARROWS, SUPPLIES
Gena's Archary, 7)4 W. Huron_
COMPLETE SET OF GOLF'cLUBS,
. 4SI-
/MIXED HOUND PUPPTIS. mToTM
alter 4 p.m.	_______
SMALL PUFPIES' FOR SALE
_________________________________
POODLE CLIPPING AND GROOM ---------Styla, 4M-4S70.
POODLE TRIMMING ■ i. Byappol M 4-3707
REGISTERED BLACK R I smaath dachshund, mala, $15. i
BUY NOW AND SAVE ON A
REGISTERED CHIHUAHUA '■ Fox Terriers pupplat, Chlhau-
— - — f.rrir - -
Toy Fox farrier
GOOD USED SHOTGUNS AND flat. Ben's Loan Offka, 13 N. Sag
new. FE 4-3141.________________
GUNS BUY SELL - TRADE Burr-Shajl, 37S S. TtNgraph ■■ s; GUNS, (	■
ACCORUIUN CUM At LekSONS. Sales Sarvkt PulanackI OR 3-5374. ACCORDION, GUITAit, PIANO, OR-
gan, drum lattona, salts a--' -
I^MInchalla Mutic, 1373 Utica, 731-1140.
ALLEN CUSTOM THEATC
Auction Salts
EVERY FRIDAY ........ )
EVERY SATURDAY ..... )...	....
EVERY SUNDAY	1:00	P.M.
Sporting Gaodt-AII Types Doer Priiat Every Auction Buy-Sell-Trada, Retail 7 dayt Consignments Welcoir-bIb AUCTION
OR 3-1717
MORRIS MUSIC
34 S. TtWgraph Rd Pontiac
Across tram Tal-Huron FE 1-0347 INN SERENADE ORGAN, 33 podtit, walnut, mutt tell. LEW BETTERLY MUSIC. Ml 4-r“
EXPERT PIANO MOVi PIANOS WANTED Bab's Van Sarvica EM 3-7110
AAARLIN n lever ACTION, $30.
GRAND PIANO, SPECIAL S175. UP-
REMMINCTON
Coast Wide Van Lina, 171 E. Pika
= YOU WANT TO SELL YOUR Plano, call Mr. Buyer at Orlnnallv Pontiac AWI. 4S1-04H. ________
batore .... _________ ...... ..
1473. No monty down till Feb. 1744.
GALLAGHER MUSIC CO.
11 E. HURON____________Ft 4-0344
MASON AND HAMLIN PIANO, CON-
RECONOITIONED MARSHALL-WEN-... ■—
complete, $430.. 131-10)3.
SELDOM USED TRAOE-lh
..«t?OTE-Jock Hogon Music Center
Fii„oeth Loko Read
FE 1-0700__________________TOJW
SILVERTONE GUITAR, AMPLIFIER th tramale In cate, $73. 4M-377I.
GREATEST ADDITION TO THE fitharman't kit. The VII Tritanic fish call. Calls fish to your favorite fishing spot. Chrjtimat tale S7.75 plus 4 par cant by mall or phone. Taylor 3373 Slaath, Milford. 403-1177.__________________________
Sand-Grml-Dirt
TOP SOIL AND PEAT A lading ovary day, 1707 P( ke Rea^ ......
USED PIANOS UPRIGHTS FROM
. $49
GRANDS FROM
$225
SMALL PIANOS FROM
$225
REBUILT ond RESTYLED PIANOS FROM
$199
l6w, Easy Terms
Grinnell's (Downtawn) 27 S. Saginaw
• yATiV"' '
yflee Igqiiwweiit 72
LAROOMARSINO TOTALIA PRINT ing cakulafor, llko now, odditlaiv suMractlon, munipticatlon md dl vlalan, S400. HaroW Tumar, Inc., 444 S. Waodward Avi., eirmlnm ham, Mkh. Ml 4.7S0B
State Neilfi^^
l-POOT MEAT CAM WITH KALES, taed eandlHdn, aW tima pla avtn,
«tnd S ---------- - ■
I---
Mustang ana Colt) IS and MW h.p. Cliff On ar's Sport Canter, 13110 N. Ho Rd., Hally. ME 4-4771. Opan
KE NEW II AND N 6. ifownlno .ovtr and undart, __
I" modHIad and full, 343-1330
H-H MAGNUM, mwar, sllno. cai " Entlald 3004 S raxan, sling, cat , Marlin 30-M, sling and tcopa
t, $35. FE 3-$774.
BROWNING AUTO. JW UIII, mi 11 Colt, $43; 31 Colt Trooper. $43; 31 3 B W snub $43; 43 $ S. W, $125. OPDYKE HARDWARE, 1740 N. Opdykt ‘
L E S; SHOTGUNS; HUNTING
. COLLER, 1 milt attt
CHOICE BLACK DIRT, 4 YARD
“ g^t’SCFT's^r**"
GOOD DRIVEWAY GRAVfU $
GRAVEL AND DIRT OF

SAND, GRAVEL, FILL DIRT, toll, block dkt. BulMoilng, vat^. OR 3-MSO. ___________
.OP sdfL, BLACK DiRT, ALSO grading. OR 4-174$.	______
WeedM^^tAB^BBl 77
CHERRY, OAK AND MIXED. WELL
laatomd. FE 2-7774.	__
I, CORB
FIREPLACE
3-MONTH-OLD PET SKUNK, cemplataiy tomad, $43, 40M404. FULL BLOODED GERMAN SHBP-hard pupa, molt. UL 2-S4$i.
/^|.E SPRINGER each. 417-1S47.
GERMAN SHEPHERD MALES,
THOROUGHBRED 0 k R M „ thaphard pupplaa. No popart—015 aach ar will trade any kr ty^ writar or ettka daak. OR 14733.
rb on quell and groui -Jllna, Khdoy trial. OA IS-MONTH-OIlD bird D(M' NEEDS geod home. OR ^57M.
AIRDALE AKC R#GISTfRED PED-
Igraa, ” ------- —	■“
3-1031.
ALL PET SHOP, SS WILLIAMS.
FE 4-4433, Canary tingart.__
Art COLLII PUPTOT iCul
AIK APRicasr Mitd^TiIjiife
¥
OUTSTANDING HI-GRADE HOLSTEIN DAIRY AUCTION Sat., Nov. 13, 1965 12:30 P.M.
maker Rd. Consittin
131 Cr 4,
3-f747.
BUD HICKMOTT GENERAL
Housahald furnishings; tools; qua ty at goad antique furnitui
Ct; china; lamps; watches; ii ; pklurts; ......................
DAVISBURG, MICHIGAN NEXT TO POST OFFICE Jewelry, tumitura, dry geoda. general marehandlsa, toys, diamonds,
ixsir-----------------
--------313-MApla 5-1704
”SATU«DA97N6vri3ri6 A.M. ■ ■ T. Gllbtrt and D. Ntlson homes M4 S. Morrith Rd., Swarti Cradk Good aPPlIanctt, furnltura, liquet, 3 autos.
PERKINS SALE SBRVtCI Auctloneart
Swarti Creek_____ Ph. 413-7400
SATURDAY, 6 P.M.
LL'S AUCTION SALES, 703 ... larktion Rd., Lake Orion. Chest
il portable TV, 3-plecc' bed-

lly. Jack ctlonaar.
. Contlgnnu W. Hall, o
SPECIAL AUCTION SALE 7:30 P.M. SATURDAY
GROCERIES TdYS-GIFTS FURNITURE TOOLS-CLOCKS 1 TON OF GROCERIES WATCHES-RINGS NEW MATTRESSES AND BOX SPRINGS POOL TABLES
B & B AUCTION
-----II Chrlslmat-.
Il's Auction Soles
W. Clorksten Rd. Lake Orion r 3-1171 L	MY 1-4141
3477 Gregory M., GlngeMyllle, 6/w'ema'oe boNUTs', made' — ■nl pure v«gelable|n
HORSEPOWER SIMPLICITY 33-
__________ ... slock. Davit
chinery Co. Ortenville. NA 7-M
FORD TRACTOR wTtH NEW REAR BLADE, S473.
MANY OTHERS
KING BROS.
.1,500. Can ha seen s. ... or call 401-4IX.
3	PONTIAC CHIEF MOBILE lome, lake over payments, 10x43. -bedroom. Inquire 247 Robin Creek Id^ Auburn Heights trailer park.
4	M A R l'E T T 'E 10x557"FUR-
iished, exc. condition. 1740 Laka-IMe RJ., Let to, Oxford. 4M-3I41.	'
3 30X13 /MOBILE HOME. LOCA-lon good, but service. /Many tx-
rat. Save $1.200. 33ym____________
MA /MOBILE HOME 2 BED-»ms, lO'xSO- take over payments.
DETROITER-P'ONTIAC CHIEF
Book slondards for heating, plumbing and electrical systems. You never gamble. You always onlay the ultimate In salety, comlort and

selection at used
PICKUP CAMPER, SLEEPS TWO ., $350. UL 2-1311 alter 4 p.m
11' SCOTTY, SELF
--■1 FE 4-4m____________
l-FOOT CAMPER, CABOVER ! FORD Pickup, automatic,
A FIRST IN THIS AREA
N ON DISPLAY
ALIO
Ellsworth Trailer Soles
~	____________/WA 5-1400
AIRSTRE/M lii
Huron (plan .. ..... .... .. Illy Byam's axcltlng caravans). ATTENTION HUNTERS Isly Caravan Teloacopic. !
----lyjiem. $450.
OPEN 7 DAYS-9 to 9
SEB THE NEW 1744 MODELS now an display
free delivePy-IIfrTI^ set-up
WE GUARANTEE A PARKING SPACE.
Large salactlon ol )2' wldas. HOLLY PARK, CHAMPION >ARK WOOD ANO PARK ESTATES Low ovorhaad - tavt real monay
MIDLAND TRAILER SALES
2137 Olxlo Hwy.	33S4771
—	- north at Talagraph
BOOTH CAMPER
Aluminum covert and campers ... any pickup. 4147 LaPoratt, Walar. ford. OR 3-3324.
TRAILERS Wlnna^ Phoanh
good utad
-------- ..ariar space.
*Tv navv no gimmicki. Just IS years ol acod merchandising and 3,400 sallstlad customers.
Open 74, closed Sunday Mila south at Lake Orion on M34
____________MY 24711 ______
USED HOUSE TRAILER, GOOD condition. 31x1. M7-3D3) ar Sr-SIlt. WATERFORb'MbBILfe H O'sri
CLOSE-OUT SALE 1965 NIMROD CAMPERS CRUISE OUT, INC.
- ............ 04, FE S-4401
Rent TruilBf Space 99
NEW SPACES WITH NATURAL GAS.
DEER HUNTERS
1 '43 Ford pickup and '44 Dura camper, SI.47S; also '44 CMC
CENTURY-TRAVELMASTER
^SAGE-GARWAY
Evarylhlno on lha lef ra-ducM, only a taw lalt.
SOMETHING NEW Robin Hood
It It's quality, «
FOR SALE 4-SPEED transmlaalon, IHt tram V4 Chavrolat. 333-7703.
1743 HONDA DREAM, ANO HEL-‘ A-1, S400. Phone batwaan 7 and 1 p.m. 473-3447. _____________________
TOM STACHLER AUTO and MOBILE SALES
FE 3-4731
FRANKLIN Truck Campers
lOWxTvy with I ■
Holly Trovel Cooch
1321$ Holly Rd.. Holly ME 44 ____:^;Optn Dtljy^and Sundays—
FOR RENT:
1 Wolvarlna '0-lt campers '43 GMC pickups. 1)00 weak a
“sCOTT RENTAL SERVICE
'4 W. WaHen___________FE $-4140
-NOW ON DISPLAY-
. 22' Monator Self Contained with Shock Absorbers
20' Monator Self Contained Twin Lunger
23' Fan
with roundtd corn
)Mt«r. 12Ve 110
Holly Travel Coach
13110 Holly Rd , Holly ME 44771 Open Pally and Sunday
NOW ON DISPLAY
FROLIC - YUKON DELTA-
Bud^ ai
ocaltd ha.. ..._________
Oxford on M24, next to Alban Country CoutIn. MY 1441).
Oxford Troiler Soles
'M MODELS, 15 to 40 «., O-UMl-lO
K 8. W cycle
YAMAHA
NEW! 1966 HONDAS NEW! 305 CC SCRAMBLER NEW! TRAIL BIKES $295
SPECIAL!!
CLOSE-OUT ON ALL 1965 TRIUMPHS
LOW DOWN PAYMENTS EASY TERMS
ANDERSON SALES t SERVICE 1443 S. Telagraph	FE 3-7101
, Opan Evas. 'Ill $, Sat. 'Ill 3 SUZUKI CYCLES SKC-liKC. RUPP Minibiktt at low at tllf.fS. Taka M37 to W. Highland. Right on Hickory RIdga Rd. te Oamoda Rd. Lett and tollow tlgna la DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSICO LAKB.
SUSUKI
SUZUKI HUSTLER
2S0 CC < iMtd NOW ON DISPLAY
TUKO SALES, INC.
V SUZUKI
^^wosoki-White B%; Bad Bultoco Von Teck-Dort Lil' Indian Mini Bikes CUSTOM COLOR
10 W. MONTCALM	Pt 44S1I
Bk^	<6
THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 12,

97Nm»
(i^OOT DAY CTUIWK^IM^W
, ll,7»5 drtlvt«
bira wiglnt «M on dudlon OMT, M ta wnr Mkt ki C
_________
ItM fO«D f-S50^TAKB, V-i, 4-tPMd. hMter, 750x1$ Hm. Like new condition. 01.W5. JEROME FIJRD, Rodieslor FORD
lOM JOHNSON MOTORS AND MO tof ttofiot *t Tony’i Mirlnt.
buARANTKD - AMERICAN ■OAT W 0 R K S, 1J5 ^dway, Crtt Oi^.^UII MY MMI any-
BrCI BIG! SAVINGS1 UP TO 30% OFF ON 1965 MODELS NOW IN STOCK! PONTIAC'S ONLY MERCURY MERCRUISER DEALER FOX SNOWMOBILES NIMROD CAMP TRAILERS
Marine and Sportlns Goodt
CRUISE OUT, INC.
t3 E. Walton Dolly *-♦ FE 5-4^ ■OAT STORAGE. KARS Bp^S Motors. Lake Orion, MY 3-lMO. CLOSEOUT
■oats	Canoes	Motor
owen«iOTpply.„
r.< FALCON RANCHERO PICK-
sSis.* PA”TE“R^S0i5**?HEVRSLET
CO. 11M S. woodward Ave.
mlnaham. Ml S-1735._________
i»4J' RANCHERO”•ICKUP, *<rYL.
’ iKSn’ trlmT'^iSd foSoiY
Wts. JEROME FORD, “ FORD Dealer.
1MJ CMC PICK-UP Jl
FE sjiTM.____________
1963 FORD F-350 STAKE, I
DON'f TAKE CHANCES We Don't!
Inside—STORAGE—Outside
■oat reflnlshing and raoalrs Motor Tune-Ups ■a raody tor Early Sarlra
HARRINGION BOAT WORKS
“Yoor Evinruda Oe 1BW S. Talegraph Rd.
Inside Boot Storage
MOTOR REPAIR_______
■OAT refinishing-repair Ask lor EARL or DALE
Wide Trock Auto Croft
ItIB W. wide Track	FE 5-1311
OUR NEW INSIDE SHOWROOM NOW COMPLETE - All 'M nnod ara now In stock — LONE STAR, MFG and GLASSTRON BOATS. Wa art dealing now - up to 120
are looking
ir WINTER PRICES
few '45 Mercurys, 3.* rag.
NOW ONLY $I5*.»5. Stop Cliff Dreyer Marine Div.
Holly Rd., Holly, call ME 4-«77l
Wanted Cw»-Trwfct H
EXTRA
EXTRA Dollars Paid
FOR THAT
EXTRA Sharp Cor
"Check the rest, then gat the bast" at
Averill
BUYING SHARP CARS
Colifornio Buytrs
lar sharp ears. Call.. .
M & M MOTOR SALES
Did You Know? VILLAGE RAMBLER
HELPf
need 300 than) Cadillacs, a, OMs and Buickt tor ( la market. Top dollar paid.
MANSFIELD AUTO SALES
not Baldwin Ava.
iMNew Md liNd Can 1M
MARMADUKE
CANCELED?
REFUSED?
Young Drivers?
Over 15 years experience biturlng _ -»ncelad and refused auto. Locw tervice—Payment plant.
CALL TODAY FE 4-3535
Anderson & Associates 1044 Joslyn Avenue
TRASPORTATION CAR BAR6AII NORTHWOOD AUTO PE 1053 BUICK, STRAIGHT EIGHT good meter, btat effaf. OR 3-5t_ 1050 BUICK ^OOOR. VERY ClMAN
FISCHER
BUICK
544 S. Woodward 647-5600
TIC corn. Mr. S
jER"oME’Fo?D,'Tfo^^	Fortiga Can	IM
TRIUMPH, 2 TOPS, BUCKET
63 WILLYS TEEP DISPATCHER, with lull metal top. Sell this one lor only $tfS. PATTERSON CHEVROLET "	"*■ ..............
- - ^
$1»5.' PATTERSON" CHE'vRO: LET CO. not S. Woodward Birmingham. Ml 4-273S._____
1963 Dodge ’/2-Ton
Pickup, with 6 cyl. engine, sti
tsn.
STATE WIDE AUTO
3t00 Elliabath Lake Road
_____________FE 0-7137
1061 BUICK SPECIAL, 4-DOOR, 0-cylinder, stick, very Met, ""
E ^5f61.
BOB BORST
LINCOLN-MERCURY 20 S. Woodwerd Blrmlnohar ______Ml 6-4530___
Repossession
INI ELECTRA Convorflblt wHh
Crissmon Chevrolet
(On Top of South Hill)
ihesjer________________OL 2-0721
4 FORD F-350, CUSTOM CAB, eavy equipped, 1-ton stake, excel-int condition, S1,r.............
Sion, radio and hooter, new tires, an excellent economy cor, fi" price I2f7, only $3.00 down ai U.OO per week. We handle ei arrange all financing. Call M Dan at:
FE B-4071
Capitol Auto
312 W. MONTCALM
GLENN'S
1*61 Buick 4-door hardtop, powa steering, power brtitat, eulomellc Ask (or-
L. C. Williams, Salesman
f52 W. Huron St.
FE 4-7371	FE 4-17*7
), 11,600. 3636440, 363- _
custom cab many nx)re extreS; Ford show truck, tovel JEROME FORD, Rochester FORD Dealer,
OL 1-*7H._______________________
1*45 CHEVY HEAVY DUTY 14' stake, 12-ply tires, elmr-* ■ «nd a bargain MA 6-4036.
ECONOLINE SUPER '
imatic. pessenter tee., -------,
uty throughout! Ford Company ruck. JEROME FORD, Roches-•r FORD Dealer. OL 1
INO MO ROADSTER WITH BRAND NEW PAINT, 4-SPEED TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND HEATER. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Assume weekly payments of $7*2, CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Perks it HAROLD TUR-
Repossession
No cash neadatf for this BUICK Electro ''225" hortftop, |u:
CADILLACS
Large Selection Alwaya On Display
WILSON CADILLAC OF BIRMINGHAM
1 block aeulh of 16 Mila Birmingham
1 VAUXHALL CRESTA - 1 I a deluxe model, ell leather erlor, radio, heater, )
. Call Mr. Cath a
an.______________________________
BUICK 1*62 4-DOOR HARDTOP, all white, axcallant, |1350. FE
2-5070.________________________________
1*63 CLEAN BUICK, ELECTRA 225 avertible, full Mwtr, s, $1,**5, FE 35*07.
5 FORD 14-TON PICKUP WITH
t 1*65 BUICK SPECIAL WAGON, stearlng, power/ brakes, ills, radio, heater, lutemat-
cash. EM 3-40X. *405 I
165 FORD DELUXE 14-TON CAMP-ar. special, heavy duty, aqulpir—‘ 352 engine, automatic.
Furniture van, 1*61 Ford, : box, excellent condition. MY 3 or MY 36141, 705 W. Clark Rd., Lake Orion.____
Attention
Hunters
„J2 AUSTIN-HEALEY 3000, W I R E -wheelt, over-drive. Colit. cr- * in 51600. OR 35020.
1*62 TR-3 HARDTOP. SOFT-Tt Tonnetu cover. 15,000 miles. Never raced. Excellent condition.
164*6.__________________________
^ 1*63 TRIUMPH TR-4, GOOD CON-
$2597
3 JEEP Ct70 pickup, 4-
1966
GMC
HAROLD
TURNER
FORD, INC.
464 5. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM
NOW OPEN
655 Oakland Ave.
(Outdoor Showroom)
(Just 'k mite north of Cota Avi
Spartan Dodge
l»65_By!CK_R!yiERA. LOADED, %ir
-?CiFfw5op
rivt, don't call
unitta interotted I
I VW. GRAY, IMMACULATE,
, servlet records. FE
CHEVY 1*62 V “ box, oxtra tires, tn
TON PICKUP, . <« *on'be
DEER HUNTERS
1 '42 Ford pickup and _______
camper, Sl,4»3; also '64 GMC and '64 Wolverine camper. S3,0*5. OR 31456. Mowleod.
1*44 AUSTIN HEALY SPRITE, II,-200, cell MA 33741.
1*65 VW, LESS THAN 6000 MILES) sunrool, radio, whltewells, excellent condition, best otter. Coll 33M77*, 333-7566.__
1966 TRIUMPH TR4-A
Demo, British racing green, wiro wheels, tonneau, save over $500 on this pre-tteton spoclel.
Superior
Rambler
4-7500 1*SI CADILLAC COUPE DeVILLE, solid block, lull power, the right kind of car. SI,0*5. JEROME FORD, Rochester FORD Deeler.
OL 16711._____________________
Its* CADILLAC 4-OOOR, EXTRA
FE 46517
Repossession
2 CADILLAC De Vllle hardtM. old cor taken In trod#. No cash needed. Estebllshed
LAC CONVERTIBLE,
By Anderson and Leemlng hew wU Used Cm
IN New «d Used Cm
INcwcMUsNCm IN
NB CHEVY	4 ■ oooa 1!
FMHO# flMTtff WNHwUlSi 22v ih> fifWp tMttf mmi «fftr f'
MWlfBIIMfir™ "
II CORVAIK BPOKt coups. RA- If
» S-DOOR HAROT^ A
CREDIT
1963 CHEVY II
SkVAIR MONiA 1*65, 4 - d60R ,
herdtep, 1)0 hji. engine. F------- '
glide. Radio, haator, 1IUIN ......
Exc. condition. t16fS. OL )6lM. 65 CHEVROLET STATION WAO-
Capitol Auto
312 W. MONTCALM
. _____Just oaat of Oakland_
' 1P63 CHEVY, 4-DOOR, RACK), NEW *—, aute., air cond. tow r"-llant family car, fannt a .... J6I16.
I 1*63 IMPXLA wagon, 327 ENOINS
Mansfield
Mtr 5:3BP.m.__________
naw^ri5)baf'^and battory, k. Forcad salt, SWf. Call FE 264W after 5;1*.
*5* FORD 3DOOR,
Ing. auto., whItewaHt, 1175. MA 6-nS7.
ter, full bewar, I
. .......5, OA ________________
TfO^^CdRVAIR WyNZA^ CONVERT-
claan, S1.200. 64667?(>.____
1*63 CORVAIR MONZA CONVERTI-
KESSLER'S
DODGE
CARS AND TRUCKS Salai and Sarvka d__________OA i-iaie
1963 CHRYSLER
I FORD 4-DOOR WAOO^ V6 igina, standard frantmlttlon, ra-0, haater, axcaHsM tranta^a-m $4*S. JEROME FORD, ROfhM-r FORD Daalar, OL 16711.
“Didn’t we just see that animal in one of the cages?!’’ .
r end Used Can IN New end I
1*63 ChavroMt Nova II, 3door
tn txcigllonally nict car, ona o ar, Birmingham trada.
$1695
BIRMINGHAM
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH *14 S. r—^	-
1*64 Ford Galoxte, l-cylindor, 2 to choeio
1*63 ch^SlCr^w
1*64 CADILLAC CONVERTIBLE, black, full equippad. S3,4*S.
BOB BORST
:<"Sai
On your n«w or uMd Pi or other fino car*
KEEGO PONTIAC
SALES ■ SERVICE
682-3400
1*64 CADILLAC COUPE DEVILLE, i ' 'vll factory aquipmant, wfilta with rhlte Landau top. Immaculate.
BOB BORST
LINCOLN-MERCURY 320 S. Woodward RlrmRiBham
__________Ml 66531_________
1*65 CADILLAC, CALAIS COUPE,
6,500 mites, air, full pi- " -
quolta, S4,5(». 335-5210.
IMF
John McAullfte Ford
I960 Chevy
2-Door
Extra ctean, twilight turguolst I
I OAKLAND AVE. PE 56 JOHN MCAULIFFE FORD
Ttmptsf 4-door, station wag-^tjxtiatk. fully aquipptd,
ALL OF THESE ARE ONE-OWNER NEW CAR TRADE-INS MANY more to CHOOSE FROM
Village Rombler
47 E. Mapte at Llvarnols TROY	5*5-7544
---ri $11*5.
Opdyka Hardwara______. _____
1*63 CORVETTE CONVERTIBLE with hardtop, 4-tptad. S2,5t5. 152-2165.
$24*5/murt sail,'6*3^.
1*43 CHBVY 1-door, 6-CYLINOER, standard tranamlsslon, axcallant •ram^rtallon and condition. Only
BOB BORST
LINCOLN-MERCURY 130 S. Woodward Blrmteghain
_________ Ml 6-453*_________
1*63 CORVETTE STINGRAY' WITH
cars. SIOO down, SSt.*0 Mr month.
Oakland Chrysler-Plymouth
H4 Oakland Ave.
1963 IMPERIAL
Air conditioning, 4-doof ha
PATTERSON
ROCHESTER
Chrysler-Plymouth
Imperial-Valiant
.0*1 N. Main	OL 16531
ll^CflSYSLeir 300 COtiVERTI-Ma, axcaftent condition, bucket sfsts, powtr windows, brakes and stearlng, 5 brand now
John McAullNe Ford
I960 Cadillac
Sedan DeVille
with lull power, beautiful finish, ona-owner. Only 045 ( Finance Balance, of Only—
$1395
1*60 CHEVROLET 3-OOOR HARO-top, radio, haater, autemat3 prict, 03*5. No money weakly MYOMnls. 0460.
STATE WIDE AUTO
3400 Ellubath Lako Road FE 0-7137
1*60 CORVAIR AOOOR 70IL AUt6-matlc, radto and haater, good — ■"St otter, FE 56628/^
4 BEL AIR V6, M700R, POW-ir slMrlng, brakes. ‘	‘ "
i*5. I-LI 5^.
1*64 CORVETTE, RED, .
spaad, *2,750, 236 Rkhard.
1*64 CHEVY BISCAYNE, RED. V6, itandard shift. 01J50. 333
1964 CHEVY
Imptla canvartlMa, aulomtik, %■
$1995
Homer Right

FE 84071
Capitol Auto
312 W. MONTCALM
stick
Just east of Oakland 1*60 MONZA COR
I xhlft. nraiuqt COnC ...	„
136 Marquette.
550 Oakland Ava.
. .J SEDAN. LOOKS IS good S7*5. Batter hurry ona. Oxtonl. OA 1-3421
GMC GLENN'S
CHEVROLETS'
Selecttd Used Cars , 1959 CHEVY
REPOSSEUION-I*40 CHiVY, V-S, no monay down, Myments of S5.07
1MI CHEVY 3-DOOR, SEDAN, AUTO-
1*64 CORVETTE CONVERTIBLE, spaed, radto and haater, walls, real sharp, for only I PATTERSON CHEVROLET 1104 S. Woodword Ave., Rim
ham. Ml 4-373S._________ ,
1064 CHEVY IMPALA SPOkT coupe, BcyHndar, atandard trana-mlMton, 0100 down, 00060 por
Oakland Chrysler-Plymouth
« 724 Oakland Ava.______
■ 1964 CHEVY
1 gtoa^mli^lurguolta
teirinft braim aM'"fuM''t quipment.
$1897
you with, tame with 50600 r factory warranty. Prkad from—
$1995
BIRMINGHAM
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH tl4 S. Woodward_____Ml 7-!
New Finance Plan I
You can buy a utad car wllh „ down or y«yr trada liwad not be
Pretty Ponies
1965 Mustangs
7 USED MUSTANGS TO CHOOSE FROM
CONVERTIBLES HARDTOPS 2 PLUS 2's FULL EQUIPMENT As Low As $79 Down
HAROLD
TURNER
FORD, INC.
466 8. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM____Ml 4-7S08
Lloyd's
Thanksgiving
SALE
Continues-RED HOT Selection
Savings-Satisfaction „ 1963 MERCURY
"Fastbtek." Pcylindtri, automatic, pewar .tearing.
1962 PONTIAC
Txye^loor hardtep, Scylindart, au-
S10*S
964 OLDS
S p 0 r 11 CeuM- l<yllndart. auto-
I DODGE L
NCE R, 2-DOOR
FACTORY BRANCH New and Utad Trucks
FE S64M_____________675 Oakland
GOOD 1*46 W-lon CHEVY PICKUF,
S140. FE 5-4226, after 4.____
HUNTERS SPECIAL - 1*60 RE-
6651 Ormond. Devltburg. Holly
I 6-34*600.	__________
MUST dispose of 1*63 ECONO-
only $1 Murphy
1*64 Volkswagen, 13600 a miles. Real sharp. Ask for
L. C. Williams, Salesman
*53 W. Huron St.
■■E 6-7371	FE 6-17*7
Many more to cheeie from RENAULT R-0, 1*65. AUTOMATIC, yrlvtte, SI300, 34 Cherokee, FE M152._________________
Volkswagen
Center
ImMte Sports Coupe, Power t1
FE S602S
SPECIALS
PREMIUM PRICES	T-OPO.tandem 3.S0(7gelleo
PAID FOR LOW-MILEAGE USED CARS.
VAN'S AUTO SALES
4540 DIXIE HWY. OR 3-13S5
y 1*61 FORD F-600 IBSBgallen tanker ^	oiling. A-I “'
or work 11,5*5.
1*63 Karmenn <
rwK "CLeAn" uscu caro
GLENN'S
FE 4-7371_____________FE 4-17*7
TOP 0 FOR CLEAN CARS OR truckt. Ecanamy Cars 2335 O' '
TOP DOLLAR PAID FOR SHARP CARS!
Gale McAnnelly't
NATIONWIDE
AUTO SALES
1962	CHEVROLETS
...jpato convertible, wMh e VI gine, Powergllda, Mwer t brakes, radio, haater, whi 01,2*5.
Air Moor, VI. ______ -
end heater, a nke car, I16t5.
ir'*«td‘?S2;.r7TK;w«.1
1963	CHEVROLETS
150 CHfeVY f'lEBTLINE AERO-
tkesl*' rildio, '^''^Deioo ^UyL
body only feirto—	---
trenspeftetlcn, 065._______
1*56 CHEVY, STICK, VI, PRICED it only f—
MARVEL_______________________
4 ■ DOOR, nearly! ||M running condl-
/ T»5rTMEVY"TDOOR7~VirTnCK,
'	------- 'E 0-4151.
J7 CHEVY
_________FE 5-2003_________
' CHEVY, 2-DOOR HARDTOP,
mt CHEVY BiL AIR 4«00R, 6-^n^, auto., flrtl 030S. Call
i*6i CORVETTE CONVERTIBLE,
Of titering, radio, etc., 32,000 - ^ kteal 2nd car, 02*5. t 0^, 4f* S. Hunter Blvd., pir-mb^iam near II Mite Rd„ Ml
"•r' mutt talM 01“« n. OR 3-S2I3.________
1963 DODGE
dw ladan, power ttearliw and 1 rakaf, new llrat, law mlteaga, napwnar, tpelteat a real honey.
$1395
BIRMINGHAM
S ^Weelhterd	3.
MODEL A, FORD, SPORT
Stton Or'sSS^ '****'
1*30 FORD, 4^>OOR, RUNS, S300,
$1595
1962 PONTIAC
<>ratxl Prbt. O^yllndart, •wtomalk
i*ai CORVAIR Mon2a ' l-OOOR,
----------------------------
Of Cast Ava.) 1*n ford - A-1. m I. CAITELL,
Spartan Dodge
B36iT~iSiPALA
$100 Down 36 Months to Pay
Lloyd
MOTORS
1250 OAKLAND 333-7863
1*61 CHBVY CONVERTIBLE, VS,
i005 - CHEVROLET, 1*51, 0000
WINTER STORAGE
"Don't leave you beet out In < snow—bring It In here end th
Ve are your euthorlied dealer Starcrett, M.F.G., Thompson. Je
J«ak Can-Tracks
k CARS - TRUCKS
1*61 FORD F-100 pickup w body, meter everhau throughout! S6*5.
1*62 FORD FIDO pkkup. m hauled, new tires, tt*S.
THE FOLLOWING TRUCKS ARE
I AVAILABLE FOR I IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
FOR NO MONEY DOWN
Superior
Rambler
I Triumph Roadster. Esc
I, push-button radio, bet-
lion blue linith, low
! VW ttatien wagon, 3-seat. Tur-olia and white finish, tuliy Ippsd .	*1,1*5
Autobahn
Motors, Inc.
'Y WAGON, VO, bOwER
_______ and brakai, M25. 6736453.
1*5* CHEVY, A-I SHAPE, I OWNER.
Ttl-Huron Auto
,- 3153 W. Huron	PI *6*73
1*5* CHEVY, a^YLlNOER, 4-600R> pewarglld*, PSPP. 33P-6633 after
r- 4:30.___________________________
< l*5t CHEVY STATION WAOON, *■ cyllndar, power steering and brakes — liras, tintad glasa all r-' md, an axcaltent M c
Waakly paymanH. «.4i.
STATE WIDE AUTO
34P0 Elliabtih Lake Road _________FE 1-7137_____
Mansfield
Ikuto Salts
Carvairs - 1*41 to 1*65. 4qpa*di and automatks, prkad rlghfl 11*4 Baldwin Ava.
. -U *-5tP*________FE HP25
r 1*63 CORVAIR MONZA COUPE
SPECIAL
1*64 Chevy Impala Sport Coupe. 4 on lha floor, full posyer, hot and ready to pol A steal at SI6tS.
ROSE
RAMBLER
guarantaa. Must latl. 674-l3t7.
JUNK"CAR$-FREir?OWS
SAM ALLiyihoNsMNC. lAHto-Morint iRsarance 104 UfoO Auto-Track Ports 102
Capitol Auto
312 W. MONTCALM
f east ef Oakland
It^ala convortibte. Powarg Smittwa'lls? rrai sharp, 516*5.
specially priced at S1,1*S.
I ctean and Is hard to
$497
1964 CHEVROLETS
radio and haatar. '
Ir station wagon, *passangtf.
Chevy convertible. Also new com.
with paint sprayer. FEI
Now oo4 Used Tracks 103
F 6M 1*55 F
"“‘ch blocks, cneins, ooiiies, or I cable, EM 3-7031 etter
1*51 FORb picKupT new iAt-
tery, new tiree, 3356352	I
T*j4 6 » 0 RlfKuTTvffH^i*j7 owe eng., geed body, OL 14554 i*52 FORD Vt-TON PICKUP, '54 1 Bird engine, runs geed. 25*0 Wl Hems Lake Rd. oiler 5 p.m. i*54 IVS-TON CHEVY WRECKER,
Auto
Insurance
for
Anyone
Don
Nicholie
S3'/2 W. Huron St.
FE 5-8183
IMF
John McAulItte Ford
1959 Buick
Elactra Convertible
The "225" with lull power (slei Ing, breket, windows end seel honey beige finish, v^lle nyoln li ^hmrom^ condition. No AAon
$895
6N OAKLAND AVE. FE 541 I JOHN McAULIFFB FORD
IMF
CHEVY Demoe, and extri equipped with many extras,
Ing elr conditioning end --------
musk. Exampla 1*65 CHBVY BIs-
wrlng, Powerglkte, ri ily 116*5.
\ Spartan Dodge
« CHEVY, R^Nt GW, ^NEBDS
I CORVAIR
llh 4qp*ed transmi
im or eld'car daw •MU u»TM<«nts of 111.72 par waal
HAROLD
TURNER
FORD, INC.
464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGH/^	...
VY SrATIONll*63 CORVETTE, FUEL INJECTION “	-2 tops, red, 217 cir *'*
of .3-Mn**d	*
new tires, A-I cond.' IteS.'CiM
OR 3-2044.________________
1*62 CHEVY 5D00R RISCAYNB 6; nl^67?l^. **'
i«i coAvaIr moMiA,
CAYNE , .............
TOMATIC TRANSMISIjON, RADIO AND HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MON BY down. Assume waakly pay-manlt of I7.*2. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml
r tow mllaaM.
VAN CAMP CHEVY
mIlPORO__________MU 4-Ktt
Mansfield
Auto Salts
1*64 ettevy Impala Super Sport Pew|ir, warranty, Burgundi
ro"*j iiw^^*******" ^**rr im. 1*64 ChAvILLE, stick SHIFT, RA-dto, **ty aya glaaa, tbiMd stlnd-shlaM, undarcoatad, 13600 miles, tactery warramy. LBta nau
2-5475 batefa 4 p.m._
1*64 CHEVY II, 6 WAOON, '
IT'S NEW
WAIT AND SEE
Pontiac Retail Store
DIALi FE 3-7954
simmmw $n,m
YEAR-END CLEARANCE SALEl
100% Written
Crsdtt Na Frablami

Sport, small VI, stidi, to
Mill umtor taarrwily, mt... ----
t1,*S0. 624-35*0 after 3:30 p.m.
CREbiT Nd PROUEM •>5:;,utateN.oX!i.
"Oriva Homo Today"
FE 5"4101
0<vl.goW cand. lew mIM S3 Oata-way Dr., Pontiac.
PRESS WANT ADS HAVE THE LAST WORD - RESULTS!
• Atenia Coupe, Pewargllda, lie, haatar, wMtawalla, 016*5.
i Corvalrs, 3-door an dtops, with various sq ces start at only (1.0*5.
CHEVY II
1*63 Chsvy II Super Sport, Sdoor hardtop, Fowe^We, radio and haater, whilawalls, SI6*5.
PATTERSON
CHEVROLET
11*4 S. Woodward	Ml 64735
BIRMINGHAM
Capitol Auto
312 W. MONTCALM
_____Juit aatt at Oakland
1*60 CHEVY CONVERTIILE,; V6, aewarglldt. whitewallt. Exlr-Iharp, 0575. OR 36*34._
1*60 CORVAIR 4 • DOOR WITH AUTOMATIC TRANB-MIIBION, RADIO AND HEATER, WHITEWALL MONEY DOWN, Asiuma waakiy paymante at I4.*3. CALL CREDIT MOR. Mr. Farkt at HAROLD TURNER

TIME IS NEAR!
WAIT AND SEE
Pontiac Retail Store
DIAL FE 3-79S4
1962	PONTIAC BonnivillE 4-Door Hardtop,
Powtr StEtring, Brokts, Windows. Only 31,000 Milts .................$1495
1963	OLDS ”98'' 4-Door with Powir. A Rial
Buy ot ............................. $1995
1963	OLDS ”88" 4-Door, Power StEtring and
Brokts ..............................$1495
1964	OLDS ”98" Convtrtibit, Full Powir....$2095
1964 OLDS Cutloii 2-Ooor Hardtop, Full Powtr,
Likt Ntw .............................$1895
1964	FORD Goloxit ”500" Convtrtibit, Powtr
StNring, Brokti, V-8, Likt Ntw........$1595
1965	OLDS Viito Cruiitr 9-Potitngtr Station
Wagon ................................$2795
1965 MONZA Convtrtibit, 3-Spttd, Only 5,500
WilM .................................$1775
1965 OLDS Cutlass Coupt, Powtr Stttring, V-8, Automatic, Only 7,800 Milts	$2395
1965 PONTIAC Bonntvilit Hardtop, Powtr Stttring, Brokts, Air Conditioning .	$2995
ORIGINATOR OF 2-YEAR WARRANTY
635 S- Woexiward Ave., Birmingham 647-5111
mm md 9mi tm 1M
.. weekly eevmwfts, M.4I.
^	STATE WIDE AUTO
t	3400 eMieOetti Leke Roed
_________■ FB 0-yi3>________
Nm nd Used Cm 186	New md Uied Cm 106
t*61 FORD WAGON, V4 CNGINE,	MUST WSFOM OF l*«4 FORD Mr. Murphy of 315d101. McAulHfe.
TllK
- 1961 Ford
Convartibit
f>nh I white finlih, redio, heete Only-
: $695 ;■ BEATTIE
OR 3-1291
’ IflO FOkb, I AUTOMATIC, J-OOOR - An Mcetfent 2nd cer for the
i deWib bo marvIl
e> pey hi Isi C
1M0 FALCON, AUTOMATIC, new pelnl, no rust, mow tlm.
.	I7J.
condition, 1350, *51-3272.
»«2 FORD CONVERTIBLE, RED end white, V-0 engine, eutometlc, e reel iherp cer et only *'**
King Auto
327S W. Huron St.
guit bISFOS# 6ft W2 rBiRD.
sToMkrs'eir--------------
33MI01. Mrtulltte.
m, iMymenti of only Cell Mr. Murphy et
I FORD GALAX IE 500 ^D( herdtop, eutometic, redio hooter, full price, Sl»5. No mi down. Wookly peymenti, tt.4l
STATE WIDE AUTO
3400 Ellubeth Leke Roed FI 0-7137______________
1N2 FALCON 2 - DOOR WITH automatic TRANS-MI $ S I 0 N, RADIO AND HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Aeiume weekly peymenti ol S4.t2. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Ferki et HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500.

n XL, pow-
_________ ____ _____j., new llrei,
r mlleoBO. cleen. 11,350. FE
. 0 engine, i
-IT iteertng, brekei — ............
WnM, cneetnut with e white top
Mansfield
Auto Soles
, city lot lem-pecked full of ihei l-owner eeri. 100 to chooie Iron 1104 Beldwin Ave.
FE 5-5W0	_____
loj^FOkg GALAklE 500 CONVERT-
.ET CO., 1104 s.
tN3 FORD FAIRLANE 2-DOOR, • • wllb Kyi. engine, eutometic, w'«> redio, hooter, whitewelli, MtS, i
'"**■ WE FINANCE
King Auto
Compact
Specials
1964 MONZA
$1095
1962 MONZA
$795
1963 CORVAIR
500 lerlei 2-door wllh euh wllh redio end heeler.
$895
$895
1963 MONZA
$1095 1963 BUICK
^ *5Ilth'^bleU*'!riterior7 e'^reei
beeuty.
$1995
1963 PONTIAC
Adoer wIlR double power, iMe end out, thli one li like new.
$1695 1961 OLDS
po4wr, while with blue Interior, e -' beeutiful cer.
$1295
1963 CHEVY
olon, roel^"M^^
1959 CHEVY
Impele oletlon wagon with VI engine, aulonwtk^ TTurquolee finir end abneet Ilka haW.
$695
MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM
BILL SMITH USED CARS
442 N. Firry St.
FE 44241
Rile 10O FORD OonvertlbM, Is ki. a mritling champagne wilhi matdhlng buckali, 352 engine, and* Crulie-O-Matic, mrer and a ttrrl-fic off saeson boy et only — i
$1497 *
Spartan Dodge
1963 FALCON
tatlon wagon with stick shift trar mission, radio and heater. In • cellant condition, full prieo on S7S7, no money down, weak peymanlt only S7.M. We henc.. and arrange ell financing. Call Mr. Dan sf;
FE 84071
Capitol Auto
312 W. MONTCALM
East of Oeklend
SAVE ON 1-OWNER 1f«3 FORD, 5-
AVE
ST
REPOSSESSION - 1»43 FORD,, money down, payments of t.... weekly Call Mr. Msmn at FE 5-4101. McAullfte.
1963 Ford
Fairlone 4-Door
with e VI engine, radio, haste Only-
$1195
BEATTIE
1964 Falcon
4-Door Wagon
Apessei^r, white finish, radio,
$1495
BEATTIE
ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD "Your FORD DEALER Since 1130"
OR 3-1291
1064 T-BIRD LANDAU FULL POW-
Ntw BiM Cm 10|
S MUSTANG, 11

1965 Ford
Fairlone 2-Door
with e beige finish, radio, haoN end Is ony—
$1795
BEATTIE
ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD "Your FORD DEALER Since 1130" "Nome of Service after the Sale"
OR 3-1291
1*41 WILLYS JEEP, drive, metal lap, S550. OR 3-7131.
Mansfield
AtHe Soles
CHy lot |em.packed full of sharp
1964 COMET	iirB.'iSvil!’a«““
1*54 LINCOLN CAPRI. FULL POW-| hoeto^ **VS "enoln*!' alftomallcjim4 0^r'4«nrEb“ANfeliy!iuE
------ ^	-----I --------m, whiTtwell tirei, only
cer down, wookly poy-
DON'S
USED CARS
SMALL AD-8IG LOT
so CARS TO CHOOSE FROM
1*65 Mustang convortlMo.
1*65 Chevy woflon, outomatic I.
1*61 Chovy wagon, automatic I.
1*61 Chevy Bel Air, 4.door.
1*62 1-ton pickup. Ford.
1*63 Ford wagon.
1*64 Buick LeSabre, automatle. ble power, radio, hooter,
Wills.
1*61 Impals 2-door hardtop, stlc„ . 1*57 Chevy 4-door hardtop, automatic, doubit power.
1*64 Impale 2-door hardtop, Stic 1*64 Chevelle 4-sposd, whits.
677 S. LAPEER RD.
Lekt Orion
MY 2-2041
IMF
John McAullfto Ford
1965 Ford
Fairlone "500"
Sedan. BssutMul copper mist finl V-l sngine, sutomstic, powsr stc Ing. Only S*S down. Hnenca 0 once ot Only—
$1795
6N OAKLAND AVE. FE S.4I0I JOHN McAULIFFE FORD
IMF
GLENN'S
1*63 Ford convortlUo, 4.sp**d, pow-or steering,, brskos and windows. Ask for-
L. C. Williams, Solesmon
*52 W. Huron St.
FE 4-7371	FE 4-17*7
----------
1*64 THUNDERBIRD, BURGUNDY 11 mot, worronty, t25*5-,l7*-6766.
1964 FORD
Country sedan with full power, automatic tronsmlulon, radio and hektor, whilewsll tires, only 34* or old cor down and weekly payments SI2.I0.
HAROLD
TURNER
FORD, INC.
464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM____Ml 4-7500
MUST DISPOSE OF 1*65 MUSTANG no money down, paymonis of only $12.03 weekly. Coll Mr. Murphy at 235-4101 McAulWe.___________
IMF
JOHN McAULIFFE FORD
1964 Ford
Goloxio "500" 4-Door
Ooden wllh o V4 onglno, out. mstlc. power itoorlrtg, skybluo finish. This unit wii sold end eervicad Iw usH S45 down. Fipcnce Balonco of Only-
$1595
W OAKLAND AVE. FE JOHN McAULIFFE FORD
IMF
1*64 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN, door wagon, outomatic. radio, hot tor, real nice. Only $1,70*.
BOB BORST
cyl. stick, radio. 14400 miles, SI, 2*5. JEROME FORD, Rochester FORD Peeler. OL l-*711.
390
4-Speed 1965 Ford
Custom 2-Door
with a blue finitb, heater, white-walls, still In new car warranty I Only-
$2095
BEATTIE
ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD 'Your FORD DEALER Since 1*30" "Home of Service otter the Sele*^
OR 3-1291
1965 MUSTANG
.lowing bronzt convortlblo, with rhite buckets, power, 21* cu. In. '» with Crutametic and factory rerrsnty for your protection.
$2197
NOW OPEN
855 Oakland Ave.
(Outdoor Showroom)
(Just Vk mile north ot Cass Avo.)
Spartan Dodge
Autobahn
Specials
roMlAC lUUSS. FRIDAY, XOVEAlijzJi 12, 19G^ New «Ml Used Cm
D—11
New sad Used Cm 106
wot FALCON SPRINT COUP! OfiBlno, ddpoad trammlsmn, ..
Rechotlor FORD Doolor, OL 1471).
1*61 MIRCURY STATION WAGON ... ..._	..-------tionlng, ------
626-2f«
1*64 JIIP CJ-S: «^Wi4E6L ORIVf,
106
New Nad Used Cm 106
OLDS 1*64, DYNAMIC 10, 2-DOOR
hardtop, power steering, ------
^aktt, radio, ofc., custom
BOB BORST
_ LINCOLN-MeRCURI 510 S. Woodward Bln....
MI 6-4538
asssa,"-''
Ing. All A-l condition. Choka Birmingham, BleomfloM tradat. Fricod to salt.
BOB BORST
<a MERCURY, GOOD TRANS-
pertotlon, 575. OR 4-37*7.___
1*60 MBRCURY 4-OOOR SBDAN,
b«*l eH*r, Ml 6-2672._________
1*60 COMET, 4-OOOR. GOOD SBC-
1*60 COMET WAOON, 4-DOOR WITH stick shin, radio, hoatar, wh" Wfito, hill price 53*5.
WE FINANCE
King Auto
3176 W. Huron St.
__________FE 1-0400________
1*61 MERCURY 2-DOOR HARDTOP
COMET, 1*65 CALIENTE. 4-OOOR. VI eutometic power staerlng end brakes, lots ol oxtres. S2.IM. GR
down, weekly paymants, 14.41.
STATE WIDE AUTO
3400 Elliaboth Lake Road FE 0-7137
i*61 M e at U fc Y CUSTOM MON-
ir,	on
’, 57* down.
S3I.0S per
1*61 COMET DELUXE, 2-OOOR, RA-
owner, *7*5.
Oakland Chrysler-Plymouth
724 Oeklend Ave.__________332-II50
1*62 COMET 1-DOOR DELUXE, white, eutometic, r»rfio-real sharp. Only *7*5.
BOB BORST
LINCOLN-MERCURY 10 S. Woodward Birmingham Ml 6-4SM
---^----^OCM^TER
I converfibit, 6t5"2117.
HAROLD
TURNER
1*64 OLDS 4-DOOR HARDTOP, *,-600 actual miles, Sl**5. 33l-)647 weekdays alter 5:30 p.-
lY MARAUDER 4-power ttoering, Slllon, tacto^ exec. ROME FORD,
9 OLDS, A-1 CONDITION, I
1N2 OLDS, N CONVERTIBLE WITH automattc, radio and hutor, f " power, full prict, IMS. No moi down, weekly payments, II.4I.
STATE WIDE AUTO
3400 Elizabeth Lake Roed _________FE 1-7137______
1*64 OLDS STARFIRE, ^DOOR HT. —er, bucket sesis, low mile-to Cleon, S24*5. MA 6-52)0.
1*64 OLDS * ** motor, ■ Ing, ekc. si
4-DOOR HARDTOP,
1964 OLDS
"M" convortlblo, powtr steering
FM radio, Iktoor hardtop, an ceptlonelly, nice car.
$2095
BIRMINGHAM
chrysler-plymouth
New Eiid Ueed Cm 106
COMP <N and test drive THE "HOT" M
JEROME
OLDS-CADILLAC
condition, 5300. FE 2-*3*5, el
1*62 PLYMOUTH SPORTS FURY
------‘.Tie, radio and hoolar, pow-
Ing and brohes, sharp mrsh, 5100 down, 55* per
r. Birmirn
ilngham trado.
$1495
BIRMINGHAM
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH *14 5. Woodward____Ml 7-!
NEED A CAR?
een bankrupt or had credit prot lems, we can finance .you Int the car ot your choice, cell Ml Den at:
FE 8-4071
FOR IMMEDIATE OeLIVERY
Capitol Auto
312 W. MONTCALM
New end Und Cm 106
Mansfield
$1595
BIRMINGHAM chryselr-plvmouth *14 S. Woodward____Ml 7-3214
Oakland Chrysler-Plyinouth
724 Oakland Avo.________330-015*
164 PLYMOUTH, 2 - DOOR HARD-top, l-cyl., radio, power stoerlno.
1964 VALIANT
t "XM," V-l automatle, 50,-----------*■ ‘T toreo, this
minghsm Irst.
$1695
BIRMINGHAM
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH
Ml 7-J2I4
brakss, full price tWS
WE FINANCE	1
King Auto
2275 W. Huron $1.
___________FE S-40IS___
REFOSSESSION-I*63 OIBSMOTlTS
1*63 OLDS CONVERTIBLE, DYNAMIC "IT' VI engine, automatic, power steering, brakes, radio, healer, 4,000 actual miles. Extra ihsrpl Ssvel JEROME FORD, RKhss-
Repossession
Must dispose of a 1*63 OLDS convertible, will bring cer to your homo. No OS neododi Cell Mr. Cash at 330-4520 Spartan.
1*65 Muitenfl with "20*" engine, 12,-000 miles, new car warranty, show, --- condition	52,0*5
1*65 GTO coup*. ^ Sensei red finish with black Interior, Redlln* tires, Mr 000 certllled miles .52,3*5
1*62 Falcon Custom 2-door. Atuo-mallc tranemisslon, radio, booutlful froit whito finish, now tiros ..lav*
Autobahn
Motors, Inc.
AUTHORIZED VW DEALER W milt north of MIrocIt MI|o 17«5 S. Ttiograph	FE MS31
BIG SURPRISE
WAIT AND SEE
Pontiac Retail Store
AT WIDE TRACK
DIAL; FE 3-7954
ff§ Mmm mm
- BUY HERE - PAY HERE -
We finance when others connot: Even if you hove been bankrupt, hove been garnisheed, ore new in town, hove hod a repossession, hove been in receivership or hove been turned down by others.
OVER 50 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM
CAR	PRICI	WEEK	CAR	PRICE	WEEK
1958 CHEVY ... SEE THIS ONE!	. $297	$3.03	1959 KARMANN GHIA $597 ECONOMICAL		$6.06
1961 TEMPEST .. SHARP	...$297	$3.03	1959 PONTIAC .. STATION WAGON	...$297	$3.03
1959 FORD 	 HARDTOP	.. $197	$2.02	1959 PONTIAC .. SHARP	.. $297	$3.03
1961 PONTIAC ... SHARPI	...$697 "	$7.07	1961 MERCURY .. STATION WAGON	...$697	$7.07
1961 CHEVY .... REAL NICEI	.. $597	$6.06	1959 CHEVY .... HARDTOP	...$397	$4.04

60 5. TELEGRAPH
ACR055 FROM TEL-HURON 5H0PPING CENTER
Double Checkeci Used Cars
, powtr light gr*
Block vinyl top
)**l OLDS Helldoy 4-door
totrlng,
(InIthI
*3,3*6
Sharp	ST
1*63 CHBVY B*l Air llOtl* WH radio, htotor, whitowtili, dork f llnish, llohl Mu* trim	IT
1*66 BUICK orond sport, radio, hj or, 4-ipood, moo whoolt, modi blut «^h matchlno trim $3 1*65 SKYLARK Adoor todon, r*i htttor, automotlc, oir condlltoni VS, pow*r Itioring, broket, wh wolli, light gray llnith	S2.
1*5* LINCOLN Contlnwitol e
------	-*w*y It-
to gol
il powtr, hld*-away topi White
1*62 FALCON wojjom St
tdoor hon
_____jg, brkk*6
lights, black « trim. Only
ItSl BUI^
GSi-u
1*66 PONTIAC Bennovlll* 1-door hordlop, automotlc,' radio, hoator,
5Xw»vW.m*“'«'
OLIVER
BUICK
OWN ONE OF OUR 'OK" USED CARS ... YOU CAN DEPEND ON THEM IN THE WINTER!
, WHAT IS IT?
WAIT AND SEE
Pontiac Retail Store
ATWWETMCK	'	0141,113.7954
; - ■ / '____^
1965	1964	1964 ■	1962	1965	1961
CHEVY	MERCURY	CHEVY	CHEVY	CHEVY	CHEVY
Bel Air 5totion Wagon *-Pass*ngpr modal wllh V-* tngln*. Poworglld* transmis-Sion, radio and hoelor and t	Comet 2-Door with powortul V-l sngln* and FonFO-Mstlc frantmlulon, radio, hoator and Gross* Point*	Impolo Super Sport with 4-speed trehsmlsslon, powerful 40* engine, radio, hooter and Imporlal Ivory finish with	Impolo Wagon Factory Air Cond. Has smooth "327" onglno with Poworglld* transmission, radio, hootor, 4-way powsr, luggagt	Impolo Sport Sedon Factory Worronty WHh powerful V-l engine, Pow-srgllde transmission, radio ond	Impolo Wagon *-pass*ngsr wHh V-g angina, standard shifl, radio and hestor, power brakes, powsr steering.
nic* solid mist blus finish with whltswalls. $2599	platinum finish with whitowsll ""*$1299	whitowsll tirn. $1599	rick on top, sllvor blu* finish with whltswalls. $1499	hoator, power itNrIng, Daytona blue finish with whltswall tlrss. $2299	gold finish. $999
1963	1961	1964	1964	1965	1962
FORD	CHEVY	CHEVY	CHEVELLE	CHEVY	PONTIAC
Gdoxie XL Convertible with Cruls*4)-Mslle trbnsmis-Sion, power brekes, power steer-inflr radio* haatar* whltawali	Impolo Convertible WKh powortul "S27" V-l onglno, Poworglld* Irtnsmisilon, power brakes, powor stMrIng, radio.	Impolo Sport Coupe with v-s angina, Poworglld* trantmlsslon, powor brakos and	Convertible Foctory Warranty WHh V-l sngln*. Powerglld*	Impolo Sport Coupe Factory Worronty with Powtrgllde Irsnsmisaton,	Sport Sedan Hydramatic trsnimlsslon, powor brikts and powor stooring, ra-
tirta. India ivory with whIto •op.	hoator, whit* finish with bltck top and rod Intorlor, whltowoll tiros.	and a sllvor mist Mu* llnish	HofHlur«8 maroon with biKk top and whitawall tlroi.	tul solid Daytona Mu* and has sparkling whltswall tIrn.	dio and hoator, and o nice sparkling turquols* llnish with whitowsll tins.
$149,9	$1099	$1999	$1899		$1099
1964	1965	1964	1961'	1964	1962
CHEVELLE	CORVAIR	OLDS	COMET	CHEVY	OLDS
Malibu Sport Coupe	Monza Sport Coupe Factory Worronty	98 Holiday Sport Coup#	4-Ooor Wogon	Impolo Super Sport	Holiday Sport Sedan
with powerful V-l onslno, etond-•rd shiff trensmlselon, radio, hooter* and a nice Roman rod	with 4-aptod trsnimlsslon, rg-die, hdMtr and the finish Is ■ solid dotort btlgt that Is beau-	WHh full power, rsdla and hoot-*r, and t bonutlful finish of sparkling lurquolso, also has	WHh Scylindir onglno, niandtrd shHt Irnnimlialon, rtdto and hootor and t nkt boig* llnish	with nutomstle transmission, radio and heater, and ths finish is s hies Indian Ivory.	transmission, radio and hootor, power brakes and stssrlng, whitowsll tlrss and sllvor mist
$1899	tiful end it has whitewall tlree. $1899	whltowoll tires. $2099	with whitowsll tires. $599		groan llnish. $1199
631 OAKLAND AT CASS PONTIAC
FE 4-4547
Oakland County's Largest Volume Chevrolet Dealer
WOODWARD and 10 MILE RD. ROYAL OAK
2 BIG LOCATIONS —
New Chevys-Demos and Over $300,000 in > "OK" Used Cars
.. >
D—If
THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY> NOVEMBER 12, 1963
Niw ■«! IM Cm miMwr li fcrf Cm
« FLYMOUTM WAOON, MOOR.
....... .......
MTS*.
fH4 VALIANT ^DOOR WITH *^YU
?r-p’!fT^N*^rR?lL*^T
CO., I1M S. Woodward Avo., Bir-
miooham. Ml 4-r35._____
\W PLYMOUTH SPORTS FURY, Moor, hardtop, 3B3 angh^ 4 twr-
GLENN'S
automatk. Aik tor—
L. L Williams, Soltsmon
*9 W. Huron M.
FB 4-7171	PR 4-WW
.......... -ti of factory warrant^ loB, (1U down, 171.9 par
Oakland Chrysler-Plymouth
784 Oakland Ava.________IIHISO
PONTIAC-RAMBLER-BUICK CRED-
r. Snow, Ml 1-55W.
I CHIEF PONTIAC, I
lonabla. FE 4-3040.
1757 PONTI„w	^— .....
Mp^good condition, 195, (
1957 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE, 4-
door hardtop. OR 3-5174_________
1750 PO N T I A C CATALINA CON-vrrtibir, brown with black topi
King Auto
PONTIAC 1713 GRAND PRIX, FULL
T7M PONTIAC STATION WAGON.
Tim PONTIAC catalina sport
coupe, automatic, tri-power, power steering, 1100 dovfr, $39.05 pei
Oakland Chrysler-Plymouth
734 Oakland Avr. ■	39-7150
17M PONTIAC CATALINA, POWER stearing and brakes, M50.
3 7341.______________________
TtaTtontiac, excellent con-
ditlon, I owner, FE 4-5614.,_
1761 PONTIAC TEMPEST, G( body, good engine, 1400. Ml-l
power steering, power brakes, i matic. Ask for—
L. C. Williams, Salesman
952 W. Huron St.
FE 4 7371 ,	FE 4-171
,1 TEMPEST 4-DOOR WAGON, 3-
weekly payments, 14 40.
STATE WIDE AUTO
1961 PONTIAC
ilar Chief 4-door hardtop with i tomatic transmission, radio a htotottoP. full mrlr* CIOT. no mOT
tomatic transmission, i heater, full price U97. do¥m. weekly payments w..., . We handle and arrange all \ nancing. Call Mr. Dan at:
FE 84071
Capitol Auto
312 W. MONTCALM
1 PONTIAC SAFARI CONVERT-
Estate Storage
1961 PONTIAC
Beautiful rad Ventura 3-door hardtop, with matching red end whl‘-morokyde Interior. Power course and In mint condition insli
”“$1197
Full Prico NOW OPEN
855 Oakland Ave.
(Outdoor Showroom)
(Just 'A mile north of Ctss Avo.)
Spartan Dodge
TitSS PONTIAC 4-0<30R HARDTOP,
r, 334-4505 Mon., Tuas.,
I PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CON-
mants, 17.41.
STATE WIDE AUTO
3400 Elizabeth Lake Road FE-1-7137
ATALINA, automatic ■	'm"?k	■
1C TRANSMISSION. RAOia WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Asauma weekly payments of an. CALL cre6-IT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500.
3 PONTIAC CATALINA, 4-DOOR edan, automatic transmbslon, ower steering and brakes, radio.
Auto Sales
1963 Pontiac Bonneville hardtop. Sr— vinyl top, r
M Baldwin Ave.
GLENN'S
Repossession
No cash needed - 1743 PONTIAC Bonneville 2-door hardtop. Full power. Just released lor public sole. Call Mr. Cash at 33B-45M -Will bring car to your "
GLENN'S
L. C. Williams, Salesman
752 W. Huron St.
FE 4-7371	FE 4-1777
RUSS JOHNSON
Pontioc-Rambler
USED CAR
STRIP
)4 RAMBLER hardtop "770" 11,1
14 TEMPEST wagon . 11,1
13CORVAIR Monza auto .. II
13 FORD Moor .. $1,:
13 RAMBLER sadtn "770" 11.1 53 FORD 3-door, nko	1
a RAMBLER 4-door . I
43 PONTIAC 3-door .. 11,475
«4 PONTIAC hardtop . 11)775
43 PONTIAC hardtop
43 PONTIAC hardtop . 11,375
1740 CHEVY 3-door
RUSS JOHNSON
Pontiac-Rambler
M24 In Lake Orkm
MY 3-6266
ai JMCm tMHw UNd Cm 1M
VENN'S”
GLENN'S
L C Williams, Salesman
732 w. Huron St.
FE 4-7171	FE 4-17W
IMF
John McAullfto Ford
1964 Pontiac
Bonneville Convertible
IBM CATALINA ii-OOOR HARDTOP --------- brakes and atoarlnn.
$2095
130 OAKLAND AVE. FE S-4101 JOHN McAULIFFE FORD
IMF
1745 PONTIAC CATALINA SPORT
STATION WAGON, 1745 SAFARI, 7-
Mansfield
Auto Sales
17« Tempest 2-door hardtop. Auto
stsering, auto., radio. York Town blue, oxcalltnt, 11400 call 453 ***'*
Special of the Week
1744 PONTIAC Catalina
lack top, a« r sttering, i
III factory egulpmont.
$1497
Spartan Dodge
Transportation Specials
77	11.75
1755 OLDS 3-door 1757 PONTIAC. 3-door . .1 1751 CHRYSLER, Auto. '
1751 FORD, Wagon .
1751 CHEVY, Stick ..
1757 FORD, Stick .
1757 SIMCA 4-SPfOd
1757 CHEVY Moor ------ ------
1740 RAMBLER, Stick 1377	13.75
17« DODGE 3-door	1377	' ■
1743 RENAULT 4-door .1377 ■— CORVAIR, Auto . 1377 CHEVY, Wagon 1577
1741 COMET, Auto. 1740 PONTIAC, »'
1477
SMALL WEEKLY PAYMENTS WE HANDLE AND ARRANGE ALL FINANCING CALL MR. DAN
FE 84071
Capitol Auto
GLENN'S frSe?
Mansfield
Auto Soles
ttts Pmtiae Calalltul AAmr hard top. I Intark
74S CATALINA 4-DOOR ......
^^^stowlnft brol«, whl^alla.
yi lop, n . ^3406, Ri
Mansfield
Auto Soles
1745 Tempest LeMans 4-spaed transmission, I GM warranty. 12,375.
_	1104 Baldwin Av
Mansfield
Tronsportotion
Specials
NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED FINANCING NO PROBLEM
. Full p
full price II price .
wagon, ce Un
1750 Ford 1757 Thuti„ 1754 Buick,
ir hardtop $77

Plus over 75 i^e to choosa from SEE US BEFORE YOU BUY
LUCKY AUTO
Mansfield
Auto Soles
mi PanHac BannevIHe Hm hardtop. Power, CM warranty,^
_^**|,^1ie0 BiMwbi Ave^^
ITOIRAMbLeiT
SHELTON
PONTIAC-BUICK
OSS Rochodar Road
________051-7711____
1743 AMBASSADOR
whitewalls. ■ BIrmli
Ing and I In^am m
Village Rambler
1703 RAMBLER CONVERTIBLE WITH AUTOAAATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Asauma weekly paymanta of 04.73. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parka at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7SOO.
55 AMBASSADOR
car warranty, S3.37S.
Village Rombler
644 S. woodward Ava. BIRMINGHAM___Ml 0-37(l0|
GO!!
HAUPT
PONTIAC
1743 PONTIAC Starchlaf AdooT an tomatic^ powtr ataaring, brakai
1741 CHEVY wagon, V-l, tutomallC,
1744 TEMPEST^^1.
CHEVY BiKa I, only 077 down
BONNEVILLE jMt powor, S77
1741 BUICK LoSobr
ON N.
N STREET
broket, good clean. No ru
rust. llrOfS. OR

GO WHERE THE ACTION ISI
1743 4-DOOR PONTIAC CATALINAj
1742 PONTIAC 4-DOOR WAGON, AU-
BOB BORST
LINCOLM-MERCURY
DON'T MISS IT
WAIT AND gEE
Pontiac Retail Store
________4-4530____
13 PONTIAC ADOOR CATALINA,' wwor itooring and brakes, shr~-11.395.
WE TRADE-BANK RATES MAZUREK MOTOR SALES lodward al S. Blvd._
Station | Wagon Specials ’
1964 Ford
with a »potl«s« burgundy, fntppy VI with itick thifl. Full prlC9~
$1197
AT WIDE TRACK
DIAL. FE 3-7954
ONLY 4
Company-Owned Demos
1965 FORDS
Auto Outlet
100 Automobiles MUST be sold immediately. These cars will be sold at fantastic savings to the public only... NO DEALERS, PLEASE.
Sale Starts Friday, November 12, 1965 at 9:00 am. Sharp... Thru Saturday, November 13 at 7:00 p.m.
LISTED BELOW ARE JUST A FEW OF THE MANY CARS THAT WILL BE FOR SALE IMMEDIATELY!
1960 Ford
2-Ooor Sadtn. Automatic radio and heater and real nice.
Weekly Payments ........$2.48
1965	1965
FORD	FORD
XL Convertible	Fairlone 4-Door
with 353 V4 MlMr fdUo, hMf-or, Crutoo-O-Maflc, powor ittor-Ing and a whita flnlit]^	WNh Nm oconomy Kylindor angina, radio, hoator, CrulM4>-Motlc and whNtwilli.
$ave	Save
1965	1965
FORD	FORD
LTD Hardtop 2-Door with 3S1 V-l engint, radio, haotor, CrulM - 0 - Motic,	F-100 Vs-Ton Styleside Pickup with V-I^anglne.^uttom
wdlniwofli^'''® '*™*^** $ave	Save
BEATTIE FORD
“YOUR FORD DEALER SINCE 1930"
ON DIXIE HIGHWAY IN WATERFORD
OR 3-1291
$1797
1963	Dodge
Dart with a glowing turguolta tl
t*a’nMril*''I ’'*( *"** * ***"'p'
$1097'
1964	Ford
t-PMMogtr Country Sedan, the ) tngint, Crul»d-0-Ma|ic and pow«
'■"”“$1987
1764 Dodg,
"440" 4-poisangrr, VO, outomitl power, ahining gold finith F.
$1797
1962 VW
Dtluxf bus, a beautiful rad ar whita finish. A full arica of oniy-^
$697
Spartan Dodge
QUALITY
That's What You Get in a
Use(d Car ■■ From Haskins
1962 Corvair
Weekly Payments .....$5.48
1961 Olds
4-Door Hardtop with tutomotlc, radio and heater. Nice.
Weekly Payments .....$6.48
1961	Pontiac
^Door Hardtop with ridlo, hatitr and automatic. Really nice.
Weekly Payments .....$8.48
1959 T-Bird
3-Door Hardtop with radio, haotor and automatic. Extra clean.
Weekly Payments ..., . .$6.48
1962	Buick
Elactra "215" ConvartlMa. Radio and hatiar. Ratlly, raally claan.
Weekly Payments ....$11.48
1961 Valiant
3-Door Hardtop with radio, hootar and automatic. Hara la elate.
WHkIy Poyments ......$6.48
1956-Cadillac
Sedan da VIHa artth MH ptwar, radio, haatar and automaTk. Sharp.
WMkIy Payments ......$2.48
1959 Chevy
1963 CORVAIR Spyder
Convartibla, 4-ipapd, rad will a black top.
$1150
1965 TEMPEST LeMons
1964 OLDS F-85	1964 PONTIAC Coupe	1964 CHEVY »/4-Ton
CutlOM. Powar ttaaring and	Sports, 1 plus 3, aulomatk.	Pickup wNh a V-f angina and
brak... '**jV«vr.l^	pawar stoarl,|^^^br.ka..	stick shHt, "'‘jjjjjrour drhtol 1
1961 CORVAIR Coupe	1963 OLDS “88"	1964 CHEVELLE Hordtop
with automatic, a iparkling whita finish with rad Inlarlor.	CONVeRTIBLE wNh automallc, powar slaaring and brakas and a whNa topi	2-Door wNh powsr Stair Ing and brakas, automatic, IlgM graani , $1695
$695	$1595	
1964 CHEVELLE 55	1964 CORVAIR Monza	1964 OLDS Convertible
with tha 4-ontha-floof. Coma look Ihl.	Coupt with radio, haalor and	Fowtr slssrlng and brakat.
	4-spawl	tor^l
HASKINS Ghev.-Olds
(on U.S.-10 at M-15)
Clarkston	„ MA 5-2604
1962 Ford
Galoxia "500" 2-Ooer Hardtop. Rtdio, haalor and automatic. TIp-fop.
Weekly Payments .....$8.48
1959 Cadillac
Fleetwood Sedan with full powa haatar and automatic. Real nka.
Weekly Poyments ....
1961 Mercury
Weekly Payments ........$6.48
1959 Ford
Oalaxla 3-Door Hardtop with automatic, radio ond hoator. Ttp-top thapa.
Weekly Payments ........$2.48
1962 Chevy
BalAIr 3-Doer with ttick NiHt, radta, haotar and automatic. WOWI
Weekly Payments ........$8.48
1959 Buick
4-Doer Hardtop with radto, aulomallc, haatar and ipotlatt axtorlor.
Weekly Payments ........$2.48
$195
$495
$595
$795
$595
$1095
$595
$195
$195
$795
$695
$595
$195
$795
$195
1961	Ford	fCAQS
Galaxia Convartibla with radio, haotor	and	kf/
automatic. Nka.
Weekly Payments.........$5.48
1962	Buick	jCyQc;
Sptclal Convartibla with automatic, radia	/ \J\J
Weekly Payments.........$8.48
1961 Ford
^Door Sadan hai radio, haatar and auto matk. IFi claan In and out.
Weekly Payments ...............$3.48
1960 Buick
Convartibla with full powtr, radto hatitr and automatic. SharpI
Weekly Payments .........$5.48
$295
$495
1957 Cadillac <C9QC;
Sadan da Villa with automatk, radto and haatar. This to ratlly nka.
Weekly Payments.......$3.48
1963 Ford
XL "SOO" Convortlbto wtth buckal taato. kPJ.0v?0 douMt powtr, automatk, radto and haatar.
Weekly Poyments................$13.M
1959 Pontiac
4-Door Station Wagan wHh automatic, radto and haatar. Really a nka car.
Weekly Payments ...............$3.48
1959	Chevy
Impala Convartlbto with V-S angina, radto haatar and automatk. Tip-top ohapa.
Weekly Poyments.......$3,48
1958	Plymouth
3-	Door Hordtop wNh tutomotk, radto and
Weekly PaymUt ........$2.48
1960	Buick
4-	Door Sodon wHh air condHtonlng, auta-
Weekly Poyments...... $4.48
1960 T-Bird
CanvartWa with douMa powtr, radto and haatar. Rati topi.
Weekly Payments.......$8.48
1959	DeSoto
and automatk. txtra iliarp.
Weekly Payments...............$2.48
1961 Pontiac
Catalina 1-Doer Hardkp with radto and haatar and automatk. flp-top ihapa.
Weekly Payments.....$8.48
1961 Chevy
S-Deor WNh V4 angina, ilick ihNI, radia and haatar and real nka body.
Weekly Poyments.....$5.48
1961 Tempest
$295
$295
$195
$395
$795
$195
$795
$495
$595
..$6.48
STATE Wl DE AUTO
3400 ELIZABETH LAKE RD.
. 1 BLK. E. OF CASS LAKE RD.
FE 4-5967 FE 8-7137
"A
;■	. V .
THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1965
D—18
Top Records
Stones Rolling on 'Cloud'
What young people think are the top records of the week as conipiM by Gilbert Youth Research^ Inc.
.1	Get off My Cloud...........................Rolling	Sfones
2	Yesterday ....................................  Beaties
3	I Bear a Symphony ...........................  Supremes
4	1-2-3 ...................................... Len	Barry
5	Keep On Dancing .............................   Gentrys
6	A Lover’s Concerto ............................... Toys
7	You’re the One ..................................Vogues
8	A Taste of Honey ...........Herb Albert’s Tijuana Brass
; 9	Rescue Me ................................ Fontella	Bass
10	I Knew You When........................Billy Joe Royal
11	Ain’t That Peculiar	...................... Marvin	Gaye
12	Positively 4th Street........................ Bob	Dylan
13	’Treat Her Right ............................Roy Head
14	Everybody Loves	a Clown ....................Gary	Lewis
15	Everyone’s Gone to	the Moon....................Jonathan	King
16	Make Me Your Baby ..............................  Byrds
17	Turn! ’Dim! ’Tumi ................................Byrds
18	Liar Liar.....................................Castaways
19	Run, Baby Run ................................ Newbeats
20	My Baby ................................... Temptations
—Television Programs—
Preoramo fumbW W	«« to chango without noHco
Ch<inn*l«i 2-WJ8K.TV, 4~WWJ-Tv) y-WXYi^TV, O-daW-TV, aO-WK8D-TV, 56-WTVS
Canada’s population has risen by 7.3 per. cent on June 1, 1965, from June 1, 1961.
GRAND OLE OPRY
Pontiac Aimory Sat. Dacombar 4,1965 3 Big Shows 3-6-9 P.M. Starring
FERLUmUSKY
and His Hush Puppy Band Tklcot* at tk«M iKotiont
DI RAI MUtie 4116 Oiiis Hwy., Drayton eirOO lOULIVARD tlRVICE 142 N. Party
TUPS STUHUMD URVICE 3411 Orahard Lk. 84. UKEUMD RECORD SHOP 4616 Dixit Hwy. Drayton
NOW
UHF ANTENNA Inttolldd $29.95 SWEET'S
East Drought Not Improved
WASHING’TON (AP) - Moderate rainfall in early October promised improvement in drought conditions in the northeastern United States, but a reversal late in the month left the drought as severe as ever.
’This was the report Thursday by the Geological Survey, which said water levels in streams, reservoirs and wells in much of the Northeast drought area tinue at record or near-record lows.
Drought conditions persist in wide area from Delaware to central Maine, said staff hydrologist Wiiiiam Schneider.
“Even with normal rainfall for November,” he said, “water levels in streams and wells will remain below normal throughout much of the drought area.”
I
DON’T BE A TINKER!
Yaur TV rocoivor roprasontt a siiat and is Iho moil complicalod applianco you own. Don't Irutt it to a friond or noighborhood handyman who tinker* in hi* *para time or on uroo to "do it your-•oH/ Oualifiod TV *orvicomon roquiro year* of practical oxporionco to gain "know how" after nece«*ary theory troining. Get the be*t operation of your TV *et, coll TESA of Oakland County member* for oil of your *ervice
FRIDAY EVENING 6:68 (2) (4) News, Weather, Sports
(7) Movie: “Wings of the Hawk” (In Progress)
(9) Dennis the Menace (50) Soupy Sales (56) Big Picture 6:25 (7) Sports 6:36 (2) (4) Network News (7) News
(9) Marshal Dillon (SO) Superman (56) Science Is Pun 6:45 (7) Network News
(56) Christopher Program 7:00 (2) (Color) Mr. Magoo (4) ’Traffic Court (7) Car 54
(9) Movie: “Big Jim McLain” (1952) John Wayne, Nancy Olson (50) Little Rascals (56) Cpnversations 7:26 (50) Sports Desk 7:30 (2) Wild, WUd West
(4) (Ck)lor) Camp Runa-muck
(7) (Color) Flintstones (60) Colorful World (56) Mental Health 8:06 (4) (Color) Hank (7) (Color) Tammy (50) Pro Basketball: Detroit vs. San Francisco (56) Continental Comment 8:30 (2) (Color) Hogan’s Heroes (4) Convoy (7) Addams Family (56) Doctors Only 6:66 (2) (Color) Corner Pyle (7) Honey West (9) Telescope
6:36 (2) Smothers Brothers (4) (Color) Mr. Roberts (7) (Color) Farmer’s Daughter (9) Star Route (56) (Special) Royal Philharmonic
16:66 (2) Slattery’s People
(4) (Color) Man From U.N.C.L.E.
(7) Jimmy Dean (9) Tonuny Hunter (50) Merv Griffin 16:36 (9) To Be Announced 11:66 (2) (4) (7) (9) News, Weathers Sports 11:25 (7) Movies: 1. (Color) “Road to ball” (1953) Bing Crosby, Bob Hope. 2. “’The Crawling Hand” (1963) Peter Breck, Kent Taylor 11:36 (2) Movies: 1. “Cowboy” (1958) Jack Lemmon, Glenn Ford. 2. “Hotel Imperial” (1939) Isa Miranda Ray Miiiand
TV Features
Pistons vs. Warriors
By United Press International
PRO BASKETBALL, 8:00 p. m. (50) San Francisco meets Pistons in Detroit.	\
CONVOY, 8:30 p. m. (4) Talbot puts destroyer into neutral Portuguese port, only to find U-boat he’s been hunting also there.
MAN FROM U.N.C.L.E., 10:00 p. m. (4) Angela Lansbury portrays madcap actress whose genius nephew is sought by both U.N.C.L.E. and THRUSH; with Diane McBaine.
SATURDAY
FIRST LOOK, 12 noon (4) Program examines origins of jazz in New Orleans, follows evolution right up to current rock ’n’ roll craze.
No Service Planned for Television Exec
HOLLYWOOD (AP) - No services are planned for televi-executlve Lawrence Berns, 57, who died of leukemia.
Bems wrote and produced the “Our Miss Brooks” radio and television shows for CBS, produced “The Nanette Fabray Show” pnd served as production executive for the “McHale’s Navy” and “Broadside” series. ★ ★ *
Berns, who died ’Thursday at Cedars of Lebanon Hospital, leaves his widow, actress Sandra Gould, and a son, Michael.
2:36 (7) All-Night Shows 3:00 (2) News, Weather -SATURDAY MORNING 6:10 (2) News 6:15 (2) Farm Scene 6:30 (2) Sunrise Semester (7) Americans at Work 6:45 (7) Wheelsville, U.S.A. 7:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (4) Country Living (7) Man and Continent 7:30 (4) Bozo the Clown (7) Junior Sports Club 8:00 (2) Happyland
(4) Milky’s Party Tima (7) Crusade for (Sirist 8:30 (7) House of Fashion 9:00 (2) Heckle and Jeckle (4) Jetsons (7) Clutch Cargo 9:30 (2) Tennessee Tuxedo (4) Atom Ant (7) Courageous Cat 9:45 (9) (Special) Santa Claus Parade
10:00 (2) Mighty Mouse (4) Secret Squirrel (7) Shenanigans 10:30 (2) Linus (4) Underdog (7) Beatles (9) Poopdeck Paul’s Sports
11:00 (2) Tom and Jerry (4) Top Cat (7) Casper (9) Wrestling 11:36 (2) Quick Draw McGraw
On the average of every IVt seconds, a child is born in the U.S.
improves your stereo sound I
12:36 (2) Lassie (4) Exploring (7) Milton the Monster (9) Country Calendar (50) Notre Dame Football 1:66 (2) Sergeant Preston (4) College Football (7) Hoppity Hooper (9) To Be Announced (50) AFL Highlights 1:36 (2) Detroit Speaks (7) American Bandstand (50) Speedway International
1:45 (56) College Football 2:66 (2) Report From Washington
(9) To Be Announced (50) Roller SkaUng 2:15 (2) America 2:30 (7) Club 1270 2:45 (2) Great Moments in Music
3:00 (2) BatUe Line (7) WVestling (9) Music. Hop (50) Championship Wrestling
3:30 (2) Flying Fisherman (7) Movie: “Gunsmoke” (1953) Audie Murphy, Susan Cabot 4:66 (2) NFL Countdown (9) Outlaws (50) Cowtown Rodeo 4:1$ (4) Great Moments in Music
4:36 (4) House Detective
HIGH FIDELITY PHONO CARTRIDCE FEATURING
15® ELLIPTICAL STYLUS The two most-wanted, distortion-reducing, features in cartridges today: 15* tracking and elliptical stylus. Will enormously improve performance when used in newest auto turntables by Dual, Garrard or Miracord tracking at 11/2 grams or lesel Only $35.50 net.
free demonstration
CUSTOMADE PRODUCTS 00.
464B W. Huron St.
I1I-9T00
Open Daily 9-5:30 .
Fri. 9-9
PONTIAC ARROWS vs
MFL ALL-STARS WISNER STADIUM TOMORROW NIGHT Sat., Nov. 13th 8 p.m.
ADULTS $2 STUDEHTS *1 Gates open at 6 P.M. Bring Your Friends
This •* e*Mi1*ty of Oinun’i
HOME IMPROVEMENT IS OUR BUSINESS
Announcing
our
do-it-yourself
'tHUCK"	"SY"	"GIORttE"
DEAL DIRECT WITH US - THE OWNERS
NO MIDDIIMAN PROFIT______
j Free Expert Plan & Design Service \
• KITCHENS	• REC ROOMS
• FAMILY ROOMS	• ADD-A-ROOM
fwiCES YOU CAN AFFORD |
NO MONEY DOWN - FHA & BANK RATES
NO PAYMENT -TIL MARCH 1966
Rtmtimhrr — Winter Price* Now In Effect
FE 8-9251
(No obiitation)	328 N. Perry, PONTIAC
RENT, LEASE, SELL. BUY HOMES, PROPERTY, COTTAGES. CARS, GOLF aUBS - - - use Pontiac Press Qassified Adi. To yours, call 3324181.
D—14
THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 19g5
M-coum
CERVANTES’ SAYINGS
rPaidbimiBhisoiia-” B‘‘Givethe —htadue"
10 Resource
12	Kind of mask
13	“One swallow never makes a
14	Lizard
15	Ear (comb, form)
16	College official
18	Convert to leather
19	Fairy fort 20Stup^
21	Fixed course
22	Vacant 24 Wanted
26 Follow after
28	Flower
29	Rim 31 Cause
35 Small heron
38	Great hurry
39	Adam’s grandson (Bib.)
40	Deeds (Latin)
43	Greenland Eskimo
44	Steamo* (ab.)
45	Remove skin, as of fruit
46	Convent worker
47	Medicinal tea (pharm.)
50 Stripe
52	Greek letters
53	Mongol
54	Striped
55	Optimistic
DOWN
IWam
2	Diffusion through membrane (chem.)
3	Doctrine
4	must when the devil drives’’
5	“Every — has his day’’ 6Ratitebird
7	Wayfarer
8	Inborn
9	Lent
	r	r	r	r	L .		j	r	*	r	r	r
	nr				11		15"					
13						_	ir					
iT				ir		It		■	i	ir		
				ar		u-		■				
zr			23	■		W		n				
s-						y						
			5”	n	aw			aiaaasi				
	5"	!U					■	■				
w							41	42	■	43		
44“		■		H			60^		■	4T		
4T			4B	40					51			
S”							53					
ST					r		n	ST			n	
11	Refuse allowance
12	Main meal
13	Find solution
17 Hearers or viewers 21 Upright to a step 23 Songs for two 25 Kinsman 27 Dutch city 30Fruit (pi.)
32	English coins
33	Ann of sea
34	you for nothing'"
35	Confer
36Inner coat (anat.)
37 Support for beam-end
41	Trial
42	Place of sacrifice
48	Lifetime
49	National Academy of
Designers (ab.)
51 Rail transport official (ab.) Answer to PrevkHU Puzzle
’The safest principle in life, instead of reforming others, is to set about perfect!^ yoursdf. —B. R. Haydon, 19th century English historical painter.
Patients ,Need Patience With Sickening Cliche
BOYLE
By HAL BOYLE YORK (AP) - Re-: marks that hospital pi^ts get tired of hearing:
“Now remember, when we get into Joe’s room, no matter j how he looks.l tdl him he looks great”
‘Hi, Joe, gee, you’re loo^ great.’’
■’Don’t worry about your work. The guy who took it over is doing a great job — handles it between his regular duties and says it’s no trouble at all.”
“Talk about your operation! Did I ever tell you about mine?”
“I hear while you were under ether, the doctors were playing marUes with your gallstones.” ★	★ A
‘It’s time to take your temperature again.”
’Wake up. It is dawn.”
“Of course, a few pains are to be expected. After all, as the French say, we can’t naake an omelette without breaking a few eggs, can we?”
NOT TfalS WEEK "Well, I guess I won’t get to be one of your pallbearers ' week.”
“Joe, I hate to bring this up while you’re lying here flat on your back. But remember '
|81 loaned you Just before they jtiuch your carted you off to the hospital? "— *■—* Naturafiy, I am not one to crowd anybody in your position but—”
‘Just sign here, Hon^. ‘The lawyer said it was only a formality and a kind of precaution.
But, according to him, it is only comnum a«ue that every man should make out a last will and
saw at a nightclub the other night, and she criM all through the floor show. The guy with her had to lend her his
“Joe, you have no idea how
Marquette Shrine in State Backed
SAULT STE. MARIE (AP)-Kenneth Shouldice, director of the Soo branch of Michigan Tech, said Thursday a memorial to Father Pierre Marquette could be located abnost any-vdiere in mid-America.
However, he said Detndt, Sault Ste. Marie and St. Ignace almost certainly would be coin sidered as the site. Shouldice was named Wednesday by President Jcrfinson as one of four public members of a comntis-sion to make plans for the 300th anniversary of the arrival of Father Marquette in North America.
Shouldice said the anniversary coincides with the founding of Sault Ste. Marie in Michigan and Ontario, and a joint celebration of the dual events is planned.
that being
Trademark of Trust
GOOD BUDDY “You know I’m your buddy, kid. We passed the hat at the office in your honor. The coUeo-tion came to a total of $3.97. What kind of a present would you really like most?”
“Do you mind showing me the scar? Is it okay if I count the stitches?”
“My cousin had exactly the same kind of operation. That was 12 years ago. He has never been the same since. But of course in your case—”
■‘Is that all they give you to eat?”
NO SNACKS
’m sorry, sir, but doctor says we mustn’t snack between meals.”
“You mean you’re paying 35 bucks a day to stay in this dump?”
“You’re coming along nicely.
I think you should be able to leave anytime after another few days — or a week or so.”
“ID, there, fellow. I’m a patient from down the halL While I’m here I thought I ought to have a hobby, so I decided to take up life insurance salesmanship. Now, the policy I have to mind for you offers—”
LOVELY NURSE ‘Hey, Joe, some dame to a white dress just drove up on a broomstick outside your door. Don’t tell me she’s your nurse. What does she do between Halloweens?”
'Yeah, before I got this job as intern I used to be a veterinarian to Yugoslavia. But when you come to a new country you got to earn a living any way you can.”
AAA ‘lExcnse me, sir. I’m one of the hospital trustees. We are trying to Increase our foundation fund, and I wondered if you would care to contribute—’ “Hey, Joe, the boss told me to ask you if the doc found any-
thing to remove except swivel chair apltoters.”
“WeU, well, weD. We certainly do ^eel much better this afternoon, don’t we? Well, weD, weU.”
Dedicate Ft. Custer Job Corps Center
BATTLE CREEK (AP) - R. Sargent Shriver, director of the Job Corps, officiaUy will dedicate Mktoigan’s first Job Corps center at FT. Custer, two mUes west of here, today.
Some 30 members of the Job Corps Advisory (touncil are expected to be on hand along with 200 Midwest industriaUsts. The camp’s facilities will be open for public inspection.
The center has been in operation for about two months. It is designed to retrain young men and teen-agers, who have dropped out of school, so that they may find emplo^ent.
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3 TWO-YEAR GUARANTEE . . . Under this guarantee your Ford Dealer, for an additional period of two years, will give a 15% cash discount from his regular retail price on any repairs he makes that are necessary to keep your car or truck in serviceable condition. (Except, of course, in case of accident or abuse.)
FOrd Dealers in this area sell more Used Cars than anvbodv.There must be a reason
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\
The Weather
U.t. WulMr ■«»» Ptrtuil
Showers^ or Snow Flurriei
VOL. 123 NO. 239
THE PONTIAC
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. I’RIDAV. NOVKMHKK V>, ilUi.) —5(5 PAGI
Landing Jet Bursts Into Fire; 39 Die
Yank Troops, Cong Force in
100 Communists Die in Stiff Battle for Control of Highway
SAIGON, South Viet Nam (iTI — Heavy fighting raged north of Saigon today as about 500 Viet Cong attacked about 700 troops of the U.S. 1st Infantry Division.
An American military spokesman said 100 Communists had been killed and the toll of the enemy probably would go higher. He reported that American casualties were light.
A Viel Cong battalion made I the attack Just after dawn on Highway 13 on a w e s t e r n | fringe of the Communist-controlled D Zone.
Heavy fighting was still going on 10 hours later, the spokesman said. Only sketchy details were available on the action.
★ ★ *
The 1st Division force, described as a reinforced battalion with armored support, had set out to secure the highway, which had been the scene of many bloody ambushes.
YANKS DEPLOYED
The Americans had deployed along the highway when Uw Viet Cong attacked. The road is flanked on both sides by rubber plantations.
The Americans fired llSmm howitzers at the enemy at close range, and U. S. planes hammered the Viet Cong.
The spokesman said several U.S. armored personnel carriers were damaged.
★ 1
The Viet Cong assault was the second Communist attack in five days against a major U.S. combat unit. On Monday, a battalion from the 173rd Airborne Brigade fought the paratroopers’ toughest battle of the war against a Viet Cong battalion in D Zone, 30 miles north of the capital.
HEAVY
The paratroopers reported more than 400 Viet Cong were killed by ground and air action. American casualties were reported moderate.
A combined force of U.S. Marines and Vietnamese troops continued their sweep 350 miles north of Saigon near the Chn Lai heachhead but still no significant contact was reported.
Two Viet Cong have been reported killed and 30 suspects detained in the operation, now in its third day.
50 Survivors in Utah Mishap
SALT LAKE CITY, Utah (.T—A Boeing 727 jot [airliner with 89 persons aboard burst into Ihimes on landing at the City Airport last	■Riming
39 passengers to death in^thej|fir]|^^(^lJl*<lJrage.'
Another 50, including the entire crew of six. dived through windows and emergency hatches .seconds before the fire raged for-^ ward from the three jet engines in the tail all the way to the flight deck.
Of the survivors, 36 were hospitalized. The dead were in the blackened fuselage.
A spokesman for United Air
Soviets Launch Venus Probe
Lines, owner of the plane, blamed the disaster on the col-^ lapse of a nose wheel as the aircraft touched down.
Should Reach Planet at End of February
Searchers Probe Charred Remains Of United Airliner Which Exploded On Landing Last Night
New Attack
1
Swells Fear i in Nankin !
Rhodesia
Death
Warned; to Traitors
Cold Winds, Snow Head for Midwest
In Today's Press
Horsewoman Area woman gets her ; training at the track — PAGEC-4.
Plan Protests (■ Negroes to march in two Alabama countlea-PAGE A-10.
Blackout
Experts gather to hunt for answers-rPAGE B-4.
Area News .........A-4
Astrology ..........012
Bridge .............Git
Crossword Puule ... D-14
Comics .............(M2
Editorials...........A4
High Scjiool.......B-1
Market* ............D-5
Obituaries ........C-13
Sport* ..........D-l-MM
Theaters.......C-l^-11
TV, Radio Programs D-13 Wilson, Earl , . . . ,A4I ; Women's Pages R-ll—B-IS
DETROIT (API—A wave of fear mounted in suburban Nankin Township today as a mother of seven report^ escape from a knife-wielding attacker who left a six-inch slash in the screen door at her home.
The attack came last night as Wayne County sheriff’s detectives intensified their search for a man believed responsible for a half-dozen attacks on women within a month.
Mrs. Barbara McCarthy, 35, told police a man posing as a Bible salesman Jerked a knife from bis pocket as she talked to him through the screen door.
"I screamed and slammed the door in his face,” she said.
# w *
She said she then called the sheriff. Officers arrived within minutes but did not catch the man.
GIGGUNG MAN
Officers said Mrs. McCarthy’
description of the man was similar to that given by other victims of a “giggling” man, psychopathic tendencies who has criss-crossed the township in a reign of terror.
Mrs. McCarthy was home with her l^year•old daughter and six sons. Her husband was at work as a bakery driver-salesman.
Meanwhile, police freed nine suspects and set out anew in efforts to track down the man believed responsible for the wave of attacks.
* ★ ★
The suspects, including two described as “prime”,, released Thursday afternoon after victims of some of the attacks failed to make positive (Ckmtinued on Page 2, Col. 1)
Mercury to Hover in 30s Tomorrow
Better button up your overcoat and put antifreeze in the car for a cold wave is on the way.
Ths weatherman predicts chance of showers tonight with lows in the 30s, and snow flurries tomorrow.
Temperatures will stay quite steady In the 30s tomorrow. Mostly fair and cold is Sunday’s forecast.
Morning southeasterly winds at 6 to 12 miles per hour will Increase to 12 to 22 miles by late afternoon.
WWW
Thirty-seven was the low reading prior to 8 a.m. in downtown Pontiac. The thermometer registered^ at 1 p.n^
LONDON (AP) — The British a 10-minute radio-television ,more than half of Rhodesia’s' V^nti7'*weathei*^*with'^^^^ government warned Prime Min- address to his people. “It is |$112 million annual crop. .strong northerly winds and cold,
Wilson apparently hopes the swept across northern Montana into the northern Plains today
The three rear-mounted cn-	_ -,-^5 soviet
gmes of the 727 are fed by fuel mes leading back from tanks in the wings.^ ^	^	jj
.	. . •„ planet around the end of Febru-
The flight originated m New ^
York and reached Salt Lake Cityj -	,
aftei stops in Cleveland,-^hio:!y^„^^
Chicago and Denver, Colo. Its ^
scheduled destination was San
V rantisco.	^
AMONG HOSPITALIZED February 1961.
! The pilot. Capt. Gail C. Keim- jass, the official Soviet eirer, 48, of Denver, was among	agency which announced
the hospitalized .survivors. Hos- j^e launch, said Venus 2 is pital officials said he kept re-i ni„ving on a course "close to peating t'Terrible, terrible.” the prescribed one.”
It was the third 727
ister Ian Smith and his Rho-j our task to take measures to i desian regime today their de-! bring the people of Rhodesia [sanctions will cut enough into!
fiance of British authority isl back from the dangerous path treason. The penalty is death, they have taken, back to mu-Atty. Gen. Sir Elwyn Jones ‘“»1 (rust and racial cooper-issued the warning in the Housej ation.” of Commons as the government!	„ „ ■. . oi.
sought emergency powers to re-1	f f
store Britain’s authority over the ®*Pc8ed it from the ster-breakaway, white-run colony in|I*ug area and banned it from central Africa.	selling its tobacco in Britain. In
Jones warned Britons inside the past, Britain has bought and outside Rhodesia that ac-|	...
the prosperity of Rhodesia’s 2S 000 whites to cause the majority of them to disown Smith’s government.
Smith declared independence after several years of negotiations foundered over Britain’s insistence that Rhodesia’s 4 million Africans be assured ultimate control of the government.
See Related Stories, Pages B-9, C-1
U.N. May Act Today
tions furthering the aims of Smith’s would be treasonable.
The bill giving the British government massive powers of retaliation against Rhodesia
UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (AP) — Pressed by an aroused General Assembly, the U. N. Security Council was expected to act today on demands for economic penalties against Rhodesia’s white government for seizing independence from Britain.
; The 117-nation assembly went into extraordinary session last sped toward adoption in thejnight and condemned the independence declaration by Rho-House.	desian Prime Minister Ian Smith.
Pr?mf mET Harold'wSs(!lJ!l	resolution won by an overwhelming 107-2 vole with
who last night accused Smith’s |	“'•*‘*‘"‘"8- South Africa and Portugal voted no.
regime of taking police state The resolution called on Britain to stamp out “the rebellion measures and assuming “thelby the unlawful authorities at Salisbury.” It also drew the sickeningly familiar attitudes oficouncil’s urgent attention to the “explosive situation.” authoritarian rule.”	*	*	*
Britain refused to take part in the vote as it refused on previous Rhodesian resolutions. It explained that it had already asked for an urgent council meeting.
Britain outlawed the Rhodesian government yesterday. Minister of State Lord Caradon called for an urgent meeting of the Security Council to deal with the Rhodesian government’s “illegal action.” British Foreign Secretary Michael Stewart was flying to New York to inform the council what steps Britain was taking.
The United States quickly threw its support behind Britain.
Jones introduced the bill asking for these special powers: An order invalidating any laws passed or business transacted by Rhodesian Prime Minister Ian Smith’s regime after its unilateral declaration of independence;
•	Authority for the British government to exercise executive control and to make laws in Rhodesia;
•	An amendment to British legislation to make it easier for
'loyal Rhodesian citizens” to obtain citizenship of the United Kingdom and the colonies, and An order enabling the British immigration authorities to confiscate passport documents issued or renewed by the Rhodesian regime.
Jones pointed out that other actions by Britain—such as the ban on import of Rhodesian tobacco and sugar — had already been carried out under existing statutory powers.
The bill proclaimed that the Rhodesian government’s declaration of independence and all acts that flowed from it were illegal.
Wilson dismissed Smith and his government of white settlers Immediately after the Rhodesian leader, 46, declared the central African colony independent from Britain. But the dismissal was a formality designed to allow Britain to intervene in of internal strife and to forestall African nationalists from fohn-ing a Rhodesian government in exile.
Wilson called the breakaway a “rebellion against the crown.” ‘”nie wprld has taken a step backward todaF.” he ^Id in
and headed into the northern Midwest.
Two inches of snow covered the Dickinson, N.D., areas as the storm spread from Montana east of the Continental Divide across the Dakotas. Arctic air, fanned by gusty northerly winds, spread southward into Montana, dropping temperatures as low as 13 above in Cut Bank. .
The chilly blasts whipped eastward and were expected to extend into Minnesota and Nebraska during the day. Visibility was near zero at times during the night at Dickinson.
Rain which fell in areas ahead of the cold front was expected to change to snow, with amounts ranging from 3 to 4 inches in the Plains and heavier accumulations in mountain regions.
The Weather Bureau issued hazardous winter weather warnings for the Dakotas, Minnesota and central Nebraska and alerted hunters, motorists and stockmen.
In other parts of the nation, showers developed as far south as the Texas Gulf Coast and rain fell in sections of Oregon and Northern California. Showers sprinkled areas from Georgia to New England and clouds;
I Tass said that by 4 a m. EST, volved in fatal accidents since	^pg^lv 34,-
August and the second this ^	gg^th. ‘
' Tass said equipment aboard
The first plunged into Lake Michigan off Lake Forest, Hi., on Aug. 16, killing all 30 aboard. The second hit a hill while approaching Cincinnati Monday night, and 58 of the 62 persons aboard died.
The Civil Aeronautics Board in Washington dispatched 12 investigators to seek the cause of the crash.
NO RELATIONSHIP A spokesman for the Federal Aviation Agency said in response to questions, “At this point we car. see no relationship between the three accidents and we have no plans for grounding 727 jets.” A similar view was expressed by Pader Hogue, chief
Jthe space station was functioning normally.
SECOND ATTEMPT The satellite named Venus 2, is the second and possibly the third Soviet attempt to probe Venus.
Venus 1 missed the planet hy 111,000 miles in February 1961, but the Soviets said it collected valuable scientific data. U.S. scientists said the Soviet spacecraft Zond 1, launched April 2, apparently was intended to be a Venus probe although it was never announced as such. 'The Americans said Zond 1 apparently missed its mark in July 1964.
The U.S. Mariner II passed flight safety engineer for Boe- | Venus Dec. 14, 1%2, at a di.s-Ing. “I think it’s a fine air- tance of 21,648 miles after gath-plane and recent unfortunate [ering data continuously during experiences are in my opinion its 180 million mile journey.
unrelated,” he declared.
The survival of the pilot and other crew members provided an opportunity for investigators | to obtain firsthand expe>'t opin-j ion on the cause.
During the 42 minutes it flew (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3)
Ike lo Get Word on Recovery Period
Mrs. Lyndon R. Day of Arlington, Va., a passenger who escaped, said: “I heard a loud FT. GORDON, Ga. (AP) — thud. I knew we had made a [Former President Dwight D. crash landing.	'Eisenhower may get an indica-
ON BOTH SIDES
take him to get over his second were reported across the majorj "There were flames on the attack of heart pains part of the nation.	[outside of the plane on both!	attending the
!sides. I scrambled through 8,75	gr.g|(, n^ral said last
door on to a wing and dived to,„jg^j	^j,ey might ha\e
[the ground.	some information today on the
Another passenger, Ralph recuperation period.
S. Nesbitt of Santa Monica, | gisenhower had one attack in Calif., told interviewers: “We early hours Tuesday, was had a hard bump, started j reported on the road to recovery i swerving from side to side	g couple of weeks, then
and flames broke out from the ^ another heavier, longer j rear.	“episode” of angina pectoris or
"People were thrown all over 1 hear!pains Wednesday, the place. It was horrible. The! The doctors reported Thurs-heat was terrible.”	day they were treating him as if
Nesbitt said he dived through!he had had an actual heart at-an open window to a wing and i tack — he suffered one in 1955. then dropped,to safety through' a sheet of flame.
STAR VISITS YOUNGSTERS — Hayley	night at Ford	Auditorium for the world pre-
Mills brightened the lives of youngsters at	mier of Walt	Disney’s “That Darn Cat” in
Camp Oakland yesterday when she visited which she has the featured role. The per-the Oxford Township facility for under privi-	formance is	a benefit for Camp Oakland,
leged children and stayed for dinner. The	according to	Mrs. Ben D, Mills, chairman
Hollywood star will, appear in jpersorw to- of the camp’s women’s c^mittee.
CHARCOAL BLACK The interior of the 72-ton jet-| liner was burned charcoal black, j Warren M. Weggeland, depu- ' ty county coroner, said the main distinguishable remains of the trapped dead were an arm or leg.
Dr. Hilmon Castle, a medical; examiner for the Federal Avia-i tion Agency, said he found bodies “strewn along the aisle, some of them piled on top of! of each other.”
One of the passengers listed' by the airline as among the dead was Bill Linderman, whoj had earned more than $439,000 in rodeo competitions when he' retired six years a^o.	'
First Call Turned Into 3 Sales
“The first person to respond to our Want Ad brought two friends. Made three sales,” states Mrs. R. C.
PRESS WANT ADS
are the best little buyer-finders and sales-makers.
Dial 332^181 for action —L-------------

THE PONTIAC ^ESS. I'RIDAV, NOVEMBEli 12, I9«5
jetxjfe Ends Today! Luci Stalling i on Seat in U.N. for Engagement!
,	^1 ,	Report She Yielded
Communist China	to Father on Deby
UNITED NATIONS. N. Y After the general debate. Na- ^^ON OT (UPI) - General Assembly de-;tionalist China, the United States Jl®	'Jg
bate on seating Communist and possibly others were ex-China in the United Nations con-, pected to reply to arguments vclu^s.^ay.Thevoteisexpect-!rai^ by Red China’s -PPor'-
Fifteen delegations, including|	^ ,gagement to Patrick J. Nugent,
Australia, were listed to speak.|	resolution or i - i just don’t know anything
resolutions which are due to [about it, ” Joseph Laitin, assist-; I he submitted,	I ant press secretary, said.
The strategy of Albania, Cam-	*.*..,*	, , -
bodia and other cosponsors ap-' Comment similarly was lack-peared to be to hold up the pro- ing when it was reported about posal to seat Communist China’two weeks agoJhat_	ami;
U. 5. VfAR DEAQ IN VIET NAM
745
Fear Increased by New Attack
Luci and Nugent both declined to answer reporters’ questions, on the ground that it was a private matter.
LATEST REPORT The latest report of a post-
Vin the debate. When it is finally sent of President and Mrs. John-sqbmitted. it is expected to have son to marry. Luci and Nug^t (Continued From Page One) Peking’s approval.	spent the weekend at the LBJ
..	, r- ,	★	ranch during the height of these
identifications, said Del. Sgt.	*	*	*	rpnnrts
Frank Van Wulfen.	The tentative draft, shown to
______.. „	some delegates, states that the
TELEPHONE CALLS	i Assembly “decides that the seat
Van Wulfen. who is in charge!china in the United Nations of the investigation, said shortly j and all its organs, illegally oc-before the men were freed, onejcupied by the representatives of of the victims. Mrs. Dorothy'chiang Kai-shek, should be re-Villemontc. 28, reported receiv-J stored to the government of the ing a strange telephone call. | People’s Republic of China"
•it was just breathing: no DEFEATED MOVE	White House. It was to the effect!
conversation,” said Van Wul- ' ^,be China resolution defeated the President had talked his fen-	in 1963 resolved that “The rep-
He said 30 arltfests were made resenUtives of Chiang Kai-shek,
Thursday and nine of the men who are illegally occupying were held for a lineup.	China’s place in the organiza-
*	* o	tion, shall be immediately re-	-
“We had a lot of look-alikes, moved from all United Nations	steady escort in
but nothing definite," he said, organs.”
BIGGIE PATROL	Nationalist China’s support-
1961	1962	1963 1964	1965
DEATH TOLL GROWS - The growing toll of U.S battle deaths in the Viet Nani conflict climbs sharply on the chart. With Tuesday’s total, the figure passed the 1,000 mark.
Chlorine Barge Begins Laborious Rise to Surface
\UVki*A U/wiioA If nyoe f/v Affppt!
Disputed Pact OK'd in Japan
Conservative Tactics Lead to Wild Fight
TOKYO (UPI) - A wild fist fight erupted in the lower house ; of the Japanese parliament 1 ly today when Conservative ' uties broke a Socialist filibuster and rammed through a contro-]versial treaty establishing normal relations with South Korea. * * *
House Speaker Naka Funhda, 70, center of the stormy session, collapsed after it was over and was hospitalized with high blood pressure and a heart ailment.
Funada had engineered con-^ servative strategy In the third j day of a general debate on I the treaty, which also settles I issues pending between Japan I and South Korea since World I War II.
I The Socialists turned the debate into a filibuster by intro-I ducing a series of motions of no confidence against Conservative I cabinet ministers in an effort to eat up the time left in the current session of parliament.
Birmingham Area News
Open Occupancy Group Sets 1st Meeting Sunday
u. . J	BATON ROUGE, La. IIP — A; within a five-mile critical area
youngest d^ghter into delaying floating derrick pulled aj were closed for the day,
^Nucent of Waukegan 111. was	Two Army hospital trains,
graduated from Ma%uette’uni-;^^‘°"’ Mississippi River |j,uses and ambulances evacuat-sriwirb;	last Jana. Ha has baan;|l»L‘^^	““
At one minute after midnight Funada mounted the speaker’s rostrum, gaveled the meeting to order and announced an immediate vote on the treaty.
A igroup being organized to push for integrated housing in the Birmingham - Bloomfield area will test its support Sunday night.
Several residents of Birming-hhm, Bloomfield Hills, Beverly Hills add Bloomfield Township have formed the Birmingham-Bloomfield Committee on Open Occupancy.
John C. Palms, 788 E. Squake Lake, Bloomfield Township, has been named pro tern chairman of the group.
The committee has sent letters to some 500 other residents urging them to attend its first formal meeting, scheduled for 9 p.m. Sunday at the Birmingham Unitarian Church, at Lone Pine and Woodward in Bloomfield Hills.
★ * *
/Committee members sent the letters to friends and neighbors who had expressed an interest in civil rights, Mrs. Palms said, but she emphasized that the! meeting Sunday would be open' to the public.
MAJOR PROBLEM	|
The letter cited open occupan-
other races, who are financially capable of doing so, to buy homes in our community — just as we have been permitted to do.”
★ * *
The independent committee now plans to start developing approaches to real estate groups, according to the letter.
BEVERLY HILLS - A series of five faculty lectures will be held every weekday morning next week at Detroit Country Day School, 22305 W. 13 Mile.
Designed for parents and the public at large, the programs will be held from 9 to 11 a.m. in the main building of the school.
Speakers in order of their appearance will be John P. Campbell, history department chairman; John E. Gilbert, language department chairman; John M. Poplawski, lower school director; Phillip L. Dillman, dean of studies; and Richard A. Schle-gel, assistant headmaster.
LEAPED TO FEET
Van Wulfen said his Roadj
ers said the two versions, al-
Patrol in the Nankin Townshipj area was beefed up to 40 men
last night, up 10 from the night |	"7
bdor. .h^.Mr,.
s uccii	ed about 600 aged and invalid
recent!| persons from the area to state	.	•	■ j
months	i Twin booms reaching out from I facilities at Pineville, 100 miles I Conservative deputies leaprt
Niivpni is pxnected to entertowering derrick slowly jg^ay	‘heir feet and Funada de-
militfry servic^ shortly, but lightened the	^	*	*	dared the treaty approved,
both he and Luci have refused I that‘jradled the bulky cratt	evacuees died Pandemonium broke loose.
to say which branch. The cur-jsunx ™	Thursday of what doctors called! Conservatives formed a human j
rent report is that he will serve|tne Louisiana Mate universiyijj^g^j	gygeua- barricade around Funada as
a six-month active duty hitch in campus during Hurrica e B y figg ji,gy jjgUa Davis, 70, deputies from both sides of
Assessed Valuation Is Gut for Utility Firm
KALAMAZOO (AP)-A $3.2 „ a “major” problem now!million cut in assessed valua-affecting ourBirmingham-|tion from $7.5 million to $4.3 Bloomfield atea.”	million was announced Thurs-
day for the Consumers Power “Asyon know. norea^^actlon	suburban Comstock
ha. yet been taken offlc.ally i^ownship.
-- this deeply moral and moy- j facility supplies only peak
ing problem,” it said. “It is
power needs. Actiqn by the state
the Air Force Reserves.
Luci is in her first year
Sept. 9-10. at Officials emphasized they
and Bena Grigsby, 78.
$400,000 CONTRACT
reported her daylight attack.	...
, So far in the debate 27 dele-the Georgetown U n i v e r s 11 y expected the bft to be rela- _	. .
nere were other reports of	j^^^sing in Wash- tively quick - about two hours t The engineers awarded a
obscene telephone calls during J^^^bership for Red China, and ington.	- and safe,
ill have supported Nationalist'
aisle converged speaker’s chair.
end the procrastination in this vital matter that
touches upon us all.	increase in December tax bills
“It is time to permit those of for township property owners.
tax commission on an appeal by the utility firm means an
the day.
Detectives continued to run china, down hundreds of tips, and	*	♦	★
Nankin area residents lined up' The remaining speakers ap-at the Wayne County Road peared to be about two to one Patrol headquarters for pistol in favor of the nationalists, permits.	Bbtti sides have tried to in-
♦	*	*	fluence new members in their
Mrs. Villemonte and Mrs. voting. The newest members are' Jlelen Varner were attacked!Singapore. Gambia and the Mal-[

mott Co. of New Orleans to raiseSocialists taking wild swings^ the busy Mis-|fj,g barge, which was en route; each other.
River traffic
c 'll	I jsissippi was h	_	6-.
NnVIPt^ I fliinrn	plant at Lake Charles to| Parliament security ^ards:
.JvtIV/IJ LiUUI IVII ed away from the lift scene. Calvert City. Ky.. when the moved to break up the fight and *	*	*	hurricane tore it loose from its, escort Funada from the hous^.
\/Am ir DrAhA ^	mooring at Baton Rouge.	Several of the guards were in--
VcnllS 11006	★	jured in quelling the fisticuffs.
.ir- on	A spokesman for the U.8. Of-DENOUNCE TACTICS	|
1 Continued From Page One) The barge carries four tanks fjee of Emergency Planning said; The Socialists denounced the; Wednesday in their homes, bothjdive Islands.	past the planet it collected data I containing 602 tons of liquid the barge would be lifted at aj Conservative tactics andj
near Wayne County General' Diplomatic sources predicted „„ the surface and atmosphericichlorine. There is concern the rate of one foot a minute, or inicharged the action could lead to| Hospital.	that Gambia would vote tor	apj pjQujj stnic-|pressurized chlorine might leakiabout one hour from the 60-foot an end to parliamentary democ-^
Communist China bilt that Sing- mre of Venus. This was relayed under stress ofjhe lift operation depth.	racy in Japan.
back to earth and Mariner sped I and turn into a lethal gas. —-------------------------------------------— —	,
on toward the sun.	| Residents in the immediate
Tass said Venus 2 would con- | area of the lift for the most
FACIAL CUTS	iapore ’and the Maldives would
Mrs. Villemonte suffered mul-	vote.
tiple facial cuts. She said they ___________________________
e inflicted by a young, blond
man who slashed her with a Detroit Doctor Named knife. Mrs. Varner reported being slugged by a man who fo Medicare Council demanded money,
„	JOHNSONClTY.Tex.(AP)-
Mr».ViUemontere,^l^ re-
ceivlng obscene and threaten-	^ i6-member advisory
mg telephone calls prior to the	fj,at will help set up
its course toward ; Venus for about three and a ' half months.
part cleared out. Traffic this capital city was light this morning. Businesses were .	, . closed, as were schools and
Tass said a multistage rocket ,^aie nffires launched Venus 2. The last;
stage was first put into a park-1 The initial tightening of the ing orbit and then it launched!cables holding the barge began the station toward Venus. This at 8 a m. (CST). is the method the Soviets have
Was Charter Member
Quits County School Board
Fred J. Beckman, a charter Board of Education, 191 school; member of the Oakland Schools districts existed. Now there are’ Board of Education formed in only 30.
attack. She said her assailant administrative procedures for
laughed during the mcident.	nrncram Amona -	- --------------------
Because Mrs Varner’s assail- hLTS cSldwell B Essel-‘heir moon probes.	A southwest wind blew across! 1940, resigned yesterday after- lEGALSTAFF
ant only demanded money and styn, executive director of the The weight of Venus 2	r>ver	Coombe. 40, of 4412 Parklane,
did not appear to have psycho-Community Health Association given as 963 kilograms - 2,123wind machines were	Township, is a mem-,
.	Snel». police »kl In D«r<«> and past board cbalr,poonda. Taaa ^ po.e, la » "tSSl” al ™ o“ 3“Lae SrS 1“' »' •'«
Ihey were not certain if the two man of the Group Health Asso-jbeing supplied it by chemical	‘	‘
attacks were connected.	elation of America
The Weather
Full U. S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Cloudy and little warmer with rain or showers likely and chance of scattered thunder-
I and solar batteries.	fumes that might escape.	jdent of the Birmingham ooaru
The agency said the station Officials said there was only of Education, to fill ^ vacancy was moving over “a trajectory a “one million to one ” chance on the five-member body.
' close to the prescribed one.” that the chlorine might leak out.' \ farmer, Beckman, 69, of ^ Tass said a sp^ial measuring	and public schools Highland Township, has been
complex on Soviet territory is	-	’ active in the Grange, Farm
keeping track of the Venus 2	>	Bureau and Michigan Milk
I flight	Kalamazoo Cellist Dies!
During Its flight, Venus 2 will	iho rtaki-ma rnnntv
carry out an extensive space KALAMAZOO (AP)—Hans B. chapter of the Michigan Milk research program, Tass said. Baldauf. 73, cellist, astronomer; Producers’Association.
The telemetric, measuring and and sculptor, died in a Kal-! jg g
Motors Corp.
A graduate of Harvard Law School, he is a member of the Oakland County School Boards Association and is on the board of directors of the Mich-gan School Boards Association. He will fill Beckman’s unex-ganized the Oakland County ! pired term until next June.
In other business yesterday, the board accepted the resigns-
,	■	, ,	.	.	. cn 4 cc ***'"	aiiu	, uic:vi »•* a j^ai- Up iq n IQIi crr<irillAtP of	dCCcpiCa UlC it
showers “If®	toni^t. Highs May 50 to scientific equipment in the sta-amazoo hospital Thur^ay. Bal-*ja	^ tion of Dr. Gerald Griffin, a pay-
Lows tonight in 20s. Saturday partly cloudy, windy and colder	j».., ...u„	„„ tiac High M;hool and attended;	.	.
with chance of snow flurries. Steady or slowly falling temperatures highs in 30s. Southeast winds 6 to 12 miles this morning increasing to 12 to 22 miles by afternoon. Sunday; Fair, cold.
tion is switched on automatical- dauf, who retired in 1958 as an	University |Chologist at Oakland Schools
ly in accordance with the flight employe of International Paper	since September,
program, the agency said, and Co., played cello with the Chi-	*	*	*	Dr. Griffin has accepted a po-
also on radio commands from cago and Kalamazoo symphony	When	Beckman	became	a	sition with the Lockheed Missile
the earth.
orchestras.
member of the Oakland Schools Corp. in California.
At I (.m Wind vriociiy t Direction:	South«»»t
Sun $etf Frldey el 5 15 p m Sun riMi Seturdey «t 7:?l e.m Moon «et> Seturday at 1i )) p rr Moon rlaat Friday at 1:05 p.m.
I racordad downtown)
By Foundation
> Miami Baach 12 7
Sale of Hospital Land Is Opposed
Last 2 Days!
Sale of Stereo and Mono LP Records
★	Western & Country it Popular Records it Classic Music it Show Tunes ir Children's Songs it Christmas Songs
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37 34 Woihinflton 53
NATIONAL WEATHER - Rain Will iail tonight in the I Pacific Northwest, northern California, western Nevada, lower Great Lakes, Ohio ^nd Tennessee valleys -nd along the Gutf Coast. Snow showers will extend from the northern and central Rookies e^tward to the northern Plains and UppmWmbuipfi and apper Great LakdT regions.
By JOE MULLEN right to huy the land when the Law said that several private 37 The Foundation for Mentally 111 Internal Revenue location was groups are interested in the J; Children, Inc., of Southfield has designated elsewhere.	Telegraph frontage with many:
“ gone on record as opposing the jj^^ RIGHTS	eyeing the possibility of a motel j
sale of state hospital property- ^	...	,	! development on the site,
on Telegraph until certain men-!. Oaklanc^ County has leg-;
ta) iipalih rpoiiirpmpnf. arp!'8>ative Hghts to buy the north! Among those Interested in | firmlv established	frontage and private! ^ according to Law, are ,
lirmly estahlished^	interests have expressed inter-1 owners of the Pontiac I
Specifically, the foundation;'""	. Mnii
seeks to prevent any land trans- ®®*	[	mt.	o •
action until the development of *8® '^•'ich indicates the north-!	The	Pontiac Mall people, how-
the children s program at Pon-®as‘corner of the intersection, jever, have not Indicated how tiac State Hospital is completed; Stote Rep. Arthur J. Law,	develop the area,
and plans for a community men-;	D-Pontiac, said today he	Law added,
tal health center are developed. |	would like to see the larger	*	*	* .
piece of property sold and de-	! Law said he	feels	that	an ad-^
veloped immediately so it ;equate children’s unit could be, would benefit the city’s tax ;developed on the state property] base	without infringing on the front-
H. add«i U.at i( Wed	,
adjoining the Pontiac State | immediate development, he-FEDERAL GRANT Hospital plant.	would introduce	legislation	in|	'The	State Hospital received a
The oarcel was approved by' •Ja"u»ry for sale	of the land.	|$250,000 federal grant in ^ptem-
the state legislature for sale to	*	*	*
ithe city of Pontiac three years’ It would probably be June 1	^^®	Qhildrens day
I ago as the site of a proposed I before it could clear the legis-center project.
I Internal Revenue facility. ; lature, be appraised and pre-j	*	sented for sale in public^auc-
, Pontike, howevd^ waived its tion. ,
The parcel concerning the; foundation has 2,600 feet of ! frontage on the east side of Telegraph north from Eliza- ! beth Lake and is 700 feet deep,
Constroction en the three-building project is expected to begin early next year.
Hospital officials have made no public statement on the proposed sale of Telegraph frontage but they reportedly are strongly opposed to it.
*
The City of Pontiac has re-> ceived permission of the legislature to buy a 12.4-acre parcel of state-owned property on the [state Hospital grounds.
I HOUSING USE Located on Elizabeth Lake east of the entrance road to the jhospital, the property is proposed for use by Pontiac General Hospital for intern and resident housing.
* * *
Pontiac General Hospital funds would be used to buy the land.
'W ★	★
Appraisals on property propose for purchase by the county and city are expected to be completed by the state later this month, |ius establishing purcAe prices.
Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.
Cold Weather Apparel from SIMMS Clothing Dept.
Mam Floor CLOTHING DEPARTMEN
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THE PONTIAC I’kESS, FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 12. :
Dem's Retirement May Not
WASHINGTON (AP» — There is strong speculation around the Senate that the Hariy Byrd e may not be missing from the 1966 roll call lists despite Sen. Harry F. Byrd’s resignation.
The 78-year-old Virginia Democrat quit the Senate Thursday with ^ formal resignation submitted to and accepted by Gov. Albertis S. Harrison Jr.
Byrd said he was stepping down because of his health. He has been suffering from arthritis.	_	I
Harrison is expected to act.
speedily to name a successor to
fill Byrd’s seat until next November’s election. Virginia will
See Related Story, Page A-14
Byrd is publisher of the Win-
chester Evening Star and the Harrisonburg Daily News-Record in his state.
Harrison has had close elation with the Byrds since he I managed the retiring senator's -	; ~r|1952 campaign. He benefited
elect two senators at that time, j when the younger Byrd decided with Sen. A. Willis Robertson, not to seek the Democratic 78, seeking a new six-year term, nomination for governor in 1961.
At the top — or near it — the Harrison’s lists of prospective appointees is the name of Harry F. Byrd Jr., 51, son of the retiring senator and a Virginia state
There was some speculation that Harrison might name an interim appointee and seek the office himself. The name of Rep. William M. Tuck, former
as a possible appointee. But he said he had called the governor, •told him he did not want the appointment, and recommended the younger Byrd for the post Byrd’s departure from the Senate will deliver the chairmanship of the powerful Senate’s Finance Committee into the hands of Sen. Russell B. Long, D-La. Long, now 47. carried much of the committee load this year when Byrd was physically handicapped by painful arthritis in a knee
KANSAS GOVERNOR ARRIVES - Gov. William H. Avery of Kansas and his wife arrived at International Airport in jilexico City yesterday. The governor is a member of a goodwill tour of Mexico that begins at Acapulco today.
Iowa School Rift Amish
May Move to Wisconsin
INDEPENDENCE, Iowa (AP) -Five of the 16 Amish families involved in a school dispute are believed planning to move to Wisconsin, Buchanan County authorities said Thursday.
Four of the Amish men have gone to Wisconsin several times recently, saying they were going to attend funerals. But authorities said they believe the Amish have been looking at farms they may buy.
One member of the group. Aden Tutzey, already has announced he has purchased a farm in Wisconsin and will move there after the first of the year. He is one of three Amish men who has had part of his property attached to satisfy fines levied for refusal to send his children to .schools with state-certified teachers.
Another of the group, Enos Mullett, has said he plans to move to Indiana.
Memt^rs of the Amish group were taken to court in Hazleton and fined again Wednesday.
Mullett told authorities he definitely is considering sending
his children to school in Indiana where he said they can attend school of their own choice.
★ * *
County attorney Harlan Lemon said papers to attach property of three more Amish' men are ready to be served.
An attachment was served Wednesday on William Bont-rager for 350 bushels of his corn to satisfy five fines and costs totaling $169.25.
Awrey Bakeries Pact Ratified by Teamsters
DETROIT (AP)-A strike by 65 Teamsters Union members at Awrey Bakeries was settled Thursday when Bakery Drivers Local 51 ratified a three-year contract.
★ * ★
The walkout began Oct. 31 and idled 1,300 employes and 120 contract route drivers Awreys. The bakery firm, which operates 228 retail outlets, said full-scale operations would resume Monday.
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> WYNKEN,BLYNKEN&NOD BABY FIRST MOTHER GOOSE
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Book Dept. . .Mezzonine
senator Since 1947. The younger 1 governor, had been mentioneef Rouge, La., he would like to chairman.
serve both as assistant Senate Democratic leader and chairman of the finance committee if the Democrats would let me. “Of course, if the Democrats want me to choose between assistant .leader and chairman, I prefer being Senate finance chairman. ■'
He pointed out that when Lyndon B. Johnson was Senate Democratic leader he also served as chairman of the Senate’s Space Committee andj filjed an active roll as an ap-|
I.iong said Thursday in Baton[propriations .subcommittee|
In Phoenix, Ariz., Sen. Carl Hayden, D-Ariz., Senate president pro tempore, said Long is likely to become finance committee chairman with Sen. John 0. Pastore, D-R.L, probably becoming assistant Democratic Ibader.
Byrd's retirement casts some doubt on the future of the Senate Hou.se CommiUco on Reduction of Nonessential Federal Expenditures, which keeps tabs on the rise and fall of federal pay rolls and is supposed to point out where government economics can be made.
A SALE YOU CANT AFFORD to MISS . .
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THE PONTIAC PRESS

«WMt Bono Street
Bewin B. Titmant* n
FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 12. 1965
HAROLD A. riTBOIRALD
Vice Preeidtnt asd Idltor
PontiM. Michigan
BcereUnr u AdreitUat
O. MAinuu Local Ad Uaotaer
Blackout Spotlights Need for ‘Readiness’
If a reminder were needed of how dependent is modern civilization on one of nature’s prime elements — electricity — it was dramatically and frighteningly proved by the massive power failure that affected 30 million people in eight of the Nation’s northeastern states.
A significant and reassuring sidelight on the disruption of the service that mankind has come to take so much for granted was the absence of panic or lawlessness among the millions trapped in environments both unsuitable and ill-prepared to cope with the emergency. ★ ★ ★
The emergency factor of the short-lived catastrophe points up on a large scale a lesson that every household and institution should profit by on a small one.
It is the need to provide standby illumination in the event of cessation, infrequent as it is, of the vital current that turns our nights into days.
We suggest that today is the time for every householder and institution administrator to see that a plentiful supply of tested flashlights, candles and modern lanterns are available and strategically placed as precaution against blackout of any description.
★ ★ ★
When our Heavenly Father ordained that “there be light,” he left it to man to protect himself against failure of the artificial illumination created by his own ingenuity'.
Canada Voters Reach No-Decision Verdict
An exercise in futility on a national scale was presented by the general election recently held in Canada.
The fifth such election in eight years, it was called by Liberal Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson in the hope of boosting his party’s representation in the 265-seat House to a majority.
Pre-election soundings indicated that the 68-year-old leader could do it too—but the electorate north of the border is about as unpredictable as voters in the U.S.A.
★ ★ ★
W hen the election smoke had cleared away, John Diefenbaker, 70-year-old leader of (he Conservative Party whom Pearson had ousted as Prime Minister in an election 30 months ago, was neck and neck with the incumbent.
Diefenbaker’s party actually was the winner, since it gained seven seats to up its total to 99 — short of course of parliament majority.
Pearson’s Liberals captured 129 seats—the same number it held before the election. Still four seats short of a majority, the prime minister will have to continue his reign by means of a shaky coalition with three minority parties.
★ ★ ★
The election, which cost the Dominion $10 million, was viewed with disfavor by a considerable number of 'Canadians and by influential metropolitan newspapers. They seemed to think that another election was one thing Canada didn’t need.
Double Dip Dividend Tax Is Indefensible
Tax reduction an<l tax reform are prime matters of domestic discussion- We have had reductions in income tax rates and diminution of some Federal excise taxes.
Tax reform is another matter. It involves the elimination of inequities in the Federal tax system. There
is much talk about them—but so far, no correction.
One of the worst inequities is double taxation of dividend income. First, the corporation is taxed on its profits at the high going rate. Then dividends paid to the corporation’s stockholder-owners are taxed again at the individual income tax rates.
The government gave some recognition to this injustice 10 years ago when a law was passed that' stockholders could deduct 4 per cent from taxes due on dividends received. But even this token relief was subsequently withdrawn.
★	★	★
Double taxation of dividends is no small matter these days. More than 20 million Americans, the majority in the middle income brackets, own stocks and most of them receive dividends.
★	-ik	★
There is neither rhyme, reason or justice in a tax policy that singles out one group of earners for punitive treatment. The elimination of double taxation would be an excellent starting point for tax reform in general.
if
Verbal Orchids to-
Mrg. Sarah Bowman ol West Bloomfield Town.ship;
83rd birthday.
1^8. Anna B. Dailey of 21 Lexington; 92nd birthday.
Bert Hilton
of Rochester; 89th birthday.
James Lewis Hill
of Waterford Township; 87th birthday.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Hanies of 1038 LaSalle, 61st wedding anniversary.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul J. Matema of 561 Lowell; 58th wedding anniversary.
Divided—Like Gaul—Into Three Parts!
David Lawrence Says:
Did LBJ Err on Aluminum Slap?
Lucky for LBJ Foreign Affairs
By JAMES MARLOW Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON - Under the law of averages, President Johnson’s luck in foreign affairs won’t last.
In the first year of his full term foreign crises have been relatively few at a time when he was anxious to concentrate on domestic problems and getting his programs through Congress.
Yesterday he arranged a full-scale review of foreign policy with top-level i Cabinet officers at his MARLOW Texas ranch, the first of its kind since his gallbladder operation Oct. 8. He had held such meetings regularly before that.
Nothing indicated (his one would be unnsual,. which is a reminder that except for -the Dominican Republic revolt and the continuing war in Viet Nam, Johnson has been fairly free of overseas dilemmas, at least critical ones. There, has been a basic difference between the way Johnson .^nd President John F Kennedy tackled foreign policy. From the very first Kennedy plunged head-first into it, and personally.
-A-	★	★
In less than three'years he made an excellent impression abroad. But Johnson has played foreign policy in a much lower key. One example: In his first year Kennedy made a trip abroad; Johnson has stayed home.
FORCEFUL ACTION But in the biggest and most critical problems that confronted them in their first five months Johnson took far more forceful and positive action than Kennedy.
By the time Johnson began his own first full term. South Viet Nam was dwindling into chaos. He poured in ' American troops, began bombing North Viet .Nam and stopped the Viet Cong tide.
But elsewhere for Johnson the world has been relatively quiet. Another lucky point for him is that he hasn't had to cope with anyone so unpredictable or pushy as Kennedy encountered: Russian Premier Khrushchev.
★ ★ ★
Since Johnson's predecessors all the way back to President Franklin D. Roosevelt . got engulfed in one crisis after another, this year for Johnson is apt to look like no more than a coffee break before he moves out of the White House.
Sooner or later he will have to get deeper into foreign affairs, if only to give the Western world a far more vital leadership than it has now. Without such leadership the Western alliance, under de Gaulle’s heckling, may crumble.
WASHINGTON-Presldent Joimson may have made in the last few days a political mistake of far-reaching importance b y placing the Democratic party in the unenviable position of being completely re-1 sponsible hereafter for the| economic wellbeing of Indus- LAWRENCE try, of agriculture and of the individual citizen throughout the country.
By asserting as a right of the government the power to fix the price at which aluminum can be sold, the administration has taken control of the metal market and, by implication, has assumed a mastery of all the businesses of the country which produce or use the various commodities in the government’s stockpile or are dependent on federal contracts involving tens of billions of dollars.
The administratioD has already been exerting pressure on the Federal Reserve Board to bold interest rates down even as bank loans are today at an unprecedentedly high level.
But not until the President stepped in to order the Defense Department to sell 300,000 tons of aluminum in the government stockpile did it become crystal clear that the role of government as an adviser and counselor of business had been expanded to the role of disciplinarian and boss.
* ★ ♦
Whether it be called an economic dictatorship or an unwarranted extension of executive power without any specific authorization by Congress to fix either wages or prices, the net effect of the latest interference in the natural operation of the laws of supply and demand is the same.
WAS PRIVATE For today the chief executive of the United States government has become the chief executive of what has hitherto been regarded as a private-business system in America.
It has come as a shock to American businessmen, who have thragbt that Mr. Johnson was sympathetic with (he bttiinesi viewpoint, to read what he did in threatening and then clobbing the aluminum companies into the rescinding of price rises they had felt were necessary to achieve a
fair return on the investment of capital.
How can investors expect satisfactory dividends to flow from the initiative and ingenuity of business management where there is a veto power exercised against business operations by the President of the United States?
How long will it be now before the prices of securities will be seriously affected, and will citizens be inclined to put their savings into companies that are limited in what they can pay in dividends?
NO SANCTIONS
America has entered into an era of government dictatorship on the economic scene without any specific sanction by Congress.
All (his inevitably will have a far-reaching influence on future elections.
Whether times are good or bad has always been a factor with many voters in either supporting or rejecting a party in power. Now there will be a greater awareness of this issue, and it could be decisive.
★ ★ ★
The administration hereafter will find itself even more the recipient of blame or praise for every important change in wages or prices or in the purchasing power of the dollar. It’s an awesome responsibility for any administration to assume.
In the next presidential election three years hence, the Democrats will have to bet on the prevalence of a booming prosperity, or else face the consequences of a recession or deep depression that they themselves may have unwittingly wrought by that time.
(CopyrlfM, IMS, Ntw Vtrk
Bob Gonsidine Says:
Behavior in Blackout Surprised Newscasters
Smiles
Ufe can be empty unless you put something into it.
It doesn’t take long for some folks’ bills to become collector’s items.
* * *
We’d like to have plumber’s privates on that drain all the taxpayers’ money is going down. *	* w
If you neglect to put on snow tires, be prepared to put your shoulder to the wheel.
NEW YORK - Well, now you see what comes from putting all your eggs in one basket.
The radio boys who kept us inform^ about the progress (or lack of progress) of The Great Blackout did a fine job.
The scope of the crisis—Toronto to Harris- CONSIDINE burg — occasioned awe in their voices, as well it should have.
But they seemed to marvel more over (he fact that New Yorkers and the other IS million blanketed by the breakdown acted like civilized human beings.
“There is little or no looting, think of that!” one treasured larynx informed us through our transistor. “When you think of all the opportunities. . .’’ His voice trails off wistfully, as if he wished he had been among the shoppers at Tiffany’s, Cartier's. Van Cleef & Aijielt and the bottled goods department at the supermarket when the power stuttered once or twice and went blooey.
★ * ★
From the first reports in, we all conducted ourselves pretty much as we would have if the lights had stayed on, though there was a better spirit of friendliness and neighborliness afoot.
FREE FOOD
Free food was passed down into stranded subway cars, and here and there in the stygian blackness below the ground, stranded commuters sang. ^
Id (he Bronx, a priest opened the door of his candlelit church, not only to all who wished to enter but to distribute votive candles ordinarily burned before a patron saint’s sUtiie.
Many a meal was codeed
in the Bronx by light earmarked for St. Jude.
Throughout the siege I found myself worrying about what would happen if a meteor shower (one is due soon) would fan across the skies, or we were hit by a thunderstorm, or if a frisky military pilot spread a carpet of sonic booms up and down the stricken area^ as one did last Saturday about the same time as Tuesday’s power collapse.
My wife’s thoughts were for people trapped in elevators, ill persons unable to come down from their lofty apartments, doctors unable to get up to them, women about to bear children.
Vaice of the People:
Mother Expresses View of Fighting in Viet Nam
Are we going to continue to sit idly by and watch our boys being slaughtered in Viet Nam just for political gains, as Supreme Court Justice William Douglas says? How many of our politicians have someone dear to them in service? Probably not too many. They have the money and. means to send their boys to college.
★ ★ ★
If it were an all-out war and our own country’s future and security were at stake we should all be willing to fight side by side. Mothers of America, let’s be heard in protest and either have an all-out war where everyone has to fight or let’s get our boys back home.
★ ★ ★
Write your Congressman today. They are making us hate and after all the killing is over we are to forgive and forget. I have a son in service and have just buried my oldest boy. There is no greater sorrow and there is no forgetting.
A WORRIED MOTHER
In reply to the “whitewashed” letter regarding Norman Morrison’s suicide over “the agony we are bringing to the Vietnamese,” this is a bit of mockery. He could have better shown his concern for humanity by going to Viet Nam and defending our American freedom.
★ ★ ★ ,
The letter mentions "negotiations” as the only solution to the ■ Vietnamese problem. I disagree. What do you do with a bunch of Red “butchers” who brag on ruling the world someday and who have refused our offers to negotiate in Viet Nam? Fighting is the only thing they respect.
PROUD TO BE AN AMERICAN
‘Citizens Resent Uninsured Driver Law'
Many resent the discriminating law recently enacted by Gov. Romney to the effect that all motorists who have no liability insurance must pay $35 to the State of Michigan. I have swallowed a lot of pills in my lifetime but this one won’t go dowm Who is going to benefit? Surely it will cost the State a lot of money and the only ones I can see who will benefit will be Iht insurance companies.
DISCOURAGED
‘Show Those Who Served We're United’
Veterans’ Day offered a lesson from our Nation’s past and sounds a challenge for her future. This day emphasized that freedom and peace with honor come at a high but worthy price.
The logic by those indulging in teaching and placard carrying, advocating our withdrawal from South Viet Nam and from our commitment to freedom’s cause, should ht»r close examination. If the integrity of our Country fails, dangers will mount fast.
★ ★ ★
Our greatest honor to men and women who served their mn tion In time of crisis is our firm resolve that their efforts And sacrifices were not in vain. It’s our obligation to show the wo/'ld that we are firmly united in the lofty principles of liberty and justice for all mankind.
WILLIAM F. TUNNINGLEY CLARKSTON
Gives Suggeslions for Naming City Streets
Now that we have become reconciled to the name “Wide Track Drive,” we have possibly opened grand new vistas in the naming of Pontiac streets. A few “attracktive” suggestions; Sidetrack, Half Track, Backtrack, Railroad Track. Racetrat-k, or Sound Track. For something really "spectrackular,” maybe wc can even have a “New Economy Size Track." L^t s show ’em that we don’t have a one-track mind in “Pontrack.
JOHN W. QUITMEYER ROCHES1ER
Comments on ‘Youth Appreriation Week'
Since this is Youth Appreciation Week, I would like show my appreciation for my sons who are without a father. My 13-year-old son has helped many people, often doing hard physical labor because he likes helping people. He has been saving money from odd jobs to buy a pair of hunting boots, but his little brother needed a winter coat. Without a word from me, he took his money and bought his brother a jacket. On Halloween night he gave up a dance to take his brother trick-or-treating. When they returned my supply of candy was gone and my three-year-old gave out his candy.
★ ★ ★
My boys are not angels-thcy get into mischief like most normal boys do-but they are on the right track and I think they
«II.U,that«y.	CHIP'S MOTHER
Reviewing Other Editorial Pages
Vote on Chance
The Columbus Dispatch
A voting machine is somewhat reminiscent o/ the slot machine. When you pull the lever you don’t know^whether you’re going to get plums or lemons.
Intrusion...
The Dothan Eagle
Here is something that seems to be contemptible, offensive and an exhibition of very bad
We refer to the announced acceptance by Senator Robert F. Kennedy (D-N.Y.) of an invitation to go to South Africa next May to address the annual meeting of the National Unton of South African Students, described in an article In The New York Times as a “multiracial organization that the government has accused of corrupting the minds of students through liberal ideas.” The Minister of Justice is quoted ns having referred to
this students’ organization with 19,500 members as “damnable and detestable.”
★ ★ *
An address by Robert Kennedy could inflame such students and render a great disservice to the government of South Africa, one of our conspicuously staunch Allies during World War II and to this date.
This thing has been brewing for some time. President Johnson and the State Department reportedly take a dim view of the affair and hoped Kenned)^ would not accept the invitation. The South African government is giving consideration to refusing Kennedy a visa if and when he requests one. We hope they do that. Their friends would applaud such action. Their enemies couldn’t treat them much worse than they have been doing for many years.
♦ ♦ ♦
Senator Kennedy must know that his contemplated action would be an tinwarrantod add unwelcome intrusion in United States foreign affairs and an insult to South Africa.
The only plausible reason for his doing this is that he hopes to gain some benefit for himself and doesn’t care how much he hurts others. This may not surprise those who know him well but It must be shocking and disappointing to many others who had higher
Good Humor!
The Chicago Sun-Times
Sen. Robert Kennedy got a laugh when he started a speech with “Ladies and gentlemen, honored guests — and Francis X. Morrissey^ wherever you are!”
Thi AMOcistad FrMS Is antHM nclutlvsly to the uit for rapubll-catlon of all locol nows prinfod In ■II as all AF
Tfw Pontiac Prasa Is dallvarad Ov ctrrlar tor 80 cants a waak) wfiara maHad In Oakland. Oanasaa. Llv-kidsMn, Macomb. LaoMr and WasMsnaw Countlas nTs III.W a
THE PONTIAC PRESS. FjllDiyY, NOVEMBER 12. 1{)H5
Phone Rate Probe Could Drag On
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Altbongh the FCC't authority is limited to interstate rates, the impottibility of isolating them from other AT&T charges means the investigation will cover the entire financial structure of Alexander Graham BeH’s most famons could drag on
AT&T charges that the whole thing is a waste of time and money and claims its rates already are subject to sufficient federal scrutiny.
★ A ★
After all, the company says, its rates have fallen 22 per cent since 1940, reducing the average individual’s monthly telephone bill to $5.62.
AVERAGE COSTS
The latest government figures, from the Labor Department’s cost-of-living survey, cover 1961. They show the average phone bill then was $7.24 a month in urban areas, $5.08 in rural nonfarm areas and $2.94 in rural farm areas.
’They break down this way: local service—u r b a n |5.77, rural nonfarm $3.74, rural farm $2.14; long distance-urban $1.47, rural nonfarm $1.34, rural farm 80 cents.
Rural residents pay less be-;ause the^ use the telephone less and their rates are usually Heavy concentrations of telephones, unlike utilities such as gas and water, increase the cost of providing service.
“We have the cheapest rates in the world in terms of the consumers’ ability to pay,’’ proclaims AT&T. It says the aver-, age American earns enough in hours and 17 minutes to pay his monthlyjbill. ’Ibis compares liAT&Tfi^
with AT&T ^ures of five hours and 59 minutes in London, and 16 hours and 36 minutes in Paris.
NOT YET Nobody at the FCC is prepared at this time to call the AT&T rates too high.
A spokesman stressed that “nothing has been found wrong with the rate structure, but there are enough questions about it to warrant an investigation.”
But a hint of government sus-
picion thht a reduction is in order was contained in the announcement of the investigation. * * *
The FCC said a financial r^ port submitted by AT&T showed ‘significant” and wide variations in earnings for various services.
LOW RATES
The report further suggested that AT&T’s money-making telephone operations might be subsidizing unreasonably low rates for services which have competition, such as private telegrapli lines.
The report was followed by an FCC staff suggestion that Western Union be given a monopoly on ail telegraphic services.
AT&T has a monopoly on interstate phone service. Competition in the field proved impractical in the early 1900s when people needed as many as five telephones from different companies to maintain contact with everybody else.
A ★	♦
Through its 18 subsidiary Beil systems, AT&T also furnishes most of the nation’s intrastate service. This gives the company exclusive operation of 75 million of the 89 million phonies in the country.
DO BUSINESS
’The other 14 million are operated by independent companies who must do business with AT&T to connect their customers with the rest of the world. ’The rates charged by these firms thus could also be affected by the investigation.
The number of independents has decreased from 5,983 to 2,535 since the end of World War II as the most powerful have swallowed up smaller firms.
Most serve sparsely populated rural areas although a few hold forth in urban centers, such as Rochester, N. Y. ’The General Telephone System, is in areas all over the nation.
But the independents are dwarfed by AT&T. Their combined 1964 revenue of $1.5 billion compared with AT&T’s $10.5 billion.
AT&T is big business—the biggest. It has more than 760,000 employes and 2.5 million stockholders who realized dividends of 12 a share last year.
for years, it has been the nation’s most profitable com^ pany in terms of dollars and cents. Its profit for the year ended Ang. 31 was $1.8 bUlion, of which about 25 per cent was attributed to interstate operations.
Liberal congressmen have often c h a r g e d that the FCC wasn’t keeping close enough watch over the company. Some have hinted that the nation best could be served by a govern-mentowned system.
★ A A
The FCC has never used its authority to set rates for most AT&T operations, but it has negotiated various rate structures in dosed sessions with company officials.
'Lorpfat' Bricks Smash Birchite Store Windows
DETROIT (AP) - Bricks wrapped in paper bearing the inscription “lorpfat," were tossed through windows at the American Opinion Library and Book Store near the Wayne State University campus Thursday. Police said the store
in John Birch Society literature. Police were trying to determine what “lorpfat’ meant.
‘Let’s Get New
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There’s more to Chrysler’s popularity than meets the eye.
Like under the hood.
Every Chrysler is a big V-8. Starting with the husky 383 cubic incher that runs on regular gas. Or any of three others — up to the 440 TNT engine.
Of course, the way every Chrysler is built has a lot to do with its popularity, too. Apd think of all the protection you get.
As for looks, come in and give Chrysler a long, hard look.
The move up to Chrysler is beautiful.
CHRYSLER’66
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An Your School's ActMfios Now Appoaring in Tho Pross?
THE PONTIAC PRESS
Turn to IWi P9l hr Sonior High School Nows
PONTIAC. MICHIGAN FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1965
B-1
At Waterford High
Set for Parents Night Variety of Topics
By BARBARA STOCK Parents of seniors at Waterford Township High School are invited to a parents’ meeting In the school cafeteria Monday at 8 p.m.
Senior activities such as honors convocation, commencement and baccalaureate will be discussed and explained by Donald Arsen, senior class adviser.
Donald Beedle will speak on the educational trip planned for seniors this spring.
Questions on graduation requirements will be answered by Helen Bulla, assistant principal. Richard Powell, counselor, will discuss military service.
★ * ★
Bryon Merritt, assistant principal, will suggest postgraduate plans and will inform parents of ways to set up appointments to discuss the potential of the individual student. VOLLEYBALL NEAR Girls’ Athletic Association, sponsored by Sue Richert, physical education teacher, will soon be playing volleyball in the school gymnasium from 2:30 to 3:30.
For girls Interested in joining the GAA interschool basketball team, practice is held from 3:30 to 4:30 after school in the gym.
Swim Club, also sponsored by Miss Richert, will offer fun and recreation at the Oakland University pool for one hour every Saturday.
* * *
Art Club meets every Monday evening from 7 to 9. Painting, drawing, and sculpturing ar‘ among the activities enjoyed.
WLHS Slates Student vs. Faculty Game
By RON MOORHEAD Next Friday WaUed Lake High School’s annual student-faculty basketball game will be played.
Every year prer^iing the regular basketball season, this game is featured.
Not only do the victors get the prestige of winning, but they also get possession of the “little brown Jug.”
In the past, faculty members have dominated the games. This year the students will be out to break the faculty winning streak.
The students will pit wit and resourcefulness against the experience and know-how of the older, but wiser faculty members.
Unfortunately, only one team can win, but humor and determination on both sides will com-oine to entertain the audience.
Students h a v 1 n g art during the school day are permitted to work on their art projects and are guided by sponsor John Banick, art teacher.
Waterford’s Playmasters have canceled their original play, Arthur Miller’s “The Cru-:lble.” ,
WTHS’s Pep Club will buUd school spirit by making posters for tonight’s Waterford T o w n-ship — Waterford Kettering football game.
★ ♦ ★
“Viet Nam” and “Should Our
Kettering Play Opens Tomorrow
By JAMIE SCHUTT Waterford Kettering Stage-masters will open the 1965-66 season with the presentation of “Green Pastures,’" night at 8 in the gymnasium.
The Broadway comedy by Marc Connelly was awarded the Pulitzer Prize and later made into a book and movie.
Portraying lead characters will be Rodney Reinhardt, Lord; Stephen Peterson, Noah; and Thomas Reinhardt, briel.
Other maitt characters will be played by Andrew Honchell, Moses; Carol Methner, Zeba; Ellen Kaul, Noah’s wife; -Jon Hike, Mr. Deshee; John Basch, Flatfoot; and Thomas Johns, Shem.
Patty Loottnin, faculty member, is dired^ of “Green Pastures.” She ^ assisted by atu-dept directorPwelop# Vounj.! TICKETS AVAILABLE % Tickets can be obtained
Boys Be There?” are topics under discussion in John Sommer’s 4th and 5th hour senior government classes.
PANEL DISCUSSIONS
Panels will discuss guerrilla warfare and student demonstrations, and a tape recording on Viet Nam history and public opinion on U.S. policy there will be played.
A truck motor was donated recently by Frank German, senior, to Waterford’s auto shop. It will be used for study.
The course gives students a chance to work on their own cars.
National Honor Society members from WTHS are now offering tutoring services to students.
Permission forms are available in the office and must be filled out. Instructors of the course in which students are seeking help must give their permission.
National Honor Society members must maintain a 3-point average and are selected as tutors in areas they are academically strongest.
33 Students Get Top Report Cards at St. Frederick's
By ERNESTINE MOORE Students of St. Frederick High School received their first‘treat’ of the year last Tuesday.
It came in the form of a white report card issued by the Arch-iiocese of Detroit.
After this momentous day, 33 top students came out all smiles. Senior honor students are Mark Brasch, John Carry, Kerry Kammer, Marsha Klu-Ve, Mary Lou Manion, Ernes-Moore, Mary Schmansky, Mariboth Shore, and Mgi^ ttHth.
Juniors are Gerald Harring-Steve Hamilton, and Peter
through DrmonUcs Club naons-.
-	-	• ■ Winmn^ sophomore class hon-
ors are Maria Bora, Bonnie Clark, Elizabeth Garland, Carol
bers or at th® gymnasiom d(^. Students with activity cards
will be admitted free. Kettering’s student body attended a debate assembly this week ^jresented by representatives of two uhiversities.
★ * *
Resolved: that law enforcement agencies should have more freedom to apprehend criminals. UNIVERSITIES DEBATE The University of Vermont debated on the affirmative, and Saint John’s College took the negative side of the issue.
Members of the Future Teachers Club met this week, and were lectured by faculty members Phylis Huerstel, Gilbert Claeys, and Vince Koehler.
Homeroom teachers turned in lists of students making either the “A”, or the “A honor role to the Student Council this week.
Hobson, Judy Peoples, Kathy Slabinski, Noreen Spanski, Mark Staskiewicz, Kathleen Stevenson, Barbara Tewksbury, and Mary Margaret Zaha.
★ ★ ★
Freshman earning recognition are Mary Bard, Judy Carry, Charles Gallagher, James La-Londe, Janet Spanski, June Staskiewicz, Joanne Stier, Carol Taylor, David Wehr, and JalAes Willis.
ENTITLED TO TRIP The 33 now are entilted to forthcoming trip on school time. Sophomores are presenting ‘Dudes' Night Out” in the parish hall from 8-11 tonight.
PtntlM pffMt Photo
PRACTICE SESSION - Students at Walled Uke High School, determined to emerge victors in the annual student-faculty basketball game, are spending all their free time practicing. Pictured above are Bruce Hermes (left rear) of 8063 Farrant, Cofnmerce Township; Fred Ferguson (left front) of 1900 Wixom, Wixom; and Michael Matteson of 2609 Warner, West Bloomfield Township.
Practice Sessions at ECHS Starts Basketball Team
'Macbeth' Readied for PNH Production
Pontiac Priu Photo
PLOT THICKENS - Lady Macbeth (Nancy Blevins of 192 W. Kennett) and Lord Macbeth (Larry Smith of 91 W. Brooklyn) scheme to seize Scotland’s throne during rehearsal for Pontiac Northern High School’s current production, “Macbeth.” Matinee performances will be Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday at 1:30. Evening performances are scheduled for Thursday and Saturday at 8.
By AUCE TURNER Attention at Pontiac Northern centered around final details for the coming production of “Macbeth.”
The Shakespearean drama will open with a matinee Wednesday for PN s tu d e n t s only.
The hard work and effort of numerous students and faculty members should make It one of the best plays produced by Northern.
The play is under the direction of Anthony Chiarilli.
“Macbeth” takes place in 11th century Scotland.
★ ★ ★
Macbeth, a gallant general in Duncan’s army, finds that he has become a popular hero.
3 WITCHES
Confronted by three witches who predict he will become king, Macbeth becomes obsessed with the "desire to gain the throne. His wife plots with him in his evil plan to seize the throne.
Macbeth has no choice but to kill the reigning King
Macbeth even has the family	... ^ n i.
of one of his most loyal friends,!	Parties and Mark Dick-
Macduff, slain.
Items at Other Area Schools
By UNDA WRIGHT Football season is over for the fans at Emmanuel Christian High School, and basketball is under way.
Practice began Monday for the 1965-66 basketball season. Teams are full of anticipation for the ^coming season anxious to meet opponents on the court.
The junior class is selling Christmas cards to boost their funds toward their goal of 1500 for the spring Junior-Senior Banquet.
Plans for selling Christmas trees again this year are taktog shape for the senior class and’ the National Honor Society.
Officers for the Honor Society this year are Elgin Green, president; Gall Konno, vice president; Linda Wright, secretary; and Patricia Gidcumb, treasurer.
Rochester
By KATHY MORGAN Conservation Club presents the “Sadie Hawkins Dance,’ 20-year tradition at Rochester High School, next Friday in the cafeteria from 7:30 to 11:30 p. m.
Atmosphere is “Dog Patch,” in decorations and costumes. In Daisy Mae and Li’l Abner style, girls invite thw boys.
Under the chairmanship of Irene Leyman, the decorations committee plans tin cans, weeds and buriap bags.
Any girl or boy not dressed in costume must pay a fine.
Clarkston
By CATHY RICHARDSON Today, at the final pep a semhly of Clarkston High School’s football season, senior members of the varsity team were honored.
They included Rod Allen, Rick Blimka, Jerry Dark, Larry Franklin, Wayne Goins, Michael Golembeske, Greg Gordon and Marshall Gratz.
Others were Paul H o x s i e, Mike Madison, Ralph May, Dave Osgood, Dennis Pine, Kurt Priebe, Dan Riggs, King Robinson, Dan Williams and the roam ager, John White.
Clarkston’s Y-Teens will go on a bottle hunt tomorrow morning.
To raise money for their Christmas project, the club will collect bottles from neighboring areas and turn them in for cash.
Tuesday, members of the varsity and junior varsity football teams and the cross county squad will receive trophies, awards and letters at Clarkston’s annual fall banquet.
Troy
Avondale
By CHERYL BECKER The junior class at Avondale High School is planning its annual Sadie Hawkins dance.
The girl-ask-boy affair will be held on Nov. 24 in the high school gym. The dance will be from 8 to 11 p.m.
Nov. 29 it the date set for College Career Night. College-bound students will have thp opportunity to discuss their college plans with a representative from the college of their choice.
By RICK SHAVER
Linda Bujold and Vince Cor-nelli«r received recognition award! from the Madison-Troy dpUtnlM Club.
The award is granted for the students’ contribution to school ahd cbmmunlty.
They were honored last Tuesday at a luncheon held in the Troy-Clawson Elks Gub.
Linda is the editor-in-chief of the “Gladiator,” the school’ yearbook.
Vince participated in crosscountry and also is a member of the debate team.
The “Gladiator,” sponsored by C. Ray Ballard, English teacher, pictured underclassmen and clubs.
The junior class, sponsored by Kay Williams, history teacher, is holding a magazine sale to raiM money for its senior trip.
West Bloomfield
By MARGIT MISANGYI
The national prize competition math test was given at West Bloomfield High School Thursday.
Students rating in the top four
■percentile will take a second test in December.
* ★ *
Tomorrow, WBHS will hold its annual American Field Service drive. Students will gather in assigned areas to begin the collection. A luncheon will follow in the gymnasium.
Preparations are being made for the annual athletic banquet to be held Tuesday evening.
Lady of Lakes
By CECELIA PARKER
Highlighting the past week al Our Lady of the Lakes High School was the presentation of the annual Optimist Award by the Optimist Club of Waterford.
Recipients of the award, in conjunction with Youth Appreciation Week, were sophomores Diane Greene and David Miller.
First quarter report cards were given out the beginning of this week by Reverend F. J. Delaney.
Students qualifing for the honor roll are Suzanne Livingston, Carl Matzelle, John Shaughnes-sy. Storm Slavin, Sandra Smith and Randolph Wise, all seniors. Juniors are "’Catherine Chad, George Lee, Constance May-worm and Caesar Weston.
★ ★ ★
Others earning honors are Dennis Day and Rosemary Day, sophomores; and Christine Gin-gras, Timothy Hagan, Diane Moultrup, Patricia Seeterlin and Kevin Shaughnessy, freshmen.
Duncan. However, once this is accomplished he finds he can hide this first crime only by murdering all who suspect his guilt.
play were made by Aloma Julian, a student at PN.
Ticket sales arc directed by Bonnie Pintamo with further efforts from the entire English
annual cooperative dinner tonight.
The High School Athletic Department and the Holly Boosters Club have scheduled their annual fall sports b a n q u e t for Wednesday.
Lake Orion
By NADINE WILLIAMS To display spirit for Lake Orion High &hool’s football team in the battle for the “Bronze Boot,” the Student Council authorized a Green and White Day today.
In addition, the pep assembly led by the cheerleaders and the pep band was held outside.
A committee of student rancil members and cheerleaders constructed a bonfire m the athletic field.
An Oxford “wildcat” was tossed into the bonfire as a symbol of Orion’s hopeful victory over their opponents.
A newly organized club, the Service Buttons, have elected officers. They are Kathy Downey, president; Louise Dodge, vice president; Mary Jane Thorp, secretary and Penny Iser, treasurer. 'This club works on projects aiding community and school.
The rage of his people and his wife’s suicide leave him alone and friendless to fall to the vengeance of his once friend, Macduff.
OTHERS IN CAST
Macbeth will be portrayed by Larry Smith; Lady Macbeth, Nancy Blevins; King Duncan, Mark Dickerson; Macduff, Ralph Bartles and Lady Mac-1 duff by Mary DeClute.
Banquo will be played by Chris Skillman; Malcomb, Bruce Kilmer; Donalbain, Greg Butler; Lennox, Gary Shorland and Ross by Jerry Davis.
Other parts are held by Allan Benson, Dianne Coin, Boyd Cryer, Patty Guy, Mari Ham-partzoomian, Pat H a m p a r t-zoomian, Jim Hester, Bob Johnson and Jim Maher.
★ * ♦
Still others include Ted McConnell, Pat Perry, Bonnie Pintamo, Qon Tinson, Bruce Tip-pen, (ilivla Sims, Marsha Webb, George Wren, Toni W y r i c k , Pedro Martinez and Tim Phipps. STUDENT DIRECTOR
Chris Bexell is student director for the play. Nancy Blevins and Mary DeClute are her assistants.
Most of the costumes for the
erson are in charge of lighting.
Scenery was completed by PN's Stagecraft Club under Pauline Woodin and tickets were printed by PN’s print shop under Roy Woods.
Evening performances will be held next Thursday and Saturday at 8:30. Matinee performances will be Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday at 1:30.
Milford
By RICHARD WIXOM
With a great show of optimism, the junior girls of Milford High School have challenged their senior sisters to a powder puff football game.
The two squads will battle on Milford’s Memorial Field next Thursday.
Junior coaches Jerry Reis and Charies Schroeder and senior trainers Charies Janke and Cliflord Wellman, all four MHS instructors, are conditioning their charges for the contest.
Yesterday, ^ Milfbrd students competed in the eighth annual Michigan mathematics prize competition.
Parents of high school students followed an abbreviated version of their son’s or daughter’s daily schedule last evening at Milford High’s open house.
Holly
By UNDA LONGSTRE’TH
Future Teachers of Holly High School have set up a long range activity plan.
On Dec. 4, there will he a bus trip to the University of Michigan and Eastern Michigan University.
Later in the school year, there will be trips to other universities.
On Dec. 8, there will be a cooperative dinner for the members of the club.
Language Club will hold its
Limelight Shines on the Juniors at Dominican
By DEBBIE VAN NATTER Juniors are presently in the limelight at Dominican Academy. Besides being the victors in the yearbook ad drive, they have received their class rings.
Seniors, too, have scored success at Dominican.
The Debate Club, under the direction of Sister Thomas, competed in a district debate contest and earned second place rating.
Two seniors, Aileen O’Connor and Catherine Samson, debated against three schools and made three consecutive victories.
Catherine Samson also awarded a certificate for outstanding speech in debating.
PCH Skiers Plan Future Activities
By HELEN COLLIAS With cold weather just a snowflake away, the Ski Club at Pontiac Central High School is planning winter activities.
Although no buses will be chartered for the weekly trips to Mt. Holly, designated days will be arranged so that carloads of students will be able to go skiing together.
Highlighting the ski season will be the many weekend ski trips. Students travel to northern Michigan and stay at ski lodges for two days of fun and exercise.
Most of the weekends are held at Nub’s Nob and Boyne Highlands. In the discussion stage is a full week trip to be taken during spring vacation.
Faculty member John Zim-rnerle, sponsor of the club, has opened the Wolverine Ski Camp to accommodate high school skiers on weekends.
HOUSE STUDENTS Able to house one to two schools at a time, the students sleep in dorm-type buildings and are served cafeteria style hot meals.
Bus transportation is provided to and from the camp and to the various ski resorts near by.
The all boy ski team, under cocaptains T^ Fisher and Richard Isgrigg, has scheduled seven meets at Mt. Holly.
* * *
Enthusiasrn will reach Its peak tonight as Pontiac Central plays Bay City in one of the most important games of the
Go Abroad in June
3 Oxford Seniors Will Tour Europe
By ANN ASHLEY Through hard work and determination, three students of the Oxford Area Community High School have been selected to tour Europe with Musical Youth International.
Diane Schalau and Rick Laid-ler will represent OHS choir and will be under the direction of Lester McCoy, musical director of MYI.
Robert Zerwick will repre-sep^ OHS bWid, working under tb4) director of instrumental music. Jack Bittle.
Beginning their European tour in June, the three seniors will visit Scotland, England, Wales and West Germany.
★ ★ *
MYI is a goodwill tour group, consisting of combined band and chorus students from high schools in Michigan as well as neighboring states and the province of Ontario, Canada. ANNUAL EVENT School-spirited voices filled the brisk air last night as OHS cheerleaders led students in the annual snake dance and bonfire.
Following tradition, a dragon was tossed into the blazing bonfire signifying Lake Orion’s defeat at the hands of OHS Wildcats.
PLANNING AHEAD - Oxford Area Community High School students believe in being prepared. Selecting luggage Graduation announcements for their European tour are (from left) Rick Laidler of 125 were selected by senior class w. Drahner and Diane Schalau of 2248 Baldwin, both of officers who are Rick Fox, presi- Oxford Township, and Robert Zerwick of 4464 Rochester, dent; Richard Valentine, vice Oakland Township. The three young people have been select-re tar y, and Mike Schlusler, ed to travel with Musical Youth International, a student treasurer.	goodwill tour group, beginning in June.
1
t ■
J33VJ eo 3WW
THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 12, 1965
Mocapagal Refuses to Concede Philippine Election, Although Far Behind in Tatfi
MANILA (AP) - Senate President Ferdinand E. Marcos appeared today to have almost won the Philippine presidency but President Diosdado Maca-pagal, seeking a second term, refused to concede.
Umrfridal returns compiled by the Philippine News Service pve Marcos a 614,095-vote lead in Tuesday’s election, still atr almost unbeatable margin although smaller than it was earlier,
* ★
The unofficial tally from about 70 per cent of the estimat-
ed 8.5 million votes gave Marcos 3,015.271 votes to Macapa-gal’s 2,401.176.
Driver License Invalid? It Belongs to Sheriff
NEWTON, Kan. (AP) - A Newton policeman was checking licenses of drivers recently. After looking at one license he handed it back aixl said;
“Sir, if you’ll sign this license, it will be valid.” The flabbergasted driver, was Vern Miller, the sheriff of Sedgwick County.
Fernando Lopez, running for vice president with Marcos, led Gerardo Roxas, son of a former president, by 114,376 votes — 2,-770,0M to 2,655,723.
LEAD TALLY
In official returns from less than half of the country’s 45,234 precincts, Marcos was leading by 340,277 votes. The official tally from 28,110 precincts was Marcos 2,299,306, Macapagal 1,-959,029.
, Marcos, 48, a war hero from the Nacionalista party, was confident of victory. He said he
could lose only through “mas-. sive and unthinkable fraud.”
★ ★ ★
But Macapagal, 55, considers the election still undecided and won’t concede until official returns are completed, a source ' close to the Liberal party president said.
The president’s press office said returns from pro-Macapa-gal precincts on the islands of Luzon and Mindanao will put him ahead in the official tally. Early returns from Mindanao showed Marcos running strongly in urban areas. Macapagal
claims strength in the countryside.
Marcos told newsmen that as
Pastor Named Prexy
ARTESIA, N.M. (AP) - Dr. Roger Wells Youngs, senior minister of the First Presbyterian Church of Wichita, Kan., has been named president of the new Whitson College of Artesia. Whitson is to be a four-year libr eral arts college and expects to open in September 1966.
End adv. for Fri. PMs Nov. 12.
the Philippines’ sixth president he would send troops to Viet Nam if he considered it necessary.
If elected, the Nationalists leader would begin his term Jan. 1 facing a Liberal-dominated 104-member House of Representatives and at best a precariously balanced 24-member Senate.
Marcos began his career by passing the nationwide bar exam with the highest grades ever made. During World War II he became the nation’s most decorated hero. After the war
.he was elected to Congress and i won every time he was up for reelection. In the Senate race «• six years ago, he topped the list, tl marking him as presidential timber.


Gets Grant for Study SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) - : The Museum of New Mexico has ,: been awarded a $57,000 grant « for a three-year study of the Ixil Indians of Guatemala. The ^ project is backed by the Nation- * al Science Foundation.
------------------------------fg-
★
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THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 12, 19«5
Poverty Unit
to Serve 2,500
Center Wilt Dispense
a Variety cf Services
An estimated 2,500 p e r s o n s will be served through the anti-poverty program’s proposed Pontiac Action Center, according to Cari P. Ingraham, chairman of the Oakland County Commission on Economic Op^ portunity (OEO).
To be located at Saginaw and Lawrence, the center will dispense a variety of services.
However, antipoverty officials say there will be no financial handouts normally associated with such federally-supported programs.
The City Commission voted Tuesday night to pay the rent for six months for the project action center here, one of two slated in Oakland County.
One of the major roles planned for the action center ' to provide counseling or referral service.
Big Job for Young Area Horsewoman
Gets Training at the Track
By JERE CRAIG Judith Frances Johnson of Avon Township is a personal friend of George Washington.
So close is their relationship, in fact, that Judy and George can be found working together almost any morning exercising their leadership and influence.
No, their work is not political; but it could be deemed royal since they are directly connected with the “sport of kings’’ — horse racing.
There “business associates’’ include Sandy’s Friend, Music Director and Good “
son is comparatively inexperi-jness, another two-year-old, and' Now that the state’s seven-enced as a “back side’’ regularjtwo yearlings now are included nionth racing season has closed, at Detroit Race Course a	she will devote her time to the
Hazel Park Race Track. !	care and feeding of the horses,
(Back side personnel are || plus her outside interests, those Who remain at the track	Washington was pur- Foremost of the latter is ab-
the owners, trainers, assistant	t r a i n i n g of the She paints and, as an under-
' Meadow Brook horses.	graduate, exhibited some of her
They are racing horses, and George Washington is a lead
trainers, grooms and
workers.)
Mildred, a goat, also is an	‘^at of other
important peacemaker among i students. ^	^	^
the sensitive thoroughbreds.	*
DIRECT POOR Counselor aides, half of whom are to come from the poverty area, are to direct the poor to the center and refer them to the appropriate existing service agency.
For example, h person needing legal counsel might be referred to the Legal Aid Society. Some services are to be located in the action center itself. These will include family counseling, consumers service, medical and dental services, and vocational guidance and placement.
rings and race tracks.
Miss Johnson, 24, still is a youngster in the eyes of the Michigan State Racing Com-
The trim brunette (5-4 and 110 pounds) has a man-sized job, however, running the stable ofj six thoroughbreds at Meadow'Good Business, won the Mkhi-Brook Farms, 480 S. Adams. I gan Futurity recently at DRC.' f	■
OU BEAUTY QUEENS - Oakland University boasts two of the Miss Michigan finalists on its student roster. Enjoying a classroom break in the November sunshine are (from left) Kathleen A. Sullivan, 18, Miss Oak Park, and Sharon S. Snyder, 20, Miss
Oakland University. Sharon was selected as first runner-up to Miss Michigan, Kathy third runner-up. Both won firsts in preliminary competitoin, Sharon in talent and Kathy in bathing suit.
OU Beoufy Queens Alike:
t, Poised, Personable
Pretty,
By JODY HEADLEE I years and that one award made Home ^itor. The Pontiac press I it all worthwhile.
Winning honors as the most attractive of Oakland University’s many attractions are beauty queens Sharon Sue Snyder and Kathleen Ann Sullivan.
Sharon, 20, the OU Snow Queen, Miss Oakland University and first runner-up in this year’s Miss Michigan contest, is the only child of Mr. and Mrs. Louis W. Snyder of 8725 Wood-bank, Bloomfield Township.
Eighteen ■ year - old Kathy is the oldest of five daughters in the Leo Sullivan family of Oak Park.
She is Miss Oak Park and Miss Michigan Sweetheart and was third runner-up in the Miss Michigan contest.
“Yes,” she paused, her eyes sparkling as she briefly relived the pomp and ceremony of the pageant, “if I had the chance to do it all over again,
I certainly would.
“1 went with the idea, win or lose, I would enjoy every minute and I did."
Both girts won firsts in the Miss Michigan preliminary competitions; Sharon in talent, Kathy in bathing suit competition.
POISED, PERSONABLE Both are pretty, poised and personable.
OU’s ‘queens’ are interested in becoming teachers—Sharon in kindergarten and Kathy, secondary English literature. They condemn levis and sloppy sweat shirts as campus uniforms for coeds.
“Girls should wear skirt^ and blouses or sweaters to classes,” said Sharon.
FEMININE LOOK “The feminine look is very Important,” Kathy agreed.
Each felt the Michigan contest was an exciting, though exhausting, adventure.
Both were pleased to be among the top finalists.
I didn’t enjoy it,” declared Kathy frankly.
“I met new people. They were nice, but I doubt if any close friendships will develop. COLLEGE MONEY
I entered because I needed money for college and a beapty contest was the quickest add easiest way to earn it.
“You see, I don’t feel my parents owe me a college education. They would and could help me but I think it’s up to me to earn my own way if I
“Would I go through it all again? I honestly don’t know.
“I would be pleased to represent Oakland as Miss Oakland University because it would be like homecoming queen: my friends and classmates would do the choosing.
“But whether I would join the pageant competition again, don’t know.” Kathy shook her head slowly.
I’d really have to think about that,” she concluded.
Kathy hesitated, her brown eyes thoughtful as she unconsciously twisted a cheek curl in her dark hair.
“Being a beauty queen,” she said emphatically, “isn't all the glamour you might think it is. HARD WORK
'It’s hard work. And the girls who win are not just the pret-They are the ones with the strongest constitutions.
“It’s fun to play celebrity for awhile but you can’t live that way. Why, the first night I was on campus, I don’t know how many boys called just because I’d been in the pageant.
“I prefer being liked and respected as a person rather ” a showpiece.
Sharon would be willing and eager to go through the whole experience again while Kathy is not so certain.
NEW FRIENbS “I met many new friends,” said Sharon. “Friends that I feel will become closer as the years
“1 was thrilled when my classmates at Oak Park High selected me as the 1964 homecoming queen. They chose me because they knew me and liked me as a person.
“I also enjoyed the experience of working in competition for one goal.
“Though each of us wanted to become Miss Michigan, there was the feeling Whoever won, we all would be happy for her.
“And, for me, the most gratifying moment of all,” continued Sharon, “was my talent award. WORTHWHH.E ‘Tv)e been dancing for 17
Detroit Firm Bids Low on Square Lake Project
The Michigan State Highway Department announced today that Cooke Construction Co., Detroit, was low bidder on the Square Lake Road improvement project.
The firm submitted a bid of $3,561,776 for the construction of 2.7 miles of divided highway and tlvee bridges from Tel^aph east to 1-75. The project is isdieduled . for completion by
Explaining plans for the action center Ingraham said the program is still being formulated.
MODIFICATIONS
“We’ll modify and change the program to meet the demand: of the poor,” he explained.
Ingraham said the major difference the antipoverty effort had with other aid programs was that OEO would “bring the servies to the people.”
Nonprofessional counselor aides are to be trained to work with the poor. An eight-week course is being set up with Oak-' land Community College.
James M. McNeely, OEO executive director, said the aides would be supervised by a professional worker on a 3-1 basis.
The aides’ program is expected to help ease some of the current shortage in the social work field.
Antipoverty officials hope to open the Pontiac Action Center by Dec. 1.
Officially, Miss Johnson is li-i
censed as an assistant trainer ..........................*	"• a former student at Vaughn
^ the state commission.	The soft-spoken Miss Johnson school in Bloomfield Hills she
*	★	♦	appreciates the value of good also enjoys skiing at local win-
She doesn’t have enough ex- help,	ter resorts,
perierice to rate her trainer’s!	★	*	★	gn however, she looks
certification, yet. and she p're-' “You’re only as good as the forward to training her Music fers being an assistant trainer people helping you,”.she says. Director and preparing Good to being classified as an owner. ! ”and you really appreciate re-Business with George Washing-LICENSE DUE	sponsible help.	ton.

vrrvaAK	results will serve as a rec-
visiisKAN	lommendation, her trainer’s li-
At nine years of age, he is cense should come soon, veteran of stables, exercise;
mission.
Working closely with trainer John Foggiano, 3529 Warring-h a m. Waterford Township, and Livonia groom Emmett Ailen, Miss Johnson saw aii six mounts win at least once and finish this summer’s season in good heaith.
Mrs. Wilson’s personal pick.
Her partners include Mrs. Alfred G. Wilson, her grandmoth-Richard S. Wilson of Bloomfield Hills, her uncle; and Detroit attorney Donald D. Mac-Far lane.
NEW ROLE Though she has been around horses all her life. Miss John-
Bus Patronage in October Ga/ni by Over 10,000
The two-year-old—bought at a RedBob Farms yearling sale in Oxford Township — has already won more than 10 times its purchase price.
RAISED IN KENTUCKY A University of Kentucky graduate with a degree in fine arts. Miss Johnson was raised by her mother, Mrs. Fred Van-Lennep, on Castleton Farms at Lexington, Ky.
After graduating in 1963, she moved to Meadow Brook to help her grandmother. In addition, she brought a colt. Music Director, with her.
Passengers on Pontiac Transit Corp. buses last month topped September by more than 10,000 riders, according to bus company officials.
There were 62,630 riders in October- compared with only 52,115 in September.
In October a year ago, there were 59,724 bus riders.
Revenue last month totaled $15,090, compared with $13,040 in September and $14,167 in October 1964.
Total patronage this year is 624,723 through October, cont-pared with 654,951 for the same period last year, while last year it totaled $149,697 for the first 10 months of the year.
He developed so well that she decided to race him last year in the East, and was rewarded with success. But even more im-p 0 r t a n t. Miss Johnson found great satisfaction in working with the colt.
Thus, Music Director’s step-
TRAIN THOROUGHBREQB-Judy Johnson of Meadow Brook Farms has heip from George Washington in training the six thoroughbred members of the newly developing racing stables. George a lead pony, is accustomed to ac-sister, Sandy’s Friend, was companying the racehorses in their workouts. Miss Johnson added to the stable. Good Busi- is one of the bright new faces in Michigan horse racing.
Labor to Ask Selection Reason
By JIM LONG Labor leaders, angered that union member wasn’t given more consideration for the county treasurer’s post, will ask for an explanation from the three


county officials who made the
OU Bursting at Seams
appointment.
Specifically, they have questioned why Mrs. Lucille Marshall of Pontiac, an active union member who campaigned the late treasurer Charles A. Sparks in the 1964 election, was not among the top contenders for the job.
She lost to Sparks by less than 5,000 votes.
New Dorm to Ease Housing
Letters demanding an answer will be sent to each of the men. Probate Judge Donald Adams, Clerk-Register of Deeds John D. Murphy and Prosecutor S. Jerome Bronson.
A $4.3-million dormitory-food service building under construction at Oakland University will be completed just in time to help the six-year-old state institution meet the pressure of sharply mounting enrollments.
Slated for occupancy next fall, the twin-towered, seven-story structure will provide rooms for 572 students and food service for some 1,600.
Enrollment at the university has moved quickly from 570 when it opened its doors in 1959 to 2,458 this fall.
University official’s predictions, which have already been revis^ upward several times in OU’s brief history, indicate the number will exceed 7,000 by the fall of 1970.
At present, one-third are resi-three - county area including Wayne, Macomb and Oakland counties.
With more and more students from other areas of Michigan and other states enrolling at the university, the proportion of dorm st^ents is expected to increase.
The new dorm will relieve the present housing pinch, which necessitates some tripling of students in rooms designed for double occupancy.
Another dorm is already being planned for the following year.
ond level, with the twin towers housing student rooms.
The new structure is located adjacent to the existing six residence halls, just north of of the academic complex.
Landscaping plans call for a small lake to be formed in the natural depression in front of the building and supported by natural runoff.
Primarily a commuter school when it opened, OU is faced not only with more students annually, but with a larger proportion of students living on campus.
The combination dormitory-food service building will provide a spacious central lounge, seminar rooms, recreational and office areas on the first level.
A curved, concrete footbridge will connect the new dorm with walks leading to the Oakland Center.
According to James R. Apple-ton, dean of men and housing director at OU, the dorm is planned as a coeducational residence.
SECOND LEVEL The kitchen and dining room
area will be located on the sec-
“This new building will include many features that will enable us to do a better job of integrating the student living situation with the educational process at Oakland,” Appleton said.
Coeducational Residence To Eas^ Housing Pinch At Oakland Uivy^rsity
the final choice, but do want to know why labor was shuffled into the background.
Harold Julian, UAW citizenship representative and a candidate himself for the $16,000 a year treasurer’s job, told delegates that Adams had stated to him that Mrs. Marshall wasn’t in the running because they didn’t want a woman filling the position.
Mrs. Marshall, 89 N. Sanford, is a former teacher and prev ently employed at Pontiac Motor Division.
The protest action was voted on this week by the Oakland County AFL-CIO Council.
AIMED AT ADAMS Most of the criticism voiced by delegates at their monthly meeting was aimed at Adams, who had received strong support from the organization during his election campaign.
Adam’s choice and longtime friend, James E. Seeter-lin, Waterford Township supervisor, was appointed to the post by a 2-1 vole last week. Adams, as the senior probate judge, and the other two county officers had the job, under a state statute, of selecting a new treasurer after Sparks died.
Julian, who is a vice chairman of the county Democratic executive committee, entered the race, he said, oniy after learning of the opposition to Mrs. Marshall.
that, they are not objecting to
HAD BACKING He .said that he had the backing of Bronson, labor and the party, but that Adams contended Julian would use the treasurer’s office to organize county employes.
Bronson, like Adams, had been supported by organized labor in his campaign last year.
Murphy, the first Democrat ever to become county clerk, owes no special allegiance to labor since he did not receive its official endorsement during his election campaign.
According to Julian, Murphy pointed this out when he was approached by representatives of labor seeking his important vote.
Sparks, a Republican, had h been treasurer for an unprecedented 33 years.
ALL DEMOCRAT Adams, Murphy and Bronson a all are Democrats and, for the o first time in Oakland County po-'
.^ical history, the party had an p ^portunity to gain control of ftjree of the five county elective ^ positions.
“ The offices filled by partisan election are clerk, prosecutor, treasurer, sheriff and drain commissioner.
There was no doubt that Democrat would be named to the treasurer’s job. The question " was who, and speculation as to * who would be appointed ran high a the three met informally
among themselves and with Eight snowy owls, rare visi-some of the candidates.	tors to Britain, which were
It was reported that the brought from Amsterdam, have names of at least 20 candidAtesjbeen released in the nature re-were offered.	serve at Riber Castle in Mat-
Union delegates emphasizedilock, Derbyshire.
REELECTION
While he didn’t receive support, Murphy wasn’t actively opposed by labor, but delegates indicated the story may be different in his case as well as in that of Adams when they come up for reelection.
Several delegates said they would take a long, hard look at the pair when endorsemertts are considered next time.
/
Duped Yank
Is Cong Victim
Led into Trap by Pair Posing as His Friends
SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — Two apparent Viet Ck>ng agents who posed as his friend led a young American aid employe to his death today in a Viet Cong ambush, U.S. officials said.
The victim was Peter Hunting, 24, of Oklahoma City, Okla. He was shot through the head five times while driving In the Mekong River delta south of iSaigon, a spokesman said.
Two Vietnamese who were with Hunting were apparently unharmed and were believed to have joined the Viet Cong.
Hunting was a regional supervisor for the International Voluntary Service—IVS. BULLET-RIDDLED
Hunting’s civilian vehicle was peppered with bullets. Members
of a military convoy that he had passed five minutes earlier said they found his bullet-riddled body on the ground.
After shooting Hunting through the head, the Viet Cong fired 10 more bullets into his body, they said.
TllK rONTlAC 1*HKSS. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 12, 1963__
LBJ Proclaims I ^ Smgeons
JiAKyvme
[iksgiving ! Monitor Keeps Tab on Patient
JOHNSON iOTY, Tex. (AP) — President JoKn^n, proclaiming Thursday, Novn^, Thanksgiving Day, called ui sons to ^ve thanks W “the blessings that have be^ bestowed upon our nation di the past 12 months.
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) - Ai Drs. John D. Michenfelder tal ‘i Rochester, Minn., system which televises sudden gnj colin S. MacCarty of the '«®‘^‘«y-changes m a patient s condition!^	Michenfelder. of the .M
ral'ope“r"a3wfsVs3T^	system has been in
Enumerating accomplishments of the last year, he said; “Wc have guaranteed the right to vote to all our citizens. We have pledged dignity to our eld-
cal operation was described to-'ment. said the system not only day for the first time.	operation at St. Marys Hospi-	physicians to sudden
^ physiological changes in a pa-r, riiiiilJSih-'	tient’s condition but stores the
• r\ I •	A	, information for later computer
m rontioc Area
rr' MT 11 '.MacCarty,
head of the clinic’s department
Deaths
■ even in sickness. We
have added new dimensions to the education of our youth. Ve have broadened the horizons of opportunity for our poor. . . We have enjoyed the greatest prosperity in history”
SHY MARINE - Three-year-old Tony McNees, son of Marine St. Lanny McNees, who is stationed in Viet Nam, held an American flag in front of his face during a Veterans Day parade yesterday in Frankfort, Ky. The
AP Photefax
boy carried a sign on his back which read: “OK, LBJ, my daddy is working in Viet Nam. Can you get him home for Xmas this year, please. Tony.”
And he called in the proclamation issued Thursday for prayers that “the forces of violence, indifference and intolerance may soon vanish from the face of the earth.”
Informant in Two Killings; Tells of 3rd Girl's Dealh
two missing sisters claims Tojgfjgj. jg ^ jjpjyg.j„ know of the killing of a third
Hunting had departed with the two Vietnamese from the delta city of Vinh Long. They were on their way to Can Tho,
20 miles away and about 100 miles south of Saigon.
Earlier reports had said that
he was killed when a mine ex- gjp| vanished a year ear-pWed under the vehicle, but ,jgp j^an the others, this was erroneous, the spokes-, Authorities take the youth toman sai ^	^	^	day to the desert area east of|Arizona High School gymnastic'
The euerrillas nnened fire on^“^®°"	champion, also knew the Rowe
... Ke. ^.son
SS‘.hrS..""	HmL wh, b.., her on head
Accepts Catholic Offer I,
HONG KONG i/Pi - Red China is reported producing 2,500 tons of uranium ore daily from three
TUCSON, Ariz. — Authori-i two daughters of Dr. and Mrs. ' DETROIT AP) — The Detroitjnew mines in southern China ties say a 19-year-old informant James Fritz.	iCouncil of Churches, an organ-jgnd shipping it to Czechoslova-
who led them to the bodies of| ip^e girls disappeared Aug. 16 i^ation of 850	Protestant | kia for processing on a 50-50
Police Chief Bernard Garmire said last night there were indications that Schmid, a former
Churches, voted unanimously j basis. Thursday to accept a Romani
Cries for Help Are Ignored
DETROIT (AP) - A 50-year-old woman, critically beaten ny an assailant, collapsed uncon-scous Thursday after her .screams for help were ignored by residents in a near east side neighborhood.
Police said investigation showed persons in the neighborhood heard the screams of Mrs. Mary Neal of Detroit, but no one called police.
Mrs. Neal, unable to talk with police, was taken to i hospital after Leonard Nash, 21 found her when he left his apartment building for work. She suffered a broken jaw, and various head injuries, poiice said.
Police said they have not been able to question Mrs. hjeal.
Family Has Nov. 7 Date With Destiny
with rocks. Sheriff Waldon Burr said.
The skeletons of Gretchcn Fritz, 17, and her sister, Wendy, 13, were found yesterday covered partly by sand in a spot where the youth had told officers the girls were killed. A short time later, Charles Howard .Schmid, 23, was charged in the deaths of the
Name Adoyor of Jerusalem Israeli Sector
home since May 31,1964.
NEVER IN HOME Dr. Fritz, a prominent Tucson surgeon, said Schmid had never been in their home.
Garmire said Schmid, newly married, “bragged to the informant that he knew where the bodies were.” Schmid’s mother, Mrs. Katherine Schmid, said h«r son “was turned in by bis best friend.” Authorities believe the Fritz girls were strangled.
JERUSALEM, Israeli Sector ) — Teddy Koilek, the moving spirit behind Israel’s new national museum, became mayor of the Israeli sector of Jerusalem today.
Koilek, 54, a candidate of former Premier David Ben-Guri,-on’s New Rafi labor party, got the post after the Rafi succeeded in forming a coalition with the right-wing Gahal coalition and the nationalist religious parties.
CHICAGO (AP) - If the George B. Childress family has a fixation for the date Nov. there are several good reasons for it.
On Nov. 7, 1945, Mr. and Mrs. Childress celebrated the birth of their first chiid. Joanne.
But Ish-Shalom’s Socialist Ma-arach group was unable to find coalition partners.
On Nov. 7, 1948, another daughter, Gayle, was born.
On Nov. 7, 1963, Joanne — now Mrs. Edward Andresen of suburban Oak Forest — celebrated her birthday, by giving birth to a girl, Rebecca.
The new mayor served as minister plenipotentiary at the Israeli Embassy in Washington in 1951-2 and for some time headed Israel’s tourist corporation.
He leaves today for New York 1 a promotion trip for the Israeli museum.
now Gayle Spaojevich — gave birth to a daughter on her birthday.
Another Childrc.ss daughter, Louise Kladis of Chicago, gave birth to a son, Anthony William, Nov. 6 this year — the first wedding anniversary^ of his aunt Gayle.
Koilek got almost the same number of votes in the Nov. 2 elections as outgoing Mayor Mordcchai Ish-Shalom.
Catholic invitation for a joint race relations program.
The decision came after debate by the council’s 150-member board of directors.
The Chinese newspaper Sing Tao said the report came from a technician who recently defected from the Peking Institute of Chemical Industry.
The jpint program would concern itself primarily with the hiring practices of firms dealing with churches and with other economic sanctions to promote fair employment practices.
The Jewish Community Council and the Detroit Council of Eastern Orthodox Churches are
The paper said the technician reported the crude ore is partially processed at Chu Chou, in Hunan Province, and then shipped to Czechoslovakia, which completes processing of the atomic fuel and keeps half of it for its Work.
The defector reportedly said
expected to follow suit, a source two of the mines — the Mao Shan and the Chu Shan
Although the informant lives in Tucson, he was sent to Columbus, Ohio, to live with an because of disciplinary problems. He telephoned Tucson police last Monday and was returned by an officer.
MAKES STATEMENT The youth did not implicate himself in his statement about the Rowe girl, Sheriff Burr said.
Schmid and the informant were questioned by police and released when the Fritz sisters vanished.
NAPLES, Italy (J’l - Michelangelo’s Pieta reached Naples from New York today and was trucked on to St. Peter’s Basilica after what Pope Paul VI has ruled will be its last trip.
Foliowing his arrest on the murder charges, Schmid also was questioned about the disappearance of the Rowe girl and another TUcson girl, Sandra Hughes, 16, last seen Sept. 10.
The bodies of the Fritz girls were found about 10 miles from the general location given by the informant for the Rowe girl’ death.
Ex-Latin Chief Dies
GUATEMALA (AP) - Luis
...... ___________ Arturo Gonzalez Lopez,
And on Nov. 7,1^, Gayle —1 former president of Guatemala,
died Thursday of caneqr. He was president of the legislative assembly when President Carlos Castillo Armas was as.sas-sinated July 26, 1957. He took over the presidency the next day and served until October of the same year when a military coup overthrew his government.
Night and Day... Only Zoo
PHILADELPHIA — A surprise awaits Philadelphia Zoo animals which usually sleep during the day and prowl at
, A new $355,000 house the zoo is building for more than lOO ampll mammals will feature a “topsy-turvy room.” Zoo offl-dala plan to reverse the time of day for the nocturnal animals. TH« officials feel it will work.
So that visitors will be able to watch the nocturnal animals without having to hang around until dark, the special room will be lighted brightly at night. During the day it will be illuminated with reddish lights.
The reddish light. Zoo officials say, are dim enough to make the animals think it’s night, but bright enouj^ for people
ethem.
Area Man Named GOP Coordinator
The appointment of John F. Cartwright of West Bloomfield Township as GOP organization coordinator for the 19th Congressional District was nounced today by county Republican Chairman Dale A. Feet.
Cartwright, 7119 K Trathahi, is employed as a tax attorney in the general counsel office at, Ford Motor Co.
Pieta Arrives Back in Italy
New Vatican rules approved by the Pope Sept. 9 ban any future lease, loan or shipment of such great Vatican art works as the Pieta.
Michelangelo’s 466-year-old masterpiece was shipped to New York on April 5, 1964, for showing in the Vatican pavilion of the New York World’s Fair.
It returned on the Italian liner Cristoforo Colombo, the sami ship which took it to New York.
Another crate held the 4th century statue of the Good Shepherd, by an unknown sculptor, which the Vatican also loaned for showing at the fair.
LABEL ON SIDE A label on the side of the Pieta’s steel crate said:
“To his holiness Pope Paul VI, with gratitude from Cardinal Spellman (of New York) and Bishop B. J. McEntegart (of Brooklyn).”
located in Kiangsi Province’s Chuan Nan County, and the third — the Hsia Chuang — in Kwangtung Province’s Weng Yuan County.
MRS. WILLIi^M H. BASKETTE 2 p.m. Sunday at (he Muir neurosurgery, believe it v
\	_	. nrnvp valiiah a in	ofaq
Service for former Pontiac Brothers F'uneral Home. Burial valuable in the area of resident Mrs.	(Caro-lwill be in Imlay Townsh.p Cem-
Z na will “e 2 P^mor-^ Mr Balabon died Wednesday'•evewed at will "to widen the row at the So^ro rSalRafter a short illness. He was a	expenenee of residents
Ze, Bramlon S buri&^'^ber of the Greek Orthodox
Myrtle Hill Cemetery, Tampa.Xhurch of Phoneix.
pig	^rviving arc his wife, Pau
Mrs Baskette died yesterday.!''"^^<^0 daughters, Mrs. Mary Michenfelder told the 18th an-Surviving are her husband; a McDonMd of St. Clair Shores nual eonterence on engeincenng daughter Mrs Walter B. Gren-Hazel ^rk; three sons, Wil-m medicine and biology here nell	of	Boca Raton	Fla	• and *‘am	and ^uel of Waterloo,	the	system has been a key fac-
three grandchildren ’	’	Iowa,	and R i^ a r d of Imlay	tor	in helping surgical teams
®	(City;	four smpchildren; 35	keep patients alive during criti-
IRA EDWARDS	grandchildren; ar^49 great-	cal	neurosurgery procedures by
Service Tor Ira Edwards. TO.israndchildren. \	: providing more complete and
of m Highland, wiil be 1 p.m.| r,chard BOCHOf)\ ‘“S'e'hSr'”''
Monday at St. John Methodistj poNTIAC TOWNSHIP-^-%he system was conceived by ice for Richard Bochoff, 69, oKwayo phy.sicians and life-sci-97 Churchill will be 1:30 p.m. engineers at International tomorrow at the Donelson-Johns Bu.s^ss Machines Corp.
Funeral Home, Pontiac. Burial! Micl^felder said the system will be in Perry Mount Park,has been used during surgery on Cemetery, Pontiac.	|han ^neurosurgical pa-
A retired employe of the Pon-bents.
tiac water department, Mr. Bochoff died yesterday after a ■ • j Si iv
long illness.	InjureQ Moto
Church with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery by the Frank Car-ruthers Funeral Home.
Mr. Edwards, a retired em-plose of GMC Truck & Coach Division, died Thursday after a three-week illness. He was a member of St. John Church.
Surviving are his wife Lonie; three children, Eddie of Fresno, Calif., Mrs. Francis Wiley and Freddy Edwards, both of Pontiac; a brother and two sisters.
A sister survives.
MRS. RALPH E. CONVERSE j Reported Serious
MRS. OSCAR RAMSEY
AVON TOWNSHIP - Service:
Two men, injured in separalcX
Service for former Pontiac [Converse. 52, of 2455 Harrison,
r	be 10 a.m. Monday at
for Mrs. Ralph B. (Lwta) A.^j^ |g accidents last night
Pnnt/ArcA *»0 nf	l-lorricnn r . .
report-
Ramsey. 62. of Del,olu will he s"parkr<lr;m„”WST„m".;
p.m. tomorrow in the Huntoon Funeral Home with burial in Forest Lawn Cemetery, Detroit. Mrs. Ramsey died Thursday.
WILLIAM ROE
Pontiac. Burial will be in Breth-
tic General Hospital.
ren. Visitors may call at the ^hey are Robert P Coley. 30. funeral home after 3 p.m. to-gf	c^aham. Water to ‘
Service for William Roe, 86, of l	illness.
4360 Richalva, Waterford Town-* Surv'''‘"«„,.fe	™lber.
ship, will be 11 a.m. tomorrow^rs- Lena Wilson of Rochester; in Coats Funeral Home.	daughters, Mrs. Nancy Bak-
Mr. Roe died yesterday after a long illness.
Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Vivian Foote of Pontiac; and a son, Wilbur Steele of Mount Clemens.
DAN BALABON IMLAY CITY - Service for former resident Dan Balabon, 85. of Phoenix, Ariz., will be
er and Alice, both of Rochester; three sons, Donald Wilson and Dean Converse, both of Rochester, and LaVern Converse of Detroit; three sisters, Mrs. Thelma Woodard of Lapeer, Mrs. Genevieve Robertson of New Hudson and Mrs. Arlene Year-gan of Rochester; and seven grandchildren.
Robber Meets Match
in Bridal Store Clerk
FORT WAYNE, Ind. (A’l - A coed jumped on an armed robber Thursday, knocked him through a plate-glass window and grabbed back the purse he had taken.
The incident began when a man entered a Fort Wayne bridal shop and handed Diane Scheiber, 19, a note saying, “This is a holdup. Give me all your money.”
Police said the man, identified as Mike Johnson, 38, Saginaw, Mich., then pulled a knife and tried to attack the pretty clerk.
The store manager, Bea Scott, stepped from an alteration room and startled the man. grabbed Mrs. Scott’s purse and ran down a flight of nine steps leading to the store’s foyer. FROM TOP STEP
Diane, a sophomore at St. Francis College in Fort Wayne, leaped from the top step and caught the robber at the bottom, knocking him through the window. She dashed out the door.
“Let’s just say it got her Irish up,” Diane’s mother, Mrs. Richard Scheiber, said later. “She’s just an average girl, about 5 feet 7, and weighing 125 pounds.”
Johnson is about 5 feet 8, of medium build and wiry. He was jailed on preliminary charges of armed robbery and attempted criminal assault.
Diane is majoring in/psychology. She has worked |t the bridal shop six weeks.
He has served as precinct captain, and as representative to the state central committee from the 19th District. He is a member of the 19th district executive committee and the ex-
ecutive committee of Oakland County.
Man Robbed Beside Home
A Ppntiac man was robbed of $75 at knifepoint early this morning in front of his home at 258 Auburn.
Lee Bowen, 26, told Pontiac police he was approached by a mani who held a knife against his back demanding his money.
The man fled on foot after re*
Washington Scene
Michigan in Year '75?
By Esther Van Wagoner Tufty Washington Correspondent WASHINGTON - What will Michigan be like in 1975?
The United States Bureau of the Census has ways of looking ahead to project the future c‘ acteristics of the population and the Bureau predicts Michigan will be more crowded with 810,-000 new residents.
The official 1960 census gave Michigan a population of 7,-854,000 and the 1963 unofflolal census 8,116,000.
Big cities will get bigger. ,Qf those 810,000 new Michigan residents by 1975, some 530,000 will live in the Detroit metropolitan area. The U. S. population is expected to exceed 218 mllUon In
1975 compared to the present 194 million.
Over half of the total population will live in three metropolitan areas: San Francisco-L o s Angeles in California; Chicago-Detroit-Buffalo; and the Boston to Washington complex; these already contain over 43 million' people.
MORE PROBLEMS
Continuing and increasing will be metropolitan headaches of transportation, housing, schools, sanitation, police protection, air and water pollution.
The changing make-up of cities from large middle-class populations to high income and low income populations (mostly low) is g|ready plaguing city ^min-
beat him and wrestled the purse from his grasp as money flew into the street.
The man fled but was seized a few blocks away by a police-
old (Sarah) Dickson, 60, of 2910 John R will be 3 p.m. tomorrow at Price Funeral Home. Burial will be in Oakview Cemetery, Royal Oak.
Mrs. Dickson died yesterday after a long illness.
Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. Oscar Price of Troy and Mrs. Alex Mel and Mrs. William Rexroad, both of Mount Clem-
Reeled Mayor in New Orleans
NEW ORLEANS, La. (AP)-Mayor Victor Schiro — returned to office by 514 votes — Will begin his second four-year term in May.
Councilman James Fitzmorris Jr., Schiro’s major opponent in the race, conceded defeat Thursday after the Orleans Parish Democratic Executive Committee sad the official count of last Saturday’s Democratic primary show^ Schiro the win-
The count showed a runoff for mayor would not be necessary since Schiro had a 514 vote majority and 3,319 better than run-nerup Fitzmorris.
The official count: Schiro 81,-973; Fitzmorris 78,654; A. Roswell ’Thompson 2,121; Joseph Held 458; and Doris Perkins, 226.
Kilittd in 2-Car Crash
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) -Frank Leo Yantz, 71, of Bedford Town-slup, Mich., was killed Thurs-d^ in a twjj^ar crash in To-
MRS. HAROLD B. DICKSON TROY—Service for Mrs. Har-
Township, and Darrell V. Thy-bault, 29, of 2384 Snellbrook, Pontiac Township.
Coley lost control of his car on a curve on Union Lake Road near Meridan in Commerce Township Ia4e last night.
The car rammed into a fence and utility pole, according to sheriff's deputies.
Thybault’s vehicle struck a tree on Pontiac Road near Walnut in Pontiac Township early this morning, sheriff’s deputies reported.
LONDON (AP) - Sir Patrick Renison, 54, one of Britain's leading colonial administrators, died Thursday after an operation. He had served in Ceylon and in Trinidad and Tobago, and as governor and commander in chief in British Honduras, British Guiana and Kenya.
ens; a son, Thomas J. Vennard of Utica; two brothers; and 15 grandchildren.
JAYC.DINTAMAN UNION LAKE - Service for former resident Jay C. Dinta-man, 69, of Kalamazoo was yesterday in Kalamazoo. Burial wasdn Mount Everest Memorial Park, Kalamazoo.
Mr. Dintaman died Tuesday after a long illness. He was a retired builder.
Sui'viving are his wife, Ada; two sons, Richard of Kalamazoo and Robert of Alexendria, Va.; a brother; and nine grandchildren.
NOTICE OF SPECIAL ASSESSMENT SANITARY SEWER ON SOUTH WEST SIDE OF TELEGRAPH ROAD TO: Oakltnd County, Felix VllasInsKy, Jale F. Carney and to all persons in-leresled, lake notice: That the roll ol Ihe Special Assessment heretofore made by the City Assessor for the purpose ol defraying lhal part of the cost which the Commission decided should be paid nd borne by special assessmeni lor Ihe instruction ol Sanitary Sewer on South lest side ol Telegraph Road from ISO lel South East ol Michigan Airline Rallied lo Orchard Lake Avenue is now fi file In my office lor public Inspection. Notice Is also hereby given lhal Ihe Commission and Ihe Assessor ol Ihe CilY of Pontiac, will meet In Ihe Commission Chamber In said City, on the 23rcL day • - Tfiber, A.D. 1965 at 8:00 o'clock review said assessment, at which
MRS. UTE POWERS TROY — Service for former resident Mrs. Ute (Ulah) Powers, 71, of Silverwood will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at Price Funeral Home. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery.
Mrs. Powers died yesterday after a long illness.
Surviving besides her husband are two daughters, Mrs. Dewain Allen of Troy and Mrs. Elmer Smith of Silverwood; a son Vance of Waterford Township;
sister, Mrs. Frank Datsko of West Bloomfield Township; two brothers; and 11 grandchildren.
DEBRA SEVERANCE ORION TOWNSHIP-Service for Debra Severance, 6-month-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Severance, 3707 Minton, will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at Pix-ley Memorial Chapel, Rochester. Burial will be in Cadillac Memorial Gardens East, Mount Clemens.
The baby died yesterday after a long illness.
Surviving besides her parents are a brother, Joe, and a sister, Paula, both at home, and grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Erdman of Romeo and Mrs. Velma Shafley of Mount Clemens.
Memorial tributes may be made to the Fifst Presbyterian Church of Pontiac.
Leading Briton Dies
Interested lo be heard.
, 196]
NOTICE OF HEARING ON ESTABLISHING NORMAL HEIGHT AND LEVEL OF WATER IN WHITE LAKE IN HIGHLAND AND WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIPS OAKLAND COUNTY, MICHIGAN To Whom It May Concern, PARTICULARLY
of properly fronting or ■- *
ting or having
_ Whila . Interested In having laintalned Ihe normal height
id In Sections 12 and 13 of Hlgh-Townshlp and Sections 7 and 18 of J Lake Township, Oakland County, Michigan.
You Are Hereby Notified That Ihe Oak-.jnd County Board of Supervisors has caused to be filed In this Court a Complaint praying lor the establishment by this Court ol the normal height and level . .......	located
d 13 ot Highland Town-
ship, Oa’-.land County, Michigan: Are Further Nolilied that a hear-n the matter will be held In the it Court lor the County ol Oakland
Oakland County C 300 North Telegraph Road. I liac, Michigan, -
Counsel c You Are Further Notified the ita the Complainant Intends to
0 establish the normal halght and it said lake at 1019.10 feet above ■ ■ B to oppose
the establishment ol the level at 1019.10
I The normal height <
S. JEROME BRONSON Prosecuting Attorney. Oakland County, MIclilgan By: ROBERT P. ALLEN Corporation Counsel HAYWARD WHITLOCK
AssT
Attorney lor Oekland Co. Boerd of '
ONICO Address:
Court House Tower 1300 N. Telegraph Road Pontiac, Michigan Phone: 338-4751, Ext. JIS
IS. 23 andSt, II ' ], 13 ail|h9, II

THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 12, 1965
TWO COLORS
[
Ju«ir Iditors Quiz on-
MOLECULES
QUESTION: How many molecules make up an atom?
★ ★ ★
ANSWER: — The question should be, how many atoms in a molecule? A molecule is made up of atoms and not the other way around.
Break down substances as far as you can go, and you get elements, or basic substances. The smallest bit of an element is an atom, like an extremely minute solar system.
There is a nucleus in the center, like the sun, with one or more smaller electrons, circling around, like the planets, only at inconceivable speed.
We show an atom of hydrogen: the single electron dashes around the central nucleus at such furious speeds that its paths make a kind of shell.
Atoms of different elements may combine with each other, such a combination being.a molecule.
As atoms nuy be different, so the combinations making molecules may he different. Elach kind of substance we see is composed of a great many of its own special molecules, like the water molecule we show, which has one atom of oxygen and two of hydrogen.
Many of these molecules together make up water. Since different kinds of molecules may have different numbers of atoms, it is impossible to give a general answer to this question.
★ ★ ★
FOR YOU TO DO: Gain a rough idea of the size of a molecule by holding up the tip of your finger and looking at it. Think of ail the molecules going across it and imagine each is as large as a gain of sand. How wide would your finger then be? About a mile across.
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Bleu us oh Lord and these Thy gihs.
PROTESTANT GRACE
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JEWISH GRACE
Blessed art Thou, Oh Lord our God, King oi the universe, who bringath forth breed from the eorth.


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WMh Clwietmae Giving In MMd

THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 12, 19(1.5
MARKETS
The following are top priced covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Wednesday.
Produce
sauiTS
AdpIm, Delicious, Golden, bu. Apples, Delicious, Red, bu.
Apples, Jonathen, bu........
Apples, AAecIntosb, early, bu.
Apples, Northern Spy, bu....
Apples, elder, 4.flaf. case ...
Rears, bosc, bu.............
veoeTAiLts
Celery, Root, di. Horseradish, pk. b: Kohlrabi, dz. bchs. I eaks, dz. bcht. . Onions, dry, SO-lb. Onions, green, dz Parsley, Curly, dz Parsley, root, dz.
NEW YORK (AP) - Alum!-, nums were weak in an irregularly higher stock market early today as the rollback in aluminum prices 'brought protests r 0 m business and industrial leaders. Trading was active. Alcoa, the biggest producer, as hit by selling. It fell % to 69V^ on an opening block of 4,000 shares and sold at the same price a few minutes later on a 30,000-share transaction.
★ ★ ★
Reynolds Metals and Kaiser Aluminurtlli yielded fractions. Aluminium Ltd. eased Mi to 29¥s n a block of 35,000 shares.
All Big Three motors gained fractions, however, and despite fears expressed among other metals producers, coppers were higher on balance, Kennecott
Escprple, bleached Lettuce, Head, bu. . Lettuce, Leal, bu. Romalne, bu...........
Poultry and Eggs
oaTROIT POULTRY
(AP)-Prlcet paid per pound ---------- ■-—”
: heavy type
17-JJ; light type hem .......... “
heavy type 24-2!; bro lbs.. Whiles 19-20; Barred Rock 2 ducklings 31; geese 2_7;2»; turkeys.
s 24-37W. DETROIT EOOI
______T (AP)-Egg
n by first receivers
..... 'Grade A e«lra large
large 39-41'/!; mediums 3!-37; smalls CHICAGO BUTTER, EGOS CHICAGO (AP) - Chicago Exchange-Butter steady; whol
Eggs firm; wholesale t to T'/J higher; 70 per Grade A Whiles 40; m diums 34; standards 35; c checks 37.
'4?'/V43'/!;
Trading Active
Aluminums Weak on Market
.advancing about IMi and Anaconda a fraction. Steels were unchanged to a trifle lower. JET CRASH
The crash of the Boeing 727
assenger jet of United Lines at Salt Lake City preceded a slump of about ivi in United Air Lines stock.
Since it was the third crash of a Boeing 727 in the last 87 days, Boeing stock was being swamped with selling orders and the stock cpuld not be opened immediately.
★ ★ ★
Boeing sank 4^8 to 115 on a block of 35,000 shares.
Strength was shown among aerospaci^ issues, electronics, chemicals and auto equipments. Ahead a point or so
Radio Corp., du Pont, United Aircraft and Polaroid.
MAKE AGREEMENT Magnavox, which has made n agreement with Xerox under which Xerox will handle a facsimile device made by Magnavox, was delayed in opening. It spurted 4 points to 79 on blocks of 50,000 and 4,000 shares. Opening blocks included: Radio Corp., up IMi at 47 on 15,000 shares; Erie - Lackawanna, up Ml at 9V4 on 4,800, Texas Gulf Sulphur, up % at 74V4 on 4,500; and Pan American World Airways, up Mi at 41%
Thursday, the Associated Press Average of 60 stocks rose .3 to 353.4.
Prices were irregular on the American Stock Exchange.
The New York Stock Exchange
( (AP)-Eollowlng Is *
AAA«t Cl 1.90
—A—
lb£) High Urn Utl Cli^.

Cal Pack .90
Livestock
DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (AP)-(USDAI- Cattla choica 900-1100 lb. slaeri 2!.2S-77.00|
Cant SW 1.30
Vealtrs 75; -------- . —.
Sitaap 300; load choica and ^ clippad lambs No. I palls 104 lbs._ 25.4 coupla loads choica 90-iU lb
1-3 330-400 lb s
slaars 25.00-26.23. . 34 25-25.50; packaoas m< 990 lb haliers 24.l5-25.00
coupla tolad s
slaughter lambs 2
American Stocks
NOON AMERICAN NEW YORK (AP)
list of salactad stock ----
American Stock Exchange '
ChRIPac .25p ChrlsCrft .Alt Chrysler 2 CIT Fin 1.40 ClllesSvc 1.50 CIOvEIIII 1.44 CocaCola 1.70 ' ilg Pal .90 illlnRad .50
ConElacInd I CnNGas 3.30 ConsPow 1.00 ---Air .60
i*nUS
Cont Oil 2.40 Control Data Corn Pd 1.30 CoxBdeas .40 CrowCol l.39f Crown Cork Tt Zell 2
I.) Hlah LI 5 30'/> 3
I 43S4 4314- H
1 21H 21H 3 42 7H ”
Campb Chib Can So Pel Cdn Javalln Cinerama Con Mng 1.00 Cont Tar .40 Ctryw Rlly .3(k Crola P 160a Data Cont EquIlyCp .151
Mackay Air McCrory wt Mead John .-
3 l3’/t U'/a 13’/a 53	t’/4	4'a	6'A-l-l-14
1 2 1-14 2 1-14 2 1-I4-I-I-"
1	IVx	IV4	SKi	,
3'/h	3'/k	3'/S
!1'/j
20'/S 20'/k-is	j	7’/i	r/k-
0 42'/S 41H 41»/a .
12 17'/! 174k 17W-)- '/k 31	34k	3'/j	3Vi
2	24k	2H	24k
2	O'/i	I'/i I'/k .
42 234k 24'/i 24'/!- '
Dan River 1 DaycoCp .40b Deere 1.40a DaltaAIr 1.40 DenRIoGW 1 DatEdls 1.30 Del Steal 40
\ag^l
2 51'/! 20 2l'/x
4l'/k 42'/4 47'/i-r 144k lAW lOVx-F i/x
Scurry Rain	7
Sbd W Air	14
Signal QUA 1	15
Sparry R wt	13
Syntax Cp SOg	44
Technlcol .75	14
HopyrTphtad by The Associated Press 1945
304k-t- 4k 4'/k a 4 — '/k 1304k 129V4 130 -14k
Treasury Position
WASHINGTON (AP)-Tha cash of the Treasury compared wItt spondlng date a year ago:
" V. I, I94S Nov. 9, 1944
. ..„.,J4I,31I.II t 5,004,419,135.32 Deposits Fiscal Year July I—
39,103,407,013.07	25,973,307,140.
Withdrawals Fiscal Year-
49,034,431,715.40	44,349,970,031.40
X-Tolal Dabt-
310,907,432,415.20	314,200,991,924.
Gold Assats—
13,059,372,533.91	15,443,147,009.37
(X) - IncludM 5301,359,349.44 dabt not sublact to siaiutary limit.
ITOCK AV CamglMi By Tba
ITOCK AVERAGBl
n
Noon Thors. . Fray. Day
Month igo
-.1	-.3	-.4	-.7
..	314.4	104.3	173.0	353.4
IS1 !8:1 SJ:’. 1K;J
.321.3	105.5	170.3	‘
451.4	149.3	143.4
475.0	1M.4	147.2
404.4	130.7	,140.9
To
Orayhnd .90 Grumn A .00 |ul|M^^^3^30a
Hoff Electron HollySug 1.00 HoneywT 1.10 ----- Ch 1.30
2	!2'/i	52'/!	!2'/i	+	4k
02	9'/!	94k	94k	■
1	444k	444k	444k
3 47'/k 47'/k 47'/k ..
:oro I I I75g
25 OO'/i OO'/iX ■
Id StI 2 -NoAm 2
IntBusMch' 4 IntHarv 1.50 IntMlner 1.20 ' I Nick 2.00a (I Packers I Pap 1.20a ...I TAT 1.20 ITECktB OOb
52 374k 37'/x 374k — '
I \m 174k 174k + '
2 304k 304k 304k 15 20	19'4 19'/t -
2 15	15	I!
3 VVi 77'/k 77'/a -t
454k 44'/k 30	30
29'/k 39'/k
. Wi ml 34'/k + '/k 5 30	30	“
2 554k 554k
Mack Ti . .. MacyRH 1.40 MadFd 1.05g Marathn 2.20 Mar Mid 1.35 Marquar .25g MartInMar f MayDStr 1.50 McCall .40b McDonA .40b McKess 1.70
MGM 1.50 Mid SUI 1.24 MlnarChem I — iMM 1.10 Kan Tex
1 43'/k 43</x -f
I 734k 734k 734k -
15	204(.	204k	20Vx	-I-
—IV—
I	204(1	204k	2044	.
34	20i/k	3744	20'/k	-I-
5	4S'/k	45'/k	45</k	- ..
10 124'/! 124	134',! -HI'/!
a	MSk	201s	204k	.
■ 37r/a 4
3	3m	37Ta
50	!7'/i	■
3	34
1	37'/k	37'/k	37'/k	-
43	45	444k	45	-t-	'
9	7744	7744	7744	-	'
3	31H	1'4k	31H	+	'
13	554k	5!'/x	55'/4	...
2	42'/a	424k	434k	—	'
17 342'/! 241'/! 342'/! 41'
14 324k 3r/k 334k - '
34	- '
)k 00'/» 1 h 10044 II
IdgeGG .20g fIBondS 1.55
EmarRad .40 End John ErlaLack RR
Evarsharp I
FaIrCam .50e FaIrch Hlllar Fedd Corn I FedOStr 1.40 FerroCorp I
I	304's	304k	204'a
I 3744 574k 5744 f '/k i 234k 32	224k -4 4k
I	27'/!	27'/!	27'/!	-	''
321	944	9'/x	94k	4	'
10	4244	42H	4244	4	'
9	!94k	59	39H	4	'
13	33'/4	33'/k	33'/k	.
Fla Pow 1.30 Fla PL 1.40 FoodFaIr .90 FordMot 3.40 ForaDsIr .50 Fraapt 5 1.40 Fruakp 1.50
119 1344k 1234k 124'/i 414k 04	l4'/x	14	14'/x	4	</,
3	19	104!	19	-4	'A
7	7044	7(«4	7044
1	25	35	25
35	52	42	43
2	33'4	33'/4	33'/x
204k	20'/!
4744 ;
33Vk
I's
9 3I'A 3I'A 3I'/4 - I
s \m
GanMIlIt . . GanMot 5.3Jg GanPrec 1.30 OPubSvc .91g PubUt 1.« JTal El 1.13 OanTIra .40 GaPacHIc 1b
«'i:}§! Ooodrch 130 Goodyr 1.3!
ili
30	344k	344k	344k	4	(4
4	3944	3944	3944	-f	W
33	!4'/k	!4'/k	!4Vk	-f	Vk
14	444k	44	44
43	334k	53'.!	534k	+	4k
9	244k	3444	344k	-i-	W
3	l1'/4	lUk	ll'/4	-I-	Vk
3	41'/!	41'/!	41V!	-i-	'A
3 23'A 33'/! 33Vk .
11	41',4	41'/4	41'A	-I-	H
9	594k	8'/!	594k	t	W
3	30H	30'/4	304k	-i--'/k
—H-
“3	E	E
I 3044 3044 3044 -f ' 5 744k 744h 744k -I- ]
3	74'/k	74'/!	76'/!	-I-
2	374k	374k	374k	..
9	534'/j	534	534'/!	-I-
20	40Vk	40	40	..
SouCsIE 125 SouNGas 1.20 SouthPac 1.50 South Ry 3.00 Sperry Rand SouareD 1.40 StBrands 3.40 Std Kollsman Stoll Cal 150 StOIIInd 1.70 SfO NJ 3.15g StdOilOhlo 2 St Packaging StanWar 1.50 StauffCh 1.40 SterlDrug .00 StevensJP 2
Texaco 2 40 TexETrn 1.05 TexGSul .40 Texasinstm I TexPLd .350 Textron 1 Thiok ■ -Tim f
______ Corp
Littonin 2.02f LIVingsO .431
LoneSCem I LonaSGa 1.12 Long Isl LI 1 Lorlllard 2.50 LuckyStr 1.40
4	1444	14'/4	14>/4	+
5	5V4	53/4	53/4	+
3	33'/k	33'k	33'/!	-f
x5	57	5444	57	-I-
3	7444	7444	7444	-I-
5	44k	4'/4	44k	—
25 32044 130	130'/i -I-
9	10'/4	10'/4	10'/4	+ .
41 m/t	U44 -l-l'/k
5	17	17 ‘	17
3	24'/k	24'/k	24'/k
10	33%	33'/4	33'/4
12	4544	45'/!	45'/!	-I-
I	33'/4	-	'
.. ^	j	45'/!	-t-	'
.	41%	41%	41%	-	'
3	334!	33'/a	33%	-I-	'
—M—
0	41'/! 41'/! 41'/> + '
1	54'/! !4'/i !4'/l - '
II 24	34	24	-1-1
33 54’/k 54% 56’/t + ' 32 32'/4 31% 31% -1
7 14'/2 14% 14%
7 194! 194k 19% + '
4	5!'/! 55% 55% + ' 9 25% 33% 35% -I- '
I	533/4	5344	53V4
3	33%	33%	33%	.
30	44%	44%	44%	+
4	0’/! O’/S •’/! ..
29	25'/4	25	25	+
WUnTel 1.40 WestgEI 1.40 Weyerhr 1.20 WhiteM 1.40 Wilson Co 2 WInnDIx 1.32 ■■■•lolworth 1 irthingin 1 ...rox Cp .70 YngstSht 1.00 Zenith 1.40
Unless otherwise n
—N—
I 15 114	114	114	-1'
I 3 50% 50% 50% - '
Nat Dlst 1.40
14 70'/4 70 Xl7 04	04
0 31'/! 31'/4 , 3 324's 334'a 3
ingEI 1.30 ... zinc la NVCent 1.30a ‘llagMP 1.10 lorilkWst 4a
70	-	'
04	-	'
31%	-I-	I
I	324k	-I-	'
.1 34%-' 21	704k	70%	70%	+	'
5	5244	5344	5244	-	'
0	1544 1544 15%	.
3	19'/4	19'/k	19'/4	+
1	29	39	39	-	'/!
D	50'/!-	50%	50'/i	-t-
t	59%	5944	59%	-I-
7	54	5344	53%	-I-
I	33%	35%	33%
i	30%	30'/>	20'/!	-f
9 119	110% 110% -1
OccldentP .40 OhioEdls 1.04 OlInMath 1.40 Otis Elev 2 Outb Mar .00 Owanslll 1.7' OxfdPap 1.
Pac G El I Pac Ltg 1 Pac Pelrol PacTAT 1.
4 59% . 59% 39% -I-9 44'/! 44'/i 44'/l . , ,
—P—
13 30% 30'/4 30% +
PepsiCo 1.40 PfttarCha la PhelpD 3.40a Phils El 1.40 PhllRdg 1.20
7	39%	39%	39%	-	'
7	13'/i	13%	13%	-	'
2	47%	47'/4	47'/4	-	'
3	35%	35%	35%	-	' -
30	!4Vk	5!4k	!4'/k	+	'4
7	51'/!	51'/4	51'/4	-I-	%
5	77'/!	77'/!	77'/t	-
5	44%	44'/k	64%	-	'
4	77	74%	77	-	'
2	37%	37%	37%	—	'
3	53%	52'/k	52%	-f	'
1	91%	91%	91%	-	'
9	59%	59%	59%
2	47%	47%	47%	-I-
4	73'.	--- "
3	15
73 1034. ...
5	70'/4 70
73% 73 1!	15
101% 103 f1 ........+ %
ading Co IchCh 20a
34 30'/k 30% .... . .. 241	47'/!	44%	47%	-1-1%
9	34'.k	34'/k	34'/4	-f	“
33	39	30%	39	-I-
5	30'/!	20	30'/)	-I-
Raxall .30b RaynMat .7! Reyn Tob 2
92	45'/k	44%	44%	-
37	45%	45%	45%	-
5	73'/4	73'/4	73'/4
34	34%	34'/!	34%	-f
1	33%	32%	33%
42	45	44%	45	-f
2	14%	14%	14%	...
Sataway St 1 SL SanF 1.50 tIRagP t.40b fan 0 Impar
Isv
faarlOD 1.30 Ssars Roe Is
pfsHT* ■“
SIngarCo 3.20	10	5941
fmlthK 1.40a	2	75
Somy 3.00s	0	91%
SoPRiug 1g	1	20
, 8'/4t:i
134% -t- %
130 40% 40'/4 40% f 3 37% 37% 37% +
/3 r.
2 M% 44% 44%
i 57'4i 57% 57% j
f V!
-...........-f %
59'/4 59% - '/! 74% 75 91'/! 91%
.a
Sales	N(
xls.) High Low Close Chi
0	41%	41%	41'4	...
7	33'/!	33%	33'/!	...
10	44%	44'/k	44'/k	-I- '
1	59	59	59
94	17'/k	16%	17	-I-	'
12	00	00	00	- '
1	74	74	74
14	24'/k	23%	34	-I-	!
17	70%	70%	70%	. .
4	40%	40%	40%	+ '
2	34%	34%	34'4
2	47%	47%	47%
4	37%	37%	37'/)
4	57%	57%	57%
7 32'/! 32'/! 32'/i	-
4	50%	!0'/k	50'/k	- '/!
—T—
20	24%	24%	24%	4
14	02%	02%	02%	4
74	74%	74'/!	74%
33 144% 143% 144 95	24'/!	23%	24'/k
5	70'/!	70'/k	70'/k
29	10%	10%	10%
143% 144	42
- -	23%	24'/k 41
70'/! 70'/k 70'/k 4 % 10% 10% 4 • 49% 49% 4 n	ovn	40%	40% 4
I	12	39%	39%	39% -
244	m,	10%	1(W4 4
I	19	29%	29%	ml 4
—u—
14	73%	73%	73% 4
)	7	52%	52%	52%
North Central Airlines (NCA) flights at Pontiac Municipal Airport last month fell short of the passenger total for September.
A total of 15 passengers were carried on outbound flights in October, compared to 26 in September and 25 carried in October 1964.
Inbound flights had 17 passengers, compared to 20 in September and 26 in October 1964.
Total patronage for the year jumped to 230 outbound and 229 nbound patrons for 1965.
* ★ *
Departing NCA flights carried more air mail in October than in September. There were 1,350 pounds carried last month, compared to only 962 pounds in September.
INBOUND FUGHTS
Meantime, inbound flights carried only 648 pounds last month, compared to 710 pounds in September.
Outbound air express totaled only 230 pounds last month, compared to 337 pounds reported in September.
Inbound express registered one pound compared to 13 pounds in September.
★ * *
NCA flights departed with 2,337 pounds of air freight in October, down from the 3,384 pounds in September.
Inbound air freight totaled 1,542 pounds last month, while i,496 pounds of freight were brought in in September.
42Vt 4
5 43% 4
2	«’/•	4%	>% .
2	53%	53%	53%
1	49	49	49	4
—V—
2	24%	24%	24%	-
33	, 24%	24%	24%	4
31	47%	47%	47%
55	51	57%	55
10	40%	40%	40%	-
4	37%	37	37	-
'	45%	45%	45%	...
37%	37%	37%	- '/!
—	25	25%
42'/4	42%
.. ... . 174'/) 177%
5	39%	39»,4	39%
23 25% 25 12 42% 42' .	- . .
23 177% 174'/) 177% 42 5 39t	— — ■ -
52 114
S^lal .
HiowInV ttSno....
»-Alio extri or extr»s. b-Annual ita plus ftock dividand. c—Liquidating -Ividand. d-:Paclarad or_ paW In 1945
f^Payaltta ...__________ ____—.........
cash value on ax-dlvMand or ax-dlstrlbu-tlon data, g—Oaclarad or paid —
---- h—Oaclarad or paid atte
--------- k_Daclarad
... .................-iue. p—Paid
this yaar, dividend omitted, deferred or — action taken at last dividand meeting.
Declared or paid In 1944 plus stock ../Idend. t—Paid In slock during estimated cash value on ex-dIvIdend t distribution date. i-Sales In full
cld-Called. x-Ex dividend. y-Ex end and sales In full. x-dls-Ex i“-'
' receivership .. ir the Bankruptcy ned by such cr-ue sublect to
Stocks of Local Interest
Figures after decimal points are eighths

markets
............... Prices ‘
icludc retail markup, markdown
AMT Corp..........
Associated Truck Braun Engineering -----ns Utilities Clast
biam^ 'ci^sfaT'*’'"*
Kelly Girl ...........
- wk Rubber Co.
9.12	9.57
14.55 15.09 9.99 10.92
Investors Trust .
--------n Electronics .
Wellington Fund
Fewer Riders on NCA Flights
October Total Fails Short of September
NEW OPEL KADETT - This four-door Opel Kadett deluxe sedan is one of five new models introduced today by Buick
Motor Division. The Kadett. built in West Germany, goes on sale locally Nov. 18 at Oliver Motor Sales, 210 Orchard Lake.
In Face of Chef Shortage
Restaurants Get Boxy
News in Brief
Gloria Mitchell, 24, of 179 Norton reported to Pontiac police yesterday theft of a $250 diamond ring from a downtown jewelry store.
Rummage Sale; Sat., Nov. 13, K. of C. Hall, from 8 a.m. to 1
m.	—adv.
New toy sale, slightly above wholesale prices. Fri. and Sat., Nov. 12, 13, 9 to 5. House of Good Church. At Auburn Heights Fire Hall.	—adv.
Bazaar and Bake Sale: Saturday, Nov. 13, 11 a.m.-6 p.m. Michigan Christian College, 800 W. Avon Rd., Rochester. Door prizes on quarter hour. Ham dinner, 3-6 p.m. Tickets, $1.50 - 75c.
—adv.
Annual Rummage Sale: Duck Lake School, Sat., Nov. 13, 11-4. 2 miles north of M59. Clothes, misc. and furniture.
Rummage Sale: Saturday, 9-3 p.m. Unity Church, corner of Genesee and .W. Huron, by Alpha Chapter of Beta Theta Phi Sorority.	—adv.
Rummage: Baldwin EUB Church, 210 Baldwin, Sat., 8-12 p.m.	—adv.
Mexican Plate Dinner; $1 plate. Also take-out orders. Sunday, Nov. 14, 12 noon to 7 p.m. Carmen’s Restaurant, 846 Jos-lyn Ave. FE 3-9686. Sponsored by the North Side American GI Forum.
Rummage Sale: 336 Marion. Friday and Saturday. —adv.
There were breaded and | European Common Market glazed ready-to-cook ‘gourmet filets,” shrimp, scallops, 10-pound bags of eggs, and pastry dough.
“The biggest obstacle in selling frozen entres to the institutional trade is the matter of the chef’s ego,” said a spokesman for a restaurant chain.
By SALLY RYAN AP Business News Writer NEW YORK - A shortage of chefs is giving a new twist to the restaurant business across the United States.
The pancakes you have for breakfast in a restaurant, the shrimpburger lunch, the cocktail party hors d’oeuvres, and the beef stroganoff dinner probably come out of a box.
A ★	♦
Restaurants, faced with a labor shortage, limited space and* mounting costs, are turning to, packaged mixes and frozen | foods. So are hospitals, schools, airlines and ships.
One major restaurant school had 3,(MX) more job offers than it had graduates last year.	|
CITE INCREASE	|
The number of restaurants has been increasing. There are 378,460 commercial restaurants in the country, 6,170 more than last year. The biggest gain has been in quick-service facilities.
recent frozen food show in New York, the emphasis was institution-size packages, for restaurants and others.
■'The old notion of the chef 40 per cent less kitchen space wanting to keep his finger in the (ban normal.
pie is dissipating," he said.	* nossible^beoause of
Whitlev said the institutional . * nis was possible because oi
market had become jfie fastest!	convenience
growing segment of $5-bil-lfo«'-s, said James Biggar. the lion annual frozen foodl^siness.	"c!
and now amounted to nearly;	, Two years ago Stouffer
one-third of all frozen food'7““*	T
jgigg	jof frozen prepared foods in its
own restaurants."
LESS SPACE	! Now it is, and it is planning to
Stouffer Food Corp. opened convert some of its existing res-three restaurants this year withitaurants.
2-Day Talks Uriijer Way forFran(»,West Germany
PARIS (lIPIl — French and West German foreign ministers conferred for more than two hours today about Germany. Eastern Europe and the recent French-Soviet talks in Moscow. . But they left until tomorrow • a review of the four-month-old
CHEF’S DELIGHT He suggested that chefs who like to tend their own sa might look more favorably on something that retjuired partial preparation in their own kitch-is.
But Davis V. Whitley of Chicago, newly elected president of the National Association of Food Packers, has founcj no such resistance.
crisis.
French Foreign Minister Maurice Couve de Murville and West German Foreign Minister Gerhard Schroeder met at the Quai d’Orsay.
As they left for lunch at the West German embassy, Schroeder told newsmen their discus-centered around the German problem, Eastern Europe and Couve de Murville's recent Moscow meeting with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko.
Schroeder refused further details for the moment. But, answering a question, he said the discussion of Germany was
within the framework of their review of the Moscow talks and the Eastern European situation generally.
QUESTIONED	'
Asked whether the Common Market crisis was mentioned at all, Schroeder said, “it obviously is impossible to avoid all discussion of Europe when talking about the subjects I mentioned.” \
But he added that it will be reviewed in greater detail tomorrow. Their second and final formal meeting wasXscheduled tomorrow morning.
Slaying Trhl of Footbair Star Ending
% t *
■ ...
I
Successhjhlnvesting
Telephone Company
Sales and Income Up
NEW YORK (AP) - International Telephone and Telegraph Corp. notched record sales of $412,848,735 the first nine months of 1965, up from $368,-582,907 last year, the company reported.
"it income was $52,066,199 or $2.48 a share' compared with $46,500,787 or $2.23 a share for the first nine months of 1964.
235.59-0.47
155.3940.04
334.30-0.53
I Srcoml grtdO rail! .
I Public utllHHi .....
SOND AVIRAGES 50 bv TM AugcIMtO Frtii M 10	10 II 1
Rilh InO. Uttl. Fgn. L Nft ebangt 4.1
Noon Thun. 50.9 101.1	17.7	93.0
Pr9v. Diy IO.{ 101.1	17.7	93.0
Ago 11.0 101.4	07.7	92.7
Ago 51.0 102.0 17.2	92.7
Ago 12.7 101.7	15.5	91.7
ligh .13.7 101.5 M.9	95.0
.ow .00.1 100.0	17.0	91.5
Children With Matches
Pontiac firemen listed children playing with matches as the cause of a $600 gargage fire yesterday morning at 815 Rob-inswood.
Owner of the frame garage is Kenneth H. Stinson.
Vi »W.y-
EXTRA coltio .20 EROULAR
Coll Corp............
Dtttanct Ind B .1 Hvniwy Choeolito .
ipiiiiiiiil;:
By ROGER E. SPEAR
Q) “We sold 300 shares of General Telephone at 25 and purchased Long Island Lighting at 34. We now own 500 shares of Long Island Lighting, which hasn’t done too much since our purchase. We are interested in buying back General Telephone and Electronics-even though it has moved up considerably—and selling some Lilco. What do you suggest?”	H. F.
A) Many investors are curious and disappointed at the inability of the utilities to make much price progress in 1965. The answer lies in the nature of the stocks themselves. They are so secure as to dividends and have in general so consistent a trend of rising payouts that they have always been institutional favorites. As such, they are subject to selling when money tightens and can be used to better advantage elsewhere by many institutions. Both your stocks are excellent for long term growth.
At the present relatively high levels for General Telephone and cheap ones for Lilco, would switch no more than 300 shares.
* * *
Q) “The growth rate In my portfolio has been close to 10 per cent annually and dividends only about 2.5 per cent on the current price. In planning retirement, isn’t there a rule of thumb where a man can spend a certain per cent
of his capital to supplement dividend income?”
A. B.
. A) I cannot give you any particular rule of thumb, however, common practice that part of profits in a steadily growing portfolio may be accepted in order to supplement dividend income. Many strong stocks have risen in value 100 per cent and, in some instances, much more over the past decade.
It seems entirely reasonable to me that perhaps one-half of such gains can be taken out on a year-to-year basis, leaving the balance for capital enhancement and as a reserve against possible future declines.
Roger Spear’s 48-page Investment Guide is available to all readers ot this column. Clip this notice and send $1.00 with your name and address to Roger E. Spear, in care of The Pontiac Press, Box 1618, Grand Central Station. New York City, N. Y. 10017.
(Copyright, 1965)
Business Notes
Walter Forbes, president Forbes Printing and Office Supply, 4500 Dixie, Waterford Township, today named Robert E. Bauer store manager.
Bauer, of 4030 Letart, Waterford Township, was formerly executive director of Community Activities, Inc., from June to September of this year, when he resigned.
LINCOLN. Neb. (IIPII - The emotion-packed murder trial of Duane Earl Pope drew’ to a close today with the defense continuing its parade of character witnesses, two of whom yesterday termed Pope “bashful.”
The thread linking the testimony of defense witnesses is insanity — the keystone on which former Nebraska Gov. Robert B. Crosby^ is building his case.
Pope, son of a Roxbury, Kan., tenant farmer and former college football star, is charged with killing three persons during the $1,500 robbery of the Farmers State Bank at Big Springs, Neb., June 4.
The defense plans to spend at least two more days with its witnesses. Crosby said he planned to call former teachers, buddies and other acquaintances in Pope’s behalf, closing with testimony from mental specialists.
* ★ *
Romona Lowe, 21, Wichita, Kan., one of two former girlfriends of Pope to testify yesterday, said Pope not only was bashful but had an “obsession” for caterpillar tractors. She said she still had a "lot of feeling for him.”
FRIGHTENED HER
Gloria Benfield, 22. Wichita, said Pope was so quiet on a blind date he frightened her.
It was kind of nerve-racking to have him sit there and look at me. He was so very shy,” she said.
The prosecution is demanding the death penalty iSrhile Crosby maintains the rangy collegian, graduated last June, Is blameless for the robbery and slayings because of a mental sickness.
Roebuck and Co.
Now hiring for Christmas season. Part-time jobs available for:
. . . SALES . . . STOCK
. . . SERVICE STATION
Part-time employment may leod to full-time career in retail field. Discount privilege immediately availoble to port-time employes.
APPLY PERSONNEL DEPT. THIRD FLOOR
Seors Roebuck & Co.
____DOWNTOWN PONTIAC
time-study engineer
Opportunity tor young men wit college trolnlng or equivalent I experience tor f—	• - -
L. H. BROWN, Realtor
5W Elliabem Lake Road Ph, FE 4-3S64 or FE i-WlO
^ AMBITIO^ WOMAN
647-4d93r S«t.a Nov.
ironer, reterencet. Ml A-Tatl.
TRAINEE FOR AAACHINE SHOP, learn all type* of machine operation. Commerce area. 3575 S. Com-
TRUCK DRIVER TANDEM DUMP
TRAINEE - GRILL MAN. 11-25.
ATTENTION RN's and LPN's'
Openings. Educational bi Salaries competitive with an pitals. Call 33S-7154. Ext, 3.
We are hiring and training our Christmas soles help now. If you can work days or evenings, have a pleasant personality and business - like appearance, we can train you for our busy Christmas season. Immediate discount privileges. Ripply personnel department between 9:30 a.m. and 9:00 p.m. daily.
Montgomery
Ward
PONTIAC MALL v
AUNT FANNY'S
*	Orh^lns. ‘ ^
raph and 24M Dixie. T'
‘ must have experience deall : with the public end pass a typi test at ao WPM. Hburs I a.m. j 5 p.m. Mon. througit^rl. Sail
unicipal Building. 151 A
FEA«5I.	[baby sitter FOR NIGHTS, CARE
Perry ^call^MA	''
ABY SITTER TO LIVE will provide transp. Uni vicinity. 3«3-R7y._____
WANTED FULL OR PART TIMEI TV service man, color set upi experience desired. t25 W. Huron,
Pontiac.___________________________1
WANTED: 3 WELDING TRAINEES for automatic wire teed welders.; Apply in person, A and D Fab.;
experience tor Pontiac M
afternoon and evenings, _______...
Apply In person. Crocker Can^, 2740 Woodward.
CURB GIRL TO WORK DAYS.
WAREHOUSE MAN. FAYGO BEV-:
•Wtter 3, 334-2810.
WELDERS, EXPERIENCED, MUST ®

d 10 only. Ml 0-2113.
.BABYSITTER FOR 3 GIRLS, DAYS,
- DEPENDABLE WOMAN FOR DAY
Applicants must t years of age, nor height and must I
BAKER
examination as well as baker. Experience preferred, top I requirements. Apply at wages, paid vacation. Insurance Office^ Orchard^ Lake; benefits, applj^^^jwrson.	^
WOODWARD AT SQUARE LAKE
day thru Friday. Dorothy M. Cham-1
berlaln. Clerk._____________________|
YOUNG MAN TO LEARN HEATING! air conditioning and r'—“ —— trade. Bryan F. Frer
DINING ROOM WAITRESSES
Meals and uniforms furnished, fi time, paid vacations, insuranc
Gr'^ENFIELD'S RESTAURANT 725 S. Hunter—Birmingham
BEAUTY OPERATOR, MUST BE I Orchard Lake Rd., Pontiac.
efficient, good hours. UL ^2010.	COSMETIC ______
BEAUTY OPERATOR, EXPERI full or part time. RuSs' Cduntry enced. Donnell's Pontiac Mall.	Drugs, 4500 Elizabeth Lake Rd.
GENERAL DRUG CLERK, PART-
HARDWORKER WITH SENSE t or and refs., help a fired mol
"'a’weiS, W^’warS-Long l!!a
WOIMAN OVER 30, FOR GENERAL office work, typing required. Write Pontiac Press Box 37 giving com-plata resume	—■- —•
father and 2 children, v
HOUSEKEEPER TO LIVE Ih ■ K week, good salary, pvt. r th and TV. Must lik_e_coi
»"i2M7.
WOMAN FOR HOUSEWORK AND woman for baby sitting. Near Wa-
tertord. OR 3-1420.	__________
YOUNG LADY WANTED WITH Experience on cash register and general office. Apply 7940 Cooley Lake
HOUSEWIVES NEAR “ ■ ’ for stand by par work, FE 4-5760.
INSURANCE OFFICE HAS IMME-
diate opening for etf'-’......
with recent bookkeepi 5-day week. Commer and fringe benefits
ACCOUNTANTS TO PREPARE IN-
ila*^''' *
"X LADIES (5)
S e a Vq n a I help needed at Pleasantssales vrork with above average- income. No experience necessary. Phone 332-3053, y
LADY TO LIVE IN ,
Ing and housework
574-2007._____________________
LOUNGE WAITRESSES. NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY. " * ' * -------	674-0424.
MANICURIST, FULL OR PART time. Guarantee $12 per day plus commission. Materials fumishad. Bloomfield area. Ml 4-5366.
MATURE WOMAN, AGE 23 AND up, ability tc	—
portant and III
Pontiac Press Box 13.
s. preferred. 644-l04y.
MOTHERS' HELPER, LIVE
ng departments. t work, good pky. on. Fox Dry Clear
COMPLETE DRY WALL SERVICE, shaetrocking, finishing, texturing, plaster repair. Free astlmatas, 16 ------------ 33M23t.
Woodward, Royal Oak.
AUTOMOTIVE ACCOUNTANT FOR
GM dealer, experienced tinancial statement "	' '
charge of office. I working conditions.
I OS AND DRIVEWAYS, IM late service, FE S-S126 7 to
.m. FE M710.___________
RECLAIMED BRICK, DELIVERED. GA 5-W61 or 464-1428.______
Dmsmaidiig & Tailoring 17
jjandry Soi^M__________^
WANTED LAUNDRYS, SPIC AND
Moving ond TracMng 22
AA MOVING
BOB'S VAN SERVICE
MOVING AND STORAGE
fidentia’i.'Reply Pontiac Press
I	KEN'S KARTAGE
BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED
I Neg. S7.M, $10.00 - $1 DETROIT BLOOD SERVICE Pontiac	PE A*947
1342 Wide Track Dr. “'
Pointing A Decorating 23
BOYS AND GIRLS
Needed at once to handle Christ-mas wreath orders. FE 0-0005. DISHWASHER, FULL TIME, DAYS,

tt own transp., Chateau-Mile and Stevenson t(wy.
PAINTING, PAPERING Topper. OR 3-7061
QUICK CASH
FOR YOU HOME OR EQUITY WE BUY, SELL, TRADE AND LIS CLARK R^AL ESTATE 3101 W. HURON. FE 3-7000 RES. FE 4-M13
Invoicing available. Excellent foi
yjemi Listings
Will Travel-Taylor
OR 4-0306
We Need Listings
CLARENCE RIDGEWAY
Apartments, Furnisiieii 37
2 ROOMS, PRIVATE ENTRANCE, gas heat, elderly or middle-aged lady preferred, dose to bv- ’* Garner, FE 4-6460.____________
2 ROOMS AND BATH, CHILD WEL-
---e, $25 per week with $75 de-
t. Inquire at 273 Baldwin Ave.
nr Children, ^*3 ROOM!
IF YOU'RE GOING TO CALIFOR-MAM Atotors, 2527 Dixie Hwy., OR
FOR CHRISTMAS ,
L Encycll^la^r month SAVE’ON AUTO“TmsWa"NCE7*d1-effort. Phono’ 357-3507.	......
HOMEOWNERS Scales. FE 2-5011 oi
ROOMS, TVp ALL UTILITIES, White Leke front, adults only, references, $35 per week. $$7-4035. ROOMS AND BATH, CHILD WEL-come. $35 per week, 5100 deposit, -• *"	" iln Ave., call
FIRST

ROOMS AND BATH,
__oor, couple only. 49 Clerk._
ATTRACTIVE 3-ROOM, UTILITIES
CALL DETROIT VA 2-9466
Rent Business Property 47-A 375 AUBURN AVE.
2 attractive stores, free parkin reasonable.
BREWER REAL ESTATE
II contractor, $00. F
2000' BUILDING, SUITABLE FOR
----ufacturing or ---------- —
. FE 5-0612.
1-BEDROOM, NEWLY DECORAT-ed, gas heat, $5200, terms. 063 Stanley,
2-BEOROOM HOME, ALUMINUM '-'-ig and storms, walk.out base-1, immediate possession.----------------
2-BEDROOM HOME
Nice shaded lot, 100'x12S', 2-car ^ra^e, ^lata ’’I’m ”^'per* °cen1 down.
2 BEDROOMS
Possibla 3 with basement, lot ISO’s 150' on blacktop, needs some work.
“'““fLATTLEY REALTY
20 Comnrterce __________36>690t
3-FAMILY. ORION, ONLY Ally, 673-9701
3-BEDROOM COLONIAL BRICK, IN * mlnole Hills, llreploce, besoment 2-cer garego. FE 6-5707.______
3-	BEOROOM, BASEMENT, GA-
raga. In Laka Orion. OA $-2013. A. Sanders, rep. H. Wilson._____
4-	BEDBOOM COLONIAL. AT-teched garage, I'/h baths, basa-
, ment, 2 years old. Only $16,990.
I 673-7925.	____________
A U DCAI CCYaTC
Gas heat. Carpited. Ntar schools
Elizabeth Lake Estates
ivy-story with 3 bedrooms, full ceramic tile bath, large family kitchen and small den. IW-car oarage, fenced yard, short walking distance to good beech. Full price $13,900.
Sislock & Kent, Inc.
1309 Pontiac State Bank Bidfl. 38«^4	33M295
MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE
MOVE IN $09 PER
-	____9or- ------- -----------*
309 Jordonr <
- ‘ VE 7-SJc.
I Contt. Co.
HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty
LARGE FAMILY HOME Commerce Twp., full price, $0,500, $1,000 down, $75 a month land contract, 3 bedrooms, living room.
Everett Cummings, Realtor
25$3 UNION LAKE ROAD EM 3-330$ _______________363-7181
HIITER
fireplace i id patio, tW<ar ga-ly lot. All for $12,-
NEAR UNION LAKE - this 5 rooms and bath, gas heat, large family room finished In knotty pine, attached garage, 2 shady lots with leke prlvlle«s. Can be sold on lend contract. CALL B. C. HIITER, REALTOR, 3792 Ellz. Lake Rd. FE 2-0179, after $ p.m, 6S2-4653.
HAYDEN 3 Bedroom Tri-Level
$12,900
Gas Heat	Attached Garage
IW Baths	Family Room
Ovor 1,350 sq. ft. of Living Ar—

NEW, REROOFS . REPAIRS -
Insurance end own. 67^nn.
BROKEN CONCRETE AND TOP! IlSrJntowi *
ROBERT PRICE ROOFING, BUILT-! up roofing. Free Esf. FE 4-1024. ROOFING AND REPAIR, REROOFS
TALBOTT LUMBER
-	ROOFS: NEW, REPAIR
Gpnerel Melnfenence	«
SEA POOP I N GrrOMPLETELY
4 chMtfren. Woodward-Square
oliences and what have yo Ve'll auction It or buy it.
1,'^ 6%5"‘ B & B Auction
----------- 5009_Dlxle_
RN'S AND LPN'S	___________________________
new, modern nursing 1^ . . ii.i- ea-i- r___________I- B,» WILL BUY ANTIQUES, FURNI-
Florida's east coast, lop salary. MWS "••Pr	**»•♦»*• Bluablrd Auction.
children. Phene FE 2-1104.
GOLF VIEW APARTMENTS, 2 BED--------------' ---- carpeting, no
SALESWOMEN - SOME EXPERI
APPLICATIONS NOW BEING TAK-en lor Christmas help. Experienced salespeople needed In all departments. Apply in person at
ries. Must be good typist. Shorthand and dlctapfione naccssary. Apply John Bean Division, 1305 5. Cedar, Lansing, Mich. An Equal Opportunity Employer.___________
BIG SALES $$$
ALL OAKLAND COUNTY AREAS 'our desire and activity with fh^ right training program conducted by a man with 50 years ex-nerlMire Is the answer^to your
WANTED
upright grand, spinet and console ' pianos. If you hava a piano ! sell call;
: GRINNELL'S
FE 3-7168
NEW DELUXE I AND 2-BEDROOM $130-0150, stove, rifrlgerator ‘ carpeting Included, elr cond.
651-024 etter 5._______________
finenclal succi sentitive In Mr. N4PP et
Pontiac oHIce.
" copper, 35Ci BRASS RADIATORS,
Rent HoaBBS, FaraisliBtl 39
2-BE^OOM LAKE I^ONT^FUR-dmosit, rJSrtncn raquIrM. Avail!
2-CAR GARAGES. 20'x20', 1075. WE Glau Installed If ___________
build any size. JCement work — dows. Complata building i Free astimete. Pady-BulH Garaga 1025 Oakland Ave.	FE
Co., OR 3-56J9._______ ______-------------------------------
1-CAR garage, $$■
ADDITIONS
n, windr - -----
- . . .VES CO F rea_ EstlmaOes
Tfm Trimmiiii Saryice
Moving ood Storage
SMITH MOVING CO.
Lakes Tree Co., Trimming
ADDITIONS, ATTICS AND RECRE- “
SHORT ORDER COOK, EXPERI ence unnacessary, 5 nights. Apply before 13 noon. gM 3-4341._________
Spiegel's
Growing With Pontiac
Due to grovrth and Splegals will be opening
to'^om'lec 'Vl'JolT
EXECUTIVE SALESMAN PLASTICS
Ve are looking for an aggressive 'oung axacutlve salesman to rep-asanl us In the Greater Pontiac mrmm This Is a proven National AAA-1
I aldM 'bv I SmmissISi
'a
DESKS, FILES, OFFICE FURNI-tura, portobla and off tea typawril-art, adding machines, dreltlng tablet, etc. Forbes, OR 34767. We
also tell seme.______________________
SNOW BLADE FOR PICKUP OR Jeep, alto old van trailers tor sto' age. FE 5-7079 or FE 4-0742. wanted slate POOL TABLE.
!. FHA t^s. FE 64460. _
•rience In credit oi
0 Pontiec Press I
; 3-BEDROOM HOUSE,
M	A-l PAINTING AND ' GENERAL TRUCKING AND EXCA-
2	PAPER HANGING	viting, IW wU. fill dirt, tend and
*•; THOMPSON	FE 4-0364	^ I 're'’*Nl,^.r^	’'i?.''.
A I INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR Sil us DAO-1147	^ '
painting, free estlmeiet •lo.x	.-------—
guarantied Reeieneolq
HAULING and rubbish, name your prlcg, Any time. FE 04095.
A I INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR A^'paIntInG ANO~01CbRAfING	/V?	I*UCKiNO.
attic and	basement	recreation,	interior and exterior,	free esfi rubbish, fill dirt, grading o^ gr«.
rooms my	specialty.	State II-!	mates UL 2-3557	«"d front<nd leading. FE 2-0603.	-
censed Reas. 602-064$.	iTiVVoriVei-DiTxiTisi.5-is.rs .vcr LIGHT HAULING, GARAGES AND
carpentry: NEW AND REPTiR or^lni A1^ OR	t«jements cleaned. 67AI242 or FE
if^'^‘lr^^^TTCHENS,
Fe1?*!& ^	**'*'^'*"'* ~	Novi, 3494022.
Spiegel's
Ctmtaf Wark
PiaRB Taaiag
' TRUCK HAULING, LAWN, -------- basement cleaning. JUL 2-
Track Rtirial
............. ' PIANO TUNING AND REPAIRING
Cement and Block Work io^midi	fe 2-5217
Guinn's Construcflon Co.	WIECAND PIANO TUNING
FE 4-7677	____Eves. FE 54122	I" Ponhec, FE 2-4924 _
patios; pRjvESi^ARAGE slabs Plostariag Ssrvice
Trucks to Rent
.	. .	I'/VTon ,
TRUCKS - TRACTORS AND EOUIRMgNT Dump Truck* -- S«ml Trallfi
Pontiac Form and
wo'’rt^V«.'r'^ «R^''33MSi	Industriol Troctor Co.
f PLASTERINcT^ANO ' REPAIR. FE 4-04/”** WOODWARD NEW AND REMODELING WORK. Reasonable George Lee, FE 2 7922 Open Dally Including'	■
"H, alttc, marMa. Pontiac Tile B,PLASTERING. FREE ESTIMATES. ------ ------------
I FE 4-1176, Deyi.
Ceraoik Titiog
Marble, 6M-5S90.
s, 3634595, 674 2441
Heating Supplies
Wall ClBooeri
BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS Will!, and window*. Rtt*. faction guarantaad FE 2-1$l1.
SMALL WANT ADS BIG DEAL FOR YOU!
Well Drilling
2mCH IMELL DRILUNG, W*
Wigs and Hnirpitcet
WIGS 539 9 5 TO VJOO, HAIRPIECES “fe"$42I6
WAITRESSES
Dining Room and Curb
Full or part-time. Pfk) vecetlont. HospItlUMtlon. Lunch hour end food altowencc. Apply In person.
BIG BOY RESTAURANT
Telegraph S Huron or Dixie Hwy. B Silver ^ke Jld._ WAITREM^FoTr"SMALL RES'TAU-rant In Pontice 5 ..m. to 2 p.m Cell 674-2914.	_
"waitress
For day shift. Hotpllellzeflon. meals, bonus plan end peW'^vece-tlon. Apply In person only. Blue Ster Drive In, Opdyke end Pon-
I WANT A PARTICULAR MAN OR WOMAN
To start training as soon as sible In a flald that Is one ol hi^esl PRiil'y
i APARTMENT OR SMALL HOUSE In Wetarford-Draylon area young couple with l-year-old i I 673-7707 efter 5 - -
le desires FOUR-BED-rcxim home, within 10 mir— ■' I Birmingham. Near public end I chlal schools, with or without 9 buy. Phone Mr. Reynold
re to the right person with
xperlence Is not necessiry, you want to Invastlgate >s opportunfity where there
No Canvasing
NEED 3-BEOROOM UNFURNISHtD home before January, coupir dog, Pontiac area. FE 4-2257.
waitress wanted, 2l OR 6vER, will train. Apply attar 5 p.m. Harvey's Colonlel House. 5096 Dixie
wXiversinivANTEirTterT^u:
time employmenl. Apply In person onty^Front's Resteurant, Kaego
WAITlfiS$'''WA^NffDTnbAVTH^ Joe's Coney Island. 1651 S. Telegraph FE 34120.
WAltlESS, CURli'GIRL ANd^CSOK Super Chief Drive In. FE M05I WAITRESS FOi'iAAALL UlSTAU-renf In' Pontiec 2 p.m. II p.m.
674i»1l4. _	___________
WAITRESS, FULL-TIME EMFLOY-menl, ScrIb's Savoy Lounge, 130 S. Telegraph Rd.
WANTEC
; WOMAN fO CAR! FOR
experienced
/elKIcellons
WANTED:	TYPIST FOlTTiilGHT
employment, pleeseni working dlttons, an Ideal poslllan for ps ............e offleJ WOT'
WO«iAN“FOR''BABVTlttlNO‘T0je Jlght house work, 5 days e week, transp. 6024346)
PART TIME
OR
FULL TIME SALESMEN
Age over 45. or men covering Ponllec with noncon-flicflng line to coll on new and estpbflshed accounts. For Interview, write to Box 363,
Bey City, Mlchlgon.
REAL estate' SALESMEN WANT-ed, experience preftrrtd but not necessary. Estate Realty, 3520 Highland Rd. FE 5-4504.
intarnational Personnel Service, Inc.
lottractiMs-Scliooh IQ
PIANO LESSONS FOR BEGINNERS over 6 years In my home In Clerkiton-Draylon area. Reeiene-
r large apartment ti
LADY DESIRES TO SHARE HER 3-bedroom home with 1 " ” —*• Ing ledles. 6514391.
Waoted loal Eitota 36
1TO50
WARDEN STOUT, Rnllor
450 N. Opdyke Rd.	FE 54U
Pontiec Dally 'III I
MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE
CASH
48 HOURS
LAND CdNTRACTS-HOMES
WRIGHT
301 Oeklend Ave. FE 14t^i
ASK OOR "SELLERS" WE'VE SOLD THEIRS!
It's oor "prlvato finance Plan" with low, low down payment That's sold nearly ell our listings, went yours sold? Call
W. H. BASS
"Specializing In Trades" REALTOR FE 3-7210 BUILDER
Owner has redut —4 bedrooms —
automatic heel —	. _____
-	vacant and ready to move Info
—	low down poynMnt to quell-lleld buyers — also many other bargains.
IMMEDIATE CASH FOR HOUSES, FARMS, ACREAGE LAND CON'TRACTS, EQUITIES
WRIGHT REALTY
332 Oeklend Ave.
FE 24141 Eves, etter 7:30 FE 5-1591
BIRMINGHAM
___________________3304034,
UNTIL JULY,JLRTOM, GAS HEAT,
Rent HoasM, UofaroiihaQ 40
BOULEVARD HEIGHTS Applications now being accepted Contact Resident Manager 544 E. Blvd. et Velencle LARGE 2-BEDROOM, LAKE FRONT hoftw, 2 baths, perfislly furnished. Couple preferred. Exc. rets, required, 0150 per month plus se curily doposit, FE 1-1427, eftor 2
WEIR, MANUEL, SNYDER & RANKE
290 5. Woodward,
644-6300____PHC
075 per months*
advance, OR 34144.
raoe, i quTr^.
HaRting AccooioMiMS 41-A
hunting CABIN AT HARRISON, Mich., oil hell, sleeps 4, cell FE $■6141 alter 4.
FHA Repossession
1391 ATHLOHE, OXFORD RED BARN SUB — 3-badroom rar
LEWISTON, MICHIGAN
$4.00 per day: Includas slaep-Ing and breaklast. Phone 674-
BASEMENT QUARTERS, 2 OR 3 men, alter 5. FE 3-7300.
CLEAN SLEEPING Ao6m F 0 4
working lady, 33$-2$$4.____
CLEAN ROOM FOR SINGLE PER-
:ottege. _ IMfc H/sreoM-lorieoie room ipr tingle working metL ell home prlvTleges. EM 3-247$.	_
maIcT s'ervicb, loffbb, car-
pined, TV, teleahone, $35 e svaak. Segeitiore Metal, 7$9 t. Woedwerd
NICE ROOM, ON BUS LINE. R'kT-erencee. PB 4-8203 before 2:3$
WANT ADS ARE
FAMOUS
FOR
"ACTION"
Immediute Possession
3-bedroom ranch, l>4 baths, full basement. Welerlord HIM, $30,000.
OPEN
SAT.-SUN. 2-5 AL PAULY, Realtor
4516 Dixie, Rear
» 3-3000_______EVES. OR 3-7293
I CAPAC NORTH ON M53, BEAU-tlful modem brkk home on 10
sett"' entwine. 651^i«4** Rwihev
ter. _____________________
In R 0 c'h'e S T“E R, O-BEDROOM brick, bl-level, living room, dining room, fireplace, 1W baths, exposed basement, etteched garage on 3 lots, $22,500. OL 1-3036 etior 5 p.m. IN THE VILLAGE OF OXFORD 3-badroom, 2-llory home, new gat furnace, also 2-cer garage. 00,f», $1,000 down, balance on land con-
*"*1iUMPHRIES REALTY
Oxiord, Mich,__________OA 0-2417
LAiKE-FRONTTBEOROOM HOME.

By Owner-W. Iroquois Immediate Occupancy


Clote to schools end shopping—
4 roomy bedro—	--------
—large living i
— 2 bet^ — newly large shady lot, 60x115 - tioeping porch — many large clotelt — f-car garage - Reasonably priced, cell 9:30-5:30. FE 2-7J93, after 7, MA 6-3069.
NORTH POINT REALTY
5904 S. Mein	Clerktlon
....... ■______________MA 5-1M2
In Kilketke Coun>y, 6-room ell modern house
country. Full
will tell on te—.......... .
Ballet, Kelketke, Michigan.

$175 DOWN
NO CLOSING COST Occupancy In February Take Orchard Leke Rd. to merce Rd., take Commerce .. .. Commerce Rd., turn right at Olen-gery $l„ left to Lot Arboles ‘ AMERICANA HOMES
$9990
HELP-HELP-HELP!
**** ■”*hw)t*t,’Tncomts, w
"	- ---------- --------rty to
WARDEN REALTY
LAST CHANCE AAA Homes Pleosont Lake Shores
Offering for Immodlete occupancy: 3 model homes. Cenel-front lots and access to 1,100' of sandy beech. This It Ihe lest offering, raising price of houses, $1,000 Nov. AAodel open from 3-6 p.m. From 021,000 ■ $24,000. 6024410.____
MULTIPLl LISTING SERVICE
McCULL0UGOEALfY“
NEED we SAY MORE Three bedroom brick ranch, 2 car atliChed garage, •.......
seeped 75 by 150 foot lot, In Welkins Hills. Call for details end let us shew you Ihe extres. Here today but may be gone tomorrow. Will consider l-bedroom home In any location et trade In.
TED MCCULLOUGH, JR.
Mixed
Neighborhood
A60DEL OPeN AFTPPNOONS 1-AND SUNDAY
WESTOWN REALTY
_______FIRST IN VALUE i
MixE6~$W8rnRWfrAd'*^ WK
.... ,— ----------members of
MULTIPLl LUTING URVICE Over tIO teletpeople at your lervlca
AIrISi Bl'
- “t^