I ' ONE COLOR Home Edition Rail Wreck Fumes : -s=r THE Kill 7 in Nebraska PONTIAC PRESS CRETE, Neb. Ml — Leaking anhydrous ■nunonia Aimes from a wrecked railroad tank car spread through a section of this southeast Nebraska town Tuesday morning. At least seven persons died from breathing the deadly fumes. Gov. Norbert Tiemann said the State Patrol ocmfirmed seven deaths. A Department of Agriculture inspector said he found 10 dead. A funeral home spokesman said one body had been brought to his establishment. A spokesman at the Saline County sheriff’s office in nearby Wilber termed the situation very serious. “They are still hauling them out of there,” said Ottp, Kastanek, a resident of the area. “I think they were overcome in their homes.< “Some probably were asleep wh& the leak spraog.” PONTIAC, ^OHIGAN., TUESDAY, FEBRUARY IS.'l VOL. 127 NO. 10 ★ ★ ★ —30 PAGES AIDING IN RESCUE Many persons were overcome as they slept in their homes. Authorities ordered the area evacuated. ON A SIDING Burlington Railroad officials said the tank car ruptured when freight cars from a passing train jumped the tracks and smashed into it. ' ” ’ National guardsmen and state police, equipped with gas masks, were ordered here to aid in lescue and evacuation work. Adjoining cpjinties also sent units. A helicopter was summoned from Lincoln, 25 miles to the,northeast, with the idea that wind from its rotor blades might dispel the fumes. The derailed freight cars were from a 98-car freight train bound from Denver to Chicago, a Burlington official said. The derailment occurred about 6:45 a m., CST, during a heavy fog. Evacuees were taken to the National Guard Armory and the Doane College gymnasium, with the injured treated at ^e hospital. William Doney, a Burlington official at Omaha, said at midmoming that fog and gas kept railroad crews from approaching the wreckage to determine the cause of the derailment or to find out the number of cars involved. City Firemen but Strike on Job, Still Looms The fog whs morning. to lift by late "T" Nixon to Shift Hqlf of OEO Programs Laird Aide Sees Improved ABM WASHINGTON UP) - President Nixon is preparing to pare away roughly half of the Office of Economic Opportunity in GOP's Bliss to Quit in April WASHINGTON (AP) — The White House announced today the resignation of Ray C. Bliss as Republican national chairman, effective in mid-April.,i Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler made public an exchange of letters in which Bliss said he would leave the party job to return to private business and Nixon said he accepted the decision with a salute “for a job extraordinarily well done.” The letters gave no explanation for the resignation and Ziegler said the White House would not amplify. Only five weeks ago, Bliss conferred with then President-elect Nixon in New York and announced he had been asked to remain as chairman. Ziegler said he knew of no disagreement between the President and Bliss. He said they had not conferred privateiy since the Jan. 10 meeting in New York. After Nixon’s electiffli, reports began circulating the new President wished to replace Bliss with a chairman who could act as a spokesman for the party on speaker’s platforms around the'nation. In Ws four years as chairman. Bliss has concentrated on the technical and organizational side of politics, leaving policy speeches to others. policy speeches to others. lipti InToday's w,^ ■ Tax Rehrm State Haim a«y bm to poaitmn tor a major realignment of the war on poverty. The Job Corps, Head Start and slum health centers are to be shifted to other federal agencies, informed sources said today. The cutback is expected to affect only some $520,000 of Head Start funds in the Oakland County OEO total budget of $2,025,000, according to Edward P. Revis, executive director- Some of the most controversial of the antipoverty efforts, the community action programs, \Vill be left in OEO, informed sources said. VISTA, the Domestic peace corps, is also to be left in OEO, but it is not handled locally by Revis’ agency. Revis said the community action programs, incuding Head Start, legal aid and senior citizens prr^rams ipake up the bulk of his office’s work. Another $200,000, also unaffected by the proposed cutbacks, is used locally for the Neighborhood Jouth Corps. Some 155 youths are involved in the county under Department of Labor sponsorship. Revis noted that his office has had only fiscal responsibility for Head Start; that the development of programs in 28 school districts of the county has been left to the indiviljual district. WASHINGTON (AP) - Deputy Secretary of Defense David Packard said today the Pentagon’s^ antimissile study is likely to produce a better defense than the present plan. At the same time, Packard gave the strongest indication yet that the Nixon administration is inclined to continue with the controversial Sentinel antimissile system, although possibly in changed deployment pattern. By DICK ROBINSON A threatened walkout of Pontiac firemen was averted this morning but still looms as other striking city employes continue to curtail city services. State Labor Mediator Leonard Bennett reported that “some progress was made” in the city’s salary negotiations with three unions after a 15-hour bargaining session which ended 7 a.m. today. ‘T asked them to stay on the,job pending further negotiations,” he said, "and 1 understand they will continue on the job at my request.” STILL POSSIBLE But Fire Fighters President Edwin Manley said a strike could be called any minute if his organization is “not treated fairly.” “My men have given me a mandate not to accept anything less than $10,300 this year sometime.” wage of the city's policemen. Firemen now earn $9,000. The city has offered firemen an immediate $600 increase and another $300 July 1, which would lift their pay to $9,900 a year. MASS RESIGNATION Bennett said he asked representatives of Fire Fighters Local 376 not to walk off the job for a third time as was threatened for 6 a.m. today. The firemen are demanding a $10,300 annual salary for three years of experience on a parity with a.promised Saying that the Sentinel’s “basic technology is in pretty good shape,” Packard told newsmen, “Our problem is how best it should be deployed.” The Pentagon’s second-ranking official was vague, but he spoke of a likelihood that “we are going to come out with a better orientation” pf the antimissile system than was conceived under the%lan proposed by the Johnson administration. PROTECTIVE UMBRELLA That envisioned emplacing Sentinel batteries in 15-20 locations to raise an umbrella over the United States against a possible Chinese attack of up to 75 missiles in the mid-1970s. “We’re relatively untouched by the proposed cutback,” Revis said. He noted the local community action program is committed to the idea of using private business involvfement in solving the problems of the poor — “a philosophy that President Nixon is preaching right now.” The DEO hires 127 people in the Oakland County office at 1 Lafayette, Pontiac, Revis said. The White House is expected to make the formal cutback announcement today or tomorrow. Options under study include moving antimissile batteries away frqm cities to protect this country’s nuclear intercontinental missile striking force, thinning out the number of antimissile batteries to guard against a possible smaller than anticipated force of Chinese missiles, and perhaps “thickening” the system to shield against a heavy Russian missile attack. Discussion of the antimissile study dominated a joint news conference held by Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird ^nd Packard. Red China Balks at Meeting U.S. Aquanaut's Death to Delay Sealab 3 Before the start of negotiations yesterday, Manley threatened a mass resignation of firemen if substantial progress wasn’t made. But today he wouldn’t comment on the subject. In the meantime, garbage collection has been backlogging at the rate of 4,000 homes a day, and other services, such as police protection, have been affected. ^Police Sgt. Herbert Cooley reports that four police officers have been pulled off a pormal patrol of 15 men to take care of vacant clerical jobs. Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. said garbage at homes will not be picked up until' the strike is over. Pickups are limited to hospitals, schools and public buildings, TALKS TO RESUME Negotiations for 141 firemen and some 440 clerical-office and blue-collar municipal employes were scheduled to resume at 2 p.m. today. “I hope to have this settled shortly,” Bennett commented. "The real problem is money. But we are real close on a proposed modified longevity plan.” Members of the Pontiac Municipal Employes Association and Council 23 of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employes (AFSCME), AFLrCIO, are seeking an average 35-cent-per-hour wage increase. Fire Fighters representatives didn’t get into joint negotiations until after midni^t, but shortly thereafter hopes of a settlement were high. RETURN OF DOUGLAS TOKYO (AP) - Red China said today it is “obviously most unsuitable” for the U. S. and Chinese ambassadors to meet in Warsaw Thursday as scheduled—after a 13-month interval. It said an anti-Cluna atmosphere had been created by the defection of a Chinese diplomat serving in the Netherlands. The diplomat is now in the United States. A statement by the Red Chinese Foreign Ministry Broadcast from Peking, said China’s envoy in the Polish capital had notified U.S. Ambassador Walter Stoellel Jr. of Peking’s position. LONG BEACH, Calif. (iP) - A $10-fnillion Navy program to train men for undersea living has been suspended while, doctws try to learn why an aquanaut had a fatal heart seizure 610 feet down yesterday. Sealab 3, the leaking underwater dwelling unit which Beny L. Cannon, 33, was attempting to repair when stricken, was ordered hauled up from the ocean floor near San Clemente Island. A delay of weeks seemed likely for the trouble-plagued project, which called for five nine-man teams to spend 12 days each living and working at the bottom of the sea. The hope hinged on the return of Jack Douglas, city coptimissioner and president of the Oakland County AFL-CIO Labor Council, to behind-the-scene talks. Douglas reportedly didn’t return. At a press conference earlier in the day, he said: “The city has delayed long enough in the negotiations and the City has notjhad the welfare of the citizens at heart or it could have settled this much sooner. , ★ ★ * ^ “The demands of the workers are reasonable and the city has enough money. In the past, the city has held wages down because of financial reasons that no longer seem to apply.” __________________________________________________________________________City representatives negotiated with ~ ~ ~ ^ clerical and blue collar employes up un- til midnight. Area Weath^ to Stay Springlike g£Ssl£sr 3 he told the bargainers in his first appearance here the issues could be re-(Continued on Page A-2, Col. 1) i UNION SOLDIER-An old member of the Union takes up the charge in front of the City Hall for the on-again, off-again striking Pontiac firemen and members of two cjty employe groups who are on strike. Today's sunny skies and springlike temperatures are just a preview of more to come. The weatherman forecasts partially cloudy skies tomorrow with little change in temperature, the high rising to near 38. Considerable cloudiness and a low of 22 to 26 is tonight’s prediction. Mostly fair and mild is the outlook for Thursday. Morning winds west to northwest at five to 15 miles per hour through tonight will become northwesterly tomorrow. Precipitation probabilities in per cent are 10 tonight and tomorrow. Twenty-three was the low thermometer reading prior to 8 a.m. in downtown Pontiac. By 2 p.m. the mercury had reached 39. 6 Found Guilty in School Sit-In Blaze Destroys Car Dealership A fire of undetermined origin last night destroyed John Wheaton Chrysler-Plymouth Inc. of 2222 Novi, Novi. Village President Ray Harrison, who was. at the scene, estimated damage at about $150,000. No one was injured. " Laird Raises Possibility of Lottery Draft for Viet Israeli Airliner Shot at in Zurich A Pontiac District Court jury yesterday found five women and a man guilty of trespassing- after a sit-in at the Pontiac Board 6f Education Feb. 6. The defendants, all members of the Voice of Oakland County Action League (VOCAL), will be sentenced Monday by Judge Cecil B. McCallum. The fire, which left only two outside walls standing, was put out by 10 p.m. although firemen stayed until midnight. The alarm was rfeceived at 7:47. Several c^s inside the building were destroyed, according to Novi police. ADDED FIRE HiuP Eire equiptt>ent||rom the neighboring communities of Walled Lake, Wixom, Northville and Farmington and Commerce townships aided Novi^in battling the blaze. " There were more than 15 pieces of WASHINGTON (AP) - Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird raised the possibility today that a form of lottery could be worlt®d into the draft system before the Vietnam war ends. But he spoke of the idea only in those terms—“a possibility” —saying it should be considered in the Pentagon’s .new studies looking toward the establishment of a volunteer military force. equipment at the scene, according to Harrison. ^ The dealership is. owned by John Wheaton of 5889 Dunmore, West Bloomfield Township. At a briefing on the draft arid military manpower rieeds, the defense chief was asked whether a lotteiy could be started as part , of the .Selective Servipe System before the Vietnam war is over. Laird replied; “There is a i^sib|lity, and I think that should be considered.” Other Pentagon manpower officials suggested the lottery could be employed in a small scale or standby draft system that is expected to be used to maintain a largely volunteer force. „ Vice Adm. William Mack told newsmen a lottery could erase some in-./ ' - . .1 ^ i equities in the current selective service system by deciding which men of a certain age group would be called upon to enter the armed forces. Mack said the Pentagon would like to get away from the present draft policy of “oldest first,” which is causing men around 26 several years of uncertainty, and select more around age 20. Mack said that in drafting men of a cprtairi age group on the basis of the oldest qian first, “the Januriry babies would be certain to be drafted and the December babies would almost be certain not to be drafted .... ZURICH, Switzerland (UPI) - Three bursts of machine gun fire were fired at an El A1 Israel Boeing 707 airliner at Zurich’s Kloten International Airport today, reliable but unofficial reports said. The reports said fire was returned from the plane and one of four assailants was hit in the head and killed. The other three were reported arrested. It was not Immediately known if any of the plane’s passengers and crew were killed or wounded in the,shooting. Swiss police and ZuriOh airport officials refused to comment on tHp reports. “Trie only alternative to this procedure that serims to make sense is to move to a lottery or random selection system,” under which all men Who are,/found available for service in a given age class have an equal opportunity to be called or not called, based upon an objective and clearly understandable procedure,’’ Mack said. Romney Hits Handouts SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - George Romney, the new secretary of housing and urban development, says problems of poverty and race relatioril canhot be solved “through legislation and money.” He said the poor are not looking ior a handout, but for character building from the inside. Trespassing, a misdemeanor, carries a penalty of up to 90 days in jail or a $50 fine, or both. The six were arrested after they refused to leave the school board building following a meeting they attended to protest the board’s selection of a‘ site at Pontiac State Hospital for a proposed high school. DEFENDANTS LISTED Convicted were Mrs. Eldred Sweeney of 228 Orchard Lake; Mrs. Ralph Tyson bf 2796 Eastways,,Bloomfield Township; Mrs. Leonard Patterson of 282 S; Marshall; Wfrs. Fremont Ogawa of 1544, Witherbee, TrOy; Mrs. Fred Favre of 171 Jefferson; and James Baldwin of 179 Augusta. Following the verdict, Mrs. Sweeney said that VCXIAL will continue its opposition to the school site, adding, “Our forces will be at the next board of education meeting.” The organization is attempting to have the proposed school built in a centrally located area. A*~2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TrESDAV.J Talks Continue Second Senate Panel's Hearings With Striking ' • , City Employes ofi N - Treaty May Delay Okoy (Continued P'rom Page One) eotved “if the facts were put on the table,'* "We're not really far apart on any of It." he said. “We checked the ability of the city to pay and it is here." ‘ * * * Winston L. Livingston, attorney for the fire fighters, hadHhis comment during one point in the session: “It’s their (the city’s) business “"if they don’t want anyone to work ' Tire strike started at noon Friday when negotiations with the firemen broke and the firemen and other city employes walked out v ^ * * P'iremen returned Saturday under a cpurt order and then struck just before midnight. They returned to work again Sunday. Members of the other two unions have pledged not to return to work until their demands are met * * ♦ Mayor Taylor .said yesterday that he hoped the firemen will continue to observe the court order and remain at work. "nie jobs performed by our firemen are important to our community, and It Is certainly encouraging that the firemen have recognized the significance Of their responsibilities by returning to duty. ‘IN HANDS OF UNIONS’ "Frankly, I can’t predict how long the strike will last because, in the final analysis, the length of the strike i.s in the hands of the unions." Figures prepared by the city show that a fireman's salary of $10,000 as of July 1 would be a 65 per cent pay increase since 1964. It would cost the city, including fringe benefits, $13,169 per third-year fireman per year. WASHING’TON (AP) - The Senate Armed Services Committee, in a move that could further delay Senate approval of the nuclear nonproliferation treaty, has announced plans for hearings on military aspects of the pact, ♦ ★„ * t' Chairman John Stennis, D-Mlss., indicated yesterday the hearings would start after the Senate Foreign Relations Committee winds up its own inquiry starting today with Secretary of State William P. Rogers as the lead-off witness. Foreign relations, which held hearings last year on the treaty that would ban the spread of nuclear arms, is expected to give it prompt approval. But while that committee has long been in favor of the treaty, the move by Armed Services could provid#a forum or rallying point for critics unhappy with inspection procedures and other provisions. Rogers, in his first appearance as secretary before a congressional committee, had the assignment of following up on President Nixon’s request of Feb. 5 that ths Senate ‘‘act promptly to consider the treaty and give its advice and consent to ratification.” ★ ★ ★ Secretary of Defense Melvin M. Laird will appear Thursday in support of the presidential request. The foreign relations committee a^ proved the treaty after an initial round of testimony last September but it was not brought to a vote before Congress adjourned. ’ ★ ★ ' -w The treaty would bind nuclear powers to keep atomic weapons out of the hands of countries that do «ot now have them, but would permit diaring peaceful uses of nuclear power. Yachts Spotted in Red China HONG KONG (UPI) - Three pleasure yachts apparently seized by Communist China bobbed at anchor today in a mainland Chinese harbor near Macao, spotted by coastal sailors. Peking maintained official silence on the fate of the 1 Boarci Askeid for MDs, DOs Budget Boss Says Nixon for Surtax WASHING’TON (AP) President Nixon's budget director told Congress today the administration will support a one-year extension of the 10 per cent surtax. Nevertheless, he said, it foresees a shrinkage in this year’s budget surplus and possibly next year’s. * ★ e Robert P. Mayo, testifying before the Senate-House Economic Cwnmittee, promised ‘‘a diligent effort to reduce outlays" in a review of former President Lyndon B. Johnson’s $195.3 billion fiscal 1970 budget now under way. WWW “I am realistic enough, however, to appreciate that over-ailj savings are not likely to be dramatic either for the few remaining months of 1969 or for 1970." the budget director said. W ' w *w Ttie budget chief told the lawmakers: "Our administration’s current position Is to support the proposed extension of the surcharge and the excise taxes." LANSING (AP) - A proposal to bring medical doctors and osteopaths under ^ the same licensing board and tighten that board’s authority over both was outlined yesterday by officials of the Michigan State Medical Society (MSMS). The proposal, which MSMS spokesmen said woukl soon be introdiic^ in the legislature, would provide for one state medical board, composed of eight doctors of medicine and two doctors of osteopathy. It would replace the current two t^rds, one operating in each field. WWW Tlie proposal also, would give the medical board “some teeth in.its protection of the public,’’ MSMS officials said. WWW They pointed to the recent case of Dr. Ronald Clark of Farmington Township, convicted of manslaughter in the death of an employe. Testimony at the Clark trial revealed that an, autopsy showed death had been caused by an overdose of .sodium pentothaL WWW Under current law, the doctors said, the licensing board could not revoke Clark’s license until he had been convicted. Under the proposed law, the board could temporarily revoke a license and ‘‘provide better protection for the public.” Observers expected the licensing board consolidation proposal tp run into op-positon from the state’s osteopaths, who have balked at the idea of losing their .separate identity. W "■ w w ' "This Is not a proposal to swallow up the osteopaths," declared Dr. John J. Courty of Port Huron, chairman of the MSM committees on osteopathy and on county medical societies. 15 persons aboard, including four Amerfbans. The crewmen of cargo junks reported yesterday they had sighted the three yachts for the first time since they disappeared Sunday while on a Chinese New Year pleasure cruise from this British colony to Portuguese Macao. W W '^W The crewmen said they saw the boats at a fishing village, a few miles from Macao, the Portuguese enclave 45 miles from Hong Kong. Authorities In Hong Kong have said they were convinced the yachts had been intercepted by Red Chinese gunboats. Diplomats from several countries said , attempts were being made to persuade Pekingtisr admit capturing the yachts and agree to return them, with their passengers, to Hong Kong. WWW The chairman of the Macao Yacht Club, Hernando Mecado Pinto, said he was in contact with provincial authorities in Canton and had been assured they would "investigate” the ipcident. WWW In addition to the four Americans aboard the yachts, there were three Swedes, two Britons, one Frenchman, an Australian girl and four Hong Kong Chinese. WWW In an unrelated incident, marine police reported today the disappearance of a British yachtsman, David Bailey, an architect from Lowestoft, S u H o I k , England. The Weather Downtown Temperitvms M II Dututh 99 1) 39 JI Fort Worth 49 30 NAflONi^ WEATHER — Cold weather is predicted over much of the nation - tonight, with showers along the West Ckiast turning to snow flurries in the higher Bouthmi etevaUans. Flurries are predicted for the «pper Great Lakes aqda portion of the eastern seaboard. Rain will cover southern Texas. / Bailey disappeared last night while rowing in a dinghy in search of his yacht which apparently broke ahehor and drifted from Hong Kong waters off Lamma Island. Pontiac Realties Salute to Youth Principals' Group Raps Parochiaid LANSING (AP) —'State aid to non-public schools could open a Pandora’s Box that “could shake this nation to its very roots,” says the Michigan Association of Elementary School Principals. In a position paper released yesterday, the MAESP said legislative approval of a plan to give state funds to private and parochial schools could set a legal precedent "which would pennit the destruction of the public school, system.” “It is the position of this association that the separation of church and state is an essenti^ characteristic of this nation and must not be threatened directly or indirectly by any legislation seeking to blur this distinction," the Association said. Parents who send their children to nonpublic schools are faced with an increasing public tax burden, the MAESP said. Certainly one can sympathize with the plight of these citizens," it said. “But nevertheless the choice is theirs. There is nothing which prevents them from decreasing this financial burden to themselves except their own free will to choose among alternatives.’’ Pontiac’s citywide Salute to Youth Program to select Pontjac’s outstanding youth is now under way. The program is sponsored by Pontiac Citizens’ Committee on Youth. w w w Any Pontiac strident in grades 9 through 12 is eligible to register and be considered for this recognition. They may be nominated by teachers, parents, principals or fellow students. ■, w w w Youth recognition will be given in nine award categories which include fine arts and handicraft, science, creative writing, scholarship, music, speech, leadership, athletics, industrial arts and home economics. /, * ★ * A program for presentation- of the awards will be held April 17 at Pontiac Northern High School. JUDGING TEAMS Students considered for Youth Recognition will be rated by teacher panels in each school, for each award category. All student entries will be j-ated by the teacher teams using a point system, and final winners will be selected by the Salute to Youth Program Steering Committee. w ★ ★ Registratidn forms may be obtained from homeroom teachers or school principals. WWW Deadline for registering for Salute to Youth consideration is March 14. Fidl U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY-Partly sunny today and mild, high 35 to 40. Considerable cloudiness, low 22 to 21. Partial clearing Wednesday and little temperature change, high 33 to 3$. Thnrsdqy’a outlook; Mostly fair and mild. Winds west to northwest 5 to 15 miles per hour today and tonight, northwesterly Wednesday. Probabilities of precipitation; 16 per cent tonight and Wednesday. T*«*y In ewitlw on* Y»*r In e»nn*c low*il pr*c«nllnt • n.m.: IJ tmST«ur7 tO At I * m.; Wind V.loc!lv 4 m.D h. • Direction: W.$t ^™ " Sun >*tt Tuttdty *t 4:W p.m. W*.th*r. Sunny • Son rim WadnttdiV «l T:»5 *m. Moon tttt Tutihdav 1:19 p.m. . ^ Mpen rUM WMncMiRY 196 9-cn. J AP Wirtphpfo MUSCLE FOR MARINES — A Marine artillery unit digs in its 105mm howitzers west of Hue as a fire support base for troops sweeping the area. Troops carved and blasted away the jungle all day to prepare the gun pits and bunkers. Nursing Homes, State OK Welfare-Patient Agreement Michigan nursing homeowners and the state reached an agreement yesterday over the care of welfare patients in private nursing homes, e/iding a long controversy. The agreement includes lifting a ban on the acceptance of new Medicaid patients and increasing certain state subsidies. w w ' “I am relieved that an equitable solution appears to have finally been reached," said Bhsil F. Boyce, president of the Michigan Nursing Home Association and co-owner of Seminole Nursing Home. Pontiac. He added, “I want to stress that the major problems were nonmonetary but involved the Department of Health’s proposed mass transfer of patients , \ " from what they termed basic to skilled homes or vice verst). RATE STILL ISSUE “Establishing an equitable rate or reimbursemoit for the next fiscal year still confronts os,” Boyce added. The Michigan Nursing Homes Association announced several weeks ago that its members would refuse to accept any more state-supported patients or permit state social and health workers on their premises to classify patients unless daily rates were increased. The controversy between the nursing home operators and the State Department of Public health began several months ago over the state’s refusal to pay the nursing home |13 and f 15 per day for basic and skilled home patients, respectively. Under the rtew agreement, the state will raise the rate for basic patients in skilled homes fCom $12 to $14 per day and pay $16 per day for patients who are paraplegic or suffer from severe heart condition. SAME BASIC RATE The basic nursing home patient rate will remain at $12 per day. Other highlights of the compromise pact, which, remains in effect until July i- q Nuring hdmes will open their books to state audit immediately. • A special governor’s study committee will make recqmmendatiws on a new rate structure by July 1. • Proposed stringent state rules and regulations governing nursing homes will be withheld temporarily. • The date will apply for federal funds to initiate an incentive cost program,for nursing homes. • Designated representatives of the state' will be admitted to nursing homes "so they can make normal evaulatkms of patient status. Birmrngham Police Union Recognition Bid Rejected BIRMINGHAM - The City Commission last night turned down a reqiiest by a newly organized Birmingham Police Officers Association to gain immediate recognition as a collective bargaining unit for the Birmingham police twee, it it * Commissioners said the organization would have to file a petition under Public Act 379 (the State of Michigan Public Employes Labor Relations Act) with the State Labor Mediation Board for permission to hold an election in order to certify that the poUce force wants the association to act as its exclusive bargaining representative. ★ ★ A The commission received the request for collective bargaining from the Southfield law firm of Lemberg and Gage, which is providing the legal counsel for the new association. A ★ * No representatives of the association were present at the commission meeting last night. Correspondence referring to the commission’s decision was to be mailed to Lemberg and Gage today. NEXT STEP Noel A. Gage of Lemberg and Gage said the next step would be to file the petition to hold the election which would be supervised by the State Labor Mediation Board. it it it Gage said he expects approval of the association as a bargaining unit by the police force. The election, he added probably could be held within three weeks. it it it “Once the associatiort has gained certification through the election, we feel the next step will be up to the city commission to express a Willingness to meet with us and sit down and amicably begin discussions for a contract for the new fiscal year beginning in July,” Gage said. Sporting Goods Store Is Closing The sign stretching across the back wall of the S. G. Rogers store reads: “Going out of business. After 47 years in Pontiac, we’re closing our d o or s forever.” Hanging on the other walls of the sporting goods store at 24 E. Lawrence are mounted game trophies given to owner Charles Rogers by his customers over the years. ★ it * “We’re closing right out,” Rogers said. “When the merchandise sale is Over, the building will be leased or sold.” ★ ★ ★ After that, he added, “I’m going to take a vacation for a while." Rogers who lives at 57 Miami {las worked in the store for the past 31 years. His father opened the firM store in 1922, nearly half a century ago. “Skater’s Holiday”, the City of Birmingham’s annual amateur ice show, has been scheduled for 8 p m. March 8 at Eton Park Municipal Ice Rink. | * ★ * / Tickets at $1 for adults and 50 cents for children will be on sale at the rink the night of the show. In case of inclement weather, the show would be postponed to March 9. Pontiac Jaycees' Bosses Night Near The 46th annual Pontiac Area Jaycees’ bosses night will be 6:30 p.m. tomorrow at Devon Gables, Bloomfield Township. Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., will be the guest speaker. The Jaycees Will present the Boss of the Year award and a Distinguished Service award to a man between the ages of 21 and 36, not necessarily a Jaycee, who' has distinguished himself in the community. A Keynian award will be presented to the Jaycee who, has been most helpful in community services. it it * Tickets at $7 each may be purchased at the door or obtained in advance from Terry Van Onnan, 1165 Lyiisue Lane, , Waterford Township. Navy Reveals Sub Malfunction NORFOLK, Va. (AP) - Atlantic Fleet headquarters said today the submarine Chopper last week experienced a “control casualty” that sent her plunging toward the bottom while operating off the coast of Cuba. it" -k it , A prepared statement, said the conventionally powered Chopper “experienced a temporary control casualty Feb. 11 which resulted in a sharp-angle descent followed by an abrupt-angle ascent.” ★ ★ * 'hie statement said the 307-foot Guppy, type submarine, with a crew of 9 officers and 74 men, “was operating on a routine training mission near the U.S, Naval Base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.” •k it it Two crewmen were injured during the violent maneuver. The Navy listed them as Oiief ■'Quartermaster R.L. Russell of Seattle, Wash., who suffered a broken arm, and Mac^ist MatlC. J.A. Goin of Ft. Worth, Tot., who had a shoulder injury. / ' / ★ ★ *■ Initial inspection at Guantanamo disclosed minor damage, the statement said. Repairs are being made by crew members. k k k Atlantic Fleet referred all further queries on the Chopper to the office of the Chief of Naval Informaiton in the Pentagon. 15% OFF ON ALL HAIR GOODS Sale on for All of FebruaryX / Some Factory Closeouts as Low as .. / . ^ Once-A-Year Special! / AVAILABLE AT All 8 Perry Pharmacies* Thrifty Drugs and Lee Priescriptions in Drayton J^lains. / DRAYTON WIG Distributors ' (9lholesale and Retail) Honored » 4666 Wi Walton Blvd. / One Block East of Dixie/Hwy. i73-34G^ 9 / 673-071^ THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, FEpiUARY 18, A—8 Tiike udvanluKe of your Ordit I'nion Services! CHIEF PONTIAC EMPLOYEES FEDERAL CREDIT UNION 790 Joslvii Ave.-l‘onluc-Qdl 335-9493 State House Vote Near on Holiday Bill DOES YOUR HOUSE HAVE THE BLAHS? Don't Move ... IMPROVE! Are Working Now . . . CALL TODAY LANSING (AP) - The House Monday moved into position for final passage a bill to give state laborers four additional three-day holidays per year. The bili, parsed by the House last year but defeated in the F111A Program Snags in Test Senate, provides that Washington’s birthday, Memorial Day, Columbus Day and Veteran’s Day always fall on Monday. Washington’s birthday would be celebrated the third Monday in February, Memorial Day oh the last Monday in May, Colum'-bus Day on the second Monday in October, and Veterans Day on the fourth Monday in October. would be celebrated on the tra-isent to committee. Among them ances yearly in an amount equal ditional dates under terms ofjwere proposals to: to the rise in the consumers Christmas, Easter, New the bill sponsored by Rep. Roy Spencer, ^Attica. RETIREMENT CREDIT The measure was one of two bills on which the House took action during its brief session. The other measure would credit veterans with time spent in military service toward retirement from state jobs. The bill, however, was re- • Authorize'the department of social services to establish post ekehange outlets for social services recipients, exempting any transactions from state or local taxes. ' Increase retirement allow- price index. • Limit salaries of boards of supervisors per year to a maximum of $10,000, with any further increases to be approved by electors at a general or spe-eiaf election. yot/R6^«mm As Low As Per Week Hore't mora room for the kids ... or a bright now, doan ond comfortablo room for family rocroation or ontortdining. Lot us assist you in your homo boautification. WASHINGTON UP) - The; [fIIIA swing-wing fighter-j • Cfofp Canifo/ bomber program has h i t another snag, but the Air Force says it doesn’t know how “’'the*oovei?nor™” serious the problem might be. ' Leg*s?ature'’haf’%«9“"^i'' vel During a test by t h e string* 5“7talned economic ad«anc^^ manufacturer last Wednesday a M^hlgan'mirsing homes and®me crack was detected in an FlllA’s steel carry-throughj s«id^hf structure, a box around which, ;nsyred^motcjujs^,^y^ the wings pivot. the senate “ ^ ^ ^ I Met briefly and conducted routine ‘No Fill aircraft have been^ ”I!dtiS?“of tmai oai grounded as the test does not indicate a safety hazard to aircraft now in use,” the Air Force said Mondsy. There was no estimate of how long it will take to determine! what effect the test failure will have on the over-all program. Year’s Day and Thanksgiving f e r r e d to the appropriations " j committee to determine its fis- Ical applications. k.1 ^ ^ In niher action, a spate of NGWS OT Q O/OnC©,bills introduced into the jHoiise. All the measures -were DRYAIRTROUBLES? ADO-A-ROOM NOWI L«t ut ouitl yaw In planning a bright family. Thnr* am many nnw Idoat and wn uta aniy lha finatt molarialt and craft- ftwrythinc In Modemimtion EAVESTROUGHINO • STORM WINDOWS • PORCH ENCLOSURES ALUMINUM AND VINYL SIDING DAYS .. . NIGHTS . . AND SUNDAYS CALL 1032 West Huron ITCHY SKIN? DRY NOSE? PLASTER CRACKING? STATIC ELECTRICAL SHOCK? “DEAD” CARPETS? Oin OF TUNE PIANO? OUALflY REPAIRS ON AIL MAKE HEARING AIDS Loanart Availabla Ofeeilon ConsinnitonSa fe 4<2597 iAember Pontiac Area Chamber of Comrrierce, PONTIAC MALL OPTICAL & HEARING AID CENTER Phone 682-1113 HEARING AID DEALER, ) establish four Mondays i DeLorean to Aid in Study of Ghetto The American Assembly, national mmpartisan, educa/ tional organization incorporated in New York state, has received a grant of $104,500 from the Ford Foundation for a national program on black economic development, Clifford Nelson, president of the assembly, announced today. John Z. DeLorean, a vice president of General Motors Corp. and general manager of Chevrolet Motor Division, will contribute to a background volume the assembly edited by Willidm F. Haddad, chairman and chief executive officer of the U.S. Research and Development Corp. * ★ ★ ' DeLorean will write chapter entitled Problem,” an examinatiqh oif the statistics of black bji^iness incentives in depresseff urban areas with comparisoi^ to other minority groups in America. 'Death Penalty on the Way Out' CORONADO, Calif. (AP) -j Capital punishment in the United States will be abolished with-, lin 10 years, predicts Justice tor Humiriilltr niolilani Hi* olr, Alien It of dvil and ImpurlliM, Yov fcti Stanley Mosk of the California! foHable of lower lemperalurti — , - ■ ge!Supreme Court. j "i “A decade from now, Ameri- ^ leans will look back and wonder how an enlightened society j could have so long tolerated I capital punishment,” Mosk said j Monday. “Killing cannot be deterred by killing.” IND THESE PROEIEMS WITH A CooleratoK AUTOMATIC HUMIDIFIER *7095 © Consumers Power FRESH STOCK AT SIMMS AMAZING NEW Theff Last a Lot Longer Up te S-Monihe LengeT ' 28 W. Lawrence FDR PHOTOGRAPHY, FLASHLIGHTS, TOYS, GAMES AND TRANSISTOR RADIOS MallorY SIMMSll 98 N. SAGINAW ST. 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Cabinet is slim and lightwai{ • ■ — Ail channel UHF/VHI «100 > Pay even less with coupon. NO MONEY DOWN • 3 YEARS JO PAY P0NTIAC AAALL SHOPPING CENTER TELEGRAPH RD., CORNER ELIZABETH LK. RD. • DAILY 10 to 9 • PHONE 682-2330 OAKLAND MALL IN TROY 1-15 at 14 MILE RD. OPEN DAILY 10 to 9 PHDNE 985-5143 Costly Garbage Issue Confronts County By JKAN SAn.K Getting rid of the garbage is going to be an expensive issue for Oakland County in the years ahead. A new study of waste disposal puls immediate costs in the neighborhood of $30-$40 million. Ilie study^otes: ''licspile millions of dollars spent annually for refuse disposal. most Vommunities are falling behind and will face a crisis in .solid waste disposal in the near future Modern man is finding that his past approach to^ the problem is no longer satisfactory." The $125,000 study of county solid waste disposal undertaken 19 months ago by the Oakland County drain commissioner has been distribuied to the board of supervisors for study. hounded by an $03,000 grant from the Department of Health, F-ducation and Welfare, the study was made by Jones, and Henry Engineers Ltd. of Toledo, O. It offers two alternate solutions. * One plan calls for the inclusion of the Southeast Oakland County Incinerator Authority, located in Madison Heights, and would put a main residue disposal area on 460 acres lying mainly in Addison Township but extending also into Oxford Township. The plan, biesideS providing for the land-fill or residue disposal area, includes three giant incinerators in central Avon Township, western Farmington Township and southwestern Independence Township plus the Southeast Oakland County Incinerator Authority in Madison Heights,- ity and allowing it to continue on its own, . is estimated to cost $31.4 million in 1970 and an additional $20 million in 1980. Both plans make provision for the inclusion of Pontiac, should it desire to join." is proposed in conjunction with Oakland University and the Avon incinerator. COST TO RESIDENTS Hie Immediate c«).sts of putting the plan into action are estimated at $39 million or about cent of the county's 1968 equalizemiValuation. An additional expenditure of $17,9 million is seen in 1980. TAXPAYERS' SHARE Transfer stations have been proposed as gathering points for Incoming garbage in northeastern Milford Township, southeastern Oxford Township and in Troy on Coolidge Road. I'he raw garbage would be collected and compressed at these points, moved by truck or rail to the incinerators where it would be burned and the ashes then taken to the proposed land-fill site, Residents living outside the area serviced by the present authority would have to pay $2.63 per $1,000 equalized valuation in 1970 in wder to put the plan into action. The alternate plan calls for a land-fill site on 380 acres along the Independence-Orion townships boundary line. Incinerators would be located in Farmington and Independence townships with transfer stations in central Highland Township and in Oxford Township southeast of the village. The cost to taxpayers in 1970, should' the plan be initiated, is e,stimated at $2 23 per $1,000 of equalized valuation. The second plan, excluding the Southeast Oakland County Incinerator Author- ifnder the second plan, the Avon in* cinerator would not be built until 1980. MACOMB-WAYNE The report, billed as a threecounty study, devotes one chapter to the Ma-xomb-Wayne County situation and noted that "it is almost a certainty that Wayne County or Detroit will approach Oakland County officials regarding residue disposal.” It notes that, in that event, an addi-, tional ^60 acres would be needed to be purchased at land-fill sites, and it proposes, that the county would be reimbursed for any *additlonal expense. The engineering report notes that federal funds might be avallablee up to two-thirds of a research project cost involving the commercial use of steam available from incinerators. Such a study Should the County Board of Supervisors choose to proceed with either of the plans advanced, there Is no cerUinty at this time that the drain commission would control development. There has been diseussion by supervisors to place the project in the hands of the Department of Public Works, a group under the control of the board. The drain commission, like the road commission, is an independent office in the county. The study follows a 1964 DetrolLMe^ politan Regional Planning Commission repprt which aroused "a furor in Oakland County when it was suggested that Detroit wastes be railroaded out to Oxfprd Township for disposal there. Focus on 1,000 in Huron Valley School Drive A promotional campaign backing the Huron Valley School district’s millage and bonding proposals on the March 28 ballot will key on about 1,000 citizens in this district not currently registered to vote. "The 1,000 voters who have not taken the interest and the time to become concerned about the school district's problems are the group that can make the difference in the special election," contends Sam Curtis, citizens’ committee chairman. An Intensive phone and mall campaign aimed at the group is being conducted by the citlzais’ committee. Voter registration deadline is Friday. nje citizens’ committee was formed last July under the dlrectlcm of the Huron Valley Board of Education in an attempt to continue a drive started by a citizens committee organized in 1966 to bring the Huron Valley system up to an “adequate level.” THE PONTIAC PRESS TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1969 A—4 W. Bloomfield Eyes Road, Sewer Units RIDES ON AIR - Dan Berry of Sports Hover^ Cr^ 2520 PontiK Prtis PI Airport, Waterford Township, demonstrates |be tfushiopflight 240, a novel craft that rides on a cushion of w over land or water. The craft, which holds two adults, is made of fiber glass and reaches speeds of 35 miles per hour. Rides on Layer of Air ■niREE PROPOSITIONS The millage and bonding package Is comprised of three propositions. One asks voters to approve 21 mills for operational purposes — 15 mills renewal and 6 mills additional. Tlie second would add 2 more mills, for a net Increase of 8 mills. Unusual Craft Now Available ■ The third calls for $10.5 million building construction and site purchase program which would rai.se taxes by 4'j mills, The school board and the citizens’ committee have stated that the present 15 mills Is not only Insufficient to run the system during the current ’ year, but would be insufficient during the 1969-70 term. The Huron Valley district now spends a) mills to meet operational expenses, creating a deficit financing situation. REASONING EXPLAINED Donald Sheridan, vice chairman of the citizens’ committee, explained the board i,s going for bottJ renewal and additional nuUage primarily because surrounding school districts have been splitting Uic renewal and additional millage requests in separate elections only to find them being defeatWv The Cushionflight 240, an unusual craft which hovers In the air above land or water, is being distributed for the first time in the Michigan area by Sports Hover Craft, 2520 Airport, Waterford Township. The craft hovers from one to five in-. che.s above the surface of land, water, marsh, .snow, ice, sand or anything else, while moving at speeds up to 35 miles per hour. the second annual Detroit Camper and Travel Show, through Sunday at the Detroit Artillery Armory. Two Nominafed in Troy Primary WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP-Consideration of a number of special assessment districts for sanitary sewer and road improvements occupied trustees at last night’s Township Board meeting. The board approved the creation of special assessment districts for paving three different road sections on a matching funds basis with Oakland County. Involved are Lone Pine from Orchard Lake to Middle Belt, Lone Pine from Middle Belt to Middleton, and Lone Pine from Middleton to Inkster. newly formed district. Sohie 53 per cent of the citizens residents signed petitions for Sewers ^o cost about $197,078. A sewer assessment ‘ district in this subdivision was recently killed after two years of dispute. The Interlaken hearing on the roll will be held March 5, for sewer improvements estimated at $361,685. The Cushionflight is Coast Guard-approved and Is licensed as a boat. Built of fiber glass, the craft holds sealed twin pontoons. Two adults can ride |n the craft, which can carry a maximum of 450 pounds of weight. The vehicle Is currently on exhibit at Aid for Memorial to Dr. King Solight TROY — About 8 per cent of this city’s registered voters turned out yesterday to nominate W. D. Bollinger and Bruce W. Franklin for municipal judge. Bollinger Of 6158 Glyndebourne, the city's present associate judge, received nearly 45 per cent of the vote in the sixway primary which apparently failed to spark much-interest among citizens. City officials generally expressed some surprise at the extremely low turnout. By resolution, the township referred all hearings and resolution procedures to the County Road Commission. Six different sanitary sewer districts were also discussed. The board approved • a resolution i educing the amount to be assessed for the Dunlap sewers since the low bidder was considerably under the original estimate. The original figure was $13,213 while the accepted bid was $5,885, turned in by VarBee Excavating The board also approved a resolution increasing the water capital charge from $200 to $300. The direct connection charge has also been increased from $400 to $600, both effective April 1. People who now use water from the central water system will not pay the , capital charge. Inc. Commerce Okays Blacktop Project Community wide support is being .sought to expand the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Collection, created by voluntary contributions from the staff of Kresge Libr.iry at Oakland University. A fund was established by unanimous vote of the professional librarians a few days after Dr. King’s assassination last April 4. Candidates and their unoffidaLtotals were Bollinger, 497; Franklin of 3730 Beach, 165; Gerald R. Hershberger of 285 E. Long Lake, 152; Raymond J. Hand of 1900 Golfview, 133; Robert J. RESOLUTION PASSED The board then passed another resolution appropriating money for the improvements from the capital funds and transferring it to the township’s improvement revolving fund. Board members said the amount was so small that the board decided to finance the A new water kystem is currently being installed on the east side of the township. The board also passed a resolution approving the sale of the fire station in Orchard Lake, to the Tri-City Fire Department. This new resolution according to board members, was made to comply with the legal requirements requested by Manufacturers National Bank, which is handling the transfer for the Tri-City Fire Department. Bromley of 2895 Somierset, 112: and sewers in this mdnner rather than William E. Wilson of 3282 Oakhill, 82. , soliciting bonds. All six' candidates appeared on the The board also approved a bonding ballot after a last-minute decision from resolution for Herndon’s Walnut Lake the State Court of Appeals upheld the Estate sewers at an estimated $1.25 Taxpayer Association to Hear Rep. Smart “We could go with a split and come back later but we feel the taxpayer should face up to the financial needs of the school syslem and vote in file full and needfd package now," Sheridan said. ^ ' COMMERCE TOWNSHIP - Th6 Township Board has approved the blacktopping of Marlin from Oakley Park to Richard.son ajid Richardson from Union I.ake to Martin on a matching-fund basis with the county. The township’s share will be $53,100. An Informational and promotional booklet distribuied by the citizens’ committee notes that the distr ict currently ranks 17111 of 28 in Oakland County in total school tax levied, with 30.70 mills. Of the eight neighboring school districts. Huron Valley ranks sixth with West Bloomfield. Clarenceville, Farmington, South Lyon and Waterford and Walled Lake and Novi lower. The road will be prepared this summer and blacktopped in 1970, according to supervisor Robert H. laing. Robert McGee of 4647 Neweroft has been appointed to the township planning commission to fill a vacancy created by the death of George Merring last month. The collection covers a wide range of subjecto related to black history and literature, as well as social and economic problems of the black citizen in America. ■ The books are selected by a committee of three librarians Mrs, Robert Cross, Mrs. Stanley Stefancic and James Myers — and three OU students — Gwendolyn Heard, Rboert Smith and LeRoy LaMot- right of Wilson, Franklin and Hand to million, run despite the fact that they had not fulfilled the city’s two-year residency requirement.- ta. The requirement had been held invalid earlier by Oakland County Circuit Judge Robert L. Templin. Templin based his opinim on several state laws, including one that declares justice of the peace candidates must only be a resident of a county for three years and one which equates municipal judges with justices. The city appealed Templin’s decision, ' leading to the Appeals Court ruling. The board also formally accepted the Brookfield Highland subdivision petitions — signed by 52 per cent of the residents — and set a hearing of necessity for March 19. The sewer’s estimated cost is $630,769. ORTONVILLE - Michigan Rep. Clifford Smart, R-Walled Lake, will be the guest speaker at the regular meeting of the Brandon Township Homeowners and Taxpayers Association at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Brandon Township Hall, 395 Mill. A hearing on the roll for Shenandoah Farms subdivision was set for M^gh 10. 88. \ The cost is projected at $270,8 HEARING DATE ' March 24 is the date for the hearing of necessity on the Knollwood Heights Rep. Smart will disduss taxation and hold a" question-and-ahswer period. The legislator is expected to explain the ' reason behind the proposed 31 per cent increase property .assessments in Brandon Township. ■ The meetini ig is open to the public. Donations should be sent to Mrs. Joyce Klosky, Kresge Ubrarj', Oakland University, Rochester 48063. l.,ong affiiounccd that fito new fire truck will be delivered this week from the John Bean Co. of Indiana. Four Incumbents File for Lake Orion Council Salary Panel for Troy Hits Snag r For Pontiac-Detroit Runs GTW Commuters on Rise Tlie number of commuters riding Grand Trunk Westein Railroad trams ha^ increased almost 50 per cent since 1966, according to Grand Trunk Vice Prtts.dent and General Manager .1 W’ Demew. . Final figures for 1968 show 667.711 passengers on the Monday-through-F riday commutpr trams The commuter total in 1966 was 448,17$, fire 1967 figure was 519.435. LAKE ORION - Four candidates, all Incumbents, have filed for council vacancies in the March 10 village elec-tion. Candidates are Arlie A. Reed. 207 Slater: Mildred Edward, 24 Highland; Dorrance A. Galloway, 601 Central; and Robert D. Stokes, 421 Lake. The top three candidates In vote total will be elected to three-year terms, while the fourth will serve one year. TROY — The City Commission ran Into a snag last night in its planned attempt to establish a salary committee to study and set commissioners’ compensation. I The commission had approved earlier a proposed charter Amendment to establish the committee, and had begun procedures to submit the proposal to a vote of the people in the municipal election April 17. mented, “I’m opposed to letting commissions set their own salaries in the futurje, even though !’d like to see that commissioners are adequately compensated." . The commutipr service cover* 26 m|Ies between Detroit and its dens^ely populated northern suburbs. As in previous vears, more people rode the morning trains from Pontfac, Bimmigham and Royal Oak to Detroit than rode the evening return runs. Demcoe said efforts to improve schedules and advertise service account for the major pari of the two-vear increase. ‘UNTAPPl^ MARKET’ “We felt at the start of this program of commuter improveq|ent that we hau* an untapped market on‘our hands, Demcoe said. “The service, still isn't making a profit, but we’re happy to see that the trend'of revenue and passenger loss is being reversed.” • He noted that the opening of 175 (the Chrysler F'reeway) running roughjy piralle! to the Grand Trunk through Ihe northern suburbs does not appear to have hurt commuter carryings. . ' , , .. , , ,;i. ' ’ . (I V . , I . I f^tes Will Be Sold at Independence Hall INTiEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP - A license plate sale will be held in the Township Hall Thursday from 6 to 9 p.m. “We have received numerous telephone calls concerning the feasibility of selling plates at the township offices, and as a convenience to constituents, it was decided to sell plates dtlring the evening hoars,” said Township Supervisor Duane Hursfall. Normally, the plates are sold only at secretary of state branch offices. However, City Attorney Stanley Burke reported that, in an iqjinion given by the state attMTiey general’s office^ the proposal as preseiltly worded is called illegal. The opinion, Burke continued, said the amendment would be “in violation of the home-rule ordinance” under which cities are incoiTOTated and chartered. REVISED CHAR^TER Under the opinion’s interpretation of Commissiorf'er Carlos W. Lynch con-curnfed and asked, “Is there any other way*we can go about this?” Burke said the commission could ininitiate a proposal to amend the charter. ADVISORY ROLE The attorney also said the ballot proposal could be revised to call for the conunittee on salariesr to-.be advisory qnly, with the commission then having the final say. A motion instructing Burke to draft the revised i^posgl passed by a 4-3 vote, wifii Jmes, Lyn^ and Commissioner John Kokalis opposed. ^ mission agenda, pointing out • that Houghten had missed several meetings. Last night, Kokalis read a prepared statement which suggested that Hou^ten^: “should either state his intentiqps to a<^ tend the majority of the meetings remaining until the end of his term-, or resign” and offer the name of another citizen for appointment by the commission to fill his place. The statement also criticized an adjournment motion made a month ago fiy Houghten at a commission meeting with several items remaining on the a Kokalis added, “This action brought concern of the fact that Cmnmissioner Houghten has been missing many meetings and as an elected official of Troy, should have considered the work load he has been shifting to the rest qf the commission . . ’’ the ordinance, the attorney added, the commission must either set its own satory or the charter must.be revised to change' the present salary of $10 per meeting. Commissiemer Ben S. Jones com- In other,. business, the commission discussed briefly, but took no action on, the questiwi of Commissioner Glen H. Houghten’s attendance at commission mieOtings. Eokalis had asked three weeks ago that the subject be placed on the com- Houghten responded by saying that three commissioners besides himself had voted for the moUon to adjourn, that don’t believe the absence of one commissioner makes the work load shift to the rest of the commission,” and tl^at I m not about to lower my dignity by having a hassle with Mr. Kokalia." \ ■' ,/.V, THE PQNTIAC t>RESS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1909 Tax on Foundations' Investment Income Urged WASHINGTON (AP) - Congress opened a sweeping review of the tax code today, hearing a call fop a 20 per cent tax qn the investment income of private foundations. Rep. Wright Patman, the Texas liemocrat who has been a leading critic of tax-exempt foundations for more than eight years, told the House Ways and Means Committee in prepared testimony ‘1 do not seek to destroy foundations, but to reform them.” Patman, however, said he doqs not propose taxing contributions to foundations, but rath-on their investment revenue. The committee, headed by Ar^ kcnsas Democrat Wilbur D. Mills, began what is expected to be a two-year job of revamping tax laws which were last re^ viewed in 1954. DEVOTION TO GREED’ Patman said the use of some of the nation’s estimated 3,200 foundations have made of their tax-free status “reveals the continuing devotion of some of our millionaires to greed, father than conversion to grabious-ness.” However, Charles L. Mc-Claskey, infe.sident of the National Association of Foundations Inc., said the groups are capable of policing themselves under his association’s code of ethics, and no additional legislation is necessary. Private foundation abuse is, as a matter of fact, not . widespread as some would have you believe, because the experience of the Internal Revenue Service in auditing private foundations’ returns found less than 2 per cent violations,” he said in prepared testimony. Besides the prppos'al to tax such foundation Income as interest, dividends,,capital gains and profit from busines sactivities. Patman said he is offering legislation to limit any privately controlled foundation from owning more than 3 per cent of the stock of a business. He said it would also require such organi- zatiohs to distribute annually for philanthropic purposes their entire net income. RECOMMENDA-nONS The committee has before It recommendations from Johnson administration Treasury officials for restricting dealings between foundations and their founders and lijn't'hg accumulation of unspent jncome. Patman said 596 foundations studied by, the small business subcommittee he heads increased the value of their assets from $10.2-billion to $15.1 billion between 1960 and 1966. Dallas Family Keeps Surgeons Busy DALLAS, Tex. OPI — Now it’s| "We thought it was sympathy] “By the time we got Buddy Kejjy, 7, in the hospital -r- and pains,” said the mother when ready,” said Mrs. King, “Bobby nobody in her family i s Mary Kay, 5, didn’t feel well a .jarted having paih.s, too. They surprised that she underwent an few weeks later. The surgeons , ” [appendectomy. decreed an emergency ap-tested^ Both needed I Mrs. Soniti King and her six pendectomy. emergency appendectomies. children take such things as a ' * * ★ matter of course.' | Kelly’s turn came the other Dallas Osteopathic Hospital day, and she’s doing fine. ..rgWU^ the N.,NCV ,s NEXT operator, who went in for ^ ^ ‘he King children, that operation last 0 c t o b e r. leaves only Nancy, 8. And she’s Daughter Kathy, 12, complained the Christmas holidays, tongjig gut of a side ache, and two days] Then, with everyone;------------------------- ' ^ 'after Thanksgiving the doctors recovered. Buddy, lO, found his took out her appendix. iside was hurting. 9 OPEN TONIGHT! Do You Know All tho Answers INCOME TAX 5 Chancti ar* that yoV i doubti •van attar droppir your rtlurn In th* mailbai You can train that* doubts with a trip to your ntorby BLOCK offict. This ytor, bt confidant. STATE / m UP ____= OUARANm a ororttaa occurota praporotion of ovary tax r laka any afrori that eoit you ony panolty or intarost, II poynha pan ' ‘ •• 1300® [sr« America's Largest Tax Service with Over 3000 Offices 20 E. HURON 1 4410 DIXIE HWY. 1 1012 N. MAIN PONTIAC 1 DRAYTON PLAINS 1 ROCHESTER 2536 ORCHARD LAKE I 508 N. MAIN SYLVAN LAKE | MILFORD WEEK DAYS 9 TO 9-SAT., SUN. 9 TO 9- PHONE 334-9932 NKiwmmmammmmm One Week Only! FINE SHOES BUILT ON AUTHENTIC U.S. NAVY LASTS Important-these lasts are AUTHENTIC, not “navy tsrpe,” not "navy style." You getvthe same fine shape and ease of fit specified by the Navy, Plus superfine Goodyear welt construction, suppje leather uppers, oak-bend leather soles, flexible fibre inSoles. , . ^8.99 a pair Black or brown. Bone's, m N. Talasraph, Pontiac 48053 6 7 7Vs 8 t'/i 9 9Ys 10 lO'-i 1112 XXXX XX X X X X Man and phona orderi promptly Id xxxxxx XX X X X X I XXXXXXX X X X See xxxxxxxxxx d ib« ihippina bayond di d SOl forC.O D't. Addloc The Pontiac Mail lerniQW .UWAYS FIRST QUALITY SPRING FASHION FABRICS REDUCED ... LAST 2 DAYS! Prints, coordinated solids. - easy care! EAGLE SCOUTS - Bruce Annett Jr. (left), 16, of 2799 Sylvan Shores and Stanley Newill, 16, of 2876 Woodbine, both of Waterford Township, received Eagle Scout awards last week. They are both members of Troop 51 and attend Waterford Mott High School. 'Generation Gap'. Workshop Is Slated The YMCA of Greater Pontiac will conduct a “generation gap”! workshop for teen-agers and their parents March 2 from 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. at the YMCA, 11 /University. Registration deadline is Feb. 27 on a first-come basis. The program fee for each family is $6. covering the cost of lunch, coffee, materials and leadership. Dircting the workshop will be James P. Simmons and Dr.. Clyde Reid from the faculty-of the Institute for A d V a p c e d Pastoral Studies and William R. ] Kirk and David L. Larence of] the YMCA staff. Heart-disease and cancer are the leading causes of death in most developed countries. lAUTOMATIC WASHER Automatically ,, replaces ice used! Featurei tho oxcluoivo Minl-Washo' System end Filter-Flo«. Hes Per-menont Prose cycle, fdur water levels end a large capacity to « handle family sized Ibadt. 14.7 cu. (I. 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USE PONTlAC PRESS WANT ADS THE PONTIAC PRESS 4S West Huron‘(Street Pontiac,' Michigan 4905t TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1969 nowHO M. FiTtemAtn, II & W. FiTKinAiD Minftgini Xdllor Jur*r kifd nnAnc* O. MAUHAU JOIIftAN Lookl Advtrttelna lt>nA|«r Outsmart Burglars With the rate of crime continuously on the rise on .tooth national and local levels and burglary one of its leading categories. Pontiac house- ■ holders may well wonder what precautions can be taken to safeguard their premises against invasion by thieves. Bearing in mind that the majority of burglaries are (committed by juvenile offenders whose techniques in ' most cases are pretty elementary, observance of the following defensive suggestions could pay rewarding dividends: • ALWAYS USE A KEY TO LOCK YOUR DOOR. Doors that lock by slamming ran be opened by a burglar in seconds. You must double lork it Also, ask a locksmith about force and pick-resistant locks. ) • LEAVE SOME LIGHTS ON WHEN YOU GO OUT. A dark house or apartment means an empty home to a burglar. liCave lights or radio on. A timer that will turn your lights on and off costs just a few dollars. It’s cheap insurance! • LOCK YOUR WINDOWS WHEN YOU GO OUT. It’s easy to forget. Use approved gate or key-controlled winclow locks that don’t create a fire trap. • DON’T LET STRANGERS IN. Use a peep hole and chain bolt to check people out. Don't buzz bark a door opener unless you know who’s there. • DON’T LEAVE YOUR KEY UNDER THE DOORMAT—or anywhere else, like in the mailbox, or with your car keys, or in your coat in a restaurant. Your key can be copied—and you wouldn’t even know . . . until it was too late. • LET THE BURGLARS THINK YOU’RE HOME. Don’t let mail, milk bottles or newspapers pile up. They’ll tip off a burglar that you’re away. • \DON’T TELL STRANGERS WHEN YOU’LL BE OUT. f>6me hurglais use the telephone to find out if you’r^ home, dr planning to be aWay. Don’t tell strangers anything. • KEEP AN EYE ON YOUR NEIGHBORS’ PROPERTY. If you see anything suspicious, call the police. • DON’T KEEP EXTRA VALUABLES IN THE HOUSE. Money, securities and other valuables are safer in a bank. Write down the serial numbers of cameras, stereos, typewriters, etc. They’re the best lead the police can have in recovering your property if stolen. Like so many other safety warnings, the foregoing could seem rudimentary to thoughtful members of the citizenry, but it’s the neglect of them, according to authorities, that contribute importantly to the ease with which so many burglaries are committed. New House Boasts Quality Preconceptions and prejudices to the contrary. Jack S. Fogbound or Senator Claghorn and their fictional ilk are not typical of the caliber of men who make up the U.S. Congress. Considering the House alone, more than 400 of the 435 representatives elected last November have college degrees. Of these, 32 have master’s degrees and 13 have more than one advanced degree of a doctorate. Not all of them are lawyers, though a slight majority—219—hold law degrees. The information comes from the "Congressiotial Index,” just published by Commerce Clearing House for coverage of the new 91st Congress. Congressmen are even more untypical of .Americans at large, who pride themselves on being the most mobile of people. No less than 276 members of the new House of Representatives are from districts in the states in which they were born. One myth that fails the test of statistics is the notion that southern congressmen are entrenched in seniority. The index reveals that of the i>8 men who have served in the House for 20 or more years, 34 are front the North. * Also contrary to belief, the road to Washington is not paved by service in state legislatures. Only 162 members of the 91st Congress came by that route. Backgrounds of others include 48 w'ho were teachers; 21 who were once newspaper publishers, editors or reporters; 10 former FBI agents; three medical doctors and three clergymen. Achievement in Olympic or professional sports preceded the election of three others. Commonest factor in the backgrounds of representatives is military service. .Almost 300 have s«*en such senice, dating from World War I on up to the present. Kissinger: Foreign Policy Is His Forte B> RAY C ROMl.KY NEA Washington (orrespondent WASHINGTON - In a very quiet wa\. Henry Kissinger Will exert a very heavy influence on the c-ourse NOT A SPARKPLUG Ty Cobb, probably the most magnificent competitor the game has evey known, could never spark the Tigw teams he jnanaged. All he couW do, in the main, •was infuriate his players by demanding that they play the game as he always did: with fangs bare"l ^ u »* grandchildren; and twij great- died yester-, George Houstina | grandchildren. rfnv Thursday at New Hope ^ ^ J; ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ UH'iiy poie yesieraay. children, was found d e a d oniployc of the former Baldwin''af'b.slfhurch with '"grandchildren, outside the Jet Bar. ■? 14 Ry^ber Co. died yesterday. Ile 'hik Hill ( emetery by the Woodward He had been shot ^as a member of the Catholic!Funeral Home. '*1*1 Knickerbocker . once in the chest. church, . .*>"''>■ will be at the funeralj .Surviving are two s o n s .! home after .3:30 p m tomorrow.! OXFORD - Private service preltminarv exam . , ^»eOrRe jr. OI roouac aim .loim ivu . inaiiiiuiK, on m.pivjrc -I .y. 1.10.0 Mannings ^ Bloomlield Hills; f 1 v e Oakland County W e 1 f d r e month-old examination is M heniiiea ipr ^ .jy,,... j.amont Department, died .Saturday, He residents Mr. and Mrs. Lester Thursday before Ponliae Dis ^_________mik n ‘ - ......................... ................... Julia Was a member of New Hope^^ Knickerbocker of St. Joseph, Ho.h Co,uh ond Mminino were »’"hek of Dclrol. Mrs. Margaret Church, , will be 11 a m. Wednesday at ” " 00 1 1 * M ,n Hm'lolotta of California and .Surviving are a .son, James the Bossardet Funeral Home, arrested Jan ..a mi sirne 1 Mitchell and Sii.san A, of Adrian: two daughters, with burial in Mount Pleasant ning was only i|,,ystina. both of Pontiac; 12 Mrs, Sally We.stmoreland of Cemetery, Oxford" Township, the ime of the crimc^^^t^ and 13 great-f)etroit and Mr.s, Allie While of Ulderic Loriviere bond. Requiem Mass for llldenc ------------------- l„iri\iere, 61, of 415 Voorheis ! Pontiac Mrs. .Sally Harris of Pontiac; and five brothers, including 'rhe child died yesterday. Surviving besides his parents are his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Preston Yost of Oxford In addition to the driver, John B. Coak, 20, of 4650 McGinnis, two passengers were injured, but were released after freat-ment. They are Kathy A. Schaef, 18, of 670 Garland, Brandon Township, and David Cornell, 16, of 3321 Perry sville, GroVeland Township. Oakland County sheriff’s deputies said Coak’s car careened across the center line after striking the fender of a friend’s car he was passing, j The accident happened short^i after 1 p.m. near Holly Road. ' The funeral is a ceremony that recognizes the intricate worth and dignity of man. It is not only a sociological statement that a death has occurred, but also a declaration that a life has been lived. mmm ^ SPARKS ~ GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME 4fi Williams St. Phjne FE 8-9288 Optometrists' Unit Will Eye Fifes Damage Court Ruling 2 Qty Honies Dr. Milton Hathaway, .^ « .• Barrington, Bloomfield Hills, '’''"‘’s damaged two Pontiac president of the Stale Board of homes last night. Examiners in Opiometrv, said Sp«rks ft'om a rubbish fire I ...ill HUniiKK nnrfiwere blamed by Pontiac the board will discuss and were blamed by review a Stale Supreme Court firemen for igniting the roof of decision on the unlicensed prac- « home owned by L. tice of a profes.slon at tomor- Washington at 439 Orchard row’s meeting. ^ l.dke, The court, in a prwedent Damage to llic frame and decision, determined; that the brick building from Hie 9 15 fllinrnev Bcneral actinc on P rn. fire was c.slimalcd by fire-. behalf of a* iicen.sing regulatory at $2,500 with $2,50 damage agency of the state, may haltfbe contents, the unlicensed practice of profession. Tl»e question involved a com.........„ , ■ „„„ plaint originally filed again.st Mrs. Nathan Howard «t <28 N. two optical firms in Grand The enuse .of the (ire| Rapids in 1962 bv the attorney bas not been delet mined, general, acting on behalf of the T tSio Lard of examiners in op. $1.(KX) to the bmldmg and $.5a«jma_ takm ^ prisons “But the state of the art (of doesnt l^l£-.well to war) has changed considerably niodeni psycttologicm Warfare/.. • now we have a-iiavchdlotfl-^ys the yss Pueblo's second in cal warfare envirmunent and I command. _ don’t think It (the code) appUes , ■ itself well in that environment.’* “The underlying principle be- Murphy was asked about the hind it must be maintained— code by an attorney for Chndr. that is, loyalty to our govern- Lloyd M. Bucher, skipper of the ment," Lt. Edward R. Murphy Pueblo, Bucher told th^ court Jr. told a Navy court of inquiry four weeks ago that North Ko-Monday after raying he signed reans used torture to make him a fraudulent spy confession fol- admit falsely to spying. Murphy lowing two days of North KQ-|was Bucher’s executive officer. ' CODE POSTED The court is investigating why the ship surrendered without a fight and the conduct of the crew as prisoners. Murphy, 31, was the first to appear in the conduct phase of the inquiry. He said he consid- ered his confession a deviation brtm the code. He said the code was posted on the intelligence ship before it was captured by the North Koreans last year. Its men were released 11 months later—Just before Christmas. The code,j»romuIgated by former President Eisenhower after the Korean War, prohibits US. military men from divulging anything but name, rank, serial number and date of birth to their captors. It also rays the men must make “every effort to escape." AEARINQ AID CENTER IfiCOIL. Rualitono A All Leading Instruments THOMAS i.jtpn.rroN SS W. Huran - Main Floor NOTICE TO City of Pontiac Dog Owners 1969 Dog Licontoo oro now duo and payable at the City Clork't Office, First Floor, City Hall. 450 Wide Track Drive, East, Pontiac, Michigan. FEE: Up to March 1 st After March 1 st »2.00 *3.00 It is necessary thot all dog owners in Oakland County produce a certificate that their dog (or dogs) has been voccinote'd against rabies within the last 12 months with Tissue Vaccine or within 24 months if vaccinated with Modified Live Virus in order to secure a 1969 dog license. If such owners do not possess such a certificate, one may be obtained from their locol VETERINARIAN or at the County.^operated clinic, located at 1200 North Telegraph Rood. ^ ' Olga BarkeUy, Publish: Fob. 6,18 and 34 CltyCUrk dealer ANNUAL V OF YEAR M:.(3T413ULAi{ BIG PICTURE! LOW PRICE! HANDCRAFTED ^ BIG SCREEN 18'PortoblelV Gracefully slim portable TV in a lightweight molded two-tone color cabinet. Charcoal color snd Off-Vyhite color. Top Carry Handle. Monopole Antenna. HANDCRAFTED 1 Carefully hsndwired chassis FULL PERFORMANCE! 20,000 volts of picture power for unsurpassed picture brightness and clarityl FULL VALUE! Deluxe Video Range Tuning System. Custom "Perma-Set" VHP Fine Tuning. Automatic •'Fringe-Lock" Circuit 3-Stage IF Amplifier. Front Mounted 5' x 3* Speaker. WHY NOT GET THE BEST *Dist. suggested retail price (Radio Dist- Co.) See Y©ur Nearby Zenith Dealer McCollum & Deon 409 E. Maple Birmingham Milks Appliance 1493 S. Woodward Birmirlghdm Clarkston Appliance 6 Nf. Main Clarkston Salley Refrigeratiqh ' 3819.M-15 Clarkston All City TV 2363 Orchord Lake Rd. Good Holfsekeeping Shop 51 W;, Huron St. Pontiac Bill Petrusha & Sons 1550 Union Lake Union Lake Celebrating On forMardi Gras Murphy said the Pupblo crewmen had several escape plans, but they were vetoed by the ship’s officers for lack of practicality. Murj^y raid he made a false confession to spying—and to invading North Korean territorial waters—but not before the North Koreans gave him three bloody, beatings and threatened twice to kill him and he heard what sounded like Bucher andi other officers confessing. Murphy said he was stripped to his shorts and forced to and balance on the balls of his feet with a stick about one and one-half inches thick behind his knees. The effect of the stick, he said, “is to deaden the sensation in the bottom of your legs. I lost control of my legs and started to quiver. “They hit me In the face and chest and kicked me backwards . another kicked me forward. It was back and forth until I was on the deck, and then they kicked me until I stood up. And then it was back down on tlie stick again. ^ “I don’t know how many evo- lutions like that I made but on at least six occasions I passed out from being kicked ... one of | the times I fell over I was kicked severely in the side of the head and it split my ear| open. There was an area on the floor completely c overed with blood from my ear and I was cut on the lip.” NEW ORLEANS (AP) -Masked merrymakers took over the city today during the Mflrdi Gras lunacy which attracts visitors from across the country who join in donning costumes and cavorting through the streets. Mardi Gras—the day before the beginning of the somber Lenten season—ends like a fairy tale -7 when the h i s t o r i c St. Louis Cathedral in the French Quarter strikes midnight. Then, Rex, king of the carnival, and Comus, the oldest Mardi Gras diety, drink a champagne toast. The crowds started filling the streets shortly after sunrise to await Rex, who started a long and glittering procession of color and music at 10 a.m. to blast off Mardi Gras 1969. The skies were partly cloudy and temperatures a chilly 36 to 40 degrees in the morning, but it was not cold enough to seriously' hamper the fun. One of the «ily sad notes in the celebrations leading up to Mardi. Gras was the death of New Orleans jazz great Adolph Paul Barbarin, 69, a drummer, who collapsed along a parade route Monday night. Hod's Radio 770 Orchard Lake Rd. Pontiac K-D TV Sales fir Service 506 S. Saginaw Pontiac Bill Petrusho & Sons 77 S. Telegraph Pontiac John Stefanski 1157 W. Huron Pontiac Swedt's Radio & TV 422 W. Huron Pontiac Tele-Tee Service 419 Main Rochester MAKE IT A HABIT TO MEET YOUR FRIENOS FOR A RELAXINQ PAUSE AT Cocktail Louige In the Heart of Downtown Pontiac 85 N. Saginaw DON’T POP YOUR TOP OVER Thli y*or poy only what you must. Notionwida ptnonnal art ax-praiily tralnfd la ditcavar tvary daducllon that yau art tnlillad la. You may ba lurpriitd on whol daduclloni you'vo boon missing . . . and Nallonwldt Wa guorantoa our rolurnt for accuracy. If wo maha on trror which cocti you a penally or Inlarost, wo will pay Iht ptnally or Intorait. NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK nriationwide L/ I I INCOME TAX SERVICE HOURS! Mon.-rrl.9-a>30 Sal.9-S>00 Sun.H-2>00 PHONE 335-1490 FOR INFORMATION 1 Mile East of Telegraph 330 West Huron, Pontiac, Michigan THE COAT DRESS: makes a smashing spring entrance shaped in acetate backed rayon/sjlk. Brassy buttons, flippy back pleats, roomy pockets, and a high rise belt make it a young junior's favorite. In 7-15 »26 SHOP MON. THRU SAT---TILL 9 P.M---CHARGE ITI MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER, TELEGRAPH A SO. LAKE RD. IMIit haffins wkea yaat eheeUag aeeaaat Maaea staws ZBM? The Bank on the GROW TAKES OVER It astablitha* a credit raterve for you. Suppose your checking account balance iw $230 and you wish to b*y a color television set on sole for $395 ... If you hove a Check-Mote Line Of Credit, you can write a personal check for the full amount of $395. When this check is received by Pontiac State Bank, it automatically activates a transfer of funds to your checking account. Since transfers are always in hundred dollar multiples there would be a $200 transfer in this cate. This gives you a checking balance of $430 from which the $395 check is deducted. You now have a checkbook balance of $35 and on outstanding loan balance of $200 . .. With Check-Mate you never need worry about an overdrawn check. 6MS” 12 Convenient Offices, Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation with Deposits Insured to $15,000.00 THE PONTIAC VRKSS. TUESDAY. FEBRCaIiY 18, 1969 By tlie time of her wedding, today s bride*to-be has an excellent chance of acquiring many qf the beautiful things for her table which she s dreamed of owning. Newlyweds want to go first-class right from the start — and first-class it usually is, thanks to. wedding gift bounty from friends and relatives. The increasing generosity of gift-givers, due mostly to a general rise in affluence, is likely to be reflected in three accessories high on the bride's “wish-list” — sterling silver flatware, fine china, and crystal. DEMAND FOR QUALITY Young brides — better educated, more sophisticated, and with greater spending power than ever before — are increasingly chooshig mOre beautiful, more elegant tableware. Richly-decorated dinnerware patterns in gold rim design, over-all iSth century European designs, cobalt blue and gold bandings., and formal pure white or white-on-whlte fine china are the most-often selected patterns, say buyers. In crystal stemware, popular choices are the deeply cut patterns. Clear crystal is preferred over colored crystal, except in casual dinnerware categories. The demand for sterling silver flatware has soared as the annual marriage count approaches 2*000,000. Brides and silver have been closely woven together for many generations, but today tliere are practical, as well as traditional and romantic, reasons for choosing solid silver. The very fact of its great and growing Intrinsic value makes it a consistently good investment. There's the assurance too, that there’s nothi%g to wear out — or off — in sterling, for it’s solid silver all the way through. Moreover, it’s one of the few things which actually will increase in value with use, for the happy fact is that the soft, lovely “patina” which blooms on the surface of sterling after long use is prized by collectors of silver. FINE CRAFTSMANSHIP OF STERLING A final imxwrtant consideration for the bride in selecting solid silver flatware is that its great value guarantees that it will receive the finest craftsmanship and design. The silversmith, knov;'’ing that the metal he is working upon will last virtually forever, feels it worthy of the best he can supply in art, craft, and care. Consider, for instance, a few of the 60 steps which can go into the making of something as simple as a spoon of solid silver. First, the artist-designer sketches the design, and a three-dimensional model is fashioned in clay, wax or plaster. Then, a greatly magnified bronze casting is made in which all tlie tiny details of the pattern aie BEAUTIFUL TREASURES for the bride to cherish all her life include sterling silver flatware, silver hoUoware, fine china and crystaL Gift registry consultants advise that^she register her patterns several months before the wedding. worked out. The master die-cutter may spend as much as three weeks carving the single set of steel dies. Great attention is given to all of its details, and any small surface imperfections are removed by sand-buffing with fine pumice and oil as abrasive. Finally, in the spoon’s “cosmetic” stage, it may be oxidized to darken its recesses, and is polished to glowing perfection. Perhaps the industrial psychologists are right when they say that in times of stress, people look back and grasp did concepts for self-certainty. Today’s mini-skirted bride-to-be is the girl who’s finding that the classic standards of beauty, quality and craftsmanship are important elements in the dining accessories which she and her family will use ~ and which will become tomorrbw’s heirlooms. BRIDE’S S'TERLING can be paired with gay, informal earthenware, bright linens and colored glassware fp^ dining in an informal mopd. Gone are the days when sterling was saved"forgood”-we ’knownow that constant use simply improves its looks by adding a lustrous, soft patina. / Ar» Your Schools Acfivitios Now Appearing in The Press? THE PONTIAC PRESS Turn to This Page Tuesdays, Fridays for Senior High School News PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 18. 1969 B-1 Communal Living Experiment Central Yries 'Live-In' By PURVIS HUNT JR. A new program instigated at Pontiac Central High involves 27 students and 14 teachers living together at St. Basil’s Novitate on Giddings Road. The students and faculty memb^s left yesterday, and will remain there for the entire school Each day the students and faculty members participating in this experimental pro^am will continue their regular academic work. Since they’ll still be required to attend school sessions, they’ll commute daily to and from school byL car. The 41 members of this “Communal Living Project’’ will each have their own private rooms, which contain one bed, one light, one desk and other facilities similar to that of an average dormitory room. When asked the purpose of this program, faculty member Mike Kenhey said, “The purpose is to create a situation that will enhance communication and understanding between all types of students.” He went oh to add that secondly, “The program is niso to provide a situation whereby a spirit of equality exists between students and teachers, leading hopefully, to a greater understanding of one another.” PERSONALITY TEST Before going on the "Communal Living Project,” a sociogram, which is a testing device used to determine change in personality, was given to each member of the program. The findings of this test will be compared with the results of a similar test to be taken upon the completion of the project. If this program is a success, several similar programs will be conducted. Faculty members participating in the project are Richard Ayling, Chester Bowling, Joanne Dembinski, Susan Derrick, Bonnie Harris, Bryan Hawley, Betty Heimke, Bill Hoffman, Connie Hubble, Margaret Jones, Mike Kenney, Diana McBride, Helen Norton and Elizabeth Pearson. Dance, tentatively scheduled for March By paying only $1, students, will be given a questionnaire to be filled out-completely i-nd honestly. These forms will be set to be processed, and on the night of the dance, each will meet his or her match. Tomorrow, exchange students from Bloomfield Hills Lahser, Waterford Kettering and Clarkston will be at Central. Student guides will lead the visitors around for the entire day, showing and explaining to them various aspects of the school. Students who will take part in the live-in are Stanley Davis, Sue Elliott, Cathy Esser, Russ Fimbinger, Debby Geans, George Glazier, Richard Hellhake, John Hershey, Micky Larson, Marge Mangurn, Molly McIntyre, David McNeir, Calvin Milton, Angela Moran; Victor Na-cianceno, Mary Nordlund, Debbie Outland, Yvonne Rowls, Chris Runyan, Don Russell, Calvin Smith, Jeff Stern, Joan Sundahl, Eugene Walchesky, Brenda White, JoAnn Williams and Paul William. Students wondering who’s the right guy or doll shouldn’t pass up the chance given to t.hem by the Pontiac Central Student Council. The pouncil is sponsoring Central’s first Data (computer) EXCHANGE VISIT During this time, .“iO PCH students will go to these .schools, to learn more about them, and existing classroom and social situations. The Student Council, in order to plan monthly activities for the PCH family, is open for suggestions from the student body. Students having suggestions should give them either to a council member, or drop them in the Tomahawk box. Sacred Heart Keeps Honor Society Busy Thus far, the council, with a $854.14 treasury balance, tentatively plans to have a roller skating party, a film festival, a forum on human relations and plays given by a professional group. At the end of the first Semester, 25 Central students had achieved 4.0 scholastic averages. By obtaining this straight-A-average they are recognized by being listed on the “Principal’s Honor RoU.” 7 A BIT TOO FAR—Bridging the generation gap has the Russell (left) and Jeff Stern threw hint a cum. The trio is full approval of Bryan Hawley (Pontiac Central High School participating in a trial project, “comrilunal living.” Twenty-math in^tractOcl,, but the blanket brigade headed by Don seven students and 14 teachers are involved. At Kettering Mmkiqns Are Sharp By DONNA FURLONG Wati^ford Kettering’s band has again .' brougHthondii^ to its school. Thirty-seven of the 67 students participating in the Michigan School Band and Orchestra Association from Kettering received a “one” rating, the highest award given. These 37 students will now go on to perform in the state festivals March 22. Receiving “ones” for solo performances were Peggy Cahape, Rick Dale, Kathy Fourn, Ken Hebenstriet, Laurie Jackson, Sue Johns, Sandra Schmidt, Margie Taylor, Nancy Thompson, Jay Young and Linda Zirkle. and Mona Haviland, class flirt; Bob Orosey and Janet Barton, ’ most courteous; Dave Stone and Karen 01ms, class wit; and Gary Allen and Louise Marshall, prettiest smile. Continuing are Charlie Patrick and Regina Farmer, most shy; Tom Donaldson and Lynn Batchelor, most allround; Mac Miller and Nancy Hogarth, most valuable to class; Dave Powell and Debbie Baer, most friendly: and Jeff Appel, Mark Mercer and Pam. Leitner, prettiest eyes. Rice Pep Club Workmgfor Big Cage Turnouts By TERESA FIASCHETTI The National Honor Society is providing one source of leadership at the Academy of the Sacred Hear.t. Mary Tindall is nresident of the K.S. Wansboro Chapter of the N.H.S., HoUis Gibbs, vice president; Mary K. Riccardo, secretary: and Sue Tindall, treasurer. The society has already redesigned the learning center, where students can use resource material and consult college catalogues. Society include Marcia Murdoch, Mary Claire Theisen, Joan Colombo, Julie Kircher, Anne Reynolds, Mary Anne MacKenzie, Sue Judge and Teresa Fiaschetti. SCHOLARS LISTED Senior honor students are Gay Behler, Jeffrey Bisanz, Arnold Finkelstein, Myra Manville, Marilyn Quango, Lee Reben-neck, Carol Sempere, Janet Smith, Jan Waters and Mary Yee. The five juniors who made the “Principal’s Honor Roll” are Linda Emsley, Ray Henry, Thomas McKelvey, Jeff Rosner and Carol Washington. Sue West, Sue Schmidt, Pat Schulte and Maureen Darin are provisional members. Completing the list are sophomores Margaret Batts, Beth Bogert, Elizabeth Brown, Maureen Coulter, Gayle GenereaUx, Patricia Larson, Janis Merkovitz, Susanne Papatheodor, Mavis Porter and Carol Wetterhahn. " -★ By STEPHEN PALMS of the high quality of this year’s basketball squad, one of the primary activities at Brother Rice High School concerns the Pep Club. Ifltrodiretory changes i» the curriculum have begun with a planned program of outside speakers. Revamping of the high school curriculum proposes the introduction of a phase system, in which each student would proceed at her own speed, as well as the Introduction of honors courses. Such a phase program is already in use in the lower grades, with much success. Members of the Sacred Heart Honor Lady of Mercy Varsity Swim Team Prepares for League Preliminaries DUETS HONOlffiD Duet “ones” were received by Laurie Jackson, Peggy Cahape, Jahet Martin and Linda Zirkle. A trio was made up of Sharon Brill, Merrillyn Burt and Sara Lanibert. . Quartets were John Baier, Wanda Corey, Ken Hebenstriet, Sue Johns, Craig Mercer, Linda Postle, Duane Shapoe and Carol Wareck. Curt Darling, Monica Hester, Dave Perkins, Mark Taylor and Larry Thompson made up a percussion ensemble, while Rick Dale, Dave Hinson, Doug Johnson, Jerry Mohlman, Scott Parrot and Jay Young were a brass sextet. Concluding the list of those receiving “ones” were Debbie Daubner, Gloria Gavette, Chris Gibson, Darrel Karbginsky, Gatha Lewis, D e b b i e Novess and Jean Proudfoot who made up a clarinet choir. The students are under the direction of George Fetter. John Williams and Marcia Steehler took most likely to succeed; while Dennis Wooster and Nancy Stoppert are most athletic; Bob Earl and Hazel Goodwin, most school spirited; Harry Booker and Debbie Dunkel, m^st attractive; and Bill Crooks and Sue Thompson, most talkative. Thursday night Kettering’s vocal music department will present its»annual Winter Concert. It will begin at 7 p.m. with tickets sold at the door. Led by cheerleader Mike Mayer and Warrior Ken Calvert, the student body turned out en masse at the last games of the season against Austin, Catholic (Central and U. of D. High. The Catholic League championships began last Sunday at the U. of D. events building, with another tremendous cheeriag effort by Rice Students. N. Farmington Grad Site Set By MARY ANNE MADDEN Our Lady of Mercy’s varsity swim team is preparing for league preliminaries March 3. Since moving to the new school complete with pool, the team has never lost in dual, league or state competition. Under the direction of Mrs. Deieris Yager, it has been victorious in 18 consecutive meets, league action 'and has claimed the state championship twice. Cocaptains^ are Michelle Riley and Marinanne Roler, , >r Other swimmers Include Sally Sherk, Lara Pasternak and diver Marla Huber. The annual Faculty-student basketball game will be held immediately after school in the gym. mmmmmmmmmm Additional School News on Page B- 2 MOCK election WINNERS The results of the senior mock election finals held laA week are Hank Longo VISITATION SET Tomorrow, members of the Student Council will participate in a visltiOn program with Pontiac Central High. Those students going to PCH are Sue Barkell, Bob Orosey, Paul Rexfprd, Karen Church, Greg Windeler, Gail Miller, Sandy Whitehead, Ruth Strong, Mary Maguire, Bob Davis, Maria Dika, Kathy Foum, Gary Bratfy, Roxanne Steehler and Unda McClunei Acting as ushers for the Central students visiting Kettering will be Mary Sies, Shelly Baumgrass, Dave Liming, Dan Orders, Sue Work, Alice Voss, Joyc Stricklin, Chris Siano, Connie Couteuir, Dennies Chavaliuex, Jenny Collins, Bev Galloway, Sue Teague, Terry and Larry Bums. . Another activity in which many sefiiors have taken an active interest is plays appearing at the Hillberry Classic and Bonstelle Theaters. Such plays as “RichaW III,” “A Elea In Her Ear,” and “The Good Woman of Setzuan,” have drawn a sizable number of Rice Seniors. OTHER PLAYS Other plays such as “Streetcar Named Desire” and “A Long Day’s Journey Into Night” will also be seen in the near future. By KATffl CAMPBELL The Farmington Board of Education reconsidered the wishes of the pajority of Farmingtpn area seniors and their parents when, by a four-to-three vote, they approved Fqrd Auditorium as the location for the two high schools’ graduation ceremonies. During a recent’ meeting members of the community asked that the Ford Auditcffium question, which had been defeated at an earlier meeting, bi brought up for rediscussion. At the Marian Mardi Gras last weekend. Rice students operated a coke bottle toss, with much success. It was staffed by Student Coimcil members. Another Vote was called for. Six board members who had previously knotted the vote at three to three did not change their votes. But Mrs. P. A. SpHh, who was absent at the previous board meeting, cast her ballot in favor of holding graduation at Ford. Many students are busy planning future activities. Mike McGill is platfning the senior tup; the Ski Gub, a weekend outing; the intramural committee, its agenda of spring sports; and the Student Council, Galway Fair. By holding the graduation ceremonies at Ford Auditorium, more tickets will be availabl& Instead of the two tickets originally promised, each graduating senior will now have three tickets with more available upon special request. At Clarkston High Honor Society Induction Held COMFORTCITED Other advantages are the comfort supplied by theater-type cushioned seats and air-conditioning in the auditorium. Arrangements for dates and times that the two ceremonies are to be held have been made by the administrations of the two high schools. North Farmington seniors will graduate June 8 at 3 p.m. ' ‘ If"' Oorri" ll]fllb- unless you knnu .uHht ‘v . By TRUdY BEALL “I light the light of character.” So began Garkston High School’s National Honors Society ipduction assembly last week as the officers prepared for the reading of the names of the newly elected members. Selected to this scholastic organization were seniors Ruth Addis, Cathy Auten, Gail Cowling, Maud Eliiott, Diana Fox, Ron Gallegly, Pam Gerber and Leora Jacobs. Officers of the Natiqnal Honors Society at Clarkston High School, all of whom were chosen during thdr junior year, are Kirk Beattie, president; Don Mayo, vice^ p^sident; and Lynn Race, secretary. Responsible for these news items are Claudia Gordon, editor-in-chief; Gail Cowling, layqut editor; Connie Rush, assignment editor; Polly Hanson, photography editor; Jim Navarre, sports editor; and Mark Cowen, copyreader. OTHER MEMBERS Also elected were Gary Klann, Jeannie Lussier, Gaiy McMillen, Jan Norberg, Rich Porrj^l Jill Sanson and Donna lliompson. Other members are Mike Yarbrough, Mark Cowen and Kathy Grogan. Mrs. Harold Passineau is'the society’s adviser. / . ★ Ever since school began last September, the newspaper'staff of the “Wolf Cry” has supplied al the students with news of|current and future happenings. Supplying the news ai'ticles are Pam Guilds, Ellen Fellows, Mike Kaul, Rich Klein, Sue McAnally, Kirk Phillips, Laura Willits and Martoa Woodward. Responsible for taking and developing all the pictures for the bimonthly publicaticMi is Jim Gark. Adviser for the “Wolf Cry” is Liada Munro. 'The Ford Auditorium is located on Jefferson Avenue across from the City-County Building in downtown Detroit. New York Gty will be the destination of those students embarking on NFH’s . senior trip April 8-11. Students will leave Detroit Tuesday, April 8, and return Friday April 11. Approximate cost of the trip is $145.55. This price includes airline tickets, hotel, meals, sight-seeing tours, bus transportation and all entry fees. Such sights as Central Park, Radio City Music Hall, the Statue of Liberty, Chinatown, The United Nations Buildings and two Broadway shows will be viewed by students during their stay at the Hotel Taft. , , , • i yaure WBllina in'^DUt m:m WORKING TOGETHER-Members of the Academy of the Sacred Heart National Honor Society (from left) Julie Kircher, Sue West and Sue Tindall are working'on displays for their new project-r-to revamp thejjigh school!curriculum. '•V . B—2 TIIK rOXTIAC PRESS. Tl ESDAV. FERHl ARV 18, 2 at Lahser Merit Finalists By r.RETTHEN HAAS Thp National Merit Scholarship Corporstion accepted two senior students at Bloomfield Hills Uhser High School last week as finalists in the National Merit Scholarship competition. As qualified candidates for the merit scholarships, Chris Baum and Nadine Penkava rank in tlje upper one-half per cent of the nation’s high school graduates for 1%9 tliris is a member of the Lahser Bowling Club and enjoys tennis and , skiing. Nadine has been accepted to' the Honors College at the University of Michigan and plans to major in drama. A student of hurhanities, behavioral science, trigonometry, French and human values, she also plays the clhrinet in l«nhser’s concert band. capable of conducting electricity or acting as an insulator. This newly-developed form of semiconductor will make possible '‘flat T.V. sets that could be hung on a wall” and "small computers which would operate on household current.’’ Chris hopes to attend the Air' Force Academy in Colorado Springs following graduation, then continue a career in the Air Force. At present, he is taking cour.ses in chemistry, p h y s i c s, trigonometry, humanities and French. Nadine appeared recently in Lahser’s production of "Romanoff and Juliett’’ and contributes to the yearbook. Today Electronics Club members and other, interested students will visit Energy Conversion Devices of Troy, originator of the new "glass-like’’ semiconductor. Tlic device is an electronic component The students hope to learn about the recently-publicized “Ovshinsky Effect" named after its discoverer, Stanford R. Ovshinsky, president of Energ^r Conversion. Officers for the Lahser Chapter of the National Hdnor Society were elected last week. Scott Whiffhg is president of the organization; Armen Megregian, vice president and treasurer; Carol Pitt, secretary; and Dee Cook, historian. Amateur Hour of Adelphian By PAT EDWARDS Adelphian Academy’s annual Amateur Hour was presented la.st week as a public evening program. The contest was Judged and prizes were awarded, a new procedure initiated this year. First prize went to the Junior Boys’ Quartet, composed, of Chip Chaffin, Dwight Donesky, Don Kalvoda and Roy Schaeffer, who dres.sed up as a barbershop quartet and gave a rendition of "Kentucky Babe." Rochester Sets Music Display Thursday Night Film Showing by Bible Club Set at Milford The Senior Girls’ Trio (Kathy DcBolt, Vicki Haincr and Sherry Wolt) Uxik second prize with the song, "Friendly Persua.sion." They were attired in identical blue iormals and short while gloves. There was a tic for third place and two prizes were awarded. One went to a girls’ trio, consisting of Cheryl Chaffin, Doris l..eavitt and Lynaia Widing. Dressed In patriotic red, white and blue, they sang "This Is My Country.” By MOLLY PETERSON "Music! Music!’’ is the motto of the music department of Rochester Senior High School this year. The department Is presenting a performance the students of Rochester High and all othef music lovers 'Thursday at 8 p.m. i;i the school auditorium. ‘ Tickets are available from any choir member or at the door for 75 cents for adults and 50 cents for students. By RaSE MAKI The Milford High School Bible Club Is presenting "Without Onion," a film displaying teen-agers striving to find themselves in today’s society. This film will be shown Saturday from 7-9 p.m., in the high school Little Theater. The Bible Club was formed recently by those students of Milford Hjgh School who are interested In Christian life through the Bible. President Karen Kodden feels that “this club is the greatest fellowship a school can have." Hoy Juopperi, ninth grade geography teacher, invites the public and student body to attend this admission free film. •WITHOUT A SONG’ 'The other went to Lynaia Widing, who, dressed In a white full-length gown with pink accents, sang "Without a Song.’’ Other numbers featured were Judy Dixon and Itoug Keller, who sang "Sixteen Going On Seventeen”; Gary Taber, with a saxophone solo, “The Impossible Dream”; Sue Struntz, who sang "Winds of the South”; Dave Ashton and Dan Warson, with a skit entitled "Joe’s Soda Fountain,’’ a satire of the routine done by Jackie Gleason and Frank Fontaine; and Sharon Widing, who played "Czardas” on the organ. Performing in the concert are the Men’s Glee Club, Treble Choir and Concert Choir. Music will consist of pieces from Bach to Bernstein. Included In the program are such favorites as "Ixiwlands” and “Streets of Laredo” to be sung by the Men’s Glee Club. BARBERSHOP ARRANGEMENT There will be a barbershop arrange- Vice President Connie Welberry, senior, and secretary Sue Hamilton, junior, are pleased with the club's progression but encourage more student participation. Tliere wilt be an assembly Monday at 10 a m. in the Milford High School gym ■s the W^yne Oakland County League ♦displays vocal music talent found throughout six district schools. This assembly Includes specialty numbers Including soloist Karen Palmer, a senior from Milford High. “Contests mark student ambition at Milford High," said senior Cora Hoff richler. Art Club president The Art Club and creative writing classes are designing an art-literary magazine for student enjoyment. The magazine should be done by May.- A contest to give the magazine a name b open to the student body. Tlie winner receives a free copy of the magazine. Also held last week was the .state American Temperance Society (ATS) oratorical contest. The s c h o o 1 s repre.sentod this year were Adelphian Academy, .Andrews University Academy, Cedar Lake Academy and Grand Ledge Academy. Included In the contest were Jingles, posters and cartoons done, by the students, all portraying the evils of liquor, tobacco and narcotics. ment of “Mr. Moon” performed by the Glee Club. The 'Treble Choir will add to the program with its renditions of “I Could Have Danced All Night" from “My Fair Lady’' and “A Wonderful Guy” from "South Pacific” and songs from "Camelot.” To conclude the program, the Concert Choir will sing .selections from the hit “West Side Story.” Many members of the Rochester High School band were present at the Solo and Ensemble festival which was held at Berkley High School during the past week. AWARD WINNERS 6 OF 13 PR1ZF,S Of the 13 prizes awarded, Adelphian look six. Junior Frank Haynes took first prize in the oratorical contest and senior IJnda Patterson, placed third in the posters’ category. AA pla^d third in th cartoons’ category, with the help of senior Pam Bush. Gary Taber, placed first; Doug Keller, second; and Crystal Cantrell, third in the jingles’ competition. Succeeding in rating firsts were senior Tom Dcttman who played a French horn solo; a brass quartet made up of senior Eric Pearson and sophomores Steve Weaver, Leon Frendberg and Bill Milligan; and a clarinet duet performed by seniors Robin Ludwig and Deb Show. Other participants in the program were Jim Green, senior; Sue Moeller, sophomore; Amy Brown, sophomore; Grace Chapman, senior; Sue Carlisle, senior; Paul Moagevero, sophomore; and Dale Thicker, junior. ;vSCHOOL NEWS F>.>^R0UNDUP Country Day By JANET IVORY lleadmlslrcSs Marjorie Sallie disclosed the honor roll for Bloomfield Country Day School's term and semester. An 85 per cent or higher grade must be attained in each subject. To make the high academic honor roll a 90 per cent must be achieved in each class. One girl qualified for the high honor roll. She Is Wendy Johnson, who also received a 90 per cent or better on all her exams. Ing dance with the ‘C" club at Cran-brook. Lauri Stanton Is the president of "K” Club. To be a member of the club, a girl must earn the designated number of credits in each sport she plays in gym classes. . Credits are given to students who demonstrate an excellence in skill and sportsmanship in each sport. Gran brook Freshmen Dawn Forshew, Jan JLucas and Melinda Mihay qualified .for the term and semester. Tina Spilzley is the only sophomore who made the honor list. Junior Karen Bentley qualified for the term and .semester. Dawn Higley made the list for ihe term and Elaine Merrick, the semester. Senior Shari Lightslone qualified for |he term. This year it was decided that credits In modeifri dance would no 1 o n g e r be awarded. Dance instnictor Jesse Sinclair said she considered modern dance to be a form of art. Lapeer By SUE DeARMOND The Lapeer High School band won 11 first and four second awards at the Solo-i:nsemble Band Concert held at Fenton. The junior American literature class, along with Mrs. Raymond Neff, music teacher, attended Meadow Brook Theatre. They saw Eugene O’NeiH's play. "Ijong Day’s Journey Into Night” Friday Mi»s Sallie and two ^eniors. Lore Moran Missy Scripps, surprised the entire,school with a St. Valentine’s party.' All of those who placed either first or ‘ ..........1 tec ■ second In the competition will teceive medals. The Student Council at present is devising a plw for a more efficient student government. More than 300 seniors from six independent schools converged on Cranbrook School, Bhumifield Hills, today for Senior Government Day. Experts in the fields of taxation, law enforcement, civil rights, political parties, juvenile problems, area development, education, health, welfare, conservation and penal institutions presented case statements during the morning session. In the afternoon the main group broke into smaller segments for seminars and question-and-answer periods. Among the experts are Irving Rubin, of *^ansportation and Land Use Study; E. Robert Turner, SoutJieast Michigan Council of Governments; Mrs. Ada Kendall, conimiinity agent, Clianey Elementary . Sc’hool, Detroit; Dr. Jerry Tobias, director. juvenile division, Bloomfield Township Police Dept.; and E. Ross Hanson, renresenting the Birmingham Board of Education and the Kingswood board of directors. Schools involved are Cranbrook School. Kingswood Sc'hool Cranbrook, Detroit Country Day, Convent of the Sacred Heart, (firossle Polnte UnNersity School and Liggett. IMPORTANT ROLES / ^ Kingswood By MARY STUART The “K” Club at Kingswood School is sponsoring a ski weekend at Sugar Loaf ^ Resort Feb. 28-March 1. OHginally. the ski trip was to include only the 80 members of the club, but later the invitation was extended to all Kingswood students. The club’s activities entail weekly g\ m locker inspection and a joint, fund-rais- 'Die plan, introduced by a committee of the present Student Council, suggested making the council smaller to allow for more effectiveness and greater accomplishment. The plan will be voted on at the next meeting, and if passed, will go into effect this Spring. Takipg important organizational and leadership parts froiti Cranbrook School were: Mark Eaton. Ann Arbw; Rod Fonda, Akron, 0.,-and Mike Langworthy, Grand Rapids. From Kingswood were Betsy Austin, Bloorrifield Hills; Cathy Burton, Birmingham’. and Linda Brown, Oxford. SHAKESPE^ARE PLAY The Drama Club, sponsored by Joan Bcland, English and .'.pcech teacher,' is planning to attend a peri.irmance of Shakespeare’s famed 'Twelfth Night” at Ba\ City Handy High School. L Sptmsored by'^Michigan State University’s continuing education service, Senior Government Day is "designed to mfke the study of local and state government more meaningful to high school seniors’. ' Attention! Employers - Employees of OaMand County OAKUND COMMUNITY COLLEGE OFFERS OVER 100 TECHNICAL PROGRAMS & COURSES On March 10th, 1969 OAKLAND COMMUNITY COLLEGE is again bringing to you the Spring Semester of Technical and Vocational courses which have been taught in the Pontiac area for some years. This is on extension of on ongoing Apprentice & Technical program now serving General Motors and smaller manufacturers in North Oakland County. OCC's Community Service Division offers a unique program for ANYONE who wishes to further their education, upgrade their present job or become technically oriented to industry todoy. THE APPRENTICE RELATED INSTRUCTION PROGRAM IS APPROVED BY THE BUREAU OF APPRENTICE TRAINING, DEPARTMENT OF LABOR The minimum registretlqn per class Is 15, therefore, we urge you toie(tgi:i^er NOW. REGISTRATION INFORMATION LOCATIOI^: Pontiac Central High School APPRENTICE & TECHNICAL EDUCATION OFFICE 250 Witt Huron Stroet, Pontiac, Michigan DATE: Febroory 17, 1969 to February 28, 1969 TIME: Monday: 8:30 o.m.-9 p.m.—Tuogdoy; 8:00 o.m.-9:00 p.ih. Wodnotdoy: 8:30 o.m.-9:00 p.m.—Thursdoy: 8:00 o.m.-9:00 p.m. Friday: 8:00 o.m.-4:30 p.m. • TUITION: Retidenta of Oioklond County. . . .....f. ... ..... 9.00 per credit hour Non-Residentt of Oakland County. CLASSES BEGIN MARCH 10, 1969 . 12.00 por credit hour FOR FURTHER INFORMATION PLEASE CALL: 332-0236—338.6101 PRE-APPRENTICE PROGRAM . . . .48 Hn- 3 Creditc 3 CrediH TET 101 Reading Comprehension.................................................... (Study end reading habits, sjoelllng and vocabulary, comprehension end techniques of reading subject r proper procedures In test teking.) TEM 101 Basic Mathematics............. .............. ............................ ...........48 Hrs. (Addition, subtraction, multiplication, divIsIcAi of whole numbers, fractions and decimals, percent tquere root, erea and voluma of geometric figures, measurements, metric system, algebra of simpla formulas.) TED 101 Basic Blueprint Reading............................................. .................48 Hrs. 3 Credits (Interpretation of three-view drawings, sections^* Isometric and oblique drawing, development ofplans, elevations, isometric details, sketching, reading of blueprints.) TEM 102 Introduction to Algebra. .................................. ..........................48 Hrs. 3 Credits (Positive ar\d negative numbers, simple equations, formulas, polynomials, equations, factoring radicals, simple quadratics.) TET 105 Phyiicoi Science (mechanics) ..........................................• .... .48 Hrs. 3 Credita Work, energy, and powder, motion of bodies, and forces. TEM 103 Introduction to Geometry............................................................. .48 Hrs. 3 Credita (Study of plane geornetric figures, lines, angles, triangles, quadrilateral, circles end their properties.) TET 090 Pre-Apprentice' Program ..........................,............................. 70 Hrg.' 4 Credits A refresher program in mathematics, mechanics, blueprint reading, and spacial relations, and diagonostic testings to aid the apprentice applicant. APPRENTICE AND EIT (UPGRADER) RELATED INSTRUCTION APD 811 Shop Dwg. 1 48 Hrs 2 Cr APD 812 Shop Dwg. II 48 Hrs 2 Cr APD 82| Die Design 1 48 Hrs 2 Cr APD 822 Die Design II 48 Hrs 2 Cr APD 823 Die Design III 48 Hrs 2 Cr APD 824 Die Design IV 48 Hrs 2 Cr APD 831 Pattern Design 48 Hrs 2 Cr APD 832 Pot. Design II 48 Hrs 2 Cr APD 833 Pot. Design III 48 Hrs 2 Cr APE 812 Industrial Elec. 48 Hrs 3 Cr APE 821 Electricity DC 1 48 Hrs 3 Cr APE 822 Electricity DC II 48 Hrs 3 Cr APE Electricity AC 1 48 Hrs 3 Cr APE 826 Electricity AC II 48 Hrs 3 Cr APE 827 Elect. AC III 48 Hrs 3 Cr APE 830 Elect. Code 48 Hrs 3 Cr APE 841 Electronics 1 48 Hrs 3 Cr APE 842 Electronics II 48 Hrs 3 Cr APE 843 Electronics III 48 Hrs 3 Cr APM 811 Geo-Algebro 48 Hrs 3 Cr APM 815 Log & Slide Rule 48 Hrs 3 Cr APM 821 Plane Trig 48 Hrs 3 Cr APM 823 Solid Trig 48 Hrs 3 Cr APM 826 Compound Angles 24 Hrs 1 Cr APM 841 Intro, to Calculus 48 Hrs 3 Cr APP 811 Physics of Mech. 24 Hrs 1 Cr APP 812 Physics of Fluids 24 Hrs 1 Cr APP 813 Physics of Heat 6r Atom 24 Hrs 1 Cr APD 841 Tool Design I 48 Hrs 2 Cr APD 842 Tool Design II 48 Hrs 2 Cr APD 843 Tool Design III 48 Hrs 2 Cr APD 850 Sheet Metol Layout 48 Hrs 2 Cr APD 355 Structural Blueprint Reading 48 Hrs 2 Cr APD 860 Pipe & Tube Isometric 48 Hrs 2 Cr APE 811 Basic Elec. Blueprint Reading 48 Hrs 3 Cr APP 814 Physics of Elec. APT 810 Use of Froming Sq. APT 813 Plumbing Code APT 817 Rigging APT 820 Mochine Hond Tools APT 824 Machinery Handbook APT 827 Gears and Gearing APT 830 Industrial Safety APT 840 Fluid Dynamics APT 843 Hydraulics 24 Hrs 1 Cr 24 Hrs 1 Cr 48 Hrs 3 Cr 48 Hrs 3 Cr 48 Hrs 3 Cr 48 Hrs 3 Cr 48 Hr 3 Cr 24 Hrs 1 Cr 48 Hrs 3 Cr 48 Hrs 3 Cr APT 847 Pneumatics APT 850 Metallurgy APT 853 Strength of Mot. APW 811 Welding A I APW 812 Welding A II APW 813 Welding A IN APW 821 Welding G I APW 822 Welding G II 48 Hrs 3 Cr 48 Hrs 3 Cr 48 Hrs 3 Cr 48 Hrs 3 Cr 48 Hrs 3 Cr 48 Hrs 3 Cr 48 Hrs 3 Cr 48 Hrs 3 Cr GENERAL TECHNICAL COURSES TEA 111 Automotives 1 48 Hrs 2 Cr TEA 112 Automotives II 48 Hrs 2 Cr TED 101 Basic BP Reading 48 Hrs 2 Cr TED 102 Intermediate BP 48 Hrs 2 Cr TED 103 Advanced BP Reading 48 Hrs 2 Cr TED 110 Basic Drafting 48 Hrs 2 Cr TED 115 Pictorial lllust. 48 Hrs 2 Cr TED 120 Descriptive Geo. 48 Hrs 2 Cr TED 130 Architectural Dwg. 1 48 Hrs 2 Cr TED 131 Architectural Dwg. II 48 Hrs 2 Cr TEE 101 Basic Elect. 48 Hrs 3 Cr TEE 102 Electricity A C Single Phase 48 Hrs 3 Cr TEE 103 Elec AC Poly Phase TEE 104 Basic Electronics TEE 107 Elec. AC Non Math TEE 110 Residential Wiring TEE 120 Rodio I TES 110 Basic Machine Shop TES 112 Advanced Machine Shop TES 120 General Woodworking TES 1,21 Advanced Woodworking TEW 110 Welding A/G 48 Hrs 3 Cr 48 Hrs 3 Cr 48 Hrs 3 Cr 48 Hrs 3 Cr 48 Hrs 3 Cr 48 Hrs 2 Cr 48 Hrs 2 Cr 48 Hrs 2 Cr 48 Hrs 2 Cr 48 Hrs 3 Cr OPERATIONAL & TECHNICAL IN-SERVICE TRAINING PROGRAM FOR OPERATIONAL AND MAINTENANCE EMPLOYEES MAINTENANCE Credit Hours Hours TEN 110 General Repair Simplified Maintenance — Carpentry, Plumbing, Class, Painting & Electrical 48 3 TEN 117 Floor Core—Beginning Hr Intermediote Types arid construction —Materials & usage. 48 3 TET 110 Public Rhiotions General Congeniality. Social Problems Leadership Development 48 /3'. TEN 120 Sanitation—Beginning Kitchen Care, Equipment & Lunch Room Cleaning Sanitation —'Intermediate Toilet Rooms and General Sanitation Sanitation — Advanced Pool, Shower Room Care & Sanitation 48 3 TEN 123 Grounds Core—Seasonal Spring Term — Cleaning, Seeding, Feeding & Weeding Fall Term — Preparing Grounds for Winter Winter Term — Snow & Its Headaches 48 3 TEN 127 Housekeeping General Cleaning Practices ; , 48 3 TEN 113 Introductory tp Electricity ' Knowledge essential to custodians 48 3 TEO 110 Heating Regulation Distribution and Control State, Traps & Valves 48 3 TEO 113 !Hydronig Uiiderstondfng Fluid Handling, Equipment, Heating and Cooling 48 3 48 SYSTEMS — Their operation & maintenance TEO 120 Steam Engineering—Beginning Boiier Construction. Safety Operation, Traps & Valves — Preparing for Low Pressure License Examination ’ TEO 121 Steam Engineering—lotermediote , ’ 4g j Combustion Cr Fuel Handling Equipment, boiler appurtenance, steam handling equipment — preparing for high Frressura license exam. ALL OF THE ABOVE ESTABLISHED COURSES ARE OFFERED AND, DEPENDING UPON PUBLIC INTEREST AND RESPONSE, WILL START MARCH 10, 1969. States Status of Women Commission Watching Editor’$ Nate: The recent injunction in Woyn« Count;/ Circuit Court prevent-irttf implementation of the ruling that allows women to work unlimited hours brings up the whole subject of women’s status in Michigan. ByJUNEELERT Following the late President John F. Kennedy’s establishment of the President’s Commissioi on the istatus of Women, many of the states followed suit, Michigan included. ■ ★ ★ ★ Former Gov. Romney’i 19 6 7 - ’ 6 8 Governor’s Commission on the Status of Women was comprised of 31 Michigan women from widely-separated areas. Four women from this area were in-^ eluded. Mrs. Howard J. Liverance of Bloomfield Hills was chairman. Mrs. John C. Finegan of Birmingham served us chairman of the Employment Commltteiii, and as a member of the Cdmndttee on Vocational Guidance. COUNCILWOMAN SERVES Mrs. William A. McNamee of Birmingham was on the EMucatim Committee. I Mrs. Neil E. Warren of Birmingham chaired the committee on Legal Pamphlet and was a member of the Legislation and Communication Committee. In the report of the Commission’s ac-tivites, they list the following actions taken: • Support of the establishment of a statutory Michigan Women’s Commission. Tb^ passed, and assures Michigan women of the continuance of this Conimission to safeguard their interests. • Support of the Administration’s Fair Housing Bill S. B. 804. • Recommendation of hours and pay regulation foi; women workers. As chairman of Qie Empli^ment Committee, Mrs. Finegan testified in August at public hearings before the Occupational Safety Standards Commission, seeking to have it reconsider its recommendation that the hours limitation for working women be abolished. In her testimony, she pointed out, “Protection for women who cannot or do not want to work overtime is still a vo'y real need in this state since many of the working women are not covered by the Fair Labor Standards Act or are not represented by labor unions.” In a telephone conversation with Mrs. Finegan, she said, “We know that the^ recommendation of the Occupational* Safety Standards Commission was voted on before the hearings were held, so the hearings, some feel, were really an exercise in futility.” As of this date, the recommendation of the Occupational Safety Standards Commission stands. It is being craitested in Wayne County Circuit Court b y Stephanie Prociuk, a 33-year employe of the Dodge Assembly plant in Ham-traihck and 200,000 unnamed working women. Judge George T. Martin has granted a temp<;jfary injunction preventing implementation of the ruling and has set March 24 as the trial date. Continuing with the Commission’s activities, its report lists: • Publication of a pamphlet entitled “Laws of Special Interest to Women in Michigan.” The pamphlet touches on some common matters of interest to - many: marriage, divorce, property rights, children, social security, citizenship, voting, etc. • Establishm^t of a roster of women qualified for appointment to state boards and commissions. • Request for ,, appointment of a member of the Commission on the Status of Women to the Advisory Council of the Occupational Safety Standards Commission. • Support of Sex Education Bill H. B. 925. , . • Submission of a position statement in support of family planning. • Opposition to the proposed “Equal Rights Amendment to the U S. Constitu-” tion.” * ★ ★ • Development of plans for pilot programs in four Michigan cities on vocational guidance fcfr girls in junior and senior high school.ij • Recommendation that the State Executive Office appoint an inter-agency committee on child care services and designafe one person or department in the State government whose sole responsibility shall be the implementing of child care services in Michigan. e Reoommendation that the Michigan Women’s Commission give assistance to the State child care committee established by the Department of Social Services to strengthen services for all Michigan children in need of day care. Commission members have served without pay or recompense for traveling expenses, since the first Conunission was established by Gov. Romney in 1963. Under the new statute, out-of-pock£t expenses will be paid but there is no per diem allowance. ★ ★ * Mrs. Finegan states that “many special commissions operate in this way,’r and that they are hoping for a budgetary allotment which would provide for office space and an executive secretary. THE DOUBLE INCOME: DELIGHT OR DILEMMA? For Fashionscope Workers Open Hunt Luncheon Set By SHIRLEY GRAY I Mrs. Harry J. Nederlander and Mrs. ' William R. Shaw will entertain “Fashionscope” committee members at luncheon Thursday at the Bloomfield Open Hunt. Mrs. Nederlander is general patroness ticket chairman; Mrs. Shaw is patroness chairman for Birmingham-Bloomfieldi . “Fashionscope,” of course, is the annual spring fashion show staged by the Los Vegas Vows for VanderKioots LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UP!) - James Mathew VanderKloot, member of a wealthy Michigan auto family, married Terry Lynn Stern of New York Monday in a quiet ceremony at a Las Vegas Strip wedding chapel. • The Rev. Glenn Tudor of4 the First Christian Church performed the brief double-ring ceremony at the Little Chapel of West. The Rev. ’Tudor said the bride’s mother, Mrs;. Will IJ. Kraus, also was married in , /the chapel, located on the grounds (rf the ^ Frontier hotel Mrs. Biff Jones, the bride’s sister, was matron of honor and Michael J. Stern, the bride’s brother, was best man. Miss Stem, 24, is related by marriage to former Gov. George Ronmey. Heir sister; Rona, married Romney’s son, Scott, last year. VanderKloot, 22, is the nephew' of Semon Knudsen, the president of Ford Motor Co! and the grandson of a former president of General Motors. His parents are Mr. and Mrs, Robert VanderKloot of Lone Pine Road, Bloomfield Township. J. L. Hudson Company at the downtown store under the sponsorship of the Women’s Association for the Detroit Symphony, for the benefit of the orchestra’s maintenance fund. The .dates are March 11 and 12. Among the Birmingham-Bloomfield women on the patroness committee are Mrs. Cecil Akrqyd, Mrs. Reynold Berti, Mrs. Royal H. Brad^prd, Mrs, William H. Breech, MfS- M. M. Burgess, Mrs. John D. Daniels, Mrs. David B. Demarest, Mrs. William DeVault, Mrs. Lawrence H. IMckelman Jr; and Mrs. Kenneth J. Dowling. ©thers are Mrs. Hichard Fernmel, Mrs. Richard A. Fischer, Mrs. Robert T. Gill, Mrs. Stephen L. Goodale, Mrs. Robert N. Green, Mrs. Leo Kargol, Mrs. Leonard Latos, Mrs. Arthur 0. Moran Jr., Mrs. John Noonan and Mrs. Robert H. Pastor. MORE Rounding out the list are Mesdamesf Carl Snyder, Herbert Scott, Richard Wehrman, Henry Vl^hiting Jr., Charles L. Wilson Jr., Marvin L. Katke, William L. Mitcheli, Robert E. Dewar, -Arthur H. Graham and Herbert S. Christner. North-enders will also brighten the hostess foster at the March style show; among them are Mrs. Robert B, Winter, the general ticket chairman; Mrs. Charles C. Hilton, Mrs. Edward N. Cole, Mrs. Gordon E. Areen and Mrs. John St. Clair. Painters Show Prints Some 15 artists will be exhibiting works in the Gertrude Kasld Galtery’s “Painters as Printmakers” collection this month. ’I'he Gallery is open Monday through Saturday fi^m 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Career Women Count the Cost of Double Life The major percentage of those nice, glossy, well-groomed career women who go dashing through revolving doors these days is leading a double life. They’re the working wives ~ whose second income has put the “A” in the Affluent Society for many families. And while they don’t exactly pull a diaper out of an attache case, sometimes the conflicts between home duties and job obligations must seem almost that ludicrous' w w ★ Setting up a conference call that will connect five states for an important sales meeting? Yes, she is —and most efficiently. But she just had her own conference call. And Rosemary definitely chicken pox. A fashion coordinator narrates a new color film for a roomful of clients. Her eyes flick nervously to the phone. 'The “Woman who comes in” just hasn’t arrived and two small children are back from school and alone in a city apartment. She’s frantic. But the show has to go on. Or the job won’t. ★ ★ * And children are only one obligation that puts the second paycheck on the line for its right to be earned. Women who don’t have children — or those whose families are grown up, away at school or . married — have their own dilemma to resolve. Does the job cost more than it brings in? WHAT PRICE PAYCHECK? The proof of the pudding is how much a working wife’s salary contributes. That is, how many working dollars does it offer her family unit. If she has to pay them all out for the services that replace her at home — obviously, that’s a total loss. But if she can help her husband carry an overburdened financial load in the heavy-duty years when children are growing up ... if she can help with such vital necessities as education financing, dental and medical care ... the mortgage on a new, repair-free house — then the price (for her) is right. Of course, emotional attitudes can’t help affecting even the sunniest side of this financial scene. Even the most reasonable husband often considers his wife’s job a rival, because it takes her attention and interest away from him. Sometimes, this goes so far as to develop into a bitter pattern of job competition between husband and wife. This can be a tragic exchange: gain an income and lose a marriage. And even in its mildest form, this feeling of rivalry isn’t pleasant. ★ ★ One woman took a job and her husband confided glumly: “It’s dark and lonesome wlien I get home. She’s working late at the,office. It used to smell so good around here.” Fortunately, these two very nice people really wanted exactly the same thing: “To be able tp afford to bake our bones in the sun one day ... instead of scrimping away in a dark little apartment.” Take Son In After School Calendar WEDNESDAY Woman’s World Series, 10 a.m.. The Pontiac Mali. “Parents’ Re-sponsibilities in Sex 'Education” " by Mrs. Mary A. Hardy, i Navy Mothers Club, 1 p.iri., ^ Naval Training Center. Regular i I meeting. ^ t C THURSDAY Community Services Fine Arts Council, noon. Orchard Ridge -Campus of Oakland Community ^ College, Room J-404. Oakland Writers Workshop, 1 ; p.m., YWCA. Regular meeting. Sylvan Lake Garden Club-, 1 X p.nl., Oakland County Boat Club, s Mrs. Eleanor McCurry of Pontiac | I State Hospital will speak. | By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: Don’t faint, but I am a very happily ‘married woman. My problem is a small one, compared to most, and my husband and I have decided to let jtou settle it. Who do you think should take our seven-year-old son to the barbershop? My husband thinks I should take him after school. I think my husband should take him when HE goes to get his hair cut on Saturday afternoons. I think it’s “sissy” for a boy to be taken to a barbershop by his mother. But when his father takes him, it helps make a man out of him. What do you say? CHICAGO DEAR CHICAGO: I say, it might Flip Flapjacks Across the Sea OLNEY, England (UPI) -- Flapjack flippets from miniskirted teen-agers to a 77-year-old grandmother greased their skillets for today’s 20th annual Shrove Tuesday Pancake Race between Olney, England, and Liberal, Kan. The Olney women run at 5:55 a.m. (EST) and the Liberal racers go seven hours later. A transatlantic telephone call matches scores to find the winners ★ ★ , w Olney has won 10 of the 19 past races with Liberal. Each town has a 415-yard wurse. Each entrant must flip her pancake three times during the run. ' “The perfect pancake has got to be like rubber,” said Olney runner, Mandy Marchant, 17, “Thick enough, solid enough and tough enough to stay in one piece.” SILVER TROPHY Olney is banking heavily on Mary Dix, 17, to successfully defend the title she wMi' last year. In the 1968 race Mary won in 68 seconds. 'The winner gets to keep the trophy — an inscribed silver skillet —for a year. According to a 500-year-old tradition behind the Olney race, each contestant must dress in apron and kerchief .arid look as though she had just rushed from her kitchen midway through breakfast. Each contestant must flip her pancake at least three times and have enough of the batter left at the end to pass for a bonafide flapjack. Mrs. Gladys “Dilly” Dillingham, one of the greats in flapjack running, will be in her usual large white apron and full-length’dress.' ★ ★ * Dilly, a 77-year-old grandmother, has )3een in each of the past 19 races- Known ymore for her sportsmanship than speed, Dilly njn's a yard or two at the stdrt then relaxes into a walk, waving bet skillet to all her neighbors along the course. Waterford Unit Meets Mrs. Dennis Forster of Longwortfi Drive will host the Thursday meeting of Waterford branch, American Association of University Women at 8 p.m. Members and guests will participate in a “Game of Democracy” emphasizing legislation procedures in state and national government. make men out of little boys to go to the barbershop with their fathers on Sdtnrdays, but it makes nervous wrecks out of barbers. There are very few hours during the week When a working man can get to the barbershop, and little boys can go after school. So have a heart. Lady, and give the working man (AND the barber) a break. * w * DEAR ABBY: Every time my husband’s e.x-wife has a death in her family my husband runs to the wake, and if possible to the funeral, too. These are all his ex-wife’s relatives and I don’t like it one bit. I have also been married before, and my ex-husband and I certainly don’t carry on like this. When I complain, my husband says that he would go to anybody’s wake and funeral who were friends of his. Please answer soon as his ex-wife still has lots of relatives left. Thank you.DISTURBED DEAR DISTURBED: A man who wants to pay his last respects to “a friend” —‘even though he or she was related to his ex-wife, shouldn’t be criticized. A wake, or funeral isn’t exactly a jamboree. * * * DEAR ABBY: I am a junior at a state university. In five years of dating, I have been intimate with many girls. These girls ^jave come from all types of backgrounds, but most of them were from the “h(est” blueblood famihes. The pathetic thing they all seemed to have in common was a basic need for love. ’Their parents may be successful in business and society, yet as parents they are miserable failures. One might expect . this of poor, underoi-ivileged girls from broken homes, but when a boy dates a girl who is supposed to have “everything,” and returns her to an 18-room mansion to find her mother passed out on the sofa, what can he feel? What can he say? These girls grab for this shallow type of physical love as a drowning man grabs for a straw. If parents really care for their daughters, they should give them more than money. If ydu print this, maybe some parents will become aware of their mistakes before it is too late. AN OBSERVER ★ w ★ confidential TO THE 19-YEAR-OLD STUDENT AT THE UNIVERSll’V IN MONTREAL, CANADA, WHO SIGNED HIMSELF “QUANDARY”: YOU are on the wrong track. There are any number of fine psychiatrists to whom you can go to discuss your “problem” without fear of having it disclosed. Look further, and skip your relatives. WWW For Abby’s booklet, “How to Have a Lovely Wedding,” send 91.06 to Ab^, in care of 'The Pontiac Press, Dept. P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 4«)56. . Liuzzo Daughter orr Probation | for Federal Narcotics Violation" SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP) - Mary Eva Liuzzo, daughter of slain Detroit civil rights worker Viola Liuz&, received a three-year probated sentence in federal court Monday on a charge of narcotics violation. “My nightmare’s over,” she said afterwards. Miss Li'izzo, 21, whose mother was killed on a darken^ highway, March 25, 1965, arrived here Saturday night. She had spent the past three months under court-ordered observation at Alderson, W. Va., federal reformatory f0r women. WWW She was arrested at International Airport here July 24 , and pleaded guilty in October to a charge of importing marijuana from Mexico without paying a federal tax on it. . MARY EVA LIUZZO Chief US. Dist.~61)idge Adrian Spears had ordered the reformatory stay iKfore sentencing her. Over the weekend^ Miss Liuzzo said she felt the judge did her a favor by doing so. w “I didn’t feel that way at first,” she told a reporter. “My sympathy was all for the inmates. But I saw people trying to help girls, and they just didn’t, want help. They had such negative attitudes and were,so unreceptive thpt I realized that putting them in prison is about the only thing you can do with them.” NERVOUS She was nervous and her hands shook as she Ivaited for sentencing Monday. The attractive, brown-eyed brpnette told newsmen she hoped her “nightmare might be coming to an end.” After facing Judge Spears and hearing the probated sentence, she sighed with relief, “My nightmare’s over.” * * * Earlier, she told a reporter that had she not been caught and sent to the reformatory she felt she might haVe begun using drugs, “ending up God knows how or where,” Last November, she told newsmen in her hometown of Detroit, “I know I’ve done wrong. I’ll never break the Ihw again.” Monday, she said she plans to atitend Oakland University in the fall. She liuped to return to Detroit Monday night, i She said she tried marijuana in Mexico on a vacation. She intended to throWjt away but decided to take it home to friends, she said. Custbms agents said it was concealed in her underwear. After arriving here Saturday she told a reporter. “I wouldn’t break another law for a million dollars.” I"./. ' / THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1969 Few Surprises Left on Tax Regulations By MARY FEEI.EV ('onsultant in Money Management I have to keep an eye on the into the next year borrow the calendar, compute each tax in-money necessary to pay up by jstalment. and pay It on your jj _ own initiative — and on thC| ? button. So don’t be careless MRS. DONALD F. MCINTYRE Speak Vows on Saturday Sometimes the most exciting Depending on how their thing about a book is its lack of}^ • ® havmonf vmiphi.r« *** picture shapes up, drama. I’m thinking now in Fo^^^FS ^ worthwhile to the “blue book" - the new >" make a s i m p 1 e - i n t e r e st edition bf IRS’s‘"^'our Federal| *“ passbook or other collateral Income Tax. 1969 Edition for While tax rulings in general loan, and then deduct the in-iIndividuals.’’ remain the same, changes in terest paid on the loan. ; We can find cheer fn the fact personal circumstances bring ^ ------ that there are no new surprises up problems that are ‘‘new.’.’: | to .speak of, to tangle us up un-' Dear Mary Feeley: This yeari duly. True, there’s the 7H per,I will have some high medicalj cent surcharge on 1968 income, bills that I will have to pay. Thei but we’ve gotten used to wor-jexpenses occurred in 19ride wore a candlelight satin puune is subject to the ups and be deducted. For f u t u r e'daughters, Leslie and Randy, host a tea in the former’s home. A‘llne gown highlighted with downs of circumstances, and reference: Some people who [will host a luncheon in their I The De^oit Athletic Club will Alencon lace. StCjAanolls and ^ho must fill out the new incur big medical bills toward j Bloomfield Hills home Satur-i be the setting on March 8 for t Sweetheart roses compri.sed her Kstimated Tax Declaration-the end of the year and don’t day. Mrs. John J. Slavin has|luncheon hosted by Mrs bnnduet- |Voucher for Individuals, won’t want the payments to ride over sent out invitations for a Charles Brethen Jr. and her TTie daughter of Mr. and Mrs. | F. Earl Harroun of Kenilworth i Street and the son of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Vineyard of Warren were feted at the Gold Roon, Oakland Center on the campus of Oakland University. They are honeymooning at Niagara Falls. i Elise ’Trieber of Yonkers, be too happy with this in-N.Y. was bridesmaid w i t h novation: bills will no longer bei Edward Brown ushering. Best sent out automatically by IRS! man was Richard Brooks. when Instalment payments are The daughter of the Don dup, Riegelmans of Birmingham and the Sfm of the Raymond Weidners of Trenton greeted guests in the church parlors before departing for a honeymoon trip to Mississippi and Florida. Starting this year, ypiu ju.st To See Fashions A clothing demonstration will highlight Wednesday’s nieeting of. Epsilon chapter. Beta Theta Phi. Mrs. Robert Perry of Southward Street will host the group at 7:30 p.m. A new member. Mrs Phil-lippe Pierce, will be initiated. Winter Shine From Secretions Q. I know this sounds silly but, overweight, your fingers will is there any exercise that will | become slimmer aS the rest of reduce the fingers? It bothers you,does when you lose weight, me that I have to have such a I * * * large ring size. i Q. When hairs are pulled out A. Sorry, but I do not know of of the head do they grow back? exercise which will reduce] a. Yes, unless the hair roots The shiny complexion hasi been the beauty bane for generations. In the summer it can often be blamed on tperspira-tlon. But in the winter, it’s almost a sure sign of excessive oily aecretion. Avoid superfatted soaps, emollients and certain moisturizers. Qeanse the oily spots fre-. quently with cotton pads soaked j trict with mild astringent. After ap-i plying makeup, use a pressed] powder specially formulated to absorb excess oil. Jill Watts of East Boulevard was chosen Pontiac DeMolay Sweetheart for 1969 at the recent installation of Pontiac chapter Order of DeMolay at Roosevelt Temple. Jill will represent Pontiac at the dis-DeMolay Sweet- heart contest this spring. She'is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Watts. daughter, Susan. Another luncheon on March 12 is planned in the Bloomfield Hills home of Mrs. John Hammond with Mrs. Henry Van Vurst Richards b._______________ __________„ with daughters, Susan and Mrs.lroom will make Uver 1,200, Charles Risdon III, have books available for Franklin reserved March 15 for a pupils, according to Principal luncheon in the Bloomfield Hills'James Sims. Localife to Wed California Girl A*^pring wedding is planned re are damaged by the way theX A black tie affair is planned by the Semon Knudsens on ,are yanked out. I Q. In your column you men- Mrs: Norman ASIMPLE,FAST VICTOR ADDINO MACHINE TO SOLVE your TAXPROSLEMS Sold on Eosx Term* |23Nirlh SialMwSI: Set Open HoOs§ at Franklin At PERRY PHARMACY American Express Money Orders Save Time! Save Steps! Franklin School PTA will sponsor an open house Wednesday from 3 to 4:30 p.m. to mark the opening of the new reading room, recently converted from a classroom. Pay all your bills with "‘The Safa Monay” Drapes and carpeting have, ■ been installed and thie reading! 1 Serving Greater Oakland County With Stores Int WATERFORD home of Mrs. Ridhards. A dinner party for the couple Is scheduled by the A. D. Pot-tingers and the J. C. Pottingers on March 1 in the former’s Bloomfield Hills home. tioned that skin specialists often prescribe a lotion to stimulate circulation when the hair thinning. What is the name of the lotion? I have this trouble. I did not have a special lotion In mind. I was referring prescription from a dermatologist after consulting him. This would not have name. Most cosmetic companies and those which sell hair-care aids have products which stimulate circulation in the scalp. March 14 in Detroit’s chartrain Hotel. The public is welcome Sims said. • PONTIAC • BIRMI • TROY • UKE ORION ^ rurikNttiaiixwi SlWNnytl* inuii niHnimsus Another dinner party is on tap for March JS, hosM by tbe Joseph C. Quays of Bloomfield Hills. Following the wedding, in the home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Davies of Bloomfield Hills, the bridal couple will be feted at a rece^ tion in Bloomfield Hills Couli^. aub. Q. When I use a beer rinse should I leave it on or rinse it off before rolling my hair up? A. Leave it on but be sure to open the can or bottle the day before so that the beer Is flat. by Kathleen Saito of Ann Arbor] Q. I hear so much about blunt cutting.” Just what is its purpose and what type hair should be cut this way? A. Blunt cutting means just what it says. The ends are not tapered but are cut straight across.' This adds body to the hair. Therefore, it is a boon to women who have hair with little i body. For instance, fine, hair should be cut this way. On March 22, the vows will be solemnized in the Mormon Temple. Salt Lake City, Utah, followed by a reception for the family and Brigham Young University friends of the couple. Mitt fs the son of former Gov. and Mrs. George Romney who now live in Washington, D.C. School of Medicine at University of Michigan. Self-Protection Rules Ouflined for Strange Dogs NEW YORK (WMNS) - Just because a dog is someone els^’s best friend does not mean he will necessarily be your friend. In recognition of this poignant fact, the National Safety Council has just issued a series, of guidelines on dealing with strange dogs, fn descending order of friendliness: If he ignores you, ignore him. If he growls, stand perfectly still. Do not look him in the eye. If he continues to growl, try -%■ —----------------- I Welcome Spring, look fresh and David L. Yuille, son of Mrs.]9 , sunshine in this skimmer! Doris Yuille of Terness Streetjart shaping. ' Q- How many calories in a and Glenn Yuille of Newberry] pretty embroidery plays up piece of Syrian bread? This Street, scallop trim. Pattern 5 5 8 ; ibread is round and flat and I Miss Saito, an alumna of the transfer, printed pattern NEW when sliced in half it makes a iUnlversity of California >t;sizes lo! l2, 14, 16. 18. Size J2 sort of envelope for stuffing ’Berkeley, is the daughter of the;^t,ust 34). State size. with meat etc. On the package V. Saiios of San Francisco. * * - * !it says, “made without fats.’ Calif. Fifty cents in coins for each Can you help me? ' Her fiance, a graduate of pattern - add 15 cents for each * * * IMa.ssaclui.setLs Institute of pattern for Ist-class mailing A. I have many calorie charts 'Technology, is a student in the and special handling. Send to but do not find Syrian bread cr..i—1 .« the i^iira Wheeler, The Pontiac listed in any of them. However,'to sooth him (with words alone Press, Needlecraft Dept, Box I am familiaf^th it and do not do not move your hands) so you 124. Old Chelsea Statidn, New think it is high in calories. It is egn slowly walk by and beyond York, N. Y. 10011. Print Pattern similar in consistency to the him. Number, Name, Address, Zip. Mexican tortilla, which has only] If he jumps you, bring your New 1969 Needlecraft Catalog — 50 calories in one which is five'arms quickly up to your face — best town-sport fashions, most inrlies in diameter. What you]each hand holding ftie opposite designs to knit, crochet, stuff in the envelope is the jok-'elbow, sew weave, embroider. 3 free er. | If you’re thrown down, roll patterns inside. 50c NEW! “50 -------------— , jonto your stomach and cover INSTANT GIFTS" — make it There are about 245,000 tele-; your head and neck with your today, give it tomorrow! vision sets in Columbus. Ohio. [arms. Marvelous fashions, toys,, decorator articles. Ideal fo^ll oc- Noto In Progress • • • Many Fine China, Crystal, Giftware and Cookware Items At Substantial Savings... Go to U here the Action Is Albert’s C'oilTures 681-0060 3901 llifchliind Kd. Albert’s Beauty Studio 674-3166 5030 Highland Rd. Albert’s Suburban Hair Fashions 674-0477 3984 W. Walton casions. 50c. I Book of 16 Jiffy Rugs to knit,: Icrochet, sew, weave, hook. 50c. | Book of 12 Prize Afghans. 50c.' Book No. lr-16 Superb QuiHs. (5^ Book No. 2 4’Museum Quilts—12 r a r e outstanding I quills. 50q,, 2 i Book No. 3 - Quilts for To-; day’s Living. 15 unique quilts. 50c. Hare today, here tomorrow to serve X your Clearing needs For Personalized Seiaaor HaireiitlinK Dieeriminat ing Women Know the Place to Co Is . . . Hgsnsitv Shnn Heaiity Shop Ritter Bldg., FK 3-7186 ft»« r»rWin «ii C—ittWiM IW We've been serving the hearing needs of people in this area for years- But. more important to you, we expect to go on serving them for many years to cpme, When you buy a Beltone hearing aid from us, you know we'll be around to provide you with all the friendly, understanding service - you need—for as long as you need Earl H. QIatpie it. We’re part of your community—arwl part of the community’s health-service team. Our home is here as well as our place of business. Being “here today and here tomorrow" is one reason why we think "if hearing is your problem, Beltone is your answer." Want to be*r all the other reasons? Wa’ra hart to tell you. Come in and sat us soon. A. Special Si!e of classic, silverplated atemwa^ by DeUberti of lulv. Wine, water, cor-dial, champagne and cocktail, regularly 6.00 each... Now 5.00 each. A manrelom aaw- ings when you purchase aeveral of these impressive piecet. B. Carbone crinkle glass. Casual and tparklingin glowing topaz, green, am;thyst, blue and moss gold. (Slightly higher in ruby red.) Goblets, reg. 2.2S.., Sale 1.80. Savings on all pieces. C. Bnenilium lale ... Has the look of fine silver, ii lightweight and •ill never tarqiah. 7.00 Relish tray.............. 5.00 7.50 Tray..... ......... 5.00 20.00 Chafing dish ............15.00 8.00 Covered casserole ........ 6.00 S.00pi|ister................. 4.00 Magnolitejpeciala... This famed cookware is designed to seal in all vapors and maintain the vitamin content of foods. Cast to the thickness of 2 silver dollars,. r yet, emaXingly light weight The pieces shown, 2 qt saucepan, 8" akillet and 2 qt covered gourmet regularly atU for 10.95. Sale pric^ at 8.88. I Hearing kid Center j Earl H. Glaapie, Certified Heorino Aid Audielofliit i 450 W. Huroft St. 334-7711 J rovnAC XAVMBaiwiSlrMl P—mew ZwllH - FE 4.1184 iMtr*insi>a CMm,Cir*ial,CUt«n« ITcMgrajihll. ■lie Rm< — 4< J ;■ THE PONTIAC PKBSS. TUESDAY, FEBRUAKY 18, I960 . I r,.' rii-i;-.:;! ! ^............ MISS HOUCK MISSWHEELOCK MISS HEBNER MISS BEECHUM MISS GRABAN MISS WVISKA MISS STROHMEYER '■SS PRUCHNICKI 'Coat' Lashes fo Get Fullest Glamor Effect MISS DADSON MISS TAYLOR MISS WHITE Eyelashes, now more than ever, are the center of attention in all the newest beauty fashion. To give your lashes as much emphasis as possible, make-up expert Max Factor suggests the following application routine; Encircle each eyelash with^ mascara. To achieve this en-| circling effect as efficiently as ;:i possible, fill your brush with! mascara and lay the sides •.9. C^luohheAA^ SALE STARTS THURSDAY k r CELEBRATING WASHINGTON'S ^ 237th BIRTHDAY ALL SALES ^NAL I CRAFT classes! I Beginning in Feb. i Ladies ' * Don’t Miss This Great EVENT 'V 4 *)>•» <)<>•»• \ w WOOD FIBER FLOWER MAKING BE SURE AND CALL f E 8-3361 SPORTSWEAR 50% to 75% OFF DRESSES 50% to 75% OFF 366 Oakland Ave. Engagements Announced Houck-Davis mascara aiiu lay me oiuco the bristles on top of your upper] lashes as close as possible to, the root area. Then, move the' brush through the lash length] with p zig-zag motion. Next,] place the bristles underneath the lashes and again move the brush through the lashes the sam zig-zag motion. DRUM LESSONS PONTIAC MUSIC & SOUND 3101 W»l Huron PHONE 6O-33S0. idaughter, Claudia Lee, to Larry,fiance is the son of the Edward lotto Rieck, is announced by Mr.IJ. Knotts of Wolverine Lake. j The engagement of their land Mrs. George N. Beechum of daughter, Judy Elizabeth, to Dixie Highway. Miss Beechum’s' Unfnn ncs Ronald L. Davis, is announcfed fiance is the son of Mr. and] Upfon-Spenc^ by the Elton Houcks of South Mrs. Douglas Rieck of Joyceil Mr. and Mrs. Robert Upton of dividually thereby creating the Roslyn Street. Miss Houck’s j Drive. October vows are plan-Pleasant Lake Drive announce ’ gygjasj, ^ost fiance is the son of the Ariel B.Ined. the engagement of their fashionable today. Also, it Davises of Escondido Road. The I (Zrnhnn-Jncobs daughter Sharon, to Cpl. John prepares your own lashes at-jj^f^-f- seLL TRADE — USE couple has attended Western Spence, USMC, who is stationed tractively for the addition of j PRESS WANT ADS Michigan University and Ferris] ^ January 1970 wedding is|at Las Vegas, Nev. He is the [ Fashion Lashes. I State College, respectively. 'planned by Margaret Graban'son of Mr. and Mrs. Archie — - f Spence of LaSalle Street. donnell coiffures TELEGRAPKot ElIZAtETH LK. R( Wheelock-Taylor Trice-Moore jand Dale Allen Jacobs, son of Mrs. Ann Vader of Cedar Island I Drive, White Lake Township An August wedding is planned [and Chester Jacobs of East by Kathy Sue Wheelock and walton Boulevard. Miss Larry W. Taylor. The bride-'Graban, a student/of Spring elect is the daughter of Mrs. [Arbor College, her fiance’s'Charles Moore. Their parents Norval E. Cramlet of Melvin alma mater, is the daughter of are Mr. and Mrs. Larry Trice Street, Avon ToWhship, and the George Grabans of Cam-j of Farmington and Mr. and Lawrehce Wheelock of Madison, bridge, Ohio. ' (Mrs. Norman Moore of Wixom. Ohio. Her fiance is the son of Chester T a y 1 o Sept. 6 vows are planned by Carolyn Sue Trice and Robert Ferndale. Hebner-Broome Loviska-Cox The engagement and August wedding plans of t h e i r daughter, Jean Ann, to Richard Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hebner jyj cox are annpunced by Mr. of Oxford announce the Mrs. James Loviska of engagement df their daughter, Poad. Miss Loviska’s Kathleen Audrey, to Spec. 4 fjance is the son of Mr. and Phillip Broome, USA. He is the j^^s. Luther Cox of Gilbo son of Mr. and Mrs. Otis gfregt. Broome of Lake Drive, Oxford, • Township. June 7 vows are , _ planned. Strohmeyer-Turner •A June 1.3 wedding is planned Beechum-Rieck by Susan Carole Strohmeyer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. F. A. The engagement of their strohmeyer of Lake Oakland “ Shores, and Ronald Kenneth Turner. A student at Ferris Dadson-Tryles The Thomas E. Dadsons ofi Franklin announce the engage-, ment of their daughter, Gael Frances, to James Francis Tryles, son of Mr. and Mrs.i Stanley E. Tryles of Madison Heights. The bride-elect attended Northwestern Michigan Junior College. Her fiance attends Wayne State University. umui PREVIEW OE mm HAIR FASH10i\S .. Being natural, as the trend || for spring, does not nec-^ essarily mean being casual. It can and does mean being artful withif,ut artifice. mum BEAUTY SHOPPE 88 Wayne Street FE 2-1424 PEARCE Floral Go. To Remind You WINTER COATS ENTIRE STOCK: FUR TRIM, UNTRIMMED, CAR COATS OFF KNIT SUITS and COSTUMES Y2 off SLEEPWEAR and ROBES 1/^ OFF FUR HATS, GLOVES BAGS Vi OFF Taylor-Hayes We are closed on Wednesdays. The engagement is announced of Carol Louise Taylor and Jerry Hayes. The bride-elect is the daughter of Mrs. Glin Taylor of Highland and the late Phone FE 2-0127 Mortality Rate in Peace, Corps Same as in U. S.i ,state College, he-is the son of Mr. Taylor. Her fiance is the I Mr. and Mrs. Lionel Turner of .son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert [Royal Oak. jdlayes, also of Highland. S(toe Pruchnicki-Knoff WhiferLeineke The engagement is announced' WASHINGTON, D,C. - If you of Dana LouAnn E[>zabeth have a son or daughter in the Pruchmcki and Ronald Edward Peace Corps, or one hoping to,Patrick Knott, S*’® join, you can resT assured he’ll | daughter of Mrs. William A. be as safe in Tinfbudoo as in'Baggett of Buffalo Drive, Com-Oshkosh. . Imerce Township and the late That’s the reassuring report Ernest A. Pruchnicki. . Her given by Dr. John Harkness, Mi’S. LaMae White of-West Huron Street announces the engagement of her daughter, Robyn L. to Michael E. Leineke. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Leineke of West Huron Street. February ,1970 vows are planned. the Corps’ medical director. In nearly eight years».45 corpsmetr have died — precisely the same mortality rate as for the same age group in the U.S. Nearly half perished in vehicle accidents. Despite exposure to lepers, tuberculars, Tropical parasites, malaria, and other extraordinary hazards,' only one corpsman died from a tropical disease — a case of amoebic hepatitis in the Philip- POSH! VISIT OUR SHOWROOM and See Our DUlihclive Collection of FJeganlly Crlifted I iirnilure. We .4lso Specialized^ CuMoip Unliolstering. “t int Kurnilur* and Quality Carpeling Since 1924” ___ OF WATERFORD ' " ' . 334-0981 5400 pi*i« HWy. TOWN & COUNTRY TRAMPESE CASUALS values to $15 ^3 CAPEZIO CASUALS values to $17 $4 TOWN 8c COUNTRY COBBLERS - DRESS STACKED values to $20 ^6 CARESSA ADORES CAPEZIO' values to $22 ^7 DELISO DEBS AMALFI values to $28 $9 HERBERT LEVINE ANDREW GELLER values to $45 $12 Alvin'.*; of Pnntinr Rnrh<=t.<;t(=»r Onklnnrl Mnll I B~6 THE PONTIAC PHESS. TUESDAV , FEBRUARY 18, 1969 IT Cocktails if Dinners '•’it Entf rtainmont Apptmriitt; Tmn.Smt. •SW Cooley Lk. M. Union Loko ^ 111-9489 Coming of Age—2 Servicemen Often Have Money Problems ' (Editor’s Note — This is the second article in o 10 part series designed to help poung people cope with the new challenges they face as they enter legal adulthood i By SIDNEY kARGOLIUS Somplimes people under 21 do gel involved in disastrous in-slallmenl’ contracts this happens most often in buying us^ cars and jewelry. . The Armed Forces h^ had a problem With such debts owed by servicemen, especially because sellers then look to the commanding officers to help collect. nonnecessities, such as jewelry bought on the installment plan, and return the merchandise. But most servicemen feeli they should pay, and do, reports Captain H. F. Rommel, Commanding Officer of the U.S. Naval Station in Washington, who has had wide experience with this problem. POWER OF ATTORNEY If v(4 are gojng into service it is'^i ul to give "power of attorney" to a parent or other dose relative, or to your wife or If you are married. This will enable them to handle any business or financial transactions on your behalf. Any lawyer will prepare this simple document for you. or the post legal services officer does this for many servicemen and women. Certain legal aids also are available to you: ^ • Premium Postponements. If you haye private insurance but are not able financially to pay the premiums, the govern- ment Will guarantee paymlht| while^QU are on active duty.' 2 YEARS TO PAY When you. are separatod from] service you have two years ini which to arrange with the in-1 surance company to pay the I accumulated back premiums | and interest. The insurance guarantee is administered by the Veterans Administration, and application must'be made for this relief. • Civil Relief. Under the Soldiers’ And Sailors’ Civil after entering service. But do consult your legal services office on how to deal with your creditors and the forms of relief available to you, including debt extension pl^s. • Reemployment Rights LI * » Note also your right to get your If you are unable to ™ee payments on debts becauwof/ ______ your service, these laws protect! (E,ce,pt,d with permission oi me you against Relief Act and the laws of many states, any legal proceedings against you can be suspended if jyour military service Interferes I with your ability to defoid I yourself against such action. goods bought on installment conyr (Ntw»pepe7 InterprUe AeeocleHon) A Time-]y Motion Study interest charges on such debts while you are in service. 1 You dependents also are protected against dispossession by landlord or foreclosure of. i goods in storage. On one ship, the commanding officer fell impelled to advi.se (he men under 21 (hat they could repudiate contracts for He's an (In)Efficiency Expert PROGRAMMER ANALYST To be No. 2 Man in Flint Computer Center. Four to five years experience in systems programming. Salary $14,000 to $15,000. All Replies Confidential Mr. R. PoHcrson Ptychodynomics Research 13349 Michigan Ave. Dearborn, Michigan 48126 NEW PAYMENT PLAN j i Usually reputable lenders and 1 sellers will work out a newj : payment plan with you. If not,j the determination of what your creditor can or cannot do must By HAL BOYI-E "Time .sp'-nt on ‘ lO^minute b.nnds at hoipely stenographer ® *1^' NEW YORK (AP) - The rest coffee breaks,” morning and and sailing paper airplanes outja"'P>®- Y®®'’ ®®“‘® "®‘ of the world does not particular- afternoon: one hour. | window: half-hour, ly admire America’s claims to "Time spent listening to bo.ss| Thr John Frrnnld (luiiipuny pm.i'iilN K.iiiiiiene O’Neill’n Stiiniiinit Draiim LOING DAY’S JOURNEY INTO NKillT TONI(;in’AT«:15P.M. EVENINOSi Tuesdoy through Saturday at 8:15 p.m., Sunday at 6s30 p.m. MATINEESi Wednesday and Thuriday of 2r00 p.m. Titkatii Hudwn'i (all jtorei) or phons 962-0353/338-6239 THK lOHN FF.nNAI lJ COMPANV OF moral grandeur, but it d sjervice. the legal services officer at vour post to make sure you get the relief you are entitled to. i This relief, however does not apply to debts you contract IMVESTORS? 000.00 down on a land contract. _ I know of o tnon who 7»i»hof to leo.o thii *•'„* boing that h. will poy oil to*.., ond „wn« (you mointononco, moho tho poymonf., ond pay tho ownor ly . porhop.) $100.00 por month. „ So, fdr o $5,000.00 outlay on your port, you con collect $1,200.00 per yeor (24%!). And to* free, becou.e you con **’• building! And, in 18 year., you own “ ”0,000.00 building Sound intSre.ting? Coll Leo A, Frankowsk. at EASTHAM REALTY, Phone FE 5-7900. jminnrrirrrrinnr^^ Wednesday Special! I DINNER • French Frias Baa e Cole Stew *1 PONTIAC LAKE INN 7890 Highland Raad ijLJULJLJLJLOJULaJLRRJLUJU looking for possible capita! growth? send for your free prospectus-booklet on channing growth fund A fully managed mutual fund whose aim is to make your investment dollars grow and to take risks along what we consider prudent lines. Fpr your free prospectus-booklet, mail this advertisement toi CHANNING COMPANY, INC., b05 Pontiac State Bank Building Pontiac, Michigan 48058/Phone: (313) 334.4577 Richard Womack, Div. Mgr. this: "Time spent gulping late breakfast at desk: 15 minutes. ' Texas Research Center Is Object of Controversy |3 BOSTON STRANGLER iohy Curtis Henry Fonda George Kenned) > Starts Friday . GREGORY PECK in THE STALKING MOON OPEN DAILY "Time spent figuring how much pension would receive if ;retired 10 years early: half-hour. ‘Time spent making preliminary estimate of personal income taxes and also trying fig-' RICHARDSON. Tex. (DPI)-! Presently. SCAS does not . If"''- At a quiet center 20 miles north have the power to grant degrees^ balance. 45 minu es. of* downtown Dallas, scientists and' the college coordinating [AND DAYDREAMING jare tackling .some of the world’s board would like to keep it this ‘‘Time spent daydreamiv at jtoughest problems, ranging way. The CCB would also allow desk: 4 hours, 15 minutes. Ifrom finding a cure for cancer [any graduate student to study] "Time spent actually working to learning how our planet was^at SCAS no matter where he on the firm’s business: one born. jwas enrolled. The board of hour. The work we do here is more I regents would only allow UTj “Time spent tidying up desk lappreclated in Wa.shington than students to study at the center, and watching clock before leav-|in Dallas," said A1 Mitchell,! The regents would like to ing for day; half-hour.” public affairs director for the establish a four-year un-j ★ ★ ★ Southwest Center for Advanced dergratuate school at the SCAS When 1 added up these Studies (SCAS). |site, but the CCB says Dallas ures, I was surprised to find * * * County does not need another that instead of eight hours they "There is always something undergraduate school. totaled 19. When I pointed this going on, but we never have an a a ★ out to my friend, he was sur-^ impact story. We don’t put menj Meanwhile, research goes on ptised, too, but insisted the fig-j in space. We just write lines in gj ^CAS. Among its textbooks. COUPON SALE , F.b. 18 thru Sqt .f.b 22.1969 complishments are putting 4 ures were accurate, He was a somewhat indignant. j “That boss of mine must be trying to turn our office into a salt mine,” he said. “Imagine j The center may prove to be^ a struments measuring cosmic guideline for higher scientific ^ays in a satellite on a Venus research and learmng in Texasj^rbit around the sun. and dig-,.„.r .....rq, ... and the nation. But with the in- 120 feet below the him getting 19 hours of perform- fluence it carries goes earth’s surface to prove the ance for only eight hours’pay. | troversy. North Pole was once located in I’m going to hit him Up for a CREATED BY CONN.ALLY the South Pacific. ’merit raise.” | The SCAS controversy FREE L isT en tycE. between the College Coordinating Board, a committee created by former Gov. John Connally to oversee coL lege education in Texas, and the University of Texas Board of Regents. ’The Texas Legislature jis set to act as referee and judge. ! Both boards basically agree LscaS should belong to the iUniversity of Texas system, but at this point all agreement lends. 12 NORTH SAQINAW IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC OPEN 9:45 A.M. SHOW AT 10:10 A.M. 3I4-44S6 Knoii^o id€ freud® (THE WORLD OF FREUD) ■M COLOR Ufe'H hdp YOU look for the right /nuimraD, DRAWING SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1969 3:00 P.M. WIN . . WESTINOHOUSC Communirator TR-2, two-way radio tranaceiver. Equipped with communieatork plu* AM radio. MOTOROU PORTARLE TV SET. Operaiek on I HF or VHF rhanneU, |*ow»-r pack ballrry or car radio battery. MOTOROU PORTAOIe STEREO. Hanib-omc Solid Male \219 klerro phonofcraph producr» clear, like-real »oundk. Stop In, Piek Up Coupons at tht Drivt-ln, No Pur-ehat* Rtguirtd. PONTIAC MALL,: Invites You and Your Fwiily Wtd. i Thure. Evdnings 4:S0to 0 P.M. Enjoy Tender, Golden, Deep-Fried COMPLETE CHICKEN DINNERS Only 20 Children I Vnder^O 95’ CHOICE OF POTATOES OR VEGETABLE DINNER SALAD OR DESSERT V ROLLS AND BUHER COFFEE, TEA OR MILK Thinking about Mutual Funds? Many millions of investors now own nnitnal funds. And more and more investors are doing something about it. They like to know that a mutual fund provides constant mofessional management of their invested dollars. That they don't have to make important decisions about when to buy and sell stocks. That their investment risk is spread over many companies—and is not concentrated in just one. hclher your interest lies in companies with growth, income or speculative possihiliticA. there’s a mutual fund geared toward your specific ohjectiT cs, You receive experienced advice. See one of llie niiiliial fund specialists at First of Michigan. Making up your mind about mutual funds, now;, could make a big difference in where you syind financially, in the years ah^ad. For For informed investing see the specitdists jat FIKST First of Michigan | Corporation | iirmheri Nmu York Stock Exchango SERVED EVERY WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY NIGHTS CLENWOOD PLAZA NORTH PERRY STREET AT GLENWOOO PONTIAC MALL CAFETERIA ONLY - 4:30 to 8 p.m. New York Delroil Chirano Rattle Creek • Ray City • Binniniihain • Flint • fTraAd Haven • Grand RapM* GroisePointe • Kihmaioo • Lanain|. • Midland * Rocheater • Colambaa,Ohio THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Friday. Produce i. Delicious. Golden, bu. addI6S« /Viciniosn# oo.......... ADOles, Northern Spy. ±u.......... veOETABLES 5, topped, bu, ................I lage, Curjv, bu................ Celery, Root, V4 bu.......................3.1 Horserodlsh, ok. bekt. .................. 4.S leeks, dz. bchs......................... 3.( Onions, 50-ib. OM ....................... 1-j P,rsley._ R»l, *. bchs................... 2.( Souash, Hubbard, vk-bu. Turnips, topped, bu.. lettuce-salad greens celery, cabbage, di. ........ Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (AP)-(USDA)-Cattle 400; Slaughter steers active, fully steady; cows active, steady to strono. '■lughter steers; choice yOO-1,5 -29.25; --------- Dow Loses Qver 14 Points Stock Market Drops NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market went down again today, following a pattern set Monday when the Dow Jones industrial average lost more than 14 points. Trading was heavier than Monday’s. But analysts did not view the selling w4th alarm and could pinpoint no major spark to account for the decline. The continued loss was seen as a storm that had to run its course. Losses among the 1,474 issues traded were well ahead of gains -1,196 to 144. The Associated Press average of 60 stocks declined 4.7 Industrials were off 6.5, rails were down a.3, and the utility component eased 1.6. The Dow Jones industrial av-era|e at noon was down 8.21 at 929.51. The Dow barometer started out with, a sharp downturn and by 11:30 a.m. The average had lost 10.13 points, but it r^ained some ground. NOON VOLUME Volume by noon was 7.8 mih lion shares, compared with 6.08 million by the same time Monday. Losses were taken by Sincla1» Oil, Atlantic Ri^field, and British Petroleum, snnclair dropped 15 to 96Mi and Atlantic lost 4^ at ^12% after a preliminary injunction barring their proposed merger was granted Monday. Prices also fell on the American Stock Exchange; Commonwealth United paced the most active list with a loss of % to 18*. Revenue Properties dropped two, and Empire Financial was down slightly more. Leasco Data Processing preferred also ^as down two and Leasco Data warrants dropped 1%. The New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK (AP) - Nev 32 50 exchange elected noon pri —A— 20.25-29.25; mixed-good and ch S.25; good 25.50-27.50; utility c 20.00. 2 gilts, U.S. 2-3 200-220 Tbs. 21.25-21.75; L_ -------------- .. 20.75-21.25; 3-4 240-270 lbs. 19.75-20.7 uws, 1-3 300-400 lbs. 17.25-18.00; 2-3 41 - ..‘Redtn l.so AlcanAlu T.iO AllegCp .20e AllegLud 2.40 39.00. e 90-105 I Sheep 500; choice and pr llaughter lambs 28.00-29.00. DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (AP)-(USDA) - Prices paid per pound tor No. 1 live poi............ Heavy type hens 23-24; hea roasters 25'/a-27; broilers ane whites 21-22. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP) - (USDA) Hogs 3,500: butchers uneven, steady to strong. Instances 25 higher early; moderately ac' tive; shippers took 2,000; 1-2 205-225 lb butchers 22.00-22.25; 1-3 200-235 lbs 21.25-21.75; 2-4 230-200 IbS 20.50-21.25; 2-4 260280 lbs 20.0020.75; 3-4 200300 IbS 19.25-20.00; ■ -• - to strong; lalrly active; 1-3 18.0O18.75; 1-3 400500 lbs ....... 2-3 500400 lbs 14.5017.25; oars 14.5015.00. Cattle 1,000; calves none; trading on all laughter steers active, slaughter steers leady to strong; heifers steady *- ---------' r strong to 25 h'-‘—- ‘ 330-400 I rySug 1.40 iCyan 1.25 AmElPw 1.58 AFdy .90 !t cl 1.90 (hds.) High Low Last Chg. 2*4 Hv, im JT5JZ3^ 28 20'^ 197/k — ' 37 72V4 7I'/k 7t'/j-i: 30 175b 175» 17Vi — ' 417 61 Vx 40 40 —V 45 305b 30'/, 30'/x — I 48 285b 28'/j 285b - ' 49 25'/4 24'.b 245b —H. 8 S3 525b 525b —15b 26 24Vi 23^1' 235/t — V, 33 345b 345b 34H — 8 355b 35'/i 35'/b — „ 47 295b 2t'/7 28'/b—t'/b 34 75'A 745/4 7454 — ■' 12 2454 245b 245b — 21 110 1075b 1075b —2 60 34/4 14 4B'/4 47'/b 47'/b —ir/i 132 12'/b 12 12'W .. .. Tobac 2 AMK Cp .30 AMKCp »' 4 Pine .48 12 345b 34'/b 345b - Anacond 7.50 147 55’4 53'/b 54 ir for the two days;'Armour I choice 27.75-2B;50; -laughter steers! a< I 48.50-30.00; good and|>, good 25.50-27.75; stand-!3.00-2S.50. I 72'/ii 72Va 72Va .. I 43'/4 41Va 415b —15b All Rich 1.60 178 It choice 24.25-27.25; good 24.50-26.25; standard and losy good 22.00-24.50; ---------------- cows 18.00-19.50; utility 18.5 high dressing 20.25; cannert 17.00-19.25. Sheep 200; wooled slaughte. ----------------- Heady; choice and prime 90-110 Ibt 28.50-19.00; mixed good and choice 26.50-26.r Poultry and Eggs DETROIT EGGS DETROIT (APJ—(USDA) — Egg p IJig" U*s'!: >y first receivers inctud' 26 43Vt 42% 427^8 — Vi 61 30% 397« 29% —) 12 135% 134Va 134% - ’ _B— 18 365b 345b 34V4 — ' 7 355b 35 35'/4 - ' 4 775e U'h 74Va —1' BolsCas .25b Borden 1.20 BorgWar 1.25 BrIstMy 1.20 Brunswick Budd Co .80 ' 685e 68 48V4 —Va tile Exchange—Butter steady: wholesali buying prices unchanged; 93 score AA 44; 97 A 64; 90 B 43'/4: 89 C 40'/a; Cars 90 E 44; 09 C 42. Eggs unsettled; wholesale buylnt prices unchanged to 4 lower; 80 per ceiy or better grade A^hltes 35-41; medlurrts 35; standards 37; checks 27. unk Rar Hulova .8( Burl Ind 1.,. - Burroug 1.20 25 2355b 22 1 45Va 45'/a —1 American Stocks ( (AP) - Arnerican Oil 512 26'/4 255b 24 — ■ 8, G 253 954 9'-b 9'/4 — Campbl Chib Cdn Javelin Cinerama Dynalectrn EguitCp .05e Rrt Resrees relmont Oil » 01 Basn Pet Gulf Am Cp HoernerW .82 Rbskyo .30e Hycon Mtg Hydrometl S 2054 ,19Vb 195i —2 1 13'A 13V4-^ 1 215/4 21Va 215/4 204 21 Va 20'/a 215b — 226 42Va 615/4 42 -1' 14 305b 30 30Va + NewPark Mn Ormand Ind RIC Group Soxon Indust Scurry Rain *2*9 (T 13% 13% 13Vi 'ivi nv.-% Syntex Cp .40 58 40 S95b 5954 - Jcchnico^.MIJ 193 225b - Copyrighted by The Associated Press 1949 Stocks of Local Interest Rioures alter decimal points ere eighths „ OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Ouolations from the NASD are repre- alive Inter-dealer prices of apprbxl-ly 11 a.m. Inter-dealer markHs jiionpe throughout the day. --------- '■•♦“II markup, r commission. 4«L,?.°cp- le retell markup, markdown ( U.J.’ “vrvices ....... Rubber Co. I?; on Printing ...... SCilblO "kondolte Chemical tiu i^5hge *' Ago bond AVERAGES Id by Tho^ AssocIhted^Prose^ Rills Ind. Util. Fgn. L. Yd. Is*:? ■ 1st Dividends Declared '“"Ion uii (, •pli’ovV,'^ ’ 1 s CampRL .45e CampSp 1.10 Canteen .80 CaroPLt 1.42 CastleCke .40 CaterTr 1.20 CelaneseCp 2 CessnaAir wi CFI StI .80 Ches Ohio 4 ChlMII SIP P ChiPneu 1.80 Chi Rl Pec Chris Craft 1 Chrysler 2 CITFIn 1.80 Cities Sve 2 ClarkEq 1.40 ClevEIIII 2.04 Coca Col 1.20 CoIgPal 1.20 CollInRad .80 CBS 1.40b ColuGas 1.40 ComSol v.90e ComWEd 2.20 40 9'/i 954 934 — 5/b 33 37-H 345b 345b -F ■' 27 31Vb 31'b 31'/b — 8 27'/i ' 4 3954 19 37'/b —-8 75 73',b 1. . _ - 30 185b 181b 18'/b — 54 22 185b I8V1 18'/b — 'h 27 34 WhL 34Vj —2'/b 18 44'4 4554 44V 15 6954 495b 495 15 57Vi. 5554 54 8 425/4 42'/i 42'b — '4 138 385b 375b 375b —15b 3 31’/4 31 31'/4 - - 1 59 50 58 —1 1 29Vj 29 29 7- » 2S5b 24'4 25'/b — t 7354 73'4 73'/j — J 555b 551/4 SS5b + I 535b 5254 5254 — 1 18 70'A 495't 70 47 48'4 *l'/2 47% — '4 31 59'4 58'/t 59Vb 32 50 495b 495b h 275'e 275b 27 Vi- »d%o Cowles .50 CoxBdeas .50 CrouseHin 1b CrowCol 1.511 DeycoCp 1 Day PL 1, Deere Co ! Det Steel .1 DiaSharn^^L- 23V> lV/7-^V* I 27'/b 27Vi 275b .. ( 385/4 3814 385/4 - 5 I 24'4 2354 2354 - E Kodak .88a 141 71% 705b 7i/t EatonYa 1.40 10 34^. 36 36 Ebascoind 2 'M 61% ao ou ?e?t°S-pe“c ”5 T 2 vT phSvJ^Cd ' 72 33 33 32% 3254 irihirp ** • iC -50e « J?.,. 1 42 415b 415b —5b ( 36'b 355/ii 3554 I 245'i 265b 245b 5f 1? 32°^ -31C4 ISvIi’ I SOVj 50».b -25b INCREASED eftOynaiT an Elec : 31 7854 785b 78Vj — 1 ,11 335/a 335b 3354 4- \ 241 79% 785b 79% + \ 23 31 Va 31'4 31'4 — " 92 395b 39% 39Va ... 50 31 30Va 305/4 — 1 I 835b 83Va 83% - PugSPL 1 Pullman : nItaC StI nt 1.30 I 585'e 5754 585b r 43 42'4 425b ... I 23'4 22% 22’% — 5b Raytheon .50 Reading Co RelchCh .50 ----"11 2.50 Gt Nor Ry 3 It 415b 4t 41 - Gt west FInl 48 2254 22'% 22'% - GtWnUnIt .90 8 71 49 49 - GraanGnt .94 5 33% 32'% 3254 - Greyhond 1 109 23’% 23 23 - —imnAlrc 1 174 45’4 4454 45 - — If Oil 1.50 224 445b 44'/i 44'% - GulfStaUt .88 7 24'% 24'% 24'% + GulfWInd .40. 172 425b 41'% 4I<% - a— Haillburt 1.05 9 47% 47% 47% 4 Harris lr‘ ' 4 , Ravlon 1.40 66 78% 77% « 77% Rexall .30b 171 45% 44Va 44V} Reyn Met .90 540 42 40% 41 ReynTob 2.20 166 44 43% 44 RoanSei .47g 165 11% 11% 11% •» % Roh Cp .W 61 35V» 33% 35V» ‘ RoyCCola .81 24 37Va 37Va 37% ReyOut 1.89r 107 51% 50Va 50% HewPack .20 12 76Va 7 SaFeInd 1.60 271 36Va 36 36% .. SanFeInt .30 42 46% 45 45% ^ Hoff Elactrn Holidyinn .35 HotlySug 1.20 HomtstKe 32 18% 17% 16% — ^ 21 73% 72 72 —2 1 35 35 35 80 42% 41% 41% >> « laywi i.iu 47 121 117 117%—41/ USehF 1.10 22 43% 41% 41% ustLP 1.12 '19 45Va 45 45 — «^met .70 49 30% 30% 30% — V ihoPw 1.60 4 33% 33% 33% — lal Basic 1 10 18 17% 17% <- % Cent 1.50 2 66% 66% 66V4 —1 0 Cp Am 74 12% 12% 12% — ^ \ Cp MO 123 45% 44% 45% — 1 i(*rRand 2 21 53V4 52% 52% — ^ and Stl 2 34 38% 38% 38% — « 4 47 299% 297 298'/# —1% 21 35% 35Vt 35% 49 23Va 22Va 22% 89 38 37% 37% 96 37% 37% 37^6 — % 206 54% 53 53 tarsR 1.20a iharon $ti xrs Shell Oil 2.30 37 67% -lltW. SouCaiE 1.40 * IthCo 1.14 -.jNGas 1.40 Sou Pec 1.60 ou Ry 2.80a 118 42'/a 415b 425b - V. 13 4IP4 5954 5954 -1'4 ........... 184 2354 23'/. 23'/a ... perryR .22o 232 49'/. 4754 49'4 - 'b ^areD lowaPSv 1.32 25 195b 185b 1 JohnMan 2.40 20 815b Bt'/. B15b —15b JonL^an .1 Jones L 2.7 Joy AAfg 1., KanPwL 1.1 Katy Ind KayserRo .i 3 10Tb 107'4 107'4 — 54 1 51'4 51'4 51’4 — 5b 5 49'4 484 —15 2 245b 245b 245b .... 59 54 55’b SS’b —1', 11 24'b 235'e 24'b -F 'b —N— - 95 44 43 43 —I'b 9 5(Fb SO'4 SO'b ... 9 95'b S9'/4 595b — 'b 19 11454 1135b 114 — 54 .91 415b 41'b 415b — V. 22 42 415b 42 — 54 7 29 2854 29 -F 'A 1. 4-1 421/1 425* — »/4 ■ 4154 415b 18 575b 57 57'4 — 5b I 17Va 175b 175. — '. 225 27 24'A 245b - 5b 219 42'b 405b 41 —1' rIGD 1.30 100 4 2.80 2.40 134 38'b 3754 37'b - H 1291 98 94’A 97 —14'b 54 825b 82 82'b - 5b 1 2154 215b 2154 4 I 2354 23'/. 231.4 — 'b tOCal 2.80b 143 49 )h 2.76 18 4854 48 485b-1 rkaging 74 18 175b 1754 - ‘ Ih 1.80 70 44'A 45'A 44 — 5 ,_.-ug .70 133 37V. 34'A 345b -15 tevensj 2.0 32 57 545b 561/. - 5 “ forth I 48 575b 5754 5754 —15 II lb 4 725’. 72 7254 .... a .72g 74 7’b 7'A 7'4 — '. 96 715b 70'b 71 47 135b 13'b I3'A — 5 47 3314 33'b 335b — '. 51 395b 395b 39'b -F ' UnOIICal 1.40 UnlonPacIf 2 Uniroyal .70 UnItAirLIn 1 UnltAlrc 1.80 'pruft ‘lSi ...It MM 1.20 USGypsm 3a US Indust .40 USPIpe 1.20 USPlyCh 1.50 US Smalt 1b US Steel 2.40 1.20 47 23'A 2254 221/. 122 54 53'A 5354 .. 28 87 84'b 84'b — 233 29’A 28'A 28'b — 49 34'4 335b 335b - . 33 74'A 75’A 755b -IV. 98 S4’b S3'A 53'A — 5“ 188 445b 435b 44'A — ' 27 34'4( 355b 34'A — ', Co .60 31 28'b 275b 27V. — V. w 1.08 24 31 3054 SIPA — Vb _w-^x—Y—Z— WarLam 1.10 33 56'b 54’/. 56'A - 'b ■•'as Wit 1.28 14 24V. 2414 2414 —'b eetnAIrL 1 8 41V. 405b 405b —I'.b ..nBanc 1.20 30 41 40'/. 40'/. — i4 WnUTel 1.40 83 41’/. 405b 401/. - ’b WestgEI 1.80 187 49 48 48'/. — 5. Weyerhr 1.40 58 8354 83 83'b Whirl Cp 1.40 40 58 58 58 —1 White Mot 2 28 485b 47'/. 475b - 5b WinnDIx 1.56 14 35’. 35'/. 35i'. - Woolworth 1 17 311/4 30’/. 30’/.—IV. XeroxCp 1,40 161 245 263'/. 263'/. -S’’. YngstSht 1.40 129 485b 47'4 48 - 5. ZenIthR 1.40 48 5354 53’/. 535b- 5b '.opyrlghted by Tho Aiioclaled Prest 1949 Sales figures are unofficial. Unless othtrwlia noted, rates of divl .end* In the foregoing table are annual disbursements based on the lart qudftarly — semi-annual declaration. Spa-'*' -a dividends or paymtnts noi Id as regular ar# Idantiflad iwing foo^ai, ■xtras. b-Annual rata dend. plus stock dividend. c-LIqUIdatIng .... ' ■“ "Klarad or paid In 1949 plus . oiviuund. e-Pald last year, t—Pay lo stock during 1949, estimated ush ! on ox-dMdend or ax-dlstrlbutlon g—Declared or. paid so f ..... h-Dtclared or paid afte dividend or split up. k—Declared this yeary an aceumulBtIwib litti dividends I Paid tr'- c dividend, t—Paid In stock during estimated cash valiia on ax-dlyidend *5al9s" In full. I-Cilled. x-Ex dividend. y-Ex dlvl-I and teles In full, x-dli—Ex dlstrlbu-xr-Ex^^^rlghls. Without^ vvar- . .. .. .... ______J. fn—Foreign Issue 107 36'b 35'/. 35'b —I'b'terest equalization tpx. 9 70'/e 4954 70'/e — 5.! -ipso 37'b 37 37'/. — 10 29 2854 28’/e — 41 25 245b 245b — 5 24 235b 2354 — 12 305b . 30’4 30'A - .. .J 2554 25'A 2SVb — 5* 22 3«'4 34 36/is of 1993. * ★ * Q—When reading the quotes on mutual funds in the Wall Street Journal, is there any way to recognize the no loads? What does “chg” mean after “bid” in the final column? — C. L. -In the Wall Street Journal the no loads are indicated by the letter (v) in parentheses, and this device, thoiiigh it appears in some other publications, is not used in all newspapers. It stands for net asset value. The surest identification is the similarity of the bid and ask quote. You will note that these are exactly alike for ho loads because no sales charge is added to the ask (or buy) price. As pointed out here recently, the net asset value is calculate daily. Total assets are divided by the number of shares outstanding to determine the bid or (redemption) price. The “bid chg” is the simple numerical difference, plus or minus, between one day’s asset value lind that of the previous day, (Copyright, 1M9) / " *1- ■ B—8 -Junior Editors Quiz on 0—Our son tried to enlist in the Navy and was rejected because of an undescended testi- cle. QUESTION: Why do deer need antlers? ANSWER: Cattle and some other animals have hollow horns, but a deer’s antlers are different, being made of solid bone. Cattle retain their hnrns, but a deer sheds his antlers every year. It Is in the winter that the male doer loses his antlers (the doe, or female deer, is without them). Missing these formidable weapons, this male deer becomes shy and retiring, As spring comes, new antlers start growing, but these are mere stumps at first, tender and covered with soft, velvety hair. With summer, the antlers are much larger and have begun to develop different points and become harder. By August they begin to look like the real thing, but still have the velvety covering. When, in the fall, this covering is finally rubbed off. the solid antlers emerge in their grandeur. Now the buck becomes aggressive. He’s boss of his herd and will fight fiercely to preserve his authority if another buck deer should attempt to challenge it. He will also fight to protect his herd from predators. He’s the king of the autumn woods and his fine new horns help him to prove it. (You con unn $10 cash plus AP's handsome World Yearbook if your question, mailed on o postcard 1o Junior Editors in care of this newspaper, is selected for a prize.) THE PONTIAC PPESS. TUESDAY, FEBRUABY 18, 1969 Dr. Wayne G. Brandsfadt Says: \ Operation on Problem Testicle Advisable It this a birth defect? Itf what way is it a handicap? Would an operation help him? If he marries later could he have children? -In a per-l______ ______ son with thisBRANDOT'adT congenital defect, there is always the danger of testiculai: cancer. A corrective operation is strongly advised. If the testicle on the opposite side is normally placed, your ; ability to have children will not be impaired. A —Phimosis is a tight foreskin tliat can be retracted over the head of the penis only with great difficulty. This makes it Impossible to clean the penis properly and predisposes to cancer. The treatment is circumcision. Q — What is the cause of phimosis? Does It have any harmful effects? What treatment do you recommend? Q_My husband, 47, has a bloody discharge in his semen. He says that, since he feels all right, there isn’t any need to worry. What do you think? A — Unexplained bleeding is always potentially dangerous. Your husband may have a chronic seminal vesiculitis, which is not very serious, or a cancer, which is. He should can sperms live outside the body? * A—It is possible for sperms to reach the uterus from outside the body and cause pregnancy. How. long they can live on the outside depends largely on the surrounding temperature and the degree of drying to which they are exposed. They can live in the female genital tract for 24 to 72 hours. cause to do nothing may be fatal. 0—Is it possible for a surgeon to remove an organ without leaving a drain in the wound? .A—A drain is left in an operative' wound that is badly infected so that the wound will held from within outward. Otherwise a deep abscess will form. When there is nd danger of infection or when the infection is well-controlled with, antibiot-'ics, no drain is requirwl. REVIVAL REVIVAL EVANGELIST Rev. D. R. Matheriee Findlay, Ohio Evangelicol Holiness Church Corner of Auburn and Morivo Ave., Pontiac February 12 to 23 ^ PuMie Wtlcome 7.w tK ^ ^ BICKIIITDH, riilW 1 STURDY METAL FOLDING TABLES RECREATION ROOMS • SEWING TABLE display TABLES QUALITY TABLES, NOT SECONDS! Commercial strength FOLDING CHAIRS Three sizes • Juvenile • Jr. • Adult AUDIO-VISUAL CENTER Division of Christian Literature Sales 85 Oakland Ava. FE 4-1828 Oil Half Cost?'$1 Billion' WASHINGTON (UPI) - It would cost the government $1-billion or more to turn the oil-fouled Santa Barbara Channel off California into a public marine sanctuary, according to unofficial Interior Department estimates. The $1 billion or more actually would be only a part of the cost of halting all drilling. The sum represents only what tlie government would lose by paying the oil companies for canceling drilling lease* ment to give the government $1 for every |6 received for oil pumped out of the ocean floor. PROPERTY RIGHTS Government “lawyers say the leases are "property rights" and if the government now were to take them away It would have to pay the "fair market value” for them. Those urging a perhianent marine sanctuary be created in the area Include the influential Sierra Club, a nationwide conservation organization based in San Francisco, and Rep whose congre.sslonal district includes Santa Barbara. granted by the Interior Depart-;^, ^ ^.^alif. ment, and In the loss of royalties on the oil. Department legal officials, reluctant to discuss the' possibility in detail, note the oil companies drilling in the Santa; Barbara Channel paid a “bonus" of 1603 million for the| privilege in addition to regular' lease payments and an agree-1 RESTORATION REVIVAL Continuej in Pontiac T««a OrMt tw-vIcM Dally Comi Receive Your Miracle III l>»iTy IIm P«ntUCa MichHian If everyone in fheworld ignored flungs like this I Write the Peace Corps, Washington. D.C. 20525 I □ Please send me intormation, I □ Please send me an application. nvi^theredbeno world The J’onliac IMComfal C==3 GAS HEAT C02:Y is the vword for our house ance the bos$ installed gas heat It's so reliable — always there when you need it. And for a speedy warm-up, there's nothing like gas heat It circulates heat so fast, the whole house is warm in minutes. It's fresh air heat too. A gas heating system actually cleans the air as it heats. Economical? Of course -— that's what gas is famous for. Remember, COZY is tlw word. Why don't you get the latest word on gas heat and be COZY too? consmneis power coNsuMens pome suggests you see your gas heating dealer today for better living tomorrow '■rv . ...I, . . Harrelson Going to Comp Club Owners Turn Thumbs Down on Arbitration Offer but saici he will not report until the dispute is settled. ★ ★ ★ “Denny is a, good friend of mine,” said Harrelson. “But 1 told him I thought he was wrcmg for not honoring his contract. I toM him I thought he should live up to it." Harrelson’^^ declaration made him the first player of any consequence to split with the others. If more follow him, it could break the back of the strike. By the Associated Press Chalk one up for the owners in the continuing threat of a baseball strike, but don’t count the players out yet. Ken Harrelson, who led the American League in runs batted in last season, became the first name player to an-. ndunqe that he would report to training camp on time this spring. h ★ “I’m going to play,” said Harrelson. ' “I signed a new contract in the middle of Ihst season and I’m going to honor it,” the Red Sox’ slugger added. The Players’ Association has Instructed its members not to sign contracts or report to training camps until the pension dispute is settled and developments Monday indicated that the final settlement could be a long way off. ARBITRATION REJECTED The club owners rejected a Players’ Association request for arbitration, and offered instead to increase their original |1 million boost in pension contributions by $200,000, lifting the total to $5.3 million. “The offer represents minimal prog-* ress,” said Marvin Miller, executive director of the Players’ Association, who said he would recommend rejection of the offer. ★ ★ * , The owners’ offer came after the players had recommended turning the dispute over to arbitration by a three-man board. John Gaherin, negotiator for the owners, rejected the suggestion, saying the owners and the players “have all the knowledge required. We don’t see any necessity of the Intervention of a third party.” Meanwhile, Harrelson found himself right in the middle of the dispute, “I am 100 per cent behind the players, and if I hadn’t signed last year, I’d be with them all the way,” Harrelson said. ---------------------------------------- TALKED TO OTHERS “But I did Sign the contract and I’m nl ££ Q^mifinnU Npxt going to stand by it. I’ve talked to some riayOTT OemiTinaiS INSXT of the other players about irly situation ---—--------------------------— and they understand why I’m doing what I feel I have to do.” Harrelson also had some thoughts on Detroit’s ace right-hander, Denny McLain, who also has signed a contract But right now, he’s by himself and so are the New Yankees and Chicago White Sox who are trying to carry on training as' though everything were normal. But normal was hardly the word for their camps. ★ ★ ★ Catcher 'Thurmap Mfmson, a rookie signed in last summer’s free agent draft, was the first man to show pp at the Yankee camp in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.; Manager Ralph Houk huddle with his coaches and club President Mike Burke Monday. ★ * ★ Munson was one of 14 fringe player.s expected to be on hand for today’s opening Yankee workout. Others included pitchers Thad Tillotson and Mike Kekich and catcher John Orsino. A ★ • * The White Sox, training at Sarasota, Fla., have 24 batterymen on hand and announced the signing Monday of Gerry Nyman, a left-handed pitcher who was 2-1 last year. Nypian is the 10th player on the Sox’ spring roster to sign. i The Baltimore Orioles and Montreal Expos expected their first players to arrive at their Miami and West Palm Beach camps today. “I think we will have about 11 men reporting,” said Jim Fannihg, general manager of the National League expansion Expos. Washington whs due to open camp to- day but pushed the starting date back a week becaui^e the team still is officially without a manager. Ted Williams was expected to agree to a million dollar package as part owner and manager later this week. In dther baseball developments Monday, Minnesota named ex-manager Cal Ermer their eastern supervisor of scouts and Bill Jackowski, a National League umpire for 16 seasons, retired because of an eye ailment. THE PONTIAC PRESS smrs 'niKSnAV. FKRHUARV 18, 1969 Nets Facing Major Hurdle in Luring Big Lew to ABA PRE-CAMP FUN — R was a day of fun yesterday at a gathering in Palm Beach, Fla., of managers and coaches at a pre-training camp dinner honoring Detroit Tigers’ skipper Mayo Smith (left). It was a Saints and Sinners affair with proceeds going to the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Fund. With Smith (from left) are Gene Mauch of the Montreal Expos, Luman Harris of the Atlanta Braves and Dick Williams of the Boston Red Sox. Brother Rice Five in 'Rematch' Excited Williams Still Negotiates WASHINGTON (AP) — Ted WUlla^ ■ays he is excited about his impending «tgning as manager of the downtrodden Washington Senators. But it appeared today the former star slugger will have to postpone celebration of his million dollar deal with owner Bob Short for at least another 24 hoiu-s. The delay in naming Williams as manager of the last-place American League club was caused by need for additional time to work out details concerning the estimated 10 per cent -or $900,000 chunk of Senators stock on which he’ll have options to Labeling the job as a challenge, Williams beamed: “I’m ready to go. I’m really getting ev cited about it.” In addition to the stock arrangement, Williams will get a long-range contract calling for a salary that may go as high as $100,000 a year. NO DETAILS Short has given no details about Williams’ stock package but has described it as significant in size. The Senators lost nearly 100 games last season. They have been burled in the American League’s second division for 22 successive years. The Senators, scheduled to open their spring training camp Monday, have postponed the start of workouts until Feb. 14 Coach Bill Norton of Birmingham Brother Rice figures things will be a little different when the Warriors take on Detroit Holy Redeemer for the second time tomorrow night. Their first encounter didn’t count. That one was for practice and fun. A lot rides on this one. The game is slated for the U. of D. Memorial Building at 7 p.m. and the winner will advance to Sunday’s finals of the Detroit Catholic League first division playoffs. That game is also slated for the Memorial Building. ‘NO-COUNT’ GAME In that ‘no-count’ encounter prior to the opening of . the season, Holy Redeemer gained the upper hand. “They handled us,” said Norton. , “But we’re a lot better now. Many of our boys were playing football and they had just moved to the basketball court and that made a difference.” * ★ ★ In this week’s Associated Press poll, Holy Redeemer is ranked third in Class B, while Brother Rice holds the No. 11 position in the Cldss A lineup. LEAD WARRIORS The Warriws will need a strong effort on the backboards from Mike McGill (6- _ . , . 5) BUI Hart (64), Mike BiaUas (6-3) and tSDOSltO; HOW6 John Malwiey (6-2). ' ' * ★ ★ Holy Redeemer wiU counter with a front line of Rick Zamjoski (6-5), Tom Targosz (6-2), and Joe Franges (6-2). PCH NO. 6 While Brother Rice failed to dent the top 10 in the Class A poll, Pontiac Central held onto its No. 6 position, while Pontiac Catholic made it to the top 10 among Class C squads for the first time this season. Heading the Class A poll is Ypsilantl (14-1). Flint Central (12-1) is third and Rochester’s Falcons are nestled in the 14th position. LAKERS EIGHTH The Lakers of West Bloomfield remain firmly entrenched in the No. 8 spot in Class B. They’re 15 points out of seventh and 16 ahead of the No. 9 squad. ★ ★ ★ Pontiac Catholic, now 15-2, jumped into a tie with St. Ignace LaSalle for the No. 8 position in Class C. Orchard Lake St, Mary (14-2) tumbled than 19 points a game and Zamjoski week to Wyandotte Mt. Carmel, the leader in the Class D lineup and Pontiac Catholic’s, foe in the second division championship game Sunday at the Memorial Building. TOP scorerB Targosz and Franges average more than 19 points a game and Zamojski averages 15 for Holy Redeemer, says coach. Bill McCartney. “They’re all good students and yet they hang around the gym, which is kind of unusual,” McCartney said. “Zamjoski has an A-mlnus average in school, Targosz and Zamojski have B-plus averages. # A. * ' “And each one of them is what coaches call a 100 per center on the court.” (Continued on Page C-2, Col. 6) ST. PAUL-MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -The New York Nets, by a coin flip, won the rights to UCLA All-American giant Lew Alcindor and selected him in a secret American Basketball .Assocition draft, highly informed sources disclosed today. ABA Commissioner George Mikan was not expected back in Minneapolis until later today and was unavailable for comment. Alcindor’s selection by the cellar team in the ABA’S Eastern Division draws the battle lines for an expected dollar war between the two-year-old ABA and the National Basketball Association, which reportedly conducted a secret draft three weeks ago in Chicago, the sources said. The Nets ilipp6d a coin with Houston, the last-place team in the Western Division, during the ABA’s secret draft by conference telephone calls last Saturday, the sources said. ★ * * The 11-team ABA conducted the first two rounds of its 1969 draft. Names of other players taken were not* known. Phoenix or Milwaukee of the NBA presumably would have the draft rights to the 7-foot-lV4 Alcindor, who has led UCLA to two straight NCAA championships and started them to a third. Alcindor, however, reportedly wants to play in his native New York- if he decides to play In either professional league. - Mikan has said ABA owners have agreed to pool money to lure Alcindor into the fledgling league. A specific price has not been set. The commissioner said the ABA has bid a lot of money in the past two drafts but “we were beaten. And I don’t choose to be beaten again. Our trustees don’t choose to be beaten.” UyS. Gal Skiers Eye Rise in Cup Standing / PRAGUE (AP) — America’s girl skiers, no better than fifth in World Gup , standmgs, have a chance to improve as / World Cup meets switch from Flurope to / North America. The Grand Prix of Slovakia, whlpb ended Monday in a double slam/by Austria’s Gertrud Gabl with Manlyn Cochran of Richmond, Vt., a cl(^ second, was the last World Cup meet in Europe for the women. The Mmaining events will be held in North Ai^rica. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 22 9 am to/8 pm Suspension Halts Third in Scoring Golf Pro in Royal Setting to Doctor King's Slice NEW YORK UP) — Claude Harmon admitted today that he had some misgivings when he got an urgent call from. King Hussan II ef Morocco to rush over and cure his slice. “I didn’t know what to think,” added the paunchy master of the Winged Foot Club in Mamaroneck, N. Y., and Thunderbird in Palm Springs, Calif. “I was afraid if he kept on slicing he might have ihd put against a wall and shot.” ' But it wasn’t that way at all, the former Masters champion in describing the tribulations of trying to teach golf to a king. “The king is really a very mild fellow on the golf course,” the famed pro related. “If h| blew his stack^nd dripped a little profanity in Arabic, I never saw it or heard it. AMERICAN TRAITS “When things go badly, he accepts it complacently; shrugs his shoulders and Says, in effect, ‘’That’s the way the ball bounces.’ He’s learned all the American traits and idioms. “It’s the wildest thing you ever saw.” Harmon continued. “He usually plays with- a couple of *' generals or some of his palace guard, I|e, /1: runs the country from tlw golf course. '? /’®-★ ★ ★ : “There are people around with nrief cases under their arms, The king will hit a ball and then reach over and sign some paper or other. He^ hit another ball and then go into a conference on the state of the treasury. ^ “I said, ‘Your Majesty, you can’t play golf like that. Not even Arnold Palmer could score with so many interruptions/ He looked at me stonily and said, ‘T Imust run my country.’” NEW YORK (AP) - The National Hockey League’s list of top scorers offers a lesson, in adversity. The league leader, Phil Esposito of Boston, has 36 goals and 56 assists for 92 points, but is now suspended for two games after roughing a referee. The second place man, Chicago’s Bobby Hull with 37 goals and 41 assists, has been skating around for much of the season with his jaw wired shut from a fracture. Hull’s weight and strength dropped noticeably but his production hung on. And in third place, hockey’s grand old man, Gordie Howe, celebrates his 23rd season with 77 points to date — 33 goals and 44 assist. Teammate Alex Delvec-chio is ti^/ for sixth with Montreal’s Yvan Cournoyer at 67 points. lowi; Di Chicago .... letrolt .... ....„ Chicago .. Balivtau, Montreal Cournoyer, Montreal Delvacchlo, Detroit Baransnn, St. Loui* Boston __ . Tf-------- Rousseau, unman, Toronto Harmon, who, with his family, was honored by the Metropolitan Golf Writers Monday night as golf’s Family of the Year, met the golf-minded king here in 1967 when Hussan II played Claude’s course at Winged Foot. > 'i Second Half Slump Hurts Wayne Stdte f ' DETTROIT (AP)-Wayne State lost a lO-pomt lead late in the second half of a nonconference basketball game Monday and Cleveland Stke guard Mike Campbell administered the final blow giving Cleveland a 71-69 win. Campbell grabbed the ball and drove the length of thq floor for a layup shot with just one second left in the game. The winners, now 10-13 on the season, were led Jby 6-foot-6 center' Harv Smith who scored 19 points -^-13 in the last nine minutes of play. I the Pontiac press. Tuesday, February is, i969 Ref Cha$es Maravich Cage Gamble Fails for Vols L\ tW|Tenr By tke AsiMcJated Press / [ In an effort to get the ball, Tennessee purposely took tW| Tennessee incurrcsl technicals technical fouls in a gamble that | in the closing seconds for call- with assistant coach Stu Aber-backfired and Louisiana State! ing time out twice In excess of deen early in the game. Aber-fell aft« a technical'foul shot the six allowed. With Florida deen suggested that the Vols try downed Pistol Pete Maravlch. {ahead 62-59 and Tennessee’s Bill the strate^ in the final minute Florida edged Tennessee 65-63 free throw line, and Vanderbilt nipped L?U 65413 <^»ch Ray Mcars called succes-in the two explosive Southeas-times out, the Vols' sixth tern Conference basketballi®"<^ games Monday ni^t 1 , . * ^ *,., *. ^ ^ I Justus r^e his free throw ' un . ... u .. V i*"'' Andy Owens converted the Meanwhile. sixth-rankM Ken-j^j,nlcal foul shot for Florida, tiickj- widened its SEC lead to] making it 63-60. Florida cop-two games over 17th-rank^ltrou^ the Jump and Mike Tennessee, snuffing out Georgia j^gtherwood dropped in two 8.5 77 in what Adolph Rupp offi- throws to give the Gators dally claimed as Ijls 600th g5.gQ p^gp coaching victory. Owens then fouled Tennes- In the Pacific -8, top-rankedj see's Jim England and Mears UCLA’s Lew Alcindqr scored 22^called another time out. Eng-pointa to pace the Bruins to a land made his free throw and 53-44 victory over upset-minded Owens mis.sed the technical free Washington. | throw, leaving the Vols trailing SQUARED OFF {65-61. Maravich, the nation’s leading CONTROLLED JUMP scorer, was ejected on a technhi Tennessee took the tap and cal foul with about two minutes {England's jump shot cut the remaining for squaring off deficit to two points with 22 sec-against an official. No blows onds left. But time ran out on were struck. the Vols. Long Jumper Produces Win for Rec Five Mears said he discussed the points, bringing his career total possibility of drawing techfiicals Florida Coach Tommy Bartlett indicated he will ask for a rules change. There was no official explanation available regarding Mara-vich’s ouster. Maravich, who was in possession of the ball, appeared to be hit by a Vanderbilt player and the ball went out of bounds. No fdul was called and the official awarded the ball to Vandy. But the floppy-haired LSU junior, stayed in the game enough to be top scorer with 35 to 2,059 and shattering the SEC {Lakeland Hardware (3-7) a 64-career scoring record of 2,fB0|g2 double overtime decision set by Mississippi State’s Bailey {over the LL.B.’s (7-3) last Howell in 1957-58. night in Waterford Township Kentucky boosted its confer-!National League basketball, ence record to 12-1 by snuffing I The score was 54-all In out a Georgia rally. Tennessee, regulation and each notched which made the top 20 rankings four markers in the first for the first time this week, dropped to 10-3 in the conference after its loss to Florida. Front-Runners in Big 10 Play Monroe Moore flashed former All-Star form last Thursday and set a ■^season individual high for the 300 Bowl Classic with a 246-246-245-^737 that just missed being the highest sanctioned triplicate ever rolled in the area and possibly the state. Moore has slowed down his LAKIWOOD LANII (wi«*Y SI. Stiwdlcl't MIkm high games and sereies WlnowlKkl, IM-aW-SIO) e»lfr JUi F«llh Hull. SI3. ErMty flan A ilrlpn , HIGH GAMES AND SERJES-Uw Sullivan, »4-av-«70; Rutt Bowktr, ir JW-40*) mcK Rankatto, iUi Gary Pan m, Marlpria Peak, TEA/ HIGH seaiss—Brttkawayt, 1191 team h I o GAME -Plonaart, m. WMitMAiy Nil* Waman HIGH SBRIES-Phylll Slain, II Thao Noall, 307. hIgH OAMB- bowling pace in r anUng iid-isii ---- -----Ortca 3)2. TEAM HIGH ^ERieS-Gmn CHICAGO (UPI) - Only the front runners will be involved in trio of Big Ten games Tuesday night and three of the four leaders will have to play away, from home. First place Purdue travels to bitra-state rival Indiana and while the Hoosiers trail by four games, their home court plus a psychological peak for a clash with the Boilermakers could be the potential for an upset. I GAMES AND SERI —;RI_SS-H«v . ........ nil BUI SomarvMla, iMi Ed Pal Pallaraon, niun 3CKIO—DOO UiVII, 326-241—*«; I Baatly, 204-244-A25) Cllll Sanlor, BO-I- SI»; Al Norman, lOS-BI-Slii Jo* . JSlar, 307-3IS- «Hi Mika Plorat, ~ 27S~*0*i Oav* Morano, 203 313 AO HURON BOWL Piiday s**rtim*ii IH GAMES AND SEI », 2a»-a3*-2>6-72») Mika P after ranking as perhaps the top pinsplller in the North Oakland County area .for several seasons, but he was right on target last week. Still one of the stronger bowlers in the 300 Classic, "Mo” was nearly 100 pins better than the next high series man, Ekl Austreng with his 213-233-651. Ed Lovell had 242-644. Two men did beat him out in the high game category. George Stanujis hit a 248 ( 611) and Cieorge (Chico) Chlcovsky a 247 (618). PAlROPTOO’i Rocky Kimball’s 276-232-702 for North Hill Texaco and Ed Jostock’s 257-235-235—727 forigiii^Vr, iw-'iir City Gla.ss Service had to share{ ci..hc^ last week’, North H^H higu Oassic spotlight with Tom *■» careiyr AIRWAY LAN» I Pafil Malar T*niR*Sl Man ID SERIES-John Il^^-aOJ. HIGH GAMES* T/oin'^^trk, ^ (S24): BUI Waonar, iMi Chuck Law, 234 “Ob Hudson, 2Mi MIk* Harmai, 2M| Bll high GAME and »RIBB-Oonn/ larfon, 917—5)2i Rlla Franciteo, SU. ----.BY UNIS 7 rnlNTaam* Ohio Statef In second place with a 6-2 record compared to 7-1 for the Boilermakers, appears at Illinois and the Illini, with a 4-4 Big Ten mark, will be aiming for revenge for a loss earlier on the Ohio State court. In the windup clash Iowa ai Michigan State tangle on the Spartan court, each with a Big Ten record, and while neither team figures as tender now with four losses, the loser will be eliminated with five. GAMES~Don ________________ Paachk* and Tom Bona, 222 aachi Skiba II7i Jack Hankal, 2l5i Dick ■ “ wo* Hanry, 212 aach. WaBnaVday B**chc*mb*rt GAMES AND SERIES-J Canterbury The Romeo resident posted a 297 final game (661) for Ebellng and Hicks, Inc. Karl Van DeMoortell rolled 264-237-699 for Hazelton’s Lettering and Ed Marsh posted a 238^35-687 for The Brass Lamp. Bill BuU (231-225-680) teamed with Jostock to help the glassmen register 1108-1 0 4 9 — 3127 highs. Ron! high McBurney’s 655 4nd George Ellman’s 654 were other good series. _____ GAMES AND _____________ -- McConnall. 234--423I Lou Sack. 214-61 MIk* O'BrItn, 933. Thunday Mlatd •HIGH SERIES Llort Knox, 102-24b 612: Lynn Van AllllnA 200-105-326; Roirmary Chrlitla, S93. HIGH GAMES-Tom Wallon, 141; Jim Halnai, 233; Dal# _i^cL**n, IM; 0.0,21* ramplalon,' Bsl*'j*riy Liriian. WadnaaBay K. or C. Man SE RIE S-Ellal .yol*. .B2-60). McOInnI* and 0 Oaria ““ II OftOi 'OAMISAND SERIES-Oorli **'-100—322: Rulh Burgoit, lallti SEREIES-J HIGH hompK 241-022: Got - ' 3W Bowl ^Tir^nEiES-Bni lodoBhl*. 131; I =rMoy Momln* lOGlSS- 605; uabon Florot, -------- 13 D*vl»oo, 2)1 BiSSJJir'Wio/ PrMay TWUMHar Mon HIGH GAMES - William Me 1 Claud* Calhoun. B2. 'hiraday Clly Woman Tone —Al— ■ ■ ----- 1421 Sam *24! _____ Parry, 214; Gary Pacesetting Purdue Takes on Indiana Bob Perry’s 30-foot Jumper {{with four seconds left gave (Continued from Page C-1) Holy Redeemer lost its opening game of the season to Harper Woods Bishop Gallagher 56-55 and McCaitney said from the third or fourth game the Lions started to improve. overtime. Jim Spadafore paced t|he winners with 17 points. UCLA, Starting slow as they have many tiptes this season, failed to take the lead for more than 30 minjydes before the 7-foot-1 AlcindOr scored six points to put the Bruins ahead to stay for their 36th straight victory. Washington, playing aggressive defense and deliberate offense, built a 2^21 lead at the half. In the only other game involv* ing the top 20 teams, 18th-ranked Colorado defeated Oklahoma State 73-66. Niagara’s Calvin Murphy, the nation’s number two scorer, was held to 23 points, 10 below his average, by Long Island University, but Niagara went wi to win 83-75. In other games, Struble Realty (9-1) downed Booker Brothers (44). S2-4S, and Bulck Warehousemen (4-6) whipped Don Murphy Inc. (3-7), 65-58. Ron Tosh and Sani GibtKMis pitched in 16 points apiece fM* Struble while Joe Beseau collected 20 for Booker. Lee Saunders’ 15 poults paced the Buick win , over Don Murphy. Ron Staffbnl collected 13 markers for the losers. On the Thursday night schedule at Crary Junior Lakeland meets Dcm Murphy at 6:55; Struble Realty plays the L.L.B.’s at 8:05; and Buick duels Booker Brothers at 9:15. Easy Victories Recorded in City Recreation Loop The Unbeatables and Club One Spot raced to easy victories last night in Pontiac Class A recreation basketball. Clothes, 93-77. In a Class B contest. Local 596 downed Black Culture Center, 73-51. Ckib One Spot downed Perry Drugs, 77-56, while the Unbeatables rolled past Conn’i Ahead 50-43 after three quarters, the C3ub One Spot crew broke the game open with 27-13 edge in the fourth period. Ishman James (18) and Lead Changes for'C Matmen Felix Brooks (14) led the winners, while Jerry Williams in 20 points fn* Perry. Vandercook Lake 1st; PNH, PCH Ranked The Unbeatables built a 43-30 halftime margin and coasted. Will Morgam (17) and Rudy Ransom (16) paced the Unbeatables, while Leste Hardiman managed 19 f o Conn’s. Ford Driver in Fast Run KALAMAZOO (UPI) -Vandercook Lake used victories over Wllliamston, last week’s I OD prep wrestling leader, and Haslett to vault to the top of Its class In the weekly poll. Fla. DAYTONA BEACH, (AP) — Ford’s Donnie Allison blitzed the 2.5 mile trl-oyal Day-International Speedway Monday in the second fastest qualifying time yet recorded for l^day’a Daytona 500. Allison, of Huey town, Ala., waa clocked at 189.374 miles per hour In a Ford Torino powered by an engine that wasn’t supposed to race. A 20-point effort by Theodore Hall plus 16 apiece by John Hooper and Joe Rainge triggered,. Local 596’s win. Ed Stephens pitched in 20 for the Black Cuture center. Trenton and South Haven retained their No. 1 rankings In Class A and Class B in the poll of coaches throughout the state, compiled weekly by George Hobbs, a.sslstant wrestling coach at Western Michigan University. Ford had planned to enter a new stagger-valve engine, but Willlamston dropped completely out of the top five C-D teams as Haslett also downed last week’s leader In a dual COOI.EY MEN The Cooley Lanes Gasslc reported a sparkling 10 51-1092—3186 tor Team No. 14 who was paced by Bob Garrett’s 254—659, Ed Gibbs’ 256-654 and Ed Szot’s 246-642. The high .scorers for the [ Wednesday circuit were CAMES^-Juaj: f*^i^^^^ ■ Cotner of Wonderland Ijines B*«n/ni, 37.10. ...... with 225-257-692. Al Schupbach i '’"V’ix.ra of Cooley Lanes with 246-224— ....... .......... 609 and Max I>ans of Angott - K*iuh soi high Vending with his 279. i „ Evans also had a 662 series: high ,®^rs; whil|» Bob Chamberlam posted Wardtn. 2x1; Marl«ne Athb^^ sit 221-245^70 for Sport^an’s, Bar, Larry Angott had a 237 for!*{JrR2iph”A;mti®*r*nd^^^^^^ Farm Maid Dairy, Fran •jS^J'-baj; substituted last year’s 427 cubic inch engines when it couldn’t get the new powerplants ready in time. Lakeland Hawks in 3-2 Ice Loss r PLACE TEAM The Lakeland Hawks bantams rallied from a 2-0 deficit Sunday bu* lost a 3-2 decision to Grosse Pointe in Southeast Michigan Juvenile Hockey action. Ray Ehnsley and Brad Strohm scor^ to tie the count, but the Hawks couldn't continue their push in the late going. The Lakeland midgets held Dumen hit 248—659 for Acme los. Asphalt. Bob Gustafson rolled' high gameC and serie$-;B*«y 258-665 for Jack’s Marathon i?rR?E*3*VruSi«*^;:“V fEA^^ and Bill Parker posted a 241 Gniwek’s Trophiej). HiGrcllAE'AND sERtET-Th.*..^ ir * * i Joyca, 203 -322; Margar«l Mallron, 500. ” lAVOY LANRS Also rating special mention! strong Huron Point to scoreless tie until the final half period of play and then the roof caved in and they suffered a 54 defeat in the other Sunday contest. are the 650 series recorded for|oisab* position behind UC^A in flie Associated Pr^ major college basketball pi^',^today as part of a wholesale Jiliuffle resulting from the 12-losses''differed by members of the rankings teams last week. In the latest vote .by a national panel of 40 sports titers and broadcasters, UCLA remained a unanimous choice for first place. The Bruins boosted their record to 194 in last week’s action* by trouncing Washington State 83-59 in their only start. Santa Clara, third a week ago, advanced one place after beating San Francisco 72-47 f(M'‘It8 21st victory without a loss. ton, Texas ABM, VI UNITED TIRE SERVICE Flaca, Taam Racord Fall 1. River Rouge (14-2) ........... 2. Albion 02-1) ; • 3. Detroit Holy Redeemer (14-1) . 4. Bey City All Saints (14-1) .. , 5. Grant,Rapids E. Christian (12-2) IM t Haights (13-1) 1 4. Wyoming — 7. Ecorse (12-2) 8. Orchard Lake '... . )o! Durand (13-1) ■ Second 10 with poll points; Rockford --------—- 21, Inkt--------- ----- Oak'shriiie'ilT, rnkstor IS-Croswol jton II, Petoskey 11, Oscoda ' Grosse He 7, Sturgis 7 ------ - -------nd ChrlStI Christian 5, Stevensvllld 1. Det. St. Martin C 2. Saginaw St. StepI a. Mirilngton (130) POrree (130) , (130, .... tg! aui (1M) .. D3| itholle (15-1) . _____j (11-1) ......... a St. Mary (131) . second 10 with poll points: 21. MunIsIng 17, Dolrolt St. Flint St. Michael IS, Home Brooklyn Columbia Central 1(L r 14, La) Central St. Alphonsus R Ontonagon f. Place, Taani, Rooera 1. Wyandotle Mt. Carmel (144 2. Detroit All Salnti (132) . 3. Baldwin (15-0) 4. Brltton-Mecon (130) ..... 5. Ewen-Trout Creek (131) . 3 Detroit St. AAartIn (131) . 7. DoTour (132) ............ 3. Baraga (132) ........... 2. Covert (12-2) .......... I poll points; Cl »r Sprlnga IZ 3 letrolf St. Ellzab F_rontler 15, D'otrolt’'st."'v1ineont X __________ .. Jarvlllo 5, Kingsley 5, Saginaw St. Mary 5, St. Clair Shores St. WHITEWALLS! FULL 4 PLY! MTSIZE 650x13 775x14 825x14 855?(14 NO EXCHANGE HEEDED 845x15.....KJO. _______ 900x15......1 roH My Only Advtrtitiil Mom M Unttoil TIrt HO SO _ ______________ - NO MONEY DOWN VISIT UNITED TIRE TODAY a.. AND SAVE! OPEMU0n.’nillMraL(btBl--MT.M -- ClMiPSUilPAY UNITED TIRE SERVICE "WHERE PRICES ARE DISCOUNTED - NOT QUALITY" 1007 Baldwin Ave. 3 MINUTES FROM DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Sure, Chevrolet makes a better looking andlower priced pickup .. .but you can make more of it than that: Buy One From Matthews-Hargreaves Chevy-Land like a camper... a work truck.. . or a second car. New 1969 Chevrolet y2-Ton Fleetside Picicup Only *2,090 1. 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Umpire in Retirement NORTH WALPOLE, Mass. |(AP) — Umpire Bill Jackowski ;has retired after 17 seasons in |the National League. Wednesday's Garnes Los Angeles at Baltimore Ortonvill^' at Linden “aterford M * (Sophomore! WRESTLING Tonight , ibrook at Dearborn Crestwood , 1. Hayes. S.D. 2. Rule, Sea. I Monroe, Balt 1 4. Robtson, CIn, eduied. G FG FT Pts. Avg. . 62 727 376 1,830 29.5 . 64 610 313 1,533 24.0 . 61 596 339 1,531 25.1 . 59 502 509 1,513 25.6 60 543 407 1,493 24.9 . 58 578 330 1.486 25.6 . 64 485 434 1,404 21.9 62 516 368 1,400 22.6 it Detroi I • 11 1 & 2 CAR MODELS ALSO ON SALE UP TO 7 YEARS TO PAY Plut tax and retreadable eating TUBE or TUBELESS WHITEWALLS $t EXTRA New Wheels 50% Off! RETREAD TIRES $395 Grade 1 Premium Cuitom COMPARE OUR PRICES FIRST! FROM Madlsor. _________ Waterford Ketterin Williamston^at Brighton t Flint Ainsworth SWIM^NG Wednesday Clintondale at Rochester (Oakland-university) Flint Northwestern at Pontiac Northern Bloomfield Hills Andover at Warren ^ Highland Lakes Prank Russell ............. Len Cole ................... Tim Moller .................. Walter Causey ............... NER THOMAS Hero’ honors this week go td John Thomas of Wagner of Ortonville Brandon. North Farmington and Ron Thomas is a guard and „ o,„ zx.x cocaptain of the Raiders and his 23 233 toT steady play has helped thej ?? “J '““ squad to the championship in' Steelers Aid Aides | the Northwest Suburban G Pts.'Avg. League. ' PITTSBURGH (AP) - Head lo mS «:3i Wagner oorltiBues to show Coach Chuck Noll of the Pitts-’’ ’“ ‘’ improvement and his scoring burgh Steelers of the NFL has GP.,.Av,.lhas given the Bjack Hawks "““’is coaching staff 1] m fll lift. He’s had 33 points in his|J|y f"*'" as^ista^^^ i? 1)^ 'last two outings. ^oury, Bob Fry and Max _ Coley. ABA Standings Eastern Division Won Lost Pet. Behind llami ....... 29 25 .537 - linnesota ... 29 26 .527 V, entucky ... . 27 26 .509 IVa idlana ...... 30 30 puSOO 2 few York . 16 37 .302 12’/i Western Division akiand . 42 10 .808 — enver ... 34 22 .607 10 . Wednesday's Gamas Dallas at Los Angeles Houston vs. New Orleans at .Jackson, Clyde Elliott Joins Al Hanoute's Clyde EIjiott, who has been selling General Motors cars for over 18 years, has reioined the sales staff of Al Hanoute, Inc., where he bod formerly been a member of that sales force for more thdn 14 years. Clyde has consistently been a mernber of every GM Sales Achievement Club. And whether you^r* thinking a new car or a used one, Clyde has the know-how and experience to put you in the best buy at the very best price for you. AL HANOUTE’S CHEVROLET BUICK-OPEL, INC. 209 N. 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Huron Ph. 334-0926 BRAKE LIIMIIM6S Beat grade, high 0^1^ qualityjining. 1,000 J J 20,000 mile guoran- Free Installation MONROE SNOOKS 24,000 $1195 $045 Guarantee ^Each 9 INSTALLED I MOTOR MART 123 East Montcalm GLEN MIGHT Tire Department Manafser It’s our guess fhot there's still a few more days of rough wirtter driving still ohead ... and remember, you're only as ,safe os your tires. We corry a complete line of the finest quality end ore equipped with the finest tire care service from true balance and troctionixing to wheel alignment. 12 MONTH TERMS SAFEH CENTER FE 3-784S c—* XOR1H A A K 4 V AK93 ♦ Q6 5 WEST ■ AQJ IPS EAST *93762 ¥Q2 ♦»A3 * 10 7 6 5 TH[E PONTIAC PRESS, Over reaction? I i MIAMI (AP) - Four Are en-RinM, two ladder trucks, one P snorkel, one foam truck, one II rescue squad and one district I fire chief rushed to the Federal I Building Monday when smdce ?: was detected on the first floor. , . . ^ . The fire fighters poured five low diamond lost to East's ace. In other words, the oom-lg^yom gf onto the source 'and a spade was led bark. ibination play was going to work|of the alarm—a cigarette butt This hand illusirates the defender held four,that had fallen into a crack in theme of not taking a disr_ard| hearts to the queen and the club!the floor and set some debris until you have to do so Eddie fiapggp smoldering, didnl know whether he should Bridge Tricks From Jacobys ROBm MALONE , ----------- - AwHAfUnBOPUf J wmpomTmfws mwKrtKmie/ ] txpBzei&porn’tlpy 6R3Ne,winfA — ----------- yLWvrmmrm SOITH (D) *3 J54 ♦ KJ10972 * AKJ Both vulnerable West North Fjuit South 1 ♦ raw 3 ¥ raw 2 ♦ raw 2 A raw 3 * Pass 4 N T. Pass S ¥ Pass 6 ♦ Pa.ss Pasa discard a heart or a club so he I just i-uffed and played his jackj I of diamonds. | ; Then lie cashed dummy's ace| iaiid king of hearts. W'hen thej queen' dropi>ed he did cashi dummy's queen of trumps and, di.srarded his Jack of clubs oni the ace of spade.s | If the queen of hearts had not! dropped, South would have discarded his jack of hearts on! the ace of spades and niffed ai heart. • ! THE BETTER HALF Pa.w If hearts broke he would have' Opening lesd—A Q entered dummy with the queen I of trumps and discarded his J AMEsij^^'' fbibs on the last heart. ilf hearts failed to break, he would have still been able to try Bv OSWALD & JACOBY One of our favorite features in; the Hullelin of the American Conlracl Bridge I.eague is Edwin Kantar's arflde entitled, "Hate Your Own Match Point Game” Mo.st of his hands are to tough for a bridge column but once in awhile he has one that should Interest our readers. (Incidentally, Kantar’s hands are usually ones he has played and, as a member of this year’s American limited your hand by your two-Intemational Team, vou can bel i**"* ■.“'•’f **'"® hack and preuy ,ur, ,!». Eddi. 1, df: St;,r,!LV'’iVr'’C the world’s best dummy play-’ B„„e p,st game and. for all 3* Pass 4¥ You, South, hold: AAK65 ¥K7S4 «32 AA98 What do you do now? A —Bid five spades. You ers.) * * * South's three-club bid was preparatory to raising hearts but whem North took control and contracted for six diamonds •South was delighted to play the hand tliere. IXimmy's king of; spades won the first trick. A you know, he may -be inlrrcKlcd in seven. You ran afford to bid five spades to show that ace. TODAY73 QUESTION You bid five spades and your partner bids six diamonds. What do you-do now? Answer Tomorrow Astrological Forecast- By tVONSY OMARS y ssinli tat way." moody looSy It It WEDNESDAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you h*yii IdMi of your own; your In-depondoncs !• almooi • Iridtmsrk. You get cnstirs to uIIIIjo IKIt qusllty ai vou got rMdy to tmbtrk on now proloct. GENERAL TendInciI^S: Cycl* ti lor ARIES, TAURUS. GEMINI. Spoi wold lo LIBRA-, scllvlllet e«pknd In nr "No thanks, we never clean hou.se—when it gets loo full of dirt we just up and move away.’’ BERRY S WORLD—By Jim Berry . 1 "My bag Is stocks and bonds, young man. What’s yours?’’ OUT OUR WAY GEMINI (M»v J1 Jun» ?0I T..r„o, m,y atmaret, don i b« c middle ol diypule. Check lacti B have ulterior molivo. Raallra thi apond accordingly. CANCER iJlina 71 July 71): ’' yTRGQ (Aug Snpl, 7J' Proircl In fit* of on» do«- lo you I'e pr'i rpi Thfip l« aura of nonroallty ragarc monay. Chock accounu. Sumoona may failing fo' fulfill oOligaflont. E ind out. LIBRA (Ssat. nict. »J); You arai corfainfy wl^'hOf^oma^iT ifandino •fill A> day In which you Invaat In your own, talrnft. Older per ion ilngi your pt*lse» SCORPIO (Ckf. JJ-Nov. til: shakaup Inj OlOAY, WE <50T FT; BA-tSRAMP SWEARS HE POESh . MOP OFF WHILE WATCHIM’ r TV, BUT WE CAUSHT HIM SMORtW THROUC5H MOST OF A PROGRAM / LET'S CUT OUT BEFORE HE WAKES UP, •hhOCifitM tend to • *‘fi^RKORN (bee JJ Ian 1*1: Wh wai .ecura may prove fluid - - aHec propdrfv Oocnt. proltttlvt* winfl o jkf'riencFd IndtvlduAl Guthtsr f«ct^ ‘^AQUaSiUS (Jan. SOFet) T«): Avo trying ft) do loo much or one*. S»fT down to ba*(c». Olherwlir your elfor air mpertirlal and leava I'o mar PISCES (Feb 19 March JO): f inancial #♦1*0, lubiecf to change, br prrHsieni; Prisoner Finds They Made the Ponfs Too Short SEATTIrE, Wash (API - A prisoner tied tw(> pairs of over-; all<- together Monday to use as an escape "rope’’ from Seattle’s sixth-fl(K)r city jail - and found he barely had’a leg to hang on. He should have u.sed stretch pants. ' Willard Aguilar, 32. discovered lo his consternation when he slid to the eiid of the overalls he still was two floors short of the plaza he was trying to reich. For 10 minutes Aguilar dan-; gled bn the face of the tnjilding hollering for . help Firemen’ hoisted a ladder and rescued hini. He was V jail for 180 days for possession bf drugs and a concealed weapbn. Health Appointee DETROIT (AF*! - Dr. George Pickett. 33. has been appointed Detroit-Wayne County health commissioner b>K, Mayor Jerome Cavanagh. Pickefl, who has been acting cornmissKmer .since the resignation last .^ep-, tember of Dr John Hanlon, will receive $33,170 a yfear. THE BERRYS By Carl Gniberl THE BORN LOSER ALLEY OOt- By V. T. Hamlin CAPTAIN EASY you SEEM 7 P055ISLy. BUT X WANT TO LUKEWARM VBE &URB JUDY COB » ALU J OVER McKEE'B ^ SHE APPEARS TO SEl ' ROMANCE, EABYI T THEV MAKH AN IPEftL COUPLE! By Leslie Turner EEX & MEEK Rv Howie Schneider THIS TIME X (SOT HER! N SHE HAS too IDEA IM V 'J ALL SWEAKIWG ASIDE... 4AOWJ UJOLXX) VtX» UK£ A HEKE! I'LL JUST tUAtT fOR Mice, OLD-FASHIOMED, THE RIGHT KAONAEWT AkJD ( WO, WCfl VET! HCifJesr aiWCH IM THe mouth? jj V —(SIj- —= ^ O „ ® 1M9 by NU. he. TJA le*. U.1 $•». Off. —■' "a-if By Ernie Bushmillei TUMBLEWEEDS THE NUMBER OF GUESTS I'M INVITING TO MY PARTY-- I JUST REDUCED THE LIST FROM TEN TO WE ARE »E6tNNiN& OUR I APPROACH TO GRIMYOUIjCHI KO SMOKINO, PL»^SE, AN' FASTEN YER yMONEYEEUnSl by Tom Ryi f' yacantpr/vwith'^ \.ACieARINYER/lMO^ DONALD m Ck ; VVEI?E you MUNGRV when vou got HCyiAE FieOAA V-SCHOOL. OEWEV ^NOPE.^ TT' Avepe vou 1 HUNGI?V AFTEP SCHOOL, LOLJIC? 1 ^ I 1^ c B/ Walt Disney AND WHEN VOU.) finish there, \ WASH all the, < ------ saai / DCXJRKNOB3 / For Wont Ads Dial |344981 City School Official Hears Death Notices Block Students' Demands THE POKTIAC S. TUESDAY, FEBiljARY 18, 1909 ^ A^ut 30 junior and senior | Fell said he would meet again hi^h school students met for with the spokesmen before the ®^^®™°°”|board of education meeting next f® h assistant i Tuesday night. He said that if P 0 n t i a c they choose one spokesman and Mliools and listed n i n e request to make a presentation demands. at the next board meeting, they Hie group, saying t h e y will be put represented a city wide black i student union, had six The students’ list of demands' spokesmen. at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) , follows: “• We want a reversal of the present decision regarding the school site (for a proposed new super high schopl on Pontiac State Hospital founds). We want it on the Orchard Lake KNICKERBOCKER, ^ site. 1 -W.e want free bus; ' transportation to and from 'Sad, Angry' Residents j We want a reversal of the! Montana Town Forced to Move JEWELL, CHRISTOPHER LEE; February 15, 1969; 141 Cranberry Beach Blvd.\ White Lake Township; beloved in-: fant son of Maurice and Gail Jewell; befoyed infant grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Jewell and Mrs. Alice Burnham, Funeral service will be held Wednesday, February 19 at 10 a.m. at the Announcements 3 Elton Black Funeral Home, for rent, 'receptions. Union Lake. Interment in Mount Vernon Cemetery,! Hi^LL Rochester, Baby Jewell will I lie in state at the funeral home. To Buy, Rent, Sell or Trade Use Pontiac Press WANT ADS Office Hoursi 8 am. to 5 p.m. Cancellation Deadline 9 a.m. Day Following First Insertion _____ RENT. RECEPTIONS, meetings, pertles. FE S-031i elter to Be Evicted by Dam present decision to phase out Jefferson Junior High School, REXFOR^ Mmt. (AP) - teachers and administrators in The little town of Rexford has aigii Pontiac schools, rundown appearance, most * its scattered buildings in need of I ,,, , ,, , paint. ! - • ''^® ™®’'® •’I®®*' MARK, PRESTON; February, 17,! 1969; 1778 Arcadia, St. Joseph Michigan; beloved infant son of Lester P. and Diana Knickerbocker; beloved infant grandson of Preston and Phyllis Yost and Glen and Grace King; dear brother of Russell K n ickerbocker. Private family funeral service will be held Wednesday February 19, at 11 a.m. at the Bossardet Funeral Home But it’s home to about 85 fam- ®^!!*®*'^^Oxford. Interment in Mt schools. * — . ~ . Hies. And most of them, accord- in? to Bill Fewkes. are “sad, ’ want black history! di^ointed, mad’’ because™™ mandatory for all Rexford ha^ to be moved. ' ^ ^ . datory that all teachers for -n. , .. black history be black. The 66-year-old community; * * must be vacated to make way for the waters which will rise! We want more black cheerleaders. Pleasant Cemetery. Oakwood, Michigan. Baby Knickerbocker will lie in state at the funeral i home after 7. tonight. The family suggests memorial contributions may be made to the| March of Dimes or the Michigan Heart Fund. | > We want a comnlete in- LARIVIERE, U L D E RIC ;; , ivestigation of facts involved! ?’®*^™®*T 17, 1969 ; 415 behind the giant Libby Dam| being built nearby. Like the town Fewkes is before any students can be' He owns one o Rexford s two . stores and handles general tner- notification, cnan ise. I an investigation ‘SILLY THING’ of all Pontiac teachers “It seems like sort of a silly regarding racist action, rdcist thing they are doing,’’ says attitudes and discrimination Fewkes, referring to the .Corps against black students.’’ of Engineers and federal offi- ----------------------- Sw Thi A new device removes carbon ____________ ______________________; Y * nnrthwMt from the blood, filters Home. Funcral scrvicc wUl bci MnnS northwest .j rgp,g„i,bes the oxygen and held Thursday, F-ebruary 20,! Tho rJioinr inHiictrw nf fhp'maintains a’desircd blood tem- at 10 a.m. at the St. to the northeast to which the---------------------------^1 home. (Suggested visiting Voorheis Road; age' 8 4 beloved husband of Marie Anne Lariviere; dear father of Miss Rolande, Rene and Roland Lariviere; also survived by se v e n grandchildren and two great-j grandchildren. Recitation of the the Rosary will be| Wednesday, at 8 p.m. at the! Donelson-Johns Funeral! IF YOU^RE HAVING fInanclAl dlfllcully - Go to r .............- Pontiac, Mich. We i Counselors. It will cost you r Licensed & Bonded _ Serving Oakland County . LOSe ■ WEIGHT SAFELY wItbtDex* A-Diet Tablets. Only 98 cnetT. REMOVE EXCESS BODY fluid with Fluidex tablets- only $1.49. Simms _^rugs^___________________ • Y()UR $$$ BUY MORE FEBRUARY HOME SALES HUDSON'S Pontiac Mall_____ BOX REPLIES At 10 a.m. today there were replies at The Press Office in the following boxes: C-1, C-6, C-7, C-11, C-18, C-19* C-21, C-24, C-28, C-30, C-46-, C-47, C-72. Funeral Directors 4 COATS FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS «74-(M«l C. X GODHARDf"FUNERAL HOME ___Keego Harbor, PH. 682-0200^ DONELSON JOHNS _______FUNERAL HOME_______ Huntoon SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME ''Thoughtful Service" FE 8-9288 VoorheesSiple town will be moved. ' # * * It’s up to the individual family, however, whether it moves with the town or elsewhere. The corps will build a new school and a new city hall, but it won’t be moving buildings to new sites. Instead, the landowners will be paid for their buildings. On Rexford’s me street is a bar, besides Fewses’s store and the grocery store of Leo Collar, who was bom and a raised in the town. There is one church. DEAD TO REMAIN The water level is expected to rise 100 feet above the town site when the dam is finished and by 1973, the water will back up 90 miles into Canada. Those who died here will remain here. The town’s cemetery is high enough to escape the water BEASLEY, MARGARET M.: February 16, 1969 ; 45 West Beverly Street: age 70; beloved wife of Harry R. Beasley: dear mother of Mrs. Robert (Ruth) Anderson and Mrs. Larry (Edna) Heaslep; dear sister of Mrs. Opal Doty; also survived by four grandchildren and f great - grandchildrert. Women Qf the Moose memorial serv- Political Aide Gets Deputy Treasurer Post Death Notices CEMETERY LOT hours 3 to 5 atid 7 to 9.) j Memorial Gardr Novi*. Mich. For more ir MANNING, ALBERT H.; February 15, 1969 ; 30 0 Rockwell Street; age 67; dear! father of Mrs. Sally B.| Westmoreland, Mrs. Altie White and James Albert Manning; dear brother of Mrs. Sally Harris, Mrs. Robbie White Donaldson, Henry,! Rock, Boyd, Robert Lee and Carman Manning. Funeral service will be held Thursday, February 20, at 1 p.m. at the AVOID GARNISHMENTS Gat out of debt with our plan Debt Consultants au Pontiac State Bank Building FE 8-0333 ice Tuesday, at 7:30 p.m. atj New Hope Baptist Church the Voorhees - Siple Funeralj with Rev. James Fleming of- -IDAY health club, -er payments, It mos. pi os. free. 674-0285.________ i PARTIES, wigs by Cald Home fqllowed by a Ladies Auxiliary of the F.O.E. memorial service at 8 p.m. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, February 19, at' 1:30 p.m. at the funeral home.! _______ „ Mrs, Beasiry will 11a in slat. WA; Mn,ar, at the funeral home. (Sug- ficiating. Interment in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. Manning will lie in state at the Davis-Cobb Funral Home after 3:30 p.m. Wednesday. Lost and Found 5 FOUND ~ BLACK SHORTHAIRED young cat. Herrington Hills Sub. FE 8J621 or FE S-3455. • LOST: LARGE SHAGGY LIGHT male dog. Bushy tail curved over ■ BLACK MONEY t gested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) i LOST: A BLACK Wayne McDonnell of Southfield has been appointed j deputy county treasurer at a salary of $14,000 a year, according to Treasurer Hugh Dohany. McDonnell, who served as Dohany’s Republican campaign manager in last fall’s election, assumes the position formerly CHIDESTER, CARL C; February 17, 1969 ; 4 9 0 0 Hatchery Road, Waterford Township: age 76: dear father of Mrs. Harry (Lucille) S'allada and Gene F. Chidester; dear brother of at 8:30 p.m. at the Donelson-Roy Chidester; also survived Johns Funeral Home. Funeral LOST: FEBRUARY 10, sliort bi 15. 1969 : 7195 Elizabeth Lake| Road, Waterford Township:! age 66; beloved wife of George R. Sova; dear-mother | of Mrs. Chester Fenlon and -r,%!^rd*.nrv»'S'’c?iumbr. Jerome C. Sova; dear sisteri e-9076._____ AI.rin on,! Ymnm, SMALL BLACK LEATHER PURSE, of Arthur, Alvin and Emory j,olen Friday Nl^ht Feb. W^Sand-Sova; also survived by seven! grandchildren. Recitation of. the Rosary will be tonight, by seven grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren. Funeral arrangements are pending at the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home where Mr. Chidester will lie in state after 7 tonight. (Suggestedj service will be held Wednesday, February 19, at 10 a.m. at St. Perpetua’s Church. Interment in Mount "Hope Cemetery. Mrs. Sova will lie in state at thp funeral home.! (Suggested visiting hours 3 to| 5 and 7 to 9.) Hsip Wonted Mole f Educallon, 3S0 WK3e iracK or., E. .An equal op> portunUy ennpioy#r, boring' 'mill operator Si'full fringe benefits. Apply Personnel Office^ Sutter Products Co„ 407 Hadley St., HollV, MIch.L- ___ BOILER OPERAKiR Full time position visiting hours 3 to 5 and 71 _______ ^................---------------------------- STEWARTrNANC’Y cT~Fel>j held by Robert Richmond under FLANIGAN, JOSEPH ALLEN;p ruary 16, 1969; Glencoe, former Treasurer James Seeterlin. ____ _ iformatlon _le^ing to return. 626-3952._______ reward! for return of Gray Hdp Wanted Moie 6 1 MAN PART TIME $50 WEEK Married, 21 or over and depen-dable. Call OR 4-0520 from 5-7 p.m; tonight only._ _ _ 2 COMBINATION AUTO SALESMEN The new deputy, who lives at 19860 W. 12 Mile, is retired from his own electronics business. Dohany said he intended to use McDonnell’s investment experience gained since his retirement when he managed his own and others’ real estate ELECTRONICS KNOW-HOW He also said that McDonnell’s experience in electronics would be put to use in switching the treasurer’s department to computer, accoupting. “I expect to have the department completely switched over in four years,’’Dohany said. Richmond has passed the Examination for personal property auditor in the County Equalization Department. The budgeted but previously unfilled position is sought!^ two other qualified candidates. According to Herman Stephens, department George Houstina Jr.; director. Stephens said he would make a decision this week. Shane Murphy, the second deputy treasurer,)! and the Democratic candidate last fall for county clerk, will remain ini the treasurer^ department Perry Mount Park Cemetery, under the merit system. ,1 Mr. Houstina will lie in state February 16, 1969 ; 4993 Dixie] Highway, Drayton Plains; age! 60; beloved husband of Vir-| ginia Flanigan: beloved son of Mrs. Tillie Flanigan: dear! father of Patrick E., Michael. L., James T. and Gerald M.| Flanigan; dear brother of Walter and Leo Flanigan; also survived by three grandchildren. Parish Rosary will be Tuesday, at 7:30 p.ni. at the Coats Funeral Home, Drayton Plains. Funeral service will be Wednesday, February 19, at 11 a.m. at the Our Lady of the Lakes Catholic Church. Interment in St. M a r y ’ s Cemetery, Corunna Michigan.] Mr. Flanigan wilTlie in state at the funeral home. (Suggest- „„„„ , Ann c . ed visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 TACKABURY, LEONARD S., February 16, 1969 ; 7170 Firstj Street, Union Lake; Illinois (formerly of Bay] City); age .32; beloved wife of! Don C. Stewart; beloved daughter of Jane and Wayne Converse of Oxford: dear mother of Tracy Lynn and Carrie Anne Stewart; dear sister of Mrs. Rosslynn Kaiser, Raymond and Elroy] Converse. I^neral service will be held Wednesday,] February 19, at 1:30 p.m. at the Scott Funeral Home, IlOO] Greenleaf Ave., Wilmette,! Illinois. Private interment in] Memorial Park Cemetery.| Mrs. Stewart will lie in state at the funeral home. (Sug-' gested visiting hours 5 to 9 p.m.) A ,____ ____________ ______ ______ trail Ic. Gall Frank Norton at Spike'r Ford- _Mereury, MJIford. 684-171}. ___________ 2 'wELDESs 'APPRENTIGES, high school grads preferred also some 2 MEN NEEDED FOR Immediate openings with local vending company. Good pay and fringe benefits. Paid Blue Cross and Life Call Ml 7-2050 tor appointment. $200 PER MONTH 7': 30, T; to 9.) HOUSTINA, GEORGE; February 17, 1969; 130 Raeburn Street; age 85; dear father of Mrs. Anna Lament, Mrs. Mary Mitchell, MTs. Julia Puhek, Mrs. Margaret Bartolotta, Susan, John and also beloved husband of Nina B.! Tackabury; dear father of Mrs. Helen Dempster and Mrs. Ruth E. McClurg; also survived by four] grandchildren and one greatgrandchild. Funeral service will be held W e d n e s d a y , survived,by 12 grandchildren February 19, at 2 p.m. at the and 13 great-^andchildren. | Bird .and Mott Funeral Home, Funeral service will be held] 17500 Fenkell, Detroit, jjiter* Thursday, February 20, at 10; ment .in Roseland Park ajn. at the Sparks-Griffin! Cemeteiy. Mr. Tackabury will Funeral Home. Interment inj lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 2 to 4 and 7 to 9.) ‘ ADJUSTOR ju're 20-30 years bid, tree ate and Interested iri beco i claims adlustor, please o Douglas Welborn, Zurl 724 Oakland_ FE 5^ ARC WELDERS needed at o Call 634-8214. rh* N. Sagin Holly, Mich. /___^ Auto Mecho'nic Pontiac, Press Want Ads ^FOR "ACTION" . Licensed or able t i months. Ex PAPER CUTTER. I cutting^ flat - better than average fringe benefits. FOLDER q F E R . WELLMAN PRESS, INC. PHONE COLLECT (517) 484-5403 Bridgeport Operators EXPERIENCED CARPENTERS, NO LAYoffs for 10 vears. ULJI-3013 Eves._ _ CAMERA DEPT. Manager PERSONNEL DEPT. 2ND FLOOR Montgomery Ward during afternoon \ Interview. Call ^ DIE MAKERS, TOOL makers, Hslp Wanted Male : GREAT CHALLENGE BIG POTENTIAL HELP ^ ^ WANTED a Day at a Time Factory hands, warehftuw FREE .JI OPEN F EMPLOYERS Temporary Service, Inc. FERNDALE . 2320 Hilton Rd REDFORO 26117 Grand River CLAWSON 65 S, Main CENTER LINE 8561 E, 10 Mile INSURANCE INVESTIGATOR, lull Employment manager at; 353-6639. inspector Technicians . Help Wonted Mole 6 and' dependable, will train, to work '"‘”new'"‘ ■ BRANCH Pitney-Bowes Oakland?"1^pmb’ enT* 5*1° °Cla*r 5. Enioy good t equal opportunity employer Needed at Once! Young, Aggressive Auto Salesmen! > JANITOR-PORTER liberal benefits. Apply In person. JACOBSON'S 16 W. MAPLE BIRMINGHAM LIFE INSURANCE SALESMAN $10,000 TO $25,000 OFFICE BOYS Advertising Agency North woodward area. Immedia opening for full time office boy fine opportunities for advanegmen benefits. Call Ml 6 1000, Personn ®^N EQUAL OPPORTUNITY OAKLAND UNIVERSITY Help Wanted Mala 6 Salesmen. PLUMBING HEATING APPLIANCES FURNITURE TIRES PERSONNEL DEPT. 2ND FLOOR Montgomery Warci ■son Go,. 23455 Teleqrai ° ariing '''^te.**'"progr°essrve pay .gr raises, ppld holidays, vacation, '’■ hospital plan. Call Wed. 9-11 e.m. ‘STOck“BOY“ TED'S BLOOMFIELD HILLS SUPERVISORS DRJVERS^ wrP|Rs7 7 DESIGNERS^ CHECKERS DETAILERS SPECIAL MACHINE-AUTOMATION Opportunity for advancement, fringe benefits. Cverlime. Steady year ^J*^ydE^CORPORATION DIE Designers PROGRESSIVE DIES PREMIUM DESIGN 120 S. ROCHESTER RD. AT 14 MILE AND 1-75 _______ 588-345J^_ DRUG AND tobacco clerkFover 18. part time for college student. 'un'lfor~m$V4555~Dlxle Hwy* _ ELECTRICAL I N s fi E C T EXPERIENCED SERVICE station attendent, references, good sislary and hours. 4660J4ighland Rd. EXPERIENCED TRUCK DRIVER', must be able to operate Semi- Apply between 5 P.m.-7 p.m, MCEvoy Door Co. 1080 Welch Rd., ENGINEERS-DESIGNERS DETAILERS & CHECKERS STOCK-WELL CO. 1280 Dorris Rd._ __ Pontiac EXPERIENCED GAS station attendant, full time. Airport Mobil Service, 5995 Highland Rd., Pon- F U U.’~YrME~c6u NTER~CONt ROL Clerk. Must be reliable, outgoing, bondable. Apply In person, 12 noon FERTILIZER SALESMAN Immediate opening for salesman with several years product line fertilizers, and chemical sales. Exceptional o P p o r tu n 11 y in established ^Western Michigan Ter^ demonstrated ability to work with C2tl basement wall crew. Willing to work 40 or more hours per week. Preferred some experience. Phone 363-49M evenings.__________________ FULirriME clerk retail store, good worklnd conditions, fringe benefits. A. L. Damman Co., Bloomfield Plaza, Telegrapn and Maple Rd. 626J010 ■ • (°o18to per year MANAGEMENT OPPORTUNITIES There is unlimited management LARGE COMMON CAR'RI'ER r .... ee— and d----- — ________ Cali Harold Carter at 566-1344 or 689-3116. An Equal Opportunity Employer^ _______ LOCAL WHOLESALER has opening for^ young man, warehousa^^work _p"m. FE°2-1844!'*^°®'^“" * LATHE AND MILL Operators and Trainee Excellent opportunity tor employment in new machine shop in Troy. Scheduled lor operation May 1969. Phone WE 3-0926 for information or apply In person 8:00 wages. Call 673-0074 c Stanezak, General Finance Loon Co., 759 Baldwin, Pontiac. 334-09d6. MAN TO LEARN Machinery repairs, most be willing to work. We will train. Apply Pontiac Laundry & Dry Cleaners, 540 S. Telegraph. Machine Operators some experience necessary Drills, mills, grinders, gear cutting equipment. Good opportunity and steady employment for right men. Day and night shifts. Equal opportunity employer. LYND GEAR. INC. Subsidiary of Condec Corp. St. Rochester, Mich. MECHANICS 362 Sol Can ' KEEGO SALES & SERVICE “ ^ • • -.ake Rd., Keego equivalent nff.cessary. Apply General Telephone Co., 317 Union St., Milford. An Equal Employment Opportunity Employer^ MACHINE LAY-OUT MEN and offer a good starting wage and a tine benefit [["J squirrel Rds. Rochester. _ An Equal Opportunity Employer Announces the following ^closing date examination'. Applications for no^ latter th'an 5 p.m„ Monday, Feb, 24. 1969. Deputy Dag Warden Oakland County Court 1200 No. Teler-- Pontiac, Mic ___BOARD MECHA Evi^nrude <*^0'*^''' *^'o'r^'wm'^rralny^lull'^ime!'°°night°s! good pay, Inquire Little Caesars. 41 Glenwood Plaza. ' PERFORMANCE CAR SALESMAN Dodge. Call Mr. Bridges, Lloyd Bridges Dodge, Walled Lake. 624- ....PUNCH ^ FJNISHER^^^ 'IiTeRTy'tOOL rTNG.''' 150 W. Maple Rd. Walled Lake _MA 4-155L ___ ... ARY time Butcher. Apply Toni'* Meat Market, 701 Orchard Lake necessary. KEEGO SALES & SERVICE, 3080 Orchard Lake Rd., Keego Harbor. 6B2j-3400. REAL ESTATE SALESMEN At Partridge Real Estate branch office. Commercial and Residential. 200 millions in listings throughout Mich, Write your own paycheck with Michigan's largest real estate ol-flces. All inquiries strictly confidential. Talk to Ward E. Partridge, 1050 W. Huron St., Pontiac. Ph. 334-3581 or 965-8759.___ Real Estate Classes Applications are now being taken for instruction classes In preparation inr the real estate selesmen's . Class will I Conti-. . ealty 3401 V steady' work”In indusIrlaPoiflce tor man over 30. Early retirees considered. Send complete resume and pay Information to Pontiac Press, Box C-33. Pontiac, Michigan.^ _________^ SERVICE STATION ATTENDANT, part time, 6 a.m. to noon, Monday-Friday, to 9^ train' _ CaM*M ' Beardstey, ,647-212f , Stock Clerk-Cashier i2«4-8567*°'^*‘ wfECHANIC Electrical wholesaling. Apply So. Saginaw. SURFACE_ ^ GRINDER I SERVICE MANAGER " Confa?l*George' Bodick at 332-8101. BEST OLDSMOBILE INC. Superinten- (dent CARPENTER FOREMAN slrucfion°°o work '"n'*°tha °Detroit-Pontlac area lor large Industrial builder. Call Maynard Gauthlar. Cunningham-Limp Company 689-0936 SPOTTER AND^CTEANEC Experienced for cleaners. $150 per «.iw8 .n/t holidays. TRAINEES National AAA-1 Company opening new ofllce In Pontiac. Wa Tava openings lor 4 young Wen. Pleasant perwnal positions. Must be high school Johnson before 2 p.m. 335-6846._ TRUCK MECHANIC, EXPERIENCED, own tools, good wages, 55;^Fra^lin_Rd.___________ UNDERWRITER (HOME OFFICE) Career opportunity^^ rtr^ ^ background or equivalent and 3 years or more ChaHenge-lralning and growth position at our new home olfice at Farmington and 12 Ml. Rd, For into, leading to a confidential “^Interview call or send resume to; Personnel Dept. 476-9000. Alexander Hamilton Life Ins. Co. of America 12 Ml. and Farmington Rd., Farrningtorn Mich. W24.__ WANTED: M^ft 45 to'55 years old for porter Work. Day and evening shifts. Apply after 4 p.m. Big Bpy Restaurant. 2490 Dixie Hw/_____ WANtED 'MANAGER and assistant manager, attendance day and night shift, Kayo Service Stations, Oxford and Pontiac, an equal op-y employer, rapid ad- ent. Contact Mr. Ron Gard ,73-7067 or 338-7) Help Wanted Male 6 Help Wanted Male 'p '^Ws ( N MOWER Repair. MAN FOR installation 01 Concrete Step Company, Highland Rd. _ MAN WANTED, FULL time. tools prefer_red._682-6321. MICHIGAN BELL^ TELEPHONE COMPANY UlLDING SERVICEMEN no experience required high starting wages MAINTENANCE AND I MANAGER TRAINEES, Ine opportunify^^r ’“Jj MAN TO'CARE FOR HORSES. I living facilities, good pay. Red B Farm, 1955 Ray Rd., Oxford. 6: MANAGER TRAINEE RAILROAD SWITCHMEN Outdoor work - Various shifts and test days. Minimum height 5'6''. Experience not necessary — will train. Rate $3.55 per hour. Company benefits include free medical, surgical and hospital benefits, plus life insurance, paid holidays and vacations. Good retirement program. Apply in person at: o Yard Office Johnson Avenue and Railroad Pontiac, Mich. Apply Tues., Feb. 18th and Wed., Feb. 19th GRAND TRUNK WESTERN RAILROAD An Equal Opportunity Employer CFT Help Vifanted Male 6 Help Wanted Male GAS STAtlON ATTENDANT- ex--'erienced, mechanically Intliheci, Saginaw, Pontiac._ HARDWARE SALES AND' STOCK clerk, Apply Pontiac Prisi, C-26. Sales Manager. Tired of Working for the Other Man? Then Inquire about q franchised business of your own. No cash investment requited. Training furnished. Must be willing to work and like meeting people. Ideal for husband and wife combination. For information write: Opportunity 5046 Highland Rd. Pontige, Michigan 48054 C—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TI ESDAV, FERUUARY For Want Ads Diol 3344981 j 6 Hilp WantMl Fomab Wantad f|mab BABV SITTEB WANTBD your homo or miM. Clost lo LonBttllow School, Pwlrirormolton, PE 4 MU. BABY SITJER FOB' I child, *^fo «r*» 33M04S, oak for'Judy. Wo dho looklhd’ for a saleomon bokERY SAl.BSWOVAN, who inlands to moke »" "no * ------ -- .... yOor. An oxporloncod WANTED SALESMAN i ftaMtftnna I fl 5,000 t • SECRETARY-RECEPTIONIST g ooulh. Will move I The Good I HOUSEWIVES' a desiras to selling new ei modern, progr shio. Men fringe I________________ Ing hospilellfellon, lirollt shdrin Olen, demo, end vecellon See Mr Tomrnv Thompson oi .Shelton Pot 1.#C Buickr «5.S S RochMl^r Ro Pochester WATER MAINTENAKjrP OPERATOR n B*k«ry, U4 W. Id wTvi GM BEAUTICIAN, 4 bAYS, C«M Al Wdtfif 3910 W W#bs1 WANTED Oeklend 71 Salat Help Mala-Famala AA l liaplaymaiit A§aTlldtr »17,000 PLUS regular CASH RECEPTIONIST: Doctor BIO TRUC .............................................. I BONUS for men over 40 in Ponllec i ''«'*«• .Jf'v'VR'™< tral^K.^ furnltura tkeepino Shop, SI Shorlhend not essentlel, but typing,i aree. Teke sohrt euto Irlpi lo hours, IJW.„ Calf Carol King, SIAl^saiaags. in, Pohilet I appearanct and pareonalltv very confect customers. Air moil Y, P. }4fl, Snelling e^ SnelHng. - ----! Imoorlent Salary gpan. innmadlata Dickerson, Pres., Southwestern pgcEPTIONIST Doctor' Cell &4)0W or 1S3-732I. Petroleum Corp., FI. Worth, Texas will train. SALESLADIES, lull and part time, «’»'• , ‘ . Adams Parsonnat t47.M»)|LADI^ES £®S'j^4NIERI0R ; Apply lo managar, R. B Shop. "A REAL ESTATE EXPLOSION" rECEPTIONST; Great opportuBify ''2Sl,..„*!?DrsMs ^?SB S.MU ‘ cm PADT TIME Tele Huron Center, no phone Calls we have e tulure lor you in the lor ,lhe gal who wants to Ea tralihl btu rAKI limt ' please. Reel Estate Held met will yieldi ogj. Phyllls Page,. 3S4-2471,!PAINTING AND PAPERINI Ai I i>9rt-tlm# 0 pCl n 1 n 0 9 ~ * CCrDCTADV............. •arnlnoi unMnnIfd, W* , iaIIIi SnciHng and SntIMnp. | n»xt, OrvI CTS-fl ibic. In our organliatlon . Sell jcLRclAlsi consider lull or perl. time nwn pro- ggcEpTIONiST' "You are s^at in^!ss—^-.i-.e-.-i—. ■n's fashions. Mutt be able to For local Lew Olllce. Experienca vided you meal our qualifications i ^ ^ ordarad" Will train a light our schedules- which ere preterrod. Saltry n e g o 11 a b I e . We will leach you this excitingHold; ditles |"‘ - I.m given out In edvence. Excellent Please send retuma to Pontiac II necasiary. Bonos _ i carol Kino, 314-2471, Sna DCAiitiriAU program, tor parMIma Press Box C-5, All replies con- U/ARREN STOUT REALTOR Smlllna BEAUTICIAN employees. Including discounts and iwentiel. Our employees know of ‘—BrcrS^insnoT SO S.SJS0 per cam Blue P»m veceilont. Cell Miss Woodard mis ed. _ MULTIPLE' LISTING SERVICE RECEPTIONIST * .... . Smrr. FE 5-41M, SALESLADY FOR FULL TIME lo uM N. ppdyke Rd. F^ 5-IU5 »jJ2S UP *lems***Selary,*\ommlssloni. paid ..... Enloy an exciting career working home. Comttt'l. Uplhoiijet _ ...................... '—2'_ '* TrantiioiKitioB 25 Tracking 22 Wonttd RmI 1 Dollars to us to contracts. homtSr’ 1^- -Wo will plva you furniture Reupholstered MILLION r available ume '■"* "r»Bl'’ouf lj^r"puyVp«l»r 1.'Swailing! " ' ‘*,74-2236 mcCUllOugh realty 36iWantnd SnnI tftib 36 ~ I HAVE A FURCHASBR WITH . CASH FOR A .STARTER I home in OAKLAND lAUINGEFf Thinking of Selling? . let our appraisal flrsl-guarantaad LAUINGER RIAETY since 1935 ; ! 674-0319 .. . }3J 977(1 Philip's Of- Pon Bloomfield Open Hunt WINKELMAN'S H O U S e K E E P E r\ highest WAGES, live In, or he"* transportation to BIrmInhem. S da rs.^ r Contact Mr Richard >n horse 15) 3410. g n t • r » . housekeeper FOR lady, live In. eowitation, 613)964 I must ho)d housekeeper, Iiv9 In mothtrless Mmtmum home Troy 3 school age boys, weak. ALSO More tor home than wages I7»- Vo\,*rn" IZT'--------------------------- ‘'‘inlervleS^ HOUSEKEEPER, TO LIVE I'^Sex^rfly ^sTss"**"' ' * quire . background. Slngei Salary, commissions, paid •" ons, and company banetits. V/"Mi Qc:s I I V ^ w»F the. public, experience hblplul but not V_/Cin I OU OSll . , qulred. Worth tul ary, wr will (rein. Re- paid. ::rp;iing^''n*d S;2pJ?!i'?.'”c:lr33'Sl 642:#.. M62 for a free eatimate in vour -----------------------—-----------------------------------? " 1 to 50 HOMES, iwing high If 6 Some home ly employer. Apply * - -------- to.r Pontiac Mall Shopping per ence LOTS WANTED ir longer, any location. Cash 674-0363 r LI 1 3653 Travel Agency i Or Airline Experience i em 3 75.6 PERMANENT POSITION working CURTAIN^ In all phases of foreign and bedspread domestic travel. SSS Personnel | top selery. ' .......... #r sit y, 044-5290 Timed late op late sales p< ikipg money. oBt not neceixeir ly of leads and atiracllve com-; ________For Interview, Taylor, OR 4-0306 Eves. international personnel leaving for CALIFORNIA Feb. ESopIrtIES, ANo' LAND CON-1190 S. woodward, B-haw 642-B269 23, want 2 riders loshere ex. ?gg^T ’ r ’ 'eJ: R'eCEWIONISY: whet You've . - this I* driver's _____________ ... ®"'T- WARREN STOUT, Realtor i 1450 N. Opdyke l?oy? 314-2471, Snalting and WOMAN WOULD LIKE a rl« from urgently III** I Highland to Pontiac, at 9:30 a.np, _ and^eturn at 2:30 p.m. 817-5941. _ i Wanted Children teBomi 281 A BETTER CASH DEAL Pontiac ,'€f S41303. .spot_cash'>,^ HOUSEWIVES s '"i4®M;i».‘‘'l^,m'lnohVrn^''MI ' A Ponliec. FE 9- Cleandrs, 7367 SALES REPRESENTATIVE 'YrRAY'E~R^Y 'and TRAINEE *Slli'otain*Bfr",SmDh!m'i Wlla you learn. Excallenf day CARE, Licensed Downtown Blrmingh«m.| opportunity for young man with 4904. 1 manut«tures nationally adyerllsed Wanted Household Goods 29 products. Excellent future, — fcneli- .............. FE 5-9165 for Immediate salel 1 Pontiac I Dally 'III 9 ' .c..—, Mill TIPLE LISTING SERVICE__| nINGS FE 4-7005._ transferred^^ FOR VOUR EOUl......... OR OTHER, FOR QUfCK Ad CALL NOW. H A G S T R O ... REALTOR, OR 6^)358 or EVE. WANTED TRUCK MECHANICS Gas or Diesel. Liberal poy, iiisuronce furnished, retirement ond full benefits. See Mr. Coe, 8 o.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday thru Friday. GMG Foclory Branch Oakland at CoSs FE 5-9485 An aqua! opportunity •mployir WF WANT 2 EXPERIENCED GM w..*rx 9*%*4-hanlCI to I daairtshi sales and t Iter you ai la, big pi BOOKKEEPING, general offita, Apply Grinnalf's, Pontiac MaM CUSTOMER SERVICE CLERK w* have an opening In our Birmingham oiFut, im a man,re person with p I e e t a n i penonalily,, gwd lele^phpne vou^e, Drier South Oeklend Vea reu arm Cell Oltke Services '“”*''''“mI 7-3700 MICJIIGAN MUTUAL LIABILITY iNSURANCI CO, COOh OOBSKI S. Union Lake. EM COOK -OR WAITRESS, wirienced. Apply m ne Birth Room 4 N Saginaw el Pike. Exciting New Part-Time Opportunity Supervising Newspoper Boys WE HAVE OPENINGS IN Keego Harbor Rochester Huron Gordens Union Lake Highland Milford Holly REQUIREMENTS: Good Cor, Good Disposition yVAITRESS WANTED, g person. WIDOW WANTS WOAAAN to live , gel meals end do light housekeep- c«li Mr Ing Write Ponllpc Press. Box C12, R»Y Reel Esiele LICENSED REAL ESTATE SALESMEN ' WITH PURCHASING EXPERIENCE Cell Mr. George at lellH. Call I PS 334-49n ___ PIECE OR HOUSEFUL. ' SECRETARY - 5-7932 _ _ rraa fvnlno and .hnrthand oliii HIGHEST PRtCES PAID FOR good &t2^sihS''’:&..""ncriiriu."l'ify’ Whet you for this great |ob. Cell IPS, ®»Ye you’^ 334 4971. _ B & B AUCTION SERVICEMAN Trainee ' 5“? :pixie„HwY-. .or 3.2717 some electrical WAITRESS WANTED, .FULL ehd REAL ESTATE SALES I rTervIct CkT-t''""”''-'-*'— lirne, e^s, Joe 1 openings tor 3 salespeople, will! poretlon will train you. Call •PSuu__a«jeej-„||__„,„ T34-, Jr,In qualified nersons_ lor_ hlghejr JJ4.4971, ,WOnHo IBISCeilOnBOUl ' vuenmus rur a 3ai«st,xuKi«, n,,, 6,1, "*'i ♦(•In quelltled persons lor higher 5919 alter 4:30 p.m. 3B-0434. .j „rn|ng,, VALUET REALTY, FE WATERFORD TOWNSHIP ‘ .. ^ , SCHOOLS .......or s.*lii-S w„b lerge' r",T*^!s.T b*;r’S’r^ei’:'!.’’-nS hXingTZp.?;Tcboor'no,o^s: ^vtvurtin for further Information/ $I5»000 first yaar. Call j "nil A7d'9^99 Atk fnr Mr Port* 689'4)760 wood**' ^ RAY REAL ESTATE________ ..SALES MANAGER OR PARTNER or Oakland County offica. Ex- TRAINEES COPPER, BRASS, • starters an"--------' OR 3-M49. _ anage- HiOEtA BEb malor | or 338-4776. 30 RADIATORS, I Drayton Plains area. Cash li hours. Call hoipe p urchas department. , YORK REAL ESTATE worth havir land at 2)0 0 ngs that r Mlu Roach. Michigan Employmar Sacurily Commlsslpn, FE 30l9). • COUNTER RESTAURANT WORK Middia aga woman, afterhooni ( mgHH, good futui^a Uniforms an natdad. Whita’ Towar. 142 f YOUNG MEN 18 3-5 AfTPiigattons aia now balr>Q takarv annua) 9b day MANAGEMENT trainee program Th06a ai f#»ad will ba twMy ttatfiari parsonnal control to p r © f u r # managamant positions Typing Is not naqulrtd. must have nigh 100 par cant of your time and anergy tp train for a career post VoUNG MAN intarestad in le cabinat .making, wt wKt BaaiJty-Ritf C a b ) n a t t , Highland Rd. (M 59 Plaj, Williams Laka Rd H«lp Wanttd F«malt I LADIES FOR gantial Curb Waitresses urb weilress. Oey shill. F iXrms°end meels (Irniihed, egei eiW tips. Vecetloni end f olldeyi. Apply In person only. TED'S BLOOMFIELD HHLS CLERK-TYPIST apfodabie girt for ganeral Of oik. Data Processing axparia alpful but not necessary. Sal immensurala with ability, Hb< inga banafils Apply In parson. Pyles Industries, Inc. 0 kiFom Rd, Wo r®*9 x*'c e'iTeT‘1 Aftemoons IF INTERESTED: Send Resume tO: BOX C-17 THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 W. Huron St. Pontioc 48056 909 S. Adams Rd., BIrmInghem. WOOL PRESSER EKparlencao, good working conditions/ paid holidays and vacation, transportation necessary, Janet Davis Cleaner, 447 3009. _ j WOMAN FOR GENERAL office tunity to l« ___ JPS”3i4-4971.'^ «r j’Ss' If you are a high school graduate a^a-oioa and cen type 5q wpm, training and ^iv=cr>'~~ ?*air » ® *"■ residential homes in ttie Clarkston area, Waterford and White Lake Twp. We will be glad to talk to you with no obligation. Please call OR 4-0306. J. A. Taylor Agency, Inc. 7732 Highland Rd. (M-59) DAILY OR 4-0306 EVES EM 3-7546 WANTED LOTS ACREAGE HOUSES as their agent to acquire or parts. l962Yalalinr fronhendl IPS’ol’Ponliac.” ' complete. FE 4-9315, aft. 6._ r 'May at LI . * ' . . , .----------- WANTED-TsPLITTING ax or wedge Instructionf-Schools 10 «nd sMge for Phone #-3710, , RUG HOOKING CLASS, Inclu basic In designing. Begins 3-3, ---- Call ^M5B3. In othe Clarkston area Clarkston Real Estate MA 5-58 typing Maple %d . _7'6i62 Salespeople Needed AA*n j»nrt women Interastpd ____ , ixpanded field of the weeks. $20. S-.— ...... v-arket —.......-... Hydraulics. 167S E. B professional approach to 1/ after j:30._ I Wanted Money - NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATION ...... . total assets of $50,000 needs $15,000 I to Improve present property, property, land contracts, acreage. 5^5^ ^ .................. 5ou iKfVr ProrSrtI louL^MacT WANT JO BUY^4^8^ famlllTipart- Wdlfa'te'wants '’prow^y“now.^T| WANTED: MOBILE~homa Park JM have to move fast or do not prospects going through vour e speces. Prefer developed home — cell us for an appraisal. VON REALTY i REALTOR ' MLS 3401 W. HURON , , , . 685-5802, It busy 682-5900_j Apartments, Furnished YOUNG WOMEN 18-25 Applications are now being taken Alan Gilford 482;-9000. day "’ MANAGEMENT WE 'WANT "e* ►ROGRAM. Those ac- sell real es • further details. wall I ienced women to firepl« ditions. d( - , - A®-1 Wanted to Rent Sfdinq. roofmg, rpe-' paneling. Alsr 'S;? "Lr“imrrma!ion rEI^TRANSFWR'EOr'N^idTo -17^2327 or 332-9058 sell Immediately? For cash in, 48 , "?:t058---- hn.irx. rail noenf. 674-4104. l' K,,,, LaNoble Business Brokers, 1516 E. Michigan Ave., Lansing. IV 2-1637. Evenings. 714-1493.____ 37 r posi- for EXCEPTIONAL OP- eai Work Wanted Male -------- -....”Mli”lmmidiifily'? ... —.................- . ___________ _____________ .... _ hours, can agent. 674-4104.__________| entrance, adults only. FE 4-3369. 32 eLDERL'Y COUPLE NEEDS home j ROOMS, UTILITTeS furnished, near Mall. Cash. Agent, 338-6952. Couple only. 332-6581. ’ wall L in?'h S?"ck o"r stonS 2 OR 3 BEDROOM HOME. OR 4- - ' rANO's ROOMSYvith pr|y.ta“b^th, .. 4 tool wide brick chimney. _2““._______ _________ A C T_T i u'"- f®™- 25 Clark. _____________________________________________________ _ ,ww. ..v.i Franklin Unit. Not 92100 or MOTHER AND 1 YEAR OLD v , - ” I J '2 ROOM APARTMENT, adults only, 91600 but only 9795. Bill Dew, FE 8- Daughter desperately need partly ^ .iT. t^ i X ^ Tefs; sec. d«) Wes Sid^^^^^ '7198, Slate License No. 16497. furnished apartment, with sloye IN 24 HOURS 1 A-1 CARPENTER, large or small and relrigeralor. Pleas, call 682- We buy P/»P«;;»v; jobs, celling tile, paneling and rec. . ............,__________*___ condition. For fast service call. rooms a specialty. 662-5137. RELIABLE COUPLE would like 1 ,or 333-7156 Al CARPENTER. “WORK OF all 2 bedjoo"^ —.-n • ‘ 673-8516.335-7637. KEYPUNCH OPERATORS " Temp. Assignments, all shifts CALL JEAN JOHNSTON 969-7265 $155 PER WEEK Miss Adams 332 3926 bafora 2 p.m. p Wanted M. or F. 8 A1 CARPENTER ROUGH a ; SMALL • School Ir 5187. • OR 3-0594. home. No children. Miller Bros. BEDROOM COMPLETE, private 2 ROOMS, ADULTS ONLY. FB 5-3218. _ 2 aVd REALTY ventory control. LI 7-9387 or LI _ Divorce-Foreclosure lon't qive your home away I Get our appraisal Guarantied sale. 3 ROOMS. West aide. Utilities paid. Security deposit. S30 a week. 339-6380, 2 bedroom upper. North end, 1 child. 9100 mo. 9100 sec. dep. FE -IShare Living Quarters 33 GOING TO TRADE? Thinking ate .... ...no, part time and contingent salespeople, male, female, flexible hours, excellent working conditions, — COOPER POINTMENT. FOR KITCHtN HUP, DAY gr « Mlljeteid' Rochester o'e ARE YOU 312 Main I A Rl Employment Agencies Work Wanted Female . BABY SITTING IN MY home ----BACHELOR TO share home V.........— I family or man. 4995 Pm* Knob 4104. ]2 Lane after 6. YORK REAL ESTATE, OR ^ VARIETY of gener _ Bok CW |$S CAN YOURS vrite PO, Box AAA 1 « CLEANING LADY. $165 an hou ^ 10 4 hquri evenings. 338 9633. » CAFETERIA, SUBSTITUTES . 1160 p BEING ac- ... ,firm. $325. Call N . 332Y157, Associates Personnel. ABILITY AND DESIRE ^ to ' people. $320. Call M' * ’^^'Vy .. * ?iom'"ASply'‘'in pS?wn. RoberT'Heli . meiS?:Asw^^ fim. .Bnlv Personnel Olllte LADY FOR^miTING on customers, Clothes, 6460 Dixie Hwy AGGRESSIVE WOMAN with Swy.F““ ■” f ■ 'K, M-'' - ■---rtunltk employer LADY FOR KITCHEN HELPER ertd YORK REAL ESTATE 674-0363. ..Associates Persont dishwasher, apply In person -i Ann nAkiADC ASSEMBLY LINEMAN, between 2 end 4 pm. to Miracle BLOOD DONORS ---“- ,ge. 7325 So, Telegraph URGENTLY NEEDED _________f lumber, gem fice. $300, call Pat Cary, 332-9157. LEGAL SECRETARY, experienced. typing CAREER minded Y-OUNO LADY. SINGLE over 18 to ASSIST MANAGER IN lOCAL BRANCH OF COAST TO COAST international chaik ORGAN I7ATION, THE RICHARDS CO, INC, You must be able to converse Intelligently. Sr»oJIall't?*and'APPE*ARAN^ a muht. Learn brand identification tethnlque* oftke manigemen! sa^eiT^^eTc*' St ART INoj'lAt^AR Y "'™$625 ■p mature woman to do typing end clerlcel work. Write Post of lice box 65, pontlec. giving age, educellon, tamlly status, lob and paid experience AMERICAN GIRL Mat choice temporary ____ _ _ I E 5 . houhekeepert. Birmingham, allowance. 642-7900. Cafeteria work ___________________ . wanted LADY FOR GENERAL New ofllce. 338-9645 IAFETERIA WORK, FULL TIME, laundry HELP EXPERIENLE Also LADY FOR COOKING SAT. not necessary, many benefits. AND SUN . CALL FAHR CATER- Pontiac Laundry, 540 S Telegraph INC. CO , FE 2 7634. ^ADy FOR COUNTER WORK, in CLEANING WOMAN. J^;rid“®d «?a..on"^^^ Most have own car, top pay lor p|y sany grent 1 hr. Martlnlilng, ..........— ----- hopping Center, or (k for Mrt. Evans. 11:00 a PR I VALE OUTY^r •----- end aides 647-3422. >me. 335-r after 4 RN'S,' red. All RH Positive DENTAL 't Yim SISTANT FOR f I t , Ponll 332U822^ As ADY FOR. LIGHT HOUSEKEEP- RH Neg, with positive * s $ B neg-. AB-neg. MICHIGAN COMMUNITY BLOOD CENTER^^ 1342 Wide Track Dr.. W. Mon., Fri. 9-4 Tues,. Wed,. Thurs. 10-5 COOK OakI mailing', r. FE .2-4117. ? Parks. 334 2471, \ snelling. ... BIRMINGHAM PERSONNEL 7 desire to vMork with omt unusual earnings potential Quick Reference BUSIHESS SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVO - SUPPLIES- IQUIPAWNT Aluminum Bldg. Items Electrical Services Roofing J desir able. Call 334 4353. DENTAL ASSISTANT HIGH SALARY AND FRINGE BENEFITS ING and bUbysIMIng. fant, Mon.-Fri., live m sj moving to Clerkston-Seshab< i 71 area 261-7538, or aft-call 6260512. MATURE LADY Good working conditions.* Transporlalion necessary Janet pavis Cleaners, 641-3009 ' MANPOWER Days. ____ ______ _ Apply out, Machus Red Fox, 6676 Telegraph. COLLECTOR: Rd. Bloomlleld Hills. ""— P"*' FEEL LIKE LIFE Is passing V right money esilmaies. 677-3644. '‘’"sne’li^' a'*n5 ^ Spe^Cml^^SovJngS for , wakyup';«rylce:;Ry )u are deeihdab bookkeeper, axe XI..w. fringe flowing concern 1 g POWER Saw Sabre saw ° Medicine , ____338-3274______ Asphalt Paving bridge procedun technique! 334"o9ir^r 7n' dental ' ASSISTANT, experienced • IJn time,'‘363'59oV""'* dental ASSISTANT, No ' 1. Apply y l(. CK. . Press Box X . DRAPERY workroom .weds han( apply In persoPonly, Mery K ng rernu. “ h" V oe Cross evailable, phone depenC-"'-1, MA 6 9 595 N< ' ' ---- „u... ............imediate p ing, 9475 Call Pat Cary, 332- Lps,.;- .no' . - Registry, 647-34__ fYPING," 61CTATION, 98,6()0.’'jack mimeographing, notary. .iii.g and Work Wanted Couples 12-A ll ncasi ATTICS haxements iiqht ALLJMINUM SIDING, WINDOWS, McCORMICK ELECTRIC, residential NEW ROOFS FOR OLD, HOT ROOF ® -®r^, ';-VT'^nny^rme:^“*"‘“^'"| ?e"ldXnr'^4'*Lu*r'’*s» o*yS?, ^ Building Services-Supplies 13 -A„sweTliig^Servici ^^ cxcavofing _____________________ | now 541-3028. Tr the'rioht man 96500 Jack ---t -- • _______ _____ ANSWERING SERVICE BULLDOZING, Finish OracMna t?'.”'* Cnpcinl Snvinos for , Let our phones do your work, also Backhoe. Basements, 674-2639. FE YpeciDI savings lur , w*xe-up service. Reasonable 8-1201. _ --------------------- Thrifty, Buyers | monthly rates. 851-0072.______. BULLOOZiNO - TRUCK ,T5-?i- iF.:ee Estimates______________ „„U ..... ,v ....... n"te’rrriic Aluminum combination door, 3-0x6- AnteunO ServIcO I esu®mSt«*'oR 3-n65* ‘ business. 96,500. Jack Parks, 334- 9 .......... ......... 919.95 , _i^ni^te5. OR ^1165. by?" Caii Mr. Foley, YORK REAL 2471. Snelling and Snelling. pmuco c.n,. sie «s BIRCHETT ANTENNA SERVICE ESTATE, OR 4-0363. DIPLOMATIC GAL: Great |ob lor a POWER Saws ............... aiy.vs ...... i EXCTELLENT OPP9RTUNITY_^,lor g*/ .............. Anders,'^* 334-7471, Snelling Snelling EX-SERVICEMAN .vVn,; .............an.,. )!'pKlali«®in ^la'cTng e"x-se?SL^^^ DOITlinO LOHSt. LO. IPC. '' sanding Vnd7inishmfl.”FE To592:”‘ .n„,„ H—• ■■ “ ^ ............................ "" front' DESK CHARMER. Uka geople? MONEY? Good_^hours^? Antique have references, apply Standard ' ' ~ ‘ Pontiac, Bloomfield, Rochester area Electric Co.. 175 S. Saginaw. REGISTER NOW 332 8396 CDCC ACCCC NURSE AIDES, EXPERIENCED or; FREE CLASSES .11 xhllix. must hav^ JJlTu" tearT'wIJ hale* 9 oltlTes? 200 ®“>"P»"Y wi'h^“ulT benemsTin PHONE: 334-2521 ^ „,nsaikiruA»a~" i ^Y Work! c'.rc?:* .f"d"sn".r,rng"“''' OPEN 9 to 5-_S,.urd.yjJo„l2^,^ I Will InSUlote Your jndis'hin'! MILLER BROS. REALTY ’ general OFFICE Business Service 15^.........BOA^CENTER Home For Less Aluminum Boats.'KE 3-2414____________Eves. 624-^339. prdfitdbie tampon *®**S*'ecVetAR1ES EXPERIENCED BREAKFAST CMke 5 Hospital paneling . $19 95 AADC0 asphalt fAVING Com* “ pany, licensed and insured, free P « r _____. „ , ” Domino Const. Co. Inc. per Driveways, parking lots. .. 93,20 _---------- -........ 92.59 . SNYDER, FLOOR LAYI Suud-Gruvel-pirt FILL SAND LOADING DAILY 50 cents per Lake Rd., Ui oruEM 3-3516. INTEF_________ AND GRAVEL CO. 450 Wiiliami ____________Free est. 674-3955._ Basement Waterproofing Floor Tiling ). bright n 3 4121 OLDER WOMAN, 68^9310. s OFFICE CLERK Full time, knowledga ol tllln bookkeeping. Apply Gresham Cleaners, 333-7156 34-2471, snelling and A, BENSON COMPANY / "OFFICE: "If" you've '■®'"**m9*"n Sagfnaw*''*'’"'* ^ bZms*i-!‘’piu*sh PHONE:'334-2521 2471, snelling and Sr^Srng"”''' i ’ GENERAL OFFICE J* . Varied interesting duties | BASE Snow Plowing -AAA, B & K Snowplowing. Com' merdal and residential. 24 hr. service, throughout Oakland Coun-ty. 335-0064, 338-8665. 332-5024._ Boots and Accessories WALL, INSTALLED. " Mr. Foley. : g OR 4-0363. JOB WITH A ftj 735 S Adams Plaia. Rm 126 one 642 3055, Birmingham Incidentally, We Pay LICR wanted for Tu n^^toApply i . at Orel k. Rd Good pay « luded. Pied 4370 Highlan home bookkeeping e benefits Retlaurai Pontiac PIN MONEY PLUS! to hours per wrfek earn* $50 to $75. -Houts flexible. Neat, personable woman over 25. Call 338-0373-bef’ween 12 noon and 3 pm. for e. Exceliem wages, 3 evenings 9 p.m.. half day Sat Must be Convenient, Downtown . Reply Pontiac Press Box YORK REAL ESTATE. OR 4-0363. i Labor Hearings Officer 15' Anticipatad qpaninga will occur in tha Immedlala tulure. , Starting salary 913,551 annually. All Michigan civil service banalihi, including an outstanding state----- —.urance prograi will tram you. CAII 331-4971, IPS of ---- -------------- p®""ic. _ _ Droosmaking & Tailorng 17; . Foiay, gEFIERAL OFFICE: Established BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER Starcralt, I.M.P. Fiberglass A ....... Merc, quiboard A stern ___1265 S. Woodward at Carpentry Suspended jCeiiings ■¥faflma.' 93M* ?!*all Kathy s. 334-7471. Snelling and Snall- ALTERATIONS ALL dresses, leather coat'*, 0367, morn. 6-9. dves. 6- Exciting fir..... day through Fi .................. , Davis 334-2471, Snelling and SneM- 'JDS.ilA CARPENTRY — arid ivuniiu*; ■“’IT —-...-v”i FE 5- Jree estimates. MA_5-4262.____ 1025 Oakland_____________FE A4595 Ia-i INTERIOR and EXTERIOR — Homo Ronoir "19, Family rooms, rough or finished,! ------- - , , i ?Mms"\ltSen5”'bamrSomsVsiSt!; ALL KINDS OF HOME REPAIR. 'YOU.^' Mon- , call INSURES FAST tax service,! licensed. Reas. Call after 4 p.m.i Free estimates, call OR 3-2835. | 9350 Kathy. Federal, Stale, City. 673-0341 lor 682-0648. _________________|MODERNIZATION OF ALL TYPEsI resses. leather c )67, morn. 6-9, 9v Income tox Service CALL INSURES FAST t Tree Trimming Service TALBOTTLUMBER ----------------- Glass service, wood or aluminum.; A-1 TREE. SERVICE BY B A L. “••'•'ting and Hardward supplies.1 Free estimate. FE S-44i9, 674-3510. Oaklar- ce ------- — -- tree,' fret estimates. 334-9049 or 335-5253.___________ Tra^g^ .1 LIGHT MOVING, TRASH hauled reasonable. FE 4-T353. .. e- • I Mavino Slaraae hauling and rubbish. Name '• *«, ting*: rSolin;; gutfe^^. FE 4-5170': |. your price. Anytime. FE 8-0095. nn"'T>ir2(S"4^?srL*ik.‘‘'Rl:!lWElinOR^ MOVING CO, Your movingof eny kind, odd II9B2-7581. ^ i V*»r* «P*rlence, __________, " BENJAMIN R. ----................, giypj!; RA-TES 338-^^^^^ REASONABLE ALL "tax ...... ..........jCARPENTRY AND cImENT work.1 Ond cement wi RETURNS carefuMvl free estimates. 852-5252.__i iranteed Jn writing, f,oME REPAIR, PANELING, pain- xcellent BEAUTICIAN s BACKUS!' Corpeting CARPET INSTALLATION. Also gi . A.... jLO't.t'lfiC Storage^ Plano movir 333^ I Mon, PRODUCTION RECORblNG AND uno DEAIER cashier tor s. ' a,iso capable of sulients, i . Grner ligur- I Oflic, ■ irfindrieni.' then experience. Steady nrertui almosphrre and good pay ° RECEPTIONIST, BEAUTY SALON. Hins. m person. Mrs parr.. Saturdays only. Donnell........... Michigen, Slate Bar required. Must heie five yeert of re----- experience as a legal _________l.IH!?:._‘?3j285. Once In a 23 .years experience Cement Work I*"'"-332T323 .______ _ 338-1695 ............... BOOKK^ErPITTG AND TAXE^ , ALL TYPES OP CEMENT WORK. IpscIiTM^Dy see ^Dorothy ""'accurate typist Gerterai ottict work,, Good Grimaldi FULL TIME operator, cu NIGHT Tele-Trey iht shitt. Apply In Bros. Big Boy. 20 S For the pen BABYSITTER. LIVE It BABY SITTER. LIVE In or , 17. Cell after S. 673-7993. H«lp Wanted Male FULL TIME Lady lor packaging end Ing In dry cleaning pl4 train. Apply I, I Cell lor appointm 6 Help Wanted Mole jl duties In 0 Pontiac Press . send resume j C 29. Pohliec 1 RELIABLE WOMAN FOR housework, 335-1679. , SALESWOMAN. AMBITIOUS, ----1 "gel tor weekly n# Call 624 1201. na'rierii SEEKING HOUSEKEEPER a _____ _. governrpent In labor relations matters, or as e legal representative belore state or federal ed-minislrative tribunals i n labor relations after two years ol setlstactory experience, these employees will be promoted lo com-mensuratb higher levels. For additional Inlormalion and applltatlon for axarpinatlon, write the Department ol Civil I 96.500 Jack Parks. 334 2471, Snall-I l"fl - 'or 3-3332 I "'^ci.n«y'Jm^eJflf.. oK" 'L!*F!5r^°iT J" Call Angie Rook, 3 3 2 - 9 1 5 7 , KEYS TAX SERVICE I Associates Perwnnel. vouy pony« or our oftlce OPPORTU.NrTY -. We're" number ^_8-2297 ' " • LIGHT HAULING and odd lobj. __________FE 5-4226________ -[LIGHT HAULING AND moving. I _Reasonable. 682-7516._ 'LIGHY"’ hauling. BASEMENTi I garages cleaned. 674-1242. .iLr - - - ; ByOCK__AND_ CEmINT work. I cement, block and repair. PERRY 673-7278 dr UL 2-4W1.________________I CEMENT FLOORS, Resldgntlel end' Piano Tuning ■AR* SCHMIDT ® FE%,7i UW-AND-HEAVY-flRDmire, :6?..?.yHB^DT_____FEJJ217 rubbish, fill dirt, grading and gravel and front-end loading. FE > Pointing and Decorating TO 97200 PER YEAR Mature worn new ekeiting _ and resWentlal. Wi#a i\. GUINN'S CONST. CO. 334-7677 or 391-2671 , FE Stenographer Stenogropher;, full time employment, fully poid life insuronce, hospitoiizotion ond/Other benefits, solory comensurqte with skill ond experience. Apply ■ • CONSUMERS POWER CQr 1030 Feathers'tone Pontioc We Are An Eqciof Opportunity Employer elderly couple Abillly lo speak Italian, desirable but n a t necessary. Call alter 5 , 651-4872. SECRETARY Interesting position open for persnn with required skills. Gnod typing and spelling a riiust. Knowledge dt mensurate with experience and ability. Apply 2 to 4 pm. General 5I7.373M51 day 0 equal opportunity 244 V , .... .... March For other |ob op-inlormatlon call Ight. An iloyar. Medical Technician Excellent opportunity available In clinical laboratory ol expanding Melropolilan Hospilal. Full lime allernoon position, lor technicibn, prclerably ASCP registry. Ex-rellenl ularv. ditterential and Contact SI. Joseph Hallmark Income fox FAST ACCURATE SERVICE PERSONNEL’CONSULTANT 474-4?23"'' '***' *48^2*’ Highland'' ................ --- PAID (M-59) nexijo Airway Lanes.______ 1 INCOME 'TAX PRERARATIGN by t prolessipnal accountant, In my oeparimrm onu nnx ■» ,.v,rK in home. Drayton Plains area, plush surroundings. Please call Mr 47,.2593. . PERSONAL ATTENTION by ap-; , Ceromic Tile PUBLIC RELATIONS pointment m vour home, Clarkston- -~f TDAIKIFF Waterford area. 62S5338. __ JceR/ Extensive public Ltact, dally C»"VXl**etnt-NMr$lBg 211 association with ®PP^'' COUNTRY HOME^ lor the A-1 PAINTING WQRKi'' - Truck Rental GUARANTEED. A-1 PAINTING AND AMIC TILE, SLATE end m work, ' mortar or Mastic stallation, area contrartor. 887-4144, for estimate. SRRAY PAINTING 052-2940, Ken 3 Call IPS 334-4971. Ip Wanted M. or F. t 693-8756. SHelp Wanted M. or F. Mercy losoital. ........................... 338 9f1l, ext. 238. secreterY from fijo'a mr'to’2730 OFFICE-BUStNESS AAANAGER for pm, 5 days per week., Good fast growing Dodge dealer. Walled shorthand and typing skills re- i.ake Salary open, mlnimtim qvtred. .bookkeeping background $10,000 per year Plus fringes. Call helpfo), apply Birmingham Bloom- tioyd Bridges, 624-1572. *5?" SHORt.ORDER COOKr'experltnw a U a I Oo. Hours 6 p.m. to 2 a m. Airway CoHee Shop. Call 673-32U days or 674-2703 eve. SILK SPOTTER Fun lime, experienced preferred, will train It quelltled, Gresham Cleaners, 605 Oakland Ave. FE 4- STENOS TYPISTS week, moitih oi onvenient Iqcati Highest rates County from 6 KELC.Y GIRL Of Keilv Servic* 125 N, Saginew J»C-;9 or AN EQ-'A: OPPORT'UNITy WANTED PART-TIME DRIVERS •UNION LAKE AREA Department Managi tools, alecijical. a with exceliem working c artments. Rapidly' ex- Exceilanl' Opportunity for advancement Mr Experience preferred, however, ' steedy employmenl. train. Secure future and PAID BENEFITS - VACATiONS - birthdays 7nSURANCE APPLY IN PERSON A.C.E., INC. S070 Highiahd Rd. Mr. Traskos or Mr. Gabftalt Dreumoking, Tail»ing alterations, all types, knit " Mi'c'htng:' dresses, leath*-BETfY"7ib'S~ Plastering Service -1 PLASTERING, new wort repair, all work guarantaai Lawrence. FE SB719.______ new" work estimates. 363-5607. I Trucks to Rent VY-Ton Pickups l',*i-Ton Stake TRUCKS - TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT Semi Trailers Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. 825 S. WOODWARD FE 4-0461 FE 4-1449 ___Open Dally Including Sunflay TV Sales and Service ^eafher_TOBtl^68^5M.-----'6r^^ 'aNd"'rESIOENTIAL 3-S dressmaking,, altera-: PrSrltpt service FE "37a . .ANTENNAS INSTALLED, weddings. 674-3W^_ ' ------------------------— «:a't Dnxi-riAn.Dn/-uirc-rew Plumbing & Heirting CONORA PLUMBING > HEATING; EAST PONTIAC-ROCHESTER ROMEO And The Greater Trl-County Area 752-9796 Wall Cleaners Sewe^r, water lines_- FE 8-0643. “ ‘tt A F PLUMBING AND HEATING.!' Let George Do It. 673-0377. BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS. PLUMBING AND HEATING. Service' Walls jeleaned. Reas. Satisfaction ._j------AA.xA.. —tteed. InsUr " *---- or 33S-1039. Eavestreughing M & S GUTTER CO. LICENSED-BONDED lompiele eavestroughlng serv Free est. 673-69M, 673- and repair. 334-7981. Restourants^ I BIG BOY DRIVE-IN, Dll Insured. FE 2-1631. FM»ST«mM LttTTIWBBWKSS er SERViei NERE . i For Want' Ads Oiol 3344981 URfuraiihMl 38 Salt Houses * w.K*l30*^?ly. “*1tr',75 'd'Sp“ Inoulrt «t 273 iaidwin Avt. Call S&V 335-0W5 or WO 2-^ 338-40W._ i THIS PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAV, FEBRUARY 18, 19(19 C-7 BACKUS Sale Houses 491 Sole Houses 49{Stale Houses 49,Sole Houses ANDJJATH, privali in-l ROCHESTER !:Sk7y. 335-m” ' lake privileges *• CLEAN sober cWWren welcome, no 3-bedroOm brick ranch house couple, 33247t0._______pels, H45 p,, mo., plus securltyl overlooking lake with attached 2- i rooms AND BATH, loweinSt' wertfi!; “»»»ser, Mr, car garage, *tdl basemwt, 2 baths,! side, 397 Prospect, adults, $25 Of 7SV-62M. fornllta cupboards with bullt-ln weekly, 3«3-«*5. H . SYLVAN ON fHETAkE.c~~l range • and._ovm. Paved sireet.l rROOMS, PRIVATE bath, ma^l *BAKU%EALTY ' cougte,^small baby micome, fhonel weiJSSIH ' 0^™!" 9’"'*ren| “AKUS,REALTY NELSON BLDG. CO. iZERO DOWN, FHA OR VA terms on ----- ----- _______________ 673-111*1______ , _ this 4 bi^oom home. Has dining new 3 bedroom ranch, basement,! room, full basement, ^closed front, cirMNnS h,th. attached 2 car garage, all the ex-! Porch. .Full price *13,700. P-82 ' Cafl Ray Today Wreclated. Conventional Township, ______ ' down .0^3-7440^_ OXFORD AREA 674-4101 i ?0 per 674-4101 i ROOMS, private ba couple, small baby weic 333-2515 balora 8 p.m.__ 3 ROOMS AND BATHe adulfs o occupancYe i»i *H2. ^.mioreni I 4300 *■ 8*2-9031 or 357-1 tSkS^PAR¥MENTS-| *F"Cip4L'.':-i: 'ir—:i big home 3 ROOMS, PRIVATE bath, adults IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY SMALL PRiCE only, no 'pets, maid service. 338- Separata Bldgs for tamlilei with ,, . ^ 9569. f • “'ugs^^tor^jamiiies with on, look wtlll convince you of t " OP8N DAILY 10 a. j'laRGE clean ROOMS, private bath, entrance, l»by welcome, $35--------------- W*ekly,J»5 ^ap. FE 4-7J65. WALLED \LAKE; W rIoOM FURNISHED apartment, ‘ adults only, no pets, $30 per week, —.^9*°.. *10 dep„ 673-7313. HOWELL Town 8< Country Inc. Highland Branch Office _^ONE: 313 - 685-1585 HITTER I DRAYTON AREA - Excellent 3 2 nice lots with connected to eecn > iwimmina« bating, I to S takes. fishing at $33,000 Phone; 651-4200 Webster-Curks^ REAL ESTATE MY 2-2291 _ terms. It has 3 large bedrooms - *-*------------V living ar-" 3 roomsi ^bath, bath up, bedroom. > deposit. Rent Houses, Furnished 39 id heat, near lakeside. 624- rooms and kitchen down, gas — 2V> car heated garage. Coul converted into 3 nice epartr A&G If you have loot trouble y< If your car i much sense In taking It landscaper, would there? some people take their home plans end dreamt to gle who deal mainly believe. For speed, sefislactlon and a program that you '• M« • week, 2-bedroom 363-0283' 3 Rooms and bath, .e-KiA<%f' rilcfrtrf. r‘jill af*d J ROU«1»f MUUU and references. 338-2754__ I ROOMS AND BATH, close In, ir MOBILE ..w, tiate possession, aouiTS oniy.i ”.... •'*“ -*— 5-5398 after' >»>ore_______________________ ! 3 ROOMS AND BATH. i ^_____- *?*_N. ^nson 1 3 ^.ROOlir^AND BATHr“Si»ry decorated, northeast side, couole . .......onlypets. FB 4-4625. ’ *'35 .RENTAL SERVICE to WARDEN REALTY I HOME 5434 W. Huron, Pontiac 682-3920 _______ _________ ______-...JOA 8-2515 recreation room with walkout Aic-f---------~i~i----■.—S basement. Aluminum siding, like Off Square Lake Rood new seel this onel , |„ convenient location, a your designs' lit 3'J>edroom ranch) to us We specii ......--.n'wUh^TrlrpLe,Wt construction. I 1964. $30,800. e UNIVERSITY DR. - Large Ic ---------------- recreation room. attached 3 car garage. 812,500 BIG LAKE AREA 4 Bedrooms, living room, —' carpeted, —' * TERMS. natural fireplace. 3 ROOM UPP^, clean, couple 1 child welcome. $135 — dep. 33^6606 or_673j;6097.__________. lonoioros, reiiaoie tenants .waiting •8 rooms, ADULTS ONLY. Deposltj A^RT DANIELS REALTY, 22177 WE BUY YORK X X LX ^ needs ; BUILD 3 bedreom ranchers — lak floors, lull basements, ilumlnum siding. To 'see model jail B. C. HIITER, REALTOR, 37*2 ELIZABETH LAKE RD. 682-AFTER 8 P.AA. FE 8-1275. CR 4 *250, 1230 N. OR 4-0363 Investors Special -roorr^epe Cod, full ba____ needs work. $2,000 fake over $2,500 balance. Vacant. Agent for ow WE TRADE FE 8-6*52 _ __ __ PE 8-7176 immediate POSSESSION — ------a... ^ BY owner'-- - w^ra.uu... s.w.s.sg ouire et 2335 Dixie or c.,1 FE 4- Rj|,, Houses. Unfurnished 40; Slr;^'’X25.,*574*'c.l["rn P,‘. .a,pa -...... .nienll $t«r' on' L^nd* .»‘?N,l77cc.n«racN: 4 ROOM apartment. Furnished, 2 BEDROOMS IN riTY 1 middle aged couple with no to bus line $21 oer wMk~ Hi»n i«TTmM~’AiA Mr H. .W.UII price. ■ wTomI, $35%“'*Too'd».Tina7lr!; » ,85°100«.«P.yS!- c.rp?ted welcome, $35 wk. $100 dep.. Inquire _at 273 Baldwin, Cali 338-4054. _ i _______________ BACHELOR—MAIN floor, carpeted,! oaraoeT'VlTs'. 'Located” private,^ email ^but_ _^nlM, near; 59, across from Pontiac Air Fisher, Pontiac FE 2-4376.___' _Ayall. Feb. 24. 636-2270. EFFICiENCY^^APARTMENT, adylts 2 ,BE,DROpM, STOVe, ^^fi-iger only, $30 I , 858 W. Flint, furnished, g replace,! area'--- " —- attachec ... ______ ... . ... room, V/i ceramic IrpprI.! basement, $27,90r - ..V I P.m., OR 3-7119.__________ bungalow “ garage. 681:0742.______ _ _ _ F YOU ARE LOOKING for beautiful country ' bedroorn, r" It. Has'pa______ ______ baths, 2W car garage. 90' X 500' k u must call Ray la at $23,81 ). FHA. I ji74-4y — ---------- — ------------ ---------^d, garage Lake Orion.________________ __required,jf3:Mjo. . , _________ ________ . EFFICIENCY APARTMENT 3 BEDROOMS, west side, STso'per "** ?»* furnace, tijio _ Adult only. FE ±126L______ _ . month. Dep., first and last mos. EFFICIENCY 2-ROOM, ail utnifles' _renl;.Call brtor^S p.m. 33M188. ' "■ "" ”■ furnished, good condition, from $50 3 BEDROOM, 2 CAR garage, lake deposit, rent *23.50 a week. 10 a.m. privileges on Sylvan Lake. $250 to 8 p.m. Call 334-3005._____| mo , I vr. lease. 646-6968 or 647- GOOD AREA. Ufllltres included. _____________________________________ BIG 6 ROOMS ‘ S'! buy we_ trade YORK RAY custom built 3\t .. ^yor own ideas SNYDER, KINNEY & BENNETT I ROCHESTER, 134 W. UNIVERSITY (Second floor) 651-6100 or 334-3100_ ONLY M80 DOWN 2-3 bedrooms. New br' ' ANDERSON 8< GILFORD Building & Realty 3861 Highland Rd. (M-59 ) 682-9000 BRIAN LET'S TRADE Located 1 large 100' „ ... ■ng all brick exterior with carport, ' 1 baths, with W bath off master ■* large kitchen, leperate sa. Call nov *- —-appointmer tor your In-belore II Soli Houses land contract, lerms with $5000 down. $19,500 full price. NORTH TONTIAC 3 BEDROOM RANCH, completely carpeted, living area, home In excellent condition, available on FHA or Gl terms. Full price $15,100. LAKE FRtytT LOTS ON WATERFORD HILL. We have 2 beautiful building lots, localsd on exclusive Watertord Hill — Priced right at $11,000 aach, assuma remodalad with IRWIN SMALL FARM 2 bedroom home with stair* to ex-j ^ T |_> IJ panslorr attic, has full basament l\/| K| I r" with walkout exit fo backyard, has! i V I i\i ■ i i i 11 1 hot water heat, carpeting, bullt-ln; ;X7s,*s7u.trin*G7ngX'lL‘’a'?e'; AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR on 2-4/10 acres. \ ......CROSS l■o,..ledTn*leftISS| Rcolty 8e Investment Co. pay for your llv-' We pay cash for used homes remodeled by prolessloitel carpenters and neat as a pin. Gel away from the HUM DRUM tity living. Currently used as an '* come property. If — '-'■ Sole Houses _ _ . 49 Long Lake Privileges ov«ly 2-bedroom home with country kitchen? aluminum Bided? plus 3-$23,900. ROME PARK bedrooms, large country kitchen, 20' living room, full basemenf, hot water heal, 2-car detached garage, 1 acre plus lake privileges. Only $29,900. HURON WOODS Large 3-bedroom brick ranch, af-tached 2-car garage, 2 fireplaces, built-in charcoal grill, family room and other extras, paved street and drive. Only $29,900. WELCH PARK 4-bedroom brick ranch with bullt-ln disposal, full basement, gas heat, 2-car garage. Only $32,500. Cos'woy 681-0760 on 2-4/10 acres. Also TAX savings, welcome. 1337 Cherrylav ot W, Hopkins. 335-6171._/ pontTac " Gl ISUBURBAN. I -l' SSnSr3;SyS ram kx^i-d.- Prlc. is^rlght •t^»11.500 TF®;ir'S„^*S„,,*”Sa) PontiBC Lake. No pets or children. 6180 Highland Rd. 673-7605; NICE APTS FURN-37 SCHRAM FHA mortgage. For sale b' __Call Mr. Cohen, 871-0110._| PONTIAC LAKE frontage Is a' setting for this 3 bedroom home* with t’/> baths, carpet In living room,! dining room and bath, I'/j car garage, alum, storms end screens,' gas heat. Call Ray for appointment and price. P-75. Call Ray Today 674-4101 RAY . Su"il.fl. GEORGE IRWIN? REALTOR MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE IB W. WALTON ______FE 3-'* GILES “garage, --------------- aluminum constructior thermopana windc mortgage terms. north side family home, 7 and bath. Could be BRICK RANCH. 3 bedrooms, marbleX j fireplace In carpeted living room, ^ 'ceramic bath. buHMn ovpn & range. IS Large 2Va car attached garape. Hot JACK Frushour REALTOR WE TRADE SCHOOL MOTHERS WILL LOVE This ALL NEW BRICK, 3 bedroom rancher close to schools and shopping area, V/i J>aths, bullt-lns, steel glass w/lndows, marble sills, door wall off dining area, full basement, 2 car garage and a paved driveway. Make your move now I $27,500. ..-i today for an appt. welcome. S35 a week. Inquire 28 ,,, ‘"''""J OR 41(063 ">E'8-7176 Hoevy, 335-0526._______________; Hwy. 1702 S. Telegraph K I TC H EJ6ETTE _ APARTMENT S' and gas hlat $140 mo S“s‘ CTEAN-*.’RQOM-'h5use. *lT5(irdown; OFF BALDWIN ' deposit. Dick vsluet. FE 4-3531. ' T37-7550 ... .. . FROM 5)03 MONTHLY t, lovely and clean. Nicely Children welcome. 1337 Cher ,U,- Fyiawn, corner of W. Hopkins. 335-Only )ve ......... ...... s, all appliances and Priced a you • ulllllles. Plus man| other extras. ceramic baths, 2'/i car gari $475 Iricl. utilities. Owner. 65JF57, ______*9«nMor^wne^__________ CLARKSfON SCHO()L AREA. 8884 ■lohawk Or. (Suiet digni'. ours ;when you move oxriniis ohalet_type ■ urn™ cveo 28x32 open ,,,, jqslYN AVE. kiicher.......... ■■ fireplace, 3 nice bedrooms. PONTlAC KNOLLS .. 7 year old ranch, 3 bedrooms, pointment carpetirrg, brick front, $0 down. FHA terms. Call ArDCAfi YORK t'r’ar'i'"’bedTo^?^^ ^SSllLn'^llVinfl, List With SCHRAM and Call the Van OPEN EVES. AND SUN. WE BUY I OR 4-0363 WE TRADE n -ROYER! e your present home In LESS THAN RENT THIS NORTH SIDE - 2 SiZCL ... kitchen w REALTOR UPPER 3 ROOMS, bath? wall to wait carpeting? seaparate entrance, ^ newly decorAjed, nice for nurses or Rent RoomS • professional folks, no children, no •' - 7---i------BEAUTIFUL SLEEPING WESTSIDE, LARGE front apart-) attar 7. 674-1397 mant,- good bads, clean, tor 2------------------- mature men, reaa. 338-9834. FE 5-9471 _________ MLS Serving Pontiac Area tor 20 years ' JOSEPH i7cirig''tji^ North side oEw Singleton Realty ' 617 S. Paddock 335-8116 I ^ LARGE CLEAN ROOM, near A ,____._____4. go share white Chirsllan Apartments, Unturnished 38 _horne,_nice.j38-363*^___________________ '' —- NICE FRONT ROOM on first floor. .....T home, middle-aged 1 AND 2 BEDROOMS, carpeted, heat lurnished, sec. dep., required. See. Mgr. apt. 109, 2427 Eliiabeth Lk. Rd. Arrowhead Mall Apts. Call 335- gentleman._332-6741. _ _ _ ________ ROOM FOR MIDDLE AGED Man, CAPE COD near Northend factories. FE 2-1127. fuJI _bas SAGIAMORE MOTEL, TV carpeted. Cash for Your Equity HACKETT 363-6703 I, lots of r conditioned, $35 i week. 789 j. Woodward. SLEEPING "room, k ________________ _________ privlleges^Phone 682-9306. BEDROOM, CLARkSTON. Stove. SLEEPING ROOM for gentler . Pontiac Motors. 330- 625-1775. ___;SLEEPING ROOM li? p’rivj Delightful, New Suburban Living in Hampton Hills | GREATER BLOOMFIELD ---- REAL ESTATE CO. homo 4190 Tejegraph^ Rd.______646-6500 LOOK WHAT'S NEW FOR '69-$700 DOWN Plus costs moves you Into a new 3-bedroom, full basement, aluminum rancher, located on large 54x120 ft. lot in city ot Pontiac. Paved streets and sidewalks included in price of only $18,600. 30-year FHA terms. Place your or-*" early spring delivery, porarlly located at 8i Open 9 a.m, to 4 p.i... _Bj)ildersJnC. 338-B588. LARGE 6 FE 8"7T76 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY «'l_Dixie Hwy. 1702 S^Telegraph 5 j,,,, self-service car wash with all HOLLY OFFICE ROCHESTER IN Christian HHIs new actuipment. we have an^ ap- i —.3 year old custom proximate amount ot gross Income Grab YoUf Wife ---------- *4''\ld'rMms" 0?'"? Iho l"qs,™Ita?”ma*nt.''Tt T 674-4161 bedrooms plus den, 2Vj baths, you are Interested In a business of 5730 W paneled family room, 2 fireplaces, your own call us today. __S’!' ^ soacloui rooms, lanrtscaped^^,* ^acrt. built brick with aluminum 651-M ROYER Claude McGruder Realtor 3710 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. 68^8720 Multiple JLIstIng Service OPE*> ~ ~ GOODRICH OFFICE FHA approved, only _________ , AgentJor£wner,J38:«93.— large 6“Rb6/irTtOMErT~acres honrie you "can and furnishings. $65,000. 682-6700. --------- " CLARKSTON Sharp 3 bedroom ranch home Cranberry Lake Estates, Just oft 75 Interchange at Clj FE 5-8183 THREE BEDROOMS All on first floor, basement, gas ' heat, full bath, garage. Located Southeast side. Easy FHA terms. , bedrooms ...... dormitory.* Beautllull MLS 674-2245 5730 WILLIAMS LAKE RD. STOUTS Best Buys Today WEST SIDE- Spaclous 3 bedroom family home with Ideal floor plan consisting of 5 rooms and bath down Including I bedroom plus 2 large bedrooms up. Basement with gas heal. 2 car garage. Close to Pontiac Mall. and Includes 3 bedroom*. 12x20 family room. GAS heat Privileges on Walters Lake. DOCTORS OR DENTISTS ATTENTION !- xtra good 4 room and bath ingalow with all large rooms us heated porch and unfinished Adams Rd. by 168 deep. This would be an Ideal parcel to develop Into a professional service center. LITTLE FARM- 32x46 ranch home nestled on park Ilka parcel approx. 150x284 all landscaped and lanced. 20x26 garage and blacktop drive. Walking distance to Oakland University. Carpeting and drapes Included. , WARREN STOUT, REALTOR 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-8165 Multiple Listing Service )nd paneled living room. Country CnU H0US6S kitchen and separate dining room. I 3 rolling ar— —-•i-n., ...—a—t acres with 3 artlally ' Champagne and Caviar If your taste runs to quality and exquisite country living — you'll pop your cork over this charming BATH, welcome. OR 3-5547._______ 3 ROOMS AND BATH, adults only, apply manager, ppt. 3, 2/20 Dixie Hwy., ^tiac^^_________ I ROOMS AND BATH, private Rent Office Space 2 SEPARATE OFFICES 1 nio foyer. Brai 3 LARGE ROOM Apartment, large' Near Pontiac plant' FE 2 *849. !twTnv^Tuc'Ticai -..........- -"'^*''®®' I" P®"- SL^EPTNglrbWtorGid-^t^ib^JTo'^Yh’i?'' ranch tSmSSrns" ' entrance. FE 2-4051. cutston* fireplace f- -- ---- t car garage, there are lois or boards and lake privileges. _ _______________ ____ _ . Ray for price and terms. P-81 3 BEDROOM ON LAKE. 3 children _ ________________ ________ Call Ray Today 674 4101 arpet. Large lot. Lake closets, L------ llac, MY 3-1128.____ 5 ROOMS AND ................. refrigerator and utilities turn. _ Taylor._ air , ditloning and cleaning lurnlshod. - ! _Call John Slier, 674-3136. __ 3 OFFICE SPACES, HEAT, fight turn., 4540 Dixie, OR S-JSSS.__ AVAILABLE NOW IN ONE OF; trance. 682-226*._________________ 4 ROOM APARTMENT. Stove and refrigerator turn. Private entrance. ''^"';;.'-;-No chUdrM._MY 2-357J._____________I 4 ROOMS AT 28*1 Peerless Medical Just off of Scott Lake Road____suites a„._ ........... 5 ROOMS, WEST SIDE, couple onfy. Plenty of’frea'parking'.'Phona 65T No children or p* . sec. ( >. ond'_S55^or^6Sj^457^_ RAY EVERYBODY HAS A DREAM ___ YOUR DREAM CAN ----- - TRUE - In this sparkling 2 Call Ray Today bedroom ranch, near Waterford i - Drive In. Wall to wall carpeting throughout, living room? fireplace,’ LAZENBY SMALL HOUSE Handy Ideation In Drayton Plains. Now rented. All furniture included. On large lot with shade trees. Total price only $7500 with terms. ROYCE LAZENBY, Realtor Open dally *-S 'nififfirSfoR I lakes from this 2 bedroom home PF a-2306 253 W. Walton FE 5-6712 with 2 more bedrooms possible.; MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE I r.roefino I'yI"9 JI®®’’’ J"® ^ NEW custim ranch home In' *™.' -*?"°®L®r®, Milford. 3 bedrooms, hulllln ranoe. “'‘‘fum FIVE BEDROOMS _____ . rtnwn >nri four iin 'he Hills. trees ,ing roLfmodern Mtchen ^nd Dk . Full basement with _GAS: ROYER REALTY, INC. GOODRICH _______636-2211____ RHODES INOIANWOOD LAKE, beautiful 4 FA heat, nice conditior Three.■bedroom ranch with 2 can attached garage. Air-conditioned fireplace, i. basement. /3 baths, ragePel'omy ^ family room, carpeting ’ ment wltL , water. Vacar gas FA heat. Pub :, etc? $87,500. WE BUILD-TRADE | ROYER REALTY, INC. PHONE: 634-8204 Holly Branch _ Holly Plaza fireplace and full b a _________ ______Last 20 3 COMMERCIAL BUILDINGS, an nearing completion. A limited pie parking. 10645 Dixie. 62^546. number avilable for IMMEDIATE jolobo SQ. FT. IN FLINT, heav ' *-‘—■ *-■ storage and mfg., 15 ton cram Also 2500 sq. It. on 4539 Dixl< good for any kind of businesi OCCUPANCY. Completely carpeted, air-conditloned, lots of closet space.; See our model, you'll love it. ALL poac UTILITIES lnclud,>d in rent. "CUS-1 Rent or lease, i m m e a i a i e TOM^^CRAFTED^ appliances JY , _possessiori^MA MUI.____________ 'BUILDING FOR l'EASE or rent,' - ' good location, 4479 Dixie Hwy, corner of Frembes. Office or OUT ON THE LIMB!! EXECUTIVE OWNER HAS BEEN TRANSFEftRED — must sell thti HOTPOINT." Adults only, m 673-5168. BLOOMFIELD ORCHARDS APARTMENTS Ideally situated In Bloomfield-Blrm- w"est~Huro'n7FE~j^796ir.' ____ b&rMim apa?^tmen?5^'^Lallable"from^ LIGHT MANUFACTURING $145 per month Including carpeting, ... . wyAj.-hip os'y70' Hotpoint air conditioning and , ap- pliances, large family kitchens, po^iiA Siltss Huron, •wimmlng pool and large sun deck’---------------------------------- closer, large family room, softly carpeted living ------- ' comfy oil . _ ...ng and ____, ---- fenced yard wiin outdoor fireplace. *21,500. $1300 down FHA. HAGSTROM, REALTOR I 1900 W. HURON OR 4-0358 V\LS________After 6 p.rh. FE 4-7005 Eva Howard RAY LAKE FRONT HOMES ROSS AND LAKE PRIVILEGE HOMES. 3-5 BEDROOMS, 1V2-3 BATHS FROM ! $33,900 INCLUDING LOT LAKELAND ESTATES Private beach, golf and teni lakes, boating. Models open "‘•I L.. .............. RAY SPECIAL 466 CALIFORNIA ST. IMMERCIAL 1 /^T 7\ 017' Over 200 feet of prime frontage. I .1 f-X PS K Located , on Auburn Ave. near ^' J—l-i i-J. LXV Osteopathic College. Sill or! i "COLONIALS ARE BAQK I Eves. Call Mr. Castelj FE 2-7273 DEMAND" Nicholip-HnraFr Co Take a mlnula and call to sea ft mcnoiie tiarger 'geiighttul colonial situated in area .. '(i W. Huron St. FE 5-8183 finer homes, tha first floor (eaturei slate entrances and hallway,; spacious living room, saparala dining room, kitchen with built In range and snack bar. Vs bath, attractive ANNETT OFFERS leading to a 12x15 patio. 3 - 4 BEDROOM BRICK 1968, mortgaga “ESTABLISHED 1930" FUTURE FRONT DOOR And the front door to your future. 3 bedroom brick a “QUIT HOUSING AROUND" Bdroom colonial, mis is iii ____ ____________ _____ _ _ imic bath and half. Insulated windows, cozy first floor family room, large kitchen with bullt-lns. Basement, 2 car attached garage, and a 14 x 22 patio. *27,900. lumlnum sided ranch home with lull walk-out basement, 2 car ttached garage tor the Onbellevabl# low price of $21,300. Red Hot orth Suburban l(-------- — ---------- Country-ltis room masonry constructed home . .. .( IS living room, 8 x 15 dIniM „ ........... , .jdrooms, basement and a tot 100 x 200. h approximately $2,200 down to existing 6Vs per cent land DORRIS & SON REALTOR 2536 Dixie Hwy. MLS OR 4-0324 b'ed'rooms''& ba'ih'on'firlt ifoo'L 2 '* WHERE THE HEART bedrooms up. Paneled rec. room ______u-.— in basement; auto. heat. Includes carpeting and drapes. $20,500, 49 Sale Houses 1 ment, gas heal, tiled bath, 3 big bedrooms, huge kitchen, dining and nlilCK COLONIAL -------- ------------ with featurds which Include a large attractive living room, delightiul bedrooms, a kitchen designed for comfort and con-recreation ■ Franklln-.-Rd,' be?. S-jBlydr' and rondfti!;r'YR''^Uh'%lreX!!l beautiful family roorn, with'f»*'® ONLY $8,500, 5 West of Walton Blvd. on Hwy. North on Shoreline Blvd. living Call Model Miracle Mile. Only $395 t< FAST POSSESSION .... ..d.) between Opdyke and 1-75 expressway.'Open daily and Sunday, 12 to 6 D.m. Closed Thursday. For . 335-5670, 399-4642.1 CLARKSTON CORNERS ALL ELECTRIC APARTMENTS NO CHILDREN — NO PETS 105 WASHINGTON W. CLARKSTON 0R^PH0NE_626-1226____ ^BASSY- WEST APARTMENTS Waterford Township Large, sound conditroned, bedroom units, all utilities excepi -enfral air conditioning, AVAILABLE. 'baths. Glassed an ment with gas he stores and tr terms. dining'room, kitchen, 2 full l~941 S Telegraph 623-0670 rent porch. Base-1. Close to schools,! isportatlon. FHA FE 4-05 . A d A . . bedrooms, 2927 Glenbrook,. Keego. EAST SIDE. No stairs to climb. 3 Sylvan Lake privileges, city sewer, bedroom, living room, kitchen, fenced. $10,950. $1250 down. Look it breakfast nook, bath. Full bsmf., gas ^ver. Owner^ OR 4-3567._______ heat, glassed-in porch. Garage. Just 2 bedroom, ATTACH. GARAGE- ****9® <*®*® ®" <*'• on East Sheffield SI. $10,500.' By I owner, new gas furnace. 363-7677. 2 BEDROOM HOME, BY OWNER. ; Corn*- lot SO'xlOO', IVa car garage. I $2,300 down on land contract. 682- FE 2-6412 M/Mer Realty, 616 W. Huron__ EAST SIDE SPECIAL " __________________________ — I 2 Bedrooms, full basement, 2 cai 3 BEDROOMS, 2 STORY, basement, garage, carpeting, all for $12,500. ----- ,-----. —------1 —pi, I MR. PROFESSIONAL Have you cash to go To mortgage on a house In Bloomfield Hills. Brick, natural stone and aluminum, no painting outside, i‘‘ insulation, $200 per year heat bill, 1*60 sq, ft. of living area, 2536 sq. ft. with attached garage, two 19' fireplaces, one .Georgian marb'-2Vj baths, 1000 sq. It. recreati room, wet bar, built In compli with vacuum throughout, 4 yea old. Will sell for twice assess not be duplicated for $60,000. ' >. Finished basement, --ntral air cr--""-y S att. 2 c nf, gasi Honing. Val-U-Woy Realty and Building Co. FE 4-3531 345_Oain,^^e._____^^P^N 9Jo » WE WILL TRADE SMALL COTTAGE OFF the lake, lot Reoltors 28 E. Hufon St. 50x125'. Must sacrifice. Best offer. -op nx// Call after 6 p.m. Sunday after 1' ooO-U'tOO “ - 363-2862. ' s, call today. CLARK REAL ESTATE 1362 W. HURON ST. carpeting, drapes, swimming pool,; 2 bedrooms, $170. Minimum 1 year _i?®®.'.*!*-P®®5*®?'®n: lease, no children. 4Vj mlv W, of Tel-Huron Shopping Center, 5367 3 BEDROOM FRAME HOME Highland Rd. Apt. 137. 674-0569,' "—*“ "‘” Mrs. -Schultz. Between 1 and 8 ch.l FHA. Call 5 YORK Enjoy A HAWAIIAN WEEKEND Every Weekend Year-Round POOLSIDE COLONIAL -VILLAGE East Apartments ' Enioy heated Swimming pool and Saunas COME SEE! COME ENJOY! 1800 SCOTT LAKE ROAD between Dixie Highway and Watkins,Lake Road lac Twp., handy to schools,!WE BUY WE TRADE ping and Oakland University, I OR 4-0363 fE 8-7176 ■ ■ with many trees 4713 Dixie Hwy. _1TO S. Telegraph *'®*'.','»»'®l'! FIRST'In VALUES kitchen /-as... _____ $17,500 ract terms. ) RENTING $78 Mo. Excluding taxes and Insurance S ONLY $10 Deposit 3-BEDR60M HOME WITH APPLICATION GAS HEAT _________ ... _ LARGE DINING AREA laundry, I'b baths, 2 car attached WILL ACCEPT ALL APPLICATIONS i garage, block from school, call FROM ANY WORKERS, WIDOWS' I MENZIES I Office; 625-5485 ,. '____Eves.; 625-2426, 674-3054_ 3 BEDROOM ASBESTOS RANCH In I very good condition In nice neighborhood, carpeting and drapes, dining el, tiled basement, l'/2 car garage, alum, storms and screens, $14,900. FHA. Call Ray for ' terms. P-56. ;Call Ray Today , 674-4101 TUCKER REALTY CO. - *03 PONTIAC STATE BANK_____ THIS RANCH has double closets In all 3 bedrooms plus carpeted living! room and hall, large patio, storage In 2 car garage, storms and screens and gas heat, only $22,500,; FHA. P-32. ' Call Ray Today_ 674-4101' VACANT. $400 DOWN 5 rooms with connecting bath, full basement and 2 car garage, dining room, owners agent 330-6*52. ___________i VACANT CAPE ebb. 4 bedrooms, basement needs flnlshlnfl, $2,000 to $2500 balance. Owner's agent, OR ! Al Thai's'bir ttiats' n ARRO Big House, Little House Bring a I Union " NEW 0UNTRY HOMES ll-HILL VILLAGE; Rambling* ranL.. — exquistely handcraltad. 24' farm kitchen, separata dining, 3 bedrooms, mammoth garage. Price includes carpeting and bullt-lns. $38,500 MOVE RIGHT IN! ! ^Gracious Southern Colonial room ranch with lull basement, 2 Saraqe, new furnace, pi ' ng. Owners agent, 674-16*8. Natural fireplace, paneling, large OPEN 9 * MLS In association with William A. Kennedy_ Val-U-Way; IMMEDIATE POSSESSION ! Sharp 2 bedrootn home with full basement and garage. Large kitchen and dining area, newly finished hardwood floors. Requires $2,000 down and take over present mortgage. No closing costs, no credit reports. $360 Moves you . Into this sharp 2 bedroom horrie with full basement, on Francis St. Gas heat, tile bath, large kitchen and dining* area, wall to wall carpeting. Total price only bring V 2 bedrooi.. -------- and dining area, utility iwall to wall carpeting, ----- ------- nlfcely Full basement with, recreatior room, gas heat, carefree alumlnun siding, 2 car garage. On city wate) and se,wer. Convenient west sidi location. Terms. landscaped and a 2 car garage. jr come to 2*0 W. Kennett . HopkinSy 335-6171, /, 3 bedrooms-! Gardtah Court Apartments 17 1-bedroom apis. from $145 17 2-bedroom apts. from $165 INCLUDING CARPETING/ y, iiilffradllts occupancy, 3 AND DRAPES i I'/j bath, large living room, run Stove, refrigerator, air con- basament, large lot, lake dinning, garbage disposal, hot privileges, $15>*00 682-75*7. ___ • Irnm Pontlar Motors ASBESTOS RANCH w I f Ih . 3 t*l® 95 W. KENNeIt ' ^'^Tna ^'m*” nTw tf^r'lS. FE 8-S734 ____________358-5420 i",chem ^olid drive? storrS? and LARGE NICE 4 and bath. Garage screens' and gas heat. Zero down,! and garden space. No children 6r fhA, P-33. pets. Phone OR 3-1*43. _________^ Call Ray Today ROCHESTER . BUILDERS . , 2 fSfdrponts, built-in oven, tAnge yOURN PLANS OaklSid Shores many ^ PEOPLE WITH CREDIT PROB- ?r1&f‘’So',5Mf'’"wtth'" LEWS down payment, call at anytime. °KAY WITH US. F-r^MuseT-co-mple^^^^^^^ daily_and.sat. and sun. furnished, land contract. 232 W. Cornell, 682-3421.____________, ... ....... 7 ROOM HOUSE, LAKE Privileges,' REAL VALUE REALTY G"Mr*Rd*” **''*"*■ For Immediate Action Call *Mo‘lvibWsYbu''iN FE 5-3676 — 642-4220 2-3 bedrooms, brick townhooses,---------------------------------- model at 1337 Charrylawn, Pontiac. Gl SPECIAL . 333:56ljL_^*nt.__________ 3 bedrooms, family room, excellent' 713 DESOTA. This half of a 2-famlly lake privileges. $17,900. unit contains 2 bedrooms and bath o BFItROOM^ on second floor, living room, din- OtLIKUUmS Ing room atid kitchen on first FuM basernept with lower Straits! floor. Full Basement is semipan-, Lake privileges, $14,800. 25 per, eled, has gak hot air furnace and! cenl-down, _ laundry tubs. Can be purchased ati FLATTLEY REALTY - ' $14,500 on FHA mortgage with $100 down and closing cost estimated ati620^MMERCE RD...... ....3®3:*?B1 *“Ll®..®®x®":'®?.‘!'/®'’' ‘‘®"®®"’ ° l HALLMARK bedrooms, 2 baths, huge family, room and all custom extras. Including carpeting. Lake an-' hillside lot selections. $7,500 DOWN I LAPP'S OF PONTIAC 3*1-33 NEW HOMES , Financing Available j-— 3-4-5 BEDROOMS 1-l'/2-2y2 BATHS ! W® have for -vouf 'selection a thoice of 9 models with 15 distinctive elevations. Prices range from $17,100 to $38,900 plus lot. A New Model Is i ____Owners'” Agent FE 8- 6*52. OR 4-164* till 9;C8 P.m._! MARGARET MCCULLOUGH, Realtor WATERFORD AREA 3-bedroom brick, full basement OOZ-ZZI I with rec. room, large kitchen, car- Open *-* MLS peted living room, new .gas fur- - - ------------- Term's.'"'''*'’ '"■**’ •*"“*«* TOM REAGAN REAL ESTATE 2251 N. Opdyke YOU CAN TRADE FOR ANY HOME WE HAVE FOR SALE ' Val-U-Way Realty and j Building Co. FE 4-3531 Sun. 2-5 345 Oakland Ave. OPEN * to * 49Sole Houses 49 , WYMAN LEWIS REALTY 389 Whittemore 338-0325 and Rd. Open For Your Inspection willis'm. BREWER REAL ESTATE _ ^24 RIker ^do- _ __ YbUNG-BILf HOMES ' REALLY MEANS BETTER BILT Russell Young, Bldr. ___W4-3830 - SV/7 W. Huron St. _ "ZONED MULTIPLE ■ 114 SEMINOLE Large spacious 5 bedrooms, bath Vj, newly decorated throughout. SAVE dispesal. and refrigerator, «wall to YOUR LOT wall carpeting, storage space pro-, _ ylded, adults, only, no pets, im- p.j. Mason*Construc mediate possession, security rn ---- quired. Smalley Realtors, 852 1708. REAL ESTATE 674-4123 4821 Highland .... ___(M-59) next to Airway Lanes____ HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty FAMILY RANCH "NORTH SHORES'' Lake Privileges, Lower Straits nj gnu Lake. Fine residential area. Large a down,] living room with fireplace, 17' dining room, 3-16' bedrooms plus' 674-4101 den. Dandy large kitchen. Full basement. Attached 2 car garage. J Large lot with nice ---------- ... PLANS shrubs. *31,800, $18,000 OUR LOT land conlraW, Shown pointment only. I car attached and Sun. Take Ellz. Lake no. Vj mile west from - Williams Lake Rd. to Colony Heights Blvd. HAYDEN REALTY 1073s, Highland Rd. - '*'"*Jf^" ■ - rOHNSON if Oxbow Lake ORION ...’of the I nice features that go with this 4 b----------- level home, large _________________. throughout, wall to wall carpeting In living room, completely aluminum sided, 2 lots with shade trees. Full pHce oi*lly $21,950, cash — mortgage. Must be —" •- ■— )preciated. _____ _____ lull basement, lake frontage on Lake , Orion. Only! $15,3M). down *”on LOW RANCH, j bedrooms, rilce size Evening* after 7, Call Mr. Braid, FE by ap- living room, family room with 2 4-jzb6. car attached garage, corner lot Everett Cummings, Realtor ' 2583 UNION LAKE ROAD KINO I^HIfKb' AOtNCY EM3 J208 363-7181 10*7 SO. LAPEER RD. 628-2565 1 704 S. Teleg|Aph >FE 4-2533. lOHNSON MMimM “IT'S TRADING TIME" COUNTRY HOME ON FOUR ACRES ^ , ............ ..orth ot Pontiac end situated c , _____ land. Three-bedroom brick ranch with full two-car garage. Adiolning garage Is heated ling far h hot water. includes 20'x24' barn. value and now only $30,950. TRADE-IN YOUR PRESENT HOMEI A CHILDREN'S /lEIGHBORHOOD light trafllt, IBrge, deep completi bedroom ranch in V' * ■ - "lily room. ipletely fenced lot. This three-woi has I'/, baths, and an extra sell at Just $17,500. Call for an CLARKSTON FHA-Gl SPECIAL ' Situated on better than one acre lot. Three-bedroom ranchlF with family size kitchen, also an extra large heated two fJaeli^ethliierY A» /WASSeV FEReUSON^ snowmobile now on hanf 17 and » twrse machines, Ponilae Fartn and Industrial, MS Woodward, M' 0441 Of 334.1442. — 334-H80. _________________ BASS guitar and amp. S100. 474-4259. Can after 5:30 p.tn. BEAUTIFUL EKO BASS hardshell r— '—■ " or 33S-4774, guiTar ana It offer. 338-3763 ENJOY YOUR PIANO DAVID A. SCULL PIANO TECHNICIAN tuning REPAIRING TUNING IS IMPORTANT 335-8227 ' ni^NCH PLASTIC dreln ___________________ flttlnos, no need to thread pipe anymore it goes together with glue, all you need Is a hack-sav and B paint brush. See G. A Thompson «. Son. 7005 M-59 W. linoleum kuGS, w.vs ea. Plastic wall tile -------....1c ea r.iiina file — wall paneling, cheap. I, FE 44957. 1075 W. Huron FENDER SUPER reverb ampi 1948 model and Gotz Guitar, OR 3-3775. te ford SUPER van and building maintenance equipment. Call after 4 p.m„ OR 3-5355. fsMOO BTU crane gas furnace, slightly damaged case. Will Install. Bargain A8.H Sales, 425-1501. ANCHOR FENCES NO MONEY DOWN FE 5-7471 AMERICAN FLYER TRAIN, Gauge, hair dryar and misc. F brTdes announ, Forbes, BUY YOUR WEDDING rnts at discount from, 0 Dixie. Drayton, OR 3- fEDROOM OUTFIT, dining room outfit, oVerstuffad chairs, rafrlg-erator, fraezer, machlnary, mIsc. CLOSE-OUT PRICES ON EvInrude NEW SKI-DOO'S Wa hava luet raealved a shipmant of new Ski Doo's. S end get our deal today. Also In stock, new trallsrs, Skl-Doo clothing, boots. KING BROS. Pontiac It Opdykt Rd. E 4-1442_______________FB 44734 Albion Saloi _______ 80 SATURCtAY, FEB. 22, 10 A M. Cruse Perm Persenel Property 7037 S. Nichols Rd., 13 Miles West and 1 Mile N. of Grand Blanc 4 Tractors and matching tools Sorayer, Planters, PIckoo «"«i mi* Perkins Sale, Service »h. Swartz Creak OtT|jAL^ " Light, compact. . SPORTCRAFT 4140 Fotey Watai;ford, SCORPION ^now Mobiles PRICES SLASHED ON LAST 3 MACHINES IN STOCK ■ h.p. "WANKLE ; sionless rotating c ^ pfelCES QUOTED 0 V B 1 PHONE McCELLAN TRAVEL TRAILERS AHABIANS_ FOR Boubla D-C FEBRUARY ' , CLEARANCE SALE Lowrey organs — save up to S30ii. Trade-ins, studios Used and other makes such as: Hammonds, Estey from $395 up. No money down — No payments till April. SHOP US BEFORE BUY. ; YOU GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. 1710 TELEGRAPH FE 4-054 PONTIAC OPEN EVENINGS TIL 9 P.M. ______SAT. 5:30 P.M. Highland Road (M Phone 4744143, TIZZY 43S4400 _______________83 -H PROJECTS V, ARABIAN Colts, Pinto colts, Ysarllng. Beautiful with lots of Arab alyla. Chastnut colt, flaxen mane a— —" YEAR OLD AAARE. Call any tii TRADE REGISTERED Quarter horse Yearling colt, top breeding, tor horse frailer good condition. 444-2742._____ 83-A FLASH: Rent a brand ni t Story and Clark Morris Music Across from Tel-Huron FARFISA DUO COMPACT, bass pedals, power peck, Gibson amp, 90 watts, 4 mos. old. 482-6485._________ I. R. Smith Moving HAMMOND C-3 ORGAN, JR-20 and buy. Hagen Music, 332-0500. Hickory Ridge Rd. to Demode Rd.. , left and follow signs to DAWSON'Sirr, SALES, TIPSICO LAKE. Phono 629-2179. MARCO POLO guitar, used~ months, S45, call after 5, 343-4105. CHURCH PEWS 332-0»3 CHAIN SAWS McCULLOCH MAC 15, $110 MAC 4 WORLD/^S LIGHTEST BUT SO POWfeRFUL, S149 HOUGHTEN'S POWER CENTER 112 E. University Dr. 451-701 MUST SELL - LADY'S 120 BASE accordion; also violin; excellent condition. Both for $150. FE 8-3113 DELTA FLOOR MODEL Drill press. BrAPES, BABY CHEST, antiq —u ..—. ^ ijgyj Clothing, size 1 :-13M._ 4, misc. 402-13S ELECTRIC LIGHT FIXTURES for in°"=Tu factory can give, luorascent, 393 Orchard $594, bench Incl. Smiley Bros. Music 119 N. Saginaw__________Y FE 4-4721 PLAYER PIANO, new type pianola Ski Doo's Sno Jet's Mercury's CRUISE OUT, INC. :. Walton FE 8-4402 __Dally 9-4, Closed Sundays Hoy-Grain^ead^ PHONE OR 3- 47140 Van Dyke. HAY AND STRAW, will i 2-3349 Auburn Halohtt. Farm Product By Kate Osann Wanted Cari-Trucki 101 Desperately Wanted 1964s through 1949 Chevellas, C a m a r o t, Corvattes, GTOs, Firebirds and 442s. Must be 4 spM or turbo hydramallc. ilveriirs 2-9970_2020 Dixie FE 4-t EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Car “Jane Ellen says she's planning to elope--but not till 1976!’’ HOMELITE CHAINSAWS and Snowmobiles In stock, also Insulated coveralls and lackets. t — Idea and John Deere parts gall Davis Machinery Co. NA 7-3292. ., $599. Elect, start 25 _____ IS-, 18- and 20-Inch tracks 20, 25 and 30 accessories. M*™ ni«tni Barrett, Troy, TERRIFIC SAVINGS for the "Early Bird" Shopper On new Johnson motors And Starcrett boats. Also see SCRAMBLER The new concept In mobility.,' A few 1969 Ski Doos left In stock. JIM HARRINGTON'S SPORT CRAl^T vs ML E. of Lapeer City limits ,On M-21 Open 10 to 9, Mon. - FrI. 10 to 4 Sat. WE BUY, SELL OR TRADE GUNS Also sell ammunition OPPYKE hardware FE 8-4484 _FORD. TR,ACTOBL^3 Travel Trailers SPEGAL JOHN DEERE TRACTOR AflGDEL NO. M-T WITH 2 BOTTOM PLOW — CULTIVATOR - SNOW PLOW. NEW TIRES ON REAR. tN A-1 CONDITION, COMPLETE PRICE, 1995 Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke TRAILER RENTALS FOR Floi vacation. Goodell Trailers, 879 0, RAILERS—CAMPERS - COVER Goodell Trailer Sales; 3200 Rochester Rd., 852-4550._ WE CARRY AND SERVICE fAtSDEM ROAD GRADER, runnino condition. $1400. Call 473-3488. Travel Trailers _____ 88 24" 8i 36" Pickup Covers New and Used Trucks 103 New and Used Curs 106 FORD 1951 DUMP, 149.5; Trailer. Illti YOUR CHOICE $119 top, $375; Roller, 3-5 ton, 41175; K§ 4-3996 11960 CHEVY, 2 door, automatic. EEP 7i963,“CJ-5,- 4 -Wheel “drlveillMJ S!!!:;'''-snov/ plow half metal cab, call hMtutMrt 0-1 ’i*li>i1T7 '1961 rlymOUtnr 4 COOT# ftlCn. ^D«TWWn 9-J. JJ4-4U7. ...... „ PAntl«r. A rtoftr JiiitArmitl 'ChGck th« rest. i Averill's F^J^78_202^lxle FEjl-: Mansfield AUTO SALES 300 Sharp Cadillacs, Pontiac, Olds end Buicks for out-oFstete market. Top dollar paid. MANSFIELD AUTO SALES 1104 BalHwIn Ava. FE 5-5900______ FE 8-8825 STOP HERE LAST M&M TROTWOODS JOHNSON'S TRAVEL TRAILERS 517 €. Walton Blvd.—FE 4-S853 169 RUTTMAN mlnl-biki. $130._482-1743. bELUXE'RUPP 3Va and rear -------------- Holly Travel Coach Inc. 15210 Holly, Holly_____ME 4-4771 WOLVERINE TRUCK cempers ant sleepers. Factory outlet, repair ant parts, new and used rentals. Jacks, Intercoms, telescoping bumpers, spare tire carriers, auxiliary ges-oline tanks, stabilizing shocks. LOWRY CAMPER SALES 1325 S. Hospital Rd. Union L EM 3-3681 1948 FORD WITH 10 ft. campar. 3 , bough Vust telj. UL 2-5117. PIANOS Give your child the piano missed _ start today with a , uced reconditioned piano. No need Warehouse Clearance Sole On Yukon King, snowmobile, 1 h.p. Grizzley .. $4- 18 h.p. Super Grizzley -- 18 H.P. Kodiac WIdetrack ... $7! All brand new — never uncraled. KAR'S BOATS S. MOTORS 493-1600 Sund-Grovel-DIrt 76 n brands, prices e Wood-Coul-Coke-Fuel BODY F I R B P L A C lUre, aluminum frame, sano blasted Swan design, $5 G. A. Thompson, 7005 M-59 W. | FORMICA REMiR^DTTMcTqTTt.: you pick up. Waterford Cabinets, > 5720 Williams Lake Rd., Drayton FE 3-7168 GARAGE SAI freezer $50,'' ..... Wicker chairs. St Lake Rd., C VUE; 18 cubi! .■'^Ironrltf Ironi etc. GARBAGE DISPOSAL, VS Horsepower, $27.88. Stainless Steal Sinks, 32x21, $29.50. PF Sable Launa Plywood, 4x8x'A, $4.95 per sheet. TALBOTT LUMBER 1025 Oakland ___________FE^ ^4595 ■ HI-FI STEREO tapa recorder. 473-J23A_____________________ WHITEHALL DUO COMBO ORGAN LIST PRICE $995 Sale Price $600 PONTIAC MUSIC & SOUND 3101 W. HURON_____________402-3350 71-A ACCORDION. GUITAR. LESSONS. Salet-service. Also piano *■■■"'“ Pulaneckl. OR 3-5594. SEASONED HARDWOOD, birch $20 cord, will dellv 1704. SEASONED HARDWOOD, 24", cord at the house. $50. FE 2-7820. SEASONED FIREPLACE wc —• —d mlx“* days I CLASSICAL GUITAR LESSONS Pontiac Music and Sound, 682- Store Equipment NEW RESTAURANT ei ----- __1 $49.95 marred. Also electric and butane heaters. Terrific values, Michigan Fluorescent, 393 orchard Lake. FE 4-8442 - 14. ___________________I HOT WATER BASEBOARD, 8' and SpOrtinO GOOdS 7' sections. Close-out, $1.25 per ft.: = G. A. Thompson 8, Son, 7005 M-59. REACH IN REFRIGERATOR, ep- ?rox. 50 cu. tt. con be seen at elly-Ho Restaurant, 6724 Dixie Hwy., Clarkston, 425-5370. 1969 STARCRMT TRAVEL TRAILERS CAMPERS INSIDE DISPLAY CRUISE-OUT. INC. 1 E. Walton Dally 9-6 FE 8-4402 _____^CLOSED SUNDAYS PACHE TENT TRAILER compirte wtih edd-a-rpom. 1947 model. Mint condit. Sacrifice, " “ " ^»237^ 1 EACH IN STOCK .. .. .0 Early Anrjerican . Front Living roonr Expando . 12 X 40 with E COUNTRYSIDE LIVING 1084 Oakland Apache Camp Trailers Pickup truck covers and cabover campers. W# will be closrt rnpnth of February. Re-open with big 2 day Inventory sale beginning Thursday, February 27. Bill Coller, Ta Bast Ot Laoeeron M-21. AIRSTREAM yGHJWEIGHT TRAVEL TRAILERS Huron (olan to loin on Bvam's exciting carava Pets-Hunting Dogs MINI POODLE pupw, miniature Collie and Shephard puppies mtxed, $15 aa. 338-2459. _____ AKC BLACK FEMAlE Poodle, Minitov, $35, 473-5274. KENMORE SUDS SAVER Automatic washer, $35; 21" Zenith black & white console TV. $35. 451-8205.___ LAVATORIES, COMPLETE, $24.50 value, $14.95, also bathtubs, toilets, shower stalls. Irregulars. Terrific values, Michigan Fluorescent, 393; Orchard Lake. FE 4-8442— 1._________ XkAfcHED SET WEDDING rings, _size 4Va, 33B-8045, ask tor Judy. NlCE DRAPES, NICE clothing, Misc., vary reasonably. FE 5-8491. OIL FURNACE tor 4 room house, complete system PEARSON'S FURNITURE HAS NOW MOVED TO 440 AUBURN, PONTIAC, FE 4-7881. KING BROS. Pontiac at Opdyke Rd. FE 4-1662 shower stalls with trim, $39.95 ; 2-bowl sink, $2.95; lavs., $2.95; tubs, $20 and up. Pipe cut and thre"'"' SAVE PLUMBING CO. .. Baldwin. FE 4-1516.________ royal TYPEWRITER, 30" stove,' size 6V> ladles roller $ Writing desk. 739-1068 Utica.___ luMMAGE SALE: Miscellaneous, size wood Dr. St’ see the SNO Snowmobiles, Close-out prices on demos and floor models. Will consider any reasonable otter. TOM'S HARDWARE, 905 Orchard Lk. Ave. Dally 9-6, Sun. 9-2. FE 5-2424. 2 USED SKI-DOOS - I960 MODEL SKI-DOO, 16 H.P, WITH RECOIL AND COVER, A-1 SHAPE. ONLY $650. -I960 MODEL SKI-DOO, 16 H.P. WITH ELECTRIC START AND COVER, A-1 SHAPE. ONLY $750. AKC GERMAN Jh^yherd puppies. IRITTANY _ 1- 482-7871._______________ AKC WHITE German, Shepherd, female, $75. 424-3429. CLEARANCE SALE Special price on all snowmobile-while they last. All models In sfock. MG SALES & SERVICE 4567 Dixie Hwy. Drayton 473-4450 AKC TOY POODLE, not good children. 852-3370. AKC SCOTTISH TERRIElTmele, io SUMP PUMPS SOLO, renteo and — repaired. Cone's, FE 0-4442. __ ' SPOTS BEFORE YOUR eyes — on] ' your new carpet — remove them! with Biua Lustre. Rent electric! shampooer $1. Hudson's Hardware,.! m E. Watton. __________________ SPRED-SATIN PAINTS. WARWICK Supply. 2478 Orchard Lake. 482-2820. 1969 RED WING Hunters.........136.50 GENE'S ARCHEiTy 714 W. Huron COLT 745 AUTOAAATIC, never user' in tXW,J85^ 628:20^ ____________ COWPLETE SCUBA GEAR, 2 year old, very good shape, ni6d., wl suit, used once last year. $100. Call 673-1784, THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE 118 W. LAWRENCE ST. Everything to meet your needs Clothing, Furniture, Appliances . USED An5 new ‘ Office desks, rtairs, typewriters, —* CLEARANCE SCORPION SNOWMOBILES PRICES SLASHED P ’‘"■'%Ul,M.nu.l 18" TRACK p Electrit”stari p M.nu.1, p Electric Start 1-A GROOMING Mr. Edward's High Fashion Poodle Salon, and stud services In •" colors. Open 8:30 a.m. to 10 p. 7 day week. 335-5259 service and puppies. FE j-6438. CENTURY YELLOWSTONE TRAVEL TRAILERS QUALITY AT ANY BUDGET STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. 3771 Highland (M-59) 1-AA AkC STUD SERVICE lEEP Sales-Sprvice Over 23 Used Jeeps In stock — Ready to go. HAHN JEEP 6673 Dixie Hwy. NaarM15 1957 Pontiac, 4 . --------- : 1960 Olds, 2 door, automatic. i«56 Chevy, Vj ton pickup. 11962 Buick, VO, automatic. BUY HERE - PAY HERB 1251 Oakland MARVEL MOTORS PB 4-4079 196b“cbRVETTE with VI, . . radio, heater, whitewalls, two tope,. ____ let black with a red Interior, a ___-kston MA 5-2635! real collector's Item. Onjy 1159^ Auto InsWaace-Marlne 104 JOHN McAULlFFE FORD 630 Oakland Ave.__________FE 5-4101 1951 CHEVY. Excellent conjitlon. 159 Cadillac. FE 2-2506.___ ________ f957 CHEVY with a At fri power, 33^920. J____________ __________ 1962 CHEVROLET 4-DOdR, 6 cylinder, auto. $250. 625-5064 Otter _S:30. ______________ 1962 CHEVY IMPALA. Ceil otter 4 105 P7n.^343-eiM^ __________ ' li'942 CHEVY 4 DR.' .. $299 1959 vw, BEST OFFER, coll boforel Dealer : ;___________??!sg 2 P.m. or_ofter 5:30 p.m. 332-7017. |jje3 CORVETTE convertible, best 1942 vw' SUNROOF w'lTH '451 oftlsr. OR 3-M59. ......... in^l^ne, bed transmission, S250. FE11943 cHEVY 0 CONVERTmLE, ' i942 RANAULT. 4 Aut6 Insurance Anderson 1044 Joslyn FE 4-3535 Foreign Cars steering, black with FEBRUARY SPECIAL lorsepower Mini Bikes, $219.95. ree SnowskI with each purchase hila they lest. MG SALES 8. SERVICE 4467 Dixie Hwy. Drayton 473-6458 ... ._y more for sharo, I*.-cars. Corvettes needed. : 1150 Oak^anj^ot Viaduct , in. 493-1118. 1 J-Wl kP J. All Cadillacs, Buick Electro 225s, Olds 98s, Pontiac and anything sharp with air conditioning. WILSON CRISSMAN LIL' INDIAN 3----------------- Excellent condition, 332-3171. Motorcycles 95 , 2854!’’ Corlntma, Rocn. 1 ............. —.. W3 VW $499i RONEY'S AUTO, 131 Baldwin Ave. ealer 338-9238! FE^4-4989. ^ _____________ 1963 VW Station Wagon i’’S?e,‘^a5tom.'tlc'^?re?smelsf^^^^^ Deluxe, sun root model. 9 condition, 539-5800 ext. 4144 or 451-8244 make otter.'...... ■ »44' CHEVY 55, very clean. $700 of , I best otter, 473-0070. _ _____ Bill Coiling VW Inc. [,9^4 chevro''let bel air, good (From Pontiac to Birmingham! condition, $400..425-3541. _____ ‘^oMnn i' '‘‘' CHEVY'I'mpaLA 4\ speyl, 327. miles, left on Maplelawn, 442-4900.)i 333 horsepower, cam and solid, excellent condition. Call otter 4, 1943'VW,'2 DOOR HARDTOP, $525 1 $995. FE 2t3268._____________________ 474-3603 1,944 CORVETTE — 1969 365 high 1964 5IMCA 1800, $150. Good condl-1 performance engine, zero miles on lion, 628-3259. _ | engine, $1750. 334-1880^ ________ 1965 VW 5QUAR'E back, best offer.11945 CHEVY 4 door, V8 no ryst. 33W798._ ! $900. Call MY 3-1654.___________ l'964 VW, SUNROOF.' radio, 15,000'i965 CORVAIR MONlW, 4 speed, miles, excellent cond. $1100. Ml 7-i $600. FE 2-9539. _______________ 4375. ............ 1,945 CHEVY IMPALA $$, good con- 1966 VOLKSWAGEN, snow tires, ex-1 dition. FE 5-3061. _ ____________ cellent condition. EM 3-3972. ; ,,45 cHEVY SS, good condition, teko 1966 ViOi.™.n„ Chic r' 1966 Thru I960 some 9 passenger, ell priced to sell! BILL FOX CHEVROLET ^ , S. Rochester R ' $1395 BIRMINGHAM 1954 HARLEY 74 CHOPPER, motor T GLENJM o CADILLAC CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH j 1350 N. Woodward_ Ml J-1930 2100 MAPLE RD. TROY, MICH.! forDOLLARnPAID'' 1965 CHEVY IMPALA, 9 passenger wagon, V-8, double power, 33,000 miles. $1250. 482-9550,__ . ______ __________Maglphone. $375. FE 2-4774. _ 1965' HONDA 250 Scrambler, —- •'--nett clutch, - FOR "CLEAN" USED CAP* new 952 W. Huron St. .... utom FE 4-7371 ..............5.? 4-t^ -1 condition InfTmnu!- i We w o u I d like to buy late _4276,_or_624*9724^_________ 1966 "bsA^ MARK [.LJPRSl&fcx' 1710061 GM COfS OP Will QC- . . trade-downs. Stop by Gp carburetors, $1 I-A Early American Modern Decor Mobile Homes FINANCING E-Z TERMS RICHARDSON LIBERTY MONARCH DELT; OXFORD Park Space-lmmedlately available Colonial Mobile Homes FE 2-1657 " 623-1310 25 Opdyke Rd. ' Auburn Heights Call 754-1694, ai 5436 Dixie 5. of Watertor' HOM^, $1975. 1967 TRIUMPH T. t. Full raca, $1006. Call anytlmp. 334-7161. ___ 960 BASA 441, Ilka ntw, $775. 335-2689.___________________ . Motorcycle . Sole SPECIAl PRICES ON AlL MODELS Anderson Soles & Service ^ 1645 S. TELEGRA^PII _ FE 3-7102! today. FISCHER BUICK 544 S. WOODWARD 647-5600 1965 CORVAIR A/\onia convertible. condition.j:ajl 674-ora cbm white top.'only $795. Ov^ 75 ot e'rb. $1600. 335- cars to select M M15^ Clarkston, MA 5-5071. =, ... ..... ......tom RADEMACHER terlor, $1295, good condition, 332-i cHEVY-OLDS - 1966 CHEVELLE 2-door, 1967' VW white" WITH black I Complete dune buggy, many extras. 4703 Hatchery Rd., Drayton! _. _______________.;lth 282 V$ automatic radio heater, whitewalls, light blue finish, with a white topi very sharp I $1295. over 75 other cart to select from — On U.S 10 at M15. Clarkston, New and Used Cart 1061 NEW FINANCE PLAN working? Need a car? We arranM for almost anybody with, good, bad or no credit. 75 cars to choose from, call credit mgr. Mr. Irv — Dealer. FE 4-1006 or FE 3:7854^ ;_____ SUZUKI CYCLES, 50 CC.tl Rupp and Wildcat mini-bikes, cycle! ighland, right to;’''* cc,|Junk Cars-Trucki Jx50 GREAT LAKES 2 bedroom, natural gas, 30 .gal. water heater $3,700. Call 682-6879 — YAMAHA OOCC, iTke ■ leage. $175. OR 4-1547. Boots-Accessories W WOLVERINE and n -AAA AKC REGISTER'ED Miniature 2 MALE BEAGLES $25 Check our deal on — SWISS COLONY LUXURY TRAILERS FROLIC TRAILERS AND TRUCK CAMPERS SKAMPER FOtD-DOWN CAMPERS 13 to 28 ft. on display at — Jacobson Trailer Soles 5490 Williams Lake Rd. OR 3-5M1 DO YOU DEMAND CONVENIENCE? APACHE otters you a 12X60 - 1960 BELVEDERE home, our equity end take over payments. 405-2758. 1966 ATLAS MOBILE HOME, 12x60, with stove, refrigerator, washer, dryer and skirting, 2 bedrooms and dining room. Unfurnished. months. $96. 624-4781. AKC GERMAN SHEPHERD Puppies, 4 mos. old, black and ten. Call after 2:30 p.m. 363-6359. ^_ AKC DACHSHUND PUPPIES morse AK'c POODLE PUPS, $50 aacb with papers. 474-1510. BASENJI ALL PET SHOP, 55 Williams. FE 4-Parakeets and u->"~t»r* PUPPIES ueauiiiui barkless -. ~ odorless end extremely clean. They are fascinating companions — good hunters. This quality was sired by the top Baser ' ...... It I960. Call Flint,.238-2319. kitchen I Such things as: stainless sink, plenty of work area " aluminum framed ca f" d>n*U* size be- ________jd seating . In Apache camping Exclusive angle contoured seatir another first In A—------------ trailers. So, It you Ing, _______ _____ ... .__.selt. BIG SAVINGS THIS MONTH. Don't forget the camping show at the Arrhory on 8 Mila Rd.ll EVAN'S EQUIPMENT 425-1711 or 625-2514 Clarkston Wed, and FrL—Open TIM 9 p.in^ EVERYTHING FOR fHE TRAVEL TRAILER All parts and accessories JOHNSON'S TRAVEL TRAILERS 517 E. Walton Blvd. COLLIE PUPPIESTTkKC,' sable end tri, D2^en_794^3M9.______ | c'h^'OLATE and block mini-toys j $56 and up. 473-0345. ' DO MAR'S POODLE SALON Days 335^963^^_______482-5447 DOBERMAN PINSCHER PUPPIES, strong championship breeding, papers. 852-3069.______________ FOR SALE 3 temalei BeagW’s, 1^ yr old 2 — 4 mo. old pups. FE S- machlnea, drafting tables, tile! ' IS PER CENT OFF cabinets. Forbes Printing and Ot-; riothino Bools i flee Supply, 4500 Dixie Hwv.,1 Trailers, " GOLDEN RETRIEVER Pu P Pie s AKC, champion sired, 9 weeks, 451-1245. .SHEPHERD, IK.C supply, *ouu u Drayton, OR 3-9747. WATERFORD CABINETS, 5 7 20 : Williams Lake Rd„ Drayton Plains. Close-out of plastic and ....... .....-1 vanities, ver'-"' 3 24" to 60", priced f Angle pipe beams Hl-Lows, as low as 8700 BOULEVARD SUPPLY ....... 880 S. Blvd. E._________333-7141 I wheelchair, good condition. WANTED TO BUY temps or leaded ^ - ... |63 W. Walton ded glass IS thadies. ,4 STACHLER TRAIJER SALES, INC. r 3772_Hlahland (M-59)_M2-I ' Demo-Used I SNOWMOBILES h.p. Polaris, ] i#‘/i h.p. Ski Uoo, *39$ I 16 h.p. Diablo, wide track, S395 16 h.p. EvInrude, wida track $595 ' 22 h.p. Ski Daddler, wide track $795 h.P. Ski Deddler, demo. 'cruise out, INC. ,. Walton . WESTINGHOUSE dryer, S40; gas __ —.................................. GUNI^NS-GUNS ' One ot the largest selections WeVtherby.^wIrKheste^ Remindton, Coll and Smith-Wesson pistols# scopast sights. We do our own repair work. _^ ^ SKIrDOOS from $695 12 to 45 H.P. ^ 15". 18", and 30" tracks 30 Machines in rtock now! We have a complete line ot cessories. Speedo, suits, bbots, helmets, B.'" custom colored trailers, single an< ‘"’stop out THI^WE^KE.tlDi ^ Cliff Dreyer's Gun and Sports Center^ gSlDE'N retriever pu pp 11 ''ery reasonable. 623»0241._______ “FREE - FREE COLOR TV WITH FIRST 12 ORDERS on the Newt SPORT TRAILER deluxe hardtop CAMPER Sleeps 8, $1495 Ellsworth Trailer Sales 4577 Dixie Highway._____425-^ LIFETIME MOTOR HOMES 23' salt contained, full bower, V engine, duals, stereo, etc., ipecli deal on stock units. STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. ' Highland Rd. (M-59) .... MALE PEKINGE’SE, $25! 338-9540. ____________________ MrxED":PUPPIE'S wanted Open-ins pet shop. mmnWta llt- lers, 831-0072. AKC male Collie, $25. 4_____________ POODLE PUPPIES, D A R W I N English Import, red ■ P ^ * deposit, will hold. 363-9324. PUrIbRE'D miniature SehneuMr pu^lM, ** ’• Hand To^-Machinery 68 ! 1810 JOHN DEERE bulldozer. In . partact condition with practically ; new engine# eves. 3M-7996.______ FACTORY CLOSE-OUT Metal, lath, small precisslon $58. I '■ ton chain hoist $40. IS" 4 lew chuck $40. Impact wrench ’/> dr. air $50. Air hammers new 120. ' industrial rated Va h.p. bench ' grinder $28.50. 18 tons of abrass ye ‘ grinding wheels, cloth belts, rolls, - mount* wheels, \«c. High $pe* ' drills, $1 per lb., high speed taP»‘3 ’ tor $t. Over 2 tons milling cuttek Tor >1. uver t ions immoM all kinds. Your selection from $1 p4r lb up. MI-LB AbrssIVfs , 8. ____ Tools, 10120 Capitol, Oak Park, S4_5- hoIIv, ME 447t1 TY 6818. Closed Set. Open Sondev 18 ooe'„ ^lly end .Sundays___________^TYrFP'^ATlfTinN a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Mon-Tues-Wed 9 - ^tenTIMETERS.I ’ I iLtKi AUUIUN B.m.-8:30 p.m. Thursday & PM-9 a.m.-4;30 p.m. REASONABLE, PART Sheltle pups and part cocker pups. 852-4158._ registered mini-toy POODLE 2 brown, 1 beige. P^sref male, tor stud. FE 8-1993. 'Registered apriojt . -POObUES, Toy Fox Terriers, and Chihuahua puppies, also stud services. FE 2-1497.__________ wanted SHORT HAIRED Calico kitten, will give excellent home. 428-1579. SILVER EAGLE & VACATIONAIRE travel TRAILERS Heated and indoor showroom , ________________..lotor, 35 H EvInrude, H50. Call am _______ 1969 Models on Display Duo and Glasspar Boats CHRYSLER AND JOHNSON MOTOR' DEALER. YOUNG'S MARINA 4830 Dixie on Loon Lake in ' OR 4-8411 (GLASS BOAT KIT. 1 7' K=,.lally completed. r~* »<50 Sacrifice $325. 338-618$. GLASSPAR STEURY MIRRO^artt ; RICHARDSON ____oms, furnlihad- : Mlltord. 485-2893. 12'x40', St up on lot CLOSE OUT AIL USED, TRAILERS overaft, 2 bedrooms, nice, all ready set on lot, has alr-conditloning, $1980 with $100 down. Star, 2 bedroom, 10x50', looks ree| good, $2300, $150 down. Stewart, has a front badroom, 10x44', real nice, $180 down, $1900. ... Armor, 3 bedroom, real clean, first $2900 grabs It, $200 down. NEW TRAILERS .769 Mt. Ver'non, 3 bedrooms, $5900. Stewart, mao' $6995. ‘769 12x43' Mt. Vernon, $4300, bedrooms. Oxford Trailer Sales 1488 S. Lapeer Rd., Lake Orion MY 2-0721 nra'Tu R I nTgI Hoily ^Paric Parkwood, Danish King. Hours 9:30 to 7 p.m. MIDLAND TRAILER SALES 2257 Dixie Hwy. ________338-0772 ae tow. 682-7010. 97 ALWAYS BUYING JUNK CARS end scrap, we tow. FE S-0201._____ COPPER - BRASS; RADI"AT(5rS — starters and generators, C. Dlxs O^W849^______________________ Used Auto-Truck Parts 1963 102 lerlng and brakes, radio, heater, $1595 HILLSIDE Lincoln-Mercury 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 I960 CHEVY IMPALA sport coupe, with V-8, automatic, radlq, healer, power steering, beautiful silver blue finish, matching Interior, New 1 Year Special at $1588, lust $188 ! down, and $61.91 per month. Free I set ot snow tirei with thii car. .............. ... 'l“2 fa”o"! JOHN McAULlFFE FORD $145,_ajd Lati 630 Oakland Ave.________FE 5-4101 STANDARD AUTO of Waterford 681-0004 OPEN 7 DAYS week Economy Cars 2335 Dixie _________ BUICK ELECTRA '225 cl< mileage. Financing can ditlon. $300. FE 2-1779._ FE 4 2131 boats, Gumman Canoe, Greene Sellboats, Dolphin Poi - (Inrude Motors, "-------------------- New and Used Trucks 103 jeep, 4 WHEEL drive, radl ter, snow plow, $950, 673-3506. 1954 FORD PICKUP. $I00! Save_Auto__________________FE 5-3278 1958 JEEP, 4 whMl drive, with steel ake MI59 to W. Highland, right to Hickory Ridge Rd. to Demode Rd., left and tollor- -------- •- DAWSON'S SALES LAKE. Phone 629-2179. HEAVY dOtY boat trailef! hiss carried 22' cebln cruiser, $185. EM 3-2680, 956 Mallock St., Union Lake, Mich.______________________ NOW IS THE tYmE For your outboard Motor tune-up Be an "early bird." Beat the spring rush HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS S. Telegr4ph____________*??J833 AUTOBAHN MOTORS RONEY'S AUTO. 131 Baldwin Ave. a top, V-8, automat $1095 VILLAGE j RAMBLER TRADES 2 Chevy Impala 8 automatic, radio and $399 1962 Ford Galaxie 500 Hardtop, 8 automatic, power, ono $399 1765 Telegraph 1960 CHEVY PICKUP, condition, S150. FE ~ big box, good! THIS WEEK'S SP'ECIAL __ _______ mj _ 1964 R^«IA loaded, blscl^ imT^'C “A tON^V-i engine^ locn 1964 Mercury Parklane 1250 OAKLAND 333-786_3. Marauder VO, with VI, TREANOR'S TRAILER 8. OUTDOOR CENTER 682-8945 OAKLAND CAMPER Midwest covers and sleeper steel frame, Tour-a-home campers. Lynx coven and sleepers. Ports and accessories. Baldwin at ColgalO'________! RENT A MOTOR h Auction Soles 8. B AUCTION EVERY FRIDAY ....7:00 P.M. IUeRV SATURDAY ..7:00 P.M. EVERY SUNDAY ..2:00 P.M. WE BUY — SELL - TRADE , Retail 7 Daw Weekly CONSIGNMENTS WELCOME CASH PRIZE EVERY AUCTION 5089 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-2717 BUY OR SELL ON Consignment TYLER'S AUCTION and tops. Cab to camper bo.ot. Sportcratt Mfg. 4160 Foley Watertord. 62:l0650.__________ PANELED PICKUP camper, 1250. 474-0064. _________________ PIONlETtAMPER, SALES Trailers: Jubiiee, Globe Star Barth ' Campers: Swinger, Mackinaw, Travel Queeni Caribou, Barth Covers :Stufz Bearcar. Merit R0YAL-0R-.REGAL ACTIVE 2 or 3 bedrooms 15'x19' living room 38-Gal. gas hot water heater Nvion carpeting over rubber pad. TOWN & COUNTRY MOBILE HOMES, INC. Teleoraph'at Dixie Hwy. 334-6694 Open Daily 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Open Saturday 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Open Sunday 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Other timas by Appt. STOP . PAYING RENTI START THE NEW YEAR RIGHT SEE THE ALL NEW DETROITER AMERICAN KROPF BUY WHERE SERVICE IS BEST BUY WHERE SA\/lNGS ARE GREATEST E-Z ITERAAS BANK FINANCING SHOP IN COMFORT HEATED MODELS AT Bob Hutchinson's Mobile Home! Sales Open Daily 'til 8 p.m. /Saturday and Sunday 'tII/S DRAYTON PLAINS 4301 Dixie Hwv. (U.S. 10) OR 3-t202 NEW 1968 MODELS USED BOATS AND MOTORS Drastic Reductions CRUISE OUT, INC. E. Walton FE I D^ly_9j4' Closed Sundays KAR'S Boats 8, Motors - head 'GS 2M , '14959 Highland Rd. (M-59) ! 473-9534! ie for Easter ________________ rata* tO' * * Insured. 343-2088.______ TRAVEL TRAILERS BONANZA WEST WIND WOOD LAKE To b* sure ot delivery by your vacation date order now. Most-units are 4 to 4 weeks behind on delivpry end demand may cause further r*-- A»\siies 13 feet thru 29 feet. McClellan travel TRAILERS . 4Bon Highland Road (M-S9) pTione 674-3163 PINTER'S MARINE SALES DEALER FOR THOMPSON FIberglas end wood STARCRAFT-MFG Inboard-outboard; sailboats BOSTON WHALER J0HNS0°N BOATS-MOTORS WEERES PONTOONS steel and Alum.—Waterbikes GRIMALDI automatic. Small efimper. New tires and brakes. Runs good. $695. FE 8-1897. 194 Orchard Lake'*' FE 2-9145 1945 BUICK ELECTRA 225 2-7S54 1945 RIVIERA, good condition, $1495. 451-4719. 1964 CHEVY W Ton, pickup, fleet side, $895. AUTOBAHN MOTORS 1765 Telegraph FE 8-4531 1964 odDGB PICKUP,, GOOD condition, $500. 75 Clark. FE 2-1779. TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1945 BUICK LeSabre 2 door hardtop, with automatic power steering, brakes; radio, heater, whitewalls, medium" green finish, one-owner, $1395. Over 75 other cars to select from. On U.S. 10 at MIS. Clarkston, AAA S-5071. 1944 BUICK Electra 225 maroon with oX GRIMALDI 1964 CHEVY, W TON PICKUP, side storage boxes, $595. 673-5172. 1964 CHEVY M -TON heavy duty clutch end springs/radio, best otter: 425-3349. Hardtop Marauder VB, With vinyl top. dark blue body, white buckets, floor console. Power steering and $995 1964 Pontiac Bonneville Hardtop, 8 automatic, power, radio, heater, whitewalls. Hon-durous maroon, whito vinyl In- $699 1965 Mercury $599 1965 Ford Galaxie 500 ditlon. Fresh tr ) Interior. Excellent con- box, 7560 GVWjigj^rchard Lake_ Ratin'o: power steering, ^-------- brakes, postraction, 10.06-14.5 tires.j -radio, gauges, expanding camper bumper. A-1 condition. $1450. i 1966 DODGE Va ton Stahl utility, like BUICK-OPEL new. 363-0081 after 5 p.m. Dir. | orchard Lake 1967 JEEP, 4 wheel drive, pickup with snowplow. 334-5835. ___ 1967 ford 'truck pickup, slight darriage $1125, Call 473-8659. 1967' 'DODGE :ustom campar special 383 V8, speed, power brakes, anti-spi diff., 18,800 actual miles, factor, warranty. $2,800 call Phil Strom at 624-1574 Lloyd Bridgas. 1967 JEEP Va ton pickup, 36' 1968 FORD PICKUP, ---------------- special, V-B, automatic, air conditioning. doubla power, 10 ply 1966 RIVIERA ONLY 12395 GRIMALDI ‘SHELTON taka credit statements over phone. PONTIAC-BUICK-OPEL Open 'til 9 tonight 855 S. Rochester Rd.______651-5500 UATE MODEL CADILLACS ON HAND AT ALL TIMES JEROME CADILLAC CO. PRE-SEASON Boat Special - i Power wagon, s-speea 1966 Aero-craft 40 h.p. Johnson and transmission, heavy duty equipped, „ trailer ^ ' With hydraulic Meyers snowplow. 1«0_ Wide JjackJJr. ^____________El. >7021 1967 Silverline, 1-0 end trailer omy m'joo. Call Carl Harris, 624-hgso CADILLAC FLEETWOOD, like 1968 Sllverline, Merc., 1250 end ,573 L|oyd Bridges Dodge, new. 41,000 mi. New tires, brakes 693-160o' Y9^S9'"GMClS-f6N''^^^ „AnJJiMt?ryJU»5^^^ TONY'S MARINE FOR JOHNSON MOTORS 2695 Orchard Lk. ..... Sylvan Lake Kent Troiler Spaca NEW LOTS, ass Browj>> •OFIY "0 school children. 335^155. Auta AcceMorlei_ _______________9 1967 327 POWER OlWa excellent condition $250. 335-01 cell after * ' -~ TAPE PLAYER AND iptakers. FM/,„ cartridge, wilt sell or toade for s;'?' "aw maos. FE 5^1332 before 4. ||M Tires-Airto-Troclt TROJAN CRUISERS CI(RIS-CRAFT AND SLICKCRAFT 30 BOATS ON DISPLAY LAKE & SEA MARINE i. Blvd. at Saginaw_, ._1.1.4-W8I VANTE'D — SLOOP 'fig sailboat fiberglas, .15 to 21 ft. 333-7161. WE ARE P-ROUD TO ANNOUNCE wi NOWXA--------------- Lund Alum. Boats Several Coho models to chooso from As loW as $199. Sijverline Boats CLIFF DREYER'S ] MARINE DIVISION 15210 Holly Rd. Hojjy, ME 4-6771, Wonted Cars-Trucks 101; nmedisto delivery. Save. KEEGO PONTIAC, MM400. CHEVV PICKUPS 1962 Thru I960 10 to choose from All ready to got Top trade In ellowancel BILL FOX CHEVROLET 755 5. Rochester Rd. ___ 45M000 IGMC Fjictory Branch Oakland at Cass ' FE_5-9485_ “ JEEPS “ New ond Used Ready for Immediate Delivery GRIMALDI IMPORTED EARS 900 Oaklond Avenue FE 5-9421 1965 GTO Hardtop 4 speed syncro. Trl-pgwer, radio, heater, whitewalls. Lots of skat- In this katl Excellent condition. ' $1195 1965 Ambassadors 8 to choose from. Wagons, Herdtops, Sedans.. All with power and automatic. One veer warranty. From $744 1966 Mustang Coupe One owner FM redlo, silver blua body, stick. $995 1967 Ambassador Sedan . Top llna, automatic powtr stearing and brakes. Air conditioning, ra-cllning septs, vinyl top, whitp- VILLAGE t963"CADrLLAC Sedan beville. ~ower and air condition. I own, paymehts $9.88. Full ^ 1092. Call Mr. Parks, cradit nanagdr at Ml 4-7500. HAROLD TURNER FORD S, Woodward Birmingham 1963 CADILLAC SEDAN DE VILLE, full power and factory air conditioning, beautiful arfic white with black Interior. This car Is as nice as any 1968. Valentine Special, only $1288 ■" ----- down « RAMBLER price. Just $188 JOHN McAULlFFE FORD 630 Oakland ^___ "TMTcaD'ILLAC, FULL POWER ^__662-2971 ______ • SPECIAL OF THE WEEK , 1965 CADILLAC Sedan DOVIMe, full power with air. Only $2295. GRIMALDI 666 S. Woodward MI 6-3900 . 1966 CHEVROLET BelaIr two door. Six itick, radio, heater. An economical mtlaagt $1095 j HILLSIDE Lincoln-Mercury 1250/OAKLAND 333-7863 1966 CHEVY, nice car. Only 1995. GRIMALDI 196 Orchard L BUICK-OPEL FE 2-9165 ............. .. let the experts at Market Tire Co. check your tires. 2635 Orch—' ' *‘-Keego. _____________ S^^VE A^TO ' * i9Vc7q'RyE'^ErAU^^ IiffoT''Sat'er; 2S|S.watls"''one c ___ 474-0560 or 673-2912 -,,25 1967 CHEVROLET ^ FEJ;3278i Impale' two door h‘ ... ________ ^______ Turbo-Jet V Ton^tion,7jieii76”«f ■ ”s^>5M7. '19» CdRVETTE 5550 ' _ F^ 5-9798 _ tl'960 'CORVAIR,' MEEDS work, bi I offer. 363-3137 aftef 5 p,m. ll94D CHEVY IMPALA, 2-doc. _ ; OAKLAND 333-7863 HlLLSlbE Lincoln-Mercury C—10 TllK 1’OX’HAC rUKySS. TTICSDAV. FEBRUARY 18. 1969 106 N«w and Ustd Can lOO MARMADUKE For Wont Ads Dial 334 4961 S' 1966 FORD ^ _ $'1595 _ ,, JSA‘:r.s. ;s,=i-sr:-:: 1967 Olds CutI ' ort Coupt. V 8 nuiofrii sVeTs At HANOLItl On M24 in Lake Orion MY 2-2411 / $1395i Lincoln-Mercury 1250 OAKLAND 333-71 1968 98 Holiday : conpi, power., fflc ^30 1966 musta'ng Attention! Need a car? by cor dealers? New in the orea? king'auto 0, .3S.0. A,. , $1495 CfinQF ^ 1967 Chrysler ^1965 98 Luxury Sedan^ iJllicJO 1967 Olds Toronado MottheWS- '[I'v'I rotEr!7^!l?KE savI!! $ 1895 51 chrr.Vom*'; "" Hargreaves ' 'Tqcy'"pQnA 'ZizZ: WINTER; .....TIMF ""$2495 .nrbrr%“r Suburban Olds D-ni r^-nn \ Lincoln Mmury U*oV'* MiLOSCH - ^ 5ni~ PRICES ^ ........... 1250 ornTN^"33^7863,0964 ......................................................" ^iSgSi MILOSCH « *77 M 24, l«k* Orion i RAMBLER Je'eP***U I < Amo »«d a n , ’’vV »SlomaHc,^«dro,MERRY OLDSMOBILE MILOSCH 'wBaui’S'K •"lifr"”' “i EFa«, ., CHRYSIER-PIYMOUIH ' ?r>*'” c.,,..,, . S McMUIFFE FORD •"XZ“7,Z' GR ™„»,~; s,:.%r.r.y,“K*■“• ■“ " »..oto" YS.„ GRIMALDI r."j ''■'" I M.AUIIFEE FORD :S“.’•""" ""' PONTIAC 1250 oAKUNr''’'' grimald: GO!, HAUPT PONTIAC NO CHERRY t TREES HERE So we got our Hatchet. and chopped prices on these new 1968 Chryslers and PlymoUths. OAKLAND Chrysler-Plymouth 724 Oakland FE 5-9436 •"’ - ’^"^ANG :=' ~ " “;;;........... -j r?=SriS' $1295 Matthews- Hargreaves • :o\V."nr„"n‘^^"re^nny*5;r*dTina’oin ....11ob"bORST ■ ■ ^'i095 vertlblt. red with_ white fop, very I’M FORD BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH l=W..7FDr^ »M= =«.-r „,s - New and Used Cars 106New and Used Cars j,gj ’’^ou*?'o5*Piaoo. 7^^^^^^ Road^Runner MUSTANGS '“SaldTI $2895 '65s, '66s, '67s, '68s ..CHECK THESE WHITE HAT SPECIALS 65 CHEVY '64 OLW 9^ '65 : 67 F ?*r-j '64 FORD ■62 FORD '67 PLYMOUTH i AMBASSADOR ......... 67 ^ A . , , ...... SEE THE GOOD GUYS WITH THEIR WHITE b'S «. >(inyl seats, '69 CORONET ..................................... 440 4, ooor, /iar,oioD. V8, wheel covers, Whilewalls, 69 CHArGEFf”......................'.'..........< 1 Ooor. herdtop, V8: power eteering. vtnyi top, wneei covers, whiteweiu 69 POLARA ................. ..................... 2 aoor, hardtop, ve, automatic, tinted glass, vlhyl top, viftyl seals, wheel covers, whltewaU* '69 MONACO ................ ..................... 4 door, hardtw, V8, automatic. fMlio, power steering and brakes, wheel covers, remol# mirror, tinted glass, vinyl root, whitewalls. $ 695 $ 795 $1095 $1895 $ 795 $ 295 $1895 $1295 $1895 HATS $2395 $2495 $2895 $2895 $3495 \, WE WON'T DODGE ANY DEAL SPARTAN DODGE SELLS FOR LESS , , . 7Tell Us If We're Wrong^ , 855 Oakland Pohtioc FE 8-9222 OAKLAND -S£f~3£:SS|igSi3' ALDI j is Matthews- Hargreaves New and Used Cors 106 New and Used Cars 106New and Used Cars 106 ^ HAHN ^ TODAY'S SPECIAL 1964 FALCON Futura $695 4 door hardtop, with automatic, V8, power steering, brakes,- must see this one. Midnight blue finish. ' 1963 CORVETTE Fastback $2495 Stingray, with 4-spaed, tilver finish, top cbnditibn, ' 1965 CHEVY Pickup $1995 1966 OLDS Toronado $2295 }-door hardtop with front whtel drive, full poiyar. Including air conditioning. This you must sea! 1967 CHRYSLER Newport ... $1895 2-Ooor hardtop, with full power, one owner trade. 1964 OLDS Wagon . $1195 1967 VALIANT 2 door $1695 AjUtomalic, lew mileage, new car warranty. Chrysler-Plymouth-^Ramblor-Jeop Glarkston . 6673 Dixie t^wy. MA 5-2635 1 qOQ PONTIAC i ^ IC/U.C/ LeMans Sports Coupe ets, lamp in ash tray and irf glove $2738 1969 PONTIAC 1969 FIREBIRD Grand Prix SPECIAL with cordova top, hydramatlc, push button radio, rear speaks, head rests? piwer-flow v” all '69 Safety features.' BRAND NEW $3765 $2562 OUTSTANDING QUALITY SELECTION 1963 LINCOLN $898 1967 Mustang $1995 ^ 1968 Pontiac VENTURA With Vi, automatic, power steering, power brakes, cordovan top and air condl- $3195 1966 PONTIAC ready to go $1595 1968 PONTIAC *?«£:— . $1798 • 1968 Bonneville $3495 1963 LINCOLN Hardtop .........$895 1965 TEMPEST WAGON ......... $1295 1963 PONTIAC WAGON .......... $595 4966 PLYMOUTH................$1295 1967 TEMPEST LeMans ........ $1595 1963 FORD Convertible ......'.$395 1966 PONTIAC - $1695 1965 TEMPEST aS; ■ $1291 1965 Pontiac Bonneville $1395 WE Will MEET OR BEAT ANY DEAF, WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD PONTIAC-THM.PEST On M-24-Lake Orion' MY 3-1 THE PONTIAC PRESS> Tlii^^&PAY. FEBRUMY 18, 1969 Olio 37 Strikes 39 Departed iuiior 40 Distance . - measure difabitual 41 Masculine *“®r* nickname 15]^ver SlBushydump 52E*amine ' IBFlxesina 53Inaline ^d^teplac* S4TeSd • 55 Favorite ZONdions ,^g,3 56 Old World 21 Shield ^**^*”5. 57 Governor of 24 Emmets Aimers 26 SmaU Insect ■' 37 Immetsein DOWN a liquid 1 pretexts SOCudgeler 2 Verbal 32Cat^ories 3 Amuse 34 Awn (bot.) 4 Cimtains 35 Redactor 5 Musical 36 Male child instrument 31Moral . principlw 33 African rivw 6 Length unit 7 Greek letter SSUp ^ 9Li|^tvi^r „ 10 Iris layer 38 Holding right 11 Promontory 40 Lion's 17&ng Vide"(pl.> cheerfully 41 Malt drinks 19 Birds homas 42 Cease 23Storms 43Stimulate 24 Arab 44 Ingredient garments ofde 25 Roman 46 On top of emperor 47 Musical > 26 Chalice quality 27 Exploded 48 Whirlpool ^ Metal 50 Feast day 29 New Zealand (comb, form) -Television'Programs- Programs fufnishod by stations listod in this column qre sobfir^^ to chango without noticol Channels; a-WJBK-TV, 4-WWJ-TV. 7-WXYZ-TV. 9-CKlW-TV, 50-WKBD-TV, 56-WTVS-TV, ^2-WXON-TV WILSON Jan Scores Big Repeating Blue Lines of Other Comics By EARL WILSON NEW YORK—Comedian Don Rickies now has Las Vegas, the new capital of Show Business, split as to whether his “adult” material, particularly his fondness for three-letter words and for certain gestures, is bad taste. , I saw Don at the Sahara—where two veteran and highly respected columnists (and their wives) told me they found his material “of- > fensive.” But the younger public seems to love it and. especially the crowd that goes to Las Vegas where anything goes and the later the hour, the'.-^ looser they get. Riddes softens the impact by| saying, “I love people, I hate bigotry,” and thenf ♦piling his jokes. Show Business thinks that* Rickies took his ideas from Buddy Hackett who did it in a Puckish little boy wai^ 1 devote this space te Billies and Hackett because they are changing the face ol comedy in cafes. Seeing their success, other comics are wondering what type of material they shonid use. aouid they get blue? The most masterful handling of the situation I saw was by Jan Murray at the Riviera Starlite Lounge. ★ ★ ★ Jan asked in effect, “Isn’t it something what these comedians are getting away with in these clubs?”—and then repeats the material, and the gestures, too . . . even more vividly than they use it. That’s talent! ic-k-k I’m back in NY in time to get a lead on another big stoiy: Washington’s wondering whether to reveal the shockingly high number of Armed Force deserters (over 1(»,0(») in the past year. Probably will in a week or two. I must tip my hat to the “class” of Barbra Streisand. When I revealed on Jan. 2 that she and Elliott Gould were having marriage problems, she had the good grace not to deny it as so many celebrities do when separating. She just didn’t respond at all. I hear that she phoned her mother here the night before the announcement of the trial separation, so her mother wouldn’t be shocked reading the papers. THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . . The Burtons whipped the flu in Paris and are expected at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas any day . . . Singer A1 Martino’s parents (from Phila.) and his in-laws (from Zanesville, Ohio) met for the first time at the Copa—and his mother and mother-in-law were wearing the same dress. Eddie Bracken said at the Pen & Pencil he and Carol Chan-ning’il be the voices for an “Archy & Mehitabel” cartoon film . . . Singer Joanna Simon’ll wear a $2,300 Dior gown when she Rings “Tristan and Isolde” Feb. 25, but the audience won’t see it—her role calls for her to sing off-stage. ★ ★ ★ REMEMBERED QUOTE: “‘Impossible’ is a word to be found only in the dictionary of fools.” —Napoleon. EARL’S PEARLS: Dialogue: “He’s a $l-a-year-man” . “Oh, in Washington?” . . . “No, as a tipper in restaurants.” Bushy-haired Marty Allen’s flying to Florida to appear on a Mike Douglas ’TV show. “If my plane’s hijacked,” says Marty, “Mike promised to send my wife a poodle with my hair style.” . . . Tlmt’s earl, brother. (Publiilnn-Hall syndlcata) ’ R — Rerun C — Color TUESD/IY 1:00 (2) (4) (7) C<'4, News, Weather, Sports 1 (9) Movie: “Big (Jbcus” (1959) Circus owner, forced to borrow money, is pushed by rival and bank. Victor Mature, Red Buttons, Rhonda Fleming (50) R C — Flintstones (M) Friendly Giant (02) R-Sea Hunt 0:15 (56) Mr. Lister’s Storytime 0:30 (2) C - News -. Cronkite (4) C — News — Huntley, Brinkley (7)C - News - Reynolds (50) R — McHale’s Navy (56) R-What’s New . (62) R C - My Mother, the Car 7:00 (2) C '— Truth or Consequences — Prc^am originates from Detroit. (4) (7) C — News, Weather, Sports (50) R — I Love Lucy (56) Nine to Get Ready — Various stages of labor are described, and the functions of the obstetrician and other members of the delivery room team . during the actual birth are discussed. (62) R — Movie: “You’re Only Young ’Twice” (1954) Disguised Irish poet romps through comic universitj? situations. Duncan Macrae 7:30 (2) C — National Geographic Special — “Australia —The Timeless Land” looks at the Down Under continent and its rugged frontiersmen who forge a life in the manner of the pioneers of America’s Old West. (4) C — Jerry Lewis — Paul Lynde and Totie Fields guest. (7) C — Mod Squad — The squad searches for Capt. Greer, who has disappeared in' a tiny desert town harboring a criminal secret. Jason Evers guests as the town sheriff. (5P) R C Hazel — Hazel paints a crosswalk on a busy intersection and gets herself arrested. (56) Antiques — The history of Josiah Wedgwood and his works is told, illustrated with various pieces of the china from a private collection. 8:00 (9) R C — I Spy -Robinson and Scott are targets for an assassin’s bullet when a routine espionage training exercise turns into the real thing. (50) C— Pay Cards (56) French Chef — “Swdetbreads and Brains” 8:25 (62) Greatest Headlines 8:30 (2) C — Red Skelton — Mickey Rooney and Hal Frazier are guests. Skelton presents a tribute to Ed Wynn, pantomimes a door-to-door salesman. (4) C — Julia — Earl J. Waggedorn’s Aunt Wanda unwittingly aids a burglar in robbing Julia’s apartment. (7) C — It Takes a Thief — Mundy tricks his former protege into recovering the stolen crown jewels of La Monica. (50) C —Password (56) C — International C!ookbo(dc — Recipes from the Philippines (62) R — Movie: “’Ibe Dambusters” (1955) True account of a scientist’s plan to destroy Germany’s Ruhr dams. Richard Todd, Michael Redgrave 9:00 (4) C — Movie: “The Appaloosa” (1966) Matt plans to begin a new life on his foster brother’s ranch, but a Mexican TV Features NINE TO GET READY, 7 p.m. (56) NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC SPECIAL, 7:30 p.m. (2) WOJECK, 9:30 p.m. (9) 60 MINUTES, 10 p.m. (2) ’THArS LIFE, 10 p.m. (7), bandit steals his horse. Marlon Brando, Anjanette Comer, Jplm Saxon (9) C — What’s M y Line? (50) R —Perry Mason (56) C — NET Festival — “The Film Generation, of Music.” 9:30 (2) C — Doris Day -Buck’s excited about his chances in a horseshoe tournament until Leroy messes up his partner’s arm. (7) C - N.Y.P.D. -Hunting a robbery suspect, Corso winds up witnessing a group therapy session at a narcotics rehabilitation center. (Second of two parts) (9) R — Wojeck — Auto execs try to undermine Wojeck’s position as he College Execs, Blade to Meet CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) -Administration ’ officials and representatives of the black student movement at the Uruversi-tv of North Carolina have agreed to meet during the next 10 days to discuss proposed academic changes. The movement seeks, among other things, a special black studies program. Chancellor J. Carlyle Sitter-_jn agreed Monday to meet with the students after they petitioned him to set a time and a place. Sitterson responded two weeks ago to the demands, but black students and their supporters regarded his reply as unsatisfactory. ‘You saw what happened at Duke,” said freshman Mickey Lewis of Durham, a spokesman the movement. “They had man up against the wall, I think that is what we are going tc have to do here.” He was referring to the seizure of Duke’s administration building Ipt Thursday. The Duke stud%s also demanded a black studi^program. appears before the parliamentary cianmiftee on auto safety. 10:00 (2) (C) -60 Minutes — Mike Wallace interviews Daniel Cohn-Behdit, the student activist who lead last year’s university* riots in Paris. Heywood Hale Broun discusses skiing in the U.S. Also, cameras follow presidential com-missiwj as it surveys rural poverty. (7) C - That’s Life -Leslie Uggams, Sid Caesar and Milt Kamen. drop in as wife gripes that hubby never takes her out. (50) C — News, Weather, Sports (56) Rainbow Quest — Dick and Mimi Farina are guests. 10:30 (9) News Magazine (50) R—Alfred Hitchcock (62) R-^^ Performance 11:00 (2) (A) (7) (9T C -News, Weather, Sports (50) R — Movie: “I’m All Right, Jack” (1960) Peter S e Hers, Terry-Thomas, Ian Carmichael, Margaret Rutherford (56) Live From Earth (62) R — Movie: “Caged” (1950) Eleanor Parker, Agnes Moorehead 11:30 (2) R - Movie : “Wuthering Heights” (1939) Laurence Olivier, Merle Oberim (4) C — J(rfmny Carson — Kaye Ballard, Richard Harris and Buddy Rogers are scheduled to visit Johnny in Hollywood. (7) C —Joey Bishop (9) R - Movie: “The Good Die Young” (1954) Richard Basehart, Gloria Grahame, L a u r e'n c e Harvey 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) R —Texan (9) C — Perry’s Probe 1:36 (2) RC-Naked City (7) News 2:30 (2) C—News, Weather 2:35 (2) ’TV Chapel 11:00 (4) C — Personality (7) Galloping Gourmet (9) Canadian Schools (50) C — Jack LaLarine 11:20 (56) Misterogers Neighborhood 11:25 (9) C — Morgan’s ry Go Round 11:30 (4) C — Jdl^wood Squares (7) R — Bachelor Father (9) Take Hiirty (50) R C — Kimba 11:50 (56) Friendly Giant WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON ------^---- A Look at TV C—11 2 NBC Specials Score By CYNTHIA LOWRY Associated Press Writer NEW YORK-Monday night’s power-packed NBC line-up •— "Laugh-In,” Bob Hope and Jack Benny specials in succession—probably ran the eyen-*—[’s Nielsen ratings up to the slfatosphere. ^V( Iven if “Laugh-In” is beginning to look a little tired around tbe edges, it is still TV’s most popular weekly series, and the two hours that followed measured up fo the high standards of the two pros who starred in them. V' UAW local Favors Centralized School Pontiac Local 653, Unitec Auto Workers, went on record at a membership meeting Sunday as being opposed to the Pontiac Board of Education’s proposed site for the new high school on Poritiac State Hospital grounds. The membership unanimously voted in favor of having a mo^e centralized location within fte city, according to a union spokesman. A telegram stating the position of Local 653 has been sent to the board of education, he said. — Radio Programs— ^ WJR(760) WXYZd 270) CKLVV(800) WWJ(950) WCARQ130) WK)N(1460) WJBKQ 5001 WHPI-FM(94.71 «;W-WWJ, Ntwt, Sporti WJR—N«v» CKLW, Tom Shannon , . WPON, Hkin, Phono Opinion WHFI, Don Boaco WCAR, Nawi, Ron Rosa WXYZ. Nawscopa WJBK. Nows, Hank O'Nall «;1S-WJR. Sports «:30-WWJ, Today In Ra vltw. Emphasis News, Sports- Lino WCAR, Naws, Rick Ste WJBK, News, Tom Dei WJR, World Tonight Lockhart WPON, Oaiy Puraea WJR, Raaeonar Ri Choral Cavalcade Silt-WJR, News, Dimension S;1S-WJR, Sunnyside Encore SilB-WJR, Showcase, Close- "^reldoscope 10:1S-WJR, Focus Encore 11:00—WJR, News 1I:15-WJR, Sports Final Ii:JO-WWJ, Overnight WJR, MuSic TJII Dawn is:oa-WJBK, Nigntnme WXYZ, News. Jim Davis CKLW, Mark Richards WCAR, News, Wayne Phil lips WEDNESDAY M^RNINO ♦lOO-WJR, Music Hdll WWJ, News StlO-WWJ, Morris Carlson Tioe-WHFI, Gary Purece WPON, News, Chuck Warrei l:00-WJR, News l:1S-WJR, Sunnyside, Musii Hall •:00-WJR, News »:IS-WJR, Open House CKLW, Frank Brodle WriFi, Uncle Jay WWJ, News, Ask Your Neighbor 10:00-WXYZ, News, Johnrty VXYZ, andall CNeWR, IilO-WJR, News, Ki WHF?'jim Zkiser WEDNESDAY, AFTERNOON Milliken Will See Caypnagh DETROIT (AP) - Detroit Mayor Jerome P. Cavanagh will disepss his stadium proposal and the city’s legislativie program in a Wednesday meeting with Goy. William G. Milliken in the mayor’s office, Cavanaj^ announced Monday. ’The meeting will mark the first time since July 1967 that a Michigan governor has visited tlje mayor's office. George Romney made the last visit WEDNESDAY MORNING 5:50 (2) TV Chapel 5:55 (2) On the Farm Scene 6:00 (2) C —Sunrise Semester 6:30 (2) C Woodrow the Woodsman (4) Classroom 6:45 (7) C —Bat Fink 7:00 (4) C-Today (7) C — Morning Show 7:30 (2) C—News, Weather, Sports 7:50 (9) Warm-Up 8:60 (2) C — Captain Kangaroo (9) C — Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 8:05 (9) Mr. Dressup 8:30 (7) R - Movie: “Tender Is the Night” (1932) Jennifer Jones, Jason Robards Jr. (Part 1) (9) R — Friendly GiaHt 8:45 (9) Chez Helene 9:00 (2) R C — Beverly Hillbillies (4) C — Steve Allen (9) C —Bozo 9:15 (56) Science Is Discovery 9:30 (2) R—Dick Van Dyke (56) Listen and Say 9:50 (56) All Aboard for Reading 10:00 (2) R C — Lucille Ball (4) C—Snap Judgment (9) Chitarlo Schools 10:10 (56) Of Cabbages and Kings 10:25 (4) C - News 10:30 (2) C — Mike Douglas (4) C — Concentration (7) C — Anniversary Game 10:35 (56) Reason and Read 10:55 (56) Spanish Lesson 12:00 (2) C—News, Weather, Sports (4) C —Jeopardy (7) R — Bewitched (9) C — Bonnie Prudden (50) C-, Alvin 12:05 ( 56) Americans From 12:25 (2) C - Fashions 12:30 (2) C — Searcl^ for Tomorrow (4) c — News, Weather, Sports (7) C — Funny You Should Ask (9) R — Real McCoys (50) R - Movie: “Brigham Young” (1940) Tyrone Power, Linda Darnell, Dean dagger 12:45 (56) Spanish Lesson 12:55 (4) C - News (7) C — Children’s Doctor 1:00 (2) C — Love of Life (4) C — Match Game (7) C —Dream House (9) R — Movie: “The Big Caper” (1957) Rory Calhoun, Mary Costa, James Gregory 1:65 (56) Art Lesson 1:25 (2) C—News (4) C — Carol Duvall • (56) Science Is Discovery 1:30 (2) C — As the World Turns (4) C — Hidden Faces (7) C — Let’s Make a Deal 2:00 (2) C — Divorce Court (4) C — Days of Our Lives (7) C — Newlywed Game (56) Reason and Read 2:15 (56) American History 2:30 (2) C —Guiding Light (4) C — Doctors (7) C — Dating Game (50) R — Make Room for Daddy 3:00 (2) C — Secret Storm (4) C — Another World (7) C — General Hospital (50) R - Topper (56) Medical Education — “Itch, Scratch, Itch: a Vicious Cycle” (first in series) 3:30 (2) C — Edge of Night (4) C - You Don’t Say (7) C — One Life to Live (9) C - Bozo’s Big Top (50) C — Captain Detroit (56) Memo to Teachers 4:00 (2) C-Linkletter Show (4) C — Donald O’Connor (7) C — Dark Shadows (9) C — Tom Shannon (56) Les Fleurs 4:25 (2) C - News 4:30 (2) C - Merv Griffin (7) R — Movie: “Love Is Better Than Ever” (1952) Elizabeth Taylor, Eleanor Donahiie (50) Little Rascals' (56) What’s New (62) C — Bugs Bunny and Friends 5:00 (9) R C - Batman (50) R — Munsters (56) TV Kindergarten (62) R — Robin Hood 5:30 (4) C-George Pierrot —“Undersea Adventure” (9) R — Gilligan’s Island (50) RC-Superman (56) Misterogers (62) R — Leave It to Beaver Hope’s program, after the comedian’s opening monologue, turned into an old-fashioned vaudeville show. He played the magician in wie of those magic acts that misflred. George Plans for Jail to Be Studied County Unit Seeks a Financial Report IBumS, with the help of a young ,, protege, ran through one the {nonsense routines he used to do with Grade Allen. Martha Raye mugged and clownei) her way through a song number. And Hope with Bing Crosby did a comedy turn full of elderly, dreadful — and funny — jokes. Although Hope seemed to be taking things a little easier than usual after his recent eye trouble, he made light of it in his mondogue—tossing out a casual crack about his “red eye” along with a couple of flip references to the vice presidency. HILARIOUS HOUR Jack Benny and company had a really hilarious hour, ostensibly to celebrate the star’s 75th birthday. From the moment Lawrence Welk opened the show by doing a Benny impersonation, of all thinys, to a witty and bright study of the classic western, the show was full of surprise turns. Lucille Ball did a song and dance number with the chorus boys. A pride—or maybe it was a gaggle—of penguins occasionally interrupted Jack’s discussions with the audience by waddling across the stage—and one of them was on roller skates. Supervisor George Grba, D-Pontiac, chairman of the County Board of Supervisors Finance Committee, said his group would launch a feasibility study of new county jail plans at its meeting at 2:30 today. “We want a financial report showing how we can expect to pay for this faciUty,” Grba said, “and we also want to know that everything included present jail plans i necessary.” * -k k He also suggested the committee might ask for reports on conversion of the old jail building on Wayne Street downtown Pontiac. It may have to be cleared and the land sold,” Grba said, “but we’d like to know the costs of gutting the buflding and using it for some other purpose.” ‘ABOUT 4 VOTES SHORT The Board of Supervisors narrowly avoided a floor flight Friday when opposition failed to gather the 16 votes said necessary to take the jail study away from the finance committee. “They were about four votes short of the necessary majority,” Grba reported. k k k An attempt to win immediate approval of the proposed $9-million law enforcement and jail complex near the courthouse was defeated Thursday. A motion introduced by NilOs Olson, D-Lake (^ion, chairman of the planning^ building and zoning committee was at that time referred to finance. ★ k k Several supervisors ha d questioned, whether financing of the facility would need to come from nonvoted taxes above the 15-mill llmitatioDL., The song, dance, monologue and nonsense led up to a big birthday cake. There was nothing in either show that could have given tte network censors a moment’s disquiet, yet they were amusing jmd evoked laughter. k k k The thought crossed this viewer’s mind toward the end of three solid hours of variety-type entertainment: Does the audience that finds Hope witty and bright and Benny warmly funny, also think that ’Tiny Tim-who was blowing kisses around “Laugh-In” earlier—is a comical figure. 'Hie “Laugh-In” crowd obviously finds him a figure of fun, sometimes to a point where this viewer finds it uncomfortable to watch. ABC still isn’t making any announcements, but the trade rumors are that “’Turn-On’s” replacement will be some part, of that large, durable, flexible King family which will roll out some short musical shows on short notice. Tops in Pops Play at WSU Is Festival Pick Church Group to Buy Plush Detroit Hotel CKLW, Jhn Edwurds 11:15—WJR, Focui l2;3g-WWJ, Marty McNatjay 1:15—WJR, Arthur Godfray when plans for the New Detroit l.QgI^wpo'N,®“"N''ew*$, Don Committee were under WHFl"b»1 Lynch jslon. WJR, News, Din WXYZ, Newt, M----- 1;15-WJR, Music Ha 1;1»-WCAR, Wews, R-. CKLW, Ed Mitchell WJBK, News, P—' ' 5il»-WWJ, Ney-5:15-WPON, L ItIfr-WPON, t Cavanagh said John D^mp-sy, hMd of the governor’s Detroit'office, would meet with him today to prepare foe MiBi-ken’s visit. 1 Touch Me 2 ’This Magic Moment 3 Crimson, and Clover 4 Dizzy 5 PrOud Mary 6 Build Me Up, Buttercup ,,7 You Showed Me 8 Indian Giver 9 Everyday People 10 Can I Change My Mind 11 Hooked on a Feeling 12 The Worst ’That could Happen 13 I Started a Joke ’m Livin’ in Shame 15 But You Know I Love You 16 To Susan on the West Coast Waiting 17 Games Pei^le Play 18 I’ve Gotta Be Me 19 Gmng Up the (Country 2i6 Crossroads Doors Really Swinging What young people think are the top records of the week as compiled by AP Newsfeatures. - ■ -- Doors Jay and Americans Tommy James, and Shondells Tommy Roe Creedence Clearwater Foundations A Turtles 1910 Fruit Gum Co. Sly and Family Stone Tyrone Davis B. J. ’Thomas v Brooklyn Bridge Bee Gees Diana Ross and Supremes First Edition Donovan Joe Soiutii Sammy Davis Canned Heat Cream DETROIT (AP) -Detroit’s ush river-front Whittier Hotel will be purchased by Michigan Baptist Homes and Development Co. on Dec. 1, according to an agreement announced Monday by officials of both firms. Selling price was reportedly $4.5 million. _ General Manager George C. Fetherston of the Whittier said there would be no interim change in hotel operations. k k * ’The purchase announcement added that the hotel’s present staff is expected to remain on the job, but said plans include a gradual transition to a purely resident-hotel operation. Michigan Baptist Homes and Development, described as a self-supporting affiliate of the Michigan Baptist Convention, plans eventually to make the hotel a complete i-etlremcnt home with residents paying an entrance fee and monthly service charges. k k k Health facilities would be established under the plan. While final arrangements for the purchase have not been fully Worked out, Arthur B. Pfleid-erer, the hotel’s executive man, ager, said the purchasing group has made a “substantial” down payment. DETROIT (UH - Wayne State University’s production of Feydeau’s play, “A Flea In Her Ear,” has been selected as one of 10 college productiops for the first American College Theatre Festival in Washington, D.C., April 28-May 12, it was announced Monday. Flea In Her Ear” officially opened the Hilberry Theatre’s 1967-68 season at WSU, running from November 1967 through May 1968. It was revived this past fall, and played to bigger houses than any non-Shakespeare production in the Hilberry Theatrf’s historyv \* ★ * The Ifr best productions, repr^sSming college theatre in the nation, were selected from 176 entries. 'The final selections were made by a committee cochaired by actress Peggy Wood and C. Robert Kase of the University of Delaware. In 1958, the Wayne State Theatre was selected by the State Department to tour India, and subsequently made two tours, for the Defense Department and the USO, to Europe and to the Far East Sherriff-Goslin Co. Penfiae'i OldMl Roofing Do U Have the Answer to LIFE'S GREATEST QUESTION? If Not, Dial/335-0700 NOW^ »*— KINSUIIE Auto—Life—Home^^ S Call Ken Mohifflan S S eoo.eaan * NATIONWIDE INSURANCE M S.II.IIWM. Mutual Flta laa. 4a. ^ Nitionwiaallft^nBeaea. £ Kk' Moaia OMct-eiilMikui. M 12,' THE rONTlAC PRESS. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1969 ONLY A FEW MORE DAYS LEFT! LIMITED ENROLLMENT FOR EXTRA CASH BENBFITS EXPIRES MIDNIGHT, FEBRUARY23,1969 LEAVE THE HOSPITAL WITH “EXTRA CASH” IN YOUR POCKET! New health plan pays extra cash direct to you-in addition to any other insurance-individual, group or Medicare-tax-free extra cash to use as you pieasei ^4 a week when you are hospitalized ^ l\ J (S«e all plans b«low) ^-9 gz a week when your wife is hospitaiized ^ g Z , J ^ (Sea All-Family and Husband-Wife plans balow) a week for each eiigibie chiid hospitalized (See All-Family and One-Parent Family plans below) ® week-double cash benefits-when you and OOvi your wife are both injured and hospitalized ' (Sea All-Family and Husband-Wife plans below) Plus increased extra cdsh for cancer, heart attack or stroke REGARDLESS OF YOUR AGE OR THE SIZE OF YOUR FAMILY, YOU CAN ENROLL FOR ONLY $1.00. Durlnfl this Limited Enrollmsnt Psriod, you can onroll youraolf and all allglbte mambars of your family simply by mailing tho Enrollmant Form boiow with t1. Tharo’a nothing also to do — but you must mall your Enrollmant no later than Midnight, Fabruary23,1069 Think of it. Now, with • droke of your pen, you c«n h»v« tax-free, expense-free extra cash paid direct to you when a sudden /ccident or unexpected illness hospitalizes you or a covered member of your familyl And you may enroll during this Limited Enrollment Period without having to set a company representative and without any red tape whatsoever. All you need do is mail the Enrollment Form below together t*’ith just $1 before the expiration date. It’s thateaxyl Why You Need Extra Cash In Addition To Ordinary Hospital Insuranca Anyone who has been in the hospital recently knows ordinary hospital insurance-even Medicare-simply will not cover everything. You have to pay many ••extras" out of your own pocket-and it can add up to hundreds of dollars in a frighteningly short time. But even if your ordinary hospital insurance covers most of your medical and hospital bills, what abouj the bills that keep piling up at home? If you, as husband, father ami hi rati winner are suddenly hospitalized, your income stops, your expenses go up. liven if you have some kind of ‘‘salary insurance" it probably won’t conre close to replacing your full-time pay. If your wife is suddenly hospitalized, who will look after the family, do the laundry, the marketing, the cleaning? You may have to lake lime off from ■ your job-or hire full-time domestic help-to lake care of things at home. // one of your children Is suddenh hospitalized •you will certainly spare no expense. You wouldn’t ■ even think of the cost. If you're over 05 and are suddenly hospitalized, Medicare, fine ai it is, won’t pay all of your hospital expenses or any household expenses. Most senior citizens won’t want to use up savings it may have taken a lifetime to accumulate... they want to retain their independence and not become a ’’burden” to their children or community. Without "extra cash” protectioii, a hospital emergency may leave you with savings gone, debts you can’t pay, peace of mind shattered-even your recovery can be seriously delayed by money worries! How The Flan Frolecta You And Your Family Now, with the unique "extra cash” protection of The l>octors Hospital Plan you can avoid these worries because you can be assured of e\//u cash income w hen you or any covered meml>er, of your family goes to the hospital. No mailer how large your family, nomatter what your age or occupation and o«f any qualifications whatsoever, yoxtxmn choose any of the four low-cost plans shown at right to meet your family’s special needs. In addition to the "exua ca.sh” hospital benefits, you get all these valuable "extra" features; Your "Health-Bank Account" Grows Each Month Here's a wonderful benefit, no matter which plan you choose-almost like having an extra "Bank Account." When your policy is issued, your insurance provides up to $10,000, $7,500, or $5,000-depend-ing upon the plan you choose. This is your "Health-^ Bank Account.” • Then, every month your policy is in force, a sum equal to your regular monthly premium (including your first month) is actually added to your maximum! When you have claims, your benefits are subtracted from ydur "account." It’s much like putting money in and taking it out of a bank account. Enjoy Life-Long Security For as long as you live and continue to pay your premiums, we will never cancel or refuse to renew your policy for health reasons-and we guarantee that we will never cancel, modify or terminate your policy unless we decline renewal on all policies of this type in your entire state or until the maximum (Aggregate of Benefits) of your policy has beeh paid. You May Actually Come Out "Money Aheed" Because The Doctors Hospital Plan pays you in addition to any other company’s health insurance you carry-individual, group or even Medicare-and because all your extra cash benefits are tax-free, you may leave the hospital many dollars ahead...money you don't have to account for to anyone. Of course, you may have only one like policy with Physicians Mutual. Enroll For Only $1 Regardless of your age, the size of your family, or tho plan you select, you get your first month for only $ 1.00. Jf you choose the All-Family Plan-all your eligible children (including future additions) are included at no r.ura cost. (See box at right for low rates.) Extra Caah Protection At Surprisingly Low Cost How can a hospital plan offer so much for so little? Ihe answer is simple: We have lower total sales costs. The DtKlors Ho.spital Plan is a mass enrollment plan. All business is conducted between you and the company by mail. No salesmen or investigators are used. It all adds up to real savings we ahaie with you by giving you high quality protection at low cost. Offered By Physicians Mutual "The Doctors Company"! Your policy is backed by the resources, integrity and reputation of the Physicians Mutual Insurance Company, "the doctors company," specializing in health and accident protection for physicians, surgeons and dentists for more than 65 years. Dunne’s Insurance Reports, one of the leading insurant^ industry authorities in the nation, gives Physicians Mutual its highest policyholders’ rating of “A Plus (Excel-lenO." Serving hundreds of thousands of policyholders throughout the United States direct by mail. Physicians Mutual has its headquarters in Omaha, Nebraska, and is licensed and incorporated in that CHOOSE THE PLAN THAT SUITS YOU BEST AU-FAMILYPLAN $10,000 MAXIMUM PAYS YOU: $100wMkly ($14.28 dally) extra caali whan you are hoipltalizad. $75 weakly ($10.71 daHy) whan your wife la hoapitalizad. $50 weakly ($7.14 dally) tar each aliglMa child hospitalized. If yours Is a young, growing family, we recommend the All-Family Plan. You and your wife are covered at once for accidents, for new sicknesses after 30 days, snd for maternity benefits after 10 months. And all your children (including future additions) between 3 months of age and under 21 are include^ n no extra cost as long as they are unmarried arid live at home. HUSBAND-WIFE PLAN $7,500 MAXIMUM PAYS YOU: $100 weekly ($14.?8 dally) extra cash when you are hospitalized. $75 weekly ($10.71 dally) when your wife ie hospitalized. If you have no children, or if your children aro grown and no longer dependent on you, you will want the Husband-Wife Plan. You pay only $5.95 a month and you gat your first month for only $1,001 ONE-PARENT FAMILY PUN $7,500 MAXIMUM PAYS YOU: $100 weekly ($1428 dally) extra cash whan you are hospitalized. $50 weakly ($7.14 daily) for each eligible child hospitalfzad. If you are the only parent living with your children, we suggest the One-Parent Family Plan. This plan has been tailored to help meet your particular needs. Itr covers you and all unmarried children living at home between 3 months of age and under 21. Under this plan, of course, future additions are not included since no maternity benefit is provided in the One-Parent Fainily Flan. You pay only $5.95 a month and you ■at your first month for only $1.00! INDIVIDUAL PUN $5,000 MAXIMUM PAYS YOU: $100 weekly ($1428 dally) exta-a cash when you are hospitalized. If you are living by yourself, or if you wish to cover only yourself or one family member, choose the Individual Plan. You pay only $3.50 monthly and you got your first month for only $1,001 SPECIAL EXTRA BENEFITS! Whichever plan you choose, you get: 50% INCREASE IN YOUR CASH BENE’ F/rS...if you or any membei- of your family is hospitalized for cancer (including Leukemia ahd Hodgkin’s Disease), heart attack (acute myocar^al infarction, coronary thrombosis and coronary occlusion), or zirole (apoplexy). . If you choose the All-Family Plm or the Husband-Wife Plan, you get in addition: DOUBLE CASH BENEFITS if both you and your wife are injured and hospitalized at foe same time: You get twice the amoiint-SiSO A WEEKl Important: Here is another real “plus”-if you have been told that anyone in your family is ‘Yin-insurable"! Even if one of your covered family members has suffered from chronic ailments in the past-ailments that come back again and again, or are likely to recur-you will be covered foe theia pre-existing conditions after your policy has been in force for two years! IF YOU ARE OVER 65 On all plans, your "extra cash" benefits are paid from the very first day you enter thohospiUl, for as long-and for as many times-as you are hospitalized, right up to the maximum (Aggregate of Benefits) of the plan you select. Naturally, The Doctors Hospital Plan will cover any new accident or sickness. Accidents aro covered immediately. After your policy ii 30 days old, you are covered for aic^essea which begin thereafter. There are only these minimum necessary exceptions; pregnancy or any consequence thereof (unless you have the All-Family Plan which covers maternity aner the policy is in force for 10 months), war, military service, mental disorder, alcoholism or drug addiction, or conditions covered by Workmen’s Compensation or Employers Liability Laws. You are free to go to any hospital of your own choice that makes a charge for room and board, with these exceptions only: nursing homes, convalescent or Self-care units of hospitals or Federal hospitals. Even though Medicare will pay most of yoUr hospital expenses it will not cover all of your needs. During this limited enrollment, you can get the extra cash protection needed during the high-risk senior years without any qualifications just by using tho form belowl It’s a fact that people over 65 go to hospitals mors often and have larger hospital bills. That’s exactly why they need extra cash protection! And that’s why some hospital plans won’t accept them or charge rates beyond their means. But The Doctors Hospital Plan not only accepts you regardless of age, it gives you ea.sy-to-carry protection that is within your means. If you are over 65 now, or When you become 65, the following modest monthly increase applies. (This is the only increase that can ever be made as long as your policy is in force): Female on All-Family or Husband-Wife Plan.....................................$2-25 Female on One-Parent Family or Individual Plan.................................. 3.00 Male on any Plan...................... ,...3.00 state. Its Board of Directors is composed entirely of respected members of the medical, dental and insurance professions. ' Easy To Enroll! No Salesman Will Call! During this limited enrollment period there are no other qualifications other than to complete and mail the Enrollment Form below. We will issue ybur Doctors Hospital Policy (Form P308 Series) imme-diately-the. tame d*y wc receive your form. This automafI for each of yoiir cllgibte chUdren. Under the HUSBAND-WIFE PLAN, the maximum Is $7..500-$l00 weekly ($14.2g daily) for you; $75 weekly ($10.71 daily) for your wife. Under the INDIVIDUAL PLAN, the ihaximum is $5,«>0-$100 a week ($14.28 a day) for you. B. Are cny edditional benefite Included In The Doctore Hospital Plan? Yea. You receive a 50% increase in cash benefits if you. or any covered family member is boipitalized for cancer (including leukemia and Hodgkin'i Diseaae), heart attack (acute myocardial infarction, coronary thrombosis and coronary oeduaion), or stroke (apoplaxjr). If you end your wife ere both injured end hocpitalJzed at the same time end are covered by the ALL-FAMILY PLAN or the HUSBAND-WIFB PLAN, you gat double cash benefits. You get twice the amount-iiiO A WEEKl IIL Doea thla plan pay In awiy boapital? You will be covered in any hospital that makes a charge for room and board, except riuning hornet, convalescent or Klf-csre units of hospitals or Federal hospitals. 11. Whan dote my policy go Into force? It becomes effective the very tame day we receive your Enrollment Form. Accidenu are covered on that date. After your policy is 30 days old, aicknesKS which begin thereafter are covered. Under the ALLFAMILY PLA^, chfidbinh or pregnancy or any oonaequenca thereof is covered after your policy k kt form for 10 months. 12. What If somaww In my family haa bad a haalHi prob-tom that may occur again? Even if om of your covered family members has suffered from chronic ailments in the past, pre-existing conditions are covered after the policy hu been in force for two years. ..-i ta- li. What conditionf aren’t covarad? Only these minimum necessary exceptions: pregnency or any consequence thereof (unleit you have the ALL- FAMILY PLAN)", wir, militaiy lervico, mental disorder, alcoholism or drug addiction, or if something happens "on the job" and is covered by Workmen’s Compensation or Employers Liability Laws. 14. Can I drop out any time? Can you drop ma? We will never cancel or refuse to renew your policy for. health reanma-for as long as you live end contique to pay your premiums. We guarantee that we will never cancel, modify or terminate your policy unleia we decline renewal on all policiee of this type in your entire state or untfi the maximum (Aggregate of Benefits) of your policy haa been paid. You, of course, can drop your policy on any renewal date. 18. Why Ie Tho Dm When your, policy is issued, your insurance provides up to $10,000, $7,500, or $5,000-depending upon the plan you choose. This is your "Health-Bank Account." Then, every month your policy is in force, a sum equal to your regular monthly premium (including your fiiet month) is actually added to your maximum. When yon have claims, benefitt are aubtracted from your “account"! 16. Wilt my dalma ba handled prumpUyT 17. Why are With the Doctoit Hospital Plan, you actually get all these benefits-at such a low cost-because thh is a mass enrollment plan-and no salesmen are used. Our volume is higher end our total sales cpsti are lower. IB. How much diliq(^flrel month ooatr ^ fly or the plan you edect After the firgt month, if you ^ are iioder 63. you pey only these low monthly ratei: only $7.95 a mos^ for the ALL-FAMILY PLAN; only $5.95 a month for the ONE-PARENT FAMILY PLAN; ^ $525 a month for the HUSBAND-WIFB PLAN; ^ $3.50 a month for IHE INDIVIDUAL PLAFL (Whoa you are over 65, prenuums iacreoM. Soo modeat increase in box above.) 19. Why ahouM I enroll right new? Becauao an unexpected tickneat or accident could strike without waming-and you wili not he covered until your pdicy is in force. Remember, if for any reason you change your mind, you may return your policy within 10 daye and your $1.00 will he refunded mune^tdy. PHYSICIANS MUTU4^ INSURANCE COMPANY 115 South 42nd Street, Omaha, Nqbiaska 68131 Licensed by the State of Michigan SPECIAL LIMITED EMROLLMENT PERIOD! EXPIRES MIDNIGHT, FEBRUARY 23,196S Do not delay. Fill out and mail Enrollment Form today with $1.00 to Physicians Mutual Insurance Company, 115 South 42nd Street. Omaha, Nebraska 68131 Nixon to Shift Half of OEO Programs WASHINGTON UP) — President Nixon is preparing to pare away roughly half of the Office of Economic Opportunity in a major realignment of the war on poverty. The Job Corps, Head Start and slum health centers are to be shifted to other federal agencies, informed sources said today. The cutback is expected to affect only some $520,000 of Head Start funds in the Oakland County OEO total budget of $2,025,000, according to Edward P. Revis, executive director.. Some of the most controversial of the antipoverty efforts, the community action programs, will be left in OEO, informed sources said. VISTA the domestic peace corps, is also to be left in OEO, but it is not handled locally by Revis’ agency. Revis said the community action programs, incuding Head Start, legal aid and senior citizens programs make up the bulk of his office’s work. Another $200,000, also unaffected by the proposed cutbacks, is used locally for the Neighborhood Youth Corps. Some 155 youths are involved in the county under Department of Labor sponsorship. Revis noted that his office has had only fiscal responsibility only for Head Start; that the development of programs in 28 school districts of the county has been left to the individual district. * * ★ “We’re relatively untouched by the proposed cutback,’’ Revis said. He noted the local community action program is committed to the idea of us: ing private business involvement in solving the problems of the poor — “a philosophy that President Nixon is preaching right now.” The OEO hires 127 people in the Oakland County office at 1 Lafayette, Pontiac, Revis said. The White House is expected to make the formal cutback announcement today or tomorrow. ★ ★ * Head Start, the widely praised preschool program for disadvantaged children, is OEO’s largest single program with $318 million budget. It is slated to go to the Department of Health, Educatpn and Welfare. Job Corps, the second largest at $280-million, is to be transferred to the Labor Department. HEW will also get the Comprehensive Health Services program of slum medical clinics. MICHIGAN, TUES0AV, FEBEtTASiy 18, 19«o mm -iMJ City Firemen on Job, but Strike Still Looms Parochiaid Plan Hit Nixon Support for Surtax Noted by Principals' Group LANSING tAF) —State aid to nonpublic schools could open a Pandora’s Box that “could shake this nation to its very roots,” says the Michigan Association of Elementary School Principals. In a position paper released yesterday, the MAESP said legislative approval of a plan to give state funds to private and parochial schools could set a legal precedent “which would permit the destruction of the public school system.” Death of Diver Delays Sealab 3 LONG BEACH, Calif., (* - A $10-million Navy program to train men for undersea living has been suspended while doctws try to learn why an aquanaut had a fatal heart seizure 610 feet down yesterday. Sealab 3, the leaking underwater dwelling unit which Berry L. Cannon, 33, was attempting to repair when stricken, was ordered hauled up from the ocean floor near San Clemente Island. ■k * * A delay of weeks seemed likely for the trouble-plagued project, which called for five nine-man teams to spend 12 days each living and working at the bottom of the sea.. * ★ * The other eight members of Cannon’s team began a six-day period of decompression. Like Cannon, they had been conditioned to pressures 19 times normal to withstand the weight of the ocean at the Sealab’s depth. AUTOPSY SCHEDULED The body of Cannon, a civilian with three children, was flown to 11th Naval District headquarters at ^n Diego, Calif., for an autopsy. ★ ★ ★ The project, delayed since July by equipment problems, got under way Saturday when the S7-by-12 foot steel cylinder was lowered to the ocean floor. ★ ★■/*'■ No diver set foot in it, however. Preliminary checks Sunday showed the helium-oxygen breathing mixture with which it was pressurized was leaking slowly at places where power and communications lines entered the unit. Cannon, an electronics engineer, and three others of his team were sent down in a diving bell to investigate Sunday night and again yesterday morning. On the second dive. Cannon suffered a seizure Navy doctors termed,a cardiac arrest. “Although there has been a steady erosion of America’s classic separation of church and state, there still exists in the minds of men and the statutes of their law the concept that the United States was founded as a secular nation and must continue to exist on a nonsectarian basis,” the association said. “It is the position of this association that the separation of church and state is an essential characteristic of this nation and must not be threatened directly or indirectly by any legislation seeking to blur this distinction.” ★ ★ ★ Parents who send their children to nonpublic schools are faced with an increasing public tax burden, the MAESP said. Certainly one can sympathize with the plight of these citizens,” it said. “But nevertheless the choice is theirs. There is nothing which prevents them from decreasing this financial burden to themselves except their own free will to choose among alternatives.” Proponents of state aid to, nonpublic schools, the association said, point to the possibility of “a flood of children loosed upon an already overtaxed public school system should the parochial schools close their doors. “Better many children in a classroom than the prospect of limited public funds being diluted among conflicting educational systems that would inevitably change the democratic nature of this nation of ours.” WASHINGTON (AP) - President Nixon’s budget director told Congress today the administration will support a one-year extension of the 10 per cent surtax. Nevertheless, he said, it foresees a shrinkage in this year’s budget surplus and possibly next year’s. Robert P. Mayo, testifying before the Senate-House Economic Committee, promised “a diligent effort to reduce outlays” in a review of former President Lyndon B. Johnson’s $195.3 bullion fiscal 1970 budget now underway. ★ ★ ★ "1 am realistic enough, however, to appreciate that over-all savings are not likely to be dramatic either for the few remaining months of 1969 or for 1970, ” the budget director said. In the clearest declaration yet of the Nixon administration’s position o n whether to let the 10 per cent surcharge on individual and corporation income taxes expire as scheduled on June 30, the budget chief told the lawmakers: “Our administration’s current position is to support the proposed extension of the surcharge and the excise taxes.” UNCERTAINTIES CITED The budget which Johnson bequeathed to the new administration called for a $2.4 billion surplus this year and $3.4 billion in fiscal 1970. “But there are enough uncertainties in the estimates to suggest that the indicated surplus may be squeezed,” Mayo reported. By DICK ROBINSON A threatened walkout of Pontiac firemen was averted this monring but still looms as other striking city employes continue to curtail city services. State Labor Mediator Leonard Bennett reported that “some progress was made” in the city’s salary negotiations with three unions after a 15-hour bargaining session which ended 7 a.m. today. Bennett said he asked representatives of Fire Fighters Local 376 not to walk off the job for a third lime as was threatened for 6 a.m. today. “1 a.sked them to stay on the job pending fui-ther negotiations,” he said, “and 1 understand they will continue on the job at my request.” STILL POSSIBLE But Fire Fighters President Edwin Manley said a strike could be called any minute if his organization is “not treated fairly.” , "My men have given me a mandate not to accept anything less than $10,300 this year sometime.” The firemen are demanding a $10,300 annual salary for three years of experience on a parity with a promised Blimp Hijacker Blows If CARSON, Calif. i/P) — The great blimp hijack of 1969 never got off the ground. ’The would-be pirate: a long-haired youth armed with a guitar. He also carried a mysterious black box. * * * “I want a ride, man,” he told Jim Genet, a company crewman who works on the Goodyear blimp. “If not. I’ll blow the thing up,” Genet quoted the youth. LAWMEN WAIT , Genet called for help. Armed officers surrounded the big gas bag and waited patiently last night, said one — “in case he really did have a bomb.” Finally, Sheriff’s Sgt. Arthur Hicks and the bomb squ'hd arrived. Hicks walked across the field and opened the door of the gondola under the blimp’s belly. * + * “Are you the pilot?” the hairy occupant asked Hicks. “I want to go Jo Aspen, Colo.” for a jazz festival. The youth, without waiting for an answer, pushed a “button” on his black box. Hicks waited for an explosion. Instead he heard a blast of rock music from the lad’s black transistor radio. Atfer searching him, Hicks helped him out. YOUTH HOSPITALIZED The youth, unidentified, was hospitalized for observation. “He never would have made it to Aspen,” said Ralph Reed, another crewman. "The blimp has a maximum ceiling of 3,500 feet and Aspen is about 13,000 feet high.” UNION SOLDIER-An old member of the Union lakes up the charge in front of the City Hall for the on-again, off-again striking Pontiac firemen and members of two city employe groups who are on strike. Area Weather to Stay Springlike Today’s sunny skies and springlike temperatures are just a preview of more to come. The weatherman forecasts partially cloudy skies tomorrow with little change in temperature, the high rising to near 38. Considerable cloudiness and a low of 22 to 26 is tonight’s prediction.. Mostly fair and mild is the outlook for Thursday. Morning winds west to northwest at five to 15 miles per hour through tonight will become northwesterly tomorrow. ★ * . * Precipitation probabilities in per cent are 10 tonight and tomorrow. ★ , ★ * Twenty-three was the low thermometer reading prior to 8 a.m. in downtown Pontiac. By 12:30 p.m. the mercury had reached 40. wage of the city’s policement. Firemen now earn $9,000. The city has offered firemen an immediate $600 increase and another $300 July 1, which would lift their pay to $9,900 a year. MASS RESIGNATION Before the start of negotiations yesterday, Manley threatened a mass resignation of firemen if substantial progress wasn’t made. But today he wouldn’t comment on the subject. In the meantime, garbage has been piling up at the rate of 4,000 homes a day, and other services, such as police protection, have been affected. Police Sgt. Herbert Cooley reports that four ^lice officers have been pulled off a normal patrol of 15 men to take care of vacant clerical jobs. Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. said garbage at homes will not be picked up until the strike is over. Pickups are limited to hospitals, schools and public buildings. TALKS TO RESUME Negotiations for 141 firemen and some 440 clerical-office and blue-collar municipal employes were scheduled to resume at 2 p.m. today. “I hope to have this settled shortly,” Bennett commented. “The real problem is money. But we are real close on a proposed modified longevity plan.” * ★ ★ Members of the Pontiac Municipal Employes Association and Council 23 of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employes (AFSCME), AFLrCIO, are seeking an average 35-cent-per-hour wage increase. Fire Fighters representatives didn’t get into joint negotiations until after midnight, but shortly thereafter hopes of a settlement were high. return of DOUGLAS The hope hinged on the return of Jack Douglas, city commissioner and president of the Oakland County AFL-CIO Labor Council, to behind-the-scene talks. Douglas reportedly didn’t return. At a press conference earlier in the day, he said: “The city has delayed long enough m the negotiations and the city has not had the welfare of the citizens at heart or it could have settled this much sooner. * ★ ★ “The demands of the workers are reasonable and the city has enough money. In the past, the city has held wages down, because of financial reasons that no longer seem to apply.” City representatives negotiated with clerical and blue collar employes up until midnight. A high union official — William Char-ron, international vice president of AFSCME council 23 — said he told the bargainers in his first appearance here (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 1) Blaze Destroys Car Dealership A fire of undetermined origin last night destroyed John Wheaton Chrysler-Plymouth Inc. of 2222 Novi, Novi. Village President Ray Harrison, who was at the scene, estimated damage at about $150,000. No one whs injured. ■k it it . The fire, which left only two outside walls standing, was put out by 10 p.m. although firemen stayed until midnight. The alarm was recteivpd at 7:47. Several cars inside the building were destroyed, according to Novi police. ADDED FIRE HELP Fire equipment from the neighboring communities of Walled Lake, Wixom, Northville and Farmington and Commerce townships aided Novi in battling the blaze. There were more than 15 pieces of equipment at the scene, according to Harrison. * ★ * The dealership is owned by John Wheaton of 5389 Dunmore, West Bloomfield Township. Damage Put At $150,000 In Novi Auto Dealership Fire r f ■ 6 Found Guilty in School Sit-In A Pontiac District Court jury yesterday found five women and a man guilty of trespassing after a sit-in at the Pontiac Board of Education Feb. 6. The defendants, all members of the Voice of Oakland County Action League (VOCAL), will be sentenced Monday by Judge Cecil B. McCallum. ■ Trespassing, a misdemeanor, carries a penalty of up to 90 days in jail or a $50 fine, or both. The six were arrested after they refused to leave the school board building following a meeting they attended to protest the board’s selection of a site at Pontiac State Hospital for a proosed high school. DEFENDANTS ^TED Convicted wer^MrsTj^ldred Sweeney of 228 Orchard LaWws. Ralph Tyson of 2796 Eastways, Bloomfield Township; Mrs. Leonard Patterson of 282 S. Marshall; Mrs. Fremont Ogawa of 1544 Witherbee, Troy; Mrs. Fred Favre of 171 Jefferson; and James Baldwin of 179 Augusta. Following the verdict, Mrs. Sweeney said that VOCAL will continue its opposition to the school site, adding, “Our forces will be at the next board of education meeting.” ★ ★ w The organization is attempting to have the proposed school built in a centrally located area. A~2 a3Vd IBAO JWIII THE PONTIAC 1’UESS. '^’ESI)A^^ FEBRCARV 18. 19(>9 Ir^L Second Senate Panel's Hearings With Striking City Employes on N-Treaty May Delay Okay (Continued From Page Onci (he issues could be resolved "if the facts were put on the table” "We re not really far apart on any of it,” he .said "We checked the ability of the city to pay and it is here " WASHING1X)N (AP) The Senate Armed Services Committee, in a move that could further delay Senate approval of the nuclear nonproliferation treaty, has announced plans for hearings on military aspects of the pact. Winston L l.ivingston, attorney for the fire fighters, had this comment during one point (n the session: "It's their (the city'si business if they don't want anyone to work." The strike started at noon Friday when negotiations with the firemen br6ke and the firemen and other city employes walked out. Chairman .Jolin Stennis, D-Miss, in dicated yesterday the hearings would start after the Senate Foreign Relations Committee winds up its own inquiry starting today with Secretary of State William P. Rogers as the lead-off witness. Foreign relations, which held hearings last year on the treaty that would ban the spread of nuclear arms, is expected to give it prompt approval But while that committee has long been in favor of the treaty, the move by Armed Services could provide a forum or rallying point for critics unhappy with inspection procedures and other provisions. Rogers, in his first appearance as secretary before a congfessional committee, had the assignment of following up on President Nixtm’s request of Feb. 5 that the Senate “act promptly to consider the treaty and give its advice and consent to ratification.’’ Secretary of Defense Melvin ML. Laird will appear Thursday in support of the presidential request. The treaty would bind nuclear powers to keep atomic weapons out hands of countries that do not now have them, but would permit sharing peaceful uses of nuclear power. Firemen relumed Saturday under a court order and then stnick just before midnight. Ttiey returned to work again Sunda\ Members of the other two unions have pledged not to return to work until their demands are met Yachts Spotted in Red China Mayor Taylor said yesterday that he hoped the firemen will continue to observe the court order and remain at work "Tlie jobs performed by our firemen are important to our community, and it is certainly encouraging that the firemen have recognized the significance of their responsibilities by returning to duly. HONG KONG (UPl) — 'i;,hree pleasure yachts apparently seized by Comrfiunist China bobbed at anchor today in a mainland Chinese harbor near Macao, spotted by coastal sailors Peking maintained official silence on the fate of the ‘IN HANDS OF UNIONS' "Frankly. I can’t prt‘dict how long the strike will last becau.se, in the final analysis, the length of the strike is in the hands of the unions." Figures prepared by the city show that a fireman's salary of $10,000 as of July 1 would be a 6.5 per cent pay increase since 1964 1 Board Asked for MDs, DOs It would cost the city, including fringe lienefits. $13,169 fier third-year fireman per year. French Stir New Furor LANSING (AP) — A proposal to bring medical doctors and osteopaths under the same licensing board and tighten that board's authority over both was outlined yesterday by officials of the Michigan State Medical Society (MSMS) The proposal, which MSMS spokesmen said would soon be introduced in the legislature, would provide for one state medical board, composed of eight doctors of medicine 'and two doctors of osteopathy. It would replace the current two boards, one operating in each field. LONDON t/P - President Charles dc Gaulle’s boycott of the Western European Union threw a new storm over the continent today, less than a week before I’residenl Nixon’s visit. The proposal also would give the medical board “some teeth in its protection of the public, " MSMS officials said. In the latest maneuver of de Gaulle's little cold war with Britain, France withdrew yesterday from the council of the WEU, the seven-nation organization that provides the only forum in which Britain and the six nations of the Common Market can discuss cooperation The council meets twice a month. They pointed to the recent case of Dr. Ronald Clark of Farmington Township, convicted of manslaughter in the death of an employee. Testimony at the Clark trial revealed that an autopsy showed death had been caused by an overdose of .sodium pentothal Berlin Traffic Resumes BERLIN (API - East German border guards halted traffic through West Berlin's main entrance to the autObahn for two hours today, then began letting cars through again. West Berlin police reported. Traffic through other checkpoints on the roads between West Berlin and West Germany was delayed, with long lines of cars and trucks piling up. But it was not stopped. The Weather T»d«v in Ont Ymt Ago Irt Dir^tion: We»t Sun 7uo$6ay « 09 pm 5uf> riMi W«dnesd«y ai 7 25 a m Moon toft Tu0Sd«v nl • U pm Mooo rluM W«lnt§dav «t i 50 a.i Downtown Tofnporotum 39 2J Fori Worth 23 12 rr 12 30 P Moon tomperoturt Mnrouelto Muskoqoo Oscoda Pell»lon Saginaw C. 33 23 Pittsburg! NATK^NAL WEATHER — Cpld weather is predicted over much of the nation tonighf, with showers alcmg the West Coast turning to sndW flurries in the higher soutbep elevations. Flurries are predicted for the upper Great Ukes ajiid a portion of the pastern seaboard. R,ain will cover southern fexas. 15 persons aboard, including four Americans. The crewmen of cargo junks reported yesterday they had sighted the three yachts for the first time since they disappeared Sunday while on a Chinese New Year pleasure cruise from this British colony to Portuguese Macao. architect from Lowestoft, Suffolk, England. Bailey disappeared last night while rowing in a dinghy in search of his yacht which apparently broke anchor and drifted from Hong Kong waters off Lamma Island. The crewmen said they saw the boats at a fishing village, a few miles from Macao, the Portuguese enclave 45 miles from Hong Kong. Authorities in Hong Kong have said they were convinced the yachts had been intercepted by Red Chinese gunboats. Ammonia Car Derailed CRETE, Neb. (AP) - A railroad car containing ammonia derailed in the west end of Crete today, causing police and fire officials to attempt evacuation of the area. A hospital spokesman estimated at least 12 persons were hospitalized. DIPLOMATIC EFFORTS Diplomats from several countries said attempLs were being made to persuade Peking to admit capturing the yachts and agree to return them, with their pas.sengers, to Hong Kong. The chairman of the Macao Yacht Club, Hernando Mecado Pinto, said he was in contact with provincial authorities in Canton and had been assured they would “investigate” the incident. The Burlington Railroad at Lincoln confirmed the derailment and indications were that two or three other cars also left the rails. A spokesman at the Crete Municipal Hospital said shortly after 8 a.m., “The place is a chaos” with persons being brought in for treatment. She estimated at least a dozen persons were hospitalized. Soviets, Peru OK Pact In addition to the four Americans aboard the yachts, there were three Swedes, two Britons, one Frenchman, an Australian girl and four Hong Kong Chinese. In an unrelated incident, marine police reported today the disappearance of a British yachtsman, David Bailey, an LIMA, Peru (UPI) — The Soviet Union expanded its influence in South America today through a trade agreement with Peru's new military regime. Peruvian Foreign Minister Edgardo Mercado Jarrin said the accord, signed yesterday, ended his country’s long economic reliance on the United States, until now Peru’s biggest trading partner. Under current law, the doctors said, the licensing board could not revoke Clark’s license until he had been convicted. Under the proposed law, the board could temporarily revoke a license and “provide better protection for the public” Observers expected the licensing board consolidation proposal to run into op-positon from the state’s o.steopaths, who have balked at the idea of losing their ■separate identity. "This is not a proposal to swallow up the osteopaths, " declared Dr John J. Courty of Port Huron, chairman of the MSM committees on osteopathy and on county medical societies. Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY-Partly sunny today and mild, high 35 to 40. Considerable cloudiness, low tZ to 26. Partial clearing Wednesday and little temperature change, high 33 to 38. Thursday's Outlook: Mostly fair and mild. Winds west to northwest 5 to 15 miles per hour today and tonight, northwesterly Wednesday. Probabilities of precipitation: 10 p<‘r cent tonight and Wt^dnesday. Michigan nursing home owners and the slate reached an agreement yesterday over the care of welfare patients in private nursing homes, ending a long controversy. The agreement includes lifting a ban on the acceptance of new Medicaid patients and increasing certain state subsidies. "1 am relieved that an equitable solution appears to have finally been reached,’ said Basil F. Boyce, president of the Michigan Nursing Home Association and co-owner of Seminole Nuring Home, SAME BASIC RATE He added. "I want to stress that the major problems were nonmonetary but involved/ the /Departnjent of -Health's proposed mass transfer of patients . . ” from what they termed basic to skilled homes or vice versa. RATE STILL ISSUE “EstaMishing an equitable rate or reimbursement for the next fiscal year still confronts us,” Boyce addec^\ \ The Michigan Nursing Homes Association annoimced several weeks ago that its members would refuse to accept any nwe state-supported patients or permit state social and health workers on their premises to classify patients unlests daily rates were increased. I ' Pontiac Readies Salute to Youth Pontiac’s citywide Salute to . Youth Program to select Pontiac’s outstanding youth is now under way. The program is sponsored by Pontiac Citizens’ Committee on Youth. Any Pontiac student in grades 9 through 12 is eligible to register and be considered for this recognition. Tliey may be nominated by teachers, parents, principals or fellow students. Youth recognition will be given in nine award categories which include fine arts and handicraft, science, creative writing, scholarship, music, speech, leadership, athletics, industrial arts and home economics. A program for presentation of the awarils will be held April 17 at Pontiac Northern High School. JUDGING TEAMS Students considered for Youth Recognition will be rated by teacher panels in each school, for each award category. All student entries will be rated by the teacher teams using a point system, and final winners will be selected by the Salute to Youth Program Steering Committee. ★ ★ ★ Registration forms may be obtained from homeroom teachers or school principals. Deadline for registering for Salute to Youth consideration is March 14. Sporting Goods Store Is Closing The sign stretching across the back wall of the S. G. Rogers store reads; “Going out of business. After 47 years in Pontiac, we’re closing our doors forever.” Hanging on the other walls of the sporting goods store at 24 E. Lawrence are mounted game trophies given to owner Charles Rogers by his customers over the years. “We’re closing right out,” Rogers said. “When ther merchandise sale is over, the building will be leased or sold.” After that, he added, “I’m going to take a vacation for a while.” Rogers who lives at p7 Miami has worked in the store for the past 31 years. His father opened the first store in 1922, nearly half a century ago. MUSCLE FOR MARINES — A Marine artillery unit digs in its 105mm hovvitzers west of Hue as a fire support base for troops sweeping the area. 'Troops carved and blasted away the jungle all day to prepare the gun pits and bunkers. Nursing Homes, State OK Welfare-Patient Agreement Pontiac Jaycees' Bosses Night Near The controversy between the nursing home operators and the State Department of Public health began several months ago over the state’s refusal to pay the nursing home $13 and $15 per day for basic and skilled home patients, respectively. Under the new agreement, the state will raise the rate for basic patients in skilled homes from $12, to $14 per day and pay $16 per day for patients who are paraplegic or suffer from severe heart condition. The 46th annual Pontiac Area Jaycees’ bosses night will be 6:30 p.m. tomorrow at Devon Gables, Bloomfield Township. Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., will be the guest speaker. The Jaycees will present the Boss of the Year award and a Distinguished Service award to a man between the ages of 21 and 36, not necessarily a Jaycee, who has distinguished himself in the, community. A Keyman award will be presented to the Jaycee who has been most hdpful in ccmimunity services. Tickets at $7 each may be purchased at the door or obtained in advance from Terry Van Orman, 1165 Lynsue Lane, Waterford Township. The foreign relations committee approved the treaty after an initial round of testimony last September but it was not brought to a vote before Congress adjourned. Birmingham ^Police Union Recognition Bid Rejected BIRMINGHAM - The City Commission last mght turned down a request by a newly organized Birmingham Police Officers Association to gain immediate recognition as a collective bargaining unit for the Birmingham police force. Commissionesr said the organization would have to file a petition under Public Act 379 (the State of Michigan Public Employes Labor Relatiems Act) with the State Labor Mediation Board for permission to hold an election in order to certify that the police force wants the association to act as its exclusive bargaining representative. The commission received the request for collective bargaining from the Southfield law firm of Lemberg and Gage, which is providing the legal counsel for the new association. No representatives of the association were present at the commission meeting last night. Correspondence referring to the commission’s decision was to be mailed to Lemberg and Gage today. NEXT STEP Noel A. Gage of Lemberg and Gage said the next step would be to file the petition to hold the election which would be supervised by the State Labor Mediation Board. Gage said he expects approval of the association as a bargaining unit by the police force. The election, he added probably could be held within three weeks. “Once the association has gained certification through the election, we feel the next step will be up to the city commission to express a willingness to meet with us and sit down and amicably begin discussions for a contract for the new fiscal year beginning in July,” Gage said. “Skater’s Holiday”, the City of Birmingham’s annual amateur ice show, has been scheduled for 8 p.m. March 8 at Eton Park Municipal Ice Rink. Tickets at $1 for adults and 50 cents for children will be on sale at the rink the night of the show. In case of inclement weather*’, the show would be postponed to March 9. Assault Charged toClarkston Boy A 14-year-old Clarkston boy, charged with assault and battery in a Jan. 30 attack on a Pontiac Press newsboy, has been released by Oakland County juvenile authorities to the custody of his parents. The youth, unidentified because of his age, is accused of striking Lee Hayes, son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Ross of 5914 Southward, Waterford Township. No hearing has yet been scheduled in the case, according to township police. Hayes was delivering papers on An-dersonville near Dixie when the assault occurred about 5:30 p.m. He finished his route, but became ill after reaching home and was hospitalized for internal injuries the following day. IN HOSPITAL ”1116 victim was treated at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital until last Wednesday. ★ * ★ Five other youths questioned in the case were released without charge, police said. , The Pontiac Press has offered a $50-per^conviction reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the person or persons responsible for the attack. The basic nursing home patient rate will remain at $12 per day. ptHer highlights pf the compromise pact, which remains m effect until July • Nuring homes will open their books to state audit immediately. • A special governor's study committee will make recommendations mi a new rate structure by July 1. • Proposed stringMit state rules and regulations governing nursing homes will be withheld temporarily. \ • The state will apply for federal funds to initiate an incentive cost program for pursing homes. • • Designated rejM-esentatives of the state will be admitted to nursing homes so they cap make^ormal evaulations of patient status. OFF ON ALL HAIR GOODS 15% Sale on fpr All of Februatry Some Factory Closeouts as Low as $4 Once-A-Year Special! AVAILABLE AT All 8 Perry Pharmacies, Thrifty Drugs and Lee Prescriptions in Drayton Plains. DRAYTON WIG Distributors Card* (Wholesale and Retail) Ho«ore«l 4666 W. Walton Blvd. One Block East of Dixie Hwv. 673-0712 ' 673-3408 Prescrij Si ♦1 o/ X A—I S3»w ifiAo mm THE PONTIAC PRESS 'n’ESDAV. FKHHrAHY 18. lOdO Trial Ordered in '66 Slaying City Man Arraigned, Youth Awaits Exam A Pontiac man was ordered yesterday to stand trial for first-degree murder in the slaying of a Caro truck driver nearly three years ago. Harry J. Smith, 23, of 431 Ferry stood mute to the charge when he was arraigned before Circuit Judge Farrell “ Roberts and was returned to the county jail to await trial. No date was set. Smith is charged along with Jesse Manning, 18, of 324 Joslyn with the shooting of Carlaroy W. Henry, on April 15, 1966. Henry, 29, the father of six children, was found dead outside the Jet Bar, 714 Woodward. He had been shot once in the chest. PREUMINARY EXAM Manning’s preliminary court examination is scheduled for Thursday before Pontiac District Judge Cecil B. McCallum. Both Smith and Manning were arrested Jan. 29, but since Manning was only 16 years old at the time of the crime, juvenile court officials had to determine if he would be waived to stand trial as an adult. Manning also is held in county jail without bond. Deaths in Pontiac, Neighboring Areas Carl C. Chidester Carl C. Chidester, 76, of 4900 Hatchery, Waterford Township, died yesterday. Arrangements are pending at, Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. Surviving are a son, Gene F. of Waterford Township; a daughter, Mrs. Harry Sallada of Pontiac; seven grandchildren; eight great-grandchildren; and a brother. i A proposed new garbage and will be 10 a.m. Thursday withiHenry, Hock and Boyd, all of and Mr. and Mrs. (Hen King ofjrubbish ordinance will be con-burial in Mount Hope Cemetery.|Pontiac. iKlml, and a brother, Russell atisidered by the City Commission iThe Rosary will be recited at 8i ' 'home. lat its meeting at 8 tonight at p.m. tomorrow at Donelson-| Mrs. J. Florence Memorials may be made toiCity Hall, East Wide Track and Johns Funeral Home. . | Donaldson March of Dimes or thelEast Pike. Michigan Heart Association. Mr. Lariviere> a r e t i )• e d employe of the Fisher Body plant, died yesterday. He was a member of St. Benedict Church. Surviving are his wife, Marie; three children, Rene of Pontiac, Roland of Westerly, R.I., andl , - . . Rolande at home; s e v e njW^lawn Cemetery Detroit George Houstina grandchildren; and two great-i Service for George Houstina, i, of 130 Raeburn will be 10 a.m. Thursday at Sparks-Griffin Chapel with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Houstina, a retired employe of the former Baldwin Rubber Co., died yesterday. He was a member of the Catholic church. Surviving are two sons George Jr. of Pontiac and John Bloomfield Hills; fiv daughters, Mrs. Anna Lament of Bloomfield Hills, Mrs. Julia Puhek of Detrot, Mrs. Margaret Bartolotta of California Mrs. Mary Mitchell and Susan Houstina, both of Pontiac; 12 grandchildren; and 13 greatgrandchildren. grandchildren. Albert H. Manning Ulderic Lariviere Requiem Mass for Ulderic Lariviere, 84, of 415 Voorheis BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -Service for Mrs. J. Florence Donaldson, 56, of 500 Fox Hills will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at the Vasu-Lynch Funeral Home,; Royal Oak, with burial ----- ordinance Would codify, . I 1 . rules for residents involving Area Youth lnjufedl-’E»' , f- . f. .jseveral street-improvement in Springfield Crash BATHROOM REMOOELING SALE Tr, ' FREE ESTIMATES Call 682-6800 3 DAY INSTALLATION LIFE KITCHEH and BATHROOM -----Lite Bldf-. Co. Open Daily 10-5:30 - Sunday 12-5 110 Pontiac Mall Office Bldg. - Facing Elizabeth Lake Rd. Mrs. Donaldson died yester- day. She was office manager of a Groveland Township youth M n nicatti Chrysler-Plymouthjis in fair condition at Pontiac M 0 nicatti Sales, Utica- {General Hospital after his can Surviving are two daughters,L,ent out of control on Dixie Mrs. Marlene Butterworth of]Highway in Springfield California and Mrs. HaroldIxo^vnship and smashed into a Bulgarelli of Walled Lake; a po,,. yesterday, brother; and three jn addition to the driver. John grandchildren. g 20, of 4650 McGinnis, two passengers were injured. Service for Albert H. Manning, 67, of 300 Rockwell will be p.m. 'Thursday at New Hope Baptist Church with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery by Davis-Cobb Funeral Home. His body will be at the funeral home after 3:30 p.m. tomorrow.! OXFORD — Private service Mr. Manning, an employe ofifor Mark P. Knickerbocker, 2-Oakland County W e 1 f a r e month-old son of form Mark P. Knickerbocker Department, died Saturday. Heiresidents Mr. and Mrs. Lester Cornell, 16, of 3321 Per- but were released after treatment. They are Kathv A. Schaef, 18, of 670 Garland, Brandon Township, and David was a member of New Hope P. Knickerbocker of St. Joseph, Church. will be 11 a m. Wednesday at Surviving are a son, James|the Bossardet Funeral Home, . of Adrian; two daughters,]with burial in Mount Pleasant Mrs. Sally Westmoreland of Cemetery, Oxford Township. rysville, Groveland Township. Detroit and Mrs. Altie White of Pontiac; two sisters, including Mrs. Sally Harris of Pontiac; and five brothers, including The child died yesterday. Surviving besides his parents re his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Preston Yost of Oxford Optometrists' Unit Will Eye' Fires Damage Court Ruling Dr. Milton Hathaway, 145 Barrington, Bloomfield Hills, president of tbe State Board of Examiners in Optometry, said the board will discuss and review a State Supreme Court decision on the unlicensed practice of a profession at tomorrow’s meeting.! The court, in a precedent decision, determined that the attorney general, acting behalf of a licensing regulatory agency of the state, may halt the unlicensed practice of profession. 2 City Homes Fires damaged two Pontiac homes last night. Sparks from a rubbish fire were blamed by Pontiac firemen for igniting the root of a home owned by C. L. Washington at 439 Orchard Lake. Damage to the frame and brick building from the 9:15 p.m. fire was estimated by fire men at $2,500 with $250 damage to the contents. An hour and a half earlier, firemen extinguished a blaze at The question involved a com- plaint originally filed against two optical firms in Grand Rapids in 1962 by the attorney general, acting on behalf of the board of examiners in optometry. The firms were charged with wrongfully and unlawfully practicing the profession of optometry by diagnosing and fitting certain persons for contact lenses. In a majority opinion, the Supreme Court upheld lower court decisions to issue permanent injunction against the two Grand Rapids optical firms. Baby Chicks Saved by National Guard MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) — Without electric power and facing the loss of baby chicks in freezing weather, the people of Rainsville, Ala., have called on the National Guard. Guardsmen, 15 of them from Ft. Payne’s 15lst E n g.i n e e Battalion, hurried to the north Alabama community to set up four emergency generators to provide power for water, heat and lights at Rainsville’s chicken farms. Meanwhile, crewmen from the Sand Mountain Electric Cooperative are working to restore the -service, wiped out by weekend ice storms. Area Lake Ice Called Unsafe Sportsmen were warned today by the Oakland County Sheriff’s Department to stay off the ice on area lakes. Lt. Donald K. Kratt, head of the department’s Water Safety Division, said that the warm weather has made a number of the lakes unsafe. NOTICE OF ENACTAAENT OF ORDINANCE Notice is heretw Siv^n that Council enacted oVdinance No. 89, - effective immediately. This is an 01 dinance to regulate the use and opert tion of snowmobiles. ROSALIND WILDGEN ' City Clerk February 18, 1969 y Hall, 1820 Inverni n Wednesday, March _ from 6:00 P.nj., to 9:0 property assessments. ROSALIND WILDGEN a frame home occupied by Mrs, Nathan Howard at 428 N. Johnson. The cause of the fire has not been determined. Damage was estimated at $1,000 to the building and $500 to] the contents. Waterford 0K\ to Probation Deportment The Waterford Township] Board last night approved a| probation department within | the 51st District Court. , Also approved were plans and specifications of a planned subdivision water main system for Lakeland Estates No. 2, off Dixie Highway, north of Williams Lake Road. Bids were opened on a township money and securities insurance policy, and were referred to the insurance committee for a report back to the board at the next meeting. The board also received first notice on a liquor license request from People’s Food Market Inc., 3415 Elizabeth Lake, to transfer stock interest in a 1968 SDM license by dropping Guido and Ida Saltarelli, in selling all stock to Mr. and Mrs. Joseph 0. Gagne, who are being IS . stockholders. The transfer request will come up for action at the next board j meeting. Approval was given to a liquor license request from Terry G. Fiscus — that Walter Murrick be dropped as a partner with him on a 1968 Class C and SDM license — at Pontiac Lake Inn, 7990 Highland. STATE OF MICHIGAN - e Soles, minors. le Name of the People ol manent severance of paret I be considered, t being impractical to mak vice hereof, this summons — III be served by publication of a able Norman - .Sid Court, in n said County, this 1 uary A.D. 1969. NORMAN R.'BARNARD, ! copy Judge of Probate Helen l. Hamilton, February 18, 1969 Oakland County s h e r i f f’.s deputies said Coak’s c a r careened across the center line after striking the fender of a friend’s car he was passing. The accident happened shortly after 1 p.m. near Holly Road. >SP\RhS'CRlH 1\ H,M.R\I IIOMI “ The funeral h a, ceremony that recognizes the. intricate worth and dignity of man. It is not only a sociological statement that a death has occurred, but also a declaration that a life has been lived. ■i' — T SPARKS-GRIFFIN FINEKAL HOME Hi Williams St. Phone FE S-112SS Old windows are draft/, unsighil/ with rotted sills and frames, difficult, to open and close, require year!/ painting and maintenance. OLD WINDOW PROBLEMS AND mm! REPLACED WITH NU-SASH NU-SASH, for years the leader in window manufacturing, has the revolutionary answer to old window problems. -NU-SASH is the only time-testecl window specifically designed to replace-old, deteriorated, worn-out house windows. The cost, including installation, is surprisingly low... nearly 40% less than other old methods of renovating windows. NU-SASH windows fit tight, greatly improve home appearance, will never mildew or rot, open and close at fingertip ease and require no painting. Old windows let In dirf, droftt and noise, causa high fuel bills, decrease home value, require repeated replacement of loose putty. 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Nu‘Sash Pays For Itself , NU-SASH.units offer many unequalled advantages. .. installed easily by experts without touching inside plaster or woodv/ork. NU-SASH windows save on fuel and maintenance, are easily cleaned from inside, improve home's apfpearance, increase home’s comfort an0 value. It's available in white or metallic gray and In a wide variety of styles to enhance your home. |noI Down Payment^ w. Modest Monthly Terms I jO: IMU-SASH pp.z.is ■ Available in White or FeafI Grey Finish | ■ . ------^---------'J'gl'gifj J-j f Iy TRIBBI Souf-h Telegraph Engiiieered and Test-Proved by Weather-Seal, Intorporated Jusf South of Voorheis Rood Pontiac, Mich. ,48053 Please send me the FREE 6-page full-color brochure, sample prices, and other complete details on Nu-Sash, CALL 338-4036 Take the first “no obligation" step. ..simply phone or clip the coupon and mail today. Free IlteTature, narhes and addresses of NU-SASH installations in the area, and other details are yours for the asking. Member Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce A V111-: i‘()N 11 AC 1 'UKss. 'H 'ksdav. i Kinu arv is. ioho MAKE OVER PAGES MlSSlUn'CK MISS W IIHKIAK'K MISS UEHNKH MISS liEECIllJM MISS GRABAN MlSS UmSKA MISS STROIIMEYER MISS riWCIINICKI MISS UPTON 'Coot' Loshes to Get Fullest Glamor Effect % MISS TRICE ^^aftcussesI 5 j f. Si Beginning In Feb. Ladies VvJ/ Don’t Miss This Great EVENT A lh.» cla».l will b.: .A w WOOD FIBER | ■i iA) ^ S' ix FLOWER MAKING | BE SURE AND CALL FE 8-3361 MISS DADSON MISS TAYLOR MISS WHITE Engagements Announced^ Eyelashes, now more thanj lever, are the center of attention! in all the newest beauty fashion, [ To give your lashes as much emphasis as possible, make-up expert Max Factor suggests the| following application routine: j Encircle each eyelash with; mascara. To achieve this en-| I circling effect as efficiently as possible, fill your brush with mascara and lay the sides of| the bristles on top of your upper lashes as close as possible to the root area- Then, move the brush through the lash length I with a zljg-zag motion. Next, place the bristles underneath the lashes and again move the' niuighUi . Claudia l.cc. to Larry tiancc is the son of the Edward Olio Hieck is amtouiKed In Mr .) Knolls of Wolverine Lake i the sam zig-zag motion. | The engagement ot tlicii and Mrs. Cicorgc N. Heechum of Repeat the entire procedure daughter. .ludy Elizabeth, In Dixie lliglmav Miss Heeeluim's i, on the lower lashes. You'll find: Ronald L. Davis, is announced fiance is the son ol Mr and Upton-Spence that this application tec-hnique liy the Elton Houcks -of .South Mrs Douglas Iticck ot .loyceil Mr, and Mrs. Robert Upton ot SSv the Hoslyn SI.M M,ss M.u.-k s „,i„l„.r v„„s I.ak,' tlrlvo Hnnounce ' S Graban-Jacobs daughter Sharon, to C you,, own la.shcs at- renT. SELL, TRADE---USE Spence, I SMt, who is stationed tractively for the addition poNTlAC PRESS WANT ADS! ^ A lanuary III7I) wedding is al Las Vegas, Nev. He is the E;,shjon Lashes. planned h> Margiirel C.raban son ot Mr. and Mrs. Archie ....................................■ -----:--------- and Dale Allen .Licohs. son ol Spence ol l.aSalle Street. Mrs. Ann \'adcr of Cedar Island Drive, While l.ake Township An August wedding is planned and Chester .lacolis of hlast by Kathy Sue Wheclock and Walton It o ii 1 c v a r d Miss sept fi vows are planned bv Dairy W raylot Die btidc- Biaban, a student ol Spring (’arolvn Sue Trice and Robert tdeci IS the daiighlcr ol Mrs. ^,„.o,. poUogc, her tinance's n,a, |os Moore. Their parents Noival K (randet ol Mch m a||„a mater, is the daughter ot are Mr. and Mrs, Larrv Trice .Street, Avon lownship, and ,1,,. (;,.orge C.rahaiis ot Cam-,,1 Farmington and Mr. and Lawrence Wheelock ot Ma.tison, tn ulge, Ohio M,., N,„.,„a,i Moore of Wixom Ohio. Her iiance is the son Ol the Chester T a y 1 o r s i Ferndale Houck-Dovis Davises of Escondido Road The couple has attended Westei Michigan Universitv and Fen State College, respcctiveh Wheelock-Taylor r Open 9 to 9 iMk Phone WW 682-0420 donnell coiffures a nd wig solon y TELEGRAPH ot ELIZABETH LK. RD. y 1 DRUM 1 LESSONS 1 PONTIAC MUSIC ; & SOUND : 1 A- 3101 Weft Huron S PHONE 682-3350 J C^luohjyeAA^ "FoiiiUHC SALE STARTS THURSDAY CELEBRATING WASHINGTON'S 237th BIRTHDAY ALL SALES FINAL SPORTSWEAR 50% to 75% OFF DRESSES 50% to 75% OFF WINTER COATS Loviska-Cox Trice-Moore Dadson-Tryles Hebner-Broome Mr. and Mrs Hobert llerbner of Oxford animiime the engagement ol llieir daughter. Kathleen Audrey, to Spec 4 Ihiillip Broome, I SA He IS the .son of Mr and Mrs Otis Broome oL Lake Dme. Oxlord Township. June 7 vows are planned Beechum-Rieck The engagement o| their Mortality Rate in Peace Corps Some os in The engagement and August The Thomas Iv Dddsons ol wedding plans ol I ti e i r Franklin announee the engage-daughter, Je.m Aim, lo Hiehard nicnt ot their daughter, Ciael M Cox are amiouiiei'd hy Mr. Frances, to James Francis and Mrs James Foviska of Tryles, .son of Mr. and Mrs. Ogemaw Ko.id Miss Fo\ iska's Stanley F Tryles of Madison lianee Is ihe son ol Mr and Iteiglils The bride-eleet at-Mrs Luther Cox ot Oilho leiuied Northwestern Miclilgail Street .Junior College Her fiance at- tends Wayne Slate Univorsity, .\ \TI0i\AL PREVIEW OF sprim; IIAIRFASHM Being natural, as the trend |5 for spring, docs not nec-essarily mean being casual. ' It can and tloes mean be-^ ing arll'iil without artifice. . R\^BAIJ;S IIEAITY SllOl'PE «« W avitr .StnM i FK 2-1424 % ENTIRE STOCK: FUR TRIM, UNTRIMMED, CAR COATS Sfrohmeyer-Turner Taylor-Hayes A June i:t wedding iS'planned hy Susan Carole SIrohmeyer, The engagement is announced daughter ot Mr and .Mrs F. A. ol t'arol Foiiise Taylor and SUoInmwcr of Lake Oakland .lorry Hayes The bride-elect Shores, and Koiiald Kenneth Hie daiigliter of Mrs Olin Turner A student al Ferris 'I'a\ lor ol Highland and the. late State College, he is Hie son of Mr. Taylor. Her fiance is the Mr and Mrs Lionet Turner of son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Koval ()ak Hayes, also of Highland PEARCE Floral Co. To Remind You We are closed on Wednesdays. Please p calls wi( Phone FE 2-012 OFF KNIT SUITS and COSTUMES 1/^ OFF SLEEPWEAR and ROBES 1/^ OFF FUR HATS, GLOVES BAGS OFF Qluoe Pruchnicki-Knott Whife-Leineke The engagement Is aiiiKHineed Mrs. LaMae White of W'esI WASHINL7T0N Df II vou <>f LoiiAnn Elizabeth Huron Street anmninces the have a son or daughter in the I'nicjiiiKki and Ronald Edward engagement of her daughter. Peace Corps, or one hoping to Patrick Knoll She is the Robyn L. to Michael E. join. >ou can'rest as.surtKj bo ll daugliler ot" .Mrs.^ William A. Leihekc. He ,is the son of Mr. be as safe in Tjmbuctoo as in Baggett^of Buffalo Drive. Coni- and Mrs. Edward J. Lcineke of Oshko.sh • hierce Township and the late VVesj Huron Street. February That-s the reassuring repon Urnest A. I’ruchnicki. Her 1970 vows are planned. ' given by Dr John Harkness the Corps'" medical director In nearly eight years, 45 corpsmen have died precisely the. same mortality rate as for the same . age group in the U S. Nearly half perished in ve--hide accidents. Despite exposure to lepers, tuberculars, tropical parasites, malaria, and other extraciijdinarv hazards, only one cor||i!man died from a tropical dhsease — a case pf amoebic hepatitis in the Philip-pines. POSH! iT'.'i \ ISIT tU R SHOWROOM ••Kinf Viimilurr amt lyualilv €«r|V«linf[ SlncH<>24" OF WATERFORD CuMAmert ‘ it.. . , 334-0981 TOWN & COUNTRY TRAMPESE CASUALS values to $15 =^3 CAPEZIO CASUALS Values to $17 $4 TOWN & COUNTRY COBBLERS DRESS STACKED values to $20 ^6 CARESS A ■ / ADORES CAPEZIO values to $22 ^7 DELISO DEBS AMALFI values td $28 $9 HERBERT LEVINE ANDREW GELLER values to $45 $12 Alvin's of Pontiac, Rochester, Oakland Mall THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, moo I |I'V I ' '\\ I MARKETS The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Friday. Produce Trade Moderately Active SUOMMS Stock Market Opens Lower Apples, Jonathan, C.A., bu. . Apples, McIntosh, bu........ Apples. Northern Spy. bu. Apples, McIntosh, C.A., bu. . Apples, Steele Red, C.A., bu. VEGETABLES Beets, Topped, bu.................S2.75 Cabbage, Curly, bu.......... ’ “ Cabbage, Red. bu............ Cabbage, Standard Variety, bu.......... »R» "b“u. Horseradish, pk. bskt............. 4.S0 Leeks, dz. bchs....................3.00 Onions, 50-lb. bag ............... 1.85 Parsley, Root, dz, bchs...........J.f*" NEW YORK (UPI) - The stock market opened lower today in moderately active trading. * * * The hews background appeared somewhat more favorable, but carryover selling from the previous session could still pressure the list. Some constructive items included the highest rate in housing starts last month since February, 1964, and the continued rise in personal income in January, although it was the smallest monthly boost in over a year. Shortly after the opening, the UPI stock market indicator showed a loss of 0.61 per cent eron 316 issues traded. There were 195 declines and 53 advances. ★ * ★ Steels retreated. Chemicals were mixed, but electronics generally worked lower. Autos lacked direction. RECORD DECLINES National Steel dipped V2 in its group, while U.S. keel gave up %. Bethlehem fell %. Du Pont picked up after sliding more than A Monday. Eastman Kodak eased I2. In the electronics, Honeywell )st %; Motorola Vi; General Electric •'4. Control Data held unchanged. General Motors added I'll in its group, while American Motors eased V». Ford held unchanged. Corning Glass works dipped l‘/2, with Teledyne off a similar amount. Monogram industries gave up 1, Minnesota Mining 1%. American-So. African rose 1%. Brief Looks at the News NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market yesterday took its largest loss since Jan. 6. The Dow Jones industrial average plunged 14.23 to 937.72. Declines led advances on the New York Exchange by three-to-one. Trading was light 11.67 million shares. 'arsnips, 'h bu. — >„r mansion. Most CUNNIFF likely it was operated by a private party. And though standards sometimes were good, the image of the entire industry was tarnished by the many that were poor. * Today the industry is one of the glamor attractions on Wall Street, with some companies commanding price-earnings multiples of 100, meaning that investors are willing to pay times earnings for a share of the action. For a comparison, consider th-> P-E of Goodyear, which is or American Cyanamid, near 18, or DuPont, which is 21. A P-E of 100 for a nursing home may seem absurdly high but hundreds of investors don’t seem to think so. $300 REPORT So great is the investor interest, and so meager the number of analytical summaries, that one Wall Street researcher now offers for $300 a copy a study of this industry, which just 10 years ago was thought to be an unchanging area of enterprise. The report, by Equity Research Associates, sums up the change in this way: The motel chains drove out the operators of roadside cabins. The grocery chains captured the retail food industry from the independents. Now the public corporation, cvming multiple facilities, will take over the nursing home ' dustry. The corporations and their investors aren’t fomenting the change by themselves. In fact, it would be more accurate to say they are simply capitalizing on these factors: Society is changing and many urban families do not have the facilities to care for elderly parents. In a more rural society it was not unusual for three generations to live securely in the same house. Life spans are increasing, and so, therefore, are the number of elderly. There were 16.5 'million Americans over 65 in The Census Bureau estimates there will be 26 million by 1980. ■ The rising costs of medical care are making it more difficult for hospitals to accommodate the chronically ill or the long-term convalescents. Some nursing homes can turn profits at room charges of $18 a day. Hospital rooms are at least twice that. * , * * The sources of funds with which to pay medical bills have grown in the past few years: Social Security, medicare, medi-c.ald, insurance policies, pensions, annuities and private savings. In fiscal 1967, close to $50 billion was expended for health and medical care in the United States, an increase of 12 per cent in one year. Health is huge and growing business. NO VACANCIES It is potential profits rather than altruism that motivates the operators of chains, the franchisers and other entrepreneurs. Motel owners often have to worry about vacancies. Well-run nursing homes have waiting lists. Dekpite a sharp increase in the building of nursing homes, especially during the past two Of three years, health officials estimate there is still a shortage cf close to 300,000 of suitable nursing home beds. ie ★ ★ This has been the trend: In Mutual Stock Quotations s Fnd 13.32 14.56 i"n?J?rse Equity r Equit Gth 21 9.25 10.11' FranMIn ( Com Stk Om^a One WmS li Pilgrim 10'.89 IV Vandals smashed seven plate glass windows and a door valued at $945 inside a drive-in restaurant under construction on .. Huron just west of Wide Track Drive, it was reported yester-| ^'day to Pontiac police. 1 Deiawar. Della Tr Divid Shr DowTh 11 I CoAm 16.16 17.66 ' Guid 10.57 10.57 / indic 15.7715.77 rest Group: IDS ndi 5.82 6.32 2^78 2S Ivy 30,54 30'.54 Johnstn 22.29 22.29 Keystone Funds: . Cus B1 20.71 21.61 Cus B2 21.90 23.89 Cus B4 1.5711.54 Cos K1 .4410.33 Cus K2 6.49 7,08 Cus SI 22.93 25.02 Knick Gth 13.0214.26 LeYlsch 16'.9618'.54 Libehy 8,27 9.04 Life ^^tlt 5.24 6.27 Ling 9.12 9.97 I Loomis Sayles Fds: ■ I Capit 13.3813.3S Stale St Ur Steadman Fds: Am Ipd 15.33 FidUC '8.39 Scien 6.85 1929, about 1,200 institutions offered 25,000 beds, according to Equity. By 1954 some 7,000 institutions provided 180,000 beds. In 1S66 the totals were 12,853 and 701,111. In the next two years, however, the number of facilities leaped to 19,256 and the number of beds to 873,189, largely because of the influence of medicare. It is growth such as this, projected into the future, that is making scores of companies jockey for position and profits. Many of the companies are going to be losers, but the betting is that more than a few will succeed. Detroit Police Deny Helping Prostitutes DETROIT (« - state Rep. James Del Rio, D-Detroit, and the Detroit Police Department clashed Monday over Del Rio’s charge that Detroit police transport prostitutes from hotel hotel and receive payoffs from them. Del Rio told the city’s Common Council he had “followed policemen in automobiles and watched them haul prostitutes from one place to another. He said he saw pickups made at hotels and payoffs handed to policemen and had s t i 1 photographs of the transactions. Inspector William G. Hunn of the Police Vice B u r e a i described as “an outright lie’ Del Rio’s accusations that prostitutes have paid off policemen and that officers h a v transported prostitutes. Remington Shop Opens in Pontiac The Shaver Shop, authorized Remington factory service and sales center, opened yesterday at 61 W, Huron. Owner Garrett Wkson said the new store carries Remington electric shavers, curlers and cordless knives and services all brands of electric shavers. Ford Profits Hit 1627 Miiiion 2nd Highest Earnings in History of Firm DETROIT (2P) — Record sales and earnings in the last quarter of 1968 pushed Ford Motor Co. profits to $627 million — $5.73 per share of common stock. Sales for the year’s last three months were $3.8 billion and profits were $164 million, or 99 cents per share, according to figures released Monday by the company. * ★ tk The yearly profit report is the second highest in Ford’s history, topped only by 1965’s $703 million. In 1967, the firm reported a profit of just $84 million, or 77 cents per share, but said it was hampered by a lengthy United Auto Workers strike. HIGHER WAGES A new contract, agreed to £ifter that walkout and effective in 1968, brought higher wages and fringe benefits. Total 1968 sales of $14.1 billion were 34 per cent higher than 1967’s and were well over the company’s previous record of $12.2 billion, set in 1966. ★ * ★ Last year was the auto industry’s best ever in sales; 9.6 million cars sold on the U.S. market beat the previous mark by 300,000. General Motors earlier reported profits of $1.7 billion, of $6.02 per share on sales of $22.8 billion, and Chrysler Corp. reported profits of $290.7 million or $6.23 a share on sales of 7.4 billion. ★ ★ ★ Both reported increased sales, but only Chrysler claimed a new earnings high. Treasury Position 8,404,8&T .542.06 7,534,488,534.02 Ml'FSfh Deposits fiscal year July 1 114,689,493,701.57 91,315,039,971^8 Mu OmGth 5.03 6.34 Mu Omin 11.49 12.49 ' 113,445,843,364.04 Total debt MUt Shrs 22.48 22.4S Mut Trust 2.92 2.98 NEA Mut 12.00 12.24 Nat WSec 11.5012.44 X—361,191,406,320.99 347,349,411,801.17 Gold assets ^ ^ ^U,880,»54,641.47 Nat Ind 13.22 13.22 Nat Invest 8.08 8.74 Nat Sec Ser: Balan 12.4713.63 lect to statutory limit. Dividend Is Set by Market Chain The board of directors of Allied .Supermarkets Inc. announced today that the regular quarterly dividend of 15 cents per share will be paid April 9 to stockholders of record March In the Pontiac area. Allied supermarkets include Wrigley, Packer and Kmart stores. SuccessfuNnvestihg ^ * ^ ^ ** - By ROGER E. SPEAR Q—I’m considering a switch of capital from 200 Pioneer Natural Gas—averaging 22%—into convertible bonds. My investment objectives are protection against inflation and stable income. Is this the time to make the switch? Please name a few such bonds on the yielding at least 6% and selling at conversion parity.—H.T. A—Pioneer’s uranium discovery — through a subsidiary’s operations,— has added some speculative potential to stock, and bids have been moving up. You should be able to sell it above your cost price in order to reinvest your capital to procure more incbrjie elsewhere. Selecting convertible bonds for this purpose has posed problems. Your triple requirements are practically impossible to meet without some speculative risks that I cannot endorse. So am offering you a compromise selection from the Big Board with yields around 5%, eacl trading at a moderate premium Federal Pacific Electric 5%s of 1987, Granite City Steel 4%s of % # ■ 1994 and Gulf & Western 5%s of 1993. * * * Q—When reading the quotes oh mutual funds in the Wall Street Journal, is there any way to recognize the no loads? What does “chg” mean after “bid’’ in the final column? — C. L. A—In the Wall Street Journal the no loads are indicated by the letter (v) in parentheses, and this device, though it appears in some other publications, is not used in all newspapers. It stands for nei asset value. The surest identification is the similarity of the bid and ask quote. You will note that these are exactly alike for no loads be-no sales charge is added to the a$k (or,buy) price. As pointed out here recently, the net asset value is calculate daily. Total assets are divided by the number of shares outstanding to determine the bid or (redemption) price. The “bid the simple numerical difference, plus or minus, between one day’s asset va^e and that of the previous day.