McNamara Sparks War Step-Up Fear ONE cold: #»•* v-'V-«-'!(•'«< WASHINGTON (AP) - Defense Secretary. Robert S. McNamara’s impending resignation is generating fears on Capitol Hill that he may have been pushed out as the first step of an accelerated U S. war effort in Vietnam. * * * The board of the World Bank was to meet informally today to consider nomination of McNamara for the organization > presidency. It was not known if a decision would be made immediately, or when McNamara might quit his Pentagon post if he is selected. It was generally expected that, in any event, McNamara would not assume- the bank presidency until President Johnson has chosen r Some congressionai sources greeted work of the defense chief’s retirement with predictions a stepped up U.S. military drive in Vietnam is in the works. ★ ★ ★ And Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., questioned publicly whether Mc- Relafed Siory, Page A-15 Namara is stepping out voluntarily. He cited some reports t^e secretary did not want to quit. Kennedy said it was improtant that Congress and the public "know really what is the basis” for the move. Sen Claiborne Pell, D-R.I., called on McNamara in a Senate speech to stay On the job. He described the secretary as a voice of restraint in the highest (KDITOR'S NOTE - Thv> ix the xcfpnd in a xeriex on Christmax gift xiiggexlionx that are available in nrcn niprrx.) By JUNE ELERT Santa's sack this year contains some do-it-yourself sets that cater to childish delight In horrors, both edible and decorative. Molds and heating units are included. Some use ordinary light bulbs for power, some are battery-operated. All are under $10. ■k it it Little boys will be contending with their sisters for the privilege of slaving pver a hot stove to bake all kinds of kitchen delicacies. The .see-ln oven and cooling chamber, plus all ingredients, sells for under $12. Heat is provided with two 100-watt light bulbs (not included). In Today's Press Sports Tigers deal Wickersham; Heisman.winner named; Central cagers triumph-PAGE D-1. Joyriding Stealing cars for fun is serious business -- PAGE B-5. Levy Defeats Romeo, Farmington school officials disappointed by Monday elections — PAGE A-4. Area News A-4, A-5, A-$ Astrology C-1# Bridge ‘ C-IQ Crossword Puzzle D-15 Comics C-ID Editorials A-6 Food Section . G4, C-5. D4, D-7 Markets M Obituaries ......... D-l Sports D-l—D-5 Theaters C-« TV and Radio Programs . D-IS WUson, Earl Women’s Pages .. ~ ' councils of the administratiqn and said if McNamara left there would be “a very real hardening of positions.” The White House, Pentagon and Gen. William C. Westmoreland, U.S. commander in Vietnam, meanwhile denied reports a McNamara resignation would herald a change in Vietnam policy or that he was being dumped. w ★ * Capitol Hill leaders who frequent the White House suggested privately that withdrawal of McNamara from the Cabinet will add weight to the already considerable influence Westmoreland has built up with President Johnson. Word that Texas Gov. John Connally was to be in Washington today seemed certain to spur new speculation — despite his denials — that he is Johnson’s choice to replace McNamara. AP Wlrwholo APPEAL FOR TAX INCREASE — Secretary of the Treasury Henry H. Fowler (right) renewed his appeal today (or a tax increase approval by the House Ways and Means Committee. At the left is Budget Director Charles Schultze. For Young Do-It-Yourselfers Santa Packing Horror Kits Does your future lawyer still yearn to be a garbage man when he grows upf A hydraulic sanitation truck with scoop and top opening will give him a head start. Under $7. Educational toys rank high this year, beginning with a set of equipment designed to teach your baby to read. F’or 2-to-6-year-olds, it contains everything needed to accomplish the purpose in 10 minutes a day. Sells for $5. * * * Science-minded seniors will be intrigued with a geology or chemistry laboratory, each in a metal case. Rock enthusiasts receive samples of gold ore and petrified wood, pick-hammer and balance. Future chemists can test their abilities with a manual of over 500 experiments and a solid fuel rocket. Each sells for under $9. TAKE-APART TOYS Among puli toys for toddlers, there is a hen that cackles when her wheels go ’round. She sells for under $3. A busy train with movable parts for the take-apart and put-together crowd sells for about $4. A doll in foreign costume, peeking from the stocking top, will delight the wide-eyed little mother Christmas morning. Take your pick of Norwegian, Brazilian, Mexican, Indian or Russian, for about $6. w ★ ★ Science is the “Thing” for ’67 even (or the very young. A remote control fluffy poodle that jumps, walks, begs and barks, operates on two “D” cell batteries (not included) for about $5. Fowler Makes Tax Hike Pitch WASHINGTON (AP) — Secretary of the Treasury Henry H. Fowler gave Congress an administration proposal today for a $7.4 billion tax increase and a $4 billion spending cut, and said it would be unthinkable not to enact it promptly. Fowler said the combination would cut expected deficit from more than $25 billion to less than $14 billion and would help in. strengthening the U. S. dollar against international buffetings. Fowler appeared before the House Ways and Means Committee which shelved President Johnson’s (ax proposal almost two months ago, saying it could be considered when Congress and the executive branch agreed on spending cuts. (Mds pgainst getting a tax bill through even one house of Congress this year skyrocketed yesterday when Chairman Wilbur D. Mills, D-Ark., of the House Ways and Means Committee said it would be impossible in that branch where all money measures start. ★ ★ ★ The proposal Fowler made today included Johnson’s original tax bill with an addition embracing an appropriation cut formula Fowler said would amount to about a $4 billion this year, divided equally between civilian and non-Vietnam defense budgets. DEEPER CUTS WANTED Members of the committee have continued to oppose a tax increase unless even deeper cuts are made. Tax components of the administration plan are based on a 10 per cent surcharge on the income tax paid by individuals and corporations, accelerating collection of some corporate taxes and deferring declines in exci.se taxes. ★ ★ ★ "Never Ijave we been confronted by a fiscal problem which, in my judgment, was more decisive for our country and the free world.” Fowler solemnly told the committee. DOWNTOWN FINERY — Pontiac’s main street shopping center is decked out in its Christmas finery as the shopping season gets seriously under Way on festooned S At Waterford Hearing State's Fair Housing Bill Hit Vote Nixes Withdrawal CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (41 — A resolution urging “the prompt return of American soldiers from Vietnam” was defeated by Cambridge voters, 17,742 to 11,349. Both critics and backers of the Johnson administration’s policy on Vietnam said they were encouraged by the vote. In^Washington, Democratic National t'ornmittee Chairman John M. Bailey described tlje vote as “an encouraging endorsement of President Johnson’s policies.” By JIM LONG Proposed state fair housing legislation came under heavy attack at a public hearing jn Waterford Township iast night. Onjy a few of the 115 persons attend- Related Story, Page A-15 ing the meeting at Mason Junior High Schooi voiced support of the measure. The hearing was called by Republican State Representatives Loren D. Anderson of Waterford Township and Clifford H. Smart of Walled Lake. Other meetings in the area are planned by the two legi.slators before returning to Lansing Dec. 12. According to Smart his mail is evenly divided on the issue now, compared to the 10-1 ratio against it when the matter first came to the attention of the public. “I’ve received more mail on fair housing than I did on the income tax,” .said Smart. Neither Smart nor Anderson has taken a stand on the issue. "Right now, it’s our intention to get as much information about the bill before the people as possible,” said Anderson. “Of all the people I’ve heard from, cither in favor or against, none has ever completely read the bill. ” k k it Those voicing opposition to the bill ranged from a clergyman, who said it “stinks,” to a housewife, who expressed concern that the Civil Rights Commission Would have too much power. A number of objectors prefaced their Who Are COG Enemies? Who Are Its Friends? 'Reds Not Using Port' PHNOM PENH, Cambodia OB - The Cambodian government denied today that the port of Sihanoukville is being used to supply North' Vietnamese and Vietcong forces in ^outh Vietnam. ♦ ■* ★ U.S. military officials in Washington last week expressed concern that Communist forces would use the port on the gulf of Siam if intensified U.S. bombing of land routes from North Vietnam sliould seriously retard the flow of materiel southward. fEDITOR’S NOTE — Thix ix the third in a xeriex on the Southeaxt Michigan Council of Governments, a projected regional association of local governments in a six-county area.) By L. GARY THORNE Assistant City Editor—Suburban There are essentially three flavors of oniplon on COG, the Southeast Michigan Council of Governments now in its final phase of organization. Opinion, which is subject to change with the next political wind, now appears divided thusly: • Those who favor COG. • Those who are absolutely opposed to COG in any form. • And those who favor a restricted COG. The bulk of opinion appears to be In the first and third categories, although many of those now favoring (he restricted form for COG are realists. port the limited version because they realize events have moved well enough along that it is remote that COG could now be untracked completely. Christian Powell, chairman of the dissident 19th Congressional District Republican Committee, is opposed to COG outright, but does think State Sen. Robert J. Huber’s proposed legislation would “at least limit COG” -APPEARS TIED UP Huber’s bill, which deletes school districts as COG members and requires elected officials as local representatives to COG, appears to be locked in a state House committee. One of the prime movers for COG here and around the nation has been the federal government, which seeks to solve urban problems on a regional basis. Opponents to COG have appeared in recent months to become more numerous, or at least more 'vocal. This has remarks by saying they were not opposed to minority groups or they were not being discriminatory. “We do not owe these people a law that .infringes on our own rights in the name of social progress,” commented one home owner. A Pontiac fireman critical of the bill said; “The Negroes are advancing and they will continue to advance ... but I don’t think I should have to give up any of my rights.” ★ * A Several persons wanted to know, if the bill was approved, whether it wouid be subject to a referendum election, and if Realtors Protest Open Housing In a letter received by the City Commission last night, the Pontiac Board of Realtors protested a local open housing ordinance being considered by city commissioners. * * ★ Bruce J. Annett, president, .said the realtors are opposed to “any ordinance. Related Stories, Page A-10 law or legislation that will remove from an owner control of his private property” In another letter on the subject, the Pontiac area Chamber of Commerce advised deferring action on a local ordinance pending the outcome of pri»-posed state legislation. Howard Nelson, C. of (^ president, .said the board of directors, "supports in policy the State Chamber of Commerce endorsement of a fair housing law in the state of Michigan. * ★ * “Since prompt .state action appears likely which will require local ordinances to conform, the board feels local action should await outcome of state action,” he wrote. Annett said, “We believe that every citizen .should have the opportunity to buy or rent private property anywhere but also believe the owner of private properly .should have the right to dispose of his property in accordance with his own desires. it were, what procedures should be taken to circulate petitions. NECESSITY QUESTIONED The necessity of the bill also was questioned. “If there is no law preventing the sale to a Negro or a Chinaman, why all this hullabaloo?” a resident asked. One woman who owns an apartment in Pontiac complained “I pay taxes ahd I see no reason why I have to sell to anybody I don’t want to.” * * * Of the minority favoring the biil, two were young men in their early 20s and a clergyman, who said he believed it is right. “Human rights are more important than property rights,” he added. ’4 agree that we shouldn’t be bullied into taking action, but I think we should pay attention to the signs of the times.” Forecast; Warmer With Snow or Rain Early morning temperatures registered a wintry 16 today, but it will be warmer tomorrow. Temperatures are expected to dip into the low 20s tonight and climb to near 30 tomorrow. There’s a chance of some light snow later tonight, and snow or rain is predicted (or tomorrow. ' Today’s light .southerly winds at five to 12 miles per hour will become southeasterly eight to 16 miles tonight. * ★ ♦ Precipitation probabilities in jjer cent are today .5, tonight 50, tomorrow 70. The temperature'^^n downtown Pontiac at 2 p m. was 29. Connally Visiting D. C. AUSTIN, Tex. (AP) — Gov. John Connally, one of those mentioned as a possible successor to Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara, is visiting Wa.sh-ington today. A Connally aide confirmed the trip Tuesflay night and said that the governor had nb plans to talk about anything other than HemisFair ’68. an international exposition .scheduled to open in San Antonio next spring. “Any law that attempts to remove, delete or abridge the fundamental right of private ownership could lead to serious problems of enforcement and harassment of all citizens,” he said. OPINION ASKED Annett said the local realtors did not intend to enter into discussion of only local ordinances but were bsked to submit an opinion by the city officials. In other words, they reluctantly sup- (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 3) Ftara Mm ttiM Op«n hi SHOPPING ^ DAYS TO CHRISTMAS A—2 TUB PONTIAC PllBSS. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 29, 1967 Ike Urges Pursuit Over Viet Border NEW YORK (AP) - Former President Dwight D. Eisenhow* er says the United States can win the Vietnam war and urges greater leeway for U.S. troops in pursuing enemy forces across South Vietnam's national frontiers. He advocated limited forays Into the Demilitarized Zone to spike enemy artillery and '-‘hot pursuit” of enemy ground forces, even when they seek sanctuary in neutral Cambodia or Laos. principle should also apply toiof U.S. forces in Vietnam, ap-aircraft fleeing over Red China, parently ‘‘has about as many He discounted the poasibility of troops as he would like, or as major intervention in Vietnam he’s asked for.' by either the Soviet Union or' But he added, ‘‘Personally, Red China. The former Republican president and allied conunander during World War II spoke Tuesday night in a taped interview on the CBS television network along with Omar N. Bradley, the nation’s only other living five-star general. Eisenhower «aid Gen. William Eisenhower said the pursuit C. Westmoreland, commander Viet War Crops Up Three Times at U.N UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (iP>-The Vietnam war cropped up three times at the United Nations yesterday. ★ * * The South Vietnamese observer to the United Nations urged that allied forces cross the Demilitarized Zone into North Vietnam to cut the Ho Chi Minh trail over which North Vietnamese troops and supplies flow South. General Asembly President Cornelia Manescn of Rmnania said that hfo government was telling U.S. roving Ambassador W. AvereD Haniman t h a t a stepup in the U.S. bombing will not end the Vietnam war. The Soviet Union told the General Assembly the United States is increasing its bombing of the North and claimed that Hanoi poses no threat to the Americans. * A U.S. delegation spokesman has indicated that Washington will try to bring Vietnam before the Security Council if the Senate^ passes a resolutoin recommended by its foreign relations committee. The proposal calls U.S. Ambassador Arthur J, Goldberg to bring a resolution aimed at settling the war before the council. Avon A4on Is Charged in Death of Boy A 21-year-old Avon Township man. Gary Lee Howard of 1669 Auburn, was held by police today on a first-degree murder charge in the death of his girlfriend’s young son. Howard was arrested yesterday by Shelby Township police after an autopsy revealed 1-yearKtld Scott Lloyd died of bead injuries. ★ * * The child’s mother, Mrs. Bessie yeyd, 8686 Rhode, Shelby Township, a divorcee, told police she found Scott dead in his crib in their home Friday. She said she thought her son had ‘‘choked to death.” The results of the autopsy and a subsequent police investigation were turned over to the Macomb County prosecutor’s office, which issued the war rant for Howard's arrest. He was to be arraigned later day. U. S. RESOLUTION I The United States presented a 'resolution seeking a new Geneva conf^ence on Vietnam before the council in February 1966. Because of Soviet and French opposition, Washington ever pressed it to a vote. ★ ★ w Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Vasily Kuznetsov brought Vietnam before the General Assembly yesterday, accusing the U.S. Air Force of wreaking North Vietnamese civilians. GOLDBER’G PARRY Goldberg challenged Kuznetsov to walk down the hall to the Security Council if he wanted to debate the- Vietnam war. Turk Jets Buzz Cyprus Capital NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) -Turkish jet fighters buzzed N1 cosia today while U.S. special envoy Cyrus Vance conferred with Greek Cypriot leaders or their opposition to Turkey’s virtual war or peace conditions for the protection of the island’! Turkish minority. U. S.-built F86 jets swooped down over Nicosia’s airport and the Turkish sector of the capital. Turks cheered them; Greeks watched them silently. The annual Pontiac Goodfel-ws newspaper sale, set Saturday, will be based on the theme, Help the needy have a merry Christmas.” Some 2,000 special Goodfellow editions of The Pontiac Press will be sold by once-a-year newsboys” from the Pontiac Metropolitan Club, Spirit Number Six. Goal for the sale is 93,000. Funds will go to purchase clothing and fuel for nnderprivileged families, according to Lt. Wil-Nesbitt of the Pontiac Police Department, chairman of the drive. Goodfellow members will concentrate on well-traveled areas such as downtown and shopping centers for their sales, he said. ★ ★ ★ All Goodfellows are city fire police or postal personnel. Nesbitt explained that any donation will buy one of the newspapers and donations may also be mailed to the police department, care of ‘‘Goodfel lows.” The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bnrean Report PONTUC AND VICINITY - MosUy sunny but coU today. High 27 to 32. Cloudy and not so cold with a chance of some light snow later tonight. Low 29 to 29. Thursday: warmer with snow or rain likely. Friday’s outlook: Cloudy with little i perature change. Winds li^t southerly five to 12 miles today and southeasterly eight to 16 miles tonight. Precipitation probabilities in p^ cent: Today S, tonight 50, tomorrow 70. & __ 5-03 I iMt Thurtday It 7:41 • Wwlnaiitay •! J;3I rlMi Thurulay al 4:37 euanaba 31 4 Fort Worth 44*^^ 0. Rapid! 35 14 Jackionvilla M 41 Houghton 16 13 Kaniat City 41 36 klSiZn ¥i t*. tISlIsSSt ^ fs Folliton 33 II NowOrlaant m S3 Travoru C. 33 II Haw York 31 M 41 31 Omoh. g 33 AO Wlraahala NATIONAL WEATHER -—*Most of the nation can expect precipKatton h) the form of rain and snow tonight except for a portion of the Midwest, California, New England and along the coast of the southern states. It will be colder in the Mid- would like to see him have another 100,000 .to just clean this thing up more quickly.” ★ ★ * At another point he said “the first principle of war is to win quickly ... I think that if you’re going to appeal to force, and disregard all international means of getting this thing set-Ued, then get all the force you can as quickly as you can.” Asked if he thought it was possible to win the war militarily, Eisenhower noted there were qlways defeatists: “People say, ‘Oh, you can’t win. What are we going to do? Better stop right here!’ Well, that’s silly. And I say, of course they can do it.' RAPS CRITICS In the past Eisenhower has repeatedly declined to recommend any specific strategy in the war. He said again in the interview, “I don’t believe anyone is in a position, that isn’t living this problem all the time, to criticize in detail the conduct of this war.” vitaUems to appear before it and Goodfellows' Sale Saturday AP Wiraplwto MAKING ANNOUNCEMENT — Democratic State Chairman Zoiton. Ferency is shown as he announces his resignation effective Jan. 15 or on the date of the election of his successor. The controversial party chieftain said his resignation was being submitted “for reasons directly related to fundamentals of political philosophy, principle and procedures.” Zolton Tabs Levin Possible Successor LANSING (AP) - Michigan Democrats beat the political bushes today in search of a successor to Stat^ Chairman Zolton Ferency, who is resigning In a controversy over national party policies and President Johnson. Ferency suggested State Sen. Sander Levin of Berkley and party cochairmen Patti Knox and Kenneth Hylton, both of De troit, as possible candidates for chairman. Levin, most often mentioned as a successor to Ferency, said he has ‘‘decided to explore thoroughly and vigorously the needs of the Democratic party at this juncture and the sagges-that I become a candidate Levin, a 36-year-oId attorney, is a former Oakland County Democratic chairman. ♦ * * Hylton, the party’s first Negro vice chairman, said he would be “interested,” adding that a number of people have called and written asking him about his possible candidacy. TIME AND PLACE Hylton said he is polling mem bers of the 85-man state central conunittee on the time and place for a meeting to choose a new chairman. The meeting will be held before Jan. IS, he said, adding that it probably would come “late in December or the very first of January.” Mrs. Knox, wife of Detroit housing director Robert Knox, said she had been approached on the subject of the chairmanship, but “have given it little thought because there was no vacancy.” F e r e n c y ’ s announcement brought expressions of gratitude for his years of work from party leaders, but most said they did not feel his views represented those of the majority of party members. LOYAL SERVICE’ “Zolton Ferency has served the democratic party loyally and capably over a long period of time,” said former Gov. G. Mennen Williams, who served six terms as Democratic gover- Fulbright Panel MayGotoLBJ ImjDatient Over Rusk's Refusal to Testify WASHINGTON (AP) - President Johnson may be asked to mediate a continuing dispute between Secretary of State Dean Rusk and the Senate Foreign Relations Committee regarding information on the Vietnam war. Some members of the panel are growing increasingly impatient over Rusk’s rejection of in- Birminghanri Area News Two Hearings Dec. 11 on Sewer Assessments BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP The Township Board will h( public hearings Dec. 11 on establishing sanitary sewer sessment districts in the Colonial Estates subdivision. The first hearing at 8 p.m. will be for the south district, with an 8:30 hearing to be held for the central district. Following a hearing this week, the board passed a reso- Bloomfield Glens Estates near Lahser and Quarton as a special assessment district for a water main extension total cost is $41,000. Each of the lots is being as- Contracts for the project have been awarded to lacobelli Construction Co. Inc., said a board spokesman. In other action the board has awarded a contract of $4,275 to Troelsen Excavating Co. for publicly answer questions on the administration’s Vietnam policies. * ★ Sen. Albert Gore, D-Tenn., lys he wants to take the c6c King Size 108x90-lnch‘BEACON' )100% Virgin Acrylic Blanket .Simms Price fast color S«v«r th« ulhfiiolD m luMwry. 100% virgin lie blonket with wiDgont Schiffli idery on 100% nylon binding. Pnrmonop^ finish to reduce shedding ond pilling. Machine woshoble ond guaranteed Famous 'Heirloom’ Pattern coZ Bedspreads Tirin or Full Size Feminine Gifts for Her. Gowns or Pajamas f ijtj ' ond pastels in sites small lo extro lorge. 9 " n brushed nylon po|omas in lovely f ry pmiel colors Si/ei 36 to 40 (Sown luei SIMMS..'* BUY, SELL, TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! Solid itaf# 4-troclt st speeds (7Vi-3V4-l% Ips), coptfon drlvw, 7” reel, two 6" ovol speakers for full, rich sound. Full S-wott music power. 7 pencil-type dynomic mikes, easy lever control operotlon, paute control Continuous tone and volume controls for each channel. Sound^n-sound 4-track stereo record and playback. #R5760S. Optional stereo speaker system ovailoble. 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Awake to music or go lo sleep lo music with this Panasonic rodio. $1 holds or chorge it with □ major credit cord SIMMS.™ Island Bridge Gets 'No' Vote in White Lake WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP-The Township Board’s “no” vote on a resident’s plans to build a bridge out to Dawson Island in White Lake brought applause from an unusually large audience of about 45 persons last night. The board’s opinion will accompany island owner Mrs. Estelle Dawson’s application for a dike and bridge construction permit from the State Department of Conservation. Trustee Walter H. Weinman provided reasons for the denial: the application doesn’t apply to the project, residents present expressed opposition to the project, and Mrs. Dawson’s plans are incomplete. The application available for the board’s review only included plans for a dike and not for the proposed b)r^ge. said Supervisor James L. Reid. ★ * ★ The board and residents both felt that plans were incomplete because Mrs. Dawson has previously registered plans to develop the island for a subdivision or apartments. NEVER GRANTED Reid reported that Mrs. Dawson’s request for rezoning of the 17-lot island for apartments was approved by the township zoning board March 6, 1968. However, the request was never granted because it wasn’t presented to the Oakland County Coordinating and Zoning Committee. Also, Mrs. Dawson would have to refile the request with the township, since the new zoning ordinance has been enacted as of this summer, Reid pointed The nine residents who spoke at the meeting said they opposed the whole plan. Among their fears were devaluation of their lakeside property and the marring of the lake’s beauty. Arleigh Hess, president of the 300-member White I^ke Citizens League, informed that the conservation department before giving Mrs. Dawson an answer, is required by law to obtain opinions from state and local health departments, the water resources board, state waterways commission, and the local School ^Officials View Levy Defeats By BETTY ANN SCHULTZ There is disappointment today in two area school districts as school officials take a second look at the results of elections Monday., Administrators in Farmington view a partial victory, while Romeo officials evaluate a complete loss. Farmington School District voters Monday approved hy 171 votes margin a $9-million bond issue and opposed by a 598-vote margin a 5-miU operating tax increase for 10 years. In the Romeo School bistrict Monday, seven votes defeated an 8-mill tax levy, a 5-mill increase. The failure of the millage proposal in Farmington “makes no difference this school year, only next year,” said Schools Supt. Roderick Smith. But, the administration and board are disappointed, he reported. Between now and next year>tije district could get more funds through prop- __________ erty taxes or another milliige proposal, said the superintendent. He added that another election before die regular school election in June is a possibility. The 5 mills would have gone for salaries, wages and fringe benefits. This increase would have raised the schools’ operating tax levy from the current 23.4 mills to 28.4 mills. The total levy, including 9 mills for bonds, now conies to 32.4 mills. The superintendent has pointed out that enrollment has gone up by 912 pupils this year to a total of 15,264. An administration official indicated that a factor influencing the defeat of the millage proposal was alarm by some district residents that their property assessments may go up. “They feared that they may be pay- ing more taxes than planned or that the district may not need the extra money,” raid the official. This is partially true. Both Farming-ton Township and the city of Farming-ton are reassessing property. This is a year ’round project, the assessors’ office in both municipalities pointed out. And, it is further true, that the Oakland County Tax equalization board fias recommended that both municipalities raise assessments. But this would also lower the equalization factor, by wiiich assessments are multiplied to get your tax bill. Thus, theoretically without an increase in the tax levy, property owners won’t be paying more, said the assessors’ offices. This, at least, is the theory. The success of the bond issue was a more urgent necessity than the mill-age increase, said Smith. The |9 million is earmarked for four new schools. THE PONTIAC PRESS WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1967 A—4 keoNms To Vie for State Title Clarkston Junior Miss Picked CLARKSTON — Miss Nancy Weiss, 17-year-old senior and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Weiss, 42 N. Main, is the new Clarkston Junior Miss. Selected in a recent pageant at the senior high school, she was presented with a trophy and a |250 scholarship by Clarkston Area Jaycees, Howe’s Lanes and Haupt Pontiac. Runner-up was Dawn Evely, winning a plaque and $100 scholarship. A special judges’ award was presented to Leslie Surre for congeniality, leadership and alertness. Nancy was crowned by the 1966-67 Clarkston Junior Miss, Jeanne Shoots, now a student at Oakland University. Nancy will compete in the State Junior Miss Pageant in January at Pontiac Northern High School. The site for the district’s third senior high, to be ready during the 1969-70 school year, has been purchased on 12 Mile west of Middle Belt. The district’s 19th Elementary school also to be open during the 1969-70 school year, will be located on a not-yet purchased site in the eastern portion of the school district. Sites have not been chosen for the district’s 20th elementary and the fifth junior high, both to be ready by 1972. The bond issue will also buy about 50 acres as future school sites. The close defeat of the Romeo School District proposal for 8 more mills — including an increase of 5 mills — disappointed and somewhat surprised the school officials. “We had expected a close but favorable election,” said Schools Supt. T.C. Filppula. While the margin between success and failure was seven votes, four of the total 687 Votes were disqualified. The Board of Education will probably call for another millage election before next Sept. 1 after reexamining the budget and possibly reducing the request, said the superintendent. The district may suffer an anticipated $100,000 deficit by next June 30 because of the election failure, the Asst. Supt. Robert Randell has said. Filppula added that “many people didn’t realize that the levy wouldn’t have started until Dec. 1968. The mill-age increase would have amounted for the property owner to about $40 more a year based on $5 per $1,000 of state equalized valuation. Of the 5 additional mills, 3 were for debt retirement and 2 for some maintenance, six new school buses, some remodeling and salary adjustments. Couple to Receive Late Son's Medals NANCY WEISS The board also directed Reid to In-vesUgate why some 20 residents in Twin Lakes Subdivision have not received property tax rebates. Residents had appealed their assessments several years ago and received a favorable opinion from the State Tax Commission. 2 on County Panel Rap Avon Planners Revisions Eyed for Programs in Holly Sdhools HOLLY — The board of education here is studying a special report by Supt. Russell Haddon on the present school program and the revisions that must be made because of the Oct. 30 defeat of a $5.2 million bond issue. The biggest problem the board now faces is what to do when we run into the expected classroom shortage, explained Haddon. “We may even have to add some temporary classrooms next semester or reduce the academic program.” he said. The bond issue if passed would have provided for a new $3.8 million junior high. ★ ★ * A new election might be decided on by the board in the near future, possibly at next Monday’s meeting, said Haddon. NEW OFFICES The board agreed to present plans for More Area News, Pages A-5 and A-8 remodeling the old Washington Street School Building to be used for new board of education offices. The building is presently used for storage, and the second floor is occupied by the school credit union. “Our present administration building at the rear of the high school is inadequate both in appearance and in work space,” Haddon explained. The board has also approved a plan to publish a direct mail publication from the board of education to school district residents at a cost of $307 per edition. Four will be printed during the remaining schooi yea^ The board has agreed to set up an Inspection by arechitects of the aging Ben-sett Junior High School to determine necessary Repairs for safety and sanitation. “We hope to avoid remodeling the old school but some repairs are going to have to be made,” said Haddon. “The plumbing in the boys’ locker room is In bad shape, and some of the walls and windows in the gym appear to be in dangerous condition.” Walled Lake Resident Named to State Board WALLED LAKE - Fred M. Helne-mann, 58, of 3116 Southwind is one of seven hearing aid dealers appointed by Lt. Gov. William G. Milliken to the new State Board of Rearing Aid Dealers. The appointment is subject to Senate confirmation. Two members of the Oakland County Board of Supervisors’ Coordinating Zoning and Planning Committee took a verbqj slap at the Avon Township Planning Commission yesterday. ★ ★ ★ The committee’s decision on a rezoning matter opposed the township planners’ view. At issue is a proposed 64-acre mobile home park in the township to be located between M59 and Anburn, west of Devondale and east of Adams. Developers are reportedly planning to build a site for 338 mobile homes on the The law requires that the appointees be Mfirn Man 9R qualified hearing air dealers who have Ml led been actively engaged in the sale of hearing aids for at least three years. The board will pass on the qualifications of and licensing of hearing aid deal- KOKOMO, Ind. W) — James R. Gavin Jr., 28, of Utica was killed last night when the car in which he was riding veered off the road and struck an embankment. Change Is Dreaded Dragon Rural Life Fading Fantasy BY L. GARY THORNE Assistant qty Editor-Suburban The rural life — open landscape marked only here and there by sipall, sedate villages — Is a fastfading fantasy. It is a painful fact of life to those in and out of local government, but the hill and dale of Oakland County is going to be replaced by urban concrete. The remaining greenery wiii oniy be that which is pianned in the way of residential backyards, municipal parks and boulevard medi- Urban planners, who forecast the eventual demise of “country” life, see decked cities in our future with the more mundane motions of life — such as the movement of motor ^jNf^s Analysis^ vehicles — being accomplished un-dergrpund. ' Despite the disturbing trend. Judged inevitable because of this country’s population growth, several Oakland County communities appear to be digging in to fight the dreaded dragon named “change.” SANITARY SEWERS A recent city council meeting in Orchard Lake, for example, saw the comment that sanitary sewers would mean the development of “every piece of property in the city.” The resulting brief discussion Indicated that such total development was not desired. This factor, of course, was not the entire reason for Orchard Lake deciding some time back not to Join in the proposed giant Clinton-Oakland Sewer Interceptor. Meantime, across the county in Addison Township there are heated political differences on rezoning a piece of land there for Industrial use. Addison Is-as rural in character as Orchard Lake is suburban. To all intents, there is a substantial segment of Addison residents who want to retain a rural flavor’ to life there. OUTSIDE PRESSURES Pontiac Township illustrates still another aspect of growth and change. This area is being pressed by its neighbors to cooperate in the construction of mutual facilities to provide essential municipal services. While these services are necessary to that township’s eventual progress, that which is on the land now must pay in advance of the prosperity of progress. Township officials wonder outioud what happens when the money runs out Like the weather, progress will come. The. question is when, and who can afford it land at a cost of $1.8 million, according to their attorneys. * ★ ★ ★ The land for the proposed development is zoned correctly now as light industry. However, township rules call for the mobile home site to abut property zoned multiresidential. REZONING SOUGHT Attorney Daniel Devine of Bloomfield Hills said the developer had obtained the adjacent land along Devondale and asked it to be rezoned from single family to multiresidential. However, Devine laid, the township planners had voted against the rezoning, 6-2. Two supervisors on the committee critized township planners Mrs. Jean McDonnell of Southfield and Billy Van Arsdel of Addison Township both leveled the charge of “poor planning” by the township officials in not approving the rezoning. Mrs. McDonnell registered the only “no” vote in the 4-1 decision backing the rezoning, however. iShe explained after the vote that she was not opposed to the development, but to the township planners’ concept of zoning. NO OBJECTIONS Attorney Devine told the group that adjacent property owners had not objected to the project at previously held public hearings. He said he would take the county com. mittee’s affirmative recommendation and the township planners’ negative one to the Avon Township Board for a final decision in the near future. ★ ★ ★ Supervisor Van Arsdel announced at the committee meeting that it was his last one. He told members he was resigning his post of supervisor of Addison Township. Work Is in His Blood WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -Mr. and Mrs. John L. Klett, 5551 Tad-worth, are receiving today three medals and a ribbon bar for their son, who died as a U.S. Navy hospital corps-man in Vietnam Nov. 21. John E. Klett, attached to the 9th Marine Regiment, 3rd Marine Division, working out of Con Thien, was killed by artillery fire while aiding wounded men. Klett’s medals are the Purple Heart------------------------- 'K z ius* ^wop shop tional Purple Hearts. Area Citizen’s Band and ham radio operators have been Invited to take part, in an electronics swap shop set for 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Dec. 10 at tl^ Lawrence Institute of Technology cafeteria. South-field. , * ♦ w ' Proceeds from the swap will aid the school’s club station W8QOA. The corpsman Is also honored with the National Defense Service medal, the Vietnam Service medal and the Republic of Vietnam ribbon bar. Klett is a 1965 North Farmington High School graduate and attended Port Huron Junior College before enlisting in the Navy in May 1966. Farmer Laments Retirement School Board Eyes Discipline Case HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP - A ipan who once drove a team of horses to market will sell his last dozen eggs Saturday at the Oakland County Farmers’ Market. Leroy Currin, unmistakably a farmer, has raised crops and poultry 77 of his 80 years. During the last 30 years, he has worked portions of 98V5 acres at 1984 W. Highland. Curria’s most recent work has been selling 256 to 275 dozen eggs on Saturdays at the market. His 500 chickens are being raised by another man. Earlier, Currin’s land has yielded melons, potatoes, sweet corn and apples. The retiring farmer, relaxed but still with sparkle in his eye, will leave his nearly century-old farmhouse before Jan. 1. He will move Into a home on Fisher Road with the family of his daughter, Mrs. Uslie Fraser. OPEN LAMENT He openly laments that he no longer has the energy required to continue his livelihood. “I would be foolish to quit if I could work,” he assured. He pointed ont the mounting pressure on farmers to keep up with latest methods of raising crops and animals. “Farming is hard work and lots of overtime,” Currin said. “But it gets in your blood.” Currin took over his dad’s 160 acres in Southfield Township and grew potatoes and corn and raised hogs. Before age 30, he had served his township as clerk and treasurer, each for two years. LOST IN DEPRESSION Currin then moved onto 40 acres in Farmington Township. Although the Depression forced Currin to relinquish the acreage, it indirectly brought in money for the Highland farm, the farmer recalls. Currin’s career follows the life of the Oakland County Farmers’ Market. He remembers back some 40 years when 15 farmers sold at the open-air market on Cass Avenue near the railroad tracks. Currin then sold in the market when It moved to Mill Street, now the parking lot of Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital. He followed the market to the 4-H fairgrounds about 20 years ago and then to its present site on Pontiac Lake Road near the county road commission building. Saturday he will sell for the last Ume with about 125 other farmers. OXFORD — The readmittance on probation. of a student suspended for using abusive language to a teacher occupied members of the board of education last night. The student, a 10th grader, was required to appear with his parents before the board to give reason why he should be readmitted since his suspension a week ago. Schools Supt. Roger Oberg said the action was In line with a general crackdown In student discipline. Students caught smoking the first time if/insirV are suspended for three days. Those ^UTIinea tO OOarCf apprehended the second time are required to appear belme the superintendent with their parents before the board of education. “We have firmed up our policy of student conduct,” Oberg said. Guidance Program PTA Dinner Thursday Elmwoo4 School PTA will sponsor Up annual spaghetti supper from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the school, 2751 Auburn, Avon ’Township, according to Mrs. Joanne Begquist, PTA publicity chairman. The formation of an Avondale Youth Guidance Committee and its work with the youth of Pontiac Township was detailed for the towmihip board recently. Gerald Hanley, 3470 Greenwood, Avon Township, chairman of the committee, asked for the board’s endorsement of its work. He leported George Billings is vice chairman, Mrs. William Bergin secretary and Mrs. Raymond Ballard treasurer. He Bsid a counselor Is available at the Auburn Heights Boys’ Club to aid chUdren with problems. Leroy Currin Loads His Last Eggs THE FOXTIAC RRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1967 A—i Almont Village Police Chief Quits ALMONT — This village today has no police chief. The reason: Edward D’Arcy, who has been chief for 15 years, has resigned to l^eep a civil service job as sewage plant operator at Selfridge Air Force Base. D’Arcy had been working both jobs for over a year, said Village Manager Eugene King. “Now we’re looking for someone to replace him,” said King, “He will have to be on duty in uniform on weekdays from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m? and until noon ^ on Saturdays and be available on call the rest of the time. We hope to have a new chief at' least Within a month.” ★ ' ★ ★ For police service during the interim, residents are advised to contact the Romeo post of the State Police or the Lapeer County Sheriff’s Department who have pledged their cooperation with the village, said King. PART-TIME OFFICERS James Dougherty and Dale Marsh still remain as part-time officers for the village. D’Arcy told King that the Selfridge job offered better salary ' and fringe benefits than his position as chief. He was appointed chief 15 years ago. Earlier this year D’Arcy came under fire by the village council for holding the two jobs simultaneously. The council advised him he would have to quit his other job, wear a uniform on duty, and be on call 24 hours a day. The council also raised his salary from $5,800 to $6,200 a year. * ★ * On Oct. 3 he told the village he would quit the job at Selfridge by a Nov. 10 deadline and would stay on as police chief. “But he changed his mind and resigned. Now we’re without a chief,” isaid King. A new drug to lower cholesterol levels is Clofibrate, which inhibits the manufacture of cholestrol at an early age. Doors Open 9:30 'til 9 Every Day 'til Christmas] Makn a Color TV sot your special gift Idea —(top to bottom) The Sanlucar home entertainment center. Color TV, 6-speaker stereo, FM-AM-FM Stereo radio. Tonsberg: Automatic Fine Tuning, twin 6" oval speakers. Bromley: Big 23* diag., 295 sq. in. rect. picture. The Bromley, only $509.95* RCA Victor’s stylish Headliner is a Color TV portable with excellent performance. 14* diag., 102-sq. in. rect. picture, superb styling and portable convenience—at a price to please the most budget-conscious Santa. The Headliner, $329.95* On^ $2^^9§* The Carry-ette, EJ505 Black-and-white TV for that Very Special Person, (top to bottom) Sport has 15" diag., 125-sq. in. rect. picture, Daylight Picture Booster. Nimble; 11" diag., 71-sq. in. rect. picture. Jaunty; 8" diag., 38-sq. in. rect. picture. Nimble, only $99.95* New RCA Victor Solid State stereo consoles, (right) The Standish, with six angled speakers and Solid State stereo amplifier with 40 watts peak power, (left) The Visby: FM-AM-FM Stereo radio, 6-speaker stereo sound, powerful 40-watt peak power amplifier. Visby, $299.95* Radios for the special stocking-stuffer. (left to right) The FM-AM Coquette has perfume-box styling. Weighted Beanbag is the newest design in radio land. NewsoastSJ, a trim AM clock-radio. Bedtimer, an AM clock-radio with prize performance. Beanbag, $14.95* Give an RCA Victor phonograph, (left) Arabesque Solid State stereo, in famous “Swingline" design, has two 4* speakers in swing-out detachable enclosures. Budget-priced Barnstormer monaural phono (right), $24.95* Arabesque, $69.95* *Prlces are local distributor's, prices, terms and effers are optional with dealers. Service not included. Keep the Sounds of Christmas with an RCA VictorTapo Recorder, (left)the FJS-i3 plays anywhere, (right) The battery-operated YJD-16 plays snap-ln cartridge. The YJS-13, only $39.95* Cdma in for your RCA VICTOR CHRISTMAS ALBUM 'TwryCom# only Smn Murry- ____' . Chriitmat'^ 99C * 1he Mon TruMd Nitiw in Elootionici \ \ Brocade \ ' '' Jacket Dress V-' ' \ Lovely brocade jacket dreji for Holiday weor. Remove jacket for a ilunning basic draii. Graan or beige. Siiei 14Vi to 24'/i. Metallic Rib *23 DRESS Dreisei. . . Third Floor One piece nylon jliirlwoisl dre-,\ with snlm trnn SEE YOUR PARTICIPATING RCA VICTOR DEALER HARTMAN AePLIANCet •arree homb shop CADILLAC MUSIC SHOD . IMUMMk eieHn^N|BII^MDIO HMSHLAND PARKi SAM ABPLIANCB I Vktar Avoimm MATTS RADIO 4 TV 114*1 P*nfe*ll PIRDMONT JRWBLRY TASBR RADIO Mil W. S*v*n Mil* WAONRR feLBCTRIC I41U W. M«NIcImI« WALTSRS HOMO APPLIANCR 7US McOrcw anR Rranclw* WORLD WIDB TV IMM W. Savcn ,MII* SU8URIAN ANN ARIOR: HOMB ARRL. MART 4 RRANCHBS Ml* W. SiMlIinn BIvn. BERKLEY: HOCKBY RADIO BIRMINGHAM; BLOOMRIRLD TV 44M T*l**r*Rh CENTERLINE; OROROi RINKR APPLIANCB U4I* Van Dyk* CHELSEA: OAMRLR STORR II* N. Mdn DEARBORN: ADRAY APPPLIANCB MU* early*!* MRS COLOR VUB 1M*« MKMsa* MRLCZRK BROS. 411 N. Main SI. Its PAIRBANKI PONTIAC: ALL CITY TV IMl Orchard Laka Raad D HOUSRKRRPINO OP PONTIAC BILL PHTRUSNA 4 SON* WAYNE: .. OATBS PURNITl 1144* MIcMtan Talbott Taralons SWRRT'S RADIO WHITMORE LAKE; HAUCKS «SU Whitmar* Laka Road Lusciou-s colors of coquelte pink, zesly blue, shy blue and light caramel in sweoters, skirts and slacks. Sizes 8 to 18. Machine washable. Ghqrge It at Waite's. *7 .o *16 Sportswear . . . Third Floor RCA VICTOR DIET. CORP.—Dttroil k-* ’ THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 West Huron Street Pontiac. Michigan 48058 WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1967 Bowud K. Pniini Agm W. rntOMW inonUT* Via* PiuUNit BaeretUT utA AdY«tUtll>( Young Killer Given Just Desserts We commend law enforcement personnel, the jury and Circuit Judge William R. Beasley that apprehended, convicted and sentenced a 19-year - old youth found guilty of first degree murder in the death of a girl who, the prosecution charged, had resisted his advances. Under the sentence imposed, For- beasley riDio Acosta will spend the rest of his life in prison, with no parole open to him unless granted by the governor. ★ ★ ★ With national and local crime rampant, striking fear among citizens for the safety of their lives and property, prompt apprehension and punishment of criminals is society’s main protection against the lawless. The case in point serves as a fine example of cooperative and effective administration of justice, and one in which the area citizenry may well find satisfaction. Franco’s Grip on Spain Not Weakened by Age Unhappy Spaniards are apt to mutter that only “after Franco’’ will some half - promised reforms be achieved in their country. But Generalissimo Francisco Franco is one of the most durable of dictators and shows no sign of obliging ^em. After three decades of rule, he approaches his 75th birthday, Monday, stiU refusing to name a successor or to share his power. Though his control is unchallenged. Franco has felt it wise of late to grant his countrymen a degree of political expression. A new constitution adopted ih 1966 allows one-fourth of ttie Cortes (parliament) to be elected. Hence the first parliamentary elections since the Spanish Civil War of 1936-39 were conducted this year. In addition. Franco has relaxed press censorship and eased religious restrictions on non-CathoUcs. The liberalization moves were aimed at defusing social unrest at home and winning greater acceptance of his regime abroad —perhaps In quest of membership in the European Common Market and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. But the liberalization appears to have? encouraged more hopes among Spaniards than he was ready to fulfill. Franco told the Cortes on Nov. 18 “We have taken a historic leap of incalculable consequence, but we will need another 10 years to perfect and complete what we have done.’’ Some worker and student groups are more impatient. Their disenchantment has been expressed throughout 1967 in demonstrations and strikes. ★ ★ ★, Franco and the dissenters face a standoff. He appears unwilling to quash them entirely, and they appear unable to extract more than token concessions from him. Here enters the “after Franco’’ discussion. A 20-yeaivold law declares that Spain is a monarchy and that Franco will be succeeded by a person of “royal lineage.’’ The most likely candidate, Don Juan, son of Spain’s last king, is regarded as a liberalizing influence in Spain today. Why Not ^Accentuate the Positive’ of America? The critically-minded often downgrade the accomplishments of our economic system on the grounds that it has made us a nation of materialistic gadget collectors with a diminishing capacity to pursue or appreciate cultural things. But, if this were true, why is the educational level of our young people on a constantly rising cq|ve? Why is it that the best-trained minds in medicine, the sciences and the arts come to the United States from other countries to learn and perfect their abilities in their chosen fields? How is it that this country is concerned with improving opportunities available to those now living at substandard levels? The fact is that the competitive enterprise system produces Will a New Team Take Over Viet? Voice of the People: % By JAMES MARLOW AP News Analytt WASHINGTON - Is the departure of Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara from his post the first in a series of dramatic events involving the war in Vietnam? Whllethe White House would neither confirm nor deny Monday night that McNamara was on his way out — although other sources did confirm it - it should always be remembered President Johnson not only has a strong political sense but also a vivid dramatic one, too. It should be no surprise If 1918 turns out to be a very MARLOW Joh^ison and the North Vietnamese, out of the same set of circumstances, have exactly the same reason for wishing for exactly opposite results in the war next year. ★ ★ ★ The reason is the criticism piling up around Johnson for hM conduct of the war from all directions, including many within his own Democratic party. Because the criticism can have a tremendous effect, it is not far-fetched to expect startling events in the months ahead. POST IN JEOPARDY No one knows better than Johnson that his chances for renomination and reelection to the presidency are in Jeopardy if the war drags on through all of next year and the criticism continues to grow. The fact that be is President Is reason enough for Johnson to get the war over with as fast ap possible. His political fntnre ^ves him an added reason. Nothing could possibly help Johnson as mu2b politically as a smashing defeat for the North Vietnamese before next August’s Democratic nominating convention or, at the least, some weeks before the November election. ★ ★ ★ On the other side of the coin are the North Vietnamese. MAKE CONCESSIONS Even it they felt themselves slipping badly in 1968 it is not hard to imagine they would try to drag the war on through the whole year in the hope Johnson would be eliminated from politics and his isor woiM be anxious to conceasuns outright de- 'Now Is The Time For All Good Men To Come To The Aid Of Their Country!' David Lawrence Soys: Upgrading of Joint Chiefs Due the material necessities and luxuries of life so efficiently that it does not take all the average family’s income just to pay for food, clothing and shelter. There is much left over for a stereo sound system. There is an insurance policy or a savings account for the youngsters’ college. There is time to read and learn. There are increasing opportunities to travel. There is political freedom, and the constitutional system that guarantees individual rights and liberties. Yes, there is much RIGHT with the United States. Because of all the things that are right, we have a far better chance of solving the problems and correcting the inequities that remain with us than any nation of people the world has seen before. WASHINGTON - The resignation of Robert S. McNamara as secretary of defense and the ap-pointiwent o f a successor could mean more than a change in personnel. Fw a question of f u ndamental Importance is at stake: LAWRENCE Shall this enormous department of government which spends more than 870 billion a year be operated by one man — a civilian without the training or knowledge of military affairs so essential to an understanding of the defense of the United States in’ a nuclear age? McNamara is an efficient executive. He was president of the Ford Motor Co. when appointed to take charge of the Department of Defense. In the almost seven years that he has been in that post, he has acted, however, not only as the administrative head of a big department of government but as the adviser of the president of the United States on military policy. No matter how efficient as members of the Senate and. House armed services committees find out that there are omtradictory views within the Defense Department, it becomes necessary to undertake the lengthy and delicate process of congressional investigations before the President himself becomes acquainted with some of the differences between the military chiefs and the civilan officials. When the Department of Defense was established in 1947, tom which had prevailed daring World War I and World War n wonM be maintained. In fk)th those periods, the service chiefs of staff almost constantly sat at the elbow of the president of the United States. Whenever meetings with the president were necessary, they were held at the White House. The civilian secretaries also attended, and full opportunity to themselves. Bob Considine Soys: Greek Junta Behaves Similar to the Israelis ATHENS — Israel launched its preventive war to escape being crushed by encroaching Arab armor. It was successful. Greece’s three colonels initiated another kind of hit - first - and-explain - later, warfare, their I __________ bloodless coup| a businessman the secretary of last April, may have been or how con- They won. sclentlously he has devoted Like the Israelis, they pro-hlmself to bis job, the f a c t pose to hold what they gained CONSIDINE feat for them could not ob- make the war — Mc-id Secretary of State Dean Rnsk — have all been on the receiving end of the criticism dumped on the administration for the war. The President has been firm in his refusal to bow to the critics and take a softer stand in Vietnam. Both McNamara and Rusk are reportedly tired from their duties which began when President John F. Kennedy appointed them in 1961. ★ ★ ★ But if the two men should step aside within a relatively short time of each other it is almost certain to be interpreted as an effort Johnson to pacify his critics a bit while still continuing the war. If these two men go, it la not unlikely some other highly placed ones will follow. If that happens, then by convention time the war, except for Johnson, will be hi the hands of a new team. At first glance that might seem a political benefit to Johnson. Actually, it might .have the o|q>osite effect on the public mind. The solution to the war, which is the root of the anti-Johnson criticism, is not here. It’s in Vietnam. remains that military science has not been his life work. Originally there were three military departments — the Army, the Navy and the Air Force. When they were placed under a> single department after World War II, Congress failed to give to the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff their rightful position in the whole mechanism of national defense. ★ * * The members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff are expected to report to the President — their commander-in-chief — through the secretary of defense. They can go over the secretary’s head to the President if they wish, but it isn’t considered discreet to do so. As a consequence, when Verbal Orchids Harry R. Elkins of 748 Orchard Lake Ave.; 84th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Austin P. Webb of Port Austin, formerly of Pontiac; 51st wedding anniversary. Mrs. Fred Travis of 191 Cherokee; 91st birthday. Mrs. Cora M. Whitmore of Keego Harbor; 82nd birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Curtis of Oxford; 51st wedding anniversary. Mrs. Ethel Edwards of Rochester; 84th birthdaiy. Mr. and Mrs. Clifford H. McCormack of 18 Claybum; 58th wedding anniversary. until absolutely sure their homeland will be securer than before. The three colonels are, in fact, two colonels and a brigadier. In the Greek army a brigadier is one grade higher than a colonel and one below a general. Several doxen other lesser officers down to the rank of captain fill out the Junta. They serve as technical advisers to the colonels and the brigadier. ’The colonels took over swiftly and efficiently in the name of King Constantine II — who was asleep at the moment in a villa outside Athens — while their more deliberative superiors, the generals, had recessed their own coup planning, according to one Greek newsman who has counted 19 governmental upheavals in his 60 years. Whatever, the colonels and the brigadier and their cohorts earnestly assure visiting correspondents that if they had not made their move, a month in advance of the scheduled May elections, the probable 79-year-old winner, former Premier George Pa-pandreou, would by now have been succeeded by his 48-year-eld son Andreas. And that, they swear, would have fouled this ancient nest of democracy beyond recall. CONTENTION Andreas, former U.8. naturalized citizen and economics professor at the University of California at Berkley, would have dispatched King Constantine into exile by now, deposited Greece behind the Iron Curtain, exchanged Russia’s new Mediterranean fleet for the' U.8. Navy’s 6th Fleet, and other wise delivered the more than 8 million Greeks to the enemies of the western world. This Is the solemn conten-tention of the tu;o moot potent leaders of the April revolution, Coi. George Papadoponlons and Brigadier Styllanos Pa-takos. ’They base their belief on an impressive volume of statements the youqger Pap-andreou made in public and private in the weeks and days leading up to their seizure of control. ’Those statements are expected to be the substance of the prosecutor’s case against Papandreou when he comes up for trial before a court-martial on a charge of conspiring to overthrow the government He could be given a life sentence. ‘People Fail to Consider Feelings of Neighbors* It is no wonder^we are in such turmoil about peace and war when we fail to consider the .yights and feelings of our neighbors. We show no sign of brotherhood. We have the capacity to feel sprry about an injustice but we fail to do anything about it. We have become a selfish people. EUGENE P. STEFFENS 4337 LESSING, WATERFORD Answers, Letters Questioning Union Finances This letter is in response to two previous letters discussing union affairs. 'The UAW-General Motors Pension Funds are invested by a bank selected by the General Motors as provided by the contract. The UAW member, when he retires and starts receiving his pension payment, pays full income tax wi the monies he receives from the pension fund. The retiree who has spent the best years of his life working at General Motors receives a pension that has been negotiated by the UAW so he will not have to become a public burden. •4' The Union asks $20 in addition to regular 85 monthly dues and it goes into a fund to pay strike assistance benefits. It cost 84 5 MORRIS million a week in strike assistance benefits to feed the families of Ford workers while they were on strike and over a million dollars to keep alive their life and hospital-medical-surgical insurance. In the nine weeks of the Ford strike the costs were over 842 million. If the Union strikes General Motors it will cost 812-5 million a week to take care of the families. Mr. Reuther is concerned with obtaining equity and resolving the problems at Ford, Chrysler and now at General Motors. Mr. Reuther gave up his entire income for the duration of the strike. The writers of those letters are concerned about the welfare of General Motors officials, as nothing is said of the mil-Uons of dollars a year paid in salary and bonuses to these officials—to additional millions stock options which are tax exempt, t6 a large degree. ★ ★ ★ ’ If Mr. Reuther was aploiting the Ford workers In obtaining the highest wage package ever negotiated with a major industrial corporation, the Ford, Chrysler and General Motors workers, as well as other workers should enjoy more of this exploitation. KEN MORRIS DIRECTOR REGION IB, UAW Reader Has Compliments for ^Heavy Ones* I know a lot of weight watchers and think they are the best cooks, most dependable, and have dispositions and smiles worth a million. I believe that’s why they make Santa Claus a heavy one. SKINNY Tells Experience on Holiday Train Ride On Thanksgiving Day our group of eight took the train from the Inglewood Station to downtown Detroit to see the parade. After arriving at the Detroit depot a bus was taken to the Woodward site. The expense for our group was 817.70 which is a large sum to pay to see four floats and a few bands. If Grand Trunk can’t get excursion trains to the event on time, I suggest they be discontinued. MRS. J. P. HART 2396 CRANE, DRAYTON PLAINS (Editor’s Note: If the writer of the letter signed “Your Son’’ will kindly contact us we will be happy to consider your letter for publication.) Question and Answer ’The block between Plainfield and Bradford on the north side of South Boulevard has weeds, piles of ashes and mnd-hbles all around. How’s a pedestrian supposed to get to the plant or bus with dirt oozing on sidewalks? PEDESTRIAN REPLY Mr. Kramer of Public Works says it is the responsibility of the property otoner to keep sidewalks iii good condition. If he fails to do this, the City can issue an order to have it cleaned up. Kramer says he will check into this matter, and suggests similar complaints be made to the Citizens Service Bureau, 333-7131, which in turn will see that such matters are brought to the attention of proper officials. Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Lucky Find St. Louis Post-Dispatch Ing a great feaat, and he should have no more finan- We borrow some of the Tribune’s points. ’There are few if For some time we have wondered what the small African kingdom of Lfsotho could be noted for, and now we have found out. It is, for the moment at least, noted for a sparkler tentatively called the Lesotho diamond, which weighs 601 carats and is between a golf ball and an egg in size. ★ ★ * It was found on a tiny claim principally owned by Petrus But that is only a guess; we are not informed on Lesotho tax schedules — and the government knows all about Mr. Ramoboa’s chunk of ice. the original purchase price of 8382,489. Since Mr. Ramoboa’s previous cash assets bad amounted to 84, this was quite a fortune; he hnmedlately bought a suit, three frying pans and two new wives, all in all a modest bit of splurging. * * * Fortunately, word of the fuid i;eached the Lesotho government, so that Mr. Ramoboa received a fair price. The stone is the seventh largest gem diamond known. * * * Mr. R^oboa has plans for farther expenditares, Inclnd- Inflatfon ... New York Daily News Our esteemed colleague, the Chicago Tribune, recently filled its spacious editorial column for seven days iii succession with a series of masterly editorials on inflation. The pieces were printed under the title “How Sound is Your Dollar?” They discussed the current creeping inflation In the United States from every angle, and the danger that it may leap from a creep to a gallop before long. the American people than maintenance of a reasonably sound and solid dollar. • There are two kinds of inflation: (1) demand-pull inflation, when goods are scarce and money ov«r-plentlful; and (2) cost-push Inflation, when goods are plentiful, but labor unions keep driving wages higher and higher and corporations pass these ballooning production costs along to We are suffering from cost' push inflation now, and have been for some years.' • In 27 years — since January, 1940 the dollar has sagged from 100c to 41.5c in buying power. It is sagging faster now than In most of those 27 years -> meaning inflation is speeding up already. * w w • Ever since President Franklin D. RooeeveH’s time, the U.S. government |uui run up yearly deficiU far oftener than it hu balanced Its l^dg-ets. This deficit financing is dangerous, contributes to inflation, and can generate an inflationary whirlwind If it continues l^g enough. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 29, 1967 A—7 rUBTLE STRIPES AND SQUARES The Van Heusen ”417” classic shirt collection is designed lor the man that prefers traditional shirt styling. The "417” is tapered to give him a lean appearance. He can wear it with a tie as. a dress shirt, or with the collar open as a handsome sportshirt. The design is traditional, with contemporary interpretations; York button-down collar, back box pleat, and front center placket. Most distinctively, ""417” is subtly accented ^ with stripes and checks in colors that adapt to any wardrobe. $6. Hudson's Men's Furnishings: 1st Floor Pontiac, Telegraph and Elizabeth Lake Road; also Northland, Eastland and Westland. Open Mon. thru Sat. till 9:00. Downtown Detroit open Mon. thru Fri. till 8:30; Sat. till 5:30. Ghpisiinas ai? PIXJD S03ST’ I Pontiac, Telegraph and EUzabeth Lake; Downtown Dotroit, Woodward Ave. and Grand River Nwtliland. 8 Mile and NorthweBtem; Eastland, 8 Mile and Kelly Roads; Westland, Wanen and Wayne Roads. M d ■■ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 29, 1967 By Rochester Council Ambulance Subsidy OK'd ROCHESTER - The City Council here has voted to subsidize Fleet Ambulance Service to the cost of $300 a month on a six-month trial basis beginning Jan. 1. •k it if The action followed a similar move by Avon Township to contribute $500 a month in an effort to keep an ambulance stationed in the Rochester-Avon area. Oakland Township is consid- ering a contribution to the fund. The'^ amhulance service had asked for a $l,000-a-month subsidy. There was discussion by City Council members that if a subsidy was to be provided, would the city also be held responsible for bad debts incurred by the service within its corporate limits. Such a move is afoot by the Ambulance Association of Oakland County to insure payment for services rendered. In other business the council instructed City Attorney Arthur Cox and City Manager William Sinclair to draw up an agreement VKith Mitzelfeld’s Dq)art-ment Store whereby it would rent the city-owned parking lot across East University from the firehall. William Mitzelfeld two weeks ago indicated a need for the space for employe parking. BONDING APPROVAL Sinclair said bonding ap- proval for the transaction had been received with the provisira that a clause be included allowing the city to terminate the lease when desirable. ★ ★ ★ An application to rezonc for apartments a lot on the comer West Fourth and inicox was refeired to the planning commission. William Hurley, owner of Alward’s Market on the site, indicate a desire to turn the store into apartments. Lack of Orchard Care Is Growing Problem LANSING (A — Some Michigan fruit growers may be spraying more but getting less tor their money and efforts today — all because other Michigan fruit growers neglect or abandon their own orchards. A State Department of Agriculture program aimed at removing abandoned or neglected orchards and vineyards has itself been partially abandoned because of a lack of money, A 19M state law gave the department anthorlty to do gave die department some $15,-NO for implementation ti dw lawlnlN5,UM...aHtheway throngh 116$ when the so^aDed “payless paj^ys” Ut dw state. Through 1968, the departm^t removed about 1.2S trees. ★ * ★ Then the appropriation stopped. “Since that time we have removed a few fruit trees small orchards,*’ says Dean Levitt, chief of tte department’s Plant Industry Division. “B u t this has been insignificant and only done in the more critical situations where our own staff for had the capacity to do the orfc.” Department statistics show an average of about 3,500 trees removed each year since 1958. 'This means the fruit grower whose orchard Is near an aban-1 doned one is going to have to spray more to control insects and diseases,” Levitt says. “And It means that even v additional spraying he’s girtng to be less effective in his efforts,” This, Levitt explains, is because a neglected or abandoned orchard will not be'sprayed and is, therefore, subject to insect invasion and disease. Once that orchard no longer produces, the insects are likely to move to the next closest orchard for fresh. Juicy fruit — and . the fruit grower who cares his trees may be in trouble. The Michigan Farm Bureau has expressed concern over the problem. In a resolution adopted at the Farm Bureau’s recent convention, delegates called for amendment to the 1945 I a w which would require property owners to remove old a doned orchards and vineyards themselves. From 1945 to 1958, the department’s program worked like this: Specific complaints and information on abandoned orchards gleaned from Agriculture Department workers involved other projects across the state set the wheels in motion. ★ * The department would ask the owner of the neglected orchard for permission to uproot the trws, then “shop around for bulldozer operators in a given line up a quantity of and get going,’’ says Levitt. 17 CENTS PER TREE That 1.25 million trees cost the state “just a little over 17 cents per tree” to uproot, Levitt says. Destroying the trees was the job of the owner, who would eighter horn them or chop them into firewood or chips. Today there are more neglected orchards and vineyards than when the program was in full force, Levitt says, “because there’s been so very little done about them.” And people still are neglecting their orchards — not spraying enough, for example — or walk ing away from them. ★ ★ ★ In some cases, Levitt says, where fruit-grow^ areas are near cities, real estate speculators purchase the land and sometimes don’t develop it for a while. Another problem, he says, is that “real estate operators have a fondness for subdividing orchards an'd trying to point to the fruit trees as an asset. . ★ -*■ * “They talk about the beauty of orchards in the spring and all this fruit the buyers are going to get in their back yards The trouble is, you don’t get fruit without a pretty good spraying program, and you’re gdng to find out you can get better apples cheaper down at the local fruit market.” SAVE Va OR MORE Rtgular 5.00 ond 6.00 famous blanket sleepers 2.47 Discover a unique blanket sleeper with all the features you want, and a savings pricel Soft acetate/Ac-lilan® acrylic that wears through many machine washings. Hidden xipper, non-slip soles, cotton knit cuffs. AAaize, pink, aqua. S-M-L-XL. Girls’ soft knit flovos or mittens, 1.00 oiiorted colors and pcrt-tams. 3 to 6, or T to 12. Girls', little girls' holidoy dresses from a large selection 4” 5” Corofroo prints In easy shopos with cotllor, bow trim, some with petticoats. Ais't. colors. OPEN NIGHTS TO 10 OPIN SUNDAY it A.M.TOSP.M. Girls stay warmer in knit headwear 1.99 gon Uylos of acrylic knit DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS From one of. California's better makers, the success shirts of the year - at a value price NATIONALLY FAMOUS MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS REGULARLY $7-$8-$9-$10 4.88 One of the greatest values we could offer you is this terrific selection of famous-make sport shirts, A handsome mixof colors and tailoring. solids and plaids. Choice fabrics, some permanent press, distinctive trims. You must see them, glance at the label to see what a tremendous buy this is ! Men’s sizes 5-M-L-XL in the group. Ideal Christmas gifts. tremendous I OPEN NIGHTS TO 10 OPIN SUNDAY DOWNTOWN AND 11 A.M. TO « DRAYTON PLAINS THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1967 A—9 • buvs Scnsotiono\ potest looks ot j \ncks ‘n o ,diaans ^ viOVV. So^* '" ,K >» WW*™, L“"i"‘ ,»•'* VZ ■sss:ssr Christmas Giving a. You’ll be king of the track in this sleek racer . . . 43-in. long. 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Has roUed edges for safety and strength, bright red enamel finish with white trim; white wheels with semi-pneumatic, puncture-proof tires. 36xl7V^-in.............. 10.99 SsonToy D«pl. tnision In Canadian internal af-1 cles ef iacorporatioo, Robert fairs, Pearson added, as House* ^ in approval. , Gallagher, dly finance director Pearson’s sharp denunciation ^ was named Ireasnrer. of de Gaulle drew immediate j Also on the board is Harold support from the opposition g Euler, hospital administra-CoDservative party. Uj,r. Conservative leader Robert * * * Stanfield said Canadians re-i The authority was created on sented de Gaulle’s encourage-! the advice of bonding consult-ment of a Quebec secession and’ants. Its structure allows for Guaranty Trust Co. of New York, Soloman Brothers and Hutzler, First National Bank (New York) and Bank of America, all acting in conjunction — quoted an Interest rate of 3.M LOW IN COST! per cent. "Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back" Downtown Pontiac --------------2----------------1-----------1------- Phone FE 5-4171 FAST IN ACTION! PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS. .. PHONE 332-8181 regarded it as an “intrusion.' ★ w ★ Pearson has been under pressure from some political quarters to break off diplomatic relations with France over the incident. But Pearson said after the House session yesterday the government planned “no further action” and denied any possibility of withdrawing Canada’s envoy to Paris. ‘SOVEREIGN STATE’ D^ Gaulle said at a news conference Monday that Quebec eventually will be elevated “to the rank of a sovereign state” and as such become the master of its destiny. The strength of Pearson’s reply, drafted in concert with the entire federal cabinet, promised to send Franco-Canadian relations to new depths. Nonetheless, he called on Canadians to restrain their response to de. Gaulle’s statement. * w * While House members thumped their desks in approval, the prime minister said; “It is intolerable that a head of a foreign state or government should recommend a course of political or constitu-' tional action which would destroy Canadian confederation and the unity of the Canadian utilizing certain methods of financing construction not open to municipalities. Temporary Aid for OEO OK'd WASHINGTON (PI - Congress j has acted to make sure federal antipoverty workers aren’ forced to go on welfare themselves, but final financing arrangements for the poverty program remain unsettled. Both the Senate and House passed Tuesday a resolution that would provide temporary spending authority through Dm. 2 for the Office of Econontic Opportunity and some other agencies The separate votes sent th( measure to President Johnson. * * e The action insured that< employes of the OEO, which the antipoverty program, would be paid for the rest of November. Their pay had been cut off last week because a prei temporary appropriation elapsed just before Congress recessed for Thanksgiving. ’The resolution also will allow the agency to restart some of the 40 programs it was forced to shut down for lack of money. THE PONTIAC FREgS, WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 29, 1967 A—11 OPEN SUNDAY 12 to 6 And Every Evening Til 9 P.M. 2-Way Roomful for Holiday Living! Instant sleepers! Thickly tufted, deep foam, cushions switch to nightly comfort with your bedding. -r- X 4-Pc. Twin Sleeper Lounge 72 groups have just arrived and we expect another sellout! A bold new lcx)k, this dramatic group offers so many extras in size, comfort, and value! Note the extra-long 84" sections (instead of the usual 72" . . . the huge 42x31 -in. corner table . . . the extrathick foam-filled seat cushioning . .. and the lavish use of walnut-finish wood trim on the sofo! Converts to two single beds. Gay floral print on lamp shade matches back cushions. 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([ Also DOWNTOWN • WESTSIDE • NORTHWEST • EASTSIDt • ANN ARBOR • PORT HUftOlT^ A—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1967 Rough Red Tactics a Mystery to U. S. WASHINGTON (UPI) — State Department officials said they were mystified tdday as to why the Russians drugged and roughed up U.S. and British military attaches during a trip through the Soviet Union. According to U.S. and British accounts of the NoV. 17 Incident, Col. William J. Spahr of Philadelphia and British Army Brigadier C. A. Des. Harper were op a routine tour through the Soviet Union. Upon arrival at Kishinev, capital of Soviet Moldavia, they were invited to a local wine-■ampling party. The two became violently ill. When they returned to Aeir hotel rooms, five or six men forced their way In and rifled their documents “in a serious violation of diplomatic immunity involving the use of force,” the State Department Several possible reasons for the action, which may have been staged by the Soviet secret police, were being discussed here. * ★ * There was speculation that the incident was staged to Impress upon official quarters in the United States that Soviet-American relations are seriously strained and that progress in arranging the first New York-to-Moscow air •ervice and an agreement on Russian fishing off the U.S. East Coast should not be interpreted as indicating any substantial Improvement. NO IMPROVEMENT The Russians maintain that as long as the Vietnam war goes on, no substantial improvement in relations can be expected, despite Johnson administration talk about “building bridges” to Communist Eastern Europe. Other theories advanced as to the reason for the incident were: • Routine harassment of military attaches who, in Russia, are considered not much more than legalized spies. But some officials said they thought the roughing-up that Spahr and Harper suffered was too extreme for “routine harassment.” • Retaliation for provocative actions by the attaches during their trip," which also took them to the Ukraine. But U.S. officials maintain the officers had always behaved properly. • Overzealous action by local officials without the approval of Moscow. Officials here conceded this theory could not be substantiated with any proof at hand. • The lengthy statement by the British foreign office on the Incident and the more restrained State Department reaction suggested the British might be more the target than the Americans. But if it was in retaliation for a British action, diplomats here were unable to figure out why. The only incident Involving a Russian official in Eiigland was 11 months ago when a Soviet military attache was arrested for drunken driving. The Kishinev incident was reminiscent of a similar occurrence at Odessa, a Black Sea port, in 1964. ★ ★ ★ Allies military attaches were drugged with wine, but on that occasion the Russians did not go so far as to rough up the officers in their hotel rooms. jaycees G/Ve I British leove OS Aden Reborn Applionces to ’ ' I LONDON (AP) — There’ll be,back to South Arabia for cele-| \A/nrrl PCW no British royal presraice and no brations marking the birth of YYQJrp pi I on I warm handshakes when the Un-their nation. I lion Jack comes down for the! Sources ih Geneva indicated last time in Aden at midnight the main stumbling block tonight. ithe amount of financial aid Brit- The Republic of South Yemen jain would give the new Arab re-was unofficially born, in fact, on public. Britain wants to give far Sunday mining when the Ar-jless than the 60 million pounds abs aw9255 17 and 65. The Jaycees have undertaken the job of making the ward, its day room and game room, as pleasant as possible; • In addition to the recent donations to the ward they have ments of power HOSPITAL RECEIVES GIFT — Dr. Theodore Saters-moen (right), director of the Community Psychiatry Division at the.Pontiac State Hospital, examines a refrigerator donated to Ward B of the hospital by the Pontiac Area Jaycees and Jaycettes. Presenting the gift are Jaycette Mrs. Martin Hupt and Jaycee Terry Van Orman. People in the News ] By The Associated Press Black Power advocate Fred Horace Brooks, who lost his student deferment when he was suspended from Tennessee A&I State University following riots in the campus area last April, was indicted yesterday in Nashville, Tenn., on. a charge of draft dodging. Brooks, 21, directed Nashville’s “Liberation School” during the summer. The school, which Brooks directed as an antipoverty program, lost federal backing after it was accused of teaching young Negroes “pure, unadulterated hatred of the white race.” Brooks, testifying before a Senate subcommittee last week, said he thought Negroes should gain power by “any means available.” Danish Princess, German Prince to Wed The Denmark royal palace In Copenhagen says Princess Benedikte, 23, will marry Prince Ricbard-Casimir of Germany on Feb. 3. The ceremony will take place In the Fredensborg Castle cburcb. The 106 guests will stay ai the North Sealand castle for the week-long festivities. Nobel-Winning Novelist Leaves Hospital Novelist John Steinbeck left New York’s University Hospital yesterday after a seven-week stay that included surgery for a ruptured spinal disc, the New York University Medical Center reports. 'The 1965 Nobel prize winner for literature and his third wife, Elaine, live at Sag Harbor, N.Y. Steinbeck, 65, had been in the hospital since Oct. 8. _________ ______ STEINBECK Ohio Blue Spruce Tagged for LBJ An Ohio tree grower will fell a 20-foot blue spruce lor President Johnson’s personal Christmas tree. The tree destined for the Blue Room at the White House will be cut and shipped Dec. 7 from the Portage County farm of Howard M. Cowan In Ravenna Township. The Ohio Christmas Tree Growers, Inc., said Ohio won the right to furnish the tree in a competition last August among tree growers from 26 stales. painted it and pian to supply furniture later. in neighboring Yemen were a threat. * ★ ★ The Egyptians have left Yemen, but A1 Shaabi said 60 million poupds was the minimum the NLF expected after “128 years of British colonial exploitatim.” No matter how much the Brit- over a country of 112,000 miles of tpbstly scorching sand. The British first moved into Aden in 1839 to use it as a coaling station en route to India. Then- it had about 500 people; now it has about 250,000 and tj;ie neighboring feudal sheikdoms have about 750,000 more. South Yemen has no oil or other appreciable riches. Its primary income came from servicing British troops and ships, and from tourists who stcgiped over on their way somewhere elsO. High Commissioner Humphrey Trevelyan left Tuesday. Unlike other transfers of British colonial power in the last 20 ish give, said A1 Shaabi, they years, no member of the royal:won’t get any land concessions, family will hand over the instru- on the peninsula or on the islands at the entrance to the Red Sea. This is bothering Israel since A1 ^haabi has promised to NEW GOVERNMENT I Tl^e NaUonal Liberation Front bl^k YsraeilThippin^iT hrcan' The total cost is expected to is taking over, and in Geneva a| a1 Shaabi said his govern-be about $1,000, with various|NLF delegation WM-ked fever-ment’s first acts would be to ap-fund raising projects supplying ishly with British negotiators piy for membership in the Arab the money. under Lord Shackletwi, trying League and the United Nations, ★ * * ito draw up a formal agreement! The National Liberation Jaycee Tery Van Orman, ofjfor an orderly transfer of pow- Front, whose soldiers battled |ll65 Lynsue, Waterford Town- er. British troops as well as the ri- ship, and Jaycette Mrs. Martin A plane was standing by to val nationalist group FLOSY, or | |Hupt, of 405 W. Iroqpois, are whisk the NLF leader, Qahtan.the Front for the Liberation of Idirecting the work on the ward.IA1 Shaabi, and his 14 associates Occiqiied South Yemen, takes YOUR CHILD MAY HAVK PUHWRMS 1 OUT OF 3 DOE» FidgctinK, noM-piekinc,«tornientinx rectal itcn are olten telltale nsnt « Pln-Worma...uslyparaai tee that medical experta aay infeet 1 Out o( erery S pereone examined. Entire faniUiaa may be Yictima and not know it. To get rid of Pin-Wonne, they muet be killed in the large inteetine where they live and multiply.That’e exactly what Jayne's P-W tableU do... and here’s how they do it: Mrst—a scientific eoating carrieo the tablets into the bowels before they dissolve. Then — Jsyne’s mod- Don’t taka chances with dangerous, highly contagious Pin-Wormn which infect entire families. Get genuine Jayne’s P-W Vermifuge ... email, eaay-to-takc tablets... spaeiid sixes for cnlldiea and aduita. 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Woodward, 1525 Woodward, Detroit Regionol Shopping Center, 15 Milo fir Gratiot Madison Heights Shopping Center, 12 Mile & John R Ho Matter Whet Yee're Seeleg Far... 1st FEDERAL HAS A PLAN TO SUIT YOU! 4^ 4^ 5 5 PASSBOOK SAVINOS The rale of 4)6% It cem- yield of 4.318, a high rata of return paid on regular $2,BM SAVINOS CERTIFIOATES Earn the rateef4%% whan held for a par-iod of 6 months. iSrOOt SAVINOS OERTIFIOATES Eom th# rata of 5% whan hold for o pori-od of 9 months. $10,H0 MViNOt onmnoAm Earn tho rota of 5V4% whan hold for a pari-od of 12 months. 761 WEST HURON STREET Downtown Pontiac - Drayton Plains - Rdchostor -> Clarfcston - Milfoid — Wollod Loko -- Loko Orion - Wotoiford THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 29, 1967 , A—13 Educdfors Mull Advantages, Problems of Year-Round School women tend to prefer the long By DICX ROBINSON {this type of operation would be Schoolchildren, would you expensive. Whitmer, instead, advances s^^hool calendar ,■ V, . , , which gives students a chance Pa^ts how do you feel to enrich their education or of- atout having your child around fers them a chance to catch the house m winter instead of „p if they are behind, going to school. | -jjjg four-quarter system as- Probably both schoolchildren sumes that all children can get!hundred years ago. and their parents would answer all the edqcation they need ini O’Neil, today in Livonia, proin the negative, but this idea three-quarters of a year,” the'posed that school districts go tm year-round schools is being superintendent remarked, l.to year-round high schools, part pushed by some educators. is possible.'of a continuing effort by edu- Supporters of the year-round school calendar say the present system of having all summer off is oqtdated since it is no longer necessary foi^ teachers and students to get time off to iwork on farms as it was one State Board of Education member James F. O’Neil has proposed that schools and teachers used on a year-round basis with students attending nine months of the I Some children time.’ Whitmer’s dreams of a year-round school year with a minimum of vacations for teachers more cators and government officials c h i e V e round-the-clock school attendance. According to O’Neil, • Students would have aito taxpayers by reducing f^' greater opportunity to get va- cilities costs, cation jobs. other supporters of yjs'a r- _ , round schools explain idl^build- Students- would have lessjingg in the summer «mght to cause to drop out since they be put to use and M teachers would have an opportunity to have to seek extra vvork to sup-repeat a subject at the end of piement their lO-tnonth-a year a quarter before they become salaries, hopelessly behind. i * * * O’Neil claimed that year- President Johnson has deround schools would also ell clared; “The school of tomor-inate teacher shortages, pro-{row will not close its doors at round schools would also elim-|3 p.m. It will employ its build-inate teacher shortages, pro-ings ^around the clock and its vide more adequate pay for,teachers around the year, teachers and provide savings! “We cannot afford to have an year -------- —r”.— — --------------{around schools would provide leiiuiuB .lure ...vHu.a ui ^ wHl not come true ^youth with greater opportuni- ye»r, but having staggered va-f" “K^ees. ties; “Many men teachers may • Graduates would have like teaching almost yea r- greater opportunities to get jobs Whitmer said, “but the | or gain entrance to col^ges. Pontiac Schools Supt. Dr. Pana P. Whitmer says this idea does not appear promising to him. •NOT SUPPORTED’ • “In every place this four-quarter system has been tried It has been discontinued because it is not supported by| GRAND HAVEN (UPI) — A Candy T reats Viet T roops parents,” he commented. “Parents don’t like their children to get vacations in the winter.” Secondly, he pointed out that thousand pounds of hard candy, “Treat the Troops” Christmas movement started by School to Hold Open House Four Towns Community School will celebrate the completion of its new building additions tomorrow night with an open house and dedication service. The school is at 6370 Cooley Lake, Waterford Township. Principal Kenneth Coopei ■aid the public is invited to attend the ceremony which will begin with the open house at| a state policeman, are, on their way to Vietnam servicemen. The offic^ Trooper Tom Min-ard, an Army veteran, deplored the surplus of hard candy his three daughters returned home with Halloween nightafter “tricking and treating.” Minard thought it would be nice If the GIs in the Jungles could get the nonperishable type of candy to break up the taste wiches on the front lines, started a trick-treat In reverse AreaEducator Is Elected to National Post Donald Youmans, assistant superintendent of community and scores of kids joined the school services for Waterford Township Schoois, has been winaixi pitched the cause to' elected to a two-year term on Ooueias Tjapkes, operator of the board of directors of the radio station WGHN in Grand, National Community School Ed- Haven. Tjapkes picked up the ucation Association (NCSEA). ; candy crusade which spread to| * * * other news media, and then the Also elected to a two- kids got into the act. 1 year term on the nine-man /■ $85 billion dollar plant Ih thisjout at the same time with manyj O’Neil said the fact that At-country open less than 30 per of them inactive, bored andiianta Ga has adonted th* cent of the Ume." driven to mischief. u u . ^ year-round high school concept Authorities have suggested.refutes any arguments that various ways of achieving a the summers are too hot. year-round attendance system,! w' * ★ according to Whitmer. 1 ..gvery taxpayer should * * * 'make it clear that he will sup- There is the 12-4 plan, which port programs for new school would require 12 weeks of buildings only if steps have school followed by four weeks been taken to put the l^month of vacation throughout the year, {school into effect,” advises the Another plan divides the year strongest advocate of a new into 13-week periods with one- calendar, Arthur S. Fleming, fourth of the students on vaca-[former secretary of Health, Ed- LESS EXPENSE If current school facilities and personnel are put to full use, school districts will reduce the amount of mraiey needed for new. buildings and equipment, som^ experts contend. O’Neil and many other school and welfare authorities are con- would help reduce delinquency as not all 46 million schodi children in the country would be tion each quarter. ! ucation and Welfare. ;30 followed by the dedication *’®®*’‘* former Waterford] The Pentagon told Minard he Township school administrator couldn’t move it through regu-Dr. V. M. Kerensky, a profes-|lar military channels. Minard sor of education at Fiorida At-^started “bumming” from people lantic University in Boca Raton,! he knew willing to help pay service at 8 . Among those participating in the ceremony will be Dr. Don O. Tatroe, superintendent of Waterford Township Schools; Board of Education President Eldon C. Rosegart; other school officials; and governmental of-ficiab. *1110 new additions to the school consist of a gymnasium-multipurpose room complex, ■lx classrooms, new offices, a kitchen, a teachers’ lounge, remodeled library - instructional materials center, a ' and nfpiodeled das: Fla. Elected president of NCSEA for 1968 was Allen D. Dighera, a consultant for the Michigan Department of Education for community schools. for the shipments. Dr. Robert Plekker of Hud-sonville, president of the Christian Reformed Church Laymen’s League, offered to include Minard's candy in their packages which will ^ sent after Christ- ’The newly elected officers and directors will assume their du-l Ues at the associaUon’s annual| Geologists in a new report, business meeting Saturday at have stated that Mount Rain-' Miami Beach, Fla., at the con-,ler’s volcano may not be dead, of NCSEA’s annual con-The 14,419-foot peak is in the and convention. 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Small, medium and large. for winter warming 3.19 3.99 GOWNS REG.$4 NOW PAJAMAS REG. $5 NOW GOWNS IN SIZES XL, XXL: REG. 4.50 . . . NOW 3.59 Gals love slippers for Christmas when they're our own Gaymod#! Warm slipper with fluffy shearling lamb upper has podded heel, vinyl sole. 3 colors. Quilted rayon scuffs with pert bow trim, synthetic sole. Black, gold. 3.99 Furry ponpon decorates a colorful slipper of oerylic/metallie/ rayon on a synthetic sole. Turquoise, hot pink. Criss cross scuff in gold or silver metallic on wedge heel, synthetic sole. 4.50 2.50 PENNEY'S MIRACLE MILE I TIL; 9:30 ’NOW'TIL CHRISfMiASr charge m A—14 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 196T MECHANISM EXPLAINED - Secretary Robert C. Weaver (left) of the Department of Housing and Urban Development looks on as Dr. Manfred Altman explains the operation of a small gasoline engine that would work in a gasoline-electric minicar. Dr. Alt- ar winphote man is director of the University of Pennsylvania’s Institute for Engery Conservation, which developed the project with General Motors. Announcement of the development was made at a news conference in Washington yesterday. Proposed Car Pairs Fund Is Not Presidential Pot-Percy WASHINGTON - Republican Red. Charles H. Percy insists there is no trace of presidential politics in an effort by his home-stAe Illinois supporters to raise $100,000 to help finance his Senate office. Nor, said Percy, does the fund bear any resemblance to the one which exploded into political trouble for Richard M. Nixon when he was running for vice president 15 years ago. “It’s a mistake to compare them,” the Illinois senator said in an interview. Percy, who plans to leave Dec. 6 on a personally financed world tour, said again he is not a candidate for the 1968 Republican presidential nomination. OFFICE EXPENSES In Chicago, Hiomas J. Houser, a lawyer who managed Percy’s Senate campaign last year, said a group of supporters is trying to raise a minimum of $100,000 a year to defray the expenses the senator faces in maintaining offices in Washington, Chicago and Centralia, 111. Houser said it is'“simply erroneous” to consider the fund a part of any national campaign move in Percy’s behalf. He said Percy has spent $70,000 of his own money this year—his first in the Senate—to pay office expenses in excess of congressional allowances. “Despite the fact that he has some personal wealth, this is a burden some of his supporters want to help him with,” Houser said. MILUONAIRE SENATOR Percy became a millionaire in business before he turned to politics. “I thought it was a very nice gesture on those people’s part,” said Percy. “The allowances here are simply inadequate. You just can’t possibly maintain on a Senate allowance an adequate office f(nr a state the size of Illinois.” •k -k -k Percy said he couldn’t compute off-hand just how much the official allowance is. It is based on several factors, including the size of the state a senator is from and staff size. He has a staff of about 40 but his official allowance is suffi- cient only for 22 emplt^es. Percy said he already is putting his $30,000 Senate salary and all his speechmaking fees back into the cost of running his office. ^ COMMITTEE CONTROL Percy said the money the Houser group is soliciting would be controlled by a committee, carefully audit^ and us^ to help cover staff salaries and expenses, mailit^, printing, reports to Illinois residents and similar expenses. Managers of the Nixon fund said it was to be used for year-round campaigning by the sena-tbr, to cover transportation, ho-^1 bills, telephone charges mailing and the preparation of speeches and newsletters. ★ ★ ★ Nixon defended his conduct with a television appearance which saved his place on the GOP ticket and won fame for his pet dog. Checkers, at 1 during the broadcast. Furthermore, Percy said, he will continue to put in most of the money himself. He said that and the lack of secrecy about the operation make it unlike the fund for which Nixon was criticized in 1952. He said only by “twisting* the facts” can the two be likened. “So far, the support funds have all been put in by me,” Percy said. The 1952 uproar swirled around the disclosure that 76 wealthy Californians had contributed $18,235*to cover Nixon’s expenses. Nixon, a California senator, was the Republican nominee for vice president. ing five days in South Vietnam, will be similar to one planned by Michigan.Gov. George Romney, who has announced he is seeking the 1968 GOP presidential nomination. Grant for Schools WASHINGTON - Detroit has been awarded $324,335 from the U.S. Office of Education to provide federal aid to sdboois, Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., Percy’s 12-nation tour, includ-i said Tuesday. WANTEp Highest Prices Paid <|. Soginaw St. 51 W. Huron St. CONN’S CLOTHES 73 N. Saginaw IE PONTIAC PNESS 48'W. Huton St. t ju.. w. w THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEl>NiB;SDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1967 A—la Built-In Woes Await New Defense Chief By FRED S. HOFFMAN AP MUItary Writer . WASHINGTON - The next escretary of defense will have to establish his authority early. The armed services, tamed by Secretary of Defense Robert ^S. McNamara, are likely to test his successor’s mettle. ★ ★ * The new Pentagon chief also may have to face a Congress bent on showing him it is boss. For nearly seven years, Congress has smarted under what some members have called McNamara’s arrogance and “know-it-all” attitude. The next defense cKief also will inherit vexing problems from McNamara, among them the Vietnam war and the still troubled Fill fighter plane project, once known as the TFX. BUDGET REFORM McNamara also will leave behind him a fundamental budget reform which is his monument. That budget approach, which ^e installed and enforced on the farvlces in 1961, probably will them.’ continue to operate to _________ service bickering over the split-up of defense dollars. •k * i this budget reform, among others, that McNamara has claimed is “driven into the bedrock” of the huge military establishment and will remain after him. He also brought about fundamental alterations in basic national defense strategy, switching from reliance on massive nuclear retaliation to a more flexible ability to meet Communist threats at every level of war, from insurgency on up. FINAL AUTHORITY Problem Driver War Is Urged Detroit OKs Open Housing j days, has made hundreds of separate decisions, involving billions of dollars, in personal itemby-item reviews of mill-tary budget proposals each year. This detailed personal Involvement has b^n criticized by some on grounds a really good administrator would delegate as much authority as possible to trusted subordinates. IMPOSED RESTRAINTS The generals and admirals have often chafed under McNamara’s imposed restraints, but none have dared to chal-Mcl^amara’s philosophy, as lenge him in public. He has DETROIT (AP)—The Detroitibiated against.” ’The ordinancel The white citizens booed when! Hood, only Negro on the coun-LANSING (AP)—A crackdown Conunon Council passed- an provides up to a $300 fine and a fh® council later passed three of cU, introduced the measure, on problem drivers has been open housing ordinance by , y sentence for nersons Proposals on public housing nAviTV CTAvwn asked by Michigan lnsurance.4-2 vote Tuesday.' Scores of;^*^ for rither elderly personin™ McNamara, working 12-hour ("‘^“stry spokesmen. | white citiMns bitterly pledgedracial discrimlna-large famiUes. A site for!_ he spelled it out to the Associated Press some years ago, was to establish a single final, a thority over the enwmously complex defense establishment. “Whoever is head of the department should run it,” McNamara said. “The head of any made no secret of his determination to keep the armed services from quarreling among themselves or lobbying outside of the department for their projects or interests. McNamara has served morel An “unfit or irresponsible to circulate repeal petiUons. minority of drivers” constitute a I Council President Edward threat to the lives, welfare and pocketbooks of responsible citizens, members of the Michigan Insurance Information Service told Lt. Gov. William Milliken. The group said they are convinced there ^ are four serious weaknesses in the state’s problem driver control and correc-program. WEAKNESSES OUT LINED These were outlined as: • Failure to prevent probably some 200,000 drivers a year from either ignoring the driver licensing law or defying traffic law violation summons. • A too-little and too-late point system of driver license reexaminations, which does net act until a driver has become a serious menace to himself and everyone else. Extensive preoccupation by (More Jets to Serve State J' ® LANSING (DPI) — Barring escalation of the Vietnam ' war. United Air Lines plans to have a “significant number” ^ of twin-engine jet aircraft serving its six Michigan points by ' the end of 1969, the airline said yesterday. United President George E. Keck told a news conference that deliveries of. the new Boeing 737 jets will begin In about 30 days and will continue unUl the line’s 110 remaining propeller aircraft are phased out. He said 7S of the new twin-engine Jets, costing abont |i mililoB each, wiU be in service by the end of I960. ^ United’s plans were met with optimism but little enthusiasm by Michigan air officials. James Ramsey, director : of the Michigan Aeronautics Commission, said the conunis-' sion is “hopeful” that the switch to jets will improve pas-f aenger service in the state. But he said the commission had a “real question” whether frequency of flighU wUl be cut down as a result. : ONE LINE WITH JETS 4 North Central Airlines is the only line now with regular 2, Jet service In Michigan. It Inaugurated jets from Battle 5 Creek last month. • Since North Central flies to smaller airports In Nortb-am Michigan and In the Upper Peninsula, Ramsey said the Z- commission was concerned that this service might bo cnr-2 tailed as more jets are used. j Since United services only Detroit, Lansing, Grand Rap-It, ids, Muskegon, Flint and Saginaw, Ramsey said the com-( mission was not as concerned about cutbacks in local service by United. Keck said “some jet service” would be started to United’s Michigan points in the second or third quarter of next year. However, he said this could be farther in the future if the war in Vietnam is escalated. ^ He said already the war effort has caused postponement of delivery dates on commercial aircraft up to four months. , “If the war escalates, we would certainly feel the ef-; fects,” he said. ------------- than two years longer than any license appeal boards and courts organization ought to place him-1 of the seven previous secreta-'with the economic necessity to self in position to make decl-|ries of defense. Even among his drive, which results In quick sions and to stand behind,critics, he is conceded to have license restoration to more than 'run the Defense Department half of those who appeal when ““’i greater effectiveness and their licenses are suspended or Carey termed the ordinance prohibiting discrimination lousing sales and rentals as a 'moderate approach to a major problem.” But spectators, who milled around after the brief council cried “Wallace for President,” “Minority Rules, and “We’ll get a referendum. Several refused to give their names to newsmen. Carey who“^voted for it, said le ordinance will allow home-owners a “certain leeway” in their property matters. IN 30 DAYS The law, which will go into effect in 30 days, deals with the sales and rentsds by brokers, agents and property owners If the property is put on the open market. “Nothing will prevent a per-)n from selling to whomever he wants, except the sale can’t be based pn race, creed, color or national origin,” Carey said. cotton flannel floral granny 2 f.r*6 Ofw way to ileap f in voriod pink or OiMs 38 to 60 «J ’ ' Oiriw br Ml «r MZ-rSM. AM 15c Iw Mwir phn lOi kr disciplin than ^y of the oth-rs. If it had not been for the Vietnam war, McNamara probably would have left the Pentagon after the completion of four years. revoked. • Unrealistic alcoholic drivers, which instead of being directed at taking them off the road until they are cured, simply removes and restores their licenses repetively. tion. NO DEBATE Carey said in Detroit more than 70 per cent of the people own homes.' No debate was allowed at the regular council session, but the 200 spectators waved placards. An open hearing on the ordinance was held last week. __________Ravitz, who was the only senior dUzeiB "was "approv^ to remain in the for Detroit’s west side. The council approved two sites for large families in Detroit’s east side. Councilmen Carey, Philip Van Antwerp, Melvin Ravitz, and I^cholas Hood voted for, the open housing ordinance. Councilmen Mary V. Beck and William Rogell voted against. for Anfisubversive Board House OKs New Setup quire the attorney general simply to keep a list of such organi- board. 'similar BILL He said a property owner treatment of could refuse sale or rental, for instance, to persons who were in “poor financial condition” or ere “slovenly housekeepers.” The burden of proof will be on the “person who is discrim- WASHINGTON (AP) - The House has passed legislation designed to clear up a major problem for the Subversive Activities Control Board—a chronic lack of work. j By a 269-104 margin, the', House voted Tuesday to estab- "♦‘’k ^ lish a new procedure for UsUng the board would be dis-groups found by the board to be fr*ctsis n S Communist-dominated. 7 l j k r . I The dearth of board business jin recent years was well-publi-Court rulings over the years cized this summer following the hpe thrown out laws that once I announcement that Simon Mc- diambers after the brief session, was confronted by angry whites, one of whom accused him of “selling out.” A stout woman walked up to him, shaking a finger, and said she didn’t want people in the neighborhood “like the ones that murdered my son.” * * * Someone tore up a placard and threw it toward Ravitz. A group of women, buttoning their overcoats, stormed out of the council session, yelling at the top of their voices. PLAN PETITIONS “We’U get the petitions on the streets. We’ll do it like Flint ^ id California did,” California voters i state open housing 1: zations as determine by the i And homeowners in Flint have filed petitions calling for their council to either repeal the recent open housing ordinance there or have a citywide vote on allowed the board to decide that groups must formally register as Conlmunist-dominated. The House-passed bill would re- Hugh, husband of a onetime secretary to President Johnson, had been appointed to one of the panel’s five $26,000-a-year posts. it. ■k k * "I’m 69 years old. And I’ve been paying taxes for 44 years. And I’m going to hit the pavement with petitions,” one white-haired man said. He would not give his name. The women said they represent various home owners groups. PONTIAC MALL I(tm #sttum’a for Ctfriatmaa What can make a gift sweater better? Osmun’s. For example, take our gift box. Go ahead . . . take our gift box. It’s free. And that’s just one example. Want more? Then come to Osmun’s. Because Osmun’s has more. More sweaters, for example. Osmun’s has more sizes. Osmun’s has more styles. Osmun’s has more colors, shapes, buttons, zippers, collars, stitches, and—But don’t think we’re just trading on our name. We trade on other people’s names, too. (Robert Bruce and Arnold Palmer for example.) So if you want to give an Osmun’s gift certificate, or make that gift sweater better, you can. Give more than a sweater. Give him Osmun’s. Arnold Palmer Cardigan by Robert Bruce *22.00 LAY-AWAY YOUR GIFT. A small daposit holds it 'til Christmas. Oa part of Christmas since 1931 SMUN’S STORES FOR MEN & YOUNG MEN ' FREE PARKING at ALL.STORES ■ Downtown Pontiac ■ Tel-Huron Center In Pontiac ■ Tech Plaza Center In Warren Open Every Night ’til 9 Open Every Night 'til 9 Open Every Night ’til 9 A—10 THE PONTIAC PREgS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBEI^ 2&> 1967 Hudson’s Music Store at Pontiac, 2nd floor; Also Downtown Detroit, Northland, Eastland and at Westland. A. Sony black/white TV is a lightweight miniature equipped with earphones for private listening. (7* viewable diagonal). Just 114.95,$llmonthly. B. RCA Victor black/white model, 5' oval speaker, 172 sq. inch picture (18' viewable diagonal). 149.95, 13.75 mo. C. Zonith ^lack/white, with a 184 sq. inch picture (19' viewable diagonal). Priced at just 149.88, 13.75 monthly. D. RCA Victor black/white, instant-on picture, 184 sq. inch picture (19' view- able diagonal). 159.95, 14.75 monthly. E. 2^nith color TV features 6' twin cone speaker, hand-crafted chassis, 227 sq. inch picture (20' viewable diagonal). Youm for only 429.88, 39.75 monthly, r. RCA Victor color style with big 295 sq. inch excellent-quality picture (23' viewaby diagonal). 519.95, 48.50 mo. G>. Huron’s own Alkc color TV set with a 171 square inch picture (18' viewabje diagonal). $309, $29 monthly. H. RCA Victor color television model with 227 sq. inch picture (20' viewable diagonal). Jutt 439.95, 40.75 monthly. I. RCA Victor color features a 180 sq. inch picture (18' viewable diagonal). Priced at only 399.95, 37.25 monthly. J. Hudson's own AMC black and white' is walnut trimmed, features instant-on, sleep switch timer, with 172 sq. inch picture (18' viewable diagonal). Priced at only $119, $11 monthly. K. Gorteral Eloctric color TV with 60 sq. inch picture (11' viewable diagonal). Great for only $229, or 21.26 monthly. L. Hudson's own AMC black and white television compact has solid state , chassis, with a 72 sq. inch picture (11' viewable diagonal). It’s $99, 8.76 mb. ii^s Chpisi^inas inline HXJOSON-’S Extra hours to gift shop: Huiison's Pontiac, Northlanfi, Eastland, Westland open till 9 p.m. Monday through Saturday. Downtown Detroit open Monday through Friday till 8:30 WontM Section; THE PONTIAC PRESS WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1967 B—1 Ry BERNICE ROSENTHAL Pontiac Tuesday Musicale Chorus, with soioists Alice Engrain, contralto, and Roger Welton, flautist, gave an artistic and stimulating performance last night with the Pontiac Symphony Orchestra. Felix Resnick conducted the concert, which was the second in the current season, at Pontiac Northern High School Auditorium. The near-capacity audience was delighted with the CIvistmas flavor of the unusual program of romantic and contemporary music. * w ★ The “Magnificat” by Ralph Vaughn Williams was the major work on the program. With its difficult modern tonalities, tenuous melodic line and static orchestral accompaniment, the woman’s chorus sang with beautifully blended ton(, fine phrasing and excellent oom-mand of the esoteric character of the choral work. POLISHED The many long hours of polishing and sustaining the dynamics which the chorus and its inspired director, Christine Gaensbauer, had spent, were evident in last night’s polished performance, which contributed greatly to the chorus’ reputation of being one of the finest in the state of Michigan. Both impressive and heart-warming Were Alice Engram’s solo passages. Her voice, which combines depth, exquisite quality, easy control, powerful resonance-and artistic know-how, was a privilege' to hear in the difficult fragmentary melodic solo parts. ABBY A large silver bowl of holly, flanked by two tall man for Tuesday’s tea, admires ^he traditional set-candelabra highlights the table setting arranged ting which conjures up shades of “Olde England” by Mrs. Gelstor Poole of South Shore Drive. Mrs. and the wassail bowl. William Mack of Bloomfield Hills tables cochair- Mrs. William Hartman of Bloomfield Hills is the designer of this imaginative setting captioned “Cardinals’ Brunch,” in green and gold accented with a flock of brilliant red cardinals feasting on the holly tree. Tuesday's “Holiday Tea and Country Store” at the YWCA was sponsored by Pontiac branch of Woman's NatioJial Farm and Garden Association. A study in black and white is the effect achieved with this table setting for a New Year’s is achieved by spray-painting dried magnolia leaves. Eve champagne supper. Red-wrapped candies, red This is the creation of Mrs. Kenneth VandenBerg, carnations and slim red candles accentuate the of Orchard Lake, president of Pontiac branch of sophisticated atmosphere. Black foliage in the vase Woman's Nationai Farm arid Garden Association. Teens Discuss Mores, Life of Their Peers Mrs. W. Ross Thompson of Bloomfield Hills is caught on her knees arranging decorative items in baskets for sale in the Country Store. A large green velvet wreath hangs over her head. Mrs. Frederick Poole was chairman, or storekeeper, of this phase of the annual tea. Proceeds will be used to help support a student at Michigan State University, majoring in horticulture. Tuesday Musicale Chorus Sings With Symphony So often taken for granted, the principals in the various sections of the orchestra are talented artists in their own right. Roger Welton, principal flautist, heard as soloist in the “Magnificat”, and later in the “L’Arlesienne” Suite, is a fine artist with pure tone, great variety, immaculate technique and intrinsic good taste. NUTCRACKER On the lighter side of the musical spectrum, the chorus presented five movements from Tschaikowsky’s “Nutcracker” Suite. , They sang well, but the “Nutcracker” iSuite does not lend itself to the vocal art, and the ill-fitting words detract from the charm 6f the familiar ballet. Bizet’s robust "L’Arlesienne” Suite No. 2, Wallingford Riegger's vibrant “Romanza for Strong Orchestra”, and Bernstein’s “West Side Story” excerpts comprised the second half of the concert, which showed Mr. Resnick and the orchestra in their best form. The curtain-raiser was Benjamin Britten’s “Soiree Musicale” excerpts. In this composition, Mr. Britten, who Is a giant among living Briti.sh composers, takes every trivial musical cliche and exaggerates it. Maudlin sentimentality becomes mawkish, a Latin dance Is made ridiculous, and, beet of all, a travesty 6n Music HaIR trivia joins in the fun to perpetuate a'^dry-huipored caricature on English music. By JEANNE NELSON If a youthful six-member panel’s appraisal of their peers’ social activities is representative, then it would appear that liquor, drugs and sex play lead roles'in today’s area teen lives. The panel, selected by their speech and drama instructor, Larry Bobbert of Andover High School, Bloomfield Hills School system, spoke Tuesday at a meeting of Child Study Club III in the Pine Lake home of Mrs/ Charles Miller. ★ ★ w The availability of liquor, all six agreed, is no problem. Older friends often make the purchase. Strangers on the street will provide this service. And as one boy put it, “the stores will take our money.” Another panelist pointed out that there is drinking at most parties. There seemed to be a division between the drinking habits of the so-calied “open house” and “invitational.” * * ★ The former, where both boys and girls come, sans date, is apt to involve the greater amount. The panel as a whole seemed to find nothing demoralizing about teen drinking in general, adding that some parents had even served it to them on occasion. The habitual u.se of alcohol with parental knowledge was also indicated. MARIJUANA Marijuana (pot) was discussed with candor. ‘ It too, is not at all difficult t(f obtain,” was the general opinion. The audience was told that “pu.shers” are usually older students at the school. A link or joint will bring a dollar. And reportedly, for $2 a degree o f “highness” can be reached, similar to that from a $3 fifth of whisky. Another reason for the use of pot is the absence of a hangover associated with drinking. There appeared to be some disagreement among the panelists on the subject of “Sex Education In the Schools.” Someone ventured that the kids would laugh at tha idea. Another suggested that the class be given as an elective as opposed to a requirement. Still another suggestion was to have the class take on a seminar-like atmosphere with the emphasis placed on emotion rather than biology. It was pointed out by one of the panelists that contraceptive methods and instruction is available reading material at the public library. ★ * * In this same vein, panelists told their listeners that intimate sexual relationships are prevalent among high school students. While one young man expressed the desire for a virginal bride, he seemingly didn’t hold out much hope for it. In answer to a listener’s query on the consequences of such actions, the panel for the most part agreed that youths “didn't really think too much about it.” TWO-FACED Pre.senting two faces, the majority claimed, was essential to their way of life. To obtain the privileges most wanted from parents and other adults, it was simply a matter of “staging” the kind of behavior their parents WAN'TED to see. But the REAL self emerged within the confines of their own peers where the “gang” is all. * * * Ideas on parent-teen relationships seem to center around parental trust. The young people all agreed that they would be more inclined towards responsible behavior, given the trust to prove it. One of the girls whose parents are giving her their car for an unchaperoned ski weekend with a trio of other girls said she would not betray her folks’ trust by driving the car one mile further than the lodge. But, she added, we’ll probably go "to........in some- one else’s car. She hinted that this Information wouldn’t be volunteered at home however since her parents might lose their “trust” in her. A widening breech in communications between parents and children was pointed out as a key factor in many youthful attitudes. Another trouble.some area seems ta« be the examples set by the parents. Several panelists voiced the feeling that parents are unrealistic to expect their sons and daughters to refrain from doing the very things they themselves do as a matter of course. Religious concepts provoked mixed feelings among the youths. General attitudes marked a total disbelief in fundamentalist theories, but each young person indicated a serious committment on an individual basis as he or she translated it. ★ * The Birmingham-Bloomfleld Teen Center came in for some sharp criticism. Dissatisfaction was voiced with the overall management of the center and prevailing rules. One major complaint was that junior high students are being admitted. Another focU.sird on the lack of seating facilities and still another on the too watchful eyes of chaperones. More student control seemed to be an obvious solution to the panelists. Panelists Were; Laura Renrisnider, senior; Sue Esdale, sophomore; Jim Eaton, junior; David Rybicki, junior; Jane Malmberg, junior; and Jan Chmiel, jilllior. Spanish Arfisf Here Spanish pianist Alicia de Larrocha will appear in concert at Detroit Institute of Arts auditorium Friday at 8:30 p.m. Tickets are available from the Institute Ticket Office, Hudson’s and Grinnell’s. Peeping Tom Would Like to Be Friend By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: I just found out I’m a I Tom. I know it sounds terrible, but I’m really not that I kind of a guy. It all hap-I pened accidentally last I week when I moved into i an upstairs apartment I overlooking a narrow * I courtyard. A gorgeous I young woman lives di-I rectly across from me, I as I learned the very I first night when she got undressed and left her shade up. I felt very sneaky about watching her, but I was fascinated. She left all the lights on, her window shades up and she even did her exercises in front of the window. Don’t tell me I can remove temptation by pulling my shades down. I know that, but I am only human and she is some dish. I saw this show again last night and to tell you the truth, I would like to meet this young lady and know her better. Any suggestions? “PEEPING TOM” DEAR TOM: Yes, introduce yourself to her before you ruin your eyes with eyestrain. As a neighborly gesture you can knock on her door and ask to borrow something. (A cup of sugar—NOT a pair of binoculars.) If she turns out to be as nice as she appears to be in the flesh, in due time, wise her up about the show she’s been putting on |pr the neighbors. And unless she is some kind of exhibitionist, she’ll appreciate it. ★ ★ ★ DEAR ABBY: ’The letter signed “HELEN,” complaining because her boss’s favorite subject was SEX, has created a p r o b I e m in our office. My name happens to be Helen, and the description of that boss fits my supervisor to a “T,” but I didn’t write the letter. This morning I found your column on my desk. Underscored in red was your advice, “If he IS your boss, there are other jobs.” In the past, I have shown my displeasure by ignoring all his sexy talk and off-color remarks, but what do I do now? HELEN IN HOUSTON DEAR HELEN: For your boss’s information, he is approximately 1600 miles off target. But you can tell him for me, “If the shoe fits—wear it,” which should not be difficult, since he has already put his foot in it. w w * Hate to write letters? Send $1 to Abby,. In care of TTie Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P.O. Box 9, PonUac, Mich. 48066. “How to Write Letters for All Occasions.” House of Bedrooms Presents New Store Our We have moved modern building display over 100 cluttered setting, special invitation into our spacious new, where we are able to bedroom sets in an un-We want to extend a to our past customers as well as to those new to this area. We pride ourselves with handling only the finest selections of adult and children's bedroom sets. New Contemporary Look Rich hond-rubbed browntona finish with striking x J j frosted occents. It’s a new look. Includes o lorge ^ I ^ ^ double dresser, nvotching fromed mirror. spociouS ^ chest of drawers ond ponel bed. Jmm flflalirjuittia 1716 S. Telegraph Rd. 334-4593 Open 9 lo 9 Mon. thru Sel. Between Miracle Mile and Orchard Lake Rd, \ PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBEB 29, 1967 Gi/uXb/MJiA^ (Si^Tuite Cotton Flannelette Permanently Pressed Dreamwear 4H'.C. Sclvumlt popular In fall and winter 1967 fashions, is called the world’s oldest fabric. producers of felt have found proof felt jerkins, and Genghis! that: Felt was “iiivented" byjKhan wore white felt when he; the nomadic tribes of central was crowned emperor of t h e Asia, long before it was men-1 Mongols. Poinsattias coma aliva on Sckrank draomwaor prattlad with ribbon-nm Vanlia baoding in parmonant prass flonnalatta. Baautifully mot-ad to a quitted broadcloth roba with idwordion tcollopad collar, anriehad with sotin piping. Pink, Fashionable Felt Is Ancient Fabric NEW YORK (UPI) - Felt, Researchers for one of today’s tlMied in the ancient records of China, Greece and Rome. Odysseus wore a hide helnoet lined with felt ; Caesar’s soldiers wore arrow- &mnd Opeitin^ 3 DAYS ONLY Ttirs.^ Fri., Sat Nor. 31. Dec. 1,2 »12 WEATHERBEE Hip Length LEFT: QUILT ROBE CENTER: SHIFT GOWN *6 RIGHT: LONG GOWN ^7 Corduroy Coot Waotharbaa pilat It on — giva this thing it takas for tha graat outdoor waiting. A snuggy Borg Acrilan pile lining and collar. And tha naw-ait in corduroy taxtura: wida wala on tha horisontol. *36 Widetrock Corduroy Skirt front styling pvti you on tha right track for juniors with tha fashion knack. In supar plushy cotton corduroy, pila-linad with Orion* acrylic. Sixas 9 to 15. Baiga, graan. ^25 All Items Gift Boxgd Fro# /t Lion Charp'i* Plan SAVE S3 per Square Yd. FREE This Vacuum Sweeper With the Purchase of 20 Sq. Yds. or More of Kitchen Queen CHATEAUBRIAND Kitchen Carpet HOSPITAL clean: Superior bacterial control SAFER! Non-SUp, no wax to rausdfalla REAL COMFORT! Exeln-aive kitchen cnahion WATERPROOFED BACK! Spills tripe right off mm NOW AT OMW LOCATION McCANDLESS Comer of Perry and Pike Streets 1 N. Perry St. FE 44531 SAMPSON-BEAVREGARD BUTZKE-BECKLEY Yvonne Beauregard chose an oval neckline dress of white peau accented with re-embroidered Alencon lace, pearls and sequins for her marriage Saturday to Jon R. Sampson. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Chester Beauregard of OrtonvUle Road, Independence Township and the Arthur Sampsons of Pioneer Street. Nancy Williams uxu maid of honor with bridesmaids Mrs . Donald Hagga-done, and Patricia Clark. Linda ! Haggadone was flower girl, Lee Prayer served as best man with ushers Donald Haggadone and Gerald Son-nenberg. A reception in the Independence Township HaU followed the rite in the Episcopal Church of the Ressurec-Hm. The couple is honeymooning at Crystal Lake. A honeymoon in Ohio followed the marriage Friday evening of Carolyn Joan Beckley ^ Michael Carl Butske. Vows were spoken in Fi^st Methodist Church, Mil-foh. Parents of the couple are Mr,- and Mrs. R. Beck-ley of MUford and the Edwin W. Butskee of Highland. The bride wore a full skirted gown of sWe accented wUh rows of lace and long lace sleeves. Anil Beckley and Mrs. Gary Lasdto were honor attendants with Robert Buteke, best man. Suzanne Beckley and Kathy Buteke were bridesmaids. Ushers were Gary Laseko, Richard and William Beckley Jr., Robert Eager, Thomas Lumley, James Dem-ko, Jeffrey Horton, dnd Lawrence Falardeau. A reception in the home of the brtde’s parents followed the rite. When Is a Sale a Bargain? When Is a sale really a sale ... for you? When you can really get some good out of it. Today’s fashion trends are changing so fast an Item is soon passe T- outdated in a matter 6f weeks rather than months. The womens-wear retailer must be Just about the shrewdest in the world — he must act fast, sometimes cuttigg prices that really hurt his budget, sometimes creating just the atmosphere of a sale. He must get rid of deadwood. He must attract customers, hire them into his store. Today, the word SALE is his best come-on. He constantly must offer you cut-price merchandise. So is this really a bargain? Yes—If it’s useful to you. Yes—when it might have been a slow mover, a sleeper that didn’t catch on quickly. Perfectly good merchandise. Clean, current and conventional. Yes—if it flts into your ward- just the rest of this month. It could have be»i on sale because it was too advanced—too avante-garde for the average shopper. It might very well be next year’s big hit. WREAMms No-lf it’s a bad fit, or badly made dress that will just never look good on anyme without drastic alterations. No-if It’s past the season for it. Next year it might be out of fashion altogether. No—if you’re only buying on Impulse because it’s a bugain. Beware of tags that say “As Is.” This means that something is wrong—soiled, button missing, torn, faded—there’s an obvious reason for the markdown. robe, your life, for more than Lubricating Bath To help lubricate skin wMch has become parched and leathery from too much eunahine, sort in a warm bath with a liberal dose of bath oil added to the soepeuda. come cold, come snow, come out in $J99 t. »19®9 From ankle-low to knee-high . . . right here't where you'll find o complete wardrobe of boot styles — and the best boot values in town. THE royiiAC press, wedine^dav. November 29, i96t_ ; CONNOLLY'S TTTi’i IIIII rrmi JeuDct OF THE WEEK 5 Oi« tiw 0 fancy diamond '4r hw ■ Chrisimo* gift. TvraU white brillioni c«l diamonds radiole about the center stone — o beautiful yellour canory gem diamond of one coral and thirty-eight points to creole o mass of bril-lionce for the fashionable woman who wants somelhingidifferent. . $3,000 Ckmrgr FRIDAY EVENINGS OOyirNTOWMroNTIAC Censer el Hsnen end Seeir - FI 2-02*4 NTIAC dEWEUAS i 'Yes---Speak Softly and Carry a Big Stick' By MURIEL LAWRENCE Why do helpless young people iget chewed up by the were-wolves vdiich lurk inside many tS humans? To make my point I’ve ^ got first to tell you about the |dreiun of a young woman under tian kindness to the werewolves i when they attack you. The trouIMW||C Wiki I IMlIc, SJ. clKk wit ireciate sturdy boots of weather - resistant leather, warmly lined in shearling. Styles may be zippered, buckled, laced or gored. CRADLING CASUALS Or, present him with the pure pleasure of footcradling casuals of brushed, glove, smo^, waxy or grained leather. There are many styles from which to choose: easy-going tie types, classic moccasins, moc-inspired styles, hackled slipcns,; tassel4ied slipons, to name a few. A never-go-WTong gift might be one of trim oxfords in smooth or fine-grained leather. New features include highriser lines, hand-sewn stitching, reverse seaming, brogue trim or tunriel ties. * * * If his size or his style sense Is still uncertain, don’t give up hope. A gift certificate will do the trick. GEORGE ROMNEY low-slung contemporary, fenced with steel chain links. And there in the school yard, herded by tall, fair-skinned teachers briskly calling good mornings in English to James and Estella, the children line up for the flag ceremony. They stand stiffly at attention, right hands rigid over their hearts in knife-edge salute while they chant the pledge of allegiance, in Spanish, and the autumn it is settled now or not. Most of the colonists are now Mexican citizens, some of them naturalized after having foresworn their U.S. citizenship. Yet they cUng to U.S. traditions and stay abre^t of U.S. politics and problems. ’They foj|pw Romney’s career in a detached way. They say they do not feel isolated—but perhaps some sense of isolation shows through their universal use of the term “out there” to mean the States. 135 MILES Colonia Dublan is about 135 miles due southwest of El Paso, Tex.—200 miles by highway-a mile-high valley on the east side of the Sierra Madre Occidental. It lies on the north edge of Nueva Casas Grandes, a commercial center of about 20,000 population. About four miles southwest of Nueva Casas Grandes is the original, now smaller town of Casas Grandes. Some five miles beyond Casas Grandes lies another Mormon colony, Colonia Juarez. * * ★ Colonia Dublan and Colonia Juarez each has a population of about 2,000. Of these. Church records show that as November planting better stock. Wagner has harvested apples that weighed more than a pound. “We have more business than we can handle in Mexico,’’ he said. George Romney’s Aunt Emily rocked in her sitting room in Colonia Juarez and smiled through a network of fine wrinkles that softly overlay the years. Yes, she remembered George. A LONG WAY “We didn’t see him very much. It was a long way between Dublan and Juarez in real congenial young fellow And he's still a fine young man.” But as a presidential candidate: “I hope he doesn’t get it. It would be just too much for him. I think if anybody could get the job done, he could, but 1 think it’s a position that no one would want. It’s too much responsibility.” * * * Harvey H. Taylor, remembers Romney, too: “Oh, he was up and doing like most boys.” Like many Mormon men, Taylor stayed in Mexico at the time of the Exodus. He became a supplier for Gen. John J. Pershing when the U:S. cavalry ,was chasing Pancho Villa. Once, pistol on his thigh, he faced down a Mexican officer who had issued a warrant for his arrest. SnlL WORKING Now 77 and holding the title of state patriarch, Taylor still works several hours a day on his farm. He keeps a stack of U.S. magazines on the table beside his chair and had just read “a pretty good article” on Romney’s career. Whatever Romney’s political future, the young Mormons of Dublan are content that for them life will always be just a litUe different-and than the lives they might have led ' there.' “Of course,” said Harvey Taylor’s granddaughter, Shirley Robinson “all the girls who go out there to school are thrilled by the supermarkets and the movies and the freeways and all those lovely things. But soon it’i the strain—it’s the pace—that begins to wear on you. “Here we seldom lock the doors. Oh, we might ask somebody to watch the house if we are going to be away overnight, but we don’t feel any real need to lock the doors. "Here It’s a guieter, safer, calnier life.” FALSETEETH That Loosan Need Not Embarrass Don't U** In feu of tain tMth looaeninc, Wobbling or dropping ]uat at the wrong time. Vor more cecurltT and more comfort, Juat eprlnkle a little VASTKETH on 70Ur platee. FASTSXTEl bolds falee tMtb Snner. liakea eating eaeler. No paety, gooey taata. Belpe check "denture breath'’. Denturaa that lit are eeaentlal to health. Bee your dentlit n Oet PASTXBTH at aU drug c “LIVING SOUND" EARING AIDS breeze unfurls the red, white I began there were 263 Anglo and green—the flag of Mexico. George Romney’s parents, Gaskell Romney and Anne Pratt, grew up here as children of Mormons. Colonia Dublan was one of a series of colonies established as havens for polyin the 1880s hy the Church of Jesus Christ of LaU ter-day Saints. But the colonists, along with other Mormons, gave plural marriage after the church accepted federal law and began exconununicating polygamists in 1890. Oeerge^m-ney’s parents were monogamous. In the fighting and fears of Mormons in Dublan and 389 in Juarez. The rest of the approximately 1,530 persons in the Juarez Stake—roughly the same as a diocese—are Latin Mormons. Practically everybody else in this cluster of towns is a Catholic with a Spanish-Indian Mexican background. HALF THE TIME “We maintain our Anglo traditions,” said John B. Robinson, the Mormon grade school principal in Colonia Dublan. “We are required to teach in Spanish, of course, because we are in the Mexican school system, but the Mexican revolution in 1912, we also teach half the time in Gaskell and Anne Romney fled with some 2,000 other Mormons into the United States in' movement unfailingly called The Exodus here. George Romney was then 5. NATURAL BORN’ The U.S. Constitution says that the president must be a natural born citizen.” Romney is a citizen because his parents were citizens. He says studies in the past have shown that the Constitution was not intended to deprive children born of citizens abroad of their chance to become president. But Isidor Blum, a former professor of constitutional law at New York Law School, wrote recently in the New York Law Journal that the authors of the Constitution meant bom within the United States when they wrote “natural born.” .He traced this meaning back to the English common law of the 14th century. ★ * ★ This constitutional question is not likely to bother Colonia Dublan boys in the future, whether English.” The colonists keep up with events “out there” by watching two El Paso television channels and hy subscribing to El Paso and Salt Lake City newspapers and U.S. magazines. When television set breaks down, it is me times months before enough parts and skill can be gotten together to repair it. * * -k Dennis Wagner, heads the col lies’ largest and most modern business—Wagner Bros., farming, packing and distributing enterprise. The seven Wagner brothers id their father raise apples, peaches, pears, cotton, maize, sorghum, wheat and turkeys. They wash, chill and pack the fruit in a 65-by-240-foot shed with electrically operated production lines. They deep freeze the turkeys. BETTER STOCK The original colonists brought fruit trees and grain seed and began irrigating from deep wells. In the past 15 years, the younger colonists have been rooting out the old trees and Dog Barks to 'Charge It' LOS ANGELES UR - Nero Is a Dalmatian and a firehouse mascot, both of which make him a very traditional dog. But Nero also Is unique; He has a charge account with a bakery. * * N Whenever Jack Watso, a bakery truck driver, stops at 14th St. and Central Ave., Nero bounds out of Fire Station 30, barking and whining, and heads for Watso. * * * Depe^ing on how vocal he Is, Nero oae doughnut or two. The weekly bin, totaling 40 to SO , cults, is paid by the firemen, who think Nero is great. This Christmas give somethin 7 really different! Jim Gym THE TOY THAT'S MORE THAN A TOY. It'i I Foldiwiy Eurciu Bir lor Indoor Fimily Fun tnd Hoolth ■ Complotoly niiomhlod . Folds Flit for saiy ilortgt • Holds in ncois of 400 pounds ^oiingly strong—enn't dp orOT .......lost for ysors Jim Gym lets thO whole family discover that exercise can be fun. Youngsters will find the Jim Gym more fun than a circus. Within days, they'll be doing "loop-the-loop", "skin-the-cat” end "hand-by-your-knees." Jim Gym helps kids build new muscles and develop co-ordination. For adults Jim Gym is a great muscle-toner. For everyone it's a barrel of fun. Use it anywhere in the house; store It under the bed .or In a closet. Jim Gym—the Christmas gift that will be used and remembored for years. Availsbis at loading stores: two sizes priced under 020.00. FOR INFORMATION CALL:. JIM GYM INC./950 W. MAPLE, TROY. MICH./313-SU-2211 Gunmn5liams?;'o“^r. THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1967 B-7 E. German Chancellor Ending First Year in Success, Stability V ® ® ® genera- ChMcellor Kurt Georg Kiesin-|tion, had their majorities gets government is ending its duced in these electi^ first year in office with a record I * * * of political stability at home and| Many political observers SS “ reviving the betting m substantial Christian ecohomy. _ Democratic gains in : It has tried for a more independent foreign policy than its predecessors but has not come up writh any easy solutions to Germany’s basic problems, such as the East-West split and relations with the Soviet bloc. * * -k Born of parliamentary crisis, the coalition of Kiesinger’s Christian Democrats and Willy Brandt’s Social Democrats took office Dec. 1, 1966. It seems to have worked well enough for neither to want to break it up before the next federal election in 1969 but officials of both sides agree that a government made up of the two largest parties is not desirable on a long-term basis. > Critics of the coalition say it has left West Germany without an effective opposition in the Bundestag Parliament and thus has driven protest voters into the arms of radical parties of the left and right. ‘BROUGHT STABU.ITY’ Those who praise the coalition say it brought stability when it was most needed—at the end of a political crisis and when the West German economic boom was leveling off. The conservative Christian Democrats have dominated political life since the end of World War II. They seem to have gained* most from the coalition, and showed gains in the last three state elections. The Social Democrats, in the government 1969, perhaps enough to allow them to form a government alone. The party ruled alone for four years until 1961, when the late Chancellor Konrad Adenauer lost votes because of the building of the Berlin wall and had to bring the tiny Free Democratic party back into the government. Kiesinger’s government set a course for a more relaxed policy toward Communist Eastern Europe, friendship with France and more independence of the United States than shown by the governments of Ludwig Erhard and Adenauer. ROMANIA TIES In a departure, Kiesinger’s government exchanged ambassadors with Romania in January. Up to then the only Com-MUNIST munist country maintaining diplomatic relations with Bonn the Soviet Union Itself. Efforts to set up diplomatic ties with Czechoslovakia, Hungary and Bulgaria got a cool reception in those countries, which are more firmly in the Soviet camp than Romania. solve the political problem of division they should at least discuss making life easier for the split nation. Stoph proposed meeting Kie-singer but Kiesinger rejected this because it would come too close to recognition of the regime in East Berlin. FRENCH FIIIENDSHIP The government has little to show for its declarations of friendship with France. Kiesinger conunitted himself to reju- venatihg the cooperation treatyied Bonn’s relations with Wash-i Soon after coming to poweri A slowdown in the economy signed by Adenauer and French ington during the year. Kiesinger made it clear to the|seems to have been checked and President Charles de Gaulle inj * ★ ★ |United States that Bonn could;business forecasts for 1968 are 1963, but the enthusiasm seemsi Kiesinger’s government led no longer buy enough U.S. arms optimistic. But large segments mostly on the German side. |Other nonnuclear industrial to offset fully America’s foreign of the population, such as min-* ★ ★ Icountries in opposing the draft exchange costs of . stationing ers and fanners, have been hit Kiesinger has had little sue-1 treaty under negotiation in Ge-|U.S. troops in Gemany. He also hard. The government helped to ov-ercome the economic difficulties by a public works program that will eventually total 7.9 billion marks, or $1.95 billion. ih trying to break down French resistance to British « try into the Common Market. neva. The Wist Germans claim refused to make a 100 per cent I it would cut off nonnuclear na- offset agreement with Britain. Unemployment, virtually non-tions from the benefit of nuclear • ★ ★ ★ |existent for years, rose research. Bonn would like to see' As a result, 35,000 of the 673,000 in February but has The treaty to halt the spread a time limit on the treaty and 250,000 America^ troops will be been shrinking since. The num- of nuclear weapons, which the!opposes any clause that would withdrawn next year as well as ber of foreign workers in West United States would like to sign allow Soviet inspectors on its 5,000 of 59,000 in the British Germany is down from 1.2 mil- witl* the Soviet Union, dominat-1 territory. Army of the Rhine. ilion to about 900,000. The Jones Act, passed by Congress August 29, 1916, granted territorial government to the Philippines with a promise of independence when they proved themselves capable of self-government. Attempts to get talks going with the Soviet Union on improving West German-Russian relations have not gotten Off the ground. Bonn proposed talks on number of bilateral topics. The Soviets suggested that Ki ger’s government exchange dec-j larations with East Germany renouncing the use of force. SOVIET DIALOGUE Brandt as foreign minister, supported by the Social Democrats, would like to continue a i dialogue with the Soviets. I Forces within Kiesinger’s party oppose this, fearing the ex-: change could lead to some sort i of recognition of East Germany. i Kiesinger has exchanged letters with East Germany’s Premier Willi Stoph. Such official correspondence had not taken place since the early 1950s. ' ★ ★ * But East Germany has not responded to Kiesinger’s proposals for easing the burden of division on people of both sides of the dividing line. Kiesinger’s reasoning was that since Ger-KURT KIESINGER mans themselves could not i GAS INCINERATOR NOW AT SPECIAL INSTALLED PRICES! Detignad for modorn living with non* of tho diiodvon-togos of wax condlot,- Polly-flomo Butono Condlot brings you toft condlolight that burnt with o uniform light for hours. Using cloon-burn-ing, odorlatt butono got, Polly-Flomo Condlot can't p or burn . PLUS FREE GIFT Metallic silicone enamel finish, bright stainless steel trim. Electrically welded special corrugated alloy steel combustion chamber, featuring secondary fire brick lining, will not crack, warp, or absorb grease, liquids, fats, or juices. Exclusive twin cyclonic built-in-smoke, odor and fly ash eliminator — featuring tio burners to become plugged or moving parts to wear out. SPECIAL REDUCED INSTALLED PRICE Polly Flame Butane Candles NOW ONLY INSTALLED FOR INFORMATION CALL 333-7812 OFFER ENDS SATURDAY DECEMBER 2 Doily 10 to 10 — Sunday 10 to 7 IN PERSON AT Kmart... Thwrs., Fri., Sat. | THE POLAROID CAMERA OIRL Thurs., Nov. 30,12 to 9 ... Fri., Dec. 1,12 to 9 ... Sat., Dec. 2,11 to 5 | To demonstrate the new "200" series of Polaroid Comeros for your convenience. Come in. Save on these Polaroid Specials Thursday, Friday and Saturday. POLAROID 220 COLOR PACK CAMERA Kraturrs double-window range finrirr focusing, duplrl lens and electric eye. Adapts to a number of Polaroid accessories. Color prints in I minute, black and white in 10 seconds. Our Reg. $b.i.88 $S4^e POLAROID 230 COLOR PACK CAMERA IIS'* triplet leiiii, electric eve, 1 expomre nettings and film speed nettinirn and electronic nliiitter. F.xpetinive leaturrn at an rcuiioiiiical price. Color in 60 neconrln, black and white in 10 seconds. Our Rrg. $79.88 $J477 POLAROID 210 COLOR PACK CAMERA Feature image sizer focusing, sharp duplet lens, electric eye for exposure control and lightweight body. Color pictures in 60 seconds and black and white in 10 seconds. Our Reg, *39** $343$ POLAROID 240 COLOR PACK CAMERA Features rangefinder focusing, electric rye exposure control-indoor or out —brushed chrome body and uses all Polaroid accessories. Use a Polaroid self-timer to take your own picture. >5; I Our Reg. $104.88 $9/88 POLAROID SWINGER FILM 1.38 Charge /t” Polaroid-Type 108 Color film for both the Polaroid “100” and “JOO” Scries. Our Reg. 9 CT/ $8,97 OeOi POLAROID 250 COLOR PACK CAMERA The very best Polaroid has to offer. Feature* electronic sliiiltrr, electric r>^ /ri** Ikon nmgrfimirr focusing and ability to sboot black and wbile picture* indoor* witbout na*b ill low light. You can't top ihi* for in.*tant |iictures. Our Reg. $119.84 $fl468 GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD i-HE PONTIAC PKESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29. 1907 FIBERGLAS^ DRAPERIES IN "CELLINI" SOLID COLORS Our Reg. 4.44 4 Days Only 3.88 Trim Mr Home for the Holidays... NEW WINDOW CURTAINS FOR CHRISTAAAS A. 10-pleal lop i* 50 inches wide per pair. FiberKlas® prlass in white, gold, avocado, beige and melon. Just say "Charge It". 63” Solid Color Fiherglas® Glass Draperies, our reg. 3.66..S.24 ANTIQUE SATIN* Our Reg. 3.77 3.22 (Pur Reg. 6.47 WOOLY FIBERGLAS« 5.66 .m B. 84" draperies. Choice of colors. 63” Antique Satin* drape, reg 2.97.............. •SsyM mS snM* OMBRE FIBER6US’ Our Reg. 6.44 5.66 D. 84”, Fiberglas® glass 2-lone shades. 63" Filierglas'tl> Oiiihre drapes..................................4.BT C. 84". Textured Fibetglaa* glass. 63" length Draperies, reg. 5.S3 444 FIIBERRUS* BRIPES » 8.44 Burlington Vislagla^, foam lined. 63-inch A. 60x36” tier with 54x11” matching valance* in “Never Press” Kodel-60 power telescope comes complete with tripod and Tinder-Hrope. Quick zeroing in on planets, stars, or distant terreslrial f>hjectM. Easy and fun to use. Just Charge It. 4.66 Our Reg. 5.97 4 Days Only Now at this outstanding low price — young men’s permanent press cotton corduroy jeans witn up-to-the-minute fast-back styling. In three versatile colors; loden, whiskey and astro blue. Sizes 27 to .16. Limited Time Only! Cbarge It at Kmart. In Many Patterns and Colors SPECIAL PURCHASE NO^IRON PAJAAAAS 1.96 Compare at 2.97 4 Days Only Take advantage of savings made possible through this special plurchase. Buy several pair of boys’ KK^ cotton pajamas, in comfortable coat style with pearliied buttons and piped edges. Many patterns, colors. Limited Time Only! 6-18. Kmart guarantees the quality, then discounts the price! GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD B-uio THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1967 RADIOS STEREO HI-FI OHORD ORGANS PORTARLE HI-FI -4; FREE DELIVERY and SERVICE NOV/ 6PJ^ ••TRANSISTOR POCKET RADIO $A|7T p •-TRANSISTDR AM-FM RAOID AM-FM locapHen. WALKIE TALKIES 3*any wlialass com- OE OARTRIDOE Taps Raeordar B-translsIar. Ramota control mika. SelM and bnltnrias. $097 mwnk^n. Rugged case. Par pair. $097 lias. »44“ $1488 if H m OE AM-FM SOLID STATE QE AM-FM Dan. Elaetrip CLOCK RADIO TADLE RADIO. TRANS. RADIO Clock Radio Autematically waka m musk. WMi snsoa-aiaim. InslanI saundl In calorti Smart mWa medal. 10 transistors. lar-phona lack. A.F.C. Rugged case. Wake to musk. At-Iroctivo modal cabinet. $19«9 $099 $1097 $997 OES-TRANS. POCKET MOK WHfc « pliMM, bottwlM and cany COM. Paluaa. $477 SAVE! PORTABLE PHONOS QE AUTOMATIC 4-SPEED STEREO QE 4-SPEED AUTOMATIC HI-FI MM iloM. Ploy* 4 racordi. 4-tpMd automallc nceM chongar. WMi «PM •pindta. Smart cempaci .irtylngca... $^487 ■ :_____________J AIWA QUALITY TAPE RECORDERS AIWA SOLID STATE BATTERY OR A.C. Pertabla, racord onywhara on baltarias or on A.C. powtr! Duol trocky copston-driva. 2 •poods. Miko hos on-off ro-moto control switch. VU motor, l With portoblo covor, miko ond ly roolsy topo ond bottorios AIWA SOLID STATE TRANSISTOR PORTABLE Paolufaa dial-typa 2-niater tpaad central, plus push-buttons for rawind, slop, play pnd laeaid functions. Ctyslal mkraphona in-eerpesatas rameta control OK-On switch. Ultra-compact for tru# portability. Racoid onywhara. With covar, milia, rools, topa and botlarias. $1988 AIWA SCUD STATE 4-TRACK STEREO Profoislonal qoolltyl 80-cord storoo and ploybock in storoo. 4-trQchy copston drtvo. 22 transistors. 2 •pookors system ond occassenas.’ $188®” SET OF FIVE STEREO RECORD ALDUMS $15.00 voluol StartarcollacHen ol fiVa storoo racoids. Frao with purchase of any slarae Hi-Fi NOT STEREO ALONE-BUT A 4-WAY COMBINATION RCA VICTOR STEREO HI-FI COMBINATION WITH AM-FMy FM-STEREO RADIO OUR LOW SALE PRICE ^47 EARLY AMERICAN COMDINATION ly Amorkon stylo cabbiM In ganulrra <»«l* ; doMlInt. MM alota ataraa *DMmiM ityW’fcicard ttecoga spoca. ZENITH MIDITERRANEAN COMBINATION DrwMik MadHarranoan In 0-A Oak ^fslTFjJ!! Ilna dMioasInt. 140 W. saM sMa nntpl^- $•«<• F^ staraa lunar, t-apanbar toond systaas with i ^P**^'^"**^_.’boco ■tplaa dataclar ctocMt Far tiwar ataraa sapnrotk*!. tacard stofoga spoca. Varydalusa. COME IN-SET OUR CLENiMCE SUE PMCES LUXURY LOWBOY SOLID STATE REALIABILITY ftgrpL STEREO HI-FI COMBINATION WITH AM-FM RADIO DANISH MODERN CABINET EMclItna to Uok mt ... thrilling to listen to. In|ey storoo hi-fi ond rodio roproduction «t Ht linost ) in this groot Xonith instrumont, Distinctivo Donish Modom cob-inotry in oil finish wolnwt woods. Solid stoto omplifior ond tvnor. Mtcro-louch 2-0 tono orm in 4-spood OMtomotic chongor. 4 •pooker systom. Rocord slorogo OUR LOW PRICE $igg88 Frgp dglivgry, ggrvieg GENERAL ELECTRIC SOLID STATE STEREO COMBINATIONS YOUR CHOICE *218«« 6.L MAPLE COMBINATION "H- «h.m anU ..I,a, S.|,a *..|wali« A _ ^ ^ comid.. .ill! 1-6 a.#. $^ U Ol itur*. Record itofofo Htoo. | ____________________________________________________________I ORDER BY PHONE NO MONEY DOWN GE SPANISH SniiD COMBINATION RED. $289.95 Fret dtliveryp 00-day servioo and free records. GENERAL ELECTRIC SfEREO HI-FI COMBINATION WITH BUILT-IN STEREO TAPE RECORDER AND AM-FM, FM-STEREO RADIO tWs a hiN spaenum at snSsnalsmsat wUh sapaA caatatl hall saaadl MW imia narnaWjwnh AM-FM,FW-staraam4la —44aiathrtsias wsaWaa4sraiaaplayhaili 1^ riswasi. 40.W ampURar. Mama smr, mnlap laaSsts, A.F.C. aummaRi akctmnk . 2 eilliBS,^-iij|ieH^ lyiteHi. GE 9-SPEAKER COMBINATION mmuiM. REQ.$299.N ■•t a Taw 8T 8 Tahit MoMt SWarMirilarSwMC08R8ol8t MAGNUS aECTMC CNURD ORGAN •wwWa. RmTS tassmatkas aa4 masts hart kaa. OOMPARE ATI11I.U $5788 R*(. *69 Sm MOO- $54988 Win FR-I iRttmipn tpgakgr fnr iMaRdfwae tgund, Staraa Hi-Fi wHh AM-FM, FM-starae radia. Faaturas 8-spaohar systam with FR-I lull ronga aitansion spaohar lor piping saund in onolhar roam. Mid stata. Ratracting A ^ ^ _ cortridga. 3-0 diamond stylus ptaisuta. 8 088 A.D.C. [lactronic FM switching. dm H 0 All liicludgFrgg Dglivgry, Sgrviog and Frag Rteordi QENERAL ELECTRIC SHOW Y TEU Shews fuR-colar pklvios In lima to words and musk, fducollanol and anlartolnlng. Haw lew Highland sola prkal »I6*» NO MONEY DOWN • 3 YEARS TO PAY PONTIAC NALL SHOPPING CENTER TELEGRAPH ROAD, Corntr Eliubfth Lake Rood OPEN SUNDAY 11 ILM. to • P.l OP0 DAILY 14.MS to • Psi 8 mONt I P.M. FNONtllt-tSM THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBP^R 29, 1967 B-11 Copper Strike Drags On, Its Impact Harsh on People, Towns By JACK LEFTER AP Business Writer ‘Tve been'through them all since 1943 and this could be the worst. But 1 don’t care if it lasts from now ‘til kingdom come, we’ll hang on.” That’s Delmus Knadle, a veteran Magna, Utah, miner, talking about the strike that has throttled the U.S. copper industry since July 15. ★ ★ ★ The strike has cost many millions of dollars in copper company revenue and miners’ wages. « But it drags on with the companies and a coalition of unions, headed by the United Steelworkers of America, apparently just about as far apart as at the beginning. IN SMALL TOWNS The strike’s impact on individuals and communities has been harsh because most of the mines and smelters are located in smali Western towns mainly dependent on a one-industry payroll. But, while the strike has shut down 95 per cent of the nation’ copper mine production, 80 per cent of its copper processing capacity and 35 per cent of its copper fabricating capacity, there has been no severe copper shortage. The loss in production estimated at 650,000 tons iof refined copper. ★ The ability to maintain output of copper products to meet tiie needs of private industry the Vietnam war is due to two factors By last June, mills and foundries, anticipating a strike, had built their inventories to record 641,083 tons. And they have been buying foreign copper at premium prices and passing on the extra cost to consumers. FEEUNG THE PINCH ■Although builders and automobile radiator manufacturers were reported starting to feel the pinch, an industry said: "There’s no copper if you want to pay the price.” it ii it The Defense Department has been able to meet its needs under the priorities system provided for by the Defense Production Act. Negotiations in the bitter pute that has idled about 50,000 workers have been at a virtual standstill ever since the walkout began. OVER 3 YEARS The companies estimate their offer to the unions at 50.6 cents scales over three years. The steelworkers union and smaller unions demand a boost they; compute at 99 cents an hour. Each side disputes the her’s computations. The U.S. Labor Department has reported that the average hourly wage in the copper mining industry last July was $3.28. ★ ★ ★ The ompanies’ official stand is this; “To date negotiations are at impasse because two inflexible union coalition demands block meaningful bargaining. These are the coalition’s insistence on a highly inflationary wage and fringe package with uniform industrywide wage scale and expiration date ai\d companywide bargaining whi^ is not feasible for such dissimilar industry op-drations as exist in cq>per mining, lead-zinc mining and copper and brass fabricating.” UNION ACCUSA’nON The unions last week issued a statement saying: ‘This strike has been provoked and perpetuated by major employers whose aims have little to do with the terms of the labor contract.” ★ ★ * The unions accused the companies of trying to exhaust sur- an hour more than the old wage Clothing--and More-on Santa's Yule List It’s a foregone conclusion that every Santa on the gifts list is going to be presented with something to wear, and maybe several somethings. In fact, apparel gifts for men are so basic to Giristmas that they’re likely to be regarded as only the beginning. Sfnta himself Is notably generous; therefore, he deserves not only more than one gift, but more than one kind of gift. So runs the reasoning of gift givers preparing to wrap up Christmas for men. Fortunately, men’s needs and interests are so wide and varied that, with gifts selections equally far-ranging, it’s no problem to come up with ideas in many categories. Men used to be considered hard to gift successfully, but no longer. * * ★ Once the apparel gifts are selected, generous givers can go on to those plus gifts with complete confidence in finding the right presents, both traditional and unusual. TRAVEL CLUE Men’s Interests and activities usually provide the clue. Travel, for instance, is a classic category of gifting, more appropriate than ever now that more men are doing more traveling, both for business and pleasure. Travel suggests certain types of apparel gifts — those with emphasis on durable press and/or easy care — plus the many other gifts that make traveling easier. Luggage is traditionally right here, and so are grooming gifts slanted to on-the-go needs. Special thoughtfulness might be expressed by gifts that make it easy to combine travel, pusiness and pleasure, from small Items such as pocket secretaries, pens and pencils to bigger ideas — a compact, portable typewriter or tape recorder, for instance. ★ ♦ ★ Portable transistorized radios, good books and similar gifts entertain both the traveling man and the stay-at-home — the sportsman and hobbyist, too. CASUAL APPAREL Since the man who must travel usually prizes his leisure hours, when he gets them, gifts to enhance his home life seem certain to delight. He’ll appreciate casual apparel for indoor or outdoor relaxing, and there are many plus factors for gifting in this area. A reclining chair, a good reading lamp, a spacious desk enter Into at-honM giving, as do all sorts of entertainment gifts, which might be as simple as a deck of cards or as happily complex as a complete stereo system. A pipe rack, an ashtray, a pair of comfortable slippers, subscription to his favorite magazine—these and more symbolize for him the comforts of home. Whether he pursues his favorite hobby at home or away, in or out of doors, he’ll welcome gifts of accessories and equipment — for photography, stamp or coin collecting, Sunday painting, model building, home craftsmanship rfnd a host of other special interests. New Method Produces Commercial Electrefs plus copper supplies to governmental intervention, set the stage for a substantial copper price < increase and "starve the strikers into submission.” Most of the nation’s copper is produced in Arizona, Montana. Nevada, New Mexico and Utah. LOSS OF WAGES The long strike has hurt these states through loss of wages, sales and taxes. In Utah it was estimated that the loss to the state’s economy by mid-November was $47 mUUon. Strikers in the small mining towns are getting aloqg without pay checks by tightening their belts, subsisting on strings, union benefits ranging up to ^0 a week and food stamps. * * * "The kids don’t ask for things any more the way they used says Frank Gonzales, an Ajo, Ariz., miner. “I used to stop off at the tavern every night after work to drink beer with the boys. I don’t now. I still have a beer, but every other day. ’The miners in Ajo, a company-owned town, perhaps are getting along better than strikers in some other areas. Their employer, Phelps-Dodge Corp., is paying their utilities and rent on trigger company-owned houses. The company mercantile store has given the miners up to $35 credit a week to buy food, clothing and other necessities. When the men go back to work Phelps-Dodge Avill deduct what it lent from their Butte, Mont., where Anaconda Co., operates, has been hard hit. "Fiscally, we may be in bad shape,” says Mayor Tom Pow-“It’s going to be toqgh pic-come spring. This strike could lead to an emergency situation.” “People who haven’t been hunting before are hunting now to have something to put on the table,” says Howard Brown, owner of the Butte Warehouse and Cold Storage Co. “Deer and elk meat beat no meat at all.” Wives of strikers have been picketing at Great Falls, Mont. Mapjorie Sharette, 26, e spokesman fcn> about 100 pick- “We want negotiations. We have to get them started because we need the money.” Credit Union Office Will Be Closed TOMORROW (Thursday, Nov. 30th) TO CHANGE ACCOUNTING SYSTEM! 939 Woodward Ave. - Pontiac Phone 338-4001 Employees Federal By Science Service WASHINGTON-Electrels are to electricity what permanent magnets are to magnetism — they exert a force on other electric bodies and don’t lost their charge. It has been known for several decades that some materials when melted and'allowed to solidify in a strong electric field acquire a permanent electric charge. More recently it was found that plastics such as Mylar, Teflon and some polycarbonates were suitable electret material. With the discovery of these more economical materials, electrets become commercially Last week a method for inexpensively mass producing electrets was patented by Peter Fatovic of the Northern Electric Co., Montreal, Canada. Electrets pi^uced by the new method are being field- tested In a condenser-type microphone for telephones, Noi'thern Electric spokesman says. Condenser mikes, which are more sensitive than other kinds, use the fact that the capacitance of a condenser depends the distance between its plates. One plate is made flexible so it vibrates with s6und pressure, changing the distance. so it vibrates with sound pressure, changing the distance. Ordinary condenser microphones need a separate power a separate power source charge the capacitor plate. With an electret as the plate, however, the cumbersome power supply can be eliminated. Other promising uses for electrets include filters for auto exhaust cleaners, industrial smokestacks and even cigarettes, according to Northern Electric (Patqnt 3,354,373). Sears SEARS. ROEBUCK AND CO. For Fast Cold Starts and Trouble Free Driving G^t,. . . High Voltage Batteries Check Sears Guarantee Check Sears Low Prices.^ As Low As With Trado-In (Sto Chart) Charge It Fast, Free Installation Free Power Team Check GUARANTEE /troimt dffmcUtm. After 90 dnyt, KW rm/tlnre thm batlery. If defective, nmd charge you only for the period of owner-$hip, hated on the regular pyice leit trade-in at the lime of return, pro-rated over the numher of moniht of guaran- S»ari Auto AceauoriM Dupi. 1 Fits These Cars: 36 MONTH GUARANTEE 42 MONTH GUARANTEE 48 MONTH GUARANTEE 1 Mi»l '59-'62 Bui. k.; mo.l '57-'(>4 Ga.IMIar; muul ’54-'64 i)lijanif>bilr 17.95 19.95 2,3.95 M.»l ’6.3-’67 Buirk; mn.1 ’S9-’66 Git.lillac; moil ’56-’67 Ghi-j-ulrr; ni.Ml ’6S-'67 Olilunobitr 16.9.'; 19.95 23.95 Maul 'S5-'r>2 Ghrvroleli nuni ’56-'bl Dfi.Soloi uioul *56-’67 Dodurt iihmI ’60-’67 Itaiii niual ’67 OI«lumobil« F-85; moal *56-’67 Plrmoulh; moal ’55-’67 Pontiac. 16.95 19.95 23.95 Moat ’6S-’67 Chevrolet; moat ’63-’67 Chevrolet 11; *6S-’67 Corvair; moat ’60-*65 Falcon; moat ’65 Ford; moat ’60-’62 Mercury Comet; moat ’61-’66 Oldamobile F-85. 1«.95 23.95 Moat ’60-’64 Corvair * 16.95 Moal ’66-’67 Falcon; moal ’66-’67 Ford; moal ’65-’67 Mercury; mo.1 ’63-’64 Mereury Comet; m.Ml ’65-’67 Mercury (Utmel. 19.95 23.95 M».l ’56-’64 Ford; m.»l ’56 ’64 Mereury. 16.95 19.95 Moal ’S9-'67 Renanllt; moal ’60-’67 VaUanl. 17.95 19.95 23.95 10 Oarrios iailorlot to FH Mott Foroign Oart MFrieotwHiiTrado-ln "Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back" SEARS Downtown Pontiac Phone FE 5-4171 B—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29. 1967 FARMER JACK LOWERS STEAK PRICES! Bushel G6 *0N AliD ON’ AT FARMER JACK’S! n^lCES ARE LOWER ON U. S. CHOia BEEF STEAK AND ALL OTHER FINE MEATS A POULTRY AT FARMER JACK'SI FILL YOUR FREEZER TIME U.S. Choice Steak Sale ROUND SIRLOIN T-BONE U«MWakT1«eUi!a)to^To«1000.P^ S3«SSS»«. 2!69o€l Billjgt*? F^airmer Jbek...l!^ajr]ria^ CounsielcMr! There's no need t'see q marriage counselor, If all you're bickering about Is a food budget that doesn't match the size of your Grocery bills I What you need t'do Is get In the cpr >• on' drive over t'seo Farmer Jack -and you'll soon be a happy family, again I You'll never know how much "togetherness” Farmer Jack can bring Intp your home - 'til you've tried his low "bushel an' case" priced food I It'i the best therapy you've ever seen - for folks whove been spending more than they make every week I Now - that doesn't mean cutting down on the amount of food you buy I What It amounts to Is - you don't have to pay high prices for food anymore I Shop at Farmer Jack's, and fill up your cart -- with everything you normally buy •* or like to eatl You'll get the surprise of your food shoppin' life - at the bags filled with National brand Groceries, U.S. Choice AAeats an' delicious Produce you'll carry home ff with money still In your pocket, that you'd have spent if you'd shopped anyplace except Farmer Jack's! Everything In Farmer Jack's Supermarkets is sold the some wayl You , get low "bushel an' case" prices on everything y'buy, regardless of quantity! Imagine buyin' one can of food, at the same low price you'd have paid •* if you'd bought a dozen, or a whole easel Buyin' more'food than y'need, an throwin' part of It away, or sacrificin' quality t'get a low price is not good economy! It costs you morel But, It's something y'never have to worry about ~ when you do your food shopping at Farmer Jack's I FARMER JACK'S Even If you aren't 'bickering' about food bills at your house -- try money-saving "bushel price shoppin", this week! Join the dozens of happy jus-bands on' wives - havin' the time of their lives - makin' their Farmer Jack shoppin' a "family affair"! B—14 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1967 You work hard the long days of life, you with the hands showing the years of your toil. You raise your arms and buildings follow, you swing your hands and mountains fall. Your eyes look across a span of ^ater and soon a bridge follows. You sweat and it soaks into every part of our nation, for it is the effort you give which makes life easier for your fellow-man. A million jobs done each day testify you are not unnoticed. Behind a badge or carrying concrete, you are the face of your .neighbor or the person down the street. You can be angry or happy; determined or in- different; curious or content, but you are recognized. You come in all shapes and sizes with backgrounds as diverse as your imaginations. With it is accomplished the highest expectations of our dreams; without it we only topple and fall to a sorrowful end too quickly felt. You are the working force, the person whose voice and muscle and mind and heart give to each of us not only the necessities but the luxuries of life. To you we can only say “Thanks!”for all you are and all you shall be throughout our days. Yhk WMk'i Picnni 1 •i"U 1 CAN ' is<8 t 1 KROGER FROZEN SHOESTRING POTATOES...........w LYNDEN BRAND-RED RASPBERRIES.......":°IZ:Z29* BEAR LAKE BRAND STRAWBERRIES........ 4 CHUN KING FROZEN EGG ROLLS 59* CHUN KUNG BEEF, CHICKEN OR SHRINP , , - FROZiN CHOW MEIN % 69' ' YOUR CHOICE J I miMr LEE FROZEN " flNNAMON ROLLS ,^,?.||9* FROZEN-SAUSAGE WITH CHEESE JENO’S PIZZA ROLLS FROZEN MORTON MINCE OR PUMPKIN PIES Ili-LB PIE FROZEN 5 VARIETIES^ MORTOH 3,,J| PK6S ■ FROZCN KROGER WAFFLES.....Vp°^c 10* KROGER REEF, CHICKEN OR TURKEr FROZEN POT PIES....Ve°kM5* BIRDS EYE FROZEN TOPPING COOL WHIP.............”.T.5S* NORTON FROZEN PEiCH OR APPLE PIE...........29‘ TWO PACKAGES OF lO-BORDEN'S ICE CREAM SANDWICHES..........20 k°k 79* iTOUFFER’S FROI I BEEF, CHICKEN OR 5.^ 4'to*key pot PIFS « •s#* FROZEN BEE^<^ CHICKEN OR TURKEN MORTOI POT PIES UFFER’S FR02 I ROMAI rVLI POTI MCHi riNPotiw ABEL’S BAGELS 3 J1 50 TOP VALUE STAMPS WITH COUPON BELOW m VEGETABLES TOP VALUE STAMPS WITH THIS COUPON ON a S2 PURCHASE OR MORE ■ KROGER ■ FROZEN VEGETABLES E Valia thru Sun., Dae. 3, 1967 E at Kragar Dat. A Eatt. Ulth. GREEN BEANS OR MIXED VEGETABLES PEAS, CORN OR PEAS AND CARROTS 9-OZ WT PKCS $1 8-OZ WT PIES MORTON B-OZ WT PKG FROZEN SPAGHETTI AND MEAT OR MACARONI & CHEESE 22* FROZEN PINEAPPLE OR PINEAPPLE-ORANGE DOLE JUICE........."“"16* BEACH HAVEN FROZEN ONION RINGS........39* MARSH BURN FARMS FROZEN CARROTS. 31* FROZEN-INDIAN TRAIL WITH ORANGE CRANBERRY n%°k^ . t33* LARRY’S FROZEN POOR BOY SANDWICHES SUNSHINE BRAND-TASTY DOG FOOD JOHNSTON GRAHAM CRACKER STAR-KfST FROZEN Krispy Crockers ..........wg‘35* Ken-L Ration Stew 2>fc~rR^>39* Ready-Crust.......................6J‘t"37* Tuna Noodle Cosserole 4 KRAFT OOOLRISE ROBIN HOOD Cracker Barrel Cheese Robin Heed Flour.. 25 .S!g*1** Coolrise Flour.,G,;.....5 53* 10""OZ WT . i c^^49* AEROSOL CAN-UNE RAPID SHAVE........r... FAMILY PRIDE SHAMPOO OR CREME RINSL..........7.49* FAMILY PRIDE FLUORIDE TOOTHPASTE........iMi.47* FAMILY PRIDE 100 ASPIRIN.... FAMILY PRIDE MULTIPLE FOR BAKING OR COOKING SHORTENING 3 44 KROGER RYE, SANDWKH OR CMBASsr CHCKitY. (Ucncmr or 29* VITAMINS. .Tiff 99* STRAWBERRY preserves.'..3Y KANDU BRAND GALLON BLEACH..............-.3« CINDY PINK ^ LIQUID DETERGENT..-3G AEROSOL SPRAY LYSOL DISINKCTANr....£".T* AU "YULE SJWE cards must be redeemed by Sat. Dec. 9 CA TOP VALUE valuabie coupon STAMPS ' MOJ B I WITH rmZ'COUFOM OM Z tOEOEM S SHEEMT 6e - B 2^PKGS CUT-UP FRYERS ■ COUNTRY CLUB ICE CRKAH " ■ OR m riEiTALNIticoMD S I ^^2-PKGS FRYER parts B AU.'’x " REGULAR AND SUPER Kotons Tanpsis ••••••••••••• Flush-A-ByDs DisposabI* Dlap«rs »I”I99 T’ SWEET N’ JUICY ZIPPER SKIN NO MORE TEARS-JOHNSON'S lohy ShoHpoo.... DEODORANT TALC lliowEr To Stoww..............SiS,4B* rANGELOS CA TOP. VALUE |E A TOP VALUE STAMPS STAMPS COUNTRY CLUB LUNCHEON MEATS YmM ffcrw Imi., On. 3, WT MKmmr Ott. A Emmt. NUk. L ' rms COUPON on TWO 1-4.B PROS COUNTRY CLUB WIENERS WTM THIS COUPON ON * rHO LOAVES XROMR BUTTERCRUST BREAD VmlH thru Sun., Dm*. 3, IM7 f Ktfmt Of. t E*»K MIth _ - . .. B ._jbS____________ WITH TNIS COUPON ON 4B-CT PRO KROGER TEA BA< 5^59 A BAGS 2 VtMtLimSm,, On, 3, nt7 ^ VmIU thimSm., D*13, nil mJ(^0*LEEmt.mth. H mt Kmf r Of. AMmt. Mlmh. 19 ASSORTED COLORS-REGULAR SIZE Ln Soap...... PACK 3S* ASSORTED COLORS-BATH SIZE Lu Soap 2£&23* U.S. NO. 1 -MICHieAN POTATOES 20-TV THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 29, 1967 C—8 --i-- )usda7 (choice) STEM SUE! ceuNRY am CORNED U.S. CHOICE SIRIOIN STEAK LEAN SMALL SPARE RIBS TENPERAY TAKES THE GUESSWORK OUT OF BUYING BEEF! CORDON'5 ROLL PORK SAUSAGE 58.12^79 9S85 ,49* U.S. CHOICE TENDERAY T-BONE STEAK U.S. CHOICE TENDERAY BONELESS BEEF ROAST BONELESS BRISKET I ROLLED RUMP ROAST I SIRLOIN TIP ROAST \ GLENDALE \ SLICED BOLOGNA. " \ COUNTRY CLUB SKINLESS WIENERS...........59* JUMBO SMOKED ] POLISH SAUSAGE.............59* a : 'I FLAVORFUL N'TASTY ECKRICH SMOKEES............,B9* i ; HYGRADE'S / BALL PARK B0L0GNA......79* / YOUNG TENDER / LAMB SHOULDER R0AST..»69* 89f.l 99 FLAVORFUL-KRAFT OR HELLM ANN’S mayonnais£!59 ISi OFF LABEL GIANT CHEER...........:^c59 MATMORE GOLDEN ROLL MARGARINE..IS KROGER EVAPORATED CANNED MILK.......... ' «• .4 J NO COUPON NECESSARY" PILLSBURY •>GOLD MEDAL FUMK 544 VACUUM PACKED COFFEE KROGER FRESH WHITE CHASE A GRADE *A’ SANBORN LARGE EGGS ”69' AH ^^^R^ PRBMIUM LARGE AA DOZEN DOzAV UNIT ONE WITH OTHER PURCHASES BORDEN’S SHERBET OR 3i OFF LABEL NORTHERN tissue...4-»30 KROGER BRAND MANDARIN OR ANDES J;»2T NESTLE MORSELS..-:. "39 lOi OFF LABEL INSTANT MASHED IDAHOAN POTATOES:^°39 country CLUB ic«: CREAM FIRST Va 6AL 65 0ALLONJ 94« ^ SECOND I Va 6AL WITHCOUPON AND S5 PURCHASE WHITE OR CORAL-BATH SIZE SCIENTIFICALLY RIPENED TO BRING YOU MELLOW-RIPE SWEETNESS AND FLAVOR GOLDEN RIPE BANANAS Lifebuoy Soap...... . .......BAP 19* J2t OFF LABEL Coldwator All ,Vc 61* Phase III ....2.»<49* 104 OFF LABEL Final Touch WHITE OR ASSORTED COLORS Kleenex Fociol Tissue. ...3%-c779* 154 OFF LABEL Fluffy All 3p‘-k‘c64* ASSORTED COLORS-DESIGNER Kleenex Towels JUMBO yyt ROLL OwP 74 OFF-REGULAR SIZE Phase III 2 bars 32< KLEENEX SOFT Dinner Napkins 27* 104 OFF LABEL Yin Toblots.... i-LB myi mm SOFT BATHROOM Delsey Tissue ...2f2S27* 8i OFF LABEL-MILD Swob Liquid............ 154 OFF-LIBBEY GLASS INSIDE Siluor Dust............ FOR BAKING OR SNACKING FRESH PECAN MEATS 10-OZ WTPKG 99 FRESH. , STRINMESS GREEN BEANS FOR CLEANING POTS A PANS 49* S.O.S. Pods............. RUST AND STAIN REMOVER c 66* Zud Cloousor. '40* MAKES THE BEST COLE SLAW AND POTATO SALAD Morzetti’s Slow Dressing -59 TREASURE CAVE Blou Chooso Square THE PONTIAC FRJSSS. WEPJ{E3DAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1907 Are You Ready to S/orf /fte Cftr/sfmos Cpo/:/e Spree ? By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Food Editor -; All of a sudden, it’s here! The ^lioliday season is upon us and ^ we’ll never accomplish all we set out to do. Next year, we must get organized earlier. * * * Does that sound familiar? It’s ‘the plaint of every woman who sets caught up in the whirl that •urrounds the season. And we mi have our own special delights. * ★ ★ If you’re a Christmas cookie maker, you can start right now. Some people have dozens and dozens of goodies already i freeze them plain. Then plan a stashed away in the freezer. |deeorating session later on. ^ freezer is a wonderful con-1 we’U give you a few recipes venience for hoKday bakers, today to get started on; more You can fit cookie baking into wiU come later your regular schedule, making one batch a day. Freeze them in airtight containers — three pound coffee cans are excellent — and the job loses some of Its gigantic proportions. Whip up a batch or two of raisin-fill^ wheat germ bars. You can make thefh now, freeze them and serve them during the holidays. These are two-in-one cookie Real buttery cookies are best | made just before you' want tol“‘*“ “ nutrition. 'serve them. And some cookies! The raisins, brown sugar, cin-like lebkuchen, springerle or namon and chopped pecans Moravian cookies need to ripen, i blend to give them a candy-ap-I If you want to make cookies peal, but, at the same time, now that are to be decorated, they have a hearty substance. The wheat germ adds a nutlike flavor plus its B vitamins, vitamin E and other nutrients. WHEAT GERM GOODIES - Ralsln-filled wheat germ bars are easily made; wonderful for Holidays. Freeze them now; eat them later. Round Up Jars, Cans for Storage How will you store those cookie treasures until distribution time? Empty coffee cans in 2-and 3-pound sizes are perfect I for most candies and cookies ★ ★ ★ Bar cookies such as brownies and coconut squares can be baked, stored, and given all in the same aluminum foil pans * * * If you bake on a really grand scale, wheedle glass or plastic gallon jars from a local restaurants Mayonnaise and condiments are bulkpacked in these. With their wide screw-top lids, they make wonderful temporary cookie jars. Wash and air thoroughly to banish any lingering odors. Filled Wheat Germ Bars ■ 1 cup sifted flour ; 1 teaspoon baking powder ; M teaspoon cinnamon » • 1 cup (firmly packed) brown sugar .* % cup rolled oats ; % cup wheat germ ; % cup butter or margarine % cup finely chopped pecans Filling ‘ Sift together flour, baking powder and dnna-inon. Add brown sugar, rolled oats and wheat igerm; mix well. Cut in butter or margarine until mbrture is crumbly. Stir in pecank. . Press % of the mixture in an even layer over .bottom of greased 13x9x2 inch pan. Spread with cold fruit filling. Sprinkle remaining crumb mixture over top. Bake in moderate oven (350 degrees) until lightly browned, 25 to 30 minutes. When cool, cut in bars. Yield: 30 bars, lV4x2W inches. To freeze: do not cut cookies. Wrap well. Freeze when defrosted. RAISIN-DATE FILLING . IW cups raisins W cup chopped dates Vs cup chopped candied cherries 1 cup water 1 cup sugar 2 tablespoons flour m teaspoons grated lemon rind Combine raisins, dates, cherries, water, sugar and flour; blend well. Cook until thickened and raisins are plum, about 10 minutes. Stir in lemon rind. Cool. Yield: 2Vt cups. APRICOT FILLING 2 cups chopped dried apricots 1 cup water 1 cup sugar 1 tablespoon grated orange rind cup orange juice 2 tablespoons flour y» teaspoon salt Combine apricots, water and sugar uncovered 10 minutes. Blend remaining In^di-ents; stir into apricots. Cook until thickened, stirring constantly. Cool. Yield: 2V4 cups. MINCEMEAT HLLING 1 package (9 ounce) dry mincemeat 1V« cups water y* cup sugar 1 tablespoon flour 1 teaspoon grated orange rind Combine mincemeat,> water, sugar and flour; mix well. Bring to boil; boil 1 minute, stirring constantly. Stir In rind. Cool. Yield: 1V« cups. gan^iiti|Ber Pack These Cookies in Cylinders If you’d like a new way to package cookies for guests to lake hotpe, try the paper bon bon packages pictured. They're very easy to make. All they are is a cylinder of flexible cardboard fastened together with tape around six pookies set end to end in foil or plastic film wrap. • You then wrap the cookies in the cardboard cylinder with a rectangle of attractively patterned paper, pull the ends to-|ether and tie with colored yarn ^inge the ends for a variation. BUTTERSCOTCH BUTTER BALLS % cup soft butter or margarine V4 teaspoon salt W oup sifted confectioners’ sugar % teaspoon rum extract IV4 cups sifted all-purpose flour 16-ounce package (1 cup) butterscotch flavored morsels 1 cup finely chopped pecans Confectioners’ sugar Cream together butter, salt and y» cup confectioners’ sugar, creaming until fluffy. Add ex- tract and gradually blend In flour until well mixed. Mix in butterscotch flavored morsels and pecans. Shape dough with hands into halls about 1 indh in diameter. Place on ungreased cook I sheets. Bake In 325 degree oven about IS minutes or until a very delicate brown. While cookies are warm sprinkle with confectioners’ sugar. Cool. Before serving, sprinkle again with confectioners’ sugar. If desired. Yield About 5 dozen. BUTTERSCOTCH BUTTER BALLS -Christmas tree take home gifts for your gu^, or the tiny gift that says more than a Ciulstmas card Is made with marvelous Butterscotch Buter Balls, an easy new Christmas cookie, packaged in bon bon paper packages you can make yourself. Butterscotch Flavored Morsels give you butterscotch flavor In moments the modern way. For people witit allergies, cookie making can be fraught with hazards. When good recipes turn up, we like, to get them into readers’ files as soon as possible. ★ * ★ FYuit-Filled Trilbys are de-licittos crisp cookies that may be filled with fruit, jelly or |am, or simply served plain. You may frost them, if you like. They contain no eggs and while they taste nutty, that flavor comes from cereal—Grape-Nuts. FRUIT-FILLED TRILBYS 2 cups Grape Nuts cereal Rudolph Reindeer Cookies 3 cups sifted regular flour 1 teaspoon baking soda % teaspoon salt Vi teaspoon each ginger, cinnamon and cloves 2 tablespoons butter or margarine, soft Vt cup firmly packed light brown sugar Vi cup light molasses % cup milk On waxpaper sift together the flour, baking soda, salt and spices. Cream butter, brown sugar and molasses. Stir in flour mixture alternately with milk, blending after each addition. Cover and chill for seyerol hours. On floured pastry cloth, with floured stockinet-covered rolling pin, roll out dough V4-inch thick. Use a reindeer-shape cookie cutter (3% inches from nose to tail) to cut out cookies. Insert a small piece of toothpick in top of each cookie — to form holes thi^gh which string can be tied for hanging cookies on tree. Place cookies a few inches apart on lightly greased cookie sheets. Bake in a moderate (350 degrees) oven for 10 to 12 minutes. Cool 1 minute. Remove frdm cookie sheets to wire racks to cool. Outline edges with Ornamental Frosting. Tuck a well-drained, dried maraschino cherry over the nose of each reindeer cookie before serving if this is done in advance cherry will soften cookie nose! Makes 3 dozen reindeer cookies. If you wish to use a 3-lnch star-shape cookie cutter, yield will be 5 dozen; a 2V4-inch round cookie cutter will yield 4 dozen. Ornamental Frosting: Into spiall bowl of electric mixer, sift IV* cup confectioners sugar and % teaspoon cream of tartar. Add 1 egg white and V* teaspoon vanilla. Beat until very stiff — knife should come out clean when cut through frosting. Makes about % cup. Use round decorating tip (about V* inch in diameter) to outline cookies. One-half of recipe will decorate edges of 36 reindeer cookies or 60 stars; one<|uarter of recipe will decorate 48 rounds. Gift Containers Are Presents, Too cups-eifted all-purpose flour ^ 1 teaspoon baking sod* 1 cup\ butter or. other, shortening s - % cup firmly packed brown sugar % cup buttermilk or sour milk Crush cereal;”&jly (can lid done in a blender)/$jj(t flour witti soda. Cream "gutter; add sugar gradually, ere aflifoil thoroughly. Add flour mixture alternately with milk, a small amount ht a time, mixing well after each addition. Add cereal. . Chill until firm enough to roll: Roll %■ inch thiefc mj lightly floured board. Cut with 2-inch cookie cutter. **ake on ungreased baking sheet at 400 degrees for 5 minutes. Cool thropghly. Spread fruit filling on half the cookies and top with remaining cookies. For crisp cookie sandwiches, spread filling between cookies just before serving. Makes about 4V5 dozen cookies. Fruit-Filling Combine one' cup chopped dates « raisins, %'cup sugar and V4 cup water in a saucepan Cook ovdr low heat until thick enough to spreAd, stirring fre-quenUy. R'emove from heat and add onf tablespoon lemon juice. Codl. Makes about one cup. Pink and Minty Minted tapioca pudding is a taste treat, yet a dessert that is simple and quick to make. Tint tapioca pudding a pale pink, flavor with peppermint, and serve with rich chocolate sauce. Containers with a dbbble life will make your food gifts more welcome. Some inexpensive ones are: Coffee cans made into gay canisters by spray-painting or felt covers. You can regulate this assignment to your apprentice cooks, so easy are these canisters to make. 1 * * * Transparent freezer or refrigerator containers, decorated with felt flowers, tinsel, or ribbons. ★ Wicker bread baskets or trays, apothecary jars, and wooden cheese or cutting boards, to display a handsome loaf cake. ^ Cooked Grits are Breakfast Treat M-m-m! Broiled grits slices will make you famous for breakfast hospitality. Prepare cooked grits according to package directions. Pour into 1-lb. loaf pan; chill. Slice;-brush with melted butter and broil 4 to 5 inches from source of heat until lightly browned. Turn; broil on second side until lightly browned. Top with a slice of cheese; broil until the cheese is bubbly. THEY’RE GOOD One of the season’s first cookie exchanges was held last week at the "yWCA by members of the Ladies Day Out program. Mrs. Leo Petrusha, Joslyn Road, Orion Township, (left) samples a jam-filled oookie offered by Mrs. Robert Watson, Canal Street, Commereo Township. WANT AN EXTRA DOLLAR? 1. Buy 10 bars of Camay. (Any size) 2. Send the wrappers to Camay. 3. Get a dollar back! DETAILS AT YOUR LOCAL STORE Look for the “Dollar Refund” display and entry blanks at your store or Send 10 Camay wrappers, with your name and address (print plainly), to: Camay Refund, Box 452, Maple Plain, Minn. 55359. Offer expires December 30, 1967. Limit one per family. Good only in the States of Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Montana, Wyoming, Idaho, Washington, Oregon, Texas, Loniaiana, Mississippi, Arkansas, Tennessee, Alabama, and Floticta. HURRY! HURRY! LIMITED-TIME OFFER. THE P,ONTlA,G PRESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1967 c—s Bread and Beer Make Good Soup The irresistib^ aroma of steaming hot soup with a real stick-to-the-ribs quality doesn’t sound like a ten-minute proposition. Not until you’ve tried thjs bread and beer soup which is a total — and totally delicious —meal by itself. Besides the speed of preparation, this soup is a revelation in how professional chefs create great recipes from the simplest ingredients. , This is a recipe every skier should memorize. It comes straight from the great Alpine hostelries. Ten-Minute Brewed Bread Soup 1 loaf stale white or rye bread (2% cups cubes, tightly packed) TOT&AND-EAT BREAKFAST SANDWICHES — Here are tempting, easy-made Tote-And-Eat Breakfast Sandwiches for busy people to enjoy en route or at home. All are palate pleasers, all are well-balanced meaty breakfasts supplying energy needed to get the day off to a good start. On Waffles, Rolls or Toast Try a Sandwich for Breakfast No time for breakfast? There’s never enough time the moring before Dad sprints off to work and the children bolt for school. Remember, breakfast Is the most important meal of the day. It breaks the long night fast and supplies ergy and vitality needed for a good day, so skip it not! broiler; spread with pecan but-|with an equal amount of ter. Broil until bubbly. Heat and | scrambled eggs. Cover each brown Canadian bacon or!with 2 bratwurst halves and top smoked butt slices in lightly|with a second toast slice. Yield; greased skillet. . 14 breakfast sandwiches. For each sandwich, top an _ _ ____ ____ _ English muffin half with 2 slices of meat and a pineapple slice. | Cover, sandwich style, with second muffin half. Repeat. Yield: 4 breakfast sandwiches. MIAMI BAKE SHOPPE Open Evenings THE PONTIAC MALL BRATWURST-SCRAMBLED When everyone is in a hurry ^GG SANDWICHES at breakfast time serve Tote-I scrambled And-Eat Breakfast Sandwiches! '88* “*‘"8 4 eggs. If desired, i o The, ,„d ^ D.licious Sausa*. sre.1, Ih. Mmp-a-1 !»<>»" < i tation to eat these convenient, bratwurst links; split in half well-balanced breakfast sand- lengthwise. Keep warm, wiches. I Top 4 hot buttered toast slice! Assemble them with coffee. OuM — 682-98)1 Open Evmingt PONTIAC MALL milk and orange juice on a table in the path to the door. You’ll find the whole family will enjoy these breakfasts en route. With alKof the quick, easy-to-fix foodsN^vailable, one can prepare scores of gre^t Tote-And-Eat Breakfast Sandwiches! in a hurry. Here are three palate pleasers. WAFFLE-FRIED APPLE-PORK SAUSAGE SANDWICH 8 to 12 fresh or brown-and-serve pork sausage links 1 tablespoon butter or margarine I tablespoon sugar ^4 teaspoon cinnamon 8 thin C/4 inch) cored apple slices 8 (3 by 4 inch) frozen waffles. heated in toaster | Heat and brown sausage links as directed on package label.: Keep hot. Combine butter or margarine, sugar and cinnamon in .skillet; mix. Add apple slices; saute over moderate heat just until apple is tender, turning slices once. For each sandwich, overlap 2 apple slices on a waffle, and lop with 2 or 3 pork sausage links; cover with second waffle. Repeat. Yield: 4 breakfast sandwiches. CANADIAN BACON-CARAMEL PECAN SANDWICH V4 cup butter or margarine V4 cup brown sugar Vi teaspoon maple flavor, op-ional Vi cup finely chopped pecans 4 large English muffins, split 8 thin Canadian bacon or smoked shoulder roll .olicrs 4 slices canned pineapple, well drained Blend first 3 ingredients; stir In nuts. Toast muffin halves in Easy Applesauce EASY APPLESAUCB-Who says applesauce has to be strained! Serve It this Way and you may change your mind. Peel, core and thick-slice about two pounds apples into a saucepan. Pour in about a half pint light corn syrup. Cook on piedium heat until apples are tender. It may be seasoned with cloves, cinnamon, nutmeg or other spices. Makes about 3 cups. Dress up your party tray with low-calorie shrimp Gulf Kist Shrimp fresh from the 0ulf Coast, home waters for nature’s tastiest shrimp Gulf Kist captures all of the sudculani and delicate flavor of shrimp from the sunny Gulf. No pseling, no waste. Already cooked for you. Qood cooks kssp sev-sral cans hsndy—rsady for good eating any tima. Idaal for weight walchart—only 170 calories ih a whole can. Economical, too, one 4-1/2 oz. can Is squsi to a 10 oz. psOk of frozsn unshsllsd 1V4 tablespoons oil 1 clove garlic, minced 3 medium onions, chopped Vii cup packaged dry bread crumbs 2 (12-oz.) cans or bottles beer 3 cups beef or chicken stock Salt and pepper to taste 2 tablespoons chopped parsley V4 pound Swiss or Gruyere cheese, grated (2 cups, grated) Paprika Cut enough bread into cubes to make 2V^ cups, tightly packed, and place on cookie sheet in 400 degree oven for 10 minutes until well toasted. In large saucepan, heat oil and saute garlic and onions until soft and golden. Stir in packaged bread crumbs and mix I well to absorb oil. Stir in bread cubes. Pour on beer and meat stock. Bring to a boll and cook for S minutes, stirring constantly until bread is mushy. Add salt and pepper to taste. Stir in pq^sley. Pour soup into 2-quart flameproof crock or casserole. Sprinkle cheese in thick layer over top. Sprinkle with paprika and place under broiler tmtil cheese is melted and bubbly hot. Yield; 6 servings. Note: For heartier dish, float thin slices of bread over top of soup and sprinkle cheese layer over that. Any type of bread may be used and beef or chicken stock can be made from canned broth or bouillon cubes. BREAD SOUP —Brewed bread soup is a ten-minute miracle of hearty flavors and revitalizing substance. With or without additional slices of bread on top, it’s a complete meal in itself, can be topped only with a tall glass of refreshing beer afterwards. HOFFMAN-OAKLAND PACK, CO. RETAIL DIVISION HOME OF NATURAL TENDER MEATS CARLOAD BEEF SALE NATURAL TENDER SIRLOIN STEAKS .73 c lb. T-BONES Steaks ■ ■ 89i PORTERHOUSE Steaks 95 ‘‘WHILE THEY LAST" mmmm Good (One Week Only) Guaranteed Tender FANCY RIB ROAST BONELESS ROLLED RUMP ROAST Guaranteed Tender CENTER CUT SWISS ROUND STEAK RUTCHER BOY STEAK . . 79*. CLUB STEAKS...83*. ALWAYS DELICIOUS POT ROAST ROUND BONE CHUCK ROAST CENTER CUT BLADE CHUCK ROAST m ^ HAMBURC lb. (in 5 lb. lots or more) HAMBURG STEAKEHES -wwb 45! EVERYDAY LOW PRICES HUMU MILK . . . GAL. CARTON 85’ SLICED BREAD . 5 LOAVES 4ol^1 COUNTRY STYLE BACON .39’ LEAN BEEF STEW.........79’ PORK ROAST PICNIC cut .. . 39’ COUNTRY STYLE (FIRST CUTS) PURK 3, CHOPS l|N SMOKED PORK CHOPS HOME FREEZER SPECIAL ONE WEEK ONLY, NOV, 27, 1967 - DEC. 2, 1967 MAKE YOUR SELECTION FROM OVER (100) HEAD OF CAHLE IN OUR COOLERS CUT, WRAPPED FULL SIDES AND DELIVERED FREE “JUST SAY CHARGE IT” NO DOWN PAYMENT MiCHIQAN BANKARD OR SEABOARD PHONE YOUR ORDER FE 2-1100 BEEF 49f GRADE #1 MICHIGAN POTATOES 10 lb. Bag 35' HOFFMAN’S OAKLAND PACKING CO. DELUXE LEAN PORK LOIN END ROAST EXCELLENT FOR STEWS SOUPS OR BAR-B-Q Average SMOKED M f%A HAMS 4-yjr WHOLE or SHANK HALF FREEZER SPECIALS CASH and CARRY 50 Lbs. MEAT^23^^ (ONE WEEK ONLY) ALL FREEZER WRAPPED 10 lbs. PORK OHOPS 10 lbs. BUTCHER BOY STEAKS 10 lbs. chuck roast 10 lbs. ALL BEEF HAMBURG STEAKETTES nibs. FRYING CHICKENS 50 lbs. CHOPS WMPPEO I TO « PKO., 8UTCHER ■OTt 1 TO A PKU., FRYER! I PKO.. CNUCK I PKO., PATTIES , I 184b. Pkg. (RETAIL DIVISION) 516 NORTH PEMIRY ST., PONTIAC SERVING THE GREATER PONTIAC AREA FOR OVER SO YEARS PARK IN REAR OPEN DAILY B AM. to 6 P.M. FE 2-1100 GOLDEN RIPE CHIQUITA BANANAS 10' lb. j, C—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEPjflSDAY. NOVEMBER 29, 1967 WHITHER GOEST, ^tPPlES? The hippie movement is spreading oil over the U.S., but meccQ for the "flower chi I dren" is still the Haight - Ashbury district in Son Francisco. Yet even in this hippie headquarters the rebels agoinst mate-riolism are becoming big business, as big money moves in to capitalize on curiosity. Many hard - core hippies ore moving out to seek nature in rural colonies. How About Some USIA Libraries? U.S. Needs Local Protest Sites By DICK WEST I m busy they don't have time to I lot of plate-glass wiiidows to WASfflNGTW (UPi; — TheiMthe regularly. Thus has ! throw bricks at. airline industry. CONSrtnmONAL B.O.? recent attack on the'^U.S; In-1 arisen a crisis of sorts in the j In other words, they would serve as Hghtning rods to draw violence away from places The seatine of one or more ^ ing aboard airlines would be kept to a minimum. Oriental religions greatly influence many hippies. Main philosophy for all flower children is a doctrine of peace and love. This problem could be solved, I think, by setting up friendly, neighborhood USIA libraries in all major cities and on college campuses where demmistrar ots or other disturb- Sustenonce for hippies is as uncomplicated os possible. Income moy be from selling trinkets, or in the case of the girl at left, psychedelic literature. Eating is a relaxed of-foir, uncluttered by tables, choirs, or silverwpre. One form of entertainment is a community theater which gives free plays in the Golden Gate Park, above. Scorned by most of society, the hippie movement is nevertheless widespread. "Psychedelic" is now a household word, and its implka-' tions of consciousness-expansion influence today's odver-tising, fashion and teen-age music. 2 Tips Will Save Time Mailing Yule Parcels Hughes Buys Fourth Casino Expedition to Hollywood Saddens David Niven formation Agency Library in Penang, Malaysia, was really one for the books. In this instance the dmnon-strators weren’t necessarily angry at something the United States had done or hadn’t done. They were protesting the devaluation. of the Malay- f Sian currency, ! Unless Malay-s i a n govem- .ment leaders WEST ' I had to go to the library to find ances are likely to occur? out how to revalue a currency,! „ , it is difficult to see how any-' a convement, nearby one could have blamed the «“ack would save the .United States for that. demonstrators plane fare and Apparently, then, they vented down on re^ir costs, ire on the library out of force of _ . ... habit. Which prompts me to lay j® libraries wouldn’t even before you a thought-provoking bwks. An question empty store front would suffice, 'if if if provided it hqd a large USIA Since USIA libraries have be- some false bindings and a 1 come the standard target for I demonstrations the world over, I and for whatever reaton, why not establish USIA libraries in the United States? LET ME EXPLAIN Before yoo become too provoked at that thought, let me explain my reasons for bringing up the question. Demonstrations in this country thus far have been rather haphazard affairs. They lack a focal point, or central place of unwashed demonstrators in their midst causes other passengers to complain. The air- _______________ lines, however, aren’t certain' W’'' ^ u.»»sOtatl«ul. Iran, the year belere. /:^KEEGO Tired of standing in line with packages at the post office? Postmaster William W. Donaldson has two helpful tips; use the proper ZIP Code in the mailing address, and mail parcels early. Postage for a package is de- Entertainment for Christmas? Glowing colors, gleaming lights, merry laughter, cheery termined by the ZIP code number; if the code is not in thel address the window clerk must! take your time and his to look it up. I If you don’t know i Code, use the ZIP Code locator cards which were sent to households daring September Acquires the Frontier Hotel in Los Vegas Fill in the zipless address, put your return address on the card, and tnail it free of charge to the post office. The proper ZIP Code will be filled in and the card returned to you. You can also look up the Marching in front of the White House or storming the Pentagon provides some outlet, but these have serious draw-By BOB THOMAS .training to be stars as well as ^®^ks, one of which is travel. AP Movie-Television Writer learning their arithmetic—Judy ★ ★ ★ HOLLYWOOD-That Garland, Lana Turner, Mickey seems that traveUng about I astute observer of Hollywood Rooney, Ava Gardner. And lat- protest site to the !flora and fauna, David Niven, er, Elizabeth Taylor. next keeps many demonstrators ha_ "And today there is only one picture shooting on this lot _ “This kind of situation natur-l s * ally causes insecurity, and| S f|,g| Kan I that’s what is so sad: To see ail ~ these able and talented people living in uncertainty about the future.’’ HURON MAGNIFICENT! - CHICAGO AMemCAfl "BREATHTAKING!" -TOaONTOSTAIt raiOESTNIS ONLY Jl^IE ^DREWS MAXVON SYDOW RICHARD HARRIS mill TC Nint,tUMMrilHlHOLW«Yt....................Ml NVWk I a wfB. .Ml UT. lUTINIES.................. IM OHIIDSWUUDIRIZ.................................. MS, : LAS VEGAS. Nev. (UPI) Industrialist Howard Hughes'for another of purchased the Frontier Hotel j his periodic excasino yesterday, giving the bil- peditions. H e lionaire the title to four gamb- concludes that ling spas on the gaudy Las Ve- while the flora gas strip. is flurishing, the Stockholders of the Frontier: fauna is not. casino approved the sale after a Nivenhas full day of meetings on Monday, been coming to Then, acting under emergency these shores ___procedures, the state Gaming since 1934, when Code yourself in the books i Control Board and the Gaming he arrived in search of music - these are the sightslin the main lobby of the post Commission took a telephone After a couple of starving years attended dinner parties at and sounds of Christmas. These, office. | vote early today in order to al-he began succeeding as an homes of chums, PONTiAr ABWA |low Hughes to take Dart in the the golden period that entertaining is much the PONTIAC AREA 'casInoTpernUon Immediately. e"™® unUl he retumed.same as in the golden ‘30s, 'from six years of wartime serv-|though the parties are smaller Hughes purchased the real ji^ ^33 elevated to topformal. He has also ob- iiiiiiiii Niven, whose home is now in Switzerland, finds the social atmosphere less changed. He has- too, are the rewards that come when entertainment gifts are . placed under the tree. Gifts of home entertainment Or, if mailing within the Pontiac area, turn to page 4 in thel Yellow Pages. Maps there show [property of the Frontier Hotei, a^qnn a time Ihr familv onH' tw uuiciciu acc*:iuv-iuuuia uie imiu aiHi imuoiilg friends’ to ^IthS togethL in B™higham|for an estimated $14 miUion Shared enjoyment And. with I dollars last September. color, light and sound, such! ^ ®f the ZIP Codes of gifts reflect the very spirit of|th« smaller towns also Is pro-a happy yuletide. Take color, for instance. It’t| Suggested mailing dates for mhted sritbin 10 days, will come before the state gambling agea-cles later for a final vote. holiday gift parcels are a Gifts of five pounds or less I destined to U.S. servicemen I abroad, and overseas airmail to , civilians in remote areas off of , main air routes . . . Dec. 1. • Gifts to distant states sent by surface mail . . . Dec. 11. • Overseas airmail on heavi-f traveled routes . . . Dec. 10. a Airmail to members of the armed forces overseas .. . Dec. 11. > Domestic airmail . . . Dec. 13. mber to put gifts in strong cardboard boxes, wrap well with heavy brown paper, and tie or tape securely. Put the address, and your return one side of the package only. It’s a good Idea also to put both addresses on a slipl of pa-! per inside the parcel. Then if tape recorders go everywhere the outer wrapping becomes_________. - _____ _______, from party to picnic, from tom in transit, the package can across the strip from schoolroom to office. |be rewrapped and sent on. |oth( glowing merrily from the many new color TV sets now attracting Santa's eye. TV sights can be viewed all year, all around the house, thanks to the growing interest In portable TV sets — especially po^ble color. Extra advantages are seen in the trend to lighter weight and larger screens for these color-full TV portables. Stereo sets the stage for the sounds of the season. This Christmas, the news centers around modular units, although there are ail sorts of models and components to fit every taste and requirement, including complete entertainment cen and radio. ters that combine stereo, TV As tape recorders become ever more varied and versatile, their importance as gifts rises, too. Transistorized, portable However, the elusive industrialist was not involved in the gambling at the resort so he bought out the casino stockholders today. PRICE ESTIMATED It was unofficially estimated that Hughes paid the stockholders about |1 million and as sumed som |8 million in lia bUities. Action on Hughes’ formal ap- Since Hughes arrived here a year ago on a private train and closted himself in the-ninth-floor suite at the Desert Inn Hotel, he has invested more than |100 million in the Las Vegas area. He bought the Desert Inn Hotel first. The Frontier is located from the plush Desert Inn. Hughes then purchased the Sands Hotel and later the Castaways Hotel casino, located ch Steaks to fulfill yoMf dfoomt of puffoctlon Prime Rounds Tostiott • Bioottod Chickon o Lobtfor Toils • Chor-Bioilod Stoolu O Froth Florida Snoppor and Pickorol • Fomout for Excoilonco In Soo Food* • Try Our Fomout Round-Up Stylo We Cater te GhiMran of AH Ages froni 1 to 100 CHILDREN'S MENUS AND FAVORS CHILDREN M PRICE No Liquor ~ Just Good Food ®*!i for Take Out Orders OaN for Reservations BNO Dryden Read, Oiydon, Michigan Open Daily If A.M. to f PJR. stardom as well as Escardom "Separate Tables,’’ 1958. In recent times he has been an infrequent visitor, all the better to gain a perspective on local conditions. He is now here to play a bewildered parent in “The Impatient Years” for MGM, and he paused for some observations on Hollywood today. “It’s sad, really,” he remarked. “When I first came to this town, MGM was crawling with activity. The stars that were here in those days! Gable Garbo, Ttacy, Crawford, Shearer, Beery, MacDonald and Eddy, Powell and Loy, Dressier. Plus a great company of character actors like Lewis Stone. TRAINING FOR STARDOM “And down in the schoolhouse were a bunch of youngsters served the natives in their tribal dances at the factory, the newly “in” discotheque. ★ A * “The place seems like fun and not too different from the Tro-cadero and other night clubs we went to in the old days,” said Niven. “The main difference is the informality; you can coi dressed in almost everything. “Not so before. When we went to the Trocadero, it was always formal, sometimes in white tie. But informal attire is not unique in Hollywood. Tile same thing is true now in Paris and in London. “When I was young, going to the London theater was always a matter of wearing white-tie Now you never see it there, and I’m not so sure that’s a bad thing. Dreadfully uncomfortable, those outfits.” FREE COFFEE FOR OUR PATRONS 12 N. SAGINAW I DOWNTOWN PONTIAC MATINEES DAILY OPEN 11i45 A.M. CONTINUOUS-FE 4-4436 NOW SHOWING FOR MATURE ADULTS WARNING!.' if)5 oi«ii mcNWAv cu. s. 101 I fC S4MX) I IIOCK N. miCIAPH ID. >tlSII|| the deadliest cycle-gang war everwaged! UK eun sons’ n.TK’SIHHRSri = They shared a STOWS 5 woman who sold out her ISSffiiiiH Slllllllllinilllim IN-CAR HEATERS ^DESnUCIDRS MiaACLE ORivr IN so mtCEAPM AT so. lAEi toTI Ft MOOO I MIIE W. woodward | P.M.I BOX OFFICE OPENS 7:00 • •(■•Ml WHY GET BRUISED, MAN? LET TONY ROME DO IT HE GETS PAID FOR IT! .First Run! ^ traiiK Sinatra i^tonM i?oinr The action wonder Tony Rome stays alive -and I single! sllllllllllllllllllll^tCCmC IM-C/IJI HEATERS luiVim OeOTK* «D. AT WAITON SI VO. I BOX OFFICE OPENS 7:00 P,mJ IN^AR HEATERS THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29^^67 C—7 hus iii€* ifpiv priv€*! LADIES' WARM FLANNEL ^ S' A- 1 Lightweight cotton flonnoll Floral print, wollz-longth tont gown* with ruffled neck and solid pastel yoke. Pink, blu< >f< .. i maize, mint. S, M, L, XL. OPEN EVERY NIGHT TILL 11 UNTIL CHRISTMAS! 25 assorted cards amiSTMAs CIFT BOXES SOLID PACK miTA6[ uIvcm CHRISTMAS CARDS ' Superb quality and rigidi For ties, gloves, scarfs, blouses, hosiery, sweaters, and mmox’ aoiD" mem GIFT ALARM CLOCKS A compactly styled luxury alarmi Antique while case. ^ |98 MPT. |H Dccmnn FEATHER ARRANGEMENTS Decorate your home with beautiful feather fleral arrangements ... In a profusion of in 3 CHRISTMAS GIFT BOXES 1 muK CHOcoun NOUtIWAHf Hi . \ MILK CHOCOLATi % 3 HERSHET KISSES J CANDY BALLS Oienl IIU" ,f tat* Clirbimat BH HB . SOV ’ 4 Har«li*y*UiN.I U ■■ J Mboi. a*» wf. w W ^ ' 0, Ucs of m 10.000 population. “Response to the survey has been good,” said Warren Cleary I regional director of the Civil Defense agency. Cleary said that so far, more than 49 per cent of those receiving the questionnaires had responded, with returns expected to continue being received through January. About 78 per cent total response is expected, j In addition to those surveyed by mail, Cleary said, another 700.000 were contacted in a door-to-door campaign. These will be getting their fallout Information within 60 days, he Lighting Contest in Sylvan Lake A Christmas display-lighting contest tor Sylvan Lake residents will be held this year, according to Mayor Fred Crossman. Everyone in the community is automatically entered. Judges will view displays by home owners on Dec. 20 and threej cash prisca wUl be awarded Dee. 22. THE PONJIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 29. 1967 C—11 Now, moro than ovor, this wook . • • noxt ^ wook • • • and ovory wook • • . Krosgo’s is ' tho storo to shop first for a groator ^ soloction of spociols ot now low pricos. Thm., hi. Sat... At Pontiac, Drayton Plains and Rochester SMPPY SWEATERS Knit in Acrylic Group of Exciting Stylos At Low Closeout Prices WHILE QUANTITIES UST Padded Seats, Chrome AAetal Construction WHILE.QIUUmnES LAST 3-PIECE TABLE AND CHAIR SET $856 REG. $9.99 STEP ^DOWJ SEAMLESS MESH PANTY HOSE AAAPLE FINISH CHILD'S ROCKER $J86 Reg. 4.77 STURDY — for long wear * Stt .XMHy at ih*w. BOXED CHRISTMAS CARDS 50 COUNT 73t Reg. 1.00 These exclusive designs and many more in each box of fifty "FIRESIDE ASSORTMENT." 3 Days Only — Our Reg. 1,27 LOUNGER PILLOWS For docorotivo comfort. A husky 16x21". Cotton covorod throddod poly foam. In Early American and floral prints. Gold, groan, rod or blue. FAMILY PAY CHECKS BUY FAR MORE AT KRESGE’S DISCOUNT PRICES TYPEWRITER $8^3 . 9.99 EDUCATIONAL-RECREATION IT WORKS! MEN'S SWEATERS $976 Reg. 12.96 ITALIAN KNITS 100% Acrylic Fibre Solid Colors Stripes WHILE QUANTITIES LAST DELUXE FOUR SPEED PORTABLE RECORD PLAYER 29" REG. 39.95 SPINDLE $|00 REMOVABLE LID SOLID STATE AMPLIFIER - SEPARATE VOLUME AND TONE CONTROL NEW CHRISTAAAS IP's 76F reg. 99® Holiday and Regular Fpvorites At A Low, Low Price GIRLS' AND LADIES' POODLE CLOTH SLIPPERS fj; 97^ POOL TABLE reg. $1.96 S'! 52 Table Top Style with Accessories 22y2”xl4«/2”x5» DECCA RECORD PLAYER Reg. 49.95 30" SPINDLE $|00 Full Stereo High Fidelity Solid State Amplifier Tilt Down Front / PONTIAC '' liAl I DOWNTOWN PONTIAC TEL-HURON CENTER DRAYTON PLAINS ROCHESTER PLAZA BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE Shop without casli— "CHARC£ /r AT msecs --Pny only once a month C—12 TUE PUMTIAC l>liKSS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29; TO67 Plant to Boost Beef Output Can Enrich Lbnd in Northern Australia By Scjence Service SYDNEY, Australia—A plant accidentally introduced from South America 50 years ago has triggered a pasture change in northern Australia which could bring a 20-fold increase in beef production. The plant is the legume, Townsville lucerne, which could transform 60 million acres of low-productivity grazing land. This area could support four-fifths of the present total of beef cattle in Australia. Results of the intensive research on the legume were reported by Dr. M. J. Norman at the bi-annual meeting of the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization advisory council. At the CSIRO’s experimental station at Katherine, NT., the legume has increased beet production 20-fold. ★ ★ * Dr. Norman said shorthorn cattle normally reach slaughter weight only after five or six years at a stocking rate of one beast to 20 acres. MORE FOR LESS With Townsville lucerne, •laughter weight can be adiieved in less than three years, at a stocking rate of one. beast to five acres. On one commercial ranch near Katherine, 1,300 acres sown with the legume last year carried 000 cattle throughout the dry season. Dr. Norman said research showed that Townsville lucerne had two vital effects upon pastures; it enriched soil by adding nitrogen from the air and it increased the protein content of the pasture for stock. ★ ★ ★ In Cape York Peninsula, Australian and American developers are planning to sow 10-000 acres a year from the air. At Katherine the company which began with 1,300 acres last year is planning to increase sowing at a rate of 5,000 acres a year. More Toys Geared to Culinary Art NEW YORK (NEA) - What would you like to have around the house after Christmas short-order cook, an animal collector, a rocket construction crew, the proprietor of a knitting mill, a song-and-dance team, a puppeteer or an electronics engineer? Once you decide, you’ll find a toy or game in that category to get the kids off to a good start. I Secret agents and spies seem to have dropped out of Santa’s I pack this year to make roomi for the more practical pastime' of eating. | Many more toy kits are geared to culinary achievement than to derringdo. ; ★ ★ I For example, there’s a Big Burger Grill powered by an electric bulb. It comes . with mixes for frankfurter and hamburger rolls, pancakes and catsup and onions. It has a trap for the grease and a transparent cover prevents splattering. CANDY BAR A new candy bar set turns out an imaginative supply of goodies on Easy-Bake Oven, powered by two electric light bulbs. And there’s a kit for baking bubble gum and a dozen Juvenile cake and cookie favorites. A cooling chamber makes sure delicacies are not too hot when grabbed. Even the cleaning up can be taken care of with a jet action automatic dishwasher. It works on an ordinary faucet. But unlike mom’s, it has a ^transpar-ent lid so the kids can see the action. Sr ★ ★ For the wild animal enthusiast there's Wild Life, a game . based on capturing animals alive for zoos, a Kenya Karry-all of caged jungle animals and, of course, all the stuffed tigers, lions and leopards that never seem to go out of style. The heightened interest in spacecraft is evidenced in Count Down, a game based on NASA data for project Apollo, which involves step-by-step coo-, I structhm of rockets as well as moon launching and recovery. { 3-Day Sale on Gloves Boys’ Reg. 91^ Rayon/Acetate f Pile-Lined Vinyl Gloves.i90pr. Youths’ Reg. 9U Vinyl Gloves If Rayon-Pile-Lined, 8, 8!4,990pr. Men’s Reg. 91^ Royon-Pile- ITOi Lined Vinyl Dress Gloves.. .0Opr. Women’s Reg. 94^ Fancy Knit Acrylic Stretch Gloves..OOpr. Women’s Reg. $1.00 Lined Vinyl Dress Gloves.....O0pr. Trim-fitting Western Style Permanent Press Scat-back Pants 3 Days - Our Reg. 1.96 Infants’ Orion Acrylic 1.57 Knit 3-Pc. Sweater Sets.. '“'Dw Pofif trademark In Watch Plaids 3-Pc. Soft-side Zippered Luggage Sets 19.88 Men’s Stond-up Garment Bog.. 13.88 Women’s Stond-up Garment Bog14.88 PONTIAC MALL Lean, tapered western-style slacks with smooth-fitting yoke back. Fortrel* polycster/cotton diagonal twill with a permanent press that won’t wash out! Whiskey, green, blue. Slims, regulars. ^Fiber Industries TM. Decorative For The Holidays! Bright, Lifelike Christmas Flo.wers Lorga Single Poinsettia.......10^-19<^ Poinsettia Clusters........da. Poinsettia Sprays.........ea. 29^-39^ Poinsettia Planters.......ea. 39t^-49^ | Holly Sprigs..................eo. 10^ ' Trailing Poinsettia..............19t^ Mens Choice Gift Shirts Have Permanent Press 2.88 I Just in time to lay away for Christmas... regular or button-down collar. Surface-interest patterns, plaids, tattersalls, stripes and solid colors. Boys’ Permanent Press Shirts ew Soil Release! Boys' 8-18 Reg. 2.86 L9Z Most stains come out with one washing—shirts never need ironing! Ivy tapered-and-tails and button downs. Patterns include metallics and neats. Men’s Permanent Press Shirts WithSoilReleosel 3 Days Only Our Rog. 3.78 2.97 Long-sleeved Ivy and regular collar styles in solid colors, woven plaids and surface interest neats. Easier to wash—no ironing. S-M-L-XL 3 Days - Misses* Reg. 1.77 Stretch Nylon Shells F Mock turtle neck sty le. White, navy, light blue, pink, black, lilac,orange maize oj mint. S-M-L, 3 Days - Misses* Reg. 5.96 Bonded Wool Slacks Hershey Kisses In Colored Foil Wrap 681 Solid chocolate wrapped in red, green Stationery In Reusoble Box 1.29 14 Folded sheets, 12 notes, envelopes. White vellum. S Christmos-OMor Vinyl Place Mats 4^66* 3 Days—Reg. I8i ea. With poly foam back- Terry TawebWftk Christmas Motif Rsg.37y Ea. Fringed cotton terry bright prints. 16 x 2/ TEL-HURON CENTER vNi^Tf^adMtals! Ball. - ...»> Angal 24<^3C 33<-57< • T.M 1.00 Jumbo-Size Continuous Rolf Holiday Print Paper 3 Days Only-Our Reg. 88i! Your choice of gala Christmas designs on 26" x 44-ft. rolls. 74 Jumbo-Size Continuous Roll Shiny Foil Gift Wrap 3 Days Only—Our Reg. 88^! Luxurious embossed foil in solids, stripes, prints, 26" x 15'. 74 25 Stick-On Star Bows, Traditional ond Hi-Styb. ^. OO ^ 200-Ct. Pock of Gift Tags, Cords and Christmas Sools. 55-Ct. Pock of Dtluxo Hi- M Style Christmas Gift Togs.. 1,000^ of Cello Topo InAHondy Dispenser... 23’ DRAYTON PLAINS BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE ROCHESTER PLAZA $. S. KRESGE COMPANY THE FQNTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1967 C—18 G/oomingGiff Perfect for Mart on List The ' mo^ expensive, exquisitely tailored clothing and accessor!^ aren’t going to make a bit of difference if solemn attention isn’t paid to groom-ing. C3iristmas can be the beginning of a good grooming season if^^you choose a gift for your husband, son, boyfriend, rich uncle from the many personal care items now flooding the marketplace. Tlie recipient need not consider your present a not-so-subtle hint to shape up, either. Personal care gifts are in excellent taste. We’ve got a perfect gift idea for that man who has everything. How about the best shoe-shine in the world, said to last at least three months? It’s availrf)le only from that genius of the shine rag, flalph Kaufman, whOj operates the valet shop at the Cleveland Hopkins Airport, Cleveland, Ohio. ★ ★ ★ For $5, genius Ralph will send you a gift certificate for a Kaufman Special. Send the certiflcate back to Ralph with a pair of shoes, he’ll work his magic^i mail the shoes back. AnotRlsr neat $5 executive gift is an aerosol can of Nine Flags Thermal Shaving Foam. That’s the shave cream that turns 150 degrees hot in your hand. Great for softening beards. 'Ae Mohawk brush people offer a nifty set of brushes which any nuu wili like. The set contains a man-sized bath or shower brush, a skin toner face brush and a nail-hand scrubber combination brush — all in sat-inwood with white boar bristle. For 910. Do-it-yourself shoe shiners might be Interested in an electric shoe cleaning kit. One kit, by Sunbeam, has a two-speed handle, t w o applicator-polish brushes, wool buffing, two cans of polish and a footrest wooden box. For $30.75. ★ * * If your giftee is a hit out of shape, you might want to consider exercise equipment. Sears, for example, offers dandles like belt massagers, exercise cycles, slant boards and hand massagers. Wrapping Key Is Imagination Add Personal Touch to Adorn Presents “Use Your Imagination’’ is the gift wrapper’s theme song this Yuletlde. The brilliant colors and exciting patterns of the '67 collection of Christmas wraps are an inspiration for packages that are fun to make and fun to receive. To Imaginative gift wrappings add the personal touch of imaginative ideas — and produce packages of real individuality. Imagination, however, should fake off from a practical base. The gift wrapping project begins with careful selection of gift wrappings, ribbons, seals, cards and boxes of assorted sizes. Next step, assemble all the “extra" equipment that will make gift wrapping go faster— scissors, cardboard, cellophane tape, rubber cement or glue, string, sealing tape. * ★ * Ideally, a location in the home should to set aside as gift wrapping headquarters. At the very least, provide a flat working surface, with a side table or tray for supplies. ADDED VALUE Awkward-sized packages can be disguised in still larger containers, while small gifts might be given an added value by “hiding” them in boxes specially designed to keep after Christmas. Tree ornaments or sprigs of greens might add a festive, imaginative touch to packages. Still^more imaginative is the use of a gift to wrap a gift.' For example, use a belt or scarf as a ‘ribbon’’; use anything from Jewelry to little kitchen gadgets as a package ornament, w ♦ * Gifts too big to wrap — a major kitchen or laundry appliance, for instance — can be adorned with decorative, remov-',, able cutouts, bows or other ornaments. i I Remember to wrap gifts for|{ mailing early and securely. I Sweaters For Dogs Orion® knit sweaters. Multicolor and ski motif. Sizes 8-20 ®DuPont trtdemirk Quihed Paisley and 97Z 999 Quilt-lined Coats, 10-20 f f Leads and Collars 4^ Give General Electric With Solid State Circuitry White AM Table Radio C9 V2 Outdoor Lights Reg. 3.97-3 Days Only T Larger weatherproof lights for out*. door use. 20 Multi-color* lights, with clips. Burn independently. Sot 50 Miniaturo Lights 3^ Good looking—good listening! Polystyrene cabinet with decorative, easy-to-clean grille. 1264 I Wake-up Radio for the Bedroom White AM Clock Radio 88 Featuring a lighted clock dial, direct tune dialing, solid state circuitry, 4" speaker. 14 Multi-color or clear, weatherproof lights. Push-in, replaceable bulbs that burn independently. 20-Light Large Indoor Bulbs.2.97 35-Light Miniature Indoor Bulbs. 2.74 24-Light Miniature Tree Lights. .2.39 Practical, Appreciated Gifts! Knit Underwear Boys' Tee Shirts and Briofs—8-16 Men's Tee Shirts, and Briefs-S, M, L, XL Men's Athletic Shirts-S,M,i,XL KMc underwear made of 100® combed cotton, designed for maximum comfort and longer wear. Shrinkage controlled for permanent fit for the life of-the garments. Reinforced at points of strain. An Outstanding Radio Value! 11-Transistor FM/AM P1820 Big sound in a personal portable. Has 20" whip antenna for long-range FM pull-in power. Low-cost, Dependable Portable Gift Tape Recorder 87 |jM8p2l|.; Instant-on recording and playback. Has remote control mike. Comes with batteries and tape. 21 Uses Batteries or AC Current 4-Trons. AM/FM Radi 16^ A Reg. 18.97-3 Days Onlyf In vinyl cabinet, with earplug, 4 penlight batteries. 10 9 14-Transistor Radio B Reg. 5.88-3 Days Only.' Has fingertip tuning control, earphone, case and battery. 4** 4-Traa$. Walki. Talki. 9” pair C.Reg. 11.66 — 3 Days Only! "Jade" citizens* band walkie talkie with 9-v battery. Black. 1 W7 Mens CottonCorduroyorVinyl Everett Slippers 2t‘ Acrylic-pile-lined grained vinyl with composition sole. Corduroy with crepe rubber sole. 7-12. Mfen’s} BoxJof 4 Handkerchiefs, White, With Initial Full cut fine quality white combed too cotton, with conventional initial, B neatly hemmed edges. ^ 6 X 9" and '8” Dia. Hi-GloSs Ceramic Ash Trays 8a Paisley ovals, whirlpool rounds, free form and abstract designs. Brown/flame; green/blue; avo-cado/lemon. Candy Dish or Cigarette Set Look Like Cut Glass r Covered cigarette box with two ashtrays or covered candy dish. Sparkfling avocado or amber glass. •ach New Christmas LP's Three-piece Pen Set P Brushed golden-tone metal ball MHf point pen and automatic pencil, MU matching key*» » MEADOWDAirPUM FLORIDA SEEDLESS PINK OR WHIT¥ Grapefruit 5 PRESH DEUCIOUS Snow Whito Parsnips........b., 19* CLEANED AND WASHED Fresh Spinach..............plii’SS* FRESH CRISP Tender Romaine Lettuce.... ib 29* FRESH SOUTHERN Salad ToEnaloet 29< ...FOR YOUR HOLIDAY BAKING OLD ENCIISH Glazed Fruit Mix DEUCIOUS WHOLE Red Cherries - - IMPORTED PIC A-NUT Pitted Dates Enriched Fleur 5 KRAFT DRESSING Miracle Whip ■EECHNUT OR FOODClUR Bahy Food DOMINO POWDERED OR Brewn Super CAMELOT SMOOTH Cream Cheese NOW AT WRIGLEY! CAMELOT COFFE 2 ”99! 9UGAR! RED DIAMOND Enqiish Walnuts POLISHED MIXED Nuts in the Shell CAMELOT DEVILS. WHITE OR YELLOW Cake Mixes............... MEl-O-CRUST ENRICHED White Bread .... NARISCO COOKIES Choc. Pinwheels. -.4 25* 89* 49* NISLETS CORN OR 6REEN RIANS Green Giant Vepetahles FROZEN IN BUTTER SAUCE ^ 89 DELICIOUS FROZEN OLD FASHIONED BAKE SHOP ^ ^ Country Style Bread 33( I i • PECAN CRUNCH Danish Coffee Cake Sugar Raised Donuts X*! 45( FABULOUS OFFERI Parifianna _ Goarmeturara % ..I, etenaJe, HNEDINWRWARE ^ Libby Squash.......... POOD CLUB All FLAVORS Gelatin Desserts....... 11.1. TASTY HOLIDAY Fruitcake 10* 1.8* 99* COUNTRY KITCHEN Cottage Choose 25< M.19 w: THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1967 C—15 V, .U.S.CHOICItlIF 8«riss Steak................. U.I.CHOICIITiAK Top Boneless Rcpincl. lb.. 75» >•1.09 Porterhouse Steak......b’1.35 U.i. CHOICI lEfr New York Strip ... .bf2.39 Sirloin rip Steaks.........ib f1.29 lOOExtra Gold Boll Gift 9tanij3? WITH COUPON BELOW AND PURCHASI OF ANY WRICLEY FINE MEAT9 U.I. CHOICE CINTH CUT Sirloin Steak...............>^ *1.09 U.S. CHOICE T-B4MMStMk.................. 7 U.t. CHOICI tEEF SHORT CUTS RibStMk...................... 09* U.t. CHOICE SONILESt Delmonieo Steak.............ib^1.99 U.S. CHOICE RlEF Cube Steaks....................99^ U.S. CHOICE FRESH GROUND ALL BEEF FRESH LEAN SEEF Ground Chuck < .ib.79< FRESH EXTRA IIAN REEF Ground Steak..................ib 89* BONELE99 BEEF ROAST CUT FROM THE CHUCK U S. CHOICE Boneless Beef Stew. b79* HICKORY SRAND LEAN AND TASTY Boiled Ham.................... wt. pkV 99* CENTER CUTS Salmon Steak............. ........ 89* MR.FinS Mb. Sliced Bologna.................. 49* PESCHKI HICKORY SMOKED 9L1CED. BACON UICED RIACK HAWK U.S. CHOICE Lciinb Roail "sriL6e« US. CHOICE lamb Chops SHOULDER HOC r“ FRESH WHOLE or SHANK HALF Bath's Bacon.............79* FRESH LEAN Pork Butt Roaet. FRESH LEAN' Pork Steak............ UICED INTO CHOFS 1/4 Pork Loin eh.p. ORtOCRiAMI W '"’'F ORIOCRIAMI-^ SoiMlwkh ClDch »P»«f 'tfST-' " C—16 flNECOUW THE PONTIAC PRESS, WRPNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 196r Favors Popular Vote for Presiclenf McDonald Discusses Electoral College Vnth Congress eying a reform in the electoral college system, U.S. Rep. Jack Mcbonald, R-19th IHstrict, said talay that the most democratic way of electing a president would be by direct popular vote. , He said that the prHome Service STAIN PROOF A ■All HERCULON $l|99 Ideal For Kitchenn U Sq. Yd. and Recreation Room Reg. $7.99 PLUSH ACRILAN Re*. 010.99 PLUSH CARVED KODEL Re*. $12.99 Choose From These Quality Carpets MAGEE - ALEXANDER SMITH - RDXBURY AMTICO VINYL TILES 1672 Telegraph Pontine Custom Coipet Call Today 334-0177 D~8 THE Pi ONTIAC '■ ' , "■ i- PRESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1967 Andover Falls to Oak Park in Cage Opener Prelim to T-Hawks' Tilt F-Birds in Cage Action Tbe Pontiac Firebirds are going to share some of the billing with the Pontiac Tomahawks Saturday night at Pontiac Northern High S^ool. * ♦ ★' The Tomahawks are scheduled to meet the Battle Creek Graves in an Eastern Division game of the NABL at 8 p.m., but at 6:30 p.m. the Firebirds will meet the Pontiac Police Association basketball team in the preliminary. ★ * * The Firebirds have several former college cagers including big Willie Washington, 6-7 and 240 pounds from Alcorn A&M; Dan LaRose, 6-5 and 250 f r o m the University of Missouri; Marty Malatin, 5-11 and 200 pounder ^m Kent State; Ron Bemis, 6-2 and 220 from Royal Oak Kimball. Also, Bill Apisa, 5-10 from Hawaii University; Jim Kennedy, 6-2 from St. Fred and Houston U.; Sam West 5-10 from Bishop College; George Tanner, 5-10 from Romeo High; Jim er outstanding newcomer In 6-1 Stewart, 5-10 from M i c h 1 g a n.backcourt whiz Dave Gaines, State and coach Tom Tracy, who pla^red at Seaholm and later at Tennessee. ★ The Firebirds have severe preliminary games scheduled with various independent teams and one of the games will be with cagers from the Detroit Lions in January as a prelim to a Tomahawks’ contest. In the main contest, the Tom ahawks will take aim at second place hy hopefully bolstering their defense. They are 1-3 while the invading Braves have a 2-2 mark. Coach Bob Duffy is continuing to shuffle the Pontiac pros until he finds the combination that will provide both offensive defensive punch. The Tomahawks boast the league’s top rebounder In 6-7 rookie Jim Patterson, and anoth- SALE ARMSTRONG "S DIG - GRIP - GO Full 4-Ply “Norseman” Was $I8A5 M MONTHS OUARANTEE NO TRADE-IN NEEDED TUULIIS BU0KWM.L SIZES WAS PER TIRE SALE PRICE FEDERAL EX. TAX MOxIl $14.98 $16.08 $06 1.90x11 $20.80 $11.00 $1.93 ilBxU $22.08 $10.00 i2.21 Ulx14 $28.28 $21.00 $2.18 MBx14 $27A8 $24.90 $2.88 MOxlB $30.88 $26.95 $2.88 WM ITEWALLS $1 tiSREPir ICE DREAKER SAFETY STUDS AVAILABLE 1 FREE NO MONEY EASY 1 MOUNTINQ DOWN CREDIT Largtr Sizat 2-»28 LOOK FOR US AT OUR NIW LOCATION AREMCO TIRE CO. 45'/0 H qhland Roo.l ' r 0< Pontiac Lako «d 614 3157 or 674-3158 OPEN MONDAY thru SATURDAY 8-8 tbe league’s No. 2 scorer. ★ But the other starters have been Inconsistent Dick Dzik has shown scoring punch lii the last two starts and Lou Hyatt has had a couple good efforts. Bat the defense has con... from Marty Letzmann, John' Watson and Ernie Ihompson. In an effort to bolster the playmaking and backline defense, Duffy has indicated 6-1 former Pontiac Northern star Mike Fedynik will dress for the first time Saturday. Another addition will be Am-le Nevels, 6-3 from Dillard, who should add speed to the lineup. Battle Creek will be on the rebound. The Braves dropped a rough 112-110 verdict to unbeaten Lansing last Saturday in a game that could have boosted the Battle Creek squad into a share of the lead. * * Or As it is, the loss gives the Braves a two-game losing streak after two opening wins. Pontiac lost its opening two games before overcoming Columbus in its last home game, then dropping a lopsided verdict in Lansing the following ni^t. * ★ * ’Tickets are |2 per adult and $1 per student for Saturday’s twin bill at PNH. in 60-55 Victory Over S. Lyon Romeo in 92-46 Rout; Holly Drops Decision to Flint Carman N. Dakota Rips Into Ice Rival GRAND FORKS, N.D. (API-North Dakota fired a relentless 73 shots at the Colorado College goal Tuesday night and came up with a 9-0 Western Collegiate Hockey Association shutout. ★ * ★ Ihe two teams face off again tonight in the final contest of a two-game series. Passing Star Earns Honor Over Runners A host of non-league contests got the local prep basketball season under way last night with Nrrthvf11« ”i’''’lnp and Bloomfield Hills Andover losing out of Wayne - Oakland Northville defeated South PMiiK prtu Phot* ,Lyon, 60-55, and Oak Park TOP DOG - Dbnell Oaft of stunned Andover 67-53. Romeo sparked the BuUdogs In other area games, Detroit to a 9246 triumph over Hmrston whipped Trov £6 54; Marysville last night. Craft Country Day defeated Whit-poured in 27 markers In the more Lake, 4M5; Algonac won rout for Romeo, one of the over New Haven, 60^; Brown favorites in the Oakland A city defeated Peck, 71-64; Al-League race. mont edged Imlay City, 6342; Romeo surprised Marysville, 9246; and HoUy fell to Flint Carman, 5145. Oak Park led 28-20 at halftime and held the eight-point margin most of the way as four players hit in double figures led by Larry Sherman's 13 Dick Souther had 16 and Steve Jones 15 for Andover. CLOSE AT HALF At halftime, Northville led South Lyon, 34-33, and the game stayed close all the way. A bucket at the buzzer moved the margin to five points for the winners. Scott Bennett dumped In 24 pdnts for the losers while Northville had four in double GOOD START — Sophomore figures led by Jim Peterson’s Dick Souther, a 6-3, 200- 17. Big Randy Pohlman, 64, led pounder, made his varsity Northville’s control of the basketball debut for Bloom- boards, field Hills Andover last night , , by leading the Barons’ scor- tag '^th 19 points In a losing ^ j,ck '________________________ Zwemer leading tbe attack with 15 potato, helped by the fine floor game of sophomore >Iitch ON THE MOVE - Guard Tom Sudek of Orchard Lake St. Mary moves toward the basket as the Eaglets set up a play in their basketball opener last night against a visit-tag St. Ladislaus quintet. Watching Sudek is St. Ladislaus’ Ken Skyniarz (31), and on hand to give Sudek an assist is teammate Ken Ksiazkiewicz (32). Sudek came up with 13 points but the Eaglets fell, 67-63. Pistons Fall to Boston It was a thriller at Almont where Imlay _City held a 34-25 halftime margin. BIG CHIEF — Forward Alton Wilson helped Pontiac Central to a winning start last night as he scored 34 points In a 72-69 win over Roseville. The sharp-shooting Wilson collected 14 field goals and six points at the foul line. High School Box Scores OAK PARK (if) PO PT TP aplln 4 0-0 1 HUffth* 10 Jonut 3 4-7 10 MIHffr 3 0-2 4 l«io 3 7>10 13 eow 0 0-10 s*'*’ Almont’s John Bacholzky put his team ahead 62-60 with a half minute to play, but 61U (Cbntlnued From Page D-1) ^ dropped in two free throws stepped such matters as pre- With a wide grin, Behan an- ®2-62 with nine secondi fercnce of a team or league, 'swered, "I think that that would ^ ^ , “We have no choice. It just have to be taken into consid- brought the ball in depends on who drafts us,” he eration.” Terry Wallace was fouled explained and by the plural he The Heisman award was shooting. He made the ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ referred to all graduaUng col- originated in 1935 in memory of ‘^row and miwed the s|jrm.n s « « m 5 >5^, legians. John W. Heisman, former direc- “>e game ended. 4 ^ ^ u * * * tor of athletics at the Downtown A1 (^rrey led with 19 points Will winning the Heisman AthleUc Club of New York, the 20 for the lYophy aid him financially? organization which conducts the —----------------------------------poll * * * I I Algonac had too much height naytn, TMm 2! SlmS!«i?‘o$c I. Ktyts. Pur .. 4. Oonka, Syr ... 22 M 5, Hittimond, PtU . 1/ 15 4. Jotinton, Tern ... n 10 . J ]l .1 II. Homan, Ala 12 Taiiiano, Wv COONTtYOAY^(«^ WMITMOM^^|^ jlp-cr. 5 1-, - ? « i 3 0-t t K. Caski 3 2-4 i Caaiar 0 0-4 0 DraHs 4 3-3 15 Alltn 2 0-14 Malcalm liar Rally in 4th Brings Celtics m-in Victory BOSTON (AP) - John Havll-cek, held to one free throw in the first half as Boston fell behind by as many as 15 points, sparked an explosive late rally as the CelUcs raced to a 118-111 National Basketball Association victory over the Detroit Pistons Tuesday night. The Eastern Division leaders, still behind 96-92 early in the final period, reeled off 13 straight points to go in front 1116-96. Havlicek, who wound up with 24 points, led the surge. Dave Bing, who had 28 points, and Dave DeBusschere, who had 24, brought Detroit back to a tie at 110. But HavUcek sank a free throw, and Sam Jones followed with a long jumper to make it 113-110 and the Celtics held on from there. Jones wound up with 20 points while Larry Siegried had 18 and Bailey Howell 17 for Boston. John Tresvant, whose strong rebounding and defensive work kept the Pistons in front through the first half, scored 16. CUT DEFICIT Boston was trailing 59-44 iato in the second period when Wayne Embry, who usually subs 'J for Player-Coach Bill Russell at j center, entered the game at a 12 14 i; 22 — 42 3 i-s Tutalt 20 4>JI 44 Total! 1 ----------- aUARTtRI ; 1? '1 u iCORt iY Three Receive Ring Awards for iNew Haven’s freshmen andli^lSSi Champ Carlos Ortiz 'Fighter of the Year' NEW YORK (AP) - Lightweight champion Carlos Ortiz, former heavyweight champion Joe Louis and manager Gil Clancy were named today to f^ive the top awards of the Bwng Writers Association. Ortiz, a 31-year-old Puerto Rican-bom New Yorker, was •elected as Fighter of the Year. Louis, 53, was singled out for long and meritorious service to boxing, and Clancy, 47, was picked as Manager of the Year. He handles middleweight champion Emile Griffith,, among others. Ortiz will receiver the Edward J. Neil Memorial Award, A master boxer and a solid puncher, Ortiz is a two-time winner of crown and a tti i!t22 “P** studded team. Freshman TiyV i m 4 HuMwrt 5 m 10 corrty ♦ !-i i» srinkti Si 1^ Scott Belt had 13 for the losers » \ t\ J, J f » V- trlEiBlIa’ p isTr- 0-1 4 Frogntr I 2-4 4 WuliKt 4 5-7 13 Soy 4 0-2 4 1 M ||forward position. With the two 0 M o big men playing in the front 7 court together, the Celtica cut the margin to 62-55 at halftime. The defeat left Detroit in third place in the NBA’s Eastern Division, games off the pace. m- A- I034-L«rry IHF-CIlnt I iMruciS;! 1940- Tom H 1941- Bruco Louis will receive the James J. Walker Memorial Award, joining the famed Jack Dempsey in an exclusive group of twol They are the only two fighters to be named for both the Neil and Walker awards. Louis was voted the Neil IVophy for 1941. Demitoey was cho^ for the Neil Award in 1940 and the Walker Award In 1057. In eiriier yean the NeO Award was not voted ezcludivo-ly to fighters. But since 1946, only fighters have wem it. TROPNY WINNIRI ’ WINNI5 •'vi- Rick Johnson 14 for „ 41 Winners. ^ g Jerry Sander, a 5-9 guard, ^ '* " '* » poured through 38 potato, with 45 17 jieid goals to lead Brown aty’i attack. He got help from . orjm, Deanii Kalbflehch with 12. Buiiin i 2-4 u uw .......?;iSr _____J M 22 ^4l Closest margin in the 4th pe- SS’i .njl,:,427 .2 1-2 5 Dtrnton 4 1-2 13 .12-5 4 LtK# I 3-t 5 .1 24 4 WIH* . . . 0 2-2 2 Kirk nits The Pistons are home tonight for a game with Los Angeles. In other NBA action, the Philadelphia 76ers beat the New York Knicks 110-106, the Seattle Supersonics edged the Chicago “WaW 111-lW. the San Francisco ‘ ‘ SSTilSr I L! ’ll Warriors topped the Baltimoiw ■■ ■ * r§f§l$ U 14-tl 44 TttHl 1 tCORI BY EUARTBRI Krosnicki had 16 for the loeers. _ Troy could never get any tw closer than 10 points despite a 27-point effort for Lynn Qual-mann. Thurston controlled the boards and Tim Forbes had 22 points for the winners, j Romeo’s tall Bulldogs had no trouble handling Marysville. The Bulldogs ran up a 48-22 lead at halftime and coasted the nPTnoiT ^iipti Four rj!' “LTt 'r* ‘^2 teJSZwS'lt Tech, will take part next month the third annual Great Lakes Swtgin I 0-0 2 Jokraon 3 I- ________.Lw’lll » 0-1 4 U 24-1* Ml T«Mt io *-20 41 ToMt 7*11-24 51 aUARTHI tCORt BY OUARTBB2 17 14 IS 1S-44Htliv ...... II I 7 II _ 41 I 14 17 II - M Film Carman II I 21 II - II ^ 0 li '?iBuUets 117-110 and the Los An-•aii I M } geles Lakers -trounced the St. Mich. Tech Host to Ice Tournament Cattl* . 3 0-1 4 Luutxow 0 0-0 4 RoRto .. 0 3-3 3 ... 0 0-0 0 Pontiac Central Whips Rosevilfe in '67-68 Debut (Continued from Page I>1) The Chiefs were up by two potato after one quarter, 15-13, and they ran the margin to 10 potato at halRime, 38-28. , Turnover! and personal foulsi'^*®^ "‘*‘**^ by PCH helped the Wildcats “ Packed up 10 post their 27-17 margin in the Carman, fourth quarter. Sparking the Wildcats (1-1) wu All-State quarterback Ken Ftatt, who pumped in 12 field goals and adM nine free throws for a 38foint perfrinn- eight of them dented the scoring column. Five players hit in double figures for Romeo with Dooell Craft leading the way with 27. Clyde Cushingberry tossed in 20, Paul Verelien collected 11 while Mike Semp and Dan Brzynakl picked up 10 apiece. Holly took a 23-19 lead at in-termissian, but Carman applied a tight press in the third pei^ on the jittery Broncos to take a 404W lead after three frames. Dave Damton led the Holly attack with 13 points and junior Invitational college hockey tournament at Olympia Stadium. * * ★ Joining the Huskies in the field are the University of North Dakota, the University of New Hampshire and the University of Western Ontario. The University of Michigan won the touna-ment last year but is unable to compete this year because of a schedule conflict. ★ * * Doubleheadert will be played both nights of the tournament-^ Dec. 20 and 21. Palrinp for the first night will be made in early December. U. S. Hoopsturs Lose | * * * Winners of first-night action MADRID (AP) — Real Mb- will play for the championship drld beat tha touring American on tbe Becond night and loMri Gulf All-Stars basketball teamlwill compete fbr runner up hoo-0542 Tuesday Bight >ors. MARYIVIt^M.^^ Bogcr'n I »-S Q ---- 33-2 * .13 1-2 77 Storay .5 0-1 10 Kutnch • S 1-2 II PanrMgt 2 * 3-S 20 ttoymnonO I Louis Hawks 134-117. Anaheim topped New Jersey 110-104, New Orleans defeated Pittsburgh 106-99 and Denver whipped Oakland 126-108 in ABA It looked like the 76ers were headed for another tough work-J out Tuesday night, for, although »they played well, they traUed 191-82 with 10:07 left. « 1-1* *2 Total* 1711. ICORl BY OUARTHl 24 12^ II - *2 li * 10 14 - 44 AAU President Cites Confusion in NCAA Feud NEW ORLEANS (AP) -Amateur Athletic Union moguls are pessimistic about a sattle-ment of the feud with the National Colieglato Athletic Association over track and field in this country. * * But the hig brass of the AAU, which Is holding its 80th annual convsntlon here, doesn’t want ot conjecture about the’ el the dispute will have on the U.S. track team for the Olympics at Mexico City. * w * 'We Can’t make heads w taili of the issue,” said AAU Presi-dent David Matlin. Then (^let Walker, Wally Jones and Luke Jackson went to work. Walker put the 76ers ahead to stay, 104-103 on a layup with 3:01 lefi, and Jones made it 108-103 25 seconds later. After the Knicks scored. Walker again hit and Jones clinched it with a basket with 51 seconds remaining. iiiiS •»«T"0IT ^ ^ ^ BOSTO P'jPP ?euM uiit' Nani. ** W ■ IB-T Badgurs Pick Lineman MADISON, WIs. (AP) - Tom Oonupw, a defensive tackle, was Wiwmnsin football tapm at tha a 0 n u a I banquet Tuesday THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1967 D~3 5 Front line Players (Continued From Page D-1) | The Twins-Dodgers deal over-Grant, of course, could be a shadowed other action as a Bal< big man In the starting rotation timore-Oeveland deal sent John If the 32-year-old right-hander lO’Donoghue to the Orioles for could come back from a 5-6£ddie Fisher, the 31-year-old year to that 21-7 season in the knuckleball pitcher, pennant-winning season of 1965 ~ „ . , , , . when he beat the Dorns twice! also acquir.^ I shortstop Gordon Lund for their Rochester farm and pqssible utility use while the Cleveland in the World Series. organization got pitcher Bob Scott and outfielder John Scruggs from the Baltimore chain for their Portland farm. * ★ ★ The busy trading day also included the conditional sale of outfielder Sam Bowens by Baltimore to Washington. Walter Alston, veteran manager of the Dodgers, said, “We needed a shortstop and feel we have come up with a pretty good one who is sound and has proven himself 8ASKET8ALL SCOKBS HIGH SCHOOL By Tht AsMciat«d Prtst Northville 60. South Lyon 55 YpsilantI St. John 75. Milan 74 Ypsllanti Roosevelt 70. Pinckney 49 River Rouge Our Lady of Lourde$ 72, Detroit St. Stanislaus 70 cintral Montcalm 65, Grant 9 Hamtramck St. Ladislaut 67, Orchan ■ Mary 63 Andovei S3 Oak Park 67, Bloomfield I Manistee Catholic Scottvllle Qunicy 62. Pittsford 62 Laker 56 vin Heights 73. Carsonvilie 71 Grand Rapids Grand Rapids Central 62 Wakefield 61, Ironwood AAaple, (Wis ) 57, Besser Painesdaie 62, Ontonagon 61 Ewen 52. Beroland 46 ^ Republic 64, Champion 46 ■ Watersmeet 73, Mercer, (Wis) 37 Covert 71, FennvMIe 58 Whi^ Pigeon 52, Edwardsburg 39 Kalamazoo Christian 74, Paw Paw 55 Lawrence 62. Marcellus 61 Schoolcraft 74, Gobies 69 (two over-mes) Lansing Gabriels 58, Lansing Eastern 43 ...______^ Lansii^ Everett «, Holt « | COLUMBUS, Ohio UPt — Frank M ddeton-Fu ton 58, Port and St. Pat- ^ , , ... ck's 55 iX. Lauterbur, who guided Leslie 7>, Jackson Northwest 50 1 _ . Shepherd 70, Carson CItv-Crystal 55 Ion Is 74. Lowell 5 DeWItt 5», Morrice 57 Romeo 92, Marysville 45 - tiac C • • “ -------- Clair . . I JAVVCE SCORCS Catholic 35 1st. Ladlslaus 13, OL St. Mary 43 ilmlay City 74, Almont 39 Country Day 45, Whitnrwre Lake 35 .Northville 53, Sooth Lyon 35 Oak Park 45, Bloomfield Andover 5 I Romeo 5(, Marysville 53 Pontiac Central 79, Roseville 35 Radford SI, Mary 74, Pon, Catholic 42 Toledo Grid Coach Given MAC Honor SWITCHING TEAMS — The Minnesota Twins and Los Angeles Dodgers teamed for a major swap in ,the current inter-league trading session. The deal sent (from left) short- stop Zoilo Versalles and pitcher Jim Grant of the Twins to Los Angeles in exchange for Dodgers’ pitcher Bob Miller, catcher John Roseboro and relief pitcher Ron Perranoski. Defro/fs QB Woes Continue I DETROIT (AP)-Coach Joe,pleted only 126 in 11 “We will have to see a little ‘ Schmidt of the Detroit Lions games this year for a meek mor.ofOrant. Heptchrtgc«af''“'“»*»f,''»1';"‘''';lav.r.gs of m yards passing against ns in tho W»-ld Soria,. gan.^ I ONE OF BEST early relief man.” Alston said he would have to solved itself. After three I’d rather be out on the field ciinton n, onsi«t 54 one of the best in the league. I ★ * * playing,” said the slick receiv- The Lions, who have only ninej Studstill, who caught 67 passes er, who also leads the league in touchdowns passing, have rolledifor 1,266 yards and five touch-jpunting with a 45.4 per kick av-up 1,628 yards rushing for « downs last year, has only lOjerage. “But every time I run, I hefty 4.4 per carry average. Ireceptions for 162 yards and repull the hamstring.’’ AP WlrtPhot* JOHN O’DONOGHUE depend on his young boys Jim ^ Karnes, the beefed up by All-America rookie!All-Pro flankerback Pat Stud- games Campanis and Jeff Torborg-as ^ions do not appear to have a Mel Farr’s 702 yards, is ranked 'still replacements for Roseboro quarterback at all. ........, .u. u... .u_ ----1 whose passing left Drysdale asi _ . .... . . the last of the old Brooklyn'^Sctaidt Mid he may be^ iKarl Sweetan, who replaced . ' ^ ^ ^ jMilt Plum as the starter early The annual player draft Tues-|ta the Mason, and go back to day - in whidi $936,000 dollars f»r Sunday s National chWd hknds for the contracts Ft»tbaU U^e battle the of 72 minor league players - Pittsburgh Steeters at Detroit, was handled with calm dispatch. The Tigers made no selec- probably go wtih Mt ‘this week and see what hap-Fourteen major league clubs Peus,” said &hrnidt who bought the contracts of 23 minor emphasizing efforts to rev up league players for $524,000. h»s impotent passing game in Class AAA and A A minor league practice this week, teams bought the contracts of Plum^and Sweetan have com-49 players for $412,000. Some familiar names were 1 among those drafted veteran in-l 'Vand/ Bounces Cagetj fielder diuck Hiller, outfielders | | Sandy Vaidespino, Andy Kosco NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) and George Spriggs a n d Bob Bundy, 6-foot-8 junior from pitcher Joe Moeller. Birt better-j Richmond, Va., was Toledo to its finest football season in school history, was Pontiac Central’72, Roseville 59 named Mid-American Con-Lakeview 91, werren (grence Coach of the Year Tues- ’’warren Cousin© 63, Lamphere 55 'dav Center Line 53. Warren Woods 51 Warren Mott 66, Harper Woods Luther it it . it Roseville Sacred Heart 55, Detroit St. | LaUterbur, whO alSO serVCS as ^M™nt Clemens St. Louis 59, Royal Oak' the school’s athletic director, re-i*Marfna City 71, New Baltimore Anchor | CCiVCd 26 OUt Of 28 VOteS cast Detroit had 239 completions | two touchdowns this season. He “"tJ’etfoii st Aiphonsus m, st. cieir by sports writers and broadcasters. ‘ I * * ' ♦ I The Rockets won nine straight j games after losing their opener and shared the conference championship with Ohio Univer-jsity. It was the first grid title for Toledo in MAC competition. I * * * I The other two votes were cast [for Ohio U. coach Bill Hess, for 2,752 yards at the same point hasn’t played in six games and;*^^f,'\ ^linMhwIitcn “ tt. last year. | remains a doubtful starter for One of the principal reasons Sunday’s game. | for the failure of Detroit’s aerial j In order to try and heal the game has been a recurring ham- injury, Schmidt hasn’t even Port Huron Port Huron Catholic 61, Cass City 35 Marina City 78. Anchor Bay 67 Algonac 60, ------ ** and a tie| Meanwhile, the rushing game, string muscle injury suffered by dressed Studstill in the last two North Huron 70, i. _____ Grass Lake 55. Napoleon 46 Leslie 76. Jackson Northwest SO Hanover-Horton 68, Concorc Litchfield 80, Waldron 47 Saranac 106, Ionia St Patar ft «L.v*ry 17, Pontic cuth. 59^ ,^j,ose Bobcats Shared the crown I with Toledo. Cougars Add MSU Star DE’TROIT (AP) - Terry Bid-lak, an All-America right halfback on Michigan State’s soccer champions last year, has signed a professional contract with the Detroit Cougars of the United Soccer Association. Budiak, lives in Toronto, Ont., was a member of the MSU squad which posted a 27-1-2 record rom 1964 to 1966. known names such as Dick Ra-datz. Bo Belinsky, WilUe Kirkland and Ed Charles were passed over. lior from! uspendedj By John Cartor What ora tha moil point! a I footboll toom can icor* in . tha fawatt minutai . . . Wall, I tha oll-tim# racord in a big- • tim# gama wai tat by tha I Naw York Giants who onco ■ tcorod tha incrodibla total of I 21 pointtinSSSECONDSI... . It happanad at Pittsburgh I Oct. 7, 1945 ... With 50 sac- ■ ondt to go in tha first holf, $ tha Giants scorad a TD . . . s Than thay kickod-off, Pitts- * rocovarad, and on tha first play Amia Harbor throw a TD pots ... On tha noiit kickoff, Pittsburgh again fum-blod. Bill Piccollo of Now York tcoopod up tha ball, and ran for a TO ... Thor# worn than 15 soconds to go ... So, that wot 21 points (all antra points worn good) in just 35 sac-ondtl ★ ★ ★ Haro's ono that toanis un- that moro pooplo got hurt by falling in thoir own homos than by playing all tha rough-ost, toughost and most dan-gorout sports . . . That soomt a littlo hard to occopt, but a national inturanco company rocontly mad# a S-yoor study, and thay roport that in thos* 5 yoars thay paid cloimt to 83,862 pooplo who fall in thoir homos, whilo thay paid claims to only 36,704 pooplo who got hurt participating in ALL SPORTS COMBINED including football, skiing, skating, cladding, hunting, booting, Mif, horseback riding and oil lb# rostl ★ ★ ★ I bat ypu didn't know . . . that choop snow tiros oro fair wopthor friondt. And who needs a fair woathor friond whan winter is 8 inches from the Vanderbilt basketball squad Tuesday night for disd-p I i n a r y reasons. Coach Roy Skinner declined to elaborate.' 4 Go Grand Trunk for a quick trip to CHICAGO on this fast new train I CARTER TIRE CO. 310 S. Saginaw FE 5-6136 PONTIAC Great for the busy butinossmani That’s Grand Trunk’s train to the Windy City. Leave Detroit’s Brush Street Station at 4.30 p.m. Local Tima (or Royal Oak at 4.51 p.m., Birmingham at 4.98 p.m., Pontiac at 5.08 p.m.). Arrive In downtown Chicago at 0.10 p.m. Local Time. You’re there In time for a good night’s sleep. In between—5 hours and 40 minutes of easygoing comfort. Read, doze, catch up on a little work. Enjoy a good dinner In our club-diner lounge or alight snack In the caf6 coach. "Red” Bargain Day Coach Far# to Chicago, one way.................................. $ 0.70 I' "Red” Bargain Day Club Car Far# to Chicago, I ona way (with compiimentary maai)............ $16.70 I Call Grand Trunk Western, I 131 West Lafayette Blvd., Detroit (962-2260) TRUI WESTERN EGTOXI CANADIAN NATIONAL RAILWAYS Looking for bai^ain? (You just found two) a Fill in and present this coupon to your Pure Oii Dealer. CITY Coupan anilliss bearer purobata ol S gallons or mors. Oiler expires Dec. 6. 1B67. PURE OIL DEALER; You ere aulhorlzad by the Pure Oil Company to give the bearer ot this coupon 1 gallon Firebird Gasoline, as shown on coupon, FREE when he buys B or more gallons ol Firebird Gasoline. Your Pure Oil tanKwegon driver will give you one gallon ol Firebird Gaaoline lor every gallon given tree as shown by coupon properly honored by you. Customer may use only one coupon per llll-up. COUPON GOOD ONLY AT PARTICIPATING DEALERS DISPLAYING FREE GAS SIGN IN THE CRUTER DETROIT AREA UtEE DEICM^ present this coupon to your Pure Oii Dealer. CITY STATE ZIP Coupan entitles bearer to ona can ol windshield da-lcar with purchase ol a or more gallons ol Firebirdiv Gasoline. Oiler expires Dec. 6. 1967. OIL DEALER; You are authorized by the Pure Oil Company lo give Ihe bearer ol thia coupon 1 can ol windshlald da-icer. as shown on coupon. FREE when ha buys 8 or more gallons ol FIrabIrd Gasoline. ■ icer lor every can Your Pure Oil aelesn given free at shown by coupon proparly honor) uta only ona coupon per purchasa. COUPON GOOD ONLY AT PARTICIPATING DEALERS DISPUTING FREE GAS SION IN THE CRUTER DETROIT ARU PURE’s Drive'll Save Days There are other exciting Drive ’n Save Days values coming up.Watch for them in the next few weeks...drive and save at the sign of PURE. ,5=dL THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 196T U-M Cagers Ready to Debut in 'Cazzie s Castle' ANN ARBOR (AP) — ‘‘Caz-iln the Big Ten with a dismial rie’s Castle” will be ready for 2-12 record. Michigan’s 1967 basketball open-j Strack is still in the process «r Saturday afternoon, but un-|of rebuilding. Only two of his fortunately Coach Dave Strack|l6 varsity players are seniors, won’t have a Cazzie Russeli to but seven are lettermen. perform in it. ' ROUGH START Construction of the $7 million j , „ * , University Events Building be-!„.'Pj”!; ri’i we’ll find out a lot about this team in the first week.” omore from Holland who-doesn’t Without a big man to replaceiSullivan 6-4 and Dennis Stewartiforwards and sophiwnore lUck figure to ptay much this year, Strack, plans to use soph- 6-7- Bloodworth, who played on * jomore senpUon Rudy Tomjan- Dave Mcaeilan and Willie Ed-Femdale’s 1965 Class A Michi- stead*of'*a* pivo* mM*’^*^said forward along [wards, a couple of 6-4 juniors Jgan high school champimis, will America player who led the Wolverines to three straight Big Ten cage titles, graduated in June 1966. j eternal optimist, Strack , I brushes aside the fact that he Strack. ‘‘We had a bad year last season. We were not a good defensive team and that was our downfall. ‘‘We’ve been working more on defense this year but we’ve got a good shooting team and we aren’t going* to stand around and hold the ball.” i with returning letterman Bob will be the swing men at the | be the top reserve guard. The home court advantage dome-shaped structure designed on’t be with the W^v^s ,,y bworsky, a Los ^geles architect and former Wolverine football star on the 1947 Rose Bowl team. Kentucky. Saturday’s gan^ will mark the first time any team has played to the new University Events Building, a The departure of Russell, now “““ J’® greduation losses a National Basketball Association star with the New York Knicks, left Michigan without an experienced regular last year. It showed on the score-board and Michigan won only eight of 24 games, finishing last ■••I Divittan W L T PtI. OF OA ■olton ............. 12 5 2 24 70 50 Toronto ............ 11 7 2 24 48 44 Botrolt .............. * 8 i 21 45 42 New York ............. » 7 3 21 57 53 Chicago .............. 8 I 5 21 57 44 Montreal............ 8 8 4 20 49 45 Wait DIvlilon Philadelphia ....... 10 5 4 24 44 41 Lot Angelas ........ 10 7 3 23 41 43 PltttlHirgh .......... 8 9 3 19 53 52 MlnnatoTa ............ 5 9 4 14 34 53 riand ................ 4 12 5 13 44 41 Loult ............ 4 13 2 20 38 52 Tiwaday'i Rasvila No gaitias scheduled. Taday's Oamas Montreal at Toronto Detroit at New York . Minnesota at Boston Philadelphia at Chicago Oakland at Pittsburgh Minnesota at AAontreal Toronto at Detroit Phil iTLeaeiH . Retinls NO games scheduled Tedaipt Oamas Muskegon at Fort Wayne Columbus at Toledo Thursdays Oamas No gameO schadulsd. man most coaches consider a from last year’s club necessity to survive in mod-l6-foot-10 center Craig Dill, who ern basketball. led Ihe team in scoring, and The biggest man on the squad'p 1 a y m a k i n g guard Dennis is 6-foot-lO Mike Lawson, a soph-|Bankey. Trojan 11 Dominates All-America Squad NEW YORK (UPI) — Sparked Jans placed the most men on by 0. J. Orange Juice Simp-the 1967 United Press Interna-son, who captured the most tional All-America football team votes. Southern California’s Tro- announced today. The national champion Tro- Urges Owners to Back Study WtnhUtt fct. •otton PhllMk D«troU CIncInr Saw York ....... 10 U .455 ■Itimort . 0 11 .431 WMltm DIvlilon ft. toull . .18 6 7M San Froncltco 17 7 .708 Lot Angolot .... U f .571 SMttIo .......... 7 16 .304 CMctpo ........... 5 18 .317 Son Diego 4 3l 160 Twodof I RMUltf Son Francisco 11^ BoltlnfMro 110 ■otton 11lg Ootrolt 111 Sootflo 111, Chicago 100 Fhlladolphla IIO, Now York 101 Lot Angolot m St. Loult 117 Todatt •amoo Lot Angolot at Dotrolt Now York at Cincinnati ion Francitco of Ph St. Loult at San 2lOj jans placed four men on the 22-man squad while Notre Dame landed three and Tennessee, Alabama, and UCLA had two each. ’The two-platoon team was chpsen by direct vote of 207 sportswriters and broadcasters throughout the nation, the only PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Na-j tional Football League owners! Simpson, the nation’s leading are being urged to dip in their rusher whose 64-yard touchdown pockets and finance an athletic! jaunt in the fourth period beat research institute to study the UCLA for Southern Cal in their cause and possible solution of big clash in Los Angeles, reinjuries which are crippling !ceived 195 votes — missing only many of the game’s top stars, jby 12 selections on every ballot ........... cast. It was the second strongest G. E. "Moose” Detty, trainer, lindividual showing in the bal-and Dr. James E. Nixon, teamlloting since World War II, fall-physician, both of the Philadel- tog only behind Michigan State phia Eagles, have submitted a tackle Bubba Smith who came plan they are prepared to im- within seven votes of unanimous plement if they can get the go-lselection in 1966. ahead from the owners. j ★ * w ★ ★ ★ I Joining Simpson on the All- The idea of such an InsUtutelA m e r i c a were Trojan team-came to light today in a discus-]mates Hon Yary at offensive Sion with Detty about the many tackle, Tim Rossovich at de- OPEN EVERY NIGHT TILL CHRISTMAS 20% OFF Sears SEABS, KOEBUCK AND CO. Sears Most Popular Tire . GUARDSMAN RAYON CORD injuries, especially to knees the Achilles tendon, which have laid low outstanding players this season. fensive end, and Adrian Young at linebacker. NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan Indians Plftiburgh Naw Jam Kantucky 136. Oakland 108 TadaWa Oamaa f Houston ------ At Naw Ja Oallaa at Kentucky Oakland va. New Oriaana at Memphit. rann. Anahalm at Pittsburgh TONIOHrS INTRlif ^•t-8888 Claiming Pact; " '**■* Waa .loama Wilmington Bi Brothar Olllor Bill Solicitor ig Paca; 1 Mllat Sir Portaoua Brother Bob Silvers Judge Jambay Hal Spirit Oukf Johnston etanity Me ... lr«~M8S Paca; 1 t Mlu C. Song Tar Atom Traloii Kathy Colling lingwood l -8680 CII Colorado Ray ^dwlna Reoueit Royal Courttup » Battle 100 Claimli Mini Prince .Scotch Echa .Trudy Hal Pair Doln Ondomo . Rusty Duka Prowler's Boy Gwen Chief Good Pal Tink Elby's Pi Ida Bio Bart Conaisti B^l^alla ^^an Fair Comat There have been 18 players sidelined for the season at various stages because of knee injuries, and at least four others are victims of tom Achilles tendons. Broken arms, legs, elbows, and back injuries are oth-have forced out valuable properties all over the Yary wag the only repeater from the 1966 UPI squad, a group which included 20 seniors. This year’s squad has 18 seniors and four Juniors, incind-tog Simpson. Pressing §impson hardest for the top vote-getting honors was versatile Leroy Keyes of Purdue who received 168 votes on ^ offense as he won the position as Simpson’s running mate at Kansas State 11 Under Scrutiny? MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) -The National Collegiate Athletic Association is investigating Kan-sas State University, but details of the inquiry are vague, it was learned Tue^ay. ifh-tpood •xprottwayo about 20% of tha timo, 4-ply rap6n cord body that givas you tha strancth and stamina you noad in a tiro The Investigation Is believed to be aimed at the Big Eight Conference school’s football pro-'gram. indsor Raceway 1 Allatata Quardsmao 1 TObalaat Blaokwall Ragular Pries With Trade Uls Prioa Wmi Trade Plus Pad-aral Exoiaa Tax 1 6.MX13 16.88 13.88 1.89 [ 7.88x14 19.96 19.98 2.98 1 7.78x14 ' 21.96 17.68 2.21 1 8.26x14 23.98 19.18 2.89 1 8.68x14 26.96 21.58 2.56 I 7.78x18 21.98 17.56 2.28 1 8.46x18 . 26.98 21.68 2.86 Count 7sr.firr*. Rwnim Cmn't TImt Todd Covnly Horry Dolo ni»-«IMg Pl... I Arch ^Cwnlo inorglior Mortho'i Dough DovlJ Hoi a. Eoty Boy tuesoay^s'results ■ "ntVflll *'***' •lUvoly Kid 3.40 2.50 2.40 .Son Juon Freight 3 20- 3.20 , Choilor Riddoll 4 40 f IJCONP «ACB 8IN< Condlllonod Pocot jfotty Mlit _ 3.70 3.00 2.70 : Moggie McBrIdo 4.40 3,20 ;tucceu Croig 3.40 OodUo: (4.2) Fold 9.40 ^TMIEd EACE IIOOOi Clolinlng TrW/ Onoi rOwwiBAdtoo MJO 11.10 7 oo ^.r^ Wyh A10 Jackpot Singles Eraty Thursday, 9:30 P.M. (Xlofluuu. QO% 0^ 200 Me«i 70% 4 200 , WHITEWitLLS ONLY S3 MORE PER TIRE FAST, FREE INSTALLATION WHEELS BALANCED , ^ “f *5 FREE TIRE ROTATION Weights Included every SgtiOO miles If two or more tires on your oar are Allstate. S«irt Tlno Odpt. Attention! Small Truck Owners Rugged highway tread tire with nylon reinforcementg traction slots, boost grip. 6.70x15 Tubx-Typm Express 55 2145 PIm S.4S PiNbnd EasiMTax ^ 6.00x16 Tube-Type Black 19.45 ( 6.50x16 Tube-Type Black 23.45 All Priest wHh Old Tira Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back" SEARS Downtown Pontiac Phone FE 5-4]71 THE PONTIAC PltESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29. 1967 D--5 Indicate Good ! Some People Never Learn Rules, Ethjcs of Hunting Deer Season j (The following is from the I Ontario Department of Lands and Forests.) Kill May Top Total, ® ' “ ' to live and a time to die. never learned when to stop > cause a man shot too far for a by the size of the community, killing. {dean kill and we see it alsolnor by the cut of their clothes. We see evidence pf it along along the creeks and rivers, —| You can’t set the activity back roads — a deer carcass a dead mink or beaver with a apart by species. Anywhere with the hind quarters cut away bullet hole in its head. {there is something wild in the The man who kills within the freedom if he can, pnly if the| They will riddle a heron wiih framework and limits of the jaw permits, and he may evenj'J^*'** shot if there is nothing else hunting regulations is a different it some regret. Heif"„‘h« «hoot! They wdl breed of cat. He tempers his . . ... .. • . ,. , {kill simply because, while car- killine with resoect for the ani-^“"^‘.rvinc a pun. thev have fnnnrf ers. But the others? icying a gun, they have found itjor bits of bones left from a| You hear it where men gather|bush you can bet your best shot-:mal he pursues. He sees a wild 'something with life which can of Last Two Years* be that way for wildi“summer” kill. You see it in to sip beer and talk about the gun someone somewhere is fig-thing not only as a target but| These are so-called men who be rendered dead! ' game top.. jthe duck marshes, — ducks left big kill, the easy kill, or the luring out a way to kill it with- as a living, breathing preature seemingly can’t stand to see anyj These are the ones with black Weather Is Factor | * ★ * [at the landing that would not illegal kill. We hear it in small out being caught. It happensjwith more freedom than he, bird or animal alive in the and white^alues. A gun is fo The problem is that there areifit into a man’s‘legal limit, land medium-sized towns, even; with squirrels and rabbits as himself will ever have. .woods. They will blast an otter shoot. A bird or animal is t »xTr.T»To huipans roaming the woods in LANSING (AP) — Early indi- the guise of hunters who have'i cations are that this should be • one of the better season for Michigan deer hunters, particfi- ■ —....... larly in the popular northern Lower Peninsula area. I Dave Arnold, State Conservation Department ueer specialist, | said the deer crop this year| could top the kill in both the! 1966 and 1965 hunting seasons. | “Our first general impression i Is that the deer kill is up in the northern Lower Peninsula,’’ Ar-| nold said. “A large number of hunters report success and there are a number of deer on cars and in camps.” One good indication is that number of deer checked the. first four days of the season— * when the kill is highest. There were 4,500 deer checked by Conservation Department personnel the first four days I I 0SS this season. This compared with 2,900 during the same period a year ago. | This has been a season of TWe ♦ j -I firsts for hunters entering deer was not^ al- gj though this year’s check was not as Intensive as last year' „ . . because of the department’s ‘'T tight money budget. the first d^ A good proportion of the deer i?" check were yearling bucks with the percentage much high-1 er than a year ago * {Lynch, Highland Towmship. ★ # * FIRST ANTLERS ' . ......... . It was his imtial success in We see it in the hardwood,—big cities, for the men who can’t well as deer and the occasional partridge gone to waste te-stop killing are never definable'moose. the yrail * ■* * [into eternity He takes that life and that ducks! Another 1st Highlights These bucks were from the three years of trying. Neil Burk- 1966 fawn crop Now just « 3815 Minton. Orion year and a half old, they are Township, entered a 2(B>^- spOTtmg their firs antlers j b„ck shot near Christmas The high yearling buck kill g peninsula. Indicates a good fawn crop in The curernt leader ended nine the spring of \m and a good reasons of coming home empty survival through last winter, .yandgy gob^rt W. Huebel Although the snow cover was Jr., 5751Clinton Ridge, Inde-hcavy over the deer country pendence Township, last winter, there was an early He tagged a 208-pounder Nov. and fast spring break. The 20, near L’Anse in the U. P. early snow melt enabled deer to Huebel was hard-pressed to find forage just at the time they hold the lead over his father, needed it most Robert Sr., 2926 Shawnee, Wa- Falrly good weather for the terford Township, who dropped deer opener also helped boost a 264-pounder in the same area. the success ratio in the northern Lower Peninsula. Larger Area for Special Bow Season ‘ And just to make the family hunt a success. Sue Huebel, wife I of Robert Jr., shot a spike the same morning. 'This was also a first for her after two fruitless ! Residents of Oakland County are eligible. Only bucks can bie entered. Weight (field dressed) I is the determining factor. The deer must be weighed on state-approved scales and a weight Southern Michigan's newly- obtained by the hunter. The extended archery deer season poi'son operating the scales and which resumes Dec. 4 and c<>n- ^ witness, tinues through the rest of the * * * year lakes in a bigger area ^ accepted in than many hunters think, ac- Pf sports department cording to the Conservation De- ^‘ween now and next Monday, partment. between 7 a.m. Archers who are confused on ^p.m. except Sunday. | this point mistakenly believeby a rep- New Fish Stocked Along West Coast | ARCATA, Calif, (ffi — Fisher-jmer, the Fish and Game Depart-men working the riffles of Cali- ment says, fornia north coastal streams I DeWitt points out that stream ,may tie into a 15-inch silvery I conditions in m a n v Jananese Japanese game fish called avu. javu streams annear identiicaHo I This year Dr. John DeWitt, those in .some north coast professor of fisheries at Hum-i streams. California offshore con-boldt State College, hatchery-1 ditions mav also suit the fish, .reared to maturity the sea-going| j^e ayu’s taste m, mne nnn vnnr ,n anan SOme- what firmer flesh and produces almost no fish odor when fired, he says. The ayu lives only one year. When it returns to fresh water to spawn, it has become a strict vegetarian, using flat teeth to scraoe the thin scum of algae from rocks in riffles. It is eight inches long In Jujig and may grow to 15 by early ** fall, when it spawns and dies. “Even though it is an algae feeder when it returns to the stream, it still will strike at artificial fli^s.— perhaps ais a reflex action established while it hunting for meant to be shot. The person with thoughts so endowed is no more than a child with a man’s body wearing a man’s boots — no more. For him there is no time to ilive — only a time to die. millions each year in Janan The fish had never been raised in the United States. LONG WAIT OVER - Robert W. Huebel Jr. hunted 10 seasons before zeroing in on a buck. When he did, Nov. 20, it was a big one. Mr. and Mrs. Huebel, 5751 Clinton Ridge, Independence Township, admire the POntiK PfMt I 208-pounder taken near L’Anse that is the current leader in The Pontiac Press Big Deer Contest. The massive head carries eight points, but weight is the only determining factor in thf derby. that the dividing line for the resentative of The Press. southern zone coincides with p« hunter entering the heavi-, the shotgun-only boundary for in sav-| hunting deer in Lower Michl- ^ . I Huebel shot his eight-pointer * ■ at 50 yards with a .270 loaded Actually, this zone, and con- with 150-grain bullets, sequently, the open area for archery deer hunting runs substantially north of the shotgun boundary which generally follows M-46 and M-57. | Specifically, the northern boundary for the southern zone and its extended archery deer season is as follows; From Lake Michigan along M-213 to M-20 in North Muske- Big Lakers Recovered Hybrid Sunfish Maceday Splake Thrive^ in Lapeer Lakes For 50 years Jananese have {been trving to hdteher-raise the ayu. They suceeded only re-I cently. I Difficulties arise from the I ayu’s eating habits. For the first ifew months after hatching, the I quarter-inch-long, transparent, {fragile fish feeds on minute ocean animals called zooplank-ters. I Furthermore, since the fish locate food more or less at ran-jdom during thieir first week of life, the fo^ orgaUisms must be ___, ip dense concentrations for them ,, ^ ^ to find enough. :__ ________. The California Fish and Game ■ Department and the Internation-j al Friendship Charitable Foundation of Gardena. Calif., arej cooperating in the naturalization' of the Japanese immigrant, j * ★ * . The ayu can be expected to; thrive in coastal streams too warm for trout during the sum- Defroif Camper Show Scheduled Early Next Year The first annual Detroit Camper and Travel Trailer! Show will be Feb. 24-Mhrch 3 at the Detroit Artillery Armory. | I Billed as the largest retail ,ex-; hibit of recreational vehicles in I the United States,' the show is expected to include over 400 campers, trailers and mobile homes from 125 manufacturers. I ★ * * ! The Michigan Mobile Home Association is arranging the show and Keith Crawford, own-I er of Crawford 'Trailers, Inc., j Taylor, is the chairman. , WHAT A BEAUTIFUL DIFFERENCE Brighten Up Your Car With A New VINYL ROOF dr An Exquisite Set of Newest SEAT COVERS AT LOW, LOW PRICES! Bill Kelley's SEAT COVER Ttl Oakland Avtnua, Ctrnar KlMitr 1 Blaeka Waal tf Mantaalw Talavliona FI 2-II3I TakeTeii^ U. S. Bowler in Lead The splake planting program pleted on Cass because last win-1 PARIS (AP) - Jack Con-naughton, a 21-year-old college student from Oconomowoc, Wis., led Joe McNally from Dublin „ . , , ,............J .u . , LANSING m - The State by 117 pins after Tueday’s open- on Maceday Lake apparently is^ters attempt ended with stolen conservation Department bas ing round in the Class A Di-successful. I nets. [planted about 33,500 fingerling vision of the International Mas- 1 Test nets placed by Conser-| redear and green sunfish hy- ters Bowling Championships, jvation Department fi®*‘®'-‘®sLe„^,„cited over four bie lake southern Michigan ~ workers were brought up J^Laken i Te ,week and yielded a number water fishing, llO-inch splake. These *ake- P*^ ^^ { One advantage of the fish, the brook trout hybrids * r ® 1 ^ ^ {Conservation Department said, I stocked last fall as three-inch ^ ' is that they don’t reproduce The schedule of ' Solunar fingerlings. Maceday and Cass were readily to overcrowd a lake with gon, then along M-% to U^l^ periods, as printed below. has> ★ ★ ★ {stocked with lakers for a num-ltoo many small fish, then along Ub-10 to Gartieldj|,een taken from John Alden' “This is very encouraging,”|ber of years, but no additional {The fish were planted in Hoad in Bay Louniym„igj,j>j SOLUNAR TABLES.isaid fish biologist Stevt Swan, fish have been planted in the Hankard Lake, Washtenaw then north on (larfleld Road pia„ y^ur days so that you will “Apparently there is a good sur- last eight years. And no lakers County; Indian and Watts to Pinconmng Road then east be fishing in good territory or yival rate.” {are immediately available foriLakes, Lapeer County, and Tea- on Pinconning Road to Seve Mile hunting in good cover during o stocked in‘"land lakes, according to Swan, han Lake, Livingston County. ' as five to seven-inch yearlings. | All hatchery-reared lakers are other fish removed by chemical Later plantings included finger- going into the rejuvinating the,treatment to give the new spe-lings. No tests have been com- Great Lakes. I cies a fresh start. and enjoy a true bourbon of HiramWalker quality. Relax. S[)end ten minutes with Ten High. Sip it slow and easy. Discover 86 proof straight Bourbon whiskey all over again. Hiram Walker style. At a welcome price 1 Hiram Walker^ ten High y'our best bourbon buy $409 $256 Road (County Road 25) in has to offer. Arenac County, then north on —rD*'n'iur Lincoln School Road to M-61,'t^« J Jo then east on M-61 to US-23, then FHd»y 7:» io:m east along US-23 to center line!sundty'V V^ of AuGres River, then southerly, TueSiVy li ” “ along center line of AuGres -River to Saginaw Bay, then north 78 degrees east to International Boundry Line. ERVIN MOS.^ TAXIDERMY I North American and African Game •Mraiiv Natun’t Btauly" ler Haudf Mountud $ HMMTannad IWlM North dfPoirtlM , 2MI CbrnnonwdNmi Rd. Mwom Nnv mO Oplykt M. iGallFEB-MN Your Yollou) Pagot’l SERVING OAKLiND COUNTY OVER 35 YEARS Lozeile Agency, Inc. ALL FORMS OF m huyrtdu ilhr INSURANCE 504 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG. Closed Saturdays—Emergency Phone FE 5-0314 Phone FE 5-8172 ATTENTION! TRADESMEN-SPORTSMEN Caps or Covers For Pick-Up Trucks AH Sizes for ALL TRUCKS • Insulated • 12 Volt Light • Paneled Interiors • Aluminum Exteriors • Locked Tdilgate Door Priced From $17950 IDGES Digige Cars | travel AND 1010 W. Maple - Open till 8:30 P.M. Daily N WALLED UKE - Sat, till 6 P.M. Doilge Trucks] 624-1572 D—8 THE PONTIAC rRESSyWEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1967 Mold Creamy Eggnog Mixture in Star Form Molded Holiday Nog is a gel-jNorfolk, Virginia, or Norfolk, atin dessert demure enough to'England, be devoured by even the littlesti must, therefore, fall back caroler, but it has some fairly 8>ve us / more insight into nog. In col-rowdy ancestors. Webster's is onial times, flip was a popular pretty vague in tracing the drink made with the same inbackground of nog, defining it gradients we now lavish on merely as: “A kind of strong .iio i M I The chief difference was that ai e formerly brewed in Nor- keepers’ recipes generally Just why it is no longer called for cream, eggs, sugar, brewed in Norfolk isn’t dis- nutmeg, rum, and ale. A red-cussed, and what’s more, we Molded Holiday Nog aren’t even told whether it’s 1 package (3-oz.) lemon flavor gelatin 1 package (3V4-oz.) vanilla pudding and pie filling 1 tablespoon sugar 2% cups water ★ ★ ★ 1 envelope whipped topping mix y« teaspoon nutmeg % teaspoon rum extract Vi teaspoon vanilla Combine gelatin, pudding mix, sugar, and water in a saucepan. Cook and stir over medium heat until mixture comes to a full boil, and is thickened and clear. Remove from heat. Chil until mixture begins to set. Prepare whipped topping mix as directed on package. ’Hior-oughly blend whipped topping, nutmeg, rum extract, and vanilla into the chilled pudding mixture. Pour into a 1-quart mold and chill until firm—about 4 hours. Unmold. Garnish with orange rind, if desired. Serve with Cranberry Orange Sauce or other fruit sauce. Makes about 4 cups or 6 to 8 servings: Note: Recipe may be doubled; chill in a 2-quart mold. Cranberry Orange Sauce 1 cup fresh cranberries Vt medium orange 1 cup sugar 1 tablespoon quick-cooking tapioca. ‘ % cup water teaspoons orange-flavored liqueur Grind cranberries and orange (skin and pulp) and set aside. Combine sugar, tapioca, and water in a saucepan; let stand 5 minutes. Cook and stir over medium heat until mixture comes to a boil; reduce beat and simmer 3 minutes. Add ground cranberries and orange and simmer 3 minutes longer. Cool 20 minutes. how good are A«P frozen vegetables? Read on... you be the judge. The best vegetables are Grade A. Every package of A&P Brand Frozen Vegetables is Grade A. Pick up a package. You’ll see.' *^GradeA^ is printed on every wrapper. Doryou have a different brand in your freezer? Check it. See if it’s labeled Grade A. Surprised at the quality of A&P Brand Frozen Vegetables? Not if you’re an A&P shopper. After all, it does bear the A&P seal What more is there to say? Just this. You won’t believe the prices... they’re so low. Are A&P Brand Frozen Vegetables a good reason for shopping A&P? They’re one of many. P.S. There are exceptions: Potato Morsels, Cottage Pries, Whole Peeled Potatoes. That’s because today there are no standards for Grade A on these items. But don’t worry. *^here are none finer. * ________________________ COPYUlOltT > HW/THE UUtAT ATt,)UITIC fc WCIFIC TD> CO., INC. / Just before serving, add MOLDED HOLIDAY NOG—A flower-shaped dessert ver-liqueur. Serve with Molded sion of a fine old American favorite, this Molded Holiday Holiday Nog, ice cream, pud- Nqg is spiked not with spirits, but with a tantalizing Cran- ding, or plain cake. Makes - berry Orange Sauce. Simple enough to whip up for family, about 1% cups sauce. it is elegant enough to grace your party tables. Super-Right" Quality Meats! Cut from Com-fed Porkers - "Soper-Rigfcf” PORK LOINS Loin End Portion COUNTKY-STVLt _ _ Spare Ribs . . » 59* Semi^Boneless Homs 79s "SUPER-RISHT” FUUr COOKED, WHOLE OR HALF A*. GRADE "A' Peas, Cut Com, Soinach, Chopped Broccoli, Peas ft Carrots " French Fries 7 - 1®® ■IRDS lYI (Th0 RmI TMnt from florUmI ^ „ Orange Juice.... 4‘cV.‘79‘ Dairy Values! Mel-O-Bit Cheese Slices ImHwidually Wrapped PROCESS AMERIMN PIMENIO OR SHARP A4P—LARGE OR SMALL CURD ^ Cottage Cheese..........49‘ Creamsicles.... 12 c'm 59' AMERICAN OR PIMENTO — — Ched-0*Bit .. I»; 89‘ OOlOi. «,SI * “iTWT. Biscuits..............6 t'dih 49 IR BUTTER SAUCE —GREER GIANT Mixed VegOtubies. 33’ Nibiets Corn.......'^'33< Le Sueur Littie Peas 39’ Broccoii Spears.... ’aF 39’ KRAn CRACKER BARREL CHEESE SHARP I extra shark, 65* 69* NET WT. MELLOW 10-OZ. e Ac BARS Jane Parker Bakery Variety! ....a 3». Blueberry Pie BAKE ’N’ SERVE Dinner Roils......... JANE PARKER Cinnamon Rolls.... NET WT. 9- OZ. Pk,. of 13 NETWT. 10- OZ. PKG. 25* 35' 1-LB. 8-OZ. SIZE SAVE 16c .. . ONIY JANE PARKER ENRICHED ^ White Bread............4 OVER W FRUITS AND NUTS—JANE PARKER FRUIT CAKE Light Batter 1H-lb. Sixe Dork Batter 2-lb. Sixe |49 I |69 I ^99 SAMt LOW PRICeS AS LAST YEAR Light Batter 5-ib. Sixe SWANSDOWN BHORTENINO ^ I.IB. Cakt Mixes FLAV^ORS 3 PKOI. 79* ^VOR HOUSE N.lur.l P.anul. NET WT. • ^ Dry Roasted Nuts . . 49* PILLSBURT BIST _ ____ Hour puRPoii... 5 *** 53* PILLSBURT BEST ___ Flour Pue*Hi.. .... W 2®* HARTX MOUNTAIN ^ NIT WT. Dog Yoimniei ■ . .2 pkbs. 37* FOR cakes and DISSERTS Beaver oicorator candy 29* 49-49* LAWlirS Seaeoned Salt LAWRV'O NETWT. T-OZ. . . tIZE NET WT. ■ •”VlZE***^ CHEP SOY-AR-DEE Spaghetti WITH MUSHROOM 49’ ALL PURPOSE Gold Medal Flour .. CHEP BOY AR-DEB _ Spa[|;htlti WITH MEAT ISjj; 49* WHITE OR BLUR x.lb Sail Detargant . . . 49< 4 Procf icnf Gift That’s Praslitally Perfect An A&P Gift Certificate A hondsome certificate with a mailing anvaloga, avaiiabla in all ARP star., all y.or long. Offtrad in SS and S10 d.MminXn. thraa .Tft cartificatos will ba honored in ony A&P store in the United Stotos. * ^ Far turthar Infermatleii call TY H IPO, Ext. 261-2-8 — ^ j Gold Medal Flour . . U* 2®® aOLl-LO CALORIE _ ___ Fruit Cocktail . • .2 59* OOLS-^O CALORIE ,.tB ^ Slind Pintapple . . 39* VACUUM PACREO _ Maxwell House Coffee '^an |39 marzetti Slaw Dressing .... j7r 63* WHITE CLOUD ____ TolMTIssu ... 2 27’ (■M SHCCTI ^ Scot Tissue •... 4 39’ ANTISEPTIC ,4.,t. Listarina (TS OFf LABELI 72' FOR LAUNDRY Snowy Blaach .... pm: 41* NINE UVI. tuna . JfcRRTWT.-^^ e**t*Ni...........2 29’ New Baking Method Is Speedy and Easy THE PONTIAC PR^SS, \^DNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1967 D—7 Even the ancient Roman con-^ makes crusty brown loaves of{ A ribbon of creamy choco-i quferors had bread baked with!bread and luscious rolls with late filling runs through the 'yeast, though not the light,i“”‘y one rising instead of the'roUs and is drizzled over the! tasty bread nor luscious rolls we have today. recipes. Today, too, there’s ^ new way| There is almost no end to the CHOCOLATE FROSTED ROLLS - A new method of yeast bread baking lets you ■ have the finished product in one-third less time. These sweet rolls are but one version. They’re easy to make and elegant to eat. to make bread and rolls quicker and easier by far than ever before. It is called “Can Do Quick” and that’s exactly what it is. Anyone can do it in one-third less time than with usual recipes. 'This unique method using buttermilk and baking powder variety of yeast bakings you can make with the new "Can Do” method. At your next coffee party, you can be the sensation of the neighborhood with Chocolate Frosted Rolls, a treat much more exciting than the name implies. the sides. “Can Do” Chocolate Frosted Rolls ! 2 packages active dry ^reast | % cup warm water (105 to 115 degrees) IV4 cups buttermilk 2 eggs 5% cups all-purpose flour* (regular or instantized) % cap butter or margarine, softened % cup sugar 2 teaspoons baking powder 2|teaspoons salt Creamy chocolate filling (below) Grease 2 round pans, 9xl(^ inches. Dissolve yeast in water j in large mixer bowl. Add but-i termilk, eggs, 2)^ cups flour, the butter, sugar, baking powder and salt. Blend 30 seconds on low speed, scraping side and bottom of bowl. Beat 2 minutes on medium speed. Stir in remaining 3 cups flour. (Dough should remain soft and slightly sticky.) Knead 5 minutes or abbut 200 turns on lightly floured board. Divide dough in half. Roll each half into rectangle, 12x7-inches. Spread each with onej I fourth of Creamy. Chocolate Filling. Roll up, beginning at[ wide side. Seal well by pinching edge of dough. Cut each' into 12 slices; place in prepared pan, leaving small space be-1 tween each slice. j Let rise in warm place (85 degrees) about 1 hhur. (Dough is ready to bake if slight dent remains when touched.) Heat to 375 degrees. Bake 30 to 35 minutes. Remove from pans and top with remaining filling. Serve immediately. Makes 24. Creamy Chocolate Filling; Beat 6 tablespoons cocoa, 6 tablespons soft butter, Vi cup ■milk and 3 cups sifted confectioners’ sugar until creamy and smooth. •When using self-rising flour, omit baking powder and salt. Quality-Famous For Generations^“Super-Right” Meats! CUT fROM HIATORC, CORN-FED BCCf-"SUPCR-RlGHJ” ROUND SIRLOIN Boneless Rotisserie or Rump Roast -99‘ 8999:1 PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH SAT., DEC. 2nd lb Top Round Steak ■ONEU9 Bottom Round Steak Cube Steak Pork Sausage BONCUSt • • • • l». |M »99< »|0* 1 69‘ PEELED AND DEVEINED MEDIUM SHRIMP 9*9 1V4-LB. BAG Med. Shrimp Shell-on »99* Breaded Shrimp itl 2*’ ECKRICH SLENDER-SLICED Pork Loin, Turkey, Beef Corned Beef, Smoked Ham YOUR CHOICE 3NET WT. ^R 3-oz. m PKGS. H 00 GOVERNMENT INSPECTED Fryer Legs . or Fryer Breasts with Ribs Attached .49* Guaranteed-Good Groceries...All Value-Priced! Juice Sale! A&P GRADE “A” UNSWCETCNCD Orange, Blended or Grapefruit 3 MINIT MEAL JM Chili____________4 99 Salad Tomatoes Flour ALL PURPOSE . .5 •" 39‘ ^"" FLORIDA FANCY ^ MM MU# Cucumbers.... 3 '°* 25 Fresh Corn.... 6 49 CILLO PACK NITWT. Spinach ..........'p°k1* 29 jmv ,U,CK^ORNED ^ « QQ Beef Hash 3 1 A&P FANCY SPINACH OR M |Ui Sauerkraut 4 - 59 A&P—OUR FINEST QUALITY Instant Rice EIGHT O’CLOCK WHOLE BEAN ANN PAGE—ALL FLAVORS ^ Sparkle Gelatin 4 ANN PAGE QUALITY Elbow Macaron REGULAR Saran Wrap... K.V.P. PAPERMADE (18" Widal Freexer Wrap. CHICKEN OR BEEP Rice-a-Roni... REGULAR BLUE BONNET HAIR GROOMING Vitalis la SOFT-PLY (2-PLYI Facial Tissue 3 a“ 59* 4“J:i'59‘ SULTANA Pork ’n’ Beans... 1^1: 0O< CAN dm W 3-LB. CQC . . I’KG. ANN PAGE (CHEF OR REGULAR) French Dressing.. .Vu 39‘ 50-FT. OG* • • "OLL XT READ'S GERMAN Potato Salad.... iis- 33' 50-FT. • • »OLL 90 FOR UPSET STOMACHS Aika-Seltzer ’K’-47‘ 2“ss69‘ DRY BUBBLE BATH Bubble Club WS9^ 2 c’thV 59‘ TOILET BOWL CLEANER Bowlene B 44' Ta,T QQ' , • • BTL. T T “V SAVE AT AGP Climulene J B 61' 2-LB. (BEEF OR 10-OZ. CHICKEN) CAN LA CHOY Chow Mein.. ANN PAGE GROUND Black Pepper.... PEKOE AND ORANGE PEKOE 4^4% Our Own Tea________ 99 /lET WT. B-OZ. CAN ANN PAGE-ALL FLAVORS Cake Mixes [t 1-LB. 3-OZ. PKG. 25' WEBSTER DICTIONARY and Nome Reference Library SECTION 1 Only Add a Stctien o Waak Until Your Dicfionory It Camplala 2 Sec. Binders, 89c each D—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1967 The following are top prices 1 covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by' them in wholesale package lots. | Quotations are furnished by the Morf Advance Not Slackening NEW YORK (AP) The Detroit Bureau of Markets asl®/'^'' showed of Monday. Produce FRUITS Apples, Cortland, bu. Apples, McIntosh Apples, Northern Spy, Cabbage, Curly, bu. Cabbage, Red, bu. Jtandard Variety bu. Carroisi Celery, i Horseradish, Carrots, Cello Pak. J-ds. Carrots, topped, bu. Celery, root, V4 bu. Horseradlsl Leeks, dz. Onions, dry, jo-ib. bag Parsley, Root, dz. bch. Parsnips, Vi-bu. Parsnips, Cello Pak, dz. Peas, Blackeye, bu........ Peppers, Sweet, bu. . Potatoes, SO-lb, bag ..... Potatoes, 30-lb. bag ..... ---- Red, Hothouse, Black, V) bu. . jrio sign of slackening as it con jtinued early this afternoon for the sixth straight session. The Dow Jones industrial av-3 00 erape at noon was up 3.30 at 3M 888.18. 4.7s| Trading was heavy. The tick-* er tape lagged at the start. 3.50 Analysts expressed surprise i the stubborness of the ad-Jlf^nce. Wall Street, however, I'^iwas full of predictions that the 3.M I market had a good year-end 3.w I rally ahead of it. Gains outnumbered losses by about 2 to 1 on the New York I “ Stock Exchange. As in Tues- day’^ session, the wide variety of stbngth in secondary issues reflected a renewal of public Latest odd lot statistics showed that purchases and sales of lots of less than 100 shares (round lots) were roughly in balance. Many active issues, however, were cheap enough so that a small Investor would have no trouble in buying a round lot. The Associated Press average of 60 stocks at noon was up .5 at 317.7 with industrials up .5, rails up .8 add utilities off .1. Prices advanced in active trading on the American Stock Exchange^ United Canso .Oil St Gas, a Low-priced fractional gainer, paced the list on volume, folllowed by Signal Oil “A”, up a fraction following news of its proposed merger with Allis-Chalmers. WtdMsday't Ul DIvIRmds Dgclind F*. Stk. af Pay-Rata riad RKard abla EXTRA PratlALambart Butler'i Am Music Sirs DetACan Tun Girard Trust 81 Radlshas, Rad, Radishes, BlacI Squash, Acorn, bu. .................... Squash, Buttercup, bu.............. 1.75 Squash, Butternut, bu............. 1.75' squash, Hubbard, bu............... 1.75 Turnips, dz. bchs. ................ 1.75 Turnips, topped ...................3.75i GREENS Collard, bu.........................1.75 LETTUCE AND GREENS I Celery, Cabbage, dz. ..............3.00 Poultry and Eggs DITROIT POULTRY Abbott Lab 1 ABC Con .eo [Abex Cp 1.60 lACF Ind 2.20 •nd fryers white, 19*21; roasters heavy lAirRedtn type, 26*27. ......... Market quiet, receipts ample cents; broilers'Admiral .25p ....... AlrRedtn 1.50 AlcanAlum 1 AliegCp .20a AllegLu 2.40b Net FMC Cp .75 [hds.) High Low Last Chg FoodFair .9o _ FordMot 2.40 23 45'/s 44Vd 4y/i Fr^Sul 38 33V4 33 33V4 + «/4 FruehCp 1 70 3 29^S 29% 29»/i + 'A 11 45*/a 45 45 + V4 36 64'A 63>/a 64 + V4 Gam Sko 1.30 -f2% GAccept 1.40 DRTROIT BOOS DETROIT (AP)—(USDA)—Egg prices paid by first receivers (including ^icoa U. S. medium, 20'30'A; small. Market Grade A |umbo, 37*41 cents; Am Airlln BO •xtra large, 3S*37 pounds 71.75; cows Mllllty 17.50 to 18.0^ culler 15.50 to 17.50; cannars 14.00 •»,0,bckw 1M '*Hogs 150; barrows and gilts steady U.S.jS*'', one and two 200-225 pounds w m-i. ts.'Baal r one to three 22lh250 pounds two and three 240-270 poun SOWS steady U.S. one to ti pounds 15*15.75; two and f pounds 13.25*15. 23 48% 47% 48% 35% 34% " 6|% 68% 98% - ' .19% 5% 6% • 49% 48% 48% •. . ____ 65% 64% 65 +1% Howmet RepubStI 2.50 Revlon * RexaM — T. R«Vn Met .90 43 74% 74% 74% + %|5SV"Tob 2.20 18 23% 23 23% + % 1 40 .. iRoanSe 1 67g —H— jRohr Cp .80 g f ft “ r 1 ■ 26 55% 54% 54% —2 I 17 45% 44% 45% +1% 44 80% 79% 80 + %' ■ ■■■ % Safeway 1.10 % SUosLcI 2.80 21 50 49ft 50 -fttlX’S?'’ 149 109% 106% 109% +2% Schenley 1.8o - *' 39»/4 40% +1V4 Schering 1.:* 28 50% 49% 50 6 31% 31% 31% 13 128 127>/4 128 HuntFds 50 41 28 42% 42 42% + % SCM Cp ““ “ ■■ ‘ Scott Pai 45% 45% 45% + % Sbd CstL Slentif Data SCM r % ScqttJ GD 1.2 TFds 1.65 II T^irw! Backman .50 Is 18-18 75; BeechAlrc lb .re. 4^09 Bjndft ,1 40 Vealers 75; steady few head bigh clwlw IjS L* and prime 4lh43; choice 35-40 good 30-35 standard 24-30. I Borden i 90 Sheep 300; slaughter classes steady BorgWar 'l 25 choice end prime 90-110 wool lambs 24-25; BrIggsS 2 40« cull to good slaughter ewes 58. BrIsIMver la CNICASO LIVESTOCK Brunswick AP) - lUSOA) - Hogs BucyEr I Me 50 to 75 higher, )-2 19fr225 sudd Co .80 )53 head 210-215 lbs 20.25; Bullard 1 25 to 50 Bulova 70b I LIVESTOCK _________ . P) 4,500; butchers i lb 19.25-20.00; i; 1-3 230-240 lbs 18.35-19.25; . I.-S Ideal Cam i . V. Imp Cp Am ft IngerRand 2 Inland StI 2 . ^4 InsNAm 2.40 InlerlkSt 1.80 ilgher; 1-3 350-400 lb sows 15.50-16. ........ , Cattle 1,300; calves none; steers lully Burroughs steady; heifers strong to 25 higher; choice 1.025-1,325 lb slaughter steers yield grade 3 to 4 36.35-27.00; mixed good and choice Cal FInanI 1.00B1.150 lbs 35.75-36.50; cholct 850-1,035 CalumH i 20 lb slaughtar hellars ylald grade 2 to 4 CempRL 45a 25.0lh25.50 CamR ln45e Sheep 200.-,choice and prime 90 - IIS Camp Soup I lb wooTad sletighter lambs 23.00-24.00. ,Canteen .H _______________________CaroPLt 1.34 'CaroTBiT .68 'Carrier Cp I . _ ■ I iCarterW 40a American Stock Exch. ^Xt/ 120 ArkLGai 1.60 Aiamara Oil AisdOII 8. G AtlatCorp wt BrazilLtPw 1 Brit Pat ,S6p Campbl Chib C»n So Pat Cdn Javelin Cinerama Creole 3.60a Data Cont EquItCp OSd Fargo OII« Fed Retreat HrnonI Oil rontier Air . Bn P Giant 'I Goidfie . Gt Bat Pet 18 49% 49% 49% 26 28% 28% 28% 6 63 61% 61% 44 74 73% 73% 7 41% 41% 41% 67 89% B9V4 89V4 38 47% 46% 47 87 e*/4 6% 6% 113 32Vj 31% 32% 101 94% 93% 94 33 41 40% 40% 36 31% 31% 31% 50 30 29% 39% I 53V4 53>4 53% 38 7BV4 77% 78'/4 125 12% 12% 12% 148 36% 35% 36% ■■ 19% 18% 19 + % , ,, 38% 37% 38% +2 IXmIS J ?2 28Vt 27% 38 + % 42 41ft 41ft -I S 172ft 170ft 172ft -f2ft j"es”J 2 70 Jos.ens .50 Joy Mfg 1.25 7 47ft 47ft 47ft + ft ___I____ I Sears Roe la 35 29% 29% 29% + %|sS?SI®s; [Shell Oil SheilTrn x57 249% 245% 246% —1% 185 88 87 88 75 20% 20 20% 9 8% 8% 8% 25 31% 31% 31% 6% 6% 6% . . i; Int Harv 1 80 1/4 Int Miner 1 . % IntNIck 2.80a Inti Packers Int Pap 1.35 Int TiT 1,70 . 7/a lowaPSv 1.24 14 45% 60 31% 31% 31% + % sinclali ait S'* STixIl Sl4»* Co 2.20 4 29% 29 29% + % SmIthK 1 lAa » ‘Ifl? *1?. i soJciiE i a? ?: "tit "St "ili t ,’t Siii’K'i.Bo'' 13 9ft 9ft 9ft -I- ft South Rv 2 pn '?! .JS?* + ft sS!Tftn^nd 29ft 29 BOft 851 28 Mft 57ft Mft -I- vll stiU be announced — will sf-16 ^ S 2ft i ft tect comoanies handling roughly • J.!?* J.IH +,v|| 50 per cent of the auto insur- +*''9 ance business in the United States. 25 45ft 45ft 45ft - ft “Thls Will bc 3 stco In the ___right direction,” Bentlev said. 259 57ft S6ft 57^ -H | “I think the auto Insurancc com- 193 41ft 2ft «ft -I- ft panics have come to realize ’T* "i7ft ’Tto ’i7ft +'ft they’re in the same position the M 42ft lift 42ft + ftjauto industry was in a couple of 53 34ft 34ft 34ft + ft ago-eithcr they move to 75 40ft « 40% ± ft 30 « 50ft »ft -F ft they will face more rigid gov- 395 33ft 32ft -Fiftlemmental control on both the w 4^ ^ 2ft Z ft'state and federal level.” 21 30ft 30ft 30ft - V. In a release issued here Tues-—S— day, the National Automobile! ” S’* 40ft Sft” ** Underwriters Association and 127 Mft 67ft 6» + ft *'''® Natiohal Bureau of Casualty 1*5 Mft Mft Mft +ift Underwriters announced they ^40 i4Sft 144ft 144ft - ft wcrc rcducing to two the num- *87 26ft 25ft 2ft + ft her of reasons for which auto 56ft 57 +i’'* insurance policies might be can-70 soft soft 56ft H- ft ! ,.plpH 12 21ft 21 21ft -I- ft i'-®*"'. 100 « M 67 +iftl release stated these In- 23 4§4 4?* 45ft Zift ®*"‘*®‘* ®"*y ‘**® "®npay™®"^ 55 Mft 67ft 6W I'l l premiums and the suspension of 38 5^ |w +'ft license or registration of the in Protesters Due to Get Army Orders DETROIT (AP)-Some Michigan men are in line for induction orders because they protested the Vietnam war or the draft system by handing in their Selective Service cards. At least one of them says' he won’t go. I * * * I As many as 30 may be in the same situation. The first step in processing those to be inducted for such acts, which are illegal, is to de-cllu-e them delinquent. ORDERS EXPECTED James Russo, 21, of Ann Arbor has received his delinquency notice, which he returned to the draft board, and he antici-l Through understanding De Gaulle’s fears, one can also realize that he is not simply an imperious old man but, once _ n, a general protecting France and in fact «11 Europe from domination by an invader an economic invader. Over the longer term he feels also that he is protecting the whole misbehaving world from Its financial follies by demanding that they settle their bank accounts and keep them settled before it is too late. . FEARS BEHIND ATTACKS These fears lay behind the general’s almost incessant attacks on the manner in which the world’s nations pay bills to each other. They pay in U.S, dollars, and De Gaulle doesn’t like it. Why? As his financial advisers have stated, the United States has been running the printing presses day and night. It is inflating the value of its dollars, and it is using them then to buy into the European economy. This accounts for De Gaulle’s news conference statement that American economic power in Europe is ‘‘due in large part not so much to the organic superiority of the United States as to the dollar inflation.” Big Year Seen for Car Industry Chrysler Chief Predicts Near-Record '68 Sales pates receiving orders to report! INDIANAPOLIS. Ind. (AP) -The president of Chrysler Corp. predicted today that the auto in-jdustry will sell a near-record number of cars in 1968 in the for Induction. United States. ‘This^view is far out of proportion. In a'speech at Boston Oct. 20 his own monetary idea man, Jacques Rueff, conceded that the ‘‘American economy is still the most powerful in the BETRAYS ANGER Perhaps, then, the general’s statement betrays his anger and frustration at being forced to view American trademarks, American manners, American money, American arrogance and American factories all about him. But France is free to invade America too. As W. Averell Harriman, American ambassajlor at large, told some European economists early this year, the economic organism moves both ways. Europeans are welcome, if able, to invest in the United States. ★ ★ ★ Nevertheless, De Gaulle feels that inflated dollars are throwing ouf of whack the ratios of currencies to each other. If the United States was forced to back every dollar with, a bit of gold, the French say, then money couldn’t be printed so easily. This would be a return, a retreat some say, to the gold standard. ★ ★ * As matters stand now, the world uses the gold exchange standard. 'Diis means that dollars held by foreign governments still can be converted to gold. But it doesn’t limit the amount of dollars the United-States can print. Only part of the money is gold backed. CONFIDENCE The result is that when the United States runs up bills abroad there can be moit dollars out than are covered by gold. However, for many years now there has been confidence in the power of America’s economy. Why bother turning them in for gold? Why not use the dollars instead? 26ft 26ft 46ft 27ft sured or a ipember of his house- Thls Is what has happened The dollar, and its cousin the pound, have been used in place ‘‘If they send me an order to| virgil E. Boyd said that dereport for induction into their spite recent increases in Army, it will have little mean- interest rates the sale of new I of gold. They are reserve curing to me,” Russo said. cars should exceed nine million rencies, and as long as nations ★ ★ ! autos in 1968. This would make are confident that they reflect He said he had not decided 11968 the second nine million - true value these dollars and what he would do with such an I plus year in industry sales his-| pounds can continue as gold re- order or how he would respond to it. But he said he won’t accept induction and won’t accept any form of duty, even a hospital assignment, as part of “'p'|r2^% + % rri%to say, “under the new pro-Le~w'is’T Hershey VecWyle^ ITE Ckl StBrand 1. Sid Kolia StOCai 2. 20 107 42 41% 41% • Kolia .50 :al ; A7i 20% 20% - % 38% 38% + % 24% 24% - % Kaiser Al 1 KanGE 1.33 KayaerRo .60 Kennecott 2 Kerr Me 1.50 KimbClk 2.20 7 29% 38% 39 15 57% 56% 31 87% 87 er . c.nnrih 70 56% 56 56% *4. 203 52% 51 . , 23 26 % 25% 36% + % 31 30 39% 39% . —K— 89 46% 45 45% 7 35% 35% 25% tory. In 1965, the industry sold placements. 9,297,000 new cars in the United ★ ★ ★ States. I The pound faltered and now, Boyd’s remarks were in assays De Gaulle, the dollar also speech prepared for a meeting|is not as good as gold. He has of the Indiana State Chamber of {strongly indicated that nations Commerce in Indianapolis. I should return to a full gold ★ 'standard, printing only so much io2 Pi; T paii ^ P®‘a'letterto’lw^^^^ "The outlook is admittedly [money as can be easily re- 32 l3*I2 minding them that individuals clouded a little by the recent de-ideemed. This would stabilize * 8 Mft Mft Mft I ft protest illegally can be de-1 valuation of the British pound i“®"omies, he feels, in this 31 14% 14% i4'/4 . ij- verify the information in the _______, ___, tha rzkcnifanf in/ipAaGA in way. 335 23% 31% 21% 27ft 27ft + ft operating the car involved, the Army. 47ft -F ft However, the release went on[ Selective Service Director I Sterl Drug 1 StevantJ 2 25 Sun Oil 1b 2 24% 20 61% 60% 61% + % kbpperi 17% 17% + % Kresge 90 -- . X, ^ ^ 130 39% 29 63 44 43% 43% 11 134% 133% 134% 15% 15% 15% Idt.) High I 15 27% 26% 27% ■ 11 47% 46% 47% +1% CFI $11 16 17% 17% 17% - % chas Ohi 17 35% 35 35% + ’A ChIMH S 179 Chl^RI Pac 334 12% 12% 12% + % Chrys^i?*2 ' i 7% Vl 7 3-iV^I-16 Citlesslc '>! 32 2 5-16 2:^16 2% ^ ^ ClevEIIII .. 33 8% 8 8% + % CocaCola 2 120 9% 8% 9% + % Colo Pairn 8 36% 35% U + % ColUnRJd 16 18 29 15% .. . 38 42% 41% 43 58 63% 63 34 53% 51% 43 43% 42% 43 Leh Val Ind x6 15% 15% 15% + % Lehman Cp IS 41% 41 41% - % LOFGIss 2.80 34 17% 17% 17% + % LibbMcN .36f 21 62% 62% 62% — % LipgettAiM 37 39% 39 39 +1 LlfyCup 1.2< 15 45 5 19 37 37 519 55 43 3 + 54% + % I Tampa El 68 t T.kl?«lx 83ft + ft Toledyn 3.BK .... Twiiwco I.M Texaco 3.60a iTexETrn 1.20 . lift lift lift;; " 109 9 Oft 8ft .. 108 lift 2)ft 21ft -F ?? ± application, during which time j 21 49ft 49ft 49ft + ft it may cancel the policy for any uiiineaiBie iihiuluou. '2 m''' Mft + ft valid underwriting reason.” f I.XI 461 38 37ft 37ft — ft Co 1.20 321 32ft 30ft 32ft -Flft ---------------- —T— i Stocks of Local Interest 1 27% 27% 27% dared delinquent and called up the resultant increase In 33 21% 21 — 183 41% --- -Flft I 27ft 27ft JT'A-ft Quotitloni from the NASD SSji !?fu. t li Mirtatlvo lnt*r./ii 4 4ft -F ft 18 7 6ft Cull Am Cp GulIRrirc Ch ColoInlG 1.60 CBS I 40b Col Gas 1.44 ft ComICre i .BO Ml ComSolv 1 20 ComwEd 2.20 nElecInd I vCup IS Llvlngsln Oil 37 FIV. LockndA 2.20 54ft + ft LoewsTh .25g 32ft 4 ft LuneiCpm 1 ft LonesGa 1.12 LongIsLt 1.16 135ft 134ft 135ft 41ft Lorusrd 2.50 13 40ft 40ft 40ft 4 ft ^ad Mog I.M 54 95ft 94 95ft 41ft Lucky Str .90 20 44ft 42 42ft 4 ft Lukoni StI I 81 53ft 52ft 53 4 ft 58 25 24ft 24ft - ft . 12 32ft 32 33 — ft Co .3} 31 35ft 34ft 34ft _ ft 'r T 47ft 47ft 47ft — ft ^i»Cy^RH wl 52 SI 51ft 4 ft MedFd 2.]» 32ft 32V^ 32ft .... MagmsC 160 70ft 70ft 70ft - 71 31ft 30ft 31ft 41ft Imper Oil 28 liram Corp McCrory wt 2 9 9 MeedJhsn .48 119 36% 35' MlchSug .lOg AAohwkD SO J it?? if** t ^i^wlalnr Lio 41 23 31ft 22 -F ft ConlAIrL 40 11 I8ft 18 18 _ ft cwrt Can 2 46 27ft 26ft 26ft — ft Cent Ins 3 20 14 63ft 62 63ft 41ft Coni (311 2 80 18 7ft 7ft 7ft - ft control Da" 35 17ft 17 17ft + ft Cooperin ) 20 Corn Pd 1.70 Cowlas SO 276 174'" ItK; I?;" 42ft C?™s^Hlnd” Crow Coll 2f 1% - % Crown Cork % CrownZe 2.20 65 52 84 32' 32 43% 43Vtf 43% . „ ■ ■ $4% 54 54% - % "• 27% 1.60 21 27% 27% 12 42% 42% 42% 11% 11% 1% 1% 218 I Mar Mid 1.40 V^iMarquar .2So I MarlInMar 1 Vg MavPStr 1.60 j . % McDonD .40b 104 164% 162% 163% -1% Mead Cp K90 n 42% 42% 42% + % 1-50 53 38% S% M% + % JJ^^ckC 1,400 2 14% 14% 14% Chap S 3 55% 54% ■■ “ w/. j. a/7 Midi--- iMM 1.3s; iPLt 1.10 Kan Tex 21 75% 73% TrantWAIr 1 i3ft 112 112 ’ -:-ift- I™!!',™'' ' 22"; 5?ft 50ft sf''" Zift 2*3 TtJS ’?Jft ^«nc'anr.«) 164 25ft 24ft 25ft 4 ft 50 27ft 27 27 16 48ft 48ft 48ft — ft UMC Ind .60 29 34 32ft 3j 4 ft On Carbide 2 5 34ft 34ft 34ft 4 ft On Elec 1.20 26 36ft 35ft 36 4ft UnOIICal 1.40 ____M_____ On Pec l.80e 12 15ft 15V. 15ft 4 ft ulllrp*y'lll' I M S'* S'’ S''* + UnllAlrUn 1 M 26ft 26ft M"!tAlrc 9 59ft 57ft 200 42ft 41ft 41ft 34 71ft 71ft 71ft 32 31 30ft 24 16ft 16 X134 20'/. 20ft 20ft t ft 22 42ft 42 42ft 4 ft 7 36ft 36ft 36ft - ft 28ft 2Sft 28ft.4 ft 58ft 51 51ft - ft AMT Corp. Associated Truck 154 114ft 113ft I3ft 3 19 18ft 18ft M 48ft 41 Mft 55 20ft 20ft 20ft 4 39ft 39ft 19ft is SS f?* S'* .C, Engineering t'... citizens Ulllllles cTi ?9* la’s Detrex Chemical 49 96ft 95ft 96ft '41 79 24ft 24 24ft 4 —Il- ia 19ft 19ft I9ft 4 ,ft Salran Printing bank interest rates,” Boyd said. “But as we see it, if there is no additional dampening of the economy, automobile sales will xiSIy” Crystal 30 CASES REVIEWED Of the dozens of potential de-Unquency casds pending in|„ot suffer appreciably.” Michigan—208 were pending at the last report—30 are being reviewed in light of Lt. Gen. Her-shey’s letter, said Col. Wilbur Myers, assistant to the Michigan Selective Service director. Myers said local draft boards if'6 162 '*''**' ***® decisions on m'6 36 5 to induct the men, but 1967 THIRD Sales of new cars this year “will be even better than the 8.7 million we predicted back in August,” Boyd said. This would make 1967 the industry's third highest sales year. He said strikes and work way: When gold flowed out of a country it would have to reduce the money in circulation. Thi.s would mean deflation, such as Britain is undergoing. Prices would fall automatically. Soon the world again would become Interested in the low-priced goods. Gold would return. The nation’s economy wouW expand. North Central Airlines Units Salran r .(ft Serlpto 32:0 »;o he said Hershey’s letter set the stoppages in the .»:• pattern to follow. dustrv this vear. i Afllllated Fund + ft t Vi 1 + ft Unit Cp .50g US Bol are 373 47ft 13) 22ft 22'A 22ft 83 50V. 49'ft 50ft 4 ft 24 30ft 37ft 30ft 4 ft 3 75 74ft 75 + ft 40 44'ft 44V. 44ft 4 ft 122 Mft 64ft M -1ft 1?,'? 1 11(8 Dry’S."" 15 5Sft 55 Mft Z ftiKavsIone Income K-1 411^81 81ft ZM^Kavstone Growth K-2 . 15 27ft 26ft 2»b - ft Growth i3.a 14 5.4 5.7 34.2 35.2 US Lines 27 37ft 37 37ft 4 ft lunlvOM 1 ■ g^Zft 13 86ft 85'/S 13 32V. 31ft 32ft 4 ft 10 50 49ft 54 16 63ft 62ft Mft 4 ft “lO"® 22 43ft 43 43ft 4 V. 1.30 43 28ft 37ft SlgnalOilA la 410 38V. 37ft 38 4ft Cui... Slatham Inst 43 38V. 37ft 37ft 41ft Curtiss Wr 1 Syntax Cp .40 112 7»H 76ft 7I’/S 41ft Tachnicol .40 100 27 26ft 26ft - ft WnNuclr ,20 32 35V. 34ft 35V. 41ft n.n oj., i m Copyrighted by The Associated Press 1967 ojljc^-p I 60 -------------------1— Day PL I.M Uee« Co Treasury Position ' Dal Steel M iDlamAlk I.M WASHINGTON (AP)-The cash position Isnay .30b ---- --------- ----------- OomeMln Ig OowChm 2 20 _ ---- „ Dresslnd 1.25 Balance— Duka Pw 1.20 5 7,5l9,983,3a2.M 5 4,354,395,711.34 duPont 5g Deposits Fiscal Yaar July I— Duq Lt LM 58,310,176,001.23 S6.6H,170,830.33 Dyna Am .M Withdrawels Fiscal Vaar- 75.380,449,399.58 69,619,863,530.39 Deposits Fiscal Year July 1— East Air 50 56,488,170,820.33 EKodek l.60e Wllhdrawols Fiscal Year- EalonYa 1.25 M.619.B63,530.29 EGAG .10 ElBondS 1.72 343,938.MI;996.36 327,286,241,737.75 Elec run SP lets - , ElPasoNG I 12,908,974.189.96 13 2.59.005.3M.48 Emnr El I.M - Includes $760.858 774 72 debt not tub. End lnHn«nn xl lo statutory llrr IS 31ft 31ft 31ft 37 14VS Mft MVs 158 43ft M 43ft 193 23ft 22ft 39 36ft 25ft 35ft - ft -D- 27 32ft 21ft 23 14 44 43ft 42ft 4 ft 6 26ft 26ft 26ft - ft MonlOut I.M Mom Pw 1.56 .viu.i.Ward I Morrell 30g M? SI TT 1 24 21 51'ft Sift 51ft - .3SI? NalAIrlln .30 ’ 'ft Nat Bite 2 - I Nat Can .50 ■ •INatCatn 1.20 ft IN Dairy 1.50 162 43ft 42ft «■* Z ft » 27 30ft 29ft 30 4 ft J 28 27ft 27 27ft 4 ft , S •7 23 22ft 22ft 122 50ft 49 49ft 4 ft fi"'®.*' } 9 V3 1:1114,. 1-ia IIS Wayarhr I.M Whirl Cp I.M WhIla Atot 2b 40 35ft 34ft 34ft. 14 37ft 37ft 37ft 25 Mft M M 453 S4ft 54 S4ft -169 41ft Mft m 15 19ft B8ft B9K 42 51ft 50ft SI 73 33ft 33 33 25 27ft 27 27M 14 43ft 43ft 43V —w— 43ft 4 ft 41ft Mass. Invatlort Putnam Growth Taltvltion Eltctronlcs ........ Fund . BOND AVI Id bj Tba^ :hange Wri. Of the cases being reviewed, Myers said he had no break-i9;3o 3L10 down to show how many ip-15.11 i6;M|Volved handing draft cards back *M Bin to draft boards, but several iM* 18 711 such incidents apparently are {JiJjiiivolved. iiiw 19^61 U" U®'- U young men I went to Selective Service Sys-AVERAOEs I to*!™ offices in Detroit to hand in 'i8^**V8 cards. Russo was among Fgn. L. Yd them. U.S. auto industry this year, including a two month United Auto Workers Union strike at Ford Motor Co., have delayed purchases of autos. “But we don’t think these sales are permanently lost, just delayed,” Boyd asserted. He said the U.S. market appears strong because of “continuing increases^in personal earnings and savings and a very enthusiastic public response to the industry’s 1968 models News in Brief The larceny of a woman’s diamond ring, valued at |895, from Rose Jewelers at Pontiac Mall reported to Waterford Township police yesterday. Pontiac Travel Service, Mexico Movie community room, Pontiac Mall, 7:39 tonight. —Adv. Fish Supper, Baldwin E.U.B. Church, Friday, 4-7 p.m. —Adv. Handmade gift items, Farmer’s Market, Sat., Dec. 2, 7 a.m. to 1 p.m. by Assn, of Mich. Christian College. —Adv. D«y M.5 87.1 78 ) 12 22 21ft 21ft — ft 1967 74 M 39ft M 4 ft 967 Ago 66.7 „ ........ Ago 67.2 S ■■■ 86.9 78.7 91.2 79.1 ft. Npt DUI IJg wvi — IW Nit GVP9 2 85ft 4 ft N LtiM 2.M MJJ-w'NiISliil 2^J Mft + 9b I Nat Tii .80 X- Total Debt 343,9: Gold AsmIs Ethyl Cp STOCK AVBRAOe lad by Tbi AaMClblad Prt .'III, u'll. I 4.5 4J 4M.8 1113 45.3 180.4 142.9 317.7 FiODSIr 1.70 Wiik Jfto .......'453 8 178 3 1M.9 313.7 Farro Ci 130 Monlb £p .......... mT.I 180 9 137.6 3|3.I FIDrol I M Yaar Agb ......... 413.8 V58.7 147.7 291.2 PIraalna ).M 1967 H|gb ......... 4M.2 289A 159.1 343.6 FilChrl 1.341 1967 Low ......... 413.4 iM.4 136.5 393.1 Fllnikole 1 i*9s;Ch 1U L4W 6 34ft 33ft 34 3 18 18 18 35 26ft 26ft 36'ft 12 18ft ITZ/b 18ft , 11 Ji!2 JIU JiSziftl'N-oi-oSii-s 34 37 36ft 14 34ft 33ft „„ T T. 11 54 149ft IMft 149ft . 12 30ft 20ft 30ft 4 ft igiWtvh; 26 18 17ft 18 4 ft JUJIISei 1^ _|T____ NYCanI 3.12a Niag MP l.lQ 12 47 44% 44% — % NorioikWtt 4 N 147% 14A% 144% + % NOMfnRock 2 13 31% 31% 31% - % NoNGas 2.40 135 4t% iV/s 40% +1% Nor Pac It 40 34 52% 51% 52% +1% NuStaPw | 40 24 24% 24% 24% + % .Hortnrop 1 47 20% 20% 20% + % Nw»i Airl .70 II 01% 09% 09% + % NwBan 2.i0a 4 25 24% 24% + '% Norton 1.5(i 14 1% 8% 1% + % Norvwich, M 35% 35 35V4 + % 17 2425% 25% + V. }l 20% 20% 20% + % _F- 151 105 43 23ft 33ft 22 S6ft 56 56ft 26 43ft 42ft Uft Olll Slav 3 22 74ft 73ft 74ft - ft r • ■ ■ - 320 M7ft Mj M.'ft 42ft I r gftt:^ Oft -F ft Pac C El 'Ift -)• ft ■ —N— I 13 39 3BVl 38V> .. 114 44ft 44 44ft -F ft I )ii2^i§?tirt3’‘ 39 34'/b 34Vi 34ft . 13 41ft 40ft 40ft — ft 39 36ft 36ft 36ft . 77 31ft KF/b 31ft 4 ft 7 42 41ft lift - ft 49 60ft 89ft 60M -F ft 41 48ft 47ft Mft Zift " !?.'* UJ® Uft-ft \n 39ft M zi Z8'/> 28ft 38ft 35 33ft 23ft 32ft M 76ft 75ft 75ft + V 39 37 36ft 37 4 61 X34 55ft 54ft 55ft 41 f 11111 N. Y. Shows Safety-Car Motdel DOW—JONIS AVRRAORS 57 90% 90 90% ... .. . + % 47% 47% 47% -f % 9 28% 2S% 28% 142 34% 31 47 1% 54 % 281 15' 34% 31% 48 100 99% 3 51% 51% 51% + 10 47% 45% 45% — _ I.M 11 28 27% 28 - % 30 industrials X^ - - §5 ^ 3W.. 142 29% 28% 29% • SalM figurts art unoNIcial. cWitn^ls# noted' ratts of dlvL dands In this forapoing tibia art annual ' SsL Jir»rin*ijii foedn^, STOCKS 30 ?? NEW YORK (AP) — Motor inches and operates automati- Utllltlaa Vehicle Commissioner Vincent 3il;64Ziii«|L. Tofany has displayed 75.4440.11 stpte-financed scale model of WSIIIX.""*.. 44.1340.33 75J6-0.07 SOT Finder May Get o Bundle BALTIMORE (AP) - A “safety sedan” that he would withstand a‘ front- or rear-end impact at 59 miles an hour. The model, developed at a cost of $385,909, was shown at a news conference Tuesday. Among the score of safety features are: ! cally as soon as the over 37 miles an hour. —A silhouette with no Jagged edges that would Impale a pedestrian. ★ ★ * —A four-wheel drive with an antilock braking system. —Structural design to withstand a sideswipe crash at 40 miles an hour and a roll-over without collision at 70 miles an periscope that juts up hour. more for further testing. Finding a manufacturer willing to build the car is another factor, Tofany said. The design calls for a 4,000-pound car with a V8 engine. ★ ★ ★ The Fairchild Hiller Corp., an aerospace firm, developed the design under a $385,000 contract with the state. George Hildebrand, program manager of Fairchild Hiller, {said at the news conference that “every item of hardware” in ■ % OutM I Owanilli 1.35 .....11% B -♦- % 39 30% 3* 8ft 8ft 3lft + ft P»c Lta 1.5 34 31ft 30ft 21ft 4 ft Ptc PM .iSg 22 47ft 46ft 47ft-ftiPocPwL lit 8 71ft 71ft 7Bb + ft ^bcTIiT 1.20 ^ ^ 27ft 27ft 112 27ft ^ 23 54 53ft 54 41 ft plus »loek dluMonil. t-Pofd Int ynr. ft I - Ptyoblo In itocb during 1987, oill- X «rdS«D5iW^ , young man walked into the po- from"twT‘r^ with an eve mir ilrj? «®® s‘»tton, plac^ . small bun-' to“thi“rft i? thJ stee™ g flisrs ffl'rid.fS ‘I*® »" ‘^e sergeant’s desk and RWinriie driverT2 Tqfany said the projected cost 1? ,rniv!d7Sr'?:*?J5 r.i5ik'*^u?i;S:“W‘‘I fou^ UHs ^ thi rear alS f®-* manufacturing the four-pas- «’e auto industry.’’ 1 2 "" ? h ^ '"‘“•out having to take his “"f not be any ♦ * * 27ft + ft JlATiin ?-E* dividtnd »_Ex divi 1 eyes off the road for long. The,'’‘8*'®'’ ® comparable conv-' “We have done nothing that create an economic Jug SUPERBUMPER A hydraulic energy-absorb- :witb'**^*r^n’?rjrS!LT; a«®r being withdrawn from —F— fdoKS?' '“"•e- ®®y a bank. It will be finder’s keep- M 2ft Sft ^ Z ft bMnZ';«?;»S!S‘TL(2r 20-yeawild George Stubbs 65 17ft 17ft inj Rl’^ot lOMrHto n!un»td''bv^ the loscT docsn’t Saiffl the ing bumper that extends memment provided $5 He said the car could go into ass production by the early 1970s if the fedOral or state gov- he said. “We treated the problem of safety as a whole rather than the method used by Detroit of adding gadget by gadget." ■' ' 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1967 D—9 Man Robs Bar, Returns to Kidnap Two Patrons DETROIT (AP) — A bandit Lounge, near the Qty - County robbed a tavern in downtown Building, at about 10:30 p.m. Detroit today and returned a Tuesday and was refused serv-couple of hours late*- to kidnap j ice because of his apparently two patrons. They later were re- intoxicated condition, leased unharnaed in Macomb County. Witnesses told police the robber first appeared at the Wabash NOTICE OF SPECIAL TOWNSHIP MEETING AND ELECTION AND OF REGISTRATION OF VOTERS WHEREAS, at a meating of the Town-Bhlp Board ot the Township of Spring-field, Oakland County, Michigan, held on the 15th day ol November, T967, a franchise ordinance was adopted, entitled as tallows: AN ORDINANCE, granting to CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY, Its successors and assigns, the right, power and authority to lay, maintain and oparata gas mains, pipes and services, and to construct, maintain and commercially use electric lines consisting ol towers, masts, poles, crossarms, guys, braces, wires, transformers and other electrical appliances on, along, across and under the 5i«ii?;?;c’«;'rd%/------------ gas and/or electric bu$ln.„„ ,., .... TOWNSHIP OF SPRINGFIELD, OAKLAND COUNTY, MICHIGAN, lor - S?A!rRlis*'"7al2”?insumer, P "-----y has heretofore filed Its wr Two hours later, the man returned. Brandishing a nickel-plated revolver, he demanded $1,000 of the bartender, Peter Petkovich, 55. Petkovich toW police he handed over about $100. Six patrons were ordered to place their money on the bar, but the bandit returned the money. Mumbling that lie was a Vietnam veteran and wanted to be killed, the bandit then fired two shots into the ceiling and fled. THIRD VISIT The man paid a third visit to the tavern at about 2:30 a.m., ” and forced Veronica Sendaki, 27, > and Peter Uznajewicz, 39, both Detroit, to accompany him. ' They were released at about ‘^'’H^'A*l*r.'"Vorn?hip Board o( B.m. in Macomb County. ii5;'"c‘!llSS' a°,'‘p''JcTa'! .Wn t.“JS!’'K!’d I ^he two said that after driving ^ Jaround for about three hours in,, d Boar^, notice P the bandit told them, “This is. Deaths in Pontiac, Nearby Areas Ray Berridge Service for Ray Berridge, 83, of 3050 Catalpa will be 10 a.m. tomorrow at the Pursley-Gilbert Funeral Home with burial in Ottawa Park Cemetery, Independence Township. Mr. Berridge, a former employe of Oakland County, died yesterday. S u r V i V i n g are two sons, Harold and Valmore, both of Pontiac. mond Hamsher of Highland | Co. of Detroit, died Monday. Township: 31 grandchilren; and j During his career, he made by 11 great-grandchildren. hand the crankshaft for the en- gine used in the automobile win-the first transccmtinenal auto race. He was a life member Ashler Lodge No. 91, F&AM, Detroit. Surviving are a son, George '. of B i r m i n g h a m; three grandchildren;. seven great-grandchildren; a brother; and two sisters. Frederick G. Klingsteir ORCHARD LAKE-Frederick G, Klingstein, 83, of 6978 Colony died yesterday. His body is at the Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Walled Lake. Mrs. Shirley A. Milam BROTHERS SHARE HONORS - It family reunion as the five Rockefeller brothers get together last night in New York at an awards dinner of the National Institute of Social Sciences. Each of the brothers and the Rockefeller family as a whole was presented a gold medal for “distinguished service to AP Wirepinto humanity.” They are (from left) David, 52, president of the Chase Manhattan Bank; Winthrop, 55, governor of Arkansas; John D. Ill, 61, chairman of the Rockefeller Foundation; Nelson A., 59, governor of New York; and Laurence S., 57, conservationist. James H. Cull Awards Dinner Is Rockefeller Reunion NE WYORK (AP) - It was typical American family reunion — except that two of the brothers were governors, one ...___ ...msh^p lor __ ci.wunu iaji aanaLH. iiaiui.-i iii, NOW, THER^ORE, pursuant to rcso- ■ . *» . . i oresident of St batik and all of tationa adopted by said Board, notice is a Car owned by the bartender, fl J „ , , -------------------------thP hRndit mid them “Thi« named Rockefeller. John, Nelson, Laurence, berrty Olvei n will be held li a special meeting and eld In said Township •i; iwwnship Hall, 650 Broad* way, Davisburg, Michigan, on Tuesday, the »th day of JandSry, 19M, lor the purpose of voting on the confirmation of , ttio action of said Township Board In granting such franchise. The polls of said election will be opened at 7 o'clock In the forenoon and will be held open until a o'clock In the afternoon. Eastern Standard Time. The Township Clerk will be In his office on the 2nd day of December, 19«7 between the hours Of ( a.m. and 5 p.m.. Eastern Standard Time, said date being the first Saturday preceding the closing of registration aald election which Is not a legal t day, and on the Sth day of DecemI 1907 between the hours ol a a.m. an_____ p.m.. Eastern Standard Time, said date being the fifth Friday, as determined ' statute, preceding the date of said i tion, tar the purpose ol reviewing registration and registering such of qualified electors of the Township shall appear and apply theretor. Said franchise as granted by said Board Is on file with the undersigned Township Clerk lor the purpose of In-apectlon by the qualified electors. BY ORDER OP THE TOWNSHIP BOARD. DAVID H. FIELD, Township Clerk Nov. M, 19, 1967 where I live, let me out.” ing dog. AN ORDINANCE, Its In and operate ind commercial listing ol tower ;*'otC"effii across ofKl or-**-iliays, bridgas ' and/or alactrlc rlod_ of thirty years. SECTION 1. The Township of Sprir field, Oakland County, Michigan, here' flrants to tha Consumers Power Coi pany, a corporation authorized to trar act business in Michigan, its succasso and assigns, hereinafter called t "Grantaa,*’^ tha right, poveer and authc. Ity to lay, maintain and operate gas ... . . .. , „.l Winthrop and David Rockefeller ^Tmheved Tuesday night for the Mile and Dequmdre roads at the time. jtional Institute ot Social Sci- State police, Macomb County 1 gn^es. sheriff’s deputies and Shelbyj Each of the sons of the late Township police joined in a John D. Rockefeller Jr. and the search, with the aid of a track- Rockefeller family as a whole and population problems had been his chief concern for many years. “But tonight’s occasion makes me wonder,” he said. “If my parents had been exposed to today’s ideas of family planning, my brothers Win and David might not have made it.’ He also described himself as Requiem Mass for James H. Cull, 85, of 421 S. Opdyke will be 10 a.m. Friday at St. Michael’s Catholic Church with burial in Mount Hope Cemetery by the Huntoon Funeral Home. Mr. Cull, a former employe of Pontiac Motor Divison, died 1 yesterday. I Surviving are a son, James E. , . , of Pontiac, and three grand- the only one of the five who is children, unemployed.” Nelson, 59, is governor of New Albert L. Moodv York, Laurance, 57, is a conservationist and also president of the Rockefeller Brothers Fund;i73, of 187 Luther will be 1 p.nt.jcluding Philip Graves and Ray-Winthrop, 55, is governor of Ar- Friday at St. John Methodist mond and Darrel Specht, all of kansas, and David, 52, is presi-| Church with burial in Oak Hill Ortonville. j 3 Teens Still Hospitalized After Crash I was presented a gold medal for j “distinguished service to humanity.” j I “I’m glad you require that the^ recipients of your a'wards be present in person,” said Johnl |D. Rockefeller 3rd, the eldest at |61. “It gives me a good oppor-' tunity to see my brothers.” I City Woman Is Bound Over Arraignment Dec. 7 PONTIAC TOWNSHIP-Serv-ice for Mrs. Shirley A. Milam, of 139 Tulane will be 2 p.m. Friday at C. F. Sherman Funeral Home, Ortonville. Burial will be in Ortonville Cemetery: Mrs. Milam, a waitress, died yesterday in an auto accident. Surviving are three children, Michael L., John D. and Diana all at home; her father, Harrison Graves of Detroit; her mother, Mrs. Grace Specht of Ortonville: grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Marne Perigo of Ortonville; three sisters, Mrs. Betty Hill of Pontiac and Pa-Itricia and Joyce Specht of Or-Service for Albert L. Moody, tonville; and four brothers. Storage Bam Burns Down dent of the Chase Manhattan Cemetery by the Frank Car-Bank. j ruthers Funeral Home. --------- ------ I Mr. Moody, a retired employe Pontiac Water I “Gn~/AyerS iDepartment, died Sunday. Jerome M. Robinson TROY — Service for Jerome huge Lrshaped storage barn burned to the ground early today despite the efforts of five area fire departments to save it. Graham J. Graham of 2101 . Woodward i n Bloomfield Hills, owner of the property at 4364 Thorneville Road, Meta-mora, credited the fire departments and no wind with saving a large dairy barn, a tenant farmer’s house, and several other structures. Are Arrested in Tire Theft I Four youths are bein Daniel J. Davis Farm operator Jerry Schrlb-r noticed the fire coming .. T, w t r,, J 1 ithrough one of the windows of M. Robinson M, of 71 Wendek^ ,.3, |ton will be 1:30 p.m. Friday at yesterday. Firemen battied the Price Funeral Home. Burial will I be in White Chapel Memorial AVON TOWNSHIP - Service Cemetery. I for Daniel J. Davis, 71, of 'Emmons will be 1 p.m. Friday at Pixley Memorial Chapel, , Rochester with burial In Chris- 1. 1 rour you ins are oeing-------------- on AAurder t_narge :charged today with grand Memorial Estate Cemetery. Mr. Robinson, a supervisor Chevrolet Detroit Forge Plant* died yesterday. He was blaze until 1 a.m. He said the cause was not known. Fire departments from Meta-mora, Dryden, Lapeer, Hadley, and Oxford fought the blaze but Contents destroyed included manure spread- a member ot Clinton River Boat'were unable to save the bam. Club and a charter member of " A 42-year-old Pontiac woman Three Lake Orion teen-agers remain under treatment in Pon- j _ _ tiac General Hospital for in-| f-QUr SUSOeCtS juries received when the car in I • which they were riding rah off! Lakeville Road in Addison Township Saturday and struck a utility pole. In fair condition are Michael Sutton. 16, of 38,35 Bald Moun- ctric b< Xvs, tain and Randy Grandihamp, cent Waterford Township break-,ni:,17, of 391 Summit. jns each waived preliminary Reported in satisfactory con- examination at their arraign- Btruct, maintain ala * — highwiyi, ___ ______ ______________ _ is Rieky B'Rle. 16, of 809ments yesterday before Water-MIchlMfv tor a period ot thirty years '''■ Markdale feed Township Justice Kenneth! SECTION }. In contidtraflon ol fh» ‘ HomncloaH or®.'’n?;d. ‘Srof wMch lhln’'l’j;,i in*”ihi;i All were passengers in a car. pug „ j breakine and en Cranio, lor a period of Ihlrty (30) yrars v|nrk Horner 17 of breaking and en tally* «"o' m a” tai™r5Sui*r5d''J*'th.l“ tering the Anchor Bar, 6756 M59, taM'r“iS’ •" ™*“'^** "’•1180 Inca Trail, which went out ■ ® ^ 22 of 103 N kS°."ri,h.?p‘u'£rirprJiV-„S control and skidded into a than nKJs'Mrv”’duriS! ?he'™I^k‘’ol”co"‘‘^‘lch, Striking the pole, accord-ta'^m.°"ama o*r?tr'a*ycOT*iiiw Oakland Couiitv sher- ^•r'.^,.r;''.,ru'“cfuVe,*\TC ^ s'I ★ A * jbe loot consi.sted of eight icnargeo looay wiin grand iar-.““""*---~^ trartnm a ceny for allegedly taking eight! Mr. Davis, retired from the Troy Meadows Homeowners As-,‘7 „ mac woman‘^e Ford-Lincoln'Detroit Grey Iron Foundry, died sociation. ^(100 Ss orhar2 0TO^SS rAMILV SBE [was bound over to ’’“Ur’wvfiis are his wife, Dolly; reu”!TL’Jhter!’jSy A. S ai S*! „e aeled ibai iaddiy piabbiu* ^ , a^j^era. oiber ,eee. di^blb. murder in connection with the. , . before Wixom Justice grandchildren; and i y. gunshot slaying of her Elwood Grubb. ^^•‘ee great-grandchildren. Mrs. Howard E. Simmons Mary E. Lewis of 87 S. Mar-^ The suspects were chased with , I LAPEER TOWNSHIP—Prayer shall faces arraignment on the‘he help of a oolice dog by of- Hugh R. Dodge service for Mrs. Howard E charge Dec. 7. She is scheduled «cers from Wixom, Novi and ^q^LY - Service for Hueh ^ for preliminary examination in the county sheriff’s department, ^^d/e. 77, of Sm“S Mul? B^othe^'s fJ Municipal Court Dec. 5 for at-. Security police at the Ford be 1 p.m. Friday at Dryer Fu-i„eral Home Lapeer with serv-tempted murder stemming plant alerted the Wixom Police neral Home, with interment at burial at Martins Fer- from the Nov. 8 wounding of Department about 1:15 a m. to-Riverside Cemetery, Plymouth, i^y Qbjo Mr. Dodge died tod^. He was, Simmons died yesterday. in Break-Ins Waive Exam P'oiir .suspects in a pair of re- Mrs. Lewis is free on $1,0001 * co^wner of Dodge and | Surviving are her husband personal bond set on both charg. aPPrehended by 3 Freeman Meat Marke of Hol-.^o gong q Jarrell of Santa es by Municipal Judge Mauricelf„"’„"''« *^°"’e“ Anna, Calif, and J. Jarrell of E. Finnegan. w f a* iWheeling, W. Va; a daughter, (Donald L. Ballard, 19, all of De-1 Surviving are his wife, Anna; !j^j.g Schnelle of St. She is accused of shooting troit and one juvenile, accord-a daughter, Mrs. Howard R-Iciairsvilles, Ohio; her mother^ The break-in was reported I Pontiac State Police Friday. 1 ttie All si Gr.ntM property In taid highway!. Tha Grantee •hall have the right to trim trean if nacaitary in the conducting of such business, subject, however, to Tha supervision of the hlahway authorities SECTION 4. Said Grantee shall at all times keep and save the Tnuwn«hin ir** and harmless from At that time, an attempted I He reportedly escaped serious cases of beer, three cases ofimurder warrant had been or- a city woman. day. her husband, Willie, 45, in the chest at their home. He died some eight hours later following emergency surgery at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. ing to Wixom police. Taylof Will Serve Panel for Cities 2 Scheduled for Exams in Area Break-In Two men are scheduled to appear before Waterford Township Justice Patrick K. Daly for preliminary examinations at 1:30 p.m. next Wednesday in connection with a break-in yesterday at Lewis Hardware, 4460 Elizabeth Lake. Charged with larceny over $100 are Wallace A. Hamilton, 38, of 7069 Mather, Waterford if th« negligent c ince ol Ine sirucli $1,090 Is Stolen From Area Store whisky, eight bottles of wine, cigars, cigarettes, cigarette lighters, records and a stuffed toy poodle dog. * A ★ j Rose is scheduled to appear before Circuit Judge William J. I Beer for arraignment Dec. 18. Bond was set at $2,500. Taylor of Canton, Ohio; and two Tacy’Everson of Alexan- E grandsons. yg . jbree sisters; five ! brothers; and eight grandchil- f I Mrs. Jane Hamsher dren. li j I Township, and Burl N. Wilson, i HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP - Q Webster ,37, of 37 W. Longfellow. Service for Mrs. Jane Hamsher, I | Both suspects stood mute at 70, of 1575 Hickory Ridge will BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — their arraignments before Daly o .. ,, ,,,,,, „ be 1 p.m. tomorrow at Rich-Service for Arvin C. Webster, yesterday and were sent to Oak- necUon with an incident in Tavtor Jr ^arL^ aZinted «''‘*s“" Dird Funeral Home, Mil- of 7200 Parkhurst be 10 a.m. land County Jail in lieu of $5,-pH appointed jlomorrow at Bell Chapel ( 000 bond each. to the commit-( Mrs. Hamsher died Monday. (William R. Hamilton Co., Bir- Waterford Township police tee ot revenuej Surviving are four sons, John ntiingham. Burial will be in Parkjand Oakland County sheriff’s and finance for|A. Franklin and Charles Ham-iView Cemetery, Alexandria, Ind.jdeputies collaborated in making the National Wolverine Lake, Clyde Mr. Webster, founder and co- the arrests and recovering the League of Milford and Ray-owner of the Webster Cold Forge [loot valued at $1,098. dered for Mrs. Lewis in con- which one of several shots fired through the back door of a home at 15 Baxter wounded Rebecca Ray, 23. , Traffic Hearing The appointment was announced b y James Some $1,090 was reported stol- TRIO CHARGED " en yesterday from a cash regis-1 charged with breaking and en- . g« bu.lnes. and PoEcC Safety and Traffic Divi- —weii™v<,.,.es n. U. __________...d^.uch’Vigh” Dixic, Waterford 4377 Westlawn, Nov. 20 are Earl g|oj) y^jn j,Qid g public hearing TAYLOR Tate, mayor of ^rrVS*™'Ii^er*’‘man^fa'eu^^^ W i 1 s 0 n Jr., 17, Charles E-1 Dec. 7 at the Lansing National Philadelphia, Pa. I * * . V Davis, 17, and Tommy L. Gar- Guard Armory on 85 proposed Also serving on the commit- time to tirna^eKiendii! gas and eiec7rkj Store officials told Waterford risen, 18, all of 385 Airport, (.^guggg Michigan’s uniform tee are Travis H. Tomlinson, alS*Th^ii*tarni9h'*Qa8"or*eiectr“icitJ'’to[T‘>wnship police the cash rcgis-^WatcrtordTownship. traffic code for cities, villages, mayor of Raleigh, N.C., and •nwlm^ga?*o^ eiectrlcity^to^be^tur|ter W0S locatcd at 006 of the jj|gy schcdulcd to appear aod townships. The code was Nathan Kaufman, mayor of The*co?r5 checkout laocs. C IT c u 11 Judge Philip last amended in 1961. University City. Mo. The theft reportedly occurred Pratt for arraignment Dec. 13. ------ s' oi*sj"d P P *^- Bond on each suspect was set SECTION 7. Th« GranI &urvlct In said Township, ara hara-antad lor tha farm ol this franchisa. ralas and rulas shall pa sublect to Monday. at $2,500. KX'*il laM Township acting by its Township Board, or by said Grantee. SECTION I. This Ordinance shall cease and be of no effect alter Ihlrty days from Its adoption unless wllhin said riod tha Granlaa shall accept the same writing filed with Ihe Township Clark, •ubieci to confirmation of tha oranl here, ol by at least a malorlty of the aleclors «l laid Township voting thereon at a •gular or special township election to be '1 tha manner provided by law. { Ilia acceptance and conlirmatlon hereof, this ordinance shall conslltutr -contract between said Township and : (irantaa lor a period ot Ihlrly years li •ha data of said acceptance. Nov. », 39, 1967 Causa STA-... - ....... • Bata Court tar tho County of Oakland, Juvtnilt Division. In Iho Matter of tho Petition tag Linda Louise TO: Professor N ff°e'^'l'^^h?reby‘^SlV.n 'lha't'’ir®«blic WatCrfOrd TOWflShlp p 0 1 1 C C "p^;nWl^l.^•|'o"n*2;,Ma^^^^ than $5 000 worth of ^Ts'i;Sfeoi’^:cV H“a.r-5Jb'5t.rT‘i”a^t was taken from the Sy- Driver East, Pontiac, Michigan for tha'ron home, almOSt dll Of WhlCh fnTO“'o.*«c‘'. "’• '“^Ihas been recovered. A copy of the proposed Zoning Map| Is available for public Inspectlon^uring i it ft Three juvenile girls also were involved in the break-in, according to police. They were re-HENRY c. |MiTH,^ leased to their parents. Nov. 21, W.'imH business ^houi nlng' and Urban Renewal Deparlmei city Hall, 450 Wide Track Drive, Eai By order ol Ihe City Planning Cot Dated: November 13. 1967. STATE OF MICHIGAN — "lourt tar r ----------- It Division. a''koiiain,'mlnor. Koliam and Jea.. ....... , parents ot said minor *"rtatlllon having bean tiled In this Court ■lloging that aald child comas provltloni of Chapter 7I2A of piltd Laws - ----------- fho p------- ... ...d child ol Chaplf- 'I of I9M — -------------- — - heroobouft of Ih# paire child Is unknown and s -■“t upon Iho public told child should ~l In th« N»m« of tho Poopio a...... -.... pf Michlpon, You oro horoby notifiod ttipt tho hoorlng on sold potition will bo ...... hold ot tho Court Houso, Ookland County South $#rvlco Confer, In fho CIfy of Pontlf-------- Mid County, on fho 7th dov of r------ A.O. 1967, ot nine o'clock In noon, and y- • — *-—•“ * — aronct o' consider) If belr —vice I II be. NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Notice Is hereby given of a public he. ship Planning Commission at the Tow ship Hall on Monday, December IB, 6:00 P.M. 10 consider Ihe lollowli changes In the Zoning Map: From Agricultural District to Re: dantlal III, Mobile Home Park DIstrIc Part of tha N.W. 'A ot Section 23, T.3K R.SE., White Lake Township, Oaklai County, Michigan, described as baginnii at a point In Ihe west line ot sold Se tIon il distant N. 3°07' W. along so. west line 257.30 It. and Coittlnulra along said west line N. 40°S0' W. 107I.M ft from the W. % corner of said Stctlon 33, thenco N. 4"50' W. 365.30 ft. ---------* 89”10' E. 139.75 ft., thonco N. “ -----------. SS'I/' W. 1S3.30 .. Section 22, thonco ^ rest Ilho 993.7? said Section ig north line ' a of 1358.77 1,107,90 it to ihe_N.(w. : S6°40' E. a a 993.72 ft. ta tha 22, Ihen--Of said S) I., thanca .1. B6»1l' >r ol "Plans n^lmilmi : . ...tlac Press. . _____...... dreyfitad In said County, /ta WWMts, tho Honorabfa ••rnord, J*go of told Ci NORMAN R. BARNARD. LIZABETH Doouty P w right (radius 3133.0 II. s S. B4”01'44" W, 240.31 II I 34B.37 ft,, thence con"-norlh right ol way I n. , 637.69 ft., thenco N. 4° It., thence S. 85»2B' W. 12, r point ot beginning, con acres more or less. ,, Dhs Intarestod ore requostad to bo | I. A copy ot Iho Zoning Map ta with a' list of tho proposed cneng .. .. Dh file at the office of tho Town ship Clerk and may be axamlnad by Ihos) Intaraslad. ' cMARLES HARRIS, Chairman ol White Lain Townshls ,, Planning Commission JACK ROSE, II: Socrotorv ig Nov. 29, Doc. 12, 196118 Police Action Pontiac police officers and Oakland County sheriff’s deputies investigated 65 reported incidents and made six arrests the past 24 hours. A breakdown of causes for police action; Vandalisms—5 Burglaries—6 Larcenies—6 Auto thefts—1 Disorderly persons—3 Assaults—2 Indecent exposures—1 Obscene phone calls—3 Bad checks—2 Traffic offenses—16 * Property damage accidents—15 Injury accidents—S ^ AP Wirophoto ■ LEADERSHIP WINNERS - Winners of 4-lf $500 leadership scholarships are (from lcft"standingl Dean Warburton, New Albany, Pa.; Joyce Kay Francis, Huntington, Vt.; Bob Frankland, Jackson, Tenn.; John Schmolesky, Madison, Wis.; Elizabeth Arnold, Tempe, Ariz.; Robert Dittus, Emmet, N.D.; Warren Neyenhuis, Valier, Mont.; Ronnie Green, Salem, N.M.; Judy Kaestner, New Albany, Ind.; Pearl Kadota, Hilo, Hawaii; (seated, from left) Sue Kieffer, East Aurora, N.Y.; W. Wallace Tudor, director of Sears Roebuck Foundation; and Sydney Faver, Rome,- Ga. WATLING. LERCHEN • DETROIT WATLING, LERCHEN • ANN ARBOR WATLING, LERCHEN • BIRMINGHAM WATLING. LERCHEN • DEARBORN WATLING. LERCHEN • JACKSON WATLING, LERCHEN • LANSING WATLING. LERCHEN • MIDLAND WATLING. LERCHEN • PONTIAC WATLING, LERCHEN • PORT HURON WATLING, LERCHEN • WARREN WATLING, LERCHEN • NEW YORK If you live in Michigan we can offer you the services of any of ten fully-staffed offices. Having your broker nearby means more convenience and better services, less chance of delay with vital information. Wo have direct lines to our Now York office, and our own man right on tho floor of the New York Stock Exchange. If you require prompt action and timely information, give one of our experienced Registered Representatives a call. He’s right in your neighborhood. Or send for a copy of our Financial Services Brochure. No cost or obligation, of course. W\TLING LERCHEN & CO im.-.m,,,! s.cu in.- Members New York Stock tichange. ? North Saginaw Street, Pontiac. Michigan. FE 4-2411 D—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 29, 1967 Death .Notices •wTl^ FwMnri Mrvic* wtl. .. htM -ni^ay, Novwnbar M, at 10 ■ “ ralay-Ollbart “ w. Lvona o«( I will Ha In state tary. Mr. BerrIdM will at the funeral t»me. vlsttliifl hours *;N a.m. to 0:1 hi Meffioriam IN LOVING MEMORY Charles ManHoza who passed i Nov. », 1*301 Tline turns away the ados of But memory turns hack every tty mother VSf. who passed away November 20. 10M. JrMsured thout^hts ^ot Often a lonely heartache w a silent tear. BURTON, ALLIE MAVr November You wished no one a last " 1047; 27 Myrtle Drive, Pontiac; Nor even sold oood^ _ 57; dear mother of Elvis J. wore ^e before I Push; dear sister of Nlrs. Sybil ‘>"'0,®'** Kr»w* why. Dean, Mrs. Elna (Tuny) Porter, I His loving wife Ruthle. Virgil and Perry E. Preslar; also IN LOVING MEMORY ( survived by five grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Thursday, November will lie in state at the funeral ______ bULL, JAMES HENRY; 26. 1967; 421 South Op^e; age I nes Edward Ci dear father of James i survived I. F Friday. j Mr. Cult will Me in state.______________________ CfEM, JESSIE; November 20, 1047; by five grandchildren and eight Ylday, at the Sherman Funeral Home, 135 South Street, Ortonville with Rev. Gary Sanderson officiating. Interment In Goodrich Cemetery. AAr. Diem He In state at the funeral h aWer 7 p.m. ‘ DeReamer, who by Orren, Duane. ATTENTION WORLD WAR II VET- Souvenirs for forgotten 334-9105. INC.. 718 RIKER FE 2-0161. Refer to Credit Ad- GUINN'S BANQUET HALL — ness meeting, parties and rece;> tion facilities. Accommodating 225. Call 334-7677 or 391-2671. OR 3-52(12. FE ^ hAMSHER, JANE; _______________ 1047; 1575 Hickory RMge Road, Milford; aga " -----------------■ Merrill John A. Franklin, Charles, ■ Raymond Hamsher Mrs. also survived by 31 grandchildren and 11 greaHirandchlldren neral service will be held Thurs- Mllford, wllh Pastor Dennis Gla der officiating. Mrs. Hamsher w state at the funeral home. Haeckel, john c.; street; ck a ot Mrs. Lll- I Frederick and \ ch. Interment Chun Park He li Funei.. ,,v ll"dTO at the Sparks-Grltfln ^ILAAA, SHIRLEY A.; November 23. 1047; 113 Tulane. Auburn Heights, age 23; baloved daugtitar ot Mrs. **-- 1 Parigoi dt Lae. John D. Betty Hiii,'"|lalrtcra,*'joy“' m^ and Darrall Spacht. David and Philip Graves. Funeral service will be held Friday, Dacambar 1, at 2 p.m. at ttw C. F. Shsrman Funeral Noma, 133 South straat, Or|onvllla vdth Rav. Kyle ‘ AaOODY, ALBERT LUTHER; No- vambar 24, 1047;--- aga 73. Funara Md FrMai ~ Chester R. Trlca^ atlng. Interment In Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. Moody will Ha In state at the Frank Carruthars Funeral 7 p.m. Thui fyiLSON, CLARA; Novambar 24, 1047; Glasgow, Kantuckyi age 70; dear mottiar of AAra. Lynn May-fltld; deer sister of AArs. Grace Woodbury, Mrs. Laverne Simmons, Burs and Vsit Brown; also eur-vlved by four arandcMIdreii. Funeral service wtll be held Thursday, November 30 at I p.m. at invlohns Funerel Home. In White Chapel Me-wteTy. AArs. Wilson will iw in sisie A the funeral home. Funeral Home and te the ladlae i the First Baptist Church aarvad the dinner following Mrvka. The family of Mrs. Fsi D!qI 334-4981 or 332-8181 Pontiac ProsB Wont AdB foa FAST ACTION NOTICI TO ADVIRTISIM AOS RICIIVIO |y 3 3 AA. WIU II 3UILI3HID THI rOllOWINO OAV. “‘so^rk; » 4*y ^vlowB to publicoiiofi. CASH WANT AD RATfS 1-Ooy 3-Ooy« 6-Doyt 6200 1246 $3.14 200 360 S.SI 244 46t 6.96 3 OS 5 40 1.40 366 A4| lOPI 4 27 i.sl 11.76, 4 81 3 64 13 44. 549 972 15.12- tlO 1080. 16.80 The Pontiac Pr«sg HUDSON'S OPTICAL SERVICE Prescriptions for a)iaglasses flllsd with pinpoint precision. Including aspri, catarac an plastic lenses. siso a large selection llasses. We do not exan Sptical Service. Pontiac, Lower KNAPP LINE FOOTWEAR to com-snt his already possessive of HOISERY end UNIFORMS, dresses and casuals. Readily avelleble from this INDEPENDENT AGENT — In various sizes, lengths, widths and comfort. MAX SOBOTA - 5700 HIGHLAND (WATERFORD TWP.) PONTIAC ---- ---- 1507 after 4:30 Snowmobilers OF TRAIL IN DENSE WOODS WITH MANY STEEP SLOPES 1 — Race on our smooth rolling fairways — VI mile straight aways or oval track. On your snowmobile or rent one ot ours. 2 — Toboggan run — Ice skat- — Club House Open. BRAMBLEWOOD COUNTRY CLUBS WINTER SPORTS BASIN DIR: FROM HOLLY 2 MILES — NO. or------------- — - FISH I MILE. 2154 MINER RD. HOLLY 434-0200 BOX REPLIES At 10 a.m. today there were replies at The Press Office in the following boxes: 1. 2, 3, 4. 5, 13, 19, 36. 1 Used Car Porter Person only). 2 MEN FOR JANITORIAL WORK. New building. Birmingham Call 447-3100 ext. 280 betwi $350-$450 CLERICAL 18-25, 50 w.p.m.a high Khool grad. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL $400-$600 FEE PAID MANAGEMENT TRAINEES in office, finance, retaH, sales Age 21-32, some college INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL W) W. Huron 334-4071 $500-$650 PLUS CAR SALES TRAINEES In all fleMt, age 21-3G soma college INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL BO W. Huron_________334-1971 $5,000-$! 2,000 TECHNICIANS Mech.-Elec.-Lab, age 2« INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL .... Huron $10,000-$14,000 PROGRAMMERS Sr. end Jr., also tab operators INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL A STATICiN ATTENDANT, AFTER-I end eve. shift, over 25, well .. 8 p.m. tonight. $200 PER MONTH A-1 AUTOMOBILE I to ity Em CAREER OPPORTUNITY Aibii Finance Company, a nation wide organization In the Conaumar the countnt for man with or wHh- progra for ma our Career Progression Is designed to train you agemenf pmlHon within 2 yra. Men with experience will qualify much sooner. These are salaried posHlont with regular Increaeas. Bxc. benetHs Include company paid axpaniat, vacations, holldeye, profit sharing end partlclpaflng mefor medical and Ufa Inturanca. If you are 21. or older, draft free and at leaM a high school graduate and have the capacity end desire to progress Into men-ogoment position,, th*n you will want to contact: 4r. J. S. Fleck ^ Regional Direct. 738 vy. Huron Pontiac, Mich. 333-7023 International Tolcphono and Tolograph Subsidiary. CLERKS $400 up Many Interesting positions, od-vencement to mansgement end «tes gooltjons. AApny fee paid. ...INjERNATIONAL PERSONNEL IMP S. Woodward, B'ham 442-0243 Halp WaiitBd MbIb LABORERS WANTED - UNION 10 MA^iHINE OPERATORS immediate openings, days end eF ternoons, will train tor advancement. Reliable men With some previous exp. on lathe, mill, or grlnd-«rs.^..Exe. year around working condHiont end overtime. 2021 In-Row, Troy bet. 14 and 15 3, SnoHIng. MAN TO WORK IN AUTO _ ditloning ihap, full time. 33B3314. MAN yvlTH SOME MECHANICAL tmowicdga for night work In bowl- MAN TO PARK CARS FOR IN-garage, day shift, apply In n, RTker Cerage, between 9 :30, 57 Wayne.______________ MAN TO DELIVER AND INSTALL electricel appliances end water softeners. Must be mechanically inclined and have own hand tools. Job Includes repairing some small —“ances. Must ba able to fur-reterences. For Interview, ap- MANAGI FOR AUTO WASH. CONTROLLER NEEDED TO COV ar 2 small manufacturing compan las presantly subsidiaries ot i growing NYSE listed parent. Must, __ , be experienced In statement prep-l _C«H FE 3-7043,______________________ aration. Inventory control, forcasl-iM A N A G E R TRAINEE, EAGER Ing and administration. Salary man needed for this spot, SS500, commensurate with experience.! cell Kathy King, 334-2471. Michigan. Attn:! be neat and dependable. Rater-required. Cell 5 to 0 p.m.. William Love. DESIGNERS 442-9148. ^y-p!?yi:Rl''®pS')31?ch“- cgg^Rd., pontlec, Mich._____ wages. 3905 N. Rochester Rd. DESIGNER - DRAFTSMAN" FOR LeN TO WORK IN SERVICE STA- sanllary, process and structural i gneer ng lay-out. Consulting en-| gitleering firm; Environmentnl En- ch. 451-5434. DISHWASHER, ! _ _ _ . rent, days only, no holidays or, Sunday. Birr............ (ALL RESTAU-I drivers. Must be over 25 years of aga w^ local references. Full time onlyT Exc. wages, vacation with pay. Shell station. Woodward 3. Long Lake Rd. Bloomfield Hills. HbIp WaiitBd Malt Roofers ingU ifd.‘ rant'ed, experienced 935 Scott La ROUTE (MAN TO SERVICE WATER softeners. Bloomfield erea. Salary end benafItF Steady employment tor reliable man. ^ply In person at Water Softener Supply, ~ Orchard Lake Rd., Pontiac o S A L E $ COUNilLOh, 66 VtiO have the ability to sell B people? Then we offer ,n SALESAMN, l6(!Xl FIRM NEEDS I Snailing. Cark, 334-2471, Snalllng SALESMAN FOR SMALL MANU-facturing company with estab" cllentle, guaranteed salary travel expenses, some overnigh ‘ ' " " Pontlei salary end telephone ARE YOU READY TO MOVE UP? New car dealarship naads a woman —Aotomotiva Offlea " BABY sitter 3. LIGHT h6USE-keaping, 3 children 4 In Khool. 391-27» after 5 p.m. ABY SITTER, DAYS, LIVE IN or out. Inquire at west Bloomfield TWp. BABY SITTER 5545 Bryden, ABY SITTER NEEDED, TO CARE tor 3 small hoys. In our home, from 3-5:30 p.m. A/lon.-Frl., Clarks-' I area, 425-4340. BAKERY SALES WOMAN, FULL 5 days, hours 10 a.m.-4:30 xxf pay, no avenlngs or Anderson Bakery, 124 w. Birmingham, Ml 4-7114. AR AAAID; ALSO WAITRESS. Apply In person. Sportsmen's Lounge, 5144 Dixie Hwy„ vyeterford. BEAUTY OPERATOR. ALBERt'S Suntey* 14 Mile, lady, good Saion, 11 N. BEAUTY OPERATOR TO TAKE over cliantela., Top wages to right ^3701 Baauty shop. FE HbIp Wanfail Ninda HOUSEWIVES Torn your spare time into extra money by applying for CHRISTMAS EMPLOYMENT NOW! Port time and (in coll schedules. Apply In Person EMPLOYMENT OFFICE Hudson's PONTIAC MALL SALESMEN HELP! WE NEED YOUl EXPERIENCED AND TRAINEES Many good lobs need to be filled We have the lob orders, now wt need you. Most fee paid, car, ex penses. Mrs. Plland. INTERNA1IONAL PERSONNEL bookkeeping . . lelen Adams, 334-247I, Snalllng 1. Snelllnq._ CASHIER ■ part time, preferably Mon. through Friday. CHAMP'S S. Woodward, B'ham. 442-8248|ijm yy Self-Service Drive-In Troy 444-3411 Michigan Bell HAS IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR STOCKMEN TELEPHONE INSTALLERS and Technicians :hn..!e“;.1 ar^ice.’Vr.'nMFAp^^ WHO WANT and Everatt Ernst, Homar HIghtI t f * j.* ^ * ' ^pryl«re^:'oXn EXPERIENCED REAL BstATE communication techniques — .w. ambition/ In* salasman naadad for Immadiata' nnri AnnInmAnt ap tegrlly, good health, high school| opening Inquire Warren Stout, J*”” ®RUiPfn6nl, Or grad, experience desirable but not realtor, 1450 N. Opdyke F ■ - • — ■ • for Inlervii ASSISTANT OFFICE MANAGER Nallonal Finance Company hat several openings for aggressive men In Oakland County. Positions, offer rapid advancement to Man- Irlnge '’benetitsl' A^^'deNre 'bus!^ ness career, be Intelligent, high school grad, 20 or over. No experience iwcessary; elso have attractive opening tor experienced person. For appointment Phone Wm. Lowry, 333-71%. ASSISTANT MANAGER, CASHIER, A.T.&T. DISHWASHER KITCHEN UTILITY For day shift. Good wages and benefits. Must be reliable and have transportation. Apply in per- HOWARD JOHNSON'S Telegraph at Maple Rd. __________Birmingham______ 'DRAFTSMAN" FOR SANITAlTf, process ~ " ---- EARN SSOO PER MONTH Standard Oil service station __ service attendant. No Sundays. Hol- Sheet Metal Machine Operators Machinists EXPERIENCED CASHIER 5 nights a week. Mature preferred. Restaurant ex^-------- or will train. Big Boy Restaurant. live-in or car. HOUSEKEEPER, REF. /ely country home, , tor day work, exc. Blue Cross insurance, call LADY FOR REAL ESTATE SALES-woman. Inquire Brewer Real £»• fate. 724 RIker Bldg, FE 4>5161. LADY TO LIVE IN. LIGHT MOUSE- LIKE' CHILDREN, THIS DENTIST needs your assistance, $325, call Betty Slack, 334-2471, Snalllng ~ - Hling. LPNS AND PRACTICAL NURSES, Exchm''***2H**Itafe'*$l''" MEDICAL ’ ASSISTANT EXPERT enced, must be willing to work some nights. Send resume of qualifications to Pontiac Press Box $347, call Fran Fox 334-2471, Snalllng B SneMIng.________ NURSE FOR DOCTORS OFFICE, 3 afternoons, modern office tr Rochester. Send resume to Pon-__Hac Press Box C-3. warding career challenging t In the fast | EXPERIENCED^ SERVICE DRAYTON PLAINS Huntoon FUNERAL HOME Serving Pontlec tor SO yeeri 79 Oakland Ave.__FE 2-0119 C. J. GODHARDT FUNERAL HOME • lego Harbor, Ph. 412-0200. SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME "ThoughttuI Sorvl^' FE 3-9230 Voorhees-Sipie FUNERAL HOME. 332-8378 Betabllsttod Ovtr 40 Years LOOK HERE ... thousands do, every day! that's why it's such a good idea to pibce a WANT AD Whether it's a buyer or an jtem you seek . . , finding is easy when you use ond reod Press Want Ads. when you want to sell, buy, rent, trode, hire, find. Either Way -They Do the Trick - Quickly JUST CALL 332-8181 THE PONTIAC PRESS OassHlMl OaportiMrtt CEMETERY LOTS weutllul Garden of t ™rd#ne.°v5lSIId o”m45, will ICO tor quick eelo. FE 3^753. ^TjKwIroment, math, irwchanical _^ntlec. FE 5-3145 I Interview: all coliKt It nwaiury. CALL 393-5921 ATTRACTIVE SERVICE AND lalet opportunity, salary, t and commission no oxparlonco ossary, will troln, 474-2272. ATTRACTIVE POSITION 21. Ntet ir, stoidy Coll FE AUTD DEALER Neods experltncoo wOsh and polish man, plonly ot work, guaranteed sBleryl Mlny fringe hanaflis. nn Saturdays, apply In ■ “ ■ Wsnkel, EXPERIENCED AUTO SALESMAN to sell Chevrolet, Buick and Pon-tlecs. All fringe benefits. Apply to Everett Ernst, Homer Hight, Motors Inc., Oxford, Mich. (Apply EXPERIENCED ARCHITECTURAL DRAFTSMAN Attrae- ^tlve atmosphere, fringe benetHs, opportunity for advancemont. " ry J. Harmon and Associates, 407 Fort Street, Port t Auto Body Shop inoger good pay. Its. _ Apply Id many fringe person, sea Del m. No phono calls please. Shelton Pontiac Buick 855 s 2 CHOICE LOTS, AT WHITE CHAPEL Thoee Graves SliffMcTWi .OF.PONTIAC,.NC.^^ PLANNED BUDGET PROG8 YOU CAN AFFORD TAILORED TO YOUR INCOME PontidC Stoto Bank Bldg. phona Confida lEBT AID, INC./ 711 RIKER BLDG. FE 2-0181/ Rtfar to Cradit Ad- LAN NOW Old fathtoM Ing for your casiont of a FOR DELIGHTFUL •lalgh ridi. Idaal out-cliib or group. Oc-I kindi. Lovaty club nina araaa. Dayfima «rtlM for grw^ ‘ your holiday arvaflons* 628- UPLAND HILLS FARM POODLE hXIRCUT. S4. Any style 473-4*97 TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN V I R G I fl I At PLEASE CALL HOME IMMEDIATELY OR CON TACT ONE OF US. HOWIE LARGE REDBONE HOUND, Oxf^. 433-2307._____________ LOST: IN ViptITV OP BALDWIN :oiumbla. Gray Walmaranar . Rtward. FE 2-2031. LOST - BASSETT HOUND PUPPY, vicinity While Lake Twp. Hall, Child's pet. Reward. 343-4730. LOST; ORANGE AND WHITE CAT, Opdyke-Auburn ereA. FE 57749. 5nrTr--------------------- 391-234*. LOST WHILE MOVING BETWEEN Wolverine Lake and Norttiwest 65 troll, and from eott bod, 31 LOST; PEKINGESE DOG, MISilNG tinea Nov. 23. Judeli Lk. t 191-1444. re$r^rifirTaeiri7rmrK: mot. oM. Williams Lako Rd. or 343 3537.______________ LOST NOVEMBER 23, ARkA, Pi Park, 1 mas. old Nock 1 « puppy, antwtrt to nemo t, ^hlM't pal. rowird otior 1 DEPENDABLE MAN MM'rlod, ovor 21, Call bttsntn and 3 pjn. 334.2771. OuartMtt M J ______________ nsis Part tbno or full limp. Guaran- AUTOMATIC SCREW MACHINE OPERATORS Troy Monulaclurer hat ope on Brown 3. Sharpo typo m«h BRIGGS ENGINE MECHANICS A^oxporltneo. Top wogot, fii HOUGHTEN'S POWER CENTER 112 university 451-7010 DOWNTOWN ROCHESTER BWPER-COLLiSlStrwORKTETkST Town Collision. 555 S. Soglnsw. California Tool Room Machinest AND Tool Grinders Stoedy ytor around work, mi fringo banetlls. Will Intorvlow Dotroit wook ot Doc. 3rd., wi or phono J. R. Wotrnort ^ at Wetmore Cutting Tools 9129 PERKINS ST. PICO RIVERA______CALIFORNIA CAREVAirER, MARRIED ' lo, live on premit, light d lodgt. PonllK Aroo, CAREER OPPORTUNITY 4 now and modtrn SIngor stoi era KhtduM tor opening In MIc gan during the next 4 moni wllh more to follow. We art n •elKllng men who can ba trelii for ttoro menagamant In this rap ly expanding nitlncet. We ni a temlly man who Is looking to tho future. Wo oNor on excoTlont training program and • good m Ing opportunlly while learning butinou. A tuccastiul rKord salat work would bo holptui not nocottary. A record ot pn out omploymont stability It ne< tery. Excellent retirement 1 temlly medical plan, poM vi Hone. Call In person at the Singer Co., PonllK Mall and ask tor Mr. Chris CARPBTNkRS, ROUGH, RfSIDElJ-"sl and aportmonts, foremen and wmeyman, year round work, nion. 474-1434.________ CARPENTERS Union roughort. work on Croscont Lake Rd. north of M-S9. Call 39a-2ast. UnH Carpentry In --------- tiWNiSR COLLEGE GRADS $7200-$12,000 FEE PAID M5^RN!?riWAL%ttsON^ 0 Wl Huron ________liijw ^LiRk WANTiD FOR SPORTINi Carpeting Dtportment FINANCE TRAINEE $5,000 FEE PAID 21-28, High School Grad. NTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL Factory Workers timo after 6 a.m. | Employers | Temporary Service lawton 65 S. Main ladford________26117 Grand River, FLINT, MICHIGAN DRY CLEANERS Wa are an aggrauiva growing company looking for a package plant manager with axparianca In a tl50,000-$300,000 pai tIon. You must have a successful background In both shirt laundry "" dry-cleaning " both pnd pc machines and Wa art willing to pay top dollar for the right man. Contact: L.C. Dortch* PH: 742-2300, Flint, Michigan, FULL OR PART TIME DELIVERY " * needed/ 21 yrs. or ovtr, 1053 or apply at 163 Del parlance n e c c FULL TIME GAS STATION ........t be e; driving Service. 9995 GAS STATION ATTENDANT. EX-necessary, inquire el Shell. 6495 Orchard Lake lie Rd.____________ GAS STATION. EXPERIENCED driveway SI 25-SI 75 H GENERAL SERVICEMAN Immediate opening at Central Of flee of Oakland Community Col ar lubrication men. Kathy King, 334-2471/ Snalllng k . _____ op Union I Blue Cross, vacation day banafits. ^ “ Bonded Guard E. Grand LO 8-4150. Harriet Sorga Personnel 5 Ponobfcot Bldg. 941-5492 3 Northland Towtn E. 353-1550 TKhnIcat or onglnOKlng txMi dtgrat tor top monutoci n. Solery opan. ACCOUNTANT — young man imdor. 25 wllh dograt, no oxp. nacatoary, varloty lob, top aolary. utlnoM Adminlilrallon ma|or — opportunity for advonCMnanl, Im-modlolo •urporvltory opaning. aSML ____- .....’taatanl I..... ... door work. EottblWiad cuotomara. ' Sarvica. Call collael. • To use their electrical training and experience WHO NEED • A real challenge • A solid career • A chance to grow WHO ARE • 18 or older • In good health • At least'5'6" • High School Groduates preferred APPLY NOW Between 8:30 a.m. and 5 p.i thru Friday at: ROOM A-172, 1365 CASS, DETROIT OR 225 S. Troy, Royal Oak Michigan Bell PART OF THE NATIONWIDE BELL SYSTEM AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER SHIPPING-RECEIVING $425-$475 Ago 21-30, tome experience. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 000 W. Huron________334.4971 STATION ATTENDANT DAYS, good pay, mutt be 3' Apply Standard ttatlon chard Lake end Maple Road. STATION ATTENDANT. EXPERI. COOK, SHORT ORDER, NIGHTS, experience helpful or will ■ train. Good weget, lull time. 343-0411, COOK TO WORK EVENINGS, good hourly rate, paid holldeyt and other benelitt. Cell UL 3-3410. COUNTER GIRL WANtEb tO make tandwichet and tell lunch-meat, exp. hoi necettery but de-tlrable. 4n-722*. CURB GIRLS WAITRESSES TELE-TRAY OPERATORS BIG BO^'''rESTAUPANT TeFHwo^hSffiilgCenter OFFICE ASSISTANT FOR PHYSI clan, reply to Pontiac Pratt Bor C-34, Pontiac, Mich. Include per OLDER WOMAN TO HELP WITH itay In I 444-5971 baby tl I nlghlt Punch Press Operators wanted Prefer a familiarization with progressive punch press operation. Day and night shift. A^ly ba-fwten 6 a.m.-6 P.m. Employers Temporary Service ___* 65 S. Main, Clawson ^ _______________________________ PUBLIC RELATIONS E. welton cathler qfllce or hotpital butinott 2 yrt. collogo and dogroe, many 0 M I c e experience, Birmingham Inleretling potlllont, moit t e a SOMETHING SPEOAI Menagement Co. Neodi you. Ex- paid. Mrs. Hoppe, iumcmim? artLIAL perlence with patient slelemeni INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL Awellt the Individual we are Inqulrlet rweettery It you dual- 1100 S Woodward. B'ham 442-3341 teeking. Age 21 to 48. Conflnuedi ily, call 444-8429, 9 a m. to 5 growth and recent promotion, hat' p.m. lor Interview. ; '’T'pHIST, DENT^, MA- Thlt'*toi)o*rtjnr"ofc D'SH«^|h7“^«~EVEt4ING Irrou®,;dln;t, 332^ «ll% uth plut overr da plui tiock option Birmingham. 444-4553. drug CLERK. -NIGHTS,-gYoT> Cl 4. 0170 over 18, Lake Center Drug, cL O-tI/o 2387 Orchard Lake Rd. No phone calls. _______________________ DRUG STORE SALES CLERK, PERSONNEL SURVEYORS - PARTY CHIEFS, top firm offers year around plus lot of overtime, no fe< Spot Welders Wanted aetting up. work. Apply dayt.'Ltarancet. J. V.'Pharmacy 474-0S5I._____^ EXPERIENCED COOK AND KlTCH-en helperi, lull lime. Apply Bloomfield Nurtlng Canter, W W. Square EXPERIENCED GIRL WITH REF- must have own car or live In. 626-1351._____________________ EXPERIENCE GENERAL HOUSE- , own transportation. 338-^568. i EXPERIENCED KEY PUNCH Op- erator. Some R.N. Supervisors and LPN HEAD NURSES NEEDED At 231-bed nurtlng home on all tMrit and at SALARIES HIGHER THAN AVERAGE. DIAL 338-7151 Ext. 95 8.30 a.m. to 4 p.m. SALES COUNSELOF 3 DEPARTMENTS OPEN wl(. Trans- - ____ furnished. NO EXPERI- iNCE NECESSARY. MUST BE ABLE TO START WORK IMMEDIATELY. Cell Mr. Fox 9 e.m. 2:30 p.m., 3384059. _____ PARTJIME Cell only, part or up to no/ Kaberley Mercury, 420 /wain St./ Rochester, OL 1-9141.__________ POLICE “OF>ICER/ VILLAGE OF Almont. 0 High School grad or 6.E.O. diploma, minimum height 5'8", previous police experience desirable possibility of becoming chief of police, send resume to PRODUCTION FORE/AAN. ittop experience In weldini tnetol febricetion and ai P.O. Box 217/ Rochastar, tembiy. MIchl- PRODUCTION WORKERS New pintle plint, exrellent working conditloni, opportunity to id-vanco to higher paying clettlflce-tlon. Prefer age 30-45. Apply * A.M. Mon. thru pri. Mutt novo own AlleA Industries, Inc. Court Trey to bik. N. of 14 Mile Rd. bet. John R. PUBLIC RELATIONS t yrt. coHega and degree, many Interntlng potlllont, moet lee paid. Mr. AtoreetL INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1380 S. Woodward, B'ham. 442-8243 CHIEF. $10,000 A YEAR PLUS FRINGES. STEADY WORK. OAKLAND COUNTY AREA, FELDHAUSER ASSOCIATES. INC., 5647 ring, bei 47-7070. FRONT OFFICE. MEDICAL, VAR-I 2471, GENERAL OFFICE CLERK Accuracy with figuret end g: handwriting ' ~ 338-9623. Molort Inc. 3158 WANTED SALESMAN taletm; 315,000 earningt, can i looking Inli ■ ■ rr. An willing lo ♦o Incroata hit __________ . fy for thit potlllon, telling and uted cart. In a rnodar- Jirettive GM daalerthip. rltna banatlU, Including h zatlon, prom thoring plan and vactlon. Sea Mr. Joe dl or Mr. Tommy Thompun el Shelton Pontiac Buick, 3S5 S. RKh-etler Rd. " ' ' penter api dentlel bul._.._____, work In Birmingham _. 342-5220, Evet. FE 2-0244. Deyt, YOUNG MEN Pleatanl Outdoor Work PONTIAC AREA EVES. 3-tO P.M. _ S3.S4 AN HOUR Coll Delvd Houto, FE 34)359 bofert 2 2 OR 3 DAYS, GENERAL HOUSE-plng and Ironing, own trant-letlon. 424-4247._________________________ 3 WOMEN h bank teller experience tor I time work. Average 10 hrt. per wook. Local banki. CALL MANPOWER 333-1314 $60-$80 YOUNG TYPIST-OEN. OFFICE typo 50-40 w.p.m., phono, fillno. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 10 W. Huron____________ 314-4971 t6P FLIGHT FIRM NEEIJS' A copablo kty punch operator, *433 call Batty slack, 314-3471, Sntll Ing If Snelling.________ /TbILIT^TTO (fAliTFOR PATIENTS LPN needed, now dewarding op-** “ * Gibbs, portunlty, 394-2471, S cell Ruth ATTENTION LADIES CHRISTMAS TIME - Our big aarnlng tima. Savaral openlnot fbr woman who with to earn. Make A MERRIER Chrlitmat lor your-•alf ond family. Plaata call FE GENERAL OFFICE $325-$425 lypltlt, YOU I to apply. Excellanf* opporlunlllet and abovt avarago aarningt, vaca->2 lion wllh pay and other benetltt. _ Cell Mitt S t a V a n t, EL 7-0645. Jacqueline Shopt, Telegraph end Maple, Blrndnghem.____ I SECRETAR Y, AAAtURE. (}6o6^6f R«aptlanltli, Ing clerkt, many varied Many lee paid. Mrt. Hoppe. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL Ike tklllt, exc. location, *325. call Kathy King, 334-2471, Snalllng A Snelling.____________ _______ SECRETARY WITH FIGURE AP-442.3341 titude, 1 girl office needt you, GENERAL HOUSEWORK, COOK-| cell Fran Fox, ihit -“4-5471, Swiling A Snelling. lor'SHARP^GAL WITH SOME ABILITY .drafting, hare It your Betty SiKk, Snell Ing, 5 dayt, must or sloop In, will pay ga own Irantp., city ref. 424-04W. GENERAL OFFICE WORKER TO work lull-time In Auburn Heights erea. SIngle-gIrl oltice, routine bookkeeping, typing end dictation Send resume with relerencet lo Box 4149, Auburn Htighit. 43057 General Office accounts poyable bookkaoplng. Ago M to 45 prtforrod. Call FE 4-4430 bol. 9 end 5 for oppolnimont. 3:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.. Reforencot required. 331-2229 ovoi. HOUSEKEEPER, 4 MORNTtiigS~A --- *»- Nontmakor, 43I-0929. HOUSEKEEPER fo LIVE MOTHERS part tima wor presitga businssi. Know $325, call Batty Slack, Snalllng 8, Snalllng, 334-2471. INGLE GI*L, Wf^AVf~A~CA-reer spot lor you, pertonellly shines here, *325, call Fran Fox, 334-2471, Snalllng A SnoHIng. STENOS $400 UP Shorthand 10-100. typing 50 w.p.m. Many InlarasNng potlllont. Mott fee paid. Mrs. Tanner. international PERSONNEL 130 S. woodward, B'ham 442-1243 TYPISTS $325 UP INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1130 S. Woodward, B'ham. 442 1243 WAITRESS WANTED, APPLY AT Leg Cabin, 577 Auburn Ave.___ THOROUGH WOMAN FOR HOUSE cleaning. Hall deyt, «Mn., Tuet. Thurt. and Fri. Own transportation. Long Lako Franklin Road area. 424-n44. _ WAITRESS, NIGHTS, NO SUNDAYS at Lunch, 1*5 Or- I Lake. Em 3P1I2. WAITRESS, PART Ml Husineis. ivnow usual nlrm. Iwmriw a pleating penonallty and best ref. cell 442-9M1 between 3 and J^on^ Thurt. allernoon lor eppolnt- ~HOUSEWiVEf:rMotHE*5 Need Chrlstmot nwncy but have only 3 to 3 hours dally? Pick up and deliver Fuller Brush orders neer home. Earn S2.S0 up hourly. N. ot M59 phono Mr. Kretz 334-4401 S. of M39 phono Mr. Owen, MA 4-41*1 WAITRESS WANTED, FULL TIME amploymanl. Apply In parson only, Franks Rtitiureni, Keeg^ Herbor. WOMAN WANTED FOR BABY-Slt-tlng and light housework during the day. Welled Lake area. CaH 424-3597 eWer 3:30. WOMAN TO BE A COMPANION and light housework. Congenial surroundings. Roply lo Ponllec _Pj^ott Box C-15.____ _ WOMAN TO ASSIST WITH HOUSE M. or F. . 335-147?. or F. 6 Holp Woirte4 Molt cellon, pa oj^uX irega ot 33 I ram, gold rt, profit at 404 E. 10 Mila Ple^t Ridge Mich. Junior Accauntant $500-$600 litTkirNi^'oiJlLVfRI^Nd ‘‘Vftrmr oil who wentt itaody onvleymanr :*W. D/gy... PI.M. C^\ aAIMS ADJUSTER In PontiK which we fwl would make life then clelme edluttar pMitlon. A 13- to SO-yearoM collage greduete It preferred, Inveetlgatlva or public cOnteA oxperlonco will bi oxcollont etortlng telery, numb roue Iringt btnofi ond txpenit eccaunt era a tow of the fectort whi make lito In PontiK i bit nicer. cbmpen we IMI HERB CUNNINGHAM Area code: 4)4-313,4711 or Sand Him a Reteme. Cara of NATIONWIDE INSURANCE COMPANYS 944 N. High straat , Ohio 43311 A Rawardino and Challenging Place ta Work. DO YOU HAVE A NEED FOR EXTRA MONEY NOW THAT CHRISTMAS TIME IS NEAR? WHY NOT WORK PART-TIME FOR US AS A SALESPERSON, CATALOG CLERK, OR IN ONE OF OUR MANY SERVICE DEPARTMENTS. WE HAVE SCHEDULES FOR DAY, EVENING, OR WEEKEND HOURS OF EMPLOYMENT. IMMEDIATE EMPLOYEE DISCOUNT. APPLY NOW PERSONNEL DEPT. MONTGOMERY WARD THE PONTIAC mil w A N T FAST R E S U L T S USE PRESS W A N T A D S 3^2 8 1 8 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS,WEDNESDAY, NO\ EMRER 29, 1967 D-11 grtph and Huron Str vitw> 1-4 p.m. ______________ WOOL PRESSER, PART TIMe! Sates Help Mate^amate M regular cash bonus. D. Crawford, PresK Fort Worth, Texas. 7t . .. HAVE YOU EXPLORED THE KIR----------‘ inlty? 363-OSM » a.m..» Souler Blvd., Tr_. NEW CLASSES STARTING—LEARN RebI Estald now. For Information . ^ “ I ROCHESTER Help Wanted M. or F. 8^ COMMUNITY SCHOOLS applications BEING TAKEN Excellent employment ODOortunltl for ushers, cashiers, concession help. Apply Miracle Mile DrI in, after t p.m. S. Telegraph Rd. bartender, NtALE OR FEMALE by opportunity? 3 p.m.__________________________ NEW AND USED CAR SALESMEN. Excellent pay plan. Car and Insurance. Fast growing area. Call SM-1025 for Ken Harris.____ REAL ESTATE SALESMEN Bon Real Estate needs 3 more -------... ........, and up to Sick leave allow Hospitalization. Paid vacation. Paid holidays. I are being accepted fort BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED All RH Positive 17.50 All RH Neg. with positive A-nS^'a-neg., AB-neg. Apply at Board of Education of- O-neg. SI2: hauling. Call Bill, FE 2-19B3. Credit Advisors 16-A 48 HOURS - ... -------_ I land CONTRACTS—HOMES GET OUT OF DEBT WRIGHT AVOID GARNISHMENTS, REPOS-l3B2 Oakland Ave._______FE M141 SESSIONS, BAD CREDIT, HA-lcASH FOR YOUR HOME OR RASSMENT, BANKRUPTCY AND PROPERTY EVEN IF BEHIND IN LOSS OF JOB. Wt hava helped PAYMENT. SELL NOW BEFORE ^oBiSto by providing a plannrt mOH MARKET. Us"ciNSOLPDAT^ ?C?SR’DEBTsiBRIAN 623-0702 WITH ONE LOW PAYMENT YOU CAN AFFORD. NO limit at to amount owad and numbar of creditors. For those who realize, "YOU^ CAN'T BORROW YOURSELF OUT: LICENSED AND BONDED i ELWOOD REALTY lome Appointment Gladly Arranged_4B2-2410 to Cost or Obllgetlon tor Interviews lOURS »-7 P.M.-SAT. »-5 p.m. I DEBT AID I Moving and Trucking OR3-3625. EFFICIENCY, ____________ licely furnished, clean, porch ■cinf ■ ■ ■ - HAVE CASH BUYER FOR SMALL HOUSE LIGHT HAULING I 2, 3. or ____________________ Painting and Decorating 231 A LADY INTERIOR DECORATOrJ 7-oSr Papering. FE_8-6214. ' GRIFFI$ & SONS painting! h laka privileges, 662- Coach. All utilities turn. 1140 mo. Sacurlfy and references required. Sislock & Kent, Inc. 1309 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. Snlf Heitsei 3 BEDROOM BRICK AND ALU--n tri-leveL etteched garage, t, drapes, 3 yrs. old, White Twp. 3 Bedroom brick, pontiac \ —far trade up or down f large lot In laka are S23,«0, r-------- HOUSE, WORKING COU- a, $100 month, FE 4-4923. B87-4943 or BB7-5451. YEAR AROUND LAKE FRONT home, gat heat, paneled, ' room, paved street, dep. r 3-B280 or MY 3-1014 after 3. Rent Houses, Unfurnished 40 3 BEDROOM LAKE FRONT. GOOD condition, available by Dec. 10, $125, Call J. A. Taylor, OR 4-0306. 3 BEDROOM NEW HOME IN OAK- BY OWNER, NICE 2 BEDROOM 3 Bedrooms LOW DOWN PAYMENT NO MORTGAGE COSTS MODEL OPEN 285 Fisher WESTOWN REALTY FE 8-2763 days After 7:30 p.m. — LI 2-4677 3 BEDROOM RANCH HOME with full basement, on 120' 110' lot, 1 block from Long Lai Ledgerock fireplace, tiled floo Marlite walls and calling In kitchen and bath. Gas hear, best r' materials and workmanship. Or ly $16,500. C. A. WEBSTER, Realtor 692-2291________________628-251$ 4-H REAL ESTATE 5844 DIXIE HWY. AFTER ■ . ..... 0^ 3-0455 EM 3-0146_____OR_3-2391 BEDROOM HOME, ALL ON ONE floor, 2 car ------ ‘----- $12,500 by n.r”*;rM9 I 5-ROOM HOME, 778 CORTVVR^GH't" parking ref MY 3-2880. 13 BEDROOM BRICK RANCH, GA-i - ' “sge, nice location, $165 mo. plus tiUties. Sec, deposit. 332-7539. Tequi”ed!l4 BEDROOM. GAS HEAT, LAKE ' Orion, $135, vacant. 1-731-7827^_____________ MOST NEW, School. 3 rooms Privaf a couple, Auburrh TELE-HURON DISTRICT 3 RDDMS, Apartments, Unfurnished 38 -BEDROOM, PARTIALLY FURN-Ished, utilities, adults, MY 3-7251. Bta Apts. 674-3887 or 673- BEDRQOM APARTMENT. PAR-tlally furnished. On Pontiac Lake. $30 oer wk. Utilities paid. No children. 8180 Highland 80' LOT full baser Juda Laki oio, »i4u plus utilitie! Homes, 624-4851.______________ Completely furn. In Danish modem wainut (which may be $150 monthly. - - ----- 334-1 posit required Days, 3 Excavating \ JOB ALL CAST IRON SEWERS. DORRIS 8i SON, REALTORS. OR: LISTINGS NEEDED Farms-Homes-Acreage Ridqaway, Realtor MLS -338-4084 _____ .. — _Rli’_67i7605.'^^]|______________________ 10^ d^ jIbedrdom. new. near mall '* '* - Carpeted. Appliances. Air and sound conditioned, heated. Rec.' HOUSE WITH 3 BEDROOMS, . acre lot, modern, oil heat. 351 N. Squirrel Rd., Auburn Heights, $150 month. Apply Sat., Dec. 2, _3_to_5_pj^. ________ MADISON HEIGHTS, 3 BEDROOM, 10% DOWN’ NEW HOMES 4-BEDROOM COLONIAL, 21/. baths, Alumavlaw windows, ^car brick j^age, pantlad family room, ST* J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor V) mile west of Oxbow Lake 363-6604 10735 Highland Rd. (M $50.00 DOWN TO QUALIFIED VETERAN NO OTHER COSTS IN THE CITY Drive by this older thret-b< n $135*.. RENT OR 2 BEDROOM UPPER, CLOSE TO -‘--*s. FE 2-2665. ' LEASE. OPTION TO' home. Loon La|-»«*r*nct and d ily, 363-6310. ices re- and it near downtown. Located ______ at 26 Sanderson. Turn left ON to' Oakland. IN THE COUNTRY " n Ortonvilla? This 2- . Orvsl Gldcum Rentol Equipment 2 BEDROOM, STOVE, REFRIGER'.;WARWICK HAS 3 BEDROOM ator. alr-condltlonto^ ^ |,trprMI.®i: "sio'wMwkk; MONTH. n6;--- t. It Is 0 lUt Ortonvil s Road, n FE 5-9333 aft. Rent Rooms *for‘'you br'ick’^hwii' ownlro w°h? sarlicas."condro.'*'Fr 8-044* | "^ltohlng''^utom^^^^^ mHc are tirad ot painting your trim gACKHOE. LOADER WORK, DRY-i « W- Montcalm. 332 9371. Jack and would Ilka to have If cov-i wells, septic fields, lootings, doztr ..“.i:.--ered with booulllul white alum-1 work, IIIL 482 3042 or 334-8948. RoofinO nf'T.ion^al lhir"j?hn°S ^^Oorh??!'! SEPTIC FIELDS,'dRY WELL, U Ti.ibV;Billed cirMKin srinPiNr. IN -------- , ‘ ____ — - -____ I AAA fencina 'new roofs for old. hot ^ * I roof-shingies, 24 hrs., free es- Drive ou 1 timatt. repair roofs.£E 8-1725. j iQUALITY ROOFING. NEW ANDi fona, loi _______OR 3-8304 or OR 3-29$6. _ PAINTING AND DECORATING'. Ll-I ... rIalTY,"^2-^’ , p^uumu. mc. mMM 62*^21 •*^’*|QUICK CASH f6r“^UR“HOAe.'2 BEDROOM, PATN-YmG“-^b^ORATlN-G ___________ 'small farm or vvb’obs with a roSjms a. bath, deposit re'-Ij room bachelor studio: your I ^ENN?NgT' Iw, .p.rlm.nt,,no cooking. 234 Mech.n-1 luLATEa tomljy, Grand WIchi-, rooms, PRIVATE, ALMOST IN I _gan^call 474:5900. -----, Ponllac. FE 4-2t3l. j ------- _ - ' cno vniil^SJoFicrv ua cha 2 ROOMS AND BATH, $25 WEEK. 64________________________________ Upholstering 24-A or other for quick action fe 2-9077^ Iclean s'lee’ping rooms, fe I CAl L NOVV HAGSTROM REAL- 5 ROOMS, NORTH SIDE, AGED FURNITURE "" Reupholslered, better than new at unW BFAI TV 3 ROOM UPPER, PRIVATE 'EM i FE 2^002. 49 BUILDER'S CLOSE OUTI,. LAST MODEL FOR SALE 3 BEDROOM RANCH $950 MOVES YOU IN. 500. 2 blocks from St. Mika's Church-, 25 Kemp, Pontiac. FE 2-4283.________________ BY OWNER 1 lot on Fox Lake. 2 lots on Huron River. 4-badroom home on 2 tots on Huron River. House CLARKSTON-ORION RD. feat 3 bedroom aluminum bunga-ow, full basement, large lot, soling lor only $7,900. Torms. Call YORK att occupancy, 1 WALLED LAKE AREA Beautllul new 3-bedroom ranch, full basement 3-way bath, 2-car garage, t-year warranty, $1200 down, Immedlolo occupancy. Frank Marotta S Associates. COMMERCE TOWNSHIP ! bedroom honeymoon cottogt, a ached garagt, slluatad on th YORK we TRADE OR 4^343 Drayton Plalna Crestbrook MODEL OPEN DAILY 12-8 3-bedroom, family room and 3-car garage, priced at only $14,400 plus lot. Located In new sub with paved ^ly'water.'*Drlve*^ut*M57^*Cr«F cant Laka Road, turn right to Crestbrook Straot and madal. GIROUX REAL ESTATE Jll Highland Road (M59) 473-7132 EQUitY IN 2 BEDROOM HOME, off Elliaboth Laka Rd.. vacant. Conas, FE 8-4442. Ic^FEJL^^ FIRST IN VALUE RENTING $78 Mo. Excluding texts end Insurence ONLY $10 Deposit WITH APPLICATION 8-BEDROOM HOMI GAS HEAT LARGE DINING AREA WILL ACCEPT ALL APPLICA* TIONS FROM ANY WORKIRS* WIDOWS OR DIVORCEES. PEOPLE WITH CREDIT PROE* LEMS AND RETIREES ARE OKAY WITH US. OPEN DAILY AND SAT. AND SUN. )l 120x100. ranen wiin tum large famlly-siie kitch-*nt location by college. I. Near lake. Only $1,700 d draperi^ III 335.: Let u 9 yourl --*- Christian < rlred Kaiser dealer PONTIAC FENCE CO. Aipnon raving 5,3, di,i, Hwy. 623-1040,'rerool. Bonded male. . ‘ ~ ' 1 timates. Reas^nabje. W2-7514. I '“wOMACk roofing! rero'of 'Complete ins, coverage. Free I FE'2-5>i9.... R G SNYDER," FLOOR LAYING Sond—Gravel—Dirt i iIRTHDAY CAKES, SPECIAL OC- sanding and finishing. FE M592, ««». TH!- a-, bulldozing, ^_f,_^n^. shed ,ass dally. Call 482-5802. Member and dep. 674-0821. MulllpleJ-lstlng Servjce. _ i ' AMERICAN HERIT'agE WANTED TO BUY FOR CASH, APARTMENTS I repossessed and condemned houses. | 1 and 2 bedroom, all modern Auto Driveawoy | 'pr,»*B« c’^I:! meWeTto' ' WITH KITCHEN vileges. Located In Auburn ights. 3063 Greenwi^. NICE ROOM. CLEAN, REF., DEP No drinkers. 14 Charlotte. FE ‘■ room for QUIET CLEAN MAN, 2 35H. Iroquois Rd. W. Side, FE RIVEWAY SPECIALISTS. FREE Estimates. FE 5-4980. Bokeries Floor Sanding carl L. bills SR., NEW AND York, Flori Virginia. Sh^ . .CC licensed. 2314 Da-Bldg. Detroit. 965-3456 Apartments, Furnished iii.j AAA American Driveaway I m°7p ’ 3365 Watkins Lake Road iROOM FOR GENTl'EMAN, KITCH- lanager on Premises 673-5168 «n privileges. 334-9450._ ■ BLOOMFIELD ORCHARDS i G?™roi''HS.pttJ!‘YE*'8-^^ APARTMENTS 'siee'ping room, man only, Ideally situated In Bloomlleld Blr- Keego erea, $12.50. 482.0408. mirtgham area, luxury 1- and 2- SAGAMORE MOTEL. SINGLE OC- 0 Grand Rivi , TV, telephone YOUNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER BILT Russell Young, 334-3830 I doors, patl 0^24-^?^* 7 Douglas St. FE 4-3IBI evenings.| 1 BEDROOM APARTMENT IN PON-I tiac, laundry facilities, $20 weekly. | UL 2-1105. r 3-ROOM UP.: Hot point family P* WOMAN. CONVENIENT TRANS- flreplact .. . J basem itifully landsa f garage I contrac Only $1500 d< Lot 75x350, •I. 693-6157. Snow Plowing .ASSIGNED RISK AVAILABLE FOR * ! Hempalead. Barrett and AssocF ^334^4724 IBS Elizabeth I Deer Processing ^JeOMPLETE DEER PROCESSING.! Brjliw* •, 625-2546.1 Quality w Service . 63 Poplar < " ! 2~RbOMS“WITH'BATHrCLOSg ‘>elor employed days. 335-359( )MS AND BATH, CARPETL_. nice, completely turn., West , adults, no pets, $120 r* dep. FE 5-- DOMS" A >. Clean. I foV*i'd fJSlelS'Ilrc'^.Td Z: . . ^3 Rd"?1»lween°0^dyke''‘'and'^l%5^'l'- I OR 2 GENTLEMEN, EXCEL-pressway. Open daily. 9 to 8 p.m.l l«nt meals, lunches packed FE Sunday, 12 to 8 p.m. For informi 335-5670, LOOKING FOR ;ury apartments. 'NICE QUIETj •at? Prefer Gen- 19 Matthew -I room and BOARD FOR YOUNGI ssher garbage 'disposal ___ \ "?reclrlc*^*hea*'^Vurnl5hed*Rent Stores 46 furr.'shed. 3440 Sashabaw. South of; rd'rp.M'ri74-3V3ii. jeYemb^^^^ j O'^IN ,|r TOM REAGAN REAL ESTATE _N Opdyke 332 Beauty, Rite Homes , 7 MODELS FROM $20,140 REAL VALUl REALTY For Immediate Action Call FE 5-3676 642-4220 FOR SALE - BY OWNER k ranch an 100' x ft car atfaciMd ga-d driv* to blacktop I cabintt In dining araa. I living room with built->r and book caso and firo-i/$ bath — larga bafh car-a and bulll-ln vanity. Ona :atod near Williams Lake a luiet dead-end llreet. $27,500 :a4t) lo mortgage. 2293 Carlos III Hatchery Rd. Shown by app Tient. Phono OR 4-3495 aflor 5 Frushour $800 DOWN Located South sido ot Pontiac — this dandy 4 room housa has full hasemenf. amt heal and nico larga land conlracf. Call ________________-Auburn B.k. Floor THing *;.dri„?°"crMax"coV, *«.4^“ A A A-1'CALIFORNIA'CAR arias, 1175 Baldwin, Pontiac. 3337 iAwr, Voaupi *aiT" kiNDs top CARS WAITING. Auburn Rd., Auburn Heights CUSTOM FLOOR COVERING. L1-i *'-,!-eeF 5 5700, Delroii. 18018 Wo.xlward Boats and Accessories j y;i'’rp.Jr."'FE'y-iiw) ! pncfs, mst delivery, 673-0049 _ Insurance 26 ^ ! 741 N. Perry Ft 2 4UV0. WELL ROTTED COW MANURE, «« BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER | Holiday Portios " ........ Your family boating headquarters. rh*.n'ak;'7ni?TMr t\ai holiday parties 1265 S. Woodward at Adams Road, Church groups, bonquels. parlies tor 1-A SNOW PLOWING, BY JOB ORl Ml 7 0133. 25 or less. Call lor reservations. I »»»«nn. 332-4993 or 852-2872. i« . p -„ . „ $18 per wk. end up. 322-8201. Brick A Block $ervice JACKS DRIVE IN 1 ® 2'rooms, clean with private . ..... ' I ”^wnuv“prnvulwrr^AND'ToVV SERV-^°“'’‘-ETE DEER PRO( • RICK. BLOCK, STONE, CEMENT__________ ----ICB s MS4 StKV , g Princeton. FE 4-31: "work. Ilroplaces specially. 335-4470.! Jontioriol ServicCS —t V t • * ' ^ __ FiitF^ACEs, written"^guaran Tree Trimming Service deer process: also IM. EM 3-4079. JANITORIAL AND WINDOW WASH-' I M4>SYS:303I ! i2i'dep-Fr5.0m, COMPLETE REMODELING "'‘”TaNITOR SERVICES.'~'^ Tabl^^^meY'sL ^ 25-2120. ^S?inTOd“^cul'* .lde°Ctoln Bo?inas?*wo^an'''noF J O'^iN Includiog loke-privileged lot. _______________ 'aAA tree service by POR-' $10 PE V-S™?.' *" *"*'’'’“■1 smoker. $65 a month. 335-5944' I required^FE 4-2847. ; 20 x 50 modern store Ideal 2 lake frOtlt hOmeS reody fOE 5^2* Williams Lake Rd. : orVow"*"’’'""' ’ tor°°«tos^t''°fle"^^'FE7^^^^^^ Lusin'^s'""''' °'pie'n7y 'T par\7n'’g immediate occuponcy. Model 674-2245 “a?d^emova*^"roS^'E5V'T-n04S’''NN^^^^^ AND ' FREEZER 2 "CLEAN''^ ROOMSr''QUTET"^^^^ Private enlrance, adults only 4642 F'-rmiMr. o? 334-7T74 ' wrapped. 1 day servlet. $9.00. 204 ®"'V' ■ ,.,0 .ccv CACT A JOHNSON 8 SONS ----- ------ -- - •r^LEA-ATiAir--al3rs-1^ Auburn between Rochester and 2-ROOM UPPER, BABY WELCOME. EMBAbSY tAbI Realtor Wellman. 338-0314. REMOV- p 052-5305, , $20 wk., $50 dep. FE 2-6464. APARTMENTS 11704 S^ Telegraph Rd FI Wonted Household Goods 29 ' on. bedroom, .ir conditioning, $130 Rent Office Space 'ran or pels, 335.| " ‘ ... todfly. It won't prico $5900. TRADE NOW FOR THIS DANDY - 3-bedroom ranch with a lamlly sized kitchen and 2-car garage, located West of Pontiac on a 100x300' lot. $15,500 — $1550 down plus costs. 'Addlflons—Racrealic Attic rooms — ------------------ - Siding an at IS. aaginew GSM Free estimates Corpantry A-l INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR HJi';!°TLld"'llIr"^'lumlnum ‘‘'’™r%ltch.Vs,'b.*hroomr*slM;i<025 O.^ ________________ on Airport Rd. at Pleasant Trucking LIGHT moving, TRASH CASH FOR FURNITURE AND AP-'_7942. Dr., 1’/2 miles north of M59. ' »33 Call 674-3136. licensed. Reas. Call altar 5 p Moving ond Storage Pointing and Decorating A-l PAINTING AND __ islImates^OR 3-1044. HAULiNG AND RUBBISH.'^NAME your price. Anytime. FE 04W95. LIGHT HAULING AND MOVING FJ 5 7443. LIGHT HAULING, BASEMENTS, jltra^s claanr- ' rooms, cabinets,'A-1 PAINTING. VliORK GilARAN-l rubbish, till , __________________ 674-1242. EE„4-_8344 light AND HEAVY TRUCKiNG, AiiAbxM.I »ii airi grading and grav- CARPEN't'RY AND'PAINTiNG ___Niw and repair. VI331 fARPENTRY, NEW AND REP^ Free aslimates. 335-4H9. iNTERldR finish; KItJhENS ! pantling. 40 years axperlanca -j ................ FE 2-1235. __ . PAPER HANGING Vyddb ART - INTERIDR DE-THOMPSON sign, lamlly rooms, cat'"-** bathroom vanities 473 2976 ____________________ _ rmniint Work 'Charles painting - decor ' T.yrl, Rental L-emeni morn ATING. Best quality malarial and irut« nuniiii workmanship, 332-1971 I expert PAilimNG“ANb>APER/P _ . EE hanging. Call Herblo, 67W790, , 1 TUCKS TO ll©rit «MENT WORK B,'^*l!i,t 'VT.n Slake ________OR_4-3247 ______ gujhy FE 4^54$. UL 2-3190. I YJJ®com|5wENT * LOCK AND CEMENT WORK'gy^LlTY VVORK ASSURED P'AINT- Dump Trucks - Seml-Trellers n,3 ... «„him,. 473-1 form and ~pianTtuiiTna~ I Industrial Tractor Co. riono^iimg ........125 s. woodward 2 NICE ROOMS, ALL PRIVATE -- - - - ____ I Everything lurnished, $23 week, CASH FOR GOOD USED HOUSE*! $30 dep.. FE 2-4012. 3® 871*' **'**',’ "all TYrtS OF CEMENT WORK : OR 4.”‘’ ' fTb C K AND C _Ponllac 391 tin. Cement and Block Work j <■7477"'’ ’ ^°'**'|^“‘Eves^°39l.2471 West Apartments. 5367 Rd , Walertord Twp. , LAK^ FRjJNT^^^DUPLEX, I BED- lor le ____________ Tt^ENTS ' _Lar'r°vHrep«kr;M-3iB4. In Rochester NEW COMMERCIAL OFFICE CEN- Ing down to Gl. Cell &TaUCTI0N N«orai."d. pvt. ________________________ Hwy. Ok 3-2717i only, $25_wk.. $25 d«p. 338-7462. WANTED: HOUSEHOLD I T E M 5, 3 ROOMS AND BATH/DEPOSIT, good ond bad. 334-7891. rpfarenca. $24 per wk.. Vicinity Wanted Miscellaneous 30 ... ' thing furr^lshod, FE 2 2946. aiinquei^^quam^^^urnifu^^^ ^and^ AND BATH. ADULTS --- **' “ Ballow. Holly, 637-5193 5366 CoOley Lf MIXED NEIGHBORHObb.' CLEAN, ------- (-g,, lo calls alter 5^30 p m. rooms' AND BATH,I RADfATbRSi Drtwmafcing, Tailoring ALTERATIONS. ALL TYPES, KNIT dresses, leather coats. 482-9533, BETTY JO'S DRESSMAKiNO addings, alli Driven Plastering Service PLASTERING. FREE ESTIMATES. D. Mayars. 343-9595.______ Plumbing B. Hi lavettroughing MBS GUTTER CO. COMPLETE -----*—‘iighln- "• 67M866. Licansad - bondad Electrical Contracting •LOOMFIELD 1 Rental Equipment BROWNIES HARDWARE floor SANDERS-POLISHERS wallfaper steamers . BLUE LUSTRE 5HAMPOOERS FE 4-144J motor wonled._473 7985. O^'nJJolly Inctodlng Sun<‘ ' ^ Water Softaners _ ^ >5849. PIANO, grand: ‘ ipa. 682-1343. SILVER CERTIFICATES. i-6 HORSEPOWER GAS! FIshar Body, coupla < refrigerator, utilities. Adults I from 400' t il for Bart .. 8.000 s. Beauty Salon. Plenty of | trapes and garaoe....... ipproved ref. required. FE 5- NEW LUXURIOUS APT. Offkr --- - ^.'731 8400. new office building, 290t K idrimi Auburn Rd. Auburn Heights, 2800' chHdren.i central heat and ondltiontng, carpeting panet- FE 8-9693. etighted ® POSSIBLY 4 BEDROOMS, _ ________ alum., nom tiding, w*'*-“■ ir Drayton, lit floor 2’/2-car garaga. ‘lec. stove ana ov , gas heat, 75xl< wn ^n^land cotnra GAYLORD INC. I6'X25* 0F-| 3-ROOM, PRIVATE BATK ADULTS, ' 78 Norton. r8lori.‘"c.''"DU- 3 ROOMS. PRIVATE BATH AND . A. l36o’raMer5:'o6''p. NEW UPPER ‘DUPLEX, '3 20. SIL- 3“*ROOm: private: BATH," EN.j elL*"kilche?* wl'lh* e'“toq'33 5. Gold FBI Jfance, FE 5-8446, 118 University. J.,,® relrigeralor. electric .love 3 ROOMS, PRIVATE BATH, NEAR dishwasher and disposal, carpetad r..k„ ._k„ ---------------------------- .... -ci..,' |hroughout, atlachad <"’ \7 it 'f.l HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty a I OVER 1 ACRE no COMMERCIAL COMMERCE RD. SALES AND RENTALS BUY RAW FURS AND DEER 13 ROOMS FURNISHED, PRIVATE sxins. Ed Herrington, 7744 24 Ml. enlronce and bath, heal tur-Rd., DISCO, Mich. I children or pels. FE 2-2416. Apartments, Unfurnished 38 Apartments, Unfurnished 38 ALL CLEANERS. guarantoad. Inturad. FE 2-1431. Weil Drilling Want Ads ior Action Grand Prix Apartments 1-2 Bedroom Apts, from $125 Per Month Inc. Gas Heat, Water, and Corpeting e Private Pool ond Recreation Area • Huge Walk-in and Wardrobe Closets • Insulated, Sound-Proof Walls • Electric Kitchens • Ceramic Tile Baths • Private Porking • RCA Master Antenna • Air Conditioning • Aluminum Sliding Windows 315 5- Telegraph Rd.-Pontiac See Monoger Apt. No. 1 Phone 334-7171 tilding HAGSTROM, Realtor j ■we5t'Waiton'BTvd."Ca'irOR-'''b'iVie Hwy.'OR 30355. ^ OH* EVES FEi^s L"'*' " .... ------- « -----*?358 ____EVES^FE 4-70q5| basamant, gat near, aiiacnao ga bed- Rent Business Property 47-A BARGAIN ^aga. Prima Invastment. 124' 0. .V.r.L"®:?rj'., vrcrrs''®''XED AREA - 5 ROOMS ANd' tlTsST'" 2 cX 96 BUILDING IN KEEGO. rath _ AUTOAAATU' mi:at _ wr.wu. 682 3542, 682-2227. EXCELLENT EAST-SIDE LOCA-! Everctt Cummings, RBoltor ° 30,000 SQ. FT. BUILDING WITH TION - LOW DOWN PAYMENTI 2583 UNION LAKE BOAO . 18 ft claaranca, and rallroAd aid- on f ing. O^tjaM Raalty OR Closa to Shrin month, adults, no p I and all ~ 25,200 SQ. FT. ON LAND CONTRACT i EM 3-320a 343.7181 WRIGHT REALTY I ~ ------------- 382 Oakland, EE 2-9141 __Cash lor al]^lypas id propwty | ________ ____ !?• l-^rga j Irapat, $23,9«). Ml Prlvata antranct, loundp^, < pating, fireplace, air conditloni Patio and balcony. 8175.00 and EM 3-2058 Apt. 144 Sumit V Court.________ ___ SYLVAN ON'THE LAKES T A 2 bedrooms fenm OR J57-4300. Annett Inc. Realtors E. Huron St. 3384)466 ffice Open Evenings 8$ Sundays * ____ 3 ROOMS AND Va block from Ooneral Hos refined lady or gentlemar •king couple^ 335-9(08. Rent Houses, Furnished 39 HIITER llroplai carpal 4-4345. BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP ' room, garaga, t ......... ... Orchard Lk. Rd. ampla parking. Call 343-3140._ IN rDyAL oak, 3400 SQUARE tort shop area, 1,0(10 tquara feel oil ices. ExcellenI location lor wholesale-retail distributor and _etc._398-3454:_aft^ 4. 2-^4. WILL BuTlD TD SU'ft TENANT, C-2 Cpmmarclal Property. Walton Blvd., Opdyka area. fi.O. Box 3532, Pontiac. Mich. I Sale Houses 49 ? “car garage, im- 2-BEDROOM HOME, CLARKSTON ,____lion, Drion Twp.,1 schools, llreplace, lamlly room, month. A. J. RHODES. FE Immodlole postastlon — $10,900 arzjiw. — land contract. BeDrODm m o B i l E home, sms UTILITIES FURN. FE 0-4442 DBIa 425-9013 2' beDrooms, $135 PER MO iiiio 3 MODELS OPEN ............................ . DAILY AND SUNDAY paneled living r 585 ft. lot. Cell YORK WE BUV — 4-0363 I Dixie H $12,200 we BUILD • renchert with oek i in beth, full beiemer On your lof. To m. _________ cell B. C. HIITER, REALTOR. 3792 Ellz. Lake Rd. in-tOiO, r* Brown DetWhit. After 5 . 628 1402. :3-BEDROOM, $125 P>u» depo»it,~'chii-dren vrelcome. 674-1619. 13 ROOMS, LAKE ORIONg DEFOStT, ref., 693-2826.____________^______ 3 BEDROOM UNTIL THE 1ST JUNE r S100 mo., 1100 dep. 682-B3a. Drive out M59 lust west of Cass Lake Rd/ to Candelstick. Directly behind the Dan Mattlpq^iy Business DAN MATTiNCLY FE 5-9497 t & Builder 0 will buy a Dutch Colonial ...... _ .,. „ ramie bath up and a half-bath down. Thera are oak lloors inroughoul and a slate loyar House leatures a fireplace; tul basement, and , a two-car ga rage. Lai us build this ona oi one ol your lots or ours. Wi 1, gas heal. Quic I, Ol FHA rooms and IRWIN OFF SASHABAW L arge 2-badroom \bungalow with Ks heal, carpeted Vvlng room, full sement. extra larM kitchen. Ofv MULTIPLE LT$TfN»$l D—12 TIIEPOXTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 29, 1967 HORN OF PLENTY bucmantii •ttictied 2-car SCHRAM FAMILY SPECIAL 3 Iar0« bedroomsr king size tiv heat'^'^BIg 2edroom, baaamontp brick front $17,400. LOT INCLUDED Double-glazed windows with Kretr Hardwood floors, built-in rang# marble siHSe ceramic tlla Phone 363-5801 or 882-8804. NO WAITING, 82700 DOWN eludes all closing costs. Nom bedroom ranch and garage, basement, Orion area, V9,t^. I son Bldg. Co., OR >81jH. OWNER TRANSFERRED Hills Schools ai Phone 332-7747. OWNER . Lotus lake, 4 bedroom attached m stall garaga, Ing, draperies, bullt-lns, L. _, extras, 3531 Percy King Dr., Wa terlord, or cell 674-0H2.______ IMMEDIATE POSSES- many OXFORD VI .... . _ garaga, large tract terms. $2000 down. GREEN ACRES 1469 3. Lapatr Rd. La OXFORD AREA. COZY RAMBLING RANCH, or 3 bedrooms ei way, 3-car garage, '/i acre far—" value, $23,300. BEDROOMS den, breeie-large patio, yard, axcallant WOODED HILLTOP - ax.. . Early American ranch, large tam-lly room, 2 wood burning " places, 3 bedrooms, scr porch, Bloomfield schools. SNYDER KINNEY 6c BENNETT RETIRED COUPLE. IF YOU OE-sire a nice comfortable home away from the city. Inspect this 3-bedroom log exterior home N. of Bey City on paved road. Lake privileges, enclosed porch. $7,300— $2,000 down. NEAR FISHER BODY and Pontiac Underwood Real kitchen with colored bulll-arpetlng, exclusive type y. Must be saeis to be Lauinger CLARKSTON KHOOLS - You i luckyl We have 2 homes In I Clarkston School district. Imme ate occupancy. One Is e lak front on Welter's Lake for $22, 300 — other has V privileges for $12,300. LAZENBY $450 DOWN utility. Oak floors througl ___ _______ exterior, tflcely _____ scaped lencad yard. Northwest Pontiac. Only $13,900 ROYCE LAZENBY, Realtor pen Dally from 9 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. 4626 W. Walton - OR 6-0301 LONG LOW RANCH ona of Troy's batfer subdivi localad-has axcapt basement.' Priced ef 123, 300. HURRY CALL cupancy. PHA approvad. Ownar Agant, 674-1649._______ MILFORD Spacious 3-badroom vie mansion In baart of Mllfoi _ valuabla cornar. ^Z farms. DC HOWELL Town & Country, Inc. MILLER AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR STOP, LOOK AND YOU'LL BUY this "SHARP" 3 badroom brick In new condition featuring carpata Ing room, tiled bath. Lovely fit . basmi with finished rac. room, large cornar lot, 2 car garaga. Ready for lha particular buyer. $17,430 on land contract. 4 BEDROOMS, ACRE OP LAND. West Suburban with lovely ranch home. 12x18 living room, lovely kHch-en, 12x22 femlB room with flre-plece. Tiled beth. Full besmt i " rec.^room. 2 cer gerage, fenced 81,000 DOWN NORTH SIDE Doll house. Ideal for couple beglnhli retiring. 4 rooms, full besmt, ell heat. 2 cer gerage. Nice with lots of trees and shrubs. 88,300 on land contrect. FE 2-0262 «70 W. HURON OPEN 9 MODEL HOME down or trade. CROSS REALTY AND INVESTMENT CO. S487 Sashabew Rd. OR 4-3103 MODEL IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY Open 6 fa 8 Thvrsdey end Friday, 2 te 6 Selurdey end fui AfflBrlgan Ranch, brick an 2-car garagi bafhs. Therm » windows and 6' tr. Furnltura. finl PRESTON BUILT HOMES AND REALTY RHODES $. IMARSHALL. Nice 2 bedroom home, full basement, gas heat, 1'/i car garaga, blacktop drive. 313,323, low FHA farms. 73 ACRE FARM, naar Davlsburg, W. WALTON. Nice 2 bedroom brick home, large sunny kitchen, oil heat, 60' shaded lot. Only 810,000. 82800 down, balance S7S per month land contrect. A. J. RHODES, REALTOR FE 8-2306 238 W. Walton FE 3-6712 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVIPE Lk. Rd. Brick 3 badroome, ivk baths, carpeting, really very exquisite Has fireplace, 23' family ro 18' kitchen, plus full siie b ment, attached 2-car garage, I on 90' wide landscaped kit In C. Schuett EM 3-7188 8800 commerce RD., UNION LK Warden MACEDAY LAKE PRIVILEGES Newly decorated sparkling 3-bcd-room rambling ranch on large in quiet Ing f I $1,: NEAT AND CLEAN Almost new S-bedidom In Waterford Township c street. Vacant and wall Wideman * WEST SIDE-iFHA •room homer 3 bedrooms and dei Large dining room. New kitchc cabmetSr baement, gas FA hea Large garage. Immediate po session. ONLY $375 DOWN. BET TER HURRY! WEST SIDE Two-story home featuring 3-bedroom spacious kitchen with nets, also new bath. Basement, gas FA hi garage. Central High flee G-- - ' General APPOINTMENT. EVES. CALL CALL FOR WYMAN LEWIS REALTY FE 5-8183 SYLVAN HOSRES ory and one half ’ih’w.T«. rrMlPng" oms on first floor. Screened rch. Gas heat. Vacant. CLARKSTON AREA Three bedroom ranch, large lot, auto heat, tile bath, in nice condition and vacant. Abobt 8738 moves you In. NORTH END story and one half frame, corner lot, garage. W«U *o well carpeting. Electric heat. Terms. Eves. Cell Mr. Castell FE 3-7373 By Dick Turner THINKING OF SELLING OR TRADING HOMES OUR ESTIMATE BEFORE YOU DEAL - Call Dave Bradley, Lao Kempsen, Lee ....^ ■ Bry- Walt Lewis. Elaine Smith or Bob Harrell for - PROMPT. EFFICI-ENT SERVICE. 1071 W. Huron St. After 8 p.m. call Kerr. Thurman Witt. Dick Bry- FE 4-0921 401-0923 DORRIS FIVE-BEDROOM WEINBERGER. Pleasant Lake Woods Is the location of this well constructed brick ranch home with first floor family room with fireplace plus a basement recreation room. Fabulous gerage and e the*’ "eke*prlviTeged *park.'°$2^^^ APPLE PIE CONDITION and house-wllely clean, tastefully decorated and you will agree It has real class and value at 117,930. Spacious 3-bedroom brick ranch home situated on a beautiful one-third acre lot In excellent west suburban area with blacktop streets, sidewalks and a wonderful lake prlvi-le^ park. Sparkling family style ‘Then it’s resolved that since the world is piling up problems faster than our present committee can handle them, that we enlarge the committee to four members!” Sola Hovsm Mattingly VACANT IMMEDIATE POSSESSION 3-BEDROOM, basnnent, 3-cer g rage. Lake Neva. Priced to tv ACRE clarkston AREA. W X tSV 830, mo. NeerFW Open Sun. Blom Bros. 623:im Ft 4 ------ 6.6309.’5640 Dixie Hwy. Water 5 ACR£S-$3495 Clarksiton site. 80 TO 800 ACRES in lower MIchlMn. Delry, gijliv beef or tagsl Name your *#rm needs, *e ,n»vo 0 at ,«"• « "Mlchlgen'l" Farm Reel Eelete Coldwetw, Mlchlgon. Dele A. Oeen Write or Heedouerters - Deen Reetly Co., or 517-200-0127 - 3-BEDROOM, basement. Sliver Lrte „,turel priced CLARKSTON HOME SITE -l=^^fwnTT^r^r’ lOO-xISS' wooded lot on paved mad U R I R|r)(,K with natural gas. Easy terms. Sec. ■‘A'l' I A iaaxv_aj_i rifice 3 BEDROOM, BASEMENT, Cendle- 2 LOTS, WATERFORD j • - . will teke your present city water, lake privileges. Both, trade. I 02,495. , , fRFCfFNT lAKF ROAD call US to buy or sell your LKCbLCm LMAE RUMU ACREAGE. WE BUY FOR CASH ANYWHERE IN MICHIGAN yg BRIAN 623-0702 3904 Dixie Hwv.. Waterford 10-50 ACRES. WOOt>Ep„mYER frontage, Mr. Fowler, EM 3-9531, EM 34003. _________ 10 ACRES FOR PRIVACY,,PLEAS- wall to wall tached garage, 533,000. TradS i WATERFORD TWP Uively 3 from WHMsms Lake. yard. Only a large fenced tured tached 2-cer garege 'witn oreezs way and priced at only 819,200. DAN MATTINGLY AGENCY 682-9000 - OR 4-3560 - OL 1-022 CLARK APPRAISED FOR 813.900. 3-BED-room brick to 61 In Northern High area. Hardwood floori, plastered walls, family dining room, fenced yard in rear, shrubs, full basamant, gas heat, garage. Only mortgage costs and move in. ICE REDUCED TO $27,900 OWN- ARRO! GILES TED MCCULLOUGH. Reoltor taka your pres- IMMEDIATE POSSESSION. ZERO Smith. FE 2-2144. L ACRES - 52,000 CASH, celleni ; 5-2161. excellent hunting. Call 140 FRONTAGE ON EOMORE ^ Drayton *----- 673-3IHe. AT ROCHESTER . . acres with plant age. Ideal tor r visit able AT LAPEER of Flint. 240 J. Beautiful setting, Vt frontage, 02Z300 down. "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" EXCHANGE FOR THIS ORCHARD INVESTMENT cres with 2244 fruit trees a he city limits i Delicious of the ngw slrable end product type". All equipment bldg. I 0. deli age barn and refrigeration. We recommend It as an exceptional value at the price of 0110,000 with easy terms or exchange. 14-4431-r MILTON WEAVER, INC., Realtors In the Village of Rochester IIP W. University______________OSI-0141 ATTRACTIVE 100x150' LOT WITH Pine Lake privileges. Terms - owner 073-3400.___________^_________ CRANBERRY LAKE ESTATES AT M-15 and 1-73. Repossessed lots 100x150'. Nothing down. Teke over payments 045 mo. Open Sun. Bloch Bros. 623-1333. FE 4-4309, 5660 Dixie Hwy................ ASK FOR BUSINESS GUIDE PARTRIDGE REALTORS 1050 W. Huron FE 63501 Open Wk. NItes til 0:00_ of SMALL FARMS — ROOM FOR —les and kids. Art Daniels lly, 4705 Washtenaw, Ann Ar-GE 4-1008, HA 6-5033. DOWN TO G.l. bedroom home, carpeted room, large kitchen, ' galore, dining space. gleaming x24 covered I. gas prica 7 examining _ _____’ end a half Excellent CASH FOR YOUR LAND CONTRACT OR EQUITY SPOTLESS 3 BEDROOM ranch, aluminum siding, storms and screens, large lot on blacktop close to grade and lunlor i, Waterford Twp. ■ $1X950. young Terms. 1 3 lakes, itty Pine Ideal tor carpeted living room 12x17, jviLS jors, plastered walls, handy.------ PHONE: 682-2211 5143 Cass-Elizabeth Road _____ OPEN DAILY 9-9 brick, ona 4 apartment, alumi-j N. Saginaw. Total year $^15,322. Satlin cent land contract. HORSE LOVERS 2',b acres with newly painted 2 story barn. This won't lest long. iRIAN 623-0702* 5904 Dixie Hwy.. Waterford HORSES ALLOWED 10 acre parcels from $8995. Spring-field, Commerce Twps. Terms. Open Sun. Bloch Bros. 423-1333. FE 4-4509. 5440 Dixit Hwy.. Water- CLARK REAL ESTATE » W. HURON ST.. FE 3-7H8 FE 5-5144 Multiple Listing Service I Income Property______ 50 moves you 2 FAMILY NEAR WEBSTER Ardmore mo- gage, HOWARD T. KEATING school. Assume 5^ per < gage. $18,000. 885-5354. 3 FAMILY INCOME - 1 1 bath. I — 4 roo 22060 W. 13 Mila. 444-1234 NEAR CLARKSTON Approx corded SeleJBoiliie^^ 120* FRONTAGE ON COR- of Blai calm. J Terms. 30,000 SO. FT. BUILDING with. 10 MS9 PLAZA AREA 20* X SO' cornar store, immac possassionp 814.900 - $3,000 d< Holmas-Bartram 4392 Dixie. Drayton Plains MIDDLE STRAITS LAKE. 4 ROOM 3 bedrm. 2 story on 1 acre plus lake front lot. 1'.^ baths, fire- 128.900. 343-5921. $13,700 on FHA t th gas f a 2-car ROCHESTER SUBURBAN - 3 BED-room rancher. W acre lot. * r^. $14,900. Nix Realtor ROYER OXFORD Older home. Nice Early American lines. Sharp Inside. FHA or Gl terms evellable. First time ottered. WATERFORD TWP. 3 bedroom ranch. Fenced yard. 2*/^-car oaracM. Huai place In new lor quick sale Sharp church! room. Priced CLARKSTON lome near schools 3 large bedrooms. Ca- Spacious New Homes 85 ROSS Save ot todays prices Ranches Colonials Split levels Tri FROM $28,700 INCL. BASE LAKE PRIV. LOT LAKELAND ESTATES On U.S. 10 (Dixie Hwy.) just 4-10 Mile North of Walton 8lvd. Phone 623-0670 STRUBLE EXCELLENT LOCATION Lake front, 18-room, ivs acros, scenic selling for this roomy Held' burning fireplace, h?S*ov TEL-HURON AREA This neat 3-badroom horn# ona to see. Nice carpeting in MILO STRU8LE REALTOR 674-3175 TUCKER REALTY CO. E. Pontiac,needs repairs. pest 28 MM825. UNION LAKE AREA 2-bedroom homo on large shaded lot, close to shopping — — NR. THE MALL The Rolfe H. Smith Co. 7168 Office upon 9-8 storms end Kioane, Cycio No welting qualifying, total payment of 881 pal Owner's egent. 876-1698. Village Home MIepheng 673dilt. Easy walking distance to churches .and shopping. Ritcne end lamlly room paneMd. LIvIn room, dining room, parlor or fitl badroom. All naw hardwood floori 4 bedrooms and fun bath up, U bath down. Basamant, torcad al hast. On larga shadM vlllags lol 819,508. Tsrmi. t. PANGOS, INC., REALTY OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 638 M-15 Orton CAIL COLLECT NA 7-2t15 VON Comfortable and Cozy Lovely asbestos sided ranch home, with a 15x24 living room. 2 nice sized bedrooms. Gas hset. Pontiac Northern district. Carpeting In living room and hallway. Beeutiful covered patio with barbecue. Built In 1944, Only $12,900. VON REALTY GEORGE VONDERHARR, Realtor n the Mall MLS Room 118 682-5802 If busy 6^^5800 // BUD" NORTHERN HIGH AREA 3-bedroom home ell on one I good condlMon, large kitchen dining area, full basement, floor, gas heat, electric water, aluminum stormsL S16.508.00, STOUTS Best Buys To(day DETROIT 80UND? First offering tractive brick HALL HOME - wl family room looKing lownsend Lake. Aisc dry basement. This home ii end St. $4,000 OF HOLLY down'. Ml 6-1432. „ ^--...11... Claude McGruder Realtor ildwin Ave. FE 3-6175 ANNETT STORE BUILDING, 40x90, REAR| yard fencad. Laaaed now for $3001 par mo. Full prica $24,900. %\\M0 cash naaclad to mortgaga. Cail 473-1198 bafora 5 p.m. j which ara claarad. Appr ly 1,000 faet on tha Sh______________, River. Sultabta for club, ratraat, church camp or baautiful coun-’ PARTRIDGE "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" CHOICE X-WAY EXIT M ff. of frantag# by 179 ft. daai aifabta. Tarrific vaiui lit only. 117,400 witi Ifi lima for actia - NOWI A TOP LOCATION STORE of Ovr_ -....... Starting Soon I DRAYTON WOODS SU8DIVISI0N CLARKSTON AREA with approx. 2 acri ranch try k" ,e ffai floor, IW car rage, also 2 — 16x28 ban property. Approx. $3,888 will you In. Cell tor moro dolalls. CLARKSTON AREA — new ; ed garage. 1W car garage. Close to bus I line A stores. $12,800, forms. side of Pontia IS A bath on first rooms A bath oi , Full basement. Garage. $12,500, le New luxury, 8 unit aport- ON DIXIE HIGHWAY ment buildings far sale.' i-«. "ot i.r imm Gr.nd Required cosh $28,900, bal. mortgage. For full details call 674-3136. Model at 3440 Sashabaw, S. of Walton 8lvd. lor muttlpla or hlgh-Ing. Excallant opportu-commtrclal dtvalop- OTHER ACREAGE AND Lake^roperty 51 ^50' FRONTAGE, CITY OF SYLVAN' 4 BEDROOMS Walk to Oakland Univartity B. HALL REALTY aawar. Gas 4549 Dixie Hwy. 9-9 daily 425-4114 >avad drive --------------------------------------- Priced oasemanf with attractive pan-i tied rac. room with fireplace. Lots nicely landscaped. Double carport. $23,500, terms. that offers a larga < at a prica you ca In today I PRICE REDUCED TIMES trective ering lemll Ottowa Hills Brick Attractive home In excaiient condition having a 24 ft. fam-main floor, also rn "WILDERNESS VALLEY" 10 acre — family cabin siti :alt replica of 4^000 acre rati LR with I LAKE PRIVILEGES «• ■•v.iory. 3 i.r» 1 Oeklend Ofler«l with this S-room ranch -*■ _'!«« .“r«7'lc ' this el-1 '«>"'* ®" * 100x1 tir lot with the tItlon^Tn!i ol*"sW?’toryoir"Mur.*'l?erd?n* ^vVtem"?’ end cut. Fesh new_c,rp..-| This prlvecy. T’j?‘''u5 J‘’i'*rSJ'.f“r'^:g fo pTeUe hSH'^REALTOR^ZS E. HurOn^sT^ j Office Open Evenings & Sunday 1-4 !I5 OFF UNIVERSITY DR. . U BEDROOM | 338-0466 seven room end _ beth one-storyj CojonhU^ In^^me^ ^ heat, finished family ro fireplace, 2-car attached Phone — Write for Map - Brochui GEORGE WILLlNofON SMITH AAA 4^2925______ Franklin Vlltaga LAKE LIVING, PONTtAC 15 MIN-i LAKE PROPERTIES AVAILABLE Davlsburg ____ 313 43* “ _____ Calls ___________ SOME DOCTORS SUGGEST IT WE RECOMMEND IT YOU WILL LOVE IT COUNTRY LIVING ACRES, a large cornar i UO' of blacktop road, 44l Qraval. $4950. Terms. 0 ACRES, hilltop view, noi OrtonvHla, naar naw propoM prasswav, $5995, $1,000 down. cation. For on Investment or priced right for quick sale on ASK*‘fOR business GUIDE PARTRIDGE REALTORS 1050 W. Huron St. FE 4-3581 _ Of*EH WK. NITES TIL 9:00 ROCHESTER INDUSTRIAL ' for industrial TAYLOR MICH. LAKE FRONT HOME THE CLOSER YOU GET, THE BET-------------- 423-1333, FE Hwy. Weler-j„ ACRES, wooded, scenic, icclud-' -.$7258,15 will consider a trade. UNION LAKE il building on Cooley Lake Rd.. 2.880 sq. ft. of building suitable lor many commarclel or office inai. Part can be used for living quartors. 129.980. BATEMAN COMMERCIAL DEPARtMENT 377 s. Telegraph 338-9641 _______after S cell 23X8188 SALE OR LEASE, m ACRES IN-dustrlal with 1804180 gallon storage tanks with pumping stelkm. 1580 square feel office and scale. 39S- 3656. after 6, LI 2-9li6._ VAN DYKE FRONtAGE, SOS' 1 from shopping center, north of Utica. 52268 VanDyke. Cell eves.. ' 731-8688. Warren Stout, Reoltor N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-81851 ............Ing Service ; tll8 CASS LAKE 50 FOOT WATER FRONT Vary attractiva 2 - b a d r homa, with laroa living firaplaca, carpating, sun kitchan and dining combii "S BATEMAN paymants 885.00 par month j«. A -i—JXV ^ eluding taxes and Insu Movain today. NICHOLIE^HUDSON ' equ,ty ,5 CASH TRADE YOURS Dally I ""BUZZ" "SAYS" full ranga, 2'/^ baths with caramic tile, lake privileges on a bathing and fishing Taka. This vary attractiva homa Is of brick and ofii?ino” GRACIOUS LIVING Is afforded you with the pur-chase ot this sprawling ranch In the Clarkston area of-I bedrooms, 2 to celing fire- O'NEIL WHY NOT TRADE? VALUE WITH COMFORT AND PRIVACY lor a quick sale. Located only 3 *— Clarkston "" - taring lull bel fo wall*' carpeting, rage, fenced yard, perfection and mai 69 University Dr. FE 5-1201 ofter 6 p.m. FE 4-8773 Val-tJ-Way OFF BALDWIN Do you nesd a 3 bedroom home with lull basement and a new 2i>y'.r iio,* 3661 S. Upoor Rd., Lake Orlon| y.V'*'*’ 3-ACR^5*'BEbW55ir-^ Warden Realty ?ip. H*Wll£lt B^ **"'^'*'‘3^. W. Huron, Pwitloc 333-7157 ---- [MODEL BUILDINO-sFX'tO'rpruS upstairs 25' x 12', lots ot land lor «'"• M»o "O' Ml.* NEAR HOLLY Jual off DIxIa Highway of Ml. Holly, 2 mlloi from 1-75, beau-tllul 3-bsdroom brick ranch wllh 3 fireplaces, slats sniry, welkoul lovnr level, beeutiful wooded, ’,7 car gerage, lake end goH course privileges, $31,880, farm: svellsbis. 1117 acre horse farm. 3-bedroonn home, lull belh, ell furnace, unfinished family room, ivs-cor go rogo, 35' x » mafol polo barn, good lances, bsaulllul woodid wl-fing, 8Mi sorts tillable, 810.680 with MCNAMARA REALTY Reellor «3M8*2 ItSOoTMlIferd Rd. A SCENT OF FRESH COUNTRY AIR HOME - S ACRES jly'rpem, llvlnj^rooimllcor’i_ C. PANGUS INC, RBoltors „9r>N3DAYI AWEBK 30 M-IS Ortanvill CALL COLLECT NA 7-3115 Pontiac Press Want Ads ARE FAMOUS FOR "ACTION" Phone 332-8181 8srv*r.i!! ss? ri! TEXACO S!!?'*. Mfvict it»- l^i-75*;iXX Cltm- iiwm gaiionigq, for In- WANTED Trash and gsrbsgs route wllh or wllhoul h^ckt. 651-9513. EMdTiMHructB 60 ! 1 TO 50 j „ iAND CONTRACTS noodod. loo us boloro WARREN STOUT, Rtoltor 16» N. Op^ t«. >1 Mia Opon Evot, 'HI I p.m. THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1967 MONEY TO LOAN - FAST prices on close-out fabrics. Expert workmanship. Phone 335-1700. . DEACON'S BENCH, PAD $35, OF- t tice desk $J5, best offer takes built-in TV cabinet, record player, modern all alum., screen 33'xll' porch. MY 3-$279._____ EARLY AMERICAN COUCH, $50; elec, range, $2$. FE 5-4350. ELEC. STOVE, $35; GAS STOVE, p what have you. 353-373$. 4-WHEEL DRIVE FORD WITH snowblade and power wrecker for VW or $1550. FE 4-14»5._______________ l-FOOT WALNUT BAR AND Accessories. Sell or swap for Early American TV, or 33r^2^____________________ FREIGHT DAMAGED BEDROOMS and living rooms. Save almost holt - LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE, Baldwin at Walton, FE 2- 1943 DODGE DART, 4-' running condition wl $1*3 trade tor good i Moving, 401 West Hi HAY BALER AND SIDE DE-Hy^reke. For sale or swap. fiOT ROD FOR MOfORCYCLE. After 4 p.m„ OR 4-35*0. Sit FURNACE (rtR PARTS), tank, 173 gallon No. 1 oil. Gas water healer and tank lor tram-pertetlon car, or ??? 603-4540._ WANTED - OLD'ER USED FURNI-tura, books, dishes, misc. tor cash. 3*1-3367. F. Clerk._______ OVERSTOCKED 35" RCA COLOR TV's Save $130 Call or see Bob Adock, Firestone. 146 W. Huron, FE 3-7917;___ $35; Refrigerator cessorles; SW rec. 300 KC-30mc, FRIDGIDAIRE ________ stove, $50, electric dryer, $15, 334-3051. GAS APARTMENT SIZE STOVE, REPOSSESSED STEREO ONLY mos. old. Solid state 40" walr. console. All transistor, no tubes to burn out. AM-FM radio, 4-sper" stereo phono. Must collect $1*3. cash or $13.50 month claims. J' 9303, Household Appliance. He Chef, brand new, tSO. 363- WANTED. RCA COLOR TV NEED-Ing ma|or repairs. 623<0S24. ZENITH —“ -• GE STOVE, 30", 120. 4220 JOYCE St., Drayton Plains._______ HOTPOINT ELECTRIC STOVE, May tradec FE 3-3933. Record player needles hard to find? ---------II kinds 45 W. Walton t in TV-PE $-4569 ir Baldwin 1 RED AND WHITE FORMAL SIZE 11 ‘ petite. ^1 green “jjlj worn* very llftle end In good cotv dlllon. CallljllerJ,^E 5-7461.____ FTEAtHER COATS, BLACK AND brown suede, sizejiS long. 33^9020. GIRL'S DRESSY CLOTHES. 7010 Terrell, Waterford on Lotus J.ake. Muskrat jacket.' size io, $5o. Also ladies clothes, site 10-11. EM 3-3633. _____________________ FERS'iAN lamb coat, $65. SABLEI Squirrel stole, $$3. Lamb trimedi cloth coat, $33. Mink collars, Dresses, $3. Man------- ------ 15 Hatchery Rd. HOUSEHOLD SPECIAL $20 A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OF FURNITURE - Consists of: •piece living room outfit with living room suite, 2 step tabl< cocktail tabit, 2 table lamps (I) 9'xl2' rug Includad. -pleca bedroom suite with ORGAN, WAL- TYPEWRITERS; UNDERWOOD, $25 nut, 3 yrs. old. FE 4-0031.__________ branbac baby grand, $300.' $39.50, desk, $25, swivel chair, $6.50. 3nz le the lively one. CREDIT TERMS AVAILABLE KING BROS. PONTIAC RD. AT OPDYKE SNOWMOBILES EVINRUDE ON DISPLAY *'‘66 demos Walt Mazurek LAKE AND SEA MARINE FE 4-9507 /E BUY, SELL, Browning - Win Injtor.. upuyk* V THE GREAT SNOWMOBILE SCORPION to perform anrf anrtura rugged terrain. IDER E4--- ORDER EARLY AND SAVE STACHLER TRAILER irge. $35. ________ _Stralhmore._ KIRBY SWEEPER EXCELLENT CONDITION -FULL GUARANTEE skirt, size 14, 55; and mIsc. 636- made to order, roping TOWN & COUNTRY MOBILE HOMES CLEARANCE SPECIALS Ideal for deer hunting ci NEW UNITS _ irkdO” Suncraft ................ " 13'x6cr Suncraft, colonial . $5395 d---------- - ..$5300 iS'kio* "Homecraft ' USED UNITS 10'X4S' Suncraft 1966 .... $3900 lO xSO- Suncraft 1966 .....$3350 13 x53' Suncraft 1966 .... $3450 DELIVERED AND SET UP TELEGRAPH AT DIXIE HIGHWAY 334-6694_____________ WATERFORD SALES EXCAVATING, REMODELING 1967 Custom deluxe, in' x 4r. 1-badroom. Completely lurnishad. At a bargain price. 6333 Highland Rd. (Acroaa Pontiac Airport) PICK-UP TRUCK CAMPERS Over 25 different models to choos from. Check our deer hunter's spe ____CJtnin^ts onjM-21 PICKUP COVERS. $245~ 10'6" cabcovere. $1,295 an. .. T 0. R CAMPER MF6. CO. n Aiihiirn DH Hin fu'El.m", SMALL SPACES AVAILABLE. ON ...A^t- --iiiing dis* . 330-4429. 1100 Auburn Rd. PIONEER CAMPER SALES BARTH TRAILERS 0$ CAMPERS TRAVEL QUEEN CAMPERS MERIT FIBERGLASS COVERS (0"-;7"-35" covers) ALSO OVERLAND A COLEMAN 3091 W. Huron_________FE 23909 SALE HOUSEHOLD AUCTION WITH SOME HAND TOOLS --- SPORTING EQUIPMENT iMi'^nTI Sat. December 2nd, 1967- ]0:30 a.m. Inventory Reduction Located Vi mile south ot the ><; ................ main Intersection In Metamora to j* ' ................ 4133 S. Oak St. Sale order - Hand >», P™''' , ........ “'J;* tools, sporting equipment then 31 .........??'2J household. )0 rooms of good turn- z< Boies;Aero Ishings plus shop and garage, cold Spot refrigerator; Kenmora 4-burn-ar electric stove; Cold Spot 10' deep freeze; Kenmore --- busline and with ___________92 650X14 USED WHITE WALLS and wheals, $15 for both. 00M33O. antaade ExctI Paint t klBtorcYclat 9S 1954 TRIUMPH T-100, 500 CC, 600B condition, 5300. 335-3705, 1966 HOnBa sport, 160 CC, liAU. nore wringer lype -I humidifier, Ken- 1»'^_ Frolic, S.C. tr; Dvolherm oil » V .. $1,195 are ttlf-contained TRUCK CAMPERS iiiiw ......... .............. $ r- SEE THESE VALUES TODAY I Also 75 used campers and Iralli more Oehumidifler space healer, 3-ple.,o nivuv," « room suite; Westinghouse 19" po table TV; Dacca portable elactr record player; Empire 6Vi h.M. i • ■ garden tractor; 3 rotary lawn -r -i r i mowers; Sears cement mixer; JoCObSOn Trailer SOIBS I’X.rfi.mng'’ .Tu'lpS' 3'^gu';: “«o«rM?n.Frl* - ~ racks plus much more. (Dress! 'J®.!! f warmly) home sold. 1st National,------- Bank of Lapeer, Dryden “--------*“' - Clerk, Mr. and Mrs. W. Day • Proprietor 9 to 6, Closed Sundays_ SALE! - SALE! use/4 mite north Cedar Lanr -m, 0970 DIxl 71-A tCCORDION. GUITAR LESSONS Sales-Servlca, Pdlaneckl. OR 3-5596. iblnets. 693-6430. Sporting Goods Congr^att il fill dirt. DR > Wood-Coal-Cokt-Fuel 77 WELL SEASDNED MIXED HARD- 74 Mike e world's terson. 141 One!' SATURDAY DECEMBER 1, 10 A.M. Wayne Most Farm and Home 11211 Green Rd., Goodrich Details here on Thursday Contractors Equipment - Shop Stan Perkins Auctioneer Swartz Creek a—4sa, tRAVEL TRAILERS Your dealer for — LAYTON, CORSAIR RDBINHOOD, TALLY HO 20 new end used trailers In stock ALSO CORSAIR PICK-UP CAMPERS NEW SERVICE DEPT. Ellsworth Trailer Sales 6577 Dixie Hwy. WANTED*>TR'AVEL TRAILER, THERE IS NO OTHER AUCtlON Every Saturday 0 p. n Land - Auctio THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2 P.M Arnolds Restaurant G-3306 S. Saginaw, Flint npiete set of fixtures Including naker, soda fountain and Ireezei rkins Sale Service Auctioneers WE CARRY THE FAMOUS Franklins—Crees Fons—Monitor ThunderBird, Ritz-Craft Trovel Trailers . 3100 h Squirri BELT VIBERATOR, ORIGINALLY $BJ. 530. 651:0003^_ ___ ' BLOWERS FOR SNOW 13 STYLES - $99 TO $378 McCulloch chain saws Dad'i Ideal X'Maa Gift $99 up. PORTABLE FUEL OIL HEATERS HOUGHTEN'S POWER CENTER 113 W. UnIvariltY 651-7011 ___DOWNTOWN, ROCHOSTER BRACE YOURSELF FOR , I 10-SPEED SCHWINN BOY'S BIKE IN EXCELLENT CONDITION. EXTRAS. A GOOD BUY FOR CHRISTMAS. $55. CALL AF- 5,V GUNS- 730 W. HURON. 134-7631. ^•f*'Munling Dogs tTS^V^robb^cH!^^ POODLE, V, COCKER, BLACK, Livostock 83 Skamper ond PleosureMofe and trailer. 391-3BM. _*'•> ___ I ComDers-7 & 8 Slcepers ■|96B"EVrNRUbE^SNOW'MbBILES“ I UTTER OF POODLES, WILL, 2 YEAR OLD PINTO FILLY v.umpcia Avaltob e to 3 blQ Hold until Chrlslmet, black, $40,' 391-1331 I , ... . track, wldalrack, and widttrack' ______________________ 3 LARGE BOX" STALlS F E'e'd Holly TrOVel CoOch alec. Demonstration rides In the lA SCHNAUZEIK, POODLES, GER- and grain, twice dally, 638-4355. 15310 Holly Rd. Holly, ME 4.6771 Scatmobile, the new land snow v^ man Shephards^ tropical fish. Pel, ^^5,--ALSO 3 “GRADE ! OP"" Dajily, " horses, lady's English Jodpur suit. shampooer, $1. Hudson's I. Rent electric 3-9767. BEGINNERS BANJO, LIKE NEW, BRITANNICA, FOR CHRISTMAS $145, $5 down, $5 monthly. 363- HARMONY GUITAR AND TRAN- stainless stainless coffeemak... wv..xe. ......... ..... placed before Dec. 5 FE 4-4013. Disf le dresser, $50. 620-, .SEWiNG MACHINES formica chume table, with likej»ew. 60^352.____ 9x12 Linoleum Rugs $3.89 Solid Vinyl Tile 7c ei. Vinyl Asbastos tile ........... »»- bilaM Tile, 9k9 . « Floor Shop-3355 Elizabeth Lake "Across From the Moll" 1$ CUBIC 'FbOT“KEMbRE“F RE ET •r chest, 313V 333-3433. _ - - blond tables and 1 <------ lariv't wintar C( 010. 3L_____ lo" OLECTRIC STOVE, 0000, CMItlon, 636-3067. ft" TAPPAN GAS "range 359.95. Frigidaira relrigernlor, big ireez ar $69. Others from $39.95 3 pc. living room $39. Gas dryer Ilka ntw $69. Wringar washar low as $34. Baby crib! $$.95. Bedrooms, chasis, and dressers. Lots of usod bargains at Llflle Joe's Trade-Ins, Baldwin ot Walton, FE 3 6343.____ 116 CUBIC FOOT FREEZER, Colonial living room suit. I sew-Ing machine, captains chalr^ other items, call after 6 p.m., 394-0312. tf66 PRIOIOAIRE REFRIGIRaToR, ------ chroma dlnalto. Singer Slant Needio $ Notional and Cab. $ ' ......I 1967 Singer and Cab ..... SI White Dial-A-Stllch, new . $1 Tlg-Zag Port., new.......3 Many others at similar savin HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE 465 Elliabath Lake Rd. Pontiac _____________335-9333 _________ SINGER DIAL-A-MATIC Zlg lag sewing mechina ~ In modern walnut cabinet — makes designs, appllctoes, buttonholes, ate. Repossessed. Pay olt. $54 CASH Or $6 per mo. payments Guaranteed Universal Sewing Center _ FE 4-0905 ___________________ SINGER MODEL'No. 66 Be.iulilul cabinet sewing machine. Will sail on new —e«r 9fii' 1, $05. FE 5-5954. _ E C t R i C SAWj CAMERA; | j.jON ■■ ...... _Ho^lst 220, 3 phase. ^E 0-3017. |aIR compressors. LUBR 1C a-I _£all_OR 3-1696. _ ENCYCLOPEDIAS, EVANS '14' 8g-,r''r.'ri.?!_____________ A-1 ELECTRICALLY CONTROLLED hoopUal bad. 333.7679. APARTMtN'T"siZe REFIRGERA-_wool rug, _13xLL jotono, 3 _____ Take M 59 to W. Highland, Right on Hickory RldgoRd. to Demode Rd. Left and follow signs to DAWSON'S SALES AT TIP- ------------ wwx ^ 629-2179. A-l SNOWMOBILES' Quality, priced right for you. HOUGHTEN'S POWER CENTEI, 112 UNIVERSITY 651-7010 DOWNTOWN ROCHESTER BOWS AND ARROWS-434-6349 GENE'S ARCHERY-714 We HURON SACRIFICE FOR $7. CALL PAIR OF MENS SIZE B. Twin beds. .... e^ream 3*13, tw MOVING. 12' ALUMINUM BOAT, 3.6 horsepowtr 0*3, plus hcusabold goods, 6MFM64._______________ MOVING: MUST SdLL BUMPER PPOl l*RI*' bedroom sat, living »» M> 5ST : S||'N-|lb-A"C( 1710 S. Telagraph lIvliM roam 047. End tablas 013. Couch U*. Swictn Phyla living. . N,*7wni. ' ■ >665 EIIUbaM Lkr Rd. riRClAL PHOTOO-... JONOVANI That'-OVXN, 3(71 N. Adams ipH^hl ............ gj, SJ*B^m"* .V.' ■ SALE - BABY FURNI- housE.holdappliancj„^| iSS;a^r'wrr!!rLaii’'K.!-' Usad organs, choose Itom. Prlciid January 1363. Sea iliesa "Rafora . .. ........... FE 4-0566 A mila south al Orchard Lake Rd. Dally *:30* p.m. - Sun. 'Ill 5 p.r _ _ Closad Sun_ POLARIS SNOWMOBILES Parry's Lawn B Gardan, 7615 Hlgh-land (M-5». 673-6336. A ) pISCOUNTS Layaway All Musical pifis *------'-------vChrhtiTO way All Me claf l-ow Pi Prlcai Ni PONTIAC MUSIC II SOUNP SKI-DOO SKI-DADDLm Snowmobile BUY NOW AND SAVEI CRUISE OUT INC. U 63 I. Walton Daily h* FB HAS s. 651-05 MOra,J43-*55l. 1966 fbPPEffTM'xl*"', 3 BfeDRbOM, central air conditlor'—-------- many axtrat* Troy ... fer. 609-4109 after 6 p 1966 RICHARDSDN GLENHAVEN i; 3-MCtlon drag; 3 cat-lart. N. of Rochatter* _ -CLEARANCE SALE ON USED TRACTORS AND SNOW 1*64 VVINDSOR, 40' X 13' I^ULLV -------------OR 4-23 3:30 p.m.___________________ AKC PEKING'ESE POPS, FAWN with black masks, 334-1647.____ AKC REGISTERED TOY POO-ill6«* male end female* 0 wkt.* ihotB* very reat. Romeo 752-9479. AKC POODLE PUPS WITH PA-- - , 335 a- - ■ AS LOW AS $150 s selection lo cho< KING BROS. 163 FE 4-0734 __. jntlae Rd. at Opdyka Rd;_ FARM"'ToyS, JOHN DEERE AND New Idea parts galore. Your Hame-llte chain saw dealer. DAVIS MA. CHINERY CO., Ortonville. NA 2J_3*3. ____________________ FARMALL CUB LWOY TRACTOR WITH SNOW BLADE HYDRAULIC LIFT, ELEC. ^ STARTER, LIGHTS, ETC. 37*^ HOUGHTEN'S POWER CENTER 112 W. UNIVERSITY 651-7010 DOWNTOWN ROCHESTER FERGUSON TRACTOR WITH" I weam, 835, 336-0731. AKC POODLES, “APRICOT AND •• •■ ‘‘a, malt and lamala. FE 3-0312. ENGLISH SPRINGER SPAN- ), KE 7-0415. COCKER SPANIEL PEbiGREE, mornhj^SSO. M5-I097. COLLIE PUPS, AKC"REGISTERED, 4 1793.*" “*’■ COLLIE ‘puppies; AKC. SABlESi ....... ................... Ford. 31,195. Casa Tractor, loader ond back hoa, *3,195; Corn pickers, 3100 each; HD-6 Alice Chalmers, good under carriage; 310 (Joxar new undarcarritga, 13,195; HD-V Dozer, tarth brtaker, good undai carriage; TD-* International, goat under carriage, I2J95; John Deere 3010 Dazor. (ikr ---- —'• —— Deere 4040, II Crawler, loader ol usad Iracto will trade for ; Casa 310 T-dryer. Many a ting* car vnia, B BUY NOW AND SAVE TROJAN'S OWENS SLICKCRAFT Inside Display FREE WINTER STORAGE s trade Bank Ral MIrrocralt booti, L. -.. ___ws, Evinrude motort, Pamci trallara. Taka M-59 to W. Highland Right on Hickory Ridge Rd. N Demode Rd. Lott and follow aigna to DAWSON'S SALES AT TfPSICO LAKE. Phone 639-31W. iNsibE winte'r storagM KAR S BOATS A MOTOR* 405 W. CLARKSTON RD. LAKE ORION - MY 3-1601 SAVE NOW-ACtT PINTER'S "Duality Marine Merchandise" STARCRAFT-THOMPSON-MPO JOHNSN MOTORS-SNOWMOBILES STORAGE-TUNE-UPS N. Opdyka 9-6 PE 46)9B (1-75 at Oakland Unlvarilty Exit) Best Mobile Home Sales Open Doily—9 a.m.-8 p.m. Mariattj Champloi Royal Embatiy Rtgan Squjrt ADI BT,c CPxrPwr DISPLAY FREE DELIVERY At WITHIN 200 MILES.. SPECIAL 2 ONLY - 1960 Champlont 12 X 60' — 04995 ON DISPLAY AT: Cranbarry Laka Moblla Homa VIMaga 120 Highland Rd.* pay more for tfiarp, late mod-cars. Corirttfes needed. ttSO lOaltland at Viaduct , / 33»-92»l_ AAU. AOl BUT BIG PRICES paid for late model cars. Gale McAnnally's Itew uirt U«id Tnicb 103 1M7 FORD 'A TON RiCKUP, ]S0« miles. Custom cab, Untad wlndet|fs, radio, V-$. Sell or swap. OR 3. 1964 Chevy Pickup Sleeps 4 with cooklnp and kitchen a beautiful outfit. Complete price includlnp truck only — $1695 BILL FOX CHEVROLET 7SS S. Rochester Rd. * OL 1-7000 INTERNATIONAL, 17M WRECKER. Holmes twin boom equipment. $950. 398-3456 after 6. 11 ^9104, JEEPS - GOOD SELECTION OF TOP $ PAID (Downtown Store Only) for oil .sharp Pontiacs AND CADILLACS. We ore prepared to make you a better offer! Ask for Bob Burns. WILSON CRISSMAN WANTED SHARP CARS!! We pay TOP DOLLAR IMMEDIATE CASH On The Spot I All Mokes and Models OR WE WILL Trade Down! SPARTAN DODGE 855 Oakland Ave. YOP S FOR CLEAN CARS OR trucks. Economy Cars. 2335 Dixie. "TOP DOLLAR PAID" GLENN'S FOR "CLEAN" USED CARS ta W. Huron St. FE 4-7371_______________FRjt'rw WANTED TO BUY: 19M OR IW Tempest LeMans, Spoi HO or any one of i ____ -^rt model <81-0110. We would like to buy late model GM Cars or will oc-cept trade-downs. Stop by today. FISCHER BUICK 544 S. WOODWARD _____647-5600 ■ WE'LL MAKE YOU A BETTE R~ Offer on your used car — SEE DOWNEY OLDS, INC. ISO Oakland Ave. FE 3-1101 JwBk Cg|»TrBcks 101-A 1, 3 JUNK CARS-tRUCKS, FREE tow anytime. FE 3-20M._____ 111 JUNK CARS, K*.Y FOR SOME COPPER, BRASS; RADIATORS; starters and panarators, C. sen, OR 3-3048.______________ JUNK CARS WANTED. FREE TOW WANTED JUNK CARS OR TRUCJCS Used Aut^Trvcl^ Parts 102 1851 PONTIAC STATION WAGON, 1850 Pontiac hardtop. 1857 Pon-tiac hardtop, 1850 Dodga 4-door M5 E. Pike St._____________ T863 408 ENGINE, S4J5 H.P. FE 5-1502 after 5:30. ______ REBUILT FORD ENGINE, FITS •35-'52. 383-8500 after 3._ USED ENGINES. TRANSMISSION, ?j|;s!^); aai:' New and Used Tracks 103 1838 DODGE PICK-UP. GOOD CON-ditlon. new liras. S190. 583-1302. 1850 FORD I'/i-TON STAKE, M rubber, runs obod. <02-1410, 8 a 4 p.m._____________________ 1FS3 M TON CHEVY PICKUP, Qpdyiw*^nlwiiy' FE K505 ■ I8S4 CHEVROLET PICk-UP, UL 2-2748. 1855 DODGE TANDEM WiTl yard Yeager mixar. 0475. 38I.3455, altar 5, LI 2-8104.____________ 1857 CHEVROLET PICKUP, GOOD and sound. Btst ofttr. 1524 Bald-twin;_________________________ 1858 FORD VI. LONG BOX. NEW snow tires. Good body and anginr New paint. First tUi. FB O.5043 1850 FORD 2 TON STakE TRUCK 1962oFord Dump Truck 5 Yd. 4>ipMda tranamiMlone 2-tp«fd axN OnJy - $1495 BEATTIE ''Your FORD DEALER SInco 1930' On DIxlo In Wattrford •t thb doublo stoplight 6234900 \964 JEEP CJWfc^WINCH, SNOV plow, ovardrivt, hubs, radio, factory cab. PETERSON JEEP. <54-4511. _______ van. Good shapa, 525-5578 i p.m. or FE 5-7H3. 18^ OMC VAN FE 2-5d Con ECONOMY CARS 5, '65 Fords. Dodges, VW's . . .$1095 — "ird . .$19.—'59 Plymouth $75 ea. '61 Rambler—'56 . $75 ea. I Others to choose—reas.—few trucks 58 Ford $75 . . $75 First $50 2335 Dixie 1960 FORD GALAXIE. hardtop, V-$, auto., t tng. Call 682-3129 1960 f6R^~TTa tion WAGOtti, real good. 682-9223, Riggins, dealer, 1961 T-BIRD. $725 674 2807 1961 FALCON, $97. CALL MR. DAN al: FE ^407^, CAPITOL AUTO, 312 W. Montcalm (lust East of hardtop. $497 full price, LUCKY AUTO Star Auto 4-2131 1965 FALCON CLUB SEDAN. AUTOMATIC, RADIO, HEATER, WHITEWALLS, FULL PRICE, $985, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Assumt weekly payments of $9.23, CALL CREDIT I MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. New md Um4 Cm "l06 MAR» DO YOU NEED A CAR? GOT A bTfkillLjqSto, PROBLEM? BEEN BANKRUPT? bra kasd niiio, haa^. prM. See It. ms. coln-Mcrcury, 1250 Ookl 7863. & fclandr 1962 MERCURY Meteor 4-door sedan, autematfe, V-i, power steering and brakes, one own- $745 Bob Borst I Llncoln-Mcrcury S.l« 478 S. Woodward Birmingham____________Ml 5-4i3$ 1853 COMET 2-DOOR, 5 CYL. Automatic, a red beauty. $585. JACK LONG FORD ROCHESTER__________ OL 1-8711 1853 COMET C. CLUB COUPE. $485, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Assume weekly payments of $5.B$. CALL .CRraiT ardtop. All ilua vinyl ini nd brakes. interior. l>owdr >*8^110 heater. It's a dandy. 1!l,085.'^ Hlii: side LIncoln-AAarcury. 1250 Oak-land, 333-7243^______________. 1855 MERCURY MONTEREY TWO door hardtop. Sunburst gold with matching Interior. Automatic, radio, heater, power steering and brakes, air conditioning. A one owner beauty. $t,485. Hillside Lln-^-Mercury, 1250 Oakland, 333- top. Automatic, power steering end 1855 MERCURY MONTCLAIR TWO steering end brakes. Real at real savings on this one Oakland, 333-7253. Nm«R4U*t4Cm lOSHow aiMl Um4 Cm 104 1855 PONTIAC 2-POOR HARDTOP, automatic, power steering and brakes. $1387 full price. LUCKY AUTO 1840 W. Wide Track _ _ PROBLEM? BEEN DIVORCED? GARNISHEED? REPOSSESSED? NEW IN THE AREA? Call Mr. White at FE 84080. King. 1965 PLYMOUTH ury 2-door, radio, healer, I eutb-latic, betge with matching Interior, niy $995 3IRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 1965 PLYMOUTH Sport Fury, power, bucket automatic r $1485 only transmission, $48 do payments of $11.82. HAROLD TURNER BIRMINGHAM 1966 PLYMOUTH Fvry, 2-door, $ eulomellc with . OTmT^'^ISrr^nVTL Hillside LIncoln-Mercury, 1250, >1595 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 4) S. Woodward______^ 7^4 147 PLYMOUTH FURY III 2-door hardtop, torque flight, double power, radio, whitewalls, covers, 5,700, have warranty 1855 MERCURY MONTEREY TWO door hardtop. Automatic, radio, heater, power steering. 10,000 one owner miles. Sparc lire never used. Slmolv ooroeous. S1885. HKI-1250 Oak- land, 333-7053. 855 MUSTANGI HARDTOP, WITH Vt, 4 speed, radio, heater, red with black vinyl roof, A-1 condition, full price $l,an with $$$ down and $58.02 monthly. I John McAuliffe Ford I 30 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 1250 Oakland. 333-7863. LIncoln-Mercury. FE 8-4071, CAPITOL AUTO, OLOSMOBILE 1966 LTD ! Hardtop, power equipped, automatic \Ar-YrT7ol ^/^r-tfr-trc; transmission, radio, heater, while- iVlQl V t?l IVIU lUl b I price $1885, only $48 i nd weekly payments ol $14.82. HAROLD TURNER 1852 Ford convertible convertible . _ .1 1841 Comet 1840 Chevroli 1842 Corvair All Al. 847 Oakland Avenue $487 BIRMINGHAM , $1450 - 1855 FORD FAIRLANE, |! 2^lr. hardtop. 208 V-i, 3-speed, ! good condition. Must sell. FE red Interior; 1843 T-BIrd, tan, tan _lnle^j.M2;;24W._____ ___________ 1863 FORD GALAXIE fUDOR, $550.1 1853 FORD FAIRLANE. 3-DOOR. 5 automatic, white with red Inter- I lor. Excellent condition. RONEY’S _AUTO, 131 Baldwin. FE 4^480^_I 1963 FORD Wagon 1966 FORD n 500, 4-door 8 automatic ra-Mtar, power steering, only $1395 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 251 Oakland ; V-8. auto., power steering, tires. Royal Oak, 546-3711, 5:30 p.m. ______________________ TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1963 OLDS luxury sedan. automatic full 335-9436, Hart.______________________ 851 PONTIAC PONNEVILLB 1965 PONTIAC Tempest LeMsfis, V-2, a powr steering end brakes, radio, Iwefer, ell vinyl trim, reduced to; $1395 Village Rambler 666 S. Woodward ' Birmingham 646-3900 1855 PONTjAC CATM.1NA ^TWO brakes! heater, power steering f;: ■ sengcr double Ish. $18L - greaves. Ivory tln-" WS HAR-at Cass THEWS HARGREAVES, 431 Oek-tand Ave. at Cass, FE 4-4557. 1855 PONTIAC EXECUTIVE SPORT coupe, automenc, double power, new tires, $185 down. MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES, 531 Oiklend Ave. at Cass. FE 4.4547;_________ 1855 CATALINA STATION WAGON. Hydramatic. Power slaaring brakes, heavy duty brake drums, springs, second battery, elr cush. loned shacks lor hauling heavy loads. 583-4128. ____ many others, tri-powar, I, $500. 0 tomatic transmission, Ing end brakes, $1287 ft .- LUCKY AUTO 1940 W. Wld« Track 1963 GRAND PRIX, 1 OWNER. Extras. Blua. AWtr 5, OR m385. 1963 PONTIAC CATALINA 2-DOOR Full power. Rad Bast offer. 334-571; GO!! HAUPT PONTIAC $2595 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 55 University Drive FE 3-W54 AND Save $ $ $ $ $ er, whitewaila, from the north^Ctarkston_________________625-5500 1963 PONTIAC ^DOOR HARDTOP, M15, Clerkston, MA S-5071. 1963 OLDS F-85 DELUXE SEDAN, V8, auto., radio, heator,, power steering, new snow tires, 1695, OLDS HARDTOP, POWER, AUTOMATIC. RADIO, HEATER, WHITEWALLS, FULL PRICE $995, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Assume payments $8.92 CALL CREDIT MGR. Parks ---------- ---- Marvel Motors 251 Oakland i Only-Si 095 Spartan Do(dge 6-4538 TiSEwf' HARGrSTvE^431 "cSlT- land Aya^t Cass, FE 4-4547._ 1964 FORD ^-8 GALAXIE, VERY 682-9223, Riggina, MjjW735^___________________ 1967 GOLD CHEVELLE. 6 CYLIN der stick. 2-door sdfan $1795. Call after 4^P^ 0^*W7^ ____ 5 TO SELECT FROM 1967 IMPALA 4-DOOR HARDTOPS 4-OOOR SEDANS ver steering and brakes, auto- "*"$2295 MIKE SAVOIE 1800 W. Maple Road Troy, Michigan 2 miles East of Woodward___ AL HANOUTE cnevrolel Buick On M24 in Loke Orion MY 2-2411 MILOSCH' CHEVY 4 XL HARDTOP, AUTOMATIC, BUCKET SEATS, RADIO, HEATER. WHITEWALLS, PULL IT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD ___TURN« FORa_MJ_f750q^ , 1964 RED FORD GALAXIE CON-vartible, axcellent condition, $875. 1964-T-Bird Hordtop 2 door h power steering, brakes, wirv 1966 MUSTANG Hardtop, V-a, automatic, power ing and brakes, special trim. $1995 Bob Borst LIncoln-Mercury Sales 479 S. Woodward Birmingham_________________ 1844^0HD^OUNTRY^SQUIRE STA radio, *lieater, power *‘>toeHng! brakes, chrome luggage rack, beeutlful Ivy green with simulated John McAuliffe Ford MJJ^eklenLAve. FE 1855 FORD LTD, 4-6obR,~HARD-top, power steering and brakes, windows, auto, radio, heator, white-wolls, convtnlenco peckogo, vinyl top. new snow tiros. Still undtr warranty. Only $1,885. $$7-4$3i. $1695 BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" On Dixie in Waterford at the double stoplight 62^0900 M FOR^GALAXIB SOO. ^7 CU. In. motor. 2 four barrels. 4 spaed, Hurti linkage, 390 rear and, 81,095. CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH Small Ad—Big Lot c*"* to choose from buy or wilt idlust your pay Hmenis to less expansive car. steering end brakes. I Lk._Orlon MY ^204^ 1966 CHRYSLER | NewDort 2-door hardtop, showroom condition, V-8. automatic, double power, radio, whitewalls, low mileage. only $2095. OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH HASKINS AUTO SALES 1965 MUSTANG V-I, aulomallc, BDurs for only $69 down. At 669! Ixie Hwy., (USIO) Clerkston, 625 Boautiful car. $1295. KEEGO PONTIAC Keago Xarbor 612-3400 19M CHEVELLE 300 4-DOOR Automatic. $1195 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, 1900 W. Maple. Troy, Michiagn. 2 milts East of Wo^ward. 4-2735._____ I8M IMPAUk 2-DObR HARDtOP, $ aulometlc. power $1255 MIKE a w. 2 miles SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Maple, Troy. MIChlgai East ol Woodward, Ml 4-2735. 1844 CHEVY STATION WAGON, with Iransmlsslon, end motor com pltloly robullt by, our doolershli SIOM full prict lip. 1.23 .... month. Just liko 0 now egri John McAuliffe Ford 530 Oakland Aye._ FE 5-4101 1844 CHEVELLE SPORT COUPE, with v$, radio, heator, luroyolst finish, $85 down. MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES, 531 Oakland Ave. el Cess Ave. FE 5.4547. _ f8M CHEVY BEL-AIR 4 DOOR SE-dan, V$, eutonietlc, power steering, turquoise flnlsli. $85 down. MAT-THEWS-HARGREAVES, lend Ave. FE 4-4547._ 1854 CHEVY BEL-aTR STAtlON wagon, v$, automatic, powtr staei Ing. lurquolso finish. $85 daw MATTHEWS • HARGREAVEt, C Oakland Avo. FE fM547._____ I8M CHEVROLET BEL AIR , 4 Power steering, radio. $1100. Call ovonings Ml 4-4fl4;^____ 1845 CHEVELLE $1100, ______ 573-$l$5 F855 CHEVY IMPXLA 4'“B6oR dOWn*''MAfVtI?W^HARGR7A $31 Oakland Ave. al Cesi Ave. FE 4-4557, ___________ 1855 CORVAIR MONZA CONVERT- ci 1855 mustang. . 228 V I, eul I N Y L 724 Oakland Ave. F E 5-8435 Kessler-Hahn CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH RAMBLER JEEP 6473 Dixie Hwy. 12095 OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 724 ObkIand Aw._ FE 5;9436 KESSLER'S Salts Mid Service OMAft er steering, nice condition. 353- 070$.___________________________ I8U DODGE CORONET ^DOOR. $ cyL.j^^ower. Exc. csndlflon. M75, t84r~DOOOE 06r5~P6LARX‘^2-dr. hardtop. Black vinyl roof and trim. Extrai, Eva. 682-4978, dayi 883-4300, Ext. 4634.__________ 1845 DODGE DARfTuGHT BLUg, owor slooring, r*" Afler 7 p.m, ^.<075. ET sn ^i>002 4-barrel. Auto. iKket 8577. IM CORONET m ^i>OOR HARO- HASKINS AUTO SALES 1865 FORD XL 2-doar hardtop V-8, automatic, youn for only 879 down. At 6695 Dlxla Hwy., (USIO) Clarkrton, 625-3112._______ 1855 T-BIRDS HARDTOP, 2 TO •e from, from $1895. JACK LONG FORD ROCHESTM_______________^0^1-8711 1855 FORD MUSTANG TWO DOOR hardtop. "2$8" lour spaed. Like new tires. Reelly i steal at $1,285. Hillside LIncoln-Mercury, 1250 Oakland. 333.7153. 1W“F0RD XL~C6NVrRflBLE, KHD PRIX, BUCKET . $195. 363-3565._ HAom D "tuph'pr PONTIAC GRAND PRIX. FORD, Ml 4-75*ee.°‘-° ..................... HASKNIS AUTO SALES _. > 442 hardtop, steering, brakes, only $79 down. At 6695 Dixie I (USIO) Clarkston, 62^3112. _ TOM RADEMACHER 1965 OLDS 442 hardtop, automatic: 1965 OLDS CHEVY-OLDS __JS "91" 4-doe with automatic full ^nly*'s?795.'‘On ^ U™* . condition, $1900, 334- ___M15, Clarkston, MA S-5071. OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS. im, ___________ 1854 OLDS. 2 door; good buy-----$1750 Opdyko Hardwtrt — FE 1865 OLDS DYNAMIC ; DOOR ; condition, quick salt. $750. Chuck Zevorskas, 685-W2. “SHELTON 651-51 4 TEMPEST CLUB COUPE. SYNCHROMESH TRANSMISSION RADIO, HEATER, WHITE WALLS, FULL PRICE 8095$ AB SOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN Assume weekly paymenta of M.92 CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD Ml 4-7500. ___________ 1964 PONflAC 1845 PONTIAC CATALINA STATION Wagon, with V$, automatic, radio, hoaler, 8 passengor. Beautiful champagne fir price $2, V$, automatic. f.s?,ra, ‘ j$£'Sri John McAuliffe Ford Oakland Ave. ______FE 5-4101 BONNEVILLE 4 • DOOR, I a. old. OR 5-IIII8. -gONTIAC 6RAN6 Full car. Red. tOMB oclutl THE NEW AUDETTE PONTIAC NOW SERVING Troy-Pontlac—Blrmln^em Area oat from Ban •oy—Pont Maple, I lari Airport RAMBDERS Economy Specials '43 Sedan, stick, radio. , stick, radia heeler, harp ................. ■sedor wagon, stick. Id, heetor, overdrive f’sT. ower steering end Drakes, re-lo, healer, whitewalls, silver-misl ray, 23,000 mi. $2.275. MA 5-2$55. SUBURBAN OLDS HOME OF Quality One-Owner 1966 COUNTRY SEDAN Birminghom Trades rower equipped, automatic Irens- AT LOWEST PRICES mission, radio, hootor, whilewells. 535 $. Woodward 447-5111 full price SI685 only $48 down end ,v,v FACTORY — weekly payments ol $12.82. .I’**.. TORONADO, faltort Cetolino steering ;eex;y po^e^o;^»4 , ^ , T T A mileage, r^ FJ^2d323. riAn^^LiJ i'f;„ ££ TURNER ivate, lOM CONVERTIBLE $1295 Bob Bofst LIncoln-Mercury Seles Village Rambler 666 S. Woodward Birmingham 646-3900 P«w»M845 rambler CLAtSld stAViah wagon with 6 t^llndar angina, automatic tranamlaaloiw radia and heater, wfiltMrall llratF Haad rttf clean and priced to aall. RO$l RAMBLflt union LokOr IM Birmingham Ml 6-4538 1964 PONTIAC CAT'ALINA 4 DOOR hardtop, power stoaring, power brakes, eutomatlc trensmisalon, whitewall tires, radio and heater, 36,000 miles. Very good condition. $1^^ CellJIt;;^;_____ ________ 1964 PONTIAC CATALINA WAGON, full power, clean. $1095. Connally's FE 2-0294. Mr. Patterson or Mr. FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE BIRMINGHAM _ _ 1966 MUSTANG 2 DOOR Y top,, with. V^8, au.om..lc. month. 10 otheri top. 1 $U.61 OLOSMOBILE. 1967, 98, LUXURY: sedan, air conditioned, power win- 2 temofic. Clean. 1964 OLDS ............................................$895 rLto'and'I%newriulre^ hrekes and power steering, eutomatlc, 1966 PONTIAC Custom Tempest.....................i.. .$1895 2-door hardtop. Power steerlno, power brakes, - DOWNEY OLDSMOBILE, INC. 550 Oakland Ave. FE 2-8101 ONE FULL BLOCK OF SELECTED CARS FOR YOU TO CHOOSE FROM THE END IS NEAR- But We‘Want to See You This Year! 1966 PONTIAC Catalina wells, heater. Municipal $1595 1962 FORD Hardtop tlexle 2-^r, V-I, eutometlc, war steorliig, radio, hootor, hitowolti. aH loothor Irlml sol ihorpi Only — $695 1966 CHEVY* Impolo v-i, auto- $2195 1967 OLDS Delmont "$$" idoor hordtop. with pot or stoorlng, brakoi; Hydrami $2695 fmhV I'ONTMC-MMSin , Ask for Chuck Moriarty, Jim Bornowsky, Arnold Denison. (Pat Jarvis, Used Cor Manager) Open Doily 'til 9 P.M. On M-24 in Orion 693-6266 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29. 1967 D—15 —Television Programs— Programs fumishod by Motions listsd in this column ora subject to chongo without notice TONIGHT Features BOB HOPE, 9 p.m. (4) ‘WIVES AND LOVERS,’ 9 pm. (7) O’KEEFE CENTRE,’ 9:30 p.m. (9) INGRH) BERGMAN, 9:30 p.m. (56) 1:00 (2) (4) News (C) (7) Movie: “Journey to the Center of the Earth” Part 2. (R) (C) (9) Pat Boone — Lon Chaney Jr. is guest. (C) (50) Fiintstones (R) (C) (56) Friendly Giant •:15 (56) Muffinland 6:30 (2) News—Cronkite (C) (4) News—Huntley, Brink-ley (C) (50) McHale’s Navy (R) (56) What’s New 7:00 (2) Truth or Consequences (C) (4) Juvenile Court (C) (9) Gilligan’s Island (R) (C) (50) I Love Lucy (R) (56) Skiing 7:36 (2) Lost in Space —Don, Judy, Will and Penny become exhibits in a traveling xoo run by a flamboyant character who calls himself the greatest showman of the cosmos. (C) (4) Virginian — Trampas implicates the town doctor In a murder. (C) (7) Custer — Custer is assigned to escort surveyors through Indian territory. (C) (9) Movie: “Teen-Age Millionaire” (1961) A young man inherits a radio station. Jimmy Clanton, Chubby Checker, Dion. (C) (50) Hockey - Detroit Red Wings vs. New York ' Rangers. (C) (56) Journey Into the Pa.st 6:60 (56) Your Dollar’s Worth —The quality and costs of medical care are examined. 1:30 (2) Beverly Hillbillies - Gr^y thinks a movi^ ggU ggveral weeks ago a and Ciyd War stage is tinted that he mightl me real thing. (Q jjlnd , television set at his door (7) Second Hundred Years before long. But Johnson said he 1:30 (2) Littlest Hobo (R) (4) News (C) 2:15 (7) News TOMORROW MORNING 6:00 (4) Ciassroom 6:20 (2) News (C) 6:30 (2) Sunrise Semester (C) (4) Ed Alien (C) (7) True Adventure (C) 7:00 (2) Woodrow the Woods-man'(C) (4) Today (C) (7) Morning Show (C) 7:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round TV Abandoned on Doorstep 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (9) Barney Boomer 8:30 (7) Movie: “Abandoned’ (1949) Dennis O’Keffe, Gale Storm. (R) (9) Bonnie Prudden (C) 9:00 (2) Merv Griffin (C) (4) Gypsy Rose Lee (C) (9) Bozo the Clown (C) 9:10 (56) Let’s Read 9:30 (4) PDQ (C) (56) American History 9:55 (56) Spanish Lesson 10:00 (4) Snap Judgment (C) (7) Girl Talk (9) Confederation of Tomorrow Conference (50) Yoga for Health 10:10 (56) Of Cabbages and Kings 10:25 (4) News (C) 10:30 (2) Beveriy Hillbillies (R) (4) Concentration (C) (7) Dateline (C) (50) Carlton Fredericks (C) 10:35 ( 56) Geography 10:55 (7) Children’s Doctor (C) 11:00 (2) Andy of Mayberry (R) (4) Persdnality (C) (7) Honeymoon Race (C) (50) Dickory Doc (C) 11:05 ( 56) Art Lesson 11:30 (2) Dick Van Dyke (R) (4) Hollywood Squares (C) (7) Family Game 11:50 (56) Arithmetic for Teachers MONTGOMERY, Ala. I ' !12:( TOMORROW AFTERNOON _! 12:00 (2) News (C) Cafe owner Paul Johnson is wondering who left an unusual bundle on his doorstep. Johnson reported that he ar- (4) Jeopardy (C) (7) Everybody’s Talking (9) Take 3(J, (50) Dialing for Dollars rived at work Monday and found a television set on the porch. i*2:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow —Luke goes to a hearing to help a girl clear her father accused of cowardice in the charge of San Juan HiU in 1898. (C) 9:00 (2) Green Acres —Haney tries to buy back the Douglases' farm when he' learns the state purchase It. (C) (4) (Special) Bob Hope-Bob hosts a taped show at UCLA with David Janssen, Elke Sommer, Jack Jones and football AlU Americas. (C) (7) Movie: “Wives and liovers” (1963) Success threatens to ruin a novelist’s marriage. Van Johnson, Janet Leigh, Shelley Winters. (C) (56) Nine to Get Ready 9:25 (9) News 9:30 (2) He & She — Paula forgets their new unlisted telephone number. (C) (9) (Special) O’Keefe Centre — Hari7 Belafonte ' welcome Miriam Makeba and Esther Marrow for an hour of song. (C) (56) (Special) Ingrid Bergman — Miss Bergman is Interviewed after her sence from the American stage for 21 years. (C) 10:00 (2) Dundee and the Cul-hane — A young woman is charged with killing her older, wealthy husband. (C) (4) Run for Your Life Part two of a drama of the consequences of an auto collision. (C) (.■iO) M 0 V i e: “Odette’ (English, 1951) Anna Nea-gle, Trevor Howard. (C) 10:30 (9) Country Music Hall 11:00 (2) (4) (7) News (C) (9) News 11:30 (2) Movie: “Hellcats of the Navy” (1957) Ronald Reagan, Arthur Franz. (4) Johnny Carson (C) (7) Joey Bishop (C) (9) Festival) C 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) Movie: “The Man from Laramie” (1955) Part 1. James Stewart, Arthur Kennedy. (R) _____(9) Window on ^e World 12 Feminine ^ Momentary in Asia Minor ^ Bulgaria MUnlti of 14 Age 15 Fastener 16 Boasts 17 Stitch tog 18 Like a cS night 20 Giant 22 Roman bi 53 Poem > Repose cloth 56 Military conflict 1® HrecipitaUon 39 Parts of bodiei 91 57 Countries 21 Daughter of 41 Thorough 58Termination Cadmui (myth.) mixture 27&gVs. down 1 Drlnlfs slowly 25 VerSo* 43 hgliw of Helen 28 Soviet city (myth.) 27 Maple genua ■" “ of dawn _____________^ 30 Algerian seaport 2 Distinct part 31 Glance at 3 Zola heroine 27 Maple geiiua 44 At"iu uui» 4 Internal part of 28 European dear 45 Secluded valley a fowl \ AM * quickly 32 Individual 34 Ox of Tibet 35 Sow 36 Greek letter 5 Asian lemur ^oker stake 48 Spec! 47 Black 6 Anatomy (ab.) 31 Was observed 48 Outer la^r 7 Fit’niif c, X,.,,__if..-. lack (poet) 1 2 3 4 r- 6 7 iO 11 ii 13 IT" IS ■■ 15 l7 IS tT 24 25^ L 30 34 4 H 48 40 51 ET 33 54 55 50 57 8s 29 By Science Service WASHINGTON - The solar system holds at least three undiscovered moons circling ma-planets, astronomers in three countries believe. They expect to find soon one each for Jupiter, Saturn and Uranus. Their predictions are based on Saturii and a dim spot in its encircling rings. Dr. Hannes Alfven of the Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden,^^ the forth- Undiscovered Moons Are Predicted Bank Suspects See Their Crime LOS ANGELES (AP) - Two men who surrendered to the law say they knew the jig when they saw themselves in newspaper photographs holdup. Authorities said a hidden camera at the North Hollywood Savings and Loan Association snapped pictures during a |3,( robbery Nov. 10. Larry Olivo, 30, surrendered to police Tuesday. Leonard Di-sandro, 23, went Monday to the FBI in San Francisco. Both ,men were wanted on federal robbery warrants. U. S. Investment Bankers Opening Meeting Today MIAMrBEACH, Fla. (AP) -Against the backfpxiund of devaluation of the British pound a boost in the U.S. prime interest rate and a threat against the B American dollar, the Investment Bankers Association of America opens its annual convention today. Manuel F. Cohen, chairman of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, speaks at the opening session. About 1,200 persons were expected. Free TV Time for Presikent Races Asked Mythical Tale Scares Coeds coming issue of Icarus suggests that the darker area in the light rings, although not related today to the interaction of satellites around the planet, reflects that relationship when the rings and satellites were forming. The area. Dr. Alfven declares, could have been crated by “an undiscovered satellite of Saturn. 7'he predicted satellite would! be smaller than the Janus, the' CHICAGO (UPI) — Newton! tenth satellite of Saturn, dis-,^- Minow, former Federal covered only last December. i Communications Commission IITH MOON FOR SATURN "i«ht urged free ^ !television time tor all presiden- Dr. Alfven calculates the newjtiai candidates^ moon would revolve around Sat- . . , , , , urn in 19 5 hours television time urn in,ij.5 Hours. candidates Two other astronomers, Drs. about $200,000,” Minow said. I. L. G. Bowell of the Observa- “With television’s rising costs tories de Meudon in France and the only candidates who will Dittmar 41 Pokaeon Townsh7D L. Wilson of the University of be able to appear on television vo irerSan en VoZ o London Observatory also pre-will be wealthy ones, or ones rhoure fire was killed Kie, diet an eleventh moon for Sat-with vast financial resources.” day when his fire engine was struck by New York Central’s Other sfieakers, scheduled Thursday and Friday, include Sen. Jacob Javits, R-N.Y., James E. Webb, head of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, and Alan S. Boyd, secretary of transpofta-tion. Among topics to be discussed at the three-day meeting are the recent British devaluation, the assault abroad against the price of gold and the increase of the prime interest rate to 4(4 per cent by the Federal Reserve Bank. Train Kills Fireman en Route to Blaze POKAGON Ml - Gordon L. , but believe it would circle Television networks should doesn’t know the woman and ’t seen her since she bought a cup of coffee at his restaurant' weeks ago. I [in 15 hours and come closer to __, Romney OKs "“r i um,. r ** last four weeks before an elec- ^ 11*1 Basing their predictions on a tion, he said. If they do not, commutation formula derived from study of the FCC should see that they jSaturn’s satellites, Drs. Bowell do, he said. •LANSING » - Go,. G^rge 1’’ «»•». FCC chair. ,C, Pco.r r.,.. hPI-vcd the coa,.;"” •'"P""”’’'fT !S”. I'™ .>»«• (4) Eye Guess (C) (7) Donna Reed (R) (9) Movie: ‘Highway 301' (1950) Steven Co<-hran, Virginia Gray. (R) _______ _____ TZnZs’^n9W^?mt^,a^^^^ ‘Wolf” ye“sTer-'tenced Oct. 6, 1943, f r o m 3b™, 40 twenties (1939) J a m e s day, and some coeds feared to Branch County Circuit Court r,.«-,lta i..r.«. |show their faces outside the „„ conviction of first-degree’ Paper Cries 'Wolf/ ‘•7;"''-;- -"-j * * * i“The United states is Vhe'o’nT; mutation of a life sentence be-1 Jupiter’s would swing between country in the world where can-Ihen Claims Joke served by Robert Manwar- the moons, Amalthea and lo, didates, must buy television ren, formerly of Vicksburg, the completing an qrbit in about 20 time. MADLSON, Wis (UPI) xhe famous 1960 Ken- jUniversity of Wisconsin .student! Manwarren, 52, was sen-‘ ............... Cagney, Priscilla Lane. (R) Meanwhile, police are holding) the set to see if anyone claims Guiding Light (C) lice said, the set will go to John- *C) 1:00 (2) Love of Life (C) (4) Match Game (C) (7) P'ugitive (R) 1:10 (56) Sets and Symbols 1:25 (2) News (C) (4) Carol Duvall (C) (56) Geographv 1:30 (2) As the World Turns Daily Almanac United Press International Today Is Wednesday, Nov. 29, the 333rd day of 1967 with 32 to follow. The moon is between Its last quarter and its new phase. The morning stars are Venus and Jupiter. The evening stars are Mars and Saturn. * ★ ★ On this day in history: In 1890, the . first Army-Navy football game was played, the Middies winning, 24-0. In 1948, opera was teleca.st directly from the stage of the Met in New York City for the first time. * W *1 In 1963, 118 persons were killed when a Canadian plane crashed near Montreal. Al.so in 1963, President Johnson appointed the Warren Commission to investigate the Kennedy as.sassination. 0/eo Paves Road PORTLAND (AP) - Oleomar gltrine spread “all over the highway” after a semitruck loaded with margarine collided Tuesday with another truck on 196 four miles west of Portland, State Police said. Drivers of the two trucks were injured, with one hospitalized in fair condition and the other treated and released. (4) Let’s Make a Deal (C) 1:55 (561 American History tween the present inner pair,|nedy-Nixon television debates, Miranda and Ariel, with a in which the candidates clashed verbally for free, Minow said, “President Kennedy personally safetv of well liphteH Hnrmifnr luoi-ucgiec , told me he felt he wouldn’t have safety of well-lighted dormitor- n,„rder m the beating death of H60(35 LeOque been elected president without .no « nio .1, a farmer at Colon. • his opporunity to apbear on There are alarming sips, 7, w w * | GRAND RAPIDS (ff) - Dr. itelevisiom” 1 ill ‘‘‘‘s ™st of his William B. Scott has been elect-1 Minow addressed his remarks f population in the hills south Southern Michigan ed president of the Grand Rap- to a dinner of a Jewish lawyer’ and west of the campus is in- state Prison at Jackson, buf is ids Urban League, filling the group. ^ crea.smg ihe prey, it hinted, foterned now at the Ionia State vacancy created by the resigns- may be the college s fairer sex. [Hospital. Romney’s action, tak- tion of M. Howard Rienstra, “Some of the girls are real-ien on unanimous recommenda-,Calvin College professor who is ^'"ow urged the FCC to re ly scared,” said Mary Pardini, tion of the State Parole Board, taking a sabbatical in R o m e. 7"^ clarify its rules and Northbrook, III., house guardian makes Manwarren eleigible for Scott is .serving his second three-pted instances iii which politi- Wolverjne passenger train at a rural (Jass County intersection in extreme southwestern lower Michigan. * ★ ★ State Police said Dittmar was alone in his truck when the train, bound from Detroit to Chicago, rammed the vehicle, ripping the cab loose from the truck. The alarm Dittmar was answering was on the other side of the tracks, police said, and the house was burned out before other firemen could reach the scene. t one of the women’s dorms. parole. year term on the board. The Cardinal quoted a mythical university profes.sor, William Eckert, alleged director of 2:00(2)Love lsaManySplen- ‘^‘^ dored Thing. (C) foundation. (41 Davs of Our Lives (C)| * * * (7) Newlywed Game (C) I the story. Eckert mused 2:20 (.56) Mathematics for You l»boiit the proliferation of the Swami Consoles Maureen Over Frank-Mia Separation leal candidates, including 1964 jGOP presidential candidate Barry Gold water, felt they were not getting equal television exposure. “When three events with In- Adan Given Life in Knife flaying LUDINGTON UP) - James E. Griffin, 29, of Ludington was given the mandatory life in prison sentence Tuesday by Mason County Circuit Court Judge Charles A. Wickens on his first-degree murder conviction in the knife slaying last August of Mrs. Louisa Kraft, 60. * ★ ★ The woman’s body was found in her home north of Ludington 2:30 House Parly (C) (4) Doctors (C) (7) Dream Girl (C) (.50) Topper (R) 2:45 (.56) .SpanLsh Le.sson 2:55 (7) News 3:00 (2) Divorce Court ((') (4) Another World (C) (7) General Hospital (C) (9) Marshall Dillon (R) (.50) Make Room for Daddy (R) (56) ^ial Security 3:15 (56) Mathematics 18 3:30 (2) Edge of Night (C) (4) You Don’t Say (C) (7) Dark Shadows (9) Swingin’ Time (50) Captain Detroit (C) 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) Woody Woodbury (C) (7) Dating Game «i) (56) Ski School 4:30 (2) Mike Douglas (C) (7) News (C) (9) Bozo the Qown (C) (50) Three Stooges (R) (56) What’s New 5:00 (9) Fun House (.50) Little Rascals (R) (56) Mist^rogers 5:30(4) George Pierrot — “The Spell of Brittany’ (C) (7) News (C) (9T Dennis the Menace , (R) (50) Superman (R) (56) TV Kindergarten wolf population and said the ani-| mals were rapidly depleting the| ternational significance took where she lived alone. Griffin place within about a week - convicted Nov. 14 in a non-Chmas first atomic bomb ex-t jury trial before Wickens. plosion, Russia’s ousting plosion, Russia’s ousting By EARL WHJSON in Lille .na minLi ,.nn,. ^EW YORK — Mhurccn O'Sullivan calmly met her Yoga Khrushchev and Britain’s” eco- “he~l.rat ..mic A».nl.ll - ... I , me campus 10 lorage. Cheerful and philosophical, Maureen gave no sign she was allowed to appear on television ’ LlOrkStOn tiigh .shaken by the fact that she’s just lost the world’s as president, - ... UNE.SCORTED COEDS A likely area was the wood- best known son-in-law Frank Sinatra, who’d just ed area in the heart of the cam-[busted with her daughter Mia Farrow, pus traveled heavily by unes-1 «i'm having my regular Sawmi session that corted coeds. ij every week,” Maureen said. Then she had Eckert even alluded to a myth-1 dinner at Luchow’s with composer Henry Man-leal February 1946 incident wbenjeini. a coed was bitten by a wolf as “We have Such a wonderful swami on West she walked out of an evenings End Av., there’s no reason to go to India,” she ass at Bascom Hall. I said. And the Cardinal even said I Mia’s plans to go to India for a study sesslo^ the U-W Zoology Department! Mahesh Yogi had been mentioned | i.imuvy .tmu a lurmer movie| n; Refr recently perfected some wolf as a reason for SinaUa’s split with Mia. Maureen said however, and television figures “continue, 3 ser4d following the pro-repellant that was available for that she’s more enthusiatsic about it than Mia. to appear on the political scene, | gram. “I love them both,” she said, of Mia and Frank. late shows starring these figures y “I know they love each other.” jwill become an issue.” Could they get back together? “One can always hope,” she said, a bit sadly. he said. “Thus, Goldwater was | fo HOSf PoTentS ^not allowed equal time and took ( his argument to court.” i-i „ CLARKSTON — Parents Goldwater finally managed to I of studenbi at Clarkston |get equal time on one network, | Senior High School have jhe said, “But he didn’t get the | been invited to meet lexposiire Johnson got on three | teachers and visit class-n e t w 0 r k s. Thus, Goldwater J rooms in a “Back-to-didn’t get the same national im- | School” night program at pact as Johnson. | 7:30 p.m. Monday. Minow .said if former movie! Refreshments will be Arthur Murray and Fred Astaire, with their dance studios,, could probably make something out of the Frank Sinatra-Miaj Farrow bu.stup. Mia was dance crazy. Frank wouldn’t dance with, anybody. One night a girl we know asked Frank to dance with I her, and he replied, “I don’t dance.” ' — RaiJio Programs— ^R(7dO) WXYZQ 270) CKLW(tOO) WWJ(950) WCARQ130) WPOn[m6^ WJBKQ 500) WHn-fM(94.7) M«wi, Hirrig WCAKe JlrW Davit WWJ, Ntwt, Neighbor WHFI, unew Jtv CKLW. Nowte Joo Van Ntwt. Mutic Patrick WXYZ. braakfatt Club. Do WPON, Nawi, Mutic WJR. NiWl. Mutic DtlO-WJII, Nawt. KalaKKh wwj^ISmm, N«i«aiier W)|(VL Nmr^winy Tiyler iTHUeSDAV AeTIRNOON 12:8»-WWJ. Ncwi. AtarkM, the asking at local drugstores. * * ★ Drugstore spokesmen laughed. “I just won’t walk on Observatory Drive anymore,” said a stunned Linda Hammond, 18,1 Lexington, Ky. Linda is a resident of Allen Hall, one of the larger Women’s dorms. ‘I’M LEAVING’ “That’s it,” said Carolyn Mor- The girl said “At least you can get out on the floor and walk I rill, 18, Newton, Mass. “I’m around wth me.” Frank said to a companion, “liet’s get outa' leaving.” here.” That ended his dancing for that decade and probably for| “I’m leaving this place,” said »“ ‘ y"" J“*‘ him doing the Monkee? Janice Abt, 18, Scarsdale, N. Y.j -k ir -k , ‘1 was thinking of transferring before, but now I’m sure of it.” THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . . Now the Cardinal claims it Mimi Hines (and Paul Ford) returned from Montreal to fin-was all an error. |sh casting “Funny Girl ” for a Dec. 20 opening at Las Vegas’ * * * Riviera, and saw this graffiti at the JFK ladies room hot airl It was sent out as a mis- hand drying machine, “Push this button for three minutes of take; it wasn’t supposed to go comment from LBJ.” said M a r c i Knowlton, - peter Glenville, who directed "The Comedians” (which Haiti Plymouth, Wis., night editor.idoesn’t like), received threats . . . Hy Uchitel was offered $100 ‘Ttere’s no fact to it. It wasifo,. ^he silverware which Cary Grant used In his Voisln . . . written as sort of a joke. We’re |nct|y George dined at Kippy’s with part of her troupe that’ll tour going to print a retraction to-j j.-gr East, morrow.” AVOID GARNISHMENT Call 338-0333 . lllS-(.KLW, Niws, 0«v« Shatar. WJR, Naw(, Godfrty WMF I, Encort WWJ, N*wt, Marty fiia-WPON, Naw>, Muilc WXYZ, Oava Princa WCAR, Nawi, Jack Sandan WJBK, Htm, Minlc. Talat CKLW, Nawa. Tom Shannon DEBT Consultants of PONTIAC, INC. 814 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG. \o Ohliimiiini . . . \ot ( l.om Op«n Saturday 9AM lo ) 2 Noon Slola L.tonv Ill D l‘ ' WISH I’D SAID THAT; “Beauty is what a woman has when Oign-Up tor rOllCe*®®s“f®s ‘"^'«®P«®‘ ”-^tenry David'Fhoreau. Rapids last week has resulted| EARL’S PEARLS: “Success is often achieved by those who in applications from 20 persons do not know that failure i.s inevitable.”—Coco Chanel, McCall’s, including several Negroes ^d Lee J. Cobb said on the "Coogan's Bluff” ^et, “The error of three junior college coeds. The city police department itill is below the authorized strength of 300 officers. youth Is to believe intelligence is a substitute for experience, while the error of age is to believe experience is a substitute for intelligence--------That’e earl, brother. (PafeUahart-Hall lyndlcata) Home of tho Bottomloss Cup of Coffaa Open Daily 11:30 - 9:10, Fri. and Sat. *til 10 P.M. ELIZABETH LAKE RD., OPPOSITE THE PONTIAC MALL V.hilda' Portionn -'Availnhlt D~16 THE PONTIAC PRKSS, WEDNESDAY^ NOVEMBER 29, 1967 Minnesota Senator Focus of Intellectual Revolt on Viet, LBJ WASHINGTON W - It looked as if the campus intellec-tud had descended from the ivory tower to find himself star of the pep rally. In the center of a crowd of sign-waving students stood a McCarthy—who, one writer observed, could “kid his way through the judgment gates”— is not the most likely figure to be at the center of such a fuss. He has been variously labeled as brilliant but detached, moral hanrisnmg middle-aged man j but cynical, philosophic but whose gray hair was neatly 1 bored. He is a Roman Catholic trimmed and whose tall frame a former professor and an Intel-wore a conservatively dark suitllectual.. He does not ass°"'^ and vest. * * * The man: Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy, 51, Democrat and senior senator from Minnesota, dissenter on Vietnam, challenger of President Johnson and overnight hero of legions of war protesters. And the students brandished their hand-lettered signs reading, “Young America Counts on Sen. McCarthy”...“Draft McCarthy; Dump Johnson” ...“Run, Baby, Run” during a recent campus visit by the Minnesotan. ANNOUNCEMENT McCarthy is expected to announce Thursday whether indeed he will run—whether he will enter Democratic primaries in a “personal confrontation” with Johnson over the war and thus take the issue to the people. In the sound and, fury over his challenge of the President’s Vietnam policy, McCarthy has been portrayed as hero and villain. Critics have accused him of everything from bitterness and gross party disloyalty to seeking publicity to better the sales of his book, “The Limits of Power,” and to increase the fees for his lecture tours. Friends and supporters see him risking his political neck to force a referendum, by primary on the war and of providing a rallying' point for dissenters— the kind of dissenters whQ, as one fan put it, “don’t wear beards, who do take baths and who don’t write four-letter words on walls.” Windmills. ■* Where mosit politicians prefer the heavy, easily understood strokes of a broadsword in verbal combat, McCarthy uses the rapier tipped with irony. ★ ★ * After a iSt. Paul speech where he complained about the Pentagon, McCarthy was asked what he would do if elected president. With a smile the senator said he would paraphrase Dwight Eisenhower’s “Go to Korea”! pledge: “If I were president, I’d go to the Pentagon. If not, I’d at least try to get diplomatic recognition.” HIGH BROW HUMOR A McCarthy admirer admitted ruefully: Gene’s is the kind of high-brow humor that Adlai EUGENE MCCARTHY Shy Daughter-in-Lawj“ in Rockefeller Light Stevenson learned is hot a political asset.” Although McCarthy serves on three of the Senate's most prestigious committees—Foreign Relations, Finance and Ethics-he is not a member of the Senate’s inner circle of power. Despite his 19 years in the House and Senate, many colleagues consider him a loner. He does not fit into handy patterns. Some "critics charge he is a stalking horse for Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, D-N.Y.. But McCarthy has not been a Kennedy ally. At the 1960 Democratic convention which ultimately nominated fellow Catholic John F. Kennedy, McCarthy gave a impassioned nominating speech for Adlai Stevenson. In other days. President Johnson said of his fellow Democrat: “Gene McCarthy is the kind of man, as we say in the ranch country of Texas, who will go to the well with you. ’That’s a homely way of saying you can count on him in dark days or bright ones.” Some feel the LBJ Ranch well water turned bitter in 1964 when the President left^ McCarthy hoping he would choose him as his running mate—then tapped McCarthy’s fellow Minnesotan, Hubert H. Humphrey. ‘ I don’t think anyone has ever measured the depth of Gene’s bitterness about ’64,” says a former associate. “It*s very deep.” McCarthy’s Vietnam dissent was not a flip-flop. In January 1966 he was one of 17 Senate Democrats who urged Johnson to prolong the bombing lull. But his dissent appeared to escalate after an August hearing by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. ’There Undersecretary of State Nicholas Katrenbach insisted President Johnson had authority to do what has been done in Vietnam even without the controversial Gulf of Tonkin resolution. LEFT HEARING S!) McCarthy left the hearing and I said to a reporter he met in the {hall:' ‘"This Is the wildest testimony ever heard. There is no limit to what he says the President I can do. There is only one thing to do—take it to the country.” i For a long time, they say, McCarthy has complained in private conversatiort that Johnson has tampered with American institutions: hobl)ling the Senate and packing the Foreign Relations Committee when he was majority leader; weakening the Democratic National Committee; lowering the prestige of the Supreme Court by giving its members outside assignments. But the focus of McCarthy’s I exert enough pressure to cause dissent is Vietnam, If he decides to enter the primaries — and many observers feel he has gone too f^ to back out-he says hi? aim would be to give voters an opportunity to Johnson to change his course. ’The issue of Vietnam, McCarthy says, “should be presented squarely to the people under the established procedures of American politics. “It has to be presented with personal identification. It can’t be dealt with as an abstract issue. If it is identified with a personality in the primaries, the people can make their judgment.” NEW YORK (AP) - When a one-man show by a venerable Russian-born artist comes to a midtown gallery today, it will be the fruition of a virtually one-woman project by the newest art patron in the family of that noted art patron. Nelson A. Rockefeller. She is Mrs. Steven Rockefeller, the beautiful but seldom-seen wife of the New York governor’s son. Eight years ago, as Anne-Marie Rasmussen, she was the central figure in the Cinderella story of the century. So publicity-shy are the Steven Rockefellers that the mad scene outside a little church in Norway on Aug. 22, 1959, is virtually forgotten. ’There 150 newsmen and photographers trampled each other to cover the wedding of the scion of one of America’s richest families to the Norwegian grocer’s daughter who had been a maid in Gov. Rockefeller’s home. And it took a frail little man with a gray goatee—and a new art form—to bring young Mrs. Rockefeller, mother of three, out of her carefully constructed shell of privacy. As a result, when Dr. Alexander Winogradow, an 80-year-old former research chemist who began his career as an artist at the age of 50, shows 75 of his “inlonee” mosaic paintings at the Kennedy Galleries on East 56th Street, Mrs. Steven Rockefeller and many of her friends will be there to lend support. MORE In the living room of her 20th-floor apartment in the East 50’s, a room accented by simple Scandinavian furnishings, hangs one of Winogradow’s larger paintings. She persuaded her husband, now busy with teaching at Union Theological Seminary, and further studies at Columbia University, to buy it. Winogradow’s “ paintings ” glow with many-colored plastlbs poured in outlines of thin wire.: They so charged Mrs. Rocke-! feller that she has become the painter’s patron and principal student. Mrs. Rockefeller, handsonie in the tweedy clothes of a suburban matron, is sometimes seen 'at a committee meeting in Westchester County, where she also has a home, especially if the meeting is about the Tarry-town beautification program. It’s rumored that, she even does some of the “dirt-gardening” work herself, besides acting as. hostess to meetings. 1 The implications are wide, not only for President Johnson, but jin the divided party ranks in T> . e. u T, u ' McCarthy’s and Humphrey’s But Mrs. Steven Clark Rocke- Minnesota feller hasn’t forgotten Anne, As McCarthy’s dissent be-Marie Rasmussen, who came to came more vocal last month. New York to learn- better Humphrey, one of the Adminis-English, took a job in theltration’s chief apologists, re-Rockefeller home and there! Portedly had a talk with him found romance. It- Humphrey is said to The Rockefellers’ summeriasked: home is not in Maine, Newport! “Are we talking as friends or any of the other spots where r®"®* P*" ^ we still friends?’ rich Americans spend their holi-1 friends, McCarthy report-days. They have bought a place In ‘MORE THAN WAR’ Norway, and every summer McCarthy’s InUmates say Steven Jr., now 7, Ingrid, 4, there is more than a war be-and Jennifer, 3, have a visit tween Johnson and the man who with Grandfather and Grand-{once would go to the well with mother Rasmussen. ihim. NOTICE OF SALE OF DWELLING AND REQUESTS FOR BIDS Th« City of Penlioc will rocoivo ••a tho tolo and romovol of a dwolling and gorapo leealod at 612 Contnil Straal on Lot 172 of South Pork Subdiviiion, a dwolling locotad at 617 Contral Stroot on Lot 202 of South Pork Subdiviiion oxcopt tho gorogo, and o dwolling locotod at 1220 Univoriity Drivo on tho Woit 91.31 foot of tho Eoit 273.p3 fa'ot of tho Woit Vk of tho louthorly lino of Univoriity Drivo, until 2:00 P.M. (Eaitarn Standard Tima) on Monday, tho 5th day of Doeambar, 1967 at tho offiea of tho City Clark, 450 Wido Track Drivo Eait, Pontiac Michigon at which timo and ploco all bidi will bo publicly oponad and road aloud. Conditions: I.Biddor ihol City Ordinonca No. 1349 which gevomi tho moving of buildingi t tho City of Pontiac. Attontion ii diroctad to roquirad 2. All tho buildingi iholl bo ramovad by Juno 1, 1968, with work not to bagin until biddar hai racoivod a Notico to Procood. It'ii onticipotod that tho Notico to Procood will bo iiluod on/obout Doeambar \8, 1967. Sinco timo ii of tho aiionco, foiluro of tho contractor to hovo tho itructuro ramovad from tho proparty at tho timo ipocifiad in tho Notico to Procood will cauia tho for-faituro of hii ( 3. Tho boiamont iholl bo froa of dabrii and not bockfillod. A cartifiod chock or bank draft, poyoblo to tho ordar 6f tho City of Pontiac, nagotiobla U.S. Govarnmant 8ondi, or a ■otiifactory 8id Bond oxacutad by tho Biddar and an accopt-ablo luroty, in tho amount aquol to 10% of tho bid prico, iholl bo lubmittad with oach bid. Tho bidi will bo racoivod and awordod on tho boiii of ooch Tho City of Pontiac roiorvai tho right to rojoct any and all bidi, or to woivo ony informalitioi in tho bidding. Bidi moy bo hold by tho City of Pontiac for a paried of twonty (20) doyi from dat^ of oponing of bidi for tho puipoia of roviawing tho Bidi and invoitigating tho quolificotioni of tho Biddar, prior to awarding tho contract. Arrangomonti for impaction of tho dwolling may bo mado by contacting tho offiea of tho City ~ Olga Bariceley City Clmrk Wednesday, Nov. 29, 1967 Men’s Coordinated Sweater Sets Reg. 15.99 Here’s a special gift he’ll thank yon for. Luxurious short sleeved knit shirt and full-cut cardigan sweater fashioned in washable Orion® in links kniL Superb colors, textured stripes. Small to X-large. Warm and Comfortable Winter Coats and Jackets for Men Plaid wool Jacket of Orion® acrylic with **** 32.H-I7.8I notched lapel pile top collar. Hooded wool melton jacket. 3646. Holiday Outfittings a a a Keywate Sport Coat and Fashion Slacks Corduroy benchwanner with aip-ont body liner. Coffee or green. 3644. Pilo lined Sureoat with yoke styling, slash pockets. Black, brown, tan. 36-44. Soon Mm'i SpertaMoor Dipt. 15’^ Wsre1l.l9-24.H 12” Sport coat in two- and three-bntton modeli in wool wontedi or wool mohaiiwool wonted blendi. Mnlti-•hadei of gray or brown. Rc|. $45. Trim slacks in plain weave, ]^in front. Ban-Rol® no-curl waistband. Wide color selection. 32 • 42. Reg. $17. Soon Men'i Draw Clothing DapL 36” 12” Child's 4.97 Children's, Women’s TaU, Waterproof Boots 6.99 Child's 7.99 Women's 4»7 gOT Overthe-foot boots featnre water-proofed vinyl upper, warm pile lining and ribbed vinyl soles for non-slip protection. Children’s in black; full siies 10 thru 4. Women’s boots in black or antiqued brown; full sixes S-10. Soon Shot Dapl. qumantved or your money back Women's, 6.97 SEARS Pontiac Phono FE b-41 71 ONE com McNamara Sparks War Step-Up Fear WASHINGTON (AP) - Defense Secretary. Robert S. McNamara’s impend-^ ing resignation is generating fears on Capitol Hill that he may have been pushed out as the first step of an accelerated U.S. war effort in Vietnam. ★ * ★ The board of the World Bank was to meet informally today to consider nony-nation of McNamara for the organization’s presidency. It was not known if a decision would be made immediately, or when McNamara might quit his Pentagon post if he is selected. It was generally expected that, in any event, McNamara would not assume- the bank presidency until President Johnson has chosen a successor. Some congressional sources greeted work of the defense chief’s retirement with predictions a stepped up U.S. military drive in Vietnam is in the works. \ * * * ■ .. And Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-MasSi, questioned publicly whether Mc- Related Story, Page A-15 Namara is stepping out voluntarily. He' cited some reports the secretary did not want to quit. WHAT BASIS Kennedy said it was impiytant that Congress and the public “kno\ really what is the basis” for the move.' Sen Claiborne Pell, I>R.I., called McNamara in a Senate speech to stay\ certain to spur new speculation — de-on the job. He described the secretary \pite his denials — that he is Johnson's as a voice of restraint in the highest chojce to replace McNamara. councils of the- admliiMration and said if McNamara left there would be “a very real hardening of positions.’* The White Ijouse, Pentagon and Gen. William C. Westmoreland, U.S. commander in Vietnam, meanwhile denied reports a McNamara resignation would herald ^ change |p Vietnam policy or that he was being dumped. Capitol Hill leaders who frequent the White House suggested privately that withdrawal of McNamara from the Cabinet will add weight to the already considerable influence Westmoreland has built up with President Johnson. Word that Texas Gov. John Connally was to be in Washington today seemed AP WIrwholo ADVOCATE OF PURSUIT — Former President Dwight D. Eisenhower, with his wife, Mamie, at his side, coupled a statement on the Vietnam war with his departure for a winter vacation today. Eisenhower advocates, more leeway for U.S. troops in Vietnam and hot pursuit of the enemy. The Eisenhowers are shown leaving Harrisburg, Pa., for Palm Desert, Calif. (Story, page A-2). '------------------------------...— For Young Do-It-Yourselfers Santa Packing Horror Kits (EDITOR’S NOTE - This is the second in a series on Christmas gift suggestions that are available in area stores.) ByJUNEELERT Santa’s sack this year contains some do-it-yourself sets that cater to childish deUght in horrors, both edible and decorative. Molds and heating units are included. Some use ordinary light bulbs for power, some are battery-operated. All are under $10. Little boys will be contending with their sisters for the privilege of slaving over a hot stove to bake all kinds of kitchen delicacies. The see-in oven and cooling chamber, plus “all ingredients, sells for under |li Heat is provided with two 100-watt light bulbs (not included). In Today's Press Sports Tigers deal Wickersham; Heisman winner named; Central cagers triumph—PAGE D-1. Joyriding Stealing cars for fun is serious business — PAGE B-5. Levy Defeats Romeo, Farmington school officials disappointed by Monday elections — PAGE A-4. Area News .....A-4, A-F, A-8 Astrelegy ............c-10 BrW«e .................C IO Crossword Pazzle .....D-13 Comics ...............C-iO Editorials A4 Food Section .......C4, C-S ... D» ....DJ7 D-1-D4 ...:C4 D-ll WOssa, Earl ........... D-13 Does your future lawyer still yearn to be a garbage man when he grows up? A hydraulic sanitation truck with scoop and top opening will give him a head start. Under $7. Educational toys rank high this year, beginning with a set of equipment designed to teach your baby to read. For 2-to-6-year-olds, it- contains everything needed to accomplish the purpose in 10 minutes a day. Sells for $5. ★ * * Science-minded seniors will be intrigued -with a geology or chemistry laboratory, each in a metal case. Rock enthusiasts receive samples of gold ore and petrified wood, pick-hammer and balance. Future chemists can test their abilities with a manual of over 500 experiments and a solid fuel rocket. Each sells for under |9. TAKE-APART TOYS Among pull toys for toddlers, there is a hen that cackles when her wheels go 'round. She sells for under $3. A busy train with moveal;)ie parts for the take-apart and put-together crowd sells for about $4. A doll in foreign costume, peeking from the stocking top, will delight the wide-eyed little mother Christmas morning. Take your pick of Norwegian, Brazilian, Mexican, Indian or Russian, for about $6. * * * Science *is the “Thing” for '67 even^ for the very young. A remote control' fluffy poodle that jumps, walks, begs and barks, operates on two “D” cell batteries (not included) for about $5. Viet^rops, Up 3 Times UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. V - The Vietnam war cropped up three\Umes at theUnitedNationsyesterday. \ ★ ★ * The ^uth Vietnamese observer to the U ited Nations urged that allied forces cross the Demilitarized Zone into North Vietnam to cut the Ho Chi Minh trail over which North Vietnamese troops and supplies flow South. General Assembly President Comeliu Manescu of Romania said that his government was telling U.S. rovi g Ambassador VV. Averell Harriman that a stepup in the U.S. bombing will not end the Vietnam war. , The Soviet Union told the General Assembly the United States is increas-claimed that Hanoi poses no threat to the Americans. * ★ ★ A U.S. delegation spokesman has indicated that Washin^on will. try to bring Vietnam before the Security Council if the Senate passes a resolution recommended by its foreig relations committee. The proposal calls on U.S. Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg to bring a resolution aimed at settling the war before the council. U.S. RESOLUTION The United States presented a reso-’ lution seeking a new Geneva co fer-ence on Vietnam before the council in February 1966. Because of Soviet and French opposition, Washington ever pressed it to a vote. * * * Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Vasily Kuznetsov brought Vietnahi before the General Assembly yesterday, accusing tfie U.S. Air Force of wrecking North Vietnamese civilians. GOLDBERG’S PARRY walk down the hall to the Security Council if he wanted to debate the Vietnam war. Vote Nixes Withdrawal CAMBRIDGE, Mass. \lfi — A resolution urging “the prompt return of American soldiers from Vietnam” was defeated by Cambridge voters, 17,742 to 11,349. Both, critics a d backers of the Johnson administration’s policy on Vietnam said they were encouraged by the vote. * * -k In Washington, Democratic National Cominittee Chairman John M. Bailey described the vote as “an e couraging endorsement of President Johnson’s policies.” DOWNTOWN FlNERY — Pontiac’s main street shopping center is decked out itvits Christmas finery as the shopping season gets seriously under way on festooned Saginaw Street. At Waterford Hearing State Fair Housing Bill Hit By JIM LONG Proposed state fair housing legislation came under heavy attack at a public hearing in Waterford Township last night. Only a few of the 115 persons attend- Related Story, Page A-15 ing the meeting at Mason Junior High School voiced support of the measure. The- hearing was called by Republican State Representatives Loren D. Anderson of Waterford Township and Clifford H. Smart of Walled Lake. Other meetings in the area are planned by the two legislators before returning to Lansing Dec.\ 12. According'to Smart his mail is evenly divided on the issue now, compared to the 10-1 ratio against it when the matter first came to the attention of the public. “I’ve received more mail on fair housing than I did on the income tax,” said Smart. ' Neither Smart nor Anderson has taken a stand on the Issue. “Right now, it’s our intention to get as much information about the bill before the ^ple as possible,” said Anderson. “Of all the people I’ve heard from, either in favor or against, none has ever completely read the bill.” ★ * ★ Those voicing opposition to the bill ranged from a clergyman, who said it “stinks," to a housewife, who expressed contjem that the CiviL Rights Commission would have too much power. A number of objectors prefaced their remarks V shying they were not opposed to minority groups or they were not being discriminatory. “We do not owe these people a law that Infringes on our «wu rights In the name of social progress,” commented one home owner. A Pontiac fireman critical of the bill said; ‘"The Negroes are advancing and they will continue to advance ... but I Realtors Protest Open Housing In a letter received by the City Com-missio Isst night, the Pontiac Board of Realtors proptested a local open housing ordinance being considered by city don't think I should have Ur give up any of my rights.” w * ★ Several persons wanted to know, if the bill was approved, whether it would be subject to a referendum election, and if it were, what procedures would be taken to circulal,e petitions. NECESSITY QUES’nONED The necessity of the bill also was questioned. “If there Is no law preventing the sale to a Negro or a Chinaman, why all this Bruce J. A nett, president, said the realtors are opposed to “any ordinance. Related Stories, Page A-10 law or legislation which would remove from an owner control of his private property.” In another letter on the subject, the Pontiac area Chamber of Commerce advibed deferring action on a local or-dl nice pending the outcome of pro- One woman who owns an apartment in Pontiac complained “I pay taxes and I see no reason why I have to sell to anybody I don’t want to.” ★ ★ ★ Of the minority favoring the bill, two were young men in their early 20s and a clergyman, who said he believed it is right. “Human rights are more important than property rights,” he added. “I agree that we shouldn't be bullied into taking action, hut I think we should pay attention to the signs of the times.” Forecast: Warmer With Snow or Rain Early morning temperatures registered a wintry 16 today, but it will be warmer tomorrow. Temperatures are expected to dip into the low 20s tonight and climb to near 30 tomorrow. Who Are COG Enemies? Who Are Its Friends? • said the board of directors, “supports in pbli'cy the State Chamber of Com-meree endorsement of a fair housing law in the state of Michigan. _________ , “Since prompt state action appeafl^ tonight, and sn likely which will require local ordinaces dieted for tomorrow, to conform, the board feels local actio should await outcome of state action,” he wrote. There’s a chance of some ^ight snow iw or rain Is pre- Today’s light southerly winds at five to 12 miles per hour will become southeasterly eight to 16 miles tonight.' 'Reds Not Using Porf PHNOM PENH, Cambodia UT) - The Cambodian government denied today that the port of Sihanoukville is being used to supply Nm-th Vietnamese and Vietcong forces in South Vietnam. ★ a * y.S. military officials in Washington last week expressed concern that Communist forces would use the port on the gulf of Siam if intensified U.S. bombing of land routes from North Vietnam sho^d seriously retard the flow qf ma-lerld southward. \ (EDITOR’S NOTE — This is the third in a series on the Southeast Michigan Council of Governments, a projected regional association of local governments in a six-county area.) By L. GARY THORNE Assistant City Editor—Suburban There are essentially three flavors of opinion on COG, the Southeast Michigan Council of Governments now in its final phase of organization. Opinion, which hi subject to change with the next political wind, now appears divided thusly; • Those who favor COG. • Those who are absolutely opposed to COG in any form. • And those who favor 'll restricted COG. The bulk of opiniou uppears t* he la port the limited version because they realize events have mpved well enough along that it is remote that COG could now be untracked completely. ★ ★ ★ Christian Powell, chairman of the dissident 19th Congressional District Republican Committee, is opposed to COG outright, but does think State Sen. Rob-era J. Huber’s proposed legislation would “at least limit COG.” APPEARS TIED Ul^ Huber’s bill, vrhich deletes school districts as COG members and requires elected officials as local representatives to COG, appears to be locked in a state House cdmi^ttee. - One of the prime movers for COG Annett said, “We believe that every citizen should have the opportunity to buy or rent private property anywhere but also believe the owner of private property should have the right to dispose of his property in accordance with his own desires. “Any law which attempts to remove, delete or abridge the fundame tat right of private ownership could lead to serious problems of enforcement and haras-sement of all citizens,’’ he laid. . OPINION ASKED Annett said the iocal realtors did not intend to enter into discussio of todd ordihances but were asked to submit >an ophiton by the dty officiate. > Precipitation probabilities in per tent are: to^y 5, tonight 50, tomorrow 70. Hie temperature in downtown Pontiac at 12:30 p.m. was 28. Post Hit During Show SAIGON (UPI) attained an American outyost during a troop show by Martha Raye, U.S. Army spokesmen said today. They said a helicopter whisked the comedienne and her troupe to safety. many of those new iavwtag the re- Opponents to COG have appeared in stricted form for COG are political recent months to becoma more numer-realists. ous, or at least more vocal. This has ^ In other words, they reluctantly sup- 4 (dMitinuod on Page A-2, Col. 3) ^ Sdrgery for NJ, lead ft) PHILADtLPHIA (34 — Gov. Rjch^ J. Hughes of New Jersey underwent ; rnTgery at the University of Petmsyl-! ,vante Haapltal today for removal of ■ cataract from his left eye. SHOPPING DAYS TO CHRISTMAS >1 THj: PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1967 Spirit of Fliers Delights This 'Amelia' (EDITOR’S NOTE - Jean Saile, a Pontiac Press report-learning hom to fly an airplane: This is the 14th in a series er, wife of a commercial artist and mother of six children, is on her impressions cn flying.) to newcomers is another item I take delight in. Varying steps of |)rogress are shared by them in the elation I feel. By JEAN SAILE “Thoroughly Modem Amelia.” That’s probably the favorite nickname appended to me during my very public flying lessons. There have been no such titles as “Crash” or “Flip,” probably because of an easily detected sensitivity on my part to such items. My contemporaries,' people who have known me for years and little suspected my vein of rashness, arp. inclined to write the whole flying thing off as a passing fancy. They are those who have never flown. I receive phone calls from people I haven’t seen in people who turn out to be flyers and who offer any they can. But the assistance I really need at this point can’t be wrapped up and delivered. What I need is to implant the idea of a “round-out” so firmly in my subconscious system that I can complete the last phase of the landing procedure with My last lesson — delayed two weeks because of weather and coming on the heels of the worst lesson yet — was a slil'-prise. Others whom I’ve known equally as long have revealed to me for the first time that they, too, are flyers. They can identify the symptoms and determine the degree of addiction. I followed the landing pattern and procedure in what seemed to me to be remarkably accurate fashion. MRS. SAILE The men are oftentimes ex-war pilots, having been trained by Uncle Sam, and according to them, missing many of the niceties which I have taken for granted in my training sessions. The knobs, switches, flaps and turns all fell into their respective places and the only thing that fouled up was my tendency to snatch the nose of the plane too quickly into the air on the flutter down. I am amazed at the number of women flyers. ! see them all the time at the Oakland-Pontiac Airport and their verve and dash amazes me. ‘A MATURE AGE’ Many have flown for years. Others' like me are tackling something new at a more mature age. The general spirit of camaraderie extended by veterans This flub of the flutter consistently brought about airy hops that are not at all professional. Aided by instructor Art Trowbridge who flew with me, we landed intact and proceeded to take off again in a series of “touch and goes” that kept the airport control tower busy working us into the pattern. The weather was perfect — my reflexes were working — and it was a great lesson. Once again I think maybe I’ll make it. iiv0 a 17-J Watch This dhristmas-lt Looks and Performs Lika a ^50 Watch SIMMS Men’s and Women’s Famous 17-JEWEL VANTAGE’ Watches ■Choose irom many smart styles (or : men and women. These jeweled . watches are: shock resistant, onti-■ magnetic, rustproof, lifetime main-; spring, too. Sold and serviced right 9 a.m. to 9:30 p.m EVERY DAY URYIL CHRISlIttS Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. De Gaulle's Attacks You’ll Find Just What The Youngsters Ordered on SIMMS 2nd Floor Brighten Your Home for the. Holidays with Domestics from SIMMS Discount Basement! Stir French Critics PARIS - President Charles de Gaulle’s renewed attacks on the United States, Brit-urdespread angry criticism yesterday and added new strains to France’s relations with nations which have been her friends and' allies in the past suavely knifed Israel. This is a lot for one man. It is too much! for one country. It so happens that De Gaulle is not France, which belongs to no one.” The Communist paper’s criti-[ | cism rested largely on DeJ Gaulle’s domestic policy, which it called “antisocial.” Commu- There wa.s only a passing at- nist criticism of De Gaulle’s for-j tempt among De Gaulle’s eign policy has been muted inj French critics to come to theiview of France’s increasingly! support of Britain after De cordial relations with the Soviet: Gaulle again slammed the door Union. | to British entry into the Com- In Jerusalem, Israeli govern-mon Market. But even the fre- ment circles were reported to quently Gaullist LeFigaro riis-'be bitter over what some deputed the French president's scribed as anli-Jewish” state-stand labelling Israel the ag- ments by De Gaulle that Israel gressor in the Middle East. was responsible for the June « « |Arab-lsraeli war. Relations with The anti-Gaullist. conserva-*Pa' i«;. cool btx-au.se of tive newspaper Aurore also crit- De Gaulle s pro-Arab stand, ^ icized the president’s Middle ^^id to be strained to the| East policies, saying it had not breaking point. There was alk| thoughT that “De Gaulle would:*" Israel s capital pf recal^g, go so far as to so explicitly’ Jlace on the Israelis the respon-i;;'"ls d***' sibilities for the conflict'’ with ecpoit the Arabs. It warned also that Canada was studying the Dc De Gaulle’s support of F’rench Gaulle statements supporting Canadian separatism would "free Quebec” in the light of the I "end only in external complica- Kovernment’s declared responsi-■> ’ jbility "not to allow any intru- The Sociali.st Le I’opulaire sion into Canadian affairs,”^ and the Communist L’HumaniteJI’'"reign Secretary Paul Martin were among the many critical voices. I WEST GERMANY . j ‘T(K> MUCH’ ! West German officials reaf- “In too minutes,” said Le Po-:f‘rmed support for Britain’s en-pulaire, "Gen. de Gaulle in theory into the Common Market name of France called for,and rejected De Gaulle’s view .secession in Canada, ,tossed'that the Middle East conflict 'The Original Tinker Toys Bath Towels Very slight irregulors of $2 95 towels. Choose yours Irom o big ond Krolls >n o variety of colors Baby Secret Doll Heavy Weight Hand Towels............49c 12x12” Terry Washcloths........ 5 for 1.00 15x24” Floral Hand Towdls-----5 for 1.00 Kohner Trouble Game Hasbro Lite Brite Ideal’s Careful Game 70x90-lnch White Cotton Sheet Blanket 300 OPEIM IMITES ’TILL CHRISTIVISS Look At What 'SANTA SIMMS' Has For You To Give In RADIOS -RECORDERS & TRANSCEIVERS All by 'PANASONIC Quality by Panasonic means you'll give better gifts this Christmas. And at lower cost. And $ 1 holds in free layaway. 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Jimmy L.' Fisher, I Pic. Josaph F. Werek, Fan- FLORIDA—Spec. 5 Venesler ILLINOIS — Flc. Henry B. Hewkins Jr., 'A^iSfilOAN — CpI. Richard Kevalcsik, "•STw YORK — Pic. Horace W. Cowd-rlck. Queens. OHIO — Spec. 4 Larimer P. Clerk Jr., '’S0U?IH 'CAROLINA — Sfll. Doneld C. I, Creenvl......................... Is. Clinon. TEXAS —Lance CpI. Manuel Silva, El Paso. Four Army men were changed from the list of missing to dead from hostile causes. They were: CALIFORNIA—Sptc. 4 Thomas J. Car- "miIsiSSIp'pI"'- PIc. Hubart Croom, Winona. VIRGINIA - PIc. Rufus J. Powdy, WEST VIRGINIA - PIc. Chartas H. Morris Jr., AlOoma. Four Artny pen were listed as missing in action. They were: Spac. 4 ^It C. Millar PIc MIlGfO Jonas PIc. Gary F. Shaw Names of nearest relatives and home towns of the misslilg were not made public. Two Army officers were listed as dead from nonhostile causes. They were: TEXAl - Mat. CharlaS E. Waavar, Don't Move .V. 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The board’s opinion will accojnpany island owner Mrs. Estelle Dawson’s application for a dike and bridge construction per^t from the State Department of Conscirvation. ol Officials View Levy Defeats Walter H. Weinman provided or the denial: the application doesn’t apply to the project, residents present expressed opposition to the project, and Mrs. Dawson’s plans are incomplete. The application available for the board’s review only included plans for a dike and not for the proposed bridge, said Supervisor James L. Reid. ★ * * ★ The board and residents both felt that plans were incomplete because Mrs. Dawson has previously registered plans to develop the island for a subdivision or apartments. NEVER GRANTED Reid reported that Mrs. Dawson’s request for rezoning of the 17-lot island for apartments was approved by the township zoning board March 6, 1958. However, the request was never granted because it wasn’t presented to the Oakland County Coordinating and Zoning Committee. Also, Mrs. Dawson would have to re-flle the request with the township, since, the new zoning ordinance has been enacted as ol this summer, Reid pointed The nine residents who spoke at the meeting said they opposed the whole plan. Among their fears were devaluation of their lakeside property and the marring of the lake’s beauty. Arleigh Hess, president of the 300-member White I^ke Citizens League, informed that the conservation department before giving Mrs. Dawson an answer, is required by law to obtain opinions from state and local health departments, the water resources board, state waterways commission, and the local government. The board also directed Reid to investigate why some 20 residents in Twin Lakes Subdivision have not received property tax rebates. Residents had appealed their assessments several years ago and received a favorable opinion from the State Tax Commission. By BETTY ANN SCHULTZ Thd^re is disappointment today in two area school districts as school officials take a second look at the results of elcetions Monday. Administrato^rs in Farmington view a partial victory, while Romeo officials evaluate a complete loss. Monday approved by 171 votes margin a $9-million bond issue and opposed by a 598-vote margin a 5-mill operating tax increase for 10 years. In the Romeo School District Monday, seven votes defeated an 8-mill Itax levy, a 5-miII lincrease. ★ ★ ★ The failure of the millage proposal in Farmington “makes no difference this school year, only next year,” said Schools Supt. Roderick Smith. But, the pointed, he reported. ADDED FUNDS Between now and next year, the district could get more funds through prop- erty taxes or another millage proposal, said the superintendent. ' < He added that another election before the regular school election in June is a possibility. The 5 mills woul dhave gone for salaries, wages and fringe benefits. This increase would have raised the schools’ operating tax levy from the current 23.4 mills to 28.4 mills. ★ * * The total levy, including 9 mills for bonds, now comes to 32.4 mills. The superintendent has pointed out that enrollment has gone up by 912 pupils this year to a total of 15,264. ASSESSMENT HIKE An administration officials indicated that a factor influencing the defeat of the millage proposal was alarm by some district residents that their property assessments may go up. “They feared that they may be pay- ing more taxes than! planned or that the district may not need the extra money,” said the official. This is partially true. Both Farming-ton Township and the city, of Farming-ton are reassessiilg property. This is a year ’round project, the assessors’ Office in both municipalities pointed out. And, it is further true, that the Oakland County Tax equalization board has recommended that both municipalities raise assessmens. But this would also lower the equalization factor, by which assessments are^ multiplied to get your tax bill. LEVY THEORY crease in the tax levy, property owners won’t be paying more, said the assessors’ offices. This, at least, is the theory. The success of the bond issue was a more urgent necessity than the milb age increase, said Smith. The $9 million is earmarked for four new schools. THE PONTIAC PRESS WED^ESDA^^ XOVEMHER 29, 1987 A—4 ho/Hews To Vie for State Title Clarkston Junior Miss Picked CLARKSTON — Miss Nancy Weiss, 17-year-old senior and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Weiss, 42 N. Main, is the new Clarkston Junior Miss. Selected in a recent pageant at the senior high school, she was presented with a trophy and a $250 scholarship by Clarkston Area Jaycees, Howe’s Lanes ard Haupt Pontiac. Runner-up was Dawn Evely, winning a plaque and $100 scholarship. A special judges’ award was presented to Leslie Surre for congeniality, leadership and alertness. Nancy was crowned by the 1966-67 Clarkston Junior Miss, Jeanne Shoots, now a student at Oakland University. Nancy will compete in the State Junior Miss Pageant in January at Pontiac Northern High School. The site for the district’^ third senior high, to be ready during the 1969-70 school year, has been purchased on 12 Mile west of MiddlaBelt. The district’s 19th Elementary sdiool also to be open during the 1969-70 school year, will be located on a not-yet purchased site in the eastern portion of the school district. Sites have not been chosen for the district’s 20th elementary and the fifth junior high, both to be ready by 1972. The bond issue will also buy about 50 acres as future school sites. The close defeat of the Romeo School District proposal for 8 more milles — i eluding an increase of 5 mills — disappointed and somewhat surprised the school officials. “We had expected a close but favorable election,” said Schools Supt. T.C. Filppula. While the margin between success and failure was seven votes, foiir of the total 687 votes were disqualified. The Board of Education will probably call for another millage election before next Sept. 1 after reexamining the budget and possibly reduci g the request, said the superintendent. The district may suffer an anticipated $100,000 deficit by next June 30 because of the election failure, the Asst. Supt. Robert Randell has said. Filppul aadded that “many people didn’t realize that the levy wouldn’t have started until Dec. 1968. The mill-age i crease would have amounted for the property owner to about $40 more a year based on $5 per $1,000 of state equalized valuation. Of the 5 additional mills, 3 were for debt retirement and 2 for some maintenance, six new school buses, ^me remodeling and salary adjustments. 2 on County Panel Rap Avon Planners Walled Lake Resident Nanfied to State Board WALLED LAKE - Fred M. Heine-mann, 58, of 3116 Southwind is one of seven hearing aid dealers appointed by Lt. Gov. William G. Milliken to the new State Board of Hearing Aid Dealers. The appointment is subject to Senate confirmation. Two members of the Oakland County Board of Supervisors’ Coordinating Zoning and Planning Conunittee took a verbal slap at the Avon Township Planning Commission yesterday. ★ * * The committee’s decision on a rezoning matter opposed the township planners’ view. At issue is a proposed 64-acre mobile home park in the township to be located between M59 and Auburn, west of Devondale and east of Adams. Developers are reportedly planning to build a site for 338 mobile homes on the The law requires that the appointees be LJf irri AAn n 98 KiI Ipd qualified-hearing air dealers who have man, ZO, Mliea been actively engaged in the sale of KOKOMO, Ind. UPi - James R. Gavin hearing aids for at least three years. Jr., 28. of Utica was killed last night The board will pass on the qualifica- when the car in which he was riding tions of and licensing of hearing aid deal- veered off the road and struck an em- ers. bankment. Change Is Dreaded Dragon Rural Life Fading Fantasy BY L. GARY THORNE Assistant Oty Editor—Suburban The rural life — open landscape marked only here and there by small, sedate villages — is a fastfading fantasy. It is a painful fact of life to those in and out of local government, but the hill and dale of Oakland County is going to be replaced by urban concrete. The remaining greenery will only be that which is planned in the way of residential backyards, municipal parks and boulevard medians. Urban planners, who forecast the eventual demise of “country” life, see decked cities in our future with the more mundane motions of life such as the movement of motor [ News Ana/ysis^ vehicles — being accomplished un-dergrountf. Despite the disturbing trend, jodged inevitable because of this country’s population growth, several Oakland County communities appear to be digging in to fight the dreaded dragon named “change.” BANITARY SEWERS / A recent city council meeting in Orchard Lake, for example, saw the comment that' sanitary sewers would mean the development of "every piece of property in the city.” The resulting brief discussion indicated that such total development was not desired. This factor, of course, was not the entire reason for Orchard Lake deciding some time back not to join in the proposed giant Clinton-Oakland Sewer interceptor. Meantime, across the county in Addison Township there are heated political differences on rezoning a piece of land there for industrial use. Addison is as rural in character as Orchard Lake is suburban. To all intents, there is a substantial segment of Addison residents who want to retain a rural flavor to life there. OUTSIDE PftESSURES Pontiac Township illustrates still another aspect of growth and change. This area is being pressed by its neighbors to cooperate in the construction of mutual facilities to provide essential municipal services. While these services are necessary to that township’s eventual progress, that which is on the jiand now must pay in advance of the prosperity of progress. Township officials wonder outloud what happens when the money runs out. Like the weather, progress will come. The question is when, and who can afford it. land at a cost of $1.8 million, according to their attorneys. ★ ★ ★ The land for the proposed development is zoned correctly now as light industry. However, township rules call for the mobile home site to abut property zoned multiresidential. REZONING SOUGHT Attorney Daniel Devine of Bloomfield Hills said the developer had obtained the adjacent land along Devondale and asked it to be rezoned from single family to multiresidential. However, Devine said, the township planners had voted against the rezoning, 6-2. Two supervisors on the committee critized township planners Mrs. Jean McDonnell of Southfield and Billy Van Arsdel of Addison Township both leveled the charge of “poor planning” by the township officials in not approving the rezoning. ★ ★ w Mrs. McDonnell registered the only “no” vote in the 4-1 decision backing the rezoning, however. She explained after the vote that she was not opposed to the development, but to the township planners’ concept of zoning. NO OBJECTIONS Attorney Devine told the group that adjacent property owners had not objected to the project at previously held public hearings. He said he would take the county com- mittee’s affirmative recommendation and the township planners’ negative one to the Avon Township BoardJor a final decision in the near future. ~ ★ ★ ★ SupertJisor Van Arsdel announced at the comhiittee meeting that it was his last one. He told members he was resigning his post of supervisor of Addison Township. Work Is in His Blood Couple to Receive Late Son's Medals WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -Mr. and Mrs. John L. Klett, 5551 Tad-worth, are receiving today three medals and a ribbon bar for their son, who died as a U.S. Navy hospital corps-man in Vietnam Nov. 21. John E. Klett, attached to the 9th Marine Regiment, 3rd Marine Division, working out of Con Thien, was killed by artillery fire while aiding wounded men. Klett’s medals are the Purple Heart with one gold star for being wounded in action. The star signifies two additional Purple Hearts. The corpsman is also honored with the National Defense Service medal, the Vietnam Service medal and the Republic of Vietnam ribbon bar. Klett is a 1965 North Farmington High School graduate and attended Port Huron Junior College before enlisting in the Navy in May 1966. Revisions Eyed for Programs in Holly Schools HOLLY — The board of education here is studying a special report by Supt. Russell Haddon on the present school program and the revisions that must be made because of the Oct. 30 defeat of a $5.2 million bond issue. The biggest problem the board now faces is what to do when we run into the expected classroom shortage, explain,ed Haddon. “We may even have to add some temporary classrooms next semester or reduce the academic program.” be said. The bond issue if passed would have .provided for a new $3.8 million junior high. * ★ * -- A new election might be decided on by the board in the near future, possibly at next Monday’s meeting, said Haddon. NEW OFFICES The board agreed to present plans for More Area News, Pages A-5 and A-8 remodeling the old Washington Street School Building to be used for new board of education offices. 'The building is presently used for storage, and the second floor is occupied by the school credit union. “Our present administration building at the rear of the high school is inadequate both iff appearance and in work space,” Haddon explained: The board has also approved a plan to publish a direct mail publication from the board of education to school district residents at a cost of $307 per edition. Four will be printed during the remaining school year. The board has agreed to set up an inspection by arechitects of the aging Ben-sett Junior High School to determine necessary repairs for safety and sanitation. “We hope to avoid remodeling the old school but some repairs are going to have to be made,” said Haddon. “The plumbing in the boys’ locker room is in bad shape, and some of the walls and windows in the gym appear to be in dangerous condition.” Invited to Swop Shop Area Citizen’s Band and ham radio operators have been invited to take part in an electronics swap shop .set for 10 a m. to 3 p.m. Dec. 10 at the Lawrence Institute of Technology cafeteria. South-field, * * ★ Proceeds from the swap will aid the •school’s club station W8QOA. Farmer Laments Retirement School Board Eyes Discipline Case OXFORD — The readmittafice on probation of a student suspended for using abusive language to a teacher occupied members of the board of education last night. 'The student, a 10th grader, was required to appear with his parents before the board to give reason why he should be readmitted since his suspension a week ago. Schools Supt. Roger Oberg said the action was In line with a general crackdown in student discipline. Students caught smoking the first time are suspended for three days. Those apprehended the second time qre required to appear before the superintendent with their parents before the board of education. We have firmed up our policy of student conduct,” Oberg said. HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP - A man who once drove a team of horses to market will sell his last dozen eggs Saturday at the Oakland County Farmers’ Market. Leroy Currin, unmistakably a farmer, has raised crops and poultry 77 of his 80 years. During the last 30 years, he has worked portions of 981^ acres at 1984 W. Highland. Currin’s most recent work has been selling 250 to 275 dozen eggs on Saturdays at the market. His 500 chickens are being raised by another man. Earlier, Currin’s land has yielded melons, potatoes, sweet corn and apples. Tile retiring farmer, relaxed but still with sparkle in his eye, will leave his nearly century-old farmhouse before Jan. 1. He will move into a home on Fisher Road with the family of his daughter, Mrs. Leslie Fraser. OPEN LAMENT He openly laments that he no longer has the energy required to continue his livelihood. “I would be foolish to quit if I could work,” he assured. He pointed out the mounting pressure on farmers to keep up with latest methods of raising crops and animals. “Farming is hard worft and lots of overtime,” Currin said. “But it gets in your blood.” Currin took over his dad’s 160 acres in Southfield Township and grew potatoes and corn and raised hogs. Before age 30, he had served his township as clerk and treasurer, each for two years. LOST IN DEPRESSION Currin then moved onto 40 acres in Farmington Township. Although the Depression forced Currin to relinquish the acreage, it indirectly brought in money for the Highland farm, the farmer recalls. Currin's career follows the life of the Oakland County Farmers’ Market. He remembers back some 40 years when 15 farmers sold at the open-air market on Cass Avenue near the railroad tracks. Currin then sold in the market when it moved to Mill Street, now the parking lot of Pontiac Osteopathic hospital. He followed the market to the 4-H fairgrounds about 20 years ago and then to its present site on Pontiac Lake Road near the county road commission building. Saturday he will sell for the last time with about 125 other farmers. PTA Dinner Thursday Elmwood School tTA will sponsor Us annual spaghetti supper from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the school, 2751 Auburn, Avon Township, acc(h^ing..4o Mrs. Joanne Begquist, PTA publicity ^lairman. Guidance Program Outlined to Board The formation of an Avondale Youth Gthdance Committee and its work with the youth of Pbnthic Township was detailed for the township board recently. Gerald Hanley, 3470 Greenwood, Avon Township, chairman of the committee, asked for the board’s endorsement of its work. He reported George Billings is vice chairman, Mrs. William Bergin secretary and Mrs. Raymond Ballard treasurer. He said a counselor is available at the Auburn Heights Boys’ Club to aid children with problems. i Leroy Cortin [Loads His Last Eggs; THE PONTIAC TRESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1967 Ambulance Subsidy OK'd ROCHESTER - The City Council here has voted to subsidize Fleet Ambulance Service to the cost of $300 a month on a six-month trial basis beginning Jan. 1. ★ ★ ★ The action followed a similar move by Avon Township to contribute $500 a month in an effort to keep an ambulance stationed in the Rochester-Avon area. Oakland Township is consid- ering a contribution to the fund. The ambulance service had asked for a $l,000-a-month subsidy. TTiere was discussion by City Council members that if a subsidy was to be provided, would the city also be held responsible for bad debts incurred by the service within its corporate limits. Such a move is afoot by the Ambulanc&> Association of Oakland County to insure payment for services rendered. In other business the council ins^cted City Attorney Arthur Cox arid City Manager William Sinclair to draw up an agreement with Mitzelfeld’s Department Store whereby it would rent the city-owned parking lot across East University from the fireball. William Mitzelfeld two weeks ago indicated a need for the space for employe parking. BONDING APPROVAL Sinclair said bonding ap- proval for the transaction had been received with the provision that a clause be included allowing the city to terminate the lease when desirable. ★ ★ ★ An application to rezone for apartments a lot on the corner of West Fourth and Wilcox was referred to the planning commission. William Hurley, owner of Alward’s Market on th6 site, indicated a desire to turn the store into apartments. Lack of Orchard Care Is Growing Problem LANSING UP)»— Some Michigan fruit growers may be spraying more but getting less for their money and efforts today T- all because other Michigan fruit growers neglect or abandon their own orchards. A State Department of Agriculture program aimed at removing abandoned or neglected orchards and vineyards has itself been partially abandoned because of a lack of money. A 1946 state law gave the department authority to do the removing. And the Legislature gave the department some $15,^ 000 for Implementation of the law in 1945, 1946 ... all the way through 1958 when the so-called “payless paydays” hit the state. Through 1958, the department removed about 1.25 million trees. ★ * ★ Then the apprc^riation stopped. “Since that time we have removed a feW fruit trees and small orchards,” says Dean Levitt, chief of the department’s Plant Industry Division. “But this has been insignificant and only done in the more critical situations where our own staff had the capacity to do the work.” Departn^ent statistics show an average of about 3,500 trees removed each year since 1958. “This means the fruit grower whose orchard is near an abandoned one is going to have to spray more to control insects and diseases,” Levitt says. '^And it means that even with this additional spraying he’s going be less effective in his efforts.” This, Levitt explains, is because a neglected or abandoned orchard will not be sprayed and is, therefore, subject to Insect invasion and disease. Once that orchard no longer the insects are likely move to the next closest orchard for fresh, juicy fruit — and the fruit grower who cares for his trees may be in trouble. The Michigan Farm Bureau has expressed concern over the problem. In a resolution adopted at the Farm Bureau’s recent convention, delegates called for an amendment to the 1945 law which would require property owners to remove old and abandoned orchards and vineyards themselves. From 1945 to 1958, the department’s program worked lilce this: Specific complaints and information on abandoned orchards gleaned from Agriculture Department workers involved in other projects across the state set the wheels in motion. * ★ * The department would ask the owner of the neglected orchard for perhiission to uproot the trees, then “shop around for bulldozer operators in a given area, line up a quantity of work and get going,” says Levitt. 17 CENTS PER TREE That 1.25 million trees cost the state “just a little over 17 cents per tree” to uproot, Levitt says. Destroying the trees was the job of the owner, who would eighter burn them or chop them into firewood or chips. *roday there are more neglected orchards and vineyards than when the program was in full force, Levitt says, “because there’s been so very little done about them.” And people still are neglecting their orchards — not spraying enough, for example — or walking away from them. ★ ★ ★ In ?ome cases, Levitt says, where fruit-growing areas art near cities, real estate speculators purchase the land and sometimes don’t develop it for a while. Another problem, he says, is that “real estate operators have a fondness for subdividing orchards and trying to point to the fruit trees as an asset. ★ * ★ “They talk about the beauty of orchards in the spring and all this fruit the buyers are go ing to get in their back yards. The trouble is, you don’t get fruit without a pretty good spraying program, and you’re going to find out you can get better apples cheaper down at the local fruit market.” SAVE Vi OR MORE Regular 5.00 and 6.00 famous blanket sleepers 2.47 Discover a unique bla^et sleeper with all the. features you want, and a savings price! Soft acet^e/Ac-rilan® acrylic that wears tl^ugh many machine washings. Hi^en zipper, non-slip soles, cotton l^it cuffs. Maize, pink, aqua. S-M-L- Girlt* soft knit gloves or mittens 1.00 Warm stretch acrylic in assorted colors and patterns. 3 to 6, or 7 to 12. Girls', liHle girls' holiday dresses from a large selection Carefree prints in easy shapes jm qq mm qq collar, bow trim, some 3-6« 7-12 with petticoats. Ass'!, colors. Open nights to io OPEN SUNDAY 11 A.M. TO 9 P.M. »y in knit headwear 1.99 Cuddle caps and toboggan styles of acrylic knit keep out winter winds. DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS From one of California's better makers, the success shirts of the year - at q, value price NATIONALLY FAMOUS MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS REGULARLY $7-$8-$9-$10 438 One of the greatest values we could offer you is this terrific selection •f famous-fnake sport shirts. A handsome mix of colors and tailoring, solids and plaids. Choice fabrics, some permanent press, distinctive trims. You must see them, glance at the label to see what a tremendous buy this is ! Meh’s sizes S-M-L-XL in the group. Ideal Christmas gifts. OPEN NIGHTS TO 10 OPEN SUNDAY DOWNTOWN AND 11 A.M. TO 9 DRAYTON PLAINS THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEPyESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1967 Built-In Woes Await New Defense Chief By FRED S. HOFFMAN AP Military Writer WASHINGTON - The next escretary of defense will have to establish his authority early. The armed services, tamed by Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara, are likely to test his successor’s mettle, * ★ ★ The new Pentagon chief also may have to face a Congress bent on showing him it is boss. For nearly seven years, Congress has smarted under what some members have called McNamara’s arrogance “know-it-all*’ attitude. The next defense chief also will inherit vexing problems from McNamara, among them the Vietnam war and the still troubled Fill fighter plane project, once known as the TFX. BUDGET REFORM McNamara also will leave behind him a fundamental budget reform which is his monument. That budget approach, which he installed and enforced on the services in 1961, probably will continue to operate to suppress service bickering over the split-up of defense dollars. ★ ★ * It is this budget reform, among others, that McNamara has claimed is “driven into the bedrock” of the huge military establishment and will remain after him. He also brought about funda mental alterations in basic national defense strategy, switching from reliance on massive nuclear retaliation to a more flexible ability to meet Comma nist threats at every level of war, from insurgency on up. FINAL AUTHORITY McNamara’s philosophy, ai he spelled it out to the Associated Press some years ago, was to establish a single final ai thority over the enwmously complex defense establishment “Whoever is head of the department should run it,” McNamara said. “The head of any organization ought to place himself in position to make decisions and to stand behind More Jets to Serve State LANSING (UPI) —Barring escalation of the Vietnam war. United Air Lines plans to have a “significant number” of twin-engine jet aircraft serving its six Michigan points by the end of 1969, the airline said yesterday. United President George E. Keck told a news conference that deliveries of the new Boeing 737 jets will begin in about 30 days and will continue until the line’s 110 remaining propeller aircraft are phased out. He said 75 of the new twin-engine jets, costing abont |5 million each, will be in service by the end of 1961. United’s plans were met with optimism but little enthusiasm by Michigan air officials. James Ramsey, director of the Michigan Aeroi^autics Commission, said the commission is “hop^” that the switch to jets will Improve passenger service in the state. ★ ★ ★ But he said the commission had a “real question” whether frequency of flights will be cut down as a result. ONE LINE WITH JETS North Central Airlines is the only line now with regular jet service In Michigan. It Inaugurated jets from Battle Creek’last month. Since North Central flies to sniaUer airports In Northern Michigan and in the Upper Penlnsnla, Ramsey saU the commission was concerned that this service might be cm> tailed as more Jets ire used. Since United services only Detroit, Lansing, Grand Rapids, Muskegon, Flint and Saginaw, Ramsey said the commission was not as concerned about cutbacks in local service by United; Keck said “some jet service” would be started to United’s Michigan points in the second or third quarter of next year. However, he said this could be farther in the future if the war in Vietnam is escalated. He said already the war effort has caused postponement of delivery dates on commercial aircraft up to four months. “If the war escalates, we would certainly feel the effects,” he said. On* way to sloap right. . . and warm: a | and oyaiot-adgad long nighty in voriod bluo floral prints. sizas 38 to 60 PONTIAC MALL r'... ■ ' f McNamara, working 12-hour days, has made hundreds of separate decisions, involving billions of dollars, in personal item-by-item reviews of mill, tary budget proposals each year. This detailed personal involvement has been criticized b;^ some on grounds a really good administrator would gate as much authority as ] ble to trusted subordinates IMPOSED RESTRAINTS The generals and admirals have often chafed under McNamara’s imposed restraints, but none have dared to challenge him in, public. He has made no secret of his determination to keep the armed services from quarreling among themselves or lobbying outside of the d^artment for their projects or interests. McNamara has served than two years longer than any of the seven previous secretaries of defense. Even among his critics, he is conceded to have run the Defense Department with greater effectiveness and disciplin than any of the out's. If it had not been for the Vietnam war, McNamara probably would have left the Pentagon after the completion of four years. Problem Driver War Is Urged LANSING (AP)-A crackdown on problem drivers has been asked by Michigan insurance industry spokesmen. An “unfit or irresponsible minority of drivers” constitute a threat to the lives, welfare and pocketbooks of responsible citizens, members of the Michigan Insurance Information Service told Lt. Gov. William Mililken The group said they are convinced there are four serious weaknesses in the state’s problem driver control and correction program. WEAKNESSES OUT LINED These were ouUined as: • Failure to prevent.probably some 200,000 drivers a year from eittier Ignoring the driver licensing law or defying traffic law violation summons. • A tpo-little and too-late point system of driver license examinations, which does not act until a driver has become a serious menace to himself and everyone else. e Extensive preoccupation by license appeal boards and courts with the economic necessity to which results in quick license restoration to more than half of those who appeal when their licenses are suspended or revoked. • Unrealistic treatment of alcoholic drivers, which instead of l^ing directed at taking them off the road until they are cured, simply removes and restores their licenses repetiyely. lillAKE OVER P&fiRi Detroit OKs Open Housing DETROIT (AP)-The Detroit Common Council pa: open housing ordinance by a 4-2 vote 'Tuesday. Scores of white citizens bitterly pledged to circulate repeal petitions. Council President Edward Car^ termed the ordinance prohibiting discrimination in housing sales and rentals as a “moderate approach to a major problem.” ★ ★ ★ But spectators, who milled around after the brief council session, cried “Wallace for President,” “Minority Rules,” and “We’ll get a referendum.” Several refused to give their names to newsmen. Carey who voted for it, said the ordinance will allow home-owners a “certain leeway” in their property matters. IN 30 DAYS The law, which will go into effect in 30 days, deals with the sales and rentals by brokers, agents and property owners if the property is put on the open market. “Nothing will prevent a person from selling to whomever he wants, except the sale can’t be based on race, creed, color or national origin,” Carey said. ★ ★ * He said a property owner could refuse sale or rental, for instance, to persoqs who were in “poor financiai condition” or were^ “slovenly housekeepers.” The burden of proof will be on the “perswi who is discrim- inated against.” The ordinance provides up to a $300 fine and a 9(klay jaii sentence for persons convicted of racial discrimination. NO DEBATE Carey said in betroit more than 70 per cent of the people own homes. No debate was allowed at the regular councfi session, -but some of the 200 spei^tors waved placards. . An open bearing on the ordinance was held last week. The white dtizens booed when the council later passed three of five proposals on puUic hou^ sites for dther* elderly persons or for large families. A site for senior citizens was JH^ved for Detroit’s wgst side. Ibe council approved two sites for large families in Detroit’s east side. Councilmen Carey, Philip Van Antwerp, Melvin Ravltz, and Nicholas Hood voted for tiie open housing ordinance. Councilmen Mary V. Beck a William Rogell voted against. For AnfJsubversive Board House OKs New Setup WASHINGTON (AP) - The House has passed legislation designed to clear up a major problem for the Subversive Activities Control Board—a chronic lack of work. By a 269-104 margin, the House voted Tuesday to estab lish a new procedure for listing ps found by the board to be Communist-dominated. * ★ w Court rulings over the years have thrown out laws that once allowed the board to decide that such groups must formally register as Communist-dominated. 'The House-passed bill would re- quire the attorney general simply to keep a list of such organizations as determined by the board. SIMILAR BILL The Senate has passed a similar bilj. But it would provide that the board would be disbanded if it doesn’t hear at least two cases in 1968. The dearth of board business in recent years, was well-publicized this summer following the announcement that Simon McHugh, husband of a onetime secretary to President' Johnson, had been appointed to one of the panel’s five $26,000-a-year posts. Hood, only Negro on the council, introduced the measure. RAVITZ STAYED Ravitz, who was the only councilman to remain in the chambers after the brief session, was confronted by angry whites, one of whom accused him of “selling out.” A stout woman walked up to him, shaking a finger, and said she didn’t want people in the neighborhood “like the ones that murdered my son.” ★ * ★ Someone tore up a placard and threw it toward Ravitz. A group of women, buttoning their overcoats, stormed out-ijfr' the council session, yelling at the top of their voices. PLAN PETITIONS ‘We’ll get the petitions on the streets. We’ll do it like Flint and California did,” one said. California voters defeated a state open housing law in 1964. And homeowners in Flint have filed petitions calling for their council to either repeal the recent open housing ordinance there or have a citywide vote on it. “I’m 69 years old. And I’ve been paying taxes for 44 years. And I’m going to hit the pavement with petitions,” one white-haired maq said. He would not give his name. 'The women said they represent various home owners groups. 8lhip Ejim ©atram’a for CEiriatmaa WEiat can make a gift sweater better? Osmun’s. For example, take our gift bpx. Go ahead . . . take our gift box. It’s free. And that’s just one example. Want more? Then come to Osmim’s. Because Osmun’s has more. More sweaters, for example. Osmun’s has more sizes. Osmun’s has more styles. Osmun’s has more colors, shapes, buttons, zippers, collars, stitches, and—But doO’t think we’re just trailing on our name. We trade on other people’s names, too, (Robert Bruce and Arnold Palmer for example.) So if you want to give an Osmun’s gift certificate, or make that gift sweater better, you can. (Rve more than a sweater. Give him Osmun’s. • Arnold Palmer Cardigan by Robert Bruce ♦ ‘22.00 LAY.AWAY YOUR OIFY. A small dapesit holds it ’til Christmas. a part of Christmas since 1931 SMUN’S STORES FOR MEN & YOUNG MEN FREE PARKING at ALL.STORES ■ Downtotjrn Pontiac ■ Tal-Huron Cantor in Pbntiac ■ Tech Plaza Center in Warren Opsn Ews^ Night ’Ml 9 Open Evsry Night *tll 9 Open Evtry Night *ttl 9 WontM vSec/itM THE PONTIAC PRESS WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1997 B—1 Mrs. William llartman o/ Bloomfield Hills is the designer of this imaginativ^e setting captioned "Cardinals’ Brunch," in green and gold accented with a flock of brilliant red cardinals feasting on the holly tree. Tuesday’s "Holiday Tea and Country Store” at the YWCA was sponsored by Pontiac branch of Woman’s National Farm and Garden Association. Mrs. .W. Ross Thompson of Bloomfield Hills is caught on her knees arranging decorative items in baskets for sale in the Country Store. A large green velvet wreath hangs over her head. Mrs. Frederick Poole was chairman, or storekeeper, of this phase of the annual tea. Proceeds will be used to help support a student at Michigan State University, majoring in horticulture. Tuesday Musicale Chorus Sings With Symphony By BERNICE ROSENTHAL Pontiac Tuesday Musicale Chorus, with soloists Alice Engram, contralto, and Roger Welton, flautist, gave an artistic and stimulating performance last night with the Pontiac Symphony Orchestra. Felix Resnick conducted the concert, which was the second in the current season, at Pontiac Northern High School Auditorium. The near-capacity audience was delighted with the Christmas flavor of the unusual program of romantic and contemporary muaic. ♦ * * The “Magnificat" by Ralph Vaughn Williams was the major work on the program. With its difficult modern tonalities, tenuous melodic line and static orchestral accompaniment, the woman’s chorus sang with beautifully blended tone, fine phrasing and excellent command of the esoteric character of the choral work. POUSHED The many long hours of polishing and sustaining the dynamics which the chorus and its inspired director, Christine Gaens,bauer, had spent, were evident in last night’s polished performance, which contributed greatly to the chorus’ reputation of being one of the finest in the state of Michigan. Both impressive and heart-warming were Alice Engntm's Solo passages. Her voice, which combines depth, exquisite quality, easy control, powerful resonance and artistic know-how, was a privilege to hear in the difficult fragmentary melodic solo parts. So often taken for granted, the principals in the various sections of the orchestra are talented artists in their own right. ★ ★ * Roger Welton, principal flautist, heard as soloist in'the “Magnificat”, and later in the “L’Arlesienne" Suite, is a fine artist with pure tone, great variety, immaculate technique* and intrinsic good taste. NUTCRACKER On the lighter side of the musical spectrum, the chorus pre.sented five. movements from Tschaikowsky’s “Nutcracker” Suite. They sang well, but the “Nutcracker” Suite does not lend itself to the vocal art, and the ill-fitting words detract from the charm of the familiar ballet. Bizet’s robust “L’Arlesienne ” Suite No. 2, Wallingford Riegger’s vibrant “Romanza for Strong Orchestra”, and Bernstein’s “West Side Story” excerpts comprised the second half of the concert, which showed Mr. Resnick and .the orchestra in their best form. The curtain-raiser was Benjamin Britten’s “Soiree Musicale” excerpts. In this composition, Mr. Britten, who is a giant among living British composers, takes every trivial musical cliche a|id exaggerates it. Maudlin sentimentality becomes mawkish, a Latin dance is made ridiculous, and, best of all,’a travesty on Music Hall trivia joins in the fun to perpetuate a dry-humored caricature on English music. ABBY A large silver bowl of holly, flanked by two tall candelabra highlights the table setting arranged by Mrs, Gelstor Poole of South Shore Drive. Mrs. William Mack of Bloomfield Hills tables cochair- man for Tuesday’s tea, admires the traditional setting which conjures up shades of "Olde England" and the wassail bowl. A study in black and white is the effect achieved with this table setting for a New Year’s Eve champagne supper. Red-wrapped candies, red carnations and slim red candles accentuate the sophisticated atmosphere. Black foliage in the vase Pontile Pms Pholot by Roll is achieved by spray-painting dried magnolia leaves. This is the creation of Mrs. Kenneth VandenBerg, of Orchard Lake, president of Pontiac branch of Woman’s National Farm and Garden Association. Teens Discuss Mores, Life of Their Peers Artist Here By .lEANNE NELSON If a youthful six-member panel’s appraisal of their peers’ social activities IS representative, then it would appear that liquor, drugs and sex play lead roles in today's area teen lives. The panel, selected by their speech and drama instructor, Larry Bobbert of Andover High School, Bloomfield Hills School system, spoke Tuesday at a meeting of Child Study Club III in the Pine Lake home of Mrs. Charles Miller. ★ ★ ★ The availability of liquor, all six agreed, is no problem. Older friends often make the purchase. Strangers on the street will provide this service. And as one boy put it, “the stores will take our money.” Another panelist pointed out that there is drinking at most parties. There seemed to be a division between the drinking habits of the so-called “open house” and “invitational.” ★ ★ ★ The former, where both boys and girls come, sans date, is apt to involve the greater amount. The panel as a whole seemed to find nothing demoral-ozing about teen drinking in general, adding that some parents had even served it to them on occasion. The habitual use of alcohol with parental knowledge was also indicated. MARIJUANA Marijuana (pot) was "^liscussed with candor. “It too, is not at all difficult to obtain,” was the general opinion. The audience was told that “pushers” are usually older students at the school. ★ * * A link or joint will bring a dollar. And reportedly, for $2 a degree o f “highness” can be reached, similar to that from a $5 fifth of whisky. Another reason for the use of pot is the absence of a hangover associated with drinking. There appeared to be some disagreement among the panelists on the subject of “Sex Education In the Schools.” Someone ventured that the kids would laugh at the Idea. Another suggested that the class be given as an elective as opposed to a requirement. Still another suggestion was to have the class take on a seminar-like atmosphere with the emphasis placed on emotion rather than biology. It was pointed out by one of the and instruction is available reading material at the public library. ★ ★ * In this same vein, panelists told their listeners that intimate sexual relationships are prevalent among high school students. While one young man expressed the desire for a virginal bride, he seemingly didn’t hold out much hope for it. In answer to a listener’s query on the consequences of such actions, the panel for the most part agreed that youths “didn’t really think too much about it.” TWO-FACED Presenting two faces, the majority claimed, was essential to their way of life. To obtain the privileges most wanted from parents and other adults, it was simply a matter of “staging” the kind of behavior their parents WANTED to .see. But the REAL self emeiged within the confines of their own peers where the “gang” is all. ★ ★ ★ Ideas on parent-teen relationships seem to center around parental trust. The young people all agreed that they would be more inclined towards responsible behavior, given the truri to prove it. One of the girls whose parents are girls said she would not betray her folks’ trust by driving the car one mile further than the lodge. But, she added, we’ll probably go to.........in some- one else’s car. ★ ★ ★ She hinted that this information wouldn't be volunteered at home however since her parents might lose their “trust” in her. A widening breech in communications between parents and children was pointed out as a key factor in many youthful attitudes. Another troublesome area seems to be the examples set by the parents. Several panelists voiced the feeling that parents are unrealistic to expect their sons and daughters to refrain from doing the very things they them- selves do as a matter of course. ★ ★ * Religious concepts provoked mixed feelings among the youths. General attitudes marked a total disbelief in fundamentalist theories, but each young person indicated a serious committment on an individual basis as he or she translated it. * * The Birmingham-Bloomfield Teen Center came in for some sharp criticism. Dissatisfaction was voiced with the overall management of the center and prevailing rules. One major complaint was that junior high students are being admitted. Another focused on the lack of seating facilities and still another on the too watchful eyes of chaperones. More student control seemed to be a nobvious solution to the panelists. Panelists were: Laura Remsnider, senior: Sue Esdale, sophomore: Jim Eaton, junior: David Rybicki, junior: Jane Malmberg, junior: and JanLCbau— el, junior. pianist Alicia de Larrocha will appear in concert at Detroit Institute of Arts auditorium Friday at 8:30 p.m. Tickets are available from the In-stutute Ticket Office, Hudson’s and Grinnell's Would Like 1‘ to Be Friend By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: I just found out I’m a Peeping Tom. I know it sounds terrible, but I’m really not that kind of a guy. It all happened accidentally last I week when I inoved into |J an upstairs apartment overlooking a narrow courtyard. A gorgeous young woman lives directly across from me, as I learned the very first night when she got undressed and left her shade up. I felt very sneaky about watching her, but I was fascinated. She left all the lights on, her window shades up and she even did her exercises in front of the window. Don’t tell me I can ren^ove temptation by pulling my shades down. I know that, but I am only human and she is some dish. I saw this show again last night and to tell you the truth, I would like to meet this young lady and know her better. Any suggestions? “PEEPING TOM ” DEAR TOM: Yes, introduce yourself to her before you ruin your eyes with eyestrain. As a neighborly gesture you can knock on her door and ask to borrow something. (A cup of sugar—NOT a pair of binoculars.) If she turns out to be as nice as she appears to be in the flesh, in due time, wise her up about the show she’s been putting on for the neighbors. And unless she is some kind of exhibitionist, she’ll appreciate it. * n it DEAR ABBY: The letter signed “HELEN,” complaining because her boss’s fayorite subject was SEX, has created a p r o b 1 e m in our office. My name happens to be Helen, and the description of that boss fits my supervisor to a “T,” but I didn’t write the letter. This morning I found your column on m'y desk. Underscored in red was your advice, "If he IS your boss, there are other jobs.” In the past, I have shown my displeasure by ignoring all his sexy talk and off-color remarks, but what do I do now? i HELEN IN HOUSTON DEAR HELEN; For your boss’s information, he is approximately 1600 miles off target. But you can tell him for me, “If the shoe fits—wear it,” which should not be difficult, since he has already put his foot in it. * * * Hate to write letters? Send $1 to Abby, in care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056. “How to Write Letters for All Occasions.” House of Bedrooms Presents New Store Our We have moved modern building display over 100 cluttered setting, special invitation into our spacious new, where we are able to bedroom sets in an un-We want to extend a to our past customers as well as to those new to this area. We pride ourselves finest selections bedroom sets. with handling of adult and only the children's New Contemporary Look Rich hond-rubbed browntone finish with striking ^ j j ^ frosted accents. It's a new look. Includc^s a large C 1 Jm mL double dresser, matching framed mirrori spacious Y W # I chest of drawers and panel bed. 0f Ifdr00ttt0 1716 S. Telegraph Rd. 334-4593 Open 9 to 9 Ajlon. thru Sat. Between Miracle Mile and Orchard Lake Rd. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1967 MARKETS |si*piisto^ Chrysler Chief Looks to "68 1 INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (AP) The following are top prices | covering sales of locally grown I produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by theL, . „ Detroit Bureau of Markets as!^^® Corp. of Monday. jpredicted today that the auto in- p , idustry will sell a near-record rroauce number of cars in 19QB in the FRUITS United State*? Appits. Cofiland, bu........U00| JMdieb. ciX'^Tiarc.^...........t”! Virgil E. Boyd said that de- amU; NoX?I: spy. bu..........4.?5|®P‘‘® increases in bank ----- - --------- ‘ 4.M|interest rates the sale of new I cars should exceed nine million 2.5o| autos in 1968. This would make '.7s!i968 the second nine million -J 5s I plus year in industry sales his-cnery, root, bu. ........... tsol^n^y- In 1965, the industry sold Big Year Seen for Auto Makers clouded a little by the recent de- have valuation of the British pound and the resultant increase in bank interest rates,” Boyd said. “But as we see it, if there is no additional dampening of the economy, automobile sales will not suffer appreciably.” Apples, Golden Delicious, bu. VEGETABLES Beets, topped, bu........... Cabbage, Curly, bu.......... Cabbage, Red, bu........... Cabbage, Standard Variety bi Carrots, Cello Pak, 2-dz. .. Carrots, topped, bu......... 1967 THIRD Sales of new cars this year “will be even better than the 8.7 million we predicted back in August,” Boyd said. This would 3~j9,297,000 new cars in the Unitediindustry’s third delayed purchases of Leeks, dz. bchs................ Onions, dry, 50-lb. bag ..... 2 001 States Partley, Root, dz. bch.......*.00 Pa™ip5 c^ito Vak di 2'25l remarks were in a PeaT ^iiackeye, bu.' . . . . . : 5.00 Speech prepared for a meeting PoSt'ws’, 5Wb.''bag'isojof the Indiana State Chamber of Ralns”s, ^'d,' Ho8,ouM, tx:h. ' ^ i.Mi'Commerce in Indianapolis. ..........{>1 “The outlook is admittedly Squash, Buttarcup, bu......... l.Zs'—_______________________________ Squash, Butternut, bu....... 1.751 , squash, Hubbard, bu. ... ' ''' Turnips, dz. bchs. . highest sales year. He said strikes and work stoppages in the U.S. auto industry this year, including a two month United Auto Workers Union strike at Ford Motor Co., “But we don’t think these sales are permanently lost, just delayed,” Boyd asserted. He said the U.S. market appears strong because of “continuing increases in personal earnings and savings and a very enthusiastic public response to the industry’s 1968 models.” Boyd said a “big question still facing the industry” is what will happen in labor negotiations between General Motors Corp, biggest automaker, and th UAW. New cpntracts have been settled between the union and Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler, but bargaining is continuing with GM. GREENS , bu................ LETTUCE AND GREENS Poultry and Eggs POULTRY The New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK (AP) ■ Nev Exchange selected morning .____,. Sales 18-20 cents,- broilers] (hds.) High La 19-21; roasters Abex <:p Y Market quiet, receipts ample. DETROIT EGGS DETROIT (AP)—(USDA)—Egg prli loien paid by first receivers (Inci Market steady, trade slow, supplies moderate and clearing closely. CHICAGO BUTTER CHICAGO (AP) — Chicago Mercantile Exchange-butter sMy; sSioleMle^-Ing prices unchanged; 93 score M MW; « A MW; 90 B 45M) 89 C 4444; cars go B MW; 89 C MW. ' Eggs steady; wt A™whlt!»'32; mfxed 31- mediums 27 standards 35W. CHICAGO POULTRY CHtCAGO (AP)-(USDA)-Llve pouUnr wholesale >»«yln9 ,»»■'«» roasters 25-28; special fed While RocI fryers 19-20. ABC Con Abex Cp ABC Con Abex Cp 1.60 ACF Ind 2,20 AdMillis .40a Address 1.40 Admiral .25p AIrRedtn 1.50 n 44^ 21 33% 33 2 29% 29% 29% 21 33V* 33 33% 2 29% 29% 29% - 45% 45% 45% • 64% 63% 64% ' 67% 67% 67% + % Gillette 19% 19% 19% .. Glen Aid wl 3 36% 36% 36% - % Glen Aid .70 Gen Elec 2.60 Gen Fds 2 40 .GenMot 3.B0g SGenPrec 1.50 GPubSv .46g GPubUt 1.56 jGTelEl 106% 106% 10 66% 66% 66% + % 122 80% 80 80% + % iGen Tire .80 !Ga Pacific lb Phlll Pet 2.40 PItneyB 1.20 PitPlafe 2 60 Pitts Steel Polaroid .64 ProctrG 2 20 PubSvcColo 1 Pubikind .46f PugSPL 1 Pulli Livestock DwflilfoO'lb M’^27.257'mW choice 25.75;26.25; good, 24.50-25.W; Um 1-3 barrows end gl .»-i^V.'’i5."75.!%.3'X’,;;s“ur ^ ArmCk "Veaiers 125, high chojce a nd prime Ashid Oil 1.20 AMiedStr 1 32 Alcoa 1.80 Am Airlin .60 A Home 1.20 AmMPdy .90 2 67% 67% 67% ....;GraceCo 79 22% 22 22 — % GranItCS 1 19 39% 39% 39% — % Grant 1.10 4 38% 38% 38% + % Gt A&P 1.* 6 76% 76% 76% - % Gl West F 40 32 31% 32 +V4 GWSug 1.6 16 62% 61% 62% -f1% GreenGnt 7 72% 71% 72V* -H% Greyhound 21 48% 48% 48% + % GrumAlrc 3 22% 22% 22Va — % Gulf Oil 2 52 28% 27% 2a .... GulfStaUt 99 55% 55 55% •4 80% 80% 80% • 18 17% 17% 17% 16 20% 20% 20% -45 48% 48% 48% 685 13% 12% 13V4 • 4 35 34% 34% 1 26% 26% 26% • 11 IOV4 10% 10% 21 69 66% 68% • 12 24% 24% 24Va 21) 5(KVs 50% 50% • 27 31% 31 31% • 8 37 36% 37 42 37 36% 37 liman 2.80 % Here In 1.20q %, HewPack 20 I Hoff Electrn W|Holidylnn .30 W Hollyiug 1.30 AlHoneywl 1.10 W Hook Ch 1,40 W House Fin 1 W HouslonLP 1 17.00-18.0 Hogs 30* 1IF3S0 lb 13.35-15.00. 135, high --------- choice 35.«MO.OOi choice 1-2 19tF3l Allas ,Ch .80 Atlas Corp Avco Cp 1.30 135^'Avon* Pd 35 to 50 Anken Chem ArchDen 1.50 Armco StI 3 Armour i.60 Arm Ck „ Ashid 01. 3»--» Assd DG 90-110 lb 34.0(F25.00. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP) - (USOA) 4,500; butchers 50 to 75 "Ighef, lb 19.25-30.00i 153 head 310-215 1-3 22M40 lbs 18.25-19.25; sow "'ttSlIe V.m’^aives 1.W Biamriw: h«ifers strono to 25 higher; choice |Daii oc 1.52 LmST'sM lb slaughter tSj'lBMChAl^c ’tb 2 to 4 38.25-37.00; mixed good and choke BewhAlK tb 1,000-1,150 lbs 35.75-38.50; choice •“-'-“J 200; Pi'S?,,’S»' BoiYng®"l 2o” lb wooTed slaughter lambs 23.00-24.00. iBolsaCasc 25 " —---------- i Borden I 20 jfiorgWar 1.25 American Stock Exch. NEW YORK (AP) - Anrierla Exchange selected noon prices. 3 56% 56% 56% — % 12 47% 47% 47%-% nsNW ? ^ 68 35% 34% 35 +1% St-rlkTt 1 HO 10 47% 47% 47%-%: ^ 42 35% 35 35% -H% ntHaru IHO 7 68% 68% 68% + % "t 1? 26% 26% 26% + %l,niNkk 2 80a 3 98% 98% 98% -- — 1914 ]9v 5% 82 49% 49% 49’ 75 65% 65 65’ 5 127’/4 127'/4 127’/4 - —B— 5 49'/3 49% 49’/3 - 16 28% 28'/a 26’% • 21 74 73% 73% - 1 41% 41% 41% • 43 89% 89% mt - 23 47 47 47 46 6'/4 6’% 6% ' 48 32% 31% 32% Packers Pap 1.35 TAT 1.70 iJl^ilowaPSv 1 24 1 23% 23' Jewel Co 1.30 I Joy Mfg 1 25 46 72 3 6% 6% 6% ,,. 13 27% 27% 27% + % 52 42% 42% 42% — % 42 25% 25'/4 25% + % 17 56 56 56 ... 6 32% 32% 32% — % 22 102% 102’/a 102% — % 16 57% 57% 57% + % 23 12% 12’A 12% ... 104 14 13% 14 + % 12 67% 67% 67'/4 ... Rayonr 1.40b 23 46% 45% 45%— % Raytheon .80 29 39’/4 39 39'/4 + % 1 Reading Co 7 26% 26% 26%-% RelchCfi .40b It 34% 34 34'/4 + % I RepubStI 2.50 5 28% 28% 28% +% Revlon 1.30 52 12’/b 12 12% + % Rexall .3Qb x3 45% 45% 45% + % Reyn Met .90 6 32 32 32 — % ReynTob 2.20 x28 21% 21% 21% + % RheemM 1.40 113 32% 32’/4 32%-% RoanSe 1.67g 24 74% 74% 74% 4- % Rohr Cp .80 9 23 23 23 .|RoyCCola 72 HjRoyDut 1.9()g ““ RyderSys 60 84 62% 62 62’/4 + % 4 61% 61% 61% + % - . 20 55% 55 55 -1% J JO 2. 44'/4 44% 44% ^ 11 79% 79% 79% + % ^ 2 10% 10% 10% ... -30^ 9 SO 49% 50 4- % Schenley 1 60 5 31'% 31% 31% ■^’%‘SCMCp - *-*tPapr* . CstL 2.20 «w «w + [— I seeburg .80 Sharon StI 1 3 I8W IBW iaw A"* 4$’" ,‘'‘ + ’^'sh™m“? 28 31-tt! 3H4 3IW + '/4 Vi. ‘f S'^*-'^1m?thK“i,8S 17 814W 813 813W - W ISHSf'c,, VIS. 7 33W 33W 33W -I- W ' 9* 153 29W MW »’/4 'i "ew ’’‘h ’’ew + wl|°“'J; .V® 78 MW 75W 25W+;J^“ '-J® MW-I- W D, 1 58W 58W M'-y-k W]|“,'« —J---- IStOCal 2.50b 1 28V. 28^4 28X4 + W -k” 1 58W 58X4 58X4 -I- W iSR 3 B7W 87 87-/4 + W I 4 58-/4 58-/4 58-/4 -F W I 52-/4 51W 52-/4 t X4 i » 2‘ Lsr-y ?‘_ + vxlt{;r7 S' (hdi.) High Low 21 58% 58 8 73'/a 72 10 60% 60 7 11% 11% 11% X30 249’/a 247% 247% • 100 87% 87 67% 0 20% 20 20% 8 6% 8% 8% 3 31% 31% 31% — ’ 14 45% 45% —R— 172 57’A 56% 57 5 24 Auto Insurance Reform Is Seen Limit on Cancellation Grounds Said Near ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) -The president of the National Associ ation of Insurance Commission ers has disclosed that all major auto insurance companies^ within the next few days will announce a new plan which would limit the grounds on which they may cancel a driver’s policy James L. Bentley Jr., Georgia insurance pommissiorjer and president of the national organization, told of the upcoming proposal Tuesday after he was questioned about a release in which one segment of the automobile insurance industry had disclosed a plan along somewhat similar lines. “I think this Is the forerunner of a much more comnlete proposal,” Bentley told the Associated Press in a telephone interview concerning the initial release. “I think you’ll see a more ad vanced nlan within the next few days,” he said. MAJOR COMPANIES The NAIC President went on to sav the major plan—still to still be announced — will af- 80-W 80-/4 39 34X4 34X4 34X4 78 48X4 47X4 48X4 -I- 54 40-W 40-/4 40X4 — W 8 51 50X4 50V4 -F X4 32 9(k 9-/4 9W . 207 32X4 32X4 32'/4 -Ft 2 33X4 33-/4 33-/J — Va 87 48X4 48X4 48V, — -A 13 30-/J 30-A 30X4 5 20W MW 28-A - -20 42W 42W 42-/2 - [IdahoPw 1.50 18 29-/4 29X4 29-/2 - Protesfers Due to Get Army Orders DETROIT (AP)-Some Michigan men are in line for induction orders because they protested the Vietnam war or the draft system by handing in their Selective Service cards. At least one of them says he won’t go. As many as 30 may be in the same situation. The first step in processing those to be inducted for such acts, which are illegal, is to declare them delinquent. ORDERS EXPECTED James Russo, 21, of Ann Ar-reevaluate their program or.I'®’' received his delinquen-they will face more rigid gov- cy notice, which he returned to -A ernmental control on both the ’I*® board, and he anticipates receiving orders to report for induction. “If they send me an ordo to report for induction into their Army, it will have little mean ing to me,” Russo said. M 08-/4 05-A 05X4 +'x4 j fcct comoanics handling roughly 12 18W l8w ww^/^ISO ner cent of the auto insur-«’/4 41W «w + Wjance business in the United States sten in the “This will be right direction,” Bentley said, “I think the auto insurance companies have come to realize they’re in the same position the auto industry was in a couple of years ago—either they move 58 23X4 23 4 41 4(F 88 27-/4 27-A 27-A ...... 87-/4 87X4 48W 48X4 -F X4 88-/4 88-/4 -F ‘ 24 145X4 144X4 144X4 — 195 54-A 53-A 53X4 -F 5) 26X4 25X4 28-A ^4 MW MX4+'xJ|State and federal level.” 83 88H 87-/4 87X4 50 48X4 48W 48X4 4 88F4 88-/4 88-/4 24 145-195 54' 51 28- 73 52 51X4 52 -F1W - 58X4 MW MX4 “ If-A If'* 21^ "**1 In a release issued here Tues- Jl MW M Mw+iw^day. the National Automobile 22 45W 44'* Underwriters Association and 33 88-/4 87X, 88-/4 -F X4 the National Bureau of Casualty - . ... 52X4 28 38X4 38X4 38X> Economic Invader Frightens De Gaulle By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst NEW YORK (AP) - A threat to the European way of life, a take-over of its econom'y, a neu- tr^zation of its_____ power are among the dangers threatened by America — in the view of Charles D e Gaulle, president of France. D e Gaulle’s financial advisers even forsee the deterioration of the system by which nations settle their accounts with each other, thus threatening a world economic collapse. Again, the United States would be at fault. CUNNIFF Through understandbg De Gaulle’s fears, one' can also realize that he is not simply an imperious old man but, once n, a general protecting France and in fact all Europe from domination by an invader - an economic invader. Over the longer term he feels also that he is protecting the whole misbehaving world from its financial follies by demanding that they settle their bank accounts anti keep them settled before it is top late. FEARS BEHIND ATTACKS These fears lay behind the general’s almost incessant attacks on the manner in which the world’s nations pay bills to each other. They pay in U dollars, and De Gaulle doesii’t like it. Why? As his financial advisers have stated, the United States has been running the printing pi es day and night. It is inflating the value of its dollars, and it is using them then to buy into the European economy. This accounts for De Gaulle’s news conference statement that American economic power in Europe is “due ip large part not so much to the organic superiority of the United States as to the dollar inflation.” 1 Brunswick iBucyEr 1.60a Stock Budd Co .80 9 31% 32 30 13 77% 77% 77% 35 12% 12'/a 12% 60 35% 35% 35% 17 18% 18% 18% 12 3r% 37% 3V/t 2 27% 27% 27% 100 42 31% 31%.......iKayserRo .60 29% 29% ...... Kehnecott 2 . -//iKerrMc 1.50 -A KImbClk 2.20 ,7 I sieri Drug t '■•iSlevensJ 2.25 Sun Oil lb mt Sunray 1.50 S-wlll Co 1.20 13 29X4 29Xi 29’/i —K— 43 45% 45 45% 1 25% 25% 25% + 92 29% 29 29% + ' 43 44 43'/^ 43% ... 3 133% 133% 133% . , ’J liii SJititles I l?-A l?-A l?w + '* Iennr.3'.M Airoitt aM m 53 W - WX4 17^ w 42 5 13-16 5 1M6 5%-l-16 AssdOII LG 70 5 ..4%_5 AtlasCi CampDI Chib Can So Pot Cdn Javelin Cinerama Creole 2.60a 34% — ^ 20 12% 12% 12% -f V - 7% 7 5-16 7 5-16-M< ■^16 2% 2%’... 30 2 5-15 ryCj * 1 0 Olli 15 15'/* 14% 14% — 30 5’^ 5 5 — CalumH 7 4% Fed^eircvs Felmont OH Frontier Air Gen PtyMTOOd Giant Yet .40 Goldfield Gt Bas Pet Gut Am Cp CulfReerc Ch HoernerW .82 Husky O .30g Hycon Mtg Hydrometi Imper Oil 2a tsram Corp Kaiser Ind McCrory wt MeadJhin .48 MlchSug .lOg MohwkD Scl 8 34’/9 12% 12% + V4 Carrier Cp 1 CarterW Case Jl CelaneseCp Cenco Ins Cent SW 1.60 Corro 1.60b 70 5% 4% s I Cert-teed .80 105 12'/4 12’/S 12*/4 CessnaA 1.40 6 10% 10% 10% -F % CFI StI .80 3 20 19% 20 -F '/4 Ches Ohio ‘ 7 7% 7% 7% . ChIPneu l.l 197 8 13-16 8 5-16 8 7-16-7-16 Chi Rl Pac 67 9 8% 8%-r % ChrisCraft la 51 4% 4’/% 4% *. Chrysler 2 54 7’,^ 6% 6% - CIT Fin 1 6 22 32% 31% 31% -I- ’n CItlesSvc 1.8 19 16’/4 16‘s 16% — % ClevEIIII 18 7 22 21% 22 + ’.k CocaCoia 2.1 4 17'/4 17Vs I7’/4 Xolg P 27% 27% 27'/i H % 'CoinnR x2 61% 61% 61% %'Coll %|CololntG 1.60 7 7% 7% .. CBS 1.40b 91 ir% 16% 17% -F H Col Gas 1 44 4 8% 8% t>% -F % ComiCre 1.80 70 3S'/4 35 r^5'/4 - %|ComSolv 1.2o 3 6% 6% d’is - %'ComwEd 2.20 9 174V4 173% 173’>S -F %lComsat _____________ 37 43 47'M 43 -M Con Edis 1-80 NewPark Mn 444 12 11% 11% + ’/4 ConElaclnd 1 Pancoastal 75 1% 1% 1% ConFood 1.50 RIC Group 4 2% 2% 2% -F V4 ConNatG 1.60 Scurry Rain 216 44% 43% 43%-F %'ConPwr 1.90b SignalOilA la 93 36% 35% 35% - %iContainr 1.30 Stalham Inst 38 37% 37 37 ~ % ContAlrL .40 Syntax Cp .40 120 78 76% 77% -l% ICont Can 2 Technicol .40 233 25% 24% 25»4 -I V4, Cont Ins 3.20 WnNuclr .20 29 34 33% 33% . Cont Oil 2 80 Copyrlghtad by The Associated Prev H67, Control Data ____________________________________ Cooperin 1.20 Corn Pd t 70 CrouseHInd 1 Treasury Position jCud«hy Co WASHINGTON (AP-Tht c»th PO»l*lo«; , ol Iht Tr»«*ury comporod -»llh cor- ' rripondlng dot* a yaar ago. riov. a, 1947 NOV. M, 19M;o,„ R|y , ,g 7,3919M,M7.58 $ 4,270,351,915.40'’2“ ‘^'”•'’^&r5?^3.^“^U.0M.847.38 ,'.2’o® 80.733.475.249.94 » ,'o’® ’‘-"‘”*i4S5S,737,885.49 327.287,228.478.M!gra’m?!Sr' fS Cold 3* n,2M,173,539 24jgl,™l^li“jO X — Includax 8340,180,774.72 dabt nollpowChm 2.20 tublact to xtatutory IlmH. lOraxsInd 1.2$ _____________—-------- iDukaPw 1.20 LehPCem .80 Leh Val Ind Lehman Cp 2 40% 40% AOV* iii' LOFGIss 2.80 9 22'/* 22 22 _%,LlbbMcN 36f 12 3) 31 31 +-/4 ;Llgoetia.M 5 7 20-A 20-A 30-/4 . : h 2 38W 38-/J 38W + xs I k lion 2 45( 16 6IW 40'/. 41-A -F W OJ' 4 17Xk )7-A 17XX -F W kockhdA 2J0 28 15Xk 15-A 15-A . . ij-oewsTh 25g 13 43-a 63-A 63-A — W' koneS Cam 1 5 51XX 5ix« SIX. + XX koneS(Ja 1.12 5 42-/X 82-/J 42-A — -A ' LonglsU 1.14 20 43X. 43 43X. + XX 1 korljlard 2.50 x2 15X4 15X4 15X4 -F XX ' Lucky Sir .90 3 4IH 41-A 41-A — -.4 kukans Sll 1 12 17XX 17W 17XX -F XX' 7 42H 62W 42-A - XX 8 45 45 45 -F VX B la fa ,MacyRH 1.80 14 36% 36’4 36% + %: wi 170 54% 54% 5% t ^ wlJSm 14 32-A 31X4 32-/4 I Xl ’i® 23 44XX 48-A 48H - W ,!S 5 35X4 35XX 35XX — -A ??! 8 134X4 134W 134-A + -A “1? Vff 10 40XX 40XX 40XX + W 15 42H ’42 +1W '.M 34 53% 52% 53 -F % 25 24% 24% 24% — % 14 35XX MW six* + W 4? r r rf'ASou'K 54 32-/4 32W 32-/4 + W K , •» 12 43XX 43W 43XX + V4 I „ S I 54XX S4XX S4XX -F W'jj'"",?k' ' 10 27-4 27-/4 27-/4 ... iKSh-YniV J" 19 39XX 39-/4 39-/4 - X4 ? «??»?? ;MS!:«“i'80b MontDUt 1.60 6 11% 11% 11% -F % 174 9 8% B% ... . 95 21% 21',^ 21% -F % 16 15% 15% 15% -F % 3 70% 70% 70% 25 31% 30'/5 31% -Fl% 39 113% 112’/% 113%..... 9 <•% 8% 8% . 99 51 50% 51 -F1% 6 107’/4 107 107»/4 -F % 7 17% 17% 17% -F % 35 24% 24% 24% -F % 16 27% 27% 27% -F % 8 48% 48% 48% -F % 3 34% 34% 34% + % —M— 3 15-/4 15-/4 15-4 ... 8 72W 72W 72W + X 13 38 38 38 . . ■ 24'A 24'A 24'A .. Tektronix Teledyn 3.811 Tenneco 1.28 Texaco 2 80a TexETrn 1.20 Tex G Sul 40 Texasinst .80 Tex PLd .35g Textron .70 Thiokol .40 TImk RB 1 80 TransWAIr 1 transamer 1 T ranxitron Tri Cont .63g TRW 1.40a TwenCent .80 1 59(4 S9-A 28 71% 71% 71% + % 16 30% 30% 30% -F % 3 16% 16% 16’ _ — 5 42 X53 20% 20% 20% -F ^ 5 42 42 42 -F ' McDonO ,40b 242 52XX 51XX 52-A + - - c- ' ig 3714 37 37,4 ‘ « , •1, +1 IS 25 12 541 19 24 30 91-A 91-4 91-A +1 8 88-/4 88-4 88-4 ' 15 25 25 12 54-A 54 21 52XX 51XX 52XX-F1XXI Underwriters announced they 54 MW MW MXX + WI were reducing to two the Pum-72 ^A MX4 27X4 + w!ber of rcasons for which auto insurance policies might be canceled. The release stated these included only the nonpayment of premiums and the suspension of license or registration q{ the insured or a member of his household operating the car involved However, the release went on to say, “under the new program, a company writing a pol , 4,44 4,44 4,44 V,, icy for a new insured will have 1)8134W 134-4 iMw +2XX j I® investigate the risk . , M 80W eo * 80W - w verify the information in the dared delinquent and called up 10 21-A 21XX 21XX ‘I application, during which time for immediate induction. 4? i??A lu-A 114W +1W it may cancel the policy for any 53 48-4 4a'‘ 48-A “'‘ valid underwriting reason.” 38 20XX 20-/4 20-A 'Agitators Pull Protest Strings' LA Mayor, Ohio Dem See Anti-U. S. Plot He said he had not dedded what he would do with such an order or how he would respond to it. But he said he won’t accept induction and won’t accept any form of duty, even a hospital assignment, as part of the Army. Selective Service Director This view is far out of prqwr-tion. In a speech at Boston Oct. 20 his own monetary idea man, Jacques Rueff, conceded that the “American economy is still the most powerful in tiie world.” BETRAYS ANGER Perhaps, then, the general’s statement betrays his anger and frustration at being forced to view American trademarks, American manners, American money, Ameckan arrogance and American factories all about him. But France is free to invade America too. As W. Averell Harriman, American ambassador at large, told some European economists early this year, the economic organism moves both ways. Europeans are welcome, if able, to invest in the United States. ★ ★ ★ Nevertheless, De Gaulle feels that inflated dollars are throwing out of whack the ratios of currencies to each other. If the United States was forced to back every dollar with a bit of gold,, the French say, then money couldn’t be printed so easily. This would be a return, a retreat some say, to the gold standard. * * ★ As matters stand now, the World uses the gold exchange standard. This means that dollars held by foreign governments still can be converted to gold. But it doesn’t limit the amount of dollars the United-States can print. Only part of the money is gold backed. CONFIDENCE The result is that when the United States runs up bills abroad there can be more dollars out than are covered by gold. However, for many years now there has been confidence in the power of America’s economy. Why bother turning them in for gold? Why not use the dollars instead? * * ♦ This is what has happened. The dollar, and its cousin the pound, have been used in place of gold. They are reserve cur- WASHING-TON (AP) - Mayor Samuel F. Yorty of Los Angeles and Sen. Frank J. Lausche, D-Ohio, contend agitators manipulated antiwar dent-onstrations in places where President Johnson and Secretary of State Dean Rusk recently spoke. Yorty told the House Commil-tee on Un-American Activities , , Tui sday the demonstration in'rencies, and as long as nations his city last June against John-f-® that reflect son was manipulated andi‘™« ^^ese dollars and pounds can continue as gold replacements. , I planned in advance by groups seeking a confrontation with po-lice. * -k * j The pound faltered and now, Johnson was in Los Angeles ^ Gaulle, the dollar also who protest illegally can be de- 39% 39% 39% • 102 53% 52% 53% 204 51% 50 51’% 55 15% 15% 15% 13 29», 27 96 Stocks of Local Interest ^24'A 24 24% + % 13 19% 19% 51% +.1% _ Figures after decimal points art elgl OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS UMr Un Carbide 2 226 47% Un^ELec 1.2p 22 22% 22% 22% Inter-dealer markets 30 CASES REVIEWED Of the dozens of potential delinquency cases pending in Michigan—208 were pending at the last report—30 are being reviewed in light of Lt. Gen. Her-shey’s letter, said Col. Wilbur UnOllcVl F4? Un Pac 1.80a Un Tank 2.50 Uniroyal 1.20 UnItAirLIn 1 Unit Aire T.60 Un Fruit 1 40 UGaiCp 1.70 Unit MM 1 20 US Borax la USOypsm 3a US ind .70 US Lines 2b USPIyCh 1.50 US Smelt 1b US steel 2.40 UnivOPd 1.40 Uplohn 1 60 Varlan Asso 76 50% 49% 50% 15 38>/k 37% 38% 2 75 74% 74Va 33 44% 44% ' 77 66% 66 46 84% 83% 3 11% 11’/4 7 55% 55% 55% 9 81% 81% 81% 2 27% 27% 27% ;AMT Corp. % [citizens I ----- ------ 15.6 16.2 whether to induct the men, but , . , Diamond Crystal .........14.4 15.0 * 81% 81% 81% —%lKelly Services “ ““ % I Mohawk Rubber Co. 29% — %l Monroe Auto Equipment j he .said Hershey’s letter set the pattern to follow. 33 34XX 34-/X 4 75'^ ^ ^ Kward 10 75% 75% 75% ~ % WarnLamb I 164% 163% 164% ~ ’ 38VX 38XX -F 14 I Nat BIsc 3 37X4 8 13-4 7 1)'/i ll'/X 1)'/. ■ Can .$0 IDuq U CamgllaB fey Tka i . Ind. Ralli um. Slockx Eaxt Air 90 . +.1 -F1.8 -.3 +.8 cKodak 1.80a 4M.8 179 7 143 $ 318.11 EalonVa 13$ 4M.7 177.9 143.7 3I$.3 EG8.G .10 491.7 177.0 140.1 313.3 lElactron Sp 419.0 199 4 148 0 393.) Emar El I 88 493 3 309.4 )».) 343.6 End Johnson 413.4 199.4 ) 36.5 393.8 ErlaLack RR 937.9 313.9 170.5 349 7 Elhyl CP .80 3M.0 143.9 130.3 389 4 EvantP .80b I Fuel 1.68 —u— l-xat Gen) .30 13 31'/X 31-ix 31'/X--%I5|*1°*'h'“»?s„ 14 5ix! 91H 5ixi 1 Xk i jjj{ 1 18 18 18 5 26% 26% 26% . 8 IB'/k 17% 17% + 7 31’A 31'/k 31% . 30 59% 58’/a 59% + 13 47% 46’/^ 46' 2 -- - 2) 85 84% 84% -F 23 37 36% 36%-%iSX?» 4 33% 33% 33% + % • w2r.V’Ai:i ' ^ 19 149% 149% 149% — % ' i 7 30% 30% ;30% ....... {j?rti 9 17% 17% 17% + % SrrwTch’-% •“E— 19 46% 46% 46% . ibk n -1* oSioP?,'. .'S 18 38-/4 38-/4 38-/ 31XX 3IXX 31XX 31 14-/X )4-/X )4-/i + -/4 89 43XX 43 43XX -F VX 85 33XX 33XX 33'/. + ^ 58 43-/X 43XX 43-/X + -/XiWas 1? r f7'‘ r7'‘=:^irn‘»;i 1$ + ^Iw^'eTh^r' '.M® 15 33XX 33--X 33'/. I Whirl Co 1.80 ----N----- While Mot 3b 9 38Xi 38X4 M'4 + 1/4 ' KSi; J ¥* 15 44XX 44VX 44'/X + Xx 1' 8 MXX 33XX 33XX -F Vfe 10 134 133-/X 134 T. ---- 7 4®ffi jf-'? X s 48® SI? 3oJi i J! 38 40'/> 99X4 80H + XX 30 48 47-/4 48 -FI 11 m )3V4 13-/4 - -A 39 41X4 MXX 4I-/X -FIX* Prices Or|-'*J^‘“> "•44.4->-4—. -.■IC «44. jked Selective Service director ' 6.3 j Myers said local draft boards cYass A 35 3 35 61"'*** decisions on Detrex Ct^mical ................15.6 16. .............14.4 15 35.6 36 32.0 33 29.0 29 9.0 9 13.6 14.4 if it i( - VX wyandoiia Chemical 34!3 35:3 Of the cascs bein| reviewed !2| MUTUAL FUND5 p,,,,,, Myers said he had no break- ziUmiiaied Fund ................. 8.38 9.07! down to show how many irt- ___V ' ' iChemlcal Fund ..................19.30 31 '"1 T Common-weallh Slock 90 33XX 33-/4 33-A ..... Draylui 13 37-/4 37-/X 37-/4 + xxlKayslona Incomo K-1 ...........VX .KavsIona Gro-wth K-3 IMass. Invastors Gro-al . 'Mass. Inveslors Trust .... J* I Putnam Groiwth .......... iz.vr la.i/ 3IH 3IH - A TelevlsKwi ElacIronIcs ...... 9.99 10.89 i!,.. t ? Welllnglon Fund ...........,13.78 13.97 2?;? T '‘ Windsor Fund ...............18.09 19.44 38 35-/4 35 ... ,1 3^’* 2?^* 439 94XX 94 133 41-/4 Jo'A 10 89-A 88'A 18 91-/4 50XX 11 43XX 43-A —w— 39 44'A 43'A 44 X4 Scriplo ........................... 5.4 Stock io!4i njsivolved handing draft cards back .15.11 16.49 M2 18.71 24 33% 33% 33% e. 6S 76% 75% 76% + % I X31 55’/> 54% 55'% 41 5 47% 46^/1 47 + V4 • ** 2T/ii 27% - % 38 25% 25% X—V—Z— BOND AVERAQBs Id by Tha Assoclalad Prass 38 10 18 10 1 to draft boards, but several such incidents apparently are involved. On Oct. 14, 17 young men went to Selective Service System offices in Detroit to hand in draft cards. Russo was among them. fair ] strongly indicated that nations Yorty said the demonstration a Bo'd Lewis B. Hershey recently sentjoutside Johnson’s hotel was an ®’^"°ard, printing only so much a letter to local draft boards re-outgrowth of a parade held to ’’’“"®y easily reminding them that individuals protest the President’s Vietnam would stabilize war policy (economies, he feels, in this way: ALLEGED COMMUNIST j ggij flowed out of a Yorty said one parade sponsor!country it would have to reduce was the Peace Action Council,[the money in circulation. This headed by a man identified by-would mean deflation, such as committee staff members as ac- Britain is undergoing. Prices tive in Communist party activi--would fall automatically. Soon ties in southern California. [the world again would become In a Senate speech, Lausche-interested in the low-priced said a plot led to the demonstra-J goods. Gold would return. The tion at Indiana University which nation’s economy would expand, interfered with a recent speech --------------------- . 4 I News in Brief Lausche said he’s sure manipulators seeking to destroy the U.S. image are behind antiwar demonstrations on several cam- 1.9 87 1 78.8 90.9 Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Ind., said of 5,000 students in the auditorium where Rusk spoke, only about 100 disrupted the speech. More than 14,000 Indiana University students signed a letter of apology recently presented to Rusk. * A Sen. Albert Gore, D-Tenn., critic of the war, deplored the “vulgarity” of some dissenters Pontiac ’Travel Service, Mexi-I Movie community room, Pontiac Mall, 7:30 tonight. . —Adv. The larceny of a woman’s diamond ring, valued at $895, from Rose Jewelers at Pontiac Mall was reported to Waterford Township police yesterday. Fish Supper, Baldwin E.U.B. Church, Friday, 4-7 p.m. —Adv. Handmade gift Items, Farmer’s Market, Sat., Dec. 2, 7 a.m. to 1 p.m. by Assn, of Mich. Christian College. —Adv. NoNGxi 3.80 Nor Pac 3.80 NoStaPia 1.80 «'/4 73X4 74-/4 -F VX JU ^ 30VA 30VX 43 90VX 90 90VX -F -A 110 38XX 38VX 38XX + Xi 1) 47X4 47-A 47-A -F VA 3 54VX 54-A 54IaIv! 7 38XX 38X4 38X4 8 38H 38-A 38'A • 33 99XX 99X4 99XX • Cooyrlghlad by Tha Aaioclatad Praia 1 llgurn are unofficial. J?So Tear Ago 71.4 90.4 u's ’80 .9 78.8 91 3 79 - dendi In the foreming fable ara®annual disbursemant based on the leaf querterly or sent annuel declaration. Special or extra dividends or payments not daslg-nated as regular ere Identified In the following, loolnoles. ^Also extra or extras. b-Annual •A Xiock dividend. e-Pefd leal year. 80-/4 -FI !ok ta GBE 1 laNGt 1.12 ^ nMat 1 80 Omark I.ITf TiMay'i lat Dlvldaiitfa Daciarad FalrCam 50h Ra* Sik o» Pay. FairHiii .3og 8 31% 31% 31% 63 60% 59% 6 24% 24% 46 20% 20% 3 89% 89% 89% . ., , 4 25 24% 24% nlliKH *» JW 35% 35 35% + % OwansMi 1.J5 8 26% 26% 26% -F % 13 M% 2(H« 20% + % Pace FI lift 71 105 104% 105 3% i3% i2'/k SacurBRat YEAR END ‘ . .35 . ■XTRA Bird it Son.....35 STOCK Edocomb StI ,. . SPC Naf SacurBRaa ^ _ Am Bank Ndta ^^.25 SlTdllSn*',™.. if F"a®RSn,„*IU-.ilf 0 1311 § j|:l! Q 13-8 13-13 13-15 1-3 FatChrt l.34f Fllntkole I 13-33 Fla Pow 1.44 1-10 FlaPwLI 1.74 FMC Cl if .25 0 1231 li FruehC 1-19 Gam Sko 1.30 Pac Pal ISg PaePwL 1 30 3 . 43 43 43 - VX KSliT, I S 3 74-/1 74-A 74-A — XX |?L 'i® 3 33-A 31'A 33-A -F -A iS, 5 50 50 50 1.^ 15 33’A 31X4 31'A -F -A 1* 13 31 J»’'‘ 5®"* + p;S^dSx*' .80® /ll^ 71’^ + S nRR f.40 nzoll 1.40 sICo .90 tFIlm .4lf -4^- -• T - • - PtizerC 1.301 PhtIpxD 3.40 4J37XX 37XX J»XX v. Phlla El 1.84 38 131X4 3IXX 3IXXt-F XX Phil dg 1.80 83 83'A 83VA 83'A .FIVs, PhllMorr 1.40 8 47 I 71- .........._ . C Cp .79 x)3 34VX 34VX MVX -F XX d^ 3.40 )M 91 90X4 SI -F Vi MCK .130 9 37TA 37XA 37Xh -F -A epSitl 1.25 13 70 70 70 -F V4 S'* SS S'‘ 18 34H 24 34-A -F'vi 10 19VX 19V4 )9'A — VA 5» **!'• JWJ 89XX -F VA ,1 STVA 37VX 37W -F VA 73 41-/1 41-A 41-A -- Vfe 88 37-A MXfe 24X6-V* 5 18 33-/4 33-A 33’A - VA 18 38-A 39Vi 38 M 17X4 17H 17X4 12 33 33 33 9 ^ 33VX 33-A -f Vfe « SX4 38V4 38VX i VA 140 24X4 34Xt 34VX .. 31'A 31XX 3I'A -F V4 ......... r. ■ p-Paid wrad 0 ______________________ r—Oodartd or paid In 1966 dlyidand. 1—Paid In stock during 1966a esttmatad cash valut on akmividand Tm—\ tribulad. wl-Whan' lafSad. MF-Nui' day dlllvfery. v|—In bankruptcy or rtcilverihip or Mng raorganliad under the Bankruptcy Act, or securities auuimd by such companies. tn—Foreign Ittue sublect to In- There Is a statue known as “Christ of /the Andes” symbolizing peace erected by diile and Argentina at a pass in the mountains between the two i'JJ 'countries. 79.7 93.0 81.1 91.0 84.9 92 5 High 79.5 1966 Low 70.1 88.9 79.2 90 4 83 7 DOW-.JONRS AVERAGES STOCKS: 20 Railroads 65 Stocks BONOS: . 40 Boi HIghSF grade ra 10 Second grade r« 10 Public utilities 10 Industrials . 64.80 75.32-0 03 79 16-0.05 82.1^0.B5 Finder May Get a Bundle BALTIMORE (AP) - A young man walked into the police station, placed a small bundle on the sergeant’s desk and said “I found this in the alley”. The bundle was $5 bills, one hundred of them. Police think the money was lost after being withdrawn from a bank. It will be finder’s keep: er for 20-year-old George Shibbs ,if the loser doesn’t claim ttie |$500. N.Y. Shows Safety-Car Model Vehicle Commissioner Vincent L. Tofany has displayed a state-financed scale model of a “safety sedan” that he says would withstand a front- or rear-end impact at 50 miles an hour. The model, developed at a cost of $385,000, was shown at a news conference Tuesday. ★ ★ ★ Among ^e score of safety features are; —A periscope that juts up from the roof, with an eye mirror to .the left of the steering wheel,-giving the driver a panoramic view to the rear and sides without having to take his eyes off the road for long.' The device has a wide-angle viewing lens of 160 degrees. SUPERBUMPER —A hydraulip energy-absoTb-ing bumper that extends 12 inches and operates automatically as soon as the car goes over 37 miles an hour. —A silhouette with no jagged edges that would impale a pedestrian. * ★ ★ —A four-wheel drive with an antilock braking system. —Structural design to withstand a sideswipe crash at 40 miles an hour and a roll-over without collision at 70 miles an hour. NO MORE COSTLY Tofany said the projected cost for manufacturing the four-pas-aenger car would not be any higher than a comparable conventional vehicle now in production. He said the car could go into mass production by the early 1970s if the federal or state government provld^ $5 mllliot more for further testing. Finding a manufacturer willing to build the car is another factor, Tofany said. The design calls for a 4,000-pound car with a V8 engine. •k k * The Fairchild Hiller Corp., an aerospace firm, developed the design under a $385,000 contract with the state. George, Hildebrand, program manager of Fairchild Hiller, said at the news conference that “every item of hardware” in the proposed car “is available to the auto industry.” ★ ★ “We have done nothing that . would create an economic juggernaut,” he said. “We treated the problem of safety as a whole rather than the method used by Detroit of adding gadget by ga(i{get.”