The Pontiac Press Tuesday, April 8, 1969 TUESDAY R — Rerun'C — Color TUESDAY MORNING 5:50 (2) TV Chapel On the Farm - Sunrise 5:55 (2) C Scene 6:00 (2) C; Semester 6:30 (2) C — Woodrow the Woodsman (4) C — Classroom 6:45 <7) C — Batfink 7:60 14) C — Today 17) C -" Morning Show 7 : 3ft ('2 ) C — News, Weather, Sports 7:50 (9) Warm-Up 8:00 (2) C — Captain Kangaroo (9) C — Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round (56) I nterviewing for Results 8:05 (9) Mr. Drqssup ---8:20 (56 T Mari a geirfienT Objectives 8:30 (7) R — Movie: “Men ' of Boys Town” (1940) Spencer Tracy, Mickey Rooney (9) R — Friendly Giant 8:45 (9) Chez Helene 9:00 (2) R — Beverly Hillbillies (4) C — Donald O’Connor (9) C — Bozo 9:30 (2) R—Dick Van Dyke 10:00 (2) R C - The Lucy Show (4) C — It Take Two (9) Holiday Film 10:10 (56) American History 10:25 (4) C — News* 10:30 (2) C —' Mike Douglas (4) C— Concentration (7) C—Anniversary Game (9) Canadian School 11:00 (4) C — Personality (7) C — Galloping Gourmet (50) C — Jack LaLanne 11:30 (4) C — Hollywood squares (7) R — Bachelor Father (9) Take Thirty (50) C — Kimba Where Prices Are Discounted, Not Quality WHY PAY THE HIGH DOLLAR? Shop ivorywhoro Hr»t, Than Sh Ut. Wo HonotHy Fool Wo Con Boot Your Bait Tiro Dool 99 Timot Out of 10OI "'All1 NANI *■1011 CAI0¥ # FIRESTONE • 1. F. GOODRICH O UNIROYAL • QOODVEAF • GENERAL • HARVARD • DELTA • COOPER • DUNLOP • MAOS • SLIDES • CHROME FOREIGN and SPORTS CAR TIRES 6 Service.. Bays for Foil Installation and High Speed Wheel Balancing No Money Down — Inatant Credit 30 Day* Same OS Coih or Up to I 2 Mot. to Pay ______OPEN MON. THRU FRI. 1-9 SATURDAY «-6 UNITE0 TIRE SERVICE 1007 BALDWIN AVE. 3 Mm, From Downtown PontMC 3 COMPLETE ROOMS *399 Includes: Dresser, Framed Mirror, Chest, Bed, Mattress and Box Spring, Sofa and Chair, 2 Step Tablet, Coffee Table, 2 Lamps, 5-pc. Dinette 36 Month* to i*uy 2135 Dixie Hwy. at Telegraph Rd. FURNITURE PH 334 4934 12:00 ( 2 ) C - News. Weather. Sports (4) C — Jeopardy (7) R Bewitched (9) C — Bonnie Prudden (50) C- Alvin 12:25 12) C — Fashions 12:30 (2) C - Search for Tomorrow (4) C — News, Weather. Sports (7) C — Funny You Should Ask (9) R Real McCoys (50) R — Movie; “Valley of the Giants” (1938) Wayne Morris, C 1 a i r e Trevor, Charles Bickford. Alan Hale 12:55 (4) C — News 17) 0 — Children's Doctor 1:00 (2i C — Love of Life it!) C — Mzftch Game 17) C — Dream House (9) R —- Movie: ‘‘To Each His Own” (Part 2) 1:25 (2) C - News (4) C — Carol Duvall 1:30 (2) C - As the World Turns (4) C — Hidden Faces liSp — Ret s Make a Deal 2:00 (2) C — Divorce Court (4) C — Days * of Our Lives * (7) C — Newlywed Game 150) C — American West 2:30 (2) C — Guiding Light (4) C - Doctors (7)»C — Dating Game (50) R — Make Room for Daddy** 3:00 (2) C — Secret Storm (4) C - Another World (7) C — General Hospital (50) R — Topper (561 R - Bridge with Jean Cox 3:30 (2) C — Edge of Night (4) C — You Don’t Say (7) C — One Life to Live (9) C — Bozo’s Big Top (50) jg — Captain Detroit (56) Efficient Reading 4:00 (2) C—Linkletter Show (4) C — Steve Allen (7) C Dark Shadows (9) C — Tom Shannon (56) Human Relations 4:30 (2) C — Merv Griffin (7) R — Movie: “Whistle Down the Wind” (British. 1962) Ilayley Mills, Alan Bates (50) R — Little Rascals ('567 TV Kindergarten ifii (62) R I Led Three Lives rot — ‘‘Yukon to Mexico” (9) R C — Batman (50) R —/ Munsters (56) Mis/erogers (62) C — Bugs Bunny and Friends 5:30 (9) R—F Troop (50) R — Superman (56) Friendly Giant . (62) R — Leave It to • Beaver 5:45 (56) Muffinland TUESDAY NIGHT 6:00 f2) (4) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports (9) R -- Movie: “So Proudly We Hail” (1943) The Jives and loves of Army nurses on Bataan during World War If are told. Paulette Goddard. Claudette Colbert (50) R C — Flintstones (56) What’s New (62) R—. Sea Hunt 6:30 (2) C - News Cronkite (4) C — News — Huntley, Brinkley (7) C - News — Reynolds (50) R — McHale’s Navy — Ensign Parker, after a blow on the head, thinks he’s 10 years old. (56) TV High School 1 162) R — Highway Patrol 7:00 (2) C — Truth or Consequences (4) (7) C — News, Weather. Sports (50> R — I Love Lucy — Plans by the Ricardos and Mertzes for a trip through the Swiss Alps are in-terrupted by an avalanche. (56) Antiques — Clocks and clockmakers are discussed and several .unique clocks are shown. (62) R — Movie: “Night Train for Inverness” (British, 1959) Father treats his son to ice cream, unaware the boy is a diabetic. Norman Wooland, Jane Nylton 7:30 (2) C — Lancer — Johnny finds himself in the role of teacher when the schoolmarm asks his stern hand in helping her with reluctant pupils. (4T C — Jerry Lewis — Guests are Michele1 Lee and the Osmond Brothers. The Pontiac Pretf Tuesday, April 8,1969 talist who has trouble with his ESP. <7) C — Mod Squad Line and Pete go undercover as prison inmates to protect the life of a convicted draft dodger. (50) 11 C ilazeh— The masterful maid saves the Baxters from a financial crisis by whipping up a giant batch of her homemade brownies. < f)(i i French Chef — Viewers are shown how to carve a leg of lamb 8:0(1 (9) C - I Spy Robinson learns the woman Ik* loves. is linked to an exiled dictator (f>0)T Pay Cards (50) C Fact of the Matter — The focus is on Detroit apd the Kerner Report as Mayor Cavanagh and 12th Street residents are interviewed. 8 : 2 5 (6 2) Greatest Headlines 8:30 (2) C Ip Red Skelton — .June Lockhart and Gloria Loring are guests. (4) C — Julia — Dr. Chegley’s health concerns JUlia when he asks her to call in a specialist. (7) C t- It Takes a Thief - Mutidy tries to find a microdot, supposedly in the possession of a beauty contest winner, and containing vital defense information. (50) C — Password Betty White and George Grizzard guest (56) Accent A contemporary jazz group, “The S t u Katz-Bunky Green Quintet.*’ presents original compositions. (62) R C — Movip; “Qur Man i n Casablanca” (Italian, 1966) CIA agent becomes involved with a general’s daughter. Lang Jeffries. 9:00 (4) R ~ Movie: “Madame X” (1966) Wife of a' rising politician becomes involved in a scandal and is told by her mother in-law she must leave her husband and infant son. Lana Turner. John Forsythe, Ricardo Montalban. Burges s Meredith (9) C — What’s My Line? (50) R — Perry Mason — “The Case of the Sleepy :SH»yer’> ^56i C — NP3T Festival — Conductor Zubin Mehta leads the Los Angeles Philharmonic in preparation and performance of Stravinsky’s “The Rite of Spring.” 9:30 (2) C — Doris Day — Doris and the children try to show Buck they can take care of Leroy’s chores. 17) R C - N.Y P D. -Hunt for a runaway young girl leads to the body of a brutally murdered young man who had shared her “crash pad.” (Part 1) (9) C — Wojeck 10:00 (2) C — Who, What, ■Where. When, Why (7) R C — That’s Life — Kay Medford and Shelley Berman guest, along with Michele Lee who plays a librarian and stag party singer-dancer. Robert has the jitters over his upcoming marriage. * ____(50) C — News. Weather, Sports (56) Rainbow Quest — Roscoe Holcomb and Jp«m Redpath guest. 10:30 (9) News Magazine (50) R - Alfred Hitchcock — A man wanting a divorce hires a private detective, hoping to trap his wife in a compromising situation. 162) R - Ann Sothern 11:00 (2) (4) (7) (9) C -News. Weather, Sports (50) R — Movie: “Confirm or Deny” (1941) War correspondent in .London sacrifices the scoop of his career to save the reputation of a girl Don Ameche. Joan Bennett. Roddy McDowell (62) R C — Movie: “Triple Deception” (English. 1956) An impostor is linked to a multimillion-d< liar murder ring. Michael Craig, Brenda de Ban-zie 11:30 (4) C — Johnny Carson (7) C — Joey Bishop (9) R — Movie: “Shoot First” (1953) Army officer CONNOLLY'S Jewel OF THE WEEK JEWELERS for the 'Jewel' m your life o tombinalion cluster ol the deep blurt of genuine sapphire*, grow green of Emerald* and fire red of rubie* - Mixed with brilliant white iporkle of diamond*. If the year* have been rewarding — there i* no more beautiful way to remember Her $2,750 (.'fciiter-l-ii^Mim.r- Wlrfileen up to their cabin and Acres four years ago from had to pull everything in on a Clawson. They have a because of the deep snow daughter, Debbie, 14. She there. As Mrs. Robertson likes to try her hand at sajd, the cabin has no TV and drawing and painting as well dnjy gas lights, so the woods as skiing and swimming. and nearby Lake Superior are Making large paper flowers is *the major attractions. The another of her many interests. R0bertson family attends Nihranz works for the Howath Methodist Church. THE RICHARD BEERS Almost everyone in the area told ns to be sure to meet Mrs. Richaird Beer who lives here with her husband and daughter Laurie, 9 years old. Both'Mr. and Mrs. Beer have Nihranz enjoys baking and been Oakland County cooking and is also active on residents all their lives, a bowling team. * According to her neighbors, THE ARTHUR* what makes Mrs. Beer special LANGELANDS is that though she is con- .. ' „ (Vl„ turner fined to a wheelchair, she is home orthe Arthur Langeland one of the happiest and most family which includes a outgomg women in t he daughter, Sandra, now a neighborhood Her husband, teacher at Oakland Com- who is Oakland County law Borden Co. in Madison Heights. Hunting and golfing are his prime interests. Mrs. Nihranz told us that both she and her husband like to take long vacations at their summer cottage at North Lapeer. When she’s home, Mrr munity College. librarian, is also partially be ARMY CodV, I tg w. /vuiis, Men-L»ub«*r, ChlcajjO.^ | ILLINOIS Robinson; S__. dotn; Pfc. Rober INDIANA — Stive, a ouuuy . Petersburg; Pvt. Jose Lazams MICHIGAN — SRM. 4 David E. Flannery, Muskagon; Me. RobartL. AS-klnsan Jr., Clarkitani Pfc. J. C. Reel, Royal Oak. MISSOURI — Spec. 4 Roy B. Boyd. 'NEBRASKA - Snec. 4 Patrick H. Marlon; Spec. ' Robot WISCONSIN — Pic. Donald J. Rlchtar, !Sheboyaan. MARINE CORPS , iV pfc.' Norman t! Beck, Rockford; Pfc. Maurice J. Wash-ln?OWAC—C*ance CpI. Michael R. Ball, Langeland is a machine handle:ipped stoce be is a repairman for Pontiac Motor cerebral palsy victim. It Division. His major hobby is doesn’t hold h m down one gunsmithtng. He does both. bit, though his wile said, repairs and renovation, vYou should see him doing mainly on his favorite rifle, yard work and riding his the Winchester Trap gun. Of ..tractor around the place, course, he’s also a member of ★ ★ * a sportsmen’s club. Beer was the first chairman • * * * of the Orion Township Plan- Mrs. Langeland has been ning Commission, a job which Busy these last few he has had to give up in order Jetourist fares: Memphis—Day, $44; (NC) Night Coach, $34. New Orleans—Day, $61; Night Coach, $51. Add tax. ILLINOIS - I Died of wounds I MARINE CORPS Changed from missing dcfid — hostile :\ ARMY I INDIANA — Pic. Phillip B. Lynch, williams. | IOWA - William D. Poltar, Mancha*- to complete his Masters Degreeirr Hbraryseienee, — Sewing always has been a hobby with Mrs. Beer, so she recently completed a dressmaking course, sponsored by the Vocational Rehabilitation group in -Pontiac. She is now in business doing dressmaking and alterations at home. She told us that the whole family enjoys music and listening to hi fi. They belong to St. Marys in the Hills Episcopal Church. THE BILL STAFFORDS Another ex-Pontiac family is that of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Stafford and their three children, Gregg, 9; Wendy, 7; and Dale, 5. ★ * Stafford is a senior specifications writer for Pontiac Motor Division. Hunting is a major interest of his and he has an antelope head to prove it. However, boating is the family’s real hobby. They own a 19-foot camper boat named “Spare Time.” They are members of Pinters Boat . Club in .Pontiac and look forward to this summer’s overnight trips to Indian River, Torch Lake and Chatham, Ontario. Mrs. Stafford also spends part of her time working at the Oakland County Sanitarium. THE GILBERT LUEBKES The Gilbert Luebke family moved here nine years ago from Oxford. The family includes Wendy, 16; Debby, 13; and Gilbert, 7. Skiing and bowling fill the girls' time. Luebke is material super! ntendent for the Oakland County Road Commission. He’s a d 6 - i t * yourselfer at -home, having paneled the basement playroom a few years ago. Camping is a major family interest, said Mrs. Luebke, When we met her, Mrs. Luebke was busy making some beautiful Raggedy Ann dolls which will be sold at a school fair. Sewing is one of her major hobbies, she said, and she makes most of her daughters’ clothes. The Luebke family belongs to Lake Orion Methodist Church. Next week we’ll be introducing you to some folks in Stratford Knolls in Avon Township^ _i_ Ir > ARE TIME PONTIAC ,* Missing as a result of hostile] I action: , .11 ARMY lit LI. Jirrici L. Lock*, III Lf. Eric > I V. Pulliam, lit LI. Ronald W. Tompkins, WO Rand R. Marker. WO Samual A. I Robarion, S. Sal. Carailmo Arroyo Baai, I Spac. 1 Michael L. Barry. Spec. 4 Clarence H. Boolln, Spec. 4 Jewell R. Green. Spec. 4 Gregory L. Habell, Spec. 4 Jerry L. Peterson, Spec. 4 David Slone, Pic. Jtene A. Boiler, Pic. Miles B. Hedalln, | | *»lc. Frederick D. Harare,- Pic,’ Pranllce-, V. Hicks, Pic. Rana C. Mlschaaus, Pic.1 auvl >. P. Palara, PIc, Julius P. tana-! aro, lc, Richard D. Roberts, Pic. Donnls }. WIHIa. force. Tj Capl. Robert D. Davenport ^Vivfef^i£rjr. 1 SHIP SHAPE — A. real boating family — that’s the pill Staffords of Holland Street, Orion Township. Taking advantage of warm weallicr to do a little spring ship cleaning / Penile* Press Phata are (from left) Dale, 5; Mrs. Stafford; Gr*$, 9; Stafford; and Wendy, 7. in addition to being a boater, Stafford is also an avid hunter. : ■ ",' B ?-:r ! I THE PONTIAC PRESS 41 West Huron Street Pontiac, Michigan 48056 TUESDAY, APRIL 8, 1969 HOWM» H. FlTtGER.UD. It FruUtBt Ml Publisher John A. BUSY Secretary and Adv.rtiiiti* Director Richa» U. FiTiCKiAii Treasurer and Finance Officer Circulation Manacer . o. umhiu joaaaR Local Advertleln* Manaaer Pay Should Fit Job Are all municipal employes of equal value in terms of skill, responsibility and job performance? We think the obvious answer to that question is“£fo.” It follows, therefore, that all municipal employes are not of equal value in terms of salary. This is not to say that we do not need qualified people to perform our city jobs. We do need them. They are important to the efficient operation of any municipal government. It’s just a simple fact of life, that different jobs require different quantities of skill and training and present different levels of responsibility and hazard. Salary levels should reflect .—all these factors. ★ ★ ★ For the past several months, Pontiac fire fighters have been locked in salary negotiations with the City. The major issue is parity with policemen. In other words, the fire fighters feel they should be paid the.same salaries as policemen. We disagree. We do not feel that firemen’s pay must automatically keep pace with that of our police force. It is our opinion that the present day task of a law enforcer is more demanding and mord consistently hazardous than that of a fire fighter. Both police and fire fighters face hazards. But the hazards faced by fire fighters are more predictable and therefore more easily avoided. There is a big difference between being overcome by smoke and being overcome by bullets from the gun Of a criminal. In regard to this whole question of merit, it is appropriate to note the comments of Mrs. Dorothy L. Judd of Grand Rapids made, recently when she announced her forthcoming Resignation from the State Civil Service Commission: ★ ★ ★ “The rise of unionism in public employment is a challenge to the merit system of public employment right across the board —as it is also a threat to the voter’s voice in his own govern-ment.” ' ‘0, ★ ★ ★ She makes a good point. The salaries of public employes these days often reflect only the strength of various unions with respect to what public funds are available, and have little or nothing to do witH the merit of the employe or his work. Baseball a ‘Hardy’ Sport Considering that it claims to be starting its centennial year, baseball shows unusual signs of spryness. It will be the earliest opening day on record—to allow playoffs at the season’s end between the new eastern and western divisions within the expanded 12-team National and American leagues. < ★ ★ ★ Montreal, San Diego and Seattle enter the big leagues while Kansas City returns—the first two in the National and the last two in the American. The Canadian entry pushes the majors beyond the American border for the first time and perhaps will make the “World Series” truly international, though still not . quite living up to its global connotation. The basis of this year’s officially designated baseball Centennial is that the old Cincinnati Red Stockings in 1869 became the first team to sign players to season-long contracts. ★ ★ ★ The 1969 centennial is not to be confused with the baseball centennial observed in 1939, marking Abner Doubleday’s supposed invention of the game 100 years earlier. Nor is it to be confused with another centennial sure to come in 1976, when the National League becomes 100 years of age. -Here at home, our World Champion Tigers open the season with high hopes of repeating last year’s brilliant performance and with the best wishes of every Michigander. ★ ★ ★ “Sock It to ’Em, Tigers!” Sees No Hope in ‘HOPE’ If you really want to know how rotten America is, don’t read the underground protest press. Tune in Radio Moscow. Here Is what the Russians had to say about the hospital ship HOPE, which recently concluded a 10-month medical mission, to Ceylon: “The ship HOPE has actually brought no hope for cure to Ceylon and the vicinity, but only mortal danger. The floating carrier of death is the name the ship is given by the people of the countries where she has already been. Whcreyer the ship HOPE appears there are sudden outbreaks of epidemics” . . . and so on and on. ★ ★ ★ During the HOPE’S stay in Ceylon, its staff treated more than 1,700 patients aboard ship and, with Cey- lonese doctors, conducted 1,280 operations. More than 3,000 patients were treated in the ship’s dental department and some 70,000 children were immunized against diphtheria, whooping cough and tetanus. When the ship left for its home base of Philadelphia on February 10, more than 20,000 people from all over the little country came to say goodby. At an official reception, the prime minister of Ceylon had previously presented Dr. William B. Walsh, founder of HOPE, with an inscribed silver platter on behalf .of his country. Evidently the Ceylonese don’t understand Russian, even in translation. Or perhaps they are aware that when it comes to Communistr propaganda, vinification is the sinccrest form of flattery. .•*- Baseball Contest The curtain fell yesterday on Act I of The Press Annual Baseball Contest that rewards the winner with a $500 U.S. Savings Bond as, the duck struck the deadline hour.of noon. There will be a 12-day intermission until Act II is played out on April 19 when the winner wiii be represented by the batter who tops the Associated Press tabulation of batting averages which will appear in the newspaper's sport section on that date. Interest in the contest was never higher, al the judges waded through a continuous flow Of entries. ★ ★ ★ Of the M players picked by contestants, •OW old friend, Al Kallne, led the hit jMHldO. He was followed by Yastrzem-ekl, F. Robinson, Northrop, W. Horton, ioitfSr Cash, Harrelson, Stanley and McAnHffe. ' * g * The highest winning prediction is the ,«oo averaga ehteMd for Gate* Brown, while Me- Waits for Winner Auliffe enjoyed (?) the distinction of being picked to win with the lowest—.206. The winning average most favored; was the .476 posted by five entrants, one more than second-place .375 — with .341 batting third with three. The number of players with ■ but a single backer followed the usual pattern, 39 going to the contest plate with such minimum support. v ■* : So that contestants may keep posted on the state of their fortunes until the moment of truth arrives on the 19th, within a few days we’ll begin publication on this page of the Associated Press list of American League's Ten Leading Batters. ★ * * That’s all for now, boys and girls. Your respective fates are now on the laps of the diamond gods, and the one favored will be a ppk^XAtory In The Press’ JV * That Guy Never Forgets His Cut! David Lawrence Says: Viet Situation at Crucial Point WASHINGTON - What’* really going on behind the scenes in the Vietnam war? G o v.ernment LAWRENCE The situation is, in fact, at a crucial point. The negotiations in Paris appear to be fruitless because the North Vietnamese are convinced that the antiwar demonstrations inside the United States are an indication America will soon order a gradual withdrawal of its forces. The Communists expect then to move in and take command of South Vietnam. . * h ★ ★ A significant dispatch came from London over the United ' Press International wires yesterday. It said in part: “The Vietcong has no Intention of negotiating i n earnest to end the war in Vietnam until it has won — or is given — seats in the Saigon ~ government, diplomatic sources said today.. * ★ A "0 “Until then, the informants said, the Vietnamese Communists intend to play a waiting game in the belief that time and U.S. anxiety to ‘finish with the Vietnam business' are on their side.’’ U.S. IMPATIENCE Vice President Ky of South Vietnam declared on the same day in Paris that the Communists are,"counting on the impatience of the American public” for an advantageous settlement. He was quoted as follows: “The reason I think the enemy are not ready at present for serious talks is this: I think even the enemy are convinced they cannot win on the battlefield, militarily or politically. But there is still one thing that the enemy are counting on — the impatience of American public opinion. “So long as the enemy still think that with the impatience and opposition in America they can get something better, they will keep their present attitude and language unchanged until the day that, both in Vietnam., and the United States, the government and the people convince the enemy that they have to talk seriously and together with us for a compromise of a final solution to the war in Vietnam. Meanwhile, President Thieu announced at Saigon that he has offered amnesty to the Vietcong and a place on the ballot in South Vietnam if they change their name and join in a policy of national reconciliation. . ★ if ★ But he pointedly added that an effective system of international control and guarantees will have to be set up to prevent a resumption of the fighting. NOT RULED OUT Concurrently inside the United States, Secretary of State William P. Rogers commented that the government here is not considering “any immediate, unilateral withdrawal” of troops from Vietnam. But lie would not tule out the possibility that America .might begin to withdraw some of its troops at a later date without an agreement on the part of the Communists to pull out any of their owri forces. This,’ of course, assumes that the South Vietnamese government will have mobilized a big enough army to enable the United States tc begin bringing home from time to time a few thousand men and, as the process continued, draft calls would be diminished. One thing is dear — the American government will continue to furnish arms and equipment to supply the large South Vietnamese army. This in itself should prove to the North Vietnamese that withdrawal of any portion of the American Army does not mean a cessation of American aid or support. PuMliMri-Hall SynMcah Bob Considjne Says: Ike May Be Rated High by Ultimate Historian Verbal Orchids Mrs. Nellie Shiel of 81 S. Jessie; 92nd birthday Fred R. Katus of Waterford Township; 89th birthday. Smiles An optimist is a fellow who cats windfall apples iti r the dark. NEW YORK — The ultimate historian may be kinder to Dwight David Eisenhower than were some of his political and military contemporaries. As the nation and a good portion of the Western world followed him to the edge of his grave in that Grant Wood American Gothic chapel ini Abilene, mil-f lions must have! pondered h i s' place in the an- CONSIDINE nals of the 20th century. ★ * ■ ★ Herbert Hoover was a good man, but in the main he never fully understood the violent rumblings of his time in office. And he could not have conceived of Ike’s humanitarian and sociological projects. Franklin Roosevelt was unique in ways that will always assure him a deep niche in the parade of the century’s presidents. He lifted the face of the land and the hearts of its people as perhaps no man before or since. FAILED TO FACE FACT He won four-in-a-row, but in the end he was too stubborn or too-vain to face the simple fact that he was dying while he tried to match wits and gall with Stalin. Eisenhower handled the Russians better than any of them. Harry Truman came to the presidency with less to recommend him than almost , any predecessor. But he will be remembered among the great presidents, this uncomplicated small-town American whose destiny it was to preside over some, of the inost * momentous events in history. * '* . * Yet ike twice easily prevailed . over,, Truman’s man, ^dlfli Stevens ion, and ail the powers of the long-entrenched Democratic party.. John F. Kennedy did not live long enough to leave a truly discernible imprint on the century, save the quickening of the interest of the young in politics, the memory of a blithe spirit around the White House, the shocking indecision of the Bay of Pigs, and a youthfulness that prompted Khrushchev to test him to the brink of thermonuclear war. Ike wasn’t as bright or hip as JFK, but to a large portion of the country he represented immensely more substance. DEFEATED BY WAR LBJ put through more legislation of a constructive nature than most of the century’s Presidents put together. But the war in Vietnam got away from him and eventually drove him out of office. Ike got Infinitely more done with tact and his remarkable catalytic power than Teddy Roosevelt did with all of his fist shaking. ★ * ★ So Ike could very well be up near the top when they finally count and rate this century’s best Presidents. He had Thi-man’s simplicity, Hoover’s honesty, FDR’s ability to lead, and Teddy’s guts. Yet, there was a period when, -if you asked a detractor what Ike - did best, the person probably would have said, “play golf.” It wasn’t a golfer they buried In Abilene the other day. It was one of the most memorabie Americans of all time. Mtlmtoily *» *• «• far we**-M«mW «fl heal MM wM* I» ifct» •• mH m •* *e MM UmiWIII. Th. PmNm Smm to Mtomri by. Mrttor tor *0* • mtotort to OattoM, OtMMa, Uotoftoaa, Mbaatob. Utaar Cawrtlaa » to »M OO • yawi aba-whara to MtoMaaa tori •* ajbar ato'M .to iha ItoHarf Katn IM.00 • yaar. AD mart tviacifartant Mybto I" art-Varna. Farlaa* baan pmk* at Ilia 2nd dorr tala at Panltoc, MIcMe«« Voice of the People:, ■ ^ .‘ Easter Season Features Enjoyed by Pr Reader I express my appreciation and reading enjoy- j ment of the special Easter period features—especially the Lenten Guijdepost. I feel these articles must setvc as 311 inspiration to all)yho read them. 1 / This is a superb Pontiafc Press tradition that many look forward to and helps make it the really .great newspaper it is. We also enjoy and are graceful for the interesting area church coverage, MRS. LELAND COFFEY Citizen Is Concerned About School Site As a citizen who recognizes the interdependence of communities, I am concerned about the site of Pontiac’s new high school. In the light of what I have learned by reading and from two serious-minded individuals — one white, one black — the school board appears to have been evasive while the students and other objectors to the State Hospital site have been specifically clear and solid in the reasoning. The Pontiac Press, having the interest of all citizens at heart, is in a postion to clear the air by finding out why the •recommendations of the Area Planning Council and various consultants are ignored in the school board’s advocacy of a noncentral site. Their choice seems very strange to a nonresident. Should not the many millions be used where they will do the most good to the most citizens—both directly and through the prideful spirit of Pontiac? Ibis, it seems, is all the blacks are asking—fair treatment. HENRY S. BOOTH 700 CRANBROOK, BLOOMFIELD HILLS Reader Gives Views on Sensitivity Training I am concerned over the compulsory sensitivity training program proposed by the Pontiac school administrators “to alleviate discrimination against black students.” Tbe intentions of the program may be good but it is a dangerous trend to employ a form of brainwashing or thought control, which sensitivity training seems to be. They use this self-criticism method in Communist countries to control the population’s thinking. We live in America, the land of the free. G. SMITH ‘Agree With Life. Sentences for Robbers' Hooray for Genesee County’s Judge Philip C. Elliot for giving three convicted robbers life sentences. This is the kind of law we need. What is wrong with Wayne and Oakland County judges that give murderers and rapists (not robbers) a couple years or probation? If our judges are afraid to give the proper life sentence, why do they run for the office? We need capital punishment. ROBERT A. COMPTON 4900 W. HURON ‘We Must Let Law and Order Rule Nation’ I commend the Detroit Police Department for the way they handled the situation at the New Bethel Baptist Church. My heart breaks for the two police officers’ families. When is our country going to wake, up and let the law rule the land once again, instead of a lot of people who will not adapt themselves to a decent society, but instead want to make up their own. This is not equal rights. ★ ★ ★ God help our country to turn back to Him and the laws of our Nation. Let’s not talk our way backward but let law and order rule and go forward as the greatest country in the world. MRS. EDWARD SKAGGS SR. ‘Politicians Work fir>r People’s Interests?’ There is much controversy today as to whether our politicians Reserve the pay and the glory they receive. Are they in the business because they care about the people-they represent or are they in it for the money and the glory? I have written to Congressman McDonald and Senator Hart requesting their help. If J receive the help I need, I will know they are some of the most valuable men in our country. MRS. JEFF VESS 6457 SNOWAPPLE, CLARKSTON Comments on Sen. Hart's ‘Survival Week’ My heart bleeds for the millionaire Hart family and their “survival week” on welfare food. (There must be some medal available for this great feat. Mrs. Hart talks of eating leftovers—a usual thing for poor and middle-class people. Senator Hart asks how you can go to a luncheon without eating. Who jn welfare goes to Senate meetings? Let’s ask for 10,000 volunteers in Pontiac to have free food, rent, utilities, clothing, food stamps and cash for a month. Any takers? R. E. GRIMMETT 1225 STANLEY Question and Answer If it Is against the law to Utter the streets In Pontiac, with a $109 fine, why are tracks loaded with paper allowed to leave all of their refuse on Joslyn? I believe they’re from the plant and headed tor the land fill on Joslyn and 1-75. MRS. JOHN ZABLOCKI REPLY . Since officers can’t be everywhere, violations should be reported. We suggest you get the license numbers or descriptions and call either the police department or the plant you think they come from. We’re sure either one would try to see that such littering is eliminated. Question and Answer ’ Why is the factory on Montcalm between Joslyn and Oakland allowed to pour that filthy smoko into the air? This happens repeatedly. I voted for spending millions to clean up water and air that factories have already polluted and feel this abuse must be stopped. LINDA THAYER REPLY The State Air Pollution Division is aware of this, as are plant officials. New equipment is being intalled and completion is expected by 1973, when virtually al^pollution will be eliminated. Mr. Phin-ney at Pontiac Motor told us it cannot all be done at once without completely shutting down the foundry, and it woulf be impractical to do so even then; because each piece of equipment must be evaluated after it is installed to make, sure ft is doing the job: '. ' (Editor’s Note: Will the lady who, while at t|ie Home and Sport* Show, donated an Active Membership teethe Drdyton Plains Natnre Center please cull us and leave her name und address? D.P.N.C., 973-6795.) THE PONTIAC PllKSS, TUKSDAy, APRIL IS, 1969 Atom D & J Cabinet Shop 124 W. Huron ,h. ttl-tW Ray Files Petition Asking for New Trial ' MEMPHIS (AP) — James that Ray Would be returned lEarl Ray, contending that two|from his maximum security cell MMAMMMMf GLOBE FURNITURE SPECIALS of his lawyers were more inter-dated in financial gains than hi? fate, has officially asked (or a new trial in the slaying of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.. In a petition filed Monday Ray said he was “pressured” into a March 10 guilty plea because a trial would have made the facts a “matter of public record for the free use of all” and would have endangered the success of a projected book and movie. Ray was represented first by Arthur Hanes of Birmingham, an attorney,he fired In November, and then by Percy Foreman of Houston, who arranged a 99-year sentence in exchange for the guilty plea. The motion said Foreman pressured him, and he, the defendant, under duress due to this pressure, entered a plea of ‘guilty’ ” for “the sole financial gain of the said attorney.” Attached to the petition were letters and agreements involving Ray, author William Bradford Huie of Hartselle, Ala., who is writing a book about Ray and negotiating movie rights, Hanes and Foreman. They outlined financial rangements under which Huie, has already written a series of magazine articles on the case, will pay part of his royalties to the two attorneys. Ray said in the motion that if he had taken the stand in a full-scale trial, “then he (Huie) would have no book.” He contended that his guilty plea was “a farce, a sham and a mockery of justice.” No date has been set for hearing on the motion. Hie attorney general’s office Was said in .the penitentiary in'Nashville to Memphis for apy such hearings. The motion was filed by three men listed as attorneys for Ray Richard J. Ryan of Memphis, J. B. Stoner of Savannah, Ga., and Robert W. Hill Jr. of Chattanooga. Ray formally dismissed Foreman as his attorney in a letter Criminal Cburt judge W. Preston Battle on March IS. Battle, who had received the guilty plea March 10, died of heart attack March 31, and a previously undisclosed second letter from Ray was found among- h)f effects. $149" GLOBE Furniture Co. EASY TERMS UPT0 3YRS. 2135 Dixie Highway at Telegraph Rd. 334-4934 12 to 5 P.M. £Q Free checking, 5% savings, and much, much more! Coming April 75th. Bus-Subsidy Pad Is Due BUY! SELL! TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! The Pontiac City Commission is expected to make a new agreement* with Pontiac Transit Co. to continue bus line operations at tonight’s commission meeting. The meeting is set for B p.m. at City Hall, Ea&t Wide Track and East Pike. The former agreement expired April 1. The new contract will call for subsidizing the bus company for the difference between fare-box revenues and cost of operations. The city also has been asked |to pay the firm a 3 per cent profit in the six-month period of the new agreement. Some $85,000 has been earmarked for bus subsidies in 1969. In other business, several zoning and street projects will be considered. A U Y* D#«T Buy From Us, W« Botti Use M PANELING 4x8 Sheet *59* Wat $7.85 Baked on Melamine finish resists scratching. Saalad back lids kaaps out mois- Pontiac's Largest Carpet Tile 12”xl2”@49° Fli E 1x1......... _____ _ IILX 41/4x41/4 . .39* sq. ft. fliMingirWliilONT SPffj- ALL FIRST QUALITY Pre-Finithed Wood Paneling 4x8 Sheet........33.M 4x7 Sheet................$3.41 ALL FORMICA VANITIES . 24" w/titik < Olsss Tub Itiolesurss 1 824.91 and Up 439«s ASK US ABOUT KITCHEN CARPET WE CARRY A LARGE SELECTION OF - CARPETS FOR ALL YQUR NEEDS OPIN MON. ami FBI. 'TIL O P.M. FBI! ISTIMATRS AND IMMEDIATE IHSTAiLATION NO MONEY 1% I DOWN : WmM JTXtXBB DELlyBRY . AND SERVICE HIGHLANDS wrrasnuNi SUMMER VALD PERSONAL PORTABLE TV SAVE! WEST1N6H0USE AT PRICE OF A RADIO AIR CONDITIONER $ P A Free off/on $AA88 remote control. y SAVE *33! 2-BOOR REFRIGERATOR BUY! A groo, buy at H» wgulor 3173 gdtn bu> n, WgMnnir. nrb.pgbig 313 into. SAVE! ARVIN 4-SPEED AUTOMATIC RECORD BUYER NEW! NAUTILUS ELECTRIC ROTISSIRIE/BROILER $1697 $7995 ZEMIN RIANT IS” DU. COLOR TV PORTABLE $33988 SAVE! HOTPOINT UPRIGHT FREEZER STORES 364 LBS SAVE! SNETUND-LEWVT FLOOR CARE SPECIALS WHIRLPOOL SIIE-BY-SIRE IS OOUPLETELY FROST-FREE 354 Ibi. nf froinn (nod .t your tingnrtip.—y $149 R«roy FLOOR POLISHER VACUUM CLEANER lull Inngth rafrig.rnlnr. All In >ip«,|intia“wM». (npwMnromg, • $199? $19" *338 ./'V- Nib MONEY DOWN • 3 YEARS TO PAY PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTER TELEGRAPH RD., G0R. ELIZABETH LAKE RD; OPEN DAILY 10 TQ 9 PHONE 852-2930. IN TROY 1-75 at 14 MILK Ml. OPEN DAILY II tap PHONE 585-5743 THE PONTIAC PkKSS. TtTESDAV, APRIL 8, 1060 PUBLIC INVITED TAXPAYERS RALLY ■7 ■ ' ■ ri-i? , Lawmakers Meet the Taxpayers THURSDAY, APRIL 10 7:30 p.m. Oakland County Auditorium 1200 N. Telegraph Road Pontiac, Michigan REFRESHMENTS Sponsored by Oakland County Homeowner* & Taxpayer* As*n. Pott Office Box 212 Lake Orion, Michigan 48035 Total Income Tax Reform Eyed By EDMOND LeBRETON Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (API - What might a new, simple income tax system look like if Congress simply got tired of/repairing the old one, junked it and started over? Although practically no one expects the lawmakers to do anything so drastic, a few hardy witnesses at the House Ways and Means Committee’s tax reform hearings have testified about what revision" from the ground up, might mean. Generally, they have sketched a tax system that could reduce the time required for making out one’s return to five minutes. Wiping out practically all exemptions and deductions would do that. And making all income subject to tax would allow the government to raise the samel amount of revenue with lower tax rates. In fact, there is a small but vocal school of tax economists advocating the same rate for everyone—probably something between IS and 30 per cent. ' A flat-rate tax appears to run cduqter to the basic principle of the present system but some proponents say it could be even more “progressive”—higher in effect on the bigger incomes— than the present tax. It could be made so by providing a much, higher personal exemption or a direct tax credit for each individual. In one of the more elaborate presentations to the committee, J. A. Stockfisch of Washington undertook to prove with wealth of figures that a flat rate | tax of 25 per cent, but providing Ian exemption of $1,500 for the [taxpayer and. each dependent! and abolishing the present separate Social Security tax, would! result In a better-graduated system than the present one. The present personal exemption is only $800, but the code is! studded with special deductions and provisions for treatment of different kinds of income in dif-j ferent ways. He cited estimates that the) average actual tax now paid onj total income is about 10.8 per cent in the $10,000411,000 bracket and tlilt it increases only to 28.8 per cent in the $100,000-$150,000 bracket and above that, actually declines slightly, so that the average for incomes of $1 million and over is 26.7 per eentt There is now a population of j 50 million persons in Prfnc College President Statesman Writing to a friend? Dwight D. Eisenhower once mentioned Winston Churchill, George Washington, Abraham Lincoln and Robert E, Lee as great men, and then went on to establish his own scale for weighing greatness. ''■It embraced," as Reiman Morin writes in his . new biography, EISENHOWER: A GAUGE OF GREATNESS,"the qualities of vision, integrity,-Courage, understanding,'and the ability to communicate." You will be interested in Morin's judgment on how Eisenhower measured up to high standards that he himself set. Dwight D. Eisenhower GAUGE OF GREATNESS Now Available To Readers Of THE PONTIAC PRESS $3.12 incl.tax To ordor Your Book, tond this coupon with your remittance, Check or Money Orders Should Be Made Payable To The Associated Press This fs just one of the insights that Morin, a two-time Pulitzer, prize winner, supplies into unknown and little known aspects of the life of the war time commander and peace time president. For your copy of‘-this complete biography of Eisenhower (264 pages, 81/2x11 inches, 140,000 words, over 85 illustrations in black and white and color) fill out the coupon below at once and mail to the address given. The special price through this newspaper is only $3.12 including tax. FILL OUT AND MAIL COUPON BELOW A Gauge of Greatness The PontiacPre**, Pontiac, Michigan P.O.Box 66 Poughkeepsie, N. Y. 12601 Enclosed is $.....,. for.........copies pf the Eisenhower bonk.. / Nome......... Address City & State .... . Zip No.. Help! We're busting out all over. Our exciting summer collections are arriving and we need space to show them off. That's where you come in—the looks, fabrics and colors you like are all here—now at much lower prices. We've reduced fashions you'll enjoy now and later in J1 dress departments. So come -on in and help us clear our racks. Big savings today in ours Detroiter Shop, Misses' Dresses.10.88 and 16.88 Detroiter Shop, Women's Dresses.12.88 to 18.88 Pontchartrain Shop, Misses' Dresses . .. .- .7.88 to 15.88 St. Clair Shop, Misses' Dresses.17.88 to 32.88 St. Clair Shop, Women's Dresses 10.88-15.88-20.88-25.88 St. Clair Knit Shop.........., . 16.88 to 42,8ft Young Junior Dresses................ . . 8.88 Home and Town Dresses..................4.88 Home and Town Dresses............ 2.88 to 6.88 Maternity Shop.................. ......13.88 Bridal Salon . . . ........... 9.88 to 34.88 s HUDSON’S OownlowA / " liJS 0 Northland f toitlond Watbnd < «... I For Home Delivery of THE PONTIAC PRESS Dipl 332-8181 - ■! if .1 ■ THIS’-PONTIAC PRESS, T1JKSDAY, APRIL H, loflo A~*9 2 um ____lM '"'■■■ mmmdtSSr %SHI0H^ SALE 3.97 Beautiful crocheted wool stoles at a beautiful new low price A nice mother's day gift, thdse imported white wool stoles look as^good as the ones grandmother used to/make. Many styles, lovely designs, perfect for spring and summer. See them in Hudson's Neckwear. COSTUME JEWELRY SALE 99c.o9.99 Start your own treasure chest on less than a king's ransom with our beautiful necklaces, bracelets, pins,/ earring, rings, scarf pins, waist ornaments. Find tftese and more, all in Hudson's Fashion Jewelry. SALE Bag big savings on plastic patent/leathcr handbags. Chock full of all sorts of styles, colors, savings, our sale collection is one you'll love. Navy, white, bohe and black are the biggest colors, double arid single handle types. Not every style is available in every color. Hudson's Handbags. A sprightly group of linen prinj hankies. So colorful and bright, you'll want many more than one of these Irish linen handkerchiefs. At such great savings, you'll be giving everyone gay prints, ipcluding abstracts, florals and gegmetrics. Choose from the collection in Handkerchiefs. SALE 3.19 A rich purse for a little: clutches, billfolds, etc. Purse accessories that save you a bundle—many one of a kind, that's what you'll find here. French purses, clutches, billgolds, all by a famous maker in lovely leather. A wide selection is yours, in Hudson's Small Leather Goods. SHOE 1 CLEARANCE From Detroiter Shoes Dayne Taylor's woven leather loaf, bone, black, beige. 8.90; woven leather T-strap, black, taupe, 10.90; woven leather pump, tan, blue, brown, 12.90. Foot Flair and Dayne Taylor shoes at savings of 10.90. From Fashion Shoes Naturalizers, DeMura, Rhythm Step, 12.90. Mademoiselle, Protege, Frank Cardone, 16.90. From Salon Shoes Palizzio, Andrew Geller, Margaret Jerrold, Newton Elkin, Downtown, Northland, East-land, Oakland only, save on them all, 22.90. Special group' of reptile shoes, Downtown only, 19.90 and 29.90. Special group of plain pumps at Westland, 8.90; another at Pontiac, a wide selection at just 6.90. From Women's Shoes Hill and Dale, Selby, Paradise-Kittens, these favorites at only 14.90 and 16.90. From Women's Casual Shoes Joyce, Naturalizer, Penaljos, DeMuras, Nina, Capezio, Cobblers of California, this big group yours at 10.90 to 14.90. v )From Young Fashion Shoes -Smaftaires, ,6 Fashionpace find, how 8.90. HUD^bN’S , DOWNTOWN DETROIT Woodward Ave. and Grand River ■ NORTHLAND CENTER . 8 Mile and Northwestern EASTLAND CENTER 8 Mile and Kelly. Roads WESTLAhID CENTER Warren end Wayne Roads PONTIAC . MALL Telegraph and Elizabeth Lake Roads - OAKLAND MALL 1.75 and 14 Mile Road A—10 THE TONtIAC PRESS,'TlTE^ljAY, APRIL 8. JOWT Tatroe Will Appear in Televised Forum Df. Don 0. Tatrpe, superintendent of Waterford Township Schools and board member of Ihp Michigan Association of School Administrator^,' will appear on WTVS, Channel 56, Thursday night on a program entitled “Reflections on Suburban Education.” The purpose of the program, which is scheduled for 10 p.m., is to reexamine topics of four proceeding .programs in a series. - Tatroe will be a panel mem* ber discussing financing education, teachers’ rights and negotiations, curriculum and future directions of suburban education. Deaths in Pontiac,Neighboring Areas Heidi M. Szadyr ander Mikiczenko, 56, of 625 of "Capac; nine grandchildren; Pursley - Gilbert Funeral Sylvanwood will be 9 a mV aitf two great-grandchildren. ; Home, Pontwt- _ . ! Sefvice for HelcH-M. Szadyr, tomorrow ,at SI. -Mark's ' . , Mr . Slpakar ;woi. nivieinn RpnHiv rnrn. in PSH Facility Gets OK of Legislature WAR WINS OUT - As his girlfriend pleads with an army-police patrol to let him go. a young' South Vietnamese is led to a police jeep and then to a military induction camp. The youth was apprehended by the ‘ AP Wirepheto patrol in his, apartment on Saigon’s Tu Do street. Police and MPs are making life difficult for any young man who tries to stay out of military service without a valid official reason. Maynard G. Post Mr. Vaughan, a construction i engineer, died Sunday. He was la member of the Presbyterian | Church. Surviving are his' wife, Annabel!; his mother, Mrs. Perry Vaughan of St. Petersburg, «• j .Fla.; and three sisters, I CHICAGO ^ - Traffic deaths ,ncli;d. Mrs John B. Ham-for the first two months of ^ mond of Bloomfield Hills, jumped 4 per cent above thej Memoria| tributes may be Traffic Deaths Up 4 Pet. in 2 Months r | The State Legislature i has approved a plan to i establish a research and ; training facility at Pontiac ! State Hospital. The $75,000 building,'financed by public and private sources, will provide facilities for physical and psychiatric research on animals. ABM Foe Blasts Shifts in Position It will house the current Pontiac Medical Science Laboratories and will be ; named after Frank E. I ! Fitzsimmons, the Team- | j sters union’s acting presi- | dent. The union donated | ! money for the building. i Dr. Donald Dawson, I | head of the laboratories I and director of the hos- 1 pital’s medical - surgical | division, said the labora- | tory will serve the re- | search and training needs g of five major medical | facilities in Oakland! County. IMLAY CITY - Service for Harold McKillen, 63, of 118 E. L of Walfed Lake; a daughteri Third will be 3 p.m.tomorrow Mrs. Shir]ey Vlvier of Miamir, ; WASHINGTON “(AP) — A said this country is working to-, in our submarines that could If'1 Muir F.un®raI Fla.; and fhree grandchildren. I leading Senate opponent ofjward development of such a wipe the Russians out, and the|Bome’ ,w™ burial in Imlay Memorial contributions mqy| ' President Nixon’s missile de- weapon. Russians know it. TownshipLiemetery. „ be sent to the Walled Lakei Ifense program savs the admin-1, m-----------t“w.w ui..? Mr. McKillen died Sunday.Hg| ' grandparents Mr. and. Mrs. Filter Division, Bendix Corp. in Mykolaj Szadyr of Troy and Mr.! Madison Heights, and Mrs. Boyce Dennington of, surviving are his .wife,!.-] Madison Heights. Palageia; three daughters, Mrs. , no ii* I Robert Adams and Miss Nina Mrs. Jan P. Barylski U both of Midland( and Anna| PONTIAC TOWNSHIP - home; a Son, Walter A. | Mrs. Jan P. (Vera Mae) |at home; and one grandchild. Barylski. 61, of 1960 Grandview j died today. Her body is wt Huntoon Funeral Home, Pon-i PHUBPWP® tiac. ! WALLED LAKE - Service .total for the same period last . to the Michigan Heart, Mrs. Barylski wa s g.for Maynard G. Post, 77, of 295jyear, the National S a f e t YjAssoeisition, Detroit, seamstress and a member of St. | Ladd will be 1 p.m. Friday at Council said, today. Michael’s Catholic Church,‘the Walled Lake United! * * * I Georqe O. West Jr. Detroit. j Methodist Church with burial in | The council added, however, 3 Surviving are her husband; Walled Lake Cemetery by the'that two-month figures were HOLLY — Requiem mass for two daughters, Mrs. Harold Richardson - Bird Funeral [insufficient to make an y George O. West' Jr., 50, of 416J> Wright of Westland and Mrs. Home. |forecasts of drivers’ and;g, Belford will be 10:30 a.m. Michael Cobb of Detroit; three Mr. Post died yesterday. He pedestrians’ performances forjFriday at St. Rita’s Catholic brothers and sisters, including was a retired Ford Motor Co. all 1969. {Church, with burial in Lakeside Lloyd Sowles of Pontiac; and 11 dealer. He belonged to the During January 8 n djCemetery. grandchildren. {walled Lake Rotary club and February, 7,447 *persons were Rosary will be recited at 7:30 was a life member of the Walt killed in traffic mishaps com-Lm Thursday at Dry^r ed Lake Lodge 528 F&AM and pared with 7,160 for the first Ifunara, Home Holly. OES chapter 508. two, months of 1968, the council Mr. West died this morning. Surviving are a son, Donald I said. [Re was a member of Hulfct- Braverider Post 5587, VFW, and Local 651, UAW-CIO. Mr. We$t Harold McKillen --~ ^ r- -p-t- ■ . ■■■■--1 tumuuuum uiiiiam < ic cut guvooiug ouvut. jwas a member I m l a y City of rationalizations for Safeguard from the administration,” Democrat George S. McGovern of South Dakota said. “They keep changing them all the time. Now it seems to me they are escalating the terror rather than giving us any enlightenment.”■ Dawson said he expects construction to start in mid-April and be finished about July 1. Boys Club Units' Meeting Delayed r- migh‘ *capabie * 'We have had a whole series , strike designed to wipe out U.S, land-based missiles, he said administration officials are “curiously silent” about the retaliatory power of U.S. Polaris-equipped submarines. , “It’s only in the last couple of weeks that they have been talking about this first strike threat McGovern commented in an ^° justify Safeguard,” he said, interview shortly after Secre- ™^ don’t mention that we,warhead, tary of Defense Melvin R. Laird have a second strike capability, told a group of European report-, ers visiting the Pentagon Mon-; day that the Soviet Union is testing a triple warhead for its they were foolish enough to try a first strike and to knock out our land-based missiles, they can’t touch our submarines." The Soviets are estimated to have 200 operational SS9s, with current deployment expected to give them 500 by 1973. With triple nuclear tips, they would have 1,500 warheads to the 1,000 Minutemen with a single Lodge 3 41, F&AM, and American Legion Post 135 and a charter member of the Imldy City Rotary Club. He had been a justice of the peace since 1956. Surviving are his wife Arlene; a half brother Lawrence of Dryden; and i sister. Alexander Mikiczenko Fred Robinson Sr. IMLAY CITY - Service for Fred Robinson Sr., 80, of- 280 W. Fourth will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at Muir Brothers Funeral Home, with burial in Imlay Township Cemetery. Mr. Robinson died Monday. Surviving are his wife, Pearl; a daughter, Mrs. Lucy Maison Imlay City; two sons, Policewomen Setiwas employed by • the A€ roucewomen ^';Sparkplug Co., Flint - Surviving are his wife, Lo£- ---------------— mrs-. Record in Buffalofa raine; his mother, Christine West.of Flint; three BUFFALO, N Y. WV-Cather-|sons, Dennis' of Davison; ine C. Rebadon and Marian Bass F..........■ TROY — Service for Alex-1 Frederick of Imlay and Richard policewoman. have a double distinction in the Buffalo Police Department: They were promoted to desk lieutenants Monday, becoming first women in the department’s 103-year history to be appointed to that rank. It is also the highest level ever reached by a Buffalo Richard at home and George II of Fort Knox, Ky.; four daughters, Mrs. Charles Mack of Flint, Mrs. Carl Stubblefield of Flint, Mrs. Richard Grooters of Highland Township; and Nancy, at home; two brothers; and 10 grandchildren. Memorial contributions may be made to the Hurley Hospital Kidney Fund, Flint. I big SS9 rocket. Laird has cited deployment of | the SS9—without extra war-I heads—as reason for deploying Safeguard. He said Monday that mounting triple warheads on the /SS9 would give Russia triple the punch it is expected to have by 1973 and the capability to take.wm Speak following dinner at _ S i ut the Minuteman missiles|6:30 p.m. Saturday at Cobo1 The meeting of the Michigan w|1jCj1 are America’s main de- Ban Detroit. Area Council of Boys Clu^ of ten-eqt, first strike force. j Hi’s address will conclude a nw^aT the Devon Gables to NOT INTENTIONS I full day’s program scheduled by Bloomfield Township has been “I’m not talking about inten-|JJe Dem Coalition to Hear Bond at Cobo Hall Rep. Julian Bond, D-Georgia, canceled, according to Howard Dell, Pontiac Area Boys Club representative. A new date for the meeting will be announced later, said. NOTICE OF HEARING ON STREET LIGHTING SPECIAL ASSESSMENT OISTRJCT Mntir* I, hereby given that • public II ba held at the White. Lake sfiip Hall, 7525 Highland Road ') from 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. on Tuai-I II 15, 1959 to consider a Special TmutSb Assessment District for Street Lighting, requested by petition, for the following described properties: Cedarviaw Subdivision No. 2, part of the W'/j of SEW of Section 27, T3N, ROB, White Lake Township, Oakland County, Michigan — Lots 43 through 53. - - ' -*i Whits Lake Township board. FEROINAND C. VETTER, / of Oakland, Juvenile Division. In the matter of the petition concerning Brenda McLauchlln, Minor: To Clair O. McLauchlln, father of said minor child. ^Petltion^havln^ bean^ filed In thH^Court provisions of *ChMCterd7j£T*ol "he^Comj the present whereabouts of the father ol said minor child Is unknown and said child has violated a law of the State, County Service Center, the,afternoon, and you are hereby c mended to appear personally at ! ^It |being Impractical to make persi shall be served by publication of a c Pontiac Press, a newspaper printed an Witness, "the Honorable Norman R Barnard, Judge of said Court, in thi City of Pontiac In said County, this art day of April A.D. IMS. (Seal) NORMAN R. BARNARD, (a true copy) Judge of Probate MARJORIE SMITH, Deputy Probata Register, Juvenile Division STATE OF MICHIGAN -I bats Court fl^—.. . .. 9 Juvenile Division. '» ‘he matter of the petition c onh Ann kornlstr. Minor, lipur Kornlsh, father of %aH "1, chile.. Pelltlon^havln^ 'Had In this Cour ...Jns "of "chapter i Laws ol 1941 as amended, in tha present, whereabouts of the father o —— child Is unknown and saji Hoisted a law of lit* State, ild child should b* continued |uHpMBft - “but aboutof NIichigan. Discussions are scheduled on the antibalMic missile system, the boycott of California table grapes, electoral reforms, current problems in education and crises of the tions,” Laird said, capability.” >At about the same time, Secretary of State William P. Rogers was telling a news conference that he can’t understand . why the Soviets are installing{urban communities, the SS9 at all. He said this will! * * * be one of the first questions to! The recently launched petition be tsfken up with them in any,drive requesting a presidential! arms-limitation talks. I Primary election in Michigan to; Sens. Richard B. Russell, D-jb® placed on the ballot in; Ga„ a top Senate authority on November 1970 will be dis-; military matters, and Sen. Hen-fussed. The drive is headed by; ry M. Jackson, D-Wash., who,!0!'n Noza of the 19th Dis-j turned down Nixon’s offer of the!!"6!- defense secretaryship, both! ; — | have cited the SS9 as a prime . There are 2.75 million people- reason for installing the anti- in New Zealand divided into missile system. Jackson said the United States has no multiple-warhead missile in its arsenal. Russell some 411 different religious! groupings but only 11 of these) religions have more than 10,000 members. li.Nm Impractical to makb para jnjBMS ■OPEN EVENINGS" (BsJti&JL Muhtef INCOME TAX / MORE DAYS To See H & k BLOCK Wa a_________ ____________________„ ________ If wa maka arty errors that coil you any penalty c interest, wo will pc^ tha panaltvor Intarost. America'! largeil Tax Service with Over 3000 Office* 20 e. HURON HMb 4#10 DIXIE HWY. DRAYTON PLAINS J 1012 N. MAIN 2836 0RCHAND LAKE r jumok WEEK DAY! I TO | - SAT., SUN. S APPOINTMENT NECESSAD ie MAIN DIRECTORS Louis H. Cole Investments David B. Eames President Eames and Brown, Inc. Warren H. Eierman Executive Vice President Community Notional Bonk of Pontiac Robert R. Eldred President Community National Bank of Pontiac National Bank of Pontiac PONTIAC, MICHIGAN STATEMENT OF CONDITION as of close of business March 31,1-969 Robert C. Fisher Executive Vice President Fisher Corporation Harold A. Fitzgerald Chairman of the Board The Pontiac Press Alfred C. Girard Chairman of the Board Community National Bank of Pontiac Alfred R. Glancy, Jr. President Realty Investment Corporation Alfred R. Glancy, III Michigan Consolidated Gas Company RESOURCES Caeh and Due from Danke ....... 9 23,866,903.18 United Statee Government Obligations 27,280,489.02 Other U.S. Government Agencies . . 5.000.000.00 State and Municipal Securities. Other Securities............... Loans and Discounts.........49,937,194.77 Real Estate Loans.............. 83.369.766.89 Accrued Interest............... Bank Properties and Equipment... Other Assets................... TOTAL RESOURCES......... 56,147,392.20 45,059,674.67 315,000.00 133,306,961.66 1,761,857.68 5,267,793.74 130.544.28 $241,989,224.23 Harold S. Goldberg Pnsident Thomas Jewelry Company, Inc. Howard W. Huttenlocher President H. W. Huttenlocher Agency, Inc. • Frederick J. Poole President Poole-Dickie Lumber Company LIABILITIES Deposits: Demand . *............. $ 75,465,072.32 Savings and Time......... 146,050,888.86 jB§j Government............. 1.076.513.30 Total Deposits................. Unearned Interest.............. Liabilities for borrowed money ... Accrued Expenses and Other Liabilities.......... Reserve for Loan Contingencies........... Capital Stock, Common.......... $ 5,000,000.00 Surplus.......................... 5,000,000.00 Undivided Profits................ 1,L71;129.40 General Reserve ..................... 48.549.36 TOTAL LIABILITIES.... $222,592,474.48 , 2,064,981.73 2,000,000.00 1,516,971.98 2,595,117.28 * 11,219,678.76 $241,989,224.23 Unlled Slain Covernmknt Sccjirlilc* In lint •mount of $8,061,260.43 Book Vilur, In iho fornoing .lainnrnl nit nloiliral to tocuro Vodoral and Mute Govornmont Depoilla including depoaili of $64,161.00 of the Trooiuror, Slate of Mlchiun and for other pu U ‘ rr purpoaea required lay law. JWambar fadernl Papoail Intur DOWNTOWN OFFICE AIRPORT OFFICE AUTO RANK ., , BLOOMFIELD HILLS OFFICE Ti, - - CLARKSTON OFFICE - COUNTY CENTER OFFICE ' HURON STREET OFFICE Heego harbor office LAKE ORION OFFICE MALL OFFICE MAPLE-TELEGRAPH OFFICE MILFORD OFFICE PERRY STREET OFFICE ROCHESTER OFFICE / ROMEO OFFICE UNION LAKE OFFICE UNIVERSITY OFFICE WALLED LAKE OFFICE ERFORD OFFICE WA' W< tTERFl I'CiODT IHWARD AVENUE OFFICE THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, APRIL 8, I two A—11 American Escapes to U.S. After 10 Years in Prison LOS ANGELES (AP) — “I me,” said the 4(Kyear-old for-can't think they’d send mem®1, F'ort Worth, Tex., laborer, back—I’m innocent," said Dykes! “l'm not.running anywhere. Aft-Askew Simmons after “his es-1cr ^ years, I’ve got hot show-'Lt ~ w , , /■ i era, clean .sheets, rues on the gjj* Prif«,floor. No more adobe. / I’m Where he spent 10 years under* free >• 1 sentence of ddath as a. killer, T * ' . • lL . v Simmons, who walked out of *n Washington, a State De- the Monterrey prison disguised as a woman, was driven across the Texas border in a friend’s car,- and he flew to Los Angeles Monday from Harlingen with his lawyer, Dennis Frederlckson of Beverly Hills. * > ■ ★ ‘‘They may try to extradite] partment spokesmen said there had been no word from Mexico on possible extradition proceedings. ON VACATION TRIP Simmons had been held in Monterrey since Oct. 12, 1959, when he was arrested while on a vacation trip and accused of a fatally shooting three members! of a dentist's family. Convicted. and sentenced to] die by firing squad, Simmons Continued to protest his Innocence and/ask for official U.S. aid to win his freedom. ★ ★ * A State Department spokesman said two years ago “We are quietly working through proper channels.” Convinced there was no hope! of help from Washington^ he said, he spread pancake makeup on his face Sunday, put a | shawl on his head and climbed! into a dress “padded in all the appropriate places.” FLEES AS WOMAN Then, with about 400 women who* had been visiting family members at the, Nuevo Leon state prison at, Monterrey, he walked Out the gates which had closed him in° since 1959, went another 500 yards to a waiting car and was driven to Texas. After a plane flight to Los Angeles, Simmons said Monday night he had help in the escape but would not elaborate. 'A ★ h, The slain Mexicans were Hil-| da Perez Villagomez, 22, ,her| sister Marta, 19, and her brother Manuel, 17. Dying of gunshot wounds, Hilda described the j killer as a big light-haired American, with one. or two gold teeth, and driving a 1958 light blue-car. . ■» Simmons was darker haired, almost 35 pounds lighter and three inches shorter, had ho gold teeth and drove a 1954 car of a different make. Identifying him in her hospital room, Hilda said: “I am almost sure. May God forgive me if I made a mistake.” I About 20 months after his con-[viction, a higher court ruled the trial court erred in accepting [the young women’s, deathbed: identification. The/ trial court reaffirmed the < conviction / and for a second time sentenced Simmons to death. Why this sentepce was never carried out not clear. Two days after his first conviction, Simmons said, he was due to die before a firing squad! but “it just didn’t happen.” * * * When Mexican authorities had not ordered his execution after [nearly a year in prison, Sim-1 mons said, his guards tried to! take the matter into their own hands. “About eight of thepi took me to f/ont gate,” he said, “and three started pushing me. The others were to shoot me. “I fought back into the prison./ I wouldn’t let go. NOSE BROKEN “They almost beat me' to! death. My nose was broken and | there were marks ail over my body from where they kicked me. They said I’d fallen off a | wall trying to escape.” But two years later he said, he really did try to escape. * * * He said he bought a gun in the prison for 109'pesos and made / his way to the prison tower but was forced by machine-gun fire < to surrender to the guards. A factory producing protein concentrate made from fish and fit for human consumption yvill. go into production in 1969. The factory is scheduled to produce 35,000 tons of the concentrate in { the first year of operation. WE’RE GOING OUT OF THE FURNITURE BUSINESS TO EXPAND OUB CARPET AND APPLIANCES WHY? Because off our tremendous growth in Carpet Sales, and because off our 25 years experience in the Appliance Business, we ffeel that we can better serve our many customers and the entire Pontiac Area by concentrating on these items. ILL FURNITURE MUST CO - TO MAKE ROOM FOR CARPET ROUS UP TO 50% OFF on every piece off furniture in eur store and warehouse EVERYTHING MUST GO! LAMPS 1 Sale PricetLFrom $095 Jmm Hurry! | I BEAUTIFUL SMOKING STANDS Regular $19.95 SALE $H88 1 PRICE u ROCKERS SALE PRICE $1488 3 Colors to Choose front BEAUTIFUL UEDR00M SUITES 4 Pieces Mar-Proof Finish $2000 60% | On All WALL Accessories BUY NOW! 100% EJUrUNI NYLON CARPET INSTALLED Complete with pad $688 z t * NO CASH DOWN - EASY TERMS 9: £br\^f) OPEN EVENINGS 'TIL SATURDAY ■ TIMld 6:00 P.M. rrxjnoMzri HOMI: FURNISHINGS 1108 W. HURON ST. (Next to Folic* Ouality Mark*!) 1 A—li V THE PONTIAC PRESS, TtJKSfiAV, APKIL 8, I9(ft> You can know which stores are the best Read their advertising in . . . v THE PONTIAC PRESS For Home Delivery Dial 332-8181 Desperate Women Death Is Final Chapter in Illegal Abortion Story By JEANNE NELSON Too many deaths occur from Illegal abortions because the woman seeking this “service" is forced by outdated laws to submit to unsterlle and sometimes brutal procedures. J ----------------- This Is the true story of one such case. / Tbe young woman was 25,7 a school The illegal abortionist often has his “patient” meet him at a motel under cover of darkness. Hopefully, no one will see her. Here, a model poses for Pontiac Press photographer, Edward R. Noble. teacher from a respected family in an affluent area of Oakland County. She found herself pregnapb by a married iruNn. .jJ'1-,[ „t ' / t/l «,■ > ' ' */ a,/ L. 1. . /. First, she sought help man the-family physician whose only solution was for her to have the child. He did, however, honor her patient-physician confidence. * a- * The second doctor she saw offered no better solution and in addition felt a lecture on the subject on morality and the laws, was in order. As days passed, the young teacher grew more and more frightened. a . a a Friends taken into her confidence were sympathetic but could supply no solution. The idea of telling her family was unthinkable. DESPERATE MOVE In desperation, she took the only help her lover could offer: an illegal abortion for which he made arrangements. ‘j. a... a a ■ Her abortion took place in an Oakland County motel where she waited her turn with two others there for the same purpose. It was later discovered that the abortionist, not even a high school graduate, had received no medical training whatever. He was an unskilled factory worker. a a a Within two weeks of the operation she was dead. The first death certificate listed death by natural causes. When an autopsy was performed, it was discovered that death was due directly to an infection caused by the earlier abortion. A FAMILY BALKED ^ Because of the criminal aspects, authorities were called in. They were able to identify the abortionist and would have brought him to trial, but the family would not sign a complaint. He (the abortionist) not only collected a fat fee, but escaped any punishment and could well be doing “business as usual” right now. “ ' Wh?t did the two physicians involved accomplish? They did not save |he life of / the unborn child. They must have some uncomfortable thoughts about the death of the young woman. Women will Have abortions for unwanted pregnaiicies with the sanction of the law or WITHOUT It . ., . some will die. ' ' * * * v, To a wealthy woman, an unwanted pregnancy is an inconvenience; to a poor woman, it is a disaster. The wealthy can obtain an abortion (usually under satisfactory and safe conditions) but her less fortunate sister is doomed to the opposite. For the very poor, self-abortion is usually resorted to,. very pfiert with dire after-effects. Most statistics on illegal abortions point to a figure of one million or more performed each year. For these, the average rate is $300. You don’t need a Ph.D in math to see this is a big money making proposition for the illegal abortionist. In view of the above, is it past time for outdated laws on the matter, to be liberalized or even repealed? (Tomorrow: Abortion Pros and Cons) 'TUESDAY, APRIL 8, 19B0 .\4h: ^ What Gals Are Doing in Self-Help Programs Give Her a Break and Look in Other Direction for Wife By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: I am 28, a bachelor, and a college graduate. I recently returned to this town to head my late father’s business. I have been decorated in combat and have seen my share of the world, and now I am ready to settle down for the right girl. Finding a desirable mate among wetnosed college coeds, divorcees, and town tramps is virtually impossible. Nonetheless, there is one who has become rather special. We dated in high school. She was the local beauty queen and is still very attractive. However, she is divorced and has two children. ★ ★ ★ I could care for.this woman, and the question of marriage has crossed my mind, but in my present business position I shudder at the thought of shackling myself with children who aren’t mine, and a “second-hand Rose” with crumpled pedals. S. 0. S. DEAR S. 0. S.: Sounds to me as though the little lady has already had her share of headaches, so give her a break and look further for a mate. If you regard a divorcee as a “second-hand Rose with crumpled petals’’ and admit that you can’t accept another man’s children as your own, this woman is npt for you. >. ★ ★ * DEAR ABBY: We have many children in our neighborhood who -have B. B. guns. One 14-year*old started coming into my yard to shoot birds, and I saw him handling his gun in a very irresponsible manner. I called his mother and told her if her son was going to use a gun, he should go to the YMCA and take a course in the proper handling of firearms. . V‘r'l£“\Tjr" ★ .....— She told me he KNEW how to handle's gun, yet I’vi seen him pumping his gun with the barrel pointed toward his head. I then told her that since 1 have children who are six and eljght, whose playmates come over a lot, I didn’t want her boy in' my yard witn his gun. (One child had already suffered a chipped tooth from a shot in the mouth)! Ceramics Authority Speaks Tonight at Greenfield Village the keeper of * ceramics and applied art of the Liverpool, England, City Museums, Alan Smith, will present an illustrated talk on Liverpool Pottery at 8:90 tonight at Greenfield Village. Henry Ford Museum and the Mid-States Ceramic ’ Study Group are sponsoring the talk'and admission |8 free. The program will be held In the museum coffeb shop. Alan Smith Is the author of a recent book entitled, "Liverpool Pottery." He Is currently making a brief tour pf mjdjor Americanmuieunwv; ' ., ! -Ki ■ • ‘ <■ - Weil, the next time I saw the boy in my yard with his gun I called the police. Not out of anger, but but of concern for his own safety as well hs the safety of others. I didn’t sign a complaint. I just told tbe officer to talk to him. * * * . Now the boy’s mother is furious with me. She said I should not have called the police, that I should have called her again, instead. Abby, I like this woman. If you say I’m wrong, I’ll apologize. MRS. H. DERBY, KAS. DEAR MRS. H.: No apologies are necessary. I think your neighbor should send you a dozen sunflowers. , * ★ * DEAR ABBY: Well, gal, I must admit you’ve got it! My hubby reads your column before he even looks at the rest of the paper. ★ * * For years I’ve had a problem I couldn’t seem to solve. You, see, John is a swell guy, but he hates water like a cat does, and I just couldn’t get him to take a bath even once a week. Well, one day 1 said, “John, if you don’t start taking a bath once a week I am going to consult Abby.’’ Wham! He was in the tub like a flash. * ★ ★ So chalk up this woman as one of your admirers. No name, please. John would have a fit. A READER IN JOLIET, ILL. CONFIDENTIAL TO M AND L: Better consult a tax expert. Face it, you’re living in the only country in the world where it takes more brains to make out the income tax return than it does to make the income. Everybody has a problem. What’s yours? For a personal reply write to Abby, in care of Hie Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056 and enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. WWW For Abby’s booklet, “How to Have a Lovely Wedding," send $1.00 to Abby, in care of Hie Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056. Calendar WEDNESDAY ' I I Woman’s World, 10 a.m., The 1 I Pontiac Mall. “Weight Watching 1 I for Glamorpus Results” by Mr& I | Rose Fox. ft Lone Pine Garden Club, 11:30 | I am., home of Mrs. W. E. Healey 1 I of Malibu Drive, Bloomfield 8 I Township. Dr. Charles Black of the 1 Michigan Department of Con- 8 servation will speak on I “Environmental Pollution.” Ikebana International, chapter 1 No. 85,1 p.m., Episcopal Church of 1 the Advent, Middle Belt Road. 8 “Containers of the Future” by | Mrs. Harold Brown. 1 | American Association of Retired | I Persons, chapter No. 7, 1:30 p.m., § I Community Services Building. I Mrs. Sadie McIntyre of St. Joseph’s I Mercy Hospital will speak. American Business Women’s Association, Waterford Charter Chapter, 7:30 p.m., Huron Bowl. John Hirlinger on ‘‘Airline Safety.” Pontiac Audubon Club, 7:30 p.m., All Saints’ Episcopal Church, Hostesses will be Mrs. Elaine Hill and Mrs. Nancy Hastie. Two films will be shown. Woman’s Society of Christian Service, St. James United Methodist Church, 7:30 p.m., in the chprch. Regular meeting. West Oakland nils Lawyers’ Wives, 8 p.m., home of Mrs. William Heaphy of Detroit. THURSDAY Women’s Society of Bethany Baptist Church, noon, in the church. Luncheon meeting. 1 msssiieinMr By PATRICIA McCORMACK NEW YORK (UPI) — Among things to cheer about in the world of women — all subject to copying in your town: • A contemporary version of the Golden Rule’s surfacing in an organization simply dubbed Fish. Women participating in this homefront project volunteer to help when called by a neighbor who needs emergency cooking, driving, babysitting or whab-not. In return, the helper gets the right to have her SOS or whatever answered when it’s sounded. • A group of wives a nd mothers climbing the walls talked their husbands into letting them go off on a cruise—sans hubby or children. They have a week of fun while husband spends a week of his vacation time filling in the little woman’s shoes. • Betting on mompower being more powerful than a policeman’s badge, authorities in an Eastern Seaboard town okayed a plan whereby mothers ride in police cars after school. The problem to be controlled: roving bands of children who descend on other children on the way home from school. Mompower, those involved figure, carries a lot of weigktr-especially when it’s via flat of hand applied to seat of pants. • A woman in her golden years, sick for more than a week, worried because her phone didn’t ring once during the shut-in spell. Yes. Things like that happen—in urban areas especially. When she recovered she started an answering service in reverse. She and the women who work with her now call persons who live alone—on a regular basis. Just a freindly call to check in, seeing that all’s well. » Young-at-heart women in their sixties were curious about some of those movies with outrageously sexy come-on Women Voters Plan Luncheon and Election The annual luncheon and election of officers of West Bloomfield League of Women Voters will be held at Botsford Inn April 15 at noon. The planning of local and state programs for the coming year is bn the agenda. Guests may attend. For reservations and baby sitting arrangements, call Mrs. F. G. Douglass of West Doherty Drive, or Mrs. Charles Pollock of Sprlngwater Lane. ads. Afraid to go alone, they banded together. Now once a week they meet and go in a group, laughing all the way. No one knows how much popcorn they consume . at the matinees. • In a move to i head off student unrest, a school system on the East Coast okayed slacks for coeds. After the authorizaton went into effect, big surprise. Most of the girls opted for skirts. The only negative observation I’ve had on the women’s world recently: That magazine that says “never underestimate the power of a woman” Ladies Home Journal — has males in the top three editorial spots. Answers Come From Readers Upon Request By ELIZABETH L. POST My thanks to my readers who wrote in to describe a “Sweetheart Wedding.” In case there are some of you who do not know it, it seems that tbe terms refers mainly to the clothes of the bride and her attendants. The bride wears white, of course, and her bouquet is heart-shaped. The neck of her gown may also be heart-shaped. The attendants wear white gowns with red trim and carry red flowers, or the reverse. In short, it seems that red and white is the theme, and it could be called a “Valentine” wedding as well as a "Sweetheart Wedding.” S-*1 P A Dear Mrs. Post: Every year I visit In a home and the people I am visiting are always invited to a gathering. The hostesses are always complete strangers to me. They know I am a guest in the home but never telephone to tell my hosts to bring me along. Am I not right in refiising to go to a complete stranger’s party without an invitation? — Harriet Dear Harriet: Yes, you are. Those giving the party, should specifically ask your hosts to bring you, and if they do not, your 'own hostess should remind them that you are visiting, and ask if you may come. Nixon's 'Other Pat' Now His No. 1 Government Girl a rayon bamboo abstract print, lends a note of sophisticated chic to almost any occasion, and fairly purrs in the rain, The smashing rayph/printed fabric is laminated for srhooth shaping and protected with SyUmer silicone for /toqter repellency.’ The A-line coat with backrbelt will take repeated dry cleanings without reprocessing. on a broader scale in 1952, but didn’t work directly with Mr. Nixon until 1956." MANAGED WELL By 1960, she had climbed to national committeewoman fori California and headed the women’s division of Sen. George Murphy’s 1964 campaign. In 1966 she was co-chairman of Robert Finch’s race fob California’s lieutenant govership, in which he outpolled Gov. , ROnald Reagan, and in 1968 she was co-chairman of Richard Nixon’s presidential campaign, which also worked out quite well. Old friends Finch and Nixon did not forget her. contributions. * * * “Senator who?” says Mrs. Hitt as the interoffice phone announces an outside call. “Oh, him. Yes, I’ll take it.” And she handles the call with warm efficiency. \ “I think government is a great field for women to enter,” she says later, ‘'and I think the nation suffers when they don’t." In the postelection days, Mrs. Hitt, sometimes called “Nixon’s other Pat” for her long political service to the President, was mentioned as the most likely woman to fill a cabinet position. “I t wasn’t offered, and if it had been I would have said no," she says. No explanation. She is still senstive about a recent’ news story quoting her as saying, “I couldn’t give you a single, solitary woman who |ibs the training, background and ability to fill one qf these cabinet posts.” - Still, she concedes, It‘is harder for most women to pursue a full-time career in politics than it is for men. COOPERATION “I’ve .been very lucky. My husband not only didn’t mind my pursuing a career of my own; he actually encouraged it. Re is successful enough In his own right fa managenient consultant) not to be "That first. campaign was a real jealous of my accomplishments.” shoestring operation — mostl” j *st Pat From across her polished desktop in and Dick Nixon and a station wagon. the HEW building, her grayish-blue eyes I 1 rang doorbells and distributed are direct, friendly: and confident toward handbills in till neighborhood. I worked , male or female visitors. ■[ WASHINGTON - It may be written some day in political manuals that for women the march up the federal ladder begins In a den mother’s uniform. From there you graduate to the PTA until your son complains you’re breathing down his neck. Then you hit the sidewalks and punch doorbells for a candidate. You also live in Whittier,. Calif. Proceed to barnstorming at the state level, then the national level and end up in a carpeted office in Washington with a big desk and lapful of urban riddles. ★ ★ ★ The formula worked for Mrs. Patricia Reilly Hitt, now the highest placed woman in government as assistant secretary of Health, Education and Welfare. - it if + She Said, "I was never much for sitting around home. I never could get ex-cited about housework. And I never cared for bridge.” WHAT ELSE? One alternative was national politics and high position. “I was always active inr civic and - community affairs, because I have always had lots of energy," she said. "While my boys were growing up (John and Patrick, now 27 and 22), I spent a lot of time close to home. I was a den mother and active in PTA until John came home one day and said, ‘Why are you always around school ,so much?’ That was my signals© start looking elsewhere. w. ’ w ★1 , , , . . “I never had any Interest In politics Naman s raincheetah caged in. Untii Mr. Nixon was a candidate, I didn’t “For years I have turned down 'evening speaking engagements so I can have that time with my family, and I hope to continue that way.” w ★ ★ “My working day is usually from 7:30 to 7:30, but I try to get home td spend some time with my husband after that. I take my mail home and go through it while he’s watching television. We’re both occupied with different tilings, but at least we’re in the same room.” know him well when he first campaigned because he was five years ahead of me in school, and Whittier is a pretty big system. But I knew of him because of the recognition,he had brought to -the school as a debater., t I Pat Hitt may have run the' den mother‘PTA coursefflte | millions of other American moms, but she's not the typical ,1 housewife. She has traded the bridge table for a deskful Of i urban riddles. ' /v r A—14 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY* APRIL 8, 16Q9 Take Closer Look at Latest Raise By MARY FEELEY | • Increase in Social Security] • Total cost of getting that Consultant in Money |tax will take an additional;lucky break of $88 salary In- Management ; $31.60. crease, $570. My husband .has just gotten! • City and state taxes will be • Spending money left, $230. a nice raise, so now we feel we'up $20.40. I REALLY NECESSARY? can relax a little", says the in- • Cost-of-living estimate for, - 'hg,d ^t, eatable letter in the day's mail, the year is cauUous at $342. ;f ^ on “We plan to use this $800 raise 6 - - ■ ---- The beautiful young wife of Iran’s Ambassador to the United States relaxes with her son and daughter, Nader, and Nadereh, at Ambassador's Wife Speaks Out the embassy in Washington, D.C. The bouquet of flowers is her own creation. 'to. . To put into a second car, to help cover the mortgage payments on a new home, to start a monthly investment plan, or do something else long, postponed. The somebody like me spoils Ithe fun by. asking; “What $800”? True, on paper the husband I I has gone up the pay scale from $11,000, say, to $11,800. But what the family needs to figure! is how much of his raise will be' money, and how much of it will !be that other stuff — taxes and jinflation. At first glance, $800 a year can look like an extra $66 a month. But then the wage earner does his arithmetic and comes up with something like; [this: • Income tax will be increased $76. Has Persian Love of Flowers “We came upon the valley of j and economic reforms, his'her will have been honored to Persia’s kings — where the democratic “revolution from I serve their king and country, palace of Persepolis lies. It was within," and with a glowing a love for beauty is the sec-my eighteenth birthday, in the smile she will tell you that he is 0nd, and perhaps most im-month of May. I stood upon alindeed a Shahanshah — a King pr,rtant, quality that hill, and in the valley below of Kings — in the very noblest distinguishes Maryam Ansary where King Darius once ruled a Persian tradition. Ias being unmistakably great empire, a hundred million But if one were to ask, “What Persian. -I Bates Vows Home Ec Field SPoken in Due ResearchMetamora EAST LANSING — A project tional Church was the setting to chart "the course of future research in home economics gets underway today and Wednesday at Michigan State University when a national advisory group of 33 leaders in the field meet with MSU’s Dr. Jean [come per month, instead of $66. [Which should remind us all: “Never spend a raise till you get it." Statistics indicate that the average wage earner will get an increase in pay this year ranging in amount from five to six per cent of his salary. By this measurement, it’s indeed an affluent society we’ve got. :But the family who’s looking for the kind of affluence they can feel, not just spell, won’t find it in a pay raise alone. Actually, more financial stability may 'we be found in a change of attitude toward what’s necessity and what’s luxury. There’re so many good things in the world, the priorities have gotten shifted in the confusion. Those tired old basics — three meals a day, a roof overhead and a good credit rating — can’t compete for' status with a car with hidden headlights, color TV and electric hair brush., But there’s still a lot to be said for a balanced budget and !a" good night’s sleep. Some families are moving them up on| the priority list. They’re build-1 Metamora Pilgrim Congrega-ing on small, undramatic sav- MRS. JOE T. BATES exchange of vows uniting Frances Jean Parrott of Oxford and Lt. Joe Thomas Bates, USAF. Parents of the bride are Mr.! ~ . . ._____, ...____ and Mrs. Wiliam Parrott of Trying t0 keep c othing costs Metamora. The bridegroom is f° a mini“ eJ«ht Perf. c„ent ofl Schlater, the project direc-1 the son of Mrs EdwinKruszyna income, instead of the ings, in such prosaic little ways as these: Cutting car operation by $5-$7 a month, by organizing the family’s trips and errands. * customed 10 per cent, and ' making good use of seasonal poppies bloomed' before my makes Maryam Ansary most, In a recent exclusive embassy t°r- of Flint and the late Boyd T. eyes.” {Persian?” the answer would be interview with Shirley Foster Schlater, ^associate pro-Bates. , This is true. It is not a two-fold. I Fields, writer for the Society of fefor of a"d ,‘d ★ * ★ K ’ , n watrh on woman’s exaggeration. The) First, there is her sense ofjAmerican Florists, she said:{Sciences, ^ directing the study| Janlce parrott attended her |mn^L nm-phasa of dnnrstore wind blew, and the huge sea of bright red wild flowers rippled and swayed. Nature was bursting! It was brilliant and endless, and more powerful than a poet’s imagination. “Later in the valley, I looked at the flowers with reverence, and I did not pick one personal identity. She is a world citizen —■ educated in Iran, France, and Washington, D. C. — at George Washington University. She speaks English flawlessly and with poetic beauty. Yet,, buttressing all this is her vivid awareness that her own homeland is indeed “the cradle of civilization" and she is a part In these words, Maryam of Iran’s matchless, 3,000-year-Ansary, the young and did cultural and religious classically beautiful wife of the/heritage. Iranian Ambassador to the! * * * United States, describes her Moreover, she sees herself most memorable enoounter with I and each member of her family beauty. | as creative participants in con- To those who-know her, it is 1 temporary Iranian history. name of a flower in Persia. Flower names for women are, in fact, vary common in Iran. Lily and Yasmin are the names of my sister-in-law and niece. “Over the centuries, w Persians have used fldwers to honor God, to depict beauty and life. Flowers ard everywhere in at once evident that every detail of her story perfectly reflects the broader truths of her own life and character. * * ★ This radiant young woman has more than an ordinary love for her country, its poets and artists, its life-loving people and long, proud history. Her father, His Excellency Abol-Gassem Panahy, formerly Iran's Counsel-General in New York, was appointed Iranian Ambassador to the United Nations in 1955 but died before he could fulfill his post. Her husband, 39-year-old Admin istrators of Home Economics (AAHE), National Association of State Universities and Land-Grant colleges. Working with her on the ad-visory group are about 15 deans of colleges of home economics at universities across the U.S., linen ensemble highlighted with Irish daisy lace. A white cascading arrangement o f daisies completed her look. Aneeta B r a n d o w was | r impulse purchase of drugstore items other than drugs, which £an reduce costs as much as $10 hi some months; Converting installmen payments into savings deposits [for at least three months after with J a c k i e the merchandise Is paid for (a Bruzewski as flower girl. car payment of $80 a month Best man was Walter A. [turned into a nice sum in sav-Hicks III with Dean Anderson,lings in that period of time); ™ culture - in our poetry, to ntaUves^rTm^toe and derry Thompson,! Having stock dividends sent our marvelous carpets an<* . J* . „ F i David McKeever and Daniel direct to the savings account so mmiature paintings, in our pot- Amencan H ome Economics R as ugherg G pigg the won-t disappear in tery and textiles and our daily Agriculture, u.s. Dept. ot,. . . ‘•mUcpllanpoim" snendtne lives. ------y [Health, Education and Welfare iJrT wa; r^ ^rge miscellaneous spending. land other sneeial consultants. , newiy weas greeted guests in the church parlors before “As a people, I should gay'and other special consultants. Sir to'Z!L.rcei5,“l. ;.^teiM^,lry"KOT,wp humblest Iranian home, one!according to Dr. Schlater, are! inevitably finds a small bowl of|$o determine the most im-fresh fruit, and a bouquet of portant goals- of future fresh flowers, These are en-;research, to identify the areas) joyed and replaced daily." jin home economics which most An embassy is sometimes a [ need to be researched, and to cold and impersonal place, but [project personnel needs, certainly this cannot be said of | * . ★ * the Embassy of Iran. Priceless Dr. Pearl J. Aldrich, Doing more entertaining In the home rather than on the town (savings per drink and a la carte can be gratifying). Houshang Ansary, a graduate 0flcarPets> miniature paintings associate dean for research in the London School of and tapestries, incomparable Economics, is a member of the She "speaks of King Darius the E con o mi c s , is Iran’s [tile TrlL’ and M5S> Ansary’s national advisory group. First, who constructed the Ambassador to the Unit e d ?wn . resh flower b o u q u e t s| The project is being funded palace of Persepolis in 488 B.CJStates. {beautify the chancery and;by AAHE and is scheduled for as though the illustrious! And if her year-old son Nader residence. [completion January 1970. monarch ruled yesterday- [one day holds the same posi-She is thoroughly conversant)tion, she will doubly rejoice, for with the present Shah’s social'then each of the men closest to FORASRSSI'rM) >d. PONTIAC MALL . _V SHOPPING CENTER ■.... Phene 68J-0350 ‘ ' TEL-TWILVE SHOPPING CENTER Mtotte 353-1330 w. I fli » ♦Si - S~13 MILES WOODWARD - ^TEIEGIAPH A SQ. LAKi ; Northwood Shopping Cantor Bloomfield Township echo park SUMMER CAMP Jiina 23 - August 2* < SUMMER CAMP, s Located on 93 acral of un.pallad wood. in SloomllaM Hills: Ineludlna three •pring fodtoko? mile. al nature trail., and two hooted jwfmmlng pool.. A do» comp program eavaring »ha year. 3Vh>'id, employing aualill.d educator. with a .olid background ip comping ond po«.o»«ingwormthond undemanding which Echo Pork'. particular approach domondi. Tj.il ln-clud.. ipociallnd Instruction in .wimming, riding, and .parte. trampolina, arte and eroftl, camp droit, noturo loro, archoiy ond cookout. for th* ichodulod ovomightl. d ■/' . ' laMklwu I Yooorkcordtell, j day ot 3 fi Hi «l Icho a “Op«n Hove*" Hoyc. For poront porticipotion in oll-yoor outdoor «oj> ot Echo Park plaaia Inqulto about our ‘Family Program'. For Information Call Ml S-5590. TRANSPORTATION IS AVAILiBI.K 4275 Echo Rd. Bloomfield Hills Enjoy Custom Furniture ... FOR THAT TASTE OF EXCELLENCE VISIT OUR SHOWROOM ■mlily Gnr|H-iinc l»y: I'urniliii'n uml (Juullly Since 1921’’ BBS 5400 Dixio Highway Ulr-n .... 334-0981 jrg- OF WATERFORD X PROFESSIONAL TAX SERVICE This year, be sure your tax return^ is filed to your best advantage. Leto a professional do it at the piace^ you shop. I a Greater convenience ^ • A safe, quiet atmosphere % • Guaranteed to protect you We roprotonl you at office audits of IRS rogardlon of reasons for audit. MALL TAX SERVICE In Front of Ted's Inside the M Monday thru Saturday 9:30 a.m.t9 p. NOW AT SEARS Thru Salimliiy, April 12th Downtown Pontiac Store FULL COLOR PORTRAIT OFFER YOUR CHOICE 1st Print, Photographers Hours: T uesday and Wednaiday 9 to 5:30 Thurs., Frl., got, 10 to 8 p.m._ O Age Limit 5 Years and’Under O Additional Children (under 5) In Family.......... 1,99 e or 2 .Children Posed Together .... 2.49 e Additional,Prints and , . Reorders Available at Reasonable Prices. Sptlsfqction Guaranteed or Your Money Back-SHOP AT SIMS 1 Canw I AND SAVI Sears Duwiilotui l'nnllnft; t Phone FE 5417 TllE PONTIAC I’llESS. TrK.SDAV, APRIL 8. 1#«0 Mr. and Mrs. Nikolai Bogdanov of Portage Street aw riounce the engagement and upcoming August 9 vows of their daughter, Olga, to Gary L. Hal-lam. He is the son of Robert Hallam and, Mrs. Marjorie Hal-lam, both of Kalamazoo. Miss Bogdanov is a senior at University of Michigan. Her fiance is a freshman in the medical school at the same university. The engagement and upcoming Aug. 16 wedding plans of their daughter, Anita Lorraine, to William Alexander Bartmm is announced by Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Franchino of John & Road, Avon Township. Parents of the prospective bridegroom are Mr. and. Mrs. Albert Bdrtman of Detroit. Both are alumni of Central Michigan University. . | Polly's Pointers Set Card Party Open to Public School Marks Better A card and wig party will be sponsored next Tuesday by the Pontiac Memorial chapter No. lOf and Auxiliary. DEAR POLLY - When our garment upside down and the ’ The .event, opento the public oldest daughter was In the zipper will work very easP begins at 7|30 p.m., in First Wth grade she started brlng-ly-MARIE ^ , / l^al Savings of Oak^nd. ing home “F” test papers for'POLLY.s problem ' “sist^by m!? No^iTTn sheldh!dl Xmls DEAR POLLY - We have Davison, Mrs. Jay Helvey, Mrs. sdand this as she bad always tw0 mummy-shaped, down-filled Albert Hulsman and Mrs. John been a good student. sleeping bags that are old and; MarUn homework6^Wthe are tear‘n^-1 h°Pe someone-will; Tickets wiU be available at doing their homework in the'teU me how to re-cover lhcdo(jr afternoons, instead of playing'^,,, _cAROL out of doors, just so they could:, watch"television in the evening. One night my daughter asked if she could finish studying for a test during the commercials on one of her favorite programs and I foolishly agreed. In a few days I signed another “F” paper. This made me sit up and: take notice. | A—18 ^ SPRING calls for HAIR CONDITIONING and TREATMENTS before your summer Permanent. Coll. FE 2-1424 , Mtet.-J'i m, BMDALL’S BEAUTY SHOPPE «« Wuyn* Slr.-.-t FE 2-1424 Vote More Power to Minnie Pearl By BETTY CANARY i must be Immoral to run NEA Writer school as a business. When we heard about Minnie i However, it’s a good bet that pearl’s Chicken System, Inc.{working mothers are standing entering the educational field, I in line, hoping their miserable talked with teachers and with j task of finding adequate care working mothers, asking how for their children will soon be I decided to cut out television watching on school nights. That was three children and seven years ago, and I have never been so pleased, with any rule I have made. No more grade problems, no arguments about playing outside after school. They began to enjoy reading, music and other creative pastimes and soon learned that lif the television was on in the j Vacation's Over Sun followers Mrs. Gerald I Kirkby of Silver Sand Drive and Frances Harrington of Lincoln) Street have recently returned' from a cruise to the Caribbean. The excursion followed a monthlong visit with friends in Florida. Plan for Efficient Use Adequate lighting and storage should be provided near the point of use in each room. they felt about it. Education is always an easy target and the idea of franchised nursery schools will come in for more than its share of darts. Comedians are going to love it because of the built-in material. (“Howd< boy like school?” up.”) over. In fact, they might reasonably assume that because the schools will be big business, they will also have adequate selection and supervision of operators. There are fine nursery schools . your little in some areas, but most work-He eats it ing mothers know the familiar and dreary story of a television- Organza and Lace Gown are holding Jobs to assure their {living room, they studied in families more luxuries, I can'another part of the house. They name 10 who belong to what has I were only denied this t four been called “that unacknowl- nights a week, leaving three edged American institution —mights to watch television as ai the woman left with four chil- family, dren to support.” I believe shel They now watch less even on will welcome Minnie Pearl into weekends since they h a v e her life. She is probably wonder-1 learned there are other en-ing where Colonel Sanders has tertaining ways to spend ones - I been! time.-WANDA.^ _« ^TOT Dflde While she Is happily awaiting DEAR pqlly -1 find that a a quality nursery school at raTliFI«»r hr.^b is great to use reasonable prices, the mothetj{or cleaning behind the grille quite sensibly expects that the'worR on an aluminum storm, franchises will be sold with'The round brush reaches in all care and that persons hired directions, and the long handle \Special, Authorized Factory Sale . , Colonial Sofa, Reg. 450 ... Sale 295 • • And, no doubt, a government- watching baby sitter who, for for teaching and supervising, helps cover the entire area, alagency will come up with dire an hourly wige, consents to oc-] Win be screened and property .This eliminates the removal of predictions about “How can one'cupy a chair while the children trained. She knows and will in- the grille. A rag wound around REALLY educate a child and shift for themselves. sist that day school operators | the brush helps with cleaning still make a profit?” Surely * * * i must necessarily have different the glass — PAULINE, someone will point out that it The middle-class mother has qualities than those required of I DEAR POLLY - When clos-eyed with envy the children at- persons running a large volume ing the zipper in a garment that I tending Head Start classes food'service. *- JuU thp {while her children are barred from entry because of the fam-l ily income. She has investigated private j homes, trudging frdm the one offering “fenced yard, hot Wearing a traditionally fashioned gown of Chantilly lace and organza. Anita Sanchez Carmona became the bride of Antonio M. Ortiz Saturday in First Assembly of God Church. The sister of Mrs. Isaac Garza of Harrison Street held a bouquet of roses centered with pink carnations. ★ ★ ★ ____HB _ Honor attendants is not being worn, hold the eyenjng nuptials were Gloria ;and Manuel Carmona, with lunch, supervised play” to the one touting “loving care modest surroundings.” Some-i times she has been lucky but oftentimes she has found the care being offered by harassed women with so many children | and personal problems that adding one more child to the bedlam seems sheer madness. Proper care of her children I is the uppermost concern of § all the working women I know. [ And for every one of those who a Chinese Vegetables Good in Casserole By JANET ODELL Food Editor, The Pontiac Press As the end of the club and school year draws nearer, there will be lots of potlucks. When it is your turn to take a casserole, consider this one from Mrs. Arthur Irwin. A resident of Westacres, Mrs. Irwin has reached the stage where she can enjoy her nine grandchildren. She is active in church groups. CHINESE HAMBURGER CASSEROLE By Mrs. Arthur Irwin Terry Trujillo and Orpha Garza as flower girls and Ruben Garza as ring bearer. Other members of the wedding party were the Ezequio Acevedas, Mr. and Mrs. Jose A. Ortiz, Rebecca Alvarez, Maria Delgado, Samuel Rodriquez, Frank Vega, Efriam Ortiz and Arthur Trujillo. ..★ ★ The son of Mrs. Concepcion M. Ortiz of West Huron Street and the late Mr. Ortiz and his bride received guests at the Roosevelt Temple. They are honeymooning in For a limited time, we offer this fine 90” Colonial sofa at this substantial Savings. It has 6” foam rubber cushions, deeply tufted back and is available in heavy tweed or nylon.fabrics. In stock in a variety of rich colors • • • The Colonial chair........... 150 See these pieces ut our Bloomfield Hill* naileries. A—16 RB THR-iH^NTiAC PRESS. TUESDAY, APRIL 8, 1069 t w POLICE 1 [ 33 nergen 18-10! B] FIRE 333-7001 J Cut Out This Disk Paste o° Stip Under ’Phone Dial The New Pontiac POLICE Emergency Phone 338-1001 Romney Hits 'Great Expectations' 'Cities Plans Too Grandiose' WASHINGTON (Upi) 7 —f '**rhe cities h^ve been led to Rousing Secretary George M. expect a great deal frorp. the Romney . U S. and British Amateur titles and U.S. and British Open titles last year. NEWEST PISTON-Boston College forward-center Terry Driscoll was the first choice of the Detroit Pistons and the fourth player chosen in the NBA draft yesterday in New York. Driscoll stands 6-7. The loss restored the Senators to last place in the American League, where they finished last year, 37% games out. Williams’ debut brought a record opening day crowd of 45,113 to newly renamed Robert F. Kennedy Stadium. Nixon, watching on a balmy spring afternoon, wore a baseball glove as he sat with half a dozen Little League players who were guests in his presidential box. The president leaped up and roared with the crowd as Howard, who led the majors in homers last year, slammed his, two-run homer in the ninth. Nixon had predicted the homer, said baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn, who was sitting with him. The shot came off Yankee pitching ace Mel Stottlemyre, who survived a 14-hit pounding to go all the way for the victory. NEW YORK WASHINGTON t abrhbl ab r h bl Clark* 2b Jill Unser cl 5 13 0 Kenney cl '5121 Stroud rf S 1 2 0 Murcer 3b . 5 2 2 3 F Howard II 5 I 1 2 White It 4 10 0 Epstein lb 4 0 11 ^option* lb 4 0 J 0 McMulln 3b 4 0 0 0 Michael* >i 1 0 0 0 H^Hen* ph t o o 0 WRobnsn rl 3 10 0 Cullen 2b 4 13 0 .. 022 400 00 0—0 ’ E’—CulTeh, Stroud. LOB—New York” 5, Waihlngton 12. 2B—Pepitone,. Unier, Brinkman, Kenney, Gibb*. HR—Kenney (1), Murcer (1), F.Howard (1). SB-White 2, W.Roblnson. IP H RiOBB SO Stottlemyre (W.l-01 9 14 4 4 2 4 Pascual (L.0-1) .2 2-3 5 4 4 1 0 Humphrey* ........ 1 2 4 o 1 0 Shaky Drysdale Triumphs /P—Bosnian! T—2:43 CINCINNATI (AP) - Let sleeping pitchers lie. The. Cincinnati Reds woke one up with a bang, then it was their hitters who went to sleep. Pete Rose and Bob Tolan, the first two hitters to face Don Drysdale of Los Angeles in Monday’s National League opener, homered, but then the Reds were held to two singles the rest of the way and the Dodgers won 3-2. “I tell you, they kind of opened my eyes a little bit,” said Drysdale who was relieved after the sixth inning when his arm tightened. “It knocks the sleepiness out of you,” the. veteran right-hander said of his rough greeting. “I was as loose as you can get throwing my fifth pitch after the second home run.” BATS SILENCED Bill Singer relieved Drysdale at the start of the seventh and held the Reds hitless the rest of the way. Young Cincinnati right-hander Gary Nolan struck’out 12 Dodgers but Ron Fairly touched him for a triple and that beat- him> Los Angeles got a run in the second inning when, after Nolan fanned the first two batters, Tom Haller singled and Jim Lefebvre doubled. In the third inning, Willie Crawford opened with a single and Len Gabielson followed with another. After Bill Sudakis struck out Fairly followed with his triple. “I got a two-run lead and couldn’t hold It,” said Nolan, who was relieved in the eighth. “I wasn’t nervous. It was just like any other game. But I got beat.” LOS ANORLIS CINCINNATI *b r h bl ab r h bl Crawford ct 5 1 1 S Rot* cl 3 1 3 V Gabrleltn rl 4 110 Tolan rt 3 111 Ruaiell rf 10 10 AJohnton It 4 0 0 0 Sudakis 3b 5 0 0 0 Perez 3b 3 0 10 tt.!b 45oVoSBL.Mn?rcb 44 0° 00 0° Drysdale p Total Total 1 Las Angeles .......»■* » » » » » • — Cincinnati ....... 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0- E—Woodward, Crawford, Halms. DP-Los Anoales 1. LOB—Los Angeles Cincinnati 4. 2B—Lefebvre, Russell i Fairly. HR-Rose (1). Tolan (1). Drysdale (W.1-0) .. 5 Singer 3 Nolan (L.0-1) ..... 7 Granger ....... 1 Save—Singer, T-2:» I. 3B— SB— BB SO State Town Honoring Ex-Green Bay Coach IRON MOUNTAIN, Mifch. (AP) -Gene Ronzani Day will be held in Iron Mountain May 10 to honor the native of this upper Michigan community who once was head coach of the Green Bay Packers. Ronzani underwent open heart surgery last fall and now makes his home in Milwaukee. Ronzani starred in football at Marquette University and played with the Chicago Bears of the National Football League. Ho succeeded the late Curly Lambeau as head coach of the Packers. He had to fly home Thursday after his shoulder tightened up on him during his final exhibition appearance, but the cortisone shot seems to have put off the pain. Mickey Stanley, who has been plagued by a sore shoulder all spring long, will start at short for the Tigers. NEW PLAYERS The Indians were set to start rookie right fielder Richie Scheinblum and third baseman Zoilo Versalles, obtained from San Diego in a winter deal. Plans to start young Davey Nelson at second had to be scrapped when he pulled a ham-string muscle in a late exhibition game and was sidelined for 10 days. Cleveland Manager Alvin Dark made plans to use Vern Fuller instead. * k k Aside from McLain, the only man in the Detroit line-up who did not start against Boston iast year was first baseman Norm Cash. Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn was on hand to call the first pitch, from Gov. William Milliken to Detroit Mayor Jerome Cavanagh. A crowd of about 54,000 was expected for the 1:30 p.m., . EST start. 1 Like This Course'—Trevino Texas Swinger Eying Masters 1 AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) - Flamboyant Lee Trevino, the merry Mexican who, in little more than a year, has captured the fancy of golfdom’s common man, ranks as a solid threat to add a green Master’s jacket to his United States Open title. “I’m playing real well,” the swarthy, grinning guy from West Texas' desolate border country said after a practice round Monday. “Except last week. I just couldn’t get started. T didn’t really like the'course, I guess. But mostly I was thinking about this one. Just kept thinking about this one.” Trevino, unknown this time two years ago but now one of the leading money winners, will be among the elite field of 83 of the - world’s best shot-makers who tee off in Thursday's first round over the lustily green, rolling acres of the 8,980-yard.par 72 Augusta National Course. LIKES COURSE “I’ve only had 27 holes of practice,” Trevino said. “But I like this course. “And I’m playing for this course. I'm getting it up in the air. I don’t know what it is, but it’s up there. ‘Way up there. I just can’t believe it.” The ex-Marlne and onetime $35-a-week assistant pro bolted into the front rank of golf's elite when he wo^the U.S. Open at Rochester, N.Y, last year with his peculiar tight, flat swing, a swing he recognizes breaks the teaching rules but one he calls “just right for a little fat , guy.” !** .... - '■ “There’s a lot of birdie holes on this course. But, there’s a lot of bogey holes, was doing good. I was just two off the too. pace going into the final round and here . '“And, man, don't I know about that. I come shooting a big, fat 80 on the list Last year was my first time here. And I royridr”^" i Wolverine Mentor Happy It's Spring, Not Fall Campaign ANN ARBOR (UP1) - An unhappy Bo Schembechler is happy the calendar Is right where it is. Die Michigan head football coach described Monday’s spring football practice season as “not very good. We have a lot of work ahead of us.” * kkk The one bright note in the latest session was sophomore halfback Glen Doughty from Detroit, Schembechler said. Doughty is slated to replace All America Ron Johnson. Schembechler wrapped up the drill with a tense goal line scrimmage session with the first string offense — then ruefully said: “I'm just thankful this isn’t Sept. 20.” Trevino, who missed the National Airlines Tournament in Miami two weeks ago because of jammed left thumb, said his injury is “okay now. No trouble,” and he wiggled the thumb to demonstrate.. But some of the other top choices to succeed star-crossed Bob Goalby as the 33k! Masters’ champ are less than well. Miller Barber, the pick of Trevino and South Africa’s Gary Player as the man most likely to succeed, also has^^a--. Hurdler Bill Tipton, former starr at jammed thumb but is playing. Vontiac Central and now a sophomore at i i * Eastern Michigan University, was slated Hurdler Bill Tipton Sent to Sidelines Because of Surgery AUGUSTA NATIONAL Arnold Palmer, a four-time champion but now struggling, still Is bothered by an ailing back, even though he shot a fantastic 63 in a practice round late last week. Flashy Doug Sanders has a similar complaint. Billy Casper, a two-time Open champ, still is suffering from allergies. TOP CONTENDERS Among the healthyjeading contenders are Player, the reigning British Open champion, Gene Littlef, winner of Sunday’s playoff for the Greater Greensboro tU1e'and the leading money winner this year! and always dangerous Jack Nicjdaus. And, too, there’s Goalby) who hasn't to undergo an appendectomy this afternoon at St. Joseph Hospital in Pontiac. Tipton, owner of numerous high school hurdles records, complained of stomach cramps after traveling with the EMU team to the Kentucky Relays in Lexington, Ky., Thursday. The pain continued Friday so Tipton ' returned by automobile With his brother, Monte. Japanese Netters Set -‘TOKYO (AP)' - The*Japan Lawn tennis Association named Knjl» Wat'anabe, Ichlzo Konlshl, Junto Kawamorl and Kelshlro Yahagl Monday luu, flU MdJBB HH »» P*«y ngaln*1 the Philippines in a done much of anything since he won last Davis Cup Eastern Zone semifinal r’s Masters'on a slip oflhe pen. And match. the gentle, gentlemanly Roberto de Vicenzo, who signed away a chance for a tie wh<|n ha autographed an incorrect scorecard. The winner of the match April 18-JO in Tokyo will meet South Vietnam, which just defeated South Korea in an elimination match. B—2 T&E PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, APRIL 8, 1969 ■ TODAY'S GAM Makes Evans Awards *%r.c.n Washington . :? I r t if Division | Patriots Eying ScbolorsbipS for Area Caddiesl Seattle Move Boston Paper Reports Switch Is Near Ten boys from Oakland |G. A. M, * s caddie-scholarship F. Penmutter of Oak Park and 'comes form some 80,000 golfers, {County are among 34 awarded committee.\ ' [Thomas C. Drabik of Berkley, including 12,500 in Michigan. 'Chick Evahs college! Today’s awards brings to 4801 There will be more than 100 ® * * * . I r scholarships by the Golf the number of scholarships'G.A.M. Evans Scholars enrolled : . ~- JlffigPSgW*' BOSTON (AP) — The Boston Association of Michigan today, given by the G.A;M. since it'this fall at Michigan and MSUJ Other caddies from tne state |Patriots of the American Foot-* ★ f {affiliated in 1948 with the na-‘M’ and MSU are two of 11 receiving scholarships to M |ball League “are on the thresh- Announcement of the tionwide Evans Scholars Foun-midwest universities at which are John J. Brutell of East;old of moving to Seattle,” the scholarships — 14 to t h e dation, administered by the the foundation owns chapter Detroit ; Dennis Doherty of Boston Herald Traveler said to- ”"Chicago (P»*»rs 4.13) »t Oakland University of Michigan and 20 Western Golf Associaton in houses which are managed and Detroit, Richard E. Hay, and day in a copyrighted story. , Kaosa, c„y to Michigan State University— Golf, ill. maintained by the scholars. Thomas D. Kmiec all of ... * . * * was made by Frank E. Kenhey LOCAL WINNERS Each scholarship is valued at Detroit; Philip J. Maziasz of "Their departure from Boston| Jr., of Detroit, chairman of the| Am0ng the 34 are two Pontiac *3,500" Support for ^ program Deaiborn: Monday's Rowlt Now York I. Washington 4 Only game scheduled. Today's Oamos Boston (Lonborg 4-10) a (McNally 32-10) Cleveland (Tlant 21-*) at (Bunker M) Seattle (Pa,,,,. PB -Glothlln 10-15), night ~-|y games scheduled. waanMdav'1 r. caddies ■— Bruce A. Kleinschmidt, 17, and Thomas. H. Sage, 18. ★ ★ ♦ Bruce", a senior at Pontiac Northern, is son. of Mr. and Miss. .Edward H. Kleinschmidt. Sage, a senior -at" Waterford Township, is son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold F. Sage. Kleinschmidt caddied a t Bloomfield Hills Country Club and Sage at Tam O’Shanter. OTHER RECIPIENTS Others in the county receiving scholarships to ‘M’ are Joseph Hauser, 17, of Milford; Richard L. Hurford, 17, of Royal Oak; Jeff M. Adams of Walled Lake; Lance T. Korthals of Southfield and Raymond M. Rose of Berkley. Heading for Michigan State from Oakland County are Barry HHH..., John W. Schurz of appears so imminent it could Harper Woods; James A."Semerjhappen within a few days,” thej of Dearborn Heights; a n d newspaper said. Thomas J. Shea of Grosse! * ★ * Pointe. =|(| Because the Patriots will be rcniiurc ta msii .unable to use Fenway Park, the GOING TO MSU ^ • ,Red ^ home fie,d unUl late Heading for MSU are ^a]P"October, and because prospects J. Alter of East Detroit; Curtis|for a new stadjum are dim, “the G. Geisler of Dearborn Heights; | patrjotg are UIKjer heavy pres-Daniel M Hanrahan o f sure ^ footba„ leaders to Dearborn; Ronald J Harkrader ye imn^,iately » the Herald of Livonia; Clifford said Heckathorn of Detroit; Marck. " C. Ilitch of Dearborn Heights; , . . .. . 1 Mike J.Leppek of Detroit; Mike The only development which O. Perlin of St. Clair Shores; prevent a move from. John J. Schalter of Roseville; Boston would be favorable ac-Paul D. Scherrer of Detroit; fc ui the legislature on one ol Richard G. VanGoethem otW many stad‘“m Proposals,! Trenton; Gary J. Warr of Jhe newspaper said. Detroit;. James H. Wilson of; * * Detroit; William D. Anderson of; “The Patriots’ last hope of re-Benton Harbor; Mike Peterson maining in Boston was appar-pf Comstock Park; and Scott T. Piereson of Rockford.. NHL Playoffs Gonzalez Moves Today'* Gama* y}«y. Gam. Witt OWIIIM lit at Oakland, bagt-of-7 si it scheduled. NBA Playoffs Atlanta 1M, San I Brother Rice Vault Mark to Quarter-n Waterford, Walled Lake Triumphant] JOHANNESBURG, South Af- Waterford and Walled Lake relay team to spark the Walled (10.8), long jump (20-8), ran a rjCa (AP) — Pancho Gonzalez Lake victory. (leg on the winning 880-yard|beat fellow-pro Fred Stolle 2-6, ently extinguished last week when Boston Mayor Kevin White and Boston redevelopment director Hale Champion met with Harvard President Nathan Pusey in an attempt to [HITperudsston4jd| posted easy track victories yesterday but strong Brother Rice had trouble whipping its Detroit Catholic League opponent. LOSES EVENT Walled Lake wpn all but one! event, missing out. in the mile I where Mott’s Bruce Clifton | re*); , The (Skippers of" Waterford Ro" Horton turned ii raced last Dearborn Fordson,'SPatrkl!n8 Performance v Waterford. He won the relay team and placed second^, 6-4, 12-14, 11-9 Monday, _______ Rica 42, Noire Dam* 54 Long Jump — May (NO), Clavartl Ewald (NO) l*-tl'/4. Put — Naughton (BR), Fontani lallng (81 Q) 10:08.4. sending the American into the quarter-finals of the South African Open Tennis Championships. bast-of-7 taritt. [74-44; Walled Lake whipped I Waterford Mott, 92-26; and| * Brother Rice won two of the' i oil last three events to edge Harper Woods Notre Dame, 62-56. e Darner 1:33.8. ____ (ND), Nagengast (BR] I 880 — Champlain Orlando (BR) 2:02.0. ABA Playoffs Division 84m It Inals Monday'sJtatoits . Rastara Division . Miami 119, Mlnnaaoti no, Miami Is bast-ot-7 sarlas, 1-0. \ , Was torn Division Now Orlaans 122, Dallas 1M. Now loans lends best-ol-7 series, 2-0. Only o*m* •/jjjy's JBama* ■•Mara Division Kentucky at Indiana, 1st doma ol b . Kentucky at Minnesota i Beach, Fla. Only gpmas CRACKS RECORD Jim Nagle cracked the pole vault mark as Brother Rice captured its season opener. Nagle went 12-feet-2%-inches to better the old mark of 12-1. In all, the Warriors took eight of 14 events. dr ★ ★ Bob Zaebst took the 100 (10.2), 220 (23.2) and had aj hand in the winning 880-yard U. S. Girl Captures Israeli Net Crown State's Peaches Wins MONTE CARLO UP) — Peaches Bartkowicz of Ham-tramck, Mich,, won the women’s title Monday in the International Sporting Club Tennis Tournament by defeating Vlasta Vopickova of Czechoslovakia, 8-0,6-3. prevailed with a 4:39.5 clocking. Raab (ND), rtllaJBR). Graleuski (BR). Sovak (ND), McCabe (BR) ... 100 — May (ND), 6i jmiilRPm (ND) (No lima - Incorrect distance). ■ ow Hurdles — Coakley j jj1 rkowskl (BR), Outlay (BR) .JO — May (ND), Grogan (BR), Savak (ND) :23.S. ■aia "suit - Jim Nag la (BR), Wallen- ______ (ND), Currlar (BR) (School Record — old mark 12-1). High Jump — lacAloon (BR), Col 'if8- , „ n * ii c National Football Leagues. Dennis Ralston of the U.S. * * it was upset by South African Ray ! ,1They don,t want t0 estabUshj Moore 6-2, 4-6, 8-6. 6-1. the Patriots in an Eastern Divi- Australian Rod Lavj, the top sion only to have the Pats movei seed, beat South Africa Drew . . tb necessi- AacAloon (BR), Coakley Milo Relay - Notrt Di (ND) 5-8. Monday's Fights By Tlw Associated Press PITTSBURGH—Adrian , Davis. New Orleans, 10. PLEA REJECTED Pusey rejected the plea, the account said. In addition to the team’s tna-j bility to use Fenway Park for September-October games, the newspaper said another problem irises from the efforts of Commissioner Pete Rozelle and others to iron out a 1970 realignment of the merged. AFL and $is« 750/775-14^ Price | M.T. -Uoo iJi- le.OO | 2.04 . 14.00 1 2.lT oioL»iuV*v' VT illlb iB.^i rjjl McMillan 6-2, 6-4, 6-2. Defending champion Tom Okker, of Holland, beat Australian Richard Crealy 7-5, 9-7, 6-0. South African Bob Hewitt surprised Spain’s Andres Gimeno, 6-3, 6-4, 6-2. In the Women’s singles, top-seeded Billie Jean King of the U.S. rallied to beat young South African Wendy Tomlinson 5-7, 6-3, 6-4. west next season, thus necessitating a reshuffling then,” the1 Herald Traveler said. Pick Football Coach MIDDLEBURY, Vt. (AP) John W. Anderson, assistant football coach at Boston College, was named head coach i Monday at Middlebury College. m s SERVICE SPECIALS BRAKE OVERHAUL 88 Two-Mile—iteve Moffat < (F), Wlllals (F) 10:14.8. 880 Relay-Waterford (Urn [ton ^Horton, Joel Hamill, Gi Mile—DeWayne Russell Danltlion (W). Varner (F) 4 High Hurdles—Ron Tabor Pterion (W), Plator (P) :1j.; NO—Muia Daly (W). Ba Betteglleg (F) 2:03,1. 440—Balyk (F), Belgenorth (P), Slava 100—Ron Horton (W), ON), Studdens (F) : 10.8. Low Hurdles —Ron Tabor (W), Rick! Pterion (W>, Plitor (F) :21.7. 220—Studdens (F), Whetstone (W), Greg Slating (W) :24.2. » i Mila Relay—Dearborn Pordson, 3:40.5. Shot. Put—Slave Kreubach (S>, Stover ’(F)4; TEL AVIV (AP) - A 26-year-old American girl won the women’s singles title at the Israeli International Spring Tennis Championships Monday. | Tv Top seeded Alice Tym of Peo- co«........---- ria, 111., defeated Israel's topi Rkhmond*fcroseySparks) ranked Tova Epstein 6-4, 6-1 inlHow?(WL8r4:».5.IIMon 'Lyon ), Poe Navy in the Korean war, Bob lias been selling Chevrolets and Buicks here for 12 years. His broad experience includes 2 years at 4he General Motors Institute. Al Hanoute’s Chevrolot-Buick, Inc. i IM N. Park B|vd„ Lake Orion MY 2-2411 Cleaner clothes begin with cleaner water Cleaner water begins with Water King HERE IS WHAT WE DO: •Install new linings *Check grease seals •Check wheel cylinders .Inspect all fluid lines' •Check master cylinder *lnstall new fluid, bleed •Turn all four drums * and odjust brakes •Test drive automobile FRONT END ALIGNMENT 88 41 HERE IS WHAT WE DO: Set caster *Center steering * »Set camber 'Adjust toe in Air conditioning stighlty higher The homes in this area have hard water. Detergents’ and special additives won't solve your clothes cleaning problems. Dingy, scratchy clothes are caused by the ^minerals in hard water. They also cause clothing to fray and wear out faster. A Water King conditioner eliminates thpse minerals before they get to your laundry. You don't need harsh detergents. With Water King you use gentle soap .-r- and less of. It. Your clothes look better, fee] batter, la$t longer. O.ur water specialists will show you a com-plate line of Watpr Kji)g conditioners and softeners—from the fully automatic models to the economical manual models. They'll give you a lifetime of service. Water King guarantees it. Water King WATER CONDITIONERS jmat YOun wAre ft royally CAR-CARE SPECIALS ftSZT ■H |M«hmii^ N on-detergent oil, 20wt., 30w». 29* Cartridge type oil filter, as low at 97f Leakproof oil can pour spout 77 < Save now on oil filter wrench 77< * SERVICE ON ALL MAKES-RENTALS NO TANK fXCMANGK NECESSARY CALL! 335-0447 369 N. SAGINAW THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, APRIL 8, 1909 B- 8 m J ^ Front Vftt By FLETCHER SPEARS Some bad news for Oakland County tennis players is that Rick Watson of Rochester appears to be in his usual winning form. Young Watson, a sophomore at Kalamazoo Col* lege, has chalked up an enviable singles record in the past few years and he shows no sign of softening. Rick has won the Oak*-—7—=——— This season, Pruitt averaged 12.S points a game and led the teal in assists. He’s majoring in counseling. Another product of Highland Lakes, Frank Russell, who also starred at Pontiac Central, is considering taking his basketball talent to Miami University (0.). land County men’s singles title two years in a row, and of course, he has plans to add No. 3 this summer on the courts at Oakland University. During Rick’s prep days at Rochester High, he compiled a record of 35-0. As a freshman last year at Kalamazoo, he was 17-2. On the Hornets trip s 0 u t h this spring, Rick zr1 *71 ™ All that adds to a record of 59-3. Odd thing about those losses is that they came during matches in Florida. Rick and his teammates open the season against Northwestern April 15. CAPTAINS TEAM Former Pontiac Central basketball ace Ed Pruitt, who spent a couple of seasons at Highland Lakes-OCC, will be captain of the George Williams College quintet next season. WIN AWARDS Among those receiving varsity swimming letters this season at Northern Michigan Uni-versitp were Mike Matter of Royal Oak Kimball, Jim Don-nfelly and Terry Travis of Royal Oak Dondero, Keith Rodney of Birmingham and Dave Swift of Southfield. , * ★ ★ Donnelly was the team’s leading scorer with 115V4 points. He had 12 individual wins for the season and placed second in the NCAA College Division 200-yard breaststroke. Paces Classic With 635 MONTH-END CAR LEASE SPECIAL Pins Fall for Lady Bowler SPILL IN TIME -r Cincinnati’s Pete Rose helped the Red-ui at the plate with a double and home run and in this sequence he' does his job in taking Dodger shortstop Ted Sizemore out of the play after being forced at second base to stop a double play. Rose lost his hat and got a face full of dirt as well, but the Red-legs still lost their National League opener, 3-2. Norma, Conley , isn’t bashful about .spreading her bowling talents. ./• / ( * . / (■; The veteran bowler grabbed the spotlight in-last Thursday’s Huron Bowl Ladies Classic with a 246—635 performance. It is the third outstanding series she’s had this, season at three different north Oakland County establishments. This gives her three of the top 11 actual women’s league series reported locally this season. Her 694 at Howe’s Lanes is an establishment I record and the second best in the area for women this season. Her 648 at 300 Bowl is the runner-up there; and her 635 is No. 3 among the Huron Women scores reported. BIG GAME Also in the Huron Ladies Classic recently, Shirley Pointer sizzled with a 266 game — No. 6 on this season’s high score list for women — during Three te,ams made strong showings.- Huntbon’s bowled a 93^—2693 actual duo; Sylvan Plumbing and Heating 2670 and Oxford Mattress hit' a 923. 300 BOWL Mo’’ Moore, who holds the season high in the 300 Bowl Classic with his 737 earlier this winter, added a 233-268 to that last week. Paul Sewell hit 213-214—634, Bob Lowry a and George Bishop a 212-225-630. Bill Crawford almost matched the high game, posting a 267. Larry Crake and Bob Garrett each hit 233s. ★ ★ . ★ Fran Bertram topped the 700 mark at North Hill Lanes last Wednesday, bowling a 235-256-' 224—715 for City Glass Service in.the men’s classic. Teammate Bill Bull had a 619 in helping the squad roll a 1054 game. Hazelton’s Lettering outdid the glassmen,' though, with an 1101—3062 combination, led by Karl Van DeMoortell’s 232-212— 649, Larry Van DeVelde’s 227-215-646 and George Ellmah’s BiH ^ohns was second-high! with his 240-223—6®4 efforts for North Hill’s entry. Warren Mosher had a 246 in Ids 634 for i Rochester Robo Wash.' 1969 FORD Calaxia With AIR COND. $9975 15450 A-1 LEASING ,,?nAc CALL 391*0412 Two others in the league also reached the 600 level last week: Bonnie Nugent had 218—604, and Fran Durso 209—600. Tony Me- 230-625. Carty hit a 218, also, and Doris * airway lank Lanktree a 215. I h.gh^W «»- Subs Sub Spurs Braves in Opener Hobart Jackson, 212. HIGH GAMES — Ted Studnlekl, 235, Herb Bunch. 225) John McConnell, *“• William Smith, 223. Expos Hoping Stadium Will Be Completed MONTREAL (AP) - John MgHale, president of the Montreal Expos, said Monday he has no doubts about the club placing its home opener against the St. Louis Cardinals at Jarry Park here next Monday. ★ ★ ★ The dub management has been involved In a race against the, weather in getting the 30,000-seat dty-owned park ready for the dub’s National League home debut. Consistently cool temperatures and continued snow in recent weeks had placed park completion in jeopardy. * ♦ ★ "During the weekend, I visited Jarry Park for an up to date, first-hand look at the site, McHale said, prior to his departure for Tuesday’s opener against the Mets in New York. "I was amazed at the amount of work accomplished in recent Among athletes receiving varsity letters at Western Michigan are seniors Gerald Gebrowsky (wrestling) of Waterford and to complain. Ray Schlaff (basketball) of Lum, a substitute’s substitute, Southfield j cracked a ninth-inning single Monday night to carry Atlanta past San Francisco 54 for the Braves’ first victory in a baseball season opener since moving HIGH SERIES - EmllV M«cum, Ml. HIGH.GAMESCa^th^ ATLANTA (AP) — Mike Lum,told himself, “Well here you, Clete Boyer opened the rallywhiiiton*, may be talking to himself but are, Mike. This is a real situa-with a single and scored when the Atlanta Braves aren’t about tton. Just try and hit the ball Jackson tripled over Willie someplace.” |MSys’ head in center. Jackson, Freshmen earning letters were wrestlers Kenneth Banar-dino of Farmington and Jeff Monteith of Birmingham Sea-holm. Gaining gymnastics letters were Paul Boes of Rochester along with Dan Erickson, i Tom. Huber and Dennis Spencer of North Farmington. south in 1966. The 23-year-old Hawaiian outfielder claimed afterward that his winning hit came after he Lum took his own advice and smacked a single to left that brought Sonny Jackson romping home with the winning run. Lum’s timely hit pinned the loss on San Francisco’s top relief pitcher, Frank Linzy. Ironically, Linzy struck out Lum after the youngster replaced Tito Francona in the seventh. Kegler Takes Sixth in ABC Tourney MADISON, WIS. w - Any Chismudy, 27, of Munster, Ind., had 244-208-190-642 Monday to take over sixth place in classic singles standings of the annual American Bowling Congress tournament. Then he and left-hander Harry VanLoon of Munster paired for seventh place in .classic doubles with 1,211. ★ ★ ★ Harry Stranski of Mount Vernon, 111., had a 705 series, only the ninth 700-or-better game to date after 45 days of the 79-day tourney. He did not make It among the top 10 in any of the divisions. TOP HONOR Junior Dennis Stanczuk of Clawson brought Wayne State' its first swimming All-American citation in more than 25 years in the recent NCAA College Division swim championships in Massa-§|||ggf® chusetts. The Clawson STANCZUK High school graduate had no opportunity to swim as a prep—the school is now constructing its first pool— and he learned the backstroke only two years at WSU dur-physical education activity swimming course. Stanczuk placed 10th in the 100-yard backstroke in For the season, he was beaten just once in 13 dual meets at the 20-yard distance.. Me Willed 86Mt points this season. ^ PLAYING BASEBALL Sid Fox, athletic director at Roeper School in Bloomfield HUls, has taken oh an added task this spring. He’ll serve as baseball coach at the Orchard Ridge campus of Oakland Community College.- ★ w >★ It’ll just be ‘club baseball’ this year and the real thing next year, says Fox. Some 40 candidates are after jobs on the team. While all is going well from a team standpoint, Fox there is a problem: The team hasn’t a field on which to play home games. He’s looking and would appreciate calls from anyone in the area who has field. Any calls concerning field should be directed to Dipk Robinson at Orchard 476-0400. Old World Paneling Elegant as a Spanish Villa Beautiful witfi Any Mood 4x8x’/4” Birch OLD WORLD $7?“- , < PANELING - 30 Varieties In .took SWEEPSTAKES ftottrl & Qftftn SUNDAY iT 3342 Auburn Rood 12 3 AUBURN HEIGHTS, MICHIGAN WM ' ; TtUPHONIt 832-2709 ■* . f’' Jr 2 Maple Leafs' Players Finish Hockey Careers TORONTO (AP) - George Punch” Imlach, fired Sunday night as general managi of the Toronto Maple Leafs, reportedly was being courted by at least two National Hockey League expansion clubs Monday while a pair of standout players during his turbulent 11-year Toronto reign hung up their skates. The Minnesota North Stars reportedly offered * Imlach the coaching job currently held by general manager Wrert Blair and the Pittsburgh Penguins also were rumored inter the 51-year-old NHL executive as a coaching replacement for George “Red” Sullivan, fired last month. * ★ ★ Toronto has named John Me-Lellan, coach of its Tulsa farm club in the Central League, and scout Jim Gregory to replace Imlach as coach, and general manager, respectively. Meanwhile, goalie Johnny Bower, 44, and defenseman Tim Horton, 39, who helped Imlach’s Leafs capture the Stanley Cup four times and reach the postseason playoffs in all but one season under his direction, announced their r e 11 r e m e n l. DYNASTY CRUMBLES Several other aging members of the one-time Imlach dynasty including team captain George Armstrong—were expected to call it quits following the club’s collapse against the Bruins and Imlach’s ouster. Horton said Imlach’s release figured in their decisions to retire. 'I’m very sorry for Punch,” said Bower. “I owe him a lot. He brought me to Toronto and he put money In my pocket—In a lot of packets I guess. He’s been good to me and I'm sorry to have this happen to him.” *. ★ * He wa6 a great guy to play for,” said Horton. “I had my fights with him, mostly when I did something wrong, but five minutes later it was all forgotten. That’s the type of people I like. I said it before that when Punch goes, I’ll go out the same door.” hobbled by injuries mubh of last season and not what .anyone would consider a power hitter, said his triple was “my best bolt, all I had.” ★ The Atlanta outburst marred the major league managing debut of Clyde King, who led the Atlanta Crackers to a Southern Association pennant in 1956: It also offset a three-run spurt by the Giants in the seventh which disposed of Pat Jarvis, the Atlanta starter. | Bobby Etheridge doubled and I Hal Lanier singled with Ether* idge scoring on an error by Orlando Cepeda, a former Giant the Braves just acquired from St. Louis. The Giants scored twice more as pinch hitter Bob Burda and Mays singled. Bobby ~ walked and Willie McCovey hit sacrifice fly. ★ ★ ★ Until the seventh, Jarvis allowed just two hits, including Dick Dietz' homer in the second. The braves had built an early 3-1 lead against Giants' ace Juan Marichal. George Stone, relieved in the Inth and picked up the victory for the Braves. IAN PRANCIICO ATLANTA . . ebrhbl (brill May* ef S 0 1 0 FAlou et 4 0 0 “■-* **• 3 0 3 0 Mlllan 2b 4 01 4 0 0 0 HAaran rf 3 11 0 2 0 0 1 Cepeda 1b 4 11 4 0 0 0 Francona If 3 12 HIGH GAMES - 'joe Melledo, Mil jjorge Felice and 'Cadi Turnar» 22~ mcH* Chat jaruzel, 221 s Dick Doll and Gervase Klein, 217 each; Chock Richard, m ^ , 246 each; Skip Egllnton, , 216-226—623; Joa jary Dlrker, Bonfigllo ' 55“ " „ — Rita Francisco, 208 (504). TRIPLICATE — Kay Dyke, .129. Tuesday Rolling pins HIGH SERIES Eula Vlck, 203-J40 for Jacobson's Florists; Bey Filka, 545, and-Jo Wlllhlta, M1«f" ”*"’* Realtors; Lucille MV-... —- •- WMg national Screw and Machine. HIGH GAME - Herlhe Schumann, 222-510 lor Schumann's Decorators. FIRST PLACE TEAM ^DrWiMn Cleaners. Wednesday Doubts Trouble Mlx< HIGH GAMES AND SERIES — Farley,' 250-630; Clara Wilson, 235; Briton Maneuvers Chevy to Victory BRANDS HATCH, England (AP) _ Peter Gethin, British racing driver, won the formula 5,000 race at Brands Hatch Mon-ay. Gethin drove his McLaren-Chevrolet around 4 laps of the Brands Hatch circuit in 1:03.06 at an average speed of 100:24 miles per hour. 7 DAYS LEFT! DON’T FLIP YOUR LID OVER fadiMSMW Pant. Motor IntarOO HIGH GAMES AND-SERIES Kastellc, 234—6)1; Marl .Antis, * 607; Robert Keller, 234400-001; WB Helmbrlno, 224; William McKee, 222; Abe Frias, 212; William Smith, 213; Arils Day, 210; Kan White, 209; Ralph Pae Wednesday Nila Ladles CU «rHS0?,X»5*E,VietM HIGH Same — Tarry Machine, 533 (2111). SPLIT CONVERSIONS — Louis Gaines nd Judy Plaids, 3-7 each. Tuesday House Man HIGH SERIES - Bill Knoll, 203-2 .J9; Larry Crake, 207-227-626. HI GAME - Fr^vg,inkslman, 266 (401 Thursday Jimmy Day Amveta HIGH GAMES AND SERIES — McKerrlcher, I — IGH GAMES - Floyd. Pail, 213; jit'Dumen, 211; Dick Dickinson, 204-l Dava Matthews and George Danic, mond, 4-10; DOTlO B PLACE TEAM - N ciara Ham- HIGH SERIES — Phyllis . PUT CONVERSIONS ____ CU. ■MMNP 3-7-ldr FIRST WWas? fir ____ GAMES - Gary Kulich, 243; Retort Scott, 23m Floyd Pdas, 226; Keith -----Gi lT)fth, *“ ~ i. 200; Clauda, 202-202. DP—San Francisco Etheridge, LOB—I R ER BB $ . I,Aaron. 36—R.Jackson. HR—Dial! ( SB—Mlllan, R.jackson, >. SF—McCovejL Marichal ............6 ny (L,0-t )...... 21-3 __rvls I ............4 ■ Upshaw . v ■ 3 fthe * (W,1-0) 1 HBP-by Jarvis (HUM 34,314. Twins Release Rookie Pitcher — The rookie KANSAS CITY (AP) Minnesota Twins cut pitcher Bill Zepp and him to their minor league train-, ing camp at Melbourne, Fla., Monday. In reaching the 25-player limit, the Twins also placed injured infielder Rick Renick on the list until April 29. NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY Jl HOURS: Mon.-Fri, 9-6:30 Sot. 9-3:00 Sun. 11*2:00 , ______ INCOME TAX MRVICK 330 W. 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WATERFORD WATERFORD Fuel & SUPPLY UTICA BLACKETT TOOL RENTAL OXFORD HARP'S SALES & SERVICE MILFORD- BICKFORD HOME A AUTO PONTIAC TOM'S HDWE. 905 Orchard lake Rd. TROY TRI-CITY MOWI* & RENTAL ROYAL OAK ^ " MANUS POWIR MOWERS HOLLY CLIFF ORRYIR SPORTS Distributed,by ; JMpfe"* Lansing,, ' X T B—4 THIS PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, APRIL 8, 1969 6-7 Ca Picked First' by Pistons {Continued from Page B-l) • Phoenix, which lost a coin toss to. Milwaukee for the right to pick first, chose 6-foot-lO Neal Walk of Florida just moments after Milwaukee had selected Lew Alcindor. - „ * A * Hie drafting of, Alcindor by Milwaukee - the last-place finisher in the Eastern Division as-Phoenix was in the Western was a mere formality because the Bucks had signed the 7-1% UCLA' All-American last week for a reported $1.4 million package. ,+ h - * The Celtics, who picked ninth' in the first round, had expected White to be gone by the timej their turn came. But he wasn’ti and so the 6-3 Olympian became' a Celtic. ★ ★ * joining Alcindor and Walk, whio was also the No. 2 pick in the rival American Basketball Association, were Lucious Allen, by Seattle; Driscoll; and Larry Cahnon of La Salle, by Chicago. The 6-2 Allen was a teammate of • Alcindor’s for two seasons before he left UCLA before his settlor year, sp* Win Baseball Openers BALK OR ERROR? - President Nixon bends to retrieve a baseball he. dropped before making the first toss in the American League opener between Washington and New "'York yesterday. Commissioner Bowie Kuhn offers the President a new ball while Senators' manager Ted Williams (left) watches President Nixon look for the ball. Clarkston and "Walled Lake! showed off some heady , pitching talent yesterday in posting victories in high school baseball! openers. I Marshall Sealy flipped a one-hitter as -Clarkston blanked Holly, 6-0, and Don Burlingame pitched his way out of a couple of jams as Walled Lake shaded Plymouth, 3-2. QUICK LEAD Doug Green singled home two runs in the first and that was really all Sealy needed. Rich1 Porritt banged out a couple ofj hits and catcher Jeff Keyser Ex-Tiger Joins Oakland A's Atlanta Reaches NBA Finals SAN DIEGO (AP)—The Atlanta Hawks,' outshot and outre-Baltimore, the regular season bounded by the young'San,Di-winner in the East, picked iast|?f R«*ets, W «* outscrab: in-the first round and took Mike | bled- „„ . No games are scheduled to-i Mahon, whose team, led by Donj night. Kojis, hit a sizzling 62 per cent' FAR BEHIND from the floor in the first hplfj of play. Atlanta trailed by 19 points na„|. Virginia Union while I nun ij" 4}je third quarter but the Kojis hit 11 of 15 in the first g"!! X Their 108-106 victory Monday! lawks began picking up loose half SCM,ing ^ points but was JJJtffwS chose Wfilie ni8ht Put the Hawkt into thcl^Us’ and 4inteFcePtlnS Passe®-helcl to three points after inter-| S-Hpr nf Slce a^l R ck National Basketball Associa- They went ah-ad by eight mission and fouled out with 1;52 ^.Carter ?friSeaHand ,tion’s Western Division playoff points, 98-90, with 4:57 to nlay lcfl t0 «play Roberson of Cincinnati. r ... with th j.. r.fc.jor the shooting of Lou Hu&on, . t shooting o Bill Bridges and Walt Hazzard. * *t * | ‘We simply turned the ball jr too many times and, lost ers in the first game of the momentum,” said Rocket coach best-of-7 Series Wednesday nightljack McMahon. "When Elvin at Los Angeles. iHayes missed that dunk shot in * * * the third period, I almost fell In the Eastern Division finals, 0ff the bench. I think that’s Boston leads the New York 1-6. when the momentum changed.” j | finals with the Los Angeles Lak-- - - \ Los Angeles was awarded an exjtra first-round pick because | Atlanta, beating San Diego 4-21 of the Rudy LaRusso incident of in their series, meets the Lak-joi a few years ago. LaRusso, now with San Francisco but then with the Lakers was involved in a trade between Los Angeles, Baltimore and Detroit but he refused to report toDetroit. ; * July S—Ballin' 17—Clav.land; 1 Cleveland(n); V Cleveland; If—a Baltimore; 7—at Boa ton In); Cleveland; 18—at Cleveland; 70-.ll the Bengals’ competition In four games. California and ’ the new Kansas City franchise have two; games each, and the rest of the I schedule is rounded out by one game apiece with Oakland, Washington and the new Seattle team. EIGHT STATIONS Once again, too, WJBK-TV will be the originator of coverage for an eight-station! Michigan-Ohio-Indiana network. | Former Tiger star’ George Kell will continue - to handle* play-by-play descriptions of the game action, along with his side-kick Larry Osterman. > ★ ★ * Fifteen minutes before each day game, Kell will add to the upcoming game excitement when he talks sports with either! a member of the Bengal organization or another iy«lMld (n); iv York Ini; 9 Mhlngton; 15-«; 77—*1 Boiti WHITEWALLS! ,'*Bi&A2/98f rmsTBM, aowrua, tens will 7M«U 711x14 1 Mini mill IHxl4 lil,14 r.S. T.I It. M SS. TuMm* R.c.m Hut Tu and lay 0M TraadsMa Tin Tire Service Co. 190 W. WALTON PONTIAC, MICH, | Aba— Write ItMlwdM ail af tha Mowing; a lorn# aluminum wmwww. - —-W ahglf at W»»V bunch • 7,6 rafturt • 16 O.C. ttudl • %" tiding • Wind bmeux 6 Stuul avurhuad dour u 6" box cornlcui • CroH-tldt • Hoc. cund. *, • 235 ahlnglai • Double hoadou u i.pon.lan • Alum. Inwlallnn • Golv. JM0LUMS ALL LASOB AM MATBIIIAL u SUILT TO ANY 0006, AMY SUIUBB Bmofide FE. 8-9584 SAi‘ c»iu6i *iwmnn mmoH'i . Oi'iioii HOUF In taste. In quality. In popularity. A combination that makes Seagram’s 7 Crown America’s most-preferred brand of whiskey. Say Seagram’s and Be Sure. 5468 ,SSii».V .KM DBALBBI. SALII TAXIS INCLUO- $296 $1085 . cod# *N#!'4*7 Cwtu^ltu.iM cu&mfwi leagram Distillers Co.,,N.Y.C. BiandW Whiskey. 66 Proof. 66% Greln Neutral Spirit* 1 w NEW FULL 4-PLY WHITEWALLS 7.35 x 14 - $22.58 7.75 x 14 - $23.50 8.25 x 14 - $24.50 8.55 x 14 - $25.50 I 1‘ricex Include Federal Tux CHARGE For tho SMOOTHEST RIDE You've Ever Had, LET US TRUE BALANCE and TRACTIONIZE YOUR TIRES FRED GAUKLER ■ President J MOTOR MART ■ SAFETY CENTER ] Our chaisit *ngln**ring ■ dsrvlea effert th* best fn 3 quality automativa work- ■ manihlp at th* lowest pos- ■ sibl* cost. Our staff of ■ •Xpert mechanics pl*dg* ■ t* keep yoUr car fi " •of* running * jh* year around. 12 MONTHf TERMS pyjl/teji ci rou ii ! MOTOR MART -121 East Montoalm ’ rg a iaa* lM ilBBIRBNIIIIigillaillllljijHKKJH SAFETY 0ENTBR iiitt jo jinn/iu" ritpiss. Acting MSU President Stands Up to arrmTTTrrrrn m< Wednesday Special! f EAST LANSING (UPI)—With one week’s experience on the job, acting Michigan State Uni-: versity president Walter Adams found out he’s f lex i n g more muscles, than in his old blackboard duties as an economics professor.’ Adams, with only an average set of muscles distributed over his about 5-foot-9 frame, was part of a two-man barricade yesterday as protesting MSU students attempted to forceiby the Oakland, Calif., police their way iijto the placement [d e p a r t m c h t. The. students director’s office. . (Streamed through the halls of , * * * the Student Services Building 'Being president is no Mickey Adorns said after- Mouse job," wards. 7 . - ■> , *. ‘ ★' ■ Some 100 chanting students, representing Students for a Democratic Society and the Black Student Alliance, disrupted job interviews conducted and forced two representatives of the Oakland police to seek shelter in placement director Jack Shihgleton’s office. WADING THROUGH Adams, who replaced John Hannah April 1 in a strictly interim position, waded through the s tu d c n t s soon after the you are more naive than Ii After the demonstration quiet-l. Chcerslthought you were,” Adams|ed and most of the students' but they.j.shojitcd over the voices of the diliper80S, interviews wereir* ye ing s u en s. sumed with Oakland police.rep-1 .rcsentalives. I n te r v I e -I He said if the polite are Rre-i scheduled for today./were demonstration b greeted his arrival, were replaced by abusive li guaige,1J , MAY LOOK ELSEWHERE Shouldering signs s a y i n g ‘Join Oakland’s finest: High lay, free bullets" and “Kill Iventea iro*n r»e c r u i ting °ii jce'ea^Dtii 'sningietcm saia tma niggers! Extra bounty on Black campuses, they will have to look waf "bcaues hot enough ,,stu-Panthers,” the students pricked elsewhere- for their recruits. jder,lts UR for int?rv.,ews; Adams’ temper. Atone point heji^jj ^ey are going to find the! I iBirehers. the - bigots and the 'Justifications' Ruled Out HELD OVER NOMINATED FOR ACADEMY AWARDS High Court Firm on Remap By BARRY SCHWEID I For Brennan’s opinion Mon-ip reference for pleasingly WASHINGTON (AP) — The day rejected as possible justify shaped districts.” Supreme Court’s latest tine-man cations “partisan politics,” the! * '* * ■ one-vote ruling represents a re- fact that a plan represents “rea- In dissent, Justice Abe Fortas, fusal to yield to political reali-jsonable legislative compro- to "dramatize the fallacy of inties in the states. I ^ flexible insistence upon mathe- The Constitution, the courtj * - * - *lmatical exactness with no says, demands a “good faith’’!'‘ k« * • i ijtolerance for reality,” put his attempt to draw exactly equali: IVOWS AnOiyStS j imagination to work, congressional districts. He saw legislators drawing * * * |mise," or that the legislators!dfstriet line down the middle of State legislators, using federal didn’t want to fragemnt areas “*9 corridor of an apartment ;nsus figures, have to aim for j with “distinct economic and so-^ouse or even, dividing the resl-the bull’s-eye. If they don’t said jcial interests.” jdents of a single-family, house Justice William J. Brennan Jr.,| He even rejected “a state’s between two districts. FORTAS DISMAYED Star* tSSS*- MOM.-TUE.-THURS.-FRI. at 1:30 Only WED.-SAT.-SUN. 1:00-3:45-6:30-9:15 PRICES This Engagement Only Adults ioo nUUIlO Children Undvr 12.. 1.00 HURON ‘they must justify each variance.” All this looks like trouble for the legislators—and for the federal courts which will have to pass on apportionment plans. DINNER •/Role Slaw PONTIAC LAKE INN ; *1890 Highland Road iu°hm2 .. ’{Birchers, the bigots and the ? Minutemen,” Adams said. flared at the crowd, show a hell of a lot more sea for my reform efforts than dhy I ^ sludents were alleging | of you. ■ . that O a k l a n d police “mur- dered” Bobby Hutton, a Black Adams and Shingleton for sev-panther April 8, 1968. Hutton cral moments were forced to Idied in a shoot-out with police physically brace the door of his!there, oufer office when students} * * * threatened to crash through. Adams told the crowd, “Youl “If you think you’re going to fellows are just engaging inj change the Oakland Police De- group therapy for yourself; partment by denying them the you’re not trying to achieve right to recruit on this campus, lanything.”' '111#! John Fernald Company I’n AMPHITRYON 38 Oakland ^IJruversity^ yr lag’ll isssj goldsn brown Fillet of Flounder, -French Fried Potetoee, I Cole Slew, Tartare Sauce, and aieorted breade. Michigan Ranks Ninth in Equality WASHINGTON (UPI) -Michigan was not among the' states affecteid in the Supreme Court’s ruling Monday that its “one man-one vote” ruling requires states to “make good-faith efforts to achieve methe-matical equality” in population in all their Congressional di> ricts. Michigan ranked 9th best in the nation in the mathematical equality of its congressional districting, with only a 13,789 difference between most and least populous districts Missouri’s population difference was 18,487. OPEN FOR BREAKFAST AT 7:00 A.M. 3650 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains OR 3-8941 12 NORTH SAGINAW IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC OPEN 9:45 A.M. SHOW at 10:00 A.M; Continuous - 334-4436 YOU MUST BE 18-ENDS TUESDAY-OPEN 9:45-CONTINUOUS ALL DAY TWO MEN STRANDED ON A STRANGE ISLAND AT THE MERCY OF LOVE-STARVED AMAZONS! SLATES Of LOVE PLUS 2nd ADULT HIT “BANNED” Wednesday 491 j 49’erDAY Dig into as many golden BUTTERMILK PANCAKES as you can eat for just PER CUSTOMER Bring Along All Your Prospectors » 15325 W. > MJLE RD. » 10001 TELEGRAPH Wife Innocent in Slaying; Insanity Cited An Orion Township woman wai found innocent by reason of insanity. yesterday in the shotgun slaying of her husband last Christmas. Mrs. Barbara Trudell, 38, of 881 Vemita was acquitted by Oakland County Circuit Judge Robert L. Templin. * * ★ Templin made his riding after hearing Dr. Abraham Tauber, a Pontiac psychiatrist testifying for the prosecution, describe Mrs. Trudell as a paranoid schizophrenic now and at thp time of the shooting. Dr. Tauber said that Mrs. Trudell was mentally unbalanced at the time of the shooting and didn’t know difference between right and wrong. SHOT IN HEAD Her husband, Lyle, was shot in the head as he slept o couch in their home. Assistant Prosecutor Michael Friedman said that Mrs Trudell will be committed to a state mental institution until she regains her sanity. The five children in the family range in age from 8 to 15. Four arc Mrs. Trudeil’s by a previous marriage. The fifth was Trudell’s by a previous marriage. The ‘nonjury trial got under way last Friday afternoon PONTIAC MALL Invites You and Your Family Wed. A Thun. Evenings 4:30 to • P.M. Enjoy Tender, Golden, Deep-Fried, COMPLETE CHICKEN DINNERS 95‘ Only * 120 Children.. Under 10 CHOICE OF POTATOES OR VEGETABLE DINNER SALAD OR DESSERT ROLLS AND BUTTER COFFEE, TEA OR MILK SERVED EVERY WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY NIGHTS PONTIAC MALL CAFETERIA ONLY - 4:30 to 8 p.m. VWr T1TE PONTIAC PRESS, TUE$D. HIL 8, 1960 NORTH S *87* WAK864 ♦ AJ876 A Void WEST EAST (D) *3 *54 WQJ973 V102 ♦ KQ92 ♦ 5 4. A AQ2 AKJ109875 SOUTH A AKQJ1098 Bridge Tricks From Jacobys Today’s article is ' based on | Wp arc goingto miss RUss/at tone he sent us several years NEA. His cheery comments, 'ago. We put it away at the infinite patiehce and general I time, but now he can’t stop us friendship will be gone, but we from running it. I'are looking forward to hearing ★ * * jfrom him occasionally, and if Russ sat South and Mrs. he sends, us hands, he can’t stop i Winterbotham North., W h e n us from using them now. I Russ failed to double seven Q—The bidding has been: West North East South 1A Pass IV Pass 1* Pass 7 'You, South, hold: *Q2 VA 1098765 *88 *42 What do you do now? A—/Bid two hoarts. A jump to three would show a much better hand. { ■■ - TODAY’S QUESTION Your partner raises you to three hearts. What do you do Jiow?. Answer Tomorrow THE BETTER HALF *643 North-South vulnerable West North East South 3* 4* 5 * 6* 7* Pass Pass 7 A P»ss Pass Dblo Pass Pass Rdble Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—* 3 | clubs his wife knew that he had solid spades and wanted her to bid seven. She obliged. West felt that he had to double, and Russ was never a man' refuse a challenge. He redoubled! . If West had been kind enough i to lead anything but a trump, | there would have been 13 easy, | tricks on a cross-ruff, but West1 did lead a trump. Russ won in his hand and led ’a heart to dummy’s ace. Then ruffed a heart, ruffed a club and ruffed another low heart. The Jacoby column has just j ★ * ★ about reached its 20th an-1 If hearts broke 4-3 Russ could niversary.. During that entire haye discarded his last two period Russ Winterbotham has clubs on the king and eight of had the extra duty a t that suit, but they broke 5-2. Newspaper Enterprise Associa- This,worried Russ but didn’t; tion of checking it. cost him the grand slam. He We are pretty sure that Russ ran off all his trumps and the enjoyed the task because from last trump lead squeezed West.1 KERRY’S WORLD—By Jim Berry time to time he sent us hands .He couldn’t hold two hearts and jwith the definite instruction the king “Don’t mention my name! ” ' diamonds. MM*? By OSWALD AND JAMES JACOBY THE BORN LOSER By Art Sansont “Try me when my wife isn’t mad at me, my son has a better report card and my feet don’t hurt.” Astrological' Fojreclst^j! (SB60TWHS FOR \/N VOU1.—VOU'LL N6UER 5 POLL OUT Y91IR TOOTH J WITH THE STRII& .-C, ATTATCHEP t> W THISpoprI IT. OPENS J - w J 0\\ V\ \ a osAN^N •xfew 4-0 X .WkWVUMil.1. Ns By V. T. Hamiip By SYDNEY OMARR cheerfulness^and optimism. Make notice y«wr unile at wall as your % ARIES (March 2*Aprl* IS): Si may Da In foul mood. Don't con error. Hold oft In making demand It slow and aasv. Sansa of hur,«n .» valuable ally. Ba flexible. Changa at assignment Is due. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Good moon aspect today coincides with Interest in faraway places.* Keep communication linos open. You could get news containing valuable information. Give attention to GEMINI (May 21-Junt suggestions fro solid. Know thli JJ knocking on door ol success. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Affair of heart may go awry. Not wise to force Issues. Do more listening than asserting. You can get at truth today. Base — H valid Information. Some diet. “ ™ 'Vagpi, mi, hrem i , vacation. Check travel export. You may be able to anuro more than you anticipated. Genuine bargain la avallablt. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Situation Involving homo, family demands attention. Key Is to finish rather than hang on to expensive proposition. Older individual may appear stubborn. Bo ' patient. Remombar past favors. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Avoid Script Writer Is Dead at 58 LA CANADA, Calif. (AP) -James Francis O’Hanlon, veteran motion picture writer who wrote television’s “Maverick,” “77 Sunset Strip” and “Mr. Roberts,” is dead at 58. O’Hanlon died Sunday night at Glendale Memorial Hospital of( congestive heart failure. His wife; Mary, three sons and two daughters survive. •k k A O’Hanlon had written movie i scripts since 1931. His screen credits Include “The Miracle of Fatima,” “Calamity Jan e “Destination Moon” and “Sahara,” 7-2 R FLORIDA LAWMAKER TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) — State Rep. Ted Alvarez Jr., can’t afford color telephones in1-his dairy barn, he says, so he figures the state can’t afford, them in its business either. The Democratic legislator from Jacksonville has filed i bill in the legislature to restrict all state agenices to the use of black telephones. ★ Hr k “I have , a feeling we’U save thousands of dollars,” he said. Dirksen Proposal Nears OK in Iowa DBS MOINEJ5, Ipwa (AP) -ri Iowa moved a step closer1 Mon-j day to being the 33rd state to* approve in principle the so-i called Dirksen amendment to th« U.S. Constitution. The state Senate passed 39 to I 20 • resolution calling on Congress to either propose the amendment or call a constitutional convention to allow the •t«t« ft do so. The measure! mAl to the house. j..k ", 4 k The D1 r k s e n amendment, named for gen. Everett Dirk-son, R41L, ijpuld allow me house of etMl legislatureg to he appefttdtMd (to the basis of n ' .popMHdB- factors. THE POJmAC PRESS, TUESDAY, APRIL 8, lflfltt B—T .e Strikers Defy Marf lsiJp;Tracting UAW Leaders The following are top prices covering sales of vocally grown produce by groweru and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the NEW YORK (AP) — The ing Indicated that while the ini-1 shares at 29VSe, off •; Southern Detroit Bureau of Markets as of stock market, spurred by bar-tial shock of the Federal Re-[Natural Gas, 20,000 shares at; Friday. {gain hunters, continued to ri8e ferve’s latest moves to curb inf-|4% off 1, Clorox l OOO shares Ls-*? I.—..._____________ v-' , . lation largely was felt in Mon-1 at 2Mi, up and Philips Indus-1 Produce jearlyihis afternoon in moderate ^ay ...... ., -----------k„ ,u. „ i... ik. .™. ^ Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (AP) - (USDA)—Prices paid per pound tor o. 1 live poultr roasere 'law-W^bnUlere hM”U ■ whiles 21%-22%. DETROIT EGGS DETROIT (AP)—(USDA) - Egg pri_______ paid per dozen by Orel receivers (including U.S.): Grad* A lumbo 44-49; extra large 43'/j-47%; large 43-44; medium 40-43; email 2529. CHICAGO GUTTER, EGGS CHICAGO (AP) - Chicago Mercanlile “ —■>—Butler steady; wholesale buy- ss unchanged to % lower; 93 score aa 47%; 92 A 47%; 90 B 45; 89 C 40%; Cere 90 B 45%; 89 C 62. Eggs unsettled; - wholesale buying prices unchanged to 3 lower; to per cent or bettor grade A whites 40; standards 37; checks 27. Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (AP)—(USDA) — C slaughter steers Hogs 200; 3 lbs 20.75! 5 3 220-240 19.25-Ujp;. ................ — — 17.7518.50; 2-3 400400 Tbs 14.25-18.25. IOoS&S *a ®n<)^ P^,’ 38.00. Sheep 500; choice, and prl slaughter lambs 29.5030.50. ' CHICAGO LIVESTOCK - (USDA) Exchange were higher, ________ ry teaching techniques., business,” says Ristow, who has I’Jg;tive level. Corp., 15,500 shares at 87, off ond most-active, unchanged at was rcP°rled- *. more Americans to rent rather' A to Z Rental has three pack- known of an individual who :J*| They said the moderate trad-1*; American Cyanamid, 23,500 52‘/4. : lTAW,_ u, than buy gained a foothold in a8es f°r prospective members rented^ a truck at one location 00 I The UAW s International Ex- ^ sbortiy a(ter World °l it® franchise. The lowest in and a construction backhoe at [ecutlve Board took control °f war II as Dart of the do-it-vour- Cost> 3 $35,000 plan, requires the another, and then disappeared the wildcat striking Local 12641.. movJ,ent purchaser to put down $8,750. with both. MOniTAwan? named Doug ^ra®'[Th^imT stores mainly were ' ” “ —----------------l er, UAW v ce president a"J mom-and-pop operations, with Jrectorofits Chryser depart-fath r^ng 7he hardware and mother attending to the fancier, activities, such as The New York Slock Exchange! al UAW director, as administra- cbg. tore of the local. [renting glassware and coffee .1 The strike at the ^S runs and candelabra for parties. t y which manufactures body pan-! ° K - «|els, so far has idled about 30,000 NO LETUP IN GROWTH . • —v. Chrysler employes in the U.S.j There has been no letup in the % and Canada. A Chrysler spokes- growth rate, estimated by in-man said 10,000 more might be dustry officials at between 15 MV* m” 85%- V,sent borne Wednesday at the an(| 20 per cent a year. But only 22% 22% + % Warren truck works and two jn the past few years has it be JT 45% i!% +% New Jersey engine plants if the growing fast in the Northeast. ™ 50% 50% 1 v! strike continues. There are now estimated to be ‘NOT GOING BACK* about 10,000 rental outlets 3rt 17 w This appeared likely, Rolls Recalls Autos Built in Last 4 Years NEW YORK (AP) — Purchas- only to “permanent heads o/ has it been crs t*1e symbo* °f automotive ;state.” n opulence—a Rolls Royce—have More than 5,000 cars were rerun into a roadblock. ' called, a Rolls spokesman said. Rolls-Royce inc- announced About 1,350 are in the United Monday that it was recalling all | States. Tears it produced In the last four The correction In the steering system, requiring 30 minutes work, would “naturally” be done free, he said, and about 30 per cent of the American owners have already brought their cars in. Stressing that the correction UAwS lnternallonal ?°nTraWtf tried U and"also w'ithdrew^The radiator grill, which sell for a spokesman^'said: “Recent engl-StATSf Eesl ait° mSM *** dol,ars ,ess test experience has lersl their own Sa|f numbers no more than 60 or so ■ shown.'that excePtional ®verl(!ad Fraser said “we had no outlets nationwide, choice” in making the unusual Franchisers are more active takeover. Chrysler repeatedly than large chains, with United has said that no negotiations Rent-All of Los Angeles, and A< can take place until the men'to Z rental of Chicago, claiming ..... 43% 43% - wCharles Ferguson, a self-de-1 great majority 0f them owner-. • 1? ** . ... scribed picket leader, said operated Not oidy is it an in- P°ienua* We’re stronger now than ever [dustry of small businesses, but Royce is available before and we’re not going'it may continue to be so |RoHs^Royce ^vaHable baCk” * £ g yHeSrtrthe big automotive and^'^ «1,600 and an econo- I The Sterling employes were construction equipment renter; b/h S^rrJ a^ pSu^s Ben-HI ordered back to work after the has withdrawn from the general identical except for thel L'UAWi International Board was renting HeMl 8ears, _Rod»ek tom models __________|____r_____ sive, including ope available ■ conditions may cause the side steering lever setscrews on Ben-. tley-T cars to relax their torque News in Brief X. um. reported, the firm said. A letter was sent to all Rolls and Bentley owners on March 19, the spokesman said. GM RECALL Less than two months ago, General Motors announced it ______ 1 _________ illegal” ing business in Des Plaines, 111.; Stocks of Local /n#eresf Iv^as fecaJ**n* 4.9 million vehi- -viland “unconstitutional,” Fraser “The bigger the business the Fiflure, ,ft(ir declmal pointI ar, ,iflhth,^les ta cl?eck possible defects. % told a news conference it “is,harder it is to turn over,” he, are returned to work. WWW Local* officials said the walkout last Wednesday followed the imposition of an “unsafe” work assignment by Chrysler. TRAGIC IMPACT Calling the strike well over 300 members each. But even franchise holders are small-business men. ,ESS TURNOVER “The higher the inventory the less the turnover,” says Bill' Ristow, who operates a flourish-1 Ray Fettlnger, 43, of 818 Farnsworth told Pontiac police yesterday that someone picked his pockets of $60 to $70 while he was at Orchard Lake Road and Franklin Boulevard. having a tragic impact on the says in explaining the small-Chrysler workers." {business man’s success. Mutual Stock Quotations OVER THE counter stocks h‘|The recall involved 2.5 million mm 1868 and 1969 Chevrolets, Pon- :hang« throughout the NEA Mut 11.55 It __ Con Edit 1. _ £ Con, Foods _ SI ConNatG l. _ % ConsPwr 1. _ % ContAIrL .! 4. iZ ContCon 2. :: jm 1L Cont Oil |Z Cont Tol .68 Control Data i/4 Cooper In 1.40 IUM 12 + V. a ■ i/k CorGW 2.50a ,5 i c _i Cowles .30 73% 74% + % CoxBdcat .50 mu mu 1 ia CrouseHIn ID Mb ^ CrowCpI 1.511 io% ii% + % Crown Cork 10% 10% — % CrownZ8j.20 w 1^. 9% _t% - % Cojohy Co 3 72% 721 13 )1% .... M| 13 12% 12% 12% — 22 17 14% 16% — 11 11% 11% 11% ... 107 21% 21% 21% + 94 135% 133% 135% +2 iMInnPLt .... 1 44% 44%'44% ... MobllOlt 2.20 IS 37% 37% 37% - %'Mohasco 1 17 2S4 253% 253% + “ ------ I “ 5 14% 14% 14% ... 2 42% 42% 42% —. 1 20% 21% M*- I MontDUt 1.41 k Mont Pw 1.54 k Motorola 1 bMtSITT 1.24 .*14 *?G* 17% “% - % NatAIrlln » 14 21% 21% H| mUiUG S 79 .. | Nat Blsc 2.20 13 22% 22% 22% -t 14 101% 100% 101% + .I »» XU 32% - 10 32% 31% 31% 17 106% 106% 106 . . I 22% 22% 22% + % —N— 39% 40% + % 33% 34 + % I 34% 36% 34% ... . n.n Rlv 1 49 51% S0% 50% — % haveoCo J 73 22% 21% 71% + % Day PL 1 Can .10 17 61 - tiry Dili Tha Associated Prrfi Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AP) -tlon of the Treasury *-pared to April 3, 1961 l - Balance 3.989.050.151 Deposits (I 'OlaSham 1 Ojsney 10t ■ CfbmeMln . 3, 1969 Com- DowChth 1 1.773.326,330,06 Du, LI tM J 22% 22% 22% + % N Di ! sT% -%!»!.... 13 44% 46% 46% . Nat Genl 5 30% 30'/4 30% — % Nat Gypi 47 38Vli 37'/4 38 + V» Natlnd .4 SI 20% 20% 20% — % NatLead *<* oc7/. + t/4 Nat Steal - % Nat Tea 1.60 I 28% - 77 — V rawali fiscal year 152*014*912,066.35 x 360,475,346,832.31 104,632.35 SO 147% 148% 14 30 29% 29% 2 18 17% 17% 1 —E— % NorAmPhll 1 . NoAmRock 1 ......... 26% 26% VaEIPw 1.08 « 28% 27% 27% - —W—X—Y—Z— WarL-Om 1.10 60 57 56% 56% + Wat Wat 128 • 21% 23% 23% Wasln AlrL I 38 33% M fin 1 Wn Banc 1.20 IS 40 39% 40 155 44% 65% 64 - 43 84% 83% 84% -I 17 54 55% 56 6 46 45% 45% + 11 34 33% 34 -I 145 30% 29% 30% + 35 249% 249% 249% - disbursements extra dividends oV pay; following tool 119,092.302,951 19 w Ibotco Ind i 149,941,449,402.09 __ °*'a ""ToJ344,975,321.54 10,4l4,082,1p.l5 Ijjjp $1^ x-lncludet 437,401,442.40 d«M not sub-i j" tafl | yg| eitrilpi.io Emer Elec 1 .......% NoltaPw I 71% 71% 71% — % Northrop | 19 30% 11% 4 % NwslAIr1 I 71% 70% 71% 4 % - - I 40% 39% 37% BOND AVERAGES^ _ Had jjt The^Aiiocleted ^Presi Not Chang# Noon Tuot. 43.2 E%! Year Ago 64.5 194$ High 44.1 Pan. L. Yd. B»4ntP AOb * +"i Ivtrahorp 00.7 77.5 79 4 Fedders .40 si . Pod Mag 1.1 90.2 J2 2 M 22 _J4 —P— 29 74% 74% 74% 42% U 17% 17 17% 4 % 5 23% 23% 21% NwIBanc 2.40 Jtorton 1.50 . . fNorl Simon 22% ^.. Norwich .80 IH occldwt. ,0b 12% 4- % OhloEdli 1.80 84% - % Okie GE 1.00 24 4 % OiiioNGt 1.12 oltlM Mar 1 QwontCg 1.40 dwonalll 1,15 i 21% h 12 44% 44=- , 24 15% 35% 35' 9 12% 12% 8 69% 69% —P— 21 16% 16% 10 21 r 1-5J 46% — »/4 35'4i . Whirl Cp White Me WlnnDIx Woolwortli YngsIShl I.eu «i -,7- . -V 1 ZeleCorp .64 44 47% 47% 47% 4 ZenllhR 1,40 70 49% 49% 49% 4; Copyrighted by Tha Associated Press Sales figures are unofficial^ ^ ^ loragolno tabla^ aril anr daclarallon. Special __ _ or payments not de regular are Identified toping' |S! k dlvloeno. o— r In stock durlnt e on ex-dlvldtna or VI . g—Declared or paid dvidend or *CpHt*up0k-¥)fcle this 'year, en accumulative I nds In arrears.'' n—New —,. „ hit veer, dividend omitted, deferred action taktn at last dlvlden meat--Dtcaa 0 pair Inldrddr.al ..... /-Declared or paid In 1948, plui stock dividend, t—Paid In itock during |mr v*lu# on ,x-dlvrd,n' 1—Celled, x-lx dividend. v-Ex dlvl — sales In full x-dls—Ex dlstrlbu--Bx rights, xw without war-- "“l ■varranta, wd—When dlt-n Issued, nd—Next day .. P_______ Liquidating dlvl- ;peclared _or paid In 19M ^lus ilimatad casTi ,ir * 1st dphtldond^ Dojlarad^ Vet* rlad’Record 1 K .lift? Q 4-18 Eaior Express . .128 O FarmUnwrts ASSOC .30 Q m a 4- 30 PMC CP .15 +30,PoodPalr .90 5- 1 FordMol 2.40 4- 131 ForMcK .73 5- 1 FraepSut 1.40 , 4-30! FruahCp 1.70, _ PocPwL 1.20 poct|t 1.20 S PanASul 1.50 1 20% 30% f 12% 12' ‘ I 21% 2V delivery', ^ being reorgenlied ui Act. .or securities as penies; fn—Foreign atlon of Securities Am Bute 3.52 3.82 Am DlvTO 11.6412,74 Am Grlh 7.42 8.07 n Mut n NGw Fid Fund 17.73 19.17 Fid Trnd 26,99 79.34 Financial Flat Fd Fla Gth Fnd Gth Founders Guerdn 27.62 27.67 Associated Truck Citizens Utilities )etrex Chemical >lamond Crystal .. Kelly Services .. Wyandotte Chemical . -dealer' markets’ tiacs, Oldsmobiles, Cadillacs, a,.,.. '•'■[Bujc|cs gud CMC trucks. Another 2.4 million 1965 to 1968 Chevrolets were recalled. 8.16 8.92 9.91 10.83 New Hor 28.29 28.29 1 16.39 16.39 Fund B 10.08 10.96 ccr shY nm Channlng Funds; Balan 13.0414 Com Stk 1.04-2 Incom Li4 J Special 3.11 3 Chase Group: Rep Tech 5.B1 4.35 Revere 14.9416.33 Roicnthl 9.7410.67 schuelgr 17.4119.32 Scudder Funds: Int Inv 17.4417.84 spec) 40.53 40.83 Bel 13.71 13.71 Com SI 11.4011.40 Sec Dlv Uneven Sec Equl 4.30 4.70 Sec Inv 0.61 9-41 Sclec Am 10.7S 11 sol 8p— iuui Side 17,37 18.99 11.81 12.91 iVoUn K*C»i . 29.0 30.0; —.3 -.3 —.1 I 186.4 T4B.B 335. 483.0 184.5 146.6 330.5 240.21-0. . 128,48—0.--.. 31995+0.43 ^3.1 to'. 500 Party Bids; When? Where? CLEVELAND, Ohio UT> — Robert Novak says he has about 500 parties to go to this year, but he doesn’t know when or where. Novak is president of the Jubilee Catering Co. and he says all records, of the firm’s 1960 party obligations were [stolen Monday. He issued a public appeal that Jubilee customers call him for rebooking. “Otherwise, I think I’ll leave town,” Novak said. Successfuhlnvesting J l S3 12.01 13.11 ursTk iii i»i tZ U 8.22 0.98 Loomlt Soyles Fd>: TWonC * % '■# ^ A convertible bond ia, in ail cases, an outstanding debt obligation of the company and as such is payable on a preset redemption date at a stated amount. * * # These bonds are by no means worthless after the conversion date but frequently are worth a lesser amount of money when the growth-generating conversion feature expires. A recent case —> Nuclear Corp. of America — clearly defines the company's profound concern that bondholders get the most for their dollar. A public notice a week prior to the change in conversion prices carefully stated what this change would mean to tha holder in terms of dollars and cents. This notice is typical or many that appear on financial pages throughout the year, . w * a «■ Bear in mind that a bond is a debt obligation and is redeemable under the conditions stated that debt contract, but it st be presented to tbf company or its agent M order for the holder to secure the proceeds. , '/AiJ • 1 ' (Copyright, INI) u;. m THE PONTIAC PRESS^Tl1ES1)AY, APRIL 8, 1969 ms in Nation's Capital WASHINGTON y 1,091 In- most important domestic issue, tersections. Specifications would by the Suffolk County Public luKen rrom nome bmm....................................... On another topic, he expressed cau jor shrubs to be no taller HealUi Service were disclosed It was just ahead of Interna-the view that President Nixon’s than three feet and tree limbs|Monday by County Executive , . . . tiortal Business Machines, which!actions to date “have generally|no jower than eight feet from Lee H. Dennison, who said the About $270 worth of contents ig in i,o88 i ns t ltu t i o n a 1 met with the approval of the the ground in areas within 25bounty was providing free in-; portfolios American people." ‘ feet from street corners. ispectioh of color sets to all Oil New Jersey,,. Russeli also said: j A|so on the agenda for the 8 county residents who requested; 1,019 institutions, *A voluntary army, would be’p m meeUng at city hall, 18201 it. too costly;' and undesirable^ be- j Inverness, are the monthly! were stolen from home, it was reported to police standard yesterday. held bv John Cowlishaw, 30, of 452 ranked third Clark; dear father of Mrs. Marian Hall, Marvin, Lynwood' and Arnold Q • Shoults. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, April 9 at 11 a.m. at Huntoon Funeral Home with Rev. Timothey Hickey of Trinity Methodist Church officiating. Interment in Croswell, Michigan. Mr. Flewelling will lie in state at the funeral home. Kuhn told police he was missing others in the top 10 were!Cause of Its mercenary nature pubHc Works, fire police and! Seymour Becker, county phys- St I PlP vision rftforn DlflVOr. A *MAMi/inn npAlanliAnA TnvooA < «J aIiiIH nna lirVlA niAllIH 1 m . * t t . i i i ..I _ McGILL, GEORGE E. television, record player,|A(nerican Telephone, Texaco,land lack of civilians who wotild financial reports ;radio, typewriter, mov 1 e General Electric, Eastman;volunteer. I camera, still camera, two bed Kodak Gu]f on Mobil Oil and' *it probably wUl be twq or .pillows and jewelry. Sears Roebuck. three years before Congress Entry apparently was made; ....... by prying open a rear door. [police said. The burglary happened between Friday and last night, according to Cowlishaw.1 three years _ -------------- 1 makes any bloc grants to cities News of Lansing and the first grants wiU 1)6 tok' ’ en amounts. Paternity-Defense Help Is Assured in Capsule Form Ru8sell's 8trongest and mo9tl __SB^RKSGRIFKI N RlNKRxi jiSCiir Our firm W06 established in Pontiac 40 years ago. The number of families we serve each year increases and the resulting expansion df facility and staff makes it possible for us to constantly servie you better. SPARKS * GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME 4fi Williams St. Phone FE 8-9288 TMfc GOVERNOR d today "Day of tha >n of tht Dftrolt Tlae of the new baseball E SUPREME COURT emotional remarks dealt with BOSTON (AP) - The county Vietnam, , which he called aRW th.e €°s4 of prav dlng cruel and tragic morass in ^ts f.or ,adlg«nt defc"d-- - ■ 'ants In paternity cases, ■Tiow"i which we are bogged down. . . - „ _ _ ! “Day to day that situation!MassachusetUi Supreme Court 3 3 ... . < rnln/l Mnnrhiv to; ruled Monday. icist who conducted the survey, said the age of the set, size of screen and type of cabinet did not figure in his findings, but ‘dangerous levels of radiation” were found in nil types. Owners, informed that their sets were emitting the dangerous X rays, returned them to manufacturers for repair, he said, and although some sets were repaired free; other owners had to pay $15 or $25 for the nd Mldlngi o ’£5 me,” he said, “nought with ev-1 “The right to obtain the resuU service. •o Cry power of my command to 0 ^ a lcsl. 8 an important NATIONAL STANDARD h*i prevent the fjrst American Sol-Tight in making p defense dier’s ever getting there.” |agains „ he chfrge’ ^ekcou^ -r-----------— ! He was applauded But there Its. . Sa^o4.bne. al; New Zealand Hit ™ *ouder applause when HS5L' I vtfvv LBo/ono mi u|] said that degpUfe hig of this right. tiori, he felt every American should support U.S. troops in Vietnam regardless of individual views on the war. “I think we could’ve won that war, If we had fought like.we should Wave, with the first ; April % by Small Tornado Officer, Clawed PALM SPRINGS, Calif. UR -A young man being booked on suspicion of ‘possessing dangerous drugs clawed Police Sgt, Thomas Wall so badly the The county .officials’ test of color sets was based on the standard set up by the National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurement. The councj said radiation* above 0.5 mini-roentgens an hour at a distance of two Inches from the set;/ surface was dangerous. The report aald at least one color set. from each of 37 -manufacturers whose sets .were tested showed too hlgl* a rate of ra- 1969; 137 East Iroquois Ropd; age 80; beloved inubanif of Ruth McGill; dear fatofer of Mrs.- James House/ Mrs. Charles Larr, Thomas E. and Robert G. McGill; also survived by 12 goandchildren. Recitation of the Rosary will be tonight at>B p.m. at the Sparks-Griffhf Funeral Home. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, April 9 at 10 a.m. St./Vincent De Paul Catholic Church- Interment in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery: Mr. McGill will lie in State at the funeral home. (Suggested siting hours, 3 to 5 and 7 to I WELLINGTON, New Zealand | fAP) — A tornado ripped roofs from hquses, uprooted trees, wrecked care and smashed store windows in a 50-yard-wide 1100,000 njen In the fii'st three swath through the town of Levin months,'* he said. At that time, officer lost sight In his left eye, dlatloq, on the west side of North Islarid RusselL said, ,, the North Viet- doctors at Desert -Hospital said ' Tuesday. ' . - ... . ' Inartiese, and thier guerrillas|today. Michael- Henderson, 22.! Black and/ztohite television More than 30 houses were j were not - well equipped and Lakcwood, Calif , was rebookedjscts. not Included survived by eight , grandchildren. Prayers wJir be Wednesday, April 9 at 11 a.m. at Sparks - iGrlfflo Funeral/Home, interment In Vets Flbt/ Perry Mount Park Cemetery.-Mr. Morrell will He in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours, 3 to 5 and 1 tbO.) m For Wont Adi Dial 334-4981 fUK PONTIAC PiiKKS. Tl’KSDA\% APU11 n-9 m PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING , INDEX RNM Jiiu II. 1943 & NOTICES Card of Thanks .. In Memoriam .... Announcements Florists .......... Funeral Directors . Cemetery Lots ... Personals ....... Lost and Found ... ----3-A ! 4 | .. ,.4-A ! -----4-B .....5 EMPLOYMENT Help Wanted Mole ... Help Wanted Female .. Help Wanted M. or F. Sales Help, Male-Fenia Employment Agencies . Employment Information Instructions—Schools.. Work Wanted Male .. Work Wanted Female. Work Wanted Couples . .. 8 ..8-A .. 9 ..9-A ..10 ..11 ..12 .12-A SERVICES OFFERED Building Services-Supplies... 13 Veterinary .................14 Business Service............15 Bookkefping and Taxes......16 Credit Advisors .........16-A Dressmaking and Tailoring:.17 Gardening ................ 18 Landscaping ..............18-A Garden Plowing........... 18-B Income Tax Service .......19 Laundry Service ............20 Convalescent—Nursing .......21 Moving and Trucking.......22 Painting and Decorating... .23 Television-Radio Service...24 Upholstering .............24-A Transportation .......... .25 Insurance ..................26 Deer Processing.............27 WANTED Dial 334-4981 (Mwi.HmFri.l-S) " (Sol. • I* 1.10) or 332-8181 ,M, TO ft I (Sat. 8 toft) Pontiac* Proti Want Ads FOR FAST ACTION AOS RECEIVED BY 9 P W Will BI PUBLISHED THI ' FOLLOWING DAT. at Adi ie 9 allot! w "Kill NUM- The Pontiac Prass Classified Dapartmant FROM I A.M. I. Silo P.M. horseback Aiding club BEGINNERS ONLY T5ES SUPPLIED Iculty-Oo It ............... Mich. We ara proftsslbnsl iriMlort. It Will Cot! you nothing A.DIdl Tabfctt. Only W ti ~SfOP y-Rlsk Mortgagt 398-7904 WE ARE PLANNING TO'oi ...________I.......... O'organize a Chau Club In the city of Pontiac. ‘ » you Interested? Please contact C. J. GODHARDT FUNERAL HOME _ Kongo Harbor. PH, 482-0200. . COATS FUNERAL HOME ORAYTON PLAINS ..... DONELSON-JOHNS FUNERAL HOME Huntoon W Oakland Am._____ SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME "Thoughtful Sarvlco" FE S-OMS VoorheesSiple FUNERAL HOME. 332-8378 Established Over 45 Yi BOX REPLIES At 10 a.m. today there were replies at The Press* Office In the following boxes: . C7, CM, C19, C21, C23, €24, C25, C28, C34, C36, C38, C72. Cemetery Lots 2 LOTS WHITE CHAPEL Came i. Memorial Crou I Announcements Bill problems! - call DEBT CONSULTANTS 33S-0333 FREE WIGLET. WIG PARTIES.' Wonted Children to Board. .28 Wanted Household Goods...29 ! “ ......30 HALL FOR RENT. RECEPTIONS, lodges, church. OR 3-S202. FE 2- .jmI_________ ■ ________ WOULD LIKE TO Bridgeport Operators . EXPERIENCED Day shift, standard I celfant working---" oIy&B Lm... . 1800 W. MAPLE ° TROY An equal opportunity employer BUTCHER. EXPERIENCED. Apply In person, Tom's Moot Morkot, 701 CREDIT MAN n needed in Instollmont loon iirtmont With collection and dlt 1 eufhorizellon experience. TxcHiitn ■.........I .. . benefits. Apply Blrmlnah. Bloomfield Bank, 1025 E. Rd„ jlrmlm*i«Bi COOK " Experienced fry work. No- Sunday Woodward and Square Lake Rds. COUNTER SAL E SM AN to equipment dlstrib perienco helpful. Cross. Reply Pont 22, Pontiac. I. Previous sales experience nc personal operating and other longevity benefits. If you hpve High School or bettor and en|oy meeting the public, stop In and discuss Inis dialling Ing career. Mr. Clement. Dsl. MGR., The Singer Co.. Ponfloc Mall Center, Phono M2-03S0. An Equal Opportunity Employer CITY OF OAK PARK Water Supply System Water Meter Repairmen — $3.01 to 53.29 ptr hour plus cost of living'. Liberal fringe bandits. Experience at City Oak Pi City Managar's Ottici CLERK, ADULT, EVERY evening- S to 10 p.m. ova Sun., 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. CARPENTERS - CEMENT MEN, way above scolo, T" “ — * 21 OS or FE 0-3329. ERAMIC Pontiac Daw, FE S ceramic tTTe Installers, “—He area, must have own truck equipment. . Call COLLEGE men qualifications: ibove Average in appearance, workmg girls, or Hum who qualify there it on opportunity for the continuance of part time basis at tha tame earn-•mgs. Car necessary. $200 per / month guaranteed. Interviews by appointment only. Ci“ - - - ’Machine Co., 2501’ Williams Dr., Pontiac. ■ , ■ ■ BIipIrTeNC-e6 BRICK FeTar's Brown Builders.. Ask tor f oppartunlty for t Experienced LICENSED * Real estate SALESMEN WITH PURCHASING EXPERIENCE Coll Mr. George at Ray Peal Estate __ " 074-1*121 LATHE, MILL AND shaper hands. Heady Si hour week. AH fringes. 334-4523. Detailerg. Special Machine 58 Hour Week All Fringe Benefits Stock-Well Company 1-75 at University Dr. 338-7197' . Maintenance Mechanic REQUIRES CITY OF 'AND SUBURBAN I > REFRIGERATION OPERATOR'S LICENSE. 7:30-9 a.m. 332-5231, Experienced pizza man Over 20 years old. Mult be dependable, willing, to work. 12.25 satrt, $2.50 altar Mr. Grass, Ml £3555. EXCELLENT JOB for rofirftd, &emk retired# handicapped or lemi-han dicapped man — needed at once -ambitious man# night work, 3 hrs Approx. 4( til-tSti. *>K for^ob or Jerry*' ° ' iA».P.LO V*1T> ' MAN, Repair 0l^EXI?RiMENtAL -SHEET METAL Fabrication and soma layO Help Wonted Mole PORTER, MIDNIGHT SHIFT, apply Blow's, 1331 W. Maple. Clswson’ PORTER ELIAS B BIG BOY RESTAURANT _ , B» Huron _/ Parts Helper and Driver ftEW CAR DEALERSHIP, GOOD WORK PNG CONDITIONS OAKLAND Chrysler-Plymouth PLUMBING AND HEATING INSPECTOR EMPLOYMENT OFFICE Hudson's -. PONTIAC MALL MATURE MAN FOR meintont LATHE OPERATOR TOOL MAKER THORE5QN McCOSH I swimming pool end fence codes. Must have Michigan Master Plumber's license. Salaried position with full benefit package Including retirement. Starting salary 10.000-$9,000. An equal opportunity employer. CONTACT PERSONNEL TRUCK DRIVf R, • okvtm T RACER LATHS'1 a Cross. Apply In Corn., 2070 ind nr/. _ fl TVTiCHKlCiAN" mmW Industrial Row, for adyaneomont i, mSm. ■ WORK TODAY GET PAID TONIGHT rr material hi Assembling, packaging • v and Common Laborers. ' REPORT' READY'PON" WORK' '*• r». to 0 p. EMPLOYERS Temporaty Service, Inc. FERNDALE 2120 Hilton Rd. REDFORO Ml” ^—* mtAaa> CLAWSON REDFORO 26117 Grand RIW CLAWSON ttl Main* CENTER MNE 1561 E. 10 Milt An 6qM*l Opportunity Employer Not an employment agBncy WANTED: MEN 45 10 55 VOOrS Old lor porter work. Day ana availing — attar 4 p.m. Big ley RoSteuront. 2400 Dixie H wanted: A c c o u n f a n t with manulocturing cost and general accounting experience. Coll Mr. BIRMINGHAM, MICHIGAN. 644- QUALIFIED TOOL Inspector. I i Equal Opportunity . Wanted Immediately Service Station Attendant RADIO-TV SALESMEN also Helpful. Excellent opportunity lor advancement, Apply Grlnnall's. Pontiac, Mall. _...._ ,, _ RETIRED 'MAN W AMT E D for security work. Call 3354141. . RETIRED? Like to supplement your Benefits Include: An Equal Opportunity Employer McGREGOR MFG. CORP. 27B5 Mapla Rd. Troy Managers . 'union Camera Dept. In a firm which offers excellent opportunities for advancement. Applicant must ba mechanically TOY DEPT. Retail Openings WORKI NO MECHANIC WORK! Fringe Benefits and P I RMANENT POSITIONI trustworthy end neat appearing, ask for Ken Johnson at 4934266 or stop Ini Texaco Lake Orion WE WANT A PARTS BUG arts deportment. He'll modern surroundings ho taka prld* In Ihtlr blueprint* would be helpful, but not raqulrtd. Full employee benefits provided, Including Blue Cross, hospitalization, dental benefits, sick and accident disability and life insurance. Apply MS# indlanwood . Road. These represent two excellent career opoprtunities for aggressive men with experience in some phase of retairmandflementrSIF pervienry or odministra- Display I A.M. to 4:30 F.M, Maintenance 5 A.M. to 1:30 F.M. Nursery Stock department os officiant and reliable as a vw, and that'* geing soma, Interested? Call or writ* Mr. Scett, Autobahn Volkswagon 1765 S. Telegraph 22S-4SH WELDERS Mp^w-ir shpp working S3 hours, all benefits. THORESON McCosh Inc. 619-4510 WANTED TRUCK MECHANICS Wanted Money ...........31 Wanted to Rent ........32 Share Living Quarters...33 Wanted Real Estate......36,, k Lost and Found RENTALS OFFERED Apartments—Furnished.......37 j Apartments—Unfurnished ...38 ' Rent Houses, Furnished ....39 j Rent Houses, Unfurnished...40 Property Management....40-A Rent Lake Cottages.........41 , Hunting Accommodations 41-A | Rent Rooms ................42 j Rooms With Board...........43 ! Rent Farm Property.........44 Hotel-Motel Rooms .........45 Rent Stores................46 Rent Office Space..........47 Rent Business Property.. .47-A ] Rent Miscellaneous..........48 TRY IT! ^L33*:!*53:_____ LOST: LITTLE BOYS” Dachshund, ' rs pet/ male BUMRIMPORIIMP 'Oukey," Drayton Woods, reword QR 4-2035, DST: ^ (SPJTZ ^ND^OC^KE R LOST whltii,'"Vicinity1 tween 10 a.m.-S p.m. 542-IS52, • night shift. Part tlm* 12.35 per hour. Howord South Shell, Long Lake and Toltgraph. , FULL AND PART TIME Sorvlce Station attendant, mutt —i good r ‘-SerVlci 18, apply 't Shell REAL ESTATE Sale Houses ...............49 Income Property.............50 1 Lake Property...............51 j Northern Property ......,51-A Resort Property ...........52 Suburban Property .........53 Lots-Acreage ..............54 Sale Farms ................56 Sale Business Property ....57 Sale or Exchange ..........58 OTHER FOLKS DO... j my1 ST: 1/FOX T of Hnmmond Lake or Ly. end MlddleMIt are*. CIVIL ENGINEER. SI7.5W plus fringes and bonus, knowledge of subdivision sowers, water and street designs, givt background, confidential. Reply lo Box C-26 Pontiac. Michigan. DESIGNERS DETAILERS Special Machines 51 HOUR WEEK FULL OR PART TIME, ' tive experience in sales is helpful. Salary, plus incentive, working conditions and employee benefits are excellent. Shipping & Receiving' I Bullai Apply Personnel Dept. < Apply PERSONNEL DEPT. 2ND FLOOR work. Morey’s Golf and GREAT Montgomery Ward Montgomery - ■ Ward LOST: 1/FOX TERRIER, brown end white/ answer to the name "Dan-dy," for further Information, call Survey Engineering Corp. Sulte-A SCM BldO. 23475 Northwattarn Hwy. ... to call on pro-set appointments, exceptional high earnings, for Intarvlow appolntmon* collect. 1-743-0040, I DISHWASHERS, NO nights, Sundew holidays. Maple-Telegraph area. 642-5036- Opportunity Service station neeflng bookkeeping. OaSPand Counly. 'Generous ' salary ' --------- fringe benefit*. Send r Sprint motorcyda, stolen Other folks make money from/Pontiac Press WANT ADS FINANCIAL Business Opportunities.....59 , Sole Land Contracts........60/ Wanted Contracts-Mtges.. .60/ Money to Lend0........... . 6 Mortgage Loans.........,/. .62 MERCHANDISE, If you haven't . . . try-one. Hundreds of others do... daily! fwaps .63 Sale Clothing ..yf.........64 Sale Household Goods.......65 Antiques 65-A Hi-Fi, TV & Radios.........66 Water Softeners......... .66-A For Sale Miscellaneous .... 67 Christmas Trees.........,67-A Christmas Gifts .........67-B Hand Tools-Machinery.... .68 Da4t Yourself..............69 Gamera^ServicB .........70 Musical Goods..............71 Music Lessons............71-A Office Equipment...........72 Store Equipment............73 Sporting Goods.............74 Fishing Supplies—Baits .....75 Sand-Gravel-Dirt ..........76 Wood—Coal-Coke—Fuel ....77 Pets—Hunting Dogs .........79 Pot Supplies-—Service .....79-A Auction Sales..............80 Nurseries .................81 Plants—Trees-vShrubs ....81-A Hobbies and Supplies.......82 FARM MERCHANDISE It pays... Livestock ......... Meats ............... Hay—Grain-Feed ...... Poultry........ Farm Produce......... Farm Equipment....... AUTOMOTIVE .. 83 ,.83-A ...84 ...85 ...86 ...87 Travel Trailers ........ Housetrailers.......... Rent Trailer Space..... Commercial Trailer*.... Auto. Accessories....... Tires—Auto-Truck........ Auto Service ........... Motor Scooters.......... Motorcycles ............ Bicycles ............... Boats—Accessories .... Airplanes Warned Cars-Trucki ... Junk Can-Trucks ...... Used Auto-Truck /Parts New and Used Trucks .. Auto-Marine Insurance Foreign Can............ New and Used Can ... .. 90 ,.90-A ...91 ...92 ...93 ...94 ...95 ...96 ...97 ...99 ..101 ,101-A . ,102, ..1031 ,.Ttf4 ..105 ..106. It's quick, simple and productive. Just look around your home, garage and basement and list the many Items that you no longer use. Hundreds of readers are searching The Press's classified columns daily for just such articles. Perhaps the piggy bank itself would bring more than the change that it holds! Try itl YOU'LL BE GLAD YOU DID! THE PONTIAC PRESS JUST CALL . 334-4981 ■ Help Wanted Male 2 MEN, PART-TIME lew Store opening, S20D UNION LK—WALLED LI -MILFORD Good money for pert time v hr*, per evening. Coll Mr 4-7 p.m. 363-77V1, rtunlly Employer AAA-1 COMPANY NOW HIRING* Positions open for 0 young men, pleasant personal Interview work to start, loading to supervisory positions. No experience necessary. Outstanding training program Must b* high school graduate and available for Itnmedlat* employment, $145 per week to start. Call Mr. Rogers, between 9-2, 335-6146. A PERMANENT PART,time position local vending ---------------- Reliable person naodod tor t . a.m, to 1:30 p.m., Mon.-Frl. Contact PE S-64M or — - _ ROYAL OAK A OVERTISING SALESMAN, ilary plus commission, coll ma 3040 aft. 4._ AFTERNOON SHIFT lachln* operators, motorist hondlers, packagers, general factory workers, REPORT READY FOR WORK 3 PI EMPLOYERS Temporary Service, Inc. FERNDALE 2320 Hlllon Rd. REDFORO 34417 Grand River CLAWSON 44 8. Main CENTER LINE ASSISTANT MANAGER Natdad Immediately. Soma colleg* preferred. 20 yrs. of age 16985 - Blue Cross, Blue T iworas, 391 Monroe-Anh I m fcraVrSS II collect KB 7-7100. from BUMPERS, E X P"ri I E N C E C guorontaod wage, paid holiday 624-4447/ Aft. I, 624-2184. BiRMINGHAMPfeRSONNEL Young man Intorastod In pubi relations. / College helpful, n. nocoisary. Unusual opporlunll adorns i seams __ ,_64t BUS DR I VERS needrd In Birr -.ham, Wyandotte and Roseville “ yr*. 6ood ft- - - automotive, oircrolt and electrical companlas, work includes assembly and tasting or prototype equipment i, contact Tom Mlcliolls, ir apply In parson, Pylas Inc., 21990 Wlxom Rd.. __An Equai Opportunity Employer DESIGNERS D ETAILERS-CHECKERS . DRAFTING TRAINEES Tools-Dyes Machines Body fixtures OVERTIME . BENEFITS Parliament Design Inc. DESIGNERS CHECKERS DETAILERS Special machine-automation Opportunity foradvancomont, fringe banallts, overtime. Steady year round work. CLYDE CORPORATION _ 1800 W. MAPLE RD. TROY ~7* An Equal Opportunity Employor DELIVERY MAN with"own car over II Glonwood, Pontiac DRIVER For full time day, excellent salary, paid vacation, must be over 21 and nave good driving record. Apply Sherman Drugs 15 Milo, Lahsor. DISPLAY MAN Enparianctd In ri design. Or c Apply In It creations, irson (bring brief EMPLOYMENT OFFICE Hudson's PONTIAC MALL DELIVERY H n 1251 Boidwln DRAFTSMAN, o x p o r I a n c 4id aluminum windows and curtalr walls, shop drawing and designs, salary open. Contact C. Davis, Mllco tpaclalllos Inc. 651-1506. DRAFTSMAN Exptr1«nc«d In MlicBllanepui Iron Blua Davis Iron Works, Inc. 389-3373 ___ Equal opportunity .employer _ DAIRY PLANT GENERAL LABOR Borden, Inc. 30550 Stephenson Hwy. _ 447-101 An equal Opportunity Employor Dependable Custodian Need very dependable mart to work custodian shift (or * now ■ • Mart —n in Michigan. Good Call 334-6464. Roedel. __ ENERGETIC MAN TO work evenings, salary and com-mlstjon. Coll lor aupt. FE 4 3574. E-CONOTIrV' Wall Company need! resume — first letter to Pontiac Pros* Box C-7.________________ GAS STATION ATTENDANT. Inquire at Jerry'* Shall, 6495 Orchard Lake Rd. at Maple. GRILL MEN ' For full or part tlm* employment. Good wage*, hospitalization, vaca- *1 opportunity employer , Demo furnished. Vage, the right man can .nakt up to 814,000 per year. APPLY AT RUSS JOHNSON PONTIAC MALL __An equal opportunity employer STATION HELP, managers, shift men and supervisor trainees. Con- Gos or Diesel. Liberal pay, insurance furnished, retirement and full benefits. See Mr. Coe, 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m, Monday thru Friday. GMC Factory Branch Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 Highland Rd., Pontiac. Opportunity Employor. __ STOCK AND DELIVERY, i irmacy, 34 ■ Pontiac. ELIAS BR05. BIG BOY RESTAURANT _____Tolegraph A Huron GAS STATION ATTENDANT, mechanically inclli HARDINGE TRUCKER _____ experience, life Insurance and paid Blue Cross. Apply In person, Benton Corp., 2 8 7 8 Industrial Row, Troy. HANDYMAN FOR rapairing houses, no transp. needed, age no barrier, steady work. FE 4-7079,______ IMMEDIATE OPENING for day man. Apply Waterford Drlva-ln Theatre, 3520 Airport Rd., bet. M0 JANITOR, PART T ovtnlngs, 5 ........ . Ishor Body Plant, Call 362-4300, Terminal Building Maintenance. Detroit. JANITOR WANTED. Rochester area. Night shift. Excellent working condltlpno, good pay, hmnitaii»«ii)n Insurance, must b* Call 821-92*0. Detroit. JANITOR Part tli MEN NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED Salesmen V^REHOUdE MAN, mu«t ba high school graduate with good driving J -------- -*-u|# Apply Tspo- Tronlci Inc., 4413 f Beauty Rita Cablnats, • /44V mgmand at William* Lk. Rd. M-59 Plaza Pleat* apply batwaan I • need prolassional salesmen completely m surance, sick 4— Excellent character. 5— Foil time only. 6— Looking tor advancement. office—15032 Grand Rlvar. Optn 7:30 *.m.-9;30 p.m._____________ MEN FOR CUSTODIAL WORK on aftornoon shift <3:00 to 11:00 P.m.), SJeady work, good (ring* benefits. i, Michigan 40013. Phono 642- Pald Holidays. ■ raxsportatlon nscas.ui r anet Davis Cloonars _______ 647-3009 JANITORS part-time afternoon work, —i, near Wlxom, for more ___________ call Mr. Given* ' In Detroit at 075-7500, any morning. available m Job Security i have had a layoff. ir 10 to 30 >y ot lift w manufacturer a TlOhPw! TUBE CO. 400 WILLIAM McMUNN SOUTH LYON, MICHIGAN __An Equal Opportunity Employer LABORER FOR LANDSCAPING. MA 4-2994______ ~ LATHE OPERATOR, experienced . LATHE OPERATORS VERTICLE MILL HANDS * JOURNEYMAN TOOLMAKERS WELDERS ^ APPLY' \ ARTCO Indlanwood Rd. LIFE INSURANCE SALESMAN $10,000 to $25,000 Dmplete training li and lucrative Bus p lo, OlOtloo per y« y to oan dlllonat income of 825,000 to 130,000 ob-talnabl* In 7 lo 10 !---- and earning possibilities lor high callbro men with our progressive company, as wo — Michigan and Jvnnclng OL. ____ 3aunt, <013-1901. IMPERIAL LIFE OF CANADA call collect 893-7139, Mon.-Fr MAN MECHANICALLY Indlnod tor lurnaco work, pip* titling, air conditioning. Will train man. Orchard Lake Rd. 402-3100. MACHINISTS, up-graders' trainees needed, 44 nr. wk. Automation. .......... -jyblrd _______________Wait Rd., Wall- Like. I OVER II FOR tro* apartmen Cell 333-4054.__ MECHANICS Cars and truck*, also helpors. Apply KEEGO SALES 8, SERVICE ^**a orchard Lake Rd., Khso paint company, unlimited Management Trainees Manaoemeni tr a maces to staff local offices# wa will: Guarantee i selected with this uqique MACHINE ASSEMBLERS • EXPERIENCED -Dev shift, standard bandflls, *i ctlftnt working conditions. CLYDE CORP. tHM" Aeple ual Opp An Equal Opportunity Employer MAN FOR PRUNING TREES/Ml 4 — " O. Brown.. Stt Purdy SI Birmingham. __ Needed at Once I Young, Aggressive ■ Experienced Auto Salesmenl who intends to tarn top wages, hospitalization, protlt sharing, (ring* benefits Including Demo end Bonusl Apply In person only, to Mr. Burmalster, grimaldi eUlCKOPEL, Pontiac, 314 OPENINGS part time. _Yolograph. Clark Stotlon, OFFICE BOY cai company needs recent I chodl graduate tor ( lutlos. No typing, o -1 o I PLUMBER, .PONTAC AREA, must Cal'* TPu*o«*k Ba!hrg«fi.jflt3Sn, Remodallng Co., at $82*68009 b$t. 10 thg following d MEN'S CLOTHING FURNITURE /IRES AND AUTO ACCESSORIES wnero professional salesmen men* excellent compensation. Our company benefits Include • tin* profit shoring plan. Apply PERSONNEL DEPT. 2ND FLOOR Montgomery . Ward STOCK CLERK FOR.--------------------- Industrial parts and equipment distributor. Soma... experience helpful, trine# . bjngflts. Pontiac Motor Parts. 1014 University Dr, TURRET/ LATHE operator/ Hx-poriencod and-or trainee withitem; experience, life Insurance and paid {Jin* co'rp* i , Industrial Row, TRAINEES TO learn extrusion P 1. Enloy talking to paepl* 2. Hava a need to oam more money 3. Willing to atari Immediately 4. Hava good transportation 5. Service obligation completed For personal Interview phone, OS-5003, bat, t and 4.______________ Help Wanted Female 7 1 WAITRESS, DAYS, ft Apply Ricky's 8t» Wo A MATURE lady ter typing am, general attic* wdrk, comfortable surroundings with pleasant people. Write Post Office fox 232, Pontiac VE NEED EXPERIENCED: Secrete rtos Stenos and Dictaphone Opri. Typists — Jr., sr„ Slat. Teletype Obfi. Clerks (10 key Adding Mach.) '— -----‘ir Oprs. Keypunch O Help Wanted Male COMMUNICATIONS ' ELECTRONICS TECHNICIANS i Western Railroad, reoulres electronics tochnlclans . .. jndWf“:-‘ railroad o _ ixcollont* opportunity "lOr"e 'quolitljd ’parson. Company m^co*.*1 surgical* enp* hwlt«l°hoiwflt»,|>pluop Wajn-contact "orand include tree medical, surgical and suranc% paid holidays and vacalk An Intarastad and licensed MHHSm 40226 or call 942-2260. GRAND TRUNK WESTERN RAILROAD Help Wanted Male 6Help Wanted Malf WICKES EXCELLENT ADVANCEMENT OPPORTUNITY FOR SALESMEN AND WAREHOUSE MEN WITH |3ACtfGR0UND IN 6 LUMBER • PLUMBING ■ 6 HEATING • ELECTRICAL • KITCHENS AND WINDOWS ALSO FOR EXPERIENCED • WAREHOUSE SUPERINTENDENT • INVENTORY CONTROL SPECIALIST I mm LUMBER AND BUILDING SUPPLY CALL ast^i'leTvlBii^i^NB 4 pon l INTERVIEW APPOIMTMiNT 1 V .if :sl B—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, APRIL 8. ltKIO JSgLTi i 7 llcky's It tell'y*? Itew"AVON' ACCOUNTING CLERK, axpartenced 5«JWB StTRochostar.' ALBERT'S Apply in poreon, ask t CAREER AAA-1 MINDED YO..H ’. SINGLE over II to ASSIST ...LGER IN LOCAL BRANCH of COAST TO COAST TER NATIONAL CH..W. ORGANIZATION, THE RICHARDS CO. INC. You must bo able to ...d APPEARANCE a must. Learn brand Identification technlquei flea management procedures, sc promotlons, eales, ate. STARTING SALARY per mo., to thoi* -* $625 After 3 day Indoctrination c Automatic pay raise and all pony benefits. CALL MR. BAILEY tor personal Interview 962-4344 * BEAUTICIAN, pair time, PE 4-0020. BABY SITTER, 5 NIGHTS, vicinity Une.lt.l EILMil Help WBEf«d FbiwbIb .,- 7 EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER NEEDS CLERK STENO for typing, shorthand, general office work, In quiet suburban location. Apply Sweat L-35, 735 S. ajj§| id. r— EXPERIENCED WAITRESSES grill cooks, top starting pay, vacation plus Christmas a Apply Paul’s Hamburgers, 33 Telgraph, or cell 334-7437. XPERIENCED WAITRESS wanted lor weekend work/ Call 651-1300 and »»k for/ Clubhouse,__7, EXPERIENCED WAITRESS for pin. EXPERIENCED GRILL cook, ---‘(ends, 451-1500 ask for < 1 • »■ . FOR CLEANING Bel « R»«»riv. Andre Beauty Sa ¥. FE 5-9257. Girl over 18 To work for bakery and oration. Some register qulred, dependable, *’ U start, must have _,___ Call Mr. Gregg, Ml >338. GRILL COOK DAY OR NIGHT SHIFT IMMEDIATE OPENINGS lining period, 5 day h overtime available, _____ si sick pay, llfa insurance vacation and holiday In person or call 334 WITH APTITUDE FOR FIGURES PERMANENT - BENEFITS IS MILES AND CROOKS AREA SEN® RESUME TO BOX C-29 r PONTIAC. MICH. BABY SITTER, LIVE li I Saturday 4432 or aaz-9542.___________ COMPUTER PROGRAMMER itlon, fnstaMaSton a! system. Day shift openln established company, good conSitione, desirable local cethmt company — Pe....... I or wrlta hlman Corp., Mile), Troy, °Arr’eqi5i Opportunity employer CASHIER-PART TIME ._________I Obit. 2S65 W. Maple 430(4. *45-7000. DAYS AND NIGHTS t days or 3 night* a weak. All amptayo* benefit* ELIAS BROS. BIG BOY RESTAURANT Telegraph A H— CAR HOPS sd part time. Apply AAW i tfl > _ Nursing Home. E uuBaunvup«.« ■ altowanct. 442-7900. wjra? m ■ Chief. 3 CASHIER-TYPIST Excellent opportunity for lady Interested In meeting i good working conditions starting salary. No Sat Contact Mr. Lea. 3334)421. CASHIER HOSTESS Day Shift. Blue Cross, Lila Insurance and Sick Day Banaflts. Apply In parson only: TED'S PONTIAC MALL ALTERATION LADY ■rt time, must ha experience* i. 6. Shop, T 12 MUo and CASHIERS e tor night posh --ndltion, to 3:30 p.m. FB 3-8779. DAY BARMAID, DISHWASHER AND SALAD GIRL wonted tor full time employment Apply In person only. Frank' .. lull or part-time. Russ' Countr Drugs, 4500 Elisabeth Leko Rd. Cental chairside assistant Healthy Industrials person who I good with hands. Like* to hoi people. Good pay, fringe benefit) Union Lake area. EM 3-3228. * DRY CLEANERS COUNTER glr o get marrl it glrle Is quit-id, even thoc -*■ FE 5-1641. DISHWASHER EM 3-4)21 EXPANSION 'REQUIRES EXPERI-enced girl for builder* olllc*. Qualified In Cost Accounting, Typing and Phono work. Salary EXPERIENCED waitress, m.....I shift, no Sundays or holidays. Mople-Tologroph oroa. 442-5134. HOUSEKEEPER, LIVE IN, 5 days. It HOUSEKEEPER, LIVE IN, 30-30, motherlees home, 1 child welcome, — * — or all day Sat. and HOSTESS m experience necessary. II by 2 p. n. 335-6821 Dining private pleasant _ l OPPORTUNITY In Rochester, ..torihand and typlna. 1500. SSS Personnel: <51-0033. KITCHEN KEEP YOUR FULL TIME to wile and mother. Full time part time work. Free I wardrobe. No collecting, delivering. We train, car phone necessary. Queans '..... Evening and Sat. 411-0386. anytime 673-3130. Help Wanted Ftmale 7 MATURE LADY TO GET 3 Children ready for school, etc; . Near Williams and Elisabeth Lk. Rd. EM 3-5054 attar 5 p.m. MEDICAL ASSISTANT NEEDED for full time employ-mint, In Intornlefs office, Beaumont area. Must bo axpartenced, typo, ond hove good knor“—“ all Insurance forme. Call p.m. *33-3371., V MATURE GIRL tor half typing end general ofllco - ... our- office. Mall Information to Post Ottlco Box 65. Pontiac, j Help Wanted Ftmala Hyghettl WAITRESS, JOE’ 103> W. Huron « WAITRESS WANTED, ..... . stouront,' 714 Woodward, Apply nereon._______ WANTED CASHIER, Perlenc* In Billing. ■B£s °r"a 71 Salts Help Mali-Ftmalt 8-A WAITRESS, doye Need > Part Time Work?. BUFFETERIA II and part! tlm* eel CASH OFFICE 2ND FLOOR Montgomery .. Ward PONTIAC MALL An equal opportunity employer PART TIME CASHIER, Mon.-Frl Cell 335.3130 aft. 3 P.m. Higher starting rates with 35 c condition, steady work" INSTASET CORP. 1330 PIEDMONT ST. T gateon 1-75 and Stephenson t PIN MONEY PLUS! 10 hours par week earns 050 to $75. Hours flexible. Neat, porsonaf* woman over 35. Call 338-05 between 13 noon and' 3 p.m. I Interview appointment.___ RELIABLE BABY SITTER, 5: - |B lo 3:30 p.m. FE 5-1760. Wickes EXCELLENT ADVANCEMENT OPPORTUNITY FOR WOMEN WITH EXPERIENCE. Full Time Cash Register Operator Part Time. Cash Register Operator Part Time Cleaning Lady Permanent Employment with Well Established, Expanding firm in existence for 113 years. Excellent Fringe Benefit Program. All Replies Held Confidential. An Equal Opportunity Employer. Wickes Lumber & Building Supply ROCHESTER. MICHIGAN CALL 053-5001 BETWEEN * and 4 FOR INTERVIEW APPOINTMENT. RECEPTIONIST-SECRETARY Raal Estate offlca hfJb opening lot woman over 35 with pleasant ! telephone voice. Must be accurate 'typist and like to moot the public For appointment, call 674-3333. KEYPUNCH OPERATORS Temp. Assignments, all shifts CALL JEAN JOHNSTON 360-3030 American Girl 10376 Woodwind ot 7 Milo CITCHEN HELP. Apply In persor Four Corners Restaurant* coi Walton and Perry.___________ KITCHEN HELP Grill Cooks and Bus Girls RECEPTIONIST hslpfSi. Front desk position. Stolningor, 334-Ws.' nd light keeping ----- ----- Cross, phld life Insurance and paid vacation. Apply Dempsey Key Punch Service, ' 6434 S. Oort Hwy., Brand Bli_________ Mich. 604-7151 or 604-5131, day and LADY FOR SEWING Good working conditions Paid holiday* and vacation* ______ I__________ ...... Math Chemistry for now pooltlon quality control. Light typing t St., Rochester, Michigan.' I filing. :o.. Mill LADY OVER ... ... | waitress work, nights, perlenc* necessary, will t SALAD GIRL AND KITCHEN help, full tlma ava. work, Roccot, 5171 Dixie HWy., Drayton Plains. . i ■ out. FE 18487. MEDICAL ASSISTANT, 3 year more experience, medication, lection, routln* lab, typing 6... ra»*.t Reply Box C-34, Pontiac SHIRT PRESS OPERATOR, Ibldor MATURE WOMAN fi evenings per : 8 at Simms. 1 SITTER 5 day* oi 5 after 5 p.m all day____________________ MIDDLE-AGED WOMAN to manage ----II office, must hav full rlodga ot accounts payable, ivable and payroll, 5 day * p pay end fringe benefits. Ir. Marcora at FE 3-»114. MATURE WOMAN for counter ______ grill work, apply In person at Carousel, 1385 N. Perry acros from Madison Jr, Heights. NEED EXTRA MONEY? Work on days available -DAY AND AFTERNOON SHIFTS REPORTJIBADY FOR WORK We pay daily EMPLOYERS Temporary Service, Inc. FERNOALB , 3330 Hilton Rd. REDFORD 38617 Orand P’— CLAWSON 65 8. CENTER LINE 1561 E. 10 Help Wanted M. or F. 8 Help Wanted M. or F. 8 BLUE CROSS-BLUE SHIELD HAS OPENING DUTIES—General office, including telephone contacts with public. Must be accurate typist, somo office experience. SALARY—Open depending upon qualifications. Regularly, scheduled merit adjustments. * BENEFITS—Blue Cross-Blue Shield paid in full, paid vacations, sick leave, 5 day week, 8:30-5*00, excellent working environment. • Call- 681-1222 MR. COLE FOR INTERVIEW MONDAY-FRIDAY AN EQUAL OPtoRT^IITY EMPLOYER m Retail - Dept. Managers Wa hava carear opportunities capabla woman who hov* strong retail administrative management background. |y hav* managed a oe— ’specialty, drug, and need ■ cnaumg Ilka to folk to you.^HapMi Includes Salary plus .Incentive, nual earnings rang* from 55,30 88,000. Excellent employe* bon-Including profit sharing plan, ply In person or *—d — -p.A.r. Montgomery Ward 40f N. Telegraph PONTIAC MALL Equal Opportunity Employer Interesting posl- SALES LADIES Full and part-time with si perlence, must bo over 31 In parson, I Mali; 13 Secretary- Receptionist Typist Oakland and Macomb Countlai. Whir earnings. VALUET REALTY, FE -*S»L ^ ______________. REAL ESTATE — ”OP«NIN-Oakland University. tiding pi p.m. and 7 p.rfi. / ITS TOWER i} l ' 1 _____4. SAGINAW WAITRESS, FULL tlm*. *1.65 par — hour to start,i mails and Uniterm*. , . j(...,|,L furnished, employe discounts, paid tmploynieill Agencies vacations, pension plan. Blue Cross I ' - - paid after 13 months, paid-up eaoc iin Insurance, tlmd and a halt tor Up Sunday t3 noon to 5 p.m. Apply In * person to S. 5. Kroig* Co., Pontiac Mall, Saa Mrs. Kays. An Equal Opportunity E WOMAN WITH CAR tor | .— —.. split hours, go GENERAL OFFICE: Office* needs gal lor light -typing and tiling. Neat appaaranc* ana goad phono vole* will-land you this lob. 8330. Carol King, 334-3471, Sneillng and MANAGER TRAINEES: A It* In management position In 2 years with 810,000 salary. '*5,720 training wage. Full benefits and this company PAYS YOUR. FEE. Call John Shaw, 334.3471, Sneillng and Snail- ORDER DESK SALES] cam. <-«i|eg* Will h*|p YOU ..... Ability to graep things Income Tax Service For Want Ads Dial .334-4981 19 Wanted Misctllansous 30 Wanted Real titata 36 >, WANTED: 30-30 GALLON aquarium 1 High Ian wayXant Moving and Tracking 22 p. l°.bk tors, ^uo formation contact 8 RECEPTIONIST Enloy an exciting career < with the public, some typ qulred. North suburban ari $450 to $600 SECRETARIES It you have typing .•Kills,-let us show ,w ■"«-. tee paid positions In North INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL WO S. woodward, B’hem. 443-12* $450 Up GIRL FRIDAY Creative and administration position* good typing skills* excellent advancement potent! * INTERNATIONAL I__________ I860 S. Woodward, B‘ham. 642-8268 $500 Up MANAGER-TRAINEES PEOPLE GREETER Fun lob with typing, public contact, busy spot with a top Cd. Call International Personnel, 011-1100. 1000 w. Huron. _______ Personnel Consultants MEN AND* WOMEN Mature? Looking for a now a bright future? Positions in personnel department now op* - Full training given. Beautiful si roundings, compensation potent outstanding. Call Mr. Johnson m lor Interview. I ntarnatlon Personnel, 681-1100, IMP W. Huroi PLUSH SPOT Llkt figures? Type some? Br beginner will like this lob. Do* . "" ---- International York, In txd sporting furnllura. L a a y I.. ..__________________ I 36. Will pay ges. Reply Pon- WANTED: COTTAGE an Lotus * Prase, Bex C-10. ..Mecedejl Lake let 2rwke, of Jul Painting and Decorating 23 ^^T^oTifoTtAGerfirst 2 we*i ATTENTION: :c*esorlet, reasonable. *82 Wnnted to Rent FORMER PONTIAC raildant* > . — —“”i* (within —“ ’ontiacl, H eSiltect 07ti4ITafAnn Arber. ianga |or TWO -BEDROOM h , ratal. *26-ERIO la estimates. 336-5010 LADIES DESIRE INTERIOR 0 Transportation YOUNG MAN WITH goad I references and good dog wish least, rant, or lias* with oi furnishad 1 or 2 bedroom laketront property. Please call Frink Levinson, 031-1186 aft. 1:30 p.m, Share Living Quarters 33 1 MILLION. _ acreage outright. W* will give you caih lor veur equity. Our eppraieer 1e awaiting your *674-2236 y McCUI^OUGn REALTY ^Hyland Rd. (M*St), WORKING GIRL to share I same, over 21. 363-0063. NEW CedllteCjlte New VOrk.|WOMAN --tQ~ Wanted Household Goods 291 INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 100 S. Woodward, B’harri. 642-826* $600 DRAFTING TRAINEES Up to 6 months experience, excellent opportunity with top com- $625 Up SALES TRAINEES Wonderful opportunities with top companies, new car furnished yearly plus expenses. Guaranteed base pay plus commission or bar YOUNG WOMEN !r W Immediate employment. Excellent earnings for those who qualify. No typing required. For Interview, Help Wanted M. or F. SHARP ADVERTISING JR part tlm* work. Aria 363-7141, “ ADMITTING CLERK, pareonallt and light typing, $320. Call *— Rook, 332-*iS7, |---------- I ARE YOU IN A Rut? Call Mr. Foley. YORK REAL ESTATE, OR 4-0363. BANK TELLER TRAINEES- FULL OR PART TIME Experience not necessary but must be over 21 years of age. If you enjoy working with people and desire a rewarding and satisfying position ASSISTANT TO DENTIST: This nice boss Is looking for « sharp go-get-tar type parson who is varsatll* and adapts wall to variety. 5433. Lynn,. Anders, 334-2471, Sneillng and| -Sneillng. _ BOYS-GIRLS: * '— Candy. Fori COMMUnIW NATIONAL BANK ao hi. Saginaw, Pontiac el opportunity ampleyar o Pontiac Press Box YORK REAL ESTATE 67441363. BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED — AH Positive. AH RH Nag. with positive factors -nag., B-neg„ AB-neg. MICHIGAN COMMUNITY BLOOD CENTER I Pontiac _ FE 6-9947 1342 Wide Track Dr„ w. ..................... ,..iplgymant. Rad Bob Farms, 1955 Ray Rd., Oxfor" 620-I790. FREE CLASSES Man or women wanted. Earn while you warn. W* hav* S offices, salespeople who can't b* wr* Call today. MILLER BROS. REALTY 333-7156 A national rapidly gi.....I .... porting and manufacturing company naads two good typist* who ar* looking ter challenging and Interesting work. You will work In a |----iful modern air conditioned of- Pald hospitalization, vacation lolktays. Ago la not Important, lyar. Apply SatiTrdayf^MMi . No cells plaaa*. FEEL LIKE LIFE Is by? Call Mr. Foley, ’ est/— mu JANITORS, full or part time. Trot area. Apply Monday, 711S E Davison, Detroit.___ JOB WITH A future. Call MrTFotay YORK REAL ESTATE, OR 44)363. GENERAL LOCK CO. 344 W. Sheffield TOUR INCOME .... ir. Foley, YORK REAL ESTATE. _R 4-0363. NEEDED FULL TIME Real *i Salesmen, with or without parlance, will tram. No llml Income It you're willing to « Interviews dally. Call 674-310S | SEWER Experionced FULL TIME AND FART TIME MANY FRINGE BENEFITS. SAKS FIFTH AVE. TROY > / Big Baavar at Coolldg* TEACHERS -7th and 8th j Math backgrou School, Claws SECRETARY TO manager of stereo- m, fenos-Secretaries Typists-Key Punch General Office Work CALL MANPOWER 332-8186 .... TRACER and collector wanted. 646-4427, SECRETARY WANTED, prafarably medical vocabulary but -tlal. Progressiva salary to experience and pai--------- Reply Pontiac Prat* Boh C-33. SECRETARY PuH jIm* opsnlngf — - secretary, gjjj |____________n Ingham, An Equal Opportunity Empleyar *T ahortl Bloomfield Wool Presser Experienced necessary ! Good working conditions ■ WAITRESS, FULL tlma, n Harbor Bar, 4S24W30. Waitresses, T Friday .... Saturday, t Saturday only, nWjti, no experience necessary. Apply, Ip ar»«as,‘u£i'is.‘Mff REAL A SHARP AGGRESSIVE Young girl ter credit department, $300. Call Pal Cary, 332-9157, Associates Personnel.________________ * SECRETARY Is needad tods* Blue Chip firm. Typing bi -dlately _. ... Davis, 334-2471, Sneillng a ACCOUNTANT Immediately, degi __1, Unusual room I. 810,800. I EXCELLENT MANAGER . Ion, fee paid, $6,000. Call Kathy king, 332-9157, r-—■-*— "---- work - grading clients, phon* and light typing notch company. 8350. K 334-3471, Sneillng and Snail R EC EPTTon I ST -Doctor, r iSSrTJli: l^it^l.nni*M!| Miscellaneous Sneillng and Sneillng^_____ COPPER BI RECEPTIONIST: LIGHT typing and .lerters' end A little >ale« Moat-lance will land i’J . .5 .?n“ 1 PIECE OR HOUSEFUL. FE 5-7933 _________ HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR good' -furnllura and appliances. Or what hav* you? B & B AUCTION 5009 Plxl* Hwy._______OR 3-2)l7 I 30 A, BETTER CASH DIAL ’ All cash tor home*. Fontlafc ar Drayton Plaint area. In - daparrmem. YORK REAL ESTATE TRAIN. nrm naaas you.'' 5303. Davit 334-2471, Sneillng am | OR 3-5049. Wanted Real Estate 1 to 50 HOMES. LOTS, AC8L..., PARCELS,1 FARMS, BUSINESS PROPERTIES, AND LAND CONTRACT. WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. opdyke , FE 5-01451 Urgently ME *-............ EAGE Divorcee-Foreclosure? Free Appraisal 30 Day' Listings LAUINGER SALES CAREER Investigate a better chip corporation, ' Ing now. Call I t. Personnel, 601-1100, I H 111 I " Quick BUSIHESS"*- SERVICE Seeking Employment? NEED HELP? hava |obs larnatipnal Personne SERyiciv ■' Dressmaking, Tailoring Aluminum Bldg. Items i'ALOMINUM SIDING, WINDOWS!l-A ALTERATIONS, SUITS, COATS,-PORTRAITS: roofing installed by "Superior,'' dresses, 335-4207. Mrs. Sebaske. Call FE 4-3177 anytime. ... ALTERATIONS, ALL TYPES, KNIT MOBILE HOVE SKIRTING, awn- drosses, leather coats. 682-9533. logs, enctetures, any size. 721-8752. j petty JO'S dressmaking. Photography SUPER GAL Work and hav* fun at tha tar tlm*. Light typing and good mi SPI ability and phone personality. C Ity International Personnel, 6S1J1I .., —Upon.- ____rany na 87,500. Call Kathy King, Atsoclalas Personnel. _ ARE YOU AN EX-SERVICEMAN! looking tor a future? 87.000, call Angle Rook, 332-9157, Associates SWITCHBOARD: This fast growing company will completely train mature girl with a desire to learn. $350. Full benefit!. Kay Roy, 334-2471, Sneillng and Sndtllng._ TAKE A TRIP. skills Swn"%uaMfyr' YOU. ' tiling C ;• 682-506 BUSINESS SALES Soma axparlanca In talai? National company hat openings tor young salesmen to coll on companies and businessman. Call International Personnel, 601-1100. HIM W. Huron. COLLEGE GRADUATES o experience necessary. Training' program In all fields of buslheas.j Call International Personnel* l*' 1100. 1080 W. Huron.______ COMPANY REP. Call International ________0. 1080 W. Huron. Instructions-Schools 10 REGISTER NOW! Day and avaning classes Semester beginning April 22 STENOGRAPH (machine shorthand) TYPEWRITING GREGG SHORTHAND LAW MATH ENGLISH OFFICE PRACTICES AND ETC. MICHIGAN SCHOOL OF BUSINESS 16 E. Huron______________332-5098 Work Wanted Mala ■A CARI small. B 0-3529 01 __________ R CARPENTER, large or small lobs, colling tll*> paneling and recreation rooms a speciality. 602-5U7, BIRCMETT ANTENNA SERVICE Also repair. 338-3274, ~ Asphalt Paving____________ 1>A, Auburn Heights Paving 'i courts, parking loft, -ays. Guaranteed, FE 5-69S3. OR 3-0326. ______________ A. G. Kosiba Asphalt New drlvoways, parking lots, resurfacing, worn out cement, old asphalt. License, bonded, and tree estimates. „ >R 3-6310 ________OR >3774 i-A-A ASPHALT Co. Paving and sealing. Froe_estimates. FE 5-5328. - aadco asphalt Paving Co.* licansad and insured. 'ret estimation_____ 332-4631 ASPHALT DISCOUNT Spring Special .:e-Cap 18 cents a sa. It. Free Est. FE 5-1107 __________________ ■ asphalt paving Residential and commardal Hons and weddings. 674-3704, Drywall L WORK Complete. 435- Eavestroughing M & S GUTTER CO. LICENSED-BONDED Complete eavestroughing service Free est. 673-6066, 673-5662 Electrical Services MCCORMICK ELECTRIC, resident!) and commarlcal, alterations, an remodeling, 24 hour service, ova 20 years In business. 334-9191 Excavating Ml BULLDOZING* Finish Gradim our prompt service, root. Varvilles Studios. 334.3802. ............ Plastering Service CONDRA PLUMBING 8, HEATING Work guaranteed. Free atllmat ONTIAC ASPHALT CO. PE 4-0334 DOMINO CONST. CO. irlvewaya, parking loti. Llceni contractors. Free ast. 674-3955. L-t CHAIN LINK FENCE, Installed 338-0297 or 674-39611 BROWN ROOFING CO. W* , I Fr** **'■ E' Robert Price Roofing : Hot Tar Roofing, Shingles Free tsllmae* FE 4-1024 TOWN AND COUNTRY ROOFING Company, free ast. and repairs. 674-1933, We Will Not Be Undersold , shingles, repairs, 24 hrs. w, FE 3-1725._________ Fast sarvlca. 651-0300. ELECTRONIC TECH. Tralnaot needad to Install and test equipment, If you have milltar axparlanca or electronic tchoollni you may qualify. Call Internatloni Personnel 601-1100. 1060 W. Huron. EX-SERVICEMEN Worrl* about your tutor*? Wi apociallM In Placing -—— International Personnel 1000 W. Huron. EXECUTIVE Management Trainees Represent major corporations top •alorvy full benefltB. Call - tlonal Personnel 60M100. Call NEED REPAIR NOW? No waiting necessary Call FI 2-4016 Parking Loti* Driveway_____ Basement Waterproofing Art BASEMENT WOtO estimates, call 651-WATER PROOFING, ------*-Td. 17 »r. », Call Collect ATTENTION* TRUCK OWNERS III deliver truck or van to contr New York, In exchang* I transporting (urnllur*. Laavlr APRIL 26. Will pay aa*. Rap Pontiac Pratt, Box C-10.___ BUMPING PAINTING, ruat, 850-8100 deductable. FB 3-6064. CARPENTER WORK am all kinds. FE 4-6337. ■spendable il yaa Call 862-0995 siding of FIREMAN would lTkb lob, 4 days a weak, axpar 602-1650. LIGHT HAULING AND BASEMENT cleaned, cell anytime, 338-0094. PLUMBING SERVICE and rapi Work Guarantaad. 335-3453, Work Wanted Female FIGURE FLAIR Interesting |ob tor gal with math aptitude. Call International Personnel, 661-1100. 1000 W. Huron. FRIDAY GAL Brit* gal with accurate typing to carry tha ball. Phone and recep- . tion work. Call International Personnel, 681-1100. 1000 W. Huron. GENERAL OFFICE: Don’t lust ait thara and think about getting a good job. "Lot's go." Taka this tor Instance. 5400 and FEE PAID. Full banaflts. Kay Roy, 334-2471, Sntll-Ing and Sneillng. Manufacturing an extra Representative Establish industrial fnd commercial no overnight* company R 3-8516. EWORK, no fhird Street* 332- Building Services-Supplies 13 ^ 20'x20' GARAGE, S975 amanl work, additions, 635.3130 BENSON LUMBER CO. "WHERE QUALITY, VALUE AND SERVICE STAND OUT rprooflng* i BRICK OR STONE* w guarantee* EM 3-687?._____ Floor tiling CUSTOM FLOOR COV linoleum* formica* tile. 741 N. Perry. 338-6120. Sand—Gravel—Dirt SAND, GRAVEL, ROAD GRAVEL, FILL sand, ate mason sand, raaa. prices, f delivery, 673-0049 or 33S-B5MT Septic Tank Sarvlca BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER ..... Boats. Marc, outboard 8. stern Dr. 1345 S. Woodward at Adams___ Building Modernization ALUMINUM SIDING, masonry work, louhdatlons, storm window*' aluminum guitars, rooting, pro-cost itona, additions, attics, “ * * rooms, violations corrected, merclal remodeling. 332-7049. HOME IMPROVEMENT ond repair tree estimates. 482-4926.____ ‘KITCHENS, MODIFIED or Modernized." Formica *<«■"•«• ♦“« ond cabinet*. 852-1224. GARDEN PLOWING grading, ready ter any location, reasonable. Clarkston, 425-4073.___________________ ' insect Spraying BOWEN AERIAL SPRAYING. no!t?(jlT/slit-j .......| CLARKSTON ROOFING, onow plowing. 473-9397. SNOW PLOWING Rtsldontlal Commercial ------ 052-27” seed, | ~ Spraying Service Dalby 8. Sons Tree Sar Now—Dormant Sprays FE Taxidermy TAXIDERMY __________673-3336 Tree Trimming Service 4!a-i TREE AND atump rtmoval, frag Landscaping a retaining M,338-831L . State it progran IS S. Talat *8S! THE NEW HOT SHOPPE CAPETERIA OAKLAND MALL Immadlat* openings ter f for housewives, 11:30 shllf, good wages, best bonofffs.' Apply ^tet Shoppe Caff tori*, 490 W. 14 Rd„ Troy. " -M Sales Hglp Male-Fsmale 8-A stock. POWER SAWS 7" only .. / . *819.9 BIRCH FLUSH DOORS ONLY S 4.1 MEDICINE CABINET, RED. 844.1 Birmingham. Irving Kay's. JSS_______________________ MODEL HOME SALESPERSON Afi excitingly beautiful now i plus gonoroui floor tlm* of tl tic* will atour* you on oil high In roof estate earnings I hav* the ability *° together. Ganaroc. program pjp* pleasant- worklr conditions. Call Mr. Warden at TWO for Interview. SHOE SALESMAN Womens Shoes MANY FRINGE BENEFITS SAKS FIFTH AVE. TROY * Big Baavar at Coolldo* APPLY IN PERSON Personnel Office Office Position $6,200 portunity* excellent benefits. Call Mr. Lewis. 353-6500 CHOATE Is CHOATE Now in Town? High School* college* or sarvlca over? I can help you find your bast |ob. I work at III Call George 353-6588 CHOATE li CHOATE HIGH SCHOOL GRAD Interesting |ob with a fine company. Excellent Chance to advance. $5408. Act now. Call Bill Adafris. 353-6500 CHOATE Is CHOATE ADJUSTER TRAINEE Growing wost sld* firm. Groat advancement. Cor oiler training. Don't delay. Call Mr. Lewis. 351-6500 CHOATE 5, CHOATE TRAINEES ACCOUNTING CLAIMS FINANCE MANAGEMENT RETAIL SAFETY CALL ANY DEGREM7.500 Draft exempt ter. tfilo AAA com pony ottering lob opportunity to nl-ctllbor man. Call Ai Wood, . 353-6500 CHOATE I. CHOATE ASSISTANT CHIEF AUDITOR Travel 30 Porcont, Homs weekends. Determination Is prime foetor>ll0,000 plus car. Call AI personol accomplishment. Voi Satisfy ing. Coll Mr. Steen. 353-6500 CHOATE t CHOATE . SYSTEMS ANALYST » CHOATE <■ CHOATE 1AILROAD TIES PICKED . UP NLY ........ ..........S 3.50 M. A. BENSON COMPANY Lumber ond Bulldar Supplies PHONEt 334-2521 549 N. Saginaw ___OPEN 0 to 5—Saturday* to 13 Business Service 1! Carpentry K CARPENTRY and roofing, fi estimates. 334-2079. MA 5-4262 -1 INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR Family rooms, rough or flnlst dormers, porches, recr.**h rooms, kltchons, bethroon licensed. Rots. Call after ■ 682-0648._____• __________ CARPENTRY INTERIOR FINISH, kltcheni panel-Inn, 40 year experience, FE 2-1235. CARPENTRY AND CEMENT work, tree estimates. 052-5252,____ OME REPAIR. Paneling, painting, rooting, gutter. FE 4.8170, ■ PLYWOOD SHELVING Carpeting CARPET INSTALLATION. Also go buys on carpets. 423-1285._ Carpet Cleaning CARPeTS CLEANED. For I A-Z CONTRACTING AND REPAIR LICENSED ROOFER, puaranltt ' ‘ mm Sm j TYPING* Mlmeograt POW^R RAKING. WNd cuttlny^aj Income Tax Sarvlca 1 BENJAMIN X. BACKUS 23 YEARS EXPERIENCE 332-1328 339-1695 K*l £ 6 M I ” roosontblo 1*B fail clean ups, i _spraylng, 473-3992. COMPLETE LANDSCAPING ___Licensed Nursery man,-602-7050 LANDSCAPING, Retaining wall tree cutting, 334-2182. nlng. Lawn Maintenance ups. Fertilizing. Free estimates, 363-6671. Wa taka prlda In our work DALES LAWN CARE, groat Cl _ ■"« fertilizing, 693-2760. LEAVES RAKED and hauled. cutting. Rotefllllne, 334-1030. BLOCK AND CEMENT work. . tl»C. 391-1173._____________ CEMENT, BLOCK AND REPAIR, 673-7370 Of UL 3-473)._______ CHIMNEYS, PORCHES ond camant HAULING AND RUBBISH, Nam# your price. Anytime. FB *-0093. LIGHT HAULING AND moving. Reasonable. 682-7516.__ LIGHT HAULING REASONABLE RATES. 338-1266. LIGHT HAULING and odd iobt. FE 5-4336_________ LIGHT HAULING and delivery. FE 4-1041.____________________ LIGHT HAULING OF any kind, odd lobs. FE 4-3347. .__________ LIGHT HAULING, BASEMENT and garages cleaned, OR 3-0067. LIGHT HAULING. BASEMENTS garages cleaned. 674.1242. LIGHT _ AND HEAVY TRUCKING ■<71* Moving, Storage Work. . GUINN'S CONST. CO. 334-7677 or 391-3671_ CONCRETE FOOTINGS, walls, fief —k and masonary. .036-3517 or! F lELDSTONEWOR K 673-3336 Ceramic Tile CERAMIC TILE, SLATE ond marble work, mortar or Mastic Installation area contractor. Coll 007-4144, jSm polntmento ovollabl*. Call i RETURNS arad, guarantaad In writing, ar without appta. Average ft* City, State and Fadardl II. E. n L Co., 2004 Cao* Lake Rd. ill 4I3-7M1,, “TAXI*., BOOKKEEPING1' OR >3333 iw FRIENDLY - LOW COST KEYS TAX SERVICE Your homo or our office, PE 1-32*7 3431 N. FERRY iNYDfeR BROS. MOVING CO. Piano Tuning PIANO TUNING-REPAIRING OSCAR SCHMIDT_________PE 3-321 Painting and Decorating A • 1 PAINTING WOR1 GUARANTEED. Froo estimates 682-&20.___________ A-t PRINTING AND' " PAPER HANGING THOMPSON . FB 6-5364 Inside-outside fainting. own work. Free ail. 731-0605. QUALITY WORK ASSURED) Painting) Papering) W-" 473-3572 OT 676-1969. Doll Repair rates. Fra* estimates. 425-3514 aft! 4 p.m. SPRAY PAINTING 1-1 CAVANAUGH'S TREE Sarvlca, stumps removed fra* If wa taka down^trea. Free estimate. 334-9049 .— ______VICE, A satlmatei. 335-1901. TRIMMING AND removal, I Trucking d fronl-and Ic I. FE » gravel 0803. _____________________ LIGHT HAULING AND yard clOan. Ing. 335-3945. RUBBAGE REMOVAL, batemanti Truck Rental Trucks to Rent Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. 135 S. WOODWARD BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS, nil clamed. Raaa. Satisfaction ranteod. Insured. FH >1611. ’ WELL ORILLINO, wall points For Wont Ads Dial 3344981 Wanttd Roal Estate 1 AT ■THE' PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, APRIL 8, 1969 B—11 tract# and equities. Ask for I Haydsn at HAYDEN REALTY. | AVON TOWNIHIP —.W/iiTliuv t cant land. Nix Real Eilat*. « Mi). MS-3375. illNG TRANSFERRED? Naad~ Mil immediately? For cash In hour*, calfagent, 67»4I04. COUPLE WITH 15,000 down deiirei SblNO TO TRADE? Thinking# ” a guarantaad sal*? Don't give noma away, call Ray today. Apartments, Unfurniihed 38 J«h.b5!?fk,,on Rd- > Bjgfet- NO children or pats , Samlnola, Apt.Vnr,‘ *° * p’m" ,S® * ROOMS. BATH and klfchantTla. adult working couple pralarrad. no pels, deposit. 42* N. Paddock. 2 BEDROOMS, near —STiS I children contract. EiwoedRealty HAVEr PH H PURCHASER WITH CASH FOR A STARTER HOME IN OAKLAND COUNTY. CALL AGENT, *74-1600 or 335-4952. 1 WILL BUY YOUR HOUSE ANYWHERE, ANY CONDITION, NO POINTS, NO COMMISSION. CASH NOW MOVE LATER Miller Bros. Realty 333-7156 IF YOUR HOME IT SHOULD Be coming to ui WISHING Doesn't Make II SOLD jn agreement to . Brian Realty. Inc. bring: buyer*. 1 list At waiting home RESULTS Ot past sales prove our statement. Whatever property you have to **"' "brIan realty 433-0702 DET.: 3*9-2424 too Dixie Hwy._________ Waterford LOTS - WANTED IN PONTIAC Immediate Closing. REAL VALUE REALY, 662-4220,___________ DICKVALUET __________ Ilderly COUPLE NEEDS _______R r Mall. Cash. Agent, 338-6*52. Rent Houses, Furnished 39 COMPLETELY 673- large rooms, i-ntt* •"trance. ROOMS AND^belh, private entrance. FE 5-04*4. 103 MONTHLY - . ________ DOWN buys Townhouse*. 1337 | Cherry lawn, 3350171. Agent. AVOID CROWDED LIVING. ELlZE tain Lakeshora Apartmants. 5375 Cooley Lake Rd., Pontiac. Adults, no Pats. ^achj^boa^docka. AMERICAN HERITAGE ■ APARTMENTS Accepting appllcatlgns far 1 bedroom apartments. Last 20 nearing completlort. A . limited OcT^P A N C Y.^Compi etely*«?pe! Id, alr-conditloned, lots of closet space. Sea our model, you'll love It. ALL UTILITIES Included In rent. "CUS-tom CRAFTED APPLIANCES BY HOTPOINT." Adults only, no pets. BLOOMFIELD MANOR WEST Newly completed building, point electric appliances, bedroom apartments. Mol dally .— ” FURNISHED, > ....... wAwaMiflt end 2 Oarage. $200 Mr month to ctptebla tenant. Call Jack R FES-7161. Rum Houses, Unfurnished 40 2 BEDROOMS, OARAGE. Mlracla area, *125 mot......... _.r...PE 411*7. ‘BEbROOM, sfoVirMfrlSratjo ceramic baft, .... ......... siding. By owner. FB 6-2783._ AUBURN HEIGHTS - large femflV home or Income, I rooms, 2 bath*, basement and garage, $16,908. Nix Realtor, 552-5375 or 651-0221._ APARTMENT BUILDING, wcond1 worf, *8000 cash °or Sio.soo couple only, -------------deposit, art- Ponllec.^M1^!f'nfjj^5 tetwMry Commerce must have t dep. 652-1421. BlbROOM, t and fast plus 658 lHILDRBtC~no pen, eiwi wnn eiuO dap. 6S2-530*. 3 PER CENT MORTOAOE—-SUn UP Includes heat, water, maintenance. Townhouias, 1337 Charrytawn, 335-6171. Agent, NEAR ROCHESTER. W Wilson Mareh 1. 2300 W Call UN 4-7405 _ or 612-3212 Great-Oaks Apartments UMk^'-edroom opertmenls am townhouses, from 5160 Sul# Houtei HEY Y0UI Don't skip ovtr this ... 'irefully Mciust this Is tha - — All aluminum .ran-... I attached garage, 49. Sale Houtei IlfS AND 1103 MONTHLY I Rtid It tht home ranch, 2 tom you. All elu: b Ad r-ea m,- 1’A aptvox. v» act privilege!. All for Call YORK Includes heel, water, melntenenc 1337 Cherryiewn, 335*6171. egent. . - OPEN* TR(.LEVEL MODELS Wideman Sail Houses . REAGAN REAL ESTATE N, Qpdyke ' 332-015* AUBURN HEIGHTS gl Rent Rooms 2 ROOMS, LAKE FRONT. 1 men with dean habile. flatting. *74-25*7, Bat. 3 and 7. ATTRACTIVE CLEAN sleeping ---- tor ladle*, 512 per wo-1' FE 1-3455, evening*. -CLEAN, VtEN'S ROOMS 112 I Pontiac area, OR 2-651* LARGE ATTRACTIVE room (or girl “ lady, home privileges. 332-537* excellent art*. Call 674-16*1, 336-6*32.____________________ AT ROCHESTER LARGE TRI-LEVEL. 3 bedro "• baths, kitchen bullt-T place, family room, p Immediate ar )tflc* In Rochdstar WEAVER ■ — i, LARGE rooms, kitchen, I deposit. FE 1-7200. ____ PRIVATE ROOM, gentleman, ttorth end factories, FE'2-1127J| j*^r.?PJ!..*P*fiin*?>!. •ns^a '^^^eif^Mu^nrVvIlaaB^^^S 93* or. OR jt-3704 furished. Hotpolnt appliances Pn- SAGAMORE MOTEL, eluding dishwasher, swimming pool and club house. Located at Wi'*— Blvd. and Great Oaks Blvd. CLARKST0N CORNERS All electric apartments No children, no poll 1 Enjoy A HAWAIIAN WEEKEND Every Weekend Year-Round POOLSIDE SLEEPING ROOM for rant. PE S-3773 _______ VERY NICE ROOM. OR 3-753*. WARM, CLEAN SLEEPING root E COOKED MEALS. Colonial LOVELAND LISTINGS WANTED , ‘Village East telling your home please call — , Leona Loveland, Realtor . i Condominium *'oo cas». L.ak* Rd. | Apartments Rent Office Space 2 SEPARATE OFFICES to rent. Open onto foyer. Brand naw. Paneled, carpeted, Heat, air conditioning and cleaning lurnlahad. Coll John Slier, 674-3136. ______ 3 OFFICE SPACES, HEAT, light turn., 4540 Dixie, OR 3-tjSS.____ 300 TO 700 SQUARE FEET building* separate entrant Xing* alt utilities, low Investment Special i bedroom bungalow, larg ckwo to ovorvWlng. $1950 dc.... .... tT1B HI land contract tarmi. Full prlce ^n 7M9 TJJB 10500. ________ LAUINGER ImSi 674-001* __________. 674-OMo] g*jj Investors Special bodroom Cap* Cod, lull basement I tada work. 12.000 lek* over S2,50g ilence. Vacant. Agent le FE 5-6*52. OR 4-164*. jWTiSTED < A sharp l bedroom rat acre lot. Broakfaat kitchen plus formal . OWNER, 3 bedroom car garage, lanced, no U. *19,*00. 332-5)02._ BY OWNER, BRICK 4 — Early American, ° walk-out | mint, finished nil|||||k fireplace, hath l gr gM purchased on FHA Also have Lek available, 533,350. COZY BUNGALOW jGood north i Id* horn* In naw can* ■ out. Larg* fining rmm, ur Tot, Hlohiarrji Rd' (M-W) iarg«'pan*r*d pprch, taiemant, gas ascent Lax* ltd., right., Vi FA heat, large lot: Near school and! 0 model. ■ ' shopping, CALL TODAY. inch^calonl*1* a, levy SPACIOUS OLl/pR HOME trt good condition. '4 bedrooms. 2 baths, carpeted living and dining rooms, basement, 2 car garage, nice lot. 513,150, FHA TERM*. 673-0200 room/i*n, | I. 0. WIDEMAN, Realtor FHHSEieim' **r 412 W. HURON ST. 334-45241 REALTY^”' l3>*-2mrVB~ CALL XO-tiul SOMETHING SPECIAL FE 5-8183 FIVE BEDROOMS 514,9*0 GIROUX REAL ESTATE igag* form Front Horn* MODERNIZED FARM HOME . On 2 . aero* In th* Hit Northwest of Rochester. Horn allowed. Ideal family home, fojjrtxtm.o^lua den, gorgeot SNYDER, KINNEY & BENNETT In Rochester 4 W. University (2nd floor) 631-6100 OR 334-3100 47 •n£n3Blk 4615 DIXIE, 3,200 sq. ft., 10 i -tace, newly decorated, cars ir conditioned, also 2500 so. (.. ... ixle Hwy., ter any business. Cdll f APPROXIMATELY 1100 SQ. FT. f beautiful paneled efflc* i Clerkston School A *201 Thendare Bit Located 5 blocks N. of Orion Rdi., 4 blocks V Eston Rd., e recreation room, *1 - LOTS WANTED . or longer, any location. Cash; swimming pool ana saunas 674-0363 j Rent for $164 Monthly Buy for $185 Monthly 1800 SCOTT LAKE ROAD betw««n Dixie Highway end Watkins take Road NEW APARTMENTS REALTOR, OR 4-0358 I Apartments, Furnished 37 - Utilities included U —■—■ rent. CALL MR. TREPECK, 674- your selection to build In this tun to "llv* ere*." — Open Dally. 673-3488 SYLVAN 682-2300 CLARKSTON AREA — 3 bedi ranch, carpeted, finished be sen 2’/a car garage. 625-2410, afti CUTE 3-BEDROOM' RANCH, new carpeted living room, dining *1 and hall, large lek* privileged lot, assume 5*/« VA loan, 514,200. 625-3*62. _____________ Cash for Your Equity HACKETT 363-6703 I, Cio ssi ARRO SOUTH SIDE, , ' Two bsdroOm bungalow. Living ' and dining area. Kitchen ana • utility. Gai HA Mat. Abour moves you In. | SOUTH JOHNSON ST. i story older I. Garage. Easy FHA forms chly cerpefed built-ins, basement ached garage. 523,900. HA6STR0M REALTOR 4*00 W. HURON OR 4-0350 MLS Altsr 5 p.m. FE 4-7003 TRI-LEVEL, 116,900 on your lot. ART DANIELS REALTY, 23177 Michigan, CR 4-9230. 1230 Milford Rd„ MU 5-1567._ TUCKER REALTY CO. . 903 PONTIAC STATE BANK ___■ - 334-1543. UNION LAKE AREA — ten I50'xl70' corner shaded lot, with! very well kept aluminum sided bungalow, gas'■heat, out storage building, peved street. 614,500. 53,500 down. Quick poisosslon. UNDERWOOD I 625-2615. If no answer, evet. 625-3125 I VACANT CAPE"COD. 4 bedrooms, basement needs finishing, $2,000 1o $2500 balance. Owner's agent, OR 4- dlnlng. Jflhout $0X140 | prlvllegs, FENCED YARD ft. .wllh 4-bedroom 1-tfory VsirShlLl ns *VE« Call AAR. ALTON 234-5301 BRIAN LIVE FREE 2 UNIT INCOME have the Idas) situation for yt become on*. Thle new llstir z downstairs, upstairs, ui and rant ,.i comtortebl* 'us* at much aa you I th. A IhL.-.., thoroughly Umi or *asume for U}ffT C*nt *xl>"ng mortgaga 2 BEDROOM, BASEMENT $10,000 FHA Gat off to a good'start In lift wllh a modest Investment In this dandy NOTHING DOWN TO GI'S Cozy 2-bedroom bungalow ........ crawl space, gas heat, pull-down stotrs- to partly floored attic. Privileges on 2 lakes. Full pries Cash for your equity or land contract 682-2211 MARGARET McCULLOUGH,v 5143 Csii'Ellzabetti Road OPEN 9-9 MLS ____^Sun. 1 GILES aid Your Neighbor's Horn* ... . , u r | BRIAN REALTY Nicholie & Harger LO. Multiple Listing Sarvlc* FE 56183 5280 Dixit Hwy. 62)471 --------1 Weekdays 'til » ______Sunday II A&G ANNETT i choice of wallpaper! ^ OFFERS WILLIAMS LAKE PRIVILEGES bath. Have you considered • cneir.i pHA OR Gl TERMS rail walnacot tor th* dining room? J 3 bedroom contemporatv r You can face these pleasant prob-| ?" 3 large wooded lots. 24ft. loms, and moving to your choice family kitchen, of new homea which we ■” * c-“- already started for xou In 30 or when school la out. 524.900-U5.900 v gar furnace 8. w KELLER 1 RAY SILVER LK.-300FT. FRONTAGE Brick B stone ranch In excellent condition. 3 bedroom* with 2 lull ceramic baths, 24 ft. LR with latural fireplace, formal DR, hljfo'—Tlv kitchen with dining dlacent laundry room. IMMEDIATE room home In It. carpeted Contract terms. Call today! POSSESION; „ -1 substantial down oavman. ftlva ... . (callant location, 17 w*‘r* ottering you this excellent call and wewlll show It fo you U * ^S. «?M*t,Tit! •rM*Lhanvs m.VIn7smISmS BUILDING LOTS •' 1 ranch with brick front, also full Located on Commerce Rd. with lake basement with utility. Call us for privileges on Cass Lake, extra It's low down end good location, large lot, surrounded by beautiful P-23 homes, don't miss out --d|M|AggatB LAZENBY Cell R»V Today_ . WATERFORD 3 bedroom ranch, full rlth recreation room, ai large fenced lot. Bi contract and move In ly. Agent. FE 8-4QH i i* lake, specious rt 074-4101: today. I SMALL BUT NEAT > 2 bedrooms, / 1 neighborhood on Walton Blvd., It a email home thle rd., It you is It. Cell ANDERSON & GILFORD Building & Realty. I lorj3« !< 3181_Highland Rd.____(M-59 ) 682-9000j extra bath B 2 car garage. Professionally landscaped. Good beech. 552,500, forms. LAKE FRONT-BI LEVEL Mil I pnijn ; Attractive 4 bedroom, 2 full bath mILL runu I brick horn* In axcellent eon- -------- Clerkston mini dltlon. Flreplec* In LR, 25 If. ' " ring room, family room with flrdplac*. th* water, | kitchen with bullt-lns, plus ........... B refrlgerator.^2 car CailfornlpT" 'possession' SMITH overlooking i Claude McGruder Realtor LAKE PRIVILEGES btauiitL. Spacious 3 bedroom brick home purchased with beautiful view overlooking 545,000. » Watkins Lake. 32 ft. living room rr»T.tc,«k',JT.??,r.l UpPERSTRAITS finished, basement with flreplec*.!? RoomLA^h,PR^1!L|S,ES,t.. Tn. --- walk-out basenrient HANDYMAN'* SPECIAL. “GAYLORD OFFERS Ishwasher B Unufo»*noft n lake. 20 *50, fi CLARKSTON subdivisions w* are Dlt, far this 3 bedroom ranc...... basement, 2 car attached gtrag* ..._ TRADE ( Realtors 28 E. Huron St. h* nicest office Open Evenings BSunday 1-4 with flu, I 338-0466 _______Call 642-4010. OFFICE SPACE, Auburn .. 384 sq. ft. adlolnlng offices, R0YCE LAZENBY Realtor Open Dally *-* 4636 W. Walton — OR 44301__ Lovely asbestos ranch in ■ In-1 dependence Twp., with lake privileges on Groan Lak*. 3 bedrooms, living room, dining "L", utility and big bath. All for onlyj MT Approx. 50 ft >. Lend contract home. 1W j DRAYTON PLAINS tastefully remodeled 2-1 am* with Pemeston* and I ,iStOTU. ul i__________________ Ing lor beauty •f'd low CbM Ray Today 674-4101! I neatad on a double. LAKE FRONT OR PRIVILEGE '-28. 1 AND 3 ROOMS dose I Gloria Apts. 37 Mechanic.__________ 2 ROOMS AND BATH, attractively decorated, carpeted, no children — pels. 335-7143. ___________________ I BEDROOMS, LIVING ROOM, dinette-kitchen, and bath. Carpeted, completely decorated. Kitgo - r location, 135 waekly, sec. furnished, 523 weekly. 335-1261 . Evas. _ ... _ ..." _ ' '' 1 I ROOMS, CLOSE IN, qujaTcouple, acctpt baby In arm*. Can aft. 4:00 P.m. 335-1766,_________________- : .replace, carpeting, dr*| 3,000 sq. ’oni maintenance. Located on a double i amlng, lot, It has carpeting throughout -cept the kitchen which has 1. *00 shwa I ROCHESTER, uppar 3 bath with air conditioning for woman over 30. Call aft. 5 p.r* 3 ROOMS AND BATH, welcoma, $35 waekly, .... ..... —---------. — Baldwin Av»., call SStfo*,,___________ i ROOMS, ADULTS ( “*i week, 5 ~ ------- 73-7313. NOW LEASING BRAND NEW-WATERF0RD Crescent Manor Apts. of lice ~ soace. High IralflclOwi volume area. Ideal ror Insurance* Attorney, Carpet Sales* etc. $250 per mo. plr* u""- derharr. 662-_________________ Rtnt Buslnass Property 47-A 70 COMMERCIAL building, ol ____s or work. 10645 Dixie. 625-2546. BARBER SHOP, fully equipped. FE 4-1542 aft. ' -- Renf Miscellaneous 48 0 X 60 FT. TENT, equipped with lights, ■ PA system end platform. By the day or week. 674-2327 1 anytime. . GARAGES FOR RENT 335,167*_______ 49 Sale Houses Specious 2-bedroom units featuring Individually controlled heat and air con., luxurious carpeting throughout, private balconies, plenty ot closet space, ground floor laundry facilities * PontSr v.v iuvu'mm me vuniun m __Acfutta only. 627 weekly. al include* all fadlllle* ei _ frlclty. No pets allowed. 1 overlooking the ^Clinton River. Renl — soite" 7 ~~ ...... 3 ROOMS, BATH, private entrance I end utilities, 300 N. Saginaw. CUSTOM CRAFTED APPLIANCES 3‘ ROOMS AND RATH adulti nnlv I By "HOTPOINT" * - ™- AND BATH' only'! SEE MANAGER APT. No, 107 —12-6 P.M. only Dally bv Appl. ’so pi?I _0R CALt_673-S050_________ ROCHEStER'-LUDLOW 1 APARTMENTS *37 Ludlow, Rochester 1 Bedroom, S150 B 5135 2 bedrooms, 5170 B S175 Country living, over looking wood! and efream, mlnutas awav fronr expressway, ma|or hospital. Exc shopping, air conditioned, hill) carpeted, picnic area on grounds. Immediate Occupancy Resident Manager *11.7270 or (Petroll) 366-1263 SYLVAN ON THE LAKES nedleto occupancy. I _and 2 1 ROOMS AND BATH, upper, z family house; off Baldwin. Rent reasonable, *50 dap, W7-5351. i ROOMS AND BATH, prlvi trence, very nice, carpet* V.ROOMS AND BATti, eleenfoPP ing coupt* only. No emokere drinker*, pats, children. S 5 0 deposIt. PE 4-6040. 4 ROOMS AND BATH, email b*by| welcome, 640 wk. 6100 dep.. Inquire. - at 273 Baldwin, call 330-4054.__1 BACHELOR, PRIVATE, carpelYd, -quid, nice, N. and. FE 2-4376. CLEAN APARTMENT FOR jtffldkjaiU ■ woman only, 6125 mo., dap., util. Incl., apply lo 8 p.m. Call 334-3003. ___ EFFICIENCY APARTMENT working person, util, turn., bath, dtp. S50. 6« “'***' Cell eft. 6, FE 2- Phone 662-9031 or 357- OPEN EVERY DAY CALLt 6514200 WEST Sloe,, upper, 5 rooms, bath, Rent Houses, Furnished 39 i Cedar Island KITCHENETTE Apartmant or tiac Lake, no pets or chlldroi Highland Rd. 473-7605._ LAKE ORION, 3. room* end _______ private^entrance. 6*3-1509. _ 2 BEDROOM. F DviNG ROOM, BlbROOM, kitchen braaiewey end 01 and beth, near Wliner Stadium,! •»• pr'v''*0** < newly decorated, completely! L»k». *>75 p*r carpeted, very nice, util, turn .' lease. 363-700). __________ 5145 per month, dep. required, no 4 BEDROOM BRICK HOME children or pd*. 33542*3. 1 carpeted, on on* acre, vie. < MAliTPLOOR, 3 rooms arid beth, t ‘•eke Orton. *35 per week. M child welcome, private entrance, ---------——----------— FE 5-1232. II Edison. 7 ROOM HOUSE, 4-btdrooms, Rear ROCHBSTBR; couple only, ft? M private, entrance, no nata. UL 2« IP cal1 10 rm* 10 • P*”1* 33 WARM, CLEAN COZY, mod* rooms for a nad couple and beby. everything turn. 635 a SUM deposit, PE 4-7253. , full basement, garage. > idH roSXyVii'Jx WARDEN RENTING WE ARE NOW BEDROOM HOME In Dreyti Plains, lull basomsnt, large 100' 202' lot, quick potMtlion — 16500 MENZIES 625-5015 • on ap-divide. 62S’$485 EVE, or sun. __________ HOMES CLARKSTON ai proximate 4 acres, w large home h kitchen, Tull 'basement .......... room and fireplace, 20x60 Insulated barn, 2 car garage, 627,500. Small home has 2 bedrr ■*"“ wTff fireplace, bath aluminum sldlny, wiyv ■„« ■ Orchard. *15,500. By mmar, ct or mortgage. 425-1713 altor 6 p.m WILL ACCEPT ALL APPLICATIONS FROM ANY WORKERS, WIDOWS OR DIVORCEES. PEOPLE WITH CREDIT PROBLEMS AND RETIREES ARE OKAY WITH US. OPEN DAILY AND SAT. AND SUN. or com* to 2*6 W. Kannalt Near Baldwin REAL VALUE REALTY For Imediate Action Call FE 5-3676-642-4220 RAY :AR OLD all aluminum trl-laval Rochester Rd. This Is a lutltul country home for anyone, bedrooms, m baths, .2W car age, big 24'xl*' family room, paneled, carpeting throughout, s one has got to go at only __.800 FHA. P-57. Call Ray Today ___674-4101 3 BEDROOM RANCH I IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY 1W bath, basement, 2 car garage, family roam wllh fireplace. Weferford ores shown by appointment - financing available. P. J. MASON 473-1201 _______363-2114 4 BEDROOMS 3 levels, larg* patio, garage, lak* prlvllegee. Only 537,500. FLATTLEY REALTY 20 COMMERCE RD. 363-4*01 ~ RAY ~ HAMPTON HILLS lust south d s. Blvd, and wed o Squirrel Road. RANCHES - TRI - QUADS - COLONIALS. „ PRICES RANGE FROM 145,000 GREATER BLOOMFIELD REAL ESTATE H| Telegraph Rd. iy Press Wont Ads Do the Job -334-4981 OXFORD OFFICE MACEDAY LAKE PRIVILEGES of cupboard*, taro* closets, ball downstairs, very nice plastered v area, living room carpetdd and i mortgage to assume, eik for 255 RANCHER ON FIVE ACRES NEAR CLARKSTON ice saving kitchen with loads ully tiled with stall shower I throughout, separate dlnlnq three bedroom*. 521,500, good Gently rolling p. JIH living, and maybe a I nd water s nice view, lull »h* place foi or two for th* children, lull 12x24 living room, wllh 2 larg* bedrooms. Only I24,*00, . take your home In trade* You bet your booties. Aik tor 2! YOU PICK THE HOUSE and wa'lt set It on th* lot of your choice. 2 your. Inspection, dally by appointment- B|l Hlghlanda — lust 1 VS miles west ol Ox lor ihlanda — lust b .-JUEn*, Paaturl** 1.000 Or maybe '^‘JtoSdi/S appointment. I Selurdi models avellab * tor lutltul Devis. Lakai west Burdick* welch j to 7 p.m. Anytime 823 S. Lopaer Road r Oxford PHONE: 628-2S48 ' ' oven, 12'xll' office In ment, Vh car geri bedrooms. Location River provide! beautiful view. Call al!' ifejf Today>tr,n*‘ ___674-4101 - 10 ROOM BRICK, LARGE M 3400 sq. ft._____________OR 4-1*16. 1 X 40 RANCHER, F aluminum siding, 615,900. Wd alio ------- . .... available In Clerkston area, pavod streets, Clerkston schools, garaoe. Located on a corner II Priced under $20,000. HALLMARK REAL ESTATE 674-4123 — 4131 Highland Rd. (M-3t) next .to Airway Lanes HlTrER WEST SUB - Ned i bedroo rancher, elum. siding, ges nai IVi car garage. S14,M0, Gl formi LAND CONTRACT TERMS — ' this 7 room, . Mdval home, ceramic til* baths, fireplace, 4 c garage, lundeck. 637,500. Tr* eve model* to sh 3, 623-2673. basement (*M_wJth closing costs PiTE for taxes, insurance estimated at 6350. KENNETH O. H l... Reoltor 185 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. Panflec Phene: 134-6204 RAY- ATTENTION Pontlec Motor employet. We've lv«l. Models FE'4-0591 Y0UNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER BILT Russell Young, Bldg. 334-3830 - 53Vk W. Huron St._ YPSILANTI nice kitchen^ on Ottls Lake, end so re we would need this e to tell you everything. Cell Ray Todey >r your apt le If. P-29. YORK MILLS „.lno, gi— contract. 2 BEDROOM—ORION 50,900, lend contract. 41 ACRES ON M-24 Partly w ' 693-8371 NEW MODEL HOME Open dally * fo 0 E. J. DUNLAP Custom Builder 2717 Sllverstona Corner Walton 330-11*0 or 338-64*7 Call Ray Today ___*74-4101 JOHNSON , NEW LISTING eego Harbor area. 2 bedroom home with large living room, ■ dining room, full bath, dose to stores and school. Full price 113,500. Will sell on land contract for substantial down payment. NEW RANCH HOME HAROLD R FRANKS, Realtor LARGE FAMILY INCOME * rooms plus hug* unfinished attic plus basement plus -plus large 75x375' li heme •(tractive at terlor In good com needs considerable l-- BU west ot Pontlec In Waterford Twp. Everett Cummings, Realtor 2363 UNION LAKE ROAD HALLMARK SHARP 3 BEDROOM ilder horn* located In Walartord Twp. Just recently redecorated. space. Price Is right a Cell Rey Today ' 674-410 NEW RANCH (Will Duplicate) - RAY JUST MARRIED? Here li the perfect stertor with the right price end lecetlun Clerkston. Ill • cute asbestos ranch with 2 bedrooms. 7 c«r KrVihi ' mm carpeting In kitchen Cell us rTg ■n r rest long. P-25. Ray Today .________ -474-4101 SCHRAM NORTH SIDE INCOME 3 apartment* complil , furnished, wllh large knotty pine penei.d recreation room, this heme Ti within wanting diet* ice ot town end you .will an ay owning Ihlt and havlrfo th* ether apartments make your payments. Call our/»lfle* for pgrtlculari; List With SCHRAM and Call the Von OPEN IVES, AND SUN. mmaW Serving Pontlec Area far 20 Year* ok? X iced lot, 2 car garage and pi Ive. Owner, S26J00. 335-45*4. _ NEED MORE ROOM! /ou'll have plenty of room In ...m big 4-bMroom bungalow In Pon- f living area plut full basamant. l’/a laths, carpeted throughout. Corner of. Full price Including lot 521,900, •rmi to suit. Cdll— J. A. Taylor Agency, Inc, 77)2 Highland Rd. (M-3f) Dally OR 4^0306 Bv**. EM 2-7346 OLDER HOME In Pontiac, hai roof, naw aluminum aiding, — wrought Iron porch railing, partalad living room, 3 bedrooms naB"" basement, Can bo yours 515,900. FHA. P-26. Coll Ray Today RAY tally anloy W t this unlqu Located bedroom ranch v Clear Lake. It'*. * 3- ... _j many *x- iras we .cen-r mi them all. We will tell you Its low price, only 122,250 conventional or 123,500 FHA. U ........ details. P-8I, have |usf completed home consisting of' 3 family style kitchen, o throughout, ‘------------ basement with g -Jed. Will bu i. Call u* I AVON HALL basement, 2V) c< Offered at only 631,500. Cal for your appointment. NEW 3 BEDROOM — alum, ranch lull basement, thermo wf—"— with ' screens, hardwood Only $14,»50 ready to move li CaY! for more information. 7150 Dixie Hwy. VON Springfield Twp. 2 bedroom home, neat end clean, Living room 12x14, kitchen 10x14. Full basement, IV* car garage. Excellent opportunity to Invest '* commercial property. 156 t*. tr lege on Dixie Hwy. Avon Twp. MODEL Over 1,100 sq. ft. 5 bedroom aluminum rat_________ family room, full basement, oak floors, csramlc bath,--- ------ kitchen wllh formica and marble window i— range, gas furnace, gas hi BRICK RANCHER plaslered kitchen i large rooms# custom built* “'-its, oak floors# bullt-lns# finished ed for quick safo. lortgage# Watarfordj AVON REALTY EXCLUSIVE SALES OP I WEINBERGER HOMES __ M OL 1-0222 335*373 y $16,950 on your 101. wo also nave frl levels erJ colonials. WE TRADE-WE FINANCE Model Open Dally 5-1 p.m. 5745 Dwfoht VON REALTY 682-5100 OPEN A New Model Is Open For Your Ihspection Colony Heights Blvd. WE BUILD RANCHES, COLONIALS, TRI-LEVELS 3-4-5 BEDROOMS 1 - l'/2 - 2Vs BATHS Your choice oK?._fn^!s_jMt*i_.!? m 617,100 Iq 631,900 pi '"d&He"' 25% DOWN ’ BUY NOW BEFORE THB INTEREST RATE INCREASE Gl APPROVED FOR $9,500 Or will discount for cash to Investor. Spacious 2 bedroom hen walking distance of like privileged park. 15x21 living root dining room, hardwood (loori and nice lot. 6 ROOM BUNGALOW, FULL BASEMENT 516,200 located north side. This home •houldi.s*ll this weak nullt in 1*63 situated on lanced corner Ig LONG, LOW RAMBLING RANCHER 129,500. Situated on a aweaping corner J5j1„f|**9eae_^ifow*rlt]j you will proudly shew off HH -------------------—m m room kaops th# rdst ot th# houat neat and ay# a bright cheerful bedrooms, wonderful kitchen wllh g and bullt-lns. Also, attached two cir g------------- nanl that your family has outgrown, and you would Ilka a ous and graefoua 3 bedroom home with potential for # 4lh jom . , . call Tor further Informetldn. This hom* Is situated on I 120'x137* willr fruit-shade- end tarries. Just off Sashebaw |H schools,jehurches end .Rhopping centers.J^^r g*rjj|ie. wfl*1 admire, price DORRIS & SON REALTOR 2536 Dixit Hwy. MI^S -----£----,----;------------j—----- The Rolf H- Smith Co. Sheldon B! Smith, Realtor 244 S. Telegraph 333-7848 STRUBLE WE TRADE kitchen, family . room, fV4 i garage, lake privileges, o n 100,900. HOUSE OF PLENTY . 2 bedroom ranch with possible bedroom, full basement w I finished rac. room end laun room, targe cerpefed living re -■“ft flreplace, dining n— ta ler dr— ch, •ana, W'd 5 STOUTS I BEST BUYS TODAY separate dining room, 1W baths, glent family room, and 4tha. bedroom In basement. Includes extra utility building on larg* tor with frulf trees. LARGE FAMILY? Need extra (pace for that large family? This oldsr 4-bedroom home feature* living room, dining room, sewing roam end kitchen on the mein floor, and 4 bedrooms wid both up. Full basement with ges heet, and I tocafod 1 CITY LOCATION - Only 6700 piu* ctoali qualified buvar will 5*25 Highland Rd. (A Next to Franks Nun 674-3175 fireplace hi living room. Alio has 2<*r garage. *| WARREN STOUT REALTOR 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-8165 Dally 'ill I Multiple Listing* Listing — Selling — Appraising — Building A WHOLE LOT OF LIVING ...._ _______ „,_.*)• dining roam and also a breakfast room. Enclosed porch, 2 fireplaces, many more extras. Why not trad* In your present heme? Priced at 643,500. A SPRING BEAUTY In Drayton Plains. Full basement, twp car garaot and fonetd yard. This bom* Is ntwly carpeted end V*S,. th* family room le another extra feature that adds to th* bargain price of 211,900. This I* a naw listing, so call today. This 2-story cHy hem* la neat as a pin. 2 bedrooms, newly decorated kitchen, formal dining room, and II has a garage. Zero down on FHA or Gl. Full price, 613,900. Don't daloyl This now listing won’t tostl NEW MODEL out and _______________......ill's newborn#. A super deluxe ranchtr wllh all aluminum trim. Ceramic master bathroom, plue half talk, formic# cupboards, wall-to-wall appraise 'ft#' it tha foot of FRUSH0UR REALTY REALTOR - MLS 674-2245 ‘ 5730 Williams Lok» Road 674-4161' 49 Sals Houses . 49 BUZZ BATEMAN SAYS "TOTAL MARCH SALES $2V4 MILLION" WE CAN SELL YOURS I HORSE LOVERS *85 ,rU8S» #69 UARANTEB PROGRAMI I ;ere mod# for thli manufacturerraoresentel .ns room, family room with flrapiac*. air-con-artioned officer Just blocks from Lake Oakland. SEE IT NOWII ASK ABOUT OUR GUARANTEE PROGRAM 11 "LIKE NEW" #62 BRICK RANCHER: Coiy and comfortable family room., brlok-wall fireplace, patio, lak* prlvliagaa and jmmadfai# poasaitlgn. Hurry on tola on#T cAlL TODAY I ASK ABOUT OUR OUARANTEB FRO-GRAM! OXFORD AREA ..... #6$ LAKEFRONT, sand baich, beautiful view, great 'I^Jng Uk# new" rancher with- hot-watar haat, i car.aarag*. CALL NOWII ASK ABOUT OUR GUARANTEE FROORAMir , , G. I. SPECIAL * -- . . #21 VERY COMFORTABLE 3 tadrrom horn# located,on.SaHJMEB JU GUARANTEE PROORAMII ' SIX NEW MODELS. QUAL|tV*^ATg?fAL*.*’ POCKBTBOOK. mm pontiac ROCHESTER 338-7161 UNION lAKt-651-8518- 86*6171 For Wont Ads' Diol 934-4981 DOUBLE HEADER Just 34,500 down- on land contract tor. this 2 month old 2 family duplex • featuring hi acre lot, aluminum siding, matching stove and refrigerator, carpeting In bath units. Live In either — the 1 or 2 bedroom unit — and let the other one make your monthly payment el only 2175. CALL FOR FURTHER INFORMATION. TED'S CORNER d you try to sell you «i»- or list It with "The Realtor? H Mil Me You i arrange WEINBERGER RANCH . On a canal to Lake Oakland. Features Include: 3 bedrooms, tv$ baths, brick fireplace, oak floors,;0™- * no. basement, sighed* Scar 'garage,]LOVOblfi Livability automatic sprinkling system, paved i you'll love every detail of this street and community water.|Ceptional--------baa la j| Shown by appointment only — to srttt Yi call us right away. , I squawk I........... ... NOTHING CAN COMPARE | - jjojSji Q jjn ** To the California contemporary ranch we have In “ County. 50 beautiful WIMipVMIIPproperty I to put It on the market on The realtor will enlist thi ol fellow real estate agent _ the owner the advantage ol entire local sales market, f -buyers seek a reputable broker because they realise the pitfalls ol direct negotiations. The realtor will price the property to sell at a fair market value. The average owner over prices but eventually accepts a price below the market value. Let your broker do the talking and . leave the selling to us. ' Oakland i ... II surround unusal home which contains, . square feet of living area, itures Include splurge bedrooms,' “'"••in 2w SRPSrKre now. No. 30-4 „_____ now for irorq'particulars. like Boating and Fishing? service _ “ Here's *n excellent river front home giving|TERMS I® stone's throw from Cass Laki ” h * u„ ... lh. ....iin.rf Two spacious bedroi •couid bedroom home on Pontiac's side. Peaturi sldlntf, lull fenced yard 625-5557.__________________ BUILDING SITES Watkins d area. OR 4-1915.__________ l, DRYDEN. Ideal proparty dividing - approx. 35 frontage on two roads to Church Wagon Restaurant' possibilities, 'Contact. administratrix 2772 Merelux, Pontiac.___________ ir HOMESITES: Orion Twp. Miller Rd. II 100x200, $2,SOB. GOLDEN GATE: 101 also - if I We hove a “House of Happi-T. J. RHODES, REALTOR ‘ thot s,«m* the Gen-a pe o-2306__*5siw.jffajtonfcFE 5-6712 eration Gap. two spacious bedrooms, torn, could use a 3rd Florida room overlooking TOWNSEND LAKE TOO' leke frontaa« lot. 200 ft. $6,500 with U No. 20-16 130? Pontiac State Bank Blvd. > Wonderful Condition WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE 674-2236 I J0IN ™e march to t,mes" h inc. Times Realty McCullough realty, 474-2236 MLS REALTOR 5460 HIGHLAND RD. (M-59) I OFFICE OPEN SUNDAY 1- 49Sale Houses basement with pi sorlos. Ceri II Included I InvjSlqatlor package. Privacy •«*, right, SJ100 d-------- low Interest (6’A ... 'tgage which Includes; 6,500 with 10 per cent down. SISLOCK & KENT, INC. Webster-Curt is Oxford Area bedroom homo “IT'S TRADING TIME" t this executive monsion. ^boetlnji end fishing. This carpet, drapes arid ri "Ji sprinkler system. Cell Neat and Clean Th'jgs^at^jfgu'll see when you Inspect this nice three bedroom built-in appliances* sndB*largePdlnlngVar0ear.°Th'e nboMmeCnt*"ha's 'a finished recreation room, ellached garage, rear yard Is fenced. ■jj*2, J®mlly enioyment. Priced at only 123,900 — WE WILL TAKE YOUR HOME IN TRADE! II An Acre of Land JJJHftJJjjJ : cioletid r/r 1 b*1 th'1 n? b',7'rl Th* **1 fighting end built-in, appliance*1'-" carpTt^nvingProorT?*’Fu M C ba«n PS!'22..attached garage. SEEING IS BELIEVING* -WE TRADE Pr,c«l •» »'•*» with fe/rni to tuj. A Peak ft.fUEP ,™SL.- hut take a good look ol this SYLVAN V'LI;A°_E. [®™™,r- Completely carpeted with separate, dining Only 10% down wlir move you ba,•|,n,,’, ,nd s,,w- PrlMd Who's The Builder! i* V°u-h®yy **•£ an unuiueiiy attractive and wall built naw tea *s# B^l OMR .0* POCkatbaolt - Wo have plans, prints, CeM Ion an 1071W, Huron Street MLS 681-1000 After 6 PM Call , 335-6514 » family? Here's (39,400. IT'S NOT TOO LATE ACRES — rolltop land for country living, $3,950, $1,000 down I ACRES - A breathtaking via beautiful oaks and pertact locatl tor llfotlmo of purt ploasui Groveland Twp. 213,900. forms. 10 ACRES — Wide road frontage and all good land “m ** — cant down. r| IB ACRES - For a rolling land f / i All Brick with a Lot of Charm J jwo^car garage, priced toj *5,000 and up. Immediate possession, j 693-8363_______________ No t1 j Northern Preperty 10 ACRES Wa! i location, landscaping, **M00. 1 Want a Fireplace? A homo priced under II to find? we've got III sized bedrooms, carps drapes Included, brick the price todey only. Oc Money Maker turn BRiCK CABIN - Roughed In on your lot, with brlcK wall to wr" fireplace $3,995, terms. Bill Dev FE 8-2I9Q or FE 0-3529._____ BEAUTIFUL SLOPING like lot on Uttlo Bear Lake near Otsegc 50x250'. Cell William Porter, 391 2270, after 6 p.m. _____ 6 HOUGHTON LAKI Villago. Lot *6 acre. Also buslnos corner located on main highway I i'I welt'on village with lake frontage No. 10-321 Houghton Lake. 472-3331._ !SMALL* CABIN ON RIVER, I acr | of land In Baavgplon 363-7331. rooms and Lots-Acreoge ' 51 "Wk' 1' AND ONLY I ,2 WNo*4n6! . -JAYN0 HEIGHTS 1 C. PANGUS, REALTORS OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 630 M-15 Ortonvllla \ CALL COLLECT 627-2SIS KlNG-PHfPPS 4.3 ROLLING ACRES, about 3 miles east of Oxford, horses permitted, nice tree $6,000. IS ACRES, 5 MILES north of Oxford, heavy wooded rolling parcel, smell lakd, asking $20,000-25 per cent down. KING PHIPPS AGENCY 1097 S. Lapeer Rd. 620-2565 1097 S._LAPfER RD._ 620-2563 LARGE LOT, WEST BLOOMFIELD, near Orchard Lake Rd. Reas. By owner. 602-7925. ROYER GOODRICH OFFICE Happiness is different things I to different people. For the! children Happiness ist j In pretending the bubbling spring! Is a wishing well and that the . drainage pond, which disappears In | spring, "he .... Blackbird, hunting wild rasnberrlas In summer, In gathering shagbark hickory nuts In fall, from lust-ovar-tho-rall fence, In cracking tha nuts for Mother to make a caka, It Is In piling the brown leaves and tramp-Bng^ through them to hoar thalr summer changed Into a Winter Wonderland by tha fall of the first gllng around' the huoe open fire < sleetod wind pecks at the window pane and the real ultimate happiness lor Children Is the red and white barn with room for 2 horses end e pony or two. Also the little red end white playhouse with bunk beds Including shelves for the dolls with tholr clothes and their beds. - But, for the tense and tired-pressured Businessman happiness is: .Business opportunity avail-—WANTED— [able. 2 bay service station, S6&7959i apartments - commercial - corner of Orchard Lake and ------ AND 'NDUSTR.AL |nvemess ^ $ Lake, .... Mich. Texaco will assist you D A1 LM AN in setting up your own busi- iNvRSTMENT & commercial co.jness. Take advantage of a T.iMr.nh oh National name. Contact Roger F. Brandi, days 292-6000, eves. 941-1062. n -----------------0S h 377 s. T_. 338-9641 Weekdays attar ■ HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE________601-23 - PLENTY OF USED washer stoves, refrigerators, and trade-furniture bargains. Little Jo* Trade-in store. Baldwin a Attention Housewives Highest prices tor used turnltu end appliances. ' *— " Partridge IS THE BIRD TO SEE" 0.94 ACRES INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY I-7J interchange Wyman's Furniture.______ A HOUSEHOLD BARGAIN pc. living rm. group (sofa, chair _____H| beautiful fables, 2 tamps); 1 t61KTY?UR AUSINESS? | ^r.T..(d0DUr!i^.dr“mps)Cjh*rpNci CponHec*. 336- condition with good roof (shako shingles), a good well, septic, pump, plenty - of .hot water, 4 fireplaces, tVi baths, plenty of closots, large living room with barn siding paneling, little upkeep scaped by an axpart 1050 West Huron St., Pontiac 1-2111 965-8) _____. Open nlles t‘11 9__ PRIME LOCATION Sale land Contracts i 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needed. See us before *Warren Stout, Realtor 450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-1161 Open Eves, 'til 2 p.m. “CASHFOR LAND CONTRACTS A Sure Fire locetlon for any ti of business or office. NATIONAL BUSINESS ROYER GOODRICH OFFICE Help-needed at once I Dairy bar, 5 and 10c itore, antique shop, TV and Applianct ^ Shop^ M buBdlngTover 2*00 a downtown Ortoi C. PANGUS, REALTORS OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK M-IS Ortonvllla CALL COLLECT 427-2S13_____ Wonted Controcts-Mfg. 60-A 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needed. See u» before y Warren Stout, Realtor 30 N. Opdyke Rd. FE S-ll ______Open Eves, 'til 2 p.m.__ This’mSSi LARGE OR SMALL lend contracts, quick closing. Reasonable discount. spoclol ottering .. ---- ---------- available to you far Immedlote occupancy. Your new hi—| — *■— the smart appetl of a or tha traditional a stately colonial o NEW HOMES ' AVAILABLE NOW fo*", -.if V up conscious — you E*®|g|^ER L*j5|?“bNTRACTfILL , McCullough realty . ..... 5460 Hlghlnad Rd. (M-59) ranch! 474-2234_ ______________I _ si aieganca otalfi 3(n 10 AgRE_PARCELS^ wooaed, NPHHIP Rllityaa "all within yogr budget.. Visit on homes of LAKE, A N GI LAKEVIEW ESTATES, rig CllntonvUle road onto Coeta - Open dally 1:S p.m. and _Foxi Bay, Happiness for the tired Businessman is: dog-eat'dog compafttlon of today's world and walk IN aulet pains, with a FRIENDLY dog at heal. * place to conlomolete, -that metier wt failures or is V It.9 of fronfego ar right off Williams Lake Road Perry Drive, left to Fox Bay ( You'll! discover how well they're built and easy to maintain. You'll be proud as punch to: own ano. C your O'Neil representative today I RAY O'NEIL REALTY 3520 Pontiac Take Road I OR 4-2222 MLS, 674-4167 Ik ACRE PARCELS, wooded, roll--Ing, live stream. Fowler. 363-0322.1 685 1404. 5 ACRES Close,, to Clorkston — also have sever# aarcels near 1-75 with lake. PrlWM WRIGHT0REALi7n'' i 382 OAKLANO_AyE. FE 2-9)411 "ACRES OF GOOD llllabl. lend, dxc. building slip In Ortonvllla I. area. By owner, rf/sop tevh. ill mi e pest, I . He le welting for your buslne price only 816,500 end bought with small down to lend contFect. Commercial Comer ceptionally busy area, Ideal Dairy Queen, ^ Orlve-ln ^or^v ROYER REALTY, INC. GOODRICH 636-2211 Butinas* Opportunities 15 LAWN CONTRACTS, and Ford stake truck. 602-6590._ 18 UNIT TRAILER PARK bordl lake, also laundromat -r spoi Money to Loan Oakland C< hard to ob ■this for < Y town. It would bo i a better deal then 2139,000 Including t highway. Excellen ROYER REALTY INC. GOODRICH 636-2211 N*NO, NEW GROWTH ANO t?EW INSPIRATION. A place ol quiet contentment. Lot ut show you this House of Happiness by appoint., so°o% M.T Prtc. Wto-^ UNDERWU included 8105,000. Owner commutes [ ^5.24,5 u „o answer, p!stV'11°veers.0'In*DevljSwrgeree* 1AUT6 WASH IN PONTIAC, 825,000 about 38 miles from Oetrolf. Mrs. j5own._FB 3-7968. ur hosttss, call 835-3291 BEAUTY MONEY Aval labia to homo ownori. Cash I 24 hours oven It behind I payments or In foreclosure. WATERFORD MORTGAGE CO. 622-91)1 ‘ *5220 Dll Mi C. NELSEY, SALES AGENT 3t3-625t3292 1 OR, 524-9825 e or trade. 874-3349 or 36 reeu. ." ■ :OR LEASE *— 3 bey rnoderfl Mot •taflgn on M-24 in Lake prlo Good neighborhood elation adloce to new ehopplng oraa. For detai call OA 8-2523 or MY 2-3SII. LOANS BAXTER - LIVINGSTONE Flnanco Co. 401 Pontiac Stata Bank Building FE 4-1538-9 5 piece dinette. ... __Sold Separately I (or 8398 — 810 monthly KAY FURNITURE _____» K Mart In Glonwood Cantor APARTMENT SIZE GAS stove and refrigerator, $60 both, beautiful Frigidalre automatic washer and dryer, $125: large 2-door refrigerator, 8100. 689-9403. AUTOMATIC ZIGZAG Sewing machine. Repossessed — I960 "Fashion Dial" model In walnut cabinet. Take over l^aPER M0. FOR 8 M0S. OR $44 CASH BALANCE UNIVERSSArSEWINGn'cENTER 2615 Dixie Jtwy. /_ _ FE 4-0905 BEDROOM SET, 895; chest, *127') MISC. M. C. Llppftrd, FE,5-7932. ■ BUNK BEOS, 3 piece sectional couch. Holiday bed. 391-0510._ S BUNK BEDS Choice of 15 styles, trundle beds, triple trundle beds and bunk beds complete, 849.50 and up. Pearson's Furniture, 640 Auburn, FE 4-7801. BUNK&EDS, ABOUT W price. Llttfo Joe's, 1461 Baldwin, FE 2-6042. BRONZE OR CHROME DINETTE tale,'BRAND NEW. Large end Mongwgt Loans - remodel your preiept I Voss 81 Buckner, Inc. , 1401 PonHec Slete Bnhk Bldg. ! , 334-3267 ; , 124.95 up. PEARSOtt’S FURNITURE 640_Auburn___ _________FE 4-7001 CHROME DINETTEES, low es $34. Little Jot's, 1461 Baldwin, FI $ CHAIRS, SWIVEL, Wfelclied* pain 1 ,J orange, $50, 651-2430. WELL WESTINGHOUSE li DAVENPORT A 'fEASV. SPIN DRY WASHfeh, like | now, $100. FE 2-8860. ELECTRiC STOVE; *25; Gas Stove, "15; Rclrlgerelor with lop Ireezer, 19; Wringer washer, $40. G. Haris, £E 5-2766. GRAY BEDROOM SET, good con- dltlon. 275. 641-0964. ______ HUGE LOUNGE~ CHAIR, -250 ; 2 - Fireside chairs, turquoise, 235 ea,; 2 large upholstered hassocks, 235 _ea.; coll alter 5 p.m„ 651-5774, HOSPITAL BED, 172 RUSttll St„ Pontiac. 332-1029 aftir 7. KIRBY SWEEPER ‘ EXCELLENT CONDITION-450 FULL GUARANTEE Kirby Service 8; Supply Co. 2617 DIXIE HWY._________676-2214 Pontiac Press Want Acjs Fpjr Action For Wont Adi Dial 334-4981 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, APRIL 8, 1969 B—18 UhHeusefceM Oeeds 65|H1-FI,TV and Radial 66 Wlcjwn, I J^n;on;» 'tv.'IFmSW ■urniturb,, garage IrSfa KXi^ b.i:„vs »m c«»h or no monthly. MidIo bunk bod Ml. complete r $219. balance duo « F ranch Provincial matching gisljt-8*!! balance duo 0192 c and matching! jSM&shsl <1 1. Walton iu M hfl,:*SLLLi. COLOR TV anditofS |tl-PI combination, boat ollar. $73 MANUFACTURER'S CLOSE-OUT: STEREO WALNUT OR MAPLE CABINET ' .Plamond Needles BSR 4-apaed changer $89 ________ <■ MS4116. WAREHOUSE SALE! pen to public to call all net. .... >lor TV*. Zenith. RCA, PhHco, S.Td^:'»*wAr3s8?,,| ABC WAREHOUSE & STORAGE *a*2S Van Dyko >. .. 8541 E- '0 MU* For Ini# Misctllaiwout 67 |S|ortjif Goode Mr* RUMMAGE !SALE: 3M 1. BLVD. 0. _i___April * • April 14. * 9oT~ RUMMAGE (ALE: April *, 9, 10. » o.m. to 2 p.m; TJULttJji everything roducod Meadows Assoc, Wind OAKLAND SNOWMOBILE 334-8500. SUMP. P/UMPOOLO, repaired, Cone's, FE ! I ROYAL .GOLF CLUBS, 1 woo* ti number*!, 3 *nd 4, 11 Iron 11 numbers 1 through 9, Pltcnlt i *»dga and sand w*do*. 335-47*4. <10* DIVER'* AQUA LUNG, ohm f| onc*- Mornings only. 474.3972. _ A WE BUY, SELL OR TRAOE SPRBD-tATlN PAINTS? ...,___M Supply, *41* Orchard t*M. 4(3- "$^7* fAPE JtECORDBRt do-t baby ------- • • ‘ 9m. Guns-Also 11 -o100dy*n« Hardware FE 1-4404 ' WILSON SAM SNEED usod goif sot', I j t---------------------- 76 TRAIN, RACE SET, floor pollahar, '— mower. FE 5-144* days. ______ THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE _ 11* W. LAWRENCE ST. Bverythli z------- Everything to moot your naods Ctothlno, Fumltura. Aoclloncas USED HtDB-A-BID tor gala. M0. FE 1-170S. condition. *43-34 Dolly ushlons, arm cops It >r *34», balance duo 14 monthly- anca due *91 cash or *10 monthly. Forjalo Miscellaneous k INCH COPPER water plpa cents o. It. and *4 Inch cc water plpo, 34 cants, a It. G Thompson B Son, TIKIS M-S9 W._ GIBSON GUITAR and Falcon mower with 3 h.p. Briggs-Stratton pa tables, fit I ____.... ... , I ...ting and 01 f graj! WOOD TRUSSES IJwJL 67 doi., oiao top soil. FE ad***. tie yArm cLaV filL wiii It to your lot reas. Vic. of B< and Howard, 4*3-414*. ' ' ATTENTION ‘ TRUCKERS: Mabry Malton loading fill sand, processed road gravel, Underwood's Lar— Rd. 1 mil* north of 1-75. FE 3-31 hiBLACK dirt. Peat t6P, dr*$ ilwBtlivtrad. UL Bittt. ■ I S.A.W. SAND AND GRAVEL * f —~a, an gravel WOOD TRUSSES 14-trusSes, 4-13 pitch, 3 gable ends.! 34* long. *10 oe, 437-343*.___ WATERFORD CABINETS INC. *73* ^— “ ‘ Drayton Plaint. ----- mltlas - t*ets-l AKC POODLE atud service, al ilors, grooming, puppies. 4*3-4*33. urplartlcTsiiirpriW ga.~I ESTEL^^icgRNfe'wi-IWt WASHED WIPING RAGS, box or-----VA^kC^p<^irstud twvjc*; Clipping!* r - » it 34c lb. Anjtopl Ucjrtt me* lu* *23* lto INCH PLASTIC d fittings, no noad to anymore, It goes .... glue, all you need Is a mond S5Sla», aollS state, told $289, balance du* *31* cash or monthly. ■sr; sart? ssc. .— cash or *10 monthly. Telli "oR GET*'YOU WITHOUT CO-SIGNERS. household appliance \ ffj.^K.^fhRd. iihUBally "Household special *20 A MONTH BUY* 3 ROOMS OF i lmo r«m .“a, 2 stop tables, 1 coeXll table, 2 table lamps and ? 9'x12' rug Included. ["BOULEVARDSUPPLY . „XAKC~ OODLES OF POODLES PACKARD BELL Hi-fi, *12*; 30" electric range, Ml _. white, M9; gas range, *49: upright HondTools-Mochlngry 68 PORTABLE HOIST ON rub Reducing stock, pupplot P71*!1 Stud Service, 335-0120. " BROKEN CONCRETE, Ir estimates on retaining walls. 3. Wellman Landscaping. 33*0314. to WHEEL HORSE W waterfront lot. 4*2-793*. 7to HP OUTBOARD MOTOR. Swing Set. 34" alec, range. 44 gal. alac. hot water heater. Coppartona kitchen exhaust fan. 334-79*1. 9*xl2' LINOLEUM.RUG*. *3.9* BA. 20 TV'S I, FE 4-9957" 1Q7i W 7 CASE 4*0 Dour, diesel \ wing angle blade. Like new. I Ins, busnlng and sprockets. 1 COMPRESSORS, -,-jmant, hydr...- cleaners. Weldlr Pontiac Motor ._. University Drive. FE 2-0104. lacks, stoar ASPHALT EQUIPMENT: 2 19*1 : poodles, Tj 1 OF OURS IS JUST FDR YOUI NEW AND USED 1Jq4 btdrbompten* 17 BMUtlful Motftlft „ ‘ MX LiMITED’PAtlK $3999 • -|RN., STORMS INCL. TAX, FURN., STORf P6I hMe. INDIANA WE HAVE LOW BANK RATfS COUNTRYSIDE LIVING MEMBER op MMHA AND MHA Boafs-Accessoriet BURNER MARINE Slav* Mahogany cabinet. Swedish mad BfWHlrUd, Keroslne, Idaal * hosts or camping. *20, 42M47*. 12 PT. ALUMINUM boat, »~tTp. " lor, *13*. vR W412. OLASTRON *KI boat 7 mi-}"! Colonial Mobile 2-1457 *23-1*10 Opdyk* Rd. 5430 Dixie; - So. gf weterwrdl fllWwlM U>pTll“tt*ryditioning. ' Flbergles and frailer, l*M 17' PlLVERLINB ‘ -liar, *309*. Aero-craft 14', 40 h.p JtrplWr- **•*-KARS Si | 104* 12* x *7' MANOR FRENCH!2491 Orchard L 1 OLASTRON, Convartlbla tap, •id* and att curtains, *0 h.p. Marcury motor. Alloy Tr $1500. P» 4-3*39 aft. *. __ At TONY'S MARINE 1949 Johnson motors, Artocreft GW Invaders, Genov- foaM —*“”■ and canoes. K" Sylvan Lake 83 Travel Trailers provincial, furnished I n c I u d I n 0: ruais^-RAFT ir. lit h.p. trallor, r,,!SJrJ!!d,.?.rv,r’ *lr c3 FE MS42. ' MVaJ^WRINGER WMhw-. rail to a.m. to 0 p.m. 334-3005^ moving, "must SELL, Konmoro Mje,stovo,>. Hemlllonoas dr“*r »0. Call batora 5 p.m. 674-3227. ,,cP.mLnl»5:& PLASTIC BRIDES — BUY YOUR WEDDING ----------- — — CIRCLE „„„ ------- - - 0 AUBURN. PONTIAC, FE 4-71*1, REFRTQERATOftsT"jTsHWASHgRS. damaged Fully guai """CURT'S APPLIANCE 44*4 WILLIAMS LAKE RD, 474-ltOj REFRIGERATOR ttl, -----—' -taVL, ____ Harris, FE S- 400 DeSote pi. 335- 35mm TOPCON v BEAGLE PUPS, 515. -[BRITTANY AND POINTER P xl with children. 4 COLEMAN CAMPERS Sun and Ski merino on Cost Lak* 3911 Cass Elli. Open Sundays, 482-4700. HAVE YOU SEEN THE ALL NEW OMEGA Motorhome Chevy Chassis 350C war steering, broket, 3 WANTED: ENGLISH SADDLE, 14" forward seat lump aoddio. Also -English riding outfit and access., boots, etc. Olrl'e also, 10-14, *37- 83-A Musical Goods r. IB-1119. _^ AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY 1947 Porkwood, *2x12', Village Groan, can be Mt on lol, Boot offer over $500, assumes balance of approx, t $4,200, 33S-S351._ - I BEST MOBILE HOMES Michigan Marietta Dealer Free delivery and oaf up Marietta Expondot on dlsplaya OPEN OAiLY 12 NOON TrellerfbooP wl lost docks go OdflY! MS go or# used twice os much. 4*2-3204 for oppolntmont CENTURY-STEURY-WINNER Inboard*, oylboerds, outdrive: JOHNSON. MOTOR* ond boolt. Spring discount*- *un and Jkl Marina, on Cato L*ke, 39Sl Caoo Ells. Open tunoay*. 4*2-4700. DOJT YOURSELF BOAT DOCK ... ALUMINUM.AND WOOD. YOUR l^VlISlift ffi^BALBR Harrington Boat Works 1*99 *■ Telanraoh BH- NEW 1968 . MODELS USED BOATS WILSON CRISSMAN CADILLAC UP N. Woodward Ml 4-1930 OP » FOE CLdAN CAli~~Ol3 trucks. Economy Cars, 233* 01 JP DOLLAR* FOR SHARP, LOW rMILEAOE AUTOMOBILES. ■ weLt *•*“ We would like to buy late model GM Cars or will accept trade-downs. Stop by today. FISCHER BUICK 544 S. WOODWARD 647-5600 " Only*- ly At Holly Travel Coach Inc. 1*210 Hally Rd., Hally ME 4-4771 Opan Dally aniiSundey* ... A BEAUTIFUL SOHMeR Dixie. Draytan, OR 3-i console p|— — ,ri.________________________I mahogany . BEAUTY EQUIPMENT Complete set up. 391-2*00 I *49-730* oaya. CHAIN SAW, fireplace fixtures, i _____Waterfront ibis. 4*3-793* _ COMPLETE. SINGLE BED, electric water healer never used. Double kitchen link, 27* gallon all tank. I FE *-0)71. *15 each. 335-7*12.---—=.I ^ViVeo HOMEMADE CAMPER, ft >11 BULL DOG PUPPIES tor Ml*. FE ROMEO (MEAT CENTER^Home ,6, pickup, gall MA 4-303*. •I; DOBERMAN PliFPIBt, At waaktp show quality* brtd \ rt. $52-4148. END OF MONTH ORGANS EXCELLENT HUNTING 'i and Short Hair puppies, *S2-437*. aft. * p.m. FEMALE GERMAN years, pc ‘ — 425-3424. OMP factory marred, n Fluorescent, 393 Orchard k, FE 4-8442 — 13-C. d Mahogany PIANOS DIAMOND WEDDING RINGS. Call batora 5:00 *52-3047. _iB DEEP WELL PUMP, Storage tank. _______________FE 5-2994 I ENCLOSE YOUR SHOWER over - ■-—“*-il glass rtma, a____ ll£ly/2l.95. Gallagher Console. . .5599 Wurlltzar Spinet.. .1399 Grlnnell Console .. .1399 'Latter Spinet.. .1429 Nancy Hart.. .*479 ’ Buy now — Savings up to *300. □a.tk Terms—90 days tame at ca No delivery charge. GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. 1710 Telegraph t lur you, HM ........ —,------------------ MADE wrapped batora you. Give us a cell| slejpsi 4, stave, for price, quality and appointment 6300. 493-2740, to cut. Romeo. PL 2-2941. Opan 7, npcTikAC days a weak. 4>140 Van Dyke. 1 artiiiwit A-l MEAT CUTTING, Fra FREE PUPPIES Hay-Gnilii-F*8d HAY, CORN AND OAT* mother. 474- FREE 1 emblems — Deelgned end, taj leather lackata, aaddlt helmets. Call 427-MI*. REPOSSESSED -------------------------- 1 Westinghouse sids-by-side F«^aN^%.r'U« Frost-Free Refrigerator " 1 Westinghouse elec, range, Avocado 2 GE 23" color TV's Budget term* available FOR RENT WITH option, planet and organa at tow aa *• par mr~*k plus cartage. SMILEY BROS., MUSIC II* NO. SAGINAW_______FE 4-1721 FREE MALE KITTENS 33*-9344_________ FAMILY DOBERMAN PUPPIEi permanent shota, ears croppat houia broken. 335-2509.________ GERMAN SHEPHERD put.. AK beauties, stud eairvlca. UL 3-14*7. GIRMAN 8HORTHAIR pointer. - GIBSON GUITAR, Ampax amp, cover. ■ ly or both far 1310, Ilka m 3W1. GIBSON GUITAR C-0 644-1553 HAMMOND A-ioo organ, salf con-tained speakers. A-t Condition. Phone FE 4^*94 after 4 p.r SINGER DIAL-A-MATIC Zig Zag sawing m a Embroiders, appliques, etc. Lata modal, achmi •> Terms ot: $6 PER MONTH - OR $59 CASH HOW Machine Guarai SAL SF....... 1415 Dixie HWY.____________ SAVE PLENTY TODAY On all 194S floor templet -. ranges, refrigerators, washers and Little Joe's Bargain House Baldwin at Wallen Blvd. FEJ SWIVEL ROCKING C H A FURNITURE, LAMPS, clothing Mltc. 334 W. Huron. FE KKI09. .FORMICA .REMNANTS 30c a M YOU Pick up special discount $ on discontinued patterns. 20c a ______ | ___I ft. Waterford Cabtoats Inc. 5730 KIMBALL GRAND RIANO, Williams Laka Rd. Drayton Plaint. . d0Od, $295,- Upright piano, I OAS FURNACES - forced air or R, Smith, 10 8. JestO.-------------- and wi^owsAI a&hTX762M5o"i PLAYER PIANO | or 874*4341.__________________Completely rebuilt with txeclric GARAGE SALE: Clothe*, mltc. motor and rglll. 1 Items. 2747 Huntington, FE S-4492. . MORRIS MUSIC April 9-11. ______________ 34 5. Telegraph Rd., *crot* from TahHuren, TE 2-0*47. MALE BRITTANY lVt years $20. call **3-2144. _____________ MIXED PUPPIES WMjtad, Wi completa_litttrs^$51-0072._____ PUPPIES PART German Shephard. 334-4141 aftar 6. KiBBITST^OUR PICK traitor, a. Call FE 3-4155. LIFETIME MOTOR HOMES I power, V. etc., tpecMI oeai an STOCK wins. — STACHLER TRAILER 84 SALES, INC. ,3771 Highland Rd, (M-*9) I«H UL2^89. Auburn Haights. Poultry____ BABY CHICKS, DUCKS, GEESE. Bulk garden feeds. 391-1400,. Farm Product 86 POTAOTES - 335 W. Sllvarbell Rd.| *43s-is441McCleildn Travsl Trailers Inc. 4820 Highland Road (M59) Phone 674-3163 LEVELING JACKS. C SEWER HOSE. ---- FEE, and LAtC DETROITER AMERICAN SUNRISE PARK KR0PF Double Wide*, Expando'i Custom built to your ordi Proa Delivery and Setup Within 3M Mile* HEATED MODELS AT BOB . HUTCHINSON MOBILE HOME SALES 4301 DIXIE HWY. 673-1202 DRAYTON PLAINS Cpen Dally 'til t o.m. Saturday and Drastic Reductions CRUISE OUT, INC 43 E. Walton . FE 9-4401 ~-‘lv 9-4. Closed Sunday* ,. $2,249.56 $2,39 A22 cultivator, rotary n [' to sleep al * 22 Foot ta 1943 FORD JUBILEE, TRACTOR/ Sal oei5 condition. $1050. 493-1871, “UY YOOr' WHEEL Horse tractor early anti receive free a rotary mower attachment. Llmltad tlma only. We taka trade-ins. TOM'S HARDWARE. 905 Orchart Lk. Ava. Dally MSuii. 9-t PE M/OA. FARMALL CUB Lawn Ateywr, blade, plow. John Dear# ** front snow blade Jhd disc. UL 1-1316. FARMALL TRACTOR F-20 '334-*3l*aftor 5. WEST WINCL Available In all alaaa, SEE OUR UNI OF ICOTTIB-CRAFT BOATS. M Choose — Trailarabla.' Fishing. NIMROD CAMPING TRAILER, » POROTRACTOttwiinai. the equipment. Call GARAGE S onm,’f2?'m...M Wi furniture, treater, clothing, tlauea and twite, ' Laka Orion, GARBAGE DISPOSAL, to horte- StafnTtas Steel Sinks. 32x21. *29JO PF Sable Launa Plywood, 4x6x14, $4.95 par sheet. TALBOTT LUMBER REGISTERED- TOY MOdle puppies, white and aprlcet. FE 2-1497. REGISTERED TOY POODLES ^ I Black and brawn. 473-60*4. ourfAR,' bcmnauzer miniature^ t AKC, *25,""silyarTona "alacVrie- amp. »o!| Suaraintead.*FE 2-1WD. '____ SIAMASE^KITTENSt 4 WEEK*. 620, iS&KINO FOR .ArhfiCB SELMER ALTO SAX, excaUent eon- _ dlllon, uaad professionally. A»- <" cassorlas. FE 44537 offer 4 p.m. SNARE DRUM,^practically rtawT "M7r**3-'743i. FORD 400 TRACTOR AND loa tome equipment. 7 ml. N. of I tlac, off M-24, to 1471 Weldon R HERE'IS A DANDY! aa your own angina and equip- Marke' Ti L The 24 A 27 Foot BIJ Laff Rd KMgb lerable." Idaal for C O- H O tSSLSJHE. ONLY $695 KING BROS. OAKLAND CAMPER Tour-a-home. I and 10 ff. campers for to Ion plckupe. Midwest cover M'dwtoj^angato PIONEER CAMPER SALES Trallarat Jubilee, Globa Star Barth Campers: Swinger, Mackinaw, -----■ “—in. Caribou, P MIDLAND TRAILER SALES Your authorised dealer for Hally Park, Oxford, Porkwood Ish king. 30 modali ... Free Delivery wllliln 300 mile*. Will trade for moat .anything of value. Opan 94 p.m. pixto Hwy. Pinter Marine SPECIAL - 1 ONLY w ..... RHI alactric motor* battery) control** cables. $2165 FOB PLUS TAX >• nptfyka 94 Sit. 9-i (1*75 at Unlvtralty Exit) ... the new 1969 Duo and Glasspor Boats Johnson & Chrysler Motors YOUNG'S MARINA WE NEED- USED CARS Desperatelyl We Will Pay TOP MARKET VALUE FOR GOOD CLEAN CARS! Matthews Hargreaves 631 Oakland Aye. FE 4-4547 PRACTICALLY NEW, unfurnished, law dew F12W4. m Tlres-Atrte-Tnwfc 92 REPAIR, MOUNT, and balance mag and uaad MRR ......________ _.,.Cr— AP Ansen. Trade eld mega for -—k■’-lyolass ttraa. Ch______ Tire Co. 243* Orchard Jvak Cars-Treclcs Mater Scaeters UL' INDIAN MINI b POX MINI-BIKE, Metertytles r,UM'P 9*1 3 WHEELER, ptrtoct. 139*. til Baldwin. 1964 SUZUKI 2*0 CC FE *43*7, days. ft! I,.|FB ^’‘pontiae Rd. at Opdyka LAWN TRACTORS USED COLOR TV SETS. S199.95 SWEET'S . RADIO AND APPIARCE, INC. 'l 3520, after 4 p.n_______________ GIBSON UPRIGHT FREEZER, mmi lbs. 2 yrt. old, mbit condition. Call > | Holly, 634-0*02.,_______ I GIBSON OUITAR# 170: TV contole 1 $50; swivel rocker $40. 612-7418.__ GOLF CART, small equipment ml$c. chHdr$n*» toys. |. O-gaga train equipment, HO flaga>' UNCLAIMED LAY-A-WAY zig-zag sawing mechln sold, built-in control* VNPmiRl itltoMt. Total price *36.00 or terms ot *5.00 a month. Call Capitol tawing Credit Manager till 9 p.m. **£*200. MICHIGAN BANKARP ACCEPTED HOT WATER HEAT, Consumers —— *39.95 r-J alactric YOUNG MARRIEDS Need furniture? Under 217 W* C— oat you credit without eo-tlpnar*. Hout*hold Appliance. 4*1-23*4; 1791 GRANDFATHER CLOCK; organ lamp; (jhlid'i Ice ^cream ANTIQUe WALNUT. CUPBOARD, antique walnut ovbl drop leaf table, walnut chair. *51-3943. CUSTOM ANTIQUE REFTNISHINO, ........— to ■—"— raflnlshlng . 3434341, i keyboard, 25 pedal, ex-ceneni condition 51*00 forms* SMILEY BROS., MUSIC 9 N. SAGINAW._______RE 44721 USED THOMAS ORGAN 25 pedals, French provincial, Ilka £ naW, *1000.00. MORRIS MUSIC Pet SvpplieE-ServIce 79-A -------iz.----------------houghtl.. . 1-A GROOMING I1” Rochester Mr. Edwards' High Fashion Poodle RgauiLT AND _USED Farm Tree-] 1 Covert: Stuti Boarear* 3091 W. Huron 6 NHL., .. . -7i 21" USED TV .. *99.9*'. Chasl qt drawers, *20. 63i-9t09. Walton TV, PE 2-2257 Open 9-4 new HOME- Yl6 xAO Sa *1* B. Walien, earner of Jotlyn i Mach In*. Ilka new/.. E v.a.r.a H * 21" rGa tOLOR T.V. Walnut _Clarlnjfejaedcandlt^ cabinet, excellent condition, wlll|NEVER USED, vinyl deliver, sat up and guarantee. 1200.1 carrier, sis. 410-447* 423-11*4., — ----- STEREO AKAI Recorder.' Vary prolaaalonal cordara. S350. Aak tor Jim Jr, . 1'JRNITURt.lHAS DIPT DISPLAY UNIT*. 12 C rack* lighted. 1 cash raglstar, l conditioner, iarga, . f marl machine. Mldwaal typewrit Mart. 334-57SI. RESTAURANT AND ICB CREAM Equipment tor “ * ■“ ~*r stGre FIXTUItifr Cabinets, counters, dltpl turas, greeting cards am ■ Oaya 3354435_______ Ev«i. 482-5467 EXPERT ALL BREED dog orpom-•r Ing. raatonabl*. PE 2-197*. » PORTABLE DOG PlNS and animal cage*. 473-67)6. , Auction Sales _ . 80 1 PUBLIC AUCTION BANKRUPT, INSURANCE, ESTATE MERCHANDISE, Wed.; April 9, 7 p.m. Tool*, glttt, games, ctocka, rollt of upholatarlng, wicker furniture, antlquai, eld barrel*, garden , pilot, power, mewar, Fradlan calculator, naw mattrtat, Ir Coka machine, apt. oat J rafrlgaretor, dinette, ward plus naw Roy Ragar* alai carton (vary rare). DOORS OPEN 6:30 P.M. auctionland 1300 Craacont Lika Rd. B & B AUCTION FRIDAY ........»IJ9 R M. STOP AND SAVE APACHE CAMPING-TRAVEL TRAILERS Travel Troilere 88 MASCOT I 24" & 36" Pickup Cover* TRUCK CAMPERS CH Trail., C„|« EVAN'S EQUIPMENT I Ellsworth Trailer *t,]**J*s*.i7ii ciarkiton *25-251 4577 Dixit Hwy._______*1^M0 NEW HOURS: OPEN 9 A.M.-O P.M. 1946" 14'” TRAVEL TRAILER, tlt*P* 4. Ilka new. 652-2404. 1944 INTERNATIONAL, 168 TRIUMPH BQNNEVILLE. CC. *93*. 441-07*7. ___________ T940 TRIUMPH 4*0, 1*00 mil**. Coll attar 4 p.m. FE 4-21*1. I960 TRIUMPH *00, 44)00 mil**. M7*. 343-M4)L*v*nlnQ*. i960 HODAKA, 90, 447-5143. PB'iwS IvlRY WtURDAY SELL - consiSnment \SH PRIZE EVI Dixie Hwy. I polos, doth** rack. 447-712t ?r* 8 P-7"' *"•' * p-m- u * 'EM Sporting Goods ^ , Y FIBERGLASS MANITOU, new, with paddltt, earrylr* never used, 0150. Call . oft. EM 3-6244. "’BOWS AND aSRGwS,'334 ----~ ^trvrfu W.^7 LJAT, arnik. 12, 10 A-M. impiamant Liquidation 0)04 Lennon Rd. 2 mllat north • •• mil* weal ot Swartz Craali .. Ana vi mu* wan u, 74 10 Form. Tractors-* ah,Hag — f Rotavator 4 p.r Gena's Arthary, 7 AMPHlCAf Plows — Cultivator* \ nousanoia ana relics. Parkins' Sala-Sarvle* Auctlonsars Swartz Creak, l^abNESDAY..APRIL 44 Of Out 635 9400 443? feuranS r8)VMl1*lNarth 3ur*nd.U 4 factor* aM Maleh iETirro:, Js»L ,&B°o?| mt l alactric *1 v Tfree ! Ssjf • N§w 1949 Console Stereo* AM'FM iGiMiAiNS iB’ee I IhS'^Wau?^ whan m ®"0 ryfia? bjBr,*r a Ss&p ^ HOUSEHOLD APPlItNCE | (hto»Jftw«’p|Rd. iflitp.m. jRfWl^ks Usad Auto-Truck Ports 102 1*99 FORD TRUCK angina 17*. whatlt and tfraa. I4MW1. 1944 CHEVY 2i ESS^jkSi't 2147 ait. a. t964 tempest count, v» aufo. Tor parti, PE MW. FOR. SALE: CyM^dragttar,. Citovy MISCELLANEOUS 1943 and 1944 Corvatto part*. Induda* mldnlgtit blue hardtop for tlMk Batwaan IS now and saval New tree Olqtapar Stoury, Mlr ra-CraM Boats, Dolphin Pontoon*. ■*“ Green* Sailboats, Evlnruda nr 2179. if. _ ____ THPU' 16' to 24* THOMPSON Sa* th# 2B* Canvas Back Campar, simps *, comptot* Galley, 140 Mtr-crulMr. ' 11 CHRYSLER MODELS Now In atock 14' to Vt "One* In a iltatlma dealsl" OUTBOARD MOTORS PARtS FOR: ■lymouth 4 door l^E&n[rr.l 1940 llalf n!acP*parti. H & H Auto Sales & Service - DR MM New gad Used Tratke 1(13 19S4*OA4C^PICKUP^un« good, new 1940 FORD F-10b Pkkup. good shape, conaldar trad* or sail. 47>-OSTlT 1964 CHEVY % ton pickup, excellent r TON PICkupT* TOM RADEMACHER ^CHEVY-OLDS I FORD to ton, Wtt SI*. I finish, 1(9*. Over Fj to sWact from—On Ul Clarktten, MA SG071. TROTWOODS WAGT4-MASTER 4 ACE JOHNSON'S TRAVEL TRAILER*._ 5)7 E. Walton Blvd. FE 4-5*53 wolverine tteuck i. Factory — —1 used rentals. Meaning . bt—------ ..... ....___/lars, auxiliary gaa- ollna tanka, atabnizlno shock*. LOWRY CAMPER SALES 132* S. Hospital Rd. Union L EM 3-3681 racalvad tlx naw *50ce mod*Is. Don't ml** th., T... I modal* 111*0.00, TT II195.M. .... Is compitto dallvarad prlc*. Com* out tor a »#*t rldt. ’• **“"• Motorcycle Sale trailers - Campers” > , ___■ COVERS, Goodall Trallar Salat, SPECIAL PRICES ON ALL 3200 5. Rochastar fed., >52-45*0. I » B k ..ansi a CLIFF DREYER'S MARINE DIVISION MB 44771 B 99 HANGERS FOR RiNT yeur Plan* for undar tl. - .... Brtti'cllfl^J MOONEY Check out In Maanav, *19 par .nr., normally 123. Com mender Plight Servlc*. 4731220, _____ Vanted Cart-Tracks 101 EXTRA Dollars Paid EXTRA0Sharp Car Etptcially Chavallai. Camarot, Corvaltaa, OHOa, Firebird* and 194* FORD to TON. With BStWIOr, axcallant condition, *7*0. Saa Raftar ML Ranch, OS Rochastar itS^MlvV *poifT VAN. mutt aali. EM 3-04*0. ,1 its* CHEVY to TON PICKUP, V-0 315-2905. t6"'4m’aueur«; PONTIAC, FE 4-7101. PINK FORMlCAt|e XT* W.» I TakM yw Hw&raPtt!a *actlan to.! BR Krt, BrMn twaad ® 'ss?i»i iimr >M enwir. Mtesjueins voasei rn > i pn. owarae woaia* v^ry-yw,- ■« VL*.', tl(apii~ BOOTH CAMPER Pickup covara _and campar custom built, C- J- enjoy'YOUR VaCaYIoN' this year "ypriqjjt. iprearfars. lO .f’8-1lj"~ .............mt Wv© to0Um1i?‘ north o? ........ Anthony !• aA8|«!L!57 p__________ Plairtt-Treet-Shrabs OROWN ■> spreadtrs. BVA| from. Sava up to-GSC campar* whlla tnav cabovar pickup truo Da’alar'eiM (^K I. Rochaitor Rd., 152-4550. | MODELS »TBEL» frA^b pickup ato^par*| Anderson Sales 8. Service MNUr «SL u,i s. telegraph fs sgh choose, and tapa. naw 19*0! Sportcraft Naw r Watarford. NOW ADDED A NEW LINE TO OUR OTHER QUALITY TRAILERS DRIFTWOOD j TRAVEL TRAILERS , Ellsworth Trailer Sales 4*77 Dixit Highway *2*-44l Enduro Cycle models On Wildcat mlnl-blkaa 'htrai j MixSJraS* I SALES TtPSICO LAKE. Fhona “* *20 and up. Flpf cut am KwAP:'' For tong. ■— Vinyl pumps .... r>g. Call tor wfrs#r ra. Long haatorl. sppt. to-Fl 1-2304 I wMici iKsir.a 149, Pro; pixie Hwy: north «| I-7S Intersection, i me Evtrgnan Farms, *970' ,V„ 425-1fa. / 83 IORSE TR/ 'IV. MUSt I o60D SAI „ap6LI horsa*. Wti gantto, *200 aaeh. FB 4 4-1442. , CENTURY YELLOWSTONE TRAVEL TRAILERS STACHLER TRAILER , SALES, INC- 3771 Highland (M-lt) J . j . *82 MOTORCYCLE INSURAnCI7 an-?-SA^M@L 3 BEDROOM, 1S*x40‘, 1948 Baron,| 1097 down, (99.90 Mr month, partly1 lurn., 334-i*09, DLR.____IE, IxiFTfWtllT'aol ILItABlfH C|, t Laka fiiii paMlad. 4MWrii. , cc ,i. -11-- AlAlRli kHGONIR 2 Ml — carpet, clean 11400. OR C| YAMAHA-KAWASAKI cal lent salactlon In ...-„ ... Her on M-21, pna mllr - I FE 40090; MW IW" Averill's FE *9070 tM Dixie FE.GO, Mansfield AUTO SALES ,300 SI07S. 34X710. TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDI _ 194* CHEVY to Ton, with S .ft. zzjz ti. wl m Ciarkiton, MA *-1071. WjIIp B-14 Ntw gad Used Trocks lOJ 1M IK)(tD_W TON pickup,JM# V*> ■j&jhgwa ' ATTENTION TRUCKERS _ on ^ra.- w,„„ JHBVY PICKUP, 1965 to to n, •wiv-..j —*— -■-‘■i, S1295. lUetd Ctrl 106 1964 BUICK SPORT WAGON, cylinder, radio, heater, auto. V power, blua with blua Interior, i white walla. *1595. , HUNTER DODGE 499 South Hunter II 7-095* Birmingham 1966 BUICK LESABRR 2 door ■ rdtop. Dark turquolu with black erlor. Automatic, power iteerlng d brakes. Excellent condition. 000 actual miles. 643-3909. Audette Pontiac Maple Rd. Troy BUICK LeSABRB 2 door BILL FOX CHEVROLET 753 $■ Rochoater Rd. 65170H GMC TRUCK CENTER 1:00 to J:0fc Mon.-Frl. § 0:00 to 12:00 Saturday . 701 Oakland Avenue 335-9731 Auto htsuraice-Marlne f04 AUTO INSURANCE . ANDERSON A ASSOCIATES t064 JOSI.YN.Pl 6-3535 Foreign Cars_ 1964 VW 3 DOOR. Radio No S down, payments , price *6«*. Coll Wr Parkt c-edlt manager at Ml 4-7500. Naw “Harold Turner Ford 2600 Maple Trov Mall 1 mile EAST OF WOODWARD I960 VW. A real clear car. Or "’economy USED CARS ni«u Hwv. PE 4-2131 I960 VW, EXCELLENT^ sun roof, radio, -1300 miles, 1” Nlahta 335-10*9. , daya 0724)044, ytf. SUNK OUr# naw •xtras. $13509 $51-3704 before '*‘1 CORTINA 2,DWK. HgTSm. 1400 mile ea. „ 'MBotS aharp as a tack Spring apeclal only *1508. Just *)M down. __ JOHN McAULIFFE FORD Oakland Av*. FE S4101 ^ 3 I condition, *1600. 330 2993. before you buVI BILL G0LUNG VW I960 BUICK HARDTOP Sport Coup*, whit* ■ body, black vinyl top, *xc. condition. *2450. PE 5-1487, 1957 CADILLAC 2> door hardtop, coup* DaVIII*. full powor, "fa 1960 CADILLAC actual miles. Ron pink w 1964 CADILLAC COUPE DtVIlte without olr, $1550. Pvt. ewnor. FE 5-7556 alter 6 p.m. mo Cadillac coupi o*viii*.. ■ condition. Full power. 039 down. payments $13.91 Full -........** Call Mr. Parks credit mam Ml 4-7500. Naw location of Harold Turner Ford 2600 Maple ___________ . Troy Mall 0 01795. la aaat of Woodward ^TEHAffiTLSLW«AECSS0N JEROME 1951 CHEVY. NWW! PM Cadillac, bast offer. FE 12500. 1960 CHEVY CONVERTIBLE, V-O, iggyaJtt 1961 CORVETTE, 327, 4-spud, sharp. RcSSqmy used cars New «nd Used Cars 1963 CHBVY.II, .2 door, VI, stick, excellent condition, *415, Buy Here-Pay Here. Marvel Motor*. 251 Oakland. FE 0-4079. 1963 CHEVY, 2 dooi condition, 0475. 02 Washington. Com* to back ^door^ond^ door on OM^fyYlfAWoiTw iOLBT iTl . Good condition. Asklno price *300. 674-3001._________ 1964 CHEVROLET IMPALA Hardtop. .powergllde, powor steering. 051 I960 DODGE POLARA HARDTOP, with VI, automatic, radio, noalor, powor stoarlng. brakes, beaulllul silver blua, with matching Interior, spring • special only, sue* lull prlca. Just *1*1 down. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 630 Oakland Av*. FE 5-4101 1*67 DODGE SPORTS van. perfect condition, * pass. “*■ “““1 van, $1300 ask foi 1597. 5 DODGE POLARA *dobr’T*i397 LUCKY AUTO 1940 W. wid# Track FE 4-1006 or FE 3-7854 KESSLER'S- DODGE CARS AND TRUCKS Soto* and Sorvie* Oxford *____OA H400 COUNTRY SQUIRE station l V-0 engine, automatic ’erABRe HARDTOP -ower, goodeondP1"- *9“ I, oftor 3:30 pjn. 1964 BUICK Convertible Spoclal- t hoator, run top. Only i, automatic, radio, $895 GRIMALDI Buick-Opel > Orchard Lk. Rd._____FE *9165 14 BUICK Spoclal Station Wagon, alth Vi, automatic, radio, hoator. sower steering, brakes, beautiful 1967 Buick 225 Air Condition $2595 1966 Buick.Wildcat Air Condition $1495 1965 Mercury Parkli $1095 1962 Mercury Meteor $495 1967 Deha 2 door, hardtop $1995 1965 BUICK Wildcat hardtop .beautiful candy apple rod 1 block tpp, full powor, and oil me tfo„oc goodies, spring special - at only $2295 inn full price. Just SIM down. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD «3D Oakland 1966 Toronodo Deluxe 1966 buick wagon, radial . Ply Zlebart rustprootod, power RgHHlMwelbs transmission, t, 338-6551. Suburban Olds 860 S. Woodward Ml 7-5111 New and Used Cars 106New and Used Cars 106 SWING INTO SPRING WITH A "DEPENDABLE" -1964 BUICK Electro "225" two door hardtop. Aspen groan In color, wllft matching Interior end black top. V-t, automatic, powor stoarlng, brakes and windows, radio, hoator, whitewalls. Be sure 1968 VOLKSWAGEN Sun R6of ' A little rod beauty If there ever yras on*. It has • matching vinyl Interior, too. Radio, heater ond whlte- 11965 PONTIAC Stor Chief - hardtop. An *11 white beauty with red vinyl Interior. V-8, radio, hoator, power steering and premium whitewalls. Low mileage by on* 1966 BUICK LoSobre 1969 CMC , Vj ton pickup. Eight, foot box, V-t, automatic, radio, Malur, West Coast mirrors. Plonty of got up and go. 1969 CADILLAC Elderodo Vory special. Two door hordtop. Silver with blue vinyl top, toother uats, climate control olr conditioning, AM-FM radio, full power, thowroom condition. 1967 THUNDERBIRD Landau two door hardtop. Phoenix blue In color with matching all Vinyl intorlor and whit* vinyl top. Factory •Ij>, powor steering, brakes and windows, AM-FM radio, flit (tooting whoaL Mater, whitewalls. Gorgoous. 1965 MUSTANG two door hordtop. Rich burgundy .In color with block top. "ir V-e, radio, hooter, whitewall*. HILLSIDE . . JJNCOLNrMERCURY 1250 Oakland :v ■:'-i............-t— $1295 $1695 $1295 $1695 $2095 $6995 $2595 $995 3337863 of Woodward 1966 CHEVY Bel-AIr 2 door with 6 cyl. automatic, powi FLANNERY FORD (Formarly Beattie Ford) n Dixie Hwy.. Waterford 623-09( Park's credit manager at Mi 4-7500.1 Now location of Harold Turner Ford I 2600 Maoie ' Troy Mall i mllt aaat of Woodward___I mijSlRD HARDTOP, *450 | DEALER____________ 33B-923* 1943 FORD, COUNTRY lldl* wagon, V|, automatic. Ilka naw, *475, Buy Here-Pay Hero, Marvel Motors, 251 Oakland, FE 0-4079.______:__ 144 FALCON, FUTURA, engine, transmission. Completely overhauled. Body In A-1 condition. Call 40MA0I. ___________ 1964 FOftD OALAXIE _______nice. Call 6*1-0771. 1964 FORD GALAXI6 500. vertibio, etler 4 pjn. 1964 FORD B Hlahiand Rd. On M24 in Lake Orion MY 2-2411 1967 CORVETTE, 327, 4 spaad, 2 topi* ilda •xhauit. OR 3^8105. CHEVY 1967 IMPALA hardtop. bucket l brakes. 174)00 "actual. miles. 1967 CHEVROLET HARDTOP "tower and automatic. *39 down, •ymentt S12.M. Full prlca *1595 :all Mr. Park* credit niiisr----1 Al 4-75*0. Naw location of Harold Turner Ford Troy Moll TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS . >68 CAMARO with V-B, (tick shift, (s.'VrlcU*to N#W 0IM* ^art 1^ Union Lako.j l4*grF°a^De^*ylj^ll^fl^8>|*^|l(o^l Daluxe. body brake’s, factory a^^condltlonlng irv good con- and a v,ny| ,op- Mir. —-*>- ■>-Union Auto ready to follow th 5-1*42 alt. *| »£- *1, JOHN McAULIf T967VORD New and Used Cars FLANNERY FORD (Formerly Boottl* Ford) On Dixie Hwy„ Waterford 423-0900 1967 MUSTANG 6, automatic, vinyl root, stud snows, real sharp, 20,000 miles. *1,450 firm. 674-0672, “ $1095 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymoutlr topi* Rd. 642-7000 1167 PLYMOUTH FURY III. dOUblO powor, auto. $1,530, 33*4374. 1966 PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE |— --rdtop, ( cylinder, r condition, 332-6594 condltton, *550. 9*50 JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 430 Oekland Av*. FE 5-41 FORD LTD hardtop, wl tllul nrr—"- - "-k c vinyl 1, heater, power FORD CUSTOM beautiful *llv*r blue fk—--- --matching Intorlor. Full J*^orT ^iP.^pr.c‘.rSS.«:n0nly JOHN McAULIFFE FORD_____________ 630 0poRD^ sTATioN\yAGQNrv^.| Contin©ntals -■- lull price, •• rnonevl 1 finest Ford 1 -g spoclal only it sis* down, hi LUCKY AUTO 1940 W. Wide Track 6 1965 FORD FE 3-78541 Falrlano 500 stoilpn V8, automatic, radio. nee.«„ ---- .......... beteotlfUl ebony black with burgundy aM| vinyl Intorlor. Spring spoclal only *98* full price. Just ***• JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 430 Oakland Av*._____FE H1PJ 1965 FORD, 4^loor, V* automatic, power steering* 10 to choose from. $696 full price. _______ _ LUCKY AUTO $ave! Bob Borst HUNTER DODGE eo* South Hunter Birmingham MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH radio, whitewalls. 677 M-24, Lako Orion. 693B341. 1968 Plymouth Satellite 5 to choou from Specially Owned Birmingham Chrysler Company Cars . • -1 p p * d, including V-l ___ transmission, pow* sturlng and many axtras. Thau cars carry full 50.000 mil* * warranty. 10 par cant payments *63.00 monthly. $1995 Sllvei LE MANS 2 I I ir blue with bin k bucket seals a tomatlc, pov ■ whitewall ... Low mlloag* k vinyl lop. Troy double ______ ____ mileage and maintained. Call 642-3289. Audette Pontiac 1944 PONTIAC 2 GO! HAUPT PONTIAC And Save $ $ $ CALRKSTON_425-5500 FE i960 fTrEBIRO 350 powar, automatic Green with black curi 4*60. 196* BONNEVILLE, black vinyl lop. ( I standard *hlft. 3 tpee-. ™-rear seat speaker. 15,000 actual milts. Extra claan. CaH *42-32*9. Audette Pontiac 1*50 Maple Rd. Tr< 1969 PONTIAC ■BONNEVILLE, RUSS JOHNSON j PONTIAC-TEMPEST ' On M-24 Lakt Orion MY 3-6266 196* PONTIAC CATALINA 4^00^ luJCKY AUTO i.™.™ 3B W. Montcalm _____ 1964 RAMBLER AMERICAN 330T-station wagon, automatic, radio, heater, IhGi car * to mbit.eon* dltlon. Spring ipaelal, only *7U full DficPa no nfionty down. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 4&Q Oaklaiid AVa. FB S-4i0t . RAMBLlR AMERICAN^ " ‘ HHRPH . cyl., radio, tow mlteaOO. 391-0509._ 946 RAMBLER Ambassador Station waoon, with VI, automatic, radio, hoator, power stofrlng,. brakes, spring special only II 111 full price, ‘loHN‘McAULIFFE FORD 31 Oakland Avo. Fa S-4I0I IAMBLER 196* Cross Country Wagon, with VI. automatic, power, one owner, 11245. 1)45 or oM car BILL FOX CHEVROLET 1 steering. Dari 964 PONTIAC CATALINA Hardtop, one own— 474-0072 covers. Vinyl ll^g ™ .. reduced prices. Call 642-32*9. Audette Pontiac 1|50 Maple Rd. 4 1964 PONTIAC Catalina with light blua finish, a real good buy priced at only *499. GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 Oakland Ayo.______FE 5-9421 1965 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE red, iuiu|teut'“—, 2 plus 2, clean, FE 0- *165. FE '3-7*54 hardtop* >3650, 335-15*3. n radio wagonEER, station wagon, 4 wheel 1 " e, automatic transmission, •wall tires, "low mloltgo. Village Rambler Trades . 1967 Buick LeSabri 4 door horedlop. I cylinder, automatic. P o w a r sloorlng and brakes. Radio, hoator, whitewall 1965 GTO CONVERTIBLE, flood condition, mornings only. 674-3973.1 IHB|--------------- llr, c>e 1 FE 866*6 } $1699 1967 Rebel 2 door, 6 cylinder automatic transmission. Radio, etc. CLEANI On* owner. Now car warranty. $1299 VILLAGE RAMBLER 666 S. Woodward Ml 6-3900 New and Used Cars 106 New and Used Cart 106 1965 PONTIAC OTO, I stick* new tires, 1 81198. Ceil 335-8614. 1965 PONTIAC FLANNERY FORD (Formerly Beattie Ford) Ixl* Hwy.. Waterford 6234)900 MILOSH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH ................. I $1395, W-24. Lake Orion. 69M341. MUSTANG V-*, 3 SPOtd, SHOO. 1-4750.______________- 1966 FALCON CLUB wagon, tor II family who play I o g a t h * r automatic, radio, hoator, sharp i a tack, b# ready lor fun in II sun. Spring ipeclal only *1481 tu price, |u*t *18* tfswrr' ___ JOHN Me A1JUFFE FORD 630 Oakland Av*. FB 1966 FORD I960 FORD FAIRLANE, 2 doo hardtop, 302 onglnt, standard shifi all vinyl trim, lima gold. Ilka n«w 10,000 milts, *1095. 673-8956 after 1966 CONTINENTAL, BLACK, 4-dr. vinyl --NT”“ ’ FE 69770. I hardtop. I Chrysler-Plymouth 2100 Mopl* Rd. Troi _________642-7000__________ 1962 BONNEVILLE, DOUBLE powor good condition, *200. FE 2-1779. 1962 PONTIAC CATALINA, 2 door bl* powar, radio, hoator. S2Si rode tor? 693(63* otter 4 p.FYI, ...j 4-7500. New location of Harold Turner Ford 600 Mapl* . Tr«r 1 mil* oast ot Woodward 9ii mbr6ury. Low _o7Il, mileage, powar, radio, hoator, *50, FE 5-1137. 1961 MERCURY, transportation, 575. 625-3149. 1961 2 DOOR MERCURY. 051-3020 AFTER 5 P.M. 1962 COMET 2-DR., GOOD SHAPE. 1963 BONNEVILLE sports Double powor. *595. 625-5447. 1963 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE, *350. 611-0948, after 5 p.m. 1966 CATALINA, DOUBLE powar *1200. 2006 Klnmount. Off Joslyrt. 966 GTO, MUST SELL! Leaving fo 1963 TEMPEST COUPE, clean, I 1963 PONTIAC STATION wago powar stoarlng and brakes, *400. DEALER_____________________ 330-92 1961 CORVAIR, assume payments. FE 5-265). Call after 5._____ 960 CHRYSLER, good transportation, *150. Inquire at 115 N. Perry, 4 CHRYSLER HARDTOP. Powor payments *5.44. Pull price Call Mr. Parks Credit manat Ml 4-7500. Naw location of Harold Turner Ford 2600 Maple Troy Mall 2600 Maple Mack vinyl trim. FLANNERY FORD I (Formarly Buffi* Ford) Ion Dixie Hwv., Waterford 623^ Mustangs Pretty Ponies '65 -'66 -'67 -'68 15 to choou from. As down, *39 par month. 1965 2-plu* 2 tailback, \ Full price S1046) Ca l Mr. Pi credit manager ot Ml 4-7500. I location of s , Harold Turner Ford 1884 MERCURY 1_______a___________ Buckets. Powor and automatic. No I down, paylnents *4.42. Full *5*8. Call Mr. Park* ---------- manager at Ml 4-7500. Now location or Harold Turner Ford 2600 Mapl* Troy Mall] t mil* east of Woodward . COMET CALIENfC SlTOWl mile*. 2 door hardtop, new brakes, fires, battery and exhaust. (850. 363-9346.___________________ 1965 COMET, 2 DOOR, 6 cylinder, "'Lk, excellent condition, SJ95. Buy re-Pay Hero, Marvel Motor*, 251 11965 from, ns iwvv ■* •*' ■ month. (Example: HURRY Clearance Priced of woodward 1965 CHRYSLER NEWPORT, 2 door! 1966 FORD CUSTOM V-* rtlek. ex-- irdtop, turquoise, exc. condition, cellent condition, 1*50. 332-6897 ,000 mites, under Chrysler war- evenings 335-6049._____________________ nty, has h*d TLC. tlfoo. Ml 4. fM6^>ORD GALAXIE 500 XL M 11W|,h beautiful metallic Ivy with .matching buckali, v*,1 heater, power steering, automatic, with console, 967 MERCURY CONVERTIBLE, power sturlng, outo, radio. Rod, good condition, *1,050. 624-4982. 1967 MERCURY Cougar, white 2-door hardtop, this one Is extra tin* and It's a gas with low miteogo, only 11995, lor Bruce McCartney. GRIMALDI CAR CO. 00 Oakland ________FE 5-9421 ■ GET A MERRY OLDS M0 DEAL AT h. Hava to make s on th* fabu and Plymouth*. ACT NOW $2195 covers. Excellent condition. CaH 842-3289. Audette Pontioc . 150 Mapl* Rd. Troy . Coll after 5 p 166 PONTIAC I Vanlura ---------- powor, excellent condition. Short] Market 2425 VoortlteS Rd. t CATALINA 2 I 966 CATALINA, 2 door hardtop, loadod, mint condition, best offer. 602-64)7. _______________________ FINAL' CLEARANCE 1968s STOCK NO. 4640-CHRVSLER, NEWPORT CONVERTIBLE....$3499 , STOCK NO. 3540-FURY III, 2 DOOR, HARDTOP....$3099 -WITH THIS AD ONLY-GIVE US A TRY - BEFORE YOU BUY OAKLAND ■ Chrysler-Plymouth ^24 Oakland FE 5-9436 New and Used Cars 106 New and Used Cars VI1495 Opdyke H 1967 PONTIAC EXECUTIVE hardtop. Silver blua* wifi Interior. Factory air Powar sturlng and v • » automatic, tilt stoarlng 29,000 actual mites. New immaculate condition. Call 32*9. ■ Audette Pontiac 1*50 Mapl* Rd. war, factory olr. all ■lor, absolutely sharp t, today's special. $1995 2 door 1966 Chrysler Newport ardtop. V-l, automatic, MERRY 0LDSM0BILE 520 N. Main 1 ROCHESTER, MICHIGAN I. __*xc*ll*nt condition, I i_1495 '767 Pontiac, 4 Ms. Light metallic :k vlnyf Interior. $1495 BIRMINGHAM!1 Chrysler-Plymouth Mapl# Rd. 642-7000 MILOSH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1965 Ntwport, 4-door, turquolu with black top, turquolu 1 n t * r I o -automatic, stoarlng, brakes, rai whitewalls. .677 M-24, Lake Orl 693-0241 ■_________ MILOSH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH Chrypltr 300 2 d< blue beauty it exfi »nd out priced at on .us vt, exceiivni wiohwhi! $1795 FE 2-1779. _ j sprlno Is coming, so beta iPprr.j ^3 OLOsTdoor wagonTcfeTn $895 1967 Pontiac. 4 door, tod Oply 81588 full frlco. Just •'••j 1963 Olds * door hordtoo. good m«roon, extra thorp* Inti dJ0HN McAULIFFE FORD LorMorcurv " * J ‘‘iT H tH Aura Saies irs^rvVa OR 3-5200 power stoarlng, this little OLDS HARDTOP.' Power ond omotic. No I down, payments 16. Full price *668. Call Mr. vo„,™ ........ *1595 1966 T-BIrd Convertible, shorp. .*1595 .... _ ---- 2-door hardtop. *1395 19*2 Olds 4-door, sharp .. * KEEGO PONTIAC SALES KEEGO HARBOR_____________682-3400 CATALINA, /_pOO_R, hardtop,; 430 Oakland 1966 FORD MUSTANG | Automatic, transmission, radio, s 1-------condition. $1395 $1695 Today only. --------:--- room condition. 1966 CHEVY IMPALA Coup*, VI, powergllde. sh latlc, sturlng, Orlpn, 493-8341, _____ WATCH FOR GIANT iAVifiGS FRIDAY COLONIAL L CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH >9 8. Main 884-361 MILFORD___ >56-DE SOTA. good transportmioi ,335-3814. 1985 DODGE DART, SKI i| Blrnurighan $1495 TAYLOR ! 1965 OLDSMOBILE nO lion wagon, l family, call tvenlngs. Ml 7-6245. sta-11965 Chrysler 2 door, hardtop, I — I.iivar beauty I* sharp Inside and i i black vlnvl top. $1395 CHEVY-OLDS CONVERTIBLE* top. GT Interior wheel. V-l slekrlng ond sturlng wheal. Ic, powar 14,6*0 acti Absolutely II In. Call saMor- Audette Pontiac „ OLDS SUPER dalux* 1 excellent condition, smooth *i almost now rubber, air dltloned. Dayllm* call Ml 4-1122, _ _______ CUTLASS convertible. Light blu* with matching Intorlor white top. V» automatic, --------- stearlno, bucket ualt. 27.00 mii«. Like naw. Call 642-321 Audette Pontiac d11*50 M nice et they*come. Spring Tonichj tp«cle^onjv^41t99. Full price end ' JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 10 Qekland Ave._ _ FB 5-4101' 1967 MUSTANG V-l, Slick "eater,, wide oval liras.! •910* after 3 p.m._;_I, MILOSH $1395 $1395 I* Super sport 2. doo i llttlo rod beauty It * ir at Ml 4-7500. aw location or Harold Turner Ford 1947 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE, I steering, power broket, transmission, spotless, by o< >6* LEMANS CONVERTIBLE, with whit* top, whit* Intorlor. automatic, power during brakes. Power radio ante Tinted windshield. Car I* maculate. 642-33*9. Audette Pontiac 1*50 Mapl* Rd. Troy] WHITE HAT SALE AIL NEW 69's REDUCED (OR SALE ALL USED CARS REDUCED FOR SALE CHECK THESE WHITE HAT SAVINGS 64 Le Sabre ....................... ..............$995 Convertible, I, automatic, powor, radio, whitewalls. 64 Impala ........................................$895 Hardtop, I, automatic, powar, radio, whitewalls. 66 Fury 111 .....................................$1395 2 door hardtop, I, automatic, powar, radio, vinyl top, whitewalls. 65 Valiant ....................................- $795 Automatic, gat savings transportation. 67 Dodge....................................... $1395 ------ —‘nnnatle. vlnvl too. radio, whitewalls. ..................$455 63 Cutlass ... Convertible, *, automatic, * 64 Barracuda .......... Hardtop, V-8, automatic, po 67 Fury II . ....... Station wagon, I, automatic, 68 Mustang Hardtop. I. au— 66 Polara Convertible# 8# 67sVW Bug . Fully equipped w ,, radio, whitewalls. ..$695 ..$995 harp. $1795 .$2295 .$1295 $1395 THI«G00D GUYS SAY "WE WON'T DODGE ANY DEAL'' * SPARTAN DODGE * SELLS FOR LESS (Tell us if we're wrong) 855 Oakland 338-9222 New and Used Cars 106 New and Used Cars 106 Naw and Used Cara 106 $1295 $1295 payments Ceil Mr. Fw. Ml 4’7S00. N«„ 8______ Harold Turner Ford *00 Mapl* Troy A 1 mil* east of Woodward CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH down,! 1947 Ford Oatoxto, 500, 2 door.l *— 'hard-top# crulsa-o-metlc, steering, brakes, radio, whitewalls, I-owner, sharp, 11795. 577 M-24, Lake Orion, 49S5341._______________________ 1947 MUSTANO, V-l, automatic, | 166 OLDS TORONADO, < black Interior, 32.000 transmission, power ill brekes, tinted glass, *11 >47 ~OL DS TOR0NA607^-.. Mil air conditioning, AM-FM, 27,000 ml lot, *2,995, 33*9502. 167 OLDS DELTA Custom, i,'"*-1,,,. ? steering, brakes and windows, olr 1965 Plvrhouth 9 | condition, AM-FM storu radio. Ideal for fh# Into# exc,. condition, 230-3719, If no lor only. answer 334-3224._____;____| $1095 1968 OLDS 11M. w.ltan, VJM . * ultra nliSI ft fMMBL ..... ’$795 rlmoldl. GRIMALDI CAR CO. real work horib and )1 W——rap ALL READY FDR THE ROAD.) 1967 MUSTANG. 6 cyl ONLY S795. ■ f i outomollc, vinyl tu,. GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 Oakland_AvO._____FB_S9421(/ 1967 FORD 1966 DODGE POLARA Convortlbte, - ^---- auto, with powor, taji, bluo interior. 7 900 Qaktotid __________PE 59421 u ! THIS WEEK'S NEW CAR SPECIAL i| 1969 OLDS Cutlets Jii £ $2809/ i^dTJ^rt.^ season it nora. Try thla red br—*"' for only $795 DODGE pickup, VO onglno, $185 b^wtHTbi_______ whitewall Mroe. 6nfir .. HUNTER DODGE . ./Jl'Jp"" HHiid Al 7-0954 MUSTANG 1 PLUS 2, dark t for Jack Brannon 5*4 Oakland , GRIMALDI CAR CO. 'Ta r^'cT. J'ntMV» lk lend FE 5 ?4?1! t tren^mliBion. 62>1I39. MPS Oakland Vi CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH n'TM Oakland Pi M4»* HAHN e TODAY'S SPECIAL * ,1966 CHEVELI.E 2-Dppr -r with automatic, dean condition, green with matching interior. ' .$995 1967 PLYMOUTH Fury n with V-t, automatic, powar car warranty. Ideal family ear. | A. $1895 1968 OLDS Cutlass 2-door hardtop, with low mlloag*, oas tee! Llk# new condition, grwn with 1 ...$2495 Mac!! Interior. 1968 VW Squareback .... Mint condition, very economical. ,...$1995 1964 PLYMOUTH 4 door... Automatic, power (tearing, radio, $595 hutor. 1964 TEMPEST 2 door ... v-l, automatic, radio, hutor, like outl ... .$795 1965 PONTIAC Hordtop .. 2 door, with Ventura trim, full i tu to appreciate. ....$9295 power. MUSI SB Chrysler-Plymouth-Rambler-Ieep ctekston, ( iMA:; 5-2635 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, APRIL 8, 1069 B—ll -Television Programs- Programs furnishied by station* listed in this column art subject to change without notics). Scrambler Chonwolii 2-WJBK-TV. 4-WWJ-TV. 7-WXVZ-TV. 9-CKLW-TV. 50-WKBD-TV, 56-WTVS-TV, 62-WXON-TV r — Rerun C — Color TUESDAY NIGHT - News, 6:00 (2) (4) (7) C Weather, Sports (0) R — Movie: "So Proudly We Hail” (1943) The lives and loves of Army nurses pn Bataan during World War II are told. Paulette Goddard, Claudette Colbert (SO) R C — Flintstones (56) What's New (62) R — Sea Hunt 6:30 (2) C — News — Cronklte -(■4) C — News — Huntley, Brinkley (7) C —News — Reynolds (50) R — McHale’s Navy — Ensign Parker, after a blow on the head, thinks he’s 10 years old. (56) TV High School (82) R — Highway Patrol 7:00 (2) C — Truth or Consequences (4) (7) C — News, Weather, Sports (50) R — I Love Lucy — Plans by the Ricardos and Mertzes for a trip through the Swiss Alps are interrupted by an avalanche. (56) Antiques — Clocks and clockmakers are discussed and sever a 1 unique clocks are shown. (62). R — Movie: "Night Train f o r Inverness” (British, 1959) Father treats his " son to ice cream, unaware the boy is a diabetic. Norman Wooland, Jane Nylton 7:30 (2) C — Lancer -Johnny finds himself in the role of teacher when the schoolmarm asks his stern hand In helping her with reluctant pupils. (4) C — Jerry Lewis — Guests are Michele Lee and the Osmond Brothers. Jerry plays would-be men-talist who has trouble with his I (7) C — Mod Squad — JLinc < and Pete go undercover as prison inmates to protect the life of a convicted draft dodger. 50) R C — Hazel — The masterful maid saves the Baxters from a financial crisis by whipping up a giants batch of her homemade brownies. (56) French Chef — Viewers are shown how to carve a leg of lamb. 8:00 (9) C - I Spy -Robinson learns the woman he loves is linked to an exiled dictator. (50) C — Pay Cards (56) C — Fact of the Matter — The focus is on Detroit and the Kerner Report as Mayor Cavanagh and 12th Street residents are Interviewed. 8:25 (62) Greatest Headlines 8:30 (2) C — Red Skelton -June Lockhart and Gloria Lortng are guests. (4) C — Julia — Dr. Chegley's health concerns ' V Julia when he asks her to call in a specialist. (7) C — It Takes a Thief — Mundy tries to find a microdot, supposedly in the possession of a beauty contest-winner, and containing vital defense information. (50) C — Password — Betty White and George Grizzard guest. (56) Accent — A contemporary jazz group, "The S t u Katz-Bunky Green Quintet,” presents original compositions. (62) R C - Movie: "Our Man 1 n Casablanca” (Italian, 1966) CIA agent becomes Involved with a general’s daughter. Lang Jeffries. 9:00 (4) R — Movie : - ^'Madame X” (1966) Wife TV Features FACT OF THE MATTER, 8 p.m. (56) NET FESTIVAL, 9 p.m. MAYOR AND THE CITY, 10 p.m,,*(2) . THAT’S LIFE, 10 p.m. (7) JOEY BISHOP, 11:30 pim. (7) of a rising poli tician becomes involved In a scandal and is told by her ■mother-in-law she must leave her husband, and infant son. Lana Turner, John Forsythe, Ricardo Montalban, Burgess Meredith (») C - What’s My Line? (50) R — Perry Mason — "The Case of the Sleepy Slayer” (56) C - NET Festival -Conductor Zubin Mehta leads the Los Angeles Philharmonic in preparation and performance of Stravinsky’s "The Rite of _. Spring."^.-.. 9:30 (2) C — Doris Dav^gl Doris and the children try to show Buck they can take care of Leroy’s . chores, '-------------"—3 (7) R C - N.Y.P.D. t-,1 Hunt for a runaway young girl leads to the body of a brutally murdered young man who had shared her “crash pad.” (Part 1) (9) RC —Wojeck 10:00 (2) C — Mayor and the City — Staff of 25 special operators will be on hand to take questions for Detroit Mayor Jerome Cavanagh. Number to call, starting at 9:30 p.m., is 871-2000. (7)-R C - That’s Life — Kay Medford and Shelley Berman guest, along with Michele Lee who plays a librarian and stag party singer-dancer. Robert has the jitters over his upcoming marriage. (50) C — News, Weather, Sports • (56) Rainbow Quest — Roscoe Holcomb and Jean Redpath guest. 10:30 (9) News Magazine (50) R — Alfred Hitchcock — A man wanting a divorce hires a private detective, hoping to trap his wife in a compromising situation. (62) R — Ann Sothern 11:00 (2) (4) (7) (9) C -News, Weather, Sports (50) R - Movie: "Confirm or Deny’,’ (1941) War correspondent in London sacrifices the scoop of his career to save the reputation of a girl. Don Ameche, Joan Bennett, Roddy McDowell (62) RC - Movie: "Triple Deception” (English, 1956) An impostor is linked to a multimillion-. dollar murder ring. Michael Craig, Brenda de Ban- r* (0) ,C — Perry’s Probe 1:30 (2) R - Movie: "The ’ Night of the Great Attack” (Italian, 1964) Cesare Borgia finds a way to” conquer ynall independent country, Agnes Laurent, Faus-to Tozzi 2:30 (2) C - News, Weather 2:35 (2) TV Chapel WEDNESDAY MORNING 11:30 (4) C-Johnny Carson (7) C - Joey Bishop — Joey resumes hosting duties. (9) R — Movie: “Shoot First” (1953) Army officer risks court-martial to find the head of an espionage ring. Evelyn Keyes, Herbert Lorn 1U35 (2) R -Movie: "Mission • 10 Morocco" (1959) Oil man in- \estigates, a murder and the disappearance 0 f ' microfilm showing location of oil deposits. Lex Barker, Juli Reding -1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) R — Texan 5:59 (2) TV Chapel 5:55 (2) On the Farm Scene 6 : 0 0 (2) C —Sunrise Semester 6:36 (2) C — Woodrow the Woodsman (4) Classroom 6:45 (7) C - Batfink 7:00 (4) C — Today — The Rev. Malcolm Boyd, former coffeehouse priest at Wayne State University joins Sandy Koufax and Tony Kubek as guests. (7) C — Morning Show 7:30 (2) C-News, Weather, Sports 7:50 (0) Warm-Up 8:00 (2) C .— Captain Kangaroo — Billy Taylor, and his trio are joined by Wilbur de. Paris and his Zeba band. (9) C — Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 8:05 (9) Mr. Dressup 8:30 (7) R------M o vle..:. "Francis" (1950) Donald O’Connor, Patricia Medina (9) R — Friendly Giant (56) Human Relations 9:00 (2) R — Beverly Hillbillies (4) C — Donald O’Connor (9) C —Bozo 9:30 (2) R—Dick Van Dyke 10:00 (2) R C—Lucille Ball (4) C — It Takes Two (9) Ontario Schools 10:25 (4) C - News 10:30 (2) C - Mike Douglas » — Jimmy Dean is cohost. "(4) C — Concentration ■ (7) C—Anniversary Game 11:00 (4) C — Personality (7) c—Galloping Gourmet (9) Ontario Schools (50) C — Jack LaLanne 1 1:25 (0) C —Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 11:30 (4) C — Hollywood Squares (7) R-Bachelor Father (9) Take Thirty (50) R C — Kimba WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) C—News, Weather, Sports (4) C —Jeopardy (7) R —Bewitched (9) C — Bonnie Prudden (50) C-Alvin 12:25 (2) C — Fashions 12:30 (2) C — Search for Tomorrow (4) c — News, Weather, Sports , (7) C—Funny You Should (9) R — Real McCoys (50) R, C — Movie: "It Happened in Rome” (Italian, 1957) Three girls hitchhike to Rome to find romance. Vittorio DeSica, Isabelle Corey 12:55 (4) C—News ■ (7) C — Children’s Doctor 1:00 (2) C —Love of Life (4) C — Match Game (7) C —Dream House (9) R — Movie: “Morning Glory” (1933) Small town girl struggles to become a great Broadway actress. Katherine Hepburn, Douglas Fairbanks Jr. 1:25 (2) C-News (4) C— Carol Duvall 1:30 (2) C — As the World Turns *(4) c — Hidden Faces. (7) C — Let’s Make a Deal 2:00 (2) C — Divorce Court (4) C — Days of Our Lives (7) C — Newlywed Game 2:30 (2) C — Guiding Light (4) C —Doctors (7) C — Dating Game (50) R — Make Rooih for Daddy 3:00 (2) C — Secret Storm l (4) C — Another World (7) C — General hospital (50) R — Topper (56) Medical Education 3:30 (2) C—Edge of Night (4)*C—You Don’t Say (7) C—One Life to Live (9) C —Bozo’s Big Top (50) C — Captain Detroit (56) C — Beyond the Tooth of Time — Film of the Philmont Scout Ranch, largest Scout camp in the U.S. 4:00 (2) C—Linkletter Show (4) C — Steve Allen (7) C — Dark Shadows (9) C T- Tom Shannon (56) Les Fleurs 4:30. (2) C —Merv Griffin (7) R — Movie: “Battle of the Coral Sea” (1959) Cliff Robertson, Gia Scale (50) R — Little Rascals (56) TV Kindergarten ». (62) R — I Led Three Lives 5:06 (4) C-George Pierrot . — "Mexico To Guatemala” / (9) R C — Batman (50) R — Munsters (56) Mlsterogers (62) C — Bugs Bunny and Friends 5:30 (9) R — F Troop (50) R — Superman (56) Friendly Giant (62) R — Leave It to ___________________________ 5:45 ( 56) Storyteller 6 Pertaining to mk 11 Lariats 13 Descending (Mtrol.) 14Put into a „ . ' new container «Entertain . 15 Comedienne end family IS Martinque MOreeUr volcano 51 Creek moon 17 Requires „„ 18 Virgin---52Wayetop 20 Secular AUfttafi 23 Volume 24 Drink liquors 30 Anatomical duct 31 Inaect egg 32 Registered (ab.) f" r- r- ♦ r~ rr n nr n j ii” "j nr- V sr 21 5T i ar H ST” sr W 38“ ■ 38 39 J TF 3 XT w — j 52r r 53 More rational 13 Heavy guns DOWN 19 Makes 1 Make a corrections mistake 20 Narrow way 2 Profound 21 Mine entry 3Cyprinoid 22 Jot film 25 Baking 4 Style of type chamber 5 Alleviates 26 Portion 6 Felt concent 27 Essential for being 7 Most unusual 29 Horae raiser mu mmmm -run Fast Fade- AS Wlrapholo HEADED NORTH? - Canceled out by CBS after a long feud about censorship, Toni (left) and Dick Smothers tell newsmen they have had an offer from the CTV network in Canada to move their show to Toronto. The brothers also are negotiating with NBC and ABC. At yesterday’s New York , press conference, they showed the tape of the show that broke the camel’s back. A Look at TV Pet Bland; Brothers Stew Predestined Colorful NY Panhandlers for New Play Are Saluted in New Film By CYNTHIA LOWRY — AP Television-Radio Writer NEW YORK - Petula Clark has a big, professional voter By WILLIAM GLOVER AP Drama Critic NEW VORK - One of the final stragglers of the Broadway season, “Cop-Out,” struggled* into the Cort Theater Monday night, predestined for a fast fade-out. Within its brief but interminable length, Writer John Guare splashes spastically about the stage a half-dozen drama styles, from black comedy to alienation, from leaden lampoon to melodramatic hocus-hokum. The two performers, Linda Lavin and Ron Leibman, enact range of characterizations with great energy and little credibility. Miss Lavin puts on a wily oldster, a sultry protest marcher, a penthouse doxy and the incarnation of a decadent America. Leibman divides his time, asj, stroboscopic lights whirl, between beihg a cop on the beat and a superdetective. The plot, to abuse that word, concerns a hunt for the killer of a cat and a romance that involves sexual surgery upon both participants before Miss Lavin ends the stage frenzy by being shot down in one of the Cort >s, where she lies as the audience files out. HOME FIRES’ "Cop-Out” is preceded by "Home Fires,” another Guare dreadful. It takes place in a funeral home on the night after the World War I Armistice, and consists mostly of Awful jokes about the lingering animosity of that era toward Germans. . Some people laughed heartily as an 0. Henry romance unfolds between a sharpie and lady’ maid, but then there was even burst of applause for the mortuary setting when the curtain went up. — Radio Programs (76P) WXVZQ 270) CKJ.W(80Q) WWJ(950) WCARQ 130) WRONG 460) WJBK(1500) WHFI-FM(94 TONIOHT :0#~WWJ, New!, Spor ■ R-New. L W, Tom Shannon WPON, NOW! wmfi, Don Boko WCAR, N«W>. Ron WXYZ, Ntwacopa WJ6K, Nows. Hon !tll—WJR, Sport! «iM~WWJ, Today ■■‘“V, Emphatli WJR, I WPON, Phono Opinion Mfutoicopa Lowell Thomil, 7|00~WWJ. Newt, Sport!-Lin* WCAR, Nowt, Rick Stewart WJ|K, Now!, Tom Doan WJR. World Tonight , I MS-WJR, BuilnOH, Snort! 7il»-WXV<, NOW!. Dpvo WJR, Rea loner Report, Choral Cavelcede Cavalcade 7iSS—WJR, SPorti Tom Coleman vTr'" Newt. "Valaldoicope CKl MiOA-WJR, Nawi’ tOilS—WJR, Focua Em TilES. aKU' - |R, ASuale ',,M fi| WXYZ, J « UawV "wayna P WPON, I Ion AAorrlt Cartoon 7,00-WHFI, MUlIc WPON. NOW!, Chuck Worron IlOO—WJR, N«WI SitS-WJR, Sunnyilde, Muolc 1-00 WJR, N . ..-WJR, Open Houio CKlW, Pronk Brodl# WWJ1' Nawi! Aot Tout lOiOBrWXYZ, Niwi, Johnny WJB^.'now!. Conred Patrick WJR, Nowi, Good Muilc WCAR# Rod Minor t,mRrS?.n ! tlcepo N WHPI, WEDNESDAY APTRSNOON llOO-WJR, CKLW. Jim Edwordi II IS—WJR, Pocus IlilS-WWJ, Marty McNaolay k At t iilS—WJR, Arthur Godfrey l.4S—WJR. Sunnyilde IiW-wRoN. New!, Gary Pvraco WHFI, lilt Lynch ■ WJR, Nawi, Dlmeni on WXYZ, Nawi, Mlkl Shirmani tits—wjr, Muiic Hail liOB-WCAR, Nawi, Ron Ron CKLW. Ed Milfoil Among its five performers, MacIntyre Dixon tried very hard as a Teutonic Keystone Kop, and April Shawhan registered some moments of ingenue sweetness. Both' plays were directed by Melvin Bernhardt with workshop verve. Refreshing Pause Proves Too Much for Russian Thief MOSCOW (AP) — Yuri Karpukhin went from cooler to cool- By EARL WILSON NEW YORK—The delightfully colorful panhandlers of New York come in for some humorous salutes in the Jack Lemon-Sandy Dennis-Milt Kamen movie, “The Out-of-Town-— ” which is about a couple from Twin Oaks, Ohio, that panies, surprisingly, her Mary Pickford looks and happy, ingenue manner. In an NBC special Monday night, she was surrounded by attractive people including Andy Williams and Sasha Dis-tel, provided with some stunning clothes to wear and given pleasant and largely familiar songs to sing. There was noth- ward the right of free expression and his objection to censor* ship. Eventually, a tape of tha canceled show was played for the ________ I ......it was one of tMe turned c brightest, most amusing programs of the series—yet it took no particular genius to see why it made CBS executives nerv- David Steinberg, the comedy monologist who starred in a controversial sketch about Jonah and the whale, is a clever, gets mugged here in Fun Town. New Yorkers are notoriously generous to beggars, though cynical, especially about the recent wave of young ones wanting carfare. A man shuffled up to a friend of mine * on 52nd St. in the Toots Shor-21 area recently, |; said, “Wait! I’m not begging. I was just | mugged. They left me with this dime.” My friend was going to press three or four quarters on him, “I’m ‘■H - - funny fellow. His sketch had J^ ing really wrong with Portrait |naj1 g^u^ed by a giant guppy of Petula, but the show some- (nBtead of a whale. It was amus- how never really got off the L aU right> but unless you ground, never really demanded | nun In ths ristlt mfMvt til* the attention of the viewer. were in the right mood, the I Biblical sketch could have car* tried a certain shock value, par* The show probably would ticularly on Easter, have been more impressive a couple of seasons back since it WILSON he insisted. “I just want to borrow $15 for cab fare to Great Neck.” “Listen,” said my friend, “why don’t you beg instead of borrowing? Hit 30 guys for 50c, throw in that dime, and you’re hon)e.” Later my friend thought he should have lent him $15. Author Neil Simon has Lemon and Sandy Dennis getting mugged, and yearning for a hamburger. Stony-hearted Milt Kamen,-vice president of weenies, won’t even let them smell the mustard unless they pay. Most New Yorkers aren’t that harsh. For our panhandlers are creative. One white-haired ancient used to say, “Would you assist Junior who’s looking for work and afraid he’ll find it?” Another begged at Christmas to get a nice suit to go home and show the folks in Chicago he was a wow in Wall Street. was a nice, respectable, bland hour of tuneful relaxation. But we have become accustomed to more—a point of view, a sharp quality, and the pepper and salt was as much missed as it would have been in a soup or a stew. Which brings us to the most recent program of those spicy Smothers Brothers—the program that was pulled out of the CBS lineup Sunday night after their CSS contract had been terminated abruptly. ATTITUDES AMPLIFIED There was a press-conference in New York Monday at which Tom Smothers amplified at great length his attitudes to- Sandy Dennis said she and husband Jerry Mulligan give to everybody and if a guy says “I need 50c for a drink,” they say, “Here’s a buck. Get yourself a double.” Tammy Grimes keeps surprising us. She says she’s going to wear "sexy pajamas” when she opens at the Downstairs. She’s permitting “The Boys in the Band” film company to use her town house in the E. 80s as a location when shooting starts in the summer. “You’ll have to move out?" we said ... . “Oh, no," said Tammy, “I’ll live there with “The Boys in the Band.” THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . , * It’s both winter and spring in NY—Susan George, a bird from Britain, of the “Twinky" cast, goes skating in the park, while extraordinarily^ shapely Mary Gill does aerial somersaults with the Flying Waynes in the Ringling Circus at the Garden. Rumor has it that the circus is a lot sexier this year; the gals who ride elephants give a special .bounce reminding us of a Minsky bump-and-grinder. Irvin Feld and Judge Roy Holfhelnz may deny it. Where’s their sense of rumor? NEW YORK (AP) — Former President Dwight D. Elsenhower was at work on a new book of reflections on the Atlantic alliance and other topics until five weeks before his death March At Doubleday & Co., Eisenhower’s publisher, a spokesman said Monday that more than 20,000 words had been written before doctors ruled out any further work on the volume. Note: The International Mario Lanza Memorial Society will hold a ball in October (following It’s memorial mass) . . . John Cassavetes, Peter Falk and Ben Gazzara—who are filming “Husbands”—were at the Colony Record Shop in their beat-up customes, listening to rock records . . . Jay Allen (who wrote “Jean Brodle”) is preparing a B’way musical about Queen Victoria that’U present her as “temperamental and passionate.” He broke Into a grocery store at Rovno, in the Ukraine, and took 3,401 fubles-$3,767—from the cash register. Then he decided to haver a drink from one of the bottles of vodka oh the shelves. » WJBK.' Nlyvii Hink O’Ntll liW-WWJ, Niwitlmi lill—WPON, LUItl '!»• AtHIBT jo*—wpon. OBijy Purie# One drink led to another. He staggered into the walk-ln refrigerator and passed out;. By the time the police discovered him, Karpukhin was nearly frozen. A local court sentenced him to five years In prison. TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Jim Mulholland claims he heard a ventriloquist who was so untalented his dummy quite to find a new partnef. WISH I’D SAID THAT: Nonnee Coan of Norfolk philosophizes: "When you’re young, you . buy a house. When you get older you sell a home.” REMEMBERED QUOTE: "Love is like a radiator. I( helps keep you warm, even when you know it’s 90% hot air.!’-' EARL’S PEARLS: Lou Brccker explains the trend toward B’way shows without intermissions: “The producers are afraid 4f the audience walks out, .they may not come back.” Gene Raylos Is reputed to be exceedingly thrifty, dnd .another comic said, 'Tt’s just a malicious rumor—begun by qll the waiters, bellhops, and cabdrivers he’s never tipped|” . That’s earl, brother. . Ike at Work on New Book at His Death There was also a continuing gag between Tom Smothers and Dan Rowan, a guest star, which would have been impossible to edit out. It had them presenting “Laugh-ln’s” Flying Fickle Unger of Fate award to Sen. John . Pastore of Rhode Island, a sharp critic of TV violence. It was funny but it might have been offensive to a senator in? terested in television affairs and without much of a show business background. The production numbers, particularly one with Nancy Wilson and the windup one with the dancers, were especially Imaginative. It seems a shame that the public will never, in all probability, see the show and make individual judgments. A HOLE TO FILL Meanwhile, the termination of the “Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour” after two more shows may find the network with a summer replacement hole to fill on short notice. But at least It Is all set with a fill-in for the “Carol Burnett Show.” Recording star Jimmie Rodgers will headline a summer series starting June 16, backed up. by Burnett show regular Vicki Lawrence and Lyle Waggoner, with Carol’s husband, Joe Hamilton, as executive producer. The general had worked at Walter Reed General Hospital with Samuel Vaughan, executive editor of Doubleday, and with Kevin McCann, a long-time aide and speech writer. Vaughan said the manuscript would bo reviewed by Eisen-hower’a son, John, along some letters that will be Included In the book. No publication date has been set but it may appear early next year, he said. Completing the book had become President Eisenhower’s principal occupation even after he was hospitalized last May, Vaughan sa^i. “He worked with the . zeal and affection of i professional writer, and seemed to gain new vitality every time he spoke about his writing projects.” I1. Barnum’s famous elephant, Jumbo, was killed by a train In a freight yard In 1885 at the $ge of 24. His skeleton is on exhibition at the America Museum of Natural History In New York City. , * M SftTini NOWnS * Auto—Life—Home^S Call Ken Mohlman B f 682-3490 m 3401 W. Huron, Pontiac 9 NATIONWIDE INSURANCE 9 s NiHMIIM* Mutual iMuriM* Ol. ■ ■ NrtllimM* Mutual Flra Ina. Oa. £ NlflkmM* LKu luauranaa Oa. 2 Sherriff-Goslin Co, PmMm's OMait Roofing Free litimates WIM1 .mrrrriiiirriiii Do U- Have the Anawor to LI FI'S GREATEST gg QUESTION? If Not, Dial |J5-07(X ^ ■■■■■■■■■■I ■ r„ B—16 THE PONTIAC riiJ»nv.v TUESDAY, APRIL 8, 1969 ^Junior Editors Quiz on- FLIES QUESTION: Why can’t a fly grow as large as an elephant? ANSWER: All of us would probably panic and run, as Charlie is doing, if a house fly suddenly buzzed down in front of us—that is, if this fly had been enlarged to the size of an elephant. But there is no need to worry. Insects wil never grow to a huge or even large size. The reason is connected with the structure of their bodies. a Our hard skeleton is on the Inside, the soft parts on the outside. As we grow, both skeleton and softer parts •become larger without difficulty. But the Insect has its skeleton, In the form of hard plates. The skeleton is on the outside, the softer parts on on the Inside. As it grows, the insect’s outer skeleton becomes too tight. Then the insect has to moult, or throw of this small outer skeleton. Its body must then secrete a larger one. ■ During the moult, the insect’s body Is only held in shape by blood and air. It must grow larger before getting g new shell, but it can only grow a little larger. With any real growth spurt, the shape of the insect’s body would be lost because the delicate membrane covering the body would not stand the strain of such large inflation. So, Inspects are forever restricted to a small size. (You can win $10 cash plus AP’s handsome World Yearbook if your question, mailed on a postcard to Junior Editors in care of this newspaper, is selected for a prize.) D-Day Spells the Demise of Britain's Ha'penny LONDON (UPI) — To the The Farthing, worth a quarter American tourist, it is pure .of a penny, was abolished from nuisance. For Britons it buys a the currency system a decade .candy “Gobstopper” and | ago as thoroughly useless. “A nothing else. {farthing is only good for a It cannot get you weighed or {bloody two matches,” was a admitted to a public lavatory, common criticism. . Yet the fabled ha’penny is as j . . . much a part of the English ~ , ._____ . , . I language as Yorkshire pudding. ^ h?sJong. beenj Now it'is dying and only somfij ar! *nteP,al Part ol the price of housewives mourn. !ml,k- bread’ flour, sugar,) Big as a quarter but worth only half a cent, the British halfpenny ceases to become legal coinage Aug. 1. Its demise is part of Britain’s approach to D-Day—Feb. 15, 1971, when the nation converts to decimal currency. The decimal system will have a new halfpenny, valued at 1.2 cents. It won’t buy much more than the old ha’penny. Confusing? Many Britons are worrying as much about, this D-Day as the one in 1944. "The halfpenny is the least valuable coin ever to have been commonly used in the United Kingdom,” concluded the committee of inquiry on decimal currency in 1963. But it also decided a low-value coin was mandatory in any new money system, mostly for use in retail pricing. Housewives are a.l r e a d y frumbllng they are gaining aj ha'penny on the bill instead of losing one. Many stores are repricing from 10% pence To 11 pence rather than 10 pence, they complain. Bakeries have compromised, subtracting a halfpenny from small loaves and adding one to big loaves. MEN say goodbye to MBS Gradually and Surely! BAN GRAY the first hair droning designed especially for men getting Gray—makes your hair look young again! BAN GRAY covers the gray without changing your NATURAL Hair Color whon used daily. Jusf rub in and IAN OKAY Navar Strati N.v.r *„b. off Nav.r look. Artificial! Alwoyi Uolti Natural. SAN OKAY whin wud dally warlii ta Maw will impact yaIt an tiling anything. You'll look yolMfar. laiy to uio, nothing to mix air moaiuro. only I Yankee Health & Beauty Aids Dept. MBS* m Wisconsin Vote Bad News for GOP m Dems See Harbinger Victory WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Democrats spotted the first robin of spring in Wisconsin last week and found it an omen , of fair weather for them in the 1970 congressional elections./ 1 The loss of /the House scat formerly held by Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird and other Republicans before him was bad news for the GOP. But Democrat David R. Obey won the seat before the voters had any clear view ,of President-Nixon’s program for 1969-70. This special election came when the new administration was only six weeks old, and the Gallup Poll indicated that Nixon was building significant support for the way he handled his office. Yet prospective candidates for the House and Senate and the political party managers know that the general climate for the 1970 congressional elections will be influenced most by the answer to one question: Will Nixon find an acceptable settlement for the war in Vietnam? $ tiated a truce in ,the Korean war, but the Democrats recaptured control of Congress in the 1954 elections. A mild recession contributed to the 1954 Democratic gains. ' The Nixon administration now is trying to steer a cautious course to bring inflation under control withput risking a recession. It is giving high priority to its drive to achieve a budget surplus for the coming fiscal year as a brake on rising price levels. The request for extension of the income surtax was one part of this campaign.. Chief. Pontiac Federal Credit Union 799 Joslyn Ave. — Pontiac — Call 335-9493 SEEKING ELBOW ROOM OTHER ISSUES A major goal by the administration is to show a degree of control over inflation to give it more elbow room to submit programs to Congress next year to carry out Republican doctrine. Congress began its annual sham battle over the budget In the debate over the bill to raise the ceiling on the national debt. It occasionally has used the debt limit in an effort to force the executive branch to spend less than the lawmaking branch had approved.. Inflation, poverty, disorder in cities and colleges, dairy price supports and state tax increases may affect the outcome of elections 19 months from now. But if those issues fade and the war goes on,, the GOP will write off its chances of breaking historic election patterns and winning control of Congress m 1970. Past elections! indicate that the Democrats, as the party in opposition to the administration, should gain congressional seats next year when the presidency is not at stake. However, the Republicans are preparing for a strenuous effort to defy history and win control of Congress for the first time since 1954. ONLY A LONG SHOT . With all 435 seats at stake in the House, the GOP is only a long shot even now to gain the 27 seats it needs to organize that chamber. They can look with more hope at the Senate, where there are more Democratic than Republican seats in jeopardy in elections to choose 33 of the 100 senators. The GOP needs a pickup of only seven seats to control The Senate but even there a strong lavorable'wind' may be needed to put the Republicans in command. Pbliticians with long memories can recall that early id !23N«lhSagHnwSE gt-FENCT TAKE YOUR CHOICE » IN OAKLAND COUNTY > SINCE 1925 » ALL CREDIT TERMS » BURNER SERVICE 7M\ \ MARATHON CLARKE-6EE FUEL Oil potatoes, cigarettes and gasoline in .Britain. Its American ocrrolary is the $1.99 price Lag—to Britons 11% pence is more alluring than a shilling (12 pence). The government, already in hot water with consumer s because of devaluation of the] pound sterling and wage-price controls, has asked shopkeepers not to increase prices when jhey lop off the ha’penny as Augusf approaches. Buying a brand new car or truck between March 1 and April 15? Finance it at Community National Bank, and we’ll give you a handsome plaid blanket and carrying case absolutely free. All you do is ask your dealer for Community National financing. Or arrange the loan yourself at any v of our 20 convenient offices. The blanket is yours either way. It's a fringed benefit from Community National. One more good reason to bank at Community. Most people do. 2? / National J Bank 20 OMcm in Oakland and MaoombCounttefTalapbona 334-0966 Hi .....I u./v t ,Jh AL.i,. .AA 'i&AtKMJh ju*.. JJjf Swiss Factory Blast Rocks Villages; 9 Dead, 40 Hurt From Our News Wires AARAU, Switzerland — An explosives factory blew up today at the village of Dotttkon, killing nine persons and injuring 40 others, police reported. Alarm sirens and church bells began ringing in villages and towns for miles around as the explosion sent a shock wave through the countryside and raised, a gigantic mushroom cloud over >the village. 4 4 4 Within minutes hundreds of ambulances, fire engines and patrol cars from the entire canton of Aarau raced to Dottikon. The plant, employing 420 persons, is one of the main sources of Jobs for the 4,500 residents of Dottikon. It makes explosives for demolition. The blast was felt 12 miles away in Aarau, and it shattered nearly all window panes in a radius of five miles. Police headquarters said the explosion blew off roofs and cracked and damaged the walls of several dozen houses in Dottikon. A small forest next to the factory caught fire, but contrary to early reports the only buildings that collapsed were some of those of the Sprengstoff-Fabrik explosives firm. 4 4 4 The danger of further explosions kept an army of firemen at bay. Police lines kept tourists and curiosity-seekers out. ★ if ★ The explosion occurred in. a nitrate plant at 7:15 a.m. shortly after the factory’s employes had come to work. But police said elaborate safety -arrangements , prevented the explosion from setting off stocks of combustibles. It was not immediately clear what had caused the blast. It was the third major accidental explosion in Switzerland-this year. . One destroyed a firecracker factory near Lausanne in January, killing a pedestrian who was walking past. Four workers were seriously injured in an explosion that destroyed a house under construction at Hergiswil in February. * 4 4 Dottikon, sometimes spelled Dietikon, is 19 miles west of Zurich on Switzerland’s northern frontier. DEATH SCENE — One man was killed and two other in this well hole at Morey’s Golf and Country Club, 2280 Township, overcame' them at about 6:30 a.m. today. 1116 m< the well to blow ’the point and were uncapping it when gas —32 PAGES U.'l. Wtlthtr Chance of Showers ’ (Dtlimeasti) VOIi.i?T — rujNTiAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, APHID 8, 1069 ■\Tn *0 / .■'/'■' 4 4 WWW- ’’ ' ■ ‘ , MSDCIATID ORBiS/ 06 ft ' j Tf w " M I'm l fj , UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL jfl ......................^ t .,Vv- Model Of Proposed Housing For The Elderly In Pontiac Housing Project Work to Start May 7 Pontiac developer Charles Langs said today he plans to begin construction May 1 of his |3-million project to provide 197 housing units for the elderly at Michigan and Anderson. Approval of a $3-million grant from the office of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to the city of Pontiac was announced last week. 4 4 ★ Under HUD’s “turnkey” concept for housing, Langs will build the apartment complex and then sell it to the City. Housing Commission which will operate It. The new facility will be the second public housing project run by the Housing Commission. It also manages Lakeside Homes on the southwest side. Langs’ development will contain twin six-story towers connected by a one-story recreation building, The apartments will be mostly one-bedroom and efficiency types and rents will be determined on the basis of income with the lower amounts placed at about |30 monthly. Prospective tennants must meet low-income requirements. Langs said he expects final details to be completed with HUD officials before the end of the montn, allowing .his firm to meet the ground-breakin£%arget date. Completion Is expected by late 1970. 4 4 4 The firm of Charles Langs Inc., has several enterprises completed or under construction in the Pontiac area including the Sheraton Motor Inn, under way at Woodward across from St. Joseph Mercy Hospital and a complex of some 500 units of housing for low-income families on West Kennett near Alcott School which Is partly completed. Statewide Strike Hits Power JACKSON (AP) - Utility workers today struck Consumers Power Co., throwing up picket lines to support their new contract demands. At least six Consumers Power locations were being picketed early today, and a company spokesman anticipated “a general walkout by the end of today,” Marshall Hicks, president of the striking Michigan State Utility Workers Council, AFL-CIO, which has 5,200 members, said “eventually we’ll have pickets at every Consumers Power location in thqfitate.” Charles F. Brown, Pontiac Consumer’s division manager, said that as of 10:40 a.m. no picket lines had been formed, and employes are working in Pontiac. He added that out of Pontiac’s 429 employes, 219 are union members. In the event of a walkout, “we will maintain service to our customers on an emergency basis,” Brown said. Spokesmen for both sides said the main issues involved union demands for a one-year contract and that wage increases be retroactive to Jan. 1 and amount to 45 cents across the board. 8-YEAR PACT OFFERED Consumers had offered a three-year contract with salary increases averaging 40 cents an hour to become effective the Monday after the contract is signed. Some 5,200 utility workers — electrical linemen, maintenance, construction and gas line men — are involved in the walkout. I A company/ spokesman said the first areas affected, included the Flint and Macomb service centers, the St. Clair natural gsts storage fields, the Weadock plant near Bay City, Lansing and Fenton. <0. Both sides in the dispute said contract talks had reached an “impasse” after a bargaining session yesterday. Showers Possible Tigers Open '69 McLain Opposes Tiant By BRUNO KEARNS Pontiac Press Sports Editor DETROIT — A sellout crowd of more than 53,000 persons, Including a battery of dignitaries, helped the World Champion Detroit Tigers open their 1969 baseball season today against the Cleveland Indians. In Today's Press Emm Area Votes Incumbents do well in nine elections 7- PAGE A-4. American Escapes Yank flees after 10 years in lexicon prison — PAGE A-ll. Heart Transplant Famed surgeon says recent donor had been dead 48 hours before operation *- PAGE A-8. Area News ................A-4 Astrology ...... Bridge ......... Crossword Puzzle ........B-15 Comics ................... Editorials ...............A-6 Markets ..................B-7 Obituaries ..........V...A-19 Sports .............B-l—B-4 Theaters ................ B-B TV and Radio Programs . .B-1S Vietnam War News .A-2 Wilson, Earl ............B-15 ~~ s Pages .........A-13-A-15 wwmiowmMiiaMitowaaiiia The opening battery found Mayor Jerome P. Cavanagh delivering his pitch to Gov. William M. Milliken, acting as catcher. Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn was on hand to deem Cavanagh’s toss a ball or a strike and to present 1968 World Series rings to each member of the Tiger squad. 4 4 4: Temperatures were in the mid-60s and skies were hazy. The Tigers started Denny McLain, winningest pitcher ip baseball last season with a 31-6 won-lost record. Cleveland started Its pitching ace, Luis Tiant, who posted a 1968 mark of 21-9, including a pair of wins over the Tigers. TIANT BEAT McLAIN In his lone start against Tiant last year, McLain lost a 2-0 game. McLain did defeat the Indians three other times during the season. Tiant has been a “Tiger Killer” In his five years of pitching against the Bengals, having won nine while losing three. After the raising of Old Glory two pennants were hoisted, that of the world championship and then the American League pennant. Gates opened at Tiger Stadium at 11:30 a.m. with a few thousand bleacher seat and standing-room-only tickets remaining. USICL NOTE Festivities started at noon with Merle Alvey’s Tiger band providing musical entertainment. Home plate ceremonies were scheduled to begin at 1:05 and McLain’s first* pitch was scheduled for 1:30. The crowd record for opening day was set in 1960 when 53,563 watched the Tigers play the Chicago White Sox. Last year, 41,429 saw the Boston Red Sox defeat Detroit, M,,after which the Tigers won nine straight games on their way to the American League pennant. Through Thursday There’s a chance of showers or thundershowers dampening the Pontiqc area through Thursday. The U.S. Weather Bureau forecasts increasing cloudiness and warmer with chance of showers with a low of 40 to 45 tonight. Cloudy and continued warm with chance of showers and a few thundershowers, with the high In the 60s is the prediction for tomorrow. The outlook for Thursday is cloudy with a chance of showers and turning cooler. Probabilities of precipitation in per cent are 20 today, 40 tonight and 50 tomorrow. Forty-two was the lojv in downtown Pontiac before 8 a.m. The mercury soared to 70 by 12:30 p.m. - Reaction to Red Flights Scant WASHINGTON (AP) - Soviet bomber flights to the fringe of North America have become so routine in recent months that U.S. fighters ’aren’t always sent to Intercept them, according to Pentagon sources. 4 4. 4 Over the la|t 15months, these sources say, there have been about three dozen incidents Of’Soviet planes flying near continental North America, usually Alaska or Canada. ' 4, \/4 ; ★ ’ However, the Soviets have been careful to turn back before actually •* - flying over U.S. or Canadian territory,' the sources said. * - ' - 4 Jfci 4 While continental defense officials occasionally may decide net to scramble Interceptors, the Soviet bombers are always monitored on vadar from the time they get within jaiew hundred miles of the North American coastline until they leave. /V FEW DISCLOSED Only two or three of the Soviet missions have been disclosed officially by the Pentagon, which indicates the low-key attitude the U.S. government is taking. 4 ’ 4 4 The most recent Soviet flight, sources report,-occurred April 1 when eight to 19 TU16 Badgers came within 65 miles of Northwest Alaska. 4 4 4 The Alaskan Air Command scrambled F102 interceptors, but no nose-to-nose confrontation Was necessary. / 4 a -4 4 \ Seven other Soviet flights near U.S. territory this year are recorded on a list now stamped secret In the Pentagon. Workman Is Killed by Escaping Gas By DICK ROBINSON Gas fumes killed one man and hospitalized a father and son — one in critical condition — in a work mishap in Commerce Township early this morning. Robert Shaw, 55, of 4131 Green Lake, West Bloomfield Township, was pronounced dead on arrival at Pontiac General Hospital after gas fumes from a well pipe overcame him in a hole at Morey’s Golf and Country Club, 2280 Union Lake, at about 6:30 a.m. 4 4 4 In critical condition is Larry Epley, 17 of 4202 Dixie, Waterford Township. His father, Hazie, 56, is listed in fair condition. 4 4 4 The three had poured five gallons of muriatic acid in a well to blow the point last night and had returned this morning Youth Is Hurt in Work Mishap An employe of a Waterford Township trucking firm received severe chest injuries yesterday when he was crushed by the vehicle he was operating. Reported in serious condition today in Pontiac General Hospital is Ronald Lee Bowen, 20, of 2985 Pontiac Lake, Waterford Township. He is being treated in the intensive care ward, according to a hospital spokesman. 4-44 Police said Bowen was operating, a forklift truck in the storage area of the B & B Trucking Co, at 3738 Elizabeth Lake when the accident occured about 1:30 p.m. Bowen tripped the control which raises the arms of the lift while apparently attempting to lower the arms and was caught between the lifting device and the cab of the vehicle, according to investigators. 4 4 4 Fellow workers were able to free him after several minutes and rushed him to the hospital, police said. to uncap it when the gas fumes escaped. Oakland County sheriffs deputies Dennis Nash and Roger Allen credited passerby Jack Hughes, 7377 Cooley Lake, West Bloomfield Township, with saving the life of Hazie Epley, greens foreman at Morey’s. The older Epley lost both hands in a com picker in 1948 and had acquired artifical arms from funds raised by The Pontiac Press. 4 4 4 Shaw, a self-employed pump man who worked out of his home, was hi the five-foot deep hole when overcome by the fumes, according to deputies. Larry Epley then jumped In to help him and was overcome. Hia father want to tile rescue, but be also passed out. COMMENDATION RECOMMENDED Deputies recommended a commendation for Hughes, who was flagged down by a laborer and jumped into/ the hole to save Hazie Epley. Deputies Mien and Nash, who were almost overcome by the gas, thin arrived and took Shaw and young Epley out of the hole. Hussein in U.S. to See President WASHINGTON (AP) - Jordan’s embattled King Hussein' arrived for talks with President Nixon today, expressing fear that another major war threatens in the Middle East with the “possibility of outside involvement. 4 4 4 “If no solution is found, I think, the danger of another major conflict in the area in the not-too-distant< future Is very real,” Hussein said yesterday as be arrived-in New York en route to talks with Nixon today. . .4 4 4 The 34-year-old monarch said he welcomed Big Four efforts to settle Mideast tensions and said he hoped they are successful. * In Women's Section Series on Abortion Starts Michigan’s abortion law will comp under the scrutiny of tbg State Legislature sometime title session. Two bills aimed at liberalizing the present law have been drafted. One of the measures would permit a, legal abortion by a licensed pftyllcten at an accredited hospital for any reason, including family planning. The other would permit an abortion only when the physical or maptial health of the mother or child la Involved or to case of rape. A six-part series on abortion begins today on the women’s pagegof Dtp Pontiac Press What do Pontiac aran women mm about possible changes to tha present abortion law? Janet OdeW, women's editor, has interviewed It women and will publicise their oplnloos to several of illegal abortion to the first article. So# pageA-U. 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, APRIL 8, 19M Little Progress Seen In Secret Viet Talks WASHINGTON (AP) - Secret contact! with Communist negotiators reportedly have produced little or no real progress toward ending the Vietnam war ^despite some recent optimistic reports from U.S. officials. ' Some high administration authorities say privately they believe that North Vietnam and the Vietcong still are convinced they will win the war in South Vietnam if they fight on long enough. These authorities conclude that enemy leaders are therefore not yet seriously interested in a compromise settlement. On the contrary, according to this view, they waht to keep public, pressure on President Nixon to bring the conflict to a close on their terms. Secretary of State William P. Rogers told a news conference yesterday the presence of enemy negotiators in Paris, taken together with “indirect reports we have received” indicate “some interest in a negotiated” settlement. Whether this is being done just to mis. lead us or not,” he said, “there is no way of knowing Until we proceed a little further down the road.” In Paris, South Vietnamese Vice President Nguyen Kao Ky said flatly Missing 25 Feared Entombed in Ship NEW ORLEANS lecture. Guest tickets are 81-50 at the doorif seating is available. A four-man marine board of in* vestigation will convene Thursday to determine the cause of the mishap. New Group Head Named for Body,Assembly Units Pontiac Issues Recall on '68s The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Today mostly sunny and warm, high 65 to 68. Tonight increasing cloudiness and warmer with chance of showers, low 40 to 45, Wednesday cloudy and continued warm with chance of showers and a few thundershowers, high 64 to 69. Thursday outlook: cloudy with chance of showers and turning cooler. Winds variable 5 to 12 miles per hour becoming southeast to south 10 to 18 miles per hour this afternoon and southerly 12 to 22 miles tonight and Wednesday. Probabilities of precipitation: 20 per cent today, 40 per cent tonight and 50 per cent Wednesday. iSCTftewsir- tun (ft* Tiwiday at 7:07 p.m. win rmo WMMMay of 4i03 i.m. Moon toft Wednesday at 11:04 e.m. Moon rliaa Wednesday at 2:21 e.m. one Year Ago in Pontiac Lowest temperature Mean temperature ................. Weather: S^nny, blustery suits to Monday'e Tm___________ 45 3) Detroit 53 34 Duluth 4a » 44 37 Part Worth 70 44 45 . 35 Jackeonvllle 70 50 S3 34 Lea Angeles 70 52 43 31 LoulSVHb 79 41 if 39 Miami SMCh 79 71 if if Milwaukee it 34 07 if New Orleans 79 44 40 W NOW.York 40 50 vw««ou ride straight thru without achangBofplanes. Six other connecting services around the clock. And to Memphis, Delta now offers you 3 non-stops, a total of 6 Jets. Exclusive Night Coach service to both cities. For Instant reservations, call Delta or see your Travel Agent* ^DELJA Leave Arrive Arrive Detroit Memphis New Orleans 8:00a 10:30a One-stop 8:00a 9:13a One-stop 1 — 10:50a 11:27a Non-stop 2:40p Conn. l:55p _ 4:25p Conn. 3:35p New 4:12p Non-stop 5:37p One-stop 5:50p ■ — 8:30p Conn. 6:23p 7:36p One-stop 9:46p Conn. 8:00p T- 12:25a Conn. ll:10p NC 11:47a Non-stop — 12:20a NC 1:33a One-stop 3:53a Conn. Jetourist fares: Memphis—Day, $44; (NC) Night New Orleans—Day, |6l; Night Coach, $51J Mali ready ■ IsSS-iS Coach, $34. Add tax. By BARBARA GRIBBON Perched high on a hillside overlboking Lapeer Roatt in Orion Township is the pretty little subdivision known as Perry Acres. Although the first homes about 10 ye still room for moving to thii area, just a few Pontiac. Many ranch-st; the hills, but the number of two-sl multi-level homes Acres as well. The met who live on Street all agreed that they are glad they chose Perry Acres for their families. The neighbors are friendly and helpful and many of them are active in a number of Community affairs. % ' . THE LARRY McEVERS For total community involvement, few families can match the Larry McEvers family who settled here three years ago. Their forntjer home ' was in Rochester. The McEvers have five children — Cheryl, 12; Cathleen, 9; Connie, 7; Cary. 2; and Carl, 3 months. McEvers recently was named manager of the John Hancock Life Insurance office in Pontiac. Although his job keeps this dad busy, he still finds time to be a Big Brother in Pontiac. One of his greatest pleasures, says his wife, is spending an afternoon with his little brother with whom he shares many sporting activities. Ice fishing, skiing, tobogganing and water sports all are favorites with McEvers. ★ Sr ★ Mrs. McEvers,, who has plenty to do with five children, also finds time to work with the Girl Scouts. Since her oldest girls are all active In scouting, mom is the cookie chairman for her area. When we visited her, she had over 1,000 cases of Girl Scout cookies neatly shared away. She told us that that the girls love camping, so last summer she and her husband took a scout troop camping for a week. Dad went along as lifeguard and ended up fPMfhlng a water safety course to the girls. ★ ★ * The McEvers youngsters like to keep busy with a variety of activities. Cheryl just won first place on her bowling team and is also Interested in sewing. When they find time to get off by themselves, the 722 Identified as Killed in Viet Fighting WASHINGTON (AP) - The Defense D epartment has released a list of casualties in the Vietnam war Including 122 men killed In action. i The list includes 23 men Mom the Midwest killed In action. Killed in action: ARMY _ ILLINOIS - Ut U. WIIMOTi O, Cody, oblnwrw Sp#c. 4 Onu W. Mill*. Mon-,t,1 pic. Robert O. Loubor, Chicago. smst1{m'SLwfe rwtoat'j&MS Inton JrTCMrktlww We. J. C. Rool. oyal Ook. Missouri — Spoe. 4 Roy S. Soyd« 4 o^n.0 R. Rjchortt, Mirlwi SwO Robort V. ShrocK Jr., Me. Donold J. Rlclrtir, th fam Grouped around th left, front) Cheryl, McEvers enjoy coho fishing, playing a card game called Euchre and atending company conventions in various places. THE RICHARD GARNTEES ' Mr. and Mrs. Richard Garnett came to Perry Acres six years ago from Pontiac. Their two children are Richard, 6 and Patti, 3. They expect a third child in May. Garnett is h service man with Consumers Power Co. He’s a member ‘of the Oakland Sportsmen’s Club, where he enjoys hunting and target shooting. In addition, Mrs. Garnett said, the club carries on such projects as feeding deer when there is no natural food available. * * ★ Mrs. Garnett told us that she enjoys playing the piano and organ as a hobby- She also bowls and likes to sew for her family. The Garnetts are active members of Grace Lutheran Church In Pontiac. THE HOWARD NIHRANZES Mr. and Mrs. Howard 'Nihranz moved to Perry Acres four years ago from-Clawson. They have a daughter, Debbie, M. She likes to try her hand at drawing and painting as well as skiing and swimming. Making largo paper flowers is anotiier of her many interests. Nihranz works for the Borden Co. in Mad I s o n Heights. Hunting' and golfing are his prime interests. Mrs. Nihranz told us that both she and her husband like to take long vacations at their summer cottage at North Lapeer. When she’s home, Mrs. Nihranz enjoys baking and rooking and is also active on a bowling team. THE ARTHUR LANGELANDS Poptiac was the former home of the Arthur Langeland family, which includes a daughter, Sandra, now a teacher at Oakland Community Collegia. Langeland is a machine repairman for Pontiac Motor Division. His major hobby is gunsmithing. He does both repairs and renova11 on, mainly on his favorite rifle, the Winchester Trap gun. Of course, he’r iiso a member of a sportsmen’s club. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Langeland has been pretty busy these last few years when' she was attending to complete his Masters Oakland University. She Degree in library science, received her degree in Sewing always has been a sociology jn 1907. For one hobby with Mrs. Beer, so she year, both inotiier and recently completed a daughter were in college at dressmaking course, the ?ame time. Now, Mrs. gponsored by the Vocational Langeland said, she s taking Rehabilitation group in Pon-up paintings her next hob- Uac she ,g ^ buslneg8 by.Sheisalsoverytat^sted doing dressmaking and ill Siamese cate and owns a alterationg at home. she told beauty named Husbe. us that the whole family en- THE CLAUDE ROBERTSONS j0yS music and listening to hi The Claude Robertson fi. They belong to St. Marys family bails from- Rochester, in the Hills Episcopal Church. The family includes three ^ BILL stafFORDS youngsters, Dave, 16, a school sports enthusiast; Cindy, 13, who loves swimming and ice skating and Marc, 8. Another ex-Pontiac family is that of Mr. and Mrs. BiU Stafford and their three IS — Gunnory Sol. Konnody J, ln?owA — Cone* col. Michool R. soil, -ivonport. are s.si WS NEBRASKA — Pic. Ronold L. COMf, •mioy Jr., Conlon. Died of wounds: M^RINRCOf Pl_ OHIO Changed from ' missing dead — hostile: ARMY j^DIANA - Me. Phillip NT- wmiom o. Potior, Missing as a result action: Robertson is a major ap- children, Gregg, 9; Wendy, 7; pliance repairman with and Dale, 5. Detroit Edison. He and his * * son like to bunt an especially Stafford is a senior enjoy their new cabin in the specifications writer for Pan-Upper Peninsula. The whole tiac Motor Division. Hunting family had a hand in building * is a major interest of Ibis and the cabin and like nothing he has an antelope head to better than to get hack to prove it. However, boating is nature whenever they can. the family’s real bobby. They * * * own a 19-foot camper boat Two weeks before I met mimed “Spare Time.” They them, the Robertsons had ara members of Pinters Boat been up to their cabin and Club to pontiao and look had to pull everything in on a forward to this summer’s sled because of the deep snow overnight trips to Indian thfle'*k ** RIVer» TOrCh Lake a,ld sa d, the cabin has no TV and chatham ^tarto. Mrs. Stef* only gas lighte so tto wo^ M ^ >pendB part heP and nearby Lake Superior we worki^ at the Oakland the major attractions. The Robertson family attends OWW Sanitarium. Howath Methodist Church. THE GILBERT LUEBKES THE RICHARD BEERS The Gtibert Luebke family Almost everyone in the area moved here nine years ago told iM to be sure to meet from Oxford. The family In-Mrs. Richard Beer who lives drim Wrody, 10;jgjrttfj l wu|i Up.* husband and Gilbert, 7. Skiing snu &^f,uSAitSXS! Both Mr. and Mrs. Beer have Luebke is^ material been Oakland County superintendent for the residents all their lives. Oakland County Road Corn-According to her neighbors, mission. He’s a do-it-what makes Mrs. Beer special yourselfer at home, having is that although she is con- paneled the baaement fined to a wheelchair, she Is playroom a few years ago. one of the happiest and most Camping is a major family outgoing women in the interest, said Mrs. Luebke. -neighborhood. Her husband, When we met her, Mrs. who is Oakland County law Luebke was busy making librarian, is also partially some beautiful Raggedy'Ann handicapped since he is a dolls which will be sold at a cerebral palsy victim. It school fair. Sewing is one of doesn't hold him down one her major hobbies, she said, bit, though, his wife said, ami she maims most of her You should see him doing daughters’ clothes. Tjjia yard work and riding hia Luebke . family belongs to tractor around the place. Lake Orion Methodist Church. Beer was the first chairman of the Orion Township Planning Commission, a job which Stratford *" he has had to give up in order Township. Next week We’ll be to- , traducing you to some folks in ,41 West 1 W - ■H »SfiJc press Pontiac, Michigan 4805$ TUESDAY, APRIL 8, 1969 ‘ ‘ ’\J| MtMLa A. nttsiMU How*** H. JWrgirai*, If Chkirmsn ot th» Board President and Publisher ms . HlOKAR* it. ftlMHAt* Treasurer and Plnance , Ofllcer i a. KlMtUli Jordan . fjM&l Ufa* Pay Should Fit Job 1 Are all municipal employes of ^|ual value in terns of skill, responsibility and job performance? We tbtak the obvious answer to that question is “No.” It follows, therefore, that all mu-nicipal employes are not of equal viglue in terms of salary. This is not to say that we do not need qualified people to perform our city jobs. We do need them. They are important to the efficient operation of any municipal government. It’s just a simple fact of life that different jobs require dif-: ferent quantities of sldll and. . training and present different levels of responsibility and haz-; ard: Salary levels should reflect aO these factors. V ★ ★ ★ i„ . ■ For the past several months, Pontiac fire fighters have been locked in salary negotiations with the City. $he major issue is parity with policemen. In other worsts, the fire fighters feel they should be paid the same Salaries as policemen, , We disagree. We do not feel that firemen’s pay must automatically keep pace with that of our police fbrce, it is our opinion that the present day task of a law enforcer is more demanding and more consistently hazardous than that of a fire fighter. Both police and fire fighters face hazards. But the hazards faced by fire fighters are more predictable and therefore more easily avoided. There is a big difference between being Overcome by smoke and being overcome by bullets from the gun of a criminal. In regard to this whole question of merit, it is appropriate to note the comments of Mrs. Dorothy L. Judd of Grand Rapids made recently when she announced her forthcoming resignation from the State Civil Service Commission: " ★ * #3 “The rise of unionism in public employment is a challenge to the merit system of public employment right across the board —as it is also a threat to the voter’s voice in his own government.” . ★ ★ ★ . She makes a good point. The salaries of public employes these days often reflect only the strength of various unions with respect to what public funds are available, and have little or nothing to do with the merit of the employe or his work. Voice of the People: Easter Season Feature® Enjoyed by Press Reader I express my appreciation and reading enjoyment of the special Easter period features-—especially the Lenten Giiidepost. I feel these articles must serve as ah inspiration to all who read them-This is a supero Pontiac Press tradition that many look forward to and helps make it the really great newspaper it is. We also enjoy and are grateful for the interesting area church coverage. MRS. LELAND COFFEY Citizen Is Concerned About School Site As a citizen who recognizes the interdependence of communities, I am concerned about the site of Pontiac’s new high school. Ip the light of what I have learned by reading and from two serious-minded individuals — one white, one black — the school board appears to have been evasive while the students and other objectors to the State Hospital site have been specifically clear and solid in the reasoning. The Pontiac Press, having the interest of all citizens at' heart, is in a postion to clear the air by finding out why the recommendations of the Area Planning Council and various consultants are ignored in the school board’s advocacy of a nohcentral site. Their choice seems very strange to a nonresident. Should not the many millions be used where they will do the most good to the most citizens—both directly and through the prideful spirit of Pontiac? 1ms, it seems, is all the blacks are asking—fair treatment. HENRY S. BOOTH 700 CRANBROOK, BLOOMFIELD HILLS That Guy Never Forgets His Cut! Reader Gives Views on Sensitivity Training David Lawrence Says: Viet Situation at Crucial Point Baseball a ‘Hardy* Sport Considering that it claims to be starting its centennial year, baseball Shows unusual Signs of spryness. It will be the earliest opening day on record—to allow playoffs at the season’s end between the new eastern tyid western divisions within the expanded 12-team National and American leagues. ,r,* Jjjfc t Montreal, San'Diego and Se-. , attle enter the big leagues while ' Kansas City returns—the first * two in the National and the last two Ip the American. The Canadian entry pushes the majors < beyond the American border for , the first time and perhaps will make the “World Series” truly international, though still not quite living up to its global con-' notation. The basis of this year’s officially designated baseball Centennial is that the old Cincinnati Red Stockings in 1869 became the first team to sign players to season-long contracts. ★ ★ ★ The 1969 centennial is not to be confused with the baseball centennial observed in. 1939, marking Abner Doubleday's supposed iriven-. tion of the game 100 years earlier. Nor is it to be confused with another centennial sure to come in 1976, when the National League becomes lOO years of age. • Here at home, our World Champion Tigers open the season with high hopes of repeating last year’s brilliant performance and .with the best wishes of every Michigander. ★ ; ★ • ★ ■ “Sock It to ’Em, Tigers!” WASHINGTON — What’s really going on behind the scenes in the Vietnam war? G o v eminent officials think it isn’t tactful to speak out just now, and the American people, therefore, are not as yet being given the story in perspective. LAWRENCE The situation is, in fact, at a crucial point. The negotiations in Paris appear to be fruitless because the North Vietnamese are convinced that the antiwar demonstrations inside the United States are an Indication America will soon order a gradual withdrawal of its forces, The Com-, munists expect then to move in and take command of South Vietnam. for a compromise of a final solution' to the war in 'Viet- jSees No Hope in ‘HOPE’ A significant dispatch came from London over the United Press International w i r e ■ yesterday. It said in part: ‘‘The Vietcong has no intention of negotiating in earnest to. end the war in Vietnam until it has won — or is given — seats in the Saigon government, diplomatic sources said today. Meanwhile, President l*bieu announced at Saigon that he has offered amnesty to the Vietcong and a place on the ballot in South Vietnam if they change their name and join in a policy of national reconciliation. But he pointedly added that In effective system of international control and guarantees will have to be set up to prevent a resumption of the fighting. NOT RULED OUT Concurrently inside the United States, Secretary of State William P. Rogers commented that the government here is not considering “any immediate, unilateral withdrawal” of troops from Vietnam. But he would not rule out the possibility that America might. begin to withdraw some of its troops at a later date without, an agreement on the part of the Communists to pull out any of their own forces. This, of course, assumes that the South Vietnamese government will have mobilized a big enough army to enable the United States I am concerned over the compulsory sensitivity training program proposed by the Pontiac school administrators “to alleviate discrimination against black students.” The intentions of the program may be good but it ia a dangerous trend jo employ a form of brainwashing or thought control, which sensitivity training seems to be. They use fids self-criticism method in Communist countries to control the population’s thinking. We live in America, the land of the free. G. SMITH ‘Agree With Life Sentences for Robbers’ to begin bringing home from ie ' time to time a few thousand men and, as .the process continued, draft calls would be Hooray, for Genesee County’s Judge Philip C. Elliot for , giving three convicted robbers life sentences. This is the kind of law we need. What is wrong with Wayne and Oakland County judges that give murderers and rapists (not robbers); a . couple years or probation? If our judges are afraid to give the proper life sentence, why do. they run for the office? We need capital punishment. ROBERT A. COMPTON 4900 W. HURON ‘We Must Let Law tfnd Order Rule Nation’ One thing is dear — the American government will continue to furnish arms and •equipment to supply the large South Vietnamese army. This in itself should prove to the North Vietnamese that I commend the Detroit Police Department for the way they handled the situation at the New Bethel Baptist Church. My heart breaks for the two police officers’ families. When is our country going to wake up and let the law rule the land once again, instead of a lot of people who will not adapt themselves to a decent society, but instead want to make up their own. This is not equal rights. One thing is dear — the the American Army does not mean a cessation of American withdrawal of any portion of aid or support. , rJSSSCM'% ■ God help our country to turn back to Him and the laws of our Nation. Let’ll not talk oar way backward but let law and order rule and go forward as the greatest country fa the world, MRS. EDWARD SKAGGS SR. ‘Politicians Work for People’s Interests?’ Bob Considirie Says: Ike May Be Rated High by Ultimate Historian There is much controversy today as to whether our politicians deserve the pay and the glory they receive. Are they in tbe business because they care about the people they represent or are they in it for the money and the glory? I have written to Congressman McDonald and Senator Hart requesting their help.- If I receive the help I need, I will know they are some of foe most valuable men in our country. MRS. JEFF VESS 8457 SNOW APPLE, CLARKSTON $ If you , really want to know.how fotten America is, don’t read the Underground protest press. Tune in Radio Moscow. ’ Here is what the Russians had to day about the hospital ship HOPE, Which recently concluded a 10-month medical mission to Ceylon: “The ship HOPE has actually ■ brought no hope for cure to Cey-‘ Ion and the vicinity, but only mortal danger. The floating car-« rier of death is the name the ;* ship is given by the people of the countries where she has already been. Wherever the ship ‘ HOPE appears there are sudden & outbreaks of epidemics” . . . and so on and on. Sp.A'.J:-' ★ ★ ’: During the HOPE’S stay in Ceylon, |ts (staff treated more-than 1,700 patients aboard ship and, with Cey- lonese doctors, conducted 1,280 operations. More than 3,000 patients were treated in the ship’s dental department and some 70,000 children were immunized against diphtheria, whooping cough and tetanus. When the ship left for its home base of Philadelphia on February 10, more than 20,000 people from' all over the little country came to say goodby. At an official reception, the prime minister of Ceylon had previously presented Dr. William B. Walsh, founder of HOPE, with an inscribed silver platter on behalf of his country, Evidently the Ceylonese don’t understand Russian, even in translation. Or perhaps they are aware that when it comes to Communist propaganda, vinification is the sincerest form of flattery. “Until then, the informants said, the Vietnamese Communists intend to play a waiting game in the belief that time and U.S. anxiety to ‘finish with the Vietnam business’ are on their side.” . U.S. IMPATIENCE Vice President Ky of South Vietnam declared on the same day in. Paris that the Communists are “counting on the. impatience of the American public” for an advantageous settlement. He was quoted as follows: “The reason I think the enemy are not ready at present for serious talks is this: I think oven the enemy are convinced they cannot win on the battlefield, militarily or politically. But there is still one thing that the enemy are counting on —- the impatience of American public opinion. NEW YORK - The ultimate historian may be kinder to Dwight David Eisenhower than were some of his political and military contemporaries. As the nation and a good portion of the Western world followed him to the edge of his \ grave in that Grant Wood American Gothic chapel Abilene, lions must!) pondered hit place in the an- CONSIDINE nals of the 20th century. Baseball Contest Waits for Winner yThe curtain foil yesterday on Act I of The Press Annual Baseball Contest that rewards 0s wimar with a |500 U.S. Savings Bond as the clock struck the deadline hour of won. liters will be a 12-day intermission tptll Act If is played out on April 19 when tint winnsr will be represented by the batter tins tope tiw Associated Press tabulation of patting averages which will appear in the newspaper's sport section on that date. .; Interest In the contest was never higher, tik tty Judges waded through a continuous Ptyr#. entries. . Auliffe enjoyed (?) the distinction of being picked to win with the lowest—.206. The winning average most favored was the .476 posted by five entrants, one more than second-place .875 — with .841 batting third with three. The number of players with but a single backer followed the usual pattern, 39'going to the contest (date with such minimum support . “So long as the enemy still think that with the impatience and opposition in America they can get something better, they will keep their present attitude aitih language unchanged until the day that, both in Vietnam and the tinited States, the government and the people convince the enemy that they have to talk seriously and together with us Verbal Orchids Of the II players picked by contestants, Mr «M friend, Al Kafira, ted (he fait , I IllMi *• wett Wtawed by Yastrzem- -\ ft RsMnsea, Northrap, W. Horton, So that contestants mty keep posted on the state of their fortunes until tbs moment of truth arrives on tbs 19th, within a few days we/ll begin publication on this page .of the Associated Press list of American League’s fen Leading Batters. Mrs. Nellie Shiel . of 81 8. Jessie; 92nd birthday Fred R. Katus of Waterford Township; 89th birthday. jtyk .HarrelMa, Stanley sad Herbert Hoover was a good man, but in the main he never fully understood the violent rumbling! of his time in office. And he could not have conceived of Ike’s humanitarian and sociological projects. Franklin Roosevelt was unique in ways that will always assure him a deep niche in the parade of the century’s presidents. He lifted the face of the land and the hearts of its people as perhaps no Man before or since. FAILED TO FACE FACT' He won four-in-a-row, but in the end he was too stubborn or too vain to face the simple fact that he was dying while he tried to match wits and gall with Stalin. Eisenhower handled the Russians better than any of them. Harry Truman came to the presidency with less to recommend him than almost any predecessor. But he will be remembered among the greet presidents, this uncomplicated small-town Americas whose destiny it was to preside over*some of the most, momentous events In history,/ John F. Kennedy did not live long enough to leave a truly discernible imprint on the century, save the quickening of the interest of the young in politics, the memory of a blithe spirit around the White House, the shocking indecision of the Bay of Pigs, and a youthfulness that prompted Khrushchev to test him to the brink of thermonuclear war. Ike wasn’t as bright or hip as JFK, but to a large portion of the country he represented immensely more substance. DEFEATED BY WAR LBJ put through more legislation of a constructive nature than most of the century’s Presidents put together. But the war in Vietnam got away from him and eventually drove him out of office. Ike got Infinitely more done with tact and Ms remarkable catalytic power than Teddy Roosevelt did with all of his Comments on Sen. Hart’s ‘Survival Week’ My heart bleeds for the millionaire Hart family and their “survival week” on welfare food. There must be some medal available for this great feat. Mrs. Hart talks of eating left-overs—a usual thing for poor and middle-class people Senator Hart asks how you can go to a luncheon without eating. Who on welfare goes to Senate meetings? Let’s ask for 10,000 volunteers in Pontiac to have free food, rent, utilities, clothing, food Stamps and cash for a month. Any takers? R. E. GRIMMETT 1225 STANLEY Question and Answer If it Is against the law to litter the streets la Pontiac, i h paper Allowed to le . with a Slot fine, why are tracks loaded with paperAllowed to leave all of their refuse on Jodya? I believe they're from the plant and headed for the land fill on Joslyn and 1-75, MRS. JOHN ZABLOCKI So Ike could very well he up near the top when they finally count and rate this century’s best Presidents. He had Truman’s simplicity, Hoover’s honesty, FDR’s ability to lead, and Teddy’s guts. Yet, there was a period when, if you asked a detractor what Ike did best, the person probably would have said, “play golf.” It* wasn’t a golfer they buried in AbilenC the other day. It was one of the most memorable Americans of all time. REPLY Since officers can't be everywhere, violations should be reported. We suggest you get the license numbers or descriptions and call either the police department or the plant you think they come from. We're sure either one would try to see that such littering is eliminated. Question and Answer Why is the factory on Montcalm between Jodya and Oakland allowed to pour that filthy amoke into the air? This happens repeatedly. I voted for spending millions to clean up water and air that factories have already polluted and feel this abuse must be stopped. * LINDA THAYER n* aeseswe n*w a «wm •RcforMr *• Uw mm tar nmm. mnmW «* heal mm ' ss3Sn* Ota wS m si AS * ptedjctidii is the .600' Brown, whHe Mc- That’s all tor mm, boys and girts. Your respective fates- ere now oa the laps of the diamond fogs, aid the oao favored wjtt be a page l story ht The Press' April 21 Issue. Smiles An,optimist is a fellow who eats windfall apples In tha dark. Yet Ike twice easily prevailed over Truman’s man, AdJal Stevension, and ill the powers of the long-entrenched Democratic party. . ...... Mfc-: N3£S m I k fMOe • ms to MMrm mjmnlmim ---1 SMMi SSMO. (Mr. •Mm mmMr l* W-H> ftM b*m|NM*riM iH w* REPLY The State Air1 Pollution Division is awate of this, as are plant'officials. New equipment is being intailed and completion is expected by 1973, when» virtually all pollution will be eliminated. Mr. Phin-ney of Pontiac Motor told us it cannot all be done at once without completely shutting down the foundry, and it would be impractical to do so even than, 'because each piece of eqiiipment must be evaluated after it is* installed to make sure it is doing the fob. / (Editor’s Note: Will the lady who, while at the Home and Sports Ihow, donated an Activo Metaberaltip to the Drayton Plaint Nature Center plense call as sad leave her addrtss? D.P.N.C., , 178-1798.) THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, APRIL 8, 1909 Tafroe Will Appear in Televised Forum Dr. Don 0. Tatroe, superintendent of Waterford Township Schools and board member of the M i c h l g a n Association of School Administrates, will ap-pear on Wj^VS, Channel 56, Thursday night op a program entitled "Reflections on Suburban Education." The. purpose of the program, which Is scheduled for 10 p.mr, is to reexamine topics of four proceeding programs in a series. Tatroe will be a panel member tiOn, teachers’ rights and negotiations, curriculum and future directions of suburban education. m2 Heidi M. Szadyr ander Mikiczenko, 56, of 625iof Capac; nine grandchildren ;;Pursley - Gilbert Fuse rat Sylvanwood will be 9 a.m. and two great-grandchildren. Home, Pontiac. ,'J* Service for Heidi M. Szadyr, tomorrow at St. Mary’s Mr. Slonaker died Saturday. •* infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs.1 (Protect-res Ukarainian Frank Slonaker j: . ” Victor M. Sdadyr- of 26 Orthodox Church, Detroit, with! mi Perry A. Vaughan Jr/ Cardinal Hill, wiH be 2 p.m*! burial ih White Chapel1 .7^1 mnMlvruAM ,n# SSmf aTrol thwUhICLriTrini MTH°ri? C"5?I7a A resident Frank taken 74, A former resident Perry A; rwi Miriat cirnl fBW '"“I'S 8 p ^‘^ Dayton, Ohio, will be 12:30 p.m. I Vaughan Jr., 51, of Howell will WWte Chapel Memorial Ceme-at Price^neral Home Troy tomorrow in Ottawa Parkbe 1 pm. Thursday at Ben **!?• W. - . Mr. Mikiczenko died yMter-\CmuAm> i n d e p e n d e n c e Chapel of the William R. Township. Arrangements are by Hamilton Co., with burial In ' '---------------sta—|-----■1 "'oodlawn Cemetery, Detroit. - a Mr. Vaughan, a construction engineer, died Sunday. Re was RRMMR PSH Facility Gets OK of C Legislature The State'Legislature | has approved a plan to | establish a research and I training facility at Pontiac 1 State Hospital. The $75,000 building, fi- | nanced by public and pri- | vate sources, will provide * | facilities for physical and | psychiatric research on 1 animals. ★ ★ w . fe It will house the current | Pontiac Medical Science'1 Laboratories and will be § named after Frank E. Fitzsimmons, the Teamsters union’s acting president. The union donated money for the building. Dr. Donald Dawson, head of the laboratories and director of the hospital’s medical - surgical division, said the laboratory will serve the research and training needs of .five major medical facilities in Oakland County. I ★ ★ ★ Dawson said he expects construction to start in mid-April and be finished I about July 1. WAR WINS OCT - As his girlfriend pleads with an army-police patrol to let him go, a young South Vietnamese is led to a police jeep and then to a military induction camp. The youth was apprehended by the patrol in his apartment op Saigon’s Tu Do street. Police and MPa are making life difficult for any young man why tries to stay out of military service without! valid official ABM Foe Blasts Shifts in Position Deaths in Pontiac, Neighboring Areas The infant died yesterday.’ I day. Surviving are her parents and} He wa8 employed by the! grandparents Mr. and Mrs.Fllter DiV|gion) Bendix Corp. in Mykolaj Szadyr of Troy and Mr.!Madjgon Heights, and, Mrs.., Boyce Pennington of. surviving are his wife, Madison HelghTsTr -— Palageia; three daughters, Mrs. Robert Adams and Miss Nina A., both of Midland, and Anna home; a son, Walter A, ‘ at home; and one grandchild. WASHINGTON (AP) - A leading Senate opponent of President Nixon’s missile defense program says the administration keeps changing its reasons for building the controversial Safeguard system. We have had a whole series of rationalizations for Safeguard from the administration,” Democrat George S. McGovern oi South Dakota said. “They keep changing thek all the time. Now it seems to me they are escalating the terror rather than giving us ahy enlightenment.” McGovern commented in an interview 'shortly after Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird told a .group of European reporters visiting the Pentagon Monday that the Soviet Union is testing a triple warhead for its big SS9 rocket. Laird has cited deployment of the SS9—without extra war-for deploying Boys Club Units' Meeting Delayed The meeting of. the Michigan Area Council of Boys Clubs of America scheduled for tomorrow at the Devon Gables in Bloiomfield Township has been canceled, according to Howard Dell,. Pontiac Area Boys Club representative. A new date for the meeting will be announced later, he said. NOTICE OF HEARING ON STREET LIGHTING SPECIAL ASSESSMENT DISTRICT Notice' Is hereby given that * pub hearing will be hefaTat the ““■a- 1' Township Hall. 70S Hint (M-59) from 7:00 to »:00 D.i day, A 1----- Rood . by petition, K. ... ‘•“E'&rvCrmvIehjn 1 I ieSlonV«N*RSB,#Wh*S'Lekr Township, Oakland County, Michigan Lots 41 through 43. By order ol the White Like Townshlt 0*rd‘ FERDINAND C. VETJjBR, White Lake Townehlg April S, IMP Cause No. 24241 ■ ■ STATE OF MICHIGAN—In the Probate Court for the County of Oakland, Juvenile DlvWon. In the matter of the petition concerning Brenda McLauchlln, Minor. To ClaTr O. McLauchlln, iather ol said mpemion'having been filed In this Court alleging that saw child comes within the provisions of Chapter 712A of the Com-niied Laws of 194i as amended, In that i present whereabouts of me father r child It unknown ai In the I .... -f this Cow., the People of aioie e, mioniyon, you are hereby r fled that the hearing on said petition', bs held at the Court -SHMegilaH County Service Center, Pontiac In tali County, oh the liih'day 1969, at t;3S o'clock In It being Impractical to make per service hereof, this summons and r_ shall be served by publication of a copy one week previous Mima hearing In The »edPriafi CTyP*r ,Bd mm Withess, Barnard, , City of/ "sy of Ap ! HI R. BARNARD, Mimg SMITH! ly probate Regfner, Juvenile TplyIsloh Cause No. 24340 STATE OP,MICHIGAN—In .... . JuvenMeWDI-'-,”“,h* 'C°“MX 6,li" said this country is working to- in our submarines that could ward development of such a wipe the Russians out, and the weapon. Russians know H. ‘CURIOUSLEY SILENT /"We’re all guessing about While McGovern conceded^ Russian intentions,, But even, if 58 might be capable of alirst they were foolish enough to try strike designed to wipe out U. S. Safeguard. He said Monday that mounting triple warheads on the SS9 would giye Russia triple the punch it is expected to have by 1973 and the capability to take out the Minuteman missiles which are America’s main deterrent, first strike force. land-based missiles, he said administration officials are "curiously silent" about the retaliatory power of U.S. Polaris-equipped submarines. “It’s only in the last cottple of weeks that they have been talking about this first strike threat to justify Safeguard,” he said, "They 'don’t mention that we have a second strike capability first strike and to knock out our land-based missiles, they can’t touch our submarines." The Soviets are estimated to have 200 operational SS9s, with current deployment expected to give them 500 by 1973. With triple nuclear- tips, they would have 1,500 warheads to the 1,000 U. S. Minutemen With a single warhead. Dem Coalition to Hear Bond at Cobo Hall Mrs. Jan P. Barylski PONTIAC TOWNSHIP» -Mrs. Jan P. (Vera Mae) Barylski, 61, of 1960 Grandview died today. Her body is at Huntoon Funeral Home, Pon-tiac. Mrs. Barylski was a seamstress and a member of St. Michael’s jPatholic Church, Detroit. Surviving are her husband; two daughters, Mrs. Harold Wright of Westland and Mrs. Michael Cobb of Detroit; three brothers and sisters, including Lloyd Sowles of Pontiac; and 11 grandchildren. ' Harold McKillen IMLAY CITY - Service for Harold McKillen, 63, of 118 E. Third will be 3 p.m. tomorrow at. Muir Brothers Funera Home, with burial In Imlay Township Cemetery. Mr. McKillen died Sunday. He was a member Imlay City Lodge 341, F&AM, and American Legion Post 135 and charter member of the Imlay City Rotary Club. He had been a justice of the peace since 1956. Surviving are his wife Arlene; a half, brother Lawrence of Dryden; and i sister. Alexander Mikiczenko Traffic Deaths Up 4 Pet. in 2 Months Maynard G. Port WALLED LAKE - Service for Maynard G. Post, 77, of 295 Ladd will be 1 p.m. Friday at the Walled Lake United Methodist Church with burial in Walled Lake Cemetery by the Richardson - Bird Funeral Home. Mr. Post died yesterday. He was a retired Ford Motor Co. dealer. He belonged to the Walled Lake Rotary club and was a life member of the Walled Lake Lodge 528 F&AM and OES chapter 506. Surviving-are a son, Donald M. of Walled Lake; a daughter, Mrs. Shirley Vivier of Miami, Fla^and three grandchildren. Memorial contributions may be sent to the Walled Lake United Methodist Church. Fred Robinson Sr. ' member of the Presbyterian Church. Surviving are his wife, Annabel!; his mother, Mrs. Perry Vaughan of St. Petersburg, Fla.; and three sister#; Including Mrs. John B. Hafit-mond of Bloomfield Hills. ' Memorial tributes may he sent to the Michigan Heart Association, Detroit. & George O. Wert Jr|; HOLLY — Requiem mass for George O. West Jr., 50, of 4186 CHICAGO UP)— Traffic deaths for the first two months of 1969 jumped 4 per cent above the total for the same period last year, the National Safety Council said today. * k k............ The council added, however, that two-month figures were insufficient to make any forecasts of drivers’ a n <1'e~ Belford will be 10:30 a.ft. pedestrians’ performances for|jrriday at St. Rita’s Cathdgc all 1969. ■ - - - • •- During January and February, 7,447 persons were killed in traffic mishaps compared with 7,160 for, the first two months of 1968, the council said. tr6y IMLAY CITY. ~- Service for Fred Robinson Sr., 80, of 280 W. Fourth will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at .Muir Brothers Fun era' Home, with burial in Imlay Township Cemetery. Mr. Robinson died Monday. Surviving are his wife, Pearl; a daughter, Mrs. Lucy Maison of Imlay City; two sons, Service for Alex-'Frederick of Imlay and Richard Policewomen Set Record in Buffalo Buffalo, N.Y. (in — Catherine . Rebadon and Marian Bass have a double distinction ii the Buffalo Police Department. They were promoted to desk lieutenants Monday, becoming file first women in. t h department’s 103-year history to be appointed to that rank. It ‘ also the highest level ever reached by a Buffal policewoman. Church, with burial in Lakeside Cemetery. * Rosary will be recited at 7x0’ ..m. Thursday at Dryer Funeral Home, Holly. 2 -. Mr. West died this morning. He was a member of Hulat-Bravender Post 5587, VFW, add Local 651, UAW-CIO. Mr. W«t was employed by the AC Sparkplug Co., Flint Surviving are his wife, Lorraine; J his mother, ■ M r s .\ Christine West of Flint; three sons, Dennis of Davlzotf; Richard at home and George *11 of Fort .Knox, Ky.; four daughters, Mrs. Charles Mafck of Flint, Mrs. Carl Stubblefield of Flint, Mrs. Richard Grooters of Highland Township; and Nancy, at home; two brothers; mid 10 grandchildren. Memorial contributions may be made to the Hurley HospiQd Kidney Fund, Flint. * Rep. Julian Bond, D-Georgia, Will speak following dinner at p.m. Saturday at Cobo Hall, Detroit. His address will conclude a NOT INTENTIONS ( full day’s program scheduled by I’m not talking about intern I “"New Democratic Coalition tions,” Laird said, "but aboutiof. Michigan. Discussions are capability." At about the same time, Secretary of State William P. Rogers was telling a news conference that he can’t understand why the Soviets are installing the SS9 at all. He said this will be one of the first, questions to be taken up with them in any arms-limitation talks. Richard B. Russell, D-Ga., a top Senate authority on military matters, and Sen. Henry. M. Jackson, D-Wash., who! turned down Nixon’s .offer of the defense secretaryship, both have cited the SS9 as a prime for installing the antimissile system. Jackson said the United States has no multiple-warhead missile in its arsenal. Russell scheduled on- the antiballlstic missile system, the boycott of California ‘ table ’ grapes, electoral reforms, current problems in education and crises of the urban communities. The recently launched petition drive requesting a presidential primary election in Michigan to be placed on the ballot sin November 1970 will be dis< cussed. The drive is headed by John R. Koza of the. 19th DIs- There are 2.75 million people in New. Zealand divided into some 411 different religious groupings but only 11 of these religions have^nore than 10,000 members. PEN EVENINGS" {BsdJjtfL, INCOME HU 7 MORE DAYS To $•• H A k BLOCK Wa gueffaniae accural# preparation of gvery lax return. If We make atiy errori that cpit yog any m Intereit, wo,will pay the penalty or intarait. America’* largeit fax Service with Over 3000 Offices 201. HURON ! 44tf DIXIE HWY. ■ 1012 N. MAIN m jmm 001 N. MAIN MILFORD DIRECTORS Louis He Cole David B. Eames President . Eames and Brown, Inc. Warren H. Eierman Executive Vice President Community National Bank of Pontiac S Robert R. Eldred President Community National Bank of Pontiac Robert C. Fisher * Executive Vice President Fisher Corporation Harold A. Fitzgerald Chairman of the Board The Pontiac Press ( Alfred C.. Girard Chairman of the Board Community National Bank of Pontiac Alfred R. Glancy, Jr* ' President Realty Investment Corporation Alfred R. Glancy, Hi Michigan Consolidated Gas Company Harold S. Goldberg President Thomas Jewelry Company, Inc. Howard W. Huttenlocher President H. W. Huttenlocher Agency, Inc. Frederick J. Poole * President Poole-DIckle Lumber Company National Bank of Pontiac PONTIAC, MICHIGAN STATEMENT OF CONDITION as of close of business March 31,1969 RESOURCES Caeh and Dae from Banka 23,866,903.18 United Stetee Government Obligations 27,280,489.02 Other U.S. Government Agencies * . . 5,000.000.00 State and Municipal Securities. Other Securities .............. Loans and Discounts...*........8 49,937,194.77 Real Estate Loans. ............ 83.369.766.89 Accrued Interest..... i........... , Bank Properties and Equipment... Other Assets........ TOTAL RESOURCES..... 8 56,147,392.20 45,059,674.67 315,000*00 133,306,961.66 1,761,857.68 5,267,793.74 - IW&M 8241,989,224.23 LIABILITIES Deposits! ■ Demand*............... 8 75,465,072.32 Savings and Time.... ... • 146,050,888.86 U. S. Government ..».*.. • 1.076.513.30 Total Deposits...... 3222,592,474.48 Unearned Interest..................................... 2,064,981*78 Liabilities for borrowed money... 2,000*000.00 Accrued Expenses and Other Liabilities... 1,516,971.98 Reserve for Loan Contingencies.................................... 2,595,117.28 Capital Stock, Common ....... 8 5,000,000.00 Surplus......................... 5,000,000.00 Undivided Profits...... 1,171,129.40 General Reserve ..................... 48,549.36 11,219,678.76 TOT^L LIABILITIES.... , v v $241,989,224.23 •v v * ifSsJa United Sutw Cov.rnm.nl Secaritlee In the .mount of 18,061 JIMS Book V.lu^ In the foreioln* .UMmanl ara gUdsml to wcara Federal and Stale Government Uepo.lt. including depo.it. of IMJ6LOO of the TNMtuar, SSkM MUlm and far athar parpom. raqnirad by law. jj Member Federal Dtpmil Inntnuut Corporation DOWNTOWN OFFICE AIRPORT OFFICE AUTO BANK BLOOMFIELD HILLS OFFICE CLARKSTON OFFICE COUNTY CENTER OFFICE n HURON STREET OFFICE KEECO HARBOR OFFICE LAKE ORION OFFICE MALL OFFICE MAPLE-TELEGRAPH OFFICE MILFORD OFFICE PERRY STREET OFFICE ROCHESTER OFFICE ROMEO OFFIOS___ , UNION LAKE OFFICE UNIVERSITY OFFir W THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. APRIL 8, 1969 MAKE WEB MB MARKETS The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by groweru and sold by then in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of.( Friday. Produce I Cl / American Telephone traded block of 13,500 shares up Ml It lost a full point on Monday. Additional large blocks included INA Corp., 11,400 shares up Mi, and Consolidated Edison 10,000 shares off%, Collins Radio was up, more than a point in later trading, after opening fr ac ton ally higher. VANCOUVER, B. C. OB — Students should be permitted to leave the classroom whenever they need to withour going through the old formality raising their hands and asking permission, a leading Canadian educationist says., * * * . Lloyd Dennis, cochairman of the Ontario Royal Commission an Education, said schools that make pupils put up their hands are punitive,- dictatorial and authoritarian. * * ** He told 1,000 teachers at the annual meeting of the British Columbia Teachers Federation that the individual knows best when he has to leave tlie room. By JOHN CUNNIFF , AP Business Analyst NEW YORK - The rental equipment business, which pay be the most" vigorously growing of all service industries, is] still essentially; one of small, dynamic busl- CUNNIFF The New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK (AP)l • New York Stack ixchange selected morning prices: Chief Has $24 /or Manhattan NEW YORK IB - Chief Thunderbird of Long Island’: Shinnecock Indian tribe came to Manhattan Monday and offered to buy back the island *- for the original purchase price of $24. The chief, his wife, two daughters and -two grandchildren also performed a ceremonial dance in Indian regalia as part of ceremonies opening an exhibit of paintings of Indians at the Gallery of Modem Art. Gallery officials said the chiefs, offer marked the 343rd anniversary of fher sale of Manhattan to Dutch Gov. Peter Mimiit. Some, small rental companies claim to turn over their Inventories four or five times a year. But larger ones might rent out their entire inventory! on average, only once in a year. There is strength in smallness. Th American Rental Association of Moline, 111., whose membership includes 100 manufacturers of rental equipment add 1,400 outlets, estimates that $50,000 of equipment is needed to begin a community rental operation. ■ ★ fit Franchisers, however, come up with lower figures, and claim also that they can improve prospects for success by their wholesale buying power and by helping to choose location and inventory, by assisting with advertising, and by teaching techniques. A to Z Rental has three packages for prospective membels of its franchise. The lowest in cost, a $35,000 plan, requires the purchaser to put down $8,750. By nearly fulfilling their boast of being-able to rent anything under thfe sun — a giraffe was rented in California a few weeks ago—these small-business men are building an industry estimated to gross $1 billion a year. ★ ★ ★ .. The tendency of more and more Americans to rent rather than buy gained a foothold in the West shortly after World War II as part of the do-it-yourself movement. The first stor mom-and-pop operations, with father renting the hardware items End mother attending to the fancier activities, such sfi renting glassware and coffee runs and candelabra for parties. NO LETUP IN GROWTH There has been no letup in the growth rate, estimated by industry officials at between 15 and 20 per cent a year. But only in the past few years has it been growing fast in the Northeast. There are now estimated to be about 10,000 rental outlets throughout the country, the great majority of them owner-operated. Not only is it an industry of small businesses, but it may continue to be so for years more. Hertz, the big automotive and construction equipment renter, has withdrawn from the general renting field. Sears,. Roebuck tried it and also withdrew. The biggest chain, Abbey Rents, numbers no more than 60 or so outlets nationwide. Franchisers are more active than large chains, with United Rent-All of Los Angeles, and A to Z rental of Chicago, claiming well over 300 members each.; The $50,000 plan requires $12,500 cash, the $75,000 plan $18,750. United Rent-All, which claims that none of its outlets has ever failed, requires $15,000 down, and a passing girade on credit and aptitude tests. It asks for an immediate $1,000 deposit as evidence of good-faith. The down payment to Urtiied goes toward reducing the $18,000 franchiSe fee, buying the opening inventory'" and providing working capital for the new ven-ture. Ohe of the big headaches, if not a threat to success,, is conversions. A conversion occur? when the renter of an item fails to return it. After a period of time it has the same effect on the businessman as a theft. “It’s a genuine peril of the business,’’ says Ristow, who has known of an individual who rented a truck at one location and a construction backhoe at another, and then disappeared with both. But even franchise holders are small-business men. LESS TURNOVER ‘The higher the inventory the less the turnover,” says Bill Ristow, who operates a flourishing business in Des Plaines, IU. “The bigger the business the harder it to to turn over,” he says in explaining the small-business man’s success Mutual Stock Quotations Rolls Recalls Autos Built in Last 4 Years NEW YORK (AP) - Purchasers of the symbol of automotive opulence—a Roils Royce—have run into a roadblock. Rolls-Royce inc. announced Monday that it was recalling all cars it produced in the last four years to correct a potential News in Brief Ray Fettinger, 43, of 811 Farnsworth told Pontiac police yesterday that someone picked hip pockets of $60 to $70 while he" was at Orchard Lake Road and Franklin Boulevard. Stocks of Local Inter&sf OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS __lotatkxif from th# NASD •» «» tentative Intar-dealer prices o' 31 IS , tad. Rett I —4.3 —.1 487.3 184.4 MA 145.4 487.1 187.5 15 4* INI. Stack! —.4 —2.4 48.3 3324 48.7 334.5 48.0 337.1 4904 187.7 444.1 1744 -1 513.5 fly 4*3.0 ]»54 531.1 2174 4354 145.4 49.9 33Si 39.9 3153 59.1 1(1,* 444 330J 40.4 34*4 135.1 299.1 DOW-JONES AVERAGES stacks 30 Indus ................. 918,21—9.09 “ill* .................mm—i11 ._ '15 ................ 128.87—{ 45 Stacks .?... .......... 319.40—! I Won. *3.3 *3 4 .Day 433 *3.4 I Ado 43.3 K| .... ! h Too *3.4 |4 7 78.4 90.2 77.8 ■ Agp 44.5 *7.1 N.7 Won 44.3 14.4 79.3 904 Lwf 43.2 ”3 24 1940 Low If BS 784 Stock Exchange Index: - Noon New Yorjs. ...-34'^ - The Rolls Royce to available i two models, a convertible selling for. $31,600 and an economy sedan for $19,600. The Eng-i lish firm also produces Bentleys, identical except for the; radiator grill, which sell for a few hundred dollars less. Cus-tom models are more expensive, including ohe available only to “permanent heads of slate.” More than 5,000 bars were recalled, a Rolls spokesman said. About 1,350 are in the United States. 30-MINUTE JOB The correction in the steering system, requiring 30 minutes work, would “naturally” be done free, he said, and about 30 per cent of the American owners have already brought their urs in. Stressing that the correction was for a “potential” defect, the spokesman said: “Recent engineering test experience has shown that exceptional overload conditions may cause toe side steering lever setscrews on ^en-tiey-T cars to relax their torque tightness.” *» ★ _ ★ There have been no failures reported, the firm said. A letter was sent to all Rolfs and Bentley owners on March 19, the spokesman said. GM RECALL Less than two months ago, General Motors announced it was recalling 4.9 million vehicles to check possible titiects. The recall involved 2.5 million 1968 andl909CChevroleto, Pon-tiacs, Oldspiobiles, Cadillacs, Sticks and GMC trucks. Another 2.4 million 1965 to 1968 Chev-rolets were recalled. CSBtee* April 8 mm By ROGER E. SPEAR Q—Should I hold Coronet Industries bought at 21? - P L. A—I see no reason to sell these shares. Two acquisitions last year put Coronet, a carpet-maker, into the ftimttasrw business. Sales have moved ahead steadily as have earnings. In the fiscal year ended last June, earnings were 94 cento a share. Hie first half of the current year saw a 25 per cent gain in net which, if applied to last year’s results, could put full-year earnings at close to $1.29 a share, A major plant expansion is planned and will be devoted to the production of commercial grade carpets, one of the fastestgrowing segments of the rug market. A convertible bond to, in all cases, an outstanding debt obligation of the company and as such to payable on a preset redemption date at a stated leading.—J.B., A.A., R.G., RA Ar-f would like to thank the many readers who picked up the error In an early March column on the redemption conversion of convertible bo This particular type of bond to used with Increasing frequency in merger situations ana as • means of obtaining funds at « reduced Interest rata. These bonds are by no means worthless after the conversion date but frequently'are worth a lesser amount of money when the growth-generating conversion feature expires. recent case — Nuclear Corp. of America — clearly defines. the company’s profound concern that bondholders get the most .for their dollar. A public notice a week prior to the change In conversion prices carefully stated what this change would mean to the holder in terms of dollars and canto. Tbto notice to typical of pages throughout the year. ? w w ★. Bear in mind $fiat n bond hi a debt obligation and to redeemable Under the conditions stated in that debt contract, but It must be presented to the company or its Ugent In order for the holder to secure the (Copyright, INI)