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THE PONTIAC PRESS
Home
Edition
VOL. 121j	1^0. 19
★ ★ ★
PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MARCH 1. 1963 —40 PAGES
ownro V£3ii'*Sm5tunoiTAL
CIA Chief Gloomy
j.
From Our hlews Wires WASHINGTON - (^tral Intelligence Agency Director John k. McCone has toU congressmen be s^ li^e hope for an internal uprising in Cuba, it was discloeed today.
Ri^. Armistead Selden, D-Ala., chairman of a suboommittee on Communist subversion in Latin America, reported McCone’s pessimistic view to newsmen in releasing a trauiscript of the CIA chief’s closed-door testimony before the subcommittee last week.
’The transcript itself, considerably censored for secnrity
reasons, nM|de no liiention of a l and tolerate use id the Soviet possible overtnm of the Fidel 'garrison in Cuba to
,,	o-------— -_________<iu*ll « re-
“ tlx
o ,	. j	« McNamara said at a news
ait a report asked ^den^ if ^wderence that this country McCone had held out ho^ for	^ the-Ruwilai.
“J	to put down an internal
saw ne nw not.	nprlslng, let aloae launch an
"Cuba is a police state,” Sel- *’ i-,.	miIah
den said. “Under the present
circumstances it would be ex- McNamara put it this way: tremely difficult for an unarmed "I think that this administra-popufation to rise. ’The rhanr^s tion indicated before that we will are not good.”	lOOt accept operations in this hem-
! Yesterday, Defense Secretary tsphere, combat operations, by |Robert S. McNamara said the Soviet miliUry personnel.”. jUnited States would not stand by| He did not indicate what action
the United States would take if the situation arose.
McCone said at least 1JM6 to 1,500 Latin Americans went to Cuba in 1962 for sabotage and guerrilla training, and mwe have gone this year, j - McCone’s statement was given 'to the House Foreign Affhirs Committee on 'Fei^, 19. It was released today after security dele-
^ 4(cCene painted a graphic picture of a parade of revolutionaries goi^ to Cuba for. training,. taking pains to conceal their travel movements.
and receiviag up to a yedr’s ^ch f
thinp as how to Hse arms and bow to homemade "h^alot.dv
In another developntent, the Norfolk (Va.) Ledger-Star said that Navy, frogmen {u^bly have been operating on Cuban beaches before and after the Soviet missiles crisis came to a head last October.
In an. article by njilitary writer Jack Kestner, the newspaper suggests^ the frogmen have learned "more about the beaches (Continued on Page 2, Cd. 4)
May Ask Head
PRESS HONORED-Delmar V. Cote, sUte director of the Savings Bond Division of the U. S. ’Treasury (left), presents ’The Pontiac Press with a U.& award. John A. Riley, adver-
tising director, accepts it on behalf of the newspaper,>cited yesterday for “service to the nation” in promoting the purchase of savings ' bonds.
Board to Quit
Blocks Propaganda
RTomne/ Might Act ii Drug Store Licensing Controversy
Pentagon Foils Reds
WASHING’rpN (AP) -’Die Pentagon’s aimouncement that long-range Soviet nooimaissance jets flew over four U.S. Navy carriers at sn was intended to disarm any Soviet prqmganda bomb before it was dropped, Informed -"rcajHM today,
These sources iiidicute# sec-rettfy of Defense Robert S.
aud the Princeton earlier showed them up as vulnerable. Officers noted that the Forres-tal’s departure from the Mediterranean for the United Statia had been announced. They said it was traveling the Great Orcle route, I iridpping lane; that it had no air patrols out, and
planations for the flights over the Kitty Hawk in the North Pacitic between Jan. 27 and Feb. 3, over the Enterprise in the North At lantic on Fob. 42 and 13, and the Princeton in the North Pacific between Feb. 13 and 16,
Pictun on Pago 2
McNamara sought to heat the Soviets to the pmieh — for ck-ample to any claim that the
war or emergency situation, the Navy said, none of these conditions would apply.
’They did not make similar ex-
Another possible aim couU have been to neutralize Soviet complaints that U S. warplanes had burned and trailed Soviet ships oit the. high seas.
-|a any event, questions about the vulnerability of carriers were raised McNamara’s disclosure toM four heavy Soviet reconnais-aance bombers flew thousands M miles from the Soviet Union stfaight to the 75,000-ton carrier Fecrestal southeast of the Azores last Friday.
But the Navy stoutiy denied that the Red flights over the Pdrrestal m Feh. 22 aad over . % BuciOar-powered carrier Enterprise, the Kitty Hawk
In Today's Prels
Now Form ' Admiidstration pressure i lioys less noticeable this congressional session — PAGEB-7.
Disarmamonf '• U.S. remains optimistic -PAGE B-11.
ToptTapl
Phones^ to carry pushbuttons instead of dial —
High School . Maitets ....
. B^U . A4
... C4
... C4
. C-1-C4
( TV, Radio Programs &11
I Wilsoa, Eari .....„C-11
Women’s Pages B4-B4 \
In I
McNamara replied with a terse no’* when a*e<rt|ihether there has been any Soviet toeonnais-sanceover-Norto '
'None of the Soviet aircraft showed hostile intent,” McNamara said of the four hMvy aircraft which came in over the Forrestal in two waves.
Sb Kerin^llaslfollans
for Seeking Presidency in '68
By LOUIS G. PANOS
WASHINGTON OB-Robert F. Kennedy looked out the window <rf his chauffeur-driven limousine and said he does not plan to run for president in 1968.
“Emphatically not,” he said.
In his voice was a note of plaintiVeness, a plea that his answer be believed.
There was also the shrug of resignation from a man who, as attorney general and brother of President, knows every word he utters for public print will be closely examined—but political onxments for campaign ammunition, by foreign diplomats for a hint M vrtiat the administration is really thinking, and by reporters who consider him the most valuable news source outside the White House itself.
★ ★ ★ ,
This interview, held^ during a ride from a hotel speaking engagement to his Justice Dqiartment office, whs one of a cent s«ies given by the attorney general to The Associated Press in an attempt to answer these questions:
1.	Is he being groomed to assume the presidency When
John F. Kennedy leaves office?	,	”
2.	How true are current Washington rumors that, in iweparation fw a run at the presid«Ky, he will be nmned secretary of state, with Dean Rusk leaving that post to becoiae
(CJontinued on Page 2, (i>l. 7)
LANSING (AP) - Gov. George Romney said today he nuy ask Michigan Pharmacy Board Director David M. Mosq to resign
as a result of disclosures in a controversial drug store licensing case.
"I expect to get a copy of the report to the State Suprenoe Court
Earlior Story, Page B-2
!, and if I find h con-
press, I will demand his immediate reri^tion,” the governor
The report to which Romney referred has been filed with Qie court by Circuit Judge Creighton Cofcanah of CaBtoun County, who
inquiry into the board’s denial of a drug license to SuperX discount
drug Cham owned by the Kroger, Co.
Moss was among those who testified in Coleman’s hearings and was singled out for criticism by Coleman’s report.
COULD TAKE ACTION Romney told newsmen that a new director appointed to replace Moss “would be in a position to (Continued on Page 2, Col, 5).
LAST MINUTE RUMI-This was the scene at th« Pmtiac	plSite sales. A 50J)00 lag is estimated throughout the state corn-
branch of the secretary of staff’s office yesterday as nootorists	pared to the 1962 3-milllon sale. Bad weather and the tab’s
jammed in to buy 1963 license plate tabs Miead of yesterday’s lack M attraction were cited asJactocsJn the sales-dip. DespltT
deadline. Willis Brewer, naanager the hranrfi, —timatoa------------the diup, putlce rep^ about the same number of tickets Issued
; area are 5,000 behind last year’s license in the area as last year. •
March Enters Like a Lamb
IbIIIV %r l■V^t1v
National Firms Make Offers -^^erthr^Qhss-af^^akhricUL-
Mwch scampered into Pontiac Many large today docile as a lamb, with I their eyes on Oakland University.
skies as unpredictable nwnth’s disposition.
The weathemaansaid MAr cb is expected to bring sprinkles of snow hite tonight midft a temperature low of 18. A light snow or ram will fall tomorrow, with the mercury mounting to 34.
News Flash
DETROIT Iff —The Detroit Red Wings today lifted defense-man Howie Young’s suspeashm. Young will rejoin the Wings against the Montreal Canadians at Montreal tomorrow night.
MINNEAPtHJS, hlinn. (UPI) —Police said a young parolee today confessed killing a 15-yenr old baby sitter in a jMuh. He had blamed an 18-year-old companion in prevhms questioning. (Earlier story. Page B4.)
And, obviously, they like what they see.
The result is plenty of job opportunities waiting for the uni-
teachers on the low end and engineering science majors on the high end of the scale.
Business administration majors are second in demand only to the
vei^s first -senior daas,^ 4^ engineering seniors.
graduate April 20.
At lea^t 40 of the nation’s le^-ing industries, as well as federal agencies and
been interviewing and biddiBg for the 150 seniors. j
Temperatures for the next five days will average 3 to 6 degrees below the normal high of 35 to 41 and normal low of 16 to 24. Precipitation will total .1 to .2 inches in periods of light snow or rain Saturday and Tuesday.
Today’s light variable winds will beotme south to southwest at 8 to 15 miles per horn tonight and Saturday.
In downtown Pontiac, toe low recording prior to 8 a.m. was 16 degrees. The temperature reading at 1 p.m. was 28.
Kath, 21, of 658 B.° Beverly St. for instance had seven offers befwe accepting that of Ford Motor Co. to enter its management training'program. He is an engineering science ma^r.
North American Aviation Co. has agreed to fly seven seniors to its plants after graduation for possible employment.
Most of the salary figures cluster around $575 to 1688 a month, said Mrs. Dorothy Hope.
ment office.
f the university place-
The teaching jobs run from |4,-700 to $5,000 for a 10-month school year, with the exception of tiiose in Anchorage, Alaska,^ where the salary 4«t $fi «nn _______
To Recommend Court Growth
But apparently the long winter has had its effect on the seniors. ■Iherejire takers for the Alas-^ -ka p
Supervisors Will Get Committee iSuggestion
General Electokr^Co. a>to Fort] The ways and means edtomit-have both made fu-m offers to
three ^niors each and are still talking with severaLothers.
I tee of the Oakland County-Board
The prices are good. Starting salary offers so far have ranged
of Supervisors today agpeed to recommend the. board back a drive for two more circuit judges in the county when supervisors meet Wednesday.
But 2 Trouble Shooters on Their Tail
If the rest of the supervisors concur with the conunittee a letter will be sent to the legislature in Lansing.
Feathers Flying Over City Pigeons
MEMORANDUM Febniary 28,1911
TO: Dou Nagel - Charles Cohen Couffauhig my, conversathm with ; to, t a
I to serve us inHieoi Ceutrel Committee to work eu the problem of iiigeotts congregathto In the tower of the First Presbytoiaa anrch and adjaccat
I would like to have you come up with a control program which cohM be piibiicised aad made known to people at the Presbyterian Church and other buildings Wbm« the problem dxists.
Robert A. Stlerer ’	' City Manager
★ ,-.k' 4 The pigeons -have to
That’s the unanimous opinion of downtown
property owners, merchants and businessmen — not to mention the showers.
The above memo kindles hope.-Help may be On ita way to the Saginaw-Huron street area ’ DmaU Nagel, ^ forester, aad ^les -Cohen, city saaittrian, have been named as a two-maa committoe to tackle the problem.
It all started when tiie Oakland County Courthouse left. What did it toave? It left an empty lot and a lot of homeless pigeons that moved to surrounding buildings.
"A little more dirt on the sidewalk .and we could grow a nice garden,” said Harold J. Mul-downey, iQoking down on the changing scene from his fourth floor office in the Rikor Building:
Muldowney is manager of Sherwid Realty Ck>. and attorney for the Rikar Building trust HELP WANTED
"I think the City 8hoaM help us in our
plight.” Muldowney said. “The situation is clearly out of hand. “I assumed that city officials would
The actioB was requested unanimously by the'five present efamit judges hi the county. They are pleading their case on the stren^ of a snowballing docket, with which they said they cannot hope to cope.
Yesterday’s action followed an increasing IHmaSer jM cirniplaiiits dlre^ at the city man-ager’s Mfice.
Muldowney said he also plans to “suggest some unified uctiou at ^ next Downtown Pontiac Bosiaess Associatioa meetiag.”
What botltors, Muldowney and ottier ^downtown people most' ln« the droppings.
“It’s get^ to be a real hazard under the pharmacy sigh downstairs on the corner," he continued. “We get out and wash the walk as oftei as weather permits, but that’s not enou|d>-“We spent several tiwusands dollars cleaning the building a few years ago. Lock at ttie window ledges -now — It’s a ritame.”
HALF^TO TEACH Of the approximately 150 seniors due to graduate, ab^Hit 34 are ptonning to go~4o graduate school, about 30 hope lo get career jobs, 76 are going into teaching, three into military service and the rest are undecided.
Offers are still coming in and the prospective graduates are still being summoned for follow-up interviews. Tlis week, Mrs. Hope said, General Electric asked five seniors to fly to (Continued on Page 2; Col. 4)
Judge Arthiir E. Moore, newest addition to the circuit bench, told the ewnmittee ttmt the courts ap-
parently ire now running a year behind in meting out justiqe. CITE CAUSE
The judges agre^ that the need for two more judges now is desperate. A major Cause, they said, is the State ^preme Court’s recent changes in the judicial system.
The hi^ court now requires a pretrial maring for each case en-
(Oontinuod on Page 2, Col. 1)

s:


"Be of good epurage | and He shall strengthen thy heart"	f
'Psalm 27:14 V
Those who have years : of study spent ... In j reading our New Testament . . Say that not j : one despondent note .
Can you from all its |
\
Its theme is fove and faith and praise . . And midnight' that I men raise ... In $ '
cells and joyous living ..

■m «. Hima R. n 14MT, op«
And praym* that’s prefaced with thanksgiving . . . That looses bonds and sets souls free .
And teaches “immortal-ity.”
JULIETTC. hyer
J
.4



THE FOnTIAC yRE^S, FHIDAY, MARCH I, 1968
Soviets Warn NiBan Chance
i ■	.	■
Disappearing
GENEVA (UPl) - The Soviet Union underlined its unc<nnpro-mising stand on a nuclear test ban today and warned that pros-
pects T(tii‘ agreement are "fast disappearing.’^
The United States charg^(bis as the fault of the Russians and Dbody else.
County Committee (or More Judges
(Continued From Page One) tered into circuit court. Ihehe hearings are gobbling up an increasing amount of their time, the judges said.
They pointed to ^ growing numbv of cases awaiting trial.
la September of IHI there were tM non-jury cases and SN jury cases awaiting trial, where now there is a'backlog bl Ml nonjury cases and 713 'jury cases, the judges said. Furthermore, they anticipate a continued swelling of the number of cases to be handled here,
This is'partly <hie to the county's increasing population, Judge Wniiain J. Beer dectored.
Chalrmaa of the Beard of Si^ervtoors Delos ftudla said . he was Informed by Sea. Farrell E. Roberts that a resohi-tioa of the board foT two more judges is necessary before the legbiatore wfll act After appropriate legislation. Gov, Romney would flu the judgeships by appointment until election in -19M.
SPAWNS DILEMMA The committee’s acUod today threw the Copnty Board of auditors into a
"If we get two more judges, I don't know wher^ we will put ihem," Robert Lilly, secretary of the auditors said.
Although the new eourthoase was built to accommodate nine judges, much of the space is occupied by county, admlnlstra-
___ tlve ofHcet pcnilfaig the
of another wing.
Besides the space problem, the. county’s budget has no provisions to pay for additicmal judges and staffs, Robbrt Moore, v,ice chair' gian of the auditors, noted.
He estimated the additional . cost would amount to approximately $130,000 a year. Conceivably, the judges could _ wed. in. shlfta. jharint court
rooms until- such time as .the county has sufficient funds to' build the wing.
•fThat still leaves offices to be fijund for them," Lilly concluded.
“We want to negotiate," American delegate William C. Foster said. "Unfortunately we have found that thus far the Soviet Union does not."
Soviet delegate Semyon K. Tsarapkio, in what an American s|h)kesinin •described as an "extremely tough’’ speech, told the 17-nation disarmament conference the Soviets are unprepared to go beyond their current position on the key issue of international on-site inspection of a test ban.
RETTEIUTES WARNING He reiterated Soviet Premier Nikta Khrushchev’s warning to expect no more Soviet concessions and accused the West of "trying to draw the discussions into a morass of technical questions.
"The prospects of an agreement are fast disappearing despite the immese political concessions made by the Soviet Union," Tsarapkin said, casting iside his prepared text He said the Russians are "adamantly opposed” to discussion of test ban issues other than the two principal opes — on-site inspection and the number of unmanned seismic stations to be included in the
Blrmingiham Area News
2 Con-Con Delegates fo Debate Constitution
.BIRMINGHAM-Two delegates] cashiers to know their endorser to the state constitutional conven-iwhen they cash Greenfield Res-tkm will debate major portions of taurant checks, the proposed constltatlon Wednes-
day in the Cranbrook School au-Idltorlum.
Prof. Harold Norris of the Detroit College of Uw, wlU explain his oppositiort to the document, while Detroit attorney	_	_____
- WilUam.BuJiidlip. JdU	jSiu fii JMfJBSfM. Qemtfsx.
affirmative side.	Troy.
Norris, a Democrat served as Mrs. Elwood died unexpected-
Mn. Robert Elwoed Service for Mrs. Robert (Annie) Elwood, 57, of 17M Holland St., will be 2 p.m. tomoriow pt the Manley Bailey Funeral Burial will be White
FREIGHT CARS DUMPED-An Illinois' Central Railroad freight train was derailed near Scales mound in northwestern
Illinois yesterday, tossing 43 freight cars tdto the sndw along the ralliWl tracks. No injuries were repotied.
Rejected Plane Design
Probe Alleged[Contracf Bias
WASHINGTON (AP)-Senate investigators have been told the rejected design fw the revolutionary new TFX war plane promised more bomb carrying capacity, longer flying range and ^ savings estimaUSd from |91 million to $415 ntiUion.
The figures were placed ft evl- In a censored transcript of toili-
dence at hearings Thursday before the Senate Investigation sub-cMiunittee. The senators seek to determine whether favoritism might explain why the huge TFX contract was awarded last Decern-
Colorful Judge Picard Succumbs lo CarKer al 73
JUDGE FRANK A. PICARD
The Weather

SAGINAW (UPl) - Faderal Judge Frank A. Picard, who won national fame dor a speech he once gave on the taial of Christ as viewed from a legal point of view, died here yesteiday at the age of 7E
Picard had been il)'for six years. Death was attributed to cancer.
Funeral service will be held here Monday. ,
Picard was appointed to the federal bench in 1S39 by President Roosevelt and became a power in the Mkhlgaa Democratic party during the ne w
deal years.
He informally retired from the bench two years ago but often filled in on certain cases. He helped write Michigan’s liquor laws after Congress repealed prohibition. Picaid served as first chairman of the State Liquor Control Commission. * ‘

Picard’s fame as a juror spread in the case of MartinO
ber to General Dynamics Corp. Fort Worth, Tex. over the purportedly lower bid of the Boeing Co., Seattle, Wash.
The estimates were listed ft a diart compiled by the suboonunlt-tee’s staff ft collaboration with Air Force officers and published
mohy taken ft| the Ojoaed-door hearings.
weather fighter-bomber tor both many capabilities up to missions at more than twice the speed of
Hope Fading for Uprising
(Continued From Page One)
Ml offshore waters of Cuba than Fidel Castro.
Kestner, uho witnessed Frogmen demonstrations last week ft the Virgin Islands, bas^ bis story on apparent American de-' temnnition tir invade Cufti last fall if necessary to.rid the island of Soviet ntissiles.
. If Khrusbehiv had failed to make the pn^ response, a landing would have been inevit-
'And just as inevitable would mmia|ssance
have been prior reeomiaj of selected beaches,’ article.
The hearings are^ recess un Tuesday.
Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara called the TFX a tremendous step forward in maifted aircraft design.
Still on the drawing board and
its test flights possibly, two years off,T^pli&,toTO
The chart described Boeing’s design as promising;
—1,100 nfiles longer nonstop flight range than General Dynamic’s design cm ferrying missions to speed the aircraft to distant sta-
—177 mil|^ longer flying radius on fighter missions to intercept enemy aircraft.
—Capacity to carry 69 per cent more pounds of demolition tombs when flying with wings extended; 11 per. oent more with wings “bidced in." ’the' plane is intended to have ability to extend or le-tract its swepV winjgi to suit vaii-ous flying mk^tons.
—250 per cent more capacity to
carry fire bowto. 50 tor pentn|re
Capacity for nuclear4wmbs, 70 per cent more land mines, as measured by die company’s own esti-mates.
The chart listed three different The Navy would not confirm *"<1 confusing estimates of thje the report. A sp(Aesmfft in the cost with Boeing’s estimated office of the chltf of naval in-1 described as lower than <3er formaUon declinM comment. Dynamics in aU three. The In Miami, a iiropoeal for the nutes were based on the {danned election of a ^ban government acquisition of 1,700 of the plages, ft exile submitted to the
s^ t
School Board
lawn Oiapel, Southfield.
Surviving besides he^ husband are two d«#ter8, Mrs. Fnmeis T. Webb of, Birmingham a|d hfrs. Alvin Shankle of Pontitt; a sister; two brothers; Md
NORRIS
Must Pare Preliminary to Target Totoi
ing committee.
Cudlip, a Re^ publican, served .as chairman of] die committee on style and drafting and Was also a member of the judicial branch committee.
h speaker irill have an al-
A $10,110,118 preliminary budget for Pontiac schools in 1963-64 was presented to the board of toucatiqn last night.___________
The board must pare this figure by $58,914 in the days ahead If it b to meet a pnlftiinary target of $10,051,294 next fiscal
The target figure would amount to a 3.47 per cent increase over the current year’s budget.
In presenting the budget, School Superintendent Dr. Dana P. Whit-mer said the proposed hike was determined by projecting an enrollment increase of 547 pupils, OT 2.55 pv cent, and a .9 per cent increase ft the Consumer Price
^‘The prelimtaaity budget reflects the estteated cost of iqieradBg the school system ft 1963-64 at the same level as ft die carr^ year," Whitraer
U.S«gov^rnftent by a group of Cftban invasion brigade members who said it was . the only way, to establish the unity we need to fight Castro.”
Felipe Rivero and a group of fellow brigate members outlined the plan to Harvey Summ, deputy to the State Department’ coordftitor' of Cuban affairs here, John H. Crimmins.
The election proposal could
((JontinuM From Page One) take whatever other actkm,were
Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY-Partiy sonny today hlA MosUy cloudy moderating temperatures tonl^t and ’satunL
A-li^ now likely late ^ight and, light snow or rain Satur^ under provision of the Fair La-
Mkhigan Window Cleaning the end of the U.S.-sup-ported (ftban revolutionary coun-In that case, the window wash- ^ failed to win the election, ers sought to prove th^ came
^y. Low tonight IF, high Ctatnrday 84, Light variable winds) bor Standards Act because their
becoming south to so^west 8 to 15 miles tonight and Saturday. \ employer was engaged in inter-
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s opinion, against the uria-washers, got wide publicity caused grumbling among chiefs.
^ NATHfti^ WEATHER —Snow,is forecast for tonight from the northern and north-central Atlantic coast Into the i#kes and upper Mississippf'Valley urill rain or showers likely in the south. The northern Rockies nuly have snow flurries and scattered showers are possible on the north Pacific CmsI. ttjriU be cold or-colder on ftae AtlanflC'and Gulf coast into the lower Mississippi and Tqnnessee valftyk, in the northern and central. Mateau and Pacific coast regkft, and warmer from the i^sbu into the southern plaitis.
‘It would be step to hold that washing company that a hotel would have to find week to week what the ints of the several hote did tor a hviiqi, whom
representing and if the din
were engaged £
’s four brothers had won fame'in the big-time circus tents as the Flying Picards. He himself was neVer in the troupe. He vras known as “Zip" to his family but decided at an early age to become a lawyer.
Picard was mkc threatened with Senate ImpraChmeut for hb portal-to-portaf pay decbhm ft the Mount Clemeas pottery
Victim of Home Fire Is in Fair Condition
t 87 s.
Elizabeth Kline, 50,
Ardmore St., b ft fair ________
ft Pontiac General Hoqiita], after suffering first-and second-degree burns when her bedding caught fire at 3:15 a,m. today.
Damage to contents in toe bedroom was set at $150. Mrs. Kline was smi^Ung in bed according to firemen.
May Ask Head oi Board to Quit
Hie
board, some of uhose members also were critkbed ft Coleman’s inquiry report, reap-Mom to hb put to
miiibtnition they fttended ttke such aetkm. Ronmey vras reported to have been irked by
No sqbty Jn'orasei beyond htoNmOnto and a .9 per cent increase .in the cost of living scale are proposed in the budget. APPROPRIATION SHIFT It calto for a major shift in appropriations from plant operation arid maintenance costs to instructional costs starting July 1, The shift b necessary to pr^ vide for aa antidpated increase ft poplb next fiscal year
Police here are - befuddled by the theft yesterday of some 77 payrdl checks totaling $2,170 front the Greenfield Restaurant, 725 S. Hunter Blvd.
Accordftg to the restaurutlS' manager, J. P. Miller, the diecks were to desk draurer. to a locked room.- • -He said they comprised about half the restaurant’s weekly pay-rolL The theft was dJOomer^ about noon.
U. *Merlin Holmqubt warned
structhmal. costs, Wfiitmer ex-
Ckileman’s report said the oard was unreasonably slow and unfair in denying the license, and charged abuw of power and dlacrimination. against the firm.
Moes originally was appointed to the board by former Gov. G. Mennen Williams in the 1950s and was reappointed in 1900, but that time kb ai^iointment was not confirmed by the Senate.
A total of 23 new teachers is provided for in the new budget at a ^posed cost of $130,031.
itmer said the sdwol buUiF nedjT’s answers: are ft good enough shape require less maintenahra dur-ftg the next fiscal year.
Operatieiial costs could be hfId down by decreased use of maintenance personnel. Thb can be done without rednetog the present staff, he said.
School - board members re-ierved comment on the preliminary budget.
STAFF STUDIES Hje various departmental heads will present staff studies to the board between now and April 11, Triicn the board mast preliminary budge^or i Sion to toe CkpityfTax Allocation Board.	\
A final budget will be adopted by the school board in Jnqe or Jnly, After (he school dbtrict’s Income for the next fiscal year b knomi.
01 e d piesenta-itkm period, a n d period rior rebuttal. A question jind-answer session w 111 CO n elude the I gram, sponsored by. the C r a n -brook School Alumrti Association.
Tickets for the debate, which starts at 8 .p.m., are available 'at Grinneli’s end at the Alumni Assoctation office at the school.
Bobby Not Planning on the Presidency
(Continued From Page One) ambassador to the United Nations aiKt Adtol E. Stevenson being eased out of the administration?
How does he define the unusual rote he plays in. government affairt?
JOHN'P. UVINCOT(N«1E
Stroke fatal to Financier
Bloomfield Tw|3. AAcin President of Firm •
John P. JM«ftg?toM. -IMsesiRnl of Baxter 6t Livingstone Fftafjrr CO., died yesterday from a stroA^^' suffered at hb home 'Tuesifr' evening. He was 44.	.
Service will be at 3 p. m. 1^-urday^ft Kirk ft the HiBs, ll40 W. Long Lake Road. Bloonaficld Township, with Dr. Harold C. De-Windt officisting. Trustees of be ebtireb will serve as p
ANSWERS '
In brief, there are Robert Ken-
1. The presidency: "Absolutely no. I don’t even think about being president. I know that may sound funny to some people, but that’s the truth.”
2. Secretary of state: “Completely ridteulons and untrue."
Mr. Livingstone’s body iriU^ ai the Wimaip Vasu Fun^ Home, 4375 N. Woodnrard Are. until the service. The family sng-gesta any memoriab be madw to the John Penman Livingstone Me-nwrial at Kirk in the Hills. 3 Mr. Livingstone of 71 Berifttilre Road, Bioomfiekl Totvnship, bu bom in Fifeshire, Scotland, |nd came to the United States Njth hb parents at the age of 8. ;
He attended the Universitytof Detroit and Detroit College Law.
3. Hb rote: “I try to dp ihe best job I can running the De-' partment of Justice as attorney general. It’s a very inq>ortant job.
"Sure, the Pre^dent geb my
partment, ji^t as he does from lots of others, But he wighs it, just as he does the advice of the others, and then makes the derisions himself.’'
Offer Oil Seniors Jobs
The income will be determined after the tax base b determined Ity the state and^ the allocatlori board sets the school’s share of the 15-milI tax limit.
(CkHRinued From Page One)
These are roughly the same answers he has given privately ftany times to similaTv questions which have cropped up during ft* fftst two-years to offioa and, no doubt, will' recur as hmg as Kennedy remains in office and there b one reporter to ask them.
Besides hb assoctotloa wSh the Baxter-Livtagstone Finaage Co. he was also president of t^ Birintogham and Farm|ngt^ finance cenqumtes.
A member of the aboard*of trustees of Kirk in the Hills, Mr.
advice on matters outside the ito Ijvftgstone abo belonged to fte
Birmftgham Chamber of Qfti-merce, the Rotary Chib of Bft-mingharo, Otsego Ski ChibT Orcharil Lake Country CJub.;
For many years he raced and bred race horses.	:
Surviving are hb wife, the former Betty Baxter; two daughters Erma Jean and Ann, both;at honae; a son Jrim n at home; hb mother, Mrs. Bertha Livipg-stone of Pontiac; and a broUjer, David of Pontiac.
Cincinnati offices for tortber
Picard ruled that workers were for the time they
entitled to-pay ment on company proporty.
The portal decision touched off srites of portal suits, mostly sponswed by the old QO union, that totaled several millions of dollars, until the law was changed by Congress in 1947.
In hia-dissertation on the total of Christ, Picard asserted the
^ itself and the crucifixion
foUowed, were illegal ia every respect, even the lanrs of the day.
Other firms that have made firm offera include IBM, Pontiac Division of Geiwal Motors, Bell Tetephone Co., DOW Chemical Ck>., Whirlpool Corp., Aetna Casualty Co. and Ex-Ctello Corp.
Among those still interviewing students are Standard Oil Division of American Oil Go., Burroughs Corp., Bendix, the National Aenonautics and Space Administration, Consumers Power Co., the City of Detroit, the Food and Drug Administration and the armed forces.
Oakland’s graduation schedule gives proq)eriive employers a dMneO to abop eariy.
Thb Use b advatoageoM to
1
the seniors — they get first crack at many offers. before thousands graduate from other colleges to Mqy.
School systema from ,M1 of the nearby areas and from several other states have been seridng teachers among Oakland’s first graduating class.
Besides Anriiorage,, the list Includes Ctevetond, Los> Ang ' Detroit, Rotftester, N. Y., Long Beach, (tol., Evanston, Bl., and Kenosha, Oskosh and Racine, Wb.
Some of the industries hiring seniors are abo interested ft Oakland’s sophomores and juniors for summer jobs with an eye ^ future graduations, Mrs. Hope
A hit of job offers are still coming ft. die athted.
RED BADGER—The Defense Department has released thb U.S. Navy photograph of what tt ktentified as i^Swtet tnto^ri B«lger
bomber, OM of several that flew over the alr-^ carrier Kitty Hawk operating tiorthwMt Of Japan ft January. (Stoiy on page 1.)

. ■■ ' '...........................................
TH^ PONTIAC f»RESS, FRiPAY, MARCH l‘ 1963
A Lass and a Lack—Most Homes Have. Them
enough, the very next morning I-snapped a dioelace. It was brown.
By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK (AP)-A houw is 1 place where you can it &iat you are sure to run out of something you ■ need.
E^rery home, be it hovel or pal-: ace, Ivas a lack.
The mountains’ of Teal loss that ■■ confront us son^ time during our existence are inescapable. These We take with a gasp. The splendor ordinary is made extraordinary by a ' diuppearance, and we close ranks and go on. That is all we can do. We accept the major inevitable.	^
But it is the minor inevitabili-
ties that’rub us raw, the small dooms that we feel we cot^ have avoided by proper planning.
We live on the frontier' of an amating plenty, but it sasms to boV oar. fate thnt we always run short of essential items.	’
I don’t know how your house-old is, but rU tell you how my household is.
We don't miss mink coats, yachts, and diamonds. These we can get aimg without tidily.
It is the things we cansafford that ws don’t have.
BOYLE,
CANDY DEPT. SALE
For Tonits and Saturday
MAIN TLOOR BARGAINS
KRAFT Camiels
49c Bagt
i2V
Aiiortad Kraft ^carmalt la fall ^	_ 'poutid bog.
***'^~~----------tilin’'^------
'NEWAAANS' WroppMl
Cwuly Mint Sticks
39cB0»fitr lAA-ounca box wrappod oiint
BRACH'S Jelly
••••••••I
For example, bur home is chron-ically short of bathroom shodaces, Ijght bulbs, aspirin; soda water and canned chicken noo<}le soup.
A „
Vear after year I have li
can of chldieil noodle soup. On than eat a can of bbef and vege-
the other hand, lo9f a docen cans of beef and vegetable sow always adorn the shelves. <
table soup.’
“Oh, go ahead and die then,’’ she siys placidly. “I’m on the way t»4he laundromat, ^ can’t be
“I spent five years with the U.S. bothered with you not Atiny on three continents avoiding can^ beef and vegetable
face tl«8e ^rtages. We Uve^^„ j	^
items.
Yet when a light bulb bums out we have none to replace it, there) is never enough soda water in the refrigerator, and there is rarely a|
Braid Name at LOWEST PRICES!
For Proof Shop Tonite and Saturday
iklVUliM
'SECRET Roll-On Deodorant
Regular 7^e Prpetor a Gooiblti fenmiki. to koop yo* *
:j|9<
'HUDNUT Creme Shampoo or Rinse
Regular $1.75
16-ounc« of Cram* C?CIC
ShiM. Yowr Oioica.
‘H. H. AYERS' Luxuria
Cleansing Cream
SB**
$2.50 Value 9-p«ne* »lxp pf fom-ovs craom for doan*-iagikla.
'N0X2EMA’ Cover Qiri Make-Up
$1.50 Valme Choica el powdon, llqvidarcAiiMiMka-up. Sovo-	WW
'LADY ESTHER’ Four Purpose Cream
$1.49 Value
For oH yoor ildn ■mUv booufynowli.	WW
'PONDS’New Formula Moisture Base
Regular $1,40 Koopi itdR uDooth «d^wdiaiidy fcoili. g ^
'PONDS’ Angel Skin Hand Cream
$2.00 Value
n.7-OMnes tixo OnC
I for dry d
ioMPARK ,
tn An^ D^i^nfom fbntix. Ctt^ ^tenef
OPEN Tonight
amt Saturday 11110 P.N.
I All Prices for Tonite and Saturday Only
CAMERA DEPARTMENT DISCOUNTS
‘Bmaral Elagirie’ FLASHBULBS
^Choice of #5~M-2-AG1 Sixes
I White floshbulbs by GE—guoronteed to flash or return it to Simms for replacement. Full carton of 12 bulbs. Limit 4 cartons.
^ You Sava $21.S2 on This Genuine
ARGUS ELECmJ-EYE Camera
With CASE and FOLDING PUSH
Be First is fiat COLOR FILM Whan You Buy
Polaroid ELE^IC^E Camera
Complete J-6$ OUTFIT '
;98
REVLON Hair Spray and Shampoo
S1JO IMng Cwl Spny
Fay only the low price pint applicable federal taxes
r
YOU SAVE MORE on Qualify SHOES at SIMMS—Coma, See These for Proof!
BIG SELECTION OF BRAND-NEW STYLES
Endleett-Johatoa ‘E-JAf aad VUTWELT
Boys’ and Girls’ SHOES
^	--------- ---> EASTER Nearf
97
Fer EVERYlAY-fer BRESS-fir EASTER Neariq;
Actuol -Values to $5.95 Your Choice
You must sed theso to opprociote the buih-in qualify by Endicott-Johnson—all first quoiity oxfords, loofors, straps, puijqM, patents and gum-drops—phis ly other stylos. Boys’ cqrtio brown or block leather uppers, in oxfords or Ipofars. Buy now — while style selection is
Gay Plaid
Corduroy SlipiMn
$2.95
Value
127
Affrecf^ p*Std de'dgn with iturdy? yet flexible sponge soles. AR sizes 7 te f2 indudbig half slzos.
‘Ehdicott-Johnson'
Men’s Oxfords
Values
to$8
3
67
Amoficen modb shoos in oxfords and drossy loofors. loelhor uppott hi brown or block. Sizos 6Vt to
‘Endicott-Johnsdn’
Boys’ Oxfords
$5.98
Values
First qiralily shoos in loofors or ox-, fords. Looltidr uppers In brown or Uack, ceiifp solos. Sites 2Vk to A
LadiesI Look What YOU Get at One Low Price!
UDIES’ Dress-Sport-Casual
to'SAS SHOES
All First Quolity—American AAade
oWoneeh
eieeMwea PNeedle IpStao I pair guerontood FHIST QUALITY—in evesy-l In Iho reinbew...ever 2,000 pain at e price nwkelte palette see these shoes hose I SimnN belete*yoe buy. Sotisfeclien gyereetoed g yew ntoney b^ l<M every style in oH sixes.
98 North Saginaw Sts
vV
A—4
t'tiipAi, j>iAitCM I, itwa
Wixom Cap Thank Legal Point
Sewage System Nearer
WIXOM - Thanks to a tegali technicality, this city’s propoied | SMO.OOO sewage s:^m for ttte 25m<Te central business dlsU-lctl is one step closer to reallutlon.
Drilling will begin this nionth in the downtown area to determine water table depths.
♦ ♦ ★
The 1800,000 project, part of a master plan under which all of Wixoln could eventuklly be “- by a citywide sewage s
wlMa the coiucU, at its meet-lag last Bight, voted 4*1 in favor el .anthorlslag Mayor Wesley B. McAlee Co enter late COB tract with Miehigan Drilling Co. to-perlorm preUminary drilling. Hie eapeiiditare is net to exceed
Councilman Mrs. Lottie" Chambers argued that this was appropriation and thus required five affirmatlvo votes for approval under the city charter.
•She' termed the expenditure for drilling a cost for Which there was no appropriation in the bud-get.
CAU,3 rr SHimNG’ city attorney Gene Schnels pointed out that while appropriations require the affirmative vote of five couheilmen present, the council “nuy- h-anshr cumbered balance from one ac* count to another.”
“You are merely shifUng from le department toemother,” he continuMl.
Such a shift requires only four favorable votes, he added.
With this met I OB passed, Council then approved the transfer of ”a sum not to exceed. $3,<M” from a read contract account to the seWer account.
Councilman Chambers voted against both motions.
Pr»r to the voting, Frank Barnes of Hubbel, Roth 4 aark, Inc., who made a study of tH^-om’s sewage needs, explained the cost of establishing a system In the central business district.
This area contains 25 homes and 14 businesses.
He estimated the cost at J7M,-two for the Interceptor system and an additional $0,000 tor la-
l^e cost of the laterals figures Out to 11,000 ptr parcel of property, he said, which could either be borne by the home owners or be paid by the city from general funds.
Mayor McAtee noted that the State Public Health Department had termed Wbtom’s downtewB area *'a disfress area” because of sewer con-
Mrs. Romney Will Speak al Lent Program Series
ROCHESTER — Mrs. George viUate, Pontiac Township, March
Romney will be .the;-speaker Wedne^ay in the weekly Lenten series of addresses bei^ sponsored by St. Philips Episcopal Church.'
Mrs. Romney will be one of the area lay
' . nr	I	s 7s. OUdS W AUlUUlil riV«CIJl.X AAI
men who wflr^rticipate to thf„	J^bester, AprU
programs, based on the theme,
“Knowing Qur Neighbors.”
She is a member qf the Ouirch .of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, Hkwmfield Hills, w *	*
Preceding the addresses, a pot-luck supper will be served, beginning at 6:30 p. m. with the progrra to get under way at 7:30.
A religions movie will be shown to the children to the educational building during the
Other speakers and the dates they will appear are Rabbi Mil-ton RoMnbaum of Temple Eman-u-El, Oak Park, March 13; Rev. James Collins of St. Biasil’s No-
Recreation Night Planned by PTA
KEEGO ^RBOR - An evening completely dhvoted -to re-creatkm is % bill of fare /or a
Tuesday to be chairmen and vice-chairmen to "	!• a review of each county’s
sponsored by the Roosevelt School PTA.
Basketball, volleyball, check-m, ping pong, shuffleboard and
Dr. Otis Gatewood of Michigan Christian Junior College. Avon Township, March 27. w a a
Others are Fred Noyes of First Church of Christ Scientist, Rochester. April 3; and Rev. Lloyd
Buss of Abiding Presence Luthet-. ..
jiartment as special officers I city of Southfield with l|poweri of arrest, and the of regular city of 1 police officers,’’ laid.
|al police officg-s appointed “!f are neither reqalrotf' e terms of the ordinance 4 an oath of office nor to ’’ he conUriued. .
t- * a
Ih his |eeuest for repeal, Clarkson said'that council had no authority 0 'Or members of the police or fi a diepartnMnt. The^ are hired by the civil service com-miseion, he said,
Kelley ruled that "it is against public wllcy for 'the! Cl^ of' SoutbReU by ordihance to grant full power of arrest and authority upon special policemen employed, paid and controlled by a shopping center.”
'Such ordinance is illegal,” he
Holy Communion will be celebrated every Wednesday during Lent at 16 a. m. at the '
GOP Meeting Will Concern '63 Campaign
LANSING (* — The Republican State Central Committee will meet in Lansing this weekend to discuss progress of the 1963 election canqwign.
State cbalrmaB Arthur Elliott Jr., wtio was elected to the pest at toe GOP cenvention tost month, said toe party’s 16 statewide cendidates to the April 1 electioB are expected to attend the two-day meettog.
Committee members win elect two at-large members to represent the 19th Congressional Eds^ frict, a secretary and a treae-ter.
♦	* e
Elliott has invited ell county
said that Clitkstm^ had undoubt-ettty made his poipt.
>. He said he wondered, however, if the mayor understood toe ftoaactol cost facing the city should toe InlP burden of policing Northland Shopping Center be left to toe Southfield police force.
Dohany said the cost of setting up a special -police force would be close to $200,000.
He added that the shopping center has always maintained " own police force and has only asked Southfield for supplementary help.
Northland Center is Southfield’! largest taxpayer.
Fivt to Bo Footurod at Lonton Evonti
ROCHESTER — Church lead-ers will be featured qgeekers at five fellowship dinnw-programs during Lent at St. Paul’s Methodist Church.
Jie urged the counclHo "cov„-er our distress area, get something on paper.”
In other action, the council joined the Pontiac City Commission in endorsing Detroit’s bid for the 1966 Olympic games.
TABLES RECOMMENDATION It tabled for two weeks recommendation by the C i t y Planning Commission to purchase the Tuck property, adjacent to Loon Lake, for recreational use.
The ptonatog commlesieB report suggested that toe city might be eligible for a 21 per ccat toad acqaisttioa assietaace graat tmder toe federal epea space bill.
The council also appointed the planning commission as an advisory council on urban renewal.
Mayor McAtee noted that it (was necessary to establish such a .(ynncll t)tfore-aiy urbait re. newel program can be submitted for federg 1 approval.
UP Railroad Asks OK to Abandon Track Span
WASHINGTON (A) - The Copper Range Railroad Co. has asked the Interstate Commerce Commission for authority to abandon M miles «f 4rack in Michigan.
Involved are 6.5 iniles between Calumet and Linden Junction and 2 miles between Calumet and Laurium.
When asked to comment. Council President C. Hu^^hany^Jf^
-Gets 1st Alumni Award
EAST LANSING * - Dr. Charles Kellogg, assistant admin-
Servich of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, was presented yesterday ■ with the first distinguished Alumni Award of the Mlchlgen State Unlverflty College of Agrisuiture.
LOUELUA.TUBB8
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Splan, $135 Garroll Lake Road, Union Lake, announce toe engagement of Louella A. Tubbs to James E. Barrett, son of Mr-and Mrs. Charles Malancy, Ontago Road, Farmington Townahlp. A June 15 wedding Is planned.
Name Speakers
hart B. Rbodea haa witodrawa Us petitioas, so voters wOl fm csaacfl vaemmles vrito torse if the rematotag sb Canutes to toeAprUleleettoa.
He gave no raaaoti for his wUb-
In addition to dedding the council race, reaidents will ba a request to borrow $95,600 to pay for tot Bits and construction of tba povposed new citybaU.
Rematatog to the nmeff for coaacil poeMoM are taeambeot trastooi William Kraft Jr. and Omar K. HeUorich.
Challenging them will be Wd-Itom C. Klein, 8921 Hahn SL ; Harold W. Parslow, 45814 Custer St.; Quatm W.
Klingkanuner St.; end Earl Swa^ 4088 Custer St.
*	* e
The four challengers are sU' residents of the area recently annexed from Shelby Townahlp.
WWW
Rhodes, a plumber, will retire in AprU after completion of bis’ first four-year term in office. In
Laird, rellfkws cetamalsti Dr. Robert Harvey Bodine of Met-ropolKaa Methodist Chnrch, Detroit; Rev. Rayatoad Lamb, mlsskmary leader; Rev. Robert Panl Ward, preacher from Ypiitaati; and Dr. HaroU Bremer, .Battopally kaowa rell-gioBs edoeator.
The programs wiU concern questions of survival of the-nKx^ em churdi.
. ★
Cooperative dinner at 6:15 p.m, wiU be foUowed b]r . programs at 7il5 each Wedneaday during Ld)t, March 6 throu0 A'psr-3;..
♦...* *,
General chairman of, itoe programs is Mr. Lois Parker. Meetings wUl be held to toe Fellow-ship haU at the church.
Robs Cashier
at Northfana
SOUTHFIELD - A robber described by his victim as about 25 years old escaped with $25 from a cashier’s booth of the J. L. Hudson Co.’s store at Northland Shopping Center here yesterday.
dr a *
Mary LeBIanc, 19, of Freedom Road, Farmington, told police that a man wearing olive Jadut aaked Itar chanfe for $1, then domended that she fill with mo^ a vanilla envelope he handM her.
/b we She spid he showed her what appeat«d to be a gun, told her to lie Oh toe floor and then left. S^tumed in the alarm wfaicb bN^t aecurity police who unabip to And the thief.
Cancel Primary
Ineumbant RhadDf Withdrowi, Petitions
UlTCA-Don’t forget to change your plans about vottof here
Ihe primary previously sdwd-tiled for that date has been can-
New cream replacements for i use in coffee are being tested at Michigan State University ah<l will soon be tried by Consumers.'
Michigen ranks as one of toe leadiim sUtos to planting dwarf apple tfaee;
have been planted to toe state ■iiiM UU sav' Michigen State The new aubetitute oontaine less University horticulturists. • than 10 cahirtos par servtof.
liey wffl tadiato Drr Jmaec addition to being .chairman ottoe
street department he larved on sevarel of the city’e boards.'
Farm Bureau Sets Talks on Constitution
’the Oakland County Farm hireau is sponsoring a series of meetings, begfaming tonight, to study toe propoaed new state cod-
Toaight’s eeaetoa, to be held to Rose Town HaHU to Rose Ceater, wffl featoro a taffl by Thoaias Shwpa of Livtogstea Ceaaty.
Speaker at the March 7 moet-higin the Novi Cwununity Building, Novi, will be Richard Kuhn, ‘elegate from PontUe.—
Kuhn also will address the. group attending the March t$ sOs-skm at Brandon High School, Or-tonville.
e ♦ a
The nonpoliticai, nonpartisan meetings, slated to start it.' pm., are open to the public.
Church af the NdzareriD to Hear Superintendent
ROCHESTER — The Qnirch of toe Nazarene here, 226 Walnut St, WiU feature Dr. E. W. Ma^ tin preaching at the regular 11 am. service Sunday, w a *
Dr. Martin is superintendent' of the eastern Midiigan district. Church of the Nazarene. There wffl be specie!'music for toe oc-
4-H to Fete Alumni
Romney to lead Bid lor GOP Conyenfion
activKies.
at 7 p.m. at the sdnoL
spring ^jampalgn training pro-gram at a ^turday breakfast. About ISO persons ere expeot-
card games-wffl be featured ed to attend the weekend meeting, which opens at 1 p.m. with
The fames wffl get under wi^ a meattog of the women’s advis-
ory councfl.
I
LANSING (UPIi— Gov. Romney wUl. head a Republican trio going to Washington this weekend for a Monday conference to bid for toe 1964 GOP national convention.
Romney said he would be accompanied by National Committeeman John B. Martin Jr., and National Committeewoman Mrs. Ella S. Koeze, both of Grand Rapids.
The toree WiU be joined by Det-trolt Major Jerqme. davanagh and a d^ation of Motm^ Qty offictois in putting in that idty's bid for tha convention to toe Republican site committee.
and Jamee Reed, 189$ White M^e Road, Highland Township.
' be cited as state winners of the annual 4-H Alumni Recognition Contest.
Reed, a farmer tad 4-H leader, has been active la faras ergaalsatioB as weQ as local politics to his ares. Mrs. Miller has participated to betk church aad ichoel werk.
The only requisite for entrants to the annual contest to they must have taken part to 4-H work at some time.
* *
Each year counties throughout toe state seleto two delegates for district competition.
District wiimeri compete for ' toe pair
(tooaen to represent the state enter the nationwide contest.
Mrs. Miller and Reed ;
Two “alumni” df one of the largest institutions in the country will be honored at next Thursday’s annual 4-H Leader Recognition Dinner.
Mrs. Francto A. Miller, 869 E.i , _ ,	,	,, •
Ctorkston* Road, Orion Townshifi " Of 2 JOCKSOH MQT)
Discover Escape
Used af Trial
HASTINGS (API-Two Southern Michigan Prison tamatea were at large today after bretoc-' tog out of Barry County JaQ where th^ had been held while qypeartog as witaesiei to a Circuit Court trial.
Sought were Louis S. Gonyer, 42, and Douglas Young, 36, both fofHolt.
Sheriffs men said the two were lodged to an upper cell where toe ceiling is formed of steel sections. The escapers apparently pushed up the edge of one section and squeend from there thmigb a bole to toe roof.
Oakland County winners thh year and went on to capture toe state title.
Currently they are being considered by toe National Review Committee, whkto selects the couple to be honored as National 4-H Leaders at toe November cooven-tion to Chicago.
year’s dtoaer is to be staged at toe Comiinnilty Ac-Uvitles Boildtog to Waterford beglBiiing at Ijf. m.
wffl be Ferdtaand “Bud” Thar, a Micbigan Btate University stu-
dnt to Israel last year.
WWW In addition to diaeuastog his experiences there he will show Aims on the rural activities of the country. Some 260 guests are expected to attend.
.Wk w w
Brides toe state wtoaert being ited, ,4-H leaders who have served 1, 5.10, and IS years wffl receive citation pins. ^	'
Tliey'rs Ntw!
Tiwy’n Taking the Countiy by Stm! They’ll at Waite’sl
LOOK WHAT WAITE’S IS GIVIIG AWAT
TOMORROW
A DRAWING EVERY HALF HOUR:
lliM-WliltoLivlh NOON.2 6^to ef Pepdl^y laaO-A uiniito wMi liMtwtMeiic liOO^WhlleUvre 1 i80.2 6-Pwhi ef PaHCsto 2iOO»9e«»PHwiw Air AAeWiew 2i80-WMto UvtV giOO-2 6-PMht ef Pspddsle
4M-WWtoUvrs 4M-2	ef NpilCile
giOO-Uehtwitotoipoits loalpamtf Oat, PmeWce OmvMt.g
A 1 Mililk	^ — - -
MMwt wnn	npenew
5<80.WhltaU«rs giOO-a 6-Paeks of NptoCeto
7i00>2 W#aehs ef NptoCeto 7;30->3 MAWINOSt
OftANb nm-e^gkbiOMnfOvltoOWMh, lMrinl,lwt«nM),Whito Uvt's Md a 6-fMb ef NpilCaie
REGISTER TO WIN TONIGHT AND UPTO TNE UST DRAWING AT 7:30 P.M.
No PokImh ftocMiaiy to Win. Wimwn WW Hntffled
WeVe got the ihorpeW looking ponls since Levi's vwre InvMted . . . WHITE CEVI'SI The* ore the poms ewsrybod/s talking about. Yooll molly Ilk#
tlw vray them new LavTs to, slim ond trim wMi that long tom look. AmHo TOgged, bMouselh^m aonforizod cotton toffl. WeVe got 'em In waW sixes 27to 36.
Whita LovPt Look LHca	' j|4f
o Million Bucks, but ths/rt only......
HEGinElil WHITE’S mPS DEfT.... $TRST FLOOR
"'.1

;i^4.
tHE PONTIAC PRiBSS, FBJDAV, MARCH 1, 1968
A—5
F/gures ///usfrofe Pfoblems, Impact of Education in Americd
WASHINGTON (JJ -Tliere are 46 million school^e children in thf United States, nearly 10 per . cent of them in California.
■Hilrty^i? per cent of the total U,S. pc^Uon 18 age 17 or iindei:, 25 per cent in the 5-17 age bracket.
The avo-age American aged 25 or older has compteted 10.6 yean ot school, i-anging from 12.2 yean In Utah to 8.7 years in Kentucky and South Carolina.
Theaef^piresvandtlesene ataee, which illustrate the problems and
the impact of education in this country, were reported by the Notional Education Association in its annual “Rankings of the the States.”
The report, comidled by the NEA's research diviskxi, makes no attempt to rank the states In over-all (j^ty of education. However, the 90 tables of facts and figures provide some dues.
For instance, Utah, with the highest average edpdatien, tied
centage of Sek^e S^ice reg-
istrants failing tMb mental test,
4.7. South Carolina, tied with Kentucky for the lowest average education, had the highest percentage of mental test failures, M.6.
TEACHER EDUCAnON In the 196M0 school year, only 16.7 per cent of the elementary school teachers in North Dakota had at least a B.A. degree, indicating four years of college preparation. South Dakota W 17.6 per cent, jud Idaho, Iowa, and Ne-
■ "w affba5ir4tlpBr centrlthiswcliod
At the top of the list stands Ok-1.7 Jer
llihoma, where 99.7 ^ cent of the elementary school teachers have at least a B,A. degree. Ari-sona, M.4 per coit, and Florida, 96.7 Ptf cent, are dose behind., The report shows there were 46,92,261 school-age youngsters on July 1. 1962. California led with 4,152,812, followed by New York with 339,949, and Pennsylvania with 2,722350.
the actual school enrollment for yew was
a estimated told
be 40,007312, of which California enrolled 4,000,000, New Ycark 3,-088,000 and Texas 2391379.
the 196303 and 1962-63 school years, the total ovdlmed of pubBc elementary and seomd-ary schools increased 44.6 per cent. Alaska increased 150.9 per cent, California 1113 per cent, and Florida 96.6 per cent.
Ariunsas lost 3.8 per cent of its public sdiool enrollment in the 10-year period and West Virginia gained only 2.2 per cent at the other end of the list.
In the median number of school years completed by pwsoos age 23 or older, Utah with 123 was only slighter ahead of Alaska, Cal-ifonila, Colorado, Nevada hnd Washington, aU with'12.1 years.
The Utah and Washington figure of only 4.7 per cent of Selective Service re^trants failing the mental test was followed closely by Wyoming, 5 per cent; Montana, 5.1 per cent, and Oregon, 5.5 per cent;
an in the South: Flor-ida'31.9, Kentudey 35.8; Virginia 35.9; Tennessee 36, North Carolina 37.4, Arkansas 40.4, Georgia 42.9, Alabama 46.1, Louisiana 483. hCssissfppi S4.S, and South Carolina 54.6,^
Ihe 11 lowest states in this cate-
lina, otily 77.7 par cent of the
youtas in the 14;17 age bracket ‘ in schod.
The NEA figures showed that 87.4 per cent of aU youths aged 14-17 were enrolled in school in 1160. On^ had the best mark.
were enroUed ir Nationwide, the report said, 86.4 per cent qf aU youngsten en-roUed in elementary and secondary schoobi are ^bliO sdwols,^
The national average was 23i and 13.6 per tent are in nonpuhllc per cent.
933 per cent, while in South Caro-Ikankas 973.
In North Carolina, 98.6 per cent of ^ school children are in public sc^l. Others near the top in this category are South Carolina 97.5 per cent, Utah 97.4 and Ar-
. Bioyi* Short Sloovu	Beyf* 8-18 Broodcloth	Giris'7-14 Cotton	3-«X,7.14Rovmtiblu	CfiiMian'g Fdtiwvs BiaiMl	Cliildi«6*gShoitSlaMU	Famous Brand	
SPORT SHIRTS	PRINT PAJAAAAS	SLIM SUCKS	GIRLS' RAINCOATS	COTTON SUCKS	POLO SHIRTS .	CRIB AAATTRESS	
Ss ^194	^ $259	iSssi<i69	IS rjAh	2 ^3	^ 66’	Rag. 12.95	*10"
Nmr Spring sneWsliMs by KiRilWd 1* prink and pUdl Stann 4 to SA	Sqnlefbnd beeddedi print petewos h ntanlto ISntnmlngt.	tans onaM skde h nnw Spring pikto Hnabannrwykslnn7tol4	aok er ihkn cook prM muMiM to 0 toM celer. Sins 7-14	Somr riyb wad) dode h prink end soM cotofi. Sins 24, MX	Short skwe pains k pikSi end soW cekis. Stan Mo 6X	Stardy hiiersprisg M stae crib iMk taissn In ndkd or rogvlar dyle	
Boy$’Woor...SoeomdFlm	Boyd Woor Soeomd Floor	GMb* rear... SeoMMl Finer	GiHdWwr. SoeomdFloor	CUUtess’«r«er. SeeMsdfIner	CkOdwm’M Womr.. SoeoUFIoor	It^omd..	.SoeomifUor
--1
Boys* ProporKonod ^ COnON SUCKS
Slim
4361^ Sisss . .^.... 639 nrrio»lBrlCiwffl^S?Swwwleeloiib

. SsDsed Flssr
TONIGHT 6-9 AND TOMORROW 9»«5 Till 9 ONLY!
PARK PREE
aU MY sa CHy Lsb
Sony, no moBor phonrotdon, no cMivoiriot oxeopl Homs. Chaleo yours.
Opon o Woito*s Floxiblo Chorgo Acemint -Chorgo Whofovor You NoodI
AAoo*t Short Sluovu	Now Spring
SPORT SHIRTS	COSTUME JEWELRY
5^2 *0*^6	vH12»or®l
Nmr Spring paasne ta EsniiMd sport	Motahkg nncMoen or oenbat k ate
ri*to ky nr	Spring dykt pnd ceton.
Mou^eWmt.. .StrmFloor	Jew^... Sewto Flmr
A	
Kantfiald PoltahadCol^	Clutch PuriM ond
MEN'S sucks	WOMEN'S WALLETS
	TS? Sjoo
rradMoaol slyk k bdge •><« bkn	(jornko koder ond toplry ddtk
or brown. Want dnn 2938.	ponoi and wdtou. Somral colors
Mm’e Won... Snoot Floor	flaadbags... Saeot Floor
Jumbo 54* Lungth	AAun'ii Fino Linun
GARMENT BAGS	HANDKERCHIEFS
	
—kinho gnSkd - i*n6 goront ti^ -	_letw sin j*to tana taiAtochldi
Odk mod homo andMTdppna	«nh hand toNtd hnn»
No*lom...3»ootFloor	BouUor. Stroot Floor
Suarural Voriutios In	Famous Brand
ARTIFICIAL PLANTS	GIRDLES
2 ®1	Warn 5.00 g / V3 gg
Cdodd •pooodr plonk k mmd	Dbeeniknd inonbeo oUenew btond
’nriotoo Sam hoM	gbdks and party StanS4H.
Bodooo...Stnftrion	Fonododomo. . Soeomd Floor
Fluur^lu-lli PlgtHc ,	Woman's Loco Tifmmad
DRESS HANGERS "	NYLON SLIPS
	92*®
Ontonn ampdelb poksin pto* drie	Lowly ehks kn Mmawd ayton'MsM
hangtrn at nien tarings	dips ri*h diadort ponds 32 to 3$
Nodom... Snoot Floor	Urngorio.. . Soeomd FUn
CoKoDiolatfon	Woman's Loea Triminad
HEATING PADS	NYLON PETTIPANTS
7.99 $497 Voluae	51*9
tbit niiiinri r--"-jrn*-**- nmr-ntli	Dokly pnOponk k nthkn or oolws
neb eamel tomrt tkot cennrot	NytooMcM.
Comotko . Snoot Floor	Llmgorio... Soeomd Floor
By Huluno Rublnttoig	Woman's EhitM Lag
WOODFERN Colognu	RAYON BRIEFS
	Spackil A||e Puithosa
”'^SMTston!^	PoyM brtdi urilh tina ndtorkg. WNk end —		
Comodn...SnootFloor	Uugorio . .Sooiad FUn
Woman's Laca Trimmad	Woman's FooMut Brand
NYLON PETTISLIPS	Cotton pajamas
	^ ^359
	Short doom, tong kg One odkn
lAMb lB» •***«* WhM pd*^ k	pdnmoi k nort Spring prkis Stato
knttk WMk ^ 84M.	32to4ft
Uufmt.. '■ Soeomd Fber	fdraw<n...Seeaad Finer
Wool Skirt	Purcolu Pillow
CUARANCE	PROTEaORS
6.99-9.99 ia98-14.9t $418 $018	^ es’
fbddi and noldh k poadt and dwh	flne ahOo prtodn pUaw pntocton
dndn Standto 2U	rt* dpptnMl dortnm
SperatoMP... TVrd Finer	Dmoomko... Foomdt Fleer
PopKn erCoid	Drip-Diy Cotton
CAR COATS	PRINT FABRICS
Wara 10.98 ♦0 16.98 '^■1	- 57’,
tkplk tot pie celar. Bndbid oMd	lOOK cdtoo prid lobrica 3«* wide
[ ton eordtmy kks Stan A to 1*	Sow warty half todUd toonMowt
Spirawter ■.. Third Floor	Fmkrko.FomnkWlon
Stmot and Aftomoon	VuntifoOm Mottruss
DRESSES	TOPPERS
Fg88	mg.ia99irai tX99UeeUe
	
	asyen WdiK''ateit benck and myoo anetl, 1020. l4Vh22Vi	tkoto nhherrtdkwi Mppdi nttoty 1' thfcfc. Thonnndi gl wet hoke
Dromoo... . Third Fton	Dooooodeo... FeanfcFleer
Loigo16by60*	Print Towol
OVAL MIRRORS	ENSEMBLES
!S <3«*	Rag. 1.99 Both..... 1.49 Rog.l.29Hoiid ....89e Rag. 59e W.CMi.. 49c
IwtodlmM	SeNMl eeton hoadtoM erits
aommmoo...UomrUoU	Urate... Faonk Fber
4^. Mino4Motie	RoMbod Unon
PRESSURE COOKER	TABLECLOTHS
Si F488	Rag. 3.99 52aSr.... 2.99 Rag. 4.99 52x70* .... 8.99 Rag. 8.99 TrUeand.. 6.99
Cm alMbiBNb piMim BBolar Mb	Rag. 8.99 60x84*.... 6.99
nidy ngkntnd gwge Mtanonoh-	Orikdlw prid ca atbten tarn
anmommno...UomLooA	Urate... FaenfcF^
32-K Gold Trimmud	Fino HoMoom
WAHRGLA^SSET	BEDSPREADS
!3i ^«$	®10®®
Odtoyn ttodto eekr pkehtr and	AeOgne khie et annr ehke heMaen
OgloH w nOh goM kks Boetd	hidipwe* k Mto ar doobk dns
Cglwem... lawteeel	^Mralrae . . FearihFlepr
Sutvicu for 8 Plostic	* Estion and Aeotato
PINNERWARE	FABRICS
911®®	fS 9103^
45*. *we tor a. SSUdy ktotrihm bd gnqfadnd tor 2 <nl won		' OaodiM drat pridt k 4S- todto. . earas end etddi dt»*y Uites
CUee... LninerLietl	Feirtee... Feartb Fleer
Fomout Sunbuom	Wool or Wool Blond'
. OaUXE SWEEPER	FABRICS
m	Wa6p3.99 . .....177 Wara4.99........5J7 WaraS.99.,	.4J7
Me <30 ddrtto wenan dUi pennrid *	Wafa 6.99 .....5.77
IWHf. nwtor WWi' cttodnids	Wara 7.99	5.77
Fenaam Snpnunra.. fgUi Fleer	FaMee... Feani Fleer
Loothor and Fobric WOMEN'S SLIPPERS
3.99
$199
Womon't FHtod TRAVEL CASES
$399

Two Longth* in Cotton DRESS GLOVES
Rag. 5.00 and 6.00
$399
Mitsof* Linod WOOL SUCKS 4.99
LAST
CHANCE!
TIME EVER
Booutiful print* ravor$o
. to tolid colon!
WEATHER-TREATED POPUN RAINCOATS
Rog-
9.90
‘S'
to 0 solid color. Fovorito bolmaocon or cMn<hin collar slyla. Weather mated cotton poplin In tizas 8 to 18 ond 7 to 15 Sove
Rm-R-Less Stockings
Reg. 1.66-1.75
NOW
Com FtuMotu Third Flow
1.29
A 9PA1B.8J9
Roducod for tonight, tomorrow Miyl
63" AND 90" DRAPERIES
in
Agilon seamless stretch
Bouery... Strm Floor
Rug. 7.99 to 10.99
$066
•	Antiquu Sotfn o Rayon
•	Fibuiglot
Handsome droportM In solid toiif-tures and contemporary prtal pasterns. More 90" than ttSf lengths In group Save to $4.33 o pair tonight and tomorrowl
Dropertoa .. . Fourth Floor
m-l-PIUI MD StVE (2!
petGR pan
Hiddm Treasure’
ROOM SIZE RUe SALE!
FAMOUS CHARM-TREO TOP QUAimr FOAMSACKEO RAYON TWEED RUGS .
Rag-49.95 9 by I r
$44
Rag. 79.95 9 by 15*
’65
i Rag. 89.95 12 by 12*
’75
[ Rag. 99.95 12 by 15*
NO MONEY DOWN
oSavo $5.95 to $14,951 SovoralColortI • Foam Bockt-N^ No Rug Padl'
Rap '... FWk near
L
TH& PONTIAC PRESS
IIWMBpnaSireit	'	~
FRIDAY, MARCH, l, ins
%1UCSf9«iNr
*^bmSSSi%miw

•tsnaaa
Voters of West Berlin Keep Feet.ori Ground
A resounding slap was admin-^tered to the Communists lO' last ^eeijc’s West Berlin city election.
With I
group of studonta, retuminf from studies in Paris, donned costutnes and danced through the streets.
In 1857, the Mystic Krewe of Comus was organized. A krewe is a social group formed specifically to stage a carnival ball and sometimes a special
per oeent of the eligible	\ip to
voters visiting the ballot boxies (American voters please take note), the city’s branch of the Communist party failed to win a single seat in the 140-member parliamwit.
★ ★ ★
*' The Reds, shut out in the previous election almost five yrars ago, had used the antirefugee Wall as a campaign weapon. The . bait, which was ignored, promised if given representation "to jiego^ tiate passes letting ,vou visit relatives in Comraunh^-euled East
Berlin.'
Mayor Witty Bbandt’s Social Dbm-
j$25,000. ITie Comus organization Is the oldest and most' exclusive.
A person may belong to as mattiy krewes as he can afford. Dues range from $15 to $200 or more a yeiar, but favors and^cidentals run the cost higher.
, ★ ★ ★,
' The krewes, warrant fof the carnival balls, have increased tremend(HuIy over the past 20 years. Before World War II, there were only about two dozen. This year, at least 74 events werp scheduled.
Since each ball has its own king

Voice of the People: ,
‘Commies Sanction Crime Undei^ Guise of fol(fics’
All Cuban crimes are sanctioned by the Gomniunlitl for "poltti. cal	betray your
umir Km«h*r foT “mlitical rcasons. Murder, armed roDoery, piracy, armn!Xg. forgSy and
the name of ‘‘poUOcal reasons." Ihe time wlU coim the bemla-pErHlll havfto Strike back, for reasons of survival.
T.C.M.i
‘Foreign*™ Distrust
Affl?ricanJR>nar!_
poses as defined by law"?
Under the same articlp. Sac-“"" ^6h“iir ‘*On&4is5f trf taxes ... imposed on retailers on taxable Not long ago our dollar was the	^
Impregnable currency of the	property, and other tax
world. Now our gaitiiOns abroad revenues provided by law, shall and other huge foreign handouts be dusted to this (scl|Ml aid) ' reflect an Increasing foreign dis- . b*™!-trust of the dollar. We undermine He might aim mate note of
No Strings?
oersts tecreaamd their membwiblplav^^ Alia court, the political doctrine of parliament'from 78 to 89 as they Louisiana Kliigflsh Huiv Loko ex-drew 62 per cent of the vote—nearly pressed 30 years ago, "Every Man a 10 per cent more than that periled. In King,” may not be as bizarre as It the last city election. The Free Demo- once sounded, crats also shQWedTiew strength, wln-
David Lawrence Says:
' the fact that if everytkfaig was provided (or la tte comtltutioa, what would his lawmakers do. in Lansing to earn their keep? *' Be further states thht the proposed constitution is going to “make citizens unequal." He says the prohibition of a graduated income tax is a “terrible crime against lof hicbme groupe." Isn’t a graduate income tax a crime against the higher income groups? How can one tax “equal dtiiens” at unequal rates and
,	^	____.still claim that those dtlzeos are
Ihe language in the propose	j	jjr gghoUe do
consttotion e^ts uvJo vote j^bigs. ^ proposed constitution and take a course in
it by huge foreign ai£^programs and the support 5 various soft currencies. Moreover, our foreign aid is directly responsible for our unfavorable balance and the flight of gold. So long as foreign aid continues, the dollar will wane and with it U.S. security.
Morgaa Rassell
Voterg Interested in Constitution
nlng 10 new seats.
★ ★ ★
An interesting sidelight on the election is that both the parties making gains did so at the expense of the city cell of Chancellor Konrad Adenauer’s Christian Democratic Union. The loss there,
' it is held, stemmed from voter disapproval of Adenauer’s warmth for President of France Charles de Gaulle and his current unsettling policies affecting the solidarity of (he West.
’The upshot of the election seems to fatten chances of WiLtv Brandt to become the next chancellor of the West German Government.
The Man Shout Town
Court‘Riof Ruling Isn’t Logical
ourselves further Into dictator-n[hen some 13S times, the document gives the kgislature the clause “provided by law.”
efementary logic.
Ratert L. Smith m Henry Clay
‘Time to Retire’
^	«	1	,	S. C., for “breach of the
Turns Back Speedometer peace" were merely exercising
Prtar to 1M8, people believed In our elected representatives, but that year, we had to resort to a grand Jury investigation of our legislature and had to, by a referendum, votov earmark funds for our schools and high-
Tracing Early Auto Days
By HOWARD HELDENBRAND Have, you ever seen “one man to a million"? Well, neither have I. But 1 Jiist had lunch with one in 14,187-which isn’t Dad. Ibis paragon is .
J. Harold Srigley
of 1275 Heyden, who retires today as the senior employe of the whole Pontiac Motor Dtvtoion.	7
American Jazz Bands Bad Influence on Reds?
IQ a recent action, Soviet cultural officials have baimed the bands— American, that Is. Maybe It was thought that the light-hearted
against segregation, and even though city officials thought a riot was immi-l nentv the police' should, in effect, LAWRENCE
,	,	.	have waited until someone got
At Retirement age of looks no more	.sizing it offi-
thkn a good 50. . . . Memo to Mrs. ty. you y «	^.......
may have trouble with this guy fpr a few O' Tuesday of this week, the days) he has racked up 43 years of servicer-- United Press International car-actual. not figurative-in the aCCStffitlBg de- a dispatch from Miami, Fla., partment.
Whea he started with the original , Oakland Motor Car Ca. in ISlf, 25 cars a day was top prodnetion (1,2|N is tte current daily average) and each was road tested.
WASHING’TON — On Monday executive officer In an effort to law taking away from the Su-of this week, the Supreme Court avoid a public brawl. But the preme Court of the United States of the United States ruled that response of petlUoners and their -	consider cases In-
1*7 persons arrested in Colum- leader, was defiance rather than f	^
-..................... coo^atlon”	■ ‘‘^“ch of the peace
Justice Clark noted that for the	SUte Supreme Court has
next 15 minutes the petitioners *^«^y “conducted what tte South Caro-lina Supreme Court found to be	.	*	*	*
‘a noisy demonstraUon In defi-	'Itere is precedent for this type
ance of 1tte dispersal) orders.’ ’’, of legisl#tion. The ConsUtution it*
Th* k«in	i« mhMh	SpCCifldilly glVCS CongTCSS
to piteent a riot » whether j^om tte Supreme Court of ^*8“ has been taken aw^from
S-nvlr* ""	United States in guchcase* --------------------
y	lawmakers may deem de-
The only available remedy now sirable. is tte pagsage by Congress pf a	(Copyright, 1N3)
‘We Don’t Need More Socialism’

their rights of free speech when they engaged in 8 picketing dem-j» ji a t r a t-i-o-n-
take violent exception io writer Frank Kerr’s brand of soctalisra. If there's one thing we dmt'want or need It’f more The proposed document also government-owned monstrosities, leads one to believe people are	* w w . —
incapable of electing our present officers, sudi as state treasurer, auditor general, superintendent of public instruction
__jis-in tt* P»«P<»ed constitution.
Bob ConsidiriB Says:
The proposed doenment does not prtoect our right to vote, it does Bot guarantee the right to initiative petitioa and It blocks our ri^t to a referon-
The warst-m a a a g c d busi- ^ nesses are alwayl governmoit operated and I do M better tteo cite his own example of a model: tte post office. ’The taxpayers spend a-half bHIion a year paying the leases sod waste M tUs socialistic vea-ture.' Ttey tell me the ftetfaer-beddbig ia the post offices rivab the railroads.
“An American Nazi wearing a khaki uniform and swastika pmn-patch was hauled ott to jail today when his picketing at the antidefamation league of the B’nai B’rith drew an angry crowd.
First Astronaut on Moon Will Wear $25,000 Suit
If Mr. Kerr wants a socialistic government to live under he Tile apportionment formula is should find a -new country. ’The an intelligence test. Further the closest approximation is .*pom-document has a poverty tax munism. base change from 100 per cent to
not sufficiently symbolic of thp
We both remembered that in those days. Bald Mountain Roai^ (now M24) in high was the inaft oT'a real ^tty carF Another recollection (like Durante, he^s
HOUSTON - The first astronaut to. step out of his Lunar Excursion Module, sometime^ und 1970. will startle the r
men who is secoad in charge (to a genius uam^ Dr. Stanley White) hi the Crew Systems Division.
50 per cent to shift property tax burden from tte corporations to hopae owners.
WUliam Morris 81 W. Longfellow
.Oevly Luttenberg
olis' had not been taken into pro-
CommiO Image of iblsery-ridderi and ^ ^	^f ’em) .was of the time’s test	.violence would
L-.j 1_________.-j have emoted in the crowd of l.m
decadent capitalism.
★ ★ ★
, Reviewing the current two-year S o V i e (-U. S. Cultural Exchange Program, the Russians turned 'd8w’n Unde Sam’s suggestion to send other bands in the future, like those o( Duke Ellington or dbunt Basie. Moscow did intimate, however, that it mtglirsit” still for the appearance of singer Harry Belafonte.
Agreed upon during the exchange ^ talks were a number of cultural events tetween the two nations. ’These Include circuses, puppet the-aters,MH)erformance» by liuiividual artoets and a Soivet-Afnerlcan track meet in the U.S.S.R. this summer.
★ ★ ■ ★
But. according to Informants, the Russians xemain as opposed as ever to the sale of American newspapers In the Soviet Union or to an end to their Jaliiming of Voicie of America broadcasts.
The Kremlin, as usual, h^m given Its own ohe-slded interpretation to another principle of International ac-:cord — “Fair Exchange ;is No Robbery.”
driver phoned in that he’d been arrested j’*''?	the crowd of 150
that gathered shortly after the picketing began."
for speeding. . . . Seems Jhat after passing a horse and buggy, the driver had looked back' and was alarmed by the furious, overtaking speed of^the oat-burner ... decided it was running away. The good Samaritan stopped, and got out with tte vague idea that he might do something about the onrushing steed.
He needu’t have beea concerned. When the rig drew alongside, the occupant (who toned oat-to he the sherilf) whoa-ed,
. got out and'arrested him for fast driving!
Ah, yes . . . those were the days. Now Mr.
S.^ is going to .*ivp some thought to his neglected golf, along with the gardening that has always been his main hobby.%,	^
' The MAT’S special sialute to this fine gen- T'"? . ,	...	.	...
tleman. with allhest wishes for many, n^ny enjoyable and rewarding years of leisure.
Maybe tte Miami police, didn’t have time to read the Supreme Court decision. May-' be they were not yet aware that the “law of the land” now is. that name-calling, defama-tioa of any race or relighm, or •incitement to vieleiiee cannot be stopped by arrests until fighting actually starts and injuries or deaths occur.
Justice Tom Clark, who was the Dnljr-member of the - high court to uphold the doctrine that threat of violence cair be
HELP WANTED: A Farm Editor who knows a Spring Tooth Harrow from a Hay Rake. Ap^y to City (acting Fanp) Editor eager to farm out his agricnitnre chores.
to say in his dissenting opinion on Monday.:
“To say that tte police -may not intervene ■until the riot has occairetTis like keeping , out the doctor until the patient dies.” ‘S’DR UP TROUBLE’
The South Carolina episode took place on the grounds of the
What happened, you see. is that in a farm-life picture spread that ran Jast Monday, the	tte legislature
mur wnc •rmndAiieiv	..	«■	.	^	.
was actually in session. Justice
said Spring Tooth Harrow .was erroneously cut-lined a Hay Rake!
Well! Has our mail picked up—from farm and city folks alike—pointing out the harrowing slip-up:
Clark studied the same record and testimony.
He pointed out that nearlf 200
Along with a red-faced (^afessioa. is an inner glow of pride that 'ilie Press has so many thoron^ and perceptive read-
Mardi Uras-a Colorful, Enduring U.S. Fete
placards bearing slogans and then proceeded to stir up the trouble. He added:
"Then the city manager, in what both the state intermediate and (state) supremd court found ,tp be -the utmost good faith.
dents, if any. He will be wearttg •a 125,000 suit (only one pair of pants to go w i t h it, too) and a Windingly bright overcoat and overshoes made of 25 layers of an aluminum C O V-e r e d syntheUc fabric named mylar.
On his back he’ll be carrying] a pack- which weighed 50 Earth j
pounds but now,______________
what with t h e CONSIDINE
feebler gravity of
tte Moon, will weigh only ten.
There’s a somewhat biased Irish ballad that starts out: “Sure a little bit of heaven fell from out tte skies one day . .
Several other places might contest Ireland’s melbdic claim that it was and is that bit of heavenly fall-out. But no one cqn dispute the fact that the pack on tte astronaut’s back will be a little bit of the Earth’s environment.
It will enable Him to breathe the kind of air he inhaled on Earth, during what is hoped to be his 24 hours on the Moon. It will heat his suit at night when the temperature on the moon drops to minus 250 degrees farenheit.
It will refrigerate him daring
After reading the article
Smiles
Nothing kilb .nicker tha&som vision mnrdering K.
THs Ts Oir^'Brmg WTick TlfondayTTressrTwoukl EEe to Facts ^’t mean a tl^ whro alive” department of NASA, If It ask Mr. SchoDe if he happened some people’s miiuto are *"»><»■ fails, and an astronaut or-astro- to notice under Article -IX: un. niuts die, the whole multibillion Finance and Taxation, Section *, doHar program will be short-dr- that all specific taxes imposed cuited in Congress and elsewhere on fuels or on registered vehicles in a Bedlam and Babel of “shall, after the payment of “Why?” f	• necessary colledion expenses, be
The only gphd that comes from Hstentag to the tnaUes of year friends is that it makes yon forgej^fRir own.
Reviewing &ther Editorial Pages
Soviet Troops
The Chicago Daily Tribune
mjng, says the Kennedy policy time lobbyist for Generalissimo on Cuba is one of uncertainty. Franco of Spain, indecision, and vaettatiori. He During his year IS 7'Domini-,,	....	.	can agoit. for which he received
Jules Dubois, our Latm Amen- has been substituted for tte Mon- $60,000, Mr. Roosevek vebementiv ^	••‘‘ch stated that defended his employer ftSn the
yiew^ the latest refugees arriv- the United States would not tol- charge that Trujillo waa in «iy
MrXfm	»*y hvol««ltoS.
J	the Kennrty system to any part of this hemis- ance of Jesus de	the
adBdnlstrat^ Is grossly under- phere, and would use all neces- Columbia university scholar who estimating tte number of Soviet - sary force to exclude such at- vanished from the Leeta of New
troops.
While the adipinistratjoii keeps saytof there are m more ttaa 17,11* Russians ft whom fewer than 5,111 are in orga-nixed miUtary anlts, the ref-ngees informed Mr. Dubois ttat there are «t least 40,000 Russian and Czech troops in Cuba. Secretary of State Rusk said that the Russian tropps/fn Cuba
' sary
tempted penetration.
Sen. (ioklwater is utterly correct in saying that “the American government is worried sick about tte new Soviet build-up in Cuba,” but that it shies away from another showdown beduise 1 constitute an admission that Mr. Kennedy’s measures to date have ac^mplisned nothing. .	_________
Rich at- vanished from the streeto of Ifew York.
* * ★ ■ . ^ Witt this rich backgronnd il Iwshiess experience, Mr. Romc> veh has been named to a post just below the secretary of
Kinfdlks
TKe ^^s^ttle Banner
He expressed the hope ttey might be
A heart-warming family note comes Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Belts of 63 Poplar St., who, with son Don. Imve	^
returned from an IlUnois visit with tte lady’* “
the day when the heat goes up to HO degrees.
The space suits of the first	‘ w. o T '	.i. ? /.. u n.
astrohauts were supplementaiy	ttat Cuba will
outfits. TTiey were designed chief-	^
ly to sustain the man’slife during those minutes il would take to
Women Drivers
The Mason CUy Olobe-Qaeett^
The way som^ women drive suggests ttat their place really is in the home.
grandfather
George Ttempson . who recently celebrated his 100th birthday — Df "IhK|e George’s" man ttm 100 descendants, half ef them are . to the Pontiac area.
There is no American phenomenon quite like thr^^ew Drleans. Manli Gras, which began with parades on Feb. .16 and ended with the-final ‘ carnival balls last Tuesday. ’The wind*
Shpove TuMday, the eve of Ash ,(	»ed<lin(|iiiiiiver»»y,
Wednesday, which (parks the b^tn^---------- 7 ps, Miaaie Trirax
fling of Lent.	of 54.Seneca St.; 82nd birthday.
The drigin of \hje celebration to ^	birthday.
Even at this June tare no or* ders were issned by tte city manager for the police to break up tte crowd, new nbont 500
cause “it'will, not be permitted”
nhor. in the evenl the Meniirv	^
the United
> the atmoc-
brirtg hint back phere in the evi capsule sprang..! leak and lost
Roosevelt's Son
The Washington Post
Verbal Orchids to—
Instead, he approached the rec-Jignizad leader of tte petitioners and requested him to tell ttf various groups of petitioners to dis-jperse within 15 minutee, failing which they would be arrested.
' IteMoearndtoarir^waftoetr form-fitting aad mobile epnee craft, a capsule to be worn, a f e*r m - fitting commuaicatiou object in mind.
States to permitting tte exbtence of a Soviet army on the island ^md Mr. Khrtnbchev woulcT nsi “mpkDn D. Rooitavelt Jr is have installed himself in this out- an amiable politician who hel^ post If he (Ud not have a definite PresWent Kennedy win the Dem^
Neckdeep in the presidential campaign, ! nominee for ttat exalted office declared on Oct. 18, I960: “Nepotism is dimerous to the public interest and to our national morality;”
What he was talking about is defined by Webster as “Favori* tism shown to relatives, especially in appointment to desirable positions.” . ■	•*'
Tte nominee man— that
wS Jehi F. Ken-
And the suit might have to sub-stain him for a day br two. These, and
Thgl such activity te already to tratotog Is attested by President Miguel Ydigons ef ttenU
hazy, but it to generailly believed to have begun^ 1827 when a
* liire; 1
of 2100 Wopdnranl Ave.; OOtt birthday.
“Even though the city manager might have been honestly mistaken as to tte munipence of
dannr this was certainly a rea-sonuie I
e request by the city’s top
ly at NASA’s in-tpaee center, thanks to 14. Cel.' Shorty Pesrers, the Veiet ef Space, and Dick Jbhnstoa, aae ef NASA’s bright ywagf
ocratic nomination. If he has otter qualifications for tte post of undersecretaty of commerce, they are hard to discover. For the past few years, Mr. Roosevelt has sold foreign cars in the Dtofrict of Columbia. His otter experience includea a "year’s seiV-i(5ft as a foreign agent of the tote Domipican dictator, Rafael Tru-c	™ jw. Hla tow partner then .Was
Sen. Mflwaid Siatyson of Wyo- Qwttoa Patrick Clark a Imm-
ceasto ef Lotto America.
TKE PONTIAC gRfeSS, FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 1908
A—7
CHICAGO (AP)-*"!!* American Mwlical Aaaeciation, which la flmly opposed 4o President Kennedy’s ppopo^ medical program for the elderly, spoke approvingly today of his mental health program.
~ Hie spokesman In this instance Is Dr. Gerald D. Dorman of New . York, an AMA trustee. His fwum was the uinual. conference State Mental Healtti Representatives.
Dr. Dorman said the Kennedy mental health program, announced Feb. S, agrees with basic recommendations made by the AMA last summer.
He said both programs stress oomprehensiyp care of mehtal patients at the community level rather than In big, distant state Institutions.
“Community centm will supply what has bem a missing link in the physician’s responsibility for patimts wiQi emotional disorders,’’ <Dr. Dorman said.
Both the Kennedy administration and AMA propoealp caB for matdihig grants to the states from the federal government for building community mental health faculties.
CARLISLE, EngUnd lUPP-Mrs.i Hazd Allday opened a brand di chocolates named “Promise” and^ found a diemond worUi $28 in one! T^of die plecer.
f _	OKZPJ
_ great names... Penney’s and Dan River I go to all lengthls to bring you this year’s * ^-buyii^Fortrer and cotton pants
KNEr KHOCKERS OR SLACKS
Comit on Pehney’s to team np with famous Dan River a down*to-earth fabric made into weU4ailorcd pants at an unbeatable price. Rusy young moderns will be housekeeping—dashing to/Uie store—running the car-pool, living in these pants during every hectio^o-ment of the day. The tough Fortrel® Polyester and ^ton fabric can take it ... is a great work-saver, too. Just toss in your washer (lukewarm watier, please). Buy a barrelful during Penney’s Anniversary celebration. Three different lengths, some with*self belts, all with side zippers. ^Glorious colors . . . solids, inclujding “faded blue jeans” blue ... a dozen muled plaids in tans, greens, blues spiced with pink and black. §izes IQ to 18.	/
PENNEY’S MIRACLE IVULE
OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M.
A—8
\
THE*k)yTIAC PREbs. FRIDAY. MARCH 1,-1963
Hard-Working Gals Are Denied Equal Pay
By PHYLLIS^ BATTELLE IJiut int4duowl another of a lonf.ldark reason'(which I bet com NEW ^ORK-f women occe-PI?pressmen don’t even discuss with
** bills Into the House. Sie claims;
^ ruthlessness.'that her bill (end^ by 1^ Kts^JlSi'the/rt ItelpS^ overdrive and using their fenu-jministration) would be good for the dihntf dishes) Muit nlnlty to get ahead in their jobsithe country because it would in- bills seem inevitably to these days—perhaps they shouldicrease female consumer pur- ■	• • •
be understood, even if not for- chasing power to the sluggish economy,
" GET PIGEONHOLED
;y've got to use more than
Rep. Gireea’s Mil was ae-nouced ea the same day that jdM l(. 8. i:enstts Bnrean Issaed
the average income for all 2d-milli^ wamcD in the “experienced civIHan labor laree” waa-»;»7.
Tot 4^roill)on men in the same category, the average was $4.01. In the professions of madkina
It makes sense. But for somdfa, ceftort stating that, la IIH,
and laW were listed as $10,000-
Aa if these figures weren’t oxxigh to make a' working girl put her nails to the grindstone, on my desk are the results of the census surveys smuggled out by the Women’s Bureau of
They indicate dmt tte^Hispart^ between male and fentale salaries tending to increase rather
and law, women averaged $1,517 the Department of l^r Cwhere, and $6,199, respectively; the ma- incidentally, the clerical girls get dlan Incomes for men in medicine'$1,601 less annually than men).
By I960, they Wore only 61 per cent.
years after they won the right to vote, 1 hey stillj haven't l^n ablm W V ofe in ' legislators v would take steps] to guarantee them equal eco- BATTELLE nomic rights with men.
Plan to Boost UP Economy Received by 'Action TjFoup
State Jaycees Plan
made an aveAge of $2,42$, adiile men made $6,755.
Among pnrfesskmal wtuicaa, women, $4,184; men, $6,848, Service woricow-women $2,418, and men, $4,008.
j MARQUETTE (UPI) - A widejby Ebasco Service, Inc., of New *' Am^can woiiien may be.	S’*
th^;^ so commo^y Pictured,	economic development com.
the most pampered people on earth. But if this ia,.true,‘they are the most perversely persecuted. patently patronized, pettily payrolled, pampered people Off earth.
Is other words,,they don’t get .equal salaries with roeii, they know it, and they’ve got to fight tooth and nail polish to get
Inomic feet without relying on out-i side help was advanced today at the first meeting erf ‘Operation Action - U.P.”
A campaign to achieve “a sound, well-balanced economy in the Upper Peninsula" through a long-range program of self-help was recomimeoded^in an updated study of the UP. \	' 1
'Among the major recommends-1
Rep. Edith Green, D-Ore., has
liori:
-rEmphasiy on development of existing industries in the area, rather than a reliance on trying to attract new ones.
—Upgrading retaii and other!
services in order to attract morel	.
ijjorito toUP'. oM todu,.j Wine-O-Gram
A mock lafpslature, made up of JunioC Chamber of Commerce .	members, will be in session to-
SXri MtolS’.
William P. Wilson, fhrmer city Among the 206 “oiMHiay” manager of Buchanan in Berrien | lawmakers will be Frank Rich-
County, has been named executive manager of the operation and will marshall efforts to stimulate economic growth in the Up-iper Peninsula.
tions in the 17-page study, madej _MulUpie use of public JandOjj /pf6rCGpfed
Gov. George Romn^''will ad-ress the Jaycees at a noon luncheon. Millait!,L. Bush of Alma, state Jay^ president, will serve as governor during the ffiock legislature.'	'
Bilsell Upholstery SSAMPOO Kits $1.49
matching state funds lor general' r • I* 1/»• T II IPrograms. taxation of ore re-1
jOCId Stu YG^ m k '•*"**	'^nds, and al SANjQSE.Calif (AP)-BepBty
.study of Mackinac Bridge tolls. Sheriff Buss Cahill arrived jiist -rermoliUon of local ming P^P^J»g airdinances and development of I®®® wall of the Santa Clara Coun-(or cooperative
About U.S. Defense
Thatcher,
Patterson
and Wernet
INSURANCE
NEW BRUNSWTCKvlOrrAP) -“it is extraordinarily doubtful ifi any of you in the audience will' live to be my age if we continue our present defense policies," Norman Thomas told 1,000 college un-dergraduateir'Thursday.
Thomas, 79, former candidate for president on the Socialist tick-
ties and even larger areas. -Movements to establish jun-
m i_ mr .t	-^	vfsiix: Ml^ IlldlF ICli 111 d	l/V
gan Tech, Northern Michigan Col- bush. And fellow deputies inside
lA0A oru4 Cnr\r¥ii	............ .	^	^
lege and Suomi College.
I ASftrtlirinniO
Don't Nogitet Slipping
FALSE TEETH
Don't b« koimrad u
Ikallnr inun.^
iioapa	mi
-acid I pu«4*r to tprlo-latm. kwDf taWi toMh
nx pt wcuritv a <otummy tuuoy.PMtyia DR Uei FAHTRITa lodl
' ef, said at Douglass College that peace can be achieved only through general disarmament, the United Nations and "relative disengagement from attempts to co trol the courses of other nations.
"Defense Secretary Robert McNamara is talking something close to dangerous nonsense when he speaks of limited war under'present conditions,” Thomas said.
in communities’ which could "logically” support them and expanded research at Michi-
The man in the blue suit and red turban who tied the bdg to a knotted bedsheet fled.
But Cahill did capture, a bottle of wine the man left in ajjearby
—Creation of "one strong or-ganiution” to coordinate and implement all facets of the economic drive. .
Operation Action — DP’ ceived the report today maeUng at Northern Michigan College. The group was formed here last October under the leadership of Detroit Edison Presl-
the Jail discovered two more bottles under an inmate’s bunk^n the sepond floor.
Killed in Auto Accident
CLIO (* -Gaudla Jean Sev-eren, 16. of Clio, was killed yesterday when the car in which she was riding collided with another auto on a rural road east of this dint Walker .L. Cisler and-Dr.'Genesee County community
ardsofl, Waterford Jaycee national director of the organl-
lalkeyevllil,forlMtaMe,
84 per eeot ef the a
NOT EQUAL |T
^ l^hieea
In no single categwy did women’s pay equal men’s, in spite of all the incensed talk, over ail the years,' about equal status. The cloaest wunen came wu in the "clerical” category, where I they made an impressive 68 per: cent as much u men did.
It’s not fair. But the injustice on’t make women retreat to the kitchen. They’ll keep fighting for their place in the office—and who is to Judge them on how they wage the battle?
To survive, the underdog needs must be clever.
for High School and Collego Groduotos Associate or Certificate Projrrama
SPRING TEHM'VpENING MARCH ,11
Free^^tacemeri Service to Gr»luatee ,
Pontiac Business Institute
18 W. liiwrence St.	PB 8*7028
, ^Accredited u Two Year School of BtutecM by the
Aod^ting Oonimlksion f«
• Schools, Waihingtoa, D.C.


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PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. MARck
Dr. Woyi36 G. Brandstodt Says:
Don't Take Medicine Without Dolor's OK
■m impact of the news that thalidomide, ^	aa the
perfect sleeping pfll, If. taken early in pregnancy frequently caused malformation of the velopirtg baby, has led the medical profession to re - examine the possible off pet of other drugs on the pregnant woman.
Many- drugs! are known to]
from the blood ofBRANDSTADT the mother to that of the fetus.
One of the more common turn* ards results from the prospective
Shortly after the baby was born it became very sick and was shown to b« snfferiag from the agoaidag withdrawal synp. toms of narcotic addletioB.
veins, may pass into the infant’slantithyreid drugs ..taken by the *	Wther. Her baby nuty be born
T
in/-be
\963
f
nancy .cannot uauaDy'-be-^detef-mined, but it can be oetimated to within a few days. There 4s gpod authority for a pregnancy lasting 320 days or a little over 10 months.
If after birth a small blood vessel ruptures, thb baby may have a serious hemorrhage. Curare, the powerful poison by -
ctJThSt'hir^	«ied“T;iru*s.
check honmhage.	rehttaat hi cer-
rw SI .	*.1.	tain convulsive states.
Dr. Mervin Sllverberg has	. .	, . „
found that one of the more serious	*®-
forms of jaundice and po^iblyp"
This type of jaundke is not to be confused with the conunonly seen jaundice of the newborn that
An extr^ cam ^ that of'Clears up spontaneously, a pr^nt wotndn who was a! Anticoagulant drugs, to prevent narcotic addict. ___________ |the formation of clots in the
With a congenital goiter, but thli usually disappears without treatment a few weeks after birth.
Many other drugs have adverse effects OB the newbora. Per this reasoB it is essential that e prespeetive mother avdid taUng medtchw of aay kind withoat the kaowMge and approval ef her doctor. X
anemia
ditisiff^vltamln K.	prevent the nonpal kicking drugs known to be safe.
“•........................movements. It has been found
such interference ntey .result in clubfoot spd possibly other deformities.
Less serious is the effect of
Because such a prolonged period of gestation is likely to result in an unusually large baby i and cause a very difficult labor, doctors usually do not allow pregnancy to proceed so long.
Our New
Fashion Pets i .V
Q—How many days elapse be-' tween conation and bhih? Is it poasible'to have e menstrual period and be pregnant at tha same time? ^
A— The usual duration of pregnancy ia ibouf Tdli 4api*Mt»w<wf» lation of about 20 days more or less would not bO unusual.
<} — Is there such a thing as a 4o or 11 months baby? I have heard of such but I just don’t belleve.it.
Thfe tXMCt duration of preg-l
When the implantstion of the fertilized ovum in the wall of the uterus occurs, menstrual periods stop. Any bleeding that occursj lafter this should be investigated.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. MARCH 1. 196»
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■ -PONnACSCRAPI
pjunlor EcTltors Quiz on-
I___ ATOMS
-4-
QUESTKm: How can a acienUst aplit an atom if be can’t see it?
ANSWER: Our artist has drawn an impossible picture in (A). ^ to suggest bow extremely small an atom really is. How could anyone hold an atom in a p^ of pincers, when Taintfe drortrf watercontatos^more than 1(l» billion hillion-ot them?
StateSenator Reneges on Lawyer-Bill -
LANSING UR - The Senate i^wed yesterday ftat perhaps Sen. HaskeU Nichols, R-Jackaon, had made a mistake.
* * ♦
Nichols told the Senate that he wanted to withdraw a bill that he introduced earHer in the Week which 'proposed that lawmakera > who had served eight years be empowered to practice law wi^ put passing a bar examination.
-	*	* w
Under the measvci'iBw'ti^-blalors also would not have had to attend law schooL Nichols) an attmwey himself, said he still would like to find some way to see that veteran lawmakers got recognition for long and faithful service — but this^ was not the right
Nichols decided to withdraw the bill after bar association of-ficiabjaade JtJmown^haL Lh^ were unhappy about its<provi-
I, hi ways Aown in the ether
Yet scientists da split n
drawings. Under cMain'^^iwaons minute particles Inside atoau may become detached. In a tube-type atom smiash-er (B), detached* eletcrically charged particles moves throng little Inner tubes which have electric (toges, first positive, then negative and ho on. litis speeds them up so much tot when they smash into the atoms of a bit of target material they split them apart. In atom smashers such as cyclotrons, and synchrotrons the patricles are whirled around and around until they, too, can smash atoms.
ing out rays and particles. In (D), such a particle (neutron) smashes down from upper left into an atom which is knock- . tag npart.
The other atoms are formed and two neutrons are Jumping out, which will smash into still oflier atoms, causing a “chain reaction.” Enormous energy is released as billions of such smash-ups occur almost toother.
★ ★ ★
FOR YOU TO DO: Find any kind of small chain and lay it on a table. Theti pick up one end and shake it sideways. Notice to movement which runs along from link to link. It will give you an idea of what’s, meant by “chain reaction.”
T(5 Take Top Posts in Satellite Firm
- WARffiNG-roN OR-Hie selection of Leo D, Welch and Joseph V. Charyk to take ovo^ the top; executive positions in the Communications Satellite Corp. was formally announced yesterday.
’The White House said Welch, retiring board chairman'of Stan-| dard ()ll Co. of New Jersey,* and Charyk, who has resigned as,un-derdicretary of to Air Force, are being nominated by President, Kennedy as incorporators of the Satellite Corp,
w ♦ A ^
At to same time, the corpcMr-utfcxi itself amminoed tot Welch has been selected to be chairman and chief executive officer while Charyk is becoming president and principal operating ofRca-.
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U. S. Historians Honored
ZURICH, Switzerland (AP) — America’s naval historian of World War n, retired Rear Adm. Samuel Eliot Mqrison of Boston, Mass., was awarded a Balzan Prtae of -^ W,00(rSwi8s francs — today for his IS-volume navtd history.
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’The death rate in the Yugoslav Republic of Montenegro in 19^ was among the lowest, in the worW. There were only 7.1 deaths per 1,000 population.
School and college enroUmenf grew to 48,704,000 in the fall of 1962, the Ceitaus Bureau reports. This is an increase of,one million in a year. ,	.
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A—11,

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Claim Locked Cockpit Doors Won't Ground Skyjaekers
Bjr ROBERT J.SEMJNG UPI AviatiM Editor WASHINGTON - Itie airtimi and tbeir pikAs have told the Federal Aviation Agency that locked wkpit doon won't prevent “sky< ’ lok^.”
The FAA haa propoaed a nef r e g ulation " quiring flight deck
duri
precautionary move againat would-be hijack-1 era.
! But the Air 'Line PiloU Aa- SEiRLING laoclation (ALPAJ, repreaenting jit.OOO qjrline air carritf pilota, the_^ liiMpi ■ "
LA^
jBdn (ATA), repreamting the acheduled airlinea, aie againat locked cockpit doora.
ALPA and ATA both filed protesta agaii^t the propoaed
regalatloB, chargiag It would create haaards without really preveatlBg Ujackiag. The two orgaaliattons, in a rare iman-
—A '‘skyjacker” confronted by
-There might be •uch as freak crew incapacitation, where quick accesa to the flight deck from the cabin could prevent a disaster.
The majority of conunenta filed by individual airlines also op-. posed the rule. But the regula-_ try to shoot tion was supported by the Air-off the lock and in doing sojUne Stewards and Stewardesses
could kill or wound the pilots and-or passengers.
dooi^ bdlted'from the inside the cockpit would require flight crew members to leave th^ post in order to unlock the doors.
■Any deranged person or criminal could threaten a stewardess or passenger with harm if the crew did not unlock the cockpit, or force a flight attendant to pro-
Association, art affiliate of the
Also in favor ,wu a lock manufacturer.,
— Cockpit doers generally are so thin (deliberately so, to aid in an emergency crash evacuation), any determined hijacker could brook one down.
U. of D. President Due at MSU Commencement. EAST LANSING UP - Michigan
Traffic Deaths Down Slightly
CHICAGO (UPI) -Traffic ac-cidenta killed 2,090 persons in the National Safety Council said this week.
a w w
An estimatod 1N,MB more suffered disabling Injuries and thonsanda, of others 'inenrred minor iajdries, the council said.
cent from January of 1962, declined in cities of more than a million population, including-Phil-adelphia, which was the nation's safest city during the month.
“ * - *• w
Philadelphia experienced a 33 per cent decline in fatalities. The next safest cities were (3ii(^o,

State University will award de-Los Angeles, New York and Degrees to 787 graduates, includingjtroit. Los Angeles reported deaths
213 master's rsnrtidatas and 49'down 31 per cent.-----------
doctoral candidates, at its winter	* v *
commencement March 13.	; Among cities of 750,000-1 mil-
The very Rev. Laurence y.jlion population, Cteveland, Ohio,'! Britt, S, J., president of the Uni-|led the way with only two death verslty of Detroit, will addresSjfoUowed Wa^ington and T the graduates. *	jLouis, Mo..
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A-—12
THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MARCH 1,
Demands Self-Government
7
MounfaTn Tribe-Worries Iraq Leaders
(SdUoyt Note: Russian~ speak^g AP Correspondent Alex tfty journeyed by car, tractor and horeebdck for six d-a y e to ooiain an 'W^hve interview with Mullah Mus~ tafa BarzanU cTi t ef o^ the Kurdish rebels who have harassed the Iraqi yobemmenl for It mon{hs.)
NORADIN, NiM-thern Iraq (IP)' —Mullah Mustafa Barzani, leader of the Kurdish revolt in northern
Iraq, says he will order his war- tonomous Kurdish regime,'* thefneyed for six days to reach Bar- jacket with wide beH-bottbmed back into battle against the Moscow-educated leader sakl. 'zani’s headquarters and return.
new Iraqi regime unless the tribes-n^ receive self-rule quickly. ''Speaking „ in Russian, tlie chief an interview at his head-I quarters in the mountains of iNorthem Iraq that the overthrow [of Premier Abdul llarim Kassem reb. 8 was the direct result of the ilkmonth Kurdish war against the jBaglMladJcegi^^^^ r^A'sHnilar, Tf r will befall anyone else I poses the establishment of an au-
Barzani, 60, said jie ordered a I We traveled by auto, by trac-cease fire when Kassem was over- tor, and finally bn horseback.-thrpwn and killed, in order to give!	e * w
the new Baghdad government a! Except for thq main towns and a chance to declare its intentions onjhalf dozen beleaguered Iraqi army the Kurdish Issue.	{garrisons, all the highlands north
of a line from Kirkuk to Suleiman-gave them 10 days. Those iyia appear to be firmly ip.Kurdish
days aire over. I am not prepared to wait indefinitely," said Bar--fondling a long Kurdish dag-
““■^■ger.
Barzani expressed impatience fer the dblay in getting word from his special emissary, Jelal Talibani, who went to Baghdad last week to negotiate with leaders of the new government.
Talibani said in Baghdad Huirsday that he was hopeful that an agreement with the new government .will be reached "within this week.” I ;'-~~ SHoWWiRpnnTO ! Barzani scoffed aj a suggestion made last week by the new government’s minister'of state, Haz-em Jawad, that the Kurdish question should be examined by a conference representing all political parties and racial groups in Iraq. ■ “All that tS Titeded is for the govonment to recognize the Kur-right to administer their own af-dish people and give them the fairs," he said, ‘"nien we can go head and have a csofenmoi. ‘ This correspondent and AP photographer James 'Pringle jour-
hands.
The Kurdish* Democratic party, headed fay.. Barzani, adniinisters severaCftousand sqoare'lifflea Qirougl), representatives in each village and township.
Barzani wore the Kurdish national costume — a cross-button
pantaloons of grey striped hand-Woven wool. A rifle lay on the window sill, and he had two bandoliers of rifle bullets strapped around his waist and a bolstered revolver. A ted turban rested jauntily on his head.
We spoke Russian, which Barzani speaks fluently, having spent 12 years in exile in the Soviet Union. -	'
Asked jibout the strength of his army, Barzani replied: "We are strongei: than ever now. I have not counted the soldiers as therb are two million Kurds in Ir«] and all our people could be soldiers if we need them.”
MIDAS TOUCH - President Kennedy holds a gold-ptoted telegraph key presented by Walter P. Marshall, president of Western Union, for use at ceremonies opening expositions, conventions and dams, with White House signals.
Only 64 Convicts Left on Worn-Out Alcatraz
ALCATRAZ, Calif. (AP)-‘"nie Rock” was down to 64 convicts today.
Only a year ago, the Island prison near San Francisco’s Golden Gate housed 260. In its time, it has held some of the nation's toughest cons—A1 Capone, AJvin (Creepy) Kaipis and Basil Owl) Bianghart.
Now it’s being, ^sed out. Salt nd and tiii^ are wearing
air, wind away Alcatraz, a prison of one sort of another since 1858. It’s too costly to restore.
Among 38 cons moved off the
rock Tuesday was Mickey Ck)hen, Los Angeles racketeer doing time for income tax evasion. They sent ^1111 to Atlanta.
The prison is expected to be empty by July 1.
’’We’ll certify the prison as-nur-plus as soon as the prisoners are removed," said a spokesman for the Bureau of Prisons in Washington. Ihe bureau is getting suggestions on what to do with it.
"I suppose it would be sort, of a sightseeing place," a bureau spokesman conjectui^.
“Some people wanted^ make a restaurant out of it."
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''I
THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAH€H 1, 1968
A—13
Blonde Rushes Into Propeller
Stewardett Beheaded by Engine Blades
BOSTON (On-A blonde stewardess was decapiteted last night siien she ran Into the wUrling propeller ol a DC7 airliner at ^an intemattonal Airpwt.
She was idendfiad br Saslero Air Lhtes (EAL) efflcials as Bariiara !OUl, !•» ef Taa^pia, Fla., and Revere, Mass. said aha tad taet j Ita warden far the abUiii Ihr M yeHtY.
The ))lane, an EAL shuttle flight from Boston to Newark, HJ., was wanning up ifa four engines for takeoff when the tragedy happened. Twenty-four paasengers and five crew members were aboard at the time.
Authorities said the woman, dnissed in a fun-length leopard aUn coat, had -no-taggege ^>r pocketbook and apparently was net atteraptteg to “hop a ride" aboard the flight.
Peter Ptetrepanle, n. ef lle-vare, a ramp agent responsible far leading paasengers and slg-nallBg the pUet when the ptaw was ready to leave the ramp» was toe oriy known eyewitness to the accident He said he was in the process of dispatching the plane whan he saw the woman running-toward
Hart Defends Cuban Probe
'SOr NYION
ni£
WASHINGTON (AP)» Tte op-cpoiqg Siflitf probe of the (d Pigs flaaco and subsequent devHopmeato in Oidm is w sary to clarify the sttuation, Sqi. Philip A. Hart, D-ltldi., said yea-terdify.
Rafarring to an inveatigattoa
planaad by a group headed By Sen. John "
John Stennis. D-Mtoa.. Hart said at p news oenfWtoioe:
“Tta paepla ars catemad. Sea. Menris is right hi trying to astaMish, chapter ami varae, what want an at differpnt
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Hart said his objection to the ritidsm by soma Republicans of the administration’s handling ef'ihe Cubut issue is that "they may do a disservica in distract-jBg_ the. peopto iram what went on there."
It is true, he said, he does not nke the presence of “10,000 or 20,(100 Russians” in Cuba. But, he added, Biese troops are not a threat to the physicH security of the United States.
SPACE DOCKING — A model of a twiHnan lunar landing “bug" developed by the Martin Co. simulates a rendezvous and docking maneuver. The "bug" features a docking ring that fits tote a bone attached to a shnulated Apollo space craft.
Ha-sbouteA waved his hands and ran to her. But she ignored him and kept rurniing, he said.
Pietropaulo said Miss HUl “ran head-on directly irito the propeller” of* the No. 1 engine.
The Federal Aviation Agency and Qvil Aeronautics Board set up a board of inquify to investigate the tragedy.
Peace Corps Labeled Yankee Fifth Column
MOSCOW (APl-The newspaper Izvestia Thursday called the American Ptaca Corpa a flfth cohunn and microbes of American pedadonialism.
The article said members of the corps are too young to be of value to the countries where fliey are servigg but will be of increasing ' vsiue 'as intellig^ agents as they gain expa*!
'Congress Unable '^Fof Jef Aircraft'
Raise Execution Age?
“The real and present danger,” Hart said, “is that Cuba, I fear, is becoming an educational ceiv ter for l^t-wing leaderdiip out ■ of Venezuela, Chile and Brazil and other places in the bem-
-^JUlAltlAr-Ca. WW-The Sea- -
ate passed and sent to the House
yesterday a bill to raise the mini-'James. Charles and Gehtge are mum age for executions from ld|ftie given names of 0.4 per cent to 18.	of all males in this country.
WASHINGTON (UPU-A House subcommittee reported yesterday that there was not much Congress can do about the deafening roar of jet aircraft.
The inbeommittee saM aircraft noise is a “sctentilic preb-tem which caanot be resolved by tegislative aetton.”
It did not completely rule out congressional action in the future but said it would not come until die problem had been dealt with by government agencies and the aircraft industry.
A Commerce Investigathma subcommittee issued its report on aircraft noises following a year study. It made a list of recommendations but oftorad no legislative proposak.
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- A—U
I Strike Words ! Hitting Powell : From Record
THB PONllAC PRESS. t^HlpAV,	1, I»6L
contains a t)^ief request by De^ wlnski to expunge the editorial from the Reirord. He told nqws; men he jna advised of the vk>l9tio|i by the House parliatnen-
I .
WASHINGTON (AP) - A news, paper, editorial critical of Rep.
Adam Clayton Powell, D-N.Y. was : stricken from the Congressional Record yesterday as a violation House rules.	_
Rep. Edwin J. Derwin^i, P-llI.jUpril 26. had' inserted the editorial Mon*	-
day. It wa\«~€Sricago Dally'News comment on what the iyriter termed “the deservedly fiery denunciation” of Powell by. Sen.
John-J. Wimarns. R-Del,
■ w w *
House rules prohibit a member from casting derogatory inflections on another member, pcnvin-ski had not made any personal comments but the rules alko provide that a member cannot d9 in-^
(cialist Leader Due f Make A^U Speech
EAsT LANSING W - Norman Thomas, 79-year-old dean of the Socialist party in America, will speak to Michigan State Unlver-’ 1 students on the campus on
The appearances! tte sixr time Socialist candrdat^oFprCT-’ ident is being sponsol'ed by the campus Young Socialist Gub.
MSU Team Figures
EAST UNSING « - Michigan State University’s mathematics team placed 10th in the recent Putnam Mathematical Competition, ieading ail other Midwestern entrants. MiSU’s teams.
:directly what he. is prohibited coached by Dr. Leroy M. Kelley, Trom doing directly.	|have finished first and fourth in
Today’s Congressional Recoidlthe preceding years.
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Squirrel/ Plan —Span Street Leading to Nuts
LONGVIEW, Warft. ,(AP)-The City Council has agreed to construction of the Nutty Narrows Bridge.
A resolution authorizing the bridge over the city’s main thoroughfare was approved ’Thursday night. Jt will carry hungry squirrels from City Park to a teeaKg"' station in an office builcfing courtyard.
, * * ♦
Several squirrels have been killed crossing the street and a contractor offered^ build a four* inqh wide bridge at no cost to the city. It will be suspended 20 feet abwethe 70-foot wide street.
NEW YORk (AP)-Anthony (Tough Tony) Anastasio, 57, dynamic boss of the Brooklyn waterfront who battled other leaders of the Longshoremen’s Union as well as dock employers, died today in a Brooklyn hospital.
He was internatipnal vice-presi-Ideniof the AFlrCIG InternAt^^^^^
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Waferfronj Boss Anastasio Dies
Elephant to Walk Roo,l
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‘CORKER’ OF A QUEEN-a-Myla Erin Danis, 1%. of Salem, Mass., is the answer to an appeal from New York’s Loyal League of Yiddish S<his of Erin. They wanted a queen for their Purim - St. Patrick’s festival who was pretty, Jewish and Irish. The picturh of the colleen,-born in County Cork, Ireland, was sent in by her grandmother.
Longshoremen’s Association and headed the 15,000-member ILA Local 1814 in Brooklyn.
' w w	*
-ATamBy spokesman said death resulted from complications following a heart attack Jan. 2.
A colorful figure, Anthony nevertheless often was overshai^wed by two of his headline-making ibrothers: the late Albert and Joseph Anastasio.
★	♦	w
Albert, a reputed- power in the^ old Murder, Inc., mob, was shot {dead as he sat in a barber chair in 1957. Joseph—involved at various times in murder, bookmaking and waterfront thievery-died of natural causes in 1956.
Another Iwother, Salvatore, is Roman Catholic priest in tt Bronx.
Where Did That Garage Go?
MOBILE, AJa. (AP)-City fathers of Mobile have asked police to investigate the theft of a brick
Asks $40,000; , Charges Cute/s Mate Muscled In
Out^ate Judge to Hear
wall and brick garage from house owned by the city.
# ★ ★
The city learned of the loss ’Thursday when a prospective buyer reduced the purchase offer $2,000 because the wall and gar^e had disappeared after an earlier inspection of the property.
Police Commissioner (Seorge McNally said his men would get' right on it.
RortmeyLPIace$ UP Man on Michigan Tech Board
LANSING I* The appointment of Stanley Sundeen of Ish-
HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Muscle-rtian Mickey Hargitay, the husband of Jayne Mansfield, is faced today with a $40,000 battery suit from the blonde actress’ hair sty-
'tynn R. Hardy, 31, charged	^ bowd of rontrol
-nuiraday, in Superior Court that>- ^ Michigan College of Min-about 3 a.m. on Feb. 21 Hargitay‘"8 and Technology has ^n an-.	. tpulled him out of Miss Mansfield’s	George Romn^.
Detroit Cdses; Court Full auto and “maliciously and wrong-' Sundeen succeeds Homer Hil-fullv” assaultwl him	ton Jr. of Marquette for a term
6f Port Huron yesterday was as-j signed to hear Detroit Recorder’s! .. (Criminal) (tourt cases for two weeks, starting Monday.
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Hargitay denies the alleged as-'
“The whole Ihing is ridiculous,” he told a newsmair.
The court is overloaded because of the city incinerator fraud
ia§e Jhal	Somerville. Mass.
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An American chess player, Har-
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Halledc Says It's Okay for Slash That Large
i

THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. MARCH 1, 1963

A—IA
WASHINGTON lif»-Rep. Chariflft A. Halleck, R.Ind., said President Kennedy*! tHlr budget could be cut upwards of |10 billion without endangering national security or the economy.
Halleck, House Republican lrt-«
televised and radfo broadcast news conference.	I
He issued a statement in which the Senate-House Republi-ca'h leadership described Ken-' nedy as “the greatest spender pf; public monies in the-history of the world at peace or war.”
At the same session Sea. Everett M. DMuen of nUnob, Senate RepubUcaa leader, read a statement asserting it is aigh time for the admlnlstratiOB tv “call a halt to concessions” to the Sovietfl in an effort to get
efro/f Finds Many Rooms for Convention
DETItOIT (UPI) - The Motor City, trying to land the 19M Democratic and RepubUcan- conventions, has received pledges of t,46S motel and hotel rooms to be used for the gatherings.
Mayor Jerome P. Gavanagh said that “besidee these rooms already pledged, there are hundreds of others which would be available if we win the conventions.”'"'*^...
The Democratic pkrty 1 asked a minimum of 8,000 rooms for its meeting, and Republicans estimated their needs nt 10,000 romns.
“We liave already met the Democrats’ figure,” the aiayor said, “and with the number of rooms already pledged I am confident that Detroit can handle the Republican convention.”
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It was this congressional Sion’s first airing of what has become popularly known as the ‘Ev and Charlie Show.”
Halleck, in the leadership-approved . statement, called Americans to speak up on whether they “favor or oppose cutting tues without cuttinig qiending.”
‘ He made it clear he was talking of cuts in new obligatlonal authority totaling 886.S biOioni
Negro Vole Booster,^ MousTyWoundecTl
GREENWOOD, Miss lUPb-A 20-year-oid Negro, who has been urging members of his race to register to vote was shot and seriously wounded on the outskirts of town last night, Negro leaders said today.
Jimmy Travis iras shot in the neck and shoulder by tivee im-
hvTZvtv	^ •wording
to Bob Moses, a field represe^-^	tor the prointegratiTstudent
He said	the	GOP-omtrolledi^lJ:''”^^	Com-
hi,
Dirksen said the two years of Kennedy aitaninistration negotiations in an effort to win a test Joins Ac|uina\'Aoard
bv"a**2a<te*of co^io?to GRAND RAPIDS m -U. S. the Soivet Union to the point that
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There were 8,929,214 persons jlisted in the first U.S. Census, taken in 1799.
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0(NLO WAR CASUALTY - Even for a nuke-believe soldier, war games can be fearsome and fatiguing, as 3-year-ohl Randy Caulfield of Merriam, Kan., discovered recently. The toy cannon was flnaUy cut apart to free his arm. Randy was unhurt.
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A~16
^ THE.PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. MARCH i, 1963
INDIAN PRESIDENT DIES —Raj^ra Prasad, 79. first ' president of India, died last night from pneumonia. An associate of Mahatma Gandhi, he held office from 1950 until last Mpy.
T^roIIections Up in February
LANSING m -February was‘ a food month for atate sales and uat tax collections, tjie State Rev-enoe Department reports.
7qtal collections in February on Jmiary business were $35.5 mil-liOB, an increase of $2.3 million om the same month l^st year.
The state tax take fi gener-aly regarded as the most re-liabie barometer of the Mkhi-
Clarena Lock, state revenue commissioner, said the improvement over last year amount to about 6.8 per cent.
f*ThisJa particularly encouraging,” he said, ‘‘since the February collections a year ago were ejicellent and the highest they had ever been for the month.” About $800,000 of the increase, Lock said, has to be attributed to the new telephone and communications service tax which lias, not in effect a year ago.
Freeze Squeeze Cuts Juice in Florida Oranges
ORLANDO. Fla. (AP)-A survey by the U.S. Department of Agriculture shows the mid-December freeie reducfed the amount of juice and sugar in orangsb still on the trees In Florida.
Tests made in 318 gi throughout the state showed that ..a 90-pound tax of Valencia oranges, yielding abouT^I j^lids of juice under ncrmal conditions, lUNl lost from 10 to 16 pounds of ■juke.
Sugar content-pounds of solids —also had droppeiiKfrom the normal 6 pounds to 4.43 pounds, ac-cofding to the report.
State Highway K«tiy«es l^onored by Park Names
tANSING m -Two State ffigh-wagr Department retirees have been honored by the department with highway roadside parks named after them.
A park on M52 in Lenawee County has been napied for Ev-. _erett E. -WeilsT 62 and another on USIO in Lake County has been named for Don Cruise, 62, of East Lansing.
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V-	. /	1 ,	, '

IV ...
An your School's AcHvitlos f Now Appearing iti Tho Pross?
THE PONTIAC PRESS
...‘..'Me  	.	----- ".TIM	—
Turn to This Pogo Prkhys 1	*'
for Soniw' High School Nows j
FRIDAY, MARCH i, 1963
PON'Ji’UC. MICHIGAN.
B—1
Pontiac
2 Students at PCH Siqg for Rotary
BY JANE BIGLER Two Pontiac Central High
School students presented amuaF ’Cently
cal prOjgrain recently for the Pontiac Rotary Qub.
Edie Payne ai«l David ,Orser who are both stndenU in Mrs. Helen Aaderson’s second year l^Malih class, sang the Caban
Bayanw.'* David also sang a solo, “Oh, Lord Most Holy.” Their selections tied in with a speech by Dr. Jorge Castellanos, a Spanish professor at Marygrove College who came to the United States recently from Cuba. EXAMS AT MSI^
Several Pontiac Central students are visiting Lansing this weekend to take tests at Michigan State University.
r-''

Waterford's Musicians Earn Contest Ratingr
By LIZ VENIE
Waterford Township High School band members re-
trist 4 Michigan School Band and Orchestra Solo and Ensemble Festival held' at Pontiac Central High School Freshmen Kay Sirlin and Tom McCulloch received first division superior ratings for their flute ^los and also a second division excellent rating^ for a fliite duet.
tomas. a junior
BY SUSAN KILLEN PonUac Northern High School seniors have elected their class officers. President of the class of 1963 is Ernest Humphreys.
Skating Party, Show Planned at Emmahudl
By CAROL ARMBRUSTER Students of'-Emtmanuel Chris-
earned an excellent rating for a trumpet solo, abng with sophomore Carol Myers, who played a flute solo.
Plans are being made for the Michigan School Band and Orchestra FesUval to Be held at epiminat JawT Roseville High School March 16.
David Trapp, a senior, serves
-------------- ------ band as president this year,
tian High Sdiool are ptanning »|along with Dale Jotjes, vice presi-
Th«i# .bidents were invited to	talent dent; Sandra Rich, recbfdll^
Aluimil«diolmliipeiiiiiiii«tkin! '“‘^'	,	,	*	TOlKrt Ultaim,
Al» » a* W"** » "aasfc s™« 75 *1 club memlHu,
■■ 0" “ "■>'	by bu, led., I. ap«d
t^ 5 per cento the gr	forget their fashion taste and the weekend at Lost Pine Lodge
....	dress-as though they were color-near the Caberfae winter qwrts
Registration took p!a« ^y blind.	I area in northern lower Michigan
with a banquet being held to-	'
'63 Officers Are Selected at Northern
William Sapelak w*i chosen vice president, with Sandra Anderson as secretory and Cynthia Rnrtifr-as treasurer.-------
VISIT COimT HOUSE Business' law classes at PNH have been presenting their class projects. They may consist of field trip, a guest speaker or a presentation by a student on any subject dealing with business or
By NANCY GAUKLER St. Frederick’s High School studeits today heard Tory Wright, Nancy Gaukler, Suiub h Cosgrove) Chris. Roppon and Shei-
RACING THE -CLOCK - 'Rmekeeper Pat Gracey of 3591 Lakewood Street, Waterford Township, times runners (left to right) Kay Jackson of 5616 Pleasant Drive, Waterford Townsh’p;, Susan Windeler of 5601 Hatchery
Road, Waterford Township; and Susan Ball of 4488 Midland Road, Waterford Township. Kettering’s girls’ track team practices in the school corridors.,
, Two of Mrs. David Jennings’ elasseg traveled to (he new
They were given an explanation
trial in the new courtrooihs ^ spoke with the presiding ,
Girls' Track Wins for
Team
Kettering
night... The test and a luncheon
MANNERS REVERSED
Accompanying the skiers are
A,...*!...,	»iii J^oulty mcmbers Stuart Thorell,
Ano^ coming event will be
"L'‘Su^pTrr.lu. .( «« -coumuy Day." .h» .»«■

m,
CENTRAL FIRST For the first time Pontiac Central’s ski team is participating in ski meets with other area high ^
schools.	i I	■ V-
’The team took part in ttie re-] r cent Michigan Interscholastic;	.	.
Ski Meet with eighteen other area	1 v
!givenbthera. ’Ihe tables wUl than
Other School News | Throughout Week ^
Senior David Patterson was recipient of the local' most
valuable .student scholarship q. ,, the last three Tuesdays, award given by the Elk s. .He ^	|g5o j, needed to fi-
(Tasses have also heard a local attorney and two men from insurance agencies explain various points of liability and its relation to teenage driveiw.
AFSCLUB The American Field Service of ipNH has sponsored “Penny
BY BARA SECAN A relatively new sp Waterford Kettering High School this year is girls’ track. ’The
Slade, Connie Shell, Barbra Smith qpd sophomore Diane Jarvis.
As a result of work done in art class, five Kettering students
team of sophomores and junion^ have won arelairn in the NaUwal . j • .	(Scholastic Art Awards competi-
has competed m two meets.
will receive a -$100 scholarship to the college of his choice.
Runner-up in the competition, which involved students In all area schook, was Diane Smith. Portfolios on both students will
nance the next foreign exchange student.
At the indoor Held boose at the University of Michigan last Saturday, four Kettering girls ran away with a number of
tkm.
Works of Jody Jones, Gary Baker, Charles Soldwish, Ken-nedi Bnshman and Karen Py-kor were sent to Detroit to be
It has also been suggested tl
the club use some of the money
Sue Ball took second place in the 220-yard dash with Virginia Fry placing second in the 60-yard dash. Kay Jackson ran first in the
Included on the girls ski team
are Dana Jebch, CoUeea Cor-porou. Sue Daily. Cindy Burke, aad.Peg MonteKh.
On the boys’ teij|m are Richard Gorman, James Joyner, Joe Patterson, 'Ton Roy, Jack Strangea and Richard ‘taylor.
’The entire Cmtral aki dub recently held their second retreat at the Caberfae ski area near Cadillac, Michigan.
DANCERS CHOSEN
be turned again, and boys win i
be sent to tae state level of thisrto aid a student from Northern in
have their i^iportunity to return the girb’ courtesy. - —-
competition.
’Ihe Junior class under the directiiHi of thoir pkeoident, Terry Martin, is making plans for the fortbcoiping J n a 1 o r -
May 24 will be the date of the events given to honor the seniors. CAREER DAY EniinanueT CliTTsTT a
B trip to a foreign country.
220-yard dash and also placed forth in the finals of that event. Another first in the 22p-yard dash was recorded by Pamela Hale.
'Horizons' fo.'Play at BHHS Sock Hop
BV NANCY WEISWASSER;
Bloomfield Hills I^h
wi.*# .lanriLr.	SchoM studcnts were enlightened
to the cast of "'nw various vocational opportun- School stpdent band, “The Hori-mS^«^’’.	^jities Wednesday at “C a r e e r sons,’’ will be featured at the
111600 girls are Julie Bacon,
Sherrie Dudley, Pat Gentry, amP Planning for the event was
after-game dance this evening.
Carolyn Gaensbauer. Others are Sue Turner, Linda Mann, Pat Weld and Stephanie Harden burgh.
under the direction of student body ^president Ray Badgero. In die aUrday affafa-, students were allowed to attend sessions of their choice.
Speakers from the fields of architecture, civil service, journalism, nursing, real estate, teaching and theology were pfes-Also in attendance were
Sponsored by the executive club, whose members are the presidents of various clubs, the dance will begin immediately after the basketball game and last until 11 p.m.
Proceeds from the sock hop will be contributed to the htarcb of Dimes.
Other rdhners were high school and college girls from all over the state. Others representing Kettering were Linda Elliott, Pat Hark-ey and Sue Windeler, all in the 200-yard dash, and Paula Serra in the 60-yard dash.
Under the coaching of Jacqueline Puhl, ■ the squad practices ■four nights ♦ week;
By''JANET TISCH - traright to furnish money toward Seniors at Clarkston High|faJ“aHon ^'P School have been making plans, for the remainder of the school |P“'-year concernkig their class flow-
Pontiac- Northern, jiH lMst the district basketball tournament,
Ma?ch 5-7. This first in a series INFECTION HELD of eliminations matches to deter-1 vistors from the North Central mine the Michigan state cham- Association of (Alleges and Sec-pion will see BHHS play Pontiac ^ondary Schools came to Kettering Central as detrmined at the Tuesday to view the cafeteria.
drawing ’Tuesday.
’The eight.schools of the Wayne-Oakland County High SdMxd League will participate in a forensics meet April 6 at Jlorthville.
Die outcome of this evening’s the following groups: declama-jfairly evaluate the school for
Undo- the direction of choreographer Shirly Zikewidi the girls are working to perfect their routines.
NA'nONAL HONOR SOCIETY Names of those stu^nts having attained membership on the
National Honor Society were an-|	,	,	, s
nounced today. Some seventy-four Speakers from several QtherJ BHHS dci team placed first in pupils were nominated but only fields completed the list, with the Oakland County Hi* -S^l,	.	-
-15 n"	gaduaUhgjniany spacers having literature j Association ski meet at Mt. Holly BHHS^are^ Clarence Slocum and
classrooms and passing areas.
iBS^tion also included the school library and observation of student bebavior and citizenship. which will be noted on the final report.
Purpose of the tour was to view Students will speak in one of everday situationsin order to
representatives of the Air Force, game will determine the “Wayne- Uon, original oration, extempor-jeoUege accreditation.
Navy and the state police.
JOakland League champion.
aneous speaking and humorous or
interpretive reading.	j	njembers from the
class may be chosen.
availabta to the shidents.
Tour of Lansing Made by Seniors of Our Lady High
By DENISE SPRINGER Our Lady of the Lakes seniors had opportunity to leam more about Michigan government. Membm visited the capitol in Lansing Thursday on a guided tour of the House and Senate.
Math stadeaU Gary Hood and Joy Priemer, along with their teacher Nkhola Antakali, are taking'the computer course offered at the University ef De-
The program consists of numerical solution by digital computers of problems in c^in areas. The course is Feb. 23 through May 18.
Tryouts for Out Lady Bf the Lakes first musical took iMace during the past two weeks. Under the direction of M a u r i c e Cleveien and A1 May worm, “Meet Arizona’’ wiU be presented the latter part of April.
In his SUte of the Union massage President Kennedy revealed a special concern for the.prob-lem proented by those who drop
'Saturday.
Sponsoring the forensics at'ctals Athletic ^iatkm r”_	"...	_. -jlanged women faculty members
Glen Wooster.
suited in defeat for the seniors.
Fiiml score was 29-31.
Planning for the letter club ere Jodnna Lovett, Claudia Wagner, Sandra Fauble , Lynne Johnston, Pat Kiser, Mairlyn
“LAKERS CAPERS” - West Bloomfield students rehearsing for . the annual taleht siww are (left to ri*t) Sue Aumaugher

out of high school prematurely.| 1«0 Beverly Street, Sylv«n Like; Rkhud
McClurg Jr. of 6740 Commerce Road, Ordiard Lake; James Lawaon of 4951 Elmgate Drive, Orchard Lake; and John Kern of 44S0 Dow Ridge, Ordiatd Lake.
TrSt. Frederick's fiasSpposium
CoiiimoiL^iylarkiit and . U. S. Are Discussed
la Lane present a symposium under the direction of Sister Marylis I.H.M.
Main topic of discosaioB the European Economic Community and the United States. Terry Wright outlined nrogress of the market, giving a of the EEC and its expansion.
XSvia- Reehon- onninred the European Free Trade Association with the (fommon Market. Objectives, progress, problems and solutions, and the manner in which each functions were highlights of her speech.
Susan Cosgrove discussed problems of British entry into the EEC. Ecommic implicn-tions of enlarged Conunoa Market for the United States occupied much of Sheila Laae’s speech.
Tradie pdBcies, problems and mutual economfo dependence of the Community the United States were explained.
Gold Key Awards were given to Gary for a print and to Judy ir a oil painting.
Receiving certificates for outstanding works were Charles with an oil, Kenneth with a print and Karen with an opague water color.
Upon arrival of the new (Juill and Scroll pins, Kettering’s branch will be known as the John Steinback Copter of the National Quill and Scroll Society.
Nancy Gaukler discussed where the (fommon Market has been and where it is headed. Political integration and a discrimination of expansion highlighted her talk. SENIOR PLAY
Seniors have selected “White Sheep of the Family” for their senior play. Terry Wright was elected assistant director of the play, a story about a family of English crooks.
Auditions have been set for Monday with play dates on April 27 and 28.
At Clarkston High School
Seniors Plan Year-End Events
Fred’s senior Marl Higgins has been crowned as Queen of Hearte of, Oakland County. The contest was run on a vote basis with one penny equaling one vote.
- dance will feature hits of the
er, motto, colors, song, the senior trip and the upcoming dance.
All class members assembled in the Little Theater Wednesday for voting. Among the color choices presented by a com-mittee composed of MariEa forr‘, VkU Bnriey, Carl WU-beg and Ward Robbins, 'were
and green and white for colors.
Flower choices included the roue, lily of the valley and gardenia. “Climb Every Mountain,” Over the Rainbow” and “Somewhere” were choices for the class song.
Seniors will sponsor a dance
Approximately IIS seniors are awaiting the class trip, v^ich will take place in early April. ’The fivenlay trip will include a Greyhonad. bat tour. to Washington, D. C., where historical and modern land-will be observed.
A moonlight cruise down the Potomac River will be featured. Seniors will be staying in the Diplomat Motel near Washington for the majority of the trip. CONTESTS APPROACHING Forensics contests wiH be under way soon at Garkston as prepwations are iieing made for memoriation,.. interpretation and speech writing.
New Group at St. Michael's
BY fniXlAM O’NEILL Michael’s High School faculty will meet i»rents March 7 and 8 in the school hall to organize a hdme-school as^iatkm.
Rev. Dennis Harrity, assistant superintendent of parochial school in the diocese of Detriot will be the key speaker.
Intramural basketball for the
for Tu^ay and Friday. Teams are divided into groups according to ability and games are played according to regulation basketball rules.
Faculty member John Browa will act as referee.
In 3 Area Schools
■■ I
Students Busy With Activities
ROCHESTER
^WALLED LAKE
Brandon Senior Gets’ DAR Citizen Award
OXFORD
By SHAR(m MANN Bruce Marshall, a senior at Ok-
By BARBARA ,DUNFORD I BY SHERI JACKSON Tennis club members at Roch-! Improving reading and Mudy ftRa-High School hope to initiate habits is the purpose of an un-wro	bcnrot, recenuy
interchib competitidn in the near'usual course at Walled Lake High turned trom< twe^ay, expen^ future, according to club presi- School. Unlike most reading din- pad	Laboratories
By CHUCK CORNELL Marilynn Palshan, a senior, has been selected by the National Society of Daughta^ of the American Revolution as the DAR Good Citizen for Brandon High School.
dent Kirk Roose.
WUh social .
Alvin Bbirk^y at adviser, members occashmally practice in the school gym on Satorday.
Other ski club officers include Leonard Paddy as vice president and Edward Williams as snere-tary-treasurer.
ON THE AIR
Genesee chapter of the DAR
ics, this class was designed for d New Jersey, the averagejyKLgiftfd sbutent —Rroce was chosen for the Jrip^
who wishs to improve reading speed and comprehension.
’The half-semesta* course begins with a survey test which indicates the student’s reading level. Results are used to plan in-
seniors, following aa kMerview with a Ben Telephone repreoen-tative.
He was flown to New Jersey where he met some 60 other boys
dividual improvement pwms all -parts of the United
Students from th^ senior social
which 'enable each student to iproceed at his own speed.
is sponsoring a tea and program living classes will discuss “Are for good citizens Thursday. The Today’s Teen-agers Complacent?” state coherence oF Michigan Junior Town Meeting of the DAR meets in Lansing March IS, Air at SiwpSirWarclrZF.
14 and 15. March 15 is devoted Held in debate form, the dis-to good citizens throughout the cusslon wiU be taped in the U-
Students are acquainted with available reading and study workbooks, reading accelerators and timed reading exer-
Btote, who win be entertained at brary prior to the performance, a luncheon as guests of the state] ‘Con’ debaters include WiUiam !Day, Donna Bremer, Laureen rmrtnns BF'rKTVR	jKoslba luid David Smith. The
LINIORS REGISTER	*«pro! side- comists of Patti Bird,
Some .29 juniors have registered	Barbara Dun-
to toke the National Merit Sdwl-
’The textbook “How to Improve ^r Reading,” by Paul Wim
arship qualifying test ’Tueaday.
Brandon cheerleaders win sponsor an sftN'-game dancp fbQow-
ford.
Four of thi^ wUl debate with otiiers asl^ questions from the floor.
This controversial subject has
debate practice.
contains group excerdses allow students to compare/their improvement with othm/]^ the class.
This reading impreveniait class is popnlar with college b a a a d ztadeats with readiag speeds of lets than five hna-
The course makes it possible for them to double or triple their still retaining or improving a high comprehehsioo '
States.
A visit to the United Nations buildipg when they spent a few hours in New York was a highlight of the trip.
^three sok^ and two enamn-M pxHips from Chderd ffigb SdxwL ptu^ipated in the recent annual vodd solo and ensemble festival held at Pontiac Central High School.
’The three soloists were Norma Geisler,. Mary Stewart and lawreace Dallack. Al throe received one ratiap, highest gives At dtoral feotivMs.
One of the two ensemble groups that participated, the senior gvb’ ense^le, also received a superior rating. The mixed enaemUe a rating of two.
B—2
:r-
THE yONT|^4.C PREgS, FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 1968
'62 Prq^ram Tofak $5.1 Million
City Jncreqses Capital fmprovements
Pontlac’i capital in^roveuMfit year before^ 1.02 miles and IHVgram was about $500,000 above the 1061 program, according to figures prepared by City Engineer Joseph E. NeipUng.
Last year’s program totaled |i.l -iniiiiea, The IMl program amooBted to an esthnated Hi
Major reason for'the increase was the beginning of Pontiac’i
Blacktopping, last year, mOes, IlMiM; the year fore, 1.0$ miles, $tl,IH. Cohibined sewers, last.
1.5T miles, 177,000; the year be-
fore, 2 miles, $120,000,
Storm sewers projects year, 1.50 miln, $28,000; the.
$3.9 - million water system im- before, 2.55 miles, $65,000.
provement project.
The annuai report traditionally lists total cost for a project in the year the Job begins.
SION — A broken leg is no ^ing school lessons, so they’re ' 11 Newhouse, 9, of 464 Town-
send St., Birmingham, by Mrs. Helen Brand-dius tfne of Oakland County’s seven traveling teacners.
way last fall and is dae f o r completioB by Jniy 1, It is being financed by revenue bonds to bp' paid off daring a lb-year
dll C/iaraes Drug Board
County Gives Shut-Ins a Break
Bone Up on Studies at Home
The total also includes some $388,000 for lighting and widening runways and taxiways at Pontiac Municipal Airport. The city paid 25 per cent 6f the cost with the rest coming from state and federal funds.
It's the
fqr Oakland County Board of Education's homebound teacher program.
Twelve of the 82 children currently taught by seven traveling teachers are home in casts, according to the program's coordinator, Mrs. Marguerite Phelps.
“There were only four a month ago,’’ says Mrs. Phelps, of 3614 Bacon -	- - -
IMiiscular more children at heme than any other dironic ailment, according to Mrs. Phelps’ records. There are 11 victims of the disease on homebound rolls.
for''instruction, and they must be mentally normal.
Pontfac, Royal Oak, Hazel Park and Ferndaie school districts have their own teachers for honoebound children. ’Their pro-granw are iinanced, however, by the County Board of Education.
The county board’s staff averages 600 to 1,200 miles a
con St., BcrkW. dysfrophy keeps
Birth defects, hepatitis and rheumatic fever account for five each.
REWARDING FIELD “It’s the most'Tewarding field in teaching,’’ says one of the sUff, Donald Fillmore of 1851 Parks Road, Oakland Township.
Fillmore says he will never forget his first home call.
“I was driving down the street looking for the right house number when I saw a little girl watch-
ing out a front Window. . ___she ,, attended _ Aahi.Wednesday
“I knew from the light in her eyes that this was the house. I didn’t even have to look at the number.	- .
‘"rhe youngster who has* to
to see us come,” Fillmore says. THEY ‘KEEP UP’
’The county’s homebound teacli-
ers visit their pupils twice a week for an hour’s instruction each time.
............±.
Nevertheless, the youngsters
keep up with and sometimes even surpass their classroom contemporaries, Mrs. Phelps sayy.
“In a classroom of 27, few * can receive as much as two hours of individual attention a we^," she explains.
Children enrolled in the program must ex^t to be out of school more than two months.
“They must have a doctor’s certificate that they are well enough
school buses run.
For comparison, the 1961 total consisted nuinly of the city’s H-bmiliion sewage treatment plant and $4S6,IM central fire statio!|,
Last year’s total investment ’They visit pupils every day that I	city funds, state and
ttMtb wbil# mftkliif..........tbcjr
Twelve children is considered full load for one traveling teacher 12 different curricu-lums for children of varying* grade levels and ability.
Query Parolee
in
Says Pal Killed Teen for Resisting Advances
MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (UPD-Police today Investigated a young parolee’s tearful story that a friend killed pretty 15-year-old Myy Louise Bell for reaisting his advances in a wooded lovers lane.
Mary Louise, described by i former teacher as "a lovely girl,’ was coaxed or forced from,i baby-sitting Job a few hours after
services and was beaten an slashed to death.
Her body, in a tan coat, blue skir^imd white tennis shoes, was found face down in'ihe snow by
a man waUcinrhis dog in rolling St, Waterford Township, har
Minnehaha Park.
A pathologist said she had been stabbed more than SO times, her throat slashed and she had been beaten. She was not raped. • Ronald Leroy Steeves^l9,
■'trinnwible Tw c"
theft, fnw St. Cloud State Reformatoryr'Sdmittod he was 4t the scene of the slaying but named an 18 - year-old companion as die killer.
Police searched for the suspect, reported carrying dynamite, who also were along. All three wire reported seen together in a car yesterday.
Mary’s sister, Patricia, 15, who formerly dated Steeves, tearfully confronted him during questioning and urged him to tell the truth.
PratUc Frua PhaU
The 87-year-old chancellor, who spoke in a firm voice but leaned wearily on the speaker’s stand, said the Paris-Bonh pact has BEGINS 99th YEAR i- Choosing candy from-one of her -bething^a^ ^with other such ie-IbFthday gifts is Mrs. Mary L<^art7(^eh!Iy'T6Siding with cent occurrences as France’s her daughter, Mrs. Alfred B. Coleman of 2395 Mann RoatL Mrs. veto of British membership in Lenhait observed her 98th birthday this week.	|the Common Market
Included are paving, sewers, curbs and gutters, drains, grading and graveling, blacktopping, >|and sidewalk construction, as well as park improvements.
PROJECT BREAKDOWN The following is a breakdown || of comparative work estinutes and costs.

EAGLE — Fourteen-yedr-old Thomas Rohrer has become the first to attain the rank of eagle in the 14-year history of Boy Scout Troop 57, Stringham School. Rohrer, 4699 Westlawn
been a scout four years. He is in the ninth grade at Waterford High School.	^
French Pact
Not Related to pther Alliances—Adenauer
BONN (UPI) - The BundesUt (Senate) gave speedy first-reading approval to the FfChch-Ger-man “friendship treaty” today aftep- Chancellor Konrad Aden-declared it would not affect West Germany’s .r«H»nsibilities
to its other Allies.
Legislators representing 7 of West Germany’s 16 states voted in favor of the treaty. Representatives of the other 3 states did pot vote.
Adenauer, addressing the Bun-desrat (Senate) for the first time since 1953, called for speedy ratification ot the treaty without amendment in what he said are the interests of West Germany, France, Europe and wbrld peace.
“This is not a pact between two old men — (French PresU dent Charles) de Gaulle and Adenauer,” the chancellor aaid. ‘It is a pact between two peoples.
“It does not affect our responsibilities in any other pact, either in the European Eco-0 m i c Community (Common Market) nor in NATO (the Atlantic Pact)?*’
federal funds, special assessments Tiald by property owners and expenditures by developers and private citizens.
Sanitary sewers, last year,
.93 miles, $27,111; the year before, 1.62 milnes, $41,660.
developers and commercial es- strudipn . valued at $6,756,9^. ...... . .. ... _____________________#11 #0#
Curb, gutter, grade and gravel projects, last,^ear, 11.35 miles,| $258,060; the yctar before, 4:58 miles, $379,000.
Sidewalk construction and re-
ftliiirW.W; me year before, .20 miles,$3,721.
Not included in Oe above fig-nrds is some |6i,666 for 7.5 miles of sidewalk repairs and constmetion by private citiaens.
tablishmqnts, it no cost to the city,
The year before, some $74,000 was spent on 5.61 miles of new sidewalk at no cost to the city. OTHER IMPROVEMENTS Another tt e m 1teT li3uddd’
Permit fees totaled $11,296.
The year before, there wore
above is some $86,000 worth of
IW F
timatod $6,121,966 worth of o itmction. Fees that year totaled
$11M
was one naore plumbing
Job somewhere in the city last
equiponent and improvements at city i^ks.. .
In a d d i t i 0 n, the City purchased a $56,666 opUon on 65 acres of property for a future park on Galloway Lake.
Tte adoption of a new building code'lut-year resulted in an increase in fees for building permits.
year.
Some 1,125 ptambing permits were issued last year compared to 1,124 in 1961. Permit fees totaled $9,257 and $9,$JI the year before.
With Power Abuse
LANSING (R - Charges of power abuse and discrimination have been lodged against ‘ the State Board Pharmacy as the result of a on^man fact-flnding inquiry into the controversial Su-perX drug licensing case.
In a report filed with the Michigan Supreme Court, Cir-ciUt Judge Creighton Coleman id. of Calhoun County said Hie board was unreasonably slow and unfair in denying a pharmacy license to the discount drug store chain owned by the Kroger company last year.
Testimony in hearings, he said, revealed that the board denied the license last Sept. 26 fw alleged violations of which some of its own members, also pharmacists, were guilty.
Coleman was appointed by tiie high court to conduct an inquiry into the case after the Kroger firm filed'A petition seeking to reverse the licehse denial ruling.
Pontiac surgical chiropodist Dr. Hubert H. Curson has been named to the steering committee to screen membership applicants to the American College of Foot Surgeons.
Paving and recapping, last year, 1.94 miles, $206,000; the
Local Group Plans Dance
The Pontiac League for the blind will sponser a “Can-Can” Dance Saturday at 8 p.m. at the VFW Hall, 321 Union Lak«.Road, White Lake Township.
Admission charge will be three cans of food per person.
, Coleman summed up his report by saying that, if he were asked to make a final decision on questions of law in the case,* he would St the state board was guilty of abusing its powers.
*Tt clearfy held the plaintiff (SuperX) to ‘standards’ not practiced by members of the board, not ‘believed in’ by the board, discriminated against the plaitiff and did not grant a fair hearing,” Coleman said. According fo the report. Pharmacy Board Chairman I%ilip Cowan of Highland Park and member Frank Reilly — both of whom are registered i^mrmacists — testifiW they had filled orders for barbiturates without written prescriptions within the last year.
All “ptoceeds” will go to Wei-
Grand Rapids.
The orchestra 18 being furnished free by the American Federation of Musicians Local in Pontiac. _____
Area Lions Clubs are also giving their support.
Similar unwritten orders at the
Home for The BfiSi In SupfXPattle (Teeing
man’s report said, were the only reason stated by the pharmacy board for denying the license.
Seveal doctors testified In the hearings, it said, that the phoning of prescription orders to drugstores was “common pi'actice.” The report added that no oth-
er firm has ever been denieil a license for the same reason.
Name Chiropodist to College Group
and decline U fees was reported by the heating inspector.
'Reports from the inspection ..jtlon clearly indicate the adjustment of pertnit fees,” said NeipUng.
“Revenues are in a more reasonable relationship to vaine of work performed than in prior years.”
While construction value dropped some $2.3 million last year, permit revenues were off only about $500.
There were 1,403
t year for eon-
A simllAi Jncrease to permiU line hi fees
iinifo Issuein . to 1,234 in 1961. However, fees were only $8,891 in 1962 compared to $9J»2 the year before.
The reason is that fees are based on the size of a Job. 1%e permit fee for a single major Job can exceed 16 permits fees for smaUer Jobs.
In ail last year there were 8,-948 permits, registrations, examinations and Ucenses issued, And $37,619.95 in fees collected, com-paied to 5,535 and $38,703.91 the
(torson, 48, with offices at 157 j W. Huron St., received the ap-, pointment while attending week-long conference of the organization in New Orleans, Feb. 19-26.
He presented a taUc at the meeting on new surgical approaches and inciskms on the feet
Veto Shelters Under Ramps
DETROIT (UPI) - Federal and state officials have turned thumbs down on a suggestion that bomb shelters be fouiR under ap-’ proach ramps along the Chrys-
nOW iinrfpr mnglnip.
tion in southeastern Oakland (bounty.
Sgt. Charles Young, Haze Park civU defense director, said he received letters from the Federal Highway Administration and the Michigan Highway Department vetoing his suggestion.
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b
1/
THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, MARCH T. 1963

Addresses Education^ Group
Speaker Supports Childhoods Experiences
Let’s stop pushing and pressuring children at home and sdMMl, and give them time to “savor ^ experiences they should.’’
This plea was made by Erma Noble, speaker at the annual dinner of the Association for'Childhood Education 4ACE)-last night.
Miss Noble, who came from Grand l^pkb for the eVent, is international vice president of ACE. In April she will become the first Michigan resi- ' dent to hold the ^office of international president. %e was introduced by Mrs. C. J. Watson of Saginaw, state ACE president.
Children are not lasy. Miss Noble said. They need to be
so that a quickening desire for learning becomes permanent.
Adults in the home must' take time to teach children how to be useful so that they develop a respectaUe ]4ace Jor themselves in family life.
Miss Noble also tra<^ the growth of ACE from its beginnings in Saratoga, N.Y. In 1892. She reminded her listeners that local branches reflect interest in welfare of children by being alert to jriiysical, emotional and intellectual needs, and by asking what can be done to make a,, better wwld for young cKi-
Mrs. Harold Muldowney, a past president of ACE, gave
As Jackie's Social Aide
Tuck to Take Tlsh’s Job
Womien s. Section
Talks on Constitution Not Polite .	to Refuse
to Women Voters This Offer
- Bontlac attorney JRi^rd--Kuhn addressed the local branch. League of Women Voters, Wednesday evening in the YWCA building on Franklin Boulevard.
He compared present con-rstitutional provisions vtith those of the proposed document on “County Government and County Home Rule.’’and touched on^the selection, or-ganizatiin, ‘jwwers and functions of charter commissions.
The new law, retains'tra-__■ ditional forms of county,
village" mia'^fynibmhment
along with related constitu-t i 0 n a 1 provisions. Greater
WASHINGTOJf (UPI)-So-clal power at the White House is moving from Ush to Tuck.
The change will take place pt the end of May when dynamic social secretary Le-llUa (Tish) Baldridge moves on to the Merchandise Mart, Chicago, a Kennedy family enterprise. Taking over the Job at the. White House wiU be First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy’s finishing school classmate Nancy Tuckerman. * * ★
It is the social secretary who sends out the proper invitations to the proper people for many affain, plans the gourmet menus, lines up the entertainment and keeps her hand on the rudder to see that White House parties sail smoothly.
Letters that flow in to Mrs. Kennedy, S-year-old Caroline and ^year-oki John Jr. are
Announce
Arrivals
Mr. and Mrs. George F. Heine Jr. of Draper Avenue (Nancy Dickinson) announce the birth (d a son, Christian Freeman, Feb. 9 at St. Joseph Mercy Hoq>ital.
A son, Douglas was bom Feb. 19 gt Fad Hospital, Detroit, to the Don Baldwins (Denise E. Baldwin) of Birmin^iam.
Gives Lesson on Carpeting
Mrs. Wilbur Ott gave the lesson on “Purchase and Care of Floor Coverings and Carpeting’’ for the Inter-Lakm Extension Group, Wednesday in the Murphy Avenue home of Mrs. John McConnell. Preceding the luncheon, , Mrs. Percy Rose reported on “Marketing” and Mrs. Francis T. Lohff on “Safety and Health.” Mrs. Mason Rich was chairman for the day.
Hostess for the March 27 meeting will be Mrs. (Jueh-tin JL-f ‘	'
Road.
handled by the social secretary.
It is the social secretary who calls on Cabinet wives to pinch-hit for the President’s wifr at various social functions. The secretary herself often filis in at public affairs where the presence of a White House representative seems important.
PROJECTS UiAGE In short, it is she who projects the social image of the White House. Judging by that standard, “Tish*’ Baldridge caq make her exit with a grs^ bow for helping White House social affairs to gain world fame f«r their cultural and Intellectual tone.
She is a powerful personality. She brought new ideas to the Executive Mansion and gave the White House a tre-mendous social boost.
at the American Embassy in Rome when (Hare Boothe Luce was ambassador. She also served- at the embassy in Paris. Her sdiooling was the same as the First Lady’s — at Miss Porter’s School, Farmington, Ckmn., and at Vassar.
★ w *
She wiU be turning over her desk to another Miss Porter’s product. Nancy Tuckerman, known to friends as “Tuck” or “Tucky,” is re-
ity to Tish in many Ways. She looks forward excitedly, and naturally a bit nervously, to the coming days in the White House.
She attended a White House state dinner for the first time last Januaiy and was awestruck.
She is tall, very good looking with blue eyes and ash blond hair. She has great fashion sense like her new boss and longtime friend, the First Lady.
ROPES FROM SCRATCH Miss Tuckerman is going , to have to team the ropes from scratch. But Tish has sbt a pattern she hopes to follow.
Tuck admires her predecessor’s social talents and achievements as an author. She sununed up her admiration' recently when she com-—mentod; T only wish I ha' written 'Roman Candle.’ ”
rwtue Pr»ii Pli»t0
. At the rmnml dinner of the Association for Childhood Education (ACE) held Thursday night at ^ MeCarrotl School, members and guests were welcomed by president Ophelia Harmon
But Forgot Gome Laws
(right). Mrs. John Buchanan, Sylvan Lake (left), was dinner chairrrian md Erma Ndbte of Grarid Rapids^center), the after-dinner speaker.
Aunt’s Husband Hunter
HJnit Hears Director of Hospital
Director of occupational therapy at Pontiac State Hospital, Mrs. Robert McCurry, was guest speaker at the Tuesday evenidg meeting of Beta Omega chapter of Lambda Chi Omega sorority.
Mrs. McCurry spoke of the history of the hospital and the expansion of its depart-
By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: I have an aunt who is a S$-year-old perpetual husband - hunter. She saw a man who works with me. She liked, his looks
saw him night and day and even went on weekend trips with him. '
When she pre^ for marriage, he told her he had a wife from whom he was only
gion wouldn’t sanction ,di-.. vorce.
My sunt is broken-hearted and her whole fanuly is blam-ingme for this mess. Was it my fault?
GOOD INTENTIONS
DEAR GOOD: When a man tells you he is unopairied, you have a right to assume he is. You were responsible for introducing them, period.
If a 38-year-okl “husl^nd-hunter” wants to play the game, it’s time she teamed the game laws.
WWW
DEAR ABBY: If your husband came home with the odor ct perfume on his shoulder, whidi you have none of, would you assume he had been close enough to some-(Hie to have had the odor mb off on him? Or would you say he had to have some-
READY TO FILE
Waterford Township Faculty Wives participated in an art workshop Thursday evening at Pierce ' Junior High School. Mrs. Shelton Root, art consult-
ant for the elementary schools (center), sKows Mrs. Robert Elliot, Easy Street (left), and Mrs^PauJ Ripley, Dill Road (ri^), how to do “foarnglas** Sculpture,
DEAR READY: He could be innocent. The head on your shoulder is the one you have to worry about. Don’t lose it.
WWW
DEAR ABBY: A couple of months ago I attended a big churdi wedding and reception. The bride wore a beautiful triiite gown and veil.
Six months later the brkte gave birth to a nine-pound baby boy, so I know she must have been expecting at the time of the wedding.
They tell me that this is being done all the time. Is this true, or am I behind the times?
JOAN
DEAR JOAN: You are not behind the times. Some babies times.
WWW
DEAR ABBY: Apropos the woman who felt “unloved” because her husband never said “I love you”: My sister and I recently asked nnbther to teU us about her courtship days, wrhether Dad , was romantic, and how he proposed to her.,
She replied: “Your father never said much, and he never once came out and said, ‘I love you.’ And this is how he proposed, ‘Well, do you want , to get married or. don’t .you?.’ ”
Maybe flowery speeches don’t mean mu^, because mom and dad have been happily married for 38 years.
THEIR DAUGHTERS
w w w
,DEAR ABBY. I am 17 and h&ve started to like girls. My {Mx>btem is T d«»ce. I would like to lean how to dance from the nicest girl I know but I am not sure how to go about it. '	‘
Should I invite her to my home, or should I go to her home?.! have very few dance records and riie has many.
Red Women 100 Years Old
MOSCOW (UPI) - The Soviet Union has 16,276 wom-en over lOD years oW, according to a new book called “Women and CJiildren in the U.S.S.R.”
WWW
'X review of the book hy the official Tass news agency yesterdSy said that Of that number, all but 3,524 live in rural areas. The average life expectancy of women in toe Soviet Union was said to be 72 years.
Join Figure Club
Mrs. Victor Muscat and Mrs. Victor Muscat Jr-were welcomed Thursday into the Fashion Your Figure Qub at the Adah Shelly Library.
Should I invite her to my home and tell' her to bring her records?
UNINFORMED DEAR UNINFORMED: No. Tell her you’d like to team how to dance, and let her take it from there. She’ll probably invite you to' her home. If she doesn’t — ask the next to the'nicest girl you know.
ments.
w w • w
Plans were made for a party on March 21 at Irirst Federal Savings of Oakland building.
Mrs. Frank Mulholland and Mrs.-/James Hudson were' elected as delegates to attend the state convention in Ann Arbor.
Mrs. Richard Eryin opened her Sylvan Lake home for toe affair.
The Peirce E. Dal-rymples of Rochester 'announce, the engagement of their daughter Leslie Anne to Jon Raymond Fdlmitier„ son of the C. Harold Palmitiers of Williams Lake Road. The bride-elect attended Michigan State University, where .her fiance, received his. degree. A June wedding is plarv-ned.
-strei^th and flexibility are provided in giving these clttr— tered units power to levy ..taxes other than property taxes for maintenance. They would be also privileged to cooperate with pthw government units on common problems.
STRESSES HOME RULE “Retention of home rule for cities and villages and the liberal organization of city, village, county and township courts pf law was stressed, al.<M toe proposed extension of county officers’ term from two to. four years.
State Item II chairman, Amy Krueger, defined the state league’s item study of the metropolitan area and the league’s concern, after much research, with a solution to existing problems.
Laura Belz, state league treasurer, reported on activities J)tJhe_ilakland County Coordinating Committee for tfte new constitution, with ein-phasis on future plans.
President, Mrs. Lillian Davidson announced the Pontiac league’s presentation of an educational program on theinew document to be bronght before the Pontiac PTA Council Tuesday evening in Wisner School.
\ - ■ Sorqrify Plans
Attendance at State Meeting
Final plans were made for attending toe state meeting in Ann Arbor Sunday at the Thursday evening meeting of Beta Theta fchapter of Lamb-' da Chi Omega Sorority.
Mrs. Melvin Small opened the dessert meeting with Mrs. Harold Sells and Mrs. Hazel Pierce as coh^tesses.. ,,
See Arranging of Flowers
- -Mrs; OBver demonstrated flower arrangement technique , to members of Zeta Eta chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, Tuesday evening in her flowac shop on West Huron Street.
The group completed plans for the March 20 fashion show and card party and welcomed Mrs. Gerald Bidwell, Mrs. John R. Edwards .and Mrs. William iJ. Yates as guests.
By Hie Emily Post Instltiite
..(j:- Last Sunday, before ........
going out to dinner, my hus-* band stopped off at a busiitess associate's house to discuss something of importance that came up.
I waited outside in the car. Evidently my husband men-’ tinned this to his friend because shortly afterwards his wife catne out and asked me to come into the house.
I said, “No thank you, I’ll wait here.” When my husband came out he said that I -was -veigf rude-Jo. lei^ come into the house.
These ^ple were perfect strangers to me and I saw no poipt in going in. Will you ■please telLme if I was wrong?
A: As the wife took the trouble to come out to invite you into the house, it was. I’m sorry to say, not very polite of you to refuse.
* * * '
Q: I plan on going to an-^ other city for a few days. I will be staying at a hotel.
How do I contact a man 4 know who lives in that city and who has asked me sevw-al times to get in touch with him should I ever come there?
Would it he proper to write and tell him when I am coming and have him contact me, or should I telephone him when I arrive?
A: Write and tell him that you plan to be in his city for a few days and give him the dates you will bp there and alw the name of the hotel at which you will be staying. Then if he would really like to see you, he will get in touch with you at the hotel.
* * *
Q: Is it correct to put a title before one’s name on return address of an envelope? I have been told Uiat you said it was wrong to write one’s own name with title prefixing it.
A: To prefix one’s signature with a Utte is very bad taste, but to use a title when writing a retam address is entirely corrwt and shows the person receiving the letter how you are to be addres-.sed.........	^
The clothes worn by th^ bride and groom as well as those worn by their attend-ents are described in the new Emily Post booklet entitled, “(nothes of the Bridal Party.” To obtain a copy, se^ 10 cents in coin and SFiM-addressed, stamped envelope to the Emily Post Institute, in care (rf The Pontiac Press.
CLOSE-OUT SALE OF FINE DINNERWARE
Choice of Over 300 Pt^terns
16-Piec.e Sets. Service for 4
from $2.95
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from $9.95
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Hie diamond which is a token of yonr lore shonld b« beantifnl and flawless. Sise is not of the greatest . importance • • • quality' is all-important. Nothing but the	flawlw diamond) ia good enou|^ for her.
The Store When Quality Counts
Pontiac*s Oldest Jewelry Stan ,
28 Wjpat Haron Street	FE 2-72S7
^	'B-4-
TKE POyTiAC PRESS. FRIDAY. MARCH 1, 1968
The United Siates, Mvo’ingi Europe which contain 828,000 jiboot 3.6 miUiOn SQuare niilea, is aqinre miles. Russia, however, laiger than the 15 countries of lembraccs .7,877,598 s({uare miles.
'Pti^ tviAM^n
Spring Decorating Time
1807 UPHOLSTERIf FABRICS
Nylon, Rayon. Cotton and Velvet, (lil color*!
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w "mi/azi
HONE DELIVERY!
NZZA:
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1.70
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•	Spegbeni • Rsviele • Lesegne
•	CMckan •Shrimp •Sandwiches
I AII^C CARRY-OUT ond DELIVERY
laWW d	2897 Orchard Lake Rd., Kaci#
Tuat., Wad., Thwrt., Sun. 3 p.m. »e 12 p.m. PHONE Friday and Saturday—3 p.m. to 2 a.m.	. 682*4920
I	Polly's Pointers _____
ji Put Damp Ironing Out
By POIXY CRAMER
^ DEAR POLLY Here is a laundry lip I use all winter .* long. I put the wash basket of sprinkleci-tlothes on the ^ outside porch for an hour before 1 start to iron.
This gives the clothes that fresh, clean, “outdoorsy” i smell, almost as though they had been dried outside.
MRS, I.
★	★ e
DEAR POLLY^ — You have a buiit-in ruler for use when transplanting plants arid flowers if you paint lines with red nail .polish‘six inches apart aloiig the handle of_ '	•" ’•“"'■"MRS. X.
l-i	ir-k-k
DEAR POLLY — Water spots on my new stainless steel sink and chromium faucets were '‘bugging” me until I discovered that a wipe with a cloth that has been sprinkled with a few drops of vinegar will remove thein completely.
It also removes the dried lime deposit that collects around my faucets.	MRS. K. C.
★	★ w
DEARJ^OLLY — I .purchased a small ledger, with an , index, for less than a dollar. 7 checked on my income tax form all the deductions, we may take and listed them alphabetically such as automobile expenses, tdnr!tie>;~dbctors, - dividends Iiibt a deduction but necessary fo^ tax purposes).
' etc.
When I pay any listed items I enter them from my check stubs arid mark tHbrH with the letter R (for recorded). At the end of the year, I simply add up each page and turn it over to my husband for the tax return. M^. R. J. S.
Share your favorite homemaking ideas . . . send them to Polly in care of The Pontiac ^ess. You'll receive a ' bright, new silver dollar if Polly uses your ideas in Polly s i Pointers.

Reconsider Viewpoihf of Dining Ell
* The visual size of a living room can be almost doubled by oon-aidoripg the dining ell from a fresh viewpoint. Rather than decorate the ell as if it were a full dining room, realize thai the architect felt the visual size of one area should be increased by the other.
No sdggested or invisible wall jquld byaaited. cittier wMi a roomdivwer or the delineation caused by sharp contrasts in color, styles or proportion. •
* * *
.^WUte walls and white flooring throughout add to the Illusion of space; but it la the use of furniture, harmoaioua in styling and tiU, that really provides the unity and continuity.
I The staid English game of troduced in the 1880s. Teams cricket has been enlivened Western Samoa, where it was i
Open Tonight Until 9 P.M.

Spring
Costume
Styled in California
29
95
Arnel stripe dresh with solid linen coat. Two styles; one has a button * full length coat, the other a seven-eighths cardigan style coat. ’Blue, green, blcfck.
The Gaucho
The .news Is the dual look—smart mixings of dolor and textures by DeLiso Debs.
.Choose from Black patent with block matte calf. Block patent with gold piping or brown potent with bone calf.
Sires 5 to 10 AAA to B widths
Matching Handbag -Available.
HURON at TUEGRAPH Mon., Thors., Frl. 10 to 9-Tues., Wed., Sot. 10 to 6
for days amid a carnival air.
field 10 to 300 players mstead of the customary 11. Contests last i black, as Ts the cocktail table
The dining table has the same low center of gravity, and because it suggests a standing in-vitatkHi to a quick game or anaok, it is in appearance a fiart of the living room,
* k k
TUs is also true af the brunch chairs which are -both comfortable and low enough to “fit” in the living room when extra chairs we needed.
Unity need not sacrifice variety. The sofa, tables and chairs are a warm Batik walnut; the marble-top. sideboard is antique
with a white leather top.
Hare a Silver Treat On Us
El
1Q47 ROGERS BROS. America's finest Si/verp/ste Mai* By
•%- THE INTERNATIONAL SILVER OOMPANY
MARCH SPECIAL
A SIX-PIECE PLACE SETTING (ICnife —Fork — Salad Place Spoon and 2 Teaspoons), IN ANY OF THE BELOW PATTERNS
Reg. $11.25.
FOROI4LY
Gleaming family! silver .. . for that added touch of elegance her "new" home!
The dining ell is furnished in a manner that makes it seem like a separate room, ytt be a part of the living room.
The furhitUre from Shalimar, by Thomasville, and is available locally.
Exercise Will Help
Your Thighs Out-Sized?
BY JOI9EPHINE LOWMAN Lower them to the floor. Contin-Tbigha cause many feminine
sighs. Many women have a lovely figure except for a bulge at the thighline. As I have said before, this happens because of muscle slump and fat dump.
Here is an excercise for this figure defect:
★ ★ *
bn your back with your ams resting on the floor, extending out from your shoulders, palms down. Lift your legs half way up (knees stiff). Separate your legs. Bring them together.
Of course, the glandular setup which we inherited influences the distribution d our weight Some women are prone to large hips, others to fat over_the abdomen and others to thuT'Bulge at the thigh.
Some women do not have a bulge, but have large thighs. I think the following excercise is very good for this defect and, for leg contour in general (it also gives the abdominal muscles a workout in a mild way.):
VERSATILE
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3 piece Relish Set
REGUIAR *6.75 VMWE
Sit OB the floor with your lep straight. Place your handi on the floor, slightly hehind you in a comfortahk position. Bend your leR knee toward yow abdomen. As you straiptea your left leg, bend your right knee. As yon straipten your right leg, bend yon Mt knee and so on. As one leg bends, the other straightens. Do this vigorously and point the toe as the leg straightens.
Here is a hint for those of you who sit at a desk for long periods of time. If you sit forward in your chair in a slumping position, with your knees slightly separated, you are much more apt to devekm what is called ‘‘The Of-"Xce Broadside?’^
Try this and notice the difference:
Sit with your hips against the back of the chair. Straighten your spine. Periodically lift youn» heeis from the floor fn |ment. This is splendid for the thighline as well as your circulation.	,	___
____-—w—*.............■
If you would like to have my excercises for the hips and the thighs, send a self-addressed mi-elope with your request fbr leaf-ftets Nq. 3 and 4 to Josephine Lbunnan in care of this newa-Ipaper.
ADAGIO
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or Kitchen KlatchesI
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nckie Fork and Pierced Relish Spoonpeired with divided crystal dish by Viking. Wonderful for relishes, jams, cottage cheese, olives, pickles, etc. 5 lovely patterns indud-RlflactiorL
LAYAWAY or BUDGET TERMS
dif^ty. A ptMto ot colon it lockod in uadar 'TSSTa Ziroon-hatd flaM...
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NOBTH END OF MIBACLE MILE MOPPING CENTEB ON TELEGBAPH ROAD
TELEPHONE FE 2-8642
Oyru Dully aiM RUhday It u.m. to I p.m.
Rub In the Dirt
When washing washable wall coverings, sure Itr rinse the I sponge often. Change clean suds and rinses as soon as the water becomes dirty. This prevents dirt being rubbed into the wall fabric or paper.
The. Oberammergau Passion Play performed in the .German village every 10 years started as a pledge made by the . peasants after a plague in 1633.
Enroll
NOW!
ULTRA MODERN METHODS W« T«och ond Do ADVANCED HAIR STYLING
Miss Wilson
Cloed WtdBOfdiy
POlWIAC
Boisty Collofo
’ MVk lAST HURON
JbioII Todoy PkoBo re 44154
Pahiad Iroapa's . . . 2ad Flob
I - -
I ].
y. A
tHE PONTIAC PRESS. rRlDAY. MARCH 1. 1&63
-A-
A.'"’ ■ ,
B—5 .
Dust G9vers for Clothes
end to slip ov^ the coa( hangar •Worn-out pillow cases makejhook.
stored in cloaets. Just cut a small hole in the cpnter of the
25th Anniversary Celebration
KINGSLEY INN
To Share in Our Celebration, We Offer A SPECIAL SILVER AmiVERSARY DllSISER
served daily $3.50
ASSORTED RELISHES SOUP DU JOUR or JUICE
Price l^ew Home Based on Gross Income
By MARV FEELEY
Dear Miss Febley: We’re considering buying a home, friends warn us we may find ourselves as strapp^ as they are. Before we fall in love with something we can’t afford, can yod tell us how much we should pay for a house on $8,000 a year?
I mn working at this point, and my kalary will go toward the pi^fhiir.
Mrs. John L., Albany, N.Y.
Dear Mrs. b.: It’s generally recommended that no more than
Unless the property could be used for track homes or othfr business ventures, a prosptetive buyer looks inside the house more critically than outside.
About all you can do is fight a delaying action — bury the garden tools.
Dear Mary Feeley: What do you suggest in the way of insurance for a single gal of 26 eamliig gW-'-pMcaedcr
CHOICE of ROAST PRIME RIBS OF BEEF AU JUS or BROILED CHOICE SIRLOIN STEAK
SPEQAL CLUB BAKED POTATO or FRENCH'FRIED POTATOES
none at all at this point.,
W. T. E., Hackensack, N.J.
cent of yonr income is a fair figure to use as a guide. This amounts to $3.28 per week. As for the kind of insurance, that
protection, security, or both.
If you have parents, or others who are dependent on you, you will want the most protection for your money:
Either straight life W tSe rale endewnraent could
give you the most protection at a low cost, ^stoviding yon with cash, value at age IS, if needed for your retirement.
I suggest you discuss Hie suIk ject with an insurance expert, who can best determinethe policy that fits Into yoiir budget, your daily living, and your future plaiB.
You can write ktory Feeley S n care of The Pontiac Press.
Hide Chip Marks'
Cover UP chipped plapes in the finiA of your stove' or refrigerator. Put clear nail polish and finely ground zinc white on the sq-atched marks.
MEET fo EAT	:
HIKER FoinfrAiN
In the lobby of the ROcer Building SSW.HmmST.
I N. SAGINAW ST.
PARK FREE V
Downtown
Dear W. T. E.: That’s a two-two and one-half p^rt question. How much can times your gfosstygy allocate for insurance? And annual i nco m ejy,hat do you want your should go into the to do for you' purchase -* -
[> SALAD' ROLLS and BUTTER COFFEE
MI 4-1400
FEED FOR BIRDS
in economical 25-lb. bags
WILD BIRD FEED,.............$2.39
MED. CR. CORN, WHEAT, MAIZE, 25 lbs. . $1.40
CORN, 25 lbs...............;$1.25
SUNFLOWER SEED, 25	lbs...$4.50
WATER SOFTENER SALT
CJIANULATED, 100 lbs. ...........$1.80
FLAKE, MEDIIJM, 100 lbs..........$2.15
PELLETS, 100 lbs. ... .........:.. .$2.15
KLEER No. 2 ROCK, 100 lbs........$2.15
LARGE SELECTION
PET FOODS-PET SUPPLIES
•
Free delivery any or^r over $5
REGAL
FEED and LAWN SUPPLY CO.
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home. On $8,000 a year, you could start shopping in the $20,000 range. With a mortgage of approximately $13,000.
Remember that in addition to the down payment — which would probably be one-third of the cost of the house — you’ll have other expenses to consider. Figure 4 to 5 per cent of the cost of the house per year will go for taxes, insurance and upkeep.
These figures are only a guide, but they will help you estimate hew much and bow long you’ll need to save before it makes sense to buy. Obviously, a lot depends on whether you already are overburdened with monthly payments on previous purchases and fvheth-er you have other financial commitments.
Dear Miss Feeley: My husband wants to put any extra money we have into buying shrubs and plants. I want to use it to make improvements inside the house. He sayb he’s improving the prop-' lerty, but the fact is he just loves to garden.
1 Don’t you think the condition nf the house is more important t^ the beauty of the grounds,
I for future sale purposes?
Mrs. Alma E., St. Paul, Minn. ★ ★ ★ ■
I Dear Mrs. E.: If you hdVe a Icompulsive gardener on you hands, you’re fighting a losing battle. But if it’s any consolation [to you, you have the real estate .man and the banker on your side.
'A homejn good repair, with an attractive new kitchen and bathroom, is certainly more I likely to get a mortgage.
“ SPECIAL SPRING mtlNG -
MINK STOUS
I HOLLYWOOD^
DEFIES THE LAW OF GRAVITY
withwwIghtlMS
stay there^
KNITS .
\S^
The adive knit that doflaf bra and girdle slip and slide...mark or ridel Famous Stay There* kpit comfort and control in styles to enhance every jfigure "underneath It alll” Shown: padded cot-ton bra, withiiiiy There back, AB32-36, 3.95. Leg-pantie, s-m-l, 5.95.
•	Whirlpool* bra, 2.50
•	Contour bra, 3.95
•	Front-closure bra, 3.5l9
•	Sports brief, 3.50
•	Extra long-leg pantie, 7.95
•	Stay There girdle, 3.95
•	Pantie girdle, 5.95
precious
prices
SALE
Happy harvest of fruits andji::::::: vegetables — grand color display ■■■ " for towels, cloth. Pattern 535; transfer four 8x10 inch motifs; di-|:i;i;:;: rections.	|
Thirty-five cents in coins for i tha pattern — add 15 cents lofjiiSi each pattern for first-class mail-ing and special handling. Send to|;i;i::i:
Laura Wheeler, The Pontiac,-S!;:
Press, 124 Needlecraft Dept., P.'iSii:	^	. ,
0 Box 161, Old Chelsea station,	Graduate Corseherer Will Assist
New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly	You to a Proper Fit.
PBttern number, Name, Address gx? and Zone.
The spring fashion that jops oil others . . . MINK ... the most elegant way to greet a new season. At dramatic savings^ . . . right now... elegant pastel natural minji;.
Fur products labeled to show country of origin of imported furs. Plus Federal tax.
Fur Salon—Second Floor
Sketched is out three-piece little suit-maker. Fully lined rayon and silk suit to greet the spring. Gay printed shell blouse matched to the jacket lining. Junior and misses' sizes.
Sporumar-Main Floor
Ease Impactof Hard 'No' to Early Dating
By MRS. MURIEL LAWRENCE child's friends tfiat she is proud dating in subduing your wife and i with comfor^ will determine rumr MrS	A	Idaughter, I suggest you consider eipectaUons-Of other memters of
Dear Mrs. Lawrence. A coupiej ^	^y^	your his sex.	^
of years ago my wife and I trouble to g«A to know them?'~jown objection Interesting and aul so I’d like to see yw mix agreed not to let our youngest] To help her organise parties?,tractive to them.	som? understanding of this girl-
daughter date until she entered:	To show her that your “No”	★	★	*	- child of yours with the firmness
high school.	‘•■‘“S does not Include an ( No girl child wants to think of of youT' “No” to outside dating.
Thoueh she is now onlv 13 she! •*'*’* “N®” *®	»'®H falser as an ogr?, you knOw.j I’d like to see you endorse her
In	dauclng and jrather Is First Man to her. desire fdr boys’ company-and
has got her mother to hacx down	13.yew.old fun? How he balances strength with forget that adjecUve “boy crazy.”
on this agreement.	H	«	*	*	kindness will be her measure of I’d like to see you get together
'	*	*	*	I Instead of using me to bolster jail subsequent men.	Iwith her and your wtfo «m pi«n. -
So 1 want to know if you thinkjy®'"’ objections to 13-year-oWi How he mixes disappointmentIfor home parties, that a bi^-o^ whose school ■ T	“	^	~~	^	■’ ' "	" ■
marks have started , slipping should be allowed to get into the boy-girl race at this age.
By siding with the girl, my wife has turned me into an 6gre| to my daughter.
Answer: Why do you let her do it?
You’re not an ogre. You’re a father who is concerned with I protecting his child’s childhood ! until time has made it more appropriate to eneer the “boy-j .girl race.”
1 Why do yim accept the character of a meah, snariidg anemyl of children?,	|
That’s the real problem:
Joins Chicago Famlty
Crow Thinks It s Human
High School in Chicago.
I The Mc-Uraths made
If you really trusted your sta^l y^TcIT
By I^iJJEORGE W. CRANE CASE CM71: Jackie was a baby crow, belonging-to the children of Spike McGrath, talented athletic coach at W a s h b u rn
against precocious dating, could win trust of it from daughter and wife. You would care enough about it to work out ways and means to make it acceptable to thepi.
I^’s sw if 4va «m do Just	“tuaUy
that.	'—
YoiAf	OHu^ntcr ■wftwtt' ■■■
her to see boys outside of her' home.	I
Are you willing to allow her to see them in her home? Are you willing to make yourself and your house so welcoming to your
DR. CRANE
a box and hand feed him till he got a little older.
prised fo SM this big black crow serving as a radiator cap.
At about 35 miles per hour, Jackie would let go of the radiator cap and fly upward. ThenjJie’d return home. GOES TO SCHOOL
One day he' accompanied the xhildren to^ school and even entered the classroom.
The teacher had to telephone Mrs. McGrath to come and get Jackie. So she drove over in the car af!d parked besi^ the window.
'The teacher. Lbea opeDed the window and Mrs. Mc-G r a t h called, so Jackie
<J{e.umod6
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Jackie than became a member of the McGrath family, and apparently believed he was a human being.
When Mrs. McGrath would be weeding her garden, Jackiq. would walk along beside her and pull weeds in the next row. _ .
Later in the summer, as she was searching for tomato worms, Jackie would also take -one row at a time and cock his head from side to side till he saw a big green tomato worm. Then he'd pick it off the tomato leaves and drop it on the ground.
When Spike would take a walk in the evening, Jackie would accompany him, just like a dog, and walk along at his side.
LIKFJ5 C01.0RFUL OBJFXTS
But Jackie was like most pet crows in having a fondness for colorful objects.
And Jackie’s greatest weakness seemed to be the rubber rings that serve as washers
hose to the faucet.
Wlrtn the neighbors would go out to sprinkle their lawns, the.se rubber rings were likely to be missing.
For, Jackie would steal them and take them up to the roof where he kept his treasures in the eaves trough. .
And when Spike would get into his auto each morning to .jiead to school, Jackie would sit oil. the radiator cap and hold on till Spike had the car up to 35 miles per hour.
Other motorists were sur-
perched on Mrs. McGrath’s shoulder.
She drove home with Jackie sitting there, while other motorists looked on in surprise.
Jackie would also accom-> pany the McGra^s to Champaign to visit Spike’s parents.
He’d stay in the car with the three McGrath children And when they’d ^top to get sodas, Jackie used his straw and sipped soda with one of the youngsters.
In fact, Jackie thought he was a -human being, so he even ignored wild crows and never attempted to join them. BABY SITTER NEEDED
But the McGraths had to have a baby sitter for Jackie so-they finally took him to one of the state parks where the caretaker's wife said she’d be happy to offer Jackie a home.
when you read the early book about “Tarzan and the Ap^s”, or the so-called “wolf boy” of India, don't think such tales are too
Animals and birds, if reared from infancy in a human environment, apparently think they are members of the human race, so maybe the reverse holds true.
It is not advisable to use 'French sjcams when sewing wash-The Richard K. Port- |Wear-cottons since double stitch-^ Koods of Barker Price an- jing^may cause the fabric to puck-' nounce tEe jengagement of their daughter Cheryle De^
Weice to Thomas Willard ’ inihger, son oj lard Winingers of Bicknell,
Ind.
Hav/e You Triod This?
Scrapple Is Interesting
By JANET WELL Pontiac Press Food Editor
l^s. Walter Smock who often calls and chats about food or sends me recipes suggests that Pontiac Press readers try Scrapple. She says it is a dish very few people make and one few of tjfie younger generation have even tasted. It dates back to' wvered wagon days.
Mrs. Smock enjoys wirking with >faer hands and .experiments with all kinds of handwork.
SC^PPLE By Mrs. Walter Smock 4 pounds pork	. ..
2 pounds beef '	'	" .
Cook together, cool and grind. Reserve liquid. Or you may stirt with, ground pork and ground beef.
Into 12 quarts of liquid put ground meat, 2 tablespoons salt, pepper and sage to taste. Stir in comroeal* to make a thick mush (it will take a pound or more).
. Cook-slowly,, stirring often,'for two hours. Pour into loaf pan and cool-^Slice ahd fry. Roll slices in flour for a brown, crisp look if you desire.
*You won’t have any lumps in the commeal if you mix it first with COLD water before adding to the hot liquid.
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7
THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. MARCH 1, 1963
JHUW
Uaispn Bailies of 87th Congress Seem Slightly Cooled
By WILLIAM F. ARDOGAST
WASHINGTON (AP) - Some key Democrats in Congress lieve President Kennedy’s legislative program would have fared better in the past two years if some of his liaison men had operated more adroitly;
'Diese Democrats are looking for more discreet teamwork in the 88th Congress,, and point to one smashing party victory already achieved to demonstrate the value of a more deft operation.
, ..-In every administration ft*8"We job of liaison men from the White iiouse and the executive agerrcies to try to get the Senate and House to pass hills recommended by the President.
From the viewpoint of every president, this is an extremely important job.
As for the outcome in the 87th Congress, aMch ended last fall, some party leaders are convinced the performance of the Kennedy liaison team was far from polished.
They think the situation may be improving. For example, the White House team was unobtrusive as the House Democratic leadership won enlargement of the key House Rules Committee on the opening day of the 88th Congress. The victory margin was much bigger than it was on the same issue two years earlier. discreetly BAdUTAGE
There were no White House troubleshooters in evidence at the Capitpl^when this year’s vote was taken. Any string-pulling was done backstage, discreetly.
While refraining from public criticism of the White House some Democratic congressional leaders in 1961-82 privately resented what they felt was too much’ intervention in legislative affairs by executive department experts.
‘ ■
Republicana and Southern Demo-crati. About IS of the 48 Democrats who kicked over the traces normally support the administra^ tlon.
downtown quarterbacks
’There were bitter commits that ni{^ as Democratk; leaders gathered privately to pick up the pieces and try to figure out what had happened. They blamed the debacle on, as one put ii. town quarterbacks who don’t know how to deal with Congress. ---------
While the farm bill was under consideration in the House, the corridors putskie the chamber were crowded at times with executive branch representatives. Among them were Secretary Agriculture Orville L. Freeman and Lawrence F. O’Brien, special assistant to the President. O’Bri-
oi, Kennedy’s No. f congressional troubleshpoter,'U8ed a nearby House reception room as temporary headquarters.
w ♦	★'
While O’Brien is credited by most Democrats with finesse and discretion, some of the others who engaged in the farm bill jockeying were reported to have been less diplomatic.
Members complained of being called off Uie House floor and be-
:0UND
if nets
ing told, either direcUy or indi-. rectiy« how they should vote. Some of the oldtbners told of having been reminded that the execu-
word reach the White HouseJhiti. After the farm bill up;et, the,compromises here tmd there, us-execuUve representatives should President fared somewhat bettw, ually with administration approv-stop their pressure practiceis or at a fact attributed by some leaders al, but always engineered by the least exert them less overtly. ’ to a White House decision to. let congressional leders.
Tiniing was an imporl^t factor the congressional pros call thej Democratic leaders, including in the farm bill outcomeTAs it was shots without backseat driving by the new House team of'Speaker
and such benefits as new public bulidings and other projects. LESS PRESSURE, JACK Wifhin 24 hours after the farm
live brancA^ controls patronageibill def^t, House leaders let the
earlier when the House killed the President’s proposal to create a department of urban affairs. In both cases, Jlw timetable was drawn up not by the House leadership but by executive re^gtesefit-
the executive departments. Ijohn W. McCormack pf Massa-*	*	*	I chusetts and Majority Leader Carl
As a result. Congress pushed |Albert of Oklahoma, are not ashamed of their record.
But they figure it would have bem better if the liaison men worked.with more finesse..
akmg some major reconunenda-tions of the President, Including some which had not appeared to have mudr diance. Ihiere were
Subways
/Symfunny
NEW YORK (UPD-Po-I lice had to be called to assist transit authorities Wednesday in putting down a brief revolt op a - subway train.
The train, with about 3,000 passengers aboard, ; developed mechanical ; trouble during the morning rush hour.
Subway personnel tried ■ to get the passengers to ‘ leave, but few were persuaded to step outside in the ll-degTM weather.
’Die train was not emptied until police were , summoned to end the ) mutiny.
Ask Romney, Governors to Gettysburg Event HARRISBURG, Pa. » -Gov. George Romney of Michigan and governors of 27 other sUtea have
Some harsh words have, been used in the legislative cloakrooms by veteran Democrats describing the activities of what they eali “Kennedy’s troubleshooters.” ’The comment included guCh words as brazen, .amateurish, dictatorial and insulting.	i
bi^Il^^bS"ii?^ participate in the when the House leadership withj^^n'f^^oration of the 100th an-some misgivings, brought to a|fliversary of the Battle of Gettys-. vote a new farm bill backed by I burg, the administration.
*	*	*	Pennsylvania’s' Gov, William
When die day. emled^i^^^^^	extended the in^tatiens
had been killed by a vote of 2151 yesterday to states who had to 205. The defeat was not en- troops participating in the Civil gineered by the usual coalition of |War battle.
YOU A2E INVITED TO A
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THE PQXTIAC rHEgS, FRIDAY, ^fAKCTT 1, 3963,
Relax! World Tensions Ar^ Back +o Normal THCrLDORADOEs
By JAMES MABLOW	lline can.
J AmocUM Press News Analyst .To show he looked upon the WASHINGTON - Dismay and British almost as intruders in Eu-disarray.	j™P«-	“anglo-sax-
Those two words paint a world
which all in few weeks changed from * cheery to bleary.
What looked nice turned to ice.
Peace became as ;;:AMptrerT^a:a; grease.
Talk-big, hot. critical, nagging, and some of it MARLOW just ^mbast — compounded the
and blackballed' membership for them in the exclusive jii-temational club called the Ck)^^ mon Market.
And, H this wasn’t enough to upset the alliance, he snubbed the United States by turning down Kennedy’s still-vague plan for aoioe .kind of MTO pobl of nuclear Weapons.
CRI-nCISM FLIES The British promptly criticized him. So did the-United States. And, as if things weren’t fouled
playing with a parked deck.. He had palled his. missiles out of Cuba but not thousands o^ Soviet' troops. So, it turned out, he wasn’t being so meek after all. w *	★
Republicans in Congress criticized Kennedy’s foreign policy. Democrats in Congress criticized J Republicans for criticizing Ken- ' nedv vvhich, they said, waa eerily contrary .to bipartisan foreign policy as they understood it.
-* -w- - -r--.— •The Red Chinese had been nagging their Russian friends for
talking peaceful coexistence and the. Russians,, nagged thep for being reactionaries for not want-ingit-	■ V ,
EARTHQUAKE FLOPS Western eyes got big with a luminous look;11iey envisioned a kind of Communist earthquake which would split apart the Communist world. The eyes clouded, however, when Khrushchev fell all over the Chinese ambassador
’Die Chinese,*wBo could recognize soft soap when they smelled remove some of his troops
it, nagged harder than ever. And two days, with almost strident csiticism, they showed they were not mollified at all.
Rigbt at this point Khrushchev announced Russia would defend Red China from atta^. This must have astonished the Chinese since nobody had been attacking them or even talking of it. It probably didn’t, change tbem.-* ★ 1 Meanwht^ iQirushchev had set tbe^Amerkans. to biting at oi^ I another by suddenly promising to
Cuba but not all. He didn’t have to be a magician to figure what came n^:
Demands in this countrr that Kennedy get the Russians out of Cuba although how he could do it without getting .into war with Russia is somett^ no one has explained yet.
★ H *	‘
While aU this got the ketUe boding like in the 01 (f e n days of a few months - ago, two planes, which the United Statn said had (S»’«"from	rflrttaeked a
shrimp-boat between this country Fidel Castro denied the
human predicament which for a up enough, the United States efiti-short time, as it turned out, hadxized Canada, -which had been seemed as quiet as a lily pad on!minding its own business, for hot a mill pond in the evening. using U.S. nuclear weapons.
It was only a few weeks ago —after’lYemier Khrushchev had meekly pocketed his Cuban missiles and shut his lip—that even President Kennedy was moved to think things might be g^tog bet-
’Then French President de Gaulle threw a matcl^ P the gaso- began to realize Khrushchev was
The Canadians criticized bacTc. And in England, meanwhile, Prime Mmister Macmillan was being criticized for accepting Kennedy’s .offer of Polaris missiles instead of Skybolt missiles which Americans now said weren’t as ood.	‘
Dismay swept Congress when it
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Buttons to Replace Dials
Phone Revolution?
NEW YORK MV-Better brush up on your tapping technique!
Before too long, millions of Americans wtll be tap, tap, tapping instead of dialing when they make a telephone call.
’The era of push button telephoning is roooding the comer. Tlie concept, which dates back to 1SS2, has Jnst received a final OK from Western Electric Co. officiEls after two years of market testing In Findlay, (Aio and Greonshurg, Pt.
“Telephoning across the U.S.A, is In for iU biggest chan.ge since the beginning of the,Roarmg Twenties when the conversion to the -diial began,^ the firm, which IsTBe manufacturing arm of the nation-wide Bejl Telephone system, said in its employe magazine, WE.
William Sidley, assistant superintendent of Western .-Electric’s program planning organizatjan, estimated that within 10 years all central offices in the United States will be able to offer “touch tone service.”
What’s more, some 40,000 to 4S,«00 push button seU in most models and colors will be in use in widely scattered exchanges by the end of this year.
The new jiush button models have three rows of three buttons each phis a tenth “0” button centered below the bottom row. The letters and numbers line up exactly as oh. today’s dial with no letters on the 1 and “IT’ buttons. ’ ★ ★ ★
’The main advantages of the new system are speed, ease and convenience of operations. American Telephone ' am^elegraph Co. estimates a number with seven letters or numbers can be tapped out in 2 to 5 seconds compared with an average 10 seconds on the conventional dial. .
WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Micbr,. says hearings on his “truth-in-packaging” bill will start March 6'.
★	★	*
Secretary of Commerce Luther Hodges and Sen. Abrahan A RJb-icoff, I>Conn., former-secretary of welfare, will be the lead-off witnesses. Eight days of hearings are planned during Mareht ★	♦	w
Hart’s bill is designed to'[Movent deceptive packaging and tabbing of consumer products. Hart will conduct the hearings for-the Senate Antitrust subcommittee.
Birch Society Has a New Stafp Leader
FROSTY
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for the 1963 Season with our
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DETROIT (API - The J-o h n Birch Society has a new Michigan leader — a , former Republican who says he quit the party to be free to bring both Republicans and Democrats into the society.
ITie new coordinator of the ultraconservative group is Allan B. Clink, 31, of Detroit.
CHnk, successor to Edward A. Kelly of Roseville, said he gave up an industrial sales position to take full-time assign-meat In the John Birch Society.
Gink said the society has members who are Democrats. He declined to indentify any. He did say, however, that United Auto Workers President Walter P. Reiither “would have a heart attack if he knew how many of his CIO committeemen belong.” Clink has been active in the Conservative Federation of Michigan, a new group.
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liospitalize Graham Before Asian Tour
HONOLULU (UPI) - Evangelist Billy Graham was undergoing tests at a local hospital today and it was feared he might have to postpone his forthcoming Asian trip.
Graham yesterday entered thf hffypftfll far ffiTBifiliiBtiftnY of ”an acute undetermined infection;” '	.
Doctors said it will take 48 hours to run a complete series of tests, and three additional days of evaluation to determine if Graham can dep^t as scheduled to open his crusade in Manila March
Uie evangelist had come to Hawaii to relax prior to starting his Asian crusade.

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Ist-Aid Lesson Saves Her Son
ELLINWOOD, Kan. (AP)-Shir-ley Wirtz attended her first class in a first aid course Tuesday. The session was on mouth-to-mouth respiration.
Wednesday, her 5-year-old son, Pat, had a severe asthmatic at-: tack, complicated by measles. He I went into convulsions and stopped' breathing. Mrs. Wirtz put him on] the kitchen floor and used her hew training until help arrived.
Pat was discharged froiri a hospital ’Thursday. He’s doing fine.
Outnumber Kennedys
FARGO, N.D. (UPI) -Mrs. Octavie Result says her living descendants include 10 children, 56 gr^children, 137 great-grand-c h i Td r e n and 43 great - great-grandhcildren,
U. 5. Soldier Killed in Viet Nam Truck Crash
SAIGON, Viet Nam .(AP) - A U.S. Army sergeant tried to dodge a Communist roadblock of stones as he was driving several Vietnamese south from Qui Nhon.
The truck plunged over an em-bai^ent *and the sqrgeant was kilM. No one else was injured.
Cards Cut Wrong Way
TYLER, Ttac. (UPI) -0. J. Burnett filed suit against C. J. Wynne yesterday charging his left eyeball was cut when Wynne hurled a deck of cards at him!
Hart Sets Hearings on Packaging Bill
charge.
The boat was unmarked and unhit and the two^man crew was uninjured. But some members of Congress called for "hot pursuit” the next Utne it happened although! they didn’t know hOw or why it happened the first time. .........*■
Americans., were still nursing their feelings over this escapade when Soviet Defense Minister Rodion Malinovsky — although why he butted in isn’t clear — an-nouiK»d an American attack on (^ba meant war with Russia.
★ a ★
And Wednesday Khnishcbev. denounced American "wild-men’ for talking about invading Cuba and practtcally promised to eat the .‘Ibig sharks” of American
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So things are back to normal and everybody can relax for half aseconsL^..........__ ~
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and His Trio
Appearing Every MON., WED., FRI., SAT.
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Dinmnand
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■ Week Monday thru
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THE P6NTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. MARCH 1. 1968

Britain's Stood Many a Loss, but She Holds U N. Spellbound
UNlTElt NATIWSrtt.Y (APy -Britain has been kept out of the Common Market : It lost the Skybolt missile.
Its colonial en4)ire is constant ly dwindling.	.
But by Jove, sir, the English
language—British English, that is
-has come fuljy into its own here, 1"ACKGRQUND like British plays • on Broadway.
Give or take a few words, it now is the official language throughwt [OF th^ mews
the United Na- ^------
tions. Pegged on preferred spell-. ings in the Oxford dictionary.
The Queen's English lords it over Americanese.
To you who learned American spelling, it’s color, labor, honor, neighbor, fervor, flavor, nlmor.
Now, not only in U.N. documents but in press releases, the standard form adds a U: colour, labour, honour, neighbour, fervour, flavour, himour.
' Don’t get the idea that those U’s are inserted in honor of Sec-• retary-Gencral U Thant, whose U ; means something like “dear un-" cle,” Burmese title of respect.
The fact- mttmtfm. spelling
has. been aomethihg of a hodgepodge since the founding.
The U.N. Preparatory Committee met in London. Documents -odiiced there appeared with pr^ iminantly British spelling.
The U.N. founding conference took place in San Francisco and the U.N. charter was written there. Ergo: American spelling.
But the United Nations brought in a lot of old League of Nations pe^le as well as Europeans and Asians who learned their English from the British. The Unitei etatesrwtrmotrlTMih^
Leagw and there weren’t many Americans on its staff, so the first secretariat officials leaned to British spelling and phrases.
American spelling fl^ghout all
U.N. documents. So fw years official document spelling was Brit-Ui. press release spelling was
Slowly the pressure to standardise on the British spelling spread.
department reporters who now hail from Africa, Asia and the West Indies find the order to use British spelling comes natural to
When the press department was set up at Lake Success, N.Y., in the early U.N. days, most of its officials and reporters wbre Americans.- ’They produced a r^rt used by newsmen exposed dally to American newspapers, who preferred—or toleratMl — American spelling.
The late Ben Cohen, Chilean diplomat. yifho headed the public information section in the early days, fought vainly to extend
here, 'however, says British Eng- Hiptomefa aped British foreign of-iq)elI them oei^e, fibre, lustre,! Instead of saying “aid is chamflikes British terminology balks at
lish pre-eminence may be only
One British language expert
'Most of the tedmical assistance the world now comes from the United States,’’ he noted. “Technical experts are in the majority American. Their jwports are being written hi Americanese. That is going to have vast influence on the new nations in the world, even if their officials learned thgir English from British teachers or their
fice terminology.’’	pahqeuvre, sombre and theatre, neled through tiie United Nations"
Take another word you teamed In ^still another classification,|u.N. documents say it is “canal-in American schoob-connection. American spelling is analyze andiized.'’ What you write to draw U.N. documents now spell it paralyze. U N. spelling is ^yse out bank funds is a chep[ue, not connexion and also use reflexion liid paralyse—S instead of Z. Pro- a check. Its aeroplane aiid*%ero-and inflexion instead ol the Amer- gramme is standard instead of dromg, no airplane and airdrome, ican forms.	program.	I But even the angiophite who
It’s aluminium, the British and
using the word government i plurd—saying “her majesty’s government are in accord.” Tte U.N. standard is that throughout most of the world—‘‘the government is in agreement" is the accepted
Canadian form, instead of alu-
Take center, fiber, luster, man-| euver, somber and theater—and;
■I
(V
Britain f6 EyW Fallout, Milk
LONDON (AP)-Britain wUl set up a reseiu-ch plant to seek ways of removing strontium 90, the most dangerous element in radioactive fallout, from milk.
Lord Hailsham, minister of science, told the House of Lords Wednesday ni^t the plant wUl be slightly huger than an experimental plant in the United States. He said the two plants will exchange information.
Government sources said the British plant would cost abCUt 156,000.
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) long - missing experimental communications satellite, Syncom I, may have been located scmie 22,-mites in space say astronomers in South /irica.
WEEKDAY
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THE HAPPIEST MOVIE IN YEARS
Presenting the FIRST
TABZAN
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Syncom I was launched aboard a Delta rocket from Cape Canaveral last Feb. 14.
It stopped sending radio signals back to Earth only seconds later. It has been assumed to be whirling about the Earth since, but its existence never has been confirmed.
t	FIRST TIMEi	4
±	lATTU OF THE	4
J MU ELEPHANTSI
The Soviet Foreign Languages!
Publishing House plans to print to meet enrollment Increases.
15,000,000 books in SManguages during 1963.
losflJ.TSfe1lite May Be Discovered
vard College observatory last night said foe S6-pomd satellite is believed to have been photo-from the Boyden Ob-1, SA.
Discontent Following MSU Project
CAST LANSING (B-A Michigan State University professor of English today said he is leaving MSU because ot what he termed plans to “level off’ the quality of educatioq in the face of en-
Tlroo other asembm of foe English department also are leaving for ofoiu nniversities.
Bernard Duffey,«faculty member for 15 years, said he will, move to Duke University in September.
Duffey ^id the deciding factor in his move was the announcement of the so-called “Project X" to streamline teaching tedmiques
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Paul Varg, dean of foe Cob lege of Arts and Letters, said he was sorry Duffey decided to Tenve.- He termed Duffey “a
flrst-rate scholar” and said his
Asked to comment on the loss of three other members of the English department, Varg said their decisions apparently were made prior to the announcement of the educational development project—so-called “Project X." The other three also were repented as critical of the new pro-grtUn.
Duffey said there was wide dis-. content-among faculty members; over the new educational pro-: gram.
*T realize changes have to be | made,” he said, “bnt-we cannot pretend to face op to foe problem sensibly by crash programs.”
“There are bound Ho be differences of opinion as to which direction we should go Jn meeting problems,” said Varg.	;
MSU President John Hannah I was in Nigeria and unavailable for comment.
I
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RHXJEFIELD, Conn. (AP)-Geraldine Farrar, the glamour girl ot grand opera’s golden age, rea(M her 81st birthday Thursday amid remembrances, from
frien^ juid admicsca,----------
’Td almost forgotten it Was my birthday,” said the onetime Metropolitan Opera star bs telegrams, birthday cards and flowers kept arriving at her cottage. here.
Miss Farrar retired from the Met in 1922 at foe age of 40.
Ft^mer Met Beauty , 8(1 Years Old Thursday
'N' There's That One...
WASHINGTON (UPD-President Kennedy is having trouble keeping up with, his wife’s picture hanging at the White House.
When asked yesterday by a group of Tennessee newspapw publishers who were being entertained at lunch to identify a portrait in the Blue Room, Kennedy said: “1 don’t know, those things have I changed so much.”
Winner of Pon&c Sales Awar^
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B—io
7
TgB rONTIAC I*RESS, FRIDAY. MARCH 1. 1968
Emphasize Scholastic Achieverheht
Big Brothers Can Lift Fraternity's Grades
By LESLIE J. NASON.'ED. D.
Dear Dr. Nason; How can a fraternity bring up its scholastic standing? What can a scholarship committee of af f r a t e rhity What can bxlivid-uaTineffibersr- do to improve their ratings? How can a faculty advimrj help? I will fRjk for your answer in the newspaper.
E. 0. Appleton,'
Wis.
realize what other fraternities have done, yours can do.
Here’s a plan that has proved successful:
Assign each pledge and active who has low grades to a “hig brother” who will work him on the problem. Get both members of the team to study a mannal such as my “You Can Get Better Grades” and discuss how to apply these 'procedures to the troublesome
DR. NASON
Answer: Only a determined effort by all, led by upper class-men in a fraternity, can improve that fratemtiy’s scholastic rating. It’s up to each of you to
Ibis procedure of working together to improve individual scholarship can prove to be the atmosphere inspiring success.
The scholarship committee and the advisor can emphasize that go(^ itcholarship is the most important part of college life. If
JACOBY ON BRIDGE
this standard of excellence Ts upheld by the fraternity as a whole, each individual will strive harder toward if
Dear Dr. Nason: We have three children, two honor students,and one hardly passing. This third diili is_i}uicit, 8fid bright,
■ willing — yet seems always to get ^ad^ and is always quick to tears.
A healthy little girl who puikes friends easily, she seems to be well-liked, but is rather" high-strung. Is her problem lack of the power to concentrate?
I’m .beginning to fear, when she brings home a very, good teat paper (which is rare) that she may be copying from someone else.
I think she should not have been promoted last year, but the teacher thought it advif-
two honor students often feels it is useless to strive for excellence. You are making matters worse with your suspicions of cheating and gold-bricking. Make a special effort to surround this child with love, affection and ap(»t>val, regardless of her scholastic short-
cowiings
Have soi^ adult outside th^ family encourage her to make the most of her opportunities in school.
JACOBY
By OSWAl^ JACOBY
The “Great Unblock” is strictly of modbm origin among bridge classic hands. At least no one ever beard of it until about 25 years ago.
It is definitely contract bridge and there is no reason why North and South shoqld not bid hearts wRh their Jihe cards.
It is also a most unusual double dummy problem in that every play made by South on a double dummy basis should also be made if he pcbiaiir*i'an Into thd hand in actual play.
Once dummy’9 ace of clubs holds- the first trick. South can make seven hearts against any combination of adverse cards. He should note that the jack of clubs and queen of spades are just window dressing and that his whole problem‘ is to find a way to unblock the diamond
ANone V 10887e
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In order to do this he must discard, a diamond on dummy’s ace of clubs. Then he comes to his own hand with a trump and ruSi a low spade._This leaves dummy with only fliree trumps. Back to his own hand with another trump and a ruff of the queen of spades leaves dummy with only one trump while South Tetains two in his own hand.
He leads a trump to his hand and discards the ace of diamonds on his last trump. Then he discards the king of diamonds on his ace of spades and has completed the great unblock.
Q—The blddinc has been; West	North	Bast	Soatb
14	Double	Paaa	8 2
34	44.	IW	'7
You, South, hold:
488 VKQ8I4 4KJf2 4984 What do you doT A—Bid four hearia. T«m have a rood rive card aelt and yonr
SMth	Wmt	Nakth	Baat
24	Paaa	24	Paaa
3¥	Paaa	4N.T.	Paaa
S¥ Pass	Paaa Paaa	7¥	Paaa
I Astrological I f‘FOT^ast
^ j?-.*	*
THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, >IARCH i;
Jb»
Ex-Worid Bank VIP-
Named toll. NJ’ostti*
united NATIONS (AP) gene R. Black, former praeident of the WotM Bank^iam lLfLen named to a new poet aa a U.N. financial trouble ehooter, informed sources said yesterday.
★ *
' Black will be a special financial consultant to Secretary General U Thant. One of his chief t|aks ^11 be to speed the coUectkm ot assessments from lagging U.N. membws, the informants said.
Black retir^ u president gl the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development on Jan. 1. He is a director and consultant now for the Chase Manhattan Bank of New York City.
(MOUor't Note: For 17 years the United State* ha* operated on tha a**nmptlon that -thaarmament map be postl-ble. What are the current chance*, and ia it a case of now or neverT)
An AP News By JOHN M. IOOHTOWER WASHINGTCm (APK-Tbe best chance the Soviet Union and the United States may ever have to end the nuclear arms race now an>ears' to be collapsing under the weight of a new d 1 s a r m a-ment deadlock.
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high officials respimsibie fWr UR. policy.
It is a Vi
dispute.
B ^nalyste iOGHTOWE
This, at least, ia-the grim view of the currentl
te of East-I____________
West arms con- HIGHTOWER trol negotiations held by some
i view ikibject to abarp
A seripus question can be raised as to whether any real chance of accord between Moscow and Washingtdh has existed since the start of the cold war—or will exist ndiile the cold war c Some authorities say '‘until you can settle the Berlin pirntd^, until Moscow and Pekhig sbandM their Ambitions to take over the world,'how can ^ .expect to disarm?”
But for 17 years, the United States, has operated on the a^ sumption that disarmament iw be possible. That hope pen&ts today.	^
The hope rests now, as in the past, on a deeper belief that at some point the Soviet Union will begin to change its fundamental
world position and move toward agreements with the West. Iben the often-cited need of all natkms to avoid destruction in a great nuclear war could begin to have its impact.
SOVIET SWITCH '
What.makes the present stalemate at Geneva critical is that fee^'Soviat actions have dealt a severe blow to this deeper belief, precisely when American leaders thoug|)t it might finally be.Justified by what had seemed to be aom new trends in Soviet policy.
The high optimism about the chances far a nuclear test ban which prevailed here within the pabt two months was bwn in the aftermath of the Cuban crisis. There is no doubt that President Kennedy, Secretary of State Dean Rusk and other leaders felt some great results might flow from the
easing of the nerverwraddng con-' frontotkm of the United States and the Sovtot Unlori over Cuba last October. ..
- * * *
This optimism was prevalent when Soviet Premier Khrushchev last Dec. 19 sent a note to the. President reversing his stand on international inspection to police ~ test ban inside fhe Soviet Union as well as on the territory'of the United States and Britain. He said he would accept two or three on-aite inspections a year. This wp cpntrdiy to the portion which
At a neon conference on Jan. ii Preiddent Kennedy said he did < not agree with the deadlihe concept but the world should kpsw by sfHing whether an agreement oould'be Mched.
DESKRATION DECISION w -.V	In a few quick seances, Kien-
he had taken in Nwember nw!Y lhen”went on to ^ricHlioth the basis of his poiicy for persist-
Khrushchev had said during the Cuban crisis that he was willing to have-on-site inspection of the removal of Soviet missiles and bombers from Cuba and a ciiange in his position on the issue of the test ban negotiations had been sx^iectod.
Civil Rights Legislation Is Doubtful
WASHINGTON IF - A partisan split in Congress over President Kennedy’s proposed civil rights measures will be passed this session.
An Immediate Republican reaction to Kennedy’s civil rights message yesterday was to k-ease toe adminis^ation of seeking political gain from its proposals. Republicans called for action on their dWn program, which they claim is much hrooder than toe President’s.
Witll the Democrats split geographically on the inue, strong bipartisan support will be needed to pul any new civil ri^U law^ qn the books, but signs of such support are hard to detect.
WWW
Kennedy himself possibly did the cause of bipartisanship little good when he told Congress that more progress had been made in the field of civil rights during the last two years than in any comparable period in the nation’s hist^.
A groop of Houje Republicans who have Introdnccd a comprehensive civil rights bill of their own conntered that toe only constructive civil rights legisiatioa passed since Reconstruction Days came during President Dwight D. Eisenhow-er’s RepoMlcan administration.
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PONTIAC MALL
In a series of House speeches [id in a joint statement, the GOP congr—c«lUH Kenedy’s program a retreat from his party’s 1960 platform and charged him with acting with his eye on the 1964 caippaign. -And in New York the National Association for thg Advancement|| of Colored People called the President's message “admirable,” but said it did not go far enough.
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Auto Output Up This Week
DETROIT (AP) — Passenger car production in the United States this week will rise about 's,000 units to 149,919 cars, Auto-motive News said yesterday.
Ar .a W The increase from the 144,874 of last week will occur despite a short work week at American Motors, where parts shortages brought a plant shutdown last ni^t. In ttw comparable week of W year 137,944 cars were built.
AW -A-
Truck producthm was estimated at 29,468 units compared with 30,018 last week and 24,468 last year.
ance in Washington’s view entered into the calculation of American officihls. Thb was—and ia—that with France already in the process of becoming a nuclear power^ it was only a question of time and probably not a very lolrig time until Red China would explode a nuclear device and introduce a wholly hew and dangerous element into the world power bal-
MAYO BOUND - Arthur A. Lambert and his wife Frieda hopefuOy wave their thumba at passing cars on the Harbor Freeway in Lot Angeles this week. Mrs. Lambert bolds a sign reading “Mayo Clinic,” their destination. Lambert, 43, says he has been in a wheelchair since a traffic accident in 1959. They have received only two small settlements, says Mrs. Lambert. They to hitdihike 2,100 miles to the famed Rochester, Mirni., clinic.
Peace Corps
Marks Second A n niversaryTUdy
WASHINGTON (F-The Peace Corps, the most copied outpost on the New Frontier, celebrates s second birthday today.
A A A President Kennedy created the Peace Ctorps March 1, 1961, by executive order and handed his brother-in-law, Sargent Shriver, the task of transforming the idea reality. Later, the organization wu ^ven permanent stature by act of Congress.
TRIPOU, Ubya (F - A new earthquake has rocked the town of El Marj, already in ruins from last week’s quakes which killed about 300 persons.
A A
The new shock hit at 9:15 p.m.
Thursday and destroyed several opening play in a new round of ot the few remaining buildings,
including the Libyan army barracks. No casualties were reported.
Other nations have-taken up the idea, and 43 have joined in forming a new organization to bliah new Peace Corps groups around the world. The U.S. Peace Corps will form the mideus for the new agenctes.
Gam« Packs a Wallet
SOUTHAMPTON, England (OK —Police reported today a wallet was found to be miss^ shortly after each goal was scored at a recent hockey game. Final score: 4 goals, 4 wallets and 1840 misi-ing.
ilewJQuake Bocks.
Democratic leader, saM the ne- tb^ efiort of trying to get a test goHators should be close to agree- bah treaty.” ment by April or^the opportunity	*
which he then.thwjght exists for nailing down a test ban might weUbelosf. T
A few day! later at a Feb. I news conference Secretary of State Dean Rusk recognized the progressive breakdown of test ban talks by saying: ‘‘^ cannot hold out great expectations that this matter can be resolved promptly.” inspection .issue has been heart of the East-West dia-it problem since negotiations first started back in 1948.
ing in negotiations no matter how desperate the prospect and the problems which he foresees at home as well as in the discussion with the^Boviet Union.
“We have been on this (seeking disarmament) for 15 years,” he said. “I must say that many people are opposed to this eRwt’ which is being directed by One other fact of basic import- „	/wniiam c t Fn«t<»r in Cr
,«.inWn.Wn0fnn’«viPw.nbn-M	(William L.I f ostCT m Ge-
neva, and quite obviously it is a imattv which we should aiTtttoch with a good deal of care. But the alternative, if we fail, of increasing the number of nuclear power! around the world over the next I, 10, 15, or 20 years is so dangerous (it) keeps me committed to
ft has therefore seemed to officials here that the period between the ending of the Cuban crisis and the further spread of nuclear weapons — a restless period marked also by wide^ipen splits in both the Communist and West-camps^ffered an unusually hopeful prospect for progress toward a disarmament breakthrough-
AAA SAME OLD SPLIT In mid-January there seemed'to be no doubt that the United States and Britain on one hand and the Soviet Union on the other were closer to a^eement on a nuclear test ban treaty^ with inspectim safeguards than they had been at any time in the past. Today they seemed to be as far apart as ever.
The deadlock has developed, as the dispute now stands, over the difference between KhruAdiev’r two or three inspections a year and the eight or 10 which Kennedy has asked with an Indication thati he would reduce the number other inspection problems were solved at the same time.
In a speech in Moscow Wednte-day, Khrushchev slammed the door on any new concessions from his side, saying “nothing else can be expected from us.”
At that time, while tt « nuclear weapons monopoly, the United States had pat a-be* fere the United Nations for into-* nationalizing all atomic power. The Soviet Union sixnlly (wteuced a counter plan.
The two nations rejected each other’s programs.
Sitice then (ilsarmament has been involved periodically in what appeared to. be serious nqjotle-tibns and at times has servri as a proipagapda football.
Winner of Pontiac Sales Award
HIB ■XPBRT KNOWLKOSB CAN S|KVa YOU WILL Courtviy, rvOabllRy, Mrvke—IImm qvaliHM or* •hwiHoI lor « (olo** man to roach Iho top and itoy Itraro. That’s why our Moitor Solos* mon Is a good man to soo lor o cor. Ms hnowiodgo and oxporionco con moon a bottor cor votuo for you. Ask for him by nomo. Ho'U bo ploosod to sorvo you.
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prise because in talks in this country in late January and more " rsesn^ at the 17-nation disarma-knent conference in Geneva his representatives had taken the ime line.
Their unyielding stand was initially a surprise and disappointment to U.S. officials, however, because they had thought that his December policy reversal was the
negotiations which Khrushchev himself wanted to be successful. In Geneva last month, Hubert :. Humphrey, assistant Senate
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B—12
THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY: MARCH
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. MARCH i; 1963

C—1
Fernandez Receives Tiger Raise'
'Slugger' Chic6 Finally Finds Bargaining Pointers
By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press LAKELAND, Fla. - When the Ume omies for contract talks, the major league ball player us^ one of three, or all, shttistic^ departments as his	for
aallwry . negoUatii^ -the home run, batting average and run batted in>
♦ ★ *
In his seven years in the majors, Chior Kdrnandez never re-lly had a good argument in try-
ing for a new contract boost, that is, not until now.
When he came.into Tiger camp, one day late, on Wednesday he said in jest, “Maybeee I get one thousan doUah for each home *un I heet.”
la other words be was asking the Tigers for	Jlc.
had hit 20 homers last year, more than all of his six years la the majors fei together, when he had a totel of M.
When' the bargaining ended,ii
Chico admitted he received boost in salary but' the figure Was placed at $18,000 or $900 for every home run he hit last year. Qiko appeared satisfied.
* w *'
Oddly, three of the last four playeis to sign were part of the home run quartet to hit 20 or
FIRST TIME It was 'the first- time in history that the Tigers have had four play^s with 20 or 'more homefs in one season. Norm Cash (39),
Rocky Colavito t37), A1 Kaline (29) and Fernandez (20).
- Three other Seasons, 1938 (Ckeenherg », York 33, G^-ringer 20) 1950 (Maxwell Kahiie 27, Boone 25) and 1959 (Maxwell 31, Kaline 27, Yost 21) wer^ the best prodnctive years for at least three Tigers
With Fernandez in the fold and’ Kaline under contract for the highest salary in history the club, an estimated $60,000, Cola-
vito and Cadj have yet to come to terms.
Cash made his biggest jump last year when he jumped from ^3,000 to $29,000 after ndnning the American League batting title .361 with 41 homers and runs batted in..
This year. Cash is fighting a cut in salary after dropping to a ■ 20 average and oe-iuas-in. He still led the team’s home run department with 39.	i
llger general manager. Jiml Campbell reports he and Cash]
are not too far apart, but in regard to Ck)lavito, Campbell says he had made his last offer.^ Colavito, on other hand, reports he is through bargaining, so as it stands it maV be a long time before a settlement is
(Colavito who started the season ! with a bad slump in 1962, was rfiporfed Be tho^Jii^fiSt paid Tiger and now feels he should be on par with Kaline.'
I . .	,	*	*.
Tfie-league considers players
who have not signed by March 1, as holdouts and as of today Colavito' must be classified as such for the second straight year.
NOT EVEN CLOSE “I came dttwh here early be^ji caiise 1 didn’t want lo be a hold-said Colavito, “but we’re not evsn close.’’
All of the Tigers in camp were inocniated with Jht shots, but trainer Jack Home! ^s his fingers crossed because it takes nine days before they can be considered effective.
Two Tigeni, Vic Wertz and Bob Farley, are still at horae iU with Asian flu. According to Homel, both were runnii^ hi^ fevers and would not arrive until next week.
♦ w w
’The weather in Lakeland has not been good for training thus far and manager Bob Scheffing says, he does not plan on putting jsis pitchers ttirou^ any str«i* uous drills until the temperatures rise ‘and, stay put for a coosistent period.
Howe Tied for NHL Scoring Lead
Detroit Star
Adds 2 Assists
in 5-3 Loss /
/
Brgins Tally Eafly; Mikita Scores Point as Chicago Loses
BOSTON!*- Howe has{ regained a share of the Nat»
' Hockey League scoring lead his unhappy Red Wing mates no taiiger consider t ton Bruins tbeir“cousins.’’
★ * ★
’The prulns severed i ties last night as they h Red Wings a 5-3 defei only the second time ii ings that the Wlnjgs 1 cellar^welling B the nickname “o
Jones
His
Olympic year 1964 l(as been! called by Hayes Jones as his prime year.
“I’ll be 26 when the games are l^ld in Tokyo,” said the world’s No. 1 hurdler who got his start on the cinders at Pontiac Central high schdol 10 years ago.
Calls 1964 Prime Year
Stadium Tax Plan Off to Fast Start
LANSING (*- Legislation designed to strengthen Detroit’s for the* 1968 Olympic games by financing a $25 million stadium through higher taxes on pari-mu-tuet betting appeared today to be off and running on a fast track. * * * *
The Senate taxation committee decided ’Thursday to report out.
der the constitution a bill must be itrinted at least five days before a final votf.
The pari-mutuel bill and a com-. snion measure — setting up a state recreational building authm--ity to handle the bonding and construction of the stadium — are designed to answer'critics challenging the selection of De-
‘This is the age when hurdlers have done their best in conqieti-tioD,” Jones added. Jobes also noted that he would be aiming for 13.0 in the Olympics and whether I do it or not, I will retire from outdoor running.”
He does hope to keep naming iadoors until 1918, then he expects Detroit to be the site of the'games ind he will be represented by a protege whom he says will bre^lR'fef Wilma Rudolph’s recms.
J“lLJL	a
I got an assist in 1 loss to New York — r game in the NHL e’s three-goal hat it an assist he picked up f Camille Henry’s two t him in second place in g race with 65 points, w w
;ate’s two goals and an-y Dave Baloo in the open-period put the fifth-place s ahead 34). Henry scored .j in the second franae and lathgate countered with his third /of the night in the final frame / before CJiicago’s Bill Hay ruined the shutout with his tally at 17:51. NO RESISTANCE	-
The Bruins met almost no resistance in the first two periods of their game with Detroit. Tommy Williams and Forbes Kennedy scored within a space of about two fninutes in the first period to give Boston a 24) lead-
Rookie Bob Letter restored the Boston margin after Del-vecchto temporarBy narrowed the gap in the middle period. Then, Charley Bums and Guy _Gendrdn ^omid the range in a s^n M 23 seconds, putting the contest out of reach.
With “bad boy” Howie Young still under suspension for his latest disappearing act, the Wings —hampered also by Pete'Goe-gan’s injury — called up defenseman Gerry Odrowskl fnrni their Pittsburgh farm club.
Red Wing officiab said Odrow-ski, M, would play in only last ni^t’s game since they hoped to have Qoegan badt for the Wings’ game in Montreal Saturday night.
'Scufflin' Hillbilly'
Tops Wrostlinjl^cirif
’The “ScOmin’ Hillbilly,” Zeke River, and his cousin Jody, will headliiie Saturday’s pro wrgstjing card' at the Pontiac Armory.
River will meet Martino Angelo.' Mephisto takes on La Bes-tia in another bout. other matches also are scheduled.
Jt'
.7^'	.... '
year old Mumford High school student in Detroit. “She has been running in the 100 and 220 and I expect her best will be in the middle distance,” said Jones. Miss White, who competes in the Detroit recreation iMgue practices against Jones at either Detroit’s Northwestern high school or the Wayne State University indoor track.
Another bit of surprising news Jone» made Imownjs he does not plan on competing in the Pan-Am games in Brazil in April and May.
“First of all it would take six weeks out of tfis scIjqM year and secondly one cannot be expected to go down there without a period, of acclimation to the weather. The westerners who caj^ practice in a good climate will have the advantage, but the midwestem-ers should be permitted to get
down early to get adjusted,” added Jones.
TRACK KING
Jones has been the king of indoor track, having posted his 42nd straight victory in the high hurdles. Saturday he will' come face to face with Harrison Dil-yard in the Cleveland K of C games, the all time great track star who held the record of 38 straight victories.
Jones clarified the problem of how many Dillard did win. ‘it was 38 not 46 as was men-Uoaed in press reports, and I Red that in Los Aagelfi." -
Dillard will be at (?lweland as! ,a spectator. He was there last I year when Jones won in record time and presented Hayes with the trophy.
His future meets call for the Japanese Indoor Championships early in March, jiad*HtonBhTy^ o^ door meet he plans to attend will be the National Championships in St. Louis in June.
He hopes to set the world mark of 13.1 in this outdoor meet and to prepare lor.it, Jones has called on his former college coach George Marshall of Eastern Michigan University, w ★	★
To toughen his legs he and Marshall plan on running the 440 sprint.
“I have the advantage on the first five hurdles, but then instead of increasing my endurance it decreases,” said Jones.
‘‘Coach Marshall has a training program laid. out for me, and the object is lb'build up that endurance for those last few yards,”
Jones’ dream for making the Olympics was realized in 1960 when he took a medal behind Willie May and Lee Calhoun. He was disappointed in his 13.6 show-which canne- ai result of bumping one of the final‘hurdles.
What is his 1964 Olympic aim? ‘With work know 1 can Bit 13.0|
WORK FOR CHICO - Tiger shortstop Chico Fernandez signed his contract yesterday and immediately went to work on the practice field. He is shown waiting for the ball as Dick McAuliffe tries to get past him during a rundown.
Duke's Hepan Star of AP AlWmerica
NEW YORK (* — Art Heyman Barry Kramer of New Y o r k of Duke was named today as the [University. Bonham polled 706 1963 college basketball Player of:points, Harkness 428, Bradds 321 the Year by the Associated Press.land Kramer 319 from the 183 The 6-foot-5 senior from Rock-[sports writers and broadcasters ville Centre, N.Y., won the honorjwho voted, ft successor to Ohio State’s Jer-| An mdication of Heymwi’s ftoib ry Lucas do the basis rf theltjr is the fact that he wm an votes he polled for the 1963 AI1-| unanimous choice for the Ail-ACC America announced ’Thursday by team for three straight years,
■ the first time it has happened. S^NDTEAM BQI Bradley, Princeton’s star sophomore, Tom ’Thacker of Cin-
theAP.
Heyman, who I
Duke
unbeaten regular in the Atlantic Coast
for the All-America with 744 points on the basis of five points for a first team vote and two fw the second team, Named to the All - America, along with Heyman, were Ron Bonham ol Cincinnati, ^ e r r y Harkness of Chicago Loyola, Gary Bradds of Ohio State and
topped -ihe- voting- cinnati. Rod Thorp of West- Vir?
ginia, Cotton Nash of Kentucky and Walt Hazzard of UCLA were
without amendments, a bill which [troit as America’s choice for the would increase , taxes on race [Olympics, track wagering and produce an| Los Angeles is making a strong extrr-$i.6 million for-the state ^pitch for the games, but Romney to finance consU’Uction of the sta-| hopes to convince the United dium. _	{states Olympic Conunittee later
Action on the measure came |‘his month of the soundness of just three days after it had | the stadium fmancing plan, been introduced in the Senate, i‘TAKEOUT’TAX with strong backing from Gotf. | ^ ^3,15 an increase in the George Romney.	“takeout” tax on pari-mutuel bet-
"Tn an unusual procedure, the king at thorough bred tracks from bUl was printed and on the law-{13 to 15 per cent, with the state’s makers desks last Monday, the share climbing from 6Ms per cent same day it was introduced. Un-'to 8 per cent.
Under the plan, the tracks — which now get 61(i per cent — would receive 7 per cent;
The harness racing tax would increase from 14 to 15 per cent, with the track share upped from 9^ to 10 per cent and the state cut from 4^ to 5 per cent. Although the pari-mutuel tax measure is expected to have a relatively fast track in both hpuses, its companion bill may run into trouble.
Opposition was being voiced by ~sDim; lawmakers-to the creation of a new building authority with broad powers they consider to be (00 sweeping.
After the stadium was built, the state wpuld sign a 30-year lease with the authority to turn over (^ration of Bie, facility to the existing State Fair authority.
named as the second team All-America.
BUI Green, of Colorado State University, Eddie Miles of Seattle, Tiginy Yates of Cincinnati. Jimmy Rayl of Indiana and Nick Werkman of Seton Hall comprise the third teamr Mel Counts M Oregon State, Paul Silas of Creighton, Joe| Caldwell of Arizona State University, Ken Charlton of (Colorado, Dave Stallworth of Wichita,
. Nate Thurmond of Bowling. Gfcen and Dave Downey of Illinois among the honorable mentions.
EASTEBN DIVISION
WESTEBN DIVISION
BIG
ST. AUGUSTINE; Fla. (*
Dr. R. I. Luri of Saginaw was eliminated from the Tournament of Golf Club Champions ’Thurs-j day when he lost to defending-champion Dr. John McKey of Or-[
ti 12.9” he commented, ilando, Fla., one-up in 19 holes.
nnST AGAIN-Hayes Jones has hit the finish line tape first in his last 42 high hurdle races. He will be after another win Saturday in the Knights of Columbus games in Geveland.
Karras' Fofe Uncertain
DETROIT (AP)-Detroit Lions tackle Alex Karras, under fire in recent wedu afto* admitting he bet on games in which he played, will have to sweat it out for an-
Football League commissioner Pete Rozelle rules on his future. * ♦ ★
William Gay Ford, president <d the Lions, told Lions stockholders at their annual'meeting yesterday that RbzeUe will nuk* puUic within 30 days results M his probe of reported contacts
between gamblers and soineN^ players.
F(Hd reported 1962 Lkms’ profits of about $115.000 after taxes—about the same as last year.
But a Lions spokesman said.
Higher piayers salaries and excessive l^al fees needed to fight that monopoly suit filed by the Aroericah FobthaU League left hur eamlngs..,just about where they werp lastjyear."
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WITH LUCK rr WUh some good ix>wling and s .fittle luck these six bowlers are hoping to score’high at Battie Creek’s Cereal Bowl this weekend and bring home a big prize in the state March of Dimes Bowling Tournament. They are the top
three qualifiers in both the women’s and mot’s divisions of the northern Oakland County portidh of U* tbufiiament. Left to ri^t are Hank Ferguson, Bonnie Watson, Shirley Potater, Janice Cowan, Ron Richards and Lewis Ruelle.
Upsets Could Produce 10 Champs
litle lime in Tonight's Prep Tilts
N.Y. Grill Men Roll Top Game for ABC Team
If there are no upsets tonight, the spoils from five basketbali championships will be divided among eight schools.
Should two leaders be upended, then 10 schools will enter throne rooms in the Inter-Lakes, Wayne-Oakland, South Central, Tri-County and Oakland A Leagues.
The biggest battlie toni^t will be at Bloomfield HiUi. The Barons will take on Holly with the winner assured a share of tho W-0 championship and possibly the whole melon.
West Bloomfield can make the W-0 title a two-team affair by winning at Milford. A Redskin upset wpukL give the champioh-ship to tile winner at Bloomfield Hills.
’There will be no looking to future league games. The regular season ends tonight. District tournament play starts next week. ROAD GAMES
Avondale and Lake Orion can be spoikrs In the Oakland A. But it is doubtful if last place Avondale can win at Clawson and the same holds true for Lake Orion’s trek to Troy. The home teams are tied for first, and if one loses, the other will be outright champion.
Pontiac Northern can sew things up in the I-L by handling Berkley at home. Farmington can tie for the crown by winning at Walled Lake, but PNH would have to lose. Waterford entertains Southfield in the other league game.
Kettering journeys to Mt. Clemons for a Tri-County game against
L’Anae Creuae.’The Captains n^ I championship. Imlay has com-a win over the Lancers plus alpleted its season with a S-1 loop RoniM upset at Lapeer to catch | mark-
North Branch is 4-1. The game will be at Oxford.
Should North Branch win, the Mustangs game with Imlay in district play next week will be an unofficial playoff for the league crown.
Saginaw Arthur ff i 11 has
the t>anthers.
Oxford can wreck North Branch’s hope of deadlocking Imlay City for the South Central
Lakeland Gains League Playoff
Lakeland Pharmacy forced its way into a one-game playoff and New Hope Baptist slipped into the city tournament with recreation basketball victories last night.
Lakeland defeated Spencer Floors for the second time in a week to end regular season Wa-terfcHXl Township Class A schedule deadlodked with the losers.
Jerry Veeder tallied 19 and Jim Robinioii 17 as the wfamers led moot of the way for a 7347 decision.
New Hope defeated The Chiefs, 60-44, to enter the Class D doubleelimination city tournament in a playoff for the last spot. Bob Seay (18), Ron Boardax (17) and Jerome Chumbiy (15) led the winners’ attack.
In another Waterford game, Hoyt Realty edged Don Nicholie Insurance, 65-60, despite a 26-point performance by the losers’ Bob Scott. Mickey Dean hit 23 for Hoyt.
but the battle for second placer!; continues.
Pontiac Centraf ciiA^linch the runnerup spot by winning at Flint Northern.
BUFFALO, N.Y. (UPI) - Con-key GriU of Rochester, N.Y. rolled an 1,115 in its second team game yesterday, the highest single team score , in the American Bowliog Congress tournament thus far.
However, the Rochester team folded in its last game to the tune of a paltry 906 and wound up with a 2,880 total. This may
11th
Frame
Entries are now being accepted at Airway Lanes for its second annual Father and Son tournament scheduled for Sunday April 7th.
iTiere will be three divisions —- junior^ sMor and" bantam—with trophy awards going to the winners.
Entry forms are available at Airway. Deadline is March 30th.
Tn league action at Airway, the Spares stayed a slim tltfee ^ames ahead, of the Missiles and Jugglers Tuesday as 4;ach won three*-
games in the Airway Queens loop. A 573 by FTan McCaUum was the top score.
WESTSIDE ACTION There were 13 eeries of 800 or better and the 300 games numbered 50 in the Westskle Classic Monday. Ed Gibbe rolled 243-254-682 and Stan KuTzman had
20e-216m-668.
A Dutch 260 game (strike-spare-strike) was bowled by Harold PeancU and Fran Bertram became progresshrety better with 177-178-179.
Bowl, Bill Arnold had a 236 In Twilight circuit last Friday and Gar Manchester’s 2U kd ihe Rebel Rouser League Monday.
Women’s action saw Rose Steat-ton post a 246-607 actual for the Women's AH Star loop, Jban Fin-cannon roUed 220—575 for the Tri-AU League and MilUe Villmeal started with seven strikes for a 268 game in the same circuit.
The GMC Girls Leagae is led by the Locky Strikes team, while Jacobsoa’s Market paces the Royal Bowierettes. Rntfa Belanger had a 541 series in the 300 Bowierettes league.
Mixed League action recorded a 257-623 by Gil Glover and 228 by Joanne Fisher in the 300 Mixed, a 236-615 by Clint Wat-
Tuesday the GMC Nite Owl circuit had a 638 by Ernie Kluet-man and William Yeager had the league’s high actual game for the year with a 258.	.■
Frank Dunkel’s	247-245—714 kins in the Anserican Legion Post
earn" the te^ a oV'Lte lwif "'V Ih* only news in the Huron 377 loop, a 256—633 by Joe Duran earn me team a snare ol me naif	— and a 21^-520 by Shirley Vin-
in the Guys and Dolls circuit. and a 211 by Hal Jones in the Lake Oakland Mixed.
o*ig..i«w ATuiur 111 MS	„ i i	Bowl aassic last week. A 3,182
^noJ^teTiT^i^--ies push^i PonUac Win-
Beh rick's Show Leaves Howe's Short of Upset
Airway Lanes withstood the best individual performance M the seaaon in the Pent^ Traveling Classic League to remain a game in front of the 300 Bowl & Lounge team last Sunday:
Airway edged by Have’s Laaes, IMl, despi|p a lOiwlnt effort by the losers’ Cmrl Beh-rick (266-326); while the IM squad handed Cooley Lanes a 174 bombing as Joe Phertas scored six points.
The latter game was a makeup match wim Cooley winning its regularly scheduled affair, 706, over Huron Bowl, as Jack Ashton tallied four points.
enough to put in me top 10 in the regular division.
The previous high team game was the 1,111 rolled by the Helin Tackle team of Detroit earlier this week in the classic divisioon.
la the classic divlsioa yesterday, the Bell Supply Company team of WUmiagtoB, Del., completed its second threesfame block to total 6,656. RoUhig their first blocks yesterday were Trailer Diner No. 1 M Syracuse, N.Y., which fired 2,715, and the Tobin first prize team of Syracose widi No standings in the clamk: division have beo> posted as yet.
In die TnliBr events, a Myew-okl optical company worker lost his chance to take first place and had settle for third in the regular sb^Tes divisioh.
Joseph L«pa of Rochester, N.Y. took third with a 702 aeries. He went 26 frames before he left pins standing in his third game and so lost his chance to take the singles division lead. Jack of Bay City, Midi., remains on top witb Monday.
dow Cleaning to an eight-game sweep over Prewription Department and. to a 15-ganie lei^ in the league race.
The league’s' high single game last Friday was a 266 by Joe Foster.
Sylvan Lanes reports a 227— 596 score for Judy Sievers in the Lakeland Ladies League; and the Lakewood Bucks and Does’ loop lead at Lakewood Lanes remains tied between the Fawns and Tinhorns as the former’s Fran Mc-Callum rolled 214-586 Monday.
Two. league results from Cooley Lanes credit Marie Reynolds and Rubenia Roeque with high Series in the Multi-Lakes Ladies loop and (Country Dames circuit, respectively.
The latter lady hit a 556 ser-1H ........... ...............
SUNDAY APRIL 7 1963
SUNDAY APRIL 7 1963
AIRWAY LANES 2nd ANNUAL
FATHER & SON TOURNAMENT
11:00 A.M....... JUNIOR and SENIOR DIVISIONS
1:00 P.M. ........	....BANTAM DIVISION
PRIZES FOR EACH DIVISION BASED ON APPROX. 25% PER 100 ENTRIES
Mniti-Lakef performer 571 series.
Fairgrounds Bowl recorded a 221-234-643 dandy series for Beverly Kuschel in the Thursday Ladies League while Dale James didn’t let a 134 average deter a705 r^led him from « 244 “century’’ per-iformance in the Friday House loop.	^
)M BOWL DOINGS For those niio And significance in numbers there were a couple combinations at the 300 Bowl ce-oently that mi^t be wm^tiiy of consideration.
Eleanor Irish in the Monday night Pioneer League has a 5757 total after 57 games this sUason;'
' the Tuesday House League and the Friday Good-fellows loop had 20 games of 200 or better in their last outing.
Joe Pnertai’ 223-466 and George Shipp’s 123 topped the Tuesday circnlt while Paul Rodriguez 236^416 and BIO Mi-halek 246-191 led the Geodfel-
_	TOURNAMENT RUUES
A.J.B.C. and A.B.C. SANCTIONED AVERAGE AS OF MARCH 1, 1963
IF NO AVERAGE USE...	
MEN 		150
SON (8-12)-Bontom 		75
SON (13-15)-Junier 		110
SON (16-19)-S.nior 		135
If Not Sonctiontd - Men $1.00 ond Son 25c Extra
Hondicop 70% from 400 Scrotch (Maximum Hondicop 130 Pint)
r”	ENTRYnFEE" PiOi^TEA^ ‘iw”
I Father's Name-----------------------A.B.C. Sane. No.--------
I I mrfsjism	Avftltfigfl-----PHone
I Son's Narne-I League ----
-A.J.B.C. Sane. No.
Mothers Keep Se<
BRING OR M
ore -
-Average-.Yes
Age.
No
MAIL APPLICATIONS AldD INTI^Y PEIS BY MARCH 30, 1963	|
For Further hformatioir^R 674^0^4
RETURN OR MAIL ENTRIES ON OR BEFORE MARCH 3b, 1963
AIRWAY LANES ijgSVy”' ,
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C—3
Lakers Are Defeated
Orchard Lake St. Mary got back on the winning basketball track last night, but Waterford Our Lady of the Lakes continued to stumble.
♦ ★ *
The Eaglets, who lost their last outing
straight,, whipped Detroit St. RoU, 71-«2. Highland Park St. Benedict pulled away in the last quarter to clip WOLL, 53-35. Thew were nonleague games.
In prep wrestling yesterday, Waterford Kettering finished its regular season by downing Utica,
lake Orion Baptist
Lake Orion Baptist continued to dominate the Y.M.dA. Men’s League Monday night with
a 03T ViCtbry over the Toiit!i& season
Business Institute.
Enimanuel (7-1) bombed St, Paul Methodist 09^ to stay one game behind the Orion team while the Y.M.C.A. stopped First Baptist of Pontiac, 70-57.
P.B.I. met defeat despite 21 points by Ken Paul. Gerry Spangler had 30 points for Emmanuel and Dick Olive 26 in the St. Paul cause.
Bruce Ross pac^ the *Y’ with 27 and Dick Oiarlton had 26 for First Baptist.
UA«C1 ITANDINOS Orion BopUit .......
Frank Rempel hit 28 points, a career high, and the t^ output this season hy an OLSM player. Larry Janiszewski netted 17 and Stan Sawicki It for
Mary outscored its rival 17-8 in the third period. This proved to be the winning margin. It was the second time this
OacaAKD LAKS
ST. niTA ^«)
— ....	rOFTTP
rOVTTP ZcnrcU t 6-T 21 i 1-1 t Andn • - -. -	«	4-7	M	Lto
Bwl'ckl	a	t-T	t	Bueei
JoDliikl	t	S-«	17	Utn
SkwIckI	6	a-1	It	WIlDi’lti
SMplea	•	0-«	*	-
Xrof'AI	•	OA
Rompor la 4-7
I 0-«
1-1 1
_____ AP Pbotoloi
RIXEY DEAD-^Eppa jifitey, 72, forma* pitcher with Cincinnati and I%iladelphia, and elected to the Baseball HaU of Fame a month ago, died yesterday.
DRIVE-IN SHOTS Rompel scored 18 of his points i in the first. The majority of his 12 baskets were scored on drive-ins up the middle.
The Ravens gained their margin at the free throw line by converting 21 of 27 foul shots. They ontscor^ Onr Lady 16-14 from the floor.
The Lakers had a podr night at the line, making only 7 of 22.
Kettering completed its first wrestling season with a 24-1 record. Heavyweight Tom 'Camp- ...	.......
-was 0.1-1 for the season and ^tnlng’ nwter that basket. So
Wingate Set to Grab Title in Point Race
Ralph Wingate of ^nmanoel Christian still has time to polish the Oakland County basketball scoring crown before he claims it.	I
Emmanuel meets Clintondalel tonight in their season finale and' the 6-1. junior may still boost hisi 23.5 average.
According to Wingate’s coach, John Malone, “he’s
Indoor Meet Tonighf
Big Ten Tracfcmen fo Compete
MADISON, Wis. (ft - Milligan, Wlnionsin and Iowa appear to be the main contenders for team honors, in the 53rd Big Ten indoor track championship opening tonight.
★	* w
Host Wisconsin is defending titlist, having stopped Michigan’s three-year reign l^t year.
FnUahMries and ^ flnaU in die broad jnmp will get the show rolling in the Camp Randall Memorial Building tonight. ’The finals in 14 events will be held Satuiday afternoon.
Eight individual defendmg champiotih are listed, but at least hurdler Larry Howard .of Wisconsin -r is questionable because of injury. Howard, who won both the bi^ and Iowa last year, has pulled a thigh muscle.
Other defenders are: Sherm Lewis, MSU, broad jump and 300-yard dash; Bill Frazier, Iowa, - yard run; Chuck Aquino, Michigan, 100-yard run; Allen Carius, Illinois, two-mile; Don
Hendrickson: Wisconsin^k shot put; Cornelius Miller, Indiana, high jump, and Bill Smith, Wisconsin, 60-yard dash.
GRID INJURY
Smith suffered a fractured jaw in the Rose Bowl football game and got a late start in the indoor track season.
Wisconsin is defending cham-in -the..jmile ixlay
ord of 3:16.3 by lUinois in 1066. Records, however, are only recognized when set in championship meets.
’Thetmly other record-bettering job this season was by shot putter George Puce of Michigan with a toss of 66-feet-7t^-inches. The record is 56-5V4 by Minnesota’s Bob Henry in Im.
.One mark was matched. Bob
Iowa looks primed to win this Moreland of Michigan State Sped
’The Hawkeyes’ Gary Hollingswigrth, Gary Richards, Frazier isnd Roger Kerr tnmed in 3:16.0 last week against Minnesota. It bettered the rec-
the 60-yard dash in :06.1 in the MSU relays. It equalled the standard set by Jesse Ownes 1935 and matched twice since.
Toronto
Montrotl
L T ITS or OA
1 41 Jerry Koch, 120, was 8-1-1. They Pootiiie nTStooSliutuut.	a li®’"® th® ‘w® seniors on the
- s'team
Bnptut T». Pontine Bunlntu In-"i^n Ort<» BAptUt
"Pre-Soosoii
SALE!"
$ll.«S U nUME tlOVES:
$7”
44t.MWIU0NAlNe
*2500
REMAINING SKI INVENTORY < $22.9S EUROPIA BOOTS
*1295
BobMisowoasor’*;
Oh Bt. Itonr ..............17 19 MT
at. luu ............... .16 li
I JVi OL Bl. IfftPT.t I6<M. -
TOFTTF
n	I	oU	2	6hBr^ ‘
3	0	U2	\	teoulcr
3	9	9*16	97	OUiua
3	9-9	9	Boryt
has been al^ to stop his short drivw.’’
Wingate, a junior, leads the county with a 373 total in 16 games. His nearest competitor Is Paul Jagels of Britber Rice with a 19.7 average.
Dwi^t Lee of New Haven has^ position to challenge for the area title with a 21.1 mark.
Chuck Ingram of Port Huron .. .. .. has dominated the area lead the * last half of the season and is still on top with 22J.
WOIX <SS)
ro FT TP adt 4 4-9 19


Jf-^iMorin'n. 1
940 Joslyn FE 4-5393 < PONTIAC	1
I	SCOBS BT OVABTBBS
WnUrtord OU. ...... 13 I I	_	______ „
OLU M-as" •	ijj }?:
1 WBBSTLINO sooiAf	p*?I ! i!!!'!!' ! 1* 141 Ir
Betlnriu (tS)	COn (141	Rodwnn, Pcmdal* ..........15	2M	17..
^ H—3. Wtteke ftn d*c. Knntti. m—fstinnik. lampbrr* ; ..	^
UUct	von by forfeit.	112—OcBonttcInlr	Mdorc. Brother Rice ..14	222	IS-
‘ir, d>r Alinrina. lie—Oary iKi doo.lSvlia. Northrllle ... . 14 220 II .
l7—Kwh iXi	dec XnHa. 122—	Daniel. Bawl Park ....... IS	227	15.2
“ detqled	Doeiber|. ^135—	Pope. Bt.	**	’■ *
______________I iB» dev.	O TP AT.
IM^BrencM ID)_ dw. 1	- . -	..
' Pellh 127—KMh iXi ' BaUebury iKi der ' Schuyler (Ui dee.
' Oreior 111—Johnaon 4
I pinned	Lee.
r. Port Huron ....14 22A 22
,pek. Hts'.—Campbell iKl pinned 1
Boaton A, Detroit 2
Taday’e Oamaa Boboduled SaUrday’e Oamce
_________ Montreal
New York at Toronto
11.7'^_i_
435 Soith Sagiaaw
FE 2-1010
¥
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You've otlcod for it! Wo'ro giving it to you—another chance to moke a bargain buy on a new Pontiac, Tempest or Buick. We're having a big birthday celebration all March long.' Our aim is to sell 100 new cart. That's why we're prepared to give you top dollar on your trade-in. That's why youll find our prices unbeatable!
Whatever you do, donU make a move on a new or used car until you see us. Ring the bargain bell at Shelton Pontiac-Buick,
JUST LOOK AT THESE BELL-RINGING BARGAINS ON NEW CARS!
’63 PONTIAC .... $3465.29 —Yeur ’66 Chev o a 91918.96 YoiTPay........ 91546.24
’63 BUICK......93665.55
-Yeur’60 Chev. a 1919.99 You Pay a . a a .. a a $1746.59
CATALINA 2-DOOR SEDAN, with Hydramatk, povmr stcBrlng, powar brakBS, Mp«r dsluxB radio, bock-up lights, windshiald woihBr*. dual tp««d wipara, dacor graup; whit*-wal1 tiras, all taxat, licanta plats transfar and titia in-xhidad. You pay only $1546.24 and a '60 Impala Chavralft Sport Coup* ,at $1918.96 in condition list^
LaSABRE ^-DOOR SEDAN, Dynoflow, pewar brakat, powar staaring, radio, sofaty graup, windthiald wathars, dual spaad wipars, chroma window trim, daluxa whaai covart, oil toxat, licansa piota transfar and titia Includad. You pay onlyf $1746.59 and a '60 Chavrolat Impala Sport Coupa ot $1918.96 in condition listad balow.
[*	Brine in this coupon. Woli put	it	in	the	Birgain Btii	S	’
I	and you can win lioth prizas.	I
I	Put m« in thawaakly draw forth*	birthday cake and	|
I	for the fobuiout fr** w**k*nd.	I
• ....-	.	, I.
I	Name............................................  |
I	Addien...................................... |
4^~Xffyr5tdfi^... .V.4VV .V. .vrr.:... ;;v7;7r;» .77;--
I	I
I	Phone..........................................   I	.
I	i am driving*..,............................. |
I ^	Modal	Yaor	|
Wo will allow thasa pricat on timilor trada-int providing thoy ora oquippod with tho following •occottorios and options: Radio, hootor, automatic trantmisBien, powor (tooring, powor brakot ond whitowollB, ond ofo in lot condition. Thoto oilovrancos ora on tho standard tizo now earsonly a littio lost on compact modolt. Comparablo allowoncos on oil othor makos and modolt.
NTIAC-BUICK^
223 Main Straai Rodntler, WeliigaR We're Out to Sell 100 New Cars in March
C—4
i
THE POXTIA(- 1>RKSS. FRIDAY. MARCFf 1, 19ft3
‘♦- Marfets. Business tod Finance
MARKETS
. The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale ^ckage lots. Quotations arT furnished by the
Weak Rally Attempted

Market Shows. Firmer Tone
Tapers Renew Strike Talks-
noon Wednesday.
*	. Produce
One New York Deity to liesume Publication
NEW YORK (APl'-^tock mar-!' Brokers said there was no onel Some Wall Streeters believed Detroit Bureau of Markets as of,	‘0^ ‘hing to blame for the market’s;the market bad finally entered a
uetroii Bureau ot Maraeis, as oiujriy Friday afternoon after twojgenerally unsatisfactory perform- period of conjwUdation after its days of sizable losses.	ance this wwk. One mentioned extended advance.	j
I Gains and kisses of key issues!apprehension over the fate of Motors steels, metals and rails|
were generally fractional." [President Kennedy’s tax program were higher. Utilities, oils and air-' NEW.YORK (API— Publishers, mm!	opening the	Wtot tiie-4eewHincs were mixed"	|following the decision of one news-
% ket attempted a rally but it was I ties and Exchange Commission i There was little in the business paper to resume publication, re-[J, weak and prices began easing off.will report soon on its investiga- news to nudge prices either way.[hewed negotiations today with the
their best levels.	ItlAn nf tho cAAnriliAc inHnctrv	An avnnniinn Inn.. D^ A .Mkini.'fftrilfino npinfarc in fKa	AA.
.' Dcllclolu. I
ApplM. JOOAItaAlk ku.. ..
AppUi, Mclnlsth. C. A. ApplM. MelnUMh. bu. Applu. Nortiurn Spj. C. A. ApplM, Northern Bpr Applet. atMle a^
VKUITAU.U
Ition.of the securities industry.

Cerrou. lopped, bu Celery, root Uorieredlih. pk. l.eekt. de. bcbT ..
I U.S. Bond Prices Go Higher

NEW YORK 0B-U.S. govern-to f/52
RedlehM. .Meek Kedlehet.WiuCbouM Rhubarb. PbotbouH. I
j.M ment bond prices were higher in inactive trying at.the opening to-,;^day. Corporate issues were most-*5 ly unchanged although some rails ]■» were lower.
throu|hout the list.
An exception was RCA, which [striking printers in the city’s 84-raised its dividend, causing the'day press blackout.
;stock to immediately advance! Eight other publishers vowed to more than a point.	[stand firm despite the decision of
I Chrysler gained more than a , the New York Post to start print-point. General Motors and Ford il>8 again on Monday, were fractional gainers.	I The Post was-one of five news-
American Teletoone moved up papers not struck when Local fairly general g point.'ETiPont and International ^of the ,^.FL-CIO International Ty-
Poultry and Eggs
-Business Machines managed only
-----—  ------K—.----------- fractional advanees^—- -
In corporate actiyity on the. Prices on the American Stock i New York Stock E x c h a n gciExchange were higher in quiet [changes were mostly in the frac- trading. Up were Electronic Spe-An over-the-counter dealer in!tions. Curtis Publishing 6s gainedIcialty, Kaiser Industries, Kratter, *!«jTreasury bonds said gains of 2-32ia*fuH point, howiever, at 78*4. ‘Occidental Petroleum and Syntex.
pographical Union walked out of lour others-last Dec. 8 ip a coit ract dispute.
DETROIT POULTET	|
OETROrr, Mircti 1 iAPi-.prlcci pAld ||*r pouod At Ottroil tor No. I buillty
RoMUri’over i lb>. 23-14; brolltri And I try«r»_3_.4 lb|. wbittt M-Jl: Birrtd.j
The New York Stock Exchange
...-........DETROn-ROOk.....
OBTROIT, March 1 lAPi-l paid p«r dOMo At OMrolt by ccivert (IncludiDb U.S.i:
:«l pric flrtt r
Whltoi Oi__-
Urib	_______
Brownt irad* XTkri»-KVb-36: ehwki 3l-»H.
Km-H-3IVbi-n
. I York Stock. XiehAiin wil
I	SAlM	_____
(hdt.l Hlfb Low Loot Ckf. Piregtne I Abbott L J,» I Alto M - Vi f»tChrl
• AW/- V.. UK A	-iLr.C;',:.

MercAntllo IxchAnte — Batlor otoadir
ACP Ind 2 SO ■"-Ipol
Red 2.M
. f»tChrl 1.1 13	IPIInikt M
•3'k + Wipio Pw
<bSo.l bur Lw LaM Chi.
____  _____ 1.4« 12 49(4 49	49tb -ft
..	A. ■	A»-A	A'.vi	A ftiPfUor IOa	74	49V«	47ft	49ft
4	17'i	IS’i	17-	+'ft:Phelpo D 2	I	52’4	Uft	Mft
II	31ft	39ft	3lft	t_ftiPhlU RL-Uk	W	JOft	99	99ft
« 14ft 34trT4tf- ft'Phil Rdf lb	17 39ft 24ft 29ft
26	29ft	23	33ft	+ ft PhU Mor 3M	14	72ft	73ft	72ft
9	20ft	20ft	20ft iphui Pot 1.90	20	4r4	47ft	47ft
1 wT"l. r.7“ft;“S?m
Lud 3 Aiirsrw 190 AlHedCh 180
Livestock
ABoMh .50e
CHICAGO LIVBATOCE CHICAGO. AUrch 1 iAPi-Hori 5,500;
Ut IfO-aM lb butebert aU*dy to 35 XmCv^ hlfbtrf>«W^tlfhU u)tf trsdM tusdy ^ .r to 38 lower with Ute *mt closlnt trade	'
fully 35 lower; eowe steady to 35 lower;^	ms
ahlppers took 3.800; 1-3 100-330 lb butch-,	^
ere 15.38-15.50; around 300 head at 18.50:1	J®
mixed 1-3 100-380 Ibe U.50-15.00. 3•l|^S“"Vl xli
260-200 lb.	.mixM ,J-3.
,i„, ! Am Srotliif I 00 with. AmStd M
___________________..	...V, ,K. 60 AmTkT 6M
_____; hollort. eowo ond bulU lUodv; Am Job 160
four loodA mMtly prime 1.300-1.300 Ibj^ni Vlob eloufhter iteeri 26.60;
30 66> . 66ft I
12 26 3«ft i
60 60ft 60 90ft 32 33ft 63ft 36ft 4 »ft 10ft 10ft 43 41ft 21ft 21ft 19 29ft 34ft 96ft 299 30ft 30ft 30ft 12 41ft 41ft 41ft
4 Flo PL 4 Pd Poir FMC Cp
- .^OomSIr ’ftlo Accet I ftiOen Cl|
1	71ft	70ft	70ft -	ftjPIt Plot	2J0b
16	24ft	24	24	—	ft Pit StMl
21 39ft Uft 29	. Polorold .30
103 43ft 42	42V. + ft ProctfiO 140
13 Oft 9ft A Oft I PSvEO 2.40 g	23	24	Uft	24	-	.V, PuMklo	32t
I	47	27H	27ft	27ft +	ft Pullmon	140
_G—	[Pure OU 1.90
10 27ft 27ft rv. - W .
2	21ft 21ft 21ft , fRCA 10
I 23 30 29ft 20	Ro]
27	20ft	26ft	Uft A	>4 Ro)
32	71ft	73	73ft +	ft Rel
1	13	79ft	79ft	79ft +	V. Rf[
19	34	Uft	34	—	ft I Rep
H^a 66ft
10	9%	99.	...
K lUft 127ft irft - ft
The five newspapers closed untarily at that time in a one struck, all struck policy.
Dorothy Schiff, Post publisher, resigxied Thursday from the Publishers Association of New York City and said she was reopening her newspaper because “the glrike has gone on long enough.’ CONTRACTS UTER Mrs. Schiff said die T»*jnlers were returning to the Post under terms of their old contract, with a new contract to be reached later.
Post printers and members of the advertising staff were back on + ft’the j|pb today. Some editorial em-- ployes also were called in to prepare for Monday’s press run.
The publishers and printers Renewed negotiations.
-ftOPrecn 1.20 yft 0Pub*v lit
+ ^4;OPbMJ 1.2ft	1
toon Eli 1.20 ■f ft OTelhEt .10	!
+ V. OenTlre .40	3
+ ft Oerbor Prod l .ip
II ond choice over I
.•*1 .}j>*»
Uft Uft 369. A ft RexoU 90b _Sft 6ft 9ft-ft'RcynM0l .N Uft U Uft-fttReyTob 160 30ft Uft 30ft— V4 Rhoem Ml 26 ■ 24ft 24ft RlchlOU i.N lift 21ft 21ft . ft'RobPultn 1 82S 93ft 63ft - ft Rohr Corp 1 ........... iRoyDu 1.910
46	27ft	Uft	»V.	.
6	lift	11	lift	.1
9	19	17ft	II	H
U	37ft	27ft	27ft
27 XI3ft 43ft ■"
Mayor Robert F. Wagner sat in as mediator. He said both sides prefer to be able to arrive at 17 lift 31ft lift ; ft ® settlement through mediation
“	—' + wand negotiation rather than have, ._______________.	.	, . ._k.
'"w^^r“saTd mS	tr.nL'l.LiH
Sion would not affect the negotiations.
79	24ft	23ft	- , .
“	“	Uft	Uft -	ft
........4 -	ft
60 U
10 Uft ....
25 42ft 61ft 41ft
20ft 2tft 2(ft -
TTie association,’ which represents the majpr newspapers in 2 Uft Uft 2o>4 '.dealings with craft unions, said 11 Toft Toft ToT;T ft'in a statement that Mrs. Schiff’s ‘9 39ft 39ft 1 ft break “does not alter the firm
11	9>I 8 * 6*. + ft determination of the other pub-uft Uft 32>, A ft lishers in the association to con-
ft 7»ft t i; tinue to press for a satisfactory S;? gJJ H agreement to end tbe current vJstrike.’’
To Uft ijft ~ ''*1 “The remaining members of the
TT 47’* 46ft z IS	S'"® ® s^-ong
12	Uft Uft Uft ‘igroup of newspapers that are de-
61 13ft Uft Tift + ftifermined to reach a satisfactory IT 37^ Uft TT* 7 Hagreexnent that will enable us to ..................‘ continue in business,*’ Amoiy
62ft 6i». 6ift - ft (Bradford, vice president ^ tHe "ft ^ New York Times and spokesman ^ for the publishers, aaidr^
It is my personal view that the resignation of one member should not affect our ability to do that,” he added.
Mrs. Schiff’s decision leaves four other newspapers shut down 8y Ure printers’ strike and four others closed voluntarily.
u:s.
Trade Muscles for Doubters
fOiinKeTIffer Moscow Dare
Want to Tell Their Side of Ideology Rift
By SAM DAWSON [will face strong competition in for-AP	N«Wl Anplyst	trade. And he lists two prob-
X. r.» lA- „ . „ 16ins « of prime importanoe In
NEW YORK-Uncle Sam this
may have much stronger trade muKles- than some doubters at
1. Adjustment of wages-and prices in the light of productivity
home and abroad have beeiusay-^Uj^ always, with an eye on
ing. Tfie European CbnijnQn Mar-”	^	----
ket’s challenge has awed many.
The farther-off threat of the Com-
DAWSON
munist Bloc'impresses others.
* *
Starting at a low base after World War II the industrial growth of these new boys on the block been striking. It has been dramatized by the shrinking since 1957 of the U;S."go-id re-e r V e 8 as foreigners turned in their once sought after dollars for the mdtal.
But the fears that Uncle Sam is in a dangerous situation may have been overdone, the National Bureau of Economic Research suggests today. *nie private nonprofit organization that studies and interprets economic facts says that today's problems are to frern Insoluble—and perhaps can be met without any extreme measures. HEALTHY BALANCE The study called "The United States as World Trader and Banker” notes that American exports have been Rowing faster than imports, making for a very healthy trade balance. <The study covers the last 10- years, rather than the last few months when the growth pattern was reversed, perhaps temporarily.)
Hal B. Lary, associate director of research of the bureau, feels
VUb aivoojr^	s
international competith tions.
2. Harmonizing monetary^ and general economic policy to meet the nation’s domestic objectives,^ but always with an eye on preventing excessive outflows of capital.
1116 problems are tough. But the 4udy notes t^t in the last two years U.S. prices have been getting more competitive, helped by the fact that labor costs per unit of output have been fairly steady here-since 1957 while they "have b^n rising elsewhere.
And the monetary problem has been eased a bit by a drop in interest rates abroad to stimulate economies that also have been troubled by a slowdown in growth rates.
TOKYO (AP)-Red China dared the Soviet Union today to let Peking beam its side of the ideological dispute with. Moscow to tlu rest of the Communist world.
Peking neensed Mescew of jamming Red China’s broad-
of this underlying trading strength.	,
h their fear that the U.S.compeU-b®	^
block countries from hearing Mao Tze-tnng’s sido of the argument. It called the followers of Soviet Premier Khrushchev cowardly as mice.
The^ new propaganda barrage aimed dt the Kremlin was distributed by the New China News Agency. It quoted from an article in. Red Flag, theoretical journal of the Chinese Communist party.
Red Flag pointed out that the Chinese Communists last week had published the anti-Peking views of Khrushchev, theConomunist party newspaper PraVda and the, premier’s French Communist supporters in his quarrel with the Chinese.
“Cowardly as mice,'* Red Flag continued, “they are scared to death, they dare not let the people of their own countries see our articles for themselves and have endeavored to hnpoM a water-tight embargo. They are evea using ..a^poatecfal statioB-to-jauB oar broadcasts to prevent people from listening.”
In Moscow, an official denied that the Soviet Union is jamming broadcasts from Communist China.
The official, Sergei fiomanov-sky, chief ot the Cultural Relations Department, said at a news Pontiac and Birmingham werel®®pf*>’ence, “'Ihere must be a kmong 10 Michigan cities de- misunderstanding.” signaled today to receive new four-hour, same-day mail serv-e.
Under the new program, letters deposited in specially marked boxes before 11 a.m. win
to Affect City
Pontiac, Birmingham to Get New Service
tlve power was weakening. The
p.m.
pfear was sharpened-in I9fl0"and Also slated for the ncceler-
service at a date to.he announced -soon are Ann Arbor, Bay City, Escanaba, East Lansing, Iron Mountain, Saginaw, Sault Ste. Marie and Traverse City.
1961 by thb heavy outflow of liquid capital to prospering Europe where interest rates were higher, and by an erosion in the U.S. gold reserve.
But American exports continued to hold well above imports, giving this country a favoral^ trade balance the bureau figures at more than $7 billion a year of late, compared with billion 10 years ago. The trouble has been that other outflow of dollars—military spending overseas, foreign aid. investments abroad, and the like— have grown, too, and- still top the trade balance, so that we run a
ficlt in payments. _______
The bureau says this problem must be meLTiunnhinks the competitive strength of the United States can be increased Iqr atten-tion to its export potential. Some ...
of the financial dram, such as the^or 16 special mail boxes for the outflow of capital, may prove to .	_
be temporary and due to passing conditions.
At home the study suggests the
aim should be “achieving greater	...... -
^55	also
Cavanagh Runs’ From Suggestion hr Walkafhon

DETROIT (UPD—Mayor Jerome Cavanagh today declined a suggestion that he compete in a walkathon with Los Angeles Mayor Samuel Yorty to settle the , dispute over the Olympic Games.
William W. Donaldson, Pontiacj DetroiLodginally won the Postmaster, said* specW mriL to be the U. S. city to bid for the moxes were speciHed for the igeg Olympic Games. But the four-hour servipe in a recent bidding was reopened recently survey conducted here by the .when Los Angeles put pressure Post Wfice Department	Ln the U.S. Olympic Committee.
Donaldson said it would be dif- gen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., ficult rot to determine how tene- suggested yesterday that Yorty hcia Jhe new system would bejand Cavanagh take a 50-mile hike «nishM^or ^
M PPOVI^^ wHhout adding new finishes first, would win the right personnel by revising present L ^id for the games.
'A 50-mile hike or a 50-hour
talkathon will hkve little effect on the decision of the USOC on March 18 in New York,” Cava-nagh said.
Grain Futures Trade|;:'tgS'^orsC'i; Well Mixed at First
Pontiac presently offers two deliveries in the downtown area and one in residential sections.
Birmingham, according to t [similar survey, would utilize 15 or 16 special mail boxes for the proposed jiew stystem, Postmaster Roland Reese said	x ■	> m «
Like Donaldson, Reese felt it NeWS ID Bfief would be impossible to appraise
CHICAGO (AP)-’IYade in the grain futures market was rather well mixed during tbe first several minutes of transactions to-,77^‘ + in day" with prlciM showing little tendency either way.
★ w
Wheat came under Scattered selling as speculators expressed some fear that tenders on the [March contract may circutate + }4[ freely for awhile.
4 ft! The first tenders, posted after ftjthe close of yesterday’s trading, “+amoiinted to more than 2 million bushels.
— -.........— ftl
.. 24ft 24ft 24ft - v«	^	• n •
.»	l?^ 12^ -	Gram Prices
growth of output, and higher employment.” It calls too pessimistic the view that these can’t be achieved without damage to the dollar’s foreign exchange' value.
TWO PROBLEMS
Coal Miners Defy De Gaulle
made this morning by Michigan Senators Patrick McNam-
The accelerated service was launched in Lansing last summer. Since then it has bMn designated for Battle Creek, Detroit, Flint, Grand Rapids, Kalamazoo.
Postal rates for the four-hour sendee are the same as regular rates.
PARIS fAPl-Presldent Chairm de Gaulle faced a serious domestic crisis today. Stubborn coal miners defied him on an is§ue dearer fo them than Algeria or international grandeur—wages.
Communist, Catholic and Socialist unions challenged-De Gaulle and began an indefinite strike in France’s ntoonalized coal mines.
The government agreed to a demonstration strike toda^and Saturday. But it said if the miners do not return*to work Monday, they will be drafted into the army. If they do not return then, they wiH be liable to fines and imprisonment after trial by tough military courts.
Other unions awaited the outcome of the test of strength. Workers in the gas and electric systems and the railways — all
want more money.
The government contends wage 'increases for the miners will set m.7 IS:* iSI STilof^ a general rise in wages and m! 2 127 0 1S T M 9	produce an infla-
277? 122 0 Tul	Spiral. The miners say
Mt 970 iiol 2oo.6|France is booming and it’s time nti iSj iui	got their share. ^
was reported stolen from the from the home of Steven Erickson, 83 Mark Ave. Erickson told police the envelope was on a table in the. frent room of the house.
offers two daily deliveries in the f, downtown area.
Neither of tbe area postma^ ters knew when the system would begin. Announcement of _ , „ the newly designated cities was	Whitfield,
Store Linked to Electronic Stock Setup
The J. C. Penney store in the Miracle Mile Shopping Center has been linked to n new nationwide semiautomatic mere handising system.
The system, described as a major advance in electronic retailing and a boon to better customer service,. was developed by firm’s New York headquarters and employs a National Cash Register 315 electronic computer.
B. R. Eastridge, local Penney manager, said the system assures customers of a greater supply of
lection of colors and styles.
Twice a week special perforated sales tags are shipped to New York. The information is converted to punched cards and fed into the pomputer which determines! what orders are to be written for the local store.
Court, Waterford'township, tdid police yesterday a power lawn nrower valued at 8112 was stolen ^m herbage.
Rummage Sale, Friday, March 1. 128 W. Pike St., beginning at 6 p m.	—Adv.
Rummage Sale, Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, 19 Front, March 2, •-5-	-rAdv.
Rummage Sale at m W. Pfte,
aturday 9 to 2.	—Adv.
Tap-Ballat—Toe Music Center. FE 4-4700.
ChiU Supper by BaldwOji E.U.B.Y.F., March 2nd, 5 to 8 p.m., at 212 Baldwin.
Ford Plans to Organize Puerto Rico Operation
DEARBORN (UPI)-Ford Motor Co. plans to organize a wholly owned subsidiary In Puerto Rico to produce ball bearings for Ford’s U.S. operations, it was announced yesterday.
Henry Ford II, board chairman, said arrangements for the plant have not been completed but it was expected that construction would begin shortly and be com-pTetod in about 20 mohUis.
Lodge Calendar
Regular Communication Pontiac Dodge No. 21 FtAM, Friday. March 1st, 7:30 p.m. George Pappas, W.M-	-Adv.
! -^SS,
\
THE PONTIAC PKESS, FRIDAY, MAjtCH 1, 1963

Report Plane Down at Sea; NoSurvivors
PORTSMOUTH, Va, (AP)-’nie Coast Guard said today the passenger liner Queen Elizabeth radioed that a small single-engine plane pUunged into the Atlantic 90 miles southeast of Cape Hi^tteras,' N.C., and sank immediately- . _ the ship said it saw no sur-
The stern lookout aboard the w liner said. the . red-nosed civilian plane pancaked into the ocean quarter-hule off the stem of the Queen Elizabeth. The plane’s can-"opy was intact when the craft
troy Shooting Tipster Found
- Fxictory Weaker Ciglmi to Be 'Investigator'
A Highland Park factory worker has admitted being the “private investigate’’ who provided the Up that led to Uie Feb. 21 shooting of a Troy woman and her male companion by the wom-■ ‘ husuawd.
Americans Eye FPC Let Millions Sip By,
Mount Everest
MRS. ROY L. BAILEY service for Mrs. Roy L. (EkUth F,t Bailey, 9t, of It Lexington Place will be at 1 p.m. tomorrow in the Voorhees-Siple Chapel with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery.
Mrs. Bailey died Wednesday after an illness of 10 days.
“i
Oakland County Senior 4>* ststaniProfoeuter Robert Tom* pUn said today that the man, uiio was not Identified, admitted his mte in the case to Troy police.
Templin he expects to take a formal statement from the 'tnan today.
MRS. JAMES K. THOMAS Mrs^. James K. (ABce G-.) fh^ as._».^«f lit Draper St., died unexpectedly of a lwaA*'lfflHeiR this nHuming. Her body is at the Do nelson • Johns Funeral Home.
K. Lee, 58, of 5057 Kidder Road: will be 2 p.m. Sunday at the .
Muir BroUmrs Funeral Home.f YVASHlNGTCm Burial will follow in Fo^pison are making their first attempt Cemetery, Almont Township. [to climb and explore the mys-Mr. Lee died Thursday after teries of Mount Everest, the a brief illness. He was a buildinglworld’s lofUest mountain, contractor.	1	★	*	★
Surviving are his wife Doro-| The great peak astride the thy; two daughters, Mrs. Albert Nepal-Tibet border on the roof of
Two vessbls have 4)een diverted to the scene and two Cogst Guard CIM turboprop planes are search-^ ing the arep. The ships are the
Es» Was^ton, 10 miles away, Howard Mordue, 32, of 4016 and the Ault, a Navy ship, 60 chestnut HiU Drive, said he re-miles distant.	[ceived a telephone Up on the
whereabouts of bish wife Barbara,
Helicopter Keeps Boat From Dangerous Rocks
KEY WEST, Fla. (JPI -Help came from the skies to a Key West fisherman who broke an oar while out in a rowboat and began to drift towards dangerous shoals.
The pilot of a Navy helicopter noticed the plight of Horace Crai^rd and maneuvered unUl hte raTplef" blades were kicking
33, and Nelson Hartman, 26, l05 CutUng Blvd., Troy, about 20 minutes before the 2.20 a.m. shooting.
Mordue is charged with assault with intent to murder in Uie critical wounding of the pair. He is free on |5,6M bond and has been a patient in a Detroit psychiatric hospiUil since the incident.
shooting took place in the
up strong enough waves to hold | Parking lot of the Thurderbird the little boat off the rocks. The Lanes in Troy, helicopter hovered until a crash	*	* w
boat arrived to tow Crawford to! Templin said the‘ investigator’ safety.	jtoid police he was at the bowling
--------------—	' alley and phoned Mordue atwiK
12:30 or 12:45 a.m. The man said
S|wncer of Imlay City and Mrs. diaries Buehner of, Rochester;
and ^ graiiddaughter.
WILLIAM SCHMITT WHITE UIKE TOWNSHIP
Uie world has turned back 13 of 15 major expediUons. Now, an American team of 20 scienUst-mountafaieers has c o m p 1 e t e d plafts to luerlfar-mountaih ail field IsSwratory for massive sci-
MRS. RUSSELL BRECHBIEL
IMLAY CITY-«ervice for Mrs. Russell (Bessie) Brechbiel, 58, of 125 W. Fifth St., will be 2 pjn. tomorrow at the Muir Brothers Funeral Home. Burial will follow in Willow Grove Cemetery, Armada.
Mrs. Russell died Wednesday after a lengUiy illness.
She was a member of the Imlay City Congregational Ct.urch; Chapter No. 252, Order of the Eastern Star; and Rebekah Lodge No' 16i;
Surviving are her mother, Mrs. Lillian Averill, and a broUier, Harlan Greenwald, both of InUay City.
Service for for,ner resident wil-d«*rta« .««•
liam Schmitt of Holmes Beach,
FT.. .U1 b. UUM.,
Patrick’s Catholic Church, Union Lake. Burial will follow in Oakland Hills Cemetery.
Mr. Schmitt died Tuesday after lengthy illness. The Rosary .irUl be recited, at 8 p.m. Sunday at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home, Pontiac, where his body will be after 3 p.m. tomorrow.
He was a member of Temstedt Post No. i66, American Legion.
Surviving are his wife Delphine and a sister.
GEORGE K. LEE ALMONT — Service for George
'U. of M. Sees 11,000 Apply; Can Admit 31 Pet/
Finnish Employes Strike
HELSINKI, Finland (UPI) -
Mordue had asked him a few days earlier to trail his wife, ac-
About 20,000 federal employes	Templin.
went on strike today, crippling	**“ '
or halting railway, tele^aph, telephone, postal and air communications.
NEW YORK - The University of Michigan will be able to admit only 3,400 freshmen from 11,000 an>licants for the fall semester. President H a r 1 a
Mordue owns the eight-s t o r yljfiatcher of the university says. Medical Arts Building in Highland Park.
Officers Train in Russia
ALGIERS, Algeria (UPI) - The Algerian army last night ynt 48
young officers to Moscow for ad-vahced military training.
American girb get an early start in earning and managing money, a teen-age magazine survey shows. Before their 11th birthday 57.5 per cgnt have
earned at least some of their spending, money.
Hatcher reported yesterday on university progress to 00 alumni who now are leaders in the communications field in. New York.
Strange Calls Precede Death
Morgan, the one-man rebellion in the Federal Power Commission, las charged that the agency lost consumers hundreds of millions of dollars through its handling of gas rate cases.
The large-scale expedition ia M
Chicago Official Slain in 'Professional Job'
CHICAGO (AP) — Two strange telephone calls, police say, have added to the mystery surrounding the slaying of Alderman B«ija-min F. Lewis, Negro Democratic political leader.
Lewis, 53, was found face down on the floor of trtx'office Thursday with three bullet wounds in the head and his hands handcuffed. Four expended 32-caliber cartridges were nearby.
Cameraia, a veteran of the hi^ Himalayas.
Chief sponsors are the National Geographic Society, the National Science Foundation, Office of Naval Research, ihiit-ed States Air Force, Office of Scientific Research, Exploren Club of New York, mid University of Soothem California at Los Angeles.
Unlike past mountaineering efforts, the American Mount Everest Expedition of 1963 will not disband when the project is completed.
It win become American Everest Foundation supporting future Scientific hi^-mountain areas throughout the world.
Although the expedition is primarily scientific, team mehdiers will attempt to climb not only Everest (29,$28 feet), but her sister peaks, Lhotse (27,923 feet), the world’s fourth highest, and Nuptse (25,726 feet).
Everest has been topped only twice; Lhotse and Nuptse, once each. No expedition has ever attempted all three.
Charges Resigning Member
WASHINGTON (AP) - Howard) -Electric and gas utilities, he
said, are syphoning off hundreds of millions of dollars by paying taxes on a liberalized depreciation based on the full tax, without the liberalizing formula.
He thus closed his case against the FPC and left Commission !3iairman Joseph Swidler mount a defenseteday before the louse Commerce siJbcomifnittee. Thursday’s session, in Which Ifergan delivered a p^t-by-point indictment of the commission— and in effect, against all the regulating agencies—set off some tempers. At one time, four committee members were shouting across the table.	.
cal advisory committee representing the natural gas industry which Morgan said caise questions of conflict''of interest and pose a threat to the commission’s integrity-
‘In other words," said Morgan, ‘their rates are based on phan-
paid.’’
-^e FPC J»8s set up a techni-
Before Morgan read his statement, Rep. John B. Bennett, R-
tom taxes which may never be Mich.,*4»d called Morgan’s letter
to the President gobbledygook and hotair.
March qr Not; Frigid Weather Gojes Right On
Morgan’s appearance was his second before the congressmen, who summoned him to explain a letter he had written to President Kennedy declining to serve a second terntj qn tbg.„(iflimmission.
htergan read a long statement givihg the reasons he felt impelled to leave the commission io which Kennedy appointed him two years ago.
ms CHARGES
Some of his main points:
—In clearing up a gigantic back-tog of gas rate refund cases, the commission settled thehi_without complete adJudlcatton. ~ This,
The audience included magazine editors, newspapermen and radio and television pwaonalitlea.
Police said one of the telephone calls suggested Lewis had an un-
The luncheon meeting was hdd I at the Overseas Press aub here.
said, led tp refunds of about 1150 million less than the consumers would have received.
Said Morgan: “The whether 1150 million in hard-earned consumer cash is a proper price to pay for helping clear up the commission’s backlog.’’
By United Press International March limped in like a frostbitten Lion todayv dumping fresh snow across the center of the nation and drenching the southern plains with rain.
With spring only three weeks away, the mercury at Lone Rock, Wis., dipped to 8 degrees below zero and Belleville, 111., reported more than 2 inches of new snow.
Heavy snow warnings were issued for much of the area from southern Missouri to southern Ohio, with more than 4 inches of snow expected.
The Weather Bureau said the
PLYMOUTH. Mass. W - A bell cast in 1773 may be used to summon children in the $2.5 mil-Plymouth-Catver Regional High School — which is still in the planning stage.
new storm would rndve'^SHwafd during the day.
France has received |9.4 billion in foreign aid from the United States, more than any other nation. Sen. Wayne Morse, D-Ore., recently informed the Senate.
1773 Bell Is Given for New High School
The bell, 15 inctied high and 23 inches across the base, cast for a -pre-Revolutionary War school, was later used in a fire house.
The Pilgrim Society has presented it to the regional school committee, which has not yet decided whether to use it. The school is scheduled to open in September 1963.
State Road Toll Mounts
EAST LANSING W - Traffic accidents have killed 181 persons in Michigan so far this year, provisional figures compiled by state police showed today. The toll at this date last year was
164.
sl^. They said the other indicat-ea an emotionally unstable gunman may have been involved.
Lewis, one of six Negroes on the City Council of 50 aktermen, was slain less than 36 hours after his re-election in the 24th Ward! by a 12-1 margin to a second four-year term on the council.
LACK LEADS
Investigators said they were without a substantial theory in the killing. John Ascher, an assistant deputy police superintendent, termed the slaying a professional
One or The lefepfidne cSlK stirred quick action when It came in the main police switchboard
GETTING SEA LEGS QN LAND British naval helicopter descends for a landing on a rocking platform at the Royal Aircraft Establishment at Bedford, England. The
platform, which can be tilted several degrees in any direction, was built to simulate the pitching and rolling action of a ship at sea.
about an hour after a jiuntor^to^ covered the alderman’s body.
“I’ve got Lewis,” the caller, man, was quoteda s saying, “and now I’m going to get Biggs.”
Protection, was set up at the home of Robert Biggs, 58, a Negro vrtio was''the unsuccessful Democratic candidate for aMo’-man in Tuesday’s balloting in the 29th Ward.
The second telephone call was described by James Gilbert, a police sergeant who said he called Wednesday night to discuss a personal matter.
Gilbert said Lewis sounded distracted by something and cut him ^)ff abru^y with, “I’m soiry, I [have to hang up now.” This is the last known report of 'tion with Lewis.
At 'New Kirld' of Meeting
OK School Program Add if ions
-School board members from all parts of Oakland County attended a new kimi of meeting last night — and approved program expansions in the record 1963-64 general fund -budget of the (tounty Board of Education.
One member from each of 25 county school boards met-under the provisions of a new state law requiring the budget to be submitted to a committee com-posed of a member of each local school board.
Five of the county’s 30 school districts were not represented.
. The School hoard members voted 23-2 to approve the $370,832 budget prepared by County Sch^to Siyt William J. Emer-«m and tentatively approved by the county board two weeks ago.
Approval -came after the defeat of a motion to trim $36,000 from the budget.
Under the new state law, the school board members are empowered to set a maxlmnm on
the budget to be presented by the County Board of Education to the County Tax Allocation
The $36,000 represented half of the proposed increases in program.
Among the proposed program expansions are $20,000 for a research program, including a director’s salary, and some $33,000 for new personnel in the reading clinic and testing and guidance ]x-ogram.	,
The budget totals fiOONi and provides a cash balance of -$129, 953 at the end of the fiscal year.
It goes before the* County Allocation Board in May.
CHANGE IN YEAR
which made the Ctouniy Board of Education a separate unit as an intermediate school district. In the past, the board’s budget was part of the county’s. ^
The budget calls for a tax allocation of about .14 or .15 mUl ($.14 or ;15 per $1.06l assessed valuation). It is $127,-MtL higher than this yeff’s
cause the county board changes this year to a July 1, June 3 [fiscal year. Ctosh is needed for operations from July 1, 1964, until .tax collections the following January, Emerson said.
‘The fiscal year change also results from the new state law.
county board’s millage al location from the .1 mill it received this year would cut into the millage allocation for local school districts.
Some $32,000 (d the increase will go to pay for services the board previously received Without charge from the county. Another $14,000 will pay for normal salary increases.
Royal Oak School Board member E. Burrows Smith and Rodi-ester School Board member
Emerson said this would not necessarily happen.
School board members agreed that the new kind of meeting to consider the budget was a good idea.
“It gives the local districts a voice in the county’s pro^am, a voice it should have,’^ said Monroe M. Osmun of the Pontiac School Board.
Earlier in the day, the (tounty Board of Education approved submission to the tax allocation
YOU GET PLUS VALUES-hard-to-measure“extxas”-from newspaper advertising. For example-'ACCEPTABILITY. For instance, a very recent survey, made by Audits and Surveys for the newspaper industry, revealed that 75% of the men and 84% of the women who read a daily newspaper say, “I like to look at ads even when I do not plan to buy anything.”, A plus value like this is hard to measure, but it adds up to a big differenca That's why advertisers last year spent more money in newspapers than in radio, tdevision, magaanes, and outdoor combined!*	•samM.'PrtHttnrini
itarosrWl^YOURtUSTOMETO^^	NEWSPAPER
time when the required changeover necessitated provi-! This budget, not required to sions for a cash balance at the be submitted to local school
end of the year.
Smith and Birmingham School Board mmnber Bennet W. Root expre^ed fears that -inereasiiig
board members, provides for 21 new special education rooins for handicapped children in county
In the Pontiac Area, They Read THE PONTIAC PRESS

Petrified FoiesI 3tstU.S.Paik
Develop Tracers, Electronic Unit, to Nab Thieves

• Heir WemtM FmmM
tX)UmiBUS, Ohio lAPt *-r Bjr . of tracers and elettronic changes which emit radio-1 iIce waves or impalsCT, a local ( “
, says ^ it has develops
WASHINGTON - TIio NaUonal’system |»r business and indus-Park System has added the to detec^ pilferers.^
‘ ••Avon cALUieo ’-yow aaaviat In your Iwe FB M5W.
ARE DEBTS
^ WORRYING
TQU_.....
is ‘
Cttm Ba« 1».	*	-
#ma>IOHTER8 WAKOtO
•aaoENccD inntsBs a
HOUSKKnpn FHOli U aOOK TO
Arizona ^rea Added to National System
-«Ht 0

Rurld's biggest, briefest collection of stone logs and semiprecious gems to eminent domain.
Items that might be pilfered re provided with this electronic Voice,” which can be detected by receivers at exits.
--Employer no* cooUctad.
—WrtU or RboM (ot„ (re* boakM.
MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNJIELORS
TOt Poo UK out* Bulk Bide
FE A04M ^
Pontlae'i oMoit oiid UrioM , budret ouUUnc* eompony. Membtr:
—Mtehl(On Anoclsllon of
.........n bdtbt 9......
Apptic^jwiir^mw* >lq 1
tllle. Uvernols or
' CronbnxA,
Ml Walllaa wmil
n ore lo ocliool. «
___^ to eon
protltoble «
> Toon <
An auxiliary hand probe'then is used to locate the stolen items without physical search.
otter or tbo petition, at Jpbn oe atote Hlkbwoy Commlt-M Btou e( Miebiioa. lor eoo-of private property lor bl»h-
Interior Secretary Stewart L. tJdall recently designated the Petrified Forest National Monument as the Nation’s thirty-first na-—tional park.'
The M.lll-acre region la the Palsied Desert of northeast Arizona sparkles with thousands of ralnhow . hued hardened logs . and tons of semlprecknis gemstones, says the National Geo-gra^ic Society.
Millions of years of geologic action have chianged the wood to agate and jasper.
HARDER THAN STEEL
leaves of unknown age.
ally, the bones of great am-itor tb« tvYun oi errum p«rr«h^g^ phiblans and crocodfle-like	iurtb*r_»ppr«rini
OKOUPS. CHURCHES. OEQAinZA-Hou. IMtIor Mlllntl > HOW
z:u
Coun AO. —--------
Appolntmoat ol Court Comi At a uMlon ol » - — — ~DUrthouM In tb»
Lid County, on tl
ry. A.D. ISM.
ProMnt: Hon.
^"joSii C MackU
CommUiloatr of tl
Mlllntl t
IN DEBT
•Ub"S«. nniSr’weffir
BUDGET SERVICE
is w. Hrnnii .....m »o»l
Pay Off Your Bills'^
Fkynwnu low h SW wk.
0ty -AdjusUhent Service
7M_*^Huron_	FE 5-Mtl
LOBE WEiOHT SAFELY AHD
date at tb* oflUe ^ Fire
rta S. BcoU, IMS Wwt I_
d. BIrmtaiiham. Mlcbltan —
wr«t s-MW. ______;
IITURE SALESMAN. MUST BE rrlniced. lor larto new itore.
•'rTSSKTCvr'^ria:
I, <T S. SatteaVT.
HAMMOND ORGAN SALESMAN
opportunity lor a io-wttor eniiatlan car lurnUhed It banelitt, vacation pay. C Juwnbefry lor appointment to play helpa, but pet Un ^anu or inner, dewntow,
___.J located In Walled
Lake bae teveral openlnae to eiperlenced Kardinai UI be ope i atom Top waste .and trlay
_____________
FEA.WM.
BJICTEN HELP. Wdi^. FOR •alOU. Morey'i OtSf and Country
jo's
LIBRARY AIDES
PONTIAC PUBUC UBRABIE8 sxe*U«nt worUng cootfttloii*. 8»i*
cSy’^HalTM toutb Farke. _ UVE JH I CHILDREN. Z SCHOOL ate, FE H4M. after «. MIODLE-AOEO WOMAN. UVE IN. More for borne than wa«ea. FE S-&9 t-TM* after »._________
tranip^t^^Agply ^
FAmuTiANOiNO A Falntlnp, Thampeon. f* faintino. wall washin6. rate
at State Hlchway auto ol Mlchlfkn, 07 nu aiiomiye rrank J. Kelley, tomey Oeneral, and Oooree Pulkem . Special Aiilitant Attorney Oeneral, hi
Beds of shale preserve fosslW med m tnu court.
THE KCHOI» nl-31M. UTICA "Mutlc lor all occaalona. "
Fw^nl Mmtwih___________^4
C. i. OOOHAROT FUNERAL Hotnt, Kee|o Harbor. Pb. SM-WOI.
COATS
FUNEKAt HOin
DRAYTON PLAINS_____OR 3.7797
HARDWARE STORl! MAN.	.
lar man about H. Mual Have toim eipcrience or very mechanical'" bielhud. ■ Can ■ SMJ7W between and 10 nja. _______________
kitchen help, dish washer.
bueboyt ate M or oldur, Morey e Ooll and &unlry Oub. U^
liW-4334.	. •________________
MOTHER'S HELPER. MUST UEE children. Live In. EM W7MS.
NEAT APPEARINO LADY FOR I
can aner o—i-ai »-emv.
WOMAN WANTS BAaTSnTtNO rilSt bouaeerorkt dayi. r». M7-0IM
toHdlin Sanilte Sappfcs 13
ALCOA-KAUER-REYNOLDS
*J^!5!U.nii2urS
„..„.jRlNO. NEW AND 1 Vem Keller. aL_M7M.
and eonienifi m Bank. FE »!
USED BDILOINO UATBRlALa. uied M4i. Me eaeh; talalMbal and 14-loM. II.M eaek: lae r -tunaeea and boilm, tolleU
doori, M.9S and .HP, Bunlli tine D'Hondl Wrackibe. M i le M5-WM.
TsIevIsjyRidis Sanrtu I
TV OB RADIO
FREE”fuffETES™G
MONfrSlffiRVtVARD
launory. S*"!;**. '
tiles are washed from their'tombs of soft rock.	{jj-jYc
Csatoiies before Cohimbi^ ' Indian tribes nMd ^TjetrK
petition that the petltlpne nt to Act *U. P.A. ItlV au ......
>e all tnlnte nacaaaary to viit In ta ol UtciMan the rlcbt to pottei the landt deKrlbed thrrrln and
Uon Ate	7™. Have ^’7---------->■-
drlvePi Ucente:	H
I (Inance. R. B. Munro
aiiecmc Co. FE MOl._______________
ELECTRIC MOTOR UIBVICB BE-and^^rewlndlat- »> K.
ol the state Trunkline I-I
Bectloni 14. »,
____ _ Jntlac Townihlp,
Mlehl^a^n. and further
ited in euch pareel at let Ii petition have not airMd i laum to be paid ai compenutlon ti
The Navajos believed the cu^
......- cny ttlkil. 3ft p. r»r»-_
-Blood Donors
ruins of which may i
clal
)ti monon of On
ious logs were the bones of a great monster, Yeitis, who was killed by the sun god.	I i^’rt’of imC m
Geologists have a different explanation. They ttiy that some 160 million years ago — In the Trlassic Period — northern Arizona was a low plain, laced by shifting streams. Forests of plne-like trees grew on distant hills, perhap a hundred miles to the west and southwest.
—rfT-.......■*-—
^Dead trees from the forests were carried by rivers to the lowland and buried In mud and sediment. For some, interment was so quick that the trees were literally “canned” without suffic-leiit oxygen to make- them de^ cay.	,»
Water - borne chemicals —
■ chleBy silica ~ soaked into the tree cells, replacing wood fl-! bers. When the process was finished, long be fore erosion brou^t the logs to the surface, they were |8 percent stone.
Arizona officials petitioned for the creation of a national preserve, and in 1906 President Theodore Roosevelt made the Petrified Forest a national monument. ★ ★ ★
' It has now been made a park because.Its attractions are jhoi^ varied than those of the specialized monuments.
l, T9N, RIOE. Pontiac Townabip. d County. Mlchlgi" -■—' finning ut eunUr i nning tbence North 9J g* ----- .
_____ . dag. 99' V
thtneu N«U>.»_dw||.
HUNTOON ■
FUNERAL HOME Btrving Pontlao lor fo Y*»ru 7» Ouklund Avu.	-FE lOlgl
Voorhees-Siple
FUNERAL home' FE IMTf — -Ektubllihvd ovur M Yu«r»
SPARKS-GRIFFIN
rUIIERAL HOME
'Thoughllul gervtcc"	FE Z-9g41
URGENTLY NEEDED
DKliorf‘*BU»D*gERjl«*
16 SOUTH CASS
I" Weat, 130,00 Ie«t; tbrnci Sout ig. 94' Wvat. 441.(3 fact; thane, ^.h N dug. 44' 0 " Euat, 130 00 iMt to tha point ol -beginning.
The Unde deecribed ubove In fee eoh-Uln 1.3 ecree. more or leaa. of which - I acre, more or Irte. le aublcct to an tieting right-of-way eaeement Intrreated Partlra: Voreat H. Hllborn nd Mary H Hllborn. buaband end wife, loa 704. Deerfletd Beach. Florida. Cupl-9l Bavinga and Loan Aaaoclatlon (lor-lerly Capitol Bavinga and Loan Com-amyj,.A Michigan corporation. WaahlM-on. Boulevard funding, Detroit, Mlchi-
‘flubfect ^
, Ororge Fulkera Aaaiaiani Attorney Oenera lor petitioner.
Oakland County.
iherwlee a Default 'u"i Further Ordered tile Order ae ‘	~
till I
Parcel C-777 le ice In each week, .-
"Vi- irin^^» Ph*:
newepaper pubUebad thia County, and that
opy of mid order -------* ......
•d
WD jfrved upon etch o? the p«rilee hereinbefore named
‘til* i;“;.‘J!i«“o1
D Further Ordered
this Ordr '----------- -
Intcregted

Army Revives Mounting of the Guard
_ _ the partlee
l‘1e.K“?S'‘<i'ayrbeYore*'
By L. A.
WUilAM JOHN Bl^ _______Mareh I art (.“wJs
Ihlp' Board^ o'l'^ev^TT rtH^iSe^'l^^ March Itb and Monday March l»l>. "j a.hi. to >:M p.m.. at the Townahlp Hal DavUburg, lAchlgan. for the purree i reviewing the
iuchlu^J
Death Notices
KM
AUGUSTA, Ga. With the command “Sound the Adjutant’s Call” and the short, snappy response of the band. Ft. Gordon has revived ah bid, colorful Army tradition — the formal mounting of the guard.
Prom the First Training Regiment, the 36 members of the guard mount wore winter • greens with trousers bloused over spit-shined boots.
They were armdd with rifles, and wore helmet liners.
’This formal guard mount will be a weekly event-in a continuing salute to customs of the U S. Army.
' 'R , ■*	*	I
Such traditional ceremonies have almost become lost in the shuffle of space age progress, a| Ft. Gordon spokesman said.,
BAILEY. FEBRUARY 37.	1113.
Edith F., If Lcxin'gton Plgeu; tn gl: deur mother ol MkurlM I. Bummond; de*r step-mothgr of Ruth and Dr. Reume Ballty: glM turvlvcd lar >111 ' grtndcbUdrn and 13 grTat-grand^lMrcn. ^u-
urdav, Match 3 at 1 p.m. at. thv Vaarh«e>-8lplc Funeral Itomt with Rev. dalen E. Herihey ol-ficlaling. Interment In Oak Hill
In itate at the Voorheei-BIple
B-IcTiirR. FEBRUARY~37 ii« Alma. 744f Bweetbriar. Orchard
Mr» Carolyn. Plante. Mn, WandL Kovach. Mrs. Ruth Antlleld and Mr. Val Beaser- dea'r sister of Mrs Oretchen Berger; slso gur-vived by seven grandchlldrco and four great-grandchUdren. Mrs.
, Rlchardson-BIrd Funeral. Rome, Walled Lake. Thursday through evening, will be taken to the Bruns Funeral Home. Ollddcn. Wisconsin. Friday where servlcM
will b
BUCKNER. FEBRUARY 37. UM Leo^ Ernest^ IS^g^Centre BU^Dcj
Oertrurfe Buckber. dear brolh-er-ln-law of Joseph Ehrtbberger:
and nephews. Funeral selvlce .will be held Ssturday. March 3
Home. .Lake Orion with Pastor C Prank Mills olflclatlng. Interment tn Eastlawn Cemetery, Lake Orion. Mr. Buckner wlll.lle In state at the Allen's Funeral Hbme,-Lake Orlo'n.'
Dr, wralled Lake.
I. Recitation of t be at g p.m.. Bui a hackt - Orltlln H , I'unarkl .ar------ “
Delphlne of Mabel .. the Rotary , Sunday night
_______________ Orlllln Ibmeral
Homt. Funarkl .service will be held Monday. March 4 at 10 a m at the St. Patrick's Church , (Union Laka) with Father Ellb ofltelaUng. Interment In Oakland Hills Cemetery. Mr. Bebmitt will lie In state alter 3 p.m -	'
(ollowtog described prop-
,*'^‘’'part of Lot J and Lots 31 and 23 * WbTr Southwest of ihe west property ' linr-of.ttac Peritpeter Botd snd all of
y In Assessor's IHat , By order of the C Dated February Tl
OLOA BAMEI^
TURNBOLt. FEBRUARY 37. KM. Ida Etta. KIO Airport Road; age t4: dear mother of Mrs Ronald iDorotbyS AathaBy; alao survived by three grandediu and twb great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Bsturdsy. Marcb 1 a( 1 pjn. at the Coats Funtral Borne, Drayton Flatas vrlth Rev. I^ul Vanaman oMl-clatlng. Interment In Waterford Center Cemetery. Mrs. Turnbull will He In state at- the Coats Funeral Home, Drayton Pisinf
AI 10 a.m. Tndaj' Ihm wpre repHp* at The l•rlnt [ .cfflop In till* foHow'liiz ] linkoa;
Z, 3, 4, 6, 7. 8,16,15,16,
I 17, 19, 26, 25, 36, 36, 76,
I 84, 91, 93, 97.
ANY OIRL OB WOMAN JNBEDINO 2-Sin 'atuir
i!*Vt ?4734.°ConndenuS!
Dainty maid boppueb. tm
Menominee^ FE 9-7605.	_____
Lott ami Fwiifi	5
BLACK Alto WHITE WATE^R SPM-tel puppy. Cbllds pet. FE 5-36(1 or PE 14943. Answera to the na ot Pudgis.
LOST: SIAMESE CAT. MALE-
In perion at Art RIoux. Morgan Driveway repreaanlatlve. Ba-Motel. 3 bloeki aoutta of H9S, _ Telagraph Read. 12» B. TelegrkPh. PonUac. Mbh. Pebtuary 35 thru March g. 9 « " J*' P j?-, OWNER ■- OPERATOia. » ' years ol Me. i^o own or » chase a late model m tni larger to Iraneport houaelralli tlonwlde. Must be physics
PART 'HME FULL CHAROT BOOK-liECEPTlONIBT • ROUSEEEEPER.
;Ii;'rt.Cs.‘*r“w*ork'!ntw'fig
wople. must be willing lo trained. Variety of duties. Intel Ing snd ehangmg w^. Reply resume of work record. b^U> --j ord and relerencea -to Box 112.
PonUac Press.______
RELIABLE WOMAN WANTED TO Immediately. Referen—
________Ml 441(7____________
RETIRED WIDOWER WAN Housekeeper to live tn. more home than wages. MA (-29(0. REGISTERED NURSE TO SUPER-
-------ht shut of M bed Oerts •
Dllal. CaU Mr. Ooaaan. FE
iNcaHM Tax Sarvico
DNORMB four bomo.
rA^’RAoi	m yotJt HMi:.
E. Dunn. Tax Accountani, S Yra. experlenca. OR 34267. ACCURATE	CONFIDENTI
BOLIN TAX SERVICE
We epeelallae^^paraon^ r'ab^* mTe. ”S™t*ooier*lifui*FE 4-lKl
INCOME TAX, BOOKKEKPINQ
notary with seal
KEN HETCHLER 63-15 AVO.
59rSECOND FE5-r
PARtTiME 4 WELL DMSSED
—’c’a!‘n?j;s.ijrciu*fir5r.5:
Pleai* can PE 4-722g If taund.
A PART-TIME JOB
>4921 belUwen-5 a«
salesmen WANTED: am Y
iSHsI^^Ne* ‘MgrKsWreiJ ^»^“rvVu.«
SfcSilal. Phone 549«
SERVIC^^PRESENTADVE WITH
mcohnnli***'	tn
«per*en^l»t required. Car fur-nulwd. Full time, steady employ-inent with rtportunjt,
AUToTdECTANic WANTYID. EX-perlenee on lorelgn cms or VW. Illnlmum^wages
A tfVo* MECHANIC, CHEVROLET
rxferience. good pay and
WOREINO CONDinONS. VAN CAMP CHEVROLET. MILFORD PHONE g|4-IIH9. _________
BARBER
yuU ,r part time. Call FE 4-4751. Visa	1^e"'3-«205.
»a. r..»irsfta 2
AUTOMATION EQUIPMENT. APPLY IN PERSON. Sahlln Bngtnacr-Ing Co. 750 W. Maple. Troy. due to recent PROMOTlOin Within our company wt art tn^ viewing .or two additional lalet-
B(t Income. '2545 yri. of M* nrt ready to start Immediately, phone
Ft fdW for appointment._________
Hyr-ani.RItT OPPORTUNTTY FOB advanoemenl with a national Con-lumer Ftoance Co. AppUca^ must be belweai Ihe ages' ol 23-26. Must be a high school graduate. Oood atarMng ss4sry Personal car al-lowancs furnished. A liberal plan of 'Yoinpany beiitfits. Apply Mr Rakh. Associates Loan	IM H.
Saginaw, PonUac. Mich. FE 24)214.
EXPERIENCED MARINE ______salesman, FE 4-4)925.
experienced man TO TAKE
para of horses. EM 3-9171._
OOOD BUifP AND PAINT MAN,
— _____________ - talary,
applT 2940 Orchard Laka Road. I^ego Harbor.
FOR FAST ACTION
Pontiac Press Want Ads CTial fI:: 2 8181
FROM I A.M. vq 9 F.M NOTICE TO ADVERTIBEgM
I Ihe ehargea for that
wa.HdJ'IS
d pubUcattun
be sure lo get your NUMBER" No adjui villi be given without
larger than reg tvpe U 12 o'doe day preyloui to i CASH WANT A
tpade
•KILL
3.M	5.41	*.«
An additional charge d 30 nenu wm he ipade for us« of Jntlac Frets Box numbera.
The Pontiac, Press
".=.ra’'-.vraist^
iisjttrsss jstows
Press suthig Ate and expcrlcnca,,
TED'S
Has ImmedUU' optnlngt (or Uw (oUo#lnf:
Dining Room Waitresses - Hostesses Curb Girls
Day Shift 1 parabn only. 9 i
INCOME TAX H & R BLOCK CO.
NaUon'a Urgeat Tax BervIca 133 V^ Hurra Bt.
Wiakdayi 9-1. Sat.. Bun. (-1
Mtvlai ami TracMai
MOVDin BEBVICa. RIASOII-bit rat^WZyai. yy -
HAVE BUYER FDR S OE S ROOM medara bunaalow wttb laratw lo area aaat M Joslyn Av^ Have
Do You Want It
SOID.t.

HNDSTORM 20
Wawtai^ld ta toard 28
CHJLO CARE.
*“	*‘^Ci UIV *-0^1 •
n
TOSkluNITY
AUCTTON. OA 1^1.________
ASH FOR FURNITURE AIB3_AP-
TOP DOLLAR PAID FOR FU^l-'U^ rrerJ^dda^i^dM irt Sunday OR 3-DIE B * B A.UC-TION. 99(9 Dlxla Hwy. ___
kail's Auction Sales. MY 3-iri or
wStw'^to buY FukkrruM.
appHsnecs or snything of value. gKe Bird AucUon. (25.M52.
Wairttd MlKsnaaeoas ^
RSB*v?r»2ji^K’'t5nOralwJ
start work at once W mn
:3fan&'2r%%.ss?".csss
can or sta uat
Warren Stout, iJealtor
m jf iselnAW	TS
“onUac. MichlfWi
jfi HAVE CASH BUYERS. "WE nead hocnaa. CaU ua. „ ^ i»aul Jonaa. Rattoty._FE	441
Customers Waitiiw
bomba WAA^QML^
HOME ONVNERS
waSsf!'OkSi _f
any rawunl. Ci
j“t“ WARDEN, Realty
gjiSaW. Hurra	«M-1K1
Aparfmaats^ai^^
I OB a ADULT*. •( ItOBINIFOOO.
2-UkoT*ilt6ota8. BAi'ff
Ilea. 265' Elisabeth Lake R-
g—ROOMS. PRIVATE ftrtfcAHei. adiilu W B. Howard.
Qualtfttd buytrf
MAX
White Oak. Manchester. Mich. Day SSZ. siiLsiiil. Night Phone m-2163. All lAbor rad Equipment.
HAVE 2 BUTTERS WAITTNO FOR 4-bedroom or more homea with large down payments. Prefer ead side of suburban Pontiac. Pbotw U yaur lisMndi	,	^	j
Dorothy Snyder Lavender
TWl ktghlart Road (M9t)
--- West of SaItgrapb --
_________Erei
• Cash
48 HQURS
■>
\^1GHT
i apartments. «(( cam bum-
Close In. ChUd vralcouw. (( CM; tap St. or caU after * p.m. PE lAi:.	_____________
3 ROOMS. PRIVATE BA™ J anlranea. all ullUUet fumlabad.
K. Pike. FE KK5.	—.
s“«OQM8 AHD BATM. FW^ATE enti’unc^v Ml. demf
4.iaw.	___
s LAROE ROOMS. AU; BJIVATE
5?.7 ,Wrak*%*ll(u".
rilOOMS. newly" DECOCTED.
pvt. uUlltlea. bua. (2 Ruth. i AND BATH WXST »mE ' per' adults (38. FE 94279.
1 rooms. PRIYA'TE KNTRAN' h” V O bua line. FE i-0494. i' JIOOMS UPSTAIRS. FlUVAIIt
r (Moil^Al^kRtMENT, OROUNU ' ^r No drgkers 87 Malthew^ niOOMS~ON LAKE OBI^. YEAR around. 875 mo. FE e-Asy- —
-------- I-ROOM. PRrVA'TE.
.. N. rad. FE 24378.
COLORED 3 BOOMS. PRiyAlE Fl^ trance, close to town. FE 1-0884. COIDRED. 1-HOQM. PRIVA^ bftth fflO. 518 Orchard L»«k«. TV
f-vm after »■_______________
(*OL6rED 3 kOOMS FRIVATE
____.1 Lake privileges.
alectrie kltchra. BuU;-tn appUmoM.
6Mer"‘?S5;l;r.‘*B3SS?imrkm
water heal. Drapes Must tra lo


I. UL 24661 Appiy"ln^perara _*ft‘r ‘ ifoMAir
ns Restaurant. I&ilT
......... E. TO LIVE IN.
Call UL 2 3910 '__________
, WHITE—»A-RJLJUTMt_ LIGHT
transporting travel trailers. 1^6 ■—ns owner^iperalor '•••• Annlv person “
Motel, tgo' ("’'Telegraph
Apply
„ ............ .lorgra
ly representative, Savoy . . "--'egraph w-*	’
PonUac.
enced only naed apply. 565 Oakland
WAITRESS WANTTED. DAYS.
ortll, 67 " ..- •-__________
WANT2T) FEMALE BALES PEB-sonnel lor Jawalry dept, lx “ Yankee Btote. Miracle Mlle_.
ENGINEER
BXpenmeed lo combined Md sa lUry seWfr design. Muft ha ability to write reportg,and in« the public, liberal fringe btnefli Mlary	P'S I
and ^Ackffround. Send rtcume and Mlary raqulremanU to Foollac |
WE NEED MEN
Opportunity lo earn tn a wcl belter learning our busto^. EX; oerlenced men earning from giao i y week. CaU lor appolU nSnt PE 54115.	i _
TOOL MAKERS
iMclaf mrahlne? Also productlo
MA 4-4587.	---------
wXfcH~llAKER.
....	"'invest, hut yo«
material. Sep ■ PonUac Prea IE8 21-35. right '
WANTED: WOMEN
lor right ptraon. apply In peraon Monday 6-12 a.m.. March 4, al "T4 Dixie Hwy.. Drayton Plains.
ITORM TTINDOWB, D RXHODELINO art ADLss>vr.>
Kraft Siding & Roofing
FREE ESTIMATES	I” *
COMBINATIONS SIDINO Pi
Am»n*>/ia urkn«!S1tT7.A1

expert floor and wall cqv-
aring. t"-* ---*	«■
3-»l.
FLORES AND MARTIN RADIO AND TV SERVICE REBUILT TVS FOR SALK
!2U!^i“i!rt!	*
■gjniiaby I4k8	FEf 448W
Trta TrlmaiiRf Sarvics
W WORK. Bioa ON TSXa
T
experlanca lo Box
ESTABLISHED WATKINI
T B. Waldron Hotel.

WANTED- salesmen. exceUeht opi»rlu>)lly
son. toads fumUh^ --------------
tor advancement, Ouaranteed sala^-y
eus commission to right p*""“ imited offer. Apply In pars, p.m. Monday. March 4. at Dixie Hwy.. Drayton Plalni. YOUNG MAN K Tt^l VR '8 full tune, talei ofHee and •hop. some typing. II per I start. Apply at *1832 W I mornings between 18 rad U a lANTED; GOOD BUMP paint inra. Plenty of work. ColUskin Shop. 129 8. Art
ffABY SI'mCR^TO LWE^IR MOTH-
BABYSITTER WANTED. LIVE IN. - - PE 3428T beiwawi 1-7 p.m.
__ for Mrt. WlUlama.
iABY mtterTrom KBEOO
OB 4-1803.
4CPER WITH AT
. years experience to do------
recehrxble tn automotive parts store. Apply Novi Ahlo Part-43131 Orand Blver, Novi. PI DEPENDABLE MOTHER'S HELP-
-------- j , „ m , p m. own
ira 8K weekly 33M02I. UETmANS: 1 ADMINMTBATIVK Dlellllan and 1 TherapeuUc Dietitian w!lh ADA membership for 308-hrt hospital with i lead tort aerviCe 4»4iour liberal benems. mcluding aec live skk leave and pension.
.&'&.lr 13 Mae Host
______________Farmington 'Twp
EXPERIENCED PRESSERTREF ences. CaU. 662 1608.
PHYSICAL THEROFIST Immediate opening for reglati physical theropUt In 380-bad 4 eral Hospital. Comprehenalva
babimaUon tervlces. Salary c__
modsurate with experience. Liberal
■ -...........................
FE 44777
Battartai
kar-lipb batteht CO.
nARl'ERS AND BEOULATOIU
REGULATORS. M.95
m Auburn___________n HM8
3aatt—AccauoriM_____
VISIT US DURING
1st Annual Hoat Show AT PONTIAC MALL
Mhrch 4 through Morch •
Harrinjjton Boat Worics
•Tour Evlanidt VttUr* im ts Tetoiroph Rd. 858-5033
iaytiiHi tanfto
ALL PUHNAOBS f^ANED Aljp Barvlesd C. L. Nalacn, FE 8-1781, _
laaoi|b Taz
ALL WOBKINO PEOPLE'S AND buslnes' taxes prepared. 93 rad up. 3. 8CHIMKE. 6R 3 2943. 5601 HlgS-
land Rd. IM99)	_____________
INCOME TAX REPORTS I^-
Trackta|
H9ULINO AND RUBBISH. NAME your price. Any lima. FE >4098. UOMT AHD HEAVY 'TRUCKIHO. rubblah. fill dirt, grading and gravel rad tront end loadlnx.
2-060L__________________-wr
UOHT hauling. EVENINOS AND
NOTARY PUBLIC PE 5-7183
•’gSTO-----
8-8C87 or
tndeJ
Midwest Employmflit
W Pcntlac Stain Bank Building
“EVELYN	WARDS
"VOCATIONAL COUNSEUNO BERVI^-
Telephone FE 4-05W
24'k Eaaf Hurwi________guile
Preston Walker .‘'iniith
EXECUTIVE PERSONNEL COUNSELING SERVICE BloonUield Oftloa Center — Offlct 8 1585 Woodward ________868.1883
liBfnKtiBnt-Scliaalt______10
LEARN HEAVY XQUIPUBHT, m on Dosers. Drag Lbwt. ate. e plaeament. "Key.” 8390 W. 8-■ Rd., Detroit tl. Ol 1.7323. LEARN SUCCESSFUL BELLmO. method. Pontiac Frees Box 24. 11C lI^NS. ACCORDION.
PONTIAC BEAUTT COLLEOH r'Peixonallccd Beauty Inatruciloa' EnraUmant Accepted at Anytlnra I Evening aaiam D^for tour Puturc-
2«AR SARAOE. gg98_
Incl. OH Doors. Concrete Eloora Addltlona. House Ratolng PAUL ORAVK8 CONTBACTmO Free Estimates______OR 4-1511
WINTER SPECIALS
Kitchens. balks, recreaUra
SCHWEI'TZER CARPET SERVICE,
■ Sif&.i^IiSJiJlrm7'M*3*
Olfm roc»	maa rwnw*
Keatueky Lump, egg art stoker y5a^*^AL CO.' % 3-711
ALTERATIONS ALL TYP1» RNTT draatas. lasiher coau OR 3-7K3.
h1

ELDERLY LADY IN VICINITY OF airport for ChUd care al l-ye*-old boy. OR 3-1131 after 4 pji. EXPERIENCED WAI'TWESS. IN person at Hangar GrUl.^UI Hlgh-Cad Rd. <9R-58Hf BXPXRiEkcED cqy
A-l CARPBITOR LARGE OI small jobi. FE L2841.	■
CARPENTRY, ELECTRICAl plumbing. UL 2-2282, FE 44814.' oeneral CARPENTRT. RXMOD-*"ni. cablneu. kltobena r— — sflon roema. FE 8-1818.
II OR 3-7188 betwtan 8 I
Experienced waitress. • must
be neat rad last Paid vacation.J Crt from 4 to 7 p.m for Inter-view. HtS N. 'telegraph neat Dixie. EXPERIENCED DAY COOK. UNION 1 lake area, pwn-tranaporlatlon. EM j f 3-nn or (8L89S2. *	I
house WntlNO. ELBCTKICAL al-—Uras. Uemirt touniemraut. tar rata 88.50 hr. FE sililir
TONTIAC FENCE
PonUac NotsuT OR 3-3332
758 aq- « * Gypaittn Sheathing No. 2. 4e so. It. BLAYLOCK BLDG. SUPPLY __________FE 3-7101_______
TALBOTT LUMBER
Olan installed tn doors and wtt dows. Complela buUdUw £^to«!
A-l PLAgTERiNO AND REMIgg' RMMQthle. Ftl Lf«g FB 3*7923.
plasteriho free ESTIMATM D. Mtytri	«M J-OI”
Trucks to Re;ut
vk-yai Plelw Ilk-Tra Maktt Txuau - TRACTORt/
AND EQUIPMEin Dump Trucks—Seml-'Trallara
Pontiac Farm and Industrial_Tfactor Co.
"'m 4-1442.
S2 8. WOODWABO
MEIER a OLBON UPHOLSTHRINO FE 8-2I92	118 Virginia PE 8T854
THOMAS UPHOLSTBRINO 4488 W WALTON BLVD.
FL 5-8888
BLOOkUTSLO WALL CLBANHRB. Walls and windows. Rasa. SaUt-lacUon guaranteed. FE 8-lMl. WALL WA8H1NO .AND CARPET cleaning. Low ratoc. PE 4-1877.

..spssit.’s:
NKW. REPAIR
Wotar PI|M tervica
gLBCTRto—' flTRAM AMD TORCH lot Uunrtng _o ‘ ---
Woadw-Cak^aal--N^
CANNBL COAL—THH IDEAL FD
wood fuel, scaaonad wood both_
furnaeo or flrratoca. OAKLAND ^I^ PAlNlTs? Tbonu “
1
■y.

> THE POJJTIAC PRESS. ■ .FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 1063
tC—T
xiTcmanrrnE amthsht. pqji.
!.*^ODinfemiib
■ rourth, u »iw.
THKE« KOOX WfER AKD. TWO t48ra Joirer. Dovntom. AS prl-ytU. AIM ttvM room upper Pr POdUac Motor*. S» Dlxl*
>-au>aooM HOMS, m ba^.
DNJOM lam ^AKTMWrrS.
“I .k.	fttt t.*nii

» BOOMS AMD BATH. LOWEH, L«lte Price ereo. MT l-»l.
4 bOOMSi IfOVE. BKFRIOCBA. lor, c*rp*Un(. tod utlUUo* tun. Prtroto Mtb ond ontruice, ref. It
1-BXOBOOM. BRICK RANCH, both*, enclooed poroh, oorport lMr<*f gtr«n. tlt.Wt. 6C.Q37t.
dlitoDC* ot downtown oOd nil bu«
----- ~—n In wintor. oool
-----T-Rhoi
ind'WoU ;
LAKEFRONT, HEAT UORTS FUR^ --‘-‘wd-, pin t»r»f«.' Atlallr wily. . Bo* Mr. Chnpmnn. Apt. S.
dryer, ouomoni. new Perk. MUlord dlftrlet <- gulfed. AdnlU. 1404 W.
MO VACAMCtBB AT BLOOMFIXLO TemcM. Howwer. mnnncer will be hnppy to Uke nmUcnUOn* for
4-BEDROOM BOUSE. IV* BATH8.
t-ROOM HOUSE AT 170 W RUM-dcU, AU	mm* hMi. iMfl
down. C«ll «
ORCHARD COURT APARTMENTS MODERN IN EVERT DETAIL -------	FE Mtlt
WEST SIDE. 3-IWOM APART-inentn. bent, bet witor. stove end relrlterstor funtshed. New St. Benedict snd Donelson sehool*.
I* line. Annett Inc.
FE 4-4fa or FE f-»oi WEST SIDE. S ROOMS AND BATH, nslurni Oreplnce. cntpeted UvIm snd dliiln* room. WU n». IncT itleii CsU Kunpsen Reelty A I Co. FE nOKl.
Bldg.
Rtnt Hmms, FwiiisliBd
COMFORTABLE J-BEDROOM. .. ndulU, ’Ml June 1. EM t-0»t. SMALL S-ROONTmoBeRN BOUSE.
t-BEDROOM RANCH H O M^ Cleen, ehlldren weloom*. FE
t-4*0t or FE 4-tnO.______
^HBroom: IVCAR OAHAOE. 04S
S BEDROOM Okies. TERRACE. IN-
_____	BATH8, S-CAR
irnie, b*«emr-* —	—-
. T —-t.ln«, II..
Rochetter
^eJ.
OL I-
Bullt-lni, tireplnce. 0150.
b-BEDROOM. OAS (Tsde ecb<^. 000 n sble Msrrh 1st to credit FE MIM.
1570 McDtfnsId
(.ROOM terrace. OAS ' HEAT.
reterene*. 307 N. Perry.____
I MONTH. COLORED ONLY. AL-
-fsi Bint. lnr»e dmtaie sren. no credU check: 01M67S. &EAL VAL-
BOULEVARD HCIOBTS
ri Per Month	,
Contset Reeldeol tOointny ^ S44 Kul Blvo. nt Vnlo^tS

iS..rgti6>d,dr-B,'
Lake. I
"fSeplnce.
■E A4M*.
Ranch home
bsihs. t-cw inrifc, pnvnie nesc •prlvUetee. Olio per mo. OR 0-0033,
RENT
SELL
OPTION
- -TWIX To WALL CARPEmO _ ^ CHOICE LOCATIONS
*JfEAR^FoffiriAC Smoi*
nnd NORTHERN BIOH
CnU dnilr nnd Bundsy 000-0070 ^ . REAL VALUE
RENT OR BELL
'small house, stove. TABLE nnd utUllton ------------------- -
ONION LaRE front, room. tlM n no. OS
HOUSEKEEPIMO ROOM. EVERT-
thtaif turnlsbod.-*“ ——
________
SLEEPINO ROOM FOR 1 OEN1LE-
8LEEP1NO ROOMS FOR RENT. 05
■ per wk Cell 3.H.5440__________
SLfcEPmd ROOM. NEAR DOWN.
town. FE 0-04W., .
SLEEPINO room near PONTIAC
SLEEPINO ROOM. 150 C
SLEEPINO ROOM NEAR OIDfERAL
Frtrnte entrnnee. 174 StnU.
Warm clean room for man.
ONE LAROE FRONT R O
COLORED. NICE PERSON. PRl-
OMAIL KITCHEH
fcoLORED ROOM, SHARE

tIOHT HOUSEKEFPINO ROOM, near downtown, older womniLjio drinker* or imoker*. Ph. 350-Mt*.
LAROE ROOM AND BATH, NO — Bloomfield OrcAsrdl
to Hwy. OR UMO CHOICE OPnCE SPACE I e( locel r-——
Acres of Land
S-b«drootnv earp«t«d .UvSne r
blOsehone. wrlMn sSSA.I«w' tnnw #..11 I
'ATKINS LAKE AREA. 0-BKD-’ room briek 'rsneb. Low sttsmd
tnched nmee. -osk floon. plss-tered Wjdlh n nie* nhunfaiiim ekwH baoi* iuet 5 mUe* W. e( PcntMc Priced dt 014.750. OLOM down. HAROLD R, FRANKS. RECTOR .....m }.33t
050 mo. Auburn Ht
7T. StOt D lelkbU srei
Isrt* kltehen. llvlns--------
Inmlly room, sbd Urn utility room. Mo bneeinent, »w M-Inched gnmse. Is^e fennd in lot. on pnved etreet psveri drive, good locntion. 010.W 074-UM.
WASHUiaTON JUNIOR HIOH r^‘*tiot‘do**'raA*‘‘**^ ft
WALLED LAKE
. bii-scre mpeh etyle. sttsebed ■*-rsn. OnU tt.OtO wllb 01.000 down. PAUL JONES. REALTY FE 48500
^Want Luxury
ROCHESTER AREA., 3 bedroom*. ~	' oU held, hi^woed lU^a
■BEDROOM. FULL BASEMENT. TUe over 4H per e«iil toortikd*. OR 343M. By owner.
BEDROOM ranch. 3 LOTS. '
The prlo* U right—besutllul locstlon. A home with tWo flrepUo**. epnelou* llvUif nr**.
MU* ThU On*.
iHave-Hobbies
________________________rot. spproii
mntely <s yews old. Onk noon
------------1 In kitchen, 'Uri* 175x
On pnved etreet.
in* dUtsne* to echooU. Priced OlLOOt, 1 yew * tax** will me
iti^T^RFO^ RjKSW MfSr
A Lake View
150 SEWARD STREET
I r*om le Boor.
Driyion with n ireenhouae. work ebop nnd * oottnto tor Income. It nleo bn* fruit nod ehnde tree* nslore. Cell Todny.
™ _______
neat, ita b*lh*. Very Urge Ut. Vectmt: ■
GILLS REALTY CO.
FE 54175	231 BgIdwU Ave:
.%LE uTtINO fccRVICE
Humphries
' furnace. Ownge. pnved 00.000 wUH 0500 down e^ ... month. Immedinl* jweae*-K. O. Rempeteed, Reeltar.
H E. Huron. FE *-03t«.-
030 E TENNYSON - ^----
Ing ipao
i^r'
, FE 2^9r7^
If no aiuwcr call FB 3-5133 S3 N Telegraph Rond ^ Member Multiple Lleting Bervleg 3-BEDROOM HOUSE ON U-NlOH Lake Rd . M.500. OR 34000.	«
.BARGAIN NO MONEY DOWN ..n”»Wafv^=»”^‘&rKbUW, Income
___________inteV heiir'1. ...
1500 down on termg or Uwer price If ceeh to mortgage E O. Hemp-•lead. Realtor. 105 E. Hutbn. FE
BY OWNER
WaUrford Townihlp. I'b home .lerge lot .breemwty, fwage. glum, elormi. ba* OR 54575 after 3._
beet, iwge basement, all "tlty eon-B—i£i u-hooU. may down. Im-
Brewer Real Estate
JOSEPH F. RBISZ. SALES MOR E «-5ir-	”— — . —
Evei.' FE S4S23
lot on north aid# of Pontiac. At-taohod gwaae. hgaement and very neel. Nice neighborhood god wiU-^ dU^ To iChooU. IU.500,
00.150 ON YOUR LOT - 155 MONTH Model Open Dally 1-5
351 VOORHEIS t
S ROUSE, a
I with
0. PHA ai
approved. $300 dowi Werwlck. OSf-2030 or OOMTIt.
A NEW 3 BEDROOM HOME AT
Anchor Bay. Oae...............
lached^^^gmge. *J
to Lako
O'NEIL
GI NOTHING DOWN
LAKE FRONT - Ste
No Down Payment
Two and threo bodroom homaa. All locatlooe. Soma with Baeemente SO yoori to MV. Botur dnal than ront-
^ for Ron O NetL OR 34W _
RAY O’NEIL, Realtor
M3 8. TELKORAFH FE 3-7103
MACEDAY LAKE
Ideal home for the growing family, tacludae 3 bcdroomi down and room tor more upatalre. Lorgo enclooed noixh for futuro expan-AtUched -------- ------
fbal bw-
3-Bcdroom Brick Ranch
Favad xlreol — clly eenvHUenee-
NOCRtS'irCHBjk
$100 DOWN
JAMEf. A TAYI.OR-
__REAL R8TATX-INSURANCR
77M Highland Rd. iM-tOl OR 4-03W
CLARKSTON AREA. J-BEDROOM. IV balha. for aaU or rent by owner. For nUre Informatun eaU
For nUre Informatun
-.150.___________________
^LEAN LBEDROOM HOME. TOTAL
Uii CONTEMPORART sfYLE' Mrlklng 3 badroom home on largt

____________
SPACIOUS H O ME TOR BAI*: ...... ^ tnlerlor to anpreeUta.
I owner for anmt. PL 24*53-ed- m Itomoo. MARRINOfoirtSZjr
3-Bedroom Ranch
Oaa hoot, no erodlt check, a paper work. PaymenYe ot 37* month Includet evarr'"' MODIL OPEN D^T 13 — ■15*1
CARLBLE BOILDIMO OO.
CUSTOM BUILT HOMES
TOUR LOT OR OURS Ross Homes, Inc.’
FE 4-0591
CHEAPER 'THAN RENT
NORTH PONTIAC
BoWn
$55 Month
Pumtture ftnlxhed cabinet*
Uy roam. OR kitchen.-----------------
2Vcer gwate. Urge UL load* iceped. oved. eloee to lehooU.
churtbee.
- :e I31.L.
RORABAUGH
FE 2405V
Woodward-------------
TTRActiVE 3-iroSooH ranch loeatod In Rochester “	■	-..... 3U<ar
etUched
recreatln
vipers
with flrepUce.
______ IM. oeautlfully land-
■eoiim. Back yard patio with huilt-ln fIrapUee. Ideal locntion for echooU. church and ihopp^
$9995-^1000 DOWN
S3' Lot	„ Family Room
IVcw Ogrgfo	Ooi Heat
HIITER
oU fur I5.3S*.
fumoeo. could bo U
LOW Dom* PATVRMT, OB B neat and cUhn 3 room*'tad bai gM hooL alt. IMcb"	>•
prlv.. nU* tand baaoh. 3S.U*.
DRAITTON AREA.-------------
wall-lo-waU earfiot. Iwgo lot
IIP to laenlc ttoU land. 3S.MS.
iTL'WSr!’'
Ev, PE 5-755*.
STrochester on. -
Shani 3-bedroom. lVb«tary,. chm'b,* kUxiU gJS'shovpl^
SYLVAN LAKE Bern Wwwlek ha* 3-bfdrMBl brick •t 1*7* Beverley. Lwge fenced yard, carport, al •rrvleos. Uke privKaaes, i *40* down phn eooU. I
lOw LAKE -
ry. 3-bet^.
■pent. atUdhoS * a i
HAYDEN
3-bedroom:
TRI-LEVEL
4-BEDROOM BI-LEVEL . 10,995—1095 DOWN
33' IJvbis room	*f
J. C. HAYDEN. Realtor
HlsbUlM^Rd^ <3«...k
_ _new homes
3-BEDRQOM RANCH With Attached Garage
Full Basement Brick
$69 ■
Month
empleton
CITY of SYLVAN LAKE
a-bodroinn bomo In ihU F cation. Lnrgg living room. M dining mm. klt^n wllb eating tDM, baeement. gai 3-ear garage. prlvUogea on M Byhru L^. Only UI.M*
C. L. TemiJeton, Realtor
n> Orchard Lake
TRADE-INS,
uan lancb. gai luaL ally -„...nUnee. *73 A. month and us.
NO CREDIT CHECKS
No mortgage approvaU needed.
t...*__ _ —*#.»• ,.ii
SPOTLITE
ine paymanu Mugt eel] EN 13 TOM DAILY XITE BUSDINO CO.
GILES
OPEN
High on a Hill
IN CLARKSTON S,\T. and SUN. 1 to 6
SNEAK PREVIEW A family planned home will
pleaeht- ------
idi^ a
multiple USTWO SRRVT^
IRWIN
St. Mike's Area
S-bedroom bungalow with wat«r. lUuatiKl tasy wal
By KrU Osaiui
SCHRAM
NaHhEnd
4 bedrooma with lepnmto dlhlbs ar4i; fuU, tiled baeement wlS forced air h*A. nenr Noi MadUon BchooU. al the at 3M.a*t. Move U for 31.
South End
1 3-badroom bomo with lapanlU or onTy St,3«t. Of OO down, eloalnt
IVANW. SCHR-\M RPIALTOR FE 5:9471
T can’t take you anywhere. I have Just enough gas to get me home!”
four- BEDROOM RANCHER—'
Sylvan I.jike Front
Open Sunday 3 to 5. >bedi brick ranch. 3* foot itmg re
vylva
open Sunday 3 to 5.
—‘-‘i ranch. 3* loot II ■ flrepUea, dInUg kitchen. dUh. waali Id gaiaga, 4F paneieS family I. etane flrepUce. laodaoaped er'UI. privoU dock. SMUm.
Have Model to Show
3 bedroom raaeb —3 car gtrage, bnumeiit. thatmo wln^wi. marble iUlt. Da ceramic bathe, built-In*, quality workmenehlp. 114.35*
JACK PRESTON

North Suburban
mmt. eutomatle h**l lA hot water 3-eer garage on loU IStallM of 1-7* Highway, good
Cmr-WEST BIDE. Ssl* *r tredo. An *ld*r home in * choice neigh-bprhood. Walking dietanee to Tel-Huron. « noma and bath, ane bedroom on main floor. Wall to wall carpeting In living room and dln-tagrira, dlvIM baaenNBI with
»COME-wf^juburbnn.
ss“'L;S7-uiSy*S«-
WATERPORD AREA-4 roomi _______
teum tiorma and ecrotne. Urge ‘ ‘ 3-cw garage Built U Itl*. A i /buy. »U.**g. PHA Un
William Miller Realtor FE 2-0263 ■9E”-J.hl
BATEMAN
Open 5-7:30 RANCH or TRI-LEVEL
NEW MODELS PEATURINO: 3 balha. famUy room, rae^e and ovon. brick and alum-
$.10,600 to $11,975
3*5* TO WHITTIER (OPPOSITR SoDELS*’"^*^' lKt^ Trade
Your Equity West Side Brick
PINANCINO » NO PROBLBM on
-SSfSS’piSL
Oy room 13t34 with off the floor nreplee*. Onk floor*, cerpoting,
drepei, ggt hgot. 3-ctr gai-
S13.S90. -
' LETS TRADE
So’ Much
FOR SO LITTLB; gpprok *Mt tak** over ife; mnrigoge vMB US -mortggg* eoeu on tW* aperkUng « yearpkl 3-bedroom ipneher Car-peiUg. drape*, alova and refi^-
detail. Bring your dopoall boeouga you wlU look no mpr*, Juat *11.79*. LET 8 TRADE
Joslyn Area
CToae to PontUe Motors. U-yaar-oId bun^w. 3 Iwdrooaa and oloaa to all ariwoU. Baaamont. na baol and a* net aa a pU. 0^ *****
paymaaU. DON'T WAIT.
LET'S TRADE -
^ Down Payment
TO VETERANS; and only *44 par ■	- id ^uryce.
Comforiabla and aoay 3
WATERFORD HILL AREA
ferlok and HmSSuBi. Tfoom, 3 story raneb. Faatiwaa 4 bmj----,-----------
U mountain
kllg|en. eomplau with alectr oven and range phn hood to,, OU PA hoot.' Soar garage, ga motaeralor. CLARKSTOl SCHOOL DISTRICT. FULI PRICE *17,50*.
_________
Mlt. PrMI bt lum liwnd
Ute prtvUbfM.
Smith Wideman
Val-U-Way
• 7 ROOMS ■
3 bathe.. 3-car garage.
and Insurance.
R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531
NICHOLIE
OFF BALDWIN
NORTH END
3 bedrooma. Tnrd'wdod floor*, i
■ about $75 tn-
_	44
. 4.BEORQOM 3.5D*. $$3-Mn.
WEBSTER
T.AKg QRIQW 7. DX79R0 Attractive home Ig Lai* Orion
breakfast bar. enclosed porch with a nice view of Lake Orion across the road. Lake privtiagea. $$.$** with $1.5** down.
C. A. WEBSTER, REALTOR
JOHNSON
RHINO YOUR TRADINO


taipeting. full bi i*a fumaca. 3 k ting. lV4*r gan «rcan ba pureb
INCOME Msml.y Income bringing
per nxmth plui owner's a*------
Excellent condltloo throughout
AfUf I call Sonne Johoeon. OR
^M05.
A. JOHNSON & SONS
O'NEIL
OPEN DAILY TWO TO NINE
3*iM BHAWNKB lank
"BEAUTT-RITl BEAUTY-
REALLY ItRANB I
$43 JOSLYN COB. MANSFIELD
yeare old, PuU baaemool. OU AC	.....
Ugh, aparkllDg
POWN-!*	■’ "
______________J bungalow on large
MxlM lot. OU'AC furnace. Al —
Inum ilonns. Interior newly orated. Milcta cbeaper than you
condition. Now gai fumaca.
NEAR UNION LAKE—Exeellebt con-
__________l-lo-wkll carpoUng.
AttracUva buogaUw *lth IH car garage. Part baeement. 15x3# rec-
n. Fenced yard snd ^a
f "YODNO BILF' ROMES
PN YOUR _ LOT .
STOUTS
Best Buys • Today
room, family Ing room, e Urge wall lii
FOR LIVINO — Spsc-throughout tbU 3-bed-- ‘tome, seMrate dln-*<lng SMCO kitchen, ghted baaomant with eautlfullv Undacaped garata. Only *13.3**
peting throughout, baumen^wltb .......ter e&4ovment. 3-ear e
esloynent. 3-esr carport. to<i‘il>g"fw prtM/"it'^5f3.^*
BUDOIT 'HOME — Vacaat and ready to go. cuta 3-badroom ranch home ' with sttsehed braesaway, garaga. comer lot. *45* down
istcred wslU. painted basement th rec. arei. oil heat. High d drv lot. pared street, 1'* r garage. Only |lt,4S«, lerma.
Warren Stout. Realtor
7 N. Saginaw	Pb. PE t-*l*5
ntca lota. Only 1 yaara o rner leaving aula and priced ly^lE*** and leniu can ba i
LET US BUILD-your
ANNETT
MUST VACATE TAKE OVER
n6 MOIflSV DOWN. 3 BEDitoOK home. Pull bplh. beeemenl. earaaC. Haw gaa furnace. 335-aiS-
COMMERCIAL
Clarence C-RiderewRy
PE 5.7»*1	3W W. 7*aMas
COLORED
Cloca ■ to. downtowD — thU m uaual .3 - bedroom homo wtl basement apartment. It U i exceptional buy at mortals* *1 pialial of Sn.SM. Smalrdon payment. FlU term*. Can t tor dctalU.
. JACK LOVELAND
a Caw Lako Rd.
RENT WITH . TOPTIGN
WALL TO WALL CARFEnNO choice LOCATIONS tin north porf ol Pontiac) NKAR. PONTIAC MOTOR and NORTHERN HIOH
Islly and Sunday K REAL VALUE
$9,500
will Jnmd 3-bedrooDl caach-etyls
„ _______ _____ will arrange
financing. 34 yean experience. VUIt our office and
L. H. BROWN, Realtor
S» EllxabOtb Lake Road Ph. PE 4-33*4 or PE 3-481*
Northern High .'\rea
5-rm. and bath bungalow, ipottenty clean. I larga bedrooms. aCMrote dining room. 3 enclosed Mrchei. alum, storms, acraans and Multiple	'--
' garage. Eitv
! West Side
Attractive stone and a newly decorated 3-bedi
isrs old end a 3-badroom her, l‘a bithe, family ktuh-carpet^ *tr^^	—
a window, Bedrooma are a
Cme'* bT•’e'in a n i. ’ recreatlro room'. oU beat, water softener ‘.‘rrif.’ble'.'TrielS
It I17.»*l
h I1.7M
■paeloue family
WHITTEMORE STREET:
-----	--- ------‘OU-	-----,
pin. Cental
nail, living room, ointng i and klUhen on firat floor. 3 roome. hath and large kitebei
I PHA
ta Web BchooU down I
lladley-Metamora Area
____ 3 family with
res ftU planted tojmrsery
and "r.5d*"bVd«T^ ling taorsei. Surrounded Mich. SUte park I33.DOO. ih to new mortgege.
40 Acres—Close In
.ATTENTION, WE BUILD
J-BEOROOM TRI-LEVEL PEATURINO: buUI-in vanity, c -	' galore.
brick trim. 39.SM ^ ace model, call HllWr B ---- FE 4-3WB
imiiy home. • large
oak floors, i-car *»f»ia. Nmi
bus. Priced at IlI.TSty
..jlllng 1_________
from Pontiac. I_______________
■— -----1 home with large
• ing ell.
' Custom Built Ranch
LAEE FRONT:
DMtn on urn ivvvi,
I With fireplace, bath and e of storage on lake level. 2-attsched girsge. Large lot. rn by appointment.
Slate floored entry, room, cut sand stoi place, all window] none, carpeting •*
John K. Irwin I
Idaire bullt-lni. dishwasher, large dining area. 3 spacious bedrms.. don or library. 1'5 tile bathe. Utllitv. laun-
Rcaltoi
... ---- —on—Since laia i
Phone FE 5*444 - EVE. FE 3-S»*3
NEAR SYLV.AN LAKE
Delightful 3-bedroom ranch with attached garage—Idadi Of batlt-m extras — very nice throughout! Reanllfnl birch and fornlea kitchen with like new 3* " range.
WILL	TRADE
Realtors, 28 E. Huron St.
Open Evenings and Sunday 1-4
IS have over-steed closets
FE 8-0466
flreplgce. Privileges I'rith Lak';. It's vacant—so see It right now. Only 3
ilGAYLORD
WATERPORD AREA
3-bedroom ranch home with c port. Large lot. goa beat, bath, lake prtvUagaa. BrlM li
Walton Bird, ot School House Ukr. Mr. Williams will be your heat. OL l-*76*.
T^ji^DlNO IS TERRIFIC
YOUR WONDERFUL CHIL-DRIN daaarva aomathlng dlffcrenj^ than crowded city
CLARK
LAKE FRONT BUT. Only IIS. — '.evel—3 k  —"
1. IMi b
X. >iUt-l
third.
living
DORRIS
erclal frontage, close to new expreesway Interehanga. “ tractive 4-bedraom eolonial w •Idtng. for num

rooms of tbir very owm IhU bonft provtjjloi 4 -- 3 UP end 3 down. A finished ■ basement recreation fBdnr is an extra for everybody. The breeseway U lust the piaee tor aummertlmo pleasures. 3-car garage, 3 big shaded loti In Elliabeth Uke KsUtet. •1«.3«* with
Bl-Uvel sible U brick III
--’"in	....—	.
r beach, quick
4 OR * BEDROOMS BloomflAd Townabtp. large llring SS'kia', dining room It'klS'. 3 air coodl-ti«»i*rs. foil basement, wall-to-I cerpeting. girege. Ideal for
fitr- beat, fireplace In recreatk roorn. Itb car garage. Call to si ^ 1 today. MY 3-3831 or FE ***93.
Poe-! ACRKAOE. From 5 ecru porccU
5Si^‘ ■■■ -------------
formation FR S-Mi3 or MY .3-3131.
Lawrence W. Gaylord
Broody^andJtot^^Lae Orto
large I
Associate
NO MONEY DOWN Mixed Neighborhoofjs Land Contract, V'A, FHA
I Franklin Bird
2-STORY FAMILY HOME
Ptetureeque • e 111 n g amid glan •hade trees on an acre lot. 3 large bedrooms.' aeparaie dimnw room natural fireplace and It
lops, oak floors.' plastered waBa.
COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANE For Home Ownership Loaos
MJSSa_____ --------JOLJHOU,.
iRcoiiie Property
I ACRES. 3 ROUSES. 3340 PER — income, Dreyton Plaino area. r termi. call OR 341*3.______
17S FOOT OAKLAND LAKE FRONT.
" ------ '"S Clintonvilla *0.0-
(7449M.
COMMERCE-ROUND L A K E—*738
4-43*9. Dal* Bria
LAKE HURON AT EAST TAWAR A rare offering, exclusive frootego on lovel «ndl«M while’Mftd beoch. W of bemattfol Mrefa usd northern pine, restricted. Only 16.000. OL ------------------------------------------
LAKE LOi. lOOklM. CLOSE IN. I
1 cimlracl. n.Stl eaxh.' 3*3-
LAKEFROHT LOTS
and 3-car attached garage. I
leged lot. Nothing dotm.
LOCHLIN CORNER WILMOT. Ldrgt t-room alum, sided home with partial basement. Ig ft. family
mediate posseeslon. ExC tcvmi.
Entranea Oolonlal. brick, :
J. L DAILY CO. 1841 Union Uke Rd.
E.M 3-7114
ImmcdleM b 504 COLOMBU. NEAR JOB-LYN. Some.^ mldto aged couple ehoiiU teally enjoy
this cMy *-room bungalow.
Sit on the sun porch hot
. HURON
... Call FE *-X---------
MuHlplt LUUng Servlet
TRADE
... jralory, largo Ilvtng room, with tireploee. ntcaly carpeted throughout. Attached ksrago. Lako prtv-Uegei. IU.9«t, Ttnu.____________
Nofth Berkshire
Largo lot baoutlfuUy Undacaped.
NBTtlMni Propsrty
flee, Cell after 5:3*. MT 34**«.
AVON nWNSRIF. U thli progree-•Ive aammunUb we are offering value. A^eettve grey
I 3-bedroom bungalow 1
Yuur equity for what you really wont, new or okletlng homce. on* eiso, any dirtc-tton.- Yon need no mooey. let ue solve your real aatalo ^oblama.
‘Today's Ton Trades” yff Balrlurin ^
flreplM, 3- bedrooma. family dining rowA, larga living room with firtploea. Bleocnflold acbeoU. 331.-
3 ACRE CABIN BITS IS U-----------
Oovlord. 31* dowB. 31* mo. Only 15. ftUl prlca. Adonio Realty, FE
Rolfe H. Smith, Realtor
344 S. TELEORAH FE 5-7tM__________MA 5-«4.11
MOBILE SITES. DONT RENT. BUT 6*R 3-12». Pal* Brian Corp.
tk "^owt am
BETWEEN UTICA AND AUBURN j
down. Mbdem 4-room with full bosement. >. faneod yard, with,
. kitchen with 1
t. 2-cer gerage.
taefriettt, ggx ' age. AU this
SPLIT-LEVEL BRICE Larga Uving room.
oil buUt-lns." 13x37 ft. -----
Den or bedroom, many closets ai custom axUaa. 2 car garage. * *50. Term* or trad*.
Uts-Acrtaps
Watu Realty. OrtonviUe. 1_________
21 ACRES AT CORNER OP BALD-■ 'ilorgan Rda. Land genUr t porily woedad. IVtU dt-lly biio aevaral suburban'
rl«k and fraroa wl
mlly lypt kltehen _____ __________
•paeloua, oomfortable family
a with buUt-lna.
NEAR GENERAL HOSPITAL: T rooro EnglUh Colonial
..(aK frviiF Kla.tiif b^drPOtni.
home, built
of quaUiy matertaU'. You
Dravton Woods
Like new trl-level, *l.7*S dew plus costa. Its batbi, large U' Ing room, natural flreplaco. bedrooma. atUehed garage. I( ceted on Urge lot with humem
DORXn * BON REALTORS 333* DUU Hwy.	OR 44334
-----PLl! LIBTINO SERVir-
1-ear basemant garaa w
ARRO
l^'twirr'lct
ntnum alorme and aereane. a •d U*grOoaa**te^«*****°*'
■lonng and aeraana, oarport i— payed drive, nicely landscaped wub r*ar yard (anetd. (11.3**. Termi.
No Money Down
Need 4 Bedrooms?
SHuated oa 3 lo4a with nnaar-oue ehade ireee and privllagaa OO WlUiams Lako. 31' Uvtes room, natural flreptaea, ' lt{ bathe, baeement with gaa haat, ecreentd^ In porch. Offtrod sit $I5.*»0. Uboral terme or trade.
Washington Park
Well kept 3-bedroom bungalow, carpeted llring room. dlRlBg , room, and hallway. Oat heat, paved itrert, landecaped Not. mtso. *35* down OB FRA
[KAMPSEN
COLORED BARGAINS
3 btdroome — *1* lUrta your --------------* - Lovely
laadecopod yard. Alee bava many
ent. gas haat. St. Banadict'a
bus. 3I.$7S. only i
WRIGHT
382 Oakland Avt.
OO YOU NEED tODB RED-ROOM37 Wen this eaa* side dtndv haa them, piu* new hardwood floors, c
'BUD'
Frushour
mpoMbJ
K'cmr'T7Ta''doiraaUlrs hos barn eomplataly raflalshM
Sn,VBR LAXR FRONT - On two boemifuUy weeded tou, thU I-lavel
,—	------- J jj, ujjim room
ladgerock I n with dUlBi
37.33*.
RAY O’NEIL. Realtor
3*3 S. TaUtrapb Offleo Opan^ ■E 3-71*3^	OR 3-3*31
MULTIPLE LlSTlNO SERVICE

ona acra af
at Paattaa oB_______
a ona floor, autematla hot water, fonead Iront . OUaiwd at $«.>««. only t down to quaUftad buyar.
OAKLAND LAKA PItONT -
ly room with big a .	.
e. braeaeway and attachad_ 3-
U^*Lmadlata*^
Med rn Fully ear
dandy kitchen with ________.
•pace, birch eapboar^ JLt***'

1 starme and ecreane.
OPEN
aaar. ti.m aurta you drlag o icaU you iaa enjoy
H.\GSTROM
JtKAL ESTATE
“Bud” Nicholie, Realtor
4*'Mt. Clemens St.
EE 5-1201
After , 6 P.M., FE 4-8773
SUBURBAN LIVtMO I'a vary -bast In this spacious 3 oom brick ranch. With over l lot. 33 R. Uring room. 28x13
Leslie R. Tripp, Realtor
73 W. Huron St. . FR Min
A BARGAIN
Eoet Walton naar OakUnd Ual-Tirstty S*x3«*. Idta) for ranch
aud 3 car garage witb paUo. Only ttl.lSt with a amaU down payment.
TOM
REAGAN
A GOOD SELECTION
Of I acre paroete. U.l«t to gRISS with only 1* per cent down.
C. PANGUS. Realtor
..... . ORfONVILLR	•
KENT
WILL SACRIFICE!
3 boaullful loU. **' and *S‘ Itat After t p.m. 54*.^.______
HI-HILL VILLAGE
FULL-FINAKCIRO AYAILAHLR BEAUTIFUL HILLTOP STTEB Paved slraeU — exe. drahtaga. 11* 8 U* - LOW. AS SLtSf
*U.(I*, Urmi.
Wanted!!
JBEORW. |^-«Mt ^elde horn* U bedmi.*and'te£’m I
Larga family etied •wom povu gat funiaee. fM-Ured walls 3 ear garage. Iminedl-au pocseuton. |g.». Terma.
Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor
3SMDUU Hwy. al Telegraph F1S4133 -OpmiEvaa.
“ Parfing
Late ta Om aw at PaaUM SPOTUTK BLDO. OO.
FE 44*«8_____
SEE k>R TOUR8ILF~
Only o_______________________
Man. Taka KUiabath Lakt Road to Scott Uke Rd. — turn right
COLORED
CARL W. BIRD. Realtor
m Community Rational Bank Bldf. FE«-431I	Rea«.Fi*T3W
WEBSTER
pretty weeded aereg with
Open Sunday 12 to 6
311 Reltman Ct. Rochetter. 3-: bedroom brick, living room, dining eL aarpeting and drapee. kitchen with eatlni epace. US bath*. 3-car garage, flnlthao baaeaieot. ^>racr. (& 1431* atUr
WEBSTIR, RRAfTOR* OA t-mi	MY 1-331
WATEWS LAktLANO
'**iI7*., Towering mapio t good level building af- *' dry. Cos* to baacn.
ELIZABETH L **XIS7. I1.3*S. 315 now HAOSTROM REAL I
«»*$5I ar OR S
7
C'-—8
THg PONTIAC PRESS, FIWDAY..MARCH 1963

UlfDKRWOOD
grocery-lunches
mm •pfitm^nt. Arc
---- a louT pHea ^ |S,|
pkut atock Jcc It tciday. ^
J. T. WARDEN. Rwlty
IW %. Huitw	m-7l»7
WILD FILL Df
Poriner Wanted
r «9«.ai9 mtvi-
tt In' PonllAf Ex.
!i lES?
AIR; on tirnc^llUs^

SritCMMu^
■lie H to U	TH. Fg j-J«p!
wprXSU'tJSifa CLOTHINO, 81?*: U. II Murnird Court.________
Salt Hwitliikl Bnii 6!
DUlXnWiUI OIL HBATEH. di Miytit Frtmer, MO. FT HWl, ELECTHIC 'RANOX: OOpD WORX-— ’^IHon, ». P^rifApi •
inSATS AND OROCERtBS -FRES HOkCR OEUVERT-All natlonallT advertised brandi.
k^as
FRIOIDAIRE REFRIOBRATOR.
... ~~
FRlOlDAlRE REFRIOERATQR. EX-.......	wndlUeB. M. FE
ouarahteed'
HAYWOOb WAKEFIELD BECnoM-
;S«I« HovMh*U 6o«4s
COUNTRY LIViNG
■nlnutei froin PootUc. lU.M^
C. PANGUS, Realtor
ORTONVOLE	.......
Mill 81	I c. PANGUS. REALTOR
Sfto tvsiMsi fiwffrty 57 •	.. ortonvillb
2.^ Dl.SCOUNT
Ob Und cootrieU with ImIb of U.m Bt »W MT month tt to bur. Btreni other •miUer o
1 OA8. AND t ELECTRIC RANGE. ~lt each. FE MtW betore *
AUTOMATIC SPACE
___________lont. tW. UL nwi.
KENMORE automatic WABHER.
Pood eondtllon. ttt. FE LA3I7. RIRBY VACUUM CLEANER COM-plete -"*•	......---
OOLD. 1 OREEN CHAIR. 1 PLAT-, form rocker. 1 ehiue loimte. door mirror, dreieer. WBehei. elec. roBiter end deep try FE t-ltt7.
i 4» I
Brick Building
L B r B e bulldini. luiuble I wholetaler.' dutrtttulor. Ilf! manufecturer or commercl HIth cetllnt. fti heat. JO,opt . ft. floor »pece.
Brewer Real Estate
, PRICE—REJECTS
________NATW? Betotlful llrtof room end bedroom
AM IMilEDIATB BALi N eultee. EJ.^IlAO^woek.^Ba^iato
LAROE CRIB AND MATTRESS
t N Ceee. FE lAtet
	
ELIZABETH LAKE RD.
...CSiftunerrlBl boUdtin. modem. 34*50
with forced air he>t. office, etoret^i room, paecd diire.. plentr.ef pom-
lot'Bree. For fur—- -----
call Warreo. Btou
IHmwHi	60-A
AN IMMEDIATE SALE «t FOR YOUR
Land'Contracts
llTealtM-? Ti^.^ulilim"
ESTABLISHED BUSINESS -
IN OIU3WINO COMMUNITY
wUj^SSrtde* Tall "for' de-
stwiTH-WIDEMAN
REALXL.
4U W. Huron St.
$«k «r ExdMiiit _5I
: PLAGUED
WITH A BUSINESS OR RF.AL ESTATE
PROBLEM
MAJtX A MORNING APPOINTMENT wax ME. AND I'LL PROVE • . CAN SOLVE TTOR LUNCH IS C M. YOUR AfrORNEY AND A WUNTANT ARE WELCOME PA^ , WERS^ ANY'nMBI REAL ESTATE AND kXCHANOE COUNSELING IS AN EXACTING SCIENCE. IT RE-aumxs FULL TIME PROFESSIONAL ATTENTION AND DIRECTION
50-STATE COVERAGE
PERSONAL ATTENTION TO TOO AND TOUR PROBLEMS
XEW HILEMAN. S.E.C.
Itll W. HURON S. PE *.137»
A-1 PARTY STORE
Homeo**l-rtet4ld Mock huildint. Vert modem on 1 ro. Nice cleen etock end • rnt. Real e«late I an. Call tor tnori
« allaji. tll.m dovD.
TRADE tor one atratfht liquor
wlUi^iloa^ nelit--^--' '—‘
eouliani '
■roaa.
REALTOR PARTRIDGE
• GOOD GOING RE8TAt)llANT7 celleni location on main hlihnay.
vetllsaUoa. are arllllni to put all pour lima and effort' to o lain Ihla kind of aecurltr, nr «:
wift? eVerTthlni.'’h>miehed. Salary. ' coinmlation; biniui. and liberal profit ahaiina. Write Pontiac Presi Box a. itaUng afe. ampioymanl
driVe-in
A kar location la PontSae. Kara U
PACEAOE UQUOR STSRE ETOPI That'a risht . . . at , bay# a tacond Packaga Uqt Store. Thu one U pHcod at oi tSt.eoe with reauoable terms a dome oxer tUW.M)e (roae. Arou Moot In etock. Why hot call m for jnafclutlrt, thawing,......
TRAILER PARK
A won octabllitaad park, a la (root location with oter • perm... Sul with a capacity of 10* traUore. After tajeytat-----------------
uny
After a lob well done. Confldentl information ayallable only to qui Iflod huyere Priced at tlM.O
CHANGE fo
BATEMAN
aalUnt. C FE A-MOI.
Can Realtor P
CASH
»'Sr
NO WAITING
For a quick d IRDEN REAL-
tXlI RUGS, FOAM BACK. J14.M Twaada. ttS M. Oral braldad. M l — Axmmutera. I4*.N. IJxlS nyloc IM. Heary ruf ISH. PEARSON'S FURNITURE «1 Orchard Lake Art.
Mmmy t* Lmr
^_^^^cantad^onap
WHEN YOU NEED $25 to $500
Wt wUl be fled to halo you
STATE FINANCE CO
MM Pontiac State Benk Bldf.
FE 4-1574.
BUCKNER
FINANCE COMPANY
WHERE YOU CAN
BORROW UP TO $500
^OFFICES Uf
PMOlM ^^Dr%r- --
TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 202 N. MAIN
214 E. ST. CLAIR ROCHESTER ROMEO
425 to $500 on Your SIGNATURE
Auto or Other Securiro PAST. CONVENIENT 24 Monthf to Repay
Signature
AUTO or FURNITURE
t\y. chfttriM
lounge cheirti up; reellner ehelr. $14.5*; retrl(-erelort. $14 up; holater back atudlo couch, foam rubber. J24.M; TVa. 414 *S un;-ainall J piece eectloonl. *lt; dreaiert; beds: eprinfi; etc.
BUY-REL^-TfiADK PEARSON’S FURNITURE 1 Orchard Lake Ave.__FE 4-71S1
MATCl	eii $«fe MiSCEltaMMS
—	AND BNDB
10% OFF
From our ereryday low price ah |N2 floor model RANGES. I FRIOERATORS. WASHERS a DRYERS	_
15% OFF
on demo or floor model 8BW1KO VAO^^CTiEANERS Montgomery Wahl	>
13-poor
bNTH BUTS 3 ROOM# OF
pc. bedroom tel with Innareprtag meltreu and box aortal to match with 2 ranity lampa. pc. kitchen dinette ,«««. m. *xl2 rug taduded. E.Z tonne et the Wyman Furalturo Co.- IT
E. Huron________________
1" RCA CONSOLE. 135; HXCEL-
lent condition. 332AM7._______
3S-INCH WE8TINOHO08H RANGE. Whirlpool refrtfvalor, china caM-aet. desk, coffee table and match-Jag end Isblci, two table Ir---
- GALLON OIL HOT 4
M-INCH OAS STOVE. GOOD CON-
dlllon. JIS FE MM44___________
IMI DELUXE FRIOIDAIRE PORT-dith waeher. Place eetttaf for Ported condition. »M). **24»51.
AUTOMA'nC WASHER AND DRY-
BARGAIN STORE
Cash Loans
$600to$25(X)
on homee any plaea ta Oaklaad County
Voss 6c Buckner,
M NAnONAL BUILDINa
FE 4-4729
IenOMe 1
. occnalonal i
-Big, Big Specials-
OE Hair Oryera. new, wltti east
RCA Portibie TV wlUi Ctiltr **
baae. new ..............Ju
Hamilton gat Oryar. wjth beat control ............ fu
The
GOOD HOUSEXEEPINO BROI

R I E N T A L IMPORTED txl2 Serouk mg and drapet. PE S-TtSI. PLASTIC fiLi ^
PORTABLE BAR. FOR DEN
SOLID MAPLE YOUTH BED AND —‘1 bad. eompleta with new >e§. Alao mUcallaDCaut.
BBWINO MACHINBS AND VACUUM
----- -eeAla to aU. Stager
I modal. Sn.N. EIae-tl4.gg. Orer 73 mod-
at^fy*’R^.^''SR

TAPP AH DELUXE ELECTRIC range. Exc. condition. FE g-ttl*.
TOTAL BALANCE UUE OP I3«. on 1N3 model automatle Zig Zi Sewing Machine v poymaoU a crpled of.Jd.0g motatfa^ Call en<„. manairr. Capitol SePtag Cantara. 'EJW^.
TURQUOlSi COUCH.
WERE MOVING. BUNK BEDS
■ .........’TS!S5?^,
PAIR OP lamps, a glass lamp.
email tablet, mubla top dn-------
chert, rocker, a tea wagon. • Htyiland. and mUc. dlthee.
OROAN WITH STOOL. REPINISHEO antique white. A Beauty I Anllquei. 10345 OakhOl. Hoi
Hi-Fi, TV & HtdlM
—--------------—-N.JJS.
IT-ln. uaod porUbla. gM.05. Wtl-■on TV, ^ 3-33lV Open 0-g. U5 E. Waltop eoraar ofjeilTn.
CASH-
Loans to $2500
Family Acceptance Corp.
317 National Bldg. 10 W. Huron Tetaphona FE 0-4023	*
CASH avaiuble now To pay off all your bllU. ' contractor mortgage, prorl you gat M home ImproTement your houaa. I(uat hava 5* cam aquilT or more. Bta I Conatmctlco Co FE 3-7Sg

real bArgatai.
Wt' buy, aell or tra and look around. 2 parking. Pbona FE 5-i
AIX NEW FURNITURE
PLUS GOOD RANOB AND RBFIUp. 1312	215 A MONTO
Beautiful gqiltea dlnelle. 2-plecr
ble dreaaar. mirror. large cheat
A Mortgage Problem
Wa make niortgag* loana to m your requlranionu. Any property, any amount. Prompt, daa.ndablt torrlca. RanuodcUi^ and con
__.._______________ . barj^
Sfor **Sll TRADH
Raroain house^
D3 N. Caee at Lafayette, n 2JS42 Open tU 2 Monday epd Friday AUTOMATIC ZIO-ZAO SINGE* lewlng machine —
Bum-til dial for
Guaranteed USED TVs
WIdt Belactloo Prom
$24.95
Goodyear Scrrlct Store
M » Caee_____________PE 5J123
TV students attention, as a pej.jml	“•
Sflia MiscaHaiitm 67
TElONT-rOOT PORinCA COUNTER tops. Brand new.	after '
2 VIBRATOR BELTS. 3 VIBRATt taUee. one roller maaiage. 2 cyciM from elendertatag lalon pi other lleme. Reaeonably priced I quick aale. Tel. FE 4 1304. afl 5 p ro. U 7-05I0.
1 UCnON ELECTRIC oVen SUIT.
{£.* jsso.'-sa 1 •
——	Office.
21-INCH BLOND S'YLVANIA TV.
20.M* B.T U. BARD COUNTERPLOW Furence. Excellent condition Chery. atiod tranaportatton,
OT leU. Va 3^410.
BEAUTIFUL SINOEB. ZIO Equipped. Coocole atyle.' Sewina .Machine. Paymente of 51.00 weekly |Tj|a.l0^t^ 11^5.$^' ®**”*®^ BATHRMM PIXTURUToH . gta fnrnacee. Hot water
XURSI.NG HOME
2* bode. Oroa< approabnatelj 2il0.-, *00, Oxer 220.000 net profH. Elderly owner wanta ta aOb. Subatmitlal
"miotigan
Business Sales, Inc.
'-WORN LANDMESI 1273 S. Tetegrapb
w COMPLETE HOUSEHOLD PURNI-‘ re foi 8 rooms. 31W 8. 8agi>l*« OLXRATOR REFRioXRATOR.
----	------ 275 lallooa and
HO mUoo compleie. ***
3«5108. e__________________________
ELECTRIC UOHT FUTURES ALL roonu. 1M2 dealgnt., puU do balloooa. atara. Aidroom 21.X porch $1.55. Irregulara, tamp Fricee only factory can glTerMI Igan Fluoraaeant. 293 Orviard U Alt. FE 4J4S2 -No. It.
Formica Headquarters-
New Locatka 217 ORCHARD LAKE RO. CabtoeU. TOm. sinka, Baodi Specta] Mica 35c
PONTIAC KITCHEN SPXCIALTTHS
__________ FE 4J322
FORMICA. PLUMBroo. FifBiT. Olaae^____H a r d w a r e. Wlrtag.
Ooiea^Tfiufe.-- T3|l*HTUlia«T.
FE 5-4713. Montcalm Supply, I5f W. t^tcalm.	________
iSe^fclquld Soor*'HMtl5aiL^*** SliBpla InexptntlTt Appltaatfca. nice Builder Eupr‘~ — - —-FURNACES and'
By Dick Turner

Tt’s no wonder magazine sales are down! Here’s another one that has rejected Junior’s cute sayings!”
SUM. o. A. i HOT WATXR HEATER,"

-----WJO and 240.2S.-------------
Michigan nuoraacent, 3S3 Orchard Lake Are. FE 4J462. — No. ’* HOT WATER BASEBOAHp. i per ft.: big tartate on bot w n^tt^^auppUai, O. A. Tbomt
LAVATORIE8 COtf^KTi
NEW AND U8ED FCRNACEB I •txn«d. very reaeonable. A <>
Something New Under the Sun!
, AURORA GLASS TINT
Control — Glare — Rett — Fade
reduce loatea due t
Both taduatrui i
InterruptlOB dule. Fully I
aur dally I — rell-
____	_____ — aatUfled
Courtaoua and conttauou> tefylce.
WHEATOX INDUSTRIES', INC.
FO. Box 14. Flymouth. Mich.
Salt MisctJIaMoai
WEBCOR TARE recorder. JUST Ilka Iiiew 290 New DeWalt bmul •ew. coat 0290. wlU eacrlflce 5190. Utod only 1 mo. Call after * p.m. or all day Sunday. FE 21310.
CONSOLE CHORD OROAN. FULL •In. aeaso. Termi. Curta Hatchery Rd. OR
New Janssen DIRBCT-Mow aptaet ptam With bulU-ln mualo light, "Let ua show you." Faaturaa not found ta any other piano , and never before such quality at auch a low priej.
USED PIANOS
CABLE CONSOLE, FRUITWOOD HUDSON SPINET, ' FRUITWOOD
. Lew Betterly Miulc Co. ingHxn
Acrou from Birmingham Theater FREE PARKINO IN REAR
_____Open Friday Evenlngi
FENDER PERCIBION BASS, AMP.

Sale On Used Organ
Hammond Chord Organ .... $€.
Oulbranaen I'odel B ... |1,»
MORRIS MUSIC CO.
34 B. TOe|n^ Road
SOHMER PIANOS
NaUonaUy Adrartlaad By ‘"THE PRICE IS BIOH'T’ Exclusive franchlaa at Lew Betteriya
I. MoriW Xahl. OM 4-Ilgl.
. cem MANURE • 7 PEa-OSOt ~ FE4-U2S
BAND. O R A V E U
PBOniSS^
- Iniektaa. F «
Wta#<Mi<aln4Ml

77
vaplng! PE 4-4221.
g-WEEK-OLO PUPPIES. PART
AHC TOT POODLE AND AKC wire haired terrier at etud. OTJJOa*. AKC BRITTANY PUPS. REASON-
SUO^.
Ajee MINIATURE SILVER POODLE
COLLIE PUPS t WEEKS OLD.
_________075J234______
DOGS BOARDED. DOGS 1
S TRAINED. 1 .FE 2-254g.
DACHSHUND PUPPIEB. AKC RRG> . .iytered. OL 1^5.
ENGLISH POINTER PUPS, SIX
waeka old. Phone 263-2225._____
GERMAN shepherds; WORLD
CIKer.’
GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPPIES,
ONE KERRY BLUE TERRIER AND
dard poodle, i g 4-lfe5 after
15 WUllami. FE 4403.
PARAKEETS. GUARANTEED TO Ulk. UM. We raUe them.
Bird Hatchery, 24W Auburn Road.
UL Z22B0.__________________;
&PRINOER SPANin PUra. EX-
WRITE TOY POODLES FOR SALE.
WANTED: PUPPY OP tERRlXH
AhcHm S«Im
THE SWEETEST SOUND YOU'VE EVER HEARD OCLBRAN8EN — All transUtor 0 gan with bulU-ta Lcalla apeake
-------g, ^	u,,
llvlera self contalni I. Coma and bear
----llXJIfrc—The New
'63 Conn Serenade
speaker like an

IRON PORCH AND
_____ eomera. and poata.
dlYIdert. AVIf^CABINins,
room diffdert. AVIS Ci 4570 Opdyka PE A^SlO.
The Floor Shop 2255 EUaabeth Laki
PLYWqgi Plywood DWf
ID OP ALL KINDS
LUMBINO BARGAINS: nUCE aUndtag toUet. $11.29;	30
heater. 040.09; Spteoe bath $50.05: PIberglaa laundry tray $10.05: 52-ta. ahower itaU.-$32.05; . 2 bowl atak. $2.05.
SAVE PLUMBDiO CO.
172 S. SMtoaw
PLVWOOD PANELING
~Ttftalahad Vjrooxad alight r
xg' Cottage Birch ..........
'xt’ Elm ............... 20.05
■xr Walnut .................
PONTIAC PLYWOOD CO.
■ »W Baldwin Are.	FE SI545
OIL WALL PURNACB OPERATING
REBUILT — O 8 E D SWEBPBRSr


REMAINS OP ESTATE Miscellaneous itema. PE 5-3924. SINOER SLANT NEEDLE 8EWINO Machine Zlg Zagger — modern blond cebinet.' Pay oft account ta
daab°°telanea. l^eraal CoT FE
—bpe«
J Pratlidahod bl
■Specials—
2. Can aftar g. MI S2S27.
STAINLESS STEEL SINKS __
rtm. S2I-09; Delta etagle Itxwr tail-eata. 210.19 with apray. O. A. Thompaan. 7015 M5*. WaaL
TALBOTT LUMBER
equlpmant. _____
......I. Imilok Racreatlou
h. 77H S. - •___
THE SALVATION -------
RED BRIELO STORE ••I WEST LAWRENCE
table, lamp, 30-galloo c
tog tablaa. Bala new Royal porti tyoawrttara. 140.95. PoffaUa typO-amuat-» Dixie
BONNIE-BRCX)K FOODS
NOW
II Maati and Ora Nattanally Adi
GRANOE JUICE
* tor ■	....... .
KLEENEX
400 Count .........
BABY PQ(H3S For Cbmplite ~'pi1co i
_____ - r .	______ YOU'LL DO BETTER AT
""•S’* Sb^Bii?’^:7.7:.-:^5r^w	Betterly - Music Co^
etEK PARKINO IN REAR Acroas from Birmingham Theatai Open Friday Eyentogi
Old Tima Player Plano ..
9.000 Top Value Btampq will be
WIEGAND MUSIC
INTERNATIONAL ACCORDION, 181
beee, $100. OR S-819!._____
HAWAHAN ELECTRIC GUITAR
eeUneU. 8 leeeone ineluded free.
\kX, CONN ALTO. PROPE810NAL $3«o!*’bMt effer.
WANTED TO BUY: Bb CLARINET.
ADDING MACHINE SALE
lubtrect and multiply. t*i.50. NEW ELfCTRIC MACROfBS. Add. fubtraet and multiply, OKN.OO^ REBUILT AND RBTONDrnONBD priced from $34.50. Termk. Open 111 7p.m. for your convenience. PONTIAC CASH REOIHTER CO. 537 B. Saginaw	FI MOQl
NATIONAL CAsh REOI8TER MOD-
9 Key c
TYPEWRITERS FROM .
Se-'A^;
SpMliNf
.PACHE CAMJ^ THAlURa. I modelt, $335 up. Camper's Fara-dlie, 355 Auburn. 232-HtT.
display See the new pickup cam-pe:. light ta weight, alaepa 3. plenty of head room at 2335. Winter boura, open daSy 5 a.m. to 7 p.m Eaay terms BUI CqUer Apache Camptag Center 1 mile-eaet of Lapeer on M-21.
HAND GUNS. SHOTGUNS. RIFLES.
EVERY.Friday	________
BporiUu Ooodi — AU Typoa Door Prtxaa Exary Auettaa
Wa buy—aaU—trade. ----- " ’
Conaljiimenla i 5009 Dlxte Hwy.
,u\.AU,no. #;sa daya. wm-O-Way
:l* P.M. WEDNES-
CounttT Mart, lU . Ml 7-3400.
IR: SATURDA?,
. ne. 1 wUI Mil at PubUc__________
lion llvlpg room furniture, dtatag room eulter Frigidaire with “ ”■
Prarmr, Ay elM aleelrle ____________
Wbirlport automatic watber. Ken-more Ironer, kitchen Ht. Telexliton. 2 bedroom euites. Cheat of Draw-
nlturt. and Tabk Saw. Mr tad*
^	-----‘	a-—
3-4>78. Termt: Caib.
•prayer. 413 N. JohnMo.	Hotly. coneMer
un 6vn Lira of MARltitft. 2225 Houror 1^
fpf	-»« Umm.14..	nriMWIfV. It - 9
Daxla Ma
____Mach. Co.. OrtoDxUle. NA
T-2MS, Tour John Tfaert. Now Idoa.
. OebTod Mayrath^dealCT.
8FBCMt'>RKH6B «*~NEW A<0> uaed apreadere and loadera ta our plSIling IgARCR (III. Wt tndt and finance. Your John Deere deal-eT^Hartland Area Hardware. Phone Hartland 2511,
USED TRACTORS
AU ataee and makea
. KING BROS.
FE 4J724	FE 4-IlU
_____Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke_
TrmI Trdim	tl
HouV
-OOT LAPSTRAfic
r..^sr“n’T/\
: Plata, ouiftt. 21.573. 012-a Ruitle Lana. Kaogo Harboi 15 . *0&t FtBERGLAS. Jj power Mercury, trailer m
tarn at Warnv 'frail W. Huron rplan to jom <
Wally Byam't exciting care AFACHE CAJdP TRAILBRO
\ few new Tfgl models left
dlscounu. 'All flys 1103 i---------
On display. laa the new pickup
< TWO-WHEEL TRAIL.
I FAMOUS MAKES DETROITER-ALMA PONTIAC CHIEF Open houeo deyc ■
Uoit unlU are hei
2^,
Bob Hutclut^pn Mobile Homes Sales, Inc.
Stale Highway OR 3-1202 Drayton Flataa 2 to 2 Dally — Sundays 12.
IW DETROITER 42 X 10 IN ‘"Tnl condltiao. BulU-ta kitchen
liMbted half way bt_______ _____
and Oxford on IU4. MY 3-Mll. SHORTS MOBILE HOMES-
' Oood uaed homa type traUera. 1* PER CENT DOWN. Cva wired and hltehea Inatalled. Completa of porta and botUa gaa.
““	—-yr. Hutwi
FE 4-t742
STOP 04 A3ID JEW
The “All-New” 1963
FANS. FRAHKLIHS, CREES, —13 to 29' on dlaplay— REAL OOOD BUYS an ALL US TRAILERS
—Open 7 daye a week—
Holly Travel Coach, Inc.
....... 5(B 4S7TI
Campers and Trailers
ETmERT MOBILE ROME REPAIR MiTlea. tree eetlmatee. Alao peute and aoeeaadrlea. Bob Rutetataaou. MobUa Homa Salea, tae.. 4201 Dtala Hwy.. Drayton Ptatoa, OB |-|3W,
DETKOIT HOUSETRAILER AND >—----- ifta^S. amaU	Wt
OXFORD TRAILER ' SALES
11*2 - Marletta'i
I Stewart'a. Chomplon'a. Wl-Tellow Btenea and Oara-“ ‘-------and priced to yo
60 Units on Display
L<M e( good need uaHe. ^ Cappor'e to 20 wide, re know vo hayo onf at Iba b< MlaeUona ta Ihla area.
•mo- wot- -todwy, -t -mllt wmith' i
Lake Orion on M24. MY 2«21.
aiictlonaeri. Call
Mountain Road, then m b to 20419 Bold Mountiln I mUa*> north of Pontiac a. 24 head of Hereford teb tacludoa: 7 Rereftird about May let 2 Hara-
4 Hereford bofert 20 montlia bred:	BenHord buUa, 17
lta.,01^ PaHP^ M traetar. i-AU C tractor. John Otoro al puroMO tractor. 19*4 Chevy
on stock truck. 1202 Ir’-------
No. 4* hay baler. 2 i
Sheet mutlie rsek. OR 8-8671. BEAUTIFUL ORETCH GUITAR — Excellent condition. 6734IU2.	hire wm|(onB. 4 comomeM. pilV • line w>f other good farm tools, produce 1.500 crates of good ear corn. 400 bushel oato. 200 bales
ORGAN SPEAKER WITH 40-WATT ampler, bargain. 219*. 332-0190.	of 2nd cutting bay. 900 bales of first cutft^^ amOto^lM bales of straw.
PIANOr - NEW M J2pTE, SPINET. Nationally .advirilscd brand name. Includea tuning abd 1 lessons traa.	hens, household: 12doot beepfreeae, small amount of household goods, lunch avaUable. Hetamora Bank.
Package valua now only 51*5. Kallaghcr Music Co.* llii. Bunm rw 4488I	clerk: William J. McRatb. pro- Sifort; 0A‘i?2^!r’“-
PIANO B91ft OH BUT aalAetlMi BAilnn&lle kSMVIl	SATURDAY MARCH 2ND AT 1 pm. lea ercra labia and 0 ehalrs, heart back. Walnut drOD leaf labia.
» POR SALE OH IBAD*.
OENTLE SHETLAND PONT MARK
"■ yrs. old. MA 3-150*.___
ISTERKr’HOLSTEIN HERD. lA, oraduotlon teetad eows Phone FE 5-2830.

APPROXIMATELY 700 BALES OP hay. M balsa straw. 19*- -
WANTED TO BOY 'oOOD COW *■" FE 4J50*.____________________
Bird feed and dog food y kinds, pet supplies, straw, r bedding, salt, paekaga coal.
Wayne Feed's >pen g to 7. Sunday 10 ta 3 Tber’s Lawn and Pal Supply CltatonvUle Rd.	*72-1331
(M52)	073-2101
________________________  M
ANGUS WHITE »nv« LEA^ TENDER OBUaODS MEATS. Visit our ptant at Richmond where wat^Ul i daya a week; • drive ontT you art welcome; see .what you are gettiat. SO* best beef rout and rlh staa\ cuts for 520.40. 39* brasins or-stewint maata tor $0.75. $9* .alrloln round and rump cuts, 525.40. SO* T-bone, tlrloln,_portcr-house cuts -for $39.50::-Bldg sr choice or prime as low as .12*. 75* half bogs 53X5*. 9*» side veal. 124.50. 21* half tomb. 113.39. 35* l*an nork chop* or smoksd cut* ta a 112775. M

Packers Inc. Pontlao store •-4271 M-5*. V, milt sMt -of Pontiac Mrport. Phono OH «-}4«. OpOn.
Travel Trailers
AVALAIk ,
NEW IJORTWKIOHT FULLY BELF«GNTAINED
Ellsworth
AUTO SALES
*577 Dtala Hwy,
RMt Traikr Sfau
TTm^rifrTnick
Traction luboloss _____ 522.30. each.
recapping
CHE DAT SERVICE on Raquost S3B 20/200-20/lO.OO-J*
Call FE 2-2251 FIraatone Store
PASSENGER TIRES. RK tread. $3.0* and up. aU tises, al used truck tiree at borgata prici
BUDGET TERMS
ORANKdlAPT GRINDINO IN THE ■“ -Tyllndars rabored. ” ’ “ Shop. 23 Hood.
34 YEARS EXPERIENCE IN 8KLL-tag quality new and UMd bikes. Scarlett’s Bicycle h Hobby Shop.
M w T ------- *E JTMl
AcMsttriM
14-PGGT FIBERGLASS 45rH.P. MER-
cury electric. traUer and r----
aorlat. $1,125. MA 4-4907 bef
tr EM 2J090 Irffer 0. -_________
rOOT PIBBROLAS BOAT 12H
CRUISBOUrMAT________
- E. Walton	FI 0-4402
Dally 2 to 0____Closed Eunday
-----.taaint Skl-Btrd. Aero Craft
Runabouts and C a n r - -	“ -
. Nymph Pishing Boats.
Motors. Rull-iSard a i Duda Trailers. .	,
PINTER’S
08 .....a.
FI 4*0884
DAWSON’S SPECIALS
1962 14’ PIberglaa runabouL eom-pletely aqulp^. 28 h.p. Extanide 100 pound Pamco trailer 21095. 12*3 Carver wood lapetrake. Traveller Alum, and fiberglas. and Evinrude motors. DAWSON'S SALES al TIPSICO LAKE. Phone
Mata 2-2172.	______________
33-FGOT. 12*1 TROJAN EXPRESS Cruller. * sleeper, shower, elee. retrlgeratar. and many extras. Can be aeon at Mean Marine. Ht. aemena. Priced to more. OR
BOAT SHOW
39 boats on display tasids Owens Cruinr M-20 fl.
Owens Fiberglas, g models Skee-Craft, 2 modeto.
““ --------------------
Many uaod liga and moton
WALT MAZUREK’S LAKE & SEA MARINA
South Bled, at Saginaw
"Thr Mere Tr6ineII~ the Quicker You Sell! Want Ads Do the Job FE 2-8181 Try Them I
Olaai and Aluminum CaooM
PAUL A. YOUNG INC.
403* Dtala Hwy. Dnykjj Pl^a (ON LOON LAKE)	?*
Open Mon.Aat. 2-2____
larm aluminum
Looms BOATS AND MaMA — . Dunphy, Olaaamaaler^ateitardj^li Johnson Dealer ”On BeautthiT
..... (HURRICAHE)
boat and trailer: $175. EM 3-3S22. MUST SELL 12-POOT 5-INCH CEH-lury taboerd. 22$ VS grey martae engine. White Wnyl sUdliig tap. Eic. condition. 883-3064.\_
JOHNSON MOTORS
star Craft boaU and Gator IriUan
. J9^^&RHiE“‘sDPyuflr 319 Orchard Lake Ava. FE 5J2I*
==-•--------- WAREHO
- 15 U
NOW AL
_ _	_ GOOD BUYS on 12 ft.
fishing bom. ftborgli* It ft. CrBBttt. .'	.
vCliff Dreyer Gun and Sports Center
15219 HoUy ltd.	“■
14-POOT WOLVERINE BOAT. ~ P. Ertarude motor with tn ■ — York after 5 p.m.
ICE BOAT CLEARANCE
Reg. 544t	NOW 2
- We Tiwda —
-------CABMML ________
at I Mlta^Ro^*‘**”^ ilE 2-2
WHiittd Car«-TrHclt» 101
__ woe xrriDP
y£U ill V-JIa R,
Par (bat Mgh grade UMd aar. „aaa ui, bafora you sell. H. J. Vsn Welt. 4549 Dltle Hlghweg. Phone OR 5-1355	_________________
$tJUNK CARS-PREE TOWM
,YS A BUYER OF_JOHK . Free towing. OR 5-2152.
FOR THAT "TOP DOLLAR" C.. SHARP LATE MODEL CARS
Averill's
BONANZA!
Morn "aiiggota’' by buyer for weetern market. WlU purchase -sharp cars/' any make. U5S-through ‘12. Ask for ’’Barnls'' at—
BIRMINGHAM
CHRYSLER-PLTMOUTR INC.
■* a. Woodward__MI 7-2M4
$$ TOP DOLLAR $$
♦ POR
Clean Used Cars
JFRnMF.
"Bright Spot"
Orchard Lake at Cast
, FE 8-0488
TOP 21 CLEAN CARS-TRUCKS Economy Discount 2335 Dixie Hwy. WANTED: ’5*.’gl CARS
EUworth
'59^’60-'61-=’62
MODELS
GLENN'S-
032 West Huron St.
E 4-7W1_____n 4-I7W
OUT-STATE MARKETS
M & M
MOTOR SALES
--------------Jjr
JUST K. OF PONTUC bRITX*Ilf aaxr nnene bwy.
OH 4«480e
UsmI A*t*-Tr«ck Parti 102
■ONTIAC. CHEVY.
Ntw oHd UMd Trdeks
1955 Ford
BEATTIE
■Tour Ford Dealtr Stnea l*Jf Oo Dixie Hwy. In Watarford At The Spotlight
OR 3-1291 •
IW CHE VY ^
riioL ‘”*	*’*'
1957 CHEVROLET g, H -lOH. A ruSar''g*45***'*' *'**'
1257 Port 2 club coupe. Radio, heal-luto. A nice car. 2479.
„ ^ PEOPLES AUTO SALES
*» Oobltaid___________PE J.255I
(01 CORVAN "SS" PANEL TRUCK.
m CHEVY stake”truck. Di-
1962 FALCON
Ranchero Pickup
with only lJ.w„tu,imUiSi. only -
BEATTIE
OR 3-1291
*HJ9?S.''»’'hiN PICKUP. PRoiii to
Mansfield Anto Sales
12*3 Chevy pick up with
*7»«k*r' 4 whcol
I- ■ •
THE PONTTAC PRESS. FRIDAY. MARl*H 1. 1963
C—»
Mtw «imI IImmI TadB,^ miiltw jM Uml Can Iflt
UM CHEVT PANEL TKDCK. r»a». V-A Oogd CWKI. PE MIM.
Better
»U BDICK 4-DOOR POWER. MH.
Used Truck's
GMC
SPF.CIAL Truck iiele
I^^Chejj	(0 MrlM. fully
1 Cbiry, (U*icl, U tti iUkt.
'n ClM*y VS ton pnnel, mony
cALL tRUCK DEPT.
ilvnrc, MW OpUyko
1962 Ford
F-lOO Pickup
BEATTIE
At Tbo BtoplMht
OR 3.-1291
1 PORD PiqC-DP. I
MH INTERNATIO^ PICK-UP.
_______________104
, AETNA CASUALTY
«5«*
loiurnl motorut'i coyernie.
$11 QUARTERLY
S CARS SIT
BRUMMETT AGENCY
XM S. Tcl
FE 4-(
CANCELED?
REFUSED?
' YOUNG DRIVER
Ovor M yn. exportonc* Inturlot CuceM tnd Refuwd Auto Xoenl SoiTtco—Torino FOR INFORMATION CALL
FE 4-3535
FRANK A ANDERSON. AOENCY
A Jool n
FE 4-34M
ftrtlgR Cm
10S
INI FIAT. RTATION WAOON. udio. hntot. II.OM octunl e flod mllM. )u>t Ukc now. cm bounbt for Vi of orlilnnl chAM prlco, thii one won t SMS down. HI 31 por me
Sro. nnd Ti?*'n Vil* ilMd ^
*“bIRMINOHa!4 RAMBLER
1963 CORVETTE
sting . Rny. tut bnek coupo. e<|ul|>pod with power oteortog. power brnkei. 100-h.p. engine, rodld. hemter. premium wbltewnll ttreo. l.SM actuel mllu. dark Uuo
$4795
JEROME- • '
'BRIGHT
SPOT"
Orchard Lake At Cass FE 8-0488
A CbR-
MM CHEVROLET REL AIR LpOOR. mlulo^	‘‘‘‘“”*tlful"*diu*
5ue.**very elei^your’%*ur "—
and only S14.6X par montk.
MarvQl Motors
SSI OAklUMl Avt.
__________FE 8-407»
INS CHEVROLET BlBL A1
verflMc •. Cora]
ISM. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO.. iSOO 8. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4.S73S.
MM CHEVY 8 CYLINDER. LIKE
new. X6.(M0 actual
sup’“pfOK RAMBLER
radio, "heater, tu-tone coral and white paint, matching black Interior". one-year uaed ear warranty, care like tUs are hard to find.
..	$895
JEROME '
'BRIGHT
SPOT"
Orchard Lake at Cass ______FE 8-OJ8T
FAMOUS <OW) GUARANTY
SPARTAN DODGE. Inc.
Ill S Saslnaw____FE S-4S41
Exceptional
Ittl BonnerUlc coneertlhle. a tt ouoiee beauty with all the pr-^u« bucket tuts. You will ee nigh end low to find a cai sharp at thie one. gX.SSS.
WILSON
PONTIAC-CADILLAG
1350 N. ^oodward
MS* KARMANf
Renault
_.<OHAM CHEVROLET 8-cyttnder. i
blue ■llnleh. -- -......—
tlree. Only $1.0N, Euy temii. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. MM 8 WOODWARD AVE. MINOHAM Ml »X7M.
MUST MOVE
tuiaT
.Kotraok at ~ S. Saginaw.
i ear. lor u low
_______per month. ^11 Ji
tok at Spiman Dodge Inc.. ulnaw. Py g-dMl Y WAbON » PAI
•^PAMOUS (OW) GUARANTY
SPARTAJfW3GE, 3nc.
S. Soatnaw	PE I-8S41
1956 CHEVrROLET <
h^ier. pjTprice only 1141.
M57 DODOE *-4aof‘. Runs fine. Radio. boater, a real bargain. Pull prlco only $148
1963 Corvette Stingray
tobritig elWer. 4 epeod. N# H-P. --N InnM. Prietd 40 —
MM CHEVROLET, f
^TLI^Efc
AUTO SALES. "PonUU'e Dlt-eounl Lot", in S. Saginaw, PE
VS entbie, e beautiful n
wbMe finish. FuU price -Buy here, ppy here!
Marvel Motors
281 Oakland Ave.
New RRd Us«d Cars
1$$I CHEVY HN cr. Fully equlpp Exoellenl. Eeoi
R 4-DOOR
emVY IMPALA HARDTOP 1
IN* CHKVROLBT BEL i Seiyltauler. Powcrglldc, reau. neei-er, whltewalle. Sl.ON. Euy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO.. MOO 8 WOODWARD AVE. BIR-
. MINOMAM-MI 4OTA,	___
*^isS2 CHEVROLET IMPALA 4-DOOR hardtop. V-S. Powergllde. power steering, tt.398 PATTERkiN CHEVROLET CO . MM 8 WOODWARD AVE . BIRMINGHAM. MI 4-273i.
___ small parmente. ___
FAMOUS lOWl OUARANTT
SPARTAN DODGE, Inc.
---------- PE I-4M1
1 a. Saglna__________________________
BS CHEVROLET BEL Am. 4-DOOR ■ 4-cyltader. Powerglli' ~ ............. "R X-34M
INI CHEVROLET CORVAIR X-DOOR "7M" series. AutomaUc. S-cyl-bider. radio, boater. Low mileage. Extra ohwp. Only 11.398. Euy
----X. Jerome - ferouson,
— 1.—.	OL l-OTIl.
-------- ----------- Excel-
lent condition OR X-34i0_______
1^ CHEVROLET STATION WAOON.
ii« CORVAIR MONZA nod white' taiterior. ~ ' nutomnttc trnnsmls
INO AND 1983 CADILLACS A-1 7 Chcry-X 19M W IMl "89 F«d wagon nnr detfrnr'
Birmingham Trades
IM9 Ford
Pelrlane 8M
$995
and. honor.
$2995
I.OM nctuol miles
$1395
$1995
4-door hardtop
"Authorised D-
OLIVER, BUICK and JEEP
Comer of Pike and Cass
•N Conralr.
I Economy Dtscoii
VOLF^SWAGENS
PATTERSON CHEVROLET 19M 8 WOODWARD AVE . MINOHAM. Ml 4-X735
9H 99 per m
~WVARD^
aoidmobilb
MM ANOUA ENGLISH PORD. M-	Sd8?*S2SI!
^ and Ctn_ -----1961 HUTTK-^
light blue roetallle peint.


tLOYD^
Metcor--BngIlah Ford m S. Sulnew
FE 2-9131
11989 CORVAIR MONZA X-DOOR
t to world'i Inrgeet tmifel OA 9-1490 or Oa 9-189X MONZA 4-SPEED box. iS91 WHE
$1995
JEROME
"BRIGHT
SPOT'
Orchard Lake at Cass FE 8-0488
BIRMINGHAM TRADES
Every used
spuUtng white finish 11.91*. PAT-lERSON CHEVROLEY CO.. 1900 8. WTODW^D AVE.. BIRMINOHAM
HEATER, WHMJE «IMWALL
----- —'XJNDITION.
bdl credit lU 4-7899.
mgr., Mr. Pnrka
Hn^d Turner, Ford._________
H99 CHEVROLET BISCATME door with radio, huter. as^ el
r'

Ouaranleed Warranty
LLOYD'S
I3X S. sawlnaw
FE 2-9131
BISCAYNE
i bonafide 1-owner, .low-mileage, sharp
•91 BUICK wagon. 9-pass •9X BUICK Special 2-door . . IJMS '92 BUICK InrlcW X-door ....M7M 92 MONZA coupe. 9M9 ml. 81W '92 BUICK LeSABRE 2 door WM '91 BUICK Convertiblo	92298
•81 BUICK KLECTRA 4-dOOr . .82M8 •80 DODOS 2-door herdtep .. .»14N
•N BUlcif KLECTRA 4-d«	----
■M BUICK 4 door hardtop •N BUICK LeSabre 4 door
•89 BUICK LKSABRB 4-door-----
"W PONTUC CaUUna 4-door I1M8
. .817U
FISCHER
BUICK
8 S. Weedword. B-bom Ml 4-9190

2-DOOR HARDTOP.
erodtt manager Mr. Cook gt
KINUtWTG SALES
1961 CADILI-AC
$3795
JEROME
"BRIGHT
SPOT"
Orchard Lake at Cass FE 8-0488
iia CMBYY 2.0OQH. SHARP CAR.
T«8 tSwn. l41^permon^^^
’ PAMobs (SwroOARAiiTY' _SPARTAN DODGE, Inc.
211 a. Saginaw	PE I-4MI „
USX CADILLAC COUPE DEVIUJE./ tacU.r’ oxecutlYos ear." Fulif
1157 CADIUatC SEDAN DBYILLE.
tab. Only 91.295 Easy terms. <»AT-TER80N CHEVROLET CO , lOM ~ WOODWARD AVE.. BIRMING--1, MI 4-2728
1%1 CHEVY
Impale eonrertlble.
luxe bumper guards, solid, whl pabil with wbltetop. matching n leather taiterior. low mileage, no ear trado-in and a real buy i
$2195
JEROME
'BRIGHT
SPOT"
Orchard Lake a* Cass FE 8-0488
MS7 CHEVT 4-DOOR. RADIO. BEAT-
age. $« _______
MM CHEVROLET 2-DOOR EOOHQ. MY 9. RADIO. HEATER. WHITE-WALL TIRES. STANDARD
------—p£„ J,Q
Parka, at
TRANSMISSION. SX4.7S
CaU credit mgr.. Mr.--------
Ml 4-7890. Hai^ Turner, Ford.
LATE M99 DELU3CE
PATTE^b
1999 S. WOODWARD MINOHAM. Ml 4-273$.
•709" 4-DOOR. POW-taeater. wUtewaUe. r mll^e. enuw aUU
"'cHEvSuc^^
iKl CHEVROLET BEL AIR 4-OOOR
j, V9 engine, powergllde, ra-heatcr. wtaitewalls. Tirillghl ftailM II.8». --------------------
$1695
power steering power bmkea
$1895
TO CHOOSE PROM 1 year warranty call MI 4-449S
Suburban Olds
BIRMINOHAM_____
SEE THE •DEPENOABLES "
KESSLER'S
DODGE
_____ 109^1 OUARAjfnr".
.SPARTAN DODGE. Inc.
~ B.^lnaW	------
HASKINS
CHEVROLET
- SALE
ISM CHEVY BUMfM 4
,*5idtai*
steering, braku radio, showroom
M3 CHEVY Btocayns 4 d engine. P^erglide. like i Hon. town gold ItnUh.
CHEVY Bel-AIr Wkgon 4
VI eiglne. PowcrgltaM^ ooltd turl
HASKINS
Chevrolet-Olds
Cronroads to Saytaigt'
.	D.8. 10 on Ml*
MA 5-3971_________________MA Mill
CHIVY CONVERTIBLE 1991. U
and oharS^^
FAM^S (dwf ^Sa^ntT SPARTAN DODGE. Tnc.
311 B. Batlnaw
Save Kg' Dnmg
Our 5th Anniversary Salel
Mil Itudebakor Daytc
» Bonnerttle 4-door R-top 9IM
MM Ctaory 'Nomad wagon .. MM Falcon Cutom 4-door . 1941 Buick conyertlblo
sa»‘jr4j5r.--
chViirg;
— Ramblir _______________
19M Ponitac 4-door udan MU Buick Special wagon .. MM Star CUM l-door oedu IM PontiK Adoor R-lop .
Mil P MU B
MH Catallnk 4-door H-top MSI Catalina Sporu Coupe 19M gevrolot topUa Ldw
.. S2398 .. S1895 , 91398
8^
MAR»fA»iUKE
Rr Andcrmm A I^ptninr
N«w md IlMd Cars -IM
Ger, thanks, pal! I’ll be back to see you again!
106
New and Used Cart
11 525 FE 2-3972
BLACK
Excelleni
M92 CORVAIR MONZA. MAROON Interior. 4 speed. Big Perfect condition. Cell EM
:	TmEVY, bil-air: TH« with AUTO-
94g.29 per month.
FAMOUS lOWi OUARANTT
SPAI^TAX DODGIL Inc.
ESQUIRE The Sign of Quality
M92 CORVAIR MONZA lOS. 4-8PE Mdio
EM 3A22*.
PAYMENTS OF THE CARS BE-
WILL BE WORTH MORE THAN
FALCON 19S0 DELUXE. SHARP. IM down. $42.71 per month. FAMOUS lOW) OUARANTT
SPARTAN DODGE. Inc.
211 B. Baglnaw
TOM TTHE BOMB)
TRACY OR CY PERLMAN.
I m^t. peWft 1
$47.33 PER^^IONTH 1957 PONTL\C
hydramatic. power tier ring ' brakes. JUST S798
$36.81 PER MONTH
1957 FORD
Ad esctptiooAUy dean 3 <loo
and hcsltV. 3UM9 oSle?*TOUBS FOR tags
$41.79 PER MONTH
^7.33 PER MONTH 1958 POXTTAC^~“”“
rsally beautiful car In Coral wbtte. Ru the matchtag all tamnor. Hydramatic radio.
1959 FORD
Thu U one of TWn THE BOMB TRACY'S SPECIALS. A custom X door. 9 cylinder.
$36.81 PER MONTH
1960 CHEVROLET
Another special from TOM THE BOMB. A X-tone blue with Power-Ulde. radio and heater. ReatM To GO AT 91298.
$52.66 PER MONTH
1959 PONTIAC
A beautiful Bonneville Vitte Starlight Blue. Fully equlppnl i duding power steering end taraki Drive It and you'll buy ~
$73.13 PER
so Is the price t
MONTH
1959 PONTL'XC
OUR WEEKEND E3CTRA SPECIAL • ^ar^Sea^r^ green Btarchlel
^ ^^^Inyl iiMiohing
Loo's and runs ijke a million. OU& SPECIAL iqt«»
$1389
OTHERS TO CHOOSE FROM ALL OF OUR CARS CARRY A 1-YEAR .WARRANTY
EASY TERMS ' BANK RATES IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
ESQUIRE Used Cars
2182 .S. TELEGRAPH PHONE 332-4623
-ACROSS PROM MIRACLE MILE'
» rnr-cuiv	_ RADIO,
h’e.ler whltewaU t^ 2«« ^ » sxe^bt dmaitton. -97M. or
ii
24 Months (GW)
Ouarantsed Warrani
LLOYD'S
Lincoln—Mercury—Comet Meteor—English Ford
S*2“^13l
eng Ins 3-W82
I DsSOTA 1929 FORD TRANS-
credlt manager, Mr. Cook at
KING AUTO SALES
2278 W. Huron At.
1989 Chevrolet 2-Door ... •"* Ford 2-door, sharp . ■"ircury 2-dobr" ________
1953 Ford t
"83 Buick ........
Many others t
managsr Mr. Cook
KING AUTO S-\LES
2278 W. Huron Bt.
m^e' standard shift, dlo. hedterr whltswsUs. Brown beige finish, IM. Easy lei PAtTERSON aiEVROLET 1990 8 WOODWARD AVE . BIR-MINOHAM Ml 4-2735___________
1960 falcon 4-DOOB SEDAN
stands.- -----------
dtowan tires Solid bisck Its nice. Only IS95. Essy JEROME - FERGUSON
> STATION WAOON 1987, power. $298 full price, with money down
AUOD8 lOWi OUARANTT
SPARTAN DODGE,, Inc,
211 8. Baglnaw _FT g-4541
T-BlRD. ALL POWER. U4M, I Avalon. UL 2-2MM after 8:30. UM FORD. FAIRLANE. CLUB tE-
SMO. IIU Auburn Rd. UL
Mo COMET 4 DOOR STATION wagon, radio, heater, and matle Iranamlssion. sharp finish, a real mile maker, down, payments 949.gS per i
Ouaraptaed Warranty
-LLOYD'S
Uocolft—lftreury—Odd Met«>r—EnglUb Fon 233 8. SavlMW
FE 2-9131
I. MA 8-3St3 after 4
JEROME FERGUSON. Bochetter
Nm* md UtU Cm IM
4 Cyl. engine. SiKk ttUt	FAMOUS (OWl
Don't SUM M -OooWickOa RACE'S USED CARS 254S PUT ---------
!i;%rS8t mnV S-cSS at
king AUTO SALES
Ouaranlood Warranty
LLOYD'S
»ln—Mercury-comet
SlSurt
m 8. Snetaiaw
FE 2-9131
bt PoMi'’iDOOR. RADIO. HEAT-EB. automatic TR^SMISSION. WRITE SIDEWALL TIRES. IJ.7* PER WE. CaU credit mgr
F&rtlS -.a UT	ItapAM '
m MI V7599, Harold Tumor.
ond weekly paymenU
Z Shoe“?«dlt m^
age'r. Mr. White, at EINO AUTO BALES. US S. Saginaw. FE
LLOYD'S
Ltaifoln - Merciiry--
Meteor—Xnglleb Ford 8. 8avtaaw
FE 2-9131
■- DOOll. RADIO.
hfa-TER WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLU'IELY NO MOI^ PO*g WITH payments of MS.78 MO Coll cerdll mgr-P

1961 T-Bird

ear warranty, special price
$2695
JEROMi;
"BRIGHT SPOT"
BIG : "409" ErKjine
'62 Chevy
IMPALA
ir sport. 4-spood tr-
let ooats. rodlo. heater, padded I, poel-UacUoo, power otoering. rr >rakee, eoHd tnlperial Ivory colonial green tntorlor.
$2788"
Matthews
Hargreaves
-tfEWFSHBLER CUSTOM
4-EKX)R SEDAN

931 (
1190 FORD PALCON 4-DOOR STA-tlon wagon, sparkling rod and has radio and healer with strtlglit eUek trsnsmtsslon. fuU price 98*8 and-jio mopey down needed. LUCET aU-TO sales."Pdnliae'i - --------- ---- IS3 S. Saginaw
______PAS8ENQER
aiin fhll powyr. gilt down.
PAidOlS’*aWI OUARANTT
SPARTAN DODGE. Inc.
211 B. Baglnaw_____FE I-4M1
19M MERCURY 2-DOOR HARDTOP
---	loney down. Call
------Mr Cook

1184 OLDSMOBILE "IS " -
eolors. with matching Interior.
has power steering end brakes slectric windows snd ne*'*-tires, this Is a Blrmlngh —-	*••“ -rUfli
with only 42.0M c
1959 OLDS
imle M tdoor sedan, t *‘brak'
Orchard Lake at Cass FE 8.0488	.
19M ford 9. RADIO. HEATER Clean 96M. OR 3^979. C. MannUu. IMT^JHD HBTRACTABLE"^AHD-
a— MS—9t,a-*
T. un.
INI PORD 4-DOOR ,
"899". 1 enghie. automatle. ----
waU Ures. Low mUeage. one-owner. Only U.3I6. Euy terms. JEROME-PEROU80N. Rochester Ford
Peeler. OL 1-9711.______
1991 T BIRD. LIKE NEW. BEST
SUPERIOR RAMW.ER
8M Oakland_____________FE 9-9421
umTord falcon 4-DOOR STA-tlon wagon, straight stick and bM » nidlo Mid healer. I
ic owner. 33.0M w
■ _ $1395’. -
JEROME
"BRIGHT SPOT'
Ordiard Like at Cass FE 8-048f.
FULL PRICE
$1995 .	-
Stahdard Transmission $1(^ Less
Not An "Americdh"
This Is the Full-Siifced Compact ONLY AT - .
"BifmingEdin Rambler
666 S. Woodward	- ^II 6-3900
Where Service, Is “King"
WHY PAY MORE?
fdOauT
verttUt. full power. ' rdramatic shift, i
I. 2938 Dtidwin.
OLIVER BUICK	
1%1 Chevrolet Impala Convertible ....	....$1695
1959 Chevy Wagon, 6-Passenger 				....$1288
1056 Buick 4-Door Hardtop		155
1%2 Buick LeS'abre—4-Door, .Sharp ..,	,....$2695
1%2 Buick Special—2-Ooor i			$2195
1962 Buick LeSabre 2-Door 			$2495
1962 Buick LeSabre 2-Door Hardtop ;..		$2895
J962 Buick Special-rWagon'			-.^42385
1%2 Buick Special—Sedan 			$2245
1962 Buick Skylark—Hardtop 			$2595
1062 Renault Gordini 		....$1295
1%1 Buick Wagon—Special 		.).)$1995
I96r Buick Special 2-Door'.'					$1785
1961 Buick Electra—4-Door 				pyjti:
1961 Renault Dauphine 4-Door 			$795
; -196(> Chevrolet Biscayhe 4-Door 				$1295
1960 Opel Station Wagon, Stick			$975
' 1960 Renault 4-Door. Clean ......		$695
1960 Pontiac Wagon. Nice .. ■ ■	.....$1995-
1 1960 Buick EIec4ra Hardtop 			$1995
i 1960 Buick LeSabre—4-Door 		...		$1775
Buick LeSabre 4-Door Hardtop .		$1895
1959-Buick LeSabre^-Dobr 			$1295
19M Oldsmobile “98” Hardtop .......	...;.$1095
1957 Buick 4-Door Hardtop 			$795
1952 Ford F-6 Dump Truck 			$ 495
1947 Jeep-6-Fr. Plow '			$885
OLIVER BUICK - 210 ORCH.ARD LAKE	
FE 2-9101	
MINOHAM. Ml 4
1957 p6rO. runs GOOD, 1
I960 FORD THUNDERBIRD. ALL power, clean, loaded with extru.
FE 8-2759	_____________
FORD- LOW ■ COST BANK IX3AN
$M PORD 2-DOOR SEDAN. 8-cyllDder. autometic. radio, hejler.i whltewan tires. Extra sharp, loltd
green finish. Only 9899. Euy ----
JEROME - PEBOr--------
tdUSON. Rochester
USl PORD OALAXIX. IRARP.
Ill FORD FAIRLANE 599. NEW • Ures. V4. sulo. Good cond. Cair finance 91.309. Plus 198 down. EM
1999 PORD S-PASSENOER COUN-try Squire station wagon, radio, hasiar V9. Dower steering end ftaUsht im dn..
brakes. Light h payments of SS2.j>.
^	34 Months (OW)
- • • - Ouarantced Warr|flji„__
T,LOYD'S
Lincoln—Mercury—Comet . klotcar-EngUsb Ford 332 SiBagInaw
FE 2-9131
CHEVT STATION
....—. MOOJf
. 999 down. 947.92
, FAMOUS (OW) OUARANTT
Spartan dodge, inc.
311 a. Baglnaw	PK 9-4M1
cikEV^UtT-^HARP.
Mansfield Auto Sales
2999 CadlUac Coupe. 4-wty
poiwor ........ .........IM
1190 Pontiac 3-door, power
otoorlni and braket .....91498
““ PonllM * -—	—	- —
SHELTOTL
looo S. WOODWARD ATE.. BIR-
MINOHAM, m <-2738._____
1M2 MONZA SSS 4-DS^rBUCip -....... >oat«. whU^ewa^
^ROCHESTER OL 1-8133
Open Ijta.. Tuu.^TliuMi. A39 to t CHEVROLET BEL-AIR 3-d6oR ISSl
peM tranimlulsn'. S1.S7S.
*1rASoo8TokrrooAlS&tTf"*^^
SPARTAN DQDGE, Inc.
ISSS^Uac
ISI^jIbrd Pai llSrchov/lI
..isss
1S80 Pontiac Sedonr hisriitop.
power stnrint ..................
1157 Buick 2-door nice ......| 141
198S Buck 4-door power
otMiws and brakes .........
ISSO Chevy Impala 4-door
hardtop ............... ... SUM
11*7 PoBtlae 4-door. I4.ISS
ISIS Oldi Buper IS. 4-door hardtop.
power stwrtng and braku . .S13SS ISM Chevy Wagon. 1 owner
RUSS JOHNSON
"SELECT"
USED CARS
1962 Bonneville .Vista .............. ^795
1962 Tempest Convertible, (new car.). $2595
1962 Chevy Corvair 900 ............ • • $1895
i9^ Rambler Classic Wagon ........... $2595
1961 Ratiibler Cliissic Custom 4-Door ......*$1495
1961 Rambler Station Wagon .......... $1295
1961 Rartibler American 2-Poor ....   $1295
lr960 Pontiac Starchief ............. $1695
1960 Ford 4-door Sedan —............  $1295
1959 Chevrolet 2-Door Sedan.......... $ 795
1959 Chevy Convertible .............. $1495
1958 Chevrolet Impala Hardtop .........$895
1958 Chevrolet.4-Door Sedan ..........$ 795
1958	Ford 4-door Sedan .,............ $ 595
lSf56 Dodge Statioh Wagon ............$ 695
i956 Cadillac 4-door Sedan........... $1195
1956	Ford Ranch Wagon .................$495
1959	Rambler Wagon, Extra Sharp........$695
1957	Dodge Hardtop^ Sedan, Qcan ......$ 595
1957 Pontiac 2-Door Hardtop ..........$ 350
1957 Chevrolet 9-Passenger Wagon .... $ 695
•1957 Pontiac Hardtop Sedan .... $ 595
1956	Ohevy 6. Standatd Shift ......•.. .$ 745
1955 Olds Sedan ...................... $395
1955 Pontiac 4-doof ................. $ 29S
1955 Pontiac 2-door.................. $ 195
1954 Chevy 4-Door ....................$ 95
1959 Pontiac 4-Door Sedan.............$1295
1957	Ford Station Wagon...........*--'.$ 295
■'■RUSSIQHNSQN
M-24 at the Stodight Lake Orion	MY 3-6266
EA'RLY BIRD
.
A-1 Used Cars
1960 Comet Wagon, 4-Door Bgdto. hMWr. antomUle trant-'"Elitlcn taiMl whlMwUlx.	1957 Ford 9-Passenger Wagon. With radio, heator, automatle tranxmleaton, whltowaUa and a red and whito finlehl 	 -$6gr ■	1962 Ford 2-Door Hardtop Oaltxle "MS" Radio, Beaitr, whttewalla. autoMUe trSBaWlii- ^$2095
1959 Ford (iaiaxie 2-Door With rxdio, heaWr. automatic tranimlulon. whlttwallx. Only—	’ 1961 Ford Fairlane 4-Door W'.th V-l eaglne. automatle trinsmtaslon. whItewaUe. radio, end tlree like newl	1959 Ford 2-Door Ranch Wagon with radio, hoater. VA englnt Medium blue flBltlil ^ '
$995	$1295	$855
1957 Ford . 2-Door Hardtop with radio, boater, automatle tranemlexleo eud tu-tone ^nt with metchtaig Interlorl Toare ”"$695	1961 Falcon 4-Door Deluxe Sedan inth 'ratoatue ^tmtmlttin, hove'two to chooee from: cne "”$1495	I960 Ford Fairlane 500 2-Door end It bee radio, boatar, automatle trantaletloo ana wbltewall Ural. Real olet. $995
I960 Ford • 4-Door Country Sedan with radio, boater. automaUe tranemt'den. whltewaUi and a	1957 Ford Convertible WUb rftdto ftud hMttr. TU-lont (laUb A Bcw top!	I960 T-Bird Hardtop 2-Door ’A WIU) radt% haator, automaU* trantmliataa. power iteering.
■ ttt-tena Qnlthl $1295	$695“	brakea and windowt and whtto-walU and la inly— $2095
, 1961 Ford 2-Door Sedan	1959 Anglia 2-Door Sedan a htotatifia btoa fitoab. rMto	1962 Anglia 2-*Door Sedan with radio, hoator, whttowadg. burfv^y flnlAb. CAr U
$1095	throug^tl $495 .	“■‘"$Ti95
John AAcAulifte-EoixL-
630 Oakland Ave. • FE 54101
THR^POyTIAC PRESS. ^ifaPAY. MABCH 1. 1^63
STORAGE AND UQUIDATION .
SALE ■
- PUBLIC ONLY
The -Follewmg Cars Have Been Released as of March 1st 1963, for Immediate Sale
'57 Ford, V8 ... .$397
COUNTRY SQUIRE Weekly Payment of $4.80
'57 Mercury .....$397
• MONTCLAIR. V8
Weekly Payment-of $4.80
'58 Chevy, V8 .. .$697
IMPALA CONVERTIBI.E , Weekly Payment of $7.80
'58 Lincoln ......$897
PEEMIERE.HARDTOP Weekly ferment
59 Imperial s. .$1397
4-DOOR HARDTOP Full Power Immaculate
^ Cadillac _.. .$597
COUPE, FULL POWER Weekly Payment of $6.80
'57 Dodge, V8 *.".S497
9-PAS.SENGER WAGON Weekly Payment of $5.80
‘58“Chevy ...: . .$497
BROOKWOOD W.AGON Weekly Payment of $5.80
: WE'LL DELIVER YOU A CAR IN S'.
MINUTES
No
Money
Down
Credit Man, on . Duty at All Times---
.$597
'58 Chevy .....
' BIG V8. 2;DOOR Weekly Payment of $6.80
'60 Simea ..... .$497
2-DQOR HARDTOP Weekly Payment
kly y. Of
.80
'57 Plymouth—$297
BELVEDERE HARDTOP ' Weekly Payment of $3.80
'58 Ford,V8.....$597
2-DOOR. STICK - Weekly Pajme.ijt of $6«)
'56 Ford, W .
.$197
2-DOOR CLUB SEDAN Weekly Payment of $2.80
'5Z.Buick
■ $497
2-DOOR_ HARDTOP Weekly Payment of $5.80
'57 Lincoln _______$597
' 2:D00R HARDTOP Weekly Payment of $6.80
'57 Ford, V8 ... .$697
RETRACTABLE TOP
-----Weekly- Payment .—
of $7.80
100 MORE TO CHOOSE FROM
Liquidated for Balance Due .Which Represents Our Full Price
ESTATE STORAGE CO.
FE 3-7161
1G9 S. EAST BOULEVARD AT AUBURN
\FE 3-7162'
5th ANNIVERSARY SALE
HURRY-LAST 2.-DAY-&-RUBEY-
H AS KINS
COMPACf CAR
-SALE-
Corvair-Dlds F-85-Chevy II
' ALL COLORS AND 'MODELS
FREE
• SET OF SEAT BELTS ON ANY COMPACT SOLD
NEW 1963 OLDS F-85 -CLUB COUPE $2331.20 ... t...
HASKINS
CHEV-OIDS
r~		44FW AT TIMTMI4M	 -	
1 1 j 1 1 civoTv /iijvamxiN^wivr r K E L FISHING BOAT 1 r~ r™ Just register ,for this beautiful boat to-t" I™ <lay. • Winner will be determined on 1 ■ J March 2, 5 p.m.	rixLlI DOLLAR r" With eyery demonstration tide m a new r“ i” 1963 Rambler or Jeep yehicle, (if you are 1 lx oyer 21 years of age!)
P n F n F!-A TMP	D'CTT’'DTT'T T\ iT'T'aTmo
L U L. L. 1N iL rixLL 1000 MILES 1^ F“ f™ Let us help pay for your yacation this 1 J year w ith 1000 mijps of free gas, when l" r" you buy a new or used car purchased 1 1 ^ 1 during sale. (Gas can be picked up any time this year!)	-T—F tT l_ |_ nLERLSHMENTS r l\ E L gifts for kids 1 1 r* Coffee, and cake for evei^ne. If you fre ^ ^ ^ in the market for a new or used car^Be 1 lx Lm Im sure and see us during the sale!
9 Gut of 10 Can Buy -With No Money Down!
1962 Cheyy 4-Door Impala Hardtop. VI anglne. automaUc tranimla. 1 aloii. radio heater, power • ateeiini and bralea. 1 power wlndowi. thle !• a ona owner thowroom (reek new car ttadeln. , $2495	1958 Rambler Custom 4 door with 1 eyi. enfine. automatic tranamlaalon, radio, heater. A real Diet car with only 31.0M mllee. $795	1962 Chevrolet 4-Door Sedan. Bel-Air. S-cyl. engine, rtdlp,' bgater, itandard tranamlaalon thla a ona owner new car trade-in. Actual 7,200 mllea. Only— 		-$1995-		1960 Rambler American Btktlan Wagon, t cyl. engine, ctandard trana-mtaaicn. one owner new car trade 1 Ouarantaed actual M.t00 mUea, only- uuraniaoo $995
j,„ . 1959'Olds ‘‘88” 4-Do<ir 1 Sedan. automaUo traoamlaalon. radio, heater, this la a one owner, new car tradeln. M.OOO actual mllaa, and la Juti like new In everyway. $1295	1947 Jeep .Universal with 4 wheel drive, nma good, hte full canvaa lop. In top copdlUonl $495	A 1962 Rambler Custom 4 door aedan, radio, heater, automatic tranamla-tioai, radio, beater, thla one hae 1 beautiful tu-tone ftnlah! Priced to aeU at only — $1795 '	/ 1962 Rambler Classic SUUon Wagon, with # cyt. ongtaM. mdlo. hoator, whitcwalla, ont owner new ear trada Ini Actual 0.000 mllea, anly- $1995
1960 Mercury 4-Door Sedan, VI encine. Automatic tranamisalon. radio, heater, power brakea, one owner new car trade. ^ real nice car that la (uaranleedi Actual n.gOO .$M95‘	1962 Pontiac Catalina 1 door hardtop, with Tl engine, automatic trana-ntlaa^ 'radio, heater, power eteering and brakea, one dVtaer, new car tradeln. lO.ON mllei, thii one la real sharp and It only— ' $259$	1962 Rambler American	'	- station Wagon. 4 door, with aotomatle tranamla-tlon, radio, heater, one owner new car trade tail Just like new $1795		1360 Rambler Ambassador 4 door tadan. radio. beaUr, VO engliM, auto-maOc tranamlaalon, power ateertng, power kraSeT B«w ear trade, with “ow nileage and $1295 ■

IS
6751 DIXIE HIGHWAY AT M-15 .
YOUR CROSSROADS TO SAVINGS '	■
CLARKSTON ' MA 5-5071
SALES ^ SERVICE PARTS 32 S. Main Street Clarkston MA 5-5861
^iii '	PONTIAC PRESS FRIDAY. I^fARCH 1, 1963
C—11>
—Today's Television Programs-
I MMw IM k M c
TONIGHT
.XJIJ^Neiw ' (’4) M Squad (7) Movie: ‘‘Shark River’
(In Progn^)'
(9) Capt. Jolly and Popeye (56) American Economy l:I6-(2) Editorial, Sports 6:25 (2) Weather . (4>-Weather 6:26 (2) Highway Patrol (4) News	’
■ (7) News, Weather, Sports (9) William Tell (56) House We Uve In 1:46 (4),j!ports 6:41 (4) News (7) News
7:66 (2) Everglades (4) At the Zoo (7) Tightrope!
» (9) Sir Francis Drak«
(56) Qjmputer 7:96 (2) Rawhide
(4) Who Goes Hiere? if) The Valiant Years (9) Movie: “The Hardys Ride High” (1937) Mickey Rooney
(56) Time for Living 8:66 (71 Father Knows Best (56) Jazz Casual
8:36 (2) Route 66	| '
Hour Documentary
To Probe Communism
By4Jnited Press International “WHO GOES THERE?” 7:30 p. m. (4) One-ho«r documentary s(iecial exmniniii^ basic concepts of communism. The format^ i^tq.^break down communism into four stages of developmtot: ideology, revolutioii, tbialittfiaaism and imperialispi.
, RAWHIDE, 7:30 p. m. (11 claims to be Gil Favor’s widow.
I’M DICKENS . ers and carpeokn «
. HE’S FENSTER. 8 pjn. (7) Paint-•er oa who win date beautiful girl.
(4) Sing Along 4W4h-"MHch“# - ' E¥EWITNESS»10:3() p. m. (2) Inauguration of Dotnini-(7) (Color) Flintstones 1 Republic’s new president, and report on country.
(56) For Doctors Only I 9:60 (7) I’m Dlckens-He’s Fen-	w w
ster
(9) Tommy Ambrose 9:81 (2) Alfred Hitchcock (4) (Color) Price Is Rigb (7) 77 Sunset Strip (9) It Is Written (56) Drama Festival 16:66 (4) (Color) Jack Paar (9) Nature .of Tilings a 18:36 (2^) Eyewitness
(7)	Shannon
(8)	Country Hoedown 11:66 (2) News
(4) News (7) Newt
(9)	News
11:16 (7) Newt, Sports U:15 (I) Sports. Editorial (4) Weather (9) Weather 11:26 (2) Weathw (4) Sports (7) Weather (9) Telescope UAW U:2S (2) Steve A^n-Variety
ALFRED drrcllOOCK, 9:91 p. m. (1) Public health service doctors try to avert panic when epMemto threatens entire community.
77 SUNSET STSIP» 8:91 p. m. (7) Spencer seeks miss* ing heir on skid row.
JACK PAAE, 10 p. m. (4) Guests include the four^nan cast of the Broadway reme ^Beyond the* FHngb”; Dick Gregory; Alexander King, and Lea Paul and Mary Ford (color).
(7) Movies: 1. “Dino.” ^(1967) 'Sal Mineo, Brian Keith. 2. “Frankenstein.” . (1932) Boris Karloff.
11:98 (4) (Color) Thni^t-Carson . (8) Movies: 1. “The Cyclops.” (1857) James Craig, Gloria Talbdtt. 2. “Broadway Gondolier.” Dick Powell, Joan Bjondell.
12:11 (2) Movie: “Lady Scar-face.” (1841) Dennis O’Keefe. Judith Anderson. 1:61 (4) TMlkr
SA’TURDAY MORNING
7:8| j» Meditations 7:6l (2) On the Farm Front 7:19 (2) News
7:18 (2) Let’s FInd’Out	.
7:2$ (4) News	"
7:30 (2) Felix the Cat
'Ruby' Passes 'Paula' on List
Here are what young people think are the top records of the week as compiled Weekly by Gilbert Youth Research. 1	Ruby Baby " Dbo 2	Hey! Paub Paul and Paula	
3 Wab I3ke aMirT"	tba Four Seaaone
4 Rhythm of the Rain	Itie Caacadei
^ 5 You’re the Reason I'm Living	Bobby Darin
6 You Really Got a Hold on Me	T^Mlraclea
8 What WiU Mary Say	Johnny Mathb
9 Wild Weekend	The Rockin Rebeb
10 Bbme It on the Bossa Nova	Edye Gonne
11 Walk Right In	The Roof Top Singers
12 He’s Sure the Boy I Love	The Crystab
13 Mama Didn’t Lie	Jan Bradby
14 Little Town Flirt	Del Shannon
15 The End of the World	Skeeter Davb
16 You Used to Be	•Brenda Lee
17 In Dreams	Roy Orbbon
18 Go Away yttle Girl	Steve Lawrence
19 Our Day Will Come	Ruby and Romantics
20 The Night Has a Thousand Eyes	Bobby Vea
Pick Hit of the Week: NEVER ^ The Earls.
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M Extrtmtij U Retlrlat
Freclout >t
Another jewel — ..........—	--------------
Blude	84 IndUiD	31 lUke e mlitake
——	Eft fiubatantlel ^ 48 Dutch mr---------
41 Fftbled b4
14 Intelli
‘M:
“ESff,
M liMlt
"“tfir
to. Be Taken by Defense Dept.
Miami; FTa. (AP)-Miami Poh Authority officials say the Defense Department plans to move into Opa^fibeka Airport, once a Marine air l»se.
♦„ * 1 Qpa-Locka,~batside Miami, was a busy temporary , facility of the mditaiy during tbe CXiban crisis last fall. About 10,006 troops were quartered there. About 100 are left.
♦ * 1 Port-Authority attorn^ James Eckhart said Thursday nagotia-tioM are under way Jof Deft Deparlment use of the field,
By BOB THOMA& inism,” be said over his Cantonese AP Movie-TelevisiM Writer” lunch. “In the show, which is set HCTllYWDOD Actors, like in ISfO, 1 am playi^ a Braiwis corporations, have^ found that it pays to diversify.
A large, living
example this economic theory is Walter Slezak, the Viennese bon vivant. He financed the up-, keep on his comfortable girth by I branching out into two n e w fields with suc-GMi thut squab 1 as an actor.
Snails, Garlic Featured on Lunch Menu
(4) Farm Report 8:66 (2) Deputy Dawg (4) (O>lor) Diver Dan 8:36 (2) B’wana Don
(4) (Ck)lor) Bozo the Qown (7) Ousade for CTirist 9:66 (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) House of Fashions 9:39 (4) (Color) Ruff and Reddy 9:55 (9) Warm-Up 16:99 (2) Junior Auction (4) (Color) Shari Lewis (7) Junior Sports Club (9) Window on Canada 10:36 (2) Mighty Mouse
(4) (Color) King Leonardo (7) Casper 11:66 (2) Rin Tin Tin (4) Fury (7) Top Cat (9T Honw Fair 11:36 (2) Roy Rogers (4) Magic Midway (7) Beany and Cecil (9) C a n a d a ’ s Defense Forces
SATURDAY AFTERNOON
BLOOMFIELD, N. J. (M^Em-ployes of the Sobering Corp. don’t bat an eyelash when the cafeteria lunch menu lists snails with gar-bc sauce.
Thanks to Robert G. Worth, French-born chef wha ta the firm’s food service manager, lunchtime at the plant alaa reg-ntariy features Ihiap like Mirii^ a I’indlenne, coq pari-sien and beef roulade.
Werth goes a step furthA and teaches a. “classical cookery” course one evening a week to employes.
★ ^ a
More men than woman attend and Werth says non are better cooks.
I “Women are too scientific in I their cooking. You should cook Iwith your heart, not wltb yow-hands.”
Pudgy Walter Slezak Spreads Interests
hands at books, ghqaled or otherwise, aezak used ‘ftooe. He has the rare distinction of
rhapsody which was written in producing a bona fide best seller.
1876.” LIGHT-HEARTED iThe plot has the
Sletak elaborated on Me two aow enreers whib on a brief visit to film a “Rawhide” segment tor televuion. He came from the set wearing a mlddle-European gypey costume, for lunch at the Tahitian restaurant.
“That is not the only anachro*
Rawhide” boys coking ebross a gypsy cara-■ in the West, ancH suspect that no one takes it seriously. Least of all Slezak, who maintains a light-hearted view of almost everything. Why not, when everything he touches seems to turn golden.
Take his book, “What 'Time’s the Next Swan?”
It happened quite by accident, whdn Jean Kerr relayed some Slezak Jokes to Ken McCormick, chief of Doubieday. Tbe two men had lunch one day and discussed a possibb book. At the end. McCormick wrote out a check for 16,006 and told the actor to stert writing.
Many actors have tried their
“It u ah entirely different world, the book business,” he said
in awe. “I am amazed at how.	____.	. .
polite everyone b. Even when ***'“ *^	•J*™“**<*
..Ir	in vnnr crafUly. “I am Utterly shameless
b a "delightful book, but it na doubt received, a push toward best-sellerdom by ^lezak’s other new iine: lecturing.
I gave 51 lectures in all parts ofi the country last year and was booked solid in October, Ndvem-
they ask for changes in your manuscript—I had only One, a Joke about Albert Einstein that dhfai’t come off—they are polite.
ESCORTS INSIDE “Ken McCormick fa the Loub B. kfayer of the book industry.
Yet when I go to hb offict, he
circuit.
me inside, takes me oubide whan I leave, even rides down in tH8 elmrator with me.
about plugging my book during my lectures.”
* it it
He has spoken to everyone from an underfokers' convention in St. Loub to 9,000 Mormon stodehts in Utah. For his hour of droltery he tal^ hoihe 81,560, money on*—
T can assure you Loub B. Mi^ never did that for me. He 'ver got up from hb chair.” What Time’s the Neat Swan'
“And sometimes T can do tw.o. in one day,” he added. “It b marveknis work.”
Michigan House to Act Soon
See OK of Aid-to-Dependent Child Bill
LANSING (*-House approval of a bill qualifying Michigan lor the federal aid to dependent.ebU* dren of unemployed (ADC-U) program seemed assured today.
The measure has been passe out of the House Ways an Means Committee with reeea mendations for Mi
Action on the bill vdll require ■peaaioo of Ikuscroles, which require appropriation ■ to be bald five days after coming
Bert Claims News Strike Best Thing Since Leprosy
from commitkse before lawmakers act on them.
Some legblatofs were predict-Ing such a suspension.
a a ♦
“’The toughest part of the fight b over,” one ADC-U siqiporter “With the bipartban port it has. it can pass without much trouble.”
’Dm Senate has promised to expedite the biU.
Bn-ied three timet hi Re-pablicaa - ceatreUed commit-tees hi prevtous tessbas, the always - oeadreversial AOC-U measure was iairodaeed this yew aa behalf af Gav. George Ramaey aad b regarded ae-Ihe first real tost of hb tafloMce
(2) Sky King
(4) Make BbSm for Daddy
(8)	Country
J2JL(2iJU«in_______^ _
(4) (Ccrior) Exploring
(7)	AUakazam
(9)	Droite de Cite (2) Breakthru
My Friend Flicka
(8)	Wrestling 1:88 (2) Global Zobel
(4) Mr. Wizard (7) Wrestling
2:96 (2) King of Dbmonds (4) IfiUcy’s Party Time
(9)	Wtorld of Spc^-^Curling 2:99 (2) Movie: “Blind Spot.”
(1947) Chester Morrb.
(7) Challenge Golf 3:99 (9) World of Sport 3:36 (4) (Color) S p 0 r t s Inter-jnational
(7) Pro Bowlers Tour 4:66 (2) Pro Pressbox (9) Wrestling 4:26 (2) Magic Momenb in Sports
4:26 (2) Big Ten BaskefoaU 4:45 (9) Changing Times 5:86 (4) (Color) George Pierrot (7) Wide World of Sports (9) Kingfbfitr Cove 5:39 (9) Jingles
3 Sentenced for IRS Fraud
ByEARLWH^SON
NEW Y0RK-“TW8 newspaper strike,” Bert Lqhr says bitterly, is the best thh« that’s happened since leprosy . .
Bert delivered thb profu^ty at the Cbcus Saints * Stoners htodwon when he was toe fall guy. Bert says he’s antltlad to bdeome permanent faO guy because ha’s boon a fall guy all Ms life. But he’s reached new depths as a tall guy since hb show, “The Beauty Part,” opened in the midst of a newspaper strike.
“We’ve had BO newspapers to remind peo- Judge Denies Motions pie to send b srders for ticketa”.” B««^llort-'—-	.	^
ed. “So I’va gone on every possible radio for New Hedrings show to talk about the Show, except Major
Bowes’ ‘Talent Scoute’ and ‘Pot O’ Gold.’ ,	r> u j
I TOLEDO, Ohio (41 - Richard WILSON ^ “They’re still on, aren’t they?” Bert asked t. Gos§er, a United Auto Work-as an afterthought.	............. ■ •
under 18 are unemployed and have exhausted state Jobless pay-
Supporters say local welfare' departments would save soihe 891 millllon and the state would save' nearly 380,0(X) a year after coiu of adminbtering the program. .
n« ADC-U bill’s future was brbfly ta doubt yesterday, wbea
Ihe biU would to take part in a federal program which provides benefib to families in wbicb parenb of children
tee doebba to report It out was held ap by argnmento over an aaMindmcnt sought by Rep. CarroO Nesrton, R-Delton, a mber and ADC-U
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Newton sought to combine the Detroit and Wayne County welfare departments under the bill —a move which would shift the bulk^af-4het city’s welfare edsls to the county budget.
Wayne (bounty officials cbim| the proposed merger b not feasi-' ble because it would put the coun-| ty some $8.7 million in dri>t.
Newton proposed the amend-; menl in committee, but in the end lacked the votes to add it' to the biU.	'
COLOR TV SERVICE
and SALES
RCA — ZENITH
CONDON'S Radio & TV
1M W«l Burn 81.	FE 4-t7W
DINKY HIDEAWAY
Fresh HomentaJe
PIZZA . .60c ond up
1947 S. Telegraph . FE 8-6451 Vz Mile North of Miracle Mila
^ Doc Ben Casey Sued for Singing and Not Selling
SONOTONE
House of Hearing' 29 E. CORNELL
(Off Baldwin)	ji
ronliae	> K 2-)l2»
Roastmaster 'Tex O’Rourke mentioned that the strike v It settled last week.
★ ★ ★
LOS ANGELES (APT^TTr. Ben Casey’s rock 'n* roll past has;
“The publishers finally gave up and agreed to everything toss work, more pay; mare heaefMsr longer pensions, aora featherbeddbg, and everything. So the union got nervous and came back with a new demand,” O’Rourke said.
“The publbhers have got to put up a guarantee they don’t go bankrupt as a result of the new terms.”
Bert Lahr was the Sainb A Sinners’ first fall guy in 1936, some '235 fall guys ago. Harry Hershfield started handing presenb to Bert at yesterday’s session and said;
‘Did we give presents back in the days when you ware the first fall guy?”
“Not to me,” sourly replied Bert. “I got a bill!”
★ ★ ★
TODAY’S BEST LAUGH; “The worst kind o(^reduclng pill b the one who insbte on telling you how he did iD’
WISH I’D SAID THAT: “In these days of short skirts, it’s not the cost that worries women—It’s the upereep.”
EARL’S PEARLS: “Some people couldn’t hold onto theird ey,.’’ claims Clyde Moore, “if it was printed on adhesive tape.” REMEMBERED QUOTES: “Women are wiser than men be-cauae they know less, and undarstand more.”
An Irbhman asked hb friend, “Your brother who wrs tryinf so hard to get a government Job-^what b he doing now?” Itoj^' the friend: “Nothing. He got the Job.” . . . Thai’s aarl, hratoer. (Cepyright, 1813)
ers international vice president. (___________________________
>1* and two c^efendanb, were sen- made him the defendant in a tenced yesterday to three years'$600,000 suit—and not for malprac-each in federal prbon for con-!tice.	i
spiring to defraud the Internal] Frank Russell, in an action filed Revenue Service.	IThursday in Superior Ck)urt,l
U.S. Dbtrict Judge Frank- L.lcharged actor Vince Edwards and! Kloeb overruled motions for a Decca Records with preventing;
WATCH THIJ PAGE FOR
i/vw SERYIU
I y SWEEFSTAKES COMING SOON! T.E.S.A. DEALERS /*
new trial and passed sentence after observing:
*“The court feeb after sit-tbg here and listening to all the evidence, that the verdict ta ahaaintoly correct ... if that Jwy had returned a verdict atoerwba, it would have serbatly shaken the faito of the eaart tai the Jury system.”
Gosser, hb assbtant, Donald dbtribute the earlier records. Pincittl, 40, and 'Ted' Maison, 40, were arrested Nov. 12 by federal agaftte and 4ndkted on conspiracy charges alleging they obtained confidential information frwn Internal Revenue Service files rebting to Gosser’s tncfOM tax returns.
—Today's Radio Programs—
WCAB (111*) WrON (IM)
WXYZ. New*. SpfrU CK1.W. Newi WJBK. Robert X. Lm WCAR. BMveUk WPON, Tin Pin BowUnf WRPl. Nows •iSI-wiR. BiuInsM WWJ, Buslnsos .WXTZ, Alox Drtor CKLW, B. Dnoton WPON. Norm O'N^U ttwv wan. Tom CUy
t;M-WJR. Nows, SporU .WWJ, Phono Optalon WXTZ. M Morfnn CKLW. F. Uwlo WJBX, Jaok BoUboy
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Are*. 8UI0 Nowi
WHI. Nowi. Tom Oiy I«:SO—WWJ. World Nowt M:U-WWJ. Sint Alonf
11:«*-WJR, Nowt. SporU WWJ. Newt. MulU WCAR, Nowo, BporU CKLW. Joo OentUo WHFI. Nowi. Tom CUy 11:1*-CKLW. Bob Stlton WCAR. Rooltti U:S*-WJR. Miate WWJ, Muolc
SATCRDAT HORNINO tlOO—WJR, Agrlculturo WWJ. Nowo. Firm WXYZ, Dire Prlnoo, Nowo CKLW, Bone of Biddle WJBK, Arory WCAR. News, Bbortdin
l:*0-WJYt, Muolc am
wan. Nowi. Rou
*:**-'WJR. Nowt, HirrU WWJ. Monitor Newt WXTZ. WInUr, Nowi CKLW, Niwi, Toby Dlfld WJBK, Awry WCAR, Niwi, Connd WPON, Nowi, Olwn wan. Nowi, BurdUk
*;SS—WJR. Leo Mumy l-^WJ. Nowi. Monitor CKLW, Mortnn. Oirld
M:N—WJR. Nowi, Kirl ^iii WXTZ. Wtnur. Niwi CKLW. Nowi, Joo Van WJBK. Nowi, C. Bold WPON, Nowi. Dale Tlno WHFI. Nowi, Burdick
!•;**—WWJ. Nowi, Monitor
Wi*6-WJR. Moods. Morton WWJ, Newt, aultmnn CKLW, Nowi, Joo Van
1;M-WJR. Nowt. Mood!
eXLW, Nowt, Jot Van WPON. Niwi, Dnio Tin# WHFI. Nowi. Burdlek
WPOlf. Iliuk. Newt 8:66-WJSr 4Cetro. Open WWJ. Red Wlnr tfocktf WJBK. Newt. Lee WPON. Newt. Johitfon WRFI. Newt. Burdick
WP04l^ Nowi. Bouloy
_____ N
I. BurdUk I:I»-WWJ. NiVi.- Monitor hkt-WXTZ. Oiri Prinei,-' Nowi
CKLW. Nowi, DitIm WJBK. Nowi. Lei WCAR. Bhirldan WPON. Nowi. jnhniiB WHFI. Nowi. BurdUk ■— —j_jinBi.:;:ankdx—. v»„w. Aperu. OiTUa WJBK, Muile
•---- Dmri Prinoo
A. Hewi. MuiU 8i WWJ. Niwi. MeUdy WJBK. Niwi. Loo CKLW, Newt, Daolod WCAR, sherldio .WXTZ. Doro PrUcc WPON. Nowi. Johnson WHPI. Nowi. BurdUk
him from capitalizing on records made by Edwards.
The records, bearing such titles as “Hole in the Head” and “Oh, Babe” were made by Edwards before' he became television’s most famed neurosurgeorf. .
Russell’s suit eSntemb that Edwards now has an exclusive contract with Decca. He claims Ed-wanis and Decca won’t let him
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A jury of five women and even men deliberated 5V5 hours before convicting the trio.
Maximum penalty for the offense b five yenrs imprisonment a fbe of $19,666.
Judge Kloeb was stern in "dealing with the -61-year-old UAW vice president and commented lhat Gosser would have been better off not to have taken the witnesB stand in hb own de-snie.
TIm court said Gosser had shown contempt for the feelings and sensibilitbs of ladies and genUemen in the court room, including those on the Jury.
No one buftlossSr would have been interested in materbl taken from the IRS files, the Judge said.
Thieves? Sorry Judge,
I Just Didn't See a One
LAS VEGAS, Nev'. (AP)-A convicted shoplifter was sentenced Thursday to spend 30 days in a pDoery storb watching for. '
Municipal Ckmrt Judge Walter Richards imposed the unusual sentence oq, John Munoz, 29. apprehended by police Wednesday in a food market.
I ‘Tm going to make a thief (iitch a thief,” said the Judge.
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^ i


II 3 PHOTO PTC CJ,EVPLAND, CKIO
PONtlAG
■X.
POKTIAC, MICHIGAN.
MAKf ■ 0}/tR
pa A£S
'csK
MARCH
1963
MICRO PHOTO INC.
Cl FVRI AND OH TO
The Weather
vs. WiMtkn Bums rweiut
THE PONTIAC
VOL. 121 NO. 19
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
PONTIAC. MICrilGAN, FRIDAY, MARCH L 19^ —40 PAGES
Russ in Cuba Warned
Don't Battle Rebels'
*Use of Troops Not Tolerated -McNamara
No Operations, for Offense or Defense, Permissible by U. S.
LAST MINUTE RUSH—This was the scene at the Pontiac branch of the secretary of state's office yesterday as motorists jammed in to buy 1963 license plate tabs ahead of yesterday’s deadline. Willis Brewer, manager of the branch, estimates tab sales in the Pontiac area are 5,000 behind last year’s license
Ttnliae freu rk*l»
plate sales. A 50,000 lag is estimated throughout the state compared to th^ 1962 3-million sale. Bad weather and the tab’s lack of attraction were cited as factors in the sales dip. Despite the drop,jx)lice report about the same number of tickets issued in the area as last year.
PRESS HONORED-Delmar V. Cote, state director of the Savings Bond Division of the U. S. ’Treasury (left), presents The Pontiac Press with a U.S. award. John A. Riley, adver-
Coal Miners Defy De Gaulle
Begin Strike for Hike
Blocks Propaganda
Pentagon Foils Reds
From Our News Wires *
WASHINGTON — The United States has warned: it would not tolerate use of I the Soviet garrison in Cuba i to (juell a rebellion on the| island.
Defense Secretary Rob-' ert S. McNamara^ said at a news conference yesterday the United States would not allow the Russian soldiers in Cuba to put down any I uprising against Fidel Castro, let alone launch an attack against another nation.
McNamara put it this way;
“I think that this administration indicated before that we will
not accept operations in this hem- Many large corporations have their eyes on Oakland | isphere, combat operations, by	^bviously, they like what they see. '
Using director, accepts it oii behalf of the newspaper, cited yesterday for “service to the nation’’ in promoting the purchase of savings, bonds.
Job Offers Deluge Oakland U. Seniors
Chinese Otter Moscow Dare
, WASHING’TON (AP) —’Thej'lB the North Atlantic and Ibuzzed and trailed Soviet ships on |	„	„
in Pay; Get Warning pentagon’s announcement that' North Pacific dmring the past I the high seas.	j Intelligence Chief John A.!
Ilong-range Soviet reconnaissance^ month.	*	w ★	| McCone says at least 1,000 to
D4HTC^AD\ -A. i	Anothcr possiWc alw couW havcI In any event, questions about 1.800 Latin Americans went to
FAius (AF)-n-esiaemuwnes|ners at sea was intended to dis- been to neutralize Soviet com- the vulnerability of carries were Cuba in 1962 foe sabotage and de Gaulle faced a serious domes-|arm any Soviet propaganda bomb plaints dut U.S. warplanM had (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) guerrilla training, and mere have . = _	-------------!. ---j------j -------1	gOHC tllis yCST.
Wont to Tell Their Side of Ideology Rift
^He dS“IloThidSaTwS^ action' The result is pTenty of job opportunities waiting for'	...
the United States would take if the university’s first class, to graduate April 20.-	c	tmna oared
Ov, Sitau™	I At least 40 of Uie Baton's leading industries, as well	S"L^L°d2logT-
—---------------------^as federal agencies and cal dispute with Moscow to the
i school systems have been rest of the Communist world.
Normal March Rciar;;"’"*
tic crisis today. Stubborn coaT before it was drop^, informed
miners defied him on an is^ sources said today.
dearer to them than Algeria or. Hwse soerees indicated sec-
international grandeur—wages.
♦	^ *
Communist, (^tholic and Socialist unions challenged De Gaulle and began an indefinite strike in FYance’s nationalized coal mines, w	*	w
The government agreed to a demonstration strike today and Saturday. But it said if the miners do not return to work Monday, they will be drafted into the army. If they do not return thert, they will be liable to fines and imprisonment after trial by tough military courts.
Other unions awaited the outcome of the test of strength. Workers in the gas and electric systems and the railways — all operated by the govenunent ^ want more m^y.
The govermnqjt contends wage increases for the miners will set off a general rise in wages and that in turn will produce an inflationary spiral. The miners say France is booming and it’s time they got their share.
r
In Toda/s Press
New Form
^ Administration pressure boys less noticeable this ^ congressional session — ; PAGE B-7.
Disqrmament U.S. remains optimistic -PAGE B-11.
Tapi Tapi
- , Phones to carry push-
t buttons instead of dtol — PAGE B4.
Area News ......,... A-4
Astrology ........ B-li
Bridge ............ B-ll
^ ‘	 ,B-W
ils ......... A-6
ttiool ...... B-1
I ........... C-4
k» .........  C-S
retary of Defense Robert S.
Picture on Page 2
McNamara sought to beat the Soviets to the poach — for ez-ample to any claim that the flints were undetected when he toM his news conference Thursday of such over-flights
School Board Studies Budget
Must Pore Preliminar]f to Meet Target Total
A 110,110,119 preliminary budget, for Pontiac schools in 1963-64 was presented to the board of education last night.
The board must pare this figure by 158,914 in the days ahead if it is to meet a preliminary target of 910,951,294 aezt fiscal year. ^
The target figure would amount to a 3.47 per cent increase over the current year’s budget.
★ ★ ★
In presenting the budget. School Superintendent Dr. Dana P. Whit-mer sfiid the proposed hike was determined by projecting an enrollment increase of 547 pupils, or 2.55 per cent, and a .9 per cent increase in the Ck>nsumer Price Index.
*‘The preliminary budget reflects the esthnated cost of operating the school system fai 1963-64 at the same level as In the current year,” vChitmer said.
No salary increases beyond not-mal increments and a .9 eent increase in the cost of liv% icale are proposed in the budget. 4PPROPIUAT10N SHIFT It calls for a major shift in a^HTopriationi from plant operation and maintenance costs to In-structiODal costs starting July I.
The shift b necessary to provide for an anticipated 334 mere pupils next fiscal year without greatly increasing in-(Continqed on Page 2, (]6l. 7)
Starts Out Lambish
Bob Kennedy Has 'No Plans' for Seeking Presidency in '68
By LOUIS G. PANOS
WASHIl^GTON (F)-Robert F. Kennedy looked out the window of his chauffeur-driven limbusine and said he does not plan to run for president in 1968.
"Emphatically not,’’ he said.
In hb voice was a note of pbdntiveiiett, a plea that hb answer be believed.
There was also the shrug of resignation from a man who, as attorney general and brother of President, knows every word he utters for public, print will be closely examined—but political opponents for campaign ammunition, by foreign diplomats for a hint of what the administration u really thinking, and by reporters who consider him the most valuable news source out-
side the White House itself.__________________
★ ★ ★
’Thb interview, held during a ride from a hotel speaking engagement to his Justice Department office, was one of a recent series given by the attorney general to The Associated Presi in an attempt to answer these questions:
1.	Is he being groomed to assume the presidency when John F. Kennedy leaves office?
2.	How true are current Washington rumors that, in preparation for a run at the presidency, he will be named secret^ of state, with Dean Rusk leaving that post to become ambassador to the United Nations and Adlai E. Stevenson being eased out of the administration?
3.	How does he define the unusual role he plays in government affairs?
ANSWERS
In brief, there are Robert Kennedy’s answerer (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6)
, McCone’s statement was given , to the House Foreign Affairs Coro-' imittee on Feb. 19. It was re-j ^ leased today after security dele-'to^gy'"dodle'Ts a lamb, skies as unpredictable a
t _ 4i.» icn____Peking accused Moscow of
for the 150 seniors.	jamming Red China’s broad-
I Bill Kath, 21. of 658 E. Beverly casts to prevent Communist |St. for instance had seven offers block countries from hearing before accepting that of Ford Mao Tze-tung’s side of the Motor Co. to enter its manage- argument. It called the follow-. l^ch scampered into Pontiac training program. He is an ers of Soviet Premier Khrushchev cowardly as mice.
with ... the	science major.
McCone, while disclosing lit- month’s disposition.	' North American Aviation Co. ^ The new propaganda barrage
1 tie that has not been made pub-	The weatherman said Ma r ch	^	*®"*?‘‘* aimed at the Kremlin was distrib-
' lie previously, painted a is expected to bring sprinkles of •» i** Plaot®	graduation uted by the New China News
graphic pictiire of a parade of snow late tonight midst a tern- 'w possible employment.	I Agency. It quoted from ah article
revolutionaries going to Cuba perature low of 18. A light snow i General Electric Co. and Ford ^®d	of
j for training, taking pains to |Or rain will fall tomorrow, with have both made firm^fers to die Chinese Communist party.
I conceal their travel move- the mercury mounting to 34.	i three seniors each and^e still ' ~	*
ments, and recelviag up to a I	*	*	*	'talking with several others.	pointed out that the
year’s instrnctioB on such | T^mneratures for the next five	♦	♦	♦	:Chmese^mmunisto as4 week had
things as how to use arms and davrwTu averaee 3 to	Th® P"®® are good, starting Polished the anU-Pekmg vieW^^^^
how to build homemade “Mol-	^	-------- —...
otov cockteir bombs.
' Temperatures for the next five
days will average 3 to 6 degree	Khrujihehev, the Communist party
b.1.. -nnal of»	.laoy oHon	^
01 10 10 M. rre	’ mier s French Communist suo-
iand normal low o
In another development, attor- cipitation will total .1 to .2 inches teachers on the low end and	quarrd**irith *the
___ii„K.	c neerme science ma ors on the	quarrel wiin me
ney Charles Ashmann s^id in Mi- in periods of light snow or rain	science majors on the
ami he would seek British inter- Saturday and Tuesday.	jdiP ®™ of the scale.	* lo. j.
venUon today on behalf of 10 Cu-,	*	*	* '	Business administraUon majors	♦	*	*
bans and 2 Americans “viciously	. ..	. j ar® second in demand only to the • ‘Cowardly as mice. Red
SScS?’’ fr^t!?BahaS by Today’s light v^^ |,„gi„eering seniors.	; Flag continued, “they
Castro commandos.
Four of the men, mcluding at night and Saturday, ast one American, already j ,	,	...	.
have been executed, Ashmann downtown Tpontiac, the low said he learned from “unofficial recording prior to 8 a.m. was
sources in Chiba.’
Ashmann said he would fly to Washington and meet with officials at the British embassy. APPEALS TO EMBASSY He appealed to the British em-, bassy in a telegram yesterday to: “initiate appropriate proc^ings to prevent unconscionable execution by the ((hutro) government of these innocent men.
“I have been assured that the (Continued on Page 2, (h>l. 2)
degrees. The temperature reading at 1 p.m. was 28.
News Flash
I scared to death, they dare not
Most of the salary figures _ .	......
month, sa d Mrs. Doro by Hope, j themselves and have ende< director of the university place- i ment office.
themselves and have endeavored to impose a water-tight embargo. ’They are even using The teaching jobs run from $4,- a powerful station to jam our 700 to 95.060 for a 10-month school broadcasts to prevent people year, with the exception of those, from listening.”^ in Atichorage, Alaska, where the	* yt
stating salary is 96 m. ^ -i p^bUcation of the anti-Chinese But ap^ently the ong winter j
as had Its effect on the seniore. ^^e first publjp airing the ^re are no takers for the Alas-	Communists had given
ka positions.	|<,f other side in the Moscow-
; Peking dispute. ,
Of the approximately 150 sen-
LANSING (fl — Gov. George Romney said .today he may ask Michigan Pharmacy Board Director DavW M. Moss to re- HALF TO TEACH, sign as a result of disclosures in a controversial drug store jiors due to graduate, about 34 licensing case.	I (Continued on Page 2, Q)l. 5) |
But 2 Trouble Shooters on Their Toll
Feathers Flying Over City Pigeons
MEMORANDUM
February 28, 1963
TO: ’'on Nagel — Charles Cdien Confirming my conversation with yon diis date, I want yon to serve as a Pigeon Coatrol Committee to work on the problem of pigeons cwgregatlBg hi the tower of the Ffa‘st Presbyterian Church and adjacent
I would like to have yon come up with a control progrpm which conM be publicizad and made known to people at the Presbyter-inn Church and other buUdings prhere the problem exists.
Robert A. Stlerer City Manager
^ ★
The pigeons have to go^
That’s the unanimous opinion of downtown
property owners, merchants and businessmen — not to mention the shoppers.
’The above memo kindles hope. Help may be on its way to the Saginaw-Huron street area.
Donald Nagel, city forester, and Charles Cohen, city sanHu'ian, have b^n named as a two-man committee to tackle the problem.
It all started when the Oakland County Courthouse left. What did it leave? It left an empty lot and a l<tt of homeless pigOons that moved to surrounding buildings.
“A little more dirt on the sidewalk and we could grow a nice garden,” said Harold J. Mul-downey, looking down on the changing scene from his fourth flow office in the Riker Building.
Muldowney is manager of Sherwin Realty Co. and attorney for the Riker Building trust. HELP WANTED
‘T think the City should help us in our
A	‘ A,
plight,” Muldowney said. “The situation is clearly out of hand. “I assumed that city officials would show some interest.”
Yesterday’s action followed an,' increasing number of complaints directed at the city manager’s office.
Muldowney said be also plans to “suggest some unified action at the next Downtown Pontiac Business Association meeting.”
What bothers Muldowney and other downtown people most are the droppings.
“It’s getting to be a real hi^rd under the pharmacy sign downstairs on the comer," he contfoued. “We get out and wash the walk as often as weather permits, but that’s not enough.
“We spent several thousands dollars cleaning the building a few years ago: Look at the window ledges now — It's a shame.”
"Be of good courage g and fie shall strength- f en thy heart."
Psalm 27:U I
Those who have years ^ of study spent ... In | reading our New Testa- | ment . . ^ Say that not on^ despondent note . . , Can you from all its pages quote.
Its theme is love and faith and praise . . . And songs at midnight - that men raise . . . iq pri cells and joyous living And prayer that’s faced with thanksgivmg"
. . That looses bonds and sets souls free . . . And teaches “immortality.”
JUUEN C. HYER
A—2
I’HE PONTIAC PKESS,	MARCH 1,
Spviets
fd-Ban Chance Disappearing
GENEVA (UPI) - The Soviet Union underlined iU uncon^)ro-mising stand on a nuclear test ban today and warned that pros-
pects for agreement are ‘‘fast disappearing.”
nie United States charged this was the fault of the Russians and nobody else.
“We want to negotiate,” American delegate William C. Foster said. “Unfortunately we have found that thus far the Soviet Union does not.”
Soviet delegate Semyon R. Tsarapkip, in what an American spokesman described as an *‘ex-^ tremely tough” speech, told the 17-nation disarmament conference the Soviets are unprepared to go beyond their current position on the key issue of inter-Pontiac and Birmingham were national on-site inspection of a among 10 Michigan cities de-'t^t|,g„ signated today to receive new	WARitfiNr.
four-hour, same^lay mail gerv- , REITERATES WARNING ic,	I He reiterated Soviet Premier
Under the new program, let-,Nikte Khrushchev’s warning to ters deposited in specially e x p e c t no more Soviet con-
Mail Speed-Up to Affect City
Pontiac, Birmingham to Get New Service
FREIGHT CARS DUMPED-An Illinois Central Railroad freight train was derailed near Scales mound in northwestern
Illinois yesterday, tossing 43 freight cars into the snow along the railroad tracks. No injuries were reported.
Rejected Plane Design
marked boxes before 11 a.m. will be delivered in the area by 3 p.m.—
.Also slated for the accelerated service at a date to be announced soon are Ann Arbor, Bay City, Escanaba, East Lansing, Iron Mountain, Saginaw, Sault SU. Marie and ‘Traverse City.
William W. Donaldson, Pontiac Postmaster, said 21 special mail moxes were specified for the four-hour service in a recent survey conducted here by the Post Office Department.
Donaldson said it would be difficult not to determine how beneficial the new system would be.
He indicated the service could be provided without adding new .personnel by revising present; routes and schedules.
Pontiac presently offers two deliveries in the downtown area and one in residential sections.
would be impossible to appraise.^‘he alleged seizures the new service until it is put in-	Saturday of last
to operation. Birming^m also *«**•
cessions and accused the West of ‘‘trying to draw the discussions into a morass of technical questions.
‘The prospects of an agreement are fast disappearing despite the immese political con-ms made by the Soviet Union,” Tsarapkin said, casting aside his prepared text.
He said the Russians are “adamantly opposed” to discussion of test ban issues other than the two principal ones — on-site inspection and the number of unmanned seismic stations to be Included in the agreement.
'Don't Attempt to Stop Rebels'
Probe Alleged Contract Bias
ber to General Dynamics Corp., Fort Worth, Tex. over the purportedly lower bid of the Boeing Co., Seattle, Wash.
WASHINGTON (AP)-Senate investigators have been told the rejected design for the revolutionary new TFX war plane promised more bomb carrying capacity, longer flying range and cost sav-igs estimated from |91 million to IIS million.
The figures were placed in evidence at hearings Thursday be-______________
fore the Senate Investigation sub-mony taken in the closed-door
committee. The senators seek to,hearings.
determine whethr favoritism I The hearings are in recess until
might explain why the huge TFX Tuesday.
contract was awarded last Decern-1 Secretary of Defense Robert S.
McNamara called the TFX a tremendous step forward in manned aircraft design.
Still on the drawing board and its test flights possibly two years off*, TFX is planned to be an all-weather fighter-bomber for both many capabilities up to missions Air Force officers and published at more than twice the speed of best job I can runnihg the Dein a censored transcript pf testi-
The estimates were listed in a chart compiled l!>v thy subcommittee’s staff in c^Mration
'Birm^ng^)am Area News
2 Con-Con Delegates to Debate Constitution
BIRMINGHAM-Two delegates to the state constitutional conven-iioiT will debate major portions of the proposed constitution Wednesday in the Cranbrook School auditorium.
Profv Harold Norris of the Detroit College of Law, will explain his opposition to the doc-ument, while Detroit attorney William B. Gudlip will give the affirmative side.
Norris, a Democrat served as vice chairman ofl the conunjttee on the declaration of and election at the convention.
He was also a member of the styling and draftj
Bobby Not Planning on the Presidency
Lt. Merlin Hohnquist wam^ qeshiers to know their endorser when they cash Greenfield R^ taurant checks.	.
Mrs. Robert Elwood
Service for Mrs. Robert (An-‘ nie) Elwood, 57, of 1704 Holland St., will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Manley Bailey Funeral Home. Burial wiU be White Chapel Memorial Centetery, Troy.
hfas. Elwood died unexpected-^ ly yesterday.
I ^ was a member of Meadov-lawn Chapel, Southfield.
I Surviving besides her husband are two daughters, Mrs. Frands iT. Webb of Birmingham amt .Mrs. Alvin «Shankle of Pontiac; a sister; two brothers; and three grandchildren.	J-
(Continued From Page One)
1. The presidency: “Absohite-, no. I don’t even think about teing president. I know that may| sound funny to some people, but that’s the truth.”	'
ing committee.
Cudlip, a Re- NORRIS I publican, served as chairman of the committee on style and drafting and was also a member of the judicial branch committee.
Each speaker will have an alio t e d presentation period, and period for rebuttal. A question
2. Secretary of state: “Cwn-idetely ridkuloas and ontnie.”
“I try to do the
((Continued From Page One)
I Colorful Judge Picard Succumbs to Cancer at 73
luid-answer ses-|sion w i 11 c 0 n -elude thfe program, sponsored
sound.	jpartment of Justice as attorney! CUDLIP by the Cran-
The chart described Boeing’s de-'general. It’s a very important brook School Alumni Association, sign as promising; -	[job.	| Tickets for the debate, which
—1,100 miles longer nonstop ‘‘Sure, the President gets my starts at 6 p.m., are available] flight range than General Dynam- advice on matters outside the de- at GriniMll’s ^ at the Alumni ic’s design on ferryig missions to partment, just as he Roes from Association office at the school. ‘
...............lots of others. But he weighs -it,
just as he does the advice of the others, and then makes the decisions him^lf.
speed the aircraft to distant sta-
, offers two daily deliveries in the downtown area.
Neither of the area postmasters knew when the system would begin. Announcement of the newly designated cities was made this morning by Michigan Senators Patrick McNamara and Philip Hart.
The accelerated service was launched in Lansing last sumnter.
Members of the dissention-tom Caban invasion brigate in Hiami moved to get U.S., government help in electing refugee leaders to set up civil government in Cuba “after Fidel Castro is overthrown.
‘The proposal, scheduled to be handed to Slate Department Cu-j ban coordinator, John Cummins, came in the wage of resignations;
Since then it has been designated by two lop brigade leaders,
for Battle Creek, Detroit, Flint, Grand Rapids, Kalamazoo. .
Postal rates for the four-hour service are the same as regular rates.
In Havana, Cuba charged that a U.S. destroyer based at Guantanamo Bay rammed a small Cuban coastal vessel carrying food to a north coast Cuban town.
SAGINAW (UPI) - Federal Judge Frank A. Picard, who won national fame for a spewh he once gave on the trial of Christ as viewed from a legal point of view, died here yesterday at the age of 73.
Picard had been ill for six years. Death was attributed to cancer.
Funeral service wij be held
w^ be 1
tlons.
177 miles longer flying radius on fighter missions to intercept enemy aircraft.
—Capacity to carry 69 pev cent more pounds Of demolition bombs flying with wings extended; 11 per cent more with wings tucked in.” The plane is intended to have ability to extend or retract its swept wings to suit various flying missions.
—250 per cent more capacity to carry fire bombs, 50 per cent more capacity for nuclear bombs, 70 per cent more land mines, as measured by the company’s own estimates.
’The chart listed three different nd confusing estimates of the cost with Boeing’s estimated cost described as lower than General

The Weather
Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VlCINITY-RffUy sunny today, high 30. Mostly cloudy moderating temperatures tonight and Saturday. A little snow likely late tonight and light snow or rain Saturday. Low tonight IS, high Saturday 34. Li^t variable winds becoming south to southwest 8 to IS miles tonight and Saturday.
T»4mt tai rculUie
JUDGE FRANK A. PICARD
here Monday.
Picard was appointed to the federal bench in 1939 by President Roosevelt and became a power in the Michigan Democratic party during the new deal years.
He informally retired from the bench two years ago but often filled in on certain cases. He helped write Michigan’s liquor laws after Congress repealed pro-/
Dynamics in all three. The esti-
Police here are befuddled by the theft yesterday some 77 payroll checks totaling |2,170 These are roughly the same from the Grwnfield Restaurant, answers he has given privately 1725 S. Hunter Blvd. many times to similar questions! According to the restaurant’s which have cropped up during nuuuger,. J. P. Miller, the his first two years in office and, no doubt, will recur as long as Kennedy remains in office and there is one reporter to ask them.
Hoffa Accuses Bobby of Having Him Spied Upon
PITTSBURGH (UPI) - Atty. mates were based on the planned'Gen. Robert Kennedy came unacquisition of 1,700 of the planes, der verbal bombardment in a
--------------- I speech delivered last night by
,	{Teamster President James R.
Vicfim of Home Fire
checks weire in desk drawer in a locked room.
He said Uiey comprised about half the restaurant’s weekly payroll. The theft was discovered about noon.
School Board Studies Budget
((Continued From Page One) structional costs, Whitmer ex-
The union leader said for the
1$ in Fair Condition
A total of 23 new teachers is provided for In the new budget at past two years the attorney gen-|a proposed coat qf $130,031. eral’s office “has kept me under! Whitmer said the school buUd-surveillance week-in-week-out for ings are in good enough shape
24 hours a day.
Pentagon Foils Reds
TContinued From Page Oh^
raised by McNamara's disclosure that four heavy Soviet reconnaissance bombers flew thousands of miles from the Soviet Union — straight to the 75,000-ton carrier
----^	” |Forrestal southeast of the Azores
J4	ri?t*wo?t'h'6i	31 last Friday.
3S 14 JftcktonvUle M 51	_	.	i j
________ u t KftniM CUT 3* u But the Navy stoutly denied
i2 »21m*¥»ch ” N that the Red flights over the -	M	M	Forrestal on	Feb.	22	and over
63	44	13	33	the nuclear-powcred	carriw
SirmingiisB M	SI	Phwni*	.	»	«	Enterprise,	the	Kitty Hawk
Unurck 40 34 PUtiburgh 3t 31 j "V.	_ ,	.	'	,,
■	- 1. - - . -............ j|,g Princeton earlier
41 si b: a: Morit is i showed them up as vulnerable.
“ 31 IMttU* SO 31
!» To'np* .	71 M Officers noted that the Forres-
Elizabeth Kline, 50, of 87 S.
_	_____________Ardmore St, Is in fair condition “Something is happening, in
■thibiUon! Picard serv^ as first'in Pontiac General Hospital, after this country by the name of chairman of the State Liquor Con-suffering first-and second-degree Bobby Kennedy , . . Bills are trol Commission.	burns when her bedding caught being introduce so that no one
w *	w	'fire at 3:15 a.m. today.	lis safe from wire tappers . . .
Picard’s fame as a j u r o r| Damage to contents in the bed-|Every man,|n this room must be spread in the case of Martino room was set at $150. Mrs. Kline care^l what he says so that vs. Michigan Window Cleaning was smoking in bed according to someone later does, not distort Co,	firemen.	jhis remarks,” Hoffa said.
In that case, the vrlndow- wash-ers sought to prove they came under provision of the Fair Labor Standards Act because their lemployer was engaged in interdate commerce.
His opinion, against the window washers, got wide publicity and caused grumbling among union chiefs.
It read in part: “It would be but another step to hold that a window washing -company that served a hotel would have to find out from week to week what the occupants of the several hotel rooms did for a living, whom they were representing and if the
Offer Oil Seniors Jobs
(Ck>ntinued From Page One)
llal’s departure from the Mediter-|Ffrms were engaged in interstate ranean for the United States had|“'"™®*^™'^	^	^
announced. They said it was pjeard’s four brothers had won traveling the Great Circle route, [f^me in the big-time circus tents _ normal shipping lane; that it as the Flying Picards. He him-had no air patrols out, and that {self was never in the troupe. He heavy radio and radar outputlw“	to his famUy
^	e • . 4«ib“f decided at an early age to
made It easy for the Soviets to become a lawyer, home in.
In a war or emergency situation, the Navy said, none of theSe conditions would apply.
They did not make similar explanations for the flights over the Kitty Hawk in the North Pacific between Jan. 27 and Feb. 3, over the Enterprise in the North Atlantic on Feb. 12 and 13, and the
Picard was once threatened with Senate impeachment for his portal-to-portal pay decision in the Mount Clemens pottery case.
Picard ruled that workers were entitled to pay for the time they spent on company property.
The portal decision touched off a series of portal suits, mostly
AT
NATIONAL WEATHER - Snow is forecast for tonight from the northern and north-central Atlantic coast into the Lakes and upper Mississippi Valley will rain or showers likely in the south. The northern Rockies may have sndw flurries and scattered showers arq possible on the north Pacific Coast. It will be cold or colder m the Atlantic and Golf coast into the lower Mississippi and. Tennessee valleys, in the northern and central Plateau and Pacific coast regh>^ and warmer from the Lakes into the southern plains.	i
Princeton in, the North Pacific I sponsored by the old CIO union, between Feb. 13 and 16.	that totaled several mUlions of
McNamara repUed with a terse dollars, until the law was changed no” when asked whether there by Congress in 1M7. has been any Soviet reconnais-
sance’over North America.
‘None of the Soviet aircraft showed hostile intent,” McNamara said of the four heavy aircraft which came in over the Forrestal in two waves.
In his dissertation on the trial of Christ, Picard asserted the trial Itself and the crucifixion which followed, were illegal in almost every respect, even under the laws of the day.
are planning to go to graduate school, about 30 hope td get career jobs, 76 are going into teaching, three into military service and the rest are undecided.
Offers are still coming in and the prospective graduates are still being summoned for foi-low-up interviews. ‘This week, Mrs. Hope said. General Electric asked five seniors to fly to Cincinnati offices for further talks.
Other firms that have made firm offers include IBM, Pontiac Division of General Motors, Bell Telephone Co., Dow Chemical Co., Whirlpool Corp., Aetna Casualty Co. and Ex-Cello Corp.
★ ★ ★
Among those-still interviewing students are Standard Oil Division of American Oil Co., Burroughs (Torp., Bendix, the Nation-Aeronautics and Space Administration, Consumers Power Co. the City of Detroit, the Food and Drug Administration and the armed forces.
Oakland’s graduation schedule gives prospective employers a chance to shop early.
’Ihis also is advantageons to me seniors — they get first crack at many offers before thousands graduate from other colleges In May.
School systems from all of the nearby areas and from sweral {Other states have been seeking
teachers among Oakland’s first graduating class.
Besides Anchorage, the list includes Geveland, Los Angeles, Detroit, Rochester, N. Y., Long Beach, Cal., Evanston, 111., and Kenosha, Oskosh and Racine, Wis.
Oakland’s sophomores and juniors for summer jobs with an eye on future graduations, Mrs.' Hc^ noted.
A lot of job offers are still coming in, she added.
to require less maintenance during the next fiscal year.
Operational costs could be held down by decreased use of maintenance personnel. This can be done without reducing the present staff, be said.
School board members reserved comment on the preliminary budget.
STAFF STUDIES ‘The various departmental
JOHN P. LIVINGSTONE
Stroke Fatal. to Financier
Bloomfield Twp. Man President of Firm
John P. Livingstone, president of Baxter & Livingstone Finance Co., died yesterday from a stroke suffered at his home Tuesday evening. He was 44.
Service-will be at 3 p. m. Saturday in Kirk in the Hills, 1340 W. Long Lake Road, Bloomfield Township, with Dr. Harold C. De-Windt officiating. Trustees of the diurch will serve as pallbearers.
■k *	*
Mr. Livingstone’s body will be at the William Vasu Funeral Home. 4375 N. Woodward Ave. until the service. The family suggests any memorials be made to the John Penman Livingstone Memorial at Kirk in the Hills.
Mr. Livingstone of 71 Berkshire Road, Bloomfield Township, wgs born in Fifeshire, Scotland, aqd came to the United States with his parents at the age of 3.
He attended the University if Detroit and Detroit College if Law.
Besides his associatkm widi
heads will present staff studies to the board between now and April 11, when the board must adopt a preliminary budget for transmission to the County Tax Allocation Board.
A final budget will he adopted by the school board in June or July, after Uie school district’s Jacome f« the next fiscal year is known.	/
The Income will be determined after the tax base is determined
Some of the industries hiringiby the state and the allocation bred race horses, seniors are also Interested in board sets the school’s share of Surviving are his wife, the ot-
the Baxter-Uvingstohe Finance Co. he wu also president of the Birmingham and Farmington finance companies.
A member of the board of trustees of Kirk in the Hills, Mr. Livingstone also belonged to the Birmingham Chamber of Coip-merce, the Rotary Qub of Birmingham, Otsego Ski Club, and Orchard Lake Country Club.
For many years he raced and
the 15-mill tax liinit.
Whitmer commended the school personnel, teachers and administrators, for their part in preparing what he termed a “very realistic budget."
mer Betty Baxter; two daughters Erma Jean and Ann, both at home; a son John II at home; his nwther, Mrs. Bertha Livingstone of Pontiac; and a brother, David ofiPontiac.



RED BADGERr-The Defense Department has released this U.S. Navy photopaph of what it identified as a Soviet twin-jet Bidger
bomber, one-of several that flew over the aircraft carrier Kitty Hawk operating northwest of Japan in January. (Story on page 1.)
I	»
A—3
THgiPONTlAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 1968

Hard-
'I
By PHYLLIS BATTELLE NEW YORK-lf women «9»-lionally resort to ruthlessness, overdrive and (uing their femininity Uf get ahead in their Jobs these days—perhaps they should be understock, even if not forgiven.
They’ve got to use more than gentle persuasionj to “get ahead”! in the business' world. Today, 43 years after they I won the right toi vote, they stiUl haven’t been able! to vote in thel I^islators w b o|
would take steps!____ , _
to guarantee PHYLLIS them equal eco- BATTELLE nomic rights with men.
★	* w
American women may be, as they’re so commonly pictured, the most pampered people on eirth. But if this is true, they am the most perversely persecuted, patently patronized, p^ tUy pajlroUed, pampered pe^ on earth.
In other words, they don’t g€t equal salaries with men, they know it, and they’ve got to fight tooth and nafl polish to get ahead.
Jlep. ^ith Oreen, D<Ore.7 has
Denied Equal Pay
^ Introduced another of a kmg, darfrcMsOb
that her bill (endm^ by the administration) would be good for the country because it would Increase Iwma ta, oonsomer purchasing |^«4r tb ' the sluggish
(whkh I bat con^ ^’lawdiKiWWlth their wived tn Am iniiii
wbaa^theyte ba|pji«,with the dinitor dishes), eqa^y bills seem Ihevltabljr'to gk
GETtl^EOlWOLEX)
It iaaltos whse. But for some
Rap. 'Oreea’s hill waa aw-Boweed ea the saiae day that the V. S. Ceases Bareaa issaed a rapert stadag that, hi UN,
----------^X~
Oe awerage iacome lor aU »• lailBoa women hi the ’’experi-eaoed civUlaa lahor force” was
For 44-millioa men in the fO"w> category, die average was $1,121. In the professions of medicine and law, women averaged $6,517 and |6,1$$, respectively; the median incomes for men in medicine
and law were Hated as $lO,M$-['ni«y indicate that the diqMwity phis.	between male and female salaries
As tf thdse figures weren’t enough to make a working girl put her nails to the grindstone, on my desk are the results of the IMO census surveys smug.' out by the Women’s Bureau of the Department of Labor (where, incidentally, the clerical girls get $1,661 less snnually than men).
is tending to i
Bimll Upholftery i SHAMPOO KITS '	$1.49
Thatcher,
Patterson
and Wernet
INSURANCE
DeR*t Npflwet SHppiag
FALSE TEETH
Don't b* « b* suob ba •IkUlnr in
dlCKM
b-mMii

Biiira Bnnit wt ut?«. onnBdont (<
Uw nr McuntT and addt(' ---
Nn(umm*. pity tai ibf Oft rAHi-erra moi
Plan to Boost UP Economy Received by 'Action Group
MARQUETTE (UPI) - A wide ranging program to get the Upper Peninsula back on its economic feet without relying on outside, he^ was advanced today at the first meeting qf ^^ration Action-U.P.”
ipalgn to a<______ _
sou^ well-balanced economy in tiw^Upper Peninsula” through a long-range program of silf-heb> was recommended In an updated study of the UP.
Among the major recommendations in the 17-page study, made
by l^oaaco Sendee, Inc., of New York at the request of the XOchi-gan economic devetopment qom-miaaion:
Socialist Gives Talk About U.S. Defense
NEW BRUNSWICK, NJ. (AP) “It is extraordinarily doubtful if any of you in the audience will live to te my age if we continue our present defense policies," Norman Thomas told 1,000 college undergraduates Thur^ay.
Thomas, 79, former candidate for president on the Socialist tlck-
of exifthig ladasMea fas the area, rather thaa trying to att^ new —Upgrading retail and other servicea in cider to attract more tourists to the UP’s qhief industry.
WWW
-Multiple use of public lands, matdiing state funds for general programs, taxation of ore reserves and fofest lands, and a study of Mackinac Brid^ tolla. —Fanaoiatkaaf toeal aoniog ...	ef
Edgar L. Harden, president of! Nortben) Michigan.
WiOiam P. Wilson, former city mnager of Buchanan in Berrien County, has been named executive manager of the operatioa and will marshall efforts to stimulate emnomic growth in the Upper Peninsula ^
_ programs among counties and even larger areas.
—Movements to establish Junior colleges in conununities which could “logicaily" support them and expanded research at Michigan Tedi, Northern Michigan Collage and Suomi CoUqge.
—Oeatton of “one atrong organisation” to coordinate and-lm-ptomaot all facato of tbe eoo-Domk drive.
“Operation^Action - UP’ ceivad the report today at a meeting at NoHhem . Mkdiigan
et, said fit Douglass College that peace caiv be achieved only through genera] difarmaraeid, the Untied-Nations and ,‘lctoive disengagement from attempts tocoi^ trol the courses of other nations.
“Defenae Secretary Robert Mc-
Naaura is talki^ something close----
to daiuerous oonsense when be'lw^
speaks M Ijudb^ war under prea-jership’^ iof Detroit Edison Presi-ent conditions,Thomaa said. 'dent WaHnr L. Cisler mid Dr.
(College. The group was formed i’e last October under the lead-
Stale Jaycees Plan Mock Legislature
A mock leglalature, made up of Junior Chamber of Commerce members, will be in session tomorrow in Lansing.
Among the 266 “oaedey” towmekert will be FVaak Rick-ardion, Waterford Jaycee and natiOBM director of the urgaM-
Wine-O-Oram
Intercepted
SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP)-Deputy Sheriff Russ Cahill arrived JiBt as a paper bag moved up the outside wall of the Santa Clara County Jail.
★	★ *
The man In the blue suit and red turban who tied the bag to a knotted bedaheet fled.
*	* e
But Cahill did capture a bottle of wine the man left in a nearby bush. And fellow deputies inside the Jail discovered two more bottles under an inmate's bunk on the floor.
Gov. George Romney reu toe Jaycees at a noon lundieon. Millard L. Bush of Alma, state Jaycee president, will serve as governor during the mock legislature.
KiHed in Auto Accident
CLIO (* —Claudia Jean 1 eren, 16, of Clio, was killeiryea-terday when the car in whidi she was riding collided with an auto on a rural road east of this County community.
01
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*tU9
la the year liH, for taataace, waama’s average lacomea were 14 pqr coat of the moa’a aver-
By 1960, they wore only 61 pa
made an average of $2,428, while men made |6,75S.
Ammg profeastonal workers, women, $1,364; men, $6,848. Serv-ice workers—women $2,418, and men. $4,066. Managers-wof
you could find them, $4,173; men, $7,241.
NOT EQUAL AT ALL
no single category did women’s pay equal men’s. In spite of an tbe inomsed talk, over aU the years, about equal atatua. The closeot women came was In the “clerical” category, where they made an impressive 68 per cent aa much as nMh did.
It’s not toir. But the injustice won’t make women retreat to the kitchen. Hwy’ll keep fighting for their jdace in the office—and who is to lodge them on bow they wage the battle?
Tb survive, the underdog needs must be cihvar.
PONTIAC ’
BUSINESS
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DETBOIT ranSON

THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. MARCH 1; 1968
SrSa Is There Any Possibilify of Nuclear DisSF
UNITED NATIONS (AP) g<ne R. Black, former president of the World Bank, has been named to a new poet as a U.N. financial trouble shooter, informed sources said yesterday.
★	*	a
Black will be a spdctal financial consultant to Secretary General U Thaitt. One of his chief tasks will be to speed the collection of assessments from lagging U.N. members, the informants said.
*	a	a
BUck retii^ as president ot the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development on Jan. 1. He is a director and consultant now for the Chase Manhattan Bank of New York City.
IliOK ANfiUS WHITE FACE LEAN, TENDER DaiOIOUS MEAT!
N ». lest leaf Raasl and Rib
ttsakDalsIar..........
II lb. IraalRg er ttawini Mnalt
hr.....................W.7I
N lb. Urtoln Nemd and Rama
pals..................
N lb. T-Daaa, SMala,
haasalatalar............WMI
IMS W eiMlaa ar Mas As U«
As....................Ns lb.
Tllb.NaNNacs..........ttlJI
Nlb.NaNLaBib..........titll
IIHL Lasa Park OhaH w Iswksd Ram, eaatar Oats la aH, an Nnak ar lad far I1I.1R. Maay Mads. Frsals, tidas aad Haivss al inal savlais.
Sirinia Patties.......Hsib.
OP0h7 Dman
(Editofi Note: For 17 years the United States has operated oh the assumption that disarmament may be possible. What are the current chances, and' is i^d case of now or never?)
f ------
An AP News Analysis By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER WASHINGTON (APl-Tlie best chance the Soviet Union and the United States may ever have to end the nuclear arms race now _ to be collapsing under the weight of a new d 1 s a r m a-ment deadlock.
This, at least, is the grim view of the current] state of L„.
West arms con- HIGHTOWER trol negotiations held by some
officials responsible U.l^. policy.
It is a view subject to shiarp
A serious question can be raised as to whether any real chance of accord between Moscow and Washington has existed since the start of the cold war—or will exist while the cold war continues. Some authorities sajr “until you can settle the Berlin problem, until Moscow and Peking abandon their ambitions to Uke over the world, how can you expect to disarm?”
But for 17 years, the United States has operated on the assumption that disarmament may be possible. That hope persiste today.
The hope rests now, as in the past, on a deeper belief that at some point the Soviet Union will begin to change its fundamental
world position and mo^ toward agreements with the West. Then the often-cited need of ail nations! to avoid destruction in a great nuclear war could begin to have its impact.
SOVIET SWITCH What makes the present stalemate at Geneva critical is that recent Soviet actions have dealt a severe blow to this deeper be-
easlng of the nerve-wracking confrontation of the United States and the SdViet Union over Cuba last O^toberr
This optimism was prevalent when Soviet Premier Khrushchev last Dec. 19 sent a note to President reversing his stand on international inspection to police a test ban inside the Soviet Union
Democratic leader', said the negotiators should be close to agreement by April or the opportunity which he then thought existed for nailing down a test ban mi^t well be lost.
★ ' * w
At a news conference on Jan. 24 President Kennedy said he did not agree with the deadline concept but the world should know
u well^as on the tewitory of the by gpring whether an agreement c^d be reached.
Uef, ptwlsely adien ^^can^y„|^ States and Britain. He said leaders thou^t it might finally would accept two or three be Justified by what had iwmjrf
was contrary to the position which
to be some new trends in Soviet poUcy.
The high optimism about the chances for a nuclear test ban which prevailed here within the past two months was bom in the aftermath of the Cuban crisis. There is no doubt that President Kennedy, Secretary of State Dean Rusk and other leaders felt some great results might flow from the
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Civil Rights Legislation Is DouBfful
WASHINGTON Wl - A partisan split in Congress over President Kennedy’s proposed civil rights measures will be passed this session.
An immediate RepubUcaa reaction to Kennedy’s civil rights message yesterday was to ae-ease the administration of seeking political gain from its proposals. Republicans called for ketioa on thefar own program, which they claim is mnch broader than the President’s. With the Democrats split geographically oh the issue, strong bipartisan support will be needed to put any new civil rights laws on the bocdis, but signs of such support are hard to detect, WWW
Kennedy himself possibly did the cause of bipartisanship little good when he told Congress that more’progress had been made in the field of civil rights during the last two years than in any comparable period in the nation’! history.
A group of House Republican who have introdncied comprehensive civil rights I of their own countered that the only coutrnctive civil rights legWathm pused since Reconstruction Days came during President Dwight D. Elsenhower’s Republican administration. In a series of House speeches ind in a joint statement, the GOP congressman called Kenedy’s program a retreat from his party’s 1960 platform and charged him with acting with his eye on the 1964 campaign.
And in New York the National Association for the Advancentent of Colored People called the President’s message "admirable,” but said it did not go far enough.
MAYO BOUND — Arthur A. Lambert and his wife Frieda hopefully wave their thumbs at passing cars on the Harbor FrMway in Loe Angeles this week. Mrs. Lambert holds a sign reading “Mayo Clinic,” their destination. Lambert, 43, says he has been in a wheelchair since a traffic accident in 1959. They have received only two small settlements, says Mrs. Lambert. ’D^ hope to hitchhike 2,100 miles to the famed Rochester, Minn., clinic.
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Auto Output Up This Week
DETROIT (AP) — Passenger car production in die United States this week will rise about 5,000 units to 149,919 cars. Automotive News said yesterday.
WWW ’The increase horn the 144,874 of last week will occur despite a short work week at American {Motors, where parts shortages brought a plant shutdown last Inight. In the comparable week of last year 137,944 cars were built.
WWW
Truck production was estimated at 29,466 units compared with 30,018 last week and 24,468 last yw.
Peace Corps Marks Second Anniversary Day
WASHINGTON <Pf-The Peace Corps, the most ct^ied outpost on the New Frontier, celebrates its second birthday today, w	w	w
President Kennedy created the Peace Corps March l; 1981, by executive order and handed his brother-in-law, Sargent Shriver, the task of transforming the idea into realRy. Later, the organization was given pomanent stature by act of Congress.
w w	w
Other nations have taken up the idea, and 43 have joined in fwming a new organization to establi^ new Peace Corps groups around the world. The U.S. Peace Corps will form the nudeus for the new agencies.
TRIPOLI. Ubya (B - A new earthquake has rocked the town ol El Marj, already in ruins from last week’s quakes which killed about 300 persons.
w w w
The new shock hit at 9:15 p.m. Thursday and destroyed several of the few remaining buildings, including the Libyan army barracks. No casualties were reported.
Game Packs a Wallet
SOUTHAMPTON, England (UFD -Police reported today a wallet was found to be missing shortly after each goal was scored at a recent hockey game. Final score: 4 goals, 4 wallets and $840 missing.
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he had taken in November 1961. w	w	w
Khrushchev had	said during the
Cuban	crisis	that	he was	willing
to have on-site inspection of the removal of Soviet missiles and bombers from Cuba and a change in his position on the issue of the test ban negotiations had been expected.
w	w	>
One other fact of basic importance in Washington’s view entered into the calculation of American (rfficials. This was—and is—that with France already in the process of becoming a nuclear power it was only a question of time and probably not a very long time until Red Oiina would explode a nuclear device and Introduce a wholly new and dangerous element into the world power balance.
WWW
It has therefore seemed to officials here that the period between the ending of the Cuban crisis and the further spread of nuclear weapons - a restless period marked also by wide-open splits in both the Communist and Western camps-offered an unusually hopeful prospect for progress toward a disarmament break-ttirough.
w w
SAME OLD SPLIT In mid-January there seemed to be no doubt that the United States and Britain on one hand and the Soviet Union on the other were closer to agreement on a nuclear test ban treaty with inspection safeguards than they had been at any time in the past. Today they seemed to be as far apart as ever.
The deadlock has developed, as the dispute now stands, over the difference between Khrushchev’s two or three inspections a year and the eight or 10 which Kennedy has asked with an indication that he would reduce thf number tf other inspection problems were solved at the same time.
In a speech in Moscow Wednesday, Khrushchev slammed the on any new concessions from!
DESPERATION DECISION In a few quick sentences, Kennedy then went on to sketch both the basis of his policy for persisting in negotiations no matter how desperate the prospect and the probjema which he foresees at home as well as in the discussion with .the Soviet Union.
We have been on this (seeking disarmament) for 15 yqars,” he said. “I must say that a good many people are opposed to this effort which is being directed by Mr. (William C.) Foster in Geneva, and quite obviously it is a matter which we should approach with a good deal of care. But the alternative, if we fail, of increas-. ing the number of nuclear powers around the world over the next
10, 15, or 20 years is so dangerous (it) keeps me committed to
the effort of trying to get a teat bgii treaty.”
★ ★ ★
A tew days later at a Feb. news conference Secretary of State Dean Rusk recognized the progressive breakdown of test ban talks by saying: “We cannot hoM out great expectations that this matter can be redolved promptly.” The Inspection issue has been at the heart of the East-West disarmament problem since negotiations first started back in 1946.
At that time,, while It still had a nuclear weapons monopoly, th6 United States had put a plan b^ fore the United Nations for internationalizing all atomic power. The Soviet Union shortly produced a counter plan.
The two nations rejected each other’s programs.
Since then alsarmament has been involved periodically in What appeared to be serious negotiations and at times has served as a propaganda football.
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New Quake Rocks Stricken El Marj
his side, saying “nothing else can be expected from us.”
★	♦ A
His statement came as no surprise because in talks in this country in late January and more recenUy at the 17-nation dlaarma-ment conference in Geneva hlsj representatives had taken tlie same line.
’Their unyielding stand was initially a surprise and disappointment to U.S. officials, however, because they had thought that his December policy reverb was the opening play in a new round of negotiations which Khrushchev himself wanted to be successful.
In Geneva last month, Hubert H. Humphrey, assistant Senate
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► Markets, Busifflesis and Fuvsnce ' ♦ •
THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. MARCH 1. 1963

■
- H'f i
-

MARKETS
In Fairly Active Trade
The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by there, in wholesale |iackage lots. Quotations are furnished by the ' Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of noon Wednesday.
Produce
M/x6d, Narrow on Stock Mart
NEW YORK Ml market followed a mixed and narrow pattern in (airly active trading early today.
This came after two days of substantial decline.
rthrrn Spy. C. A rlhern Spy reic RkI
VEbtTABLES
C»bb«»e. curly, bi r>bb«f«. rad. ou.
Cabbatc. ataadard farrou. c»llo-pa»
Horarradlab. pt. 1.MU da bcha Onioiu dry S»-!b b
Partnit«. 'a bu
PaUloea. SS-lb. ba| .Polatota. *S-lb. ba<
The stock Pfizer added a point. Fractional gains were posted by U.^ S. Steel, General Motors, RCA, Homestake Mining, Union Carbide, (knerai Electric and Texaco.
Off by fractions were Bethlehem Steel, U. S. Rubber, Raythe-^] Allied Chemical and United { Air Lines.	ji
Opening blocks included; Gen-| eral Motors up Vi at 60'/4 on 6,600. shares: Chrysler off Vi at 89 onj
lianc^ Insurance and Technicolor. Ahead were Cubic, General Plywood, Hardmen, Kratter and National Bellas.
American Stock Exch.
riK.ire» ftflcp dectmftl potnti art eighth!
lEW YORK I
STicKt'.:
R Devel
BUfin AVKRAOKg
Poultry and Eggs
>.Si Some improvement in prices 3 U|Was noted after initial trades.
5 Til Some brokers considered this week's slump as largely technical „ 7, after the long upward move.
J JiThey said the business news is j jj good, there have been few specu-lative exceses and there are large rlsisums in the hands of institutiott-
*	«'al investors.
};|S Motors and tobaccos advanced.
'^ Steels leaned to the downside.
*	jj Utilities were lower and rails and
%5-chemicals were mixed.	,	.
l:?i International B u s i n e s s Ma-! Prices on the American Stock]	^
IS chines gained better than 2 points|Exchange were lower. Losers in-. « indu*. ma jo uu ... **jand American Telephone was eluded Aerojet, Creole Petrole^Mf §?,¥.* ,W I ahead fractionally.	I urn, Draper. O’Okiep Copper, Re-1	*1.^ u*o.,
6,000; RCA off Vk at SiP* on 2,500; i	,,, " ‘
Ford off Vk at 42 on 3,500; East- Pr.v o«»	ji.i loo.s
man Kodak off Vi at 112 on 1,000; MmJh^Ajo ioa ioo« Pan American Airways up Vi |	JT I {m:!
at 25^ on 2,700.

I IWI I
HMl 1
.M. AVEMQES
DETROIT rOlXTKV DETROIT. Feb 3S .APi 'Price* per pound >t Det'roll lor Ro,‘l Q' lue poultry.
The New York Stock Exchange
a.) HM fw LhI Cbt.
6	7JAi	TSH	7Jti	.
n	47'*	47H	47»i	.
3	-All*	41'e	41**	..
7	UH	UH	UH
Pit	steel	M	lOVb	10	10	-
Polirald .»	>0 140	138H »0% +
Proctao	1 00	17	71H	711*	71V.-
------ ...	jj	7,
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PuUmen 1.40	14	»V.	10	»'l-
—	- -	ij	jni	jTVi	17V4 -
—R—
dustry.’ ’
'Job Growth Is Too Slow'
Economic Director Talks on State Work
ST. JOSEPH (ifv- Michigan’s Job growth is not rapid enough to meet existing demands, acting director of the State Economic Development Department says.
Acting Director Richard Byers explained how many Jobs the sUte needs — and where it must get them — in an address prepared for the annual convention of city and village clerks Thursday.
Basing his views on an economic report jiublished in 1959 by the Upjohn Institute, Byers said Michigan needs 100,000 new jobs every year through 1970.
★ W' ★
‘Our experience shows that four new jobs in industry can generate six other jobs in related fields, in the services, the professions and in education," said Byers, “so if we need 100,000 new jobs a year, 40,000 of them must come from industry.”
Byers said 80 per cent of the new industrial jobs would be created from existing businesses.
“That leaves us 8,000 jobs which must be created each year by new com^nies organized in Michigan or industries now lo^ :ated in other states which can ae induced to expand into or relocate in Michigan,” Byers de-claried.
He said Gov. George Romney’! request for $750,000 to finance
US Flexing Trade Muscles for Doubters
DAWSON
By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst N E W Y 0 R K - Uncle Spm may have much stronger trade muscles than some doubters at home and abroad have been saying. The Eur<H>ean Common Market’s challenge has awed many. ’The farther-off threat of the Communist Bloc impresses others.
Starting at a low base after World War II the industrial growth these new boys on the block has been striking. It has been dramatized by the shrinking since 1957 of the U. S. gold re-erves'as foreigners turned in their once sought after dollars for the metal.
But the fears that Uncle Sam is in a dangerous situation may have been overdone, the National Bureau of EconcKnic Research suggests today. Thq*private nonprofit organization that studies and interprets economic facts says that today’s problems are far from insoluble—and perhaps can be met without any extreme measures. HEALTHY BALANCE ’The study called “The United States as World Trader and Banker” notes that American exports have been growing faster than imports, making for a very healthy trade balance. (’The study covers the last 10 years, rather than the Ust few months when the growth pattern was reversed, perhaps temporarily.)
Hal B. Lary, associate director of research of the bureau, feels many Americans have lost si^t of this underlying trading strength
gains, but always with an eye on ntemational. competitive conditions.
2. Harmonizing monetary and general economic policy to meet the nation’s domestic objectives, but always with an eye on preventing excessive outflows of capital.
The problems are tough. But the study notes that in the last two years U.S. prices have been getting more competitive, helped by the fact that labor costs per unit of output, have been fairly steady here since 1957 while they have been rising elsewhere.
And the monetary problem has been eaked a bit by a drop in interest rates abroad to stimulate economies that also have been troubled by a slowdown in growth rates.
basic and applied research “is'in their fear that the U.S. compeU-designed to ppovWe new oppor-jtive p,,^ weakening. The tuniUes. new industries and thusjfcr was sharpened in 1980 and
Store Linked to Electronic Stock Setup
The J. C. Penney store in the Miracle Mile Shopping Center has been link^ to a new nationwide semiautomatic mere handising system.
The system, described as a major advance in electronic retailing and a boon to better customer service, was developed by the firtn’s New York headquarters and employs a National Cash Register 315 electronic computer.
B. R. Eastridge, local Penney manager, said the system assures customers of a greater supply of all popular sizes and wider selection of colors and styles.
Twice a week special perforated sales tags are shipped to New York. ’The information is convert-
new jobs.”	: 1961 by the heavy outflow of liquid jcd to punched cards arid fed into
As for bnsiness this year. By-jcapital to prospering Europe]the computer which determines ers said, “Mickigaa’s ecoaomic |where interest rates were higher, | what orders are to be written for improvement will exceed the and by an erosion in the U.S. gold jthe kical store, s aatwaal average.	reserve.
5	Npwt in Brief
5 a SS a - ' in IW." b* ad*d. -I.1 TO .»m “
■! r a 7 itot nu* -11 n« *,1..
Quits Blackout
Post PressBs to Roll Despite Printers' Strike
NEW YORK (AP) - Dorothy Schlff, publisher of the New York Post, has broken awpy from the publishers of the city’s other major newspapers and announced that her afternoon tabloid will resume publication Monday.
Her decision leaves four ne^s-apers shut down by a printerk’ strike and four others closed voluntarily.
*	w w
Mrs. Schiff said Thursday, “I thitik the strike has gone on long enough. I see no evidence on a settlement."
Mrs. Schiff, owner and editor-in-chief Df the Post, and four other publishers shut down their pai^rs when the printers struck against four dailies 84 days ago.
★	w ♦
Talks in the contract dispute continue today with Mayor Robert F. Wagner serving as chief mediator.
’The Publishers Association of New York City, which represents the major newspapers in dealings with craft unions, said in a statement that Mrs. Schiff’s break does not alter the firm determination of the other publishers in the association to continue to press for a satisfactory agreement to end the current strike.” Mrs. Schiff resigned from the association a short time before her announcement at a news conference.
‘GREAT MISTAKE’
Amory Bradford, vice president of the struck New York Times and chief negotiator for the publishers’ association, said Mrs. Schiff’s move was “a great mistake on her part, which is bound to stiffen the union’s position and may well prolong the strike."
Elmer Brown, president of the AFLrCIO International ’Typographical Union, said ‘Tm very hopeful that this step will encourage others to do likewise.”
♦	♦ w
Brown made the statement to newsmen as he arrived Thursday nigh|^. Wagner summoned him frdm the union headquarters at (Colorado Springs, Colo., to participate in the resumed peace talks.
Bertram A. Powers, president of striking printers Local 6, stood beside Mrs. Schiff as she announced her Intention to reopen
5 Wtovment problem or our	^	W“ the Post, founded in IBOl by
t!s ^4* - 4 peiidelicy on a single industrv- -	I Alexander Hamilton, and the city’s
- nimeaning, of course, the automo-	continuously published
itive J track n^nufacturin,
Cherpical Firm Denies It Got Hidden Kickbacks
other outflow oFdollars—military police the envelope was on a table;	asked by a newsman if
----......... in the front room of the house. )|,e thought Mrs. Schiff’s action
SoaJ. Eysaman, 3137 Whitfield	‘h*
Court Waterford Township,	^ certainly (^o. -nie other
afternoon papers will not miss the 5 pub-
spending overseas, foreign aid, investments abroad, and the like-have grown, too, and still top the trade balance, so that we run a deficit in payments.
The bureau says this problem must be met, but it thinks the competitive strength of the United States can be increased by attention to its ei^rt potential. Some ofjthe financial drain, such as the
ieson Chemical Corp. was indicted yesterday on charges of failure to report alleged payments of $150,(XXI in kickbacks and commissions on drugs sold to South Viet Nam and Cambodia.
Olin Mathieson issned a statement terming the 24-connt indictment “absolutely groundless." ’The company |»id it may have been the victim of fraud and denied receiving any government foreign aid funds in the sales.
Others named in the indictment were Philipp Bauer Q)., Inc., of New York; its president, Kenneth B. Bauer; the Far East International Corp. of New York, allegedly a dummy export firm, and Its organizer Herbert G. Wolf of Hong Kong, listed as a former regional vice president of Olin Mathieson.
Groin Prices
butflbw oT capItaT,. may prove to be temporary and due to passing conditions.
At home the study suggests the aim should be “achieving greater freedom from external restraint in the pursuit of economic stability, long-term growth of output, 1^ higher employment.” It calls too pessimistic the view that these can’t be achieved without damage to the dollar’s foreign exchange value.
TWO PROBLEMS
Lary admits the united States will face strong competition in foreign trade. And he lists two problems as of prime importance in meeting this:
1. Adjustment of wages and prices in the light of productivity
Acema^mn
8S___________
Iow4 PAL
Io»» PAL 4.1 vf . _ lowaPL 4.M pT 1.M7S lowtPAL 1.1 ft —
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police yesterday a power mower valued at $112 was stolen from her garage.
Rummage Sale, Friday, March 128 W. Pike St., beginning at 6 p.m.	—Adv.
fact that their competitor lishing.'
Rmniiiage Sale, Reorganized C3iurch of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, 19 Front, March 2, 9-5.	-Adv.
Rummage Sale at 128 W. Pike, &turday 9 to 2.	—Adv.
Tap-Ballet—Toe Music Center. FE 4-47(X).
Chili Supper by Baldwin E.U.B.Y.F., March 2nd. 5 to 8 p.m., at 212 Baldwin.
Lodge Calendar
Regular Communication Pontiac Lodge No. 21 F&AM, Friday, March 1st, 7:30 p.m. George Pappas, W.M.	-Adv.
Ford Plans to Organize
DEARBORN (UPl)-Ford Mo-r Co. plans to organize a wholly owned spbsidiary in Puerto Rico to produce ball bearings for Ford’s U.S. operations, it was announced yesterday.
w ★	♦
Henry Ford II, board chairman, said arrangements for the plant have not been completed but it was expected that construction would begin shortly and be completed in about 20 months..
Didn't Make Case
Adminislration Retreats on Debt Ceiling
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Kennedy administration was forced to retreat today on its insistence that Congress keep the national debt ceiling propped at $306 billion from April to June.
Faced with Republican charges that the celling proposed by the administration would give it too much leeway for spending, chairman Wilbur D. Mills, D-Ark., refused yesterday to put the proposal to a showdown vote in the House Ways and Means Committee.
’The surprised postponement was ordered b«;ause Mills felt the administration had not yet made a case for urgent action the issue, and bocause he wanted time to try to negotiate a compromise ceiling that would Wd-erate GOP opposition.
w : *•	♦
After adjourning the comntlttee
meeting. Mills conferred at h s office with ’Treasury Secretary Douglas Dillon and Rep. John Byrnes, Wls., senior Republican the committee and chairman of the House Republican Policy Committee.
They reached no agreement.
★ ★ ★
Dillon was sidvjsed that the committee would take another look at the debt ceiling problem in mid-March when the secretary will have a better idea of the tax revenues available to finance spending this spring.
PROPOSAL SHOULD PASS There was no doubt that the administration had enough Democratic votes to pass its proposal through the committee, yesterday.
However, Mills obviously wss afraid President Kennedy conceivably might be defeated on the House floor unless the pro-
posal was revamped beforehand.	^
Last June administration forces managed by a vote 211 to 192 to win House approval of the present temporary $308-billl9n ceiling. Under that law, (he debt ceiling on April 1 will drop to *105 btilion.
★ *	♦
Dillon has insisted at a public hearing that the $308-biilion limit must be continued through the April-June period.
However, he	reported to
have conceded 'at a closed session of the committee yesterday that tile treuory could operate under the $3l5-billioa ceiling without difficulty until mid-ApriL
Byrnes argued that witii some belt-tightening in its spending, the administration probably could manage with a l^billion debt limit until mid-May.
;	. V.	. .. /
TH?: PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. MARCH 1. 1963 ^
Report Plaqe Down at Sea; NoSurvivors
PORTSMOUTH, Va. (AP)-The Coast Guard said today the passenger liner Queen Elizabeth radioed that a small singje-engine plane pllunged into the Atlantic 90
Trof Shooting Tipster Found
Factory Worker Claims to Be 'Investigator'
A Highland Park factory worker has admitted being the “private investigator” who provided
miles southeast of Cape Hatteras, the tip that led to the- Feb. 21 N.C., and sank immediately.
The ship said it saw no survivors.
The stern lookout aboard the liher said the red-nosed civilian plane pancaked into the ocean a quarter-mile off the stern of the Queen Elizabeth. The plane's canopy was intact when the craft sank.
Two vessels have been diverted to the scene and two Coast Guard C130 turboprop planes are searching the area. The ships are the Esso Washington, 10 miles away, and the Ault, a Navy ship, 60 miles distant.
Helicopter Keeps Boat From Dangerous Rocks
KEY WEST, -Fla. UP -Help came from the skies to a Key West fisherman who broke an oar while out in a rowboat and began to drift towards dangerous shoals.
The pilot of a Navy helicopter noticed the plight of Horace Crawford and maneuvered until
shooting of a Troy woman and her male companion by the woman’s businessman husband.
* ★ *
Oakland County Senior Assistant Prosecutor Robert Tern-plin said today that the ,man, who was not identified, admitted his' role in the case to Troy police.
Templin said he expects to take a formal statement from the man today.
Howard Mordue, 32, of 4016 Chestnut Hill Drive, ceived a telephone tip on the whereabouts of his wife Barbara, 33, and Nelson Hartman, 26, 105 Cutting Blvd., Troy/ about 20 minutes before the 2;20 a.m. stHwting.
Mordue is charged with assault with intent to murder in the critical wounding of the pair. He is free on $5,000 bond and has been a patient in a Detroit psychiatric hospital since the incident.
Americans Eye Mount Everest
MRS. ROY L. BAILEY Service for Mrs. Roy L. (Edith F.) Bailey, 91, of 18 Lexington Place will be at 1 p.m. tomorrow in the Voorhees-Siple Chapel with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery.
Mrs. Bailey died Wednesday after an illness 6f 10 flays.
MRS. JAMES K. THOMAS Mrs. James K. (Alice G.) Thom-s. 60, of 115 Draper St., died unexpectedly of a heart ailment this morning. Her body is at the Donelson - Johns Funeral Honve. MRS, RUSSELL BRECHBIEL IMLAY CITY-Service for Mrs. Russell (Bessie) Brechbiel, 58, of 125 W. Fifth St., wUl be 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Muir Brokers Funeral Home. Burial will follow in Willow Grove Cemetery, Armada.
Mrs. Russell died Wednesday after a lengthy illness.
She was a member of the Im-lay City Congregational Church; Chapter No. 252, Order of the Eastern Star; and Rebekah Lodge No. 161.
Surviving are her mother, Mrs. Lillian Averill, and a brother, Harlan Greenwald, both of Imlay City.
GEORGE K. LEE / ALMONT — Service for Grarge
K. Lee, 58, of ^7 Kidder Road will be 2 p.id. Sunday at the!
Muir Brother's Funeral Home.] WASHINGTON — An^ericans Burial wiil follow iii Ferguson are making their first attempt
'U. of M. Sees 11,000 Apply; Can
Chicago Official Slain in 'Professional Job'
his copter blades were kicking The shooting took place in the up strong enough waves to hold Parking lot of the Thurderbird the little boat off the rocks. The Lanes in Troy, helicopter hovered until a crash	*
boat arrived to tow Crawford to I Templin said the'investigator”; A J/nif Prf safety.	Itold police he was at the bowling
alley and phoned Mordue abotsk	YORK liP
Finnish Emoloves Strike	®	®/‘‘^versity of Michigan will be able,added to the mystery surrounding
nnnisn employes OtriKe Mordue had asked him a iew:^ a d m i t only 3,400 freshmen|the slaying of Alderman Benja-days ear hereto trail his wife, ac- f^om 11,000 applicants for the fall^in F. Lewis, Negro Democratic cording to Templin.	-semester. President HarlaniPoUt'cal leader.
Mordue owns the eight-story Hatcher of the university says.
Cemetery, Almont Township.
Mr. Lee died Thursday after a brief illness. He was a'building contractor.
Surviving are his wife Dorothy; two daughters, Mrs. Albert Spencer of Imlay City and Mrs. Charles Buehner of Rochester; and a granddaughter.
WILUAM SCHMITT
WHITE lake township -Service for former resident William Schmitt of Holmes Beach, Fla., win be 10 a.m. Monday at Patrick’s Catholic Church, Union Lake. Burial will follow in Oakland Hills Cemetery.
Mr. Schmitt died "rtiesday after a lengthy illness. The Rosary will be recited at 8 p.m. Sunday at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home, Pontiac, where his body will be after 3 p.m. tomorrow.
He was a member of Temstedt Post No. 166, American Legion.
Surviving are his wife Delphine and a sister.
Strange Calls Precede Death
climb and explore the mysteries of Mount Everest, the world’s loftiest mountain.
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The great peak astride the Nepal-Tibet border on the roof of the world has turned back 13 of 15 major expeditions. Now, an American team of 20 scientist-mountaineers has c 0 m p 1 e t e d plans to use the mountain as field laboratory for massive scientific research during 1963.
The large-scale expedition is led by Norman G. Dyhrenfurth, of California, a veteran of the high Himalayas.
Chief sponsors are the National Geographic Society, the National Science Foundation, Office of Naval Research, United States Air Force, Office of Scientific Research, Explorers Cluh of New York, and University of Southern California at Los Angeles.
Unlike past mountaineering efforts, the American Mount Everest Expedition of 1963 will not disband when the project is completed.
It will become a permanent American Everest Foundation supporting future scientific studies in high-mountain areas throughout the world.
Although the expedition is primarily scientific, team members will attempt to climb not only Everest (29,$28 feet), but her sister peaks, Lhotse (27,923 feet), the world’s fourth highest, and
FPC Let'Millions
Charges Resigning Member
CHICAGO (AP) - Two strange Nuptse (25 726 f^t).
telephone calls, police say, have
HELSINKI, Finland (UPl) Atout 20,000 federal employes went on strike today, crippling or halting railway, telegraph,' telephone, postal and air communications.
Everest has been topped only twice; Lhotse and Nuptse, once each. No expedition has ever attempted all three.
Medical Arts Building in Highland Park.
Officers Train in Russia ^
money, a teen-age magazine sur-
Hatcher reported yesterday on university progress to 60 alunmi who now are leaders in the com-American girls get an early munications field in New York.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Howard Morgan, the one-man rebellion in the Federal Power Commission, has charged that the agency lost consumers hundreds of millions of dollars through' its handling of rate cases.
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He thus closed his case against the FPC and left Conunission Chairman Joseph Swidler mount a defense today before the House Ckimmerce subiximmittee.
Thursday’s session, in which Morgan delivered a puint-by-point indictment of the commission-in effect, against all the regulating agencies—set off some tempers. At one time, four committee members were shouting across the table.
Morgan’s appearance was his second before the congressmen, who summoned him to explain a letter he had written to President Kennedy declining to serve a second term on the commission.
Morgan read a long statement ! giving the reasons he felt impelled to leave the commission to which Kennedy appointed him two years ago.
HIS CHARGES .
Some of his main points;
—In clearing up a gigantic backlog of gas rate refund cases, the commission settled them without complete adjudication. This, he said, led to refunds of about $150 mijlion less than the consumers would have received.
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Said Morgan: “The question is whether $150 million in hard-
—Electric and gas utilities, he sajd, are'syphoning off hundreds of millions of dollars by paying taxes on a liberalized depreciation on the full tax, without the liberalizing formula.
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“In other words,” said Morgan, their rates are based on phantom taxes which may never be
-The FPC has Mt up a techni-
cal advistM-y committee reprint strj?TOicl
it-
ing the natural gas industry w Morgan said raise questions of conflict of interest and pose a threat to the commission’s integrity.
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Before Morgan read his statement, Rep. John B. Bennett, R-Mich., had called Morgan’s letter the President gobbledygook and hot air.
March or Not, Frigid Weather Goes Right On
By United Press International March limped in like a frostbitten Lion today, dumping fresh snow across the center of the nation and drenching the southern plains with rain.
With spring only three weeks away, the mercury at Lone Rock, Wis., dipped to 8 degrees below zero and Belleville, III., reported more than 2 inches of new snow.
Heavy snow warnings were issued for much of the area from southern Missouri to sou^ern Ohio, with more than 4 inches of snow expected.
The Weather Bureau said the new storm would move eastward during the day.
France has received $9.4 billion in foreign aid from the United States, more than any other earned consumer cash is a proper! nation. Sen. Wayne Morse, D-price to pay for helping cleacup Ore., recently informed the Sen-the commission’s backlog.” late.
1773 Bell Is Given for New High School
PLYMOUTH, Mass. UP - A bell cast in 1773 may be used to summon children in the $2.5 million Plymouth-Carver Regional High School — which is still in the planning stage.
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The bell, 15 incites high and 23 inches across the base, cast for a pre-Revolutionary War school, was later used in a fire house.
The Pilgrim Society has pre-sen"ted it to the regional school committee, which has mot yet decided whether to use it. The school is scheduled to open in September 1963.
State Road Toil Mounts
EAST LANSING UP - Traffic accidents have killed 181 persons in Michigap so far this year, provisional figures compiled by state police showed today. The toll at this date last year was 164.
ALGIERS, Algeria (UPI)— The I vey shows. Before their 11th Algerian army last night sent 481 birthday 57.5 ppr cent have
young officers to Moscow for ad-1 earned at least some of their j The luncheon meeting was held vanced militery training.	spending money.	!at the Overseas Press Gub here.
The audience included magazine editors, newspapermen and radio and television personalities.
GETTING SEA LEGS ON LAND - A British naval helicopter descends for a landing on a rocking platform at the Royal Aircraft Establishment at Bedford, England. The '
platform, which can be tilted several in any direction, was built to simulate the pitching and rolling action of a ship at :
Lewis. 53, was found face down on the floor of his office Thursday with three bullet wounds in the head and his hands handcuffed. Four expended 32-caliber cartridges were nearby.	1
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Police said one of the telephone calls suggested Lewis had an un-i wanted caller the night he was slain. They said the other indicated an emotionally unstable gunman may have been involved.
Lewis, one of six Negroes on the City Council of 50 aldermen, was slain less than 36 hours after his re-election in the 24th Ward| by ^ 12-1 margin to a second four-year term on the council.	^
LACK LEADS
Investigators said they were without a substantial theory in the killing. John i^scher, an assistant deputy police superintendent, termed the slaying a professional job.
One of the telephone calls stirred quick action when it came to the main police switchboard about an hour after a janitor discovered the alderman’s body. ,
I’ve got Lewis,” the caller, a man, was quoteda s saying, “and now I’m going to get Biggs.”
Protectid'n was set up at the“ home of. Robert Biggs, 58, a Negro who was the unsuccessful Democratic candidate for alder-Tuesday’s balloting in the 29th Ward.	>
The second telephone call was described by James Gilbert, a police Sergeant who said he called Wednesday night to discuss a personal matter.
Gilbert said Lewis sounded distracted by something and cut him off abruptly with. “I’m .sorry. I have to hang up now.” This is the! last known report of a conversa-, ;tion with Lewis.

At 'New Kind' of Meeting
OK School Program Additions
School board members from all parts of Oakland County attended a new kind of meeting last night — and approved program expansions in the record 1963-64 general fund budget of the County Board of Education.
One member from each of 25 county school boards met under the provisions of a new state law requiring the budget to be submitt^ to a committee composed of a member of each local school board.
Five of the county’s 30 school districts were not represented.
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The school board members voted 23-2 td approve the $370,832 budget prepared by County Schools Supt. William J. Emerson and tentatively approved by the county board two weeks ago. ’ Approval came after the defeat of a motion to trim $36,000 from the budget.
Under the new state law, the school board members are empowered to set a maximnm on
the budget to be presented by the County Board of Education to the County Tax Allocation Board.
The $36,000 represented half of the proposed increases in program.
Among the proposed program expansions are $^,000 for a research program, including a director’s salary, and some $33,000 for new personnel in the reading clinic and testing and guidance I#ogram./
Thh budget totals $500,785 and provides a cash balance of $129, »3 at the end of the fiscal year.
It goes bOfore the County Allocation Board in May.
CHANGE IN YEAR A cash balance is needed because the county board changes this year to a July 1, June 3 fiscal year. Cash is needed for irations from July I, 1964, until tax collections the following January, Emerson said.
The fiscal year change also results from the new state law.
I which made the County Board of Education a separate unit as an intermediate school district. In the past, the board’s budget was part of the county’s.
The budget calls for a tax allocation of about .14 or .15 mill ($.14 or .15 per $1,000 assessed valuation). It is $127,-000 higher than this year's budget.
Some $32,000 of the ir^crease will go to pay for services the board previously received without charge from the county. Another $14,000 will pay for normal salary Increases.
Royal Oak School Board member E. Burrows Slnith and Rochester School Board member James Ludwick questioned the wisdom of expanding programs at p time when the required changeover necessitated previsions for a cash balance at the end of the year..
Smith and Birmingham School Board member Bennet W. Root ,lexpressed fears that** increasing
the county board’s millage allocation from the .1 mill it received this year would cut into the millage allocation for local school districts.
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Emerson said this would not necesurily happen.
School board members agreed that the new kind of meeting to consider the budget was a good idea.'
“It gives the local districts a voice in the cpjpity’s program, a voice it should'have,” said Monroe M. Osmun of the Pontiac School Board.
Earliej^in the day, the County Board of Education approved for submission to the tax allocation board a special education fund budget of $1,643,887.
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This budget, not required to be submitted to local school board members, provides for 28 new special education rooms for handicapped children in county schools.
YOU GET PLUS VALUES-hard-to-measure “extras”-from newspaper advertising. For example-ACCEPTABILITY. For instance, a very recent survey, made by Audits and Surveys for the newspaper industry, revealed that 75% of the men and 84% of the women who read a daily newspaper say, “I like t6 look at ads even when I do not plan to buy anything.” A plus value like this is hard to measure, but it adds up to a big difference. That’s why advertisers last year spent more money in newspapers than in radio, television, magazines, and outdoor combined!*	^	*sowc$: pruuen’m
EVERY DAY...ALMOST AUYOUR CUSTOMERS READ A DAILY NEWSPAPER
In the Pontiac Area, They Read THE PONTLAC PRESS