Ford, Griffin Hit Safety Sensationalism' GERALD R. FORD It would be a serious mistake to make auto designers out of federal bureaucrats, Michigan's newest U. S. Senator, Robert P. Griffin, declar^ today,. Griffin and House Republican Leader Gerald R. Ford claimed the sensationalism of the Senate hearings on auto safety tend to distort the (noblem. “It is essential that the reie of auto design and mannfac-ture in traffic safety he kept in perspective,” said Griffin. The new senator said the consequences could severely jolt the .entire economy. _____ He urged Congress to "go slow in this area . . . and allow the industry time to do a better job of regulating itself.” SAME THEME Ford, the House/m i n o r i t y leader, sounded essentially the same l(ey as his GOP colleague. a development of this kind. But I do believe there is a temptation under the circumstances to tty to pin most Automobile accidents on the manufacturer, saying he simply isn’t engineering e^gh safety into his product. steps to eliminate in 1.S million . of its cars.” “There is danger in the sen-dded Ford. Both Michigan legislators saw a usefulness in the auto safety hearings. Said. Ford; “I am not trying to minimize the seriousness d MANY FACTORS “Of course, we want safety built into our cars, but we must not lose sight of the fact that auto accidents are caused by a variety of factors — and it is highly unusual to find the kind of potential hazard in new automobiles which GM is now tllkJng Commenting on a potential hazard repoled in reference to potsftle accelerator stick-lag on certain INS Chevroleto and 1M4 and INS Chevelles, Ford said: “Testimony making GM out to be a vill^ is obscuring the fact that GM knows of only five incidents resulting from this potential hazard. “Also drowned out by the shouting is the fact that no injuries occurred in any of the five incidents." _____ Ford added that he thought the House, slated to begin auto safety hearings later this month, would pass highway safety and tire safety bills in some form this year. The GOP House chief pointed out that the drop in car sales may be an indicator of potential trouble with the economy and the sensational nature of the hearings certainly had not helped car “The auto industry is the bell-(Contlnued on Pago 2, Col.4) ROBERT P. GRIFFIN Th» Weather Showers Pouible Tonight VOL. 124 NO. SGuilfy; Tortured, Killed Girl I a black dress, burst into tears when Judge Rabb read the verdict at the end of the 23-day trial. When her son’s conviction was announced, she cried, “Please, I want to see my son.” Weather to Stay in Same Pattern The weatherman predicts partly cloudy skies through tomorrow with little temperature change and a chance of some brief showers this evening. Lows will dip to 40 to 48 tonight. Highs will aim for 66 to 74 tomorrow. Mestly sunny and pleasant is the forecast for Saturday. . A low of 52 greeted Pontiac residents at 6 a m. today. The mercury recording at 2 p.m. was 76. ' In Today's Press Open House Local 653 planning event at new home — PAGE i C-U. Peace Talks_ Quiet diplomacy results I in Malaysia - Indonesia meeting — PAGE B-12. | Dominican Vote Confining armed forces placates Bosch’s party — PAGE A-t. Area News .........B-14 Astrsiogy...........D-7 TOgp-— Crossword Puzzle . .D-17 Comics ^... D-7 Editorials ......... A4 Food Section . . C4-C4 Markets ............D-8 Obituaries . .. . ;. C4 Spqrts ..........D-1-D4 Hieaters ............C4 TV, Radio Programs D-17 WDson, Earl......D-17 j Pages B-1-B4 THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition ★ ★ ★ PONTLAC, MICHIGAN. THURSDAY, MAY 19, 1966 -m PAGES Rebel HQ Surrounded by Ky Troops INDUNAPOLIS, Ind. (AP)-An Indianapolis mother of seven was convicted of first-degree murder today and four teen-. agers, two of them her children, were found guilty of lesser charges in the torture slaying of Sylvia Marie Likens. The jury recommended life in prison for G e r t r u d e Wright Baniszewski, 37. It convicted her daughter, Paula, 18, of second-degree murder. Mrs. Baniszewski’s son, John, 13, and two neighbor boys, RichaM D. Hobbs, and Coy Hubbard, both IS, were convicted of maaslaughter. The panel of eight men and four women deliberated eight Foes Attack College Plan for Osteopaths Second-degree murder is pun-ishablt by Ufe imprisonment. Manslaughter carries a 2-21-year sentence. Criminal Court Judge Saul I. Rabb set sentencing for Tuesday. All five defendants were charged with first-degree murder. The state asked the death penalty for all, charging they subjected Miss Likens, 16, to nearly two weeks of torture be-lore her death last Oct. 26. Testimony indicated the girl’s body bore 150 wounds and that she had been burned, beaten, scalded, branded and starved. Sylvia was boarded in the Baniszewski home while her parents managed a food concession at carnivals. Mrs, baniszewski, dressed in Expansion of existing medical schools rather than establishment of a Michigan College of Osteopathic Medicine was last night labeled the cheapest and best way to meet the need for more doctors. This is what opponents, mostly medical doctor representatives and the heads of existing medical schools, told state legislators last night at a hearing in Lan-,^ sing before the House Ways and Means Committee. 1 The projected ozteopathic jpol-lege is planned for a 164-acre site at Auburn and Opdyke. College advocates contended it is disc^nation for the state to support the training of medical doctors but not of osteopaths. Districting Bill hr Counties Clears House OsteopaUis, they said, serve one-third of the state’s population and make a unique contribution to health care. WITNESSES TALK A dozen witnesses appeared before the committee in a four-hour hearing on a Senate-passed . proposal to create a State Osteopathic College Authority. ’The bill, already approved by the House Senate Affairs Committee, would commit the state to help pay operating costs of the proposed osteopathic college at Pontiac, said Rep. Einar Erlandsen, D-Es-c a n a b a, ways and' means A compromise bill that would reduce the number of members on the OAland County Board Supervisors from 86 to between 25 and is was passed in the State House of Representatives yesterday. The bill calls for the one man-one vote districting to start with thftJm etecUqn, ’The Senate has yet to act on the proposal, worked out by a Honse^nate conference Buddhists Shun Cong Efforts to Monks Ask World Leaders to Seek End to Viet Civil Strife SAIGON, South Viet Nam ■— F^emier Nguyen Cao Ky’s troops surrounded rebel headquarters in Da Nang today after moi^e than four hours of heavy shooting around the Buddhiat stronghold. The government appeared trying to choke off the dissidents rather than wipe them but in a direct attack. In an attempt to exploit the >fl, the Viet Cuaft ua- POWWOW — KindergartMj pupils (from left) Edward Perez of 1039 LaSalle, Marie Walsh of 345 Scott Lake and Thomas Ott of 1124 Holbrook, ail of Waterford Township, are performers in Donel- son Elementary School’s PTA program in observance of Michigan Week. The kindergarten pupils of Mrs. Gail Au^er and Mrs. Barbara Ruelle presented “An Inqian Powwow” today. hind the rebels and urged aU South Vietaamese troops to “rise up” against the govera- At Waterford Schools The bill would create an authority to govern the new medical school, but an appropriation provision was deleted when the measure passed the Senate. Deans of the medical colleges at the University of Michigan, Wayne State University and Michigan State Univerrity argued medical education must be centered at universities, which (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Backers of one man-one vote county apportionment iwd hoped for redistricting this year. But House Republicans blocked immediate effect for apportionment measures. ’The House adopted the conference committee version 72-24 with no debate. House Minority Leader Rep. Robert Waldron, R-Grosse Pointe, tried, however, to have the vote delayed until after the House decided on a county home rule proposal. Some Republicans have contended the apportionment measure violates a constitutional provision that every , township must have a representative on the board of supervisors. Sfvdenfs Extra Busy M-Week Buddhist leaders in Saigon and the northern provinces sent pleas for intervention to end the civil strife to world leaders, but significantly the monks avoided any association with the Viet Cong overtures. Although today is “Education Day,” students in the Waterford Township School District aren’t limiting their Michigan Week events to a single day. houses, a siemblie a, field events and other activities. They’ve been placing empha-ais on the township in various programs and exhibits all week. Township history, places of interest and unique products are in the spotlight. Scheduled this week,are breakfasts and luncheons featuring Michigan products, mnsi^ salutes to the state, displays hy pnpils, open ’Typical of the events scheduled in the elementary schools are p ro g r ams at Donelson, Waterford Village, (^oolejr and Burt Schools. ’The 8 c h 0 01 band, orchestra and chorus performed and 18 fifth graders demonstrated physical fitness. SCHOOL THEME Highlight of secondary school activities was Monday night’s Michigan Week honors banquet at Mason Junior High School in which 94 outstanding senior students were honored. \^eme of Donelson School’s actiyities is “Festivals qf Mich-Pupils of all grades have red festival displays for an exhibi in the school’s gym-nasiui At Waterford Village School, the theme is “Oeativity of Michigan People —Both Pioneer and Contemporary.” Displays are on exhibit in the school lobby throughout the week. The school chorus presented a program at 1:15 p. m. yesterday. Today, fourth graders competed in a track and field demonstration at 1 p.m., following a luncheon for parents. Barbara |dergarten pupils of Mrs. lelle presented a . _ ■‘ ■ “An Indian Pow Wow” y the school’s PTA meeting I Other festivals yso were presented at the pronam which included singing and dancing. At Burt School, the 175 members of the chorus are participating in a Michigan Week “Salute to Our State in Music and Pictures.” The Buddhists also canceled all rallies today to avoid the impression that they might be in honor of North Vietnamese President Ho phi Minh’s 76th birthday today. ONE MAJOR ACTION In^e war against the Ck)m-munists, only one major ground action was reported and monsoon rains held U.S. Air Force and Navy planes to 23 missions against North Viet Nam. The U.S. comnumd announced the loss, apparently to ground fire, of an Air Force C123 cargo plane on a mission M miles northwest of Qui Nhon. Bodies of two crewmen were found in the wreckage, and the other three were listed as missing. At Ckraiey School, fourth and fifth graders prepared meals featuring Michigan products for breakfast and lunch Tuesday. Both loyalist and antigovem-ment forces took casualties as the eruption of fighing in Da Nang, South Viet Nam’s second largest city, created the danger of a war within a war. Plant Closing Cuite Urged LONG BEACH, Calif. (APl-Hie president of the United Steelworkers of America says his union should join forces with the United Auto Workers to haltV'unilateral action,” by industry in closing obsolete plants and thrbwing veteran workers out of their ^ I. W. Abel told the UAW’s Ntt constitutional convention yes-terday the two giant unions shoulo“join forces and work together ^HOUR OUTBURSTS The shooting came in two--hour-outbursts during the morning and in the afternoon as Ky’s forces closed in on three Buddhist pagodas where an estimated 1,000 troops and Buddhists had collected in a three-block-square pocket of resistance. INSPECT ’TRUCX - U. Frank Randolph (kneeling) and (3iief William Stokes of the Water- their vehicles inspected /rom 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Salford Township Police Department inspect one of urday at the Pontiac Mall. Vehicle safety check thb township fire trucks as Fire CUM Lewis Goff lanes will also be (merying in Pontiac tomorrow (center) looks on. ’Township residents can have and Saturday. / . ... to see what we can do jointly, rather than working separately on problems we can solve together.” \ “The mere decishm of a cofflpuw to go out of business is insufficient,” Abel said at a news cyierenoe afterward. Both labor contracts and federal legislation should provide for phasing out of plants and equipment, h^said. 'A' union official said it seemed likely negotiations might be reopened for skilled tradesmen in the auto industry to obtain higher wages before new contract talks in 1967. “No more potatoes. Mom. Too much starch will make me stiff.” Pi- A—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 19, 1966 Kidnaped Girl Reported OK Who Firod Fatal Shot Still Not Cleared Up SHADE GAP. Pa. (UPI) For Peggy Ann Bradnick, pert brunette of 17, the ordeal ]s over. Her doctor said today she is In excellent condition despite seven days of captivity in cb^ns St the hands of a crazed gunman. WUliam Hollenbaugh lay dead. And this mounUin hamlet which had known him ars a timW town chnacteri — “Bicycle Pete” he was called —rested assured that the bullet which killed him also ended the greatest terror it had known since the Indians pillaged the westward moving wagons two centuries ago. The kidnaping of Peggy Ann, the killing of an FBI agent and the wounding of a deputy sheriff during his flight were the last violent episodes in the murky life of Hollenbaugh. who for the An Avon Township hospital, whose faulty septic system has resulted in a flow of sewage to nearby areas, has agreed to correct the problem, an Oakland County Health Department employe said yesterday. Related Sfory> Page B-7 last two years, had stalked the Tuscarora hills as a sniper, wounding two persons and potshooting at scores of pedesW-ans and motorists. Hollenbaugh, 44, was hunted down by a posse of almost 700 and shot dead yesterday on a mountain farm. Ptggy Ann, disheveled and bruised, was freed. NOT RAPED It remained unknown today who killed Hollenbaugh and why he seized Peggy Ann and dragged her through the rugged, lushly forested mountains for a week. She was not raped. Larry Rubeck, 15, a farm youth, said he killed Hollen-; baugh. He shot a pumpUh ball from a shotgun tfarmigh a window at his home^ the approaching man, also was under fire frtfnj Stote police converging on " farm. Avon Hospital Bows on Sewage Problet^ Cited as the source of the sewage flow was the Haven Hospital and Psychiatric Clinic, 1850 University. The problem was reported about a week ago, acctwdlng of the health.department. “We took samples of the flow and established in laboratory testing that it was sewage,” Goldman said. added that the hoi^ital owner, Graham Shinnick, has agreed to take immediate steps to install a new septic system. “It’s a serious problem," Goldman said. “But many other areas of the county are faced with similar problems." Goldman reitei^ted what other health department personnel and County Department of PubUc Works officials have been saying — that sanitary sewers are the only solution to the sewage disposal problem. Home ownerdlh the Lochmoor Estates Subdivision near the hospital have tlucatened legal Cavanagh/ Griffin Due action against the hospital because of the sewage fldw. It allegedly is draining Into Lochmoor Lake. Foes Attack College Plan 2 Fail to File-Expense Costs Statement Deadline in City Vote Passes (Continued From Page One) already are equipped to teach biological and social sciences. “The State of Michigan cannot afford to support a college of medicine outside of the framework of a university,” said Dr. Ernest Gardner, dean at Wayne. The witnesses included three from California, where medical doctors and osteopaths recently amalgamated. Two candidates—one of whom was elected—had not filed campaign expense statements for the April 18 city election by yesterday’s deadline, according !to city and county officials. George Grba, unsuccessful I District 4 City Commission hopeful, and Municipal Court Judge Maurice E. Finnegan, reelected to a six-year term, are the two who have not filed the required expense statements. According to the City Charter, those elected in the general election must file expense statements within 38 days of the election. Mrs. Julia Maddock, chief deputy clerk in the county clerjt’s office, said all candi- ' ! dates whether or not elected Dr. Warren Bostick, dean ofirhust file the University of California Mpdr ical School at Los Angeles^ told the committee, “I’m no( Certain merger is inevitable nationwide, why not take ^e right step at this moment.' e expense statements. Okinawa Air Crenh Kills 10 Americans NAMA, (Mcinawa (ffl -A U.S. Air Force KC 135 jet tanker crashed while taking off from Kadena Air Base at noon today,, and unofficial sources reported 10 Americans and one (ftinawan were kilfed. The Okinawan was driving a car which was hit by the exploding plane. Buy Now For Those Wedding end Qroduation notures! Dr. C. Johh Tupper, formerly associate/dean at the University of/hflchlgan and now with the llhlversity of California, said "a/inew osteopathic school will perpetuate the needless, even senseless duplication of facilities that now exist and are growing. MEDICAL LEADER Dr. e. Allen Payne of Grand Rapids, president-elect of the 10,000-member Michigan State Medical Society, said passing A rA/w Ci/Arif osteopathic college bill will or AKlGO L V6ni |“surely require you to face up i ... to whether or not the taxpay-money will be spent to maintain Political opponents J e r o m e ers’ money will be spent to Cav^iaUgh, mayor of Detroit, maintain and operate a college and newly appointed United which, not being affiliated with Btates Sen. Robert Griffin are the rich academic resources of among candidates slated to at- * “aj" university, cannot ex-ho.... P«‘^t to mcasurc up to the cali- ^ an open-house reception. . . Miohlaan Saturday by "“‘“•I partisi League. n Oakland Citizens the Rubeck , reception, being held at a a a a .. the Communlty House in Bir-The rai and state troopers | njjngham from 2 to 5 p.m., rep- said their investigation showed youn^ Rubeck’s pumpkin ball - a steel projectile used fot deer pnting — killed Hollenbaugh. But the Fulton County coroner. Dr. RusseU C. McLucta, said an autopsy revealed Hol-lenbau^ died from a single rifle bullet which pierced the tip of his left shoulder and emerged from his neck above the collar bone. The trajectory of the shot showed it could not have been fired by- Rubeqk, Dr. McLucas said, because the boy was firing from a window above Hollenbaugh. McLucas said only a ballistics test could determine who fired the fatal shot. This was impossible because the bullet passed through the sniper’s body and was not found. resents an effort on the part of the league to better acquaint the public with political issues and candidates. No speeches are included in theprogramas candidates win disenss Oefr viewpoints with interested citizens in answer to specific questions. Gov. Romney and Senatorial candidate G. Mennen Williams have also been invited but have not accepted as yet. Others who will attend are Senators Sander Levin, D-Berk-ley, and Robert Huber, R-Troy; Congressman Billie S. Farnum, D-19th District; State Rep. William Hampton; State Sen. Farrell E. Roberts and Royal Oak attwney Maurice Merritt, candidates for circuit judge; and candidate for the 19th District congressional post. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Partly cloudy through Friday, chance of some brief showers mainly this evening, little temperature change. Highs today 44 to 72, lows tonight 40 to 48. Highs Friday 44 to 74. Light westerly winds 8 to 14 miles today. Saturday’s outlook;. Mostly sunny and pleasant. LowMt ttmptritur* precMlIng I ••ti At I ■.m.: Wind Vilocity I Direction, Wedtrly. Sun wts Thuriday at 7,:51 p 1 rlaei Friday at f Downtawn Tamparatiwai • Year Age in Pontiac Highest temperature ............... 74 W^cr, < > Kansas City 76 . Marquette 5t Muskegon 43 — ................ . - - Pension 43 34 N. Orleana 14 72 Traverse C. 45 41 New Yo' " " Albuquerque M 57 Phoenix Atlanla 73 40 PIttsburi Bismarck 42 43 St. Louis 74 50 Chicago I 73 2 S. Lake City 72 30 D S. Francisco 45 54 1 S. $. Marla 54 3* I Seattle 49 49 I Washington “ '* Floyd Brooker, executive officer of the Michigan Osteopathic College, told the committee osteopaths never have opposed the expansion of the three state medical schools. “But we say there is a need for an additional school," he said. “We would establish a college for the sole purpose of She said those who have not filed would be notified to do so. If there is no reply, the clerk’s office will notify the county .prosecutor, she added. 14 STATEMENTS Of the 14 candidates that have filed statements or had a committee file in their behalf, only one candidate — Cecil B. Mc-Callum—reported no election expenses. McCallnm, reelected to a similar six-year term, is Finnegan’s colleague on the municipal court bench. The largest expenditure, |4|-690, was reported by the Citizens Committee for a Better Pontiac, which supported the reelecteid incumbents. Two candidates spent 8900 or more in bids for election to the seven-member City Sion. $900 IN EXPENSES District 3 hopeful. William J. Winters of 293 Ottawa reported expenses of $900, while Mrs. Charles W. Neldrett of 62 Mari-va, a District 6 candidate, reported expenses totaling $946. Next in line on total expenditures was District 4 Commissioner Leslie H. Hudson, who reported expenses of 3591. According tp the city clerk’s office, a candidate’s expenses could not exceed 3L100, which would mean that no one'*'who has filed an expense statement RATED TOPS — The main office of the Birmingham-Bloomfield Bank on Maple near Adams in Birmingham was named the winder yesterday in the professional building division of the Beautify Birmingham competition for its over-all attractiveness. Designed by Detroit architect Louis Redstone, the bank was c^ned last September. The Ram sculpture at the entrance of the granite-faced structure is the work of the noted Birfhing-ham sculptor, Marshall Fredericks. Dr. Philip Adler, president of the Michigan Association of Osteopathic Physicians and Sur-!, said of the five existing osteopathic colleges in the nation, only the one in Philadelphia now receives state support. Michigan M.D.’s and osteopaths have beea polled by the House State Affairs Committee! on the merger question. M.D.’s! favored amalgamation and os- Day of Michigan Week is being observed here today with a variety of school assemblies, classroom activities and displays. Today also marks the opening of the annual Village Fair, featuring 15 amusement rides and concessions operating in Shain Park. has eicSed the an>»l| stipulated. Contract Let Birmingham Area News M-Wee/c School Events Today BIRMINGHAM — Education Honorable mention winners hi the retail category were Atlantic Drapery Shoppe, Barriccini Candy, the Bennaville-Woodward branch of the Birmingham-Bloomfield Bank, Continental Market, Detroit Bank and Trust and Englander Furniture Shops Inc. Others were Fay Fields Boutique, Furs by Robert, Huhter Dodge, Inc., Birmingham Federal Savings and Loan Association, Huston Hardware Co., Jacobson’s and Irving Kay's Draperies and Bedspreads. Students will participate in a variety of indlvidnal and gronp activities, inclnding planting of state trees, band concerts and other mnsical f n n c 110 n s and promotional projects. The annual PTA Council banquet will be held at 6:30 p.m. at Berkshire Junior High School, honoring retiring members of the school staff and administration. Gl Dead Again Top S. Viets SAIGON (AP) - Others were Lake’s Jewelers, Nadon’s girls’ wear. Peck’s Tailors and Men’s Wear, the Prep Shop, Sherman Shoes, Steward Fabrics, Inc., Suburban Oldsmo-bile Co., Vic Tanny Detroit, Inc., Village Rambler Sales Inc., Weir Manuel, Snydei* and Ranke Real Estate and Andrew Yevich, jeweler. Photo Framos c At SIMMS -From 39! SIMMSiE W N. S«cinaw-2nd Floor Featured speaker will be Thomas Brennan, president of the Michigan State Board of Education. WILL TAKE SPOTLIGHT The Newcomers Club and the Senior Men’s Club will take the spotlight at the Birmingham f 1% I I • U spotlight »t the Birmingham tor D/OOmi/©/CflMall during Hospitality Day ac-j tivities tomorrow. Hills School Coffee, cookies, cider and soft drinks will be distribated^ ! free by the NewdOtoers Club, An $11,000,000 school building and the men’s club will en- teopaths opposed it. Youth for Griffin Group Is Formed Two Oakland County college students have fbrmed a Youth for Griffin Club to suppor Robert Griffin, a Republican, in his bid for a four-year term in the U. S. Senate. They ade Robert Smart, 555 W. Walled Lake, Walled Lake, and Mike Renner of 1404.Eaton, Berkley, both students at the University of Michigan. The group will distribute campaign materials, and its first project will be to escort Griffin during his appearance at the Village Fair in Birmingham Saturday. Griffin, appointed recently to temporarily fill the vacancy created by the death of U. S. Sen. Patrick V. McNamara, is seeking election to the post in November. Auto Safety Exposure Hit (Continued From Page One) weather of the entire American economy. Millions of jobs depend on it,” concluded Ford. Griffin said the hearings could program authorized by Bloomfield Hills voters last month has been put into motimi by the board of education with the awarding of a contract for a 21-room elementary school. Construction for the George P. Way School, to be located on Long Lake just east of Telegraph, Is ekpected to begin next week, with completion scheduled before September 1967. Four contracts totaling $741,380 were approved by the board Tuesday, with flie largest being awarded to the J. C. Nellson Co. of Royal Oak for its low bid of $5M,-800 for general contracting. Options were taken on several school sites and an ardiitec-tural committee was appointed for reviewing plans, construction and final payments to coo-tractors. Serving on the committee are board members Henry Haber-' korn, Donald Hyde and Dr. Charles Bowers. The men were cautioned by board president Richard McGraw that the committee’s only function was to make recommendations and not take final\ action. SWIMMING POOL A swimimng pool for Bloomfield Hills High School is sched-■ uled to be the new committee’s first project. Cimipletion of the po(d by the close of the llf7 school year is anticigsted, makfaif It available for recreatiolul purposes the foHowing summer. Option for future school sites at Middle Belt and Fieldbrook and on Orange Lake were ac- NATKMAL WEATHER — Showers and thunderstorms are hreeust tonight for New England, the southeast quad-nmt if the country and extreme southan Plains. It will be co*r la qiper Mlssisi^ipi VaOey, western Lakes end Gulf ComL it will be warmer hi the central and northern Pla- out of every seven workers in the nation, he added. “Surely, we cannot afford to allow such a vital industry to become the center of a ptdttlcal hassl^” said Griffin. -----irepted,,. al..a...xfl8ljoLJ104,500. but government regulation is -phe purchase of a lotadOoffiiig not automatically the best an-- ----- - - -------------------- swer for every problehi.” Directly or indirectly, the auto industry provides join for one Pine Lakd School for $6,000 was also approved. Schoor architect Charles McMahon made a presentation on the use of “computerized time" scheduling of construction on the proposed new $1,406,060 high sdiool. Completion for the new scho^ is scheduled for Februaiy 1967. tertain with a musical ensemble. Special guests will be foreign exchange students attending Birmingham schools, who will be presented the keys to the city by Mayor Robert Page. combat deaths exceeded those of South Viet Nam’s ai forces last week for the third time this spring, a period of political unrest. The U.S. Command announced today 86 Americans were killed, 556 wounded and three missing In action May 8-14. A Vietnamese spokesman, after first reporting a total of 91 Vietnamese servicemen dead or missing, later broke down the figures: 72 dead and 19 missing. The Vietnamese do not list their wounded. Three battle deaths were reported among Australian, New Zealand and South Korean units. In all, Allied Forces lost 161 men killed and 22 missing while listing 998 Communists killed and 192 captmed. The Birmingham-Bloomfield Bank was presented one of four Beautify Birmingham Awards yesterday during an Our Livelihood Day luncheon at the Community House. Mrs. G. Howard Willett Jr., a vice president of the new bank a c c e p t e d the award, which was presented in the professional building category. LBJ Taps Texas Friend as Envoy to Pakistan I ‘Royal Family’ 11-Pc. Set I i $am whr^gwtiq»4 > tW~ 1% » ooWwJ I, I hondlw 1 cradlq, IO*eoMi«dtklilW 110-lRch Covand SUIIot . $8.^ ilto • whM COniln0wat« SUM ««h ( A comflowr pontfii In bliw. Som Saucepan 1395 1___________0 |Wnd Cover #P1. i Saucepan and cover #P1 Vh WASHINGTON iX) ^ President Johnson picked Eugene Murphy Locke, a Texas friend and former state Democratic chairman, today to be ambassador to Pakistan. Locke would succeed Walter . McConaughy in the embassy in Pakistan. McConaughy has been tapped to be ambassador to Natioiyilist China. ‘CORNINgWilRE’... the gift for any bride on your Rst THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MAY 10, im 1*IH£>SV0UR Exfra Charga SIMMS Is Still the Biggest Nut When It Conies to Slashing Prices THE PONTIAC TRESS. THURSDAY. MAY 19, 1966 House Asks Civil Service Commission to Fill Jobs Only With Top Scorers on Tests, LANSING (AP) - The House had plenty of advice for the ' Civil Service Commission at its meeting today, including a controversial proposal that state job openings be filled only by the top scorer on a civil service top three scorers on an examination, but some legislators argued this permits discrimination by race and against handicapped persons. three" for a “rule of one" was one of three resolutioos passed by the House Wednesday for forwarding to the commission meeting today. time-and-a-half overtime pay for state employes. CAN ONLY URGE The Legislature can only urge, State divisions now are allowed to choose from among the The iheasure "urgently requesting” the Civil Service Commission to scrap its “rule of The others requested “equal opportunity for women in appointments and promotions” and encouraged adoption of since the Omstitution makes tie Civil Service Conunlssion idependent of legislative con- troit, chief sponsor of the “rule of one" resolution, argued the change is ^heeded to give civil service a true mer(t system. His resolution passed K-31 after a -half-hour’s debate. inde] trol. Rep. James Del Rio, D-De- Opponents argued examination grades are not everything, and factors such as personality and attitude can be Important in {>egs employe selection. The top sewer is passed over in slightly less foan one-half of the appointments, Franklin De-Wald, state personnel director, told a newsman. in round holes and Increases dismissals and grievances,” he said. “We feel that the (rule of one) is cumbersome, puts square India’s foreign trade has more than doubled since it achieved Independence in 1947. rising from $1,730 million to over $3,900 million. SHOP TONiTE TIL 9 P.M. FRI. & SAT. 9:30 TIL 9 GIGANTIC STORE-WIDE SALe ENDS SATURDAY... USE YOURCHARGA-PLATE Pinehurst 24" Rotary Sew and Save FABRIC RIDING MOWER SAVE $50 $179 NO MONEY DOWN FiooHng wide track suspension, and automotive type differential moke this mower one of the best on liie market. E-Z wind up "Microhile* cutting adjustment Rugged 4-HP, 4- proposed by Gov. Romney would have cut the current surplus in half. The remainder would presumably have seen the State through another fiscal year without going into the red. ★ ★ ★ But spending proposals originating in both houses would add another $88 million — sending the budget above the $1 billion level for the first time and entirely depleting the treasury surplus. Statehbuse observers think, how/ ever, that this excess will be halved before the budget is adopted. Rut it will still represent unsound ;^cal policy that will imquestiona^y put the State in financial hot \^iter unless a tax reform progra^ is soon adopted. That, of course, is out of the question before the November election. ★ ★ ★ Another measure that is hanging In the balance is a pay raise for ,legislators. It zipped through the Senate, with strong Democratic support but faces tough going in the House. The bill’s f a t e is still a question mark. .:__________★_____★.....★............. The principle of Inobased Property Tax Relief for Veterans is supported by both parlies, but has been batted/bai^ and forth between the (pernor’s office and the legi^Mtnre like a badminton shuttlecock. Romney would base the relief on the realistic basis of heed, whereas the Democrats ^11 for a flat across-the-board increase. Fate of the legislatiop is still uncertain, but there’s ^ good chance it will pass in the form close to the Romney concept. Aqbther requisition on State fu^s will result from a package of ^use-passed bills, for which Senate Passage is expected, that conupits the State to medical assistance for the aged and indigent. ’This will cost Michigan taxpayers $35 millibn annually. A regrettable fatality of the 1966 legislature is meaningful traffic safet^measures. Killed were bills to get drinking drivers off the roads, tighten up the point system on violations and provide periodic motor vehicle safety inspection. If you have any strong convictions on any of these impor-_____ tant issues, now, as the saying goes, is the time to speak up to your elected representatives “or 1 forever hold your peace.” ' Drivers’ Test Negative in Oregon Check The Oregon Department of Motor Vehicles has released statistics showing that 63 per cent of. 70 motorists who failed to produce licenses when stopped at roadblocks had no legal right to drive. Nearly 29 per cent of the drivers had no driver’s license; 17 per cent were driving while suspended; 10 per cent had no Oregon driver’s license, but had records on file as Merchandising Loopholes - 19th Century Style In view of all the current pro and con about legislation against mis-merchandising, including such gimmicks as ^*c^»ts-off” sales, this sign posted by a St. Louis wholesale house seems particularly pertinent: “One price for goods will be strictly adhered to. And to those in the habit of cheapening when purchasing, the following is Fidhrighfs Fulmimtiom Foggy By JAMES MARLOW Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON — Sen. J. W. Fulbright, D-Ark., has had something critical to say about American fweign policy ever since he first spoke in the Senate with his maiden speech there in 1945. And Us attenqit Tuesday to explain his criticism of President Johnson’s foreign policy is not the first time he tried to explain what he said after being criticized for say- ing it.. „.............. In that speech 21 years MARLOW ago, just a few months-after election to the S^te, he complained that for more than two decades American foreign policy had been “improvised from day to day.’’ Aa chairman of die Foreign Relathma Ceounittee now, his words get more at-tenOon. Bat thnwgii the years ho managed to get attendoB, and never more ao than with his suggestion about President Harry S. Tmman in 19M. As soon as the Republicans gained control of Congress in the elections that year, Fulbr^t I ■ • - ■ ■ ‘ ' " '^Miid appoint a Republi- can to succeed hint and then resign. ★ ★ ★ Fulbright got such a bad reaction that within four days be issued a five-page explanation, laying he had been Fnlhright was critical of President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s foreign policy, much less critical of President John F. Kennedy’s, and then really went to Johnson still hasn’t gone after Fulbright directly, but last week Ina speech at Princeton he jabbed at the senaUn- indirectly, saying in this century American use of power has meant not “arrogance but agony for all Americans.’’ ★ * ★ ★ The President took another dig the next night at a Democratic dinner with Ful-bright sitting nearby. Jnhnson said he was delighted b be there with so many friends and “some members of the Foreign Relations Committee.’’ EXPLAINED AGAIN Then once again Tuesday at the National Press Gub, Fulbright undertook to explain some of the tUngs he had said, “Because they lent themselves to taterpretations I did not intend.’’ He raggested the press had not ac-caratdy conveyed his ideas. But as chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, Fulbright has an enormous- re- But the explanation was only n repetl-ttoo af the originri statement to take the trouble to express himself so clearly that there is little chance for misunderstanding. ★ ★ ★ Such is not the case. Historians Speed Vaennm MONTHLY #270 GENERAL ELECTRIC Three Days Only SPECIAL PRICES SPECIAL TERMS SPECIAL MODELS FRIGIDAIRE “Flair” e Looks ]^uilt-In, but II Installs in Minutes e Clide-Up Oven Door Opens Up, Out of . i ja the Way e Cook Master Control Starts and Stops the Oven While You’re Away, only $340 w!Pekly 90 Days For U LOOK! 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THURSDAY, MAY 19, 1966 LORD BUDDHA RIDES OFF - An ancient Buddhist relief uncovered in excavations at Nagarjunakonda in southern India shows the Lord Buddha, astride a horse and surrounded by worshipful retainers, riding off to renounce the world and ail worldly things. Now(a Hindu Land India Saves Buddhist Heritage NEW DELHI If) - IndU, the spiritual homeland of Buddhism, is taking steps to preswve its Buddhist heritage even though it now is a predominantly Hindu land. An archaeological museum has been opened in Nagarjunakonda in the southern state of Andhra Pradesh to save and display Buddhist art and ediflces dating from ancient times. Nagarjnnakonda first became archaeologlcally important in 1K7-31 when extensive excavations nncovered Bnd-dhist sites and many stnpas (stone piiiars), shrines, monasteries and sculptures. Work was continued in 1938^ and 1940 but not until 1953 was it' speedecTup. In that year, it bet»me apparent that a dam being built across the Krishna River would cover the Nagarjunakonda Valley and its priceless relics with deep water. WORKED FAST The Indian government in a recent announcement said that in 1954-60, archaeologists worked fast, uncovering much more than what had been known about Buddhist edifices and also the prehistoric archaeology of the valley. The relics that could be saved will be placed in the rauseom. Others will be Dominican Order Curbing Armed Forces Placates Bosch Party and pieces that have been found. Many, however,' will be reconstructed out of original material on one hill site. ★ ♦ ★ One original, titled “Stupa' Worship," is a detailed relief| depicting Buddhists in ancient times worshipping a stupa, or stone pillar which represents a god or goddess. LORD BUDDHA Another outstanding work shows the Lord Buddha, astride a horse and surrounded by worshipful retainers, riding off to renounce the world and all worldly things. Lord Buddha, a wealthy, selfindulging prince, gained enlighteament in India. He renounced all his worldly belongings and took to preaching; H i s followers subsequently spread his teachings throughout Asia and Buddhism became one of the world’s great religions. Ironically, Buddhism all but; died out in India. Of the nation’s 4M million people, about 445 million are Hindus. Nearly 50 mil-; lion are Moslems. Qiristianity,; Buddhism and other religions also are present. SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic (Af) — Ex-President Juan Bosch’s party Wednesday night withdrew its threat to boycott the Dominican presidential race after the government confined the anned forces to quarters until the June I election is over. The executive committee of Bosch’s Dominican Re^ohi-tionary party — PRD — said in statement that provisional President Hector Garcia-Go-doy’s orders had resolved the crisis. Bosch and the PRD had charged the armed forces and national police were persecuting party workers. I Garcia-Godey, in a radio-television address, said that to create the proper conditions fori a safe, free election he also was I creating a tripartisan commission to deal with future com-! plaints of political persecution. The commission is to include representatives of the three presidential candidates: Bosch, ex-President Joaquin Balagueri and ex-President Rafael Bonnel-I ly. I Garcia-Godoy said the government thoroughly had investigated all complaints of persecution and election violence. Where necessary, he said, all guilty parties have been punished but many complaints have turned out “to be inexact.” Speaking after the president. Armed Forces Minister Maj. Gen. Enrique Perez y Perez reemphasized the “political position” of the military. The order confining the troops to quarters Observers say PRO strength went out shortly after the presi- may have suffered because of dent spoke, he said, and “will Bosch’s failure to leave his be complied with rigidly.” ihome to campaign and Balagu-ier’s hard-driving campaign in Fear of assassination made Bosch a virtual prisoner in his suburban Santo Domingo home, and he campaigns by broadcasts of recorded speeches. Recent opinion polls show Bosch and Balaguer running neck and neck, with Boscfl slightly ahead but Balaguer gaining steadily in weeks. a group hold the minican officials by this of them, is expected balance of power. Do-and inter-American are privately pleased prospect because they feel the still explosive idtuation requires broad political representation in Congress. There are some fears of postelection violence if the losing parties do not accept the results quietly. Many civilians remain armed, but military and police chiefs are confident they can maintain order. Bosch had threatened to pull out of the elections by noon to-|day if the government did not crack down on the armed forces and national police. Bosch charged they were carrying out clandestine campaigns to help his chief rival, Balaguer, the Reformist party candidate. Bosch repeaMly has charged rural areas where about 70 per cent of the voters live. Radios are scarce in the interior. Bosch’s top lieutenants and his vice^presidential running mate, Antonio Guzman, have done most of the PRD campaigning there. Unoffich^ polls suggest no the political climate stemming | single party will be able to dom-from the April 1965 revolution is|inate the new Congress to be too heated to permit peaceful elected June 1. - | elections. i One of the smaller pafttesr^er' Now You Can RENT A FAMOUS GIBSON ELECTRIC GUITAR & AMP! It's exciting and new! Rent a Gibson Solid Body "Melody Maker" Electric Guitar with Vibrola Lever and a Gibson "Skylark" Amplifier. If you buy, all payments apply. 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At these reduced prices, they’re sensgtifT"* rti.y’r. they’re styled and tailored to exacting specifications for quality, fit, wear. Plaids and solid tones in polyester-cotton blends ore Penh-Prest — keep their smooth just-pressed look without ironing; knits ore wash-and-wear Ban-Lon 100% nylon. Ban-Lon 1(X)% nylon knit: olockt collar. Solid tones, contrott front. NOW, 3fo.»io PENNErS MIRACLE MILE STORE HOURS 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. A—10 TltE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. MAY 19. 1966 THE OUTSIDERS. By Robert Carsont Little, Browq. $6.95. Carson has written the kind of historical novel about Los Angeles often written about places In the Deep South. Four generations of one family, living through it, relate j- to them current events. To us, it’s history. Writing with the hindsight of the BOW, Carson is able to make his fictional family named Brennan, guess ri^t about the future as they go along. From generation to generation, starting in 1881, the Brennans have the financial foresight to get in on the development of gome of California’s longest-lasting and best-known booms — real estate, consolidated banks, big gaudy graveyards, the building of airplanes. And the present generation, rather than sell to builders of crackerbox houses, donates the gtill-intact family Sjtanish rancho - where the TV Westerns shoot film - to the city fpf a park. (An e a r 1 y Brenn^ had married a Villanueva.)/ But Carson has a fault, and It’s a major one. Ris characters are the most ^tilted conversationalists this side of a sacred amateur theather group putting on a 19th Centrury melodrama. the BEST IS YET TO BE. Bentz Plagemann. Morrow. |4.50. This Is a nice quiet little novel that doesn’t attempt to be profound, a pleasantly humorous story. The Wallaces have reached Backing Given to Overtime for State Employes DETROIT (AP) - A recommendation that state workers be paid time-and-a-half for overtime instead of straight time or compensatory time off goes to the State Civil Service Commission today. A poll of the 19 major state departments showed 13 in favor of the time - and - one - half pay Idea, five opposed and one neutral. OK»sed were the Conservation, Treasury, Public Health, Licensing and Regulation, and Attorney General’s Departments. the age when their son Cameron abruptly decides to get married to his Nancy. After getting the young couple settled, the parents decide to have a middle-aged fling on a trip to Europe. TTiere are some amusing and gently touching scenes as the parents try '(o be helpful — without interfering — as the newlyweds set up housekeeping in a low-budget apartment. -Then the adventure abroad. In Italy the Wallaces just can’l seem to detach themselves from the h a b i t of sheperding flie younger generation. There also is a sly picture of „.ie of their American friends who had married apitalian businessman, not ej^ctly to her advantage. And of course there are the comic maladjustments that tourists fifid in lands to which they aft! unaccustomed. It’s a nice relief lo have this story. No black humor, no bitter satire, no social significance, no grotesque caricatures?' Just satisfying glow, some appreciative chuckles and apt turns of phrasing that create pleasure. THE SUM AND TOTAL OF NOW. By Don Robertson. Putnam. $4-95. There’s this kid, named Morris Bird III. He’s 13 years old in this, the sununer of 1948, and he lives in Oeveland. He is the same Morris who had a great adventure one day when he was 9, and the story of that great day was told in Robertson’s previous nov^l So. bi" deal. If you’ve read the other book, you’ll enjoy this one more. This would be the summer, of course, that Morris had started — but Just started — changing from boy to man. Suddenly there’s this girl, named Julie Sutton, who is a shy in school, but knows Morris is there. There’s also this world where adolescent fantasy seems real. Like Morris’ dreams of movie types, and baseball heroes; and Julie’s collection of ducks and her lovely conversations with an imaginary Claramae. Robertson is remarkably good at two things. He knows how to recreate a time and place with an extraordinarily vivid skill. And he captures the essence, the chimera, the tender confusion of boyhood in a bright, style that is indelible and convincing. Built Better to Last Longer Because it's HANDCRAFTED 'perfected Tha MOCUPri • lllf Trim Contemporary lo-boy atyUng In grained Walnut color (9316W), or In grained Mahogany oelor (9316R). 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The U.S. commander cited the strategic importance of the bridge as a link between the city and American installations on the outskirts. 20-Year War Scars Saigon SAIGON, South Viet Nam When the day begins, with Itsi In a school courtyard, neatly (AP) — Across a wide street of heavy, oppressive humidity ofjdressed children in white, paja-Saigon, someone had scrawled the tropics, the streets fill withjmalike uniforms line up while 'hoa binh”—peace. But few peo-thousands of expre.ssionless men; a loudspeaker blares “Yankee pie bothered to look. and women heading for work.;Doodle.” Overhead, a flight of Ramshackle taxis, pedicabsi Bars open early—the most,U.S. Caribou transport planes: and heavy military trucks rolled booming business of the capital roars toward a jungle battle-over the sign and women from’of a nation at war. About 30,000; field. crowded shacks emptied their American troops and civilians ^tslde, beggars stretch garbage pails on it. I are here with their dollars, cig- griniy hands and life goes on— ★ ★ * 'arettes and canned goods. despite everything. The war is with the city—as * * ★ -----^--- it has been for the past 20 The signs are gaudy an years. For many it seems a war blunt: "Lucky Love Bar, “Save Hme With Our Hostess-- es.” 1 There are thousands of girls s to entertain the foreigners. Some earn 10 times as much as Vietnamese teachers. Ciyilian Manipulators Yanks Face Probe for Viel Profiteering! Bower Beoiliiuorlers Lodge Visits Korea to Discuss Viet Nam WASHINGTON (AP) - The Defense Department and the Treasury Department are teaming up to go after American civilians who have returned from Viet Nam with small fortunes made through money manipulation in Viet Nam, officials said today. These people will be pursued,” one defense official told a reporter. * ★ ★ He said 28 Americans, most of them past and present employes of U.S. contractors in Viet Nam, have been under investigation since returning to this country. Their files have been forwarded to the Treasury for tax scrutiny, he said. The Pentagon and the Treasury have begun working closely on means to choke off money profiteering and black mark-eteering in Viet Nam. A Treasury agent will go to Saigon to survey the situation, and an official said the agency may eventually station people there. 70 IN PROBE Over-all, if was learned, 70: U.S. civilians have been the! subject of probes. One Ameri-| can netted about $42,000 by! money speculation, officials said, and several pocketed profits in the $16,000-$I8,000 range, ★ ★ ★ Officials also said 41 U.S. servicemen in South Viet Nam have been court-martialed given lesser punishment in the crackdown on black marketeer-ing and currency manipulation. * ★ Offenders in money speculation were said to have b^n chiefly U.S. civilians. Servicemen were involved for the most part in selling post exchange goods on the black market. Asst. Secretary of Defense Thomas D. Morris and Frank Bartimo, ar senior Pentagon lawyer, flew back to Washington last weekend after an on-the-spot check on the situation. FIRM ACTION Officials familiar with their findings said firm action by Gen. William C. Westmoreland, U.S. commander in Viet Nam, has cut down the problem. Flourishing of the black market in PX goods blamed by officials on the hectic conditions which prevailed in Saigon last fail and early winter when supplies were being rammed into the country under a high-speed buildup. WE ACCEPT TRADES Town Makes it Illegal to Leave Child in Car COLUMBUS, Ga. AP) The; City Commission has passed an ordinance making it illegal to leave youngsters under 10 years of age in a car without proper supervision for a period of more than five minutes. A similar ordinance is being drafted to cover pets in parked cars. ?■ The Battle of Trafalgar occurred on Oct. 21, 1805. Beer Cans Empty Fund CALAIS, Maine (AP)—The local Lions Club has launch^ a cleanup campaign that may well clean out its treasury. President Leonard Scott said that as part of a beautification campaign, the clpb offered to pay one cent for each beer can collected along municipal highways by Friday. * ★ w But he said yesterday some 9,500 cans already have been collected—and club members feared that the total may climb astronomically by the end of the week. Scott said the club plans to continue the project despite the cost “but we may have a treasury full of beer cans.” FIRESTONE Best^^uys On Laicn And Ghrden ^applies! -WG^CTION UHBEtlEVULE LOW PRICES y]46 W. HURON FE3-791S without hope. The smell of decay, of hopelessness, of fear and of stubborn struggle for survival dominates the life of Saigon. GRENADES EXPLODE Vietnamese leacners. SEOUL (UPI) - U. S. Ambas- Every day, two or three gre- PILES OF REFUSE sador to S a 1 g o n Henry Cabot nades explode. Almost every Along the streets, piles of ref-Lojgg arrived here today for day men are stabbed or shot, use wait for garbage trucks that .. _ . By -estimate, 3.000 hard-core seldom come. The city pays 12 Viet Cong terrorists are in the. piasters—15 cents—a day to its otticiats on the situation capital, capable of striking any- garbage men. American con- FREHER TAKES THE WORRY OUT OF DISCOUNT BUYING! where, any time. It is a many-faced city of 2Vt million—many of them hungry. At night, flares illuminate the sky over tiie wide plain outside Saigon and the sound of exploding bombs comes clear to diners in elegant restaurants. In grimy doorways, skinny children huddle wearily for another night without a home. struction firms pay many times Men and women wait patiently in front of air-conditioned American offices that administer the construction of airbases, ports, compounds and installations fw the war. —ropAlMlifAREHOUSt-- TELECR/ini m. Vi MILE S. of ORCHUD LX. RD. 1 Milt North Of Miraolc Milt Opon Daily 10-9 ~ Op«n Sunday 10-7 — FE 3-7051 NO MONEY DOWN - UP TO 36 MONTHS TO PAY THE PONTIAC PRESS THURSDAY, MAY 19, 1966 A—18 >()ii (an ( Oiini on I ^ . (^ua i i ( \ ( %o \lor(‘ at Sc*ai SPRING SAVINGS SCENE OF CRASH-U. Col. J. M. McClure (left) and two fellow members of the Kentucky National Guard look over the site where an Air National Guard FM crashed yesterday about IS miles northeast of Louis- AP PheMtx Wile, Ky. The crash kiUed Capt. Kermit Ebo-ly, 36, of Uvonia, Mich., who was ferrying the plane from Mobile, Ala., to Detroit. But Few in Tycoon Class Professors' Salaries Going Up lege salaries are rising. The competition is fierce for distinguished scholars. Institutions that have them want to keep them. The professor, especially if he is an outstanding one, is operating in a seller’s market. | I- vey of the American Association n of University Professors showed n that Harvard University again led the nation with an annual average salary for all full-time e faculty members of more than r $17,500 a year. That average includes not y only full professors, but asso- y dates, assistants and instruc-’on figures voluntarily supplied ^ tors. by 905 universities and colleges,' ♦ ♦ * showed an average yearly sala- ^ . Ranking second was the Uni- T of $0,816 for all faculty mem- versity of Chicago, in the $16,000 bers combined. This is a nine-might blink at in surprise. ug jjQ month salary for the academic TTie legislature has estab- gj gg^^ ^gg year and does not reflect what bshed .some special chairs fw.pg^gggg c<,ii„e of Fairfield, <»‘ber income a teacher might both state and private universi-l j^^g earn in summer employment, WASHINGTON (AP) - College professoraniay not be in the industrial tycoon class in salaries yet, but they are moving up. Although there still are some “poverty cases’’ on the hi^er education scene, geneiilty things are getting rosier every year for college and university faculties. There have been a couple of recent appointments The association study, based ties that carry a $100,000 annual price tag. It wanted to provide an "apex of excellence’’ for the state educational structure. NOT ALL SALARY Not ag of this is salary. Hie professor must use it for travel, staff and research assistants. Dr. C. N. Yang, Chinese-born Nobel Priie-wisnlng physicist, I Parsons? Yes Indeed. ThlS|“2“iJ‘"8 ®?,. . om;e-floundering coUege had 212 s'«n»f‘cant, the association said this was 7.6 per cent higher than in the previous year — a rate of climb hi^ students and paid its professors an average of $3,600 a year when a new president took over . , .u ^ in 1955. Now it ranks with the for the first Ume to top institutions of the country in .« <««>‘>ling of faculty salaries. »uuci —-—..........c MOTTO I In g separate study, the Na- was named to one of these pro-^ Parsons’president, Millard G.jUonal Education Associatfon fessorships at the SUte Unive^l**®^• baa « motto; “Buy aireported a median salary fort sity at Stonybrook. In his case,'8*^ faculty. This costs money.jfull-time teachers in colleges the nersonal salary component'*t. This means raiding oth-;and universities of $9,081—an h„ b~n » b. ««,C0.;«r won the Pulitzer Prize for hisj "A Thousand Days’’ portrait of the years he spent in the White House with tte late President{ John F. Kennedy, h«s justj signed a contract for the $100,-000 Albert Schweitzer Chair in' Humanities at City University' of New York. 1 These are exceptional cases^! but the over-all picture isn’t bad either. i The recent annual salaiy sur-{ That, in a nutshell, is why col- years ago. {11.2 per cent jump from two Study of Pain Is Shocking By Science Service WASHINGTON - Electric! shock is not pleasant under any I circumstances, but it is easier' to take if one knows exactly' when it is coming. And knowing when is more important than; knowing how bad the shock will be. ! S 0 m e 50 undergrkduate stu-| dents each endured about 40 electric jolts to illustrate the I theory that knowledge about fu-' ture pain reduces anxiety. I could relax nntU shock time. Some tensed their muscles to offset its effect, but more | important to the students were those assured moments of peace. Authors of the experiment. Dr. Austin Jones of the University of Pittsburgh, P. M. Bentler of the University of California at Los Angeles, and Georgia Petry of the Psychological Service of Pittsburgh, gave to each student in the jolt chamber a button whidi he could press for information on the coming shock. Most (rf the students pressed the buttons, reported the researchers. And the more uncertain they were (the more erratic the tithe sequence of the shocks),' the more often they pressed it. SHOCKS VARIED “Tlii’'“sHoclts aF6"“'ViSfIBff“Tfr strength, but evidently this information was not particularly useful to the worried students. Giving them the opportunity to know the time and intensity of shock did not Significantly change their button-pressing rate, reported the experimenters. LONG RANGE RECEPTION! 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Men's Sporiswrar, Main Klo< men 8 sport coats A^U THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. MAY 19, 1966 > ou Can Count on Us . .. Qualit\ Costs No Moi*e at Soai*s ENDS SATURDAY! Timely Savings In Every Department SAVINGS )ltlll(lil). lllllISlI.l}. lljH'll !l III lursdin \iiil Ill'dllCMlih' INSTALLED-Sears Strong Chain Link Fencing Free Estimate Sean will be happy to eatimate the cost of fencing your yard. Expert Installation Sean will arrange for trained installation men to put up your chain link fence or any other fencing you choose at Sean. Fencing Department Perry St., Basement 48-in. Height INCLUDES: fence, top rail, line posts, loop caps and hard* Call FE 5-4171 For FREE ESTIMATES NO MONEY DOWN on Sean Easy Payment Plan For strength, permanence, beauty in a fencing material Sears chain link fence is your answer. Keeps your family and pets enclosed in safety: keeps trespassers and unwanted stray animals out. Attractive diamond pattern enhances the beauty of any lawn. 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Ignatius told Gniening during a Senate hearing on supply policies Wednesday. Gruening’s assertion grew out of an Investigation hie staff conducted in Hong Kong. Joseph Lippman, staff direc- tor of the Senate subcommittee on f(B-eign aid expenditures, went there in March to make sure that discarded military equipment was not finding its way into Red Chinese hands. Gruening said Lippman “learned that the U.S. Navy, which operates a procurement office in Hong Kong, had been making substantial purchases of electronic or other equipment fr(Mn two firms which were owned or controlled or other- wise affiliated with Communist China.” The senator made that statement April 21 in a letter to Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara. At that time, Gruening wrote that the Navy was una- ware of Red Chinese involvement because the two firms were subcontractors. The Hong Kong firm which held the Navy contract had been cleared by the U.S. consulate, the senator/ added. You Can Count on Cs ... Quality Costs No More at Sears ENDS SATURDAY Timely Savinge In Every Department SAVI\GS Sears House and Trim Paint in 47 Colors One Coat SAVE 22% Undercoat for OH Latex House Paint Sears Price PrimerMtier for_________ new wood, turo tpolt, for bi ter top coal adhetion. «9c White Caulk Tube 2/88c Gallon 1^1 coat covers any color, even black: 47 non>chalking colopscape colors f^Won’t discolor from industrial gases . . . protects wood surfaces for years I^For all exterior wood surfaces, use also on metal gutters, downspouts Pure, Pure White Enamel Stays While Res.S2.79 1^. Won’t yellow or diKolor. Driee to^ hard waihable iIom, Odor-leJ, lead-free. Sears Ready-Mixed Speckling Paste R8' Reg.SI.19 For plaiter, wood, wallboard. Appliet eaeily. Driet' hard. Caiily landed. Self-priming Reg. 81.19 Putty........88a Porch, Floor or Patio SEARS LATEX Concrete Paint Mlaster-Mixed Quality Smooth, Jet-Black Driveway Coating Regular S5,99 Regular S7,39 .59J Eight bright colors. 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Building HaUriaU, Parry St. Ba$tm0nt 'Salisfaclion gnaranlcccl ov your money back” SEARS Dowiiiowii I’oiiliac* PlioiH‘FK sY-1171 A--16 THE PONTIAC PRESi, THURSDAY, MAY 19, 1966 OP TRAFFIC DEATH8I #5lV; MAKE PONTIAC AAAERICA^S SAFEST-jMUVING COMMUNITY SAFETY- CHECKED convenient locations ^ West Huron at Franklin North Cass Between Sanderson and Wide Track ^ Oakland Avo. Between Wide Track and Lafayette ^ N. Saginaw between Lafayette and Wide Track ^ S. Saginaw Between Orchard Lake and WhHtemore Friday 10 A.M. to 7 P.M. and Saturday 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. MAY20.nd21si! ' Sponsored by the Following * Joiiyn StT»«t AUSTIN NORVCLL AOENOY 70 W. Ldwranca at Wtd« Track BAZLET MARKEn BLUE RIBBON OISTRIBUTBR 191 OWkI* Track Drhra CAPITOL SAVINOS B LOAN 75 W. Hursn CARTER TIRE 00. 370 South Soginow V CLOONAN’S 77 North SognMw COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK 18 OfflcM in Oakland and Macomb CoonHo* CONNOLLY’S JEWELERS 16 W. Humn - Pontiac 3303 S. Tolograph - Miracio Milo 163 N. Woodward - Birmingham CONN’S CLOTHES - MEN’S and BOYS’WEAR 73 N. Saginaw Stroot CRESCENT U.S. ROYAL 530 Sauth Saginaw Stroot OICKINSON’S Saginaw of Lowmneo CCOOYEAN SERVICE STORK 40 WoMPilto Stroot RMTO EMPLOYEES FEDERAL OREOIT UNION P0NT1A0 ONAMRER OP OOHMRROR Rikar Building PONTUO RNRCASS JEWELERS 160S.WaAhnte%Orfoid LHANOVT---------------- 309N.P« S9M-34,lakaOrtaa KINOSLEY INN Phono: Ml 4-1400 Kaart OtonwoodPloM LEWIS FURNITURK 63 South Soginow Stroot UBERTY COCKTAIL LOUNOE MOTOR MART SAFEH CENTER 133 fact Montcalm JOHN MoAULIFFE FORD 630 Oakland Avonuo 933 0akloiid SEARS DOWNTOWN PONTIAO IS4 North Saginaw Stroot SHAW’S Michigan'* Pino Jowoton 34 North Soginow 855 Wort Huron DOWNEY OLDSMOBILE 550 Oakland Avonuo RUSS DOWNEY’S VILUSE RAMBLER 666 S. Woodward, Birmingham FIRESTONE 146 W. Huron FORUM THEATRE 13 North Soginow Stroot FOX CLEANERS 719 Wort Huron Tho Pontiac AAoll dOroatSloiMlaSofvaVog HAVE YOUR CAR CHECKED FOR YOUR SAFETY!!! THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MAY 19, 1966 B-1 Of Course, Inform Parents; This Child Could Be Sick ABBY Quill pens are the subject of discussion for Insurance Women of Pontiac and Wednesday evening’s speaker, Malcolm Dooley of Detroit. Left is Mrs. Elizabeth Jackson, Blaine Street, new president of the group.--Mrs.r Garland Hale, North Perry Street (right) is outgoing president. The occasion at Bedell’s was the annual Bosses’ Night dinner. Tom Dooley’s Brother Is Speaker Malcolm Dooley of Detroit, brother of the famous Dr. Thomas A. Dooley, spoko at the 12th annual Boases’ Night dinner of the Insurance Women of Pontiac Wednesday. Some 50 mem- BPW Goes to Selfridge for Evening The Pontiac Business and Pro-fessional Women’s Club traveled to Selfridge Air Force Base, Tuesday, for a brieflng as part of this year’s edUcatio«i pro-gram. > >. „ Col. George Pittman Jr.^lst Fighter Wia*#eputy Commander for Matgnw /tc^v«d the group at ttli O f i r S’ CItib where dinnof was Served. In reviewing the program at Selfridge, Col. Pittman explained that all of the commands in the military, there are but THREE statutory commands. They are the Strategic Air Command (SAC), the Tactical Air Conunand (TAC) and the Air Defense Command (ADC) of which Selfridge is a part. DEFENSE COMMAND The function of the ADC operation with headquarters at Colorado Springs, Colo., is to organize men and train units for employment by the North American Defense Command. Selfridge AFB has assets of more than 300 million dollars, one-half of which is in airplanes and the remainder in real estate, equipment and supplies. A payroll of over IS ^lion for its 4,000 personnel makes the operation the largest industry in Macomb (bounty. Colored films of Supersonic Thunderbirds shown by Airman John Lyons and Sgt William Bishop, and a con^cted tour of the base, compleCra the urity Committee of the BPW club responsible for the program * were Mrs. Clifton Gabler, Jewell Burchwell, Margaret Harths and Bonnie Davidson. Hostesses included Mrs. Lola Sandage, Mrs. Ronald Kunse, Margaret Wilmot, Mrs. Janet Dow, Ruth Rogers and Roberta A. Rapaport. Set Table for Guests Beforehand By ELIZABETH L POST Dear Mrs. Post: I have a v^ small apartment with my dining table at one end of the living room. I would like to know if, when ! entertain, I may set the table ahead of time, or would it look strange to have it all a cocktail before dinner?—Sally S. Dear Sally: Yes, a thousand times yesl Not only may you set the table ahead, you must. No one minds the sight of an attractively set table, and the important thing is to do everything possible ahead of time so that you may devote every moment you can to your guests. bers and guests attended the event at Bedell’s. ■* * it A graduate of the University of Notre Dame and a former broker in St. Louis and Detroit, Dooley is founder and member of the board of directors of the "Dr. Thomas A. Dooley Foundation.’’ He travels throughout the world to promote this cause. Dooley has coauthored “Promises to Keep,” a biography of Dr. Tom and is now assisting in the production of a movie based on the doctor’s life. * ★ * Participating in the evening’s program were The Siblings, Mrs. A. Glenn Wilson, Mrs. Garland Hale, Mrs. William F. Hill, Lester Oles and A. Glenn Wilson. Slate Strawberry Festival Mrs. Peter J. Russ Jr. and Mrs. John H. Forshew are co-chairmen for the sixth annual StratKbeny F e s t i v a 1 of the Blooibrield Country Day School on Saturday. * w W From 10 a.m. to S p.m. the fesdvii wyt faature games, a bouti^e gill shop, the traditional geranium sale, a flea market and home baked goods, all in a country fair setting. ’The mofliers’ club with Mrs. Charles L. Bricker, president, is sponsoring the festival Retireid Teoc^rs The Retired Teachers Club will hold its annual meeting Friday at 6 p.m. in the First Federal Savings of Oakland Building. There will be a cooperative dinner with program following. By ABIGAIL VANBUREN ‘ DEAR ABBY: My daughter goes to school with a girl who goes around telling all the^ boys if theyl want anything! (material) she| can get it for| them. She brags' that she has |3,- ^ 000 worth of^ clothes, jewelry j and things she! has shop-lifted from stores. She is a pretty girl and cranes from a very nice family. Her parents can buy her anything she wants. She is a junior In high school, Abby. Should I tell her mother? I’m afraid she might hurt her parents, or herself if this con^ tinues. No name, please. WINSLOW, MAINE DEAR WINSLOW: The child could be sick. Of course you should tell her mother. If it were YOUR daughter, wouldn’t you appreciate the information? * * ★ ', DEAR ABBY: My husband seems to think I’m a magician. He wants this house spic and span, but if I’m dead tired at night he tells me not to work so hard. He’s a great one for inviting crowds of people home for drinks and supper, but when the grocery and liquor bills come he says I am trying to send him to the poorhouse. He nagged me for years to become “active” in community projects, but if he calls the house and I’m not home he raises the roof. If we’ve had a late evening he tells me not to get up early, but he growls like a bear if he has to make his '’^own breakfast. How can I tell him in plain language that I am no magician? NOMAOICIAN. DEAR NO: He knows it V. you were, you’d have made him disappear a long time ago. « ★ • ★ DEAR ABBY: Please tell that young lady whose baby was a few days overdue with her husband gone nine months and three days that she need not be concerned. The courts of most of our states, and most countries of the world recognize the legal gestation period as 11 months for humans. It is a medical fact that a child can be carried that long. My sister-in-law carried a baby a fuU 10^ months, and she had been married five years at the time. MRS. 0. G. S., GULFPORT, CONFIDENTIAU TO DU-ANNE: Stayt crjdng when she does. If there’s on« thing that’s more effective than a woman’s tears, it’s a man’s. Don’t underestimate your own water power. CONFIDENTIAL TO “RIGHT OR WROffGV IN MEMPHIS: Any aniinkl can have a SEX life. Your wife is talking about a LOVE life. Ihat takes understanding, patieneg and unselfishness. V, ★ ★ Troubled? Write to )my, care of The Pontiac Presa For a personai reply, inclose a stamped, self-adm«ssed etfve-lope. ★ ★ ★ Hate to write letters? Send |1 to Abby, care of Hie Pontiac Press, for Abby’s booklet, “How to Write Letters for All Occasions.” At the spring meeting of the Janet Stuart Association (mother’s club) of the Convent of the Sacred Heart Wednesday, plans for the Oct. 5 fashion show were presented. Mrs. Ray A. Altcdo, Mill Spring Road, (center) is general chairman of ‘‘Hemlines\and Horsepower '67.” Mrs. John J. Riccqrdo, Tottenham Road, (left) and Mrs. John T. Higgins, Birmingham, are committee heads for the event at Bloomfield Open Hunt. IthaS^od, g\^od World of Jewehy^ashlons BUDGET TERMS ■ 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH ■ 18 MONTHS TO PAY ntat ChMSi il IM JMNknl H ynm btlSMp W* I|N W17 «d tl. )N CM tfN )«r «n mat acnwl PONTIAC MALL TekgraphatEUaab«tkLalMB4. Open Every Nicht Until 9 P.M. Save Sewing Time on Trouser Legs To save sewing time, use cotton iron-on tape to hem trousers for growing boys. It -k It Turn under pants legs to the desired length and iron strips of tape ov«’ raw edges. When you need to let out the hem, just press the cotton tape with a warm iron and pull it off. / About one-balf of annuai cotton consumption goes into the production of clothing. Youth Groups Prepare Camp Oweki Camp Oweki, owned and operated by the Pontiac Area Council of Camp Fire Girls, I had its face lifted over the] past weekend. at SIBLEY'S Miracle Mile What can Huih Puppies* golf shoes do for your game? Makeitmorecomfortable.tiuit’tforsurf^ They’re available in a variety of colors. Maybe even make you feel so good that Andthey’remadeofaspedalleatherthat your score improves. There are several you just wipe clean. Stop In today and tiy golf shoestyles.forbothmenand women, a pair. Play your next eighteen Incomfort $1400 HuSli M Pcifipiesf aBAain rACiiai* BKANO CASUALS “Miehigai’t Largest Florsheiai Dealer” Um Ymt SMwIty Cktri. k [ ■ Bloonfield Miracle Mila SflOvS South Telegraph at Square Lake Rd. Open Evenings 'til 9 At the annual work bee, members of youth groups volunteered their services. High School students from area schools and church groups worked all day to ready the grounds and buildings for the summer program. w ★ * Adult members of the board of directors and camp devel- were Mr. and Mrs. Earl Floyd, the Charles Cupps, E. A. Hollister, M r s. J o h n Fitzgerald and Dorothy Hollister. ★ * ★ Others were Richard Jarvis, Don DeVoe, Willis Schnek-enburger and staff members, Mrs. Judith Davison, Mrs. Deanne Hensel and Mn. Ruth Plew. YEARrROUND Camp Oweki is used all during the year by the Cany> Fire Girls and other organizations for group camping. During the summer, both day and overnight camping programs are conducted._________ TOy camp which begins July 5 will have two two-week sessions open to all area girls. Applications are also now being accepted from high school girls for camp aide positions. Futher information may be obtained from the local Camp Fire office. k k * A second recent event at the camp was the annual Council Fire. This Is an awards’ evoiL Mrs. D o n aid Campbell directed activities, assisted by Mrs. Roscoe Hunt, Mrs. Albert Krueger, Mrs. Jade Pel-ton and Mrs. John Vanderlind. Machine Dry After washing items trimmed with cotton ball fringe, machine-dry them to restore the fluffiness of fringe. If you don’t have an automatic dryer, you can soften line-dried fringe by holding it over a steaming kettle. A single-row mechanical picker can harvest about 1,200 pounds of cotton an hour. Beauty Operator One of Pontiac’s leading beauty salons has an immediate opening for a full or part time hair stylist. 70% commission plus guaranteed salary for operator with established clientele. VamA •H(Wt/”D64ig 1062 W. Huron . . nA Next to China City Phone 682-1S13 or GA 2-8355 after 5 for appointment “That’s rigp,t, now pivot," ^ys Charmaine R^eb (extreme left) of Simplicity pattern Co., Inc. as she AnstruePs Pontiac Central High School teens in modeling. Shown (from/eft) are three students fol- nicuy Y \rucPs ol teeni n/eft) ■ / Teen-Age Presented, Charmaine Reeb of Simplicity Pattern Co., Inc. who’s in Pontiac all week has been showing teens the latest in sew - it - yourself wardrobes. Pontiac Central High School viewed the young styles Wednesday afternoon with students from Jo Leino’s home economics classes modeling. Thursday and Friday will see presentations at other area schools. lowing her lead, Sue Thompson of Elm Street, Debbie Mazza of Avondale Avenue and Cheryl Payne of Foster Street. Miss Reeb is-con^ ducting several shows in Pontiac schools. / Exclamations of, “Oh no” filled Centrjjrs auditorium when the commentator remarked that saddle shoes are finding their way back to the school scene. One piece of advice given the, girls was, “if in doubt about skirt lengths, sit down in front of a full mirror and relax. If you don't like what you see, lower that hem.” Style Show at School Most of the fashions shown were made from the mad mod coliections of prints so much in evidence with the young set. The wandering waistlines produced silhouettes calling attention to the hipline, bustline and, for that matter, everything but the waistline. k k k Today some Londoners are wearing hemlines four to five inchesTbm^ the knee, TuT Miss Reeb reports that the end to shorter skirts is around the corner. The July Paris showings forecasts the look of 1930 with lengths coming down to mid-knee. Another tip for young seamstresses is to cover clear plastic head bands with fabric matching the outfit you’re making. Just attach with clear tape. Silk Getting a New finish Silk, 'which has become a forgotten fabric since the advent of man-made easy care mato'ials, is about to stage a'^'comeback — thanks to researchers who are developing a chemical treatment that sounds like the answer to a silkworm’s prayer. When silk has been treated with the new finish, it can be laundered in your washer without shrinking or wrinkling. Normally, silk is extremely difficult to free of wrinkles when home washed and tumble dried, as you probably know all too well. Textile World says that the new treatment fm- silk is based on the use of blocked urethane resins. Now why didn’t they think of that soon- The longer the fiber, the better the quality of cotton. THE PONTIAC PRESSr THURSDAY, MAY 19, 1966 B-8 •JHeumode ISAIE! **SUART GIRL^ SEAMl^SS Plain or Micro with nude heel* and demi-toes. 82 N. SagiiMw Illicit Affair Means Bondage By MURIEL LAWRENCE | This isn’t just true of neuroUCj DEAR MRS LAWRENCE: i;«nen. It’s true of those neurotic am 28. I am having an affair mothers, too, who demand end-with a min who is separated supplies of love in return from his wife giving us birth. If we are I wo-Hn-t have called it thi.s a year ago but I do now as yours it’s helpful to real^M he gete angrv if I mention the ^ oeely he^mbles the divorce he promised to get. He *“‘*®'^®*®P*‘* naother. wants me to spend my comingl regards the love-making he Mr. and Mrs. Roy DeWitt, longtime resir dents of Pontiac now living in Roscommon, will be guests of honor at an open house in Pioneer Hills Sports Park Saturday from 6 to 10 p.m. They were married May 24, 1916 in Pontiac. Children who will give the party are Mrs. Ed Kleusner, Clarkston; Mrs. Jack Eckerly, Farmington; Mrs. Max King, Bloomfield Hills; Mrs. Harry Miner, Detroit; Mrs. Walter Hiller, Chicago, III.; Jerry, Saginaw; Jon, Grand Rapids; William, Robert and Thornas, all of Roscommon. There are 38 grandchildren. vacation with him as man and wife as I did last summer. A * ★ When I try to tell him I was fii^tened of someone recognizing us the whole time, he says this wouldn’t matter iif 1 loved him. I do love him but gives us exactly as she regards her giving birth — the act tihat entitles diem both to such appreciation that we must remain fixed in tois ai^ireclation and never want anything dse. It’s a helpM realization because it destroys Ids “romantic Hove” glamour. You just can’t ANSWER: But yon want see yourself as the heroine of more advantage from your romance once you see its hero’s love. That’s it, isn’t it? likeness to irrational mothers. But there are thousands of Tell such a mother, ’Tve people who can't allow us any fallen in love and want to get advantage from loving them.. married’’ and she has a tan-They just want an endless sup-| trum at the idea we could ply of our love dished out toi want to love someone else. So them as invalids want hot soup. I does he. He goes wild at the mentioo of divorce that would open our way to marriage, a home and bahles. Girls like you dwi’t see the similarity of growth-denying men to growth - denying mothers because your “romantic love” notion says to you, “Sexual relationship is different from all other human relationships. It’s special.’’ ★ ★ ★ Wen, it isn’t. It’s no more glorious to remain forevw content with love-making than it would be to remain forever content with mommy. If we are not allowed to grow in any human relationship, we begin to hate it as bondage. Definition G. K. Chesterton — “An accident is an adventure wrongly understood — an adventure is an accident rightly understood.” Friday Bride Honored at Numerous Parties Sharon L. Walters has been honored at several bridal showers before her marriage to John F. Bradley, Friday evening, in St. Benedict’s Catholic Church. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Walters of Ledge-stone Drive and the L J. Bradleys of Mark Avenue. Tune in Tonight. BULOVA PRESENTS THE JACK PAAR TV SPECIAL "A fiffinjfTMitf M (At W»yt§th9 WhHilhiist' NBC CHANNEL 4 8:30 TO 9:30 P.M. The Bulova watches you’ll see on the show are available at... HAS Bloomneld Miracle Mil* Near Cunninsham’i Bioomfield Hasa Teiesraph and W. Mapl* Sharing hostess honors with Mrs. H. A. Miller in her home on Wenonah Drive were^Mrs. N. H. Blood of KUleen, Texas, and Mrs. C. J. Lawson. ★ ★ ★ hfrs. L. J. Bradley Jr. of Snow Apple Drive, Independence Township and Mrs. Clarence V. Sears also honored the bride-elect. Mrs. William W. Brady of Ledgestme Drive, with Mrs! William Keller and Mrs. Gerald Krzmar-zick gave the trousseau show- Others who entertained for Miss Walters were Mrs. John R. Taylor of Bloomfield Village with Mrs. C. Lee Henry, Royal Oak; and Mrs. Robert C. Bums poise. Smart sheaths and easy skirts. 14’= .017* Your Prom Wrap in Fur-Look Broadtail 7.95 Wear a little wrap or cape with your formal. The fur-look in prom white, so moderately priced. Limitless Fashion by DAVID CRYSTAL^ Oasudl, yet so sure of itself. An elegant chanel-type summer suit that is always and ready to go. A perfect blend of Flax, in rayon and cotton. Yours in bone piped with block ond white. Belted overblouse, 4 flop pockets. Sixes 10 to 16 *45 B—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. MAY 19, 196fl T?(m/T2ficuie& jH CAtPEF SALES ,4990 DIXIE HWY. DRAYTON PLAINS 1 BlMk Nwlli W Waltoa PhoM 473-1297 OpmHm-, Wad., Pri-TH 19 P.M. Or«i1W.,‘Itai».,9M.’TU*P.i'. NeiocttS Inn (Formerly Sharp's Inn) COCKTAILS BUSINESSMEN’S NOON SPECIAL • Stoak • Fronch Frioo • Salad *p5 SEAFOOD Foaturing Lobstor Tails Rogular Monu Also Availablo 2675 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-2463 Pmt Supernottlts of Warringham Drive announce the engagement of their daughter, Linda Lee, to Timothy Gene Affolder, son of the Eugene W. Affold-ers of Cedargrove Street, Independence Township. A Sept. 24 wedding date is set. Can Be a Lifesaver ) / Teach Tact ta^ Young By DR. GEORGE W. CRANEL CASE Y-475: Fritz K., aged 17, is a high school senior. “Dr. Crane,” he said, “I ran for president of our senior class. “But I did not get the job. In fact, I was beaten by a vote of 189 to 14, so I f e e I disgraced^ “Yet I am DR. CRANE as good looking as the fellow who won. And we have both been in the same classes for almost four years. “So how could he win such a lopsided victory?” Fritz was the type of teenager who is blunt and tactless. His opponent had been reared by a mother who was deft and tactful in any group. IuikAvom — Olnntff — CdefcfaWi -tlji' • PRIME BEEF • STEAKS 9 CHOPS • SEA FOOD BanqiMl Facillli** n*NO Mt ftlOAT ANO »TO«>AT Hotuttita Country Sun 3230 Pin* L9i(9 RmcI Ph*"« *>2-0400 STAPP'S . . . where you can get.. U.S. KEDS* TO FIT ALL FEET Beauty is made up of many parts, and these are within the reach of every woman. A clear complexion, shining hair, a lovely figure, and a good posture form the foundation upon which beauty is built. I haven’t mentioned' health because if you have the first five ingredients, you are very apt to have fine health also. Add to these meticulous grooming, well-cared-for and becomingly styled hair, knowhow about clothes and make-up, and a s'parkTing personality, and"3?on have" a knockout! Many women are worried about skin blemishes. Something can be done about most of them. It is surprising how many women allow warts or moles to mar their good looks. These can be safely and easily removM by a dermatologist. Do ' not follow a friend’s advice and try to treat them yourself. * ★ ★ Large pores are often a handicap to an otherwise lovely complexion. ’These usually accompany an oil skin. The face should be washed several times a day with soap and water. A complexion brush is tive to pat the face with a cube of ice which is wrapped in a soft cloth after rinsing it and before using the astringent. The face should be thoroughly dry before patting the astringent on. It is possible to have large pores even when the complexion would be classified as dry. The face may be dry as a whole but be oily in the areas where the enlarged pores occur. If you have this kind of “combination skin.” treat it that wav. Use soap and water on the oily sections and cream on the dry parts. W ★ ★ A skin speciMist can prescribe a drying lotion which helps contract the pores. A visit to one might wortl^ while if you have this problem. If you would like to have my leaflet “Clear The Way For Beauty” (about skin blemishes), send a stamped, self-ad- . . , Here are some tips for care dressedijnv^witMou^-^^ knits' quest. Address Josephine Lawman in care of The Pontiac Press. So he had developed a sense of tact from early Infancy. It was as ingrained as is the musical sense of a youngster reared in a home where good music is played from his babyhood onward. For tact is a definite strategy wherein we must team which keys to strike, verbally, by which to produce harmony instead of discord in our human contacts. This requires, at the outset, ani analysis of many actual situations in life where two choices are offered us. One demonstrates tact whereas the other is an undiplomatic solution. For example, at least by foe first year of Junior High, all the students should be given a “Tact Test” like that in (he Appendix of my college textbook, “Psychology Applied.” Maybe 100, 500 or even 1,000 social situations like the fol-can be offered the students. Then let them make their choices. Afterwards, tell them foe reasons why they are right or wrong. In this way a child may ultimately become so deft in “sensing foe diplomatic thing to do or say, that he can win friends without conscious ef-fwt. Like the skilled musician who forgets a bar of music blit can improvise a few measures that harmonize, so the boy or girl reared on tact can automatically aj^the right thing in a cniciaTsimation. From Page 788 of my textbook I’ll offer this typical teaching case; Problem 22. A butler accidentally opens the bathroom door while the lady of foe house is bathing. He should say:----------- (a) “Oh, excuse me, Madame. I didn’t know you were in here." (b) “You should have locked the door.” Don't Mistreat Acetate Knits (c) “Oh, excuse me, Sir.” When I inserted that problem in my newspaper Quiz Column, it swamped the switchboards of the Chicago TRIBUNE and the New York NEWS. For thousands of chemists, accountants, physicists and even introvertlve clergymen phoned to report that there must have been an error in the answers given! There wasn’t! The correct answer was (e>. It indicated tact. But introverts often haven’t a sense of tact, for tactfiil people also have a keen sense of humor, since they are more extrovertive. * -k -k So send for my “Vocational Guidance Booklet,” enclosing a long stamped, return envelope, plus 20 cents in care of The Pontiac Press for its 5 subtests include a “Test of Tact.” Use it In Sunday School as well as public school classes to zoom your ability to win friends, customers or elections! e. R. HASKILL STUDIO Haa Hiotogniphed Over 2000 Weddings* MsyWell"^ " e Make Your Pictures? TiM^ty-Four ♦' Sxl0.iHch S full cohr I4S Price Includee: a Pic.ture for Preta a Jolt Married Sign a Wedding Gueat Book a Miniature Marriage Cer> tiftcata a Rice to Throw wi ■ wnune lunr FE 4-0SS3 Jf ra. Jerry W. Day 1 Mt. Clemena St. • ••eeae»oeaaao4Ss*ees*aaaaaaaeeeeaoeees how to slim an hourglass Figure . .. the National Institute of Dry- | cleaning. If you press your garment between its trips to foe-cleaner, remember to turn it inside out and press on foe underside of foe fabric. Ro not tug. Sudllll) SUM mm JR. HIGH? GRADUATE IN GRAND STYLE In this lovely, important, sleeveless empire dress and crop top with ambroiderad im. So new, so very "in." Just w THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. MAY 19, 1966 B—5 9x12' nylon nig— lowest price over! MANr SMAtr SeUD COMM 2998 > Wards lowast price aver for a continuous filo-SMnt nylon pilo rugl So easy to core for— spills wipe upl Resists crushing and abrasive wear. Wards Tuf*Tred back of mesh covered foam cushions your slops. M ONTGOMERY WARD always aboveyboard! Save on Du|>*enl 501' Nylon BROADLOOM INSTALLED! WARDS A-IH-I BARCAIN CARPET PACKAOE 1.Cw»«l 2.M4taf 3.lMtaaMlM 4.PrMMvwy Dupont 501* continuous Hoovy spongo rubbor Custom wall-to>w«ll Fast sorvico from our fllomont nylon pilt pod cushions stops, odds installation by Words woroheuso direct to broodtooffl in 6 pottomsl years to corpet lifel skilled professionals! your home at no cosH CARPET INSTALLED SUPER NYALLE DYNASTY 799 9491A49 REG. 9.0s REG. 12.08 REG. 13.08 REG. 12.08 Glamorize your floors with DuPont 501* nylon pile broadloom in an multi-level pattern in 5 smart Style House* colors. REG. 13.08 Choose from multi-level loop, random sheared or tweed design in bulky 501 * nylon pile. 16 exciting colors to complement any decor. SWiPPBRS ALL OVER AMERICA CHOOSE WARDS CARPETS | ^^CAM4€! Our Irmwndous buying power allows us to offer you the highest quality carpeting at a substantially lower uy now, save *5 x12^oval* wool rug Traditional rug is reversible for twice the wear, half the care. Virgin wool yams are tightly intertwined over a sturdy core. In 5 colors. ^MMNOwnSxfSS' NO MONEY DOWN . OraN-A-CHARGE TODA.YI Ask Wards carpet consultant to bring swatches to your home. Call taday. 682-4940 A B— THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY; MAY 10, 1960 NO HANDICAP - Dr. Herbert Songer wasted no time getting back to work after suffering a broken kneecap. The Lincoln, Kan., doctor had the dooC of his car re- moved, a brace attached to the body and a rod bolted to the clutch so he can shift gears without the use of his injured leg. First Hint of Change Heard on Japan N-Arms Attitude TOKYO (AP) - A _ debate in Japan over its rela-with the United States and Red China is bringing forth the first vague hint that the general Japanese attitude toward nuclear arms may be changing. Hie debate, centered on the Japan-U.S. security treaty and Communist China’s atomic weapon potential, has focused attention on controversial proposals for a Japanese military buildup. In this country, that suffered the world’s only atomic bombings, the whole idea of rearmament — especially with nuclear weapons — has been shunned for two decades. Now the government Is proceeding more boldly with plans for a defense buildup. It idso la taking a subtle stand on the question of nuclear proliferation treaty, leaving the way open for Japan to have its ment’s official view is tiut countries possessing m bombs must cut back on thiir arsenals if such a treaty is put on the bo<^. The Japanese say such a reduction would match their own sacrifice in not making A-bombs. NOT SAYING Japan is not saying vdiether it will refuse to si^ the treaty if the nuclear powers refuse to cut their arsenals. And Japan is not saying whether it will make A-bombs if it refuses to sign the treaty. Foreign Ministry sources say these questions are left unanswered deliberately. Ihe Security Research Council of Prime Minister Eisaku Sato’s Liberal Democratic party recently said that officials should refrain from public statements in Parliament that Japan would not possess nuclear weapons. The council said such declarations diminish the country’s abiiify to pretent a war deterrent. w ★ ★ It is a long way from such hints to open advocacy of nuclear arsenals. But public (pinion may be evolving. A few years ago no Japanese government would have said openly that this country could make an A-b<»nb if H wants to. But the Sato govonment has now said it repeatedly — with hardly a pub-; lie ripple. I ------------------ 1 Dow Doctor Honored PITTSBURGH (AP)-Dr. Don D. Irish ct Dow Chemical Co. in Midland, Mich., was homnred Wednesday for his contributions to the field of industrial hygiene. Irish received the Donald E. Cummings Memorial Award of the American Industrial Hygiene Association. YOU CAN BUY... “Everything At Mays* mrs CREDIT STORE V » g. g,«ia«, < DOWNIOWN p:PUiCl( Cong Give Him a Pain in the Leg -- Often ByTOMTIEDE Newspaper Enterprise Assn. BIEN HOA, Viet Nam (NEA) ^Enough is enou^. It wasn’t so astonishing whea Efrain Davila was shot in the ^leg the first time. One even shrug off the second wound. And the third. . .well, stretching the proposition, that, too, coidd conceivably be accepted as simply the way the bullet bounces. But bow about ttie rest? It’s downright weird. The man is whammied. And enough is enough. It an started last year when DavOa, a 24-year-old sergeant from P1 a e I a a s, Tex., was crawling threngh n war zone, slapping at skeeters and genuflect gracefirily whenever enemy snipers opened fire. The order that day was ftf every man to be stone silent . . .but Davila, son of a sergeant major, graduate of a military academy, and nonnal-ly disciplined to a fault, reluctantly disobeyed. ★ ★ ★ “Nuts!” he shouted suddenly. HOLE IN LEG Then he fell, blood rushing from a large hole in his leg. He had been drilled through by a 50-caliber machine gun shell. They evacuated him immediately. Hospital people washed his leg, sterilised the wound, closed the hole, slapped on gauze, gave him a Purple Heart and a pat on the shoulder and sent him back to the war. Things passed quietly for awhile. Then he got it again. I ★ ★ ★ This time the sergeant stopped a 9mm slug. It punctured thei fatty part of his upper left leg .. .not far from the first hole. Book Offers the Best of War Reports War correspondent Tom Tiede Is a reported in the fine tradi-| lion of Ernie Pyle. In fact, | Tiede, whose dispatches appear^ regularly in the Pontiac Press,; is a winner _of the Ernie Pyle award. / Tiede’s accounts have^ gutsy up-front quality, an^f Pyle had been alive, no lioubt he would have presented the award to him personally. Newspaper Enterprise Association has a collection of hisj WOT k, “YOiif Men at Waf,”' available at |1 each with the! coupon below. Back he went to the hospital, about bad pennies. The nurse Therq they injected him, pulled out the slug, iodined the surgery, etc., etc., remarked about the coincidence, and returned him once again to the front. It’s not difficult to guess what happened then. Of course. He caught another one. The third wound was different, however. Instead of the left leg it was the right. And the shell was a 7.62mm. If nothing else, the man was amassing an enviable collection of enemy munitions. Anyway, by this time everybody was beginning to worry including, probably, the oft-crippled infantry sergeant. ★ ★ ★ But if the others indicated concern, Davila didn’t. He insisted on being returned to duty like a battered and bandaged boomerang. Six weeka later . . -H)oom! He was back abed. That fourth one happened during, a mortar attack. A shell split apart not far from the sergeant and splattered his already lame legs with pieces of twisted Iron. The post-puncture procedure was now monotonously familiar: Evacuation, sterilization, extraction and then inoculation. pumbled, “You here again?” Buddies brought in year - old magazines. And everybody stood around the bed shaking their heads. THINGS CHANGE When they released him, however, it was different. The goodbys were no longer convincing. Rumor is they even left his toothbrush hanging in the ward. And wen they might have for not much later the ricocheting rifleman got into it again. He and his company were naUed to a jungle floor when the enemy stuffed the battlefield with shot of every atomic weapons as long as others do. SPACE PROGRAM The government is considering strengthening the submarine and missile forces. Japan’s space program ahead, and the country may become the fourth in the world to launch its own satellite with its own rocket later this year. space program is for peace-fm purposes, but its rockets easily could become missiles. And the Japanese government says it can make a nuclear bomb if it wants to. Probably the Japanese could produce a nuclear ballistic missile in a year — and keep in the racel with Red China. Japan likely isj ahead of China in missile technology while trailing the Chinese on nuciear weapon de-^^ velopment. i By all odds, the sergeant shouldn’t have gotten hit again. he did. In the legs, of course. A hand grenade this time. Japan renounced the use of nuclear weapons after World War II. Devielopments — particularly Communist China’s nuclear tests — have produced second thoughts. This month, after China’s third test, several Japanese papers suggested Japan might be forced to reconsider its nuclear policy. The government pledged anew to avoid nuclear armament. Yet the government has been It was wound No. 5. Three inj involved in a debate over Ja- the right leg, altogether, and two in the left. A pound of fragmentation and a trio of bullets. COUNT ENDS But there the count ended. At last the Army said that the man had had enough. . .and the gimpy, gritty non-com wearily agreed. pan’s policy toward a proposed treaty on proliferation of nuclear weapons. The govern- Solid Vinyl Tile Ea. While They Last IMAGINE ENOUGH TILE FOR A 9^12’ ROOM FOR ONLY... $1440 • rxS” • FIRST QUALITY »LIQHT COLORS A.*a. TILE 1 CEIUH6TILE •X ■Tc ihc Colors t ea. 1 1 Via. FUSTIC WALL TILE l'-2t MICA wMi. AAe' ::: 09^ VINYL RUBBER 9”x9” tile Thi Bost 4 Cc All AroumI I Flaar IV Ea. MOSUC HLE ithci” CKc 9»»X12” RUGS a a a V Ea. MICA etpratta •S' 29| floor shop ACROSS From The MALL 2525 EUZIBETH LIKE RD. FRORT DOOR MRKING FE 4-5216 Open Mm., Thurt., FrI. 9 to 9 Tum., Wad., Sat. 9 to 6 Thus fiiey sent Efrain Davila home Jo rest. Somebody made weak jokes; Enough, after all, is enough. I ‘nrewMMOtWar^ Ic/o PontkK Prast Box489 I Radio City Station * Now York, N.Y. 10019 I |l I PiaoM Mod ma ... copiat of ^ |.J^a«rMa«atWor,‘'at $1 par | I' 21 Anniversary OPEN HOUSE SPECIAL the fastest washer sold today! I CITY...... . I ITATI...... I*......... I WManl ,i| II Wash a load in 4 minutes • SpiiKliy it in just 1 mimiti more a Compact, portable, needs no piumbing • Store in kitchen, bathroom, closet, anywhere • Uses leas water, 1/3 the detergent. See The Hoover Washer Demonstrated Friday and / SafurffdYTntyui^^ ELECTRIC COMPlNY CRUMP I46S Auburn Roid - UL2-30GO IBarnett’s TheBestPlace ToBuyYourNew Suit Is Nqw at BametTs! This Week’s Outstanding Value! Handsome Midweight AU Wool Sharkskin Suits with TWO-PANTS All Permanently Creased Trousers A SPLENDID SELECTION'- IMPECCABLY Tailored by DUNBROOK, ALL LUXURIOUS WOOLENS THAT USUALLY SELL AT 175 Yes Sir, With 2 PAIR PANTS On Sale Tomorrow at $5975 Wa repaoti What valuat, yes, and what luitsl Every one fine all wool sharkskinsi All have permanently creased trousers. Perfect for spring and summer wear. All sizes in regulars, longs, shorts and stouts, up to size 50. See them today ... or tomorrow. You can't save fifteen dollars any easier. 2 PAIRS of PANTS PARK FREE Whan You Shop ____at Bornatt'i on Courthouse lot or any lot duplayingthU I Have Your Ticket St \ Office of Time « m1^tltk^f0MlU-IMHUmrOpemFrLmmdMmm.Nlgkts•ta9rJt. . 4 THB PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. MAY 19. 1966 B- i HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) — Aitieiit lo receive an artificial partial artificial heart has been I heart within a month. Dr. Mi-removed from the chest of aichael E. DeBakey, international-retired Navy chief petty officer. |l)^ known heart surgeon, per- Surgeons at Methodist Hospital said Walter L. McCans’ heart condition had improved enough to assume normal function after it had been assisted by the mechanical pump for 27 h(^. I it it * I DeBakey said the artificial He’s “stUl doing fine,” a ho8-j!“»T‘ «as performing satlsfac- Checks Hole Made By Slug He Fired At Killer Teen Tells of Firing at Killer (EDITOR’S NOTE - Larry Rubeck, 15, fired on kidnaper-killer William .HoUenbaugh, 44, yesterday on the front porch of the Rubeck farm home. In the following dispatch, young Rubeck tells his story.) By LARRY RUBECK (As told to United Press In- FORT LITTLETON, Pa. -was afraid the whole time. I was pitching hay and fooling around in the bam when I saw the car coming up. w w * I saw him and I saw the girl and I knew right away who it was. I had seen him around before and I had seen his picture. I raa to the boose and got ^ISe gun and y e 11 e d to my mother, “hit the floor. Mom, that crazy mountain man is on the porch.” She didn’t listen though. S h ( went with jne to get the gun and then stood beside me the whole time. It was only three or four minutes. ★ ★ w I saw him at the window and I didn’t have time to hesitate. HE FELL OVER I knew he would either keep us as hostages or maybe kill us. I fired and he fell over. I’m a hnnter and I’ve killed animals, but I just don’t know how I feel about this. I haven’t had time to think. (Rubeck was sure he bad killed HoUenbaugh, and a state police and FBI investigation, concurred. However, the county coroner said an autopsy indicated HoUenbaugh was killed by a rifle bullet, not the pumpkin ball Rubeck fired, and thht the trajectory of the slug through Hollenbaugh’s body showed the boy could not have fired it from the window. The fugitive was under fire by police when he was hit on the Rubeck porch.) it it * People around here seem to think I’m a hero but I know*. I didn’t know the girl because we don’t go to the same school. And I had never really talked to him (HoUenbaugh). I’m glad the girl is all rightj and I’m glad it’s over. Artificial Heart Is Taken Out formed a similar operation April 21 on Marcel L. DeRuder, 65, an lUinois coal miner. DeRuder lived nearly five days but never regained consciousness. His death was attributed to a rupture of the left lung. pital spokesman said today. '’He’s holding his own.” ★ w * McCans, 61, WoodinviUe, Wash., received the plastic pump, also caUed a left ventricular bypass, Tuesday in a five-hour operation. The pump is ■ ■ to ease the heart’s work load and give a damaged chamber tinne to heal. CHEST FI,UID The partial artificial heart was removed Wednesday night when McCans was returned to surgery for removal of chest fluid. it it it The fluid, according to an earlier hospital bulletin, was causing McCans trouble with his lungs and breathing. But following the operation to remove the heart device they said his vital signs were stable. McCans was the second pa- torily when DeRuder died. LUNG FUNCTION The hospital’s advisory Wednesday night said removal of the chest fluid caused improvement of lung function and treatment was initiated toward control of a hemorrhagic bleeding tendency. Tests during the removal of chest fluid indicated McCans’ heart condition had improved sufficiently to assue normal function without assistance of the pump and with no evidence of heart failure, the hospital! stated. The device therefore' was removed, it said. * * it I McCans and DeRuder re-, quired operations to replace different major heart valves. Both McCans, who entered the hospital May 8, apd DeRuder, who died April 26, were de- scribed as "high risk” cases with long histories of heart aii-j ments. | The artificial heart includes a| plastic pump about the size of a tennis ball and two tubes about six inches long and an inch in diameter. The pump remains outside the chest with the tubes implanted. It can be removed at any time without major surgery. WWW The hospital would not confirm that DeBakey performed the McCans operation. It referred only to a “cardiovascular team” which is known to include DeBakey and others capable of performing the surgery. Hunt Infensifiect for New Music Camp President INTERLOCHEN (UPD - The search for a successor to the late Dr. Jose|d) E. Maddy, pres-ident of the National Music Camp here, has been intensified, according to the chairman of the executive committee. ’The board of trustees will screen candidates to succeed Maddy, who founded the camp, during commencement week in June, a special cimunlttee handling applications. Roscoe 0. Bonisteel, Amt Arbor, chairman of the executive committee, said the search for a successor is still being carried It's along Row to England BOSTWI (AP) — Would you believe a rowboat race across the Atlantic Ocean? Four Britons do. ‘ David Johnstone, 34, Farnham, Surrey, and John Hoare, 2t, Leicester, leave Virginia Beach, Va., today or tomorrow in f 15-foot boat equipped with a small cabin and a kerosene stove. Capt. John Ridgeway, 27, and Sgt. Shay Blyth, 26, both attached to a parachute troop stationed at Aldershot, England, plan to shove their 22-foot dory into the waters off Cape Cod, Mass., next week for the long haul to Lands End in England. Their dory is equipped with life rafts, lifejackets and radios, w w; w Both teams hope to make the 3,000-plus mile trip in less than SO daygand break a record they said was set by two sea- ! meninlgas._________^_____________________________—I Use Holland House Cocktail Mix Never buy a mix unless it makes a great drink. With Holland House, you're likely to get the best you've ever tasted. You use your favorite liquor, as much or little as you like. Ever tried them? You should. Nine varieties. The original and largest-selling In the nation and tha world. Boyne City School Vote Set on Extra Milloge BOYNE eiry (UPD - The Boyne City Board of Education will ask district school voters June 13 to approve an extra three-mill tax for operational expenses. The t h r e e mills would'i replace two expiring mills and " add an extra mill. East Jordan voters, also in Charlevoix County, will be: to continue an expiring six-jmill tax with a new nine-mill I levy for extra operating funds. FOR GRADS- BRIDES- WEDDINGS- ANNIVERSARIES wiayiinie Fesiivai^f^ Best Gift Values Selections For Everyone The Mind-Changer. (Rambler Rebel) Ron and Loretta Armstrong had it in their heads that they wanted just a car. Now they have a Rebel on their minds (and one in their garage). What changed^ their minds? First, they took a reading on Rebel’s Hialeah Plaid interior.* Then he slipped behind the wheel, and sank into the comfort of coil-spring bucket seats. But the clincher came when he ^ slipped it into low, let it go and felt the mind-changing difference a 327 cubic inch V-8 makes.* Rebel is bigger, bolder... ^ and now more powerful than ever. So why not see your American Motors/ / '■ Rambler Dealer! This could be the day you get carried away and end up wth your Mind-Changer. Every minute of V ' every working day, two more families make thpir rhoire a new American Motors car. _ American Motors.. .where quality Is bailt In, not added on. ® Be careful with your car-full... itart with a aafety check. It’S National Mlnd-Changlng Month at your American Motors/Rambler Dealer. BILL SPENCE, INC. Clqkkston RUSS JOHNSON MOTOR SALES Lok« Orion HOUGHTEN & SON, INC. , Rochester ROSE RAMBLER Union Loke i BOY - BEST GIRL IDENT. BAND DIAMOND and CULTURED PEARL DIAMOND BRIDAL DUO *49’’->500 Lady’s BULOVA - 17 Jewels 2 Diamonds — Expansion Band 195 ONE HALF THE PRICE POLAROID COLOR PACK CAMERA Now Only $qQ95 si.aswttkiy wv Half the price of the original model. Same film and automatic faatures color pictuies in 60 seconds — black and white in 10. Man’s BULOVA Self-Wind* k>59” jnrnrtr , HOME OF RNEST BRAND NAMES 108 N.SAGINAW-FE 3-7114 OPEN THURS., JRl t NIGHTS’til 9 PARK FREE ^ inWKC’SLot atRearofStorf THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. MAY 19, 1966 PART OF THERAPY-Minh Son N^yen, an ll-year-oW Vietnamese who lost his left hand during a Viet Cong ambush. demonstrates how he ,can hit a ball today, thanks to an artificial hand fitted at Los Anpeles’ Orthopedic Hospital. The boy entered the hospital Jan. 30 for a series of operations and physical therapy. Nurse Edith Gillespie is in the background. 1980 Is Here as Far as Traffic Planning Goes, Says Expert DETROIT fAP)-A transportation exp^ says there is a “gallojping evoluUon in transpor-tati^'^ that is putting more cars on the road than communities ^handle. In fact, he says, travel volumes not predicted to occur until 1980 may occur this year. ★ w * And, said Irving jf Rubin, "when our tabulations are I complete, we may very well 'find that 1980 arrived last year.” Rubin reported Tuesday to members of Sigma Delta Chi, a journalism society, on findings of the Detroit Regional Transportation and Land Use Study, of which he is director. TRAFnC STUDY He cited a 1953 study df traffic in the Detroit metropolitan region which predicted a 1980 Double U.S. Space Spectaculaf; Set Starting on Memorial Day CAPE KENNEDY (UPD-T^ United States hopes to t^e another big step toward an astronaut on the moon by 1969 with ^ a two-day space spectacular beginning on Memorial Day. Space agency officials yesterday scheduled the renm of Gemini 9’s orbital extravaganza—featuring a rendezvous and spacewalk—fn-May 31. TTie preceding 4ay, die first operational Atlas-Centaur rodiet is to hnrl a Surveyor spacecraft toward America’s first soft landing ^on the moon. Such a landing is necessary to determine the makeup of the moon’s surface for manned explorations. To set the stage for the Gemini 9 rerun, teams of technicians are working 24 hours a day to get a new Atlas rocket ready for launching the substitute rendezvous target that astronauts TTiomas Stafford and Eugene Ceman will chase in space. “This is a very difficult task,” said Dr. George E. Mueller, chief of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration’s manned space-flight program. Road Unit Hits RelocatonBill Senator Raps Stand; Committee Gives OK LANSING (AP) -Utb Highway Department <^ared Wednesday a bill fiNpiiring the department to 'ioarantee housing for pejMons displaced by highwayo^^uld halt most state highway construction. ^ the Senate Highway Corn-approved the bill and a ^Itinator accused the department of “bluffing like they always vdume of 7.5 million vehicle trips a day. But, he said, a “conservative analy^” of a study under way this year shows there are now more than 7 million vehicle trips a day. He attributed the big Increase in travel to “striking changes In our way of life” and said these tinges are increasing travel totals out of all proportion to population growth.” Changes include more two-car households and more oneT«Tn rrrnnnFTryr¥|TnTnTSTrnTrrnTnTnrn~n'TmmTTmmTTTrrnryrrrrnTr8TrnrmTym''s viA'i i v 4 COAAPLETE FLOORS or HOMI rUMNSHINOS-ltfVATOt tnVICI TO lACH FtOOt UflRDl/ 17-19 S, SAC^NAW ST. Downtown Pontiac OPEN MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY TIL 9 P.M. • PROVINCIAL • COLONIAL • TRADITIONAL • MODERN All By Amorica's Loading AAanufacturwrtI free delivery 4-Pc. Walnut Contemporary BEDROOM FoAhlmed ujilk cu F(j0il/v FOR STYLE-CONSCIOUS HOMEAAAKERS Mar and Stain-Resistant Plastic Tops. Lavishly beautiful walnut bedroom suite of distinctive quality. All drawers dovetailed and center-guided. All pieces completely dust-proof. Includes nine-dj’ower triple dresser, framed plate glass mirror, large roomy chest of drawers and full-or twin-size panel bed. Reg. ^199 BUDGET TERMS $179 byKroehler Early American 90 DAYS Sam* as Cash Reg. »229 Foam Cushions fashion-featured for more beautiful room You'll appreciate the beauty and quality of this sofa, also the expert tailoring and the comfortable coil spring base. Covered in durable performance-tested fabrics. This sofa speaks quality throughout! $149. *149 I \ ' MONTHS TO PAY f^ourMiut Be Sati$fied-Thi$ We Guarantee** OPEN MON., THlIrS , FRIDAY TIL 9 P.M. AJUAJU«.tAAmmJUAIJUUULUJLJULEAUJL^^ 19 9 ».m 9 9 9 9.R.».>JJLAJULmAJL9JUL9JULUJUtAJLA9JULUjLAJ.U.U9AMA^^ THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. MAY 19, 1966 Straw Hat Day Is May 21st / Dobb's celebrated Milan straws— light, easy-going, and very good looking. Dobbs handcrafts these fine imported straws in a variety of styles, and adds a colorful variety of interchangeable puggree bands. Here are a few of the classics Dobbs is majoring in this summer. (A) The pinch crown model, with wider brim. (B) The center crease model with narrow bound-edge brim. (C) The telescope crown model with medium brim. Each is priced at 13.95. DOBBS straws get a handsome start on summer, and BOSTONIAN shoes take a step in the same direction Bostonian takes a load off your feet — with lightweight summer shoes that are beautifully crafted, yet cut from featherweight leathers (uppers and soles). Shown here: (A) The Linwood, a bladk-and-white classic wing-tip with uppers of DuPont wipe-and-wear Corfam, at 29.95. (B) The Cyrano, a black-and-white moc toe with Corfam uppers, at 23.95. (C) The Brboke, a moc toe in black or brown calf with matching black or tan Haitian weave front, at p 22.95. 0«r PoRtiK Mall Star* Opan Evary Evanini ta 9 PJA. Oar Nrminglifmi Slara Opaa Hmts. aad Fri. ta 9; Sat. ta StM THE PONTIAC PRESS THURSDAY, MAY 19, 1966 MacGregor-Spalding BASEBALL GLOVES DRASTICALLY REDUCED! th.y JiSrS- *18.00 dfsign, loctd fingtr* mh Rtc. $30 Rtc. $20 MacGrtgor Spalding "Robtrta Clamanlt’* »Dick McAuliffa’* AUrOGUra MODEL autograph MODEL ' Naturol^ll pocket. , ,qo% *10.00 Rag. $16 PRO MODEL Reg. $24 Spalding “Pate Ward" Spalding “Roger Maris" PRO MODEL mIoo Reg. $11.00 “Phil Rixiuto” autograph model ”“Cob" COMPLETE LINE OF GLOVfe from 2.95 to 34.95 FRESH AS A DAISY OUR BRAND NEW SPRING FABRICS AT GOOD OLD FASHION SAVINGS! DOHED SWISS 1.00. Crisp dainty 45" shear with permanent dots, reg. 1.29 a yard 65% Dacron polyester 35% Dacron CoHon BROADCLOTH Sew crisp, pretty easy- polyester, 35% cotton. "CHARCe IT" AT KHSCi'S Anniversary Special k Michisan-Made Product 20 Gal. GARBAGE CAN the moffic touch of Cinderella 45” COTTON SEERSUCKER m Reg. 1.29 p yard; this is the time to stock upl lo.t.1. TAFFETA fc TO Got. TRASH BURNER 033 With Cover and Footed. V 57! Decorator BURLAP 49; WITH A GOLDEN NEEDLE [ggis i? Summering Seuth uandamilo's AAexlean inspirations in aun! ahlfte and play sots. Bold colors, cool eottone ombraidery and ball fringe. Olel 3to6x 7te14 3.99 4.99 Optn^vrrAight’Mf TEL-HURON ft 5-9955, Childrens Anniversary Sale TENNIS SHOES Whita aaIJSoiIS 13 1311 SDOurffy Chargg .Use Your Security Charga 1. Tel-Huren, Pehtiae 2. Nerthweod, Royal Oak I. Tet-Craft, Detroit 4.1 Evergroon, Detroit I. Eaotgato, Roseville PONTIAC STORE FI 44211 Open 9:30 to 9:00 TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER Phon. 335-5471 SHOP THESE MERCHANTS FOR ANNIVERSARY SPECIALS • Cunningham's a Griswold Sporting Goods • Winkelman's a R. B. Shops • Osman's • Beckwith-Evans • Kresge's a Shoe Box • Sander's • Wrigley's • 1 Hour Valet • Camera Shop a Jayson Jewelers • Petrusha & Sons • Children's Shop a Golden Thimble MUST STORES OPEN EVERY NIGHT FREE PARKLSG Bare ih new ways-front and back plunges. Stretchy shapes that follow the figure, cut through the water with perfect ease.-Most of oil, they flatter beautifully. Here, button-front effect. Ban Lon® nylon in turquoise. Sizes 10 to 16 in the group. $16 shop monday thru Saturday to 9 TEL HURON SHOPPING CENTER Telegraph at Huron Road Chic Summer Check ... to escort you right Into summer. Smart windowpone checks on double-knit Arnel® jersey. You'll love the big, roomy pockets and tosseled "leather" tie belt. Block with white,---------------- red with white. Sizes 8-18. ■ ROYAL OAK. SU W. 4Ui a URNDAli iM W. IM1U a ItRMIMNAM, lU a PONTIAC, TU-HURON a ROCHUTtR, NORTH NIU PLAU •18 Play 90U or relax in fhoso Jay mar slacks Sbppit^ CtrttB General Electric annotiiices Portable Color TV. ^ How much? Only $24995 ting now, colo r. not too r, color television is for evei ---It’e^t h d to tune. Magie^emory ■ ■ color set to taning makes G-E the easiest color si tune! (All you do is turn the pre-ti ^ color dials until they point straight up.) It doesn’t need an outside antenna-(if your black and white aet doesn’t need one). It has its own set of rabbit ears, so you can have color wherever you have an outlet. It e with a free 90-day . ;here’e nothing in the ind a color television world between STOP IN AND SEE IT TODAY! pfipgggi G-E Foita-color Mod.lM213BWD EASY PAYMENTS Coma to Osmun's for a great selection of famous Dr. Cary AAiddlecoff golf slacks by Joymar. They're 55% Fortrel®/45% Bud-rel* rayon and completely wash and wear. Extra comf< waist that features Jaymar's Perrna-ho curls. Choose Navy, AAedium Blue, Light Blue, Black, Beige, Brown, l^ed, Burgundy, Olive, Yellow, or Gold. Available at Both Stores $[295 a part 0/ Ponifac since 1931 ISMUN’S • Anniversary Special sterling Silver S^ ORDER NOW AND Save 25% On • Wallace • Lunt • Gorham • Reed & Barton • International • Heirloom -TW0LE20%rti TELrHURON CENTER DOWNTOWN PONTIAC FREE PARKING JAYSON JEWELERS CAMERA MART’S USED PROJECTORS A CAMERAS CLEARANCE SALE FUJICA 35mm CAMERAS ....... i.r .m,... $ 6JM» ARCUS C-3 and C4 Models.........ly... $ 9.85.. BELL I HUWELL Mens oamera ... ..i,.. $ 54U ARCUS SLIDE PROJECTORS............. $10.00 KODAK MOVIE PROJECTOR .........my.. $15.00 HIGH STYLE IN A PORTABLE TV! i GENERAL ELECTRIC PORTABLE TV e Big 19* diag. tube-172 e Ail‘chann”i (VHF-UHF) Reception featuring G-E’s “SILVER-TOUCH” Tandem 'Tuning Systems. a Front Controls and ADVENTURER III Model M423CBQ ...Easy to Hear... PERSONAL PORTABLE GID FOR PEOPLE TO General Electric Personal Portable TV e Big 16" Diag. Tuba-125 aq. in. Picture, e Private Earphone Jack for truly pereonal viewing pleasure, e All-Channel (VHF-UHF) Reception fea-turing G-E’i “SILVER-, TOUCH” “ • I* Tuning System. Now GE’s Eleetronie Wiring Has a Lifetime Guarantee (at no extm cost) BE SMART . . . SEND YOUR ORDERS TO TlwCaiile>ui MoaL wmm FE 3-7879 363-6286 B—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS; ^THURSDAY, MAY 19, 1966 Quiet Diplomacy Results in Malaysia-Indonesia Talks By AKlHUR L. GAVISON LM^N (AP) - After « pl^Oe of quiet diplomacy, Britain and Maiaysia are ready to take the calculated risk of making peace with a sobered Indonesia. This is the meaning of the Malaysian government assignment Wednesday that sent Deputy Prime Minister Tun Abdul Razak to meet with Indonesian Foreign Minister Adam Malik. More is at stake than an end to the three-year undeclared war between Indonesia and Malaysia. The stability of South Asia is involved, and With it American-British plans to block Red Chinese expansionism in the area. An end to Uje war ia aU-im- portant for Britain at this critical stage in the Labor government’s economic recovery program. Britain has 50,000 air, lan^ and sea forces in Malaysia to defend its Commonwealth partner. MUCH SPADEWORK British representatives in Jakarta have done much spade- work in informal exchanges Malaysian territoiy and ship-with the new Indonesian regimeiPhig and a cease-fire along the of Lt. Gen. Suharto. The outline of a settlement has begun to shape up, according to diplomats of the three countries concerned. The starting point for any political reconciliation, by common consent, seenos likely to be a tacit truce. This would mean an end to Indonesian raids on sian and Indonesian Borneo. If all goes well, this would be followed by a quiet withdrawal of forces from the Borneo frontier. Binding political agreements could follow. NO DESIGNS The Indonesians have given 1. The Suharto regime has no designs on present territory of the Malaysian federation. 2. It is concerned much more with reorganizing Indonesia’s near-bankrupt economy. Aid for reconstructum is likely to be sought from the United States, Britain, Australia, Japan and the Netherlands. 3- Indonesia intends Joining no will follow true nonalignment. President Sukarno was committed nominally to nonalignment but Westerners considered him to be in Pddng’s pocket. The Indonesians also have let it be known that for the continued stability of the Suharto regime the Indonesian-Malaysian confrontation n«ist be ended with no loss of Indonesian honor British and Malaysian authorities seem to have taken the point. They are aware Sukarno scored a great p - “The living quarters are about 27 x 27 feet,” smiles Coast Guardsman Dan Discianno, “and at each day goes by, it gets smaller and smaller and smaller . Thirty miles out into Lake Michigan north of here and 18 miles west of the Mackinac Bridge is Gray’s Reef Light. ★ * ★ Located at the reef’s “elbow,’’ it is one of more than a dozen such installations manned by the U.S. Coast Guard to make shipping lanes safe where winds are wont to bowl through the Straits of Mackinac in an area menaced by shoals, reefs and shallows. Hermits live on Gray’s Reef but they are a far cry from “The Hermit of Shark-Tooth Sioal,” who, legend has it, “lived by himself on a sea lion’s shelf in lonely Iniquity.” MODERN HERMITS The modem hermits of Gray’s Reef have TV. ’They live in the 80-foot-hlgh lighthouse on a 60 x 88-foot con-’ Crete “crib” sunk solidly Into the reef 26 feet below water. And instead of fighting loneliness, they guard against getting on each other’s nerves. “We’ve been pi*etty lucky,’ Discianno says. “We’ve had no squabbles. In fact,” he adds ■ a wink, “you can’t hardly pick an argument around here just to pass the time. T ask Wade what he wants to watch on ’TV and he says 'It doesn’t matter to me.’ ” TWO SEASONS Elwood Wade, bosun’s mate first class from ’Traverse City, is in charge of the li^t. A tall, thin, soft-spoken man, he has served there two seasons. “We keep busy to pass the time,” Wade says. “We get up at 7 a.m., eat breakfast and ‘turn to’ for station work 8 a.m. We ‘secure’ from work at 1630 hours (4:30 p.m.) and then are pretty much on oUr own. ★ ★ ★ ‘”rhat’s week days. Saturdays and Sundays we don’t have regular work but we can work if we want to.” The work includes maintaining the 1,000-watt, 9,OOOcandle-power red li^t which is visible up to 17 miles away under good conditions; operating the air-powered fog horn when visibility is five miles or/less; and keeping a 24-hour/radiobeacon on the air which can be picked up as far as 70 miles away. ’Ihe light is on four seconds nd off two seconds as seen from a passing ship. The fog horn is turned on by hand when visibility falls and operates on a 20seoMid cycle, with two seconds of melancholy warning followed by 18 seconds of silence. The dash, dot, dot, dash of the radiobeacon (No. • in Morse code) is continuous. Just off the smaU Uving, dining and recreation room which also serves as a galley, three identical grandfather-type pendulum clochs stand sl^e by side.' Two keep time and operate automatic eouipment and the third keeps check on the others and stands by as a spare. ★ ★ ♦ ’lime Is important to the men On dray’s Reef. In the two small rooms with double bunks, in the engine room and at other strategic locations are calendars with big X’s throuj^ each passed day. yghthousc duty is generally n a volunteer basis, according to Wade, though if there aren’t enough volunteers, men are serve in the off season. Warrant Offleer Jamef C. eludes a station at voix base. In addition to Gray’s Reef, Iron It? Forget it! PERMANENT PRESS SPORT SHIRTS in COOL PASTELS These shirts get one pressing in a lifetime-when they’re made, BEFORE you buy. Bond’s exclusive “BONDSET” builds the shape right into the fabric. Wash these any way you lii^e (even machine>tub, tumble>Kliy)» and they stay emooth-as-ice. 65% Dacron polyester, 35% cotton in frosty blue, green, maize. S,M,L,XL. Teacher Plan fa Be Eyed in Waterford TTie Waterford Township Board of Education tonight will consider school district participation in an elementary teaching internship program, operated by Michigan State University since 1958. Under the program, fourth-year university teaching students would be employed as regular instructors in elementary classroonu in the school district at a salary of about 83,500. The number of interns ai-lowed by a participating district is limited to five. Interns would be supervised and coordinated by a university staff member. In other business, the board is expected to approve the calendar for the 1966-67 school year, w ★ ★ Also on the agenda is a recommendation of Supt. of Sichools Dr. Don 0. Tatroe regarding staff appolntmenls; Michigan “mitten” : Michigan and Huron. THE PONTIAC MALL Birth Control Project Is Tried on Seagulls MUSKET(}?T ISLAND, Mass. (AP) — \Twenty-lbur thousand seagulls oit this sandy island, took part in ah experiment in family planning ^ecent- *■ ★ ★ They were fed tons of fish treated with a birth-control agent. It’s a {k’oject of the University of MaMachusetts to ease the gull population crisis on the Crews serve tlwee weeks on duty and one week off in most cases but may choose to serve six weeks straight with two weeks off. Lights are generally opened about mid-March and kept in operation into December, depending on the shipping season. When lights close for the year, men who have served on them ■r — " ' — ^ if SPECIAL*: Citi r OE IM. Refriteraler f-doer BottoM Freeier .a*.a... *239" , QE124taTtitvision *75" OE10»Talavision *95" 11” Color Ttldvisioii *249" Trade ia aeoMlad ia aalar 01 9* Traneialar TV far ear, baat or beat *109" GE 21” Color Tolovislon a.. a. *439" Used 30”Eloctrie Rango.... *49" Now Philoo Electric Dryer.. • *99" SALE NOW IN PROGRESS ' CONVENIENT EASYTERMS Hampton Eh(!liiiA 825 W. Huron Sta FE4^252I FORMERLY CALLED HERITAGE HOUSE 4-PC. COLONIAL BEDROOAA SUITE • Double Dresser • Minor e ^ ^ • Chest • Panel Bed Q f All4-Piecos ONLY Ivf To Help Complete Any Bedroom Grouping In Your Home .1 • Triple Dresser In Hardrock Maple *99 * Large Chest in Hardreck Maple *6S • Miner Framed in Hardrock Maple *29 * Cannonball Bed in Hardrock Maple *79 For Your Colonial Dining neasure... TABLE HARDROCK AAAPLE 36x54x64-lnch CHAIRS . . *15 BUFFET BASE ^94. CHIHA DECK ^74 Codcl] ■House' (Eolnniai \ yuntitttrr 3nr.i 4405 HiGHLANO RD. Cor. Pontiac Lalco Rd. OPEN DAILY 'TIL 9 P.M. Phono 674-2251 TERMS ARRANGED 90 DAYS CASH FORMERLY CALLED, HERITAGE HOUSE BUY NOW! Buy on Budget! _ eoaaiatsiias wseoaosH! pusTinsAinsiF NIZES NATMHWIKI TNQIE’S ONE WINNER AT LEAST FROM OUR STOREI COUU BE YIN! CHECK THESE SPECIAL TV BARGAINS TNo-for-ONE SALE • All-channel VHF-UHF rMepUon with the new G-E Tandem ”82” integrated tuning ayetem featuring the excluaive ”410” pennationic tran^tor tuner. • Front eontrola and front aound—easy to see... easy to tiae... easy to hear. • Complete with matching roli-around stand in satin-nickal 6nish with walnut finished handle and trim. • Attractive high-impact polystyrene cabinet. EASY TERMS! *139” Jmt Say ^^Charge It SMALL DOWN PAYMENT > MONTHS TO PAY! TRULY J.IGHT-WE1CHT PERSONAL PORTABLE TV From Tbe World's Leader In Portable TVI General Electric Adventurer I Featmlno: • Attractive, durable textured Plastic Cabinet with Handsome Molded Handle. • AU Channel (UHF ft VHF) Reception featuring G-E’a "SILVER-TOUCH” T ' Tuning System. Only Try G-E's "Magic Memory" Color Reference Controls! GENERAL ELECTRIC COLOR TVI • Front Controls & Front Sound... Eggy 'to See... Easy to Um ... Easy to Hear! e All Channel (VHF ft UHF) Beoeptkn featuring G-E’a “SILVER-TOUCW” Tandem Tuning System. WITH MATCHING BASE •399" We Have Color TV n >i»l Chesterfield townships. I ? _________________ per cent of local mailboxes do "" "" not have names or numbers on Independence INDEPENDENCE TOWN SHIP - Reginald R. Bird, $5, of 7661 Allen has been named township assessor, replacing William C. Cobb, who resigned to accept another position. Bird is the third assessor the township has had in the last six months. Cobb had asumed thej position late last year, succeed BOARD MEETING In other action at ’Tuesday’s township board meeting, it was announced that a i^nt census’Tj,* ...re rusted and un- taken in the township has unofficially set the population at 23,- The census was taken them. what is wrong with thw mail contaTners. TO TOUR CITY Grubb and Mrs. Neil Taylor, beautification representative for Wixom, will tour the city to judge mailboxes June 1. The prize will be awarded at the regular city council meeting June 14. “A great many of them,” sightly or fail to meet specifications in some manner.” All these irregularities slow down mail delivery, Grubb said. Troy School Groups' Concert Is Tonight TROY — The Baker Junior ing the late James Gardiner Youth Day who died Nov. 8. ’The position pays |6,0M a year, according to township Parade Slated officials. Bird will take office June 1. In other business at a recent board meeting, a |9,240 contract was awarded to Ahderson Plumbing and Heating, 5910 M-15, for installation of a new heating unit in the township! hall. Construction is under way, according to township officials. for Saturday Ten dollars in postage stamps' ^'8** School concert band and will be awarded to the Wixom! j resident who is judged to have ® evening in the the most attractive mailbox and school auditorium. who®obtains the highest score. * * * ■* * * I Trombonists Toni Stanezak, Ten points will be given for Chuck McDonald and Jim each correction of the items list-j Gresham will be featured in ed on Form 4056, a citation“Swinging Slides” by C a r/o 1 issued residents spelling out Butts. Special Education Director Is Appointed for Walled Lake Married and the father of five children, Wood has a B.A. from Western Michigan University and a masters from the University of Michigan. A Navy veteran, he is expected fir join toe Walled Lake staff for the 1966-67 school year. In other action Monday night, the school board askedihe-G«n-merce Township Commission to delay the rezoning of property directly across from the Union Lake Elementary School, adjoining Clifford Smart Junior High, until a thorough study has been made. “We would like to determine the" effect the proposed rezoning would have on the health, welfare and safety of the 1,600 children attending the two schools,” Supt. George Garver said. SKHNG IS IN Interscholastic skiing was of- ficially recognized and placed on the approved list of athletic activities. Money was budgeted for coaching salaries. The board also authorized recognition of the Walled Lake bargaining agent for drivers of the district. WIXOM - A Youth Day parade Saturday afternoon will climax Michigan Week activities here. The annual bicycle parade will leave Wixom Elementary School at 1 p.m. and will lead to the City Hall parking lot, where cash prizes will be awarded for the best decorated bicycles. Leading toe parade will be Wteom Elementary kinder-gartners Cris SikkUa and Dianne Burger, voted king and queen last week by students at toe school. Following the parade. Little League baseball games are scheduled for 1:30 and 3:30 p.m. at the Wixom field. Hot dogs and soft drinks will be provided for the youngsters! by Holloway Construction Co. HOSPITALITY DAY Hospitality Day Friday will feature on open house at City Hall, sponsored by the Wixom Chamber of Comnierce in honor of “older Michiganders.” Senior citizens may obtain transportation to the event by caUinf City Hall. Also in conjunction with Michigan Week, the Wixom Elementary PTA has scheduled a tea sole for i^his afternooh iObnbf o retiring teacher Mrs. Vanderhill. Highland Twp. Girl Wins Award for Art HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP -Kitene Brown, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Ray K. Brown of 3820 Middle, is one of nine Interloch-en Arts Academy students who have won awards in the 1966 National High School Exhibition in New York. Her prizes were $50 for painting and the $100 Hallmark Honor Award for an opaque water color. Hear Ye! Hear Ye! "••5amiLibr.iw The choice of the f i to receive the funds was I id partly on the team’s des ttion of its aims as well as iluation of its own lilwary prof ■SE TECHNIQUES "This Is an excellent t, tunity to see and hear tou Are Invited to ST. LAWRENCE PARISH Fellowship CARD PARTY in Utica Table Prizes Door Prizes REFRESHMENTS SUNDAY MAY 22 8:00 P.M. St. Lawrence High School Cafeteria Utica Rd.p W. of Van Dyke Donetion $1.50 'KM SAT. - MAY 2Ut What makes a great cook? CHAR-BROIL Portable Pits, that's whatl The secret's in the Cast iron, which holds In heat and f lavorand gives you real old fashioned cooking at its finest. CHAR-BROIL* From FI^EE Bar-B-Cued BEEF SANDWICHES POP - CHIPS-Plus-Leam How YOU Can Be Cook qf the Year With CHARBROIL! THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 19, 19M B—ia Your HEALTH is in COOD HANDS FLOATING ON AIR-Mrs. May KimbaD of Boston was literally floating on air as she celebrated her 90th birthday recwtly by taking her first glider flight. After the ex- perience, Mrs. Kimball exulted, “Oh how wonderful, just wonderful. .. it’s so pretty.” Shown with her is pilot James Doyle of Andover, N.H. U.S; Winning^adrGaboirFr^^ M LIBREVILLE, Gabon (AP) The United States is gradually winning back the friendship of Gabonese leaders who once blamed American intervention for an unsuccessful attempt to overthrow President Leon Mba. The president was saved at the 11th hour during the 1964 coup by the arrival of French troops which still are the most solid prop of his regime. French military and civilian advisors have a bigger role in Gabon’s administration than in 'most other former French coionies in Africa. The Gabonese army and poiice still are under command of French officers. Albert Bongo, Mba’s defense' and information chief, an impassioned supporter of French policies in Gabon, is the gray eminence of the regime and is widely tapped as the 64-year-oId president’s eventual successor. I* ★ * The 1964 coup was directed^ partly against French influence. Former U.S. Ambassador Charles Darlington was suspect-; ed by many Gabonese politi-i dans of maintaining close con-j tacts with its leaders. For more than a year after that, there! I was no American ambassador mountain of almost pure iron ore is believed to contain reserves of up to two billion tons. in Gabon. NOT TRYING The new ambassador, career diplomat David M. Bane, arrived last August and, by patient diplomacy, has succeeded in convincing Gabonese and French officials that the United States is not trying to replace BethleheiB Steel Carp., ii collaboration with Freaeh interests, is planning to develop the area. Experts say die ore can be scooped off the surface with a bnlldoier. At Moanda, some 200 miles French Influence in the country.; inland from Belinga, there is the The French are more than j largest known deposit of man-usually sensitive about Gabon, I ganese ore outside the Soviet a nation the size of Colorado bloc, astride the equator on the : west coast of Africa. i Moanda is probably the only town in the world where the manganese. Here, too, a large- With a population of less than half a million, Gabon has rich mineral deposits and produces much of the uranium needed fat French nuclear weapons development. Unlike most African nations, Gabon has no balance of trade problems. The uranium deposits may soon be worked out, imt huge quantities of manganese,! scale development is planned jointly by French and American interests. OIL PRODUCTION Oil production of coastal and ffshore wells is soon expected to reach six million tons annually- The investment needed to iron ore and oil are only waiting! develop all these immese re-tobe taken away. j sources is so great diat the The mineral reserves provide breach realize they cannot a unique opportunity for| handle H without the help of French-American economic co- American interests," Bane operation. IRON MOUNTAIN At Belinga, 300 miles inland, a People in the Nev/s| By The Associated Press Actress Ann Sothem has been charged with a traffic violation in a twocar accident a few blocks from ■ the Coconut Gfove Playhouse, in Miami, Fla., where she is appearing in a play. Police said no one was seriously hurt. She was charged with failing to yidd the right-(rf-way and smashed her auto broadside Into another, patrolman Larry Glover said. After the accident last night. Miss Sothern went on stage to appear in "The Glass Me-Ann Sothen nagerie.” IcHrting Doctor=GwitTijM^ff=tongevity How do you live to be 166? A Unsing physician. Dr. Richard C. Bates, gave the foOowing advice yesterday at the American Industriai Hygieoe Conference at Pittabnrgh: Smoking—That's eui” Foods—A diet of cereal, faults and vegetables rather “This may explain why we and the French are moving closer and closer together.” ★ ★ ♦ If French di|ilomats ever felt any suspicion of . American intentions in Gabon, they s ready to bury the hatchet. French and Gabonese officials praise what they call Bane’s I “discretion.” In practice, this means allowing the French to exercise ce^ tain exclusive prerogatives in advising the Mba regime. I f *700 FILLED BY US QUALITY DRUGS LOWEST PRICE 4895 Dixie Hiphw.iy Exercise—“The more violent the exercise, the better, right from the start”-iirovlded you’ve had a chMkup by your doctor first advises the 45-year-old internist, who says he runs seven miles n day* nonstop. And the hardest—“TVy to be a woman. They live longer than men,” he laid. ^ ■■Mug Thi« Oovpoa WWi Your tboM ■■ SHOE REPAIR SPECIAL HALF SOLES 8-PIECE DANISH MODERN BEDROOM GROUPING • Doi^ble Dresser f _WfllnutJfammii^£u:„-..JLjClmxt..~.Jt£onai-BecL.—oad. Be^ • 2 Modern Lamj3s„^_ This remarkable bedroom collection features the best of Contemporary design . . . genuine Walnut veneers accented with handsome vertical inlays, louvered drawer fronts, fine cabinetmaker detail. Long-lasting plastic laminate tops, identically matched ito the fine Walnut grain, give extra protection against accidents and wear. ' COMPLETE FOR ONLY . . . *199: No Money Down 90 Days Same as Cash 2 Years to fey B—16 THE PONTIAC PRB$g, THURSDAY, MAY 19, 1966 Present Status of Major Legislation WEBFOOTED WEDGE — Mama and Goos^, of the family, form a ivotective wedge as they lead the Nashaw^ Golf Club hv Concord, Mass. America's Hinge Generation Middle-Aged Need a Boost By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK (AP) - A “Great Society” should recognize real heroes. Since this is so, isn’t it about time that President Johnson and Hie Congress formulated a program to pay At 45, SO, 55 and 00, each mid-dle-ager could be given an Oak Leaf Cluster, provided he still WASHINGTON (UPI)-«atu8 of major legislation: LABOR WAGE-HOUR - Admlristra-tion and labor now supportinc legislaUon to raise the |l.r hourly minimum wage to $lilO on Feb. 1, 1967 and to $1.60 on Feb. 1,1968. Also would give new miaL mom wage coverage ta tbmt 7 millkm workers, for the first tfane, inclading farm and service industry House: Education committee approved, flow action scheduled this week. Senate: No action yet. UNEMPLOYMENT COMPENSATION — Johnson asked Congress to liberalize and make unilorm unempioyment compensation poyments in the states. House: Ways and Means Committee has held hearings, is considering bill. Senate: Awaiting House action. WELFARE POVERTY - Congrett will review authority fw continua- third President has asked for $1.7-billion authorization, and an actual appropriation of $1.6-billion compared to the $1.5-billion requested and got last year. House: Education and Labw Committee approved $1.75 UUion bill, witti new restrictions on jH'ogram administration. Senate: Nothing scheduled yet. Administration has requested legislation to permit Washing- ton, D.C., to elect its own local government Senate; Approved. House: Approved differing version, requiring vote of citizens on home rule question. Efforts to reconcile the two bills appar-enUy failed. CONSUMERS TRUTH-IN-LENDING - Pre^ idmit Johnson has proposed that lenders be required by law to tell borrowers the true annual interest and total amount of interest for consumer credit. Legislation has not yet been submitted. Senate: Has similar bill by Sen. Paul Douglas, D-Ill., but no action has been scheduled. Truth-in-packaging and labeling information for the consumer on the quantity, quality and price of supermarket goods. Senate: Commerce committee approved. House: No action yet. TRANSPORTATION D^ARTMENT - Johnson has asked Congress to establish a Cabinet level department for transportation including the Federal Aviation Agency, Bureau of Public Roadq, Coast Guard, Office of the Undersecretary of Commeroe for Transportation, Traverse City Offers Proof of Big Catches ■niAVERSE OTY (AP) -Cherry crops in Grand Traverse County appear to have fared better than others stricken by recent freezes, Cfounty Rural Agent George Me-. Manus said Wtonesday. ! Tart dimies, he said, appear i to be better off than they were in the short crop of 1963. Sweet cherries were doing much bet-| ter, he added. i Maritline Commission, and safety ftifictions oi the Interstate Commerce Commission and Civil Aeronautics Board, phis smaller agencies. House: Hearings under way. Senate: Hearings under way. SAFETY — The President called fw a $700 million, six-year traffic safety Senate: Has approvto tire standards legialatian. House: Commerce committee com-ideted hearings, legislation. FARM President Johnson asked for a five - year, $3.3-biIliwi atmual “food fw freedom” program to sell and give food to hungry nations. HOUSE: Agriculture committee approved a $3.3 bilUon annual program fw only two years. Senate: Hearings completed. COTTON — Industry spedees- men want administration-backed bill to iet cotton growers tite themselves to pay foe a cotton program. House: Passed-Senate: Hearings completed. EDUCATION LIBRARIES -> Administration asking $57.5 million obe-year spem^ authority for public library construction and o$wa-tion aid. House: Education and labw ewnmittoe approved $86-tor first year; $675 million ovw five-year period with No action. HEALTH FOREIGN HEALTH - Johnson asked for a $45-milIion program to train 1,500 international health wwkers for assignment abroad. House: Commerce committee approved the bill but tbe rules oommittee buried it. ESf-forts under way to revive it. Senate: Nothing scheduled. Learning to Play the Organ is "MorelWwifha IHI^W3®1 were employed and not a tax delinquent. Governments tend to regard him as something like a two-legged cow—to be milked morning and evening. You can win a deal on a battlefield in five minutes. But noi medals are awarded for our! Then, at 65, the President and most numerous heroes — tiiose the Congress could issue him a who quietly and unspectacular- brass sundial — a gold watch ly fight the long 25-year dally might be overdoing it — and a grind that stretches between parchment scroll reading: their 40th birthday and final vie- -a grateful nation salutes you, BURT LAKE (AP)-A couple tory - retirement. ijohn Doe,-for a good job well planning to be married this Pair Found Dead; Car Fumes Blamed Why not a national day honoring them? Why not give medals to the middle-aged? Certainly today any man or woman who admits being ovw 40 deserves a medal — for courage, if not fw valor. Evwybody loves a parade, why not vast parades once a year — perhaps it could be held on April Fools’ Day done. You have served‘Y o irr country faithfullly and well by raising a family, buying a home, staying out of jail, refraining from bearing your wife in public, and contributhig to the mortal welfare ot the U.S. Treasury. 'Now, take it easy, John. Doff your harness and enjoy the green pastures M old a^ And remember, if you ever need help weekend was found dtod Wednesday in a parked car near this Emmet County commuidty. Sheriff’s deputies said Ronald Jordan, 26, of Petoskey and Mary Lumley, 23, ol Detroit were found dead in the auto in a remote area. He said they had been missing since Saturday. ★ ' ★ A Deputies said there was no sip of violence and tmtatively blamed carbon monoxide poi-I soiling. App^ntly the couple ally starved for a kind word and a friendfy pat on the back. Ihe fUeral government provided free lunches for kids, college scholarships fw the tal-^ . . . ented^oung, and medical care ™ ^ call us. We’ll call you.’ for the eldwl’y. year-olds would get a brass or i --------------------- ★ A A I leather medal, pinned on by the An allergy is not contag-' had parked after a date and had But what does it send to the i been overcome, deputies said, middle-aged? Just tax bills. They are the most taken-for-granted generation in all history — and the least rewarded. HINGE GENERATION Yet they are the hinge generation of America. It all de-pwids on them. If every middle-aged num and woman went on strike and refused to do his duty for a single week, the conduct of civilization would cease. Factwies and business offices would shut down, railroads pind to a halt, schools close, department stores and restaurant shutter their doors, theaters ring down their curtains. A A The middle-aged not only do most of the nation’s work, but also are chief keepers of the nation’s pocketbook. When they don’t spend, the economy is punctur^. Yet the middle-aged person is the patsy of the times. Everybody else depends on him, but he gets less credit than anybody. HANGOVER FROM PAST He is gibed at, mocked, and treated by his juniors as a hangover from the Neanderthal past. World's Lorgsst Hommor^ Dsolr You’ll find new relaxation ano fun with the now easy-to-play Hammonds. Dollar for dollar feature for feature, you can't buy a better quality organ at this price! This beautiful 2-Manual Spinet gives you excitingly different tones by the hundreds! With bench, EIGHT LESSONS INCLUDED! Our Mobile Reet will bring a Hammond right to your home for Free Trial. F*hone for details or come m for a demonstration GRfNRELl7S, Pontiac Moll, 682-0422 Downtown Pontiac, 27 S. Saginaw St., FE 3-7168 Use Your Charge, 4-Pay Plan (90 days some os cosh) or Budget Terms Tta PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. MAY 19, 1966 B-17 DIAL *r FOR TERROR - Symbolic of photographer Eddie T. Adams. With a spin a of ^■mdts nsing the Me*—of ftc dial, the growing menace is, in many phone to gain access to homes across the instances, turning the teleph(Mie into an incountry is this photo by Associated Press strument of terror. Often an Instrument of Terror Crank Calls Are Rising in US NEW YORK (AP) - Every day a faceless horde of cranks is using the teleidione to gain access to homes across America. With a spin of the dial, this growing menace, in numy instances, is turning the telephone into an instrument of terror. The anonymous caller uses the telephone to harass, threat- a crank call? The telei^ione people have simple advice: Ifsngup. “The pervert gets his kicks from the shock he creates with his lewd remarks," said Lusk. "If he’s denied an audience, he’ll soon quit calling.’’ ★ ★ ★ If the calls persist, the victim I should report them to the tele-1 *0NW ONCI a YEAR' Anniversary en. frighten, malign, annoy, and hone company and to the mouth obscenities. More than 30 states have laws. ... j .u , • The telephone company solves agamst obscene and threatemng:^ cases through ve^ ordi- telephone calls. Law enforcement officials work with telephone security agents to track down the persistent anonymous caller. ANNUAL report The menace is such that In the 1965 arjiual report of the American Tel^)boDe It Telegraph Co., Frederidc R. Kappel, dialrmm of the boards said: "We invite customers to adk our help. We shall take every appropriate action, and stay with the problem until it is worked out.’’ Pat Lusk, a spokesman for AT&T, said “It got started simply as a result of the switch from operators to the dial system — the dials give anonymity to every caller.’’ nary means — call tracing is resorted to only in extreme cases, said George Payne, general conmuinications superintendent of New York Telephone. KEEP LOG One of the best means is for the victim to keep a log for seven days, noting the ^uency, date, time and duration of the mUs;^ recwd of the converse-tlon, and a description of the caller’s voice. This fact sheet often provides a clue to the identity of the anonymous caller. ' ★ * ★ j In one case involving harassing calls, every >dctim reported hearing a squealing sound in the background. It M the tele-| ed until a ITATE OP MICHIGAN - Ttw ProtMta Court for Ifio County of Oakland d to dotyrmbw ------- ..JO ttmo of (Math law of tald docooMd. PubUcatlon and wrvict ahall ba mado ai provided by Statuto and Court Rulo. security agent waiting for the Staten Island ferry got to woo-j dering about the squeal of the train wheels on the subway turn-; around below. i On a hundi the ferry buOdingj was staked out, and the anony-i mous caller was quickly un-' RodMstor, Michlaan ta'id HarSy Cartify that I bava cemparad tha forogolng copy with tha originar racord thoraot. now remaining In toll oftko. and have * tha lama to ba a correct tran May, A.D. im. laai) OPAL ISLES Deputy Roglitar of Probata Court Oakland County. Ml^lgan May 1*. M and Juno 1 1»M NOTICE OP PUBLIC SALB fetica It hereby glvan by tha undi Mad that on Thunday, Juna 2. INS, .. n o'clock P.M. at Oakland Marina, 17 Dixie Hwy., Pontiac, Oakland Cnin- bearing larlal cath h ba made at Oakland Marine, 2S27 Dixie Hwy., Pontiac, Oakland County, Michigan, too place of itorage. Datod: May 17, 1*M Warren Bank 27243 Van Dyke, Warren, Michigan « By Reny D'Alessandro • Authoriied Agent .. May 1* and 20. ItM LEGAL NOTICE INTERIOR PAINTING AND WINDOW REPAIRS at FEDERAL BUILDING AND U.S.P.O., PONTIAC, MICHIGAN (G' MB04SI2). Eitimatad cost la und 5s,0S0. Bldi publicly opanad at 2: FIm., COST Juna 15, 10M In Room b.S. Cthia. t Fed. Off. Bldg., Chkago hdnf- and the time. By comparing the times with her log, p^ce soon had the telephone number, then the address, of a prime suspect. They swore out a search warrant and waited. WEEK WENT BY A week went 1^ before the! next call came, but when it did the police and telephone company were ready. A lock-in device' was inserted into the switching' equipment to keep the connection open and police rushed toi the address. When an officer picked up the telephone in the house, the woman victim was still on the other end. ★ ★ ★ Not every anonymous telephone call is a potential menace. "A lot of people make mistakes in dialing—and when they realize they’vw -got a wrong number they hang up. It’s not the polite thing to do, but they do.” NOT QUICK Contrary to popular belief, there is no quick and easy way to trace a telephone calk It’s a laborious process, complicated by the fact that in the Bell Sys-l tern four different kinds of switching equipment are used in the more than 10,000 central (rffices. Four aids to tracing calls are the pen register, the trouble re-, corder, the lock-in device and the tone set. But in all cases, the phone people make clear, there is no wiiVtapping or listening-in involved. ★ ★ ♦ The pen register was the undoing of a young man in New Jersey, who was convicted of! placing more than a thousand i obscene calls to women over a| period of 12 months. The pen! register is placed on the line of i suspect’s telephone and records every number called and the time. In a Cleveland, Ohio, suburb a trouble recorder was placed on the line of a housewife who had been getting obscene calls. The recorder tapped out the dial im- I ipeciticatlona Including mta NOW AVAILABLE L SERVICES ADMINI- ... So. Dearborn St„ Chl-______________________________________ ^pulses of every Incoming call Codctail cues: Use Holland House --------eoddJtttMix Never buy a mix unless ^ ____ n rtiaifftr E rirlnke - with Holland House, you’re likely :.|e get the best you’ve ever tasted. - You use your favorite liquor, " -s much or 88 little as you like.' Ever tried them? You should. Nine varieties. The original and largest-seiling hUhenTionTi^ atODHl (onenCy 095| A GALLON • $ Why igisb your walls? 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AAost spottors stay In tho pan —oven stays clsanori Alto servea at a rooetor—covorad or uncovorod iff tho biggoet turkty. SEE • Miss Jean Hardy, Home Economist. Detroit Edison Co. Demonstrator Ranges and Frooz-•rs! • Factory Reprosent- atives demonstrate products and an> swer your questions. , e • Frigidaire Electri-clean range cleans itself automatically. • Frigiciaire Automatic fee Makere in action. . 13.6eu.ft (NEMAsUndard) dcoloreorwhlta • 100% Frost-Proof by FRIGIDAIRE! Frost never forms in the big 102-lb. top freezer or in the spacious refrigerator sectioni • Twin vegetable HydratorsI B Big storage doer has 3 full- width shelves, butter compartment. Full-width freezer door shelf, too! a Plus the Power Capsule for Space Age RefrigerationI •271 FUP QUICK ICE EJECTOR KIT Only *1 99 WITH THE PURCHASE OF THE FRIGIDiURE REFRIGERATOR SHOWN Just flip tha handle and you have ica cubes instantly, eqtily. Offer Includes two special 20 cube ice ejector trdys, os well os handy 80>X»rtora $485 . £week ’a small down payment! 3 DAYS 0 N L Y 52 GALLON ELECTRIC WATER HEATER...........*85 KMHip flame RK 3466 AUBURN ROAD - PHONE UL 2-3000 - FE 4-3573 B—1« THE PONTIAC ^RESS. THl^SDAY, MAY 19. 1966 ONE COLOR 1966 Chevrolet Inpala 2-Door Hardtop INCLUDES: Only , Back-up Lamps, Padded Dash, Seat Belts, Deluxe Heater, Padded Sun Visors, Trunk Light, Electric Clock, Outside Plus Tax and Plates N Chevrolet Biscayne 2-Door Sedan Only HMl INCLUDES: ■r Plus Tax and Plates Back-up Lamps^ Padded Dash, Seat Belts, Deluxe Heater, Padded Sun Visor, Outside Side Mirror. OTHER MODELS SPECIALLY PRICED DURING OUR ANNIVERSARY SALE CHOOSE FROM OVER 450 Chevrolets in Stock '^Immediate Delivery! On-the-Spot Financing! Direct Factor, Distributor for Dayton Tiro and Rubber Company Savings Service Satisfaqion Matthews hargreave^ 631 Oakland at 6aci ■ Oakland County^ Largost Volumo Chovrolot Ooalar -------. FE 64181 f }, \ THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MAY 19, Ifm TWO COLORS ;C-i MICIIiGAN : ; ‘fl// \ ■ riiitlo.1 MICHIGAN PETERS I Grade #1 SKHmSS MIW 1 Pi i-u.i-oi. |A^ CHERRIES m* SPARTAN CoffMlbit 6? waigtrt Dolt KneaDPto and Franco Amarican ---------- nnicsnptinitt Brink PmBapple JuiCB MayomimB Maeironi antBnnf SpaghnW w/Mnat Bills 14^1. Gan 29« i-ot. 14-oz. can 29' ijSG* 15-ez.nat j|, $4 wti{M l|for I Franco American cat Ba 4-'1- Y Maxwell House Re{. or Drip Grind GOLD MEDAL 25-ib. Bag / ^ 1 tWKE 691 FLOUR LUCKY WHIP ij?."s?r.k. ““MTyii;”'' ,'S® i 4»-’r sS' 29* 'Z 44* ai"i..69* V ^ • WWt.4oz. as®.1 , t'i Puffin BiteuilB iHttermilk erOld "•tet.’fC pMhionad >-•<• | SPARTAN 3-ib. p 9t Borden's, Sealtest or Nye 60TTA6E lAA GHEESE lU* ^NatWt.l-oz. ^ TREESWEET QC LEMONAEO All Varieties 9-oz. Min. m, ^ BANQUET 0£el UiNNERSOU 1 KRAFT ORANGE JUICE ^ 59*^ *1 9H0IIENIA « f USDA Fancy Spartan 6-ox. ORANGE 12 £$1 JUICE Q* 1 WndweetB loM Natwt. 4||||a1 ^ToastyTreat |llw I WAFFLES 111 an alow Wndaniaaa \ JggaglS. JSS2T-. SKKS55S " 59* Sf 19" i 39' ”^16' Bfl. Pkf. net wt. GatFoad.-, 1I4Z. 1*>< natwt. 49*’ 39*^ Mb. pkg. 49« Natwt. 7C l^oz. HUNT'S T0MAT9 1 CATSUP SPARTAN RUNrS STEWED HUNTS TOMATO miirsTiain Pork'n Beans TOMATOES PASTE SAUCE '!? 19® N.tW. 10c 14 1Q Nairn. 10c (01. 1^ W ’ll® HUNT'S Sliced or Halves nuK$>^2ri Coldwatcr All Warm Wata r Swan AH l-Ct. 1-Gt. ■ le 02® 63® 59»___________ Suiahina RINSO BLIE Giant Size 3-lb. 7-oZi Final Touch Fabric Softener W/Frta Soissora 77* 1 Qt. 1 oz. Lux Liquid 49* Lux Regular-Bar Soap Aasertnd Colon l-lor Pkg. 30* Advanced All Giant Sizo 71' U5. No. 1 Hot House TOHATOES Graan Fapiwrt RaditlMt Graea OnioBi CabbacB u. ^Sugar or Plain ' gW SPARTAN DOUGHNUTS Z - 88^ W* Reserve the Right to Limit Quantitiea 'v’saaciSSr.i RL lndwdlngS«mi0|r»#iN22 T Shurfiri0 —Hlrapefruit Seething 1-U, Penn Dutch Piocaa and Stanu Muthroi^ FOODLAND Ml. WALTON. BfiMWai L.2. FONUID LAnoNtan lTem£ta/^l W FO|iDiAfiD Fmm Maii.aiieirt.tnaa c—t THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 19, 1M6 Cookies Layer Ice Cream Slice A Urthday celebration, a witt-oiog ftreak for the local sandkt nine, a doll's tea party or an after-achool or day camp session are aB reason enough for Mom to mdce these very special Brownie Sandwiphes. The brownies — made from a mix -< are baked in two pans ao that they’re slim and crispy, just like cookies vrtien cut To the mix, are added rich and tempting pecans that make the aanMi^s wonderfully crunchy to bke into. Quick Breads Made With Pancake Mix Freshly baked qiUdc breads brighten spirits at breakfast lunch, dinner or snack tin\e and your family would surely welcome them more often. With the aid of buttermilk pancake mix you can make the old -.fashioned good breads “Grandma used to make" in a fraction of the time it took her. Pancakes, waffles, coffee cakes, muffins and dou^muts are just minutes away when you have this versatile product on the kitchen shelf. Buttermilk pancake mix hlso makes excellent cake rolls and other des- W-U,; « t>aed BUTTER-CRUNCH COFFEE CAKE Butter-Crunch Topping tk cup butterocmargarine, melted % cup sugar f Vi cup dry bread crumbs y» cup finely-phopped pecans Coffee Cake 2 eggs, beaten % cup sugar % cup milk 2 cups buttermilk pancake mix cup butter or nmrgarine, melted Heat oven to 350 degrees. Line IV^-qt. ring mold with stripe of and cut into cookie-size pieces, slices of ice cream are put between two brownies, and each treat is wrapped and frozen till serving time. Brownie Sandwiches 1 ISmunce package brownie mix 1 cup chopped pecans 2 pi^ vatniaia ice cream Prepare brownie mix as di- brownMs7 Pour half of inSture Into a greased IS^xlOH inch pan. Sprinkle with ti-cup diopped pecans. Repeat with re-maii^ batto- and pecans. Bake in a 3S(Vdegree oven for 30 minutes. While still hot, cut each pan Of hrowniea Into If tach cookies. Remove from pan and cod on rack. Gut each pint of ice cream into 6 slices. Put s slice of ice cream between two coddes. Wrap in saran or waxed paper and keep hnsen until serving time. Makes 18 sandwiches. ' aluminum foil. Combine ingredients for topping; press mixture onto bottom and sides of ring mold. Beat together egp and sag-ar until fluffy. Add milk, paw-cake mix and butter, stirring lightly until combined. Pear uto ring mold. Baite ia preheated oven 3t to 35 piWatea. Let cod about 5 minutes; turn out, crunch side up on platter.. Serve warm. Makes one coffee cake. buttermilk; doughnuts 3H cups buttermilk pancake mix cup sugar 1 teaspoon cinnamon 2 eggs, beaten % cup milk 2 tablespoons vegetable. oU Combine pancake mix, sugar and cinnanKMi. Add eggs, milk and oil; stir until batter is fairly smooth. Roil dough out to t^-inch thickaets on lightly floured board or canvas; cut with floured doughnut cutter. Fry donghnnts and “holes” in hot deep fat (375 degrees) 2 to 3 lag only once. Drain on absorbent papqr. While warm, qiilddo .With granulated or confectioners’ sugar, cinnamon-sugar or frost with coidectioners’ sugar frosting. Makes IS doughnuts. QUICK HONEY MUFFINS Honey Topping; ^ cup honey Va cup butter or margarine, melted 12 walnut halves % cup milk 1 egg, beaten % cup honey 2 tablesj>oons liquid shortening 1 teaspoon grated orange rind Batter Ilk cups buttermilk pancake mix Heat oven to 425 degrees. For topping, ounbine honey and butter. Place about 1 teaspoonful in bottom ! of each greased muffin cup. Place walnut half in each cup. For batter, (dace pa&ske nqJx in bowl. Add remaining ingredients, mixing lightly until combined. Fill muffin cups % full. Bake in preheated oven, 12 to 15 minutes or until golden brown. Servo piping hot. Makes 12 medium muffins. QUICK BREAD BONANZA - You’ll be thrilled to discover that buttermilk pancake mix is a rich source for quick bread baking. Just see how quickly and easily you can stir up these tempting breads. FELICE li^ FELICE QUALITY MARKET NLLSBURY ASST CAKEJAIXE&J QUALITY MARKET ir Pkg. MLLIIOKY FROStlNQ MIXES 3l5Vkoz. SUE DtYS: MET IS to 2S BROWNIE SANDWICHES — This dandy ice cream treat is a finger food everyone will loive—the children just because it’s so good; mother, because it’s nutritious and tasty as well as fun food. Vary the flavw of the ice cream if you like. DEL MONTE imXWEU HODSE Send for Booklet on CHICAGO - “Pocket Guide to Beef,” a new, convenientsized booklet for consumers, has been developed the American Meat Institute. Designed to aid homemakers with beef pur-diasing, the boddet contains actual color photographs of many of the most popular cuts of beef and gives instructions on cooking methods. The attractive M^age bodtletj abo provides infbnnation on nutrition, carving and other material of interest to consumer. It is a companion bpoklet to the Institute’s popular “Pocket Guide to Pork.” ★ ★ ★ “Pocket Guide to Beef” is available for IS cents per copy hnm the American Meat Institute, 59 East Van Buren Street, Chicago 60605. Consumer preferences are important to Michigan agricultural producers, food processors, wholesalers and retailers states consumer marketing agent, Mrs. Josejriiine Lawyer. For this reason, Michigan State University’s Consumer Marketing Program annually stages statewide ctfflsumer preferenc* pan- Spring Accents Soup In saucepan, combine 1 can (lOVk ounces) frozen condensed green pea with ham soup, 1 soup can water, V* cup thinly sliced carrot, 1 tablespoon slic^ green onion, and 1 teaspoon crushed dried mint flakes. Heat; stir now and then. Garnish with sour cream. Makes 2 to 3 servings. Crimchy rye wafers make a sprightly accompaniment. Area Women Parficipofe|| in Consumer Panels :C0RN BEHS CATSUP Crwam Stylo m del monte COFFEE I SWEET PEAS lb. can Approximately 125 Oakland county residents participated in such a research project in Pontiac last week at the County Board d Education. Mary Zehner, Marketing Specialist and Mrs. Lawyer arranged five group^ of panelists to study nine different foods and packages « inte^ est to Michigan’s food indn^. try. Briefly the products tested Included: The point or price at which consumers will switch from buying 2-half gallon containers to buying a gallon container. Determine consumer preference for three types of gallon milk containers — the plastic milk bottle, paperboard gallon pi carton, and twin-pack (2-half|cc gallons sold together). * • Consumer packaging pre- I ference for three types of dry I i(jwhole) onim bags -> paper I vfith mesh window polyethylene, | and vexar (nylon mesh). • Consumer color jx-eferencel I for vexar bags for d^ (whole) || onions (red, white, and blue). • Taste test with regular fruit 11 cocktail and low calorie fruit || cocktail, • Test consumer understand-1 ing of the difference between I bitt pcH^on and butt half of I ham, as specified by Michigan I law. • Determine consumer attitude toward gallon paperboard milk cartons in respect to ease of carrying, economy, ease of pouring, how it fits in refrigerator, and general convenience. Test the market potential 11 for pure maple products^in new] | forms and packages. Taste test with coated and|| uncoated dry roasted peanuts. * ★ ★ Results of the state-wide study will be reported to producers, processors and sellers of these respective products. Such infor-Imation will assist various jsegments of the food industry irovide consumers with more [convenient, more satisfactory |food products and packages. for BEANS FRUIT COCKTAILl 5 11b. Cans DEL MOHTE UlCD PINEIPPLE ’’c’liilir 4 UVkn. $1 00 Cam 1 DEL MONTE tww’L.I. DRUIKS ww.wmwp.ir.. 4 FOR SAUD3 OR COOKING MUOU OIL Ud?. 49*^ WITH FREE RECIFE BOOK JELLO-Esst Flavors 12 soz. QQc np. 09 SKOULTOmND DREAM WHIP 4oz. QQc Size NAOISCO OREO COOKIES Si 49* GIMTSIZE TIDE 3 lb. 1 oz. Pkg. • FRENCH 4 FOOT TALL Lilac Bushes.. Red Barbaiy Bushes • MICHIGAN GROWN Fruit Trees..... • AAOUNTAIN ASH 7 TO 9 FT. Shade Trees.... $295 ARBOR -—^ 99^ VITA A GLOBESg $299 $C95 3T leebai High SB $2^9 0 DERANIUMS 69! VEGETABLE PLANTS c Box. 49 JAoaMtKmiiKt C490 Climbing Rosebushes ____A Low<0O Auortnwnt B MICHIGAN NO. 1 POTATOES 20 POUNDS $129 MIXED ^ rBiUftla rials ^ COOKING ONIONS BOROS farm produce market Stou in and Chack Oar Imb Prir^m Stop in and Chack Our Low Pricea OPEN DAILY aiiN SUNDAY IS A.M. to 8 PUN. 22N Ibde Hgta^hJael Neilb ef Tebgrepb FELICE USDA CHOICE STEAK SALE T-BONE b ROUND lb. SIRLOIN lb. BONELESS ROLLED RUMP ROAST CHOICE LEAN STEW BEEF *79« ARMOUR STAR SLIC^ BACON lb- Pkf.79® PETERS SKINLESS HOT DOCS n-pi« 49* PETERS SUCEO ROLOGNA lb. pkg. 490 FRESH BABY BEEF LIVER e. 49* ARMOUR STAR CANNED HAH 6.'!; *3" THHti;Crnr H SEALTEST mLF’nHUF *39' PILLSBURY BISCUITS 8 oz. tuba MERICO-Rag. 390 CHOCOLATE CHIP or FUDGE NUT COOKIES Mb. Pkt 29< BEEF, CHICKEN OR TURKEY MORTON POT PIES 8-OZ. SWEET PEAS lOozb Pkg. Morton Strawborry FROirnES CUCUMBERS... RADISNES pk.. GREENCNICNSi YOUR CHOICE THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. MAY 10. 1966 C—8 Meat Loaf Recipes Have New Twist on Old Subject By JANET ODELL i PoBliM PreM Fo«d Editor | Meat loaf can be as interest-! big a main dish as any other meat. The meats to use and the ways to Vary the trimmings are' endless. ♦ A. A, [ Being, a dish that is good either hot or cold, meat loaf is good for plqnic and patio meals. It can be wrapped in aluminum (oil and cooked on an open grill. Jnst a word of waning: because ground meat la always quicker to qMil than largtt ^eces, meat ionves mast be kept refrigerated after baking. It is wise to use any leftovers within a day or two. - ~J!!qr a quick and easy loaf with! delicious flavor, try this Bu gundy Beef and Olive Loaf. BURGUNDY BEEF AND (HJVE LOAF Vi cup coarse cradcer cnimbo % cup Burgundy wine H cup chopped stuffed olives 2 pounds lean ground beef ^2 tablespoons nieat loaf seasoning Mend Stuffed olive slices ★ ★ e Combine cracker crumbs and wine in a large mixing b Stir to moisten. Add remaining ingredients and mix well. Pack into a 9x5-inch loaf pan and bake at 325 degrees for 1 hour and 15 minutes. Garnish with stuffed olive slices. Serves 8 to 12. Lamb makes an interestiBg meat loaf. This one has a rib- Put Creamy Orange Filling bon of appio staffing between two meat layers. LAMB LOAF WITH APPLE FILLING Meat Mixture: 2 pounds lean lamb, ground Ml cup packaged com flake crumbs V* cup wheat germ 2 teaspoons salt % teaspoon rosemary y« teaspoon pep^ Vs cup milk 1 egg, slightly beaten Filling Mixture: 2 apples, c<^, pared and diced 1 tablespoon minced onion 1 tablespoon sugar 1 egg, slightly beaten Combine all ingredients for meat mixture; mix well. Spread greased loaf pan 8 by 5 Combine filling in-, Sometimes it’s fun to glaze gredients; spread evenly over j a meat loaf. The following one meat mixture in ^n. Top with remaining meat mixture. Bake in moderate oven at IM degrees for 1 hour. Re- BURGUNDY BEEF AND OLIVE VOAF This recipe (or a luscious orangejiieLwithxi crushed-nut crust is based on one that actually did win a FIo^ Ida orange dessert contest several years ago. Florida’s prized Valencia oranges, now a good low-cost fruit choice in your local market, are perfect for this pie as they are simple to section and juice. Valencias are large in size, with a smooth, thin skin, oval shape, and deep orange color. They are usually seedless or have not more Uuin sir small seeds. Valencia-type oranges make np nearly half of the Florida crop. They came to the state from Sonthem Europe about a hundred years ago, and have been the standard late variety Florida orange during this century. Should you notice green tinges on the outside of Valencia oranges, don’t be alarmed; all Florida citrus is tree-ripened. ’The green merely indicates that the tree produced chloro|d)yll while U was in bloom this spring and some of it colored the already ripe fruit on the tree. Tlje inner color, the flavor and rich supply of vitamin C are not affected. Florida Orange Grove Pie Tnefinfni>.ai«L Beat egg whites 1 cup sugar A egg whites Vs teaspoon cream of tartar finely crushed walnuts SPICY GLAZED MEAT LOAF IVi pounds ground beef Vi cup ginger snap co over top. Gvnish with peach Ichopped onion, 2 tablespoons | slices, red maraschino cherries slivei^ almonds, and M tea- and parsjey, if desired. Paint the G>okies Sometimes let your children Mix M cupi paint their favorite raisin cook-ind Vi cup wa-!ies, rather than trying to dec- Q. What is the name of this cut of meat? A. Beef tiq> round steak. !*P®®" ^ tablespoon but- Peach Glaze: from. How Is it weani^. j,jgj.ggrjng unyi jj p^ach {weserves and Vi cup wa-'ies, rather than trying A. It comes frra me n^- j gap ounces) ter in saucepan; cook and stir'orate with frosting. Simply thin quartw of b^ known as me pQpjgnggd chicken with rice over low heat until thick and egg yolk with a little water and “round.’ This is a boneless Igijjyp ^ ^ water, smooth. mix with food ,coloring. The piece of meat mtn a very Makes Rolled Meat Loaf has a sur- paint dries right away leaving narrow ei^uig of fat around j ^ 3 servings. prise in the center. an oil paint effect, one side. Beef top round can _ ______,____________^_____________________________________------ ROLLED MEAT LOAF of meringue sbeil and smooth over. Chill 12 hours or longer. Just before serving, whip remaining 1 cup cream; spoon in mounds on tc^ of pie. Fill center wim remaining 3 oranges which have been sectioned. Top cream wim grated orange rind and decorate with orange slices. Yield: 19-inch pie. be distinguished from me bottom round because it is one muscle as cmnpared wim the bottom round which has two muscles. The top round occasionally does have a small piece of the sirloin tip muscle, as shown in me illustration, since this cut lies next to me sirloin section. Q. How is it jpepari^? A. By braising. Tliis means browning me meat in a small amount of lard or drippings, men adding a small amount of liquid. The utensil is cov- | ered tightly and me meat is cooked slowly, either on top of me range or in the oven, approximately IM hours for a %-inch thick steak, or ub-tU tender. ORANGE GROVE PIE - Grated orange ^ u j rind gives zesty flavor to the rich, creamy me fUling is properly chiUed, whipped cream . filling of mis pie while diced fresh orange is spooned on me top and me center filled sections add juicy flavor and texture. After wim m«e orange sections. _____ Variety Meats Are Valuable I If you want to add variety to your menu, try beef variety meats. They’re full of flavor as well as nutritive value. Liver, especially, is a rich source of Iron, B vitamins and vitamin A. Here are some general directions from the American Meat Institute to help you include mese meats in your meal plan-ning. ^ • Liver: Pan-fry to medium Cook in water abont four hours or until fork-tender; slice and serve hot or cold wim horseradish or mustard. • Kidney: Beef kidneys are usually braised or cooked as stew. • Tongue, smoked or fresh; Cover wim water, cover and simmer allowing about one hour per pound. Remove skin aftesr cooking. Slice and serve hot or medium or welWone: serve salads or casseroles, wim sauteed onion rings or crisp' « Sweemreads. Cook in sim-baedn. Use me bacon fat for merlng water about 15 minutes. pan-frying me liver. • Heqrt: Braise slices or whole s4im or without stuffing. Cook slowly on range or in moderate oven (350 d^pees) Mwut 2M to three hours or until tender. Remove memlkanes; then fry, broil or use In creamed dishes. Rich and luxurious sauce for ice cream: caremela hm...-wim heavy cream and bpped wim salted pecans. Cream, Cheese^ Make Topping You may enjoy trying this variation of udii|q)^ cream. Devonshtae Topping 1 package cream dieese (soft) 1-3 cup superfine granulated sugar IV4 teaspoons vanilla 1 container (8 ounces) heavy cream “In a medium mixing bowl, muMy biit Kganer iiif cream cheese, sugar and vanilla. Gradually beat in me cream; continue beating, if necessary, until as mick as regular whipped cream. Chill until serving time. Serve instead of regular wh^ped cream on strawbeiry shortcake or similar fruit desserts. Makes 2 cups. POTATOES 2I^H.I9 f ARM FRESH GRADE "A" JUMBO'S E6R49 HICKORY SMOKEI suai. FRESH DRESSED BACON 59il TITERS 30^ HAMBURGER FRESH GROUND 53' l>0RK SAUSAGE 53' lb. HUTOOGS GR. 1 SKINLESS POT BOAST FRESH AO- lb. SAUSAGE SMOKED POLISH 59*.^ BOLOGNA CHUNK ONLY 39® »> LIVER FRESH PORK 39* lb. PICNICS HICKORY SMOKED 45< BING BOLOGNA 49"'" CLUB FBANKS LUNCN MEATS 49' 1b. IMPEFIIHT Ok White Seedless * 69* TOMATOES FRESH CELLO 23* pkg- LEHUCE CALIF. SCUD 2-19' CUKES FRESH CRISP 2-19- GREEN ONIONS'«• 2-1 O' COBN FRESH SWEET 6 “"49* FRESH STRAWBERRIES 0LE9 SNDTIII CLb.«1 M CBEAM PIES BANQUET 14-OZ. Ea. 2?. POT PIES MCRTCN 8-OZ. 5 for CHEESE SPBEAD'«r AO* BISCUITS PILLSBURY 8>0Z. lO*’ CAUF. VALENCIA CHANCES FLORIDA ORANGES VALENCIA 59 c DOZ. jlieMet Open Wiokly 9 to 9-Fri. and Sat. 9 to 10 PRICES SUUECT TO HURKr CHAMBE 608 W. HURON STREET NEAR WEBSTER SCHOOL C-4 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MAY 19, im Danish Cheese Fine in Salad Salad days are here again, and the markets are blooming with young spring vegetables tempt salad lovo-s. Make point of serving very ln^)ortant salads this spring, for your family’s pleasure and good health — salads increases and wrote the Republican governor: “Your continual resistance to legislative initiative in this vital area causes me to wonder about your recent request for immediate legislative action on this matter.” Dzendzel also disputed Romney’s contention that tax deadlines still permitted action in time for 1966 benefits to in- "IREAKFAST AT TIFFANY'S” TEENAGERS rOM COC wdhthi lOLOUll COUFOI Feirtlae't FOFULAIITMUTER LII M tall Mb MitMta II Mb EAGLE STARTS FRIOMA* DASHES OFF LETTER-Denice Blair of Layton, Utah^ representing her state in the to pen a backstage letter to her mother. Miss U.S.A. contest in Miami Beach, is show- Fifteen finalists will be selected today, with ing the effects of homesickness. Here she the new Miss If.S.A. being crowned Satur-=^«neaks-4r,ie« j»wments..off Jtona.jebeataaL-. Northwesfem Texas Buffeted by Heavy Rain, Hail and Wind Heavy rain, hail and destructive winds raked sections of northeastern Texas today. ■ ★ ★ * At Henderson, a community of about 10,000 persons some 100 miles east of Dallas, the storm had tapered down to a light rain, but earlier more than four inches of rain fell in the area in an hour. There also were SO mile winds and hail. WWW At Shreveport, La., east of the Texas line, nearly two inches of rain fell in an hour. ★ ★ ★ Thunderstorms hit other sections of the South and portims of the Appalachians Wednesday night and today. 1.09 INCHES Macon, Ga., reported l.( inches of rain by midnight. There were some rainy spote in other sections along Atlantic and Gulf states. •a a ★ Gear skies dominated the weather pattern elsewhere in the country. Temperatures .were slightly lower than normal, except in the Deep South, where conditions generally were hot ■ humid. Powwow is Modern TULSA, Okla. UB - Tlieie could have been some spirits moving in the Happy Huntiing Grounds of their ancestors when members of the Sac and Fox Indian tribe staged a recent pow ’. A Kiowa Indian band from Anadarko provided rock ‘n’ roll music ^ the dance! For Jimmy Brown From Football to Footlights By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-Television Writer .a Hollywood western, ' chos." LONDON - Football great, Jim Brown of the Cleveland Browns is in London to make a movie, and I “It was a good break-in for ipe because I had a lot of action a^ not too much dialogue,” he football’s lossjrecalled. "I ride a horse pretty may be film- good, although my style dom’s gain. conventional. But then. I’m that Jim was way in most of the things 1 do.” strolling along His work in “The Dirty Doz-the Thames on will be more demanding, a day off from Kenneth Hyman is MGM's “The Brown can keep up Dirty Dozen,” gteUgr cast that irt- cludes two Oscar winners, Lee Marvin and Ernest Borgnine. AN EXPLORA-nON “We’ll see,” said Brown re- players and can carry out the ideas which you would like to see done.” Brown has been a bachelw during his London stay so far, but he is hoping bis wife and three children will join him soon. Meanwhde, he has been studying English politics with particular,regard to race relations. He Is likely to have much to say about such things on his return to America. in w h i c h he THOMAS plays a murderer — “but a nice murderer. He’s part of a wartime squad of soldier criminals assigned to J[ • f A "CRAZT WORLO" ^ I ODDITIES ABOUND IH , last I A "CRAZY WORLD" NIGHT I ODDITIES ABOUND IN da«ln« rSuchSf CHAR-BROIUNG Rei^y Makes a pifference at THE ENCORE IfMafwM Mirule Nile Sloppiij! (eiter a risky mission that doubtless |«l*stically. At ahy rate, saves World War II for the acting is something that I would allies definitely like to explore. ' , ... , “It seems to me that there Acting is "oj^ing new |“'■|are not many Negro actors in ,Brown, and I ^t meanand yet j villainous work he does against, Negroes are be- the Los Angeles Bams, etc. He! coming more frequent. The only a thespian lUjstar nowadays is Sidney Poitier, who has wide acceptance and won himself an Academy Award. He-has made a couple of pictures that have been successful and present him in roles that afford him different opportunities. * * * “Sidney can’t do them all. So maybe there’s a chance for me.” What about his football career? MAY NOT PLAY When that question comes up. Brown becomes an all-American in circumlocution. After a period of open-field running, he provided this answer: “I would like to play my final season in football, but circumstances may prevent me from doing so.” You can make whatever you want of that, with Jim’s blessing. At any rate. Brown, 30, is looking for other fields, although last season was one of his best. Coming up is his 10th year in pro ball, and how long can a fellow go on In that bone-rattling profession? ... Thank You' to tho hundreds and hundreds of customers who visited our Moat Display for tho first time last wook« Thousands of steaks and roasts wore sold ... But most important, moat shoppers found a now adventure-shoppinc our morehandisinf method. Quality Moats at the Qraatost Savings. . . . Fill Your Freezer Now while our Fabulous Beef Sale is oh-Every steak every roast, aged to mellow perfection. Any amount, any portion will be cut to your specification. At Unheard of Low Prices. 90 DAYS SAME AS GASH NO INTEREST. NO CARRYING CHARGES. 0 DOWN Lbs. J for For Our-Over-the-Counter Customers—See Our Large Display Extra L«an GROUND BEEF Our Fotneut Angus Bonalass SIRLOIN TIP ROAST Our Famous Angus CHUCK STEAKS Our Famous Angus BonaUss or RUMP RUAST Extra Loon PORKCHUPS .$|45 m 89i 491 PHONE jsm. 674-1440 4980 HIGHLAND RD.(M-59) ACROSS FROM WATERFORD k Guaranteed for tenderness, flavor and quality or your purchase will be re-cu* within ten days. C—^ THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. MAY 19. 196ft R«tirina From Pontiac System Educators to Be Feted Students, parents and fellow teachers — both past and frfes-ent — will be gathering^at receptions this spring 1 educators retiring from the Pontiac SdMol System. A man-and-wife team with a total of 68 years experience as educators will be honored at a 24 p.m. reception Sunday at Pontiac Northern High School. Theodore Wlersema, Eastern Junior High School principal, baa been in die Pontine School System lor 41 years, while his wile, Mildred, has been teaching here 16 years. She now teaches English classes at Northern High A tea is being planned for B e t h u n e Elementary School Principal Mrs. Harry Killian, in the local school system for 39 years. The event is scheduled for 3:3(^ p.m. June 8. The staff and Parent - Teacher-Student Afibdathm of Midt i son Junior High School will sponsor a 24 p.m. reception for Mrs. Gordon Pauli Sunday. Mrs. Pautt“iiaai»!etr BTTSriySm 14 years, 11 as a Latin and French teacher at Madison. THREE RETIREES A FTA reception will be at Mark Twain Elementary He Viet Upheaval Worries U.S. D«ep Frustration May Lead to Policy Review ★ Or ★/ said the l^pitalized is David/ Grooters, whose condition w^ diagnosed by a private phySidan. Spinal menii^^ is an infection by bacteria/of fluid in the si^l column, causing an inflammation of/the outer covering of the br^in. CAN BE T^ATED The disease can be treated ith drugs/but sometimes has| been fatal, Prothro said. By JOHN M. mOHTOWER AP Special Correspondent WASHINGTON-Some of tte best informed U.S. officials now fear prolonged political violence in South Viet Nam could undm*-mine the whole basis of the American effort there and force this country to reconsider its Vietnamese policies. A deepening sense of worry and frustration has become evident among policy makers here in recent days. The Johnson administraUon I5 still hopeful that the ruling tary directorate in Sa ^ , headed by Premier Nguyen/Cao Ky, and rebellious Buddhist and military elements at Da Nang and Hue can patch over' their differences quickly. Both sides ■ t^y have been warned that endangering American/support. ■k ★ ★ / But in administratmn quarters there is less talk than there was during earlier outbreaks of violence this year Om the South Vietnamese are Merely suffering political growing pains There is more ankious speculation that their differences may be too de^ to be reconciled and, even if apparently compost, soon will erupt again. SETS UMlTA^nONS Secretary ojt Defense Robert S. McNamari’s statement //«P Wednesday /specifying limitations on the j^ount of UJS. help that will be/ given to developing nations is jteing interpreted by -some-authdrttics hcre-as under scoring in policy terms the diplomatic warnings to South Vietnamese leaders disclosed by Secretary of State Dean Rusk at a news conference Tuesday. Rusk said the South Vietnamese were being told that “their own attitude, their own solidarity, their own efforts are crucial elements in the combined (American and Vietnamese) determination" to get on with the fight against Communist conquest. School from 7:45 to 9 tonight to honor three retirees. The teachers and their yean in the Pontiac system art Mrs. Helen Dovre, pS; Mrs. Wayne Yager, 21; ^Ml Mrs. Paul Banghan, 9. Mrs. Robert McManus, a Pontiac teacher for 25 years, be honored at a 7-9 p.m. reception Friday at CrolMt Elamen- Student Has Meningitis Grand Rapids Case Puts College on Alert GRAND RAPIDS (AP)-A 19-vear-old Grand Rapids Junior CoDege student was in serious condition at a hosirital today, suffering spinal meningitis. Health ^,Commi.s.sionfj ^ Prothro of 1 precautionai tletin Winston County said tice was posted on the board at the college to avert any possible epidemic of the tary School, where she tei 5th grade classes. !a^M A May 26 reception is planned for Mrs. Robert Smith/ a Pontiac teacher for five, years. A first grade teacher M Rogers Elementary School, Mrs. Smith will be honored at a 7-9 p.m. reception at the sc^. THREE VETERANS Scheduled fo/ June 16 is noon lunchewi/at Baldwin Elementary SchQbl, which will bid farewell to ^ee of its veteran teachers. / They areMrs. James Cadieux, in the sratem 39 years; Gertrude Fofey, 36 years; and Mrs. Eugene Garey, 22 years. Thes^' events will be open to the pimlic. Other retirees will be guests of honor at special facipty functions at their schools. L. • ,.i X- .-j BLIND TO SO LITTLE — Richard Kinney, 42, a deaf and blind man who will be honored by his alma rnkto', plays with his 3-year-old son, Clark. Kinney, associate director of a school for the blind, will receive an honorary doctorate from Mount Union College in Alliance, Ohio. He lives in Winnetka, a Chicago suburb. Dedfhs In Pontiac, IHearBy~Ar^f Air Support Called th SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — American air cavalry-moi called in more air strikes today on the fourth day of their fight to root out a Communist battalion from a nnountaia area in central Viet Nam. U.S. military headcpiarters said the three battalions (rf beli-copta^lifted cavalrymen still were locked In combat against 350 or more ol the enemy. 586; there were 815 the |wevious It was the flrst time the Viet-imese dead and miss^ had been reported together, without specifying the number killed. Enemy casualties were put at 8 killed, compared to 456 the , revious week, and 192 captured, compared to 121. 3 BATTLE DEAD Other allied forces—Austra- The fighting swirled in ragged mountain terrain and tall elephant grass about 15 miles northeast of An Khe and 250 miles northeast of Saigon. This was the only large-scale combat repwted on the ground (w in the air as fighting erupted beween loyalist and rebel troops of the Vietnamese army in I)a Nang. TWICE AS MANY Spokesman announced that allied dead and missing last week remained at the level of Ihe-week J)det»-b(R-BKH» than twice as many of the enemy were killed. lian, Korean and New Zealander —reported three battle dead and 14 wounded. The week’s report brought the number of U.S. battle deaths since Jan. 1 to 1,472 by unofficial count. Since the United States became involved in the Vietnamese war, 3,329 Americans have bdoi killed by enemy action, according to an unofficial tabulation. Prescription Doubted Mon Faces Drug Charge A Pontiac man sought on a warrant for attempting to obtain a narcotic drug with forged prescription was apprehended i^ police last night. Melvin Hatchett, 30, of 345 Woman listed Fair SAMUEL E. EVANS Service fw Samuel E. Evans, 52, of 7692 Elizabeth Lake, Waterford Township, will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow in Voorhees-Siple Chapel with burial in Perry Mount Park (Cemetery. Mr. Evans, an employe of Pontiac Motor Division, died Tuesday after a long illness. “We’re/ not unduly alarmed about it/’ he said. “There are suspected cases. I double very seriously whether there/Will be one.’ ROBERT A. McDANIEL Service for former Pontiac area resident Robert A. McDaniel, 56, of Prudenville will be 10 a.m. Saturday at Ckiats Funeral Home with burial in Perry Mount ParlPCemetery. Mr. McDaniel, a welder for U-Haul Trailer Co., died yester- day. Tlye public health notice at the cogege warned students to see a dodtor if they displayed symptoms of meningifis, such as a sore throat or respiratory infection, severe headaches or fever. Prothro said “We’ve had about nine cases in a year’s time" in the county but they apparently did not come from a single source. "We had a case or two of meningitis that died," he said, but Prothro did not recall whether the death resulted from spinal meningitis or from other types of meningitis. Surviving are his wife, Virginia; seven children, Robert Jr., Mary A., Ernest, Roberta, Shirley, Gary and Ronald; and 15 grandchil^n. Also surviving are two brothers, George of Oxford and Rrd II. Cavanaugh is Williams’ major opponent for the Democratic nomination. The spokesman replied that Ford’s “nwinal company rule was enforced” that political candidates greet Ford workers off company property. He added, ‘‘Gov. Williams is welcome to return to the Monroe plant and campaign on the premises.” ment the Utah zoologist is using in his study. * it * Assisted by two graduate students — Arthur King, a 24-year-old ecologist and RicWd Downward, a 35-year-oki radiological health specialist, Hirth has set up a small-mesh wire fence around the snake den. It is a 300 square-foot area which contains four rock piles. WIRES INJECTED As the reptiles — rattlers, western racers, whip and gopher snakes — emerge from the den in the spring, Hirth and his assistants capture them, frien inject wires with radioactive tantalum 182 into their tails. ‘‘It’ like a small piano wire,” Hirth explained. ‘‘One millimeter in diameter and five millimeters (1/5 inch) long.” ^ The injections are made pith speciaUy-designcd hypodermic needles and syringes. About 310 wfll be tagged dnr-ing the next three or four weeks. ’The snakes will be “hot” nntil the fall, when the Tantalum 182 Is schednled to expire. ‘‘We plan to follow them day and night all summer, ” Hirth said. ’The Geiger counters track the snakes 33 feet away on the surface and 20 feet away 18 inches underground. ♦ ★ ★ An infrared sniper-scope will be used to observe thenim)i>4b 100 feet away at night. Some of the questions the Utah scientist h(^ to answer are: How far do snakes move each day? Where do they go? How long do they spend in a particular area? What makes them leave the den or start back for it in the fall? Are they equipped with some kind of biological clock? What is the effect of radiation on cold-blooded aninuls and to what extent do snakes act as disease carriers? man for Ft Kmn, said the board will consider whether to discharge Joseph N. Saadone, 20, who coUapsied during basic training. Caitimess said Sansone fainted May 12 during training. He said sone had rheumatic heart dls-|at Ft. Wayne in Detroit he gave home Tuesday and said their ease with aortic insufficiency, {them a letter from our family|son may need a. corrective dp-* * * {doctor, warning of his «»fl*|eration for The recruit’s mother, Mrs.'tion.” L . Frank Sansone, said ‘‘Joe hast we* | ^ had heart trouble fcr about two The Sansones said an Armyl years. When he took his only doctor, whose name they could Caithness, however, said me an examination disclosed San-lArmy idiysical last September not recall, telephoned their!Army hospital reported no med- ical basis for performing sudi The Sansones said ttiey were told by the Army doctor the government would not be responsible for their son’s present condition or f w medical UQs if he is discharged. Science for You «»» A wattrhoMwiI adjoittbte aoszl a table taunii baa OB the atream of water aadktaadsto xemaia there eeemlnsly in deflaacc of HEnrS WHYi TMi is a variation of the BemoulU principle, « -wMah-the-tatesat pBeiimia-of,.a movias-Ouid.— juch..« aic water —• is less than that of the still i sic or Ouid around k. Here the pressure of the faster moving water is less, and u the ball tends to move to the ri^it (M the drawing) Om faster moving water on the left exerts less pressure than the abwer water on the right The greater pressure of the siowly --------------—-------------■- iMck imo the suesffl. The atraam condng from tha nools imward pushes Issm aide of Shan to keep k from falling straight dowa. AAontcomerv WARD SIGNATURE SEWING MACHINES UOHTWIIGHT DRUSMAKIR DARNS, niATS AND MINDS <39 • Attachts zippGrs, locG, cording • Sgws forward or rovorso; ruffles • Saws over pins; pleats, quilts w includes basa, foot pedal control FUU SIZISIWING MACHINE FOR HlAYY-DUTY SIWING ^9 • Modem styl*writli built-in light • Pueh4»utton reverse, drop feed • Sow, repair any weight fabric • Full-she head with base, pedal Signaturo power vac at Rtarde low price e Power for deep cleaning e Roll-easy swivel wheels • Strong oil-metal body • Protective vinyl bumpers • Uses tosi-out dust bogs *18 *2 eff-Signatvre shampee-pelislier f Shampoo carpets and rugs e Scrub, wax, polish floors e Power-driven brushes e Costs just pennies to use e Complete with rug care kit *19 DlUfXI ZIG ZAG MAKU •UtTONHOUS, APPUGUU <59 • Appliques, sews on buttons, heme • Embroiders, overcasts raw edges • Sows all plain and fancy chores • Compact style with base, pedol NO MONEY DOWN up to 3 ytors to pay on credit /SATISFACTION OUARANTEED or your money bock Signature Vibm-Beal vac CLEANS 3 TIMU FAfTIR THAN STRAIGHT SUaiON $44 • 3-woy Vibra-Bnat action beats, swnnps, and suction-cleans ruga • Turn it on and off at touch of ton; big toss-out bags pravant mess • Attachments are always within easy reach on piggyback caddy e Stdnds on ond for aoty storing; safe and convenient on stairs ^ Trtptir itltratton - -won't I pra y dust; poworful 1 V^-h.p. motor Save now- Zig Zag Sewing machine SALE-PRICED SICMTURE DELUXE WITH 2D CAMS! *108 RED. M3T e Pattern cams fit on easily, let you create, thousands of designs • Mend, embroider, monogram, applique, e Moke perfect 'juttonholes every time at the touch of o b rton ' e Convenient pushbutton reverse for fast flttd_imQotJiJMcktackifig..- e Bose and fc it control included OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. SUNDAYS 12 NOON to 6 P.M. Pontiac Mail TELEGRAPH ROAD CORNER ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD TELEPHONE 682-4940 THE Pontiac PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY Ift, 19«6 Talmadge Bid Stuns Georgia ATLANTA AIPB — Everyone agreed in the smoldering ruins of Gen. Sherman’s bonfires that Georgia’s Re-_^ c 0 nstructionw Era political ~ situation was mess. ^ Four score and a couple of years later, in^ 1 947, chaos reigned again when three “g 0 vernors” laid conflicting TALMADGE claim on the state house. Today, Georgia’s political structure is askew once again. While the Yankees invariably are Mamed for the original “mess in Atlanta,” responsibOity for the later situations mnst rest upon the man with the magic name in Georgia politics — Herman Talmadge. Talmadge', who started the “three govM-nors” ruckus nearly 20 years ago, dropped a bombshell yesterday by announcing from Washington that he would give up his U. S. Senate seat to run for governor “if the pe<^le of Georgia desire Red Fishing ^ Fleet off U. S. Reduced to 5 ELIZABETH N.C. (AP) — A federal fifties official says tdl biit five of^ Soviet Union fishing vessels seep operating g week ago oif the Yiiigin-ia-North Carolina coast apw-ently have left. ' ★ ★ ★ Charles L. Philbrook of thd U.S. Bureau of Commercial Fisheries at Gloucester, Mass; said he did not know where the Russian vessels had gone but said apparently they moved out in the l^t two or three days. “ Fhflbnx* has been keeping tabs on the fleet because of U.S. officials’ concern the Russians might deplete the fishing ground. He said Wednesday five 280-foot stem trawlers still in the area may be scout ships and could bring about the return of the others if th^ find substantial schools of fish. me to serve Jks their chief executive. . .” * ♦ \ ♦ Almost simulta^ously, former Gov. Ernest Vahdiver, considered the front-runnir in* the race for the Democratic nomination for governor, said^ Atlanta he would not be a candidate because of recurring heart trouble. CREATES SHAMBLES The statement made a shambles of what had shaped op as a routine Democratic falmary building toward a strong challenge by the Republicans in the general elections. Vandiver’s major oppoaition had been expected to come from former Gov. Ellis Amall, and the GOP was predicting that Rep. Howard (Bo) Callaway, R*Ua. — boosted by “Goldwater Democrats” — would defeat either one of However, Talnjadge as a gubernatorial candidate substantially alters the picture. And while both Amall and Callaway say they are ready to take on Talmadge, sources close to each man admit they are seriously reassessing their chances. ■k * * Callaway, considered a shoo-in for the GOP gubernatorial nomination, accused the Democrats of “sending the king home” in an attempt to keep Republicans from gaining control of the capitol. “They’re scared to death,” he said. He expressed amazement that Talmadge would give up 10 years of senility in the Senate to run for governor. Talmadge said he would not resign the Senate post until after he was elected governor. Insurers Oppose Bill on High-Risk Drivers LANSING (AP) - Insurance company representatives objected Wednesday to p>arts of a bill which would require them to insure high-risk drivers not only for liability, but also for damage to their own cars. * k * The bill, already passed by the Senate, would require aU Michigan auto insurers to participate in an assigned risk plan in which they would divide up the business of insuring of high-risk drivers. ★ ★ ★ In a hearing before the House Insurance 5>mmittee, company representatives argued the present voluntary assigned risk plan is working well in providing' liability insurance for high-risk drivers. ! David Dykhouse of the State Insurance Department said the standard insurance companies refuse to accept about 10 to 15' per cent of the auto insurance QUINNS TAKE SON HOME-Actor Anthony Quinn and his wife, Yolanda, take home their 10-day-old son, Lawrencei yesterday from a clinic in Rome.. ’The couple have two other boys, Frank, 3, and Daniel, 2. rolvinft PHYSICAL DAMAGE But, he said, these high risk drivers demand physical damage coverage, often because financial institutions re-1 quire such coverage to protect their interest in financed autos. To meet this demand, he said, companies specializing in hi|^ risk insurance tend to “write too nuich business for their fi-| nancial structure to sustain over^ time” and a number of firms thus go Insolvent. * ★ ★ The bill, Dykhouse said, would take the pressure of these companies and keep fly-by-night companies out of the mirtet. WiUiam Gibson of the American Insurance Association said the industry is 'taying to put voluntary plans for Ugh risk physical damage coverage into effect, but has been having difficulty winning approval for ifo rates. Own Your Own Hole LEFFINGHAM, England lUPD —Holes in tlie road were selling briskly in this seaside vi [today. The'sale was organized [by residents to finance road repairs. The holes were selling, [according to size, for $1.40 to 15.60. About 1280 has b^n raised so far. CHILDREN OUTGROWN THE WAGON? SELL IT WITH A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. EASY TO USE. JUST PHONE 3324181. long Time, No See Is All Right With Me' NANIMO, B. C. (UPI) -British Columbia woman who hasn’t seen her husband for 35 years had only six words to say when she learned he was in Wisbdch, England: I’m not the Jeast bit inter- Concer Kills Performer OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla. (AP) - Wiley A. Walker, 54, member of the country and Western music duo of “Wiley and Gene,” died Tuesday of cancer. OFF , ON HER CAREER' QUESTION: How does a spider spin and build its web? ★ ★ ★ ANSWER: A group of little organs, the spinnerets, lie under the spider’s abdomen. These connect with silk glands inside the body. To spin its web, the spider presses the spinnerets down on some object and squeezes out silk in liquid form. This hardens in the air, forming a delicate thread which can be either dry or sticky. .. Spiders can spin a number of fine threads in this way or combine them into a stronger one. Webs are made in a number of ways. We illustrate that of the orb spider. TTiis spider perches in some likely spot and presses one of its legs to the spinnerets, drawing out a long stocky single thread (a). Air currents blow this around until the sticky end attaches itself to something else. Then the spider fastens its end, passes over the line with more t|u-ead to strengthen it and then goes to foe middle whei^e it fastens foe thread, drops down and fastens another. It keeps coming back to the center carrying new dry cables (2) until there is a strwi^fo^dation. Then the spider Sifts from the'"center andTi^ thread around. —‘TTTitaraer'iTJffr’cainriff'W-^iirj^^ When the cable vibrataa, the web—or trap—is working. ★ ★ ★ FOR YOU TO DO—Guess the meaning of the little picture at lower right. Is foe spider trying to catch insects in the air? No, this is • spiderling, or tiny needy-hatched spider. It dhnbs op somewhere, q>ins a si^e thread and lets go. Tie ttread carries it like a ballooo to some new place where tt COB start spidering on its own. THIS SPRING TO AUTOMATIC, CAREFREE, CLEAN S c: O Enjoy all the latest work-saving features! Cooking with clean-burning gas is clean cooking. A smokeless Gas broiler and convenience fw such as lift-out burners, slide-out cooking tops, disposable oven liners... all make the modern gas range easier to clean— and keep clean too. Y’bu'll be amazed at the big difference it makes every day to have the automatic features of the modern Gas range. "Clock-controlled Oven” and the "Burner-with-a-Brain” bring a wonderful freedom from pot-watching and oven-waiting. And the "Keep-Warm” oven control automatically keeps foods moist and juicy until you're ready to eat. YOU'LL APPRECIATE A FEATURE-PACKED GAS RANGE THAT MAKES MENU-PLANNING A SNAP AND COOKING COMPLETELY AUTOMATIC Nothing Cooks Faster... Nothing Cooks Better! SEE YOUR GAS APPLIANCE DEALER ELIMINATE 6ARBA6E CAN MESS FROM YOUR HOME for only pennies a day! with an AUTOMATIC A MODERN Fast-Action Water Heater is the answer to today’s demands for more HOT WATER The Bewt Namet In Ga$ Ranges and Dryers No Money Down - Up to 3 Years to Pay WKC 108 R. SAGINAW niomni-TIU FREEMMINa FEDERAL DEPT. STORES Downtown DRAYTON PUINS Headquarters for All Gas Appliances Opwn Evpry Evwning Until 9 P.M. DON FNAYER NOME FURNISNINGS ___A Division of Lakeland Sales, Michigan Wholesale Distributing Co. 1108 W. Huron St. FE 2-9204 Charg* Your GAS RANGE or DRYER at^ Op«n Doily 10 to 10 GLINWOM FIA2A Sunday 12 to 7 Dwtroif Jwwwt Ga« Stovws Available At. . . MArS 1820 North Saginaw St. Ag Low As *1 Wk., For the Sweetest Deal See Sweet*s SWEETS RADIO and APPUANCE 422 W. Huron 334-S6TT See All the Famous Name Gas Appliances At thf BIG Appliance Store HIGHLAND APPLIANCE PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTER -r- CHANDLER HEATING CO. MIG Highland Road, Vi Milt East of Pontiae Airport IFafm Morning Brick Lined Incinerator Salts IT4-M11 Night Sarviea OR S-NS2 FRETTER Apjiliance Co. PONTIAC WAREHOUSE Talagraph ^Road Vt Mila $. of Orchard Lake Rd. 1 Milt North of Miracit Milo Firestone Stores 140 N. SAGINAW 146 W. HURON FRAYER APPLIANCE The kind of service you tell your neighbor about. \ 589 Orchard Lake Ave. PONTIAC TRAIL PMONEi MA 4-1881 Good Housekeeping Shop of PONTIAC 51 W. Huron St. FE 4-1555 Scars Kenmore ™emrDrymi" To”carry spirals of sticky MJowcost- IncinerafaM^ Incinerator evMsSsd Sf Cmuomsrs gowsr Csmpssy THE PONTIAC PKKSS, THURSjJAY. MAY 19, 1966 L/.S. River Patrol Boats Ideal in Viet Nam Deltas VUNG TAU, Viet Nam (UPI) — “Anything that movea on this liver at night is fair game,” Chief Boson’s Mate Theodore Wilson whispered grimly. The burly boatswain offlctr from Baltimore, Md., glanced at| the suspicious looking spot on the radar screen and turnhd to scan the deeper dark of the groves lining the river bank upstream. Boat Master Leo Pearman of CUeago, BL, swing the qnietly pwring PBR (for patrol boat, river) from side to side trying to reloeate the teB* tale bright spot OB his radar. In the boat, Seaman Frank L. Foster, also from Chicago, hunched tensely behind his twin SO • caliber mounted machine guns. In the stem. Gunner Oscar Cloninger of Belmont, N.C., swung the single rear SO to point diagonally upstream. The click of the bolt as he checked the weapon sounded unnaturally loud. ★ ♦ a I Assistant Gunner Gerald Nolan of Wilmington, Del. readied tor his M16 automatic and moved amidships. Everyone was^ wearing flak jackets. SUP THROUCffl WATER PBR 48 slipped through the water with hardly a sound except the low drone of the IM^ed twin 230 horsepower powend t water^and Those engines twin pumps sucking in and expellinig it at speed through movable five-inch nozzles to give the vessel iti thrust. The hydro-jet propelled 31-foot fibtf glass patrol boats have been opera ting ia Viet Nam for little more thaa three weeks and have proved to be Ideal for river work M the many deltas of Viet Nam. The dot on the radar screen turned out to be a false alarmi that time. It could have been a sampan infiltrating AHet Cong' agents, arms or supplies. PBR 47, under the command of Boat Master Wilfred O’Keefe of Key West, Fla., were patrolling a sizzle stretch of the main shipping channel up to Saigon. LIFELINE TO SAIGON The channel is the lifeline to Saigon, and the Viet Cong have lion’s share falls to the U.B. ’’s PBR’s which were designed especially for such work in Viet Nam. FAT ____________________OVERWEIGHT •kody Wed to block Itti ing a small freighter with recoil- odrincx. You must lose ugly fat less rifle fire. They have also or your money beck. Odrlnex is a tried setting mines in the chan- tiny tablet and easily swallowed. I ^ Get rid of excess fat and live long- er. Odrinex costs $3.00 and is sold on this guarantee: If not ut-isfied for any reason, )ust return the package to your druggist and get your full money back. No questions asked. Odrinex is sold with this guarantee by: The channel is now patrdled night and day by American and Vietnamese naval units. It is a * A * I thankless, sometimes dang«r- PBR 48 and her sister boat'ous, often boring task and the N N. satlaaw Mall Oreers a RELAXED POSE — President Johnson APmtum leans back in his rocking chair with his foot office yesterday with two U.S. ambassadors propped up on a stool and an arm draped — Findley Bums (left), envoy to Jordan, Scrops a table as he visits in his White House and Henry Hoyt, ambassador to Uruguay. Auto Dealers Had Merry First Quarter By CHARLES C. CAIN AP BnsineM News Writer BEraon* ~~ Cash registers jingled a merry tune in auto dealerships in the first quarter of this year as sales and {wofits ran ahead of the 1965 pace. The big question was what would happen to dealer profits In the second quarter in view of a sales dip in April and early May. * ★ ★ The National Automobile Dealers Association said the opening three months profits were the best openers since 1955. They were based on record first quarter sales of 2,206,970 cars, up over five per cent over the old mark set last year. nRST QUAR’TER NADA said first quarter 1966 profits figured out to 2.6 per cent of sales, compared with 2.1 per cent for all of 1965. The opening months of 1965 also saw a 2.6 per cent profit ratio. Because of slightly higher total volume this year, however, the average profit per new unit average showed dealers got 62.6 per cent of all their revenues from sales of new earr and trucks. Used car sales accounted for 23.2 per cent and^service and parts accounted for'the remaining 14.2 per cent, >1ADA said. GROSS INCOME NADA said gross income fran sale of new and used cars averaged $431 per new unit, just Tell by the Smell It’s Not Petunia GRAND JUNCTION, Cok). (AP) — An odor lingers in the back yard of Mrs. Lloyd Files and Petunia is still missing. Police got a report rec«itly that Petunia - i^s. FUes’ missing, deodorized,' pet skunk —had been found. Mrs. Files put the skunk in a pen in the back yard and left. When she return^ the skunk retailed fibred out" to $126, up convinced her it wasn’t Petunia, $1 over last year’s initial i days. * * * NADA said one cloud in the sales picture was a report that 17.1 per cent of the nation’s 33,(XN) franchised new car dealers operated at a loss last quarter, compared with 16.2 for all of 1965. Only 3.4 per cent of the dealers had an operating loss in the first three months last year. A breakdown of dealer departmental sales for an industry' about the same as last year’s first quarter but above the $406 for entire 1965. One aspect of NADA’s report which attracted attention was disclosure that used car prices dropped in the first three monte of thia year. Dealer figures showed the average used car gold at $917, compared with! $932 at this point a year ago| and $938 for all of 1965. ★ ★ ★ The average NADA dealer, had 34 used cars in inventory as of March 31, or a 41 day supply at current selling rates. NADA pointed out that dealer expenses rose slightly in the first three months of 1966. Theyi amounted to 12.32 per cent of total sales, compared with 11.94 per cent in the similar period last year. ‘GOOD OR BETTER’ In a supplemental survey, the trade publication Automotive News said 80 per cent of the dealers it queried reported April profits were as good or better as in the first quarter. About two-thirds said their April profits were as good or better than The city dog catcher re-jin April a year ago. leased the imposter. Republican Switches The paper added: “Despite this, there was less, optimism this year than last on ANN ARBOR (AP) - George] the profit outlook for the re-Sallade, former three-term Re- mainder of the year.’’ publican re|X‘esentative fr(»n: Tony Ritz, president of the Ann Arbor, said today he will; Detroit Automobile Dealers As-seek the Democratic nomina-lsociation, summed it up this tion for state senator from the | way, “It simply means we all 18th District. The seat is now! have to get out and work a little held by Sen. Gilbert Bursley,] harder. The business is still R-Ann Arbor. I there.’’ Afflirks't Mott GleiMrsw FOLDING Aluminum Awnin{s Fr.m OPEN SUN. 104 F.M. Uailyl^PJL r 264n W. Eight Mill M.| MrwKx.sfiy.t i IH Mile West of Tsleinph | REYNOLD'S , 1 Downnwr 1 iimiMi|ltt«-Si(ilMi*l i TMi I PtlNMy, mck I Wll •1 R^MSlUv.$45.MMir34y.lW » We Design • We Manufacture • We Install • We Guarantee Consiitf of 4 ayloB strung, vinyl-gripped rsekete, II ft. badminton net, metal polee, plastic shuttlecock, nilei. e-player eet with attractivaly decorated, varniahed wood maliets. Hat wood-and-steel reck with rubber tired wheele. Cooker has fall range smoke control, full draft control, tompersturs gauge, ask dump and grease trap. 40* height. Settee, two chaira, two ttack tables, with quality featurea: redwood alata, plastic arms, 1* aluminum tiiKing. MTD ^'Lawn Flite” ir Rotary pewaied by big 2V> bp enflina *29” As little as 81.28 a week. Special Turbo-lift blade, self-lubricating wheel bearingi. Float-lock Safety Handle. Oven Hood Grill Web Folding Chair Meteitadfptt (1/199 24”giMadlttiU 1«| ^ $299 Complete with extra-heavy spit, swings out for basting or testing. UL approved motor, dependable temp, gauge. aluminum tubing, weatherproof polypropylene webbing, folda for etay storage. Web Chaise Lonnoe $cw aaqrMMUi G Lnxarlons 71* length, wide. Adjusts to S poalttono. Rust-proof aluminum btaaa, grean-whits webbing. i#»*'... 24" Huffy Parklane KatylenmlTikt 4QQ99 Bonths la pay GG Big SVt hp engine with Choke-A-Matic carburetor, recoil starter. Forward, neutral, reverse. Foot clutch. 2-6aL Gas Can rsssr Great for emcrganctas and for home use on mowers and motorboats. Plated inside end out for rust resistance. un-piece Tool Set Carrying and storage caaa. ■crewdriver racks, socket wrenchai, hackaaw, blades, punches, chlselo, pliers. Hand Vacuum Cleaner Works like magic. Has extension wand, 30* flexible hoia, bpholstery nozzle, shoulder strap, crevice tool, brush. 50' Crown Vinyl Hose Nylon-reinforced lor extn strengtli $299 Take advantage of this low-low price on ^* Crown hose. 100% vinyl cover, nylon braided. Brass couplings. Teflon Bakeware i.SbiMwm $Q99 aa.iHck llaM Q West Band aluminum bake set; 15'/i* X lOVt* cookie ’n bake pan, 12-cup muffin pan, two 9* cakt pans, 5* x 9* x 3* pan. •J Skillet'N Griddle leiSutsIselec $*799 inrr Seilc seed | Teflon coated. West Bend set at new low teg. 10" skillet, ll‘/i* griddle, 8* saute pen, plui nylon apatule. Easy terms.____________________ Eureka Cleaner *39“ Complete with special floor, wall brush, twin action rug nozzle, upholstery, duatiag bruehes, crevice tool iVi bp. k k sw Spalding Golf Balls Uqaid center **Go-nite** Hurricane Lamp Spllnkler Grasnip $133 Veett^*eH^ 00^ This beautiful imported copper finished lamp has a 9* nhlmniiy, MItierrLef Wfl tnaMa-litt servict 4 Watdra lajLs up to 33' x 85'. Has autefmatie 4-position spray dial. Bealed motor Pn^s action design Large grip arsai ITVT 11* long. Thb largest shear of its style on the mafket today. And at what a low price. Fee- 3 for JL Puts more distance between you and the tee. Takes roundi ' of rugged play. Limit one keeps'out dirt and grime. tures effortless pump action. good,Aear 40 W. PIKE ST. 0,M ton hUf, ItN I. «; M. HI fcM SERVICE SyORE FE 5-6123 C~10 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MAY 19, 1966 653 Housewarming in the Wbrks New Union Office At Joslyn And Tennyson Has Low, Modern Look Plans are under way for an open house at the new home of Pontiac Motor Division United Auto Workers Local 653 at 990 Joslyn. Bert Henson, financial secretary of the local, said the affair will be held as soon as landscaping around the building is completed, probably in July. Formerly located at 386 East Kennett, the records and equipment of the local were mov^ into the new facilities March 21. Built at a cost of mpre than $250,000, the building contains 12,000 square feet. Acquisition of the 200-by-l 10-foot lot on which the facility is located brought the total cost to $317,000. ★ ★ ★ Construction was started last June. Robert Savoda of Detroit was the architect and the Ernest Hollick Construction Co. of Detroit was the general contractor. SEATING CAPACITY In addition to record offices and committee rooms, the building contains an auditorium with a seating capacity of nearly 500 and a kitchen and dining room capable of feeding 500 at one time. Henson said the building i« constructed so thst a second floor can be added if necessary. Parking facilities for 50 cars will be provided adjacent to the building as soon as blacktopping is complete. ★ ★ ★ * President John Maye said the local has also been given permission to use Pontiac Motor Division property across the street for parking. Mrs. Charles Frazier Handles Clerk Dt/fies Imprinting Photo Reproductions on Metal Berf Henson (left), John Maye In Hallway OCC Summer City Firm Offers New Process By JOE MULL EN A Pontiac firm is one of only two in the state utilizing a relatively new process to imprint permanent photographic reproductions on aluminum. “We began this processing procedure last year,’’ said Eugene E. Jones, assistant to the manager of Chief Pontiac Photo Engraving Co. “Our firm is already equipped to handle a larger volume than the company in Detroit that performs the same service,’’ Jones added. Chief Pontiac Photo Engrav- ing Co., 103 Wayne, is one of the largest producers of zinc etchings in Michigan and this is its main function. ■k -k -k The company also prepares offset plates for multilith and lithographic reproduction, readies pictures and typeset copy for the cameras and prepares headline composition. PHOTO PROCESS “Hie significance of this process is its permanency,’’ Jones said. He explained that photographs, nameplates, and numerals for dials are reproduced permanently on photo-sensitized anodized aluminum by actually being sealed below the surface of the metal. “The product of the process Is both waterproof and weatherproof,’’ Jones added. But, the darling of the ultra-1 modern engraving plant is the!^"^ anodized aluminum photo proc-j Jones and Roy E. Lester, gen-jeral manager of Chief Pontiac Photo acquainted with mejai photo processes a dozen years ago when both were employed by' Chrysler Missile. This experience, modern techniques In coating and buffing and special equipment are the basics that led to Chief Pontiac Photo Engraving’s emergence as a leader in the anodized aluminum photo process. The hig|ily technical inner-workings rif the process, however, are confidential-: ★ ★ ★ A “no admittance’’ sign serves notice that only authorized personnel are allowed in the area of the plant where the process is performed.. NOVELTY ITEMS Besides providing such items as electronic dials and identification plates for industry, the firm is busy imprinting cuff links, tie-bars and other novelty items. Permanent placement o f photographs on metal is in growing demand both from .bustness. viduals. A related process performed in the air-conditioned plant adjoining The Pontiac Press is that of imprinting images on the surface of aluminum^ather than sealed below the surface. Evening Classes Will Begin on June ^8 Oakland Community College’s second eight-week summer evening session has been scheduled from June 28 to Aug 19. Counseling and course selection for the new term will be held June 1-20 at both the Highland Lakes and Auburn Hills campuses or at the OCC administration office. Registration^ Auditorium Has Seating Capacity Of 500 Director is Given Authority in Antipoverty Nurse Issue Oakland County Health Direc-iif the OCCEO is not satisfied! the OCCEO, to Daniel T. Mur-tor Dr. Bernard D. Berman yea-| with his decision. phy, chairman of the County terday was given the power of j NOTED FAILURE of Auditors. discretion by the board of health; ^ letter noting the failure of be''lSiSed to geHhe nurseron sch^ided June 2f and 28 ty.ti^^ ' ^^iarET co^S^£^^^ from 6 to 10 p.m. | The Oakland Cwnty o ^entzer, health coordinator for cies calls-for full-time nurses* Courses will be oHered at , Economic Opportunity (OCCEO) Highland Lakes in the follow- I ing general categories: Art, English, foreign lan- guages, general science, mathematics, music, political science and social science. Curriculum at Auburn Hills will include accounting, business, English, foreign language general science, landscape technology, mathematics, political science, psychology and secretarial. AH but the foreign language courses, which offer four semes-' department has not yet lived up > to a contractual arrangement! ; provide a public health nurse: B at both the Pontiac and Royal J Oak Township antipoverty ac-tion centers. Berman told members of the health committee of the County Board of Supervisors yesterday he felt the action center programs were not sufficiently developed to warrent nurses. ...................... ■a Berman cited the shortage of Honors War Dead ter hours credit, are three-hour i nurses and said that he couldn’t credit programs. “Thr^^^ foitdgr^^ t jiMd&_: courses are scheduled from 6 assign any to a duty when to 10 p. All other courses are slated from 7 to 10 p.m. except basic mathematics and physical science which will he conducted The health committee then supported Beaman’s position in not assigning nurses to the action centers and authorized him to withdraw from the agreement EXAMINING PICTURE Oakland County officials Daniel T. Murphy (left), chairman of the board of auditors, and Delos Hamlin, chairman of the board of supervisors, examine an aluminum photo of an architect’s Pontiac Prais Phott drawing of the County courthouse complex. Chief Pontiac Photo Engraving Co. presented the anodized aluminum reproduction to the county. / from 6 to 9 p.m. at the Highland Lakes Campus. Called Scotchcal, this process Walter J. Fightmaster, direc- is long lasting but not perma- of the OCC continuing edu-cation program, anticipates an A main use of the Scotchcal j enrollment of 1,200 to 1,300 for process is in preparation of in-j the new term structional charts used, for ex- Approximately this same num-ample, in manufacturing plants!her of students is enrolled in the first summer evening session Poppy Sale Launched A three-day sale of poppies began today with auxiliary members of two Pontiac American Legion posts taking part in the annual program to pay tribute to America’s war dead. Directing activities locally are Mrs. Donald Richmond of Chief Pontiac Post No. 377, and Mrs. Ayres Miller of Cook-Nelson Post No. 20. The memorial flowers are hand IS who are paid lor their work members voijinteer services in distributing them. Contributions collected dilring Poppy Days are used to carry out the auxiliary’s programs of rehabilitation and child welfare. The small red flower was adopted as symbol of sacrifice shortly after World War I. Harriman Gets Job Negotiating for U.S. Captives WASHINGTON fUPl) - Roving Ambassador W. A v e r e 11 Harriman has been handed another special assignment — he's now in charge of all State prisoner exchange with the Com-imimgg'irTierNgiir— The department announced Harriman's new job yesterday, although actually he took on the task several weeks ago before making a trip to Geneva to talk to the Intematkmal Com- Illustrator of Children's Books to Address County Librarians Wesley Dennis, a Boston artist who draws horses for children’s books, will be guest speaker next Wednesday night at a dinner of the Oakland County Chapter of the Michigan Association of School Librarians. Northern High School. Mrs. Marguerite Phelps, librarian fdl'l)akliind"Schddls, is in t:Kal'^d' 61'i''&i^aIiohi.‘'’^ or on trains. Oil and grease can easily be wiped from the chart and both the metal composition of the chart and its surface image can endure years of use. Products of Chief Pontiac Photo Engraving Co. have been approved for government use. Bids now are being prepared for some military contracts. 2 Calmly Drink Beer as Firemen Fight Blaze -L»m>N,--Nebr-((B----- ikL-£pHiB§iiifi8 anmrcd .M. mlttee of the Red Cross about Included among the books illustrated by Dennis are “King of the Wind,’’ “Misty of Chincoteague,’’ “Brighty of the Grand Canyon,’’ “Orphan of Chincoteague’’ and “Justin Morgan Had a Horse.’’ He also has written some books, including the “Flip" series about a flying horse and “A Crow I Know” which be illustrated. lELjaHK______________ all when afire started in a stove vent and spread to an overhead fan pouring smoke through a Lincoln tavern. Despite the smoke and firefighting activity two patrons sat calmly quaffing their beer until a policeman finally asked them to leave. that began May 4 and will end June 24. Drivers Find Street Full of Mad Mothers LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) Mothers on Juniper Drive believe in direct action to many of their children themselves on lawn chairs and bicycles In the street so there was no traffic at all. The human barricade ended after about IS minutes when police were called. Police have promised daily motorcycle patrols. SUPPORTS WORTHY CAUSE - William G. McLean, 103 Dwight, buys a poppy from Mrs. Donald Richmond (left) of the Chief Pontiac American Legion Post No. 337 and Mrs. Ayres Miiler irf Cook-Nelson Post No. 20 as they launched a three-day campaign this morning to sell the Memorial flower. Ihe women are diairmen of the Poppy I»y program in the area. !■ ^ I- THE PONTIAC PRESS, THIJRSDAY. MAY 19> 1966 C—11 Chances of Halt Fading Vief War Affects Dollar Draih Hospital Gets Grant WASHINGTON (UH) - Hie National IiuUtute of Mental Health yesterday awarded a grant of $10,000 to Newberry (Mich.) State Hospital to finance a five-year research program on rehabilitatioa therapy. An average of 7,700 physi^ ians and 3^iW dentists arc graduated annually In the United States. Retired Editor Dies SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP) -Artfaur R. Todd, 72, editar af the Gary (Ind.) Post IVibiine for » years until he retired, diM Tuesday. FIRST QUEEN — Mrs. James Shearer, 2930 Orange-grove, Waterford Township, holds the crown which will go to WASHINGTON (AP) - The Viet Nam war has virtually ended any chance of halting the drain ci American dollars over sas tMs year. Secretary of the Treasury Henry H. Fowler indicated this much Wednesday. Although ending the deflcit in the U.S. baiance of payments in 1M6 is still the go^, he said, the administration ma^ have to settle for something else. ★ ★ It may well be that we will have to settle for an interim objective of equilibrium exclusive of the costs of, Viet Nam,” Fowla* added. He made the comments in reporting a disappointing $582-million deficit in the payments p(»ition for the first three months of this year. NOTORIOUSLY UNRELIABLE’ But he cautioned against in^jecUng this into an annual rate. Quarterly figures, db though adjusted for seasonal variations, are “notoriously aid, (he seUcretary said, it also has adversely affected the historically favorable U.S. trade balance. Although exports exceeded Imp^ by a |4.4-btllion annual rate during the Hrst quarter, he said officii had ho^ for an over-all Id-billion surplus this year. The trade surplus last year sunk to $4.8 billion from $6.7 billion in U64. ADVERSE EFFECT Fowler said it’s impossible to spell'out how much more favorable the trade balance would be without the (H'essures on in- Kruv«, IT.IC.U.U XUW.BP..U, ..u.u»u.B»;.uw.. wui;.. wu.g«« varimwim, .luiuwuua., u..-Calif., Wednesday announced posed merger of Kal^w the Winner of the queen contest of the North Oakland County - reliable guides to future per-jPlan» to mwge4heir fum.. -Paper Fair, to be held June 17-18-19 at the Community Activities,. Inc., building, 5640 Wiliiams Lake, Waterford Township. Mrs. Shearer, the fair’s first queen in 1952, is in charge of this year’s contest for single girls, aged 14-19. 13 Entered in Queen Contest for North Oakland County Fair formance,” he said. ___________ Fowler said he could give the dollar and cent estimate of the effects of the war on the net dollar outflow but added that since the buildup began last August “we have been little med keep the lid on potential racial strife in the state—the No. 1 civil rights complaint still is the inability of Negroes and other nonwhites to live where they want in the kind of house they want. * ★ ★ Findings of the State Civil Rights Commission show 50 per cent or more of the housing units rented by nonwhites in virtually all of Michigan’s largest cities are dilapidated or deteriorating. lagmawr Jackson, Kalamaaoo “ is have Negro slum “ghettoes** dewribed as pitiful by Jim Rose, the commission’s housing dnwtor. FREEWAY projects In Lansing, Flint, Saginaw and Detroit, freeway projects have added to relocation prob-ms. A recent door-by-door inspection in Saginaw resulted in a tightening up of previously lax and allegedly unequal enforcement of health and building all the way across the continent by train. As I urged by the Saginaw Area Religious Council on Human Relations to accept any persons who want to be good neighbors and discourage panic selling and moving. These efforts "have changed Saginaw’s atmosphere from stifled resentment to fpury encouragement,’’ McCrea reports. ★ ★ There are many other facets to the racial picture in lifichi-gan. Ku Klux Klan and Black Mus-m activities have been noted in communities with large automotive plants. KLAN COLLECTION In Fliftt, for example, a collection was taken up for the defense of the accus^ slayers of Mrs. Viola Uuzzo, a Detroit housewife who was murdered on an Alabama highway while helping the Selma-to-Montgomery freedom marchers. The defendants were KKK members. the fact that ripples are not be-1 A major complaint of Pon-coming waves,” Wilhelm re-|tiac’s Negro leaders, says Fitz-igeraW, is a two-year-old system PONTIAC SHARE Ifor electing city commissioners. Pontiac has had its shiue of| ^lack Muslim rallies have attracted sizable crowds. According to Allan Wilhelm of the Flint Journal, the situation is relatively calm, however. “Prosperity and high employment in the Flint area probably account to a great extent for racial |HX)blems, and city officials have clashed with the Civil Rights Conunission over the seriousness the picture. Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. accu^ the commission of Us-tening to only one side of the story, but a spokesman for fiie agency said ctmiplaints of widespread discrimination aired^at a monthly meeting were allegations only, not conunission findings. According to the Michigan Chronicle, a Negro newspaper, Pontiac’s situation can be summarized as “hoiising, schools, jobs, voicelessness—the same old problems, but intensified.” The Pontiac Press doesn’ agree the city is the powder keg it has been {)ainted in some quarters. The city charter calls for nominations from seven separate districts but election by the city at large for each di^ct. “This still insures eadi district of representation by someone living and nominate from their district,” Fitzgerald explains, “but It may not be the one they want, since the city at BOSTON (AP) - Dr. Louis Y. Bardfield, an optometrist, has large makes the final selection.”. fitted his pet monkey, Chi Chi, NEGROES COMPLAIN | with a {^ -^,^***^ ’*"*** o ' 1 ^ j correct farsightedness. Some Negro leaders contend w ★ w tofir districts have been disen- ,.j ^ ,3, franchised m the process. ^3^ ,39 Editor John Fitzgerald reports the Board of Education has gone far with mixing Nepo and white children from different schools in joint functions that there are protests about it, claiming forced intepation. 582-Mile Walk Near End According to Malcolm McCrea of the Saginaw News, a close a fann southeast of Portland. , .. ,1. j 1 observer of the racial scene, the; inspecting the ^odell^j^ Council has an enlightened! fl fnr. \ .. ... POR’TLAND, Ind. (AP) - Three hikers from Mchlgan strode into Portland yesterday, only 42 miles from the end of a 582-mile walk from Sault Ste. Marie, Mich., to Richmond, Ind. They took (rff then '0-. ,«.! M '.MV*-- I'■ *ji* " ir-fe I ■ V.. 4~V ,'' ', • fxV», 'Most draft beer'never even leaves the brew^ ery. , While being bbttled, it gets heated to 140' fahrenheit—and that’s the end of it. Draft beer loses its draft taste when heated, and becomes “bottled” beer. (Bottled beer is good beer; but it’s not draft _ beer.) There’s only one 1 w , foUndwt^ho^^ why Drewtys tastes^ I, idtattbfefe »• ‘ wa: :pOS; right], ^^He didn’t continue the event i clearing 14-244. tient,” Wright said. ‘‘He has all tho confidence in the world he is gofaig to recover.” But even if he recovers as quickly as he did when stricken with his first heart attack last spring, Dressen couldn’t t a k over the Tigers again until in August. After a second smi-ous attack he might not get a [rfiysical go-ahead to return to the rigorous job ot managing a pennant contender. Coach Bob Swift, who has been with Dressen during his 2% years at Detroit, was given command of the team when Dressen was stricken Monday afternoon. Swift ^ he expecU to ran 06^ team “jast like last yetf.” and wouldn’t role ont a possible mid-season retnm by tbe peppery little Tiger skip- A Tiger spokesman said there Sff* were no plans to replace Dressen as manager. “They didn’t wrte replace him last year and they don’t plan to run him out of a Job now vdiile he’s sick,” tiie ‘It’s too early to tell,” Swift said. “They d«m’t evoi know yet how much damage was done to his heart. They only found out today (Wednesday) that it was a heart attack.” Blnninghain Stuhohn at Buyal Oak Klm- teumflaSl Romao at Avondala _ . ^ Birmingham Bro. Rica at U. of O. High Sta. Francia da Salat at St. CoelHa St. Banadict at Royal Oak St. Mary - — at Fanidalo It. Jr— .... ... at St. O..,.., St. Fraderlck at Richmond SI. Auouallna Holy Cross at Utica St. La------ New Baltimora St. Mary al Invitational at Uvonia High SdMal SouthflaM at Barkloy Watartord at Livonia SlovBntan IT White who, '■“"I ipTfpilit.ittie laief.hit 6 se-[ fo/boB^ 8t^ out, but Joei “ - noferlhri ‘ Pontiac Northern undefeated in I-L track by ping Livonia Stephenson, 80-20, as Nick Ochoa and Sam Kyles each posted two victories. n and Clin-| ton singed to give the Yankees aU the runs they needed. ^1. .Siottlemyre limited the Tfigers to five hijs, including a tWfKUn homer by F” * inthelMirtb.1niniM. ; it". ilie YaiAiees jik^M i« The Huskies and Waterfoitl go into next* Monday’s showdown Monday tied for first, ’nto two leaders will meet Itol nm k tip^ oH _________________-Shim (to a triple bjr Bpbby »cbal«Bop.toid .day iOuthem McDowell won the long Jump against both teams with a 1610 effort, the 446yard dash against WATIRFORO ms. WALLBD LAKI llVk LONO JUMP — Dick McDowell (WT), RutMgd (WL), Boktr (WL). dManco m ReLAV-Watortord (Farrli, Mako. - - Klkia), tima SHOT PUT — Dava Farrit (WT), RUF wall (WT), Snook (WL), SB4VS. MILE RUN - Don Coktlttt (WL), Galloway (W), Clot (WL), 4:44. 120 HIGH HURDLES - Mark Rulladga (WT), KHna (WT), Fltigarald (WL), Ills. (WT), 0 RUN - - Jim LIndlar (WL), Orahl igomaa (WT), 2:03.1. .... JASH - Dick McDowaH (WT), Trudaau (WT), Wilcox (WL), :51.». 100 DASH J- Dava Farrit (WT), Hack (WL), Oadany (WL), :10.0. HIGH JUMP - Dova BOkar (WL), Frani (WT), RattarW WL), height M. 100 LOW HURDLES-Dava Kllna (W^, ------------ -la willla (WT) and Fltt- Wvjsr’iis.' (m),'*^dany Ym’.lbiiiilier Riiiph tiowkiMl'WliMebhs.iinre. «i«« lot 4t people diell liotiip tfocfb lat homer be d Jijto a.routine fiy, got A Cot of good woodton the '‘Ibat homer be hit may have Sy'wtbe baA.” HpukaahL Afenis suffered _ ----- ki^ wbeq.be crdsbedl^ Vtm-hail while trying te ecore In Cto first Wj ^ gone in: aht Ro#W^ it was all right, to I ktok him «|W. No itoetiliitai M': BESrr IN STATE-Ron Shortt of Farmington cleared lied Lake. •*Mraa«-N Kay, Ruaaail, an 162% in the pole vault yesterday at Walled Lake, This ia the best height reported in the sUte this epring and makes him the favorite in Saturday’s Qm A state finato at Ana Arbor. He used a borrowed p<^ after breaking his own. SUMMER ELEGANCE IS A ONE-BUTTON BLACK MOHAIR BY AUSTIN LEEDS Whether it's on important event, or simply important to you to look elegantly dressed this summer — Austin Leads arrives ot the perfect answer: o beautifully cut one-button in imported mohair-worsted. Tho line is trim ond highly flattering. Tho fabric is lustrous, rich, and surprisingly light in weight. The price is 119.50 Stare Ope* f»**l*l *• * Oer Mmiagbem Stare Opee Sri. te 9; Set. te StM D-2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 19. 1966 Test Driver tikes Turbine in '500' INDIANAPOLIS, Ind^ (AP) Big Bill Cheesbourg of Tucson,' Ariz., main test driver of exotic cars at the Indianapolis Motor | Speedway this year, thinks rear-; engine Fords which have dominated the track the last two years can be beaten. Great! Thafs what you’ll say when you tight up a Half and Half. It tastes rich...and so mild, too. Pipe tobacco does it “If wb can get the turbine qualifiied,’’ he said today, “we’ll win the race.” ' e * w The race is the Golden Anniversary 500-miler May 30. Cheesbourg has been working with two cars, one owned by Norm Dernier of Niagara Falls, N.Y., with * horsepower General Electric turbo shaft engine, and a novelty dreamed up by Albert H. Stein ot Orinda, Calif., with two Miter German Porsche engines. The kerosene-burning turbine has been starved down to about 900 horsepower. TOO POWERFUL “I never though race car was too powei Cheesbourg said, “but this one spins the wheels all the way down the straightaways in spite Cards Switch Players ST. LOUIS (AP) - nia St. Louis Cardinals optioned outfielder Alex Johnson to their Tulsa farm club Wednesday night and brought up Bob Ttdan, an outfielder-first baseman. of anything you can do. And of course that’s bad for tires. I’m still trying to find out just where to an>ly the power.” Cheesbourg is having to find his own route around the 1V%-mile track for the turbo monster because it isn’t designed to run in the rubber-smeared groove made by the light rear-engine cars which dominate the field. ★ ★ ★ The crew also is trying out a new brake system in the experimenting bdore final quaMca-tioTw Saturday anit .Sunday “I know one thing,” Cheesbourg said. “There is no way in the world for any other car here to pass this one on the straightaways.” The twin-engine car has been a disappointment. The six-cylinder engines, each with six carburetors, have not reached more than 7,500 revolutions a niinute. They need more than 8,-000 to give the car a chance to qualify as one of the 33 starters. * ★ ★ Cheesebourg, 38 and with seven children, has handled such monsters as the V-8 supercharged Novi in his six previous Indianapolis starts. He drove it to lOth place in 1958. Get twice the control in danger spots with a Ueep’Wagoneer. Just flip one simple lever into ^Jeep’ 4-wheel drive. You're cruising the highway smoothly, comfort- confidence you just don't have in any other ably In your ‘Jeep* Wagoneer. Suddenly—a wagon. In short: a ‘Jeep’ Wagonoer gives you steep hilt. Or slippery pavement. Or icy, danger- all the comfort, riding and handling ease of any ous curves. Just flip one simple lever into 4- fine car. Plus the incomparable safety of ‘Jeep* wheel drive at any speed-and you hug) the 4-wheel drive. In these emergencies, it's the road with twice the fraction of other cars... world's finest protection for your family... off twice the control, twice the safety. You've got the road, it's a new world of fun and adventure. New power: 250 hp V-8 or Mi-Torque 6-cylinder engines. Turbo Hydra-Matie* automatle treni-mission, power steering, power brakes, and other options you'd expect in any fine wagon. Yon’ve got to drire it to belicTC It! See yoor *Jeep* dealer. Cbeck the Yellow Pages. GIANT WAREHOUSE SALE eiANT TIRE SPECIALS NItr REMFS-MT SECONDS-ROT RDJUSiaEIIT TIRES-Rul.. RR«D HEW FRCTORY TIKE-OFFS These Origiaal EowhiiwbI Ikes Ware Reflwved Fiem Raw 1118 Can 7.75*14 wwiEWiius -SSi- $1095 Your Choice of Brand Full Prict IneludM ailtaxit WAREIWUSE Dinct FaetoryViM^iOon for nil WIDE TRACK Chiefs Eye Marks, State Track Crown Records j are made to be bro-| wiping the hurdle marks off the Set by Ken Dyer of Ann Arbor ken and Pontiac Central’s track) Pontiac Central books last Sat-team has come up with its share urday in the regional at Qar- this spring. The Chiefs are counting on adding a state record to the list Saturday at the University of Michigan in the Class A finals. PCH’s nine - man contingent Tipton ia a iieavy favturile to also Is casting covetous loola - ......... ....... at the team diampionship. enceviUe when be stei^ over the low sticks in 19 seconds flat. His winning time of 13.9 in the high hurdles lowered a school standard he had set early in the win the state high hurdles crown and break the record of 14.2 set Oxford is another team that in 1963 by Ernie Long of Flint has a state record in mind the central. He is a co-favorite in same day in the Class B finals the lows and will be aiming at in 1964. Art Wiggins is expected to place in the long jump whore the record of 2S-87k set Hayes Jones in 1956 is the second oldest. George Hester of Detroit Northern set the 108-yard dash standanl of in 1995. It has tied five times since. Ken Franks and Earl Polk in the pole vault and Larry Platt in the high jump could pickup valuable points. Bill Hollis, who set 'a PCH at Michigan SUte, but the Wikl-|Rex Cawley’s 19-second record fg^ord of 1:58.3 whUe placing cats don’t appear to have the set in 1958. ......................- - GOING UP—If his injured knee is all right, Don Lavalais of Pontiac Central is expected to be a strong challenger for State Class A high jump honors Saturday at the University of Michigan. Lavalais set the sctiool record earlier this spring by clearing 6 feet,-6 inches. depth to earn the team crown. The Class C and D finals also will be run Satnrday at Central Michigan University in Mount Plensant Starting times at the three sites are the same. Preliminaries will get under way at 18 a.m. and the finals at 1:30 p.m. Junior Bill Tipton completed ! The weather, of course, will play a dominant role. If it is warm and dry no record will be safe. But if rain or cold weather set in, performances will suffer. PCH high jumper Don Uva-lais will be hoping for good weather becaose of his ailing knee. If the injory is healed sufficiently by Satnrday, Lavalais will be a contender. He set the school record by' third in the regional 880 faces a major task. Class A ranks are loaded with top half-miler this spring. Coach Dean Wilson combined Hollis, Wiggins, Larry Lewis and Brace Tnrpin for the mile relay in the regional and came np with a pleasing result The qnartet Mt only won, but set a school record of 3:25.8. Wilson is hoping this foursome Miss Chandler W/7son Pitches, Bats Boston Past Orioles Triumphs With 88 at Romeo CC Phyllis Chandler of Ham-tramck carded a 44-44-88 at Romeo Country Club yesterday BALTIMORE (AP) - Which was more important to Earl Wilson as he pitched and batted the Boston Red Sox to a 2-1 victory over the Baltimore Orioles? The loading or the unloading? to capture the weekly Women’s I In baseball parlance, Wilson called for the ball, Wilson tossed Metropolitan Golf Association unloaded a home run into the it to Flaherty from out of his' outing. right field bleachers off Jim palm. In other words, Robinson Palmer Wednesday night to nail inferred, Wilson was careful not “Wilson’s main pitdies are a fast ball and n slider, and the fast ball is pretty stnd^t,” Robinson said. “Then all of a sudden the fast ball jumps straight down.” Robinson said the last time he clearing 6-6 in the Mansfiei^lfe- wiil^get inte'fr fast heat-in- the-lays. The state record is 6-7% finals because relays are run against time and teams in the speediest heats usually wind up I with the points. * “If the pobits are fairly well spread I feel we have a chance for the team championship,” said Wilson. Saginaw Valley Conference dianqiion Flint Southwestern is rated a slight edge. Nick Ochow of Pontiac Npr- The field of 60 players was slowed early in the day by rain, and the scores soared with the fariways wet on the 7,008-yard course. Miss Chandler totaled six pars in her 88. She stayed ahead of the pack wifli sharp down the decision. That much to touch the ball with his fingers She needed only 38 putts for Mrs. Max Evans of Southfield carded a 90 to finish In the runner-up spot, and Mrs, George Schade of Detroit turned in a 95 for a third place finish. PhyllH Chiiidler, Mamtrimck ..44.^4-M Mrs. M*x Evani, Southfield ...47-43-tO Mri. Georg* Schode, Dotrolt ..4M7—»5 Mre. Fred Brooks, Feimlngton . 51-47-9I Mrs. Peter McAlpIne, SouthfWd SW7-.W Low Net; Mrs. McAlpIn* »W4-«. FIRST FLIGHTi Mrs. Tony MItcheH, Detroit 4S-M-«3( Mrs. Goorg* Sulllvon, Detroit 50.50-100; Mr*. Tod MakoskI, Detroit 101-14-05. SECOND FLIGHT - Mrs. Leo Gorlep-py, Detroit 50-47-106; Mrs. Douglr-Denton, Detroit 54-51-107; Low Net-Mrs. John Ralston, Farmington 100-21- Freneis Rehn 125-10- Defending Loop Titles DE KALB, 111. (AP) - Co ■ champions Central Michigan and Northern Illinois seek tain the track and field crown and Eastern Illinois defmids its tennis title in Interstate Intercollegiate Athletic Conference championship meets this weekend. was evident. ★ But the Orioles claimed that just as important to victory was Wilson’s not-too-subtle job of loading his pitches with moisture. Or, in more uncouth language — that he was throwing spitters. The Orioles requested umpire John Flaherty to check the ball about four or five times during the game, the last two times while Frank Robinson was batting in the 10th inning with the potential tying run on third base. NOT IMPRESSED Flaherty returned the ball to Wilson each time and play resumed without a hitch. But the Orioles were unimpressed. Wilson was loading up for the next pitch wMe FlMierty was checking the ball,” BiDy Hunter, the Baltimore third base coach, said. “As soon as Wilson got the ball back, he put it in his glove and rubb^ on the spit,” Hunter said. “It was very evident what he was doing- If he dkln^’t load it, he sure decoyed the hell out of me. ^ Robinson, who hit a foul pop on a 3-2 pitch to end the game, was asked u he thought Wilson was throwing a spitter. 'T don’t think it,” Robinson said. “I know it. and leave telltale evidence. U.S. in Polo Matches NEW YORK (UPI) - The United States Polo Association Wednesday announced plans to send a team to participate in the Cup of Americas matches in Buenos Aires Nov. 19. The Standings them in the 448 and long jumper Dick McDowell and shot putter Dave Farris of Waterford qualified for the finals. Oxford is expected to win one event and place in four others. AFTER RECORD Mike Lantry is after the state Class B shot put record of 58-5% set last year by Bob Johnson of Vassar. The 198-pound Lan-try fired the 12-pound ball 68-7% FMiiM FfM FI.6. in the regional last week. . He will be competing in the HALFJ^Rr-^nvUle s too, but wiU have Wayne Wills v^l he one of wlnidog 28.45 igan University. m the 108 and 228. Oi^’s 880 relay team and Mickey Cummings in Uie high jump are given an outsit chance of earning points. Ortonvilie shotputter Ron Waller has been improving rajj^dly and could challenge for the Gass C Utle. Wayne Wills of the Black Hawks should do well in the 880. AMERICAN LBAOUE San Francisco Houston ...... — Angola* ., . ...ladel^la .. Pittsburgh York f. Chicago . Houston M ChlcsM 1-2 --------- • N*« York 2 Chicago (Buihartft 1-1 or John Ml at *WaS!ngton*Tl^^lek 1-3) at Cltvo-(Tlant 1-1), night Clavoland at Chicw, night Calltamla at Washington, night Datralt at Baltlnwra, 1, twi-night Mlnnasota at Naw York, night Kansas City at Boston, night NATIONAL LEAGUE ‘ tr 1! IS Cincinnati (O'Tool* tFiSilOf 1-4) “ ■ - (Jackaon M) ”^ar Houston (Farrall 1-1) at Hands 1-3) Only gamas tchaduM. Friday's Gamas chlcaoo at Atlanta, night I. Louis at Cincinnatr night Stop At the SIgi THE JOLLY BLUE ^ NFl Players Talk > Wilh Club Owners WASHINGTON (^ - The 20 player representatives moved into the National Football League meetings today to talk turkey with the owners now that seven cities have cwnpleted their pitch for the 16th franchise in 1967. There were no prior reports of pr^lems between iriayers and owners, and no word of what might go on between the two groups. The league still was beaming over the attention showered upon it Wednesday by governors, senators, congressmen the 16th franchise. Commissioner Pete Rozelle planned to summarize the presentations made by Houston, New Orleans, Seattle, Cincinnati, Boston, Phoenix apd Portland, Ore., so that the owners can begin to evaluate the candidates. PIUN onui turn «nm. aenoor. mx tm Kinui muri Thornton Facing Torres in Battle for Ring Title KIAMESHA LAKE, N.Y. (AP) — Wayne Thornton will move out of his fight camp at the Concord Hotel Friday and heavyweight contender Doug Jones will move in. Thornton meets champion Jose Torres in a light heavyweight title bout at New York’s Shea Stadium Saturday night. Jones will meet Ernie Twrell the World Boxing Association’s heavywel^t diuiqiioo. Id n title fight at Houston, Tex., June 28. Ffthing TaoMe SNRTINO GOODS Ml. Lawrence F88-tNi THE POMTUC PRESS. THURSnAT. MAY TO, IWW D—« GARY PUYER’S GOLF CLASS: Shoot away from irouUo Hershberget Stars Table Tennis All-Stars vs. Lansing Foes The unbeaten Pine Knob All-Stars will chaUenge Lansing’s All-City squad Sunday in a table tennis exhibition at the local Elks »10 Lodge. The seven-member teams Will renew their annual rivalry at 2 p. m. The feature match is set for 3 p.m. between former national collegi-MRS. KILMER ate singles champion Carol Wol-verton of Pine Knob ud Lansing’s Cynthia Kilmer. Mrs. Kilmer is a Korean who has played most of her table tennis in SeoqL ★ ; Others on the Pine Knob All-Stars are Ben Baker, the 19M Pontiac singles champion; Jerry Saunders, last year’s state recreation titlist; Dick Kirby, the state novice junior champ; Poe Secord, state YMCA champion; A1 Magnus and Ralph Irish. ★ * ★ Larry Ruel captains the Lansing squad. Admission is free for the competition. Too Old? Del Crandall Valuable Supply Bowlers Become Champs S in Huron League litrMlI ph lOOOOobMnB AthletiG Win Twice French, English, Spansih and American flags have Sown over Michigan. NEW YORK (NEA) - Each of the last three years supposedly was the last for Del Craa-dall in the major leagues. First Milwaukee told him he was too old .. . then San Francisco ... Last winter it was Pittsburgh. 8e Del Crandall packed his how much credit Del Crandall deserves for his (McDowell’s) “They’re togeAer a loti’’ Indian reliefer Don McMahon, who was with Crandall during the money days ti Mlwaaiee. “Sam’s going to benefit by it. “There aren’t any better catchers than Crandall. He Wl- KANSAS CITY (Jf> — KansaslEd Charles and Dick GreepTiad City completed knocking CaU-| three hits apiece in tjie Hrst ifornia from the American' League’s first division here last * night by beating the Angels, 7-11 w i and 7-4 in a doubleheader. ^ C|^!« • 1 The Athletics also topped the » } •»J SSS5V VM Angels Tuesday. J S T ? SSSTmI'' 11! Il Mike Hershberger drove in " * o o o SSSTif" 1 8 * 11 three runs and scored two ISSohUISSd 4stS City completed itsSt3S5i'’phUoo"'^'’ sweep of the Angels. JSi5mb% o**ao _ Jim (Catfish) Ihmter pitched Total si i 41 t^oi si: SMborn 1b I 0 11 Harroltan lb 4 « 1 1 Fragoii u 5 2 2 1 Cmpnorto H 4 1 1 0 —- - • -lutoy 2b S«2« .Croon 2b 4 1 » o' ------ 2 0 0 0, ________________ 2 0 0 fl| Herk’s Auto Supply pulledl5S^» away to win the Ihu^ Bowl Classic championship with a re- 5y*i7jJJ*pR sounding eight-point sweep of Moose Lodge No. 182 on the «»»» _ final night of bowling. WlAi, ” * * oVo i o m' Felice (Quality Market alsolKMOM CHy. ‘ Completi Lint of GoK and Tennis Equip. 94 I. UWMHM SO. K 24S«* 0 Akor p 00 0 0 10 0 0 ‘Jeep’ Wagoneer with 4-wheel drive gets you away from It all. took eight on the final night tojcoj^^i climb from third to secon dl£ (frandall is 36 and has been around the major leagues since 1948, so he just smiles and talks softly about McDowell’s remarks. “I a p p r e c I a t e Sam’s re- rntohhi* aoor —I ihorks,’’ CYandall said, “but and all of our pitchers in Mil- =-i- X-^ndwltchSlwei* don’t make too much of H. Re-waukee..’’ nabbed a share of thW place nity-and switched leagues. „,g„,ber pjt,,htog. --------------- with the Moose by cllnrfilng past 'Lg-bi- 750/735x14 P-4 Major L^ue Boxes W ANW|ILU FMCItW » ”4 1 r« Will* M s; 0«v«np^ •• I • 0 9 ^ ST/ 5*.?rLiKKiV?J THE PONTIAC l^KESS. THTJRSDAY, MAY 19, 18M •rown rf 4 0 10 Osfton p J o / r He'S; MDanW P 099 9\Ti>avlt ph 19 00 Lind rum If 119 9) __ ' Total ^ M 9 7 * Total Xt *5*5BS, DP-$an FrinclMO \ Lot Angela if------- s«SiSiraa.Si.-a,s7« McOinItl. Iirtarlrl .... . . IM 7 M^M (W,M) 11-3 9 Lln^f^ )).!)’ 1 I 9 OtMcn (L.A4) . . 71-3 5 S Pi^*anoskl M 9 9 9 9 1 W^SSSalltr. T-l:91. A-41,73*. Leaping Catch Aids Senators CLEVELAND (AP)^ Don Lock’s leaping catdi of Duke Sims’ liner jH^served Washington’s 4-S victory over Cleveland Wednesday ni^t and snai^j ............ the Senators’ three-game losing streak, r.V.r ’ Senators’ starter Pete Richert g;^^ took a four-hit shutout into the ninth but with one out FredigjMiSli vrr9'9 9 Y9'9-«i Whitfield singled and Max Alvis E^^Sanni m. swiiiitmt. op-chiogoj reached base on an error. One|Ji,ci?J^”“SS?San*' ‘ out later, Rocky Colavito^IISJJS',; smashed a pinch-hit homer, bringing the Indians to within one tun. Wifli ifliever Casey Cox pitdiing, Sms drove one to the 40S-foot sign in center field, but Lock leaped up and grabbed the blast for a game-saving catch. WASHfNOION^ _ CLBVELAND . . Homer u . I 0 Hlnlpn rf ____, 1 4 9 2 9 McMahoo p 9 9 9 9^ 9 9 9 9 Wagner If 4 9 19 4 119 Whitfield lb 3 1 1 9 4 119 Alvis 3b 4 10 0 >4131 Davallllo cf 3 : 4 112 Landis pf i 3 9 9 9 Gonzalez /vVoNTCOMERV WARD Why H8t... _____f (Ul-2) .. MefSahon T-2:32. A-At49. RIViRSIPi SAVES YOU UP TO $175 OViR RSOUUR FACTORY INSTAUATIONI 9291999 9 9 9 9 9 1 1 . bp3-'sTiouls 1. LOB^’Lof'V Philadelphia «■ . T.Taylor, Buc'*''' McCarver. ERBBSO Gibson (L.3-5) ? 1 1 Woodaschlek I” V ? ? Bunnlng 5 5 J i - - (W, , ..JP-B, ^ (Capada). Killebrew Sparks Minnesota fo 7-1 BunntnQ „ J 300^5 Nod OverChisox One-Hit Pitching in Softball Play A two-run homer by Jerry ST. PAUL-MINNEAPOUS (AP) — “If you want a simple explanation, I just haven’t been hitting the ball well,’’ Harmon Killebrew said Wednesday evening. .......... ... . Then he went out and hit his|\vedge and Floyd Hicks one-second home run of the 1966 ytter paced Spencer Floors to, season, staking the Minnesota j a 7.1 victory over Bob & Larry’s Twins to a 2-0 lead in the first jjast night in the opening of Pon-inning .and sending them on'tiac softball play at Beaudette their way to a -1 triumph over Park, the. Chicago White Sox. CHICAOO MINNESOTA ab r h M «b r h AgM cf 3 9 9 1 Versallcs ss 4 0 9 Buford 2b 4 9 0 0 Tovpr cf 4 12 PRoMnsn rf 4 9 1 9 Ollvi rf 4 19 Romano c 4 9 9 9 Klllabrow 1b 2 2 1 McCraw Jb 2 9 9 0 Rollins 3b 19 0 Ward K 1 0 9 0 MIncher lb 1 1 1 Preosa 3b 3 9 2 0 Kosco If 4 0 0 Wals ss 3 10 0 Baftey C 4 0 0 G.Pcfors p 2 0 10 Zlmrman c 9 0 0 ----- . . . , Jb .... Hicks fanned 12 of the last 14 batters he faced and had 14 for the game. E-Con-0 forfeited to Ron’s Roost in the other Beaudette tilt. A three-run uprising In the top of. the seventh carried Orchard Lanes to a 5-4 win over Bob & Ken’s at Northside. 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Or, better yet, phone us right now I WHY WAIT TO BUY THE YOU NEEDY f AVE MOW—JUW SAY "CHARGE FT North Branch Wins in South Central Senior John Hogan won three events and shared in another as North Branch piled up 80>.4 points yesterday to take the South Central track championship. V Hogan won the 100-yard dash (10.7), low hurdles (21.1), broad jump 20-1) and he ran a leg on the winning 880-yard relay team. Teammate Doug Monroe, sophomore, set a school record with a 2:08.4 clocking in the 880-yard run. Imlay City placed second (44), followed by DeckervlUe (32), MiUlngton (26H) and Harbor Beach (23). JOHNSON MOTORS NOAH and SUPPLIES WHh lyiN-ln tponsans 30 Ybora Rbpair lxp«ri*nc« Labor Guarontbbfl 100% TOEirS NUIEE KuBtaNarBarin-MN Riverside Supreme-Wurds best shocks! You can't buy better ihocb! V A A They have 44% more work- ing capacity to give more control, smoother ride, less tire wear, easier steering lACH M PAMM Bulk oil sale! 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THURSDAY, 31AY^.lj>6g Cincinnafi Rising; Astros Surprising NL By The Associated Press The Cincinnati Reds are beginning to rise to the surface but the big question in the National League is whether the Houston Astros are in over their heads. tory. Catcher John ^Batemanl the aecond game but got thelers. Cincinnati put it out of homered for Houston in the victory, Na 2S4 of his major reach with a tbrea-nin flfth built nightcap but the key plays wecepe«8«e career. |on three walks, a hit batter, two errors by the Cubs’ Ernie I w ♦ ♦ |Deron Johnson’s double and an Banks that led to three un-| SamiQy Ellis checked thejinfield hit by Tonttny Helms, earned runs. iMetS qn fomr hits while the Reds Trailing 3-2, the Giants came tA hn «mono the "Ceded relief collccM seven Mts and nine up with four runs in the eighth au me way rrom ennm contenders the^slow- Claude Raymond in walks off four New York pitch-linning with the help of errors bylscored the lead run. second baseman Jim Lefebvre and outfielder Ron Fairly. Hall Lanier singled in the tying run I and when Lefebvre fumbled the' relay from the outfield on thej hit, Tito Fuentes came around all the way from first and B. Track Victory Barons Don League Thinclad Crown Cassius Calls for Press Huddle LONDON (UP!) - Cassius Clay, never one to, keep anything to himself, scheduled “very special” meeting with defeat Cooper Saturday night, said) “I’ve got something important to say and I won’t feel comfortable to fight on Satur- pennant contenders, the slow-starting Reds continued their climb from the tail-end section of the standings Wednesday night, moving to within one victory of the .500 level by beating the New York Mets 4-2. The Reds now have won 10 of their last 12 games. WWW At the same time, the Astros, expected to be down where the R^ were, reeled off their 14th and 15th victories in the last 19 games by sweeping a double-header from the Chicago Cubs 5-1 and 4-2. Houston has inched to within 2H games of front-running San Francisco. And, the Astros have been getting some solid individual performances. Second baseman Joe Morgan is hitting at a .342 clip, outfielder Jim Wynn is among thTTons-battetLln leaiT-ers with 23 and shortstop Sonny Jackson is the runner-up in stolen bases with 12 to 14 for Maury Wills of Los Angeles. | SITLL LEADING | The Giants, meanwhile, re-i mained at the head of the stand-! ings with a .097 percentage to' Houson’s .025, by downing the third-place Dodgers 0-4, Philadelphia climbnl into fourth by edging St. Louis 4-3 and Atlanta whip^ Pittsburgh 4-2. W]^ smacked a two-run douUe and Lee Maye and Rusty Staub hit homers in support of Dave Guistl’s seven-hit pitching in the Astros’ opening game BloomHeld Hills recorded six firsts Tuesday in taking the WayneOakland League track championship with 03 points. ClarencevUle (OlH) placed second, followed by Milford (80), NorthviUe (21%). Garks-ton (14%), Brighton (0%), West Bloomfleld (8) and Holly (1). w w ★ Brett Griffin of Hills won the broad jump with leap of 20 feet 0 inches, breaking the record of 20-2 set to 1902 by another jumper. Art Treganza. A secotiid record fell in the shot put where Keith Grantham of Milford tossed the ball 55 feet, % inch, erasing the mark of 51-5% set by Chuck Andrews of Milford last year. READY AND RUNNING - Bay City’s Col. Warner Gardner is shown behind the wheel of Detroiter Jim Herrington’s ^iss ^Lapeer on^aginaw Bay near Bay City. G^dner made final shakedown runs earlier this week In the unlimited hydroplane before leaving for Tampa, Fla., and a June 12 race. The craft ha^eached speeds in excess of 150 mph. Stevens Seeking! Medal Play Title at Grasse He Utica Baseball Team Seeking Playing Dales The Utica Jets — formerly the Chiefs are forming under coach John Lieber and seeking games against the Pontiac city FORT WORTH, Tex. (UPI)-I There are such successful win-1 ning, who has been scoring well'men’s baseball league twiiu. Ben Hogan, showing l|iis age (53) I ners as Gay Brewer, No. 3 in recent weeks. tHp tuam will nractice to in his walk but not in his golflamong the money winners; Hogan After Sixth Colonial Golf le Baseball and Softball Headquarters 24 I. Lownnc* St. FE 2-2369 Burly Melvin ‘Bud’ Stevens, Michigan’s winningest amateur golfer last year, is a solid favorite to capture the Michigan Medal Play tournament which opens tomorrow at Grosse He (Jolf and Country Club. Sm Our Comalat* Un« of LONE STAR BOATS fey CferyUor Boat Conwratton McKlBBEN HDWE. U7« URto* Lfekfe as., URIOR UkR game, started another four-day trudge down “Hogan’s Alley’ today in search of an unprecedented sixth Colonial National Invitation golf tournament title. It will be the 19th time the graying, one-time “Hawk” of the fairways has competed in this tournament, which has grown from a $15,000 affair in The field of 40 wiU play 36 1945 to a $110,000 plum, holes tomorrow, 18 on Saturday! But the host Colonial Country and wind it up with 18 on Sun- Qub is Hogan’s home club and he plays the 7,132-yard, par 35-mu w ^ 1 ™ * 35—70 layout year-around when The Medal Play crown was jg^-t making one of his in-the first win of the 65 season frequent visits to the tdhr. He for Stevens, who went on to take'doesn’t know every blade of, the Michigan State Amateurigiagg is closely ac-' A"®"'*®*'"" “^.quainted with the whimsical de Michigan titles. pgjfg jjuilt into one of the world’s toughest courses. Hogan is not actually the pick of the writers here. That honor went to Dong Sanders, the colorful Georgian who is wearing a deep trail to the hank witfi the $74,268 he has earned so far this year. But, there are plenty of others in the 72-player field capable of upstaging Hogan or Sanders. Frank Beard, now the No. 4 ranking wage earner after his $20,000 victory last Sunday in the New Orleans Open; Gary Playo*, the little South African who rejoined the tour here after a iMig rest at home, or Player’s fellow countryman, Harold Hen- Two of the biggest names in Dlf—Arnold Palmer and Jack Nicklaus, are not in the field. Palmer withdrew after injurmg his ba(^ at New Orleans and Nicklaus declined his invitation without any specific reason. The team will practice today and Saturday. Those desiring tryouts may contact Lieber at 731-7506. Rides Four Winners NEW YORK (AP) - Jockey Braulio Baeza rode four winners at Aqueduct Weihieaday. all'the'world’s press”^ this day I,have said what I’vs morning to clear his nnind prior $dt to say.” to defending his world heavy- ★ w weight title against Henry Coop- He infused to- give even a er, 'hint as to the content of his □ay, a strong 11-2 favorite to| talk. YOU WIU UM out aVSIMSSatlTHOOS iMPERIAL-CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH-VALtANT BIRMINGHAM e CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH e 912 S. Woodward PhonoMI 7-3211 KINS TIRE CENTER 31 W. Montcalm FE S-TON AT TIGER PAW HEADQUARTERS See the Popular I —- COUPON------------------------1 • NOW I IranS luw blackwall take-effs. WhHe they last! T.TIi14| HIM I QUARANTEED I Whitewalls only $2.00 additional plus fas I ------------------COUPON - - - - — KING TIRE Center"- ns-Teet hlli^. Bud Rtnigar, im, Doin Milltr, Ray 1:30 - T I l?42 - Pat* Green, Bill Ralph Elstrpm, Wm. ctoaln. 1:54 — Tom Draper, Joe Gri Savat, Gene Woodward. t:0l - Earn Burnt, Gee. WIMI John ZWar. F. E. Rlcfeart. 9;M - Claude Dwight. OHIe Elitrom Jr., D. DKIercq, Chuck * I ONE MAN TELLS ANOTHER i cos£ m. sPuuaj— II Now you have the widest choice ever in Stetson• Againtl defnets la aeterialt,« tima. Adjuatmanta pro-rated on mantMp fer M'fe ef tread. I' mentlia used. air-*------------------- Tub.lM. SiM. SpKial Frk. MTira Sp«lol Flic. 2nd Til. M. T.I 630-13 22.16 7.QP 1.83 700-13 695-14 24.90 7J0 I.M 1.12 700-14 795-14 25.90 7.00 2.111 730-14 773-14 26.98 7.00 2.20 800-14 _ 825-14 29.90 7.00 2.86 830-14 855-14 31A0 IW 2,87 470-15 26.90 7J0 2.21 710-15 815-15 29JM 7.p0 2.88 740-15 845-15 31 JO 7J0 2.88 fOQ/820-IS 858/900-15 853/900-14 33.90 7.00 2.78 3.01 Saginaw at Lawrence Wg Poy THg Parking 271 E. Maple OpenFrjdoyi ' Birmingham Open Fri. 'til 9 iSTYLE CORNER of 3 MINUTES FROM DOWNTOWN PONTIAC AR Meat Has tolas Tai aed Old Tira Off Oart OPEN MONDAYShni FRIDAY 8 ’til 9-SAT. 8 ’til INCLOSED SUNDAY MianinncE fOOT lALDWIN AVENUE PONTIAO THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. MAY 19. 1966 D-r Jacoby on Bridge It *74S VAJ4S ♦ AS 4Q10«5 WB8T BAST «KIS AJIDII VTS ♦ KQt7 ♦101641 «t7S> «84 soirra (D) ♦ AQS ♦ KQlOtS ♦ ja ♦ AKJ Both vulnerable- Wari Narth Bast South 1¥ PSM su Pan 4N.T. Past Pan 6N.T. Pass PUi Pass Pan Pan Opoeing K. BY JACOBY & SON North’s jump to three hearts was one of those limit raises to justify a slam contract and he went there after checking for aces. In fact, South made a mlki effort to get to seven but gave up when North showed no Ungs in response to the Blackwood five no-trump. West speMd the king ef diamonds. Soath ^ " my’s ace and drew Immps two leads. Then be ran oH four cnlb tricks. At this point all he had to do to throw away game and rubber woaM be to discard his jack of diamonds on the fonrth chib. After this play he would have no way to avoid the loss of two spade tricks provided that East and West played their cards properly. On the other hand, South had a winning play at his disposal. He discarded his deuce of spades on the fourth club and led a diamond. West had to win with the qneen and was end-played. He had to lead a diamond to give Sowth a mff and discard w the ace^pteen. It should be noted that South’s diamond play would have failed had East held the queen of diamonds but in that case, no play woidd have worked and also it would have been quite a play for West to have opened the king of diamonds without the queen to back it up. I lor Use on Copter By Science Service CULVER CITY, Calif. - A, new gyro-stabilized gun sight designed to aim the Army’s, supersonic TOW antitank missile from helicopters, will keep a fixed bead on a target despite the ‘copter’s vibrating and maneuvering. BEN CASET Port Huron Gets Grant WASHINGTON (A?) - Tire Q—The bidding has been: West Narth East Seeth IW !♦ Pass IN.T. 2W Pass Pass ? You, South, hold: ♦Kiel WKI7 6 ♦ASSAJS4 • What do you do? A—Bid tw« spades. Tew one M-tmasp was a ~ nnderbid. in game, if l%Economic Deveh partner held, more than a^ tration ‘i;;i''nim''ut^‘“o^n-l»M.«» grant to assist Port; Ing. ! Huron, Mich., in developing an - South had industrial park. ’The city is to^ enough morei match the grant with $394,000. ■y tVONIY OMASa ssr snesy . „ "TIN mm wlrsls Wt SNltay . . . Mn»m SSMs IM way." aaies (M«r. ll^ Apr. W); vtrleui moiwy-msWno "***w*: Moon MaMIgMt mw ways ol tniMncino homa kmim paatiwmiat. Sa a«Mra o< patMttloni. Yog can uIHlia MMa at ■AowmanoMp to advanca caota. TAUaus (Apr. M - May »): ivaUwto Inllwnea. Don't tool yourialf ojoro fflondt, doolrot art eoncornod. Tafct »tocli. You may 6a ipandlne tor wrong tttingt. Cytio rtmalnt Wgh ... yog can mako now contacli. = OEMINI (May J1 - Juno »); Battio , to (roo yourioH from roitrlctlon*. (ruttra-ttona. Kaap mind opon ... do “ * liatonlng. RM yoorttif ol ^ral I Don't bo approhenalvo ““ act. It will worm CANCER (Juno 2t -------pa up. Ma-“ SCORRIO (Oct. a - Nov. M)! IMrtfr „ant eomprbmlaa cogld aa»t _;«Yni* malt or partotr to Jf* J" plonty ol llitoning, obaarvtog. Cbort W aaPtrti. Don't Invito gnnaotoury trogU SAGITTARIUS (Nov. a -Dac.21): Gain ponpoctlvo. Job or aarvicat partormod rtqgira attantlon. Mlghllolit maturity. - --t Mmottilng tor nothing. Wit" • you comidet probloma I Advance Cited By Scelcne service WASHINGTON — New York City’s birth control program Is handling an estimated 44 ^r cent of all low-income families who need help, and services are expanding daily, reports Dr. Alonzo S. Yerby, Commissioner of Hospitals, New York City, to the first National Conference on Family Planning held here. The total load of «7 clinics, both public and private, is alwut 73 000 patients, proving conclusively, stated Dr. Yerby, that large numbers of impoverished f a m 111 e s of all ethnic backgrounds want family planning services if they are treated with even a modest degree of dignity Dr. Y«rby noted that New York, wlfli far and above the largest program In the country, could be a possible model for other communities. Reports from other areas of the nation indicate that the government’s birth control program under the War on Poverty Is als^^ off the ground but on a much smaller scale. Three community directors from St. Louis, Grand Rapids and Minneapolis told the conference their projects are noncontroversial and eagerly accepted by the poor. Boston Museum Given Privote Art Colfedion boston (AP) - The Mu-' aeum of Fine Arts has been given a private art collection it values at $4 million. Tile collection, assembled by the late Forsyth Wickles of New York and Newport, R.I., la .called by the museum "one of the country’s great private art collections.’’ "nWuseunTITDiai^ecr ALPENA (AP) - Offldala of] Alpena Community College today dedicated the Jesse H. Bes-ser Museum, Science and Arts Building. The structure Is named for an Alpena philanthropist who has donated money for the museum and a number of other projects. D—8 THE PONTIAC PKKSS. THURSDAY. MAY 196(^ The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers ahdjp)ld by them in wholesale pack^ lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Wednesday. Produce eauiTS AfloM. D«lkleut, GaMtn, bu. ApplM, DcMckHK, Rid, bu. Appm. Jonathan, C.A.. bt Applaa, Macintoah, bu. Applat, Macintoah, C.O., Applet, Norlhof" Ipv, bu Siock Market Remains NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market remained higher early this afternoon de^ite profit taking which pared some of its early gains. Trading was riHxlerately active. Stocks advanced from the opening as they followed through on yesterday’s recovery, the biggest advance in 11 months. VEaaTABLSS Rhubarb, hothouae, 5-lb. box ...... Rhrubarb, hothouae, bilUoo. To stock traders that could be bearish. But that “only” still carried the annual rate of personal income to a record high of |863.1< billion. Even more indicative of busi* ness health could be the factory payroll rate. This rose by 1700* million in April, die same amount by which it had risen in March. Increased payrolls were reputed in the electrical machinery, transportation equipment, rubber, apparel and ordnance industries. And the annual rate for all factories came to $124.4* typt hens 22-24; roesten hcevy ty^ UW, broilers end fryers 3-4 lbs. Wh 11-22; Berred Rock »Vy-24. 36% +’% attempts.' ' prices, of profits, or expansion; Alpine Valley Church mih-mage. All day Fri.-Sat. 204 W. Cornell. Rummage sale, Friday, May 20,1 a.m. to 5 p.m. 1745 Waldon Rd. -Adv. Lertc^jcident in Michigan within two wnrriprl * , u . economists. iinlve Robert Westendorf, a school - 1 janitor who was standing at M -'4 the top of the tank, yelled for . “ “-™b*seb6u. News in Brief An unidentified man playing baseball nearby ran to the tank, followed by Sgt. Dewitt Fillmore of the Midland County Sheriff’s Department. In trying to reach into the septic tank to haul out Spencer Rummage: Methodist Church, *^- 2091 Cass LkeRd.Fri., May 20, ,1 9:30 a.m.-5 p.m. and Sat., May I T MU They were rushed to Midland iw M ^ ww-Rummage Sale, Sal lu ?r im IIM -1- 'A released. May 21, 8 to 12 p.m. at ^ ni 171A 36U 36% + M Ao autopsy was ordered by Im “h i u Dr. G. Fred Moench, Midland '• 17% 177/s -I- w assistant medical ex- 2* 29% 2»% 29% - w aniiner. i S'* ” «* + u'sULFIDE GAS 31 33% 33'4 33% + % “ " -7- J-1.1. On May 7, five men were killed by a sulfide gas, commonly known as sewer gas, in . a cistern at the Anderson F^ Rummage. .. 11!,..^%. Church. Fri. Police Watch, LOT OF TAKE HOME PAY, Even with higher y for federal taxes, that n lot of take home p opportunities f< « and in Store Theft A 23-year-old store clerk faces arraignment on a larce charge today after p o 1 watched him allegedly steal a boxful of cameras .gM equip- ment from him i night. the service h All wages up by $1^billion to an annual rate ^^^1.1 billion. Ibat gain Ither exuberant nor over-And some business econo^ts join the administration in leaving much of the wcurying at the moment to the ^oyer last stock markets. nJzer Co. plant at Rigsr in % southeastern Michiga^ In that mishap, jode man 23 60% 60% “% + %'working in the cist^ was felled *2 ^ 2% 2% + % ^**® ^®s and-^ur others, In- » 59 + % chiding Ri^ fire chief, died 51 M% S%I %ione after.-toe other in rescue Rummage ^ at Orchard Lake Commumty Church, 5171 Commerce Rd., Sat., May 21, 8-12:^ featuring special gift shqpT —Adv. Congregational Church. Fri. 3-7, Sat. 10-12. Adv. Held a^e Oakland County Jail B-Xlarl Winkley Jr. of De-troit(^rrested by Pontiac police block from Federal’s De-'partment Store at VIN. Saginaw. Acting on a tip, plaiuclothes-men Bruce D. Jarvis and Robert H. Rood said they looked on from a nearby alley while Winkley came to a rear door of the store after closing time. There the clerk picked up a box of equipment valued at $110 and started to leave, police said. Sales, Profits Firm Records Farmington Company Gives Yearly Report Robert G. Begle, president of Futurmill, Inc., Farmington, and chairman of its board of di-rectors has reported record Rummage Sale. St. Michael's Rood at the corner of Wayne Hr was stooned bv Jarvis and ^ He was stopped ny Jarvis ana|y^j. March 31. Hall. Fri., May 20, 9 til 5 and Sat., May 21. Rummage-Bake Sale: CAI, Friday 8-12 p.m. - Metro Aux, No. 62. . u . ,. .. ,1 Futurmill’s sales of machines, I ana and Warren. He told poUce that . , . . Adv. he had a stiKkboy leave the boxjjpj. ,j at the rear door location earlier ^ ^3 ^ in the day. —Adv. Business Notes Thursday and Friday, lo”to 3. Cor. Grass Lake and Ridge, off OrmOnd. -Adv. Peter Else, 553 Coolidge, Bir-- mingham, has opened an office 58% M% practice of architecture ,» j. JQ2 Pierce, Birmingham. I He formerly was an associate and treasurer of Begrow and Brown, Architects, Bloomfield Hills. Rummage and bake sale Sat., May 21, 9-1 p.m., C.A.I. Bldg. First United Pent. Church. —Adv. Gorman’s Gallery of Fine Furniture will open its first Oakland j[>>unty store at 29145 Telegraph, Southfield T0 w n sTi i p, Monday. The new store will offer a wide selection of home furnishings exhibited in 120 display settings. Green’s doctor said his heart BOND AVERAOas _____ Thurs. 76.1 95.5 13.5 92.4 M.7 Prev. Day 76.1 95.5 S3J 92.4 M.l “ Ago 77.0 95.7 13.9 92A Ago 773 96.7 14.4 92.4 1965 High 83.7 103.5 88.9 Treasury Position Ex-Senator Dies; Oldest to Serve compared to $3,618,665 in sales for the same period in 196446. The next profit of $144,-202 was up 26.9 per cent com* pared to $273,353 in profits from the year ending March. 31, 1965. PROVIDENCE. R.I. (AP) -Theodore Francis Green, 98, who retired from the U.S. Senate in 1960 in his 93rd year, died today at his home. He was the oldest man ever WASHINGTON (AP)-The ce^ position to serve in the Senate. a yaar a May 16b 1966 Belence-^ , 10,234,695,437.311 failpH »♦$ Fiscal Yaar July 1— laiicu. iRwj_«,io5.w^ 1^ Green was stricken in late iSli4(r9KiS4.(ii iio,i9i,343,i22.#4 1962 With a series of cerebral i.PSktr:. ... .. ... ... ... ... ..i etmlroc ■31I,779.I04,475.K 314,357,570,619.371 StrokeS. (Mid Aisets— 13J31.A34.3WJ9 14,351,705j555.09 (X) — Includes $279,085,116.03 debt not subleet to stBtutory timit. . DtvM.^ C oUSe^ STOCK AVERAOIS t Ago .. th Ago . 445.5 172.0 150.2 3 The per-s hare earning was $1.55 compared to $1.23 for the proceeding 12-month period, after giving retroactive effect to stock dividends paid during the fiscal year. Begle noted that several major activities of the company prevented the percentage of profit increase from balacning with the percentage ratio of sales in- INfXUDED COSTS These included the cost of moving into a new plant, a change in product mix and higher costs of training and supervision incident to an employment increase of 73 per cent during the year. He reported incoming orden streiM with-sm -erdap backlog 70 per cent above the 12.6 M o sarne period in 1964-65. „ . Ethyl Cp -<50 'ATCHISON, Kan. (» “ Del-bert Ehret, director of the Atchison YMCA says that every-iFeirCem .w time be looks out in his pasture Fensteei he sees a new moon. Recently, his 25-year old mare named “Moon” gave birth to a colt Ehret’s children insisted the new cnner should be named “NewMoon.” .., oAlon takon a< leet dividentf meeting r-Deelered or paid In 1966 plus ^ MCj _________divw^. jr-f* ACCEPTING AWAimS-General Motors Corp. President James Roche of 425 Dui^ton. Bloomfield Hills, is among four auto chiefs receiving steering wheel awards from the Automobile Club of Mi^igan for contributions made to Raffle safety. Holding one of the awards are (from left) Ciller Corp. President Lynn Townsend, 5991 Orchard Bend, Bloomfield Township; American Motors Gorp. Board Chairman Richard Croes; Roche; and-Ford Motor Corp. Arjay Miller. THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 1966 D—9 Giv« Soybeans to UP LINCOLN; HI. W - Sevwal (a^Ban do tbdr iharo to thi Uulted Fund of Lincoln by gla-tatg odwr than hadi or dwckB. Ttey give soybeans, whfch are Inunediately marketed and tuned into cash by Ken Goodrich, the United Fluid president OFFKTIAL NOTICiJW ML! •aOMlioa OM* to munlty Celiigt D Countlit of OokI fS-JSSf DoHorl "^17s!Sh on Iho nrd doy of April In ttM yoor ItTt • t»5.aM on Mo first doy of April In ttw yoor Wn tmogs on tho flrot doy of April In tiM yoor mi *2U.«0S on tlM first doy of April In the yoor ItTI t»S,«»pn ttioefst^ of April m on IKo first doy of April m ’’nilISjO on’ltio first doy of April In ■^^11,. first doy of ’’IlSoSil’^lho first doy of April In ’^IKo first doy of April In tsSSm on ttw first Doy of April In wjtho first doy of April m on ttw first doy of April In on*ttw first doy of April In "ojim'^Ifw firol doy of April m tsAMd on ttw flrtf doy of April In ”«53»l on*ttw nrst doy of April In ***tUo!oN ^ttw first doy of April In «Tttw first doy of April In "tssSIm on ttw first doy of April In ^'^MSoloM’^tho first doy of April In on’tlw flrst doy of April In ***tSOo!M^^llw first doy of April In '**U0b!SIs on*ttw first doy of April In . ttw first doy of April In ^^SathVlSpol ond IntorW^M ^ ■ovobW ot 0 bonk or trust compony to by ttw orlolnol purr-— ? tST 6onS: ^ nos os oueb ondor ttw y*™*” J;\.r:T HASTY RETREAT - When S-year-oId Mike Muilenburg was visiting Pittsburg, Kan., and learned a circus had just arrived, he went to the area. For a while, he was doing fine feeding a lone el^hant. But when two others moved in for a re, Mike decided to head toward the rear. New Seed Lifts Hopes lor Pakistan Rice Crops •^ASbr*?; ro^'-s mi?* i!y’'tato5si KARACHI (UPD-Tbe brightest hope for incrasing the meager rice harvests of overcrowded flood-prone East Pakistan lies not in birth control nor new irrigation dams but in net of seed developed in the Philippines. After testing a number of hand-cultured rice grains in East Pakistan, researchers report that it is quite possible the low, 1,200-pound-per-a ere yield on the province’s 2S.4 million acres of rice paddies can be made to double in the next flve years. The effect would be to fatten the stomachs and pocket-books of the world’s densest rural population where rice te NASA Plans for a 2-Gas Atmosphere PimtiM #n or oflor April 1. m«, ‘ ‘^'?f'*'i* irU; ’SXd CPIM^ rmwmpllon on or ^ *f*f^* ’’ S«ltoitlon of oucb.notlCT^^ S-rSaS-Hav'! munlclporbondb onS •" Iriorod bondo Iblrly iW) STlI bopw by "»» *» JCITirifii. to' ff-lr "Wturlfy find. ?3niwlnlfy’c| Vgridtions in Height of Mars Areas By Sdence Service VIENNA — Regions on the surface of hlars vary in height hy py miifh n« thimo milCS, measuremoits made during Bie Mariner 4 fly-by of the red planet last July indicate. Tbe changes in strength of radio waves as the Mariner probe passed behind Mars beU the clues to the height variations. Tbe radio occultation measurements indicate that the Electris area of the Martian southern hemisphere is 16,500 feet higher than the northern hemisphere’s Mare AcidaU-un. Dr. Arvydas J. KUore of California Institute of Technology’s Jet PrqpdsloB Laboratory in Pasadena revealed the If JMtot hei|^ at an international symposhm of the Committee on Space Research, or OOSPAR, here-The measurements were deciphered by Dan L. Cain and Gerald S. Levy of JPL, and Dr. Von R. Eshleman and Gunnar TjeHlT and Dr. F. D. Drake of Cornell University for the National Aeronautics a^ Space Administration. ^ Niirucmi Ra*M Jpwa. wa NOTICES Cord of Thanks............1 In Mamoriom ..............2 . 3 Florlstf ................8-A Dinctors ;........4 Camataiy Lots ...L.......4-A Penonob ................ 4-B Lost and Found..............5 EMPLOYMENT Help Wonted Mole..........6 Help Wanted Femole........7 Help Wanted M. or F. .... S Soles Help, MoleAnuili. Employment Agencies.......9 Emplo^nt Information .. .9-A instructions-Schools ......10 Work Wanted Male .........11 Work Wanted Female........12 Work Wanted Couples ... .12-A SERVICES OFFERS Building Services^upplies...13 Veterinary............... 14 Business Service..........15 Bookkeeping and Taxes.....16 Credit Advisors.........16-A Dressmaking and Toiloring..17 Gardening .................18 Landscaping.............18-A Gorden Plowing..........18-B Income Tax Service .......19 Laundry Service ..,......^.20 ^ . ... By Science Service WASHINGTON-No one knows what space missions will be planned after the Apollo moon landing in 1968, but the National Aeronautics and Space Administration is building hardware for them anyway. Manned spacecraft now use a single gas (oxygen) atmosiAere. For missions of more than 45 days, however, a two-gas system — oxygen plus some Inert gas such as nit^en or helium — may be necessary for crew health and safety. Two companies have each been given parallel $306,061 NASA contracts to produce a cabin sensor for snch a two-gas atmosphere. The companies are SDS Data Systems, Aumuia.- CnUL.. and .PctklB-Elmer Corp. E ectro Optics Division, Norwalk, Conn. Each will be required to design, develop, test and driver a flight prototype system to NASA’s Langley Research Center, Hampton, Va., for further basic ground research. But there are no such 45-day missions planned. Even the Air Force’s Manned Orbiting Laboratory (MOL) will only be “m’' for a month. The only likely can didates are interplanetary flights which could last years. Even a manned Mars landing could require as much as 600 700 days. A twi>or-mor6-ga» atmosphere would be a necessity for such a trip, and NASA has aUowed itself an absolute minimum of seven years to investigate the problem. the major food crop and the staple S D., 411 Robfmmod Streete; »oe tti beloved huabertjif dear father of Min HtlenF rwnr j„ Jamaa J., Oaorg* J., aSi»ed'V72??rnihW •hSSI; *;ura», X Church. Interfhwt m $ 3 to 5 vlaHIng ,_m ELSIE A.J .w„ ...... -'*?HHda) HImelsen. Gravaalde aajvlea will a*m.*’at* MiVors^'^lalna Ca«y BOX REPLIES At 10 a.m. today there were replies at The Press Office In tbe fel-lowiag boxes: $•,_ 2L^84,41a 50, so, 65, 72, 79, 117. COATS funeral homr DRAYTON PLAIN! Harter, i___ bONELSON-JOHNe "Pealgmy^^Fwetr- SPARKS-CIIIFFIK FUNERAL HOME. lul Service" F Huntoon. Cema^ Lots ________4-A 2 GRAVE LOTS IN CHRISTIAN Memorial Eatates Cemetery. FE 2^222. MUST SACRtFICE ■rOSEUND PARK CEMETERY 3 Lots In Rosoland Park Catn^ tery. RtaaonaMo prko. CeH FE 4-2I2S. 4 GRAVES, 0100 ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEOINI CLOSED .MAY 21-JUNE 1ST HOUSE OF WIGS get out of debt ON A PLANNED BUDGET PROGRAM YOU CAN AFFORD TAILORED.TO YOUR INCOME ON AND AFTER THIS DATE, MAY 10, 1044, I _________________,_______ tor any dabla contracted ^ any other than myself. Rodney R. Col-wen, 007 . Hintord, Laka Orion, >1 AND AFTER THIS DATE MAY 19, I9M I will not be reiponaible tor any dabta contracted by any other than myatif. Norman Mar-I 4335 Lotus Or. Watarterd, 2. Call collect 791-3003. w A N -T FAST R E ANYONE HAVING INFOliMAj tion concerning misplaced red Schwinn Stingray bike, white banana seat with red ”D" — Herrington Hills Sub — Please call FE 2-0633 after 5 p.m fOUNDi BROWN AND WHITE Brittany ... ......... Lake, Drayton Plelni, OR 3-7009. FOUND: SAAALL BLACK FEMALE, port boxar, rad hamtsa. Vicinity of Loon Laka on Otxlo Hvty. iH-SS41. LOST: GREY TAPESTRY HANO-bag St Paople'f Food Market on Orchard Lake. FE 44300. LOST - WiRkHAIREO TERRIER, mete, mainly white, Wetklna Lake. OR 3-7752. Reward. LOST: LADIES GLASSES IN b’lUE =4^ U L T S USE PRESS W A N T b^emo^n^^ IN LOVING^MEMORY OF OUR beloved daughter, Paula Who poased away May 19, 940. From our happy homa^ circle God haa takm one we lava. Born away from tin and lorrow To a better home abwa. $adly missed by molhsr, filher, sls- GET out OF garnishments. REPOSSESSIONS, AND HARASSMENT. AVOID bankruptcy, — credit Philippine ir to Pak- istan R. S. Busuego told UPI, “tbe PhlllpplHBi a proud to be the host country to a project Which has shown positive results to Pakistan and much of Asia.” The credit, go to the researchers respooair ble- can youth because “British youth Influences American youth now more than ev«r.” ★ ★ w ‘I had hoped to grow my hair long to identify with the young, but my wife and staff wouldn’t let me,” Graham jtAed at a pre-saillDg news confarence abowl the ()ueea Mary.’ FARM MERCHANDISE livestock ............... 83 Meats ..................83-A Hay—Grain-Fted ...........84 Poifltry..................85 Farm Produce..............86 .......87 AUTOMOTIVE Travel Trailars .............88 Housetrailers...............89 Rent Trailer Space..........90 Commercial Trailers.......90-A Auto Accessories............91 Tirss-Auto-Truck ............92 Auto Service ...............93 Motor Scooters..............94 Motorcycles ................95 Bicycles ........... Airplanes..................99 Wanted Cors-Trucks........101 Junk Cors-Trucks .......TOM Used Auto-Truck Ports ...102 New and Used Trucks.......103 Auto-Marine Insurance ...104 Foreigh Curs ....iCTt.....105 New and Con...............106 a' number of ctatHIo™. Pontiac Press WANT ADS ARE FAMOUS ____Em_— 1944 CIVIL RIGHTS LAW PROHIBITS, WITH SJciRTAIN iXCBPTlONl, tlDliCRIMINATION BE-:;:; Rt: CAUSE OP SEX. lINCR :;::soME occupations are;:;: Vj CONSIDBREO AMER at-J;: tractive to persons .x OP ONE SEX THAN THS tx a:;other, advrrtii ■-v.; M ■ N T S ARB PLACED X. UNDER THE MALE OR FEMALE COLUMNS POE-X CONVENIENCE OF RIAO-:;:; res. such listings aes NOT intsndsd to ex- x-X- CLUOR FEESONS OF v:, SITHRR SIX. V.' HsIpJWantsd Male 6 2 MEN TO INSTALL APPLIANCES. Steady plaaMiit work. Good wagat. Will train. Apply In person 237 W. Clerkilon Rd. Lake Orion. Weatco 20 MEN NEEDED hour. 4(H»oor week. 13 yeara and up. Excallent opportunity for nwn walling Induction, attending nWI Khool, otc. Report 7:30 a.m. dally In whit# thirl and fit to tha following addreu: 3012 PONTIAC DRIVE NEAR ORCHARD LAKE RO.-TELEGRAPH PONTIAC _ or apply at Michigan Employment Securli^CommlMlon, M^iWe^ D S 3^2 8 1 "ACTION"- Phone 332-8181 PLUS BONUS AND CO. CAR ------- For RIOht MOO- SI e 1 d V year around work. No atrlkoa or loyotla. Muit bo nopl. Wo troln. Portonol Intorvlow only. Coll 4742233 4 p.tn.-7 P.m. A PART TIME JOB 3 morriod man, 31-^,,to,^'|mik 4 houra par ovanlng. Call 4743233, 3 p.m.-7 p.m. tonight. $200 PER MONTH 8 1 D~10 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. MAY 19, 19W IMy l(ld< / 4 « A-t MOTOACYCH M i C H A N I c!cOUNT6* AND CLIRICAL WOAK muM b* am lo rAAAir *11 modth. --- —■------------------ Aft. - no oMmt nood (My. Cm->tm ColAf. tM W. MwikoSn. I I. oHmiMno A •taro, lucH. Ft »yi' A-1 MECHANIC Exptrltnccd In Hydrtmillc IranA mlulon work. Modorn shop ol nm fronchfstd cor dcoltr. Excelkm working condMon*. good ulory ind boneflti. Soo Mr. Mllltr Mrv-ICO monogor at DOWNEY Oldsmobile, Inc. 5S0 OAKLAND FE 2-8101 AUTO ■OOY MAN. CXMRIENCEO with tools. CM dtaltrihip. SO-JO ------ benollfs. 1050 eitOOM HANDY MAN TO WORK WMo Track Dr. V ATTENTION STATION MANAGERS Horo 1$ 0 DIE DESIGNER AND DCTAILER with laminollon and progror-'— die expericnct. Ovortime, ft benalits and axcollant working GROOM FOR HORSES, PURLIC riding itaM. EM 3-0171.______ " STATION ATTENDANT. EX- DIE REPAIRMAN FOR SAAALL PROGRESSIVE DIES. STEADY WORK. DAY SHIFT, ALSO PART TIME HELP DAYS OR NIGHTS. Automatic Press Products 115 ELIZABETH LAKE ORION a group ot consignment deal Would prefer experience with g._ line dally reports. Inventory figures and drive way marchandlslng. Our employes know about this ad. Sand resume, Including salary desired, to Pontiac Press Box ei. Al OPENING FOR tXPEAl- Ponllac, Michigan. Mamber A ACCOUNTANT Permanent position. Degree and knowladga of standard and lob cost systems desirable. Salary, other benefits commensurate with ability. Plaase su|bmlt full resume and ywr salary rRquIremcnts in confidence. - P. O. Box Lake Orion, Mkh. APPLICATIONS BEING .TAKEN for 2 field mr- ----------* ^---■ ment of West Starting ---- military Apply " DRIVER DELIVERY MAN Salt and Tanks APPLY: CULLIGAN WATER CONDITIONING 925 ORCHARD LAKE DRIVER^ OLDER AUTO BILLER authorized Franchise, Auto liar. Must Have Experience, Top Business Management Outstanding Opportunity Ground floor opportunity with nf tional financa connsany. Learn t high school graduatt, —.......... salary, liberal benefits including "a Plan and axpenses. ------ tes Consumers F inane kland Ave., Pontiac, Hi Telegraph, Pontiac _____ ___________ DIES AND AUTOAkATIC FEEDS. STEADY WORK, DAY SHIFT, PART TIME CONSIDERED DAYS OR NIGHTS. Automotic Press Products liS ELIZABETH LAKE ORION NIGHT sniiT. Apply aieax ano eggs Restaurant, 5395 Dixie Hwy., Water- ford.________________________ DISHWASHER FOR AFTERNOONS. Good working condttlons. Wagaa above Union Scale. Royal Oak. LI t-7500_________________________ DRUG AND STOCK CLERK, IS. experience preferred L.. necessary. Perry Pharmacy, GRILL MEN Pun or part lima. naU .haapitalliatloiv R gwlcncad Shell eats Orchard Lake and Maple ATTENDANT INSIDE SALESMEN IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR MEN EXPERIENCED To Sell Building Supplies EXCELLENT ADVANCEMENT opportunity PERMANENT EMPLOYMENT In Existence over 111 years EXCELLENT FRINGE BENEFITS openings. For irvtervii ELECTRICAL PANEL WIREMAN, ELEVATOR OPERATORS Retired or seml-retired gi Neat appearance. Age « Able to work all shifts. WICKES Lumber & Bldg. Supply Co. Baldwin—Holly Rd. P.O. Box No. 5» GRAND BLANC, MICH. — NO. 45X3' Held Confidential "Equal SpportunTFy Employer INSfR^UMENT AAAN FOR SURVEYi CREW - TOP WAGES A N D| FRINGE BENEFITS. FE 2--— ' ^.r!" □onoaDie. ijood emp' Apply: JACOBSON'S, pie, Birmingham. MS Oakland Ava. In ^RTER FOR USED CAR LOT. Must have valid drivers license. — "' employment and top wages. Pontiac Farm and Troctor Co. YOUNG MEN OVER PRODUCTION WORKERS Millwrights 1 Electricians Pipefitters Maintenance Welders Machine Repair Toolmakers Painters & Glaziers GenararMolor Motor DIv. irsCSrwrafIb JANITOR - PORTER Immediate ope full time conscientious : TANTEO * . ____ jsSivsc'ja’S FINAL INSPECTOR •jxpffiiiBNtdb trucks and biduatrlall ampioymeni ana She^ pomiae Man MMS11. -WWMrt am. Cali CALAO An6 SANDWICH WOfikAN tor an aggeintmant. Tha Rotunda tor grtvato club. ExaeilancB ora- Country bin. 0124600. fOrrad Md wd nwwaurv. Par an. ------------------------------------: WELDERS-HELPERS PaW vacollant and holldayt. paid FOR IMMEDIATE EMPLOYMENT. 2 GIRLS FOR TELEPHONE WORK from ottko. Hourly waga and com-mlitloo. Apply In parson, 9 to Tt a.m. It Nowborry SI. In parton _______I, 17*7 S. T( OBNE^IUL general office WORtd. iHORt- ■- — ^ wWInQ to Pontiac, LADIES lo handia naw progratr Fullar Brush Co. OR : porsenol Intorvltw. A WEEK. DOCTOR'S FAMILY, —S to llvo-ln, ganaral haina. Ilka chlMran, ly off, privato room, low homo, 334-26S5. Iraninu, im, b^ DINING WAITRESS DAYS, SUP- Or Chlot, FE 24151.____________ A-1 MAID - SATURDAYS. RE-ml roforoncaa, mutt hava own ronaportotlon. Ml 64437._________ ALTERATIONS sowars. Must bo exp. ...1.1— ^ epoeloltv she -----..^.Ing, discount pri t Jacobaon'i 336 w. MapI ATTENTION RN'S AND LPN'S Oponingo. Coll 33B-7154 baby SITTER-HOUSEKEEPER -throuy FrI. for working BABY SITTER TO ..... ____________ out, reply to Pontiac Press Box 56. bAbY SITTER WANTED. OWN M. C. MFG. CO. Ill Indionwead Rd., Like Orion *s equal opportunity omoleyor WAITRESSES. BOTH SHIFTS. Ar- WANTBO; WOMAN TO STAY WITH oMorly (miamon wookondo. Sal. noon until Sunday It p.m. Coaktob no houaawerk, tlO. Rot. LI I-74S4 ravorsa chorgos. Pox Dry Cleonors, GIRL FOR GENERA pay. Apply 332 5. Toligroph.' GROOM FOR HORSES, PUBLIC flS;T drivar't Ikoniad. Brooch Estimator AND Brooch Designer BUPFEr MAN TO SERVE BUFFET foods during dinner hour, — to 10:30 p.m. Apply in ( The Rotunda Country Inn, 3230 Pino Lake Rd., Orchard Lk. CARPENTERS, RESIDENTIAL, n, 60H665 or 603-3096. CARPENTERS, FINISHER roughtrs, union only. Call Green-briar Carpentry at 711-3273 r- tAR WASHERS, DRYERS, DRlV- CITY OF SOUTH LYON PUBLIC WORKS DEPT. Someone with knowladga ol operation of equipment and .preference tor outdoor work. Apply City Hall, 214 W. nights, some exp. needed, some typing. FE 54369.______ Took, short order, counter- booth type operation, starting pay 6115 per wk.. Hospitalization,- paid vacation. Apply in person. Steak end Egg, 5395 Oixia Hwy., Weler-lord cook-grTdOle man," nights, benefits, vacations, 5 day week, Bill's — Telegraph at Maple (IS EXCELLENT Opportunity IN A HIGH LEVEL OCCUPATION I expansion, the Pontiac branch off lea o living nnditli n quaTifications. —, resourcafi'' I _wlth padp! nllaga bac II 662-4060 f FrTday. * ' employer) 1 EXPERIMENTAL SHEET METAL MEN ing conditions. Ref. necessary. Call LI 8-7500.____________________ EXPERIENCED OUTBOARD ME-chanlc. Year around work. Lake 8. Sea Marina, 245 S. Blvd. E. FE EXPERIENCED MAN FOR INDE-lenf food market, some drlv-lull or part lime. See Cole-1, 1744 West Maple, Blrmlng- COUNTERMAN - SATURDAY AND Sunday off, 11.60 an hr., BUI Coflea Shop, Telegraph at Map (15 Mile).__ __ CU^LLIGAN'S ........-jf be atabto ....... .... have earnings Jn excMS of .69,000 EXPERIENCED REAL ESTATE iaieamen, licensed for naw aiM* tisad homat. mambars MLS. Ca FE 5-9471 ter appointment. Ivaf Schram, LIQUOR ENFORCEMENT OFFICERS "Career opportunity" ANNUAL STARTING SALARY 66,681. END OF FIRST YEAR 87.328 AND ANNUAL increase THEREAFTER FOR FIVE YEARS. College graduates only. Must be willing to work and liva anywhere in Michigan. Age 22-50. Good physical condition.^ Milam^^ ex- salary plus Michigan State civil service benefits. Training school will start In August 1966. Write for interview to Michigan Control Commission, Director of Enforde-ment, P.O. Box 1260, Lansing, Michigan. An equal opportunity employ- I BANQUET HOSTESS WITH CLER-i bookkeeping experience. Holiday Inn of Pontiac, 1601 S. - MOTHERS TURN tings, afternoons or evenings mm cesh, 610 for voMlng.'336-3111 between 3-6 SALES OIRL L healery caunl... Setvrday. ■ toll 6ei4S11. IMp WMtid JN. or F. BROILER, MAN OR WOMAN FOR ---- Call 682-1347. ____ HELPilf, t R B ss, pOll time, eve. • P'*'* I, Drayton PI ~ WAITRESSES Dining Room and Curb Full or part-tblto. Paid yacaltowa Hoapltllliatlon. Lunch hour ar' food altowanca. Apply in parao BIG BOY RESTAURANT Tttoarapb A Huron or WHOLESALE COMPANY WANTS WOMAN FOR GENERAL OFFICE WORK. MUST HAVE APTITUDE ANO ABILITY TO LEARN. CON-GENIAL SURROUNDINGS IN MEDIUM SIZED OFFICE. THIS IS A PERAAANENr POSITION FOR THE RIGHT PERST" WRITE PONTIAC PRESS BOX WOMAN for kitchen. APPLY 0^ Olkto WOMAN TO CARE FOR ELDERLY WEEfd M. or F. I PIZZA MAKER. EXPERIENCED 'and*btnafl^ '** ’bi'mS^enhf' Ftanka Raalaurarit, Kaage Hgrber'. SHORt ORDER COOKS. aAPLV V Data Processinc^f Trainee Prefer punch cord experience, but will consider persons who con successfully poss aptitude test. Excellent opportu-^ nity. Fringe benefits. pii^ilNEL^i^ice COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK Pontiac . .lAWLEIGH ___Sylvan ' III. Supply far with avary day na<^tlaa. Rawlaigh Dapt. MC E 690 555. port, llTinoli or ita or writa GaraW Rosa. 646 Fourth, Pontiac. IBSK CLERKS — PREFERRI with clarkal and switchboard i parlenca. 333-5532._ I lummer. Apply iM Oakland HOUSE- HELP WANTED. COUPLE. ITOUSE- — ----- - Invalid.; kaeper and housaman to lorvS. Strong and heolthy. Call OR 3-9156.1 No children. 2 room near Dxl Wanted Man or Woman FDR MOTOR ROUTE , rTroy Royal Oak Area At Once Apply to Mr. Stier PDNTIAC PRESS circulation dept. . .Soles HoIpJiahjMMkXA REAL ESTATE PERMANENT POSITIDN You are free lo go to work mediately ” •— — --- '' you can apprec for 6150-8256 pe BEAUTICIAN, EXCELLENT OPPOR-it‘‘.n‘’',«S^niivl P**"***'®"' po. vacation, bonus REAL ESTATE r. -MLS Room noj or 482-5802 Eves. OR 34033| ____________ REFRIGEllATOR MECHANIC, PON-'BEAUTY OPERATORS-SHAMPOO JTICIAM, EXPERIENCED, d working conditions, commls-I. FE 54192 eve. FE 4-1025. f OPERATOR. WITH APPLICANTS MUST BE RE6IS-TERED IN THE STATE OF|m MICH, T^TO 2 YEARS INDUS-1 TRIAL NURSING EXP. DESIRABLE BUT NOT required. SALARY COMMENSURATE WITH QUALIFICATIONS. FOR APPOINTMENT CALL 731-3700 EXT. 271 OR APPLY IN PERSON AT SALARIED PERSONNEL OF-FICE, 23 MILE AND MOUND RDS., UTICA, MICH. BETWEEN I INTERESTED I P BOOKKEEPING ANO GENERAL offko work. Must be ablo to work witn tha public. Prefer i someone with exrerltnca but will N consider trsining the right girt. II' Send complete resume of exporl-lo enca. wages axoeefad, ate. to Pontiac Presa Box 50. ._____ I ROUTE MANAGER, BEVERAGE ' LDT MAN Used Ca*r**Lot. All bonellt? Ii Ing hospitalization anf Ilia anca. Paid vacation and around work. Must hav# valid era licence. Good chanco to vancement. Apply In parse 6695 Dixie Highway, Clarkston ! RESPONSIBLE , L TO LEARN' CAR BILLER Must hava auto dealer experience, top salary, retirement. For top girl. Call FE 5-0602. necessary. Will train. Interviews '-betweetl 2 and 7 pjn. Farm Boy; Market, 487 Elizabeth Lake Rd.|- Acrosa from Pontiac Mall.__________ | RETIRED A6AN FOR LAUNDRY attendant. Apply 543 S. Paddock. EXPERIENCED 3-2700. 6570 Telegrai ^Ue. Help Wanted M. or F. BLDOD DONDRS URGENTLY NEEDED Poslttva 86.00 Neg. 67.00. 610 00 - 612 00 OETROIT BLOOD SERVICE | blood btnking . starting salary, ^ plus probable overtime _ . and a half. Call or write: Paraon-nel Dnt., Ponllac Oslaopathic Hos-l Pile I. Ponllac, MJrt. Phm 338-7271.; lY COOK, EVENING WE BUY Howard Johnson'- — ------------- YORK 4713 Dixie Hwy.. Drayton Plalna LADY FOR GENERAL OFFICE dictation, pleasant work. Send re-|:^;; sume to Pontiac Prew Box 58. _ PN FOR MIDNIGHTS. NURSE Inr •«*rnnn«< EM .1-4121.! . LOAN ADJUSTER Prefe’r man with small lo()n or finance company experience, but may consider training inexperienced man. Excellent opportunity to move into commercial bonking field. MANAGER TO ASSUME RESPON-slbllltles of distribution ol concreta steps and railings. Exc. opr ' Ity. Salary open. Apply Cc ____________________________CLEANING LADY, EVERY OTHER SERVICE STATION ATTENDANT.; Friday. Clarkston area. 625-1096. Must -........ ......- —' ' ——- derMnvliia' Riir 0R~4^51. ~ FOR LANDSCAPING. CALL FEIman“T FULL- OR PART-TIME SERVICE station attendant and light mechanic work, days. Must be over 21 and hava local rafarancas. 682- t PART TIME BARBER- 3465 Auburn Ava. '=E 6-3573. a week, dependable and preferably ----------„ 330.4001. ■NERAL WAREHOUSE JST BE GOOD WORK-........nous AND INTELLIGENT. THIS IS X WERMANENT YEAR AROUND JOB FOR THE RIGHT MAN. HAROLD PAPER CO. FE 5-9221, ASK FOR MR. IMMEDIATE ..OPENINGS— In The Pontiac and Royal Oak areas for: LINEMEN and INSTALLERS America's soundest industry offers yog steady work, new line, year in - year put, NOT JUST IN "BOOM" PERIODS. High School Education Required ENJOY GOOD PAY • New, higher itarting salary g Paid vacation and holldayi ' .#-Group health and medical li g Aaaoclatlon with friendly paopli g Opnortunlty for adyancamont EXPERIENCE NOT NECESSARY But %chanicol or ElKtricol Background Helpful APPLY IN PERSON: BatwaAn B.M n m nnrf S.Pn. pm , Mnnriny yhi Fridoy at 1365 Cass Ave., Detroit. , MICHIGAN BELL (Part al H R STEADY WORK TO OP“- ning work. Morey's (Jolf and C try Club, 2280 Union .Lk. Rd., Commerci * ' MACHINE DESIGNER DRAWING CHECKER or full time work. Must be i srienced prelerably on small n MECHANICS - SUPERB GUARAN-lea against commissions, a>—‘ ence, many fringe benefits, i In person to Mr. Ed Tatle Service Manager. Beattie I _ *»-6S88 ________ MEN WANTED tO WORK ON Fiberglass boats. Good w, Milk Route Salesman Earn While You Learn Paid training parted. Wholasala and retail, mutt be 23 yrt. " aWar, married jwirtofrad. F« 40 man WANTED FOR LAWN WORK and odd outside lobe. State your wages and rofarances. Pontiac Stsnwood-Hlllson Bar, 21 East Pika St., EIL REALTY I r axperlan-^ - ct iFm ta.„________.______ 9US racordf ~ your Incon stlal It unlimited. Call okteh, tsiaa manager foi nal kitarvlaw. Ray O'Nall, Realtor PARKING l6T ATTENDANT, PULL "mo. Apply » R. Huran. Cashier techniques. Liberal salary,, travel , allowance and benefit program. Lo- , cal territories available. Forward' confidential resume to < SPEEDRING CORP. 7111 East 11 Mi. Rd. Warren, Michigan a090 *“ DIa-Mat Sz— g for cashier. Exc. >la-Tclegr« conditlot 4650 Telegraph Rd. CLERKS, FULL TIME, RXCEL-1 i.ni -iigry, nays, paid vacation, in PrescripH - ------ METAL FABRICATOR, Sherman Prescriptions, "Mapia ..... !. Gemco Elec-! Lahser Rd., Birmingham. 647-41 . Crooks Rd.,:cOOK FOR WEEKENbS - Oi '--Id County Boat Club—6824170, Located In Troy, 4 il opportunity. Experienced COOK, FULL TIME. APPLY' person at Rip's. 998 W. Huron. ; DAY WORK AND IRONING, SATUR--■-------nj||, transportation. OL STOCKMEN For work at Mapla-Tela store. Good working cond plodsant surroundings, fringe fits. Apply at A. L. Dsmma.. — 6650 Telegraph Rd. (BWomtlild EMERGENCY ROOM CLERK, Experience In typing nacassary. Call Mrs. Hausmsn before 3 p.m. waak-days, 651-9381. HARDiNGE OPERATOR TOOL LATHE HAND Growing company, days, many fringe benefits, steady employment M. C. MFG. CO, . TOOL AND PRODUCTION MACHINE OPERATORS EXPERIENCED WAITRESS WANT-ed at Larry and Tammla LOnch, 4882 Hatcitory. OR 39353. -_ EXPERIENCED Operot (UTOMATI Drill Press Operators WINDOW TRIMMER Succaasful applicant s Winkelman's 25 PARSONS DETROIT, MICH. 48201 ATTENTION: MR. M. E. KING fBD UW^EDIATEL^ WANTED Salary and banafita open. Mr. Robartion 874-2AO for Bp- OPENING «R FULL AND PART time waitresses. Apply In person. I The Rotunda Country Inn. 3230 Pina Lake Rd. Orchard Lake. PART TIME. WEEKEND KITCHEN .._ TELEPHONE WORK ___ our office, evenings ond Sundays, salary plus bonus. Aoolv 5660 Dixie Hwy. ALUaTiNUM siding - DOORS. sr dealer. FE 63177^___; ,^>k7 Bryan 'fT 'Fram-hr 35i "i ^ock St. FEJ-6973._ ___o 'mbs gutter CO. COMPLETE - PERSON TO CARE FOR SEMIBEO-riddan gintlainan. Live In. Batora 12 noon dr after 6 p,m.- 882-2578. Saleswomen FOR FULL TIME OR PART, TIME Hours NEW UHF-VHF-FM "EXPONEN-, ■'ll design" antennas. You or wa, ifall. Dalby TV. FE 44802._- Architectural Drowinr | PLANS DRAWN. | Electrolysis — by Romoine Asphalt Paviag 3'D CONSTRUCTION ! HARPER SHOP-Mr, DRIVEWAYS ' 144 w. Maple Birmingham ____scaping Free Estimaies - ------i------ ----- 852-4210_________ opw III 9 p.m. Excavotiag ASPHALT DISCOUNT PAVING CO. Hurry! Hurryt BACKHOE, FRONT END LOADER, Discount Prkta ! dump trucking. Specializing In Free Esilmatas_______FE 5-7459 driveways: gravel and cemanl. OR ly 18. 682-6035. 1364 Grinnall. a dishwasher 577 A .' Aljtoly C( l;X to 1o:3l) Experienced Waitress Wanted ' ...... Mmordr Coney Isl 338-8020. able to your nt Please apply I ' TEL-HURON STORE Winkelman's PEGGY'S Bloomfield Miracle Mile Shopping Center B««rn,c rirz-Tni/.' PLASTERING. FREE ESTIIWATEI BOYER'S ELECTRIC ' O Mtyara, 3634395, 674-2441. ab to small ___________ FE 4-5303 GAS-OIL FURNACES. HEAT 1 DAY. A8iH Satoa. MA 5-1501-5-2537. BROWNIES hardware DRIVEWAY SPECIALIST . ___________________________ptOOR SANDERS -PonsMWRk Call now. Free aatimato. FE 54980 BLACK DIRT, SAND, GRAVEL ANol TORS ASSOC., FE 2- backhoe. 682-4710 or 628-1550. BULLDOZING, BACKHOE WORK,! excavating, landscaping, light sew-|- se^ic field. Call avanings. FE WMliijl Mutteraliatloii 2 MAY 19. 1966 ■MPLOYte LAOY WISHIt TO ttwr* htr hoM wim twiw, >i-tl«c AkMTt ITM. lint nvIlN l»ontl«c frwi Hat tC. «. 'OR KINO OIRL TO SHAI t74-)440 Mt. I • 1 OOY$ TO DO LAWN MOWING ALUMINUM' k>U$» WASHED, 1 TO 50 loit UIm Confw 41 TMrly rata. «U-M14. FbR SUMMER VACATION APARTMRNT^ ON^^« LAKR, OROUNOS, FLOAT, iOAT SWINGS, FOR JUNI, JULY AUG. 875 WEEKLY. «IM7«4. SICLUOiO MOOIRN LOG CARII ------- .. . . ^ ^ «*■ 0* *•”». 42 D—11 REOROOM HOMi WITH GA-ra#a or imall farm, with opti-ta buy, chna to M-S4. ARar p.w, Rayai Oafc LI a-Moa, M747._______________ Souiti OCCUFANCY, MS waak. MaM larvica, tataphona. ca patad, TV. Sagarnara Matal, 7» i BARGAIN SU3M pawn and taka avar pay-manta on Rib 3 badreom, tall haiamaflt boma off RaMwIn. Full prka SI3.3S0; Ookk pouastlon. list With U$-W# StII a Home Every 24 Hours R. J. (DICK) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 141 Oakidiid Ava. . Opan t-: FE PNM ar FE AdSSO Attar houri FE AMIS or FE UtM ■Y OWNER, 34EDR00M IRICK tancad, paraga, nHiwd. FE 5 baaV IW batha. _ alad tamlly room, 3Vb-car at-laehad paraga, an nioaly land-teapad ITS' lat, asking Slf.lOQ, FHA or bank tarmt. > n work. FE 4-73M. CASH 40 HOURS LAND CONTRACTS - HOMES EQUITIES WRIGHT 3H Oakland Ava.______fE 1-014 MIOOLEAGB GEHTWEMAW, irO imoklng or drinking. FE 1-2317. NICE SLEEPING ROOM, LADY. Fontlac. FE GOOSI._______ NICE SLEEPING ROOM FOR YORK lONING DONE II......... y larvica. OR 3-1031. 4aBY SITTER, REF. TOWNSHIP BEFORE JUnS IS, 3 OR 3 BEDROOMS, CAN PAY UP TO 114,0001. CALL THEIR agent, YORK, OR or lady Ctoia i city mil line. pE 0-3400._____ ROOM. AND OR KyRD,^l3SW CLAWSON - S REOROOM OMar hm, 1 baths, dining roi basamant, 3-ear gar ago, on TTxl lot, walk to schools ant sRoppI kltchan privllsgas, usa of g OR 3-2SOO. WHITE WrOMAN HAS SLEEPING Practical nurse available, for Invalid or poat-oparativa cara. Excallanl rat., Ilvo In or transportation naadad. FE SSSU. Widow, ironings and/or light houiawork on Wast SIda. 33S-3337. WO^N WOULD LIKE BABY SIT-ting. Vlcbilty al Cats Laka. 403- Wfwmd CwplH Tiji COUFLE FOR * EXPERIENCED rattauraBt, iDot arst FE S-177S. GENERAL MOTORS EXECUTIVE NEED A 3 OR 4 BEDROOM HME IN T H E CLARKSTON AREA, CAN PAY UP TO 111400, CALL H^ AGENT, YORK AT OR Klfchtn prlv. C«ll f p.m. ISMSTOl ■" Rbbmis WHii Iford 43 ‘ GENTLEMEN. EXCELLENT FOOD. FE >7353. MAN WITH 513,000 IS LOOK- MEN DNLY, nIaR MALL, lunchot paefcod, FE B400S. ING FOR A HOME IN THE WATERFORD AREA, CALL HIS AGENT, York, OR 44D41 ROOM - MDTHER WITH t DR 2 ehlldran, kltchan prlvlltgtt, Near Woodward. Ml 7-dm. need 200 LISTHSOS RMt Storat 46 t^. tll tar SI3JI0 cash to eloi K. L. TEMPLETON, Realtor I Senrt^Sipiiliet 13 ALL ALUMINUM 2T BY 32' FREE standing building. Intsrior and tarlor comptattly tlnlshod and In. sulatad. Idaal fo7 cottaga, baauty sh^, or Rial Eslala oHIct. Can ba aractad In 3 days. Montgomary Ward. 403^40 Building Dipt._ CARPENTRY, GARAGES. AOOI- SPOT CASH FOR YOUR EQUITY, VA, . OR OTHER. FOR QUICK ACTION CALL NOW. HAGSTROM REALTOR, OR AOSSI OR EVENINGS ^ VACANT LOTS AND HOUSES Vlantad In Pontiac tnd Watartord. Immedlala dosing. REAL VALUE realty, tU-tSJS, Mr. Davis. Rent Office Space 47 ,200 SQUARE FEET OF OFFICE Ray O'Neil, Realtor 3S20 Pontiac Us. Rd. . OR <-3223 MLS FE S-4404 3 , WANTED-3 BEDROOM FENCES INSTALLED -sarvlea'— traa sstlmatM tarlal ar tabor - 23 yrs. ones. Howard Acktr, 421 lawn, call 412-3404. iesieen Service leeldBieplBf t Texes ^ suburban araa^ pay DEBT AID, INC., 7IS RIKER BLDG FE 3-0101. Sap Announcomants. Dorris A Son, Raaltars DressHMUiii A Teiieriii| 17; R 1430 SQUAHe FEET OF OFFICE " taco tar laasa at S3.0O par squara at. I suits had 7 otfim, other IS 3 ortkas. Sultabla for doctors, mtlsts, or manulactarar's agon'-. .Jt utlllllas tarnishad. Ampla pai Ing. Located on Woodward ns IsTi Mila. GOODE REAL ESTATE DAILY n Fanarama Dr. - bath an half garaga — pave ----- ----I m u n 11 y watei PRICED TO SELL. Godd buys move right in. J. L. DAILY CO. EM 3-7114 EAST SIDE. NICE 3 BEDROOI ---large newly carpeted llvin family-style kltchan, ban ----- SreetaWPV with •ttarhan a, rage. SIO.WO ta LAZENBY NORTH SUBURBAN newly ’^nwtade'lA'^i?lte AIR-CONOITIONED OFFICE AVAIL-s-i able now. See i E begins. Capitol _ > Assn. 75 W. Huron ' ; NEW MODERN square foot of Highland Rd. “ -in 473-0331. I. FOR SALE BY OWNER 4-BEDROOM * ■ homa on Lbke Orton, ftna beach, full bath up, Vk bath dovm, In-ctudlng carpating and drapes throughout. SItJOO. MY 3-3471. FIRST IN VALUE Cease Ponltac Airport on A«». Frs OR 4413241 parking. i CHANDLER HEATING CO. j OR 3-S432 PROFESSIONAL-RETAIU OFFICES, 1230 sq. ft. ample patting, high I IraHlc. Orchard Laka Rd. Kaago ....................’ NEEDS] Ekia. k^rn building, will dl- PROPERTY NOW IN DRAYTON I vide. Low rent or lease. EM 3-3140 PLAINS, WATERFORD, AND SUR- ----------- US bafora lha heat __ ___ _ RENTING ....$59 Mo. Excluding taxes and Insurance ONLY $10 Deposit YORK EXPANDING COMPANY I WITH APPLICATION LARGE DINING AREA WILL ACCEPT ALL APPLICA-................. WORKERS, NEAR OAKLAND U. lol. City water? s^r, ^s hiat'. Ideal lor the young couple-- tiroes. $0,500 on land co with 4 W. Huron, Pontiac 3: NEW HOMES FULL BASEMENT RANCH $14,700 BI-LEVEL $17,300 LAKE PRIVILEGES ONLY $000 DOWN LOW AS $123 A MONTH Includes taxes and Insurancs Tike Commerca Rd. to S. Cam, merce, left to Glengaryi (2 miles). FAMILY TAIL0RE6 HOMES ________ 424-4300______________ NO CLOSING COSTS . $30 DOWN — our lof. Art Daniels 31000 421-7110 or KE 7.-7800.- OFF WALTON rooms, all brick, buin-l.. .... s, fenced In backyard ara beamed celling. There Is cai boast's bu!?-ln oven, range — dishwasher. The carpeted bedrooms have wealth of closet space, 3 of which are walk-in. There are 2 full baths up and >/k bath down. The basement recreation room Is finished in rough sawn cedar paneling and has formica cupboards and sink for a summer kitchen. The heating aystem Is zoned gas fired hot water. A full 2 car garage Is attached. The grounds are BUSINESS and Home. Five t home, garage. Breaaeway. On l. .. W^of«: JSrlorTHS: Terms. Call MY 3-1B2I. FE M4M. OLDER HOME. Village of Orkm. Ideal family home, eomer lot. Va- ?iSii.V^.35;i LAWRENCE W. GAYLORD Broadway and Flint Sts. Lake Orion lY 2 2121 FE M413 IRWIN .VON GI-NOTHING DOWN JOHNSON Large log 2 badroom homo. With knotty Kna Intorlor. Larga 2 bad ttaaplng perch. Nkaly tamithod ready to movt In to. 4T of idea Crtscent Lokt Prii^l«s^ Sbodroom ranch — avortaaklna Cra^t LM>a.^ 2 Mntfy btfich. Only lllillP wttti SiSMdown. Land contract. tton. 2rx3r ottachad garagt — Braaitway. Ahimlmim ttarma and NORTH FND tertant. Carpeting end draoaa In-cludad. 01X000. SM2 Evas. OR >4132 DRAYTON AREA - 7-room Large'qpSd*an?sSwln^ t way. 13'x21'. V/Ktr attache. ,. rage. Large lot SS'xISP'. Oakland Lake prlvTl^. F-" ' : J^RO^NTAGE - ^badroom 041 -lohnaon, A. Johnson & Son, Raaltor* 1704 S. Telegraph FE 4-2533 I MILLER AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR WEST SUBURBAN TRILEVEL I " ‘TndHIon. Less than l yei.. ready for your family. I living room, tiled bath. 'BUD' NICHOLIE NORTH SIDE RANCH S roar___ "~th phis large unfinishad 3rd. Iroom altle. Larga dining area, I basement wRh recreation !S-.«2,«I?!!he ■ ■ .. ........ fireplace. New plush carpet Ir the large living room and hall Fenced back yard plus muci WiTrl TUII oewfwienif in b«r ‘itaXhkf'room,“swrata dlnli^ ..roqm,/3. yrooTO ^ up, f^ Insutatad, ^ heat and hot watar, storms and screens, lawn and shrubs. Prksd at $12,-yw.oa make a data todayl FOR YOUR COUNTRY HOME Ing woodad landscape, fl^lita wall, only 3 minutes from I-7S. Utility room. Camort. About » moves you In. FHA terms. OAVISBUROm area Two bedroom bungalow. Living ai dining rooms. Kltditan. Basemei Coal HA heat. About four acres land. $10M.M down. EAST SIDE Three bedroom bungalow. LIvli and dining area. Kitchen. Fi nlly. Carpeted living room, gt It, U'xISiy lol. Only $13.yS0. FEJ-02il__ HURON ~ OPEN f TO KINZLER IDEAL FAMILY HOME colorful Interior, .n NICHOLIE-HUDSON Associatis, Inc. 4» Mt. Clemins St. 49 Mt. CleiTMns St. FE 5-1201 After 6 p.m„ FE 4-8773 IRWIN _ WEST SIDE RANCH: 2 badroom homa aet on a larga beautifully landscaped let hi a popuiar area of Watarford. Closa to school and shopping. Larga living room (lastafuliy carpetad) Cheerful easy to work In kltchan, bath, gas heat. Prkad to sail $11,*00. MGIC. ELLWOOD: na for the couple starling / rno?n*ewelfflf'eoi4lt ^ wall carpeting In llvM KENT It and gas heat. Located k edge of city on r* ' ‘ ■clal Tot that could 4________ r business. ISSOO, nothing AL PAULY 4514 Dixie, rear OR 3-3100 EBES. OR 3-7i Waterford 4-BEDROOM RANCH Lovely brick and redwood ranch home. Kettering High area. Lika new condition — features large COUNTRY RANCH SITES 3 BEDROOM HOME - brick ranch o Weal for horses. Prices OKAY WITH U: GIROUX estlmatas. 474-3133._______________ LAWN CUTTING AND MAINTE-| nance. Free esflmalei. Tall Tlm-—s NUtwy: 33H441. ' 2-FAMILY INCOME I^'rI.^Ww) 473-7537! unlt**’consliti % 1 twdroom, nv7^ BRICK 3 BEDROOM HOME - oak floors, full basement, gas heat, gas Incinerator, fenced yard. Paved street. $14,500, $3,000 down. FLOYD KENT, INC., Realtor 3300 Dixie Hwy. at Telegraph _____FE 2-0123 or MA 5-1741 LOG CABIN Secluded vacation spot nestled In . the hills and surrounded by tower-ing frees N. of Clarkston. * ' JOHN KINZLER, Realtor » Dixie Hwy, ....474r333 Across from Packer's Store Multiple Lilting tarvke Open »- RHODES INOIANWOOO SHORES. Beautifu , breakfast nook, beau- $10,300. can ba soon nM any- WEST THIRD: / A good starting pt^ca for lha right family that/ naads living spaca and wants a nlca convenient tocatlen.-lo Pontiac Motors. A solid, A badroom ranch homa on a o6ot size let, com-pWe^tay, kltSien utIHty. Prica John K. Irwin A SONS, REALTORS 313 W. Huron-SInce 1335 Buyliw or Sailing Call FE H444 Evenings Call 473-1773 |Val-U-Way HERRINGTON HILLS badroom brick eontamporary . jme. Carport. BUIIt In over range. Gas hast. Largs I; 1 BEDROOM, $140 A MONT Koto-tilling, gardens, beds, new aqulpmant, real. 334-4415. CemlMceHt-NwrtlRi 21 f VACANCIES-NDW AVAILABLE ) -Sumat Nursing Homa-OR 3^113.1 Mtvfiii md TmUM 22 2 LARGE ROOMS. NEAR GENERAL ------- and convatascant home. lady only FE 2-3735 or ;3 BEDROOMS, CRAWL SPACE, $451 1 moves you In. $71 pr“ j 23 E. Brooklyn. 42B-I4H._______ 2 BEDROOM, BASEMENT, $3500, J/ take over contract,, by owner, seen ----Py appointment, FE 1-1057. 1, 117 2-BEDROOM. FINiLhEO_________^ _ north of flttwr Body H FRONT — For Immediate Action Call FE 5-3676 626-9575 OPEN SUN., 2-6 P.M. DAILY BY APPOINTMENT si adults, $32. FE M375. ROOMS, PRIVATE, I St. yard, surrounded OUSE, WITH _ _ __ _ YORK '- WE BUY WE TRAD E OR 4-0343 OR 440 4713 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plalni BOB'S VAN SERVICE MOVING AND STORAGE *REE ESTIMATES ROBERT TOMPKINS EM 3-1 GENERAL HAULING. _______miiia._____________. Hauling of any kmo. have LIGHT HAULING AND MOVING Cheap. Any kind. FE S3331 2 ROOMS IN PONTIAC, DEPOSIT ^ I 3 ROOMS UPPER - 344 h ROOM APARTME Lake. '4 mile north of Cooley Lake Rd. 3-bedroom brick trilevel. Large kitchen. Family room. 2-car attached garage. Blacktop streets. J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor 34414 10735 Hl| • - - i ROCHESTER -’ bedroonr ---- ra r SMALL 2 BEDROOM HOME, PON- tiac Twp., $1001 down and -- over land contract. 33M314. JTH EDITH A I contract. i WATERFORD REALTY D. Bryson, Realtor OR >1273 4340 Dixie Hwy. Van Welt Bldg GILES nlthmM Si tached 2 car garage with large, modem workshop. $13,350 -land * LOOKING FOR HOMES In ths $10r 000 or $124100 bracket? We have a good selection. Call today for details. 4 ACRE FARM hear Hill: good buildings, flowing str Only $31,500. .AKE ORION. Good commercial garage, large showroom, service area, separate bump and paint shopj^frontage on 3 streets, only INDIAttWOOO SHORES NO. 3. An Ideal spot for your new home, choose your homesita today. Excel I a n t restrictions, raasonably priced. Call today for details. ALBERT J. RHODES, Broker FE $-2304 351 W. Walton FE 5-4713 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE Aluminum siding. Comi fenced yard. Price, $14,300. ROCHESTER AREA - 5-room ANNETT Frushour . Recently redocoratad. $500 NEAR FISHER BODY 3 bedroom ranch homa. Gas heat. Urge irtlllty. Tiled bath. Only $401 down. $70 per month. OFF BALDWIN Redecorated 5 room brick ranch homa. Full basamant. Now gas furnace. 3 bedrooms. Largs INIng List With Us-We Sell a Home Every 24 Hours R. J. (DICK) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 ^la 4, InI LAK imIshM wt , depMit r ■» PAINTING Ah ara naxt. Or AND PAPERING. YOU ----Ofvat Gldcumb, 47M4M. FAINTING, PAPERING hUALITY WORK ASSURED, . ________ in|^ paparing, wall sraihlng. 47B- WMterf HMsehaM Good* 29 CASH FOR FURNITURE AND AP- ... ..... . [Jaxe ....„s.*M?*a*wd quirad 4334433. _____________ 3 ROOMS, NEAR BALDWIN AND Walton. FE 54743. 3 ROOMS AND BATH II for I or 2 adults o private entrance, newly no pets, call aftsr f SJ443. 4 RO<^Bh^a'*$f»’^dapSit*AdSta only. Inquira al 273 Baldwin Ava., Call 331^.___________________ BACHELOR, 3 ROOM, PRIVATE th end, quiet. FE 24374. EFFICIENCY APARTMENT ... teacher or working parson, utilities furnished, references quired. 3133 W. Huron, FE $-0427 dr FE 54743. ____________ . ROCHESTER, 2 BEDROOM APART-; ~ drag your feet on this om now. Price 13350 with HOM on land contract. WEST SUBURBAN — No ^'kireom ‘hornei Its In excellent sul It working mans details. SS44 Dixie Highway OR 4-2234 AFTER 5 FE 4-1341 - OR 3-0455 ROOMS. CARPETING, FURI aluminum siding, garaga. Lol IIS'. Land contract. Small payment or will trade. V. 5 433-3711. ______________ ~be6room Colonial, sunken living room, family room with " place, basement, 3043 Wallon I Rochester. 451-1534. 4-BEDROOM FRAME CLARENCE C. RIDGEWAY Realtor MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty NEAT RANCH On large landecoped tancad I garage, gas furnace. Dandy 2 be. room, largo utility. Only $10,500. Can be bought on land coi-- Owner transtarred. Everett Cummings, Realtor 2513 UNION LAKE ROAD SAUNDERS-WYATT OFF MT. CLEMENS. 3 carpeted living room, and Iliad floors. Birch lovely Compact kitchen. . ...-- mT wlS?*Anchor 'feiKef Xnly^ll,-350. GILES REALTY CO. ill Baldwin Ava. FE 3417 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE SUBURBAN RANCHER :arpatod living room wim dinlm ell. Spacious kltchan « Webster School POSSESSION AT ONCE, room brick, all large roomi ter hall, LR, OR, sun den or extra bedroom, full - b^utlfully modernized kitchen with dishwasher and larga braai fast space aH on 1st floar. 3r floor has 1 bedrooms and batl Basement, rec. rooom, kitchei laundry room and steam o heat. Garage. $27,100, terms. Clarkston Area-Lake Struble SCHRAM I PIECE < M. C. LI C/kSH F( fun^rs . GOOD CLEAN USED ' Call Hall's Auc—- __________' 2-1171 or MY 34141. HEAR OUR PRICE BEFORE YOU BEDROOM APARTMENT II garden type apartment b Central air condltkmlnB, sou CHIFFEROBE. 30 WANTED BLOND ( FE UMl, afWr 5:X. WoiiteO MhceBayeMi APARTMENT SIZE STOVE AND 12' fishing boat. Call FE ' after 4 p.m. COPPEil frlgerator. Adults, no pats. $135- _ $145 per mo. FE SgSlsT 412-2410. B ROOM APARTMENT, MIDDLE- WATKINS LK. FRONT , ______m. Will take trade DALE HAMPSHIRE OR 3-3473 3 ROOMS, BATH, GARAGE. COU- is Included. 2355 SI ...........- upr brassY-Wri radlatort, batteries, starters, geiv ■* erators. C. Olxson, OR 3-5143. WANmpTJO^R, BRASS, RADI- HAYDEN NEW HOMES 0 Our ECON43-TRI. A room. Attochod goragt.' Com-Inass combined with tfficlancy. " _________3 bddrooms. Tlla bath. Full basamant, larga recreationi an Arras room with llropltco. Poflo. 2m, O'xir kltchan and dining ell, full basemoM, gas heat, completoly finished recreation room, 2Vy-cor garogo, on o let 50'xl53', shown by oppointmoflf 5X'$5fi)*Mu.’3S;ing"Vi8;; List With Schrom and Coll the Van 10 1111 JOSLYN AVE. PE S-3471 J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor 343-4404 10735 Hlghlond Rd. (M51 HERRINGTON HILLS 3 bedroom, all brick m WE TRADE . excellent condition, f WANTED; ANTIQUE^-------------- , Ity furniture. Cell 4254137 or Holly, ME 7-5133.___________ WANTEDI used jet WATER pump. Call 474-2141.________ WANTED 14' MOLDED PLYWOOD, ------ beat, PE >3531. I tt >WI f eibkhoM:. apartment or ADULT FAMILY OF 1 year rent In advam 3 badroom housi, R tIac. ST I-44N, Wash . COUPLE Wltif 1 CHILD DESIRES " - • —1 Orion or Oxford. tar 3;30 p.m.__ 2 DAUGHTERS, 15 AMERICrtM HERITAGE APARTMENT MODEL OPEN TUES. THRU SUN. 1 10 5 AND 4:30 TO 1;30 FROM $145 A MONTH 3345 WATKINS LAKE RO. 474 23S3, MORNINGS 473-4027 NEW 2 BEDROOM DELUXE APARTMENTS In Union Ldk# iroa. Ready tor bn-madiata dceupaney. $150 a month on 1 yoar laafa. Includat: bullt-ki oven and Tanga, carpatino, air con-dlHonlng, ctramic tile bath. Hot watar boaaboord hoot. Call 34> 7000. 3 t.m. to 5 p.m. ROCHESTER. NEW >BIDROOM -carpet, heat, alr-candlttonod. 1150-5155. 45I-0024, attar 5. Rent Hmms, FarniiliGJ 39 EXECUTIVE TYPE HOME, WEST BY OWNER - >BEOROOM BRICK ranch. 2Vi baths, 2'A-car plaitarid garaii. All bullf-lni. Ckrpitng, dripat. radiant heat, on| rolling landicipod 2 acroi, plui 20'x40' pool. 544,300. Will trad# ------ J.llTu?.'llf*'72* ’ BY OWNER, 2 BEDROOM BRICK "w '•era ^oL*to^fnxS*of*Ju(Sh ika an Jetlyn. Call fi 1 p.m. FE HBOS._____________ BY OWNER: 3 BEDROOM BRICK -atha, carpottno, drapes, IstNd bBsanwirt, 2 ear Ick garaga. good loca- Sislock & Kent, Inc. 1303 Pontiac Slelt tank Bldg. 330-3234 33>323S| HERRINGTON HILLS, BY“6WNER, 3 bedroom, brick ranch, recreation 2 car garage, 514,300. FHA terms, 330-4474._____________' HIITER tlSOOi TENNYSON - BETWEEN JOSLYN ' AND PERRY, excellonl starter , ■ with 3-bedroom. • sylth ref., 332-17IS 0 BRICK RANCH lautltal suburban homa nf tendtttoniltaetad ad antranoa hall. 24 ft 5 living room with fli I panaM sun ream, ___ carpeted dininr-ream fIrtpiKa. Large kltchan wit $7B0 DOWN — on this 5 rooms and bath, lake privllagas. $7,700, land contract tarmt. vino ro^ utility room, garags. EM 3^7.____________ WATER PRONT - WHITi LAKE, WE BUILD — now 3 badroo mrench- All "tor' BIXsOoT Of’wm 'bulld*on our let. Te see modal call B. r HIITER, REALTOR, 3703 E 11 HOUbESI HOUSES! ALL NEW 3 BEDROOM RANCHES TRI-LEVELS 4 BEDROOM RANCHES COLONIALS SUBURBAN LIVING 100 FOOT LOTS YORK Brown Realtors I, Builders Since 1333 WATERFORD AREA with three bedrooms, lorgo twonfy-tour-loot llvlng^^roomj^ counlry-styta Ujeh- oM *'lunt5num storms and la*iie privileges. This home Is In very good condition insido and out. Pull price, 113,300. ROCHESTER AREA - A specious --tisficolly decoratod quodlovol Ith 1 24' carpeted living room, h cablneta. For- fleldstono firoplaco, kitchen with mice tops^ 0^ 2 bodreemo, garoM, —, S1500 down. Vdc cam in wunv. City *— Realty, 2354511. WEST SIDE 2 FAMILY INCOME l«rM ll f tandficapM ■ priev wwr thin rfiptoevTT cost. 135.950. Les Brown, Realtor see EltaaiNth Lake Rood. FE >4010 or FE 4-3144 ih for all typqs pf prqparty. WRIGHT REALTY CO. 302 Oakland Ava._______FE 2-0141 CLARK flraplaca, tevaly glaiead .porch overlooking Ihe lake, >pladl bath | and gM ?*ba ready EOUPLE WITH lARY DESIRES 2 or 3 badroom hduia- Wail prat. RatarancM. 2214323._ FAWLY^^BS^BS 2 llibROOM h, dapotit. FE >3011. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION 4 bldroom, 2W baths, built . urpated. 2 ear garaga. In Blown-fiaiSr I2S0---— ' — f 22, f ta I p.m bassmant with fireplace. 2 cer ga-ra^ it 151,500. By op- WLfT^H. SMITH, Realtor 344 B. Totagroph =E >7140 EVEB. FE >7312 lY OWNER. NORTHERN HIGH Aluminum Northtrn i «rp 3-btc Inlshfid bi M.»-.no^CarpMw.. 1 car Boraga. Fancad yard, data Kheel. 02M00. QuM paiaiitilon. SHEPARD REaI ESTATE I and ftncdd lot, asking , Gl. BANK TERMS -s the existing land ci YORK WE BUY WE TRAO- -1 4B243 OR 44343 4713 Dixll Hwy., Drayton Plilns got heal and 1'/S-car garags Newly remodeled kitchen an bethroem. Carpeted living roon end dining room. All largt room) Asking, 510,000. WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -One and Ik acres. 14ir rood front ago. tl,3N. Ttrmt on land oar 'Buzz' Bateman SAYS: NEW MODEL HOMES AS LOW AS $11,350. on your lot. A typo and price for ovoryeno. Beautifully built of brick and aluminum, lott of extra taoturao and many bullt-Int. ULTRA HOMES SUB.: Opan SAT. end SUN. 2-4 p.m. and dolly by oppolntmont. M-53 to Whittlar, oppotita City Aoirporf. YOU CAN TRADE. TWO FAMILY Brick Prime city area. furnaces, enfrancas'* and *^lded Itasement, Each ta saH-ausfaln-Ing and gross rental of S275 par month. Priced af 121,000 with raasonabta Land contract farms ta qualiflod buyer. Bettor "Buzz" Bateman on this one. #01 BIRMINGHAM Ro^n Brick Ranehor w«h at- mnrt Avonua. Three badroomt. plui dan, recreation room with firoplaco, US batht and left of extra taaturas. Excellonf clota-ln locitian and reasonably priced af 123,300. Make Your oppolnfmanf A BUCKET OF PAINT And Elbow Ortaia mixed ta( or Is all you need fo turn bargain Info whit you would Two bedrooms, firoplaco lake privileges elate to Ro( ter. Only 07450 fo O.I., no d 377 S. TELEGRAPH - FE 8-7161 CITY LIVING All City eonvonlonets goat with this 7.yoar old brIOk-front ronch-or In Lincoln Jr. and Northern High orOls. 3 bedrooms, tall boto-mont, got heal and 2 car garagt. TarrHIc buy on Today's Moiicol ot 113.300. Just taka over present mortgage with approx. $2100 iwn and no mortgaga coots. 730 S. ROCHESTER RD. - OL 1-8518 ‘0—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TljuRSDAY, MAY 19, 1966 TIME^ ARRO CASH Y FOR EQUITY - LAND CONTRACT DRAYTON WOODS. V»ry attractive 3-bedroom ranch, carpatInR hi M loot living room, etorms and screen*^ avtjW garaig^ BN^top $15,000. Terms. SPACIOUS LOT FOR A GARDEN. ituring ___________________________ latural fireptaca, glase enelojed front porch, tor only $14,030, cash poinfment, you'll I OUT Times Realty REALTOR-APPRAISER 5190 DIXIE HIGHWAY (South of Watarford HIM) OR 4-0»t______Open 9-9 dalt PHONE 682-2211 Ted McCullough Sr.,Ht 5153 Cass-Ellzabath Road _____ OPEN DAILY 9-9 KAMPSEN Your Neighbor Traded— Why Don't You? WET YOUR HOUSE BUYING DORRIS CLARKSTON BRICK RANCH. Ab-Immaculala InsMa and out I Bile axcapltonally larga room homok baautIfulTy -M«S-«amHy room vdth i good siza utllHy room and m car garage. Prtoii right at Sia950 on G1 or FHA tarim. MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE STOUTS Best Buys Tociay 4 Bedroom- Family home, conveniently It cated In WalertOrd Twp., pirtli aluminum siding, separate dining room, living room with r‘— flreplaca, basement, oil I larga 100x130 foncad lot. A vajue^af^only ^ iMIj^ with Trqde- bedroom brick home. .... . .. floors, saparala dining room, fireplace, basement, new gat furnace, Convenient city location. Only $15,500 total price. Pacesetter Ranch- I. Call TODAY f Warren Stout Realtor iO' living' room, larga^*^Schen, go^ location near LAKE FRONT LOTS DUCK LAKE - Spot — 75x231 PONTIAC^ LAKE^ sandy baac — 40x130' — 04000 — 0500 down. HAGSTROM, Realtor MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE too W. HURON OR A031 _________EVE. «024H35 ~ ON PINE LAKE, WEST BLOOM-^ rooms. Ilia bam “ WILL TRADE MY LAKE WALTER'S lot for a lata model Cadir— Reply to Pontiac Press Box 109. WEAVER ROCHESTER SUMM» COTTAGE pi Cranberry Lake,^near RochasMr. Club -- cation home that features brick siding, living room v'"" "" place, formal dining nx en with aating space, ment, 1W car garage, bedrotfrhs, aNo afi unfIr more bedrooms. Priced M $17^ HURON GARDENS— NwHierw 5T-A ....-.........30M429, weekends 539-7031. (Harrison). FURNISHED CABIN ioy. Priced a1 available. AHOY (31'S— LOT ON LIT-tLE BEAR LAKE near Lewiston. (3ood ■ hunting. $395. 073-7491. have lust the I one features n' MODERN 3^-GEOROOM RETIRB- utTHty'’room.'lW*mli^ R^ common. OR 3-0395. NEAR STANOISH Private ‘ ‘ I satt^ GLEN LAKE, 3 BEDROOM YEAR home, 3 A-frame rental completely furnished. 133,500. ery Butler, Lea Kerr, Tony Elsele, Leo Kampsan, Fred Roae-vear, Dave Bradley, Hilda Stew-• art. 171 W. Huron Street MLS FE A0931 Ldw PrBpBrty ^ ^ 51 0. Call 403-3331 after 0 p. 2 FAMILY, 5 ROOMS EACH ON lake, renl ' ^ FE 37547. BEAUTIFUL BEDROOM BRICK laxe rront. Walk-out base-fireplace, close In. S---------- BEAUTIFUL _______ SYLVAN front - 3 bedrooms, Al 030,500, terms. FE 24133. HOME SITES, SO- X 100'. SUNNY Beach overlooking beautiful Wil-fora Lake privflegot. 3 aandv beaches, docking, $1000. $10 down, 510 month Owner. MV ?.(W40. STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE 2661 S. tapetr Rd.p Lakt Orion 33S"0000 KEATINGTON c Beautiful loko-from snd lake-pHOI-lega lots avaltobto. Plan to llva to thlt beautiful new town to Orton Township. AAodelt open 24 dally. Lots-Acreage 54 1 LOT ON DEWEY NEAR FISHER Body, Mvod Btroot, $1400 cash only. TO-1430. LAKE HURON, LARGE MODERN, furnished summer home. 90 miles North Sarnia. Stonaflraplaca, ' TAYLOR "WE TRADE" Williams Lake Front . Lovely lake front home located In choice neighborhood. Includes large carpeted living room with fireplace, ultraimdem kitchen with bullt-lns, -- -- TAYLOR AGENCY Real Estate — Building — Insurance --- Highland Road (MS9) OR 44304 Evenings call EM 34937 TRADE WARDS POINT Why put off a day longer? Start making plant now to buy I home you have been wanting and needing. You can begin better way than to see this large 4 bedroom Cape Cod, on bear ------------------------------------------------- O'NEL I. Call u n appointment ti 137,300. It'! h^laca, ovwlookln^ int and wa have the #212 YOU ASKED FOR IT! Lake front home on a large lake. Syrlm, fish, skli a baautif 1—1 ...,1. , I—---------------- dying gnnd cupboard s >, 3 fireplaces, extra larga fa a kitchen for entertaining. C In kitchen. 3 ceramic tiled batli sized garage, large lot. Sea It ni WILLIAMS UKE PRIVILEGES Be the first to see this well mainta _ . _ Lake. Lovely c h Roman brick flr« attached g I. 031,50 II landscaped I it's go taka a home, lust otsy^Vi™ CHARMING FROM TOP TO BOTTOM Describes this lovely old home. It sits on a surrounding It on three sides. The owner ht. by room with absoluts perfection. Now after 15 years all dona, the owner hat been transferred. You have to really appreciate It. Verbal description can't do It | an appointment and remember wa will take your home 4-BEDROOM BRICK Located on State St., cic living room, separate dli Basement, gat heat, 3 ca trade. 4 BEDROOM Lakt Orion '-oom tfiS ice. Make trade. e to school and shopping. Fireplace ng room, full bath up, Vt bath do' garage. $17,950. Will tell 53500 down fireplace, water heat 1. Big lot of this h bedroom home. It's just the answer for the large family h nr an economical buy. Marvelous 13.6x27' living room, natural Ceramic tile bathroom. Formal dining roo ' 3 car garage, with attached work shop. I ees. It will be a lucky day for ft- -------------- MODELS OPEN DAILY 2 TO 6 OPEN SUNDAY 2 TO 8 HUNTOON SHORES ... It a prar __ __________________ __________ _ tha plcturesqua privacy of Invigorating country living—YET Only M few minutes drive to downtown Pontiac. See theta exciting TRI-LEVELS, apaclous RANCH HOMES and EARLY AMERICAN easy ta reach. Taka M49 (Huron St.) West to Airport Road, turn rtaht^en Airport Read and proceed one mllel Come see for mrsalf Why wa say, "You'll get a lot to ilka" at HUNTOON SHORES--pwast, flnaat subdivision In or around Pontiac. RAY O'NEIL, REALTOR S520 PONTIAC UKE RD. OPEN 9 TO 9 OR 4-2222 MLS OR 3-7408 ________________ ^ aftect. Tarma H daalrad. Silvtr Lake Const. Co. OR 29S31 ' PICTURESQUE ,10 ACRES, A hay with larga a«m traa middia and trass on frontoge, pai oily tencad. White Lake Twps. mitea vrast of Drayton Plains. t1-.. Down assume poymonfs of per iTxxrth. By owner, coll OR 34957 tor on ippelnfment. SPACF STARVED? home or Mvostmopf poialblllty. Only 59500, tormt. MILTON WEAVER WEAVER II ho Vl>to^ of Unlyarslfy , REALTORS ochostor 4514141 LADD'S ---------fjRd. (M-34)------- SS3-4534 ____________FE S439I sylvan lake, 45'XI35' PRIVATE beach. All utilities. Including walks, storm sewers, paving, — Priced below markol for quick toll, 55,000. 4424143._________ WATERFORD HILL - WOODED N 3 LOTS, ir, Gladwin Don Brady, CLARKSTON-PONTIAC AREA, 15(7 lot, $3395, 533 month. Nl_ gas, near churches, school, shopping. Bloch Bros., OR 3-1395 or Suburban Propurty 4'/2 ACRES It work on the 2 upstairs I coop. Y $1^500 Sdu ur ixdMip I you My. Esti It swimming i n*Htlg)ds 0 YORK BUY WE TRADE 1-0343 OR 44343 3 Dixie Hwy., Drdyton Plains Salu Farmt 56 8" GEM FLOOR BUFFER, GOOD condition. 3344303. 0 MINUTES SOUTHWEST ---- buildings In shaded satti d. S3S,5(»-ttrms. itting. Hot of ferllle. Underwood Real Estate 0445 Dixie Hwy , Clarksfon 435-3415 "------- GHASTLY Big 3-bedroom farm home with barn and 10 acres, possibilities unlimited, location and land --' C. Pangus Inc., Realty OPEN 7 DAYS ^ MIS (Jrlonvillo CALL COLLECT NA 7-3515 Coast to CcX3St Trades COMMERCIAL BLDG. with 300' highway ffimtaga, 3300 tq. ft. floor space. 4 milts from Lapoor. Many PotsIMa usas. $7700 down. SALE OR LEASE S4.000 aq. ft. laf with 495 faaf RR tMIng. Ovar 1700 tq. ft. oftlca. 13400 tq. ft. ^a^. Will ramodal or build PKG. LIQUOR SOO G SOM with minimum of grocariai. S1SGOOD grou oprox. as Yoara hr^Mr-tpef en main eomar. BATEMAN COAAMERCIAL DEPARTMENT 377 S. Talagraph _____FE 8-9641 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRAaS Saa ua batora you deal. WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. opdyka Rd. FE S414S Optl> BVS. *tll I PJWe 7 ROOMG 4 BEDROOMS -~i^ Wirted Cuiitrict»Mt|. :ASH for land C(}NTR ACTS. H. J. Van Walt. 4540 DIxIa Hwy. OR >1355. 30-YEAR-OLD LUNCH ROOM F "'^’ofiSnd ** ' 38 WAYS TO MAKE MONEY )ht—30 mo rars all o ... day and i a RED HOT fi Lot us show you mo < way to BIG PROFITS. Sli Includes real astafa. K WARDEN ■ Huron, Pontiac 333-7157 BE YOUR OWN BOSS *---* ''“t yaar Inooma. |n you and furnish E. E. SHINN REALTOR RIGHT HERE, RIGHT NOWI You con buy "PLUS PROTECTION" for vourMjf Md family. TUt DEAL Is 99-44/100 per cent RIGHT. Purchaser gate LAND, BUILDING, FIXTURES, S.D.M. LICENSE; PLUS. NOW READ THIS DODO - 30,000 HUNGRY people are to locate In a NEW SUBDIVISION near this fine location. Seller Is leaving, fact Is, ha's nearly GONE. COME today and bring your money. $55,000 plus Inventory. See Mr. Shinn. 3344107 "Win with Shin" 474-3004 INVESTORS WANTjEO, STOCK FM trlbMrshlp*lor expan^Sorf*%ntloc Press Box 30.___________ 10 Acres N. of Clarksfon — secluded an^ gently rolling—I7,000-ter - 10 Acres W. of Oovlsburg-fertlle w frees. $5,950—terms. Restricted homasites, lOO'xSOO' on blacktap. 10 min. N.W. of Drayton-Near school, $3750 terms -S3500 cash. Make offer. Pontiac P LOTS AT ELIZABETH LAKE, 13 LOTS OFF BALDWIN. NEAR I-7S. 50' by 1517 each. 3, 1 acre lots near Kettering High. "Xii a'e'2 i VACANT LOTS mgfellow school. Will tra > contract, house or wt BrIwER real ESTATE 4 RIker Bldg. ACRESy SEMI-PRIVATE LAKE. 625-3701, afty 5 ROLLING SCENIC ACRES WITH rss? aorcOT Expressway. Livingston County. 535,000 with 10 per cent ■*— FE 3-3144. L. Smith.________ 100x357 OAKLAND LAKE FRONT, C. Pangus Inc., Realty OPEN 7 DAYS n M15 Ortonvi CALL COLLECT NA 7-3015 BEAUTIFUL LOTS, 100x150, BUILDING SITES on Ellzabofh Like 73x130 t 750 ....on Scalt Lake $0x300 1500 Crascant Lake Woods 93x1X ' — ‘^toW'.-.......... 130X3B Clarkslon, main St., comm'l ,... ............. 13,300 Annett Inc., Realtors 30 E. Huron SI. 3314444 --------------Sundayt 1-4 CLARKSTON AREA CURKSTON REAL ESTATE ■45 s. AAaIn AM 14131 ibkifdu. L6T flk *15 ONLY 53.30 PER ACRE FREE COLORED BROCHURE Lone Star, Aare C full line of snow--------------- owner 30 years. 515.000 Includes 510,000 CLARENCE C. RIDGEWAY REALTOR MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE No Competition! country grocery stare with be and llquw llcinae ond mona making variety dopartmont. Bull Ing with modem living quarto Included. A good going busino comploto with modom flxturas lust waiting for aggressive owm Falllno health forces owner .. sell. 30 miles north of Pontiac. 535,000. Terms plus Inventory. C. Pangus Inc., Realty OPEN 7 DAYS 30 M-15 Ortonvilla CALL COLLECT ------- _ „ ani^ing planted thrives. Annual rain fall 45 inches. Temperatures range from a low of 50 degrees to a high of 05 degrees. Pioneers from all OVer tha world are pouring Into this country seek- Fortuno knocks. GoMon chance go-getter. Tavern Business ;— fixturat and e<|ulpmant In Keago MOBILE HOME EQUIP. Comnnerclal property with excelleni building across afreet from proposed Mbpnit rnoMlo homo park. Mineral rights and clear. Free booklets showing pictures and giving---------- tolls sent upon reque Real^ Estoto Com|>an) .cSo --------- .jtfono 30------ ... members of the Indlanopolls C I. Sellg B GROCERY WITH LIQUOR Unlimited Financial Opportunity. Top location for expanding- bualnes-Now grossing $140400 and tire owner hat opened only 9 hours . day. Would make terrific party store. Spacious S-room aparfmont included. $15,000 dr ---- lory. PARTRIDGE "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" Goodrich ore'o. 130 acres rolling lai Adloins 9-holo golf course. R for lubdlvldingl 33 par cent do — rotoasa clauses to rolls builder. Lucratlvo Invosfmtnf portunity at SSOO par acra. iton area. Approx. 340 ocros w 3 streams and two prlvitd lak_ Excellent hedge against Inflation. 30 min. from Flint. 30 min. from Pontiac, a min. from txprassway. West Oakland County. Gently rolling and very scenic 340 acres-------- „. ,-------ape. ______ - ______ 113,900. $3,500 down. Humphries Realty, 01 ' , Oxford. OA 23417. MT. CLEMENS ST. 10(7x519' lot has 3 bulldir,.. . .......... - ------- 40'x8(7 block for light room house building on ______ ____ manufacturing, 40'x40' rented — bringing In I— 000 — Priced oxceptlonally low tor HAGSTROM, Realtor MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 40 W. HURON OR 443SI ________EVE. 4S3-4435 30 day possession. Ttrms a R^. Voeont, tetaion. $31^50. Roy O'Neil, Realtor 2530 Pontiac Ltka Read OR 23323 or FE M PARTRIDGE "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" tAvern with SDM s. Goktoi Tavern 1 iartxwl Yoorrior**S PARTRIDGE "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" BUSY HARDWARE Building Is 1430 aq. ft. Owner re Ing after 20 yeart. Groulng n 545,000 In ar'...—------ a year for lavartl yeart. Groia-ing well over $27,000 with at tee ownership. Your golden TED; RISTAURAFtT TO I la PmHae or tumunMng . CoH pftof 4 PJW. iO-Tm. AaiON On your land contract, large or waall call Mr. Hlltor, FE M179. ■rekar, 2792 Elizoboth Lake Rood. ANYONE WANTING TO INVEST 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS WARREN STOUT, Realtor ISO N.^0pdyk^_R4____Fi S414S CASH For your aqulty or lai--- Don't taae ihat honM, i —--------------'-L Coll ( 40" GE RANGE) NORGI REFRIG-—'or,- Moving. 3322714, QUICK CASH FOR LAND CON-troett. Clark Real Estita, F~ 3-7555, Rea. FE 44113, Mr. Clark. SEASONED LAND CONTRACTS wantod. Get our deal bg^ sell. CAPITOL SAVINGri. I ASSN.. 7S W. Huron. FE 2712 MiMy to Loor 61 LOANS frlgerator, MA- MML- J TO a.m. or iTtor 4 p.m.______ APARTMENT SIZE tor, with freeztr, S3o< heotor, $35. UL 2-47lt. LOANS TO $1,000 Ituolly en first visit. Quick, IrlonG r, hoipfui.^^ la the number to call. OAKLAND LOAN CO. 302 Pontiac State Bank bmp. 9:30 to 5:30 — Sat. 9;39 toT APARTMENT SIZE REFRI6ERV axcallant worklim condition. „ V. Harris. FE 22744. AUTOMATIC too CUP COFFEE LOANS TO $1,000 To consolldoto bills Into one n ly payment. Quick sorvica ----- courteous exporlencad counsolort. Credit Ufa Insurance ovtllabto Stop In or phono FE 20131. HOME & AUTO LOAN CO. r St. FE 20131 5 dolly. Sot. 9 •* 7 N. LOANS t2StoSI400 Insured Pay 14' ALUMINUM BOAT, JOHNSON —'w ond trailer. I75fc or ildtr small motor or I mower. 777 731-4441 y. 3930 Hensmon. 403-4145. 1950 VOLKSWAGEN S2S0 OR TRADE 1945 CADILLAC COUPE OE VILLE, merclal property. Grimaldi - COLORED TV Vi-TON PICK-UP. — Cooley Lake Rd. EM 27733. FORMAL PINK AND WHITE WITH A-UNE SKIRT - WORN ONCE. EXCEL-LENT CONDITION - SIZE 7. $35 OR 23304. Mac's Bargain Center has bargains, bargalni, bargains. Name brand shoes and cloihing. PROM DRESSES, SIZE 210, BLUE "'ton, ,pink faftota, $10 each. blue fleor-lenqth, 135. 3323104. WEDDING DRESS, 2 YEARS OLD, ----- 3320779.____________ WEDDING DRESS, I YEAR OLD, size 13. ---- Sale HeMifeeM ieede 65 BEDROOM 3 PC. SOMi ------------^Lmto-'- 2 ELECTRIC STOVES. AUTOMATIC washer. Olldsr. r by IS* rug. FB 2394S. ________________ 2 Piece GRKN LIVING ROOM 3 PIECrMEOlUM BEIGE LIVING room sulto, good condition, S3S. Call oftor 4 pjn. FE 27S57. PIECE MAPLE JUVENILE BEO- SEWING MACHINE, DELUXE CABI- 5-MONTH-OLD Swing^iaadlo dlaF»stltch to tovtly atstouf cabtotf. Just aal diPl ond sow, no attachments npadad tor Call crtdlf manager at 3422421, CERTIFIED SEWINO CENTER. 7IPIECE DINING ROOM SET Cuahflwn 2 Sykoa, solid Moi cost 5500, prlee, 5300. MY 279SI. $3.69 TWe ft. 7e pa. SOFA COUCH AND CHAIR, BOX spring and mattraaa. apartment size rofrigtrttor, 132.50. 2 piece bodroom sot, OR 20221. 4254 An-dorsonvlllo Rd. TV SET, 135, REFRIGERATOR, !», -- itova, 13$. alaetric sl^ •« : bads, miK. FE 22744. TO«, ^ tabto^^. Small nauitohyda reckar. 29304. ZAenarch Sawing Cantor. .539.95 Guar. Elec. Wesher SS9.95 Your Credit Is Good At Wyman': EASY TERMS_____________FE 231 BARGAIN BOX 445 S. Woodward Birmingham (Just South of the Bus Station) Ml 2452S THURSDAY, MAY 26 Lost day tor iccMIng consignment Consignment hours,. ANTIQUE AUCTION WEDNESDAY, May 25, 7 p.m. Wa ara now accepting ontlquos for this auction. Hall's Auction Solo, 70S W. Clark-ston Rd., Lake Orion. MY 21171 or MY 34141.__________________ ANTIQUE CHEST, 4 DRAWER, walnut. OL t-5341 oftor S.___ DINNER BELL, ORGAN FLOOR ““xxion ond Iron pumps, iphono, small aplnnlng walker, leetar-babs, baby clothing, chlld'i desk. FE 23373. lED, SPRINGS $10. (FREfe AAAT- HILLTOP . BUNK BEDS Choica ot 15 styloa, trundle b triple trundle beds ond bunk I complete, 549J0 and up. Peers CARPET SALE Nylon carpet now on S2.97 per square yerd. W there Is absolutely no can boot this price. Unit.. _______ Outfitting. 5050 Dixie Hwy. 472 3205. 31-INCH USED TV S39.95 used 3 speed phonoqrepht 2 ' Walton TV FE 2S57 Open CHEST FREEZER. II CUBIC FEET CHROME DINEETE SETS, ASSEM-ble yoursoH, lovo; 4 chairs, tab'' $49.95 valua, $29.95. Haw 1944 i signs, lormica tops. MIchlQ Fluoretcont, 393 Orchard Lake. 1 COFFEE TABLE, 3 END TABLES. good condWIon, $40, FE 24344. CcjiMBINATlON WASHER AND DRY-ar. S2S; air condltlonar, ISO; china cabinet, $25; air comprasaor, usod 'Once, 095; radio phono combtoa-tlon, S45; walking tractor ond it-tochmonta. Ilka — M744, V. Harris. 1100; FE . 33' CUBIC ?iViST43iaft” ELECTRIC STOVE AND IRONER, ___________OR M1I4. FRIGIDAI.RE R E F R I^G 8 RA-rOR. GARAGE SALE, HANDICRAFT w and rummage. 494 Haux-Dr. Lake Orion. May 2221, m. to 4 p.m.___________ gray davenport, good con. II, $75, 47 6000 housekeeper SEWINO mochlno with Fronch Provincial tawing cast. Exe. condition, I FE 3-4437._____________ HOME FREEZER SPECIAL ■■ f.irr“ ....... PRIME INVESTMENT 33x40' brick building In Pontiac, formerly occupied by u4ad '—' ture dealer 2 apartments up, — Ing tor $300 a mo. Full price only 513,750. Tormt or trade. J. J. Joll, Realty ■E 23400______________I SHORT ORDER FOR LEASE, LO- LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE 1441 Beldwin at Walton FE 2-4042 -rit Traffic light south of 1-75 4 drawer choat. SS5. Ml 7-0I3I. LIKE NEW ROLLAWAY BED AND mattreta, I2S| Sli Ing machine, — 4 ft. picnic I S. FB 23497. asi Singer h w, good com c tablo, oxc. 1844 or LO 20754.______ SMALL CAB LOT — 4 R55M Fulfjrlcr'silSS) - »B0y*doSn 410 N. Coat. FB 2337$ OT 23397.________________________ SOFT ICE CREAM AND SANO- ittar, mirror, choit and boi ttraat and box vrtogi, 4 cha attt. Stove and rOT^rsto S oomplota. Tarma. S3J0 p< iJr r>ii Mr. Adams, FE 2090 ( (next to K-Marf). LINOLEUM -......- f; LOVESEAT AND CHAIR) S3I.L ir rofrlgaroter, SiO, OE 2 mont, 4720744 or 4729337,_______ WANTED: REFRIGERATION-AIR milontog • aatablTih.. ...,------ — conditioning company. Includtt utlful air conditioned ^ CHURCH-ACTIVITY HALL Price Reduced Church conaliti ot 3500 aq. ea^c^^ ------------- Activity Haii coniritt of 5700 tq. No. 1 M3.’Alin Arbor, h ft. office, Khoolroom, baikotboll court ond stage. Also focllltles . t i t w x Tm it i—n/'n I. Bilanco en imall 1 MORE TIME BRAND NEW FURNITURE 3-ROOM OUTFITS $278 (Good) $2.50 Weekly $378 (Better) $3.00 Weekly $478 (Best) $4.00 Weekly NEW LIVING ROOM BARGAINS 7-ploce (brand new) living -pom Sitoet itvlno room aulto, two tto tpbtoo, initchtog cofloa tablo, to dooorator tompa, all tor 1109. Onl ” MW^^ROOM BARGAINS NfCCHf DELUXE AUTOMATIC ZIg zag tawing mtehtot — apbloato modal — ambroldan, bitod home, buttonhelaa, ate. 1943 modal. Taka ovor payments of SS.90 PER MO. for 9 mot. or IS3 ciih bil. UNIVERSAL to. FE 44)905 NORGE 30" GAS FRET?EI?s'wA?EtfOUSE OUTLET 1458 S. Ttlegroph __FB 270SI ARE FAMOUS FOR "ACTION" _PBARIOH'l PURHITUy^^ •adbock and Cito Han I. and FrI. *tti 9 pjn. Betw^ Faddock on Open Mim. and FrI. I GROUP MlAYTAa AND EASY wpahofa. Lew at IV. Ratm 12 frlMTilofid iiiitsi esbilwfiw oM iSS^svlMw! joS^ ^AoldN E«mU'rM7i^^^ 1440 BaMwta «t Wallen. FB 24043. Repossessed ■wing Machine, Drata maker, . monihi oM, In new eablnat, zlg- oMlao tmall balance of only 543.43 cash or small paymanto of 14.41 monihly a^aMa. 10 Sde HewelwM Q-de 65 RANGE. 015) RBFRIGERA'TOhJ AwdlMca SlT'W’oixSa'^ RUMAAAGE SALE. FRIDAY I Saturday and Sunday. II a — DEW BXTEIUION TAB S5y ilZff ImwItSo'xi!^ SW4S45. SINGER Used beautiful wood c< makes buttonhelaa, Wind tto. li yr. guarantaa, pay yly $32J4 cash or SI .23 par wk. Ceil SINGER DIAL-A-MATIC ZIg zag tawing machlna - ...._______Pay p« SS4 „ 14 PER MO. paymants. UNIVERSAL CO. FE 4-0905 LEA 5AARKET. Last Sund4W in A4ay at AUCTIONLAND. Call FE 27079 or FE 20743.________ FURNACE SALE. GAS FORCBI2 UPRIGHT DEEP FREEZE USED RANGES 30" and 34" gai and alaetric rangts. Thaaa art rangaa that wa used to tha Pontiac Schools Nor Econonilc Clasaat all to A-1 a ditlon, how guorontoa, Wg aavini CONSUMERS POWER CO. frl^itor with top -Ofwrm. TV, S3S.---------- $35. V. Harris. FE 2V44. 1. GAS STOVE, S3S. RB> WYMAN'S USED BARGAIN STORE I Our IS W. Pika Stort Only -------- ----... From I1.9S From S5.9S mirror 124.95 DIVING BOARDS B'-10'-12' AND 14' 5327iiia. tPcrHICa S3S Dolren — For the Finest in Top-Quality^Merchandise MONTGOMERY WARD POtlTIAC 5MLL GIANT VACUUM CLEANER IN-stillod on Ford truck. Sul'-"" — commorclat and midon noce cleaning. FB 27171. .............. ..„ JAMES k Blvd., IW Wkt. oft Voorhala Rd. Furniture, ctothtog, mlae. May 19, 32 31.__________ clothing,''I 13 Ml.-Croi GARAGE SALE, GARAGE SALE. BICYCLES, CHIL-toorylond, p.m. Sot. GARAGE SALE , May 20, Sol. 3lsf. 10 a.m. 5 p.m. Elec, stovt and drytri 2S2S Ivanhoe, I Wk. S. Orchard Lake, 5 blks. W. Middle Belt. 483-3470 or 603-477t. i________________ d holtft, hi umidifler, 1 misc. articles. Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. C5 S. Woodward. FE 20441 GO-CART, GOOD CONDITION, rBj soneWe. FE 3-5910. 0000 USED WARNL AIR FUR-nacet ond bettors. You or wo Inttoll. Cliff Loehnof. FB 241V. HOSKINS RENTAL HAS POWEB rakt, aloe, sewer ctopnof, FE 23039 I. Cirl Oobot, 2440 Outfon Rd. largo Round Oak itovt, many u usual piccos. Como In and brow around. 5904 Dixie Hwy. at Wth ........ 4721013. i, TV t 19" PORTABLE TV, WIL 66 SACRI- COLOR TV GENERAL ELECTRIC COLOR YV -------portacolor TV — t*49 “ Sunfry TV. 4720151. LAVATORIES C0MFLETR,I 034.50 valua, $14.95; also balhtuba, lallalt. showtr tfallt. Irragulara, terrific values. Michigan Ftoonacant, 393 Orchard Lake. FB 44443. $10^ par IN'! , ____^ --.h high pressurt, 597. 0. A. Thompson, 7005 “•* "' . .. ALUMINUA2-VINYL SIDING Storm windows, ownlnga, guftart. For Immodlato Intfallatlon of a quality giiartntoad lob. lA ALUMINUM - VINYL SIDING Storm windows, awntogi, guttors. For Immodlato Inttollallon of t SS''U'£T Hooting Co., 4723411 - 4I3-SS74. 3'x5' BOX UTILITY TRAILER, I AMERICAN ENCYCLOPEDIA. COM-—yllh dictlonar- “— **' ING^WACMIHE, SSSi AL*0 S2Si atondord. ___________________ MS. Bo^yt nsi Auburn Rd. Utka, 73I-S4M.____________________ BABY BED, BAMINBTTB, I960 Ford wagon VI. 17- and lIHndi soft. Roieonablo. Coll 472ISU I T Y SHC .L. nnti mjTCBUl. omm mwvis wnora, "Sportator" modal, odopt-■ rtog, Tlltor, toother earrytog lie. 4 lamp light bar, motal CHILDREN'S PLASTIC HOT-R 0 D ... . purehata of any mower, h TO S^Irlw.l'E 21V1, palled reel type mower. Ulka Raat. 33214M. zot. Over 12000 Items to chaoae am. Ik^zlca oe Jots all oa most amt. 2MI OIxto Hwy„ A4on.-Frl. 9, Sat. 9-4, cloaod Sun. FE 2I30S. Lawn Equipment Troctors—Mowers Simplicity—Bolens Lawn Boy—Jacobson Yardman—Hohn Eclipse Snopper—Comet McCulloch Chain Saws HOUGHTEN & SON 528 N. Main OL 1-9761 ROCHESTER -N MOWERS SHARFENfeD, LO-II pick-up. Hoft'2 FE 21311. 9E STAR CHIPPER FISHING ( POSTS - INSTALLED. NEW 50 GALLON HOT POIN Motorway, FE 2S44I. OLD BARN WOOD, 50c FT. 4321431. PICNTC TABLES, FlVf SliMl '—I ornamenfa and glfto. LIbarai I Outpost, 3345 OIxto Hwy„ OR 4 BALL AAACHINB, GOOD CON- PLUMBING BARGAINS. FREE Standing tollaf, S129S. SBgallen haattr. S47.9S; 2ptoct bath aota IS9.9S. Laundry tray, trim. I19.H| ahowar afalto with trim 134.95; 2bowl sink, t3.95; Lavt„ 0.95; OFF-SET PRESSES. Forbss - 29747,__________________ RUMAAAGE SALE FOR STUDENT trip to AAoxIco. FrI. and Sol. 25 -- MWtto, Drayton. RUMMAGE; CRESCENT LAKI AREA - TO CLAY8URN - OFF ELIZABETH LAKE RO.-THURS. THROUGH SAT., LOADS OF CHIL-DREN'S CLOTHING. SAVE BIOI DO YOUR OWN RUG ' -holatery ctoanln—"" *' Ron! oloctrtc at 5PRED-SATIN PAINTS. WARWICK S^iy. 2471 Orehaid Lake. 4S2 f ANDREWS THRIFT SHOP, clothing tor the family, houiahold Itomi. Hatchary Rd., Friday 9:32 STEEL TANK, gallon 2 OR 2 TALBOTT LUMBER BPS houM paint No. 212 MJS fol. BPS ranch houid wMto N2 M, Cook-Dwin'alum. roof point, ISJO gaL on base Interior, 34.00 gal. Mlic. totox point. Ml oonto o at. 1035 Q-*-'—-' ““ ' Clothi^.' ftmlturo,' iSplI JS? ^’^ncisiiroicrtdyXWay m 1944 dratampkor head with i-iaggar far buttanhatoa, Kama, ilgbt; ate. In brand new eab-...jLlpId new ter II19JI2 muit eoltoct' unpaid balance of only SSL02 Paymanta easily arraiwad. AAAN BROS. SEWING CENTER. THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. MAY 19, 1966 D~18 Estate Storage mi. Enl Blvd. / FE 3-7161 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 10, 1960 Niw«* VM4 0n IMjNMr wi Untf Cm 166 1^62 iUldC ten tan ea Ic AAA-FM vinyl trim. 61187” Spartan Dodge U1 Oakland Ava. ' (Ik Mila N. at Cass Ava.) lUKK ItM SKYLAKK 1 apart eaupa, pamarad, bwcki axtras, privata. MMMS._________ i»*4 BUICK SKYLARK HARDTOP Extra sharp Buy With Canlldanca Houghten Olds Rochester”* ©l IMS BUICK wildcat. HARDTOP GM GM (Owner's Initials! --la McAnnally's Auta IMS BUICK Riviera, blue ■ -ic, pa'..-. . ir warranty. steer- air canditlaning. ( ' steering, brakes. Ing, brakes, J-year warrai..,. SEE BOB BURKE I SEE BOB BURKE 1304 Baldwin FE 8-4525jl304 Baldwin FE 84525 Acrass tram Pantlac State Bank > Across from Pantlae Stale Bank BIRMINGHAM TRADES If new car payments ere too high, why don't you try one of our Birminghom trode-ins? Check the cors listed below ToFbhe thbt will fiT your budget. 1965 Riviera.................. .$2988 Daubla Power, Automatic, Burgundy Finish With Normal Down Paymentt 36 AAonths at tM.«3 Monthly 1965 Electra .....................$2788 4-Door Sedan — Double Power, Factory Warranty With Normal Down Payment: 34 Months at MS.M Monthly 1965 Wildcat .....................$2688 With Double Power, IMIOO Actuaf Miles, Fireside Red With Normal Down Payment: 3< Months at %n.a Monthly 1965 Galaxie .....................$2088 4-Door Hardtop — Double Power, 3»0 Engine, Vinyl Trim With Normal Down Payment: 34 Months at $43.07 Monthly 1964 Electra ....................$2188 4-Door Hardtop - Full Power, Dark Blue, Blue Trim With Normal (Sown Payment: 34 Months at $44.30 Monthly 1964 Riviera......................$2588 Double Power, Special Wheels. Shoreline Beige With Normal Down Payment: 34 Months at $74.35 Monthly 1964 Skylark .....................$1888 l-Door Hardtop — v-l. Power Steering, Bucket Seats With Normal Down Payment: 34 AAonths at $50.43 Monthly 1961 Chevrolet______________.... $788 Bal-AIr 3-door, automatic, radio, heater With normal down payment, II months at $34.03 monthly 1963 Skylark ....................$1388 Convertible — V-0, Standard, Power Steering, Beige With Normal Down Payment: 34 Months at $53.14 Monthly 1963 Special .-..................$1188 Convertible — Automatic, V-4, Radio, Heater With Normal Down Payment: 24 Months at $47.33 AAonIhly We hove Five nice older cars with payments on 18 month fmoncing for os low os $37.33 monthly New md Mm6 166 GLENN'S 1044 Special Buick 3 door, radio. 1. C. Witlioms, Salesman GLENN'S 1044 Wildest Bukk, 3000 miles, pov. er steering, brakes, tinted glass, red with white top. L. C. Williams, Salesman JEROME 1956 CADILLAC Coupe DeVille 4-door hardtop, power steering and brakes, radio, heater, outomatic. $295 full price. Bank rotes at Village Rambler 666 WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM Ml 6-3900 New «iid Used Con By Dick Tomer 1044 CADILLAC FLEETWOOD, complete extras. S' FE ^7531. 473-oni. 055 CHEVY, DOUBLE POWER 1050 Plymouth, 3344403.________ 055 CHEVY BEL AIR, 4 Automatic. New tires, good transpor- » CHEVY 4 CYLINDER" STICK, 1050 CHEVY CONVERTIBLE $307 Oscar's Motors 448 S. Saginaw St. 050 CHEVROLET STATION W/G on, 457 FORD. GOOD TRANI^RTA- tlon. $40. EM >-3114._____ 1957 FORD, GOOD CONDITION^ 1999 FORD, RUNS OOOD, B75. $00 IMPALA 3 DOOR, V-l AUTO, powar tiaaring, $1193. Will taki Irada. Lloyd BrldBas, 434-3100. GM (Ownor'i Initials) Galt McAnnally'i Auto Salat >45 CHEVY Impala Super Sport, blue with a blua vinyl top. Black latthor buckols. automatic, console, power atooring, brakes, new cer wirrenty. SEE BOB BURKE 1304 Baldwin FE 84525 1945 CORVAIR 500 COUPE, 3 REPOSSESSION, 1945 CHEVY pala, 4-door herdtop, gray, po No money down, $13.07 weekly payments. Cell Mr. Akason at FE 5-4101, McAullHa. 166 New wd iMi Cm 166 MECHANICS SPECIALS . OR 3-1BS7, after 1959 FORD. $50. AAA 5-3994. 1960 FORD loor with $ cylindtr and i ihift, radio and haatar. In condition, full price $195. STATE WIDE AUTO OUTLET 1400 Elluboth Ltko Road FE 8-7137 1960 Ford Galaxie whaat covtri, saat belts Autobahn Motors, Inc. AUTHORIZED VW DEALER v> mile north ot Mirada Mila 1745 S. Telegraph FE $-4531 1943 CORVAIR MONZA, AUTO-Brldgas, M^ilOO.* GLENN'S 1943 AAonza 4 door ledan Corvair, radio, heater, automatic transmission exceptionally sharp for 1943. L C. Williams, Salesman 3 CHEVROLET BEL AIR 9 0 takes It. 436^. Second car. $3350. 4I3-3533. - BILL SPENCE Chrysler-Plymouth.Vallant 6673 Dixie Hwy. I j *<1IPN__________MA 5-3435 I960 FALCON 4 DOOR 4 CYLINDER outomatic, radio, htatar. Exctl- ■ ■ --------1. $195. Full price D^achoitRr Ford falcon ini 4 DOOR SEDAN, RA- Autobohn Motors, Inc. AUTHORIZaO VW DIALER --------- “—'.I# Mila FE $-453 .. FORD COUPE, 47S4397.__________ _____________ IN) FORD SKYLINER, IN, HIGH parformanca, 4M haada, and ctm-ahatt, pay balance. ISI-H13. INI FORD T lIRD COUPE. ME-■ burgundy, powar ttaaring, ______ windows, too par cant warranty. Full Prica .......II3N Autobann Motors, Inc. AUTHORIZED VW DEALER INI FORD GALAXIE 4 Crulaa-0-Ma«c, powar i 1795. Excallanl. 333-7945 a 1377 attar 4 p.m. . 1962 Ford 2-door stick, 4 cyl. radio, haator, hill price 1597. Na AAonay Down, As-sumt small weakly payments. Wt handle and arrange all Financing. Call Mr. Dan at: FE 84071 Capitol Auto ' 312 W. Montcolm (Just East ot FALCON SQUIRE WAGON!, dard transmlsslan. aood transo. $400. OR 1,3707. FALCON, IN3 4-DODR WAGON, ‘ , wife's car. 1745. Ml 7-4337. IN3 FALCON 4 CYLINDER AUTD- MUST DISPOSE E OF THl/1943 FAL-bhia, awematk, no I, 15.17-'weekly. Call, 1943 FALCON FUTURA, BEKliJ Mtd.f-bMcktt •••U. gfftr. 67A> 1412. Anvtlm« •mr * p.m. Autobahn Motors, Inc. AUTHORIZED VW DEALER Vi mile north ol Miracle Milo 5 S. Tolegraph FE M53I 1945 CORVAIR, RADIO, HEATER, 1957 CHRYSLER 4 DOOR HARD-fop • cylinder automatic »: ---------- Excellent transportation, -DOUBLE CHECK---USED CARS- 554 i. Woodward STAR AUTO NO MONEY DOWN . CLASSY '■ CHASSIS F^OM wimff 1965 Oadillac BUY HERE - PAY HERE CAR ]959 CHEVROLET .... PRICE $195 WEEK $2.02 1959 FORD $195 $2.02 1961 CHEVROLET .... $395 $4.04 1958 BUICK ........ . ; ; . $ <75 $1t01 1961 PONTIAC ......$695 $7.07 1959 LINCOLN $595 $6.06 1960 CORVAIR ......$395 $4.04 1964 CHEVELLE . ...$1595 $16.16 STAR AUTQ S. TELEGRAPH FE 8-9( Something New in Oakland County fiSffl fflW® -CHEVEOLEI^-INa at 1000 & 1104 S. Woodward, Birmingham WE INTEND TO BE KNOWN FOR CUSTOMER SATISFACTION FINE SERVICE-FAIR PRICES AND LIBERAL TRADES COMPLETE SELECTION ON HAND OF NEW CHEVROLETS Caprices - Impalas - Bel Airs - Biscaynes Chevelle - Chevy II - Corvairs Ready for Immediate Delivery WE NEED USED CARS mmiEmMM MI 4-2735 ‘^PFPTAT ANNOUNCEMENT FROM THE PONTIAC RETAIL STORE WHERE YOU EXPECT MORE AND GET ITl For The Next Two Weeks, We Are Going to Sell Qur Entire Stock of Used Cars at All Time Low Prices 150 Cars in Inventory All Are One-Owner New Car Trades. We Can Sell You One of These Cars, If You Will Only Give Us the Opportunity. Come On Down and Make An Offer. '61 SOME ARE ALMOST NEW Check our low financing and insurance plan DON'T MISS THE BUY OF A LIFETIME * 65 Mt. Clemens St. (At Wide Track) FE 3-79 -416SS- BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH S. Woodward___Ml 7-J 1966 DODGE mant, automatic ', gowar equip-1 . .ransmUslon, ra-, whitewall tires. PONTIAC CADILLAC HAROLD TURNER OF BIRMINGHAM (Ask for Norm Danielson) 1350 NORTH WOODWARD PHONE Ml 4-1930 BIRMINGHAM OAKLAND CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH Top Quality U,sed Cars WmeEDort Hardtop 3 door, automatic, radio, hoater, Ing, braktt, whltewalt, baauittui finish, with matching buckat ttate. 1964 PLYMOUTH Fury Hardtop 313 angina, 4 ipaad, radio, batter, « —^----- lihT w- ------------ matching Interior. $1895 1964 TIMPEST LoMana Hardtop, 134 angina, 4 apaad, radio, haatar, whitewallt, baautmil gold matalle fln-Ith, with matching vinyl Intarlor. $1295 1964 DODGE Polara Convertible with the M3 ^ $1895 1963 VW 2-Door Sedan $995 1963 PLYMOUTH 4-Door automatic, hMler, >1 paymmta monthly of on $995 powtr •twriMi :tiooM from, |o '$36.00 PONTlAjCCalalim italJlng, “Crakaa?™wlllfc^ *teory tlnlih, with bluo Interior. Only— $1295 1964 CHEVY Vz Ton Pickup with a long box, radio, htiter, oxtra nlcd low mlltage. Only— $1395 724 OAKLAND AVE. Just North of Cass Ave. THE PONTIAC PRESS« THURSDAY. MAY 19. 1966 \ D—U 1i »Rh^25?S,^V{? r'KSfif MI»K)N, RADIO AND HIATIR AND WHITBWALL cWSTmJ Mansfield Auto Sales FE 8-8825 FE 5-5900 WE SPECIALIZE IN LATE MODEL G.M. 1-OWNER USED CARS Convertibles IMS PONTIAC R«MMVI bN> tutomalic. psw brakM. Mid windowi, CM WirrMity. 137*5. ms PONTfAC Catalina Convtrtjbla, mtmmr alMrlng tnd ndilionlng. HAS CHiVROLIT Impala ___________ ^Ntmr'^’automatfc, '*buckiS laats, factory warranty. t2a*S. ItM PONTIAC Catalina Convertlbla, automatic, power staerlng —' brakn, powdv Mue, I4,0N mllaa. CM Warranty. Stias. Ikw id HtBd Ci lOi 1*43 AND 1*41 PORD PALCON BUS 4 .etrllndart.wMIi itaidird„.*igna- Ibw id IhBd Cm 108 CHEVELLE nPM%gM.^jASllM?p8R^ •atar'a Ford Daalir, OL VfTII. Nammlwltm^^ Meldta tain IMF JotMi McAallff* Ford ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP EM 3-4155 1*SI MERCURY, CANDY APPLE paint-glint gold, boat eltor ovw SMO. 3SM Hrcy King, Watarford. 1963 Ford Falcon 2-Door 1963 MERCURY Colony Pork * paaaangtr atatlon wagon with power aquipmant, automallc tranimlailtn, radio and haatar, sshttawall tlrea, only S4I dawn' and 111.11 taatkly pay- rMlo.^'^ltiwMlV ?r^ wv-wl IS* down, Flnanca Bilanco at Only— $599 HAROLD TURNER FORD. INC. "It only takes a mlnuta to Gal a BETTER DEAL" at John McAulifft Ford 4M Oakland Avt. PE S-4101 M4 $. w600WARD AVE. BIRMINOHA/M Ml 4-7SM 1963 Mercury Colony Pork 6-Pos$«ngtr station Wagon, radio, haatar, Crulsa-O-Matlc power steering. 1*43 FORD-GALAXIE, XL, CONVER-tlMa, II4W raal claan. 33BARACUDA« . I . AUTOMATIC iM MnnAville PONflAi coh- voftlbN, rMl MM. OR AMP. mt PONTIAC WAGON, M. 1965 Plymouth Fury III wmi baaumul wtilta llnlah, r ■ - -*-rlor, powar ataarlng, Vt BILL SPENCE ChryiNr-Pl,______ RamMar-Jaap 6673 Dixie Hw " " see’ BOB BURKE 1304 Baldwin FE 8-4525 Acroaa from Pontiac State lank ItM T-BIRD CONVERTIBLR WITI Rangoon red finish and matchlm red Interior with black top. IP loaded SM»5. Autorama MOTOR SALES BEATTIE M4 COMET VILtAGER WAGON. Red with chrome luggage rack, powar ataarhiB, brakaa and VI. Real claan, O^y tIMS. BOB BORST IM4 MERCURY SUPER HARDTOP, TM4 FORO OALAXIE SM Convertible, eutomatlc, power steering and powar brakaa. St 1*5. mi PONTIAC Tampest Custom Con-vartlbN, m VI wltf - - -Trsnsmltllen. I13IS. mi PONTIAC eamiavllto Cpnvartl- 1*13 BUICK La Sabra Convertlbla. Automatic, powar ataarlng and brakai, whita with a whita too tnd rad Intartor. lla*S. lOGE 330 4 door sedan. ____ 14.000 mllas. Prica right IMS CORVAIR 3 door hardtop 7« actual mlNs list 1*57 JEEP 4 whael driva M te. truck . IMS ROCHESTER DODGE Oriva Away — Sava Mora Pay ..... ROCHESTER IMS MERCURY COUPE, HURRY on this one. KEEGO Pontioc-GMC-Tempest "Some tocetlon SO Years" KEEGO HARBOR Y OWNER, 1*45 MERCURY 3 door hardtop. 17.000 ml., FE 4W7*. aft. 5 p.m., axcapt Sat, and Sun. NBw md IM Cm 106 1*3* OLDS, EXCELLENT CONDI lion, 4Sa-7tS1. Ntw and UH^Can 106‘ 1*43 CUTLASS, AUTOMATIC, 12.343 FE 2-444* JOIN THE DODGE REBELLION Prices stashed all 44's new at Hunter Dodge, 4** $. Hunter neer IS ML, Birmingham. 447-0*53. 1*43 OLDS 442 HARDTOP COUPE, automatic, powar steering, power brakes, console, bucket s e s I s. Ready to Gol Buy With Confidenca Houghten Olds S3t N. Main ROCHESTER OL 1*741 1*43 OLDSMOBILB CONVERTIBLE, y^claatl. Raaaonably pricad. FE OLDS JET FIRE 2 DOOR HARD-top l*44j^ Vinjj trim, full powar. 6000 RUNNING 1951 PLYMOUTH. 33M433. fy°* *' Save AUTHORIZED VW DEALER 1*40 VALIANT WAGON, 4-CYLIN-der, manual transmission, radio, heater. Bood tlrB. trt(l«t_hllcli,. spare parts, good running condition. 4244037. mile north of Miracle Mile 11743 $. Telegraph FE 44331 1961 PLYMOUTH ! 1 brates, radi Sttn at ;ilS5 PONTIAC, tIOO. 1*St FORD, REPOSSESSION, 1*44 FORD OAL-axlp, Adocr bardtop. Mack, no monay down, N.07 waakly pa^ manta. Call Mr. Mason at FE S4101, BOB BORST y axtraa.' 1*43 BUICK Canvartlbla s malic transmission. B whita lop. tIOIS. W4S BUICK Wildcat I d __________ . . . III75. OPDYKE Hardwara ^ FE 0-4406. INS FORD GALAXIE, 2 DOOR hard-top, floor ihl** ■“ * •Iso OPt pair of asirv ri firas. OR ______________ fH4 FORD CONVERTIBLE • new, 115*5. 335-»«7, days. IMS FORD CUSTOM Vk7 STICK, y' walls. 11350. FE 1^71. 0 OLDS, 3 DOOR HARDTOP, adlo. hastar, auto, full pow*r..$4IS 0 Cadillac, ssdan DtVIlle, auto.. Beautiful d ige, vary cieani vs auromoi ower steering, brakes, powe mlent features of a real lu« ury car. Honest It's real share aasy monthly poyntants available Savt I1000. BILL SPENCE C steering and brakes, p window. IMF John McAullfta Ford MUSTANGS-MUSTANGS Mustangs It have 10 Mustangs In our com and the pricee stoH it $1499 TAR^IW 1959 PONTIAC tvIHt statloo wagon, goi naoda a luna^ip abd soe ir SBota. OtN leal condltk I CATALINA, 3 DOOR, AUTO- Bsr' I960 PONTIAC j avt two outstanding convart-to ctiooaa from In this avtr ir modaf. iaiact from sottl $595 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 40 S, Woodward Ml 7-3714 "|| gnN takas a mlnuta to 1 1962 PLYMOUTH [ Gf • Setter deal" at rHr*iCSis*'’tevaTTuTy"w^^^^^^^ Johh McAuliff# Fofd C 0 m p I a I a Equipment Includes 430 Oakland Ava. FE 4-4101 ' Torquetllta, VO, and power slaar-'-------------------------- tng and brakes. Full Price $987 OLIVER BUICK 1965 Opel Wagon white finish, 4 miles. Only — $1250 1964 Buick LeSabrt Sedan, betas, pewar staerini brakaa, whltawalla, a real nk • $T795 1962 Buick Convertible blue llnlah, white top, powar staa< Ing, brakes. Only — $1195 1960 Buick Invicta 3 door hordtop, .rad with buck) aaats, a real nice carl Only f- $695 1964 Buick Special 4 doer svttti « bluu fintsli, ertilti walls, V4, radio, haatar, auti malic. $1395 OLIVER BUICK AUTO SALES NO MONEY OOWN-WE FINANCE 1961 Chevy Impala 3-Door Hardtop. Radio, ~$895 gt.33 par Weak 110.33 par weak 1962 Chevy 4 door with radio, haator, stick shift and Is yours for "~$695 1962 Pontiac 3-Ooor Hardtop, bcyllndtr, auto-matk, radio, haatar, powar. $995 1962 Forci $595 1959 Chevy l-Door Impala Hardtop. Radk haatar, automatic, powar. $295 1961 Pontiac ^Door Hardtop. Radio, haatar, automatic, powar ataarlng and brakaa. $695 MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM of^y^^r^l^.sLWio^^m m-MU _jaiL.auMr,..-t!ieL PHONE FE 2-9214 , 125 OAKLAND AT WIDE TRACK No Money Down-We Finance Spartan Dodge! 1*45 OLDS H 2 ______________________ automatic, powar steering end <*« PLYMOUTH I brakes, dark graan H**- «» i’ Hooghten Olds r 521 N. Main i ROCHESTER__________OL M741 staarlno, lor, I3.m miles, GM Werranty. I ms PONTIAC Grand Prb with autp-mallc, poww staarlng and br^M. buckal sails. GM Warrenly. «**5. 1*45 CHEVROLET Impala 3 door hardtop. Automatic, power steer Ing and brakas. 10,000 octusl mTles. GM Warranty. $33*5. 1N5 CHEVROLET SuPar^JPOrt door Hardtop, VI. automatic, pow-. ar slaarlng.^kel saats, GM Warranty. I1W. 1964 Ford Galaxie 500 4-Door sedan, VI angina, radio, heater Crulse-O-Matic power steering brakes, whltewells. Only - $1595 BEAHIE "Your FORD DEALER Since 1*30" On Dixie In WiHrford el the doubN stoplight OR 3-1291 1*43 Pontioc Catalina wagon, radio, healer, power, steering, standard i transmission tl3*S 1*43 Ford Country sadan, auto., radio, heator, power staerlng Slots 1*43 Buick LeSabre 2 door hardtop, auto., radio, haatar, powar stoar- Ing ' *13*5 BOLES AUTO SALES 4 East Blvd. North Cornar of East Pika (orM (Ownar's Initials) Galt McAnnally's Auto Salas 1*43. OLDS Vista Crulatr Wagon, automatic, powar ataarlng, brakas, "*'*sTe*'boTburke 1*41 OLDS, CONVERTIBLE, RED 3574, 1304 Baldwin FE M525 Across from Ponitae Stata Bank 1*42 OLbSMOBILE CUTLAS CONVERTIBLE WITH V-0 ENGINE, AUTOMATIC READ THIS!! 1962 PLYMOUTH station wagon with VI, automatic, new .tires, power steering and it's exceptional. Vacation ready and no cash needed. Only $895 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1*45 MUSTANG. TAKE OVER PAY-. ^ menla. 413.4511.___________________________ ............ malic. Power brakas, low mllaaga. 133*5. 1*45 PONTIAC Tampest 3 door Sport Couaa. 324 VI with M • ------ ' power j brakas. Factory W Autorama TRANSMISSION, ________ AND HEATER AND WHITE-WALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Aasuma weakly payments of ll.*2. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parka at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml. 4-7S00. GLENN'S 1*43 Falcon Coupe MOTOR SALES 3435 Orchard Lake Rd. 41 ■■ wait of Talagraph 1*44 Oldsmobll* 2 door coups, powar staerlng tnd brekes, bucket teats, let star I, vrhita with Mua Interior. L. C. Williams, Saltsman *53 W. Huron St. •E 4-7371 FE 4-17*7 - T-BIRD3^ 12 To Choose From ' 1964 and 1965 All Colors NO CASH NEEDED-BANK RATES Conditioning ifM Chaw II** Power equipment, 1*41 citaw 4door . s3**i automatic transmission, ‘ ' “* radio, heater, whites. AS LOW AS $129 DOWN ' and $69 per month : Catalina hardtop $1** HiS . E| HAROLD TURNER 1*43 Tempeat LaMans Pontiac BonnavIRa Conv. Pontiac Bannevilla Canv. FE 1*231 BIRMINGHAM I4S MUSTANG CONVERTIBLE, power top and jstMrlng, automatic. mileage. 4134451. ms PONTIAC Catalina 2 i lop. Ventura trim and ...... , aut^fk, 1*45 FALCOnH* HORSE, 4 SPEED, brakaa, GM Warranty. 524*5. , cobra-cam solids adel I block quads. AFBCAOS, 11100. FE 1*45 PONTIAC Catalina 4 door har^ J!'^ I'*." - 4- -- I PONTIAC Grand PHx, i GM Bu^at teals. SIW5. (Owner's Initials) , ^ Gala McAnnally's Auto Si 1*44 BUICK Wildcat mr(«op i^h MUSTANG 3- 1963 Tempest Custom 2-Door with a green flnl*h, radio, heatei automatic, whitewall*. Only — $1095 BEATTIE IMF 1962 Pontiac Tempest LeMans Coupe with a candy apple re rad bucket*, automatic, a real fi and economy In on* package, Fi Only — tw down, Flnanca Bi anca of Only^ $791 $1197 Spartan Dodge' 855 Oakland Ava. Mila N. of Cast) FE M528 John McAuliffe Ford PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CON- GLENN'S l^ei^OsBd Con 1M PONTIAC IMS, CATALINA STORTS L. C. Williams, Salesman fSS W. Huron Sf. E A-TOI FE 4-17*7 l*iS PONTIAC , lran*mi**lon, power eteerlng, *14»7 fuU peica, SS down. LUCKY AUTO I. wide Track Nwr Id Bead Cire m GLENN'S INS Batmavlll* converttbl*, powe etaarlng, brakai, tinted gla**, car •Ola aiflh bucket *eat*. law mIH age, *para never been on IN groiatd. L C. Willioms, Sotesmon m W. Huron Sf. Now Bod Used Cre H« VENTVRA 166 1*M TEMPEST, AUTOMATIC, New ^ ^ GLENN^-Tt^o"" Cataikw wigatLjBi^^r- r^JUJ—iXjJxy Hew mi Ueed Cm 166 BEEN BANKRUPT? NEED A CAR -------— .a» IS daytt Tfy big; brake*, i brSid new. Ran. L. C. Williams, Salesman *SI W. Huron SI. FE 4-7371 PE A17* Pontioc-GMC-Tempest "Same location SO Year*" _______KEEOO HARBOR 1964 PONTIAC )l*- with full power, --j tran*ml**lon, radio heater, whilewall tira*, only S4* ddwn and S13.*2 per week pay- HAROLD TURNER 1*44 PONTIAC LOMANS CONVERT-Ible, 4 *tlck, radio, power top, good condition, 11400. 3344X14. GM' (Owner'* Ir e........... . -Jf Dark _____ „.... .......,..... rior, automatic, power steering, brake*, new car warranty. SEE BOB BURKE 1304 Baldwin FE 84525 Aero** from Pontiac State Bank 1965 Pontiac Catalina Wagon HOMER HIGHT 1*4S CATALINA 4 DOOR HARO-‘ cNan. OIOSS. Opdyke Hard-_____________________ I GLENN^S WUNUbRhUL OUT 9IJT3. KEEGO Pontiac-GMC-Tempest "Same location SO Year*" KEEOO HARBOR 1966 Pontiac Catalina 4-Door *adan, with radio, haaler, au.. matk, power ilearInB, braka*, whitewalb. Now Only — $2995 BEATTIE ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD 1961 RAMBLER | _ Amtrican ConvBrtible 440 1963 RamblGr with rod ond wWti fin-| 6-PassBnger ish. 1 OWn#r MW cor station waoon* arMrt flnlth. radio trade. $395 Full Price at! bank rates. Immediate de-l livery. Many more to choose from at i,™^ BEATTIE A DEALER SInco 1*30" 666 WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM Ml 6-3900 $995 On DIxlo In Watorford attha.......... OR 3 1964 RAMBLER American 5-door hardtop. Bucket seats and straight shift, radio, heater, white-wall tires and tutone finish. A shorp 1 owner Birmingham new car trade. $1095 with bonk rotes. Credit no problem at Village Rambler 666 WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM Ml 6-3900 fita. Plan Plnandng. CaE i DON'S USED CARO SMALL AO-BIG LOT 70 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM 1*44 PLYAAOUTH 677 S. LAPEER RD. Laka Orlen MY 2-2041 l*4S CTO, CONVERTIBLE, 4-SPEED peurar etaarlng and brake*. S227S. 1441 Ruby St., Rocheeter. ^2217._________________ ricluding lie end (, POWER STEER- ----- -Tfy graup-^ g group. Autorama MOTOR SALES 2435 Orchard Laka Rd. 402-4410 ...... -* Telagraph trI-power. (iold color, 335-5414. 1965 Pontiac Bonneville Convertible i with a green finish, radio, heater,, automatic, power steering, brake*,: whitewall*. Only — $2895 BEATTIE 3n Dixie In Waterford It the double stoplight OR 3-1291 Pretty Ponies 1965 MUSTANGS 7 USED MUSTANGS TO CHOOSE FROM CONVERTIBLES HARDTOPS 2 PLUS FULL EQUIPMENT As Low As $49 Down and $49 Per Month HAROLD TURNER GO!! HAUPT PONTIAC 1*41 TEMPEST Custom 4 metic, radio, heater, vin 1*43 CORVAIR AAonza, 2 i 11*43 TEMPEST Wagon, vinyl tr PONTIAC Tempest LeMans Special BIRMINGHAM . M 4-75W CLARKSTON 1*45 PONTIAC CATALINA C 01 vertibla, doubt* power, 1000 mile*. $2450, Call 473-Mlt. TEMPEST LeMANS VS, 4 leed, bucket seats, exc. con" •en drafted. 473-1943. 1945 BONNEVILLE, 2 DOOR, LOAD-ed, S2595. New car warranty. Lloyd Bridges, 424-2100.___ IS., power $1600, OR 3- ir feature*. 673-OM GM 0. Call FE 2-9043. 1*42 PONTIAC Catalina 2-door hardtop. Red with rad Interior, automatic, power steering, brakes, 2-yeer warranty. SEE BOB BURKE 1304 Baldwin FE 84525 Acres* from Pontiac State Bank {*42 BONNEVILLE, 2 DOOR HARD-top, good condition, FE 4-304* " 5 p.m._____________________ 1*42 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE WITH AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, POWER '' crI^oi?’*/ GLENN'S 2 1*42 Catalina convertible*, 1 red and 1 whit*. L. C. Williams, Salesman 952 W. Huron St. FE 4-7371 FE. 4-171 Many t ‘ ' GLENN'S steering and brakes, real sharp. L. C Williams, Salesman 952 W. Huron St. ! RAMBLER Clearance Sale New Car Warranty matic, or stick Reasonable! clean. $1,995. 574-0119. 1964 RAMBLER Classic r er, First 8888. 1963 Rambler Classic VI LUCKY AUTO GM (Owner's Initials) Gaia McAnnally't Auto Sales m* TEMPEST LaMant. oraan v .. .. ----- a._ 1963 RAMBLER 4 Door W t RAMBLER Sedans, GrimaHi SMBMBM (DUBS BIRMINGHAM TRADES 1964 OLDS Super 88 4-door hardtop. Loaded with all the extras including factory air conditioning and tinted glass. Sharp Birmingham trade ....................... $2095 1965 OLDS 98 Luxury sedan with full power. A sharp Birmingham trade.................$2795 1963 OLDS 88 2-do^ hardtop, power steering, power brakes-i^ sharp Birmingham trade. Only ....................................$1595 1965 OLDS 442 hardtop. 4-Speed, radio, heater red line tires. New car warranty.........$2395 1964 OLDS F85 V-8 4-Door Priced to Sell ......................... $1395 1962 OLDS 98 4-door hordtop. Full power and priced to sell...........................$1295 2 YEAR WARRANTY 6^ S. Woodward Ave. Birmingham 647-5111 1942 PONTIAC CATALINA 4-DOOR I hardtop. Automatic tran*ml**lon, power *taertng and brake*, radio, heater, $1,195 at JEROME FORD Rocheeter Ford Daalar, OL 1-9711. SdOOR hardtop, 1942 BONNE- ville, powr- --------------------- OR 3-7744. 1942 BONNEVILLE SPORT COUPE. FE 44152. 1943 PONTIAC CATALINA CONVER- 1t43 BONNEVILLE. 2-DOOR HARD- Ing and brake*. OR 3-3324. 1965 FORDS NEW CAR WARRANTYS AS LOW AS $49 DOWN Payments as low as $11.95 HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. Woodward Ave. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-75C 1941 T brakes, — 2-year warrr ‘ SEE BOB BURKE 1304 Baldwin FE 8-4525 Across from Pontiac State Bank 1964 TEMPEST SPORT COUPE. V-Sl • • ------ steering. 673-8357. 1944 TEMPEST 8 WAGON, NEW ' "ewalls, power brakes, rr-"-er, 1 owner, clean. 492-5492. PONTIAC CATALINA, Transportation Specials BUY HERE-PAY HERE No Application Refused 8397 4 1941 COMET Auto , ... 1940 CQRVAIR Auto 8297 S3.( 1960 RAMBLER American .... 1940 CHEVY Slick 1959 PONTIAC Catalina 1940 RAMBLER Auto 1962 VALIANT *-- 1942 FORD '‘'• i«rP07m._. 1941 FORD GalaxI* 1940 OLDS hardtop 1940 FORD 4 Cyt... v /' >i.» 1959 CHEVY Auto 8197 12.2 NO MONE YDOWN SMALL WEEKL YPAYMENTS IMMEDIATE DELIVERY MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM WE HANDLE AND ARRANGE ALL FINANCING.: CALL R. DAN AT ^ FE 84071 Capitol Auto HASKINS CHEVY "OK" USED CARS 1963 CHEVY Convertible, Impala. Full power, red finish .................................$1550 1965 MUSTANG Hardtop, stick shift, only ... $1695 1963 CHEVY Pickup, '/2-ton. Now only.............$1095 1961 CHEVY 2-door, automatic, radio ..........$ 750 1965 CHEVY Impala Hardtop, automatic, power steering, brakes. Only..................' $5*295 1961 6UICK 4-door hardtop, outomatic, power 1964 CORVAIR Convertible, 4-speed. Only $1295 COURTESY TnnAV'C BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE. Power s IL7UAI i Hydrams SPECIAL With White top $2195 1963 PONTIAC CATALINA 2-D< 1944 BUICK, wildcat 2-door hard-tnn. has oower brakes and steer- If actual miles I309S 1942 FORD Country Si rk.r^-S; 1944 ANTIQUE SPECIAL Pontiac Coupe. Yes, folks, all original and locally owned. 1-owner 849S 1943 KARMANN GHIA Coupe. ....- -nd It 11295 brakes, Hydrametic, maroon f 1942 MERCURY 4-Door Sedan. Air conditioning, power steering and brakes, automatic, 29,000 actual PaIa 2- 1940 PONTIAC VENTURA Hardtop. Power steering end brakes, Hydrametic, l-owiwr, almost like 1943 Chevrolet Super Sports Convertible. 9,000 guaranteed miles, t'MtIno, V-l 1943 BUICK LeSABRE Hardtop. Power steering ana ^^na- 1943 PONTIAC, Stirchlat 4-door hardtop, power brakes end power steering, automatic; a beautiful I owner ................ SI 795 1944 VALIANT, station wagon, big 4 Cylinder, 5,000 actual miles, new car factory warranty, really th* tope .................. $2295 1944 GRAND PRIX. Power steering and brakes, HydramatIc, radio, neater, whitewalls. Beautiful 1944 PONTIAC CATALINA ^Door Hardtop, l-owner, new car trade-in. Aqua llnish with matching 1942 CHEVROLET IMPALA Hardtop. Automatic transmission, v-8 engine. Beautiful whit* finish with rad Interior. WOW 81095 1945 BUICK SPECIAL Convertible. Automatic, power steering, 1,300 actual miles. New car warranty. ........................... 12495 1944 DODGE, 4-door sedan, auto- 13 OLDS "18" Convertibte. Pow-^tteerlnji and brakn,^ 1945 CHEVROLET IMPALA Convertible. "327" V4 engine, automatic, power steering, radio, healer, wire wheels, whTtewills $2495 1965 MUSTANG 2-1-2. Equipped with "289" engine and automatic transmission. New car warranty. HURRY FOR THIS ONE 12193 Ittt PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 4-Door Hardtop. Factory air con- fo'lks,'Ts *Iolk2l ” 12295 HydramatIc 2,700 guaranteed a fuel miles .............. 524,., 1959 FORD 2-Door Sedan. Folk*, 1945 PONTIAC CATALINA 2-Door Hardtop. Power (tearing and brake*, HydramatIc, naw car war- MOVE OUT IN MAY DURING NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY! WE CHALLENGE YOU TO FIND ANY BETTERl OUR CARS ARE ALL "SAFETY CHECKED" Our seledion, sarvica and complata customar satisfaction cannot ba baat. Our pricas ara right for tha budgat mindad shoppar, looking for a “Quality" usad car. BESIDES . . . It's also fun to driva a car ypu can dapand on, so put a smila into your summar driving bahind a Chavy "OK." 1964 Chevys Biscayna models, SEVERAL TO CHOOSE FROM. Wide variety of colors and equipment; These beouties ard- priced from; $1195 5 NEW TIRES FREE With Every 1963 to 1965 Used Car sold during this big sale. 1963 Chevy DUMP TRUCK This one is titled in General Motors Name. Lass than 10,000 miles, fully reconditioned, ready for highway houling. $ave-$ave 1962 Fored Country Sedan station wagon with V-8 engine, automatic transmission, radio and heater, power brakes and steering, nice burgunHy finish. WAS $1195.. NOW $1095 1963 Renault Douphine with a beautiful beige finish and lovely maroon interior. This one is really o fine gas saving automobile. WAS $595 NOW $495 DEMONSTRATORS 1966 Caprice Windows, comtartron air conditioning, USED IN COMPANY SERVICE $AVE-1$$$-$AVE 1966 Chevelle I sport coup# with V-t angina, powarglld stMrlng, radio, htater, whitewall liras, M USED IN COMPANY SERVICE $AVE-«-^AVE 1966 Monza d whitewall tires* n terglkle transmitsion* radio and h USED IN COMPANY SERVICE $AVE—$$$-$AVE 1963 Chevy Biscayne station wagon with economical 6 cylinder engine, standard shift transmission, radio and heater, tropical turquoise finish. WAS $1195 .NOW $995 1965 Chevy Bel-Air 4-door with radio ond heater, automatic transmission, whitewoll tires and a nice tropical turquoise finish. WAS $1495 NOW $1295 1963 Chevy II Station Wagon with 6 cylinder engine, ppwer-“ghde TrdhsTmission, heater, red finish with nice matching interior. $995 1965 Corvair "500' Series Spoil Coupe speed... transmis.^. sion, radio and heater, and an exceptional cameo ivory finish. Save here. WAS $1695 NOW $1495 1963 ChevY Bel-Air 4-door sedan with thrifty 6 cylinder engine, Powerglide transmission, radio and heater, and a nice jet black finish. WAS $1295 NOW $1195 1964 Chevy Impala Sport Coupe with V-8 engine, stick shift transmission, radio and heater. TWO TO CHOOSE FROM and both in excellent condition. WERE $1795 NOW $1595 1965 Chevys Impala Sport Coupes, V-8 engine, standard shift trahimlssTdn, rqW, Heater, whitewalls, nice arctic white finish. TWO TO CHOOSE FROM. WERE $2395 NOW $2195 1964 Chevy II Nova with 6 cylinder engine, standard shift transmission, heater, whitewall tires, midnight mist finish. WAS $1295 NOW $1195 1965 Chevelle 4-door sedan, V-8 engine, radio and heater. This one has a beautiful Indio ivory finish and is nice. WAS $1895 NOW $1695 1962 Ghevy Biscayne 4-door, 6 cylinder engine, standard shift transmission, beautiful turquoise finish. WAS $995 . NOW $895 @ wmm On US-10 at M15 Qarkston MA 5-260.4 Ask for: John Donley-Win Hbpp-Lysle Basinger-Duane Brown-Leroy Riethmeier Gary Cecera-Dan Polasek-Dewey Petiprin-Joe Galardi-Tommy Thompson PONTIAC-BUICK 6'51-9911 855 S. Rochester Rd., '/s Mile South of Downtown Rochester --------------------^------------------- Oakland County's Largest Volume Chevrolet Dealer 631 Oakland at Cass Woodward at 10 Mile FE 4-4547 - Pontiac Royal Oak I THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 19, 1966 D—li / —Television Programs— programs fumlihtd by stations listsd in this column or* iub|o«l to chango without notlet Chonn*lti 2-WJSK-TV, 4-WWJ-TV, 7-WXYI-TV. S-CKIW.TV, SO-WKSD-TV, 50-WT^ TONIGHT (:M (2) (4) News, Westhei;, Sports (T) Movie: “ItCame From Outer ^ace” (1963) Richard Carlson, Barbara Rush (9) Dennis the Menace (SO) Superman (56) Friendly Giant 9:15 (56) Science Is Fun 1:30 (2) (4) Network News (9) Marshal Dillon (50) UtUe Rascals (56) Great Society 7:90 (2) Zorro (4) (Color) Michigan Out*' doors (9) Twilight Zone (56) U.S.A. 7:30 (2) Munsters (4) (Color) Daniel Boone (7) (Color) Batman (50) Merv Griffin (56) Managers in Action 1:00 (2) (Color) GUllgan’s Island (7) (Color) Gidget t9) (l^ial) Something -------^Spedah-------— --------- (56) Ihtertel 1:30 (2) (Col^) My Three Sons (4) (Color special) Political Humor (7) (Ck>ior) Double Life 9:00 (2) (Color) Movie: “Part rish” (1960) Claudette Colbert, Connie Stevens, Karl Malden, Dean dagger (7) Bewitched (9) (Special) Insurrection (50) Alfred Hitchcock (56) Festival of the Arts 9:30 (4) (Color) MkUFinn’a (7) Peyton Place 19:00 (4) (Cobr) Dean Martin (7) (Cblor) The Baron (9) Wrestling (50) Roller Skating 11:00 (4) (7) (9) News, Weather, Sports (50) Horse Races 11:15 (21 News, Weather, Sports 11:30 (4) (Color) Johnny Carson (7) Movie: “No Time to Be Young” (1957) Robert Vaughn, Roger Smith (9) Nightcap 11:45 (2) (Color) Movie: “Drum Beat" (1954) Alan Lado, Marisa Pavan TV Features U.S. Political Humor SOMETHING SPECIAL, 8:00 p.m. (9) Heading host Abbe Lane’s guest list are Jose Greco and his dancers. POLITICAL HUMOR, 8:38 p.m. (4) American political humor of die 20th cental is reviewed. INSURRECTION, 9:00 pjn. (9) Story of the 1916 Irish Easter Rebellion in Dublin. MICKIE FINN’S, 9:30 p.m. (4) Guests are Roberta Sherwood and her son, Don Lanning. wuiw.'ftmAi aw 11 in >•—a..* -- -n«aa iiMmmI (50) Jockey Standings 11:N (50) Sports Desk 12:30 (9) Window on the World 1:90 (4) Beat the Chanq^ 1:15 (7) News 1:30 (2) (4) News, Weather (7) After Hours ^1: W171 Draffiiet_____ FRIDAY MORNING 9:15 (2) On the Farm Scene 9:29 (2) News 9:25 (2) Summer Semester 9:39 (4) Classroom (7) Funews 9:U. (2) Editorial, News 7:90. (4) ’Today (7) ’Three Stooges 7:96.(2) News 7:39 (2) Happyland 1:98 (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Big TTieater 9:30 (7) Movie: “The Young Don’t Cry" (1957) Sal Mineo, James Whitmore 8:49 (56) Great Books 9:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry -Go-I Round 9:00 (2) Andy Griffith (9) Romper 2:30 (2) House Party (4) Doctors (7) A Time for Us 2:50.(56) Spanish Usson 2:55 (7) News 3:00 (2) To Tell the Truth (4) Another World ______/ft\ ITumniigil _ jfj vicncrfli iiospiioi (50) Captain Detroit 3:25 (2) (9) News 3:30 (2) Edge of Night fl) You Don’t Say (7) Nurses (9) Swingin’ Time 4:00, (2) Secret Storm " (4) Bozo the Clown (7) Never Too Young (50) ToK>er 4:25 (7) Arlene Dahl 4:30. (2) Mike Douglas (7) Where the Action Is (9) Fun House (50) Love That Bob 4:55 (4) Eliot’s Ahnanac 5:00 (4) George Pierrot (7) News, Sports (50) Discovering America 5:30 (56) What’s New 5:45 (7) Network News 5:55 (4) Here’s Carol Duvall Jobles Benefit Bill Gets OK Measure in House Short of LBJ Request WASHINGTON (AP) - The House Ways and Means Cchq-mittee has approved a bill to broaden the coverage d the enqtloyment Insurance system but the measure falls short of presidential recommendations. The bill qrproved by the committee Wedn^y wc^ octend coverage effective Jan. 1, 1969, to 3.5 million additional workers. It also would require par- periods of high unemployment. for a thorough overhaul of the 30-year-old system. He had asked coverage be extended to 4.65 million workers not now included in the 49.7 million presently covered. MINIMUM STANDARDS A presidential recommendation that minimum standards be reqnlreduf the states — such as benefits equal to half the employes’ regular wages or the average for the state — was omitted from the committee bill. It was estimated the conunit-tee bill would result in a 9272,-million increase in the payroll tax effective July 1. Und^ the President’s bill the increase would have been about double that figure. ★ ★ ★ Among the additional workers who would be covered were blue PAL OpM Mon. ond/ii Evba *NI 9.-00 P.M. CONDON'S RADIO & TV 730 West Huron - FE 4-1736 AAY JOB: Working Solutions To Your Living Problems! Let’s Talk REMODELING Eliminoto In-Batwoon Costs and Confusion..,. I Pareonolly Will Coll I On You! ' tnS Layaiit ItrvioB jr'Ftraonal Suptniaiofl Of All OaiaUt k^Loeal Cantraatw FHA urn BMIK TMM8 UP TO 20 YEWS AN OPPORTUNITY TO BID FOR YOUR WORK WILL PLEASE US BOTH mmExir CONSTRUCTION COI^PANY 739 North Perry PONTIAC FE 3-7833 T D—18 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MAY 19, 1966 Ship Crash Suit LawyersConfer Claims for Damages LBJ Loan Shift Plan Heads to Conference Committee After House OK WASfflNGTW (AP) - President Johnson appear^ assured today of congressional authority for a venture into the private capital market designed to hold the 1967 budget deficit to his Exceed $2 Millionip redicted $18 billion rather | than a possible $6 billion. While the Senate and House still must negotiate some details, the House removed the CLEVELAND. Ohio (API -Attorneys representing claimants to multimillion-dollar damages in the collision of the freighter Cedarville with a Norwegian ship last May met today in U.S. District Court. Claims against the owners of tiw two 8^ exceed several million dollars, a court spokesman said. ★ w * The Cedarville collided with the Topdalsfjcwd on May 7,1965, in the fog-bound Straits of Mackinac, wiU) the loss of 10 lives. Fifteen attorneys representing SO claimants met with U.S. Dis-rict Judge James Connell. The txnirtis attempting to ascertain the total of all claims and present the figures to the owners of the vessels. DETROIT ATTORNEY Victor Hanson of Detroit representing five suits involving deaths and 10 personal injury suits.___________________________ A s(^nd group of suits, involving three death and seven personal injury cases, is reiwe-sented by Abraham Freedman of Philadelphia. w ★ * Lee Hinslea of Cleveland representing U.S. Steel Co. as the owner ^ the Cedarville and TlKMnas Murphy is representing the owners of ^ Topalsfjord. Following the disaster, the capt^ of the Cedarville, Martin Joppich of Rogers City, Mich, pleaded guilty to negligence before a U.S. Coast Guard hearing and his license was suspended for one year. Reader Clinic Chief Leaves for NY Post Dr. Lawrence Gold, director of the Oakland Schools Reading Oinic, has been appmnted Project coordinator for a two-year research project to be conducted through the City University of New York. Succeeding Dr. Gold as director of the rending clinic will be Dr. Daniel A- Briggs, professor of educaUon of Glasboro State College, Glasboro, N.J. The project is funded by the U. S. Office of Edncation to utilise the findinp of 27 research projects conducted throughout the United States last year and to determine areas in which further research is needed. One of the projects was the study in 36 Oakland County first grade classrooms of the effectiveness of three different approaches to teaching young children how to read. ★ ★ * , Dr. Gold has been a menber of the Oakland Schools staff for one year. He was formerly on the facilty of Hunter College in New York. . last big doubt Wednesday by voting 206-190 for Johnson’s bill to permit the administration to shift federal loans to private investors, using the resulting cash to finance some government operations. The Senate has passed the bill in slightly different form. The close House vote climaxed a long controversy that I found liberal Democrats joining Republicans in opposition to the bill and many fiscally conservative Southerners supporting it The Republican opposition was solid. The Senate was expected to move quickly for a conference to reconcile the differences on the measure. The adm itration is known to be planning to use the authority as soon as possible to provi^ funds for some agencies now short of cash. LOAN POOLING The bill provides for the poot ing of loans made by various government agencies and still held by the government. The Federal National Mortgage Association then would market participations in these pools, principally to large investors— such as pension fi^s and insurance companies. The proceeds would go to the agencies whose loans were in the pool. They could then make new loans without receiving appropriations that would showup as budget spending. Republicans haifunered at the contention that this was concealment and “budget ginunick-ry,“ and that “fat cat’’ brokerage houses and big investors would profit. Backers of the bill, includipg its sponsor. Rep. Wright Patman, D-Tex., conceded the interest cost would be swnewhat greater than on straight Treasury borrowing. But Patman insisted the bill in the long run would help the ordinary borrower because it would be drawing on investment reserves for which he does not compete. He oppos^, and the House defeated, an amendment that would have placed a 4% per cent ceiling on interest on the participations. Club at Pierce The Pierce Junior High School dramatics club will stage its second performance of the play, “Junior Miss," at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow. ’The initial performance of the play was scheduled to be held at 3:45 p.m. today at the school. Leading the cast of 19 per-formers is ninth grader Martha Antes, who is playing ^ the part of Junior Miss. Director of the play is Mary Long, an instructor at Pierce. Tickets at 50 cents each can be . purchased at the door. * * * in conjunction with the play, the school is conducting a Jiinio;-Miss contest. A girl from each of the three grades will be selected tomorrow night. Court Hopefuls to Meet Public at City Dem Club Candidates for the circuit and probate courts have been invited to meet thf public at a meetingHunday of the Pontiac Democratic Ciub. The 2 p.m. open house will be held at the Fisher Body Local MS unian hell at 121 Baldwin. Plans for the chib’s July 24 at Hawthmne Pait will picnic be disc 3-Day Sears 2-Speed, 3 All-Fabric Cycles, With Suds-Saver Automatic Washers Check Sean Low Price Packed with Cleaning power ^169 NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan Cycles for NonnaL Delicate, Wash ’n Wear fabrics. Washday troubles are over with thia antomatic washer. Jnst set the dial and forget. 6-vane agitator for thorough cleaning power. Cold, Warm or Hot temperatures. Porcelain-nnish top, lid and wash basket. Built-in full time lint filter. See this washer today and save! Matching 2-cycle Electric Dryers 2-eycIo antomatic dryers have 2 heau for drying; "air - only" for fluffing pillowa or sweaters. Shop at Sears and save! Gu Model Dryer. ,.$139 99 Applianea D»pU, Main Basement Circulating FANS Wringer Washers Kenmore 2-Speed Visi-matic *118 Automatic Pump and Timer Prevent twisting, tangliiig before it starts. Cushioned rolls adjust to fabric thickness. Drain pump. Open top for easy loading. Similar. 20-In. Window Fans SavefS on HELP BEIT HEAT ELEmiC WASHERS $54.95 PorUbl. ELECTRIi; DRYERS K«.I32.,S 27** ----St* « ^$peed ft CFAL 1/IS-I Regular -$54.95 49®* Save $10 44«* Set it, forset iti Antomitic, Cleans 3 lbs. clothing, even workclothes. Agitator action sir 3800 CFAjL 1/I^HP motor. with antomatic timer, drain piimp. 28>in. hi^ Needs no ipecisl wiringl Dries 3 lbs. clothes, shots off at time yon set RemoTsble drum. 28> in. high. For 110-120 Volk Our Best 3-Speed„ Portable Fan Sears Prico 399s Automitic, electrically r^ versible 2lhin. fisns also in s. Uh-HP 5000 CFM Powerful 2-Speed 14-in. Portables Rea. $19.95 17” Ventnri ring directs the air flow for better eircnlation. 1500 CFM. A big value at this low, loV sale price. Electrical Dept,, Main Bataq^ent Automatic 20-inch RoUabont Fans 56” Changea air in average 5 rooms in Just 2 minntes! 3 electrically reversible speeds. Keep yonr rooms eooL Kenmore ‘‘600” Antomatic Dishwasher Sale Reioilar $199.95 Save $34.95 •165 Choice of White or Coppertone Use light wash cycle for amall loads; rnn complete cycle when dishwasher is fiilL 2-lerel washing gets dishes, silverware, even pots and pans sparkling clean. Insulation outer surfaces cooL 'I lavo cleaner 'IdiiEesTinS'lSiorenim^ See it at Seara todayl Cemp, Kitchen Plannlnf Dept,, Perry St, Btmt. Check Sean Low Price White porcelain-finlah Hurry...This Event Ends SATURDAY Built-in Rotisserie—fio Extra Chargo Kenmore Gas Ranges with Convenient Griddle 30 inches wide White or copper <^159 NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Flan Built-in aluminum griddle with handy cover. Electric clock haa bnas timer; appliance outlet and oven and cooktop lights. See-dirou^ Visi-Bako oven door removes for easy oven cleaning, Dbl. Oven Classic Gas Range................. .269.88 Check' this Quality Kenmore 2-Burner Hot Plate 88 Big-Model Action! Compact Electric Refrigerators Keeps party foods, snacks bandy in rcc- Regnlar $ 79,95 reation roona. L58 cn. fk /^088 size with door storage. 2 iee-enbe trays. Matching Freezer 79.88 19 Electric range type burners, one side 550 watts, the other with simmer to 1100 watts beak Hood folds over bnmeri when not in nse. Similar Electrical Dept., Main Btmt, OPEN TONTTE TIL 9! 14.2 Cu. Ft. Frostless Coldspot Refrigerators Quick-moimt 8,000 BTU Sears Air Conditioners *199 Check Sears low price 2-speed antomatic cooling *149 BY'BOlWM BB 8BiiT-Eagyy$ymeBrPft«t"“ 3 enbio-foot freeger section maintain! aoro-degree storage of frosen foods. Fnll-width alide-ont eriaper. Butter atorago and egg rack shelf on the door. Magnetie.door gagketa for a inre airtight seaL Compact, easy to install with built-in vinyl-side panels. Weighs jnst 95 lbs. Operates on ll5 volts. Fonivway air direction and separate fan-only controls. Zinc-clad cabinet and base insist mst. i^larlion a'liarariU'iHi or voiii' iiion(‘\ bar I )o\s iiltiw II INtiiliac A The Weather , U.t. WMtiMr ■urN« P PowfUe Toaight VOL. 124 NO. 87 ‘ IV..■ r>... .- - ,, f»ONTIA€ ■ MIC^G®, .roUHSpAY. MAT H). ^ * ^ "y' ‘ ' ' ^ .' ~ T’^’ ■ '. j '. ' fy''' V * ' ‘ lUe paoel of el|bt neir awl four -women deliberated eij{bt Second-degree murder is pun-, ishable by life imprisonment. Manslaughter carries : Cptirt^ 06j^“Wpwlcl ^ 25-35^.Mm^: ; 'u.L t.' -. ■ V ■ _, A< CDinpr dpdse .'bittvtha t' ,rder. The state asked the death ; penalty for all, charging they ■ • subjected Miss Likens, 16, to • , nearly twa weeks of torture be-; fore her death last Oct. 26. 150 WOUNDS •Jhp fafli calls'fir the one mao- Testimony indicated the .girl’s ■ body bore 150 wounds and that • ; she had been burned, bealeh,^ scalded, landed and starved. Sylvia was boarded in the Baniszewski home while her . parents managed a food coa- . cession at carnivals. Mrs. Baniszewski, di^essed'in a black-dress, burst into tears when Judge Rabb read the ver-, diet-at the end of the 23-day trial. When her son’s conviction , was announced, she cried, “Please, i want to.see my son.” . The Senate Mas yet |o^ act on the woritOd out by a.Houae^Seialle eoBfereiice 'pohnnittee. ' "I^ Backeni ol one maiKkie vote ^ ^ouM/apportiodment'had,hoped for' r^istricthig^tllis But House’ Republicans b^^. iip-modiate effect *flar apportien-.ment measun^s.v 7 The House' adopted the epn-’ference oHnniili^ version 72-24 . with no debate. ■ , SOUGHT DELAY House Minprity Leader Re^. Robert W a Id j- oni > R - Gro^ ' They embraced, both in tears, before Mrs. Baniszewski and Paula were whisked to their cells. Pointe, tried, however, to have the vote delayed until after the House decide d» a county home rule proposal. ; In Today's : Press Open House • ^ 7 Local |653 planning event ^ *• at nw home^^^—PAGE t ' c-10.- , 1; Peace-Talks , I ' ’ ■ ;? Quiet diplomacy results I r 7 in Malaysia - Indonesia | , . ^ meeting — PAGE B?12. 'i Dominican Vote ^ r Confining armed forces | -, placates Bosch's party ^ ^ PAGE A,». J' Arep News ...\...'..'.B-14 7 Astrology .'.D-^7 ■ ’* fridge .......... D-7 7 • Crossword .Puzzle . .D-17 i Comics .... ... D-7 ; Editorials . ... , . A-C ’ Food Section . .C-2=fc4 ^ Markets ......... D-8 I Obituaries ...... C-6 I Sports D-1-D4 I TTieaters ........ C-5 . i TV, Radio ]^ogram8j)fl7 ■J WflsoB,Eafl,.;.'.^“D-p . * Women’s Pages B-1—bU He said he feared some legislators would consider the apportionment measure a sul^ stituie for county home mie. Some Republicans have contended the appA)^aferfbrd Schools year sentence. Criminal Court ' reite<’the ni^ter ti menibers .Judge Saul I. Rabb set sen- .'on t|m;Chikh^ tencing for Tuesday. Supervisors frjpn''l» to between * * * :72S;a«ki.7l36. . , All five defendants were - .SU?lie»Housa,*;Of‘RiOT chorged wih first-degree mur-• ‘yesterday,; ■/ • Osteopaths,, they said, aerve one-third of the state’s ^population and make a m\|que contr|b-uiSimtioheaithWe, WITNESS talk ’ •' 1 ' A dozen; witoeMss • appkin!odi;..>; before the jcoinmitti6e hour hearj|hg,on a Senate-passed . jubptaaLto estate a Sate Osteo-‘PelBte-Cii^e Authority. Tlte’iill, aheady impeoved by the Hoose Senate Affairs sjute to help pay operating . eostk of the proposed osteo-patklc cetiege at JPontiac, said Rep. Rtear Eriandsen, D-Es-cl n d ha,. jMipys and means Buddhisl lehders in Saigon ' and fhe‘ ntelH^ provinces sort pleas for intery«^U(^tu end flie , . civil steife.to worlditeadera, but. signifkantiy-the^monks-avoidtel ,any asapejntikm with the Vkt .6»g-oiiii*toes;.- ;-7,, ■, ..J . programs and exhibits Township history, places of 'ii|^':)i:i;'^ terest and unique, products in the-spotlight. ■ ' - SdnMed this week gre breakfmts and luncheons f^- >oik .vote distriotiitt to start With • the 1948 Bleotiop. However, tlte bill would create an authority to goverii the new m^al school. An appropria-titm proyiskn'^was'defeted when -the measure, jlhssecf tffe-Senate. Dharts of the*"medical coH^es at the Uiiivendty ofi bridugan, W a ju*a JState Ui^sity a h d^^r Michigan Slate university jar-, gii^ medk^l,>ei|uchtiOn must be c^tred at! universities, wMck already are- equipp^ to teach biological and social sciences. .^stliliPS "* Tim, BiAtdhists alto cancried allrallies today to avoid the jmpreauon -that ihey znl^ be to honor^.or'Ntotlv Vietnamese Pierident Ifo'iqd-tlfflito’n Wfli; • birthday today* ,'. !^‘fiitoUvife'iof‘MiA^ (»«: MAJOR 4icti(»r 1fuL5?”r.*‘T 7 , sclLr.. ffvm ®.“*y “»i«' ground schools gym- reJ»orted and mmi- I '* ’ ' soon rhlns’ held U.S. Alr^Jbrce . laniBs a^-Vafri N% ptone^^ ^ ' Ja'^gSWaf V7t.r-The president of Ifie'United StBfel-' . -—.. of Ameripa says his union should join forhes, with the ,'Hhited Auto; takers toi hait ‘‘unilateral action,’” by’industiy in clostogtobs^^ pjants aM tim)wtog veteran ww#rs;outtoftoeir- ., , , .... '• , -f, i . ■ Thte(sd‘i;b;jpi'band, OFohestrn -.1. W.'lAbel told the UAW’s 2(kh c(pstittotoimHamvenfion-yes-aiW'-c^Hisjpj^ormed and 18 terday the two giant unions should “join-forces and'work togfetoer' ' ' ... to tee what we can do jointly, rather than wwking separately ‘ > 'pf^Siiikllfititess. on problems we can solve together.” . » , ‘‘The,mere decision of'a company to go out of ImstoessHi^• Jt seented''likely .inegottotions. toljgW:^ be* > ■for skilled-tradesmen*.hnVthe« auto-vihdttStiV-'7to ofciiiP ^' higher wages before new contract talks in 1967. The weatherman p r c'd i;c t-s partly cloudy skies' through -tomorrow with little titoiMra- ■' tore change and" a of s6nie brief showers this'eywungl' t Lows will dip,|o 40-to a tonight. w^l .aim for .;66 to 74 tomorrow- ^ is tbe forecMt tor Satnrday. (l^htei^my. Oiqiii^s-tane on exhibit in the schoql’7.hRby throughout the week:,7^ schopl ohorot pre8ented:la4|mgrtim ,at 1:1$ -f p. m. yestewlay. Today, foorto graders competed in a>,^k and^ii^ dc-raphstrationatl p. mi^tollowing aiuncheoh^octparente.1 ' , AVBurt-Sbli(ral, the 17$ inem-' hers of’ the' diprus are .j^tici-’ j^itnig^ln a(M if h i g a n We4k “Salute to70iiri Viet'Nam’s second largest city, created the danger •of a-war ndthin a war. ^HOUR OUTBURSTS The .shooting came in two-hour oUtteksts during the morning and in the afternoon as Ky’s forces closed in on three Bud-{ihistlpagbdas where an estimated 1,000 troops and Buddhists had collected in a ttoee-block-■ square pocket of resistance. Ky’s; airborne' commander. Brig. Gen. Dn Qooc Dong, de-.clnred .liis move townrd tbe ' pagOdns was only totended to open the roads and was not a drive I on tbe Bnddhist compound. He saM the rebels opened fhe fifsf. U,Si Marines; stationed on the outskirts of Da Nang appeared to be<,i]taktog an . effort to stay clean, pf jahy involvement with .' ritfldr.skter i/ ' '"'O. ' -4 . Marines took! control ky*stortM!yrof-.a:distolted, bridge Oy«r;llie ‘Da Nto^ RiVer! ~T~~ ;RRDWID||^,. R.I. (AP) ' 'nteotiore • iPitancis Green, 98, 7 :Vflfo'Tetirfeftrf«ra the U.S. Seh-,j'jkte, iiit-198j)'in his 93rd yehr, ..^slitei-'i'J^y; at' his home. '•( iicjwas -the oldest man ever tojrtet^e, in the Senate. U10MES fo.ww-^ A low of 52 peiM iPootiac residents at 6 a^.-.toiny.' The mercury record|fe^4it 1 p,m. was 75, INSPECT TRUCKLt. Frank Randolph 4; v’i ^ (killing) and Xlhi6f;Wi]liam Stokes,of tbetWater-4 , their vehkles inw6cted.fr(pii’9va.to-Aof5;5i(> ford Towmhip-'RbUce' Department inspect ,tone of-' urdSy at the PoAtiae Mall, vfetei srt^-cneck Oy^township f&o. trucks as Fhfe Chief-Lewis Goff lanes will also Be-'dtwtattog.inilPpiNfeie^i^^ (<5i|ttor) l^s on. Townstip residents can have . anj SatulVay. I iMs ‘■•Cireeii’s,-doctor said his heart •failed. •Green - was • stricken in late ' 1962' with^a series of cerebral f*. “No more potatoes. Mom. Too muchstorch will make me stiff.” ^ , ' ■ 7 ' : . 7 ^ * THK PONTIAC PRESS, TIIURSDAV. MAY 19, 1966 fiapea uirl Avon Hospital Bows 2 Fail to File Reported OK on Sewage Problem Expense Costs Who Fired Fatal Shot Still Not Cleared Up ploye said yesterday. SHADE GAP, Pa. (UPI) -For Veggy Ann Bradnick. a pert brunette of 17, the ordeal is over. Her doctor said today she is In exQellent condition despite seven days of captivity in chains at the hands of a crazed gunman. William Hollenbaugh lay dead. And this mountain hamlet which had known him as a timid town chrtacter — “Bicycle Pete" he was called —rested assured that the bullet which killed him also ended the greatest terror it had | ^ .rr. known since the Indians pil- | vj^r/fi/n UUG laged the westward moving ; ! at Area Event An Avon Township hospital.I “We took whose faulty septic system resulted in a flow of sewage to nearby areas, has agreed to correct the problem, an Oakland County Health Department em- |les of the floWj laboratory! sewage," Statement Deadline in City Vote Passes Cited as the source of the sewage flow was the Haven Hospital and Psychiatric Clinic, 1850 University. The problem was reported about a week ago, according ^^e health department. and establisi testing that it Goldman said. * A * Two candidates—one of whom He added that the hospital was elected-had not filed cam- Cavarjagh, owner, Graham Shinnick, haspaign expense statements for agreed to take immediate steps [the April 18 city election by to install a new septic system, ‘yesterday’s deadline, a^rding to citv and county officials. ‘SERIOUS PROBLEM- ‘“ceorge Grba. unsuccessful “It’s a serious problem,” Gold-joistrict 4 City Commission man said. But many other areasjhopeful, and Municipal Court of the county are faced withijodge Maurice E. Finnegan, resimilar problems.” ' elected to a six-year term, are Goldman reiterated what i the two who have not filed the other health department per- | required expense statements, sonnet and County Department ! According to the City Char- j of Pe.ggy-^ the killing of an FBI agent and the wounding of a deputy sheriff during his flight were the last violent episodes in the murky life of Hollenbaugh, who for the Related Story, Page B-7 last two years, had stalked the Tuscarora hills as a sniper, wounding two persons and potshooting at scores of pedestrians and motorists. Holienbaugh, 44, was hunh^ down by a posse of altnost —“ and shot dead yesterday on a mountain farm. Peggy Anri, disheveled and bruised, was freed. NOT RAPED It remained unknown today who killed Hollenbaugh and why he seized Peggy Ann and dragged her through the rugged, lushly forested tnountains for a week. She was not raped. Larry Rubeck, 15, a farm youth, said he killed Hollenbaugh. He shot a pumpkin ball from a shotgun through a window at his home at the approaching man, wlm also was under fire from stale police converging on the Rubeck farm. Political opponents J e r o m e Cavanaugh, mayor of Detroit, and newly appointed United States Sen. Robert Griffin are among candidates slated to attend an open-house reception Saturday sponsored by the non-partisan Oakland Citizens League. ter. those elected In tte general election must file expense statements within 31 days of the election. Mrs. Julia Maddock, chief Home owners in the Lochmooi-j deputy clerk in the county Estates Subdivision near thejclerk’s office, said all candi-pTal have threatened legardates wheTher- or not elected of Public Works officials have | bee saying — that sanitary sewers are the only solution i to the sewage disposal prob- ‘ lem. ■ i action ahainst the hospital be- must file expense statements, cause of the sewage flow. * . * * * * ★ She said those who have not It allegedly is draining i n t o (‘‘'ed wou'd be notified^to do so. Lochmoor Lake. “ ““ ‘ The reception, being held at the Community House in Birmingham from 2 to 5 p.m., represents an effort on the part of the league,to better acquaint the public with political issues and candidates. No speeches are included in the p r 0 gr a m as candidates will discuss their viewpoints with interested citizens in answer to specific questions. Gov. Romney and Senatorial candidate G. Mermen Williams have also been invited but have not accepted as yet. (Continued From Page One) cal doctors and osteopaths recently amalgamated. Dr. Warren Bostick, dean of the University of California Medical School at Los Angeles, told the committee, “Im not certain merger is inevitable nationwide, so why not take the right step at this moment. ’ Others who will attend are Senators Sander Levin, D-Berk-ley, and Robert Huber, R-Troy; Congressman Billie S. Farnum, D-19th District; State Rep. William Hampton; State Sen. Farrell E. Roberts and Royal Oak attorney Maurice Merritt, candidates for circuit judge; and The FBI and slate troopers!for the 19th District said their investiga^n also‘^°"8ressional post, showed young Rubeck^s pumpkin ball — a steel projectile | used for deer hunting — killed Hollenbaugh. I Foes Attack College Plan Okinawa Air Crash / Kills 10 Americans . NAMA, Okinawa -A U.S. Air Force KC 135 jet tanker tied while taking off from Kadena Air Base at noon today, and unofficial sources reported 10 Americans and one Okinawan were kiUed. The Okinawan was driving a car which was hit by the exploding plane. If there is no reply, the clerk’s office will notify the county prosecutor, she added. 14 STATEMENTS ‘ Of the 14 candidates that have [filed statements or had a com-[mitte file in their behalf, only one a candidate—Cecil B. Mc-Callum—reported no election expenses. I McCallum, reelected to a similar six-year term. Is Finnegan's colleague on the municipal court bench. The largest expenditure, $4, 690, was reported by the Citizens Committee for a Better Pontiac, which supported the reelected incumbents. Two candidates spent $900 or more in bids for election to the seven-member City Connimis-sion. $900 IN EXPENSES District 3 hopeful William J. Winters of 293 Ottawa reported expenses of $900. while Mrs. Charles W. Neldrett of 62 Mari-va, a District 6 candidate, reported expenses totaling $946. Next in line on total expend!- RATED TOPS The main office of the Birmingham-Bloomfield Bank on Maple near Adams in Birmingham was named the winner yesterday in the professional building division of the Beautify Birmingham competition for its over-all attractiveness. De^j^ned by Detroit architect Louis Redstone, the bank was opened last September. The Ram sculpture at the entrance of the granite-faced structure is the work of the noted Birmingham sculptor, Marshall Fredericks. Birmingham Area News Buy Now For Those Wedding and Graduation Pictures! M-Weeic School Events Today BIRMINGHAM - Education But the Fulton County coron-' er. Dr. Russell C. McLucas, said an autopsy revealed Hol-lenbaugh died from a single_rifle bullet which pierced the tip of his left shoulder and emerged from his neck above the collar bone. The trajectory of the shot showed it could not have been fired by Rubeck, Dr. Metucas said, because the boy was firing from a window above Hollenbaugh. McLucas said only a ballistics test could determine who fired the fatal shot. This was impossible because the bullet passed through the sniper’s body and was not found. 7 Millionth Car Rolls Off Line, Ahead of 1965 Dr. C. John Tupper, formerly associate dean at the University of Michigan and now with the University of California, said a new osteopathic school will perpetuate the needless, even senseless duplication of facilities that now exist and are growing." MEDICAL LEADER Dr. C. Allen Payne of Grand Rapids, president — elect of the I tures was District 4 Commis-10,000-member Michigan State|sioner Lesiie H. Hudson, who Medical Society, said passing reported expenses of the osteopathic college bill will! According to the city clerk’s surely require you to face up office, the candidate's expenses . to whether or the taxpayers’ Day of Michigan Week is being ■ here today with a variety of school assemblies, classroom activities and displays. Today also marks the opening of the annual Village Fair, featuring 15 amusement rides and concessions operating in Shain Park. Honorable mention winners in the retail category were Atlantic Drapery Shoppe. Barriccini Candy, the Bennaville-Woodward branch of the Birmingham-Bloomfield Bank, Continental Market, Detroit Bank and Trust and Englander Furniture Shops! Others were Fay Fields Boutique, Furs by Robert, Hunter Dodge. Inc., Birmingham Federal Savings and Loan Association, Huston Hardware Co., Jacobson’s and Irving Kay’s Draperies and Bedspreads. Inc. Students will participate in a variety of individual and | group activities, including { planting of state trees, band | concerts and other musical functions and promotion- > al projects. : The annual PTA Council banquet will be held at 6:30 p.n money will be spent to maintain and operate a college which, not being affiliated with the rich academic resources of a major university, cannot expect to DE-TR0LT fUPI) -The7 mil-;'"®as'ure up to the caliber of the lionth 1966 model car rolled offl^^'^^'^n" medical schools .-. . the assembly lines yesterday, ^ Floyd Brooker, executive of-according to Automotive Indus- ficer of the Michigan Osteo-tries. pathic College, told th^ com- * * ★ mittee osteopaths nevei- have The milestone was achieved! opposed the expansion of the 14 days earlier than the old three state medical schools. record set last year, the trade-—7—-----------nr—^ news said. . could not exceed $1,100, which would mean that no one who has filed an expense statement so far has exceeded, the amount stipulated. for an additional school,” he said. “We would establish a college for the sole purpose of meeting the health care needs of the state. 'Ei^phosize Gl Dead Again Top S. Viets others were Lake’s Jewelers. Nadon’s girls’ wear. Peck's Tail-j ,ors and Men’s Wear, the Prep! [Shop, Sherman Shoes, Steward Fabrics, Inc.. Suburban Oldsmo-|bile Co.. Vic Tanny Detroit, Inc., [Village Rambler Sales Inc., Weir I Manuel, Snyder and Ranke Real Estate and Andrew Yevich, I jeweler. Photo Frames C At SIMMS -From 39; SIMMS51 IS N. Sicinaw-2nd Floor SAIGON (API — American at Berkshire Junior High School, I combat deaths exceeded those honoring retiring members;of South Viet Nam’s armed of the school staff and admini-| forces last week for the third stration. time this spring, a period of po-| * * * ■ litical unrest. Featured s p e a k e r will bej -phe u.S. Command announced Thomas Brennan, president of today 86 Americans were killed, the Michigan State Board of Ed-1555 wounded and three missing ucation. in action May 8-14. Vietnamese spokesman. WHX TAKE SPOTUGHT The Newcomers Club and the [Senior Men’s Club will take the Hrit/or Pr\r^ric Ispotlight at the Birmingham L/r/Ver, KOQOS Man during! in New Laws' The Industry would assemble 194,266 passenger cars this week, making a year-to-date total of 4,244,852, compared to 4,050,- 586 at this time last year. Auto-! . " -j * , motive Industries said. i Adler, president of the Michigan Association of Os-Physicians- and S itr-[geons, said of the five existing *J"^0 [osteopathic colleges in the na- Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Partly cloudy through Friday, chance of some brief showers mainly this evening, little temperature change. Highs today 64 to 72, lows tonight 40 to 48. Highs Friday 66 to 74. Light westerly winds 8 to 16 miles today. Saturday’s outlook; Mostly sunny and pleasant. On* Yur Ago Ir Highest temperature .. Lowest temperature . Mean temperature ...... Highest ami Lowest Temperaluri IS rcceriM downtown) tion, only the one in Philadelphia now receives state support. MAKE CONTRIBUTION Michigan’s nearly 2,000 osteopathic physicians, he added, are committed to pay $2,000 each over 10 years toward making a $3 million contribution to capital outlay for the new Michigan school. , i. Wednesday's Tomporaluro Chart Escaneba 5» 47 Ft. Worth 7» Gr. Rapids 47 44 Jacksonville W Houghton 41 W Kansae City 74 Lansing 4S 44 Los Angeles 71 Marquette 58 42 Miami Beach 80 78 Michigan M.D.’s and osteopaths have been polled by the House State Affairs Committee on the merger question. M.D.'s favored amalgamation and osteopaths opposed it. . Orleans I Washington 82 . State Sen. Carl W. O’Brien, D-Pontiac, said yesterday he favored legislation for traffic safety that would emphasize making things tougher on the driver and correcting bad road conditions -- instead of stressing Ihe automobile manufacturer. O’Brien is a member of the Senate Highways Committee that has htld three traffic safety public hearings during the legislative session — the most recent on May 17 dealing with highway design. “From conclusions drawn from the hearings, I take the position of Gov. Romney and others on the s u b | e c t," OBrien said. ‘I feel from what I have learned at the hearings that the majority of our traffic problems are caused by the driver and environmental conditions. during Hospitality Day activities tomorrow. Coffee, cookies, cider and soft drinks will be distributed free by the Newcomers Club, and the men's club will entertain with a musical ensemble. Special guests will be foreign exchange students attending Birmingham schools, who will be presented the keys to the city I by Mayor Robert Page. The Birmingham-Bloomfield Bank was presented one of four Beautify Birmingham Awards yesterday during an Our Livelihood Day luncheon at the Community House. Mrs. G. Howard Willett Jr.,' a vice president of the new bank accepted the award,-which was presented in the professional building category. Youth for Griffin Group Is forlned Two Oakland County College students have formed a Youth for Griffin Club.to suppo Robert Griffin, a Republicim, in his hid-Jor a four-year term the U. S. Senate. They are Robert Smart, 555 W. Walled Lake, Walled Lake, and Mike Renner of 1404 Eaton, Berkley, both students at the University of Michigan. NATIONAL WEATHER — Showers and thunderstorms are forecast tonight for New England, the southeast quadrant of the country and extreme southern Plains. It will be cooler in upper Mississippi Valley, western Lakes and Gulf Coast., It will be wanner in the central and northern Pla-.J A The group will distribute cam-aign materials, and its first project will be to escort Griffin during his appearance at the Village Fair in Birmingham Saturday. Griffin, appointed recently to temporarily fill the v a created by the death of U.S. Sen. Patrick V. McNamara, is seeking election to the post in November. ^ “I disagree with the tone of jthe current congressional hear-[ings before the House Com-[merce Committee which seems to be that the auto manufacturer should assume the major burden of guilt,” O’Brien add^. PHILOSOPHY WRONG >“I also feel that such a phl-0Sophy, which is being put forth by some of my legislative colleagues and the writer Ralph Nader, is wrong.” — ' O’Biiea said to cope with the sitnation “we may or may not" need new traffic laws, “but for certain we most enforce much more strictly the myriad of statutes we already have on the books." He concluded, “Sure, there is a problem with vehicles, but think a program of sound motor vehicle inspection is the answer to most of it. 'We have an excellent start this ybar through a bill, v has passed the Senate and waits House action, allowing the State P 011 c e to establish highway safety check lanes,’’ O’Brien said. > ^ after first reporting a total of 91 Vietnamese servicemen dead or missing, lalhr broke down the figures: 72 dead and 19 missing. The Vietnamese Three battle deaths were reported among Australian, New Zealand and South Korean' - In all. Allied Forces lost 161 men killed and 22 missing while listing 998 Communists killed and 192 captured. Friends Say Darin Is Split Frotn Sandra HOLLYWOOD tJPi - Friends of singer Bobby Darin and ac- tress Sandra Dee say the pair have separated. The couple separated once several years ago, but reconciled. Miss Dee, 24, and Darin^29, married on Dec. 1, 1960, in abeth, N.J. They have a 4-year- ^CORNINGWARE’... the gift for any bride on your list STORE - BAKE and SERVE 1 cook - »erv« and freezo oil in ih# somo container — 'CORN-InGWARE' tho modern cookware for youc hoiiia ‘Royal Family’ 11-Pc. Set 10-Inch Covered Skillet pi-Qt.Saucapan Ags Cov*r#P1.........0 4-Qt. Dutch Oven ^^95 ilV^Qt. Saucepan j [ and cover #Pll4... x ' PA-Qt. Saucepan ^95 land covor #P1% . .hi and cevor #P34 8-Cup Percolator Qgj #P116...........U Menu-ette Skillet ^95 6Vk" modal P83.... SIM ASM. Tflfc PONTIAC PREgS. THURSDAY. MAY 19, 1966 A—® LORD BUDDHA RIDES OFF — An ancient Buddhist relief uncovered in excavations at Nagarjunakonda in southern IiM^ia >ihows the Lord Buddha, astride a horse and surrounded StJ^rshipful retainers, riding off to renounce the world and luridly things. Now a Hindu Land India Saves Buddhist Heritage NEW DELHI Ur> - India, the spirituat homeland of Buddhisnu is taking steps to preserve its Buddhist heritage even though it no|w is a predominantiy Hindu la^. An archaeological museum has been opened in Nagarjunakonda in tiK southern state of Andhra Pradesh to save and display Buddhist art and edifices dating from ancient times. Nagarjunakonda first became archaeologically important in 1927-31 when extensive excavations uncovered Buddhist sites and many stupas (stone piliars), shrines, monasteries and sculptures. Work was continued in 1933 and 1940 but not until 1953 was it speeded up. In that year, it became parent that a dam being built across the Krishna River would cover the Nagarjunakonda Valley and its priceless relics with deepwater. WORKED FAST The Indian government in a; recent announcement said that in 1954-60, archaeologists work^ fast, uncovering much more than what had been known about Buddhist edifices and also the prehistoric archaeology of the valley. The relics that could be saved wiO be placed in the museum. Others will be patched together from bits and pieces that have been found. Many, however, will be reconstruct^ out of original material on one hill site. One original, titled “.Stupa Worship,” is a detailed relief depicting Buddhists in ancient times worshipping a stupa, o stone pillar which represents god or goddess. LORD BUDDHA Another outstanding wor shows the Lord Buddha, astride a horse and surrounded by worshipful retainers, riding off to’ renounce the world and all worldly things. Lord Buddha, a wealthy, selfindulging prince, gain^ enlightenment in India. He renounced all bis worldly belongings and took to preaching. His followers subsequently spread his teachings throughout Asia and Buddhism became one of the world’s great religions. IroQjpally, Buddhism all but died out In India. Of the nation’ 495 million ^ple, about d45 million, are Hindus. Nearly 50 million are Moslems. Giristianity, Buddhism and other religions also are present. Dominican Order Curbing Armed Forces Placates 'O SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic (AP) — Ex-President Juan Bosch’s party Wednesday night withdrew its threat to boycott the Dominican presidential race after the government confined the anm^ forces to quartm until tiw June 1 election is over. The executive committee of Bosch’s Dominican Revolutionary party — PRD — said in a statement that provisional I^resident Hector Garcia-Go-doy’s orders had resolved tiie crisis. Bosch and the PRD had charged the armed forces and national police were persecuting party workers. # Garcia-Godey, in a radio-television address, said that create the proper conditions for a safe, free election he also was creating a tripartisan commission to deal with future complaints of political persecution. ’The commission is to include representatives of the three presidential candidates: Bosch, ex-President Joaquin Balaguer and ex-President Rafael Bonnel- ly. Garcia-Godoy said the government thohMighly had investigated all complaints of persecution and election violence. Where necessary, he said, all guilty parties have been punished but many complaints have turned out “to be inexact.” Speaking after the president. Armed Forces Minister Maj. Gen. Enrique Perez y Perez reemphasized the “political position” of the militaiy. The order confining the troops to quarters went out shortly after the president spoke, he said, and “will be complied with rigidly.” Bosch had threatened to pull out of the elections by noon today if the government did not crack down on the armed forces and national police, charged they were carrying out clandestine campaigns to help his chief rival, Balaguer, the Reformist party candidate. Bosch repeati^ly has charged le political climate stemming from the April 1965 revolution is too heated to pei^t peaceful elections. Fear of assassination made Bosch a virtual prisoner in his suburban Santo Domingd home, and he campaigns by broadcasts of recorded speech- a group of them, is expected to hold the balance of power. Dj>-and inter-American officials are privately pleased by this prospect because they Recent opinion polls show Bosch and Balaguer running neck and neck, with Bosch slightly ahead but Balaguer gaining steadily in recent weeks. Observers say PRD strength may have suffered because of failure to leave his home to campaign and Balagu-er’s hard-driving campaign in rural areas where about 70 per cent of the voters live, Radios are scarce in the interior. Bosch’s top lieutenants apd his vice-presidential running mate, Antonio Guzman, have done most of the PRD campaigning there. Unofficial i>olls suggest no single party will be able to dom- inate the new Congress to be elected June 1. _________ Onp of the smaller parties, or feel the still explosive situation| pities do not accept the results requires broad political repre- quietly. Many civilians remain sentation in Congress. | armed, but military and police TTiere are some fears of post-1 chiefs are confident they can election violence if the losing!maintain order. Now You Con RENT A FAMOUS GIBSON ELEQRIC GUITAR & AMP! It's excithig and new! Rent a Gibson Solid Body “Melody Maker"'Electric Guitar with Vibrola Lever and a Gibson "Skylark" Amplifier. If you buy, all payments apply. Unlimited return privileges. Guitar & Amplifier, Complete MO a Month GRINNELL'S, Pontiac Moll and 27 S. Saginaw St. Men's 6Vz-1 Boys' 21/2-6 SPECIAL SALE! 'Top Scats" boat shoes withT full cushion arch and insole Ship to shore boot shoes with o pillow soft insole , and sure safety ribbed sole. Men's and boys' in . blue or white. 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Plaids and solid tones in polyester 41 42% 41% 42% 41' 10 75% 75% 75% — ' 12 31% 31% 31% 4 ' 10 44% 44% 44% —I 14 43% 43% 43% 4 ' '8 8% %% '44% 4i I 85 85 85 4i SS)HI PannD^' AO PaPwLt'fS Pa RR lAOa Pannioll lAO PfSalS* l'.Ma W°EI*-« Phil Rdg 1J0 ’$ S5 8% f2%i^ *1 8% 8% 11%- Youth Service Plan Clarified Aides Say McNamara Sees Voluntary Effort Pytlman 2.00 « 55% i i7w5^ki5 if 85 85 85 3 20 % 47%372%%m7 —H- -10 43% 41 41 - % 4 14% 144. 30 41% 401 8 S'* J?4. . . .. 8 r f,5fSt8 ”, 85 85 38t5.” IgTcp IllCl^nd 2 IngaHland 2 31% ^1% 11% 10 41% 8% jar UO 11 44% „ . ■Rc&tf *8 8% r I irsi JanLagan JO ■—a L 2.70 Mfg 1.35 (amCtJ* 2* J 21 53% S3 51% 41% 2 171% 171%17J%42 11 45% 45 45% 4 22 113% 110% 110% -1% 32 42% 42% 4 I 37% 37 314 43% 41% 41% - 41 21% 27% 27% 4 34 42% 43% 42% - 14 71 77% 71 4 __, . .. ... 22 23% 23% 23% .. ColiinRad^.50 120 STJA 55% «%- II 14% 34% 24% 4 2 fi% 23% 23% . 15 21% 31 21 101 53% 51 51%- Col Pict J4t Edit 1J0 lElacInd 1 „j'.®P*.Jy'i5!) Contalnr 1.20 Cont Air .10 Cont Can 2.40 Cont Int 3.40 Cont Mot .40 ContOtl 3.40a Control Data Com Pd 1.40 ComgGWk 3a CoxBdcat .40 CrowCol 1.32f Crown Cork Crown Zall 2 Cruc StI 1.20 " ^ hy Co I Pub t/iem^iR I • 2 Otanay .40b MmMn'.IO 343 51% 54% 57 - S 85 85 S'*:: 8 5^ 5T* 5^4 21 30 22% 22% 4 155 57% 55% 55%-10 43% 41% 43% .. I gV4 -%' Maraltm J.20 li!:Jnl!i:ar-'’f MayDStr 1.40 McDonAIr .N McKau 1.70 MaadCp 1.70 Malv Sh •" Marrilt Chap MGM 1.40 MldSoUtll .41 Midid Ron 2 MlnarCh 1J0 Montan 1.40b 12 73% 7 atonYa 2 GAG .20 43 21% 24% 24% .. 10 20 10 30 .. 1 33% »% 33% .. 5 14 13% 13% 4 24 11 17 37% 4. 2 51'A 51 51 ... 11 85 85 85- 72 n 10% 00%-1 44 70% 42% 70 . '8 85 S'* S5?5 1 40% 40% 40% 4 % 17 201% 200% 200% - % 5S?8t?r*85^% —E— 205 102% 101% 101% —1 74 13|% 134% 137% 41 3 52% 52% 8% 4 II 22% 22% 22% 4 2185 8%?;%? 8 r ......... FairCam .SOg —-■■III .15a ----al Atet FaddarCp AO FadDStr 1.40 FarroCp 1.20 Plltrol 1.N FIraitna UO - Chrt I.ITf . ...itkota 1 Fla Pew US ESSc^'1^20 8% n% i'% ya luvj 2% 10 4 V 11 34% 14% 34%-1 14 41% 40 40% 4 < 15 15% 14% 24% - 1 —F— 215 144 142% 142% —3t 142 17 14% 14% 4 1 14 21% 11% »% .... 1 85 85 854i-”2S5S5r?? 12 40% 12% 12%.. 11 11% 13 13% 4 % 15 15% II 11 - ■• 2 44% 44% 4M0 _ 1 11% 30 LodoSlA ij 350 51% 51% 51% -I RCA .10 RalilonPur . . _ ___ Saisss;'if .tS r 85 sn i?^i1%P25J -------- 8St8v*8%l 8 St 8% is? 8 8% 85 2^? 110 12 11% 12 4 100 37% 14% 34% 4 4SS 85i8t? 12 11% 17% 17% ... Ravlon UO Raxill .30b RaynMat .75 Safaway St 1 iMrifl 14 s% 85 8% +. 41 31% 33% 33% 4 SharenStt .40 Shall OH 1.20 ShallTra .43a SharWm 1.20 Sinclair lAO SlngwCb 130 Sml%K 1M ------J Ijf South Co .24 SouNOai *“ SoulliPac Jn*S sioircai'T.io SlOIIInd 1.70 StOIINJ 1.40a St Packaging StanWar T.M TtauffCh 1.40 itarlOrug JO lavantJP 2 ludabakar un Oil lb unray 1.40a 2 52% ^ 52%-55 51% Si M% 4 31 13% 11% 22% 4 1 4% J4% 4% - 2 11% M% 21% 4 \4 22 40% «% 50% 4 % Tstststr 8S%S5S”t 8 »% 8% 8%? 21 34% 34% 34% -21 31% H% 31% 4 S 85 85 85- 14 50% M 51% ... 540 10% 12% 20 4 2 70% 70% 70% 41 1 21% 13% 13% 4 7 44% 4M 44% 4 1 33% »% 11% ... 8 St ti% t?5- I 21% 11% 4 % Business Notes Peter Else, 553 CooUdge, Birmingham, has opened an nffire for the practice of architecture at 102 Fierce, Birmingham. He formerly was an associate and treasurer of Begrow and Brown, Architects, Bloomfield Hills. 30 23% 22% 22% 247 I TImRB 1.K)a 4 15% 15 IS - Vt 10 2% 2% 2% 4 % 12 12% 32% 32% — % 8 85 ?i5 85- % 145 75 n5 n% 41** Transftiw ” 52 1% 0 14 % Tri Cont .10 27 41% 40% 40% 4 % Tj---- ’ 5?8%r55??%+- S” 85 85 + --------1 127 127 -3% 5 17% 14% ITi* 4 % 11 103% 22% 21% -3% 54 43% 43 42 4 % 45 14% 14% 14% 4 % 31 53 53% 52% 4 % I 41% 41% 41% - % 154 12% 10% 00% 4 % 25 30V* 30% 30% 4 % 141 1 14% 1 31 41% 40% 40% 4 1 —-M—- 11 42 41% 42 41 4 47 44% 44% 4 1 10 22 21% 21% .... • 53% 53% 53% .... .... — 03% _I ••* — % 1.25 150 24% 21% 2 54 23% 31% 23i danA m arraart. n—Naw----------- .. .... — -ividand emlttad. dofarrad kan at laat dMdand maatir ....... . -Sald*^'^ - ......... ... -------------------------- WASHINGTON (AP) - Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara is thinking of a voh tary effort — not compulsion In Ms proposal fltat every young American devote two years to service either in uniform, the Peace Corps or some other help-mankind program. ★ * , ^ Associates of the defense cMef ; [said this today afteF^feNamara returned from M(»itreal, vriiere he offered his proposal in wide-ranging speech to the American Society of Newspaper Editors. Jota Fitzgerald, editor of ’The Pontiac Press, is attending the M(Hitreal conference with American and Canadian editors. * ★ ★ Sources familiar with McNamara’s thinking said the secretary envisions both young men and young women taking part Officials cautioned against jumping to any conclusions that the Pentagon would send implementing legislaticm to Congress. They did not rule out the possibility, however. OTHER FACETS McNamara’s associates also sought to draw attention to other facets of the speech. These Muded the secretary’s call for "building Midges” toward Red Uhind and his emphasis on international peace-keeping as a hoped-for pattern of the future. It was understdo4 that McNamara and Secretary of State Dean Rusk has reviewed together the foreign policy aspects of tte speech before the Pentagon cMef went to Montreal to deliver it. But Economists, Businesses Relaxing Stock Market Worried By SAM DAWSON AP Bminess Newt Analyst NEW YORK-Wben the economy is rising fast some call it “overheating.” When the pace gets back ' wards noi that’s called ‘losing some of its exuberance.”' Either way you’ll find some vriw worry about it and others who justj relax and enjoy it. I Right now the DAWSON worrying is centered in the stock markets. Government economists seem to be more relaxed. And so, you’ll find, are many business leaders. The dictionary calis eomber-nce “an ovoUowing supply.” And when the economy atarted soaring in the first ftree months of tMs year, the overflowing supply of ou^t, of prices, of proBts, or expansion plans w(MTied administration economists. And they talked of cooling down tMs overfaeatiilg by raising taxes. fast some call i ’ When the paa m News in Brief Alpine Valley Chardi nt mage. Ail day Fri.-Sat. 204 W. Cornell. Rummage sale, Friday, May 20,1 a.m. to 5 p.m. 1745 Waldon "d. -Adv. Rnnunage: MeUradist Church, 2091 Cass Lake Rd. Fri., May 20, 9:30 a.m.-5 p.m. and Sat., May 21, 9:30-1 p.m. -Adv. Rummage Sale, Saturday, May 21, 8 to 12 p.m. at St, Vincents de Paul Hall. Wide TVack Drive. —Adv. Rammage Sale at Orchard Lake Community Church, 5171 Commerce Rd., Sat., May 21, 8-12:30 featuring special gift shop. —Adv. His savice for all youth mo-posal came after he spoke of the oeed for a worldwide community of effort. ^ (AF)- ^>ibirfrJwiU-^ipen 4ta4irst^Gak-ai'21 % land County store at 29145 Tele-■« -’’-graph, Southfield Town ship, donday. Hie new store will offer a wide selection of home furnishings exhibited in 120 display settings. SOND AVERAGEt CamplM by Tbs AnsclaM PrSM t chan a **"*^ ^' ”•"■ ••■ _-On wlSii*74J 25.3 M.5 22.4 51 Pray. Day . 74.1 25.3 53.4 22.4 II - kgo 77.0 25.7 53.2 22.5 12 Ago 770 «•« *2 1254 Hlg> I tow :; 7j:i ...mm . «.7 1«J 55.2 25.0 24J Rummage. Church. Fri. 3-7, Sat. 10-12, -Adi Rummage Sale. St. Michael’ Hall Fri., May 20, 9 til 5 and Sat., May 21. —Adv. Rummage-Bake Sale^ CAI, Friday 8-12 p.m. — Metro Aiuc. No. 62. -Adv. Riunm^e — Thursday and Friday, 10 to 3. Cor. Gkass Lake and Ridge, off Ormond. —Adv. Rnmmage and bake sale Sat, May 21, 9-1 p.m., C.A.I. Bldg. First UMted Pent Church. -Adv. Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AP)-Tha Cl $ 11,050,751J05.I1 WOmmjOUl 315J7IJ40J54.07 12J32,455JI2.25 14,353, The administration econo-1 leaders as jittoy as stock trad- mista say this means that some ers? of the economy’s exuberance has faded. And presumably the need for Mgher taxes is more questionable now. But the stock market takes a second definition from the dictionary, which also calls exuberance “abounding in good spirits.” ★ 4 ★ And vdien auto sales and production slipped a bit and the prospects for profits in general continuing their record climb seemed dimmer, Wall ‘Street was no longer abounding in good spirits. Exuberance went out of the nutfket for many glamorous hi^ flyers. Prices of the conservative blue cMps also started down, and down, and down. Then why aren’t business By ROGER E. SPEAR (Q) “I am 40 years old, have four children. My husband is a wounded veteran-having undergone five major operations since his return from Iwo Jima. His illness is considered fatal, and we have had no chance to save. My mother wants to Invest 810,800 for me. What would you sug gest?” H. L. (A) If $10,000 to be given by your mother will represent your entirq.capital, as seems apparent, I believe part, at least, should go into a savings account and good bonds. I suggest that $2,000 be placed in a savings institution and that $2,000 be invested in Pacific TeleidKme 5%s of 8/1/1980, selling to yield 5.15 per cent. The balance of $6,000 might be distributed equally kmong the following: Commercial Credit, offering a six per cent return; Norfolk & Western Rwy., selling on a 5.4 per cent basis; and one lower-yield^ stock for growth and some inflation protection — such as Corn Products, currently offering a 3.4 per cent return. ★ ★ (Q) “You recently advised a 72-year-
Voald you name a reliable company and say how mnch income I might receive? I am 75 years old.” H.R. (A) I cannot recommend one insurance company against others to persons seeking an an- YRIND OP ITAPLl PRICES NEW YORK (API - The Associated rask walghtad wholasala price ------- I commoanias (insert to come) ^T'XS,?7Vo;.’V^r'5£'l??!S3.’"”' 1245 J24r-...1244 ™ Igh .......110.04 174.74 144.22 142.77 »w .........172.71 144.20 140.54 157.,'“ (1224 avaraga equals any major insurance company licensed to,do business in your state would be satisfactory. If $8,000 is your entire capital, you should retain a proportion of that sum as a savings reserve. I cannot tell you exa(jt-ly what you would receive on a straight life annuity, because this amount is figured closely to your date of birth. I am confident, however, that you would get at least $8 a month on each $i,W of consideration. ^ (Copyright, 19^6) PERSONAL INCOME One reason can be found in the breakdown on the personal income figures. In March the annual rate rose by $4 billion. In April it rose by only a billion. To stock traders that could be bearish. But that “only” still carried the annual rate of personal income to a record high of $563.1-bilUon, . ★ 4 * Even more indicative of business health could be the factory payroll rate. This rose by $700-million in April, the same amount by wMch it had risen in March. 1 Increased i^yrolls were reported in the'electrlcal.machin-ery, fransportation equipment, rubber, apparel and ordnance industriesJ-^^ the annual rate for all factories Came to $124.4-bilUon. LOT OF TAKE HOME PAY Even with Mgher withholding for federal taxes, that means a lot of take home pay for factory workers — and a lot of saks opportunities for merchants and the service industries. All jvages and salaries were up by $1.2 billion to an annual rate of $381.1 billion. Tliat gain is neither exuberant nor overheating. And some business economists join the administration in leaving much of the worrying at the moment to the stock markets. Sales, Profits Firm Records Farmington Company Gives Yearly Report Robert G. Begle, president of Futuraiill, Inc., Farmington, and chairman of its board of dire c t o r s has reported record, earnings and sales during the year ending March 31. . Futurmill’s sales of maritines^ cutting tools and allied produce! for the year ending March $1 rose 43 per cent to $1,199,245 compared to $3,618,665 in sales for the same period in 1964-65. -The next profit of |M4,-202 was up 25.9 per cent compared to $273,353 in profits from the year ending March 31, 1965. The per-share earning was $1.55 compared to $1.23 for the preceeding 12-month period, after giving retroactive effect to stock dividends paid during the fiscalyoar- Begle bated that several major activities of the compapy fit increase from t^gcning wiYh the percentage ratio waMes increase. INCLUDED COSTS These included the cost of moving into a new plant, a change in product mix and Mgher costs of training and supervision. incident to an employment increase of 73 per cent during the year. He reported incoming orders remain strong with an order backlog 70 per cent above the same period in 1964-65. •find. ACCEPTING AWARDS-General Motors Corp. President James Roche of 425 Dunston, Bloomfield Hills, is among four auto cMefs receiving steering vriteel awards from tha Automobile Gub of Mi(ihigan for contributions mad* to traffic safety^ Holding one of the awards (fnan left) Chrysler Corp. President Lynn-Townsend, 5991 Orchard Bend, Bloomfield TownsMp; -American Motors’ Corp. Board Chairman Richard Cross; Roche; and Ford Motor Corp. President Arjay Miller.