The Weather < 9.S. Weather Bureau Forecait Chance of Snow (Oataili rata « Home Edition THE PONTIAC PRESS f PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 30, 19C9 VOL. m - NO. are A A A A -a* PAGES io« Tax, Mine Bills Signed by Nixon Iliw COOL AND CONTENTED — Those who say winter weath- contented snoozer in Chicago’s Brookfield Zoo lovingly hugs er is fine — for polar bears — are hereby vindicated. This a chunk of ice. Cool, baby, cool. From Our News Wires WASHINGTON - President NixOn signed into law today a tax-relief bill for 63 million Americans, including a IS per cent boost in Social Security benefits and loophole-closing reforms. But he warned that he will “take the action I consider necessary to present a balanced budget for the next fiscal year."-. ’y ’■ The President also signed the federal coal mine health and safety bill today but said Its provision for federal workmen’s compensation “in no way should be considered a precedent.” One provision of the bill is to provide federal payments for a time to miners disabled by respiratory ailments — a type of workmen’s Compensation not covered by most state laws. Nixon’s tax statement indicated the budget will be tight on expenditures, but was silent as to whether he will also' recommend tax increases to make up for the revenue losses occasioned by file bill. The tax package is the biggest in modern history. The tax relief provisions start becoming effective in 1970—but the relief provisions don’t apply to salaries earned in 1969. Thejfull effect won’t be felt until 1973 wherf the last provisions become effective. A 15 per cent across-the-board increase in Social Security benefits for 25 million persons becomes effective Jan. 1. However, bigger checks won’t show up until payments are mailed next April. In 1970, the $600 personal exemption for each taxpayer and dependent goes to $625. The exemption rises to $700 on Jan. 1,1972, and $750 on Jan. 1,1973. The mine-safety act will, for the first time, limit the permissible amount of coal dust in the 3,600 U. S. coal mines as a means of controlling both “black lung disease” and explosive air mixtures. Early this afternoon, the President and Mrs. Nixon were to fly to California. Nixon probably will wait until his State of the Union Message to Congress Jan. 22 to spell out whOt he has in mind in the way of new proposals. It is likely, however, to include a “value added” tax, in which a tax is added on at each stage of the manufacturing process — a sort of national sales tax. Word that Nixon would sign the mine-safety, bill came yesterday as a delegation of miners’’widows was visiting the White House. Snowmobile Crackdown Vowed By ED BLUNDEN Snowmobiles are becoming a major headache in Oakland County, and a crackdown is imminent, according to Lt. Donald Kratt, of the Oakland County Sheriff’s Department. Many snowmobilers are operating with complete disregard for laws, regulations, or even common sense, he said. 'A A a Hundreds of complaints have been reported to the sheriff’s department since the first snow, cover. Kratt said the complaints are of snowmobiles being run over private property, destroying trees, shrubs, and anything else in their path. “Apparently many snowmobile drivers feel anything that’s covered with snow is' fair game,” he said. He vowed a crackdown. RESTRICTIONS ON USE Actually, use of snowmobiles is quite restrictive in state laws. The vehicles are not permitted tin roads, for instance. And a snowmobile has no more right on anyone’s property than a car has. The use of private lakes is just as protected against snowmobiles as it is against boats, Kratt pointed out. Owners of the vehicles are taking their machines so much for granted that few have even bdthered to register them as required, Kratt said. A snowmobile license can be granted at any Department of State office for J$5, and is required if the vehicle, leaves the property of the owner. Drivers are subject to a large variety of misdemeanor charges for offenses that include drunk or drugged driving, speeding, making too much noise or smoke, operating on a highway, driving at night without proper lighting or driving through any area designated as a forestry. The state act governing snowmobiles also provides that “any community may pass an ordinance regulating the operating of snowmobiles.” POOR USE INVITES BAN Thus, just as bad practices by hunters have moved many Oakland County communities to ban the sport, poor use of snowmobiles could result in banning them from many areas, if the annoyance becomes too great, Kratt said. Many snowmobilers are also neglecting their own safety, he said. * * * . Several serious injuries have been reported in recent weeks. One man went into a barbed wire fence and his face was so badly shredded he faces years of plastic surgery. A a * A girl fell off and then was run over by the vehicle, suffering a deep facial scar. Last weekend a motor blew up and a Detroit man sustained an eye injury. A A A Kratt said, “This is the first big year of the snowmobile and too many drivers are behaving with reckless abandon, ignoring the rights of others and endangering themselves. All' the law departments in the county are having trouble with complaints. “This is going to have to be controlled before it gets out of hand,” he said. AGNEW IN MANILA - Vice President Spiro T. Agnew , (right of center); follows his wife as they arrived today in nand Marcos ! Manila at Luneta Park to attend the inauguration of Ferdi- A-2). President of the Philippines. (Story, | Mystery Gunboats a Day Away From Port From Our News Wires HAIFA, Israel — A heavy overcast shrouded the. eastern Mediterranean today as the five mystery gunboats from France advanced through windwhipped seas toward Israel’s chief port. * A * Israeli maritime experts said the boats were still at least a full day out of Haifa. One Source said they were probably delayed by rough weather and slower escorts front the Israeli Navy. -.... iA, fcM A... ...A. |Vftt .y-j; The low clouds and high winds Were expected to hamper any attempt by Egyptian planes to intercept the; boats. They slipped out of Cherbourg about 3 a.m. Christmas Day in defiance of the French embargo on arms for Israel. Hundreds gathered on Mt. Carmel abandoned \ their lookout as word flashed through the city that the boats now were expected tomorrow. SIGHTED BY TRAWLER An Italian trawler reported sighting the ships early yesterday east of Sicily escorted By ‘ ‘numerous other Israeli smps?r~^eek"’poficl"^^0nllie"IslSBd"‘ef Crete said the convoy passed north of the island shortly, after midnight " — There was no evidence of any effort to intercept the gunboats, although Arab Housing-Code Suit Hearing Set Legal action was started yesterday in Oakland County Circuit Court to force the Pontiac City Commission to schedule . a referendum on the city’s new housing code. The complainants, Arthur Smith, 369 Seward, and Harry F. Evans, 253 Clifford, are asking that the code be suspended until the ordinance is decided by voters at a general or special election. Judge William R. Beasley set Jan. 7 to hear arguments why .the request should not be granted. The suit follows the Dec. 16 rejection by the commission of petitions asking for the election. The commission refused to accept the petitions on the opinion of City Attorney Shirwin Birnkrant. Smith and Evans were among those who spearheaded the petition drive. They contend the code could present financial hardships to elderly homeowners. The petitions, which contained more than the number of signatures required, were filed Nov. 28, the day after Thanksgiving. The holiday, accenting to Birnkrant, marked the 30 day deadline for submitting the petitions. He also contended the petitions were not prop--'ift iAJtSr‘“spbkesman ~in-“Washingten-»-erly-sipuatL denied an Italian Communist report that Alan Greenberg, attorney for the TBp'U ST Ki.ii Fiwi awf-perhaps—twits—complainants ...said- state -law- provides-from other of the North Atlantic Treaty that anything falling due on a legal holi-Organization countries were providing day carries over to the next business cover for the gunboats. day. Arms-Cost Excesses Put at Almost 50% WASHINGTON UPl - The cost of major weapons systems is running nearly 50 per cent ahead of original estimates and no central agency is keeping track of all arms development information, a congressional study team has been told by Assistant Comptroller Gen. Robert P. Keller. newspapers called on the french Navy to do so. * * * Arab world capitals withheld condemnation of the incident pending an explanation from France. Representatives of 14 Arab nations called a meeting in Paris today to discuss the matter, a threat to what had been improving relations with the French. Chance of Snow Seen for Tonight The weatherman says there’s a chance of some snow this evening or tonight, but he doesn’t predict how much. Temperatures in the low 30s today are expected to drop to 23 to 28 tonight, and rise to a high of 27 to 32 tomorrow. A A A There’s a chance of some light snow early tomorrow. Probabilities of precipitation in per . cent are 40 today, 50 tonight and 30 tomorrow. , .* | a *- Twenty-nine was the low temperature in downtown Pontiac before 8 a.m. By 2 p.m. the thermometer recorded 36. The cost overrun investigation by a joint House-Senate subcommittee chaired by Sen. William Proxmire, D-Wis., focused today on shipbuilding and the Navy’s estimate that the bill could be up to $1.2 billion higher than originally figured. A A * Navy officials say a major problem comes from claims being filed by shipbuilders against the government for changes ordered by the Navy on 125 ships during the past 13 years. Keller told the subcommittee yesterday that the estimated cost of 38 major weapons systems is $62.9 billion, although initial estimates placed the cost at $42 billion. ‘SHOCKING FINDING’ Proxmire called the lack of central cost information a "shocking finding” and said overruns cannot be controlled if one official or agency is not keeping track of all weapons development. The chairman also said an increase in estimates for the Navy's Deep Sub-—merging-Rescue Vehicle from $36 million . for 12 to $463 million for six is fantastic. --- —■ -A— A~ • A — _ He said the Navy should only need one or two. There have only been two deep-sea submarine emergencies in 40 years, he said. '70 Economic Outlook for Area Is Uncertain By DIANNE DUROCHER An aura of uncertainty regarding the hew year appears to be settling over the Pontiac area economy as 1969 draws to a close. A variety of factors — the high cost of living, tight money, high interest rates and a drop in industrial production — offer mounting evidence that government anti-inflationary efforts.ai;e beginning to be frit. A'. A A “It’s hard to say exactly why, but everybody feels like they’ve just got to scale back,’* said Earl Kreps, manager of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce. Pontiac area residents are curtailing purchases of durable goods, growing more conscious of saving money and looking toward next year’s auto contract negotiations, Kreps said. STARTED LEVELING IN JUNE Conspmer spending started to levd off in the area around June, Kreps continued. Residents will probably continue spending moderately, with a reluctance for credit buying until contracts are settled, tie predicted. Retailing hi the Pontiac area for 1969 registered a slight Increase over 1968, according to a check of area businesses. ^Gross sales volume of Pontiac Mall stores showed an over-all increase of approximately 12 per cent during 1969 compared With a 24 per cent rate of increase in 1968, said Mrs. Ruth McCarthy, mall resident manager. ★ A A She continued, “Soft line (clothes and smaller items) items are selling very well, but big ticket (appliances, furniture etc.) items are not moving as well as in past years.” For 1970 Mrs. McCarthy anticipated that sales will continue to rise on about the same level as this year showing a 10 to 12 per cent increase. . She added that a 1970 forecast for the Pontiac Mall also includes plans for enlarging the center “in various ways,” but declined to elaborate further. A I A Jack Simon, manager of Simms Brothers Inc., in downtown Pontiac said his store’s sales volume for 1969 was up slightly over 1968. Simon is. also presi- dent of the Downtown Pontiac Business' Association. He added however that operational expenses and general overhead have risen considerably, making it difficult to maintain profit margins. FIERCE COMPETITION “Freight rates have gone u p, newspaper advertising rates and salaries have increased and manufacturers have increased, prices,” Simon explained. Auto Industry Ending 69 in Sales Slump The U.8. auto industry is closing out 1969 with slumping sales and unwieldy inventories. Retail new-car sales are expected to be less than (me per cent below the record set last year — but, that’s 70,000 units. Sales for 1969, including imports, are expected to total 9.54 million units, as compared to 9,611,000 unifs in 1968. Truck sales for 1969 g£e expected to total about 1,925,000 units as compered with 1,807,000 units in 1968, an increase of diaper cOnt. A bright note for 1969 came when GMC Truck and Coach Division was reported a strong third in the heavy truck field. INFLATION KEY Inflation appears as the key to 1970 auto sales. A A "A “Looking to 1970, the prospects for further economic expansion may be im- < portantly influenced by the government’s efforts to meet the challenge of /inflation,’’ James M. Roche, chairman of General Motors, said in m year-end fP°rt: . -y y; ' , ' added, “There is reason to be hopeful that current economic trends may foreshadow a reduction in inflationary pressures, establishing a firmer foundation for growth jn 1970 and later years. Our expectations for 1970 assume that this objective will be realized.” The GM executive predicted car sales in 1970 of 9.2 to 9.5 million units, assuming that employment and income continue to rise during the year. . (Continued on Page A-2, Cpl. 4) He added that many downtown stores are receiving fierce competition from shopping centers in the outlying areas. A A A John Harrington, manager of Sears and Roebuck in downtown Pontiac, said that the store’s sales Volume this year was just about parallel with 1968. “Soft line sales are up, but people don’t seem to be buying deluxe fringe items,” Harrington said. He added, “People are buying smaller items and paying cash and they are not buying anything they don’t need.” * SHYING AWAY 'j He speculated that people are shying away from long-term purchasing because of the current “uncertain employment situation iri Pontiac.l’ Regarding 1970, Harririgton said that he expects sales to remain at their current level for the next several months and then to begin to rise. Rebecca Karnehm, promotion manager of the Miracle Mile Shopping Centfer, Bloomfield Township, said the center experienced a definite increase in traffic in 1969. She attributed this< In / part, to the opening of new stores and the widening of Telegraph in front of the ednter. (Continued on Page A-2, Col. ,1) A In Today's Press New England 1 More storms expected late | today - PAGE A-8. | Nixon vs. Congress I Collision looms on health-edu- cation appropriation — PAGE 5 A-19. Good News f Some cheerful events occurred behind those gloomy 1969 head- | lines — PAGE A-5. * Area .News •A-$ / \J , Astrology... B-8 1 j I Bridge B-8 * Crossword Puzzle B-15 a 1 Comics i B-8 i Editorials . A-6 1 I Markets . .B-7 '1 ;< Obituaries B-6 1 Sports B-l , B-2 1 Theaters B-9 1 | TV and Radio Programs . B-15 1 I Wilson, Earl l B4 I | WOmen’s Pages A-13—A-ll I ' ' J \ A—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 80, 1969 Atmosphere of Uncertainty on Area Economic Future Waterford OKs Firemen's Pact (Continued From Page One) Sales volume figures for 1969 indicate about a 15 per cent increase over 1968 figures, Miss Karnehm said. , ‘BUSIEST SEASON’ “This has been the busiest Christmas season that the center has experienced,” she said, adding that center merchants anticipate a good year in 1970. Pontiac area banking and savings and loan executives, currently experiencing a profit squeeze, are not optimistic about the new year. < high interest rates with a shortage of money to the degree we are currently experiencing — in banking history.» ‘'‘As an' industry banks simply have no money available to lend,’' he said. “There was little or no growth in demand deposits (checking accounts) and a modest growth in time savings (savings deposits),” Elerman added. “Who knows what the future has in store,” Eierman continued, “economists predict that there will be no relief of the tight money situation at least through mid-1970.” The Waterford Township Board last night approved a one-year contract with the Waterford Township Professional Fire Fighters calling for a $1,150 salary indreqse during 1970. ' ) A $400 increase will be awarded Jan. 1 while a $750 increase will be awarded July 1. Guards Ring Spiro, at Marcos Inaugural This will raise the salary of a driver-engineer who has worked on the force MANILA (UPI) -, Vice President Spiro T. Agnew attended /President Ferdinand E. \Macces’ inauguration under heavy Secrefservice guard today and later dismissed demonstrations against his Philippines visit. as Inconsequential. free-en- two years from the present $9,100 to $10,21 Money is tight and interest rates are lip largely due to inflation and partly due to federal monetary control^, explained Edward Barker, president of Pontiac State Bank. Warren H. Eierman, president of Community National Bank said, “As far back as 1966 it has been increasingly difficult for banks to find available monies for loans because their supply of funds — bank deposits — have simply not been able to match the record demand for loans.” SOME HOPE 10,250 after July 1,1970. A lieutenant’s salary will rise from $9,870 to $11,020 after July 1. A captain who receives $10,702 today will be paid $11,852 after July 1. DEMAND AT ALL-TIME HIGH In referring'to the new usury law and the effects of erasing the state’s 7 per cent ceiling on honie mortgage loans, Eierman said, “No matter what rate you are allowed to charge, if you have no money to lend then you’re in trouble.” By taking off, the ceiling on home mortgage loans, there is some hope that money will become more available, but it may take longer than a year for rates to level off, Eierman said. Currently the rate is around 8% per cent, he added. ‘INCREASE COMPARABLE’ “This increase is comparable to other areas," Township Supervisor Elmer Johnson said. The fire fighters were awarded $916 in rasies this year — $416 on Jan. 1 and $500 on July 1. 1 In an impromptu news conference at the Manila Intercontinental Hotel following the ceremony, Agnew said the anti-American deomonstration outside the U.S. Embassy last night “didn’t really amount to very much.” -The vice president said he was sure the protest was not representative of the feelings of the Philippine people. strong course to terprlse system,”/he said. ‘TAOTCOfcUFE’ “I think we’U just have to get used to that as a tactic of modern life.” Agnew met for 80 minutes Ibis afternoon with Prime Minister Chung II Kown of South Korea and later visited a U.S. military cemetery in Makarl Town. Tonight he and Mrs. Agnew attended a state dinner hosted by President and Mrs. Marcos at the presidential palace. .Birmingham Police Chief Says Holidays Hike Mishaps BIRMINGHAM — The traditional holiday pattern of parties, drinking and winter weather is already showing signs uf pushing the local accident curve Upward, Police Chief Darryl Bruestle warned residents today. Chief Bruestle said his department is working to hold down holiday traffic problems. , “I think this activity . . . is going to continue whenever a nation, is taking a The new contract will mean an across-the-board increase of $2,066 over 1969 and 1970. The demand for all types of loans is at an all-time high, he said, adding, “There has never been a similar situation—of Women's Limit on Work Hours Illegal—Kelley Initially, there was some problem regarding unclear wording of the new law “but. it is now our understanding, as advised by counsel, that current rates will hold when the ceiling goes back on after next year,” Eierman concluded. -James Clarkson, president of First Federal Savings and Loan of Oakland, said, “Lifting the ceiling on residential mortgage interest was intended to help lenders, but because of the law’s unclear wording, it has actually hurt.” , Auto Sales Sag at Year's End Ship Fire Under Control DURBAN, South Africa UFI — A fire on board the British supertanker Mactra has been brought under control and the ship is on an even keel, the ship reported today. A spokesman for the owners said the 208,569-ton ship was “quite safe.” DROP EXPECTED LANSING (AP) — Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley said today a Michigan law limiting'employed women to a 10-hour work day is in conflict with the 1964 Federal Civil Rights Act. Kelley’s opinion holds that women now maywork more than 10 hours a day and 55 hours a week if employed by firms with more than 25 employes. Firms with fewer than 25 employes still would be covered bythe 10-55 limitation, he said. He said that in 1967 First Federal of Oakland made loans in excess of $20 million; in. 1968, $13,843,000 and in 1969 through the change in the usuary law in August, $17.5 million. “This is going to drop off tremendously in 1970,” Clarkston said, “We are not issuing very many mortgage commitments because of the new usuary law and the lack of sufficient cash flows running in.” Three tugs from Durban and Cape Town were on their way to aid the Mactra, but none was expected to reach her before late tomorrow. She was reported 180 miles off the east coast of Africa in the Mozambique Channel last night. (Continued From Page One) Auto sales, after rising well above the 1968 level in September and early October as the result of the earlier introduction of new models, have slumped in November and December, according to Ward’s Automotive Reports, the industry statistical service. Surveys of consumer buying intentions show weakening interest in new par purchases, and dealers are reportedly holding^ record stocks of unsold cars. In his 20-minute inaugural Marcos, 52, called for a united Asia and peaceful coexistence with all powers, including Communist China. The tightest security precautions in the nation’s history prevented any repetition of last night’s incident, ih which anti-American demonstrators tjirew a gunpowder-filled bottle at Agnew’s limousine outside the U.S. Embassy, Agnew is on the first official stop of his 23-day, 10-nation Asian goodw^tour. “If you think you can drink freely at parties and then slide behind the wheel of your car hoping you cun get away with it this time remember this fair warning: Our department will be out with all the manpower we can muster to protect you — and others — from your i thinking.” An Alcohol Education C e n t e r to encourage the sensible use of liquor by motorists has been established temporarily at the Birmingham Automobile Club of Michigan Office. The center will operate through New Year’s Day. U.S. Hands N. Viets Prisoner-List Plea Ethiopia Embassy Hit Michigan, Kelley said, is only the fourth state to review the possibility of conflict in its state antidiscrimination: laws. “We are still continuing to loan, but for smaller amounts,” he concluded. Realtors have been feeling the credit crunch more in recent months, commented Claude C. McGruder, 1969 president of the Pontiac area Board of Realtors. MOSCOW UPi — Sixty Ethiopian students stormefi their embassy in Moscow today, ripping out phones, tearing up files, marking swastikas on the wall and chanting slogans against Emperor Haile Selaisse. “Since Michigan has no law limiting CAN’T PURCHASE’ the number of hours a man may work, a woman is, denied the same rights to overtime compensation as her male counterpart, in direct violation of the federal act,” Kelley wrote. ‘PREVENTS PROMOTIONS’ He added: “This limitation on the number of hours a woman may work tends to prevent the promotion of women to supervisory positions which might require longer hours than the state law permits.” ' California, North and South Dakota attorneys general have reached similar conclusions about laws in their respective states, Kelley said. The Kentucky attorney general ruled contrarily, but one of two cases used in reaching that opinion has been overruled, Kelley said. ‘The general public has as much money now as they ever did,” McGruder said, “But because home mortgages are at a premium people can’t purchase or build new homes.” Some observers are still confident of a healthy 1970, however. They were protesting^ the death in Addis Ababa of Kilabuh Gizaw, a 29-year-old student leader shot Sunday by an unknown gunman. A leader of the demonstration accused the Ethiopian government of killing Gizaw and said similar protests would be staged at other Ethiopian Decisions are expected to adjust January and first-quarter output, Ward’s reports, adding that January car output, which will include week-long shutdowns Jan. 12-19 at some Chrysler Corp. plants plus adjustments by GM and Ford, may well dip below 650,000 units when all scheduling action is taken. The industry’s original output was projected at 720,000 units. Thousands of auto workers — including 12,500 in-Pontiac — were laid off extra days during the Christmas\ holidays this year. PARIS (AP) - The United States handed North Vietnam a list today of U.S.*' military / personnel" missing in Southeast Asia and asked it to identify those it is holding prisoner. ( Ambassador Philip Habib, acting U.S. delegation chief at the Vietnam peace talks, also called on Hanoi to allow neutral inspection of its prisoner of war camps and then to negotiate exchange of prisoners. The center display which may also be seen in package liquor stores and bars, includes a poster with practical tips for persons'Who drink and drive along with a chart showing how many drinks one can consume before driving ability is affected. . Bottle sleeves with an alcoholic chart and a plea for moderation as the best policy are available at all AAA offices. The move, designed to reduce the national inventory of unsold new cars affected some 12,500 of GMs 36,000V. employes in Pontiac. The JUst of the missing was delivered to Col. Ha Van Lau, Hanoi’s No. 2 delegate^ Habib. Hah)b said th# North Vietnamese apparently want to Use prisoners as “pawns in bargaining for an over-all settlement of the war;” He said Hanoi’s refusal to negotiate seriously in Paris delayed an overall settlement and prolonged “agonizine doubt about the lives and welflfe” ofu.S. soldiers missing'hr1* known to have been taken prisoner. The program places responsibility for motorists who drink and drive on the host serving the alcohol. The display suggests that motorists eat food such as mashed potatoes or beans (which act like a sponge) before drinking, and stop all drinking about an hour before the party ends. Registration for preschool story hours at Baldwin Library begins Friday. Ail 3-5 years olds not in nursery school or kindergarten are eligible for the winter series beginning Jan. 6 or the spring series beginning March 3., Registration %iust be made in person for the seven-week program. “The current tight money situation is going to hqrt everybody a little, but the economy is going to get healthy,” said Robbin R. Hough, an Oakland University professor of economics. He explained, “In an inflationary period, such as we are now experiencing, people would like to spend, but when they realize that their paycheck isn’t buying what it should or did, then they back off from spending. The Federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission said last Aug. 19 that laws restricting women’s working hours “although originally promulgated for the purpose of protecting females, have ceased to be relevant to our technology or to the expanding role of the female worker in our economy." ‘DEEP SKEPTICISM’ “Today we are dealing with a deeply embedded skepticism about the future value of the dollar, Hough said, addding that this skepticism about the price level * can be partly attributed to the fact that inflation was allowed to run for so long ^almost four years. This long-sustained inflation is now boginning to respond to federal monetary controls and as a result, .there is a HUDSON’S BIG SALE OF UNDERFASHIONS LINGERIE AT SEMI-ANNUAL SAVINGS Black General for AF possiMfytHat unemployment wiTi rise; Hough said. -s. WASHINGTON (AP) - Col. D a n i e 1 James Jr. probably will be the only Negro-general in the Air Force by the time his promotion passes through the Senate confirmation process. President Nixon said yesterday he is nominating James, 49, a native of Pensacola, Fla., to become an Air Force brigadier general. Lt. Gen. Benjamin O. Davis Jr., the only Negro general in the Air Force, plans to retire Feb. 1. He explained,, the purpose of monetary restraint is to slow the economy and thereby ultimately to halt inflation by decreasing the rate of growth of money supply. As the money supply stops growing, while incomes and prices continue to. rise, people find themselves holding smaller cash balances than they would like and ultimately respond to this situation by cutting down on tiieir purchases of real assets — especially autos and durable goods, he said. The Wea Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Today, cloudy, chance of some snow this afternoon or evening. High 28 to 33. Tonight chance of light snow. Low 23 to 28. Wednesday cloudy. Chance of some light snow early in the day, High 27 to 32. Thursday outlook: partly cloudy. A little colder. Winds northeasterly 8 to 15 miles per hour increasing to 10 to 20 miles* tonight. Probabilities of precipitation are 40 per cent today, $0 per cent tonight, 30 per cent Wednesday. ' ^ ; ToRey in Conn** Lowest temperature preceding'8 d.».:> 29 At 8 ajn.: Wind Velocity 8 m.p.h. Direction: Northeast Sun sets Tuesday at 8:10 P.m. Sun rises Wednesday at 8:02 a.m. Monda/m Pontiac. , ;,t, 1 Ips recorded downtown) Lowest temperature .. . i 25 Mean temperature —■.. f. 29.5 Weather: Partly sunny Moan sets Wednesday at 11:57 a.m. Moon rises Tuesday at 12:02 a.m.. Downtown Temperatures t a.m. 2* It MW 34 f a.m 29 12 m. » Monday's Temperatures Alpena 31 25 Bismarck 15 1 ' Detroit 34 12 Cincinnati 34 33 Escanabe 32 25 Denver 24 4 . Flint M 30 Duluth 25 1< C. Rapids i 31 26 Jacksonville 75 50 Houghton 30 8 Kansas City 26 19 9 S&:::::::: 5 TSm1"* 36 10 «.m. 31 One Veer Age in Pontiac Highest temperature JO Lowest temperature Mean temperature ... 23 Weather: Snow, 3 Inches Houghton Lk. 28 16 Los-Angeles 61 41 i Jackson 3i 27 Miami Beach 73 71 Lansing. 34 28 Milwaukee 26 24 Marquette 32 25 New Orleans 71 72 Muskegon 30 22 New York <40 35 Osoorfa 30 2/ Phoenix 53-. 35, Pettsteq, 32 19 Pittsburgh 33 31 Saginaw 31 24 St. Louis 34 27 S. Ste. Marie 24 20 Tampa 75 4T Traverse C. 30 10 S. Lake City 29 19 . Albuquerque 31 !1 S. Francisco 59 46 Highest and Lowast Tamperatures This Data la 92 Years 59 1814 -10 In 1880 Boston 39 33 Tucson 47 30 BPnlo 31 25 Washington 42 34 /R' HOLLYWOOD VASSARETTE EASY^ AlEnM YION TRICOT TO MATCH UP AT SAVINGS: 1.69,4.99 Slip: Short 32-J38, Average 34-40, Sale 3.99 Average 42-44.............. Sale 4.99 Brief: sizes 4 to 7, Sale 1.69; 8-9, 1.99 Not shown: Matching petticoat. Short S,M,L, Average M-L Sale 2.99 Average XL Sale 3.49 Make your selections in white, blue or yellow. Hudson's Daytime Lingerie, Pontiac, 1st. HUDSON’S El Hi! Vy, \ ■ : Hudson's Pontiac open till 9:00 p.m. Tuesday; till 5:30 p.m. Wed.; and closed New Year's Day :/ f the press ArsoNsws PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1969 A—3 A Reflective Es$ay Puts the Focus on Our Rural Heritage 1 , ' ‘ By T. LARRY ADCOCK ' ' Staff photographer Rolf inter has a particular liking for driving about the countryside with camera in hand. He here provides us with a pictorial essay of rural Oakland County. A German by birth, Winter later emigrated to Holland, then America. His appreciation for the beauty of a rural setting grew keen during his boyhood and young adult days in scenic European locale?. The barn and windmill photograph represents a man’s organized presence with nature and his pledge to cultivate the fertile land to feed his fellow men. A SCHOOL BUS A school bus at a Holly ^railroad crossing makes a predawn round, gathering the children each morning to transport them to learning experiences. And, finally, a woodpile. Stored up firepower for the long winter nights to come. A comfortable, secure feeling for the household, knowing the warmth the wood will provide. The photos reflect a life far, far away from the hurly-burly of cities ... a life that is a bit slower-paced, a little more appreciative of its natural appearance. Rural America, though some say is fast fading, is alive and well in the hearts of country boys who have moved to the cities and city boys who visit the country. MAN’S OBLITERATION The neon lights, the concrete, glass, steel and plastic have obliterated much of our original lands. America, originally agrarian, today retains only bits and pieces of its rural heritage ... an occasional barn and windmill, a school bus at a small-town railroacj crossing and a pile of firewood ' Pontiac Press Photos by Rolf Winter Wixonr Studies Probe Possibility of Renewal for Its Downtown Area By LOIS FRIEDLAND WIXOM — Land and building studies of the central business area are under way, exploring the possibilities of urban renewal. Money for the three studies will come from a $125,579 grant for surveying and planning a new central business area, authorized by the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). ★ ★ ★ Funds for the over-all study will become an advance payment on .a $1.2-million grant should the city decide to actually rebuild the 53.6 acre central area. Contracts totaling $24,400 were awarded to three companies for the current studies. PACTS DETAILED \ * Groseclose & Williams, Washington D. C., received a $4,000 contract for a land use and marketability study.. Ellis ' Naeyaert & Co. ofx Warren received a $4;400 grant to tnake 1 building inspections and decide which are sturdy enough to remain and which must be torn down. Ralph Wenger & Co'., Grand Rapids, will do the initial appraisals at a cost not to exceed $16,000. ★ ♦ ★ These studies are due within 60-90 days, according *to Robert E. Case, assistant to the mayor. 1 Survey and planning work'must-be wrapped up and into the HUD office in Chicago by next April, the federal deadline, for the preliminary work PAIR OF VERDICTS ^ if At that point, both die city and HUD must individually K Mwil ' * * ■ , decide to go ahead with, urban renewal before any program can begin. If the city decides to proceed, a public hearing will be held. ' . 1 The area in question is bounded by Wixom and Manistee to the west, the far edge of the Wixom subdivision to the south, empty land to the east, the Renton plat and acreage to die north. Some 61 buildings are located on the land. More than half may have to be demolished, according to the city’s formal application for ,the grant. PART OF MASTER PLAN The renewal plan currently, being considered was designed by Vjlican-rLeman & Associates, planning consultants < for. the city,sin 1963. It is part o( a master plan the council faquekted from the fftm> \ 1 1 • u *\ •» - * \ Tne plan includes Compatible light industrial and. commercial facilities with, related uses. Lands oh the west side of the existing central business district would be used for light industry, while housing could be located to the north of the railroad tracks and west of Wixom road. ' ★ ★ ★ j Wixom Road'would end ahput a block from Pontiac TYail, in the center/of industrial area, ind begin again south jot Pontiac Trail. The business district would be moved opposite the civic center, which would include city hallv VilicanHLaaah is performing other survey and planning work necessary fen* the grant. Its <33,000 fee also comes from the preliminary grant. A—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 80, 19^9 U.S. Pressing to Keep Viet Hamlets Secure EDITOR’S NOTE - How do the Vietnamese people in the countryside feel after another year of war? And what has happened to the Vietcong? Two Associated Press men who h covered the war since 1962 W sess the situation afier revisit ing battle areas and provinces from south to north. This is the second of three reports.) By PETER ARNETT and q,ORST FAAS SAIGON (AP) — The premise of lasting safety for the Vietnamese peasant and t h assurance that the Vietcong will not return to dominate his life are overriding aims of all allied efforts in Vietnam today. The defeat of the Vietcong and the North Vietnamese army seem no longer paramount. Safety in the hamlets and fields, and tiie promise to maintain it, have swung whole Vietnamese populations away from Vietcong influence and brought semblance of normal life millions. * ★ ★ The villages have been the scene of major battles in the past, the. peasant always pawn. The promise that has won his cooperation is that there will be no more battles in his neighborhood. It was taking a twofold military effort to keep the promise. On the one hand the allied forces are driving the Vietcong from population centers into remote jungles, mountains and across the borders; with the other hand they are keeping them there. lapse and fizzle out like all other pacification programs. “Earlier this year Vietcong strategy was just to clobber American units and kick them around and cause as many American casualties as possible. TheiV belatedly they had to recognize they could not get back into their places — we had moved in.” in the watchtowers, the Vietnamese tend to match the effort. When the Americans go home, when the patrols and ambushes become boring routine, any lack of enthusiasm tnay'ihean the d i f f £ re n between success and failure. U.S. WILLING American commanders say they would do everything that it takes, including fighting big battles, to prevent a comeback. , “Hie people and the Communist armies are being separated. The Communists no longer are able to swim in the seas of people. We are pulling the population rug from under him, and clubbing him on the head when he comes back.” * ★ ★ -That is the view of Lt. Geh. Julian Ewell, commander of the four U.S. divisions that fight in the war zones around Saigon. A survey by these reporters shows that in only a fifth of the 45 provinces do large, mobile Vietcong forces remain among the population. From the air and highways it can be seen that these provinces have not kept up with the others. NOT IN SHAPE The people crowd in refugee centers along the main roads. Wastelands, rutted highways and burned-out villages still dominate the countryside. The Vietcong guerrilla units that once constituted t h backbone of the insurgency are no longer in fighting shape. Most still exist but are understrength; to avoid destruction they have left their home villages to live in the swamps and jungles. The Vietcong’^ military weakness in the villages came as a surprise to the Americans and Vietnamese who spearheaded the move back into the countryside. The district.of Tra (hi, in the MekongUelta.consideredTinder —romplete-VietooBg -control. last January, was taken without a shot in July. Heavy fighting was expected when government .troops moved against Quoi An village at the Mekong River’s edge. None developed, and it turned out that Quoi An and its 12,000 people had been ruled by 12 armed guerrillas. TOO WEAK In other villages the Vietconj considered themselves too weak to resist and left for the hills hoping tiie government armies would pass through. “It must have come as i great surprise to them that this time we stayed,” commented Capt. Ismael Noriega, whose paratroopers assist the local ^militia of Dinh Binh hamlet on the central coast. “We sit down . hero with their wives families, and they are stuck up there in the mountains, pretty hungry and alone.” North of Hue in Phong Dlen district Lt. Col. William I Steinberg, from King-Prussia, Pa., had his battalion join the local militia to rout guerrillas and the political underground. “This is the biggest pressure the Vietcong here have ever been under, he says. TRY FOR TRAPS “I demand at least one bush a night from each of our squads. We try to trap him at daytime when he mingles with the people in the fields ahd villages, when he is trying to buy rice, to deliver a message, mine a road or just visit his family.” Steinberg hopes that soon most of the local guerrillas and the blacklisted secret organizers will be caught in a honeycomb Of allied traps. ★ ★ ★ By the best available estimate there are 80,000 Irmed guerrillas and just as many mdmembers of the secret government. The guerrillas are being killed over and over again. There are far more dead than alive. But only one in five of the known active supporters and secret organizers has been eliminated. “We have not crippled the Vietcong infrastructure by any means,” commented a senior American in Saigon., ORGANIZING SUCCESS While down in their effectiveness now, the guerrillas and the secret organizers have much to sustain them. Old-timers remember the 'guerrillas’ success in organizing the countryside against the regime, of Ngd Dinh Diem in the early Mi The young ones who survived remember many local successes that culminated in the Tet offensive less than two years ago. Even if his family lives in a government village and is happy there, as 30 Vietcong families do in the Ben Lbc coffee plantation village northeast of Saigon, in the end, the per-rilla can count on them, count on his mother sneaking him some rice, and his wife giving him shelter and hiding him for a few days of rest. The presence of the North Vietnamese nearby encourages the Vietcong, and they expect their brothers from the North to with replacements weapons. The -North Vietni talk - about final victory. The perrillas believe this, however incredulous it may seem on the localscene. Some guerrilla units spend their summers in the Laotian hills, refitting with new recruits, new equipment and new spirit and heading back to their villages, whatever may have . happened there in between. NEVER SURRENDER The hardfcore g u e r r i 11 a s never surrenaefT" The Robin Hood myth If the perrillas survive until cracks show in ’ the security screen they may have a chance of a comeback, “Where vacuum appears, they move in,” said a U.S. battalion commander in Phu My district. The underground in many hamlets and districts likely waits for the new day. ON POSTERS In areas where the population has trust in the district and province chiefs, and truly believes in the promise of secure future, it is possible to take on the underpound. Secret blacklists name the hunted. Some of the most-wanted people are named on posters. In a district of 22,000 people north of Hue 695 names the blacklist. Since October, 21 of them have been killed, captured or surrendered. The price paid was 17 allied soldiers killed, five of them Americans. The VietcOng never fired a shot in resistance. They killed with booby traps. Americans in the field report the people are slow in accepting the idea that there is now an all-out effort, possibly the last undertaken by the Americans in Vietnam. Official surveys taken in some healthy delta provinces show that the peasants/feel the new climate of safety but keep asking “When are the Vietcong coming back?” CREDIBILITY IS LOW And ih the cities the government’s credibility is low. A shopkeeper in Qui Nhon told that two Western reporters had driven 200 miles along coast roads, commented, S “The government has told Vs for a long time that the road is open, but! just can’t believe that. —- • ie—: ★ . ★---- While many people in the provinces are making a giant effort to revive their country the three million inhabitants of Saigon go their own way. The man in the street shows casual indifference. There is really only one question: Will Saigon be attacked again? They welcome assurances like those given by the American general commanding the city’: environs, that the war around Saigon is pretty much over. But the Saigon people seem little interested in helping bring about a'similar si-tuat' elsewhere. ★ ★ There was a howl when the, aigon government imposed austerity taxes on basic commodities like gasoline and motorbikes to get money to help rebuild the nation. The present government, like the ministrations before it, tends to the moods of Saigon, H is the political base for the whole war effort. ONE STEP ... One step in the wrong direction could bring the Buddhists back onto the streets, annoy the militant Catholics, or Wreck the economy. Events such as these could ripple through the couti-Tryside and" in^afi^erelrt achievements. And tills despite the fact that upheavals hi Saigon might bear no relation to what is happening outside the city. Senior officials in the' provinces say that because of its political /handicaps the Saigon government moves slowly decisions of vital importance. ★ * * "Six months ago it was excruciating to get. a decision out of Saigon. Today it is merely agonizing,” commented American general. Once these decisions taken the province chiefs have more freedom than ever to carry them out. EVOLUTION Hie armed forces that are the government’s instrument in tiie rural breakthrough •; dergoing an evolution called Vietnanuzation. It wui move most of the regular Vietnamese army divisions to the frontier shield that presently separates the population from most of tiie North Vietnamese divisions and their associated Vietcong regulars/ it the war's most Important single event. Already .the territorial forces are 50 per cent larger than the regular 375,000-man army- An additional force in the recruiting stage will be used as volunteer home guards. “The last thing the Vietcong can afford to do is to trade lives with the Home Guard,” a U.S. official comments. Hie Home Guard have lost 2,3000 killed this year, he says, and inflicted the same number of kills against the Vietcong. * ★ * There is another motive in organizing the population: a political vacuum in the countryside now that the Vietcong 'as been pushed back or held own. In Vinh Long province 100,000 of the 500,000 people have been recruited for the Home Guard. “We don’t need that many people, the idea is to organize to create a political base,” an American aid official commented. Government territorial forces and home guards recruited and serving in their native provinces will protect the countryside inside the shield. In two northern provinces this change has already taken place. A senior American officer calls Some province chiefs feel that the great challenge Of 1970 will be to interest the peasants in local politics, (hie American concerned in the war observes: 'If we earn their allegiance and get them deeply involved with their local governments we have got it made. Then we will be in and, the Vietcong will be out." (Ntxl: Now things Him tip fsr Hm possible winter-spring offensive.) SIGN OF SUCCESS -r- -This thriving market on South Vietnam's Route 1 is a sign of the pacificiation program’s recent successes. Security provided by the U.S. 173rd Airborne Brigade has enabled lines of com- munication between resettled villages and main markets in northern Binh Dinh Province to be reopened. New roads and markets have been constructed. “We used to admire these guys, but now they botch everything,” says an American in the field. “They plant a mine and blow themselves Basically they are amateurs now." The weapon the Vietcong still wield efficiently is terror, hamlet chief sleeping at home is still the highest indicator of successful pacification. This year 4,500 people have been killed by Vietcong terrorists and Hie onoe-powerfui Vietcong district and province chiefs who commanded every level of society are now hi many cases forced to rule their fiefdoms from exile, surrounded by North Vietnamese bodyguards. In many areas it is believed the enemy made a major miscalculation. ‘DROPPED THE BALL’ j “They dropped tiie ball last November. They underestmated bur promise to the people to stay,” Says an American official in the delta. “They assessed our program efongly. . They thought it woqld just col- i W 1 once surrounded the Vietcong has been exploded. Fiye years agp many people looked upon the Vietcong as an organization that could make everything possible with superior skills, discipline and dedication. The Vietcong were omnipresent; it was impossible to escape their influence. , Drinking Driver, Sign Up Now BURLINGTON, Vt. (AP) -The Burlington Free Press, a daily newspaper that has offered free funerals in past years to those whq register their in-tendon to drink and drive on New Year’s Eve, is offering a different service this year. * ' * Editor Gordon "Mills said Monday night the paper will distrib-questionnaire, and if persons who plan to drink and drive this holiday return it,, the information will be passed bn to On The Twelfth-Day of Chifhftmas My True Love Gave to Me... assassins; five times as many the next of kin, should the driver meet misfortune. , The questiohnaire will list were kidnaped and maimed. FURY OF OFFENSIVE Jin some areas the fury of the Tet offensive turned the people the Vietcong. Guerrillas lave to commute into Hue to land out leaflets; tiie population will not permit them to live there. The real weapon of tiie future for tiie Vietcong could be the complacency that may set in with quietude,;/ as it /has so many times before. Now Saigon’s forces have a momentum. As long as Americans go along on five-man ambush patrols, and stay awake at night people. ift such information as where tiie will, bank hooks and other sonaP effects are. ' ' \ ie ★ ★ Mills said an average of 30 persons each -year have registered for free funerals, but the paper never had to pay off. plant nutrition specialist believes a single nuclear complex placed in the Ganges River plain, could give the basic energy needed to, help provide food for more- titan 40 million ALL THE BILLS It's the same tune every Christmas, after the holiday comes the bills ... If you'find yourself up that Christmas Tree with a bill problem just call the Pontiac State Bank . . . We're here to help you financially with a convenient PERSONAL LOAN, and loaning money to people like you is an important part of our business. So get those bills together and consolidate them with one loan. It's a sensible way to start the '70s. At Any One of Our 13 Conveniently Located Offices. The Bank On The GROW State Bank Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation with Deposits Insured to $15,000.00 m THfe PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER. 30, 1969 A—»5 69 Had its Share of Good News, Too By the Association Press Attention was focused on war and conflict. Crime and corrup-\ flop claimed headlines. Yet there was ‘'good news'’ in 1969 and some of. the best of it was recorded in stories that showed countless citizens at their unselfish best. > It was the year a blind high school dropout named Clyde Raymond Smith earned his doctorate degree. It was the year that Illinois neighbors pitched in to help Don Kruse when he lost parts of both legs in a farm ac-; cident. ★ * ★ Perhaps one of the best-remembered "good-news” stories of the year occurred on a Detroit bus. A man attacked the driver and broke his arm. Most of the passengers cowered in their seats, but 71-year-old Bernice Kuliszko ran up the aisle 1 and pushed the assailant away. Mrs. Kuliszko, Vfho was punched and. had her glasses knocked off by the bully, was given a resolution of commendation by the bus system. DOING RIGHT “It is gratifying to know that there are still people in this world who know what is right and proud to do it without regard for their personal safety,” she was told. Smith, now teaching in Peoria, 111., dropped out of high school and had abandoned hope of supporting himself and his wife. Later he passed trance exam to Arkansas State College. He graduated with honors, got a master’s degree from the University of Missouri and in December got his doctor of education degree from the University of Tennessee. ★ ★ ★ People gave of themselves. In Moro, HI., Kruse, 31, a part-time farmer, lost parts Of both legs when caught in a com picking machine. His friends not only raised $12,000 to help him, but also harvested his fields and built a concrete sidewalk, driveway and patio for his house. In North Bend, Wash., neighbors of a baker who was injured with his wife in an auto accident manned his shop themselves. Among those helping sell the pastries were a minister and an undertaker. A NEW ROOF A Richfield, Minn., widow got a new roof for her home. It was installed by the "Operation Brotherhood” org whose members donate several hours each week to an "ability bank” to help people In need. Even prisoners displayed generosity.1 This year, 240 initiates 'of Tucker Prison Farm in Fine Bluff, Ark., each contributed $1 they received as Christmas presents from the state for presents for 25 poor children living nearby. ★ * * Animals got into the act at Broward Humane Society Shel-in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. They licked their chops at an overflow of donated food after staffers appealed to the public. The 800 cans Sf food and 700 pounds of dry mealjFas plenty for all including an irmadillo, a monkey and a turkey who made it through the Thanksgiving cri-s. Honesty was one of the traits seen in tins year’s good news. A woman in Boone, N.C., who lost a pocketbook with $600 and no local address in it, got it back through a radio appeal. In Aurora, Colp., a billfold with $44 and a bevy of credit cards in it was lost and returned intact by mail to its owner. The 18-year-oid finder did not want a reward. SHOWED THANKS And in St. Louis, a young Marine who had been* stranded in LoS Angeles earlier in the year Bankers, often pictured as fishy-eyed and cold-hearted, aiso jiad praise for students as financial risk*. The New York State Higher Education Assistance Corp., which has loaned about $618 mi)Uon to 700,000 students since 1958, reported defaults were only 1.6 per cent of dollars lent. The Peace Corps announced that this year American school children have raised funds for the 1,000th school to be built in an. underdevloped foreign country. ★ * The Yuletide spirit brought out donations of food for the needy by 10,000 of the 29,000 people in Weirton, W.Va., and gifts from a Terry Sanford High School class in Fayetteville, N.C., for poor kids. It also saw 179 Detroit patrolmen volunteer their time for duty in a high-crime area and a Philadelphia man, Albert Trauf-fer, 67, spend nearly $1,500 of his $7,031 yearly salary on Christmas presents for neighborhood youngsters and youths in hospitals and orphanages. He’s been doing so for a quarter of a century and says, "I believe in the dear Lord treating me tomorrow as I treat people today.” • and was loaned $12 toward a] plane ticket by an unidentified woman, showed his thanks by, donating $100 to the Central Institute for the Deaf. She had de-| dined repayment but suggested he send any amount he wanted to the school. ■ * Students, too, contributed -to the bright side of the news. * ★ ★ At Eastern Mennonite College in Harrisonburg, Va„ they took odd jobs and had a fund raising auction to help raise $400,000 for a start on construction of a $1.4-million library. Some washed cars and got $200 per scrubbing. Another got $1,000 for chopping wood. Others' outbid at $350 the owner of a Handmade 1893 cello who donated it for the auction-ahd then promptly returned it to him. _ . * {- Central High School students in Kenai, Alaska, held a sing’-in —admission price three cans, of food—to aid the needy. A Freshman at Florissant Valley Community College in Missouri and some high school chums took orphan children on a tour of downtown display windows in St. Louis and got them Christmas presents. G & M & ELLIS Since 1945 CEMENT WORK • PATIOS GARAGES • ADDITIONS COMPLETSBUILDINO SERVICE TERMS Pi 2-1211 QUALITY REPAIRS ON ALL MAKE HEARING AIDS Loaner* Available PONTIAC MALL OPTICAL & HEARING AID CENTER Phone 682*1113 HEARING AID DEALER, Our business offices will be closed December 31st and January 1st. The Appliance Soles DeFartmebt in Downtown Pontiac will be open until 5 P.M. on December 31st. consumers power TOMORROW, 9 am to 5:30 pm Is Your Last Chance During 1969 to Save at SIMMS... It’s LAST-DAY OF THE YEAR mg s Come join 1n with Simms to celebrate the New Year by taking advantage of these year-ending specials. Shop , Simms 9 am to 5:30 pm'Wednesday, Simms will be closed Thursday, Jan. 1, and may we still serve you during the coming year. \ Jh PARK FREE for 1 HOUR w i • n i Simm* will pay for 1 hour of par|dng In the You can charge all your purchases at downtown parking mall. Ju»t have ticket 1 Simms with Your MICHIGAN BANKARD WW stamped at time of purchase. Except tobacco or MASTER CHARGE cards. ___ and beverage purchases. Bates or FMdcrest Woven Easy Care Bedspreads First quality American made Gates or Fieldcrest wow bedspreads. Full, twin or bunk sizes. Plaids and solid colors. Basement Slacks Press * Dan River 50% Fortrel and 50% cotton blend, permanent press, Ivy style pants. AQA Sizes 6 to 18. jFr***- Basement - HP Yard Goods ^Solid color wash and wear yard Jgoods for making clothes, curtains, jM y TB quilts, etc. Stock up now. d B W Basement -B.’ * .BL , CANNON Bath Towels Famous Cannon first quality heavyweight both towels, 22x44 inch size. Solid colors or prints, pink or green. Basement si\#ws: ladies Sportsweat 66< Smart Winter Styles Ladies’ Dresses Orlons, Orion and wool blends, rayon and cotton knits. Shifts, button fronts, etc. Broken sizes 8-10-12-14. Matn Floor Gelusil Antacid $1.59 value, 12-oz. size Gelusil liquid antacid. Relieves that stuffy feeling from BBBB^ overindulgence. Drugs—AAain Floor “W Head and Shoulders Shampoo $1.75 "value tube Head and Shoulders shampoo eliminates unsightly dandruff., tn hondy^tflwiDrmr ' ' ~.- . Drug* Main Floor WW-MW. _ Scope Mouth Wash $1.59 value, 17-oz. size Scope mouth wash and gargle. Once in the morning does it. Tastes good. Drugs—AAain Floor 83< Therapeutic Formula Parke-Davis 130 Myadec Capsules $8.65 Value for Pkg. of-130 Parke Davis Myadec . capsules a therapeutic vitamin formula plus minerals. Drugs—AAain Floor Phisohex Skin Cleanser $3.65 value, 16-OZ. size Phisohex sudsing anti-bacterial skin cleanser. Helps relieve' 'acne, '■ '\ Drugs—Main Floor J69 Adorn Hair Spray 129 $2.25 value Toni self styling Adorn hair spray in your choice of regular ,6r* extra hold formula. Drugs—AAain Floor For Winter Fun-Sturdy Toboggans 8-Foot Reg. $18.99 6-Foot Reg. $16.99 11« 10« Sturdily made toboggans for winter fun. Pad for 8-Foojf. .. 6.88 Pad for 6-Foot... 4.88 ■ Sport*—2nd Floor Cast Aluminum Fry Pan 149 10 Vi-inch size cast aluminum'fry pan with sta-' bright finish. Fries evenly, • 2nd Floor Magic Hot Seat Regular $1.69, standard size hot seat keeps AA you warm while ice fishing, watching football B games, etc. 2nd Floor *■. Heavy Duty Jumper Cables All copper heavy duty 12-foot length jumper cables for can, snowmobiles or boats. Reg. $5.88 8-Foot Length... 3.22 Auto —2nd Floor 3" Brews 3 to 7 Cups-Automatic General Electric Coffee Maker < of better V is m ssEMfis Model CM1 Famous General Electric top quality coffee maker. Brews 3 to 7 cups of coffee and keeps it warm. ; 2nd Floor Electric Alarm Clock 'Syroco' electric alarm clock has luminous CD CD dial qnd delicate scroll design case. Factory B guaranteed. Sundries—AAain Floor -B. ‘Lux’ Wind Up Alarm Clock $2.98 list. Lux Apollo 2-key wind-up alarm clock With white case and 90-day factory guarantee. Sundries—AAain Floor 188 5-Cell ASHE Flashlight Ashe 'He Man' 5-cetl flashlight throws 750-foot beam. Comes complete with batteries, all for only 99‘ Adjustable Cut - Super 89 Wahl Electric Clipper $17.75 Lift for only Wahl Super 89 taper clipper adjustable cut from #1 to 000. With free can of oil. Sundries—AAain Floor Fedtro Shaver Booster Electric shaver power booster speeds up to 35% faster, all electric shavers except Ron- ! son and Shavex.' . Sundries—Main Floor . 129 Mallow Battery Wall Clocks 13" $28.00 list, model\1710 $28.00 list, model 69! $31.00 list, model 1715 $28.00 list, model 445 98 North Saginaw St. Downtown Pontiac SIMMS'1! plus batteries. Sundries—Main Floor The Friendly Discount Store since 1934 $ A, 48 West Huron Street THE PONTIAC PRESS Pontiac, Michigan 48056 TUESDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1969 HOWARD H. FITZGERALD II Publithur ARLO McCUUY Circulation Ma nagur Floyd Miller The community is saddened by the passing of Floyd Miller, a Pontiac resident for nearly half a century. A native of Michi-gan, Mr. Miller followed a mercantile career before identifying himself with the Credit Bureau of Flint. He subsequently moved to Pontiac and estab-| lished the Pontiac | Credit Bureau, Inc., which he headed until the time of his death at 81. ★ ■ ★ ★ Mr. Miller was widely recog- nized in the credit-rating field, and during his long connection with it developed a successful system of advanced forms that found national acceptance. Although active in a wide range of civic and social activities, Mr. MiLler’s principal interest was the conduct of his business enterprises, . leaving him little time for hobbies or recreational pursuits. He leaves an enviable record of personal achievement and service to the business community. Here’s one for the Swords-into-Plowshares Department: A onetime launching pad for a nuclear,armed missile near Topeka is now the site of a new high school, reports the National Education Association. Missile Complex No. 9/ closed in 1964, was near the center of Kansas Unified School District No. 335, which was seeking a site for a school to replace four substandard high schools. ★ ★ For $1, the school district bought the land on which the missile base stood, an 18,000-square-foot underground complex, two water wells, two 30,000-gallon tanks, a sewer system and an airstrip. ■Or ★ ★ The district voted $685,000 to refurbish Jhe underground complex to house general business, math and science classrooms, teacher offices and heating and air-conditioning equipment and to build the balance of the school above ground. (Locally, the Auburn Heights campus of Oakland Community College was developed on a former Nike base.) It added up to a fine, and unique, new school for half what it would have cost to build it from scratch. ★ ir it • „ All our armaments should find such happy ultimate uses. Collection Cost Consistent The IRS is currently spending a mere 40 cents for every $100 it collects in taxes, reports Commerce Cleaning House: The figure is arrived at by computing the total expenses of the service, including the salaries of some 64,500 employes, against the total of Federal taxes paid .by- Americans. In fiscal 1969, the latter was a record $187.9 billion. , 1 . , ★ ★ ★ The current cost of 40 cents compares with 32 cents per $100 in 1944, the lowest ever recorded, and the all-time high of $5.87 in 1871 under an earlier income tax law that was later declared unconstitutional. When the present income tax began in 1913, the IRS spent $1.59 for every $100 in collected. This cost dropped to 33 cents in 1918 due to an almost five-fold boost in receipts during World War I. The more taxes and more taxpayers always means more tax litigation. In fiscal 1968, 9,602 new tax cases were filed. This compares with 5,811 in 1958. About 10;300 tax suits are anticipated in 1969 and 10,700 in 1970, when an estimated 10 million more Americans will file returns. But here, too, the IRS has an impressive batting average — .750 to be exact. In 1968, the Government won three of every four tax disputes takeu to court. Ray Cram ley Everyone's Problem! Missile Site Now School Site Ralph de Toledano Arab Summit Roils the Mideast .WASHINGTON—The Rabat Arab summit meeting has come and gone, making headlines and muddying the waters of international policy. A group of Arab red-hots made the noise and got the major play, pumping up steam for the kind of “holy war” De TOLEDANO which could only lead to further crisis in the Middle East. Take, for example, the keynote speech at the unsuccessful Rabat meeting. “We hslve followed the road to peace until we have exhausted all our means and we have tried to reach a just settlement which does not affect our dignity and honor and would not make us surrender any of our principles or our land.” . * „ ★ i , Those are beautiful sen-' timents, but there is not a word of truth in them. How has Egypt followed the , road to peace? How have Jordan and Iraq and Syria . tried to reach a just settlement? LAUNCHING RAIDS The Arab countries agreed to a cease-fire after the June 1967 war. But their voices had not ceased reverberating in the councils of the world before they began to violate that cease-fire by launching raids on Israel and by arming guerrilla groups to prey on the Israelis. 1 After the war, the Israelis pointed out that they Had withdrawn their forces ip 1956, on the promise that the Arabs would sit down at the negotiating table. But this promise was forgotten Pnd the: Arab states began preparing., for a second war with Israel — a war which, to their chagrin, they lost. * * * The Israelis said they would not discuss peace terms with third parties, which yr a s futile, but would settle their differences With the Arabs only by direct negotiations. Of course, neither President jS. Viet Coalition Fears Well Gr -—-WASHINGTON (NEAI—The other day this reporter talked for three hours with a man named Vu Hong Khanh. In 1946, Khanh was vice chairman of time when many Aw.rihags ^gcret orders tq the CRCMLEY new Vietnamese government, Ho and Khanh signed an agreement by Which France recognized Vietnam as a free and sovereign country within (he French Union. * * Sif: . Khanh therefore should be somewhat of an expert on what Hanoi means by “coalition.” tAii understanding of this, meaning is important at a argue for a preelection coalition as the logical solution for Vietnam. EASY TO UNDERSTAND After talking with Khanh it is not difficult to understand why President Thieu disagrees. He remembers 1946. In the 1946 coalition Ho was head of state. Giap (victor at Dien Bien Phu and currently one of the five most powerful men in Hanoi) was head of the Supreme Military Council. Major cabipet posts were divided among the parties. * ’ ★ \* Iri the discussions on Cabinet ministers in the new government, Ho and his Communist associates were quite generous (or so it seemed). The nationalist party, to which Khanh belonged had three cabinet posts — foreign affairs, social Welfare, nat-tiqnal . economy — the vice v chairmanship 'of the' Supreme Military Council/ '(Khanh) and a third of the National Assembly. DIDN’T WORK OUT But tilings didn’t work out. Ho made certain the working head of the police (ip Interior) was a Communist believer. Ho issued direct orders tir this pian., The y secretary of state for^ they Interior was ignored. Ho's man Giap issued h the. military secret police, ignoring the Supreme Military Council, the National Assembly,' the secretary of state for defense and the non-Communist members of the. cabinet. * * * Ho had his own secret police. He armed groups of Communist party security men. The Communists kept their own tax system. Through control of virtually all taxes, they gathered the funds they needed for party organizational work and terrorist operations, ALL-OUT ATTACK Once the Communists had eliminated enough opposition leaders and secured sufficient arms, they opened an all-out military-terrorist attack on the non-Comm-unist leadership. To clinch victory,' Ho made a deal with the French, allowing the French armies. back, into v the country.' The French forces attacked the non-Communist nationalists on the frontier: the Communists attacked from within. Between the hammer and .anvil, the nationalists were defeated. • * * ★ ' This is enough' of Khanh’s story on/ what happened in Vietnam/7two decades ago tb explain South Vietnam's f^ars on coalition. ■ Bob Considine Old Reporter a Failure: His Work Isn’t Decadent NEW YORK-Peopie . . . Places . . The young mail with the long hairdo from the big New York and Hollywood talent agency had been ordered by someone higher up in his organization, possibly even bald* to drop by the old reporter’s apartment to look* over some stories the bumrhad written inrtftrpsstr— **? ~ The stories were a mass of experiences. One concerned-the agony- of GenrJonathan M. Wainwright’s imprisonment during World War if j £ Nasser nor King. Hussein would agree to this kind of negotiation. For the fact is that the Arabs do not want a peaceful settlement of their dispute with Israel. NO LEG TO STAND ON Jordan, it should be remembered, does not have a leg to stand on in its demands for tiie West Bank or for Jerusalem. This was territory which never belonged to the Jordanians and was theirs only because they had wrested it from Israel by force of arms in the 1948 war. Only by maintaining a perpetual state of crisis can the rulers of toe Arab world survive. / * * * ¥ Only by (fainting the Uriited States, whidP has compromised far more than it shodld have in attempting to bring the war to an end, as an “imperialist” and murderous country can they hold their people in line. The propaganda of the" disrupted Rabat meeting was designed to fool the world even as it fools toe poor and underprivileged of Egypt, Syria, Jordan, Iraq and Sudan. If it were open to careful analysis, it might evep be pointed out that Siidan has been slaughtering black Africans by the •thousands, and that it still condones the slave trade — despite the meager efforts of the United Nations to end it. Voice, of the People: Television Viewer’s Day Full of No-No \ *\ v v \ \ ' I’m beginning to think I should remain in bed day in and day out. When I get up, I turn on my colored television and my wife* pours me*a glass of juice. A warning on television immediately tells me of cyclamates that may cause cancer. If I light a cigarette, TV says “no,, no, there’s danger of emphysema and lung cancer.”. Whelm my wijfe decides to wash some clothes,'she’s warded that enzymes may infect her lungs. ★ ★ * Water is polluted' fish are full of D.D.T., the air is polluted. I don’t think all the violence on “Gunsmoke” ever scared anyone as much as all these warnings on television. I’d better turn off my colored television because my health could be injured by radioactivity; and I can’t see it sitting, very far away. Guess I’ll settle for a beer because television doesn’t say “no, no,” that it might damage my health. MR. NO-NO, Expresses Concern for Babies’ Bare Hands I I see many babies being carried around with bare hands on these cold days. Let’s sew up some mittens and do it now. D. S. Commends Kettering’s Basketball Teams I commend toe Waterford-Kettering basketball teams for the interesting and thrilling games in mis very young season. I know toe record reads 0-4, but it could have just as easily been 4-0. Don’t be discouraged. * ★ ★ I know officiating is a hard job, but if an official is bad, he still stays on. Even in the major leagues, toe ball player has to produce, but the Umpire stays. I think there should be some commissioner or someone to view these games once in awhile. I also think there should be a uniform price for all high school games. A KETTERING FAN Reader Tells Need to Study Word of God One can be ever so sincere in what he believes and still be wrong. Unless our faith is based on the Word of God, we have no foundation that will hold and save us eternally. This is why we need to read and study toe Word of Gpd. Accepting the Word by faith and obeying it from the heart brings about a change of direction in your life. YOUR NEIGHBOR (Editor’s Note: All letters to the Voice of the People' must be signed and an address given. In some instances a pen name may be used m the paper.) Daily Almanac By United Press International Today is Tuesday, Dec. 30, the 364th day of 1969 with one to follow. The moon is full. • The morning stars areVenu? and Jupiter. .The evening stars are Mercury, Mars and Saturn. On this day in history: In 1853, the United States bought .45,000 square miles of land south of the Gila . River from Mexico for $10 million. It is now toe southern area of Arizona and New Mexipo. In’ 1903, fire swept toe Iroquois Theatre in Chicago killing 588 persons. In 1947, King .Michael'of " Rumania abdicated, claiming he was forced out by local Communists aided by Russians. BERRY’S WORLD-By Jim Berry CONSIDINE Another had to1 do with the conscience of a Brinks robber whose testimony sent half a dozen fellow thieves to prison for life (two of whom were released this past week). Still another had to do with a wildly wonderful and often eccentric lady newspaper publisher named Cissy Patterson. , There were some odds and ends for toe young man to look over: toe life and sad death of the greatest woman athlete who ever lived, Babe Didrikson; toe little-known but intensely influential “think tanks” that toe Pentagon and other top government agencies depend upon; the story of an astronaut who defected to toe Soviet Union, and a short story about the death of a great metropolitan newspaper. ‘I’M SURPRISED’ “No good for us/’ the young man declared, after a swift glance. Then he added, sincerely, “You know, I’m surprised. You’re supposed to be a good reporter. Why haven’t you written anything that people are really interested in? , “The only people who go to movies today are under 30. They want sex, sadism, lesbianism, sodomy, drug addiction. They don’t . want sweetness and light. They want to be ugly, decadent, diseased. You must be some kind of a nut to think we’ds be interested in your stuff.” *1 1 ‘ . ' *’ \ w ' \ The old reporter was so angry he reached for the nearest object and broke it over the .young man’s head. Unfortunately, it was my Guy Lombardo album. TTie most mystifying reason given by the Air Force for ordering what might eventually be $6 billion worth of new McDonnell-Douglas jet' fighters is. thpt in the Korean war . our pilots had a 12-to-l mastery over the Rupian-built fighterjs, but in toe war in Vietnam that figure/has been reduced to two-aitd-a-half to One. 7 yJ't t /> ’ U] When did we shoot down those two-and-S-half Migs? . (Kim Futures) \ Verbal Orchids • Mrs. Daisy Daley of Ortonville; 89th birthday. Mrs. Mattie' Jackson -2586-Wr-Walton r 92ndtoirthdayr Axel J. Benson Of 6853 Dixie; 85to birthday. Mr. and Mrs. P. P. Anderson of Holly; 57th wedding Anniversary © 1W» I* NEA, Ik. “If you’re really Bob Hope and not ‘Charlie’ — say something funny!” \ (Q) I have a formal complaint to make to Montgomery Ward. Can yon give ine the president’s name and address apd phone numbier of toe main office? MRS. JESSE FINK 616 E. COLUMBIA (A) E. S. DonneU, 616 W, Chicago Ave., Chicago, III, Phone 312-467-2000. ^ (Q) Pip a widow of 74. man from toe City, came and told me my apartment buUding needed certain repairs, including a shower and wash bowl with a partition around it, which will cotft me about $1,000. Some are done, but I don’t have much money to get toe rest done by toe time they told mie. The man said when I have these things done, he will give me more to do. Where can I get help on this thing? ■ > .VJ> ' TAXPAYER • (A) Mr. Parker at City Housing Department says nothing ctin be done to change the Requirements for meeting the minimum housing code as prescribed by law. However, he says every effort is made to accommodate persons who are cooperating with the Department, and each case is reviewed on an individual basis so financial difficulties can be token into consideration when setting a deadline for completion of improvements. \ (Q) On Nov. 101 mailed a cheek for merchandise shown on toe enclosed Xerox copy- * My check was cashed, but I have not heard from toe seller. What action do yo« advise? - t ' Wondering (A) We suggest you wait a little longer. The Chamber of Commerce in that city tells its it is a reputable , company; but they’re working on back orders, and are trying to get the merchandise out' as soon as possible.. f T Hurry! Ticketed lor. travel is the message given to our shoes! Brilliant foot fashion dazzle for every family member. Not -all ‘sixes in ail colors ind styles. Be an early shopper for the I Vest choice. INFANTS’ and J^OLDREN’S. Sy MEN’S and >i *AT BIG BOYS’ © Big Boys’ Shoes A Were 7.99 to 10 99 ZJ Men’s Dress Shoes Were 10.99 to 15.99 Men’s Work Shoes Were 9.99 to 11.99 Featlierlite Heels Sears Sears OPEN Monday thru Saturday . 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. ISgai^l Downtown Pontiac •. FE 5-4171 rs-wjg SAVE tm ClondStipreineBatkCarpfetin^and Accessories Our best quality nylon pile . . . soluxurious, yet so practical. Exceptionally long-wearing, resists pilling and fuzzing. IN'on-skid \ backing. Machine washable. 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Enameled steel.case with brass- _ * gree Trim. 4 built-in towel bars. Plastic - OQ„ color handle. Reg. 6.49.......-a.......O. doors. Reg, 22.98........................... lo -»/ ' ' • Use Your Sears Revolving Charge' -OPEN . JFT“ Saturday jSearsj Downtown Pontiac • FE 5-4171 9 a.ftl. to 9 |».m. mars, roebuck an'd co, w , , v 1 . ■ ; ~ • ' . . ,, • . , • •’ Troy Villas: Busy Folks By BARBARA (i RIBBON Troy Villas Is a112-year-old subdivision/ dear Liveri/iois / and South Boulevard in Troy. There are ranch and two-stbry style homes on curved streets with plenty of lend for privacy around each house. Residents keep busy with a number ,of civic activities. There’s a great deal of interest in handicrafts, both modern and old-fashioned in nature. Interest- In the history of' Troy and its many organizations keep residents busy. THE CHARLES OSBURNS Everyone’s busy at the Charles Osburn home. The - family, including Susan, 15, Margie, 14 and Jeanne, 8, mpve(f here from Dearborn. Mrs. Osburn’s mother, Mrs. Elsie Bunn, also lives with them. Osburn is a model maker at the' GM Tech Center in Warrep. His hobbies include bowling, golf and swimming. He also enjoys woodworking, making such items as picture frames, inlaid wood bowls and animals. Mrs. Osburn says her husband had to take up some outside interests in self defense. Everyone else in the family is involved in something. The two older girls, Susan and Margie, both ballet dancers, are members of the Contemporary Civic Ballet group of Oakland County in Royal Oak. This holiday season found them dancing with the Oak Park Symphony Concert. Their teacher is Rosemarie Floyd of Royal Oak. The girls’ dancing keeps mom busy making costumes and chauffering them to rehearsals. Mrs. Osburn and her mother are busy with their own hobby, rug, hooking. They’ve put on demonstrations at the Troy Historical Museum and at Greenfield Village, where Mrs. Bunn won a first prize last year. Some of the larger rugs they make take over a year and a half to complete. Both ladies dye their own wool for their rugs and like to make large pictorial rugs, often mistaken for oil paintings when framed and hung on the wall. ★ ★ ★ ■ Mrs. Osburn is also a Girl Guards leader and bowls with a league. The youngest daughter, Jeanne, also is taking dancing and plans to, follow in her sisters’ footsteps. She’s a member of the Sunbeams, a junior Girl Guards group in the area. The family belongs to St. Augustine’s Lutheran Church. > THE ALBIN BOROVICAS ' The Albin Borovica family came two years ago from Warren. The youngsters are Cathy, 7, Barbara, 5, Michael, 3 and Mary, 2. Borvica is assistant chief draftsman at Pontiac Motor Division. A sports fan and do-it-yourselfer, he’s been refurbishing the ,family’s house, Mrs. Borovica enjoys sewing and makes many of her children’s clothes. Cooking, baking and decorating are»also hobbies of hers. She’s a room mother at Niles Elementary School. The .family belongs ,to St. Andrew’s Church in Rochester. THE ROBERT BEVIER5 — The Robert Beviers have .lived here for 12 years. Their family includes Terry, 11, Robert, 15, Debbie, 18, and Cindy, , 21, just married. Cindy and her husband are employed by VISTA in Salt take City, Utah where they work in poverty aiieas. They’re both in the edu<)a(tonpl section of VIS^A, which is tryihg to Upgrade education tor,.all ages. 1 Mrs. Bevier is president of tl\e Friends of Troy Public Library and is area chairman of the Girl Scouts. She’s also blood hank chairman for the Parent-Teacher-Student Assn, at Troy High School and is program chairman for the Troy ‘Study Club. She’s also a member of the Troy Youth Protective Group and is active in the First United Methodist Church. . , Bevier, who Is a Prudential Insurance agent, is vice president pt the Oakland County Youth Protection organization. He’s president of the Troy Rotary, a volunteer fireman, president of the administrative board at the First United' Methodist Church, is on the board of directors , of the Troy Library and is active in Boy Scouting. Debbie, a freshman at Centray Michigan University, was a member of the Up With People singing group for two years,‘traveling throughout the U.S. and Europe. THE JESSE BURROUGHSES The Jesse Burroughs family came five years ago from Berkley. The .children are Jimmy, 8, and Brenda, 6. Also living with the family is Mrs. Burroughs’ father, William Courtney, retired from the Ford Motor Co. Courtney, an avid golfer, once played in (hq National Open. Burroughs is a dynamometer technician at Ford Motor Co. He enjoys things of a mechanical nature, bpt jus wife is the real do-it-yourselfer in the family. Expert inwShdwork-ing, she even taught carpentry for two years. She has built herself a set of kitchen cabinets, a small storage shed in the yard and a five-foot-long doll house for her daughter. Mrs. Burroughs is a member of the Creative Council of the Continuum Center for Woolen at Oakland University, actually a marketing service for women expert in crafts. One of Mrs. Burroughs’ most successful crafts is the unusual picture frames she makes, using a method of iconage, which transfers pictures to wood. She sold numerous frames at the Somerset Mall "Young at Art” shdw recently. She also enjoys sewing and is a Cub Scout Den mother. She is active in the Troy Historical Society, where she recently chairmanned the “Hand & Eye Show.’* THE STEWART FALLS Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Fall came nine years ago from Royal Oak. Their .children are Stewart, 8, Steven, 3, and Alisha, 18 months old. Also in the family is a 180-pound St. Bernard named Sir Schultz. Fall is an agent for State Mutual of America Insurance Co. He and his wife hunt for antiques, refinishing their finds for their home—almost completely furnished in unusual pieces. An old kettle drum serves as an end table and an old corn masher is a lamp. Everyone in the family has a handmade quilt. Mrs. Fall collects cookbooks; she has more than 150 and uses them, too. * Football is the family’s main interest. They have five season’s tickets to the Lions games. Miy. Fall is active in the Troy Historical Society, which recently had its • annual Oiristmas party- at her home. (Next week—Maceday Woods) AFTER CHRISTMAS SALE A r --i>-T/ v ip ^ u ■ 5 'A. TIIE,PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 30, ip69 BIG DOLL HOUSE!—Mrs. Jesse Burroughs, daughter Brenda and son Jimmy look over the five-foot-long doll BUSY (xENERATlONS—Margie Osburn (center) looks on as her mother, Mrs. Charles Osburn (right) and grand- mother, Mrs. Elsie Bunn,' hook rugs. Framed examples hang on the walls behind the women. house Mrs. Burroughs made for her daughter. She has ,a widespread reputation as a handyman. I 1 ' y ■ : ■ * ■■ . v ■ V. , jfasjhs Sk Sfa THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 80, 1969 ^ pH I'*" ,, i ailll® mi PWSHif|m 15-Foot Drifts Bury Farm After Snowfall In Eastern New York In New England Warning Is Issued on March 7 Eclipse More Storms Are Due More inclement weather wasjVidalia, La., ripping off the roofl More light snow was falling expected to hit New England|of a house and overturning sev- from Idaho' across Montana and] late today or tonight, according eral trucks, to the U.S. Weather Bureau at HAIL IN ALABAMA Boston. But the bureau said res- ' A llttle more than tw0 ‘dents need not fear a repeat of of rain had fallen at MuscIe I Shoals, Ala., by early morning. e Small hail, mixed with thundershowers in portions of Alabama II and Arkansas. WASHINGTON (AP) -.Solar eclipse fans: If you miss the big blackout next March 7, you'll have to wait until 2184 to Bee the next . one scheduled . to , occur over a large part of the/United States. The National Science Foundation issued the last-chance warning in announcing an eclipsewatching session for college astronomy teachers to be held March 6 and 7 at East Carolina University in Greenville, N.C. The total eclipse of the sun takes place when the sun, moon and earth—in that order —are lined * up and the disk of the inodh fully covers the sun. Once the entire solar surface is hidden, the sky gets dark j enough to allow viewers to see bright stars. *> * * The March 7 show, centered over the nation's southeast coast, will feature the usual 100-mile-wide shadow of the moon racing at 1,000 miles,per hour across the earth’s surface. co and northwest Florida. Next It will skirt inland alohg the Atlantic coast of Georgia and the j Carolines, leave land at the louth of Chesapeake pay, touch Nantucket Island, cross Nova Scotia and end south'of Icelaiul in the North Atlantic,. From any given spot, the totality “will last for about three minutes. The most recent total eclipse visible within the continental United States occurred in August 1963. the post-Christmas storm that left many areas still in trouble today. A four-day storm that began late Christmas Day and continued through Sunday left some 60 Snow, sleet or freezing rain inches of new snow in parts ofjWas falling from eastern New Vermont and up to 50 inches ini Mexico as far north and east as sections of central and western Pennsylvania. The upper Great Wyoming to North Dakota with I s*!a<*ow wjll begin in the subzero temperatures the norm|^acl*lc ®cean wes*coast from the eastern Dakotas to Iowa and portions of Colorado. Predawn temperature ranged from 15 below zero at Aberdeen, S.D., to 72 at Key West, Fla. Massachusetts. * 4 Mayor James F. Cleary of North Adams, Mass., said the storm caused a crisis in his city. "We’re down to two - snowplows — he rest have broken. Everybody’s dead on their feet, and now they say more snow may be on the way,’’ he sajd Monday DAIRY FARMERS HURT Snowmobiles still were being pressed into service in. North Adams and elsewhere in New England for food and medical deliveries and other emergencies. ■k * * Dairy farmers in Vermont! were especially hard hit. Some | in the Newbury area said they! were dumping their milk be-1 cause tankers couldn’t pick it up. Others said they had to do milking-by hand for the first] time in years because of power failures. The entire state of Vermont was declared a disaster area! Sunday. The storm caused some flooding in coastal regions where it rained heavily. ' “Unless we get more rain, the worst of the flood problem isj past,” a spokesman for the U.S. I Army Corps of Engineers said. HEAVY RAINS A variety of precipitation fell] across much of the rest of the! nation during today’s early] hours. Rain fell from Texas across i the Tennessee Valley and the] Virginias to Delaware and New | Jersey. Locally heavy amounts I were recorded in "some areas. ★ * ★ A tornado watch was in effect foiLBPJdipjBs sLLssislSB**; mis- sissippi and Alabama as a cold front moved rapidly across the states clashing with warm moist air driven northward out of the Gulf of Mexico. ' * * * A tornado demolished about! 20 trailer homes at a trailer park near JonesviHe, La. Only! two minor injurics^ere report-! ed. Another , tornado struck near 47.7 million tons of shipping passed through the inland waters of the Sf. Lawrence Lakes area reported Ught snow I Seaway between U.S. and falling. « j Canada in 1968, nearly a record. "I Didn't Know Thoy Had Interstate!!" DO YOU WANT YOUR HOME PROTECTED WHILE ON VACATION OR EVEli A WEEKEND? Interstate Alarm can give you complete protection of your psidence while you're away for any length of time -on a rental basis, COST? PENNIES A DAY CALL US FOR SECURITY information ’ . hVcwrify by / jVoi/Vfxiona/ Extort* ■Interstate Atom System | 4494 EliMbith L»k* Road P.nti.c SM-W1* MEN - WOMEN■ JOIN HEALTH SPA Where you add new life to your living Are you proud of what you tee when you look in tho mirror? Wouldn't your clothes fit better if your hips and abdomen were smaller? Have your thighs grown lax and bulgy? Now is the time to reduce and firm-up the nationally recognized HOLI-. DAY..Health Spa Way., MEN WOMEN TRY OUR FAftULOUS BEGINNERS INTRODUCTORY COURSE 10 VISITS HO • PERSONAL SUPERVISION • YOUR OWN CHART TAILORED TO YOUR PHYSICAL NEEDS e CALISTHENTICS CLASS e STEAM ROOM e SAUNA BATH e COMPLETE USE OF ALL EXERCISE EQUIPMENT of Mexico, then move across southern Mexico and the Yucatan Peninsula, the Gulf of Mexi- B read-Price War in Third Month; 4 Loaves 2 Bits KALISPELL, Mont (AP) - A bread price war moved into a third month Monday with four one-pound loaves of unsliced white bread Celling for 25 cents. The normal price would be around $1. At one time the loaves dipped in price to three cents each. What started the war? “I wish I knew,” said James Todd, a baker. BACK FROM HANOI — Cleveland industrialist Cyrils Eaton, flanked by his wife, Anne, tells newsmen of his discussions with North Vietnamese leaders. Eaton was 86 Saturday. Industrialist Tells Pullout Plan for Peace CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) -Industrialist Cyrus Eaton says withdrawal of. 100,000 U.S. troops in 60 days and all the troops in 18 months would con- • vince Hanoi President Nixon Is seeking an end to the Vietnam war. * .. t ★ Eaton told a news conference Monday he based his Judgment on eight days of talks and visits with the leaders of North Vietnam earlier this month. Eaton said once Hanoi was convinced of a U.S. desire for peace all the details—such as the release of prisoners—would be easily agreed upon. Eaton, 86-year-old chairman of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway, said he found the leaders of Hanoi in agreement that they wanted to end the war but were determined not,to lose it. Eaton said W. Averell Harri-■ man could have negotiated an wirtpitoto end to the war at tlje Paris peace talks but was not granted the power to do so. Eaton did not elaborate mi this. Harrlman’s successor as chief U.S. negotiator, Henry Cabot Lodge, did not want to end' the war, Eaton declared. M)ic If You’re Thinking of Purchasing an Appliance This Winter and You Really Want to Buy At The Market Low Then •.. Here’s Your Chance to Save! TONIGHT AM) WEDNESDAY ONLY! We’re still loaded with Inventory and we want to be clean for January 1, 1970 - Great discounts for those who can get It out of here by Wednesday night! Come See! Colne Save! Terms • 90 Days Cash od Major Purchases# ZENITH 12” TV PORTABLE *97 ALL CHANNELS ONLY 12 LBS. 9 ONLY SUNBEAM STEAM & DRY IRON $J77 New Models Aluminum Shoe 15 ONLY EUREKA i .TANK VACUUM All Attach. *24 1H. P. MOTOR DISPOSABLE BAGS 7 ONLY HOOVER UPRIGHTS HEAVY DUTY ■VACUUM *57 BEATS AS IT SWEEPS AS IT CLEANS--.. 6 OflLY REALTONE POLICE-BAND AM-FM RADIO *34 Long Distance Pick Up Tone Control 6 ONLY Thal'i the full price for this introductory accelerated crash weight course. Complete figure or physique analysis to determine yoUr exact needs. Complete use of oil facilities of the club,, absolutely no extras, all 10 day visits must be taken within 21 days. One introductory course per person. OPEN DAILY 10 A.M. TO 10 P.M. CALL NOW OR DROP BY TODAY FDR FREE TOUR , 682-5040 HEALTH SPA 3432 HIGHLAND RD. (M-59) RCA" 4 SPEED STEREO PLAYER *43 SOLID STATE PLAYS ALL RECORDS 13 ONLY GENERAL ELECTRIC 2-Door, U-Ft. *222 Big 133 Lb. Freezer Choice of Colors 13 Only 20” RCA WALNUT TV CONSOLE *391 NEW 1970 ALL CHANNELS 70&LY GENERAL ELECTRIC PORTABLE DipfASHER. *121 15 PLACE SETTINGS 3 ONLY MAYTAG HEAVY DUTY YOUNGER *139 BALLOON ROLLS ADJUSTABLE WRINGER 6 ONLY WHIRLPOOL ELECTRIC DRYER. ALL TEMPS. *122 BIG CAPACITY NEW’70 MODEL 3 ONLY Admiral 10-Foot Refrigerator *157 BIG FREEZER PORCELAIN CRISPER 5 ONLY ,v SELF CLEAN 30” GASOWOTRIC RANGES *199 ALL DELUXE LIGHT* CLOCK LOOK IN OxV£N 9 ONLY r j GENERAL , ELECTRIC Automatic WASHER, *143 All Porcelain Tub - Big CAPACITY MAYTAG GAS DRYER ALL TEMPS. *179 HEAVY DUTY ALL PORCELAIN v DRUM 3 ONLY f HOUSEKEEPING FREE PARKING THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. DECEMBER 30. 1969 A—9 $ALE...on prestyled human hair wigs and falls 257 357 ' Several styles to choose from for the new you! In shades from blonds to dark colors—including frosteds! Some stretch styles are included in the selection. Have a stylist help you with your choice: Miss Koslyn will be at the Downtown stbre; Miss Frances dt Northland; Miss \ Gloria at Eastland; Mr. Victor at Dearborn. They’re waiting to see you. SALEJrregulars of sheer Agilon nylon panty hose in four convenient stretch sizes Glorious Agilon® nylon panty hose that are made to stretch two different ways. So you can walk, sitv stand or bend without a worry about their appearance. Slight misweaves won’t affect this fabulous wearability. Find them in neutral colors; 4 stretch sizes. Now at this money saving sale price. Hurry! flannelette branch coats at savings Something soft to slip into on chilly mornings. And sale-priced, too! Assorted prints to choose from. Perky piping, snap-front closing pockets. Misses' sizes S,M,L. Such a pretty way to save money. Sleepwear—Hudson's Budget Stores—Downtown, First Basement AND Northland, Eastland, Westland, Oakland, . Lincoln Park, Madison, Dearborn seconds of grained plastic handbags in several styles 1 SALE! Here’s a buy that’s too good to pass up! Good-looking grained plastic handbags in black and a fashionable assortment of colors. Satchels! Pouch styles! Travel bags! And More! Slight imperfections will not affect their wear. v Buy\several for yourself Tuck sonrp^: aWay for birthjday girts. | Basement v li Hudson’s Budget Stores Pontile Mall. Elizabeth Lake Road and Telegraph. A—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 80, 1969 HEW Bill Pits N ixon,Congress WASHINGTON (AP) - President jyixon and the Democratic Congress are heading into campaign year on a collision course, with a confrontation on a leftover Appropriation atop the agenda for the new session. “The issue is really going to - come to a head right at the start,” a Senate Democratic aide sair of a $19.7-billlon appropriation bill ' that would sharply increase outlays f> treatment of individuals....” breakers.” ’ a A state penal facility for i • Expansion of the commu- * * * female offenders. Present facil- toty corrections center and work Replacement of the three jities, rented in the DetrolrtHouse ] pass programs. would be “financially out of the of Correction, involve “a costly ivc . a question,” the commission said. I arrangement and a facility §6-1 R It called, however, for “exten- signed especially for the female! sive remodeling and renovation” felony offender is needed,” the; of the units. . commission said. . Commission Chairman G. a Addition of two former job | Robert Cotton cited “an imme- corps centers, now unused, to] diate need to expand and remodel housing and programs for prisoners,” WOULD COST MILLIONS J Department officials said j implementing the several ideas enumerated after a commission review of current prison opera-; tions would cost many millions of dollars. They declined to estimate, the exact total, however, because plans haye not been completed for afty projects. But they said more than $4.7 million has been requested fir planning and initial construction on some proj-1 ects during the 1970-71 .fiscal year. I . . * . . * , A . Li Besides renovations at the] three maximum security pris-j ons, the commission said Michigan needs: . ■ • a new medium security training institution to hold some : 000 offenders. “Such a facility' ip called for by the increased I W I f:, ■' : ’ ■ KAREN’S CARPETS wifi close Tues., Dec. 30th at 6:00 P.M. and remain .closed through January 4th JEWELERS IN ''rj PONTIAC SINCE 1924 EXPERT 'T^ejvlu/tA' SERVICE FOR ALL NATIONALLY FAMOUS JEWELED MAKES! cept Tirtiex wolphej, Certified repair- FOR THAT GALA'/?/ SAVE 20* —3-PIECE SAVE 38*—19x24 CHIP-N-DIP SET WONDA MAT 1“ 81* Perffct lor ontortoining. Keeps chips and dip togothor for serving. Quality door mot proltcH your carpet from tht weather. r. VM ^ FOLDING CHAIR FRAMED SEAT IN WAINUT FINISH 3M SAVE S*—WOOD KITCHEN OR BAR STOOL 2“ FOR YOUR FAMILY'S HEAITHI SQUIBB therAgran therapeutic formula vitamintablets ' 100'S—‘SAVE 1.00 ^ THERGRAN-M VITAMIN — MINERALS pk THERAPY , , j 00'S — SAVE 1.00 | PEPTO-BISMOL IZ30"' 69* | ALKA-SELTZER m ,4’ 39* | MAALOX LIQUID-. 12-OZ.24 93* BUFFERIN f^TAMTs • 88* ROLAIDS ^ 83* J 4-WAY NASAL SPRAY ”* 63* V.. ' , ' ■ ' THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1069 A—H Polish - Jew Refugees Seek New Life in Denmark? ; COPENHAGEN, Denmark (AP)—Some 1,500 Jewish refugees from Poland are'trying to start a new life in this country. I The refugees, telling of pres-lure and harassment condoned By the Warsaw government-aft-the Mideast War of 1967, begin trickling into Denmark in KM. v» - '«.W ; Last summer the trickle turned into a stream, and while arrivals are how on the decline, they have given Denmark its biggest and most complicated refugee problem since World War II. , Officially, all are coming here as emigrants headed for Israel.; Few will ever go there. BRANDED AS ZIONISTS i to escape humiliation, and un-l employment in Poland they^ like an estimated 9,000 -other Jews! who fled to other countries, signed- papers , branding themselves as Zionists. Danish Refugee Aid a govern-! ihent-financed but privately run! Organization, normally is1 geared to handle 80-100 refugees; annually. For months it has1 beat receiving more than that dumber weekly. Danes 26 years ag^ sponta-i As long as the refugees re-Iters are being set up across theian Church aid organization.[Tourist guides organized free,automatically extended to the neously evacuated nearly 8,000 Jews from German-occupied main unemployed they receive] country to get the refugees] “There is a broad popular sup-1 sight-seeing trips. A member ] old and the sick. Denmark to neighboring, neutral Sweden. For die arrivals from Poland, knowledge of what the Danes did then is a major sources of optimism now. They have to wait thrte weeks for police clearance and' asylum papers in small cabins of the St. Lawrence, once a, steamer on the Great Lakes but for several years moored in Copenhagen’s harbor as a hotel ship. “Many of us barely survived Nazi death camps,” said one of the Poles. NEW SYSTEM “We believed the new system in Poland would do away with racial prejudice once and for all.1* Another commented: '“Maybe somebody thought, it was better for Poles to hate Jews than to hate Russians. The refugees range from an 83-year-old woman to a girl born after her mother arrived here. They include university teachers, doctors of medicine, craftsmen and workers. Refugee Aid concentrates efforts on the ultimate goal: integration and assimilation. a $3 daily meal allowance plus i away from Copenhagen. free lodging. A language school has started with university students taking the Poles through crash courses in Danish. Familiarization cen- Soviets Help Cubans Cast Big Shrimp Net MEXICO CITY (UPI) — With] fishing operations in the Gulf of Russian help, Fidel Castro’ new $10-million shrimp boat fleet is appearing off the coast of Mexico in What industry circles ' consider a Cuba challenge to U.S. and Mexican Mexico. Mexican navy officials disclosed a steady buildup has been observed on Campeche^ Sound since Cuba began taking delivery on 90 Spanish trawlers ‘flier this year. Racial Debates State Business Lags as Lawmakers Ai*gue LANSING (AP)—The clenched fist — symbol of militancy pushed the Michigan Legislature’s calendar into the background at almost regular intervals during the 1969 session. Some lawmakers argued that furioys, name - calling debates got nowhere but in the newspapers. 5j. ★ ★ Resolutions, which generally sparked the racial discussions the House and Senate floors, carry no force of law. They are, in most instances, expressions of legislative intent. But they put a subject within argument’s easy reach and, some contend, serve to create in legislators as well as the general public an awareness of problems. FRUITLESS ORATORY Time after-time during the re-centiy concluded session, some lawmakers seemed more than Willing to let slide the ihatters of legislative business while they tangled in fruitless oratory on racial, issues. The case of FSfris State Col-"Tege limrareslfirpolfitr Rep. E. D. O’Brien, D-Detroit, introduced a resolution praising Ferris’s president, Victor Spat-helf, for his handling of a racial disturbance on the Big Rapids campus. ★ * ★ Black representatives, who form a caucus too small to pass legislation by itself but large enough to defend what it considers unfair, fought the resolution. ; They argued that, arrest of black students at .the .campus— but not whites who reportedly participated in the hassles^-rep-resented inequity, COMPROMISE Debate went on for weeks, with most other matters suspended in the meantime, until compromise resolution finally passed. In the Senate, the New Bethel Church incident in which white Detroit policeman was shot to death sparked angry talk. 1 i Industr leaders confirmed the fact and predicted there would be 300 Cuban shrimp boats in the Gulf and Caribbean within three years, outstripping both Americans and Mexicans in technology. “Each boat has a Russian—captain. Movements radio-controlled from huge fishing complex,, built and operated by Russians, at Puerto Pesquero near' Havana,” shrimp industry executive told UPI. “The American and Mexican operations are still family-sized affairs. They pack their shrimp The Cubans have freezers aboard. It is one more case of “get big or get out.” MARKETING PROBLEM One problem Castro faces is marketing. As long as the Cuban premier is refused access to the U.S: market, he must sell shrimp in Europe at reduced prices, or force Cubans to eat a great deal of shrimp. Cuban officials have made soundings in Mexican fishing circles, about the possibility of marketing Cuban shrimp in the U.S. through a phony pQint of origin, industry sources said. Mexicans rebuffed the scheme. Among other reasons, might jeojardize Mexican leadership - in the U.S. shrimp market. Mexico has relations with Cuba; the U.S. does not. Cuba is selling shrimp in France and Spain, in addition to the Communist bloc, according tolndustry-seHr-eeshere,'..-RUSSIAN BACKING Russian money and technology are behind the entire Cuban fishing industry pansion, in an effort to diversify Cuba’s one-crop, sugar economy, according diplomatic intelligence received here. The projected Cuban fleet of _J0 boats compares with about 300 Mexican and 2,000 U-S. trawlers in the Gulf and Garib-' bean. However the Cuban*boats 77 feet long, steel-hulled, fast and' modem, compared with typical shrlmpboats about 40 feet long, wooden-hulled, and using ice to preserve shrimp during frequent short runs back to base. ★ * *. ... addition to shrimping, Cuba is moving into tuna and haddock fishing on. a large scale. , t. Haddock and hake boats, controlled by radio fro m Havana, have been operating off New York City, according to intelligence sources here. Other Cubah boats have been spotted as far south as the coasts of Guyana, in South America. j port for the work to bring these ‘We are highly encouraged byjPe°P^e ®ut °f ^eir Isolation.’! the spontaneous willingness to;CHILDREN INVITED help at the local level,” says the] Many refugee children were Revy ' Viggo M o 11 ^ r u pJ invited to spend Christmas and secretary general of the Luther-1 New Year with Danish 'fllbilies. of parliament arranged for an Refugee Aid Secretary Pill bid woman to have her most | Christensen is optimistic about immediate problem solved: new set of false teeth. AH benefits ,of, the Danish social and health care system are prospects for finding work for all the other refugees. Most, children of school age Have resumed thlir education. ' ' toothache Don’t juffer — rtllovo Min In tKondi is millions Ho will) ORA-JEL. Many dentists recommend usInfORA-JEL until you |et __ —<—,—1| treatment. •jel RENT, SELL, TRADE ... UjSE i PONTIAC PRESS WANT- ADS! But all the talk, ancf even a slap delivered by* a woman legislator who called a colleague a “white nigger,’-’ accomplished little. T The debates served only to The 9® Spanish shrimp widen a liberal-cpnservative trawlers have unusually large split that sapped tenuous party water- and fuel capacities. Each unity in both chambers. I boat carries a crew of 11, ac- ” * * * cording to diplomatic sources. And they took up a lot of time It is estimated each boat cost that could otherwise have been used for work on matters oyer which the Legislature has more control." ■ SIS • i the Russians about 8115,000, including freezer equipment, for a total mvestipent of more than $10 million. /W CONSOLES* PORT ABLE TV REFRIGERATORS & FREEZERS COLOR TELEVISION SAVINGS! MOTOROLA TV Mti. Built-in handle, ;£*nrSoh $76 If. Floor modolf onl, 19.95 SYLVANIA 12 *148 .*66 *149 : *66 *61 $449.95 ADMIRAL 20- WHIRLPOOL 7-door to- $276 ig^^-$iOO NATIONALLY SOLD I Store* about 190 i“h'yL'.# $175 SUNBEAM oloclrlc alorm SAVE! ASSORTED TOP BRANDS STEREO M-n CONSOLES Chooi# from ZINITH, R(TA, MOTOROLA, GENERAL ELECTRIC, PACKARD BELL Assortment of storoo con. boIos and combinations. Most combining stsrso hi-fi with AM-FM, FM-stsroo radio. Many furniture •tylet and finishst. PRICES START AT 79 -'lit s*ioy O 19 co. $336 $168 PHILCO upright ^ freeier. Store. 282 lbs. -*289 ’*243 >u AumiKAL *u v.oior _ ztNi ih . romofo -cont sots. UHF/VHF. Whilo $4) Color TV portables. F< ir model* lost. Hurry. JiV I loft. Solo priced. $59< *193 “ *396 ADMIRAL Color V ZENITH 23" Colo ssts. UHF/VHF. Floor •Is. Priced at RCA Color TV portables. . UnnoCaWh^*th«y*iosLn" 235 ZENITH 16" Cob *417 *438 *450 *263 ASSORTED GROUPING PORTABLE AUTOMATIC DISHWASHERS Chaos* from PHILCO, HOTPOINT and WHIRLPOOL. Front load and top load. All with automatic features. Floor modols priced accordingly. Many aro PRICES START AT *79 ASSORTED GROUPING GAS and ELECTRIC DRYERS Chooso from WHIRLPOOL HOTPOINT, PHILCO and NORGE. Floor modols ond now crates. Gat or oloc-tric. Service froo by Utility Co. ovor life of dryer. While assortment losts. PRICES START AT *79 | WASHERS • DRYERS • DISHWASHERS 1 STEREO HI-FI • MO D U L A R S 1 GAS & ELECTRIC RANGES j HOTPOINT top iPod dii $300 1 $138 $41 -$9.00 ASSORTMENT OF SIDE-BY-SIDE REFRIGERATOR- FREEZERS WHIRLPOOL HOTPOINT Floor models PRICES START AT *249 $219.95 CALORIC 30" Glass window. In crates. 4 ADMIRAL 30" eh HOTPOINT 30"' • duced while floor n *140 *117 *151 fhrar modVl!: ^1 75 ILCO 40" elec- *,4, * *138 $219.95 WHIRLPOOL 30" ASSORTMENT OF GAS and ELECTRIC RANGES PRICES START AT 1 *79 INSTANT CREDIT EASY TERMS Gat your purchase immadi-ately. All major credit carat, bank cards and store charge plates honored at Highland for immediate credit. Highland makos credit buying easier than PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTER TELEGRAPH RD., COR. ELIZABETH LAKE RD. DAILY 10 to 9 • PHQNE 682-2330 OAKLAND MALL IN TROY l-T8> at 14 MILE RD. OPEN DAILY 10 to 9 „ PHONE 585-5143 A—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1909 Drunk Drivers-2 Does the Alcoholic Deserve a License? By ROBERT BUCKHORN WASHINGTON (UPI) - Docs an alcoholic have a right to a driver’s license? . / Most highway safety experts agree that the 'alcoholic sick person, the victim of a disease who needs medical and psychiatric care. But they add one factor: Behind the wheel of a car, the alcoholic is a killer.' This year more than 56,000 person^ were killed automobile accidents. M than 3.5 million persons were injured. Alcohol was involved in 25,000 of the fatalities and 800,000 of the injuries recorded jn 1969. MUST ACCEPT BLAME Closer to the mark, the 1 Gala Table Settings FOR THE MOL I DAY SEASON! Punch Bowl Sets From*3M to 52500 Punch Cups 25c and Up BAR WARE from 25c and Up OVER 100 PATTERNS AT TERRIFIC SAVINGS DIXIE POTTERY 5281 DIXIE HIGHWAY 623-0911 Movie Ordeal to Be Repeated Film Lost, Frenchman to Return to W. Irian HUTTENLOCHERS, KERNS, NORVELL, INC. 1007 W. HURON ST. 681-2100 TYPEWRITERS ALL MAKES DISCOUNT PRICES TRAD*’1™U* TERMS ARRANGED OLD MACHINE r ..atirmirj-rrhrbi Mrmrin , l23N*ih$fl5in«wSl f>, Majorca, Fonts Delgado HANSEATIC—April 20-40 Day* Funchal, Casablanca, Genoa, GET CARRIED AWAY Call us for details PONTIAC TRAVEL SERVICE 101 Pontiac Mall Offks Bldg. 682-4600 DON'T EXPECT GIMMICKS-JUST CLEAR HEARING! The BELTONE Name Has Always Meant Quality! • Quality Can Provide Clei Quality Hearing Beltone’s Free Electronic test Certified Hearing Sendee Plan plot the exclusive Beltone tre your assurance of Clear Hearing. You Deserve the Beat... Don’t Settle for Lest! 450 W. 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(Not at G OPEN Monday . thru Saturday 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Tufiiluy, Vrdnrtil ★ Deqr Mrs. Post:' You state in one of your recent columns that it is selfish of marfied children living near their parents to neglect them — that the parents wanted weekly calls, visits and/or invitations from their married children and grandchildren. : You certainly said a mouthful when you mentioned that the damage in this relationship had. already been done. I am sure these children are not simply forgetting their parents in oversight. .The parents most, likely make that impossible. Does it occur to you that these may be parents who cannot let loose the strings? They may have offered a great deal of unwanted advice, interfered and tried to dominate and manipulate these same children. These may be parents who have neyer learned to derive satisfaction from living an interesting and independent life of their own. JHK Husband Is Cop Out Father by His Childi By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: My problem is a husband who loves to tell everybody that he' is “growing up with his children.” We have two sons, 10 and 12, and their father is well . known among the neighborhood kids as a “good sport.” And no wonder! There is absolutely no discipline arOund this house. Anything goes. Nothing but fun and horseplay! Our sons have become obnoxious, loudmouthed, know-it-alls who won’t listen to either one of us. - What is the matter with a man who is blind to the fact that his sons do not need another playmate — they need a father! THEIR MOTHER DEAR MOTHER: He hasn’t grown up himself yet! Furthermore, in his eagerness to win the approval of his sons, he is depriving them of a father. All children need a “hand” (sometimes a firm hand, a helping hand — and occasionally'the back of one). If your husband continues to cop. out as a father, you will have to be the strong one. Pity. j St h 1t DEAR ABBY: After some of the disgraceful sights I’ve seen in miniskirts, I neyer thought I'd like to see the day when I’d complain because skirts were tod long, But here I am. Abby, those, maxi coats! They are hideous. What are the fashion designers trying to do to us women anyway? Do we have to go from one extreme to the other? Granted, .those short, short skirts way up to here were terrible on most girls over 22. But how they’re trying to shove these Grandma Civil War styles down our throats. Please, please, let’s get some sort of a protest movement going. Or do you like them? HATES MAXI LOOK DEAR HATES: I don’t “like” them, but given a choice between the mini and the maxi, I’d take the maxi- And the only “protest” that will ever be effective is the one which affects the designers, wholesalers, and retailers in the pocket-book. If you don’t like ’em, don’t buy ’em. ★ w w DEAR ABBY: .Three years ago a “gay” guy wrote to you asking if he should marry if he could satisfy both parties. You advised him not to. Your advice was not taken, and today he (and I) are facing a situation identical to one I just read in your column from “Troubled Out West.” For six years this “gay” guy and I had a romance going. (I am also “gay.”) He decided that for “appearances” sake he should marry a young woman he knew as a friend. (He believed, as many homosexuals do, that if he married, all suspicions of homosexuality would disappear.) My friend’s Wife had ‘‘suspected” the truth about him, but of course he admitted nothing. They’ve been married for three years, have one child and Noise Effects Studied BOSTON (UPI) — Such noises as sonic booms could have an emotional and psychological effect on unborn babies as well as their mothers, scientists said Sunday. Dr. Lester W. Sontag and a panel of scientists summed up science’s proofs that excessive noise, even of less intensity than sonic booms, is bad for the ‘heart and blood vessels in addition to the hearing of adults. They discussed the matter at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. another on the way. Meanwhile his “gay” relationship with me has never stopped. We See each other at least twice a week. ★ ★ ★ It is a game of hide and seek. He is not “happy” with his wife, but he feels “safer” married. He also feels a sense of obligation now that he is a “family man.” I am not happy without him and I won’t stop seeing him. * * ★ I have the feeling his wife knows about us but she will never give him up either. I am writing only to say that if a girl suspects a man is “gay,” but marries him anyway, hoping to change him, she is in for a big disappointment. Sign me TROUBLED OUT EAST DEAR ABBY: I read a letter in your column from a mailman who signed himself, “WALKING DRY.” He wanted to know where all the nice ladies were who used to give the mailman a glass of cold water. Well, I can tell you where they are. They’re on MY route in Westland^ Mich. I’Ve had coffee, tea, and chocolate, both hot and cold. And cookies, \and fresh fruit. I’ve also been given fresh vegetables from their gardens, and large bouquets of flowers from their yards. And that’s not all. I’ve had hand-made gifts, and even a pure bred shepherd with registration papers. These were all presents. And not at Christmas time either. But that’s another story. , No. 45 in WESTLAND What’s your problem? You’ll feel better if you get it off your chest. Write to Abby, in care of The Pontiac Press, Dej>t. E-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. ^8056. For a personal reply enclose stamped, addressed envelope. Pintiac Press Photo ty/ltaa Who. says the doldrums have to, set in after the,excitement of Christmas is over? Not this bunch of youngsters who take advantage of winter fun in Murphy Park. New gift skates and ski jackets found under the tree last Thursday, add a bright note to the cold season ahead. A—14 Curling Gets New Image as Fashion Sweeps Rink It's in the house and a near shot rock signals pretty Mindy Livermore. Mindy, who’s an RN at Pontiac. General Hospital, . . wears a delicately designed en-If you think close only counts in horseshoes, ypu re wrong. JacK 8em^ 0f coco, apricot and white. measures the minute differences in these tw6 stones. His Mr whitf wotil sweater from' , t ---------------------- ....... . ... suunyruirn y ^ . Turkey carries an unusual front brand of body English to the stone as Mrs. Denise jacket features the “wet look. Joe is all turned out scarlet crew neck sweater carries the racer’s stripes so popular with panel and hip border design in Green of Troy gets ready to take her direetionsin brown. His matching sweater contains a bold Sports earthis season jtpricot. . from the skip, Denise’s black ski ^ants followbell front pattern in green and gold. ^ Joe sLivermOre of Orchard Lake, puts his own bottom styling and hkr bright red new, longer By JEANNE NELSON THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY; DECEMBER 30, 1969 Word goes out from the skip. Sweep, sweep. Rochester husband-wife team, Ethel and Jack Allingham begin to slick the ice for the smooth sailing stone. Sophisticated black teamed with white is Ethel’s choice for her curling outfit. She adds a dash of glamour with touches of fur on hat and boots. Jdck’s handsome sports outfit is a blaze °f and cut for the trim look. Badges on his tarn tell a story. The Scots claim to have invented that grand, old game of curling some 400 years ago. But, Oakland County is responsible for its start here in the United States about 139 years ago. In fact, at that time the shout of the skip’s “sweep” could be heard clear across Orchard Lake as the first group of curlers gathered for a game. ★ . ★ ★ In another year, several clubs had formed in the Detroit area; and, when the ice was right, there developed many a bonspiel (club contest) right there on the Detroit River at the foot of Joseph Campau Street. It wasn’t until the turn of the century^ that the Detroit Curling Club erected its present indoor facility on Forest Avenue. A disastrous fire in 1948 partially destroyed the building (which has since been repaired and modernized) but never the curlers’ spirits. CURLING CLOTHES The Detroit Club will play host to the International Bonspiel Jan. 8-11, where it’s, expected that all those different curling outfits could cause their own sweeping wins. Don Thomas, owner of the Sporthaus at Somerset Mall, says most of the clothes used for this sport are interchangeable with active and apres-ski wear. One exception is gloves. Curlers wear warrply lined leather finger gloves while skiers need suede mitts. Boots must be warm to withstand long periods on the ice. Trim ski pants are most often topped with matching ski sweaters and warm, but lightweight, jackets. Hats are the fun accessory, with some curlers going to outlandish extremes. Of course, the tarn remains ever popular and is seen in a multitude of tartans. ★ ★ ★ Dana Lockniskar, who acts as the club’s public relations man invited me down to participate in a curling game and, while I’m not going to win any prizes for my sweeping, I must say here and now, this is great sport. And even more importantly, the players exhibit such enthusiasm that it would take a real sour-grapes type not to get caught up in the spirit of the game. Curling has lots of pluses going for it and not the least among them is the fact that it’s truly a family sport. Watching some of these families enjoying the game together, it was hard to remember that the generation gap _we hear about is still around. ★ ★ ★ Although it’s a thrill to deliver a stone exactly as the skip has indicated, sweeping has got to be the real fun part. With arms going as fast as the body allows, it takes every bit of balance the player can, muster to keep a running pace without slipping on the ice that’s kept absolutely smooth. There’s no doubt that the old game of curling has been sadly overlooked through the years. However, recently industry, has taken a second look at this sport and has shown some interest in forming new clubs for employe participation. ★ ★ ★ Perhaps curling is best described in “The Spirit of Curling” by Fergie Ferguson of Milwaukee, Wis., who says: “The heart of curling is in its incomparable spirit. ’Without it, it is just another' pastime. With it, it’s the spirit of all games. The spirit of curling is reflected in its most cherished traditions.” The racer’s look is adopted by Andover High School student, Hyatt Wilson of Bloomfield Township.'His navy ski pants are trim and topped with a powder blue all-wool sweater featuring the white and navy racing stripes. A coordinated cap‘follows the blue-on-blue theme. It’s serious business here as Ethel Allingham tests the measuring instrument’s accuracy. Denise Green checks her opponent’s figures in a bright red and white print blouse teamed with her black pants. 1 ’ . I I All curling and ski fashions shown are from the Don Thomas | I1 Sporthaus located in the Somerset Mall, Troy. Pontiac Press 1 photos by Rolf Winter.. ■1 3SB THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. DECEMBER .((), W A—15 . August 15 is the wedding date selected by Sally Jane Hunter arid Gerald James Feil. Both are students at Western Michigan University. The bride-elect is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Neil R. Hunter of Waverly Drive, Parents of the prospective bridegroom are Mr. and Mrs. James G. Feil of Roseville. Handle Your Charity Dollar Kathryn Ellen Trudeau and her fiance, Lance Craig Bedini are planning to marry. Parents of the engaged couple are the Norman Trudeaus of Sherbrook Road, Commerce Town- * ship and the John E. Cudahys of Mundelein, III. The bride-elect attended Oakland Community College. Her fi-anci attends Triton Junior} College. Up ■' Mr. and Mrs. George Luenberger of Oriole Road announce the engagement of their daughter, Donna Rae, to Michael C. Nichols. The prospective bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Marie Nichols of Green Street and the late Lawrence W. Nichols. Michael attends Oakland University. April 25 wedding vows are being planned. By ANNE TAYLOR AP NEWS FEATURE Many charity drives step up their campaigns around this time of year, which brings me right to the point: Handle your charity dollars as carefully as you do your food or investment dollars. '0 ■ I appear the least bit misanthropic, I hasten to add that I’m all for giving to charity j— but I advocate throughtful, not emotional giving. It's the only way to handle money. * Sr ★ Here are some tips I have prepared for the charity season: • Check up on any new charity seeking your money. Ask a few simple questions, and if the answers don’t satisfy you, don’t give. • Be certain that the collector really represents the charity. There is no set procedure for determining this, but if the individual is unknown to you, he or she should not object to showing credentials. • Be wary of organizations that use telephone appeals, | telegrams or other “pressure” | tactics. Ask that all pertinent | facts be available in written I form. Frauds don’t like to put I things in writing; honest charities always have printed ! matter available. RETURN ! • Remember that you are under no obligation to return or that pne ‘‘charitable organization had operating costs totaling 76 pea* cent of collections. ‘ , FINANCIAL REPORT do you interpret financial statements of charitable per cent on fund-raising, no matter how they state it. Sometimes! fund-raising costs! organizations? It isn’t always; worthwhile, but their ^manner of can reach preposterous pro-easy, although some stand-!telling you so is different. The portions. The Better Business ^^0,, is being Cached. fact ls that *»th are spending 15 Bureau found earlier this year JT .. * ■ , , -■ - At the moment you might And one charity states that it spends 15 per cent of income on fund-raising, while another reports/ operating costs qf 7.5 per cent and another 7.5 per cent on public education. Both charities might be Linda Geary was recently installed as honored queen of Job’s Daughters, Milford, Bethel No. 68. Among other new officers of the group are JoAnne Mun-sell, Pat Geary, Ruth Malphrus and Michelle Bearup. To clarify misconceptions, the National Health Council and the National Social' Welfare Assembly have been leaders in adopting uniform auditing statements and terminology for 54 voluntary health-welfare agencies and thousands of their affiliates. ★ jf ★ ★ Until Compleie uniformity is achieved, however, it is wise to look closely. When you determine that most of the revenue is going for administration, put your money back in your pocket book. Before dipping into your pocketbook, you may’ wish to | consider your own selfish interest. Is the gift taxable? Not all are, you know. If you have any doubts, call 'the nearest Internal Revenue! | Office. Relieved of tax-season i pressures, I have found them remarkably prompt and helpful! with questions. So—Hearing Isn't Always Believing By BETTY CANARY NEA Writer I went to the doctor because pay for any unsolicited|l thought perhaps noise pollu-i merchandise that comes tion had finally caught up with * Right how my second son can .mothers do not like to hear, j do it and he is only 13. It includes: There is a way of coping with A group of sixth-grade cheer-: this problem. If you have been leaders doing flips in an up-screaming, “PLEASE take out | stairs bedroom. Tennis balls An open house in the First Federal Savings of Oakland on Sunday from 2 to 5 p.m. will mark the golden wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Breininger of First Avenue. The couple married Jan. 3, 1920 in Pontiac and have lived here ever since. Their children are: Mrs. Jess Hobson or Ortonville, Raymond and Harold, both of First Avenue; Mrs. Orville Kelly of Shim-mons Road, Pontiac Township, Paul of Maybee Road, Independence Township arid Mrs. Ronr aid Hetherington of Tilmor Street. There are 10 grandchildren. through the mails. No [foe! He chMk^my ears, said ga rb ® g e!” or growing|bouncing off the side °* straightforward charity will at-1 nothing was wrong and sentbfarse wbat w{th. trying to gethousewhen someone is trying \a/*j.L &5K tempt to confuse you on this me home to tell my family I m to clean out tha 5*S£S5P'TCin S OW V Without Bum subject. , could hear them all right, but I yonara.go^ a^ it m at^mi^: ^ thrt hoi* / 1,1 - Dpn’t be too timid to ask didn’t particularly like what ^^^doS ^ “ """'S ttSTJii the solicitor for a charity familiar to you if he or she is willing to provide a detailed report of activities — maybe even a financial statement. Ask how much of your contribution will be spent for the purpose for which it is col- talk on the phone. Children whoi To get that tan without suf-1 Increase exposure by one Go outside. You could even. honk and whistle while one fering through a painful sun-j third the second day, another I can’t remember when l\&> all the way across town. Wes to talk on the phone. ,burn next summer, medical jthlrdthe third day> and so on. started thinking something was Then, whisper, “I think we _ . ■ .... | authorities suggest you begin " ifl, h wrong with mv ears but I might raise your allowance.’’! Compiling the list did more your first day with about 15 to)Remember that Pamful burns can remember when .1 thought He will hear you. He will be !for me than my trip to the 20 minutes of exposure each on lean be caused by wind as well our eldest son had gone stone (right beside you. With his hand fetor's office. It really eased your face and back and then as sun, and that even on a deaf. This was before I knew out. Grasp the hand firmly,my mind. For one thing, I was extend the period in the sun 'etoudy day it is possible to get a llected, and what percentage is that every child around age 15'and say. “Now that I have surprised to discover that every each day. severe burn, to be spent for administration1 acquires the ability to simplyyour attention ...” °ne « tbe mothers with whom I -—« «—IT— --------- . /*.. . S , I spoke has a child who says, But, back to a parent’s hear- “Granzelbach fritze,” when ' and fund-raising costs. tune others in and out at will. Food Preparation - ing problems. I have always asHed, ..What dld u do in checked what my children read i seh00l—t©day **" las I have worried over their Almnst J, Avoid Disease; Keep Hands Clean Looking for a practical and rewarding New Year’s resolution? Then resolve always to use lots of soap and water in your kitchen. Let’s face it. Food poisoning mon cold as the most frequent cause of illness in the United States. ★ ★ ★ “To avoid food poisoning, people should learn a few facts ranks second only to the com-1 about basic hygiene. Many do £ ~ « • Polly's Pointers Make Own Notepaper DEAR POLLY — Janet asked how to make an ou decorative covering notepaper, using waxed paper and toilet tissue. I am sure she meant facial tissues. I have great success with the following method: Paste cut-out flowers paper. Lay a SINGLE sheet of facial tissue over the “picture" you have made. Make a mixture of half water and half all-purpose white glue. Spread generously over the top of the tissue with a one-inch brush. Let dry, then iron on the WAXED PAPER side. I use a deckle cutter for the edges when the sheets are cut to the size of the. notepaper. — SISTER GLORIA M ' ★ ★ DEAR POLLY — I hope my Pointer helps Janet, who has disappointing results making notepaper with tissue and other, papers. First, lay a piece of white shelf paper or other white paper qn the ironing board. Smoothly lay on it a piece of that dear, dining plastic wrap' we use in the kitchen. Put your design *of dry leaves, flowers or just pictures and perhaps some glitter in place, then a sheet of waxed paper over the top. Press gently with a BARELY WARM iron; Test a piece first. The result is a very pretty and unusual effect. Be sure to have the “front” of your decorations against the plastic wrap, as the waxed paper* side will be the 1 wrong sideF Gut--4o- fit - the bacteria. notepaper you wish to use inside this decorative folder. —* MRS.G.K. DEAR GIRLS — Even though Mrs. G.K.’s letter included beautiful example of her method, I simply could not believe it could be done so easily and quickly and with no messy pasting. It worked _ and takes far less time than other methods. The biggest trick is to have the iron on the right temperature. Experiment bit, as you do not want the plastic to stick to the shelf paper, which is really just a protection to the ironing board. POLLY POLLY’S PROBLEM DEAR POLLY — One rainy evening, the rubber strip came off our windshield wipers and a long scratch on the passenger’s side of the glass. Is there any way to remove scratch? - MRS. J.K. food may cause illness by entering the body and setting up infections in the digestive tract. Other bacteria may cause toxins which cause illness. Salmonella spreads simply and easily by eating contaminated food or by contact With an infected person. The symptoms are headache, vomiting, diarrhea, cramps and fever. Staph, probably the most comm o n food-borne .disease, causes vomiting, diarrhea and cramps. These symptoms, incidentally, often are attributed I‘m DICK FRYE. W* at our studio want to wish you all tho love, peace and happiness that comes with the Christ Child, now and throughout the coming year. 518 W. HURON ------*--1*~ not realize that we should wash our hands in soapy water after handling raw meat, poultry or eggs before working with oiher foods,” reports Elsie Dawson, supervisory food technologist with the Agriculture Research Service in Beltsville, Md. Miss Dawson, head of the Consumer Use of Food Laboratory, University of California (Berkeley), adds “Anyone cooking should keep | her hands away from her mouth, nose and hair. Also, anyone ill or with an infected cut should not prepare the meal. It also is wise not to use the hands for mixing foods, at least whenever possible." START FRESH Don’t dip a spoon or fork into cooking, food a second time. Use a fresh one for second dipping. This also will help prevent food from being contaminated by the Grocery ManufacturersJ of America, is now working on a project to alert homemakers to the hazards of foodborne ill-1 nesses and how to avoid them. A new pamphlet, “Keeping Food Safe to Eat,” was. prepared by the Human Nutri- picking up gutter words. However, I wasn’t prepared to have my youngest daughter start calling me “Mumsie, dear." She even started saying things like, “I shan’t be late.” TEA TOO? I saw the book she was reading. The little girl in it always \ wore white embroidered dresses I Almost all of them have a child who says, Puhds and sernd bff,” when asked, “What was served for lunch?” Most of those who have teen-agers report that, upon being asked, I “Where are you going?” the! daughter invariably re- to other causes. Other illnesses caused by food bacteria are botulism, often fatal, and Perfringens, which results in and loved talking with Mumsie ! nausea, diarrhea and acute in-[Dear's gardener. The cook, too, flammation of stomach, and in-Being called “Mumsie, dear,”* testines. wasn’t the only thing bothering These threats can be avoided, me. I was afraid she’d start The U.S. Department of asking me to serve tea every n Agriculture, in cooperation with '< | Freshman Girl on Rifle Team GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) -afternoon. Not to mention pro- ^u*nda Lee Duke, who learned to viding her with a drawerful of;™ at the a8e of 13- now has gloves and a wicker box filled,a toP °n„the University with'handkerchiefs from Swit-Florida s Rifle Club “A” zerland. Frankly, I was glad team- ' ' when Babs took that book back;, ®ince members of the to the library. iteani are required to take Army; » j .. JROTC, the 17-year-old freshman! And wouldnt any mother from c pa is the onl Question her hearing if a boy|„ . „ Armv eirl on the tion Research Division. (For a (who spoke perfectly at two for- j y g on 'ine; opy, send 10 cents to the got at age nine? “Wha?” my with a score of 255 Doints out! uperintendent of Documents, son asked me. “Nnn, I din.” T. J? T X Government Printing Of- I have dlrcnsneg these ,4- ce, Washington, D.C. 20402.) lems with others and discoveredQPfa Uttle siS sinS am; This effort concentrates on I was not alone. I ended up I the youngest on the University1 proper storage, preparation and with a three-page list of things » university serving of “sensitive” foods, — — she spends about 10 hours a such as meat, poultry, fish,1 1 - - ■ - Elliott Furniture Co.. Inc. “The One aid Original” REIPHOLSTERIH AT ITS BEST! boose your fabric from our u-eptionallylarge selection f upholstery materials. irniture Since 1924” 623-0025 /VL // Bloomficld-Bi [i-Birmingham Customers 334-0981 OF WATERFORD 5390-5400 Dixie Highway CertafiPbaeterla - i^owtof^eggs^d^da^ dishes which contain these products — custards, creamy sauces, dressings, casseroles and gravies. “We emphasize clean hands, clean counters and clean utensils to ip r e v e n t contamination. We stress that food may not be safe to eat if held for more than three or four hours at room temperatures, between 60 degrees and 120 degrees, the temperature zpne where bacteria grow rapidly. Always .serve food soon after cooking. Or refrigerate promptly,” Miss Dawson adds. week on thfcjifle ranee., an hour 4fn ROTC-class and two hours, in. [drill. In her spare time she IfrimmersTbfi A new electric skillet has 1,Kes 10 seW-family-size capacity (5 }h . quarts), comes in decorator Use Drip-Catchers colors of avocado or harvest gold and features a removable Keep melted wax from heat control unit. The skillet candles off the frosting of the; can be immersed in water for cake. Use marshmallows as i easy cleaning. candleholders. Mak Your Holiday Partyg a Success . See Our Fine New China Silvurwar# — Glasses — Candelabra Silver Tea Service -Large and $mall Chofing Dishes -Coffee Makers - Punch Bowls , PUNCH FOUNTAIN 5000 Chair't and Tablus.- Bms^Sleck ' ' 1 (Wev Deliver: ' Baby Beds — Hospital Beds Walkers — Commodes Wheel Chairs -- Adults & Child's BEER TAPPERS & BARS! * TPodSacs Gluu/u “ReeW,, 140 OAKLAND AVE. Just. 'North of Wide TrocIr'Drive 334-4044 ^ If Busy - 334-39^9 — —j Fine Furniture Since.1917 CLOSED WEDNESDAY DEC. 31st FOR INVENTORY Open Friday, Jan. 2nd 9:00 A.M, to 9:00 P.M. 1680 S. Telegraph Roatl Free Parking - FE 2-8348 FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Oakland and Saginaw Rev. ROBERT SHELTON, PASTOR Presents The - MELODY FOUR QUARTET CHICAGO, ILLINOIS AND- DUET TEAM BILL PEARCE and DICK ANTHONY NEW YEAR’S EVE 8:30 P.M. PUBLIC INVITED i A—18 ¥ THE PONTIAC PRESS, Lady Bird Thrifty homemakers who delight in the soft, feminine airs and carefree ways of our dainty Perma Press® prints of Dacron® polyester/Avril® rayon will want several at this low savings price! Each charming style comes in several lighthearted posy patterns in pink, blue or yellow tones, sizes 8 to 18 and 7 to 15. Rush over to Hudson's Home and Town Dresses, Downtown 5; Northland, Eastland, Westland, Pontiac, Oakland. Or, call us anytime at 964-4444. HUD SO N’S , a. Button front, shirt shift with optional tie belt, sizes 8 to 18 and 7 to 15.*. 5.97. b. Tucked button front shirt shift, tie belt, sizes 8 to 18 ond 7 to f5. i.. 5.97. c. Tucked front A-line skimmer, back zipper, sizes 8 fo18 and 7 to 15 .. 5.97. d. Tucked front jacket A-line, skimmer, back zip, sizes 8 to 18 ond 7 to I Si. 5.97. Hudson s Pontiac is now open 6 nights a week, Monday through Saturday, from 9:30 a.m. till 9:30 p.m. for your shopping convenience Bo Claims Loop Title ■, First Target PASADENA, Calif. As far, as Michigan coach Bo Schembechler is concerned, neither the Rose Bowl hor any games with non-league teams Which, are meant to decide the ratings, will «ver be as important as wbtnihg the Big Ten title. * . . ■ “Sure this has been a new and exciting experience for me and for the players, but playing Southern Cal in the Rose Bowl could never replace the traditional rivalry with Ohio State or Michigan State,” said Schembechler. “For teams like Notre Dame or Penn State: independent tearris, the No. 1 rating might mean a lot more, but for most teams in conferences, winning their league titles always comes first,” he added. Bo admits that the atmosphere of the Wolverine training camp prior to this Rose Bowl has been entirely (different from the atmosphere prior to the Ohio State game. MANY FACTORS “Ohio State was the No. 1 team in the country, the defending Big Ten champion, the Rose Bowl champion, brought the largest croWd ever to Michigan Stadium, plus the fact that OSU has been a long traditional rival and the factor of revenge we had remembering the whipping we took in 1968, are many reasons why the atmosphere was different for that game,” said Schembechler. “The past two weeks have seemed so long and it has been like an all new training camp starting again ... The distractions have been many. ★ W “I was once in favor of repealing the no-repeat rule for going to the Rose Bowl, but now I’m waivering. “I can now see why the rule was passed. Southern Cal, which has been in the Rose Bowl three straight years, didn’t have to be away fronT home for Christmas. ' “If we could practice in a warmer climate closer to home, then go home for Christmas and come out a day or so before the game, I might think differently,” Bo added. The fact that USC has been to three straight Rose Bowls and now the fourth, does have its advantages Bo admits. TIME T6 LEARN “I think it is especially an advantage to the coaches. I’m sure that McKay (USC coach) has learned how to handle his boys to get them ready for this post season game. »“If we should work the boys too hard, or maybe not hard enough with one or (Wo drills a day, or with or without pads every day, are psychological factors we : must consider.” - Schembechler doesn’t think that USC will be peaked psychologically because of the fact that Michigan is unbeaten in four Rose Bowl games and whipped USC 49-0 in their lone clash in this famous bowl. “The revenge motive would exist if the current players had faced each other as was the case when we played Ohio State this year. ★ * * “I’m sure McKay could find it easier to bring his team up for UCLA than for us." , ' Anyway, the distractions of which Schembechler speaks, such as going to Disneyland, Universal City, the public luncheons and dinners and the press conferences, all come to an end Wednesday when Bo and his 50-man traveling squad go into seclusion. “It will probably be the quietest New Year*s ‘Eve mostrof you boyshavespent. We will-watch a movie and be in bed hy ^ 10 p.m.” Field Position Important liNlww AS Wirephoto GRIDIRON TOAST—Head football coaches John McKay (left) of Southern California and Michigan’s Bo Schembechler offer a toast during a press luncheon yesterday in Pasadena where the two teams will square off Thursday in the Rose Bowl game. The coaches didn’t say who the toast honored. THE PONTIAC PRESS SPWS TUESDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1969 B- By the Associated Press Not one, but two, Texas Longhorn teams are playing for championships this week. The Texas football team, ranked No. 1 in the notion, meets Notre Dame in the Cotton Bowl Saturday. The basketball team, a far cry in success from its football counterparts, plays Seton Hall of Ohio Northern Wins MARSHALL, Mich. (AP) -r- Randy Young had 26 points and held Albion’s high scorer, Mike Wilson, to only five points as Ohio Northern captured the Marshall Optimist Classic 105-71 Monday night. Wilson had been averaging about 15 points a game. Pistons Slump in 4th Quarter By The Associated Press The Detroit Pistons had to throw away a° 14-point lead with five minutes left in thd third period to come out a loser Monday night against Cincinnati in National Basketball Association play. The Detroiters showed off before* a home crowd of 5,500 for nearly a full three periods, but fizzled out to a 110-103 loss to the Royals. ★ Hr ★ In the only other NBA action Monday, Atlanta defeated San Diego 122-118. In American Basketball Association play, Indiana topped New Orleans 94-89. The Royals’ Fred Foster scored 13 of his 19 points in the third period to help Cincinnati roll into its comeback. They 'scored nine straight points late in the period to cut Detroit’s lead to 83-81. SCORING SPREE Then Norm VanLier scored a basket for the Royals at the outset of the fourth period to" tie the game. Moments later Connie Dlerking broke loose on a personal-^ix-point—spree--that puL the-Royals ahead forkeeps-at $9-#7 ^1^,1, The Royals now have three straight wins. The Pistons have lost eight of their last nine outings. 5 4-7 Mueller 7 4 3 4-4 10 Walker io 3 Totals 4124-M lit Totals 40 23-14 103 Cincinnati 20 30 3t 20—110 Detroit SO 30 22 20-103 Total tools: Cincinnati 20, Detroit 24. Fouled out: Cincinnati; VanLier. Plays Alma OU Reaches Special to The Press ALMA — Oakland University pulled ajvay in the second half here last night to defeat Florida Presbyterian, 7J-56, - and reach 6ie final round of the Alma Jdycee Basketball Tournamenl. 1 The Pioneers wilTplay Alma College tonight for the championship. < * ★ ’ Alma gained the title round by holding off Aurora College of Illinois, 88-84, in last night’s other contest. Aurora -and Florida Presbyterian will play for third place in tonight’s opening action. Oakland moved to a 35-31 halftone lead' against the Florida quintet and steadily pulled away in the final 20 minutes to. even its record a 3-3. . Coach Gene Bolton used 12 players Htmimt seer*: < and 10 scored. Freshman Carven Nelson led the Pioneers with 19 points. John Eley Was next with 12. Ken Anthony netted 25 for the loser. , . \ * * * ' : , Charles Hudson pumped im 28 points and Jerry Hills l7 to lead Alma. Gordon Cox scored 21 and Ed Green 20 for Aurora. INIV. (73) PRESBYTBRIAN s scheduled Today's Oamas 0 Game. and our second half was subpar in the beginning.” Errant passes hurt the Wolverines as the Second half began. Butler, capitalizing on the errors slashed eight points from Michigan’s 24-point edge. But the Wolverines shook off the shirt slump as BUI, Fraumarm hit on tqn> free throws and Tomjanovich slammed In a driving hook. ________ yun as well as wt should have Cart or Ford FINt CllWorth ' Mont,'; m 4 i-i Hl»*t i a mL 0 3-3 JPtrjiuson M^LJ Tripped by Illinois in Cage Play PORTLAND, Qre. (AP) -Michigan State’s basketball team will try to brighten their outlook this afternoon with a consolation victory in the Far! West Classic. The Spartans will meet Temple in the final round of consolation play. ■ A Illinois earlier whipped MSU 86-77 in the consolation bracket, although Michigan State’s standout sophomore, Ralph Simpson, led the Spartans with 32 points. Oregon, the defaiding tournament champion, will meet Washington in the finals. The tenth-ranked Huskies downed Oregon State 85-65. A MICHIGAN, STATE * Is 1 M il 6 S-9 20 W 2 34 7 C Jackson .10 44 24 Gibbons * • Bsnlaml" Ward ... . Cohrs 0 2-2 2 Miller , , 0 0-0 A DMA land * * “ Illinois ..................... ., .. _ Michigan State .............. 66 31—77 Total foult: Illinois 22, Michigan St. 25 Fouled out: Michigan Stata, Gibbons, Btnlamln. 0 3G 3 Cola fiH 29 28-3316 Totalt 28 21-28 77 When in Doubt See Hanoute and Ask for Bob Johnson Al Hanoute's gonial Genera. Manager. With the exception of four year* in the U.S. Navy in the Korean war, Bob has been selling Chevrolet! and Buicks here for 13 years. Hit broad experience includes 2 years at the General Motors Institute. Al Hanoute’s Chevrolet-Buick-Opel Inc. 209 N. Park Blvd., Lake Orion v- 693-8344 HOW TO I SUCCEED INTHEB i SNOW.OBILE HB0RMCE • ■ OUR SNOWMOBILE POLICY GIVES YOU Complete Snowmobile Coverage ■ At A Rate of $3.00 Per $100.00 Coverage g $25,000 LIABILITY - $25.00 A YEAR I Another Service of So. r. nicholie S AGENCY, INC. “ J For Complete • Carefree Protection ■ 61 UNIVERSITY DR. ! 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CLOSED NEW YEARS DAY ■■ S0PtR-W®HT Smoked boneless »urBK>Riwm Semi-Boneless Hf 11$ B—A THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1969 Earl Relives the Phenomena That Made 1969 a Big Year By EARL WILSON NEW YORK—I hope everybody enjoys looking back over the past as hungrily as I do. The Show Etjz Rests of 1969 have to include the “revolution-1 1st’’ youth, auto-establishment productions—'‘Easy Rider,” “Midnight Cowboy,” “Alice’s Restaurant” -L which will probably have to fight it out with “Hello, Dolly!” “They Shoot Horses, Don’t They?” and “True Grit” for the Oscar. If in 1970 is still age-oriented and many believe, “Hello, Dolly!” will snatch the award—but don’t be. too sure there’s not a youth vote in the Academy, which could overturn the Establishment. Some of us oldsters were shocked whew Buddy Hackett. Don Rickies aad Anthony New-ley spoke a 4-letter word in night clubs (or .even a 3 in the case of Buddy Hackett) but when WILSON Katie Hepburn did it,' we noticed that the audience shrieked and applauded. What was going on here? -* ★ ★ “Hair,” which some of us frowned on because it had a nude scene became evidently, a clasic, with Michael Butler employing companies in many cities and nobody thinking it very dirty any more. Best New Groups (after the unsurpassable Beetles) were the Rolling Stones, Blood, Sweat and Tears, and Blind Faith . , . Top girl rock singer: Janis Joplin . . . Magic Word to Groupies: Fillmore East . . . Poet Laureate of the movement: still Bob Dylan. Most worried profession in America: Barbers. Kids getting hair cut once every 3 or 6 months . . . Big deal (rattier perilous) Celebrity franchise restaurants . . . Most interviewed personality in the world, Jacueline Susann, who said she loved reading “Portnoy’s Complaint” but wouldn’t want to shake hands with the author. ★ ★ ★ Host With the Most (Room): Earl Blackwell, whose pent-hoiise party after “Coco” was what the GIs in Vietnam would call “outstanding” ... Man Doing Everything (including getting a divorce and new sneakers): Woody Allen. THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . . Joe Namath insisted that a photographer give up his film taken of him at a party at his TV producer’s penthouse where everybody was convivial... Shelley Winters is in huge demand ’for talk shown since her classic clash with David Susskind. Maybe they’d do a series? Secret Stuff: A forthcoming film, with a gambling title, already Is a gamble ... A west side discotheque may be 1970’s first casualty . . . Lynn Redgrave’s worried about her father’s reaction to her first nude scene in Columbia’s “The Virgin Soldier.” REMEMBERED QUOTE: “Practical politics consists of ingoring facts.”—Henry Brooks Adams. EARL’S PEARLS: Van Panopolous of 37th St. Hideway saw this sign, “Season’s Greetings—Beware of Dog.” “Maxicoats are a gam shame” (Tom Manessis) . . . That’s earl, brother. (Put>ll»tiw>-H*ll Syndicate) THE WAR IN THE AIR, THE ROYAL AIR FORCE IN WORLD WAR H, edited by Gavin Lyall. (Morrow, $7.95) Tills nifty anthology is the middle offering in a three-part series on the British forces during World War II. ’ , The first, “The War at Sea,” was issued last year and the final work, “The War on Land,” tentatively is listed for January release. ( ■ ★ * * For war buffs, the series is a must. The RAF edition, like the Navy anthology, is six pounds of action in a five-pound book. Lyall, piecing together first-person accounts from a variety of sources, chronicles the RAF from 1939 to the end of the war. from Hitler’s march into Poland which triggered England’s entry into the war, through the RAF’s struggling development,, bn to Africa and finally to the frustrating account of a prison camp liberation. Paul Robbins (UPI)] THE STRUGGLE F 0 R| SURVIVAL, by Eliot Japeway. (Weybright & Talley, $3.50) Eliot Janeway, economic adviser to President Franklin D. Roosevelt and many private corporations, believes the United States has “compromised her leadership' in the world economy” by allowing one-time colonial powers to “transfer their former colonial responsibilities to America” while continuing to benefit from America’s dollar outflow. I The U.S. decision to play reformer in Asia ‘‘was implausible from ; the outset provocative to foreign cynicism and tragic for ideal! s.m everywhere,” the author says. ★ ★ ★ By the time Washington realized what "was happening, Janeway says, “Europe was in firm political control of the balance of power betwe-en America and the Communist world, and in even firmer control of the world’s largest pool of free dollars . . .” -Janewjay also ^claims former President Lyndon B. Johnson would have had fewer financial and political problems if he had| been honest with Congress and the American people. ★ ★ ’ * Instead, the author charges In this highly critical book, he “resorted to escalation by stealth." John F. Barton (UPI) TAKE YOUR CHOICE. SPERRY AND HUTCHINSON IN OAKLAND COUNTY SINCE 1925 ALL CREDIT TERMS BURNER SERVICE C1ARKE-6EE FUEL OIL HOKMIL CURE «1 * ■ iQ Boneless Flat Htam ‘ 1 "SUPER-RIGHT" BONELESS FULLY COOKED Canned Hams.. 8 7W ECKRICH VARIETY LUNCH MEAT Smorgas Pac ... s9r RADISHES 2 as 29* GREEN ONIONS 2'unch«29 PARTY SNACKS A&P BRAND Assorted Nuts.. PLANTtR’S Cocktail Peanuts PLANTER'S Cocktail Peanuts ROMEO Marashino Cherries. LIBBY'S FROZEN Lemonade ■••• A&P GRADE "A" Tomato Juice.. VERNOR'S—RETURNABLE BTL.' Ginaerale . ,. . INSTANT COFFEE Nescafe. 29* 10-OZ. JAR 25* 5%:OZ. CANS 49 24-OZ. BTLS. ASPIRIN TABLETS ARP 5-GRAIN 100'19‘ Fruit Drinks ORANGE-CNERRY GRAPE OR FRUIT PUNCH YUKON L0-CAL Beverages CREST—6c OFF LABEL, REG. Toothpaste* . v- 3 85 1-QT 14-OZ. WHILE SUPPLIES LAST CANS THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1069 'Adults, Unborn Hurt by Noise BOSTON (UP1) — Such 1 H&h FRYERS Special Pack Cut-Up Fryers 45 lb CUI-UP FRYERS e DOUBLE BREASTED e FOUR LEGGED e FAMILY PACK e COUNTRY CUT Peeled and Medium Size SHRIMP 1H-LB. BAG ( 3-LB. BAG 2" 1597 Save 10c-Pane Packet Potato Chips noises as sonic booms could have an emotional and • psychological effect on unborn I babies as wel) as their mothers, |a group of scientists claims. Dr. Lester /W. Sontag and a panel of scientists summed up science's proofs that excessive noise, even of less intensity than sonic booms, is .bad for the heart and blood vessels in addition,to the hearing of adults. I They discussed the matter at | the annual meeting of the American Association for the I Advancement of Science (AAAS). ' science unveiled today- Called 'environmental biology," the new science says as the infant grows, curiosity becomes dpnunatirvg , and it must be Sontag, director of F e l s Research Laboratory at Yellow Springs, Ohio, said, “The fetus, while he cannot speak for himself, may have equal or greater reason to object to” excessive noises as adults. “We must be concerned about its being a possible damaging aspect of the fetus’ environment I and a contributing factor j Mill total behavior and adjustment patterns in its later life," he ! told a symposium on noise. jHIGH BLOOD PRESSURE I Dr. Samuel Rosen of Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New I York said. “Physiological ef-jfects of noise in the human, I other than auditory, have not (been given sufficient attention by scientists.” satisfied if either is nob'to be environmentally deprived. Dr. Richard Allen of Johns Hopkins University Medical School of- Baltimore, its advocate, npted the child’s brain reaches 90 per cent of its eventual adult size by the age of 5. BASIC PREMISE ! The basic premise of the I science, as outlined by Chase, is that competence of human behavior can de “enlarged or destroyed by alterations in environmental structure." “Environments that impair behavioral development should be disallowed in the same way that we disallow dangerous foods and drugs and dangerous pollution of the physical environment,” he said. The environment of concern to environmental biology has nothing to do with parental affluence or poverty or with what the child is taught in facts or beliefs. Its environment is that in which the developing young human is or isn’t provided with the environmental responses he must have at the time he needs them if he is to develop into a fully competent adult. Dr. Joseph P. Buckley of the]CRIPPLED BEHAVIORS University of Pittsburgh said, if he.doesn’t get them, first sounds such as compressed air blasts and bells and buzzers established pathological high blood pressure in his laboratory rats. He and his associates are experimenting with drugs to curb such pressure elevations and could eventually be useful for noise-plagued humans. JANE PARKER Hot Dog Rolls or Sandwich Buns from parents, later from teachers, the result are “individuals crippled in their social and intellectual behaviors because of early environmental deprivation,” Chase said. On the other hand, evolving techniques of environmental biology offer “an opportunity to , . explore the far reaches of the The infant and environment ‘human potential.” also are the subjects of a new) * * * 'No child In Chase’s view should be allowed to suffer preventable retardation o f behavioral development because of environmental deprivation. I can think of no more fundamental human right than the right of every infant and child to an early environment that allows him to become a broadly competent human being.” Turkey-Egg Loss Is Laid to Birds' Stand on Laying ANN PAGE LARGE STUFFED OLIVES it 9-OZ. JAR 69 OAILEY CR0SE=CU1U Sweet Pickles DAILIY, POLISH STYLE Dill Pickles...... WITH TOMATO SAUCE WITH TOMATO SAUCE A Ann Page Beans .3 SARA LIE FROZEN Parkerhouse Rolls Pizza Pie Mix.. " Prices tffeetive Through Wed., Dec. 31st EAST LANSING (,0-Turkeys lay their eggs standing up. Chickens, who are smarter, squat. | The result: 20 to 30 per cent of eggs laid in a given turkey flock a,* ■ k| j I are cracked or badly damaged bill Named Ulieen [by ffle fall. Chickens don’t have I that problem. of Job S Daughters Michigan State University poultry experts have designed a ,, . .shock-absorbing rubber “chr- Kathleen Ives, daughter of pet„ tQ reduce the egg casual-jMr. and Mrs. Edwm Ives of 203 . and improve the turkey Thalia, Avon Township, will be bjrth rflte aspsoiffidaMkm | include Janice Rowland of 322 Pane Packet oGmeiicaU ‘Javocite LIGHT BATTER [Griggs, Rochester; Kaye Askew :of 1710 South Blvd., Avon Town-: ship: Nanci Snook of 6892 Coolidge, Troy; and Vicki Crandall, of 4204 S. Mill, Dryden. cracked turkey' eggb every year." FRUIT CAKE Egypt will produce three new breeds of cotton that will in-I w ■ 1 c r e a s e productive quantity, The* program is* open"~to the | yield earlier and be longer and public. ] stronger. yards FRUIT AND NUTS WANTED Non-Ferrous METALS No. 1 Copper ....... lb. 50c No. 2 Copper........ lb. 45c Brass___.......... lb. 25e Radiators . .. lb. 25c Aluminum ........ lb. 8C Batteries tpttT Steel - Cast - Junk Cars Save money on used auto parts Pontiac Scrap Co. 135 Braneh Entrance on Hess St. 3324)200 B—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 80, 1969 PGH Budget Hearing Is Set Mrs. Beniamin Armstrong at Frank Carruthers Funeral !arid Thomas, all of Milford, and, Edwards Furniture Co., Royal 1 "Home. I Harry Jr.of Venice, Calif.-jsixjOak. Benjamin _Mrs. McCray, a dietitian atjgrandchildren; and one great-j Surviving are one son, Frank L; of Owego, N.Y.; one daugher, Mrs. Irvan Schmidt of Warren; one sister; three grandchildren; and bne great- A public hearing on the $14.9-, General Hospital will beacon-fKay M) Armstrong. 5°. of 211 Evergreen Convalescent Home, Oneida will be 10 a m. Friday died Sunday. She was a mem-the C‘ty ^TTf^Dtat the ^ursjey-Gilbert Funeral -ber of Macedonia Church. 2 i ^^Home with burial in Perry/.Surviving are her husband; Hall, East Wide Track and Eas Qualitone A All Leading Instruments THOMAS B. APPLETON 25 W. Huron - Main Floor 332-M62 BiktrBUg. WB PLACE ALL TYPES OF IN$UIIANCE even iff the etlier fellow soys you can't get It. HENRY BEHRENDT DYNAMIC SERVICE 7622 HI6HUND ROAD, PONTIAC Z! Joseph B0RYS & BEHRENDT INVESTMENT SERVICE v THE, PONTIAC PRESS, Tuesday,| December mi Mib B—7 A Finance MARKETS Trade Moderately Active The following ere top prices covering sales of totally grown produce by growers and sold by Stem in wholesale package tots, flotations are furnished by the &troit Bureau of Markets as of SSriday. S Produce Reuther Sees Resolutions for '70 —Light and Serious By VON BATTLE gressmen who voted to cut the'fionary way of bringing down AP Business Write# joil-depltion allowance.” the present high rates of bond i t | p. a —^ I • I \/ iL LI NfiW YORK — Ask topi “We resolve to open a newy*elds should be resolved In IsrsT / nI f* Ynntn /)C Hf!HP business and consumer leadersitype of super - service station!1970- “They are purely disastr- /V\Uf KvI Lr vk/l I V** V#l II ll I wvw ] ' V**■ * * 9 IV/jJv, what their 1970 New Year’s re-this year which will offer cash!ous now [?r *°n® ran8® °f ■ / 1 , i ‘ ,|solutions are and one is liable togivjeaway games for each(mem-jour econbmy,” he says. I imat rrmfrrintrttinn get some interesting answers. ber of the family, triple green . .. w * „ Urges Confrontation6 * * * stamps, free drinking glasses, And Mrs. Mickey DiLorenzo„ of Problems in 1970s| “r guess 1 should resolve to free place mats for the kitchen, VEGETABLES , Topped, bu. ........ ige, Curly, bu........ ige. Red, bu. ige, Standard NEW YORK (APH The stock market continued to be depress’ed in moderately active trading early this afternoon. At noon the Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, showed a minimal gain of 0.40 to 792.77 after having been down 2.44. ».»j The Associated Press 60-stock 3.»{average at noon had dropped .7 3.ooj to 268.1, with industrials off ^trails off .8, and utilities, up. 1. " Jjg The market opened on a firm . iso stance blit quickly began drift-:: i.5o ing tower on a broad front. Analysts said persisting tax-loss selling on this next to the last trading session of the year weighed on the market. A block of 172,000 shares of U.S. Plywood-Champion Papers] New York exchange. Both the! °T rroDiems m ,y/us|sponsor round-table peace talks balloons and bubble gum for the{last summer *”:*Ped ®Parlt meal seller and buyer were institu- between automobile manufac-1kids, modern deluxe restrooms, jboycotts m various states, says: tions, according to the broker DETROIT (AP) — Voicing turers and Ralph Nader,” says complete travel maps and the* “My first resolution is proba-who handled the transaction. disappointment in the decade ofjMrs. Virginia H. Knauer, chair-j quickest service in town.” biy 8omg 10 be not to buy any ir ir * the 1960s, United Auto Workers|man of President Nixon’s Com- “Gee, that’s great.” .meat in Nassau County super- Amone prices on the Ameri- President Walter Reuther said mlttee on Consumer Interests. j-> Yes, but there’s just one11 can Stock Exchange were FourMonday .that America’s youngj *■ * * c Seasons Nursing, off 2% to 67^; PeoP>f constitute our great, And from a spokesman for a * * * Nortek up 1V4 to 24V Re- hope in the decade ahead. imajor oil company, who asked “What’s that?” On "two occasions during thejsearch^ottrell, off 2% to for °bvi°US don't have any room for, morning the Big Board ticker Telex, off 1 to 95V«; Asamera,!end ^That^hrsnation^hoi" 6 ' gasoline pumps. ’ tape trailed in reporting floor off % to 17%; and Slick, off $ THE GIMMICKS On a serious note, Dayton Cle-1 Declines widened their edge over advances to nearly 400 among individual issues traded on the New York Stock Exchange. . ^markets unless I take a butcher along with me to identify it.” transactions. "We The New York Stock Exchange .[acts to solve the many series, national problems which we credit cards of all those Con-belatedly recognized, but only] barely began to cope with in the! resolve not to cancel the weU> -®fior Yice Presidfnt Paper Reports Cohn Indicted r Poultry and Eggs •*, DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (AP)—(USDA)—Prices Tuesday for No. l live poultry, - - -■Bunds: hens heav- heavy type 35-27; ______(■ Whites 19*41; turkeys 32-34. dfijjr ‘ t^ steady. Jrade slowly develop^ »S"sKortv'i it the far Speaking for the UAW in par-iticular, Reuther said efforts 'will -I^h LOW Lest Chj! be made “to humanize the| f *' 1 * i Successful s Investing l m Wm $ * v By ROGER E. SPEAR research and engineering Mobil Oil, has a resolution that | involves cutting air pollution, i “I’d like to see the American motorist resolve to help us by CHICAGO (AP) - The Chica-I keeping his car in first-class !g0 Sun-Times reported today j working order and by driving it'that1 Roy M. Cohn, New York ■properly. A clean, well-tuned;financier and former counsel to ! car, properly driven, cuts air J the late Republican Sen. Joseph pollution to half of that of a r McCarthy of Wisconsin, has dirty car. been indicted secretly on a 1 “We recognize that it is the oil|charge of violating the Illinois companies who must carry the iBank Company Holding Act. 2m» + .*! workplace, bring greater secu-| * 22* 22''i-*lrity and d'Snity t0 active and * 28* 29* - *'retired workers, and extend the! £ 40,1 41 “ |benefits of unionism to millions! '* 20 jo', [of workers still unorganized.". •r( Reuther conceded that pro- , . ■ , 2«'/4 26* + -Igress had been made during the Q—My shares of Hiram brunt of this part of the air pol-j The newspaper says an indict-3i»4 T i ?J!60s, but said it “pates into Walker have gone up 50 per lution battle,” Clewell says, jment handed down, by a Cook 34^4 34* - “‘ virtual, insignificance when cpnt since I bought them in mid- “But if 90 million Americans re-]County grand jury in November m! 11* - * measured against the growing 1967. Should I take my profit? solve to drive clean and well- charged Cohn, 42, and some 7i',‘ n* - * pressures on all our resources —G. B. tuned cars and drive sensibly it business associates with having 44* 44* + *1 inherent- in our population; A—Hiram Walker is partieu-sure will help.” held more than 15 per cent con- 23'/A &v> - * growth...” larly well-situated within an * a ★ trol of two Chicago Banks. 39* 39* + J MUST END WAR {industry whose prospects are{ in the world of stocks, there] * ★ * - m ^ -1 'excellent. The American prefer-|are those who also are making! The banks named in tfie in- ;|ence for lighter-bodied whiskies resoiuttons-as long as the in-dictment were the Guaranty “We must free ourselves i rapidly as possible from the! drain on our spirit and resources stemming from our Vietnam involvement,” he said. “We' must move from confrontation to negotiation and coopera-jtion for peaceful development in z'JJIthe world community, recogniz--’^ling that we are in trouble not . just as Americans but... as a ~ *' species.” has resulted in a rapid increase in sales of Scotch and Canadian whiskies. Between 1957 and 1968 consumption of Scotch and vestor doesn’t hold the brokers Lnk & Trust Co and the Mer. to all of them. cantile National Bank, the* pa- Eldon Grimm sen‘or vic*|Per reported. „ • .... ! president of Walston & Co., a, The 1957 iaw prohibits persons Canadian whiskies increased 16 New York investment firm, re- . . , comPanies per cent compared with a 62 per solves to “get a new bull mar- Jnd “2 thaTlsTer cent gain in total liquor con- ket started jn both stocks andj^[ro controf wer two or more sumption. This trend is expected I bonds and buy up some of the provides {or . He said the young are thejwdich xf |xp,e?ted 1° i BAFFLING PROBLEMS 1 ^,|hope of America. “They tend to j®a ®® 0 ® j ..Wc-re .g0,ng to resolve to Z I‘.know more and care morethansP'rds gWE aftyer help the securities industry iron SSI Hiram is aging and out most of Raffling ^ and. up to a year in prison. News in Brief American life. “If we are as wise Ibuilding up its inventory in this i tems it’s been faced with this | as wise as we new type of whisky. Accordingjyear and to do much better, The theft of $83 In change In m .. ... I think we _ will legislate to figures published by Business^ investment clients than most a break-in at the Hatchett and | E E S ’ J aetton to'Week, Hiram Walker’s Canadian everybody did in 1969.” Brown Auto Wash 354 S. Sag- » g* gj Jo* + *'meet human needTand SirS was third largest seller Sidney Homer, a partner in;maw, was reported to Pontiac I £ m ”• : ItTons herTJt home and then- m the 1966-68 period- All told, Salomon Brothers & Hutzler. police yesterday morning by t of its brand* were included [bond brokers, says a noninfla-ljoel Hatchett of 172 Green. {join with them (the young) in|in a list of 35 industry leaders. | regenerating our natural and1 , . , 724 - * man-made environments.” | Consumption 6f distilled spirits. 3*'4» + {* ________________ is expected to reach 2 gallons fiC ’> {per capita by 1973 from the| 4 Fnr \/~ Irini inr\/iPresent rat®01 18 gaHons. ini - lu iiy jyji iukji y the ,ast three years Hirami Walker has increased sales anr average of over 7 per cent an- j nually and earnings have out-] paced sales. In the year ended! Aug. 31, net of $2.78 per share] was reported on sales of $699 ;. r, ... '.[million. I see no reason to sell DETROIT (AP) - OP®-we®kjat tfl/s time. layoffs have been ordered for Mutual Stock Quotations Layoffs Slated* by Chrysler COMPANIES ' (asked) Monday all Chrysler Corp. assembly 39* + *{ plant workers. About 37,700 em-39v« - * ployes will be affected. Ji* + *1 Two plants at Detroit will be 27J^ + closed from Jan. 5 through Jan. Is* - *l 10 along with assembly plants in *1*- *! Newark, Del., Los Angeles and 26* ,27* ~ v“{St. Louis, Mo., the announce-si* 51* z *iment Monday said. Q—What in your opinion will; be the final solution to (he back- ] office mess that brokers face? —M. V. A—A just - completed study conducted by a group from Columbia University, headed by Sidney Robbins, professor at the university’s graduate school of J l£! During the second week in business, proposes a certificate-+ ^ January, another Detroit as-|less, computerized transaction) jsembly plant’s operations will system. The study, commis-Z 4 -be curtailed, along with plants intoned by.the respected account-{ - “‘ Belvidere, 111., and Windsor,ling1 firm of Ly b r a ndTHossj + * Ont. ... Brothers & Montgomery, focuses I Z *i Chrysler offered no explana-onirlhe ^fock certificates as re-; ?j ,jjion for the layoffs, but it is nolsponsible for the crises that] - Jr secret that* the firm has unu-result when trading volume - *|sually high new car inventories mounts. Elimination of the cer- - *!because of sagging sales. jtificate would also help reduce! n*!?! SELECTIVE SHUTDOWNS the mounting number of security] The Big Three auto makers— Chrysler, General Motors and Ford—have all closed selected plants during recent weeks to bring inventories into line with sales volume. Chrysler closed plants during Thanksgiving! week and around Christmas. ( . . The Chrysler statement said Cf)/// Powder Sub new car assembly was expected to be back at full tilt by Jan. 19. KanSOS Youths thefts. Implementation and'or. acceptance of this plausible but ! innovative solution will t a k e j many years to accomplish. (Copyright 1969) 1Pot‘ Dealers Sell Schustr | 15.7517.24 Board of Realtors Plans Yearly Fete WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Some dealers are fooling high school | Students by selling chili powder, parsley and ordinary tree leaves as marijuana, police said P The Pontiac Area Board of {Monday. [Realtors will hold its 49th an- nual banquet at 6:30 p.m. Mon- DiCckt,Fent' a Sedgwick County day at ttie Elks Temple, 114 Dr- Sheriff s investigator, said tob, chard Lake v reports on recent purchases ' > Incoming' officers • for- 1970 ^ve revealed the substances, If wiU\be installed, including Wil [which, are -dried and broken up .J|-J H. Bass, president; Warren D. |10 resemble marijuana. !Newton, senior vice president;; * „ . „ , ] 78.41Gary Partridge, secretary; and An ounce sells for $5 and mat' (Kenneth Hemstead. treasurer, [yield up to 50 cigarettes, Fent] Dr. Richard-C. Bates of the!said. 1 u+ys,“ik7iC!eneralv Motors public rela-’ * * * 1 tions repartment will be guest' In ap phusual buy/in/Hays-; ;* !»:i IS:’ weaker. • vHle, . 10 miles southwest of( I'|i’p73 fficketo, costing $6.50 per, Wichiia, officers thought the(y| s 1279 26o|:per$on, ma^ bi/pur-chqsed ' at, had purchased liSD. An analysis | “ door. T I 1 / ■ [revealed it was powdered sugar.! sK,2 Cos S2 Cos S3 Crtty Cap 13.32 14 Cm WOlv 6.22 6 Cm WDal 10.59 11 Decat Irfc 10.96 1) Delta Tf B.21 8 Divid Shr 3.57 3 ’ Dowrtt F 5,77 6 OteJf Lv JVifl-lS Dreyf Fd 12.83 14 Eaton&Howard: MTOdy Mc“p 14.06 . ZM i . Wash Mi Welihgtn Explr ‘ftYFio.a B-r-8 THE PONTIAC PItESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1969 Tricks From Jacobys By OSWALD & reached four spades and hadjspade suit and minimum hand.I We say probably, because a JAMES JACOBY ,,no troublij making^ contract. jOipthe system ufled/by lijim^ arid'clairvoyant declarer could rt-' In the match between this I Bobby (Joldmanf,, Who' was Billy Sisehberg, the two-club I cover from this' liafl start, Dallas Aces ahd the Walsh j South for the Aces,, jumped to response, followed by the re-j Careless players don't get teams, both South players four spades to announce a good [turn to two spades, committed (into a match to determine the a m e. [North American International [ Junior Editors Quiz on- GULF STREAM partnership W ^ lla )***•. jump to <«r »P.t«»3;“.pBOb,,y d“l”t W gave a complete picture of the1 hand. QUESTION: Where does the Gulf Stream start and what makes it warm? WWW ANSWER: Put a kettle of water on a hot stove and after awhile steam will spout out from it, steam that has a lot of pusti. The boiler of a steam locomotive is a larger kind of kettle. The Gulf of Mexico, a body of . water surrounded by our Gulf states, the eastern shores of Mexico and part of Central America, is another kind of kettle. Its waters, lying in a kind of pocket, become warmed by the southern sun. Like steam from the kettle, these (warmed waters) pour through the Straits of Florida, then take a Northeast course along the American coast, passing some way offshore. " This is the Gulf Stream, a kind of ocean river. About 50 miles wide and 3,000 feet deep, it slows its speed as it moves North. When reaching North Carolina, it is moving about 40 miles a day. From Newfoundland it heads Northeast, flowing more slowly, and divides into three branches. One moves toward Iceland and southern Greenland; one upward to Scandinavia and the third south toward Spain. Here this last joins several other currents which carry them back to the Gulf of Mexico. In the center is an area of calm, where old time sailing ships were often trapped. Where the Gulf Stream passes cold countries', it changes their climates, making them He ruffed the second dia-. , , , ^ . , ,mond and led out one high A careless player might take ttunpt Then he played a heart a quick look at dummy andjto dummy>s ace apd a heart [play out his ace and king of back to his jack. West was j spades. Should the queen drop,jln with y,e queen and could he would be able to try for a|find no better iead than a club, couple of overtricks but the ac-jBobby won in dummy and was tual trump, heart and clubjneiw ready to play his second situation would probably lead high trump. Hie king of hearts to our careless friend winding |and a ruff of the fourth heart j up one trick short of his cba*};ame next and eventually West jtract- j made his queen of trumps. Of. course, the hand NORIB 30 j standoff. Dick Walsh made the + J53 [same four spades in the other room. + AK843 WEST EAST + Q98 A10 VQ1073 ¥98 ♦ K Q9 8 4 A107654 + Q7 + J952 SOUTH (D) + AK7642 ¥KJ42 ♦ 3 + 106 East-West vulnerable West North East South 1 + Pass 2 + Pass 2 ¥ Pass 2 + Pass 4 + Pass Pass Pass Opening lead- -♦K Pass 4 ¥ Pass ? You, South, hold: 4QJ73 ¥3 4X876 +A532 What do you do now? A—Bid fourno-trump to ask for aces. TODAY’S QUESTION You do bid four no-trump. Your partner bids five spades to show three aces. You bid five no-trump and he bids six spades. What do you do now? Answer Tomorrow CAMPUS CLATTER By Lurry Lewis- THE BORN LOSER By Art S tie purpose of the hearing, department said, was to pre-. details of the proposed re-itruction between M54 and iay Road, highway official? plan to answer questions j| the project Jan. 11 at the Irford Township HaH. -■ ' 1 p THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUBS The John Ferneld Company •; Preienli '' 1 Gcorjte Bernard Shaw’s PYGMALION TONIGHT AT 8:15 P.M. TICKETS: Hudton’*, Meadow I Brook Theatre Box Office 01 call 377*2700, 902*0353, Detroit Inititnte at Art* Box. Office or caU832-2730. 0 ^JkSfa. Un SPAY, DECEMBER 30, 1909 B—9 Sex Education Films Stir Debate in Great Britain T.(TMnnM tim \nru._ iaAS • _,j .. . . . . ... ........ . \ ' .T LONDON (AP) —\vhen you are 8 or 8 you .begin to question the mystery of life. “Where do babies com j from?" you ask.; * * * . Then, one day in school, J voice says: “All the people in J|the workj were made |n the way A Toast. Best Wishes For A Happy New Year From Lih/riy Cocktail Lounge 85 N. SAGINAW we’ve told you today,, by a man and a woman together. AH the people in the world grew first inside their mothers' wombs land then were bom. “And that’s where babies come from.” PREVIEWS OF , PROGRAM A thousand schoolchildren of 8 and 9 heard and saw this story in previews of new sex education programs produced by the British Broadcasting Gorp. and scheduled for gen-, eral broadcasting later. The stork has been shot down. Is this good? ★ it it Dr. Louise Eickhoff, child have cases to show that children who have been taught by parents without harm broke down as a result of seeing the film Birth of a Baby’ and television programs." Dr. Robert Kind, who teaches sex in Leicestershire schools, says: “I personally know of no case where a child has been sent of! the rails by sex instruction. Ignorance causes anxiety as well as a good many illegitimate teen-age" births. It is the root of many adult sex problems.” ‘PARENTAL BURDEN' Much of the opposition to the programs centers on the credo that sex instruction is a parental responsibility. Proponents argue that parents have failed their job, leading to maladjusted generations. headed youngster after somei The earlier arrival of puberty,jdivided into three, segments to thought, “how was the' first affecting girls particularly, was be shown on BBC next June. spokesman said 95 per cent of title parents who saw the previews approved! A spokesman for the School Broadcasting Council, a BBC affiliate, said ^Initial reaction from parents, teachers and nearly i,000 children at previews produced only a small number of . objections.” does youT stomach know you’re [the former, BBC radio brpad- The children themselves married?0 , toasts the worths -while color talked freely, parent and teach-] * ★ * ' films are , it it 8. Peace in Central America. Another “soccer war” is prevented as Honduras and El Salvador agree, to take up base- will give them the same kind of tongue-lashing he administered to television newscasters. Communists quail and lay]ball instead, down arms. At peace confer- 9. Peace in Washington., ence in Paris, North and South I Democrats and Republicans Vietnamese delegates agree to [ agree on plan for peace be-return both countries to France, j tween Agnew and television 2. Peace in Middle East, networks. Under terms of agree-United States and Soviet Union ment, NBC hires Judge Hayns-finally agree an play for peace worth to Replace Huntiey-Brink-between Israel and Arab states, ley. Plan provides for entire area to j 10. Peace in Greece. Onassis rejoin Roman Empire. jbuys entire country from mili-' * * * tary .junta and installs self as 3. Peace in Northeast Asia, president so Jackie can be a Israel and Arab states agree on!^rs^ lady again, plane for peace between Soviet! Union and China. Under terms of agreement, China stops workj uclear missiles. In ex-! change, Russians drop claim! that they invented the fortune! cookie. 1 | 4. Peace in Africa. Soviet. Union and China agree on plan] for peace between Nigeria andj srrinnrrriroTrirrrm^ Wednesday Special! DINNER s- FI S-4S00 g_» pmtiac PKIVt-tN THIATIIt plLfilMtDMoffiwnilFMEgGIl L IN-CAN 'HEATERS SO TELEGRAPH AT SO. LAKE 80. I 1 MILE W. WOODWARD 1 ( ... CHILDREN UNDER 12 FREE . 1 First Run! “WILLIAM / rmjL SOUNDER'S W PULITZER m PRIZEWINNER i COMES TO Vw James Bond oar U Sieve .McQueen A H|! CAROL ■ km 'White^KmB TDAdDYsGoTMe plut/r-HSjRirinib ^ frank K sinatra ■1 ‘‘tonij ■K.. rome 1-0200 A# ‘ I ORIVK-IN THEATER OPDYKE RD. AT WALTON BUD BOX OFFICE OPENS 6:30 P.M apply for American statehood, j || Peace in Far” East. Protestants and Catholics agree on; plan for peace between Hindus and Moslems. Under terms of: agreement, India and Pakistan j are reunited, and once again become part of British Empire. PONTIAC LAKE INN l 7890 Highland Road its-imi \ Spend Your New Year’s Eve At IUIMII} IIIIITI. in the \ TEMPEST ROOM Make Your Reservations Nqw! Smorgasbord and Dancing 87 Per Couple or $10 Door Charge WALDRON HOTEL PHONE: 334-0907 SjhiUJMUliMI isejeit OtAkiStm 12 NORTH SAGINAW IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Open 11 am Wed. thru Sat. and 2:00 pm Sun., Mon., Tuea. Proof Is Required — End* Tuatday c PREeiecs [JEWELSJIJ HURON ACADEMY AWARD WINNER BEST ACTRESS BARBRA STREISAND BARBRA STREISAND-OMAR SHARIF Mi MEDFORD;ANNFFRAN(!IS-WArTrR PI®®- Adults. Wed.-Sat., Mat. 1.25, Nites Sun fir Hojjdaya 2.00 1 Chlldran Under 19 1M _ Mr. B's ounge Firebird L J®?ERRY LIBBY will be back on JAN. 6 THE JERRY LIBBY TRIO Appearing Rightly Tuesday through Sunday Phone 681-2525, 2525 Elisabeth Lake Rd. You Are Cordially Invited to Celebrate New Year’s Eve at Kingsley Inn Open House in the Crown Room • Empire Room • Hills Room • Athenian Room Dinners will be served from 5:0O P.Mi Entertainment... Donn Preston in the Cocktail Lounge Charles Dubin in the Dining Room In The Grand Ballroom Djan^ing from 10:00 PM. till 3:00 AM. To the music of Jim Thomas and the Mel-O-Matics $35.00 per couple includes Full Course Dinner served"from 9 P.M. until... By Reservation Only Call 644-1400 or 564-5143 ITHE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1960 For Wont Ad* Dial 334*4981 2 Aden Rob Collector on Fisher Street An insurance collector was abducted and robbed of $325 at gunpoint as he left a home on the city’s sopth side yesterday, Pontiac police report. William Taylor, of Grand; Blanc told police he had just finished making a collection on Fisher Street about 5:30 p.m. and was walking toward his car when he was approached by two men who forced him into; the car! ★ * . When he tried to break away, j Taylor said, one of the men] tried to spray an unknown substance in hi$ eyes and the other hit him in the back of the j head with a small revolver. He said the gun fired when he was! struck. Taylor said that he was then! ordered to drive to a location about three blocks away on Wilson, where he was able to' jump out of the car. His shouts for help, he said,' apparently frightened his ab-j ductors and they fled on foot. sMswv* MRS CHARLII of Myrtle Clasman; dearl ------- - ........... father of Clennie Martin, | Jimmy and Kent Valentine;] dear brother of »M y r 11 e Moran, Nancy Thorp, Gladys Jackson, Reydith Cones, Lee, David and Stoney Clasman; also survived by s 1 x, grandchildren. Funeral, service was held Monday,] December 29, at 7:30 p.m. at, the J. L. Peters Funeral, Home, Lincoln Park. Interment in Kentucky. | Used-Car Lots Get Regulation laid minor' child I child has violated a that said child shou Ihe jurisdiction of t of Michigan, you ar the hearlng^on^sald MAE; December 28, 1969;, 530 Arthur Street; age 57;; beloved wife of Willie Frank] McCray; dear sister of Mrs. Clester Asberry ,and Mrs. Elizabeth Webb; also survived by five nieces and; five nephews. Funeral] service will be held Friday, January 2, at 1 p.m, at the] Macedonia Baptist Church | with . Rev. L. R. Miner officiating. Interment in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mrs. McCray will lie in state at the Frank Carruthers Funeral Home after 11 a.m.' Thursday. se, G a k I a n d County ^the Xlty of Ponflacjn ou are hereby commanded to Impractical to make personal HRMPVI_________ _ twspaoer prints , circulated In said County, witness, the \ Pontiac; Press. The Waterford Town ship! would be forced to sell ........................"judge o* said cour HI board last night approved an I remove the tanks if the contract 0f°prontiac ?n said county, this 23rd day n-junonno regulating and went to another company, pf d*c*,t,*eu(}en,e"arthur mop re, He said the difference in •♦«..«** MA^,g §£££ removing or purchasing the B#p“,y jl^’ife "Vision tanks is more than the dif-_________________ * December no, tw ference in the bids. order for publication ordiinance licensing used-car lots. The ordinance requires that every used-car’ dealer in the township register with t h e| ESTLOW, MABLE E.; December 29, 1969; 111 Draper Road, Waterford Township; age 63; beloved wife of Ken-i neth V. Estlow; dear sister OVERBAUGH, BLAKE C.; of Mrs. E. J. Barber, and December 27, 1969 ; 5 918 Mrs. Lucille Maritvick. Fu- Chippewa, Whittemore, Mjch-neral service will be held igan (formerly of Union Wednesday, December 31, at Lake); age 70; beloved hus-2:45 p.m, at Donelson-Johns band of Irene Overbaugh; Funeral'Rpme. Interment in- dear brother of Mrs.,Winnie White Chapel Memorial McDonald, Melvin, Emery Cemetery, Troy. Mrs. EJstlow and Roy Overbaugh. Funeral will lie in state after 4 p.m. today at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours are 3 to 5 and 7 to 4k) clerk’s office and that only used -jq BUY TANKS cars may be sold at the lots. | After awarditlg the contract 55TS j ■ County of Oaklam Rondtna, Plaintiff 1 the board moved that the J. Rondlna, Defendant. Burns, in southeastern Oregon. | The ordinance says it will ^ township negotiate with Ashland • - illnwnl 4m kba n Ini Fap cIapQOn Ar * .. __ LA Issues Warrants on 1 Am Curious' LOS ANGELES (AP) - Warrants are out for eight movie houses in Los Angeles County showing the Swedish film “I am Curious (Yellow)” and officers have begun confiscating prints of it on die ground it’s obscene. Sidney A. Cherniss Jr., head qf the district attorney’s special section on pornography, said Monday the warrants were obtained after law enforcement officers viewed the production {only other bidder, Pure Oil and signed affidavits that, in Division, Union Oil Co. of illegal to use a lot for storage of junk cars or for display, trade or sale Of any car that is hot in operable condition. The lot licensing fee is (10. The penalty for violating the. ordinance is a fine of no more than $100 and or imprisonment in the county jail for not more than 90 days. GASOLINE PACT In other business the board awarded the two-year gasoline contract for all t o w n s h i p vehicles to Ashland Oil and Refining Co., 4304 Lessing, Waterford Township, though it was not the low bidder. Ashland bid $12,807 while the Oil and Refining Company to purchase the tanks or, depending on .their age, to remove the tanks and purchase new tanks ip order that there will.be no extenuating circumstances in the awarding of future gasoline contracts. their opinion, it was obscene. Initial confiscations were made in Inglewood and Hgrmo-sa Beach. The other affected theaters are within the Los Angeles City limits. in reading and filing the Affidavit ... Publication of Service signed by Lanore M.’ Rondlna, the Plaintiff In the above entitled cause In which the Plaintiff has alleged that the Defendant, Mario ‘ Rondlna, - resides outside the Sta‘-ohltfen and that his last known ad h day of December, if , Circuit Georgia, and tl In which perso Defendant Is^nc I jurisdiction over the 1st day of /March, divorce initiated by above entitled —■“ The board also denied two rezoning applications. One application asked that 21 acres North Lake Angelus east of! Clintonville be rezoned from "Vt'inSrmw lA-dered that acopy of this! single-family residential t o gw* be ?0°rntl,aoSrPrcon- GIBSON, multiple dwelling for the construction of a 288-unit apart- default against such demand this Cow Plaintiff In tha ,„ ... 1st day of De-.. failure to comply with result In a judgment by ‘ Defendant for the the Complaint filed ;uH GALLANT, WILLIAM D . ; |0| December , 28, 1969 ; 6 3 7 r { Lake view, Union Lake; age Pontiac 49; beloved husband of Laurie Gallant; beloved son of Clyde Gallant; ‘dear father of Mrs. Eldon C. Young Jr., Miss Gail and William C. Gallant; dear brother of Mrs. Donna Rossman. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, December 31, at 10 a m. at Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Interment in Hale Cemetery, Hale. Mr. Gallant will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours are. 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) secutive weeks « ment. of if led of the pendency i Ms obligation thereto before the date of the iLiP PRATT, £&uy°id$ The application was denied at1 California, bid $12,736. the recommendation of thp ★ *- ★ planning commission because of A representative of Ashland (the large investment people of Oil explained that they own the area have in their homes. | - several of the t o w n sh i p ’ s The second rezoning ap-- KTntir-iaci underground storage tanks and;plication, for four lots on Cass| Lake north of Cass Elizabeth, BABY GARY EUGENE; December 29, 1 27 Lincoln Street, Oxford; beloved infant son of Garold and Sandra Gibson. Arrangements are pending at Bossar det Funeral Home, Oxford. Make Your Neill ReJC/U/tifiotld in person NOW 2 Gala Floor Shows 7 Hours of Entertainment DM Inn 1 Corner Elizabeth Lake JudlikMl1 And Cass Lake Roads lilftE'llJJ ] 1 BLOCK WEST OF HURON was denied because of a change in building plans of the ap-{ plicant. ★ 44 The board moved to hold its next meeting Tuesday at the Waterford Board of Education Building at Elizabeth Lake and Airport. Still Room For You! NEW YEAR'S EVE % Party Reservations Dancing-Favors -Hot Buffet-$12.50 Per Couple OXBOW PAVILLION , 9451 Elizabeth Lake Road ALLEN, CHARLES F.; December 28, 1969 ; 540 Sun-, iiyside Dr., Flushing; age 84; beloved husband of Eva M. Allen; dear father of Mrs. Chester (Madelene) Bluhm, Mrs. Fred (Hazel) Turek and Charles H. Allen; dear brother of Mrs. Andrew McDonald, Walter and Lester Allen; also survived by six grandchildren and five great-] wmte“cha^i'cemetery..JLr; HARNACK SR., CLYDE C.; December 28, 1969; 7C Henderson’ St.; age 69; beloved husband of Clara E. Harnack; dear father of Mrs. Leonard H a s k e It, Mrs. Edward Hilliker and Clyde H. Harnack Jr.; deaf brother of Mrs. Harry Lock, Hugo and Stuart Harnack; also survived by six grandchildren and six great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Wednesday December 31, at 11 a.m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Cremation at Hanwlt'Sr*wftrBg1n~siiiie lO l|C© rTODS service will be held Wednes-I Motel Thefft Two television sets and bedspread, valued at a total of] dhy, December 31, at 1:30 ; p.m, at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Interment in | Perry Mount Park Cemetery. at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to “5 and 7 to 9.) Friends may make contributions to the ^Tuberculosis Assoc, of Oak- Mr. Alien will lie Utt at ^ ^ Envelopes are the funeral home. (Suggested: ... $450, were taken from two visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 rooms of the Edgewater Beach [ to 9 ) Motor Lodge and Apartments, available at the funeral home. 3664 Dixie, Waterford Township police reported yesterday. * ★ * Police said gomeone entered the rooms by cutting a window Screen, reaching, through it and HOTTMAN, BETTY P. December 27{ 1969; 160 W Mansfield; age* 30; beloved „ 1 . . • I daughter of Joseph and Anna age 50; beloved wife of Ben- Gl^n. dear mother of jamm Armstrong; dear sis er] Michae, and David ARMSTRONG, KAY M.; December 29, 1969;. 211 Oneida; of Mrs. Bert (Margarette) Raglin. Funeral service will unlocking the door sometime be held January 2, at 10 a.i _ . mm. of DiiFcloij-nilKorl ITimpr Sunday night. No one was staying in the rooms at the time police said. Hottman; dear sister of Mrs. Mary Stocty, Mrs. Barbara Jenereaux, Mr. Bobbie, Sam-mie and Joseph Guinn Jr. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, December 31, at 3 p.m. at the Huntoon Funeral Home. Interment in Perry p b , ... , . _ . . ... .. . Mount Parte, Cemetery. Mrs. luveniitjBRYAN, GIBSON S.; Deeember| Hottman will lie in state at cerning] 28, 1969; 184 E. Huron St.;] the funeral home from 8 to i minor age 64; beloved husband of] 5 and 7 to 9. Christa SS'nUBlBiRT, GEORGE; De- cember 28, 1969 ; 2640 Candle- at Pursley-Gilbert Fufteral] Home with Rev. Leland Lloyd | officiating. Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. | Mrs, Armstrong will lie hi state at the funeral home. said vmlnor child Is unknown and said, ■ •• Ifcas violated a law Of. tha State, — said child should be continued u Jurwdfttlon oh this Court. ... 'tha'Name of the People of the State of Michigan, you are hereby notified that jjL hearing on said petition Will be hei" .. .the court House, Oak le nd Count Service Center, In the City of Pontiac I "d County, on the Sth day of Januar, 3. 1970, at 1:30 o'clock In the after-...jn, end you are hereby commanded -appear personally at said hearing. It being impractical to make persi -•-* hereof, this summons and notice be served by publication of a copy ■eek previous to said hearing,in The Pontiac .Qreas, a newspaper printed circulated In said County. . Witness, the Hohorable Np_rman lot Pontiac Ir », December *.D. -1 m city if day '7N0RMk jt. SAANARD, copy ■ judge of Probate MARJORIE SMITH, Deputy Probate Register, Juvenile Division December ■ 30,. 1969 of Mrs. Richard (Velma) Dewey, Albert E. and Miss Margaret Bryan; dear brother of Mrs. Edyt'he Gaylord, Mrs. Bettie Lewis, Haity R. andv John Bryan; also survived by one grandson. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, December 31, at 1 p.m. at th6 service will be held Wednesday, December 31, a! p.m. at the First Church of Brethren (Corner of Roselawn and Lois St.) with Rev. LeRoy W. Shafer officiating. Interment in Ottawa Park Cemetery. Mr, Overbaugh] will lie in state at the Pursley-Gilbert Funeral Home until noon Wednesday at which time he will be taken to] the church to lie in state until time of service. PROFFITT, ETHEL C.; December 29, 1969; formerly of 94 Green St.; age 75; dear mother of Mrs. Kaytheryn Tick, Mrs. Clarabelle Locke, Mrs. Carol Jean Cowan, Walter D. and Yance E. Proffitt; dear sister of Mrs. Myrtle Hillerman, Mrs. Lilly Fyie, Mrs. Dorothea Benson, Mrs. Marjorie Cameron, Herschel, Paul, Lowell and James E. Willhite; also survived by 13 grandchildren and 11 great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, December 31, at 1 p.th. at the Huntoon Funeral Home with Rev. Walter Ratcliffe officiating. Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mrs. Proffitt will lie in state at the funeral home. Dial 334-4981 (Mon. thru fri. 8-5) (Sat. 8 to 2:30) or 332-8181 Pontiac Press Want Ads FOR FAST ACTION NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS ' ADS RECEIVED BY S P.M to g*t your "KILL NUM- PLEASE NOTE Effective Saturday, November 1st, 1969, the cash rates for Classified Transient Ads will ba discontinued, The regular. Transient charge rates . will prevail from that date on. The Pontiac Press BOX NUMBERS At 10 a.m. today there were replies at The Press - Office in the -fallowing ~ hexes: C-8, C-9, C-27, C-40, C-65. In Memoriam 2 IN LOVIN? MEMORY of Roger D4l« Stogner who passed away December 30, 1947; No one knows the silent heartache Only those who've lost can tell, Thejirief we |—- *—---- • happy ________RM cherished memories. That death cannot erase. 'Sadly missed by Mother, Dad, —bthar Funeral Dlreeters B. aTiOVEND Funeral H— ipta! owIT FUNERAL HOM1 DRAYTON PLAiNS 4744M41 DONELSON-JOHNS FUNERAL HOME iu uu Huron Pont ac 334-4511 C J OOOH^PTF^ERAkHOME Keaao HIlWirHi 413-0200■ Huntoon FjJNETRAL HOME ServIng Pontlac tor SO ^'»r*>189 ____PROBLE MS |—CALL DEBT CONSULTANTS 331-0333 Bavid H. Iihportant you contact Pat or Lawyer. Emergency. , HOLIDAY Health Spa, permanent i,ka Auar nwvmantB. HA Fashion brings forth the prettiest one or 2-color shappings. 1. A slender skim with hi-rise neck. 2. Hi-belt version. 3. Low-belt version. Printed Pattern 4968: New Misses’. Sizes 9, 10, 12, 14, 16. Size 12 (bust 34) takes-23/« yards 39-inch fabric. Sixty five cents in coins for pach pattern — add 15 cents for each pattern for first-class mailing and special handling, Send to' /uute Adams, care of The Pontiac Press, 137 Pattern Dept., 243 West 17th St., New York, N.Y. 10011. Print Name, Address with Zip, Size and Style Number. LOOKING for tax da d u c t Ion, personal Improvement motivation, leadership, success. _S400 to S1500. Collect 743-7084 or 743-2347. Mr. and Mrs. Homeowner Yes. you can got a 1st or 2nd rnortgaga^on^our home. Call Mr. AND AFTER this da fa]. my other than myself. Kennetn E. Karns Jr„ 3S4S Wat-klns Lk Rd., Fpntlac, Michigan. SUSANy PLEASE COMB HO&I. . Mother and Chuck both love end want you. Wa live, at 471 University Or. Call mother before 4 p.m. at FE 8-7450 or Chuck attar £jsMFy-M2MJa^nove m,h ,®„un- «N. AI*o Birmingham — HIGH SCHOOL STUDENT neat people, 12 an hr. pli Call M dally,335-s»S7. T IATMS 1 LATHE OPERATORS experience. Pay* overtime. Qualify for extra benefit* It employed before Dec.. 31*t Apply M«n., Tue*., wed. 292 Industrial Row, Troy, .between 14 IS Mile Rd., oft Coolldge Hwy. Do you want a "white collar lob?' would you Ilka to be trained toi promotional edvertl.lno field a our exnenae. National Cprp. I* ac ceptlno application* or trainee* h fill vacande* created by pro- f _ High School Grad I •_ Athletically--------- Salary: $142.50 per week For personal Interview Call Mr. Burchl * *32-34. "MANAGEMENT OPPORTUNITY Malor cdrporatlon seeking a caret employee to manage retail servk facility, opportuinty includes paid vacation, hospitalization, retirement, noncontrlbulory savings plar plus potential advancement Ini ^ t marketing managemen £ 32-45 ixperlenca helpful. Salary open custom cuts, n wk. to atart, night*, every third Sun., i day* * week. Call Ml 4-7727, 9-5 p.m. Sorter for general maintenance of building. SOME LIGHT DELIVERY. MUST HAVE CHAUFFER'S LICENSE. PERMANENT position, many PHARMACIST Staff Pharmacist lor 170 bed hospital. Paid Blue Cross, Shield, a retirement plan many other benefits. Ext working condition. Write or Personnel Director, Lapeer ( General Hospital, Lap Michigan. 48444. Help Wanted Ftmale AGE 30-40 II train you for a career es an OPTICAL ASSISTANT you qualify es follows: Help Wantad Famale____________\ MATURE WOMAN FOR Jive Ir reasonable salary Plus room an board, car* tor 3' school ag children. Celt 424-0451 ^between . between i o.m. A 5 p.m. Pontiac Mall Optical Center PART TIME. Call appointments SINGLE Man tor general ca horses and stable. AAodern living quarters available. Red Bob farms, 1955 Ray Rd., Oxford, aaa-1798 before 4 p.m. After 4, 428-3772 , TRAINEE Looking for e career oi with gross possibilities? work hard to meet challenge? En- low mss At Inn mbbssUB id Babysitter wanted) mutt ii In, $30 p«r/ week, Ph. 338-1< between 4 and 7 p.m.______ f TECHNICIAN. EXPERIENCED. SWEETS RADIO AND APPLIANCES ni HTT 422 W, Huron USED CAR PORTER BABYSITTER. DAYS, Keego Harbor VILLAGE MANAGER—Village of Lake Orion, Mich. Population 2,700, budget 8140,000. Salary Open. . treated confidentially. Direct Inquiries tp Village Clerk, 37 E. Flint St„ Lake Orion, Mich. 48035. WINDOW DISPLAY MAN For A.M. Davison Co., h Hart, Schaffnor, and Marx, associated, mens specialty store with 2 stores, 452 S. Saginaw St., Flint, Michigan. Must be willing to relocate. Call Mr. Cammarata and record keeping, good oi portunlty tor advanctment. Ca Culllgan Water Conditioning, FE school grad, re __________ able to atari mediately. Opportunities available of advertising porting Mlssong at 335-4114, MATURE WOMAN. OW ansportatlon, mornings or tu »y, 7:30-5. f^iw. boy, OR 3-23M. PRACTICAL Nurses FOR private duties, must have own transporta-tlon. Call 332-3382. Nureo* Registry. RN's OR BS‘a PULL or part time, FE 5-4094. ileesant working conditions, now ifflce in Troy area. Stnd resume o P.O. Box 424, Waterford, Mich. RELIABLE BABYSITTER/ needed for my homo for days, Infant, own transportation, $20 a wk„ ref., apply et' 40 Murphy St., Apt. BB, RECEPTIONIST-Housekeeher wanlei — • -erel home. Salary anc Reply Pontiac Press I. days, 474-1124, after 4 p. BABYSITTER FOR INFANT, r Moybee Rd. art trensp. 40-0179. BABYSITTER, RESPONSIBLE, ! Live In, Monday thru Friday, nfir 11 BABYSITTER, URGENTLY____________ 3 children near Pontiac Genera Hospital. Days, 332-4994 SITTER WANTED nights woo.-Sat. 2 boys, Irons. Coll before 4 p BAKERY SALES WOMAlj, full tl no evenings or Sunday, good l Arfderson Bakery, 124 W. 14-A Bd Birmingham, 8** ‘ Employment Agencies ACCOUNTANT INTERE CPA career. Unusually Ing conditions in top tin CLERK START IN ON your flit money! *Nowl ZowiVl $282! Carol Ball. 334-2471. Snellinc Snelllng. SEAMSTRESS FULL OR PART.TIME For Alteration Department ms ron of Telegraph___Pontiac .. TELEPHONE GIRL UNION .LAKE AREA Part-time $1.75 to S2.50 per hot TELLER-SECRETARY 25 minutes from Pontiac, solar open, paid vacation, bonus hospltlllzatlon, lift Insurance retirement program. Contact Mi WOMAN for housekooplng. appl between 9 a.m.-3 p.m. 14 Woodward Avo., Pontiac.____ WAITRESS MORNINGS OR MIDNIGHTS Earn mora money when workin Detroit' Persor ___________ OUR GIRLS AVERAGE OVER $125 SECRETARYe pleasant Wanted Real Estate 36 Apartments, Unfurnished 38 DENTAL OFFICE train jn receptionist & procedures with p odonlst. Pleasant, lively EX SERVICE MEN Wondering where -to go? Wo havs career opportunities in all fields Coll International Personnel,, 481' 1100, 1080 W. Huron. GAL FRIDAY $325 & UP Typo 40 to 50 /words per minute Ltght bookkeeping, filing, anc answering the phone. Exc. op portunlty. Call International; Personnel, 481-1100, 10080 W\ Huron. HOLIDAY TIME IN OAKLAND COUNTY. CALLl AGENT,' 474-1498 or 338-4993. . Repairs no Obiect. Call t t. 333-7824, ,_____ SPOT CASH REALTOR, OR 4-0358 ( TRANSFERRED, NEAT 2 OR 3 BEDROOM HOUSE. CALL MY AGENT 481-0374 THINK CASH-WE BUY IF -YOU WANT TO SELL. $109 I>IR MONTH WALTON PARK MANOR Unprecedented opportunity — Fot msllon Call 335-4171. Sale Houses -2 BEDROOMS, doublo lot tiding. $13,950 terms. 2731 McCullough Rlty. 674-2238. 1-2-3-BEDROOM, BASEMENT, B A'T H UNIT. MODEL 12 CHERRYLAWN, PONTIAC. 3 WEI WILLI BUY! APARTMENT FOR RENT Coll 428-3155 AMERICAN HERITAGE APARTMENTS Wishes you a . MERRY CHRISTMAS HAPPY ANEW YEAR ... SQUARE BUILDING on m-ov. c location, paved parking. , HAYDEN REALTY BEDROOM. Clou paneled FHA 8)500 dbwn. 425-2440, ___ 4-H REAL ESTATE CRESCENT LAKE ESTATES ■ vary sharp 4 room hunaul paneled basement. Cash for Your equity HACKETT 363-6703 DO YOU WANT IT SOLD? Or |uit listed- Tired of waiting and hoping? Wo need more property nr a reason; WE SELL )TJ For owi’ Ing, lum. siding, lelghborhood. IKS Times Realty _....E HIGHWAY 123-0400 Realtor Open 9-9 Dally | Office Open Sunday 1-5 Headquarters tor INDEPENDENT INVESTORS INC. | - FEl°Zl90ofrrY' "° children °r 1 COLONIAL VILLAGE OFFICE MANAGER trainee. Come to where the money Isl No time to wastel $4,500. Call Jerry Jay. 334-! 2471, Snelllng and Snelllng._. SALES TRAINEE j $500-$65Q PLUS CO. CAR Openings In many fields. College ... , . no jggjjSjjji Want to Sell? , ^ _ m fJ- hav-e Jte g,jore ir rom kt>14o ,d or Financing No Problem 1 Internation CLOSED FRIDAYS It Dixie Highway ■ 473-9449 DOLLY MADISON APARTMENTS SECRETARY Good typing skills, shortl flee exp. a'plus^N&ded yesterday.I J A. Taylor Agency, InC. j Exc. salarv. yil __lnternatl°nal | 77JJ HiJh|and ^ (^.59) Daily OR 4-0304 Eves. EM 3-75441 VACANT — Im $17,500, $3500 d 623-1400 or OR 3-2391 5 BEDROOMS and space tor ovtryono In the family. Family room, fireplace, 2’/,! baths, only 3 yrs. old. In Silver I Lake Estates. Waterford Rlty., 473-1273, EVE, 473-4121._____ | V $109 PER MONTH WALTON PARK MANOR | ECENENTEO OP- YORK ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES Largo colonial, ‘ 3 bedrooms, formol dining room, 22* living room with fireplace, full basement, gas heat, 22x25' attachad privileges. Quick i FHA farms. $24,900. ( GMC FAMILIES; BRIAN REALTY I your neighbor's homo COME. 1, 2, AND 3 BEDROOM weekdays TOWNSHOUSES ADJACENT TO I- 5280 Dixie <75, ONLY 35 MIN. TO DOWNTOWN DETROIT. OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAY 12 TO 8 PM, EXCEPT THURS. /FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 335- COUNTER Clerk for dry cleaning plant, no experience necessary. Apply Indian Village Cleaners, 3259 S. Blvd. East. Phone LO 7-4500. ■ Party Store, 1022 HIER CLERK, OVER 21, at-noons, full or part time, Russ's untry Store,, 4500 Elizabeth Lake WAITRESS. Nights, full or pa tlma, experienced. Blue Cross pla Apply at Ricky's, 819 Woodward. Sofa's ATTORNEY'S housekee— children, cooking. . . wages open. 051-2764. Buyers — Sellers Meet Thru Press Want Ads. ...j in. 2 school s General .cleaning 1 cooking. Private. —— —* Help Wanted Mole 6 Help Wanted Male Top Money for Top Van Drivers at North American No Experience Necessary — Complete Training Openings In both Household and New Products Di- North American offeri a hauling program designed te provide you. with big tamings, that. Is only possible by being In business for yourseif with one of the worlds fastest growing moving van companies. You will pull a North American trailer with your tractor* or wt can supply a tractor with very low down Your benefits include: 1. One of the highest compensation schedules In tho In 2. Prompt payments. 3. Life end hospitalization Insurance at a group rote. 4. Bonus awards tor quality performai 5. 40 foot trailer, permits, complete tr furnished. 4. Wives welcome to travel with you. 7. Full training program with living 0 1 maintenance, and ttras WRITE NORTH AMERICAN VAN LINES, DEPARTMENT 147, FORT WAYNE, INDIANA, OR PHONE 219-422-7415 FOR APPLICATION AND FURTHER DETAILS. An Equal Opportunity. Company CASHIER WAITRESSES Bvehlng shift, mature women preferred, resturant experience ** will train, all benefits, apply eiim Brothers Big B< I, Telegraph 8, Huron, PER WEEI Apply In person, Egg 8< I, 2020 Woodward, Royal Oak, Between 8, 13 Mile rds. WAITRESSES WANTED, days ■ afternoons, good pay and tips, • col lent working conditions, 1 Sundays or holidays. Apply ..person. Village Restaurant, 312 Southfield at 13-Mlto Rd., Bovoi dependable i Apartments, Furnished 37 I EFFICIENCY, i MADISON HEIGHTS SEE MODEL AT 12448 DOLLY MADISON DR. 14 MILE AT 1-75 PHONE 585-1125____ EMBASSY WEST 4 APARTMENTS 317 HOPKINS. 3 bedroom brick ranch* near transportation and schools. 353-0770* 562-6264. _ A SALE IS ONLY \ AS GOOD AS YOUR FINANCING. j Aoaron Mtg. & invst. Co. ALUMINUM BUNGALOW. WAITRESS WANTED nights, 10 1 4, start $1.35 hour. Call 425-3232. WAITRESS NIGHTS. Four Seasor BASEMENT, wl Ing. FE 5-4454.____ HOME IMPROVEMENTS. DISHWASHER w--------1 Great Dane Restaurant, Mlddlebtlt * ---851-0555. WOMAN, TOP WAGES, llve-ln parlance, rat., private room, 444-9474._______ WOMAN FOR . general laundry work. Apply Pontiac Laundry, ' i Cleaners. 540 S. Telegraph. YOUNG WOMEN Work Wanted Female Ironing, one day • ■s, MtCowan, 334-3047. EXPERIENCED Day' work', ' ansportatlon. 335-4251. DAY OR NIGHT, Kitchen help, Rocco’i, 5171 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains. ling guaranteed Cost DRUG CLERK, MATURE, nights, good pay. Lake Cantor Drug, 2307 Orchard-1 |B| Of DRUGSTORE TOBACCO Clerks Mik experience preferred. > Wanted M. or F. AIDES'and orderlies, afternoon midnight shift, modern no-------- homo In Southfield, high wages *nd fringe benefits, must -aaB ansportatlon. Call 357-5534, 4390 Dixie Hwy. CARETAKER COUPLE, #ULL ...... tor large apartment project at 957 N. Perry, wife to clean, husband Executive Secretary For sales operation In Mi Heights. Excellent typing shorthand (desirable) and ability to converse on phone affectively. Salary between $425 and "" -,“' excellent fringe bene* interview, 585-9335. , portunlty Employer. BOOKKEEPER FOR EXECUTIVE OFFICE 9 e.m. til 5 p.m., 3 days, good salary and fringe benefits, apply Id person, to Inkeeper, Holiday in Im S, Telegraph Rd., Pontiac. i. Paul's Hamburgers. 18-24 HHRP4PM.. to be trained for tho promotional advertising fl our expense? National Corp., Is accepting applications or trainees to fill vacancies created by promotions. Would you II jelligently appearance Salary: $142.50 per week For personal Interview: Excellent opportunity. Experie desirable. Typing, filing, and L Ing. Ph. 338-4113. Mrs. Wllllomi. Help Wanted Mala 6 Help Wanted Male PLANNING • FOR A FUTURE, Include your fomilV In your plans. The protection of your family Is Important. Join our ttam and havt this protection. Company paid benefits Include: Employee and Family Dental Insurance* Blue Cross Medical and Hospital coverage. Employee Life* Sick and Accident Insurance. Company Paid Retirement Plan. io Paid Holidays. Night Shift premium of 10 per cent. Top Union Rates plus cost ot' living increase and many other benefits. » ■ ' 'openings FOR: ' EXPERIENCED • TOOLMAKERS' • JIG AND FIXTURE BUILDERS • BORING MILL VERT.-HOR. MILLS LATHE BENCH HANDS WELDERS AND FITTERS 58 Hour Week Long Range Program Make Applications at Our Employment Office 8 to 5:30 Mon.-Fri. - Sat. 8 to 12 Noon ' INTERVIEWS TUESDAY nANO WEDNESDAY EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY! USI-Artco, Inc. MACHINE AND TOOL DIV. SUBSIDIARY OF U.S. INDUSTRIES, INC. 3020 INDIANWOOP RD--l LAKE ORION PHONE 693-8388 An Equal Opportunity Employer GIRLS—WOMEN 18 OR OLDER INTERVIEW WORK NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY to start — increase after weeks. The Richard's Co., In For appointment call Miss Well GRILL COOK, HOURS 2:30 t HAIR DRESSERS ASSISTANT Must be licensed for work, Birmingham area, «xc. pay. P Ted's of Bloomfield Hills — openings for a full time hostess and • part-tlms hostess, day shift, top wages, food allowance, vocation, paid holidays and pension. Free Blue Cross <> life Insurance. Apply In person only. TED'S ' WOODWARD AT SQUARE LK. RD. have pleasant personality. For full or part tlma, apply In person only, Bloomfield Canopy, 4540 Orchard Loko Rd. Immediate opening for wig Sfyli; —' salesgirl at Wig je KITCHEN HELP Mature women for, kitchen work, all benefits paid. Apply at ELIAS BROS. BIG BOY RESTAURANTS, Telegraph and Huron or Dixie KITCHEN Help, for small nursing home, requires full help, light cooking, yrill tn applicant la ambitious. Must .. .. yrs. old or over. Call only 9-3 p-m. Mon. thru Frl. / s- ' - Evergreen Convalescent Hoi vacation, Blue Crete, Dempsey's Keypunch Service, 5744 Williams Lake Rd. Drayton Plains. 473-1215. An Equal Opportunity Employer. Always Expanding, 4 HOUSEKEEPER In Blrm- Evps. 442-5750'. transporrarion, io Pontiac Press, S MATURE LADY To $7,200, to train for perse Interviewer position. Cell Bud*, tt |M| Must b 18-25 ___jorlonce K. high school g :e Necessary mediately. Opportunities available In the field of advertising starting at $142.50 per — ■*- Hiss Business Service AVON-TROY CARPET WAREHOUSE Carpeting installed, cleaned. S yds. carpet In stock. Rochi 852-2444. Hlssohg at 335-4114, I COUNTRY HILL Furniture, custom made furniture, reflnlshlng, — end stripping. Cell " Dressmaking & Tailoring 17 SEWING, alterations and mending. Painting' and Decorating 23 BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED All RH Positive S7.50 ... j... — ... poddy* thoroughbred horses, ------- Women, 125 lb. limit, permanent employment. Red ’ Bob Forms, 1955 Roy Rd., Oxford. —* LABORATORY Technologist i progressive 40 bed eccri hospital. Soma on cell. Ger ,lop«q HAGSTROM HAPPINESS IS LIVING WHERE THERE , ARE OTHER CHILDREN to play with and being close enough to school to walk with your friends. This new 3-bedroom, $21,500 on land contract. REALTOR ML | 4900 W. HURON OR 4-0358 | AFTER 6 p.m._________FE 4-7005 I Clarkston School Area 2000 SQ. FT. brick 1 FE 8 ........ . _om, iei-nuron »r 1 both, utllltiesl Highland Rd. furnisnea. $37.50 wk., deposit re- Mrs. Schultz, qulred. FE 5-2424. 2 ROOM STUDIO^APARTMENf; 1~ROOMS, PRIVATE bath and~< deposit required)* child ' EAL FOR senior citizens, 1 r* "N A jedroom, $120 a mo., plus $50 sec. I __ I \ /1 I lep., heat furnished, no children ^or- Jf y | - J IMMEDIATE OC-482-2300 p.Tg, ml AFTER CHRISTMAS BLUES io children. Give yourself a lilt, start the new 473-7984. ROOMS, PRIVATE BATH, I furnished, 75 Clark.____________ no, 8100 dep. 332-3221. 35-7842 or 335-7942, Satisfaction guarani: ■ 0754. bath, $27.50 wk., : . 2 children welcome. ArAKimcnis From $145 MADISON HEIGHTS SEE MODEL AT 31950 WHITCOMB EAST OF JOHN R. BETWEEN 13 & 14 MILE PHONE 588-6300_____ WALTON SQUARE Apartments 1675 Perry Rd. North 373-1400 or 338-1606 YORK ELDERLY -Mo: needs someoni Ing. 338-7544. going to Flori: 2 LARGE ROOMS, private^ V Cass. $3o’weekly, 473-7416. * 2~ROOM AND BATH, Small child Com7 'see ’'one' I welcome, $27.50 per week. $75 dep. anartments being built In - req. Inquire at 273 Baldwin Avi.,, comfort, and beauiy are M - cell 338-4054.________... in . a..inn tv,at nj '■;j NICE APARTMENTS. Fo AFTER CHRISTMAS COMES SPRING YORK Florida ath ars. Want passenger 1 e and companionship. 6t 3 ROOM, BATH, GARAGE, c Vi/ANTED: Couple to ■ Petersburg, ----------------- ?! -3, AND Bfurnlshed ' Wanted Household Goods 291 depMA3uitsUonlly!S338y38os .‘13 ROOMS, PRIVATE, utilities, HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR good; FE 2-5494._________________ adousness, convenience o n d ..jgance. Largo private balconies, thick carpeting, brick alcoves, eiec-rlc heating are special features, fe're still building but occupancy Is vailable Immediately, or at any ime or location of your choosing. From $165 SORRY, NO CHILDREN OR PETS APPLIANCES BY I FRIGIDAIRE II Rent Houses, Furnished 39 Wanted Miscellaneous 30 COPPER, B“R A OR 3-27UI3 j£gSS! MgSt3^2134° *pprec,a,e’ Securltv| M4p*r wk'., $90 dap. 482-3477. NEWSPAPERS, 40 < 3 LARGE ROOMS A dep, F^a2S-4935. ' 1 BEDROOM Home, very completely private, In A Heights and Oakland Unlvorslty I area. 852-4116._______ 3 ROOMS, COUPLES O Call J. Crary, ad-1 Hudson, LI 1-4020. r, Hubbard Hospital, Bad TOP PRICES paid j^i.i 373-0382. 3-BEDROOM, LAKEVILLE, pay owr ""ties, A-1 ret. and sec. deposit, to Realty, 628-3135. _______ ) WIFE, it salary. 335-5896. j PAINT & WALLPAPER SHOP Naeds help. If you stop at tl haariinn. you might be the pars looking for, experience ' would bo great, but a H meeting of the public .. helpful. Full or porttime. Call Pat Lolly at 481-0427 for appointment. this field w Wanted Real Estate iterated PAPER, *• Iwlplng people polntment. I 481-0427, for i WANTED: Wig stylist for wig se in Pontiac. EXPERIENCED ( LY-APPly 102 N. Saginaw. Wonted to Rent WANTED: SPACE..TO stor varnish 23' boat. From 1-1-3 15-70. Call Bill Chable we I iflCE ROOMS, PRIVATE both. ! and,* ROOMS AND BATH, l ! to 4-1 nlA* non-smokers- FE 8 m-smokers. FE 8-4897. 1 TO 50 HOMES, LOTS, ACRE------ PARCELS, FARMS, BUSINESS PROPERTIES, AND LAND CONTRACTS, URGENTLY NEEDED FOR IMMEDIATE SALE! WARREN STOUT, REALTOR 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. M8MU Dally 'til MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE I WILL BUY YOUR HOUSE, -REGARDLESS OF CONDITION. CALL MY AGENT _________481-0374 ______ ] ABSOLUTELY GET MORE CASH YOUR HOUSE. Sales Help, Male-Female 8-A call my agent -481-0374 ; ROOMS, PRIVATE vBATHjo park- condition. Children welcome, $37.50 wk., security. 332-4436. I l ROOMS. Private entrance, bath, patio, new paint, . security dep. $37.50, all utilities Incl. Children welcome. 332-4434. APARTMENT Including utilities ' ' building. 338-0854. E. Howard, 333-7405. AVONDALE SCHOOLS Approx, l aero completely fenced, many fruit trees and garden FREE TOUR Drive by 9241 Commerce Rd., see hova much house for only * „ 1,40 comfort*h6mes 399-5550 FARRELL' FHA APPROVED payment. 9 NEAR PONTIAC MOTORS FHA Terms on this large 3-bedroom home. Full ^*•"'•"1' FARRELL REALTY 2405 N. Opdyke Rd. _ Pon,,ac ROCHESTER CITY Cape Cod style, l'A story frame, 4 bedrooms, possible 5th or "— 2 baths. Full basement with room, carpeting. City water sewer. $35,500 . SNYDER, KINNEY & BENNETT bedroom doll kitchen and on Reni Houses. Unfurnished 40 2 BEDROOM HOUSE In tt "'1C Truck Si Coach, 1973. _____H i-BEDROOM RANCH, BEDROOM, BASEMENT car garage, llkr--- ‘ of Pontiac, ’A off 1-75, large >■ Plus dep, 394-0125. 6,000 COMMISSION was below] BACHELOR APARTMENTS Pontiac on Lake, S100 and Includes utilities. 625-3803. BEDROOM BRICK, Cash For Your Home HALLMARK 1 Highland Rd. l . i of | downtown, partly turn., FE 4-2131. *"514 BEDROOM Heme, *150 dap $40 I ! wk.’ Partlv furnished. Utilities no! icluded. FREE CLASSES Mon or women wanted. Earn while you learn. Wa have 11 offices and 200 salespeople who can't be wrong. Call today. . Miller Bros. Realty 333-7156 CASH FOR YOUR HOME PROMPT, COURTEOUS SERVICE BRIAN REALTY We Sold Your Neighbor's Home Multiple Listing Service-Weekdays 'til -9 Sunday 10-4 j* 5 ROOMS TERRACE, E. ! ihj required. 673-4339. CLARKSTON Area. ll'shed, 625-3853. 5280 Dixie Hwy. COUPLE V REAL ESTATE — Wanted he sail houses, will train, top 90— Immeidate openings — new am1 used homes. -Call: MARK REAL ESTATE 1702 S. Telegraph, Por-tlac, 332-0124, ASK FOR MARK. SALESMEN 3 NEEDED to round out c iom'i miss. Do yourself a fav, 681-0370. ASK F 0 MANAGER GMC REAL ESTATE CALL SALES EMPLOYMEtfr COUNSEL-if you have the ability'and fra’ to work with People and ceptionally high ea year. Snelllng 8. Si ----- ■ — 334-2471, 1 423-0702| 2 ROOMS ON WATKINS.LAKE. ALL NEW FURNITURE NEW APPLIANCES. ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED ADUI.TS — NO CHILDREN O CLEAN 3 room apartment. , 338-6993,1 welcome, Divorce-Foreclosure? It. 474-3840. HHHHI * APARTMENTS, adults ( 473-2168 FURNISHED APARTMENT fl ———I 'uii|iams Lk. and M-59, a 2, or 473-8931. FURNISHED APARTMENT will I available first of month, 335-0261. KITCHENETTE apartment on Po 117 HOPKINS, 3 BEDROOM, BRICK RANCH NEAR TRANSPORTATION AND SCHOOLS. 3534)770, 542-4244. _______.__________ CLARKSTON M-15, $165 MONTHLY. FHA. NEW LAKE FRONT. 3 BEDROOM, BRICK, BUILT-INS, EXPANDING ATTIC. CHILDREN WELCOME.- MICHAEL'S REALTY. 427-38 5, 3534)770. 17,500. CALL 481-0370. GMC JOSEPH SINGLETON REALTOR 429 Orchard Lk. REAGAN REAL ESTATE I, Opdyke _______' 373-0154 CONTEMPORARY RANCH Located In the Sylvan Lake area, with 2700 sq. ft. of living area, 4 bedrooms, carpet throughout, 2 stone fireplaces. Indoor barbecue, and 20'x40* swimming pool with cabana, 18,000 down to existing 444 per cent mortgage. LAKE -FRONT COLONIAL Brick and cedar exterior — 5 lar$^ bedrooms, 3 t COSWAY er* sewer and paved i. Only $17*900* land WATERFORD, VACANT, 3-bedroc WAT ERfORD, 3 badrooni, heated I garage, washer & dryer, OR 3-j VACANt 3 bedroom ror Pontiac Press Want Ads For Action JUST CALL 334-4981 YORK 474-0843 FE $-7174 IMMACULATE 3 B EDR OOM asbestos ranch featuring large living room, full basemwnt, fenc«d Y*r<* and full price is only $18,000, P-51. RAY L RAY TODAY! LAZENBY WE BUILD BUY SELL TRADE R0YCE LAZENBY, Realtor Open Dolly 9-0 _ ' 4426 W. Walton — OR 4-0*01 1 - LES BROWN REALTORS & BUILDERS 681-1144 IN DRAYTON Neat 2 bedroom bungalow, largo Jiving, room, 'garden space. Only Slt,500. Small down —tend con- tr#Ct MILL'S REALTY For all your Real Estate Needs CALL: 493-8371 KING-PHIPPS OXFORD — 4-ROOM OLDER HOME, full baaemtnt, good ORION - 3-BEDROOM BRICK HOME, family room, 1V4 bath, garage, lake privileges, $24,500— ■Ml. ...........ART DANIELS REALTY, Pontiac, OR 4-4128, Garden City, GA 1-78f* MORTGAGE ASSUMPTION 3 Month Old 3 bedroom aluminum sided- ranch, 2 car attached garage. No point* or closing costs. Agent for owner, 474-1698.____ NEAR MALL 2 bedroom house, 812,800 cash or 815,000 land contract, 4S1-1877. " y dep. and credit report re- Apartments, Unfurnished 38 Apartments, Unfurnished 38 INVESTORS BUYING need repairs. CALL MY AGENT LOTS — WANTED NORTHS1DE, 2 I WALLPAPER & PAINT SALES Do you like to help your frltn: chongot around the house? Do you mu to meet people, —■ ■-------■— going on? Need Money? ^ FOR THOSE CHRISTMAS BILLS! Register Now F.or'Profltabl* Ton porary Office Wortf, Wo Need: J STENOS o SECRETARIE TYPISTS BOOKKEEPERS! -BOOKKEEPING MACH. OPERATORS GENERAL OPPICE CLERKS I Pontiac, Rochester, Bloomfield --------- EXTRA BENEFITS P RATES L MANPOWER 332-8314 Employment Agencies / 1 COLLEGE GRADUATE $7200 & UP FEE PAID Management trainee position* opa In * an fteldt. Call Intematloni Personnel, 6S1-11M, 10*0 W. Huro: REALTY;' 442-4220. ,__ IMMEDIATE CASH For home* In Oakland County, t points, no commission, stay Up to months, cash m 24 hour*. YORK parking, alavator service, 2 681-0374 children welcome. Security dep.j .PONTIAC —! $33.50 per wK.334-3005. REAj. VALUE-SMALL apartment, suitai 2 SLEEPING ROOMS fl Apartments, Unfurnished 38 attract' 1 BEDROOM, HEAT PliRNlSHED.j FDR MAN, security deposit required, rAp- kitchen * plications now v being taken. *1 Pontiac Prqss Want Ads For/ Action JUST CALL 334-4981 . weekly, $18 dep. FE 2-7280,_______j Lar6e CLEAN .. ROOM, Pontiac '—-iral.Hospital area. 338-4942. | dltloning. Sorry, ! BEDROOMS, „ ___ basement, 673-4794. BEDROOM APARTMENT, Pontiac Central' High. Adu SLEEPING ROOM, MEN, Pont! TV, PHONES, MAID service, working mans rate. 789 South • Woodward. Sagamore yo**1' WATER FORD, COOKInQ privileges, '■»« -SuS 3 min. from Bulck plant, IS min. 332-3845, ' _ nakUnri ll . 474-1859. 2 BEDROOM ROOMY Duplex,; » j 1 Drayton area, sec. det|(. 673-9443: I Rooms With Board 2 BEDROOM APARTMENT no ' “nil, $145 e mo., carpet, heat a included, no children or pe RIDGEMONT TOWNHOUSE APARTMENTS • One, Two and Three Bedrooms • Roper Gas Ranges • Hotpoii^t Refrigerators- • Carpet and Drapes • AH Utilities Except Electric • Air-Conditioning by Hotpoint • Swiming Pool and Pool House Between East Boulevard and Madison—2 blocks from main gate of Pontiac Motors. 957 N- ferry St. , Phone 332-3322 Open Dally It) a.M.-*xcobi Wednesday I B—12 THE PONTIAC FBESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 80, I960 For Wont Adi Dial 334-4981 LAKE FRONT ■IE GANT HILLSIDE level on Ooklond Lek root showpiece. Ideel entertaining friends. THIS I BEDROOM RANCH lifting on IS acr--- landscaped, land Sola Home . - ^ _ 49 Sola Haam 49 lale Wwf» , KELLER HATTON ROAD: Juat north of dfy IRWIN CLARK limits, to ft. brick ranch including 2M car attached garaga, 3 bedrooms, large family size kltchan. full bastmtnt with flraplaca, lot 170x380 ft. Owner leaving date. Price $21,888. 1 Mortgaga terms. LaRua Kaller , . Realtor 3097 W. Huron St. Ml-1833 4734793 N0RTHEND 2 bedroom bungalow with carpeted living room, built-in range and oven, * garaga, and situated . on 2 lata. FHA terms. FHA BI-L»VEL^408[[tq.B llvjm bedrooms and full Kth uppa level. Family room, kltchan, dlnlni room and W bath tower level, af tached 2-car garaga, eutslde patio haautlful f$nee«l In lot, FH; term*. (Jaffwood) GILES 2-FAMILY INCOME 1 bedroom older horn* with full , batamant, gai hast, 1V9 baths, garage, 'ana other nlc* faaturaa. Don't ml** this one. v' GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR MULTIPLE-LISTING SERVICE 291 Watt Walton FE 3-|t$3 tri-level, watt suburban al brick and aluminum, spacious am luxurious, loft of storage (pace nawly dacoratad. family rpont wltt tet%HA1 tarmtL*’*- ^?Cr*etbrooK CLARK REAL ESTATE mitmarS" in* our afflM. ^Lat your tantar* mike yaur payments. hearthSIde 1342 W. HURON SI! 4S24S50 OPEN 9-9 MLS Located on East Pike St. M a good rental area, call today. WEIGHING VALUES Looking for your monies worth then take a look at fhia 3 bedroom home with full basement and 2W car CHARMING 3-BEDROOM BRICK RANCH — full basement, in excellent location, fenced yard. Lake privileges on Cass Lak*. Watt Bloomfield Schools, early occupancy. May consider land con- EASTHAM 4-BEDROOM BRICK Val-U-Way Realty and Building Co. FE 4-3531 Oakland Ave. mmmHPHHM 'gaylord' leach backus YORK ; B?29.2K 1 0fFWS d at only S21.S00 FHA or 01. ' ranch, atone fireplace, basement, tiled ceramic bath. Dlua Mi bath carpeted, large Claude McGruder Realtor 3710 Elisabeth Lk. Rd. Ml Multiple Lilting Satvico Opa IVal-U^Way SYLVAN LAKE FRONT OUTSTANDING RANCH HOME lolld brick construction right on S ft, fylvan Lake front lot. Fully; andscaped and equipped, Homal :ontalhPP4 bedrooms, 3 baths, 2 or garage, fireplace and family | Florida room. Many outstanding |f|‘ landscaped lot, throughout. It boa baths, largo carpeno uv>ng with fireplace, formal dining nicely planned kitchen wll„ ... bullt-ins, full basamaht. Completely air conditioned. 2W car »»arrearage. $39,900. T POSSIBLE LAND CONTRACT -|his brick ranch on a circular drive. Tharo are BUSINESS FRONTAGE ______ I village, beeutitu large carpeted living room, wltt fireplace, lots of storage, outside clh ■—* —aniancas. Priea, $21,500 LAKE fRONT HOME Completely paneled 3 bedroom hi fireplace In coiy living room, dock on lake, now Is the tlm< NEWLY DECORATED 3 bedroom home, located In Pontiac “ Sasement, 1 car garaga, fh/ .ved with immediate possession Price $13,900. LAKE ORION: : . Full existing mor* MILLER sreBAUGHEY Open 9 9 13324323 338-1695 6X4-0363 m BUSINESS -SERVICE DIRECTORY' 72 J ■4*«, Quick Reference m1 „ ' jg® FRONT I S* FE *-7176! MA 6-4000 444-48901 8BT2 *Sg eautlful lake home can lor $$,000 down. Total 1. Good value. Call $93- famlly room, 3 w. end V, acre lot. per cent land contract $73-9$$9 $33-1909 OPEN RI-LEVEL MODELS Waterford Township Sharp 2-badroom alum, rand Paneled family room w l doorwall. Carpeted living room bedrooms. Convenient kltchan. $333 or PB 0- IRWIN »• C,M, NEAR FISHER BODY: REALTY 3 UNIT INCOME ON FHA. Live r. one unit, let the others pay yc h payment and put money In the bat,., d Close to stores and bus. $23,900 full is price. See It today. .screens. Attached 2W-car garage. WEST SUBURBAN BRICK Ranch . Located on large double lot. Priced NEW condition featuring lovely $17,300]. Move In for closing costs carpeted living room with flreplar-enly. ' .family style kitchen and dining art dishwasher, 3 large bedrooms, 1 NORTHSIDE baths, full basement with $ ft. gla Just finished Yaw 2 bad room hrlrk walk-out doors tp a lovely tarrao IISr-JLEH yard. Fireplace In basement, We ment MS hea* hm2S' bill b’n*k 9»r«B». Lovely beach privileges pi i SERVICE - SUPPLIES *- EQUIPMENT WSSSSm m Apparel—Ladies | Ceramic Tile I DAN'S CERAMIC TILE, Slete floors, G & L PLUMBING It Heating. Let! DIRECTIONS: Highland Road (M-59) 093.1333 to Crascant Lake Road, rlgf* U -mile to modol. Also ranchos and colonials as FE 5-8183 Plumbing & Heating GIROUX REAL ESTATE Aluminum Bldg. Items SIDING ALUM. VINYL AND ASBESTOS AWNING-PATIOS SCREEN-IN OR GLASS ENCLOSED EAVESTROUGHING Continued seamless eavai Wa bring factory to FAST SERVICE—QUALL TERMS CALL NOW—DAY OR NIGHT $81-2300 DEALER—ASK FOR BOB ORJREt) i )./ _ Antenna Service t. 674*4341, 625- HAYDEN Roofing 17,700-3 BEDROOM RANCH, f ADVANCE________________ Construction Equipment DOZERS, BACKHOE, LOADERS Sales & Rentals Used Bobcat Loaders Burton Equipment Co. » E. Auburn Rd._____052-3 Dressmaking, Tailoring r. Dutton______________0-1723! Ml‘ T,° T & H ROOFING. Free estimates." •A_^LTERATIONS,_ SUITS. COATS, •_ .(jot tar_end shingles. $21,$00—3 BEDROOM ranch. Hardwood floors, heat. 3 car garaga. dacoratad. Vacant. $500.00 northslda Ma HA Nawly i^OO-^BEOROOM TRI-LEVEL $300.00 this 3 bedroom east side ranen bungalow. ' baaemant. Gas HA neat. I decorated. Vacant. garage. Fenced yard. Many extra*. call fbr more details. PONTIAC NORTHERN AREA: prte* only cupboards. Full $030 down plus possession. Finished .basement ant room, braeieway to i Rewood fonetd potior, gjgjl fancod yard. Call N TRADE FOR ANY fE HAVE FOR SALE todayl ACRE LOT p ..jme with breez__, m | basement, community TIMES Clarktton features 3 bedrooms, IV baths, family room, formic, kitchen, oak floors, gas hast thermo windows and attached car garage, offered at only $29,93 and you can have. Immtdiah possession. Call now for an appt. RETIRE IN FENTON for you ■ refir-- ■MIINPIRilPIBI..,. Peefi include 2 large bedrooms, ■ -baths; all built-in appliances. In eluding refrigerator am dishwasher, air conditioning, ga heat, an attached, heated garage avail, at $23,930 on FHA or lam contract farms. this w I kept h BUYING OR SELLING CALL JOHN K. IRWIN & SONS REALTORS 313 West Huron—Sine* 1*25 FE 3-9445 after 3 p.m, $23-4043 insured, licensed, bonded! 424-0044. Roofing, siding, and gutters, and repair work. Free Esf.Call attar S' Pjnr $2>3875._ ______________ | it tar, shingles, n ■making. BIRCHETT AADC0 ASPHALT ^Estimation __33 .. . ALTERATION & Ore: All Typos. 9a.m.-7 p.m. jjz-w ALTERATIONS, all types, ki dresses, leather coats. $03-9333. _ DRESSMAKING — TAILORING BONNIE KAY'S WOMENS alter lions. $74-4473._ Driver's Training Vacant. ■ . Eve. call MR. ALTON FE 4-3311 Nicholie & Harger Co. | 53Vk W, Huron St. PB S-0113, ST HIITER ! ,LObath»L, LAKE FRONT - grooms and bath,1 >*, fully, J27>00_ terms. !CLARKSTON AREA-B rooms^end ARRO NEW 3 BEDROOM Brick and aluminum ranch vary wall built home. Fully insulated. Wall to wall carpeting, gas hot water heat, 2V9 car garaga. Larga loMn quiet^ neighborhood. $24,950. CLOSE TO SHOPPING Abov. Pries plu. lot. ( ^ , Snow Plowing , HAYDEN REALTY I «arw' ■ - 343-7139 10733 Highland Rd. (M59)iNEAR THE MALL-4 rooms and] S oariM^SSad QUALITY PLOWING.! W Mila West of Oxbow Lake bath,- basemanL^ cal' garaga. * j 5, ooo. Call for bedroom, story and a half home, * Val-U-Way Realty ; si and Building Co. ?*n .7 FE 4-3531 *' 343 Oakland Ave. ' open 9-9 [ Wideman j- IT'S SO CLEAN- ! , You'll enloy moving Info - this horns. It's a 3 bedroom ranch that features plenty closet space. Til* I features In bath. Cerpettd living — and"1 you”8CAN ''ffikVE Tm-! | MEDIATE POSSESSION. j NEW SUBURBAN rancher, with lake privileges, step-saving kitchen, bath with vanity.’ Large wardrobe closets. Carpeting throughout. Basement, recreation area. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION - CALL FOR DETAILS. 1 — IS 0. WIDEMAN, REALTOR 1 lots more. 113.930 SMITH WASHINGTON. PARK sedroom bungalow In excellent ea with full basement and vacant now and offered at 119,900 THE ROLFE H. SMITH CO. SHELDON B. SMITH REALTOR 244 s. Telegraph 333*7848 UNLIMITED HIGH AND low A 4 pressure steam or hot water boilers furnished and Installed. All I types—heating and cooling equlp- $15-2897 i V PLOWING, REASONABLE _______$01-0071 7— . CONTRACTS O'NEIL WHY not ’Trade? t. Call Don Sweeney at, TAKEN. RESIDENTIAL A N O W.HR. SERVICE.; CLOSE IN LOCATION Call B.C. HIITER. REALTOR. 682-2211 3792 Eliz. Lake Rd. 482-8080, after MARGARET McCOLLOUGH, Realtor 8 nm.. FE 0-1275. ___ 5143 Cass-Eltzabath Lk. Rd. ' I Open 9-7 MLS. Clotod Sun. Envestroughing M & S GUTTER CO. LICENSED-BONDED "Estimates” Electrical Service* AVON Brick Block & Stone WM(astro electrical i c!!Yf,er 5I ReCsCidaRn1lil Wlrlng-S tireDiaces a it 157 Baldwin '_______' __ Excavating ---1* well landscaped lot with a I sharp 3 level home featuring 3 0 ____:____ bedrooms, country kitchen, 2V4 car 0 Sf33M839EM0VAL' 24 hr‘ ,>rvlc*' oareoe- Offered at $24^900. C*U right - Snowplowing 9” REASONABLE 473-3542 YOUR FAMILY WILL VOTE ! ,-! ^W^G~g5^RCW?R unammpusly for thlfextra nice thre. TWIN LAKE ESTATES ANNETT TED'S Trading 674-2236 2 fireplaces, or cook family room. What .port.'now OFFERS jst 4 miles uT HS B'^,««e8M^.me1t. £ BUDGET BEAUTY 3 bedroom brick ran baths, wall fireplace, IV esidential, Smitty'3, 332-3251.~ Tree Trimming Service family room, 2 1 _-j FA heat, fenced ya 0 Fisher Body, excellent c FIREPLACES, WRITTEN guarante weather, end distance no probler 343-3179. Building Modernization ____________d additions. 338-4312. MODERNIZATIONS AND ADDITIONS of all types. Cement ■ s - work. $23-3515. ’ - - J___I REMODELING KITCHENS, baths,; recreation .and family rooms,-rough and or fyrish.^ C^usto^m 071$. ■ * T-HHfiSNG QF. A.SEAWALL! Build now at the ......M -Const r. SfVW Floor Sanding FLOOR SANDING^#nd?layOnj^Old GlossWork REPAIR STORM WINDOWS, thermo' Trucking oval-trim TAKE ADVANTAGE OF Estimate*,’ LOW LOW INTEREST --—RATES 1 home Is on a A-l LIGHT HAULING and 01 FE 3-4223 _ 1-A LIGHT Moving, trash reasonable. FE 4-1333. STRUBLE LIKE NEW l-bedroom aluminum ranch horn with full basement, a very else Hlahim^Laka^tllwe, mortgage. Thara It a at least $4,800, i nicest homes! vou r* al Lumber TALBOTT LUMBER Carpentry Moving, Storage 1A CARPENTRY AND rooting, I estimates. 334-2879. A-l CARPENTERS, FATHER Odd Ji _____ -'ED'S LIGHT hauling service.-F! ; 732$ or FE 8-4844._____;- HAULING and s~now~ plowing 1 removal. Arvi's Inc. $93-1370. ; HAULING AND RUBBISH. Ni your pnee. Anytime, FE 8-009S. light hauling, basements. • garages cleaned. $74-1242,_____ LIGHT HAULING, a n y t I me', easoneble. 333-4780. 4 Acres Springfield New., -part ally flnjshed 3-1“' l’/j baths, o",r,c,i LEISURE YEARS Ar* Included In this 3-bedroom 1 ranch, new carpeting, custom 11$. LR drapes, washer and dryer, com-D R, pletely remodeled kitchen with ce, full formica cupboards, 2-car garage. Ml In lake privileges on Sylvan Lake, Ideal , S 0 0 , location. ! IMMEDIATE POSSESSION ....moraryiPn fhl* extra sharp 3-bedroom b: full baths I r*nch, huge family room dor plus lavatory, 2 modern kitchens, flraplaca, tV% ceramic baths, 1 with bullt-ins, 2 fireplaces, ■»>■•"» •'*♦* «*»»* garage --- TUCKER EAST SIDE 2 STORY FRAME with 2 bad -and 1 bath, full basement, gas haat, carpeting, fenced rear yard, 1 car garaga. Only S50 down. VACANT MOVE RIGHT IN - This one ston alum, sided horn* bn Southsida, bedrooms, living, dining room an< kitchen, full basement, gas heal Easy FHA terms. TUCKER REALTY 903 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. 334-1545 LAKE FRONT BI-LEVEL __■ schools and shopping, price tme $17,300 with minimum dow 11 here and 2 acres-are S ad, priced at ***““ ’ I land contract. *; realtor ! I Lake area. $30,900. Calf *34-2400'. \ PROMISE HER ANYTHING Hartw'Lwliy 3M*772S ! «•-»*- **!*r«9!P W* WE WILL TRADE Realtors - 28 E- Huron Sf. r4m, flr^ek" alummum storms »e'u®i 008 n$$4 and screens, central elr, excellent arson ooO-UNOO location,' neighborhood and beach, allowed 'Many ether, extras and . features ......• . or fenc-i make thl* a good 1-------------- $25,908. Can assume—i ' » . j trade. Watkins Lake. _speclaMsts._FE 4-4864._ _______ Piano Tuning til*' anj' paneling, Rec. rooms", ' kitchens a specialty. $82-5137. j PIANO TUNING - REPAIRING A-1 INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR. OSCAR SCHMIDT_______FE_M! dormers,r0porchesfu?ec°re’a't^onJ Painting and Decorating rooms, kitchens, bet licensed, Rees. Cell $82-0448. Vi BLOCK FROM THE ‘ ------------- BOY'S CLUB S^alUt0sVFEG4-4M4YOUr m0Vl"8 ^T-HWLTNGTnT-oddlobsTciil 2nd ^s,ern: 11 bungalow v oak! 3925 Highland Rd. (M-59) NeXt 67X*3175 Ur”rV or CALL FE 5-3248-492-907$ -KINZLER WHAT A WAY , stairway I 1 either CARPENTRY AND CEMENT work free estimates. 8V2-52S2._______ Interior finish! kitchens. one and all. Est., and Immediate! work don# by journeyman carpenter*. Call 451-027$.___j REASONABLE prices on all Inferior] 1-A RELIABLE PAINTING, Inter exterior. Free est. 334-4594._ A-l PAINTING - WORK GUARAN-. TEED. Free estimates, $82-0420. B&L PAINTING AND horn* in provsmants, free estimates, $2 4078, 393-8778. GEORGfe FRERICKS Painting, plaster repair. Free Est. Work guaranteed. Reasonable CALL ANYTIME 882-3M INTERIOR & EXTERIOR Custor Lj6HT W TRUCKING flMrrt attte' rubbish, fill dirt, grading and only $15,500 UIm*' *nd ,ron,-«nd loading. FE 2- v.A. terms avanaui*. LIGHT Hauling, basemenf'cleanlng. ^ --------.WALKING DISTANCE Truck Rental j to Lincoln Junior .High. This lovely 2 SINGLE AXLE Dumps SCHRAM living room and kltchan IVfe c ..S4S4. ..... Qaraga$ and situated on a corner It OR 3-3896 »Pull price only $12.500, with F.H. I nr r. I tasrme Wft. 90*1 " Trucks to Rent I over 20 years of l°n stake SERVING YOUR COMMUNITY cabinets, < Carpeting LINIC WAREHL n carpet. $23-109 ___| PAINTING. '. Wall . c .-Ton Pickups TRUCKS-TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT Sami Trailers Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. 1 S. WOODWARD . ......... fe m Open Dally Including Sunday y i fe 4- L 2-3190. 334-8548. CARPET CLINIC WAREHOUSE. Blfl QUAL^TY ^Wort ^assured, ^^jntlng, j Upholstering SPRAY PAINTING ■I ^ ^ - ^Quality fabri Carpet Cleaning HOLST j 32 YEARS pick u UPHOLSTERING by Richer n...........» and work. ‘ M ____________ 682^4178.___ r M5-1 Fraa^esi!!* Orval Gidcumb. 673*04961 Wall Plaques Plastering Service j wall, places, painteo, yr~ !i-a plastering, REALTOR RAY O'NEIL REALTY 3520 PONTIAC LAKE ROAD HAPPY NEW YEAR Yes. your new jraar^wou^ aluminum sided beauty. With the plush carpeting and nlcajayout that this nlc* home ha*. Plu* a complete fencing, a nice backyard, sand the whole neighborhood is and the whole neighborhood Is call so wa could tail you mor* about It. Just as a sneak pravlaw, It could sell on assy FHA farms, i IVAN W. SCHRAM UST WITH SCHRAM AND CALL THE VAN 111 jpslyn FE 3-9471 493-4131 REALTOR MLS I v year. Taka a look DRAYTON PLAINS—FHA Justkllst*d, and you sf first tq^ see thla^ ar with recreation M 'bedroom, carpeting and drapas, din- Kte, tsnoruss. _ ____ [^ schools Bvdgef priced at *21,400. and shopping. Fenced lot 00x150 ft. .. $15,900. I m m ad la «* possession.] PRICE APPEAL SYLVAN VILLAGE ^ITScai^ a new brick and frame, 3 J™ *““h ------- Iroom, 2 baths home. W living 'fl kitchen v Si bMfar________ Vacant. FHA i , carpeting quailfl*. veteran. Features. include: bedrooms, dining room, f u I walkout basement, paved atrea and^ tots of traai, Call u* for mor WlfEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE "JOIN THE MARCH TO TIMES" Times Reafty 5090 DIXIE HIGHWAY >23-0600 1 Open 9-9 Dllh * ~ n Sunday 1-5 STOUT'S Best Buys Today QUICK POSSESSION? Vacant good looking aluminum roam and bath white alumlnun aided ranch alyl* horn* will plastered walls and hardwoot floors. Full basement with gw haat. Shaded lot and 1 c* garaga. Land contract farms. LAKE FRONT TO FIXUP— 2 story 3 bedroom frame lakt front with good beach and wld< boat dock. Solid structure atlt needs soma work. Ideal spot h raise family. Scenic view of lako Priced at $13,900 with $2,00 down, $120 par month Ineludlm interest at I par cent. Vacant fo Immediate possession. INVESTORS— . Hurry on this one! Old$r nea and clean panalad 2 story hom< with basement, gas , heat the would show axcalTent return or your investment of $9,000 wltt excellent land contract terms. OXFORD OFFICE BIG FISH LAKE FRONT Handymans dre view. $4 acr* k BUILDERS MODELS AVAILABLE THINKING OF BUILDING 823 S. Lapeer Rd., Oxford 628-2573—628-2548 r Contract McCullough Realty, Inc. 3440 HIGHLAND RD. JOHN KINZLER, Realtor £74*?236 ... ,?2.4'?4?0! Multiple "photo" Luting sarvic* Pontiac Walled Lake; 5129 Dixie Hwy. $23-0333 REALTOR MLS REALTOR | Sale Haases 49 Sale Houses 49 ‘IT'S TRADING TIME" kinds. 391-0706. COMMERCIAL; INDUSTRIAL AND] residential brl'1- k~< **—"♦ -»*k l i GUINN' ii brick at.r Wm , I INN'S CONST. CO. ' 391-0471 ___ —dSivewaVs, patios. HHH ______c. Call Don Sweeney a 681-1294. Plumbing 4 Heating ^ I BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS | Walls cleaned. Reas. Satisfaction' 1 guaranteed, Insured. FE 2«1631. | Well Drilling HHVPiepillBPVWH9aHm|HIP_ remodeling, I. Elwood, $82-3373. Ing. violations 'corrected. POURED BASEMENT AND foun-|^t>9tw«Cn f A ^ 338-0$27. service. 33849^1 V*r 1-4344044. FOR FAST ACTION UST YOUR NSIIKSS SERVICE HERE LISTING - SELLING - APPRAISING - BUILDING ATTRACTIVE wall built 2 Stor tome on Elizabeth Lake Road, ______ng room, full basement, 2 car and nawly dacoratad. immad' OUR 1970 MODEL * I* available for your Inspection and Sunday from ■— * - — | illy by tfrattatfi#d 2"car parag*,' carpeting _____ ceramic matter bath, plu* half far 120,500. Conveniently located at 5431 ■cross from the CAI building in Drayton on Saturday paraga, FRUSH0UR REALTY REALTORS X MLS 5730 Williams Lake Rd. imiwmm Building Consultants, Inc. HAPPY NEW YEAR Going righf along now . $17,300410 complete plant, carpeting, l Land Contract, tart ie In tha City of Birmingham going on ,FHA i down plus closing costs tor a total of $22,500.00. full batamant, and a (2) car garaga. \ ii on t.hl$ 3-bedraom horn* in tha City of Pontiac, batamant and you can purchase tor $17,900.00 on Land .Contract farmi. ' iking of building ar c of TEN ACRES ■ m thli wooded parcel of Ii DeMASELLIS Realty 3881 Highland Road (M-59) 7 .682-9000 . ORION TWP- - OVER AN ACRE chtncd to stretch 1 Large, sprawling i room with fireplace baths. Hi ill fi H. ,r ______ rr details. AUBURN HEIGHTS I mil* from 1-73. Family -*"■* kitchen, fW IDEAL FAMILY HOME FOUR ACRES PLUS — this attractive four bedroom h designed for family living la located in tha Lake Orion sc , 'district on apptpxlmataiyr five scras of ground. Farrdly r : with fireplace, formal dinlhg room plus aatliw In kite \ Mi" qpJWHflLMft <»r garage and, * Targe heated w gap--, fit of this on a lovalyfancad, tree shaded lot LAKE FRONT BRICK HOME ON WILLIAMS, LAKE. It's a pleasure to show tt dryer ami rtfrlgarator. Possession 1$ atMast Immediate **» o>,» q| state. LOW INTEREST “* ■ ‘4“J“* “i further details. laku. Tt pattest the wad /WHEN CALLING, ASK FOR ANY OF OuE QUALIFIED >Ai pc PEOPLE: Etitary Butlar, Otata HowirtT IIMW ^Sh *u£S Hunt, Dick Bryan, Lao Bogart, Ellsfn Moyer or Dave Bradley. 1071 W. Huron St. MLS 681-1000 V For Want Ads Dial 334-4981 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1969 B—18 Safa Hoattf JOHNSON __peted living r ) natural fireplace, full t ment with gas Mat, SO' si Mach, ) ear brick garage hea Pull Priced, >43,500. Will tell Land Contract. BRAND NEW APARTMENT illy Income In A-1 condition, basement with utilities, esi* % C. SCHUETT EM 3-7188 0 Commerce Rd. Union Li LOVELAND LOVELY 6 AND 6 stucco Income. 1 bedrooms as fewly decorated. Gas ho I H _..jr closing. MHI 13x15 master bedroom. Fireplace, attached 2 garage, gaa forced air heatf ........ soil on Land Contract. Lake Leona Loveland, Realtor . 2100 Cays Lake Rd. , 442-1255 i . ' lahe’Property ~3 IB FRONT HOMES Von-Hall & ASSOCIATES, INC. TRI-LEVEL LIVING - at It’s bet LAKE LOVERS, 51 Detroit, 20 takes, nai Acrettes 1995. Bloch Dlxte Waterford, country.. 2-car garage, electric door opener. Many extras too numero too mention. Call for your I polntment. BUILDER'S SPECIAL — 2 h 50x17$ each, >2,000. Nice area, I “ ft. minimum building i TRAILER SITE I MOVE Otter Laka-Clere, in nours rrom Pontiac, 4 minutes from 1-75. Owner must sell, >l» per month, including wgr —1 * — —■* tSLiW LAPEER AREA-42408, 2 bedroom home on $ acres of land, live stream, good loca-tlon lust off M-M, 12x12* •baa. This home needs some work, but. could be quite attractive, kitchen and dining area are combined, living room, and basament, $11,500. CALL 4444540, EVES. 727-4742 FOR APPOINTMENT. ” AP L«f ?-M.e T AMORA AREA, 55 acre farm, scenic rolling land, live stream, , woods, excellent lake site. Earl? American decors. $29,220.—J2 per cant down—7 per cent land contract. CALL 444-8540, EVES. 4444117. HADLEY AREA, 42770, 10-20-30 acre parcels, gently rolling land. Ideal location to build your dream home. Excellent schools, bus to door. From 81,350 down. CALL US AT 444-8540, EVES. 4444117. Ml furnace, well Recently I____________ $25,500. (more land available). Call 4444540 ACRES, lust north of Lapeer, good stream, through full length of property, to mile this fond. 25 per cent down, land contract 7 per cent. CALL 4444540, EVES 7V3-6946 OR 425-4243. 72 ACRES, lust outside the city of Lapeer, good 3 bedroom house, 2 car garage, 22 per cent down, land contract, 7 per cent Int. PHONE 4444540, EVES 7234244. natural fireplace, basement, garage. An excellent . buy—$34,500. CALL 4444540, EVES 7274742 OR 4444117. JOHN A. ROWLING, Inc. REALTOR 122 W. GENESEE, LAPEER Lsti-Hcfsdfs ' 54 Sato Farm BROKERS Interisted^ln cooperating HOLLY AREA- Paved rood frontage w of Holly limits, four ■ --------- by side that By lust right. 83250 with $425 down, 840 per--------- Including Interest at 8 i all due within 5 years l.. ______ lot. SEE THESE! May M sold separately. Be ready -ad years bulldlngl LAKE FRONT, LAKE PRIVILEGE —meres Cedar Island, Straits, Big Lakes, B U RB AN i4®ra 2-2. Dixie, n 2-2. WINTER SPECIAL 30 WOODED ACRES, bordering state land. 2 miles from Grand Traverse Bay. Great for Snowmobtllng. Buy — *•-'— NICELY WOODED A-frama 340 ft. frontage on County rbat mile from. M-55. Close to ,Blg M and Caber Fae Ski area, $2200 WINTER SPECIALS 30 wooded acre*, 012,000. Terms. 200 acres, 2,000' commercial fro taga, $185,000. Tycoon In comer for continui development protect need. KALKASKA Sale Business Property 57 ACRES ON M-1 In Drayton Plains,,water, gaa and alec., at site. AL PAULEY 3 ROLLING ACRES- Whlta Lake area tn_ —..... boat landing. Situated Ideally located for load* of privacy. Milford schools. 04,400 with 02,000 down, $40 par month Including Interact at 0 percent. WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. 373-111 HOWARD T. KEATING CO. 22040 W. 13 tall* Birmingham One Secretary to Another I can't spell thee words in the first place, how does he expect me to find them in the dictionary?" ' 120 ACRES Gladwin County with large use, 2 large barn* and other tidings. Ideal tor raising beet, s running strssm through pro- SCHUETT EM 3-7188 ATTENTION INVESTORS Commercial let, 300x300 on Highland Rd. (M-52). Only 070 par front ft. on land contract. Call J. A. TAYLOR AOENCY, Inc. OR 44304, eves. EM 3-7544. LIGHT MANUFACTURING Good north ana locatlo BALDWIN AVE. Brick front 40x70 With 1. .. floor, four 3 room 1,700 sq. ft. of land, ic*. $22,500, terms. cement block bldg. By Kate Osann For Sale Miscellaneous ... INCH PLASTIC OfAIN .... fittings, no nssd to thrsad pipe anymore. It goas together with glue, all you head la a hack-saw and a paint brush. Sse o, A. Thompson A Son, 7005 M-52 W. 2 HOT WATER OR sttsm bollsrs, by Amsrlcan Radiator Corp., 2,750,000 BTU. Ser. No. 1244. 1m-madlat* Possession. Call MA 5- Other Commercial Properties After 5 p.m. call Harlay Lavaiy 332-7725 Annett Inc. Realtors 28 E. Huron St. 338-0466 A 20 DAY ONLY REDUCTION IN PRICE ON THE FOLLOWING ACREAGE: l acre camper site, Stan BAYVIEW REALTY ( 4 E. Front, Traverse City, 42464 616-8464010 or 4144474104 ayes. - Resort Property^ 11.10 ACRES In Oakland Co. on the Genesee Fanton line. 200 ft. frontage on asphalt road bordered on rear and northwest slda by th* Shiawassee 1 Rlvar. Formerly priced at tl 1,000. ! For tM next 20 day* only — 87,250 ! with 22 par cent down. Balance on1 a 7 par cant land contract. • WOODED HILLS I 58.70 acres near Davlsburg. A good sound investment tor future secluded country estate In a fast d—1—*— —«. Highly restricted ling requirements, cent down. Balance id contract. j Business Opportunities 59 "BUD” PRIME LOCATION 100 feat frontage on Wait Huron St., (M-52) lust Wtst Of Telegraph Rd., zoned for restricted office use, Includes two (2) small dwellings, terms available, DOWNTOWN PONTIAC 340 feet on N. Perry St. Inside Wide Track Drive, zoned commercial, presently usad os parking lot (paved) with small commercial building and 2 story Snle Household Goods 65'Sale Household Goods 65 Suburban Property S3 Priced Below FHA Sharp 4 bedroom, quad-laval. In country atmosphere west of Pontiac. Basement, attached garage, gas heat, bullt-lns. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION ____ $26,750.00 .add's of Pontiac _______321-3300 lots-Aereage 2 ACRES near Ortonville.^blacktop ACRE RIVER i. Good pari n, 6734400. 840 ACRES. 12 Hulbert, Mich parcels. Lloyd ind other small Ml... Peacock, Box 2T Hulbert, Mich. 4274S. 14044744511, C. PANGUS, INC., Realtor anywhere In Oakland County. 1 CLARKST0N SCHOOL AREA Walteri Lake privileges, severe choice building sites, pare tes available, priced from $3000 up. 673-3400 Sylvan , 482-230 MLS "ESTABLISHED 1930" WEST SIDE DANDY: 3 b apartment call USI Brick doll id full basement, $12,200, FHA ...4E: In favor of a holiday w*dd.~, t, garage and oversized wooded lot, priced , __ MH basement, $12,200, BRIDE WHO BYPASSED JUNE: In favor of a holiday wedding — In Sylvan Village, base-—■ — right on land contract. WELLSPRING OF SERENITY: a real oasl$ of quiet surrounds this - —■- —-----------— - beautifully wooded 5-ACRE parcel a|c*, 3 bedrooms, modem to-minute heat, basement, 2-car garage and with frontage o kitchen. 2Va be HOME AND BUSINESS: beauty salon ttxfii.^Pric* reduced.” DORRIS 8. SON REALTOR 2536 Dixie Hwy. MLS orth side location, very ime, 2x12 kltehan, 13x12 , garage, plus a fully sale Houses 49 Sale Houses 49 Call recreational area or residential. Zoned 400 ft. deep tor commercial along US 10 with ovar 1500 ft. of frontage. Alto 200 ft. on a country road toucMs a small creek at rear on 1 point. Priced! at 055,000.. A vary good buy I MORE HILLS AND WOODS Isolated. $12,500 m the same wooded area. 10.02 aerts. 2! cent down. Balaric* 7 —* “' contract. Highly 4MM for details. NICH0LIE-HUDS0N Associates, Inc. 1141 W. Huron St. 681-1770 after 6 p.m. FE 4-8773 ELECTRIC Organ, dou exc. condition, must i LJJ 1* @045^' Pat Supplfes-Senrtce 79-A A-1 POODLE GROOMING, 7 days. ELECTRIC GUITAk Afft) ampilfler; 623-1161. ■( L0WREY ORGANS Presents the new 1270 Escape Machine, see this before you jjuy. It will pey you to shop us- Our Christmas Lay-A-Wav Plan GALLAGHER'S 1710 TELEGRAPH PE 4-0566 Open Mon. Through Prt. 'til 2 HORSEPOWER SNOW blower, stage with twin screw, chains anai lights, like new, 0250, 24" Delta lg saw, $75) antique pump organ with needle point bench, $125; 1252 Ford tractor atralght air, $250; 2 heavy i duty Pintle hooks, $20 each, 682- mi I____________________ Sh6p tonholes. Yours for $30.20 on n NEW AND USED PIANOS Prlcgd Prom $399 before you buy *—nk, terms y Plan °“gALUYGHER'S 1710 TELEGRAPH FE 4-0 Onen Mon. Through Frl. 'til 2 p. Open Sun., 1-5 P.M. PLAYER PIANO, UPRIGHT, $ J SSyBfo 8S, 3101 W. Huron 3410. Sale price, 3450. - Pontiac Music & Sound 4024350 £.J0 “Look at it this way: it’s like falling off a horse—you have to fall in love again right away or you’ll always be afraid of romance!" f 25 Christmas cards. We al usad office desks, chali ate. Forbes Printing and ( Cnnnlu JUA ntvla Nun, C CRAFTSMAN Tractor, 10 h.p. 1261 Modal Electric start, mower snov — — - Chains. $575. 330-0476. CHRISTMAS C WALNUT Dining room suit*, table, 6 chairs, buffet, chine cabinet, $75. 338-9394, After 4 p.m,______________■ $202. Cash, farms, I REFRIGERATORS, DISHWASHERS, damaged 9x12 Linoleum Rugs $495 Solid Vinyl Tile .. ......7c ea. Vinyl Asbestos Til* .......7c ea. Inlaid Til*, 2x2 :.........7c ea. Floor Shop-2255 Elizabeth Lake "Across From the Mall" 1970 DIAL-A-MATIC ag sawing machine. I ____.lent* needed for dace.. atltch designs, blind hems. Yours for Chrlstmr-balance, only $52.50 o er mo. for 7 mos. Ca lorthern Distributors. ESTABLISHED BEAUTY shop f Partridge "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" A YEAR END SALE Dua to personal property tax, - ■■ Co. will sail SINGER DELUXE MODEL-PORTABLE Zlg Zagger In sturdy cart __________ _____ SPECIALS OF 25 cards per box, to off catalogue price, assortment of 2000 boxes. Forbes Printing and Office Supplies, $500 Dixie, days til 2 PM, Sat... . ...■ CYPRESS PRIVACY FENCE, 8' sections, 5 and 6' height, $7.50 — 2 Electric built-in rang* tops.! stainless steel, $45 ea. TALBOTT LUMBER 1025 Oakland FE 4-4S2S! USED PIANOS Choose from spinets, uprights and grands, Uprights — as low r-x4M^ GRINNELL'S 27 S. SAGINAW A TO Z AUCTIONEERING Buying all usad furnltum B & B AUCTION EVERY SATURDAY Eyery^Sunjlay Retail 7 K CONSIGNMENTS WELCOME CASH PRIZE EVERS AUCTION. $2 Dixie Hwy. OR S-27l7 AENTS WELCOM PERKINS SALE Service Audi I: Swartz Creek 41 retail. Hours 10 a,m.«7 p.m GENTLE Ponies - LAZY B Saddlery jk I. R. Smith 3< 0 Elizabeth Lake Rd. 71-Afc and advanced i ORGAN and pi ; & W MODEL 40 stainless stubnose 38 special, $110. S _ .. model 34 snubnose 38 special, $80, 2 20 gauge shotguns, 1 youth Hay-Gruin-Feed FIRST AND second cutting. ENCLOSE YOUR SHOWER 0 reme, “*l lesjj^l S-V GUNS Year end Inventory sals, ...IP dispose of all guns. Dec. 31. Call STRAW, 4575 Oakwood I . Year Guarantee UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER 2415 Dixie Hwy. P refrigerator, CCM TACKABERRY hockey $20, trombone, $10 end tables, newi used 1 year, call 624-5162, medicine cabinet, lamps, our warehouse at dealer's cost. / _____ toys, books, Mi OR 3-814, i -----—------------------ FURNACES ~ Gat A Oil. SINGER ASH Salat. 425-1501, 474-4341. AUTOMATIC ZIG ZAG GtrlcDEst,arLRtCJr°R'ofd,h‘3iJSd c Sewing machine — saws single or dltlon, power iltt, mower, serai double needle, designs, overcasts, blade, wheel weights, chains, $1 Button holes, etc—Modern cabinet. —* ~ - Take over payments of: $7 Per Month fpr 8 Mos. or $56 Cash Balance Still Under Guarantee GIFTS? WE CARRY ALL TYPES OF SPORTING GOODS Every iMrn M UjWWjM: SEWING CENTER sold to beat the Jen. 1st deadline,) 2615 Dixie Hwy._FE 4-0201 LAVATORIES COMPLETE $24,501 value, $14.25; also bathtubs, toilets, shower stalls, irregulars. Terrific ....... upjj *—......................... Orchard L Cliff Dreyers Gun and Sports Center 15210 Holly Rd. Holly ME 4-4771 1 FREE LESSON WITH BOW SALE GENE'S ARCHERY 714 W. requirements. $10,250. mmm steak house bulldlna1 Restaurant with tervlc " located on M*ln street Arbor. Owner has 1 Sale, Sun. 12-5 Dally 10-2 Hilt Appliance Co. 2416 14 Ml. Rd. Between Cool Idge-C rooks buildings. House rented for $100 per month. Farm In land bank under cultivation. All wooded area. Level. Lie* nicely for future development. S0.32 acre* at $55,000. r Estates. Hlgl ke privileges. 137,500 Including HAVE A HAPPY HOLIDAY AND DRIVE CAREFULLY -.YOU CANNOT AFFORD AN INJURY -WE CANNOT AFFORD TO LOSE A CUSTOMER. 313-625-3298 or 634-9825 C. NELSEY Sales Agent Davisburg, Mich. Evenings calls welcome _____________ early ‘20s. Business grossing $27,000 In 1260, While “ 7:30 to to p.m., arid closing SINGER AND CONSOLE $47.05 CASH ' Terms aval labia, touch and . features for hams and design work. Lessons Included. Call Midwest Appliance, 2-2 dally, 334* HOUSEHOLD SPECIALS ROOMS OF FURNITURE -Consists of: l-plece living room outfit with 2-p Living room suit*, 2 step tables, cocktail table, 2 table lamps Si (1) 2'x12' rug Included. 7-pl*c* bedroom suit* with daub ------- chest, full-size bad wl PLUSH BEAUTY SHOP 1 Very pleasing decor and located In Birmingham area shopping ma“ Showing good gross, though business lass than on* year. F only $23,000. Terms. $11400 dow S2T3.50 per month, on 7 per ce Chattle Mortgage. Shown by I polntment after business hours. IS 4544. PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE 1050 West Huron St., Pontiac 481-2111 ______ WO 5-8752 A HOUSEHOLD BARGAIN pc. living rm. group (sofa, chairs, 3 beautiful tables, 2 lamps); 8 -* bedroom (double dresser, chi bed. mattress, springs, lamps); place bunk bed — 5 piece dlnetti Any Item Sold Separately All fbr 8328 — $10 monthly KAY FURNITURE Next to Kmart In Glenwood Center SAGINAW BAY GROCERY Hiding nd. A r buy at lust $2,000 pi Sole land Cantracts 1, $42.50 « k beds Furniture, 440- Auburn, FE 4-7881. BARGAINS ON MATTRESSES Discontinued covers and mil matched. Llttl* Joe's 1541 Baldwin at Walton, FE 2-4842 CLARKSTON 1 TO 50 Rds?^A beautiful* 3"acre homeslte^j LAND CONTRACTS Zoned suburban farm and located! Urgently needed. See us before y •- c—' 1 deal. Warren Stout, Realtor Bob White JIWWIIIILIIII LULUIL IV* Stereos, refrigerators, range washers, dryers, dishwashers. -BUY DIRECT FROM WAREHOUSE AND SAVE PLENTY ... Bring your trailer or.truck, hp yourself and save still more. Joe's Appliance Warehouse 547 E. Walton at Joslyn, 373-5540 Easy terms___________ ! BRONZE OR CHROME DINETTE sale, BRAND NEW. Large e"<« i small size (round, drop-leat, r tangular) tables In 3-, 5- and 7- |f%EARSO&'S FURNITURE lawn sprinkling pumps, i h to 2 HP, priced from $92.50, G. / Thompson and Son, 7005 M-52 W MOVING, must sell. _______ Classic gas range, coppertone, 012$. Washer S< dryar, both, 36 “ box spring and 2 vanity lamps, -place dinette set with 4 chroma chair* and tabl*. All for $322. credit Is good at Wyman'*, WYMAN FURNITURE CO. 7 B. HURON_______ FE S-1501 Year End Clearance Walnut bedroom suite, dresser, mirror, 4 drawei and full size paneled bed. i Lovely tote with matching floral Mr. and Mrs. Chairs, zippered reversible cushions, sold for $242, unclaimed balance $1B3. 5 ft, long Danish modern Console Dupont 501 nylon c regular $4.25 value i sq. yd. Choice of coo Colonial console sten SPRINKLING SYSTEMS, : inch'plastic pipe, S3.4S per too, 1 plastic pipe, 85.61 per 100, l1 plastic pipe, $841 per 100, 1 plastic plRe, 010.01 per 100. G. / —------—- * «— 7005 M-59 W, .BHA 2 HORSE thoroughbred id condition, $700. 477- ' E GISTERED THOROUGHBRED gelding, field hunter, 14. S, reasonable. Ml 7-2234. MEAT CUTTING, rraooed. We cure I. Call 373-4155. FOR SALE FREEZER MEATS, 752-2241. Romeo Meat Center O ALL CUSTOMERS "Happy Holidays," '62 and '70, Davis Machinery Co., Ortonvllle, NA 7- ~ Farm Equipment 8. AAA 5-2211. d exansion ladders, ONE GROUP OF 10 rows of commercial carpeting left over from large building — lects that must be sold mediately. Assorted color' SMIgulpment 74-A SKI IS, POLLS, CABLE bindings tie —i condition. 850. Sand-bravel-Dlrl shower mill MHrtrlnpMWI bowl sink, 82.25; lavs: 12.25; tubs, $20 and up. Pip* cut and threaded. ____ PLUMBING CO. 041 Baldwin. FE 4-1514.____ ■ TV Slimline consol*, ax-condition, $60. Maiya Sacor ■.... camera, super deluxe with accessories, excellent condition. SAVE Bel ~ RCA 338-0261. d heating patf, oaro wire, bed back res sewing machine. Ilk* net SPRED-SATIN PAINTS, WARWICK Supply, 2478 Orchard ‘ " — SIMPLICITY LANDLORD, 1 52-1443. I, like n 625-5821 CLARKSTON 5 choice acres with 200 ft. of frontage, 2.7 miles north of 1-75. Across the street from 2250 M-15. Full price 87,500. Terms available. Stslock & Kent, Inc. 1302 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. 30-2224 3384 373-11111640 Auburn BARGAINS ON NEW LIVING ROOMS W7. Bedroom, -2225 LOTS TERMS FLATTLEY REALTY 420 Commerce Rd.___. 343-4281 OFFICES WILL CLOSE WED. AT 6 P.M. and RESUME REGULAR BUSINESS HOURS FRIDAY w SURE TO GOI DANDY BRICK RANCHER In a aattlhg of evergreens. Family room, lVi baths, 3 -------s, and breezeway to a heated garage separate workshop "Best Buy" In the patio, and garage. In a high demand area and prtcad for FAST ACTION I CONTEMPORARY BRICK RANCHER on a B place, extra Vt bath, and a king-sized family room. Neat, clean and IMMEDIATE POSSESSION. CALL TODAY! NO. 2 BLOOMFIELD AREA A FINE FAMILY HOME with all the features of comfortable family llvlngl 4 large bedrooms, 3 full Beths, I Contract term*, with a privacy .L TODAY I NO. 27 1 a , NEW MODEL ... w OPENSAT.& SUN* 2-5 P.M. OR BYAPPT. AVON RANCHER: Avon Rd. lust east of CrooksRd. Deluxe in-Erick rancher with all that# features Included In the basic Mlctr double-hung wood wlndowtp paneled family room ^ with Bp-aes; Mt^r^Ts'ss , « REALTOR PONTIAC CLARKSTON/ROCHESTER UNION LAKE 338-7161 6254441 651-8518 363-4171 LAKE ORION—30 LOTS. Platted, lekt canal lots, r -- dianwood. 830, 4 ^Neaf^jm^h development. farming, fruit, good bldg. site. S45.0W. . - Other Acreage Parcels | HarleyVave'ly 332-7725 Annett Inc. Realtors 28 E. Huron St, 338-0466 Wanted Contracts-Mta. 60-A 7 . MILLION Dollars has been made available to us to purchase and assume land contracts, mortgages or buy homes, lots or acreage outright. We will give you cash for yo ~ equity. Our appraiser 1$ awaltii your call McCullough realty 440 Highland Rd. (M-52) Ml kw w ifrlgerators, $)47; dinettes, $44, electric dryers, $114; Automath washers, $124. Dishwashers, $121, color TV's, $221. Plenty of trade Ir furniture, ranges, washers, and refrigerators at bargain prices. Little Joe's Bargain Furniture 1441 Baldwin at Walton, FE 2-4142 Joe's Appliance Warehouse ur E. Walton at Joslyn Phone 373-5540 DUPONT 501..NYLON Prices slashed, Dupont 501 nylon carpeting being sacrificed, ragu ar $4.25 value, now only 13.22. Cnolc* HwJaSST'APPlalno ' 401-2323 DOUBLE HOLLYWOOD Bed, I springs and mattress. 401-0207. DAVENPORT andchalr, royal B good condition. 723 Blaine 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS— Urgently needed. 5ee ua. before Wairen Stout* Realtor 450 N. Opdyke Rd. 173-1111 _____Open Eves, 'til 0 p.m. LARGE OR SMALL quick closing. "tM Earl Gerrels, EM 3-4084. OTS LOTS TERMS > FLATTLEY REALTY 0 Commerce Rd. 3 TSrs Money to Loan LOANS $25 to *1,000 Insured Payment Plan , BAXTER — LIVINGSTONE 280 acres — Includes^ b»rJ'f ^ 8150,000. Low dbwn payment. LIGHT INDUSTRIAL Over » acres with 1100' railroad frontage, Waterford Town s r dose to 1-75. $32,500. Terms. PONTIAC TOWNSHIP Ml Ft. frontage on_M-24, mediately off 1-75 Expressway. Zoned light manufacturing, $20,000 on land contract. ; BATEMAN INVESTMENT A COMMERCIAL CO. 377 S. Telegraph Rd. 338-9641 After 5 p,m. *■ Sunday CALL 473- Mortgage Loans Sale Farms 56 30 TO 800 ACRES In Lower Michlgtn. 'Dairy grain, beef, dr hogsl Nam* your farm "Mldilga'n^s ;Fami {Wat B^e Norm or r-apeer. rruguui. ■ io rgom remodeled American horn# with exterior. 2 extra good bar and wafer available. Lam IS ACRES In Clarkston school , are allowed: Only $445 per ac DRYER, $35; REFRIGERATOR $25; bunkbeds; epert-MiSC., G. HaHlJt ELECTRIC STOVE, ! *" Refrigerator v Wringer wash! FE 5-2744. chair, zippered ri self decked, sold ed balance 3107. Hollywood bed set complete mattrast, box spring, frame and head board, regular $92 value, nowlj THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE i 118 W. LAWRENCE ST. with matching. Everything to meet your need* ersible cushions. Clothing, Furniture)-Appliances >r $282 unclalm- WELL KEPT CARPETS show t _ results of regular Blue Lustra spot 1 cleaner. Rent electric thampooer " Hudsons Hardware 41 E, Walton. cedar chests, 473-9534 or 482-4120. un. i Christmas Trees Antiques U 65-A CLOSING OUT Everything at discount prices. Y-Knot Antiques. Davlsburg. 434-8221.___________ CUSTOM ANTIQUES Antiques repaired and restored. 391-1578 Harold Richardson OAK TABLE and 6 chairs, enma CHOICE NURSURY TREES SCOTCH PINE, BALSAM SPRUCE 1,000'S TO CHOOSE FROM THE BIG TREE LOT CORNER OF OPDYKE A PONTIAC YAMAHA SN0-M0BILES 3 NEW MODELS IN StOCK PRICES From 3895 K&W CYCLE :a 731-8220 MICHIGAN'S OLDEST EXCLUSIVE YAMAHA DEALER JOHN DEERE A with front end blade, $400, 434-4782.____ SNOW IS COMING COME IN AND SEE THE NEW AREINS SNOWBLOWERS FROM 4 H.P, TO 7 H.P. PRICED AS LOW AS: $249.95 IIVITH FREE TIRE CHAINS NEW TORO SNOW PUPS ONLY $109.95 ALSO WE HAVE A GOOD SELECTION OF USED SNOWBLOWERS. KING BROS. 373-0734 Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke Wood-Coal-Coke-Fuel FIREPLACE WOOD, SEASONED oak, cherry and hickory, lMa mivarf ara«n and seasoned 2138 Davlsburg Keilvared. 321-1704.'______ WOOD BY THE LOAD delivered or you pick up. WHITE BIRCH FIREPLACE WOOD Reasonable price, will dsjivar. Pets-Hunting Dogs Travel Trailers 8S apache CAMP trailer — Dal Ray, Tour-a-Home and Fleetwing pickup campers and covers. For the finest service and the best deal, come to J I M HARRINGTON'S SPORTCRAFT, to ml. E. of Lapeer on M-21. Apache factory home town dealer. Open Sundays. 444-2412. CLOSE-OUT STARCRAFT 1969 TRAVEL TRAILERS 1969 CAMPERS StE THE ALL NEW 1970 ALJO'S AND STARCRAFTS CRUISE OUT, INC. I E. Walton ff «-44M Dally 9- pupt. Stud service oi s. FE 2- CENTURY TRAVEL TRAILERS Quality coaches for ovar 37 yai STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC 3771 Highland (M-52)_483-9440 Travel trailers 88 Check Our Deal on— SWISS COLONY female pureoreo carmen luxury trailers Shepherd puppies. Black *, tan, 7i LUXUcVniir wks. old, 835 Orlando, off Oakland1 FROLIC Ava. Coma after 3. _______ TRAILERS AND TRUCK CAMPERS SKAMPER D-DOWN CAMPERS 28 ft. on display at— FURNITURE FOR SALE: 2 II dressing room taW* with mirror | and chair and armolre. Tues. and. Wad., 814 - mmtorf|‘ '*'* Hi-Fi, TV and Rodios 66 r 4 REPOSSESSED CONSOLE STEREOS Save $$ Goodyear Service Store 1378 Wide Track Pontiac, Mich. Phone 335-4169 ______ " AND 8 TRACK CAR STEREO INSTALLATION. PH. 373-0084. AFTER ' ““ -*■1 " Christmas Gifts 67-fi LIONELL TRAIN, STROMBECKER AKC GERMAN SHEPHERD puppies, Hand Tools—Machinery 'air compressors, •miinment, hydraulic qMRPmiim ■ ;, Welding equipment, etc. ___68 lubrlcetio; ATTENTION ed poodle, chocolate brown nlature for lease or sale. 335-14 or 693-6387. Dachshund. 693-8847.____________ AKC MINI-TOY POODLE puppys, apricot. $40. 481-0304. AKC POODLE PUPS it joslyn, 373-5540. KIRBY SWEEPER EXCELLENT CONDITION-S45 FULL GUARANTEE Kirby Service & Supply Co. —- PIXIE HWY. |Uj| ^___ LIVING ROOMS, brand, 62 j . PE 2^842.__ I LINOLEUM RUGS, Joe's, 1441 Baldwin, NEED UP TO $5,Q00? L sse up. Pearwn's Furniture, au may be surprised how Auburn Ava. FE 4-7881._______ -^n^-n7epalr:Por MOBILE HOME FURNITURE SALE tm ” 1 BRAND NEW doing your JIHPPWPVIR|I our money for matanal*. Whatever your hom* needs see: Voss 8t Buckner, Inc. 1408 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. 334-3267 Iwajw^ 2 YEAR OLD PONY, tl Chevy, tre< h. FE 2-82; 1243 j$ORP GALAX IE, for whet have you. UL 2- rtmyla*. licensed 4. Inscii Sole Clothing lU'D EXPECT TO PAY 3 ROOMS I NEW FURN $2.50 per week $297 END TABLES . COFFEE TABLES DINETTE SETS MATCHING LIVING ROOM SETS BOB HUTCHINSON MOBILE HOMES, 4301 Dixie H DRAYTON PLAINS 1 ONE GROUP O-10 rows of commercial carpetlni left over from large^bulldlng pro mediately. Asserted colors. Ideal for heavy traffic areas, installation available. Fra* estimates. Call Ran. FEr4-5697. ■■ A v . V ROUND 54'VTABLE. 6 ctialftL an* buffet, $123; tress, and door combo Ra SIM) Double r*“ $50; swivel hi TABLE, 4 chair* »m ■” ings .and wet-rawers, $25; 2- WPUllului liiinr. oven electric range, tlgh-back rocker $25; i, 373-162$. REMNANT MARKET it and yards of remnants immediately ** ■ cent continual filament nv - .carpet, yardage unlimited $488. 7525 Ctergent Rd. Clarkston Multiple "PHOTO" Listing Service JOHN KINZLER, Realtor i ^ 5122 Dixie Hwy. 6234335) Eves.‘til LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN FURNITURE n*Mu,in at Walton FE 2-48 of Free Parklng_ Sat. 'til 6. E-Z Ten SINGER Portable, desk. Chest of drawers, mlsc. 335 TRACK STEREO CAR tapepleyer ED TV ............... $22.25 TV, FE 2-2257 Open 9-4 E. Walton, corner of EMERSON PORTABLE • $75, 451-6324.__________ SETS, $35 each SaQamoi 515 Motel, 382 S. Woodward. V SERVICE S. Walton hear FE 8-4549 GE COLOR TV, 25" picture, UHr, walnut, 3B-2841. _ ■ MANUFACTURER'S CLOSE-Cut STEREO WALNUT OR MAPLE CONSOLE Diamond Needles BSR 4-Speed Changer $89 18:15-8 Tues., Sat. 10:15-8 t from warehouse i oe'V Applla^ce W scrapper RUHR MusIcnlOueBe 71 3 DAY PRE-INVENTORY SALE PIANOS * ORGANS CHOOSE FROM BALDWIN * YAMAHA L0WREY STORY AND CLARK Many styles to choose from Smiley Bros., Music FE 4-4721 ■■ A ALL PET SHOP, 55 Williams, FE ■ "3, Canaries and White mice. CHIHUAHUA Pup for sale. Call FE EXPLORER MOTOR HOME 21', 23', 25', MODELS See this California bullt-ln unit which Is No. 2 In motor hom« sales. Prices start, at 89,995, up. STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. 3771 Highland (M-59) ----- SPORT TRAILER, GEM OR CORSAIR TRAVEL TRAILER Corsair and Gam pickup campers. stud service, reasonable, 585-4453. 4577 C CANARY BREEDER SELLING out—Male Canaries guaranteed to sing. Best canaries in 50 mile area. Also puppies, kittens, gerblls, hamsters, and mice. Open Sunday 12-5 Bird-N-Cage Pet Shop, 143 W. GERMAN Shepherd Pups. AKC, MALE APRICOT T MALE, V/i year old English pointer, field trained, papers, >180. 482.1413. MIXED PUPPIES- WANTED, good homes provided, w* buy con— USED COLOR TV SETS $i SWEETS ~ ' BALDWIN CHE piano,*$500 6 WOODuCONSOlE STEREO SALE Special price from factory. Ne 1970 Zanlfh, Admiral Philc Sylvan!*. RCA, and Symphoni from 822. Our warehouse prlci will be lowest in Mich. Terms. ABC APPLIANCE , 48125 Van Dyke l bik. S. 22 Mile 856IE.18MII8 ...... Jj Dally 184 739-ljltt POODLE Puppies r. 338-9394 ■CLOSE OUT ALL GUITARS^ AMPS AND BAND INSTRUMENTS, ACCESSORIES. 40% off list price SMILEY BROS. MUIC FE 4-4721 -YOUR CHILD can say her ABC'; then It’s time she learned her Do Rem Ml's, pibno rentals. SSI-0567. ', MORRIS MUSIC 34 S. Telegraph Rd* acrors from Tat Huron, Ft 2-0547 beauties, dap, holds, t E S . Weimaraner-Germar POODLE PUPPIES. MIXED, $10. GERMAN, SHEPHARD .pup'! femala, no papers: $10. 3734772. —AADOR-AIRDALB _______4PM 10 mos. old, trained tor hunting, $25,8384794. _________ WANTED: mouse car, win i call or deliver 4. Elmhurst, Pontiac. YOUNG RABBITS for sale, all sizes. Pet Supplies-Service____79-A f? 1-A GROOMING Mr. Edwards' High Fashion Salon, all breads, 7 day w**~. Bloomfield Pontlec 335-5259 JOHNSON'S TRAILER SUPPLIES & ACCESSORIES ' DEALER FOR: TR0TW00D WAG-N-MASTERS Walton at Joslyn FE 4-5*53 NOW ON DISPLAYI Frankllns-Crees Fans-LirHobo's Scampers—Pleasure Mates Camp 4 Truck Campers ' lip Hobo Truck Camper* HAVE YOU SEEN THE NEW OMEGA MOTOR HOME Both Models on Display Holly Travel Coach Inc. 15218 Holly Rd., Holly MB 44771 Open Dail/ end'Sunday! mcclellan travel trailers 4828 Highland Rd, Ph. 674-3143 , Closeout prices on all Item* In atockl PRE-INVENTORY SALE v 17 FT. AND 19 FT/TRAILBRS. , ' ACCESORIES ' V \ i- Hayden Camper Salas 18719 HIGHLAND ED. (M-52) Ml. W. of Oxbow Lk. 343-4404 tops. CM) to camper boot. SPORTCRAFT MFO, CO. 4160 Folqy HfH •" Truck Caps *122 and »wp. Vslr’s-Goodell 857-4550 TRUCK COVERS % THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 80, 1969 For Want Adi Dial 334*4981 Travel Trailer! 88 Boats-Accesiorio* 97 Wanted Cars*Trucks SNO FOOLIN'! SNOWMOBILE OR TRAIL BIKE INSIDE ALL NEW 1970'S 14 Ft. Yukon Delta Self-contained, 6 sleeper. ONLY $1595 VILLAGE TRAILER SALES 6670 Dixie 615-2217 ClarKston SALES - SERVICE - REPAIR trucTTTovFr headquarters , Merit »' fiberglass-- ™ ' / other .models *- s plus 50 to ' choose from, • Swinger Motor Home and OlobestaT trailer. PIONEER CAMPER SALES 601-0720 25 PCT. OFF Mansfield AUTO-SALES 300 1011 Now and Used Cars \ Pontiac |. Standard Auto 106! M ARM ADUKE >r out-of-stale rr Ski Doo Clothing Ski Doo Parts WHILE THEY LAST ANDERSON SALES 8. SERVICE . MANSFIELD 1645 S., Telegraph;_____FE 3-7102 AUTO SALES ”,»67>MF-SNOW^,LE,«2CC / ^',Vwln%./ . 1 _ 1 / .......-L+,_________' FE 5-tOOQ PI new TOP- DOLLAR POA sWsrp ca COMPLAINTS WOLVERINE TRUCK.campers sleepers. Factory outlet/ repair and! bumpers, spare tire carriers, aux lllar|f gasoline tanks, stabllzln* * LOWRY CAMPER SALES 2325 S. Hospital Rd. Union Lak< EM 3-3681 "wiIXFUY USED TRAILERS PonUac Mobile Park_75, 189. WINNEBAGO cond.. stock., 673-2620. , '68 Skl-DADDLER, Snowmobli* cover, lOVb Ji.p. Like new. Call after 6 p.m. 674-2702. ... t6» SNOW JET, 10 horsep rentals. | 5600. 674-3084._________ - ■------ EVINRUOE SKEETER 5450.; AveriU's Reese & Draw-tlte H ___-9878 2020 Dixie_FE 4-6096 snowmobiles, snowmobile clothing I T(yP $ P A.ID , Take M-59 to W. HIghland, right to ' * ^ * * ***" | I pJ,ckor)i„R“n5 Rtoiiow° SgfSondt* All Cadillacs, Buick Electro ! dawson's sales, t i p s i c o 225s, Olds 98s, Pontiacs and LAKE, phone 629-2179. L .l. , ... . i97o“ALLouETtE. xL 26739rcc, anytning sharp with air con-674^*0679 M h P‘ 2 W**kS °W' $87S' ^Honing. |ARCTIC CAT end MOTO-Ski'nowln, V\^ILSON CRISSMAN uSc^rTHER‘“4 Hlr:h CADILLAC i I ARCTIC CAT & YAMAHA Woodward and 12l 962 Oakland Ava. FE l ■ NEW~fTHANC‘1‘ PLAN Working? Naad a car? Wa arrange for almost anybody with ggpd, w “ no credit. 75 Cars to c!:oo*e ft .. Call craflif Mgr. Mr, Jrv Dealsr. FE 4-1006 er PE 2-7854. P 1061 BUICK 4-door, powar steering I and brakes, Ilka new liras, ISO.’ FE | 5-69081 _____ 1962 BUICK SPECIAL Convertible, automatic V-B, full power, $195, 651-5887, 4535 Orjon Rd., Roaster. V 1966 T0R0NAD0 I Full power and air conditioning, 4 radio, heater and whitewall tires. | $1695 '«! Pontiac Retail 65 University Dr. FE 3-7954 1966 BUICK SPECIAL WAGON V-6 engine, power, air conditioning. This special price of . $895 By Anderson nnd Leeming New end Used Car» 108 1t)67 OLDS Cutless. Pbwar, automatic transmission, radio and., wnar, 81218. Call Mr- Parks at Ml 4-WOo. TURNER FORD Blrmlngham-Troy Area 2600 Maple fo.__ 1968 Olds 98 % Luxury Sedan dltlonlng, 6 Way seat, vinyl tog,. $2795 Suburban Olds 860 S. Woodward /r Birmingham Ml 7-5111 1969 Olds Luxury Sedan Full power, air conditioning, AM-FM stereo tape, speed control, tilt' wheel. A fine car for only $3495 I j BOB BORST ! Lincoln-Mercury Sales r New and Uted Cars 1963 PONTIAC Bonneville 2 door hardtop, with full power, radio, hooter, and It only—1395, i PONTIAC, CATALINA, 4 -... GET A "JTAN" Tit*' N STAN ELLIS OLDS klnterjor, power, brakes SB? wheel covers, 5 to choose from. 1 ,nnf. all 1M IaiU mill trado Ins. Coll MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH $200 UNDER - FACTORY COST! 1969 CHRYSLERS 1969 PLYMOUTH* ALL NEW! I to choose from, soma with air. 677 M-34, LakO Orion, 693-8341 64 TEMPEST LaMANS. Hi* transmission, 13M or bast offi FE 54350. PK 2-8101'1650 Maple Rtf. 1-328? or, 642-0600. AUDETTE PONTIAC 1969 Pontiacs I , 1969 Buick ' i .Wa have several Dermis ; / /now In stock - Save 5S5 ,/ l SHELTON Pontiat-Buick 655 5. RoChbSter Rd. ■ 451-5500 clip IJOHNSON PONTIAC-TEMPEST . . Oh M-24 Lake Orion < MY 3-6266 42-1746.11969 Gi 1968, Catalina St. Wgn. . YELLOWSTONE SPECIAL CLEARANCE j 1969 MODELS 3-18' Models 2-19' Models 1-25' Capri. Alt prices chopped for qulckt dl#PSTACHLER TRAILER I SALES, INC. 3771 Highland (M-59) 682-9440 Mobile Homes 89! HAVE M0DERNUDECOR Early American-Mediterranean | CAMBRIDGE l irprtY MONARCH LIBE rambrandt Available immediately-park space | . Colonial Mobile Homes 1 KbSsft. 2733 DUSi ” fSTOP SHOPPING Herrll-Topper Travelo-Globemaster CLARKSTON MOBILE HOME 82 7 NEW 1969'S LEFT! AT BARGAIN PRICES I Also 4 used Mobile Homes ORDER !2x65's NOW! COUNTRYSIDE LIVING insi Oakland, ..jjj 1959 RIGHARDSON 10 X 50 fur ed, 68I-C668. 1967 CRANBRQOK, 12 X furnished, 373-5042,. 196S HOLLY Central M Accessories, Parts Service 0-1/3 CLAYTS CYCLE CENTER 1 Mila E. ot Lapeer on^M-2' 664-9261 O-Vk, ! A HOLIDAY SPECIAL ^ Why Go "One" Better I somi Go the Best GO RUPP Snowmobile $3795 BOB BORST Lincoln-Mercury Sales d New and Used Car* 106 j Naw and Used Cars 1966 MUSTANG, RADIO, healer, i MILOSCH i, radio, whitewalls, i 1965 GRAND PRIX, 1 original owner, needs bubt wu ----------j, $600. FE 4-2273. STATION WAQOitri966 Pontiac, •H!iM7-L___ i powar, low mileage, 1 owner, iom Galaxla l ! $1,095, 332-0237, eves. 674-3731. 1963 Bonnavlll, i nt* 0TCT,0fr;feB _ 1963 Oldf 4^ Convertible' I. On M24 in Lake Orion 693-8344_______________I Boot», gloves, etc. D SNOWMOBILE TRAILERS | rr,.,.„12x60, skirted* PBMi.......ininiiiiui in i'( _____-^CHAROSON trailer, 1»68, 53,500, furnished, “*■ ADD-A-t MG COLLISION Montcalm. Pontiac, FE 3 79 America's Snowmobile $695 YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED SKI DOO DEALER BILL GOLLING SPORT CENTER 1821 Maplelawn Just ott Maple Rd. (15 Mile Rd.) Between Crooks 8, Coolldge Rd. Troy Motor Mai1_____Ml 2-6900 JUNK CARS HAULED sway "tree. FE 4-5121. Used Auto-Truck Parts 102; 1962 TEMPEST FOR ANY PARTS. Excellent Co a, 673-3287. .... T-BIrd angina, 390 8 1966 Chevy engine, 283 S' 1964 Ford engine, 352 Si 1962 Stude., V8 engine (Hawk) $ — Grancl Prlx, Chrome Rally Wheals (5) 5 I or Plymouth Crleger chromes (4) t Pontiac trl-powar S Also other engines, bodies, HftTH AUTOPSERV*CE 1969 Buick Skylark Hardtop I 'hir©r top, V8, automatic, power j * $2588 MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES ; CHEVYLAND THE BIG LOT 631 Oakland Axe._4-4547! 1969 CHEVY IMPALA, 12, 12,795, FE 8-6370. 1969 CHEVELLE $5“ hnrsepower, dusk bk dramatic, take o I FORD 4-door, 8 eyl. ai Swer steering, 8795, Star! ord, 2 blocks north of 11 ; i Woodward Ava., LI 1-loov. as! Guy You Want To Sea. ,,_J FALCON Club Coupe Automatic, radio, heater, whltewi 325 tires. 11344. Call N . jvar Daymen! for further Information, 852-4356. 1969 CHEVY Ii. Nova . 4-7500. TURNER FORD 2600 Maple Rd. Blrmlngham-Troy Area $1,395 i; automatic, power snaring ■ i brakes. S1795. Stark Hickey For blocks north ol 11 Mila Rd. Woodward Ave. Ll M680. The l |- Guy You Want To Sea. I 1968 Thunderbird power, factory air condil 2j LATE MODEL CADILLACS ON HAND AT ALL TIMES ’ JEROME ° CADILLAC CO. 0 1980 Wide Track Dr. FE 3-7021 S CADILLAC SEDAN DeVllle, 1966, i air, windows, 6-wav seat, AM-FM, , first class condition, 8 23 0 0. ' Weekdays, 9-5, Mr. Brondyke, 585- rouim >V YOUR mobiw _____ Countryside Living. 334-1509. S ■^1969 HARTFORD e 12 X 6U, 2 BEDROOM. CALL 394-! 0374, IF NO ANSWER CALL 625->922 AFTER 5 P;M. ___j DETROITER AMERICAN SUNRISE PARK KR0PF Double Wldes, Expando's Custom built to your order Free Delivery end Setup EVINRUDE SKEETERS BOBCATS '70s HERE NOW Fabulous snowmobile lakeT^mTrine Blvd. at Saginaw__FE 4-95B5 3 sf with the best possible deal cr no Jet or Wheelhorse Safa* ash,m°TOM'S HARDWARE, 90i Irchard Lake Ave. 335-2424. _ COMPLETE 1963 Chevy II, for parts VERTEX MAGNETO, cross manifold and carbs for a s box Chevy,; 4 American mags. 1940 CHEVROLET. i reliable. 673,3228. $1995 4-1969 DEMO'S to choose from! BILL FOX CHEVROLET Save I Suburban Olds] 860 S. Woodward | Birmingham Ml 74111, 1969 FAIRLANE I Fastback Hardtop $3395 Suburban Olds 860 S. Woodward Birmingham Ml 74111 I 1969 OLDS "98" Hardtop conditioning, vinyl* root, radio, ; whitewalls, low mileage, new car '"“$3595 MERRY OLDS 528 N. Main St, 1966 Pontiac Exocutive 2 door hardtop. Factory air coi dition. .$1195 BOB BORST Lincoln-Mercury Sales 1950 Maple Rd. Trc Ml 6-2200 vn Sedan, fotwc. ansmlsslgn. *1297 TURNER FORD 2600 Maple Rd. . Blrmlngham-Troy Area TSew"l969 Firebirds, sail at lnvolce. Keego Sales 8l Service KEEGO HARBOR ' _•___ 682-3400 "HOME OF 1H* AeJ?,endablS USED CARS" Waterford Standard Auto I960 RAMBLER $97 GRIMALDI .CAR CO 900 Oakland Ave. FE 5-9421 1967 PONTIAC 4-Door with automatic, powar, txcellent condition, only— 1968 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE /agon, factory elactrl- —■ 1966 Chrysler Newport 4 door hardtop. Emerald white! with black vinyl roof and matching! Interior, v-8, automatic, pewer! steering and brakes. Radio and $2188 black;1963 CHEVY STATION wagon, 1 1950 CHEVROLET TRUCK, % 1 stake,'call FEJ-3935 after 4. . "i960 CMC % TON PICKUP 673-1506 1963 Chevy II Nova Hardtop $995 JOHN McAULIFFE FORD Vi. Mile N. gif Mirada Mile « s. Telegraph FE 5-4102 MILOSCH i cruise control, electric power » !, ”*"$2795 Suburban Olds RP XUUUB IIAIIDTQP, automatic transmission, reOlo, h a afar, whitewall tires, priced tesalT so SAVE. ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP, VILLAGE RAMBLER tars you a fine^ selection of n 960 REBEL SST, 294 barrel,, 3 Speed automatic, full powar, vinyl top and Interior, buckets, low mileage, maViv extras. 651-2280 or 373-56)5. , MILOSCH Chrysler-Plymouth 1969 Wlilys Jaap wllh matai hard MILOSCH Chrysler-Plymouth W woodward 3969 Road Runner, 6 barrgl OOU 3. WOOOWura t 1M*<-kr?*t*?ta!?n*999s!sBirmingham , Ml 74111 Lake oriStrotS^i. ■24 Lake Orion, * Npw and Used Cars 106 New and Used Cars 106 FORD PANEL, 8125. FE WhitewsllG, H B , - ip must see to ap- 2100 Maple Rd. 1 Birmingham BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH l I. 852- 1963 FORD F250, 4-wheel BOB HUTCHINSON1 MOBILE HOME SALES j 4301 DIXIE HWY. 473-1202 DRAYTON PLAINS Open Dally 'til 8 p.m. « Saturday and Sunday til 5__ SEASON'S GREETINGS Midlpnd Trailer Sales j Rent Trailer Space 90 SQUARE LAKE trailer park, some JOHNSON'S SKI-H0#S£S TONY'S MARINE ______________682-3660 . ____ POLARIS COLT, 1969, 372CC, ei ______ I -trie start, lighted speedometer, | 4862 Sashabaw. must" “see 2iselllngk,fSrandJanr®rl,,w.F.0R.R.vlL'!. " 1965 CHEVY °j Suburban $995* - GRIMALDI CAR CO. •i 900 Oakland Ave. FE 5-9421 . „J7 COMET 2 dOdr, economical 1 owner, excellent condition, low rr r inventory sale, only $887. mlngham-Troy. Area OR 3- 1964 FORD 2 DOOR! KT .......... 1964 FAIRLANE. 6 cylinder, stick. lY-'Mortycius 1969 HARLEY Davison, Holly, ___________ 1970 Boss. For t tlie -best dea.. - N — RINGTON'S SPORT CRAFT, ml. E: of Lapeer —-u^^l Sundays. 664-9412.__ SNOWMOBILES __ MOTO SKI a. JOHNSON OC I JOHNSON CHALLENGER, S695 UP 7J i Also Snowmobile Clothes ! PAUL A. YOUNG, Inc. UH U”u H 1 ‘ QR 4-0411 34-4178.1 BIG VOLUME DEALS! Do to Our Big Volume In A LARGE SAVINGS! ON ANY NEW OR USED TRUCK DEAL! Better Service after the sale! Honda, Triumph, BSA Norton &. Mini Bikes TthIsTs SKI-D00 COUNTRY! ! Come and See the Beautiful •New 1970's * SKI-DOO'S AND ------------ 1966 CHEVY Wagon. Power automatic transmission. S892. I Mr. Parks at Ml 4-7500. TURNER FORD 2600 Maple Rd. Blrmlngham-Troy Area__ Save $$$ at Mike Savoie Chevy 1900 W. Maple Ml 4-2735 1965 Mustang 2 door hardtop lardtop, power . steering. finish, weekend $788 * 1969 Continental % Mark III Low mileage, area trade-in. $ave BOB BORST Lincoln-Mercury Sales 150 W. Maple Rd.. Tray Ml 6-22 1960 OLDS, $45, AFTER 2 JU HA\ ARE E CAN If A DEALERS - MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES CHEVYLAND' THE BUDGET LOT 3966 CHEVY NOVA ST A T I O N.630 Oakland Aye. FE 5-416 Wagon, 203-3 speed, eng. com- t9M FORD. ’ansmfssioiv r » clutch ayatem, Power, automatic, 428 -A HOLIDAY SPECIAL 120CC SUZUKI; Trail Bike, 6 Speed REGULAR $485 Sale $375^ MG SUZUKI SALES 4667 Dixie HWy. 673-6458 _____DRAYTON PLAINS__ BMW 600cc, saddle bags, (airing, and dlrecttonals. $900, 6933 302._| V GUNS MODEL YOU0 DESIRE WHILE 1845 S' TA*kBfSr Toic'k Dep|F THE SELECTION IS GOOD. -*■" ,or RRJCES STARI.AI,QNLY $695. , ALSO WE HAVE A GOOD STOCK OF REC0NDIT40MSD USED SKI-DOOS, ALL PRICED TO SELL. KING BROS. 373-0734 PONTIAC RD. AT 0PDYKE e Mile ' ioxT/ GMC“TRUCK~ CEOTER >513200, I srlng, brakes, whitewalls, 11966 I. Call'M " turner ford 2600 Maple Rd. Blrmlngham-Troy_Ar___ FALCON AUTOMATIC, ! 1967 Delta 88 4 door hardtop. Power stee brakes. Vinyl top and i ] dltlonlng. | $ave ! Suburban Olds 860 S. Woodward $1495 BIRMINGHAM i CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 2100 Maple Rd. -Ph. *42-7000 ! Birmingham * Troy Area j MILOSCH Chrysler-Plymouth ; .. 1969 Custom. Suburban, 6 passenger - wagon, while with red vinyl interior, > automatic, power steering, power brakes, radio, new tires, power - '- v mileage, $2495. I, Lake Orion, 693-8341. ° 1969 STINGRAY, CONVERTIBLE, V red, 300 h.p., air, double-power, i AM-FM radio, burglar alarm, '-predated, omytST29S. ___ Surep-^q f Inance Call Credit Manager cylinder, radio, BUY HERE-PAY HERE Low Down-Easy Payments No Reasonable offer refused CROWN MOTORS 131 Baldwin Ava. — ■ - "H"' $695. StanrHItkey Ford,______ north of 11 Mile Rd. on Woodward t AVa. Ll 13680. The Last Goy Ydu: 1 Want To See. ^HARp^Birmir#,qm Mj 7-5111 ws ^tiac. siso. i Cat, a ohly v Ice. See It today. 334-1754. 650 BSA Firebird Scm m $650 682-0193. Motorcycle Repairs Scorpion Snawmobiles "See the Hottest One of All" SCORPION STINGER PINTERS Johnson Snowmobiles: '^FINANCING AVAILABLE" # it Unlv. Exit) __ THE ALL NEW 1970 SKI DOOS NOW IN STOCK—SHOP EARLY SPECIAL 23 HP Sno-Jet, , .58 USED SNOWMOBILE TOO ANDERSON SALES & SERVICE CRUISE OUT, INC- 1645 S. Telegraph FE 3-7102 |x, e w.»nn FE 8-4402 SUZUKI CYCLES, 50CC to 500CC. I Dally 9-6 Sat. 9-5: CHosed Sun. DAWSON'S SALES, T I P S I C O ---JC x' t T X LAKE. Phone 6293179.----; YAMAHA Bicycles 96 SCHWINN Stingraa, SNO-MOBILES 3 NEW MODELS IN STOCK PRICES From 8895 K & W CYCLE boais-Accessortei 97 V ON ICE BOAt^InJan made. GLASSPAR. STEURY, ' Mlcrqjcratt ------I------------ -- , ^udeGrU,S^nSONa'nSd ffl NEEpWnER^HJ ,966 C*»n. lake, phene *»-2t79. > ----i^sToTwlNTER STORAGE WINTER STORAGE CLEARANCE 1969 Boats, Motors, Trailers /C0H0 SPECIALS Jdt some |ust'right for Coho !' new^elum. 48 h.p. Westbend,! I I50r '_ . M - Airport. Call 473,-1238. . A o’ SERIOUS Minded competent pi -1 wants to buy share In Skyhawk ; ? Call FE 8-C862 after 6._ .Wanted Cars Truck* 191 "TOP DOLLAR PAID" ; GLENN'S FOR "CLEAN" USED CARS Cruise Out, Inc. J 675 Oakland Avenue • 335-9731! GET A "STAN" THE MAN/L EAL STAN ELLIS OLDS 550 Oakland Aye. FE 2-8101 j iAuto Insurance-Marine 1041 T967 CAMARO. Must sell, best offer.; 682-0467. j. I >«• j SPECIALISTS IN ! AUTO INSURANCE Homeowners Insurance Low Rates — Terms . Insuring Pontiac since 1913 ANDERSON 8, ASSOCIATES • 11044 Joslyn ■ FE 4-35351 1967 BLUE CHEVELLE Station' wagon, air ’cohdltioned, snhw tires',; low mileage, *1/550. 626-8440. 1967 CHEVELLE, SUPER SPORT, 3*6 cubic In., Lof carn, slicks, clean, many extras. 682-7398. | FOR SALE BY OWNER, 1»69| Corvalr Monza. 682-2165. Foreign Cars 105 1966 OPEL ! Wagon, Sharp $1095 1 GRIMALDI CAR CO. j 900 Oakland Ave. FE 5-9421 1966 VW. 1500 Series. Radio ind heater. $988. Call Mr. Parks at Ml 4 7500 TURNER FORD ' Blrmlngham-Troy Area 2600 Maple Rd. Tom Rademacher Chevy-Olds 1 On US 10 at M-l 5 Clarkston f MA 5-5071, 1968 ”CHEVY IMPALA stallon Wagon. Powar steering, power brakes, air cond., power back window, air lift shocks, beige with coco-brown In-, terior. Only 15,000 ml., axe. cond., $2,300. 685-2741, Milford. ' . 1966 English Ford Cortina Wagon White with black Interior. Radio ‘“““$895 BIRMINGHAM 'j . CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH ^ 2100 Maple Rd. , Ph. 642-7006 -Blrmlhoham & Troy Area l, ' 1967 W—do6{> CONDITION ■ f ‘ "v .Ph. 673-2115 ' ■' 1968 Chevy . Biscoyne Wagon 6 Pessenoer with V®, automatic, radio* heater, whitewalls, beautiful green finish, one owner, traded In! Only . $2088 , MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES \ CHEVYLAND V , \ THE BIG LOT > v \ 631 Oakland Ava: PE 4-4547 1968 Corvette 2 tops, 4 spaed transmission, AM-FM radio, 350 h.p. engine One i owner,; like new, and priced fo sail. $3595 •Suburban Olds | 860 S. Woodward {Birmingham Ml 7*5111 ;J 19*8 TRIUMPH GT 6, *1,800. 602-7175. . 111968 NSU, WHITE, Ilka new, 12,000 • actual miles. Ph. 651-2272. 1969 VW. Stick, formula V pipes, leather steering wheels, racing stripes, hood scoop, whlto inforior, 5 coats of wax, under warranty. Days, 357-1500. evenings, 651-51*0. (OPEL 1969 KADETT Wagon, 4 speed, big engine, radio A twater, whitewalls, yellow. *1650. 335-1321. ,New and Used Cars l06 AUTOBAHN. VW r 1765 S. Telegraph 1 FE 8-4531 1969 ,SS 396, 350 horsepower, turoo 373 PT, 7000 ml.. Week with Week vinyl top, black interior. $2800. 388 1 N. PAddock. . . .. - t 1968 FORD KL Convertible With V8, automatic, power steer ing, brakes, windows* green finish, black tdp, radio, only*— $1995 Flannery Ford OVER-50 SELECT TOP OUALTTTTRaDE GRIMALDI BUICK-0PEL 11952 PONTIAC CATALINA ‘ Motors. 251 Oakland, FE 8-4079. 1964 PONTIAC convertible, gxti FE. 2-9165 S55B. 673-6227. Sure—Wc Finance , Call Credit Manager Mr. Bell for Lew Payments GET A "STAN" THE MAN DEAI GO I HAUPT PONTIAC 1966 OLDSMOBJLE, *8 LS, tuil r, $1500. 682-8441. New and Used Cars 106 New and Used Cars 106 New and Used Cars 106 O HA HN TODAY'S SPECIAL L' 1968'OLDS F-85 Coupe $1795 with V8, stick shift, white finish, blue interior, sharp as they cornel 1967 RAMBLER Rebel ...... .-.$1195 1967 DODGE Coronet .. . . .. $1295 Station Wagon, 1*4* mileage, one owner trade. v 1969 JEEPSTER Wagon ... ...$24^5 with V6, four wheel drive, 2 toos, 0,000 actual miles. Showroom new, and 1* yours to drlvtl . 1967 Plymouth iWys G \a, .$1095 many to dwosa v frohi full power,' soma with air ^conditioning, as It^w as price above. \ 1963 COMET 2 door ......... $295 Hardtop* automatic, radio, heater, hew tires, rims good* hurry, Mil nty taetl 1967 OLDS Delmont ......... .$1595 so 4 Door* with full pbwer, low mileage, one owner, showroom new! 1969 CHRYSLER Wagon ...... .$$695 town and Country, with factory air conditioning, full power. 5,000 folia*, factory official. Showroom new throughout! 1969 RAMBLER SST $2295 4 door, gold with matching Interior, 7,000 .actual miles, factory official cay, new car warranty, V-8. full power, Chrysler-Ply mouth-Rambler-Jeep CJarkston 6673 Dixie Hwy. MA 5-2635 VERY SPECIAL' VALUES top, f radio, 7 1966 MERCURY 9 Passenger Colony Perk station wagon. V-8, steering and brakes, chrome luggage premium whitewalls. 1967 CONTINENTAL Four Door Fawn beige with matching Interior,_ vinyl air, full power, power door locks, AM-FM Royal master whitewalls. 1966 OLDS "88" Holiday Hardtop Medium blue with blue vinyl Interior, air power steering and brakes, automatic, r...», whitewalls. . 1965 CONTINENTAL Sedan Brome In color With matching parchment laathar Interior. Factory elr conditioning, full power, tilt wheel, power door locks, AM-FM radio, heattr, whitewalls. 1968 DODGE "Charger" "RT" tWo door hardtop. "440" magnum V-8, automatic, vinyl top, bucket seats, read wheels, radio, heater, axtra wide ovals. 1966 BUICK Riveria Gran Sport Two ddor hardtop. Full power, air conditioning, road wheels, stereo tape system, radio, heater, blue streak $2195 1966 DODGE "440" Two door hardtop. "383" V-8, automatic, vinyl Trim, ' >. radio, heater, whitewalls. A low mileage, one owner ^1295 SALES OFFICE NOW OPEN EVERY SATURDAY , LARRY SHEEHAN'S HILLSIDE Lincoln-Mercury $1595 $2895 $1295 $1695 $2195 New and Used Cars 106New and Used Carl 106 HOLIDAY , SPECIALS!? Top Quality YEAR END J1EARANCE SALE, NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED 11 1965 Chrysler Newoort 4 door, sodan, beige this car. looks and runs real good only, ; $895 1968 Olds 2-door, hardtop, a nice clean family car for only t $1895 1966 DODGE Coronet ) passenger, wagon, i 1967 CHEVY. 4-dobr, ’sedan, v-8, automatic, drive, power steering, and factory air condition, sharp and $1495 1968 DODGE Cogonat "500" 2-door, hardtop, a green car that looks and drives reel good. $1795 .. » 1968 VW < a real shar, illy, priced i $1695 1967 Chryslers >r, hard t o p, and 4-door Ians, a nice selection to $1295 1968 PLYMOUTH Furys malic, with power, t 1969 CHEVY Camara 2 door, hardtop, VI, automatic, power steering, vinyl top, a .tharola today only $2395 1969 Chrysler 2-door, hardtop, automatic, with double power, vinyl top, with saddle leather Interior, a real steal at only — $2785 1968 Charger V-8, automatic, power (tearing, vinyl; fop, and ,.a Sharp $2395 TODAY'S SPECIAL 2-door Sedan, automatic drive. Ilka hew. ..$1895 CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 724 Oakland Ave. FE 5-9436 *, THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1969 B—15 XSSketcher 16 Vine fruit £5£2lrf"r 53 SSSS. , “S&1— .(S2"‘I”, ^commnnd 56 Card game 10 Likenesses »Broadway 57 ConfcctlunMJ IlDowiired 58 Privations 12 American Str*****^ D°,W MSdwdd* 26 Health resort 1 Joyous whales 28 Moves 2 Tutelary gods 22 Musical suddenly (Roman relig.) dnunu SO Australian -3 Musteline 24 Challenge V sgiST?1" »Milkin«id’a 50Scottish jBiblicriname oantfrL) sheepfold WLegalpoint SPreeent 27 Ending of 51 Social insect *“»*&(“»•) a prayer 52Sizeofshot HMH|| 29 City in Latvia (pL) 31 Employs 54- 35 Freebooter 35 TV quia group 6 Perfume 37Htftbrow 7 Entangle 39 Bud’s sibling 8 Donkey 1 2 3 4 5 6- 7 r rr 11 12 13“ 15“ a vT nr 19 ■ t - w H zC 22 zT 24 ■ 25 H n sr 27 W a r 30" 31 W W ST J 35 36 ST 38 L J 39 «r C sr 43 Wi mum i 49“ 50 51 52 53 54 55“ 56~ 2 □ y ST 30 gpNMMMWKRmf Mm I P GINSBERG People in the News (By The Associated Press) Poet Allan Ginsberg has filed a federal court suit seeking to force Miami, Fla.* officials to let him reschedule a poetry reading at Marine Stadium, admitting all comers free. A Ginsberg reading Dec. 22 was halted when the' stadium manager, Manny Costa, objected to a number of four-letter words and drowned out the recitation with loud music on the public address system. The poet’s suit yesterday also asked $10,00 damages from Costa. Scranton Resigns Delegation Post Former Gov. William W. Scranton of Pennsylvania has resigned as U.S. representative to a conference arranging for an International Telecommunications Satellite Consortium. President Nixon said yesterday Scranton’s successor would be Abbot M. Washburn, deputy director of the U.S. delegation. When Scranton took the post, he said he SCRANTON planned to serve only through 1969. Actor Don Murray, Wife to Separate Actor Don Murray and his wife, Betty, blaming incompatibility, have agreed to separate, they disclosed yesterday in a joint announcement. Married Aug. 2, 1961, in Berlin, they have three children. Murray, 40, also has two children by his former marriage to actress Hope Lange. The actor, whose big break came when he played opposite Marilyn Monroe in “Bus Stop,” has been seen most recently in the ABC television series “The Outcasts.”. His movie credits include leading roles in “Hatful of Rain” and “The Imodium MURRAY Priest.” Actress la_Be RelRased ftpm Med Center^ Actress Terry Moore’s agent says he expects her to be released within a few days from the University of California Medical Center at Los Angeles, where she is under treatment for a bronchial infection. The agent, Ray Sackheim, told newsmen yesterday that Miss Moore, 40, has been suffering from a general run-down condition. Miss Moore’s third husband, investor Stuart Warren Cramer in, 41, sued this year for divorce, charging cruelty. Actor Gets 60 Days in Jail, Probation INDO, Calif. (AP) — Actor John Barrymore Jr. has been sentenced to 60 days in jail and placed on two years probation after pleading no contest to a charge of possessing marijuana. In passing sentence yesterday in Los Angeles, Superior1 Court Judge Karl Davis dismissed another charge, possessing dangerous drugs. • Barrymore, 37, was arrested last Aug. 4 after a traffic accident involving a car in which he was a passenger. The Highway Patrol said investigators found marijuana beneath tiie seat where the actor had been sitting. -Television Programs- Programs furnished by stations listed in this column are subject to change without notice! Chonnels: 2-WJBK-TV. 4-WWJ-TV. 7-WXYZ-TV. 9-CKLW-TV. 50-WKBP-TV, 56-WTVS-TV, 62-WXON-TV R — Rerun C — Color , TUESDAY NIGHT 6:00 (2) (4) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports ^9) R C — Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea (in progress) (SO) R C — Flintstones (56) CPT (62) R—Ozzie and Harriet 6:30 (2) C r- News -Cronkite (4) C — New?— Huntley, Brinkley (7) C — 1 News — Reynolds, Smith (9) R — Dick Van Dyke <— Rob ignores Laura’s warning to stay off the big slopes on his first Skiing excursion. (50) R — Ministers (56) Beyond the Earth — Stars that do not radiate light uniformly are discussed. (62) R — Movie: “One Way Out” (British, 1957) Jill Adams, Eddie Bryne 7:00 (2) C — Truth or Consequences . (4) C — News, Weather, Sports (7) C — (Special) Rose Bowl Preview — Sports-caster Dave Diles interviews University of Michigan football coach Bo Schembechler and members of tiie team as they prepare for their game with Southern California. (9) R C — Movie: “The Man Who Never Was” (British, 1956) Naval intelligence officers throw Germans off guard, making the invasion of Sicily easier for the Allies. Clifton Webb, Gloria Grahame (50) R — I Love Lucy (56) What’s. New — “Inland Waterway” covers a trip through the I n tracoastal Waterway from Charleston, S.C., to St. Augustine, Fla. (Part 1) 7:30 (2) C — Lancer - An old friend dies, leaving Murdoch responsible for the man’s 9 - year - old daughter. (4) C — (Special) Rose ' Bowl — Highlights of past Rose Bowl games with a close-up of this year’s Michigan Wolverines (7) C — Mod Squad — After a young man helps Pete when he is attacked by hoodluins, Pete learns that the man’s father may be plotting a serious crime. (50) C — Beat the Clock (56) Joyce Chen Cooks — “Egg Rolls” 8:00(4) C — Debbie Reynolds — Debbie gets a contract offer frdm the. head of a movie studio. (50) R C - Hazel (56) Fact of the Matter ■ t-“The High Cost of Medical Care” (62) R — The Nelsons 8:30 (2) C Red Skelton -Barbara Bain and Sweetwater guest. (4) C t- Julia — Hannah and Julia threaten to strike over Dr. Chegley’s .demands., — ~ ' (7). C — Movie: “Sidget Grows lip” (Premiere) Gidget gives up her surfing life to become a U.N. guide. Karen Valentine, Edward Mulhare, Paul Petersen (50) C 'lx* To Tell the Truth (56) Twin Circle Headline — Sex education is discussed. (62) R - Sea Hunt 9:00 (4) C' — Movie: “A Matter o f - Innocence” (British, 1967) Frumpy girl comes. to Singapore with her aunt and falls in love with a Eurasian gigolo. Hay ley Mills, Trevor Howard, Shashi Kapoor <. ffl C — What’s My Line? —Radio Programs— WWJ(950) WCAR(1 ‘30) WPONQ46Q) WDEEQ5O0) WHFI-FM(94.7) - I > TONIGHT . «:00—WWJ, News, Sports WJR, Nows CiaW, SWVO Hunter WPON, Nows WHFi, Don Alcorn WCAfi. News, Ron Roto WXYZ, Nowscope WDEE, Tom Doan «:1*-WJR, Sports WPON, Between the Line WJR, Business, Time Traveler «:«—WWJ. Review, I • phesls Me—WWJ. News, Block Builders 7:30-WXYZ, Newt, lockhart * ’ WWJ, Sportsuine WJR, Reasoner Repr Choral Cavalcade 7:S$—WJR, Correspondents' Report •tM-WPON, News, Lorry WJRv News, Sports •tlSMNJR, Sunnyside Encore 1:10—WJR, Showcase, dost- 11:1S—WJR, Sports WWJ, MMBw 11:10—WJR, H CKLW, Todd Wallace WCAR, News, Wayne- Phil- WEDNESDAY MORNING WJ, Morria C ir, News IR, Sunnytldl wrun, news, van WHFI, Don Zee WDEE, Mike Scott 11:00-wjr, News, WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON uiOO—WJR, Newt, Farm WWJ, News CKLW, Hal Martin WJBK, Hank O'Neil . 12:15—WJR, Focus litt-WJR. News, Deer 2:M—WPON. News, pai X News. Mike Sherman I WJR, News, Mike Wallsce7 WDEE, Hank O'Neil jSSUfii.Jp* Mitchell 3:15—WJR, Music Hall 3:00—WCAR, News, Ron Rom WHFI, DonAieont 4:00—WWJ, Newstime 5:S5—WPON, Shjck Report TV Featurei RO$E BOWL PREVIEW, 7 p.m. (7), 7:30 p.m. (4) FACT OF THE MATTER, 8 p.m. (56) JULIA, 8:30 p.m. (4) MOVIE, 9 p.mu (4) NEWS SPECIAL, 10 p.m. (2) MARCUS WELBY, 10 p.m. (7) % MAN AT THE CENTER, 10 p.m. (9) COLLEGE BASKETBALL, 11:30 p.m. (62) (50) R — Perry Mason (56) Segovia Master Class , (62) R — Movie: “Brigand” (Italian, 1960) Adelmo di Fraia, Serena Vergano 9:30 (2) C — Governor and J. J. — Drinkwater becomes the subject of an underground press scandal. (9) C — Cesar’s World — “Pakistan” (56) Conversations i n Depth 10:60 (2) C — News Special —“The Battle of East St. Louis” examines how a sensitivity training session among 18 of the angriest citizens of East St. Louis helped curb a -racial crisis. (7) C — Marcus Welby — Young basketball player, told he must undergo knee surgery, goes to a faith healer instead. Ruth Roman guest-stars. (9) C — McQueen — The Actioneer investigates a furniture store that will not return deposits. (50) C — News, Weather, Sports 10:30 (9) C — Man at the Center — “The Genetics Revolution” offers a look at the future when science may be able to manipulate gender and birth. (50) R — Ben Casey —: The entire hospital staff is put on the emergency ward to save the life of a hospital worker exposed - to radioactivity. (62) R — I Led Three Lives 11:00(2) (4) (7) (9) C:: t-' News, Weather, Sports (62) R — Highway Patrol 11:30 (4) C — Johnny Carson — Author John Lahr and comedian Marty Brill guest. (7) C — Dick Cavett — Violinist Isaac Stem and Charlotte Curtis, New York Times women’s editor, join Bette Davis and Henry Fonda as guests, (9) R — Movie: “Prize *«of AmaLJBntisbJ96i) Stanley Baker (50) C — Merv Griffin — Guests include Ernest Borgnine, Pam Rodgers, Zsa Zsa Gabor, Morey Amsterdam, Marty Allen and the Blossoms. (62) C (Special) College Basektball: Purdue • vs. Penn 11:35 42) R C — MOvie: “A Pistol for Ringo” (Italian, 1966) 1:00(4) C — Beat the Champ (7) R — Texan' (9) Viewpoint ' 1:05 (9) C — Peiry’s Probe — “ESP and Dreams” 1:30 (2) R - Naked City (4) (?) C News, Weather 1U0 (7) C — Five Minutes to Live By WEDNESDAY MORNING 5:50 (2) tV Chapel 5:55 (2) C — On the Farm Scene 6:00 (2) C — Suprise Semester 6:25 (7) C — Five Minutes , to Live By 6:30 (2) C — Cartoon Carnival ( 4) Classroom njj “Seekers: the M o de r n Surgeon” (.7) Education Today and Tomorrow “Between ' Home and School” 7:00 (4) C-Today (7) C —Morning Show 7:30 (2) C—News, Weather, Sports 7:55 (9) News , 8:60 (2) C; ^ . Captain j 8:05 (9) Mr. Dressiip ; 8:30 (7) R C - Mdvie: “Peggy” (1950) Diana Lynn, Charles Coburn (9) Friendly Giant 8:45 (9) Chez Helene 9:60 (2) R — Mr. Ed "Hi) C — Dennis Wholey (9)0 —Bozo 9:30 (2) R C - Beverly Hillbillies 9:55 (4) C - Carol Duvall 10:00 (2) R C — Lucy Show (4) C-It Takes Two (9) C—Children’s Movie: “The Boy With the Grey Horse” (Part 1) (56) C — Sesame Street 10:25 (4) C - News 10:30 (2) C Della Reese -James Cleveland and the Southern California Community Choir guest. (4) C — Concentration (7) C - The His and Her of It (9) C - Wizard of Oz 1 (50) C — Jack LaLanne 11:00 (4) C - Sale of the Century (9) C — Window on the World (50) C—Strange Paradise (56) friendly Giant 11:15 (56) Misterogers 11:30 (2) C —Love of Life (4) C - Hollywood Squares (7) C — Anniversary Game (9) C — Let’s Get Away From It All (50) C — Kimba 11:45 (0) C -News WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON 12:60 (2) C-News, Weather, Sports (4) C —Jeopardy (7) RC —Bewitched (9) Take 30 (50) C —Alvin 12:25 (2) C -Fashions 12:30 (i) C — He Said, She Said (4) C — News, Weather, Sports (7) R C — That Girl (9) C — Tempo 9 (50) C — Galloping Gourmet 12:55 (4) C— News 1:00 (2) C — Search for Tomorrow (4) C — Letters to Laugh-In (7) C —.Dream House (9) R — Movie: “Zotz” (1962) Tom Poston, Julia Meade ( 5 0 ) R — Movie : “Footlight Parade” (1933) Dick Powell, Joan Blondell 1:36 (2) C — As the World Turns (4) C —' Life With Link-letter (7) C — Let’s Make a Deal 2:00 (2) C - Where the Heart Is (4)iC — Days of Our Lives 17) C — Newlywed Game (56) R — Black Journal-Program reviews the 1960s and the decade’s effect on black Americans in the Seventies. 2:25 (2) C — News . 2:30 (2) C — Guiding Light 14) C — Doctors (7) C — Dating Game" (62) R — Movie: “Good Companions” (British 1957) Eric Portman, Hugh Griffith 3:00 (2) C — Secret Storm (4) C — Another World (7) C — General Hospital (9) R — Candid Camera (56) Consultation— “Common Cold” 3:30 (2) C - Edge of Night (4) C — Bright Promise (7) C — One Life To Live (9) C — Magic Shoppe (50) C — Captain Detroit (56) Family Camping — A guide to camping in Canada. 4:00 (2) RC-Gomer Pyle (4) R C — Steve Allen — Allan Sherman, Dr. Cleo Dawson and Jerry Shane guest. (7) C — Dark Shadows (9) C —Bozo (56) Sesame Street (62) C — Robin Seymour —Catmother and the All Night Newsboys and Martha Reeves and the Vandellas guest. 4:30 (2) C—Mike Douglas— John Hartford and Troy Donahue guest. ' (7) R C — Movie: “Red Sundown” (1956) Rory Calhoun, Martha Hyer (50) R — Little Rascals 5:00 (4) C—George Pierrot “Nassau and the Bahamas” -(9) R C - Flipper (50) R C — Lost in Space (56) Misterogers (62) G — Bugs, Cyrus and 1 Friends 5:30 (9) R C — Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea (56) Friendly Giant . (62) R - — Leave It to Beaver 5:45 (56) Merlin the Magician Cavett Right for Spot By CYNTHIA LOWRY lett’s quiet and effective way of AP Television-Radio Writer stimulating bright and vital dis-NEW YORK — Dick Cavett cussion. In his premiere show returned Monday night for his there was some standard badi- A Look at TV third go-around on ABC and seems, finally, to be the right I man in the right 1 time spot. The format of his late evening show differs from that of his1 rivals in that he works alone — f|§ga no sturdy man Mi IBB Friday to help mjSS LOWRY bridge the awkward moments. He has ries of chairs in a simple set to accommodate the guests. The main difference is Cav- Radicals Hold Private Session FINT, UP) — Singing, chanting, snake dancing, calisthenics and karate lessons featured a session of a meeting called by Weatherman, abreakaway group from the Students for a Demochatic Society. Efforts to keep Monday’s gathering at a dance hall private included a registration system, shaded windows and journalists’ fee ranging from $25 to $100. Weatherman, which claims as many as 10,000 members, took its name from a Bob Dylan lyr-‘You don’t need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows.” The Weatherman, led by 22-year-old Mark Rudd and Ber-nardine Dohrn, split from the! main body of SDS last June at a Chicago convention. Both Rudd and Miss Dohrn attended the Flint gathering which began Saturday and was to continue through Wednesday. IN SMALL GROUPS The number of assed the 150 mark Monday night, and most spent the evening session in small groups discussing such topics' as male chauvinism, alliances with factory workers and the sugar harvest in Cuba. A 'couple, of Rudd’s lieutenants took the stage to lead calisthenics midway through the evening. Large posters of Communist heroes—Mao, Lenin and Ho Chi Minh—were displayed in the meeting room. nage in the Carson style with comedian-writer Woody Allen. The interesting portion came with the introduction of Metro-politap opera soprano Beverly Sills, who spoke of her family and the familiar generation gap. Miss Silsl said she did not particularly want to communicate and that she liked the gap. “I hoep it stays. What I don’t heed is a 20-yearo-ld buddy.” Then came Jacqueline Gren-nan Wexler, former nun, former president of Webster College and now the new head of New York’s Hunter College. SPIRITED, LIVELY Mrs. Wexler defended the young, spoke of their need for involvement. It was a spirited and lively conversation among intelligent people that shed some light on an overdiscussed subject. The commercial interruptions often broke up good, rolling conversations. But the tone of the minutes has breat spontaneity, and if Cavett’s mix magic with people holds, the program may produce more insomniacs than anything since before Jack Paar quit the late night battlefield. board of regen is sfSTE# H! NBC launched a pair of fragile barks on its channels Monday in another revision of its troublesome daytime schedule. The11 first was tiie “Who, What and Where Show,” which after minutes had still not answered the question. The second, and not to be underestimated, is “Life with Linkletter,” in which Art and son Jack have pulled together a potpourri of interviews, oddities and show biz gimmicks in a deliberate effort to woo both the older and younger daytime viewers. The game show is so d ingly, so indistinguishly, t to a' clutch of earlier audience participation programs that one wondered just what there was about it that persuaded the network to give it air time. Three members of the audience were at the usual consoles, given $150 to bet and permitted to put their money on their ability to answer an assortment of questions. The program also has Art James, who has been hosting around game shows for years. The players grimly concentrated on answering questions about Frank Sinatra, Apollo 12, the Cuban invasion and the Whiffen-poof song and had little time for. anything else. ^ INSURE iiowi^S K Auto—Life—Home ^5 B Call Ken Mnhlman S Call Ken Mohlman 682-3490 e 3401 W. Huron, Pontiac 9 NATIONWIDE INSURANCE 9 Nationwide Mutual Imuranen Co. ■ Nationwide Mutual F|n Ini. Co. ^ A Nationwide Ufa Insurance Co. gi Homo OfNee-Calumfcus, Ohio -J* FOE VOWS CONTINUING FIGHT—Roy V. Harris (hand cupped to ear) waits for an elevator outside the Georgia Board of Regents office after The board had voted to approve former Secretary of State Dean Riisk as a member of the University of • Georgia law faculty. Harris, Georgia head of the American party, which supported former Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace for president in 1968, vowed continued opposition to the appointment, which must be renewed yearly. Rusk OK'd as Georgia ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) - Dean Rusk, secretary of state under two presidents, will come home to his native State next September as a highly paid University of Georgia faculty mezhber. ’’ His controversial appointment as a professor of international law was approved Monday by the state Board of Regents in a rare special session. / * ★ *' Rusk will be paid $45,000 a year. „ University President Fred C? Davison, who nominate^ hjm for tiie post, receives $36,500. . Rusk, 60, born in Cherokee County, Ga., is presently a fel-ljvf of the Rockefeller Founda- tion with an office in Washington. ,9-4 VOTE He was secretary of state through .this Kennedy p'nd Johnson administrations. ' \ N Regents approved the nomination by a 9-4 vote after "a two-hour meeting behind closed doors. Several regents emerged from the meeting vowing continued opposition to the appointment, which must be renewed yearly. j “We don’t think he’s qualified,” said Regent Roy.V. Harris of Augusta, Georgia head of the American Party* which sup- ported former Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace for president in 1968. opposition i to husk, centered on1 what some Georgians regarded as\ liberal* Views, an4 the marriage of his daughter, Margaret, to Guy Gibson Smith, a Negro, in 1967, Georgia Gov. Lester Maddox did not attend the meeting, but said if he were a member of the board, “I’d vote against this.” He said Rusk permitted security risks to work in the state department and contributed to “tiie weakness of our international position.” A*E YOU Seeking E!eoce of . Mind in These Troublesome Times? If So, Dial 335-0700 We buy, sell and trade PISTOLS, RIFLES and SHOTGUNS 2924 N. WOODWARD AVE. Between 12V* and 13-Mile Daily 9, Sun. til 6 LI 9-6353 "GET OUT OF DEBT” GARNISHMENTS! REPOSSESSED! BAD CREDIT! HARASSMENT! KK&WjtS Jon. for hundrkdi of oth.n without ConiolldoiW Your Dobtt Into Wotkly Payments You Con Afford Homo Appointment Gladly . Arranged at Any Tima No Cost o> Obligation ter Interview mm V to 6 P.M., Sot; 9 fo 1 P.M. DEBT AID, INC. Pontiac: 10 W. Huron St. FE 24111 :1; |jy Now, slacks with ■p a flare! Farah's ■ styling combines I comfortable slim, trim J fit with the new flared bottom! Start you own collection of these ter-rific new slacks, in a great vafiety of permanently pressed patterns and solids! QUALITY KNIT SHIRT 100% Textralized NYLON All Colors YourChoice of • Turtleneck • Moc Neck • Button TOYS! GAMES! DOLLS! HOPPIES! TREE TRIMS & CARDS! Made to keep them warm all winter. Large selection of styles. Some pile-lined, some corduroy, some ski jackets. We honor Michgian Bankard Store Hours Doily 10:00 s.m. to 0:00 p.m. W« wilcomt Matter Charge, Michigan Bankard, Security Charga, Telegraph and Square Lake Road Free Parking for $,000 Gars In Our Well-Lighted Lot [AVINU AND KINu ol On All Purchases, While You Wait and Shop Personalize the Christmas Gift You Received! 4 Days Only SAVE *10” 4-Band, 12-Transistor FM-AM - 2 SHORT WAVE SAND WHEN YOU WANT TO GET AWAY FROM IT ALL, CALL tfS. Phone 332-8318 INVENTORY CLEARANCE SALE NOW ON! MIRACLE CAMERA SHOP “The Friendly Camera Shop Around The Corner” HANSEN TRAVEL Alterations, Dressmaking, Restyling 30 Years Experience Phone 338-8528 SABRA9S Custom Tailoring FREE WIGLET WITH EVERY WIG PURCHASED WIGLAND 335-2953 BOYS’PENN-PREST SUCKS KRESGE'S MIRACLE MILE STORE ONLY us ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY’ B—-16 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 80, 1069 * RADIO $2995 An outstanding value. AC and DC operated. A great gift for the person you forgot on your Christmas list. Friday: FISH ’N’ CHIPS AH Yon Can Eat _?39 334-2585 Try Our Own Fresh BAKED PECAN PIE (Whole Pies To Go.. ,17S) A Quality Company of LTV. Lin# Altec, Inc Allied Encore RESTAURANT Radio Stores, Inc. SAVE TIME ON YOUR LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANING We know how valuable your time is, so conserve your time and steps by combining your shopping trip . with your laundry chore. Econ-O-Wash Sony Micro TV is built to go with you. 1349S Micro-TV's the personal portable that you can take with you anywhere. It's 9.8 lbs. light. Sony's advanced solid state, circuitry means flic;ker-free reception anywhere; has an optional clip-on rechargeable battery pdek, or operate it off the cigarette lighter; and you can' always plug in the AC cord in your favorite room, to enjoy your far vorite program instantly. SONY* R ! QJU) ( O L/- eid 1NC. ■ ELECTRONICS BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE PONTIAC 1 75% Fortrel/Polyester, 25% cotton. Penn-Prest for that no-iron feature. Soil Release aids in removal of most stains. Regular and slims. Originally 499 to 5.99 2 <- *7 Like It... Charge Iti END of '69 SALE Terrific Values for the ENTIRE FAMILY I n AH 1 It \ Departments , DECEMBER 30, Tax-Reform Bill Signed by Nixon COOL AND CONTENTED — Those who say winter weath- contented snoozer in Chicago’s Brookfield Zoo lovingly hugs er is fine — for polar bears — are hereby vindicated. This a chunk of ice. Cool, baby, cool. 'V»v 3 Mystery Gunboats a Day Away From Port Froyn Our News Wires t HAIFA, Israel — A heavy overcast shrouded the eastern Mediterranean today as the five mystery, gunboats from France advanced through windwhipped seas toward Israel’s chief port. | ★ Vi; }i Israeli maritime experts said file boats were still at least a full day put of Haifa. One source said they were probably delayed by rough weather and slower escorts from the Israeli Navy. * ★ * The low clouds and high winds were expected to hamper any attempt by Egyptian planes to intercept the boats. They slipped out of Cherbourg about 3 a.m. Christmas Day in defiance of the French embargo on arms for Israel. Hundreds gathered on Mt. Carmel abandoned their lookout as word flashed through the city that the boats now were expected tomorrow. SIGHTED BY TRAWLER An Italian trawler reported sighting the ships early yesterday east of Sicily escorted by “numerous other Israeli ships.” Greek police on the island of Crete said the convoy passed north of the island shortly after midnight. ■ |f|j a * There was no evidence of any effort to intercept the gunboats, although Arab newspapers called on the French Navy to do so. Arab world' capitals withheld condemnation of the incident pending an explanation from France. Representatives of 14 Arab nations called a meeting in Paris today to discuss the matter, a threat to what had been improving relations with file French. ; . , ★ • ir ★ A U.S. spokesman in Washington denied an Italian Communist report that the U.S. 6th Fleet and perhaps units from other of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization countries were providing cover for the gunboats. From Our News Wires WASHINGTON - President Nixon signed into law today a tax-relief bill for 63 million Americahs, including a 15 per cent boost in Social Security benefits and loophole-closing refoims. But he warned that he will “take the action I consider necessary to present a balanced budget for the next fiscal year.” Still awaiting Nixon’s signature was a landmark bill on coal mine safety. ♦ ★ ' if -' , -**> Nixon's tax statement indicated the budget will be tight on expenditures, but was silent as to whether he will also recommend tax increases to make up for the revenue losses occasioned by the bill. The tax package is the biggest in modem history. The tax relief provisions start becom- taxpaying families from the rolls by 1973, and reduce taXes to another 55.5 million taxpaying families by that year. Early this afternoon, the President and Mrs. Nixon were to fly to California to spend New Year’s at the San Clemente White House. it it ■' ,iW , Nixon probably will wait until his State of the Union Message to Congress Jan. 22 to spell out what he has in mind in the way of new proposals. It is .likely, however, to include a “value added” tax, in which a tax is added on at each stage of the manufacturing process — a sort of national sales tax. ★ ★ ★ Word that Nixon would sign the mine-safety bill came yesterday as a delegation of miners’ widows was visiting the White House. Snowmobile Crack Housing-Code Suit Hearing Set Legal action was started yesterday in Oakland County Circuit Court to force the Pontiac City Commission to. schedule a referendum on the .city’s new housing code. The complainants, Arthur Smith, 369 Seward, and Harry F. Evans, 253 Clifford, are asking that the code be suspended until the ordinance is decided by voters at a general or special election. Judge William R. Beasley set Jan. 7 to hear arguments why the request should not be granted. The suit follows the Dec. 16 rejection by the commission of petitions asking for the election. The commission refused to accept the petitions on file opinion of City Attorney Shirwin Bimkrant. Smith and Evans were among those who spearheaded the petition drive. They contend the code could present financial hardships to elderly homeowners. The petitions, which contained more than the number of signatures required, were filed Nov. 28, the day after Thanksgiving. The holiday, according to Birnkrant, marked the 30 day deadline for submitting the petitions. He also contended the petitions were not properly signed. Alan Greenberg, attorney for the complainants, said state law provides that anything falling due on a legal holiday carries over to the next business day. tag effective in 1970—but the relief provisions don’t apply to salaries earned in 1969. The full effect won’t be felt until 1973 when the last provisions become effective. SOCIAL SECURITY INCREASE AGNEW IN MANILA - Vice President Spiro T. Agnew (right of center) follows his wife as they arrived today in Manila at Luneta Park to attend the inauguration of Ferdi- AP Wirephoto nand Marcos as President of the Philippines. (Story, page A-2). Arms-Cost Excesses Put at Almost 50% WASHINGTON HP) — The cost of major weapons systems is running nearly 50 per cent ahead of original estimates and no central agency is keeping track of all arms development information, a congressional study team has been told by Assistant Comptroller Gen. Robert P. Keller. Chance of Snow Seen for Tonight The weatherman says there’s a chance of some snow this evening or tonight, but he doesn’t predict how much. Temperatures in the low 30s today are expected to drop to 23. to 28 tonight, and rise to a high of 27 to 32 tomorrow. ★ * * There’s a chance of some light snow early tomorrow. Probabilities of precipitation in per cent are 40 today, 50 tonight and 30 tomorrow, it it it Twenty-nine was the low temperature in downtown Pontiac before 8 a.m. By 12:30 p.m. the thermometer recorded 33. The cost overrun investigation- by a joint House-Senate subcommittee chaired by Sen. William Proxmire, D-Wis., focused today on shipbuilding and the Navy’s estimate that the bill could be up to $1.2 billion higher than originally figured. * * ★ ’ Navy officials Say a major problem comes from claims being filed by shipbuilders against the government for changes ordered by the Navy on 125 ships during the past 13 years. Keller told file subcommittee yesterday that the estimated cost of 38 major weapons systems is $62.9 billion, although initial estimates placed the cost at $42 billion. ‘SHOCKING FINDING’ Proxmire called the lack of central cost information a “shocking finding” and said overruns cannot be controlled if one official or agency is .not keeping. - track of all weapons development. The chairman also said an increase In estimates for the Navy’s Deep Submerging Rescue Vehicle from $36 million for 12 to $463 million for six is fantastic. it it if He said the Navy should only need one or two. There have only been two deep-sea submarine emergencies in 40 years, he said. A15 per cent across-the-board increase in social security benefits for 25 million persons becomes effective Jan. 1. However, bigger checks won’t show up until checks are mailed next April. In 1970, the $600 personal exemption for each taxpayer and dependent goes to $625. The exemption rises to $700 on Jan. 1, 1972, and $750 on Jan. 1,1973. ★ it , it The higher exemption, a higher minimum standard deduction and a higher maximum standard deduction are designed to remove 7.6 million poorer By ED BLUNDEN Snowmobiles are becoming a major headache in Oakland County, and a crackdown is imminent, according to Lt. Donald Kratt, of the Oakland County Sheriff’s Department. Many showmobilers are operating With complete disregard for laws, regulations, or even common sense, he said. it it " W : Hundreds of complaints have been reported to the sheriff’s department since the first snow cover. Kratt said the complaints are of snowmobiles being run over private property, destroying trees, shrubs, and anything else in their path. “Apparently many snowmobile drivers feei anything that’s covered with snow is fair game,” he said. He vowed a crackdown. RESTRICTIONS ON USE Actually, use of snowmobiles is quite restrictive in state laws. The vehicles are not permitted on roads, for instance. And a snowmobile has ho more right on anyone’s property than a car has. The use of private lakes is just as protected against snowmobiles as it is against boats, Kratt pointed out. Owners of the vehicles are taking their machines so much for granted that few have even bothered to register them as required, Kratt said. A snowmobile license can be granted at any Department of State office for $5, and is required if the vehicle leaves the property of the owner. Drivers are subject to a large variety of misdemeanor charges for offenses that include drunk or drugged driving, speeding, making too much noise or smoke, operating on a highway, driving at night without proper lighting or driving through any area designated as a forestry, < The State act governing snowmobiles also provides that “any community may pass an ordinance -regulating the operating of snowmobiles.” POOR USE INVITES'SANto Thus, just as bad practices by hunters _ have moved many Oakland County before it gets Tut Communities to ban the sport, poor use of snowmobiles could result in banning theta from many areas, if the annoyance becomes too great, Kratt said. Many snowmobilers are also neglecting their own safety, he said. ★ * ★ Several serious injuries haye been reported in recent weeks. One man Went into a barbed wire fence and his face was so badly shredded, he faces years of plastic surgery, ★ ★ n A girl fell off and then was run over by the vehicle, suffering a deep .facial scar. Last weekend a motor blew up and a Detroit man sustained an eye inji ★ ★ it Kratt said, “This is the first big year of the snowmobile and too many drivers are behaving with reckless abandon, ignoring the rights of others and dangertag themselves. All the departments in the county are '70 Economic Outlook for Area Is Uncertain By DIANNE DUROCHER An aura of uncertainty regarding the new year appears to be settling over the Potttiac area economy as 1969 draws to a dose. A variety of factors — the high cost of living, tight money, high interest rates and a drop in industrial production — offer mounting evidence that government anti-inflationary efforts are beginning to be felt. 4 it it it “It’s hard to say exactly why, but everybody feels like they’ve Just got to scale back,” said Earl Kreps, manager of file Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce. Pontiac area residents are curtailing purchases of durable goods, growing more conscious df saving money and looking toward next year’s auto contract negotiations, Kreps said. STARTED LEVELING IN JUNE Consumer upending started to level off in the area around June, Kreps continued. Residents will probably continue spending moderately, with a reluctance for credit buying until contracts are set-J tied, hepredicted. Retailing in the Pontiac area for 1969 registered a slight increase over 1968, according to a check of area businesses. Gross sales volume of Pontiac Mall stores showed an over-all increase of approximately 12 per cent during 1969 compared with a 24 per cent rate of increase in 1968, said Mrs. Ruth McCarthy, mall resident manager. ★ it * She continued, “Soft line (clothes and smaller items) items are selling very well, but big ticket (appliances, furniture etc.) items are not moving as well as in past years.” For 1970 Mrs. McCarthy anticipated that sales will continue to rise on about the same level as this year showing a 10 to 12 per cent increase. She added that a 1970 forecast for the Pontiac Mall also includes plans for enlarging the center ‘‘to various ways,” but declined to elaborate further. * * • * / Jack Simon, manager of Simms Brothers Inc., in downtown Pontiac said his store’s sales volume for 1969 was up over 1968. Simon is also presi- dent of the downtown Pontiac Business Association. He added however that operational expenses and general overhead have risen considerably, making it difficult to maintain profit margins. FIERCE COMPETITION “Freight rates have gone up, newspaper advertising rates and salaries have increased and manufacturers have ' prices,” Simon explained. Auto Industry Ending '69 in Sales Slump The DCS. auto industry is closing (Hit ,1969 with slumping sales and unwieldly inventories. * ' ■ V 'V Retail new-car sales are expected to be less than one per cent below the record set .last year — but that’s 70,000 units. Sales for 1969, including imports, are expected to total 9.54 million units, as compared to 9,611,000 units to 1968. Truck sales for 1969 ar^,expected to total about 1,925,000 units as compared with 1,807,000 units in 1968, an increase of 6.6 per cent. / A bright note for 1969 came when GMC Truck and Coach Division was reported,, a strong third in the heavy truck field. INFLATION KEY inflation appears as the key to 1970 auto sales. it * it “Looking.to. 1970, the prospects for further economic expansion may be importantly influenced by the government’s efforts to meet the challenge of inflation,” James M. Roche, chairman of General Motors, said to a year-end report. > . ; /.. He added, “There is reason to be hopeful that current economic trends may foreshadow a reduction in inflationary pressures, establishing a firmer foundation for growth to 1970 mid later years. Our expectations for 1970 assume that this objective will be realized.” The GM executive predicted car sales in 1970 of 9.2 to 9.5 million units, assuming that employment and income continue to rise during the year. (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 4) He added that many downtown stores are receiving fierce competition from shopping centers in the outlying areas. it it it John Harrington, manager of Sears and Roebuck to downtown Pontiac, said that the store’s sales volume this year was just about parallel with 1968. “Soft line sales are up, but people don’t seem to be buying deluxe fringe items,” Harrington said. He added, “People are buying smaller items and paying cash and they are not buying anything they don’t need.’’ SHYING AWAY He speculated that people are shying away from long-term purchasing because of the current “uncertain employment situation to Pontiac.” Regarding, 1970, Harrington said that he expects sales to remain at their cur- \ rent level for the next several months and then to begin to rise. Rebecca Karnehm, promotion manager of the Miracle Mile Shopping Center, Bloomfield Township, said the colter experienced a definite increase to traffic to 1969. She attributed this, to7 part, to the opening of new stores .and the widening of Telegraph to front Of the center. (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 1) In Today's Press New England ' More storms expected late today — PAGE A-8. Nixon vs. Congress Collision looms on health-education appropriation — PAGE A-10. Good News Some cheerful events occurred behind those gloomy 1969 headlines — PAGE A-5. Area News -........... ...A-3 Astrology ...................B-8 Bridge ..........V.......W Crossword Fnzzle ........ .$-15 Comics' —).:..............B-8 Editorials ................. A-6 Markets .........v... ....B-7 Obituaries ..................B-8 Sports .............. B-L B-2 Theaters ....................B-9 TV and Radio Programs . B-1S Wilson, Earl ................B-4 Women’s Pages . . A-13—A45 \j * j£ A A—2 ainu iW# THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 80, 1269 Atmosphere of Uncertainty on Ared Economic Future (Continued From Page One) Sales volume figures for 1969 indicate about a 15 per cent increasp over 1968 figures, Miss Karnehm said.) * ‘BUSIEST SEASON’ 1 “This has been the busiest Christmas season that the center has experienced,” she said, adding that center merchants anticipate a good year in 1970. Pontiac area banking and savings and loan executives, currently experiencing a profit squeeze, are not optimistic about the new year. high interest rates with a shortage of money to the degree we are currently eitoeriMdtag — In banking' history. “As an |industry banks dimply have no money available to lend,” he said. i V * “There was little or no growth in de* mand deposits (checking accounts) and a modest growth in time savings (savings deposits),” Eierman added. “Who knows what the future has in store,” Eierman continued, “economists predict that there will be no relief of tile tight money situation at lei mid-1970.” Money is tight and interest rates are up largely due to inflation and partly due to federal monetary controls, explained Edward Barker, president of Pontiac State Bank. Warren H. Eierman, president of Community National Bank said, “As far back as 1966 it has been increasingly difficult for banks to find available monies for loans because their supply of funds — bank deposits — have simply not been able to match the record demand for loans.” some hope DEMAND AT ALL-TIME HIGH The demand for all types of loans is at an all-time high, he said, adding, “There has never been a similar situation—of News Briefs WASHINGTON (AP) - Federally required information on automobile safety performance will be available starting Thursday in dealers’ showrooms, but it may disappoint the comparison shopper. The Transportation Department’s National Highway Safety Bureau says “considerable differences exist in the formats used and in the groupings of models, body styles and equipment which each manufacturer has chosen to provide.” Initially, there was some problem regarding unclear wording of the new law “but it is now our understanding, as advised by counsel, that current rates will hold when the ceiling goes back on after next year,” Eierman concluded. James Clarkson, president of First Federal Savings and Loan of Oakland, said, “Lifting the ceiling on residential mortgage interest was intended tp help lenders, but because of the law’s unclear wording, it has actually hurt.” DROP EXPECTED Black General for AF WASHINGTON (AP) - Cal . D a n i e I James Jr. probably will be the only Negro general in the Air Force by the time his promotion passes through the Senate confirmation process. President Nixon said yesterday he is nominating James, 49, a native of Pensacola, Fla., to become an Air Force brigadier general. Lt. Gen. Benjamin 0. Davis Jr., the only Negro general in the Air Force, plans to retire Feb. 1. He said that in 1967 First Federal of Oakland made loans in excess of $20 mtilion; in 1968, $13,843,000 and in 1969 through the change in the usuary law in August, $17.5 million. “This is going to drop off tremendously in 1970,” Clarkston said, “We are not issuing very many mortgage commitments because of the new usuary law and the lack of sufficient cash flows running in.” “We are still continuing to loan, but for smaller amounts,” he concluded. Realtors have been feeling the credit crunch more in recent months, commented Claude C. McGruder, 1969 president of the Pontiac area Board of Realtors. Viet Officer Transferred DA NANG, Vietnam UR — The South Vietnamese officer in charge of Quang Ngai province at the time of the alleged My Lai massacre is being transferred to another province, informed sources said today. They said the transfer of Col. Ton That Khein is in no way related to the alleged massacre of unarmed civilians by American troops during an operation in My Lai hamlet on March 16,1968. ‘CAN’T PURCHASE’ “The general public has as much money now as they ever did,” McGruder said, “But because home mortgages are at a premium people can’t purchase or build new homes.” Some observers are still confident of a healthy 1970, however. Ship Fire Under Control DURBAN, South Africa (0 — A fire on board the British supertanker Mactra has been brought under control and the ship is on an even keel, the ship reported today. A spokesman for the owners said the 208,560-ton ship was “quite safe.” Three tugs from Durban and Cape Town were on their way to aid the Mactra, but none was expected to reach her before late tomorrow. She was reported 180 miles off the east coast of Africa in the Mozambique Channel last night. Panel to Monitor Talks WASHINGTON (AP) -U.S. disarmament negotiations with the Soviet Union will be monitored by seven member of the Senate Armed Services Committee. Sen. Henry M. Jackson, D-Wash., will head the new panel that also includes Sens. John Stennis, D-Miss.; Harry F. Byrd Jr., P-Va.; Daniel K. Inouye, D-Hawaii; Margaret Chase Smith, R-Maine; John G. Tower, R-Tex.; and Edward W. Brooke, R-Mass. The Weather ToMy In Pontiac Lowaat temperature preceding 8 a At.t a.rn.: Wind Velocity 8 m.p.h. Direction: Northeast \ \ Sun lets Tuesday at 5:10, p.tn. Sun (fin Wednesday at 8:~* - ~ -s Wednesday at r _____ture . nperature . Weatheri Pertly sum ,, Lowest tempera X Mean temper ah Weather! Par ts Tuesday at 12:02 a Monday's Temperatures ' 31 28 Bismarck 1! . .2 Cincinnati I 25 Denver 1 30 Duluth A Lk. 28 14 Los Angeles , 31 27 Miami Beech 34 28 Milwaukee S. Ste. Marie 24 20 TangM owes! Temp* it in »» Yeeri 31 11 S. Francisco 3 Miiama 48 41 feattl# . 4 Boston 39 88 Tucson ‘ Buffalo 31 38 Washington i Waterford Firemen's Pact The Waterford Township Board last night approved a one-year contract with the Waterford Township Professional Fire Fighters calling for a $1,160 salary increase during 1970. A $400 Increase will be awarded Jan. 1 while a/$950 Increase will be awarded July!. Guards Ring Spiro at Marcos Inaugural This will raise the salary of a driver-engineer who has worked on the force two years from the present $9,100 to $10,250 after July 1, 1070. A lieutenant’s salary will rise from $9,870 to $11,020 after July 1. A captain who receives $10,702 today will be paid $11,852 after July 1. MANILA (UPI) - Vice President Spiro T. Agnew attended President Ferdinand E. Marcos’ inauguration'' under heavy Secret Service guard today and later dismissed demonstrations against his Philippines visit as inconsequential. In referring to the new usury law and the effects of erasing the state’s 7 per cent ceiling on home mortgage loans, Eierman said, “No matter what rate you are allowed to charge, if you have no money to lend then you’re in trouble.” By taking off the ceiling on home mortgage loans, there is some hope that money will become more available, but it may take longer than a year for rates to level off, Eierman said. Currently the rate is around 8% per cent, he added. ‘INCREASE COMPARABLE’ “This increase Is comparable to other areas,” Township Supervisor Elmer Johnson said. The fire fighters were awarded $816 in rasies this year — $416 on Jan. 1 and $500 on July 1. Hie new contract will mean an across-the-board increase of $2,066 over 1969 and 1970. In an impromptu news conference at the Manila Intercontinental Hotel following the ceremony, Agnew said the anti-American deomonstration outside the U.S. Embassy last night “didn’t really amount to very much.” The-vice president said he was sure the protest was hot representative of the feelings of the Philippine people. strong course to preserve a free-enterprise system,” he said. TACTIC OF LIFE’ “I think well just have to get used .to that as a tactic of modern life.” Agnew met for 30 minutes this afternoon with Prime Minister Chung 11 Kown of South Korea and later visited a U.S. military cemetery In Makari Town. Tonight he and Mrs. Agnew attended a state dinner hosted by President and Mrs. Marcos at the presidential palace. Birmingham PoliceChief Says Holidays Hike Mishaps BIRMINGHAM —- The traditional holiday pattern of parties, drinking and winter weather is already showing signs of pushing the local accident curve upward, Police Chief Darryl Bruestle warned residents today. Chief Bruestle said his department is working to hold down liollday traffic problems. “I think this activity ... is going to continue whenever a nation is taking a Utica Schools Study of Language Arts Set Auto Sales Sag at Year's End UTICA — An expanded systemwide committee will conduct an in-depth evaluation of the language arts program in the Utica Community Schools beginning next month. The 33-member group includes the existing elementary language arts committee, plus secondary department chairmen and elementary and secondary principals. The K-12 study is expected to take at least one year. Short- and long-range goals and deadlines will be established at the initial meeting in January. (Continued From Page One) Auto sales, after rising well above the 1968 level in September and early October as the result of the earlier introduction of new models, have slumped ip November and December, according to Ward's Automotive Reports, the industry statistical service. Surveys of consumer buying intentions show weakening interest in new car purchases, and dealers are reportedly holding record stocks of unsold cars. In his 20-minute inaugural address, Marcos, 52; called for a united Asia and peaceful coexistence with all powers, including Communist China. The tightest security precautions in the nation’s history prevented any repetition of last night’s incident, in which anti-American demonstrators threw a gunpowder-filled bottle at Agnew’s limousine outside the U.S. Embassy. Agnew is on the first official stop of his 23-day, 10-nation Asian goodwill tour. “If you think you can drink freely at parties and then slide behind the wheel of your car hoping you can get away with it this time remember this fair warning: Our department will be out with all the manpower we can muster to protect you — and others — from your owq dangerous thinking.” An Alcohol Education Center to encourage the sensible use of liquor by motorists has been established temporarily at the Birmingham Automobile Club of Michigan Office. The center will operate through New Year’s Day. U.S. Hands N.Viets Prisoner-List Plea Ethiopia Embassy Hit MOSCOW ® - Sixty Ethiopian students stormed their embassy taf Moscow today, ripping out phones, tearing up files, marking swastikas on the wall and chanting slogans against Emperor Haile Selaisse. They wore protesting the death in Addis Ababa of Kilahun Gizaw, a 29-year-old student leader shot Sunday by an unknown gunman. A leader of the demonstration accused the Ethiopian government of killing Gizaw and said similar protests would be staged at other . Decisions are expected to adjust. January and first-quarter output, Wgrd’s reports, adding that January car output, which will include week-long shutdowns Jan. 12-19 at some Chrysler Corp. plants plus adjustments by GM and Ford, may well dip below 850,000 units when all scheduling action is taken. The industry’s original output was projected at 720,000 units. ^ Thousands of auto workers — including 12,500 in Pontiac — were laid off extra days during tine Christinas holidays this year. Hie move, designed to reduce the national inventory of unsold new cars affected some 12,500 of GM’s 36,000 employes in Pontiac. PARIS (AP) — Hie United States handed North Vietnam a list today of U.S. military personnel missing in Southeast Asia and asked it to identify those it is holding prisoner. Ambassador Philip Habib, acting V.S. delegation chief at the Vietnam peace talks, also called on Hanoi to allow neutral inspection of its prisoner of war camps and then to negotiate exchange of prisoners. * * t 3 The list of the missing was delivered to Col. Ha Van LaU, Hanoi’s No. 2 delegate, by Habib. Habib said the North Vietnamese apparently want to use prisoners as “pawns in bargaining for an over-all settlement of the war.” He said Hanoi’s refusal to negotiate seriously in Paris delayed an over-all settlement and prolonged “agonizing doubt about the lives, and welfare” of U.S. soldiers missing or known to have been taken prisoner. The center display which may also be seen in package liquor stores and bars, includes a poster with practical tips for persons who drink and drive along with a chart showing how many drinks one can consume before driving ability is, affected. Bottle sleeves with an alcoholic chart and a plea for moderation as the best policy are available at all AAA offices. The program places responsibility for motorists who drink and drive on the host serving the alcohol. The display suggests that motorists eat food such as mashed potatoes or beans (which act like a sponge) before drinking, and stop nil drinking about an hour before the party ends. Registration for preschool story hours at Baldwin Library begins Friday. All 3-5 years olds not In nursery school or kindergarten are eligible for the winter series beginning Jan. 6 or the spring series beginning March 3. Registration must he made in person for the seven-week program. “The current tight money situation is going to hurt everybody a little, but the economy is going to get healthy,” said Robbin R. Hough, an Oakland University professor of economics. He explained, “In an inflationary period, such as we are now experiencing, people would like to spend, but when they realize that their paycheck isn’t buying what it should or did, then they back off from spending. HUDSON’S BIG SALE LINGERIE AT SEMI-ANNUAL SAVINGS DF ‘DEEP SKEPTICISM’ “Today we are dealing with a deeply omhpdfted skepticism about the future value of the dollar, Hough said, addding that this skepticism about the price level can be partly attributed to the fact that inflation was allowed to run for so long — almost four years. This long-sustained inflation is now beginning to respond to federal monetary controls and as a result there is a possibility that unemployment will rise, Hough said. UNDERFASHIONS He explained, the purpose of monetary restraint is to slow the economy and thereby ultimately to halt inflation by decreasing the rate of growth of money supply. As the money supply stops growing, while incomes and prices continue to rise, people find themselves holding smaller cash balances than they would like and ultimately respond to this situation by cutting down on their purchases of real assets — especially autos and durable goods, he said. Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Today, cloudy, chance of some snow this afternoon or evening. High 28 to 33. Tonight chance of light snow., Low 23 to 28. Wednesday cloudy. Chance of some light sqow early in the day. High 27 to 32 Thursday outlook: partly cloudy. A little colder. Winds northeasterly 8 to 15 miles per hour Increasing to 10 to 20 miles tonight. Probabilities of precipitation are 40 per cent today, 50 per cent tonight, 30 per cent Wednesday. HOLLYWOOD VASSARETTE E ASY-C ARE NYLON TRICOT TO MATCH UP AT SAVINGS: 1.69*4.99 Slip: Short 32-38, Average 34-40, Sale 3.99 Average 42-44...........*......Sale 4.99 Brief: sizes 4 to 7, Sale 1.69; 8-9, 1.99 Not shown: Matching petticoat. Short S,M,L, Average M-L Sale 2.99 Average XL Sale 3.49 Make your selections in white, blue or yellow. Hudson's Daytime Lingerie, Pontiac, 1st. H XT DSON’S Hudson's Pontiac open till 9:00 p.m. Tuesday; till 5:30 p.m. Wed.; and closed New, Year's Day * mfmum <« West Hurto Street JJWAwm nnoimio Publlihar 1914-1936 RESS Pontiac, Michigan 48056 TUESbAY, DECEMBER 30, 1969 HOWARD H, FITZGERALD II Publisher JOHN A. RILEY §J HARRY J. MID RICHARD M. SAUNDERS Floyd Miller The community is saddened by the passing of Floyd Miller, a Pontiac resident for nearly half a century. A native of Michi-gan, Mr. Miller fol*| lowed a mercantile I career before identi-1 tying himself with! the Credit Bureau of 1 Flint. He subse-3 quently moved to I Pontiac and estab-| lished the Pontiac 1 Credit Bureau, Inc., 1 which he headed un-, til the time of his death at 81. ★ ★ ★ Mr. Miller was widely recog* nized in the credit-rating field, and during his long connection with it developed a successful system of advanced forms that found national acceptance. Although active in a wide range of civic and social activities, Mr. Miller’s principal interest was the conduct of his business enterprises, leaving him little time for hobbies or recreational pursuits. He leaves an enviable record of personal achievement and service to the business community. Here’s one for Hie Swords-into-Plowshares Department: A onetime launching .pad for a nuclear armed missile hear Topeka is n6ft the site of a new high school, reports the National Education Association. Missile Complex No. 9, closed in 1964, was near the center of Kansas Unified School District No. 335, which was seeking a site for a school to replace: four substandard high schools. ★ • For $1, the school district bought the land on which "the missile base stood, an 18,060-square-foot underground complex, two water wells, two The IRS is currently spending a mere 40 cents for every $100 it collects in taxes, reports Commerce Clearing House. The figure is arrived at by computing the total expenses of the service, including the salaries of some 64,500 employes, against the total of Federal taxes paid by Americans. In fiscal 1969, the latter was a record $187.9 billion. JJ : te „ ■■ H| *, •. The current cost of 40 cents compares with 32 cents per $100 In 1944, the lowest ever recorded, and the all-time high of 35.87 in 1871 under an earlier income tax law that was later declared unconstitutional. Voice of the People: ----—---T---(. " ..... ‘ Television Viewer's Day Full of No-No Warnings I’m beginning to think I should remain in bed day in and day out. When I get up, I, turn on my colored television and m^ wife pours me a glass of juice. A warning on television immediately tells me of cyclamates that may cause cancer. If I light a cigarette; TV says “no, no, there’s danger of em- , phy^ema ancf lung can,cer.” When my Wife decides to wash some clothes, she’s warned that enzymes may infect her lungs. ★ ★ ★ Water is polluted, fish are full of D.D.T., the air is polluted. I don’t think qll the violence on “Gunsmoke” ever scared anyone as much as all these warnings on television. I’d better turn off my colored television because my health could be injured by radioactivity, and I can’t see it sitting very far away. Guess I’ll settle for a beer because television doesn’t say “no, no,” that it might dam* age my health. MR. NO-NO Everyone's Problem Missile Site Now School Site 30,000-gallon tanks, a sewer system and an airstrip. Wr‘ ★. The district voted $685,000 to refurbish the underground complex to house: general business, math and science classrooms, teacher offices and heating and air-conditioning equipment and to build the balance of the school above ground. (Locally, the Auburn Heights campus of Oakland Community College was developed on a former Nike base.) It added up to a fine, and unique, new school for half what it would have cost to build it from soratch. m ■ ★ ' All our armaments should find such happy ultimate uses. Ralph de Toledano Arab Summit Roils the Mideast Collection Cost Consistent When the present income tax began in 1913, the IRS spent $1.59 for every $100 in collected. This cost dropped to 33 cents in 1918 due to an almost five-fold boost in receipts durjng World War I. The more taxes and more taxpayers always means more tax litigation. In fiscal 1968, 9,602 new tax cases were filed. This compares with 5,811 in 1958. About 10,300 tax suits are anticipated in i960 and 10,700 in 1970, when an estimated 10 million more Americans will file returns. But here, too, the IRS has an impressive batting average — •750 to be exact. In 1968, the Government won three of every four tax disputes taken, to court. WASHINGTON—The Rabat Arab summit meeting has come and gone, making headlines and muddying the waters of international policy. A group of Arab red-hots made the noise and got the major play, pumping up steam for the kind of „ “holy w ar” De TOLEDANO which could only lead to further crisis in die Middle East Take, for example, the keynote speech at tee unsuccessful RAbat meeting. “We have followed the road to peace until we have exhausted all our means and we have tried to reach a just settlement which does not affect our dignity and honor and would not matte us surrender any of our principles or our land.” * * * Those are .beautiful sentiments, but there is not a word of truth in them. How has Egypt followed the road to peace? How have Jordan and Iraq and Syria tried to reach a just settlement? LAUNCHING RAIDS The Arab countries agreed to a cease-fire after the June 1967 war. But their voices had not ceased reverberating in the councils of the world before they began to violate that cease-fire by launching raids on Israel and by arming guerrilla groups to prey on tee Israelis. After the war, the Israelis pointed out that they had withdrawn their forces in 1956, on the promise that tee Arabs would sit down at the negotiating table. But thi$ promise was forgotten and the Arab states began preparing for a second war with Israel — a war which, to their chagrin, teey lost. arae jr The Israelis said teey would not discuSs peace terms with third parties, which was futile, hut would settle their differences with the Arabs • only by direct negotiations. Of course, neither President Ray Cromley S. Viet Coalition Fears Well Grounded WASHINGTON (NEA)-The other day this reporter talked for three hours with a man named Vu Hong Khanh. In. 1946, Khanh was vice chairman of the Vietnam Supreme Mili-tary Council in a coalition gov ernment with Ho Chi Mfnh*s Coin-munists. i In that same year, on be-_______________ half of tee CROMLEY new Vietnamese government, Ho and Khanh signed an agreement by which France recognized/Vietnam as a, free and sovereign country within the French Union. ★ * * ’ i Khanh therefore should be somewhat of an expert on what Hanoi means by “coalition.” An understanding of this . meaning is important at a time when many Americans argue for a preelection coalition as the logical solution for Vietnam. EASY TO UNDERSTAND After talking with Khanh it is not difficult to understand why President xhieu disagrees. H e remembers 1946. In the 1946 coalition Ho was head of state. Giap (victor at Dien Bien Phu and currently one of the five most powerful men in Hanoi) was head of. tee Supreme Military Council. Major cabinet posts were divided among tee parties. 2nd 'dm rat. at Pontiac, Mich Mombor off ABC. In the cabinet ministers in the new government, Ho and hi# Communist associates w^ere quite generous (or so it seemed). The nationalist party to which Khanh belonged had three cabinet posts — foreign affairs, social welfare, national economy — the vice chairmanship pf tile Supreme Military Council (Khanh) and a third of the National Assembly. DIDN’T WORK OUT But things didn’t work out. Ho made certain the working head of the police (In Interior) was a Communist believer. Ho issued direct orders to this man. The secretary of state for the Interior was ignored. Ho’s man Giap issued secret orders to tee army and the military secret police, ignoring the Supreme Military Council, the National Assembly, the secretary of state for defense and tee non-Communist members of tee cabinet. ★ * ★ Ho had his own secret pplice. He armed groups of Communist party security The Communists kept their own tax system. Through control of virtually all taxes, teey gathered the funds they needed for party organizational work and terrorist’ operations. ALL-OUT ATTACK Once the Communists had eliminated enough opposition leaders and secured sufficient arms, they opened an all-out miUtary-terrorist attack on t h e no n-Co mm u n i s t leadership. To clinch victory, Ho made a deal with the French, allowing tee French armies bapk in]to the country. The French , forces attacked the non-Communist nationalists on the frontier; the Communists attacked from within. Between the hammer and anvil, tee nationalists were defeated. ★ ★ * ' This is enough of KhaPh’s story on, what happened in Vietnam two decades ago to explain South Vietnam’s fears on coalition. Bob Considine Old Reporter a Failure: His Work Isn’t Decadent NEW YORK—People . . . Places The young man with the long hairdo from the big New York and Hollywood talent agency had been ordered by someone higher up in his organization, pos- _______ sibly even told, to drop by the old reporter’s apartment to look over some stories tee bum had written in the past. The stories were a mass of experiences. One concerned the agony of Gen. Jonathan M. Wainwright’s imprisonment during World War II. ★ * , * * 1,1 Another had to dp with the conscience of a Brinks robber whose testimony sent half a dozen fellow thieves to prison for life (tiro of whom were released this past week). Still another had to do with a wildly wonderful and often eccentric lady newspaper publisher named Cissy Patterson. There were some odds and ends for tee young man to look over: the life and sad death of tee greatest woman athlete who ever lived, Babe Didrikson; tee little-known but intensely influential “think tanks” teat the Pentagon and other top government agencies depend upon; the story of an astronaut who defected to the Soviet Union, and a short story about the death of a great metropolitan newspaper. ‘I’M SURPRISED’ “No good for us,” the young man declared, after a swift glahce. Then he added, sincerely, “You know, I’m surprised. You’re supposed to to a good reporter. Why haven’t you written anything that people are really interested in? “The only people who go to movies today are under 30. They want sex, sadism, lesbianism, sodomy, drug addiction. They don’t want sweetness and light. They want to be ugly, decadent, diseased. You must be some kind of a nut to think we’d be interested in your stuff.” - • v ' , . \ " • #, V' W ' ’ ■ ' - ' \ , The old reporter was so angry he reached for the nearest object and bro^e it over tee young man’s head. Unfortunately* it was my Guy Lombardo album. . The most mystifying reason given by tee Air Force for ordering what might eventually be $6 billion Worth of new McDonnell-Douglas jet fighters is that in the Korean war our pilots had a 12-to-l mastery over tee Russian-built fighters, but in the war in Vietnam that figure has beert reduced to two-and-a-half to one. When did we shoot down those two-and-a-half Migs? (King Features) Nasser nor King Hussein would agree to this kind of negotiation. For the fact is that the Arabs do not want a peaceful settlement of* their dispute with Israel. NO LEG TO STAND ON Jordan, it should be remembered, does not have a leg to stand on in its demands for the West Bank or for Jerusalem. This was territory which never belonged to the Jordanians and was theirs only because teey had wrested it from Israel by force of arms in the~1948 war. Only by maintaining a perpetual state of crisis can tee rulers of the Arab world survive. ' ★ . ★ * Only by painting the United States, which has compromised far more than it should have in attempting to bring the war to an end, as an “imperialist” and murderous country can fhgjujiold their people in line. The propaganda of the disrupted Rabat meeting was designed to fool the world even as it fools tee poor and underprivileged of Egypt, Syria, Jordan, Iraq and Sudan. If it were open to careful analysis, it might even be pointed out that Sudan has been slaughtering black Africans by the thousands, and that it still condones the slave trade — despite the meager efforts of the United Nations to end it. (King fmi Expresses Concern for Babies'1 Bare Hands I see many tobies being carried around with tore hands on these cold days. Let’s sew up some mittens and do it now. D. S. Commends Kettering’s Basketball Teams 1 I commend the Waterford-Kettering basketball teams for the interesting and thrilling games in this very young season. I know the record reads 0-4, but it could have just as easily been 4-0. Don’t be discouraged. w ★ ★ ★ I know officiating is a hard job, but if an official is bad, he still stays on. Even in tee major leagues, the toll player has to produce, but the umpire stays. I think there should be some commissioner or someone to view these games once in awhile. I also think there should be a uniform price for all high school games. A KETTERING FAN Reader Tells Need to Study Word of God One can be ever so. sincere in what he believes and still be wrong. Unless our faith is based on the Word of God, we have no foundation teat will hold and save us eternally. This is why we need to read and study the Word of God. Accepting tee Word by faith and obeying it from the heart brings about a change of direction! in your life. < , YOUR NEIGHBOR (Editor’s Note: All letters to the Voice of the People must be signed and an address given. In some instances a pen name may be used in the paper.) Daily Almanac By United Press International Today is Tuesday, Dec. 30, the 364th day of 1969 with one to follow. The moon is full. The morning stars are Venus and Jupiter . The evening stars are Mercury, Mars and Saturn. On this day in history: In 1853, the United States bought 45,000 square miles of land south of the GUa River from Mexico for $10 million. It is now the southern area of Arizona and New Mexico. In 1903, fire swept the Iroquois Theatre in Chicago killing 588 persons. In 1947, King Michael of Rumania abdicated, claiming he was forced out by local Communists aided by RUB- BERRY’S WORLD—By Jim Berry Verbal Orchids \ Mrs. Daisy Daley of Ortonville; 89th birthday. Mrs. Mattie Jackson 2566 W. Walton; 92nd birthday. Axel J. Benson of 6853 Dixie; 85th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. P. P. Anderson of Holly; 57th wedding anniversary © INI NIA, Ik. “If you’re really Bob Hope and not ‘Charlie’—say (Q) I have a formal complaint to make to Montgomery Ward. Can you give me tee president’s name and address and phone number of tee main office? MRS. JESSE FINK 616 E. COLUMBIA (A) E. S. Donnell, 616 W. Chicago Ave., Chicago, 111. Phone 312-467-2000. (Q)' I’m a widow of 74, A mad from tee . City came and told me my apartment building needed certain repairs, including va shower and wash bowl with a partition arotind it, which Will cost me about $1,000. Some are done, but I don’t have much money to get the rest done by the time they told me. The man said when I have these things done, he will give me more to do. Where can I get help oh this thing? .7 V. - sr.^V TAXPAYER (A) Mr. Parker at City Housing Department says nothing can be done to change the requirements for meeting the minimum housing code as prescribed by law. However, he sq,ys every effort is made to accommodate persons-who are cooperating with the Department, and each case is reviewed on an individual basis so financial difficulties can be taken into consideration when setting a deadline for completion of improvements. ” (Q) On Nov. 101 mailed a check for merchandise shown on the enclosed Xerox copy. My check was cashed, tot I have not heard from tee seller. What action do yon advise? ►.. . ■ „ I : . » WONDERING (A) We suggest you umt a little longer. The Chamber of Commerce in that city tells us it is a reputable company, but they're working an back orders, and are trying to get , the merchandise out as soon as possible: ' $ THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 80, 1900 Drunk DriVers-2 PEARCE Floral Co. To Remind You.. We will be open on Wednesday PIoom plan On visiting US on thil additional shopping day. Does the Alcoholic Deserve a License? By ROBERT BUCKHORN WASHINGTON (UPI) - Does an alcoholic have a right to a driver’s license? ' -Most highway safety experts agree that the alcoholic is a sick person, the victim of a disease who needs medical and psychiatric care. But they add one factor: Behind the wheel of a car, the alcoholic is a killer,) ,, v 11118 year nWe than 58;000 persons were killed in automobile accidents. More than 3.5 million persons were injured. Alcohol was involved in 25,000 of the fatalities and 300,000 of the injuries recorded inl9$9. MUST AtpCipPT BLAME Closet* to the mark, the 1968 alcohol and highway safety report submitted to Congress by the Transportation Department says alcoholics — compulsive drinkers — ihust accept the major share of the blame for alcohol-involved accidents. of me highway deaths. One statistic mare revealing than meat Is that Transportation Department studies showed up(to 97 per cent of the drivers killed in stngle-car accidents had blood-alcohol readings of .10 per cent and higher. (Next: How can the aleoheUc be kept off the highway?) DON’T EXPECT GIMMICKS JUST CLEAR HEARING! Most state laws identify drunk drivers by the amount of alcohol found in the ,blood. The federal government has proposed a uniformed standard of not more than one-tenth of 1 per cent (.10) by weight. So far, 24 states, and the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico, have conformed to the federal standard. Twenty four others use a hitter (.15) standard, and one, Utah, uses a tougher (.08). But three — New Mexico, Texas, and Mississippi — have no standard. ’Lite BELTONE Name Has Always Meant Quality! Film Lost, Frenchman to Return to W. Irian According to Dr. William Haddon Jr., former director of th$. National Highway Safety Bureau, alcoholics, who make up only about 4 per cent of the drivers on the highway, may be JAKARTA (AP) - French documentary film maker Pierre Gaisseau says he plans to return to the Lost Valley of West Irian to reshoot 23,000 feet of “superb film” showing the Ut-tle-known Stone Age tribesmen there. From*3M to $25M Punch Cups 25c and Up CARPET St FASHIONS PNigelqw hat Down-to-Earth Prices! Moth What does the .10 per cent standard mean ,to a drinker? A chart published by the Health, Education and Welfare department shows, in rough averages, that a 150-pound man, drinking on an empty stomach, could have 5 one-ounce shots of 80 proof liquor in one hour before he reached the .10 per cent level. On a full stomach, the same man could down 7 one-ounce shots of 80 proof liquor. DIFFERENT CASE In a state using the .15 per Gaisseau lost. the film—and nearly lost his life—in a disastrous trip through rapids of the Idenbiirg River earlier this month. The expedition began three months ago when its 15 members parachuted into the valley. It ended when their rubber canoes were torn to shreds by the razor-edged rocks of the rapids. Gaisseau, 47, filmed the Oscar-winning documentary “The Sky Above, the Mud Below” on an earlier expedition in West Irian, the Indonesian half of New Guinea. ' GRIPSHOIM—May 1-32 Day* Tangier, Capri, Mont* Carlo,1 STATENDAM—Moy 30-49 Day* 450 W. Huron St. * Pontiac, Mich. - Ph. 334-7711 Opposite Pontiac General Hospital — Free Parking "If Hearing Is Your Problem Beltone Is Your Answer !” OVER 100 PATTERNS AT TERRIFIC SAVINGS DIXIE POTTERY 5281DIXIE HIGHWAY 623-0911 Sear. Pontiac i. OPEN EVERY WIGHT Monday thru Saturday On the latest trip, he said, he went through three unexplored valleys in the mountains. Some of the tribes inhabiting the area are known to be cannibals. ‘BEST FILM' "That film w« lost was the best I have eVer taken,” he said. “Die natives were friendly and reacted wonderfully. “They thought I was a witch doctor and treated me as such. It was all my cameras, tape recorders and video tape gear that mystified them. We had no trouble from them at all.” Charge It on Your Sears Re* voiding Charge HUTTENLOCHERS, KERNS, NORVELL, INC. 1007 W. HURON ST. 681-2100 FE 4-1551 FE 2-0241 The film maker said the end of the expedition could have been worse. “It was hard losing all that film,” he explained, “but if we had gone on another two miles or so, we would have hit the worst rapids I have ever seen. They are in a canyon, and I am sure some or all of us would have been killed if we had tried to ride them.” TEAM STRANDED The team was stranded on the banks of the Idenburg for several days, but managed to salvage a damaged radio and signal for help. A small helicopter from Australian New Guinea ferried them out one by one. Gaisseau said the film was in a waterproof bag and was tied to two inflated tire tubes. He said he offered a $2,000 reward for its recovery, and several TYPEWRITERS ALE MAKES DISCOUNT PUCES TRADE IN YOUR. OLD MACHINE crocodile hunters who work along the, Idenburg are searching for the brown bag. Meanwhile, he is making plans to return to West Irian in January to remake the film if it is not found. This time he wifi not try to come out hy canoe, he’ll call for a helicopter. TRAINED CORSETIERES are always ready to assist you in our private fitting rooms. Let them show you the Best bra, girdle for you, for fashion, for fit and comfort. I2BNarihSsginswSk PXR248M Report by Police EAST LANSING (AP) - The fraudulent check unit: of the Michigan State Police reports processing 229 bogus checks during November. Face value of the checks totaled $61,680, State Police said. 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Downtown Fontiac • bbt 5-4171 w Mmmm Curling Gefs New Image as Fashion Sweeps Rink By JEANNE NELSON Word goes outfroip the skip. Sweep, sweep. Rochester husbdnd-wife team, Ethel and Jack Allingham begin to slick the ice for the smooth sailing stone. Sophisticated black tedmed with white is Ethel’s choice for her curling outfit. She adds a dash of glamour with touches of fur on hat and boots.Jack’s handsome sports outfit iso blaze of red and ciit for the trim look. Badges on his tarn tell a story. The Scots claim to have invented that grand, old game of furling some 400 years ago. But, Oakland County, is responsible for its start here in the United States about 139 years ago. In fact, at that time the shout of the skip’s “sweep” could be heard clear across Orchard Lake as the first group of curlers gathered for a game. *★ ★ ★ In another year, several chibs had formed in the Detroit area; and, when the ice was right, there developed many an bonspiel (club contests) right there on the Detroit River at the foot of Joseph Campau Street’ It wasn’t until the turn of the century that the Detroit Curling Club erected its present ipdoor facility on Forest Avenue. A disastrous fire in 1948 partially destroyed the building (which has since been repaired and modernized) but never the curlers’ spirits. CtJRLING CLOTHES The Detroit Club will play host to the International Bonspiel Jan. 8-11, where it’s expected that all those different curling outfits could cause their own sweeping wins. Don Thomas, owner of the Sporthaus at Somerset Mall, says most of the clothes used for this sport are interchangeable with active and apres-ski wear. One exception is gloves. Curlers wear warmly lined leather finger gloves while skiers need suede mitts. Boots must be warm to withstand long periods on the ice. Trim ski pants, are most often topped with watching ski sweaters and warm, but lightweight, jackets. Hats are the fun accessory, with some curlers going to outlandish extremes. Of course, the tarn remains ever popular and is seen in a multitude of tartans. ★ ★ ★ Dana Lockniskar, who acts as the club’s public relations man invited me down to participate in a curling game and, while I’m not going to win any prizes for my sweeping, I must say here and now, this is great sport. And even more importantly, the players exhibit such enthusiasm that it would take a real sour-grapes type not to get caught up in the spirit of the game. All curling and swi fashions shown are from the Don Thomas Sporthaus located in the Somerset Mall, Troy. Pontiac Press photos by Rolf Winter. The racer’s look is adopted by Andover High School student, Hyatt Wilson of Bloomfield Township. His navy ski pants are trim and topped with a powder blue all-wool sweater featuring the white and navy racing stripes. A coordinated cap follows the blue-on-blue theme. If you think close only counts in horseshoes, you’re wrong. Jack, Allingham measures the minute differences in these two stones. His Scarlet crew heck sweater carries the racer’s stripes so popular with sportswear this i It’s in the house and a near shot rock signals pretty Mindy Livermore. Mindy, who’s an RN at Pontiac General Hospital, wears a delicately designed ensemble of coco, apricot and white. Her White wool sjpeater from Turkey carries an Unusual front panel and hip border design in apricot. ■. " Joe Livermore of Orchard Lake, puts his. own brand of body English to the stone as,Mrs. Denise Green of Troy gets ready to take her directions from the skip, Denise’s black ski pants follow bell bottom styling and her bright red new, longer jacket features the “wet look.” Joe is allturned out in brown. His matching sweater contains a bold front pattern in green and gold. Curling has lots of pluses going for it and not the least among them is the fact that it’s truly a family sport. Watching some of these families enjoying the game together, it was hard to remember that the generation gap we hear about is still around. • ★ ★ ★ Although it’s a thrill to deliver a stone exactly as the skip has indicated, sweeping has go to be the real fun part. With arms going as fast as the body allows,'it takes every bit of balance the player can muster to keep a running pace without slipping on the ice that’s kept absolutely smooth. * There’s no doubt that the old game of curling has been sadly overlooked through the years. However, recently industry has taken a second look at this sport and has shown some interest in forming new clubs for employe participation. ★ ★ ★ Perhaps curling is best described in “The Spirit of Curling” by Fergie Ferguson of Milwaukee, Wis., who says: “The heart of curling is in its incomparable spirit. Without it, it is just another pastime. With it, it’s the spirit of all games. The spirit of curling is reflected in its most cherished traditions.” It’s serious business here as Ethel Allingham tests'the measuring instrument’s accuracy. Denise Green checks her opponent’s figures in a bright red and-white print blouse teamed with her black pants. THE PONTIAC TUESDAY, DECEMBER 80, 1969 A—Id Handle Your Charity Dollar Carefully August 15 is the. wedding date selected by Sally Jam Hunter and Gerald James.Fed. Both are students at Western Michigan University. The bride-elect is the daughter of Mr., and Mrs. Neil R. Hunter of Waverly Drive. Parents of the prospective bridegroom are Mr. and Mrs. James G. Feil of Roseville. Kathiyn Ellen Trudeau and her fiance, Craig Bedini are planning to marry. Parents of the engaged couple are the Norman Trudeaus of Sherbrook Road, Commerce Township and the John E. Cudahys of Mundelein, III. The bride-elect attended Oakland Community College. Her fiance attends Triton Junior College. Mr. and Mrs. George Luenberger of Oriole Road announce the engagement of their daughter, Donna Roe, to Michael C. Nichols. The prospective bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Marie Nichols of Green Street and the late Lawrence W. Nichols. Michael at-tendMOakland University. April 25 wedding vows are being planned. i By ANNE TAYLOR AP NEWS FEATURE Many charity drives step up their campaigns around this time of year, which brings me right to the point; Handle your charity dollars as carefully as you do your food or investment dollars, r st I appear the least bit misanthropic, I hasten to add I'm all for giving to charity — but I advocate throughtful, not emotional giving. It’s the only way to handle money. UP! ★ ★ Here are some tips I have prepared for the charity on: Check up on any new charity seeking your money. Ask a few simple questions, and if the answers don’t satisfy you, don’t give. Be certain that the collector really represents the charity. There is no set procedure for determining this, but if the individual is unknown to you, he or she should not object to showing credentials. • Be wary of organizations that use telephone appeals, telegrams or other “pressure” tactics. Ask that all pertinent focts be available in written form. Frauds don’t like to put things In writing; honest charities always have printed matter available. RETURN Remember, that you are under no obligation to return or pay for any unsolicited merchandise that comes through the mails. No straightforward charity will attempt to confuse you on this subject. Don’t be too timid to ask the solicitor for a charity unfamiliar to you if he or she is willing to provide a detailed report of activities — maybe even a financial statement. Ask how much of your contribution will be spent for purpose for which it is collected, and what percentage is to be spent for administration and fund-raising costs. Sometimes fund-raising costs can reach preposterous proportions. The Better Business Bureau found earlier this year that one "charitable’’ organization had operating costs totaling 76 per cent of collections, FINANCIAL report How do you interpret financial statements of charitable organizations? It isn't always easy, although some, standardisation is being reached. At the moment you might find one charity states that it spends M per cent of income on fund-raising, while another reports operating costs of 7.6 per cent' ahd another 7.5 per cent on public education. Both charities - might b e worthwhile, but. their manner of telHng'^tott so is different. The fact is that both are spending II. per cent on fUnd-ralsing, * matter how they state it. In • ★ ★, * ★ -JB To clarify misconceptions, the National Health Council and the National Social Welfare Assembly have been leaders in, adopting uniform auditing statements and terminology for Linda Geary was recently installed as honored queen of Job’s Daughters, Milford Bethel No. 68. Among other new officers of the group are JoAnne Mun-sell, Pat. Geary, Ruth Malphrus and Michelle Bearup. 54voIuntary health-welfare agencies and thousands of their affiliates. Until complete uniformity is achieved, however, it is wise to look closely. When you determine that most of -the revenue is going, for administration, put your money back in your pocket book. Before dipping into your pocketbook, you may wish to consider your own selfish interest. Is the gift taxable? Not all are, you know. If you have any doubts, call the nearest Internal Revenue Office. Relieved of tax-season pressures, I have found them remarkably prompt and helpful with questions. Pontiac Press Photo So—Hearing Isn't Always Believing By BETTY CANARY NBA Writer I went to the doctor because I thought perhaps noise pollution had finally caught up with me. He checked my ears, said nothing was wrong and sent me home to toll my family I could hear them all right, but I didn’t particularly like what * heard. ■ ★ ★ it can’t remember when started thinking something was wrong with my ears, but can remember when I thought our eldest son had gone stone deaf. This was before I knew that every child around age 15 acquires the ability to simply tune others in and out at will. Food Preparation Avoid Disease,- Keep Hands Clean Looking for a practical and rewarding New Year’s resolution? Then resolve always to use lots of soap and water in your kitchen. Let’s, face it. Food poisoning ranks second only to the corn- cold as the most frequent cause of illness in the United States. ★ * ★ “To avoid food poisoning, people should learn a few facts about basic hygiene. Many do Polly's Pointers Make Own Notepaper DEAR POLLY — Janet asked * how to make an outer decorative coverii notepaper, using waxed paper and toilet tissue. I am sure she meant; facial tissues. I have great success with the following method: Paste cut-out flowers or pressed leaves on waxed paper. Lay a SINGLE sheet of facial tissue over the “picture” you have made. Make a mixture of half water and half all-purpose white glue. Spread thi generously over the top of the tissue with a one-inch brush. Let dry, then iron on the WAXED PAPER side. I use a deckle cutter for the edges when the sheets are cut to the size of the notepaper. — SISTER GLORIA * * * DEAR POLLY — I hope my Pointer helps Janet, who has disappointing results making notepaper witli tissue and other papers. First, lay a piece of white shelf paper or other white paper on the ironing board. Smoothly lay on it a piece of that clear, dining plastic wrap we use in the kitchen. Put your design of dry leaves, flowers or just pictures mid perhaps some glitter , in place, then a sheet of waxed paper over the top. Press gently with a BARELY WARM iron. Test a piece first. The result is a very pretty and unusual effect. Be sure to have the ‘front” of your decorations against the plastic wrap, as the waxed paper side will be the wrong side. Cut to fit notepaper you wish to use inside this decorative folder. — MRS. G.K. * * * DEAR GIRLS — Even though Mrs. G.K.’s letter included beautiful example of hi method, I simply could not believe it could be done so easily and quickly ahd with no messy pasting. It worked great and takes far less time than other methods. The biggest brick is to hove the iron on the right temperature. Experiment a bit, as you do npt want the plastic to stick to the shelf paper, which is really just protection to the ironing board. -POLLY’ POLLY’S PROBLEM DEAR POLLY — One rainy evening, the rubber strip came off our windshield wipers and left a long scratch on the _ sr’s side of the glass. Is there any wot to remove this scratch? — MRS. J.K. not realize that we should wash our hands in soapy water after handling raw meat, poultry or before working with other foods,” reports Elsie Dawson, supervisory food technologist with the Agriculture Research Service in Beltsville, Md. Miss Dawson, head of the Consumer Use of Food Laboratory, University of California (Berkeley), adds “Anyone cooking should keep her hands away from her mouth, nose and hair. Also, anyone ill or with an infected cut should not prepare the meal. It also is wise not to use the hands for mixing foods, at least whenever possible.” START FRESH Don’t dip a spoon or fork into cooking food a second time. Use a fresh one for second dipping. This also will help prevent food from being contaminated by bacteria. Certain bacteria growing in food may cause illness by entering the body and setting up infections in the digestive tract. Other bacteria may cause toxins which cause illness. Salmonella spreads Simply and easily by eating contaminated food or-by contact with an infected person. The symptoms are headache, vomiting, diarrhea, cramps and fever. ★ * * Staph, probably the most common food-borne disease, causes, vomiting, diarrhea and cramps. These symptoms, incidentally, often are attributed 4-W«o~ DICK FRYE. W* at our. studio Want to wish you dll the love, peace and; happiness that comes 'with the Christ Child, flow and throughout the coming year. 518 W. HURON to other causes. Other illnesses caused by food bacteria are botulism, often fatal, an d Perfringens, which results in diarrhea and acute flammation of stomach and intestines.. These threats can be avoided. The U.S. Department of Agriculture; in cooperation with tile Grocery Manufacturers of America, is now working on project to alert homemakers to the hazards of foodbome illnesses and how to avoid them. A new pamphlet, “Keeping Food Safe to Eat,” was prepared by the Human Nutrition Research Division. (For a copy, send IQ cents to the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government. Printing Office, Washington, D.C. 20402.) This effort concentrates on proper storage, preparation and serving of “sensitive” foods, Such as meat, poultry, fish, eggs and dairy foods; also on dishes which contain these products — custards, creamy sauces, dressings, casseroles and grayies. 'We emphasize clean hands, clean counters and clean utensils to prevent contamination. We stress that food may not be safe to eat if held for more than three or four hours at room temperatures, between 60 degrees and 120 degrees, the temperature zone where bacteria grow rapidly. Always serve food soon after cooking. Or refrigerate promptly,” Miss Dawson adds. Right now my second son can do it and he is only 13. There is a way of coping with this problem. If you have been screaming, “PLEASE take out the garbage!” or growing hoarse what with trying to get him to clean out the garage, ten you are going about it in le wrong way. Go into a room 1th a closed door. Go outside. You could even > all the way across town. Then, whisper, “I think we might raise your allowance.,”; He will hear yoii. He will be right beside you. With his hand out. Grasp the hand firmly and say, “Now that I have your attention . . But, back to a parent’s hearing problems. I have always checked what my children read as I have worried over their picking up gutter words. However, I wasn’t prepared to have my youngest daughter start calling me “Mumsie, dear.” She even started saying things like, “I shan’t be late.” TEA TOO? I saw the book she was reading. The little girl in it always wore white embroidered dresses loved talking with Mumsie Dear’s gardener. The cook, too. called “Mumsie, dear,” wasn’t the only thing bothering I was afraid she’d start g me to serve tea every afternoon. Not to mention providing her with a drawerful of gloves and a wicker box filled with handkerchiefs from Switzerland. Frankly, I was glad when Babs took that book back to the library. And wouldn’t any question her hearing if a boy who spoke perfectly at two forgot at age nine? “Wha?” i son asked me. “Nnn, I din. I have discussed these problems with others and discovered was not alone. I aided up with a three-page list of things mothers do not like to hear. It includes: A group of sixth-grade cheerleaders doing flips in an upstairs bedroom. Tennis balls bouncing off the side of the house when someone is trying take a nap Electric guitars at midnight. Toys that honk and whistle while one tries to talk on the phone. Children who honk and whistle while- one tries to talk on the phone. * §J * * Compiling the list did more for me than my trip to the doctor’s office. It really eased my mind. For one thing, I was surprised to discover that every, one of the mothers with whom spoke has a child who says, Sranzelbach fritze,” when asked, “What did you do in school today?” Almost all of them have a Mid who says, Ruhds and sernd bff,” when asked, “What served fort lunch?” Most of those who have teen-agers report that, upon being asked, “Where are yoU going?” the son or daughter invariably re- Ifs Immersible A new electric skillet has family-size capacity (S % quarts), comes in decorator colors of avocado or harvest gold and features a removable heat control unit. The skillet can be immersed in water for easy cleaning. An open house in the First Federal Savings of Oakland on Sunday from 2 to 5 p.m. will mark the goldefi wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Breininger of First Avenue. The couple married km. 3, 1620 in Pontiac and have lived here ever since. Their children are: Mrs. Jess . Hobson or Ortdnville, Raymond and Harold, both of First, Avenue; Mrs. Orville Kelly of Shim-mans Road, Pontiac Township, Paul of Maybee Road, Independence Township and Mrs. Ronald Hethetington of Tilmor Street. There are 10 grandchildren. Tan Slowly Without Burn To get that tan without suffering through a painful sunburn next summer, medical Authorities suggest you begin your first day with about 15 to 20 minutes of exposure each on your face and back and then extend the period in the sun each day. ..Increase exposure by one third the second day, another third the third day, and so on. Remember that painful burns can be caused by wind as well as sun, and that even on a cloudy day it is possible to get a severe burn. Elliott Furniture («., Inc. “The Oie and Original” plied, “Gnitz dn.” Freshman Girl on Rifle Team GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) -Linda Lee Duke, who learned to shoot at the age of 13, now has a top position on the University of Florida’s Rifle Club “A” team. Since all members of the team are required to take Army ROTC, the 17-year-old freshman from Cocoa, Fa., is the only “regular” Army girl on the campus. With a score of 255 points out of a possible 300, Linda Lee is accepted as “a regular guy, but sort of a little sister, since 1 am the youngest on the University RElPH0LSTERI\(i AT ITS BEST! Choose your fabric from our exceptionally large selection of upholstery "Fine Furniture Since1924'* 623-0025 7/ Bloomfield-Bin at,... .Birmingham Customers 334-0981 OF WATERFORD 5390-5400 Dixie Highway She spends about 10 hours a week on the rifle range, an hour in ROTC class and two hours in drill. In her spare time she likes to sew. Use Drip-Catchers Keep melted wax fro candles off the frosting of the cake. Use marshmallows candleholders. fine Furniture Since 1917 CLOSED WEDNESDAY DEC. 31st FOR INVENTORY Open Friday, Jan. 2nd 9:00 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. 1680 Telegraph Road Free Paridng - FE 2-8348 FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Oakland and Saginaw Rev. ROBERT SHELTON, PASTOR Presents The MELODY FOUR QUARTET CHICAGO, ILLINOIS lift DUET TEAM bill Pearce and DICK ANTHbNY NEW YEAR’S EVE 8:30 P.M. PUBLIC INVITED TWTC PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER ad, B—T I MARKETS The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Friday. t Produce Turnover Moderate Stock Mdrket Opens Lower *» FRUITS Apples, Delicious, Golden, bti Apples, Delicious, Red, bu. NEW YORK (IPiy — Stocks opened lower today in moderate turnover. ; In the Absence of constructive news many analysts expected the market to be pulled down further by year-end tax selling which has been unusually heavy tills year;; Investors seemed to be taking tax losses this year rather than waiting until the new law takes effect in 1970 which is regarded as less liberal. ★ ★ # w Shortly after the opening, the UPf ,marketwide i n d 1 c a t o showed a loss of 0.21 per cent on 493 issues crossing the tape. There were 195 declines, and 158 advances. Lowe’s Theatres eased % to 35%, while Tdedyne gave up % to 38%, Anaconda dipped % to 29%, but Interational Telephone picked up % Jto 58%. OIL TRADING Among the oils, Standard of Ohio eased % to 81%, Occidental % to 24% on a block of 11,600 shares, and Cities Service to 40%. Atlantic Richfield lost % to 83%, while Gulf Mobile held unchanged at 31 and 46%, respectively. ★ A * Int he electronics, RCAe ased % to 35 on a block of 13,500 and Litton % to 35%. General Electric and Control Data were steady at 76% and 115 in that order. IBM lost % to U.S. Steel fell % to 33%, and Inland % to 261. Bethlehem also slid % to 26%. The New York Stock Exchange Poultry and Eggs BTROIT POULTRY f API—fll&DAl—Prirei ;0SJ1 liPl Reuther Sees Youth as Hope Urges, Confrontation of Problems in 1970s ResoluMAKt fflfERi!©G!$ —Light and Serious DETROIT (AP) — Voicing disappointment in the decade of the 1960s, United Auto Workers Walter Reuther. said Monday that America’s young people “constitute our great hope’’ in the decade ahead. Reuther, in a prepared year-end statement, said he hoped in the ’70s, that this nation “honestly confronts and vigorously acts to solve the many series national problems which we belatedly recognized, but only barely began to cope with in the ’60s.” Speaking, for the. UAW in particular, Reuther said efforts will be made “to humanize the workplace, bring greater security and dignity to active and retired workers, and extend the benefits of unionism to millions of workers still unorganized.” Reuther conceded that pro-ress had been made during the is, but said it “pales into virtual insignificance when measured against the growing pressures on all our resources Inherent in our population growth...” MUST END WAR ‘We must free ourselves as rapidly as possible from the chain on our spirit and resources stemming from our Vietnam involvement,” he said. ‘We must move from confrontation to negotiation and cooperation for peaceful development in the world community, ing that we are in trouble not just as Americans but. species.” He said the young are the hope of America. “They tend ' know more and care more than most of their parents about the shortcomings and promises of American life. 'If we are as wise as we think we are, we will legislate NEW YORK -r Ask top business and consumer leaders what their 1970 New Year’s resolutions are and one is liable to get some interesting answers. * t * * 'I guess I, should resolve to sponsor round-table peace talks between automobile manufacturers and Ralph Nader,” says Mrs. Virginia H. Knauer, chairman of President Nixon’s Committee on Consumer Interests. And from a spokesman for a major oil company, who a ' not to be identified for obvious gressmen who voted to cut the oil-depltlon allowance.” "We resolve to open a new type of super - service station this year which win offer cash giveaway games for each member of the family, triple green stamps, free drinking glasses, free place mats for the kitchen, balloons and bubble gum for the kids, modern deluxe restrooms, complete travel maps and the quickest service in town.” “Gee, that’s great.” “Yes, but there’s just one catch.” ALL THE GIMMICKS We resolve not to cancel the credit cards of ail those tionary way of bringing down the present high rates of bond yields should be resolved in 1970. “They are purely disastrous now for the long range of our economy,” he says, w ' * * And Mrs, Mickey DiLorenzo of Levlttown, Long Island, who last summer helped spark meat boycotts in various states, says: “My first resolution is probably going to be not to buy any meat in Nassau County supermarkets unless I take a butcher along with me to identify it.” twbdmw:* t; * % $.*'■ % By ROGER E. SPEAR Q—My shares of Hiram Walker have gone up 50 per cent since I bought them in mid-1967. Should I take my profit? -G. B. -Hiram Walkjrr is particularly well-situated within an industry whose prospects are excellent. The American prefer->nce for lighter-bodied whiskies has resulted in A rapid increase in sales of Scotch and Canadian whiskies. Between 1957 and 1968 consumption of Scotch arid Canadian whiskies increased 16 per cent compared with a 62 per cent gain in total' liquor consumption. This trend is expected to continue through 1973. However, a development which is expected to cut into sales of Scotch and Canadian spirits is the new “light whisky’’ which will be marketed after July, 1972. Hiram is aging and building up its inventory in this new type of whisky. According to figures published by Busine^g Week, Hiram Walker’s Canadian Whiskey was third largest seller ‘What’s that?” ‘We don’t have any room for gasoline pumps.” On a serious note, Dayton Cle-well, senior vice president for research and engineering Mobil Oil, has a resolution that involves cutting air pollution. I’d like to see the American motorist resolve to help us by keeping his car in first-class working order and by driving it properly. A dean, well-tuned car, properly driven, cuts air pollution to half of that of a dirty car. We recognize that it is the oil companies who must carry the brunt of this part of the air pollution battle,” Clewell says. But if 90 million Americans resolve to drive dean and well-tuned cars and drive sensibly it sure will help.” Paper Reports Cohn Indicted five of its brands were included In, a list of 35 industry leaders. clear priorities for action to in the 1966-68 period. AH told, meet human needs and aspire- “ ** jjfl 1 J" tions here at home and then-through participatory planning-join with them (the young) in regenerating our natural and man-made environments. Early-January Layoffs Slated by Chrysler DETROIT (AP) 111 One-week layoffs have been ordered for all Chrysler Corp. assembly plant workers. About 37,700 employes will be affected. Two plants at Detroit will be closed from Jan. 5 through Jan. 10 along with assembly plants in Newark, Del., Los Angeles and St. Louis, Mo., the announcement Monday said. ★ * ★ During the second week in January, another Detroit assembly plant’s operations will be curtailed along with planta in Belvidere, 111., and Windsor, Ont. Chrysler offered no explanation for the layoffs, but it is no secret that the firm has unusually high, new car inventories because of sagging sales. SELECTIVE SHUTDOWNS The Big Three auto makers— Chiysler, General Motors and Ford—have all closed selected plants during recent weeks to bring inventories into line with sales volume. Chrysler closed plants during Thanksgiving week and around Christmas. The Chrysler statement __ew car assembly was expected to be back at full tilt by Jan. 19; Consumption of distilled spirits is expected to,,reach 2 gallons per capita by 1973 from the present rate of 1.8 gallons, the last three years Hiram Walker has increased sales an average of over 7 per cent annually and earnings have outpaced sales. In the year ended Aug. 31, net of $2.78 per share was reported on sales of ’$690 million. I see no reason to sell at this time. Board of Realtors Plans Yearly Fete In the world of stocks, there are those who also are making resolutions—as long as the investor doesn’t hold the brokers to all of ■____ Eldon Grimm, senior vice president of Walston & Co., New York investment firm, resolves to “get a new bull market started in both stocks and bonds and to buy up some of the bargains hammered (town so drastically.** BAFFLING PROBLEMS ‘We’re going to resolve to help the securities industry iron out most of the baffling problems it’s been faced with this year and try to do much better for investment clients than most everybody did in 1969.” CHICAGO (AP) - The Chlca-Sun-Times reported today that Roy M, Cohn, New York financier and former counsel to the late Republican Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy of Wisconsin, has been indicted secretly on a charge of violating the Illinois Bank Company Holding Act. The newspaper says an indictment handed down by a Cook County grand jury in November charged Cohn, 42, and some business associates with having held more than 15 per cent control of two Chicago Banks. The banks named in the indictment were the Guaranty Bank & Trust CO. and the Mercantile National Bank, the paper reported. The 1957 law prohibits persons and bank holding companies from holding more than 15 -per cent control over two or more banks in illinois. It provides for penalties of up tor $10,000 in fines and up to a year in prison. News in Brief The theft of $83 in change in a break-in at the Hatchett and __PUP_______________ [Brown Auto Wash, 354 S. Sag- Sidney Homer, a partner in inaw, was reported to Pontiac Salomon Brothers & Hutzler, police yesterday morning by bond brokers, says a noninfla-j Joel Hatchett of 172 Green. Q—What in your opinion will[ be the final solution to the back-office mess that brokers face? ■M. V. A—A •' just - completed study conducted by a group from Columbia University, headed by Sidney Robbins, professor at the university’s graduate school of business, proposes a certificate-computerized transaction system. The study, commissioned by the respected accounting firm of Lybrand, Ross Brothers & Montgomery, focuses on the stock certificates as responsible for the crises that result when trading volume mounts. Elimination of the certificate would also help reduce the mounting number of security thefts. Implementation and/or acceptance of this plausible but innovative solution will take many years to accomplish. (Copyright 1919) 'Pot' Dealers Sell Chili Powder Sub to Kansas Youths WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Some dealers are fooling high school students by selling chili powder, parsley and ordinary tree leaves as marijuana, police said Monday. The Pontiac Area Board of Realtors will hold its 49th annual banquet at 6:30 p.m. Monday at the Elks Temple, 114 Orchard Lake. incoming officers for 1970 will be installed, including Wil H. Bass, president; Warden D. Newthn, senior vice' president; Gary Partridge, secretary; Sndi An Ounce sells for $5 and ma^ Kenneth Hemstead, treasurer. jg|d ,m fA F>nt Dick Fent, a Sedgwick County Sheriff’s investigator, said lab reports on recent purchases have revealed the substances, which are dried and broken up to resemble marijpana. A, record $12 million' counterfeit currency was seizuu by the government during fiscal 1969. Dr. Richard C. Bates of the General Motors public relations repartment will be guest speaker. Tickets, costing $6.50 per person, may be purchased at the door yield up to SO cigarettes, Fent said. In an unusual buy in Hays-ville, 10 miles southwest of Wichita, officers thought they had purchased LSD. An analysis repealed it was powdered sugar. Mutual Stock Quotations COMPANIES Of Securities Am Grth 5.83 6.37 AmN Gth 3.96 Fund E 7.75 1.42 Stock 6.07 6.63 Sci Cp 4.85 5.27 Canadn" 18.78 20.31 Capamr S.0S 8.82 Capit Inv 4.24 4.65 Capit Shr 7.03 7.71 CaSt Shr 11.1012.13 Channlng Fundi: Balan 11.4612.52 Fid Trnd 24.62 26.91 Fit InGth 9.9610.92 Fit InStk 8.70 9.53 Fit MUltl 9.51 9.66 Fit Nat 7.48 8.17 Fit Slera 43.05 47JO , Flet Cap 7.37 . Flat Fnd 6.42 6.42 Fnd Gth 5.65 6.10 Incom 5.19 5.67 Noreait 14.6714.67 Ocngph 7.43 0.12 Omega l.ta 0.20 100 Fd 13.8015.fi 101 Fd . 9.2910.15 ftnm Ulml 16.01 16.01 )0 15.05 Util 6.07 6.65 2.0$ |5S Fd frMut 10.1710.17 Fund Am 9.5610.45 Gen Sac 10.3310.33 Gtbraltr 14.0714.07 Group Sic: Aero Sc 8.30 8.00 Com St 12.01 13.14 Fut Ad 8.37 9.15 Grth Ind 21.47 21.47 Oppenh 7.57 8.27 rfS Fnd io.6jii.67 Penn Sq 7.77 7.77 Pa AAut 7.84 7.86 Phlia 14.4415.85 Pilgrim 9.61 10.50 Pilot 7.44 8.13 ; Pine St 10.5210.52 ' Pion Ent 7.58 8.20 Plon Fnd 12.1613.29 Plan In* 11.1612.20 I Era „. 25.79 *.62 9.62 14.29 24.29 Gth 5.37 Ilf nvestors Group: sm M Ml 5.55 *8010.65 ;93 5.36 38.90 28.90 pro Fund 10.3510.35 Provdnt- 4.40 4.81 Puritan 9.4510:55 Putnam Funds: EqUlt 9.6910.59 Gaorg 13.9015.19 Grth 9.971Q.90 Incom 7.75 8.47 tayttt 7.57 8.27 Vista 10.21 11.16 Voyag 8.35 9.13 Rap Tach 4.88 5.33 Rtyara 12.6013.77 Rotanth 7.15 7.82 Salam Fd 6.00 4.52 Schustr 15.7517.24 Scuder Funds: Int inv 16.041449 Opel 33.16 33.16 Bat 14.9714.97 Com St 11.0011.00 ligma^Tr £ InS sting Ibv onwith F Cap Fd 9.7210.62 Concord 12.5012.50 Cont Gth 9.60 9.70 5.77 6.32 21.55 22.22 ivy 8.17 8.17 I Hncock 8.42 9.15 Johnstn 21.42 21.42 Keystone Funds: Cus K2 5.17 S.6S Lite Stk 5.31 5.80 Mast Tr 15.2116.62 Mates 5.62 162 Mathers 11.7611.76 McDon 8.51 9,33 MldA'MU 6.49 7.09 . Moody, Cp 14.0615.37 Mody's , 13.43 14.68' Mqrttti Fundi: . • Grwth 9.3710.27 incom ,3.86 4“ Svvlnv Gt ; .Sever- Inv 1 Spectra StFrm Gt i Roe Fds: Egret 1 Emrg Sc Enei-py 1 Fairfd 11.03 12.05 Farm Bu 11.0311.03 Fed Grth 12.9814.19 Fid cap ,11.2612.31 Fid fund 16.6618.21 I 8.85 AAut Tr$t 2.45 2.45 10.5710.79 Nat WSec 9.6710.46 Stock 14.2714.27 Slip InGt 6.81 7.46 SupInSt 9.5710.49 TMR Ap 19.60 21.42 Syncr Gt 10.8711.88 Teachrs 9.7410.15 Techncl 6.21 6.79 Technoi 7.23 7.88 Tamp Gt 25.03 27.36 Towr MR 6.53 7.14 Tran Cap 7.46 8.11 Trav Eq 10.0911.03 Tudor Fd 16.09 17.58 TwnC Gt 4.34 4.74 TwnC Inc 4.41 4.82 Unit AAut 10.0711,01 Unlfd 9.3010.16 Unitad Funds: Abcm 7M 7.74 Incom 13.59,14.85 Scien 7.9 0.73 UFd Can unavail Vdlua Una Fd: Val Lin 7.57 8.30 Spl Sit 7.12 7.80 VqctS spl 7.82 1.55 investing ee Vandrbt " 7.66 £37 ' Vangd H 5.38 In Var Indp 4.77 5.18 Viking 6.86 7.46 Walls! In n&nM Wash AAu 11.8312.93 WW %Wks ■Vest 15.11 16.51 Morg 10.16 11.10 Techv 8.00 Welltn 1.2713,32 Wlndr 9.0* 9.92 West Ind 7.88 *.*i Whitahl 14.7516.1 Hr Want Ads Dial 334-4981 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 80, I960 JOHNSON ELIZABETH LAKE FRONT rtf<».r7x t Ivina , full undy MRNMi H natural fireplace moot with gai neat, _ beach, 3 car brick oarage heel Fuff Priced, *43,300. will aall Land Contract. BRAND NEW Lowly 9 Immedlat. ____ 13x30- living r bedroom. Flreo gerage, gas ,_^r. ..... aall an Land Contract. Lake Privilege! on Sylvan Lake. Evening!, Call Sanaa Johr Von-Hall & ASSOCIATES, INC. i mention. Call tor 1 BUILDER'S SPECIAL — 1 |, 50x175 aach, *2,000. Nica area, l eg. ft. minimum building LAPEER AREA—49688, 2 bedroom homo on 5 acraa of land, llva stream, good location, lu»t oft M-24, 12x12' shed. Thli home need* soma work, but could ba quite attractive, kitchen and dining area are combined, living 11,500. wood*, excellent lake site, large barn, 4 bedroom farm home with attached 2 car garage, natural fireplace, Early American decor*. *99,990.-29---------- I land. Ideal location to wild your dream home. Excellent school*, bus to door. From *1,350 down. CALL US AT 664-8560, EVES. 664-6117. home^wlth'good* furnace, w —' SMC. Recant APARTMENT « Income In A-t f M* ' LOVELAND LOVELY 6 AND 6 Stucco Income. 3 bad room! aachj Newly decorated. Oa* beat. Garagea, *19,500. Balance on land contract. 6 par cant. Liona Loveland, Realtor 2100 Case Lake Rd. tas-iar1^ toka Property ‘ _ >1 LAKE FRONT HOMES Call FE 2-2144. HOLLY AREAr Paved rood ft of Hollv limit »«,*' a.rys *4*6 d ll*T In kit. “sEE* THESE I’Tway ‘ba 7 laparataiy. Bo ready for n< year* bulldlngl Gladwin Cautdy With large jrwata: running stream through pf*. EMS7188 Sole Business Property 07 54 .ACRES ON M-l In Drayton J. L. Pally to. ,'lake front. VERS, SUBUR BAN Mama near everything, l995.\Bioch 540-7711. 5660 Acrettai *995. Dlxla.Waterfn .......... TRAILER Sltfei MOVE an nowl At otter Sure — rnS iK' WINTER SPECIAL 30 WOODED ACRES, bordering state land. 2 miles tram Grand Traverse Bay, Great for Snowmoblllng. Buy new before taring. Price rtaac *12,000.00 Term*. BAYVIEW REALTY, 616> 946-3010.____________________ 51-A WINTER SPECIALS 30 wooded acre*, *12,000. Tarmt. 200 acres, 2,000' commercial froi tage, *1*5,000. Tycoon In comer for continued development project need. KALKASKA I for S3f,000 with 10 acre camper silt, i Lake tub., *1,000. 2Vfc acre parcel, 116 ml. hunting yard. *“* length of ; LAPEER A REA — 1 5'5 ACRES, |U*t north of Lapeer, good stream, through full —“■ -* —iperty, Vi mile a, on M-24, W * land. 25 par* .and contract 7 ear tern. CALL 664-8560, EVES 7934946 im house, 2 car garage, cant down, land con-7 par cant Inf. PHONE t, EVES 793-6946. BAYVIEW REALTY - Front, Traverse City, j 616-946-3010 or*15947-4104 aVd Resort Pwpsrty 2-BEDROOM CABIN, C Priced Below FHA tlac. Baiement, attached garage, gas heat, built-lns. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION $26,750.00 ■add** of Pontiac____ »1 totg-Acraage "ERI____ Ray today, 674-4101 i. Good pen », 67M400. FowSr Realty, 363-8322, 6 363-3665. 100x150' LOT WATKINS LAKE PRIVILEGES. Only ana left, axcnflgnt established area of nice homes. Price $4,000. 4-H REAL ESTATE. 623-1400, OR 3-0455. OR 3-2391. 3 ROLLING ACRES— While Lett* area naar i boat (Mding., Situated (----- located for loads of privacy. Milford tcHOOle. *6,600 With *2,W0 down, $40 per month Including Interest it I percent. HOWARD T. KEATING CO. 22060 W. 13 Milo Birmingham One Secretary to Another 1 can't spall that words ii the first place, how does he expect me to find them in the dictionary?" Afiar S pan. ti riarity Lavaly 332-,,^> Annett Inc. Realtors 28 E. Huron St, 3384)466 asphalt road bordered w River. Formoriy priced at $11,000. For tlw next *0 days only *’ *“ with 29 por cent down. Ba WOODED HILLS 50.70 acres naar Davlsburg. A good sound Investment for future secluded country estate In a fast developing area. Highly restricted as to building requirements. *58,700. 25 par cant down. Balance 7 por cant land contract. VALUABLE ACRES In Orovcland Twp. 39 valuable acres oft US 10. Not to- I—“ • *■ Interchange near Of recreational area or Zoned 400 ft. deep for commercial along US 10 with over 111-- frontage. Alio 900 ft. on a MORE HILLS AND WOODS • lad 1 ■ m eat s? Isolated. *12,500 In the tame worried area. ^0.09 ^acras. 25 per contract. Highly restr.. requirement*. *10,950. on 2 i DUiiaings. House reman par month. Farm In I 840 ACRES. 12 Milas northwest of Hulbert, Mich, and other small parcel*. Lloyd A. Peacock, Box 90, Hulbert, MlCh. 69740. 1-906676-2511. JOHN A. ROWLING, Inc. REALTOR ' 129 W. GENESEE, LAPEER C. PANGUS, INC., Realtor BUILDER would like to purchase lot* or small acraga parcels, anywhere In Oakland County. Call CLARKSTON SCHOOL AREA Walters Lake privileges, several choice building sites, pare —‘ available, priced from *3000 I 673-3408 Sylvan . IS “ESTABLISHED 1930" t Estates. High and (* privileges. 3 bad! 37,500 Including tot. 0 HAVE A HAPPY HOLIDAY AND DRIVE CAREFULLY - YOU .CANNOT AFFORD_AN_INiURY PARTRIDGE READ ESTATE 1050 West Huron St., Pontiac 681-2111___________WO 5-0759 313-625-3298 or 634-9825 C NELSEY Sales Agent Davisburg, Mich. Evenings calls welcome Sale Land Contracts WEST SIDE DANDY: 3 b_______________ I main floor, beautifully modernized living 1 STOPI before yob rant that apartment call kitchen and bath. 2 story* and full_ BRIDE WHO BYPASSED JUNE: In favor D | ________ ... In Sylvan Village, basement, garage and oversized weodsd lo right on land contract. WELLSPRING OF SERENITY: custom brick ranch home on a with frontage on small private I kitchen, Tn bam*, hot water HOME AND BUSINESS: In top note nice t bedroom aluminum sided rand living room, oak floor*, plastered v equipped beauty salon 12x16. Price r DORRIS & SON REALTOR 2536 Dixie Hwy. MLS of quiet —HM ...IP ...... wooded 5-ACRE parcel bedrooms, modem to minute basement, 2-car garage and Drib aid* location, imo,. 9x12 kitchen, , garage, plus a iSft Rds.—A beautiful 3- Zoned suburban farm a In rn* Clarkston Sclux Priced at S7.2M. Bob White REAL ESTATE BMFMMMM OFFICES WILL CLOSE WED. AT 6 P.M. and RESUME REGULAR BUSINESS HOURS FRIDAY SURE TO GO! DANDY BRICK RANCHER In * salting Of avaroreans. Family room, bod rooms, an. leading to a beared with separate workshop area. A "Best Buy" In the Drayton area. No. 73 BIG HALF ACRE COMMUNITY BEACH and tonM* court and a fine neighborhood are close at Nani in mi* 3 bedroom 2- patio, and garage, in a ““ demand area and for FAST ACTION I £%d BLOOMFIELD AREA A FINE FAMILY HOME wim all the matures of cent-forrtbW family living! 4 large bedrooms, 3 full baths, stone fireplace, finished basement, and attac Land Contract terms. 100. CALL TODAY 1 NEW MODEL OPEN SAT. & SUN. 2-5 P.M. OR BY APPT, . AVON RANCHER: Avon Rd. lust east of Crooks Rd. Detox* all-brick rancher with all these features included In tha haale price: double-hung wood PONTIAC CLARKSTON ROCHESTER UNION LAKE 338-7161 625-2441 651-8518 3634171 tag*, 2.7 mil** north of I-7S. Across tlm (treat from 9950, M-15 Full price *7,500. Term* available. Sislock & Kent, Inc. 1109 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. 30-9294 _______________338-9295 TERMS FLATTLEY REALTY !0 Commerce Rd._____363-69*1 LAKE ORION-3# LOTS Platted, laka privltog**. M ----‘”l-*-rnaar m-24 and ACRES-NORTH SIDE Naar M-53, 4 mltas to Roj Laval land sultabto tor I farming, fruit, good bldg. *45,000. Other Acraaga Parcels Attar S P.M. ealL Harley Levtly 332-7725 Annett Inc. Realtors 28 E. Huron St. 338-0466 JTS LOTS I TERMS _ FLATTLEY REALTY o Commerce Rd._____Jfi 200 acre* — Include* bam, S 'a 8^,bto.**Low*clown payment. LIGHT INDUSTRIAL Ovar 9 lacra* with 1HJ' railroad frontage, Waterford T o w r close” 1-75. *39,500. Term PONTIAC TOWNSHIP 351 Ft. frontage on M-24, lm-mediately oft 1-75 Expressway. Zoned light manufacturing, *20,000 on land contract. BATEMAN INVESTMENT * COMMERCIAL CO. *77 S. Tatograph Rd. 338-9641 After 5 pjn.. 8> Sunday CALL 673- Sale Farms 56 80 TO 800 ACRES in Lower Michigan. Dairy grate, beat or hogs! Nam# Igur term 87 ACRE FARM Formtri^ a larga djalry farm. 15 ACRES is ton School crca. Horae* Only *66* par acre. 15 per Bosloesr Oppertooitlei 59 "BUD" PRIME LOCATION pa on West Hu lust west By Kate Osum U ,30 “Look at it this wayr.it’s like falling off a horse—you-have to fall in love again right away or you’ll always be afraid of romance!" Sale Household Goods 65 WALNUT Dining ream suite, tab)*, 6 chain, buffet, china cabinet, *75. 3354394. After 6 p.m. 4-RObM — (Brand n«w furniture) *2(9. CMh, term*, lay-away Pearson'* Furniture, 648 Auburn Fa wi. DOWNTOWN PONTIAC 360 teat on N. Parry St. Inakte Wide Track Drive, zoned “ marcial bulldlm NICH0LIE-HUDS0N Associates, Inc. 1141 W. Huron St. 681-1770 after 6 p.m. FE 4-8773 ESTABLISHED BEAUTY (hop tor Partridge “IS THE BIRD TO SEE" STEAK HOUSE location sine* early '20s. Busina grossing *97,000 In IMS, white opi 7:30 to lo P.m., and closing su days and holidays, This prln location rents tor only SSOO P month. No. 6S3S-RB. PLUSH BEAUTY SHOP ,Vcrv pleating decor and located Birmingham area shopping ma! Showing good gross, though business lass than one year. For only $23,000.. Terms. *11,000 down, A HOUSEHOLD BARGAIN bedroom (doubl* dresser, chas AWW-.w*f&& KAY FURNITURE Next to Kmart In Gtaiwood Cantor SAGINAW BAY GROCERY A fin* no competition store o state highway in good resort torn Doing approx. *120,000 par yeai Large madam doubt* bulldlm WARDEN REALTY 5USINE5S 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needed. Sac us baton LEACH CHOICE land contracts, I . -‘Id, good returns. 474-4192 673-9669 625- WaatEd CoHtrgcts-Mtp. 60-A l MILLION Dollars has bsan mad* avallab us to purekaro and assume contracts, mortgages or I homes, lot* or acreage eutr_ W* will give you cam for your equity. Our appraittr It a wafting your call at 674-2236 McCullough realty 460 Highland Rd. (M-59) ft ipan 9-9 0744 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently nttdad. See us before deal. • Warren Stout, Realtor 450 N. Opdyke Rd. 17S-U11 Open Evas. "’ * — CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS ; H. J, Von Welt 4563 Dixie Hwy.-OR 3-1355 Ujdf jpR SMALL lend contracts, lari Garrels, MA '4-5400 Or'cvw'J EM 3-4006. Mi LOANS *25 to *14)00 insured Payment Plan BAXTER — LIVINGSTONE NEED UP TO $5,000? You may b* surprised hew cheat you can add new room repair, «. remoda^your^present home by ^WfliimSxr Voss & Buckner, Inc. 140* Pontiac Stole Bank Bldg. 334-3267 YEAR OLD PONY, * for motorcycle, or J WHAT YOU'D EXPECT TO PAY 3 ROOMS BRAND NEW FURNITURE *UD per week $297 *-• LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN FURNITURE 14*1 tjfiSSSi ktWnhp jFE t4»g - Acre* Wpftairesiig.^ Evas. 'HI 9: Sat. % 6. E-Z Terms 9-PIECE LIVING ROOM, $ n 9x12 Linoleum Rugs $495 Solid vinyi TII* --7c ito Vinyl Artwtto* Til*.......-7c Inlaid TWte 9x9.......... .7c Floor Shop-11» Elizabeth Lak “Across From the Mall' 1970 DIAL-A-MATIC Zig zag sawing n ItBXWintS naadad stitch dasMns, bl Just dlaL Yours toi away balance, end W47, Rcrtharn A YEAR END SALE •ft to personal proparty tax, I Appliance Co. will Mil ■MIH Mere merchandise Is top brand I-— ..,., guarantead^ Ever^pltsm must b* Midwest Appliance, 9-9 BUNK B9$ , Choice of 15 styles, trundls. bed triple tnrndto beds and bunk bw complete, *49JO and up. Pearson Furniture.«>Auburn, FE4-70I1. BARGAINS ON MATTRESSES Little Jc.._______ 1561 Baldwin at Walton, FE 2- BARGAINS ON NEW COLOR TV'* Stereos, refrlgoretors, rang**, BU Y,DIREft*FROt^WA^HbuBE AND SAVE PLENTY t , Bring your tralter or truck, haol yourself and save still mere, Joe'* Appliance Warehouse 5*7 B. Walton at Joslyn7373-5560 ___________Easy terms IRONZE OR CHROME DINETTE sate, BRAND NEW. Large and smill' *iz* (round, gremr" tangular) tabto* In 3-, 5-' *24.95 ~ BARGAINS ON NEW LIVING ROOMS *97. electric dryers, *114; Automa washers, *124, Dishwashers, SI color TV's, mi. Plenty el trad* furniture, ranges, washer*, a refrigerator* at bargain price*. Little Joa't Bargain Furniture 14*1 Baldwin at Walton, FE 2-6S4 Joe's Applla 567 ^. Wal DUPONT 501 NYLON Prices slashed, Dupont 501 r carpeting being sacrificed, regular *6.95 vakit, new only *3.99. Choice of colors. ..ousohokl Apclslnco M1-SS93 jRfLLYWoop.. bsS DAVENPORT and.chelri reyej'blM, vary good condition. 723 Blolno off Montcalm. DRYER, *35; REFRIOERAfi 21" T.v7 *35; bunkbads; mant ttova, *35; MHc., G. FE5-P6*. ELECTRIC STOVE, *85; GAS Stove, *35; Refrigerator.with top freezer, *49; Wrlnjer washer. *40. G. Har- FURNITURE FOR SALE: 2 I —-n chairs, 2 end tabto*. d n taw*, 3 doubl* bad, 2 si GAS •SPACE HEATERS alto ! hftatlng stoves, low OS S24J0. J Appl lines Warehouse, 567 E. 1 KIRBY SWEEPER EXCELLENT CONDITION—8*5 FULL GUARANTEE, Kirby Service & Supply Co. 2617 DIXIE HWY. *74-223- LIVING ROOMS, BRAND new, •A price. Little Jm% 1461 Baldwin, FE 2-6642. MATCHING LIVING ROOM SETS BOB HUTCHINSON IBILE HOMES, 4301 Dixie H DRAYTON PLAINS ONE GROUP OF commercial carpeting min large building “ it mutt b* .sold fwlhi^'trSnrareii^0tostoU available. Fre* astimitos. Ron, FE 4-5497. . aMl INb 54" TABLE, .6 CWItrt msl’and^chMt ajffiii8rerfc-B2*'r*- •r ■ ■ htr SB; told imnmMrJi HOLI*DAy“sPECIALI Carpit rooms injtssr NMBjMta Ml ... cent" contteuM Ntattan. nVton REFRIGERATOR SINGpR MMl*, dtett of drewort, mtec. 33 SIGNATURE GAS RANGE, lust llkn new, STS. Sal# Household Getd* 65 aar, Fully guarantoad. Tarrillc savings. Termt. CURT'S APPLIANCE LLIAMS LAKE NP. 474.1101 SINGER DELUXE MODEL-PORTABLE Zlg Zagger In sturdy carr cast. Rapestaued. mgr off: $38 CASH or Payments of $5 Per Mo. 5 Year Guarantee UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER FE 441905 SINGER AUTOMATIC ZIG ZAG $7 Per Month for 8 Mos. or $56 Cash Balance HOUSEHOLD SPECIALS lOOM^stt OF FURNITURE -l-pleca living room outfit With 2# . (1) »'xi2' rug Includad. , 7-pltc* bedroom suit* with doub Innartprlng mattraia and maieM, WYMAN FURNITURE CO. 17 E. HURON , FE B-ll Year End- Clearance 51#, unclaimed to CUSTOM ANTIQUES Antique* repaired ai ‘ taMg HI-FI, IV and Radios 4 REPOSSESSED CONSOLE STEREOS Save $$ .....'.jttikh 2-2257 . Open 9# i, comer of Joilyn » TV SETS, tSS .— . Motel. 7S9 S. Woodward. A-1 COLOR TV SERVICE •wf* . Tv ^ ..r4 45 e. ' m j ■ 45 E. Watwn near nawwin Ik «Mk TV, V Pietur*, Ohp walnut. StaSBH.«... _______ MANUFACTURik'S CLUek^ui ■ STEREO WALNUT OR MAPLE CONSOLE . or * UNIVERSAL TUMu tat. 10:15-6 ■ny HBIW ew—y :iMt::-oaiiU'.TV Bargains Nam* brwxli and flna tarvlc Buy direct morn warehouse at Jot's Applla 5*7 E, Wei WQQP CONSOLE STEREO SALE Special price from tactory. Naw m ZanM, SSmtrat Fhiice, Sylvanla, RCA, Md Symphonic, m $99. Our jpwil FBI will betoweet In ftftMH. Tarmt. ABC APPUANa : f mmytnom t VMt. S. HMBb Daily If Tuas. 'tl 739-1010 mniwmi W INCH COFFER wy It a hack-saw WPmM MBBal HOT WATeN OR steam'bolters, by_American Radiator gn, mtaiJff ^ssSfc?^tl M S-" stag* w mT^ tract! mm fill ANCHOR FENCES lO MOHOY DOWN FI S-7471 a oiAvriFUL efimlli . Pastel colored porlabla rowing machine (like new), zig Zafnar make* fancy stltchas end button hoton. Your* for *31.90 an new •eewiit or pay H par me. for I mot. Call 3*9-0147, Northern Distributor*. ■S||nsffi BRIDES — BUY YOUR WEDDING ■ atmaMBtamtnts at discount from, Forbes, 4500 Dixie, Drayton, 673-124*. Weekdays 'til 9 p.m.. Set. * box of 2$ ChrlttmtalL,*— . . have used cdilc* dtaks, ehalre files, etc. Forbes printing and Office Supply, 4500 Dixie Hwy. 473- CRAFTSMAN Tractor, 10 h.p. 1 accordian Lessons, Begiim and advanetd atudant* elf ag •actions, I and 6' height, S7JO (action, s itoetrie. -'-’ilai* strol, 165 ... . TALBOTT LUMBER lOM Oakland ENCLOSE VQUR SHOVy.E.fc ever the I bleated Swan dial ELECTRIC STOVE, *7, refrlpirator, GARDEN TRACTOR. P. here*,, < * Ctr > ycrapor ilnSp UTS, LAVATORIES COMPLETE SI) value, $14.95; shower valuas. ...... Ordwattk. is. Irragutere. Terrific sigan Fluorescent, 393 F E 4-6462. ___________ AWN SPRINKLING PUMPS, 1 HP to 2 HP, priced from S92J0, G. A. Thompton end son, 7005 M-59 W. AWN SPRINKLING tySTafty, inch plastic plpa> SSJ5 per ion, . plastic pipe, tail par 100, lift plastic . pipe, SMI per 100, l'A plastic pipe, *10.01 per. 100. G. A, Thompson & Son"TOfe ilM* W. Washer 5 "dryerfsioo'Tor Sid SKIIS, POLLS, CABLE bindings tie boot*—*11 In goad condition. *50. mum 8.1 SAND AND GRAVEL, ^ gmn^predueto. M Wood-Coal-Coke-Fuei KENMORE Irontr, portable Nlapra cycle messeger end heettog pad, 2 •r sawing I. mtWH. SUBMERSIBI SPRIdBATIN PAINTS, WARWICK '—267* Oraiaiv Lake. 6*2- SIMPLICITY LANDLORD, U hi BElt------------- THE SALVATION ARMY WANTED: Ceder Christmas Tree*, 25c and up, any amount to make M||| 6759534 or 6124120. QiH«tma« Iwu 67 CHOicr NURSURY TREES SCOTCH PIN?l.. BALSAM Hand Tools-^MachiHBiy 68 AIR COMPRESSORS, ^ lubrication equipment, hydraulic lacks, star— cleaners, mMlne equipment, < Pontiac - Motor Parts, . i o University Drive. PE 1-0104. NORTHWEST. 6;# teem drag 3 DAY PRE-INVENTORY SALE PIANOS ORGANS L0WREY STORY AND CLARK Many styles to cheese tram Smilay Bros., Music FE 4-4721 BALDWIN CHERRYWOOb Acrosonlc m EPIPHONE Etorttk OulfmvT..— »<*, twin humbucking, pick-upi, n MHMlh — musl. IF YOUR CHILD can say her ABC's then It's time she learned her Do. lam Ml's, plane rentals. 3124)547. MORRIS MUSIC "s-T«k%E»,r8m Ifcbui L0WREY dkOANt,,,,,, Presents the Hew 1970 Escape BwiwSf® Our ChrMmaa Uv-A-Wey Plan GALLAGHER'S Sli, W&L Tt AS Wtm GALLAGHER'S 1210 TELEGRAPH - v PE 44666 ~—i Mon. Through Frt. Nil *- Opqn Sun., 1-5 P.M. iooHrs 4 Filer bl(UM~iff, compete with cymbals. List price *610. tale price, MM. ■ Pontiac Music & Sound USED PIANOS see from wlneti, uprights an nds, Uprlghte — as low as SB*. GRINNELL'S 27 S, SAGINAW ACCORDION, GUITAR, LBStONS HNS * service. Also plane toning. FulenrokC OR Staff. BHA 2 HORSE thoroughbred trailer, good condition, *900. 477- Rj^iwrswnHliHlMHlGBjilB hunter, Ti.i, 740*. FW15 Sporting Oggay {■ ' 5 W MODEL 60 stainless rtubnota 31 amdUMBXk I nodal 36 snuMqar-fli.epecIi stam^Ma I gauge thol it, *25 each. W vror rod MS?? »H7mw, diipoae of all guns. Dec. 31. Call -H-xiH. ■ OF SPORTING GOODS Guns—Scopes Ammo Cliff Dreyers Gun and Sports Centsr 15210 Holly Rd' HOHY ME 6-4771 R-PRIB fuSON WITH MW SALE GBNB3 ARCHERY 714 W, Huron •DYKE 4yee^ta^d^^tajwlm*i*, JPP I ES.' Welmerener-German - * "Ideal bird J ^ ' roMlrsto POODLE PUPFNE& MIXED, S10. WANTED: 2 dogs and one good ■ mouse cat, will give good home, YOUNG RABBITS for aala, all sizes. Pot SappIteC-Sarvlcs . 79-A 1-A GROOMING SelbnT ell I Bloomfield M! GROOMING If or 332-5639. DoMAhs POODLE CLIPPING. AactlaaT LAZY B Uddwy tata open; Blg Horn seddlet " Noccne boot* h belts. Isn't 5 Worntn's Western Clothing a R«- “ XitoonTkr^ st E. of Ui Arl MOAT CUTTING, fri wrapped, we Jjjn -aad meel87cell 37S-61I5. HAY FIRST AND secend cutting. BTWW. ‘”6^»' .ttkiiifcBd' (B 1 Bhone NUMBER 1 POTATOES, *2-50 par tMshal, 5200 Watarterd Rd. w- TU. ..ML eOlTOMiltt HoltaiyS'" '69 and ‘70, Davis MnwhlHjry Co., Ortonvllle, NA 7- r-a-Home and Fleetwing pickup ■pare and covers, Por me flnrot •Ice and the beet deal, come to Lapeer on jML Apache factory , Open Sunday*. CLOSE-OUT SfARCRAFT 1969 TRAVEb TRAILERS - 1969 CAMPERS SEE THE ALL NEW 1970 AUG'S AND STARCRAFTS CRUISE OUT, INC. CENTURY TRAVfEL TRAILERS illty coaches tor over 37 yet STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC . 3771 Highland (iMn 1 6*3 Trovoi troHdfB Chuck Our Daal on— SWISS COLONY LUXURY TRAILRRB FROLIC = TRAILERS AND TRUCK CAMPERS SKAMPER FOLD-DOWN CAMPERS is le 21 tt. on display at- Jocobson Trailer Sales 5690 Wlilieme Lek* Rd, OR *49ti DRAYTON CAMPER, insuleted, , stove, bed end ic* box, 6 mo. old, $475, 2694 wilder St. off Bender off Hatchery Rd„ breyton Plain*. EXPLORER MOTOR HOME 3V, 23', 25', MODELS See Rile California MdiMn unit which Is No. 2 fh motor horn* aatoe. Price* (tart at *9,995, up. STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC 77i Hhtoisita tsibiw ' mmjk OR COItSAIR TRAVEL TRAILER Corealr and Gem pickup camper*. Ellsworth Trailer Sales ' ’ '. .JOHNSOHapf;;1" l? TRAILER SUPPLIES 5AKii»Rlpl DEALER FOR: ' TR0TW00D WAG-N-MASTERS ' ‘ fe ten NOW ON DISPLAYI Frenkllns-Creet Scemron^temure Mete* Camp 4 Truck Campers LM' Hobo Truck Campers HAVE YOU SEEN THE NEW OMEGA MOTOR HOME Both Models on Display MCCLELLAN TRAVEL TRAILERS 4820 Highland Rd. Ph.*Mfljp price* an all Hama In alackl ,, ii.ru O ^ footer* ... g Bonanza, WoU Lake, West - Wtod * WhroT ttmpar SALE PICKUP CAPS ^mMcss. ' , ACCESORIES " Hayden Camper Sales 10719 HIGHLAND ItO. (M-59) Ml. W. of Oxbnw Lk. 363-6606 -Television Programs- Programs fumiahad by station* listod in this column ar» subject to chang Channtla.2-WJBK-TV. 4-VWWV. 7-WXVE-TV. 9-CKIW-TV. SO-WWO-TV, S6-WTVS-TV. 62-WXON-TV R — Rerun C — Color TUBfiDAY NIGHT 6:66 (2) (4) (?) C - News, Weather, Sports (9) ft C ~ Voyage to the Bottom of the Sm (in progress) (50) R C — Flintstones (56) CPT (82) R~Osric and Harriet |:3S (2) C — News — Cronkite (4) C — News — Huntley, Brinkley (7) C - News — Reynolds, smith (9) R — Dick Van Dyke t — Rob ignores Laura’s warning to stay off the big slopes on his first siding excursion. (90) R — Ministers (66) Beyond the Earth — Stars that do not radiate light uniformly are TV Features JULIA, 6:90 p.m. (4) MOVIE, 9 p m. (4) ^insure Nowr SAuto—Life—Horn* W Call Kan Mohlman I . 682-3490 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1089 (By The Associated Press) Poet Allan Ginsberg has filed a federal court suit seeking to force Miami, Fla., officials to let him reschedule a poetry reading at Marine Stadium, admitting art comers free. A Ginsberg reading Dec. 22 was halted when the stadium manager, Manny Costa, objected to a number of four-letter words and drowned out the recitation with loud music on the jpublic address system. The poet’s suit yesterday also asked 610,00 damages from Costa. Scranton Resigns Delegation Post Former Gov. William W. Scranton of Pennsylvania has resigned., as VA representative to a conference arranging fir an International Telecommunications Satellite CoMerttam. President Nixon said yesterday Scranton’s successor would be Abbot M. Wash-bum, deputy director of die U.S. delegation. When Scranton took the post, he said he planned to serve only through 1969. Actor Don Murray, Wife to Separate Actor Don Murray and his wife, Betty, blaming incompatibility, have agreed to separate, they disclosed yesterday I in a joint announcement. Married Aug, 2, 1961, in Berlin, they have three children. Murray, 40, also has two children by his former marriage to actress Hope Lange. The actor, whose big break came when he played opposite Marilyn Monroe in “Bus Stop,” has been seen most recently in the < ABC television series “The Outcasts.'1 His movie credits include leading roles in “HatfUl of Rain” and “The Hoodlum MURRAY Priest.” Actnwt to Be Released From Med Center Actress Terry Moore’s agent says he expects her to be released within a few days from the University of California Medical Center at Lot Angeles, where she is under treat- The agent, Ray Sackheim, told news Mist Moore, 46, has been suffering from a general run-down Miss Moore's third husband, investor Stuart Warren Cramer ID, 41, sued this year for divorce, charging cruelty. ; John. Barrymore Jr. Placed on Probation Actor John Barrymore Jr. has been placed on probation for two years after pleading no contest to a charge of possessing marijuana. Id passing sentence yesterday in Los Angeles, Superior Court Judge Karl Davis dismissed another charge, possessing Barrymore, 37, was arrested last Aug. 4 after a traffic accident Involving a car in which he was S passenger. The Highway Patrol said investigators found marijuana beneath the Seal where the actor had been sitting. (62) R — Movie: “One Way Out” (British, 1957) Jill Adams, Eddie Bryne 7:99 (2) C — Truth or Consequences (4) C — News, Weather, (?) C — (Special) Rose Bowl Preview — Sports-casta- Dave Dfies interview! University of Michigan football coach Bo Schembechler and members of foe team as they prepare for their game with Southern California. (9) R C - Movie: “The Man Who Never Was” (British, 1966) Naval intelligence officers throw Germans off guard, making the invasion of fflcDy easier for the Allies. Clifton Webb, Gloria Grahsme (50) R -1 Love Lucy (56) What’s New -“Inland Waterway” covers a trip through the I n tracoastal Waterway from Charleston, S.C., to St Augustine. Fla. (Part 1) 7:30 (2) C - Lancer - An old friend dies, leaving Murdoch responsible for the man’s 9 - year - old (4). C - (Special) Rose Bowl — Highlights of past Rose Bowl games with a close-up of this year’s Michigan Wolverines (?) C - Mod Squad -After a young man helps Pete when he is attacked by hoodlums, Pete learns that the man’s father may be plotting a serious crime. (90) C — Beat the Clock (66) Joyce Chen Cooks — “Egg Rolls” 6:16(4) C - Debbie Reynolds — Debbie gets a contract offer from the head of a movie studio. (60) R C - Hazel (50) Fact of the Matter -“The High Cost of Medical (tare” (62) R — The Nelsons - 9:30 (2) C - Red Skelton -Barbara Bain and Sweetwater guest. (4) C — Julia — Hannah and Julia, threaten to strike over Dr. Chegley’s (7) C — Movie: "Gidget Grows Up” (Premiere) Gidget gives up her surfing life to become a U.N. guide. Karen Valentine, Edward Mulhare, Paul Petersen (50) C - To Tell the Truth (56) Twin Circle Headline — Sex education is discussed. (02) R - Sea Hunt 6:11 (4) C - Movie: “A Matter of Innocence” (British, 1067) Friuhpy girl comes to Singapore with her aunt and fans in love with a Eurasian gigolo. Hay lay Mills, Trevor Howard, Shashi Kapoor (9) C-What’s My Line? -Radio Programs- Vbldr60iw>tvai370) CKlWteOO) WWJ(9S0) WCAR(lt3Q) WPON(14»0) WOEt(tSOO) WHH-fM(94.7) woie. MSw Scott ---—- Nlwt> Kiloldo YAFnnmooN WHFI. Don Atcam asw*8- WD6E, Tom Dean man Sports «:30-WWJ, Today In Rot 7:0S—WWJ. Now WHFI.r*L00 All WCAR, News;, 7:M-WXYZ, News, Dave Leckhan WWJ, SporttUne ! WJR, Reaaoner Report, CMr«.tM*ea*a ,. rUHMbcBBpp*e»l»' CKLW, Todd Wallace WCAR, Newt, wayne Phlb WHN? Ira J. Ccok WEDNRtDAY MORNINO liTO-WPON, Newt, limr ' WjS? News, Sporta ItW—WJR. Sunnyslde Encore ItJO-WJR, Showcase, Close- li4S—WJR, Showcase, MlnorJly Report fiWr-CKLW, Scott Regen WJR, News, Kaleidoscope ■v Sncora • dtSO“MMM* MuiSe MM CKLW, Jim Edwarria WPON! Nmn,BChuSc War- WHPI, Marc Avery . • ■ Morrla Carlmn 1 titO-WJR, New* , (ill—WJR, Sunnyildt, Music laiM-WJR, News wo EE, mm smith . WitS-rWJR, racua Encore IttaS-WJR, Now* • VMM. w ‘ ■ tttfViJAwIN WWJ. News, Ask Your lO-atwX^^^^Johnny' 11j»-WJR, Music Till Down ttita-WXYZ, News, Jim . Devla RaiaMT j. 1 WCAR. Rod Mllfor WJR, NOW*, Good Music IldS—WJR, POM MMSfc.. WHFI, Don Alcorn . |;)M|WJ| Hewjtlm. fits—wpon, week Report (SO) R — Perry Mason (56) Segovia Master Class (62) R - Movie: “Brigand” (Italian, 1960) Adelmo di Praia, Serena Vergano 1:10 (2) C — Governor and J. J. — Drinkwater becomes the subject of an underground press scandal. (6) C — Cesar’s World — “Pakistan” (50) Conversations i n Depth 16:00 (2) C — News Special -“The Battle of East St Louis” examines how a sensitivity training session among It of tbs angriest citizens of East St, Louis helped curb a racial crisis. (7) C — Marcus Welby — Young basketball player, told he must undergo knee surgery, goes to a faith healer instead. Ruth Roman guest-stars. (9) C — McQueen - The ACtioneer investigates a furniture store that will not return deposits. (50) C — News, Weather, ‘-Sports 19:99 (9) C — Man at the Center - “The Gaieties Revolution” offers a look at the future when science may be able to manipulate gender and birth. (50) R — Ben Casey -The entire hospital staff is pot on the emergency ward to save the life of a hospital worker exposed to radioactivity. ' (62) R — I Led Three Lives 11:66(2) (4) (7) (9) C -News, Weather, Sports (62) R- Highway Patrol 11:20 (41) C - Johnny Carson — Author John Lahr and comedian Marty Brill guest (7) C -JDlck Cavett -Violinist Isaac Stem and Charlotte Curtis, New Y6rk Times women’* editor, join Bette Davis and Henry Fonda as guests. (9) R - Movie: “Prize of Arms” (British, 1961) Stanley Baker (50) C - Mfcrv Griffin-Guests include Ernest Borgnine, Pam Rodgers, Zsa Zsa Gabor, Morey Amsterdam, Marty Allen and the Blossoms. (02) C - (Special) College Basektball: Purdue vs. Penn 11:21 (2) R C - Movie: “A Pistol for Ringo” (Italian, 1906) 1:09(4)' C - Beat the Champ (7) R — Texan (9) Viewpoint 1:06 (9) C - Perry’s Probe — “ESP and Dreams” 1:99 (2) R - Naked City (4) (7) C - News, Weather 1:49(7) C — live Minutes to Live By WEDNESDAY MORNING 6:59 (2) TV Chapel 6:16 (2) C — On the Farm Scene