The Weather U.S. WMtIwr Buriau PoracMt (Dalalli on Pago 1) VOL. 126 NO. 104 THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC. MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 7, 1967 —.52 PAGES lOe So we/s force U. N. Session to Eye Further War Action UNITED NATIONS UB — The U.N. Security Council was called into a hurried emergency session at the request of the Soviet Union today to consider further action to halt the Middle East war. ★ ★ ★ The Soviets demanded an immediate cease-fire by Israel and threatened a break in diplomatic relatipns if Israel ignores the demand. The Russians further asked the Security Council to set a deadline of 4 p.m. (EDT) for Israel and the Arab countries to cease firing. The meeting was scheduled for 12:30 p,m., approximately 90 minutes after the request from Soviet,. Ambassader Nikolai T. Fedorenko had been received by the council’s president, Ambassador Hans A. Tabor of Denmark. The council was awaiting responses from Israel and the Arab nations to its unanirnous call for an immediate ceasefire issued yesterday after a sudden Soviet retreat on the issue. FEDORENKO’S STATEMENT In a statement just before the council adjourned last night, Fedorenko declared: “We consider that this decision, unanimously adopted by the council, will be carried out today without any further delay, and that the president of the council will take all the necessary steps to see to it that the aggression stops.” The Soviet Union throughout has taken the position that Israel is the aggressor. Some diplomats believe Fedorenko would* blame Israel for failure of the cease-fire to take place promptly. Secretary Gfaeral U Thant conferred privately this morning with Egyptian Ambassador Mohamed Awad el Keney. He also had an appointment with Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban but the meeting Was canceled without explanation. U.N. officials said Thant had received a cable from Jordanian Foreign Minister Amhed Toukan announcing that Jordan had decided to accept the cease-fire appeal. The secretary general had received no communications from any other party to., the fighting, they said. Israel had given conditional acceptance to the cease-fire last night, and Thant sent cables to all the belligerent governments seeking confirmation of the Israeli position and acceptance from the Arab nations. Israelis Raise Flag At El Arish Airfield Tax Bill Ready for Vote; Leaders Ask Romney Aid ISRAELI""ADDRE^ES'sra - Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban (left) addresses the United Nations Security Council last night which had just called for an immediate cease-fire in the Arab-Israeli war. Eban said his country welcomed the appeal for cessation of fighting. Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg, and seated between Eban Caradon, British minister of state for foreign affairs. At far right is U.S. and Goldberg is Lord LANSING OB - With Their two-punch tax program in position foe a flnalAi'ote, House Republican leaders have enlisted TijjGov. George Romney’s aid in their search for votes to pass it. One reluctant Republican emerged from a 25-minute session in Romney’s office yesterday and said the governor Republican Wins Key House Race MOUNT CLEMENS (AP) - For the second time in two weeks, a Republican has swept his way to a .seat in the Michigan House, riding the crest of Gov. George Romney’s popularity. David Serotkin yesterday swamped Democrat Victor Steeh, by an unofficial 5,879 to 4,635 votes in their race to represent the state’s 75th legislative district at Mount Clemens. The victory gave Republicans a 56-54 margin in the House, considerably eur hancing Romney’s chances of pushing through a controversial state tax reform p^am. Romney’s ability to swing fiscal reform thriragh theMichigan Legislature is considered a prime factor in party selection of a presidential candidate next year. A jubiliant Serotkin hailed Romney as the architect of his success; had suggested Republicans might repay his support for the fiscal package with Votes for his views on court reorganization. That GOP member. Rep. Donald Holbrook of Clare, said he still didn’t intend to vote for the tax program. House Republicans moved the tax package yesterday into position for a final vote. Speaker Robert Waldron, playing by ear and carefully counting his votes, said he hoped for a showdown this week on the Republican-drafted package and its controversial state income tax. He said he had “over 50” of the 55 votes needed to pass the bills. Holbrook said Romney was “very congenial and courteous” and made no threats while asking him to vote for the new fiscal program. “He did mention,” Holbrook said, “that since I am chairman of the House Judiciary Committee and consequently quite concerned about the subject of court reorganization, I mighit be in a better position to have members of my party go along with my position in that matter if I went along with the majority of my caucus on the tax program.” Holbrook said he replied that he doubted that was true, that the House GOP tax package still contains “certain basic inequities,” and that “at the present time” he couldn’t vote for it. Commission OKs Betterment Fund City commissioners last night approved a capital improvement fund budget calling for $799,204 worth of expenditures duHng the 1967 fiscal year. * ★ ★ The fund is financed by a special 1%-rhill tax levy, which fs expected to bring in $621,000. Another $150,000 was carried over from last year'’s fund as an unexpended balance. Appropriations were authorized for Related Stories, Pages A-2, A-8 spending $148,000 for construction of seven storm drains and $120,000 for the city’s share of paving local streets. Another $106,000 was allocated as final payment on the central fire station and $22,000 was appropriated for completion of a pistol firing range in the basement of the public safety building. (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 6) Israel Claims Egypt Defeat TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) - Israel today claimed complete defeat of Egypt and control of a wide Arab sector from the west bank of the Jordan River to the Suez Canal. By The Associated Press Israeli forces, apparently running roughshod over the Egyptian Array, announced today the capture of the strategic Sharm el Sheikh heights overlooking the entrance to the Gulf of Aqaba — in effect breaking Gamal Abdel Nasser’s blockade. They reported also an advance to a point 20 miles from the Suez Canal. On the northern front, Jordan sought a cease-fire as an echo to the Israelis’ capture of Old Jerusalem. The twin Israeli advances in Egypt placed their armies almost at the identical points they had won during the 1956 war with Egypt. Egyptian occupation of Sharm el Sheikh was the flash point of this war, now in its third day. At the head of the Gulf of Aqaba lies Elath. To reach SKarnr el Sheikh, Israeli forces had to race more than 125 miles down the Sinai Peninsula. Radio Cairo reported ment by the Egyptian High Command that forces at Sharm el Sheikh “have Related Stories, Pages A-7, B-10, B-11, B-14, C-9, D-6 rejoined our main forces in the defensive positions in Sinai.” An Israeli Army spokesman in Tel Aviv said an armored column along Egypt’s coast had overrun Rumana in an advance of more than 100 miles since the drive began two days ago. Jordan: Ready if for Cease-Fire This not only put the Israelis 20 miles from the Suez Canal, but they also were in a position to move on Port Said, at the head of*the canal 30 miles to the northwest. Jordan’s government in Amman reported the decls^^ with Israel was made after consultation with the Arab joint command, which Egypt heads. Syria and Egypt maintained they wouid continue the fight. Cairo admitted today that its troops had fallen back before the Israeli drive toward the canal, but there was no indication of the extent of the withdrawal. •k it ★ Israel’s radio said two tank columns were racing toward the canal along two paved highways — the main road through the Sinai Desert and Egypt’s coasti road farther nra-th. Hand-to-hand fighting between Israelis and Jordanians was reported in Bethlehem, Jesus’ birthplace, 10 iniles southwest of Jerusalem. 1 lnT( Today's | Press I First Time I Secret Service arrests own | agent on counterfeiting charge ^ - PAGE B-8. I Walled Lake Protests surround rezoning of |i land for apartments — PAGE i A4. ^ __ . I Golf Sectional I Several name golfers fail in p USGA Sectional qualifying play - PAGE D-1. Area News ..........»....,A4 Astrology ..??.........'..C-8 k Bridge .............:.... C-8 Crossword Puzzle . D-13 Comics ...................C-8 ] Editorials ............... A4 f Markets ..................D-6 i Obituaries .............. D-7 | Sports ...............D-I-D-5 I 'liieaters ............. C-9 | TV and Radio Programs D-13 ; Wilson, Earl . D-13 t Women’s Pages ........B-l—B-3 _ | AMMAN, Jordan (AP) — Jordan announced today it has agreed to negotiate^ a cease-^ It said, however, it is continuing to fight because of continuing “Israeli aggression.” King Hussein broadcast an appeal to the people of Jordan to “fight to the death.” The government said the decision to negotiate a truce was made after consultation with the Arab joint command and was relayed to the United Nations Emergency Force in the Middle East. It was said the king was speaking “from somewhere on the front.” Amman Radio had announced that Jordanian forces had launched a general counteroffensive against Israeli troops along the whole length of the b o r d e r west of the Biblical River Jordan. The youthful ruler asked other Arab countries for material aid''and money to continue the battle against Israel. The king, 32, had said in his speech that the Jordanian forces “are waging a battle for all Arabs everywhere.” He then appealed to other Arab countries for help. He said “any material and moral aid for the young men and other Arabs continuing the fight in the front line and in the trenches will be deeply appreciated." Good Drenching for Pontiac Area The weatherman didn’t forget Pontiac area residents when he brought showers to Michigan during the night. Pontiac hasn’t had a drenching rain since May J7 when three-tenths of an inch was recorded. About one-tenth of an inch followed on May 18r Rainfall last nigtt and early this hiom-ing measured eight-tenths of an inch in the downtown area. The forecast for today, tonight and tomorrow is mostly cloudy, continued warm and humid with occasional showers or thundershowers. , , *■ Friday’s outlook is more of the same-little change. ’ The low in downtowh Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. was 66. The mercury sto()d near 75 at 2 p.m. de-" J fi The king praised the bravery and de- | Reporf 071 KuSSIOnS ■rmination of the J 0 r d a n i a n armed I ' SAFER CROSSING . SEEN — A new pedestrian overpass across East Wide Track at Whittemore is ready for use. Designed as a pilot project, it is the first of its type to be used in the state. The $26,000 bridge will connect the central business district with the area east of Wide Track and allow for safer crossings, city officials said. , . termination forces. He declared: “Kill the enemy wheverer you find them, kill them with your bare hands or even with your teeth and nails. Continue fighting to your last breath. “Until we all fall dead, we shall continue fighting and shedding our blood for our sacred Holy Land.” Recent years appear to have mellowed the Russian people. Read these conclusions by Hai;pld A. Fitzgerald, chairman of the board of The Pontiac Press, in his column on today’s editorial page. Friday he will write his hnpres-sidns of India as he saw it on a recent world tour. -1- r ■ A—2 the PONTIAC l^RESy WEDNEsWy, JUNE 7, 1967 Senate Starts Talk on Rail Strike Delay WASHINGTON (AR)-Presi-j Congress already has voted jcial five-man board he would T dent Johnson’s proposal to side- two extension of the no strike-no name. track a threatened nationwide! lockout period in the dispute rail strike steams toward Sen-between six shopcraft unions ate debate with Democratic ; and railroads handling about 95 leader Mike Mansfield express-i per cent of the nation’s rail traf-ing hope the measure will be in fic. House hands by Thursday. Mansfield called for a morning debate on the bill and put aside another measure — on congressional. redistricting DEADLINE NEAR But if no settlement were, reached in this time, the board i could make its own determina-i tion of fair terms and order these into effect until Jan. 1, originally Slated to occupy the Slup 3 b^! . 1 The unions labeled the plan The present extension runs jjggj.. out June 19. . ■ ings on the bill and urged Con- ... The.admmstratiOT contends ^ reject iL- Administra- that with a war on m Vietnam, varied^ Senate today. Mansfield said he felt the Senate had to dispose of the rail plan this week because the Senate is expected to devote most of next week to debating a resolution to censure Sen. Thomas J. Dodd, Monn. a disaster. Commission Eyes Delay of UAW Office City commissioners heard a report last night on urban renewal land purchased by the United Auto Workers in Decern-1 from compulsory ‘brbitration in several ways. * * * j The railroads said they would Johnson’s bill would extend j go along with the proposal as the no strike-no lockout period I the only apparently feasible another 90 days during which | way to avoid a strike at this intensive m^iation efforts | time, would take place under a spe-1 ★ ★ ★ Senators who supported the Romney to Hit 3 Key States union’s position tried unsuccessfully to amend the bill in the Labor Committee and said they expected to renew their efforts in the floor debate. Sen, Ralph Yarborough, D-Tex., lost narrowly in commit-lee on a pfbpbsaT to add a^F^^ sion impounding the railroads’ Presidentid Primary Sites Will Be Visited i Yarborough said he was I trying to find a way to “balance LANSING (tlBI) — Gov.i^l*® scale’’ and not put all ^ ber 1965 at Au^n and CenterRomney will take a on the umons under whic^ has sat idle for nearly 18 presidential chances *e bill. BIRMINGHAM - The school board last night awarded bids for approximately $631,000 for an addition and remodeling of Groves High School. The awards were about $20,000 below expectations. months. The union purchased the land under urban renewal agreements which called for construction of an office building before December 1966. James L. Bates, director of planning and urban renewal, stated to the commission a UAW regional director had re-ptHded the building has not been started because of “internal problems.” Bates said the union would be In a better position to know what It intends 'to do in two weeks. The commission asked for a status report in two weeks. in three states which will hold tho w fpw weeks N strike, would be forced to ac- the next few w^ks. g government-decreed set- First stop will be Wisconsin gf jgj.ms and undoubt- Saturtay for a senes of politi- ^g^g ^ take lower cal backstopping events and a j^an they could win good olddasluoned croommg of ecdoomio ' ■ strength. ' The Romney-for-President i Tj,e Senate committee ap-club in Milwaukee has invited | proved the hjeasure 14 The planning director said the city had been assisting the imion from 1961 to 1966 in securing a Bite for an office building. If the union does not intend to construct on the site, Bates said, the best solution would be to persuade the union to sell the land to a developer approved by the city. 2 Firms Looted m Shelby Twp. Merchandise and cash amounting to $1,100 was stolen this morning from two firms at 523110 Van Dyke, Shelby Township. Hairstyles by Carol suffered $700 in loss of money and miscellaneous items. Cash and merchandise worth $400 was stolen from Weinbei'ger Builders. Thieves also broke into Brook-lands Dental Laboratory and the Cake Cottage ih the same building but nothing was reported missing. Police are still investi- The unions contended that,. under the President’s projposal, YOU JANE - Terry Stretten, 16, plays the role of Tarzan as his sister, Wendy, 5, watches near the shore of Union Lake. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Ivan S. Stretten, 2390 Locklin, West Bloomfield Township. New Mexico Search for Raiders Is Ended Birmingham Area News Board Lets Groves Contracts The work will provide 15 additional classrooms, a larger library and offices. Winning bidders werd, Bundy Construction, $449,000 for general construction; Evans Plumbing, $115,000 for mechanical work; Fred Moote Co., $67,01 for electrical work. 'Deck Concept Likely in Downtown Plan' Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. l that this would be included In last night said he has not seen the finalized plan of developer plans for a downtown.shopping A. Alfred Taubman. The board also accepted preliminary plans for a new $1.1-million elementary school to be located at 13 Mile between Telegraph and Lahser. MINORITY GROUPS Die board replied to a letter requesting that the district hire “members of other races and minority groups ... to enrich our children’s lives.” Members of the board and administration pointed out it had always been the policy to hire educators regardless of race or creed. center that include a decked concept but considered dt likely Improvement Fund Okayed (Continued From Page One) City Manager Joseph A. Warren, outlining the planned ex-said $40,000 would be spent to improve the municipal golf course and provide equipment for other parks; $46,820 Answering questions posed by a citizens’ group which has in the past advocated a decked concept firsf proposed by a University of Detroit design and criticized the Taubman plan, Taylor said he was “very optimistic. ‘ Revindicated that Ta They pointed oiit the district has at present one Negro and two Oriental persons on the staff. The district has a teaching staff of about 900. does have a plan that includes deck parking and said he was “pretty sure” it would be something that the Citizens Committee for Pontiac’s Positive Progress (CCPPP) would accept. Taubman has an agreement CANJILON, N.M. (AP) - officersandholdingseveralper-National Guard troops called off] sons hostage. their search for a band of j Black said he believed some'; .. 5h-American fugitives in of the group’s leaders still were the rugged northern New Mexi- hiding in the forested hills and; Warren said allocations for for street lighting on M59, Golf,with the City Commission to Drive, Arlene, Cass and Oak-| secure tenants for a downtown land; and $42,400 to complete!shopping center and to be the paving of the parking area be- sole developer of the center. Unhind toe civic center. der the a^eement he has until I Sept. 27 to secure major ten-POUCE RADIOS ants. Downtown parking lot im- t ★ ★ provements will cost $30,000 and Donald H. Frayer, chairman M2,000 will be used to replace of the CCPPP, said he was pleased to read that the cjty “has decided to utilize toe deck breakfast of faithful support- j^j. amendments, ers Saturday and to make a i Tjje House Commerce Corn-few remarks to newsmen on mittee scheduled its final public his plans. ! hearings on the legislation for A noon luncheon with GOP today, leaders in Appleton also is planned before Romney spends the rest of the day at Green Bay helping celebrate the Alice i n Dairyland festival. Romney also is reported plan-j ning a four-day stay in New, Hampshire, site of the nation’s! first 1968 presidential primary,' early next month. He is expected to stay at Lake Winnipesau-kee July 6-9 with a long-time; Global Sailor Hospifalized in England PLYMOUTH, England (AP) ... _ .-..o -. ■ Sir Francis Chichester, the friend hotel owner J. Willard solo round-the-world sailor, Marriott of Washington, D. C. admitted Tuesday night to the TNii'nRMiiT iwwFTTMrs Naval Hospital here. INFOmAL MEETINGS hospital reported today Informed sources say Romney j,g was found to have hemor-will spend toe time in New, j.j,gggd from a duodenal ulcer. Hampshire ^tb HafOTmaU-typej meetings with his Republican supporters in toe New England state. A meet-the-candidates rally for Monday’s school board election will be held at 8 tonight at Seaholm High School, 2436 W. Lincoln. The event Is sponsored by the Birmingham-Bloomfield League of Women voters. All toe Birmingham School District candidates are expected to be on hand. Following their talks, voters will have a chance to throw questions at toe candi-dates. ■ Five persons are seeking two four-year terms and three vie for a single one-year seat. Lightning Cuts Power in Areas number of. State Police Chief Joe Black have slipped through police major expenses needed to said 25 of his officers would re- lines. bring the police communica- ! Frayer asked ,. ^ main in the area but the nearly WOUNDED tion system up to date. [questions some of which Taylor.W 400 National Guard troops and ' .... 'declined m nn the.Go. other officers were beiiic sent! Spanish-Americans raid-i The improvement fund also-grounds that doing so would borne ^ ^ ^ Arriba County court- calls for $56,000 to be spent fori- - - - ® • ------- About 30 fugitives fled into the Carson National Forest near Canjilon Monday after raitohg a rural courthouse, wounding two house at Tierra Amarilla Monday, with their gunfire Critically wounding two officers. The group was tracked by state police, deputies and National Guardsmen into the Carson National Forest east of Canjilon. three new pedestrian walkways, $40,000 for toe city’s share of new sidewalks and $17,660 for cemetery equipment. A $27,000 allocation was made for purchase of new fire fighting equipment. Warren said it jeopardize Taubman’s attempt to secure agreements with tenant. After the arrest Tuesday of] ^g^gg ygg^'g get delivery flOr 09 L)6l60ll°"® well-known member of the; equipment and the city que. State Police Chief Joel Black said it was believed the ° ^ for Roosevelt Taylor would not comment when asked about the status of the tenants other than to say that an answer would “jeopardize” the project. In answer to other questions, he said a complete concept would not be finalized until the [Ueeds of the major tenants are fugitives might be making their NAME SIGNS defined, that it is “ques- way south toward the Rio Arri- other allocations are; $15,000iuonable” whether toe city will County community of for remodeling toe old city li-'have to close South Saginaw to brary, $12,000 for planting trees j implement Taqbman’s plans, t '"“" and that it is uncerta^^ Lightning damage to electric power lines kept Detroit Edison answer on the!^®- repairmen busy for several hours this morning in five areas. Some 100 customers in the vicinity of Giddings and Brown in Orion Township were inconvenienced for several hours after lightning burned down wires at 8:05......... ) Jay Dermer. The adventurer, 65 years old, was given a blood transfusion! Dermer, 37, untested politi-j shortly after admission. An an- (.gUy pj-jm- to a May 16 primary His office, however, said the | nouncement said his condition; jn wl|ich he placed second in a ^ime would be spent in “re- jwas satisfactory and gave no five-man field, smashed Roose- laxation.” j cause for alarm. : at th e But it added he would be un- Romney will — ... Young Republican Convention in der medical chre for at least a Omaha, Neb., June 23. |month. Besides the visits to key! ★ ★ ★ states with presidential primar-| Chichester was due to sail for les, Romney also has trips London Thursday in his yacht MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) Elliott Roosevelt was out of of-! ^ ^ ^ . ficG today as mavor of Miami wt n t_ j r j i str6€ts, $18,500 for paving tBeach after Tdsinv a inno Noll, who was under federal drives and installing a water meach ajter losing a runoff race assaulting feder-lgygten,-in Jaycee Park and $6,- al officers and conversion of j,g^ gj.j.ggt gg^e signs. government property, was arrested south of Canjilon in Navajo Canyon. The Spanish-Americans group contends its members are heirs velt’s bid for reelection. planned to Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Wyoming this month. Gipsy Moth IV and to be dubbid knight by Queen Elizabeth next week. The Weather FuU U.S. Weatoer Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Mostly cloudy, continued warm and humid with occasional periods of showers or thundershowers today^ tonight, and tomorrow. Friday’s outlook: Uttto change. High today 77 to 83. Low tonight 62 to 68. South-„ westeriy winds eight to 18 miies but briefly higher in thundershowers today. Senate Probe ofLongtJr^ At 8 a.m.: Wind Velocity S r Direction: Southwest Sun seta Wednesday et 8:07 p.m. Sun rises Thursday at 4:57 a.m. Moon sets Wednesday at 8:05 p.m Highest temperature Lowest temperature ---- temperature Omrntawn Temperatures Tuesday In Pontiac WASHINGTON .(UPD - % John J. Williams, R-DeT., today asked toe Senate Ethics Committee to investigate allegations that Sen. Edward V. Lwig, D-Mo., used a Senate investjga- Weather: Day, partly cloudy; night, Tuesday's Temperature Chart jna 75 59 Fort Worth 89 S9 Escanaba 66 53 Jacksonville - 69t(5r. Rapids 70| Houghton 73 Lansing 75 Marquette Muskegon One Year Ago In Pontiac Highest temperature , . Lowest temperature . Mean temperature ................. Weather: Sunny * 76 67 Kansas City 86 71 67 46 Miami Beach 83 73 82 70 Milwaukee 77 61 69 44 New Orleans 87 67 SO 64 New York " ‘ 83 18 Phoenix C. 8) 60 Pittsburgh r 80 60 St. Louis -,72 45 Temps 86 74 81 60 Saif Lake C. 77 52 76 68 S. Francisco 59 53 Roosevelt, 56, son of the late President Franklin D. Roosevelt, had said before toe election that his political ambitions were limited to Miami Beach. With machine ba^ts in all 25 precincts counted. Dormer had 10,364 votes to 8,289 fqr Roosevelt. Election officials kaid less than 600 absentee ballots remained to be tabulated. HEAD OF BAR The son of a restaurant m er, Dermer is president oT Miami Beach Bar Association. He had been given only a slight chance to win Tuesday’s election. Roosevelt’s administration, Dermer charged, was pitted by bickering and fighting that spoiled its effectiveness. The commissioners gave quick approval to the improvement fund authorizations after the public hearing at whieh no o vasTregLn^ under old Spanish land grants. I ‘’^rs of the audience. They took over a campground ini the Carson Forest last October for about four days to press ^ ; these claims. »"-• Their leader, Reies Tijerina, ^ -had threatened a showdown of | force at Coyote last Saturday S but 11 of his lieutenants v^rel arrested toe previous night andl^ no incidents occurred. But when seven of those ar-rested were taken to the court-Wse~idonday anto ndvised of-their rights by District Court Judge James Scarborough, a Some 50 homes In toe vicinity of Somerset and Square Lake Road in Bloomfield Township went without electricity from 7 to 8:M a.m. for the same reason. group of armed men stormed into the building and Wounded Twd officers^th pnfire7 Tping two hostages, later released unharmed, toe gunmen ' fled tdward Canjilon. House Democrats Press for Boost in D^bt Ceiling HIglMtt and Lowest Temporaturei . s. s. ; -J Seattle 67 51 81 65 Washington ' 81 60 59 51 NATIONAL WEATHER -r Showers are forecast tonight frt»a nuahoma to the Great Lakes and northern Plains. Western states will have cooler temperatures. tion to aid Teamster boss E. Hoffa and received /ees from Hoffa attorney. Williams announced he has written Ethics Committee Oiair-nan John C. Stdhnis, D-Miss. ‘requesting that if the committee is not already doing so, it J^lexamine these charges and is-«' 57 sue a report to the Senate. “These charges are of Such a nature that in fairness to the junior senator from Missouri (Long) and the United States Senate, they should not be ignored or left unanswered.” Life Magazine in ifs May 29 issue charged that Long used his chairmanship of a Senate ■ Hoffa’a efforts to stay out of , The magazine also charged j that Long accepted $48,(K)p from| As the House debate opened Morris A. Shenker, a St. Louis 'today on the debt ceiling attorney who has represented lure, GOP leaders also saw de-Hoffa. I feat of the administration meas;; Long denied using the subcom'i| yjg gg g to force Johnson to imittee to help Hoffh and said! present the tax hike proposal he “There is not one single fact has mentioned but hasn’t sub- Iin the article to substantiate |mitted to Congress, this charge.” I The economy’s sluggish pace The senator' said the referral j and toe House Ways and Means fees were due him from I^al Committee’s heavy work sebedt work he and Shenker performed ule were cited government t^etoer. ' | officials as causing the delay in WASHINGTON (AP) - Democrats are stressing uncertainties raised by the Middle East war as they press for House acceptance of a $29 billion boost in the national debt ceiling — biggest proposed single jump since World War II. Republicans have called for defeat of the proposed new $365-billion borrowing limit, saying congressional rejection would presentation of Johnson’s proposed six per cent surtax on private and corporate income. TAX BOOST But sources said the request for a tax boost will be sent to Congress in plenty of time for the Ways and Means Committee -^gindter in Cimgress of all tax legislation — to consider it. The Israeli-Arab fighting was force PwsideBL Joh«soH-to trim JnentioMd-KpMtedl^ his budget. as toe House Rules Committee debated, and then cleared for action today the bill setting toe new ceiling. Cliairman Wilbur D, Mills, D-Ark., of toe Ways and Means Committee argued a $29-billion deficit is possible, though not likely, on. the basis of Vietnam costs and fiscal possibilities. What additional demahdk toe •Middle East fighting may goi-erate, he added, cannot even be guessed now. point whether additional land will have to be purchased to complete a shopping center. “When I am ready to report all details I’ll report to the City of Pontiac,” he said. Each commissioner was asked if he had been aware of what Taylor would say to the I Rotary Club before toe speech iMay 25. Commissioner Robert C. Irwin, District 2, said he heai^d the speech. Four commission-leVs had “no comment” or indicated they were not aware of toe speech beforehand. Commissioner Leslie H. Hudson said Taylor’s remarks were well covered in the press Qrcuit fuses were l^lown out by lightning in three other areas. Eighty customers were without electricity from 8:05 to 8:25 a.m. in the vicinity of Union Lake Road and Commerce 1n and ample. ’ He said Tavlor dq- lightning blacked out^ custonu-livers a number of speeches and er’s homes in the vicinity of It IS not nefcessary for him to p clear his remarks with each commissioner. JOSEPH A. WARREN Fupd Selects City Manager aty Manager Joseph A. Warren has been selected by toe Metropolitan Fund, Inc., to attend a 12-day Urban Affairs program in Washington, D.C., this month. Mayor WilUam H. ,Taylor Jr. said last night«Warren was chosen by a committee of the fund, emmental studies and programs, for his “achievement and participation”, in community and government affairs. Taylor said the fund pays $1,-500 for toe city manager’s participation in toe program, toe city will pay other costs. He indicated Warren may request attendance at similar programs held later in the year instead of toe one scheduled to start June 18. Commerce Township. Others affected Included 100 customers around Maple and Wisconsin in Doy from 8 to 8:30 a.m. Also 100 customers in the area of Walnut and Orchard Lake Road in West Bloomfield Township, between 9 and 9:15 a.m. SCHOOL DISMISSED West Bloomfield Junior High, 6000 Orchard Lake, dismissed students at 9:05 a.m. because of the power failure. There was low power in a few areas of the school but most portions were without power and water, a school spokesman said. ★ ★ Transformer fuses blown by homes in the vicinity i Paint (]reek near Adams in Oakland Township from 8 9:10 a.m. 4-County Board to Offer Clinton River Drain Plan A proposed four-county Clinton River improvement project petitioned by 10 Macomb County communities will be discussed June 22 at a meeting in Macomb County for representatives of all affected municipalities. The meeting is scheduled for 10 a.m. in the Macomb Health Department building. Preliminary plans for the proposed Clinton River Basin Drain will be presented at the meeting by toe 12-member augmented drainage board representing Oakland, Ma-| Macomb Counte'officials an-■istrxiair -n on the augmented drainage hoard are Delos Hamlin, chairman of the County Board of Supervisors; Daniel Barry, driin commissioner; and Daniel T. Murphy, chairman of the County Board of Auditors. Persons with comparable responsibility in the other three counties fill tile other nine positions on toe augmented board. This board will have toe responsibility of deciding whether to proceed with toe project. No cost estimates are available for the project that would involve 56 municipalities in the four-county area including C ‘ Oakland County. * A total of 17 Oakland County townships, 17 cities jfod five villages would be affected in the project that calls for deepening, widening and straightening toe river. ' Representing Oakland County ticipate a three-way cost spl with the f e d e r a 1 government paying half the cost and the tate and local communites each meeting 25 per cent of the obligation: Local costs in affected communities could be met by special assessment dis^icts for those deriving direct benefits or by imposing a communitywide obligation. .,It would be up to eaqh community to determine wMch revenue raising method to lA. f THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JUNE^T, 1967 A—8 Sunday Liquor Sales Up for Senate Vote LANSING (AP)-The Senate was prepared May to vote on an amendment - laden bill calling for Sunday liquor sales and described by one senator as ‘‘the biggest, bag of goodies to come out"l)f the Senate this year.” Sale of liquor on Sunday was Included in one of four amendments-tacked onto a House bill which originally would have prohibited retail sale of liquor by manufacturers, warehousemen or wholesalers. ★ ★ ★ The Sunday sale amendment, added by iSen. John McCauley, I) - Wyandotte, was proposed earlier In ^e session in bill form by Sen. Stanley Novak, D-Detroit. The Novak bill passed the Senate but died in House committee. In other capital developments: • Gov. George Romney sent a telegram to President Johnson expressing hope the President wilHnsist that conditions in the Middle East insure preservation of the national integrity and independence of Israel. • House Republican leaders moved their fiscal reform package, calling for Michigan’s first state income tax, into position for a final vote. SUNDAY UQUOR The Sunday liquor amendment would allow, county boards of supervisors to approve such sale by resolution 60 days after the effecUve date of the bill. If The supervisors failed to act within the period, a petition could be filed with the county clerk State Capitol Happenings on Tuesday ■y The AiSKlittd Prt» ■ . the governor sent « Itlagram fo Pre$ld*nt Johnsi expressing hope Johnson will insist fh conditions In the AAlddle Best inso preservotion of the natlonel integrity ai Independence ot Israel, r • Received a repofTTrOm WTchigan N tional Guard commanders and said Oelense^Depar^ent reaH^nment ot tl Signed eight bills Into law, including I one authorizing 129.97 million In supple-1 mental appropriations tor state spending during the current fiscal year. " ' THE SENATE X^OMOlcSd Immediate effect, SB95, Rockwell. Increases stale parks entrance tees to SI daily and S3 a ---- for'residents and $2 daily and $5 a tor nonresidents, HB2472, Smit, Exempts amateur theaters and bands from -slate trust di' ' ' supervision. _ _ _ ^concurrence needed in Senate ameti# _ X-HB2734, Edwards. Permits school equipment'’ Concurrence needed in Senate ai questing submission of the ques" tion to the board. two other amendnlents, add-ded by Sen. Frank Beadle, R-St. Clair, would exempt packaged liquor dealers from the present law which prohibits sale of liquor within 500 feet of a church and would extend some 600 resort liquor licenses from 10 months to 12. ★ -k * An amendment added by Charles Zollar, R - Benton Harbor, would prohibit retailers from asking wholesalers to de-bver their retail sales. The load of amendments caused Sen. Robert Richardson, R - Saginaw, to say “this is probably the biggest bag of goodies to come out of the Senate this year.” HOUSE BILL The Senate had been expected to vote on the amended House bill, sponsored by Rep. Raymond Baker, R - Farmington, Tuesday night. But senators spent the evening session on debate without moving to final consideration of bills.. Senate Majority Leader Emil Lockwood of St. Louis said it was decided not to move to final consideration “because a full complement was not present.” A “call of the Senate” had been ordered in which Senate doors ate locked and all senators are required to remain in the chamber while sergeants at arms are sent to bring in any absent members. The only absent member was Sen. Stad(ey Rozyeki, D-Detroit, I whd sponsored an unsuccessful I rival Sunday liquor bill earlier | in the session. ABSENCE CITED Several colleagues said Ro-1 zycjii’s absence was the reason I no actibn was taken on the lii f quor bill, Lockwood said a call of the I Senate would berequestedi today and that State Po-1 lice would be sent to find any I absent members. * ★ The bill, backed primarily by I Detroit - area Democrats who I have long sought Sunday liquor, [ needed 20 votes to pass. There I are 18 Democrats and 20 Repub- | licans in the Senate. The Senate reportedly was one I vote short of the. number need- f ed to pass the bill. VOTES ASSURED McCauley said he has been I assured there would_he suf-1 ficient votes to pass it in the | House. Beadle said his amendment I to exempt packed liquor deal- f ers from the 500-foot limit was I designed to aid his district I where urban renewal has dis- I placed some dealers. He said I their only choices for relocation I lie within 500 feet of churches. I ★ ★ ★ I In other action Tuesday, the I Senate, passed 25-9 a measure I providing for a stiff increase in I state parks entrance fees, de-r spite a last ditch stand by tour- | ist area senators. Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. Here’s the Greatest WATCH BUY in America -Perfect Gift for’GRAD’ and’DAD’ Here at SIMMS! 1 Senate amendment. The Jewelers’ Quality Watch ''y Vantage® iHVlStM Of HAtaiklOH WATCH COHfAMY N.: . Sets J I operating | taxes between school i Defeated: HB27I2, Dramer. ____________ the Stale Board of Education _ . *n o''b’*"' h* [’'''etiological examinations! THE HOUSE Moved amended three-bill lax package from general orders to third reading. Sent to the governor; X lmmedlate effect X-HB2005, T. J. Anderson. Permit disabled person to hunt from standing motor vehicle; permit prosecution ot per-I shining deer Is he has accessible -------- —...... penalties' ' " HB2B00, Edwards. Extra tax on i Insurance, transactions by firms not .. censed to sell otemajms.Jo.JiMchiganJ X-HB2503, Petltpren, Permit community ^colle^es^.ta Issue bonds to finance X-HB2S69, Walton. Increase authorized' special quail season from S to 20 days. I Passed SB732, Levin. Require election I of Detroit School Board from single-1 / 4 12.95 14.95 19 95 Check these Vantage features: VJeweler’s Quality 17-Jewel Precision Movement VShock-Resistant VAnti-Magnetic, Dustproof VLifetime Mainspring -^Waterproof* Models Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. save more thari30% on genuine 'Kent' of Grand Rapids modern scrqtch-finish chest-of-drawers 3* Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac Shop SIMMS—The Excitement Store Tomorrow For JWlRSMnr 9M.to9M.OnlY ^SAU ' Those Prices Good For Tomorrow Only-No Mail or Phono Orders Please Check the specials listed below and you'll see why Simms is Pontiac's Excitement Store — tremendous bargains dt low, low discount prices. And you'll also see hundreds of unodvertised bargains in the store. So come in tomorrow for these extra values. We reserve the right to limit quantities. Cool Mesh Men’s Sport Caps 69« Regulor $1.00 values. Cool cops for golf, fishing, etc. With mesh inserts, first quality. Sizes S to XL Bqsetnent' Men’s 100% Cotton Bermuda Shorts 1.99 Regular $3.49 values, populor solid color shorts, washable and fast color. Sizes 28 to 42. — Basement . Men’s Terry Sport Shirts 2x3-Ft., 50-star Flag Set «9* Reg. $1.49 value. Includes 50-stor flog, pole and wall bracket. Boxed. Sundries —Main Floor Four*Blade Scout Knife 69* j. 98c Scout or camper knife with fork and spoon and knife. Boxed. Sundries-Main Floor Norelco Battery Cordless Shaver 12-TRANSISTOR Pocket Radio Has 1-Yr. Warranty |98 Realtone -ready to Ploy $19.95 value-#1239 radio luxe styling, slide rule tuning. Yea ranty. Cose, battery and Earphone eluded. Electronics —Mom Floor ^ KODAK Instamatic 304 Color Camera Set Vs’lnch Diameter Garden Hose 75-ft. Big %-inch gorden hose in full 75-fool length. Green color Brass coupling. Limit I per' person. Hordwore — 2nd Floor j Portable-With Wheels 22-Gal. Trash Can $49.9& Value 30^® I 2®^ Electric-eye oulomdtic comer flashcube, color film, bolferies major credit card to buy this. Cameras —Main Floor^ Package of 100 BUFFERIN Tablets 1.00 I 9.45 I <- 76' I 88 Durable Poly trash can with o handle and rolling wheels. Lorge 22-gallon capacity. Limit 2. Hardware —2nd Floo^ Plaslic-5 GALLON Trash Barrel With Cover Men’s Cotton Knit Iduscle Shirts $14.95 list. Flip-fop Norelco shaver operates on flashlite batteries, ot extra cost. Sundries —Main Floor Cord or Cordless nhgtoh 5haver: | Fast octing Bufferin — relieves pain without upsetting the stomach. ■ Druqs — Main .Floor ’Sudden Beauty’ 12lS0zrTlair Spray Handy trash borrel for the home, basement, workshop, goroge, etc. ' Bale handle7lrifhtf"2. Hardware —2nd floor Jumbo 17x28 Inches Boot-Shoe Caddy 2 126.881 44 $1.99 Seller F Sleeveless cotton knit shirts with ribbed knit neck and armhole, ond sides. Sizes S-M-L — Basemen*,^ Wash and Wear Yard Goods per yard 19' Choice of colorful prints and solid color yard goods for spring and •summer sewing. -Main Floor U.S. Rubber Ladies’ Rain Coats $42.95 list, Selectronic shaver, dial the shave you want. 5 shaving heights. Sundries-Main Floor . Windproof Butane Lighter 99* $2.98 list. Marathon butane .findproof lighter vvith odjust-qble flame. Sundries—Main Floor , General Electric Rechargeable Flashlight Generous l2’/2 ounces of 'Sudden Beauty'' hair spray for oil hair styling needs. Limit 3 ca Cosmetics —Main Floor Used By Mest Dentists LAVORIS Mouthwash 95 c Size I5'/2 ounces of genuine 'LAVORIS' the refreshing mouthwash for the entire family. Limit 3 bottles. Drugs —Main Floor . 11 Ounces Liquid SCORE Hair Groom Durable rubber coddy holds boots and dirty shoes. Protects floors, keeps dirt out of the house. Hardware - 2nd Floorj ^et of 3 Hardwood Trouser Hangers 47« High lacquered hardwood trouser hangers keeps the creose In pants. HOUSEWARES-2nd Floor ^ PlastiC'Fishing Tackle Box 50* I 8.44 I ^^87' I 39« Wicker Pitted Picnic Basket Powerful flashlight with constbnt strong beam. Recharges in AC Sundries - Main Floqr 2-to 5-at. Electric Ice Cream Freezer 'Score' the liquid grooming for men's hair keeps hair neat allday. Limit 3. ^Brugs—Main Floor^ For Men - 12 Ounces ’CORN HUSKER’ Lotion Regular 69c value, with compartments for hooks, sinkers etc. 9'/2x5x3 inch size. SRORTS-2ndFloor^ 36" Electric Ganlen-Patio Light 4.99 I 16.00 I - 87’’ I - Wicker- pieeie bosket with -plostic dishes and tableware for 6. Covered, with handles. — Basement Wash ’n Wear Fabric loyrSTacks $2.98 Value [49 -Save l4i -on 50% Avetl.oit(i--50%----Cotton slacks. Smart ivy style in sizes 10 to 16. Black or Olive. American first qualify. —Basement^ —Moksii to_S_qu.grts_of ice cregm_ like grandma used to make. . Poly tub. — Basement J Textured - Seamed Nylon Hose 10* -Seamless^ textured hose, black, sizes B’/j to 10. Seamed hose, beigetone, sizes BVz - 9'/2 only. —Main Floor The lotion mode -expr*ssly_iot_... 'hands that have to work' —genuine Corn Huskers in 12-oz. size. Lrrnit ^ 3. Drugs t- Main Floor Full Peund Package Teeth Paste Indirect light for the patio Or garden. 36 inches higfi 'wrfiTTS-'' inch umbrella top. HOUSEWARES 2nd Flq^ ScIcfSMctal Lmif Bake Pans 5 i 77i 42* "Cofn^re to”$2.35'valued tubes of Listerine tooth paste in plastic bag. Limit 3 bogs. Drugs—Main Floor^ BBNorih Sa^naw StTMl -3 populor sizes ,«f loot pons for baking meat, loaf, cofees, breojs, ' HOUSEWARES-2nd Floor^ I Where The Real] BIG BIRGUNSi SHNUve. A—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNP:SDAY, JUNE 7, 1967, School Board Land Changed for Apartments OKsNewPacts Cover Tv/o Categories in Independence Twp. INDEPENDENCE T 0 W N-SHIP — Ne]ff contracts for two categories ^of employes have been approved by the school board. Head custodians were granted salaries that will give them Rezoning Stirs Row in Walled Lake By JANICE KLOUSER WALLED LAKE - The City Council rezoned two parcels of land night impite of loud and often bitter protests from a few residents in the areas affected. The rezoning to multiple dwellings is the beginning of a new look for the city which will include new housing, parks and shopping areas. Rezoned were M.J acres west of S. Pontiac Trail from one-family residential to multiple dwelling and 3.7 acres across Pdntiac Trail from one-family residential to high-rise. About five or six persons out of the 30 attending the meeting objected to the rezoning of the larger parcel, charging the apartments would cause more traffic, devaluate their property and cause too much congestion. They also questioned the type of people who would occupy the apartments. They accused the council of already having their minds made up, of not giving the residents any consideration and at one point “of acUng like Russians.” TAKE EXCEPTION “I know it doesn’t do any good to object,” said one woman, “because you aren’t going to change your minds, but I still want to be heard.” “We’ve lived here a long time and paid taxes over the years and we should be given some consideration,” said another. I Several of the cbuhcDmeh took exception to the accusations. ie it “We represent 4,200 people and we have to weigh all the facts,” said Mayor Wendel G-Kellogg. “We have to weigh what you say and also what’s good for the whole city.” City Manager Royce Downey said a lot of thought had gone into the decision “and it’s not fair to your councilmen to accuseThem like tSis.” In answer to the type of "people who would occupy the buildings, one councilman said, “I don’t think you’re going to get riffraff if the rents start at $175 a month.” Kellogg also explained that the aparenenfs would be better for the city than private raises ranging about $1,200 over a three-year period. Salary ranges were $5,600 to $5,900 and will rise to $7,000 to $7,250. The secretaries’ association was granted three extra holidays per year, but_salary levels remained about the same. ★ ★ ★ In addition, the board set pay standard? for other school employes on an individual basis. Still to come up is teachers’ salaries. As in other school districts, the Clark-ston teachers and district negotiators are waiting for the state school aid formula to be set by the Legislature before salary talks are resumed, according to school authorities. Salaiies for administrators were set in a range of $11,081 to $17,250, depending on increments and position held. The board was informed the construction company for the high school rubberized one-quarter mile running track would resume work June 16 and shouldhave the running surface readyTibout a week later. The athletic director was re- Attacking Cat Hunted, Shot by Avon Township Man AVON TOWNSHIP - Paul Wilmot, 32, of 6231 Orion has had his fill of cats. ....Particularly Siamese . . . and particularly those who stalk and attack people for no apparent reason. Wilmot callied The Pontiac Press recently to tell of a neighborhood cat which had jumped in his face and clawed and bitten him when he went outside his home to see what had frightened his daughter. He said when he’d been informed the cat had attacked another child two days previously, he took down his shotgun, stalked the cat through a field behind the house' and shot it. ★ ★ ★ The body was deposited with the Oakland County Animal Shelter and tests for rabies are currently being conducted. New Planners' Group Named in Imlay City Pontile Prin Photo JirprBiHson construction of a baseball field and fence. IMLAY CITY - Members to a newly created planning com-mission were appointed last School Board Eyes Summer Rec Program WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — A request that the West Bloomfield School District undertake a recreation program during the summer has been taken under consideration, by school officials. At the board meeting recently, Mrs. Ross Callaway of the . West Bloomfield League of Women Voters (LWV) asked the board to conduct a recreation program for both adults and students during the summer in all of their schools. She said the LWV has made a study of existing programs In surrounding areas and found many of the school districts to have such a program. She pomted out that West Bloomfield has been relatively small but now that it is growing, it should have a recreation program. The matter was referred to Schools Supt. Dr. Leif Hougen who will discuss the possibilities of such a program with other officials. Hougen said there is no recreation program now except at Roosevelt School in Keego Harbor which is supported by local donations. be- ing furtherance of an Incorporation move on the part of the village. S e r V1 n g on the commission will be Mayor John Folk, Manager Harvey Weatherwax and Councilman Keith Clark. They are assisted by Irvin Welton, Dr. Donald Harrington, Albert Hill, Mervin Muir, Charles Themm and Eugene McKillop. Law limifing Soliciting OK'd in Brandon Twp. BRANDON TOWNSHIP - The Township Board has passed an ordinance limiting door-to-door soliciting in hopes of prevent-i% a repetition of a recent swindle. Board members were told an elderly couple were sold cemetery lots by a man who called atth^dobr' Upon investigation, the lots, in Davison, Genesee County, turned out to be under water. The new ordmance requires all salesmen or firms to register at the township office, 395 Mill, Ortonville. ★ ' > ★ ★ In addition, approval must be obtained from bettor btisiness bureaus or chambers of commerce in Flint or Pontiac. Violation calls for a maximum of $100 fine and/or 90 days in jail. Weatherwax said he thought the group would meet sometime ..iunngJMn£XLH£fiL„ In other business last night, the council okayed a fireworks display for July 4 at the Imlay City Elementary School foUovfc Ing the showing of free movies in the parking lot. Weatherwax told the council he had been informed of plans to construct a new district headquarters building for the State ' Conservation Department which will begin in the village about Aug. 1. The council authorized the manager to advertise for bids on a radar system for the police department. Confroversy Surrounded Rezoning For These Proposed New Apartments Shelby Clerk Files Petitions Pension PJanVotBSu^ Almont OKs Trailer Park ALMONT — The way was opened to the establishment of a trailer coach park in the north-west, section of town last night, thje 50-acre site to hold at least 50 mobile homes. The V i 11 a g e Council voted unanimously in favor of an or-dinance which would allow trailers on land zoned for general business. Involved was the petition of Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur C. Lane who last fall asked for zoning which would permit the establishment of a pajfk.4 _ The projected site Is currently zoned for single-family residential, according to Clerk Verne Messer, though the land is used for fanniiig.__________________ SHELBY TOWNSHIP - With just five hours to spare. Clerk Mae Stedeer yesterday filed petitions with the Macomb County Clerk that will insure a vote on a^oposed p«isiomplm^foi4>ohee^^nd-fire-men August 7. ★ ★ ★ A special meeting of the Township Board Monday afternoon instructed her to file. The petitions, containing 900 resident signatures, ask for a voted five-tenths of a mill to augment a retirement fund for the present 16 fuU-time firemen and 14 full-tune policemen. The police and five fire departments have agreed to give 5 per cent of their wages to the fund. '* * ★ ★ ★ As planned the fund would pay a retired officer aged 55 with 25 years of service half his salary. It also provides for death benefits and retirement payments on a sliding scale according to service. EFFECTIVE DATE If approved, the plan would not take effect until July 1, 1968, according to Fire Marshal William Tiese. The addition to the ballot means that township electors will br asked to approve a ^otal— extra miilage of 4.5 mills in August. ^ Of the total,T.5 mills is earmarked for the oper-tion of the police department; 1.5 is asked as additional money for the fire department budget: and five-tenth of a mill is asked for the pension fund. Each question will be voted on separately. The fire miilage question has lost the support of Supervisor Kirby Holmes who contended in a public meeting last week that the money is not necessary to the operation of the department. 2.5 MILLS The fire department already- has a voted 2.5 mills on which it operates. The miilage bida come at a time when the township allegedly faces a $30,000 deficit in meeting its current bills to the end of the month. A new fiscal year begins July 1. homes in the same area because they provide twice as much taxable base for the city. ★ # ★ Councilman Frank Hamilton said that miilage has not gone up in the last five years “because of progress such as this and if this type of progress continues, I don’t see a miilage increase next year.” ‘WON’T DEVALUE HOMES’ “'j'his won’t devalue your homes,” he said. It was also explained that the Oakland, County Road Conunision has stated diat ingress and egress to the area would not constitute a traffic hazard on Pontiac Trail. One resident- sought to have the zoning limited to multiple dwellings rather than including the uses allowed under the new classification such as general hospital' housing for the elderly and convalescent hpmes. ★ ★ ★ It was pointed out that while it can’t be limited to a specific use, any change in the site plan must go back to the planning Kommission for approvajl.or disapproval. _ ■ APPROVES CHANGE Only one resident voiced his approval of the zoning change. “That land has been there since God made it and it is not being used,” he said, “and if someone wants to improve it. I’m all for it.” Ko one objected to the rezoning of the smaller parcel. Planned for the larger section are 412 units and for the smaller one, 60 units. Downey said that the annual Income Jrom them will be $26,-826 which can be used to help defray the cost of new sewers going into the area. “This starts expansion of the city in the proper way,” he —saidr-^^and-it Is^ an -attraction for the development of our new downtown project.” C. of C. Wants Rochester Auto Bureau for Rochester Rights Group Officers Named ROCHESTER — A bid to get a Secretary of State’s licensing bureau in the Rochester area will be made by the Chamber of Commerce. Members recently heard Police Chief Robert Werth and City Manager William Sinclair explain the city’s decision to go out of the business. Time consumed to service all the people who applied, some of ihem who live at a considerable distance from the city, was cited as reason , for wittdrawal from the program. Herbert Miller, president, said Rochester will be in the position where its. residents ■ must travel either to Pontiac, Troy or Mt. Oeihens to obtain drivers’ licenses after the end of the month. The group voted to petition for a nearer state<^ated bureau. _ . ... ROCHESTER - Davl^, Hackett, 1380 Ruby, Avon Township, has been named chairman of the Rochester Area Human Relations Council for the coming year. ★ ★ ★ He will be assisted by Mrs. Robert Williamson, first vice president; Mrs. James McAl-pine* recording secretary; Mrs. J. Stanley Weaver, corresponding secretary: and Beauregard Stubblefield, treasurer. ■ ★ ★ it New members on the board are Mr. and Mrs, Frank Irish, Mrs. David Mascitelli, Mrs. Fred Harrison, Ralph Stallard, Paul Olson, Mrs. William lym-kow and James McAlpine. it -k ★ Continuing to serve on the board are Mrs. Hugo Swan, Mr. and Mrs. James Dickerson, David Evans, Mrs. David Walsh, Mrs. George Johannessen, Mrs. George Stoughton, Mrs. Walter Reuther, Mrs. George McVeigh, Mrs. Alex Duffield and Maurice WilUts. Addison Gets Petitions on Hunfing, Junk ADDISON TOWNSHIP - Petitions to ban Sunday hunting in the township, except by the owners of the land, mid to remove junk and three old homes along Rochester Road have been received by the Township Board. . The homes are located in Moffits Beach Subdivision on Rochester Road, south of Mack. Twenty residents requested that the township Institute condemnation proceedings to remove the health and safety hazards they represent. An enforcement of the township’s Junk o^inance was asked with respect to unsightly debris in the same area. Mo m b or^-of the ^lewly formed Indianlake Improvement Association, representing r e s i d e n t s of the Grampian Heights Subdivision, asked that any zoning matters coming before the township as regards the subdivision be referred to the association for approval. Dennis Bams, 3368 Kniard, president of the group, informed the board that court proceedings are started against a violation now in existence. The board discussed hiring of an appraiier to review township assessments. No action was taken. Shelby Moves to Get a Library SHElSr TOWNSHIP - An attempt to make use of some $10,000412,000 now going to Macomb County and to provide residents with some kind of library has been started by the Township Board. Attorney Roy Rogensues has been instucted to look into the processes for starting one. Supervisor Kirby Holmes said the project could be financed at least in the beginning by traffic fihbs which ^ are now turned over to the county. “Only if a townMiip has a Dbrair do these funds revert to the township,” he said. “We’ll house it in the Township Hall for the time being,” he said. “Even if it’s no more than a closet and open only on Saturday in the beginning, it’s still a start.” Smorgasbord Dinner SPRINGPIEM) TOWNSHIP-A smorgasbord dinner will be offered at the Masonic Temple on Andersonville Road noon, to 3 p.m. Sunday by the Austin Chapter No. 396, OES. Nope, If Was Just 'Lonely' | WASHING'TON TOWN- | SHIP — There’s a “lone- I ly” tombstone in Washington Cemetery and a chastised 16-year-old boy at' f home today. Spotted by Stony Creek Park ranger William Walker while parkpd in the park area, he was found to have a tombstone beside him in the car. The boy told the ranger the tombstone looked lonely “sitting out there all by itself” and he just wanted to be friendly. Romeo State Police troopers Curt Fonger and John Fiedler, called in by" Walker, r e t u r n e d the tombstone to its resting place and the boy to his parents. Said officers, “We think he’s got a proTilem.” DAVID C. HACKETT Lapeer Gl Killed LAPEER — The parents of Amy Spec. 4 Terry R. McComb of Lapeer hava b^n informed of Ids death in action in yiet- . He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon McComb. - GRACEFUI, ADDITION - The new branch street corner. The branch, one of five in the of the Birmingham-Bloomfield bank at Woodward county, will hold open house tomorrow through and Maple in Birmingham uses a classical arched Saturday. A free historical map of Birmingham effect to add a touch of elegance to the city and other prizes will be offered. ■ , V THE FONTlAe PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 7, 1967 A-5 V/ef Fighting at Lowest Level of '67 I SAIGON (AP) — The U.S.I c^nt ground fighting. They said,] 40 to 50 flatcars or boxcars had i ing south from the North Viet-j In South Vietnam^ an Ameri-Conwnand reported today that however, that intelligence indi-! been destroyed or damaged. ! namese capitol. can civilian official was shot to fighting in Vietnam had slack-icated the Communist forces] While the Air Force F105| Navy pilots reported more[death early today by about 30 ened to its lowest level this year i have evidentiy been girding for Thunderchief jets were hitting ] than 24 barges destroyed and Vietcong who raided the home with only scattered ground'battle in three areas — the de-1 north of Hanoi, the Navy’s car-, cuts in several rail and roadjof a South Vietnamese district skirmishes and relatively few militarized zone between North] rier planes concentrated on I bridges which the Communists I chief where the American was air strikes against North Viet- and South Vietnam, the central] road, rail and river traffic flow-i rebuild each night. ' visiting 15 miles east of Saigon, nam. {highlands and the Mekong Delta^ Despite the lull, losses were,south of Saigon. . ire--./%si- /K’-, ANNOUNCING A sustained in small fights and ai Light contacts were reported If Navy Crusader jet was lost to] in all three areas Tuesday, butil*'-ground fire over the CommunistUhere was no developing pat-f North. The pilot parachuted and tern. || ' ^ was picked up in the Tonkin] Along the demilitarized zone, ‘ Gulf only 18 minutes after he the cruiser Boston shelled Com-K splashed down. It was the 573rd! munist storage areas and then]^ U.S. combat plane reported lost- moved south to catch an evident | in North Vietnam. ; strong Red attempt to movej^ ★ ★ I supplies across the Ben Hailes Officers denied that the lull in River, which bisects the zone.]' ^ ^ the war was due in any way to cruiser reported wreaking |' the fighting in the Middle East.i i'^voc among a fleet of 25 sam-' but it appeared that neither side P®"®*‘ivcr. i , viewed this as a propitious mo-; In the air war, U.S. headquar-], ment for any dramatic moves. | ters reported jets again plas-| American warplanes pene-jtered three rail lines leading ] '-% trated into the heavily fortified Hanoi—one to the > heartland of North Vietnam' northwest up the Red River del- ’ again Tuesday, raiding rail; ta, one to the northeast and one' lines leading from Hanoi to Red I short spur running 40 miles , China. Only 88 missions were! north into the Thai Nguyen in-flown, compared with about 125 dustrial complex. i ^ vn recent normal days. | There was no report of any ] ' ^ The U.S. Command reported dogfights with. Communist] that not since the first of the MIGs, although raids into this AP wirephoto ^year had there been a compara^ area nearly always bring the SETS SAIL FOR AFRICA - Francis Brentnn, 40, waves from his 26-foot catamaran in Chicago’s Lincoln Park lagoon yesterday just before setting sail on a 15,0(^)-mile solo jaunt to West Africa and back. He will sail via the St. Lawrence Seaway, stopping at Montreal’s Expo 67, with a destination of the African port of St. Louis between Senegal and Mauritania. The craft, a canoe and pontoon, is one pe sailed last year from South America to Chicago up the Mississippi and Illinois rivers. 'ble lull in the ground war. For Red jets into the sky. the past four days the U.S. mili-; U.S. Command reported the tary communique has said, “No weather in the target area was • significant contact with the ene- comparatively good and rcturn-my was reported.’’ ^ing pilots told of multiple cuts in ,, U.S. officers volunteered no the lines and extensive other-’ reason for the lapse in signifi-i damage. The headquarters said ^ PERSIAN RUG AUCTION ______________„A NOTE ABOUT THE SALE______________________________________ ) This shipment Pf 20 bales having cleared customs is being dispatched to this area for I disposal af Public Auction. This is an unusually fine stock of Persian and Oriental carpets ‘ and ruga. They are of the finest origins selected by experts with over 40 years experience in the European and Eastern markets. They are all hand knotted in intricate patterns and of historical designs and will be sold in single units to the highest bidder. Each piece is ! described in the catalogue that will be available during the view period. ! Stauffer’s Northland Inn 21000 Northwestern Hwy.. Southfield. Michig-an Thursday, June 8, at 8 P. M, EXHIBITION :6 :30 p.m.’til time of sale. j All Rugs are on view for your inspection. Catalogs available. | Included in this shipment in small and large sixes, strictly the fiiiest grades of KIRMAN, KESHAN, BORIALOO, SAROUK. BOKHARA. ISPAHAN, BAKHTIAR, MESHED, AFGHAN. BELOUCHISTAN. HAMADAN. ARDEBIL, ROYAL AUBESSON (INDIAN), HERIZ, GHOUM, TABRIZ. JOOSHIGAN, KAZVIN, SHIRAZ. NAIN, ETC. C. B. Charles specialist auctioneers TERMS: CASH, CHECK or AMERICAN EXPRESS THE PONTIAC PRESS it West Huron Street WEDNESDAY, JUNE 7. 1967 JOHN A. Rn.«r Secretary aod Advartlaln* Director RlCHAHe M. riTCOCTAl* Pontiac, Michigan 48056 Local Advertldng Manager Attitude of Russian People Has Mellowed With Time Russia. Russia! There’s always Russia. After you’ve circled the globe, invariably someone drags in the spectre of the sword-brandishing Reds. Certainly they aren’t wallowing in international amity. Their global image suggests a hijacker who has national power and the first or second biggest arsenal in the world. And further, he’s very conscious of the fact and loves to finger a knife. Yet, I was in Russia eight or ^ ten years ago and I think I see a softening in their belligerence and braggadocio. They smile more but this doesn’t include the titular heads of that seat of unchallenged global disunity. The people? They’re a better breed. ★ ★ ★ I saw only one person in Russia that really wanted to see us humiliated and made an abject pawn in the light of the glories of Soviet ascendency. And I didn’t s^e a single person anywhere—^not one—that wanted to drop a devastating bomb anywhere. The people are friendly. ★ ★ ★ They’re anxious to mind their own business and hope that we want to do the same, thank you. But the head Red and his immediate.- cohorts are.. „ spawned from-a different caste. For untold centuries, all Russians were dispensable pawns and serfs that bowed before an omnipotent Czar. He ruled by ruthlessly unquestioned might, Now that these crowned heads have been cast to the dogs, their successors are assuming some of the same domination in reigning power. Personally, I think the difference between us and the Russians lies mainly in the ideas and intentions of the uppermost echelon to whom freedom and democracy are anathema. ★ ★ ★ The leaders have come a long ways in the last half century and it would be my unimportant observation that they’re softening but I draw a line between the Kremlin and the average citizen. We can get along with the people. It’s their bosses that refuse to let us behind their personal Iron Curtain. The citizenry has been taught to fling Vietnim in our faces at every opportunity. And this, they do. |t’s usually mild, but they make the point that our dastardly “imperialism” is the ruination of Southeastern ^sia and other points east, west, north and \ south. Russians in positions to talk most often with outsiders are drilled in their attitudes and responses. ★ ★ ★ Today Leningrad has 3.5 million people and 19 churches, We have more than a hundred churches in our own area. They don’t believe in God. They don’t believe in any type of hereafter; and they’re told when this life terminates, it’s the end. ★ ★ ★ Leningrad was under siege by the bloodthirsty Germans for three years and over half a million people were slaughtered. On top of untold centuries of menial penury and serfdom under the Czars this imposed a staggering mental burden that can’t be shaken easily. It’s understandable. They’re a fertile field for the lying charges of our “imperialism” and our “self evident infamy.” ★ ★ ★ Barring the tqp . leaders, I don’t hate a single Russian. I like them. I’m their friend and I’m ■wiling to wait until they see the errors of,their leaders. Even these are an imiffbasur-able improvement over the passing centuries of self-crowned predecessors. ★ ★ ' ★ , We saw the most marvelous ^ V, . ballet this incompetent critic ever witnessed. The technique is superb and when the curtain descends, those dancing nymphs weren’t waiting for masculine attention. They were breathtaking — my wife says so. We saw grand opera and again it was absolutely top hole. My wife says thi« also. This untutored scribe even remained awake through both, which is a record he never set in America. These Russian people have marched myriads and myriads of cultural miles since their liberation. ★ ★ ★ They have art museums that are stupendous. One in Leningrad has two million originals and if you “took 30 seconds for each, it would require eleven years to see it all” (tbeir assertion). To me the resplencfent interior was even g r e a t e r. The incidental walls, ceilings, doors, pillars etc. were even more asjj&unding than the art objects. ★ . ★ ★ j More than three-fodrths of the students take the English language today. Nine years ago, Englisbi was tbl-' efated and “allowed” but foday it’s actually suggested. Currently it’s the second language by n^iles and deGaulle will turn a few jbackward facts. ★ ★ ★ I But governmentally they’re suspicious of us. We’re the “tjad people” in the eyes of the reignir|g Communists who call the shots. | ★ w I They award us very little credit for ■winning World War Two. You are given to understand that the victory came about through Russian management, prescience and manpower. They have no beatniks. No one burns a draft card. And if he does, he says “goodbye” to one ahd all. The closest I saw to a beatnik was an individual who approached the dining, room in the Astoria. The maitre d’hotel pointed back without a word and the undesirable left pronto. There are no beggars as you find in so many places. There’s no starvation. There are no raggedy mismates. ★ ★ ★ ' Their subway is the greatest, finest, cleanest and most artistic ip the world and I mean that “artistic” part. They have statues in brilliantly lighted stations. 'There’s no dirt, foul fifth, and debris to conceal. You could sit dovm anywhere and eat your lu^h on the stairs (and they’re all swift escalators) or on the passageways or in the cars. And yet — You can’t send a sealed envelope to your family in Pontiac. You can’t have dinner in the home of a Russian without special permission and it’s hard to get. (Nine years ago you couldn’t have it period.) You can’t subscribe to 'The Pontiac Press or The Chicago Tribune. I’m under the impression you can’t phone Pontiac — but you can in Tokyo, Hong Kong and most other places. . You can’t spend a dime without using Russian money. Other countries accept U. S. currency. You can give tips in most cases but usually it’s done surreptitiously. You can keep a portion of the ' crops you raise yourself if you exceed a quota. This wasn’t true before. You can get extra pay for extra effort in some circumstances. You couldn’t befdre. This The Meeting Will PLEASE Come To #rder!' David Lawrence Says: Voice of the People: ' Comments on Fighter*s Refusal to Serve Country Nice going, Michigan! We are going to have the great Muhammad Ali fight here June 15. Too bad he hasn’t the guts to fight in Vietnam. Fighting for charity is just a way to get his foot in the door to fight again for money. ★ ★ Why doesn’t he volunteer for the medical corps and help the injured overseas? He doesn’t mind making a mint off the American public but won’t go to war for the country that is making him rich. BUD CORELLA MILFORD Parades Prompt Three Citizens to Write I congratulate the Loafers Club of Keego Harbor on the fine job on our Memorial Day Parade, ( was proud to take part in it with the Ladies Auxiliary of VFW Post 2706 of Keego “Harbor : MRS. HANNAH JUSTMAN KEEGO HARBOR Why don't people salute our flag? I attended a Memorial Day Parade and I didn't see a person salute our flag as it went by. I don’t believe this is due to lack of patriotism, but possibly, due to embarrassment, or maybe these people don't know the proper way a civilian is supposed to salute. Whatever the reason, It would be interesting to find out why. It would be commendable if the newspapers informed the public the proper way to salute, especially prior to a parade day. ROBERT CONNOLLY WHITE LAKE ★ ★ ★ (Editor’s Note: According to the flag code, when the flag Is passing in parade, being hoisted or lowered, all present should face it, stand at attention and salute: Uniformed per- ]\lid6cist Issu6s SftinG 3.S in X95T place WASHINGTON - Who is eign Relations Committee right and who is wrong in the which gives all the back-dispute between Egypt and ground documents Israel over the closing of the Gulf of Aqaba, which trig- gered the current hostilities in the Middle East?- IFafone'] has to do to answer this • question is to LAWRENCE examine carefully a report just issued by the Senate For- the United States, oh behalf of vessels of its^own registry, is prepared"*to exercise the right of free and innocent passage and to join with others to secure general recognition of this right.’’ No ruling has ever come from the international couft to upset the principles enunciated at that time by the U n i t e d Itates. They were accepted in 1957 by both the Arab countries and Israel and were embodied in the resolution of the United Nations, which set up a peacekeeping force to uphold the decisions made that year. * ★ * When the U.N. force, however, was withdrawn a few weeks ago by Secretary General U Thant in response to a demand from the Egyptian government, the right of free mat UlC OUil Ul rvv^aua vv/n*- ^ i. au /-« ir “disgust and disapproval prebends international waters passage through the Gulf of in coming to the U.S. and and that no nation has the Aqaba was not repealed but She'd ne«r be forgiven. right lo prevent free and 1„. was simply ipnred, . . nocent passage in the Gulf and We had a minimum of through the straits giving ac-caviar and yet we were fed cess thereto .... this delicacy plentifully ★ * ★ nine years ago. One Rug- ‘‘The position of the United „ wea fVicvr Statcs Is bascd OH broad, long- sian sage assured me they established principles of inter-had just sent all they national law, extending beyond could to jExpo 67, so when the specific problems connect-you’re in Canada for the ed with the Gulf of Aqaba, big show, pound on the LEGAL EFFECTS table and demand caviar. “Because ef its worldwide And sports! responsibUities the U n i t ed ^ States must take into account ^ ★ ★ the legal effects and prece- dents which rnight be estab-They’re everywhere—es- ushed in othef situations and pecially track and field, areas.... The enthusiasm for this “it is, of course, clear that even transcends American the enjoyment of the rights Wirvi, oViri vvKiivror of frcc Hud innoceut possagc high schools ahd univer. with aggres-^ sities. is a galling capitalistic trend. An official who briefed us said Svetlana Alliluyeva .incited nothing but tion taken by the United Nations in making peace between Israel and the Arab countries in 1957. When one reads the words of President Eisenhower and the late secretary of state, John Foster Dalles, as for- heads of the various governments in the Mideast, it becomes evident that the basic issues have not changed at all apd that the fundamental principles of international law which are being defied today were fully accepted by both sides in 1957. Thus, the U.S. Department of State declared on June 27, 1957: “It is the United States view that the Gulf of Aqaba com- Smiles their hats, holding them over their hearts with their right hands.) I agree that we deserve something better in our parade than a couple of army trucks. Parades are planned, not born overnight, dhd units are invited from volunteers who wish to be in the parade. In the parade you see the few that are willing and proud to do their duty as citizens. It is true you see GMC cars and trucks and we thapk them for cooperating, but GMC cars and buses also drive our citizens out of our city to their own brand of Memorial Day celebration. GUIIJ.ERMO GARCIA 184 HARRISON CHAIRMAN OAKLAND COUNTY COUNCH. FLAG DAY PARADE ‘Need Duplieale Certificates of Insurance* What doesihe state consider proof of insurance? My wife and I each have an insurance card but only one certificate of insurance? This can’t be passed along every time the car moves. If the certificates are the law, it’s up to insurance companies to provide another copy. - ■ RAYMOND C. DAVIS SR. CLARKSTON Suggests Others Check Sod Measurements People buying sod should be sure and measure before they pay for it. I bought sod, laid it and measured it, only 1o find that we were shorted quite a few square yards. IRENE WEST CLARKSTON Question and Answer Saving for a rainy day can remove the clouds from your future. * * *. Previously I asked what law requires me to vote. Thank He may not be the life of the y,j„^ answer which said no law requires this. Now— u..t u.„ Vi, a tVin |jappene(j gti). ffce right-to-choose to register or re- register? Can you give the law that requires us to register to vote? JoANNE SHATTUCK party, but his hostesses hide the lamp shades when he comes. ..... *. - If.' * It’s amazing how far some rumors can travel without a leg to stand on. That coppercentered coin is about the only sandwich you can get for a quarter these days. REPLY Again, no law requires you to register. However, Chapter 23, Sect. 1449 of the Michigan Election l,aw says local units of government cannot accept , pour vote unless you are registered. ★ ★ ★ In conclusion I repeat an impression I’ve had for some, time. The Russian people don’t hate us. They’re deceived about our “imperialism” and “hostility.” But these ideas center in the minds of the top leaders. There the truth is secondary. Someday the p e o p 1 e . will learn tk,e iacts. It’s coming slowly now. And when they do, the top bosses will back away by demand. In the meantime, we — the U. S, and all the world — deal only with the iron hand of the Kremlin that calls the shots. And the head Red is rtithless, unpredictable and an^ swerable to no one except his hand-picked cronies. —^Harold A. Fitzgerald {Editor’s Note: An article on India wiU appear on Friday.) Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Fantastic Odds sion. “Thus, in the United States’ view, Israel’s right to free and /innocent passage was dependent upon withdrawal of i t s forces behind the arausfice^^'Do^ (Oklahoma City) lines in accordance with the Oklahoman United Nations resolutions.” in the name of education perience indicates clearly that force has nbw gone, and Nas- * ★ * New Hampshire started the the most careful supervision ser once again considers the When the United Nations set first state lottery of modem cannot eradicate the inevitable gulf an Egyptian “lake.” up on the Gaza Strip a mil- t™®®- Resulting school funds abuse in a system particularly itary force to maintain peace proves these things: They cost more than they brought in if their , total impact on society ‘ is reckoned; and 160 years’ ex- that a U.N. peacekeeping force maintain the status quo — that is, keep the gulf open to all Shipping. That U.N. have been far less than ex- susceptible to fraud, pected. Now New York starts its t r 0 0 p s from the strip, the ^ problem was definitely considered to have been resolved and when Egypt and Israel agreed to withdraw their with the first drawing set for July 20. • ^ so far as internatiopal lavv is concerned. RIGHT OF FREE PASSAGE The same document from the department of state added: “The United States has stated that in the absence of some overriding decision to ’ the contrary, as by the international court of justice, Verbal Oi^chids Mrs. Eva Goldade of Sault Stei Marie, formerly , of Pontiac; 94th birthday. Mrs. Hannah Schluchter of Clarkston; 81st birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Lewis of Owosso; 53rd wedding anniversary. ” ■ ' ■ .. The attraction for a $1 ticket is a prize fund up to $100,000 with an annual possibility of a special $250,000 award. 'But the odds are not a n y\t h i n g a professional gambler would consider, being 1 to 4,167. 'Sticky' Strait The Minneapolis Star^ This claim is disputed by Israel, the United States and other maritime nations, which consider the blockade an obstruction of an - international waterway. The narrow Strait of Tiran, the entrance to the Gulf of Aqaba, is the focus of the crisis between Israel and the these days. Without the re- But Nasser is paying little attention to international law Arab nations. The 100-mile-long gulf itself Israel’s only outlet to the Red Sea and to the oil of Iran — is bordered on the west by Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula and on the east by Saudi Arabia. Israel and Jordan each hold strips of land on the northern edge of the gnlf, % \ ir , .. EgypUs previous blockade of the wait was lifted by the .......... ........... _ swift Israeli attack through tory teaches anything, a study the Sinai Peninsula in 1956. of the more than 1,300 legal Under U.N. pressure, Israel lotteries in the United States withdrew, but pn condition ' Even Las Vegas roulette wheels do far better than that as the house skims a profitable take on the long end of *33 to 1 odds against the bettor. ★ ★ ★ Editorial Research Reports quotes James Samuel Ezell, a historian of the lottery in America, who said: “If his- straining influence of the U.N. peacekeeping force, Nasser can war against the so-called “aggressor” — Israel — and the “imperialist” nations — the United States and Britain. The Associated Press I* entitled exclusively, to the use for republi-cation of all local news printed In The Rontlec Press Is delivered by carrier for 50 cents a week; where mailed In Oakland. GenesM, Livingston, Macomb, Lapeer and Washtenaw Counties it is $10.00 • year; elsewhere in Michigan and all ether places in the United States $26.00 a year. All mall subscriptions pisyabte In advance. Postage has bean paid at the 2nd class rate at Pontiac, Michigan. Member of ABC. THK PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 7, 19BT A-7 I Mideast Oil Clamp Not Likely to Hurt U.S. - ' Waterford Township Plannlnu Connmisilon on June DVis'oni I-Uv !!* School NEW YORK (AP) - The' Middle East war isn’t likely tol cause an oil shortage in the United States but, if prolonged, could cut deeply into the supplies of Western Europe, Japan, Australia and New Zealand. Two of the major Arab oil-producing countries, Kuwait 'and Iraq, yesterday halted sale of oil to Britain and the United States. Egypt closed the Suez Canal, through which much oil is transported. Section le.M. Paragraph (a), Ordinance No. 45, to allow a horse to be housed on property zoned AG-2, Small Farm District, as defined by Township OrdI-, nanCe No. 45, being the "Zoning Ordinance of the Charter Township of Water-lord", Oakland County, Michigan, on the following described parcel of properly; | Cose No. 62-5-3 ’ ' Waterford Township, Oakl6nd County,! Michigan, Section l, T3N, R9E, Lot 23, ...............Farms Subdivrsloh. SAtuev, Clerk ' mship of Waterford ,'^Oil-industry spokesmen said the United States has sufficient domestic production and sources other than the Middle East to meet its petroleum needs. In fact, they said, the United States could boost its production to hejp meet the needs of other colintries. The United States consumed about 12 million barrels of crude oil daily in 1966, of which about 9.5 million barrels were domes- tically produced, according to the American Petfoleum Institute. Most Pf the balance was impo.rted from Canada, Venezu-'ela and the Netherlands Antilles. Only about 400,000 barrels daily came from Arab countries. TEXAS WELLS Jim C. Langdon, chairman of the Texas Railroad Commission, which sets production quotas for wells in the nation’s largest oil-producing state, says Texas wells could boost their production between a million and 1.5 million barrels daily. He estimated this couldsbe accom-| pli^hed within 10 to todays. j J.M. Menefee, Louisiana con- DmwnS servation commissioner, esti-^ L/luw/ia just be a matter of turning the] valves.” ] 'T^otal loss of production from the nine Arab oil-producing' countries — Abu Dhabi, Algeria, Bahrein, Iraq, Kuwait, Libya, j Aatar, Saudi Arabia and the| United Arab Republic — would! amount to about 8.5 million barrels daily, about a third of the] supply to non-Gommunist coun-' tries. j 84 PER CENT Western Europe gets about 84 per cent of its oil, supply from the Arab countries. Royal Dutch Shell, the European oil company, issued a statement at The Hague that the I Middle East crisis would have no drastic effect on Western Europe’s oil supplies. mates his state also could in-i ypSILANTI (AP) — Floyd crease production by a million _ , . . to 1.5 million barrels daily. ' S^ott, 38, of Romulus, drowned * * ★ 'I’uesday in nearby Ford Lake “We could make the change i when he fell fr^m^bis^outboard overnight,” he says. ‘Tt would) motor boat. eniteuf \A/AVQ CIDCT nilAI ITV " Royal Dutch referred to present European oil stocks, the supplies under way and the largely increased size of the Western tanker fleets. I It said that a switch to other] oil-producing areas might mean an incaease in freight costs) I 3-MONTH SUPPLY Another source estimated that ,ern Europe has more than a three-month supply of crude oil on hand and more en route in tankers. With the Suez Canal closed, oil companies operating- in^t Middle East were reported verting iheir tankers to other routes. be eased by the existence of the| largest supply bf idle tankers in' three years. , :___ I Another factor i& the increase in tanker sizes. The new supertankers can carry oil around the I southern tip of Africa for lower [ costs per barrel than smaller, 'tankers using the Suez Canal. I American oil companlesTi?ivr ' a big stake in the Middle East. Among those operating there are Standard Oil Co. (N.J.), Mobil Oil Corp., Gulf Oil Corp., Standard Oil CO. (Ind.), Standard Oil Co. of California, Texaco, Inc., and Phillips Petroleum-Co. Maritime sources said the transportation problem would i WANTEI Highest Prices Paid' “We Pick 0p’» FE 2-C2m JUNKGARS Used Auto Parts Available Pontiac Scrap 135 Branch EVERYTHING’S PENN-PREST! DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Offers FREE PARKING ON THE COURTHOUSE LOT (CORNER SAGINAW and HURON) Furniahed by: the Following Merchanta: ARTHUR’S GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP 48 N. Saginaw St. OSMUN’S MEN’S WEAR 51 N. Saginaw St. BOBEHE SHOP 16 N. Saginaw 5PW. Huron St. CONN’S CLOTHES 73 N. Saginaw THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 W. Huron St. Penn-Presr stars in our Towncraft shirt fair Summer is the short-sleeve shirt season and that's just what these Penn-Prest Dacron® Polyester/cotfon shirts are. Not only easy to wear, but they're easy to care for. dost wash, tumble dry and they're smooth as new and ready to wear. In whites and color-rich solids in broadcloth and oxford weave. Your favorite collar styles, too. You'll want several at this price! 3.98 We've lots of wide stripes and tattersalls too! PENNEY'S MIRACLE MILE Great value! Towncraft* Penn-Prest* dress slacks MACHINE WASH, NEED NO IRONING! Only the Penn-Prest best for Pop! Penhey's own brand name stands for: smooth-as-new straight out of the dryer... cris^ front creases that never de-crease . . . rugged construction behind every handsome tailoring feature . . . top volue for your dollar. And remember: no more cleaning bills! Your choice of two Grad models... ' polyester/worsted wool in a | smooth Bengdlino weavo (qlso in II J checks and plaids). ...... ........ I Dacron'" poIyMter/Orlon^ acrylic in traditional fovorite plain weave. 798 STORE HOURS 9:30 A.M. to 9 P.M. CHARGE IT! V A-8 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY^ JUNE 7, 1967 Bids Are Authorized for Repair of Streets of an unusually de-atructive winter, City commissioners last night authorized *'* taking bids June 26 for asphalt; repair work on city streets. i Joseph E. Neipling, director of public works and service, said repairs needed are beyond the city maintenance crew’s capability. V*# f Affairs h I as a parking lot for county I building annex employees. To protect city interests, the ; commission selected Siierwin M. iBirnkrant, director of law, and' |Niepling to attend a meeting iJune 22 of the Clinton River I Drainage Board. , Joseph A. Warren, city man-'ager, said the city could b^ assessed for improvements made Bids for asphalt for paving . , , ' ^ „ ..i * ............. projects and for fleet auto in- cial of a 6.6-acre parcel at me downstream from Pontiac, surance and workman’s com- southeast corner of East Boule- pirst reading was given to an pensation insurance \ be taken June 26. vard and Woodward. ordinance which will regulate I Both were modifications to aniggj,gp metal processors. DC IHKCII JUUc I i V . it. ‘i. j' ^ . . , , ■ agreement between the aty andi Ungs who is t, .apply‘^kooo l«l « 7 ‘ seaUng work on major streets. ' Commissioners, in other busi-i The commission agreed ness, accepted executed deeds to] to replace meters at a city-property which will allow con-j owned parking lot at the south-struction of a portion of South west corner of Pine and La-East Boulevard to Woodward! fayette and to terminate a from its present terminus and' leasing agreement with Oak- a,.rn„ri/pn ninnK approved rezoning to commer- land County. It had been used and Henry for engineering work on requested lateral sewers in ;the area to be serviced by the [projected Galloway Creek I Sewer Trunk. 1 ! Neipling said his office has' received more requests for lat-i jeral sewers than can be proc-by the city’s engineering It’s not every day that a pret- Commissioners voiced interest in provisions for preventing junk from piling up on the public sidewaHre or-adjoining-fences and asked for more information at next week’s informal meeting on which existing operators would be covered. They also authorized hiring Teaching Tradition in Family Carried On; ty college coed is preparing to ^ begin a teaching career just as . her mother retires as a pro- -fessional educator after 40 ' P” years. That’s the way it is in the ' Snyder family of 6765 Wood-bank, Birmingham. Sharon Sue Snyder, an Oak-land University beauty who was first runner-up in last year’s Miss Michigan contest, will teach her first class this fall in Brookside School in ___Bloomfield Hills. Her mother. Dr. Edith Roach Snyder, has just announced her retirement as principal of Pontiac’s Webster Elementary School after holding that position for 27 years. Mrs. Snyder, 62, who is currently listed in three types of Who’s( Who publications confirmed yesterday that she was retiring after 29 years in the Pontiac public school system be-“ cause of her health. A prime mover in developing the primary and intermediate block program, she had this to say in looking back upon ,4C years of experience: “I feel the profession I chose is one of the greatest. There is much work to be done in education. We must always provide the best environment and learning opportunities possible. Istaff. A public hearing on a special [assessment roll for curbs, gutters and paving on Baltimore from Kenilworth to Emerson was held. Attending the commission meeting were 12 citizens residing on or doing business on Allison. They complained of a large volume of traffic using the street to get from southbound Oakland to southbound I Cas®- . k.. Because of Oakland being one-[way northbound from West Wide _! Track to Allison, cars and trucks I lusing the street have multiplied, ’ [they said. ^ "Ae director of public works ' and service said there is DR. EDITH R. SNYDER [question that additional work needed to alleviate traffic problems in the area but funds are unavailable. A holder of doctorate degrees in music education and in education, sh^ is listed in “Who’s Who”, “Who’s Who in American Education” and “Who’s Who of American Women.” She began her career in Desh-ler, Ohio, ^nd taught in Maumee, Ohio, and Birmingham before coming to Pontiac. Mrs. Snyder has taught in several state colleges during^ffi^^^ summer as well as having written many professional articles and belonging to several professional, civic and social organizations. School Aspirants to Air Issues Pontiac school board candidates, incumbent Russell L. Brown and Ronald E. Covault, linir discuss campaip iss^^^^ McConnell Community Schoql, 245 S. Paddock at 3 p.m. Sunday. Fifteen block club presidents reportedly requested the public She was instrumental in at- session which Is expected to tracting colleges to offer con-a couple hundred persons. T love the little ones I willitmuing education courses in'^ miss them dearly,” she said. iPontiac 18 years ago. (Advertisement) Murder Charged to Teen DteTROIT (UPI) - A teen 'was in the county jail today awaiting examination on a first-degree murder charge in the death of an elderly woman injured in a purse-snatching incident. „ Isaac Parks, 18, was remanded to jail without bond after a plea of innocent was entered for him at his arraignment yesterday. Recorder’s Court Judgd Elyin L. Davenport set court examination for June 15. Parks, a meat truck helper. Is accused of causing the death of Mrs. Mileva Bozin, 75, by attacking her May 17 to sted her purse. Tho woman died about a week later of injuries received when she was knocked to the pound by her apairanl. Police said Parks was arrested Monday when a 15-year-old girl inmlicated him. The girl, who was being held I by juvenile authorities as a material witness, told police ishe grabbed Mrs. Bozin’s purse after Parks knocked the woman down. nHWilMS A FAMILY AFFAIR Fidgetine, nose-picUng, a tormenting rectal itch are often telltale signs oi Pin-Wortaa... ugly parasites that medical experts say infest 1 out of every 3 persons examined. Entire families may be victims and not icnow it. ...........large intestine where 4bey4ive4UMLmuitipl3t.That:sezactly what Jasme’s P-W tablets do. •. and here’s how they do it: , First—a scientific coating carries the tablets into the bowels before they dissolve. Then — Jayne’s modern, medically-approved ingredient goes right to work—Idlls Pin-Worms quickly, easily. Aik tour pharmaettt. Don’t take chances with dangerous, highly contagious Pin-Worms which infect entire families. Glet genuine Jayne’s P-W Vermifuge . . . small, easy-to-take tablets... special sizes for children and adults. DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS 3 ilWISJllk'll SHOP PO® dollar OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9:30 !; Drayton Open Sundays Noon to 6 DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS /“ ■ r THE PONTIAC PRESS WEDNESDAY, JUNE 7, T967 A—9 38 GIs Killed in Viet Listed Wounds Fatal to 4, 5 Missing Now Dead WASfflNGTON (AP) - The Defense Department has listed the names of 39 men killed ii connection with the war in Vietnam. They included 22 Army men, 11 Marines and five Navy men. Four others died of earlier wounds and five previously reported missing were listed as dead. Killed in action; ARMY CALIFORNIA - Capt. Ronald W. Pann, Upland) CpI. Terrance P. Fitzgerald, DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA - Sgf. Johnny C. Preaton, Washington. GEORGIA - Spec. 4 Roy R, Booth, College Park. ....W. John- LOUISIANA — Pfc. Edward G. Lacey. New Orleans; S.Sgt. Billy L. Hammon-tree, Rosepolne. MASSACHUSETTS - Capt. Ralph B. Walker II, South Hadley Falls. Kansas City. ---- YORK Hyde Park,' L NORTH CAROLINA — isi. Li. reier e. Day, Cameron; Pfc. Jimmy K. Morrison, RHODE ISLAND - Sgt. William G. SUva, East Providence. TENNESSEE — Pfc, Michael L. Dot-son, Chattanooga. TEXAS - Pfc. Gary L. James, Santa Anna. UTAH - Pfc. David 0. Cederstrom, a^ii 1 Bk* ritv Richard E. ’wVscbNSIN Spec.”!' Frederic G. ityar, Menomonie. NAVY CALIFORNIA - Lt. Charles 0. Witt, Costa Mess. GEORGIA — Hospitalman Michael \V. Carey, Morrow; Electronics Technician Radar, 2.C; Roy L. Castleberry. Marlet- MfCHIOAN - Hospital Corpsman I.C. tih--* • — ---------- -MEVAD. itierwalt, MARINE CORPS CALIFORNIA - Pfc. Alfred Cobos, Norwalk; Lance CpI, Daniel A. Patterson, Eureka. CONNECTICUT — Pfc. ftobert J. White, Manchester. FLORIDA - CpI. Robert K. Cadeau, fort Lauderdale; Pfc. John A. Sutherland, Tampa. IDAHO — Lanca CpI. Jay Mount Rainier. D. McClain, Pfc. John W. Avelleyra, - Pfc. Noble Jackson, NORTH DAKOTA — Pfc. Garry 0. Klein, Mott. OKLAHOMA - Lanca CpI. Kenneth R. Abmeyer. Tulsa. OREGON — Pfc. Michael J. Greeley, ARMY NORTH CAROLINA - 1st L H. Farmer Jr., Fayetteville. i NAVY ’NORTH CAROLINA - Hospitalman James L. Gales, Bynum. MARINE CORPS . MASSACHUSETTS — Pfc. William J. Bresnahan Jr., Ashburnham. NEW YORK - Pvt. Thomas D. NIeder-meler, Rochester. Changed from missing to dead—hostile; ARMY MICHIGAN - Pfc. Mtchsal P. Oaf-Ik. ' nuTe, nuoson. PENNSYLVANIA — Sgt. l.C. James Patterson, Three Springs. TEXAS — Spec. 4 Paul 0. Skelton Waco. Virginia - wo otto a. Seamans. Virginia Beach. Missing as a result of hostile action; Army M. Sgt. Douglas Lloyd. Returned to military control Army Spec. 5 James L. Adams. Died not as a result of hostile action;' ARMY Veach," Bakersfield; Fortune, Sante Ana. GEORGIA - Staff Sgf. Edwin J. Casa-letto, Fitzgerald. KANSAS — Capt. Robert L. Mosher, Junction City. LOUISIANA - Spec. 4 Joseph D. Lt Grand Jr., Breaux Bridge. MAINE — Capt. Gena F. Matthews, MICHIGAN - Spec. 4 Melvin Marti, Mantan. MINNESOTA - Spec. 4 David ,, Hughes, Minneapolis; Pfc. Richard Casper, Grand Meadow. MISSOURI — Spec Marshfield. new] YORK - Spec. 4 Domenico Cac-clola, Brooklyn, NORTH CAROLINA - Spec. S George D. Bennett, Grantsboro. OHIO— Capt. Norman R. Ktdd Jr,, Cleveland. TEXAS - Capt. Floyd W. Xaase, Houston. NAVY PENNSYLVANIA — Seaman Sandy M. Rivers, Philadelphia. MARINE utton^ront styles. Sizes S-M-L. Sovel Reg. 59e-69e panties for misses and wo- ^ men. Royon/nylon; white, pastels. 5-7, 8-10. JL ■ Values up to 2.99! Lovely styles by Katz in summer^eepwear 99 All of our 3.9 iiauiliuiiai Ml j In addition. Gene Greek and _ , #»■ • . § Floyd will.be installed lor two- SpOrt ohirtS i ’j year terms and Lewis Goff and y.;; For that particu- f 'j Andy Body one-year terms on i^r breed of 1 ■e-evc^e U alarms answered in *April and 84 the previous May. ★ ★ ★ 1 Township firemen responded to 292 alarms the first five months this year compared with 341 for the same period of 1966. tilts uudiu ui a* tatner wno ittsists p EMCEE I-.- on button down I _ . collars. We hove Presiding over the ceremony „ complete selec- 1 M will be A1 Van Thomme Jr of J:;.:; tion available 1 grl Fraser. Van Thomme is district g.. 1 governor of the Lions organiza-'. ^ / 1 # # tion- • T TO f ' Pontiac and Morlh Suburban’s Number 1 GARAGE BUILDER attached ■ ■ 4’^ • Many Styles Sizes Prompt Service STANDARD Bank Rat^s. No Down Payment Requireif Closed Sundays 852-4030 SUBURBAN Homo & Garage Builder 1588 E. Auburn Rd. Rochester Use A Lion Charge with Option Terms THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. JUNE 7, 1967 A—ll GLADSTONE (AP) - Funeral services were pending today for Carroll Johnson, 04, Gladstone chief of police, who died Monday night at Rochester, Minn. Johnson had been on a leave of absence for ailing health. GRADUATION PARADE - Army cadets of the class of 1967 move forward to review Graduation took place today with 584 cadets the parade given in their honor by junior receiving diplomas. Since the academy’s be- classmen yesterday at West Point, N. Y. ginning in 1802, 27,244 have been graduated. Graduates Info World .of War West Point Salutes 584 Today WEST POINT, N.Y. (AP) Into a world troiibled by war in Vietnam and the Middle East, the U S. Military Academy graduates 584 cadets today. nie cadets received their diplomas in ceremonies at Michie Stadium, and Secretary of the Army Stanley R. Resor delivered the main address. ~ At least 148 of the new second lieutenants will go to Vietnam after completion of Ranger and other training. More than that number had volunteered to fill the vacancies. The 148 were selected on the basis of class standing. ____Jiankhig-cadet-for the gradua- tion Is Ernest C. Heimberg, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. Clayton Heimberg of Midland Park, N.J. He was first In his class Academical^ for four years. TWO-NEGROES Two of the cadets are Ne-roes, including the first son of West Point Negro graduate. He is James D. Fowler Jr., whose father, a 1941 graduate, is a colonel stationed at Ft. Leavenworth, Kan. The other is Bobby G. Whaley, son of Mr. and Mrs. Cole B. Whaley Sr. of Cleveland, Ohio. Resor, a native of New York City, was appointed secretary of the Army JulyJU1965r--a£tec. serving as undersecretary for three monthsr He is a veteran of World War II and was a lawyer in New York before his appointment, — The graduation exercises conclude June Week at the academy. The program opened last Friday when former President Dwight D. Eisenhower dedicated a D-Day mural at the Academy museum. T^e painting was presented to West Point by the class of 1944, which graduated on D-Day, June 6, 1944,^Eisenhower, a 1915 graduate of the academy, commanded the Allied invasion of Europe................... California Senate Passes Liberalized Abortion Law SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — The first liberalization of California’s abortion law in 95 years has clearcNl the Senate without a vote to spare in the most dramatic battle of the 1967 legislative session. The measure cleared the upper house 21-17 Tuesday night the bare majority needed for passage. Supporters predict Assembly passage. Gov. Ronald Reagan has said he would sign such a bill. Sen. Anthony C. Beilenson of Beverly Hills, the youthful Democrat who has been pushing the liberalization for four years, expressed confidence the Assembly will back the bill. He modified it to meet Reagan’s objections. Beilenson asserted that 100,-000 obortions are performed illegally in California each year, at great risk to women’s lives. He said the present law lead^i to tragedy” because it permits abortions only Jo save j mothers’s life. “It is our contention this existing law is archaic, barlaric and hypocritical,” he said. Republican Sen. John Schmitz of Orange County raised the opponents’ main question: When does life begin? Roman Catholic Church spokesmen contended it starts With conception. i “If life begins before birth, the state has the duty to protect it,” Schmitz said. Beilenson’s measure would make three major revisions in California’s abortion law, originally passed 106 years ago and rewritten in 1872. RAPE, INCEST It would permit abortions to end pregnancies caused by rape or incest or to prevent a birth that in the judgment of a panel of physicians, would gravely impair the mental or physical health of the mother. Operations to end a pregnancy caused by statutory rape could be performed only on girls 14 years of age and younger. At Reagan’s insistence, Beiii-ison dropped a provision that would have allowed abortions to prevent the birth of a child that physicians panel decided !ht be bom deformed. BUILD NOW-AVOID THE RUSH Gustom Built | KITCHENS I As Lew as *ff PerWtsk Everything in Remodeling . . . 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BAL TENNIS OXFORDS LITTLE BOYS’ CANVAS GYMSHOES Our Reg. 2.86 Our Reg. 1.96 4 Days Only LOO Our Reg. 1.96 4 Days Only Infants* sizes 5 to 8; children’s sizes 9 to 12; misses’ size* l2Vz to 3. Cotton canvas or denim uppers are matched to full cushioned insoles, rubber Soles. Red ijar blue. While quantities last._______________________________: ' _________ ' LOO Lace-to-toe, black cotton canvas gym oxfords in sizes .'i to 12. Sturdily built for rugged play with full cushioned insoles and non-slip rubber outsoles. Charge it. While quantities last. Lightweight Comfort for Carefree Summer Days MEN'S 4 EYELET CLOTH OXFORDS 2.00 Men really go for our 4 eyelet, blucher oxfords in sizes 6y2 to 12. Features cushioned insole, flexible rubber outsoles. Black or chino. 4 Days Only Kmart sells only ^^first quality^^ goods. We carry no ^^seconds 99 GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD / ■■ B-8 THE PONTMC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 7, 1967 Phony-Bill Count Jails Secret Service Man NEW YORK (AjPl ~ For the thau said the two agents gave first time in the 102-year history the third man the counterfeit of the Secret Service, one hf its money and were then arrested agents stands accused of trying|on a street corner. The third to sell counterfeit bills. The j man was trailed and the moh^y servicy^was created to fight recovered from him. For counterfeiting undisclosed reasons, he was not I The suspect’s Brooklyn neigh-bor, also accused of conspiring to sell $23,000 worth of phony PAIR STUNNED j $20 bills, is a federal Narcotics Eugene Jackie Ballard, the Bureau agent. , Secret Service agent, and Jesse * A ★ Spratley, the narcotics agent. Secret Service agents trailed appeared stunned as they were the two through Greenwich Vil- arraigned Tuesday before U.~ lage streets Monday night and Comrnissioner Earle N. BisjKl arrested them after they met a They were held in _$5,0(^ bi third man, it was disclosed ‘ each. Tuesday. I * ★ * U.S. Atty. Robert M. Morgen-; A government s^rce said Ballard’s arrest on 'k:onspiramr| a Narcotics Bureau agent and charges was the first of its kirol joined the Secret Service last for the service and he coukl not August, recall whether a narcotks agent j * * * hiid ever been con\^d of a I Spratley, 34, also married and serious crime. y | the father of two, had worked /I for the Federal Department of Ballard, 29yiiarried and the Correction and became a nar-father of twoTchildren, had been|cotics agent four year ago. /Romney Accepts Plan to End Guard Division LANSING (UPI) - Gov. George Romney has accepted the Defense Department’s plan to abolish the 46th Infantry Division of the Michigan National Guard and reorganize it into several nonaligned combat-ready units. "Whal theyTJropose is certai ly acceptable to the state, Romney said yesterday. The proposed buildup of units will occur through merging of the state’s nearly 100 various guard units. NEW UNITS The new units would not be attached to any state division .outside.ot Michigan. . .... However, one brigade of 3,200 men would continue to be part of the 38th Infantry Division of the Indiana National Guard. The Michigan brigade is part of a 150,000 man Selected Reserve Force created late in 1965 to act as a backup force for In some respects, the governor said the reorganization will “be better for us.’’ “Basically what they are proposing is reducing the number i|f units that are only 50 per cent manned and giving us nnits ;-that are^^ per ^entjthe regular Army manned. “It appears to us the.se units two top military chiefs, Maj. Gen, Clarence Schnipke, adjutant general of Michigan, and Maj. Gen. Gocil Simmons, eommanding general of the 46th Division. WORLDWIDE effort for a limited time only one of the best dealt we ever hod: a whole houseful of fothien-freth furniture, for to littlel THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 7. 1967 Permanent Color! Lifetime Luster! Your Choice Of 5 Plastic Items 57* 3 Days Only! Our Reg. 77^’88^ Break-resistant, waterproof! MadC' of durable Teramora ' polyethylene w'ith high gloss' and fine finish. 30-Qt. waste basket, ll4-bu. laundrybasket, dish pan or 3-pc. mixing bowl set. Turquoise, sandalwood, white. 50» 5/8"1.D. Hose 3 Days-Our Reg. 2.84! 50' Full-size green vinyl hose with solid brass coup-lings. Cuts down on lawn-watering time! 50r« Nylon-Reinforced V2" I.D. plastic hose, nylon-reinforced m for flexibility even in low- temperatures. Easy to coil... doesn’t fight back.^ MtM 17-Inch Sprinkler 296 3 Days~Reg4 3.88! "Superain” osciL lating sprinkler sweeps agentle spray on rectangular areas up to 1800 sq. ft. Like U? Charge It! 137 3 Days ■ Reg. 1.94! Shift softly* into summer with these jewel-neckline, easy-to-wear shifts. Made up dn a lustrous bletfd of Avril rayon/cotton that’s easy to care for, too. We also have cotton hopsacking shifts featured at this same low price, this weekend. 10-18. ^FMCCorp.TM, 3 Days - Reg. 1.87-2.33! Misses* Printed Blouses Summery sleeveless blouses, styled with Peter Pan collar, Italian collar or Bermuda collar. Made of fine combed cotton in a variety of vivacious prints. 32-?8. Petite and Misses' 3 Days Only -Reg. 3.991 Missies* Skirts and Culottes 297 Cotton duck, hopsacking and rayons in A-line, swinger, pleated and button-front skirts and western or wrap-look culottes. Petite 8-l6; regular 10-18. Uke It? Charge It! 3 Days - Reg. 11.97, Dinnerware 20% Discount Sale On Beautiful 3 Days - Reg. 2.99! 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Fresh Coconut Candy Plastic Trash Can 38* Cocormt Bon Bons, VanillaiCocOr nut Ditties and Neapolitan Iri-color Coconut Cubes. Fresh, flavor-fill, delicious! In 14b. bags or hulk. Like It? Charge It! Durable 20-gal. trash can of heavy duty= pla.stic. Has .self-locking, tight-fitting cover, and easy-grip handles for convenience in carrying. Waterproof, rustproof. Like It? Charge It! 3 Days Only - Reg. 99^1 Girls' 2-6x 3 Days Only - Our Reg. 99^! Boys .Blouse and Shorts Denim Boxer Shorts Stripes star for the sandbox set . ; . csp^ially Vhen the stripes are in storybook colors on easy-to-care-for Wash-N-Wear cotton seersucker. 2-6x Like It? Charge It! rLittle bays can- be plenty nautical in. these Blu Surf® Sanforized® cotton denim boxer shorts. Faded blue. Pacific blue, navy blue or red. 3-6x. ®£ru/» Mills r.M. PONTIAC MALL DOWNTOWN PONTIAC T£L4WRON CENTER DRAYTON PLAINS ROCHESTER PLAZA BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE So S. KRESGE COMPANY B—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. JUNE 7, 1967 Problem Seems Insoluble Arab Refugees Irritate Discord ^ By WnjJAMl..'RYAN j Hundreds of thousands were|good& Jn boxes, sleepiijg and AP Special Correspondent | displaced this way. Nobody jeating wherever they can. Until the problem of the Arab knows the exact figure. Over! In Lebanon and Syria the ref-refugees from Israel is solved, the years their number has iugees live in mud huts or con-the_Mddle East will remain grown by the natural process, jcrete block shacks, and brood politically explosive and a dan-Today, by best estimates, per-1 constantly about their former ger to world peace. But the | haps a few more than a million | homeland. In the Gaza Strip, as problem seems utterly insolu-lpersons claim4he status of rd- lelsewhere, the reiEugees form a ble. jugee. ’ I pool for the recruitment of the For almost 20 years, a quest They have lived in slums in commandos who infiltrate Isr-for a solution has been going on. | the outskirts of cities in Leba- ael and attack, prompting Israel Neutrals close to Middle Eastlnon, Syria and Jordan and in [to retaliation. ^Iprohlems saw three basiejgavsjthe Gaza Strip which Egypt oc- to approach the problem of establishing stability. One was to seek a method to resettle the refugees. It failed. ■ cupied on Israel’s southwestj While Israel feels itself stron-Mediterranean coast after the I ger than all the Arabs com-I war. They were a constant ibined, there seems no prospect source of political ferment, aniof persuading the Israelis to Another was to seek political j easy prey to pan-Arab agitation make concessions on the refu-settlement between Israel and | stirred up' by the followers of gee problem. Israel says the the Arab nations so some refu- Egypt’s President Gamal Abdel Arabs fled their homes of their i gees could return to their form-! Nasser. lown accord and thus are not Map Shows Yesterday's Highlights Of The Arab-lsraeli War Preserve Israel—Romney LANSING (AP)—Gov. George appropriate action to. honor our Romney has urged President! commitments in the Middle Johnson in a telegram “to pre- ^ast,” even if that means act-serve the state of Israel in the ^ light of serious developments-in SPECIFY the Middle East.’’ State Democratic Chairman “The state of Israel must be Zolton Ferency, in a letter to preserved,” Romney told John- Johnson, did not specify what son Tuesday. “I hope you will action the officers of the Demp-insist that conditions in the cratic Central Committee had Middle East insure the true in mind, preservation of the national in- Romney called the Israeli -tegrity and independence of Arab conflict tragic and recom-Israel.” | mended that the United States * * * I continue to work toward immed- Observers had been awaiting idate ehd to hostilities, a statement on the crisis from * * ★ Ttomneyr"ransidered~ii"pj1itre—^lease''lJeassured-ofmyfull-prospect for the 1968 Republican support in such endeavors,” he presidential nomination. told Johnson. Meanwhile, the state Demo- ------------------ cratic party told the president Charles Dickinson was killed that it believes the United in a duel with Andrew Jackson States “must take timely andiin 1806. er homes. It failed. The third way was war. It, too, has failed strong enough to accomplish solution by means of battle. The slogan uniting ali Arabs 'Israel’s responsibility. The Ar-Only some of the families who abs say they were driven out by so far — with die Arabs not fled teforr^e“ Israeli troopsi conquest. eventually wound up in other; Israel has never moved to Arab countries. Most clung; negotiate on the question of tenaciously to their status as [ repatriating Arabs. The Arabs against Israel is a cry for “li- refugees. They said that to do [steadfastly refuse to give up beating the Arab homeland. The problem was created at the outset of the Palestine war of^ l948-49j^ when Jewish troops, storming through Arab villages, otherwise would be to imply forfeiting their right to return to their former homes. Only a third of Jordan’s refugees lived in camps. Others expelled the inhabitants and live in tin shacks, rock huts, Tseilf them^Reeing'isehind-'^jsome in protection of Arab lines. [ carrying about their worldly their claims to lands the Jews inhabit. They have refused even to let United Nations investigators take a refugee census, for fear it would show reductions and make a less impressive refugee"figure than "the LS Tnitlion they claim. M ONTGO/VIERY WARD SEE -^yow^meri#femeiifite4 • • • it happening before your eyetl . . . while you wait ONE DAY ONLY! JUNE 8 Bring your diamond, your ruby or your other precious gems up to date... give them a4nodern^Iookv r.4lonY hideTheir fire and beauty in an old-fashioned mounting. 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X 60 INCH • HAND WASHABLE AHD UTILITY PAD QQt Superior quality polyester foom. THE PONTIAC TRESS. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 7, 19B7 I B-11 U.S. May AvoickMideast Involvement By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER AP Special Correspondent WASHINGTON - The U.N. Security Council call for a cease-fire in the Mf^die^ast strengthened the possibility today that the United States can avoid military involvement in the Arab-Israeli war. It also contributes to pros-pects the war may be contained in that area and that a U.S.-Soviet military confrohtation there will not develop. Overcoming these two perils has appeared a major objective of President Johnson since the war broke out unexpectedly long or if it began to turn out badly for Israel, the pressures on the United States to give Israel some kind of military assist- Monday morning. This objective ance would become very^reat. lay behind the statement of a neutral policy first made-at the State Department a few hours after the fighting started. It also guided later efforts to back away from the neutrality idea without *eclually abandoning it. There has been concern here that if the conflict continued too hke(LbY^X>r\ Percy Hits State Dept. WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. Charles H. Percy urges congressional review of State Department planning amid increasing GOP grumbling ..over other aspects of administration actions in the Middle East cri- Percy, considered a possibility for the Republican presidential nomination next year, said in^ah interview the government’s handling of the Arab-lsr-1 aeli clash “left grave questions in my mind about the quality of ~ijnr advance ptenning ’’ Picturing himself as a nonneutral supporter of Israel, the Illinois senator said despite many advance signs of trouble In the Middle East, the State Department was still doing research this week on whether the United States had a commitment to Israel. Senate Republican leaden Everett M. Dirksen noted grunj-bling in GOP ranks. , LACK OF ‘HARD FACTS’ He told newsmen Republican senators complained at a meeting Tuesday about a lack of “hard facts” in administration briefings, adding: “I think they expected a little larger body of facts.” . Another potential contender for the GOP presidential nod in i 1968, Michigan Gov. George] Romney, urged President John-1 son to “insist that conditions inj the Middle East insure the true preservation of the national in-! te'grity and independence of Isr- ‘ ael.” i In a telegram to Johnson, Romney pledged his support to U.S. efforts to end Middle East hostilities, which hUCalled tragic. In Sacramento, Calif., GOP Gov. Ronald Reagan said the “real villain” • of the Middle East crisis ia the Soviet Union, which he said is ‘^probably as anti-semitic” as Nazi Germany. Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser has talked about destroying Israel completely. It has never been suggested that Israel could destroy the Arab states, however, and Israel has said itiseeks to annex no new territory. ★ ★ The debate over neutrality which arose here Monday obscured _ rather than clarified U.S. policy toward the conflict. In part this seems to have resulted from official explanations at a time when officials wished to avoid getting pinned down to any course of action pther^than President Johnson’s chosen way through the Upited Nations. disavow what the State Department said. Finally Secretary of State Dean Rusk said the United Statesrwas not a “belligerent" in the conflict and urged the world to note that the word neutrality did not mean indifference. The fumbling for a definition raised a question not only of the real U.S. policy beneath the cover of . words, but also what was meant by neutrality and nonbelligerent. EXPLANA-nON The simplest explanation of Ihe difference is that neutrality is the proper term used in international law to define the position of a country which chooses not to take part in a war between two other countries. The term nonbelligerent, according The first comment from_____ State Department spokesman that the United States was'following a “neutral” policy reportedly brought protests to the administration from people who feared for the safety and support of Israel. Then the White House refused either to support to lawyers, has substantially the same meaning. U.S officials worried however, that overtones of the idea of neutraiity would suggest the United States did not care whether Israel or the Arab states won the conflict, which in turn implied that the United States would accept defeat for Israel if the war came to that. U.S. officials had been saying privately for days the United States did not intend to see Isr-i ael destroyed, though they did! not seem to^fear that this was] threatened. Israel’s military capability has always been highly rated in Washington. The Arab governments evidently did not consider the United States] impartial on the issues for they began breaking relations with' Washington 'Tuesday. SAVE *5®® For This FATHER’S DAY GIFT! Deluxe zrMMRIHDWER • 3-H.P. 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Protect yourselves. Use these handy reminders to make sure you get something you like (whether it’s a pair of socks to match your new suit, or a new suit). Hide them in schooi books, lunch bags, the refrigerator, curler boxes, record albums, etc. If yoimse^up all yopr reminders, just ask us for more. After all, Osmun’s has everything Fathers need. Father’s Day is Sunday, June 18. OSMUN’S Pontiac • Warren ■ ~ + ■ Father’s Day is Sunday, June 18. OSMUN’S “ _ j —.. Father’s Day 1 Father’s Day | 1 Father’s Day is Sunday, 1 - is Sunday, i 1 is Sunday, June 18. 1 June 18. 1 1 June 18. OSMUN’S ■ 1 OSMUN’S 1 1 OSMUN’S Pontiac . Warren 1 4- Pontiac • Warren | Pontiac • Warrdn Father’s Day 1 1 “ ““ H , ~ Father’s Day 1 Father’s Day is Sunday, I is Sunday, , 1 is Sunday, June 18. 1 June 18. 1 June 18. OSMUN’S L OSMUN’S 1 OSMUN’S Father’s Day is Sunday, June 18. OSMUN’S Pontiac • Warren Father’s Day is Sunday, June 18. OSMUN’S Pontiac • Warren Father’s Day is Sunday, June 18. 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Warren Father’s Day 1 Father’s Day 1 1 is Sunday, 1 is Sunday, JuVie 18. 1 June 18. 1 OSMUN’S 1 OSMUN’S 1 Pontiac • Warren 1 1 Pontiac • Warren 1 1 Father’s Day 1 1 Father’s Day 4 is Sunday, I is Sunday, 1 June 18. 1 June 18. I OSMUN’S 1 OSMUN’S 1 Pontiac . Warren 1 + 1 Pontiac • Warren 1 H 1 Father’s Day Father’s Day is Sunday, 1 is Sunday, June 18. 1 June 18. OSMUN’S 1 OSMUN’S 1 Pontiac . Warren 1 + 1 Pontiac • Warran 1 4 1 Father’s Day Father’s Day is Sunday, 1 Is^Sunday, June 18. 1 June 18. 1 OSMUN’S 1 OSMUN’S 1 Pontiac • Warren 1 ± Pontiac • Warren 1 j DADS! WIN $5D0 In prizes Be sure you register (FREE!) for Osroun's ANNUAL FATHER'S DAY GOLF TOURNAMENT! Carl's Golfland, Tslaoraph Rood) jusl north of Squora lako Xoad.l Register at Osmun's Downtown Pontiac Oa part ol Pontiac since 1931 SMUN’S FREE PARKING of ALL STORES STORES FOR MEKi I. VOUNG MEN I Downtown Pontiac ' ■ Tel-Horoir Center in Pontiac I lejm Ploza Center In Wenrtn Open fri.'iil 9 Open Every Night'til 9 ^pon Every Night'til V B—12 TH^ POyTlAC PRESS. WEDNESDAlit JUNE 7, 1967 an tavtotwii ••• TO THE Wrigieyhas th e juiciestf^s f ripest peaches for your pies, fresh fruit salads or just plain eatin* out of h'and, ,, # mbits AViOBf ABUS ffiSmATlON US. NO. iii/i And up fr£^ fancy ripe southern lbs. . SPRING FRESH TENDER >0011 B0CMS FRESH CALIFORNIA CALOVA >AvoccmIos r SPRING FRESH LONG ^ Green Cucumbers 2 for 29* spring Frttb Tender Leafy VAe Bib Lettuce ">• 5“ ----SWUNG nOBH -- - gn —.......WAc Green Peppers . 2 far 29| FRESH CRISP AKc Butter Lettuce 25* 2 <.29* CALIFORNIA THIN SKIN ^ ^ ^ Sunkist Lemons O C39* FRESH SWEET , — ^ Pinecqpplo 49‘ WONDERFUL LOW PRICEI lu Ji Pioneer Siisar 5 ^ 49 WONDERFUL LOW PRICEI '' i~.-~-.~~ Presto Charcoal IQ£>59 DELICIOUS ORANGE flavor J| . .. 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Juca chocolate ^ , 39c sbuHusi Milk 3d 8«c .4 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 7, 1»67 Over the yemh Wrtgby bat been^kHtum for tbe paett VMSJ>*A, jeigict beef and US, Grade *^A** fouliry. Nowhere will you get to mucb^meat for your money m . * nowhere else does it promise to taste so goodt Take Your Pick of the Finest U.S. (Choice Tender Rump, Patio .our Free Beautiful Picture Canadian Style Pork Loin Roast SAVE 50% on beautiful finished frames to match your decor! . magnificent Reproduction of a fine Masterpiece . . . Now you can have reproductions of the world*s great masterpieces in your own home . . . beautifully reproduced in full color on sturdy washable duraboard... ready for framing. VALUABLE COUPOK | GocxJ For One 8x10 Print I GOOD THRU JUNE 10 M ALL GRADE"A” , to Freth! . so Tender! to Delicious! fresh Spring Broilers MEADOWDAIB SMOKED FRESH ML BEEF Ilwrvei Leittr QuenHlin, li. 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WEDNESDAY, JUNE 7, 1967 Israel Captures Old Jerusalem^ Other Jordan Towns JERUSALEM (AP) —Israel sent a walkie-talkie message to captured Uie old walled city of Jerusalem today and hit Jordan with another body blow by seizing the commanding town of Nablus 30 miles to the north, * * ★ The Israeli army also reported the capture of two more towns in ^e Jordanian bulge into Israel, Ramallah and Tubas. Amman radio said Israeli forces to the south were trying tft breach the Jordanian border at several points along the west bank of the Jordan River and heavy fighting was under way. Occupation of the sector of Jerusalem held by the Jordanians since the 1948 war gave the Jews access once more to their most venerated shrine, the Wailing Wall of the Old Temple. Such access had been promised them in the 1949 armistice agreement, but the Jordanians refused to honor the promise. JEWS ENTERED Soon after the Israeli occupation, Jews frmo the Israeli sector of Jerusalem began streaming through the gates of the Arab quarter long denied them. As the troops approached the Wailing Wall the officer commanding the military operation Schlomo Goren, chief rabbi of the armed forces, to come blow the shofar, the traditional ram’s horn Jblown at special religious or historic events. ★ * * The final battle for Jerusalem ‘ began at 5 a.m. after threej hours of almost complete silence. Mortars opened up a chorus of eJtplosions, and the air was filled with the rattle ofj heavy armored columns and the chatter of small-arms fire. BOMBING Israeli tanks moved forward on the historic roads to Jericho and the Dead Sea which pass inear the southern part of the Arab-held sector of the Mt. Scopus demilitarized zone. mistice, the Jews were permit-1 ted to station a small police j force there at the old Hebi-ew University and Hadassah Hospital. The Jordanians honored this part of the agreement and for nearly 18 years permitted the United Nations to convoy Israeli defense command told the Isr-, police to and from the moun- aeli population: 'It is now per-itain. The police garrison was'”™’**®** *P ®*’f**®’’,®, ™1?^. ; cut off for two days until it was ”P®" Jerusalem. Seiz- : relieved Tuesday. ure of the Arab sector silenced __________ I Jordanian batteries which had BATTERIES SILENCEp rained shells into the Israeli Shortly before noon, the civil, sector since Monday. The fall of Nablus was announced almost at the samb time. Us seizure followed hard bn successful thrusts at Kalkil-lia and Jenin in that same area of northwest Jordan east of the Israeli coastline and northeast of Tel Aviv. The drive from the north In the general direction of Jerusalem was through the "hatched” part of Palestine which Jordan seized in the 1948 war. Nablus is about 70 miles west and slightly north of King Hussein’s capital, Amman. ISRAEUS IN JERUSALEM - Tbis map locates the Man-delbaum Gate in beleaguered Jerusalem through which Israeli soldiers moved into the Jwdanian section of the city after a fierce battle with Jordan’s troops. Sporadic sniping was reported in the city as the cleanup operation by the Israelis proceeded. Nuptidl Trek Finds ^War in Jerusalem ^ AMMAN, Jordan MPl— A young Mexican-couple came to Jerusalem to fulfill their vow to marry in the Holy City, they almost got killed by the bullets and bombs of the Arab-Israeli war. “We were machine-gunned by planes, bullets whizzed past, bombs exploded so near we were covered in dust,^said EIL az jQuxmanr a 8^ar-old book^ seller from Mexico City. “We were lucky to get out unscathed.” “We have looked forward to our marriage in Jerusalem for such a long time,” said his petite bride, Guadeloupe Morande. “We came all this way, and then...” They saw Roman Catholic Patriarch Alberto Goir only long enough for him tq absolve them from their vow to solemnize .their civil marriage a year ago with a religious ceremony in Jerusalem. ^ BLACK LACE Mrs. Guzman was still wearing her black lace wedding dress when she and her husband arrived in Amman Tuesday er a harrowing trip from Jerusalem. “We were still at the patriarchate when fighting broke all around us,” Guzman said. “Fortunately, some good nuns escorted us to our hotel outside the Old City. "An American television correspondent was fatally wounded by a bullet while standing in the lobby Of tbe hotel minutes after we arrived.” ^ BURNING TRUCKS “We were only a few miles from Jerusalem when we were forced to stop when we came across a line of burning military trucks in the road,” Guzman ’ said.-“Before we realized what wasfrappentng a soraiershoute^ to us to take cover as Israeli planes were still attacking the convoys. “We jumped from our car and ran into the fields for cover as jet planes roared low overhead, splattering the roadway with bullets. Some of the bullets fell a few feet from us. ★ ★ The couple spent the night in Jericho after driving for 30 miles without lights, then made their way to Amman early the next morning. Oswald Quinn, a white-haired American tourist from Sacramento, Calif., traveled to Amman in the car with the Mexican cou-jplt^ PINNED TO WALL “You should have seen it in Jerusalem,” Quinn said. “I was pinned standing against the wall near the hotel while machine gun bullets kicked up the dust less than four feet from me,” Quinn said he was standing next to Yates when the NBC televisimi producer was shot. T went to Jerusalem because my tourist agent told me it would hi all right,” said Quinn. RCA VICTOR MODEL QH 692 RCA VICTOR MODEL GH 724 RCA VICTOR MODEL GH 754 RCA VICTOR MODEL GH 716 RCA COMBINATION HH 84$ . J tS»,l»DICOTT. 295 MJn. . Jh* pUM«. 295 iq. In. i.ctcmButar. Clmiant Ui. HARDING. 295 «(. In. nctongular. Shnb Thf IVANGUt 3M nq. to. i«Wil«»ta». Sean<«n». Th. VISUNDA. 295 m. In. (Mor TV, HwM hMI, n.nch Provincinl in Mlnelnd hofdinnndi. Twin contnmpnrwy towbey to gnmiton wntoul WDOfl*, «|nn ttyllna to wat7iH wondn. TwM npnalcnn. AM-1M, rnito. • OMFW»; UHF/VHF. Dniux* ctionii. ipnnknn. UHF/VHF. Twin .pnokni*. OHF/VHf. Vniy dnluxnu UHF/VHF. *i» Unluilfc Solid •totn. Contompomiy. REQ. $639.95 SAVE $143 REQ. $679.95 SAVE $133 REG. $695 SAVE $148 REO. $678.95 SAVE $133 REQ. $1,150 SAVE $276 $497 INtTANT CIIIMT «547 $547 $547 $875 NO MONEY DOWN • 3 YEARS TO PAY PONTUIC MUl SHOPPING CENTER * TELECRAPH ROAD, Corner Elizabeth Lake Road OPEN DAILY 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. * PHONE 682-2330 \ ; THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 7, 1»67 C—t Dairy Foods Make Eating Nicer 1 package (6 oz.) frozen crab meat, thawed, drained and broken into small pieces 3 hardKiooked eggs, finely Vi cup soft bread crunibs % cup,coarsely chopped casHfews 1 teaspoon lime Juice 1 package (9oz.) frozen asparagus spears, cooked and drained Vi cup soft bread crumbs 2 tablespoons butter, melted 1 hard-cooked egg, sliced In a 2-quart sSucepan melt butter; saute green onions a few minutes. Stir in flour, salt and pepper. Remove from heat; gradually stir in milk, Cook over medium heat, stirring constantly, until thickened. Cook 2 additional min^-utes. Stir in sour cream, crab meat, eggs, Vi cup bread crumbs, cashews and lime juice. Divide asparagus into 4 individual buttered ramekins; top with crab mixture. Combine Vi By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Food Editor June is always celebrated as Dairy Month. It’s the time when the industry places special; em-phas^ on all milk products, the foods we take for Ranted most of the time. . With the picnic season already on its way,-you’ll be making potato salad frequently. Unless your family is adamant and refuses to eat any but the old familiar kind, try this Interesting new-recipe^JtJiaa —ISliced-cherry-to^toes no mayonnaise or salad dressing in it. Gourmet Potato Salad I cup (% pint) creamed cottage cheese 1 cup (% pint) dairy sour cream 2 teaspoons prepared mustard 2 teaspoons seasoned salt 4 cups sliced cooked potatoes I 1 cup slibed green onions with tops i 1 cup sliced celery ! % cup diced green pepper 13 hard-cooked eggs, coarsely chopped 1 package (1 oz.) blue cheese, I crumbled Combine cottage cheese, sour cream, mustard and salt. Pour over potatoes, onion, celery, green pepper and eggs; mix carefully. Chill several hours to blend flavors. Fold in blue cheese just before serving. , Makes 6 to 8 servings. In spite of the decided increase in the use of corn oil and other margarines, there ■till Is no real substitute for butter. It Imparts a flavor to food that is not possible with-^ out its use. For a tempting luncheon or •upper dish, prepare a mixture of crab meat, hard-cooked eggs and cashew nuts. Butter is used to saute the onion. Crab and Egg Bake 2 tablespoons butter \i cup chopped green onion 2 tablespoons regular allpurpose flour j 1 teaspoon salt , Dash of pepper 1 cup mUk Vi cup dairy sour cream at room temperature cup bread crumbs and melted butter; divide onto centers of crab mixture. Bake in a preheated 350 degree oven 15-20 minutes or until warmed through. Garnish with egg slices and cherry tomatoes. Makes 4 servings. Butter also contributes its unique flavor to cake. Con-vehieht as It is to use a box mix, it is also satisfying to make a cake with the raw in- set aside. In a mixing bowl add It and cream butter; gradu? sugar and beat until fluffy. Beat in eggs, one at a time. Add almond extract. Sift toge&er flour, baking powder, cinnamon, salt, nutmeg and ginger. Add to creamed mixture alternately with milk, beginning and ending with dry ingredients. Divide evenly into pans. “ 'This eakfr-has-Hnnild sfttee in trpireheated-350-defree-oven tisnslJlin_ute§. flavor and a delectable orange butter frosting. Strawberry-Orange Butter Cake Vi cup (1 stick) butter 114 cups sugar 2 eggs Mt teaspoon almond extract cups sifted cake flour 214 teaspoons baking powder Vi teaspoon cinnamon Vi teaspoon salt 14 teaspoon nutmeg 14 teaspoon ginger 1 cup milk Butter bottoms of two 9-inch ci.ke pans and dust with flour; 25-30 minutes. Cool in pans on wire racks 10 minutes. Turn onto racks and cool completely. Frost and fill with Orange Sauce Frosting. Orange Sauce Frosting 6 tablespoons sugar 6 tablespoons regular allpurpose flour Vi teaspoon salt 1% cups fresh orange juice ■■ ‘ ^ slightly beaten strawberries, drained In a 1-quart saucepan combine sugar, flour and salt; gradually stir in orange juice. Cook over medium heat, stirring constantly, until thickened. Cook 2 addi- 1 teaspoon gratiid orange' rind Vi cup (1% sticks) butter Vi cup confectioners sugar 14 teaspoon almond extract butter; gradually add confec-jSpread 1V4 cups strawberries ^1 pint^eetHied sliced fresh tidners sugar and beat until lightiover this in single layer. Spread and fluffy. Add almond extract. Beating constantly, add orange mixture, a smalT amount at a time, beating just until blended. To assemble cake: Place bottom cake layer on plate; spread Blend small amount of hot mixture into egg; return all to saucepan. Cook, stirring constantly, 1 additional minute. (Do not boil.) Remove from heat; add orange rind. Press a circle of waxed paper over surface of filling to prevent drying as it cools. Chill. In a small mixing bowl cream cup^rosting-on-firsL4ayer.^berries. Vi cup frosting on bottom of second layer and place this frosted side on strawberries. Spread remaining frosting on top and sides of cake. Garnish with remaining sweetened straw- Stretch Dough You can add as much as a cup of grated cheddar cheese to a standard 2-cup flour baking-powder biscuit recipe. If you do, you’ll have a couple more biscuits than usual! mcMre good meat in than any cat food you can buy! i Flatten Dough"^ With Hand for Crisp Cookies Here’s one of the thinnest and crispest oatmeal cookies you can bake! Oatmeal Wafers Vi cup butter or margarine, at room temperature Vi cup firmly packed light browr^gar V4 teaspSTOsalt 1 tei/poon vanilla 1 teaspoon undiluted evaporated milk IVi cups quick-cooking rolled oats In a medium bowl, thoroughly cream the butter, sugar, salt and vanilla. Stir In the evaporated milk, then the oats, mixing well. Drop by level teaspoonfuls, about 3 Inches apart, onto on-greased cookie sheets. (You can bake 12 cookies on one large sheet.) With palm of hand, flatten into thin (about ¥s-inch) rounds. Bake in a moderate (350 de-IP'ees) oven until cookies spread and brown — 8 to 10 minutes. Allow to cool on pan for about a minute or just until firm enough to lift, with a wide ■patula, to wire rack; work quickly. Makes about 4 dozen. Fold Figs info Batter An elegant dessert can baked ahead of time, and topped with ice cream at the last minute. Fig Crunch Torte 1 cup graham cracker crumbs % cup finely chopped dried figs . _Mp«pchopped walnuts 4 egg whites 1 teaspoon vanilla 1 cup sugar vanilla ice cream Combine graham cracker crumbs with figs and walnuts. Beat egg whites with vanilla until soft peaks form; gradually add sugar, beating until very stiff. Fold crundj mixture into beaten egg whites. Spread in greased 9-inch pie pan. Bake at 350 degrees for about 30 minutes. Cool; cut into wedges and top with ice cream. li^es 6 to 8 servings. PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 7, 1967 v^care-v how many ribsina We think there should be seven. Not five or six. With A&P^s seven-1^ portion; you get more of the select meat. How can you tell how many ribs you^re getting? -B/S'easy. ~ ~ —.............— With your fingers, you can feel and count the rib bones in the package. Next time you^re buying a Pork Loin Rib Portion, check it ............. you can^t count one,^o, three, four, five, ax, seven ribs, you^re missing select meat. You're not gettingthe best value for your meat dollar. Seven-Rib Pork Loin Portions are just one example of the full value A&P meats offer. We think that caring like this about fair portions has helped make A&P America's largest meat retailer. When you think about it, shouldn't A&P be your store? For Full Value—“Super-Right" Meats From Selected, Corn-Fed Porkers! "Super-Right" PORK LOINS 7-Rib End Portion Loin End Portion 4559 lb CENTIR Rll CUTS Apple Sauce 3i^ 79‘ Pork Chops ... " 89‘ BONELESS FULLY COOKED CANNED 6 79 HAMS LB. SIZE 4 Jane Parker Bakery Features! Save 10c —Pineopple or Lemon Pie ^ 39 SAVI 17c ON 3 PKGS.—ICED ^ imiiiiib_____________ lANE PARKER—HEAT & SERVE mm Twin Rolls ..... 25* Snack Pies . . . .21^Zx 37* JANE PARKER --rifr ' ' 0% ■ Blueberry Muffins . 29* Cracked Wheat or JANE PARKEi—SANDWICH OR Franlifurter Rolls JANE PAKKER^-ALMOND^- a Crescent Cookies 2'x'4 79* 4%99‘ IwiiiBagoionji; SILVERBROOK, FINE QUALITY BUTTER ■“ .................... WISCONSIN MILD ■Vfic Cheddar Cheese . . . “ ' 3 WISCONSIN CHEDDAR O Cc Sharp Cheese • • • • “ Kraft Crocker Barrel Cheese SHARP 59* 63* 69* EXTRA SHARP A&P GRADE '^A", REGULAR OR CRINKLE CUT French Fries 4'^'S9* W%>............3S2» TURKEY OR CHICKEN ^NETWT.ABii Banquet ... 5 ‘.ts 97 STOUFPER'S NETWT. CAi Welsh Rarebit . .. V. 59 MINUTE MAID "TI..RmiI m ■VAi Orange Juice "i:*’ 4‘&n?^79 eOPyiHOHT* W67, THE GREAT ATIANTIC A PACIBC TEA CO., INC. , PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH SAT., JUNE 10th. 8.25% SODIUM HYPOCHLORITE iiyht 0 Clock coffee°59 1-POUND BAG 8.2S% SODIUM HYPOCHLORITE m A Bright Sail Bleach'^"=43 BRIGHT SAIL-AEROSOL „ITWT. V Ac Insecticide . . . .’i^> 79 Toilet Tissue . . 4f««35 iscOPFUBEL y-rr. m Mg Gentle Fels . . . m 44 35* Ammonia . . . . Doi^eliqaid . .. ^ 63* MT..... k"29* You May WIb up to *1,000 in Cash! S^ART TODAY SOME OF LAST WEEK'S WINNERS Win Your Shan of Cash and Product Prixos, PUY BOHUS BINGO Simply pick up your prize siip and game isook at your iocal A&P store or request same sending a seif-addrassed stamped envelope to P.O. Box 358; Detroit. Michigan 48232. No purchase required. Adults only. Mrs. R. ObuW, Wutwford ..StSE Mn. C Overly, Detroit........ 100 Mn. R. J. Yeeej, Pentlee.. 100 Stan. Zocklewies, Detroit.. 100 Mri. Roy While, Wayne....... 100 Mrs. V. RebImen, Doviib'g 100 Mri.S. Inrt#n,6. Pie. Wde. 100 Catherine Cex, Wyandetto . 100 Mrs. 0. Oorsine, Recbrnter 100 Diane Konkowikl, Detroit.. 100 Mrs. A Wnricmae, Cadillac 75 “ ■ilt......r. 'T5 $1,000 WIN $100 WINNER >— THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 7. 1967 C—8 Get Guaranteed Eat in the Meat—Choose ''Super-Right''! KING OF ROASTS! er-Right" Mature, Corn-fed Beef BEEF RIB ROASTS HrsISKlK we care PUrCES EFFEGTIVE THROUGH SAT., JUNE 10th. CUT FROM "SUPER-RIGHT" MATURE, CORN-FED BEEF! Beef Rib Steaks ^89' "SUPER-RIGHT" QUALITY, Goy. Inipceted Fresh Fryers FRY«r RRIASTS (Ribi Anachtd) OR I*#!# Fryer Legs .... .^' 59 "SUPIR-RISHT" ALL-MIAT ■■ "SUPER-RIGHT" SLICED, ALL-MEAT Bl Diniier Franks . .59 Bologna . . . . .59 "SUPER-RIGHT" FULLY COOKED BIRD FARM HAA iemi-Bonless Hains^^^^ Pork Sausage . . 79‘ FOR BROILING OR FRYING OCEAN PERCH 40 ^.. Halibut Steak . . . » 59‘ Fish Fillets .... > 35‘ Savings A-Plenty on Fine-Quality Groceries! YUKON CLUB ALL FLAVORS-REG. or LO-CAL^ GRANULATED BEVERAGES SUGi c ——027 m ^ CAN ^ k ' r 5-4 SWEET, JUICY SOUTHERN Peaches ...... ' 29' ^ LUSCIOUS, SWEET, FRESH m -----Blueberrler^.-v^^^* AAP PREMIUM QUALITY Instant Coffee . . SAVE AT ASP Miracle Whip . . NET WT. I 10-OZ. JAR 99‘ 49‘ Mayonnaise . . . 85* SUPER-RIGHT A NET WT. A Af Luncheon Meat 2 'iSh o9 All FlovQri—Swanidown Sherttninf 4^ T-LB. FVAB# Cake Mixes . . 3 ,,11 79 39* A*P GRADE "A" 4^ , ,, m ^^N PAGE QUALITY 4s FreestonePeaches3 cVSi Eggifoodles . .3»« TROPICAL PUNCH OR GRAPE 40 1 OT A ANN PAGE QUALITY I A ^ A&PFruitDrinks3 c% 85* Mayonnaise . . .^1^88* Kernel Corn . . 2 35 Peanut Butter m> 63 ARP BRAND—ALL FLAVORS IB-CT.) nETWT A A. ANN PAGE QUALITY A yir Mm InstantBreakfast ^ 55* Pork *N'Beans 3 E T" RED RIPE HOT HOUSE TOMATOES 39< lb. Prune Juice . . . ARP FRESH—Th« Rtal Thing tram Florida m A . Orange Juice . . >^ 49* LADY SCOTT 2-PLY A BOXES t SULTANA 4^ 4^^ WHITE OR BLUE M Jh Facial Tissue. .2 53 Grape Jelly . . 2 » 39 SAIL deteroent B 49 Baby Powder . . 53* Instant Dry Milk 4 JOHNSON'S AND JOHNSON S NET WT. M OUR OWN, with Lemon ond Sugor A NET WT AJBw Baby Oil .... 49 Instant Teo Mix 3 29 15e OFF LABEL SOFT-PLY m 'N quarters, kutley h f IONA-CUT M netwt. Toilet Tissue 4 "*« 33 I Morgurine 5 o9 J Wax Beans 4 «n?"49 cKn Broth 23: 29* SUNSHINE A#B« Krispy Crackers °^30* KRAFT'S PARKAY Soft Margarine "'■ DAWN FRESH, MUSHKOOM NET WT. Steak Sauce . . . »n‘' 7i; OFF LABEL 47* TO* PILLSBURY—ALL FLAVORS, MOIST 4^ , , . A A- Cake Mixes . .3;fi 98* ^209 CHASE AND SANBORN VACUUM -KED O • • REGULAR (MIX) DEL MONTE A ,...b. j| P>4 ^ >-AB^ MA. Sweet Peas . . 2 45 Spry Shortening 77 SEVEN SEAS GREEN GODDESS NETWT. #<1* - ... 1-LB. CAc Salad Dressing *.t' 43 Beef Stew .... 59 SEVEN SEAS CREAMY ITALIAN :eT WT. WfC if* Ii®®’* .. « TLB O Cc Salad Dressing m 37 Colombian Coffee o5 SEVEN SEAS DRESSING rWT.dlA« , NETW'r.d%P'« Coach House . . 39* Corn Flakes . . . 25* DOLE LO-CAl ~m PUFF'S 2-PLY . m BOXES Fruit Cocktail 4 cans 99 Facial Tissues 4 2?o 99 HILLS BROS. mm. Sc OFF LABEL ,2 FL. 4^ - FRENCHETTI LOW-CALORIE NETWT. Coffee.. . 75 Sprite «Tri’NT ... 24 Italian Dressing itif^ 37 Coffee REGULAR (MIX) NET WT A A Appian Way Pizza ir'37 APPIAN WAY (MIX) lET WT ^ A PhiawHliClieese»48 SKBTDrrMMi S r OFF LABEL-^O BAR PACK 4^ 37* Praise Soap . .2 Nlf WT. B t-OZ. BTL. LOW^tORIE FRENCH STYLE Frenchette Dressing FRENCHETTE LOW-CALORIE DRESSING yj Thousand Island FRENCHETTE LOW-CALORIE Joy Liquid . ... 62* 8c OFF LABEL l.PT ^ Am fhrili Liquid . . . 49- ifeOFryiii Dreft^izV , . . . VKt^73* FOR AUTOMATIC DISHWASHERS i i n M M „ Cascade .... 41* MILD, GENTLE__ NETWT.A>|* Ivory Flakes . . . 34 Oxydol..............1 76* 35* 3-LB. 1-OZ. PKG. Win Product Prizes, Too! CLIP THESE EXTRA SLIPS TO HELP YOU WIN Only those store end newspaper Bonus Bingo prize slips marked "Program #186" may be used to play the 12 brand new games in our completely new BONUS BINGO game book now being distributed and marked "Program #186.” MORE OF LAST WIEK^ WINKERS JMrs.CKrJfflmel,WyiindDtte$100 i Mory Jo James, Troy....... TOO Cariline Newton, Vassnr.... 100 Mrs. M.Auerboch,Gr. Rapids 100 Sondra Thompson, Flint...;.. 100 Irene Ktlmnce, Ann Arbor.. 100 [ Stan Wlorcloch, Detroit... 100 Mrs. Herb Zarike, Alpena.. 100 LawrtnceLonnani Sandusky 100 Sam Willis, Gardtn Gty.... 100 Earl Linder, Sllverwoed...... 100 Mrs. R. Salmon, Musktgon 100 A - Mri. Mery Leiecki, Dotreif $100 WINNER Mrs. Vina Mallory, Gd. Repidt $50 WINNER BOBSriTS 8XIVOO NRIZB SLIP PROGRAM #isr BOIMUS BX3\rOO FRIZK SLIP PROGRAM #186 BOIVXJS 33XIVOO PRIZE SLIP PROGRAM #186 ^Copyright W. J. JoWory 19E2—All Right RetOfvod Stwtogic Morchondising, 90 PLASTIC ^OATID Playing Cardis With the Purchase of 4 Bath Size Safeguard 4 BATH SIZE BARS 12c OFF LABEL _ Spic and Span ^ 7U ~T C-4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 7, 1967 Pillsbttry Bake-Off to Be Held in Dallas The 19th Pillsfaury Bake-Off, with new rules and new categories, will he held Feb. 19-20 in the Apparel Mart at the Pillsbufy Company and the General Electric Company announced today. rorlhe lifst time there will be separate categories for recipes using a convenient mix or refrigerated foods product from Pillsbury. In neither cate* gory will it be necessary to use flour in the recipe. The flour category will continue. The $25,000 grand prize will go to the contestant whose recipe has the strongest popular appeal and excellence of eating quality. Judging emphasis wiU be on flavor^ taste, appearance and creativity. > addition to the grand prize, the best recTpe“'ih“eacH of the three categories will win $5,000, with runner-up prizes of $2,000. In addition, there will be awards of $2,000 to the best recipe from a Junior and the best/^iSrlght Idea award. Entry blanks will be available in September in refrigerated turnovers and in five pound and more sacks of Pillsbury flour, in grocery stores, or by mail from “Bake-Off,” Box 1492, Dept. Di Mnneapolisr Minn. 5546(). The entry period closes Oct. 31, 1967. One hundred finalists, including juniors, ages 17 and under, wll be notified in early. January that they have won allexpense trips to Dallas, and will receive GeneraLJElectric P-7 Oven Ranges and $100 in cash. Home makers interested in the winning recipes at the 1967 Bake-Off will find 100 Busy Lady Bake-Off Recipes cook-booklet at newsstands after Sept. 1. SAM A WALTER Delicious Sausage Carry Oofa — 68$-98l I [Thcrt!t more good moat in Kal Kaa than any dog food you can buy. See Shaggy in Walt Disney’s hilarious movie %THE SHAGGY DOG ' ^ _ starring Fred MacMurray KRAUT RELISH—Kraut Round Dogs pro- frankfurters and tart, crunchy robust, kraut vide an enticing, quickly prepared treat for combine to form a sandwich that is sure to a weekend meal or entertaining. Juicy curled bring everyone back for seconds. Everyone Is Pleased of a Buffet When it’s time to put on the apron for outdoor barbecuing, likely as libt it’s Dad that dons it. But usually behind the scenes are the mm« ti^^ Burning preparations which have been done by the .“better,” or lesser, as the case may be, “half!” ......... Why not have a Kraut Round Dog Party? It’s the kind of entertaining that will please everyone from those hungry teenagers to Mom. Round Dogs are frankfurters tiut are slit at half-inch intervals and curl into circles when grilled. They are served^ on round buns or bread, topped with crisp, piquant kraut aid anyOing else your heart desires. Youngsters are fascinated watching the frankfurters curl slowly on the pill as they heat and the sandwiches are wonder- -.MlyJhearty.aiid satisfying.____ Mom will appreciate serving ttem, for guests can make their own concoctions from an assortment set out buffet-style. Load up the table with several kinds of rolli breads7 zesty kraut relish, a variety of cheeses, fresh sliced tomatoes, onions, cucumbers and green pepper, dives and pickles, mustard, catsup and mayonnaise and let everyone ^g in. There’s sure to be a wide variety of interesting creations as guests borrow ideas from one another. Best of all, each person gets exactly what he wants. Kraut Relish and Round Dog Buffet 4 cups drained sauerkraut % cup dairy sour cream V4 cup chopped pa/sley 3 tablespoons diced canned pimiento 2 tablespoons chopped % teaspoon dill weed Vi teaspoon pound celery seed Dash pepper 8 frankfurters Swiss and Cheddar cheese, tomato and sweet onion slices, cucumber spears, pickles and olives Assorted bread and rolls Butter, catsup and mustard Combine kraut, sour cream, parsley, pimiento, scallion and seasonings: toss until mixed well. Cover and chill. Make 19 slits in each frank- furter taking care not to cut all the way through. Grill on both sides. Serve with kraut relish and remaining inpedients buffet sidev^ Makes~8-sandwicheSi Roll Pear Sikes Inside Pancakes Try “pearadise” pancakes for breakfast. Prepare pancakes according to directions on pancake mix p^age. Bprinkle hot pancakes with brown sugar. Place fresh or canned pear slices across the center of each pancake; roll up. Serve immediately. Skillef Dish Is Quick CtirrycmdPearsforfowl Springtime, summertime, anytime is a good time to serve and enjoy cHTckel. jjgfg -gj -jj-gjg: tinctive, new dish combining curried chicken with canned Barlett pears. And, instead of browning the chicken in fat, it is browned in a mixture of honey and kitchen bouquet, the bottled browning sauce. A picture-pretty dish. Curried Chicken B a r 1 e 11 is delicious served with fluffy rice and a peen vegetable such as buttered fresh asparagus spears or whole green beans. Curried Chicken BartleR 1 tablespoon honey 2 teaspoons kitchen bouquet 1 broiler-fryer, about 2% to 3-lb., cut up ~%"Cup f inely chopped onion 1 teaspoon curry powder 1 can (1-lb.) Bartlett pear halves Water 1 tablespoon lemon juice 1 teaspoon pated lemon peel 1 teaspoon salt ________ _ , 1 teffspoOn "pfepp^ mustard 1 tablespoon cornstarch 3 maraschino cherries, optional Toasted coconut, optional In a large skillet, combine honey and kitchen bouquet. Place over moderate heat,| add chicken; turn to coat airsides of chicken with honey mixture. Lightly brown chicken. Remove chicken from pan and add onion and curry powder; cook until onion is soft. CURRIED CHICKEN BARTLETT — Another good way to prepare chicken is with honey and curry and canned pears. You need only about an hour to get this tasty dish cooked. Garnish it with maraschino cherries and toasted coconut.. Drain juice from pears into a measuring cup and add water, if necessary, to make 1 cup: Reserve pears. Add liquid, lemon juice and peel and salt to onions and stir in mustard. Return chicken to pan. Cover and cook over low heat until chicken is tender, about 45 minutes. Add pears during last five minutes and baste with sauce. Remove chicken and pears to warm serving platter. Skim any Excess fat from sauce. Mix cornstarch with a little cold water and add to the sauce. Cook, stirring constantly, until thickened. Spoon sauce over chicken. If desired, garnish pears with maraschino cherry halves and serve with toasted coconut. Makes 4 servings. fr “HOFFMAN DOES IT ABAIN Quality Meat and Vegetables at Carload Prices Pontiac Pride HICKORY SMOKED Sugar Cured PICNICS 33^ SLICED FREE ~ NONE HIGHER Frying CHICKENS ir* Ifs “BAR-B-Q” Time 27i 69 73 Small Baby Strip SPARERIBS Sizzling Steaks RIB or Club Roiisserie Roasts Boneless Rolled 'BEEF •••••••. PORK..... 73 59 EVERY DAY LOW PRICES Homogenized Carton Sliced BREAD.. U.S. Gov’t Grad. «A” URGE EGGS Dos. Pkft Sliced Squares BACON. All-Beef Hamburg STEAKEHES.. 79 39* 29i 45^ aaiaaannaii FRESH FROM OUR SAUSAGE KITCHEN Mifih. .Grade #1 Your Choice Skinless HOT DOGS CHUNK BOLOGNA 391 ChucK Center Gut HERE at HOFFMAN’S On Any Purehase ROME FREEZER SPECIALS Fill Your Freezer the E-Z Way ■Cut, Wrapped, Frozen, Oetivered FREE BEEF No FRDNTS I iayment BEEF asr, BEEF 43 SUES 49? MUDS 59? We Accept Michigan Bankards on All Purchases All Beef U.S. Gov’t. Inspected I ITafure Grain Fed steer Beef Fancy BONELESS ROLLED ROAST NONE HIGHER “It’s Pontiac’s Best” SAY OUR CUSTOMERS All-Beef HAMBURG 39^ Lesser Amts. 49*ih. in 5-lb. lots or more Hickory Smoked Sugar Cured Pontiac Pride Whole or Half lEilr SLAB BACON 53? Sliced Free CENTER CUTS 59? Ifs Always Delicious niiusr lEEF 39 t lb. GARDIIL FRESH SPECIALS BANANAS REP RAPISHES e • • • • 2 |9^ GREEN ONIONS G Tray Pack TOJMATOaS. PARK FREE IN REAR 2 f.r 19< ... Pkg. 19* JIfUK Knil FIEEIEL IK. 526 N. PERRY ST. ITe Reserve The Right To Limit Quantities 0PaiULY94r FE 2-1100 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. JUNE 7, 1967 C—5 Bacon Is Good for Any Meal Bacon need not be limited to breakfast. Many are the possibilities for using this delectable meat at other meals of the day, |too. Bacon in casseroles, ini sandwiches and in sauces over other foods are a few sug tions. A bacon and vegetable platter can be colorful as well as good tasting. For example, there’s baked bacon served with Mexican corn in cooked green pepper halves and buttered beets. Here's a Chocolate Sauce To Top Your Favorite Sundae Because luncheon and supjwr dishes require larger quantities of bacon than does CARIOCA SAUCE — swingin’ and spicy that Cariocan beat. . . it’s a South American specialty, this chocolatety ice cream sauce. FIRST COURSE—If you’re the first hostess for a progressive dinner, consider serving a variety of hot and cold soups with pretzels. Let your imagination take over and use all kinds of containers as soup dishes. bake rather than pan-fry the meat. Place separated bacon slices on a rack and bake in a 400 degree oven until brown and crisp, 10 to 15 minutes. Grate Carrots forCoffeecake Follow directions and you’ll have a fine dessert. Soup Course and Pretzels Are Welcome WANT TO SE;.L lawn MOWERS, POWER MOWERS, BOATS, ROLLER SKATES?----USE A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 332-8181. Will any of us ever outgrow our love for chocolate? Well, not as long as creations such as Carioca Sauce are quickly prepared and so delicious over creamy ice cream. We think you’ll like this chocolate sauce witFthe spicy touch. Brpwn sugar and chocolate pieces find unusual and flavorful companions in rum extract and tangy sour cream. As you might imagine, the results are both spicy and tangy, and ever so creamy and delightful. Just a little sophisticated in appeal is ttiis fine chocolate sauce. Generously spoon Carioca Sauce over vanilla ice cream for snacks or dessert. The convenience pf ice'cream and the keeping qualities of the sauce mean ready refreshment for the busy homemaker. Carioca Sauce y% cup firmly packed lig brown sugar ¥4 teaspoon salt ¥4 cup milk 1 package (6-oz.) semi-sweet chocolate pieces 1 cup dairy sour cream ' Vh pint) m teaspoons rum extract Combine sugar, salt and mil in a heavy saudepan; cook and stir over low heat until sugar dissolves: do not boil. Stir in chocolate. Add sour cream and flavoring; blend until smooth. Serve hot or cold over ice cream. Store, covered, in refrigerator. Makes 2 cups sauce. Cereal Candy Is Minted Treat Mint-flavored cereal candy is easy to make. Heat six cups of puffed rice in preheated 35(kiegree oven about 10 minutes. Poor into large greased bowl. Melt 5 cups of miniature marshmallows and cup of butter over low heat. Add % teaspoon of peppermint extract and 6 drops M red food adoring. Fold in 1 cup of crushed p^iper-mint stick candy. Pour over cereal; stir to coat evenly. Firmly press into greased 11 by 7-in^ hairing pan. Let set about 4 hours. Makes 24 bars. A mar^mallow rolled in cinnamon before being floated on top of a cup of hot choclate gives a new taste to the chocolate. CaiTot Coffeecake IMf cups sifted regular flour 2 teaspoons baking powder teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon cinnamon % cup butter or margarine 1 cup sugar 2 large eggs 1 cup packed down medium-coarse grated raw pared carrots (2 very large) % cup raisins, rinsed in hot water and drained " ¥1 cup chopped (medium fine) wahiuts On wax paper sift together thie flour, baking powder, salt and cinnamon. Cream butter and sugar; thoroughly beat in eggs, one at a time. Gra(feially stir in sifted in- It is very much "in” now to go from one home to the next for'a dinner party. Each hostess does her stuff to star her course. We’re suggesting an unusual first course that is definitely different. Dig out all the treasures you have that can be used as soup bowls : finger bowls, sugar bowls, strangely shaped bowls Of silver or glass or exquisite ehina. Make the bowls themselves a conversation piece. Serve at least three different kinds of soup — some hot — I some cold — and float pretzels atop each bowl. The fn'etzels do float for hours, but nobody seems to know this except the I hostess. >!' Serve an over-sized bowl of split pea soup, adding a dash of sherry as it does the last bub)}le- raisins and walnuts and stirjextra man! enough to distribute evenly. Tom into a 9 by 5 by 3 inch loaf pan (bottom greased, then lined with buttered wax paper). Bake in a 350-degree oven for 1 hour;: or until cake tester inserted in center comes out clean. Turn out on wire rack; turn right side up; cool completely. For calorie conscious women, do pass bowls of hot conscnnme with pretzels afloat, and do not forget a bit of frozen chives added at the last. Jellied consomme is always a popular serving. Poke half a dozen tiny pretzel sticks into it, standing up Another always popular soup I is Yankee and it’s definitely Wrap tightly in saran and re-j different when you top it with frigerate overnight. Slice after: pretzels. chilUng; wrap slices (piled one| ^ on top of the other) and reheat {*0 mange because all you do is briefly in moderate or hot oven, taste and Serve at once. .serve. But don’t spare that ' dash of tabasco or sherry or I, , [freshly ground black pepper — a Jelly S Saved pinch of dUl — or whatever ^ jmakes soup sing for you. Mold does not penetrate below At the finale before the guests the surface on jelly if removed:exit to the next home for the as soon as it is noticed. No next course, pass a tray of fresh harm is done by it. i fruit. HAM SANDWICHES WITH GRAVY - In saucepan, cook ¥4 cup chopped onion, two tablespoons chopped green pepper and Vi teaspoon curry powder in two tablespoons butter or margarine until vegetables are tender. Add 1 can (lOVi oz.) mushroom gravy; heat. Meanwhile, spread four hamburger bun halves with chopped chutney; top each with a slice of cooked ham. Place remaining bun halves on ham. Pour gravy over top; garnish with sliced hard-cooked egg. Makes four sandwiches. THE FINEST IN NEARLY NEW • Household Goods • Clothing • Jewelry • Drapes, Etc. Keego Resale Shop 2965 Orchard Lk. Rd., Keego Harbor of tha light in K*«go Harbor . Mon. thru Sat. 10-4 6B2-5S20 Poultry Buy at Farmer Jack’s! GOVT. INSPECTED GRADE W FRESH WHOLE FRYERS LD 27« / ASSORTED-CANNED fAVOrSODAPOR l-LB., 6-OZ. ROCK DUNCAN HINES ASSORTED FINE CAKE MIXES lil riKc PKG. EASY MONDAY PINK LOTION DETERGENT HUNT'S HICKORY FLAVORED TOMATO CATSUP 25* 29' 10* ’5^^- in« BTL. BREAST'D CHICKEN | LIGHT CHUNK TUNA H 24 COMPLETE MIX APPIAN WAY PIZZA '’“z- QOc PKG. STARCROSS CUT GREEN SEANS DOLE HAWAIIAN PINEAPPLE JUICE ORANGE OR. GRAPf Hl-C FRUIT DRINKS l-QT. 14-OZ. CAN 1-QJ. 14-6Z. CAN 29 11 25 25 CHUCK RCASf 48« 3 LBS. OR MORE FRESH HAMBURG 46f ^LB. ROUND STEAK 84< U.S. CHOICE SPECIAL CUT RIB STEAKS ^0RNISIL4IENS SHENANDOAH BONELESS TURKEY ROLLS BUTTERBALLGRADE'A'/ LITHE TiMkEirs 98« 49° rolled rump U.S.pHOICE ROTISSERIE ROAST U.S. CHOICE WHOLE 98° ROHELESS RRISKET -88° ..78° *39* -39° U.S. CHOICE BONELESS CHUCK ROASTING CHICKENS CUTUP SnWMSCHHiXEIIS OCOMA MEAT PIES KARFT 100% PURE FLORIDA aAR. PITTS GRADE '1' SLICED 8 OZ. WT. PKG. AMERICA'S FAVORITE COFFIe MAXWELL HOUSE 0RM8E JUICE C V^GAL BTL. 33 LAR6E BOLOGNA 39- IO< 1-LB. PKG. FROZEN IN BUHER SAUCE - CORN OR BIRDS EYE PEAS 3-LB. CAN $|79 87* GRADE n'SKINLESS S-LI. 1 MR. PITTS FRANKS pkg. f HYGRADE'S HICKORY SMOKED, SLICED fiY QQC BOILED HAM PK& 99 CALORIE REDUCED-DEL MONTE FRUIT COCKTAIL ECONOMY AMERICAN, ■■ PIMIENTOorCombinatlon 1-LB. |m CHEESE SLICES pkg.iJ SWEETMILKOR anT lUTTERMILK wt PUFFIN BISCUITS PKG. 59‘ 22< TIGER TOWN CLUB HOUSE PR4M,. GRADE 1 4.U.KIIC SKINLESS FRANKS rKG-gig SWEET AS SUGAR! WHOLE 29< WATERMELCNS " 88^ HUNT'S ... IN TOMATO SAUCE THERE'S A PARMER JACK'S NEAR YOUl U.S: NO. 1 CALIFORNIA PCRK & BEANS OPEN DAILY MO, SAT. S-IO, SUN. 9*7 Pricei Effective Through Sun., June 11 Sorry, No Salei To Dealert PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTER GLENWOOU PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER DIXIE HWT. AT WILLIAMS LK. RD. CHERRY TOMATCES 29< THE :aCHS THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 7, 1967 SUMtflBS- PEOPLES FOOD MARKETS FOOD TOWN SUPER MARKETS I, ‘ '■ 7SI0 Hichlind Rd. 1200 Baldw 810 Orchard Lk. Rd. jt. | C.rn.rafF.r^ M-S8 arwT.m"k. Rd. OPEN SUNDAYS . Qpj,^ SUNDAYS I OPEN SUNDAVS . H OPEN SUNDAYS ryday Law Prices • Friend fy Service • Gc Everyday Gold Bell Stamps CenterCut HORMEL mfwmmMmmmm m\\\ CHASE & SANBORN REG. or DRIP COFFEE 3 s$|79 Loin Col PORK CHOPS l9^ IsSrfe iOiiiKEFBisiiEr u 69° bEliwfii^ u:69° Pesehke i-oz. wt.Pke. LNNGNEON MEATS 0 ^1 West Virginia Smoked AAlr PORK CHOPS . Lb. 99 Peters Aikc “ o™ SiUSAElE Lb. «tO Eckrich 3-0.. Pkg. SiBnderSHoedMeatsU ^1 RTY SBUnY ‘91 CAKE WHITE muw CMOOUTE MH 2P HEINZ inun IneiiP sconiES FAHAl TISSUE 2-PLY 200-CT. I PINE CONE lOIIIUTOES -15< FRANCO-AMERICAN SPMIEni iSJflSSHlT—Ha COUPON LE gfiell GIFfi^rAMPS Coupon Enpi^Sui^ dby. Juno 11,1967 With This Coupon «|iid $5.00 Purchaio , , (&..pt o»enn--M^ Umhia^ipWlDi*te««' PER BOX vmu, m. TREESWEET FROZEN FRESH NUKNKi ||t WEST-PAC FROZEN iminws p 1MZ. WT.PKG. Iw TOP FROST FROZEN RED lot RASPOERRtES l« it-orwT.PKO. KING SIZE ItINSO AQUA NET UUI8FUV 49$ 13)^1. OZ. > m DEL MONTE CALORIE REDUCED FRUir 9Qt| njuL4gi 1-LB., 12-OZ. CAN CBAIICOAL iUETS iO-LB.BAG' Coupon of$S PASCAL BLUE RIBBON 01E0MAR6ARINE 24 Size PER STALK )od Town-Peoples Bonus Stamp Coupon R |t|| FREE GOLD BELL 011 Stamps With Purchase | of 2 Lbs. or AAoro of C—8 Jacoby on Bridge THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. JUNE 7, 1967 9 ful. Armin led a diamwid to| ROBIN MALONE By Bob Lubbers NORTH 7 4b QJ 10 8 5 VK 10 6 4 ♦ AJ 10 ♦ 2 WB8T EAST *3 A642 VA32 VQJ75 ♦ 8 8 4 32 >Q9 4KQ10B *7543 SOUTH (D) *AK97 V98 ♦ K75 *AJ96 Both vulnerable Weat North Eaat South his king and his last diamond { back to dummy. When West followed to that diamond lead: Armin went right up with dum-j my’s king and pick^ up East’s queen and to make his slam. his jack of clubs as a threat : This last play was a certain-against West and to let a dia- :ty. West’s one remaining card mond go. was known to be the queen of West dropped a third diamond clubs. It couldn't be the queen and everything looked wonder-^of diamonds. THE BETTER HALF Pass 2* IN.T. Pass 2 * Pass 4 ♦ Pass , 5 V Pass Pass Opening lead—* K By OSWALD AND JAMES JACOBY One (rf the best ways to get a good score either in duplicate or rubber bridge is to bid too much and then make your tract. This procedure is not r e c 0 m mended as a steady diet. You don’t West I make enough these un- was no way for him to make his contract unless West held the ace of hearts and that he also had to locate the queen of diamonds. He took his medicine quickly and led the nine of hearts at [trick two. West ducked and dummy’s king held the trick. lEast won the heart return withi the jack and led a trump. Ar-i min won in his own hand, led a! club and ruffed in dummy, | ruffed a heart, ruffed his nine! ;of clubs in hopes that the queen! i might fall. i He ruffed dummy’s last heart: in his own hand with the ace and noted that West dropped a diamond. Led his low spade to dummy. Then he played dum-imy’s last trump. East had to follow and Armin paused to^ countthe hand. West had showm up with only one trump and three hearts. Therefore he had started j with either five clubs and four diamonds or four clubs | five diamonds. In cither | berRY’S WORLD-By Jim Berry THE HBRRVfl By Carl Grubert Oh good — I see they got your eyes back under your eyebrows where they belong and your mouth centered under your nose again.” even Armin decided to hold Q—The bidding has been; North East South 1 * Pa ss 2 * Pass 2 N.T. Pass 3 * j , Pass 3 N.T. Pass ? ____ sound contracts, you. South, hold: JACOBT to^ay f O r *AQ1054 VK62 ^2 *AQ87 maTdoWu A—Pass. Your partner has shown no interest in a slam and great interest in no-trump. He moat be able to Uke eare of both red suits. TODAY'S QUESTION Instead of bidding three no-trump over your three clubs your partner bas bid three hearts. What do you do now? ! Answer Tomorrow geTsetr •f min Speer of East Orange, N. J., had a minimum or possibly sub-minimum no-trump opening. His partner carried him to six spades with good distributi(»i but only 11 high card points. Armin won the club opening and stndied dummy nn-happily. He noted that Aere Forecast ay SYDNIY OMARR "Ths « IF THURSDAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY^ „ . . . you art on ths brink of n*w ad-: I. ventures. Includet romance, greater fredom of thought, action. You are varaa-a natuhaT axacutiva. , GENERAL ^ND^NCIES; Cycle highi " for GEMINI, CANCER, LEO. Special '»• word to. AQUARIUS: A (ournay paya ARIES (Mar. tl - Apr. W): New W amphaali points to aucceat through utlll- ; ration of orlglntl ideas. Don't bo upset by gossip. Stand your ground. Display " •bllity to act quickly during c ' ' TAURUS (Apr. 20 - May JO): now go forward with FINANCIAL plans, v Chance for success enhanced If you aro;t,,,,„^„„, versatMa. Chock sources, don't bt _fW (Copyright 1»S7, Gtnaral Features Corp.) © 1907 by NEA, la ‘You could be a really GREAT poet, if you would get rid I method. Do s of your mental block agaimst OBSCENITY!” XIUT OUR WAY Impression y Be aware of details. CHECK FINE PRINT. CANCER (June 21 • July 22); One who aided In past could make raappaar Check behind the scenes. If you thorough and patlant . . . reward to Utilize yoilr fins stnsa of timing. LEO (July 23 - Aug. 22); Em| an ability to convince others, charm, showmanship In spotlight. Ize soma close to you require face-saving device. Provide It and harmony It re-■tored. VIRGO (Aug. 23 - Sapt. 22): Be perceptive. Don't make suptrficlal |udg-ments. Key Is to analyze. Find reasons WHY. Those tn authority observe " can be favorably Impressed. Act cordingiy. LIBRA (Sept. 23 - Oct. 22): New 1_______ omphaslzes personal philosophy. You make decisions of paramount Importance. These may Involve travel, writing, publishing. Nothing halfway today. Give your Bill SCORPIO (Oct. 23 - Nov. 21); moderate. Avoid exh-emas.. Conetrn over costs could create uneasy sphere. Display confidenct and ..--------- Favorable for completing rather than starting prolecti. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 - Dec. 21): Bo enthusiastic. Spark action and reaction. Whatever you do . . . . don't do It In ordinary manner. Electric element of excitement, worka In your favor. --------* '^‘capricorn (Dac. 22 - Jan. 1»): promises to self concerning diet, else, general health, work. Now ......... position strassas basic considerations. Focus on family, friends, and job intarests. AQUARIUS (Jah. 20 - Feb. IB): You'Ve been asking for a refreshing c' . dtmanding greater freedom . . . possibly wishing for romance. Today New Moon touches that part of chart GRANTING REQUESTS. PISCES (Feb. I» • AAar. 20): Lunar, position spatllohls security, completion I The following is a list of re-~'cent Pontiac’area^lJtrths as corded at the OaklE^nd County Clerk's Office (by name of father); Richard E. Draft, Drayton Plains Houston A. Tinsley, 221 East Wilson Nacy P. Dl Martino, Drayton Plains Dale F. Green, Walled Lake I Leon E. HIckarson, 3805 ■ Lincolnshire | George Jacob Jr., 272 F.trry William H. Johnsfon jr., '^Robert L. Mathes, Lake Orion Edward D. Smith, Drayton Richard W. Athleman, Rochtstar Georgt r "■.... "" Fred^u Bruce (Twins) Thomas G. Broders, Union Lake Norman P. BurcIckI, Waterford Georgt L. Graves, Lake Orion Darrell M. Hall, AO Soufh Sanford Richard R. Hart, 229 East Walton Thomaa K. Jones, Drayton P' Baall J, Miles, Waterford^ Harold R. Payne, 14 Neyvfon Heratial D. Samt, (48 Terry Donald E. Benaon, Milford Robert T. Adcock, 124 Ruth sa»s.'ssss.“. Fritor A. Vipond, 554 Valencia . - -Earl f. tetOrReebaaiar.-- . _ Earl I. Oal(iirii. -Ul Sdfnlnolt Paul V. Rqtamm, Laonard William A, Undiy, 305 west Hopkins Clifton F. Aahley, TO Canary Hill ! William V. Huntoon, U3 South Edith Guy V. Barnett, 544 West Irqu ' Kotth L. Hollay, IB Hartung Joseph L. Vera, lake Orion Ronald t. Wright, 4 Liberty Richard W. Griffin, Walled Lake George R. Stommoll, SIK Windy l William R. Everiolt. Union Lake — £dward-R.J4alaler>.559J3aseta------ Edward W. Jonks. Clarkslon Ollit Mltehail Jr., Bloomefie Richard N. Bay*, Uka Orion israbse."!!.) boarding house THE Born loser By Art Sansom CAPTAIN EASY THEM THE FEELIN0 50RKV FOR IF I OLP COOT HAPN'T BEEN THERE HE MIEHT'Vft BROKE POm . BLURTEP OUT THE WHOLE STORVl, ' CRHINS IW -------- EEK & MEEK HEIP/ ! \HEIP/ % By Howie Schneider NANCV By Ernie Bushmiller I GUESS IVE JUST GOT A SUSPICIOUS MINP GET CHANGE HERE By Bud Blake DONALD DUCK By Walt Disney THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNIlSDAY, JUNE 7, 1967 HOLY UNO, PROMISED LAND LAND OF ANCIENT ENMITIES Fop fls for back as recorded history extends, the lond once colled Palestine, vhich now forms the modern state of Israel and parts of Jordan, Syrio, Lebanon and Egypt, has been a battleground and a prize. Not only a strotegic crossroads of civilixation but a Holy Land to three of the world's greet religions, its Iwg history is one ot conquest and war and religious, ethnic and political rivalry. The Hebrews, led to "the land of Canaan" first by Abraham and back again by j>*cume f^oim- nant among the voried peoples of FaTesfine and attained nationhood aboat TOW B.C. Through successive invasions, conquests and enslavements, Jewish nationhood persisted. With the destruction of their temple by the Romans in A.D. 70, the great dispersion of the, Jews throughout the world began. But the idco of Israel endured for two millenia. to cause new strife in our own time. • ROW SHOwme •' THE GREAT TIDE - The great tide of Islam swept over Palestine in the 7th Century A.D. Moslem rule continued practically uninterupted until 1915 when Gen. Sir Edmund Allenby (left) wrested Jerusalem from the Turks. It was during World War I, when a discovery by Admiralty ‘’chemist Chaim Weizmann solved Britain’s critical shortage of explosives, that Jewish nationalist aspirations bwame more than just a dream. Aufo Crash Fatal . FREELAND (AP) - WUliam Albert Allen, 36, of Freeland, was killed Tuesday in a twiKiar collision on M47 about jtwo miles south of Freeland. COMMERCE C—ft Union Lake at Hacforty Fd. EM 3-MII-Show Starts at Dusk MhUls SIJI-BMMrsa UnStr 12 Fns minnaiiee I ALSO L Isssia^ SUGGESTED FOR I ^^MM^WDIENCES 1 r^HAPPENEt LONTriEWAYToi eOlOIIL»D.linl. 1 FLOCK TO PALESTINE-Ever since the launching of the Zionist movement in 1896, Jewish immigrants had come in increasing numbers to Palestine. Moslem discontent increased proportionately. Uprisings in 1936 and 1938 were put down by force. See Shaggy -I In Walt Disney's hilarious ,..... starring FrMi MacMurroy WAR WITH ARABS - On May 14, 1948, the Republic of Israei was proclaimed and immediately found itself at war with the Arabs. Israeli arms prevailed and in 1949, armistice but no lasting settlement was reached. In that year. Dr. Chaim Weizmann was elected Israel’s first jiresident and Israel was admitted to the U.N. FLOOD OF COLONISTS - World War II temporarily eclipsed the Palestine problem. But with its end came another flood of Jewish colonists, despite Britain’s attempts to restrict them. In 1947, the U.N. voted to partition Palestine. 'Israel a Beachhead' ANOTHER OUTBREAK - War broke out again in the Middle East on Oct. 29, 1956, after-Egypt’s President Nasser seized the Suez Canal and barred Israeli shipping. Israel invaded the Sinai Peninsula, scoring humiliating victories over the Russian-I armed Egyptians and taking thousands of prisoners.. Britain and France attacked Egypt, but pressure by the U.S. brought about a cease-fire. Havana Blasts U.S., Britain MIAMI, Fla. (AP) -- Havana radio says that “the American Arab peoples refuse to serve that way,’’ the broadcast, moni- and EngUsb Imperialists wre hn-ed in Miami, said. Text of Johnson's Call for Cease-Fire WASHINGTON (AP) - This is the text of the statement President Johnson issued Tues- Postal Nominee WASHINGTON (AP) - President Johnson nominate Irene A. Simpson as postmaster of Presque Isle, Mich., Tuesday. The Senate must gonfirm the nomination! day night on the Middle East situation: The cease-fire vote of the Security Council opens a hopeful path away from danger in the Middle East. It reflects responsible concern for peace on the part of all who voted for it. The United States has warmly supported this resolution. We hope the parties directly^^oncOTied will promptly - act hpon it We believe a cease-fire is the necessary “first step.’’ in the'words of die resolution itself — a first step toward what Wje all muirt hope will be a new time of settled peace and progress for in all the peoples of the Middle East. It is toward this end thai shall now strive. using Israel as a beachhead to ,imp^e the integration of the Arabs.’’ ★ * ★ "There is war In the Middle East because Israel serves imperialism eciMiQmically and ideologically arid because the COWBOY HSre Name................................ “ Winners J Address Selected o City.........Phone.............. \ Do Not Hovo To Bo Proioni To Win Accommodiitions for ChiUlren — Open 7 Days a Week^ II A.M. - 9 P.M. GLENWOOO at PEimY - Cany Out Available Call 338-9433 The broadcast Tuesday night concluded: “The Arab peoples are rightfully defending their sovereipty and their honor. The people of Cuba are on their side.’’ Director Named SAULT STE. MARIE (AP)--Lee Myers, 34, of Iron Mountain has been namc^ ^eci" ^ director of the Up^ Eeninsifla Committee for Area Progress (UPCAP). He succeeds Joseph Tuma, who resigned to accept a manpower utilization specialist position at the University of Michigan. Time for Trade? WASHINGTON (iW - Rep. Wayne L. Hays, noting Israel’s reported military successes against its Arab foes, proposed a baseball - style U. S. - Israel trade. “I think we ought to offer Israel 400 Fill airplanes for that onC-eyed general,” the Ohio Democrat told fee House ’Tuesday, referring to Gen. M Dayan, Israel’s defense minister. “Maybe he could take care of things in Vietnam the way he’s doing in the Middle East,” FREE 18 HOLES OF GOLF PattAPutt Lltoa For Nile Play OPEN DAILY 9 a.m.'til 12 p.m. iMLlk* lonFliliit Exciting Things Are Going On at the Chuck Wagon. Bring The Family Out For Dinper. Excellent Selection of Sea Foods Tool Steaks to filfull yoor dreams of perfection Prime Rounds OnoeHisTDR .Vo Liquor — Ju$t Gt^jod Food Cali 796-2245 for Taka Out Ordara C6II for Resarvations. 5800 Drydcn Road, Dryden, Michican Open Daily t1 A.M. to 9 P.M. DEVILS ANGELS K.ni'iHiii.ik'-lilig- C—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 7. 1967 LESS • • • • W. FRESH PICNIC STYLE PORK ROAST CANNED HAMS 99 39 15 4 CENTER CUT RIB FLAVOR-SEAL-PAQ, PORK CHOPS ALL BEEF will ! HAMBURGER COUNTJiYCLUB I SKINLESS WIENERS...........2l i99‘ HYGRADE'S RING BOLOGNA................. 59* CORDON'S ROLL PORK SAUSAGE...........................2< .99* WITH THIS COUPON AND S5 PURCHASE OR MORE SPOTLIGHT COFFEE BA6 ■ SAVE IOC Valid thru Sun., Juna 11, 1967 at Krogar Dat. S, Fast. MIeh. WITH THIS COUPON ANP S5 PURCHASE OR MORE [NORTHERN i TISSUE ROLL S IN 4 ROLL PACK LIMIT DROLLS I Valid thru Suf^., Jury, 11, 1967 at Kragar Dat. t Boat. Mich. KROGER TASTY PORK & BEANS...................... KPiFT SALAD DRESSING r.r'Kri oai-au uKCjj/nu ■ _ MIRACLE WHIP.....................s48* KROGER FLOUR.....................539* PURE GRANULATED _ — ^ .a PIONEER SUGAR..................S.%49* MORTON FROZEN PEACH OR , „ APPLE PIE...:...................is2S* FAMILY SIZE PEPSODENT TOOTHPASTE BE SURE TO PICK-UP STICKER NO. 8 THIS WEEK FOR 500 EXTRA TOP VALUE STAMPS WITH COVERALL BONUS PACE 2 FROM KROGER BOOKLET! 70 TOP VALUE STAMPS - WITH THIS COUPON ON Z WTH THIS COUPON ON I'ANT THREE 3-OZ WT. PKGS | ANY TWO 1-LB. PKGS OR BUDDIG SLICED m ONE 2-LB PKG LUNCHEON MEAT ■ SLICED BACON CATOP VALUE 31# STAMPS WITH THIS COUPON ON 2 PKGS CUT-UP FRYERS, 2 PKGS FRYER PARTS OR 2 ROASTING CHICKENS - ■ Valid thru Sun., Juna II,' 1967 Valid thru Sun., Juna 11, 1967 aJ Valid thru Sun., Juna 11, 1967 _ at KragarDat. t East. Mich. WM_at Kroger Dat. d East, Mich, K A TOP VALUE STAMPS WITH THIS COUPON ON m ANY 7-FL pz. CAN i RENUZIT’S ■ AIR FRESHENER m TOP VALUE STAMPS WITH THIS COUPON ON ANY TWO PKGS. COUNTRY OVEN COOKIES WITH THIS COUPON ON ANY SI.88 BEACH TOWEL ■ AIK rKcancricK ■ vv/v^imw - - tValid thru Sun., June 11, 1967 Valid thru Sun., June 11 1967 mJ Valid thru Sun., June 11, 1967 ^ of Ktagar Dat. i East. Mich. IM of Krogar Dat. .l.East. Mich. at Kroger Dat. 4 £oif. Hieh. ■» ■ ■■■■•■■■■■(■■■RiNMMHMBBMaMRIMHMMlHaiBMMRiMBRIM ■■■■■■* COMPARE KROGER’S SAVE ANY DAY OF THE WEEK AT KROGER.... LOHMANN’S SLICED PICKLED BEETS... DEL MONTE CALORIES REDUCED FRUIT COCKTAIL DEL MONTE CALORIES REDUCED PEACHES.............. TRELLIS WHOLE KERNEL j2-0Z VAC PAC CORN ...c7» FRANCO-AMERICAH DELICIOUS SPAGHETTI...........A 13* CHEF BOY-AR-DEE WITH MEAT BALLS SPAGHETTI. DEL MONTE LIGHT <.//.oz CHUHK TUNA... .c*/k 27* KROGER BRAND ,2'cucaiears MEAT....cV, 39* EMBASSY STRAWBERRY OR BLACKBERRY PRESERVES..........2.^169* CLOVER VALLEY puiH«e BUmR..ZrZr69* SPOTLIGH T BRAMY- ------- COFFEE..... INSTANT COFFEE ,.oz YUBAN......... coormsEFLovR.. ........ ROBIN HOOD25./C •2** DOMINO LIGHT OR DARK BROWN & CONFECTIONERS 10-X SUGAR_______’.Kif 15* FOR FRYING i BAKING WESSON OIL..........V. 45* HEINZ STRAINED 41/,.oz BABY FOOD............Zi 7* JIFFY BRAND BISCUIT MIX.........’’^k^‘29* KROGER ASSORTED VARIETIES CAKEMIXES. VEVS NOURISHING DOG FOOD...........9* MUELLER'S ELBOW MACARONI...........’rio‘77* 1-LB 22* i29* • PKG 1-LB 29* BORDEN'S ELSIE ICE CREAM Vi-GAL "" 03 INSTANT TEA NESTEA............ KROGER ASSORTED FLAVORS GELATINS.......... KROGER FRENCH OR ITALIAN SALAD Dtoddwa.........°ri19* SPECIAL LABEL-SWIFTNINP SH0RTENING:...3 c/»69* COOL RISE FLOUR ROBIN HOOD. .5.YcS3* BREAKFAST CEREAL CHEERIOS... 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PACKER LABEL FROZEN ,g.oz STRAWBERRIES..4.7» *1 KROGER FROZEN FLORIDA ORANGE JUICE 79* HEKNAN TASTY r CLUB CRACKERS V^l39* VITA-BOY DELICIOUS , oz ' BACON CRISP..........39* MCONONY ALUmNUN REYNOLOS FOIL’.^dil^66* .4?Jc^^37* ■ FOR YOUR LAUNDRY-KING SIZE ,%« BLEACH GALLON 11/2-PT JUG FROZEN-S VARIETIES ii oz DINNERS...?« 36* NORTON FROZEN j. . CREAM PIES...........AV25* GREEN GIANT FROZEN IN BUTTER SAUCE i PEAS "”'ONIONS^iSfc39* GREEN GIANT FROZEN IN CHEESE SAUCE CAULIFLOWER... .U^c39* STAR-KIST FROZEN CASSEROLE TUNA NOODLE4.*^89* BANQUET FROZEN 4 VARIETIES , qz ' COOKIN’ BAGS....?c 29* COUNTRY OVEN SUGAR, CINNANON OR PLAIN DONUTS 2 °oz49* NABISCO CHOCOLATE CHIP COOKIES CHIPS AHOY!.........Vo 49* INDEPENDENT SHUR-COOD COOKIES ,, .. NIPPODROMES...P?c 39* BATHROON TISSUE CHARMIN... HONE PRIDE SPRAY STARCH ^ 49* KROGER FRESH CRISP SAITINES 2-49 14i OFF LABEL DOVE LIQUID............°rl63* tvatmsoti AMMONIA...............‘’r;i9* RE6ULUtSIZE-IUU> ZEST SOAP................ 15* FOhHEHOS HARD TO CLEM LAVA SOAR.............I'^‘13* FOR BISHES-WLO LIQUID CHIFFON ff. S9* OLDSFICELOTm AFTER SHAVE......<’ri ’I'* STJOSEFHBRMD BABY ASPIRIN Boffur 35* SUNTAN LOTION COPPERTONE. 2-FL OZ •1UBE W KROGER EVAPORATED I CANNED MILKI 7'' *1 ■ m PL ■ PZCANS ■ FOR A BEAUTIFUL TAN-LOTION COPPERTONE. IN PLASTIC BOTTLE-OIL COPPERTONE. FREE 6 EXTRA NAPKINS INSIDE 3K>4^VEE-F0RM FREE 8 EXTRA NAPKINS INSIDE MODESS lf*1« $|2f rKG m 5 SIZE SWEET N’JUICY HONEYDEW MELONS..........................»ck69* U.S. EXTRA FANCY WASHINGTON STATE RED DELICIOUS APPLES.................... U:S. EXTRA FANCY WASHINGTON STATE WINESAP APPLES.......................... U:S. NO. 1 NAME RUSSET POTATOES................. FRESH SALAD SIZE RED RIPE TOMATOES .................3. o\‘o99* FRESH CHURNED HERBRUCK’S COUNTRY ROLL BUHER XHEESE OR PEPPERONI APPIAN WAY PIZIARINO -— WE RESERVE YhE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. PRICES AND ITEMS EP-PECTIVE^AT KROGER IN DETROIT 4 EASTERN MICHIGAN THRU SLMdAY, JUNE 11 1967. NONE SOLD TO DEALERS. COPYRIGHT 1967-THi KROGER CO. C—12 ONE THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JUNE f, 1967 Tibetan Refugees Long for the Day They Can Return DARJEELING, India (AP) -Eight years after fleeing their homeland in the wake of an un< successful uprising against Peking, tens of thousands of H-betan refugees still long for the day when they can trek back across the steep Himalayan passes. Even tile sick and dying want to go-back, says the command dant of a refugee camp established for the aged and infirm in neighboring Sikkim. “This hope of returning is really the oiJy thing keeping them alive.” ★ ★ ★ The camp’s 300 residents, many of them too old and too sick to walk, spend most of their time spinning Buddhist prayer wheels in front of their one-room homes. Inside nearly every home is a small image of Lord Buddha and a picture of the Dalai Lama, the former Tibetan god-king who also fled to India in 1959 and now lives in Dharam-sala, 200 miles north of New Delhi. NO LIMITS The desire to go back to Tibet is not limited to the aged. Standing on a hillside in Darjeeling, the home of 3,000 refugees and the headquarters for many relief activities, 16-year-old Tashi Norbu pointed north toward a snow-capped Himalayan peak. “My homeland is just on the back side of the mountain. Someday I intend to return to it,” be said. ★ ★ * In many ways, Tashi is a typical refugee of the younger generation. As a student at a Tibetan school here, he is busy preparing for a new life in a new country, studying mathematics, science, history and geography, plus Tibetan, English and Hindi. ^STHA HOPES Yet he has not given up h(^ of retqrning to Tibet. . Early th^ year a wave of optimism sw^ the refugee settie-mentS'-aa-iJCWa-reporte-aiTived of clashes in Tibet between sig>- porters and opponents of Mao Tse-tung. But now we feel there is no basis for the refugees’ hopes to rise,” said Lodi Gyaltsan, editor of the Tibetan Freedom Press, a daily paper published in Darjeeling and distributed to refugees throughout India. ■‘The fighting was just a pow- Sonic Boom Study Is Cited By Science Service PHILADELPHIA - “It Is Improbable that even slight damage should occur” to houses and other buildings due the supersonic transport,’^ as long as its sonic booms have overpressures of less than three pounds per square foot, according to the man who was technical director of the National Sonic Boom Programs in White Sands, N. M., and Oklahoma City. Dr. John H. Wiggins Jr. reports hisanalysis of . the- two test series, in which 2,747 booms were produced ii\ 1964 and 1965, in the June issue of ’ Materials Research and Standards. “This does not imply that claims won’t be made,” however, be says, simply because people are much more sensitive to vibration than are structures. .“That which is easily noticeable to persons is about 75 times less than the datiiage criterion,” Dr. Wiggins reports. Though most of the test runs were made by F-104 jets that are much smaller than the coming SST, Dr. Wiggins says, “larger aircraft should have no effect bn these results, since the F-104 loaded the buildings to a maximum.” There was some evidence from the tests, however, that cracking from normal shrinkage processes might be accelerated fiy the booms, he says. Armenian Christians reserve Christmas Day completely for religious .observance and exchange of gifts on New Year’s Day. Watch For The GRAND OPENING AD Of Our New CHICKEN DELIGHT 500 N. Perry In Thursday's Paper er struggle within the army and didn’t involve Ae Tibetans themselves.” There are an estimated 42,000 refugees living in India, 5,500 in Sikkim and 3,000 in Bhutan. Nenrly all arrived before 1962, when the borders with ’Tibet were sealed as a security precaution. ' The refugee community has had an annual birth rate of more than 4- per cent. ★ ★ w “The Tibetans feel they are in a minority here and with the old people dying they fear that unless the women go on producing it may be difficult to maintain their num.bers,” says K. S. Gup- ta, secretary general of the Indian Central Relief Committee, in his New Delhi office. This private organization channels aid from charity groups around the world. Since it was founded in 1959, the committee has disbursed $700,000 in cash and $2.8 million in gifts. One of the largest contributors has been an American committee, headed by Lowell Thomas. REFUGEE FARMS Most of tiie money and gifts, such as medical supplies, have been used to establish agricultural settlements where the refugees farm as they did in Tibet. Each settlement also has a han- dicraft training center that enables the older refugees to teach their children carpet and basket weaving, knitting, painting, tailoring and carpentry. Despite closing of the border, about 10 refugees a month still manage to escape from the Chinese, bringing stories of oppression and persecution. BONELESS USDA CHOICE BOSTON ROLLED ROAST BEEF SALE! FAIRWAY TENDER USOA CHOICE ARM CUT SWISS STEAK IN ECONOMICAL 3 POUND FAMILY PACKAGES FRESH, LEAH HAMBURGER GRAUE 1 SKIHLESS HUT UUGS 3 lbs. M GRACE 1 LARGE SLICED BGLUGHA 39’ LEAH BLADE-CUT PORK CHOPS GRADE 1 BULK SAUSAGE MILD CURE SLICED BACOH OUR OWH HOMEMADE CHEESE SPREAD OR LONGHORN CNEESE < lb. • HacariMii ^fafo rcdle Slaw MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE SALADS PORKS BEAHS OXYDOL 29« Detergent 4-Oz. Box Radishes 10*^ Green 0nions»-10'^ Cucumbers BIRDS EYE HASH BROWH POTATOES Each KRAFT 91^-Oz. Can WHIP TOPPIHG Cfcmr Cheose louPONI ! EXTERIOR LATEX f iHOUSE fPAINT HOW WAIL 'paint Reg.< 1491 JXTERIOR HOUSE PAINT I PRi * "taALLON 2 GALS. *^91 FOR / ENAMEL R«g. lire 2 quarts REDWOOD Jim R«fl. pea or. 2 QUARTS *19 FOR ]’ wt::TuZrT^:r W. Re^nra th. RigM to Uarit Q«aKti.. ^ Across From Pontiac Northern High School 1220 N. Pany at Madison, Pontiac FE 4-2260 FOODS Open Daily 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.-Sundays 10 A.Mi to 6 Pt Showers THE PONTIAC PRES!*^^ VOL. 125 — NO. 104 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 7, 1967 —52 PAGES IOC LANSING (iP — With their two-punch tax program in position for a final vote, House Republican leaders have enlisted Gov. George Romney’s aid in their search for votes to pass it. One reluctant Republican emerged from a 25-minute session in Romney’s office yesterday and said the governor had suggested Republicans might repay his support for the fiscal package with Republican Wins Key House Race MOUNT CLEMENS (AP) - For the second time in two weeks, a Republican has swept his way to a seat. in the Michigan House, riding the crest of Gov. George Romnfy’s popularity. David Serotkin ■ yesterday swamped Democrat Victor Steeh, by an unofficial 5,879 to 4,635 votes in their race to represent the state’s 75th legislative district at Mount Clemens. The victory gave Republicans a 56-54 margin in the House, considerably enhancing Romney’s chances of pushing through a controversial state tax reform program. Romney’s ability to swing fiscal reform through the Michigan Legislature is considered a prime factor in party selection of a presidential candidate next year. A jubiliant Serotkin hailed Romney as the architect of his success. In Today's Press First Time Secret Service arrests own agent on counterfeiting charge - PAGE B-8. Walled Lake Protests surround rezoning of land for apartments — PAGE A-4. Golf Sectional Several name golfers fail in USGA Sectional qualifying play -PAGED-1. Area News .............. A-4 Astrology ................C-8 Bridge ...................C-8 Crossword Puzzle ........D-13 Comics .................. C-8 Editorials .y-T......1....A-6 Markets ^...... .......D-« 'OBIfiiiiries ......... . .D-7 Spwts ...............D-1—D-5 Theaters ............... C-9 Ty and Radio Programs . D-13 Wilson, Earl ............D-13 Women’s Pages B-1—B-3 Sop/e/s SeeA U N. Action to End Mideast War Fast UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. - With Israeli forces continuing their march into Egypt, the Soviet Union today demanded an immediate meeting of the U.N. Security Council to consider further action to halt the Middle East war. The council president, Ambassador Hans R. Tabor of Denmark, began consultations with other members to set the time of the meeting. It was understood that Soviet Ambassador Nikolai T. Federenko asked that . the 15-nation body meet within the hour. The council was awaiting responses from Israel and the Arab nations to its unanimous call for an immediate ceasefire issued yesterday after a sudden Soviet retreat on the issue. Israel immediately gave conditional acceptance to the ceasefire, and U.N. Secretary General U Thant sent cables to all the belligerent governments seeking confirmation of the Israeli position and acceptances from the Arab nations. The Arab response was complicated by the stiff conditions Israel set. But their replies were expected soon because the war news showed them losing, and Cairo and Amman broadcast announcements of the council’s. Diplomatic sources in Washington said Jordan had asked the United States to arrange a cease-fire. The council adopted the resolution by vote of all its 15 members last night. The resolution called on “the governments concerned as a first step to take forthwith all measures for an immediate cease-fire and for cessation of all military activities in the area. ” A deadlock in the council was broken after two days of private consultations resolution call for withdrawal of the when Soviet Ambassador Nikolai T. Fedorenko dropped his insistence that the fighting forces to their prewar positions and agreed with U.S. Ambassador Arthur J. Goldbert that it should seek only a cease-fire. Fedorneko, blaming Israel for the war, told the council the cease-fire resolution was the least it could do at present but was only a. first step. He said his government wants immediate withdrawal of “the forces of the aggressor” — meaning Israel — behind the 1949 armistice lines and “the council must take an immediate decision” for such withdrawal. WAR VICTIM IN JERUSALEM - One of 500 Israelis wounded in the Arab-Israeli conflict in Jerusalem is helped into a first aid station in the Israeli section of the city. Israel reported today that it had captured Old Jerusalem from the Jordanians, and a few hours later Jordan announced it was ready to negotiate a cease-fire. Tax Bill Ready for Vote; Leaders Ask Romney Aid votes for his views on court reorganization. That GOP member. Rep. Donald Holbrook of Clare, said he still didn’t intend to vote for the tax program. House Republicans moved the tax package yesterday into position for a final vote. Speaker Robert Waldron, playing by ear and carefully counting his votes, said he hoped for a showdown this week on the Republican-drafted package and its controversial state income tax. ★ ★ ★ He said he had “over 50” of the 55 votes needed to pass the bills. He declined to comment on whether he thought any Democrats would favor it. ‘NO THREATS’ MADE Holbrook said Romney was “very congenial and courteous” and made no threats while asking him to vote for the new fiscal program. ‘‘He did mention,” Holbrook said, ‘‘that since I am chairman of the House Judiciary Committee and consequently quite concerned about the subject of court reorganization, I mi^dit be in a better position to have members of my party go along with my position in that matter if I went along with the majority of my caucus on the tax program.” Holbrook said he replied that he doubted that was true, that the House GOP tax package still contains “certain basic inequities,” and that “at the present time” he couldn’t vote for it. ISRAELI ADDRESSES SECURITY COUNCIL - Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban (left) addresses the United Nations Security Council last night which had just called for an immediate cease-fire in the Arab-Israeli war. Eban said his country welcomed the appeal for cessation of fighting. At far right is U.S, Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg, and seated between Eban and Goldberg is Lord Caradon, British minister of state for foreign affairs. Commission OKs Betterment Fund City commissioners last night approved a capital improvement fund budget calling for $799,204 worth of expenditures during the 1967 fiscal year. ★ ★ ★ The fund is financed by a special 1%-mill tax levy, which is expected to bring in $621,000. Another $150,000 was carried over from last year’s fund as an unexpended balance. Appropriations were authorized for I Israel Breaks Gulf Blockade Related Stories, Pages A-2, A-8 spending $148,000 for construction of seven storm drains and $120,000 for the city’s share of paving local streets. Another $106,000 was allocated as final payment on the central fire station and $22,000 was appropriated for completion of a pistol firing range in the basement of the public safety building. (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 6) By The Associated Press Israeli forces, apparently running roughshod over the Egyptian Army, announced today the capture of the strategic Sharm el Sheikh heights overlooking the entrance to the Gulf of Aqaba — in effect breaking Gamal Abdel Nasser’s blockade. They reported also an advance to a point 20 miles from the Suez Canal. On the northern front, Jordan sought a cease-fire as an echo to the Israeiis’ capture of Old Jerusalem. The twin Israeli advances in Egypt placed their armies almost at the identical points they had won during the 1956 war with Egypt. ★ * * Egyptian occupation of Sharm el Sheikh was the flash point of this war, now in its third day. At the head of the Gulf of Aqaba lies Elath. RACE 125 MILES To reach Sharm el Sheikh, Israeli forces had to race more than 125 miles down the Sinai Peninsula. Radio Cairo reported an announcement by the Egyptian High Command that forces at Sharm ei Sheikh “have rejoined our main forces in the defensive positions in Sinai.” An Israeli Army spokesman in Tel Aviv said an armored column along Related Stories, Pages A-7, B-10, B-ll, B-U, C-9, D-6 Egypt’s coast had overrun Rumana in an advance of more than 100 miles since the drive began two days ago. Jordan: Ready for Cease-Fire AMMAN, Jordan (AP) — Jordan, invaded by Israeli forces, announced today its readiness to negotiate a cease-fire. An announcement said the decision had been made after consultations with the Arab joint command and was relayed to the United Nations. Israel earlier announced capture of the Jordan-held Old City of Jerusalem and other military action within Jordan. Abba Eban, Israeli foreign minister, told the United Nations last night that Jordan was “the most intense of all belligerents” in the war. s Announcement of the agreement for •a cease-fire came under strange circumstances. Just half an hour earlier. King Hussein had made a rousing speech to his people urging that they fight against Israel “until death.” ★ It was said he was speaking “from somewhere oh the front.” COUNTEROFFENSIVE Amman Radio had announced that Jordanian forces had launched a general counteroffensive against Israeli troops along the whole length of the border west of the Biblical River Jordah. The youthful ruler asked other Arab countries for material aid> and money to continue the battle against Israel. The king, 32, had said in his speech that the Jordanian forces “are waging a battle for all Arabs everywhere.” He then appealed to other Arab coup-tries for help. He said “any material and moral aid for the young men* and other Arabs continuing the fight in the front line and in the trenches will be deeply appreciated.” This not only put the Israelis 20 miles from the Suez Canal, but they also were in a position to move on Port Said, at the head of the canal 30 miles to the northwest. Jordan’s government in Amman reported the decision to seek a cease-fire with Israel was made after consultation with the Arab joint command, which Egypt heads. Syria and Egypt maintained they would continue the fight. Cairo admitted today that its troops had fallen back before the Israeli drive toward the canal, but there was no indication of the extent of the withdrawal. ★ ★ ★ Israel’s radio said two tank columns were racing toward the canal along two paved highways — the main road through the Sinai Desert and Egypt’s coastal road ifarther north. Hand-to-hand fighting between Israelis and Jordanians was reported in Bethlehem, Jesus’ birthplace, 10 miles southwest of Jerusalem. SAFER CROSSING SEEN — A new pedestrian overpass in the state. Tlie ^,000 bridge will connect the central business across East Wide Track, at Whittemore is ready for use. De- district vrith the area ehst of Wide Track and allow for s^fer . signed as a j^ot jwoject, it is the first of Its type to be used crossings, city officials said. Ron Covwm — Adv. Good Drenching for Pontiac Area The weatherman didn’t forget Pontiac area residents when he brought showers to Michigan during the night. Pontiac hasn’t had a drenching rain since May 17 when three-tenths of an inch was recorded. About one-tenth of an inch followed on May 18. Rainfall last night and early this morning measured eight-tenths of an inch in the downtown area. Tbe forecast for today, tonight and tomorrow is mostly cloudy, continued warm and humid with occasional showers or thundershowers. ★ ★ * ■ Friday’s outlook is more of the same-little change. The low in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. was 66. The mercury sto^ near i 73 at 1 p.m. ^ Report on Russians | Recent years appear to have mellowed the Russian people. Read these conclusions by Harold A. Fitzgerald, chairman of the board of The Pontiac Press, in his column on today’s editorial'page. Friday he ]wiU write his impressions of India as he saw it on a recent world tour. TllK PONTIAC WEDNl^:SDAY, JUNE 7, 1967 (farts' Talk on Rail Strike Delay WASHINGTON (AP) - President Johnson’s proposal to sidetrack a threatened nationwide rail strike steams toward Senate debate with Democratic leader Mike Mansfield expi ing hope the measure will be in House hands by Thursday. Mansfield called for a morning debate on the bill and put aside another measure — on congressional redistricting — originally slated to occupy the Senate today. Mansfield said he felt the Senate had to dispose of the rail plan this week because the Senate is expected to devote most of next week to debating a resolution to censure Sen, Thomas J. Dodd, DConn. Congress already has \ two extension of the no strike-no lockout period in the dispute between six shopcraft unions and railroads handling about 95 per cent of the nation’s rail traffic. DEADUNE NEAR The present extension runs out June 19. The administration contends that with a war on in Vietnam, a nationwide rail tie-up would be a disaster. ★ ★ ★ Johnson’s bill would extend the no strike-no lockout period another 90 days during which intensive m^iation efforts would take place under a spe- cial five-man board he would name. But if no settlement were reached in this time, the board could make its own determination of fair terms and order these into effect until Jan. 1, 1969. UNKM LABEL The unions labeled the plan compulsory arbitration in hearings on the bill and urged Congress to reject it. Administration officials insisted it varied from compulsory arbitration in several ways. The railroads said they would go along with the profwsal as the only apparently feasible way to avoid a strike at this time. Romney to Hit 3 Key States Presidential Primary Sites Will Be Visited LANSING (UPI) - (iov. George Romney will take a peek at his presidential chances in three states which will hold preferential primaries next year during visits to the states in the next few weeks. Rrst stop will be Wisconsin Saturday for a series of political backslapping events and a good old-fashioned crowning of a queen. The Romney-for-Presldent club In Milwaukee has invited the governor to attend a breakfast of faithful supporters Saturday and to make a few remarks to newsmen on his plans. A noon luncheon with GOP leaders in Appleton also is planned before Romney spends the rest of the day at Green Bay helping celebrate the Alice in Dairyland festival. Romney also is reported planning a four-day stay in New Hampshire, site of the nation’s first 1968 presidential primary, early next month. He is expected to stay at Lake Wipnipesau-kee July 6-9 with a long-time friend, hotel owner J. Willard Marriott of Washington, D. C. INFORMAL MEETINGS Informed sources say Romney will spend the time in New Hampshire with informal type meetings with his Republican supporters in the New England state. His office, however, said the time wouid be spent in “relaxation.” Romney will speak at the Young Republican Convention in Omaha, Neb., June 23. Besides the visits to key states with presidential primaries, Romney also has trips planned to Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Wyoming this month. Commission Eyes Delay of UAW Office City commissioners heard a report last night on urban renewal land purchased by the United Auto Workers in December 1965 at Auburn and Center which has sat idle for nearly 18 months. The union purchased the land under urban renewal agreements which called for construction of an office building before December 1966. James L. Bates, director of planning and urban renewal, stated to the commission a UAW regional director had re-ptHted the building has not been started because of “internal problems.” Bates said the union would be in a better position to know what it intends to do in two weeks. The commission asked for a status report in two weeks. ★ * ★ The planning director said the city had been assisting the union from 1961 to 1966 in securing a site for an office building. SELL LAND If the union does not intend to construct on the site. Bate said, the best solution would be to persuade the union to sell the land to a developer approved by the city. The union owns some 17,000 square feet at the southwest corner of Auburn and Center. 73 Spellers Vie for National Title WASHINGTON (UPI) - Seventy-three nimble-witted and determined youngsters began battle today to be crowned the nation’s champion speller. The 40th annual national spelling bee brought together 47 girls and 26 boys from 72 communities spread from Washington, D.C., to the U.S. territory of Guam in the Pacific. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Mostly cloudy, continued warm and humid with occasional periods of showers or thundershowers today, tonight, and tomorrow. Friday’s outlook: little change. High today 77 to 83. Low tonight 62 to 68. Southwesterly winds eight to 18 miles but briefly higher in thundershowers today. Tundiy In Pontiac Senators who supported the union’s position tried unsuccessfully to amend the bill in the Labor Committee and said they expected to renew their efforts in the floor dehate. Sen. Ralph Yarborough, Tex., lost narrowly in commit-1 a proposal to add a provision impounding the railroads’ profits for th^ seizinre period. relieve pressure Yarborough said he was trying to find a way to “balance the scale” and not put all the pressure on the unions under the bill. The unions contended that, under the President’s proposal, they would lose the right to strike, would be forced to accept a government-decreed settlement of terms and undoubtedly would have to take lower pay scales than they could win with their own economic strength. ★ ★ ★ The Senate committee approved the measure 14 to 2 Tuesday after rejecting all ma: jor amendments. The House Commerce Committee scheduled its final public hearings on the legislation for today. Global Sailor Hospitalized in England PLYMOUTH, England (AP) - Sir Francis Chichester, the solo round-the-world sailor, was: admitted Tuesday night to the Royal Naval Hospital here. The hospital reported today he was found to have hemorrhaged from a duodenal ulcer. ★ ★ ★ The adventurer, 65 years old, was given a blood transfusion shortly after admission. An announcement said his condition was satisfactory and gave no cause for alarm. But it added he would be under medical care for at least a month. ★ / ★ Chichester was due to sail for London Thursday in his yacht Gipsy Moth IV and to be dubbed knight by Queen Elizabeth next week. rs Wednesday af 8:07 p.m. rises Thursday at 4:57 a.m. in sets Wednesday at 8:05 p.m. ih rises Thursday at 4:52 a.m. Downtown Temperatures I.........67 11 a.m...... ........... 12 m............ I........66 I p.m....... Highest temperature . 1. Lowest temperature ............... Mean temperature .................. Weather: Day, partly cloudy; r One Year Ago Highest temperature . Lowest temperature i 50 Fort .......... - I 53 Jacksonville 70 70 I 67 Kansas City 86 71 r 46 Miami Beach 83 73 i 70 Milwaukee 72 61 1 44 New Orleans 87 67 ) 64 New York " I 50 Phoenik I 60 Pittsburgh ) M St. Louis 00 61 86 74 C. 77 52 68 S. Francisco 66 S. S. Maria NATIONAL WEATHER — Shpwcrs are fqrecast tonight frm nHohnma to the Great Lakes and ni^thmi Plains. Western states will have cooler temperatures. BIRMINGHAM - The school board last night awarded bids fo approximately $631,(XI0 for an ad dition and remodeling of Groves High School. The awards were about $20,000 below expectations. YOU JANE - Terry Stretten, 16, plays the role of Tarzan as his sister, Wendy, 5, watches near the shore of Union Lake. 'Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Ivan S. Stretten, 2390 Locklin, West Bloomfield Township. ' New Mexico Search for Raiders Is Ended Birmingham Area News Board Lets Groves Contracts The work wiU provide 1$ additional classrooms, a larger library and offices. Winning bidders were Bundy Construction, $449,000 for _ al construction; Evans Plumb-$115,0001 for mechanical 'Deck Concept Likely in Downtown Plan' Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. last night said he has not seen plans for a downtown shopping center that include a decked concept but considered it likely Improvement Fund Okayed (Continued From Page One) City Manager Joseph A. War-en, outlining the planned ex-said $40,000 would be spent to improve .the municipal golf course and provide equipment for other parks; $46,820 for street lighting on M59, Golf Drive, Arlene, Cass and Oakland; and $42,400 to complete paving of the parking area behind the civic center. POUCE RADIOS CANJIWN N.M. (AP) -'officer, holding .everal per- Z Spanish-American fugitives in of the Roup’s leaders still were:P®“‘^® raaios. the rugged northern New Mexi-i hiding in the forested hUls and| Warren said allocations for CO mountains. [canyons but that others might! thp radios should complete State Police Chief Joe Black [have said 25 of his officers would re-[lines, main in the area but the nearly wqUNDED 400 National Guard troops and| Spanish-Americans raid- slipped through police! major expenses needed bring the police communication system up to date. that this would be included in the finalized plan of developer A. Alfred Taubman. Answering questions posed by a citizens’ group which has in the past advocated a decked concept first proposed by a University of Detroit design and criticized the Taubman plan, Taylor said he was “very optimistic.” He indicated that Tanbman does have a plan that faicludes deck parking and said he was “pretty sure” It would be something that the Citizens Committee for Pontiac's Positive Progress (CCPPP) would accept. Taubman has an agreement with the City Commission to secure tenants for a downtown shopping center and to be the sole developer of the center. Under the agreement he has until Sept. 27 to scure major tenants. ★ ★ ★ Donald H. Frayer, chairman of the CCPPP, said he was pleased to read that the city “has decided to utilize the deck type concept we have been vacating.” Frayer asked a number of questions some of which Taylor declined to answer on the work; Fred Moot Co., $67,000, for electrical work. ★ ★ ★ The board also accepted preliminary plans for a new $1.1-million elementary school to be located at 13 Mile between Tele- inority groups...... the board replied to a letter requesting that the district hire “members of other races and minority groups ... to nrich our children’s lives.” Members of the board and administration pointed out it had always been the policy to hire educators regardless of race or creed. They pointed out the district has at present one Negro and two oriental persos on the staff. The district has a teaching staff of about 900. A meet-the-candidates rally for Monday’s school board election will be held at 8 tonight at Seaholm High School, 2436 W .Lincoln. The event is sponsored by the Birmingham-Bloomfield League of Women voters. ★ ★ ★ AH the Birmingham S c h o o I District candidates are expected to be on hand. Following their talks, voters will have a chance throw questions at the candidates. Five persons are seeking two four-year terms and three vie for a single one-year sat. other officers werp being sent’ ia,u- me improveiuem luuu mau homi were being sent^^^ court- calls for $56,000 to be spent for home. About 30 fugitives fled into ;he Carson National Forest near Canjilon Monday after raiding rural cc^urthouse, wounding two Florida Defeat for Roosevelt MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) (house at Tierra Amarilla Monday, with their gunfire critically wounding two officers. The group was tracked by state police, deputies and National Guardsmen into the Carson National Forest east of Canjilon. After the arrest Tuesday of one well-known member of the group, Gerry Noll of Albuquerque, State Police Chief Joe The improvement fund also grounds that doing so would jepordize Taubman’s attempt to secure agreements with a ten- three new pedestrian walkways, $40,000 for the city’s share of new sidewalks and $17,660 for cemetery equipment. A $27,000 aUocaUon was made for purchase of new fire fighting equipment. Warren said it takes years to get delivery of new equipment and the city should attempt to replace its Blak said it was believed the older equipment, fugitives might be making their [NAME SIGNS way south toward the Rio Arri-i other allocations are: $15,000 na. mr; - community remodeling the old city U- ElUott Roosevelt was out of of-* * * Ibrary, $12,000 for planting trees fice today as mayor of Miamij federal^2 lu oay i/ciuici. | nftinorc anrf pnnvprsion nf ^ ^ . Youth Program Grant Is Seen James M. McNeely, executive director of the Oakland County Commission on Economic Opportunity (OCCEO), said yesterday that he expects a $100,000 grant for summer youth programs by the end of thi| month. The Officf oi Economic Opportunity (OEO) last week allocated $28.7 million to its regional o f .f i c e s for summer programs aimed at keeping youngsters busy and averting racial unrest. McNeely said that the Chi-, cago regional office has given a tentative commitment for release of $100,000 to Oakland Countv. A formal applicatioa for the p’ant will be filed Friday by the executive committee of the OCCEO. Most of the grant will be used to expand the present summer program sponsored by the Pontiac Parks and Recreation Commission, according to McNeely. •k it it Funds will be used to hire added staff and provide a toll-scale recreation program ruig-Ing from softball to day camp and swimming events. It ^wUl start about July L O^r target poverty areas in tiie coimty such as Royal Oak Township and Hazel Paik also benefit from the grant, McNeely said. Dermer, 37, untested politically prior to a May 16 primary in which he placed second in a five-man field, smashed Roosevelt’s bid for re-election. ★ ★ ★ Roosevelt, 56, son of the late President Franklin D. Roosevelt, had said before the election that his political ambitions were limited to Miami Beach. With machine baUots in all 25 precincts counted, Dermer had 10,364 votes to 8,M9 for Roosevelt. Election officials said less than 600 absentee ballots remained to be tabulated. HEAD OF BAR The son of a restaurant owner, Dermer is president of the Beach Bar Association. He had been given only a slight chance to win Tuesday’s election. Roosevelt’s administration, Dermer charged, was pitted by bickering and fighting that spoiled its effectiveness. al officers and conversion of government property, was arrested south of Canjilon in Navajo Canyon. The Spanish-Americans group contends its members are heirs to vast regions of the southwest under old Spanish land grants. They took over a campground in the Carson Forest last October for about four days to press these claims. Their leader, Reies Tijerina, had threatened a showdown oL force at Coyote last Saturday | but. 11 of his lieutenants were arresled the previous night and no incidents occurred. \ But when seven of thbse arrested were taken to the cpurt-house Monday and advised of their rights by District Court Judge James Scarborough, a group of armed men stormed into the building and wounded two officers with gunfire. Taking two hostages, later released unharmed, the gunmen fled toward Canjilon. 700 for new street name signs. The commissioners gave quick approval to the improvement fund authorizations after the public hearing at which no comment was made by members of the audience. House Democrats Press for Boost in Debt Ceiling WASHINGTON (AP)— Democrats are stressing uncertainties raised by the Middle East war as they press for Hbuse acceptance of a $29 billion boost in the national debt ceiling — biggest proposed single jump since World War II. / Reiwblicans have called for defeat of the proposed new $365-billion borrowing limit, saying c(»i]^essional rejection would force President Johnson to trim his budget. ★ ★ ★ As the House debate opened today on the debt ceiUng measure, GOP leaders also saw defeat of the administration measure as a way to force Johnson to presoit tile tax hike proposed he 1^ mentioned but hasn’t submitted to Congress. The economy’s sluggish pace and toe House Ways and Means Committee’s heavy work schedule 'Were cited by government officials as causing the delay in presentation of Johnson’s proposed six per cent surtax on private and corporate income. TAX BOOST But sources said the request, for a tax boost will be sent to Congress in plenty of time for the Ways and Means Committee —originator in Congress Of all tax legislation — to consider it. The Israeli-Arab fighting was mentioned repeatedly Tuesday as toe House Rules Committee debated, and then cleared for action today toe biU setting toe new ceiling. € it it Chairman Wilbur D. Mills, D-Ark., of the Ways and Means Committee argued a $29-blUion deficit is possible, though not likely, on the basis of Vietnam costs and fiscal possibilities. What additional demands the Middle East fighting may gm-erate, he added, cannot even be JOSEPH A. WARREN FundSelects City Manager City Manager Joseph A*. Warren has been selected by toe Metropolitan Fund, Inc., to attend a 12rday Urban Affairs pro-grain in Washington, D.C., this monUi. Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. said last night'Warren was chosen by a conunittee of the fund, vriiich sponsors numerous gov-emm^tol' studies and programs, for his “achievement and participation” in community and government affairs. ★ ★ ★ Taylor said toe fund pays |1,-500 tor the city manager’s participation in toe program, the city will pay other costs. He intocated Warren may request attendance at similar programs held later in toe year instead of the one schedujled io start June 18. ant. Taylor would not comment when asked about the status of the tenants other Ithan to say that an answer would “jeopardize” the project. In answer to other questions, he said a complete concept would not be finalized until the needs of the major tenants are well defined, that it is “questionable” whether the city wiU have to close South Saginaw to implement Taubman’s plans, and that it is uncertain at this point whether additional land will have to be purchased to complete a shopping center. ‘When I am ready to report all details I’U report to the City of Pontiac,” he said. Each commissioner was asked if he had been aware of what Taylor would say to the Rotary Club before the speech May 25. Commissioner Robert C. Ir-in. District 2, said he heard the speech. Four commissioners had “no comment” or indicated they were not aware of the speech beforehand. Commissioner Leslie H. Hudson said Taylor’s remarks ‘were well covered in the press and ample.” He said Taylor delivers a numlier of speeches and it is not necessary for him to clear his remarks with each commissioner. Lightning Cuts Power in Areas Lightning damage to electric power lines kept Detroit Edison Co. repairmen busy for several hours this morning in five areas. Some 100 customers in the vicinity of Giddings and Brown in Orion Township were inconvenienced for several hours after lightning burned down wires at 8:05. Some 50 homes in the vicinity of Somerset and Square Lake Road in B1 o o m f 1 e 1 d Township went without electricity from 7 to 8:20 a.m. for the same reason. Circuit fuses were blown out by lightning in three other areas. Eighty customers were without electricity from 8:05 to 8:25 a.m. in the vicinity of Union Lake Road and Commerce in Commerce Township. Others affected included 100 customers around Maple and Wisconsin in Troy from 8 to 8:30 a.m. ★ * ★ Also 100 customers in the area of Walnut and Orchard Lake Road in West Bloomfield Township, between 9 and 9:15 a.m. SCHOOL DISMISSED West Bloomfield Junior High, 6000 Orchard Lake, dismissed students at 9:05 a.m. because of the power failure. There was low power in a few areas of the school but most portions were without power and water, a school spokesman said. ★ ★ ★ Transformer fuses blown by lightoing blacked out 20 customer’s home in the vicinity of Paint Creek near Adams in Oakland Township from 8 to 9:10 a.m. 4-County Board to Offer Clinton River Drain Plan A proposed four-county Clinton River improvement project petitioned by 10 Macomb County communities will be discussed June 22 at a meeting in Macomb County for representatives of all affected municipalities. The iheeting is scheduled for 10 a.m. in toe Macomb Health Department building. Preliminary plans tor toe proposed Clinton River Basin Drain will be presented at toe meeting by toe 12-member augmented drainage board representing Oakland, M a-comb, Lapeer and St. Clafar counties. - No cost estimates are available for the project that would involve 56 municipalities in the four-couqty area including 39 in Oakland County. ★ ★ ★ A total of 17 Oakland County townships, 17 citiesi and five Ullages virould be affected in the project toat calls for denning, widening and straightening tti» river. Representing Oakland County the augmented drainage board are Delos Hamlin, chairman of the County Board of Supervisors; Daniel Baity, drain commissioner; and Daniel T. Murphy, chairman of toe County Board of Auditors. Persons with comparable responsibility ip toe mher three counties fill toe other nine positions on toe augmented board. This board will have the responsibility of deciding whether I proceed with toe jffoject. Macomb Couniy officials anticipate a -three-way cost split the f e d e r a 1 government paying half the c o s t and the state and local ebrnmunites each meeting 25 per cent of toe obligation. Local costs in affected communities could be met by special assessment district for those deriving direct benefits or by imposing a communityvidde obligation. It would be up to each community to determine which revenue raising method to use. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, .TUNE 7, 1967 tr Sunday Liquor Sales Up for Senate Vote LANSING (AP)-The Senate was prepared today to vote on an amendment - laden bill calling for Sunday liquor sales and described by one senator as “the biggest bag of goodies to come out of the Senate this year.” Sale of liquor on Sunday was included in one of four amendments tacked onto a House bill which originally would have prohibited retail sale of liquor by manufacturers, warehousemen or wholesalers. ★ ★ ★ The Sunday sale amendment, added by Sen. John McCauley, D - Wyandotte, was proposed earlier in the session in bill form by Sen. Stanley Novak, D-Detroit. The Novak bill passed the Senate but died in House committee. In other capital developments: • Gov. George Romney sent a telegram to President Johnson expressing hope the President will insist that conditions in the Middle East insure preservation of the national integrity and independence of Israel. • House Republican leaders moved their fiscal reform package, calling for Michigan’s first state income tax, into position for a final vote. SUNDAY UQUOR The Sunday liquor amendment would allow county boards of supervisors to approve such sale by resolution 60 days after the effective date of. the bill. If the supervisors failed to act within the period, a petition could be filed with the county clerk re- questing submission of the question to the board. Two other amendments, add-ded by Sen. Frank Beadle, R-St. Clair, would exempt packaged liquor dealers from the present law which prohibits sale of liquor within 500 feet of a church and would extend some resort liquor licenses from 10 months to 12. ★ ★ ★ An amendment added by Sen. Charles Zollar, R - Benton Harbor, would prohibit retailers from asking wholesalers to deliver their retail sales. The load of amendments caused Sen. Robert Richardson, R - Saginaw, to say “this is probably the biggest bag of goodies to come out of the Senate this year.” HOUSE BILL The Senate had been expected to vote on the amended House bill, sponsored by Rep. Raymond Baker, R - Farmington, Tuesday night. But senators spent the evening session on debate without moving to final consideration of bills. Senate Majority Leader Emil Ijockwood of St. Louis said it was decided not to move to final consideration “because a full complement was not present.” A “call of the Senate” had been ordered in which Senate doors are locked and all senators are required to remain in the chamber while sergeants at arms are sent to bring in any absent members. The only absent member was Sen, Stanley Rozyeki, D-Detroit, I who sponsored an unsuccessful I rival Sunday liquor bill earlier | in the session. ABSENCE CITED Several colleagues said Ro-1 zycki’s absence was the reason I no action was taken on the li- ’ quor bill. Lockwood said a call of the I Senate would be r e q u e s t e d I again today, and that State Po-1 lice would be sent to find any | absent members. ★ ★ ★ The bill, backed primarily by I Detroit - area Democrats who I have long sought Sunday liquor, f needed 20 votes to pass. There I are 18 Democrats and 20 Repub- I licans in the Senate. The Senate reportedly was one I vote short of the number need-1 ed to pass the bill. VOTES ASSURED McCauley said he has been I assured there would be suf- [ ficient votes to pass it in the I House. Beadle said his amendment I to exempt packed liquor deal- F ers from the 500-foot limit was I designed to aid his district I where urban renewal has dis- F placed some dealers. He said I their only choices for relocation I lie within 500 feet of churches, f ★ ★ ★ I In other action Tuesday, the I Senate, passed 25-9 a measure I providing for a stiff increase in I state parks entrance fees, de-1 spite a last ditch stand by tour- | ist area senators. State Capitol Happenings on Tuesday ssing hope Johnson will insisi rions In the Middle East rvation of the national Integrit inders and said a I Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. ^ Here’s tKe Greatest ^ WATCH BUY in America -Perfect Gift for ‘GRAD’ and W Here at SIMMS! 'ANTAGE The Jewelers’ Quality Watch '‘y Vantage® D/WS/OM OF MAUtL TON WA KM COUFANY \ * r kiFi 12.95 14.95 18.95 Check these Vantage features: VJcweler's Quality 17-Jewel Precision Movement VShock-Resistant VAnti-Magnetic, Dustproof VLifetime Mainspring V^aterproof* Models Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac Shop SIMMS-The Excitement Store Tomorrow For ^ jmsm ssmta^oniY »SALE ' These Prices Good For Tomorrow Only-No Mail er Phone Orders Please Check the specials listed below and you'll see why Simms is Pontiac's Excitement Store - tremendous bargains at low, low discount prices. And you'll also see hundreds of unodvertised bargains in the store. So come in tomorrow for these extra values. We reserve the right to limit quantities. Cool Mesh Men’s Sport Caps 69« Regular $1.00 values. Cool cops for golf, fishing, etc. With mesh inserts, first quality. Siz( — Basement Men’s 100% Cotton Bermuda Shorts 2x3-Ft., SO-Star Flag Set 89* Reg. $1.49 value. Includes 50-star flag, pole and wall bracket. Boxed. Sundries —Main Floor Four-Blade Scout Knife 12-TRANSISTOR Pocket Radio Has 1-Yr. Warranty Reoltone — ready to Ploy $19.95 value- # 1239 radio in deluxe styling, slide rule tuning. Yeor warranty. Case, battery and Eorphone included. Electronics —Main Floor KODAK Instamatic 304 Color Camera Set Vs-Inch Diameter Garden Hose 75-ft. 100% Vinyl Big %-inch garden hose in full 75-(ool length. Green color. Brass coupling. Limit 1 per person. Hardware—2nd Floor . Portable-With Wheels 22-Gal. Trash Can 1.99 I 69' $49.95 Value 30^® I 2®^ Regular $3.49 values, popular solid color shorts, washable and fast color. Sizes 28 to 42. — Basement^ Men’s Terry Sport Shirts eg. 98c Scout or^ camper knife with fork and spoon and knife. Boxed. Sundries—Main Floor Norelco Battery Cordless Shaver Electric-eye automatic camera ' llashcube, color film, batteries. Use o major credit card to buy this. Cameras —Main Flaar J Package of 100 BUFFERIN Tablets 1.00 I 9.45 I V-70*^ I Henley style ferry cloth shirts, choice of solid colors. Sizes S Men’s Cotton Knit Muscle Shirts $14.95 list. Flip-top Norelco shaver operates on flashlite batteries, at extra cost. Sundries—Main Floor Cord or Cordless Remington Shaver Fast octing Bufferin — relieves pain without upsetting the stomach. Drugs —Main Floor ‘Sudden Beauty’ 12'/2-0z. Hair Spray 2 : 126.881 - 44 Sleeveless cotton knit shirts with ribbed knit neck and armhole, and sides. Sizes S-M-L. — Basement^ Wash and Wear Yard Goods , $42.95 list, Selectronic shaver, dial the shave you want. 5 shaving heights. Sundries —Main Floor . Windproof Butane Lighter Generous I2V2 ounces of 'Sudden Beauty' hair spray for all hair styling needs. Limit 3 ca Cosmetics —Main Floor Used By Most Dentists LAVORIS Mouthwash per yard 19* I 99' 95c Size Choice of colorful prints ond solid color yard goods for spring and •summer sewing. —Main Floor U.S. Rubber Ladies’ Rain Goats $2.98 list. Marathon butane windproof lighter with adjustable flame. Sundries—Main Floor . General Electric Rechargeable Flashlight I5V2 ounces of genuine 'LAVORIS' the refreshing mouthwash for the entire family. Limit 3 bottles. Drugs—Main Floor ^ 11 Ounces Liquid SCORE Hair Groom Final clearance of genuine Rubber raincoats. Choice of 3 styles. —Main Floor Powerful flashlight with conslatt .strong beam. Recharges in outlet. Sundries—Main Floor 'Score' the liquid grooming for men's hair — keeps hair neat all day. Limit s. Drugs—Main Floor . Durable Poly trash can with cover, handle and rolling wheels. Large 22-ga!lon capacity. Limit 2. Hardware —2nd Floor4 Plastic-5 SALLON Trash Barrel With Cover Handy trash borrel for the home, basement, workshop, garage, etc. Bale handle. Limit 2 Hardware —2nd Floor Jumbo 17x28 inches Boot-Shoe Caddy $1.99 Seller 117 Durable rubber caddy holds wet boots and dirty shoes. Protects floors, keeps dirt out of the house. Hardware-2nd Floorj Set of 3 Hardwood Trouser Hangers 53* I 47* High lacquered hardwood trouser hangers keeps the crease in pants. HOUSEWARES-2nd Floor . Plastic-Fishing Tackle Box 50* I 8.44 I 87* I 39« Regular 69c value, with comportments for hooks, sinkers etc. 9'/2x5x3 inch size. SPORTS-2nd Floor 2 save more than50% on genuine 'Kent' of Grand Rapids modern scratch-finish chest-of-drawers 3-drawer chest f regular $65 value • modern style Scratch finish pumice furniture in two-tone • brass finish drawer pulls • 24xl5%x30 inches • easy to-assemble yourself — no special tools needed. 5-drawer chest • $115 value — os shown • prefinished ' two-tone scratch finish pumice • 30x- 15%x44% inches • ready to assemble without special tools. open Thurs. 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. -- Fri. 9 a.m. Jo 9:30 p.m. - Sat. 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Wicker Fitted Picnic Basket Wicker picnic basket with plastic dishes and tableware for 6. Covered, with handles. - Basement Wash ’n Wear Fabric Boys Slacks $2.98 Value Save '/2 on 50% Avril and 50% Cotton slacks. Smart ivy style in sizes 10 to 16. Black or Olive. American first quality. 2-to S-Qt. Electric Ice Cream Freezer For Men - 12 Ounces ‘CORN HUSKER’ Lotion Mokes 2 to S quarts of ice like grandma used to Poly tufa. — Basement i Textured * Seamed HylonHose The lotion made expressly for 'hands that have to work'—genuine Corn Huskers in 12-oz. size. Limit Drugs — Main Floor . Full Pound Package LISTERINE Tooth Paste 36” Electric Garden-Patio Light 4.99 I 10.00 I - 87’’ I Seamless textured hose, black, sizes 8’/2 to 10. Seamed hose, beigetone, sizes 8’/2 - 9’/2 only. —Main Floor s Compare to $2.35 value—5 tubes of Lisierine tooth paste in plastic, bag. Limit 3 bogs. Drugs-Main Floor^ ViSIMMSiflbs Indirect light for the patio or garden. 36 inches high with 15-inch umbrella top. HbUSEWARES-J2nd Flo<^ Set Of 3 Metal Loaf Bake Pans 149 I |o« i yyei 426 3 popular sizes of loaf pons for boking meat loof, cofees, breads, c HOUSEWARES-2nd Floor Where The Real] BIG GMGUMSi SHH Live^ THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 7, 1967 ovEe ?m Viet Fighting at Lowest Level of '67 SAIGON (AP) - The U.S.Itant ground fighting. They said,|40 to 50 flatcars or boxcars hadj ing south from the North Viet-Command reported today that | however, that intelligence indi-i been destroyed or damaged. i namese capitol. fighting in Vietnam had slack-jcated the Communist forcesj While the Air Force Fiosl Navy pilots reported more ened to its lowest level this year I have evidently been girding for | Thunderchief jets were hitting than 24 barges destroyed and iwith only scattered , ground battle jn three areas — the de-! north of Hanoi, the Navy’s car-j cuts in several rail and road skirmishes and relatively few militarized zone between North jrier planes concentrated on j bridges which the Communists air strikes against North Viet- and South Vietnam, the central road, rail and river traffic flow-1 rebuild each night, nam. i highlands and the Mekong Delta ----------- In Sopth Vjfetnam, an American civilian official was shot to death early today by about 3 Vietcong who raided the home of a South Vietnamese district chief where the American was visiting 15 miles east of Saigon. SETS SAIL FOR AFRICA - Francis Brenton, 40, waves from his 26-foot catamaran in Chicago’s Lincoln Park lagoon yesterday Just before setting sail on a 15,000-mile solo jaunt to West Africa and back. He will sail via the St. Lawrence Seaway, stopping at Montreal’s Expo 67, with a destination of the African port of St. Louis between Senegal and Mauritania. The craft, a canoe and pontoon, is one he sailed last year from South America to Chicago up the Mississippi and Illinois rivers. Despite the lull, losses were; south of Saigon, sustained in small fights and a; Light contacts were reported Navy Crusader jet was lost to; in all three areas Tuesday, but ground fire over the Communist' there was no developing pat-North. The pilot parachuted and tern. was picked up in the Tonkin' Along the demilitarized zone. Gulf only 18 minutes after he; the cruiser Boston shelled Corn-splashed down. It was the 573rdlmunist storage areas and then s U.S. combat plane reported lost moved south to catch an evident]' I in North Vietnam. strong Red attempt to movei'^ * ★ * supplies across the Ben Hai:^ Officers denied that the lull in J^^ver, which bisects the zone, the war was due in any way to cruiser reported wreaking, the fighting in the Middle East, havoc among a fleet of 25 sam-I but it appeared that neither side crossing the river, viewed this as a propitious mo-; In the air war, U.S. headquar-^ ment for any dramatic moves. : Icrs reported jets again plas-American warplanes pene- tered three rail lines leading '' trated into the*heavily fortified "°cth from Hanoi—one to the heartland of North Vietnam northwest up the Red River del-again Tuesday, raiding rail la. one to the northeast and one lines leading from Hanoi to Red short spur running 40 miles • China. Only 88 missions were: north into the Thai Nguyen in-flown, compared with about I25]dustrial complex, vn recent normal days. i There was no report of any The U.S. Command reported dogfights with Communist that not since the first of the;MIGs, although raids into this year had there been a compara-' area nearly always bring the ble lull in the ground war. For Red jets into the sky. the past four days the U.S. mill- U.S. Command reported the tary communique has said, “No weather in the target area was significant contact with the ene-,comparatively good and return-] my was reported.” iing pilots told of multiple cuts in], U.S. officers volunteered no the lines and extensive other reason for the lapse in signifi- damage. The headquarters said ANNOUNCING A i - PERSIAN RUG AUCTION ^---------------------A NOTE ABOUT THE SALE__________________________________ I Thii ihipmenl' of 20 bales having cleared customs is being dispatched to this area for | I disposal at Public Auction. This is an unusually fine stock of Persian and Oriental carpets | I and rugs. They are of the finest origins selected by experts with over 40 yekrs experience | I in the European and Eastern markets. They are all hand knotted in intricate patterns and j I of historical designs and will be sold in single units to the highest bidder. Each piece is | I described in the catalogue that will be available during the view period. » Stouffer’s Northland Inn 21000 Northwestern Hwy., Southfield, Michigan Thursday, June 8, at 8 P. M. j EXHIBITION: 6:30 p.m. ’til time of sale. I j All Rugs are on view for your inspection. Catalogs available, j f__________________________________ j Included in this shipment in small and large sixes,, strictly the finest grades of KIRMAN, KESHAN, BORIALOO, SAROUK, BOKHARA, ISPAHAN. BAKHTIAR, MESHED. AFGHAN, BELOUCH1STAN, HAMADAN, AROEBIL, ROYAL AUBESSON (INDIAN), HERIZ’ GHOUM, TABRIZ, lOOSHIGAN, KAZVIN, SHIRAZ, NAIN. ETC. C. B. Charles specialist auctioneers TERMS: CASH, CHECK or AMERICAN EXPRESS 0 feet first for Dad, June 18 Footloose comfort Fancy free style Big Size. Big Value. (%u now save 85c) A. Cavalier Spectators. Premium upper leather usually found in shoes as high as $12.95. Black or brown. 6*/2-12. SALE $6.99 (Regularly $8.95) B.BB.Bermuda Softies. Nobreaking in. Brushed-buk oxford (B)... or slipon (BB). Charcoal or Loden tan. 6V2-12. SALE 2 pairs $13 ($6.99 pair) C. Nylon Mesh. Ventilated with hundreds of tiny “windows. ” Washable. Foam-lite. Cush n-crepe soles. Black. 6'/2 l2. 3.99 D. Genuine Pigskin. “Sueded” leather— repels rain and stain, can be washed, buffs "like new.” Tan or grey. 6V2-I2. Comparable shoes $10............8.95 E. Sun/Fun Sandals—imported from France. Crafted of butter-soft luggage leather. Arch-supporting cush n-crepe sole. Sizes 7-12.............3.99 F. Venetian Slipons. Italian style, U.S.A. craftsmanship. Supple grained leather. Handsewn saddle. Black or brown. Sizes 6Vz l2 ...........................10.95 Bond's The Pontiac Moll Pairs letter SiM’’ Color Chg. Atct. # c. o d: N.m. Add SOf for C.O.D't. Hurry in, writ* •rphout 682-1010 Bmtis The Pontiac Mall FOUR ROSES DISTILLERS CO., N.Y.C. • BLENDED WHISKEY ■ 86 PROOF • 65% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS You now save 85c when 3fou buy a half-gallon. The half-gallon has a built-in pourer. And a grip that’s easy to grab. So grab one. It’s enough for several small parties. Or one big one. HALF GALLON—ONLY. Code if9038 1085 Sates Taxes IncI Taxes Included Available on Special Order m eiAo 3WW A-^ THE PONTIAC PUKSS. WKI>NES1)AV, JI NK ' Bids Are Authorized for Repair of Streets Because of an unusually destructive winter, City commissioners last night authorized taking bids June 26 for asphalt repair work on city streets. Joseph E. Neipiing, director of public works and service, said repairs needed are beyonid the city maintenance crew’s capability. Bids for asphalt for paving projects and for fleet auto insurance and workman’s compensation insurance will also be taken June 26. Commissioners at last night’s meeting approved a $20,781 bid to supply 95,000 feet of joint sealing work on major streets. Commissioners, in other business, accepted executed deeds to property which will allow construction of a portion of South East Boulevard to Woodward from its present terminus and approved rezoning to commer- Affairs ! cial of a 6.6-acre parcel at the southeast corner of East Boulevard and Woodward. Both were modifications to an agreement between the city and developer Charles Langs who is now completing a housing project in the area. The commission agreed to replace meters at a city-owned parking lot at the southwest corner of Pine and Lafayette and to terminate a leasing agreement with Oakland County. It had been used Teaching Tradition in Family Carried On as a parking lot for county building annex employees. To protect city interests, the commission selected Sherwin M. Birnkrant, director of law, and Niepling to attend a meeting June 22 of the Clinton River Drainage Board. Joseph A. Warren, city lAan-ager, said the city could be assessed for improvements made downstream from Pontiac. First reading was given to an ordinance which will regulate scrap iron and metal processors. Commissioners voiced interest in provisions for preventing junk from piling up on the public sidewalks or adjoining fences and asked for more information at next week’s informal meeting on which existing operators would be covered. It’s not every day that a pretty college coed is preparing to begin a teaching career just as her mother retires as a professional educator after 40 years. That’s the way it is in the Snyder family of 6765 Wood-bank, Birmingham. Sharon Sue Snyder, an Oakland University beauty who was first runner-up in last year’s Miss Michigan contest, will teach her first class this fail in Broofcside School in Bloomfield Hills. Her mother, Dr. Edith Roach Snyder, has just anpounced her retirement as principal of Pontiac’s Webster Elementary School after holding that position for 27 years. Mrs. Snyder, 62, who is currently listed in three types of Who’s Who publications confirmed yesterday that she was retiring after 29 years in the Pontiac public school system because of her health. A prime mover in developing the primary and intermediate block program, she had this to say in looking back upon 40 years of experience: “I feel the profession 1 chose is one of the greatest. There is much work to be done in education. We must always provide the best environment and learning opportunities possible. “I love the little ones. I will miss them dearly,” she said. DR. EDITH R. SNYDER A holder of doctorate degrees I music education and in education, she is listed in “Who’s Who”, “Who’s Who in American Education” and “Who’s Who of American Women.” She began her career in Desh-ler, Ohio, and taught in Maumee, Ohio, and Birmingham before coming 'to Pontiac. Mrs. Snyder has taught in several state colleges during the summer as well as having written many professional articles and belonging to several professional, civic and social organizations. She was instrumental in attracting colleges to offer continuing education courses in Pontiac 18 years ago. They also authorized hiring the engineering firm of Jones ariti Henry for engineering work on requested lateral sewers in the area to be serviced by the projected Galloway Creek Sewer Trunk. Neipiing said his office has received more requests for lateral sewers than can be processed by the city’s engineering staff. A public hearing on a special assessment roll for curbs, gutters and paving on Baltimore from Kenilworth to Emerson was held. Attending the commission meeting were 12 citizens residing on or doing business on Allison. They complained of a large volume of traffic using the street to get from southbound Oakland to southbound Cass- Because of Oakland being oneway northbound from West Wide Track to Allison, cars and trucks using the street have multiplied, they said. ,| The director of public works / and service, said there is no question that additional work is needed to alleviate traffic problems in the area but funds are unavailable. Murder Charged to Teen DETROIT (UPI) - A teen was in the county jail today awaiting examination on a first-degree murder charge in the death of an elderly woman injured in a purse-snatching incident. Isaac Parks, 18, was remanded to jail without bond after « plea of innocent was entered for him at his arraignment yesterday. Recorder’s Court Judge Elvin L. Davenport set court examination for June 15. Parks, a meat truck helper, is accused of causing; the death of Mrs. Mileva Bozin, 75, by attacking her May 17 to steal her purse. Tho woman died about a week later of injuries received when she was knocked to the ground by her assailant. Police said Parks was arrested Monday when a 15-year-old girl implicated him. The girl, who was being held by juvenile authorities as a material witness, told police she grabbed Mrs. Bozin’s purse after Parks knocked the woman down. School Aspirants to Air Issues Pontiac school board candidates, incumbent Russell L. Brown and Ronald E. Covault, will discuss campaign issues at McConnell Community School, 245 S. Paddock at 3 p.m. Sunday. Fifteen block club presidents reportedly requested the public session which is expected to draw a couple hundred persons. There will be a question and answer period. PUHNOIIMS A FAMILY AFFAIR FidgetinK, nose-picking, a tormenting rect^ itch are often telltale signs of Pin-Worms...ugly parasites that medical experts say infest 1 out of every 3 persons examined, Entire families may be victims and not know it. To, - — - they live and multiply. That’s exactly what Jayne’s P-W tablets do... and here’s how they do it: they dissolve. Then — Jayne’s mod-medically-approved ingredient right to work—kills Pin-Worms ____Jayne’s f-W Vermifuge , small, easy-to-take tablets... special sizes for children and adults. . Special Purchase Women's fabric casuals 194 famous U.S. mak«r washable casuals in styles galore, 13 colors. To 10. Not all sizes, colors in every style. OPEN EVERY MIGHT TO 9:30 Drayton Qpen Sundays Noon to i •faded blue • floral prints •ihirk Uue a|i,ht pink •b«ifl« I. •whita DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS 3 dWS TH0R.fW-SM- SHOP 19* dollar OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9:30 Droyton Open Sundays Noon to 6 DOWNTOWN AND DRAnON PLAINS THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDXKSDAV. .U NE 7, 19H7 Israel Captures Old Jerusalem, Other Jordan Towns JERUSALEM (AP) -Israel captured the old walled city of Jerusalem today and hit Jordan with anoUier body blow by seizing the commanding town of Nablus 30 miles to the north. The Israeli army also reported the capture of two more towns in toe Jordanian bulge into Israel, Ramallah and Tubas. sent a walkie-talkie message to Schlomo Goren, chief rabbi of the armed forces, to come blow the shofar, the traditional, ram’s horn blown at special religious or historic events. mistice, the Jews were permit-1 United Nations to convoy Israeli defense command told the Isr- liusiltu, Uio wuii; pciziiii.-j v./iui.cu iiwizviio i,u •'v ted to station a small police I police to and from the moun-force there at the old Hebrew police, garrison was University and Hadassah Hospi-I untj, jt ^as relieved Tuesday . BATTERIES SILENCED Amman radio said Israeli forces to the south were trying to breach the Jordanian border at several points along the west bank of the Jordan River and heavy fighting was under way. The final battle for Jerusalem began at 5 a.m. after three hours of almost complete silence. Mortars opened up a chorus of explosions, and the air was filled with the rattle of heavy armored columns and the chatter of small-arms fire. nearly 18 years permitted the! Shortly before noon, the civill .sector since Monday. Occupation of the sector ofj Jerusalem held by the Jordanians since the 1948 war gave the i Jews access once more to their | most venerated shrine, the| Wailing Wall of the Old Temple.! Such access had been promised them in the 1949 armistice agreement, but the Jordanians refused to honor the promise. JEWS ENTERED Soon after the Israeli occupation, Jews frmo the Israeli sector of Jerusalem began streaming through the gates of the Arab quarter long denied them. As the troops approached the Wailing Wall the officer commanding the military operation BOMBING Israeli tanks moved forward on the historic roads to Jericho and the Dead Sea which pass 'near the southern part of the Arab-held sector of the Mt. Scopus demilitarized zone. Israeli planes wheeled overhead. Bombs fell. Weak and rather hesitant antiaircraft fire could be heard from the south. Part of Mt, Scopus was captured Tuesday by Israeli forces, but the Arabs still held the eastern end of the mountain at the old Augusta Victoria Hospital when the action began today. Mt. Scopus, a high hump of land dotted with olive trees, rises to the north and east of Jerusaiem. Under the 1949 ar- ISRAEUS IN JERUSALEM - This map locates the Man-delbaum Gate in beleaguered Jerusalem through which Israeli soldiers moved into the Jordanian section of the city after a fierce battle with Jordan’s troops. Sporadic sniping was reported in the city as the cleanup operation by the Israelis proceeded. Nuptial Trek Finds War in Jerusalem AMMAN, Jordan (AP) young Mexican couple came to Jerusalem to fulfill their vow to marry in the Holy City. Instead they almost got killed by the bullets and bombs of the Arab-Israeli war. “We were machine-gunned by planes, bullets whizzed past, bombs exploded so near we were covered in dust,” said Eli-az Guzman, a 38-year-old bookseller from Mexico City. “We were lucky to get out unscathed.” “We have looked forward to our marriage in Jerusalem for such a long time,” said his petite bride, Guadeloupe Morande. “We came all this way, and then...” They saw Roman Catholic Patriarch Alberto Goir only long enough for him to absolve them from their vow to solemnize their civil marriage a year ago with a religious ceremony in Jerusalem. BLACK LACE Mrs. Guzman was still'wearing her black lace wedding dress when she and her husband arrived in Amman Tuesday after a harrowing trip from Jerus- “We were still at the patriarchate wh«i fighting broke all around us,” Guzman “Fortunately, some good nuns escorted us to our hotel outside the Old City. “An American television correspondent was fatally wounded by a bullet while standing in the^ lobby of toe hotel minutes aft^^ we arrived.” He was Ted Yates of NBC. During a lull in the firing Monday night, the couple took a car for Amman. BURNING TRUCKS “We were only a few miles from Jerusalem when we were forced to stop when we came across a line of burning military trucks in the road,” Guzman said. “Before we realized what was happening a soldier shouted to us to take cover as Israeli planes were still attacking the convoys. “We jumped from our car and ran into the fields for cover as jet planes roared low overhead, splattering the roadway with bullets. Some of the bullets fell a few feet from us.” The couple spent the night in Jericho after driving for miles without lights, then made their way to Amman early the next morning. Oswald Quinn, a white-haired American tourist from Sacramento, Calif., traveled to Amman in the' car with the Mexican couple. PINNED TO WALL “You should!have seen it in Jerusalem,” Quinn said. “I was pinned standing against the wall near the hotel while machine gun bullets kicked up the dust ■ !ss than four feet from me." Quinn said he was standing next to Yates when the NBC television producer was shot. T went to Jerusalem Jiecause my tourist agent told me it would be all right,” said Quinn. aeli population: “It is now permitted to leave shelters and open shops in Jerusalem.” Seizure of the Arab sector silenced Jordanian batteries which had rained shells into the Israeli The fall of Nablus was announced almost at the same time. Its seizure follo^yed hard on successful thrusts^ 6t Kafiul-lia and Jenin in that same area of northwest Jordan east of the Israeli coastline and northeast of Tel AViv. The drive from the north in the general direction of Jerusalem was through the “hatched” part of Palestine which Jordan seized in the 1948 war. Nablus is about 70 miles west and slightly north of King Hussein’s capital, Amman. READ THE INSIDE STDRY! EXCERPTS REPRINTED FRDM NEWSPAPER “HOME FURNISHINQ DAILY" DAILY BUSINESS NEWSPAPER HIGHIAND BUYS DISTRIBUTORS OVERSTOCK OF KCJkVICTOR COLOR TV . AND PASSES ALONG THE FANTASTIC SAVINGS TO YOU! Highland Tips RCA’s Color Price Stand TWO RCA DISTRIBUTORS UNLOAD 1967 COLOR TV OVERSTOCK AT PRICES FAR RELOW THEIR COST TO HICHLAND Sav« $133 to $275 ai th»ie RCA dittributori fak» a greot lots. THEIR LOSS IS YOUR GAIN. Highland boys out ov«r 1,200 Color TV sots! Choosa from portoblai, tobla modalt. consoles ond combinations. All ore currant bast-sailing models. All ora 295 sq. in. rectangular picture tuba - largest color screen mode. All wood fine furniture cabinetry, UHF/VHf. Immediate delivery. Many mi DETROIT.-Highland Ar>pU-•nee Co. has broken the color TV market here Wide open with toe offering of 1,200. RCA con-*oIe.s at. prices which are in some cases lower than franchised RCA dealers pay for them. In a full-page ad In the Detroit Free Press, Highland pic-'/"■‘‘d. 14 RCA models and said: RCA distributors unload ■l-illf . ------ww.a Ifall "TV overstock to High- re models not odvertisad here. “MODEL GH652 NORMALLY HAS A LIST PRICE OF $589.95 AND IS OFFERED TO CUSTOMERS BY HICHLAND AT $457” ---------HERE IT IS!---- land at prices far below dlstrib-utors’ co.st! Over 1,200 sets! We pas.s the savings along to you!- ■bout this price break, and are Highland so much ? the distributors. 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REGe $150 SAVf $183 *567 RCA VICTOR MODEL GH 672 295 SO. IN RECTANGULAR FIX RED.$S29 95 SAVE $133 m m RCA VICTOR MODEL 6H 761 295 SQ. IN. RECTANGULAR PIX. RBa.m. $EA7 SAVE $183 WWM RCA VICTOR MODEL GH 692 The ENDieOTT. 295 sq. in. rectangular. Contem RCA VICTOR MODEL GH 124 The DUMAS. 295 sq. i French Provincial in set speakers. UHF/VHF. RCA VICTOR MODEL GH 154 RCA VICTOR MODEL GH 716 The HARDING. 295 sq. I cantempiHOcy lowMy 0< Twin speakers. UHF/VHF. Vs RCA COMBINATION HH 848 hi-fi, I. UHF/VHF. SAVE $143 REG. $679.9$ SAVE $133 ' REG. $695 eluxe. UHF/VHF. Very delu> SAVE $148 REG. $619.95 $497 $547 $547 SAVE $133 REG. $1,150 SAVE $21$ $547 ^875 INSTANT these Color TV sets ot Highland. All mojor credit cards, bank cards or charge plates honored at Highland for immediate credit. NO MONEY DOWN • 3 YEARS TO PAY POHrUUI MUl SHOPPING CEHTER TELEGRAPH RDAD, Corner Elizabeth Lake Road OPEN DAILY 9 A.M. to 9 P.AA. * PHONE 682-2330 W-EDNESDAY, JUNE 7, 1967 THREE COLORS nrii lESt I ii^ iu\ ti(\ ititX Mif\ Mit\[ #«nli ■iii\' Tti\\ -ffiivl iMit lai l^i !^i 1^ il^ 1^1 M' kS' iSS' iG^' i^' 'GS- G^ EaS 'Mli ESi fepS !^ iS'i ils ®S i^E^iill iiwi fiol rioi fioi fitf iPil Shop and Save at r FOOD TOWN SUPER MARKETS ■ 75S0 Hi|hland Rd. M-S9 Pin* M-SI at Williami Lk. Rd. OPEN SUNDAYS 1200 Baldwin Ave. I 8216 Coolpy Lake Rd. Corner Columbi* I Uni(Hi Like Villat* OPEN SUNDAYS I OPEN SUNDAYS ty Service • Gold Bell Stamps eOUPON lOKJon* 11,1967 li$5.00 Pwichat* RINSO ■ mils DEL MONTE CALORIE REDUCED FRUIT 9Q( Z9* PRESTO GHJUKOAl ■BlimiTS 10-LB. COtKTAILI 1-LBa, 12-OZ. CAN ' limit 1 . Willi Furehasc of $5 or A^ore BLUE RIBBON OlEOMARBARINE PI mm Pli iSr^VAlSpj I Sf.TSItO w JOJ UM ■YfvMP, laS H' THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNES1)A^^ JUNE 7, l!)(i7 HOLY LAND, PROMISED LAND LAND OF ANCIENT ENMITIES For as far back as recorded history extends, the land once called Palestine, which row forms the modern state of Israel end parts of Jordan, Syria, Lebanon and Egypt, has been a battleground and a prize. Not only a strategic crossroods of civilization but a Holy Land to three of the world's great religions, its long history is one of conquest and war ond religious, ethnic and political rivolry. The Hebrews, led to "the land of Canaan" first by Abraham and back again by Moses, became predominant among the varied peoples of Palestine and attained nationhood about 1000 B.C. Through successive invasions, conquests and enslavements, Jewish nationhood persisted. With the destruction of their temple by the Romans in A.D. 70, the great dispersion of the. Jews throughout the world began. But the idea of Israel endured for two millenio. to cause new strife in our own time. THE GREAT TIDE - The great tide of Islam swept over Palestine in the 7th Century A.D. Moslem rule continued practically uninterupted until 1915 when Gen. Sir Edmund Allenby (left) wrested Jerusalem from the Turks. It was during World War 1, when a discovery by Admiralty chemist Chaim Weizmann solved Britain’s critical shortage of explosives, that Jewish nationalist aspirations became more than just a dream. Auto Crash Fatal FREELAND (AP) - William Albert Allen, 36, of Freeland, was killed Tuesday in a two-car collision on M47 about miles south of Freeland. COMMERCE Union Lokt at Hagftrty Rd. EM 3-0S6l-Show Starts at Dusk Adults SI.2l-ChUdron Undtr 12 Frtt NOW SNOWING fofwmJ nbeSeraca SUGGESTfD FOR I ^^^MAlURt AUDItNCtS 1 ipDlTriE.WflYTp.l HfTORuS 1 . 1 •" . UbITtO AUTIST* 7- .. ; 1 There's more Kal Kan than yon FLOCK TO PALESTINE-Ever since the launching of the Zionist movement in 1896, Jewish immigrants had come in increasing numbers to Palestine. Moslem discontent increased proportionately. Uprisings in 1936 and 1938 wqre put down by force. good meat in any dog food can buy. See Shaggy in Walt Disney’s hilarious movie THE SHAGGY DOG starring Fred MacMurray CMU tiswr NMUCIIMS WAR WITH ARAB.S - On May 14, 1948. the Republic of Israel was proclaimed and immediately found itself at war with the Arabs. Israeli arms prevailed and in 1949, armistice but no lasting settlement was reached. In that year, Dr. Chaim Weizmann was elected Israel’s first president and Israel was admitted to the U.N. FREE I Deposit m Box QQ^BOY HATS Bonanza • '* Lucky T Name......................................7 Winners ' Address.................................. ^ City............Phone.................... Ui' Monday^ Do Not Hove To Be Present To Win Al'coinmodatioiis for Children — Open 7 Davsn Week\ I t A.M. - 9 P.M. GLENWOOD at PERRY - KMART SHOPPING PLAZA Carry Out Available Call 338-9433 Good For One Dollar FLOOD OF COLONISTS - World War II temporarily eclipsed the Palestine problem. But with its end came another flood of Jewish colonists, despite Britain’s attempts to restrict them. In 1947, the U.N. voted to partition Palestine. 'Israel a Beachhead' Towards a FIVE Dollar Purchase at the BONANZA SIRLOIN PIT 7 Good Till June 10,1967 ANOTHER OUTBREAK - War broke out again in the Middle East on Oct. 29, 1956, after Egypt’s President Nasser seized the Suez Canal and barred Israeli shipping. Israel invaded the Sinai Peninsula, scoring humiliating victories over the Russianarmed Egyptians and taking thousands of prisoners. Britain and France attacked Egypt, but pressure by the U.S. brought about a cease-fire. Havana Blasts U.i, Britain Text of Johnson's Call for Cease-Fire WASHINGTON (APi - This is the text of the statement President Johnson issued Tues- day night on the Middle East|all the peoples of the Middle East. Postal Nominee WASHINGTON (AP) - President Johnson nominated Irene A. Simpson as postmaster of Presque Isle, Mich., Tuesday. The Senate must confirm the nomination. situation: The cease-fire vote of the Security Council opens a hopeful path away from danger in the Middle East. It reflects responsible concern for peace on the part of all who voted for it. The United States has warmly sup-, ported this resolution. We hope the parties directly concerned will promptly act upon it. We believe a cease-fire is the necessary “first step.’’ in the words of e resolution itself — a first step ward what we all must hope ’1 be a new time of MIAMI, Fla. (AP) — Havana radio says that “the American and English Imperialists are using Israel as a beachhead to impede the integration of the Arabs.” ★ ★ , + “There is war in the Middle East because Israel serves imperialism economically and ideologically and because the It is toward this end that we shall now strive. Director Named SAULT STE. MARIE (API-Lee Myers, 34, of Iron Mountain has been named executive director of the Upper Peninsula Committee for Area Progress (UPCAP). He succeeds Joseph Tuma, wbo resigned to accept Time for Trade? WASHINGTON _ Rep. Wayne L. Hays, noting Israel’s reported military successes against its Arab foes, proposed a baseball - style U. S. - Israel trade. “I think we ought to offer Israel 400 Fill airplanes for that one-eyed general,” the Ohio Democrat told the House Tues- Arab peoples refuse to serve that way,” the broadcast, monitored in Miami, said. The broadcast Tuesday night concluded: “The Arab peoples are rightfully defending their sovereignty and their honor. The people of Cuba are on their side.” ^ FREE 18 HOLES OF COLF Putt-Putt Litet For Nite Play OPEN DAILY 9 a.m. ’til 12 p.m. WE’RE OPEN EVENINGS TOO! Exciting Things Are Going On at the Chuck Wagon. Bring The Family Out For Dinner. Excellent Selection of Sea Foods Too! jftntiacr L.^.J Steaks to filfull your drenrns of perfection Prime Rounds Round-Up Style Dinners Children Vi Price Liquor — Jiiil Good Food Call 796-2245 for Take Out Orders Call for Reservations. 5800 Dryden Road, Dryden, Michigan Open Daily 11 A.M. to 9 P.M. JTHE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, .11 XE 7, 1967 The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by th^m in wholesale package lots Quotat'-ins are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Wednesday. Produce Apples, Delicious, Red, < Apples, Mclntpsti, bu. . Apples, McIntosh, C.A., Apples, Jonathan, bu. Apples, Jonathan, C.A., Apples, Northern Spy, I Apples, Steele Red, bu. Apples, Steele Red, C.A., bu. Asparapus, dz. bch......... VEGETABLES Beets, topped, bu.......... Radishes) White, dz. bcli ............ 1.50 Potatoes^ 20 lbs......... • ........ Rhubarb/ hothouse, dz. ben. — Tomatoes, Hothouse. 8-lb. bskt. .. Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (AP)-Prices paid per pc lor No. 1 live poultry: 18-20'/j; turkeys heavy breeder I DETROIT EGGS DETROIT (AP)-Egg prices dozen by first receivers (includ Whites Grade A lumbo 30-34; e 26-30'/j; large U'/t-7Vh; med 21'/,; small 14. ) prices unchanged; 93 score AA 2 A M; 90 B 63'.; 89 C 59'/.; 90 B 64; 89 C 60".. s sleady; wholesale buying price, nged; 75 per cent or better Grade lies 25; mixed 24'/,; mediums 21; wholesale buying Mart Ma/ces Strong Rebound NEW YORK (AP)-The stock market eariy Wednesday resumed a strong rebound as hopes increased for an end to the fighting in the Middle East. Gainers outnumbered losers by six to one as the market advanced on a wide front. * ★ * The Dow Jones Industrial Average was up more than nine points in the first half hour. The ticker tape ran late. International oils rose in a body despite the halt of oil shipments through the Suez Canal and ports in Syria and Lebanon. Texaco gained about 2 points, Royal Dutch and Jersey Standard about a point each. IBM gained 5 and Eastman Kodak 3 while two-point gains were scored by many issues, including Boeing, Ogden Corp., Control Data, American Airlines, Polaroid, Xerox, Standard Oil of California, Raytheon and Eastern Air Lines. Leading steels and motors were mainly fractional gainers. ★ ★ ★ Up a point or so were such stocks as Texas Gulf Sulphur, Uniroyal, Goodyear, Interna- tional Telephone, du Pont, International Nickel, General Foods and M-G-M. Hopes for peace were bolstered by the unanimous call of the United Nations Security Council for a cease-fire in the Middle East. This was underlined by news that Jordan had agreed to negotiate a cease-fire with Israel. AP AVERAGE On Tuesday the Associated Press Average of 60 Stocks rose 5.1 to 319.6. Prices were strong on the American Stock Exchange. The New York Stock Exchange - New York Stock AttMIlira'* .«b Admiral .50 AIrRedtn 1.50 AlcanAlum 1 AllegCp .lOg AmBdest I.6C Can 2.20 AmCrySug 1 23 33'/4 32% : Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (AP)-(U5DA)- Cal choice 9S0-D50 pound slaugMei 26.00-26.75; mixed good and 26.00; good 24.00-25."'- — 1 500;!/^ rt T&T 2 ______ 25.50-1 Am Job good siaughlerl AMP Inc n .75; few lots Anacnd 2.25g 210-240 pound Anaconda wi 300-400 pound Anken CheM . 21% 21% 21% ■+ -^^20^39.00; choice 31.C 31.00. Sheep 500; few lots 3 StI 3 'mour 1.60 •msCk 1.20a j DG 1 60 2 62 lots Choice and Atchison l ou ig lambs 28.00-30.00; pounds shorn old cropUtias Corp culled to good slaughter avco Cp 1.20 V2 200-230 lb butchers 23.75-24.25; 1-3 190-220 lbs 23.00-23.75; 1-3 330-400 lb 19.00-19.75. Cattle 1,100; calves none; several Sheep 200; scattered I American Stock Exch. rican Stock'Bulova .70b s- !Burl Ind 1.2 Burroughs Burl Ind 1.20 15 36% Fore Dair .50 GamSko 1.30 8 26% 26V3 26%-f GenDynam 1 Gen Elec 2.60 Gen Fds 2.40 GenMills 1.50 GenMot 1.70g GenPrec 1.50 GPubSvc .38g G PubUt 1.50 GTel El 1.28 Gen Tire .80 Ga Pacific 1b 52 28% 28% 28% -t GrantWT 1.10 19 11% 11»/i IIV4 ... 39 59% 59Vt 59Va -f- 5 51 43% 42% 43V4 -fl> 72 44% 43% 43% ~ ’ 21 55% 25% 25% + ' 19 27V. 26% 27Vb T 32 31 30’/2 303.^4 ... 20 60% 59% 6OV4 + ’ 89 12% 12% 12Vi -4- 3 17 51 49'/a 503/4 -fT 8 38% 38% 38V. -f 1 41 23% 23% 23% + « 106'363/4 3SV2 36% -fir 122 64% t i 27V4 -i- Halllburt 1.90 28 SlVj 50%- SIV2 +13/4 RoyCCota .72 Royal Dut Ig RyderSys .60 4% 4% 4Vb. .. » 55 53V2 54% -fl% ,,jrlG^D 1.30 Ihiron Stl 1 Shell Oil 2.10 Shell Trn .58g SheiivnWm 2 Sinclair 2.40 SingerCo 2.20 SmIthK 1.80a SoPRSu 1.27g SouCaiE 1.25 South Co 1.02 SouNGas 1.30 SouthPac 1.50 South Ry 2.00 Spartan bind Square D .70 t T&T 1.50 65 93% Data Cont 101 17% EquifVCp ,16f 50 Felmont Oil 8 IP/4 FlyTiger .lOh 228 40^4 Gt Bas Pet Gulf Am Cp Hycon Mfg MeadJohn .48 7 55% 55 55% +1% 199 13% 12% 13 x43 32% 30% 32 5 5% 5Va SV2 79 48% 47V2 48% 101 80 78% 79 27 5% 5% 5/8 Signal OIIA 1 ,192 32% 31% 323,^ fl Sperry R wt 130 8% 8% 8Va + Statham Inst 5 36% 35% 36 -f ^ Syntax Gp .40 263 85% 83% 85% +2 Technicol .40 5 4% 2210% 21% -fl% UnControl .20 295 8% 8V4 8% -f % Copyrighted by The Associated Press 1967 Stocks of Local Interest Figures after decimal points are eighths OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Quotations from the NASO are representative inter-dealer prices ot approxi- C mately 11 a.m. Inter-dealer markets C. change throughout the day. Prices -Adv. MOM’S Rummage: Thursday 9-12 Indianwood and Baldwin Rd. -Adv. 71.8 1 59.1 -331.8 BOND AVERAGES Complied by The Associated Press 20 10 10 10 10 Ralls Ind. Util. Fgn. L. Yd net Change ‘ ' ' Noon Tues. Prev. Day + .5 —.1 92J) 85.8 k Ago 92.4 91.9 85.f ......... .... .......... 91.9 87.5 Year Ago 76.2 95.3 83.4 92.5 S8.2 1 Ago 72.4 94.8 TEL AVIV, Israel (UPI) Israel’s price for settling the Middle East war may be a slice of Arab territory, informed sources said today. They said Israel also will want Arab recognition that she is here to stay and an end to the three factors which pro-duced the Holy Land crisis—the U.A.R. blockade of the Gulf of Aqaba, raids by Arab terrorists, and the threat of attack from across the Sinai Desert. Israel leaders believe they erred in not demanding and getting these national security goals after defeating Arab armies in 1948 and 1956. Brig. Gen. Hayyim Hertzog hinted at the Israel war aims yesterday in briefing correspondents. TTie official military spokesman indicated Israel may claim the west bank of the Jordan River from King Hussein’s Jordan. * A * Israel always has felt the Jordan River is a natural frontier of its country and that she will always remain vulnerable as long as the west bank lies in Arab hands. Hertzog, in his broadcast briefing, also indicated Israel may lay claim to the whole of Jerusalem. Before the crisis, she shared the holy city with Jordan. almost any other nation — some 13 per cent a year. It is no wonder, then, that Japan has developed the world’s largest tankers. It is vulnerable. The United States could fall back on its reserve production capacity, but this might be expensive. The Middle East contains abundant oil, and it is easily retrieved. Sharp increases in American production, qn the other hand, might be at a sharply accelerating cost. Over a long period of time, then, the world needs Middle East and African oil. The Middle East, despite its huge production of 9.4 million barrels a day, second only to that of the United States’ 9.6 million, is the fastestgrowing source of oil for the world. And North Africa-is second. GM Promotes PR Executive P. John Bryant of 4161 W. Orchard Hill, Bloomfield Township has been appointed manager of the educational relations section of the General Motors Public Relations staff, effective July 1. Bryant succeeds Kenneth A. Meade of 27625 Captain’s Lane, Franklin. Meade retires June 30. ★ -A ★ Bryant has been in charge of secondary school relations. He joined GM in July 1953 as associate editor of the GM Engineering Journal and became editor in 1955. He took charge ot college and university relations in 1962 and four years Iate.i: took over his job prior to his new assignment. Meade joined the faculty of General Motors Institute, Flint, . in 1929, and has held a variety of jobs since. He has been manager of the educational relations section since 1952. Successfuhinvesfing ^ By ROGER E. SPEAR (Q) “I am interested in buying the following stocks: Litton Industries, Sperry Rand, and National Lead. What possibilities have they for future growth and income?” E. T. (A) Your three stocks are each in theif way good stocks but differ in their past records and in their potential ability to meet your objectives. Litton has shown strong and consistent growth and is characterized by exceptionally good Inan-agemeht. Expansion has been kided by well-planned acquisitions, and revenues have increased more than 66-fold during the past decade. I like this stock and do not consider the present earnings multiple excessive. Sperry Rand has had a rather uneven record but has acted well after breaking into profitable operations with its computer division. I regard the stock as a good trading vehicle with some gain potential, but do not recommend it as a long-term holding. National Lead is an income stock and should be regarded in this light only. Neither Litton nor Sperry pay cash dividends and future payments seem unlikely to provide a good yield at current prices — at least for some time ahead. My preference for you would be Litton Industries, if your main objective is capital enhancement and you can forego income. ★ ★ ★ (Q) “I have a three-year-old niece. To help her future education, I would like to invest in some growth stock. Should I do this or put the money in a savings account?” C. D. (A) Educatiortal expenses have long been in an upward spiral, more so than in most other areas. Money in the savings bank cannot increase her principal over the next 15 years, except through the addition of compound interest. I advise you to buy Georgia-Pacific, a stock which is capable of doing so, judging by its past record. To order your copy of Roger Spearis 48-page Guide to Suemsful Investing, clip this notice and send |1.00 with your name and address to Roger E. Spear, in care of The Pontiac Press, Box 1618, Grand Cenhral StatfiM, New York, N. Y. 10017. (Copyright,-1907) /I